This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
13600 | 3(?).] |
13600 | How far has it been influenced by non- Germanic elements, especially by Roman and Canon law? |
13600 | Most of these were translated from William of Malmesbury([+] 1143?) |
13600 | What is its position in the legal history of Germanic nations? |
13600 | by T. Wright, London, 1866- 1868); the_ Chronique_ of Nicholas Trevet( 1258?-1328? |
13600 | v. 14(?).] |
11212 | And if you want another conundrum, what is a chotohazree? |
11212 | And where do you suppose they obtained all the money for these buildings, which cost millions upon millions of dollars? |
11212 | What, for example, would you call Mr. Jamshijdji or Mr. Jijibhai, and those are comparatively simple? |
12648 | Do we not all of us, consciously or unconsciously, recognize the fact of character and physiognomy in buildings? |
12648 | May not one source of this satisfaction dwell in the intrinsic beauty of the number 15? |
12648 | The question naturally arises, why the circle, the equilateral triangle and the square? |
12648 | What could be more essentially musical for example than the sea arcade of the Venetian Ducal Palace? |
12648 | Why is the body of man so constructed and related? |
11805 | Are parents people? |
11805 | Are the planets inhabited? |
11805 | Are there psychological differences of race? |
11805 | COMPANY, NEW YORK What is worth while? |
11805 | HALDEMAN- JULIUS COMPANY, GIRARD, KAN. Are the planets inhabited? |
11805 | How much progress can human nature stand? |
11805 | Is the moon a dead world? |
11805 | Is there a group mind? |
11805 | Liberal Judaism and liberal Christianity-- can they ever meet? |
11805 | SEE Seymour, Flora Warren( Smith) HALDEMAN- JULIUS COMPANY, GIRARD, KAN. Is the moon a dead world? |
11805 | SEE Wilson, Ira B. LINDSAY, ANNA ROBERTSON( BROWN) What is worth while? |
11805 | Why the weather? |
12491 | ''How did our Master Himself sum up the law in a few words?'' |
12491 | Have we really learnt to think more broadly? |
12491 | Is it really so certain that he would go deeper into the matter than that old antithetical jingle goes? |
12491 | Or have we only learnt to spread our thoughts thinner? |
12491 | The famous remark of the Caterpillar in''Alice in Wonderland''--''Why not?'' |
12491 | The story of Henry Durie is dark enough, but could anyone stand beside the grave of that sodden monomaniac and not respect him? |
12491 | Why did he who loved where all men were blind, seek to blind himself where all men loved? |
12491 | Why was he a monk, and not a troubadour? |
12491 | Why was it that the most large- hearted and poetic spirits in that age found their most congenial atmosphere in these awful renunciations? |
13755 | Had they a hero to whom they would pay honour? |
13755 | Where was the site of Babylon? |
13755 | where that of the renowned Nineveh? |
13652 | To which of the angels said he at any time, Sit on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool? 13652 Who shall declare his generation?" |
13652 | [ 041]Is not this the Christ? |
13652 | Any attempt to do so must be arrogant and misleading, for who"by searching can find out God"? |
13652 | If the angels rejoice over the conversion of a sinner, are we to think that the spirits of just men made perfect are strangers to this joy? |
13652 | What think ye? |
13652 | Whence came matter if not from the creative word of God? |
11812 | Are petting parties dangerous? |
11812 | Are petting parties dangerous? |
11812 | Are you happy? |
11812 | KELLOGG, IRWIN, JR. Why breathe? |
11812 | KELLOGG, PHILIP M. Why breathe? |
11812 | Laddie, whither away? |
11812 | Laddie, whither away? |
11812 | MEARS, NEAL F. What is up in your family tree? |
11812 | ROBINSON, GEORGE L. Where did we get our Bible? |
11812 | SEE Meredith, I. H. Laddie, whither away? |
11812 | Where was Bobby? |
11812 | Where was Bobby? |
11812 | Where was Bobby? |
11812 | Where, grave, thy victory? |
11812 | Where, grave, thy victory? |
11812 | Why breathe? |
11812 | Why breathe? |
13678 | I have beheld base men Destroying thee? |
13678 | Joseph Ibn Caspi writes in 1322:"How can I know God, and that he is one, unless I know what knowing means, and what constitutes unity? |
13678 | The Rabbi paused awhile, And then made answer:"Think you I beguile You with an idle tale? |
13678 | The house of kings and throne of God wert thou, How comes it then that now Slaves fill the throne where sat thy kings before? |
13678 | The"Law"is addressed in the second person: Dismay hath seized upon my soul; how then Can food be sweet to me? |
13678 | Why should Aristotle retain sole possession of the treasures that he stole from Solomon?" |
13678 | Why should these things be left to non- Jewish philosophers? |
13678 | who will give me wings That I may fly away, And there, at rest from all my wanderings, The ruins of my heart among thy ruins lay? |
13678 | who will lead me on To seek the spots where, in far distant years, The angels in their glory dawned upon Thy messengers and seers? |
11015 | What do you see there? |
11015 | What do you see there? |
11015 | And if the Pantheist in these days be asked,"What interpretation then do you propose?" |
11015 | Are they also in God and of God? |
11015 | But does any one suppose that in those realms of space God is evoking something out of nothing, or saying"be,"and"there is"? |
11015 | But should it be asked what if the resultant impulse of the whole nature is toward wrong? |
11015 | But what are we to say of bad men, the vile, the base, the liar, the murderer? |
11015 | Or if it be asked what is right? |
11015 | Or if it be said that never, except in the ages of primeval simplicity, or amongst later generations living under primeval conditions? |
11015 | Or why should we be suspected of denying the divinity of evolution because we do not believe the Eternal All to be subject to it? |
11015 | What, then, is the office of the Creator according to this scheme, as repulsive as it is absurd? |
11015 | Whence the fiery mists by the rotation and cooling of which the worlds were slowly evolved? |
11015 | Why should we be supposed to be without God because we acknowledge Him to be superpersonal, and"past finding out"? |
11802 | D''YE MARK HIM, FLASK? |
11802 | D''ye mark him, Flask? |
11802 | ARE WAITRESSES SAFE? |
11802 | COME ALONG THEN, DO COME, WON''T YE COME? |
11802 | DOES IT PAY? |
11802 | Does it pay? |
11802 | HOW''S YOUR HEALTH? |
11802 | How''s your health? |
11802 | IS it peace? |
11802 | KNOW ROQUE? |
11802 | Know Rogue? |
11802 | SEE Are waitresses safe? |
11802 | SEE How''s Your Health? |
11802 | SEE Where are we going? |
11802 | SEE Where are we going? |
11802 | WHAT WOULD YOU DO? |
11802 | WHERE ARE WE GOING? |
11802 | WHO PICKED UP THE FIRST NUGGET IN CALIFORNIA? |
11802 | What would you do? |
11802 | Who picked up the first nugget in California? |
11802 | abroad as"Is It peace?" |
10714 | And what is at the bottom of all this? |
10714 | Are they not the weeds that prevent the corn coming up, so that they may cover all the ground themselves? |
10714 | Can not the same be said of many men of learning?] |
10714 | Do n''t you see they are both foreigners_? |
10714 | Does the worm see the eagle as it soars aloft? |
10714 | For instance, what declamation on the vanity of human existence could ever be more telling than the words of Job? |
10714 | Have you eyes_? |
10714 | How would it have been if every one of them spoke in the language that was peculiar to his time and country? |
10714 | If a man has some real communication to make, which will he choose-- an indistinct or a clear way of expressing himself? |
10714 | Still, what was thought of Beethoven and Mozart during their lives? |
10714 | They have been drawn upon, it is true; but how? |
10714 | Though the critic may step forth and say, like Hamlet when he held up the two portraits to his wretched mother,_ Have you eyes? |
10714 | Was it because both were such uncouth beasts, or had such long necks, or were neither of them particularly clever or beautiful? |
10714 | What man has in any real sense lived more than he whose moments of thought make their echoes heard through the tumult of centuries? |
10714 | [ 1] Is not this characteristic of the miserable nature of mankind? |
10714 | or was it because each had a hump? |
10714 | what even of Shakespeare? |
10714 | what of Dante? |
10118 | Item, for two doss( dozen?) 10118 Ma''am,"exclaimed the woman in astonishment,"do n''t you know this is the 11th October?" |
10118 | ''How comes,''I said,''such music to his bill? |
10118 | ''Why so?'' |
10118 | 3):--"Have we eaten of the insane root That takes the reason prisoner?" |
10118 | A quaint phrase applied to those who expect events to take an unnatural turn is:--"Would you have potatoes grow by the pot- side?" |
10118 | Dura taneu molli saxa cavantur aqua?" |
10118 | His wife then called him, thinking he must have hid himself, but he only replied,"Why do you call me? |
10118 | It is thus described by Burns:"Wee Jenny to her granny says,''Will ye gae wi''me, granny? |
10118 | Quid mollius unda? |
10118 | What mortal can now harm, Or foeman vex us more? |
12048 | ''For what reason do you pry into other people''s business?'' 12048 ''On this account,"said the man to Cheng- chong,''my father broke out into mourning in these words:"''"Why have I lived to this age? |
12048 | ''True,''was the reply,''but whence are you? 12048 ''What examination?'' |
12048 | Do n''t you see him right behind that little man in yellow who is carrying a big blue flag? |
12048 | Do you think,said Yung Pak,"that the old kings were any better than our own gracious ruler?" |
12048 | Seeing his embarrassment, the old man spoke to him in these words:''What benefit is it for a youth of your abilities to be seeking a stray falcon? |
12048 | Upon the man''s appearance, the king asked:''Do you know who I am? 12048 What is that music?" |
12048 | What is that wall for? |
12048 | Where is he? |
12048 | Who is in that chair? |
12048 | Yes, but why is this done? |
12048 | And are not those strange leaves on it? |
12048 | How is it that you should come to find me at midnight? |
12048 | So how do you suppose Yung Pak''s mother used to put him to sleep in this land where cradles were unknown? |
12048 | To what family do you belong?'' |
12048 | What does it all mean?" |
12048 | What kind of a tree is it, anyway?" |
12048 | What little boy ever saw a monkey that he did n''t want for his own? |
12048 | Why did I not die years ago? |
12048 | Why did the nun dance, the bereaved man sing, and the old man weep? |
12048 | Why has this degradation come to my daughter- in- law?" |
12048 | why such persistence in trying to learn about other people''s business?'' |
13300 | And who can define God? |
13300 | Cause? |
13300 | Cause? |
13300 | Did he care whether his body would live or die? |
13300 | Did he live for the enjoyments of the flesh? |
13300 | Did he"play to the gallery"and act and speak for any worldly gain or low considerations? |
13300 | Do you know what Concentration means? |
13300 | Do you or can you prepare yourself to follow in his steps? |
13300 | Do you or would you know the meaning of Life? |
13300 | Do you remember what Lord Rosebery said of the great Puritan Mystic Oliver Cromwell? |
13300 | Do you see? |
13300 | Do you understand now? |
13300 | How to develop it within yourself? |
13300 | If so, what is that higher use? |
13300 | Is it possible for everyone to acquire it? |
13300 | Need I tell you of the tremendous and world- conquering power that awoke in Vivekananda through mere Guru worship? |
13300 | Now what is this power due to? |
13300 | Now you will say this is all very well but: HOW? |
13300 | Now, first of all, what is Maya( ignorance of the real)? |
13300 | Now, what are the causes behind Personal Influence? |
13300 | The question resolves itself into this:"_ What makes one man superior to another_?" |
13300 | Viewed from this standpoint is not the fearless man rarely to be met with? |
13300 | WHAT IS MAYA? |
13300 | What do I mean? |
13300 | _( a) What is Thought- Force?_"Thoughts are things." |
10833 | And did not this state of things last for more than a thousand years? |
10833 | And is n''t this just the very claim which religion sets up? |
10833 | But after a few years one asks, Where are they? |
10833 | But did anarchy and lawlessness prevail amongst them on that account? |
10833 | Can you then, all considered, maintain that mankind has been really made morally better by Christianity? |
10833 | Hardly one in ten thousand will have the strength of mind to ask himself seriously and earnestly-- is that true? |
10833 | How can anyone think out the true philosophy when he is prepared like this? |
10833 | How often must I repeat that religion is anything but a pack of lies? |
10833 | How so? |
10833 | Is all this to- day quite a thing of the past? |
10833 | Is n''t it a little too much to have tolerance and delicate forbearance preached by what is intolerance and cruelty itself? |
10833 | Is not law and civil order, rather, so much their work, that it still forms the foundation of our own? |
10833 | Is this so, because we require the magnifying effect of imagination? |
10833 | So that''s your higher point of view? |
10833 | Was there not complete protection for property, even though it consisted for the most part of slaves? |
10833 | What caused this utter transformation? |
10833 | What is the use of grounds of consolation and tranquillity which are constantly overshadowed by the Damocles- sword of illusion? |
10833 | What is this but the effect of early impressions? |
10833 | Which is? |
10833 | or because the school of experience makes our judgment ripe? |
10833 | or because we can get a general view only from a distance? |
10833 | where is the glory which came so soon and made so much clamor? |
10071 | Butquoth his Excellency,"what will you ask of Government in return?" |
10071 | Hast thou any wish unfulfilled? |
10071 | How can I seek help of my grandsire? 10071 How much"you ask him"do you charge per cup?" |
10071 | Where are the women,you ask;"do they not repeat the daily prayers also?" |
10071 | Who art thou? |
10071 | And were I mean enough to ask his favour, would he not first insist that I become once more''pardahnashin''? |
10071 | And what of him who built the shrine? |
10071 | Have I not disgraced his name by adopting this life? |
10071 | Have you heard that your father is dead?" |
10071 | How comes she here amid this refuse of humanity? |
10071 | Is it always as well patronised as it is this evening?" |
10071 | Is it that I should go?" |
10071 | Near the door squats a figure without arms, who can scratch his head with his toes without altering his position,"What do you do for a living, Baba?" |
10071 | Perhaps they were stolen, perhaps they were worn away by constant polishing, who can say? |
10071 | Seeing the military and police they halted for a moment and gave one time to have, a word with them:--"Whither go ye?" |
10071 | Was it merely an accident or the physical formation of the hill- side which led to the choice of this number? |
10071 | What could we, gently- bred Mahomedan girls, do in a strange city? |
10071 | What does it signify? |
10071 | Who can tell? |
10071 | Who does not know the Mahomedan quarters of the city of Bombay, with their serried ranks of many- storeyed mansions extending as far as eye can reach? |
10071 | Would you learn how the Memon and the Rangari-- two of the most notable inhabitants of the city-- pass the waking hours? |
10071 | You ask of Mimi''s future? |
12671 | Astounding,Quintus interrupts in a whirl of words;"but did he make any promise of another life for men, before he was put to death?" |
12671 | Have you more wonders to tell? |
12671 | How many disciples are there here? |
12671 | Is it true,asks Quintus in breathless words,"that your Master has risen from the grave? |
12671 | But how fares our knight when persecution comes? |
12671 | But is this all? |
12671 | But where had the workman gone who once had shaped that token of immortality? |
12671 | But, my dear Aulus, would there be content in this? |
12671 | Can it be that Quintus himself shall see this Christus and hear his message? |
12671 | Cicero or Christ? |
12671 | Does not Quintus remember that Cicero likens to heaven a port prepared, and prays that he may sail thither with full- spread sails? |
12671 | IV CICERO OR CHRIST? |
12671 | Is his established resurrection at Jerusalem the climacteric proof for immortality? |
12671 | Is it an endless slumber? |
12671 | Is the word of the augur at Brundisium beginning to be fulfilled? |
12671 | Shall I soon follow them? |
12671 | Shall men believe in a future life because of Christ''s return from the grave? |
12671 | What can Quintus do, in the face of such proof as this? |
12671 | What if by any shadow of possibility the prediction of the strange Teacher has been fulfilled, that he should return from the dead on the third day? |
12671 | What is it that the new Rabbi from Nazareth means, when in the city yonder he speaks of another life?" |
12671 | What is to be my fortune?" |
12671 | What means such a marvelous report?" |
12671 | What words can measure the divers arguments, the opposing considerations, the conflicting emotions that shape human choice? |
12671 | Where had disappeared his projects and his dreams? |
12671 | Which shall it be-- Cicero or the Christ? |
12671 | Which shall it be? |
12671 | Whither had vanished his carver''s skill? |
12671 | Yet are men to live again? |
12671 | Yet would that be satisfying? |
12671 | responds Quintus;"but is this all?" |
11846 | < pb id=''269.png''/> BEAUCHAMP, WILBUR L. Guidebook for How do we know? |
11846 | A birthday greeting; what''s this for? |
11846 | After the war-- what? |
11846 | Allo allo? |
11846 | Are men equal? |
11846 | BROWNSTONE PRESS, INC. Who said that? |
11846 | Clear ahead? |
11846 | Do you know your daughter? |
11846 | Fooled ya, did n''t I? |
11846 | Guess who? |
11846 | Guidebook for How do we know? |
11846 | Have you tried staying awake? |
11846 | How do we know? |
11846 | How do we talk American? |
11846 | Lost continent? |
11846 | Must Jesus bear the cross alone? |
11846 | Please, won''tcha be mine, Valentine? |
11846 | SEE Doreal, M. DORING, ERNEST N. How many Strads? |
11846 | Should the detective story writer know anything about crime? |
11846 | So what? |
11846 | So you''re laid up? |
11846 | Well, can''tcha guess? |
11846 | What Is Christian civilization? |
11846 | What kind of a show, if any, should junior go to? |
11846 | What time is it? |
11846 | Who are you? |
11846 | Who killed my buddy? |
11846 | Who''s paying for this cab? |
11828 | After the New Deal, what? |
11828 | How are you? |
11828 | How are you? |
11828 | Oh, say, can you ski? |
11828 | PREUS, J. C. K. What is Christianity? |
11828 | Patriots, patrirots, and parasites; is patriotism forever dead in our own United States? |
11828 | Penny wise? |
11828 | SEE CLEATOR, P. E. What''s this? |
11828 | SEE Dybvig, Philip S. What is Christianity? |
11828 | SEE Vizetelly, Frank H. What''s the name please? |
11828 | Soviet communism: a new civilization? |
11828 | Soviet communism: a new civilization? |
11828 | Soviet communism: a new civilization? |
11828 | Wake up and live, eh? |
11828 | What do you know about the kilowatt? |
11828 | What does America mean? |
11828 | What does America mean? |
11828 | What gentleman strangles a lady? |
11828 | What is Christianity? |
11828 | What''s the name please? |
11828 | What''s this? |
11828 | What''s this? |
11828 | What''s this? |
11828 | Where''s George? |
11828 | Where''s George? |
11828 | Where''s George? |
11828 | Where''s George? |
11828 | Which am I, bird, beast, or fish? |
11828 | Whose Constitution? |
11828 | Would you step over here a second, Waldo? |
13940 | And if China does copy the model set by all foreign nations with which she has dealings, what will become of all of us? |
13940 | But on what grounds can we think that the natures of clay and wood desire this application of compasses and square, of arc and line? |
13940 | Can Chinese virtues be preserved? |
13940 | FOOTNOTES:[ Footnote 63: On this subject George Gleason,_ What Shall I Think of Japan?_ pp. |
13940 | Is it prudent to lose all enjoyment of the present through thinking of the disasters that may come at some future date? |
13940 | Is it really wise to be always guarding against future misfortune? |
13940 | One is forced to ask: What are the things that I ultimately value? |
13940 | One of the feudal princes asked an official, saying,"Have not the people of the Wei State done very wrong in expelling their ruler?" |
13940 | Or must China, in order to survive, acquire, instead, the vices which make for success and cause misery to others only? |
13940 | Should our lives be passed in building a mansion that we shall never have leisure to inhabit? |
13940 | What is Americanism? |
13940 | What sort of ends should I most wish to see realized in the world? |
13940 | What will be the outcome of the contact of this ancient civilization with the West? |
13940 | What would make me judge one sort of society more desirable than another sort? |
13940 | What, meanwhile, is China''s interest? |
13940 | Who then is it, except the Sovereign, that can appoint, dismiss, and punish a Minister of State? |
11428 | But if you only take from the willing,I inquired,"why do you not ask their permission?" |
11428 | Can you spot him? |
11428 | DO YER? |
11428 | Did you want that sugar? 11428 HOW ARE WE TO PUSH OUR PROPAGANDA PAST THE CENSOR?" |
11428 | IT IS A BIT OF A TEASER, AIN''T IT? 11428 Is that the end?" |
11428 | PORTER, IS THIS EDGWARE ROAD? 11428 So do your best to give them beans( You have some ammunition? |
11428 | WHAT ABAHT IT? |
11428 | WILL YOU PLAY MENDELSSOHN''S''SPRING SONG,''PLEASE? |
11428 | What kind are you now using? |
11428 | What''s the next move? |
11428 | Why not have it all in one? |
11428 | Ye know that herrin''-gutted bush- ranger over yonder? 11428 Yes, and what will you eat with I it?" |
11428 | ( Have I mentioned that Seymour is an Adjutant?) |
11428 | (_ An Engineering School for Women has been started in Scotland._) What if my lady should appear In a mechanic''s grimy gear? |
11428 | And why not?" |
11428 | Have the things been invented yet? |
11428 | I cried,"and parade hotel passages in search of the bath looking like a clown out of a circus? |
11428 | May I hint a doubt, by the way, whether in 1913 a French Professor would have mentioned HINDENBURG as one of Germany''s most important men? |
11428 | Not quite what one expects of a British Junker, is it? |
11428 | Now what could be more unlike London under the German invasion and all that nasty little tunnel known as Lower Robert Street, than Peter Tavy? |
11428 | People are asking,"Can there be a hidden brain in the Foreign Office?" |
11428 | Perceive the jest now? |
11428 | What''s the time, someone?" |
11428 | [ Sign before church with bomb- damaged steeple:] THE REV SULVANUS JONES WILL PREACH NEXT SUNDAY MORNING ON WHAT''S WRONG WITH THE CHURCH?] |
11428 | said the General to his Brigade- major;"one of theirs, I suppose?" |
1061 | ''What sort of an earth- worm is this?'' 1061 Do you suppose I am going to get water in those paltry hand- basins? |
1061 | The cannibal said,''What are you about, child of my sister? 1061 Why do n''t you run a race for them?" |
1061 | ''The candle?'' |
1061 | 7;"Shall there be evil in the city, and the Lord hath not done it?" |
1061 | A little while after he was accosted by the second thief, who said,''Brahman, why do you carry a dog on your back?'' |
1061 | But what has the avenging daybreak to do with the lightning and the divining- rod? |
1061 | But what shall we say when we find Mr. Gladstone citing the Latin thalamus in support of this antiquated theory? |
1061 | But why does the piper, who is a leader of souls( Psychopompos), also draw rats after him? |
1061 | During seven years he continued to inveigle little boys and girls into his castle, at the rate of about TWO EACH WEEK,(?) |
1061 | He cried out saying,''Child of my sister, how have you managed your thatching?'' |
1061 | Ic the secge, forthon heo locath on helle.--Tell me, why is the sun red at even? |
1061 | Is not Helios pure Greek for the sun? |
1061 | Now came the Devil into the garden and asked,''Well, did you get the key? |
1061 | Shall we then say boldly, that close similarity between legends is proof of kinship, and go our way without further misgivings? |
1061 | She is never to look upon him in his human shape, but how could a young bride be expected to obey such an injunction as that? |
1061 | Soon after he was stopped by the third thief, who said,''Brahman, why do you carry a dog on your back?'' |
1061 | The other, in his gruff voice, and striking his breast with his forefoot, said,''I am a Ram; who are you?'' |
1061 | What, now, is the common origin of this whole group of superstitions? |
1061 | What, then, is a myth? |
1061 | When the Brahman, who carried the goat on his back, approached the first thief, the thief said,''Brahman, why do you carry a dog on your back?'' |
1061 | Why are you silent?'' |
1061 | Would you be afther dyin''in a strange land without your red birredh?" |
1061 | Yet, if the story be not historical, what could have been its origin? |
1061 | [ Footnote 33:"Saga me forwhan byth seo sunne read on aefen? |
1061 | and how is it with the candle? |
1061 | and where should his sacred island be placed, if not in the East? |
1061 | dost thou command me to bring thee my master, and hang him up in the midst of this vaulted dome?" |
1061 | what may your name be?'' |
1061 | where is it?'' |
11039 | And who pays for all this? |
11039 | Are such arrangements worthy of a public institution? |
11039 | But what are a few drops in an immeasurable sea? |
11039 | But what objections will not thirst silence? |
11039 | But, when I came nearer to one of the people, that I might see these pictures better, what did I discover there? |
11039 | Could he mean to take his revenge on me? |
11039 | Does this courage come with the coat, or from the example of the English? |
11039 | Have you been robbed? |
11039 | Have you parted from your company and only left them in the town?" |
11039 | How far should I reach in this way with my 100 pounds sterling? |
11039 | How many people are there among us Christians who believe things which require quite as great an amount of faith? |
11039 | How many similar and even more provoking incidents have I seen? |
11039 | In a very short time he came, and his first questions were:"How did you come here,_ alone_? |
11039 | One cried,"How shall I shelter my sugar- loaves?" |
11039 | The country is the same; but what has become of its towns and its powerful empires? |
11039 | The first question we put to the captain was:"When do you weigh anchor?" |
11039 | There may be cases in which certain slaves are cruelly and undeservedly punished; but do not the like instances of injustice occur in Europe also? |
11039 | They stopped and surrounded us, and then inquired where we came from, where we were going to, and what kind of goods we carried? |
11039 | Thus it fared with me, who was provided with letters to the chief officers,--how do poor people come off? |
11039 | What was to be done? |
11039 | Why are there not a few rooms fitted up at the expense of government for the poor? |
11039 | Why can not they have a plain hot meal once in the day for a moderate price? |
11039 | Why did he travel at night through a country which he ought to have chosen day- time for? |
11039 | With this assurance he left me, saying to Ali:"What shall I do with her? |
11039 | Would not people flock round them? |
11039 | and then,"It is horrible-- shocking-- good heavens?--where did it happen?" |
11039 | how is it possible that they should feel any love for Christians? |
11039 | would they not receive the tracts given out gratis, even if they could not read them? |
11039 | { 190} If these two towers did belong to a mosque, why were they built of such different sizes? |
12342 | );"Hamlet,"1602,"Measure for Measure,"1603;"Troilus and Cressida,"1603- 1607(? |
12342 | );"Richard II.,"1594;"King John,"1595;"Merchant of Venice,"1596; 1 and 2"Henry IV.,"1597- 1598;"Henry V.,"1599;"Taming of the Shrew,"1597(? |
12342 | ; is the hero of the Cornish ballad,"And shall Trelawney die?" |
12342 | Black?" |
12342 | CLIFFORD, JOHN, D.D., Baptist minister in London, author of"Is Life Worth Living?" |
12342 | COLLINS, MORTIMER, a versatile genius, born at Plymouth; wrote poems, novels, and essays; was the author of"Who was the Heir?" |
12342 | EST- IL- POSSIBLE? |
12342 | How? |
12342 | In such a case the challenge of Goethe is_ apropos_,"What have I to do with names when it is a work of the spirit I am considering?" |
12342 | Johnnie Cowp, are ye wauken yet?" |
12342 | MANNA, the food with which the Israelites were miraculously fed in the wilderness, a term which means"What is this?" |
12342 | Saved or Lost? |
12342 | Sure enough, I am; and lately was not; but Whence? |
12342 | Whereto?" |
12342 | got for answer the counter- challenge"Who made you king?" |
10417 | How long are you in for? |
10417 | Me? 10417 What are you eating?" |
10417 | Who gave you the authority to do all this? |
10417 | All law centers around this point-- what shall men be allowed to do? |
10417 | Am I bad because I want to give you freedom, and have you work in gladness instead of fear? |
10417 | And how could I love her unless I had perfect confidence that she would only aspire to what was beautiful, true and right? |
10417 | But what think you is necessary before a person can come into full possession of his subconscious treasures? |
10417 | Does God cease work one day in seven, or is the work that He does on Sunday especially different from that which He performs on Tuesday? |
10417 | If prayer is not a desire, backed up by a right human effort to bring about its efficacy, then what is it? |
10417 | Is it worth the cost? |
10417 | Is n''t good work an effort to produce a useful, necessary or beautiful thing? |
10417 | Is n''t it as necessary for me to hoe corn and feed my loved ones( and also the priest) as for the priest to preach and pray? |
10417 | Is n''t it strange that men should have made laws declaring that it is wicked for us to work? |
10417 | Is n''t that so? |
10417 | Is she a bawd that she should bargain? |
10417 | Morality is simply the question of expressing your life forces-- how to use them? |
10417 | Obey? |
10417 | Preparing for Old Age Socrates was once asked by a pupil, this question:"What kind of people shall we be when we reach Elysium?" |
10417 | That is, what shall we do to be saved? |
10417 | The Best Religion A religion of just being kind would be a pretty good religion, do n''t you think so? |
10417 | The Folly of Living in the Future The question is often asked,"What becomes of all the Valedictorians and all the Class- Day Poets?" |
10417 | The Week- Day, Keep it Holy Did it ever strike you that it is a most absurd and semi- barbaric thing to set one day apart as"holy?" |
10417 | The question is as alive to- day as it was two thousand years ago-- what expression is best? |
10417 | To which class do you belong? |
10417 | Was it a plan of building modern tenement houses along scientific and sanitary lines? |
10417 | Was it called to provide funds for scientific research of various kinds that would add to human knowledge and prove a benefit to mankind? |
10417 | Was it to build technical schools and provide a means for practical and useful education? |
10417 | What for? |
10417 | What is Initiative? |
10417 | What kind of a man shall I be to- morrow? |
10417 | Where does_ Ivan the Terrible_ go when Death closes his eyes? |
10417 | Why should you cease to express your holiest and highest on Sunday? |
10417 | Why wait for an accident to discover Tom Potter? |
10417 | Will there not come a time when all men and women will work because it is a blessed gift-- a privilege? |
10417 | Would any priest ever preach and pray if somebody did n''t hoe? |
10417 | Yet all sermons have but one theme: how shall life be expressed? |
10417 | You have so much energy; and what will you do with it? |
10740 | And have you ceased to talk about yourself and to regard yourself with self- complacent pride? |
10740 | Are you content to take the lowest place, and to be passed by unnoticed? |
10740 | Are you given to ostentation and self- praise? |
10740 | Are you saved from your temper, your irritability, your vanity, your personal dislikes, your judgment and condemnation of others? |
10740 | Are you willing to deny yourself, to give up your lusts, your prejudices, your opinions? |
10740 | Armored in changeless Truth, what can he know Of loss and gain? |
10740 | Art thou purged by the fires of sorrow? |
10740 | But how may one attain to this sublime realization? |
10740 | Divine Love can not be known until self is dead, for self is the denial of Love, and how can that which is known be also denied? |
10740 | Do you fight, with passion, for your party? |
10740 | Do you harbor thoughts of suspicion, enmity, envy, lust, pride, or do you strenuously fight against these? |
10740 | Do you lust for power and leadership? |
10740 | Do you seek to know and to realize Truth? |
10740 | Do you strive for riches? |
10740 | From thy human heart hath all striving gone, Leaving but Truth, and Love, and Peace alone? |
10740 | Hast thou crossed the wide ocean of strife? |
10740 | Hast thou found on the Shores of the Silence, Release from all the wild unrest of life? |
10740 | Hast thou passed through the desert of doubt? |
10740 | Hast thou passed through the place of despair? |
10740 | Hast thou wept through the dark night of grief? |
10740 | Have you pondered seriously upon the problem of life? |
10740 | Have you relinquished all strife? |
10740 | Have you sorrowed deeply? |
10740 | Have you suffered much? |
10740 | How does he act under trial and temptation? |
10740 | If not, from what are you saved, and wherein have you realized the transforming Love of Christ? |
10740 | Is thy soul so fair That no false thought can ever harbor there? |
10740 | Or have you given up the love of riches? |
10740 | Reader, do you seek to realize the birth into Truth? |
10740 | Sheltered by deathless love, what fear hath he? |
10740 | The final test of wisdom is this,--how does a man live? |
10740 | What spirit does he manifest? |
10740 | Who, then, in the midst of the ceaseless pandemonium of schools and creeds and parties, has the Truth? |
10740 | You say,"How can I love the drunkard, the hypocrite, the sneak, the murderer? |
10740 | does it move( Now freed from its sorrow and care) Thy human heart to pitying gentleness, Looking on wrong, and hate, and ceaseless stress? |
10740 | hath ruth The fiends of opinion cast out Of thy human heart? |
11906 | And is not their knowledge of the things carried past them equally limited? |
11906 | But what if your clock is running down or speeding up? |
11906 | He thought:''Shall I send forth worlds?'' 11906 Oh, thou that sleepest, what is sleep?" |
11906 | What is it that is much desired by man, but which they know not while possessing? |
11906 | Why raise( he says)"these puzzling and merely academic questions? |
11906 | And to the questions,"How, and from whence?" |
11906 | Are such strange hauntings of our House of Life due to the cyclic return of time? |
11906 | But do we really forget? |
11906 | But how are we to determine our equal times? |
11906 | But is it established? |
11906 | Deep sleep dreams are in the true sense clairvoyant, though for the most part irrecoverable--"Canst thou draw out Leviathan with an hook?" |
11906 | For what is karma but the return of time, the flowering in the present of some seed sown elsewhere and long ago? |
11906 | How long would the double journey have taken_ if the river current had been faster than our rowing speed_? |
11906 | How shall we schedule our trip if we can not learn the correct speed,_ or if it varies from minute to minute_? |
11906 | If space is curved, how are we going to measure its curvature? |
11906 | If such is indeed the case, if the will is extraneous, how does it possess itself of the nerves and muscles of the hand of the writer? |
11906 | Is n''t the straightness of the knife a mere poverty of human imagination? |
11906 | Might it not be perceived as a representation, merely, of a supernal world, higher- dimensional in relation to our own? |
11906 | Perhaps,--but what is time? |
11906 | Suppose some one should ask you,"What is an hour?" |
11906 | To the question,"What worlds?" |
11906 | We are_ embedded_ in our own space, and if that space be embedded in higher space, how are we going to discover it? |
11906 | Were reason equal to the strain put upon it under these circumstances, in what light might the phantasmagoria of human life appear? |
11906 | What circumstances, we may ask, have compelled our intellect to conceive of_ solid_ space? |
11906 | What have they to do, it may be asked, with the idea of_ higher_ spaces? |
11906 | What is the reason for these differences of power and function? |
11906 | What is this but the self- forgiveness of sins? |
11906 | What results from conceptions of this order? |
11906 | Where is consciousness during these intervals, long or short, when the senses fail to respond to the stimuli of the external world? |
11906 | Why attempt to turn the universe completely upside down?" |
11906 | Why do they vanish? |
11906 | Why should death bedreaded any more than bedtime? |
11906 | Why, then, does a flying man so little amaze us? |
1021 | But has the world the envious dream-- Ah, such things can not be,-- To tear their fairy- land like silk And toss it in the sea? 1021 Has n''t it another name, lark, or thrush, or the like?" |
1021 | # When the good dreams go? |
1021 | #"Must Avalon, with hope forlorn, Her back against the wall, Have lived her brilliant life in vain While ruder tribes take all? |
1021 | #"Now do you know of Avalon That sailors call Japan? |
1021 | ***** But what can Europe say, when in your name The throats are cut, the lotus- ponds turn red? |
1021 | --Mothers of men go on the destined wrack To give them life, with anguish and with tears:-- Are all those childbed sorrows sneered away? |
1021 | And what can Europe say, when with a laugh Old Asia heaps her hecatombs of dead? |
1021 | And who will bring white peace That he may sleep upon his hill again? |
1021 | And would they sheathe the sword before you, friend, Or scorn your way, while looking in your eyes? |
1021 | But why should brawling braggarts rise With hasty words of shame To drive them back like dogs and swine Who in due honor came?" |
1021 | Did you ever hear of a thing like that? |
1021 | Did you ever hear of a thing like that? |
1021 | Did you ever hear of a thing like that? |
1021 | For_ that_ do you curse Avalon And raise a hue and cry? |
1021 | He said:"Mr. Yeats asked me recently in Chicago,''What are we going to do to restore the primitive singing of poetry?'' |
1021 | His fealty due And his infinite debt To the folly divine, To the exquisite rule Of the perilous master, The fawn- footed fool? |
1021 | How can the Nippon nondescripts That weird and dreadful band Be aught but what we find them here:-- The blasters of the land? |
1021 | IV Love?... |
1021 | Is Europe then to be their sprawling- place? |
1021 | Must Arthur stand with Asian Celts, A ghost with spear and crown, Behind the great Pendragon flag And be again cut down? |
1021 | Must venom rob the future day The ultimate world- man Of rare Bushido, code of codes, The fair heart of Japan? |
1021 | Oh, hurrying tide that will not hear Your own foam- children dying near: Is there no refuge- house of song, No home, no haven where songs belong? |
1021 | The Santa Fe Trail( A Humoresque) I asked the old Negro,"What is that bird that sings so well?" |
1021 | Their mad- house, till it turns the wide world''s bane? |
1021 | Their place of maudlin, slavering conference Till every far- off farmstead goes insane? |
1021 | V. Parvenu Where does Cinderella sleep? |
1021 | We sang of Zion, good to know, Where righteousness and peace abide.... What of your second sacrilege Carousing at Belshazzar''s side? |
1021 | What child that strange night- time Can ever forget? |
1021 | What will he sing to- morrow What wonder all his own Alone, set free, rejoicing, With a green hill for his throne? |
1021 | Who Knows? |
1021 | Who Knows? |
1021 | Who knows? |
1021 | With what fire is it burning? |
1021 | Yea, when the sick world cries, how can he sleep? |
1021 | Yet Gentle will the Griffin Be( What Grandpa told the Children) The moon? |
11367 | : did it mean"white"plus"horse"? |
11367 | A much more difficult question, however, faced him: How was the empire to be governed? |
11367 | And how could it be ascertained whom Heaven had destined as successor if the existing dynasty was brought down? |
11367 | But how was it that the Mongol rule did not collapse until some forty years later? |
11367 | But what had happened to the Toba? |
11367 | But what was the position of the"official"religion? |
11367 | But what was the purpose of all this? |
11367 | But what were the traders to do with their profits? |
11367 | But whence came the officials? |
11367 | But why not by the Toba? |
11367 | Can the Chinese eradicate this tendency? |
11367 | How can we explain that Buddhism had gained such influence? |
11367 | How could unity be restored in these things? |
11367 | How was it that in spite of all this the Manchus were able to establish themselves? |
11367 | Northern Ch''i( Chinese? |
11367 | Now a new question arose: what should be done with all those people? |
11367 | Or should the right wing prevail, an alliance be concluded with the capitalists, and limits be set to the expropriation of landed estates? |
11367 | Or was"white horse"no longer a horse at all but something quite different? |
11367 | Should they work with it or against it? |
11367 | The Europeans concentrated especially on the purchase of silk and tea; but what could they import into China? |
11367 | The volume of short stories entitled_ Liao- chai chich- i_, by P''u Sung- lin( 1640- 1715? |
11367 | Were the aliens to hold to their own worship of heaven, or were they to take over the official Chinese cult, or what else? |
11367 | Western Liang( Chinese?) |
11367 | What could take their place? |
11367 | What was to be done, for instance, with Chu''s helpers? |
11367 | When we read of the turning over of great landed estates to the state, do we not imagine that we are faced with a modern land reform? |
11367 | Why discuss the hearts of the people?" |
11367 | Why should not the Huns have the same right? |
11367 | Why should not they join in this struggle for the Chinese imperial throne? |
11367 | Why was it that the Mongols were able to be so much more successful than their predecessors? |
11367 | Will China be able to continue its eighteenth- century dream of direct or indirect domination of South- east Asia? |
11367 | Will North Vietnam detach itself from China and attach itself more closely to Russia? |
11367 | Will Russia and China continue to create separate spheres of influence in Asia, Africa, and South America? |
11367 | Will the present government change the minds of these men and eradicate their feelings? |
12625 | And is that all that Nature says? |
12625 | And what will Nature say? |
12625 | Then how can it come? |
12625 | Then how shall we receive Nature? |
12625 | Then how will the remedy go into effect? |
12625 | What,he asked himself,"is the chief characteristic of the tall office building? |
12625 | Again you say,"How can honesty be enforced?" |
12625 | And so he goes on with his Jeremiad: a prophet of despair, do you say? |
12625 | And why do they believe in it? |
12625 | But what of its significance? |
12625 | For according to that point of view, a skyscraper is only a symbol-- and of what? |
12625 | Has not our body its trunk, bearing aloft the head, like a flower: a cup to hold the precious juices of the brain? |
12625 | How then is it possible to consider or discuss an architecture of democracy-- the shadow of a shade? |
12625 | Is it not the part of wisdom to cheer, to encourage such a mind, rather than dishearten it with ridicule? |
12625 | Is it not the_ world- order_?--the very thing that religion, philosophy, science, strive according to their different natures and methods to express? |
12625 | Is our search for some sign of democracy ended, and is it vain? |
12625 | The reason is involved in the answer to the question,"Of what is marriage a symbol?" |
12625 | Then shall we find in our great hotels, say, such expression? |
12625 | This is exactly the aim of the architect-- to fashion beautiful organisms; what better school, therefore, could he have in which to learn his trade? |
12625 | To what, specifically, should the architectural student devote his attention in order to improve the quality of his work? |
12625 | What Israfil of the future will pour on mortals this new"music of the spheres"? |
12625 | What can the brain accomplish without these two? |
12625 | What is Architecture? |
12625 | What is it, in the last analysis, that all art which is not purely personal and episodical strives to express? |
12625 | What is nature''s first visible creative act? |
12625 | What is the psychological mood? |
12625 | What mystic meaning, it may be asked, is contained in such things as a brick, a house, a hat, a pair of shoes? |
12625 | What ornamental_ motif_ of any universality, worth, or importance is less than a hundred years old? |
12625 | Why are they beautiful? |
12625 | Why do they do this? |
12625 | Will the psychology of the new dispensation find expression through some adaptation of four- dimensional geometry? |
12625 | Will they re- create, from its ruins, the faithless and loveless feudalism from which the war set them free? |
14325 | [ 35] Tertullian addressed women in these words:Do you not know that you are each an Eve? |
14325 | But why and how does this nuclear material determine sex? |
14325 | How may such biological material be safely used? |
14325 | Hubert and Mauss of L''Année Sociologique? |
14325 | In other words, what is the nature of the process of differentiation into male and female which it sets in motion? |
14325 | Marett in his essay"Is Taboo a Negative Magic? |
14325 | PART I THE NEW BIOLOGY AND THE SEX PROBLEM IN SOCIETY BY M. M. KNIGHT, PH.D. CHAPTER I THE PROBLEM DEFINED What is sex? |
14325 | THE PROBLEM DEFINED What is sex? |
14325 | What are the outstandingly significant sex differences which application of the above criterion leaves? |
14325 | What shall we say of a sterile individual, which produces neither? |
14325 | What, then, do we mean by"male"and"female"in man? |
14325 | Why does not the female become a true, functional male? |
11029 | Has Christianity,asks the writer I have just quoted,"exerted a progressive action on these peoples? |
11029 | How is your body and your health? |
11029 | What does he call my own flesh? 11029 What is this?" |
11029 | Whence come you? |
11029 | Whither, oh ancient man,asked Quetzalcoatl,"Whither must I go?" |
11029 | Why have you left your capital? 11029 Why,"asked the king"do you not wear a_ maxtli_( breech- cloth), and cover your nakedness with a garment?" |
11029 | And what became of Tunapa? |
11029 | And when was that to be? |
11029 | And who, let us ask, were these Toltecs? |
11029 | As soon as Quetzalcoatl saw his face in the mirror he exclaimed:--"How is it possible my subjects can look on me without affright? |
11029 | At the fountain of Cozcapan, sorcerers met him, minded to prevent his departure:--"Where are you going?" |
11029 | Can we identify him further with that personification of Light which, as we have already seen, was the dominant figure in other American mythologies? |
11029 | Could these myths have been historically identical? |
11029 | Does some one object that it is too refined for those rude savages, or that it smacks too much of reminiscences of old- world teachings? |
11029 | Does this seem too abstract, too elevated a notion of God for a race whom we are accustomed to deem gross and barbaric? |
11029 | Great was the disappointment of the company on the raft, for what better divers had they than the beaver and the otter? |
11029 | Has it any meaning? |
11029 | Has it brought them forward, has it aided their natural evolution? |
11029 | How can a man remain among them filled as I am with foul sores, his face wrinkled and his aspect loathsome? |
11029 | How much longer must we wait to see the same canons of criticism applied to the products of the religious fancy of the red race? |
11029 | If this is so, is it not time that we dismiss, once for all, these American myths from the domain of historical traditions? |
11029 | In whose care is it? |
11029 | Is it more than the puerile fable of savages? |
11029 | May we not construe the maiden as the Evening Twilight, the child of the Day at the close of its life? |
11029 | May we not go farther, and in this Rock of Light which stands hard by the river, recognize the Heavenly Hill which rises beside the World Stream? |
11029 | Or did it produce the latter? |
11029 | Quetzalcoatl took the drop and tasted it, and then quaffed the liquor, exclaiming:--"What is this? |
11029 | The black lover with whom she is fatally enamored, is he not the Darkness, in which the twilight fades away? |
11029 | The sorcerers asked again:"Whither are you going?" |
11029 | Thereupon Quetzalcoatl began to sing, as follows:--"My pretty house, my coral house, I call it Zacuan by name; And must I leave it, do you say? |
11029 | They admitted the old man and he entered the apartment of Quetzalcoatl, and said to him:--"My lord and son, how are you? |
11029 | Thus the earth was, in their language, the parent of the race, and what more natural than that it should become so in the myth also?] |
11029 | Was it an offshoot of that of the Aztecs? |
11029 | What has been the result? |
11029 | What is this, my flesh, that you would show me?" |
11029 | Whence came this civilization? |
11029 | Whence come you? |
11029 | Where, then, was this marvelous land and wondrous city? |
11029 | Who will perform the sacred rites?" |
11029 | [ 1] Against such an enemy who could hope for victory? |
13128 | And what does your mother say? |
13128 | But, then, how can you like her? |
13128 | Did you see her? |
13128 | Do you see that man? |
13128 | Does your father know the girl well? |
13128 | How can they be dirty if they bathe every day? 13128 How much was it you borrowed?" |
13128 | I say, Mr. S.I whispered, touching him with my foot,"what does all this mean?" |
13128 | I suppose that no oath was bad enough for the three leaders, then? |
13128 | If you were to be beheaded, Mr. S., would you be afraid of death? |
13128 | Nonsense,I said;"are you joking, or what?" |
13128 | Now,added the Cho- senese, looking earnestly into my face,"would you work under those circumstances?" |
13128 | So your argument is,I dared put in,"that if one may laugh at one''s own misfortunes, there is all the more title to laugh at those of other people?" |
13128 | What is it? |
13128 | When will you go and live with your wife? |
13128 | Where is my child? |
13128 | Why do you do it? |
13128 | Why not have machines altogether? |
13128 | Why not laugh at illnesses, death, and deformity? |
13128 | Why; who was there? |
13128 | Why? |
13128 | Yes,I remarked,"your story is a very good one; but what part did this particular man, now at Fusan, take in the marauding scheme?" |
13128 | At first the baby became ten times more lively than before, and looked at me as if it meant to say,"What the devil are you doing?" |
13128 | But these are only lesser native failings; and have we not all our faults? |
13128 | But to return to the children of Cho- sen: do you know what is the system employed by the yellow- skinned women to send their babies to sleep? |
13128 | Did you ever see a weaker, more depraved and inhuman head than that which was screwed on his shoulders? |
13128 | Did you not hear the two shrieks and the whistle? |
13128 | Do you see that man squatting down there on a mat? |
13128 | I am pleased with his work, but I flog him to encourage(?) |
13128 | Is he not picturesque with his long white flowing robe, his large pointed straw hat and his black face? |
13128 | One hardly ventures to address any such personage, for so grand is he that, he will hardly condescend to say"How do you do?" |
13128 | Puzzled at this strange occurrence, I inquired of a neighbour:"In which palanquin is the King?" |
13128 | S.?" |
13128 | See how they are swollen, and nearly cut by the rope?" |
13128 | That is punctuality, is it not? |
13128 | The idea is not at all bad, is it? |
13128 | The soldiers had brought with them-- conceive what? |
13128 | What do you suppose they intended to do? |
13128 | What is to be done? |
13128 | What things could make a woman more unhappy? |
13128 | Who would have foreseen this? |
13128 | thought I, panic- stricken-- am I to bathe with these three... old lizards? |
13128 | you have not got it?" |
13342 | Canst thou play with him as with a bird, canst thou bind him for thy maidens? |
13342 | Do you care for nature much? |
13342 | Another lady who did not know him, and therefore disliked him, asked after a dinner party,"Who was that too- exuberant financier?" |
13342 | But Browning might simply be describing the material incident of the man being knocked downstairs, and his description would run:--"What then? |
13342 | Can it be? |
13342 | Do I carry the moon in my pocket?" |
13342 | Do grey skies and wastes covered with thistles mean nothing? |
13342 | Do the people who call one of Browning''s poems scientific in its analysis realise the meaning of what they say? |
13342 | Does an old horse turned out to graze mean nothing? |
13342 | Does the earth mean nothing? |
13342 | For what is the state of affairs? |
13342 | How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae fu''of care? |
13342 | If a man had gone up to Browning and asked him with all the solemnity of the eccentric,"Do you think life is worth living?" |
13342 | If his grandfather had been a Swede, should we not have said that the old sea- roving blood broke out in bold speculation and insatiable travel? |
13342 | Is that plain?" |
13342 | It is really true that such a line as"Irks fear the crop- full bird, frets doubt the maw- crammed beast?" |
13342 | Now what, as a matter of fact, is the outline and development of the poem of"Sludge"? |
13342 | The only genuine answer to this is,"What does anything mean?" |
13342 | The question now arises, therefore, what was his conception of his functions as an artist? |
13342 | What art can wash her guilt away?" |
13342 | What do you really say to dashing down a plate on the floor when you do n''t like what''s on it? |
13342 | What made those holes and rents In the dock''s harsh swarth leaves, bruised as to baulk All hope of greenness? |
13342 | What poet was ever so magnificently lucid? |
13342 | What poet was ever vainer than Byron? |
13342 | What porridge had John Keats?" |
13342 | What porridge had John Keats?" |
13342 | Whence came this extraordinary theory that a man is always speaking most truly when he is speaking most coarsely? |
13342 | Who fished the murex up? |
13342 | Will you believe me, though? |
13342 | to be able to ask impudently of them now? |
10518 | Who were your friends? |
10518 | A funeral vase awaiting tearful showers? |
10518 | A silken cushion or a bank of flowers? |
10518 | A smirking servant smiled When she gave him her child to keep; Did she know he would strangle the child As it lay in his arms asleep? |
10518 | An Eastern odor, waste and oasis blent? |
10518 | And where, after all, is the harm done? |
10518 | Are the high deeds of the sires sung to the children no more? |
10518 | Art thou late fruit of spicy savor and scent? |
10518 | As Freedom with eyes aglow Smiled glad through her childbirth pain, How was the mother to know That her woe and travail were vain? |
10518 | But still they questioned, Who art thou? |
10518 | But what care I if this be all pretense? |
10518 | Chained, watching her chosen nation Grinding late and early In the mills of usurpation? |
10518 | Did you ever hear an Apache yell? |
10518 | For thou art more than life, And if our fate should set Life and my love at strife, How could I then forget I love thee more than life? |
10518 | Four months alone I walked the chalk, I thought my heart would break; And all them boys a- slappin''my back And axin'',"What''ll you take?" |
10518 | Has she not paid it dearly? |
10518 | Has thou forgotten those days illumined with glory and honor, When the far isles of the sea thrilled to the tread of Castile? |
10518 | Hath he no instruments here? |
10518 | Have not her holy tears Flowing through shameful years, Washed the stains from her tortured hands? |
10518 | How did he git thar? |
10518 | How shall his vengeance be done? |
10518 | How, when his purpose is clear? |
10518 | I''ve sarched in vain, from Dan to Beer- Sheba, to make this mystery clear; But I end with_ hit_ as I did begin,-- WHO GOT THE WHISKY- SKIN?" |
10518 | In fine, upon this April day, This deep conundrum I will bring: Tell me the two good reasons, pray, I have, to say you are like spring? |
10518 | Liberty What man is there so bold that he should say"Thus, and thus only, would I have the sea"? |
10518 | Must he come down from his throne? |
10518 | Nay, what is it to thee?" |
10518 | On the dun hills of the North hast thou heard of no plough- boy Pizarro? |
10518 | Roams no young swine- herd Cortés hid by the Tagus''wild shore? |
10518 | Say, what wilt Thou with me?" |
10518 | Say, what''s the use of being a fool? |
10518 | She is stunned and speechless yet In her grief and bloody sweat Shall we make her trust her blame? |
10518 | The captain seized the little waif, And said,"What dost thou here?" |
10518 | The fresh young smile, so pure and fine, Does it but mock our reading? |
10518 | The handmaid rows and the Countess speaks:"Seest thou not there where the water breaks Seven corpses swim In the moonlight dim? |
10518 | There is not so much to pardon,-- For why were your lips so red? |
10518 | Through the long days and years What will my loved one be, Parted from me? |
10518 | V. Has the red blood run cold that boiled by the Xenil and Darro? |
10518 | V. What is a first love worth, except to prepare for a second? |
10518 | Whar have you been for the last three year That you have n''t heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the Prairie Belle? |
10518 | What ailed the girl? |
10518 | What art thou now? |
10518 | What does the second love bring? |
10518 | What hast thou been? |
10518 | When every land under Heaven was flecked by the shade of thy banner,-- When every beam of the sun flashed on thy conquering steel? |
10518 | Which shall we see? |
10518 | Why read ye not the changeless truth,-- The free can conquer but to save? |
10518 | You did n''t know Ben? |
10518 | You see it; A gay old thing, is it not? |
10518 | [ You give it up?] |
10518 | do they shine, those eyes of thine, But for our own misleading? |
10518 | they said,"By His dread Name who shall one day come To judge the quick and the dead,--"Who art thou? |
10518 | why should you worry in choosing whom you shall marry? |
12883 | Dogs, madam? 12883 Then I looked up at Nye, And he gazed upon me: And he rose with a sigh, And said,''Can this be? |
12883 | Who am I? |
12883 | And are not her perpetuity and greatness assured? |
12883 | And is it not true that men are much the same the world over, in their pastimes and pursuits, their loves and their pleasures? |
12883 | And is it not true that men can hold fast their crown, that no man take it from them, if only they will make use of the grace of God? |
12883 | And is there not a strong resemblance between Mormon and Mohammedan? |
12883 | And what are these but deified human beings? |
12883 | And what would have been the result of this? |
12883 | And whose would the sin and the shame be? |
12883 | Are they not all hewn from the quarries of a noble motherhood? |
12883 | Are they not sprung from the fountain of a womanhood whose living streams are clear as crystal and sweet and refreshing? |
12883 | Are you not? |
12883 | But the chicken? |
12883 | But what is Chinese theology? |
12883 | But what is opium, what its parentage and history? |
12883 | But what of the Golden Gate, on which our eyes now rest? |
12883 | But what of their settlement with their Maker who gave them life, who holds all men responsible for that gift, who expects us to use the boon aright? |
12883 | But what, you ask, are the exact teachings of the sage Confucius, who influences Chinese society even to this day, with regard to woman? |
12883 | But who gave it its name, and why is it so called? |
12883 | But would this be true? |
12883 | Did it not go forth into the Gentile world on its glorious mission, and did it not convert many nations in the first ages? |
12883 | Do you know its rector? |
12883 | Has Christianity anything to dread? |
12883 | Has it lost its potency to- day? |
12883 | Has she not at her feet all the great States which stretch out beyond the Rocky Mountains? |
12883 | Has she not the homage of all the Pacific coast lands with their untold wealth? |
12883 | How shall we make them Christians? |
12883 | Is this a comment on the honesty of the Chinaman? |
12883 | Is this indicative of their lack of confidence in each other? |
12883 | Said he to Don Jose de Galvez, the leader of the expedition from Mexico to California,"Is St. Francis to have no Mission?" |
12883 | The question, debated for weeks before setting out on the journey, was, which route of travel will I take? |
12883 | Was this what is known as Drake''s Bay or popularly as Jack''s Bay, southeast of Point los Reyes, or was it the Bay of San Francisco? |
12883 | What impression has the Joss- House made all these years on the life of San Francisco outside of Chinatown? |
12883 | What is the Presidio? |
12883 | What part? |
12883 | What would have been the effect of Chinese occupation of the Pacific coast on the Indians of all the region west of the Rocky Mountains? |
12883 | Why are they so deeply absorbed and why so interested? |
12883 | Will China, now waking out of the sleep of centuries, allow Him to gather her children together under the wings of His Cross? |
12883 | Will the dream be substantial when we enter the City by the Golden Gate? |
12883 | Would the followers of Confucius have incorporated them into their nationality, supplanted them, or caused them to vanish out of sight? |
12883 | of Spain? |
12240 | How are you,_ Tanaka_? |
12240 | A pan? |
12240 | And in between times? |
12240 | And would you believe it? |
12240 | Ca n''t you imagine the picture she drew of her foster child who had satisfied every craving of her big mother heart? |
12240 | Can not you imagine the mad revel of his soul in this pictureland? |
12240 | Can not you see success in life branded on William''s freckled brow right now? |
12240 | Can you believe it? |
12240 | Carson?" |
12240 | Could I come to see every one of them? |
12240 | Could they see his picture? |
12240 | Did I know the penalty for kidnaping? |
12240 | Did I remember how we used to play? |
12240 | Did he say I could come? |
12240 | Does he forget he raged once upon a time, when he was in America without me? |
12240 | Had I been sent home for disobedience? |
12240 | Had any of my people ever been in the penitentiary? |
12240 | How could a woman dare disobey? |
12240 | How did I live? |
12240 | I asked,"Why are you making two wedding- bells?" |
12240 | I once asked my friend Carson from Colorado if he could choose but one gift in all the world, what would it be? |
12240 | I saw the man returning but I quickly whispered,"What about Billy?" |
12240 | In the name of all the Orient, what else is there to do with a_ girl_, and especially one whose blood is tainted with that of the West? |
12240 | In the name of anything why can not he be satisfied? |
12240 | Is n''t it like him, though, with his German education, to hunt a thing to its lair? |
12240 | Is not that name like the face of an old familiar friend? |
12240 | Jealous? |
12240 | Now is n''t that a full hand nestling up my half- sleeve? |
12240 | Now? |
12240 | Still, why moan over the dampness? |
12240 | Was I in Japan by his permission? |
12240 | Was I married? |
12240 | What is coming when the glamour of the scenery wears off and Uncle puts on the pressure of his will? |
12240 | What kind of a pan? |
12240 | What was she to do? |
12240 | What''s the use of tying your heartstrings around a man, and then have ambition slip the knot and leave you all a- quiver? |
12240 | What''s the use, with Jack on the borderland of a sulphurous country and you in the Garden of Eden? |
12240 | Where was Jack? |
12240 | Where was my home? |
12240 | Where was my master? |
12240 | Who was my grandfather? |
12240 | Who would give a hang for any old ancestor so cut on the bias? |
12240 | Will men never learn that hardship and risk are double cousins to loneliness, and not even related to love by marriage? |
12240 | Will the teachings of the woman, who lived with her head in the clouds, hold hard and fast when Uncle puts on the screws? |
12240 | Would a wash pan do? |
12240 | Would n''t Jack howl? |
12240 | Would n''t it be interesting to know how many"only ones"any man''s life history records? |
12240 | Would not my husband send me home, take my name off the house register and put somebody in my place? |
12240 | You might know, Mate? |
12240 | You say it is a sordid tale? |
12240 | You surely remember him? |
12240 | must not the groom have one for his head too?" |
12240 | there was a Billy? |
13072 | ''Has some one stolen it?'' 13072 ''Well, is not then the interest of the struggle to which we are subjected a sufficient attraction to keep us at our post?''" |
13072 | ''What do you mean,''they replied,''do you prophesy that the prince will have a fever?'' 13072 ''Why''they added,''can you foresee so exactly the evil and direct us to that which is right and just?'' |
13072 | A prince,he continues,"possest a large? |
13072 | And the superstitious people added:''Are you not in communication with the spirits, which float in space, which come from the other world? |
13072 | And what is more stupid than a sorrow, voluntarily imposed, when it can not be productive of any good? 13072 At what conclusions should I arrive, if I had planted my trees on the opposite side?" |
13072 | But does he always judge of it without bias or prejudice? 13072 But how many, among those who suffer from these unhappy illusions, are apt to recognize them as such? |
13072 | Can one imagine,he says,"a painter conceiving a picture and grouping his figures in such a way as to violate the rules of common sense? |
13072 | Does this fact prevent them from combatting disease victoriously? 13072 Have you noted the flight of certain birds? |
13072 | How could we guide ourselves through life without the beacon- light of reason? 13072 In what way did you lose it?" |
13072 | Is it not a cruel irony which renders such a gift useless? 13072 Is it not much better to compel its attainment when the hair is black and the heart capable of hope? |
13072 | Is it, then, necessary to have experienced pain in order to prevent or cure it? 13072 Is this to say that his nature changes to the point of modifying his natural color? |
13072 | Must one believe that common sense is excluded from two such incompatible opinions? 13072 Of what benefit is wisdom resulting from experience if it can not preserve us from the unfortunate seduction of youth? |
13072 | Ought we then to blame others so strongly? 13072 Then why could we not do for the soul that which can be done for the body? |
13072 | What becomes of it, then? 13072 What is there more commendable than the love of work, devotion to science, ambition to succeed? |
13072 | What should I do if I were in the place of the person with whom I am discussing? 13072 What should he do to be able to give the best possible description? |
13072 | Which of these are worthy of admiration? 13072 Why give to old age alone the privileges of wisdom and experience? |
13072 | Why should its beauty be unveiled only to those who can no longer profit by it? |
13072 | Would you not be counseled by voices which we have not the power to hear, and do you not see things which are visible to you alone?'' 13072 Common Sense Does Not Exclude Great Aspirations LESSON I COMMON SENSE: WHAT IS IT? 13072 Common Sense: What Is It? 13072 Could not this story serve as an example to the majority of contemporary critics? 13072 However, people will say, if laws are so impeccable in their right to authority, how is it that their interpretation leads so often to disputes? 13072 Is it not often necessary to appear to be denuded of common sense, to make the voice of reason dominate? 13072 Or, yet again: What should I reply if my adversaries used the same language to me as I purpose using when addressing them? 13072 Why? 13072 Would one not say that these lines had been written yesterday? 14203 How did our Master Himself sum up the law in a few words?" |
14203 | For how could a man even wish for something which he had never heard of? |
14203 | Have we really learnt to think more broadly? |
14203 | In every man''s heart there is a revolution; how much more in every poet''s? |
14203 | Or have we only learnt to spread our thoughts thinner? |
14203 | The famous remark of the Caterpillar in"Alice in Wonderland"--"Why not?" |
14203 | The only question that remains is what was the joy of the old Christian ascetics of which their asceticism was merely the purchasing price? |
14203 | The story of Henry Durie is dark enough, but could anyone stand beside the grave of that sodden monomaniac and not respect him? |
14203 | Why did he who loved where all men were blind, seek to blind himself where all men loved? |
14203 | Why should any critic of poetry spend time and attention on that part of a man''s work which is unpoetical? |
14203 | Why should any man be interested in aspects which are uninteresting? |
14203 | Why should we jeer at him because he has a great many uniforms, for instance? |
14203 | Why was he a monk, and not a troubadour? |
14203 | Why was it that the most large- hearted and poetic spirits in that age found their most congenial atmosphere in these awful renunciations? |
10477 | But how shall I know the men of virtue? |
10477 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 10477 If I am not to mourn bitterly for this man, for whom should I mourn?" |
10477 | Professing ignorance, he put perhaps this question: What is law? 10477 Again,If a minister can not rectify himself, what has he to do with rectifying others?" |
10477 | But what did they discover? |
10477 | But whence the original atoms, and what force gave to them motion? |
10477 | Duke Gae asked,"What should be done to secure the submission of the people?" |
10477 | For instance: One of his disciples asked,"If you had the conduct of armies, whom would you have to act with you?" |
10477 | From what source did the people learn the necessity of obedience to parents, of conjugal fidelity, of truthfulness, of chastity, of honesty? |
10477 | Have we any reason to adduce that God has ever been without his witnesses on earth, or ever will be? |
10477 | How far did they arrive at lofty and immutable principles of morality? |
10477 | If a Christian poet can see divinity in the chiselled stone, why should we wonder at the worship of art by the pagan Greeks? |
10477 | If you lead on the people with correctness, who will not dare to be correct?" |
10477 | May there not be the greatest practical infidelity with the most artistic beauty and native reach of thought? |
10477 | Now, what has given to the religion of Buddha such an extraordinary attraction for the people of Eastern Asia? |
10477 | Some one asked:"What do you say about the treatment of injuries?" |
10477 | The master heard this observation, and said to his disciples:''What shall I practise, charioteering or archery? |
10477 | This Yu-- what is the use of my reproving him?''" |
10477 | What for? |
10477 | What is courage? |
10477 | What is temperance? |
10477 | What is the great first cause of all things? |
10477 | What is the just and the unjust? |
10477 | What keeps alive the"Provincial Letters"of Pascal? |
10477 | What more important or vital than water? |
10477 | What sincerity was there in Julius Caesar when he discharged the duties of high- priest of the Republic? |
10477 | What truths did they arrive at to serve as foundation- stones of science? |
10477 | What uninstructed reason can? |
10477 | What will promote this? |
10477 | Where was the ennobling influence of the gods, when nobody of any position finally believed in them? |
10477 | Who gave to him this insight into the fundamental principles of morality? |
10477 | Who gave to him this wisdom and this almost superhuman virtue? |
10477 | Who has copied the Flavian amphitheatre except as a convenient form for exhibitors on the stage, or for the rostrum of an orator? |
10477 | Who has not copied the Parthenon as the severest in its proportions for public buildings for civic purposes? |
10477 | Who has not devoured the classical dictionary before he has learned to scan the lines of Homer or of Virgil? |
10477 | Who has surpassed Pindar in artistic skill? |
10477 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifices? |
10477 | Who made him, in all spiritual discernment, a wiser man than the gifted John Stuart Mill, who seems to have been a candid searcher after truth? |
10477 | Who, in this respect, made him a greater light and a clearer expounder than the Christian Paley? |
10477 | Why could he not have imparted wisdom both to Buddha and Socrates, as he did to Abraham, Moses, and Paul? |
10477 | Why was so bright a glory followed by so dismal a shame? |
10477 | _ Cui bono?_ this, the cry of most men in periods of great outward prosperity, was the popular inquiry. |
10477 | canst thou know the Almighty unto perfection?" |
10484 | And for what? |
10484 | And what is the possession of a human body without the sympathy of a living soul? |
10484 | And when the mind was both neglected and undervalued, how could respect and admiration be kindled, or continue after sensual charms had passed away? |
10484 | As for her,--this selfish, heartless sorceress, gifted and beautiful as she was,--what does she do when she sees her lover dead,--dying for her? |
10484 | But in these letters he also evinces a friendship which is immortal; and what is nobler than the capacity of friendship? |
10484 | But why such an eclipse of the glory of man? |
10484 | Can Paganism show a greater magnanimity? |
10484 | Can you expect perfection in him who"is born of a woman"? |
10484 | Does she share his fate? |
10484 | If Plato or Aristotle had been contemporaries with Thales, would they have matured so wonderful a system of dialectics? |
10484 | Is it not something to have been one of the acknowledged masters of human composition? |
10484 | Is it to be wondered at that even so good and great a man as Cicero should bitterly feel his disgrace and misfortunes? |
10484 | Take away the soul of woman, and what is she? |
10484 | Was this madness sent upon him by that awful Power who controls the fate of war and the destinies of nations? |
10484 | What European monarch ever possessed such a sum? |
10484 | What charities did they contribute to? |
10484 | What churches did they attend? |
10484 | What could be more polite and courteous than the intercourse carried on in Greece among cultivated and famous people? |
10484 | What glitter or artistic splendor can make home attractive when women are mere butterflies or slaves with gilded fetters? |
10484 | What hospitals did they enrich? |
10484 | What if he was vain and egotistical and vacillating, and occasionally weak? |
10484 | What is a home where women are treated as inferiors? |
10484 | What is home when women are ignorant, stupid, and slavish? |
10484 | What miseries did they relieve? |
10484 | What missions of benevolence did they embark in? |
10484 | What poor man''s name appears in any will?" |
10484 | What schools did they teach or even visit? |
10484 | What selfish woman ever killed herself for love? |
10484 | What social gatherings did they enliven? |
10484 | What was that mighty machinery by which nations were subdued, or rose to greatness on the ruin of States and Empires? |
10484 | What was to be expected of a class who had no object to live for? |
10484 | What were these to women who did not know what was the most precious thing they had, or when this precious thing was allowed to run to waste? |
10484 | When was art ever brought in support of luxury to greater perfection? |
10484 | When were symposia more attractive than when the_ élite_ of Athens, in the time of Pericles, feasted and communed together? |
10484 | Where was salvation to a Republic which banished its savior, and for having saved it? |
10484 | Who blinded Napoleon at the very summit of his greatness? |
10484 | Who can improve upon the Doric columns of the Parthenon, or upon the Corinthian capitals of the Temple of Jupiter? |
10484 | Who has added substantially to what the Greeks worked out of their creative brain? |
10484 | Who sent madness upon Nebuchadnezzar? |
10484 | Who was ever allowed at Borne to become a son- in- law, if his estate was inferior? |
10484 | Would such a love have been permanent? |
10484 | Yet who has copied the Flavian amphitheatre; who erects an edifice after the style of the Thermae? |
10484 | Yet who have been greater ornaments and lights than these two distinguished Greeks? |
11218 | Very good saddle too? |
11218 | Are you not sorry for these poor rich girls? |
11218 | Are you not surprised to hear that there are black men in America? |
11218 | Do you know that it would make sixteen lands as large as our own? |
11218 | Have the people of India ever seen him? |
11218 | How are tigers hunted? |
11218 | How can you tell a Chinaman when you see him? |
11218 | How did the Red men hunt the bison? |
11218 | How do Indian boys play at marbles? |
11218 | How do we know what the men of Egypt were like in olden times? |
11218 | How is it that we now find them in America? |
11218 | How should you like to go for a ride in a wheelbarrow? |
11218 | How would you build a snow house? |
11218 | If not, why not? |
11218 | If the rider says"Yes,"he will then ask,--"Very good donkey boy?" |
11218 | In what other ways might he have travelled? |
11218 | In what way does a Burmese girl differ from an Indian girl? |
11218 | In what ways do Chinese girls differ from British girls? |
11218 | In what ways do the people of Bombay differ from the people of your town or village? |
11218 | Learn:_ A globe is a small model of the earth._ Of what shape is the earth? |
11218 | Of what shape are the sun, moon, and stars? |
11218 | Of what shape is the ground on which a pyramid stands? |
11218 | Of what use is he? |
11218 | Sometimes the donkey boy will ask the rider,--"Very good donkey?" |
11218 | Suppose the water between England and France were to dry up, what would the strait be then? |
11218 | Suppose the water round an island were to dry up, what would the island be then? |
11218 | Suppose you forget to water your plants, what happens? |
11218 | Suppose you water them too much, what happens? |
11218 | What animals do you see in the picture? |
11218 | What do you know about salmon? |
11218 | What do you think this saying means? |
11218 | What has become of the bison? |
11218 | What is the difference between Burmese football and British football? |
11218 | What is the difference between a canal and a strait? |
11218 | What is the difference between cotton and wool? |
11218 | What is the difference between our shops and the shops of Bombay? |
11218 | What is the use of a punkah? |
11218 | What other work does this power do? |
11218 | What power drives the train? |
11218 | What sports do these boys enjoy in winter? |
11218 | Where does this mud come from? |
11218 | Which is the fastest way? |
11218 | Which is the slowest? |
11218 | Which should you like to do best-- till the fields, cut down trees, or catch salmon? |
11218 | Which should you prefer to be-- a boy or a girl( 1) in Japan,( 2) in India? |
11218 | Who is their king? |
11218 | Why are the Eskimos fishermen and hunters, and not farmers? |
11218 | Why are the people of hot lands dark in colour? |
11218 | Why are they of no use now? |
11218 | Why do flowers bloom earlier in the south of France than in England? |
11218 | Why do the Arabs who wander from place to place live in tents? |
11218 | Why do the Chinese paint an eye on the bows of their boats? |
11218 | Why do the boys cover up their ears? |
11218 | Why does a big ship"go slow"through the Suez Canal? |
11218 | Why is the camel called the"ship of the desert"? |
11218 | Why were these walls built? |
11218 | Would it be very cold to live in? |
11218 | Write out and learn:_ A desert is a rainless tract of country on which little or nothing will grow._ How can a desert be turned into a garden? |
12294 | ''ULLO,''ERB; GOT A JOB, THEN? |
12294 | But, my dear old man, what on earth did you mean by saying she has red hair and that you hate the sight of her? |
12294 | Did she get out to Siam, then? |
12294 | Do? |
12294 | Exactly the same? |
12294 | RATHER A FEARFUL MAN, THAT? |
12294 | SEE THAT, LIZ? 12294 SO, WE''VE GOT A_ DREADNOUGHT_, HAVE WE?" |
12294 | The hare? |
12294 | Then how did the British Government get her? |
12294 | Then whom does she belong to now? |
12294 | WELL, HOW WOULD YE LIKE HIM BRED? 12294 WHICH?" |
12294 | What about it? |
12294 | What do you mean? |
12294 | What does it do? |
12294 | What hare? |
12294 | What madness is this? |
12294 | *** Is a motor- car, it is being asked, feminine-- like a ship? |
12294 | *****[ Illustration:_ English Horse Dealer( to Irish horse dealer from whom he is buying a horse)._"HOW''S HE BRED?" |
12294 | BROWN?" |
12294 | But what is he? |
12294 | But why should we not say that it was the introduction of Pekingese into England from China? |
12294 | Ca n''t you tell from my face? |
12294 | Could he have been a Little Englander? |
12294 | Could you not extend this feature? |
12294 | Could you not give us a little humour now and then? |
12294 | Did she represent the levity of the dual life? |
12294 | Do n''t you? |
12294 | Er, I suppose this is the end? |
12294 | Good Heavens, HOLMAN, is this_ your_ first appearance in England too? |
12294 | How could he look the village in the face if he were to be seen scattering little bits of paper from a linen bag? |
12294 | How did you find out? |
12294 | How ever did you know? |
12294 | How''s that? |
12294 | I WONDER WHAT THE TIME IS?"] |
12294 | I paused, half troubled by a thought-- Were my proposals too sublime? |
12294 | In reply to my first question,"Whom did she belong to first of all?" |
12294 | John,"I said,"you would not have your father fall, would you?" |
12294 | Mr. Mérital, may I speak to you a moment? |
12294 | Of course it is a lie? |
12294 | Oh, are you there, Father? |
12294 | Oh, are you there, Father? |
12294 | Perhaps you know already that peculiar gift of Mr. JACK LONDON''S that makes you not only see physical hardship but suffer it? |
12294 | Real life? |
12294 | Sir,--Why is it you always favour the Tories? |
12294 | The end? |
12294 | These boats were, we presume, fitted with ARCHIMEDES''famous screw? |
12294 | Vowed I more deeply than I ought? |
12294 | Well? |
12294 | Where was the referee? |
12294 | Will you marry me? |
12294 | Would you chase your more than middle- aged father over the open country? |
12294 | Yes, but is that art? |
12294 | You have won the case? |
12294 | Your past_ wife_ is n''t alive somewhere? |
13983 | Oh, Rakush, why so thoughtless grown To fight a lion thus alone? 13983 Tell me now, friend Volker, will you stand me by, If these men of Kriemhild''s would my mettle try? |
13983 | Was it this, ah me, I followed over land and sea? 13983 Where is my Roland, sire,"she cried,"Who vowed to take me for his bride?" |
13983 | ''But what a scene was there? |
13983 | AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE Who would list to the good lay Gladness of the captive grey? |
13983 | And fate to numbers, by a single hand? |
13983 | For fate who fear''d amidst a feastful band? |
13983 | Have I struck thee, brother? |
13983 | Him, while he pass''d, the monster blind bespoke:"What makes my ram the lag of all the flock? |
13983 | His plans are, however, detected by Dido, who vehemently demands, how he dares forsake her now? |
13983 | How could thy master have conveyed His helm, and battle- axe, and blade, Unaided to Mazinderan? |
13983 | How then in the gates of Valhall may the door of the gleaming ring Clash to on the heel of Sigurd, as I follow on my king?" |
13983 | How then may the road he wendeth be hard for my feet to find? |
13983 | In jest or earnest say, Have I offended you? |
13983 | Is it with Rustum only thou wouldst fight? |
13983 | Meanwhile, further to satisfy his curiosity, Adam inquires how the sun and stars move so quietly in their orbit? |
13983 | One of the sufferers confined here suddenly asks Dante,"Who art thou that earnest ere thine hour?" |
13983 | Roland marvelled at such a blow, And thus bespake him soft and low:"Hast thou done it, my comrade, wittingly? |
13983 | Seest thou these lids that now unfold in vain,( The deed of Noman and his wicked train?) |
13983 | She, too, sends Brahmans in all directions, singing"Where is the one who, after stealing half of his wife''s garment, abandoned her in the jungle?" |
13983 | Then, addressing Satan, Gabriel demands why he broke his prescribed bonds? |
13983 | Then, all at once, a voice addresses Dante, who, prompted by Virgil, inquires where the next stairway may be? |
13983 | Then, hearing her order that his bed be removed to the portico, he hotly demands who cut down the tree which formed one of its posts? |
13983 | Then, turning upon his interlocutor, Christ inquires why he is so anxious to promote the one whose rise will entail his fall? |
13983 | Thirsting for information, Dante inquires of him"how bitter can spring when sweet is sown?" |
13983 | What if my lost beloved I may revenge at last?" |
13983 | Why did ye carry with you brides ye loved not, treacherous curs? |
13983 | Why didst thou fail to give the alarm, And save thyself from chance of harm, By neighing loudly in my ear? |
13983 | Why have ye laid my heartstrings bare? |
13983 | Why tear their flesh in Corpes wood with saddle- girths and spurs, And leave them to the beasts of prey? |
13983 | _ 12th Adventure._ Twelve whole years elapse ere Brunhild asks Gunther how it happens his vassal Siegfried has never yet come to Worms to do homage? |
13983 | _ Canto XIV._ The two spirits leaning close together, in their turn question who Virgil and Dante may be? |
13983 | _ Canto XXXIII._ The seven Virtues having chanted a hymn, Beatrice motions to Statius and Dante to follow her, asking the latter why he is so mute? |
13983 | in my friend''s dear spoils arrayed To me for mercy sue? |
13983 | shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?" |
13983 | what excuse, what answer do ye make? |
13983 | wherefore dost thou vainly question thus Of Rustum? |
10642 | : is our present system of education adequate to the sufficient development of character, and if not, how should it be modified? |
10642 | And here it was not things that failed, but_ men._ What of the world since the Peace of Versailles? |
10642 | And what did he leave behind him? |
10642 | And yet, had we this right? |
10642 | Are not children the true artists? |
10642 | Are the two so very far apart? |
10642 | Assuming that this is so, two questions arise: what is to take the place of imperial industry, and how is this substitution to be brought about? |
10642 | Certainly this is possible; greater miracles have happened in history but, failing this, what? |
10642 | Do we not speak of the call of a missionary from an unshepherded flock to a large city parish as a call to"a wider sphere of usefulness"? |
10642 | Does it manifest itself with power today in the dealings between class and class, between interest and interest, between nation and nation? |
10642 | For those who can go with me so far, the question will arise: How then are we so to reorganize society that we may gain the end in view? |
10642 | How has this been possible, what has been the sequence of events that has brought us to this pass? |
10642 | How is this to be accomplished? |
10642 | How, humanly speaking, is the redemption of society to be achieved? |
10642 | I would not exchange Kit Marlowe''s_"Is this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? |
10642 | In our prayer- life today do we recognize sufficiently the need for_ listening_ to God? |
10642 | Is it due to the viciousness of the worker, to his natural selfishness, greed and cruelty? |
10642 | Is there any one who would confess that character and intelligence are now a helpless minority in this nation? |
10642 | Is there any value in an estate where status is heritable? |
10642 | Is this supernatural gift of charity a mark of contemporary civilization? |
10642 | Is this"chimerical and irrational"? |
10642 | May it not be infinitely complex, as the ripple rises on the wave that lifts on the swell of the underlying tide? |
10642 | On this assumption what are these enduring principles that will control the guild system of industry in the new State, however may be its form? |
10642 | Shall I put the whole thing in a phrase and say that the object of teaching English is to get young people to like good things? |
10642 | The man asks of God:_ O when did I give Thee drink erewhile, Or when embrace Thine unseen feet? |
10642 | The rise and fall of the line of civilization; showing also the nodal points at the Christian Era and at the years 500, 1000, 1500 and 2000(?)] |
10642 | These are hard sayings and strong doctrine, but will any one say they are not true? |
10642 | Today, when we accept the necessity of labour, and even worship activity for its own sake, do we not need to be reminded that to pray is to labour? |
10642 | What if this all did fade in the miasma of Versailles and the cynicism of trade fighting to get back to"normalcy,"and the red anarchy out of the East? |
10642 | What is spirit? |
10642 | What is the reason for this? |
10642 | What is the reason for this? |
10642 | What is their source? |
10642 | What then is matter and what is spirit? |
10642 | What then, in the premises, can we do? |
10642 | What, after all, does this imply, so far as the social organism is concerned? |
10642 | What, precisely has taken place? |
10642 | When you or I conceive of any piece of work as"important"is it not because it involves either great numbers or great sums of money? |
10642 | Which shall we choose,_ if_ we choose, and do not content ourselves with an easier inertia that allows nature to take its course? |
10642 | Why did these things come, and how? |
10642 | Why is it that this is so? |
10642 | but the kingdom of heaven is_ within you._ Why a second birth? |
14836 | ''Can you read her name?'' |
14836 | ''Does she look as if she had been long abandoned?'' |
14836 | ''Is she a man- of- war? |
14836 | ''Is she a merchant ship?'' |
14836 | ''Is there any one on board?'' |
14836 | ''No do what then?'' |
14836 | ''To- morrow is Friday,''added Monsieur Letellier,''and that is so near Monday, what can Madame do better than wait here till then?'' |
14836 | ''What is she?'' |
14836 | ''Where does she come from?'' |
14836 | He said,"Will the ship go to the bottom?" |
14836 | How far and how fast do they really fly? |
14836 | We exchanged signals and made out that she was the''Calypso''(?) |
14836 | When asked,''What do the whales do?'' |
14836 | Whence came the idea and design? |
14836 | Where do these birds rest? |
14836 | Where does all this_ débris_ come from? |
14836 | Who can describe these wonderful gardens of the deep, on which we now gazed through ten and twenty fathoms of crystal water? |
14836 | and left no letter?'' |
10447 | ''Berries already,''do you mean? |
10447 | All alone in the world, Billy? |
10447 | And you''ve been walking with this temperature? |
10447 | Are n''t I, though? |
10447 | Are n''t you glad we walked, Colin? |
10447 | Been- a Pal- aer- mo? |
10447 | Ca n''t you think up a verse to put underneath? |
10447 | Do you know Hafiz, Colin? |
10447 | Ever at--? |
10447 | Hate it? 10447 Have you been drinking much water as you went along? |
10447 | How on earth did you do it? |
10447 | Is it a go, then? |
10447 | Is this Mrs. Mulligan''s house? |
10447 | Missus,he called to the house a few yards away,"can you find any lunch for two good- looking fellows here?" |
10447 | Out for a walk, boys? |
10447 | Pal- aer- mo? 10447 Shall we have a chapter of the wisdom of Paragot before bed?" |
10447 | Sketching? |
10447 | Surely, they ca n''t all be in bed by seven o''clock? |
10447 | Walk to New York? |
10447 | Well, boys,said he, looking up from his work with a smile,"and what can I do for you? |
10447 | You are, of course, a great artist; but I do n''t remember you ever having a thought quite so fine and romantic as that, do you? |
10447 | You''re an Italian? |
10447 | And he will say:"You do n''t really mean to say so?" |
10447 | And if any one says to me,''Why are you grinning from ear to ear?'' |
10447 | And the men that thus sang from morning till night-- what was the trade they worked and sang at? |
10447 | And why, across the aching field, Does one lone cricket chirrup on; Why one surviving butterfly, With all its bright companions gone? |
10447 | And why, when faces all about Whiten and wither hour by hour, Does one old face bloom on so sweet, As young as when it was a flower_? |
10447 | And, why, out of all the roses of the world, had these two been chosen, still, so late in the year, to hold up the tattered standard of Summer? |
10447 | But when did that mother ever turn her face from her child, however truant from her care? |
10447 | But where is your_ clair de lune_?" |
10447 | CHAPTER IV SALAD AND MOONSHINE"Do you remember that first salad you made us, Colin?" |
10447 | Ca n''t I give you a lift in exchange? |
10447 | Can you imagine two more lonesome wailing words to make a picture with? |
10447 | Could anything be more refined or in more perfect taste? |
10447 | Could she be a plain farmer''s daughter, indigenous to that stubborn soil? |
10447 | Did he ever expect to return to Palermo? |
10447 | Do they live there just like ordinary people in towns, go about ordinary businesses, live ordinary lives? |
10447 | How had she come there, that beautiful child- woman in the solitude? |
10447 | In fact, who could have dreamed of coming upon so incongruous an apparition as this in an American woodland? |
10447 | No, surely she was not that, and yet-- how had she come to be there? |
10447 | Perhaps some reader had been disposed hastily to say:"What did you want with hooks out of doors? |
10447 | Presently he asked,"Do you care about music?" |
10447 | Then,"Ready?" |
10447 | These mazy lines, some faint and wayward as a hair, and some straight and decided as a steel track-- whence and whither do they lead? |
10447 | Thus the sound of"Wales Center"had taken us, we were told, a mile or two out of our way; but what of that? |
10447 | Was Nature really like that? |
10447 | Was not Nature enough?" |
10447 | We looked and kept our thoughts to ourselves, but we wondered if the dead were really as grateful as they should be for this drastic house- cleaning? |
10447 | What is it--_Who_ is it-- that has gone? |
10447 | Why not?" |
10447 | Why this curious collocation of onions and pigs? |
10447 | _ Why, in the empty Autumn woods, And all the loss and end of things, Does one leaf linger on the tree; Why is it only one bird sings? |
10447 | he asked, and then he said, half shyly,"Would you mind my taking a look how you do it?" |
10447 | he said, with a humorous chuckle, pushing the harmonica aside from his mouth,"what do you think of that for an overture?" |
10447 | not drink this fairy water? |
10447 | out for a walk? |
12344 | And what was it? |
12344 | Are you not ashamed to fight with children? |
12344 | How old do you think I am? |
12344 | Is Her Majesty the Empress- Dowager agreeable to receiving me as British Minister? |
12344 | Look,said he suddenly, addressing the table in his most charming manner,"did you ever see sherry exactly like that before? |
12344 | May I offer you my boutonnière? |
12344 | Then is she willing to have me leave the Inspectorate? |
12344 | Then you have too much work to do? |
12344 | Was not that an excellent idea? |
12344 | We must have a chat about old times,said he cordially;"when may I come and see you-- on Tuesday?" |
12344 | Well, are you willing? |
12344 | What can I do? |
12344 | What has happened? |
12344 | What is your secret power of settling a difficult matter? |
12344 | What,retorted Hart, astonished,"is the list published already?" |
12344 | Why do you not ask me to give you this amount? |
12344 | Will he come back a heathen? |
12344 | After this little victory the Governor of the school remarked to him:"Now you see what you can do when you try, Hart; why do n''t you try?" |
12344 | And why? |
12344 | Anything to declare?" |
12344 | But what could he do beyond asking Mr. Campbell politely if there was any other matter about which he would like to speak? |
12344 | But what hope had he of being heard? |
12344 | Can you not make peace with him for me?" |
12344 | Could it be a Censor had denounced some one and enquiries were to be made? |
12344 | Do you not think that my going will be an excellent opportunity for you to send some of your people to see a little of the world?" |
12344 | Do you notice its peculiar colour? |
12344 | Eight weeks of doing nothing,--what more could a man expect?" |
12344 | How could order be brought out of chaos? |
12344 | How has he done it? |
12344 | How shall I collect them?" |
12344 | I believe not once but a dozen times in an afternoon he would turn to the boy and ask wistfully,"Who are you?" |
12344 | I wonder if their ghosts have a sense of humour, and if they ever chuckle a little over the trick Fate played on them when they were helpless? |
12344 | Is he small? |
12344 | Might he telegraph it home to his Government? |
12344 | Naturally he refused to do either of these things; how could he possibly agree to such quixotic demands? |
12344 | News? |
12344 | Nobody, indeed? |
12344 | Shall I tell you the secret-- or what he often laughingly said was the secret? |
12344 | So will you please tell me what happened in the latter place?" |
12344 | The Chinese officials_ could_ not listen and his own countrymen_ would_ not, so where was he to turn? |
12344 | The first thing the Minister said to him was,"Have you sent that telegram?" |
12344 | The man who would cheat time should live on nuts like the squirrels( do they contrive to do it, I wonder?). |
12344 | Therefore, when we give rewards, shall we not give them where they are justly due?" |
12344 | Was ever an arrival more providential? |
12344 | Was ever simpler or saner method discovered for warding off old age? |
12344 | Was ever stranger complaint made by servant to master? |
12344 | Was it about the finances of the provinces? |
12344 | What could the change mean? |
12344 | What do you think they said, now, before I came up to Peking? |
12344 | What more natural? |
12344 | What was more natural, since he was destined to"wag his head in a pulpit?" |
12344 | Why not seek to soften the hearts of his captors by a_ kotow_ as profound as it was novel; why not stand on his head? |
12344 | Why not, indeed? |
12344 | Would they? |
12344 | Yet what could they do to circumvent these innovations? |
12344 | and after they had spoken with him for ten minutes,"Can he be all that?" |
12344 | half laughingly remarked,"So you are going to fight China after all? |
12344 | one might ask, and another-- but never aloud--"Will he come at all?" |
12344 | say about such and such a thing?" |
15141 | Are there notasks this Junius,"in the ideal world of tones many dissonances? |
15141 | Have you been patient with every one to- day? |
15141 | In what part of me am I not injured and torn? |
15141 | Is a blind painter to be imagined? |
15141 | After he had been playing for some time Beethoven interrupted him with the question,"When are you going to begin?" |
15141 | And you wish me to deliver it? |
15141 | At the conclusion of the service the Prince made the rather inane remark,"but my dear Beethoven, what have you been doing now?" |
15141 | CHAPTER III THE NEW PATH I tremble to the depths of my soul and ask my dæmon:"Why this cup to me?" |
15141 | Does not the mind instantly revert to the C minor Symphony? |
15141 | How could they, we naturally ask, get an audience, when so many performances were in progress, and how could the people get around to so many places? |
15141 | In speaking of him in after years, he said,"Who can thank sufficiently a great poet? |
15141 | Muss es sein? |
15141 | On one occasion, however, she was playing his_ Kennst Du das Land?_ when he came in unexpectedly. |
15141 | This art of improvising, as these masters practised it,--who can explain it or tell how it is done? |
15141 | Why should these not also exist in the actual world?" |
15141 | and do you think you could fill a post that has been offered to me?'' |
10649 | He''s got one letter; why does he want another? |
10649 | Is not the Emperor the same as God? |
10649 | And now what have we found as the fruit of all this labor of exploration? |
10649 | And who were these kings, Cyrus and Xerxes, whose names burst upon us with dim light out of a black antiquity? |
10649 | But for his timely intervention who knows that the French consulate would not have been reduced to ashes? |
10649 | But what is this to the great work that needs to be done? |
10649 | But what memory had been kept of the Ionia and Greece of the days before Homer? |
10649 | Didst thou not agree with me for a penny? |
10649 | Empires were lost, buried in chiliads of forgetfulness; would they ever be recovered? |
10649 | For Egypt did not Napoleon provide the most elephantine books of monuments and records that printing- presses have yet issued? |
10649 | Has history no record? |
10649 | Have we not seen, even in this our day, the rank and file of the Chinese army equipped with bows and arrows? |
10649 | He knew that the Prussian Meyerbeer had won fame and fortune there,--why should not he have the same good luck? |
10649 | He reasoned that he had written four good operas and nobody seemed to want them; why, therefore, should he compose any more? |
10649 | How could they doubt that a large community of native Christians would act as an auxiliary to any foreign invader? |
10649 | How does the belief in the advancement of man from some low organized form bear on the belief in the immortality of the soul? |
10649 | How many men are there in the annals of art who would have refused, after all these disappointments and bitter lessons, to make_ some_ concessions? |
10649 | In case the attack is not successfully repelled at the outset, what happens? |
10649 | Is it surprising that this lost opportunity was followed by a century and a half of open persecution? |
10649 | Is it worth the labor and the expense? |
10649 | Or was it still further east, in the highlands of Persia, that men first learned how to write and record history? |
10649 | Or would you know of some great revolution in Egypt? |
10649 | Or would you learn how Egypt ruled its subject territory? |
10649 | Steam Navy of the United States: Bennett, Frank M. Who invented the Screw Propeller? |
10649 | Taking Ericsson''s life and work, what portion remains as a permanent acquisition or as a part of the practice of the present age? |
10649 | The Arabs say:"I had a horse, but no desert; I had a desert, but no horse; now I have a desert and a horse, and shall I not ride?" |
10649 | Was there not, moreover, an open door before his face inviting him to win for himself the honors of a mandarinate? |
10649 | Was there such a real palace of Minos as the Greek poets sung? |
10649 | Were they Dorians, or Heraclidae, Achaeans or Pelasgi? |
10649 | Were they autochthons? |
10649 | Were they uninhabited before the times of Xerxes and Cyrus? |
10649 | What actual, useful, commercial machines have been based on them? |
10649 | What do we mean by a moral being? |
10649 | What eulogy is too great for such a work and such a man? |
10649 | What if he were to write a comic opera? |
10649 | What kings and kingdoms came before them and passed away? |
10649 | What of Persia and Elam? |
10649 | What of the early civilization of Cyprus and Crete? |
10649 | What practical results have attended these discoveries? |
10649 | What shall we call them? |
10649 | What unforeseen occurrence had effected a union of powers whose usual attitude is mutual jealousy or secret hostility? |
10649 | What useful processes or industries have grown out of them? |
10649 | What was the mainspring of this tragic movement? |
10649 | Whence came that first dynasty? |
10649 | Who can blame him for this? |
10649 | Who can say that we shall not triumph over cancer while the Twentieth Century is still young? |
10649 | Who invented writing? |
10649 | Why is it that we see there both the dawn of civilization and the tardiest development of human progress? |
10649 | Why, it may be asked, did nearly all the most eminent naturalists and geologists until recently decline to believe in the mutability of species? |
10649 | Would any one trust the convictions in a monkey''s mind, if there are any convictions in such a mind?" |
10649 | Would not that be likely to get him access to the stage again, and help him financially? |
10649 | Yet was not his next work,"Lohengrin,"of a popular character? |
10005 | And can these prudential restraints be generally practised? 10005 And does not darkness remind us of light,"replied Shuro,"by the contrast? |
10005 | And how does your neighbour bear this in the mean time? |
10005 | And how much is it worth to your neighbour? |
10005 | And it is the same case with your neighbour? |
10005 | And may not,said I,"the very nature of the plant be changed, after a long continuance of the same culture in the same soil?" |
10005 | And what do they give you for the privilege of hunting your neighbour''s cattle? |
10005 | And what is your opinion of me farther? |
10005 | Are you not a pretty fellow to vote for Bald- head, whom you have so often called rogue and blockhead? |
10005 | Assuredly: what man, in his entire senses, could act so irrationally? |
10005 | But have they no friends, who can at once render them this service, and relieve them from the odium of it? |
10005 | But have you not many more competitors, than you have public offices? |
10005 | But very inferior? |
10005 | But who has the skill,quickly rejoined the other,"of which I can boast? |
10005 | Do you think then,said I,"that there is no such thing as natural inferiority and differences of races?" |
10005 | Do you think, father,said I,"that animal, or even vegetable life, could possibly exist in such a disruption as is supposed?" |
10005 | Do your vassals get rich by the bounty you give them? |
10005 | Does not Greece,said I,"furnish the clearest proof of the influence of moral causes on the character of nations? |
10005 | Good,said the other;"and what is my calling?" |
10005 | Have you always,he asked,"had the same number of acres in grain and grass under your new and old system?" |
10005 | Have you, then, no parties? |
10005 | How many do you now sell? |
10005 | How many head did you formerly sell in a year? |
10005 | How, then, am I to believe.....? |
10005 | How, then, do your associates continue stationary? |
10005 | I presume,said I,"that the champions who thus expose their persons and lives in the cause of another, are Glonglims?" |
10005 | I suppose,says he,"from the violence of these partisans, they are on different sides in religion or politics?" |
10005 | In such a case? 10005 Indeed!--and how many did you lose in the same time? |
10005 | Is he also a Glonglim? |
10005 | Is this custom,asked the Brahmin,"an advantage or a tax on your estate?" |
10005 | So it is; but what has that to do with rent? |
10005 | Some occasionally migrate, then? |
10005 | This unit, then,said my friend,"assumes different forms, and requires various remedies? |
10005 | What, father,said I,"could have given rise to so strange an opinion?" |
10005 | When can we set out, father? |
10005 | Which you expect will yield you more than the thirty did formerly? |
10005 | Who would be able to conquer us? |
10005 | Why do we like,he continued,"the smell of a beef- steak, or of a cup of tea, except for the pleasure we receive from their taste?" |
10005 | Why not? 10005 Why not?" |
10005 | Will you listen to me for one moment? |
10005 | You do not,said I,"examine witnesses who are interested?" |
10005 | You think, then,said I,"that the native of Kamtschatka has the advantage?" |
10005 | Your reasoning about the natives of Spanish America appears very probable,said the Brahmin;"but is it not equally applicable to your own country?" |
10005 | Have you, my good friend, seen my last essay on morbid action?" |
10005 | How few of the officers in your western armies, ever hesitate to march, at the head of their men, on a forlorn hope? |
10005 | How few of the officers in your western armies, ever hesitate to march, at the head of their men, on a forlorn hope? |
10005 | I asked him whether he thought if his countrymen were to shake off the yoke of the English, they could maintain their independence? |
10005 | I inquired if they travelled at the public expense or their own? |
10005 | I presume you marry late in life?" |
10005 | In the first raptures of requited affection, what lover thinks of difficulties? |
10005 | Is it not so?" |
10005 | Is there not, then, a convenience in separating these modifications( or_ forms_, if you prefer it) from one another, by different names?" |
10005 | Nay, more; if we were then tamely to tie up our hands, do you think that Bulderent and his men would consent to do the same? |
10005 | Pray, sir, how does it happen that you are now against him, when you were so lately sworn friends, and used to eat out of the same dish?" |
10005 | Shall I ever be rich?" |
10005 | What is it to one with a tooth- ache, that a savoury dish is placed before him? |
10005 | What, then, is your course in these cases?" |
10005 | Where is the mighty agent to rend off such a mass, and throw it to thirty times the earth''s diameter?" |
10005 | Who could suppose from the letters alone, that_ Wigurd_,_ Vindar_, and_ Avarabet_, were respectively intended for_ Godwin_,_ Darwin_, and_ Lavater_?] |
10005 | and how many even court the danger for the sake of the glory? |
10005 | and how many even court the danger for the sake of the glory? |
10005 | and who would take the same trouble, although they had the skill?" |
10005 | heat of cold-- north of south?" |
10005 | you have ambition among you?" |
13749 | Ca n''t it be forded with camels? |
13749 | Do they have railways in Yenghi Donia? |
13749 | Eat soup with a spoon? |
13749 | Ever hear of Dadur, the place of which the Persians tritely say:''Seeing that there is Dadur, why did Allah, then, make the infernal regions?'' 13749 Ever hear of Dadur?" |
13749 | General Roberts Sahib, Cabool to Kandahar? |
13749 | Gladstone koob or Salisbury koob? |
13749 | Kishtee ass? |
13749 | Knowing that you have been worried in the same way yourselves,says Abbas Kahu,"I have replied to them,''Is the Sahib a giraffe and I his keeper? |
13749 | Like the one at Iskenderi and Stamboul? |
13749 | No bridge? 13749 No village, with people to assist with poles or skins to make a raft?" |
13749 | Noon ass? |
13749 | Parsee namifami? |
13749 | Paruski ni? |
13749 | Sheerah ass? |
13749 | Some of you pedar sags have stolen my money; who is it? 13749 Sowari pool f pool koob; rupee- rupee Jcoob?" |
13749 | There will be no trouble about getting permission to go through Turkestan? |
13749 | These men are not bul- buls; then why do they sing? |
13749 | Well, what if he is the Padishah''s step- father? 13749 Well, yes, I understand; Afghanistan-- what of it?" |
13749 | What have you then besides bread? |
13749 | What is the fire yonder? |
13749 | What was that? 13749 What was the medicine you prescribed, Gray?" |
13749 | What''s the matter? 13749 What''s up now?" |
13749 | Where are you going? |
13749 | Where have you come from? |
13749 | Why the devil do n''t you put them out, as you are told, then? |
13749 | Yes; why do n''t you have railroads in Iran? 13749 ( Do you understand Persian?) 13749 ( How much money did the King give you?) 13749 ( am I hungry, thirsty, or ill?). 13749 ( how much money?) 13749 Addressing himself to me, he inquires:Sahib, Parses namifami?" |
13749 | Among the wiseacres gathered around me plying questions, is one who asks,"Chand menzils inja to London?" |
13749 | Beaching the pagoda, we pass, on the opposite shore, the town of Yang- tai(?). |
13749 | Dismounting, and allowing them to approach, in reply to my query of"Chi mi khoi?" |
13749 | He speaks of London, and wants to know about Mr. Gladstone and Lord Salisbury-- which is now Prime Minister? |
13749 | I wonder, and does it always rain so soft and noiselessly here as it does to- day? |
13749 | In reply to the general and stereotyped query,"Shoot anything?" |
13749 | Several war- junks are anchored before Yang- tai; unlike the peaceful(?) |
13749 | Stevens?" |
13749 | Suppose the Sahib''s iron horse was a wheel of fire, what harm would it do their country even then?" |
13749 | The joint query of"chand pool?" |
13749 | They gather in a crowd about me when I stay to seek refreshments; the general query of"What is he? |
13749 | They have no squeamishness whatever about his watching their own natatorial duties; why, then, should he shrink within himself and wave them off? |
13749 | What cares she for Ferenghi"sanitary fads?" |
13749 | What is to be done? |
13749 | What plans could they devise to keep out the English? |
13749 | What, after all, are the ambitions and enterprises of an individual, compared to the will and policy of an empire? |
13749 | Where do these interesting specimens of Beerjand''s weird population want to entice me to? |
13749 | Why, then, do you come to me? |
13749 | a cuckoo?" |
13749 | mashallah, what language does he speak?" |
13749 | no ferry- boat? |
13749 | no means of getting across?" |
13749 | nobody expected to ever see anything of you again; and so you got through all safe, eh?" |
13749 | one of the erring pair replies,"Yes, we shot several canvas- backs, but lost them in the reeds; did n''t we, old un?" |
13749 | pahni? |
13749 | what is he?" |
13749 | where is the khan and the inirza? |
13749 | where''s the khan?" |
13749 | why do they want to entice me anywhere? |
13749 | you wanchee room? |
1409 | And yet,--stranger paradox still,--was there ever any one willing to exchange his personality for another''s? |
1409 | And, if he did, what other business should he adopt? |
1409 | Are the laws we have learned to be true for matter true also for mind? |
1409 | Are the most religious peoples the most moral? |
1409 | But first, what do we know about its existence ourselves? |
1409 | But is it otherwise at home? |
1409 | But is it? |
1409 | But that portion of it which we each know as self, is it not like to a drop of rain seen in its falling through the air? |
1409 | Can it be that the personal, progressive West is wrong, and the impersonal, impassive East right? |
1409 | Do not our personal presentments mock each of us individually our lives long? |
1409 | Does not one''s own imagination elude one''s power to portray it? |
1409 | Hai, elder sister, augustly exists there sugar? |
1409 | Has there been any influence at work to differentiate us in this respect from Far Orientals? |
1409 | Have specially religious races been proportionally truth- telling ones? |
1409 | Have the least religious nations of Europe been any less truthful than the most bigoted? |
1409 | If individuality be a delusion of the mind, what motive potent enough to excite endeavor in the breast of an ordinary mortal remains? |
1409 | If not, has there been any other cause at work in the development of mankind tending to increase veracity? |
1409 | If the ego be but the passing shadow of the material brain, at the disintegration of the gray matter what will become of us? |
1409 | If you begin,"Well met, Green, how goes it?" |
1409 | In what, then? |
1409 | Is a like fate to be the lot of the soul? |
1409 | Is it likely, then, that in the most important case of all the rule should suddenly cease to hold? |
1409 | Is it not forever flitting will- o''-the- wisp- like ahead of us just beyond exact definition? |
1409 | Is it to be presumed that even Socrates chose Xantippe for her remarkable contrariety to himself? |
1409 | Is not its seeming wisdom rather the precociousness of what is destined never to go far? |
1409 | Is not our would- be slight unwittingly the reverse? |
1409 | Is there a man so poor in all that man holds dear that he does not keenly resent being accidentally mistaken for his neighbor? |
1409 | Nay, do we not cling even to its outward appearance? |
1409 | Now what does this strange impersonality betoken? |
1409 | Now what evidence have we that this analogy holds? |
1409 | Now, in what does this so- called personality consist? |
1409 | Now, the"augustlies"go almost without saying, but why is the sugar honorable? |
1409 | Shall we simply lapse into an indistinguishable part of the vast universe that compasses us round? |
1409 | Should we not refuse to tolerate a play that insisted on furnishing us with a full perspective of its characters''past? |
1409 | The T. H. M. The honorable sugar, augustly is it? |
1409 | They have to do with things which we know are transitory: how can they be immortal themselves? |
1409 | Was Loyola a gentleman whose assertions carried conviction other than to the stake? |
1409 | Was fanatic Spain remarkable for veracity? |
1409 | Were the eminently mundane burghers whom he persecuted noted for a pious superiority to fact? |
1409 | What they do with space in their paintings do we not with time in the case of our comedies, those acted pictures of life? |
1409 | Who can imagine foregoing his own self? |
1409 | Who has not been delightedly duped by the semi- disclosures of a dress? |
1409 | Who has not had a shock of day- dream desecration on chancing upon an illustrated edition of some book whose story he had lain to heart? |
1409 | Who has not in his dreams fallen repeatedly from giddy heights and invariably escaped unhurt? |
1409 | Who has not suspected through a veil a fairer face than veil ever hid? |
1409 | Who would expect of a mason an impersonal interest in the principles of the arch, or of a plumber a non- financial devotion to hydraulics? |
1409 | Why are these peoples so different from us in this most fundamental of considerations to any people, the consideration of themselves? |
1409 | Why should he adopt another line of business? |
1409 | Will analogy help to answer the grewsome riddle of the Sphinx? |
1409 | Yet who but has thus felt its force? |
15237 | An important point is, can a man on such food be fit for physical work? |
15237 | Certainly he has the choice, but does he avail himself of it to any considerable extent? |
15237 | Do you think that a Burmese boy would be allowed to birds''-nest or worry rats with a terrier, or go ferreting? |
15237 | If the ape tribe can thrive without added salt why should not man? |
15237 | It may be asked, says Professor Chittenden, was this diet at all adequate for the needs of the body-- sufficient for a man weighing 165 pounds? |
12282 | But how remedy the evil? 12282 From what book shall I read?" |
12282 | I beseech you to tell me, Socrates,said Phaedrus,"do you believe this tale?" |
12282 | Was not this my saying when I was yet in my country? 12282 What do I love when I love Thee?" |
12282 | ***** How shall we thus rightly read the Bible, for ethical and spiritual upbuilding? |
12282 | ***** It is a matter of perfect indifference where a thing originated the only question is; Is it true in and for itself? |
12282 | 1300(?) |
12282 | Again I hear a voice from the pews-- Who then save a scholar is competent for such a use of the Bible? |
12282 | Are we to quake in our shoes when a few ciphers are cut off from the roll of Israel''s impossible armies? |
12282 | But you say, Do not the Old Testament prophets surely point on to Christ? |
12282 | By the mind of God manifest in''the express image of His person?'' |
12282 | Can we improve upon their ritual? |
12282 | Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection? |
12282 | Deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
12282 | Had the ancient promise of prophecy failed? |
12282 | Had this been the case, where would the ethical forces of a new and higher life have risen? |
12282 | Have we good grounds for accepting it as such? |
12282 | Have you discovered the Bible? |
12282 | How could such a sublime conception as that of Moses have ripened in a people at this stage of their development? |
12282 | How many Bible Christians know their Bible thus? |
12282 | How restore to the communities their old rights and privileges, without unduly trenching upon rights and possessions that had since been acquired? |
12282 | I might have a rational explanation.... Now I have certainly not time for such inquiries; shall I tell you why? |
12282 | I no longer believe as I was taught about it: what, then, can I teach them?" |
12282 | I. Wherein lies this commanding rank of the Bible in the literature of ethical and spiritual power? |
12282 | If Moses was the human parent of this marvellous child, who fathered the"essential Christ"in Moses? |
12282 | In the Epistle of St. James, assuming the traditional authorship, how much of this theology can you find? |
12282 | Isaiah carries this message from God: To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me? |
12282 | It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? |
12282 | Micah asks,"What doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God?" |
12282 | My soul is athirst for God, yea, even for the Living God; When shall I come to appear before the presence of God? |
12282 | Nay, have we not overwhelming grounds for doubting it to be such?'' |
12282 | Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, With calves of a year old? |
12282 | Shall I give my first born for my transgression, The fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? |
12282 | Take the Bible out of Adam Bede and Dinah Morris, out of Robert Falconer and M. Myriel the blessed Bishop of D., and what would be left of them? |
12282 | The great Mother sings to herself: But he, the man- child glorious, Where tarries he the while? |
12282 | The question is, in no case,''Will you part with any utterance of God''s voice, whether through apostle or evangelist?'' |
12282 | Through the chorus of human voices have you heard the voice of the Eternal Power? |
12282 | We still ask whence? |
12282 | What artist dreamed this ethical and spiritual ideal? |
12282 | What can we make of Dante without some knowledge of Italy in the thirteenth century? |
12282 | What if Jehovah was but a name to the mass of the people? |
12282 | What if they continued to worship much as before, only no longer at the altars of Baal? |
12282 | What is there in these books which has led Christendom to assign to them so high an honor? |
12282 | What mean ye that ye beat my people to pieces, And grind the faces of the poor? |
12282 | What mind planned this process of a nation''s growth into a universal religion? |
12282 | What miscarriage can befall her who is nursed by Nature and tended by Providence? |
12282 | What shall be said when the morning stars sing together, and all the sons of God shout for joy that MAN is born upon the earth? |
12282 | What so fine in religious poetry as some of the strains from the Jewish Hymnal? |
12282 | What was to become of preachers if, after they had threatened destruction upon evil- doers, the Most High went back upon them thus? |
12282 | What will the Coming Man be like? |
12282 | What_ is_, without any doubt, a genuine portion of those writings which contain the message from God? |
12282 | When we have said this, have we accounted for it? |
12282 | When ye come to appear before me, Who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts? |
12282 | Where are to be found letters like those of Paul? |
12282 | Who begat this"holy thing"conceived in Israel and born of her at length in glorious beauty? |
12282 | Who is the real father of Jesus Christ? |
12282 | Who that has read Taine''s graphic portraiture of the Elizabethan age can fail ever thereafter to see Shakespeare stand forth vividly? |
12282 | Who that pretends to be a lover of Shakespeare is content with a scrappy reading of his immortal plays? |
12282 | Who that reads the story of the coming of the Hebrew Christ can doubt it? |
12282 | Who would think of an indiscriminate use of the original Shakespeare? |
12282 | Why should you defer to him in the one opinion and disregard him in the other? |
12282 | Will Humanity come to the birth with her beloved son? |
12282 | Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, Or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
12282 | Within the body of human"letters"have you found out the divine soul of the Bible? |
12282 | Yea, even for the living God: When shall I come to appear before the presence of God? |
12282 | [ 27] How then are we to know what words and deeds express the mind of God, are words of the Lord, examples He presents for our imitation? |
12282 | but only,''Is this particular word, or sentence, or passage, truly such an utterance? |
12282 | or can I endure to see the destruction of my kindred?'' |
15283 | Did they come from bodies of the same sort according to the general laws governing the production of living things, or did they arise spontaneously? |
15283 | How were they produced? |
13144 | ''Have you any mate?'' |
13144 | ''Well, well, it is very hard work?'' |
13144 | ''[ 10] Who was this Katherine Riche to whom he so carefully commends himself? |
13144 | ''[ 11] What would we not give for one of those''naughty ballads''today? |
13144 | A good ruler of her house? |
13144 | An Anglo- Saxon writer has imagined a dialogue with him:''Well, ploughman, how do you do your work?'' |
13144 | And how were they living? |
13144 | And what have Ausonius and his correspondents to say about this? |
13144 | And what is thine office? |
13144 | At what point did barbarism within become a wasting disease? |
13144 | At what point in the assault from without did the attack become fatal? |
13144 | But how did they feel and think and amuse themselves when they were not working? |
13144 | But was she? |
13144 | But what matter? |
13144 | But while this pleasant country house and senior common room life was going calmly on, what do we find happening in the history books? |
13144 | Cur non imus? |
13144 | Did people realize what was happening? |
13144 | Did the gloom of the Dark Ages cast its shadow before? |
13144 | Gone altogether? |
13144 | Had he loved before, under the alien skies where his youth was spent, some languid, exquisite lady of China, or hardy Tartar maid? |
13144 | How could they foresee the day when the Norman chronicler would marvel over the broken hypocausts of Caerleon? |
13144 | How could they imagine that anything so solid might conceivably disappear? |
13144 | How many of the literary critics, who chuckle over her, know that she never ought to have got into the Prologue at all? |
13144 | I_ passim_, 46, 87, 155 Roman Empire, 1- 17, 27, 42, 155 decline of, 1- 17; reasons for disintegration of, 14- 17; trade of, 1 ff? |
13144 | Is it not true to say that Venice was the proudest city on earth,_ la noble cite que l''en apele Venise, qui est orendroit la plus bele dou siecle_? |
13144 | It is true that the Pope excommunicated the Venetians when they first turned the armies against Zara, but what matter? |
13144 | Meanwhile what of little Katherine Riche? |
13144 | Miss Waddell has reminded us, on the authority of Saintsbury( whom else?) |
13144 | Now wol ye vouche- sauf, my lady dere? |
13144 | One day( may we not see him?) |
13144 | Quid stamus? |
13144 | Thereupon the bishop, who was standing near like a servant, drew closer and said:''Why do you do that, lord emperor? |
13144 | Thomas marked his bales of cloth thus, and what other armorial bearings did he need? |
13144 | Was it the removal of the legions from Britain, a distant people( as a Roman senator might have said) of whom we know nothing? |
13144 | Was it, as Polybius said, because people preferred amusements to children or wished to bring their children up in comfort? |
13144 | Was she religious? |
13144 | Was this policy of appeasement the fatal error? |
13144 | What hath thenne Flaundres, be Flemmyngis leffe or lothe But a lytelle madere and Flemmyshe cloothe? |
13144 | What is civilization and what progress? |
13144 | What might this be? |
13144 | What then did it feel like to live at a time when civilization was going down before the forces of barbarism? |
13144 | What will the wretches want next? |
13144 | When she has with some difficulty risen, do you know what her hours are? |
13144 | Why ca n''t we go away? |
13144 | Why did they not realize the magnitude of the disaster that was befalling them? |
13144 | Why( the insistent question forces itself) did this civilization lose the power to reproduce itself? |
13144 | [ 15] Through the leafy forest, Bovo went a- riding And his pretty Merswind trotted on beside him-- Why are we standing still? |
13144 | [ 16] Is it not Madame Eglentyne to the life? |
13144 | [ 9] What, they lived once thus in Venice, where the merchants were the kings, Where St Mark''s is, where the Doges used to we d the sea with rings? |
13144 | [ Footnote J: Possibly an inn with that name(?).] |
13144 | is there nothing left over from last night?" |
13144 | she would have said;"who ever heard of such a thing? |
13144 | what shall we have to drink? |
14196 | ''Tis folly to fight, we both lose by battle; whose is the gain? |
14196 | How about her fitness for marriage? |
14196 | How do people get along who get less than we do? |
14196 | Is it the best I can do? |
14196 | Should I rest now; have I the right to rest? |
14196 | What right has a poor woman anyway to desires above her station, and why does not she resign herself to her lot? |
14196 | Where does it all go? |
14196 | And who sets the pace for her, for all of her group; who establishes the standard of expenditure? |
14196 | But we are concerned with these questions:"What happens to her in marriage?" |
14196 | Can one purge a woman of futile longings and strivings, rid her of natural fears and even of absurd fears? |
14196 | Can the home be altered to bring in more of the social spirit and yet maintain its great virtues, its extraordinary attraction for the human heart? |
14196 | Did the housewife of a past generation go through the same stage? |
14196 | Discreditable to those women who use it? |
14196 | Discreditable to women? |
14196 | Does a strenuous existence make against easy motherhood? |
14196 | Here the question arises: Is there room in our society for matrimony and a business career? |
14196 | How avert such a thing? |
14196 | How does this apply to the nervous housewife? |
14196 | How often is it closely approximated? |
14196 | Is the average man''s impression the correct one? |
14196 | Is the increasing incidence of divorce a revolt against domesticity? |
14196 | Is the maternal instinct waning in intensity in this period of feminization? |
14196 | Is the modern woman more susceptible to the effects of pregnancy,--less resistant to the strain of childbearing and childbirth? |
14196 | Is there a subconsciousness, and what is it? |
14196 | Men in comfortable places cry"Why worry?" |
14196 | Of what use is it to raise taste when this is injured at the very outset of life by giving bad taste a fascinating attraction? |
14196 | Of what use is it to teach children good English when the newspaper deliberately teaches them the cheapest slang? |
14196 | Of what use is it to teach them manners and kindliness when the newspaper constantly spreads boorishness and"rough house"conduct? |
14196 | Or are we dealing with the incorrigible disposition of man to glorify the past? |
14196 | Repair of the parts immediately is indicated, but in what percentage of cases is this done? |
14196 | Second-- Is it labor saving? |
14196 | Shall it be the nowadays emphasized moral suasion, the appeal to conscience and reason? |
14196 | Shall it be the old- fashioned corporal punishment of a past generation, the appeal to pain and blame? |
14196 | She came out of her dereliction dazed; could it be she who had done this, who had descended into the vilest degradation? |
14196 | She was no longer dissatisfied, no longer eager for romance; but could she live with him if she had been unfaithful? |
14196 | Should a man knowingly marry such a woman? |
14196 | The first question asked about a woman is,"Is she pretty?" |
14196 | The tests by which the good household device ought to be judged are these: First-- Is it efficient? |
14196 | The woman wonders whether her husband will long be able to keep up,--and then"what will become of us?" |
14196 | There have always been some bad, careless, selfish mothers; has their number increased? |
14196 | Third-- Is it time saving? |
14196 | This has been done so often and so effectively(?) |
14196 | What are the causes of the change? |
14196 | What are the chief sources of conflict? |
14196 | What are the difficulties confronting the partners which impede happiness and especially which bring the neurosis of the housewife? |
14196 | What are these phases that are attended with difficulty? |
14196 | What can emotion produce that is pathological, detrimental to well- being? |
14196 | What part does a subconscious personality take in all this and in further symptoms? |
14196 | What system will do that? |
14196 | What will she do with her time; what will the better- to- do woman do? |
14196 | Why is this? |
14196 | is his cry;"Must we spend as much as we do?" |
14846 | And do you mean to say,said the New- Zealander,"that the best scullers of England were beaten by a boating- man from the Seine?" |
14846 | _ Quis supperabit?_asked the learned Dr. B. |
14846 | _ The liver is very prone to become affected._The question is, first, Is"an evil liver"or"a good liver"here intended? |
14846 | (_ Lady Festus At Home_--2 A.M.)_ Hostess._"ONLY JUST COME, SIR GEORGE? |
14846 | (_ To the other W.W._) See that extraordinary decision of old JUBBER''s in_ Biling_ v._ Bulgin_? |
14846 | Ah, and''ow_ was_ he? |
14846 | But is this enough? |
14846 | But tell me, has there been a national defeat?" |
14846 | Could n''t you take in my card to Mr. TANFIELD? |
14846 | Crois- tu que pour HIPPOLYTE j''ai le moindre estime? |
14846 | Do you wait for him? |
14846 | I suppose there''ll be a chance of getting in presently, eh? |
14846 | If"convenable,"why not"inconvenable"?] |
14846 | If, after dinner, a worthy convivialist observed,"I see ROBERTS,"would not the question naturally be,"How many of''em?" |
14846 | Ingenious-- but a trifle transparent that, eh? |
14846 | Kin I see Sir HALFRID ALLABYE a moment? |
14846 | Que la rose n''est pas rose avant qu''elle pourrisse? |
14846 | Que veut dire Madame? |
14846 | Share you not that which shamed him most? |
14846 | The tower he reared would he attack, Because-- they have not called him back Like CINCINNATUS from the plough? |
14846 | Thought you had orders to let Counsel in before the general public? |
14846 | Wait for him? |
14846 | What have I to do with pollings? |
14846 | What should it say, Count HARRY''s ghost, Could it beside your couch appear, And whisper in his foeman''s ear? |
14846 | Who originated it? |
14846 | Who''s that in the box? |
14846 | Why, my dear MUTTON, wo n''t they let you in? |
14846 | You who against the Mob were loud, With mockery MARCIUS well might own? |
14846 | [ 2] Tu me coupe la parole d''une façon exécrable-- Le vice, OENONE, sais- tu ce que c''est que le vice? |
14846 | _ Doork._ You a Witness in this case, Sir? |
14846 | _ Early Visitor._"WHY, WHAT ON EARTH ARE YOU DOING, MATHILDE,--TURNING YOUR BOUDOIR INTO A POULTRY YARD?" |
14846 | _ The M.M._ But they''ll be rising for luncheon in an hour or so, and some will be coming out then, surely? |
14846 | _ You_ bare State secrets to the crowd? |
14846 | _ You_ flaunt the Press against the Throne? |
14846 | and R. differ on this? |
13206 | Am I not your mother? 13206 Anthony,"says Athanasius,"became known not by worldly wisdom, nor by any art, but solely by piety, and that this was the gift of God who can deny?" |
13206 | Monk,fiercely demands Voltaire,"Monk, what is that profession of thine? |
13206 | Whence,he cried,"has this man come to us, wanting to destroy the rule of this monastery? |
13206 | Where is the town,cries Montalembert,"which has not been founded or enriched or protected by some religious community? |
13206 | Who can describe the carnage of that night? 13206 328 Was the Suppression Justifiable? 13206 : that King Henry was the Supreme Head of the Church? |
13206 | Am I to blame for this, That here come those that worship me? |
13206 | Are the flowers in the cup? |
13206 | Are the ignorance and the filth of the begging friars offensive? |
13206 | But does this truth lead the Christian to the monastic method? |
13206 | But what does such a conception involve? |
13206 | But what was the nature of the office as held by the saint? |
13206 | But what was the nature of this British monasticism? |
13206 | But, if it be admitted that the marks did appear, as it is not improbable, how shall the phenomenon be explained? |
13206 | Christians, will you ever repudiate Calvary? |
13206 | Did Rome never adorn men in garments of shame and parade them through streets to be mocked by the populace, and finally burned at the stake? |
13206 | Did the commissioners take a few altar- cloths and decorate their horses? |
13206 | Did the monastic institution command the unanimous approval of the church from the outset? |
13206 | Does the new age demand liberty? |
13206 | Does the new age reject monastic seclusion? |
13206 | For whom do we carry arms? |
13206 | How is this? |
13206 | How is your king called?" |
13206 | How long must we refrain from driving these detestable monks out of Rome? |
13206 | How long wilt thou remain in the shadow of roofs, and in the smoky dungeons of cities? |
13206 | If this be, Can I work miracles and not be saved?" |
13206 | Is Protestantism a curse or a blessing? |
13206 | Is dinner ready? |
13206 | Is it rational when danger is on every side, to remain where it is the greatest?" |
13206 | Is it shameful to follow them, and are we not rather disgraced by not following them?" |
13206 | Is the pavement swept? |
13206 | Is the sofa smooth? |
13206 | Loyalty? |
13206 | Patrick, St., 122; labors in Ireland, 123; was he a Romanist? |
13206 | Potitianus, a young officer of rank, read the life of Anthony, and cried to his fellow- soldier:"Tell me, I pray thee, whither all our labors tend? |
13206 | Richard Bagot, a Catholic, in a recent article on the question,"Will England become Catholic?" |
13206 | Tell me, pray, amid all this, is there room for the thought of God?" |
13206 | The churchmen argued:"If he plunders the monasteries, will not his next step be to plunder the churches?" |
13206 | The problem is reduced to this, Was the Reformation desirable? |
13206 | To her piteous entreaties, they said:"Why do you, who are already stricken with age, pour forth such cries and lamentations?" |
13206 | To what shall the development of the community system be attributed? |
13206 | Together they converse of things human and divine, Paul, close to the dust of the grave, asks, Are new houses springing up in ancient cities? |
13206 | Was the self- renunciation of Jesus like that of the ascetics, with their ecstasies and self- punishments? |
13206 | Were not the Bibles burned in France, in Germany, in Spain, in Holland, in England, dear to the hearts of the reformers? |
13206 | Were the altar- cloths dear to Catholic hearts? |
13206 | Were the charges against the monks true? |
13206 | What am I? |
13206 | What are harmful indulgences? |
13206 | What can be our greatest hope in the palace but to be friend to the Emperor? |
13206 | What do we seek? |
13206 | What dost thou in the world, my brother, with thy soul greater than the world? |
13206 | What government directs the world? |
13206 | What hast thou been hearing? |
13206 | What is it I can have done to merit this? |
13206 | What is it to keep the body in subjection? |
13206 | What is it to love the world? |
13206 | What is the name of your province?" |
13206 | What must one do to deny self? |
13206 | What tears are equal to its agony? |
13206 | What was the effect upon the mind of the thoughtful? |
13206 | What will you say now? |
13206 | When it was a pageant, a ritualism, an arm of the state, a vain philosophy, a superstition, a formula, how could it save, if ever so dominant? |
13206 | When shall this be?" |
13206 | Where is the church which owes not to them a patron, a relic, a pious and popular tradition? |
13206 | Why do we not stone them or hurl them into the Tiber? |
13206 | Will you be loyal to Beelzebub? |
13206 | Will you''make a covenant with Death and Hell''? |
13206 | Would England and the world be better off under the sway of medieval religion than under the influence of modern Protestantism? |
13206 | Writing to the king, he said:"Man is against you; God is against you; the universe is against you; what can you look for but destruction?" |
13206 | You welcome beasts, why not a man? |
13206 | _ Disorders and Oppositions_ But was there no protest against the progress of these ascetic teachings? |
13206 | _ Henry''s Disposal of Monastic Revenues_ What use did Henry make of the revenues that fell into his hands? |
13206 | is there any of you halt or maim''d? |
15713 | Aside from the name of the country whence it emanates and the expression of value, what do we find in it to study? |
130 | A man chooses to have an emotion about the largeness of the world; why should he not choose to have an emotion about its smallness? |
130 | And to the question,"What is meant by the Fall?" |
130 | And what is the matter with the anti- patriot? |
130 | And what is the matter with the candid friend? |
130 | Are there no other stories in the world except yours; and are all men busy with your business? |
130 | But do we want so crude a consummation? |
130 | But do we want the universe smashed up for fun? |
130 | But even supposing that those doctrines do include those truths, why can not you take the truths and leave the doctrines? |
130 | But how can this be an answer when even in saying"Japan has become progressive,"we really only mean,"Japan has become European"? |
130 | But how can we rush if we are, perhaps, in advance of our time? |
130 | But the question is, do we want to have longer and longer noses? |
130 | But we may ask in conclusion, if this be what drives men mad, what is it that keeps them sane? |
130 | But what are we to say of the fanatic who wrecks this world out of hatred of the other? |
130 | But what do we mean by making things better? |
130 | Can I thank no one for the birthday present of birth? |
130 | Can he hate it enough to change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth changing? |
130 | Can he look up at its colossal evil without once feeling despair? |
130 | Can he look up at its colossal good without once feeling acquiescence? |
130 | Can he, in short, be at once not only a pessimist and an optimist, but a fanatical pessimist and a fanatical optimist? |
130 | Christianity had also felt this opposition of the martyr to the suicide: had it perhaps felt it for the same reason? |
130 | Could I not be grateful to Santa Claus when he put in my stockings the gift of two miraculous legs? |
130 | How can I answer if there is no eternal test? |
130 | How can I denounce a man for skinning cats, if he is only now what I may possibly become in drinking a glass of milk? |
130 | How can it be noble to wish to make one''s life infinite and yet mean to wish to make it immortal? |
130 | How can man be approximately free of fine emotions, able to swing them in a clear space without breakage or wrong? |
130 | How can one say that Christmas celebrations are not suitable to the twenty- fifth of a month? |
130 | How can we contrive to be at once astonished at the world and yet at home in it? |
130 | How can we make a man always dissatisfied with his work, yet always satisfied with working? |
130 | How can we rush to catch a train which may not arrive for a few centuries? |
130 | How can we say that the Church wishes to bring us back into the Dark Ages? |
130 | How can you overtake Jones if you walk in the other direction? |
130 | I am not saying this fierceness was right; but why was it so fierce? |
130 | I said to him,"Shall I tell you where the men are who believe most in themselves? |
130 | If Cinderella says,"How is it that I must leave the ball at twelve?" |
130 | If I ask,"Why credulous?" |
130 | If better conditions will make the poor more fit to govern themselves, why should not better conditions already make the rich more fit to govern them? |
130 | If clean homes and clean air make clean souls, why not give the power( for the present at any rate) to those who undoubtedly have the clean air? |
130 | If sweaters can be behind the current morality, why should not philanthropists be in front of it? |
130 | If the standard changes, how can there be improvement, which implies a standard? |
130 | If you are merely a sceptic, you must sooner or later ask yourself the question,"Why should ANYTHING go right; even observation and deduction? |
130 | If you like to put it so, shall it be a reasonable or an unreasonable loyalty? |
130 | If you see clearly the kernel of common- sense in the nut of Christian orthodoxy, why can not you simply take the kernel and leave the nut? |
130 | In Sir Oliver Lodge''s interesting new Catechism, the first two questions were:"What are you?" |
130 | In what world of riddles was born this monstrous murder and this monstrous meekness? |
130 | Is he enough of a pagan to die for the world, and enough of a Christian to die to it? |
130 | Is there any answer to the argument that those who have breathed clean air had better decide for those who have breathed foul? |
130 | Is there any answer to the proposition that those who have had the best opportunities will probably be our best guides? |
130 | It may be so, and if it is so how are we to test it? |
130 | Perhaps you know that you are the King of England; but why do you care? |
130 | The Evolutionist says,"Where do you draw the line?" |
130 | The question was,"What did the first frog say?" |
130 | The real problem is-- Can the lion lie down with the lamb and still retain his royal ferocity? |
130 | They are both movements in the brain of a bewildered ape?" |
130 | They do not prove that Adam was not responsible to God; how could they prove it? |
130 | They might reasonably rejoin( in a stentorian chorus),"How the blazes could we discover, without being angry, whether angry people see red?" |
130 | Thus, if one asked an ordinary intelligent man, on the spur of the moment,"Why do you prefer civilization to savagery?" |
130 | To the question,"What are you?" |
130 | Was Lord Bacon a bootblack? |
130 | Was the Duke of Marlborough a crossing sweeper? |
130 | We say there must be a primal loyalty to life: the only question is, shall it be a natural or a supernatural loyalty? |
130 | What could be better than to have all the fun of discovering South Africa without the disgusting necessity of landing there? |
130 | What could be the nature of the thing which one could abuse first because it would not fight, and second because it was always fighting? |
130 | What could it all mean? |
130 | What is the evil of the man commonly called an optimist? |
130 | What is the matter with the pessimist? |
130 | What on earth is the current morality, except in its literal sense-- the morality that is always running away? |
130 | What was this Christianity which always forbade war and always produced wars? |
130 | Who ever found an ant- hill decorated with the statues of celebrated ants? |
130 | Who has seen a bee- hive carved with the images of gorgeous queens of old? |
130 | Why should a man surrender his dignity to the solar system any more than to a whale? |
130 | Why should not good logic be as misleading as bad logic? |
130 | Why, then, should one worry particularly to call it large? |
130 | and"What, then, is the meaning of the Fall of Man?" |
130 | her godmother might answer,"How is it that you are going there till twelve?" |
10533 | E''en in thy desert what is like to thee? 10533 Old Marlborough is dying,"said the wit;"but who can tell? |
10533 | Why did he love her? 10533 Why,"said she,"should we marry at our age? |
10533 | And among the Pagan nations, who does not admire the heroism of such women as we have already noticed? |
10533 | And even if the form remains, what is a mortal body without the immortal soul which animates it? |
10533 | And if we do suffer, what of that? |
10533 | And shall a woman dare to take to herself that man whom Nature meant to be the ornament and benefactor of the human race? |
10533 | And the voices which inspired the Maid of Orleans herself,--what were these? |
10533 | And what young woman with such a nature and under such circumstances could resist the influence of such a teacher? |
10533 | And who can point out any fundamental inferiority or superiority between them? |
10533 | And why not, since they have more leisure for literary pursuits than men? |
10533 | And, as a wedded wife, why should she conquer it? |
10533 | Are not all His ways mysterious, never to be explained by the reason of man? |
10533 | As a rule, is she not already better educated than her husband? |
10533 | But Christianity said,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
10533 | Can any words be as vivid as a sensation? |
10533 | Did not the occasion seem to warrant something extraordinary? |
10533 | Do not well- educated women speak French before their brothers can translate the easiest lines of Virgil? |
10533 | Do we wish to enthrone them in the chairs of our universities, to deliver oracles, harangues, and dissertations? |
10533 | Do you admire the one who prevailed over him? |
10533 | Does any one doubt or deny that the sphere of women_ is_ different from the sphere of men? |
10533 | From lips like those, what precept failed to move? |
10533 | Have they not quickness, brilliancy, sentiment, acuteness of observation, good sense, and even genius? |
10533 | He suffered for our sake, shall we not suffer for his cause?" |
10533 | How could she thus triumph over all the inequalities of feudalism unless divinely commissioned? |
10533 | How could she work what seemed to be almost miracles if she had not a supernatural power to assist her? |
10533 | How could she, unacquainted with wars and sieges, show the necessary military skill and genius? |
10533 | How long her fame will last, who can tell? |
10533 | However domestic she may be, can not she still paint and sing, and read and talk on the grandest subjects? |
10533 | If she was sent by a voice that spoke to her soul, and that voice was from God, what was human greatness to her? |
10533 | In America, what single novel ever equalled the success of"Uncle Tom''s Cabin"? |
10533 | Is human love the fruit of human will?" |
10533 | Is she not really more privileged than her husband or brother, with more time and less harassing cares and anxieties? |
10533 | Is this statement denied? |
10533 | Is woman, in restricting herself to her sphere, thereby debarred from the pleasures of literature and art? |
10533 | It is harder to tell what captured her, for who can explain the mysteries of love? |
10533 | May He not choose such instruments as He pleases? |
10533 | Now, what is meant by a high education for women? |
10533 | O Death, where is thy sting?" |
10533 | She doubtless will live as long as any English novelist; but do those who amuse live like those who save? |
10533 | Should women murmur because they can not be superior in everything, when it is conceded that they are superior in the best thing? |
10533 | Take away intellect from woman, and what is she but a toy or a slave? |
10533 | The question is, Is it wise for boys and girls to pursue the same studies in the more difficult branches of knowledge? |
10533 | To some it may seem exaggerated in its transports; but can transports be too highly colored? |
10533 | True it is that the impression we receive of human life is not always pleasant; but who in any community can bear the severest scrutiny of neighbors? |
10533 | Was Josephine to blame because she loved a selfish man after she was repudiated? |
10533 | What can satisfy a restless and ambitious woman whose happiness is in external pleasures? |
10533 | What could be more flattering even to a woman of the world, especially if this man had noble traits and great cultivation? |
10533 | What good can I do? |
10533 | What is Christmas without the sentiments which hallow the evergreen, the anthem, the mistletoe, the family reunion? |
10533 | What is impossible for God to do? |
10533 | What is inspiration? |
10533 | What man does not accept woman as a fellow- laborer in the field of letters? |
10533 | What schools are better kept than those by women? |
10533 | What sympathy could feudal barons have with a low- born peasant girl? |
10533 | What was his glory, as a conqueror, compared with the cause she loved, trodden under foot by an iron, rigid, jealous, irresistible despotism? |
10533 | What was rank or learning to her? |
10533 | What would become of our world if men and women were left to choose their partners with the eye of unclouded reason? |
10533 | When did supernatural voices first begin to utter the power of God? |
10533 | When will the voices of inspiration cease to be heard on earth? |
10533 | Who can deny that the daemon of Socrates was something more than a fancied voice? |
10533 | Who can explain such mysteries? |
10533 | Who can sit in judgment on the ways in which Providence is seen to act? |
10533 | Who can tell? |
10533 | Who could save it? |
10533 | Who could stand before such insinuations? |
10533 | Who denies the insight, the superior tact, the genius of woman? |
10533 | Who laughs at blue- stockings? |
10533 | Who now sneers at the intellect of a woman? |
10533 | Why have I chosen her as one of the Beacon Lights of history? |
10533 | Why may not women cope with men in the proudest intellectual tournaments? |
10533 | Why should a young woman have selected such books to translate? |
10533 | Why should not the most unquestioning faith have preserved her from the charge of heresy? |
10533 | Why should the priests of that age have treated her as a witch, when she showed all the traits of an angel? |
10533 | Why should they not become great linguists, and poets, and novelists, and artists, and critics, and historians? |
10533 | Will the witty sayings of Dickens be cherished like the almost inspired truths of Plato, of Bacon, of Burke? |
10533 | Would she really exchange her graceful labors for the rough and turbulent work of men? |
11011 | All right? |
11011 | And for Uhlans? |
11011 | And the French? |
11011 | Any one else here speak English? |
11011 | Are all the bridges down? |
11011 | Captain Edwards''s compliments,he said,"and will you be so kind as to explain to me exactly where you think the Uhlans are hidden?" |
11011 | Captain,I asked,"do you think there is any danger in my staying here?" |
11011 | Dear little lady,he said,"I wonder if there is any tea left for me?" |
11011 | Did I live alone? |
11011 | Do you know where it is? |
11011 | Do you think,he replied,"that you could get me a couple of fresh eggs at half- past seven and let me have a cold wash- up?" |
11011 | How far off is it? |
11011 | How much risk am I running by remaining here? |
11011 | Is there anything I can do for you, captain? |
11011 | Live here with your daughter? |
11011 | Live here? |
11011 | Lived here long? |
11011 | Married? |
11011 | May I be very indiscreet? |
11011 | Some of us will get killed, but what of that? 11011 Staying on?" |
11011 | Was I afraid? |
11011 | Was n''t that your daughter I met? |
11011 | Water? |
11011 | Well, Amelie? |
11011 | Well, then,I replied,"do n''t you want to sleep here to- night?" |
11011 | What are you doing here? |
11011 | What are you doing here? |
11011 | What are you doing here? |
11011 | What does that mean? |
11011 | What regiment? |
11011 | What town is that? |
11011 | What town is that? |
11011 | What was that? |
11011 | What''s that thing? |
11011 | When? |
11011 | Where are they? |
11011 | Where are you going? |
11011 | Where did you come from? |
11011 | Who put it there? |
11011 | Wooded all the way? |
11011 | You are not afraid? |
11011 | You do n''t live here alone? |
11011 | You want to come back? |
11011 | --but where was the good? |
11011 | Are you answered? |
11011 | Being caught, he looked up at once and said:"So you are not afraid?" |
11011 | Besides, did you ever know the English bulldog to let go? |
11011 | But did n''t I come near to losing it? |
11011 | But who knows? |
11011 | Did I keep it to myself well? |
11011 | Do you understand?" |
11011 | He looked a little surprised, asked a few questions-- how long they had been there? |
11011 | He looked at me a moment before he asked,"You want to know the truth?" |
11011 | He looked at me for the first time-- and softened his tone a bit-- my white hair and beastly accent, I suppose-- as he asked:"What is it for?" |
11011 | How far are we from Paris?" |
11011 | I am afraid he found it so, because he said at once,"Could you give me a drink before I go?" |
11011 | I asked what that was for? |
11011 | I had not been out there since Saturday night-- was it less than forty- eight hours before? |
11011 | I looked at it-- and for the first time it occurred to me to say,"What is that?" |
11011 | I might have replied literally,"Offer? |
11011 | I wanted to ask,"When will it be the''last minute''--and what does the''last minute''mean?" |
11011 | I went out to the gate where the corporal of the guard was standing, and asked him,"Do I hear cannon?" |
11011 | If that-- why not here? |
11011 | If we screen our hospital behind a building and a shell comes over and blows us up, how can we swear the shell was aimed at us?" |
11011 | In the back of my mind-- pushed back as hard as I could-- stood the question-- what was to become of all this? |
11011 | Is it not a pity, for early association''s sake, that it has not one more? |
11011 | Is n''t that droll? |
11011 | Is n''t the mind a queer thing? |
11011 | It is a compelling idea, is n''t it? |
11011 | Of course I do not deny that I shall miss the inspiration of your contradictions-- or do you call it repartee? |
11011 | Often they disappear from view, not because they have passed a horizon line, but simply because they have passed out of the range of my vision-? |
11011 | So I said,"Amelie, do you want to do me a great service?" |
11011 | That seemed to mean that the heaviest firing was over the hill and not on it,--or did it mean that the battle was receding? |
11011 | The only thing I had the sense to call out was:--"Where''d you come from?" |
11011 | The"Paths of Glory lead but to the grave,"so what matters it, really, out by what door one goes? |
11011 | Things like that make a man feel immune-- but Who knows?" |
11011 | Was it possible that it was only a week ago that I had heard the drum beat for the disarming of the Seine et Marne? |
11011 | Was there really going to come a day when all the beauty around me would not be a mockery? |
11011 | What do you think of that? |
11011 | What was the good? |
11011 | What would they have done if the detachment of Uhlans we are watching for had dashed up that hill-- as they might have?" |
11011 | When I had explained, he simply said,"Rough road?" |
11011 | When I said,"Best girl?" |
11011 | When they can not, what then? |
11011 | Who knows which of us is right?--or if our difference of opinion may not be a difference in our years? |
11011 | Who knows which of us is right?--or if our difference of opinion may not be a difference in our years? |
11011 | Who knows? |
11011 | Who knows? |
11011 | Will you please gather up what you wish to save, and it can be hidden there?" |
11011 | You are not afraid?" |
11011 | You ask me also how it happens that I am living again"near by Quincy?" |
11011 | and if I had seen them? |
11011 | how many? |
11011 | where they were? |
15751 | 6s._= Capes( Bernard).= WHY DID HE DO IT? |
14492 | Can they heal the sick? |
14492 | Can_ girls_ learn anything? |
14492 | Do you know what that means? 14492 How can you go''round''a''square''?" |
14492 | Is it true they have been studying for four years in a foreign land? |
14492 | Is self- supporting work a missionary work? 14492 What makes these girls look so different from the other Chinese women who come here?" |
14492 | Will they live in Kiukiang? |
14492 | After a while one of the girls came back and said,''My face is clean now, is it not?'' |
14492 | An explanation of this was afforded Dr. Hü, by a remark which she overheard:"How can we stand having this hospital closed? |
14492 | And if all money received goes again into the work, to increase its efficiency, why may it not be counted missionary? |
14492 | As she was starting for Chicago at the end of May, she wrote Dr. Danforth:"Do you think I shall be able to see much clinic in two weeks? |
14492 | As the company slowly proceeded up the Bund, the missionaries were besieged with eager questions:"Are they Chinese women?" |
14492 | As they came up an old woman who carried one corner of the bamboo bed called out,''Doctor, have you opened your accounts yet?'' |
14492 | Assuredly yes; for is not the money thus gained used in giving relief to the poor?... |
14492 | But what did you call the writing on the stones in the graveyard? |
14492 | Can any one dare to think,''What is the use to teach these Chinese people?''" |
14492 | Can not Mrs. Ahok make an exception and come on this occasion?" |
14492 | Do you think we ought to refuse that offer, which is a wonderful one, because the church has only just been established there? |
14492 | Finally the woman said,"Why do n''t you answer me? |
14492 | He wanted me to do what? |
14492 | How can we undertake to help spread medical education in China with the limited means at our command? |
14492 | How could you hear unless I came to tell you? |
14492 | How could you know the needs of China without hearing them? |
14492 | How do you suppose he found out about the matter? |
14492 | How many physicians are there to minister to this vast mass of humanity? |
14492 | I have never seen_ them_ yet; so why should I come so far to see other places? |
14492 | I left my little boy, my husband, my mother-- all this: for what purpose, do you think? |
14492 | I said,''Do you want me, or do you want the idols? |
14492 | If we ask,''What would Jesus do?'' |
14492 | If_ you_ can not, will you cause others to come, by sending them and doing what you can to help them to come?" |
14492 | Is n''t that splendid?" |
14492 | Missionary work? |
14492 | No one could resist Dr. Mary Stone''s persuasive tones as she went up and down the aisles asking,''Wo n''t you join?'' |
14492 | One morning as she was going down to breakfast some one asked,"How is our little China girl this morning?" |
14492 | One woman who heard her sing asked,"Why do you let her go back? |
14492 | Shall we simply take unto ourselves a few students as assistants, and after training them for a few years turn them out as doctors? |
14492 | So she asked an old"literary man"standing near her,"Ibah, are you glad to see us building? |
14492 | So what do you think I do? |
14492 | So wherever we go we must think how to benefit our people, and not do as we please, and then how can we be proud?" |
14492 | The first question asked was,"Please give your reasons for coming to study medicine?" |
14492 | The_ New York Herald_ gave a long and enthusiastic report of her work, ending with the words:"''Am I not fortunate? |
14492 | Was that a prescription or a proscription?" |
14492 | Was that a prescription or a subscription?" |
14492 | What was it we had in church last Sunday? |
14492 | When she would ask,"Can you stand them a little tighter?" |
14492 | Where comes the time and strength to teach the students as they should be taught? |
14492 | Will you buy one-- a good one-- for me?" |
14492 | Will you come back to China with me?" |
14492 | You wonder how I know it? |
15092 | But what village is_ not_ the peculiar property of the race? |
15092 | Did I say I loved you, Mary? |
15092 | Do you know,she cried,"I have just learned that we were about to leave the place without visiting one of its greatest curiosities? |
15092 | Is it not so, my friend? 15092 There are the rabbits to hear from, the pigeons, the sparrows, the mole, and the striped snake who lives by the garden gate?" |
15092 | What''s coming next? |
15092 | What, nothing? 15092 Who is she?" |
15092 | Why does not Mr. Harrison come himself? |
15092 | *****_ Quid me ploras? |
15092 | And rejoiced still more when we were out of school? |
15092 | And yet, who would have the heart to slander the daisy, or cause a blush of shame to tint its whiteness? |
15092 | But then one wakes, and where am I? |
15092 | But who is Mr. Miller, and what has he done? |
15092 | Can you--_will_ you not love me?" |
15092 | Could you offer me a fly, or a beetle? |
15092 | Do they read Byron? |
15092 | Do you find yourself at home in this life, madame?" |
15092 | Gaiser_) 92"Which in infancy lisped"246"Who Said Rats?" |
15092 | Had this exquisite creature, after all, no better sense of the appropriate? |
15092 | He is right, for the bat whirrs up to the ceiling and from that height accosts us in a squeaking voice:"I am weak- eyed, am I? |
15092 | How arraign Sam of harboring murderous designs which he had himself implanted in his bosom? |
15092 | How, indeed, expect him to comprehend conversation so entirely foreign to his experience? |
15092 | If the fancy of an unreal crime almost drove me mad, what must be the remorse of an actual criminal?" |
15092 | Let me see, what mandarin shall I murder? |
15092 | Nonne decessi gravis senectute? |
15092 | Piguet_ 53 Watering the Cattle_ Peter Moran_ 171 Wayside Inn, The( After_ Hill_) 107 Weber, Von, Last Moments of 206 What Was That Knot Tied For? |
15092 | Polly held her up, and she cunningly combed her furry wings with her hind feet, and said:"Polly, dear, I itch dreadfully; do you mind plain speaking? |
15092 | She raised her luminous eyes to his, and murmured reproachfully:"Why speak to me of Life? |
15092 | They will carry off this casket that was my father''s-- this locket, with the hair of-- of-- what the deuce was her name? |
15092 | Was a glimpse ever caught of Fairyland there? |
15092 | What do you think she gave me? |
15092 | Why ca n''t you keep your forgiveness until it''s wanted?" |
15092 | Why do n''t you stay at home, in your brick cages that stand on heaps of flat stones? |
15092 | Will you marry me?" |
15092 | With such a school record as this, is it to be wondered at that we rejoiced when school was out? |
15092 | Yet how could he argue and expostulate against himself? |
15092 | _ THE QUEEN''S CLOSET._ Did anybody ever see a fairy in the city? |
15092 | and my wings are leathery? |
15092 | no hope? |
15092 | sang out that young gentleman,"what new deviltry are you up to? |
15092 | sobbed Constance, falling upon the sofa,"hast thou not made me what I am?" |
16058 | Does it act on the atoms themselves, or on molecules, or sometimes on one and sometimes on the other? |
16058 | Is this done in order to preserve the difference of seven from its comrade? |
16058 | One constantly asks oneself: What is the significance of these minute changes? |
16058 | What are they, then, these bubbles, or rather, what is their content, the force which can blow bubbles in a substance of infinite density? |
16058 | and in steel is the distortion permanent? |
14002 | And he fell to the earth and heard a voice saying unto him:''Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?'' 14002 And he said:''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
14002 | And he trembling and astonished, said:''Lord, what wilt thou have me do?'' 14002 Have you, in lonely darkness longed for companionship and consolation? |
14002 | What dost thou love then? |
14002 | What shall I cry? |
14002 | ''To what end?'' |
14002 | ''Who painted that?'' |
14002 | Again we find in these newly discovered papyri a phrase bearing upon this subject: To the question of Salome:"How long shall death reign?" |
14002 | Am I the god upon the face of the deep, nay-- The deepless deepness in the beginning?" |
14002 | And when Minna, like Wilfrid,"seized by a devouring jealousy,"demanded to know"whom?" |
14002 | And who would blame him? |
14002 | Are you awake?" |
14002 | But have we not? |
14002 | But returning to_ what_? |
14002 | But shall we then believe, that the Oriental doctrine is erroneous? |
14002 | But what are words? |
14002 | But who is there who can not see that each step in attainment of consciousness brings with it a corresponding freedom from suffering? |
14002 | Did Emerson predict a Millenium? |
14002 | Did Jesus teach the kingdom of God on earth? |
14002 | Do you think that robber can sleep? |
14002 | Does this imply that an unlettered mind is desirable? |
14002 | Does this"flesh"mean the physical body? |
14002 | From what was Buddha finally liberated? |
14002 | Had the ancient Hebrews any knowledge of Illumination and its results? |
14002 | Have the present- day Buddhists lost the key? |
14002 | Have you felt so proud to get at the meaning of poems? |
14002 | Have you longed for perfect, satisfying_ human_ love? |
14002 | Have you not said it? |
14002 | Have you practised so long to learn to read? |
14002 | He only asks"how much can I give?" |
14002 | His disciples said unto him:"When will thou be manifest to us, and when shall we see thee?" |
14002 | His_ guru_ stood beside him and gently asked:"What did you, my son?" |
14002 | How can it fail when we"seek not our own,"but only love for love''s own sake, without regard to compensation or gratitude? |
14002 | How may the Self acquire consciousness and yet become selfless? |
14002 | How may the Self realize a state of selflessness and yet not be lost in a sea of_ un_ consciousness? |
14002 | How might they know when they had found this great love that was to make them"a new creature"? |
14002 | How, then, would they know when they had attained to this state of consciousness, of which he spoke, and which they but dimly understood? |
14002 | I shuddered with fear when I became sure that it was indeed she, but why were the closed eyes so fallen in? |
14002 | If God is omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient, how and where and in what manner can be explained the necessity of individual effort? |
14002 | If we admit the desirability of living in such a family, why not in such a world? |
14002 | If you melt butter in a pan over a fire, how long does it make a noise? |
14002 | Is he now on earth? |
14002 | Is religion necessary to Illumination? |
14002 | Is the_ atman_ asleep? |
14002 | Is there a basis for belief in physical immortality? |
14002 | Is there any evidence that Cosmic Consciousness is possible to all? |
14002 | Seraphita answered:"Couldst thou love two beings at once? |
14002 | She who loves will she not quit the world for her lover? |
14002 | Should he not be the first, the last, the only one? |
14002 | Suddenly he started up and murmured in alarm:''What is this?'' |
14002 | The persistence of the ideal of Perfected Man; Has it any basis in history? |
14002 | The worldly wise man or woman asks"how much do I get?" |
14002 | Then Salome said to him:"Then have I done well that I have not given birth?" |
14002 | These suspensions of life always found expression in the same problem,''Why am I here?'' |
14002 | This being true, male and female must they return to the source from which they sprung, completing the circle, and gaining what? |
14002 | To Minna she used the term"Heaven,"and when Minna questioned:"But art thou worthy of heaven when thou despisest the creatures of God?" |
14002 | To love feebly, is that to love? |
14002 | To what was due Tolstoi''s great struggle and suffering? |
14002 | WHAT IS NIRVANA? |
14002 | Was Paul changed by"conversion,"or what was the wonderful power that altered his whole life? |
14002 | Was he not perhaps, mad? |
14002 | Were these voices of a truth from God? |
14002 | What caused Buddha the greatest anxiety? |
14002 | What is Nirvana? |
14002 | What is the law? |
14002 | What shall he say to God? |
14002 | What, then is the goal, and how may it be attained? |
14002 | Who is he that shall intercede with Him, save by His permission?" |
14002 | Who will not say that the bee is more satisfied when he has found and drank of the honey than when he is buzzingly seeking it? |
14002 | Why Buddha endured such terrible struggles; is suffering necessary to Cosmic Consciousness? |
14002 | Why have we prayed that the will of God which is Love,"be done on earth as it is in the heavens,"if we despise the planet and hope to leave it? |
14002 | Why not? |
14002 | Why should we be so careful when at the end of all things nothing remains of what was once Nicolai Tolstoi? |
14002 | Why stand shrinking there? |
14002 | Why was she so terribly pale, and why was there a blackish mark under the clear skin on one cheek?" |
14002 | Why? |
14002 | Will such a state ever exist on the earth? |
14002 | Would a lover be a lover if he did not fill the heart? |
14002 | and then''What next?'' |
14002 | have you reckoned the earth much? |
14002 | or possessed by a devil? |
13552 | Besides the other Ambo- trees, and the trees that are not Ambo, is there any other? 13552 Besides this Ambo, and those other Ambo- trees, are there any other trees on the earth? |
13552 | Besides this one, is there any other Ambo- tree? 13552 Besides thy relations, and those who are not thy relations, is there, or is there not, any other human being in existence? |
13552 | Hast thou any relations, oh, king? 13552 King, are there any persons not thy relations? |
13552 | Then again how are they disabled by the wasp, and yet not injured so as to cause their immediate death? 13552 _ King._ Have you seen any of the royal tanks at Oung- ben- le'', which have recently been constructed? |
13552 | ''Prince,''she replied,''from attendants what pleasure canst thou derive? |
13552 | (? |
13552 | (?) |
13552 | ? |
13552 | ? solidus,_ Wlk_. |
13552 | ?_ Sitophilus,_ Schön._ oryzæ,_ Linn._ disciferus,_ Wlk._ Mecinus,_ Germ._*? |
13552 | ?_ Sitophilus,_ Schön._ oryzæ,_ Linn._ disciferus,_ Wlk._ Mecinus,_ Germ._*? |
13552 | ?_ ebeninus,_ Wlk._* immunis,_ Wlk._ Cleonus,_ Schön._ inducens,_ Wlk._ Myllocerus,_ Schön._ transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
13552 | ?_ ebeninus,_ Wlk._* immunis,_ Wlk._ Cleonus,_ Schön._ inducens,_ Wlk._ Myllocerus,_ Schön._ transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
13552 | And he describes at Angola an insect( A. goudotti? |
13552 | Are the seeds of this plant narcotic like some of the_ Solanaceaæ_? |
13552 | But in the case of Ceylon? |
13552 | CUCUJIDÆ,_ Steph._ Loemophloeus,_ Dej._ ferrugineus,_ Wlk._ Cucujus? |
13552 | Cardisoma...?_ Ocypoda ceratophthalmus,_ Pall_. |
13552 | Discourses are delivered upon the principles of vacancy( nirwana?) |
13552 | Does not this drawing of a species of Chironectes, captured near Colombo, justify his description? |
13552 | Dussumieri_? |
13552 | For the purpose of ascertaining the capacity of the gifted monarch, Mahindo thus interrogated him:--"O king; what is this tree called? |
13552 | Gymnoplistia? |
13552 | He described it as being divided by a river( the Mahawelli- ganga?) |
13552 | His father seeing him lying on his bed, with his hands and feet gathered up, inquired,"My boy, why not stretch thyself at length on thy bed?" |
13552 | How then does the enclosed fly always select the right end, and with what secretion is it supplied to decompose this mortar?"] |
13552 | ICHNEUMONIDÆ,_ Leach._ Cryptus,_ Fabr._* onustus,_ Wlk._ Hemiteles? |
13552 | Ichthyology of Ceylon, little known Fish for table, seir fish Sardines, poisonous? |
13552 | In Ceylon he was struck by the number of serpents, and the multitude of wild animals, lions( leopards? |
13552 | Is it a fact that in America, pigs extirpate the rattlesnakes with impunity?] |
13552 | It occurred to him his retinue must surely have been seized by her, and he exclaimed,''Pray, why dost not thou produce my attendants?'' |
13552 | Ixodes...? |
13552 | Lumbricus...? |
13552 | MUSCIDÆ,_ Latr._ Tachina? |
13552 | NYCTERIBIDÆ,_ Leach._ Nycteribia,_ Latr._----? |
13552 | Nephila...? |
13552 | Oribata...? |
13552 | Oxytelus,_ Grav._ rudis,_ Wlk._ productus,_ Wlk._* bicolor,_ Wlk._ Trogophloeus? |
13552 | Peneus...? |
13552 | Porcellana...?_ Decapoda Macrura. |
13552 | Stenopus...? |
13552 | Thalamita...? |
13552 | The first day he crossed a river,( the estuary of Calpentyn?) |
13552 | Whence do they re- appear? |
13552 | [ 4][ Footnote 1: Rhinolophus affinis? |
13552 | [ Footnote 19:? |
13552 | [ Footnote 1: Galle?] |
13552 | [ Footnote 1:_ Culex laniger_? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2: The fable of the"spicy breezes"said to blow from Arabia and India, is as old as Ctesias; and is eagerly repeated by Pliny? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2:_ Gelasimus tatragonon_? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2:_ Pentaceros?_]_ Sea Slugs._--There are a few species of_ Holothuriæ_, of which the trepang is the best known example. |
13552 | [ Footnote 3: May it not have an Egyptian origin"Siela- Keh,"the_ land_ of_ Siela_?] |
13552 | _ Crangon...?__ Alpheus...?_ Pontonia inflata,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Crangon...?__ Alpheus...?_ Pontonia inflata,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Dromia...?_ Hippa Asiatica,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Grayii? |
13552 | _ Jek._ cribricollis,_ Wlk._? |
13552 | _ Oliv._ Sphænophorus,_ Schön._ glabridiscus,_ Wlk._ exquisitus,_ Wlk._ Dehaani? |
13552 | _ Squilla...?_ Gonodactylus chiragra,_ Fabr_. |
13552 | alternans,_ Wlk._ Stenus,_ Latr._* barbatus,_ Niet._* lacertoides,_ Niet._ Osorius? |
13552 | and whether the Devil should be drawn with horns and a tail? |
13552 | annulipes_? |
13552 | aridifolia,_ Stoll_ extensicollis? |
13552 | atratum? |
13552 | cygneus,_ Fabr_.? |
13552 | errans? |
13552 | ferrugineus,_ Fabr._ introducens,_ Wlk._ Protocerus,_ Schön._ molossus? |
13552 | lectularius,_ Linn._? |
13552 | longicollis? |
13552 | or do they cause dilatation of the pupil, like those of the_ Atropa Belladonna_?] |
13552 | panops,_ Wlk._ Cossonus,_ Clairv._* quadrimacula,_ Wlk._? |
13552 | perplexa,_ Wlk_.?] |
13552 | punctiger? |
13552 | s. Vert, cucullata? |
13928 | And is not that, perhaps, the supreme merit of acting? |
13928 | And still the question remains: how much of this success is due to the playwright''s skill or to the skill of the actors? |
13928 | Are those quite the words one would use about the play in English? |
13928 | Are we always quite certain what we mean when we speak of an artist? |
13928 | Are we capable of realising the difference? |
13928 | Before saying to himself: what would this particular person say or do in these circumstances? |
13928 | But can it? |
13928 | But how? |
13928 | But is not all art a suggestion, an evocation, never a statement? |
13928 | But is not that a trifle too obvious sentiment for the true artist in artificial things? |
13928 | But is there, anywhere but in Ireland, an attempt to write imaginative literature in the form of drama? |
13928 | But might not the experiment be tried? |
13928 | Could Pachmann himself explain to us his own magic? |
13928 | Does anyone"seriously contest"its right not to"rank as Literature"? |
13928 | Does not gesture indeed make emotion, more certainly and more immediately than emotion makes gesture? |
13928 | Does not the play, for instance, lose a little in its acceptance of those narrow limits of the footlights? |
13928 | Does she deliberately choose the plays most obviously not written for her in order to extort a triumph out of her enemies? |
13928 | Elsewhere, how often do we find even so much as this, in more than a single writer here and there? |
13928 | GREAT ACTING IN ENGLISH Why is it that we have at the present moment no great acting in England? |
13928 | Has the most gradual of stage- moons ever caught the miraculous lunar trick to the life? |
13928 | Has the real hedgerow ever brought a breath of the country upon the stage? |
13928 | Here are two arts helping one another; something is gained, but how much is lost? |
13928 | How is it that in this play the actors obtain a fine result, act on a higher level, than in their realistic Sicilian tragedies? |
13928 | How is it that we get from the acting and management of these two actors a result which no one in England has ever been able to get? |
13928 | How many English actresses, I wonder, would have been capable of dealing adequately with such a scene as that? |
13928 | In casting away his formulas, has he the big human mastery which alone could replace them? |
13928 | Is Mr. Redford capable of discriminating between what is artistically fine and what is artistically ignoble? |
13928 | Is Paderewski after all a Belus? |
13928 | Is it his many coloured soul that"magnetises our poor vertebras,"in Verlaine''s phrase, and not the mere skill of his fingers? |
13928 | Is it not partly the energy, the restless energy, of the English character which prevents our actors from ever sitting or standing still on the stage? |
13928 | Is it reality, is it illusion? |
13928 | Is it technique, temperament, touch, that reveals to us what we have never dreamed was hidden in sounds? |
13928 | Is it through Pachmann''s nerves, or through ours, that this communion takes place? |
13928 | Is not, then, the persistent English habit of"crossing stage to right"a national characteristic, ingrained in us, and not only a matter of training? |
13928 | Is the play weak? |
13928 | Now Busoni can do, on the pianoforte, whatever he can conceive; the question is, what can he conceive? |
13928 | Now, is it possible that Miss Julia Neilson really imagined herself to be capable of rendering this scene as it should be rendered? |
13928 | Or is there in our actor- managers a lack of this very sense of what is required in the proper rendering of imaginative work on the stage? |
13928 | THE SPEAKING OF VERSE Was there ever at any time an art, an acquired method, of speaking verse, as definite as the art and method of singing it? |
13928 | The brothers surprise Vivarce on the stairs: was he coming from the room of Giselle or of Léonore? |
13928 | The question is: could any one man be found on whose opinion all England might safely rely for its dramatic instruction and entertainment? |
13928 | The whole point of the play: has a husband the right to kill his wife or his wife''s lover if he discovers that his wife has been unfaithful to him? |
13928 | There are many more names, if I could remember them; but where is the serious playwright? |
13928 | There is Mr. Pinero, Mr. Jones, Mr. Grundy: what names are better known, or less to be associated with literature? |
13928 | There is something in her aspect, what shall I call it? |
13928 | Undoubtedly the words lose, and does not the voice lose something also, in its directness of appeal? |
13928 | What fine vision was there to bring down? |
13928 | What is the peculiar quality in this artist which acts always with the same intoxicating effect? |
13928 | What should we say if he altered the time of one movement in order to make room for another, in which he would himself be more prominent? |
13928 | What should we say if he rearranged the composer''s score for the convenience of his own orchestra? |
13928 | What should we say if the conductor of an orchestra committed a single one of these criminal absurdities? |
13928 | What should we say if the first fiddle insisted on having a cadenza to himself in the course of every dozen bars of the music? |
13928 | Who is there on our stage who has completely mastered those two first requirements of acting? |
13928 | Who is there that can give us, not the external gesture, but the inner meaning, of some beautiful and subtle passage in Shakespeare? |
13928 | Why leave the ball- room? |
13928 | Why not? |
13928 | Why should not the visible world be treated in the same spirit as the invisible world of character and temperament? |
13928 | Why wear chains for dancing? |
13928 | Would it have been so effective, that is to say, so real? |
13928 | Yet what method is there besides these two methods? |
13928 | and as"Which?" |
13928 | he says to himself: what would it be effective on the stage for this particular person to do or say? |
13928 | what poetry hid in thought or passion was lost to us in its passage across the stage? |
14360 | A king shall come, they say, to rule the world, If he will rule; but whence this mighty king? 14360 But how awake such thoughts?" |
14360 | But why should one for others think, when all Must answer for themselves? 14360 How kindle such a love? |
14360 | Not sell the ground? |
14360 | Whither away, my son? |
14360 | And how can blood wash out the stains of sin, And change the fixed eternal law of life That good from good, evil from evil flows?" |
14360 | And how can hatred dwell with perfect love? |
14360 | And now his cup with every blessing filled Full to the brim, to overflowing full, What more has life to give or heart to wish? |
14360 | And who shall dare to chide their simple faith? |
14360 | And why one born another''s slave, when all Might serve and help each other?" |
14360 | Asita, oldest of his counselors, Sprang to his side and asked:"What ails the king?" |
14360 | But where is now that erring, wandering son, The pride of all these loyal, loving hearts, Heir to this wealth and hope of this proud house? |
14360 | But who so gentle, stately, tall and grand As my Siddartha? |
14360 | But why despise what ages have revered? |
14360 | But would you have me like a coward shun The path of duty, though beset with thorns-- Thorns that must pierce your tender feet and mine?" |
14360 | Can such a life be good That shuns all duties lying in our path-- Useless to others, filled with grief and pain? |
14360 | For how can God, being good, delight in blood? |
14360 | For how can darkness dwell with perfect light? |
14360 | Greeting each other with such royal grace As fits a prince greeting a brother prince, The king inquired why he had left his home? |
14360 | Has mighty Brahma there no son, no heir? |
14360 | Have you escaped from karma''s fatal chains And gained clear vision-- found the living light?" |
14360 | He spoke, and many to each other said:"Why hear this babbler rail at sacred things-- Our caste, our faith, our prayers and sacred hymns?" |
14360 | How can we turn his mind from such sad thoughts To life''s full joys, the duties of a king, And his great destiny so long foretold?" |
14360 | How will you meet their cruelty and wrath?" |
14360 | Is death the end, or what comes after death? |
14360 | Is this old age, or swinish greed grown old? |
14360 | O crushed and bleeding hearts, That from the very ground in anguish cry:"Is there no light-- no hope-- no help-- no God?" |
14360 | Sudata sharply said,"Why then said you,''Fill it with yellow gold''?" |
14360 | The people saw this great vihara rise, A stately palace for a foreign prince, And said in wonder:"What strange thing is this? |
14360 | The prince stopped short before him, bending low, And gently asked:"What would my father have? |
14360 | This the return for all the patient love Of sweet Yasodhara, and this the way To teach his duty to your royal son?" |
14360 | What further need of our poor flickering lamps?" |
14360 | What need of words to introduce his guests? |
14360 | What steps have e''er retraced that silent road? |
14360 | What wonder that the deepest hells were stirred? |
14360 | What wonder that the heavens were filled with joy? |
14360 | Whence comes this wondrous and undying love? |
14360 | Where is their birthplace-- where their home? |
14360 | Which waked the sweet Yasodhara, who asked,"What ails my love?" |
14360 | Who knows what joys await those troubled hearts? |
14360 | Who knows what visions meet their dying gaze? |
14360 | Who so full of love? |
14360 | Why am I left as if by death forgot, Left here alone, a leafless, fruitless trunk? |
14360 | Why are the strong like the mown grass cut down? |
14360 | Why are we born to tread this little round, To live, to love, to suffer, sorrow, die? |
14360 | Why brothers fight? |
14360 | Why do the young like field- flowers bloom to fade? |
14360 | Why leave the heights with so much labor gained? |
14360 | Why plunge in darkness we have just escaped? |
14360 | Why pray for what we do not strive to gain? |
14360 | Why seek to know more than the Vedas teach? |
14360 | Why seek to learn more than the teachers know? |
14360 | Why seek to solve the riddle nature puts, Of whence and why, with theories and dreams? |
14360 | Why should such men make fables so absurd Unless within their rough outside is stored Some precious truth from profanation hid? |
14360 | Why waste your time pursuing such vain dreams-- As some benighted travelers chase false lights To lose themselves in bogs and fens at last? |
14360 | [ 12]"Can this be wisdom? |
14360 | and must it be forever lost? |
14360 | must I be such for thee?'' |
15605 | A Parable? 15605 And now, what is a Parable, Effie?" |
15605 | HILLO, ALGIE, BEEN CUB- HUNTING? 15605 After all--_was_ it wise to abolish the Contractor? 15605 And what was the Captain doing, Sir, in mess uniform at his uncle''s chambers, when he was supposed to be on guard at the Tower? 15605 And why does the Curtain invariably come down as soon as swords are drawn? 15605 As for you, rough Mr. HORSLEY, Arguing so very coarsely, May I say yours is a worse lie,-- Rhyming badly? 15605 As victory is this claimed By spouts, by cool sense tamed? 15605 Did anyone shoot the bloomin''bird, after all? 15605 Did the latter hum,_ sotto voce_,_ And a good Judge too!_"with other selections from_ Trial by Jury_? |
15605 | Do n''t you think so?" |
15605 | Do you think an ordinary charge of shot would go through_ that_? |
15605 | Does n''t that sound nice? |
15605 | HOW DOES THE YOUNG''UN GO?" |
15605 | Have another go of pie, JOHNNY? |
15605 | If we''re_ permitted_ in this Square To muster there, why should we care? |
15605 | In which of DICKENS''s Novels does this occur? |
15605 | Is she more frail, less fair, that perfect pearl Of Singing Girls, Xipangu''s great''st of glories? |
15605 | James''s Gazette, October 12th._] Why, churlish critic, do you hope sincerely The rumour, which you mention, is untrue? |
15605 | Moreover, where was his scarf, as orderly officer? |
15605 | Must_ that_ exclude me from the Wreath? |
15605 | No moaning of the bards? |
15605 | Of dirge''s luxury deprive my lip? |
15605 | See? |
15605 | Thanks, TOMMY-- do you mind handin''round that beer- jug? |
15605 | That I should spurn it? |
15605 | True, a greater Or more accomplished spy who ever knew? |
15605 | Who cares a cuss for Rights of Man, Checked by that bugbear Duty?" |
15605 | Why not in singing, then, as well as sketching? |
15605 | _ Manrico_ a very robust type of Troubadour-- but ought n''t a Troubadour to carry about a guitar, or a lute, or something? |
15605 | _ Shoot_ him? |
15605 | _ What do you mean_?" |
15925 | Again, a query: Is the rise of the Brahmo- Somaj a step toward the practical extension of Christianity into the domain of Buddhism? |
15925 | Did the weird prophet- orator who spoke of"carrying the flag and keeping step to the music of the Union"ever dream of such a strange combination? |
15925 | Do I believe in the teachings of this book? |
15925 | How forcible and full of noble example is the picture exhibited by these records? |
15925 | How has he obtained his knowledge? |
15925 | If, as Sinnett asserts, the true Chinese belong to the fourth root- race, as appears not improbable, did not the system come into India from China? |
15925 | Query: Does this account for their apparent inability to develop their language beyond the monosyllable? |
15925 | Query: Is a fifth race now in the throes of nativity? |
15925 | Query: Is the famous click of the Zulu a remainder of the gradual passage from animal noise to human articulation in speech? |
15925 | What is the practical use of all this study? |
15925 | Why should one lose patience with this boy''s inability to learn, more than at the inanimate obstacle in one''s pathway? |
15925 | Why, then, should it be thought heretical to maintain that the future world of_ rewards_ is_ also_ not eternal? |
14637 | ''"Like that?'' |
14637 | ''And always I ask and wonder( Though often I do not know it) Why does this water not smell like water?...'' |
14637 | ''How can a bell sound on into a race?'' |
14637 | ''Mais tu ne seras plus? |
14637 | ''Tell me honestly who of my contemporaries-- that is, men between thirty and forty- five-- have given the world one single drop of alcohol?... |
14637 | ''Vous ne le voulez pas? |
14637 | ''_ Bast_.--James Gurney, wilt thou give us leave awhile? |
14637 | All that remains to be said is that Mr Monro is fond of dogs(''Can you smell the rose?'' |
14637 | And what exactly_ is_ a philosophic critic? |
14637 | And what, indeed, have material things to do with the purification and the peace of the soul? |
14637 | And which( strange question) is the more consoling, the more satisfying, the more acceptable? |
14637 | Are we to look for a music of verbal melody, or for a musical elaboration of an intellectual theme? |
14637 | But can we isolate the philosophic critic in the same way? |
14637 | But what happens in_ The Way of all Flesh_? |
14637 | Can the source be defined or indicated? |
14637 | Do you, because you clothed yourselves in the shreds of a moral respectability which you had not the time( or was it the courage?) |
14637 | Et puis?... |
14637 | How shall we recognise him? |
14637 | How shall we say it? |
14637 | How_ could_ a race be drowsy? |
14637 | I am myself a mouth for blood....''Perhaps we do wrong to ask ourselves whether this and similar things mean, exactly, anything? |
14637 | Into what cloud cuckoo land have we been beguiled by Coleridge''s laudanum trances? |
14637 | Is it not Mr Hardy? |
14637 | Is it not Mr Hardy? |
14637 | Is it not always on the point of degenerating into a jingle-- as much an exhibition of the limitations of a poetical theory as of its capabilities? |
14637 | Is it surprising that we do not trust these gentlemen? |
14637 | Or would he hear the eternal arc- lamps sputter, Only that; and see old shadows crawl; And find the stars were street lamps after all? |
14637 | To be serious nowadays is to be ill- mannered, and what, murmurs the cynic, does it matter? |
14637 | Was it laziness, was it a felt incapacity? |
14637 | What does he do? |
14637 | What does it matter? |
14637 | What if after all, the true end of man be those hours of plenary beatitude he spent lying at the bottom of the boat on the Lake of Bienne? |
14637 | What if the old truth is valid still, that man is born free but is everywhere in chains? |
14637 | What is the secret of poetic power like this? |
14637 | What is''the race of night?'' |
14637 | What right had you to suppose that a man disarmed of tradition is stronger for his nakedness? |
14637 | What right, indeed, have these to condemn the logical outcome of an anarchic individualism which they themselves so jealously cherished? |
14637 | What shall we require of her? |
14637 | What shall we require of poetry? |
14637 | What would he not have found in those mighty seekers, with whom Hardy alone stands equal? |
14637 | What_ can_ it mean? |
14637 | When, when, Peace, will you, Peace? |
14637 | Whence came the power that compelled it? |
14637 | Where are we to call a halt in the inevitable process by which the kinds of literary art merge into one? |
14637 | Which is the more beautiful? |
14637 | Who alive can say,''Thou art no poet-- mays''t not tell thy dreams''? |
14637 | Who but a fool would ask Mr De la Mare to write an epic or Miss Mansfield to give us a novel? |
14637 | Who could hurt him more than he had been hurt already? |
14637 | Who may not well be plunged up to the lips in sorrow at parting from one of whom he can say this in all soberness and truth? |
14637 | Why did you not see that the end of all your devotion was to shift man''s responsibility for himself from his shoulders? |
14637 | Yet even here, where the general beauty is undoubted, is not the music too obvious? |
14637 | _ Present Condition of English Poetry_ Shall we, or shall we not, be serious? |
14637 | _ The Wisdom of Anatole France_ How few are the wise writers who remain to us? |
14637 | or''Hé, que ne suis- je puce?'' |
14637 | quand la paleur Qui blemist nôtre corps sans chaleur ne lumière Nous perd le sentiment?... |
14637 | to analyse, dare to denounce us because our teeth are set on edge by the sour grapes which you enjoyed? |
14965 | AND WHERE DID YOU LEARN TO SPEAK ENGLISH SO WELL? |
14965 | AND_ DID_ THEY LEARN FRENCH AND GERMAN? |
14965 | Are you ready? |
14965 | Are you ready? |
14965 | HAVE C''GAR, OLD F''LLA? |
14965 | THAT''S THAT ASS, BOUNDERSON, ISN''T IT? 14965 THERE''S TIME ENOUGH_ YET_, ISN''T THERE?"] |
14965 | What ill have ye done? 14965 Who''s there?" |
14965 | ''Ow would you like to''ave me comin''bustin''up_ your_ stairs, eh? |
14965 | (_ To a small boy in passage._) Mr. MOLESKIN in, my lad? |
14965 | 4_) Is Mr. BULCHER at home? |
14965 | Ah, but I mean in-- er-- politics-- I hope he is opposed to granting Home Rule to Ireland? |
14965 | An''hain''t_ I_''telligent an''educated? |
14965 | And what right ha''you got comin''up my stairs as if they belonged to you? |
14965 | And whatsh Free Education er me? |
14965 | Are you for a Conservatory? |
14965 | Away went GILPIN-- who but he? |
14965 | But I trust, Mrs. GUFFIN, your husband feels the importance of maintaining the Union--? |
14965 | But what I ask_ you_ is-- where does the secresy of the Ballot come in, if I''m to tell you which way I''m goin''to give my vote? |
14965 | By the way, when the handicaps_ are_ framed, where do they hang them up? |
14965 | C.-J._ But surely-- er-- it was a Conservative Government that gave you Free Education? |
14965 | C.-J._ But-- er-- don''t you see, my friend, that, according to Mr. GLADSTONE, the more intelligent and educated you are, the more you''re wrong? |
14965 | C.-J._ For a--? |
14965 | C.-J._ I-- I thought-- I hoped-- that, it being Saturday, I might be-- er-- fortunate enough-- have I the pleasure of addressing Mrs. GUFFIN? |
14965 | Chase him? |
14965 | Could he hold on? |
14965 | Could not the matter be compromised? |
14965 | Do you hear the ceaseless echo of their weary, weary feet? |
14965 | Eh? |
14965 | Guffin._ Oh, it''s about the voting, is it? |
14965 | I suppose this_ is_ Little Anna Maria Street? |
14965 | If so, why did SHAKSPEARE give us"_ The Taming of the Shrew_"as such a feat? |
14965 | If_ he_ runs athwart us, what power shall save, From the doom to which promptly he''d send us? |
14965 | Mrs. R. thinks it''s from POPE; but if so, she asks what Pope? |
14965 | No, look''ere, Guv''nr, I''m torken to you''bout wharri_ unnershtan''_, d''yer see? |
14965 | Now, then, what do_ you_ want''ere? |
14965 | Now_ do_ yer think he''s nothink else to do but set indoors in a arm- cheer all day? |
14965 | Oh, lovely flower sent from afar, Like sunlight to this world of ours, What art thou but a golden star, A priceless gem amongst the flowers? |
14965 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
14965 | Perhaps if I called again, I might--? |
14965 | Then I''m afraid it would be of no use if I said any more? |
14965 | There yer wrong, d''yer see? |
14965 | Well, at all events you will admit that, during the last six years, you have been-- er-- peaceful and prosperous? |
14965 | Well, what does_ he_ want? |
14965 | What am I to do? |
14965 | What better example of patience and perseverance, which, as all know, are"good for the gout,"could possibly be given? |
14965 | What did Misher GLADSHTONE say? |
14965 | What good Conshervative gov''men''ever done er workin''man-- d''yer shee? |
14965 | What of that? |
14965 | What shall I"peck"for an epicure''s whim? |
14965 | What would DARE DEATH DICK or THUNDER TIM say to such a show of water?" |
14965 | Where are now the confident boastings with which they inaugurated the campaign? |
14965 | Who''s the first man I must see and"use my best endeavours to persuade him into promising his vote?" |
14965 | You leave that pore child alone, will yer-- or I''ll come out and_ tork_ to you, d''y''ear? |
14965 | You unnershtand me? |
14965 | _ H.H._"CAN''T REFUSE A TOOTHPICK, THEN, OLD F''LLA?"] |
14965 | _ H.H._"CIGARETTE THEN?" |
14965 | and is it one of the"perks"of the Handicapper to supply the frames? |
15084 | And as to the second point, I would ask whether M. Bergson possesses a clock or a watch, and if he has, how he supposes time is measured on them? |
15084 | And if not, what becomes of a''growth of the soul''? |
15084 | And not only happiness and love, but knowledge also: the Earth calls to the Sky:''Heaven, hast thou secrets? |
15084 | And what is this Jury of people situated in the natural conditions of laborious life who are to decide not individually but as a Jury? |
15084 | But are they also deeper? |
15084 | But can we possibly distinguish between industrial and political matters? |
15084 | But how was it, with such a Poor Law, that the hand- loom weavers did not die of starvation by the thousand? |
15084 | But what is it that really happens when the artist addresses us, and why does he wish to address us? |
15084 | But which had the best chance of seeing truly, the life- long companion and lover, or the stranger, sad, lonely, and longing for home?] |
15084 | But why should we want art at all? |
15084 | But, the objector will inquire, does this imply the enlargement of every individual or even of the average or the typical personality? |
15084 | Croce does not see that the question-- What is expression? |
15084 | Do not great mountains sometimes rise from the sea and sometimes from the high plateau? |
15084 | For what in this reference is''the community''? |
15084 | How can a monster beget an angel? |
15084 | How did they live, what did they think about, what did they count for then, what do they count for now? |
15084 | How did this new and amazing experience react upon their poetry? |
15084 | How then does the history of poetry in Europe during these sixty years stand in relation to these underlying processes? |
15084 | If I really give my mind to the task, can not I define a continuous function which is_ not_ differentiable? |
15084 | If any one mysteriously falls ill and dies, the question at once presents itself to the savage mind, who did it? |
15084 | If it were your idea of a horse, why should you look at it? |
15084 | If the state can be described as a person, may not also a church and a trade union? |
15084 | In what sense, then, can we speak of the evolution of religion? |
15084 | Is it not this that divides our modern local poetry from his? |
15084 | Need we doubt that with the general raising in the level new eminences will appear? |
15084 | Shaw, it is reported, asked the sculptor:''I suppose you meant your own hand after all?'' |
15084 | The problem immediately propounds itself-- what are the factors which control this differentiation? |
15084 | There is a relation, and a necessary relation, between the artist and his public; but what is the nature of it? |
15084 | True enough, as far as it goes; but what do we mean by expression? |
15084 | Was the compulsion to drink an oppression? |
15084 | We must then, I hold, regard it as an integral part of the whole story of everything to find an answer to the questions What is good? |
15084 | What else could they do but hand them on to the men? |
15084 | What has happened? |
15084 | What is the condition of the rural counties of Wessex? |
15084 | What is the cure for it? |
15084 | What is the distinctive note of this new poetry of nationality? |
15084 | What is the truth? |
15084 | What may not be hoped of men if once they learn to live with their fellows? |
15084 | What then is it in totemism from which, on Sir James Frazer''s view, something comes? |
15084 | Where would English industry have been without its king? |
15084 | Which of all types of modern men is the most habitually hopeful, the man of letters, the politician, the business man, or the man of science? |
15084 | Who can say whether he himself belongs to them? |
15084 | Who is to choose them? |
15084 | Why? |
15084 | You have not been equal to it, and why? |
15084 | [ 21] What is a navvy and how does he live? |
15084 | _ What is Art?_ is a most interesting book, full of incidental truth; but I believe that the main contention in it is false. |
15084 | and What is beautiful? |
15084 | as well as to the question What is fact? |
15084 | depends upon the question-- What is the relation between the artist and his audience? |
14599 | Am I speaking too positively? |
14599 | And in this fact lies the whole answer to the question,"Why does man create pain for his own discomfort?" |
14599 | And when they open, what is it that is found? |
14599 | And why? |
14599 | At least, to ask a lesser question, is it impossible to make a guess as to the direction in which our goal lies? |
14599 | But are these results unknowable? |
14599 | But can any earnest student of Theosophy deny, or object to this? |
14599 | But what is the iron bar and the knot? |
14599 | Conquer what? |
14599 | Destiny, the inevitable, does indeed exist for the race and for the individual; but who can ordain this save the man himself? |
14599 | Does it not agree perfectly with the teaching of the Bhagavat- Gita? |
14599 | Granted, then, for the sake of our argument, that he desires pain, why is it that he desires anything so annoying to himself? |
14599 | Has the statement too dogmatic a sound? |
14599 | How else can he be where he is, or be at all? |
14599 | How is it possible to divide the infinite,--that which is one? |
14599 | How is it possible to obtain recognition of the inner man, to observe its growth and foster it? |
14599 | How is it that the profound sinner who lives for pleasure can at last feel stir within himself the divine afflatus? |
14599 | How, then, can he know that he lives? |
14599 | If religion be of God how is it that we find that same God in his own works and acts violating the precepts of religion? |
14599 | In contemplating a battlefield it is impossible to realize the agony of every sufferer; why, then, realize your own pain more keenly than another''s? |
14599 | In how many virtuous and religious men does not this same state exist? |
14599 | Is it not a pure statement of the law of Karma? |
14599 | Is it not enough to produce a weariness and sickness unutterable, to be forever accomplishing a task only to see it undone again? |
14599 | Is it too dogmatic to say that a man must have foothold before he can spring? |
14599 | Is there one? |
14599 | It can not answer the question"what am I?" |
14599 | Knowledge is man''s greatest inheritance; why, then, should he not attempt to reach it by every possible road? |
14599 | Otherwise how could they exist, even for an hour, in such a mental and psychic atmosphere as is created by the confusion and disorder of a city? |
14599 | Otherwise why place them so far off? |
14599 | Shall we not search for it? |
14599 | Some scant fragments we have of these great gifts of man; where, then, is the whole of which they must be a part? |
14599 | The disciple may say, Should I study these thoughts at all did I not seek out the way? |
14599 | This can not last always; why let it last any longer? |
14599 | VII What is the cure for this misery and waste of effort? |
14599 | What are these two gaunt figures, and why are they permitted to be our constant followers? |
14599 | What are those waters? |
14599 | What good fortune can we expect? |
14599 | What good has the drunkard obtained by his madness? |
14599 | What has given this ghastly shape the right to haunt us from the hour we are born until the hour we die? |
14599 | What then can he do but reconcile his conduct gradually to their rules? |
14599 | What then will be the value of the knowledge of its laws acquired by industry and observation? |
14599 | What value or strength is there in the neglected garden rose which has the canker in every bud? |
14599 | What we desire to discover is, who is the user; what part of ourselves is it that demands the presence of this thing so hateful to the rest? |
14599 | What we desire to discover is, who is the user; what part of ourselves is it that demands the presence of this thing so hateful to the rest?" |
14599 | When will that ultimate good be attained? |
14599 | Where is this to be found? |
14599 | Who cares for any intermediate states? |
14599 | Who places those obstacles there? |
14599 | Why does he desire his own hurt? |
14599 | Why does he not stay on this hill- top he has reached, and look away to the mountains beyond, and resolve to scale those greater heights? |
14599 | Why is this? |
14599 | Why long and look for that which is beyond all hope until the inner eyes are opened? |
14599 | Why not piece together the fragments that we have, at hand, and see whether from them some shape can not be given to the vast puzzle? |
14599 | Why should he not die for it? |
14599 | Why should this be, will be asked at once, if he is a being of such great powers as those say who believe in his existence? |
14599 | Why this useless labor? |
14599 | Why, then, should she shut her doors on any? |
14599 | Why? |
14599 | Yet is it for his own people to say he has done wrong, if he has injured no man and remained just? |
14599 | Yet man has undoubtedly within himself the heroism needed for the great journey; else how is it martyrs have smiled amid the torture? |
15516 | How long halt ye between two opinions? 15516 Now when chaos had begun to condense, but force and form were not yet manifest, and there was naught named, naught done, who could know its shape? |
15516 | Old age sometimes becomes second childhood; why should not filial piety become parental love? |
15516 | What permanency is there to the glory of the world? 15516 Are the Japanese eager for reform? 15516 At what stage of mutual growth did Buddhism and the Japanese meet each other? 15516 But if we do good only to those who do good to us, what thanks have we? 15516 Did he succeed? 15516 Do not the publicans the same? 15516 Do they possess that quality of emotion in which a tormenting sense of sin, and a burning desire for self- surrender to holiness, are ever manifest? 15516 Does the name of Gautama, the Buddha, stand for a sun- myth or for a historic personage? 15516 Dr. Joseph Edkins''s The Early Spread of Religious Ideas in the Far East( London, 1893)?] 15516 In the thirteen hundred years of the life of Buddhism in Japan, what are the fruits, and what are the failures? 15516 Is God all, or is all God? 15516 Is Japanese Buddhism really Shint[=o]ized Buddhism, or Buddhaized Shint[=o]? 15516 Is it any wonder that such teachings could in the long run satisfy neither the trained intellects nor the unthinking common people of Japan? 15516 Is it not a protest against something to which it opposes a difference? 15516 Is it paradoxical to say that the Buddhists arereligious atheists?" |
15516 | Is the hermit crab Shint[=o], and the shell Buddhism, or_ vice versa_? |
15516 | Japanese poetry asks of the dewdrop"why, having the heart of the lotus for its home, does it pretend to be a gem?" |
15516 | May we call them the Quakers of Japanese Buddhism? |
15516 | Of the two faiths, which shall be victor? |
15516 | Shall we call him a Japanese Luther, because of his insistence on salvation by faith only? |
15516 | What was the soil for the new sowing, and what was the harvest to be reaped in due time? |
15516 | What were the features of this modern Confucian philosophy, which the Japanese Samurai exalted to a religion? |
15516 | When one of the pupils of Confucius interrogated his Master concerning this, the sage answered;"What then will you return for good? |
15516 | Which is the parasite and which the parasitized? |
15516 | Who can tell which was the base and which was the true metal in the alloy that was formed? |
15516 | Who can utter it? |
15516 | Yet in the alloy, which ingredient has preserved most of its qualities? |
15516 | Yet, is not every religion, in one sense, protestant? |
10478 | Are there any on my side? |
10478 | Art thou he who troubleth Israel? |
10478 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
10478 | Canst thou by searching find out Him? |
10478 | Hast thou, O Lord, utterly rejected Judah? 10478 How long,"cried the preacher, with a loud voice and fierce aspect,"halt ye between two opinions? |
10478 | In much knowledge is much grief, and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.... What profit hath a man of all his labor?... 10478 To what purpose,"said he,"is the multitude of sacrifices? |
10478 | To whom then will ye liken God? 10478 When, before or since, has there lived an outlaw who did not despoil his country?" |
10478 | Whence come ye? |
10478 | Whereby,said he,"shall I_ know_ that I shall inherit it,"--that is Canaan,--"and that my seed shall be in number as the stars of heaven?" |
10478 | And he took the fire in his hand and a knife, and Isaac said,"Behold the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?" |
10478 | And how did the prophet receive her message? |
10478 | And what was to be its fate? |
10478 | And whither did the prophet fly? |
10478 | But how was Samuel to rekindle a fervent religious life among the degenerate Israelites in such unsettled times? |
10478 | But these sheep, what have they done? |
10478 | Can stronger or more comforting language be made use of to assert the personality and providence of God? |
10478 | Did any man of genius ever conceive such an illustration of blended piety and obedience? |
10478 | Do not most great men utter sentiments hard to be reconciled with one another, yet with equal sincerity? |
10478 | Do you ask for a confirmation of the truths thus deduced from the denial of the supernaturalism of the Mosaic Code? |
10478 | Had he acted with the courage of a man sure of divine protection? |
10478 | Had he not been faint- hearted when he wished to die? |
10478 | Had the prophet been told to flee? |
10478 | Has dramatic poetry ever created such a display of conflicting emotions? |
10478 | Has there ever been from his time to ours such a transcendent manifestation of faith? |
10478 | Hast thou not known, hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? |
10478 | Have ye not known, have ye not heard, hath it not been told you from the beginning? |
10478 | He replies to the great_ I Am_,"Who am I, that_ I_ should bring forth the Children of Israel out of Egypt? |
10478 | How could city officials steal princely revenues, how could lawyers collect exorbitant fees, if it were not for the law? |
10478 | How could she remove the grievous eye- sore? |
10478 | How does he reply to the mysterious voice? |
10478 | How hard to shake off the burdens which even a rich man is compelled to bear? |
10478 | I can not dwell on the haughty scepticism and obdurate hardness of the King--"Who is Jehovah, that I should obey_ his_ voice?" |
10478 | If his own sons would take bribes in rendering judgment, who could be trusted? |
10478 | Is it possible for a human being to transcend so mighty a sacrifice, and all by the power of faith? |
10478 | Is it possible for language to express a deeper despondency, or a more tender grief? |
10478 | Is it true that in much wisdom is much grief, and that the increase of knowledge is the increase of sorrow? |
10478 | Is there not a change between youth and old age? |
10478 | Is thy soul tired of Zion? |
10478 | Isaac was a gentle, harmless, interesting youth of twenty, and what right, by any human standard, had Abraham to take his life? |
10478 | Moreover, had he not said that there should be neither rain nor dew but according to his word? |
10478 | Moreover, on principles of reason why should such a sacrifice be demanded? |
10478 | Now, whence had this man this wisdom? |
10478 | On their return to Ahaziah, without delivering their message to the god of the Phoenicians or Philistines, the king said:"Why are ye now turned back?" |
10478 | Or of whose hand have I received any bribe to blind my eyes therewith? |
10478 | People say contemptuously,"Is this the man that made the earth to tremble?" |
10478 | Said he:"What have I to do with thee, thou King of Judah? |
10478 | So from her open window she tauntingly accosted Jehu as he approached:"What came of Zimri, who murdered his master as thou hast done?" |
10478 | Then what follows? |
10478 | There is a higher law still which speaks to the universal conscience, asking, What is your duty? |
10478 | They repeated the words of the strange man who had turned them back; and the king said:"What manner of man was he who came up to meet you?" |
10478 | Was it revealed to his exultant soul what this blessing should be? |
10478 | Was it the result of his studies and reflections and experiences, or was it a wisdom supernaturally taught him by the Almighty? |
10478 | Was there ever such a supreme act of obedience in the history of our race? |
10478 | Was this voice reproachful? |
10478 | What career was ever more varied? |
10478 | What character in history presents such wide contradictions? |
10478 | What ear could he reach? |
10478 | What had he naturally to expect from the zealots for that Law but a renewed persecution? |
10478 | What had he to live for, but Isaac? |
10478 | What is it worth? |
10478 | What monarch has transmitted to posterity such inestimable treasures of thought and language? |
10478 | What ruler ever did so much for a people in a single reign? |
10478 | What was that call, coupled with such a magnificent and cheering promise? |
10478 | What, then, are we to think of the revival of observances which lost their force three hundred years ago, unless connected with artistic music? |
10478 | When and where, in the annals of the great, has such a dreadful imprecation been uttered? |
10478 | When before in the history of the world has there been such a progress among mere barbarians, with fetichism for their native religion? |
10478 | When, how,--by the gradual spread of knowledge, or by supernatural intervention,--who can tell? |
10478 | Where else at that period could they have found such teachers? |
10478 | Where would have been the glories of Solomon but for the genius and deeds of David? |
10478 | Where, then, is his authority? |
10478 | Who can escape anxiety and fear? |
10478 | Who denies his faults? |
10478 | Who does not change, and yet remain individually the same? |
10478 | Who in all Israel was greater than he, even after he had anointed Saul to the kingly office? |
10478 | Who is free from corroding cares? |
10478 | Who is happy with any amount of wealth? |
10478 | Who is this stricken, persecuted, martyred personage, bearing the iniquity of the race, and thus providing a way for future salvation? |
10478 | Who knows what the private life of Shakspeare and Goethe may have been, but who would part with the writings they have left us? |
10478 | Who was this Prince of Salem? |
10478 | Who would listen to him? |
10478 | Whose ox have I taken, or whose ass have I taken, or whom have I defrauded? |
10478 | Why did I come forth from the womb that my days might be spent in shame?" |
10478 | Why did error seemingly prove as vital as truth in all the varied forms of civilization in the ancient world? |
10478 | Why did even tradition fail to keep alive the knowledge of God, at least among the people? |
10478 | Why did not art, science, philosophy, and literature save the most lauded nations of the ancient world? |
10478 | Why hast thou smitten us so that there is no healing for us?" |
10478 | Why so rapid a degeneracy among people favored not only with a primitive revelation, but by splendid triumphs of reason and knowledge? |
10478 | Will a flattered woman, once beautiful, ever admit that her charms have passed away? |
10478 | Would he not be called a fanatic? |
10478 | Yet what nation, in the world''s history, ever improved so much in forty years? |
10478 | give not Thine heritage to reproach, lest the heathen make us a by- word, and ask, Where is now thy God?" |
10478 | if he were obliged to carry their load, knowing well what that burden was? |
10478 | replied Jehu;"what peace can be made so long as Jezebel bears rule?" |
16180 | But the question arises, Why should the Bocca della Verita, if such was its origin, have been used for the superstitious purpose connected with it? |
16180 | But what shall we think of the worship of the god Caligula and the god Nero? |
16180 | Filled with wonder and awe, the Apostle exclaimed,"Domine quo Vadis,"Lord, whither goest thou? |
16180 | How are we to regard the vaticinations of the heathen oracle? |
16180 | The question is naturally asked, Where were the obelisks originally placed? |
16180 | Why is it that we Christians look upon death with feelings so widely different? |
15030 | ''And thou,''he says,''didst indeed dare to transgress this law?'' |
15030 | ''Hath not a Jew eyes? |
15030 | ''Hath this man sinned, or his parents, that he was born blind?'' |
15030 | ''I could do this or that and do it thus, but may I?'' |
15030 | ''What is to come out of this struggle? |
15030 | After all, they are the necessary result of freedom, and what do the Bible and Greece mean but moral and intellectual freedom? |
15030 | And he said, What cities are these which thou hast given me, my brother? |
15030 | And what way so apt to this end as the bringing of his competitors under a law similar in character and as far as possible uniform in its provisions? |
15030 | At what point could it be said that a World- State is in being? |
15030 | But do circumstances and necessities always compel us to move slowly and to take one step at a time? |
15030 | But here a difficulty arose: what law was to be applied to a transaction between a Roman and a foreigner, or between two foreigners? |
15030 | But how far do they offer assistance or security for the achievement of organic reform? |
15030 | But why make mistakes? |
15030 | Do recent history and present experience discover any influences at work which may yet restore a unifying power to religion? |
15030 | Fed with the same food, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same summer and winter, as a Christian is?'' |
15030 | For what is the end to which it must lead? |
15030 | For what other knowledge matters? |
15030 | Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? |
15030 | How can such a World- State be reconciled with the independent sovereignty of the several States comprised in it? |
15030 | How far and in what form may we anticipate that the unity of mankind, centring as it must round Europe, will emerge from the trial? |
15030 | How far is attachment to country a valuable thing, how far should it be cultivated, what are the necessary limitations and controlling ideas? |
15030 | How far will the state of mind following this war assist this progress of internationalism? |
15030 | How then shall we act? |
15030 | I have many predecessors in the task of answering the question, What do we owe to the Greeks? |
15030 | If no provision is made for enforcing the acceptance of the recommendations of this body, what measure of real security for peace has been attained? |
15030 | Is a spiritual conversion, corresponding to the process of biological mutatism, possible or probable? |
15030 | Is it too much to say that we are not likely to reach either, apart from Jesus of Nazareth? |
15030 | Is the older union of thought to be permanently lost? |
15030 | Is this all? |
15030 | Just anything that may come out of it, or something we mean_ shall_ come out of it?'' |
15030 | May not similarly important mutations occur in the evolution of political institutions, when a similar stress of circumstances makes itself felt? |
15030 | Nietzsche says somewhere,''if the goal of humanity be wanting, do we not lack humanity itself?'' |
15030 | Now what is the epic? |
15030 | The task is not an easy one, for what do we mean by unity? |
15030 | Was there ever anything greater of its kind than this? |
15030 | What does it teach us to expect as the issue of the conflict? |
15030 | What does the nature of man itself demand? |
15030 | What happened? |
15030 | What has been done and what is still hoped for? |
15030 | What is it now that we find in Defoe and Hogarth? |
15030 | What is it then which has produced this impression? |
15030 | What is this spirit? |
15030 | What is to be the sanction imposing the decisions of the larger community on its constituent members? |
15030 | What is, then, the characteristic quality or note of the_ Decameron_ and the_ Canterbury Tales_? |
15030 | What then of Religion? |
15030 | What was this, then, that had come to European art and literature? |
15030 | Whence does this change in atmosphere originate? |
15030 | Where was the spark actually fired which led to the present conflagration? |
15030 | Who can ever forget these figures: the Knight, the Franklyn, the Prioress, the Wife of Bath? |
15030 | Who shall say, remembering these things, that the aims of the mediaeval Church were visionary or impracticable? |
15030 | Why these failures of co- ordination between design and execution, between nature''s truth and man''s theory and practice? |
15030 | Why this declining from the best into sloppy or antiquated work, to name only two main sorts of technological fallacy? |
15030 | see? |
14294 | In killing Afzal Khan did Sivaji sin? |
14294 | India for the Indians,will that come next? |
14294 | Need we go out of India in quest of the true knowledge of God? |
14294 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? 14294 Why has it befallen him? |
14294 | Why,Ramkrishna Paramhansa asks,"does the God- lover find such pleasure in addressing the Deity as Mother? |
14294 | Without Christian dogmas, can not a man equally love and revere Christ? |
14294 | [ 18] What now of the dignity of manual labour which many a high official has expounded to native youth? 14294 A conservative or a reformer? 14294 Again, what can be the remedy? 14294 And how, we ask, has Christ been introduced to India by association with the popular beliefs-- how, rather, has the attempt been made to do so? 14294 And what, his thighs and feet? 14294 And where the land she travels from away? 14294 And who make the nominations? 14294 Bose, B.A., B.L., a native of Eastern Bengal, regarding his youth[ 1860?] 14294 But how is the Indian feeling to be transformed? 14294 But in the final exposition of this pantheism, what do we find? 14294 But over against transmigration, what are the essential and distinctive features of that Christian belief? 14294 But we are dealing with modern, new- educated India, and now we ask ourselves: What does the modern, new- educated Indian mean by salvation? 14294 But what is poured into his ears? 14294 CHAPTER IX NEW RELIGIOUS IDEAS-- ARE THERE ANY? 14294 Does not that signify that he himself is stripped bare of belief? 14294 For Hindus or Mahomedans; for the million, English- speaking, or the many- millioned masses? 14294 For the Christian conception of the Here and the Hereafter-- what is it? 14294 From what then, during the nineteenth century, has the national consciousness come forth? 14294 He called aloud,''Who sleeps there? 14294 Hindu ascetic or Christian philanthropist? 14294 How far then have Christian and modern religious ideas been_ naturalised_ in New India, whether within the new religious organisations or without? 14294 How is it so? 14294 How shall we ticket that strange personage? 14294 How, indeed, could the educated Indian employ any other term with the desired comprehensiveness? 14294 I take the following from the question column:Do Christians believe in the doctrine of reincarnation? |
14294 | If not, how do you account for blindness at birth?" |
14294 | In answer to an inquirer''s question--"Is there only one God?" |
14294 | In brief, what is the present position of India in regard to religious belief; and in particular, what are the prevailing beliefs about God? |
14294 | In their helpless ignorance, what wonder that Britons''views are often incomplete and distorted? |
14294 | Indian conservatism-- what is it? |
14294 | Is there really any perceptible and significant change to record as the outcome of the influences of the nineteenth century? |
14294 | Kayasth caste as he was born, or new brahman? |
14294 | NEW RELIGIOUS IDEAS-- ARE THERE ANY? |
14294 | One question is,"Can we know that eternal Being( the"One only without a second,"or"The All,"_ i.e._ pantheistic Deity)? |
14294 | Our question merely is: How has the new regime affected native ideas? |
14294 | Pantheism, or the doctrine that God is all and all is God-- what does it imply? |
14294 | The Br[=a]hma Sam[=a]j, graft of West on East, and still sterile as an intellectual coterie, how would it fare, cut off from its Western nurture? |
14294 | The Indian Christian Church, hardly yet acclimatised so far as it is the creation of modern efforts, would she survive? |
14294 | The four new religious organisations described in the preceding chapters may or may not survive-- who can tell? |
14294 | The reactionary Theosophists-- after the provocative action had ceased-- what of them? |
14294 | The visitor questioned the jogi,"How can one obtain the knowledge of God?" |
14294 | The[= A]rya Sam[=a]j-- what, in that event, would be her resistance to the centripetal force that we have noted in her blind patriotism? |
14294 | To the pessimist, on the contrary[ and Hindu philosophy is pessimistic, whatever be the new mood of India], the question is,"Why was I born?" |
14294 | What are they doing at the entrance to a Mahomedan mosque? |
14294 | What does caste forbid and punish? |
14294 | What element of truth is there in the idea, we may well ask? |
14294 | What has been the nature and extent of the impact of Christian and modern thought upon India, and particularly upon Hinduism? |
14294 | What ideas have such an attraction for the educated middle class, for to that class the[= A]ryas almost exclusively belong? |
14294 | What is it? |
14294 | What sin did the pandit commit, would be his natural reflection, that he was born again a Feringee, and a woman? |
14294 | What was his mouth? |
14294 | What were his arms? |
14294 | What will she become? |
14294 | What, we may ask, is to become of the 1886 sub- divisions of the brahman caste alone, all mutually exclusive with regard to inter- marriage? |
14294 | When they divided him, How did they cut him up? |
14294 | Whence came the Christian seed of Chet Ram''s vision? |
14294 | Where are these 37 girls and women out of every 1000--over five million altogether? |
14294 | Where shall we find evidence reliable of what British influence has been? |
14294 | Where, then, is the testimony that is reliable? |
14294 | Who are the electors enjoying the new political citizenship of India? |
14294 | Why are the Indian figures so different? |
14294 | Why does the thought of salvation by faith in Jesus Christ fail to reach his heart? |
14294 | Why is it that Hindu doctrine has never set? |
14294 | Why this double- mindedness in the same educated individual? |
14294 | Why this incongruity between doctrine and domestic practice? |
14294 | Why this un- British weighting of those who are behind in the race? |
14294 | Why, one can not help asking, this invertebrate character of the new Indian religious associations in Western India? |
14294 | Why, when an Assam Shaha takes up his residence again in his motherland, Bengal, should this Blue- book be casting up to him his humble origin? |
14294 | Would not the Indian jungle, which they are trying to reduce to a well- ordered garden of indigenous fruits, speedily lapse to jungle again? |
14294 | You lay your hand upon the arm of a boy, a new- comer to the school, and you ask him in English,"What class?" |
14294 | [ 31][ Sidenote: Where is Hindustan?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: Due to nature?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: What is Pantheism?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: Who speak Hindustani?] |
14294 | [ Sidenote: Will the new religious organisations survive?] |
14294 | _ India for what Indians?_, we ask ourselves. |
14294 | and whither shall I flee from Thy spirit?" |
14294 | of a Mission College of the modern Calcutta University? |
16351 | The king said,''How can that be omitted? 16351 The man answered,''Shall we then omit the consecration of the bell?'' |
16351 | For what is the symphony, sonata, etc., but a remnant of the dance form? |
16351 | Now what is mankind''s strongest emotion? |
16351 | The king saw him, and asked,''Where is the ox going?'' |
16351 | They ask,"Why play another entirely different kind of sound until one has already enjoyed to the full what has gone before?" |
16351 | We must admit, therefore, that from this point of view their orchestra is well balanced, for what will rhyme better with noise than more noise? |
16351 | What were the books which people read and loved in those days( 1750- 1800), that is, books upon which operas might be built? |
16351 | [ 01] What would that shudder of horror in Weber''s"Freischütz"be without that throb of the basses? |
16581 | Has any one, however, doubted of the existence of Francis d''Assisi, and of the part played by him? |
16581 | Is it more just to say that Jesus owes all to Judaism, and that his greatness is only that of the Jewish people? |
16581 | Which of us, pigmies as we are, could do what the extravagant Francis d''Assisi, or the hysterical saint Theresa, has done? |
16581 | Who would not prefer to be diseased like Pascal, rather than healthy like the common herd? |
10636 | A recollection of their voyage was that they hailed an outward bound ship, somewhere off the Cape, through the trumpet:''What news?'' 10636 And_ then_ he gave them up?" |
10636 | Did_ we_ do like that, think you? |
10636 | Et pourquoy vous en feroie- je lonc conte? 10636 I understand it is not the ornamentation your friend objects to? |
10636 | Some of the Jade,says Timkowski,"is as white as snow, some dark green, like the most beautiful emerald(? |
10636 | Some one may say:''Since he holds the Christian faith to be best, why does he not attach himself to it, and become a Christian?'' 10636 Where is the ninth?" |
10636 | Who but I myself? |
10636 | Why, then,replied the Tartar,"did you hoard it, instead of expending it in keeping up an army? |
10636 | [ 7] He asks how the Gur- Khan of Karakhitai could be styled King of_ Armenia_ and of India? 10636 ''And what meanest thou by horror?'' 10636 ''Nothing more?'' 10636 ''Then you''re not in the brick- making line, are you?'' 10636 ''Transit Instrument''(? 10636 (_ Times_, 1876,----?) 10636 ), it bordered on the Mongol country; on a second( north- east? 10636 )[ 2] Can this title have been a trace of their rule? 10636 ---- How was the Trireme rowed? 10636 ----_ Quid, si Mundus evolvatur?_(_ Spectator_, 24th March, 1877.) 10636 139- 142); the mention of the Lake( Sirikul?) 10636 158), and of the benefit that Messer Marco''s health derived from a visit to them? 10636 39. Who, then, was Rusticiano, or, as the name actually is read in the oldest type of MS.,Messire Rustacians de Pise"? |
10636 | 496 seqq.)? |
10636 | Abaji( Gaiyachi?). |
10636 | According to the first of these biographies, Hatan, after his defeat by Liting on the river Kui lui( Kuilar? |
10636 | Also leaves her the interest from 1000_ lire_ of his funds in Public Debt(? |
10636 | Also the Kachh mariners told Lieutenant Leech that midway to Zanzibar there was a town(?) |
10636 | Among the questions that the Jews are said to have put, in order to test Mahommed''s prophetic character, was one series:"Who are Gog and Magog? |
10636 | And it is introduced likewise as an incident in the Romance of Bauduin de Sebourc:"Vollés veioir merveilles? |
10636 | And next, spying Mark, who was then a young gallant,[NOTE 1] he asked who was that in their company? |
10636 | And what shall I tell you next? |
10636 | And what shall I tell you? |
10636 | And what shall I tell you? |
10636 | And what will become of it all? |
10636 | And when they had read it he asked them if that was the truth? |
10636 | And why should I make a long story of it? |
10636 | And why should I make a long story? |
10636 | Bauduin exclaims:"''Madame, fu- jou chou qui sui le vous soubgis?'' |
10636 | Behind this image and overhead are other idols of a cubit(?) |
10636 | But what were they? |
10636 | But why Istan_it_? |
10636 | But why does Polo bring this_ Arbre Sec_ into connection with the Sun Tree of the Alexandrian Legend? |
10636 | C.] NOTE 3.--Ramusio''s edition says that what with horses and mares there will be an average of eighteen beasts(?) |
10636 | C.] V. ISPAHAN? |
10636 | Dated in Catania 13th January, 1346( 1347?). |
10636 | Does not this point to the real nature of the_ siclatoun_ of the Middle Ages? |
10636 | Et ad arborem Seth fecit eos ducere, prohibens eos, ne arborem transmearent, sed[ si?] |
10636 | Et cum admirantes tantam pulcritudinem aspicerent, unus sociorum aliquo eorum maior aetate, cogitans[ cogitavit?] |
10636 | Et quoi vous en diroie- je? |
10636 | Formerly it contained the_ Hwan- t''ien- e_[ B]''Armillary Sphere''; the_ Keen- e_[ D?] |
10636 | Hast thou in truth then forsaken thy wife and thy children and the Diet of thy People? |
10636 | He said:''How would you have me to become a Christian? |
10636 | He tells me also that there are( wild?) |
10636 | Hence I conjecture that this_ cognata Fiordelisa_( Trevisan?) |
10636 | How could he come so privily that I know nought of it?" |
10636 | How far was there diffusion of his Book in his own day? |
10636 | In accounts of materials for the use of Anne Boleyn in the time of her prosperity,_ bokeram_ frequently appears for"lyning and taynting"(?) |
10636 | Indeed some such passage is necessary; otherwise why distinguish between three days of desert and four days more of desert? |
10636 | Is not this rather a severe strain on one''s credulity, even for an Indian jugglery story?] |
10636 | Joinville( p. 205) gives incidental evidence of the same:"Those Marseilles ships have each two rudders, with each a tiller(? |
10636 | Knewest thou not that I was thine enemy, and that I was coming against thee with so great an host to cast thee forth of thine heritage? |
10636 | May not the Spanish_ Geliz_,"a silk- dealer,"which seems to have been a puzzle to etymologists, be connected with this? |
10636 | NOTE 1.--"In old times,"says the_ Haft Iklím._,"travellers used to go from Khotan to Cathay in 14(?) |
10636 | NOTE 2.--According to Hammer''s authority( Rashid?) |
10636 | Now des you mean to say that you be really come all the way from Beng_u_l?'' |
10636 | Or is it Indian? |
10636 | Peritsol? |
10636 | Pone mente tu che l''odi Se noi tegnamo questa via? |
10636 | Quoth Cogatai,"How can that be? |
10636 | She asked what those flowers might signify? |
10636 | The Emperor sent for the Mullahs, and asked them why they did not act on the Divine injunction? |
10636 | The Shaikh, turning to the Count, asked if he had any subjects as obedient as his own? |
10636 | The Will itself is not known to be extant, but from the reference to it in this document we learn that he left 1000_ lire_ of public debt[2](_? |
10636 | The four Characters learned by Marco, what? |
10636 | The lady asked:''May I, for once, visit the Land of Enlightenment?'' |
10636 | The lady then said:''At what place shall I hereafter come into existence?'' |
10636 | The languages to be studied were Niuché, Mongol, Tibetan, Sanskrit, Bokharan( Persian?) |
10636 | Then said Hulagu:''Since thou didst so well know that these be not fit for eating, why didst thou make a store thereof? |
10636 | There was rumoured at this time the discovery of the first known(?) |
10636 | To his son Nicolo he bequeaths a silver- wrought girdle of vermilion silk, two silver spoons, a silver cup without cover( or saucer? |
10636 | Was Polo''s Book materially affected by the Scribe Rusticiano? |
10636 | Was it possible that he had lighted on the long- lost original of Ramusio''s Version? |
10636 | What could be meant by"_ chevauchier les_ vi_ cités_"? |
10636 | What didst thou mean to do therewith? |
10636 | What manner of man was Ser Marco? |
10636 | What more shall I say? |
10636 | What powers or miracles have you witnessed on His part?" |
10636 | What shall I say about it? |
10636 | What shall I say? |
10636 | What shall I tell you? |
10636 | What sort of rampart did Zu''lkarnain build between them and men?" |
10636 | What was before such a man when once his eyes were closed? |
10636 | When lacked we homeborn Genoese? |
10636 | Whenever he knew of any one who had a pretty daughter, certain ruffians of his would go to the father, and say:"What say you? |
10636 | Where do they dwell? |
10636 | Where was Karákorum situated? |
10636 | Wherefore didst thou not take of thy gear and employ it in paying knights and soldiers to defend thee and thy city?" |
10636 | Why did you not meet me at the Oxus?" |
10636 | Wist he not well that he was my liegeman and serf? |
10636 | [ 11] The great Magellanic cloud? |
10636 | [ 15] Ma sé si gran colmo avea Perchè andava mendigando Per terra de Lombardia Peccunia, gente a sodi? |
10636 | [ 20] And, if this be the true answer, why should Polo have used a French jargon in which to tell his story? |
10636 | [ 8] Perhaps this time the Traveller had found an amanuensis whose faculties had not been stiffened by fifteen years of Malapaga? |
10636 | [ NOTE 4] But why should I make a long story of it? |
10636 | [ Sidenote: How far was there diffusion of his Book in his own day?] |
10636 | [ Sidenote: Was Polo''s Book materially affected by the Scribe Rusticiano?] |
10636 | _ Buckrams_, what were they? |
10636 | _ Grus leucogeranus_(?) |
10636 | _ Olives_(? |
10636 | _ We_ indeed? |
10636 | a Vernier? |
10636 | am I awake or am I dreaming?" |
10636 | he adds:--"Beat up for aliens? |
10636 | of Rossetti and others to read aloud( and who could equal his reading? |
10636 | punctam?) |
10636 | to_ The Karwán Expedition_ in which he says:"Is it not possible that the Karwánis are the Caraonas of Marco Polo? |
12956 | ''one is seated... and asks another who is thoughtful:"What are you thinking of?" |
12956 | 2]?" |
12956 | 443 In what sense is the world- appearance false? |
12956 | 6. Who is it knows? |
12956 | 62 CHAPTER IV GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE SYSTEMS OF INDIAN PHILOSOPHY In what Sense is a History of Indian Philosophy possible? |
12956 | 63,"si le vijñâna ne descendait pas dans le sein maternel la namarupa s''y constituerait- il?" |
12956 | 95 does it manifest? |
12956 | Again, what is meant by being"made up of parts"? |
12956 | And whether not till after it the gods lived? |
12956 | But I maintain that if everything past and future has been taken away, what remains? |
12956 | But Vedânta objects to this, and asks how there can be non- distinction between a thing which is clearly perceived and a thing which is remembered? |
12956 | But do the facts prove this? |
12956 | But how was it that the existence of this self was so widely spoken of as demonstrated in experience? |
12956 | But is it necessary that a history of Indian philosophy should be written? |
12956 | But is this being without the jug identical with the ground or different? |
12956 | But on what did upâdâna depend? |
12956 | But on what do the six âyatanas depend? |
12956 | But on what does sense- contact depend? |
12956 | But on what does this bhava depend? |
12956 | But on what does vedanâ depend, or rather what must be there, that there may be feeling(_ vedanâ_)? |
12956 | But still the question remains, what breaks the state of equilibrium? |
12956 | But what being there are there the sa@nkhâras? |
12956 | But what being there, can there be desire? |
12956 | But what does that mean? |
12956 | But what does this mean? |
12956 | But what is the inmost essence of man? |
12956 | But what is this specific nature? |
12956 | But what was its nature? |
12956 | Could it be identified with any of the deities of Nature, was it a new deity or was it no deity at all? |
12956 | Did he take to creation through a personal whim? |
12956 | Did he take to it in accordance with the moral and immoral actions of men? |
12956 | Does Vais''e@sika represent an Old School of Mîmâ@msâ? |
12956 | Does he produce the world by knowledge and will? |
12956 | Does he produce the world by physical movement or any other kind of movement? |
12956 | Does his mere abstract existence produce the world? |
12956 | For they do not exist, and even if they did exist, why should the same data sometimes bring about the right perception and sometimes the illusion? |
12956 | For what is meant by empty space? |
12956 | For when in the beginning there were no beings towards whom should he be actuated with a feeling of mercy? |
12956 | For who could live, who could breathe if this space(_ âkâs''a_) was not bliss? |
12956 | Having gone up to the sphere beyond, it considered,''How can I descend again into these worlds?'' |
12956 | He established the earth and this sky; to what god shall we offer our oblation?... |
12956 | He further asks, Is this consciousness the same as the previous consciousness or different from it? |
12956 | How again can one come to a right conclusion about the_ regressus ad infinitum_ of cause and effect(_ hetu_ and_ phala_)? |
12956 | How can the perception of want of vision or want of existence be grasped? |
12956 | How can the thing which is destroyed the moment after it is born produce any effect? |
12956 | If anyone has done a vile action by inflicting injury, should he himself also do the same by being angry at it? |
12956 | If everything was 167 non- essential how did it originate? |
12956 | If he were finding fault with others for being angry, could he himself indulge in anger? |
12956 | If it is indefinite nescience, how can all these well- defined forms of world- existence come out of it? |
12956 | If knowledge and the object are both but corresponding points in a parallel series, whence comes this correspondence? |
12956 | If the creation took place simply through his own nature, then, what is the good of 206 admitting him at all? |
12956 | If the jug as it exists in our representation were the svalak@sa@na and paramârthasat, what would remain of Vijñânavâda? |
12956 | In doubtful cognitions also, as in the case"Is this a post or a man?" |
12956 | In other words, how can my perception"a blue thing"guarantee that what is subjectively perceived as blue is really so objectively as well? |
12956 | Is it through mercy that he took to creation? |
12956 | Is_ A B_? |
12956 | Is_ C D_? |
12956 | Moreover, knowledge is a mental affair and how can it certify the objective truth of its representation? |
12956 | Moreover, the puru@sa is pure inactive intelligence without any touch of impurity and what service or need can such a puru@sa have of the gu@nas? |
12956 | The guide of his ascending path,--who saw it?" |
12956 | The objection is sometimes raised that if the soul is omnipresent how can it be called an agent or a mover? |
12956 | The question arises that if there is no substance or reality how are we to account for the phenomena? |
12956 | The question however arises that if all apprehensions are valid, how are we to account for illusory perceptions which can not be regarded as valid? |
12956 | The question is raised, how can the prak@rti supply the deficiencies made in its evolutes by the formation of other evolutes from them? |
12956 | The question now arises, how is self cognized? |
12956 | Then it occurred to him what being there, are decay and death, depending on what do they come? |
12956 | They would describe the wind( Vâta) and adore him and say"In what place was he born, and from whence comes he? |
12956 | This earth he settled firm and heaven established: What god shall we adore with our oblations? |
12956 | Thus a man of the city who has never seen a wild ox(_ gavaya_) goes to the forest, asks a forester--"what is gavaya?" |
12956 | To this the Jain replies,"What does the Naiyâyika mean when he says that the world is of the nature of an effect"? |
12956 | Was there the fathomless abyss of waters? |
12956 | What being there, is there birth, on what does birth depend? |
12956 | What covered all? |
12956 | What does potential state mean? |
12956 | What is his nature? |
12956 | What is meant by saying that the jug was unmanifested or was in a potential state before, and that it has now become manifest or actual? |
12956 | What is the horse that grazes in the field and to what good can its sacrifice lead? |
12956 | What is the process of this experience? |
12956 | What was sorrow, what was the cause of sorrow, what was the cessation of sorrow and what could lead to it? |
12956 | When a man receives this rapture, then is he full of bliss; for who could breathe, who live, if that bliss had not filled this void(_ âkâs''a_)? |
12956 | Where is Brahman? |
12956 | Who here can tell us surely From what and how this universe has risen? |
12956 | Who then can know from what it has arisen? |
12956 | Who went to ask him that knows it[ Footnote ref 2]?" |
12956 | Why did the puru@sa become bound down? |
12956 | You say that sensations are copies of the external world, but why should you say that they copy, and not that they alone exist? |
12956 | and where? |
12956 | by what protected? |
12956 | where was the vital breath, the blood, the Self(_ âtman_) of the world? |
15320 | And then the consciousness itself-- what is it during the time that it continues? 15320 But how could she?" |
15320 | But how,I persisted,"could the relatives allow Madame to forgive him?" |
15320 | But why? |
15320 | But,I interrupted,"how does it happen that the fellow is still on the Floran plantation?" |
15320 | Is it African sorcery? |
15320 | Queer-- is it not? |
15320 | You are not a human being, but a Well- Person.... Why do you thus wickedly try to delude and destroy people? |
15320 | [ 60])_][ Footnote 60: The fourth line gives these two readings:--_ Nam''mai da?_--How many sheets are there?" |
15320 | ( Why then should Heaven deem it necessary to part us? |
15320 | ( or,"for what evil design can this deed have been done? |
15320 | )_] Waga tamé to, Tanabata- tsumé no, Sono yado ni, Oreru shirotai Nuït ken kamo? |
15320 | --The sturdy Takeo who spoke thus: can he really be dead?...__ Nay! |
15320 | All that human mind is capable of conceiving as possible( and how much also that human mind must forever remain incapable of conceiving?) |
15320 | Amanogawa Kawa''to sayakéshi: Hikoboshi no Haya kogu funé no Nami no sawagi ka? |
15320 | And the old negro whom we saw to- day-- the old sorcerer, as you call him-- left the plantation, and joined the rising: do you understand?" |
15320 | And what becomes of it when it ends? |
15320 | As you have come thus far out of your way, kind sir, will you not deign to enter and to rest a while?" |
15320 | But the world must pass away: will it thereafter be the same for the universe as if humanity had never existed? |
15320 | Doko no uma no honé da ka?_"("Goodness knows what kind of a thing he has dragged here after him! |
15320 | For years past, when watching the unfolding buds in the spring, there has arisen the thought,''Shall I ever again see the buds unfold? |
15320 | He went himself to the entrance, and asked,--"Who calls?" |
15320 | Hisakata no[8] Ama no kawasé ni, Funé ukété, Koyoï ka kimi ga Agari kimasan? |
15320 | Honrai wa K[=u] naru mono ka, Yuki- Onna? |
15320 | I queried...."How does he bewitch those chickens?" |
15320 | If I laughed unthinkingly, it was only because I could not help wondering"..."At what?" |
15320 | Kabé ni mimi Arité, kiké to ka? |
15320 | May I ask if you have lost your way?" |
15320 | Saka- bashira Tatéshi wa tazo ya? |
15320 | Shall I ever again be awakened at dawn by the song of the thrush?'' |
15320 | So the village query about the man who marries a strange wife,"What old horse- bone has he picked up?" |
15320 | Tomoshibi no Kagé ayashigé ni Miyénuru wa Abura shiborishi Furu- tsubaki ka- mo? |
15320 | Where did he pick up that old horse- bone?") |
15320 | [ 53] listen, will ye? |
15320 | [_ Even the ghost that would remove the charms written with six characters actually tries to count them, repeating:"How many sheets are there?" |
15320 | [_ Is it that the current of the River of__ Heaven( has become too) rapid? |
15320 | [_ That house- pillar hewn in the mountains of Hida, and thence brought here and erected upside- down-- what carpenter''s work can it be? |
15320 | [_ Was she, then, a delusion from the very first, that Snow- Woman,--a thing that vanishes into empty space? |
15320 | [_ Which one is this?--which one is that? |
15320 | [_ Who set the house- pillar upside- down? |
15320 | signifies really,"What wanton has bewitched him?" |
15320 | when shall we meet?" |
15082 | O Paradise, O Paradise Who does not sigh for rest? |
15082 | The Scholar said to his Master: How may I come to the supersensual life, that I may see God and hear Him speak? 15082 The Scholar said: How can I hear when I stand still from thinking and willing? |
15082 | The Scholar said: Is that near at hand or far off? 15082 What fruits dost thou bring back from this thy vision?" |
15082 | Where,says Jacob Boehme,"will you seek for God? |
15082 | [ 28] Is it possible to state more plainly the indivisible identity of the Spirit of Life? 15082 [ 39] How many people do each of us know who work and will in quiet love, and thus participate in eternal life? |
15082 | [ 41] And what is worship but a reach- out of the finite spirit towards Infinite Life? 15082 [ 91] What happens in it? |
15082 | Again, we have to remember that the instinctive self, powerful though it be? |
15082 | And if in a group or church, what should the character of this society be? |
15082 | And last, if we ask as a summing up of the whole matter:_ Why_ man is thus to seek the Eternal, through, behind and within the ever- fleeting? |
15082 | And the next question-- a highly practical question-- is,"How_ both_?" |
15082 | And what is perfection of joy but grace complete? |
15082 | But the crucial question which religion asks must be, does fresh life flow in from those visions and contacts, that intercourse? |
15082 | Can we honestly say that young people reared in them are likely to acquire this temper of heaven? |
15082 | Do the masters, or the workers, work and will in quiet love? |
15082 | Do we always manage or even try to give it that enduring object, in a form it can accept? |
15082 | Do we take enough notice of it? |
15082 | Does it send them out equipped with the means of living a full and efficient spiritual life? |
15082 | Does it train them to regard humanity, and their own place in the human life- stream, from this point of view? |
15082 | First, does the average good education train our young people in spiritual self- preservation? |
15082 | How is he to be dealt with, and the opportunities which he presents used best? |
15082 | How is the traditional deposit of spiritual experience handed on, the individual drawn into the stream of spiritual history and held there? |
15082 | How is this done? |
15082 | How many politicians-- the people to whom we have confided the control of our national existence-- work and will in quiet love? |
15082 | If anyone who has followed these arguments, and now desires to bring them from idea into practice, asks:"What next?" |
15082 | If, then, it does achieve the social phase what stages may we expect it to pass through, and by what special characters will it be graced? |
15082 | Is nothing left out? |
15082 | Is such a view complete? |
15082 | Is transcendental feeling involved in them? |
15082 | Last, to what extent do we try to introduce our pupils into a full enjoyment of their spiritual inheritance, the culture and tradition of the past? |
15082 | Or after considering the inner nature of international diplomacy and finance? |
15082 | Or after reading the unvarnished record of our dealings with the problem of Indian immigration into Africa? |
15082 | Ought we not to introduce our pupils to them; not as stuffed specimens, but as vivid human beings? |
15082 | Secondly, does it give them a spiritual outlook in respect of their racial duties, fit them in due time to be parents of other souls? |
15082 | Secondly,_ Process._ What is the line of development by which the individual comes to acquire and exhibit these characters? |
15082 | This question, often put in the crucial form,"Did Jesus Christ intend to form a Church?" |
15082 | V.][ Footnote 98: Que frutti reducene de esta tua visione? |
15082 | What about industry? |
15082 | What about our English saints? |
15082 | What about the hurried, ugly and devitalizing existence of our big towns? |
15082 | What about the master and the worker in such a possibly regenerated social order? |
15082 | What are we to regard as the heart of spirituality? |
15082 | What is it, then, from which he must be saved? |
15082 | What is that supernal symphony of which this elusive music, with its three complementary strains, forms part? |
15082 | What next? |
15082 | What thing is grace but beginning of joy? |
15082 | What was this impulse and urge? |
15082 | What, then, are we doing about this? |
15082 | When the young man with great possessions asked Jesus,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
15082 | Where then would be our most heart- searching social problems? |
15082 | Wherein do its differentia consist? |
15082 | Would not this, at last, actualize the Pauline dream, of each single citizen as a member of the Body of Christ? |
15082 | Yet is there in this state of things nothing but food for congratulation? |
15082 | [ 56] What, then, is the character of the life which St. Benedict proposed as a remedy for the human failure and disharmony that he saw around him? |
15082 | that is to say with diligence and faithful purpose, without selfish anxiety, without selfish demands and hostilities? |
15586 | Has any cloud ever arisen between my brother Shaukat and myself during the months that we have now lived and worked together? 15586 But how if these results have been achieved only by a short- sighted and narrow- minded policy which sacrificed the future to the present? 15586 But what do such differences matter between two men in both of whom the heart of India beats in unison? |
15586 | But what of many other"orders"which were not disallowed? |
15586 | But where, they asked with growing impatience, was the fulfilment of the hopes which they had founded on the Queen''s Proclamation of 1858? |
15586 | But would he have been able to retain it? |
15586 | Can you point to a single Dominion that is asked to make an annual sacrifice comparable to that? |
15586 | Did he despair of any remedy unless he took the spiritual law, as he had already taken the civil law, into his own hands? |
15586 | Does not the same hold good for nations and for races? |
15586 | Had not a great part of Calcutta itself also observed the_ Hartal_ proclaimed by Mr. Gandhi during the Prince''s visit? |
15586 | Had she not also perhaps feet of clay? |
15586 | Have we not there a symbol of the fundamental antagonism between Hindu and Mahomedan conceptions in many other domains than that of architecture? |
15586 | How far down has this Hindu and Mahomedan fraternisation really reached that is based above all on common hatred of a"Satanic"Government? |
15586 | How many of them are entirely free from it themselves, or, if free, have the courage to act up to their opinions? |
15586 | How was this new situation to be dealt with? |
15586 | Or was even as noble a mind as his not proof against the overweening_ hubris_ to which a despotic genius has so often succumbed? |
15586 | Or who would care to miss during the daylight hours the open window on to the kaleidoscopic scenes of Indian life at every halt? |
15586 | There had been perhaps no departure from the letter of the Proclamation, but had its spirit been translated into effective practice? |
15586 | To which of these worlds would Mahomedans reckon India to belong when she obtained_ Swaraj_? |
15586 | Was British rule to endure for ever? |
15586 | Was England really mightier than Russia? |
15586 | What augury can be drawn for the future from the results already achieved? |
15586 | What is the secret of his power? |
15586 | What manner of man is Mr. Gandhi, whom Indians revere as a Mahatma,_ i.e._ an inspired sage upon whom the wisdom of the ancient Rishis has descended? |
15586 | What of the whole judicial or_ quasi_-judicial administration of martial law? |
15586 | What was the reason? |
15586 | When would Simla or Whitehall break the prolonged silence? |
15586 | Will it have died with the war? |
11738 | ''And who are these fellows who set themselves up for wise men? 11738 ''But how can I make this underground passage?'' |
11738 | ''But how can I manage this?'' 11738 ''But why should I waste your time with needless arguments? |
11738 | ''Have you no clever thief here,''I replied,''accustomed to such work?'' 11738 ''Tell me,''he answered,''how far do you regard virtue as superior to the other two?'' |
11738 | ''Who is he?'' 11738 But is there no danger?" |
11738 | How can that be? |
11738 | How can there be danger when the ceremony is to be performed by his own queen, in his own private gardens, where no stranger can enter? 11738 Meanwhile the rascal took the anklet he had stolen to the husband, saying:''I wish to dispose of this, will you buy it?'' |
11738 | Not having his eyes yet opened, he started as if thunderstruck, and said:''My dear, what does all this mean? 11738 Of what family was she?" |
11738 | Recognising the ornament as having been his wife''s, he asked:''Where did you get this?'' 11738 Shall that monster carry off the lady before our eyes? |
11738 | Tell me,said he,"who they were, and how they prove the truth of your answers?" |
11738 | What best accomplishes difficult things? |
11738 | What is love? |
11738 | What is most to the advantage of a householder? |
11738 | What is your plan? |
11738 | ''Did I ever deceive you?'' |
11738 | ''Is this your child?'' |
11738 | ''What would I say? |
11738 | After I was rested and refreshed, he asked me,"What has brought you back so soon? |
11738 | After some further talk, I asked him:"Friend, what do you now intend to do?" |
11738 | And I, having my mind occupied by astonishment, thought:"Is this Lakshmi? |
11738 | And how did you get all these attendants?" |
11738 | And who can this beautiful lady be? |
11738 | Are there not the six thousand verses composed for the use of kings, and containing the whole science? |
11738 | Are they not often themselves cheated by the unlearned? |
11738 | Are they the less worshipped on that account? |
11738 | Are you willing, if you are pardoned, to forsake your evil ways, and lead an honest life? |
11738 | As she said this, I called out:"O old woman, who ever bound a god or the wind, Shall these crows catch an eagle?" |
11738 | Being struck by the appearance of the child, he said"Where did you get this beautiful boy, who is like a king''s son? |
11738 | Besides, have not the learned and clever ministers and counsellors approved of it, and is it likely that they would be deceived?" |
11738 | But I have done nothing to offend him; why should he so distress me? |
11738 | But why should I preach to you thus? |
11738 | Can you expect that I will confer on you this beauty for the sake of my rivals?" |
11738 | Can you tell me where to find him?" |
11738 | Cruel, indeed, was Târâvali, who, when she had received you again from Kuvera, did not bring you at once to me; but what could I expect from her? |
11738 | Do they always do right? |
11738 | Do you think he has no cause for anger against you? |
11738 | Give up your exertions; the prince is the only physician who can cure me; and how can he come to me here?" |
11738 | Going up to him, I asked"What is this concourse of people? |
11738 | Great was their mutual astonishment and joy when they recognised each other, the prince exclaiming,"Is it possible? |
11738 | Have you not robbed him of his intended wife, by bribing her father? |
11738 | Have you, in your travels, met with any very extraordinary adventure?" |
11738 | Having heard this, I made my appearance, and said:"O lovely lady, do you ask how you have offended Kâma? |
11738 | He answered furiously:"You purse- proud wretch, do you think I will not take my master''s part? |
11738 | He hesitated for a moment, and looked very hard at me; but at last he said:"What harm can there be in telling you? |
11738 | He took it to our master, the god Kuvera, who sent for me, and asked,"What induced you to bring this child?" |
11738 | He, having heard nothing of what his servant had said, when summoned and asked"Have you a confidential servant named Vimardaka?" |
11738 | How came you to be in such a place, and why did the lady wish to destroy herself?" |
11738 | How can she do this without her ornaments? |
11738 | How is it possible that the princess should have fallen in love with such a paltry wretch, overlooking a man like me? |
11738 | How is my bed of leaves exchanged for this soft couch? |
11738 | I am deceived, he is not coming; O my heart, how can this be borne? |
11738 | I asked her, therefore:"Will you allow me to examine that picture?" |
11738 | I asked him therefore:"Do you know anything of what is going on at Mahishmati?" |
11738 | I asked him"Worthy sir, what is this festival called? |
11738 | I asked him--"What is that camp which I see at some distance?" |
11738 | I have been searching for him ever since; have you seen him?'' |
11738 | I said to myself:"Who are these creatures whose voices I have heard? |
11738 | I then painted a portrait of myself, and said:"Show this to the queen; she will no doubt admire it, and say:''Is this a portrait or a fancy picture?'' |
11738 | I then said to the old woman,"Pray tell me what all this means? |
11738 | I thought to myself I could easily run away from them; but what would become of the poor old woman? |
11738 | If I do not obtain her, Kâma will not suffer me to live; but how can I make known my love to her? |
11738 | Inspired by this circumstance with a happy thought, Râjavâhana said to the princess,"Will you allow me to tell you a short story? |
11738 | Is it possible that such a handsome man can exist in the world? |
11738 | Is it really you, my dear friend Apahâravarma, who have done this deed?" |
11738 | Is there any one among you skilled in charms who can recover him?" |
11738 | Lost in astonishment, I said to myself;"What has become of that great forest wrapt in darkness? |
11738 | May I know the cause of your grief? |
11738 | Now my transformation is ended, and you are so far free; tell me what I can do for you in atonement for the suffering which I have caused?" |
11738 | O adorable Kâma, what have I done to offend thee, that thou thus burnest me and dost not reduce me to ashes?" |
11738 | Observing that she looked at me very hard, and that tears came into her eyes, I asked her:"O, mother, what is the cause of your grief?" |
11738 | She, not imagining what had occurred, would have let me pass without especial notice; but I called her, and said:"Have you never seen me before?" |
11738 | Then do you answer:''Suppose it should be a portrait of some living person; what then?'' |
11738 | Then he began:"What is cruel?" |
11738 | Then indeed she opened her eyes wide with joy and astonishment, saying:"Can it be possible? |
11738 | Then they sat down together under a shady tree, and the prince inquired:"What have you been doing all this time? |
11738 | Then, as if my anger were appeased, I answered:"Why should I, who am about to die, harbour resentment? |
11738 | Then, with a knowing smile, he added,"But what makes you look so pale?" |
11738 | What are we now to do?" |
11738 | What are you doing here, destroying my flowers?" |
11738 | What can I do? |
11738 | What did you do when you missed me that morning in the forest?" |
11738 | What has become of the great love which you professed for me?'' |
11738 | What have I to do with that low fellow? |
11738 | What is now to be done?" |
11738 | What more would you have? |
11738 | What will become of me?" |
11738 | Whence is this dome above me, lofty as the great temple of Siva? |
11738 | Where do you come from? |
11738 | Where does he come from? |
11738 | Where have you been? |
11738 | Who are all these lovely women, like a troop of Apsaras lying down wearied with play? |
11738 | Who is this lady? |
11738 | Why do you sit here alone, away from the others?" |
11738 | Why should you annoy me? |
11738 | Will this satisfy you?" |
11738 | Will you be offended if I ask you to come and rest at my house?" |
11738 | Will you be so good as to help me, and tie his hands behind him that he may not get away again?" |
11738 | Will your majesty deign to allow her to remain under your protection until my return?" |
11738 | You seem very intelligent; can not you think of some stratagem which may have the desired effect?'' |
11738 | and the other saying,"Do I indeed see my Lord Râjavâhana?" |
11738 | and what is he that he should thus lord it over us?'' |
11738 | he asked,"and how can I be of service in carrying it out?" |
11738 | how can I find out who he is?" |
11738 | is not this a delusion? |
11738 | is there anything in which you require my assistance?" |
11738 | should there be any pity for the violator of the harem? |
11738 | who can that magician be, and what dreadful thing is it which he is about to do?" |
13229 | And they worshiped the dragon which gave power unto the beast: and they worshiped the beast, saying, Who is like unto the beast? 13229 Are you ready, waiting for the Lord? |
13229 | Before she travailed, she brought forth; before her pain came, she was delivered of a_ man- child._ Who hath heard such a thing? 13229 Do not Methodists, in violation of God''s Word and their own discipline, dress as extravagantly and as fashionably as any other class? |
13229 | To whom then will ye liken God? 13229 What is a man profited, if he gain the whole world, and_ lose his own soul_?" |
13229 | 4. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? |
13229 | A certain writer on this text has said:"Who take the lead in all the extravagancies of the age? |
13229 | And I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, Who is worthy to open the book, and to loose the seals thereof? |
13229 | And if he ate them, how, then, could they constitute the remainder of the book? |
13229 | And if his appearance was necessary in this case, why was it not necessary in every event, to show that it was done under his direction? |
13229 | And if this is not his real appearance, upon what principle of interpretation can we ever establish the fact of his second coming? |
13229 | And is not a fallen star an appropriate symbol of its propagator? |
13229 | And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in white robes? |
13229 | And the angel said unto me, Wherefore didst thou marvel? |
13229 | And they cried with a loud voice, saying, How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth? |
13229 | And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the beast: and they worshipped the beast, saying, Who is like unto the beast? |
13229 | Andrew Proles, provincial of the Augustines, used often to say:"Whence, then, proceeds so much darkness and such horrible superstitions? |
13229 | At this point the question is sure to be asked, How could the beast continue to live if its seventh head was to continue but"a short space"? |
13229 | But the peculiar qualities thus symbolized are possessed by the four living creatures themselves, and what do_ they_ represent? |
13229 | But they were also a religious body, and how could that fact be symbolically combined with the other? |
13229 | But who are"his servants"? |
13229 | But why stir this cesspool of filth any longer? |
13229 | By what law could such a symbolic appearance represent merely a providential superintendence? |
13229 | Did human thought ever reach the conception of music like this? |
13229 | Did new Rome in reality have the seven heads? |
13229 | Did old Rome really possess the ten horns? |
13229 | Did severe slaughter and persecution follow the Reformation? |
13229 | Did the eyes of a mortal ever behold such rapturous scenes? |
13229 | Do not the ladies, and even the wives and daughters of the ministry, put on''gold and pearls and costly array''? |
13229 | Does it deteriorate rapidly and turn out so badly, after all? |
13229 | Does the evil, the folly, and the madness of these proud, formal, fashionable worshiper, stop here? |
13229 | Drunken with what-- wine? |
13229 | For the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand? |
13229 | For who that sees it does not inquire for what we suffer? |
13229 | For whose benefit was the Revelation given? |
13229 | God, evidently, can not be symbolized; for where is the individual in heaven or on earth that can stand as his representative? |
13229 | Has the Pope of Rome a name the letters of which, used as numerals, make six hundred and sixty- six? |
13229 | Have we not here a fit representation of a delusive faith proceeding from its true source,"the bottomless pit"? |
13229 | How did the Papacy mark its subjects? |
13229 | How is this fulfilled? |
13229 | How soon, at that rate, will this world be brought to God? |
13229 | How, then, could the old heathen worship be perpetuated in the church of Rome and form a part of her religious services? |
13229 | I do not question the truth of this assertion, but what becomes of their boasted uninterrupted apostolical succession? |
13229 | In the face of these amazing facts can any one deny that Protestantism is a part of great Babylon and is in a fallen condition? |
13229 | Is it any wonder that such is the case when a large number of the preachers themselves are in reality skeptics? |
13229 | Is it any wonder that the souls of these martyrs should cry unto God for the vindication of their righteous blood? |
13229 | Is not this a wonderful combination of symbols which can be carried out with surprising accuracy? |
13229 | Is not worldliness seen in the music? |
13229 | Lorenzo Dow says of the Romish Church:"If she be the mother, who are the daughters? |
13229 | Many sects have also copied other Popish doctrines, such as infant baptism, the destruction of all outside of the pales of the church(? |
13229 | Oh, when will the communion of saints be complete? |
13229 | One of his infallible(?) |
13229 | Or will you decide to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season, only to be resurrected at the last great day to"shame and everlasting contempt"? |
13229 | Reader, what was the condition of the so- called church in A.D. 270 that could make the introduction of such abominations possible? |
13229 | Reasoning by analogy, what would the contents of a sealed book in the hand of God symbolize? |
13229 | Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? |
13229 | The Decretals of Isodore furnish another example of Papal infallibility(?). |
13229 | The last question asked was,"Do you belong to any of the various orthodox Protestant denominations?" |
13229 | The next question that greeted him was this,"Do you believe the Westminster Confession of Faith to be orthodox?" |
13229 | The question arises, Are these souls symbols of something else, or are they what they are here stated to be,"the souls of them that were slain"? |
13229 | The question may be asked,"Is the language intelligible at all?" |
13229 | Then the ministers humbly asked,"What do you intend to leave us?" |
13229 | They were disembodied spirits, and where is there anything of analagous character to represent such? |
13229 | To what living agents, then, did the delusion of Mohammedanism give birth-- agents of a destructive nature like scorpion locust? |
13229 | To what, then, does it refer? |
13229 | To whom are the four and twenty elders referred? |
13229 | Was not here a hearty response to that call,"Rejoice over her thou heaven"? |
13229 | What greater plague could fall upon Romanism and Protestantism than this fearful scourge of infidelity? |
13229 | What harm can it do to give her a hearing?... |
13229 | What human ingenuity could have ever contrived such a marvelous series of events, and described them under such appropriate symbols? |
13229 | What is Jerusalem without a temple where the tribes may go up and worship before the Lord? |
13229 | What is there analagous to it which could here be employed? |
13229 | What right have we to remove one agent from the panorama as an actual agent there any more than another? |
13229 | What shall become of it? |
13229 | What will be the fourth? |
13229 | What will be the fourth? |
13229 | What, let me ask, in the political world is analagous to tempestuous storms sweeping over the earth? |
13229 | What, may we ask, has been the fate of this church against which Christ uttered the threat of removal? |
13229 | What, then, does the man- child signify? |
13229 | What, then, is the analagous object of which the human body may stand as a proper representative? |
13229 | What, then, were they? |
13229 | When he called on the minister and made known his errand, the first question asked him was this,"Are you a member of the Presbyterian church?" |
13229 | When will these avenging judgments cease?" |
13229 | Where is there an object in all creation analagous to a disembodied spirit? |
13229 | Where shall we look for the very highest exhibition of the luxury, even show, and pride of life, resulting from the vanity and sin of the race? |
13229 | Where shall we look in the history of religious affairs to find the object that meets the requirements of this symbol? |
13229 | Where, then, in the history of God''s true church do we find the agencies corresponding to the symbol? |
13229 | Who are foremost in extravagance in dress, and all costly attire? |
13229 | Who are the very personification of pride and arrogance? |
13229 | Who are they? |
13229 | Who ever heard of a city one thousand and five hundred miles square? |
13229 | Who load their tables with the richest and choicest viands? |
13229 | Who that embraces them is not ready to give his blood for the fulness of God''s grace?" |
13229 | Who that inquires does not embrace our doctrines? |
13229 | Who were the active, intelligent agents that appeared as the great opposers of the establishment of Christianity by the rider of the white horse? |
13229 | Why was it necessary that the redeemed company of God''s people should be represented by_ four_ living creatures? |
13229 | Why, then, was it called the Devil and Satan? |
13229 | Would she not falsify them? |
13229 | and whence came they? |
13229 | is not this a great defect? |
13229 | or shall a nation be born at once? |
13229 | or what likeness will ye compare unto him?" |
13229 | successors in the Papal chair, Pope Victor III., pronounced this infallible(?) |
13229 | what will this come to?" |
13229 | who hath seen such things? |
13229 | who is able to make war with him? |
13229 | who is able to make war with him?" |
10610 | Oh, when shall I be with you? |
10610 | ''Have you read the latter part of Lord J. Russell''s speech?'' |
10610 | ***** What is to be done? |
10610 | --At Sea, April 9th._--Will this letter be delivered to you by the post or by the writer in person? |
10610 | ... Shall I really eat my Christmas dinner with you? |
10610 | Am I likely to find fifty young military officers who would be competent to advise the Ryots on points of so much delicacy? |
10610 | And Frederick-- what will he think of my coming out? |
10610 | And again, was it not equally certain that undeserved aspersions were cast upon the planters? |
10610 | And if we do, what will be its character? |
10610 | And is this really so incontestable a truth that it is a duty not only to hold but to proclaim it? |
10610 | And what is the result? |
10610 | And what will the sum of those experiences be? |
10610 | And wherefore this foreboding? |
10610 | And who are the Americans? |
10610 | And why is it otherwise in India? |
10610 | And with what issues? |
10610 | And, after all, may I not with all submission ask, Is not the question at issue a most momentous one? |
10610 | Are we to stand by and laugh at our dupe, telling him that though our advice got him into the scrape, he must find his own way out of it? |
10610 | Bight or wrong you had better book up, for we are bound to keep the peace, and we shall certainly be down upon you if you kick up a row''? |
10610 | But by whom is this charge to be borne? |
10610 | But how does the case stand with us? |
10610 | But if so, what are the conditions which will entitle railway enterprises of this class to the countenance and encouragement of the Government? |
10610 | But is it indeed so light a matter, even as our constitution now works? |
10610 | But is it the right way? |
10610 | But is it true? |
10610 | But suppose them to be successful, what would be the result? |
10610 | But what does this resolution in favour of an uniform gauge imply? |
10610 | But what is to be done? |
10610 | But wherefore then this anticipation-- if foreboding be not the correct term? |
10610 | Can I do anything to prevent England from calling down on herself God''s curse for brutalities committed on another feeble Oriental race? |
10610 | Could I leave this, the really noblest part of my task, to be worked out by others? |
10610 | Did I ever mention it in my letters? |
10610 | Do not anniversaries stir this great fountain of sadness? |
10610 | Have you returned to your desolate home? |
10610 | How can it be justifiable to adopt the former of these expedients, and sacrilegious to act upon the latter? |
10610 | How has she sought to solve this problem-- to overcome this difficulty? |
10610 | How long can such a state of things be expected to endure? |
10610 | How many since we parted? |
10610 | How, then, does it come to pass, that the labours of their descendants here have been rewarded by a return so much more immediate and abundant? |
10610 | I am waiting for Parkes and the General before I decide as to landing,& c. Is it not strange to be here? |
10610 | If firing had begun, who could tell when it would end? |
10610 | If the rising generation, however, are not educated, what is to become of this island? |
10610 | If this goes on one fortnight after we have captured the town, when is it to stop?... |
10610 | Is education necessary to qualify the peasantry to carry on the rude field operations of slavery? |
10610 | Is it a light matter that the Crown should have the power of dissolving Parliament; in other words, of deposing the tyrant at will? |
10610 | Is it indeed true( he wrote to Lady Elgin)? |
10610 | Is it not lawful to be sad? |
10610 | Is it one which has any claim to a special remedy? |
10610 | Is it so or am I to meet some great disappointment when I reach China? |
10610 | Is it the Canadas? |
10610 | Is it to be all undone? |
10610 | Is there not, however, some fallacy in this? |
10610 | It can always be said:"What does Lord Elgin know of India? |
10610 | Let me ask you, who is the worse off for this display of good feeling and fraternal intercourse? |
10610 | May I hope that it is so? |
10610 | May not some persons even entertain the apprehension, that it will indispose them to such pursuits? |
10610 | Now, gentlemen, what is the inference that I would draw from all this? |
10610 | Now, how was this change effected? |
10610 | Or if I had gone home, and left the winding- up of these affairs in the hands of others?... |
10610 | Shall we find any Chinese news there? |
10610 | Shall we meet any vessels at the rendezvous? |
10610 | The first consideration which offers itself in connection with this subject is this,''Why does Canada require to be defended, and against whom?'' |
10610 | There will remain the questions: Is there a grievance at all? |
10610 | This line of argument very naturally raises the question, wherefore then is the maintenance of so large a European army necessary? |
10610 | Twenty years hence, what will be the contrast? |
10610 | Was it not attested even in Parliament, that estates, which used to produce thousands annually, were sinking money year after year? |
10610 | Was it not shown on the face of unquestioned official returns, that the exports of the island had dwindled to one- third of their former amount? |
10610 | Was the result of his hard- won victory only to empty himself of all but the mere outward show of power and authority? |
10610 | Well, then, how has Upper Canada addressed herself to the execution of this great work? |
10610 | Were they not held responsible for results over which they could exercise no manner of control? |
10610 | What ground of consolation or hope does he discover there? |
10610 | What have we now done to put an end to this? |
10610 | What hope was there that a body so constituted would wield such powers with discretion? |
10610 | What in point of fact_ can_ the other suffering interests, of which the_ Times_ writes, do? |
10610 | What is the moral I would endeavour to impress upon you? |
10610 | What reasons can you assign for the refusal, except such as are founded on selfishness, and are, therefore, morally worthless? |
10610 | What then was the scope and extent of application which Canning in action was prepared to give to this policy? |
10610 | What will he do? |
10610 | What will the result be? |
10610 | What will this day bring forth? |
10610 | Whence then are these funds derived? |
10610 | Where are you now?... |
10610 | Who will attend to it now? |
10610 | Who would have supposed a few days ago that poor Ritchie would have been the first summoned? |
10610 | Why was there so much violence on the part of the opposition here last summer, particularly against the Governor- General? |
10610 | Why, then, blame us for discussing the subject?'' |
10610 | Will it be a great disappointment, or will its interest equal the expectations it raises? |
10610 | Will you think me mad? |
10610 | Would he back me?... |
10610 | Would it have been better for me if I had had more engrossing positive work? |
10610 | Would it have happened if I had given way to those who wished me to carry fire and sword through all the country villages? |
10610 | Would this have been wise or humane for a little bravado, or that the country might not be alarmed for a day or two?'' |
10610 | _ At Sea, Gulf of Pecheli.--July 5th_.--At last I am actually off-- on my way home? |
10610 | _ Ceylon, March 2nd._--I found here your letters to January 10th, and am relieved... Where is our meeting to be?... |
10610 | _ Chi sa?_... You will like to have a complete record of my experiences during my long absence. |
10610 | _ July 10th_.--What will the House of Commons say when the bill which has to be paid for this war is presented? |
10610 | _ May 22nd._--Have you read Russell''s book on the Indian Mutiny? |
10610 | _ Nan- tsai- tsun.--September 12th._--Where will this letter be sent from? |
10610 | _ Yamun, Tientsin.--May 30th._--Only look at my date, does it not astonish you? |
10610 | and against whom? |
10610 | and if we undertake the latter task, how far will it lead us? |
10610 | and was it not natural that, having been thus calumniated, they should be somewhat impatient of advice? |
10610 | or are we to set to work to check his opponents? |
10610 | or what will your view of my proceedings be?... |
10610 | than his neighbours?'' |
10610 | the mystery, shall we say, of God''s universe or of man''s destiny?) |
10610 | the ryot? |
10610 | what resemblance will the facts bear to these anticipations? |
16261 | Is it well with thee, my lord? |
16261 | _ Do you ask me who she was,--the beautiful Sië- Thao? 16261 And the Spirit of the Furnace made answer unto him with roaring of fire:_ Canst thou divide a Soul? |
16261 | And the Spirit of the Furnace mysteriously answered him with muttering of fire:"_ Canst thou give ghost unto a stone? |
16261 | But whither, whither? |
16261 | But whither, whither? |
16261 | Did she not say she was wedded to Ping- Khang? |
16261 | Did she not sing the songs of Kao- pien? |
16261 | Ere he could speak a word, Pelou demanded:"Son, in what place have you been passing your nights?" |
16261 | Had she ever done aught to merit the malediction of an ascetic? |
16261 | Has Thought feet, that man may perceive the trace of its passing? |
16261 | Hast thirst? |
16261 | How shall man lend the aspect of sentient life to dead clay? |
16261 | Knowest thou not, also, that the people of my kingdom are the first- born of the Master of Heaven? |
16261 | O thou most pitiless god!--thou whom I have worshipped with ten thousand sacrifices!--for what fault hast thou abandoned me? |
16261 | This is the way of..._ Her_ form, too, unsubstantial, unreal, an illusion only, though comeliest of illusions? |
16261 | Unto whom was it first given to discover the divine art of porcelain? |
16261 | Was the merit of the giver illusive also,--illusive like the grace of the supple fingers that gave? |
16261 | Was this death? |
16261 | Was this languor of the Will a signal of coming peril, the peril of slumber? |
16261 | What marvel had been wrought? |
16261 | What was she? |
16261 | Who first discovered the virtue of the curd- white clay? |
16261 | Who save the Infinite can give soul?" |
16261 | Why not permit him to slumber in my house during the season of snow?" |
16261 | Wouldst pray? |
16261 | Wouldst sacrifice? |
16261 | ever render the aspect of flesh made to creep with the utterance of a Word, sentient to the titillation of a Thought, if thou wilt not aid me?" |
16261 | for what error hast thou forsaken me? |
16261 | was everything a dream? |
16261 | why should he curse her? |
16284 | What,he asks very well,"are the eternal objects of Poetry, among all nations and at all times?" |
16284 | Why is_ Villette_ disagreeable? 16284 ( a most effective demurrer); andWhat_ is_ high seriousness, except a fond thing vainly invented for the nonce?" |
16284 | Again one asks Mr Arnold, as seriously as possible,"How_ do_ you know that? |
16284 | Besides, are puffs so wholly bad? |
16284 | But in the name of Bandusia and of Gargarus, what offence can these things give to any worthy wight who by his ill luck has not seen them with eyes? |
16284 | But these things do not matter; they are the things on which reviewers exercise their"will it be believed?" |
16284 | But what hold does this give it? |
16284 | By December danger- signals are up in a letter to his mother, to the effect that"it is intolerable absurdity to profess[ who does?] |
16284 | Foolish heart, dost thou quiver?" |
16284 | He asks,"What modern poem presents personages as interesting as Achilles, Prometheus, Clytemnestra, Dido?" |
16284 | He does not really attempt to meet the more dangerous though less epigrammatic demurrer,"Do you_ want_ schools to turn out products of this sort?" |
16284 | He is even tempted( and of course asked) to write a criticism of the Laureate, but justly replies,"How is that possible?" |
16284 | Here are a few out of many instances--"Is it, then, evening So soon? |
16284 | No doubt from some points of view it ought, but will it? |
16284 | On your own calculus, with your own estimate of evidence, how is it possible for you to know that? |
16284 | Only, what is left? |
16284 | Perhaps; but suppose we ask for a little reason, just a ghost of a premiss or two for this extensive conclusion? |
16284 | So he looked at me and said,"_ I_ did n''t write that anywhere, did I?" |
16284 | Tell me how I managed this worthy action?" |
16284 | The question was,"What should he write?" |
16284 | The right triumphs, no doubt; but who cares whether it does or not? |
16284 | This new La Fontaine asking everybody,"Avez- vous lu Kuenen?" |
16284 | What lights in the court? |
16284 | What steps on the stair?" |
16284 | When and where did Molière write poetry? |
16284 | Where are the improvements due to this great influence? |
16284 | Yet, after Southey himself in the first half of the century, who has done so much for letters_ quâ_ letters as Mr Arnold in the second? |
16284 | [ 5]"What, then, are the situations, from the representation of which, though accurate, no poetical enjoyment can be derived? |
16284 | that He shall give"a good title,"like a man who is selling a house? |
10999 | Am I the man to sell my son for filthy lucre? 10999 And the son of a pig owes me rent?" |
10999 | Anything else? |
10999 | But what did she say? |
10999 | But why should it be postponed? |
10999 | Come to the point-- what do you want? |
10999 | Could you identify the boy? |
10999 | Dear me,said Harish,"perhaps you will say that these buttons are yours too?" |
10999 | Did she tell you so herself? |
10999 | Did you attend the deceased woman? |
10999 | Do you know any mathematics? |
10999 | Do you mean to say that Barabau has lied? |
10999 | Do you want to ruin me? 10999 How can I know you?" |
10999 | How did yon learn all this? |
10999 | I hope you will do as well as Gopál,said Shám Babu,"but I suppose you have joined him?" |
10999 | Is my wife a liar and are you a Judisthir? |
10999 | Is not that a fatal objection? |
10999 | Is that so? |
10999 | It must have been Tennyson-- or was it Wordsworth? 10999 Mahásay,"replied Rám Harak,"have I not served you for two- score years with obedience and fidelity? |
10999 | Now, do you know who I am? |
10999 | Oh, you Neka( buffoon), she groaned,"did n''t you swear to separate from Nalini, and have you not taken all your meals with him ever since? |
10999 | Once for all, are you going to obey me or not? |
10999 | Quite true, but what I want to know is-- how long is this going to last? |
10999 | She has been ill for three days, with excruciating internal pains; what am I to do, Bábuji? |
10999 | So you are,replied Chandra Babu, after recovering from his intense surprise;"but why have you turned dacoit?" |
10999 | So you used to take your vegetables to Ramani Babu''s market? |
10999 | Surely you know my sister, Chota Babu? |
10999 | Tell me where are the ornaments-- where is the cash? |
10999 | Then none of you have stolen it? |
10999 | Then why have you come here? |
10999 | Well, I should like to know how Nalini has injured me? |
10999 | What are your English text- books? |
10999 | What did she say? |
10999 | What do you want here, you son of a pig? |
10999 | What drugs has he been administering? |
10999 | What have you got in those baskets of yours? |
10999 | What were your English text- books? |
10999 | What''s that? |
10999 | What''s the use of talking nonsense? |
10999 | What''s your name and residence? |
10999 | What, do you want to teach me manners, Maulvie Saheb( doctor learned in Mohammadan law)? |
10999 | What, you are his ryot and yet are acting against his interests? 10999 What, you dare to bandy words with me, haramzúdú( bastard)?" |
10999 | Who is she? |
10999 | Who is this person? |
10999 | Who is treating her? |
10999 | Who told you so? |
10999 | Who will dare to excommunicate you for such a trifle? |
10999 | Whose market? |
10999 | Why do n''t you attend Ramani Babu''s market? |
10999 | Why do you say''something,''Babu? 10999 Why has the moon risen so early?" |
10999 | Why should he? |
10999 | Why, did you not take away a box full of trinkets? 10999 Why, what''s the matter, mother?" |
10999 | Will you give your daughter to him in marriage? 10999 Yes, of course, what''s the matter with her?" |
10999 | You know my son Susil, I suppose? 10999 You remember buying the Shibprakásh estate at last auction? |
10999 | 100?" |
10999 | 20,000 on his note of hand?" |
10999 | 20,000?" |
10999 | 20,000?" |
10999 | 75 a month to begin with?" |
10999 | After a few moments he looked up, clasped his hands, and said:--"Tell me the truth, Sádhu, is Maini alive?" |
10999 | After beating about the bush for a while he said:"My fate just now seems very unpropitious; when may I expect better times?" |
10999 | After dwelling now on this matter, now on that, he asked casually:--"Have you never thought of getting Nalini married? |
10999 | After hearing the story of Shibprakásh and its vicissitudes of ownership, he asked:--"How much will you pay me if I win your case?" |
10999 | After pondering a while, he asked,"What would you advise me to do? |
10999 | All Debendra Babu''s fears revived; he exclaimed:"Speak plainly, what is the matter?" |
10999 | Am I to have no redress?" |
10999 | Are there no means of conjuring it away?" |
10999 | Are they dogs? |
10999 | Are you one?" |
10999 | At this stage Ramani Babu intervened:--"You son of a pig, are you going to obey my orders or not?" |
10999 | But can you point to a single merchant among your acquaintances whose career has been uniformly prosperous? |
10999 | But could he face the neighbours''sneers, the servants''contumely-- worse than all, his wife''s bitter tongue? |
10999 | But wait a bit: what gotra( clan) does he belong to?" |
10999 | But what has he got to do with our present fix?" |
10999 | But will Shám Babu be equally tolerant?" |
10999 | Ca n''t you do it for less?" |
10999 | Debendra Babu stamped his foot in annoyance and, after musing awhile, asked,"What would you advise me to do?" |
10999 | Did you administer anything else?" |
10999 | Do you happen to know of any job which would give me enough to live on? |
10999 | Do you mean to tell me that you decline to discharge your arrears?" |
10999 | Gobardhan asked:"Now, why should you lose such a splendid opportunity of making money?" |
10999 | Gopál has house property in Calcutta, I believe?" |
10999 | Have you brought the money, eh?" |
10999 | Have you ever found me untrue to my salt?" |
10999 | Have you got another daughter to marry?" |
10999 | He answered, punctuating his sentences by inhaling fragrant Bhilsi,"You have heard of Campbell& Co., the big cooly recruiters of Azimganj? |
10999 | He asked,"Why, what''s the matter with Gopál, nothing wrong I hope and trust?" |
10999 | He asked:"Why, what do you know about lekha- para( reading and writing)?" |
10999 | How are these poor people to live while engaged in begár( forced labour) on my behalf? |
10999 | How can a small estate like yours bear the costs of both sides? |
10999 | How could a grown- up man torture a child like that?" |
10999 | How much would it cost me? |
10999 | I might kill you, and who would dare to inform the police folk?" |
10999 | I want to know whether this woman is mistress of the family? |
10999 | Is he an outcast? |
10999 | Is it likely that I would injure his reputation gratuitously? |
10999 | Is that so?" |
10999 | Is that the action of a truthful man?" |
10999 | Is there no religion left in this world? |
10999 | Kanto Babu was evidently perplexed; but after reflecting for a short time he asked,"Now why should such a trifling matter cause any trouble whatever? |
10999 | Meeting him one day in the village street, she asked with an air of mystery:--"Have you heard the news?" |
10999 | Nagendra turned sharply on his brother with the question:"Then why did you not enter these receipts in your karcha( cash- book)?" |
10999 | On receiving a more peremptory demand seven days later, he called on Nagendra Babu, whom he thus addressed:--"Why, Nagen, what''s the matter with you? |
10999 | Presently she asked,"What has induced you to put me to shame?" |
10999 | Priya gazed at him with feigned astonishment"What loan are you talking about?" |
10999 | Tell me frankly-- how much money would satisfy you?" |
10999 | The brothers did not stir; but Jadu Babu asked,"So you wo n''t overlook our faults, or even tell us what they are?" |
10999 | The cunning bait was swallowed by Debendra Babu, who asked:"How much would these ceremonies cost?" |
10999 | The issue was-- who placed them there? |
10999 | The sardar came close to him and asked:--"Look at me carefully: do you know me?" |
10999 | The sardar thus addressed him:--"Babuji, do you know us?" |
10999 | Then he asked the Sub- Inspector:"Do these people mean to say that the brass vessel belongs to Nagendra Babu?" |
10999 | Then lowering his voice, he added,"Is your life safe with those people?" |
10999 | Then nestling closer to Ramzán, she pleaded in a voice of music,"Surely you do n''t want to get rid of me?" |
10999 | Then with an attempt at irony he asked:--"What brings you of all people to my house? |
10999 | Turning on Abdullah he shouted:--"How dare you say that I gave you any such orders?" |
10999 | What do you expect to make per head delivered; and what capital will be required?" |
10999 | What have I done to be treated thus?" |
10999 | What have you done to offend her?" |
10999 | What is the snobbery which degrades our English character but the Indo- German Sudra''s reverence for his Brahmin? |
10999 | What is your idea of Dená Páona( a word answering to our''settlements'')?" |
10999 | What shall I do? |
10999 | When Abdullah''s turn came, the police officer surveyed him from head to foot, saying:--"I have heard of you before; what is your occupation?" |
10999 | When all were assembled, Gobardhan thus addressed them,"Mrinu has lost her jasam, have any of you seen it?" |
10999 | Where are you studying?" |
10999 | Where could I find a brother so faithful and obedient as he? |
10999 | Whom do you suspect of sending the anonymous letter?" |
10999 | Whose ryot( tenant) are you?" |
10999 | Why did you not come to me earlier?" |
10999 | Why should I not hear what he has to say? |
10999 | Will Ramzán be able to protect you?" |
10999 | Will peace be restored by the gift of constitutional government at a crisis when the august Mother of Parliaments is herself a prey to faction? |
10999 | Will your honour give me a trifle towards making one up?" |
10999 | Would Sádhu help him by giving evidence? |
10999 | You know that her case was hushed up by the police? |
10999 | You remember the old fable of the earthen pot and brass vessel?" |
10999 | You wish to live apart from him? |
10999 | he exclaimed,"do you wish to return to a mother- in- law who hates and persecutes you? |
10999 | interest?" |
10999 | remarked Hiramani;"but has he not been too cruelly used by his uncle? |
10999 | what shall I do? |
10999 | whither so early, friend?" |
10999 | you have the audacity to lecture me-- a wretched brat like you? |
12750 | Academy? |
12750 | And the orchid? |
12750 | Anyhow, you will keep the secret?... 12750 Anything new? |
12750 | Are these the things collected by that poor young fellow you told me of the other day? |
12750 | Are these-- alive? 12750 Are you going to talk studio to me?" |
12750 | Bellows,he said,"is that you?" |
12750 | But how do they form new plants? |
12750 | But how will you see your canvas? |
12750 | Butcher-- Butcher? |
12750 | Ca n''t I do anything for you? |
12750 | Ca n''t you see it''s me? |
12750 | Ca n''t you speak? |
12750 | Davidson,said I,"what on earth''s come over you?" |
12750 | Did they hang you well? |
12750 | Did you not think it would blow up the house? 12750 Do n''t you think it time you got me something to eat?" |
12750 | Do you do figure- work at all? |
12750 | Ever been thirsty, Graham? |
12750 | Funny case, was n''t it? 12750 Had I anything in my hand when I spoke to you, dear, just now?" |
12750 | Have I not served my Lord? |
12750 | Have some more whisky, Bellows? |
12750 | Have you exhibited very much? |
12750 | Have you lost your wits? |
12750 | Help me to sit down,said he, presently;"and now-- I''m sorry to trouble you-- but will you tell me all that over again?" |
12750 | How about the others? 12750 How did I come to make it? |
12750 | How did it happen? |
12750 | How did you get it? |
12750 | How did you play it off upon them? |
12750 | How the deuce could you dream that? |
12750 | I could almost swear--"What? |
12750 | I mean did they put you in a good place? |
12750 | I presume you saw the rascals making for the shrubbery, and dropped down on them? |
12750 | I suppose,said I,"you are out of work just at present?" |
12750 | I suppose,the pale man said with a slight smile,"that you scarcely care to have such things about you in the living-- in the active state?" |
12750 | I wonder if you know enough to know what that is? |
12750 | I wonder why? 12750 It''s a little thing in the telling, is n''t it? |
12750 | Look at that,said Holroyd;"where''s your''eathen idol to match''i m?" |
12750 | Malays, are n''t they? |
12750 | Of course? |
12750 | Orchids? |
12750 | Put on my shoes? 12750 The rest were all right?" |
12750 | To the canoe? |
12750 | Unpleasant? 12750 Was the Lord Dynamo still hungry? |
12750 | Well.... You''ve heard of the Aepyornis? |
12750 | Well? |
12750 | Well? |
12750 | Whadyer mean? |
12750 | What are you after, Hagshot? |
12750 | What are you dewin''with that switch? |
12750 | What did they tell you? |
12750 | What on earth are you going to do with that_ beastly_ green? |
12750 | What the devil''s that? |
12750 | What was that? |
12750 | What''s come to it? |
12750 | What''s come to you, Hooker? |
12750 | What''s she got in her''and? |
12750 | What''s the matter with you? |
12750 | What''s the matter with you? |
12750 | What''s the matter? |
12750 | What''s this? |
12750 | What''s up, man? |
12750 | What_ do_ you see? |
12750 | What_ was_ it? |
12750 | What_ was_ that fearful smash? |
12750 | Where? |
12750 | Which way? |
12750 | Who''s been killing calves here? 12750 Whom did you collect for?" |
12750 | Why do you keep moving about then,he said,"making faces and all that-- sneering and squinting, while I am painting you?" |
12750 | Why not Mephistopheles? 12750 Why not?" |
12750 | Why? 12750 Yes,"said Wilderspin;"_ is n''t_ it?" |
12750 | You do n''t see a moth on the edge of the table there? |
12750 | _ How did it end_? 12750 ''Look here,''says I to Hooker and the other Englishmen;''what are we to do now?'' 12750 ''You know the Chin way, George?'' 12750 --or was it Hooker? 12750 Ai nt he a- clawin''out of the keb? 12750 And what''s the writing? |
12750 | Are they dangerous now?" |
12750 | At that he stepped back a pace, and cried out with almost a whimper,"What, in heaven''s name, has come over me?" |
12750 | But it was a queer thing to happen to a man; was n''t it-- altogether?" |
12750 | But when did they find these bones?" |
12750 | Could it see him? |
12750 | Did he run after you?" |
12750 | Did he see Holroyd kill himself? |
12750 | Did they get any more eggs? |
12750 | Did you get those home? |
12750 | Do you follow me?" |
12750 | Do you happen to know? |
12750 | Do you know what hallucination means?" |
12750 | Ever heard of the dinornis? |
12750 | For the new miracle of Nature may stand in need of a new specific name, and what so convenient as that of its discoverer? |
12750 | Have you fixed that there wire across the path from the laundry?" |
12750 | How about a scarlet robe and call him''One of the Sacred College''? |
12750 | How could you bring yourself to do it, man?" |
12750 | How does it stand at present?" |
12750 | How fared the chase? |
12750 | How shall we get it to the canoe?" |
12750 | I say!--What''s that red paint for?" |
12750 | I wonder if you''ve heard the name of Butcher ever?" |
12750 | It''s a bargain?" |
12750 | Jolly quick thing, Bellows-- eigh?" |
12750 | May I offer you my arm?" |
12750 | Or if it was a diamond, how came he by it, and why should he offer it at a hundred pounds? |
12750 | See? |
12750 | Shall we re- bury them over here, or take them across the strait in the canoe?" |
12750 | That gone, and a little more fire in the eye-- never noticed how warm his eye was before-- and he might do for--? |
12750 | The corner of the mouth? |
12750 | The eye, then? |
12750 | The eyebrows-- it could scarcely be the eyebrows? |
12750 | The patch of stars he saw was in Sagittarius and south- eastward; the door was north-- or was it north by west? |
12750 | The puzzle is, what are the flowers for? |
12750 | Then opening the topic abruptly,"What on earth is this cock- and- bull story they have of a flying man?" |
12750 | Then suddenly, with a queer rush of irritation,"What are you staring at?" |
12750 | Then with an abrupt transition to unreasonable anger:"What is the good of waiting here all the day? |
12750 | They called''em Aepyornis-- what was it?" |
12750 | Was he an ingenious monomaniac, or a fraudulent dealer in pebbles, or has he really made diamonds as he asserted? |
12750 | Was he going to faint? |
12750 | Was it in retreat? |
12750 | Was it pure hallucination? |
12750 | Was the thing coming on again? |
12750 | Was the thing, whatever it was, inside or out? |
12750 | Were there other people in the place?" |
12750 | What did a dead Chinaman signify? |
12750 | What do_ you_ think? |
12750 | What price Passionate Pilgrim? |
12750 | What ship is that?" |
12750 | What the devil was it? |
12750 | What was this familiar street? |
12750 | What_ do_ you mean to do with it?" |
12750 | Where did you get it?" |
12750 | Where had the door got to? |
12750 | Where the devil are we?" |
12750 | Which way_ are_ you, Bellows?" |
12750 | Why could n''t the brute have got himself decently caught on the opposite bank, or shot in the water? |
12750 | Why do n''t you show yourself like a man, Bellows?" |
12750 | Why? |
12750 | Why?" |
12750 | Wonder if he''s after''Arry''Icks?" |
12750 | Wot''s_ he_ got?" |
12750 | Would he have anything to tell me worth the money, or was he the common incapable-- incapable even of telling his own story? |
12750 | You do n''t happen to remember, perhaps?" |
12750 | You do n''t mean to paint in the open, by night?" |
12750 | You know I have made some dodos and a great auk? |
12750 | You saw the road?" |
12750 | he said to Thaddy--"The Thing I fought with?" |
12750 | you do n''t think you can paint a picture like that?" |
16526 | Ah,he said mournfully, when he had admonished the unruly member,"who can set a curb upon the tongue? |
16526 | Do they grow maize in this province? |
16526 | Do you not know the Feast of Scribes, that is held in Marrakesh and Fez? |
16526 | Have you been to your Basha? |
16526 | How much? |
16526 | Mektub,it is written, and who shall avoid destiny? |
16526 | What is this,cried the Lamps''Father in great anger,"who sells cracked lamps? |
16526 | Who shall arrest Allah''s decree? |
16526 | Why is the price so low? |
16526 | And to serve what end? |
16526 | Are there great cities so big that a man can not walk from end to end in half a day? |
16526 | Are there great waters of which no man may drink-- waters that are never at rest? |
16526 | But next year, or the next-- who shall say? |
16526 | Do houses with devils(? |
16526 | Does that not suffice believing people? |
16526 | Has not the Prophet said,''He who behaveth ill to his slave shall not enter into Paradise''? |
16526 | Have I such store of dollars that I can buy a child for its weight in silver?" |
16526 | How now can you find words to praise him?" |
16526 | Is it not so set down? |
16526 | Shall I listen then to Pretenders and other evil men? |
16526 | Shall the hammers cease to strike because the anvil cries out? |
16526 | The strangers would sleep outside the n''zala: Can they have guards at a fair price? |
16526 | They were a sorry set of fellows enough, to outward seeming, but how shall a European judge them fairly? |
16526 | What is it? |
16526 | What shall be said of a man like that, to whom Allah had given the wisdom to become a Bashador and the foolishness to reject a present? |
16526 | Who will give more in such a case? |
16526 | Why does it come to complain to the silence night after night? |
16526 | steam engines) in them go to and fro upon the face of these waters? |
14345 | What is my crime? |
14345 | Which side will win the war? 14345 And as the Powers will be afraid of a second world- war, who will come to our aid? 14345 And why must it be so? 14345 And yet is there no plan possible whereby she may be saved? 14345 At what precise moment will that occur? 14345 But at this season of construction and dire crisis how shall these mutual suspicions find a place? 14345 But can we suspect the troops-- so long trained under the Great President-- of such unworthy conduct? 14345 But do they even know whether the Great President has taken the least part in connection with the phantasies of the past four months? 14345 But what a year and what a day we are now living in? 14345 Can it be imagined that Chang Hsun is actuated by a patriotic motive? 14345 Can it be possible that Chang Hsun has acted in the interest of the Ching House? 14345 Can it be possible that you have never heard of this and thus raise this extraordinary subject without any cause? 14345 Can our authorities firmly make up their mind to solve this Chinese Question by the actual carrying out of this fundamental principle? 14345 Can such a man blame his wife for immorality after marriage? 14345 Can you find any person who is able to be at the head of the state besides His Excellency Yuan Shih- kai? 14345 Can you gentlemen bear to see this come to pass? 14345 Can you tell me anything along that line? 14345 Could you not at that time have brought out an essay by one of the great scholars of the world as a subject for discussion? 14345 Could you not have cited the cases of American republics as a warning for us that these republics were by no means peaceful? 14345 Did it not heap persecution and humiliation on me to the utmost of its power and resources? 14345 Did we recognize it as such? 14345 Do not the Sages say:In dealing with the people aim at faithfulness?" |
14345 | Do they know that the Great President has, on many occasions, sworn fidelity before high Heaven and the noon- day sun? |
14345 | Do you not know that you, as citizens of the Republic, must in duty bound observe the Constitution and obey the laws and mandates? |
14345 | Do you not realize that the State is a thing of great importance and should not be disturbed carelessly? |
14345 | Do you still doubt my words? |
14345 | Do you think this provision is not sufficient to avert the terrible times which you have just described? |
14345 | Do you understand? |
14345 | Do you wish to select a person other than the Great President? |
14345 | Does not the last ray of hope for China depend on this? |
14345 | For who can replace the Great President in coping with our numerous difficulties? |
14345 | Have we not seen the example of Korea? |
14345 | How can we stand as a nation if such a state of affairs is allowed to continue? |
14345 | How in such circumstances was it possible to keep alive absolutism? |
14345 | How then can one rule the people when he"eats"his own words and tears his own oath? |
14345 | If not, then are we going to ask the President to form a responsible cabinet under a figurehead monarch? |
14345 | If our industries are not developed, how can we expect to be strong? |
14345 | If so, then what do you take the President for? |
14345 | If the South rises in arms against this measure, what explanation can the Central Government give? |
14345 | If the branches are all withered, how can the trunk continue to grow? |
14345 | In plain words, is the person in our mind the President? |
14345 | In such circumstances, how can you devise a general policy for the country which will last for a hundred years? |
14345 | In these circumstances what did he do? |
14345 | In these circumstances, how can one hope to send forth his orders to the country in the future, and expect them to be obeyed? |
14345 | Is fiction mixed with fact-- are these only"trial"drafts, or are they real documents signed, sealed, and delivered? |
14345 | Is it a misfortune for my words or a misfortune to the Country? |
14345 | Is it because no one except a foreign doctor can discover such facts? |
14345 | Is it not the greatest misfortune to set up an example that can not be handed down as a precedent? |
14345 | Is it not then a vital necessity for Japan to solve at this very moment the Chinese Question? |
14345 | Is it too much to dream of such a consummation? |
14345 | Is not Persia a monarchy? |
14345 | Is not Russia a monarchy? |
14345 | Is not Turkey a monarchy? |
14345 | Is not this highly advisable? |
14345 | Is such a course a charitable way of doing things? |
14345 | Is that true? |
14345 | Is the man you have in mind the present President? |
14345 | Is this not a great injustice to native merchants? |
14345 | Is this not a service to humanity and the true spirit of civilization? |
14345 | Let us ask Mr. Yang if the activities of the Chou An Hui, of which he is the President, are acts within the bounds of law? |
14345 | Mencius says,"Am I argumentative? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: But why is it that there is no hope of China ever becoming rich? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Can I know something about the contents of our future constitution in advance? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: How is it that should China desire wealth and strength she must first adopt the constitutional form of government? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: I do not understand why it is that a monarchy should be established before the constitutional form of government can be formed? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: What do you mean by honesty? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: What do you mean by the proper method of procedure? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Why is it that there is no hope of China''s becoming strong? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Why is it that you say there is no hope for China having a Constitutional Government? |
14345 | Mr. Ko: Why so? |
14345 | Now has that anything to do with the change or not of the form of State? |
14345 | Now what have these things to do with a change in the form of the States? |
14345 | Otherwise tell me what you have got to say? |
14345 | Pray, how large is Germany''s share of the Boxer indemnity? |
14345 | Shall we then make the present President a monarch? |
14345 | Should they advocate the continuance of the Republic or suggest a change for a monarchy? |
14345 | The proverb says,"If now, why not then?" |
14345 | The question I would ask in plain words is, who is the person you have in your mind as the future Emperor? |
14345 | The reason? |
14345 | Then it may be asked why not fix upon one man instead of upon three since you have already deprived the people of part of their freedom? |
14345 | They have asked the question:--"Who has invited the disaster, and brought upon us such great disgrace?" |
14345 | To whom shall I speak?" |
14345 | Was there, then, evasion, on the part of China? |
14345 | What attitude then should those who have the good of the nation at heart, take under the present circumstances? |
14345 | What do the people of our day mean by advising and urging the President to ascend the throne? |
14345 | What has no parents?" |
14345 | What is that thought-- whither does it lead? |
14345 | What is the remedy? |
14345 | What obligations had I to the then Imperial House? |
14345 | What policy has been followed to solve the Chinese Question? |
14345 | What preparations are being made to meet the combined pressure of the Allies upon China? |
14345 | What proper means shall we employ to maintain our influence and extend our interests within this ring of rivalry and competition? |
14345 | What shall we do with the President if we find another man? |
14345 | What then could have prompted me to aspire to the Throne? |
14345 | What was the foreign response-- the official response? |
14345 | What was this Central Government? |
14345 | Where were you then, advocates of monarchy? |
14345 | Wherein then is there need of doubt or fear? |
14345 | Who dares to contend for the Throne? |
14345 | Who then can claim the right to drag our Great President into unrighteousness for the sake of vanity and vainglory? |
14345 | Who will dare disobey the behests of the Great President if he should elect to open his heart and follow the path of honour and unbroken vows? |
14345 | Why do they not do so? |
14345 | Why is it that the attempt to introduce constitutional government during the last years of the Manchu Dynasty proved a failure? |
14345 | Why should we not think out and lay down a plan beforehand? |
14345 | Why should we wait for the spontaneous uprising of the revolutionists and malcontents? |
14345 | Why stir the peaceful water and create a sea of troubles by your vain attempt to excite the people and sow seeds of discord for the State? |
14345 | Why then should I blame others? |
14345 | Why then should we talk about exchange of privileges and rights? |
14345 | Why then should we traffic for these things at the risk of grave dangers to the nation? |
14345 | Why then such unrest? |
14345 | Why? |
14345 | Will it be wise to place so valuable a personage in so idle a position at a time when the situation is so extremely critical? |
14345 | Will not this then be indeed a bonâ fide proof of our friendly relations? |
14345 | Would the South remain silent respecting this outrageous measure? |
14345 | or any other person? |
13349 | Could they think,he asked,"that youths, initiated under such oaths as theirs, were fit to be made soldiers? |
13349 | Like the slain that lie in the grave, whom thou rememberest no more.... Wilt thou shew wonders to the dead? 13349 Tsze- Kung asked,''Is there one word which may serve as a rule for one''s whole life?'' |
13349 | We have forsaken all and followed thee:_ what shall we have therefore_?... 13349 What, then, does this stationary condition of the population mean? |
13349 | What, then, is the position of the so- called Ignatian epistles? 13349 Would this questioning[ on the triumphal entry] have taken place if Jesus had often made visits to Jerusalem, and been well known there? |
13349 | _ What shall we have_, therefore?... 13349 ''Blessed are ye that hunger now, for ye shall be filled''... Craven in spirit, with an empty purse and hungry mouth-- what next? 13349 ):Pilate saith unto him, What is truth? |
13349 | 12]--but the people of Jerusalem knew him not, and, therefore, asked''Who is this?''" |
13349 | 24- 27) sends Peter to catch a fish with money in its mouth( why not, by the way, have fished directly for the coin? |
13349 | 30), answered to the question,"What is thy name?" |
13349 | A metaphor must mean_ something_: what does this metaphor mean? |
13349 | A natural reluctance to take up such a notion might prompt the question, Why were the Magi brought to Jerusalem at all? |
13349 | And he continued,''Covetousness, passion, ignorance, the destruction of life, theft, adultery, and lying, are these good or bad, right or wrong? |
13349 | And if you lend what new thing do ye? |
13349 | And suppose he were, what then? |
13349 | And the governor, becoming afraid, said to all the multitude of the Jews, Why will ye shed innocent blood?" |
13349 | And the people, what of them? |
13349 | And what does Jesus teach? |
13349 | And what does that point out? |
13349 | And what was the date of Philo? |
13349 | Are these three Gospels based upon a common document? |
13349 | Are they not unprofitable, and causes of sorrow?'' |
13349 | Are you poor in spirit, and are you smitten; in such case what did Jesus teach? |
13349 | As magnetic? |
13349 | Besides, even if such judicial duties were"the rule,"what of the exceptions? |
13349 | Besides, why should they do so? |
13349 | But how could this Being which was veiled from the world be brought to bear upon it? |
13349 | But the Jews answered, and said to Pilate, Did we not tell thee that he is a magician? |
13349 | Confucius answered,''Is not reciprocity such a word? |
13349 | Confucius said,''In carrying out your government, why use killing at all? |
13349 | Could Eusebius have written that Tatian formed this,_ I know not how_, if it had been a harmony of the Gospels recognised by the Church when he wrote? |
13349 | Could he have any other purpose than that of determining the age under which no infants in the neighbourhood of Bethlehem should be allowed to live? |
13349 | Did Jesus and the Devil go flying through the air together, till the Devil put Jesus down? |
13349 | Did so unusual an occurrence cause no astonishment in the city? |
13349 | Do the contents of the books themselves commend them as credible to our intelligence? |
13349 | Do they also suppose his Greek Gospel to have been intended for the same class? |
13349 | Do wise men praise or blame them? |
13349 | Does the external evidence suffice to prove their authenticity? |
13349 | For if ye should love And of our love to all, he them which love you, what reward taught this: If ye love them have ye? |
13349 | For what shall a man be profited if he shall gain the whole world, but lose his soul? |
13349 | For who is better able either to rule my hesitation, or to instruct my ignorance? |
13349 | How can men who can not rectify themselves, rectify others?" |
13349 | How can that be a revelation from God which was well known in the world long before God revealed it? |
13349 | How far are such harsh expressions consonant with fact? |
13349 | How is this a proof of the religion called Christianity? |
13349 | How long did the ministry of Jesus last? |
13349 | How much may fairly be included under the title"Christian Morality"? |
13349 | If Moses be a type of Christ, must not Bacchus be admitted to the same honour? |
13349 | If Pagan historians are thus curiously silent, what deduction shall we draw from the similar silence of the great Jewish annalist? |
13349 | If so, how could they be proved to be contemporary? |
13349 | If so, is not Justin Martyr''s citation drawn from the same anonymous document, rather than from the three Gospels, seeing he does not name them? |
13349 | If so, why is it said that the powers are"ordained of God"? |
13349 | If these had been taken from Gospels written by Apostles, is it conceivable that Justin would not have used their authority to support himself? |
13349 | If, on the other hand, Justin has cited them accurately in this instance, why has he failed to do so in the others? |
13349 | In this they are, in a certain sense, consistent; for contemporary writings[? |
13349 | Is Paley joking with his readers, or only trading on their ignorance? |
13349 | Is it credible that Josephus should thus have ignored Jesus Christ, if one tithe of the marvels related in the Gospels really took place? |
13349 | Is it credible that such duplicity passes to- day for argument? |
13349 | Is it for that they contain accounts of supernatural events? |
13349 | Is it true that the Devil gives power to whom he will? |
13349 | Is not this through having no selfishness? |
13349 | Is poverty of spirit a virtue at all? |
13349 | It is true that many of the tales related are absurd, but are they more absurd than the tales related in the canonical Gospels? |
13349 | Ke K''ang asked,''What do you say about killing the unprincipled for the good of the principled?'' |
13349 | Mark?" |
13349 | Now I ask you, Alopho, absence of covetousness, Athoso, absence of passion, Amoho, absence of folly, are these profitable or not?'' |
13349 | Or do they believe that the second edition of it was designed for Gentile Christians? |
13349 | Or shall we turn to Irenæus, so invaluable a witness, since he knew Polycarp, who knew John, who knew Jesus? |
13349 | Or, lastly, as psychical? |
13349 | Pilate said to those who said that demons were subject to him, Why were your teachers not also subject to him? |
13349 | Pilate saith, Is truth not upon earth? |
13349 | Seeing that all sleep, deposited together in the earth, why do men foolishly seek to treat each other injuriously? |
13349 | Shall the dead arise and praise thee? |
13349 | Shall thy lovingkindness be declared in the grave? |
13349 | Shall thy wonders be known in the dark? |
13349 | Shall we say, then, that bareness is natural to the mountain? |
13349 | Suppose, however, that we allow that the passage is to be taken metaphorically, what then? |
13349 | Supposing, however, that the most exaggerated accounts of Church historians were correct, how would that support Paley''s argument? |
13349 | Surely, then, there was"prospect"enough of"honour and advantage"? |
13349 | That wretches brought out of the temple of obscenity could be trusted with arms? |
13349 | The Jews said, Did we not tell thee so? |
13349 | The Sage replied,''With what, then, will you recompense kindness? |
13349 | The early Jews had clearly no idea of life after death;"for in death there is no remembrance of thee; in the grave who shall give thee thanks?" |
13349 | The rulers in heaven were commanded to admit the King of Glory, but seeing him uncomely and dishonoured they asked,"Who is this King of Glory?" |
13349 | These three, like foul diseases, spread quickly wherever humanity is stagnant and content with wrong"("What Did Jesus Teach?" |
13349 | They were writing the story of a Jew; why should they translate all his sayings instead of writing them down as they fell from his lips? |
13349 | Throughout the New Testament what word is there of patriotism? |
13349 | To which of the Gospels is such an announcement prefixed? |
13349 | Well argued, Dr. Paley; and in the man who sat outside the beautiful gate of the Temple, who examined the limb, or questioned the patient? |
13349 | What appeal to self- reverence? |
13349 | What cry against injustice and oppression? |
13349 | What did the people in the courts below think of the Devil and a man standing on a point of the temple in the full sight of Jerusalem? |
13349 | What does it all, this"evidence,"amount to? |
13349 | What effect would obedience to these injunctions have upon a State? |
13349 | What incitement to heroism? |
13349 | What is this but to say, in polite language, that Jesus was very effeminate? |
13349 | What reliance can be placed on historians(?) |
13349 | What was this motive? |
13349 | What, then, was the knowledge given to him in this? |
13349 | Where is the high mountain from which Jesus and the Devil saw all round the globe? |
13349 | Wherefore? |
13349 | Wherefore? |
13349 | Which of the Evangelists has related for us his own life, so that we may judge of his opportunities of knowing what he tells? |
13349 | Who can reckon the millions of human lives that have been spilt in obedience to them? |
13349 | Why blame a Legree, when he only acts on the permission given by God from Mount Sinai? |
13349 | Why did the star desert them after its first appearance, not to be seen again till they issued from Jerusalem? |
13349 | Why does not Paley explain to us how Jesus came to be leading Jews at Rome during the reign of Claudius, and why he incited them to riot? |
13349 | Why not finish the passage? |
13349 | Why not wash our hands in their blood?" |
13349 | Why should we accept Ignatius''testimony to the star, and reject his testimony to the sun and moon and stars singing to it? |
13349 | Why, then, may we not refer the quotation of Christ''s words, occurring in the Apostolical Fathers, to an origin of this kind? |
13349 | and how is it that Paley knows all about it, though Eusebius did not? |
13349 | and thy righteousness in the land of forgetfulness?" |
13349 | as purely miraculous and magical? |
13349 | do not even the that love ye, what new things publicans the same? |
13349 | do ye? |
13349 | expelled, banished, returning and murdering the reigning pope: what avails it to chronicle these monsters? |
13349 | on chastity), separates the quotations by an emphatic"And,"marking the quotation taken from another place? |
13349 | or thy faithfulness in destruction? |
13349 | or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
13349 | or what shall he thieves do not break through give in exchange for it? |
13349 | that on the Sabbath he healeth and casteth out demons? |
15125 | But can you govern the empire on horseback? 15125 Has he been called to account?" |
15125 | Is it not evident that whatever spark caused the explosion, the nitro- glycerin that made it possible came from the boycott? 15125 Shall I then have no tidings of mankind? |
15125 | Suppose,said one of his students,"that Shun''s father had killed a man, would Shun, being king, have allowed him to be condemned?" |
15125 | We beg your pardon, we know enough about Asia; but what of America-- does polygamy flourish there? |
15125 | What are his merits? |
15125 | What is to hinder us from doing what those islanders have done? |
15125 | A helpless fugitive, how could she conceive that fortune held in reserve for her brighter days than she had ever experienced? |
15125 | And is she not at this moment taking the medicine of Japan? |
15125 | Are not the same to be seen all the way from Afghanistan to Dahomey? |
15125 | Are the Chinese hostile to these branches of missionary work? |
15125 | But do we not know how it has been fostered in China? |
15125 | But how about the preaching missionary and the teaching missionary? |
15125 | But is there not a deplorable difference between the conditions under which it is used in the two countries? |
15125 | But what do they think now, when they see cabinets and chambers of commerce compelled to reckon with the British of the North Pacific? |
15125 | But what of the feeling towards religious missions? |
15125 | But where would he look for the third? |
15125 | But why extend the gruesome list? |
15125 | But will they not see it when the trolleys run? |
15125 | Chinese authors assert that it was sent in search of the"elixir of life,"but do they not distort everything in the history of the First Hwang- ti? |
15125 | Could Hebrew or Arab hospitality surpass it? |
15125 | Could he have been less humane in the treatment of his new subjects? |
15125 | Did not China after a trial of European methods also relapse during the Boxer craze into her old superstitions? |
15125 | Did she hate the foreigner for driving her away, or did she thank him for her repeated restoration? |
15125 | Do not these specimens show a laudable attempt to simulate a free press? |
15125 | Do our Chinese friends wish to be looked on as Quakers, or do they desire to fraternise freely with the people of the great West? |
15125 | Do they not announce more clearly than the batteries which command the waterway the coming of a new China? |
15125 | Does not China do the same when she mistakes hostility to foreigners for patriotism? |
15125 | Had they not made war on China ten years before because they could brook no rival in the peninsula? |
15125 | Has not Carlyle shown in his"Sartor Resartus"how the Philosophy of Clothes is fundamental to the history of civilisation? |
15125 | Has not hatred of the foreigner been mistaken for patriotism, and been secretly instigated as a safeguard against foreign aggression? |
15125 | Have we not seen her in that splendid portrait executed by Miss Carl, and exhibited at St. Louis? |
15125 | He expired on the island of Shang- chuen or St. John''s, exclaiming"O rock, rock, when wilt thou open?" |
15125 | How could China be opened; how was a stable equilibrium possible so long as foreign powers were kept at a distance from the capital of the Empire? |
15125 | How could they tolerate the intrusion of Russia? |
15125 | How does her period of probation compare with that of her neighbour? |
15125 | If she makes things easy for China this time, will it not be because the Republic is engaged in mortal combat with the Roman Church? |
15125 | If so, might it not be possible to wrest the sceptre from their feeble grasp, and emancipate the Chinese race? |
15125 | If stocks pay well, why should not the Government hold them? |
15125 | If we of the Yellow Race only stand together, What foreign power will dare to molest us? |
15125 | If we suspect the artist of flattery, have we not a gallery of photographs, in which she shows herself in many a majestic pose? |
15125 | In China does not the coming of a parliament involve the previous issue of a Magna Charta? |
15125 | In view of these facts, what wonder that Chinese newspapers are discussing the question of a national religion? |
15125 | Is flattery possible to a sunbeam? |
15125 | Is it merely tributary or is it a portion of the Chinese Empire? |
15125 | Is it not because greatness in these higher realms requires patient thought for due appreciation? |
15125 | Is it not probable that the same view of the situation flashed on the minds of all three simultaneously? |
15125 | Is it not probable that their representations, backed by the viceroy, moved the hand that sways the sceptre? |
15125 | Is it not probable that they were occupied in making good their claim to the nine provinces emblazoned on the tripods? |
15125 | Is it not therefore a fair question whether the maintenance of these old restrictions is desirable or politic? |
15125 | Is it not to be regretted that the Chinese are excluded from the Philippines? |
15125 | Is not China in danger of being left to the fate which her friends have sought to avert? |
15125 | Is not woman a slave, though called a wife, in a society where such things are allowed to go with impunity? |
15125 | Is there a people in either hemisphere that can afford to look on with indifference? |
15125 | May we not look forward with confidence to a time when China shall be found in the brotherhood of Christian nations? |
15125 | Might we not call the place the Temple of Cain? |
15125 | On one occasion a feudal prince asked the question,"How heavy are these tripods?" |
15125 | One may ask, too, would Japan have come to terms so readily if she had not seen her huge neighbour bowing to superior force? |
15125 | One of the princes asking him,"How do you know that I have it in me to become a good ruler?" |
15125 | Say, when shall we next meet together? |
15125 | Shall we describe such manifestations as hysteria, hypnotism, or hypocrisy? |
15125 | Should they turn back or push ahead? |
15125 | That he was allowed to do so-- does it not speak as much for the morality of Ts''in as for the courage of Lin? |
15125 | The new education requires new tests; but what is to hinder their incorporation in the old system? |
15125 | The question arises, did we know her in person and character? |
15125 | The question no doubt arises in the mind of the reader, Will China succeed in freeing herself from bondage to this hateful vice? |
15125 | To him a golden dream, will it ever be a reality to his people? |
15125 | Too late for Port Arthur, might they not reënforce Vladivostok and save it from a like fate? |
15125 | Was it not the satisfaction of a gladiator who seated himself on the throne of the Cæsars in a burning amphitheatre? |
15125 | Was not this a sure sign that their divine commission had been withdrawn by the Court of Heaven? |
15125 | We heartily approve the practice of Europe, but what of Africa?" |
15125 | What better evidence than that he has kept himself on top of a rolling log for thirty years? |
15125 | What but that impelled her to seek for it a second terminus on the Gulf of Pechili? |
15125 | What but that led her to construct the longest railway in the world? |
15125 | What but that motive led her, in 1858, to demand the Manchurian seacoast as the price of neutrality? |
15125 | What did we think when she tore up the track and dumped it in the river? |
15125 | What feeling of unity can exist so long as the people are divided by a babel of dialects? |
15125 | What influence can we presume on when our commodities are shut out, not by legislative action but as a result of popular resentment? |
15125 | What may we not expect when the women learn to read, and when education becomes more general among men? |
15125 | What of the other 14,000? |
15125 | What shall be said of the successors of Cheng- wang? |
15125 | What use had they for books on that subject, so long as they held no intercourse on equal terms with foreign countries? |
15125 | What was the case of those singing girls under the age of fifteen, of whom you spoke last week, but a form of slavery? |
15125 | What was the real object of that strange expedition? |
15125 | What, for example, was the lady from Szechuen doing but carrying on a customary[ Page 299] form of the slave traffic? |
15125 | When these changes come, what will be left of this queer antique? |
15125 | Where could it be, if not in that very channel? |
15125 | Where is there another conqueror in the annals of the world who has such solid claims to everlasting renown? |
15125 | Where there was no tribute and no command, why send them? |
15125 | Who says the Chinese are not original? |
15125 | Who will find us a man to take them in hand and keep them in place?" |
15125 | Why did they not enact a law that no man should surpass the longevity of his father? |
15125 | Why sought this mountain den? |
15125 | Why? |
15125 | Will not the new arts and sciences of the West convince them that their Sage was not omniscient? |
15125 | Will they persist in burning incense before it to disguise its ill- odour, or will they bury it out of sight at once and for ever? |
15125 | Would not the future of that archipelago be brighter if the shiftless native were replaced by the thrifty Chinaman? |
16671 | Are ye not of much more value then they? |
16671 | Is it opposed to absolute security to attack the line with driving wheels? 16671 About this he says: Is the locomotive proposed by M. Estrade under abnormal conditions as to weight and adhesion? 16671 But how much had this success been prepared by long and conscientious labors that cede in nothing to it in importance? 16671 Cost? 16671 Do they remain true? 16671 Here then was the cup or calyx of a definite vorticellan form changing into(?) 16671 How much would the best one he could make cost? 16671 In fact, is it not a pretty difficult thing to find one that is not cut, and is this because they are overloaded? 16671 Is it an uncommon thing to see the ways of a planer that has run any length of time cut? 16671 Is it necessary even in a planing machine of forty feet length of bed and a thirty foot table? 16671 Is the principle right? 16671 It now becomes a question-- What other types of timber diseases shall be described? 16671 No matter whether it can or can not, is it not the thing wanted, and if so, is it not an object worth striving for? 16671 Should they? 16671 The first important question we have to answer is, What do we mean by a poison? 16671 Where can better concrete be found than that which has set under water? 16671 Who that has ever sojourned in this province can wonder that Goethe''s Mignon should have ardently desired a return to these sunny regions? 16671 Why not hook the tool carriage on the side of the clamping structure, and thus dispense with one of the frames altogether? 16671 Why should yellow phosphorus be an active poison and red phosphorus be inert? 16640 And how old is she?" |
16640 | And how old may your mother be? |
16640 | And is she well and hearty? |
16640 | And what of your_ revanche_? 16640 Are you trying to assure us that your mother is not in the least bit deaf?" |
16640 | How many grandchildren did you say? |
16640 | In other words,he said,"she uses a trumpet?" |
16640 | No doubt, no doubt,the Archdeacon agreed;"but my question was, Can she still read?" |
16640 | Shall I read it while you wait? |
16640 | She uses a trumpet, Sir? 16640 *****[ Illustration: PARADISE LOST AGAIN? 16640 *****[ Illustration:_ Gladys._HAVE YOU ANY INTERESTING CASES COMING ON, SIR CHARLES?" |
16640 | *****[ Illustration:_ Lady of the Manor._"HOWDY, BO? |
16640 | *****[ Illustration:_ Naturalised Alien._"VY DOND YOU GED OUD OF MY VAY? |
16640 | And do you not owe me something for_ The Pretty Lady_? |
16640 | And now,"he turned to me,"which of us would you say has won this entertaining contest?" |
16640 | And what of the German armies-- now in process of reduction to a mere police force? |
16640 | And, though we did not pretend to be a military nation, had we not some little share in that achievement? |
16640 | But what of your public that is all ear for the so- called_ Echo de Paris_, with its constant incitement to jealousy and suspicion of England? |
16640 | Can your mother hear?" |
16640 | Can your mother still read?" |
16640 | Can your mother walk?" |
16640 | Could she hear a stranger? |
16640 | Could she hear me?" |
16640 | DOND YOU KNOW DER RULE OF DER RIVER?" |
16640 | Did you derive no advantage from the overthrow of a system which was always a greater menace to you than the German Fleet ever was to us? |
16640 | Had he been ill? |
16640 | Have I not shown you that your love is both sacred and profane? |
16640 | How do the German Colonies, which we have freed and now hold in trust-- how do these compare with your solid recovery of Alsace- Lorraine? |
16640 | If so how did he beat him by 187 wickets? |
16640 | Ill? |
16640 | Is this quite fair or even decent? |
16640 | May I solicit your aid in helping me to suppress any further confusion of our respective genii? |
16640 | THE RHINE?"] |
16640 | The Private Secretary knows this and continues to say,"Are you going to the Lord Mayor''s lunch?" |
16640 | The public man takes no notice of any one of them, but says rapidly over and over again,"Where are my spectacles?" |
16640 | WILL YOU KINDLY DELIVER IT AT THE HAREA HENTRANCE?"] |
16640 | Was this match, we want to know, a single- wicket game between the Sussex player and H. WILSON? |
16640 | What do they know of England who only KIPLING know? |
16640 | What of your second- rate Press and its pin- pricking policy, connived at, if not actually encouraged, by your Government? |
16640 | Will you please assist me in making it clear that we work independently? |
16640 | _ Bargeman._"WHICH? |
16640 | _ Gladys._"OH, BUT WHY NOT ASK A PLUMBER?"] |
16640 | _ Sympathetic Friend._"WELL, AND HOW ARE YOU?"] |
16640 | or"How much will you give to the Dyspeptic Postmen''s Association?" |
16640 | or"What about this letter from Bunt?" |
16640 | or"What have you done with the brown socks?" |
14091 | But I must wash? |
14091 | Do you often do that? |
14091 | Among the other songs of Work the following are best known:"Kingdom Coming,"or"Say, Darkey, Hab You Seen de Massa?" |
14091 | Are mineral veins aqueous or igneous in origin? |
14091 | But the question with every man, and especially if he is the head of a family, is, Can he afford it? |
14091 | Can a horse trot faster in harness, or under saddle? |
14091 | Can any effectual provision be made by the State against"hard times"? |
14091 | Can democratic forms of government be made universal? |
14091 | Do our methods of government promote centralization? |
14091 | Do the benefits of the signal service justify its costs? |
14091 | Do you notice a drawn look about your eyes and a general streakiness in the cheeks? |
14091 | Doctors, are you content? |
14091 | Does civilization promote the happiness of the world? |
14091 | Does home life promote the growth of selfishness? |
14091 | Does the study of physical science militate against religious belief? |
14091 | Dogwood-- Am I indifferent to you? |
14091 | Every cradle asks us''whence,''and every coffin''whither?'' |
14091 | HOW TO BE HANDSOME Where is the woman who would not be beautiful? |
14091 | Has Spanish influence been helpful or harmful to Mexico as a people? |
14091 | Has any State a right to secede? |
14091 | Has our Government a right to disfranchise the polygamists of Utah? |
14091 | Has the experiment of universal suffrage proven a success? |
14091 | How shall our teeth be preserved? |
14091 | How shall they be kept clean? |
14091 | How the Kind of White Metal is Made That is Used in the Manufacture of Cheap Table Ware.--How same can be hardened and still retain its color? |
14091 | In a hundred years will republics be as numerous as monarchies? |
14091 | Is Saxon blood deteriorating? |
14091 | Is agriculture the noblest occupation? |
14091 | Is an income- tax commendable? |
14091 | Is an untarnished reputation of more importance to a woman than to a man? |
14091 | Is assassination ever justifiable? |
14091 | Is dancing, as usually conducted, compatible with a high standard of morality? |
14091 | Is genius hereditary? |
14091 | Is history or philosophy the better exercise for the mind? |
14091 | Is honesty always the best policy? |
14091 | Is it advisable longer to attempt to maintain both a gold and silver standard of coinage? |
14091 | Is it politic to place restrictions upon the immigration of the Chinese to the United States? |
14091 | Is it probable that any language will ever become universal? |
14091 | Is it probable that any planet, except the earth, is inhabited? |
14091 | Is it the duty of the State to encourage art and literature as much as science? |
14091 | Is labor entitled to more remuneration than it receives? |
14091 | Is legal punishment for crime as severe as it should be? |
14091 | Is life insurance a benefit? |
14091 | Is life more desirable now than in ancient Rome? |
14091 | Is life worth living? |
14091 | Is suicide cowardice? |
14091 | Is the doctrine of"State rights"to be commended? |
14091 | Is the occasional destruction of large numbers of people, by war and disaster, a benefit to the world? |
14091 | Is the production of great works of literature favored by the conditions of modern civilized life? |
14091 | Is the prohibitory liquor law preferable to a system of high license? |
14091 | Is the pursuit of politics an honorable avocation? |
14091 | Is the study of ancient or modern history the more important to the student? |
14091 | Is the study of current politics a duty? |
14091 | Is the theory of evolution tenable? |
14091 | Is the"Monroe doctrine"to be commended and upheld? |
14091 | Is there any improvement in the quality of the literature of to- day over that of last century? |
14091 | Is"socialism"treason? |
14091 | Ought the national banking system to be abolished? |
14091 | Ought we to be surprised that the gums and teeth against which these decomposing or putrefying masses lie should become subjects of disease? |
14091 | Should American railroad companies be allowed to sell their bonds in other countries? |
14091 | Should Arctic expeditions be encouraged? |
14091 | Should Ireland and Scotland be independent nations? |
14091 | Should Latin be taught in the public schools? |
14091 | Should Sumner''s civil rights bill be made constitutional by an amendment? |
14091 | Should a right to vote in any part of the United States depend upon a property qualification? |
14091 | Should aliens be allowed to acquire property in this country? |
14091 | Should aliens be allowed to own real estate in this country? |
14091 | Should all laws for the collection of debt be abolished? |
14091 | Should any limit be placed by the constitution of a State upon its ability to contract indebtedness? |
14091 | Should book- keeping be taught in the public schools? |
14091 | Should capital punishment be abolished? |
14091 | Should cremation be substituted for burial? |
14091 | Should internal revenue taxation be abolished? |
14091 | Should land subsidies be granted to railroads by the government? |
14091 | Should men and women receive the same amount of wages for the same kind of work? |
14091 | Should restrictions be placed upon the amount of property inheritable? |
14091 | Should the State prohibit the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors? |
14091 | Should the art of war be taught more widely than at present in the United States? |
14091 | Should the co- education of the sexes be encouraged? |
14091 | Should the continuance of militia organizations by the several States be encouraged? |
14091 | Should the contract labor system in public prisons be forbidden? |
14091 | Should the education of the young be compulsory? |
14091 | Should the electoral college be continued? |
14091 | Should the formation of monopolies be prevented by the State? |
14091 | Should the formation of trade unions be encouraged? |
14091 | Should the government establish a national system of telegraph? |
14091 | Should the government interfere to stop the spread of contagious diseases among cattle? |
14091 | Should the government lease to stockgrowers any portion of the public domain? |
14091 | Should the government prohibit the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors? |
14091 | Should the grand jury system of making indictments be continued? |
14091 | Should the guillotine be substituted for the gallows? |
14091 | Should the jury system be continued? |
14091 | Should the languages of alien nations be taught in the public schools? |
14091 | Should the law interfere against the growth of class distinctions in society? |
14091 | Should the law place a limit upon the hours of daily labor for workingmen? |
14091 | Should the military or the interior department have charge over the Indians in the United States? |
14091 | Should the pooling system among American railroads be abolished by law? |
14091 | Should the railroads be under the direct control of the government? |
14091 | Should the rate of taxation be graduated to a ratio with the amount of property taxed? |
14091 | Should the theater be encouraged? |
14091 | Should the volume of greenback money be increased? |
14091 | Should the volume of national bank circulation be increased? |
14091 | Should the"Spoils System"be continued in American politics? |
14091 | Should there be a censor for the public press? |
14091 | Should usury laws be abolished? |
14091 | Should women be given the right of suffrage in the United States? |
14091 | Should"landlordism"in Ireland be supplanted by home rule? |
14091 | That is, can he afford to live up his wages as fast as he earns them, without laying up anything for the future? |
14091 | The Largest Buildings in the World.--Where is the largest building in the world situated? |
14091 | Was Bryant or Longfellow the greater poet? |
14091 | Was Caesar or Hannibal the more able general? |
14091 | Was England justifiable in interfering between Egypt and the Soudan rebels? |
14091 | Was Grant or Lee the greater general? |
14091 | Was Rome justifiable in annihilating Carthage as a nation? |
14091 | Was slavery the cause of the American civil war? |
14091 | Was the purchase of Alaska by this government wise? |
14091 | What cost 10 pounds butter at 25c per pound? |
14091 | What cost 12- 2/3 pounds of butter at 18- 3/4c per pound? |
14091 | What cost 18 dozen eggs at 16- 2/3c per dozen? |
14091 | What cost 5- 1/3 yards at 18c a yard? |
14091 | When did you leave Newark?" |
14091 | Which can man the more easily do without, electricity or petroleum? |
14091 | Which can support the greater population in proportion to area, our Northern or Southern States? |
14091 | Which can to- day wield the greater influence, the orator or the writer? |
14091 | Which could man best do without, steam or horse power? |
14091 | Which could mankind dispense with at least inconvenience, wood or coal? |
14091 | Which gives rise to more objectionable idioms and localisms of language, New England or the West? |
14091 | Which has been of greater benefit to mankind, geology or chemistry? |
14091 | Which has been the greater curse to man, war or drunkenness? |
14091 | Which has left the more permanent impress upon mankind, Greece or Rome? |
14091 | Which has the greater resources, Pennsylvania or Texas? |
14091 | Which is more desirable as the chief business of a city-- commerce or manufactures? |
14091 | Which is more desirable as the chief business of a city-- transportation by water or by rail? |
14091 | Which is of greater benefit at the present day, books or newspapers? |
14091 | Which is of more benefit to his race, the inventor or the explorer? |
14091 | Which is of more importance, the primary or the high school? |
14091 | Which is of the greater importance, the college or the university? |
14091 | Which is of the more benefit to society, journalism or the law? |
14091 | Which is the better for this nation, high or low import tariffs? |
14091 | Which is the greater nation, Germany or France? |
14091 | Which is the more desirable as an occupation, medicine or law? |
14091 | Which is the more important as a branch of education, mineralogy or astronomy? |
14091 | Which is the more important as a continent, Africa or South America? |
14091 | Which is the more important to the student, physical science or mathematics? |
14091 | Which is the stronger military power, England or the United States? |
14091 | Which should be the more encouraged, novelists or dramatists? |
14091 | Which should be the more highly remunerated, skilled labor or the work of professional men? |
14091 | Which was the greater general, Napoleon or Wellington? |
14091 | Which was the greater genius, Mohammed or Buddha? |
14091 | Which was the greater thinker, Emerson or Bacon? |
14091 | Which was the more able leader, Pizarro or Cortez? |
14091 | Which was the more influential congressman, Blaine or Garfield? |
14091 | Which will predominate in five hundred years, the Saxon or Latin races? |
14091 | Why should we fear that which will come to all that is? |
14091 | Why?" |
14091 | Will a time ever come when the population of the earth will be limited by the earth''s capacity of food production? |
14091 | Will coal always constitute the main source of artificial heat? |
14091 | Will the African and Caucasian races ever be amalgamated in the United States? |
14091 | Will the population of Chicago ever exceed that of New York? |
14091 | Will the population of St. Louis ever exceed that of Chicago? |
14091 | Will the tide of emigration ever turn eastward instead of westward? |
14091 | Would a rebellion in Russia be justifiable? |
14091 | Would mankind be the loser if the earth should cease to produce gold and silver? |
13116 | ''Who kissed the place to make it well?'' |
13116 | And every one? |
13116 | And it all kills? |
13116 | And where have you come from, and where are you going to? |
13116 | And where is dear Leam? |
13116 | Are there? |
13116 | Are you all safe? |
13116 | But you think him a very ordinary man? |
13116 | Childis"pickny;""white man"( or woman),"buckrah;""I do n''t know,""Me no sabbée;""Is it not?" |
13116 | Could n''t you invent an iron bed, then? |
13116 | Decidedly not,said Lady Arthur, whose spirits were rising to the occasion:"we ca n''t be far from Cockhoolet here?" |
13116 | Did any one ever hear of such a lunatic? 13116 Do you mean what it is? |
13116 | Do you really think so? |
13116 | Enty? 13116 Have you no curiosity? |
13116 | How do they kill? |
13116 | How does it kill people? |
13116 | How many drops are here? |
13116 | How will the strong- minded Tudor lady like to see herself revived in that fashion, if she can see it? |
13116 | How? |
13116 | How_ are_ ye, gentlemen? |
13116 | I am supposed,she said to herself,"to be eccentric: why not get the good of such a character?" |
13116 | I thought you disliked society? |
13116 | In a moment? |
13116 | In the name of wonder, George, how are you here? 13116 Is he honest?" |
13116 | Is it much hurt? |
13116 | Is it nasty? |
13116 | Is not that what is called an anachronism, Miss Adamson? 13116 It is only a little fatigue from exposure that ails her, is n''t it?" |
13116 | Neither is it: perhaps you would read it? |
13116 | No? 13116 Not even if they do n''t care for them?" |
13116 | She is not ill, is she? |
13116 | Speaking of writing,she said,"I wrote to you when I had the fever last year and thought I was dying: would you like to see that letter?" |
13116 | Suppose a gnat should break his shoulder- blade,I said,"would they put his wing in a sling?" |
13116 | Tell me, Mrs, Birkett, what can be done with such an impracticable creature? |
13116 | Thank you? 13116 The victoria to- day,"called out His Royal Highness from the balcony.--"And Tom?" |
13116 | Then how were you so cold and distant the day we stuck on the moor? |
13116 | Then you do n''t want the letter? |
13116 | We shall have no such luck,said Lady Arthur:"what ever happens out of the usual way now? |
13116 | Well, I must say I have enjoyed it,Lady Arthur said,"but how are we to get home to- night?" |
13116 | Were there many lives lost? |
13116 | What can I tell you? 13116 What can a chit of a thing like you have to do? |
13116 | What do you want? |
13116 | What does it say? |
13116 | What have you got to do? |
13116 | What is enough? |
13116 | What is poison? |
13116 | What is poison? |
13116 | What is that black mass yonder, far up the beach, just at the edge of the breakers? |
13116 | What is that funny little bottle? |
13116 | What is that? |
13116 | What kind of thing, Alice? |
13116 | What shall I put the hands at to- day, sir? |
13116 | What''s the matter with the child? |
13116 | What_ can_ the meaning of that be? |
13116 | Who is it from? |
13116 | Why are you so very glad? |
13116 | Why do my thoughts vex you? |
13116 | Why do not the Portuguese devote themselves so largely to the cultivation of grain that there need never be danger of famine? |
13116 | Why, Rose, is that you? 13116 Wi''the wind in yer teeth, and sinking up to yer cuits at every step? |
13116 | Will she go if she knows that is your end? |
13116 | Will you forgive me? |
13116 | Will you say the same to me, Leam? |
13116 | Would it be painful? |
13116 | Would something not need to be done for it? |
13116 | Would you like to stay here longer among the hills and the sheep? |
13116 | Yes? |
13116 | You love me now? |
13116 | ***** Has photography dealt hardly with portrait- painting as a branch of art, or has it benefited it by weeding out the feeble? |
13116 | 1/4 to 2/4, Cumulo- stratus East, Rainfall 2.80 inch."? |
13116 | After they had spoken in the most quiet and friendly way for a little she said,"And how is your cousin, Lord Eildon?" |
13116 | An angel appears at the side and discloses all by asking Cain,"Where is thy brother?" |
13116 | And why might she not say what she thought and show what she disliked? |
13116 | And why should she not make her bread her plate, and hold both bread and meat in her hand if she liked? |
13116 | Are not sewing- machines a recent invention? |
13116 | Are you in love too?" |
13116 | Are you sure? |
13116 | Being thus thoroughly attached and thoroughly happy, what could occur to break up this happiness? |
13116 | But is there any gain in the eye and intellect which perceive, and the hand which fixes, beauty and truth? |
13116 | But when the morning came, where was Leam? |
13116 | But where were the knights in armor, the courtiers in velvet and satin, the boars''heads, the venison pasties, the wassail- bowls? |
13116 | Can you show me the way to John''s place of refuge?" |
13116 | Come with us,"cried Mrs. Corfield:"why not?" |
13116 | Could she send it to him yet? |
13116 | Dead? |
13116 | Do any of you care to go?" |
13116 | Eildon?" |
13116 | Enty you got one piece t''bacca fo''po''ole nigger?" |
13116 | For of what use are shapes and appliances if you have nothing for them to do?--if you have no need to walk, to grasp, nor yet to sit? |
13116 | For thee who would not weep? |
13116 | For what?" |
13116 | Good Moment, that giv''st him me, Wast ever in love? |
13116 | Had they lost their way, or what could possibly have happened? |
13116 | Have we surpassed the old song, the old story, the old picture, the old temple? |
13116 | Have you visited the Himalaya?" |
13116 | He held it up and said,"''Who ran to help me when I fell?''" |
13116 | How are the rest of the people that are ill?" |
13116 | How are you, and how are the children?" |
13116 | How can a man without calm obtain happiness? |
13116 | How can any man be alive to the significance of a wreck and fluttering flag which he sees twenty times a day? |
13116 | How could we be happy after killing our own kindred, O Slayer of Madhu? |
13116 | How do you get on, Bhima Gandharva, with so many claims on your worshiping faculties? |
13116 | How do you know she is there, and not in the place of torment instead? |
13116 | How ever can thine utmost sweet Be star- consummate, rose- complete, Till thy rich reds full opened are? |
13116 | How is Britannicus? |
13116 | How, indeed, should she tell this little sharp- faced woman that she was thinking how she could prevent madame from coming here as her home? |
13116 | How, then, came it there, broken on the floor? |
13116 | I ask myself,''Have I left Jonesville-- dear Jonesville!--on the other side of the world, in order to sit on an antipodal cotton- bale?''" |
13116 | I love mamma: how can I love you?" |
13116 | I should think you would be well lost in such a jungle of gods?" |
13116 | I wonder if we shall have to sit here all night?" |
13116 | If she ran away on the wedding- day, she may run away again, and then where would we all be? |
13116 | Is it interesting-- as interesting as the thorn?" |
13116 | Is it not strange that such frothy frivolity could have obtained dominion for more than fifty years over the most critical people in the world? |
13116 | Is it upon our religion? |
13116 | Is''t no time yer leddyship was in yer bed, after siccan a day''s wark?" |
13116 | It is not right, for who knows what she may not do? |
13116 | Lady Arthur rose hurriedly and said,"What is it, George? |
13116 | Leam pondered for a few moments; then she asked,"How much poison is there in the world?" |
13116 | Lov''st not good company? |
13116 | Mamma had eaten with her knife grasped also like a whanger, and why might not she? |
13116 | Miss Adamson merely said,"Do you not underrate Mr. Eildon''s abilities?" |
13116 | Now, what do you suppose was one of the first acts committed by these adventurers? |
13116 | Now, where do these fish live? |
13116 | Of what use organs of sense when you have no brain to which they lead?--when you are substantially all brain and the result independent of the method? |
13116 | Shall I tell you all? |
13116 | She go to church? |
13116 | Sweet Sometime, fly fast to me: Poor Now- time sits in the Lonesome- tree And broods as gray as any dove, And calls,_ When wilt thou come, O Love_? |
13116 | There were none in Elizabeth''s time, I think?" |
13116 | To what segment of time shall we assign the name of Nineteenth Century? |
13116 | Was her sleep so deep that even love could not awake her? |
13116 | Wha''dat? |
13116 | What could be keeping the men? |
13116 | What could she, Leam, do to prevent all this wickedness if the blessed ones were idle and would not help her? |
13116 | What do you say to thunder?" |
13116 | What has it to do with iron beds?" |
13116 | What has she ever done that was rational?" |
13116 | What if he took the equatorial regions or great tracts of arid desert for the heated room? |
13116 | What should we do with a kingdom, Govinda? |
13116 | What with enjoyments, or with life itself? |
13116 | What, then, has become of the 250,000 human beings annually called into existence in Portugal? |
13116 | When he appeared Lady Arthur shook hands tranquilly and said,"How do you do?" |
13116 | When we had killed the Dhartarashtras, what pleasure should we have, O thou who art prayed to by mortals? |
13116 | When will you come?" |
13116 | Where are John and Thomas?" |
13116 | Where were the stately dames in stiff brocade, the shaven priests, the fool in motley, the vassals, the yeomen in hodden gray and broad blue bonnet? |
13116 | Who knows? |
13116 | Why get up from her chair when ladies like Mrs, Harrowby and Mrs. Birkett came into the room? |
13116 | Why is the whole world like this Englishman?--upon what does it found its opinion that the Hindu is a fool? |
13116 | Why should she put herself in the way of being punished when she was not to blame? |
13116 | Why should she? |
13116 | Why was she to wipe her lips when she drank? |
13116 | Will you have a little in some water? |
13116 | You yerry me? |
13116 | and as to economizing labor, that is the last thing a planter cares about, for what are the negroes to do? |
13116 | and upon what do they feed? |
13116 | and why, traveling farther afield, was she to speak when she was spoken to if she would rather be silent? |
13116 | enty you tek wife yet? |
13116 | or what it does?" |
13116 | said Lady Arthur,"and have all the poor people got housed?" |
13116 | what''s the matter?" |
13116 | where do they breed? |
13116 | who dat da''talk me? |
13116 | why?" |
17009 | And how shall the"still small voice"make itself heard in a soul entirely occupied with its own privileged tenants? |
17009 | And where, on what neutral ground can they be imprisoned so as not to affect man? |
17009 | But the knowledge of what? |
17009 | But what can this matter? |
17009 | Can it be so? |
17009 | Do they still hope to turn thereby the muddy stream of the animal sewer into the crystalline waters of life? |
17009 | For, while the heart is full of thoughts for a little group of_ selves_, near and dear to us, how shall the rest of mankind fare in our souls? |
17009 | How about these unfortunates, we shall be asked, who are thus rent in twain by conflicting forces? |
17009 | How many Westerns are ready even to attempt this in earnest? |
17009 | Is there no other road for him? |
17009 | Must he then inevitably fall into sorcery and black magic, and through many incarnations heap up for himself a terrible Karma? |
17009 | What are then the conditions required to become a student of the"Divina Sapientia"? |
17009 | What is it? |
17009 | What mother would not sacrifice without a moment''s hesitation hundreds and thousands of lives for that of the child of her heart? |
17009 | What percentage of love and care will there remain to bestow on the"great orphan"? |
17009 | What room is there left for the needs of Humanity_ en bloc_ to impress themselves upon, or even receive a speedy response? |
17009 | Will these candidates to Wisdom and Power feel very indignant if told the plain truth? |
17009 | With such ideas"educated into"him from his childhood, how can a Western bring himself to feel towards his co- students"as the fingers on one hand"? |
17009 | and what lover or true husband would not break the happiness of every other man and woman around him to satisfy the desire of one whom he loves? |
17009 | as explained by the accepted authorities) convey to the minds of those who hear, or who pronounce them? |
16996 | How can that be? |
16996 | Was it cold water,they asked,"that was brought unto thee?" |
16996 | [ 79][ Sidenote: Is Islam suitable for any nation?] 16996 An error in the pronunciation of the mystic text might bring destruction on the worshiper; what could he do but lean upon the priest? 16996 Could conceptions of divinity so incongruous co- exist? 16996 Disliked and denied they may be; but forgotten? 16996 How could these be the thoughts, or those the expressions, of the imperfectly civilized shepherds of the Panjab? 16996 How far, in fact, did there exist inducements or hinderances to its adoption inherent in the religion itself? 16996 How is the marvel to be explained? 16996 How is this great falling- off to be explained? 16996 However desirable freedom might be, slavery was not inconsistent with the Christian profession:Art thou called being a servant? |
16996 | It is a solemn question, Had he said it when his career was ended? |
16996 | Need we say how gloriously rich the Gospel is in having in the character of Christ the realized ideal of every possible excellence? |
16996 | Now what is Christianity? |
16996 | Say, now, which are the more worthy to be called martyrs, these, or thy fellows that fall fighting for the world and the power thereof? |
16996 | What could explain it? |
16996 | Where then is our merit? |
16996 | Wherefore wast not thou slain before him? |
16996 | Which bears the impress of man''s hand, and which that of Him who"is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in working?" |
16996 | and which the artificial imitation? |
16442 | ***** What now are the results of variation, over- multiplication, and competition? |
16442 | ***** What, now, are the reasons why the palæontological evidence is not complete and why it can not be? |
16442 | ***** What, now, is life? |
16442 | And if it does not represent a reduced counterpart of the tails of other mammals, what does it represent? |
16442 | Are they permanent and unchanged since the beginning of time, unchanging and unchangeable at the present? |
16442 | Are we not too busy with the ordering of our immediate affairs to concern ourselves with such remote matters? |
16442 | Are we to forget all of these things when we try to put in order our ideas belonging to the categories of higher thought? |
16442 | Birds, 44; have they descended from gill- breathing ancestors? |
16442 | But are the difficulties insuperable? |
16442 | But is this conception really justified by the facts of animal structure and physiology? |
16442 | But why does this view seem justified? |
16442 | Can we hope to find the truth if we fail to employ the methods of scientific common- sense which only yield sure results? |
16442 | Can we look upon the living thing as a mechanism in the proper sense of the word? |
16442 | Can we reasonably regard these resemblances as indications of anything else but a community of ancestry of the forms that exhibit them? |
16442 | Do the rules of nature''s order control the lives of men? |
16442 | Does any one of us do all of these things for himself? |
16442 | Does palæontology throw any light on the antiquity of man? |
16442 | Does this mean that even birds have descended from gill- breathing ancestors? |
16442 | Does this mean that man and all the other higher forms have evolved from protozoa in the course of long ages? |
16442 | Does this mean that the essential process of what we call life is a chemical one? |
16442 | How are we to regard the material things of the earth? |
16442 | How can we be independent of the environment when we are interlocked in so many ways with inorganic nature? |
16442 | How does the human body develop? |
16442 | How does the matter stand when the general structural plan of a human being is examined? |
16442 | In brief, is life physics and chemistry? |
16442 | Is it entirely different from everything else? |
16442 | Is the human species a unique kind of vertebrate, or does it find a place in one of these classes? |
16442 | Life, what is it? |
16442 | Organisms, living, 14; analysis of, 16; 17, 18, 19, 26, 28, 29, 31, 32; characteristic early stages, 55; are they adapted by circumstances? |
16442 | Science, what is it? |
16442 | These facts being as they are, what must we do? |
16442 | Unless the coccyx is a tail, what can it be? |
16442 | What are the facts of human structure, comparatively treated? |
16442 | What has become of the masses washed away during the formation of these gorges? |
16442 | What have we to do with evolution and science? |
16442 | What is it that distinguishes a savage of antiquity from an American of to- day? |
16442 | What now are the lessons of social evolution and what guidance does science give for human endeavor? |
16442 | What, now, is a science? |
16442 | Why is adaptation a universal phenomenon of organic nature? |
16442 | Why should this be so? |
16442 | Why, now, should it be necessary for a developing bird to follow this order? |
16442 | Would any one contend that the creeds of Protestantism have remained unchanged even during the past twenty years? |
12410 | How, then,quoth the king''s son,"do all men die?" |
12410 | ''Are there,''said the prince,''many such beings in the world?'' |
12410 | ''You are doing this or that,--no?'' |
12410 | ''You are walking,--no?'' |
12410 | ( Bianca, widow of GIOVANNI Polo? |
12410 | ( Chemotona) 138?" |
12410 | ( Subject obscure-- Travelling in Persia?) |
12410 | (? |
12410 | ), or Trevisano(? |
12410 | ---- in Fo- kien, Zayton(? |
12410 | ----(? |
12410 | --_Japan or Java? |
12410 | 105, 111), the second_ Taikung_, the third_ Malai_, the fourth Ngan- cheng- kwé(? |
12410 | 1111 Italian(?). |
12410 | 1= p. 141, k. 3(_ a- h_, par 8;_ i_, by 4;_ k_, by 6); maximum 33 lines by page;[ 1485?]. |
12410 | 3 F. 26, XVth cent., by an Anonym, Moravian? |
12410 | 474 83 VIENNA-- German? |
12410 | 600"156"Kotak Sheri( Chemotona) to Lulan( Nafopo) 264?" |
12410 | 68 MUNICH Royal Library? |
12410 | 69 MUNICH Royal Library? |
12410 | 72 MUNICH? |
12410 | 73 MUNICH? |
12410 | A Man herding White Cattle(?) |
12410 | A clause in the edict also orders the_ foreign bonzes of Ta- T''sin_ and_ Mubupa_( Christian and_ Mobed_ or Magian?) |
12410 | A contemporary_ Eloge de Charles VII._ says:"_ Jamais il chevauchoit mule ne haquenée, mais_ un bas cheval trotier entre deux selles"( a cob?).] |
12410 | A modern MS., said to be a copy of the_ Wiener MS._(?). |
12410 | And what shall I say of it? |
12410 | And what shall I tell you? |
12410 | And what shall I tell you? |
12410 | And what shall I tell you? |
12410 | And what shall I tell you? |
12410 | And what shall I tell you? |
12410 | And when the Envoys had heard the Soldan''s words they asked again:"Is there no hope that we shall find you in different mind?" |
12410 | And when the king''s son beheld this old man he asked what that might mean, and wherefore the man could not walk? |
12410 | And why should I make a long story of it? |
12410 | And why should I make a long story of it? |
12410 | At the f. 39_ v._, is"_ Esplizzit Liber Milionis Ziuis Veneziani Questo libro scrissi Saluador Paxuti(?) |
12410 | BARTOLO, son of Ser ALMORO and of the Nobil Donna CHIARA Orio.(? |
12410 | Behind this image and overhead are other idols of a cubit(?) |
12410 | Borrak, Amir, Prince of Kerman( Kutlugh Sultan?). |
12410 | But can we say that deterioration has been all on one side? |
12410 | But is it not possible that in the origin of the Mahomedan States of Adel the Sultan of Aden had some power over them? |
12410 | But perhaps that specially intended is a species of hemp(_ Urtica Nivea?_) of which M. Perny of the R.C. |
12410 | But why should I make a long story of it? |
12410 | Caichu, castle of( Kiai- chau, or Hiai- chau?). |
12410 | Can_ Sala_ be the same as_ Sari_?" |
12410 | Cyc._ says that wild asses and zebras(?) |
12410 | Did Marco Polo visit the Tabas? |
12410 | Did not Marco Polo speak of the people of''Badashan''as''valiant in war''and of the men of''Vokhan''as gallant soldiers?" |
12410 | Do any texts suggest the possibility of such a reading as I suggest?" |
12410 | Does its description justify me in my identification? |
12410 | Does not this look as if_ Kolo_ were really the old name,_ Luluh_ or Lolo the later? |
12410 | Donata--(?) |
12410 | ESCURIAL, Latin, Pipino''s(?). |
12410 | El ql se eprimio por La[?] |
12410 | Fire-_Pao_( cannon?). |
12410 | Further, if_ sundur_ represents a native form_ cundur_, whence the hard_ c_(=_ k_) of our modern form of the word? |
12410 | Fusang, Mexico(?). |
12410 | Galvano heard that there were on the Island certain people called_ Daraque Dara_(? |
12410 | He had two sons, SUNDAR BANDI by a lawful wife, and Pirabandi( Vira Pandi?) |
12410 | He names as the chief of the Mongol force_ Huthukh_( Kutuka? |
12410 | Hiai- or Kiai- chau( Caichu?). |
12410 | His stages were from Yung Ch''ang:( 1) Yin wang(? |
12410 | I find in the Acts of the Notary Brutti, in the Will of Elisabetta Polo, dated 14th March, 1350:-- BETA= MARCO POLO[ MARCOLINO?] |
12410 | I may note that Barbosa also tells us that the King of Kaulam was called Benate- deri(_ devar?_). |
12410 | Ibn Said, speaking of Sebennico( the cradle of the Polo family), says that when the Tartars advanced under its walls( 1242?) |
12410 | If it represents Pulo Condor, why should navigators on their way to China call at it_ after_ visiting Champa, which lies beyond it? |
12410 | In a text of the_ Yuen tien chang_, dated 1317, found by Prof. Pelliot, mention is made of a certain Ngao- la- han[ Abraham?] |
12410 | In another passage he describes the palm,_ Sagus ruffia(? |
12410 | In the final defence of Acre( 1291) we hear of balistae_ bipedales_( with a forked rest?) |
12410 | In what tongue was Mandeville''s Book written? |
12410 | Incontinently he demanded of those who were with him what thing that was? |
12410 | Is it perhaps an error for_ Karábughá_, the name given by the Turks and Arabs to a kind of great mangonel? |
12410 | Is it possible that it was a wooden building? |
12410 | Is not this probably Marco Polo''s route? |
12410 | Is this the result of a change of climate, or only a commercial change? |
12410 | It is inscribed:"_ Bongars, de la courtoisie de Mr. Aurel, tiré de la biblioteque de Mr. de Vutron_(?)." |
12410 | It runs--(1)_ Delhi_,( 2)_ Deogír_,( 3)_ Multán_,( 4)_ Kehran_(_ Kohrám_, in Sirhind Division of Province of Delhi? |
12410 | Joanna I. of_ Navarre_( 1274- 1276)? |
12410 | Keriya( Pimo) to Niya( Niyang) 64"200"52"Niya( Niyang) to Endereh( Tuholo) 94"400"104"Endereh( Tuholo) to Kotak Sheri? |
12410 | Khanabad( Dogana?). |
12410 | Lambri?) |
12410 | MATTEO, son of MARCOLINO|+--------------------+---------------------+|| Maria? |
12410 | Makám_,"Locus, Statio"? |
12410 | Maria Nuova? |
12410 | Menjar( Májar?). |
12410 | Mr. F.G. Kramp(_ Japan or Java?_), in the_ Tijdschrift v. het K. Nederl. |
12410 | NOTE 11.--And again:"The god in question is asked what sacrifice he requires? |
12410 | Navapa( Lop?). |
12410 | On another occasion they repeated this statement, alleging that this bird was known in the Udoe(?) |
12410 | Or who feeds a parrot with a carcase? |
12410 | Or who would approve of giving dressed almonds to a cow?" |
12410 | Oroech, Norway(?) |
12410 | Pardevant lui s''arestit Si parla, Oès que dist; Diva fau, que fais- tu ci? |
12410 | Persian Gulf( Sea of India?). |
12410 | Phungan, Phungan- lu( Fungul?). |
12410 | Pipino''s(?) |
12410 | Polo asks Rusticiano,"Where were we?" |
12410 | Poultry, kind of, in Coilum, in Abyssinia( guinea- fowl?). |
12410 | Pygmies, factitious(?). |
12410 | Scene at Sea( an Expedition to Chipangu?) |
12410 | Speaking of the fabulous countries of women, Chau Ju- kwa, p. 151, writes:"The women of this country[ to the south- east( beyond Sha- hua kung?) |
12410 | Síráf( Kish, or Kais?). |
12410 | Tanpiju( Shaohing?). |
12410 | The 4th of February, 781_ was_ Sunday, why_ Great_ Sunday? |
12410 | The Great River Kian? |
12410 | The King at this was in alarm and great astonishment, and said:"How then, good my sons, what thing is this ye say? |
12410 | The Uzbegs interpreted this as a symbolical demand: Peace or War? |
12410 | The eight_ kiun_( Chinese_ t''sun_? |
12410 | The former_ Mu- ku- tu- su_, lies on the sea, 20 days from_ Siao- Kolan_( Quilon? |
12410 | The phantom of a cup that comes and goes? |
12410 | The phrase about their being Kaidu''s kinsmen is in the G.T.,"_ qe_ zinzinz(?) |
12410 | The prince again enquired,''Shall I become thus old and decrepit?'' |
12410 | The question may be raised, however, Are there any traces of foreign influence displayed in this statue? |
12410 | The streets and squares are all paved; the houses are five- storied(? |
12410 | The thick part is deeply hollowed on the upper(?) |
12410 | There is, or was fifty years ago, a small port between Ayer Labu and Samarlangka, called_ Darián_-Gadé(_ Great_ Darian?). |
12410 | They ask him what remedies will save the patient; what remedies does the Evil Spirit require that he may give up his prey? |
12410 | This informs us that Malacca first acknowledged itself as tributary to the Empire in 1405, the king being_ Sili- ju- eul- sula_(?). |
12410 | Thus Mr. Burnell reads:"In punishment(?) |
12410 | Thus they will say''You are eating,-- no?'' |
12410 | Toyan( Tathung?). |
12410 | VIII., p. 282 n."This informs us that Malacca first acknowledged itself as tributary to the Empire in 1405, the king being_ Sili- ju- eul- sula_(?)." |
12410 | Valentyn calls it 1- 1/2 ell in length; Knox says 2 feet; Herman Bree( De Bry? |
12410 | We read in the_ Tao yi chi lio_( 1349) that"T''u t''a( the eastern stupa) is to be found in the flat land of Pa- tan( Fattan, Negapatam?) |
12410 | We were in astonishment at this, and I observed that the sailors were weeping and bidding each other adieu, so I called out,''What is the matter?'' |
12410 | What are we to make of the story? |
12410 | What was this kingdom of Lo which occupied the northern shores of the Gulf of Siam? |
12410 | When it has disappeared from earth the Law gradually perishes, and violence and wickedness more and more prevail:--"What is it? |
12410 | Where is it? |
12410 | Where then is his wife? |
12410 | Whether the fault is due to Rustician''s ignorance or is Polo''s own, who can say? |
12410 | Who loads jewels on the back of an ass? |
12410 | Written in 1401 by the Notary Philip, son of Pietro Muleto of Fodan( or Fogan? |
12410 | Zanton( Shantung?). |
12410 | [ 7] Stella relates that the Genoese armament sent against Cyprus, in 1373, among other great machines had one called_ Troja_(_ Truia_? |
12410 | [ B][ Dr. F. Hirth(_ China and the Roman Orient_, p. 323) writes:"O- LO- PÊN= Ruben, Rupen?" |
12410 | [ NOTE 4] What shall I say then? |
12410 | _ Cralantur_, its meaning(?). |
12410 | _ Kolam_,"Black Pepper"? |
12410 | _ Roiaus dereusse_(?). |
12410 | _''Apuhota_( Kapukada?). |
12410 | adds at the end of this passage:"E qe voz en diroi? |
12410 | and whither would ye have me go?" |
12410 | by Odoric, and perhaps allusively by Shakspeare("_ Where''s my Serpent of Old Nile_?"). |
12410 | nationale( 675)? |
12410 | of Delhi? |
12410 | of_ Navarre_( 1328- 1336)? |
12410 | or the Waraeg Country(?) |
12410 | p. 113, who adds in a note_ zaitún_: Olive- coloured?) |
12410 | perhaps the_ Nga- tshaung gyan_ of the Burmese Annals), the fifth PUKAN MIEN- WANG( Pagán of the Mien King?). |
12410 | setters? |
12410 | sondaicus_?) |
12410 | |_ Fiordelisa|| Trevisan_?) |
15164 | A- well, is that Methusalem? |
15164 | And so you have had all this toil and labour on account of a foolish speech of mine? 15164 And the cow?" |
15164 | And the gold? |
15164 | And the horse? |
15164 | And the pig? |
15164 | And what is my bride doing? |
15164 | Could a_ man_ have done that? 15164 Have you, young man,"asked the king,"another ruby like the one you sold me?" |
15164 | How can you ask me? |
15164 | I ask you, was that natural? 15164 I saw the Emperor,"he resumed,"standing by the bridge, motionless, not feeling the cold-- was that human? |
15164 | I suppose you ca n''t be ready before you have commenced? |
15164 | Is it true, now,said the lad,"what they say, that the Deil can make himself as small as he chooses, and thrust himself on through a pinhole?" |
15164 | Is that Ned? |
15164 | Is that Nicodemus? |
15164 | Is that Sammle? |
15164 | Is that Solomon? |
15164 | Not none on''em? |
15164 | Now, is there any man among you who will stand up here and declare to me that all that was human? 15164 Now, tell me how they knew that Napoleon had a pact with God? |
15164 | Now, what''s my name? |
15164 | The same to you; whither are you going so late? |
15164 | Was that a human man? 15164 Well, I suppose it can not be helped, then; but how much would the young man give you for the cub?" |
15164 | Well, is that Mark? |
15164 | Well, is that Zebedee? |
15164 | Well, you are a wonderful workman, to be sure,said the king;"but how much do you eat at a time, because I suppose you are hungry now?" |
15164 | Wha''s that to yew? |
15164 | What do you say, sir? |
15164 | What is it? |
15164 | What shall I do now? |
15164 | What''s my name? |
15164 | What, is that Bill? |
15164 | What, prithee, shall we do? 15164 Where is the toll? |
15164 | Where''s the flax? |
15164 | Wherever in the world have you been? |
15164 | Whither are you going? |
15164 | Whither are you going? |
15164 | Who are you,said the prince,"and what can you do?" |
15164 | Who are you? |
15164 | Who are you? |
15164 | Why are you weeping thus? |
15164 | Why do n''t you eat out of the barrel of oats? |
15164 | Why do you hold your thumb there? |
15164 | Why have you a bandage on your eyes? |
15164 | Why should n''t I try my luck? |
15164 | You have killed twelve men,said the king;"and you eat for many times twelve; but how many do you work for?" |
15164 | You know your business well, but what''s the use of birds''nests to me, if you ca n''t conduct me out of this forest? |
15164 | ''What have you done with my children, the soldiers?'' |
15164 | --and, would you believe it? |
15164 | After he announced himself, the emperor admitted him into his presence, and asked him:"Do you wish to keep sheep?" |
15164 | And the old woman said,"Why do you come to tell me this? |
15164 | As soon as he saw her, he made a reverence to her, and she stood on her feet and questioned him:"Whence are you, unknown young man?" |
15164 | As soon as the ploughboy felt that he had intelligence in his head, he began to think:"Why must I follow the plough to the day of my death? |
15164 | Before_ him_, did ever man recover an empire by showing his hat? |
15164 | Besides-- to prove he was the child of God, and made to be the father of soldiers-- was he ever known to be lieutenant or captain? |
15164 | But what a fine goose you have got; where did you buy it?" |
15164 | But what have you got there?" |
15164 | Do you see a bird''s nest in that pine yonder? |
15164 | En w''at de matter wid Brer Rabbit dat he ai n''t j''inin''in?'' |
15164 | George said:"Why have you a foot on your shoulder?" |
15164 | Hans stopped and looked at him, and at last he said,"You appear to have a good business, if I may judge by your merry song?" |
15164 | He had not gone very far when he met Lion, and Lion said to him:"Well, brother Ananzi, where have you been? |
15164 | He said,"It is all that fellow Ananzi who has tied me to the tree, but will you loose me?" |
15164 | He said,"What?" |
15164 | He said:"Why should I make room for you? |
15164 | Hearing this, the prince was somewhat disturbed, and said to the old woman:"What shall we do now? |
15164 | Here is one which is a little worn, certainly, and so I will not ask anything more for it than your goose; are you agreeable?" |
15164 | His father said:"What ails you, Vanek? |
15164 | How can the Son of Heaven, who is the father and mother of his people, turn dealer in ranks and honours? |
15164 | How could I stand by and see life taken? |
15164 | How shall we hand him over to you?" |
15164 | Is not the story of the dog of Totoribé Yorodzu written in the Annals of Japan? |
15164 | Is not this a disgrace? |
15164 | Lion, what are you doing there?" |
15164 | May it please your Majesty to order this malefactor to be executed with the sword?" |
15164 | Perhaps you are an old acquaintance?" |
15164 | See you there yon peasant''s son who''s ploughing in the field? |
15164 | She questioned him again:"Who are you? |
15164 | That looked up at her right kewrious, an''that said:"What are yew a- cryin''for?" |
15164 | The Rider, overhearing Hans making these reflections, stopped and said,"Why, then, do you travel on foot, my fine fellow?" |
15164 | The dog said nothing, but instead of the dog the princess replied:"To whom can she belong but to yourself? |
15164 | The emperor inquired menacingly:"Why, villains, did ye hoard up corn, when there was such a famine that so many people died of hunger? |
15164 | The impet that come at night along o''the five skeins, an''that said:"What, hain''t yew got my name yet?" |
15164 | The old woman interrupted him:"How should I not? |
15164 | The prince said to it:"Tell me now, where are my brothers?" |
15164 | Then he said to her:"Dear old woman, do you know what? |
15164 | Then the old man said,"What are you after now?" |
15164 | Then the old woman began to coax it:"And why do you go so far? |
15164 | Then the old woman inquired:"Where is it?" |
15164 | Then the prince asked her:"Where, old woman, is my hare?" |
15164 | Then the three sons went to their father, and asked him:"Daddy, what shall we do? |
15164 | Then they went on eating, but Ananzi wanted to revenge himself, and he said to the Lion,"Which of us do you think is the stronger?" |
15164 | W''at all dis? |
15164 | WHAT DO YOU WANT?" |
15164 | Was that natural, d''ye think? |
15164 | What can I do to requite them? |
15164 | What on earth are you going to keep the fox for?" |
15164 | What princess ever puts only one ruby in her hair? |
15164 | What was the hair? |
15164 | What would come to pass? |
15164 | What''s the good of the sculptor''s damsel without life? |
15164 | What''s the good of the tailor''s dressing without speech? |
15164 | When the dragon came in, the old woman began to question it:"Where in God''s name have you been? |
15164 | Where have you got the soul?" |
15164 | Where was he to get another ruby like it? |
15164 | Whither do you go so far? |
15164 | Why have you been so long without coming here? |
15164 | Why have you come?" |
15164 | Why, do you want another? |
15164 | Would common soldiers have been capable of such wickedness? |
15164 | Would you believe it? |
15164 | demanded the prince,"and what can you do?" |
15164 | get up, Sharpsight, do you know where the princess is?" |
15164 | have you lost your wits?" |
15164 | how shall I manage that?" |
15164 | it is, is it? |
15164 | said Hans, pulling his hair over his eyes,"who would have thought it? |
15164 | the prince asked him,"and why are your eyes bandaged? |
15164 | they were the civil and the military honour that must be kept pure; could their heads be lowered because of the cold? |
15164 | thought Vanek;"who knows whether I may n''t succeed in bringing her to answer when I ask her a question?" |
15164 | was that indeed your thought? |
15164 | what are you doing with that fox?" |
15164 | what''s this? |
15164 | what''s this?" |
15164 | will you tell me that_ that''s_ in the nature of a mere man? |
15164 | would they have done that for a human man? |
15164 | you ca n''t''speck a man fer ter slip en slide de whole blessid day, kin you? |
14867 | Does the perfect Buddha live on beyond death, or does he not? 14867 I cannot-- will not fight,"he says;"I seek not victory, I seek no kingdom; what shall we do with regal pomp and power? |
14867 | Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you? |
14867 | Now, that which is created,he adds,"must of necessity be created by some cause-- but how can we find out the Father and maker of all this universe? |
14867 | [ 26] There is a deep pathos in the question which I have just quoted,How can we find out the Father and maker of all this universe?" |
14867 | ''Is Buddhism really older than Christianity, and does it really contain many things which are found in the Bible?''" |
14867 | ''Is it really true?'' |
14867 | ''Why did you not tell us all this before? |
14867 | ... Did humanity begin with a coarse fetishism, and thence rise by slow degrees to higher conceptions? |
14867 | Again, the question arises, How can responsibility be transferred from one to another? |
14867 | And how are we to account for their striking similarities? |
14867 | Are not we sons of the mighty Duryodani? |
14867 | But are they? |
14867 | But does conversion mean the same, or anything like the same, thing in each? |
14867 | But how shall the false systems of religions be studied? |
14867 | But the question may be asked,"Do we not admit a similar principle when we speak of a man''s influence as something that survives him?" |
14867 | But what is the evidence found in the legends themselves? |
14867 | But what is the testimony of the great dead religions of the past with respect to a primitive monotheism? |
14867 | But who knows whence his blessings come to him? |
14867 | But_ how_ have these conquests in Central Africa been made? |
14867 | Do the traces of a comparatively pure monotheism first show themselves in the recent periods of idolatry? |
14867 | Do they appear to have risen from polytheism toward simpler and more spiritual forms, or have simple forms been ramified into polytheism? |
14867 | Dost Thou only care for men? |
14867 | Even if change were possible, therefore, how shall the old score be settled? |
14867 | For what else have many excellent members of our faith done? |
14867 | Good men are asking,"Is not such a study a waste of energy, when we are charged with proclaiming the only saving truth? |
14867 | Have they shown an upward or a downward development? |
14867 | Have we forgotten our Rama and Arjun, Yudistar or Bishma or Drona the Wise? |
14867 | How can he be a lover of truth, which is God, if he knows not his beloved under such a disguise? |
14867 | How can there be reconciliation to God, then, without repentance and humiliation? |
14867 | How can we attain unto them? |
14867 | How could Buddhism grow out of such a soil and finally cast its spell over so many peoples? |
14867 | How did the early Church succeed in its great conquest? |
14867 | How is it with the authenticity of Buddhist literature? |
14867 | How is the young missionary, who knows nothing of their systems or the real points of comparison, to deal with such men? |
14867 | How much may we expect to prove from the early history of the non- Christian systems? |
14867 | How shall we account for the similarities above indicated, except on the supposition of a common and a very ancient source? |
14867 | How shall we explain that career? |
14867 | How then did they succeed? |
14867 | How was it that Islam gained its conquests, and what is the secret of that dominion which it still holds? |
14867 | How was such a man to be met? |
14867 | How will the mere philosopher explain this wonderful power of personality over men of all races, if it be not Divine? |
14867 | How, then, shall we draw the line between history and legend? |
14867 | If Krishna is within and without, what is the use of austerities? |
14867 | If Krishna is_ not_ within and without, what is the use of austerities? |
14867 | If Krishna is_ not_ worshipped, what is the use of austerities? |
14867 | In the old churches of the East or on the Continent of Europe, how much of virtual idolatry is there even now? |
14867 | In the receptacle of what was it contained? |
14867 | Is it any wonder that such persons have a warm side toward Buddhism? |
14867 | Is it_ in pari materia_, and if not, is the comparison worth the paper on which it is written? |
14867 | Is not downright earnestness better than any possible knowledge of philosophies and superstitions?" |
14867 | May there not, after all, be danger in the study of false systems? |
14867 | May we not believe that the ideas here expressed had always existed in the minds of the more devout rulers of the empire? |
14867 | Men had begun to ask themselves the great questions of human life and destiny,"Whence am I? |
14867 | Mr. Goldwin Smith, in an able article published in the_ Forum_ of April, 1891, on the question,"Will Morality Survive Faith?" |
14867 | No man sings there,''Shall not my soul be submitted unto God? |
14867 | O Almighty One, hast Thou not power to make us other than we are, that we too may have some part in the blessings of life?" |
14867 | Of what value can heathen asceticism and merit- making be while the heart is still barred and buttressed with self- righteousness? |
14867 | Or Lactantius, or Victorinus, Optatus, Hilary, not to speak of the living, and Greeks innumerable? |
14867 | See we not how richly laden with gold and silver and apparel that most persuasive teacher and most blessed martyr, Cyprian, departed out of Egypt? |
14867 | Stop, O Brahman; why do you engage in austerities? |
14867 | The Bhagavad Gita and the Gospel both enjoin the brotherhood of men, but what are the meanings which they give to this term? |
14867 | The eating of bread is in conformity with the ordinance of God; can one forget that his blessing rests thereupon?... |
14867 | The question"Are ye not of more value than many sparrows?" |
14867 | The question, What is Nirvana? |
14867 | The real question is, what was the_ drift_ of the prophet''s character? |
14867 | Then follow other questions:''Does Buddhism really count more believers than any other religion?'' |
14867 | There is recognized no future intervention that can effect a change in the downward drift, and why should a thousand existences prove better than one? |
14867 | Was it enveloped in the gulph profound of water? |
14867 | What are the lessons of the various ethnic traditions? |
14867 | What are their aims, respectively? |
14867 | What could be more horrible than the story just brought down by the messengers who were with Major Festing? |
14867 | What could have produced them? |
14867 | What has become of the tens of thousands of peaceful agriculturists, their wives and their innocent children? |
14867 | What help, what rescue can mere infinitude of time afford, though the transmigrations should number tens of thousands? |
14867 | What human skill could have depicted a character which no ideal of our best modern culture can equal? |
14867 | What is the relation between these two currents? |
14867 | What is this mysterious being of which I am conscious?" |
14867 | What methods were adopted, and with what measures of success? |
14867 | What then enshrouded all the teeming universe? |
14867 | What was the influence of his professed principles on his own life? |
14867 | What were the elements of power which enabled the great sage of China to rear a social and political fabric which has survived for so many centuries? |
14867 | What, then, is Kharma? |
14867 | Where can we point to so easy a conquest as that of Patrick in Ireland, or that of the Monks of Iona among the Picts and Scots? |
14867 | Where did Shankar and great Dayananda arise? |
14867 | Where do violence, meanness, and deception gradually beam forth into benevolence and truth? |
14867 | Where is the system in which such an incident and such a lesson would not be wholly out of place? |
14867 | Wherein, then, consists the unique supremacy of the Christian faith? |
14867 | Who shall change the leopard''s spots or deflect the fatal drift of a human soul? |
14867 | Who would think of quoting"Paradise Lost"in any sober comparison of Biblical truth with the teachings of other religions? |
14867 | Will there not be found perplexing parallels which will shake our trust in the positive and exclusive supremacy of the Christian faith? |
14867 | Without a Daysman how shall we bridge the abyss that lies between? |
14867 | Yet where in all the wide waste of heathen faiths or philosophies is there anything which even remotely resembles the story of the Prodigal? |
14867 | or has perchance some other God made us? |
14867 | what with enjoyments, or with life itself, when we have slaughtered all our kindred here?" |
16872 | And why? |
16872 | Ask him who adores, what is God?" |
16872 | Ask him who lives, what is life? |
16872 | Can any one cavil with these beautiful expressions, this outpouring of genius? |
16872 | Do_ we_ misunderstand him? |
16872 | Even popularly, do we not speak of every great poet as the exponent of the spirit of his age? |
16872 | Have ye leisure, comfort, calm, Shelter, food, love''s gentle balm? |
16872 | Here then comes the query,"Have we existed before birth?" |
16872 | In another place he inquires--"What is love? |
16872 | Or what is''t ye buy so dear With your pain, and with your fear? |
16872 | Protestant Christians may urge that all this is not Christianity; if it be not-- for it is the record of the Church-- I would ask, what is? |
16872 | Shelley''s answer was unmistakable,"Certainly not; how can I? |
16872 | The poor are set to labor-- for what? |
16872 | To those who will look down the ages, I would ask, is this picture overdrawn? |
16872 | Trelawney asked him on one occasion:"Do you believe in the immortality of the spirit?" |
16872 | True reformers ask: What was the condition of the sex in the past? |
16872 | Was there not more of what you might call Spinozaism in Wordsworth than even in Coleridge, who spoke more of Spinoza? |
16872 | What need we care, though, for does not the"Empire of the dead increase of the living from age to age?" |
16872 | What then avail their virtuous deeds, their thoughts Of purity, with radiant genius bright, Or lit with human reason''s earthly ray? |
16872 | Whence that unnatural line of drones, who heap Toil and unvanquishable penury On those who build their palaces, and bring Their daily bread? |
16872 | Wherefore feed and clothe and save, From the cradle to the grave, Those ungrateful drones who would Drain your sweat-- nay, drink your blood? |
16872 | Wherefore weave, with toil and care, The rich robes your tyrants wear? |
16872 | Wherefore, bees of England, forge Many a weapon, chain, and scourge, That these stingless drones may spoil The forced produce of your toil? |
16872 | Why shake the chains ye wrought? |
16872 | and that"if a future state be clearly proved, does it follow that it will be a state of punishment or reward?" |
16872 | and where shall we find the history of Christianity for the fifteen centuries before Luther''s time? |
16872 | and where, to- day? |
16872 | they were fiends, And what was he who taught them that the God Of nature and benevolence had given A special sanction to the trade of blood? |
16872 | wherefore plough For the lords who lay ye low? |
17483 | Do we not, again, listen too much merely for delight? 17483 _ What greater calamity can fall upon a nation than the loss of worship? |
17483 | ''Perhaps he can,''said a wise man once,''but_ does_ he?'' |
17483 | Churchill, for Defendant, in cross examining the witnesses, enquired why they rose at so early an hour, on the 25th June, and went to walk? |
17483 | Do not the papers often speak of"fashionable"churches? |
17483 | How often does an entire service depend upon our own temper, our own mood, our own spirit? |
17483 | How was it in"old times"? |
17483 | If these statements are true, we have a sufficient answer to the question so often asked:"Why do not people go to church as they once did?" |
17483 | Mr. W---- was to preach that morning? |
17483 | What is it? |
17483 | When should doubt make worship impossible, or unbelief make worship wrong for the honest soul? |
17483 | When should''personal consecration''say to a man, not_ stay_, but_ depart_? |
17483 | Why not? |
17970 | A citizen would wish to know why among the many lotteries now in being, there is not one for the benefit of this town? |
17970 | And who can look without disgust on the impious figure it makes, in holding the scourge in one hand, and the temptation in the other? |
17970 | What bounteous hand Grants more than sanguine Hope could e''en demand? |
17970 | What right has such a government to punish our follies? |
17970 | _"WHO WANTS A GUINEA? |
16808 | And how about that man on the charpoy? |
16808 | And you, brave stranger, who are you? |
16808 | But you also do n''t suppose I am going to leave my warm quilt on this bitterly cold morning to guard you while you pray? |
16808 | Go to,laughed Dilawur,"what next? |
16808 | Going? |
16808 | Have I not sworn before all my people? 16808 How many men of that man''s tribe are there in the regiment?" |
16808 | I? |
16808 | Now then, thou son of a burnt father, what sayest thou? |
16808 | Oh, brother,shouted the orderly,"who art thou and whence comest and whither goest?" |
16808 | To what purpose therefore, Sahib, should I waste my day? |
16808 | Was there ever such a person? |
16808 | Well, then, why look so doleful? 16808 Well, what is it?" |
16808 | Well, what''s that? |
16808 | What am I going to do now? 16808 What are you doing, you accursed infidel?" |
16808 | What friend? |
16808 | What new devilment is this? |
16808 | What then? |
16808 | Why do you supplicate Lumsden Sahib? 16808 Why, what ails you, my man?" |
16808 | Your petition is granted; but why say''we''? 16808 A gun or a serpent? 16808 And now, again, when all the Englishmen were dead, the voices cried:Why fight any longer? |
16808 | And what do you suppose I shall do with you when I do catch you? |
16808 | Are we not all of one corps?" |
16808 | But Faiz Talab said to the officer:"May I see you alone? |
16808 | Can I make the salutations and genuflections ordered in the Koran while thus strapped up?" |
16808 | Damn you, why do n''t you get back?" |
16808 | English officers are a race of princes; how then can they disguise themselves as inferior folk?" |
16808 | How then can I now spare this Englishman? |
16808 | It was after one such visit that the chief, as he came out, called Shah Sowar to him and said:"Who did you say that your master is?" |
16808 | Make calculation, oh venerable one; has not the Sahib more than a thousand hairs on his head? |
16808 | Perchance my master may be a sahib, but there are many nations of sahibs, and why should this one be English?" |
16808 | Shall we hand over the property of the Sirkar, and the dead bodies of our officers, to these sons of perdition? |
16808 | Shall we then disgrace the cloth we wear by disobeying their orders now they are dead? |
16808 | Was anyone ever in a more awkward position? |
16808 | Was ever such a pandemonium? |
16808 | Well, what do you say?" |
16808 | What can I do for you to show my gratitude?" |
16808 | What could an escort of seventy- five men, however brave, do against thousands, and tens of thousands, of armed men? |
16808 | What could the British Ambassador in Paris do against a brigade of troops unrestrained by the French Government? |
16808 | What shall I call it? |
16808 | What then?" |
16808 | What''s up?" |
16808 | When eventually they were brought before him, that chieftain, addressing Dilawur, asked,"Who are you and whence come you?" |
16808 | Who goes there?" |
16808 | Will you take on with the Guides?" |
16808 | _ Hein!_ what sayest thou?" |
16808 | exclaimed the company;"and what are you going to do now?" |
16808 | replied Abdul Mujid;"how can I go and pray with my arms and feet tied? |
16808 | who are you and what is your business?" |
16808 | you there, where are you going?" |
16287 | But how can you speak if you''re killed? |
16287 | When two of these asses met, there would be an anxious''Have you got your lantern?'' 16287 ***** And now what is the result of all these considerations and quotations? 16287 ***** But what, exactly, do we mean by an ideal? 16287 And in what does your deliberation consist? 16287 And what do we retort when they say this? 16287 And which has the superior view of the absolute truth, he or we? 16287 And who knows how much of that higher manliness of poverty, of which Phillips Brooks has spoken so penetratingly, was or was not present in that gang? 16287 And why is this so? 16287 As you sit reading the most moving romance you ever fell upon, what sort of a judge is your fox- terrier of your behavior? 16287 But how can one attain to the feeling of the vital significance of an experience, if one have it not to begin with? 16287 But this forming of associations with a fact,--what is it but thinking_ about_ the fact as much as possible? 16287 But was not this a paradox well calculated to fill one with dismay? 16287 But, if so, how does he point it out? 16287 Can not we escape some of those hideous ancestral intolerances and cruelties, and positive reversals of the truth? 16287 Can the teacher afford to throw such an ally away? 16287 Can we give no definite account of such a word? 16287 Can we say which of these functions is the more essential? 16287 Could a Howells or a Kipling be enlisted in this mission? 16287 Does your faculty of memory obey the order, and reproduce any definite image from your past? 16287 For where would any of it have been without their unremitting, unrewarded labor in the fields? 16287 How are idioms acquired, how do local peculiarities of phrase and accent come about? 16287 How can conversation possibly steer itself through such a sea of responsibilities and inhibitions as this? 16287 How is it when an alternative is presented to you for choice, and you are uncertain what you ought to do? 16287 I was out early taking a short walk by the river only two squares from where I live.... Shall I tell you about[ my life] just to fill up? 16287 If the outer differences had no meaning for life, why indeed should all this immense variety of them exist? 16287 If there_ were_ any such morally exceptional individuals, however, what made them different from the rest? 16287 If, arresting ourselves in the flow of reverie, we ask the question,How came we to be thinking of just this object now?" |
16287 | If, then, you are asked,"_ In what does a moral act consist_ when reduced to its simplest and most elementary form?" |
16287 | Is he in excess, being in this matter a maniac? |
16287 | Is it because they are so dirty? |
16287 | Is it the insensibility? |
16287 | Is it the poverty? |
16287 | Is it the slavery to a task, the loss of finer pleasures? |
16287 | It stands staring into vacancy, and asking,"What kind of a thing do you wish me to remember?" |
16287 | Many teachers are inquiring,"What is the meaning of Apperception in educational psychology?" |
16287 | Must we wait for some one born and bred and living as a laborer himself, but who, by grace of Heaven, shall also find a literary voice? |
16287 | Now of what do such habits of reaction themselves consist? |
16287 | Now what is the cause of this absence of repose, this bottled- lightning quality in us Americans? |
16287 | So that, if the_ homo sapiens_ of the future can only digest his food and think, what need will he have of well- developed muscles at all? |
16287 | So, taking the book, she asked:"In what condition is the interior of the globe?" |
16287 | The backache, the long hours, the danger, are patiently endured-- for what? |
16287 | The change is well described by my colleague, Josiah Royce:--"What, then, is our neighbor? |
16287 | Then I said to the mountaineer who was driving me,"What sort of people are they who have to make these new clearings?" |
16287 | WHAT MAKES A LIFE SIGNIFICANT? |
16287 | We mean all this in youth, I say; and yet in how many middle- aged men and women is such an honest and sanguine expectation fulfilled? |
16287 | We say:"Why_ did n''t_ you think? |
16287 | Well, has our experimental self- observation, so understood, already accomplished aught of importance? |
16287 | What is life on the largest scale, he asks, but the same recurrent inanities, the same dog barking, the same fly buzzing, forevermore? |
16287 | What is the attentive process, psychologically considered? |
16287 | What is their life to ours,--the life that is as naught to them? |
16287 | What more deadly uninteresting object can there be than a railroad time- table? |
16287 | What percentage of persons now fifty years old have any definite conception whatever of a dynamo, or how the trolley- cars are made to run? |
16287 | What were you there for but to think?" |
16287 | Where would any of_ us_ be, were there no one willing to know us as we really are or ready to repay us for_ our_ insight by making recognizant return? |
16287 | Which has the more vital insight into the nature of Jill''s existence, as a fact? |
16287 | Who are the scholars who get''rattled''in the recitation- room? |
16287 | Who are those who do recite well? |
16287 | Why are you, my hearers, sitting here before me? |
16287 | Why not? |
16287 | Why seek to eliminate it from the schoolroom or minimize the sterner law? |
16287 | Yet where will you find a more interesting object if you are going on a journey, and by its means can find your train? |
16287 | Yet you remember the Irishman who, when asked,"Is not one man as good as another?" |
16287 | or are we in defect, being victims of a pathological anà ¦ sthesia as regards Jill''s magical importance? |
16287 | to which,"Is that the kind of spray I spray my nose with?" |
16520 | How was it, Clara? 16520 Is it some_ one_ or some_ thing_?" |
16520 | What is Death and what is after that? 16520 What is Heaven?" |
16520 | Who made God? |
16520 | Who made God?--what was the very beginning of beginnings? |
16520 | And her religion? |
16520 | And her religion? |
16520 | And must I back to darkness go Because I can not say a creed? |
16520 | And the girl''s religion? |
16520 | And what of the schools? |
16520 | At home? |
16520 | Can she find there the atmosphere that will stir her soul to noble, unselfish joyous living? |
16520 | Can she there breathe in that which will enkindle noble ambition to love and serve in a world which so needs love and service? |
16520 | Did''oo tell true? |
16520 | Everybody may not respond now-- but how about_ you_, the girl herself? |
16520 | Has it anything to offer in compensation, if it permits conditions to go on unchanged? |
16520 | Has religion anything to do with lonely girlhood? |
16520 | Has religion anything to offer to girls whose parents have laid down their task and neglected their duty? |
16520 | Her mother looking the child straight in the eyes, said,"Did Esther tell true?" |
16520 | How am I to_ know_?" |
16520 | How can I talk to God? |
16520 | How does the prayer affect life as they know it? |
16520 | How many girls listen reverently to it? |
16520 | How many prayers for girls from ten to twelve does one hear? |
16520 | I tried to find words to strengthen her but she turned her calm face toward me and said,"How do people live through it and go on, who have n''t God? |
16520 | If grandmother is happy and really wanted to go, why does mother look so sad, why the closed blinds, why is everything so quiet? |
16520 | In life''s larger school our girls of today are inhaling what? |
16520 | Is it the fresh, untainted, life- giving air? |
16520 | Nature asks"What do you think about me?" |
16520 | One day a woman at a noon service in the factory shocked at a profane remark of Mary''s said reprovingly,"Do n''t you believe there is a God?" |
16520 | Ought I leave my mother and go? |
16520 | She hurls another question,"Where is God?" |
16520 | She is only a very little girl but she has met the unanswerable questions,"Who made God? |
16520 | The girls were asked,"Did you ever hear of Frances Willard? |
16520 | The problems of sin and sickness, accident and injustice ask"How do you explain us?" |
16520 | The thought in her heart if it were put into words would be,"I wonder if He would want me to do that?" |
16520 | The word has an awful sound and she raises her eyes to the severe face above her and asks,"What_ is_ dead?" |
16520 | To the church? |
16520 | What became of her passion to serve, to share in the work of making life easier and happier? |
16520 | What became of the cry in her heart for something to do to express the new life which had fired her soul? |
16520 | What can we do? |
16520 | What do you know about her?" |
16520 | What does it mean? |
16520 | What has a girl''s religion to do with these simple undeniable facts? |
16520 | What is Death?" |
16520 | What is it like? |
16520 | What is it that religion may offer to her in compensation for that which she has been denied? |
16520 | What is it that religion may offer to her in compensation for what she has been denied? |
16520 | What is she in the ideal? |
16520 | What now?" |
16520 | What should she be like, this all- important average girl? |
16520 | What was it that happened to her? |
16520 | What would he do for me? |
16520 | Where can the girl turn for the life giving atmosphere? |
16520 | Where did I come from? |
16520 | Where had she breathed in the sentiments regarding honor which in slangy phrases she breathed out with no hesitation or shame? |
16520 | Where is Heaven? |
16520 | Where shall they go for that information and how shall they be led to desire it? |
16520 | Who teaches_ thou shalt not_ to the girl of today? |
16520 | and"where is Heaven?" |
18037 | And is its rage now silenced for ever? |
18037 | But, for the present expedition, what reasonable motive can possibly be suggested?" |
18037 | Even for a man to have accomplished them would have earned our praise; what shall we not say when they were conceived and carried out by a woman? |
18037 | How many of her sex could bear for a week the fatigue and exposure to which she subjected herself year after year? |
18037 | The royal council debated vehemently the question, Whether they should be put to death? |
18037 | What object could this woman have had in visiting them, but a desire to excite our astonishment and raise our curiosity? |
18037 | What should she do next? |
18037 | Why should a civilized people put Nature in fetters, and delight in checking her growth, in limiting her spontaneous energies? |
18037 | Will it be satisfied with the ruin it has wrought? |
18037 | and this being answered in the affirmative, What death they should die? |
16757 | ( George Searle? |
16757 | 1656?] |
16757 | An interesting question arises in connection with Milton''s official duties: had he any real influence on the counsels of Government? |
16757 | And what of the"desire of honour and repute and immortal fame seated in the breast of every true scholar?" |
16757 | Barron?). |
16757 | But Cromwell''s life was precarious, and what after Cromwell? |
16757 | By a gentleman of Oxford[ George Smith Green?]. |
16757 | Can a man thus employed find himself discontented or dishonoured for want of admittance to have a pragmatical voice at sessions and jail deliveries? |
16757 | Could he have had any vague knowledge of the autos of Calderon? |
16757 | Darby?] |
16757 | Ellis? |
16757 | Hall, Bishop of Norwich?] |
16757 | Hall?] |
16757 | He has not provided for Italian, but can it not"be easily learned at any odd hour"? |
16757 | His own hair? |
16757 | How many of the passers knew that they flitted past the greatest glory of the age of Newton, Locke, and Wren? |
16757 | How many weeks? |
16757 | Is it not an axiom that a worthy book can only proceed from a worthy mind? |
16757 | Must we believe that Phillips''s account is a misrepresentation? |
16757 | Riquetti, Comte de Mirabeau?] |
16757 | Shepherd?] |
16757 | Uncertain and unsettled still remains? |
16757 | WHAT TO DO? |
16757 | Where should the woman be found at once submissive enough and learned enough to meet such inconsistent exigencies? |
16757 | Why speak of the charms of Italy, in themselves sufficient allurement to a poet and scholar? |
16757 | [ Amsterdam? |
16757 | [ Amsterdam?] |
16757 | [ By J. Gauden, Bishop of Exeter?] |
16757 | [ By John Phillips?] |
16757 | [ Edited by J. Tyrrell? |
16757 | [ Leyden?] |
16757 | [ Leyden?] |
16757 | [ London, 1873?] |
16757 | [ London?] |
16757 | or by Arthur, Earl of Anglesey?] |
16757 | or his pupil''s? |
16757 | or was he a mere secretary? |
12977 | A mass for the repose,he said,"Of Colonel Markham''s"----"What, Is gallant Colonel Markham dead? |
12977 | But who are they who skulk aside, As to get out of reach, And in their clothing strive to hide Three thousand dollars each? 12977 Celestial bird,"I cried, in pain,"What vandal wrought this wreck? |
12977 | Do you believe him? |
12977 | I think that life in this secluded spot Agrees with men of your trade, does it not? |
12977 | My memory fails as I near mine end; How_ did_ they astonish their grateful friend? |
12977 | My son, O tell me, who are those men, Rushing like pigs to the feeding- pen? |
12977 | Not members of your body, sure? 12977 O Azrael-- O Prince of Death, declare Why conquered I the grave?" |
12977 | O Poet, what in Satan''s name To me''s all this ado? 12977 O son,"He said,"alike of nature and a gun, Knowest not Mackay''s insufferable sin? |
12977 | Sire,Said Waterman, his agitable wick Still sputtering,"what calls you back so quick? |
12977 | What does it mean? |
12977 | What makes him fly lop- sided? |
12977 | What of that? |
12977 | What of that? |
12977 | What rare, Conspicuous virtues won this boon for me? |
12977 | What''s in a name? |
12977 | Who are you? |
12977 | Why come ye here? |
12977 | Yes? |
12977 | ''Tis sad, at your age, having to complain Of disillusion; but the fault is whose When pigmies stumble, wearing giants''shoes? |
12977 | ''Tis true he wrought, In deed or thought, But few of all the things he ought; But men said:"Who Would wish him to? |
12977 | ''Twas then that he said:"It is plain to my mind This property''s ownerless-- how can I find The cursedest rascal in all of the State?" |
12977 | (_ Enter Satan._) You dlive me outee clunty towns all way; Why you no tackle me Safflisco, hay? |
12977 | (_ Sees De Young._) What? |
12977 | )_ Flung like a doom athwart-- ha!--thou? |
12977 | )_ NEEDLESON: Hay? |
12977 | A VOLUPTUARY Who''s this that lispeth in the thickening throng Which crowds to claim distinction in my song? |
12977 | AN IDLER Who told Creed Haymond he was witty?--who Had nothing better in this world to do? |
12977 | And now the question is of more Importance than it was before: Shall vacancies among us be To idiots threw open free?" |
12977 | And,"Yes?" |
12977 | Are you not he who makes to- day A merchandise of old renown Which he persuades this easy town He won in battle far away? |
12977 | Are you so surely right? |
12977 | Believe the blackguard? |
12977 | Believe? |
12977 | Better for you that thoughtless men had said( Noting your fitness in the humbler sphere):"Why do n''t they make him Governor?" |
12977 | Blood? |
12977 | Brisk boomers once, alert and wise, Why do n''t they rise, why do n''t they rise?" |
12977 | But is there nothing you were always at? |
12977 | But let him bask In droll prosperity, absurdly clean-- Is that the man whom we admired before? |
12977 | But what can you hope from a gentleman barred From circles of culture by dogs in the yard? |
12977 | Cain, Esau, and Iscariot, too, And Ananias, likewise, Each had peculiar powers, but who Could lie as Mike lies? |
12977 | Can vengeance bring my sorrow to an end, Or justice give me back my buried friend? |
12977 | Could no greased pig''s appeal to his embrace Kindle his ardor for the friendly chase? |
12977 | Did he unscabbard the avenging blade, The long spear brandish and porrect the shield, Havoc the town and devastate the field? |
12977 | Do n''t know me? |
12977 | Do you not fear the grave reproof In good Creed Haymond''s eye? |
12977 | Dost think the Strangler will release his hold Because, forsooth, some fibs remain untold? |
12977 | Faith is belief; and how can I Have that by being willing? |
12977 | For centuries the question has been hot: Was Hamlet crazy, or was Hamlet not? |
12977 | HARDHAND: Who''s Shakespeare?--what''s his trade? |
12977 | Hast thou not heard that he doth stand and grin? |
12977 | Have you told William Stow? |
12977 | He raised his eyelids as if tired:"What is a Vandal?" |
12977 | His garb is mean, His face is grimy, but who thinks to ask The measure of his brains? |
12977 | His sacred thirst for blood did he allay By halving the unfortunate Mackay? |
12977 | How can we serve each other, you and I? |
12977 | How long, O Lord, shall Law and Right Be mocked for gain or glory, And angels weep as they recite The shameful story? |
12977 | I seemed to cry( though naught My sleeping tongue did utter) to the first--"What are ye?--with what woful message fraught? |
12977 | If it''s a fair And civil question, and not too abstruse, Were you elected as a"robber baron,"Or as a Communist whose teeth had hair on? |
12977 | If now he''d an office to sell could He sell it? |
12977 | Is that you, Mike? |
12977 | It''s a nickel a line? |
12977 | Jim Phelan, who Was thought to know a thing or two Of land which rose but never sank? |
12977 | Master Mouldybones, how fare you, sir? |
12977 | Max Muller, how''s that? |
12977 | May?" |
12977 | NOZZLE, RINGDIVVY, FEEGOBBLE, HAYSEED: How''ll that help_ us_? |
12977 | Now What else befell-- to whom and how? |
12977 | Now what''s the hour? |
12977 | Now wherefore, venerable sir, So resolutely gay? |
12977 | Now will you go? |
12977 | Now, what so great a change has wrought That you so frankly speak Of"seeking"honors once unsought Because you"scorned to seek"? |
12977 | O, fear you not that Vrooman''s lich Will rise from earth and point At you a scornful finger which May lack, perchance, a joint? |
12977 | O, no-- where( in Hell) could He find a cool four hundred dollars? |
12977 | O, who would n''t be in the place of me, The anti- monopoly cat? |
12977 | Or lag, and let that functionary floor you? |
12977 | Pete, Does any one contest my seat?" |
12977 | Peter expanded all his eyes:"''Clay Sheets?'' |
12977 | Pixley, must I hear you call the roll Of all the vices that infest your soul? |
12977 | SARALTHIA Now who is next? |
12977 | ST. JOHN: And who, thou antiquated crone, art thou? |
12977 | ST. JOHN: What are they? |
12977 | ST. JOHN: What dost them here? |
12977 | SWIFT: I never have heard that!--did you, De Young? |
12977 | SWIFT_( waking):_ Am I all that? |
12977 | Said Peter, affable and bland:"The free- list is suspended--"What claim have you that''s valid here?" |
12977 | Shall Hate be throned on Bunker Hill, Yet Love abide at Seven Pines? |
12977 | Shall we Alone of all his servitors refuse Swift welcome to our master and our lord?" |
12977 | Sing, muse, what next to break the peace occurred-- What act uncivil, what unfriendly word? |
12977 | Sir, what were_ you_ without the press? |
12977 | Smarting with the blow I rose and( cuffing Rutherford) inquired:"Wherefore this chastisement?" |
12977 | Still must I hear how low your taste has sunk-- From getting money down to getting drunk? |
12977 | Still must it vulgarize your feats of lung? |
12977 | THERSITES So, in the Sunday papers_ you_, Del Mar, Damn, all great Englishmen in English speech? |
12977 | That goddess was angry, and what do you think? |
12977 | That lofty tomb, Then, honored-- whom? |
12977 | That pavement, too, of golden bricks--"They''ve gobbled that?" |
12977 | The ghost of a scent-- had it followed me there From the place where I truly was resting? |
12977 | The reporter chap said:"Why, where''s your eyes? |
12977 | The sovereign of the gods superior smiled, Beaming benignant, fatherly and mild:"Is Destiny''s decree performed, my lad?-- And has he now no sense?" |
12977 | The world, awaking like a startled bat, Exclaims:"A Bonynge? |
12977 | Then Knight addressed the Judge of Heaven:"Your Honor, would it trench On custom here if Blake were given A seat upon the Bench?" |
12977 | Then he called him in and he pointed sweet To a blooming garden across the street, Inquiring:"What''s them a- growing?" |
12977 | Thou dog of darkness, dost thou hope to stay Time''s dread advance till thou hast had thy day? |
12977 | Though you had granted Ralph another breath Would_ he_ to- day less silent lie and cold? |
12977 | To hate me? |
12977 | To whom Would be the fame? |
12977 | Was''t not enough that lately you did bawl Your money- worship in the ears of all? |
12977 | Was_ that_ what threw poor Themis in a rage? |
12977 | Well, how will you assuage Your spongy passion for the blood of age?" |
12977 | Well, who decides that Faith is best? |
12977 | What dire distress have you prepared for us? |
12977 | What fiend is this? |
12977 | What haughty Power defyes? |
12977 | What if the dead whom still you hate Were wrong? |
12977 | What matters it When beggars quit Their beats? |
12977 | What profit have you if the world you set Against me? |
12977 | What shall it be? |
12977 | What signifies the date upon a stone? |
12977 | What skillful tinker ever takes His tongue to turn a screw? |
12977 | What the devil''s that?" |
12977 | What then? |
12977 | What then? |
12977 | What''s that? |
12977 | What''s that?--you"ne''er again will rob a stage"? |
12977 | What, then, are you most eager to be at? |
12977 | What,_ you_? |
12977 | When Genius strikes for error, who''s afraid To arm poor Folly with a wooden blade? |
12977 | Where''s Con O''Conor of the Bank, And all who consecrated lands Of old by laying on of hands? |
12977 | Where''s Luning, Blythe and Michael Reese, Magee, who ran the_ Golden Fleece?_ Where''s Asa Fisk? |
12977 | Where''s Luning, Blythe and Michael Reese, Magee, who ran the_ Golden Fleece?_ Where''s Asa Fisk? |
12977 | Who fyghteth the bold Seventh? |
12977 | Who vowed if you''d the power you would fine The Son of God for making water wine? |
12977 | Whose then would be the monument? |
12977 | Whose was it? |
12977 | Why do I sound my note in vain? |
12977 | Why should he not have been allowed To thread with peaceful feet the crowd Which filled that Christian street? |
12977 | Why spring they not from out the plain? |
12977 | Why, Having the pick and choice of seats, should we Forego them all but one? |
12977 | Why?" |
12977 | Will Stephen Gage not stand aloof And pass you coldly by? |
12977 | Will snatching me restore the fame That printing snatched from you?" |
12977 | Will''t keep the pigmy, if we make him strong, From siding with a giant in the wrong? |
12977 | With Chilean birth your name but poorly tallies; The test is-- Did you ever sell tamales? |
12977 | You recall The tale of Zaccheus, who did climb a tree, And Jesus said:"Come down"? |
12977 | You say that you''ve no patience with such stuff As by Rénan is writ, and when you read( Why_ do_ you read?) |
12977 | You would have damned the entire lot And turned a Christian, would you not? |
12977 | [ A] Still must you crack your brazen cheek to tell That though a miser you''re a sot as well? |
12977 | [ C] Pray, in the catalogue of all your graces, Have theft and cowardice no honored places? |
12977 | _ I_ unmentionable? |
12977 | _ You_ said''twas so writ? |
12977 | _ You_, for whose back the rods and cudgels strove Ere yet the ax had hewn them from the grove? |
12977 | _ you_ said that?" |
12977 | all untaught in art, With mind indecent and indecent heart, Do you not know-- nay, why should I explain? |
12977 | cried I--"you let such chaps Come here? |
12977 | did you do so? |
12977 | has not the upper sod Enough of room for every crime that crawls But you must loot the Palaces of God And daub your filthy names upon the walls? |
12977 | instead Of,"Why the devil did they?" |
12977 | oof dot tief o''ze vorld-- Zat Ivan Tchanay vos got hurled In Hella, da debil he say:"Wor be yer return pairmit, hey?" |
12977 | such words from you, Who call yourself a soldier? |
12977 | there are rogues? |
12977 | to whose vacant lot Each rhyming literary knacker scourges His cart- compelling Pegasus to trot, As folly, fame or famine smartly urges? |
12977 | what profits it? |
12977 | what''s that? |
12977 | where''s the stick? |
12977 | you were born, you animated doll, Within the shadow of the Capitol? |
18392 | ***** I stay my haste, I make delays, For what avails this eager pace? |
18392 | And would you have in your body all the elasticity, all the strength, all the beauty of your younger years? |
18392 | _ Whittier_***** Would you remain always young, and would you carry all the joyousness and buoyancy of youth into your maturer years? |
18223 | 144 Was Poe Immoral? |
18223 | 171 Has Life Any Meaning? |
18223 | How can a system requiring the infliction of misery on other beings be called a religious system?... |
18223 | How should I be capable of leaving thee in thy calamity?... |
18223 | I then will ask you, if a man, in worshipping... sacrifices a sheep, and so does well, wherefore not his child,... and so do better? |
18223 | Is She of small account? |
18223 | Is she a child? |
18223 | Is she honorable? |
18223 | Is she old? |
18223 | Shall we in worshipping slay that which hath life? |
18223 | What is a true gift? |
18223 | What is goodness? |
18223 | What is it to you... whether another is guilty or guiltless? |
18223 | What man is there who would be remiss in doing good to mankind? |
18223 | Wherein does religion consist? |
18223 | Who is a( true) spiritual teacher? |
18223 | Why should there be such sorrowful contention? |
18223 | Why should we cling to this perishable body? |
11400 | A beauty named Atupu,or"A black- eyed girl?" |
11400 | All goes well? |
11400 | Alors,replied the physician,"where has he taken meals?" |
11400 | And the babies? |
11400 | Are we to let Tahiti rival Paris? |
11400 | Are you ready for adventure? |
11400 | As the Fanny physic fails to straighten you out,I said to him,"why not try the hospital?" |
11400 | But they have newspapers here? |
11400 | Come and have déjeuner? |
11400 | Could n''t you bring French Chinese from Indo- China? |
11400 | Did the prayers have anything to do with your pulling through and saving the copra? |
11400 | Do you know about the nono? |
11400 | Do you know the negro? |
11400 | Does not Christianity improve them? |
11400 | Dooze gin, dooze Manhattan? 11400 George, did n''t I say the El Dorado would turn up?" |
11400 | Have we time for that history? |
11400 | Have you ever lamped it? |
11400 | Have you no Japanese? |
11400 | How about Atamu and Eva? |
11400 | How about getting an apartment or a suite of rooms? |
11400 | How about the time the French came here with the treasure? |
11400 | How you''re goin''a get any bloody fun with no roast beef, no mutton, no puddin'', and let alone a drop of ale and a pipe? |
11400 | Huh? 11400 I angry with you?" |
11400 | In what language? |
11400 | Is she your girl? |
11400 | Is the French republic to permit here in its colony the whites who enjoy its hospitality to shame the nation before the Tahitians by their nakedness? 11400 Is the bloody meat- safe still on the back porch? |
11400 | Mais, I gave you three francs for the fish, n''est- ce pas? |
11400 | Newspapers? 11400 Serious, monsieur?" |
11400 | Spik Furanche? |
11400 | Steve,I asked gentry,"did you keep a log? |
11400 | The French? |
11400 | They have been married long? |
11400 | Those missionaries, the Tonito? 11400 Ve vas dere mit''i m, und vas ve in de museum, py damage? |
11400 | Vere do ve gat oop on dat? |
11400 | Vous etes faché avec moi? |
11400 | Was it not funny? 11400 Was that a custom of Tahiti mothers, to bury their babes alive at birth?" |
11400 | Was the Chinaman sure dead when you put the leaves over him? |
11400 | We are a little sleepy, n''est- ce pas? |
11400 | What brings him here now? |
11400 | What did the queer fellow want to go to Tahiti for? |
11400 | What did you do? 11400 What do they preach?" |
11400 | What does the bounder look like? |
11400 | What is the secret? |
11400 | What land is this? |
11400 | What ship are you from? |
11400 | What will you do to uphold the honor of the British crown? 11400 What would be the result? |
11400 | What you do so long no see you? 11400 What, you have left Terii?" |
11400 | What? 11400 Where will the Umuti be?" |
11400 | Where''s the American Counsul? |
11400 | Where''s the El Dorado? |
11400 | Who pays him? |
11400 | Why bother with some one who may be dead when we are here? |
11400 | Why what have I done to show it? |
11400 | Why, who hit you, and what did you do? |
11400 | You are not an American? |
11400 | You know that big cocoanut tree in the garden of the Annexe? 11400 You savee, gin and bitters? |
11400 | You were safe on Easter Island, and ill from stuffing yourself with fresh mutton,I prompted,"And now what?" |
11400 | Against what? |
11400 | Am I going to give you death in exchange for my life? |
11400 | And what was an Occidental, a city man, before her? |
11400 | Any blow would send him to prison, but why not for a sheep instead of a lamb? |
11400 | Are we French citizens to die of hunger that savages may ride in les Fords?" |
11400 | Are we human, or are these savages?" |
11400 | Are you ceemented to that hooker?" |
11400 | Become enamored of those simple, primitive places and ways, and want to keep going westward? |
11400 | But was not romance a spiritual emanation, a state of mind, and not people or scenes? |
11400 | Buy a vanilla plantation?" |
11400 | Como estas tu?" |
11400 | Dead? |
11400 | Did I not see the former queen lift the hem of his tapa and bow over it? |
11400 | Did he hurt you?" |
11400 | Did not Napoleon say that? |
11400 | Did not Zarathustra so philosophize, and is not the national trend in Europe exalting his theory? |
11400 | Did not these natives of Tahiti themselves wear little clothing? |
11400 | Did you hear that Tissot left for Raiatea when he heard of the census? |
11400 | Do you know, their mother came here with them this morning?" |
11400 | Do you mean to tell me he gets away with that folderol?" |
11400 | Do you understand that? |
11400 | Do you want to know how they got hold here? |
11400 | Does not this hark back to a clime where the inequality of day and night was greater than in the tropics? |
11400 | Dost think''t is sweet to let thy mock''ry fall? |
11400 | Dot shkvarehet be''n''t de only wrider?" |
11400 | Even had I been guilty of all that has been said, why were they not manly and generous enough to give or find me congenial employment? |
11400 | Fish to sell or to barter? |
11400 | For me to hear forgotten noises in the Strand? |
11400 | Had the love of their father been so soon lost to them, as under the foul breath of a demon that may have wandered about their home? |
11400 | Had this child of Tahiti arranged beforehand that she should be met by a jinn with sandwiches and cakes? |
11400 | Has David run off with Miri or Caroline?" |
11400 | Have n''t I lived with''em twenty years? |
11400 | Have you eaten the fei?" |
11400 | He had the stanzas, burlesquing the sacred lines, one of which the natives especially liked: Oh, why do n''t you work, as other men do? |
11400 | How about it at night, too, when the trade quits? |
11400 | How about the tupapau, the bloody ghosts? |
11400 | How about their achievements here?" |
11400 | How could he have got it? |
11400 | How did women get along in your father''s day?" |
11400 | How much?" |
11400 | How the hell can we work when there''s no work to do? |
11400 | How would you''a''done? |
11400 | How you think? |
11400 | How''d you like to chyse up there to his roost in the''ills?" |
11400 | I do n''t say nothing about her, but you know her tongue? |
11400 | I had danced with her, I had talked with her under the stars, but what might she expect me not to do? |
11400 | I sat down and quaffed a Doctor Funk, and then inquired idly:"Where''s David?" |
11400 | I was passing the opium den here a few minutes ago, and I heard Hip Sing say something like that: What have I to do with David? |
11400 | I was willing, but I said,''What for? |
11400 | If a man had not his dream, what could life give him? |
11400 | If it is possible, could I be buried in the sea? |
11400 | Is the Scotch bastard to go on with his fairy- tale and do brown the colonials?" |
11400 | Is the ship the Tatto?" |
11400 | Is there anything in that bleedin''idea? |
11400 | Is there nothing else for me but this ignominious death? |
11400 | Is this business go on?" |
11400 | Is this war? |
11400 | Maru, could that doctor have brought the hotahota to Lovaina? |
11400 | Oh, why did I ever leave there, where love and all that is good and pure was lavished on me? |
11400 | Or the French, the governors of Tahiti? |
11400 | Quatre cocktails, n''est- ce pas?" |
11400 | See those bottle''champagne goin''in?" |
11400 | Shall I find you her?" |
11400 | She ask her,''Where that babee?'' |
11400 | She beautiful? |
11400 | She''s lovely, is n''t she? |
11400 | Suppose you were part Kanaka, an''the kid''ad done what''e did? |
11400 | THE HOME- LAND CALL Why wilt thou torture me with unripe call, Bringing these visions of the dear old land? |
11400 | That flat woman from''Nited States, ai n''t she funny? |
11400 | That from the Chaldea of millenniums ago to the Tautira of to- day, the ceremonial was virtually the same? |
11400 | The flesh was not burned, but, well-- What? |
11400 | The law forbids it, but do you suppose people do n''t fish on that account? |
11400 | The princess put her finger on her lips and whispered in my ear:"Do you hear the warbling of the omamao and the olatare? |
11400 | The waterfall?" |
11400 | Then I saw the name on the boat,"El Dorado S. F.""Did n''t I tell you so?" |
11400 | Then he turned to me, and his eyes contracted into mere black gleams as he asked:"Are you like all these others? |
11400 | These were to foil the rats or crabs which climb the trees and steal( can a creature steal from nature?) |
11400 | They all remained quiet, until McHenry, with an oath, blurted out:"What the hell''s the good of all this bloody silence? |
11400 | They replied to the first whites who asked them if they ate people:"Do you?" |
11400 | To Sen knew no English, and Temanu only,"Yais, ma darleeng,"and"Whatnahell?" |
11400 | To give bad name my good house?" |
11400 | Until the date of carrying out the mandate, one picked out a pleasing fish or string of fish, all nicely wrapped in leaves, and one asked,"A hia? |
11400 | Vaimato?" |
11400 | Vous savez cocktail, à la mode des ancients? |
11400 | Was I an average tourist or loafer come to put an unknown quantity in their smoothly working problem of a pleasant life in this Eden? |
11400 | Was I hypercritical? |
11400 | Was I responsible for his death? |
11400 | Was it for me to wander among those fabulous coral isles flung for a thousand miles upon the sapphire sea, like wreaths of lilies upon a magic lake? |
11400 | Was it not eighty- nine?" |
11400 | Was it that happiness was a delusion never to be realized? |
11400 | Was n''t that funny?" |
11400 | Was nature so fearful? |
11400 | Was this what Lovaina was bursting with? |
11400 | Were the owners glad to see that schooner again? |
11400 | Were they, in that isle so distant from Paris, their capital, practising a puritanism unknown at home? |
11400 | What Tahiti was like before the white? |
11400 | What became of her?" |
11400 | What can I do? |
11400 | What could a friendless man of eighty do to exist in the United States other than become the inmate of a poorhouse? |
11400 | What did Tahiti hold for me? |
11400 | What more liberal dispensation of nature? |
11400 | What to do? |
11400 | What was I to find in Tahiti? |
11400 | What was the secret of the miracle I had witnessed? |
11400 | What you think? |
11400 | What you think? |
11400 | What you think? |
11400 | What''s this terrible thing about young David?" |
11400 | What, you whisky- filled pigs, you will resist the law?" |
11400 | Whence had come these Polynesians or Maoris who peopled the ocean islands from Hawaii to New Zealand, and from Easter Island to the eastern Fijis? |
11400 | Whence would the luncheon come? |
11400 | Where did you come from? |
11400 | Where have you been? |
11400 | Who could it be? |
11400 | Who were they to object to a white man doffing the superfluities of dress in a climate where breadfruit and bananas grow? |
11400 | Who would keep the stores or grow vegetables if we did not have the Chinese? |
11400 | Why do n''t you? |
11400 | Why should not Steinach or the others make the grand experiment on me? |
11400 | Why should we fool with these cards here when we might sing?" |
11400 | Why was he afraid to wake them to- night when always they ate the fish with their parents-- the fish just from the sea and golden from the umu? |
11400 | Why? |
11400 | Will you not yourself show me Fautaua?" |
11400 | Would I, too, fish to be honored for my string? |
11400 | Would I, too,"go native"? |
11400 | Would he gather the fishermen from all over Tahiti, and decimate them, the way the Little Corporal purged mutiny out of his regiments? |
11400 | Would the entire British population of the ship resist the taking away of any of the crew? |
11400 | You go and see her, wo n''t you? |
11400 | You know that the French are excitable, n''est- ce pas? |
11400 | You not hear about that turribil thing?" |
11400 | You not meet that rich uncle of David from America? |
11400 | do you hear the passing flute? |
11400 | how long you been? |
11400 | is it that the indigènes pay the governor or give him fish free? |
11400 | what to do? |
1561 | ''AND WHERE SHALL I CARRY MY MONEY?'' 1561 But what of the second group above- mentioned, the"things SHOWN"? |
1561 | Where is the founder of the Religion? |
1561 | ( 2) And what is this new form in which consciousness has to rearise? |
1561 | ( 2) Why indeed? |
1561 | -------- How then are we to reach this treasure and make it our own? |
1561 | --or to put it in another form:"Is it necessary to suppose a human and visible Founder at all?" |
1561 | Am_ I_ doing the right thing? |
1561 | Am_ I_ winning the favor of God and man? |
1561 | Among what stars was the Sun moving at that critical moment? |
1561 | And he wrote-- in the Tao- Teh- King--"Who is there who can make muddy water clear?" |
1561 | And to how many of us, in our dealings with the world, does life take on just such a form-- of a queer and ugly cloud? |
1561 | And what about the kind of creed or creeds which that religion would favor? |
1561 | And what of the transformation of the king into a god-- or of the Magician or Priest directly into the same? |
1561 | And yet( one can not help asking the question): Has any one of us really ever SEEN a Tree? |
1561 | Are they good for me, are they evil for me? |
1561 | But what does it mean--"whose soul is purified"? |
1561 | But what was that lamb? |
1561 | By which they may be guided, by which they may hope, by which look forward? |
1561 | Can any description of Rest be more perfect than that? |
1561 | Can we doubt, in the light of all that we have already said, what the answer to these questions is? |
1561 | Could anything be more crushing? |
1561 | Did_ I_ make a good bargain in allowing Jesus to be crucified for me?" |
1561 | Do you mean that the whole family is his"body"? |
1561 | Do you see? |
1561 | Had he not alienated himself from his fellows by destroying its very symbol? |
1561 | How are we to attain to this Stilling of the Mind, which is the secret of all power and possession? |
1561 | How can one describe such a state of affairs? |
1561 | How can we reconcile St. Augustine with his own devilish creed, or the religious belief of the Aztecs with their unspeakable cruelties? |
1561 | How can you reconcile the existence side by side of divinities belonging to such different periods, or ascribe them both to an astronomical origin?" |
1561 | How was this location defined? |
1561 | How without Almanacs or Calendars could the day, or probable day, of the Sun''s rebirth be fixed? |
1561 | If that is true-- it will be asked-- how was it that that divorce DID take place-- that the taboo did arise? |
1561 | If we can get into right touch with the immense, the incalculable powers of Nature, is there anything which we may not be able to do? |
1561 | If you pour a phial of muddy water into that reservoir which we described-- what will you see? |
1561 | Is it not obvious that the real Self MUST be something of this nature, a being perceiving all, but itself remaining unperceived? |
1561 | Is it not possible, we may ask, that in the very midst of the cyclone of daily life we may find a similar resting- place? |
1561 | Is that not magnificent? |
1561 | It was always:"Am_ I_ saved? |
1561 | Let us then grant this preliminary assumption-- and it clearly is not a large or hazardous one-- and what follows? |
1561 | Must we say then that the whole nation is really a part of the man''s body? |
1561 | Schemes of reconstruction are well enough in their way, but if there is no ground of REAL HUMAN SOLIDARITY beneath, of what avail are they? |
1561 | The history of Religion( they will say) is a history of delusion and illusion; why waste time over it? |
1561 | The question arose:"How do these sensations and experiences affect ME? |
1561 | The question inevitably arises, How can this power be obtained? |
1561 | Then when it is melted he says,"Where is the crystal?" |
1561 | We can hardly, in this last case, disbelieve altogether in the genuineness of the plea, so why should we do so in the former case? |
1561 | What can_ I_ do to modify them, to encourage the pleasurable, to avoid or inhibit the painful, and so on?" |
1561 | What did Shakespeare say? |
1561 | What has been the instigating cause of it? |
1561 | What have been the main characteristics of the Christian branch, as differentiating it from the other branches? |
1561 | What is that new and necessary element of regeneration? |
1561 | What is the ESSENCE of the tree? |
1561 | What is the explanation of this fact? |
1561 | What is the matter? |
1561 | What more natural than to suppose that the pain really is transferred from the one person to the other? |
1561 | What sorrow indeed, what, grief, can come to such an one who has seen this vision? |
1561 | What sort of god, we may ask, did Augustine worship? |
1561 | What was happening? |
1561 | What was the meaning of that"coming of the Son of Man"whom Daniel beheld in vision among the clouds of heaven? |
1561 | What will happen? |
1561 | When, to a man who understands, the Self has become all things, what sorrow, what trouble, can there be to him-- having once beheld that Unity?" |
1561 | Where then was the Sun at that moment? |
1561 | Who then was this"Christos"for whom the world was waiting three centuries before our era( and indeed centuries before that)? |
1561 | Who was this"thrice Savior"whom the Greek Gnostics acclaimed? |
1561 | Why did Samson( name derived from Shemesh, the sun) lose all his strength when he lost his hair? |
1561 | Why did the Druids at Yule Tide light roaring fires? |
1561 | Why should our minds dwell on them any longer or harbor a doubt as to our perfect comprehension of them? |
1561 | Why should the head brag of its ascendancy and domination, and the heart be smothered up and hidden? |
1561 | Why was Apollo born with only one hair( the young Sun with only one feeble ray)? |
1561 | Why was all this? |
1561 | Why was the cock supposed to crow all Christmas Eve("The bird of dawning singeth all night long")? |
1561 | Why waste time over them?" |
1561 | Why were so many of these gods-- Mithra, Apollo, Krishna, Jesus, and others, born in caves or underground chambers? |
1561 | Why( again we ask) did Christianity make this apparently great mistake? |
1561 | Will my claims to salvation be allowed? |
1561 | Would the god grow weaker and weaker, and finally succumb, or would he conquer after all? |
1561 | Yet since its return was somewhat variable and uncertain the question, What could man do to assist that return? |
1561 | or of the"perfect man"who, Paul declared, should deliver us from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God? |
1561 | spoke of these same Mysteries as enforcing the lesson that"the greatest of human blessings is fellowship and mutual trust"? |
18266 | Why seek ye the living among the dead? |
18266 | 3._ DEATH-- AND AFTER? |
18266 | Again quoting from the"Notes on Devachan":"_ Who goes to Devachan?" |
18266 | And man has questioned ever of Religion, Whence comes it? |
18266 | Does the last penalty of the law mean the highest honour of the peerage? |
18266 | Is a wooden spoon the emblem of the most illustrious pre- eminence in learning? |
18266 | What can be a greater fraud than our body, so apparently solid, stable, visible and tangible? |
18266 | What can be more depressing than the darkness in which a house is kept shrouded, while the dead body is awaiting sepulture? |
18266 | What then is being_ en rapport_? |
18266 | Whither goes it? |
18266 | Will not this suffice? |
18266 | [ 49] A pure medium''s Ego can be drawn to and made, for an instant, to unite in a magnetic(?) |
16352 | After the death of King Wan,said he,"was not the cause of truth lodged in me? |
16352 | And how, Lord, do they treat the remains of a king of kings? |
16352 | And what kind of man is he? |
16352 | But of what kind of spirits is the Lord, the venerable Anuruddha, thinking? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the higher penalty? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | For whom have you come? |
16352 | Has the superior man,said Tsze- loo,"indeed, to endure in this way?" |
16352 | Has your majesty,said this officer,"any servant who could discharge the duties of ambassador like Tsze- kung? |
16352 | Have you heard any lessons from your father different from what we have all heard? |
16352 | How do you mean that you are unknown? |
16352 | If the great mountain crumble,said he,"to what shall I look up? |
16352 | Kung Kew,replied the disciple,"Kung Kew, of Loo?" |
16352 | No,replied Le,"he was standing alone once when I was passing through the court below with hasty steps, and said to me,''Have you read the Odes?'' |
16352 | Sir,replied Confucius,"in carrying on your government why should you employ capital punishment at all? |
16352 | What do you say,asked the chief of the Ke clan on one occasion,"to killing the unprincipled for the good of the principled?" |
16352 | What is this world? |
16352 | What makes you so late? |
16352 | Who are you, sir? |
16352 | Who is that holding the reins in the carriage yonder? |
16352 | Why, then, do you not remove from the place? |
16352 | Again he inquired of him, saying:"Canst thou act as my guide?" |
16352 | Am I a bitter gourd? |
16352 | Am I to be hung up out of the way of being eaten?" |
16352 | And even if some gain should accrue to the people, in what way would this interfere with the sage''s action? |
16352 | And if they existed, do the order and relation agree with actual truth? |
16352 | And until we know, is it not a waste of time to pore over the lesser happenings between? |
16352 | Another day, in the same place and the same way, he said to me,''Have you read the rules of Propriety?'' |
16352 | Arbaces communicated his ideas and projects to the prince then intrusted with the government of Babylon, the Chaldæan Phul( Palia? |
16352 | But did all those who preceded him, and those who followed him, exist as he did? |
16352 | But my principles make no progress, and I, how shall I be viewed in future ages?" |
16352 | But the real formula is,_ post trigesimum diem_, and we may ask, Why did Livy or the annalist whom he followed make this alteration? |
16352 | But what was the practical result? |
16352 | Can the vanishing pictures of the past be made as simply obvious as mathematics, as fascinating as a breezy novel of adventure? |
16352 | Can this be accomplished? |
16352 | Did not kings Wan and Woo, from their small states of Fung and Kaou, rise to the sovereignty of the empire? |
16352 | Did the Ptolemies admit the claims which the local priests attempted to deduce from this romantic tale? |
16352 | Heaven will not let the cause of truth perish, and what therefore can the people of Kwang do to me?" |
16352 | How is it possible that they should not be dissolved?" |
16352 | How is it possible that[ they should not be dissolved]?" |
16352 | How many of us do really know about them? |
16352 | How then is it possible[ that such a being should not be dissolved]?''" |
16352 | If I associate not with people, with mankind, with whom shall I associate? |
16352 | If the strong beam break, and the wise man wither away, on whom shall I lean? |
16352 | If while an ox is passing on the street[ market?] |
16352 | If you accept the invitation of this Pih Hih, who is in open rebellion against his chief, what will people say?" |
16352 | Is not he who neglects to teach his son his duties, equally guilty with the son who fails in them? |
16352 | Is there any who will assist me?" |
16352 | Miki In no no Mikoto, also indignant at this, said:"My mother and my aunt are both sea- goddesses; why do they raise great billows to overwhelm us?" |
16352 | No sooner had the envoys put the question to the Delphian priestess, on the day named,"What is Croesus now doing?" |
16352 | One time he said to his friend just named,"Do you think we are governing the people well?" |
16352 | That this poetry is very ancient can not be doubted; but did the legend at all times describe Romulus as the son of Rea Silvia or Ilia? |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor summoned him and then inquired of him, saying:"Who art thou?" |
16352 | The first problem to be confronted was, What were the Great Events that should be told? |
16352 | The question now is, What were these two towns of Roma and Remuria? |
16352 | Then the Mallas of Kusinara said to the venerable Ananda:"What should be done, Lord, with the remains of the Tathagata?" |
16352 | We are told that he reckoned a sheep and a medimnus( of wheat or barley?) |
16352 | What is his likeness?" |
16352 | What is to be done?" |
16352 | Where is the place in which the Nile is born? |
16352 | Which was the greater, the external magnificence, or the moral sublimity of this scene? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice?" |
16352 | Who is the god or goddess concealed there? |
16352 | Who would suspect any uncertainty here if it were not for this passage of Dionysius? |
16352 | Why do they harass me by land, and why, moreover, do they harass me by sea?" |
16352 | Why need there be such rectification?" |
16352 | Why should we not proceed thither, and make it the capital?" |
16352 | Why should we remain for a long time in one place? |
16352 | Why? |
16352 | Will this not be well? |
16352 | _ But will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth? |
16352 | and did the god regain possession of the domains and dues which they declared had been his right? |
16352 | he cried,"for whom have you come?" |
16352 | or any one to compare as a general with Tsze- loo? |
16352 | or any so well qualified for a premier as Yen Hwuy? |
16352 | or even know what they are? |
16352 | or one- twentieth part of them? |
16352 | surely thou knowest our Master?" |
12089 | ''Am I to understand, then,''I said,''that what you call Labour absolutely dominates this part of the world?'' |
12089 | ''And how d''you strip''em?'' |
12089 | ''And how does the country like it?'' |
12089 | ''And if I do n''t?'' |
12089 | ''And the next?'' |
12089 | ''And was n''t it worth while to name even_ one_ of these stations from some man, living or dead, who had something to do with making the line?'' |
12089 | ''And what do you do, nowadays?'' |
12089 | ''And what school is that?'' |
12089 | ''And what''ll the American Woman do?'' |
12089 | ''And whereabout do they go?'' |
12089 | ''And will your friends go?'' |
12089 | ''Are there any limits to the possibilities of it?'' |
12089 | ''But did n''t the Salvation Army offer to bring in three or four thousand English some short time ago? |
12089 | ''But does it follow that they are lying?'' |
12089 | ''But have n''t the rates been reduced?'' |
12089 | ''But if his woman ord----told him to do it?'' |
12089 | ''But s''pose he would n''t?'' |
12089 | ''But this is n''t across the Border?'' |
12089 | ''But what prevents my cutting your throat where you sit? |
12089 | ''But,''said I, when the tale had been told,''whatever made the lower court accept all that village evidence? |
12089 | ''But_ why_ must you get this stuff?'' |
12089 | ''Ca n''t you import servants from England?'' |
12089 | ''D''you know what''s happening across the Border? |
12089 | ''Difficult? |
12089 | ''Do n''t you think our Eastern maple is a little violent in colour?'' |
12089 | ''Do you happen to know if the roof''s on?'' |
12089 | ''Do you object to the Japanese, too?'' |
12089 | ''Even if he has his Union ticket? |
12089 | ''Going to supper?'' |
12089 | ''Ha- ow''s that?'' |
12089 | ''Had you meant to kill the headman?'' |
12089 | ''Haow''s that? |
12089 | ''Haow''s that?'' |
12089 | ''Have n''t you heard about our natural gas-- the greatest natural gas in the world? |
12089 | ''Have you been to the Bank?'' |
12089 | ''Have you made your pile?'' |
12089 | ''How d''you propose to set about it?'' |
12089 | ''How much haf you losd?'' |
12089 | ''I do not comprehend your Gods-- your direct worship of beasts, for instance?'' |
12089 | ''I thought they only want a fair day''s wage for a fair day''s work?'' |
12089 | ''Indians on the move?'' |
12089 | ''Is that your trouble? |
12089 | ''Maybe; but_ was_ the Agricultural Bank selling the cultivators up too much?'' |
12089 | ''Number? |
12089 | ''O Serang, is that man a fool?'' |
12089 | ''Oh, him?'' |
12089 | ''On the hoof?'' |
12089 | ''Tell me,_ he_ ever did anything in his life?'' |
12089 | ''That it is difficult to get skilled labour into here?'' |
12089 | ''Then the Greek will sell him up, and that will be against the law, wo n''t it?'' |
12089 | ''Then what happens?'' |
12089 | ''Then who takes their place? |
12089 | ''Then why keep the Chinese?'' |
12089 | ''Then you think Calgary is going ahead?'' |
12089 | ''Well,''he asked at last,''what do you think? |
12089 | ''What about the Luck?'' |
12089 | ''What did you see in your Gods as affecting belief and conduct?'' |
12089 | ''What happens when you strip the cover off a hornet''s nest? |
12089 | ''What is it?'' |
12089 | ''What more could a man need to make him happy?'' |
12089 | ''What need? |
12089 | ''What was the good of telling? |
12089 | ''What would happen if you did?'' |
12089 | ''What''s the matter with the Bank?'' |
12089 | ''Who knows? |
12089 | ''Why not go home before you are buried, O Face?'' |
12089 | ''Why should n''t you?'' |
12089 | ''Why?'' |
12089 | ''Why?'' |
12089 | ''Would they go back again?'' |
12089 | ''Yes, but what I mean is, have you seen the equipment of their schools and colleges-- desks, libraries, and lavatories? |
12089 | ''Yes, but_ what_ school?'' |
12089 | ''You know the answer to the riddle of the Sphinx?'' |
12089 | ''You mean,''said one straight- eyed youth,''that we are a back- number copying back- numbers?'' |
12089 | ''You prefer the indirect? |
12089 | ''You shall get your number, sar, for the first service?'' |
12089 | ''You''re perfectly right, Sheikh, but do n''t you see I ca n''t tell him what I think of him so long as he''s loyal and you''re out against us? |
12089 | ''_ Are_ they?'' |
12089 | ( Did not your own hair stand straight on end, and, therefore, must not everybody else''s have done likewise?) |
12089 | (_ Over his shoulder to his wife, who wears half- hoop diamond rings at_ 10 A.M.)''Lizzie, where''s my grip? |
12089 | A man passed stiffly and some one of a group turned to ask lightly,''Hit, old man?'' |
12089 | After all, why should they? |
12089 | And how will you vote?'' |
12089 | And meantime, what is the fellah doing?'' |
12089 | And the child repays by his gratitude and good behaviour? |
12089 | And then? |
12089 | And then? |
12089 | And what happened?'' |
12089 | And you do n''t think any attempt to bring in white immigration would succeed?'' |
12089 | And...? |
12089 | And_ have_ you seen their old barn of a saloon? |
12089 | Are n''t you going to have a flutter?'' |
12089 | Are you interested in mixed farming? |
12089 | Are_ all_ the regiments full? |
12089 | Assuredly with interest.. Did men lend money for nothing in_ any_ country? |
12089 | But do you know any other country where two women could go out for a three months''trek and shoot in perfect comfort and safety? |
12089 | But how in the world can a man under these skies behave except as a waterweed and a ghost? |
12089 | But how to get free food, and free-- shall we say-- love? |
12089 | But what can we do? |
12089 | But why? |
12089 | But why?'' |
12089 | CITIES AND SPACES What would you do with a magic carpet if one were lent you? |
12089 | Can you tell me what the capital of the Hudson Bay district''s goin''to be? |
12089 | Chickens? |
12089 | Curious idea, is it not? |
12089 | D''you suppose he meant to produce that effect?'' |
12089 | Did they lie about Vancouver six years since, or Creede not twenty months gone? |
12089 | Did you buy that alleged scarab off the dragoman this morning? |
12089 | Did you ever know a man get a woman''s respect by parading around creation with a dish- clout pinned to his coat- tails?'' |
12089 | Did_ you_?'' |
12089 | Do n''t run away with any idea that I''m against Labour-- will you?'' |
12089 | Do n''t you know the story of the Englishman who lost his way and was found half- dead of thirst beside a river? |
12089 | Do n''t you think it''s beautiful? |
12089 | Do you know the saying that the Frontier is hard on women and cattle? |
12089 | Does the bald catalogue of these recitals leave you cold? |
12089 | Eh? |
12089 | Forty- four and a half? |
12089 | Had the lower court been long in the country?'' |
12089 | Have you ever noticed that Canada has to deal in the lump with most of the problems that afflict us others severally? |
12089 | He has heard the Arabian Nights retold and knows the inward kernel of that romance, which some? |
12089 | He smiled as the artist smiles-- all true prospectors have that lofty smile--''Me? |
12089 | Hell is_ quite_ full of such grandsons of just such father''s uncles; and how do I know if Private So- and- So speaks the truth about his family? |
12089 | Hey, what? |
12089 | How could he have broken_ any_ man''s caste when they were all eating his sheep? |
12089 | How could mere horses face the endless furrows? |
12089 | How could they say anything about it? |
12089 | How many acres?'' |
12089 | How old would you take me for? |
12089 | How so? |
12089 | How? |
12089 | I hope I have made myself clear?'' |
12089 | I suppose they''ve told you that little fuss with the Japanese in Vancouver was worked from down under, have n''t they? |
12089 | Is it not''distinctively American''? |
12089 | Is it quite sporting, do you think, to lay the blame on another country?'' |
12089 | Is n''t it glorious? |
12089 | Is n''t it grand? |
12089 | Is n''t this rather a new country to pitch people out of?'' |
12089 | Is that true, d''you think?'' |
12089 | Is the extravaganza complete? |
12089 | It comes in all right, does n''t it?'' |
12089 | It looks so marvellously like a toy train flung aside by a child, that one can not realise what it means till a voice cries,''Any one killed?'' |
12089 | Main Street-- do you remember Main Street of a little village locked up in the snow this spring? |
12089 | Not so bad?'' |
12089 | Now, I put it to you, what is left for a priest with imagination, except to develop ritual and multiply gods on friezes? |
12089 | Now, what do you think about the Japanese question?'' |
12089 | Oh, you by the hut, there, what is your business? |
12089 | Or, if one is rich, what better fun than to grub- stake an expedition on the supposed site of a dead city and see what turns up? |
12089 | Presently I asked:''What is the name of the next station out from here?'' |
12089 | Queer mixture, is n''t it? |
12089 | Said one of them to the other:''Hullo?'' |
12089 | Sentiment is a beautiful thing, but what are you going to do?'' |
12089 | Showing off pretty before the globe- trotters, are n''t we?'' |
12089 | Sold for_ how_ much? |
12089 | That was Gordon, of course,''or''Was that before or after Omdurman?'' |
12089 | The big man bent down to little Impudence--''Want to pick lilies, eh? |
12089 | The last words I caught were true Sikh talk:''But what about the money, O my brother?'' |
12089 | The worship of Humanity with a capital H? |
12089 | Then a senior officer with a British India medal asked hopefully:''Has the Sahib any orders where we are to go?'' |
12089 | Then you''ll use the rest- house there?'' |
12089 | They were simply and unfeignedly glad to see home again, and they said:''Is n''t it lovely? |
12089 | Was_ that_ all? |
12089 | We do n''t want to be separated and--''''You''ave your number for the service, sar?'' |
12089 | What came of that idea?'' |
12089 | What can we do? |
12089 | What d''you think?'' |
12089 | What do_ you_ think?'' |
12089 | What else could I have done? |
12089 | What is it?'' |
12089 | What is the matter with the English as immigrants?'' |
12089 | What must they mean to the native- born? |
12089 | What number? |
12089 | What were those men talking about just now?'' |
12089 | What would you do if the cars went on and took mama away, Sis?'' |
12089 | What- at?'' |
12089 | What? |
12089 | What? |
12089 | When he was asked why he did n''t drink, he said,"How the deuce can I without a glass?"'' |
12089 | Where in thunder do we_ get_ the numbers, anyway?'' |
12089 | Who''s there? |
12089 | Why did you come here?'' |
12089 | Why does it not do so?'' |
12089 | Why should we have laid ourselves open to be snubbed worse than we were? |
12089 | Why, in the name of Reason, therefore, should we vex ourselves with vain exertions? |
12089 | Why? |
12089 | Why?'' |
12089 | Will you sell us into slavery among the Egyptians?'' |
12089 | With interest? |
12089 | You know the First Sign- post on the Great Main Road? |
12089 | You know the old belief that the white man on brown, red, or black lands, will throw back in manner and instinct to the type originally bred there? |
12089 | You may have noticed men were rather careful when they talked about it?'' |
12089 | You merely find that Labour''s a little bit-- er-- inconsiderate, sometimes?'' |
12089 | _ And_ the officers''library? |
12089 | _ Now_ d''you see?'' |
12089 | _ Now_, what''ll you do with me?'' |
12089 | _ Who_ bought at that? |
12089 | where did you come from?'' |
15735 | ''Can a man contend with God? 15735 ''Leave off talking men,''said Muini Pembà ©,''and allow others to speak, wo n''t you? |
15735 | Can the Ethiopian,asks the prophet,"change his skin, or the leopard his spots?" |
15735 | Shall we, whose souls are lighted By wisdom from on high,-- Shall we, to men benighted The lamp of life deny? |
15735 | [ 123] Might not he have meantabout the end of last August"came the Dutch man- of- war, etc.? |
15735 | [ 56] Is it asked what caused the decline of all this glory of the primitive Negro? 15735 _ Prisoner._--That is strange, and know me so well?" |
15735 | _ Prisoner_.--What answer did the Negroes make, when I offered to forgive them their sins, as you said? 15735 _ Prisoner_.--What room was I in when I called Mary, and you came up, as you said? |
15735 | _ Prisoner_.--You say you have seen me several times at Hughson''s, what clothes did I usually wear? 15735 ''Wo n''t we, Kachà © chà ©? |
15735 | And also, what Blacks and Slaves have been brought in within the said time, and att what rates? |
15735 | And what is the proposed compensation to the Northern States for a sacrifice of every principle of right, of every impulse of humanity? |
15735 | And what of the few who secured their freedom? |
15735 | And where are our arms? |
15735 | And why? |
15735 | And yet an intelligent(?) |
15735 | Are they admitted as property? |
15735 | Are they men? |
15735 | Are they property? |
15735 | At the time it was made( 1641), what had its authors to provide for? |
15735 | But is he a good man? |
15735 | But where doth he read of any such War? |
15735 | But who shall decide how fast or how slowly these abolitions shall be made?" |
15735 | But, again, what was the cause of the Negro''s fall from his high state of civilization? |
15735 | Can he recover the legacy, and how? |
15735 | Can the Ethiopian change his Skin?_ This shows that Black Men are the Posterity of_ Cush_. |
15735 | Could he be taken as property, or as a prisoner of war? |
15735 | Does she not seem as though she would speak to me?" |
15735 | Even his accidental conversion could not change his condition, nor mollify the feelings of the white Christians(?) |
15735 | For what, then, are all the sacrifices to be made? |
15735 | He was asked by one of the learned gentlemen,"what the Negroes intended by all this mischief?" |
15735 | How many seconds in seventy years, seventeen days, twelve hours? |
15735 | How, then, could we expect less of these"knights"and"adventurers"who"degraded the human race by an exclusive respect for the privileged classes"? |
15735 | Hutchinson sign a bill that was intended to choke the channel of a commerce in human souls that was so near the heart of the British throne? |
15735 | If the whites of the colony were left in ignorance, what must have been the mental and moral condition of the slaves? |
15735 | If this ever was a Commission; How do we know but that it is long since out of Date? |
15735 | Ilogo, we ask thee, What shall we do to cure the king? |
15735 | In a free land(? |
15735 | Irving, R.N., in a letter to Dr. Hodgkin, Aug 3, 1840, observes,''You ask me if they aid in the slave- trade? |
15735 | Is this reasonable? |
15735 | It could not have been that he believed the convicts of England more industrious or skilful than Negro slaves? |
15735 | Mr. Wilson of Pennsylvania said,"Are they admitted as citizens? |
15735 | Needles,"of this city( Philadelphia), and gave correct answers to all their questions such as, How many seconds there are in a year and a half? |
15735 | New- York court thought the evidence"clear(? |
15735 | Now, what was the condition of the slaves in the Christian colony of New York? |
15735 | Or, had he theoretical objections to slavery as a permanent institution? |
15735 | Read Mr. Stanley''s account without emotion if you can:--"''Do you wish to see Zanzibar, boys?'' |
15735 | Shall I go and rob it at ten o''clock; because, if I do not do so, another person will, two hours later? |
15735 | Shall all the States, then, be bound to defend each, and shall each be at liberty to introduce a weakness which will render defence more difficult? |
15735 | Shall the king die? |
15735 | Shall we say, that the rights of masters and servants clash, and can be decided only by force? |
15735 | Speaking of the slaves, Pastorius asks,"Have not these negroes as much right to fight for their freedom as you have to keep them slaves?" |
15735 | The question was, whether all America was not in a state of war, and whether we ought to confine ourselves to act upon the defensive only? |
15735 | The question, upon a demand for the yeas and nays, was put:"Shall the words moved to be stricken out stand?" |
15735 | The sky is bright; the sun is shining: why dost than weep? |
15735 | They were not allowed to vote: why should they be represented? |
15735 | They were not represented in the States: why should they be in the general government? |
15735 | To prove that the people of Israel were strictly forbidden the Buying and Selling one another for_ Slaves_: who questions that? |
15735 | To the question,''Would they work for Europeans?'' |
15735 | Upon what principle it is that the slaves shall be computed in the representation? |
15735 | Was he booty, or was he entitled to the usage of civilized warfare,--a freeman, and therefore to be treated as such? |
15735 | Was it another reminder that the"Negroes were heathen,"and, therefore, not entitled to the privileges of Christian freemen? |
15735 | We know there must have been more than Cain and his son Enoch in the land of Nod to build a city but who were they?... |
15735 | What a strange piece of Logick is this? |
15735 | What are the great objects of the general system? |
15735 | What say ye now? |
15735 | What time of the day did I used to come to Hughson''s? |
15735 | What was his name, and whence came he to battle? |
15735 | Where are you going to battle now? |
15735 | Where are you going to battle now? |
15735 | Where are you going to battle now?" |
15735 | Where will you go out to battle now? |
15735 | Who fears death? |
15735 | Who was Crispus Attucks? |
15735 | Who were the Shemites? |
15735 | Who will give me matta- bicho_?" |
15735 | Why not? |
15735 | Why should I be sad? |
15735 | Why, then, is no other property included? |
15735 | Will you do it, brethren? |
15735 | Will your honors grant the liberty, and give me the command of the party? |
15735 | [ 184] If they dared lift a hand against any white man, or"Christian"(?) |
15735 | [ 98]"_ Why dost than weep, my child? |
15735 | and what is that to the case in hand? |
15735 | how can he sing the wonderful deeds of the Toubab? |
15735 | or whether there be a distinction between such as are slaves and those who are free?'' |
15735 | or, whether that paste, which the deponent showed him, was not made of the same ingredients as the Luthern minister''s?" |
15735 | then, why is not other property admitted into the computation?" |
15735 | then, why not on an equality with citizens? |
15735 | where will you go out to battle now? |
15735 | why this people lost their position in the world''s history? |
15735 | | JOHN MORTON, Sergt.[?] |
13015 | And now may I ask you, sir, whither you are bound? |
13015 | And pray, sir, how is my lord? 13015 And so you have had all this toil and labour on account of a foolish speech of mine? |
13015 | But what made you think she must be a goblin because her clothes were dry? |
13015 | But who and what are you? |
13015 | Come,said Genzaburô, smiling,"had n''t you better sit a little closer to me?" |
13015 | How could I, above all men, who have so much to reproach myself with in my conduct towards you, accept this money? |
13015 | How is it that I find you here pursuing this vile calling, in the Yoshiwara? 13015 How is it that you have come so late? |
13015 | I received the order but a moment since; how comest thou to know of it? |
13015 | I say, Master Chokichi, is it off yet? |
13015 | I''m going to the capital of the moon,[52] answered the hare;"wo n''t you come with me?" |
13015 | Is it not the duty of a retainer to lay down his life for his master? 13015 Is your name Chôbei?" |
13015 | Oh, you know the gentleman who was talking with you the other day, at the Adzuma Bridge? 13015 Pray, where are you going to, Master Tokutarô?" |
13015 | Well, I suppose it can not be helped, then; but how much would the young man give you for the cub? |
13015 | Well, what is it? |
13015 | What are you carrying at your girdle? |
13015 | What can I do to oblige you, sir? |
13015 | What can this mean? |
13015 | What do you want to do that for? |
13015 | What have your reverences to say? |
13015 | What is that wound on your knee? 13015 What is the matter?" |
13015 | What is this? |
13015 | What low ruffian is this? |
13015 | What terrible tale is this that neither of you dare tell? 13015 What''s that?" |
13015 | Who and what are you? |
13015 | Why are you weeping thus? |
13015 | Why so? |
13015 | Wo n''t you accept twenty- five riyos? |
13015 | ''And what is the course in the murder of a brother?'' |
13015 | ''And what is the course in the murder of an uncle or cousin?'' |
13015 | Am I not right, eh?" |
13015 | And how comes it to have no name? |
13015 | And pray why? |
13015 | And who can say that this would not be the case? |
13015 | And who is to blame in the matter? |
13015 | And why? |
13015 | Are you prepared to serve me in whatever respect I may require you?" |
13015 | As for gentlemen marrying women of bad character, are not such things known in Europe? |
13015 | As he has gone out to- day, suppose you and I have a game?" |
13015 | As he saw it, he started and said--"Pray tell me, how came you by that sword?" |
13015 | At this O Koyo, who had been crouching down like a drooping flower, gave a great start, and cried out,"Is that really true? |
13015 | But, pray, who asked you to bring me into the world? |
13015 | By what instruction, other than that of Nichiren, the holy founder of this sect, can we expect to attain this end? |
13015 | Chokichi smiled contemptuously, as he answered,"So you deem the presence of an Eta in your house a pollution-- eh? |
13015 | Could it be a fish- hook? |
13015 | Could it be a net? |
13015 | Do ladies of the_ demi- monde_ never make good marriages? |
13015 | Do they not rather recoil upon the accusers, who would appear to have studied the Japanese woman only in the harlot of Yokohama? |
13015 | Do you mean to say that your daughter has not yet learnt shampooing, an art which is essential to her following the right path of a wife? |
13015 | Do you suppose such a thing as that would frighten a thief from breaking in? |
13015 | Does a man show his spite by grudging a bit of roast fowl or meat? |
13015 | For a while Zempachi made no answer, but at length he said--"Do you know, villain, that your dirty football struck me in the face? |
13015 | Genzaburô remained as one stupefied, and, turning to Chokichi, said,"Are you acquainted with those two women who came up just now?" |
13015 | Hare?" |
13015 | Has my pet chicken been here?" |
13015 | Have you any fixed intentions?" |
13015 | Have you forgotten how your own life was spared but a moment since? |
13015 | His companion Magohachi, seeing him fall, was in great anxiety; for should any harm happen to Kazuma, what excuse could he make to Matayémon? |
13015 | His disciple, Tsze Hea, asked him,''What course is to be pursued in the murder of a father or mother?'' |
13015 | How can beasts[45] and hobgoblins exercise any power over men? |
13015 | How can men be conscious of shame for a deformed finger, and count it as no misfortune that their hearts are crooked? |
13015 | How can the Son of Heaven, who is the father and mother of his people, turn dealer in ranks and honours? |
13015 | How could I stand by and see life taken? |
13015 | How could I, who am such a vile thing, pollute your nobility by sitting by your side?" |
13015 | How could that have been?" |
13015 | How dare you invent such lies?" |
13015 | How do you think that happened, my children? |
13015 | How is it that you alone are awake? |
13015 | How long do you retain the delicious taste of the dainties you feast upon? |
13015 | How many myriads of men are there who have been bewitched by foxes? |
13015 | How on earth can foxes have such power over men? |
13015 | How shall we hand him over to you?" |
13015 | How then is the heart a thing which can be hidden? |
13015 | However, as the fellow has got my sword, I mean to get it back by fair means or foul: will you allow me to undertake the job of seizing him?" |
13015 | I suppose there is no chance of his coming home to- night, is there?" |
13015 | I wish you could manage to be rather less of a shrew,"what do you think the scullery- maid would answer then? |
13015 | I''m able to take care of myself; and, if I choose to go over to China, or to live in India, I should like to know who is to prevent me? |
13015 | If I were of a bad heart or an angular disposition, should I be here helping him? |
13015 | If the heart be awry, what though your skin be fair, your nose aquiline, your hair beautiful? |
13015 | If we did not depend upon ourselves, how could we live in the world?" |
13015 | Is he in any better condition since I have been offering up prayers for him?" |
13015 | Is it a dream or a reality? |
13015 | Is n''t that a funny story? |
13015 | Is n''t that a funny story? |
13015 | Is not the story of the dog of Totoribé Yorodzu written in the Annals of Japan? |
13015 | Is not this a cruel state of things? |
13015 | Is not this a disgrace? |
13015 | Is such a scratch as this worth thinking about?" |
13015 | Isahaya Buzen reflected for a while, and said--"Well, then, how shall we kill the foul thing?" |
13015 | It certainly is of great importance that we should forward our complaint to our lord''s palace at Yedo; but what are your plans? |
13015 | It has often been asked, Are the Japanese polygamists? |
13015 | Master Tarubei is a guest, but so am I: what does the fellow mean by helping me so meanly? |
13015 | Master Tokutarô, what means this brutal violence? |
13015 | May I make so bold as to go in?" |
13015 | Now, was not that delightful? |
13015 | O Kuma, however, who was not quite so particular, cried out--"Why, what is the meaning of this? |
13015 | Of course she knows how to rub the shoulders and loins, and has learnt the art of shampooing?" |
13015 | Perhaps, however, you do not like it?" |
13015 | Please, may I ask for the ball?" |
13015 | Pray what is your name?" |
13015 | Pray where are you from?" |
13015 | Pray, have you any friends in that city?" |
13015 | Pray, what may be the matter?" |
13015 | Seeing how obstinately he held to his opinion, the old folks were sorely perplexed, and said--"What do you think of doing?" |
13015 | Shall the lord, who is the heart, be ailing and his sickness be neglected, while his servants, who are the members only, are cared for? |
13015 | Shall you be at home the day after to- morrow?" |
13015 | Since you''ve been there all the time, why did you not roar?" |
13015 | So the girl cried and screamed; but Tokutarô only laughed, and said--"So you thought to bewitch me, did you? |
13015 | The Government is now sorely straitened: are you willing to carry your loyalty so far as to lay down your life on its behalf?" |
13015 | The fairy bewails her lot; without her wings how can she return to heaven? |
13015 | The fairy reproaches him for his want of faith: how should a heavenly being be capable of falsehood? |
13015 | The sunlight came forth, and what became of all the clouds of self- will and selfishness? |
13015 | Then Jiuyémon, who had come up, said to one of the officers on the shore--"Have you caught him yet?" |
13015 | Then the lady went up to the sleeping prince and said,"How fares it with my lord to- night?" |
13015 | Then the priest looked on one side, and saw Tokutarô bound, and exclaimed,"Is not that Tokutarô that I see there?" |
13015 | This is my opinion: what think you of it, my masters?" |
13015 | This put Sazen rather in a dilemma; however, he made up his mind not to show any hesitation, and said,"What are you talking about? |
13015 | Unless we listen to the teachings of Buddha, how shall we be washed and purified?" |
13015 | Well, how about the foxes?" |
13015 | What can I do to requite them? |
13015 | What can be the matter with the girl''s face? |
13015 | What does it signify how I spelt the word cholera, so long as the efficacy of the medicine is unimpaired?" |
13015 | What fair wind has wafted him back to her? |
13015 | What is his answer? |
13015 | What may you please to want?" |
13015 | What on earth are you going to keep the fox for?" |
13015 | What pleasure can there be away from her? |
13015 | What say you, my masters?" |
13015 | What says the Chin- Yo? |
13015 | What says the old song? |
13015 | What says the proverb? |
13015 | What says the verse of the reverend priest Eni? |
13015 | What signifies it if the hand or the foot be deformed? |
13015 | What sort of creature is this? |
13015 | What strange chance brings your lordship hither thus late at night, on horseback and alone, without a single follower?" |
13015 | What think you of it?" |
13015 | What think you, gentlemen?" |
13015 | What though we are punished for the many? |
13015 | What''s this? |
13015 | When Genzaburô saw how modest she was, he reassured her, saying--"Come, what is there to be so shy about? |
13015 | When a man is appointed to act as second to another, what shall be said of him if he accepts the office with a smiling face? |
13015 | When a man sleeps under his roof at night, how can he say that it is thanks to himself that he stretches his limbs in slumber? |
13015 | When he saw Kôtsuké no Suké, he caused the gates to be opened, and, thinking it more than strange, said--"Is this indeed you, my lord? |
13015 | When she saw him arrive, she said--"What message have you brought me from my lord?" |
13015 | When the old man got home, the dame grew very angry, and began to scold him, saying,"Well, and pray where have you been this many a day? |
13015 | Whence can you have fallen into such a mistake? |
13015 | Where are you living now?" |
13015 | Where on earth shall I hide myself?" |
13015 | Who are you?" |
13015 | Who could think of falling in love with such a wretch as I am? |
13015 | Why go to look at the flowers, and take delight in their beauty? |
13015 | Why have you been so long without coming here? |
13015 | Why is not the indulgence of passions guarded against?" |
13015 | Why purchase fleeting joys of loose women? |
13015 | Why should he come now? |
13015 | Why should you not get this from Genzaburô, who is very anxious to keep his intrigue with O Koyo secret?" |
13015 | Why, then, did he not send his servant to explain? |
13015 | With what f ace can we return to our villages after such a disgrace? |
13015 | Would you like something to eat?" |
13015 | Would you not like to bathe and make yourself comfortable?" |
13015 | You have done a hateful deed; but am I not a priest, and have I not forsaken the things of this world? |
13015 | [ 24] Is there anything which your lordship would specially fancy?" |
13015 | [ 54] where are you off to, Master Peachling?" |
13015 | and if we think to escape from this fire, how shall we succeed save only by the teaching of the divine Buddha?" |
13015 | and would it not ill become me to bear malice? |
13015 | cried Sanza, seeing that Banzayémon was trying to fool him,"have I not had enough of your vile tricks? |
13015 | did not every man of you swear to lay down his life in avenging his lord, and now are you driven back by three men? |
13015 | have you been unhappy?" |
13015 | how dare you kill another man''s daughter without provocation? |
13015 | my young lord, what wicked deed is this that you''ve done? |
13015 | said Jiuyémon, laughing at him,"surely you are not such a coward as to be afraid because the sliding- doors are opened? |
13015 | said the man to the deer,"what''s this? |
13015 | was that indeed your thought? |
13015 | were you in league with Banzayémon to vent your spite upon me? |
13015 | what are you doing with that fox?" |
13015 | what can it be?" |
13015 | what can this noise be?" |
13015 | what crime has this poor child committed that he is treated thus? |
13015 | what have you done? |
13015 | what is that noise?" |
13015 | what shall we do?" |
13015 | where are you living?" |
13015 | where are you off to, Little Peachling?" |
13015 | where can it be?" |
13015 | where can my bird be gone? |
13015 | where is your home now?" |
13015 | whereabouts is it?" |
13015 | whither away, Master Peachling?" |
13015 | who is the man?" |
13015 | wo n''t you stay a little while? |
16910 | If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen? |
16910 | If it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France? |
16910 | No government without the consent of the governed?--When has our consent been asked, the consent of twenty- five million people? 16910 An art which England had been centuries in learning, how could France be expected to master in a decade? 16910 And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was he doing to save her? 16910 And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate-- while the_ Faubourg St. Germain_ stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his brand- new aristocracy? 16910 And theGentle King,"where was he while this was happening? |
16910 | And was not Austria the leader of the coalition against France? |
16910 | And was this not a triumph for the revolutionary principle which offset the existence of an empire, as its final result? |
16910 | And where was"his Majesty"while this work was being done? |
16910 | Are we sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years, without our consent?" |
16910 | As one after another of the cities helplessly fell, someone asked why Louis came himself-- why he did not send his valet? |
16910 | But how could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread? |
16910 | But what could he do? |
16910 | But what if he ceased to be ornamental? |
16910 | But what if they should refuse? |
16910 | But where was his knighthood, where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest against her fate? |
16910 | Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly? |
16910 | Could any scales weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been endured? |
16910 | Could the upper ranks fall lower than this? |
16910 | Could they ever wipe out the stain which had made them odious in the sight of Christendom? |
16910 | Did Madame du Barry think of it? |
16910 | Did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged shrieking and struggling to the guillotine? |
16910 | Did she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his heads? |
16910 | Did they recall this time? |
16910 | Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it? |
16910 | Had not the kingdom reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour? |
16910 | Had she been, not set free, but simply annexed to the realm of the barbarian across the Rhine? |
16910 | Had she exchanged one servitude for another? |
16910 | How could sensuality and vice at Rome be reconciled with a divine infallibility? |
16910 | How was it in Germany? |
16910 | How was it with Catharine? |
16910 | If the ballad- poetry of Provence satirized the lives and manners of the priests, was it not dealing with what was true? |
16910 | Is it strange that, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled, Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages? |
16910 | Napoleon had captured not alone Italy, but France herself? |
16910 | Of all miracles, is not this the greatest? |
16910 | Private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life, treasure, all eagerly given, for what? |
16910 | That thrones, empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before His name? |
16910 | Then why was there no mention of him as one of that martyred group? |
16910 | They had rescued them from one terrible fate, might they not deliver them from another? |
16910 | This hero of Marengo, and Austerlitz, and Jena, and Wagram, the man before whom Europe trembled, was he not, after all, only a crowned citizen? |
16910 | Was any human event ever fraught with such consequences to the human race as the conquest of Gaul by Julius Caesar? |
16910 | Was there not, after all, a certain irritating reserve in the homage paid him? |
16910 | Was this not an embodiment of their dreams? |
16910 | Was this the equality they expected when they cried,"Down with the Aristocrats"? |
16910 | Was this wasting away the result of a drug? |
16910 | What could be expected of a woman with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with Catharine de''Medici as her model and teacher? |
16910 | What might she not accomplish with such a leader? |
16910 | What should they do with this strange being, claiming supernatural powers? |
16910 | What would they build upon the ruins of their ancient despotism? |
16910 | What would they do with it? |
16910 | Where were the pale- faced, determined patriots who sat in the National Assembly? |
16910 | Where would he find chains more galling, more unnatural, than in Italy, held by the iron hand of Austria? |
16910 | Whether Fredegunde or Brunhilde was the more terrible who can say? |
16910 | Whether the conversion of the Bourbon prince was of that nature or not, who can say? |
16910 | Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the most regenerative force the world had ever known? |
16910 | Why had Henry of Navarre been spared? |
16910 | Why should the simple- hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see: that victory or failure was alike full of peril for France? |
16910 | Would they ever be forgiven for disgracing the name of Liberty? |
16910 | the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what miracle could he produce the other? |
16910 | was there not a touch of condescension in the friendship of his royal neighbors? |
15794 | Charlie, my dear,said Mrs. Marlow,"Do n''t you think we could finish the story after dinner? |
15794 | How do you know Mr. McFee wants to see you? |
15794 | How''s the game this morning? |
15794 | Is it? |
15794 | Is n''t the house very cold? |
15794 | Is that the_ Leviathan_ up there? |
15794 | Is this one of them? |
15794 | Now, why did you get on a train without making sure where it stopped? 15794 Pigs in clover,"they sometimes call it, but who knows why? |
15794 | Single, or return? |
15794 | Want to see a freak? |
15794 | Well,he said, without a trace of nervousness;"what''ll you have?" |
15794 | What is he doing now? |
15794 | What was it you ordered? |
15794 | What''s the matter with this car? |
15794 | Which of the vice- presidents are you going to vote for? |
15794 | You see? |
15794 | ( Heavens, were they some minor offshoot of the Hohenzollern tribe?) |
15794 | ( Speaking of that, a very jolly article in this month''s_ Bookman_, called"How Old Is Sherlock Holmes?" |
15794 | ( What, the club wondered inwardly, does Mr. La Follette know of seafaring?) |
15794 | ( Who sees so little as he who looks through a microscope?) |
15794 | ( Who was Cobb, we wonder?) |
15794 | AJAX: How would you work out the plan? |
15794 | AJAX: I wonder if your experience is the same as mine was? |
15794 | AJAX: What do you mean by that? |
15794 | Against that stump-- is it a real stump, or only a painted canvas affair from the property man''s warehouse?--surely that is a demijohn of cider? |
15794 | And at the top, what do you find, just before going out upon that gallery to spread your eye upon man''s reticulated concerns? |
15794 | And did he therefore look down upon, or otherwise feel inclined to belittle our tie? |
15794 | And then, when all the children were bedded for the night, how would the domestic atmosphere be simulated? |
15794 | At the corner of Grand Street is the Sapphire Café, and what could be a more appealing name than that? |
15794 | But where is the beautiful girl with slick dark hair who used to be at the Reading terminal news- stand? |
15794 | But who is this gallant little figure darting up the rope ladder with fluttering skirts? |
15794 | But, is there not just a faint suggestion of smugness in her mien? |
15794 | Can he jump so far? |
15794 | Can the spiders have learned their technology by watching those cheerful scientists on the golf greens?] |
15794 | Can you guess the writer of it? |
15794 | Can you look on them without marvelling at their gallant mien? |
15794 | Can you see that caravan of life without a pang? |
15794 | Did J---- keep his copy of the book, I wonder, and did he annotate it with lively commentary of his own? |
15794 | Did he_ infer_ the existence of that spot, even though he did not see it? |
15794 | Do we expect great things to come to pass without corresponding suffering? |
15794 | Do you find a little temple or cloister for meditation, or any way of marking in your mind the beauty and significance of the place? |
15794 | Do you remember how Burke''s speech on Conciliation was parsed and sub- headed in the preface to the school- texts? |
15794 | Does he not belong to the conquering class that has us all under its thumb? |
15794 | Does our intrepid weaver hurl himself madly six feet into the dark, trusting to catch the leaf at the other end? |
15794 | Excuse me, but have you seen me jump up and pull the baby''s clothes from the line? |
15794 | For two thousand years poets have mocked and taunted the cruelties and follies of men, but to what purpose? |
15794 | GISSING: Do you believe in Right and Wrong? |
15794 | GISSING: Then instinct is not to be obeyed? |
15794 | Hardy writes"The Dynasts,"Joseph Conrad writes his great preface to"The Nigger of the_ Narcissus_,"but do the destroyers hear them? |
15794 | Have you read again, since the War, Gulliver''s"Voyage to the Houyhnhnms,"or Herman Melville''s"Moby Dick"? |
15794 | How is it done? |
15794 | How is it, he wondered, that ladies know instinctively, even when vested in several layers of blankets, if anything is wrong with the furnace? |
15794 | How many million such he has devoured, and must he take these, too? |
15794 | I mean, are they absolute, or only relative? |
15794 | I wonder if the critics have not too insistently persuaded us to read our poet in a black- edged mood? |
15794 | Is Time never sated with loveliness? |
15794 | Is it possible that tadpoles weep? |
15794 | Is there no one who wonders about these merry little hostages? |
15794 | It being now 5:10 by our time, what are we to do? |
15794 | No? |
15794 | Now can Pete Corcoran wonder why we are fond of it, and why, ever and anon, we get it out and wear it in remembrance? |
15794 | O where hae ye been, my handsome young man? |
15794 | On such an occasion, the chat went like this: GISSING: Do you believe in God? |
15794 | Or a pigskin tobacco pouch while it is still rather new? |
15794 | Or the colour of the_ Atlantic Monthly_ in the old days, when it lay longer on the stands than it does now, and got faintly bleached? |
15794 | Poor Mrs. Marlow( have I mentioned her before?) |
15794 | SOCRATES: And when Cassandra went away you found yourself desolate? |
15794 | Shall we dash up to the waiting room and have another look? |
15794 | Shall we say, the colour of a corncob pipe, singed and tawnied by much smoking? |
15794 | So when Pete Corcoran spoke about our tie, was that what was in his mind, we wondered? |
15794 | Surely it would be more seemly to be at home? |
15794 | The last I knew-- six years ago-- he was a contractor in an Ohio city; and( is this not significant?) |
15794 | There was a wayside chapel with painted frescoes and Latin inscriptions( why did n''t we make a note of them, we wonder?) |
15794 | This moves us to ask, how can you tell? |
15794 | Very well, very well indeed, we said to ourselves; let the world revolve; in the meantime, what is that printed in blackface type upon the menu? |
15794 | Was it a yell against the railroad for not adding an extra brace of cars? |
15794 | Was it written that sticks should be pursued in this strange and alien element? |
15794 | Was n''t there such a ditty? |
15794 | Was that the Mohawk Valley that glittered in the morning? |
15794 | Was this Gorgeous Georges, this blood- smeared, wilting, hunted figure, flitting desperately from the grim, dark- jowled avenger? |
15794 | We think seriously of writing a note,"_ What are you reading?_"and weighting it with an inkwell and hurling it down to him. |
15794 | We wonder if any Albany booksellers chance to recall a sudden flash of colour that came, moved along the shelves, and was gone? |
15794 | We wonder whether he has gone back yet? |
15794 | We wonder who bought her, and how much he paid; and why she carries the odd name of that Long Island village? |
15794 | We wonder, is it out of order? |
15794 | Well, should she arrive here at two o''clock or at four? |
15794 | Were Mr. Green such a man as the captain, would he be lowering himself to have any truck with journalists and such petty folk? |
15794 | Were we really blowzy, we said to ourself? |
15794 | What are you making such a racket about? |
15794 | What do we care for what( most of) the critics say? |
15794 | What do you say, shall we have recourse to a beaker of ginger ale and discuss this matter? |
15794 | What does it matter that he( probably) knows less about cooking than you or I? |
15794 | What happens to the used ribbons of modern poets? |
15794 | What is there that so moves the heart? |
15794 | What should we do? |
15794 | What was this etiquette? |
15794 | When the barber says, genially,"Well, have you done your Christmas shopping yet?" |
15794 | Where, now, do we see any cohesive binding together of humanity? |
15794 | Who else, in modern times, came so close to holding unruffled in his hand the shy wild bird of Poetry? |
15794 | Why, one wonders, should we cry out at the pangs and scuffles of the subway? |
15794 | Why, we asked gently, in these peaceful times is it so difficult to visit a friend who happens to be in a ship? |
15794 | Why, we wonder, does n''t our friend fill the remaining blank panel on his side wall by painting there some stanzas from Calverley''s"Ode to Tobacco?" |
15794 | With what strange cruelties will he trouble them, their very gayety a temptation to his hand? |
15794 | Would he take gladly to the ocean? |
15794 | Yes, I know you were in a hurry, but that was n''t our fault, was it? |
15794 | You heard the brakeman say:''Newark and Philadelphia''? |
15794 | [ Illustration] BOOKS OF THE SEA The National Marine League asks, What are the ten best books of the sea? |
15794 | [ Illustration] THE CLUB OF ABANDONED HUSBANDS AJAX: Hullo, Socrates, what are you doing patrolling the streets at this late hour? |
15794 | [ Illustration] WEST BROADWAY Did you ever hear of Finn Square? |
15794 | had not the company manager himself condescended to share a two- room suite with us in the Kingsborough Hotel that night? |
15794 | we raise the book and point to this maxim:_ Taciturnity is natural to man._ When he says,"How about a nice little shampoo this morning?" |
18355 | ****** What is Truth? |
18355 | ****** Who are the"pure in heart?" |
18355 | And what, O what is his destiny, here or hereafter? |
18355 | And why not laurels? |
18355 | And why not? |
18355 | And why not? |
18355 | Do you call all this blasphemous? |
18355 | How is it now with the Christian religion in the so- called Christian nations? |
18355 | How shall we pray? |
18355 | How would it benefit the race to prove it to be wholly orphaned-- utterly left out of all consideration for its future care and happiness? |
18355 | If that is n''t serving the devil, what in the name of common sense is it? |
18355 | It is thought by many that the history of all God''s doings is writ in the Holy(?) |
18355 | Meeting him some time afterward he said to him:"How did you like Plato?" |
18355 | Shall these, then, be brought beneath the ban of limitless darkness, and exiled from the"many mansions"of our Heavenly Father''s and Mother''s house? |
18355 | Shall we pray at all? |
18355 | The nomadic tramp who yields no meed of use to his fellows? |
18355 | The spirit does not weary, and when the exhausted body is laid aside, why not enlist the services of all to whom any appeal can be made? |
18355 | The willfully sin- sodden who poisons all his surrounding atmosphere with the noxious exhalations from his decaying organism? |
18355 | There is but one will; so make it known to us that we may realize out[ Transcriber''s note: our?] |
18355 | To whom shall we pray? |
18355 | What are the results, the"fruits,"of the Jehovian dispensation? |
18355 | What bonds shall ever be forged between the nations of the earth that can supersede such ties of love and fealty to family and home? |
18355 | What is he here for? |
18355 | What is the everlasting purpose of him? |
18355 | What is the origin of man? |
18355 | What is virtue? |
18355 | What sort of a reckoning will such lawmakers have to meet, and what penalties undergo under the applied judgment of the Great Teacher and exemplars? |
18355 | Where are the good Samaritans among the pretended followers of the loving Christ? |
18355 | Where on the face of the earth is there a community or a people that is governed and controlled by the real teachings of the Christ? |
18355 | Who are the"fit"? |
18355 | Why reject the teachings of any one of this trinity of inspired and inspiring ones? |
18355 | Why this everlasting"harking back"to Moses, while posing as followers of teachings utterly at variance with his? |
18355 | Why, then, have a religion? |
18355 | vent could they have for their own natural, pure cussedness? |
18384 | Another cup? |
18384 | Some tea? |
18384 | And if there were a laureate in prose romance, whom should we choose? |
18384 | As the Gospel has it--"Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?" |
18384 | Can we imagine_ Sartor Resartus_ being published in the age of Johnson, or_ In Memoriam_ in that of Byron? |
18384 | Does the present generation know that frank and amusing book-- one of the most brisk and manly autobiographies in our language? |
18384 | Has it given him a foremost place in English literature? |
18384 | Have they any common standard of form, any type of metre? |
18384 | He never attempts grandiloquence; but then he never sinks into the fashionable bathos of--"Sugar in your tea, dear?" |
18384 | How many a"general reader"steadily reads through_ Sartor_ from cover to cover? |
18384 | In what things would Southey and John Morley agree, except about books and pure English? |
18384 | Nay, the question has begun to arise, If there is to be a laureate in poetry, why not a laureate also in prose romance? |
18384 | Now, what are the masterpieces of Thomas Carlyle? |
18384 | O, Thomas, Thomas, what Titania has bewitched thee with the head of Dryasdust on thy noble shoulders? |
18384 | Of the multitude that have read her books, who has not known and deplored the tragedy of her family, her own most sad and untimely fate? |
18384 | Of what other fiction can this be said? |
18384 | The only question is, if she be real? |
18384 | What can they mean? |
18384 | What is the cause? |
18384 | What would one say if even fine passages out of Wordsworth''s_ Excursion_ had been accidentally bound up between the pages of Shakespeare''s_ Hamlet_? |
18384 | Which of her readers has not become her friend? |
18384 | Who cares to know how big was the belly of some court chamberlain, or who were the lovers of some unendurable Frau? |
18384 | Who reads every word of these ten volumes? |
18384 | Who, nowadays, imagines Mahomet to have been an impostor, or Burns to have been a mere tipsy song- writer? |
18384 | Why is it, that, in an age pre- eminently historical, in an age so redundant of novels, the historical novel is out of fashion? |
18384 | on"Aristocracies,""Captains of Industry,""The Landed,""The Gifted"? |
18384 | why so glum?" |
17711 | Art thou serene and calm and unafraid When thou considerest thy tyranny? |
17711 | Before what mortal eyes Was manifested the Eternal Light? |
17711 | But yet, Beloved One, I ask in pain When is the hour when thou wilt come again? |
17711 | How can I to the fisher speak my thought? |
17711 | How can I traffic in Love''s busy mart? |
17711 | How can I win that Hidden One Who sits within the secret place? |
17711 | How can a bird escape, deprived of wings? |
17711 | How did he lose his life, unhappy one? |
17711 | How strange the turns in Love''s unending game, For neither Lover nor Beloved lit The ever- burning flame: Whence was the spirit that enkindled it? |
17711 | I ask that God in justice punish me With death, if my love waver or grow less; Faithful am I indeed-- How can you comprehend such faithfulness? |
17711 | I had a thousand desires, for each of them I would have died, And what did I gain? |
17711 | I said-- Never again Canst thou forget my faithfulness to thee; She answered in disdain--What mean thy love and faithfulness to me? |
17711 | I, Asif, am the chief of sinners held, This dark dishonour will I not deny, But glory in my shame; Where is another sinner such as I? |
17711 | In idol- worship at the Temple thou Hast spent thy days, and thus thy years have run: How canst thou call thyself a Muslim now? |
17711 | Long to myself I said-- It will be well, When I can see her, I will tell my pain: Now she is here, what is there left to tell? |
17711 | Mine eyes were shut And yet I saw the shining vision gleam; Now that mine eyes are opened, know I not Was it a thought that held me-- or a dream? |
17711 | My heart thy words have burnt with whips of fire, Do they not burn thy lips, O Heart''s Desire? |
17711 | My soul cries out to thee in bitter need--When wilt thou come-- or wilt thou come indeed? |
17711 | Naught my desire? |
17711 | No light demand I make, What answer will you grant that I may live? |
17711 | No love was there; O Gracious One, have you forgotten too? |
17711 | O Weaver of Excuses, what to thee Are all the promises that thou hast made, The truth derided, and the faith betrayed, And all thy perfidy? |
17711 | O cruel One, when once your glances smote me, Why turn your head? |
17711 | Of no use is my pain to her nor me: For what disease is love the remedy? |
17711 | Or shall I sit in solitude apart Nursing my grief? |
17711 | Repent not, for repentance is in vain, And what is done is done; What shouldst thou reck of me and all my pain? |
17711 | Shall I or shall I not console my heart And win relief? |
17711 | She lightly laughed-- And so is Mazhar dead? |
17711 | She need not have one anxious doubt of me, She need not fear my further wanderings-- How can I flee? |
17711 | They say when I complain of all I bore--It is thy kismet, what would''st thou have more? |
17711 | Thou turnest thy face, O Beloved, I can not tell why, Art thou shy of a mirror, Beloved? |
17711 | To whom shall I relate The weary story of my sorrowful love? |
17711 | To you alone I offer up my heart, To any other what have I to give? |
17711 | What are these bonds that try to shackle me? |
17711 | What happiness is to the lover left Of peace bereft, What freedom for his captive heart remains Held in her chains? |
17711 | What heart is there in all the world Can bear thy cruel tyranny? |
17711 | What help and solace in calamity? |
17711 | What kind of comforter art thou to me? |
17711 | What matter if he die? |
17711 | Whence did the yearning of the soul arise, The longing to attain the Heavenly Sight? |
17711 | Where are repose and patience gone? |
17711 | Where has my childhood gone, where are its placid years? |
17711 | Where is my honour, held so fair? |
17711 | Who can live long enough To win the beauty of thy curling tress? |
17711 | Who hath not lingering cast Long looks behind, and in his eager breast Held many a secret yearning unfulfilled? |
17711 | Who taught thee for a shrine To choose a heart so desolate as mine? |
17711 | Why did the fragrance of the flowers outflow If not to breathe with benediction sweet Across her path? |
17711 | Why did the soft wind blow If not to kiss the ground before her feet? |
17711 | Why should the Cosmos turn its wheel of worlds If not to search for thee eternally? |
17711 | Why should the tireless Sun arise each morn If not to look for thee? |
17711 | Why shouldst thou keep from tyranny anew? |
17711 | Why shouldst thou not betray another one? |
17711 | Will naught my love avail? |
17711 | Wilt thou, indeed, I wonder in despair, Bring me at last what I so long have sought? |
17711 | You took my heart, but left my life behind: O see you not What thing you have remembered, and what thing you have forgot? |
17711 | how can I think the rolling Wheel of Fate Should turn to favour one so long unfortunate? |
13931 | Ah,said Lady Lefevre,"you have noticed something, have you? |
13931 | And all is vanity, eh? |
13931 | And how much, Embro,laughed Julius, rising to leave the circle,"is the argument advanced by your ticketing the case with that long word?" |
13931 | And is that electricity too? |
13931 | And is that your secret? |
13931 | And where have you been all this while? |
13931 | And where is he gone? 13931 And why, may I ask?" |
13931 | And you are really Julius Courtney? |
13931 | And you did not get weary of it? |
13931 | And you thought--? |
13931 | Are you afraid of me? 13931 Are you warm enough?" |
13931 | Becomes solitary, does he? |
13931 | Been in the country? |
13931 | Been what? |
13931 | Brandy? 13931 But ca n''t I do something for you first? |
13931 | But come,said Embro, posing the question with his forefinger;"do you believe that story, Lefevre?" |
13931 | But if he is engaged, Jenkins--? |
13931 | But what did the stranger do to put him in that condition, which seems something more than hypnotism? |
13931 | But,asked Lefevre,"how did you get into such a low condition?" |
13931 | Can I conceive? |
13931 | Do n''t I remember well,said Lefevre,"what you were like when I first met you in Paris?" |
13931 | Do you feel ill? |
13931 | Do you know the beautiful creature? |
13931 | Do you mind saying what you have to say and letting me go? |
13931 | Do you perceive my purpose? |
13931 | Do you quite believe the story? |
13931 | Does the experience of another,demanded the doctor,"however untoward it may be, ever keep a man from making his own? |
13931 | Gone out,said Lefevre,"to the club or to dinner, I suppose?" |
13931 | Has it, indeed, got so far as that? |
13931 | Has nobody been to see him since he came in? |
13931 | Have you lost anything? |
13931 | Have you read it yourself, Julius? |
13931 | Have you seen any of the picture- shows, Julius? |
13931 | Having a debauch, you mean? 13931 He has no profession?" |
13931 | He is gone into the country, then? |
13931 | How are you? |
13931 | How? 13931 I am about to attempt,"said he,"an altogether new operation: the patient has remained just as I left her, I suppose?" |
13931 | I am right, I believe, Dr Lefevre, in setting this down to the author of that other case you had,--that from the Brighton train? |
13931 | I suppose his people are of the right sort? |
13931 | I wish to see Mr Courtney,said Lefevre, in the half hope that Jenkins would say,"Which Mr Courtney?" |
13931 | In the name of truth, Lefevre,answered Julius,"if my life is not my own, what is? |
13931 | Indeed, sir, when you put it so,said the house- physician, suddenly steeled and brightened into interest,"I should say,''why not?'' |
13931 | Is he alone, then? |
13931 | Is it fair,said Julius,"to ask you in what direction you are looking for an explanation or revelation?" |
13931 | Is it not horrible? 13931 Is there such a thing as an absolute impossibility?" |
13931 | Is your master at home, Jenkins? |
13931 | Julius,said he,"what does this mean?" |
13931 | Lazying in bed on such a day as this? 13931 May I,"he said,"open the window?" |
13931 | May not I come in? 13931 My dear fellow,"said Lefevre,"do you consider what you are so promptly offering? |
13931 | Nervous Force, whether it be Electricity or not, is manifestly a fluid of some sort: why should it not be transfused as the other vital fluid is? |
13931 | Not at home, Jenkins? 13931 Nothing to do, my dear fellow?" |
13931 | Now, you are a musician, are you not? |
13931 | Oh yes,said Julius, quietly,"I can pronounce an opinion; but what''s the use of that? |
13931 | Shall I get some brandy, sir? |
13931 | Still, had n''t you better try to find out what he may have in that line? |
13931 | Supposing,said Lefevre,"that this Julius were their son, do you know of any reason why he should be reserved about his parentage?" |
13931 | There is no remedy for me but death, which( who knows?) 13931 Weary of it? |
13931 | Well,said Lefevre at length, smiling in spite of a twinge of jealousy,"what do you think, now you have seen him, of the fascinating Julius?" |
13931 | Well? |
13931 | Well? |
13931 | What Paris case? |
13931 | What do you make of this queer case at the Hôtel- Dieu in Paris? 13931 What do you think of it?" |
13931 | What does a man want with a family and a name? 13931 What has come over Nora?" |
13931 | What is this? |
13931 | What then, sir? |
13931 | What-- what do you think of my daughter? 13931 What?" |
13931 | Where have you been this long, long while, Julius? |
13931 | Where is the man? |
13931 | Where was this lady found? |
13931 | Who is the gentleman? |
13931 | Who is there? |
13931 | Who? 13931 Why, Julius,"said Lefevre,"that''s a new experience you are trying,--is it not?" |
13931 | Wo n''t you let me in, Lefevre? |
13931 | Worse? |
13931 | Would n''t a hansom be quicker? |
13931 | Would not my example keep you from using it selfishly? |
13931 | You are alone,said Lefevre,"are you not?" |
13931 | You do n''t understand? |
13931 | You have been in the country,--have you not? |
13931 | You play the violin? |
13931 | You really think so? |
13931 | You say that? 13931 You wanted,"said he,"some serious talk with me, mother?" |
13931 | You-- you saw that? |
13931 | ''What is the matter with you all?'' |
13931 | A secret that would enable you--_you_--to work cures more wonderful than any that are told of the greatest Eastern Thaumaturge?" |
13931 | And what-- what if Julius knew all that, and therefore sought to keep his parentage hidden? |
13931 | And why could they not have had their talk there as well as in Savile Row? |
13931 | And why was he nightly haunting the busiest pavements of London, in the crowd, but not of it, urged on as by some desire or agony? |
13931 | And yet, who knows what worlds he may not have drawn into his flaming self, and consumed during the æons of his existence? |
13931 | Are you ill?" |
13931 | But can there be any question of vanity or vexation in this sweet, glorious sunshine?" |
13931 | But do you see how Nora and Julius are taken up with each other? |
13931 | But how can we stay babbling and quibbling here all this delicious afternoon? |
13931 | But how was success to be compelled? |
13931 | But you were going to say--?" |
13931 | But-- and you see I frankly expose my whole position to you-- what would you think of her for a wife?" |
13931 | But--_que diable vas- tu faire dans cette galère?_ You are the best friend in the world, and whenever I am in trouble-- and who knows? |
13931 | But--_que diable vas- tu faire dans cette galère?_ You are the best friend in the world, and whenever I am in trouble-- and who knows? |
13931 | Can you conceive, Julius, of a universal principle in Nature being got so under control as to form a universal basis of cure?" |
13931 | Could I not have gone elsewhere-- anywhere, the wide world over-- and lived my life? |
13931 | Crime? |
13931 | Do n''t you see how foolish that is?" |
13931 | Do n''t you think a talk with me might help you?" |
13931 | Do you find her very changed, then?" |
13931 | Do you know that my experiment, if successful, might leave you a paralytic, or an imbecile, or even-- a corpse?" |
13931 | Had he been very ill? |
13931 | Has the lady given an account of it? |
13931 | Have you read it, Julius?" |
13931 | He had a flying thought--"Can it be a woman, after all, in this strange shape?" |
13931 | He told you, I suppose?" |
13931 | How came the idea? |
13931 | How can I harm you?" |
13931 | How do ideas ever come? |
13931 | I believe I have heard of the moon having a magnetic influence on people: do you think it has? |
13931 | I can see you look anxious: is Mary''s condition very serious?--most serious? |
13931 | I demanded; when they instantly cried,''What is the matter with_ you?_ Have you been poisoned?'' |
13931 | I demanded; when they instantly cried,''What is the matter with_ you?_ Have you been poisoned?'' |
13931 | I knew him years ago: was he a relation of yours, I wonder?" |
13931 | I knew no more of duty than Crusoe on his island; and as for work, I had no ambition,--why, then, should I work? |
13931 | I mean, not as a doctor, but as a man?" |
13931 | In flashes of reflection these questions arose: Who could he be but Hernando Courtney?--and where could he be going but to Julius''s chambers? |
13931 | Is it inevitable? |
13931 | Is it necessary? |
13931 | Is it not forced?" |
13931 | Is not my wretched secret written in my face?" |
13931 | Is your conclusion clear upon the evidence? |
13931 | It was clear that in both cases the nerves had been seriously played upon; but for what purpose? |
13931 | Julius astonished him by demanding,"What is the outrage? |
13931 | Lady Lefevre expressed that in her question--"Why, Julius, have you taken to hard work? |
13931 | Life without health can be nothing but a weariness: why should it be reckoned a praiseworthy thing to keep it going at any price? |
13931 | May we go now, Lady Lefevre?" |
13931 | Now, will you go and speak to her at once, or will you wait till another day? |
13931 | Ought he not to have insisted on seeing whether Julius was in truth alone in the study? |
13931 | Ought he not to leave some hint behind him of the strange adventure upon which he was about to embark, and which might end he knew not how or where? |
13931 | Over dinner, Lefevre was beset with inquiries about his mysterious case:--Was the young man better? |
13931 | Science is the examination of facts, and what has imagination to do with that? |
13931 | Shall I tell them anything of this?" |
13931 | Should he tell the inspector all that he had seen the night before, and all that he suspected now, or should he hold his peace? |
13931 | Something magneto- electric-- eh? |
13931 | Then turning to the waiting policeman, he said,"Of course, you must report this to your inspector?" |
13931 | They were retiring from the window when Embro''s voice again sounded at Lefevre''s elbow--"Come now, Lefevre; what''s the meaning of that Paris case?" |
13931 | Was he handsome? |
13931 | What did he seek?--and what find? |
13931 | What did you desire?--what did you hope for?" |
13931 | What did you say his name is, John?" |
13931 | What do you say, John?" |
13931 | What does she accuse the man of?" |
13931 | What does this mean?" |
13931 | What good would it do me if I had it?" |
13931 | What had the foreign- looking stranger done to him? |
13931 | What if the mysterious person were really proved to be Julius''s father? |
13931 | What more could be said or done? |
13931 | What then? |
13931 | What was the meaning of so much mystery? |
13931 | What was the secret of the old man''s life which had left such an awful impress on his face? |
13931 | What was the secret of the stranger''s endeavour? |
13931 | What, then, did it mean? |
13931 | Where am I?" |
13931 | Where did you say she was found?" |
13931 | Who journeyed with you?" |
13931 | Who was the man, may I ask, that you knew?" |
13931 | Why fix yourself to call this principle you''re seeking for''electricity''? |
13931 | Why should I seek fame? |
13931 | Why, Lefevre, do you look so amazed and overcome? |
13931 | Will you come?" |
13931 | Will you do me that service?" |
13931 | Will you have something to eat and drink? |
13931 | Will you step into the drawing- room, sir, while I inquire? |
13931 | Would you be so good as to bring me the bow of your violin, and borrow for me anywhere a tuning- fork of as high a note as possible?" |
13931 | Would you have me, then, live on,--passing to and fro among mankind merely as a blight, taking the energy of life, even from whomsoever I would not? |
13931 | Yet, he thought, how could he speak to the official, with all that he suspected, all that he feared, in his heart? |
13931 | You remember Nora, Julius, when she was a little girl in frocks?" |
13931 | You think me prejudiced in favour of anything of the kind; perhaps I think you prejudiced against it: where, then, is the good of discussion?" |
13931 | and for what purpose had he done it? |
13931 | debt? |
13931 | he panted in amazement,"do you know that you are refusing such a medical and spiritual secret as the world has not known for thousands of years? |
13931 | or were father and son somehow aware of each other? |
13931 | or, what? |
13931 | political intrigue? |
13931 | said he;"what are you talking about? |
13931 | what have you done?" |
13931 | who knows? |
13931 | why did you not tell me this long ago? |
11654 | Am I going to fail again as I have failed before? |
11654 | And he took you out? |
11654 | And the son,the girl asks,"what became of him?" |
11654 | And thy Venetian mirror, deep as a cold fountain in its banks of gilt work; what is reflected there? 11654 And what did he say?" |
11654 | And when is he coming for you again? |
11654 | And where did you go? |
11654 | And whom did he marry? |
11654 | Anything else? |
11654 | Are you going to dine at home to- day, sir? |
11654 | But you are not going to stay there? |
11654 | Do you know his address? |
11654 | He left no money? |
11654 | Holloa, Marshall, how are you? 11654 I suppose,"he said,"it was about one or two in the morning?" |
11654 | I think it beautiful; did you really compose that the other evening? |
11654 | Insult? |
11654 | M. Marshall, is he at home? |
11654 | Then how do you explain,cries the angry reader,"that you have never had a friend whom you did not make a profit out of? |
11654 | This; what do you think of it? |
11654 | Thou art abstracted? 11654 Well, tell me, how did you meet him, who introduced him?" |
11654 | What an admirable book she would make, but what will the end be? 11654 What can I have?" |
11654 | What can I have? |
11654 | What number? |
11654 | What shall I do? |
11654 | What waltz is that? |
11654 | Who is that little blonde woman over there, the right hand corner? |
11654 | Who told yer that? |
11654 | Who''s there? |
11654 | Why did n''t he? |
11654 | Why, would you like to be a painter? |
11654 | Will my novel prove as abortive as my paintings, my poetry, my journalism? |
11654 | Will you introduce me? |
11654 | Would it be the same to the end? |
11654 | _ Elle mit son plus beau chapeau, son chapeau bleu_... and then? |
11654 | ***** But if you do n''t know the original? |
11654 | ***** But in English blank verse you can translate quite as literally as you could into prose? |
11654 | ***** I wonder why murder is considered less immoral than fornication in literature? |
11654 | ***** What does that matter; what is more stereotyped than Japanese art? |
11654 | ***** What, do n''t you know the story about Mendés?--when_ Chose_ wanted to marry his sister? |
11654 | A knocking at the door,"Nine o''clock, sir;''ot water sir; what will you have for breakfast?" |
11654 | Among my old friends I could think of some half- dozen that would suit me perfectly, but where were they? |
11654 | And Daudet? |
11654 | And now tell me, Emma, how is your young man? |
11654 | And should she_ not_ visit his rooms? |
11654 | And what led me to that house? |
11654 | And why didst thou remain ever poor and unknown? |
11654 | Because of something too much, or something too little? |
11654 | But the danger? |
11654 | But what is symbolism? |
11654 | But what truisms are these; who believes in philanthropy nowadays? |
11654 | But who is that man? |
11654 | CHAPTER III Is it necessary to say that I did not find a manager to produce my play? |
11654 | CHAPTER VIII EXTRACT FROM A LETTER Why did you not send a letter? |
11654 | Can any one imagine such a thing? |
11654 | Certain_ nuances_ of soul are characteristic of certain latitudes, and what subtle instinct led him to Norway in quest of this fervent soul? |
11654 | Chance, or a friend''s recommendation? |
11654 | Could a man be so wicked as to attempt to force on a duel, so that he might make himself known through the medium of a legal murder?" |
11654 | Despondent days and nights when I cried, Shall I never pass from this lodging? |
11654 | Did Lady Audley murder her husband? |
11654 | Did he ever see Duret in dress clothes? |
11654 | Do I regret? |
11654 | Do you attach any precise meaning to the word? |
11654 | Do you believe in chance? |
11654 | Do you employ it at haphazard, allowing it to mean what it may? |
11654 | Does it give as good an idea of the original as our prose translation? |
11654 | Does it not seem to thee that even these blue birds are discoloured by time? |
11654 | For if long locks and general dissoluteness were not an aid and a way to pure thought, why have they been so long his characteristics? |
11654 | For the last hundred years we have been going rapidly towards democracy, and what is the result? |
11654 | Had Marshall suspected the truth he would have said pityingly,"My dear Dayne, how can you be so foolish? |
11654 | Had a good crossing? |
11654 | Has she returned to her native northern solitudes, great gulfs of sea water, mountain rock, and pine? |
11654 | Have you not seen a horse suddenly leave a corner of a field to seek pasturage further away? |
11654 | How are you? |
11654 | How many may love him? |
11654 | How, I asked myself, could the man who wrote the"Nuptials of Attila"write this? |
11654 | Hypocritical reader, think, had you had courage, health, and money to lead a fast life, would you not have done so? |
11654 | I ask, Did any one ever see a gay club room? |
11654 | I ground my teeth; what was to be done? |
11654 | I read the pages again... did I understand? |
11654 | I remember when you heard that Miss L---- was going to America, you asked me, and the question was sublime:"Is she going to travel all night?" |
11654 | I suppose you can let me have it back finished by to- morrow afternoon?" |
11654 | I telegraphed to Warwickshire to an old friend:--"Can I count on you to act for me in an affair of honour?" |
11654 | I was eleven years old when I first heard and obeyed this cry, or, shall I say, echo- augury? |
11654 | I will ask him only why he always avoids decisive action? |
11654 | I will not taunt him with any of the old taunts-- why does he not write complicated stories? |
11654 | II"The old Saxony clock, which is slow, and which strikes thirteen amid its flowers and gods, to whom did it belong? |
11654 | If it were not, what would have happened? |
11654 | Into what shadow has not Diana floated? |
11654 | Is Duret in the habit of going to the theatre with ladies? |
11654 | Is Eugénie Grandet inferior to Desdemona? |
11654 | Is Lucien inferior to Hamlet? |
11654 | Is Macbeth inferior to Vautrin? |
11654 | Is her father inferior to Shylock? |
11654 | Is it Degas or Manet they admire? |
11654 | Is it as interesting reading? |
11654 | Is it not monstrous? |
11654 | Is it possible to imagine anything more absurdly arid? |
11654 | Is it readable? |
11654 | Is love, then, a magnetism which we sometimes possess and exercise unconsciously, and sometimes do not possess? |
11654 | Is not such music as this enough? |
11654 | Is there one amongst us who would exchange them for the lives of the ignominious slaves that died? |
11654 | It has no boys to put to school, no neighbours to study, and is therefore a little more refined, or, should I say? |
11654 | It was the proper pagan thing to say, as he does here--"What care I that some millions of wretched Israelites died under Pharaoh''s lash? |
11654 | Julien?" |
11654 | Literature? |
11654 | Mr. Stevenson is the author of shall I say,"Treasure Island,"or what? |
11654 | Mr. Stevenson''s style is over smart, well- dressed, shall I say, like a young man walking in the Burlington Arcade? |
11654 | O''Flanagan, do you mind if I send you in a couple of poems as well as my regular stuff, that will make it all square?" |
11654 | One thing, and only one thing puzzled me, who was I to ask to be my second? |
11654 | Orion, Altair, or thou, green Venus? |
11654 | Reader, do you know of anything more angelic? |
11654 | See the Americans that come over here; what do they admire? |
11654 | Shakespeare was really great when he wrote"Music to hear, why hearest thou music sadly?" |
11654 | Shall I explain this by atavism? |
11654 | Should I buy a copy? |
11654 | Should Wilfred or Mona be the possessor? |
11654 | The only question was, under what influences would the revolt occur? |
11654 | The poor old gentleman went off quite suddenly, I suppose?" |
11654 | The shoes went with a lot of other things-- and oh, to whom? |
11654 | The usual reflections on the chances of life were of course made, and then followed the inevitable"Will you dine with me to- night?" |
11654 | Then after a long silence some one said,--"Whose story is that?" |
11654 | Then do you not remember how we danced in one room, while the servants set the other out with little tables? |
11654 | Thinkest that it came from Saxony by the mail coaches of old time? |
11654 | True it is that I longed for art, but I longed also for fame, or was it notoriety? |
11654 | Two old ladies discussing the peerage? |
11654 | Vanity? |
11654 | Was England an island or a mountain? |
11654 | Was I disappointed? |
11654 | Was there a French man or woman in my family some half dozen generations ago? |
11654 | Was there ever such luck?... |
11654 | We could but utter coarse gibes and exclaim,"What could have induced him to paint such things? |
11654 | We could no longer even talk of the same people; when I spoke of a certain_ marquise_, he answered with an indifferent"Do you really think so?" |
11654 | Well, would that preclude sincerity? |
11654 | Were I to win her could I be dutiful, true?... |
11654 | Were other ages as coarse and as common as ours? |
11654 | What a field for psychical investigation is at once opened up; how we may tear to shreds our past lives in search of-- what? |
11654 | What care I that some millions of wretched Israelites died under Pharaoh''s lash or Egypt''s sun? |
11654 | What care I that the virtue of some sixteen- year- old maiden was the price paid for Ingres''_ La Source_? |
11654 | What do you think of it?" |
11654 | What does it mean? |
11654 | What fate has been like Thine? |
11654 | What is Byron the author of? |
11654 | What is Carlyle the author of? |
11654 | What is Fielding the author of? |
11654 | What is Milton the author of? |
11654 | What is Mr. Swinburne the author of? |
11654 | What is Shakespeare the author of? |
11654 | What is Thackeray the author of? |
11654 | What is Zola the author of? |
11654 | What is the literature of the people? |
11654 | What is the"Nouvelle Athènes"? |
11654 | What is there? |
11654 | What will you do in England?" |
11654 | What''s the news?" |
11654 | When I told Fay she said,''What can you expect? |
11654 | When one of my poems appeared, didst thou not desire, my sister, whose looks are full of yesterdays, the words, the grace of faded things? |
11654 | Where are the Boulevards? |
11654 | Where are the magical glimpses of the soul? |
11654 | Where in"Diana of the Crossways"do we find soul- evoking words like these? |
11654 | Where is she now, that flower of northern snow, once seen for a season in Paris? |
11654 | Where is she? |
11654 | Where, then, is the dream, the_ au delà_? |
11654 | Where, then, is the struggle? |
11654 | Who has not felt a sickening feeling come over him when he hears such phrases as"To be or not to be, that is the question"? |
11654 | Who shall forget those terrible words of the poor life- weary orphan in the boarding- house? |
11654 | Why could I not live without an ever- present and acute consciousness of life? |
11654 | Why could I not love, forgetful of the harsh ticking of the clock in the perfumed silence of the chamber? |
11654 | Why did I love Shelley? |
11654 | Why did she marry him? |
11654 | Why do its flourishes go to my soul, and make me weep like a romantic ballad? |
11654 | Why does a man never kill a man? |
11654 | Why does a man never kill himself? |
11654 | Why does a woman never leave the house with her lover? |
11654 | Why does a woman never say"I will"? |
11654 | Why does he not complete his stories? |
11654 | Why is nothing ever accomplished? |
11654 | Why not write a comedy? |
11654 | Why should Marlowe enchant me? |
11654 | Why was I not attracted to Byron? |
11654 | Will he induce her to visit his rooms? |
11654 | Will the world learn that we never learn anything that we did not know before? |
11654 | Would she whom I saw to- night marry me? |
11654 | Yes, she is a woman who can feel, and she has lived her life and felt it very acutely, very sincerely-- sincerely?... |
11654 | You arrive at a strangely just estimate of a writer''s worth by the mere question:"What is he the author of?" |
11654 | You can have bacon and eggs, or--""Anything else?" |
11654 | You see colour and light in his pictures as you do in nature, and the child''s criticism of a portrait--"Why is one side of the face black?" |
11654 | and shall he renounce all for that little creature who has just finished singing, and is handing round cups of tea? |
11654 | as I might to a man who says"I like sherry,"and no doubt when I say I like character- drawing, Mr. Lang says,"Oh, do you?" |
11654 | c''est vous; une deme tasse? |
11654 | de Maupin refrained, knowing well that the face of love may not be twice seen? |
11654 | dear reader, is there such a thing as chance? |
11654 | strange contraltos; the forms? |
11654 | those square shoulders that swaggered as he went across a room and the thin waist; and that face, the beard and nose, satyr- like shall I say? |
11654 | what are you painting?" |
11654 | what, you back again, Dayne? |
11654 | where are the Champs Élysées? |
11654 | where, then, is the triumph? |
11654 | why should he delight and awake enthusiasm in me, while Shakespeare leaves me cold? |
11654 | why will you not be contented to live?" |
11525 | A tailor? 11525 And do you come every year?" |
11525 | And left no word where she was going? |
11525 | And the pretty cousin, likewise, I hope? |
11525 | And who may you be, Sir, to take such an interest in the lady? |
11525 | Belong about here? |
11525 | Ben up here afore, though, I guess? |
11525 | Bridget,exclaimed the enraged mistress,"what are you staring at? |
11525 | But, Candace, you''ve always been contented and happy with us, have you not? |
11525 | But, then, how comes the air to be so full of music? 11525 Candace,"said he,"do you think it right that the black race should be slaves to the white?" |
11525 | Found her? 11525 Found her?" |
11525 | From Boston? |
11525 | Had a great white cotton umbrill, a box like a shoe- kit, and suthin''like a pair o''clo''es- frames? |
11525 | Have I been asleep, Martin? |
11525 | Have you known her long? |
11525 | Have you looked? |
11525 | He that loveth not his brother, whom he hath seen, how can he love God, whom he hath not seen? |
11525 | How are you ever going to know, if you wo n''t hear? |
11525 | How impossible? |
11525 | How is one to find her? |
11525 | I declare, they look like them hyacinths in the window,--don''t they? 11525 If they have the goods, wo n''t they be satisfied?" |
11525 | In the dumps? 11525 In the first place, Minnie, what do we live for?" |
11525 | Is Mr. Bullion that short man, father, with the cold eyes and gruff voice, and the queer eyebrow which he seems to poke at people? |
11525 | Is it? 11525 Is n''t she at home?" |
11525 | Is she not here? |
11525 | It is n''t gone? 11525 Just handed you?" |
11525 | Lee''s house? 11525 Martin,--is the window close?" |
11525 | May have to speak to common folks, yet,--eh, Miss Bridget? |
11525 | Melancholy Orpheus, how? 11525 Mr. Monroe,"began the stranger, in an agitated manner,"do you know anything of a young lady named Lee,--Alice Lee?" |
11525 | Now, really, if every one would take care of one, and that one himself, do n''t you see there would be no more want or suffering in this weary world? 11525 Oh, if you ask that, why did you give, last Monday? |
11525 | Oh, yes,--you can go; ca n''t he, brother? |
11525 | Only what? 11525 Out of here, Sir? |
11525 | Pray, what are the_ grisini?_ what is the white truffle? |
11525 | Pray, what are the_ grisini?_ what is the white truffle? |
11525 | S''pose he does cough and keep her awake nights, and take a little too much sometimes, a''n''t he better''n no husband at all? 11525 She has relatives here, has she not?" |
11525 | The painter? |
11525 | Then you will see me insulted without lifting a finger? 11525 Want to go where he is?" |
11525 | Wants to see me, does he? 11525 What are they good for? |
11525 | What do you mean? |
11525 | What in the world shall I do? |
11525 | What is the advantage of brains to a man who does n''t use them? 11525 What is the need of this fury?" |
11525 | What use? |
11525 | What will you take? |
11525 | When shall I be a disembodied spirit, and no longer subject to the petty annoyances that belong to the flesh? |
11525 | Where do you come from? |
11525 | Where is Miss Lee,--Alice,--his daughter? |
11525 | Whither, ancient mariner? 11525 Who opened the door, then?--What''s that in your hand?" |
11525 | Who went out, Martin? |
11525 | Who, the Sandford woman? 11525 Whom have you seen?" |
11525 | Why could they not have been content to cling to the comforts of Old England, and to restrain their wilfulness of spirit? |
11525 | Why did you let her trunk go, mother? 11525 Why do you give, then, dear Minnie?" |
11525 | Why, father? |
11525 | Why, you do n''t say this is high- cost? 11525 Why? |
11525 | Wo n''t the property at the store be enough when you can sell it? |
11525 | Would you like your liberty, if you could get it, though? |
11525 | You expected to see me at your feet, imploring your love and striving to melt you by tears,--did you? 11525 You give lessons? |
11525 | You, Doctor?--and now, immediately? 11525 _ I_ de weaker vessel?" |
11525 | ''Most too light and fuzzy for a duster, a''n''t it? |
11525 | --_"Che mi importa,"_ answered she,_"se sia bello o brutto? |
11525 | 20,)''He feedeth on ashes: a deceived heart hath turned him aside, that he can not deliver his soul, nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?''" |
11525 | After all, why should he care for a pair of tongs? |
11525 | And could the same genius that created also give life and warmth to its productions? |
11525 | And how far might these blazes and flames go, when once they set out? |
11525 | And on account of what constraint of soul- liberty did he decline the office? |
11525 | And what do you say to New York?--asked the Koh- i- noor? |
11525 | And why might he not have it? |
11525 | Are not fresh air and cold water to be had cheap? |
11525 | Are we not the centre of something? |
11525 | At enormous expense they have gathered volumes of authorities; will they readily admit them to be cheats and counterfeits? |
11525 | Athletic sports are"boyish,"are they? |
11525 | Besides, did n''t our Lord particularly tell his disciples not to have but one? |
11525 | But had she any alternative course? |
11525 | But how, where? |
11525 | But then how could he follow up his system of self- culture? |
11525 | But then, again, how could his soul go off on an exploring tour with Annie''s? |
11525 | But then, again, how was his soul to pass,--to get out, in the first place, of his body? |
11525 | But then, what is a year, two, ten years, in an eternity of fame? |
11525 | But what avails it, to know that they go?--how far from me when they start, and how many millions of miles before they turn to come back? |
11525 | But what is Agrarianism, and who are Agrarians? |
11525 | But what then? |
11525 | But who can be expected to say a word for Agrarian? |
11525 | But who thought of such things under the smart of defeat? |
11525 | Can I do anything to obleege you?" |
11525 | Come, now,--he said,--what''s the use of these comparisons? |
11525 | Could he ever forgive himself? |
11525 | Did n''t I hear this gentleman saying, the other day, that every American owns all America? |
11525 | Did not all your large experience in the retail- business teach you the comparative value of the ounce of prevention and the pound of cure? |
11525 | Did she leave no word, no note?" |
11525 | Did she not hear my voice, my step, and attempt to excuse herself through you?" |
11525 | Did you ever hear of Dr. Lyne, the eccentric Irish physician? |
11525 | Did you look over your shoulder, and did she vanish into smoke?" |
11525 | Do n''t you see I am in my shirt- sleeves? |
11525 | Do n''t you see that it is replaced by the_ grisini?_"A mistake, a profound mistake. |
11525 | Do you expect me to believe it, even?" |
11525 | Do you suppose that the world will believe it, the day after our losses? |
11525 | Do? |
11525 | Dropped? |
11525 | Even that is better than nothing, but-- Soul of Mohammed!--is that called bathing? |
11525 | Feathers ben dyed, most likely? |
11525 | Gone?" |
11525 | Had the old fable of Pygmalion a truth in it, then? |
11525 | Has it been altered since we acquired it? |
11525 | Has the man no mind, no cultivation, no taste? |
11525 | Have you found her?" |
11525 | He thought,--"Can this be the spiritual body that St. Paul says is to supersede the natural one? |
11525 | He was silent,--and sat looking at his handsome left hand with the red stone ring upon it.--Is he going to fall in love with Iris? |
11525 | How could buttered toast, emblem of softness, thrive in so hard a temperature? |
11525 | How could the kind woman repress the impulse to fold her to her bosom? |
11525 | How dare you? |
11525 | How for the color? |
11525 | How is your mother?" |
11525 | I knew I''d another to home,--and what does a man want of two coats? |
11525 | I wonder, now, how?" |
11525 | If I like Broadway better than Washington Street, what then? |
11525 | If it is not the want of proper materials, or of taste to use them, what can be the cause of the unjust ostracism against buttered toast? |
11525 | If you have really got more brains in Boston than other folks, as you seem to think, who hates you for it, except a pack of scribbling fools? |
11525 | If you tell them they are very beautiful, they say,_"Ma che? |
11525 | Is it just the right shade to stop? |
11525 | Is it not possible to impress upon your mind the changes which"modern improvements"are bringing upon us? |
11525 | Is n''t that it? |
11525 | Is not the gymnasium a more economical institution than the hospital? |
11525 | Is not_ free- thinker_ a term of reproach in England? |
11525 | Is the cow Pepsin, on the whole, a more frugal hobby to ride than a good saddle- horse? |
11525 | Is there any need of killing ninety- nine men to give the hundredth one the gospel, when we could give the gospel to them all? |
11525 | My dear Dolorosus, can you acquaint me with any reason, in the heavens above or on the earth beneath, why you should_ not_ have dyspepsia? |
11525 | Nay, it is Plato who says that exercise will almost cure a guilty conscience,--and can we be indifferent to this, my fellow- sinner? |
11525 | Now what shall we do? |
11525 | Now, why did_ you_ give?" |
11525 | Oh, you mean we ought rather to attend to our own faults than those of others?" |
11525 | One thing, I confess, stumbles me:--Was there not an express permission given to Israel to buy and hold slaves of old?" |
11525 | Or is it a passion? |
11525 | Or is this turned into a butcher''s shop?" |
11525 | She laughed somewhat derisively, and said,_"Ma che? |
11525 | Should you thrust conscience into the cellar, stifle its outcries, and give your consent to a profanation of holy wedlock?" |
11525 | That it is, I am solemnly convinced; and shall I''use lightness? |
11525 | The conception being completely projected from the brain in a visible form, what remains but the mechanical imitation of it? |
11525 | Then aloud,--"Knowed Square Lee, I b''lieve?" |
11525 | Then dropping his voice to a lower key, and with a tone which was meant to be wheedling, he turned to his sister- in- law:--"You''ve got it, then? |
11525 | There are books, surely? |
11525 | There are such great obstacles in the way, that I do not see at present what can be done; do you, Doctor?" |
11525 | Turning to Mrs. Sandford, she exclaimed,--"Who is this fellow?" |
11525 | Was it fancy, now? |
11525 | Was there ever anything in Italy, I should like to know, like a Boston sunset? |
11525 | We have fought for it, and the Lord of Hosts has been with us; and can we stand before Him with our foot upon our brother''s neck?" |
11525 | What business had I to be trying experiments on this forlorn old soul? |
11525 | What do you say to this, eh?" |
11525 | What do_ you_ think, Miss Bridget? |
11525 | What has happened? |
11525 | What is it made of? |
11525 | What more natural than that he should seek to avail himself of the distress of the people? |
11525 | What next? |
11525 | What of her? |
11525 | What then? |
11525 | What was I saying,--I, who would not for the world have pained our unfortunate little boarder by an allusion? |
11525 | What would he not give for one word from the dumb lips, for one look from the eyes now closed forever? |
11525 | What ye talkin''about money? |
11525 | What''s the meaning of this blood? |
11525 | What, then, can I do for you? |
11525 | Where is she? |
11525 | Where is the pocket- book?" |
11525 | Whether that effect would have been good or bad, who shall say? |
11525 | Which of those six is the prettiest, after all? |
11525 | Who has been murdered? |
11525 | Who has it? |
11525 | Who knows indeed?" |
11525 | Who knows what souls are made of? |
11525 | Who would n''t? |
11525 | Who would receive an unknown, friendless girl? |
11525 | Who''s got it? |
11525 | Who, in the terrible palsy of trade, would furnish her employment? |
11525 | Why are beards and moustaches tabooed in Great Britain? |
11525 | Why are new pipes preferred in England for smoking? |
11525 | Why do n''t they now? |
11525 | Why do n''t they now? |
11525 | Why do n''t you get that lady off from Battle Monument and plant a terrapin in her place? |
11525 | Why do n''t you put a canvas- back duck on the top of the Washington column? |
11525 | Why do you ask such dreadful questions in such a solemn way? |
11525 | Why does the English Parliament hold its sittings at night? |
11525 | Why is winter the season of_ villeggiatura_ in England? |
11525 | Why not, in a great measure, when awake? |
11525 | Why not? |
11525 | Why should I imitate Titian''s tints, when I can copy my own fancies? |
11525 | Why will you ask for other glories when you have soft crabs? |
11525 | Why will you persist in urging that you"can not afford"these indulgences, as you call them? |
11525 | Why, what did she do? |
11525 | Will you give me the same privilege of following my own pleasure?" |
11525 | Would every honest believer do as much for his religion? |
11525 | Year or so ago?" |
11525 | You allow that? |
11525 | You avoid the very point of the argument, which is, Is this a sin against God? |
11525 | You will join me in making search for her?" |
11525 | [ Footnote C:"What do I care whether it is handsome or ugly? |
11525 | _ Chi sa?_ The plainest Ranz des Vaches may sometimes please when the fifth symphony of Beethoven would be a bore. |
11525 | alive? |
11525 | and is not a pair of skates a good investment, if it aids you to elude the grasp of the apothecary? |
11525 | and is not good bread less costly than cake and pies? |
11525 | are you dreaming?" |
11525 | are you there? |
11525 | can you afford the cessation of labor and the ceaseless drugging and douching of your last few years? |
11525 | did ye?" |
11525 | excuse me for interrupting you; but can you find nothing but rheumatism to talk about? |
11525 | if she could really see him,"he thought,"would she look so?" |
11525 | is it painful to you?" |
11525 | is not genius before rules? |
11525 | no more need of blankets or dispensaries? |
11525 | or the things that I purpose do I purpose according to the flesh, that with me there should be yea, yea, and nay, nay?'' |
11525 | presents!--said I.--What tickets, what presents has he had the impertinence to be offering to that young lady? |
11525 | said Minnie, astonished,"only last week, what did you do for poor Sophia? |
11525 | that lame one?" |
11525 | what now?" |
11525 | where in the world-- what have you done with your coat?" |
17567 | A royal pair, eh? |
17567 | A thorn- bush-- what matter the precise name? |
17567 | And alone? |
17567 | And the bees? |
17567 | And then? |
17567 | And who should know it if not he, since it was the voice of his wife? |
17567 | And why had it touched up Prickles as if with a live wire? |
17567 | And why? |
17567 | And, anyway, who can blame her? |
17567 | And, by the way, you know the gnu, of course,_ alias_ wildebeest? |
17567 | Another trap? |
17567 | Anyway, the thrush on the lawn was a lady, and-- well, what would you? |
17567 | At least, she had n''t for an hour and a half; but, then, what''s an hour and a half to a cat? |
17567 | Besides, how about the squirrel overhead? |
17567 | But do you think that made any difference? |
17567 | But how was Blackie to know that, little owls being a comparatively new introduction into those parts? |
17567 | But what is size, anyway? |
17567 | But what the fangs and claws was she doing here? |
17567 | By what? |
17567 | Did she, indeed, ever love anything? |
17567 | Did that ratel quit quick? |
17567 | Did yer ever see th''like?" |
17567 | Do n''t you? |
17567 | Do ratels ever quit an unbeaten foe? |
17567 | Got in among the trees-- yes, but dead- beat, and-- to what end? |
17567 | He knew that it would hurt any one to attack him; the cat knew it; all rabbits in their senses knew it; but was that mother- rabbit in her senses? |
17567 | He would have outdistanced you or me easily in no time, but it was not you or I that came, and who could tell how fast that something might travel? |
17567 | His blood was up, and had not all who ever fought him allowed that he was the pluckiest beast on earth? |
17567 | How could one tell? |
17567 | No honey- guide? |
17567 | Now, what is one to make of such a bird? |
17567 | Now, what is one to say of such a cat? |
17567 | Perhaps he saw, too, the gleam of hunger, the wild, cruel gleam that forgets all else, in her eyes; but who am I to say whether he understood it? |
17567 | Pharaoh, old cat, are-- are you in there?" |
17567 | Probably, quite probably, he had met Gulo the Indomitable before, and-- was not that enough? |
17567 | Safe? |
17567 | She certainly did her duty by it; but what was the use of setting up to be a queen, anyway, if she could not do that? |
17567 | Sixteen feet to the ground he bounded, and twenty- two feet out from the bole of the tree he landed, and-- well, what d''you think of that? |
17567 | Something? |
17567 | That was all, but it was enough; was n''t it, boys? |
17567 | The only difficulty was, who was going out first, and who alive, and who dead? |
17567 | The wolf? |
17567 | Then what? |
17567 | Thousands upon thousands of wood- pigeons were asleep above his head, come from Heaven knows where, going to-- who could tell in the end? |
17567 | VIII THE WHERE IS IT? |
17567 | Was he ever anything else than on the war- path if he moved abroad at all? |
17567 | What else did you expect? |
17567 | What meant this unseemly disturbance of_ Phasianus''s_ domain? |
17567 | What''s in a name, anyway? |
17567 | What''s that? |
17567 | What''s that? |
17567 | What''s that? |
17567 | What? |
17567 | What? |
17567 | What? |
17567 | What_ could_ make any difference after_ that_? |
17567 | Where had the old"varmint"gone? |
17567 | Who can tell how much a cat sees, anyway? |
17567 | Who can tell? |
17567 | Who dares check the will of the king''s son?" |
17567 | Who knows? |
17567 | Why should they? |
17567 | You know the size of pythons? |
17567 | You know the ways of a pig? |
17567 | You think it was a battle of patience? |
17567 | from that of a gentleman of the same breed; or, perhaps-- but how do I know? |
17567 | he said very quietly, quickly, gratingly, and tersely; and then, as if expecting an answer, added,"Eh?" |
12678 | ''You know my profession?'' 12678 Ai n''t it funny?" |
12678 | Ai n''t it my business to know the faces of everybody? 12678 And you promise to leave quiet?" |
12678 | Are you coming back again to that queer business of which you told me-- that day on the tennis court? |
12678 | Are you going to be all day redding up them rooms? |
12678 | Are you sure Annette''s abed? |
12678 | But I may see you-- call on you in the city? |
12678 | But how about that electric bell? |
12678 | But is she a fake? 12678 But what am I to do-- why am I here if I am to do nothing?" |
12678 | But will you tell your Aunt Paula that you met me? |
12678 | Could you come at once to that Eighty- sixth Street entrance of the Park? |
12678 | Dearest, why do you ask? |
12678 | Did you ever hear that Miss Markham had been brought up to be a medium? 12678 Did you look at his feet?" |
12678 | Do n''t you see? |
12678 | Do tell me how you got it? 12678 Do you come personally or professionally? |
12678 | Do you hear that? |
12678 | Do you know that for all I''ve been so much out of the active world--a shadow fell on her eyes,--"I long for country and farms? |
12678 | Do you know what it means? 12678 Does n''t she?" |
12678 | Drink? |
12678 | Even bringing spirits from a cabinet? |
12678 | Ever been about much down there? |
12678 | Exactly when? |
12678 | Good symptom for you, ai n''t it? 12678 Have I ever denied it-- can I ever deny it to you?" |
12678 | Have I not said that you are-- the obstacle? 12678 Have you been given anything special to say to- night-- has anything been impressed upon you?" |
12678 | Her heart? |
12678 | Her other name? |
12678 | How did you know? 12678 How did you know?" |
12678 | How do you like it after the Philippines? |
12678 | How much is this business worth to you? |
12678 | How''s your head? 12678 I am beginning to question your right to--""But answer me--_Did you wake?_""No. |
12678 | I see,said his voice,"but do you_ believe_ it?" |
12678 | I suppose--bitterly--"your Aunt Paula had nothing to do with that?" |
12678 | I wo n''t ask you to let_ me_ treat you-- but why do n''t you go to some physician about it? 12678 I''ve opened myself up to you like a school- girl in a cosey corner chat,"said Rosalie Le Grange;"ai n''t it time_ you_ was doin''some confidin''?" |
12678 | If I should come again, would Helen tell me more? |
12678 | If we wanted to water our mediumship, could n''t we get rich out of the tips we give people on their business? |
12678 | Investigating Mrs. Markham? 12678 Is that all?" |
12678 | Is the compartment occupied? 12678 Know any of the graves?" |
12678 | Let''s walk,he said shortly; and then,"Even if you put me aside, wo n''t you keep me in your life?" |
12678 | May I kiss her? |
12678 | Might I ask some questions? |
12678 | Must we go all over it again? 12678 Must we talk this out whenever we meet? |
12678 | My dear sir-- I could almost say''my dear boy''--if I had, would I admit it? 12678 No,"he said,"I brought it on-- God brought it on-- but what does that matter? |
12678 | Now the spirits slipped that right out of me, did n''t they? |
12678 | Oh, did I do that? |
12678 | Oh, why did you do that? |
12678 | See here,she pursued,"are you a psychic researcher?" |
12678 | Shall I pay you now or later? 12678 Since this is a-- a-- professional relation, may I ask how much I owe you?" |
12678 | Tell me about Miss Markham first,he interrupted;"is she well?" |
12678 | The Philippines-- oh, you''ve been in the East? 12678 The railroad king?" |
12678 | The what? |
12678 | Then it''s coming to a fight between me and your Aunt Paula? 12678 Then may I come again?" |
12678 | Then you say,returned Norcross with one of his characteristic shifts to childlike abruptness,"that you never faked?" |
12678 | They could n''t find anybody else to fall in love with around the Markham house-- ain''t as smart as you thought you was, are you? |
12678 | This something-- won''t you tell me what it is? 12678 Tuesday night?" |
12678 | Twenty- five thousand dollars? |
12678 | Was there ever anyone else? |
12678 | We need air most of all-- open that window, will you? |
12678 | Well, that''s what I''m takin''your money for, ai n''t it? |
12678 | What I''m wondering,she said,"is who plays her spook? |
12678 | What about putting aside earthly love for strength? |
12678 | What can such a thing have to do with your physical condition? |
12678 | What did I do last night? |
12678 | What did I say? |
12678 | What do you know about Miss Markham? |
12678 | What do you suppose she''s like? |
12678 | What has that to do with the case? |
12678 | What is it that''s quite true, Auntie? |
12678 | What is it? |
12678 | What put you down? |
12678 | What reasons? |
12678 | What sort of a looking gentleman? |
12678 | What was Lallie''s real name? |
12678 | What was the matter? |
12678 | What''d you give for a chance to stay in his office a month and see him work? 12678 What''s the trouble between you and that slim little niece of Mrs. Markham''s that you want her aunt exposed? |
12678 | What''s thirty years? |
12678 | Where? |
12678 | Who is the cleverest fakir in that business? |
12678 | Who''s Martha? |
12678 | Who''s the greatest doctor in the world? |
12678 | Why do you ask that? |
12678 | Why do you ask? |
12678 | Why should I? |
12678 | Why were you so far away? 12678 Why?" |
12678 | Wilfred-- is it Wilfred? |
12678 | Will you kindly remember,said Rosalie Le Grange,"that you''re supposed to be drunk? |
12678 | Will you obey? |
12678 | Will you ride? |
12678 | Will your voices tell me anything? |
12678 | Wo n''t you tell me what I''m going to see? |
12678 | Wonder if they''re-- anywhere-- those people down under the tombstones? |
12678 | Yes, an''ai n''t it a sneakin''trick to hire a housekeeper to be a spy? |
12678 | You admit that there_ are_ frauds in your profession, then? |
12678 | You did not get up? |
12678 | You have never seemed harsh before--"Will you answer me? |
12678 | You will not be frightened? |
12678 | You will not laugh? |
12678 | Young man,asked Rosalie with an air of shocked and injured innocence,"are you accusing me of_ fakery_?" |
12678 | ''Indeed?'' |
12678 | Ah, do you see now?" |
12678 | Am I to become a Light without sacrificing all? |
12678 | An''ca n''t I fix it some other way?" |
12678 | And do you suppose that I am going to let Aunt Paula keep you now?" |
12678 | And if Mrs. Markham is playin''fake materializing with old Norcross as a dope, what does it come to? |
12678 | And so, it was Annette who spoke first:"What is the matter-- oh, what has happened?" |
12678 | And what do they have to offer? |
12678 | And why should he care so much that he had risked offending a mere passing acquaintance of the road? |
12678 | Are you he? |
12678 | Are you takin''in what I tell you?" |
12678 | Blake heard his own voice, far away, saying:"What did you come for?" |
12678 | But about Annette?" |
12678 | But his voice quavered a little for a moment as he added:"You''re good at forgetting?" |
12678 | But how should I know? |
12678 | But it''s quite true, is it not so, dear?" |
12678 | But when they had entered the smooth park driveway, he came out with it:"Do you think that I respect that obstacle? |
12678 | Ca n''t you use your drag with Norcross somehow? |
12678 | Can you guess it?" |
12678 | Can you prove it?" |
12678 | Can you think that I believe such moonshine even if you do? |
12678 | Could you come as well on Friday?" |
12678 | Dear, might I touch your arm? |
12678 | Did she stand again on the edge of revelation? |
12678 | Did you ever consider,"she went on,"that no fraud invents anything; that he is only imitating something genuine? |
12678 | Do I need to go on?" |
12678 | Do n''t you think you might tell me your name?" |
12678 | Do you hear?" |
12678 | Do you or do n''t you?" |
12678 | Do you see now what happened? |
12678 | Do you understand that, dearie?" |
12678 | Do you want advice?" |
12678 | Does that go?" |
12678 | Does that satisfy you?" |
12678 | Dr. Blake gathered up the little old woman in his arms, and spoke over his shoulder to the blonde girl:"You will come with us?" |
12678 | Fife?" |
12678 | Has she got a cinch on a relative of yours?" |
12678 | Have n''t her controls told her that? |
12678 | Have n''t we talked enough? |
12678 | Have you ever noticed what bully travelers''tales you get out of adventures in bargaining? |
12678 | He formed that conclusion, but,"How do you like America after India?" |
12678 | He found himself at length apostrophizing a brick wall,"Who could believe it?" |
12678 | He turned at low speed north, and as his hands moved over wheels and levers, she was asking:"How did you happen to be here?" |
12678 | How are you goin''to git me into the house?" |
12678 | How is she? |
12678 | How should I identify myself? |
12678 | I have stolen this morning-- would you rob me in turn?" |
12678 | I suppose you can play housekeeper well enough to keep the place a month, ca n''t you?" |
12678 | I think of nothing but this all day-- why do you make it harder? |
12678 | I''ve told you that she''s held two materializing seances for Robert H. Norcross, have n''t I? |
12678 | I_ am_ asking you if you''re willing to risk fifty a week on a pig in a poke? |
12678 | If I have done anything for you to- night, will you return it by setting us down in your automobile?" |
12678 | If I were talking to you over a telephone and you were not sure of my voice, how should I identify myself? |
12678 | If not, why did she telegraph to me when she did?" |
12678 | In fairness, that is so, is it not?" |
12678 | Interested because it is yours and she loves you, perhaps-- but basically? |
12678 | Is it a big house?" |
12678 | Is she, keeping her soul for you in a life which I hope is better-- is she interested in whether or no you make a little more money and position? |
12678 | Is she-- does she belong to your party?" |
12678 | It was he himself who had risen from his chair, was leaning over the table, was asking:"What do you mean? |
12678 | Mrs. Markham, shall we bargain?" |
12678 | Must I tell you any more?" |
12678 | Now was it me makin''that voice, or the spirit? |
12678 | Or better-- looting? |
12678 | Or does Berkeley Center seem primitive and far away?" |
12678 | Question was, where was the bell? |
12678 | Remember how he had you while you listened? |
12678 | Remember how you believed like he did and felt everything was right and you could do anything? |
12678 | See that table over in the corner? |
12678 | See?" |
12678 | See?" |
12678 | Shall I particularize? |
12678 | Shall I tell you all she said?" |
12678 | Shall I tell you how it seemed to me? |
12678 | She will know--""Her spirits?" |
12678 | So what risk do you take even if you_ are_ caught? |
12678 | Tell me-- what do you mean?" |
12678 | That is only natural, is it not? |
12678 | That she must n''t marry because it would destroy her powers? |
12678 | That she''s been taught to believe that she will never develop fully until she''s put aside an earthly love?" |
12678 | The Vango trumpet seances were doin''too well to suit that lyin'', fakin'', Spirit Truth outfit in Brooklyn-- wasn''t that the bell?" |
12678 | The newspapers, Mr. Norcross--""Would any newspaper believe you?" |
12678 | The young man let out an agitated"did n''t I?" |
12678 | Then, with a few refined convulsions, Rosalie awoke, rubbed her eyes, and said in her tinkling natural voice:"Was I out long? |
12678 | This being so, what tack should she take? |
12678 | Was this patient a medical or surgical case? |
12678 | Were you afraid of Mrs. Markham? |
12678 | What are we goin''to do then? |
12678 | What did you do last night?" |
12678 | What do I read the personals in the magazines for? |
12678 | What do you mean by this? |
12678 | What for? |
12678 | What had that ever brought, what could it ever bring, except advertising and vague standing? |
12678 | What is the use of concealment? |
12678 | What should I offer to-- well, to that one among the disembodied who means most to me? |
12678 | What was I saying? |
12678 | What was it?" |
12678 | What was the matter?" |
12678 | What was the something? |
12678 | What''s the ten or twenty years I''ve got to live in this world, compared with all that''s waiting us out there? |
12678 | Where were you last night-- what did you do?" |
12678 | Where would Mrs. Markham have a cabinet if she ever done materializin''? |
12678 | Which of your spirits"--he was bold enough for the moment to make light of her sacred places--"sent you out- of- doors just before I passed?" |
12678 | Why are you always so mysterious with me? |
12678 | Why did you ask that question?" |
12678 | Why do you trouble me so?" |
12678 | Why wo n''t you leave me alone?" |
12678 | Why-- when I want to know everything about you?" |
12678 | Why? |
12678 | Will you make an appointment?" |
12678 | Wo n''t you wait until I know? |
12678 | Would he have answered me?" |
12678 | Would n''t it be better, in your present condition of suspicion, if I try to see what we can do without seeming any further to inspect you? |
12678 | Would n''t that identify me to you?" |
12678 | Would not you do the same? |
12678 | Would you imperil truth?'' |
12678 | Would you like her?" |
12678 | Would you mind my coming to the point at once? |
12678 | Would you mind sitting a little further away? |
12678 | You have been commanded to enter the other room then, turn out the light, lift a trap, let down a rope ladder, descend it, and say certain things?" |
12678 | You have been commanded to rise when you hear music?" |
12678 | You know the locket I showed you?" |
12678 | You''d know Theodore Roosevelt if you saw him first time, would n''t you? |
12678 | You''ll have to be neater if you expect to make a good wife to the dark gentleman--""Will it be him?" |
12678 | You''re on the way to the dining- car are n''t you? |
12678 | Your wish is about the affections, ai n''t it, dearie?" |
12678 | [ Illustration: ANNETTE]"I am a physician,"he said simply,"Get the porter, will you?" |
12678 | _ Who_ do you suppose it was? |
12678 | she asked,"with a doctor at hand? |
12678 | she cried,"ca n''t you see what she''s aiming at? |
12678 | she cried;"he was only an incident-- won''t you hear me?" |
12678 | she exclaimed;"and why-- oh, do n''t touch me-- don''t come near-- can''t you see it makes it harder for me to renounce?" |
12678 | she said half aloud,"that a smart young man like him never thought to ask whose room it was I found the trap in?" |
15540 | ''Do you know vot vas der reason vy ve calls our boy Hans?'' |
15540 | Air ye''s from the County Carhk? |
15540 | And must I pronounce that word? |
15540 | And you have been married this evening, sahib? |
15540 | Are all the animals fawns? |
15540 | Are there any snakes where we are going, Sir Modava? |
15540 | Are ye''s thryin''to shake the screw out of her? |
15540 | Are you a sailor, Captain Carlisle? |
15540 | Are you going among elephants, Flix, and do n''t know what a pachyderm is? |
15540 | Aside from the mischief done by Nana Sahib, which seems to have had only a limited effect, what were the causes of this mutiny, Lord Tremlyn? |
15540 | But are n''t the women as religious as the men? |
15540 | But is he much of a king? |
15540 | But is the Guicowar really a king, when all this country belongs to the English? 15540 But is there not a new church or philosophy of recent date-- I mean Brahmo Somaj?" |
15540 | But the snakes, your lordship? |
15540 | But what are the Buddhists? |
15540 | But what are the merchants and shopkeepers? |
15540 | But what are they? |
15540 | But what are those things over the other side of the park? |
15540 | But what are we to do with such a lot of them? |
15540 | But what becomes of the ships? |
15540 | But what becomes of them, for they do not sink? |
15540 | But what is a durbar? 15540 But what is it all about?" |
15540 | But what is it for? |
15540 | But where are Lord Tremlyn and Sir Modava? |
15540 | But where do the elephants and the tigers come in? |
15540 | But who would do it? |
15540 | But why did Khayrat tell me I ought not to have shot a monkey? |
15540 | But, Sir Modava, do you really dare to go out where there are cobras? |
15540 | Ca n''t you stop that hideous noise, Sir Modava? |
15540 | Can your lordship tell me the salary of the governor- general of India? |
15540 | Captain, dear, are there any schnakes forninst the joongle? |
15540 | Could n''t he put a head on him? |
15540 | Did n''t she hail you, and offer to stand by you? |
15540 | Did ye''s mate ony cobrys, Musther Scott? |
15540 | Do n''t we stop at any stations on the road? |
15540 | Do n''t you see those men standing upon something, or clinging to whatever floats them? 15540 Do the English attend such shows?" |
15540 | Do they nurse lame tigers? |
15540 | Do you have a lecture to- day, Captain Ringgold? |
15540 | Do you serve your sick and disabled in that way? |
15540 | Do you think it is right to kill them if God put them here for a good purpose, Sir Modava? |
15540 | Do you want to carry those snakes back to the palace? |
15540 | Do your ladies take an interest in these lectures, Captain Ringgold? |
15540 | Does he, indeed? |
15540 | For the present, will you excuse me until the ship comes to anchor? |
15540 | Has any one counted the number of men on the wreck, or whatever it is? |
15540 | Have n''t you heard of him? |
15540 | Have we really a live lord on board, Felix? |
15540 | Have you a chaplain? |
15540 | Have you the blue book that comes with this chart, Captain Ringgold? |
15540 | How could I run away when I was surrounded by the snakes? |
15540 | How did you enjoy the play, madam? |
15540 | How do you like the motion, Miss Blanche? |
15540 | How do you spell Hindustan, Sir Modava? |
15540 | How hot is it, Louis? |
15540 | How is it, Louis? 15540 How is the second cutter doing?" |
15540 | How old are you, Sahib Dinshaw? |
15540 | I changed it? |
15540 | I do n''t see why? |
15540 | I suppose it is not given to outsiders to know what all that means? |
15540 | I thank you, sir, with all my heart; but may I ask one favor of you? |
15540 | In the hospital for lame ducks and superannuated bullfrogs we visited in Bombay, do they take in sick cobras? |
15540 | Into the Ganges? |
15540 | Is he afeerd of schnakes? |
15540 | Is it after schnakes? |
15540 | Is it much of a fall, sir? |
15540 | Is it possible that this little fellow is married, Sir Modava? |
15540 | Is it the bore that runs up the river to Calcutty? |
15540 | Is n''t that the same thing? |
15540 | Is that big tiger to fight the crowd here assembled? |
15540 | Is that in a Pickwickian sense? |
15540 | Is that man the only musician? |
15540 | Is the mahout his schnout? |
15540 | Is there any place near the palace where we could find any game? |
15540 | Is this account in your handwriting, General? |
15540 | Is this as near the Himalayas as we are to go? |
15540 | Mavalipoor? |
15540 | May we go with you? |
15540 | Meals? |
15540 | My what? |
15540 | Not the Garden of Eden? |
15540 | Now what are these girls, Sir Modava? |
15540 | Now, Mr. Scott, what is the run for to- day? |
15540 | Now, what is there to be seen in Calcutta? |
15540 | Of course you know how the longitude of the ship is obtained, Miss Woolridge? |
15540 | Suppose you were coming up the river in a steamer from Calcutta, which would be the left bank? |
15540 | That''s what''s the matter, is it? |
15540 | The city must be''done''by walking, must it? |
15540 | Then Captain Sharp really saved his life? |
15540 | Then how shall we get ashore there? |
15540 | Thugging? |
15540 | Was Sir Modava saved? |
15540 | Well, what was the reason, Captain? |
15540 | Were you the captain of the Travancore, sir? |
15540 | What are our guns for? |
15540 | What are the prices at a hotel like this one, Lord Tremlyn? |
15540 | What are we to do with them, my Lord? |
15540 | What caste or class do they belong to? |
15540 | What did I ask you? |
15540 | What do you call that house? |
15540 | What do you mean by saying you do not know the run? |
15540 | What does all that mean? |
15540 | What does this mean, Sir Modava? |
15540 | What has become of the Travancore? |
15540 | What in the world is bandoline, Mister? |
15540 | What is a dak- bungalow? |
15540 | What is a poithon? |
15540 | What is it, Bangs? |
15540 | What is that stockade for? |
15540 | What is this crowd in the square? |
15540 | What is this man, Sir Modava? |
15540 | What is your name, my boy? |
15540 | What snakes? |
15540 | What the dickens do we want of all these fellows? |
15540 | What time are the other meals? |
15540 | What time is breakfast? |
15540 | What time is dinner, Moro? |
15540 | What would you do then? |
15540 | What would you have said, Captain? |
15540 | What''s that last one, Moro? |
15540 | Where did I see that name? |
15540 | Where does the name of this place come from? |
15540 | Where is Benares? 15540 Where is Lord Tremlyn?" |
15540 | Where is that bay? |
15540 | Which is the first cutter? |
15540 | Which, your honor? |
15540 | Who is he? 15540 Who is the hero of the piece, Sir Modava?" |
15540 | Whose statue is that-- the Duke of Wellington? |
15540 | Why do you call it so? |
15540 | Why not? |
15540 | Will you please to tell me how many hours there are in a sea- day? |
15540 | Will your Lordship permit me to present to you and your friends my son Dinshaw, in whose honor I am making this feast? 15540 Would I give a hundred thousand dollars for saving Sir Louis''s life? |
15540 | You could n''t climb it; and what good would it do you? 15540 And these lectures are mainly for the benefit of Mr. Belgrave, your owner? |
15540 | Belgrave?" |
15540 | Belgrave?" |
15540 | Boulong?" |
15540 | Boulong?" |
15540 | But what is that man in the cart? |
15540 | CHAPTER XXV FELIX MCGAVONTY BRINGS DOWN SOME SNAKES"Well, what do you think of this?" |
15540 | Can you make anything of its shape? |
15540 | Come; are you going down- stairs, fellows?" |
15540 | Gaskette?" |
15540 | God gave us fire: is it right, therefore, to let the city burn up when the fire is kindled? |
15540 | Is he a Grand Mogul?" |
15540 | Is it an orchestrion?" |
15540 | Is it something good to eat?" |
15540 | Is there anything more about it?" |
15540 | Scott?" |
15540 | Scott?" |
15540 | Scott?" |
15540 | Scott?" |
15540 | Scott?" |
15540 | Shall the invitation be accepted? |
15540 | Shall we not protect ourselves from the tempest he sends? |
15540 | Shall we permit the plague or the cholera to decimate our land because God punishes us in that way for violating the laws he has set up in our bodies? |
15540 | When the_ karma_ is exhausted"--"What in the world is that?" |
15540 | Windham?" |
15540 | Wud I foind ary cobry in here?" |
15540 | Wud I roon from a cobry? |
15540 | what will you call that vehicle, Miss Blanche?" |
18285 | Away, blockhead, we have no occasion to rejoice; could you not discover the queen''s anger through her unsuccessful attempts to disguise it? 18285 A real person may exist in this world or how can an exact figure come here? |
18285 | All are happy, Why should Kuvalayamala alone be sorry? |
18285 | Am I a fit object for a joke? |
18285 | Angada laughs and observes:--"Is this thy wisdom, Ravana? |
18285 | Bidushaka asks his Majesty,"Was not the queen with you when you dreamt? |
18285 | Bidushaka remarks,"Why could not you assuage her anger?" |
18285 | But Earth says,"has it been proper for the good Rama? |
18285 | But how can I accept your offer as this body belongs to a Chandal? |
18285 | Can not you perceive that I have been attracted hither, and misled by the resemblance of your dress and person? |
18285 | Can this be true? |
18285 | Can you give me any tidings of Soudamini, my former pupil?" |
18285 | Does then the deity, whose effigy only we adore in the dwelling of my father, here condescend to accept in person the homage of his votaries? |
18285 | Ganga replies"who can close the door of Fate?" |
18285 | Has anyone carved the statue out of his fancy? |
18285 | He observes,"What does this mean? |
18285 | He thinks,"Who will carve on the wall the person I dreamed of? |
18285 | Her friend replies,"why should you be ashamed? |
18285 | Her hand is the new shoot of the_ Parijata_ tree, else whence distil these dewdrops of ambrosia?" |
18285 | How can I forsake my duty to my lord to save you?" |
18285 | How can I now retire? |
18285 | How rescue Sagarika from the dread of her resentment, or liberate my friend Basantaka? |
18285 | I can neither stand nor move-- what shall I do?" |
18285 | Infirm of judgement dost thou deem of Rama thus-- a mortal man? |
18285 | Is it Sita, or am I dreaming?" |
18285 | Knowest thou not this, and canst thou stoop to praise the son of Raghu, whose frail mortal body is but a meal to any of my households?" |
18285 | Loved sister Ratnavali, where art thou? |
18285 | Parasurama addresses Rama thus:--"How dost thou presume to bend thy brow in frowns on me? |
18285 | Rama despairs:--"My soldiers shall find protection in their caves; I can die with Sita, but thou, Vibhishana, what shall become of thee?" |
18285 | Sagarika thinks to herself,"What will he reply? |
18285 | Sagarika views the scene, mistakes the king for the god and observes,"What do I see? |
18285 | Satyacharya asks,"How are the scribes?" |
18285 | Satyacharya asks,"What then?" |
18285 | Satyacharya observes:"You are right, what chance is there for the good? |
18285 | Satyacharya says:"How now, holy sirs, how fares it with you?" |
18285 | She says,"How now, Sagarika, what makes you here? |
18285 | Siva asks,"Now, Nareda, whence come you?" |
18285 | Susangata sits down, puts her hand upon the picture and asks,"who is this you have delineated?" |
18285 | The Brahmans answer:"why, know you not the customs of the country? |
18285 | The friend listens and repeats,"Who is this you have delineated? |
18285 | The king observes,"This must have been a dream, or is it magic?" |
18285 | The king observes,"What can I say to you, dearest? |
18285 | The king replies,"What should you suspect? |
18285 | The king springs up and exclaims,"Where is she? |
18285 | The pupil asks"why is a stolen marriage intended?" |
18285 | The sage whirls his eyes and exclaims,"Is it a joke? |
18285 | The_ Kosalas_ are subdued: what other object does the world present for which I could entertain a wish? |
18285 | Then he approaches the queen and addresses her thus:--"Who are you? |
18285 | Vasantaka replies,"The latter, no doubt; did not that conjuring son of a slave say, he had still something for your Majesty to see?" |
18285 | What are your Majesty''s commands? |
18285 | What can we say of this reign? |
18285 | What did she do?" |
18285 | What firmness could resist the honest warmth of nature''s mute expressiveness? |
18285 | What is to be done? |
18285 | What is your duty?" |
18285 | What need of many words? |
18285 | What shall I do with only half the money? |
18285 | What should prevent your union? |
18285 | Who but yourself could have been delineated as the god of the flowery bow?". |
18285 | Why should he fear it? |
18285 | Why should you be ashamed? |
18285 | Why thus anxious to behold that form, one only view of which has inspired such painful agitation? |
18285 | Would you see the moon brought down upon earth, a mountain in mid air, a fire in the ocean, or night at noon? |
18285 | Yet the people are many; why is not such misconduct resented?" |
18285 | are you not yet satisfied?" |
18285 | chiefs and heroes, why this groundless panic, the prowess of our enemy untried in closer conflict? |
18285 | dost thou not blush to waste thy might upon a weak defenceless maiden, or art thou truly without form and sense? |
18285 | what have I got with which to make a due gift to you? |
18285 | where is my favourite starling, that I left to your charge, and whom it seems you have quitted for this ceremony? |
18285 | where is my fee? |
18285 | would you impose upon me with falsehoods? |
14049 | A key? |
14049 | A question or two? 14049 About Absalom, or about someone else?" |
14049 | Absalom was to have got a gold lacquer bowl that you ordered from Mhtoon Pah? |
14049 | And Heath, what did Heath say? |
14049 | And I trust thy business hath prospered with thee? |
14049 | And Joicey? |
14049 | And besides Mr. Heath, was there anyone else who saw him? |
14049 | And something of the same nature has occurred since? |
14049 | And the Chinaman? |
14049 | And the date? |
14049 | And the little boy? 14049 And what is your idea?" |
14049 | And yet you have to keep it secret? |
14049 | Any news? |
14049 | Anyhow, you saw Absalom? |
14049 | Are these the deductions of one evening? 14049 Are you_ worried_ about it?" |
14049 | Art thou bidden? |
14049 | But is it likely that Hartley will ask me? |
14049 | But when, and how? 14049 But you''ll stay for a bit?" |
14049 | But_ why_,_ why_? |
14049 | By the way, was n''t Absalom, old Mhtoon Pah''s assistant, once a dressing- boy or something in your establishment? |
14049 | By the way,said Wilder carelessly,"was it ever discovered how that fellow Rydal got clear of the country?" |
14049 | By the way,she said carelessly,"have you found that wretched little Absalom yet? |
14049 | Ca n''t you drop it? |
14049 | Can I help? |
14049 | Can I speak to you for a moment? |
14049 | Can you give me any opinion? 14049 Can you remember anything at all of what you were doing on the evening of July the twenty- ninth?" |
14049 | Can you tell me when you saw him? |
14049 | Can your boy look after me for a few days? |
14049 | Canst thou stand by thyself? |
14049 | Come, then,said the police officer abruptly,"who did you see? |
14049 | Did Rydal''s disappearance affect you at all, personally? |
14049 | Did he speak of Absalom? |
14049 | Did you bring any cigars down? |
14049 | Did you go down Paradise Street just after sunset? |
14049 | Did you see him come back? 14049 Did you see him?" |
14049 | Did your last job work out? |
14049 | Do I? |
14049 | Do you believe he was listening? |
14049 | Do you happen to know that Mhtoon Pah was looking for a bowl of gold lacquer, and that he sent his boy Absalom here to get it? |
14049 | Do you recall the evening of the twenty- ninth? |
14049 | Do you suppose that he got away disguised? |
14049 | Dost thou sell beautiful things, Leh Shin? |
14049 | Evidence? |
14049 | Forgive me for pelting you with questions, but did you see Mr. Heath that evening? |
14049 | Hartley, impertinent? |
14049 | Has he been long like this? |
14049 | Has the man reappeared since? |
14049 | He was away from the curio shop that night, you say? |
14049 | He was quite honest, I suppose? |
14049 | Heath never explained anything? |
14049 | How can you say that? 14049 How could I see him come back?" |
14049 | How do I know it? |
14049 | I assure you that I will, but even when I do, you see what a position the least publicity places me in? |
14049 | I hope you have n''t been bored? |
14049 | I suppose I was right? |
14049 | I suppose you have n''t got the lacquer bowl since? |
14049 | I understand,said Coryndon,"the warrant was issued about noon the same day?" |
14049 | I will see what Mr. Hartley will do, but if you drag in my name or refer him to me you will do yourself no good, do you hear? 14049 I_ think_ not, but who can tell? |
14049 | In what house am I to seek him, assistant of the widower and the childless? |
14049 | Is anything the matter? |
14049 | Is he a devil? |
14049 | Is it not written that none may rise so high, or plunge so deep, that he does not follow the hidden path to the hidden end? 14049 Is it true that I can save you from that?" |
14049 | Is my bath prepared, Shiraz? 14049 Is my bath ready, Shiraz?" |
14049 | Is not the time ripe, O wise old man, is not the hour come when thou mayst go to the house of the white Sahib and demand a piece for closed lips? |
14049 | Is the Sahib awake? |
14049 | It strikes you, does n''t it? |
14049 | Jewels, jewels? 14049 July the twenty- ninth?" |
14049 | Knowest thou of the story of Shiraz, the Punjabi? |
14049 | Leh Shin? 14049 May I come in?" |
14049 | May I send in my card? |
14049 | Mhtoon Pah is the man who has the curio shop? |
14049 | Night after night have I stood outside his shop, but who may enter through a locked door? 14049 Not after this?" |
14049 | Now, Mhtoon Pah, are you quite sure that it was Mr. Heath that you saw that evening? |
14049 | Now, what_ are_ you trying to get out of me, Mr. Hartley? 14049 Oh, are you?" |
14049 | Overdo what? |
14049 | Paradise Street? 14049 Perhaps you remember seeing me? |
14049 | Say? 14049 Shall I tell you why? |
14049 | Shall you be away long, do you suppose? |
14049 | So she is a friend of Hartley''s? |
14049 | So thou art back, Mountain of Wisdom? |
14049 | So thou hast news for me, unclean one? 14049 So thy devils have not yet caught thee and scalded thee with oil, or burned thee in quicklime?" |
14049 | That means that you have cleared Heath? |
14049 | That was early on the morning of July the twenty- ninth? |
14049 | That was what she said? |
14049 | The Padré Sahib is out? |
14049 | Then that was July the twenty- ninth? |
14049 | There is nothing the matter with you, is there, Joicey? |
14049 | Thou art certain of this? |
14049 | Thy friend is under the hand of devils? |
14049 | Up to your mark, Hartley, or my own mark, or someone else''s mark? 14049 Was he not my friend, this monster of infamy?" |
14049 | Was he with anyone when you saw him? |
14049 | Was it in the nature of the evil works of the bad man, thy friend? |
14049 | Was it the twenty- ninth? |
14049 | Was the thief taken, O son of a Prophet? |
14049 | Well,he said brusquely,"what''s this about Rydal?" |
14049 | What am I to do with these things? |
14049 | What are you pondering about, Mr. Hartley? 14049 What are you talking about?" |
14049 | What business? |
14049 | What can I do for you? |
14049 | What did you say? |
14049 | What evening? 14049 What happened then?" |
14049 | What has come over you, Joicey; are you ill? |
14049 | What has he been doing? |
14049 | What have you got? 14049 What inquiries have you made?" |
14049 | What is it, Leh Shin? |
14049 | What is my life or my reputation set against the value of one living soul? 14049 What is thy message?" |
14049 | What mark? |
14049 | What now, Leh Shin? |
14049 | What of thine own house by the river? |
14049 | What saidst thou? |
14049 | What were we saying? |
14049 | What''s the matter, Joicey? |
14049 | Where did you spring from, Hartley? |
14049 | Where is he? |
14049 | Where is my lacquer bowl, Mhtoon Pah? |
14049 | Where shall I find Leh Shin? |
14049 | Which shop? |
14049 | Whither doth he send thee, unclean one? |
14049 | Who can tell? |
14049 | Who fries the mud fish when he may eat roast duck? |
14049 | Who is going to call me? |
14049 | Who saw Absalom last? |
14049 | Who wants me? |
14049 | Who wants me? |
14049 | Who was the man? |
14049 | Whoever I saw him with? |
14049 | Why do you ask? |
14049 | Why not? |
14049 | Why should you be? 14049 Why should you say that I helped Rydal?" |
14049 | Why the devil did n''t you raise the alarm? |
14049 | Why the devil is he talking like this and looking like this? |
14049 | Will he, I wonder? |
14049 | Will you come and dine with us one night? |
14049 | Will you pledge me your solemn word to keep this knowledge from anyone who asks? |
14049 | Wise one, where are the jewels stolen by thy Master? |
14049 | Wo n''t you come, too, Hartley? |
14049 | Would you like a little stroll in the garden? |
14049 | Wouldst thou ruin all at the end? 14049 You ask me_ that_, you devil?" |
14049 | You attach no importance to him? |
14049 | You can prove what you say, I suppose,said Hartley, speaking to Leh Shin,"and satisfy me that the boy Absalom was not here, and did not come here?" |
14049 | You said that you had just finished a job? |
14049 | You said that, Atkins? |
14049 | You saw the Manager, and got what you wanted? |
14049 | You''ll do that, Coryndon? |
14049 | You''re Hartley''s globe- trotting acquaintance, are n''t you? 14049 You''re going to the Club, I suppose?" |
14049 | You_ must_ have suspicions? |
14049 | _ Inshallah, Huzoor_,murmured Shiraz, bowing his head,"what is the will of the Master?" |
14049 | _ Seem_ to suppose,_ Thakin_? |
14049 | Are you in any trouble yourself?" |
14049 | Are you seeing ghosts or moon spirits? |
14049 | But what do you mean, Mhtoon Pah?" |
14049 | But where has Absalom gone to?" |
14049 | By the way, do you think that Mr. Heath is quite well himself?" |
14049 | Can I be sure that it is not in a dream that the Master speaks again?" |
14049 | Could I go alone?" |
14049 | Could you tell me the name, or would it be wrong of you?" |
14049 | Did I say anything? |
14049 | Did Mr. Heath tell you that he had seen me?" |
14049 | Did he take my lacquer bowl with him?" |
14049 | Did you see Absalom again?" |
14049 | Did you, for instance, see the Christian boy, Absalom, Mhtoon Pah''s assistant?" |
14049 | Do you know each other--?" |
14049 | Do you sell lacquer in this shop?" |
14049 | Does Hartley suspect you? |
14049 | Does he question you? |
14049 | Does he try to wring admissions out of you?" |
14049 | Has he, too, been interrogated?" |
14049 | Hast thou these things, Leh Shin?" |
14049 | Have I not the tale of thy years written in the book of my mind?" |
14049 | Have you seen the assistant of Leh Shin?" |
14049 | He was in evening dress, and he explained that he had been detained owing to his hostess having been taken suddenly ill."Where is Rydal himself?" |
14049 | Heath?" |
14049 | Heath?" |
14049 | Heath?" |
14049 | Honestly, do n''t you really believe that I had a hand in putting him out of the way?" |
14049 | I got to the appointed place by the river just after twilight had come on--""Were you seen by anyone?" |
14049 | I have already told one man to- day that he was going mad; are you dreaming, man? |
14049 | I hope that question does n''t mean that you are professionally interested in his past?" |
14049 | I hope you did n''t want one, Hartley? |
14049 | I''ve never known Mrs. Wilder very well, but she is an interesting woman; do n''t you think so, Heath?" |
14049 | It gives you some idea of his percentage on sales, what?" |
14049 | Jewels, didst thou say? |
14049 | Joicey sprang up and called out hoarsely:"Who is it?" |
14049 | Mr. Heath, I mean?" |
14049 | No one had seen me actually with Rydal--""You are quite clear on that point? |
14049 | Not even the other person you alluded to?" |
14049 | Shall we go back into the house?" |
14049 | Shall we go in?" |
14049 | That does n''t give you much clue, does it?" |
14049 | Thou art sure that lacquer is accursed to thine eyes, Leh Shin? |
14049 | What link could bind life with life, when lives were divided by such yawning gulfs of space and class and race? |
14049 | What reason have you for imagining that there has been foul play?" |
14049 | What the devil does Hartley want to know?" |
14049 | Where hast thou hidden the body of the boy who was the light of mine eyes, who was ever eager and honest in business?" |
14049 | Who saw the boy besides yourself?" |
14049 | Why did n''t you shout?" |
14049 | Will you pardon me when you consider my motive? |
14049 | Will you tell me exactly whom you saw on your way to the river house?" |
14049 | Wo n''t do, d''you hear?" |
14049 | XIX IN WHICH LEH SHIN WHISPERS A STORY INTO THE EAR OF SHIRAZ, THE PUNJABI; THE BURDEN OF WHICH IS:"HAVE I FOUND THEE, O MINE ENEMY?" |
14049 | You are alone?" |
14049 | You thought I could tell you something about poor Mr. Heath, did n''t you? |
14049 | You would not do that willingly, I think?" |
14049 | You, too, saw Absalom, and spoke to him?" |
18242 | Cornel, cornel, green and red Flooring for the forest wide, Whither down the ways of dread Went my starry- eyed? |
18242 | Good,the days are chorusing,"shall triumph;"Though the far- off morrows whisper,"When?" |
18242 | Mortal, mortal, is there found Any fruitage half so fair In the dim world underground As there grows in air? |
18242 | Mortal, mortal, overfond, How come you at all to know There be any joys beyond Blisses here and now? |
18242 | Mortal, mortal, what would you With that beauty once was yours? 18242 With the ends of the earth for thy garden now, What solace and what reward hast thou?" |
18242 | ''Drift and chartless? |
18242 | ), Climbing into treble thin and clear, Past the silence, change to waves of color, We must say, when eye takes place of ear? |
18242 | An anarchist, say some; But tush, say I, When a man''s heart is plumb, Can his life be awry? |
18242 | And often when the autumn noons are still, By swale and hill I see their gipsy signs, Trespassing somewhere on my border lines; With what designs? |
18242 | And yet how can I know''T is not a happy Ariel masking so In mocking woe? |
18242 | Are not crickets and all field- wise creatures Brahmins of the universal grass? |
18242 | Can it be that, hurried or tired out, The hand of the juggler shook? |
18242 | Can it be, this thing like a shred Of the firmament torn away, Is a boarded train that Death and his crew Consorted to waylay? |
18242 | Deed and accident alike unending By eternal consequence of cause? |
18242 | Demonish, toiling, grim, In the ruddy furnace flare, While the Driver fingers the throttle- bar, Who stands at his elbow there? |
18242 | Did a flock of wild geese honk As they cleared the hill? |
18242 | Did a renegade''s soul get free On a wail of the storm? |
18242 | Did the Master try the taut string merely, Give a touch, and she must throb to time? |
18242 | Did the pipes, at"Bonny Dundee,"Bid regiments form? |
18242 | Did your fellows all drive under In the maelstrom of the sun, While you only, for a wonder, Rode the wash you could not shun? |
18242 | Ends? |
18242 | His rooms? |
18242 | How escape we then, the rainbow''s brothers, Endless being with each blade and sod? |
18242 | How know the true master? |
18242 | How shall half- way judge of journey done? |
18242 | II O Heart, dear Heart, in this fair house Why hast thou wearied and grown tired, Between a morning and a night, Of all thy soul desired? |
18242 | Ice on every shroud and eyelet, Rocking in the windy trough? |
18242 | Into the twilight dun, Blue moth and dragon- fly Adventuring alone,-- Shall be more brave than I? |
18242 | Is it the hollow voice of the census- taker Time In his old idle round from door to door? |
18242 | It answers,"Where?" |
18242 | Know you not the word unsaid Is the flower of speech?" |
18242 | Laded deep and rolling hard? |
18242 | Mum did I say? |
18242 | Never guessed, outworn and heartless, There was land so close aboard? |
18242 | Or only a bittern cronk, Then all was still? |
18242 | Or only the north wind, when all the leaves are thinned, Come at last with his moan to my door? |
18242 | Say I let you, spite of all endeavor, Mar some nocturne by a single note; Is there immortality of discord In your failure to preserve the rote? |
18242 | Shall I then discard my simpler joys? |
18242 | Shall the grasshopper repress his drumbeats For small envy of the kingbird''s chime? |
18242 | Shall the grub deny himself the rose- leaf That he may be moth before his time? |
18242 | Shall this germ and protoplast of being Rest mid- life and say his race is run? |
18242 | The landlord? |
18242 | Tiny twin- flowers, what are they but fancies, Subtler than a field- lark can express? |
18242 | Was ever there such a sight in the world? |
18242 | Was it a night stampede Of a thousand head? |
18242 | Was it the cry Of a rider riding the night Into ashes and dawn, With news in his nostrils and fright Where his hoof- beats had gone? |
18242 | Was it the shuffle of feet I heard go by, With muffled drums in the street? |
18242 | Was that the wind then trying to provoke His brothers in their blessed sleep?" |
18242 | Waves of sound( Is this your thought, Amati? |
18242 | We are travelling safe and warm, With our little baggage of cares; Why tease the peril that yet would come Unbidden and unawares? |
18242 | What can put such fancies in your head? |
18242 | What is good? |
18242 | What is good? |
18242 | What tide current struck you hither, Beating up the storm of years? |
18242 | What, thou too here, Thou haunting whisperer? |
18242 | Where are those who stood to weather These uncharted gulfs of tears? |
18242 | Where do you guess he learned the trick To hold us gaping here, Till our minds in the spell of his maze almost Have forgotten the time of year? |
18242 | Yet why be disposed to twit A fellow who does such wonderful things With the merest lack of wit? |
18242 | You''ve seen the sea? |
18242 | [ Illustration]_ Exit Anima_"Hospes comesque corporis, Quae nunc abitis in loca?" |
18242 | _ Fancy''s Fool_"Cornel, cornel, green and white, Spreading on the forest floor, Whither went my lost delight Through the silent door?" |
16076 | To a Preacher,which runs as follows:"In harmony with Nature? |
16076 | While you do not know life,replied he,"how can you know about death? |
16076 | ''"[ 19][ Footnote 19:_ Can the Church Survive_? |
16076 | And does Jesus mean very much to us if He is only"Jesus"? |
16076 | And what is it that makes the futility of so much present preaching? |
16076 | And what is the religious consciousness? |
16076 | And why is the reformatory replacing the prison? |
16076 | And, if we do, would we dare to assert it, come out from the world and live for it, in the midst of the paganism of this moment? |
16076 | Are we going to be afraid to keep its fires burning? |
16076 | Because He calls us away from ourselves? |
16076 | Because He is something other than us? |
16076 | But can worship be taught? |
16076 | But did that subtle intellect suffice? |
16076 | But does right knowing in itself suffice to insure right doing? |
16076 | But how much has our average non- liturgical service to offer to their critically trained perceptions? |
16076 | But how shall the connection be made? |
16076 | But is this what men have passionately adored in Jesus? |
16076 | But where are we turning for our remedy? |
16076 | But why is the heart subdued, the mind elevated, the will made tractable by Him? |
16076 | By the ancient law that the only effectual appeal is to might and that opportunity therefore justifies the deed? |
16076 | By the humane law, some objective standard of common rights and inclusive justice? |
16076 | By the unwritten law of heaven? |
16076 | By what law, admitting many exceptions, are men on the whole trying to change this situation at once indecent and impious? |
16076 | By what law, depending upon what sort of power, is each seeking its respective ends? |
16076 | By what power can he go through with this experience we have just been relating and find his whole self in a whole world? |
16076 | Can this energy be found without subtracting energy from some other sphere?" |
16076 | Can we afford to do that? |
16076 | Do we dare define it? |
16076 | Does not its_ real politik_ make the philosophical naturalism of Spencer and Haeckel seem like child''s play? |
16076 | Does the world''s sin and pain and weakness come and empty itself into the broad current of these devout lives? |
16076 | First, by which of these three laws of human development, religious, humanistic, naturalistic, has it been largely governed? |
16076 | For between the two, associated capital and associated labor, what is there to choose today? |
16076 | For upon what law, natural, human, divine, has this new empire been founded? |
16076 | For what is a doctrine? |
16076 | For what is a dogma? |
16076 | For what is it that looks out from the eyes of religious humanity? |
16076 | Has it worked to clarify and solidify the essence of the religious position? |
16076 | Has love of Him been self- love? |
16076 | Has not the time arrived when, if we are to find ourselves again in the world, we should ask, What is this religion in which we believe? |
16076 | Has not the trouble with most of our political and moral reform been that we have had a passion for it but very little science of it? |
16076 | Has not your school held the civilized world, both old and new alike, in the hollow of their hand for two long generations past? |
16076 | He chafes at the limitations of time and space? |
16076 | How are we, being guilty, to find Him? |
16076 | How can anyone give unity to such a prospect? |
16076 | How can he dare to try it? |
16076 | How can he gain power to achieve it? |
16076 | How can we know the ways of godliness if we take God Himself for granted? |
16076 | How has this renewal of naturalism affected the church and Christian preaching? |
16076 | How is he to bridge the gulf? |
16076 | How shall the unfaith which the mystery, the suffering, the evil of the world induce be overcome? |
16076 | How then shall we become alive again? |
16076 | In what does scientific and emotional naturalism issue, then? |
16076 | In what lies the essence of the leadership of Jesus? |
16076 | Inequality of endowment? |
16076 | Is it any wonder then that we can not compete with the state or the world for the loyalty of men and women? |
16076 | Is it not clear, then, that preaching must deal again, never more indeed than now, with the religion which offers a redemption from sin? |
16076 | Is it not worth while to remember that the great religious leaders have generally ignored contemporary social problems? |
16076 | Is it quite clear that their influence has been so much more potent than the gospel of the various churches? |
16076 | Is it the curate of souls, patient shepherd of the silly sheep? |
16076 | Is it the professional ecclesiastic, backed with the authority and prestige of a venerable organization? |
16076 | Is it the theologian, the administrator, the prophet-- who? |
16076 | Is it to a disinterested and even- handed justice, the high legalism of the Golden Rule, which would be the humanist''s way? |
16076 | Is it to exalt human nature? |
16076 | Is it true that without the loaves and the fishes we can do nothing? |
16076 | Is not the devotee, like the poet or the lover or any other genius, born and not made? |
16076 | Is not this the vision which we need? |
16076 | Is there anything in this world sufficient now for the widow, the orphan, the cripple, the starving, the disillusioned and the desperate? |
16076 | Is this thy body''s end? |
16076 | Is this why He has become the sanctuary of humanity? |
16076 | It pays no attention, except to ridicule them, to the problems that vex high and serious souls: What is right and wrong? |
16076 | Lives that have seemed strong and fair go down every day, do they not, and shock us for a moment with their irremediable catastrophe? |
16076 | Now, if all this is true, what is the religious preaching of Jesus, what aspect of His person meets the spiritual need? |
16076 | Or are we''created''in Him? |
16076 | Or has preaching declined and become neutralized in religious quality under it? |
16076 | Or he whispers,"Whither shall I go from Thy spirit, Or whither shall I flee from Thy presence? |
16076 | Or is it to the old law of aggression and might transferring the gain thereof from the present exploiters to the recently exploited? |
16076 | Our immediate question is, Who, on the whole, is the most needed figure in the ministry today? |
16076 | Rebellion, pride? |
16076 | Secondly, by what law are men now attempting to solve its present difficulties? |
16076 | Shall we ever reach His level, become as divine as He, or does He have part in the absolute and infinite? |
16076 | Shall worms, inheritors of this excess, Eat up thy charge? |
16076 | So he cries,"Wretched man that I am, what shall I do to be saved?" |
16076 | So what is the religious passion? |
16076 | Sometimes we are constrained to ask ourselves, How can the heart of man go so undismayed through the waste places of the world? |
16076 | The law of humanism, of Confucius and Buddha and Epictetus and Aurelius? |
16076 | The law of humanism? |
16076 | The law of naked individualism; of might; force; cunning? |
16076 | The law of the jungle? |
16076 | The unwritten law of heaven? |
16076 | The unwritten law of heaven? |
16076 | Then comes the final question: How are we, being helpless, to reach Him? |
16076 | They know well that Nature does not exist by our law; that we neither control nor understand it; is it not our friend? |
16076 | To borrow the expressive language of Paul, was He''created''in us? |
16076 | We need not ask with Faust,"Where is that place which men call''Hell''?" |
16076 | What Europe wants to know is why and for what purpose this holocaust-- is there anything beyond, was there anything before it? |
16076 | What are we reading in the public prints and hearing from platform and stage? |
16076 | What can we do, then, better for an age of paganism than to cultivate this transcendent consciousness? |
16076 | What gives us the key to her dualism? |
16076 | What has the one to do with the other? |
16076 | What is He like? |
16076 | What is His power to lift and how long may it last? |
16076 | What is holy and what is profane? |
16076 | What is the code that made the deadly rivalry of mounting armaments between army and army, navy and navy, of the Europe before 1914? |
16076 | What is the end for us? |
16076 | What is the real nature of its resources? |
16076 | What is the religious law, then? |
16076 | What is the use of preaching social service to the almost total neglect of setting forth the intellectual and emotional concept of the servant? |
16076 | What is ugly and beautiful? |
16076 | What justifies a pseudo- civilization which permits such tragic inequality of fortune? |
16076 | What justifies it, then? |
16076 | What law produced and justifies such a society? |
16076 | What men are chiefly asking of life at this moment is not, What ought we to do? |
16076 | What shall enable us to do that mystic thing, come back to God? |
16076 | What the real nature of its remedies? |
16076 | What was the worst thing about the war? |
16076 | What, as President Tucker asks, is this power which shall make"maybe"into"is"for us? |
16076 | What, then, has been the final effect of humanism upon preaching? |
16076 | What, then, has humanism done to preaching? |
16076 | When shall I come and appear before God?" |
16076 | Who can forget Othello''s soliloquy as he prepares to darken his marriage chamber before the murder of his wife? |
16076 | Who could state the mingling of desire and dread with which men strive after, and hide from, such a God? |
16076 | Who does not love to lie, in those slow- waning days upon the sands which hold within their golden cup the murmuring and dreaming sea? |
16076 | Who else, indeed, has the words of Eternal Life? |
16076 | Who need be surprised at the restlessness, the fluidity, the elusiveness of the Protestant laity? |
16076 | Who would deny that the revival of intellectual authority and leadership in matters of religion is terribly needed in our day? |
16076 | Whoever needed to explain to a company of grown men and women what the cry of the soul for its release from passion is? |
16076 | Why are we surprised that the world is passing us by? |
16076 | Why do we answer the great invitation,"Come unto me"? |
16076 | Why do we think that there is Something which perpetually beckons to us through her, makes awful signs of an intimate and significant relationship? |
16076 | Why keep on insisting upon being good if our hearers have never been carefully instructed in the nature and the sanctions of goodness? |
16076 | Why so large cost, having so short a lease, Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend? |
16076 | Why this ever failing, but never ending struggle against unseen odds to grasp and understand and live with the Divine? |
16076 | back to home? |
16076 | but the deeper question, What is there we can believe? |
16076 | could it make the scholar into the saint? |
14499 | Are you making a staircase to lead to something, taking it for a mansion, which you know not and have never seen? |
14499 | But, at least, thou knowest me, my conduct, my mind, my wisdom, my life, my salvation( i.e., thou knowest me as well as I know myself)? |
14499 | Hast thou known all the Buddhas that will be? |
14499 | How,they ask,"if you could not succeed in becoming a Buddha by asceticism, can we suppose that you become one by indulgence?" |
14499 | Thou seest that thou knowest not the venerable Buddhas of the past and of the future; why, then, are thy words so grand and bold? |
14499 | Through whose wisdom, through whose design do they come? |
14499 | What is discontent, and what is pleasure? 14499 Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the gods?" |
14499 | [ 109] Husbands or brothers or children of Dawn, the Horsemen are also S[=u]ry[=a]''s husbands, and she is the sun''s daughter( Dawn?) 14499 ''A man builds a staircase, and the people ask,Do you know where is the mansion to which this staircase leads?" |
14499 | ''Can there then be likeness between the Brahmans and Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | ''Has he self- mastery?'' |
14499 | ''How am I to keep thee?'' |
14499 | ''How my daughter, glorious woman?'' |
14499 | ''Is his mind depraved or pure?'' |
14499 | ''Is his mind full of anger or free from anger? |
14499 | ''Or did any one of their ancestors ever see Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | ''Unwisely does one consider:"Have I existed in ages past... shall I exist in ages yet to be, do I exist at all, am I, how am I? |
14499 | ''Well, did the most ancient seers ever say that they knew where is Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | ''What wilt thou save me from?'' |
14499 | ''Will they then after death become united to Brahm[=a] who is not at all like them?'' |
14499 | ''[ 47] It is screened by an Orphic philosophy, for is not Nature or Illusion the female side of the Divine Male? |
14499 | ( 19) 179# Vishnu#( vi[s.][n.]u like jishnu, ji[s.][n.]u, vi,''fly,''the heavenly bird? |
14499 | ), or_''whom? |
14499 | ); to the Derbiker( around Meru? |
14499 | 1- 9, thus translated by Müller: What then now? |
14499 | 10:"Who gives ten cows for my Indra? |
14499 | 13? |
14499 | 16 of 1892, 1893; epic language, Franke, Was ist Sanskrit? |
14499 | 20); he becomes identical(''how can one know the knower?'' |
14499 | 259; Müller,_ India, What Can It Teach Us_? |
14499 | 28:"Who knows man''s morrow? |
14499 | 4); or must the bull be_ soma_? |
14499 | Across air- spaces gazes he, the eagle, Who moves in secret, th''Asura,[25] well- guiding, Where is( bright) S[=u]rya now? |
14499 | Again, does Buddhism lose in the comparison from an intellectual point of view when set beside the mazy gropings of the Upanishads? |
14499 | Again, what use to mortify the flesh? |
14499 | Against the priests''novel and unjustifiable claim Y[=a]jñavalkya exclaims:''How can people have faith in this? |
14499 | An account of this Renaissance, as he calls it, will be found in Müller''s_ India, What Can It Teach Us_? |
14499 | And through which sky is now his ray extending? |
14499 | And what are these duties? |
14499 | And what is this? |
14499 | And why? |
14499 | Buddha answers:''Let us see; has any one of these Brahmans ever seen Brahm[=a]?'' |
14499 | But in what, from a wider point of view, lies the importance of the study of Hindu religions? |
14499 | But is it likely that a race would have come from the Northeast and another from the Northwest, and both have the same name? |
14499 | But which is truer? |
14499 | Can any one question that Vivasvant the''wide gleaming''is sun or bright sky, as he is represented in the Avesta and Rig Veda? |
14499 | Can this god,''most august of Vedic deities,''as Bergaigne and others have called him, have belonged as such to the earliest stratum of Aryan belief? |
14499 | Come, hast thou, then, known all the Buddhas that were?" |
14499 | Daksha may, perhaps, be the''clever,''''strong''one([ Greek: dexios]), abstract Strength; as another name of the sun(?). |
14499 | Did he expect to escape age, sickness, death, in this life by that means? |
14499 | Do they all lead to union with Brahm[=a]? |
14499 | Do they give up polytheism; are they inclined to do so, or are they taught to do so? |
14499 | Does he go to destruction like a cloud that is rent, failing on the path that leads to_ brahma_? |
14499 | Every one seizes his neighbor and asks,''Has it boiled?'' |
14499 | First, if_ brahma_ is a personal god, which of the gods is he, this personal All- spirit? |
14499 | For what hath man of all his labor and of the vexation of his heart, wherein he hath laboured under the sun? |
14499 | From an Aryan point of view how much weight is to be placed on comparisons of the formulae in the Atharvan of India with those of other Aryan nations? |
14499 | Hast thou not made horse- sacrifices, the_ r[=a]jas[=u]ya_-sacrifice, sacrifices of every sort(_ pu[n.][d.]arika,[84] gosava_)? |
14499 | Hast thou not worshipped with salutation and honored the priests, gods, and manes? |
14499 | Have I not told thee already that we must divide ourselves from all that is nearest and dearest? |
14499 | He established earth and heaven-- to what god shall we offer sacrifice? |
14499 | He too had already answered negatively the question Is life worth living? |
14499 | His sister is his mistress, and his mother is his wife( Dawn and Night?) |
14499 | How are these to be reconciled with this hymn? |
14499 | How can it be possible that a being born to die should not die? |
14499 | How can one know him through whom he knows this all, how can he know the knower( as something different)? |
14499 | How could it send forth jubilant disciples to preach the gospel of joy? |
14499 | How could such a religion inspire enthusiasm? |
14499 | How did he originate? |
14499 | How did such gods obtain their supremacy? |
14499 | How else could this distress have come upon my wife? |
14499 | How much of this is new? |
14499 | In Europe: does the soul wait for the Last Day, or get to heaven immediately? |
14499 | In that case, it may be asked, why not begin the history of Hindu religion with the Atharvan, rather than with the Rig Veda? |
14499 | In what does it consist? |
14499 | Is his mind full of malice or free from malice?'' |
14499 | Is it necessarily imported from Christianity? |
14499 | Is there not here perhaps a little irony? |
14499 | Is there, then, nothing with which to bridge this gulf? |
14499 | Is this poem of a"singularly refined character,"or"preëminently sacerdotal"in appearance? |
14499 | Is_ m[=a]s_ or_ candramas_( moon) a power of strength, a great god? |
14499 | It is therefore( perhaps with Bhaga?) |
14499 | It remains only to ask from which side is the borrowing? |
14499 | Mitra and Varuna met her, and said:''Who art thou?'' |
14499 | Now what think you, is Brahm[=a] in possession of wives and wealth?'' |
14499 | On the other hand, who will deny that in India certain mythological figures are eoian or solar in origin? |
14499 | On what errand of yours are you going, in heaven, not on earth? |
14499 | Or is Mr. Lang ignorant that the god Yima became Jemshid, and that Feridun is only the god Trita? |
14499 | Others say''not- being alone''... but how could being be born of not- being? |
14499 | Possibly Hermes as boundary- god may be connected with the Hermes that conducts souls; or is it simply as thief- god that he guards from theft? |
14499 | QUERY: Is the hymn addressed to the plant as it is pressed out into the pails, or to the moon? |
14499 | Said Manu:''Who art thou?'' |
14499 | The corresponding Power is Cerus in Cerus- Creator( Kronos? |
14499 | The friend is he of waters; First- born and holy,--where was he created, And whence arose he? |
14499 | The gods have mystic names, and these''who will dare to speak?'' |
14499 | The knight asks"What is_ brahma_, the Supreme Spirit, the supreme being, the supreme sacrifice?" |
14499 | The knight objects, not yet knowing that Krishna is the All- god:"How did''st thou declare it first? |
14499 | The mystery of these gods''origin puzzles the seer:"Which was first and which came later, how were they begotten, who knows, O ye wise seers? |
14499 | The native eras are discussed by Cunningham, Book of Indian Eras; and in Müller''s India, What Can It Teach Us? |
14499 | The parents of Up[=a]li thought to themselves:"What shalt we teach Up[=a]li that he may earn his living? |
14499 | The philosophers are pantheists, but what of the vulgar? |
14499 | The sages say to Vishnu:"All men worship thee; to whom dost thou offer worship?" |
14499 | Their sacra( totems?) |
14499 | Then said M[=a]itrey[=i]:''Lord, if this whole earth filled with wealth were mine, how then? |
14499 | Then said M[=a]itrey[=i]:''With what I can not be immortal, what can I do with that? |
14499 | Then the Blessed One called the brethren and said:"Where then, brethren, is[= A]nanda?" |
14499 | This is a being, whence is it come, whither will it go?" |
14499 | This one, pressing surely through the knotty( sieve?) |
14499 | Thou art thine own friend; why longest thou for a friend beyond thyself?... |
14499 | To this Upas[=i]va replies:"But has he only disappeared, or does he not exist, or is he only free from sickness?" |
14499 | To whom shall we give praises?'' |
14499 | Unconnected, unsupported, downward extending, why does not this( god) fall down? |
14499 | Varuna, despite phonetic difficulties, probably is Ouranos; but Asura( Asen?) |
14499 | Vishnu( may be the epithet of Indra in I.61.7) means winner(? |
14499 | Was it then a new morality, a new ethical code, that thus inspired them? |
14499 | Was it water, deep darkness? |
14499 | What are the necessary equipment of a Long Island witch? |
14499 | What avails it to collect a heap of books? |
14499 | What becomes of them that die ignorant of the ego? |
14499 | What does not close its eye when asleep, what does not move when it is born, what has no heart, what increases by moving? |
14499 | What hid( it)? |
14499 | What influence has she had upon Western cults and beliefs? |
14499 | What is he in reality? |
14499 | What is one to understand from this? |
14499 | What is the ego? |
14499 | What may again be put before( him) By which his court may be seen? |
14499 | What now is the relation of Vishnu- Krishna to the other divinities? |
14499 | What part in the pantheon is played by the moon when it is called by its natural name( not by the priestly name,_ soma_)? |
14499 | What reward does God get that he sends happiness to this sinful man( thy oppressor)? |
14499 | What then becomes of the virtue of a man who enters the absolute_ brahma,_ and descends no more? |
14499 | What then has Gautama done from the point of view of the Brahman? |
14499 | What to the Buddhist is the spirit, the soul of man? |
14499 | What will be the result of proselytizing zeal among these variegated masses? |
14499 | What word may be spoken by the mouth, Which having heard he may bestow love? |
14499 | What, then, is the religious belief and the moral position of the Hindu law- books? |
14499 | What, then, is the sacrifice? |
14499 | When had ever the moon the power to start the sun? |
14499 | When will ye take us as a dear father takes his son by both hands, O ye gods, for whom the sacred grass has been trimmed? |
14499 | When, however, pantheism, nay, even Vishnuism, or still more, Krishnaism, was an accepted fact upon what, then, was the wisdom of the priest expended? |
14499 | Where all delights? |
14499 | Where and in the protection of what? |
14499 | Where are blessings? |
14499 | Where are your cows sporting? |
14499 | Where are your newest favors, O Maruts? |
14499 | Where now? |
14499 | Which accords more with the facts as they are collected from a wider field? |
14499 | Which of these gives highest bliss? |
14499 | Who forgives sins? |
14499 | Who gives wealth? |
14499 | Who helps in war? |
14499 | Who is it, O Maruts, ye that have lightning- spears, that impels you within? |
14499 | Who knoweth the spirit of man whether it goeth upward? |
14499 | Who sends rain? |
14499 | Who weds Dawn? |
14499 | Who, sooth, are the gleaming related heroes, the glory of Rudra, on beauteous chargers? |
14499 | Whom, awful, they( yet) ask about:''where is he?'' |
14499 | Why is it that well- informed Vedic scholars differ so widely in regard to the ritualistic share in the making of the Veda? |
14499 | Why is''horse- grass''used in the sacrifice? |
14499 | Why should Gautama have so given himself to Yoga discipline? |
14499 | Why then does one find Çiva invoked by philosophy? |
14499 | Why? |
14499 | With Varuna stands Mitra, and besides this pair are found''the true friend''Aryaman, Savitar, Bhaga, and, later, Indra, as sun(?). |
14499 | With what nature goes he, who knows( literally,''who has seen'')? |
14499 | Without this name may one ascribe to India what is found in Iran? |
14499 | Would not this be foolish talk?... |
14499 | Yet, it may be said, why could not a poetic hymn have been written in a ritualistic environment? |
14499 | [ 11] What is the speech which the judge on the bench is ordered to repeat to the witnesses? |
14499 | [ 14] But, again, for a further question here presents itself, how much in India to- day is Aryan? |
14499 | [ 19] But what is the ego, spirit or self(_[= a]tm[=a]_)? |
14499 | [ 22] The name of the fire- priest,_ brahman_= fla(g)men(? |
14499 | [ 28] What is the reward for knowing this? |
14499 | [ Footnote 17: The word is_ a[.m]sala_, strong, or''from the shoulder''(?). |
14499 | [ Footnote 34: He is the''son of freeing,''from darkness? |
14499 | [ Footnote 37: Sun- worship( Iranian?) |
14499 | [ Footnote 45: One comparatively new god deserves a passing mention, Dharma''s son, K[=a]ma, the( Grecian?) |
14499 | [ Footnote 51: At Pushkara is Brahm[=a]''s only(?) |
14499 | and he should say,"I know not,"and the people should say,"Whom you know not, neither have seen, her you love and long for?" |
14499 | and he should say,"No"; and the people should say,"What is her name, is she tall or short, in what place does she live?" |
14499 | and he should say,"Yes,"--would not that be foolish? |
14499 | as the dull Br[=a]hmanas interpreted that verse of the Rig Veda which asks''to whom( which, as) god shall we offer sacrifice?'' |
14499 | should I be immortal by reason of this wealth?'' |
14499 | there is a passage like the great Ka hymn of the Rig Veda,''whom as god shall one worship?'' |
14499 | they jeered,"Did you not maintain that all was a mere illusion? |
14499 | this great spirit( Manabozho,_ mana_ is Manu?) |
14499 | who understands it? |
19379 | ''And if it''s the four thousand and thirty- two guns?'' |
19379 | ''Did you fire back?'' |
19379 | ''Where''ve you been, padre? |
19379 | And he was returned question for question, with''Why do you keep laughing at me with those big, blue eyes?'' |
19379 | As a Marian martyr observed to an enthusiast who thrust a blazing furze- bush into his face,''Friend, have I not harm enough? |
19379 | But who was going to connect the rare reference to''Midlanders''with the Leicestershires? |
19379 | Did he not wear a medal for those days? |
19379 | Fowke asked the wastes in a soaring falsetto,''Why do the heathen rage?'' |
19379 | General Davies came up and asked,''Have the Leicesters taken any prisoners?'' |
19379 | Has the padre put in services?'' |
19379 | How can the nerves and trembling thought bear up? |
19379 | I asked Knott the question of questions,''What are our casualties?'' |
19379 | Much later, when I had managed to get transport to push him away, I asked him,''Got your stick, G.A.?'' |
19379 | The old question was raised, Did the Turk dig graves beforehand, against an action, to hide his losses? |
19379 | Then some one asked,''But what did you hear about our casualties?'' |
19379 | This feeling was shared, for when the staff- captain and signalling- officer joined us, the latter asked,''Is n''t this spot a bit unhealthy, sir?'' |
19379 | What need of that?'' |
19379 | What were your casualties?'' |
19379 | What''s the news?'' |
19379 | Why should John lie doggo in this fashion? |
15250 | And what will she be like? |
15250 | And why must you be going away like this? |
15250 | Are men of good family and talents wanting in my kingdom? 15250 Be quick,"urged the Immortal;"you have been commanded to return as soon as possible; why do you hesitate as if you were a young girl?" |
15250 | But how,said Chin Hung,"was he to be found in this immense emptiness?" |
15250 | But how,said the Chief,"can I possibly marry my daughter to a dog?" |
15250 | But,replied the T''ien- shih,"was it not your Majesty who ordered me under pain of death to exterminate the authors of this pandemonium?" |
15250 | Has he had the smallpox? |
15250 | Have I not power enough to be the God of Heaven? |
15250 | How can I cross? |
15250 | How could I, a poor useless wretch,replied Ch''un- yü,"have ever aspired to such honour?" |
15250 | How far off is this island? |
15250 | How is it that I find myself in this place? 15250 How is that?" |
15250 | I gave him back my substance; why did he burn my temple and smash up my image? |
15250 | I gave him back the substance I received from him; why did he come with violence to break up my image? 15250 I have ever treasured the recollection in my heart; how could I possibly forget it?" |
15250 | If you are of a cultured family, why did you become a priest? |
15250 | Is it because I am poor? |
15250 | Is not this my home? 15250 Since my husband is dead, what can they say?" |
15250 | Then where can I procure this remedy? |
15250 | Well,replied the dog,"will you agree to her marrying me if I change myself into a man?" |
15250 | Well,said Miao Shan to her father,"will you now force me to marry and prevent my devoting myself to the attainment of perfection?" |
15250 | What Immortal,she asked,"can have been so charitable as to sacrifice a hand and eye for the King''s benefit?" |
15250 | What are you saying? |
15250 | What description did he give? |
15250 | What else can they do? |
15250 | What have you been doing? |
15250 | What is the meaning of these verses? |
15250 | What is the name of this spirit? |
15250 | What is this cursed place where I am now? |
15250 | What is your name? |
15250 | What obnoxious creature is this that you have brought into the world? |
15250 | What power have your masters? |
15250 | What qualifications have you? |
15250 | What remedy is there, and how am I to protect the people? |
15250 | What shall I do? |
15250 | What special degree of ability have you attained during your course of perfection? |
15250 | What was the face of the saintly person like who gave you the remedy? |
15250 | What way, and where is it? |
15250 | What, after all, is this remedy that I must have in order to be cured? |
15250 | When you removed her hands and eyes did she seem to suffer? |
15250 | Where are these people going? |
15250 | Where are you going? |
15250 | Where is Hsiang Shan, and how far from here? |
15250 | Where is the sky? |
15250 | Where is the source of the salt water? |
15250 | Where is this bird to be found? |
15250 | Where will you go for aid? |
15250 | Whither away, nun? |
15250 | Who am I,asked Miao Shan,"that you should deign to take the trouble to show me such respect?" |
15250 | Who are you? |
15250 | Who are you? |
15250 | Who are you? |
15250 | Who but she would have given hands and eyes? 15250 Who has demolished my temple?" |
15250 | Who is Ch''ien- t''ang? |
15250 | Who is that who speaks so brutally? |
15250 | Who is that? |
15250 | Who is there,answered the girl,"who does not love the royal dignity?--what person who does not aspire to the happiness of marriage? |
15250 | Who slew my messenger? |
15250 | Why are you so afraid that he might hear what I have just told you? |
15250 | Why continue so useless a fight? |
15250 | Why do you not leave the place? |
15250 | Why eat of one tree? 15250 Why have you come to this place?" |
15250 | Why is it,asked the King,"that this remedy, which is so efficacious for the left side, should not be applied to the right?" |
15250 | Would it not have been better to gain your living honestly in practising your art than to shave your head and go loafing about the world? 15250 You can not do it; why trouble?" |
15250 | Addressing himself to Lu Ch''i, he asked:"Do you wish to live in the Crystal Palace?" |
15250 | After a little while Hsi- mên Pao said:"Why does she stay so long? |
15250 | Are n''t you ashamed to do such a thing? |
15250 | Are we not told that''out of evil cometh good''? |
15250 | Are we to suppose, then, that the Chinese Lei Kung is of Indian origin? |
15250 | Are you sure it is still upon your head?" |
15250 | But,"he added, pointing with his hand,"is not that Sun coming yonder?" |
15250 | Can a good woman be found in that class? |
15250 | Chia then picked up half a brick and laid it on the washing- block, saying to Mr Chên,"This little piece is not too much, surely?" |
15250 | Detecting this manoeuvre, the god was incensed, and said to the Emperor:"You have broken your word; did you bring Lu here to insult me? |
15250 | Do n''t you remember how we tied a handkerchief on the stem of a bamboo?" |
15250 | Do you wish to have me disgraced? |
15250 | Forthwith the dragon went on shore, and, spying a monkey on the top of a tree, said:"Hail, shining one, are you not afraid you will fall?" |
15250 | Half- measures"Who else, in fact, but his child,"she continued amid her sobs,"could have had the courage to give her hand to save her father''s life?" |
15250 | Has anyone ever known a daughter of a king become a nun? |
15250 | He said:"Why do you make no progress? |
15250 | He then said to Sun, with a laugh:"What can you do to me now?" |
15250 | He then spoke,"Illustrious friend, why did not you tell me? |
15250 | He, seeing her colour fade away, said:"My dear, what shall I get you to eat?" |
15250 | Here, without any lonely mountain on which to give myself up to the pursuit of perfection, what will become of me?" |
15250 | How can I be wanting in sincerity?" |
15250 | How can I get one of their hearts?" |
15250 | How can I live in this desolate region?" |
15250 | How can we serve spiritual beings while we do not know how to serve men? |
15250 | How can you speak so lightly? |
15250 | How dare you kill him, and then boast of your crime?" |
15250 | How dare you lend your mountain to the Demon for such a purpose?" |
15250 | How did these Taoists deceive your King?" |
15250 | How is it you do n''t know? |
15250 | How is it you do n''t know? |
15250 | How made Heaven and earth? |
15250 | How made insects? |
15250 | How made men and demons? |
15250 | How then did it come about that scholars worshipped the K''uei in the Great Bear as the abode of the God of Literature? |
15250 | If I were to be accused at Court of having instituted the worship of false gods, would not my destruction be certain? |
15250 | If she is left without help, who is there who will be willing to adopt the virtuous life? |
15250 | If you can not suppress them, how do you expect to see the Great Lord?" |
15250 | If you must die, why should Sha Ho- shang and Pa- chieh and the Dragon- horse also suffer?" |
15250 | Is a human being meant to live in marital relations with a horse?" |
15250 | Is not this the same as if they had committed the crime themselves? |
15250 | It commences: Who came to the bad disposition, To send fire and burn the hill? |
15250 | Ku made a low bow, but the young lady said,"Sir, when you were kind to my mother, I did not thank you; why then thank me?" |
15250 | Made male and made female? |
15250 | Made male and made female? |
15250 | Miscellaneous Legends The Pronunciation of Chinese Words_ Mais cet Orient, cette Asie, quelles en sont, enfin, les frontières réelles?... |
15250 | Now you have n''t the luck of an ounce of silver to call your own; and what would you do, for instance, with a beautiful princess? |
15250 | Of course, everybody was firmly convinced of his guilt, and what could the poor boy say when his own appeal to the god thus turned against him? |
15250 | Of what use have been all my labours and all my victories?" |
15250 | On the road they met a blind man, who addressed them saying:"Whither away, Buddhist Priest? |
15250 | One of the ceremonial questions addressed by a visitor to the parent of a child was always_ Ch''u la hua''rh mei yu_? |
15250 | She indignantly exclaimed:"How dare you come into my room in this indiscreet manner?" |
15250 | Shih- tsun ordered you not to reply to anyone; why did you not hearken to his words? |
15250 | Shên Kung- pao said:"What is that you hold in your hand?" |
15250 | Shên Kung- pao said:"You will not go back on your word?" |
15250 | Some members of the palace guard seized her, and inquired angrily:"Who are you that you should dare to tear down the royal proclamation?" |
15250 | Sun pointed to his fan and said:"Is not this the Fan?" |
15250 | Sun replied:"Having never met him, how can you know him?" |
15250 | The Demons of Blackwater River One day the Master suddenly exclaimed:"What is that noise?" |
15250 | The Master thought a while and then said:"O disciple, when shall we see the Incarnate Model( Ju Lai) face to face?" |
15250 | The Monkey said to the two leading Taoists:"I wonder if I shall be so fortunate as to see your Emperor?" |
15250 | The Slaying of the Dragon- king''s Son"How is it that the officer does not return?" |
15250 | The art I practise is a secret known to the Immortals only: how can I divulge it to you?" |
15250 | The guardian angels of the Five Religions asked:"Whose is this mountain, and who is crushed beneath it?" |
15250 | The legend of the Creation commences: Who made Heaven and earth? |
15250 | There was an end of that; but Ma went on to say,"I always heard that fox- girls were of surpassing beauty; how is it you are not?" |
15250 | They smiled and said:"How is it that you have so many relatives?" |
15250 | Tzu- ya quickly asked:"My elder brother, why have you returned?" |
15250 | Tzu- ya said:"When your elder brother has spoken his word is as unchangeable as Mount T''ai, How can there be any going back on my word?" |
15250 | What are we to do? |
15250 | What if it should rain? |
15250 | What say you?" |
15250 | When he reached her, he asked:"What have you to fear from the robbers? |
15250 | When they met the servant said:"Do you know that your face is completely altered?" |
15250 | Where are now all those powerful dynasties which have laid down the law to the world? |
15250 | Where is this Hsiang Shan?" |
15250 | Where is your abode? |
15250 | Whither else am I to go?" |
15250 | Who came to the bad disposition, To send water and destroy the earth? |
15250 | Who is the Demon- chief''s associate?" |
15250 | Who made insects? |
15250 | Who made men? |
15250 | Who will dare to dispute his right to the throne?" |
15250 | Who would ever give his hand or his eye? |
15250 | Why are you molesting my parents? |
15250 | Why do n''t you know? |
15250 | Why have you killed his disciples? |
15250 | Why should some peoples tell many and marvellous tales about their gods and others say little about them, though they may say a great deal to them? |
15250 | Why should the four travellers not finish their journey there, and be happy ever afterward? |
15250 | Why should this be? |
15250 | Why should we not marry? |
15250 | Will it satisfy you?" |
15250 | Will you not rescue your younger sister? |
15250 | Will you not save us from this fiery destruction?" |
15250 | You have nothing for them to steal; why throw yourself over the precipice, exposing yourself to certain death?" |
15250 | You remember this, without doubt?" |
15250 | cried Mr Chên in despair,"what is to be done now? |
15250 | do you not know that your victim was a deputy of the King of Heaven? |
15250 | he cried,"what diabolical suggestions are these that you dare to make in my presence?" |
16295 | ''), in which the following question occurs,''On what is the air founded?'' |
16295 | ''But when the Self only is all this, how should he see another?'' |
16295 | ''Others say, in the beginning there was that only which is not; but how could it be thus, my dear? |
16295 | ''Where one sees nothing else?'' |
16295 | ''Who is that one god( in whom all the other gods are contained)? |
16295 | --''Is there something which is more than speech?'' |
16295 | --(But how does this passage convey praise of knowledge?) |
16295 | --But how is it known that the Self of delight is the highest Self? |
16295 | And again,''Who in truth knows it? |
16295 | And how should the indifferent soul move the pradhâna? |
16295 | And how then, we ask, can you explain the relation existing between a sufferer and the causes of suffering? |
16295 | And if the doctrine of release is untrue, how can we maintain the truth of the absolute unity of the Self, which forms an item of that doctrine? |
16295 | And if you ask,''Where does Scripture oppose itself to what is thus established?'' |
16295 | And why so? |
16295 | And, moreover, how can the divinity, to whom the scriptural passage,''No, no,''denies all attributes, be endowed with all powers? |
16295 | Being such, how should it be able to produce effects, although it may be endowed with all powers? |
16295 | But how can the avântara- prak/ ri/ ti be called a she- goat? |
16295 | But how is it possible that on the interior Self which itself is not an object there should be superimposed objects and their attributes? |
16295 | But of what nature is that connexion to be? |
16295 | But, again, how can it be said that Scripture is the means of knowing Brahman? |
16295 | But, it may be asked, is Brahman known or not known( previously to the enquiry into its nature)? |
16295 | But-- it may be objected-- we meet here neither with a question, such as,''Is there something more than vital air?'' |
16295 | Bâlâki begins his colloquy with Ajâta/ s/ atru with the offer,''Shall I tell you Brahman?'' |
16295 | Compare also the passage,''What trouble, what sorrow can there be to him who has once beheld that unity?'' |
16295 | For how can the cognition of unity remove the cognition of manifoldness if both are true? |
16295 | For if both were true how could the man who acquiesces in the reality of this phenomenal world be called false- minded[281]? |
16295 | For we find, in the Bauddha Scriptures, a series of questions and answers( beginning,''On what, O reverend Sir, is the earth founded? |
16295 | For while we meet with a series of questions and answers( such as,''Sir, is there something which is more than a name?'' |
16295 | For, from the passage( VII, 24, 1),(''Sir, in what does the bhûman rest? |
16295 | He established the earth and this sky; to what God shall we offer our oblation?'' |
16295 | He thought, shall I send forth worlds? |
16295 | He thought, shall I send forth worlds?'' |
16295 | Hence the question may present itself, How many such classes are there? |
16295 | How could such a principle be the Self of the non- intelligent pradhâna? |
16295 | How could that which is be born of that which is not?'' |
16295 | How so? |
16295 | How so? |
16295 | How then can it be supposed that Brahman, which is likewise of an intelligent nature, should proceed without any auxiliary? |
16295 | How then does it follow from the word''Self''that the thinking( ascribed to the cause of the world) is not to be taken in a figurative sense? |
16295 | How, indeed, could various impressions originate if no external things were perceived? |
16295 | How, moreover, is the conjunction of one atom with another to be imagined? |
16295 | How, then, the Sâ@nkhya will ask, do you interpret the phrase''the five five- people?'' |
16295 | How? |
16295 | How? |
16295 | I, 10, 9),''Prastot/ ri/, that deity which belongs to the prastâva,& c.,''and, further on( I, 11, 4; 5),''Which then is that deity? |
16295 | I, 3); and''How should he know him by whom he knows all this?'' |
16295 | I, 4, 10);''What sorrow, what trouble can there be to him who beholds that unity?'' |
16295 | II, 4, 13,''Then by what should he see whom?'' |
16295 | II, 4, 6);''But when the Self only is all this, how should he see another, how should he know another, how should he know the knower?'' |
16295 | IV, 5, 15,''For where there is duality as it were, then one sees the other; but when the Self only is all this, how should he see another?'' |
16295 | If enjoyment, what enjoyment, we ask, can belong to the soul which is naturally incapable of any accretion( of pleasure or pain)[327]? |
16295 | If, on the other hand, prâ/ n/ a denoted Brahman, what then could be different from what? |
16295 | In favour of which meaning have we then to decide? |
16295 | In his own glory?'' |
16295 | In the Chândogya( I, 9) the following passage is met with,''What is the origin of this world?'' |
16295 | In the sixth prapâ/ th/ aka of the B/ ri/ hadâra/ n/ yaka there is given, in reply to the question,''Who is that Self?'' |
16295 | In what way, we ask the Sâ@nkhya, is Brahman''s all- knowingness interfered with by a permanent cognitional activity? |
16295 | Is it to be total interpenetration of the two or partial conjunction? |
16295 | Now, as later on prâ/ n/ a is declared to be what is most beneficial for man, what should prâ/ n/ a denote but the highest Self? |
16295 | Nârada, thus enlightened, starts a new line of enquiry(''Might I, Sir, become an ativâdin by the True?'') |
16295 | Of what nature then is the''word''with a view to which it is said that the world originates from the''word?'' |
16295 | The concluding clause finally,''How, O beloved, should he know the knower?'' |
16295 | The question might therefore be asked,''What reason is there for the subsequent part of the Vedânta- sûtras?'' |
16295 | The question then arises: What is the end of the journey, the highest place of Vish/ n/ u? |
16295 | This passage giving rise to the question,''How is it the light of lights?'' |
16295 | Thus/S/ ruti says,''If a man understands the Self, saying,"I am he,"what could he wish or desire that he should pine after the body?'' |
16295 | VII, 24, 1);''But when the Self only has become all this, how should he see another?'' |
16295 | We therefore ask: Wherein consists that( alleged) rising from the body? |
16295 | What alternative then does recommend itself? |
16295 | What is that Vara/ n/ â, what is that Nâsî?'' |
16295 | What is that instruction? |
16295 | Whence came he thus back?'' |
16295 | Where does that avimukta abide? |
16295 | Where was he? |
16295 | Wherein consists that appearing( of the soul) in its own form? |
16295 | While the Sâ@nkhyas employ the term''the Great one,''to denote the first- born entity, which is mere existence[232](? |
16295 | Who could breathe, who could breathe forth if that Bliss existed not in the ether( of the heart)? |
16295 | Who could breathe, who could breathe forth, if that bliss existed not in the ether? |
16295 | Who could here proclaim it, whence this creation sprang?'' |
16295 | Why so? |
16295 | Why so? |
16295 | Why? |
16295 | Why? |
16295 | Why? |
16295 | [ 37]''--But what have we to understand by the term''superimposition?'' |
16295 | [ Footnote 201:''How should it be so?'' |
16295 | a discussion begins with the words,''What is our Self, what is Brahman?'' |
16295 | accented with the udâtta, the anudâtta, and the Svarita and nasal as well as non- nasal[201]? |
16295 | and from whence did he thus come back?'' |
16295 | in the material parts of which it consists? |
16295 | in the passage,''What is our Self, what is Brahman?'' |
16295 | one bundle made up of five bundles) and hence when the question arises,''How many such bundles are there?'' |
16295 | that the word''knower''--which occurs in the concluding passage,''How should he know the knower?'' |
16295 | that which is developed or manifested? |
16295 | the internal organ) be spoken of as an enjoyer, as is actually done in the clause,''One of them eats the sweet fruit?'' |
17120 | And if you escape, when shall we meet again? |
17120 | But you have friends, who would pay to ransom you, I suppose, if you were captured? |
17120 | Ca n''t you get me out of this infernal den? |
17120 | Do n''t you think,he remarked grimly,"it would add to the effect of your communication if you were to enclose your own ears in your letter? |
17120 | How do you come to be in his bedroom? |
17120 | How on earth am I to let you escape, dear Valeria? |
17120 | Was that Croppo who got away? |
17120 | What is it, sweet Valeria? |
17120 | Where did you pick him up, Croppo? |
17120 | Where is he? |
17120 | Who? |
17120 | Wo n''t you give him some kind of a bed? |
17120 | Adolphus, dear, do n''t you feel, with me, that our hearts warm towards the hippopotamus? |
17120 | Ah, Plumper, how are you, old man? |
17120 | And, Valeria, do n''t you think we could make our lips meet through this beastly hole?" |
17120 | Are we not formed and fashioned for each other? |
17120 | Are you coming to ride with me, or going out to drive with your mother, Elaine? |
17120 | But may I ask you to lend me your''Echo''? |
17120 | By the way, was that man much hurt that I was obliged to trip up?" |
17120 | Ca n''t you guess for whom? |
17120 | Ca n''t you see how miserable I am, and how hollow everything seems all at once? |
17120 | Can we not feel each other''s hearts beating in sweet accord? |
17120 | Can we not read each other''s thoughts? |
17120 | Can you hear what Lord Fondleton is saying to Mrs Gloring at this moment? |
17120 | Come, Adolphus-- why should we linger here, now that our troths are plighted? |
17120 | Dear Adolphus, why should this strained conventional formality exist any longer between us? |
17120 | Did you ever see anything more extraordinary, my dear? |
17120 | Do n''t we, Louisa, dear? |
17120 | Do you not know the risks?" |
17120 | Do you wish me to stay? |
17120 | Dud- dud- dud- do you intend to keep that on? |
17120 | Dud- dud- dud- do you see a likeness? |
17120 | Elaine, dear Elaine[_ returns softly and takes her hand_], do you wish me to go? |
17120 | From what source do you get the force which enables you to love humanity with a devotion so intense that it shall elevate your present moral standard? |
17120 | Have you really been experimentalising on your own moral organism? |
17120 | How can I say Adolphus? |
17120 | How can it evolve without a propulsive force behind it? |
17120 | How d''ye do, Lady Fritterly? |
17120 | How do you set to work to experimentalise morally? |
17120 | How is it that you are not afraid to be wandering in this solitary glen by yourself? |
17120 | How would you propose to try and fathom it? |
17120 | I have a few people coming to me to- morrow evening; do you think you can spare a moment from your numerous engagements? |
17120 | I hear something inside of me; do you know what? |
17120 | I said, a bright idea suddenly striking me;"suppose I were to write to my Government-- how would that do?" |
17120 | I say,"shouted the cavalry captain;"why do n''t you charge? |
17120 | I wonder whether A. stands for Adolphus? |
17120 | If it is a latent potentiality of matter, how did it get there? |
17120 | If you eliminate dogma, what does religion consist of but morality? |
17120 | Is the gentleman coming up- stairs, Charles? |
17120 | Is there any address on his card? |
17120 | Lord Fondleton, how can you be so silly? |
17120 | May I ask why you deem it impossible that our experience can be extended? |
17120 | Mr Fussle, might I ask you to take this cup of tea to Mrs Allmash? |
17120 | Mr Gresham, how dare you talk such nonsense? |
17120 | My dear Louisa, what is the matter? |
17120 | Mysterious, is n''t it? |
17120 | No; what? |
17120 | Oh, Mr Gresham, how can you be so heartless? |
17120 | Oh, was ever woman so cruelly humiliated? |
17120 | Please tell me why you were so surprised at what I said, and why you think me so very objectionable? |
17120 | Pray, Lord Fondleton, can you tell me what a Rishi is? |
17120 | Pup- pup- pup- pardon me, madam; shall I put the window up? |
17120 | Shall I stay and go alternately, or shall we make a fresh start, without prejudice, as the lawyers say? |
17120 | They were quickly drawn away, and then the whisper reached my ears--"Are you hungry?" |
17120 | To what extent is the domestic happiness of such a ruffian to be respected?" |
17120 | Well, have you two young people come to an understanding? |
17120 | What about me struck that mysterious chord of sympathy which vibrated in your affections when I was Plumper, which failed to strike it as Gresham? |
17120 | What are you saying, Lord Fondleton? |
17120 | What can be pleasanter than this gentle process of aesthetic development which our higher faculties are undergoing? |
17120 | What do I care what the lawyers say? |
17120 | What do you wish me to do? |
17120 | What does he care about my ears?" |
17120 | What have you done for Mr Gresham''s sake that puts me under an obligation to him? |
17120 | What is her name? |
17120 | What more inherent right can be vested by nature in a woman than that of telling a man that she loves him, and that, therefore, he belongs to her? |
17120 | What on earth are you doing here?--looking for those brigands you were so anxious to find when you left Naples? |
17120 | What on? |
17120 | Who else''s wife do you suppose I am? |
17120 | Who knows, perhaps you might make a convert of me? |
17120 | Who started such an extraordinary doctrine? |
17120 | Who''s our black friend? |
17120 | Why do n''t you write a book on mental and emotional physics? |
17120 | Why should I allow an absurd custom of conventional civilisation, degrading to the sex, to prevent my telling him so? |
17120 | Why should not our hearts still beat in sweet accord without my wig? |
17120 | Why should we not at once brave the world together? |
17120 | Why should you set a limit on the evolution of the senses, and say that no man in the future can ever hear or see further than men have in the past? |
17120 | Why, Adolphus, where have you been? |
17120 | Why, may n''t it evolve from itself? |
17120 | Why, what have you done with Mrs Plumper and the children? |
17120 | You do n''t think there is a reaction setting in, do you? |
17120 | You will be mine, for ever mine, dud- dud- darling, will you not-- even though I may not have the riches I am supposed to possess? |
17120 | how can you ask me such a question? |
17120 | how can you suppose that I would ever marry a Conservative? |
17120 | what have we here? |
17120 | whom have we here? |
19410 | But then is not this rather more than being only a little weak in constitution, and still sound? |
19410 | How came those ideas to rise up and fill the whole air? |
19410 | What were the doctrines of the Revolution? |
19410 | Why did men turn their backs on these and all else, and betake themselves to revolutionary ideas? |
12744 | But can not the kitten go through the same hole as the cat? |
12744 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? |
12744 | Have you any other business? |
12744 | In the beginning? |
12744 | Lord, is it I? |
12744 | A man said to another,"Do you drink?" |
12744 | All that is said is that they were ungrateful; but how about those who go out from our colleges and universities? |
12744 | An indifferent Christian? |
12744 | And he said unto him, Why callest thou me good? |
12744 | And how about morals? |
12744 | And how much can one wisely spend? |
12744 | And if the light waves created the eyes, why did they not create them strong enough to bear the light? |
12744 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
12744 | And is it not greater still that the people are able to reduce a President to the ranks as well as to lift him up? |
12744 | And that brings us to the next question: How much should one desire to collect from society? |
12744 | And what called forth this powerful illustration-- the sacrificing of the right eye and the right hand to save the body? |
12744 | And what can be more important than the cleansing of the heart of all that obstructs one''s view of God? |
12744 | And what excuses do men give? |
12744 | And what of the man who showed us how to hurl our messages thousands of miles through space without the aid of wire? |
12744 | And what would he think of saving weak babies by pasteurizing milk and of the efforts to find a specific for tuberculosis and cancer? |
12744 | And where does that begin? |
12744 | And why did the light waves quit playing when two eyes were perfected? |
12744 | And why is it that we live under a government resting upon the consent of the governed, and in a land in which the people rule? |
12744 | And why is the spring a spring? |
12744 | And why take ye thought for raiment? |
12744 | And, would He_ want_ to? |
12744 | Are any more worthy to be trusted than Christians? |
12744 | Are not many of these worse than ungrateful? |
12744 | Are ye not much better than they? |
12744 | Art thou a mourner? |
12744 | But can one earn an_ hundred million_? |
12744 | But how does the evolutionist explain the eye when he leaves God out? |
12744 | But is the law of"natural selection"a sufficient explanation, or a more satisfactory explanation, than sexual selection? |
12744 | But now that men are looked upon as children of apes, what matters it whether they are slaughtered or not?" |
12744 | But what has God been doing since the"stuff"began to develop? |
12744 | But what has been the experience of those who have been successful in accumulating money? |
12744 | But what is justice? |
12744 | But what is the_ natural tendency_ of Darwin''s doctrine? |
12744 | But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste? |
12744 | But who will estimate the value of this narrative? |
12744 | But why should the betrayal have come from one of the twelve? |
12744 | But you say, a man can leave his money to his children? |
12744 | But, suppose they make mistakes occasionally: have they not a right to make_ their own mistakes_? |
12744 | But, would God_ want_ to perform a miracle? |
12744 | Can Christians be indifferent to such statistics? |
12744 | Can a man earn that much? |
12744 | Can anything be less scientific than trying to guess what an animal is thinking about? |
12744 | Can such a barbarous doctrine be sound? |
12744 | Can that doctrine be accepted as scientific when its author admits that we can not apply it"without deterioration in the noblest part of our nature"? |
12744 | Can they be blind to the benefits conferred by our churches? |
12744 | Can you beat it? |
12744 | Can you imagine anything more brutal? |
12744 | Christ, noticing the absence of the others, inquired,"Were there not ten cleansed, but where are the nine?" |
12744 | Could this be said of a man labouring under a delusion as to his real character? |
12744 | Did you ever hear an atheist explain creation? |
12744 | Do not even the publicans so? |
12744 | Do not even the publicans the same? |
12744 | Do these murmurs echo in the corridors of our universities? |
12744 | Do we count the cost to others and think of the sacrifices they have made for our benefit? |
12744 | Do we estimate the strength that education has brought to us and feel that we should put that strength under heavier loads? |
12744 | Does it not seem incredible that the money of Christians is available for the outside world and yet not within reach of needy brethren? |
12744 | Does the atheist understand the mystery of the life he lives? |
12744 | Dost reel from righteous retribution''s blow? |
12744 | Dost thou behold thy lost youth all aghast? |
12744 | Even Judas himself, coerced by the action of the others, asked,"Master, is it I?" |
12744 | Faith says obey; reason asks, Why? |
12744 | For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? |
12744 | For who can doubt that the prosperity and power of the nations of the world are due to the influence of the Bible upon the character and conduct? |
12744 | Has man so fallen from his high estate, that we can not rightfully expect as much of him now as nineteen centuries ago? |
12744 | Have they the confidence that the prophets of Baal had in their god? |
12744 | Have you ever read a scientific definition of love? |
12744 | Have you thought how few of each generation are remembered after death by any one outside of a small circle of friends? |
12744 | Have you thought of the value of the ice machine? |
12744 | Having answered the atheist''s first question, it is now my turn, and I ask my first question of the atheist:"Where do you begin?" |
12744 | He even blames vaccination because it has preserved thousands who might otherwise have succumbed( for the benefit of the race?). |
12744 | He saith unto him, which? |
12744 | He was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall declare his generation? |
12744 | How can Christ''s teachings relieve the situation? |
12744 | How can a brute mind comprehend spiritual things? |
12744 | How can he delay acceptance of Christ''s offer to ennoble that which he has, and to add to it the things that are highest and best and most enduring? |
12744 | How can one believe in prayer if, for millions of years, God has never touched a human life or laid His hand upon the destiny of the human race? |
12744 | How can one feel God''s presence in his daily life if Darwin''s reasoning is sound? |
12744 | How can one fight for a principle unless he believes in the triumph of right? |
12744 | How can you explain Christ? |
12744 | How could one ambitious for worldly success afford to reject such an applicant? |
12744 | How did it build a watermelon? |
12744 | How different this way of dealing from the way the carnal man acts, and yet who can question the wisdom of the Saviour''s plan? |
12744 | How do we feel when we complete our education? |
12744 | How highly does he prize the form of government under which he lives? |
12744 | How is it possible for a preacher to be a power of God, whose source of authority is his own reason and convictions? |
12744 | How long did the"light waves"have to play on the skin before the eyes came out? |
12744 | How much did he earn? |
12744 | How much is it worth to one to be born again? |
12744 | How much money can a man rightfully collect from society? |
12744 | How much of the intellectual wealth that we have so laboriously acquired can we carry with us? |
12744 | How would conscription have been received if it applied to father, husband and son and not to wealth also? |
12744 | How? |
12744 | I can not understand a radish; can you? |
12744 | III WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST? |
12744 | If he complains of vaccination, what would he say of the more recent discovery of remedies for typhoid fever, yellow fever and the black plague? |
12744 | If not, what excuse will they give? |
12744 | If the Old Testament is so fascinating what may we expect of the New? |
12744 | If you will analyze the miracle you will find just two questions in it:_ Can_ God perform a miracle? |
12744 | Is any other proof needed to show the irreligious influence exerted by Darwinism applied to man? |
12744 | Is eye or arm or body more important than the soul? |
12744 | Is he discharging the duty which superior opportunity imposes upon him? |
12744 | Is it not a reflection on the church that its members should ever be compelled to go outside for assistance in such emergencies? |
12744 | Is it not astonishing that any person intelligent enough to teach school would talk such tommyrot to students and look serious while doing so? |
12744 | Is it possible for one to render a service so large as to earn so vast a sum? |
12744 | Is it possible for one to render so large a service? |
12744 | Is it satisfactorily proved that species may be originated by selection? |
12744 | Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? |
12744 | Is there any other plan? |
12744 | Is this within the range of human possibility? |
12744 | Is"thus saith the Lord"to be supplanted by guesses and speculations and assumptions? |
12744 | It is to such that Christ appeals when He asks:"What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?" |
12744 | Let him find out, if he can, why it is that a black cow can eat green grass and then give white milk with yellow butter in it? |
12744 | Let no one be deceived-- if the devil would tempt the Saviour Himself, will he not tempt you? |
12744 | Lowry, in"Where Is My Wandering Boy To- night?" |
12744 | Must we believe this, too? |
12744 | Nietzsche names Darwin as one of the three great men of his century, but tries to deprive him of credit(?) |
12744 | Not only is a man limited in his collection of what he honestly earns, but will an honest man_ desire_ to collect more than he earns? |
12744 | Of whom but an honest person could such a story be told? |
12744 | Or does the Bible come to us from a source that is higher than man? |
12744 | Or was He deluded? |
12744 | Or was He the promised Messiah,"the Way, the Truth, and the Life,"as He declared Himself to be? |
12744 | Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? |
12744 | Or, did the males select for three years and then allow the females to do the selecting during leap year? |
12744 | Or, what is more important, what would so great a sum_ do with them_? |
12744 | Rouse thee from thy spell; Art thou a sinner? |
12744 | Some years ago I read a story by Tolstoy, and I did not notice until I had completed it that the title of the story was,"What shall it profit?" |
12744 | That none of the phenomena exhibited by the species are inconsistent with the origin of the species in this way? |
12744 | The higher critic, however, comes to you in the guise of a friend and politely inquires:"Is n''t the light too near your eyes? |
12744 | The narrative suggests an epitaph which every Christian can earn-- and who could desire more? |
12744 | The question, What think ye of Christ? |
12744 | The world has been full of delusions: have any of them produced a character like Christ? |
12744 | The young man saith unto him, All these things have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet? |
12744 | Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee? |
12744 | There is but one_ first_ question: Where do you begin? |
12744 | Third: What right has a Christian to throw the influence of his example on the side of a habit that has brought millions to the grave? |
12744 | This is a living world; why not a_ living_ God upon the throne? |
12744 | Tolstoy insists that the science of"How to Live"is more important than any other science, and is this not true? |
12744 | WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST? |
12744 | Was Christ an impostor? |
12744 | Was Christ deceived? |
12744 | We are familiar with this word but how shall it be interpreted in governmental terms? |
12744 | We_ should_, but do we? |
12744 | Well, what shall we say of ten millions? |
12744 | Were they censured? |
12744 | What Christian can afford to say less in regard to intoxicants? |
12744 | What about the Bible, is it not here to stay? |
12744 | What architect drew the plan? |
12744 | What can Darwinism ever do to compensate any one for the destruction of faith in God, in His Word, in His Son, and of hope of immortality? |
12744 | What could they do with the sum that they actually earn? |
12744 | What did Gorry earn when he gave the world the ice machine? |
12744 | What did the man earn who gave the world a sewing machine? |
12744 | What estimate does he place upon the education which he has received? |
12744 | What has he earned? |
12744 | What has she earned? |
12744 | What is it in man that can take the body and hold it in the fire until the flames consume the quivering flesh? |
12744 | What is it, that, having, we live, and, having not, we are as the clod? |
12744 | What is more mysterious than an egg? |
12744 | What is the first question an atheist asks a Christian? |
12744 | What is the profit? |
12744 | What is to be done? |
12744 | What moral right has he to take into his body that which he knows will lessen his capacity for service and_ may_ destroy even his desire to serve? |
12744 | What of vaccination and the labours of Pasteur? |
12744 | What shall it profit a man if he shall gain all the learning of the schools and lose his faith in God? |
12744 | What shall we say of the man who gave to the world a knowledge of the use of steam and revolutionized the transportation of the globe? |
12744 | What time has he to waste in hunting for"missing links"or in searching for resemblances between his forefathers and the ape? |
12744 | What value does he put upon the religion that controls his heart? |
12744 | What would have been the fate of the Church if the early Christians had had as little faith as many of our Christians of to- day? |
12744 | What would have been the feeling among the people if we had entered the late war under such a handicap? |
12744 | When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman? |
12744 | When Job was asked,"Canst thou by searching find out God?" |
12744 | When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? |
12744 | When, before or since, has the littleness of the self- centered been so exposed and the nobility of self- surrender been so glorified? |
12744 | Where did it find its flavouring extract and its colouring matter? |
12744 | Where did that little watermelon seed get its tremendous strength? |
12744 | Where does the atheist begin? |
12744 | Where in all the books in all the libraries can one find as much that affects the welfare of man as is condensed into these three verses? |
12744 | Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature? |
12744 | Who can be happier than the Christian? |
12744 | Who dares to say that the plan will fail? |
12744 | Who has a right to make mistakes for them? |
12744 | Who has not seen a splendidly developed body with an ignorant brain to think for it and a puny spiritual life within? |
12744 | Who represented the liquor traffic in that august tribunal? |
12744 | Who will calculate the restraint that that one question,"Lord, is it I?" |
12744 | Who will deny that the acceptance of the Darwinian hypothesis shuts out the higher reasonings and the larger conceptions of man? |
12744 | Who will estimate the Bible''s value to society? |
12744 | Who will estimate the value of the service rendered by the man who gave us a remedy for typhoid? |
12744 | Who will measure the value of anesthetics in the treatment of disease and injury? |
12744 | Who will say, after reading these words, that it is immaterial what man thinks about his origin? |
12744 | Whose hand caught the hues of a summer sunset and wrapped them around the radish''s root down there in the darkness in the ground? |
12744 | Why did the light waves make eyes and then make eyelids to keep the light out of the eyes? |
12744 | Why did they not keep on playing until there were eyes all over the body? |
12744 | Why do they not play to- day, so that we may see eyes in process of development? |
12744 | Why not allow Him to work_ now_? |
12744 | Why not employ the only untried remedy for the ills which afflict civilization? |
12744 | Why should a church member be driven to these extremities when the loanable money in the church is sufficient for all needs? |
12744 | Why should we encourage the guesses of these speculators and thus weaken our power to protest when they attempt the leap from the monkey to man? |
12744 | Why will he be content with the pleasures of the body and the joys of the mind when he can have added to them the delights of the spirit? |
12744 | Why will one choose a life that is small and contracted, when there is within his reach the life that is full and complete-- the Larger Life? |
12744 | Why? |
12744 | Why? |
12744 | Why? |
12744 | Will he be as sensitive to God''s will and as anxious to find out what God wants him to do? |
12744 | Will man''s attitude toward Darwin''s God be the same as it would be toward the God of Moses? |
12744 | Will the believer in Darwin''s God be as conscious of God''s presence in his daily life? |
12744 | Will the believer in Darwin''s God be as fervent in prayer and as open to the reception of divine suggestions? |
12744 | Will the mystery disturb him? |
12744 | Will they try? |
12744 | Winning hearts through love expressed in sacrifice, is that strange? |
12744 | Would you have proof? |
12744 | fight out their differences, have they not a right to demand information as to the merits of the dispute before the shivering begins? |
12744 | has exerted upon Christ''s followers in the hour when some great temptation has made the believer hesitate upon the brink of sin? |
12744 | or naked, and clothed thee? |
12744 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink? |
18936 | Do you yet want to go on? |
18936 | Fool, do you not know that the law says these doors shall admit no one except at sunrise? |
18936 | Have you had any breakfast? 18936 The Ideal School a school for Negroes, instituted by a Negro, where only Negroes teach, and only Negroes are allowed to enter as students?" |
18936 | What difference does it make, anyway? |
18936 | Who ever heard anything like that before? |
18936 | A voice, seemingly coming from afar, demanded,"Do you still wish to go on?" |
18936 | About that time the Bishops in assembly asked,"Is Simeon sincere?" |
18936 | As to his chastity, there was little doubt, and his poverty was beyond question; but how about obedience to his superiors? |
18936 | At a point where he seemed about to perish a voice called loudly,"Do you yet desire to go on?" |
18936 | Besides, what greater or juster aim and ambition have they than to please their husbands? |
18936 | Can a sane person reply to such lack of logic? |
18936 | Can we now conceive of a system where the duty of certain scholars was to whip other scholars? |
18936 | Can you foretell where this will end-- this formation of habits of industry, sobriety and continued, persistent effort towards the right? |
18936 | Did Simeon hear the bells and say,"Soon it will be my turn"? |
18936 | Did he suffer? |
18936 | Do you mean to say that the child should not be disciplined? |
18936 | Do you not know I am doing the best I can?''" |
18936 | Does the Bible say that the child is good by nature?" |
18936 | Every phase of life is solved by answering the question,"What would Mrs. Eddy do?" |
18936 | Fifteen hundred people of one mind, doing anything in unison-- do you know what it means? |
18936 | Has any man a mind to raise himself a good estate? |
18936 | He looked up at me and said with a touch of spirit:''Sir, why do you get angry with me? |
18936 | He needed them: he wanted to make Rugby a model school, a school that would influence all England-- would they help him? |
18936 | He was so little-- the place was so big-- by what right could he ask to be admitted? |
18936 | Here a questioner asked,"If we are to protect our persons, must we not learn to fight?" |
18936 | How did Simeon get to the top of the column? |
18936 | How do we explain these inconsistencies? |
18936 | If God, being all- wise, all- powerful and all- loving, turns author, why does He produce work so muddy that it requires a"Key"? |
18936 | In reading a book, the question that interests us is not,"Is it inspired?" |
18936 | Is it necessary? |
18936 | Is n''t it better to relax and rest and allow Divinity to flow through us, than to sit on a sharp rail and call the passer- by names in falsetto? |
18936 | Not only to whip them, but to beat them into insensibility if they fought back? |
18936 | Now, is it not possible that the prevalency of the Monastic Impulse is proof that it is in itself a movement in the direction of Nature? |
18936 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought? |
18936 | Others asked as to the nature of his wares, and one dignitary called and asked,"Is Herr Pestalozzi in?" |
18936 | Others, still, inquired,"Is she sincere?" |
18936 | The horses of a drunkard, blanketless, hungry, shivering, outside of the village tavern, do they not proclaim the poor, despised owner within? |
18936 | The only question ever asked was,"Can you do the work?" |
18936 | The question is, then, what teaching concern in America supplies the best quality of actinic ray? |
18936 | The question then arises,"Was Mrs. Eddy sincere in putting forth such writings?" |
18936 | The test was simple and severe: would they and could they do one useful piece of work well? |
18936 | The well- upholstered conservatives twiddled their thumbs, coughed, and asked:"How about the doctrine of total depravity? |
18936 | They always ask when you take away their superstition,"What are you going to give us in return?" |
18936 | What does Solomon say about the use of the rod? |
18936 | What does Solomon say? |
18936 | What end does it serve and how is humanity to be served or benefited by it? |
18936 | What''s in a name? |
18936 | Where did she get it? |
18936 | Where do you suppose oppressed colored people get chickens? |
18936 | While floundering there the voice again called,"Do you yet desire to go on?" |
18936 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
18936 | Would he arise at sundown and pray, and with outstretched hands bless the assembled pilgrims? |
18936 | Yes, you liver- colored boy-- you, I say, have you had your breakfast?" |
18936 | but,"Is it true?" |
13242 | Advise me? |
13242 | Alick Corfield, for instance? |
13242 | And did he rent it for a_ lady friend?_Tom asked, putting a significant stress on the last two words. |
13242 | And does Mr. Falconer visit her? |
13242 | And is there living in your house, right here beside us, a mysterious woman with a baby? |
13242 | And the child dislikes her so much? |
13242 | And what is the blanket for? |
13242 | And why should n''t you give yourself concern about matters of dress, Miss Summerhaze? 13242 And you have been sorry?" |
13242 | And, pray, what''s his notion for that? |
13242 | And, pray, whose bedroom is that supposed to be? |
13242 | Are you going through life taking as gospel all the unmeaning badinage which gentlemen permit themselves to talk to ladies? |
13242 | As picking primroses and bluebells, Joseph? |
13242 | Because-- Shall I tell you? |
13242 | Believe that you pushed her in-- that you wanted to drown dear little Fina? 13242 But friend?" |
13242 | But have you no commendation for the woman who is independent enough to rise above the vanities of fashion? |
13242 | But how far? |
13242 | But may I depend upon you? 13242 But where is the third?" |
13242 | Dear lady, may I kiss you? |
13242 | Do I understand that she is a widow? |
13242 | Do n''t I? |
13242 | Do n''t you say so, Sue? 13242 Do n''t you think so?" |
13242 | Do n''t you think so? |
13242 | Do n''t you think so? |
13242 | Do you believe this? |
13242 | Do you hear, Ruth? 13242 Do you keep dogs?" |
13242 | Do you not agree with me? |
13242 | Do you propose keeping bachelor''s hall? |
13242 | Do you think it looks pretty? 13242 Does he want another story put on your house?" |
13242 | Dr. Gillett had said they all had to die: would they, truly? |
13242 | Fina, did you not hear me? 13242 Friend? |
13242 | Gertrude,she said,"do I look very old- fashioned?" |
13242 | Good- morning, Miss Dundas: where have you been? |
13242 | Had n''t you gone home with Delia Spaulding? 13242 Have you any children?--a large family?" |
13242 | Have you boys? |
13242 | Have you studied architecture? |
13242 | He is not disagreeable to you? |
13242 | How can you be insincere? 13242 How does your friend like the house?" |
13242 | How far would you go to prove your gratitude? |
13242 | How should I know? |
13242 | How should I know? |
13242 | How,I asked,"do the efforts of the Christian missionaries comport with your own sect''s?" |
13242 | I am sorry I have not made your sister''s acquaintance: would it be convenient for me to go with you this evening and get acquainted with her? |
13242 | I wonder,said Brother Tom, recovering,"if he can be the same Falconer I''ve heard the boys talk about?" |
13242 | I''d like to know how the fellows, as you call them, could have found all this out unless they employ spies? |
13242 | If Josephine was her stepmother, would Major Harrowby be her stepfather? |
13242 | Is n''t that delightful? |
13242 | Is that man a servant, Ruth? |
13242 | Is that what you''ve been doing? |
13242 | May I depend on you? |
13242 | May n''t I go and select your dress this afternoon? 13242 Me whom ye pierced with curse and jeer, Whose mortal thirst ye quenched with gall? |
13242 | No: why should I? 13242 Now, Gert, be fair: did n''t I tell you that I''d be back immediately?" |
13242 | Of course I do not wish to interfere, and it is no business of mine, but is it right to fool that unhappy girl as you are doing? 13242 Suppose your house should burn down as soon as it''s finished, as the First Congregational church did?" |
13242 | Susie, wo n''t you go with us sleigh- riding to- morrow evening? |
13242 | Tell me,then said Mr. Gryce in a soft and crooning kind of voice, coming nearer to her,"what do you think of gratitude?" |
13242 | That is your first effort? 13242 Then why do n''t you help me across some of the heartache?" |
13242 | Then why does n''t he say so? 13242 Think not?" |
13242 | Think so? |
13242 | To waste in ribbons and bonnets? |
13242 | To you? |
13242 | Well, what''s that other man done? |
13242 | Well, why do n''t you put yourself in the lead in this matter, Miss Summerhaze? 13242 What are these things?" |
13242 | What are you people all about? 13242 What do folks have against him?" |
13242 | What do people do who have large families and who must rent houses? |
13242 | What do you know? |
13242 | What good would advice do? 13242 What in the world do you want with a house? |
13242 | What is he for ever coming here for? |
13242 | What is it this time? |
13242 | What is it you say, Fina? |
13242 | What shall it be? 13242 When_ did_ you do it?" |
13242 | Where is Leam, my little Fina? 13242 Where is Lester, Ruth?" |
13242 | Where''s Nell? 13242 Where''s my wife?" |
13242 | Where, then? |
13242 | Who told you? |
13242 | Who was it that called, Susie? |
13242 | Why do n''t you call on me, Susie? 13242 Why does Miss Birkett hate me?" |
13242 | Why should I be vexed? |
13242 | Why, Tom, what''s the matter with you? |
13242 | Why, do n''t you see? 13242 Why, mother, do n''t you see the fault?" |
13242 | Why, what''s happened, Gertrude? |
13242 | Why,said Susan, laughing,"what possible difference can it make to anybody how I look?" |
13242 | Will you be good to her and love her very much? 13242 Will you like me to be your mamma?" |
13242 | Will you love me, little Fina? |
13242 | Will you take my word for it, then, in lieu of your own experience? |
13242 | Would you marry for fear, then, if not for gratitude or love? 13242 Would you marry for gratitude where you did not love?" |
13242 | You are not good at metaphysics? |
13242 | You are not vexed that I speak of him when I want a name? |
13242 | You do n''t want anybody to marry you because you dress well and are stylish? |
13242 | Your friend is a lady-- a widow? |
13242 | ''What is that?'' |
13242 | After all, is it surprising that the institution which is most liberal should attract to itself the most progressive minds? |
13242 | Ah, where was the philosophy of fitness now, when this exquisite creation, more splendid than fit, came to the front? |
13242 | Ai n''t that your mind about it, Susan?" |
13242 | An''stlanger[15] say when in he come,"Is Mister Coe, my dear, at home?" |
13242 | And for himself, would she make him happy? |
13242 | And how is that excellent young man, our deputy shepherd?" |
13242 | And if I think all this, how can I like her?" |
13242 | And what shall we say to performances such as the explosion of nitro- glycerine? |
13242 | And why? |
13242 | Are we not at liberty to borrow an example from the history of President Porter''s own college? |
13242 | Are you going to get married?" |
13242 | Are you going to live in it yourself? |
13242 | Are you one of them?" |
13242 | Are you, too, going to build a house, Gert?" |
13242 | Besides, what could she say? |
13242 | But has the spirit of brutality passed wholly away? |
13242 | But is he unworthy? |
13242 | But is it not becoming in us to confess, without repining, that we can not realize the wish? |
13242 | But who ever gained by conscious endeavor the love that was not given by the free sympathies of Nature? |
13242 | Can he conceive of anything more likely to frustrate all the aims of college study? |
13242 | Can not you take that to yourself? |
13242 | Could not the Fates have let her off from this cup, so bitter to a proud woman''s lips? |
13242 | Did he know that she looked at him because he told her to do so? |
13242 | Do n''t you see there ca n''t be a window?" |
13242 | Do you know, Susie, what the feeling is to be always behind in dress?" |
13242 | Do you know?" |
13242 | Do you really believe that Major Harrowby was in earnest about your giving him botanical lessons?" |
13242 | Do you see that iron pillar?" |
13242 | Falconer?" |
13242 | Gertrude with her youth and beauty and enthusiasm-- why must she be drawn into the wretchedness? |
13242 | Had she heard aright? |
13242 | Have you all gone house- mad? |
13242 | He began to ask himself whether the blighted tree could ever put forth leaves again? |
13242 | He gentleum much stare galow[20] To hearee girley talkee so; And say,"Dear child, may I inquire Which form of faith you most admire?" |
13242 | How could she ever do it? |
13242 | How could she satisfy her own conscience that she was not moved by jealousy? |
13242 | How in the world could I show him consideration? |
13242 | How should she behave? |
13242 | How should there be a change? |
13242 | How would she bear herself? |
13242 | How, then, to deal with this fatal superstition, or rather conglomerate of superstitions, which seems to suffer no more from attack than a shadow? |
13242 | I died for your immortal cheer: What profit have I of you all? |
13242 | I must say I have no faith, myself, in Bayswater_ ingénues_: have you, Edgar?" |
13242 | I replied that we ate the fishes, but was greatly troubled afterward lest she should confound me with the question,"What becomes of the snakes?" |
13242 | If she was his wife, why any reticence or mystery? |
13242 | If she was simply a friend or a sister, why this reticence and mystery of which Tom had spoken? |
13242 | If she''s an honest wife or his sister or a reputable friend, why the deuce does n''t he say so? |
13242 | If you were in the power of a man, would you marry that man to save yourself from all chance of betrayal? |
13242 | In all its details?" |
13242 | Is it a mere accident that the oldest and the youngest German universities are in large cities? |
13242 | Is there not something dwarfing in the atmosphere of a small country town, where character is undiversified and life uneventful? |
13242 | It was n''t Mr. Falconer, then; and who in the world was Phil? |
13242 | May I see you immediately?" |
13242 | No, she must stay at home and abide the meeting; and, after all, what would she not rather do and suffer than miss it? |
13242 | Not many days after Gertrude had occasion to repeat her question to Susan:"Who was it called?" |
13242 | Now, this one is right pretty,''pears to me, and right handy.--What''s the reason this one wo n''t do, Susan?" |
13242 | Of what good to dream, to lament? |
13242 | One day some flin[11] flom[12] Boston come And askee,"Mister Coe at home?" |
13242 | Ought n''t Gertrude to cut him? |
13242 | Ought she, as her mother had advised, demand possession of her house? |
13242 | Praise and give thanks, all spirits sad: A day, two nights of perfect rest? |
13242 | Said he, Madam, pray, what mean ye? |
13242 | Sha''n''t I bring her away to- night?" |
13242 | Shall we add New York and San Francisco-- little wards as they are of a continental metropolis? |
13242 | She did not even see that some one stood straight in the path before her, till"Whither and whence?" |
13242 | Should she never be free from its shadow? |
13242 | Tell me who In this house you ever knew? |
13242 | That''s nature.--But what are you going to do with your fifteen hundred dollars, anyhow, Susie?" |
13242 | The teacher then asks the question, writing it upon the blackboard or spelling it upon his fingers,"What did John do?" |
13242 | Their recitations(?) |
13242 | Then through their agonies were heard The tones which still''d the angry sea, The voice of the Eternal Word:"And do ye ask repose of me? |
13242 | Then would n''t I have been in a pretty pickle? |
13242 | To what point on a continent as broad as the Atlantic were they to come? |
13242 | Two nights, a day, no pain or tears?" |
13242 | Was I to come trapesing home alone?" |
13242 | Was Susan vain or foolish that she thus questioned herself? |
13242 | Was it because it would double his visits to her? |
13242 | Was it sympathy she felt, or was hers a generous stand against a possible injustice? |
13242 | Was it then coming at last, that reward of constancy for which she had borne so much suspense, so many delays, such long dull days and tearful nights? |
13242 | Was not this enough, after all the years of longing and dreary waiting and sickening commonplace? |
13242 | Was she awake? |
13242 | Was she not betraying herself for the very fear of discovery? |
13242 | Was she to be asked to befriend this woman toward whom people''s eyes were turning in mistrust, and about whom their lips were whispering? |
13242 | Was the rickety idol of her whole life''s worship really about to bless her with his smiles? |
13242 | Was there much doubt of it? |
13242 | We dine at four: may I not send the carriage for you as early as two o''clock? |
13242 | Well, I suppose there''s something or other the matter with all these plans?" |
13242 | Well, now, what''s the matter with this one?" |
13242 | Were ever mortals in such a fix? |
13242 | What can man desire more? |
13242 | What did it all mean? |
13242 | What ever did you draw it this way for, Susan?" |
13242 | What have we in return for the outlay? |
13242 | What malady was this that had overtaken her so suddenly? |
13242 | What wonder that there are so many of these? |
13242 | What would our Pan- Athenaic games be without it? |
13242 | What''s gone crooked?" |
13242 | What''s the matter now? |
13242 | Where are you going? |
13242 | Where else could the two ends of the century be so fitly brought together? |
13242 | Wherein, then, lies the secret of the change? |
13242 | Who could have resisted the eloquence of those lips? |
13242 | Who was your architect, Miss Summerhaze? |
13242 | Who will say that it is according to philosophical principles that we say,"A fine large red apple,"instead of"An apple, fine, red, large"? |
13242 | Why ca n''t they sew in the dining- room?" |
13242 | Why did n''t he get a screw- driver and screw up the screws?" |
13242 | Why do n''t you adopt this plan?" |
13242 | Why should I marry--?" |
13242 | Why should n''t you become a builder?" |
13242 | Why should n''t you become an architect? |
13242 | Why should n''t you go into a work for which you have evidently remarkable talent? |
13242 | Why should she be delivered over to an unworthy love? |
13242 | Why should they exact this uttermost farthing of anguish her heart could pay? |
13242 | Why was this? |
13242 | Why, Susan, ai n''t that the name of the man who rented your house?" |
13242 | Why, then, should they be the only set of persons to disobey, as a set, the rules of public order? |
13242 | Will it be a sacrifice, Josephine?" |
13242 | Will you go over now and look at it? |
13242 | Would he look changed to her? |
13242 | Would it not seem even to her own heart that she was acting selfishly? |
13242 | Would she accept his relations pleasantly, or defy and reject as before? |
13242 | Would she be able to maintain a calm coldness, or would her conscious manner betray her mistrust, her wounded heart? |
13242 | Would that sin of hers always thus meet her face to face? |
13242 | Yet how could she, the involved, bewildered Susan, dare warn Gertrude? |
13242 | You know Phil Trowbridge?" |
13242 | You never planned a house before?" |
13242 | You''ve heard what we''ve been talking about, have n''t you?" |
13242 | and how shall it be made? |
13242 | and that she would have rather kept her eyes to the ground? |
13242 | and why does n''t he go there and live with her, instead of boarding at a hotel? |
13242 | and why does n''t she ever go out with him? |
13242 | another screw loose?" |
13242 | asked Mr. Dundas slowly--"Leam pushed you into the river?" |
13242 | but_ What_ are the Sontals? |
13242 | do you hear?" |
13242 | had there ever been any doubt of it? |
13242 | hey?" |
13242 | how would he behave? |
13242 | is this proved? |
13242 | said Josephine gratefully; and Leam, looking at her with large mournful eyes, said in a soft but surprised tone of voice,"Thank me!--why?" |
13242 | said King Anang Pal.--''If the serpent were dead there would be no change,''said the Brahman.--''Well, and what then?'' |
13242 | said the leader in some astonishment as our search proceeded unsuccessfully,"has_ anybody_ hit him? |
13242 | so little; for there was another voice, a voice that dismayed:"Why otherwise the silence, the mystery?" |
13242 | upon your secresy?" |
13242 | what do you mean? |
13242 | what is all this about?" |
13242 | where have you been?" |
13242 | where''s Edward?" |
13242 | why are we waiting here?" |
13242 | would she seem changed to him? |
15065 | ''And by whom?'' |
15065 | ''Any one hurt?'' |
15065 | ''Because he was brutal to Sam, should you be brutal to him? |
15065 | ''By tale?'' |
15065 | ''Can you tell me what_ that_ figger represents?'' |
15065 | ''Did he dare to do that? |
15065 | ''Did you git that gash over your nose out there?'' |
15065 | ''Did you hear the music in the Esbekieh garden yesterday?'' |
15065 | ''Do they? |
15065 | ''Do you say that, boys;''said the Colonel, turning to the other negroes;''shall he have fifty lashes?'' |
15065 | ''Excuse me,''said Caper,''but may I ask why she has such a_ very_ low- necked dress on?'' |
15065 | ''Hallo, uncle, you awake?'' |
15065 | ''How could I help it? |
15065 | ''How dare you disobey me? |
15065 | ''How was it? |
15065 | ''Hum-- yes,''says Dr. K.,''_ but how did the elephant stand it_?'' |
15065 | ''I say, Jim, did you expect to see me here?'' |
15065 | ''I say, now, Jim, where did we go last night?'' |
15065 | ''I say,''_llustrissimo_,''shouted Caper down to him,''what kind of strings are those on your instrument?'' |
15065 | ''I want ter know what yer went and berried me for, afore I was killed for?'' |
15065 | ''Is Jake much hurt?'' |
15065 | ''Is_ she_ here?'' |
15065 | ''Kin it stop the turpentime from running?'' |
15065 | ''Old man,''the pages asked,''where goest thou now?'' |
15065 | ''Sha n''t I get well? |
15065 | ''Then how do you get your butter?'' |
15065 | ''Tis hard to believe, for so seemeth life, A cruse full of oil, with nothing more rife; Yet what saith the prophet? |
15065 | ''Very well, Ned; how are you?'' |
15065 | ''Wal, Cunnul, how dy''ge?'' |
15065 | ''Well, Jim, what is it?'' |
15065 | ''Well, another time you mind what_ I_ say-- do you hear?'' |
15065 | ''Well, what then?'' |
15065 | ''Whar did ye come from? |
15065 | ''What Sam is it?'' |
15065 | ''What are you howling about?'' |
15065 | ''What have you to say to that, young man?'' |
15065 | ''What the devil''s broke loose?'' |
15065 | ''What will he pay you?'' |
15065 | ''What, will you go sixty miles with this team, and waste five or six days, for fifty cents on six barrels-- three dollars?'' |
15065 | ''When you shall die, who shall within it dwell?'' |
15065 | ''Where are you hauling your turpentine?'' |
15065 | ''Where did you catch him?'' |
15065 | ''Where is Jake?'' |
15065 | ''Who are you, sir?'' |
15065 | ''Who hired it then upon your father''s death?'' |
15065 | ''Who is_ that_?'' |
15065 | ''Who was the next proprietor?'' |
15065 | ''Who''s looking after Sam?'' |
15065 | ''Who,''asked the dervish,''owned this palace first?'' |
15065 | ''Who?'' |
15065 | ''Whose negroes are those, Colonel?'' |
15065 | ''Why ask''st thou? |
15065 | ''Why is that?'' |
15065 | ''Why should_ you_ interfere between them and him? |
15065 | ''Why was he whipped?'' |
15065 | ''Would''nt it be better to make them go to hear the old preacher; could''nt they learn something from him?'' |
15065 | ''You do n''t mean to say that cows are generally worked here?'' |
15065 | ''You were all through that Mexican war, and out with Walker in Niggerawger.--Well, what do you think''bout Niggerawger? |
15065 | ***** Does the reader remember Poor Pillicoddy, and the mariner who was ever expected to turn up again? |
15065 | ARE THE SOUTHERN PRIVATEERS PIRATES? |
15065 | And I said-- what gallant horseman, Who revels and rides no more, Perhaps twenty years back, or fifty, On his heel that weapon wore? |
15065 | And JEFF DAVIS that I spy there? |
15065 | And dost thou now fall over to my foes, And wear a lion''s hide? |
15065 | And even if there is''danger nigh''--because we are pleased with the beautiful foam, need we steer straight for the breakers? |
15065 | And here-- did the buckle loosen, And no eye look down to see, When he rode to blast with the lightning The shrinking eyes of Lee? |
15065 | And shake hands with the dainty New Zealander dame, Who thought that she really might relish a bit Of broiled missionary brought fresh from the spit? |
15065 | And what if it was human- faced like the Sphinx? |
15065 | And who is their mourner? |
15065 | And,''if wishes were fishes''I think one or two Would have_ wished_, and swam out of their scrape, do not you? |
15065 | Arn''t they rather down in month? |
15065 | Been sworn my soldier? |
15065 | Big and fearful,& c,& c. Is not that the traitor DAVIS? |
15065 | Big and fearful,& c.& c. Is n''t that the gallows high there? |
15065 | But does_ he_ ever sleep? |
15065 | But the fact was indisputable; and how could St. Louis hope for protection that had nowhere else been afforded? |
15065 | But what now about dinner? |
15065 | But what was to be next done? |
15065 | But why talk thus? |
15065 | But_ is_ it right; we do not say as a thing of the past, and of a rapidly vanishing serf- system, but as an institution of the progressive present? |
15065 | By the way, Mister Caper, air you any relation to Caper of the great East Ingy house of Caper?'' |
15065 | By the way, who is that pickpocket- looking genius with eyes like a black snake?'' |
15065 | Ca n''t Jim help you?'' |
15065 | Can it be that those''Fish Tales''of mermen are true? |
15065 | Can such things in our lives occur? |
15065 | Can you expect me to tend you when you are sick, if you beat a dying man? |
15065 | Chapin threw back the doors of it like a showman about to disclose the What Is It? |
15065 | Did anybody ever know that man to keep an engagement?'' |
15065 | Did it drive him, at terrible Princeton,''Tween two storms of leaden rain? |
15065 | Did it fall, unfelt and unheeded, When that fight of despair was won, And Clinton, worn and discouraged, Crept away at the set of sun? |
15065 | Did it press his steed in hot anger On Long Island''s day of pain? |
15065 | Did n''t I tell you to give him a hundred?'' |
15065 | Did the brave old_ Pater Patrioe_ Wear that spur like a belted knight-- Wear it through gain and disaster, From Cambridge to Monmouth flight? |
15065 | Did you ever see anybody with their hair fixed that way? |
15065 | Did you help Deacon Hubbard hive his bees? |
15065 | Do I grasp such a priceless treasure? |
15065 | Do n''t he wish he could enslave us? |
15065 | Do you remember those lines in Richard the Third,--''"Why do you look on us, and shake your head, And call us orphans-- wretched?"'' |
15065 | Do you wish to know the turning process? |
15065 | Does Pompey say you should do such things?'' |
15065 | Got a match? |
15065 | Had it no purpose? |
15065 | Had it nothing to hold? |
15065 | Has he not insulted you often enough to make you let him alone? |
15065 | Has there since the fall been a pause in_ his_ labors? |
15065 | Have n''t I been out with him day after day at Ostia? |
15065 | Have you ever thought how much misery one life_ can_ hold in solution? |
15065 | How could it be otherwise? |
15065 | How long since you had it cleaned?'' |
15065 | How shall the emancipation of slavery conduce to the best interest of the master, no less than to the happiness of the slave? |
15065 | I say, Jim, now, what became of the nobility, the Colonnas and Aldobrandinis, after they finished that barrel? |
15065 | I say, what''s she got that towel on her head for? |
15065 | IBRAM the King next to the dervish spoke:''My palace a hotel? |
15065 | If breath to every hidden prayer were given, could it be_ singing_ breath? |
15065 | If he cries so over anchovies, what would he do if he had a whale for sale? |
15065 | If so, did you receive any remuneration from him for your services? |
15065 | If such were his recreations, what must have been his labors? |
15065 | If the question is asked,''Can we hold and dispose of a part, or whole, of a sovereign State as a conquered province?'' |
15065 | In its shape it was what? |
15065 | Is it possible to find anywhere a community more helpless for its own protection or defense? |
15065 | Is it put there to dry?'' |
15065 | Is not that the Rebel South? |
15065 | It is n''t traitorous in me, is it, to thus desire to aid and assist the enemy? |
15065 | Jim, how dy''ge?'' |
15065 | Kimball, Esq., entitled''WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?'' |
15065 | Kind of a cuss''d''skeeter hole, ai n''t it?'' |
15065 | Letting Grahamite doctors our diet appoint, Eat our very plain pudding without any joint? |
15065 | Now for what was this slender and curious mold? |
15065 | On they went; who shall say where they paused? |
15065 | One day, after dinner, he said to me, in his stern way of speaking,--''Gilbert, what kind of scrape did you get into in G----?'' |
15065 | One example of these will perhaps be enough:--''These crawlers,''for instance,''should they be still here,''''Not yet become bipeds?'' |
15065 | Or a grand public dinner with_ nothing_ but toasts? |
15065 | Or, shall we the bloody alternative take, And cannibal meals of our relatives make, Put aside ancient scruples( for what''s in a name?) |
15065 | Pray, where''s the joke?'' |
15065 | President,''said he,''how would this do? |
15065 | Shall I introduce you?'' |
15065 | Shall she, still struggling, find that blood and treasure, and all the thousand dear blessings of peace, have been sacrificed in vain? |
15065 | Shall we pulse it, like Daniel, that knowing young Jew? |
15065 | T.***** Who has not belonged in his time to a debating society? |
15065 | The question for debate on one occasion was-- Is conscience an infallible guide? |
15065 | The war was waged, and, when over, what had England gained? |
15065 | Then what difference_ kin_ it make to_ the country_?'' |
15065 | There was war in heaven when ambition was cast out:--what quiet pastoral appeals to our noblest impulses as Paradise Lost does? |
15065 | This saying the ancients were better sculpters than we air, is no such thing; what did they know about steam- engines or telegraphs? |
15065 | Thou cold- blooded slave, Hast thou not spoke like thunder on my side? |
15065 | Unto what was it like? |
15065 | V.***** What Shall we do with it? |
15065 | Was he riding away to his bridal, When the leather snapped in twain? |
15065 | Was he thrown and dragged by the stirrup, With the rough stones crushing his brain? |
15065 | Was it a victory where the conquerors were obliged to retire from the field, and carry out their wounded under a flag of truce? |
15065 | Was this_ George Washington''s spur_? |
15065 | We can not go hungry; what are we to do? |
15065 | What a precious paradox have we here? |
15065 | What are homes without hearths? |
15065 | What do you think of it? |
15065 | What great gift has the world ever won that was not bought with blood? |
15065 | What if it had ridden with Forman, When he leaped through the open door, With the British dragoon behind him, In his race o''er the granary floor? |
15065 | What if, in the day of battle That raged and rioted here, It had dropped from the foot of a soldier, As he rode in his mad career? |
15065 | What if-- but the brain grows dizzy With the thoughts of the rusted spur; What if it had fled with Clinton, Or charged with Aaron Burr? |
15065 | What is to be done with it? |
15065 | What leader of slighter mold and lesser fame could now resist the coming shock? |
15065 | What shall we do with him?'' |
15065 | What was to be done? |
15065 | What youth ambitious of becoming''a perfect_ Hercules_ behind the bar?'' |
15065 | What''s a hearth without roasts? |
15065 | What, then, is to be done? |
15065 | What_ was_ this race, this religion, this language? |
15065 | When from under each cover a man was to spring, Where then was the empty, insignificant thing? |
15065 | When has independence of action or thought been purchased otherwise than at the cost of persecution,--more revolution? |
15065 | Whether I had ever received from him a large pan of honey in the comb? |
15065 | Whether he would give his consent for me to come to G---- on business of great importance if they would pay my expenses, and how soon I could come? |
15065 | Whether my father was a member of the church? |
15065 | Who shall answer? |
15065 | Who were the first settlers in America? |
15065 | Who, indeed, could have believed that the well was deep enough to hold a pump of such immense size as this, that had become so old and rotten? |
15065 | Why do n''t they saw it off, and take out the old pump in two or three pieces?'' |
15065 | Why have n''t you ben up to see my wife and daughters? |
15065 | Will she offer a choice which we may not refuse, When we''re sure to turn savage however we choose? |
15065 | Will you state what it was? |
15065 | Wo n''t it make them stop and ponder? |
15065 | Would it not be a wail monotonous as the dirge of the November wind over the dead summer, a wail for lost hopes, lost joys, lost loves? |
15065 | Yet, what government measure, or scheme philanthropic, Or learned convention in hall philosophic, But is mainly sustained upon leasts and collations? |
15065 | _ Gran Cacciatore!_ Does n''t he spend all his time after quails and snipe and woodcock? |
15065 | _ Jake_ does not say that-- your master leaves it to him, and he will not whip a dying man-- will you, Jake?'' |
15065 | _ The cause_--have we all learned what that means, brother Americans? |
15065 | and what is our duty in this exigency? |
15065 | bidding me depend Upon thy stars, thy fortune, and thy strength? |
15065 | cosa faceste?_''shrieked the lovely Countess Grimanny. |
15065 | dare you call hotel A palace, where the King of Balkh doth dwell?'' |
15065 | must not the state have several hundred millions? |
15065 | was ist das?_''roared the German baron. |
15065 | we grant it; but is it reserved for the nineteenth century to discover a creed for which there shall be no martyrs? |
15065 | why mourn over dead hopes, dead joys, dead loves? |
15065 | you there? |
15482 | About the aunt? |
15482 | Ah, Miss MacLean, may I speak with you a moment? |
15482 | Aighe-- wull it do? |
15482 | An''could we put up a sign furninst,''No Trusters Allowed''? |
15482 | An''goin''away? |
15482 | And I''ll not have to give them up? |
15482 | And Toby? |
15482 | And did the next bring love? |
15482 | And does your back need it, too? |
15482 | And have n''t I come to keep the promise? |
15482 | And retain Margaret MacLean in charge? |
15482 | And so you make believe that Trustee Day is n''t really bad? |
15482 | And the next one brought happiness-- didn''t she? |
15482 | And then-- then-- Oh, could n''t the one after her bring beauty? 15482 And we''ll all be happy together-- somewhere?" |
15482 | And we''ll find the children there? |
15482 | And who knows but the faeries may have come and stolen them all away? |
15482 | And you wo n''t unless I do? |
15482 | And you''ll have them, too? |
15482 | Are the children very much broken up over it? |
15482 | Are ye sure ye''re the queen? |
15482 | Are you ill? |
15482 | But I thought you told me last night we were all going together? 15482 But ca n''t you understand?" |
15482 | But the new surgical ward-- and science? |
15482 | But who ever heard of one in a hospital? 15482 Can any one tell me when Miss MacLean''s time expires?" |
15482 | Could ye-- could ye get one for the price of a penny? |
15482 | Could yer buy a dorg? |
15482 | Did she decorate you? |
15482 | Dinna ye ken the wee gray woman''at cam creepity round an''smiled? |
15482 | Do I get a piece o''paper sayin''I paid the money on it? |
15482 | Do n''t you know that no one must disturb a primrose ring? 15482 Do n''t you want to go back?" |
15482 | Do ye think, Sandy, that ye could scrooch out o''bed an''hump yerself over to them? 15482 Do ye think, now, she might ha''been me aunt?" |
15482 | Do you know what is going to happen some day? 15482 Do you mean to say you paid for them out of your own wages?" |
15482 | Dreading it as much as usual? |
15482 | Every one of those cases could get into, some of the other hospitals; but who would take the incurables? 15482 Guess yer could n''t guess what I dreamt last night, Miss Peggie?" |
15482 | Have n''t you noticed how all mother''s little peculiarities are growing on her? 15482 Have you any shoes got?" |
15482 | Have you forgotten so soon? 15482 Have you never looked into a glass, Thumbkin?" |
15482 | Honest to goodness, Susan, do ye think the likes o''ye could belong to the likes o''that? |
15482 | How did you know it? 15482 How do I know what I would do? |
15482 | How do you do? |
15482 | How do you know? |
15482 | I wonder-- is your magic working all right to- day? 15482 Is it as bad as all that?" |
15482 | Is the song ready, now? |
15482 | Is there any one objectin''to payin''this down for a home? |
15482 | Is there any way of buyin''a dog into a horspital? |
15482 | Is there anything you want? |
15482 | It would be rather a Balaam and his ass affair, but, as Miss MacLean suggests, why not try it? |
15482 | Now how did you ever happen to think of bringing these-- to- day? |
15482 | Now tell me, did they make you go, too? |
15482 | Oh, Michael, do n''t you remember, the next time you were going to say''God bless you''? |
15482 | Oh, my dear-- my dear--and the Superintendent''s voice had almost broken--"what shall we do without you? |
15482 | Operation? |
15482 | Pants? |
15482 | Perhaps you would like to see the new pictures for the nurses''room? |
15482 | Perhaps-- perhaps,she stammered, pitifully,"after what I have said you would rather I did not stay on-- in charge of Ward C?" |
15482 | Phat are ye wantin''wi''''em? |
15482 | Phat wull a do the noo? |
15482 | Porridge? |
15482 | Precautionary disinfecting? |
15482 | Really, Sandy? |
15482 | Shall I guess? |
15482 | So-- you have likewise heard from the widow of the Richest Trustee? |
15482 | Sure, an''silk dresses an''straw hats wi''ribbon on them, an--"Will shoes in the chest be? |
15482 | Sure, was n''t I knowin'', an''could I be afther bringin''anythin''else? 15482 Take what?" |
15482 | The incurable ward and Margaret MacLean have really been a terrible responsibility, have n''t they? 15482 The trustees"--she drew in a quick breath and put out a steadying hand on the banisters--"you mean-- they have given up the incurable ward?" |
15482 | The what? |
15482 | Then ye been''t the wee gray woman-- back yonder? |
15482 | Well, do n''t ye ever say it ag''in-- do ye hear? 15482 Well, what are you going to do about it?" |
15482 | Well,and Bridget put both arms akimbo and smiled a smile of complete satisfaction,"what was I a- tellin''ye, anyways? |
15482 | Well,he found himself saying at last--"well, what is it?" |
15482 | Well--"I thought you said I was n''t to move or speak, or the spell would be broken? |
15482 | Well? |
15482 | What do you mean, dear? 15482 What is it, dear?" |
15482 | What is it, dearest? 15482 What kind of a home?" |
15482 | What might it be? |
15482 | What''s him? |
15482 | What''s that for? |
15482 | What''s that? |
15482 | What''s that? |
15482 | What''s that? |
15482 | What-- what was it you expected? |
15482 | What? |
15482 | What? |
15482 | Who der thunk it? 15482 Why not faeries?" |
15482 | Why not? 15482 Why not? |
15482 | Why, dearest? |
15482 | Why, what''s happenin''to- day? |
15482 | Will one do ye? |
15482 | Will some one motion that we adopt the two measures we have suggested? 15482 Will they fit?" |
15482 | Wobins? |
15482 | Would it be big enough for nine childher-- an''one dog; an''would it be afther havin''all improvements like Miss Peggie an''the House Surgeon? |
15482 | Would n''t to- morrow do? |
15482 | Would n''t you like to come in and talk to the children? 15482 Would n''t you two like to go into the consulting- room and talk it over? |
15482 | Would you go with him-- if he came? |
15482 | Would you promise not to make any noise? |
15482 | Ye have n''t by any chance forgotten somethin''ye''d like to be rememberin'', have ye? |
15482 | Yes, would n''t you like to go in? |
15482 | You remember, Thumbkin, about that sleep? 15482 ''Can ye improve it any?'' 15482 ''What''s that?'' 15482 Almost prophetic, was n''t it? |
15482 | And Peter piped out,"Trusterday, ai n''t it, Miss Peggie?" |
15482 | As for that head of yours, it bobs like a penny balloon among the clouds looking for--""Faeries?" |
15482 | But when is it going to happen?" |
15482 | Ca n''t you see her raising those lorgnettes of hers and saying,''My good boy, do you read your Bible?'' |
15482 | Ca n''t you see that yourself? |
15482 | Can you hear anything?" |
15482 | Can you hear something-- some one coming nearer and nearer and nearer?" |
15482 | Could n''t we?" |
15482 | Could not minds like theirs be taught to walk alone, after all? |
15482 | Could ye be buyin''a home for childher an''dogs for the price of a penny?" |
15482 | Did not their brains go in the end, too, and leave just a breathing husk behind? |
15482 | Did you ever think what it could be like-- if the trustees would only make it something more than-- a matter of business? |
15482 | Do n''t ye mind? |
15482 | Do n''t you like them?" |
15482 | Do n''t you think it sounds-- hopeful?" |
15482 | Do n''t you understand? |
15482 | Do you?" |
15482 | Does any one ever get married in Saint Margaret''s?" |
15482 | Faith, do n''t it beat all how things come thrue-- when ye think''em pleasant an''hard enough?" |
15482 | Have I been dreaming?" |
15482 | Have you noticed how much she naps in the evening, now?" |
15482 | How could you have given her a penny?" |
15482 | How did you know it?" |
15482 | How many are there now?" |
15482 | Instead of that I fear at times that you are-- shall I say-- flippant?" |
15482 | Is n''t it?" |
15482 | Is that not very foolish? |
15482 | Is that not worth considering?" |
15482 | Is there any knowledgeable one among ye that knows aught of a primrose ring?" |
15482 | Is there any one more competent to take charge?" |
15482 | Is there anything dearer to the pride of a child than boots-- new boots? |
15482 | It was a man''s shadow, and the voice of the House Surgeon came over the threshold in a whisper:"What are you doing-- burying ghosts?" |
15482 | It was n''t exactly fair to leave me behind, was it?" |
15482 | May I pass?" |
15482 | Now shall we go on with the story?" |
15482 | Now why waste that room for no purpose?" |
15482 | Now, all together,''We wish--''""Can we go''thout any clothes?" |
15482 | Of course I know it is very much out of the accustomed order of things, but why not try it? |
15482 | Only-- only why could n''t they have taken me with the children? |
15482 | Sad, is n''t it, in so young a child? |
15482 | Say, would n''t you hate to have charity stuffed down your throat that way?" |
15482 | Shall we?" |
15482 | She has written you?" |
15482 | She reached out her hands and patted theirs in turn, asking,"Now what is your name, dearie?" |
15482 | So I thought it would be nice to have something different-- once in a while; and then the old things would taste all the better-- don''t you see? |
15482 | Somewhere-- somewhere-- he knew of hundreds of them-- or were there only a few? |
15482 | That you wish to do the greatest possible good to the greatest number of children? |
15482 | The arguments wax hot at times, and it is Bridget who generally has to put in the final silencing word:"Faith, she kept her promise, did n''t she? |
15482 | The question came from the set lips of the nurse in charge of Ward C."How do we know anything in science? |
15482 | Was it for self- sacrifice?" |
15482 | Was she building up for them an ultimate discontent in trying to make life happy and full for them now? |
15482 | Was this why they had searched him out? |
15482 | Well, do you not see how continuing to keep a number of incurable cases for two or three years-- or as long as they live-- is hindering this? |
15482 | Well, what more do ye want?" |
15482 | Were n''t we afther givin''a penny to the wee one yondther for the home?" |
15482 | Were n''t ye afther givin''us the promise of a home?" |
15482 | What are pockets for, anyway?" |
15482 | What are you doing? |
15482 | What did people do who had to live with dead, paralyzed bodies, dependent upon others to execute the dictates of their brains? |
15482 | What do ye think that C on the door means?" |
15482 | What is going to happen to us?" |
15482 | What would you do with the children in Ward C, now?" |
15482 | What would you say to that?" |
15482 | What''s ailin''?" |
15482 | What''s the news?" |
15482 | What''s the news?" |
15482 | Who der thunk it?" |
15482 | Who did ye ever hear say that?" |
15482 | Who knows?" |
15482 | Why not add your second surgical ward to Saint Margaret''s and do all the good work you can, as you had planned? |
15482 | Why should n''t we ask them? |
15482 | Why should the children ever have to do without her-- unless-- unless something came to them far better-- like Susan''s mythical aunt? |
15482 | Will you come to see me as soon as you can and let us talk it over?" |
15482 | Will you please signify by raising your hands if it is your wish that Miss MacLean''s resignation be accepted at once?" |
15482 | Will you please tell me how you, of all people, ever evolved these-- ideas-- out of Saint Margaret''s?" |
15482 | Would n''t you remember what life had been in that hospital crib, and would n''t you fight to make it happier for the children coming after you? |
15482 | Would n''t you?" |
15482 | Would you mind putting it into scientific American?" |
15482 | Wull it nae mair coom back?" |
15482 | Wull ye tak it frae me noo?" |
15482 | You will only shake it off on the children, and it''s time enough for them to bear it when they wake up in the morning and find out--""Find out what?" |
15482 | and everything come thrue, has n''t it? |
15482 | answered back the administering nurse, and then she asked, solemnly,"How''s Toby?" |
15482 | or,"What''s happened next?" |
10321 | A funny world, ai n''t it? |
10321 | A shadow? 10321 Alone?" |
10321 | And the big characters,she added,"the big characters you tried to hide, are''Kill''and''Burn''?" |
10321 | And the day? |
10321 | And the placard, so finishing, so artistic-- That says? |
10321 | And the theme? |
10321 | And what--the aged voice rose briskly--"what saw you on the waters?" |
10321 | And where did you study? |
10321 | Another,said the girl,"of your heathen stories?" |
10321 | Anything to concern us? |
10321 | Are n''t you coming,called Heywood,"to sit with us awhile?" |
10321 | Are we ready? |
10321 | Are you all excuses, like the others? 10321 Are you dead, then?" |
10321 | Black Dog? 10321 But what can we do? |
10321 | But you are a griffin? |
10321 | Chantel? 10321 Dare what?" |
10321 | Did he mention,said the big padre, presently,"the case against my man, Chok Chung?" |
10321 | Did n''t they just? |
10321 | Did she kill you? |
10321 | Did you catch what she said? 10321 Did you climb into the water- jar, yesterday, before dinner? |
10321 | Dispatches for Rudolph Hackh? |
10321 | Do we play cards,he cried sourly,"or listen to the chatter of senility?" |
10321 | Do you hear, Nesbit? |
10321 | Do you know enough to time a fuse? |
10321 | Do you still think,he answered coldly,"that I would beg off?" |
10321 | Do you? |
10321 | Do? 10321 Do_ you_ dare go to the place I show you, and hide? |
10321 | Dose fellows catch me? |
10321 | Earthquake? |
10321 | Eh, what? 10321 Eng- lish speak I ver''badt,"he whispered; and then with something between gasp and chuckle,"but der_ pak- wa_ goot, no? |
10321 | Escaped? 10321 Extinct? |
10321 | Fair? 10321 Fang?" |
10321 | For the last time,he said:"wo n''t you let me tell him? |
10321 | Goo- moh? 10321 Good?" |
10321 | Heard? 10321 How do you like it, Rudie?" |
10321 | How do you manage all these nice things? |
10321 | How long, Rudie, how long? |
10321 | How many times must I give me orders? |
10321 | How much does he think a man can stand? |
10321 | How shall we know the hour? |
10321 | How''s the fair Bertha?--Mausers all right? 10321 How''s the old forearm I gave you? |
10321 | I am welly? 10321 I do not yet-- Of what?" |
10321 | I mean,Miss Forrester explained, smiling,"it is your first visit to the Far East?" |
10321 | I say, Kneebone, what''s your idea? 10321 I say, what''s the matter one piecee picnic this week? |
10321 | I say,he complained suddenly,"you''re not going to''study the people,''and all that rot? |
10321 | I was naked, and--how ran the lines? |
10321 | I''ll be along, tell her--"Had she better go alone? |
10321 | If I have made my flock a remnant-- aliens-- rejected-- tell me, what shall I do? 10321 Is Hackh there?" |
10321 | Is n''t it just a place to be happy in? |
10321 | Is that not better? |
10321 | Is the water safe? |
10321 | Jolivet''s kids wake you? |
10321 | Life sentence, eh? 10321 Little devil, I always thought-- What''s missing?" |
10321 | Lowdah? |
10321 | Must we take it so very, very hard? |
10321 | My dream, eh, little dog? 10321 No, is she?" |
10321 | No,he cried, with a start:"you have n''t?" |
10321 | Not dead yet, you rascal? |
10321 | Now what does Byron say? |
10321 | Of the world? |
10321 | Oh? |
10321 | Oh? |
10321 | Oh? |
10321 | Old fool and his earnings, eh? 10321 Over where?" |
10321 | Pardon? |
10321 | Pistols? 10321 So you''re there, too, eh? |
10321 | Stores? 10321 Take me-- leave him, if he wo n''t come-- I scolded him-- then the noises came, and we ran--""What boat?" |
10321 | Take only the left half of that word, and what have you? |
10321 | Take,the padre ordered,"this one; left half?" |
10321 | That dingy little procession, do you know, it''s quite theatrical? 10321 The beggar puts one shot every five minutes through the same window.--I wonder what he''s thinking about? |
10321 | The best? |
10321 | The good? 10321 The right half?" |
10321 | The very best friend? 10321 This remains the same, does n''t it, for all our troubles?" |
10321 | To the nunnery? |
10321 | Two swords, that''s all? 10321 Was that true?" |
10321 | Was what true? |
10321 | Well? |
10321 | What are you thinking of? |
10321 | What book did you read? |
10321 | What cannon? 10321 What did we promise?" |
10321 | What do you see there? |
10321 | What do you think of it all? |
10321 | What do you think, Gilly? |
10321 | What have you there for us? |
10321 | What is danger? 10321 What is it?" |
10321 | What is your news? |
10321 | What must I choose? |
10321 | What price sympathy on a pagoda? |
10321 | What shall I say? |
10321 | What ship? |
10321 | What the devil are you firing at? |
10321 | What thing you do? |
10321 | What was all true? |
10321 | What would a chap ever do without''em? 10321 What would you give,"he propounded thickly,"for a hay harvest breeze?" |
10321 | What''s that about Rome? |
10321 | What''s this? |
10321 | What''s up, Captain? |
10321 | What''s up? |
10321 | What''s wrong? |
10321 | What,began Rudolph, suddenly, and his voice trembled,"what is your true opinion? |
10321 | What? 10321 Where should all the rats be coming from?" |
10321 | Where''s he taking your Mausers? |
10321 | White Lotus? |
10321 | Who can tell? |
10321 | Who comes? |
10321 | Who poked fun at me, first and last? 10321 Why have you such a sensual face?" |
10321 | Why is your face so green? |
10321 | Why, I think-- it is-- is it not all now the sense- manifest substance of our duty? 10321 Why, where''s the Mem?" |
10321 | Why,continued the examiner,"do you look so happy?" |
10321 | Will you bite the clouds? |
10321 | Will you speak out and live,cried the swordsman,"or will you die?" |
10321 | Without saying good- by? |
10321 | Yes? |
10321 | You have killed him? |
10321 | You old Sly- boots!--But are you sure? 10321 You see at the phosphor, not?" |
10321 | You speak English, I''m sure, do n''t you? |
10321 | You were saying? |
10321 | You''ve never seen it, Mr. Hackh? 10321 You?" |
10321 | ''Nisi damnose bibimus,''--forget how it runs:''Drink hearty, or you''ll die without getting your revenge,''""You are then a university''s- man?" |
10321 | ''_ Das versinnlichte Material unserer Pflicht_''No?" |
10321 | --Satirical and debonair, he shrugged his shoulders.--"What use, among these thousands of yellow pigs?" |
10321 | --The little old reader had quietly disappeared, leaving them a vacant table.--"Isn''t he weird?" |
10321 | After a pause, he added soberly:--"Images? |
10321 | All zo many shoots,_ kugel_, der bullet,--''_gilt''s mir, oder gilt es dir?_''Men are dead in der Silk- Weafer Street. |
10321 | And by the way, did you make that inventory of provisions?" |
10321 | And come join me in a peg at the club? |
10321 | And did my cook arrive to help yours?" |
10321 | Are the rest coming? |
10321 | Are they?" |
10321 | Are_ you_ married to these people? |
10321 | At last he regained himself, stood quiet, and added very pointedly,"What did_ yow_ lern?" |
10321 | Boats? |
10321 | Bring any new songs out? |
10321 | But was she? |
10321 | But what can you have brought back? |
10321 | But what?" |
10321 | But why come here? |
10321 | But will that stop him? |
10321 | CHAPTER XII THE WAR BOARD"Rigmarole?" |
10321 | Cadging for chow, does one acquire merit?" |
10321 | Can I truly be proud of-- of her?" |
10321 | Can we, now? |
10321 | Come see us, when we''re not so busy? |
10321 | Desert''em? |
10321 | Did you find them? |
10321 | Do n''t you think you have a better?" |
10321 | Do you dare?" |
10321 | Do you hear? |
10321 | Do you know,"his voice rose and quickened,"do you know, the other end of town is in an uproar? |
10321 | Does the knowledge come so cheap, or at a price? |
10321 | Duels? |
10321 | Eh, Heywood?" |
10321 | Eh, what? |
10321 | Eh, what? |
10321 | Eh? |
10321 | Eh? |
10321 | Eh? |
10321 | Eh?" |
10321 | Equal to hauling a sack out? |
10321 | Extinct? |
10321 | Fang, the Sword- Pen, in great favor up there.--What? |
10321 | Fixed ideas, eh? |
10321 | Fixed ideas, eh? |
10321 | For some time again they stood as though listening, till Heywood spoke:--"Holding your own, are you, by the water gate?" |
10321 | Forrester?" |
10321 | Going to stay long?" |
10321 | Hackh?" |
10321 | Have n''t you-- a better friend?" |
10321 | He clapped Rudolph on the arm, and crowed:--"Nunnery? |
10321 | He drained his whiskey and soda, signaled for more, and added:"Were you ever cooped up, yachting, with a chap you detested? |
10321 | He hailed them in a dry voice, and cleared his throat,"Where is she? |
10321 | He snapped the empty shells from his gun, and blew into the breech, before adding,"Would_ you_ mind, then? |
10321 | He stepped lightly across the landing, and called out,"You chaps make yourselves at home, will you? |
10321 | Heywood laughed, and turned his head:--"How much do you know about sieges, old chap?" |
10321 | How ran the verse? |
10321 | I lern moch.--But iss Rome yet a fortify town?" |
10321 | I mean, we ca n''t carry these long faces to the club, can we? |
10321 | I would say-- picturesque, no?" |
10321 | I''ve kept the guns oiled, and will warrant the lot sound.--Now, who''ll lend me spare coolies, and stuff for sand- bags?" |
10321 | In a daze, Rudolph gripped the wet and shining hands, and heard the same quiet voice:"Rest all asleep, I suppose? |
10321 | In the hoary peace of twilight,--"What can_ we_ do here?" |
10321 | Is it?" |
10321 | Is n''t that-- what I call-- being invulnerable? |
10321 | Let you go? |
10321 | Look here"--He held up a tin and scanned the label triumphantly:"Chow de Bruxelles, what? |
10321 | Man,"he cried, in a voice that made Rudolph jump,--"man, why did n''t you stop him? |
10321 | Meantime, you chaps must lend coolies, eh? |
10321 | Meantime,--what do you say, Doctor?--chloride of lime in pots?" |
10321 | Mrs. Forrester? |
10321 | Never saw chow spelt with an''x''before, did ye? |
10321 | Next instant he whirled on Rudolph in fury.--"Is this a game, or Idiot''s Joy?" |
10321 | Nothing else to do, is there?" |
10321 | Now please, wo n''t you listen to my advice? |
10321 | O heh!--O ha? |
10321 | One leg at a time?" |
10321 | Or do you dare?" |
10321 | Phew!--Oh, I say, what did they mean? |
10321 | Pink Pagoda, eh? |
10321 | Poor chap, he''ll never ask you to return them.--Anything else?" |
10321 | Rather neat, what? |
10321 | Rudie: are you game for something rather foolhardy? |
10321 | Rudie? |
10321 | See those bead eyes watching us, eh? |
10321 | She moved away, carrying her medicines, but paused in the door, smiled back at him as from a crypt, and said:--"Have_ you_ been hurt?" |
10321 | She''s resting.--I hope we''ve not delayed the concert?" |
10321 | Shot- guns? |
10321 | Sniping all night, will it be?--or shall we get a fair chance at''em?" |
10321 | Some are marked for you, and the rest-- will you send them Home, please?" |
10321 | Still, what had he expected? |
10321 | Sturgeon, Teppich, Padre, Captain? |
10321 | Such a nasty little-- Why did-- What do you propose doing with it?" |
10321 | The joke is now on the merchant, eh?" |
10321 | The merchant?" |
10321 | The voice, level and ironic, was that of Fang, the Sword- Pen:--"O Fragrant Ones, when shall the foreign monsters perish like this cock?" |
10321 | Then your name''s-- what is it again?--Hackh, is n''t it? |
10321 | They kept asking,''Do you follow the foreign dogs and goats?'' |
10321 | Think I carry ships in my pocket?" |
10321 | Think you these things are but still to come? |
10321 | Thorough, rather? |
10321 | To- morrow will do.--Have you any money on you? |
10321 | Tough as ever? |
10321 | Was there a German mail- boat? |
10321 | Was there a club, from which he had stolen out while she wept, ignominiously, in that girl''s arms? |
10321 | We''ll just make it a holiday, catchee good time.--What? |
10321 | What Black Dog is to bark?" |
10321 | What can we do here?" |
10321 | What could he know, this airy, unfeeling meddler, so free with his advice and innuendo? |
10321 | What did I come so many hundred miles for? |
10321 | What did you do then?" |
10321 | What had loosed the bond, swept away all the effects? |
10321 | What have we? |
10321 | What is it?" |
10321 | What presence could lurk there? |
10321 | What price fixed ideas now?" |
10321 | What shall I do?" |
10321 | What was the use now, he thought indignantly, of all their watching and fighting? |
10321 | What''s your plan?" |
10321 | What?" |
10321 | What?" |
10321 | When dey shoot him off?" |
10321 | When you did-- that, for me, yesterday, did n''t it seem different and rather splendid, and-- like a book?" |
10321 | Where the devil does Maurice Heywood live?" |
10321 | Where''s Bertha Forrester?" |
10321 | Where''s my cap?" |
10321 | Where''s my wife?" |
10321 | Whim? |
10321 | Who always came out aboard to tell me what an old ass I was? |
10321 | Who was Christian? |
10321 | Who''d have thought? |
10321 | Who''s afraid? |
10321 | Why Must life bear all away, Away, away, Ah, my beloved, why?" |
10321 | Why did you ever let me come back? |
10321 | Why not stay, and learn more?" |
10321 | Wish I carried some money: this chit system is damnable.--Meanwhile, doctor, wo n''t you forget anything I was rude enough to say? |
10321 | With a stick and a handkerchief, he twisted on a tourniquet, muttering condolence:"Pain much? |
10321 | Wo n''t you? |
10321 | Would that answer, he wondered, be a month, a week, to- morrow? |
10321 | You and I are just--"She broke off, humming:--"Only here and now? |
10321 | You can''t-- What did you mean?" |
10321 | You did n''t say, but-- She made no attempt to come here? |
10321 | You do n''t care? |
10321 | You do n''t speak the language? |
10321 | You know this sign?" |
10321 | You were joking? |
10321 | You''ll find the dipper more handy.--How did you ever manage? |
10321 | he scolded, as though addressing a horse; then growled in Heywood''s ear,"Why did_ you_ go lose your temper?" |
10321 | it''s you, is it? |
1968 | But how could such a drama, with the four or five thousand persons which society offers, be made interesting? |
1968 | Do not all these solve the difficult literary problem which consists in making a virtuous person interesting? |
1968 | For does not society modify Man, according to the conditions in which he lives and acts, into men as manifold as the species in Zoology? |
1968 | How, at the same time, please the poet, the philosopher, and the masses who want both poetry and philosophy under striking imagery? |
1968 | In what way can they shake the Catholic dogma? |
1968 | Is it not exact? |
1968 | Is this too ambitious? |
1968 | What is better than dreams? |
16168 | ''Ave you no loyalty? |
16168 | ''Do I know anything of it?'' 16168 Am I to understand that you intend to turn state''s evidence?" |
16168 | And did you notice, ma''am,he asked,"that during his tirade he mentioned about a cove fishing- village? |
16168 | Are you Flint? |
16168 | Are you going to let ten thousand dollars stand in the way of your father''s recovery? |
16168 | Are you sure the watchman''s still up above? |
16168 | But tell me-- you tried to kill me once-- why? |
16168 | Ca n''t you see? |
16168 | Can you get Brent out of the house and bring him to me here behind this hedge at eight o''clock to- night? |
16168 | Do n''t you know me? 16168 Do n''t you know that you may be_ killed_?" |
16168 | Do n''t you think, Doctor,she overheard,"that he would be far better off in a sanitarium?" |
16168 | Do you mean to tell me,demanded Brent,"that a human brain has been made to control a thing of no use except as a terrible engine of destruction?" |
16168 | Eva,pleaded Locke,"wo n''t you trust me? |
16168 | Flint,he snarled,"you get one chance-- see? |
16168 | Happened? |
16168 | Have n''t you anything to add? |
16168 | Have you masks? |
16168 | Have you prepared for their reception? |
16168 | Have you suddenly gone mad, man? |
16168 | Here, my man, what are you doing? |
16168 | How can I know that you speak the truth? |
16168 | How dare you? |
16168 | How did you come here? |
16168 | How did you come to be here? |
16168 | How do you know? |
16168 | How is everything? |
16168 | How long has this double crossing been going on? |
16168 | How long have you known Mr. Balcom''s son? |
16168 | I-- I forgive you? |
16168 | In a taxicab? |
16168 | Is Mr. Balcom there? |
16168 | Is anything-- really the matter-- father? |
16168 | Is he violent? |
16168 | Is the antidote that will restore your father''s reason worth ten thousand dollars to you? |
16168 | Is there anything wrong? |
16168 | Just what, Mr. Balcom, do you mean? |
16168 | Master,he nodded,"why not use the beautiful lady to lure the other one into our power?" |
16168 | May I come in? |
16168 | Miss Brent,he asked, with a bow,"may I speak for you?" |
16168 | Mr. Brent,she called,"is there anything I can do?" |
16168 | Mr. Locke-- where is he? |
16168 | Need I tell you,remarked Eva, coldly,"that I am astounded at your presumption in coming here?" |
16168 | Oh-- Zita-- please-- can''t something be_ done_? |
16168 | Quentin,she burst forth, breathlessly,"what do you think has happened? |
16168 | Say, Dora, why the grouch? |
16168 | She is-- eh? 16168 Tell me quickly what has happened?" |
16168 | The girl-- I really love? |
16168 | The wounded man who was brought here,he demanded,"where is he?" |
16168 | Then you do n''t think it is really an automaton? |
16168 | This Madagascan with the antidote,asked Eva, tremulously,"where is he?" |
16168 | Understand? |
16168 | Want to see her work, sir? |
16168 | Well, Flint,he greeted, in a hushed tone,"what was it you asked to see me about?" |
16168 | Well, old pal,exclaimed one, clapping him on the shoulders,"how does it seem to be out?" |
16168 | Were you in Madagascar lately? |
16168 | What can I do for you, sir? |
16168 | What do you make of it now-- father? |
16168 | What do you mean to insinuate by that question? |
16168 | What do you think it is? |
16168 | What does this mean? |
16168 | What does this prove? |
16168 | What had she come for? 16168 What has happened?" |
16168 | What is it? |
16168 | What is it? |
16168 | What shall I do to obtain my rights? |
16168 | What shall I do? |
16168 | What the devil''s the matter? |
16168 | What was it-- tell us? |
16168 | What''s all the fuss about? |
16168 | What''s that you say? |
16168 | What''s the matter, Quentin? |
16168 | What''s the matter, father? |
16168 | What''s the meaning of this? |
16168 | What''s wrong? |
16168 | What_ is_ the trouble? |
16168 | When will you stop mixing women with business? |
16168 | Where''s a rope? |
16168 | Who did Mr. Balcom say you were? |
16168 | Who is that? |
16168 | Who was the funny gink that hurried by a little while ago? |
16168 | Why did that man look at me in such a strange manner? |
16168 | Why do you look at me in such a strange manner? |
16168 | Why do you make me ridiculous before that fellow? |
16168 | Why do you treat me so coldly,she asked,"when you know I admire your wonderful work?" |
16168 | Why, what are you doing here? |
16168 | Will you answer me one question? |
16168 | Will you please give this package to Mr. Locke and Miss Brent when they come at eight? |
16168 | You have the antidote, then? |
16168 | You know? |
16168 | You say, Long Fang, that all is ready? |
16168 | You think you''re pretty clever, do n''t you? |
16168 | Zita,demanded Locke, suspiciously,"why did you hesitate to save my life?" |
16168 | Am I not cured?" |
16168 | And all for what? |
16168 | And what answer could I give him? |
16168 | As she knelt, crying softly, she sobbed half- aloud:"Why ca n''t I confide in you, father? |
16168 | At that moment a policeman, followed by Zita, entered, and Zita, running up to Locke, cried, anxiously,"You''re not hurt-- are you?" |
16168 | Besides, were not her fortunes tied up with Balcom-- or perhaps with Paul? |
16168 | Brent had a very great feeling of affection and respect for the younger man, for had he not really brought him up? |
16168 | But to what extent? |
16168 | But, buried under tons of earth and rock, could any rescuers reach him in time? |
16168 | By this time Balcom, Paul, and the doctor came out of the library, the doctor in high good humor, for had he not received a huge fee? |
16168 | By what miracle had he escaped from the watery grave? |
16168 | Ca n''t you come to me at once? |
16168 | Could he last long enough to free himself? |
16168 | Could he make it? |
16168 | Could it be possible, after all, that Locke was faithless? |
16168 | Could it be that Brent and Flint were drinking? |
16168 | Could it be that Brent was lying? |
16168 | Could it be that Quentin was such a cad? |
16168 | Could it be that at last his seared conscience was troubling him? |
16168 | Could it be that this young scion of the Balcom fortune could in any way be connected with the Automaton? |
16168 | Could she bring herself to save this man-- for a woman she hated, who had won him from her? |
16168 | Could she reach it in time? |
16168 | Could this man, this suave, polished gentleman, have any motive for seeking the ruin or death of his fiancée? |
16168 | Did Paul realize it? |
16168 | Do you understand? |
16168 | Even Paul did not understand this phase of the conspiracy and looked at his father as much as to say,"I wonder what the old man is up to now?" |
16168 | Had Balcom planned it, or had that mechanical monster taken advantage of what Balcom had ordered? |
16168 | Had it in some way deranged the mechanism, causing the Automaton to turn in its tracks and confront Locke as he charged forward? |
16168 | Had she gone mad? |
16168 | Had she not with her own eyes seen Locke in Zita''s arms? |
16168 | Had she some connection with the Automaton? |
16168 | Have you lost your nerve?" |
16168 | Have you prepared everything?" |
16168 | How could any living thing have lived after such an occurrence? |
16168 | How long had she been there? |
16168 | How much had she overheard? |
16168 | I can trust you to take care of this if I arrange the details?" |
16168 | Is there anything wrong?" |
16168 | It was just at that instant that Balcom had been saying to her:"Why do n''t you marry Paul, as you promised your father and me? |
16168 | Locke?" |
16168 | Might I suggest that that is where Mr. Paul is and Mr. Locke will not be found far off?" |
16168 | Mr. Locke, will you be so kind as to get them?" |
16168 | Or was it fear? |
16168 | Or was it her fear that either Balcom or Paul might know more than they would care to have the authorities know? |
16168 | Or was it merely her heightened imagination? |
16168 | Or was some human being concealed in the armored creature and wounded? |
16168 | Or was the Automaton really an iron monster, after all? |
16168 | Or would it leave him to a death more horrible? |
16168 | Paul?" |
16168 | Seeking-- always seeking-- what? |
16168 | She seemed alone-- yet was she? |
16168 | Should he do so now? |
16168 | Suppose it were indeed true-- this Frankenstein, this conscienceless inhuman superman? |
16168 | Then with a graceful gesture he asked,"Will you so far honor your humble servant?" |
16168 | Then, unable to withstand the suspense longer, she asked,"Have you brought it-- the antidote?" |
16168 | Understand? |
16168 | Was it a signal? |
16168 | Was she trying to worm some secret from him? |
16168 | Was the wall at the right of the statue moving? |
16168 | Was this the end? |
16168 | Was this the man who had been so kind, who had saved her from a thousand dangers? |
16168 | What can we do?" |
16168 | What did it mean? |
16168 | What did the man mean? |
16168 | What fate was in store for her-- what for Locke? |
16168 | What had Flint to gain by misrepresentation? |
16168 | What had he to fear from any man at the bottom of a peaceful harbor? |
16168 | What made his eyes gleam so banefully? |
16168 | What nameless torture was in store for her? |
16168 | What new terrors awaited her here? |
16168 | What sort of reception might she expect? |
16168 | What was he contemplating? |
16168 | What was it inside? |
16168 | What was it that they, who feared neither God nor man, feared? |
16168 | What was the strange power which Balcom had wielded over him, which death had snapped? |
16168 | What was there about Quentin Locke that compelled her attention-- that made her feel secure when he was about? |
16168 | What was this strange being doing there on the bottom of the sea? |
16168 | What was this strange power that Paul, at will, could exercise throughout the underworld? |
16168 | What was this strange power that this man, scarcely more than a youth, wielded over these outlawed men? |
16168 | What''s the matter? |
16168 | When would they begin to suspect the substitution he had played on them? |
16168 | Whence had he come? |
16168 | Who is now in the iron man?" |
16168 | Why ca n''t you advise me? |
16168 | Why had she been brought to such a place? |
16168 | Why was she struck down-- first?" |
16168 | Why was the air not vitiated? |
16168 | Why?" |
16168 | Wo n''t you be seated? |
16168 | Would he be in time? |
16168 | Would it crush out Locke''s life under its ponderous heel? |
16168 | Would she, for love of Locke, who had not returned her love, save him? |
16168 | Would the door be unlocked? |
16168 | Would the pretty lady hear her fortune told while she waited? |
16168 | Would they throw her, unconscious, down the same yawning trap? |
16168 | Yet how dare that woman enter Brent Rock? |
19049 | [ 129] How gracious of them to vouchsafe even trite explanations, but why frame a set of degrees to conceal what they wished to hide? 19049 And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? 19049 But did Masonry have to go outside its own history and tradition to learn Hermetic truths and symbols? 19049 But what is your need? 19049 But why does not the wisest and noblest plan do more than half what its advocates hope and pray and labor so heroically to bring about? 19049 Did he know what the bee hive means in the symbolism of Masonry? 19049 HUTCHINSON,_ The Spirit of Masonry_#/ CHAPTER II_ The Masonic Philosophy_Hast any philosophy in thee, Shepherd? |
19049 | Had he done so, would it have met with such instant and universal acceptance by old Masons who stood for the ancient usages of the order? |
19049 | Have we any evidence tending to confirm this inference? |
19049 | Have ye said that he would die? |
19049 | How else can we explain the fact that when the Knights of the Crusades went to the Holy Land they came back a secret, oath- bound fraternity? |
19049 | Is he Solomon? |
19049 | Is it surprising that we find so few references in later literature to what was thus held as a sacred secret? |
19049 | KENNEDY,_ The Servant in the House_#/ CHAPTER I_ What is Masonry_ I What, then, is Masonry, and what is it trying to do in the world? |
19049 | Not that men are ignorant; Who can boast that he is wise? |
19049 | Not that men are wicked; Who can claim to be good? |
19049 | Our own religion? |
19049 | Then men of every name will ask, when they meet:/P Not what is your creed? |
19049 | Was such wisdom new to Masonry? |
19049 | We seem to come, we seem to go; But whence or whither who can know? |
19049 | Were these Fellows made acquainted with the secrets of an Apprentice? |
19049 | What attracted them to it as far back as 1600, and earlier? |
19049 | What faith builded this home of the soul, what philosophy underlies and upholds it? |
19049 | What held them with increasing power and an ever- deepening interest? |
19049 | What is it that so tragically delays the march of man toward the better and wiser social order whereof our prophets dream? |
19049 | What may this fact set in the fixed and changeless East mean? |
19049 | What shall we say of this Legend, with its recurring and insistent emphasis upon the antiquity of the order, and its linking of Egypt with Israel? |
19049 | What was the Master''s Part? |
19049 | When is a man a Mason? |
19049 | Where did they get it? |
19049 | Where else could they have done so? |
19049 | Wherefore go elsewhere than to Masonry itself to trace the_ pure_ stream of Hermetic faith through the ages? |
19049 | Wherefore their interest in the order at all? |
19049 | Who else can he be? |
19049 | Who is sufficient to describe a spirit so benign? |
19049 | Who knows but that the crypt of the past may become the church of the future? |
19049 | Who knows, for example-- even with the Klein essay on_ The Great Symbol_[94] in hand-- what Pythagoras meant by his lesser and greater Tetractys? |
19049 | Who was Hermes? |
19049 | Who were they? |
19049 | Who were those"men of intelligence"to whom Pike ascribed the making of the Third Degree of Masonry? |
19049 | Why all this unnecessary mystery-- not to say mystification-- when the facts are so plain, written in records and carved in stone? |
19049 | Why any disguise at all if it had no hidden meaning? |
19049 | Why did not Freemasonry die, along with the Guilds, or else revert to some kind of trades- union? |
19049 | Why did they continue to enter the Lodges until they had the rule of them? |
19049 | Why do they not succeed? |
19049 | Why such a people, having such a tradition? |
19049 | Why was this? |
19049 | Why, then, it may be asked, speak of such a thing as the Secret Doctrine at all, since it were better named the Open Secret of the world? |
19049 | [ 130] What_ was_ his wisdom? |
19049 | [ 74] Why so, when the name was well known, written in the Bible which lay upon the altar for all to read? |
17616 | A magic plate? |
17616 | And now what amusing thing is it that my little girl has to tell me-- something new that Nora has told you of the Fairy Shoemaker? |
17616 | And to whom will you tell it, Sky- High? |
17616 | And what if I were? |
17616 | And what is it you see? |
17616 | And what is the heaven, mistress? |
17616 | And what is the wan, Sky- High? |
17616 | And what put such a thought into your head? |
17616 | And where did it come from? |
17616 | And who goes with you on these visits, Sky- High? |
17616 | And who is ruler over all your people? |
17616 | And who was your master? |
17616 | And would n''t you better use him up- stairs for an errand- boy altogether now? 17616 And you will come to my country, mistress?" |
17616 | Are there more people than in Boston? |
17616 | But what is the story? |
17616 | But what was he? |
17616 | Did I not say there are no evil spirits here? |
17616 | Did the mandarin live in great, wonderful, gorgeous splendor? |
17616 | Did you meet English people at the hong? |
17616 | Did you use plain language? |
17616 | Do mandarins in China teach their servants to speak English? |
17616 | Do n''t we treat you as well as if you were? 17616 Do they send servants to English teachers in China?" |
17616 | Do you think me a wang? |
17616 | Does n''t Mr. Consul Bradley know about him, mother? |
17616 | Has Consul Bradley been here? |
17616 | Have you called the governor? |
17616 | Have you more crackers, Sky- High? |
17616 | He awoke me-- what more was needed? |
17616 | He is indeed, dear,said the rector''s wife; and added low to her neighbor,"Is it not their wonderful house- boy?" |
17616 | He never told a lie? |
17616 | Hoqua? |
17616 | How do you know so much, Sky- High? |
17616 | How old are you, Sky- High? |
17616 | I always treated you like a wang, did n''t I? |
17616 | I attended upon my mandarin-- yes? |
17616 | Is everything all right? |
17616 | Is n''t he perfectly splendid? |
17616 | Is that all? |
17616 | May I give my opinion? |
17616 | May Sky- High let the wan fly over his door? |
17616 | Now, is n''t he, sure? |
17616 | Oh, what_ did_ happen? |
17616 | Pie- cat? |
17616 | Pray, what relation may he be to you? |
17616 | See here, Sky- High, ca n''t you take a joke? |
17616 | Sky- High, did you ever see a vice- royal occasion? |
17616 | Sky- High, how many people have you in your country? |
17616 | Sky- High,said Mrs. Van Buren,"what was that sound I heard?" |
17616 | Sky- High? |
17616 | So you are Sky- High? |
17616 | Souls? 17616 Such throngs of people-- they all have souls, think you?" |
17616 | To your House Spirit? |
17616 | Was that so wonderful? 17616 We do not have tea like this,"she said;"is it tea?" |
17616 | We have? 17616 We''ve a quare one here, now, have n''t we?" |
17616 | Well, Lucy,said her mother, smiling,"what is your opinion?" |
17616 | Well, then, what is it, Lucy? |
17616 | Well? |
17616 | What did you say? |
17616 | What has happened to- day? |
17616 | What is it now? |
17616 | What shall I say in the plain American language? |
17616 | What shall I say when I knock on the governor''s chamber- door? |
17616 | What shall you say? 17616 What would thee have, stranger?" |
17616 | When will the master go? |
17616 | Where did you get it? |
17616 | Where did you live in Manchuria? |
17616 | Where go their souls when your people die? |
17616 | Where is the tea? |
17616 | Who is Hoqua? |
17616 | Who were they? |
17616 | Why did master put a horse- shoe over the stable- door? |
17616 | Why not_ let_ me talk after nature? |
17616 | Will you join with us in singing? |
17616 | You waited on your mandarin? |
17616 | After the old German song, Herman said:"Let us pray-- will you kneel with us, traveler? |
17616 | And did you hear it, Lucy? |
17616 | Charlie, come and see; let me go with Charlie, mother?" |
17616 | Do n''t we, mother?" |
17616 | Do n''t you ever say prayers, Sky- High?" |
17616 | Do you not think so, O Mandarin Americans?" |
17616 | Do your people die to make room for more millions?" |
17616 | Have n''t you heard about him? |
17616 | He said,''Would you have any prejudice against a little Chinese servant, if he were trusty, after the general principles I have described?'' |
17616 | He wishes me to learn everything that will be of good to me and my country when I am a man"--"Is he any kinsman of yours?" |
17616 | How did a Chinese servant know anything of Hoqua? |
17616 | Is that what you have down- stairs, Lucy?" |
17616 | Mr. Van Buren looked at the boy with interest,"You know of Hoqua?" |
17616 | Now, is n''t he?" |
17616 | Now, who taught you English?" |
17616 | One day Mrs. Van Buren asked,"What do you do all day in town, Sky- High?" |
17616 | One day he said to Mrs. Van Buren,"You will surely let Sky- High come up- stairs on the night of the Christmas- tree?" |
17616 | Suddenly he said,"Mistress, what were the''sayings''of Jesus? |
17616 | Sure, you would n''t be after teaching him any cooking at all?" |
17616 | The collier came running up the stairs,"What, what,"he demanded,"have you been doing to our House Spirit?" |
17616 | Was there an English teacher in your house?" |
17616 | What could have made you think that there were, Sky- High?" |
17616 | What do you think his name is? |
17616 | What does our little house- boy mean?" |
17616 | What is that strange figure in black on the red paper flag over the door?" |
17616 | What mandarin is he?" |
17616 | What meant the little Washee- washee- wang? |
17616 | What wouldst thou?" |
17616 | Where is the city in which you lived?" |
17616 | Where?" |
17616 | Who are the young people on the bridge? |
17616 | Why did you light crackers?" |
17616 | Will you let him go with you, mistress? |
17616 | Would you like to hear it, mother? |
17616 | Would you, Sky- High?" |
17616 | You come with me here?" |
17616 | You let me fly it for you some day? |
17616 | Your family is that place-- shall I send him?'' |
17616 | _ Parlez- vous Français_, Mademoiselle Lucy?" |
17616 | is that a magic plate? |
17616 | she added,"is n''t that a Jataka story?" |
17616 | where did you get him? |
15230 | ''Mandy,cried Gordon Lee, eagerly,"you mean to say you gwine to remove the hoodoo?" |
15230 | ''Mandy,he cried again fearfully,"you ai n''t gwine ter hurt me in no way, is you?" |
15230 | A match? 15230 A new dress?" |
15230 | Ai n''t I made it cl''ar from the start,cried Pop angrily,"thet I ai n''t a- goin''to be druv out? |
15230 | Ai n''t it great? |
15230 | Ai n''t that like a dog now? 15230 Ai n''t that whut we''re here fer?" |
15230 | Ai n''t the spell lifted? 15230 Ai n''t you gwine help me back in bed fust?" |
15230 | Air you shore hit ai n''t gwine hurt me? |
15230 | And what have you got to say about it? 15230 Are n''t you the nicest ever?" |
15230 | Aunt Kizzy,he whispered hoarsely,"how am I gwine to fin''out who''t is done conjured me?" |
15230 | Be she goin''to die? |
15230 | Ben Schenk ai n''t here? |
15230 | Ben Schenk? |
15230 | But here,cried Phelan,"what''s up; what you doing to me?" |
15230 | But how do you know? |
15230 | But maybe these here is your pajamas? 15230 But s''pose you_ had_ lost? |
15230 | But what do the other soldiers do on Sunday? |
15230 | Ca n''t you fetch me up some of them thar picter books? |
15230 | Can anybody go out there that wants to? |
15230 | Can he stand up? |
15230 | Can you tell me where I can get a drink? |
15230 | Can you tell me where the broken- legged soldiers are? |
15230 | Could n''t you fix hit up in terbaccy er mothballs ag''in''de time I need hit? |
15230 | Did he jump in? |
15230 | Did n''t I massacre him? |
15230 | Did n''t Mittie send me no word? |
15230 | Did she have any children? |
15230 | Did you see all the new steps Mr. Ben learnt me? |
15230 | Do n''t I talk good grammar? |
15230 | Do what? |
15230 | Does he realize her condition? |
15230 | Does yer foot hurt you, Joe? |
15230 | Excuse me,said a man''s voice above her,"but are either of you ladies Mrs. Lura Doring?" |
15230 | Father, him no can lend money? |
15230 | Gordon Lee Surrender Jones,she exclaimed indignantly,"has that there meddlin''ol''Aunt Kizzy been here again?" |
15230 | Gordon Lee,she cried,"whose coffin is that settin''in our coal- shed?" |
15230 | Got''em off a scarecrow, did you? |
15230 | Has paw turned up? |
15230 | Have you any other children? |
15230 | How did it happen? |
15230 | How did you happen to do it? |
15230 | How do you go about gittin''a larnin''? |
15230 | How much farther is it to the Camp? |
15230 | How old is she? |
15230 | How you mean? |
15230 | Huccome you put yer pillow on the floor? |
15230 | I said would you come home to dinner with me? |
15230 | I''ve seen your kind before,said the conductor wearily;"what did you get on for when you did n''t have anything to pay your fare with?" |
15230 | If it is not to trouble you more, may I ask a match? |
15230 | Is n''t it nearly time to start? |
15230 | Is the wagon ready, Sam? 15230 It''s Joe,"he said,"Joe Ridder, What''s your front name?" |
15230 | It''s on the square, Tsang? 15230 May I give you a lift?" |
15230 | May I have a little talk with you before you go? |
15230 | Me? 15230 Miss Perkins?" |
15230 | Mr. Ben? 15230 Now, whar''s the doctor?" |
15230 | Perhaps you do not like that I should smoke? |
15230 | Sal, whut ails ye? |
15230 | Say, Mittie, why do n''t yer maw like me? |
15230 | Suppose me go,he said,"you makee one hole in head?" |
15230 | That you, Joe? |
15230 | The Governor? 15230 The last one?" |
15230 | The money? 15230 To- morrer night?" |
15230 | Want yer? |
15230 | Was he talking to a policeman? |
15230 | Was it suicide? |
15230 | Well, ai n''t they goin''to draw it? |
15230 | Well, where do you go? |
15230 | Whar they fetching her to? |
15230 | What do you do of nights, hang around the hall? |
15230 | What do you know? 15230 What do you think it is?" |
15230 | What fer? |
15230 | What for? |
15230 | What for? |
15230 | What purpose do you serve? |
15230 | What right? |
15230 | What thing you mean, Tsang? 15230 What was her name?" |
15230 | What was his company? |
15230 | What you givin''me? |
15230 | What you mean, Tsang? |
15230 | What you tidying up so fer, Joe? |
15230 | What''s her name? |
15230 | What''s the matter with you? |
15230 | What''s the matter? |
15230 | What''s the matter? |
15230 | What''s the matter? |
15230 | When did she get to New York? |
15230 | When? |
15230 | Where at? |
15230 | Where can I get it at? |
15230 | Where''d you git it at? |
15230 | Where''s Ben Schenk? |
15230 | Where''s he at? |
15230 | Where''s my pistol? |
15230 | Who are they, and where did they come from? |
15230 | Who do you want to see? |
15230 | Who? |
15230 | Whut them_ strings_ tied on yer toes fer? |
15230 | Whut you mean by stickin''out yer lip lak a circus camel? |
15230 | Whut you''sinuatin'', nigger? |
15230 | Whut''s the matter with you, Gordon Lee Surrender Jones? |
15230 | Why do n''t you talk to the old man? |
15230 | Why on earth did n''t you stay there? |
15230 | Why-- why ai n''t it? |
15230 | Ye ai n''t fixin''to die, air ye? |
15230 | You ai n''t goin''to leave me like this, Pop? |
15230 | You do all same my talkee you? |
15230 | You do know how,Pop declared vociferously;"ai n''t you bin a- lookin''after folks thet''s ailin''around the Fork fer a couple of years or more? |
15230 | You do n''t mean that man was Tsang? |
15230 | You fixin''to git up, Honey? |
15230 | _ So-- deska_? |
15230 | A needle and thread to mend your coat? |
15230 | Ai n''t I tol''you that a hunderd times?" |
15230 | Ai n''t that the train coming?" |
15230 | Ai n''t the Fork good enough fer ye? |
15230 | Ai n''t the cabin whar yer paw, an''yer grandpaw, an''yer great- grandpaw was borned good enough for ye?" |
15230 | And once she had got him to her cottage, what on earth would she talk to him about? |
15230 | And, Corp,"he added apologetically,"you know I told you we was going to ride regular like gentlemen? |
15230 | And, dog alive, stop wagging your tail, do n''t you see it makes a draft?" |
15230 | Buncoed me, did n''t he? |
15230 | But why in Heaven''s name should the steamer put back? |
15230 | Could Mr. Harrihan remember just what articles he had left behind? |
15230 | Did you leave anything on the train?" |
15230 | Discharged? |
15230 | Do n''t I talk like other fellers, Mittie?" |
15230 | Do n''t tell me I disturbed you after you''d retired for the night? |
15230 | Do you still want me?" |
15230 | Do you suppose I''d go back and ask them to put up a thousand more for my rotten foolishness?" |
15230 | Do you swear?" |
15230 | Dura Loring? |
15230 | For a moment she poised at the foot of Bowinski''s cot, then recognizing Miss Mink she nodded:"So you found your soldier? |
15230 | Have n''t you ever felt the need of an education yourself?" |
15230 | He''s''lowable to come to me an''say,''Huccome you wearin''dat shirt? |
15230 | His voice then decided to speak for itself, and in strange, hollow tones he heard himself saying--"Say, do you wanter go to the show with me?" |
15230 | How do you suppose he ever got her here?" |
15230 | How long did you go to school?" |
15230 | How''d you like to have a little jam along with yer apple- dumplin''?" |
15230 | If a side door Pullman ai n''t convenient, I''ll have to go on the bumpers, then what''ll become of you, Mr. Corporal Harrihan?" |
15230 | It was n''t right, old fellow, you oughtn''t--"then he gave it up and smiled helplessly,"you belong my good friend Tsang, what thing you wantchee?" |
15230 | It''s just for a week, Miss Lucy; wo n''t you come?" |
15230 | Lura Doring?" |
15230 | Matinà © e this afternoon, a dinner to- night-- What''s the matter? |
15230 | Miss Mink was plunged into instant panic; suppose he was a German? |
15230 | Mrs. Dora Luring, or Mrs. Dura Loring, or Mrs. Lura Doring? |
15230 | My can do what thing my wantchee, see?" |
15230 | Now how about yer scholards? |
15230 | Nowarms?" |
15230 | One for five, is it? |
15230 | Only once did Phelan venture another question:"Say, you sports, you do n''t mind telling me where you are taking me, do you?" |
15230 | Perhaps you have a son or a grandson out there?" |
15230 | Quite sure you are getting warm?" |
15230 | Reynolds laughed in spite of himself:"Going to reform me, oh? |
15230 | S''pose you lose what no belong you? |
15230 | Sal, do you hear me?" |
15230 | Say Martini cocktails for the crowd, eh?" |
15230 | She knew he was coming back to ask her name, and what was her name? |
15230 | Stop whisky- soda, maybe?" |
15230 | Sure you have room?" |
15230 | The money must be paid back, of course, but how, and when? |
15230 | The thing is on the level?" |
15230 | Then she slipped her hand through his arm and said coaxingly--"Say now, Joe, what you kickin''''bout?" |
15230 | They are not going to operate? |
15230 | They pitch you over? |
15230 | Too late? |
15230 | Tsang Foo looked at him cunningly:"I win, you belong good boy? |
15230 | Was it any wonder that when a brilliant alternative presented itself she was eager to accept it? |
15230 | Was it kind to bring him back, to go through with it all again? |
15230 | Was this young man actually proposing to profane the virgin air of her domicile with the fumes of tobacco? |
15230 | What can I do?" |
15230 | What have all you fellers got against him?" |
15230 | What have they got you harnessed up like this for?" |
15230 | What if he was an utterly worthless asset on the great human ledger? |
15230 | What if the man wished to die? |
15230 | What made the tears drop, drop on the hard pillow, and why did he not brush them away? |
15230 | What on earth do you want with a match?" |
15230 | What thing you do?" |
15230 | What''s the good of throwing good money after bad? |
15230 | Where''s Cadet Limpy? |
15230 | Who''s your tailor, friend?" |
15230 | Whut them strings tied on yer toes fer?" |
15230 | Why should several hundred people be delayed an hour or so for the sake of an inconsiderate, useless fool?" |
15230 | Why, what struck you? |
15230 | Wonder what poor devil wore''em last? |
15230 | Would Bowinski he at church? |
15230 | Would he sit on her side of the congregation? |
15230 | Would he wait after the service to speak to her? |
15230 | Would the gentleman be satisfied if the cost of these articles, together with the railroad fare back to Lebanon Junction be paid him? |
15230 | You do n''t stand in with anybody below decks? |
15230 | You have seen a drop of water caught in a crystal? |
15230 | You''ve won the biggest pool of the crossing, do n''t you think it''s about time for you to set''em up? |
15230 | _ What_ you want? |
15230 | asked his mother that night;"you goin''out?" |
15230 | he said fiercely, bending over her,"air ye wuss?" |
15230 | he thundered;"do n''t you see hit''s marking of her cheek?" |
15230 | she cried, moving timidly towards him,"ai n''t you mad? |
15230 | she said politely, then repeated his words in puzzled incomprehension:"Nowarms? |
15230 | what are you goin''to wash yer head for?" |
10004 | A Last Man? |
10004 | A heap of atoms in some strange human semblance-- is that all? |
10004 | AUTHOR OF WHAT IS WORTH WHILE? |
10004 | Am I capable of larger responsibilities, and of wider control? |
10004 | Am I foreordained to sin? |
10004 | Am I loyal? |
10004 | Among all his friends, who is there, man or woman, who is brave enough to be true? |
10004 | And after the Last Man, what? |
10004 | And have we all been misinformed? |
10004 | Are there no sages? |
10004 | Are these things true? |
10004 | As a babe, was I still I? |
10004 | As a representative of the ideal, as executors of social trust, how shall each one use his Power of Price? |
10004 | As these two giants gird themselves for World- dominion, who but God shall gird the armor on, direct the onward course of change? |
10004 | Before a man complains of his wages, then, let him ask himself: Have I mastered my work? |
10004 | Blown hither and thither-- where? |
10004 | But in what state is the proffered fellowship like that of the communion of saints? |
10004 | But in whose hands is equity? |
10004 | But that it is real, who can doubt? |
10004 | But we must first ask: What is an idol? |
10004 | But what am I? |
10004 | But who is consulting the Church in these concerns, except in reference to mere technical points? |
10004 | Can I do as I choose? |
10004 | Can a man receive an education outside of himself? |
10004 | Can not a great leader be inspired to the choice of a man, as well as a great author to the choice of a word, a rhyme? |
10004 | Can not almost all the problems of human training be run down to this: How to teach a child to work? |
10004 | Can not department stores be artistically fashioned and built? |
10004 | Can not market- houses have arches and arabesques? |
10004 | Can not our day- laborers be granted vision? |
10004 | Can not our streets have curves and storied cross- ways? |
10004 | Can not porters and draymen have somewhat to arouse and satisfy aesthetic instincts? |
10004 | Could any career be grander than the one that God has planned for us? |
10004 | Customs? |
10004 | Do many sermons thrill us in this large way? |
10004 | Do the stars in their courses lay limitations on free will? |
10004 | Do we not long for the graces and perfections which make up a radiant and happy life? |
10004 | Do we not yearn eagerly for the dignity and beauty of high virtue? |
10004 | Do we wish to retain these grimacing phases of ourselves? |
10004 | Do you recall the history of the infamous Jukes family? |
10004 | Do you remember the sermon of Horace Bushnell on the"Populating Power of the Christian Faith"? |
10004 | Does a clod- hopper dream? |
10004 | Does he not miss much from the lack of the world''s hearty give- and- take? |
10004 | Does not he often say sadly to himself, They only want my money? |
10004 | Each asks himself at some time: How shall I become one of the Victors of the race? |
10004 | Each employer must say: Before I settle back with a serene belief that I have given my men a living- wage, let me ask: Have they sun? |
10004 | Even so, looking out upon our own spirits, do we not some day rouse to the distortion and deformity of sin? |
10004 | FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL What is work? |
10004 | First, What is Mother- work? |
10004 | First: Is a minister''s environment favorable to his best personal development? |
10004 | From what point shall they diverge? |
10004 | Has the minister, as a thinker and active force of regeneration, kept pace with this advance? |
10004 | Have many ministers ever bent themselves in this way to solve a special moral problem-- that of, say, a disobedient child in the congregation? |
10004 | Have they enough money for ordinary occasions, and a little to give away? |
10004 | Have they spent six months, hours and hours a day, to make the law of God, the word Obedience, ring in that child''s ears? |
10004 | Have_ I_ had enough dinner? |
10004 | He may rule-- to what end? |
10004 | Hence the first questions in reform are not: How many groggeries are there in my parish? |
10004 | Here is another thought: Shall all association in work be arbitrary? |
10004 | How am I free? |
10004 | How could we love Jesus if He did not sympathize with our ideals? |
10004 | How do other men in public life deal with this problem? |
10004 | How do they maintain discipline, either themselves, or through their subordinates? |
10004 | How do they, age after age, run a predestined course? |
10004 | How far are the limits of authority to be pressed? |
10004 | How far can I extend Myself? |
10004 | How many corrupt polls? |
10004 | How many hypocrites on my church- roll? |
10004 | How many ministers possess, for instance, a scholarly knowledge of human nature or of the deeper aspects of redemption? |
10004 | How much ought I to be paid? |
10004 | How otherwise could it be that out of one century one heart calls to another-- out of one age, proceeds the answer to the cry of ages gone? |
10004 | How ought the soul of man to act in an emergency? |
10004 | How shall the working- man lay hold on the best that life can give? |
10004 | I mean, Why give myself, my powers, my education, my love, my loyalty, to advance the progress of the Church? |
10004 | If a man wishes to build a house, does it fetter him to know square measure, cubic contents, geometry, mensuration, and mechanical laws? |
10004 | If accredited spiritual leaders can not help, who can? |
10004 | If doctrine be the crystallized thought and belief of godly men, what is heresy? |
10004 | If so, how may better things be brought to pass? |
10004 | If so, where does it end? |
10004 | If we could be born again, would we not be born a more spiritual being? |
10004 | In loneliness and silence does he not often think, I wonder, of the God with whom he deals? |
10004 | In what time? |
10004 | In what work shall they centre? |
10004 | In whose hand is the final price of the necessaries of life-- wheat, rice, sugar, soap, cotton, wool, coal, milk, iron, lumber, ice? |
10004 | Is it in me? |
10004 | Is it merely a way of making money? |
10004 | Is it not a strange thing that one voice, and only one, should have really won the hearing of the race? |
10004 | Is it not also the source of the discontent to- day, among almost all classes of women, except the most highly educated and efficient? |
10004 | Is it not the consciousness of existence, together with a consciousness of the power of choice? |
10004 | Is it the material horizon that bounds us? |
10004 | Is not professional pride aroused? |
10004 | Is there any one who wishes to stay always just where he is to- day? |
10004 | Is there any one who wishes to stay always where he is to- day?--to be always what he is this morning? |
10004 | Is there any other processional in the world''s history which, numbering such millions and millions, began with only one? |
10004 | Is there not a more human way than the chain- gang way? |
10004 | Is there such a thing as a place for Truth at wholesale, even in an academy or college? |
10004 | Is this quite as it should be? |
10004 | It begins to question, Upon what foundation does this phrase, this fine sentiment, rest? |
10004 | It is better to ask, What is my work in the upbuilding of the Church? |
10004 | Let excellence, not Will- it- pass? |
10004 | Literature asks: What do I live for? |
10004 | May not even the Bourse have something about it suggestive of great art? |
10004 | Must he-- and his church-- have only his grandfather''s ideas, standards, and decrees? |
10004 | My energy? |
10004 | My ideals? |
10004 | My time? |
10004 | Of a civil engineer who would lament that the mountain over which he was asked to project a road was steep? |
10004 | Of a doctor who would grieve that hosts of people about him were very ill? |
10004 | Of a statesman who would cry out that horrid folks opposed him? |
10004 | Of what avail is it to save one street- Arab, or one Chinaman, if a million Arabs and Chinamen remain unsaved? |
10004 | Of what quality? |
10004 | Once, in a game of Twenty Questions, this was the question set to guess: Who first used the prehistoric root expressing a verb of action? |
10004 | One is the problem of the capitalist: How much ought I to pay? |
10004 | One is then a full- fledged altruist,_ n''est- ce pas_? |
10004 | Or are there bourns of conduct beyond which I can never go? |
10004 | Part of my soul is passing from me: do dollars ever repay? |
10004 | SECOND: ADHERENCE By the question, Why join the Church?--I do not mean alone, Why add my name to a church- roll? |
10004 | Second, What are the best economic conditions under which this work can be done? |
10004 | Shall doctrine be taught a child? |
10004 | Shall we give a liberty to a man''s library which we refuse to his belief? |
10004 | Shall we let others share in the mystery and triumph while we stand apart, silent, unapproving, and alone? |
10004 | Shall we not endeavor to share in some broadly planned, magnificently executed scheme of world- advance? |
10004 | Some one has well said:"Wouldst thou live a great life? |
10004 | Some one says: Do you realize that you are making a moral laughing- stock of much of our system of trade? |
10004 | Sometimes the question comes over me: What am I trading for money? |
10004 | That of the seven devout and noble generations of the Murrays? |
10004 | The most business- like question that ever touches the heart of man is this: For what shall I trade my soul? |
10004 | The problem is, How shall the capitalist lead the noblest, most public- spirited, and helpful life in relation to those in his employ? |
10004 | The question is not: How shall I grind down price to the lowest? |
10004 | The question is: How is my parish society in enmity to the highest spiritual ideal I know? |
10004 | The question, Where is the line between ecclesiastical integrity and individual freedom? |
10004 | The second is that of the working- man: How much service must I render? |
10004 | The tree grows, the flower grows, the ideals of the race grow-- shall not I? |
10004 | There is no question more baffling than this simple, ever- recurring one: What am I? |
10004 | They met the tyrant''s brandished steel, The lions gory mane; They bowed their necks the death to feel: Who follows in their train? |
10004 | Think you that any spiritual power aloof from this Church can be as efficient as if it were allied with it? |
10004 | Think you that such a Church can die? |
10004 | To be always what he is this morning? |
10004 | To- day the trenchant question:"What More than Wages?" |
10004 | Ways? |
10004 | We have honest doctors, lawyers, tradesmen; shall we not have an honest politician and an upright ward- boss? |
10004 | We have myriads of Sabbath- school teachers, but how many men or women really know how to teach a little child? |
10004 | What Doctor of Theology takes the last six of these to bed with him to- day? |
10004 | What are the bounds of ecclesiastical control? |
10004 | What are they? |
10004 | What binds it earthward? |
10004 | What can I do that shall be a stepping- stone to progress? |
10004 | What can I do to further the Royal Progress of the Church of God? |
10004 | What can I hope that shall unseal other eyes to the universal glory, comfort others in the universal pain? |
10004 | What can I think that shall be worth the consideration of the race? |
10004 | What does St. Leo tell the youth to say? |
10004 | What does he find? |
10004 | What does it promise, for the help or hope of man? |
10004 | What draws them together? |
10004 | What else is the meaning of our love for excellence, our insatiable yearning for perfection? |
10004 | What force has there been in time gone by, which has lived and so greatly grown for nineteen hundred years? |
10004 | What has Christianity to do with this shark- instinct? |
10004 | What has he done, that he must be waved down? |
10004 | What is Myself? |
10004 | What is Trade? |
10004 | What is a bad custom? |
10004 | What is a hymn? |
10004 | What is a revival? |
10004 | What is academic rule? |
10004 | What is an abuse? |
10004 | What is doctrine? |
10004 | What is environment? |
10004 | What is schism? |
10004 | What is the Self that abides in each man? |
10004 | What is the best solution of the great human problems of duty, love, and fate? |
10004 | What is the inner vitality which presses him upward? |
10004 | What is thinking? |
10004 | What is this voice of Jesus, so enduring, matchless, and supreme? |
10004 | What it is, who may say? |
10004 | What keeps a subtle distance between them, which they never cross? |
10004 | What makes the differences in the social privileges given to one class of workers above another? |
10004 | What matters a conflagration, a disappointment, to him whose thoughts are set upon the race? |
10004 | What reward for them is meet? |
10004 | What say the sages of the vast possibilities of the race? |
10004 | What work awaits the university man or woman? |
10004 | What work can he do? |
10004 | What would happen? |
10004 | What would the Queen''s Jubilee have been, if but one soldier had marched up and down? |
10004 | What would we then lack? |
10004 | What would we think of an electrician who would complain that a storm had cast down his network of wires? |
10004 | What, then, may the sage know? |
10004 | When did I come to Myself? |
10004 | Whence came I? |
10004 | Where am I free? |
10004 | Where are the gods of Sepharvaim? |
10004 | Where did that misty veil come from? |
10004 | Where does he rank among the world- masters of energy and power? |
10004 | Where now are the gods of Hamath and of Arpad? |
10004 | Where shall we put our moral powers? |
10004 | Where was the port physician? |
10004 | Where were the quarantine officers? |
10004 | Where were the specialists who attend to sanitation and disinfection? |
10004 | Where, outside of the Church, will you find the ideal conception of marriage, and the really united and happy home? |
10004 | Where, then, are the limits of Myself? |
10004 | Which of us has ever exhausted his possibilities? |
10004 | Which of us is all that he might be? |
10004 | Which of us would want to be born at all, if we should be told in advance, You shall never control anything? |
10004 | Who appraises value? |
10004 | Who are the men who have built up doctrine? |
10004 | Who bridged the Firth of Forth, the Ganges, the Mississippi? |
10004 | Who built the Brooklyn Bridge? |
10004 | Who designed the Esplanade at Hamburg? |
10004 | Who drew the wall that has encircled China for a thousand years? |
10004 | Who first thought of a cable across the depths of seas? |
10004 | Who is dictator of doctrine? |
10004 | Who is looking to the intellectual, moral, and spiritual standards of the Church for guidance? |
10004 | Who is loser? |
10004 | Who is there that tries to shield the minister from sorrow and from pain? |
10004 | Who is there to comfort and help_ him_? |
10004 | Who planned the economic use of the Niagara Falls? |
10004 | Who projected its irrigation, by which areas have been redeemed from barrenness and waste? |
10004 | Who projected the Suez Canal? |
10004 | Who projected the gray docks of Montreal? |
10004 | Who projected the vast waterway from Chicago to the Gulf? |
10004 | Who set them? |
10004 | Who sets price? |
10004 | Who shall teach us wisdom, and in what manner may we be wise? |
10004 | Who sunk the mines of Eldorado? |
10004 | Who tells him of his real virtues, his real faults? |
10004 | Who wound the iron rails across the Alleghanies, the Rockies, the Sierras? |
10004 | Who, in other realms, has excelled Moses, Joshua, Elijah, David, Paul? |
10004 | Who, indeed? |
10004 | Who, looking upon that processional, filing through the ages of the years of man, would say that there may be a parliament of religions? |
10004 | Who, to- day, holds the spiritual destiny of the world in his hand? |
10004 | Why do mothers often look so tired? |
10004 | Why do we hide so many pretty talents under a bushel, when the church- door swings behind us? |
10004 | Why do we substitute such strange and foolish tasks, particularly for women? |
10004 | Why must he go away? |
10004 | Why not? |
10004 | Why should we cringe before an inferior essence or command? |
10004 | Why? |
10004 | Would any one be to blame? |
10004 | Would there not be at once a return to more simplicity of life? |
10004 | Would we not make ourselves wholly beautiful if we could make ourselves? |
10004 | You shall never have the slightest chance of self- assertion, of impressing your own individuality upon the world? |
10004 | a chance to grow? |
10004 | air? |
10004 | as well as, How shall I speak forth beauty? |
10004 | education? |
10004 | he asked, not, Is the race fed? |
10004 | leisure? |
10004 | medical care? |
10004 | of intellectual mandate in the Christian Church? |
10004 | sanitary surroundings and conditions? |
10004 | that you are setting an axe to that system, more cutting than the axe of any Socialist, Nihilist, or Anarchist in the world? |
10004 | the Appian Way? |
10004 | the Simplon Tunnel? |
10004 | the Subway in New York? |
10004 | the Trans- Siberian Railway? |
10004 | the aqueducts of Rome? |
10004 | the military roads of Chili and Peru? |
10004 | the stone banks of the Seine? |
10004 | the waterways of Venice? |
10004 | when shall I behold Thy face, Thou Majesty divine_?" |
10004 | with the rapacity which looks on the world as a vast grabbing- ground, and upon all natural resources as mere commercial prey? |
14680 | And what was done for the man at the wheel?'' 14680 The man at the wheel?'' |
14680 | ''''And who is he?'' |
14680 | ''''Are you a native of Mexico, Señora?'' |
14680 | ''''Are you surgeon enough to bleed him?'' |
14680 | ''''English or American-- what is the difference, any way? |
14680 | ''''Fear not?'' |
14680 | ''''How does he spend his time?'' |
14680 | ''''How so?'' |
14680 | ''''If I were to offer you ten to let it go, how would it be then?'' |
14680 | ''''In the name of God, George, is that you?'' |
14680 | ''''No, Señor,''answered she, after a momentary pause,''I am not a Mexican; but may I, in return, inquire what induced you to doubt it?'' |
14680 | ''''No?'' |
14680 | ''''Not an American?'' |
14680 | ''''Occupied by whom?'' |
14680 | ''''Of Mr. Albert Pride?'' |
14680 | ''''Over- excitement, doubtless, produced it?'' |
14680 | ''''Señor, I have simply to beg some information; can you direct me which street will lead me to the Cathedral Square?'' |
14680 | ''''That is a question I can not answer?'' |
14680 | ''''Told who so?'' |
14680 | ''''Well, Señora Lopez, have these folks with the eternal pass- word turned up yet?'' |
14680 | ''''What do I think? |
14680 | ''''What do you come here for, Pedro?'' |
14680 | ''''Who is there?'' |
14680 | ''''Why not, I should like to know?'' |
14680 | ''''Why not?'' |
14680 | ''''Would you deem me too impertinent, were I to ask you one question, Señora?'' |
14680 | ''''Would you inform her, sir, that I wish to speak with her?'' |
14680 | ''''Would you, Señor Rideau, have the goodness to give me an ounce in exchange for sixteen dollars?'' |
14680 | ''''You refuse to meet me,''said my neighbor,''and for what reason?'' |
14680 | ''Again I heard the tapping, and exclaimed:''Who is there?'' |
14680 | ''And how on earth did you get away from him?'' |
14680 | ''And was the bear always good to him?'' |
14680 | ''And what is that?'' |
14680 | ''Are you descended from the celebrated Julius?'' |
14680 | ''Assured this time that I was no longer dreaming, I started up again, and laboring under much excitement, cried out:''Who is there?'' |
14680 | ''But wherefore this disguise?'' |
14680 | ''But, Eugenie, tell me-- do you really love me as you have so often protested you did?'' |
14680 | ''But,''said he,''what makes you think I am a heretic? |
14680 | ''Dick, how much of all this is true?'' |
14680 | ''Did he ever have any other wife?'' |
14680 | ''Do I? |
14680 | ''Do what?'' |
14680 | ''Do you ever think,''asked Rocjean,''of those seventy thousand poor devils of Jews who helped build the Coliseum and the Arch of Titus? |
14680 | ''Do you see that pistol?'' |
14680 | ''Her apparent purpose seems almost inevitably thwarted by some influence-- shall we call it malign? |
14680 | ''How shall we describe this part? |
14680 | ''How- ow- ow c- could you d- do it, Al- lal- bert?'' |
14680 | ''I approached the door, and in equally low tones asked:''Who are you?'' |
14680 | ''I know;''been a bear,''twould a bit you,''eh?'' |
14680 | ''I say, Caper, does it ever come into your head to people all this broad Campagna with old Romans?'' |
14680 | ''I say, driver, what''s your name?'' |
14680 | ''I say, when he had him in his mouth, it was''bear and forbear,''was n''t it?'' |
14680 | ''Is it possible?'' |
14680 | ''It was told me by an ancient mariner, who knows how many years ago? |
14680 | ''Poor Fanny,''said she, before I could turn round;''do you have to black the boots of that odious brute?'' |
14680 | ''Prove to me that he was not?'' |
14680 | ''Shows, chickabiddy? |
14680 | ''Some of his friends saw him one morning at the German confessional- box, and knowing that he was a heretic, asked him what he was doing there? |
14680 | ''Then how comes it that if the knave can take the Ten, a navy ca n''t?'' |
14680 | ''Then,''continued she,''what is_ that person_ there taking the bread out of my mouth for? |
14680 | ''Very,''replied Von Bluhmen;''but, my dear Rocjean, how long were you in America?'' |
14680 | ''Well, and what_ was_ it?'' |
14680 | ''Well,''interrupted Caper,''what do you think of the English?'' |
14680 | ''What possible interest, Señor, can it be to you as to who or what I am?'' |
14680 | ''Who is there?'' |
14680 | ''Who is there?'' |
14680 | ''Who knows of what service your presence may be to- day, or of what value your testimony may be hereafter? |
14680 | ''_ Benissimo!_ and who will paint mine?'' |
14680 | ''_ Diavolo!_''said he,''ca n''t a man have a comfortable mouthful of German, without changing religions?'''' |
14680 | *****''Is this''dreadful bad''?'' |
14680 | A dreadful thought now rested on my mind day and night: What if this woman should accomplish her designs? |
14680 | Adà © le remained motionless as a statue; and when the second blow fell upon the panels, I cried out most lustily:''''Who the deuce is there?'' |
14680 | And I-- what were my sentiments toward this good and noble man who was so kind to me? |
14680 | And evermore the question recurred to me, What shall I do? |
14680 | And if it be possible, what question can take precedence of one concerning the means of averting such a mischief? |
14680 | And in what other human business, besides that of education, are there not in like manner remissnesses and errors to point out? |
14680 | Are there many of us, after all, who would care for a career of unbroken prosperity? |
14680 | Are they not all against any combination of patriotic men under the name of a Union party? |
14680 | Are they not all clamorous for the reörganization of the Democratic party? |
14680 | Are you drunk or mad, to mention names in such a place as this?'' |
14680 | Are you indeed a woman?'' |
14680 | As I looked from my lofty attic, and saw Paris glittering with her million lights, I said to myself:''Must I perish of hunger in these streets? |
14680 | Augusta C. Kimball Was He Successful? |
14680 | But angels defend us, why, Señor, have you your pistol in your hand?'' |
14680 | But in relation to Byron, Shelley, Keats, Tennyson, and-- as we are in Italy-- Rogers?'' |
14680 | But men must fight for the sleeping Right, And who can stop to reckon? |
14680 | But what is the news here? |
14680 | But who knows whether that is his real name?'' |
14680 | But, my dear sir, do you feel ill? |
14680 | But, now, sir, one last question: Why do you persist in seeking an interview with the woman you pretend to hate?'' |
14680 | But,_ in the way_: You dissent from some of these remarks? |
14680 | By whom will those liberties be destroyed? |
14680 | Curiosity began by asking, Why the deuce, Albert Pride was so carefully hiding himself away in the city of Mexico? |
14680 | Did you ever mind what eyes them devils has? |
14680 | Do n''t we most feel our national troubles, the shock of the great national earthquake, when it causes an upheaval from the depths of the pocket? |
14680 | Do you ever reflect over the millions of_ slaves_ who worked for these same poetical, flowing- robed, old senators and centurions? |
14680 | Do you forget that I have paid you already one hundred dollars in advance, and that four hundred more are ready for you when your job is finished?'' |
14680 | Do you remember an itinerant expedition sent forth, years ago, by the same grand purveyor? |
14680 | Does not this enactment thoroughly negative all theories of the exclusive supremacy of State rights? |
14680 | Does not this strong language find equally strong warrant in current facts of individual conduct and of our social life? |
14680 | Edmund Kirke Literary Notices Editor''s Table***** WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? |
14680 | For men must fight for the sleeping Right, And who can stop to reckon? |
14680 | Had I heard the words aright? |
14680 | Had Shakspeare no_ esprit_?'' |
14680 | Has not this accusation been abundantly proved? |
14680 | Her body was free from every mortal ill, but her poor soul, where was it? |
14680 | How could this be done? |
14680 | How does it strike you?'' |
14680 | How long is it since that horned, cloven- footed monster whom the monks made of Pan_ theos_ and called him_ Devil_, was an object of fear? |
14680 | How shall I pledge thee, my king? |
14680 | How? |
14680 | I roused myself, and looking at her with a half- smile,''You speak in church?'' |
14680 | I think that is the phrase, is it not, for sending a fellow- mortal on his last long journey? |
14680 | If Cuffy runs away, when the army comes, by what earthly show of sense or justice does the master complain, who has refused to accept payment for him? |
14680 | Is it not the same with our present contest with the South? |
14680 | Is it_ true_? |
14680 | Is such to be the fate of the negro also? |
14680 | Is this just? |
14680 | Leger,''etc., entitled, WAS HE SUCCESSFUL? |
14680 | Madonna-- ah?'' |
14680 | May I ask why you seek to prolong it, and why, if you so loathe Adà © le, you persecute me by following her?'' |
14680 | May I inquire, sir, if you are acquainted with any of the persons dwelling in this house?'' |
14680 | Might not the aged, even if wealthy, say they are forgotten, excepting by their immediate connection? |
14680 | Must I starve in the midst of that abundance which might be mine but for the fact that I am_ a woman_? |
14680 | My name? |
14680 | Not, not in vain,''How long, O Lord: how long?'' |
14680 | Now tell us another-- tell us some more about shows?'' |
14680 | Now, do causes, in any realm of being, forbear to produce fruit in effects? |
14680 | Now, how is it that pupils get on at all with such lessons and such books? |
14680 | On one occasion, as we sat together in the study, he said to me, abruptly:''How old are you, Eugene?'' |
14680 | Part? |
14680 | Possibly, it may save money, if not life; but why go without your hat and gloves?'' |
14680 | Sanders?'' |
14680 | The Congress of what, and for what? |
14680 | The charmà © d dusk still settles down Upon the happy prairies; But twilight''s chiefest charm is flown, For where are now the fairies? |
14680 | The instruction your young men receive at school and college, in what way does it prepare them to become men fit for a republic?'' |
14680 | The silence that ensued was broken by a miserable skeptic, whose ill- regulated aspirations betrayed his insular prejudice,''Vot is it? |
14680 | The soft impeachment proceeded--''Well, where do yer belong? |
14680 | True, there are in Paris many employments open to women, but what was that to me? |
14680 | V.***** WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH IT? |
14680 | Was he a fraudulent merchant, or a bank- defaulter? |
14680 | Was n''t I at Saint Peter''s yesterday, and at the confessionals?'' |
14680 | Was she the victim or the enchantress? |
14680 | Well, then, perhaps he had had a personal difficulty? |
14680 | What Congress? |
14680 | What but the well- nigh inevitable, because highly perfected and crystalline method of one book--_Euclid''s Elements_? |
14680 | What could be the link between her and this Albert Pride, who had for three months been awaiting her arrival? |
14680 | What do you want, Nina?'' |
14680 | What if my master should marry her? |
14680 | What in the---- are you doing here, looking like a muddy Lazarus in the painted cloth?'' |
14680 | What is there authentically known of ancient America and its inhabitants which confirms his account? |
14680 | What nectar shall fill the bowl? |
14680 | What of that? |
14680 | What right had I to tear aside the vail of mystery in which my neighbor wished to wrap himself? |
14680 | What says the following section? |
14680 | What steps do you propose taking?'' |
14680 | What thin man would melt away even in the hot solstice of June? |
14680 | What was her part in this drama that was enacting so close beside me? |
14680 | What would naval battles amount to between such invulnerables? |
14680 | What would then become of me? |
14680 | When they were all gone, what should I do? |
14680 | Where are the''State rights''in these clauses? |
14680 | Where lies thy strength, my Country-- where alone? |
14680 | Where now''s your chivalrie?'' |
14680 | Who could this man be for whose arrival, according to my hostess''account, he had been waiting with such feverish impatience? |
14680 | Whoever knew a practical shoemaker, or a maker of pin- heads, to have a_ man''s_ ambition? |
14680 | Why in the devil do n''t one dirk all? |
14680 | Why should she be as anxious as he to avoid recognition? |
14680 | Why this specification, if the States were to be supreme in their own limits? |
14680 | Will it pay, under such extraordinary conditions of naval warfare, to fight at all? |
14680 | Will you deny that she is now your mistress?'' |
14680 | Will you oblige me by allowing me to buy the spurious dollars? |
14680 | Will you, Arthur Livermore, give me your word of honor as a gentleman, that my wife, Adà © le Percival, has not followed you to Mexico? |
14680 | Would not-- considering the day in question--_I Puritani_ have been more appropriate for''a day of fasting and prayer''? |
14680 | You chide my grief, and wipe my frequent tears; But to my pain what art can minister? |
14680 | You''ve cut your eye- teeth, have you? |
14680 | [ You use Webster?] |
14680 | _ what_ is no matter?'' |
14680 | answered Caper,''with those seventy thousand old Jews you were preaching about the other day?'' |
14680 | arf hanimal, eh? |
14680 | did n''t it hurt?'' |
14680 | do yer belong in with the_ bear_?'' |
14680 | do you shave?'' |
14680 | do you suppose a foreigner would be fool enough to amuse himself by shooting a Mexican at mid- day, in the very heart of the capital?'' |
14680 | exclaimed she,''who can be there at this hour? |
14680 | excuse me,''said Percival, returning,''where does this door lead to?'' |
14680 | good enough, good enough, Pedro, but--''''''Suits me admirably, I think, do n''t you? |
14680 | is there any one running? |
14680 | my ducats!''? |
14680 | no-- ill-- it is nothing-- the heat-- and I am fatigued, sir; pray, are we far from the Cathedral Square?'' |
14680 | or rather shall we consider( as perhaps we should in all short- comings) that''tis only a matter of time and the comparative degree? |
14680 | said Giacinta,''did n''t you tell_ me_ to be here at nine o''clock?'' |
14680 | said she,''do you think that I dread death for my own sake? |
14680 | t''other day, I stuck a pin into him, and ses he,''_ Dam yez!_''Vot is it, eh?'' |
14680 | that even would be no reason for concealment, for once in Mexico, what had he to dread? |
14680 | there now, tell us another; tell us about the bear that bit you?'' |
14680 | what connection can there be between members of Congress and crooked policy, or jumping over principles? |
14680 | what do you mean?'' |
14680 | whither? |
14680 | why, is this your residence?'' |
14680 | you sly rogue, you passed off three on the croupier, eh? |
20137 | 4, 6;[?] |
20137 | Second, the"Mimansa"( inquiry), devoted to the solution of the problem, How can the material world spring from Brahma, or the immaterial? |
19365 | But how can you afford to lose a day''s money like that? |
19365 | But what about the money for all these men? |
19365 | But why are you not working to- day? 19365 Is there too great a burden on the shoulders of the Chinese Christians? |
19365 | Were you not sorry to see them burnt, seeing that you had prepared them so carefully, and had spent a lot of money on them? |
19365 | What about your beads? 19365 Why do n''t you try to save him? |
19365 | But how should she begin? |
19365 | But where was the money to come from? |
19365 | Could such faithful work, done through the prompting of the Holy Spirit, and through the constraining love of Christ, be in vain? |
19365 | Could the Lord have dealt more kindly with the old man, who would have had none to lovingly care for him had he passed through a long illness? |
19365 | Did the Lord not have compassion on them, or had He ceased to care? |
19365 | Do you know what happened last week? |
19365 | For Christ''s sake to me; for Christ''s sake to Thee; Oh what, oh what shall the answer be? |
19365 | Had the Lord changed in His love for them, or had He forgotten to be gracious? |
19365 | Her heart is lifted up in prayer to God for a lost world; shall we let her wrestle alone, and let the cry of many a despairing soul go unheeded? |
19365 | Her husband''s death would be at her door, for had she not angered the idols in leaving them? |
19365 | How can you play about like this?" |
19365 | How could she do without it? |
19365 | It comes unto me; it comes unto thee; Oh what, oh what shall the answer be? |
19365 | Now, how much is it worth? |
19365 | On her last Sunday morning on earth she asked,"Who is coming to preach to- day?" |
19365 | Pulling out one straw, and showing it to her, we said,"Do you see that straw? |
19365 | Shall we not unite our voices with hers? |
19365 | Some months before his baptism we asked him,"Grandfather Hsü, what about your boxes of clothes and all your paper money?" |
19365 | Some one said,''I see you have a big burden, have n''t you?'' |
19365 | The writer, putting her hand on Mrs. Lü''s shoulder, said,"Mrs. Lü, what are you doing this morning? |
19365 | This was his dream; but was it not a clear call to that man to seek the things above? |
19365 | Was it not because he believed God and took Him simply at His word? |
19365 | Was it possible to flee from the suffering in the next world? |
19365 | Was there anything that could give her aching heart some comfort, her despairing soul some hope? |
19365 | What about you? |
19365 | What am I to do?" |
19365 | What had happened to the man? |
19365 | What is our part to be? |
19365 | What is the outcome to be? |
19365 | What might that be? |
19365 | What more could be said? |
19365 | What power was there in that strange religion that could make him forgo all the money a weekly day of rest meant to him and his family? |
19365 | What was she to do? |
19365 | What was to be done next? |
19365 | Where are they going to be hung?" |
19365 | Where had they gone? |
19365 | Why did they not prosper in everything as before? |
19365 | Why do you not call them?" |
19365 | Why should he reveal to her what he had hidden from the other worshippers? |
19365 | Yet, what were they to do? |
19557 | After all, may it not be that he has flinched? |
19557 | And after one is dead, what does it all matter? |
19557 | And from whom did Tolstoy learn more than from that conserver of the pristine and dominating Russian traits, the moujik? |
19557 | And had M. Rachmaninoff instead of being a musician been a painter, would not a like destiny await his compositions? |
19557 | And was not this restatement of the national character Borodin''s great contribution to his age''s life? |
19557 | And where was this music more immanent than in the New World, in America, that essentialization of the entire age? |
19557 | Are not the piano- pieces of M. Rachmaninoff the result of a relationship to the instrument that is fast becoming outmoded? |
19557 | Are they not a sort of throwback to the salon school, the school of velocity, of effect, of whatever Rubinstein and Liszt could desire? |
19557 | But if there is such a thing as form without significance in music, might not these compositions serve to exemplify it? |
19557 | By what environment was it more justly appreciated, Saxon though the accents of its recitative might be? |
19557 | Do you know the"Phaeton"of Saint- Saëns? |
19557 | For do they not proceed from the point of departure of the entire brilliant school of piano- compositions? |
19557 | Has it a melodic line quite properly its own? |
19557 | If there is such a thing as rhythmless music, would not the stagnant orchestra of the"Five Orchestral Pieces"exemplify it? |
19557 | In 1911 he returned to Berlin, remaining there till 1916(?). |
19557 | Is it the blind hovering of the spirit that has quit its earthly habitation in the moment of dissolution? |
19557 | Is it"the wind of death''s imperishable wing"? |
19557 | Take away the sound and fury signifying nothing from the third concerto, and what is left? |
19557 | The whole world is sham and advertisement and opportunism, is it not? |
19557 | What instrument but the viola could appreciate the famous"Harold"theme? |
19557 | When was there a time when composers did not deform their themes in amorous, rustic and warlike variations? |
19557 | Would not the two rhapsodies"L''Etang"and"La Cornemuse"have transmuted to music the macabre and sinister note of so much symbolist poetry? |
19557 | Would not the"Pagan Poem"have been the musical equivalent of the mystic and sorrowful sensuality of Verlaine? |
18399 | A God that rides on a Golden Fish? 18399 And so he is going to furnish the cannibals with a nice juicy stew for their pots, is he? |
18399 | And you-- are you really my uncle? |
18399 | But hello, here!--What''s the matter? 18399 But why must he not see us? |
18399 | Cain, where is thy brother Abel? 18399 Can any one play eavesdropper here?" |
18399 | Do you want to be drowned? 18399 Have n''t I told you again and again that I will not have that boy put out of the way?" |
18399 | Have you heard it, my people? 18399 Have you heard nothing, Lihoa, of the great scheme which is on foot?" |
18399 | Hello, Willy, what''s the matter? 18399 How is my nephew? |
18399 | How shall we appease the God? |
18399 | How shall we celebrate the New Year? |
18399 | How shall we protect ourselves? |
18399 | How? 18399 Is that possible? |
18399 | Land on what? 18399 Land?" |
18399 | My children,cried Lihoa,"what crime against the God of the Golden Fish have you committed? |
18399 | Oho, helmsman, you dare to order this boy to be insubordinate, do you? 18399 On a bright day like this can your pupils climb the scaffolding on that dome at will without being stopped? |
18399 | Peppo, Peppo,he cried,"are you here?" |
18399 | Peppo, would it not be a beautiful sacrifice for you to give up going to- night? |
18399 | Poor, poor Peppo,wailed Willy,"ca n''t we help him? |
18399 | Speak, Lohe, tell us, can we get some of the gold,--at least a handful or two? 18399 Superfluous to say one''s prayers?" |
18399 | The first danger is over,said Gray breathless,"but what now? |
18399 | Well, Captain, what do you think of the fellow''s impudence? 18399 Well-- and why not? |
18399 | What has my nephew been doing? |
18399 | What is to be done? |
18399 | What, little Lihu, are you not going to the celebration? 18399 What? |
18399 | What? 18399 What? |
18399 | What? 18399 What? |
18399 | Who has been doing the foul play? |
18399 | Who is going to protect me from this bad man? |
18399 | Why Master Willy, do you not know your uncle, the Captain? |
18399 | Will the first officer also be good to me? |
18399 | Will the spirit not answer? |
18399 | An old Chinaman, whose wrinkled face looked like parchment cried out:"Why do you even ask the cause of our bad luck? |
18399 | And pray tell, what did that nice uncle of yours, the Captain, say to all this?" |
18399 | And who knows whether I''ll ever see Hongkong and the good Fathers again so long as I live?" |
18399 | Anything wrong? |
18399 | Are you still the second mate? |
18399 | But what do they know? |
18399 | Did we not open one of the graves of one of the children to see if the eyes and hearts were there? |
18399 | Do n''t you hear the drums and tomtoms in the market- place? |
18399 | Do you not know why it has come upon us? |
18399 | For heaven''s sake!--sacks full of gold in a few days?" |
18399 | From the cross can you see all the ships?" |
18399 | Gray?" |
18399 | Great was the noise and excitement following his announcement, but how could a handful of men oppose three hundred Chinaman? |
18399 | Have I not the same hooked nose that your father had?" |
18399 | Heave to in such a fine breeze as this? |
18399 | How can we have our usual celebration with only a sapeck or two in our pockets?" |
18399 | How can you doubt if? |
18399 | How far is it to Balintang, Redfox?" |
18399 | If we are here a month, yes, a week, even, without drinking- water, what then? |
18399 | Is he advanced sufficiently so that he can take business training or have the schooling of life at sea prove of value to him?" |
18399 | Is he doing well? |
18399 | Is that all you are going to give me, when you know that the sum must be divided among twenty families?" |
18399 | Is there anything wrong about my looking to see whether my father''s boat is here? |
18399 | Must I repeat the reasons why?" |
18399 | Now, what if my nephew, for whose welfare I, as guardian, have a care, had fallen headlong and been killed or crippled for life? |
18399 | Redfox is the chief sinner and forces the Captain into things which he would never think of doing otherwise.--But what are we to do? |
18399 | Shall we not try to baptize them? |
18399 | So you are the interpreter, you little pigmy? |
18399 | Such a thing as this from you? |
18399 | That''s so, is n''t it, dear cook? |
18399 | Turning to Redfox, he asked:"Do n''t you want to go with me?" |
18399 | We are here all by ourselves aft and who is there that would want to listen to us?" |
18399 | Were not those white- faced women here again yesterday whose God is the enemy of our God? |
18399 | What a happy boy you will be, if you save not one but three hundred souls? |
18399 | What ails the man?" |
18399 | What can it be?" |
18399 | What did it all mean? |
18399 | What do you mean, you fools?" |
18399 | What had been Tommy Green''s experiences at sea in an open boat? |
18399 | What has he against me? |
18399 | What hast thou done with thy brother''s child? |
18399 | What have we got for the cannibals over there?" |
18399 | What judgment will be pronounced on thee?" |
18399 | What will become of us, if God and his angels do not watch over and guard us?" |
18399 | What''s going on with the three hundred Chinamen in the steerage?" |
18399 | What? |
18399 | What? |
18399 | Where are James and John and all the rest?" |
18399 | Who will protect me now when they all tease me?" |
18399 | Whose turn is it to go?" |
18399 | Why did Redbeard wish their death? |
18399 | Why do not the people kill the superfluous children according to the old custom of the land? |
18399 | Why let living children get into the hands of these foreign women to be murdered and to have their eyes and hearts stewed up into magic drinks? |
18399 | Will he be eaten up by the cannibals?" |
18399 | Willy, the first to recover himself sufficiently to speak, said:"Oh, Peppo, are you alive?" |
18399 | Would n''t you be sorry to have to stay at home for punishment while all of us boys go to the show?" |
18399 | You are his father, are you not? |
18399 | You are not going to do anything wrong, are you?" |
18399 | You might get dizzy and fall, and what would your father say if he were to come here and find you a corpse, or with your legs and arms broken?" |
18399 | You will see that there is some misunderstanding.--What was that awful crash? |
18399 | You wo n''t punish him, will you?" |
18399 | how came you to think of that?" |
17508 | About what price, sir? |
17508 | And while you were having these very fine moods? |
17508 | And why not so? |
17508 | Braces? |
17508 | Calf-- kid-- dogskin? |
17508 | Can not we see to the uttermost limits of space? |
17508 | Collars, cuffs? |
17508 | Do you like it? |
17508 | Find the salesman pleasant? |
17508 | How much? |
17508 | How_ could_ you come to me,it seems to say,"when all these really brilliant flowers invite you?" |
17508 | I say,said I,"is not that rather rough on the ladies?" |
17508 | I wonder how long it would take to get to the top of the house from the bottom? |
17508 | May I ask your size, sir? |
17508 | Meaning me, sir? |
17508 | Nothing more, sir? |
17508 | What can I have the pleasure? |
17508 | Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine? |
17508 | Why ca n''t you play without swearing, Muster Gibbs? |
17508 | Wo n''t you try it? |
17508 | 6d.? |
17508 | Am I in rags, that I should endure this thing? |
17508 | And can I avoid seeing at last how it is they hang together? |
17508 | And then who has not read Carlyle''s gloating over a certain historical suit of leather? |
17508 | And what then if_ our_ heavens were to open? |
17508 | Are not the words in their fittest context in the original? |
17508 | Are they birds? |
17508 | Ask:"How can you say such things?" |
17508 | At once the fascinating question arises, What will this being be? |
17508 | Bacon? |
17508 | But I was quite taken with my idea----Where is it? |
17508 | But does this necessitate acknowledgment to the man, now in Hades, who sucked that orange and strewed the peel in your way? |
17508 | But to show how good it is-- did you ever know a quarrelsome person give up the use? |
17508 | But what is this? |
17508 | But why do they keep on with this cross- examination? |
17508 | But you know the parable of the seven devils? |
17508 | Can I help thinking of them, then, and asking why I suffer thus? |
17508 | Could there be a better type of sordid and mercenary deliberation maintaining a fair appearance? |
17508 | Curious way of spending Sunday afternoon, is it not? |
17508 | Dining- room chairs-- query-- rush bottoms? |
17508 | Even this: Why, after all, should correct spelling be the one absolutely essential literary merit? |
17508 | For some words at anyrate may there not be sometimes one way of spelling a little happier, sometimes another? |
17508 | For why should one repeat good things that are already written? |
17508 | Have you any more matches?" |
17508 | Have you lithia? |
17508 | His test of literary merit is"What good does it do you?" |
17508 | How can they pass their lives?" |
17508 | How much do you want?" |
17508 | How shall he ask for his liquor? |
17508 | How should_ I_ know the technicalities of his traffic? |
17508 | However, we need scarcely depreciate the sea as a bath, for what need is there of that when the river is clearly better? |
17508 | I suppose he got at last to three- cornered notes in the vernacular; and meanwhile what could a poor girl do? |
17508 | I---- On the score of personal dignity, why should a young man of respectable antecedents and some natural capacity stoop to this kind of thing? |
17508 | If the lower plants, why not the higher? |
17508 | In moulding a head, do you take a lump and fine it down, or do you dab on the features after the main knob of it is shaped? |
17508 | Is it not immediately infinitely more soft and tender? |
17508 | Is there not something exquisitely pleasant in lingering over those redundant letters, leaving each word, as it were, with a reluctant caress? |
17508 | Is_ that_ what you aspire to be, that twopence- coloured edition of yourself? |
17508 | It is natural to ask,"Whence come all these old boots?" |
17508 | It may be he will read this-- amused-- recking little of the mysteries of fate.... Is killing a salesman murder, like killing a human being? |
17508 | May I say that Mr. Sandsome was at his full? |
17508 | Might it not rather be an art? |
17508 | Now_ will_ you let me go? |
17508 | On the other hand, what is more natural than an outburst of righteous indignation at the ruin of some carefully studied climax of feeding? |
17508 | One forthwith asked me''What the----''--I really can not quote these puerilities--''what the idiotic_ clichà ©_ that mattered to me?'' |
17508 | Or keep it_ all_ on the floor?" |
17508 | Price you were saying is? |
17508 | Rather, is it not more becoming to be angry at his careless anticipation? |
17508 | So_ Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_''"Prosaic! |
17508 | Some of it is not that; and, for the rest, is a woman like a toy balloon?--just a surface? |
17508 | Suppose such a creature were to appear-- and it is, we repeat, a possibility, if perhaps a remote one-- how could it be fought against? |
17508 | Suppose you let off some clever little thing, a subtlety of expression, a paradox, an allusive suggestive picture; how does it affect ordinary people? |
17508 | Surely Shakespeare or Lamb, or what other source you contemplate, has had the thing long enough? |
17508 | Surely his friends have cherished the story out of no petty love of depreciatory detail? |
17508 | The blows I have endured from her? |
17508 | The gaunt, familiar hand comes out suddenly, swiftly, this time surely? |
17508 | The good old days of thumb- biting--"Do you bite your thumbs at us, sir?" |
17508 | Then suddenly she remarked,"Why not put your coal in a bassinette? |
17508 | Then the silent gentry who brew our Chartreuse; what are they in retirement for? |
17508 | Then what did Shakespeare live on? |
17508 | There are certain verses-- Heaven help me, but I have forgotten them!--about"_ i_ vel_ e_ dat"(_ was_ it dat?) |
17508 | These great plain valuable things, as plain as good women, as complacently assured of their intrinsic worth-- who does not know them? |
17508 | They were_ viveurs_.... We have witnessed Religion without Theology, and why not an Unsectarian Thebaid? |
17508 | Were the gods ever so insulted? |
17508 | What business has a man to think of things right in front of you, poke his head, as it were, into your light? |
17508 | What respectable townsman, for instance, knows what"scabiosa"is? |
17508 | What right has he to set up dams and tunnel out swallow- holes to deflect the current of your thoughts? |
17508 | What use is there for external ears, nose, and brow ridges now? |
17508 | What would he think if my cricketer retaliated by asking, in the pause before the sermon, how the vicarage pony took his last bolus? |
17508 | What''s this? |
17508 | What''s this? |
17508 | Why did he throw his breakfast out of the window? |
17508 | Why not? |
17508 | Why should I be expected to know the price of gloves? |
17508 | Why should he? |
17508 | Why, I say, should I know the price of gloves? |
17508 | Why, then, should not the stomach be ultimately superannuated altogether? |
17508 | Would it let at eighty? |
17508 | Yet even at the risk of shocking the religious convictions of some, may not one ask whether spelling is in truth a matter of right and wrong at all? |
17508 | Yet one may ask, Do we not a little over- estimate the value of orthography? |
17508 | Yet where are the books? |
17508 | Yet would he consider it improvement to put a piece of even the richest of old tapestry or gold embroidery into his new pair of breeks? |
17508 | You ask: Have you read the_ Wheels of Chance_? |
17508 | _ Where are the wardrobes of Painted Pine?_''"Comes round again, you see! |
17508 | of their lives? |
17508 | they might argue,"and is it not altogether blue and void?" |
17508 | wide will cover room, width 16 ft., length 27- 1/2 ft.?" |
16358 | Ai n''t it wrong to steal dese here chickens? |
16358 | An''he kistered apre a myla? 16358 And He rode on an ass? |
16358 | And as I suppose you made money there, why did n''t you remain? |
16358 | And do n''t you think, sir, that we''re of the children of the lost Ten Tribes? |
16358 | And he says as he was dying,''Uncle, you know the cigars you gave me?'' 16358 And what did they do?" |
16358 | And what do you call a face? |
16358 | And what had you for dinner to- day? |
16358 | And what is that? |
16358 | And what kind of a hook? |
16358 | And what kind of a hook? |
16358 | And when my juva dickt''omandy pash- nango, she pens,''Dovo''s tute''s heesis?'' 16358 And when my wife saw me half- naked, she_ says_,''Where are your clothes?'' |
16358 | Because a fish has a roan(_ i.e_., roe), has n''t it? 16358 But can you make it out? |
16358 | But d''ye know how rich he is? 16358 But do you jin the lav( know the word) for an_ animal_?" |
16358 | But how about the children? |
16358 | But how would you sell a glandered horse? |
16358 | But is it Rommany? |
16358 | But what does the picture mean, sir? |
16358 | Can you VOKER Rommany? |
16358 | Can you tell me if there is really such a thing as a Gipsy language? 16358 Did n''t I just pooker tute( tell you) it was a jomper? |
16358 | Did she indeed, rya? |
16358 | Do n''t talk so loud; do you think I want all the Gorgios around here to know I talk Gipsy? 16358 Do snails live as long as lizards?" |
16358 | Do the lizards get a new life every year? |
16358 | Do you know any turnkeys? |
16358 | Do you know what the Gipsies in Germany say became of their church? |
16358 | Do you know what the judgment day is, Puro? |
16358 | Eight or nine days after, at Hampton Court,{ 53} his''pal''came to me and told me that Job was ill. And I said,''Anything wrong?'' 16358 Ha, kun''s acai?" |
16358 | Ha, what''s here? |
16358 | How do they kair it? |
16358 | How much wongur? |
16358 | How was that? |
16358 | I suppose that you often have had trouble with the_ gavengroes_( police) when you wished to pitch your tent? |
16358 | I suppose you have often taken your coat off? |
16358 | Is dovo tacho? |
16358 | Is that true? |
16358 | Kun sus adovo? |
16358 | Oh dye-- miri dye, Do n''t tute jin a Rommany rye? 16358 Oh, I suppose the Rummany chi prastered avree( ran away), and got off with the swag?" |
16358 | Oh, has n''t it? |
16358 | Old fellow,said the gentleman,"did I frighten you?" |
16358 | Puro,pens the rye,"did I kair you trash?" |
16358 | Savo''s tute''s rye? |
16358 | That''s the French for it, is it, sir? |
16358 | Well,I answered;"I suppose you have heard occasionally that Gipsies used to chore Gorgios''chavis-- steal people''s children?" |
16358 | What are you? |
16358 | What did he blow on a pipe for? |
16358 | What language is the gentleman talking? |
16358 | What would_ you_ do,he continued,"if you were in the fields and had nothing to eat?" |
16358 | Where did tute chore adovo rani? |
16358 | Where did you steal that turkey? |
16358 | Who is your master? |
16358 | Why a crow- pipe? |
16358 | Why a matchno grai? |
16358 | Why? |
16358 | Will you del mandy a walin o''tatto panni too? |
16358 | Will you give me a glass of brandy too? |
16358 | Would you take seven pounds for him? |
16358 | Yes; there can be no forced meaning there, can there, sir? 16358 You see, rya,"he remarked,"any man as is so well known could n''t never do nothing wrong now,--could he?" |
16358 | _ Et tu vas roulant de vergne en vergne_? |
16358 | _ Kennick_ you mean? |
16358 | _ Mo rov a jaw_;_ mo rakker so drovan_? |
16358 | _ Where was it_? |
16358 | ''How much do you get for carryin''that there bundle?'' |
16358 | ''Kako, tute jins the cigarras you del a mandy?'' |
16358 | ''Kushto-- lel some tuvalo pal?'' |
16358 | ''Pre yeck chairus a cooromengro was to coor, and a rye rakkered him,"Will tute mukk your kokero be koored for twenty bar?" |
16358 | ''Pre yeck divvus a Royston rookus jalled mongin the kaulo chiriclos, an''they putched( pootschered) him,"Where did tute chore tiro pauno chukko?" |
16358 | ''Well, take some tobacco, brother?'' |
16358 | ''What''s tute?'' |
16358 | ''What_ is_ the affair?'' |
16358 | ''What_ is_ the covvo?'' |
16358 | ''_ Do all the Gipsies do that_?'' |
16358 | ''_ Do sar the Rommany chals kair adovo_?'' |
16358 | ( Do n''t you jin that the holluf was the firstus leaf? |
16358 | ( Do n''t you know that the olive was the first leaf? |
16358 | ), a bar, a pash- bar, a pash- cutter, a pange- cullo( caulor?) |
16358 | --and you go about from town to town? |
16358 | --you can talk argot? |
16358 | A boro cheirus pauli dovo, the rye dicked the Rommany chal, an''penned,"You choramengro, did tute lel the matchas avree my panni with a hook?" |
16358 | A long time after, the gentleman met the Gipsy, and said,"You thief, did you catch the fish in my pond with a hook?" |
16358 | Adoi I jalled from the gudli''dree the toss- ring for a pashora, when I dicked a waver mush, an''he putched mandy,''What bak?'' |
16358 | An''he del it, an''putchered laki,"If I bitcher my wongur a- mukkerin''''pre the graias, ki''ll manni''s bak be?" |
16358 | An''how do you suppose he made that money?" |
16358 | And I penned,''Any thing dush?'' |
16358 | And I, answering said--"So you all call it_ patteran_?" |
16358 | And going home, he saw his father sitting by the side of the tent, and his father said,"How did you succeed(_ i.e_.,_ do it_), my son?" |
16358 | And he gave it, and asked her,"If I lose my money a- betting on the horses, where will my luck be?" |
16358 | And they asked him,"Where did you get those black trousers and sleeves?" |
16358 | And they putched lesti,"Where did tute lel akovo kauli rokamyas te byascros?" |
16358 | And yuv sikkered him a cutter( cotter? |
16358 | But she penned,''Why, you have n''t got your hovalos an; you did n''t koor tute''s hovalos avree?'' |
16358 | But who knows with whom he may associate in this life, or whither he may drift on the great white rolling sea of humanity? |
16358 | Ca n''t tu rakker Rommany jib, Tachipen and kek fib?" |
16358 | Can everybody see them, I wonder?" |
16358 | Can you tell me anything about the_ surrelo rukk_--the strong tree-- the oak?" |
16358 | Did I ever go to church? |
16358 | Did mandy ever jal to kangry? |
16358 | Did not Lord Lytton, unless the preface to Pelham err, himself once tarry in the tents of the Egyptians? |
16358 | Did you ever hunt game in the west?" |
16358 | Do I know the word in Rommanis for a Jack- o''-lantern-- the light that runs, and stops, and dances by night, over the water, in the fields? |
16358 | Do you know Old Frank?" |
16358 | Do you know any such word as_ trushul_ for it?" |
16358 | He said:''Where did you find them?'' |
16358 | How often have we heard that the preservation of the Jews is a phenomenon without equal? |
16358 | How would you prevent that?" |
16358 | I gazed as gravely back as if I had not been at that instant the worst sold man in London, and asked--"Can you_ rakher Rommanis_?" |
16358 | I have been asked scores of times,"Have the Gipsies an alphabet of their own? |
16358 | I pet em adree my poachy an''jailed apre the purge and latched odoi my pal''s chavo, an''he pook''d mandy,''Where you jallin to, kako?'' |
16358 | I put them in my pocket, and went on the road and found there my brother''s son, and he asked me,''Where( are) you going, uncle?'' |
16358 | I said,"Is that your horse?" |
16358 | I should state that the narrative which precedes his comments was a reply to my question, Why he invariably declined my offer of cigars? |
16358 | I suppose you know, of course, sir, how to_ draw_ rats?" |
16358 | Is it true, sir, we come from Egypt?" |
16358 | It may seem simple enough to the reader to ask a man"How do you call''to carry''in your language?" |
16358 | Ki did tute kin it?" |
16358 | Need I say that I refer to the excellent------? |
16358 | Now, how much of this word is due to the English word pack or packer, and how much to_ paikar_, meaning in Hindustani a pedlar? |
16358 | Oh, ai nt he scared?" |
16358 | Oh, if charity covereth a multitude of sins, what should not poverty do? |
16358 | On a day a Royston rook{ 206} went among the crows( black birds), and they asked him,"Where did you steal your white coat?" |
16358 | On a time a prize- fighter was to fight, and a gentleman asked him,"Will you sell the fight"(_ i.e_., let yourself be beaten)"for twenty pounds?" |
16358 | Once upon a time a Gorgio said to a Gipsy,"Why do you always go about the country so? |
16358 | Once''pre a chairus( or chyrus) a Gorgio penned to a Rommany chal,"Why does tute always jal about the tem ajaw? |
16358 | Penned he:''Where did tute latcher''em?'' |
16358 | Penned the cooromengro,"Will tute mukk mandy pogger your herry for a hundred bar?" |
16358 | Putched the rye,"Kun''s tute ruvvin''ajaw for?" |
16358 | Said the prize- fighter,"Will you let me break your leg for a hundred pounds?" |
16358 | Sarishan means in Gipsy,"How are you?" |
16358 | So he jalled ajaw kerri to the tan, an''dicked his dadas beshtin''alay by the rikk o''the tan, and his dadas penned,"Sa did you keravit, my chavo?" |
16358 | So he pet em adree his poachy, an''pookered mandy,''What''ll tu lel to pi?'' |
16358 | So he put them in his pocket, and asked me,''What''ll you take to drink?'' |
16358 | So then, what do you think he did?" |
16358 | So they went all quick together, and said"Good evening,"( sarishan means really"How are you?") |
16358 | Some chairuses in her jivaben, she''d lel a bitti nokengro avree my mokto, and when I''d pen,''Deari juvo, what do you kair dovo for?'' |
16358 | Sometimes in her life she''d take a bit of snuff out( from) my box; and when I''d say,''Dear wife, what do you do that for?'' |
16358 | Suppose a man sells''punge- cake, would''nt that be his capital? |
16358 | Tell me, do you know any Gipsy_ gilis_--any songs?" |
16358 | Tell me, now, when you wanted a night''s lodging did you ever go to a union?" |
16358 | The gentleman asked him,"What are you weeping for now?" |
16358 | Then I went from the noise in the toss- ring for half an hour, when I saw another man, and he asked me,''What luck?'' |
16358 | Then he jalled a- men the pigeons an''penned,"Sarishan, pals?" |
16358 | Then he went among the pigeons and said,"How are you, brothers?" |
16358 | There ca n''t be no stretch adoi-- can there, rya? |
16358 | There was a horse going with a waggon along the road; and I saw a youth, and asked him,"How much money?" |
16358 | Were you ever on Salisbury Plain?" |
16358 | What is it you call it before everything"( here he seemed puzzled for a word)"when the world was a- making?" |
16358 | What is it?" |
16358 | What is the Rommanis for to hide?" |
16358 | What was it, then? |
16358 | Where_ did_ you buy it?" |
16358 | Why do n''t you do it?" |
16358 | Why do you burn ash- wood?" |
16358 | With regard to the first letter, I might prefix to it, as a motto, old John Willett''s remark:"What''s a man without an imagination?" |
16358 | You wo n''t go away like a Gorgio without tasting anything?" |
16358 | You''d like to hear them, would n''t you?" |
16358 | _ Vishnu is then the Great God_?" |
16358 | an''he pookered man''y"Desh bar;"I penned:"Is dovo, noko gry?" |
16358 | do you know such a word as_ punji_? |
16358 | have they grammars of their language, dictionaries, or books?" |
16358 | or"how are you?" |
16358 | or,"Do you know that old Cheshire has managed that appointment in India for his boy?--splendid independence, is n''t it?" |
16358 | was this thy idea of qualification for a seer and a reader of dark lore? |
16358 | { 33}"Can you tell me anything more about snails?" |
19699 | And if they strike you? |
19699 | And if they try to kill you? |
19699 | Are you not descended from an illustrious line? 19699 How so?" |
19699 | Oh, tell me who that is? |
19699 | You profess only to be a farmer; no one sees your ploughing, what do you mean? |
19699 | 5.--Piece of crimson silk damask brocaded in gold thread with symmetrically arranged flowers, scrolls, birds,& c. Italian(? Florentine). |
19699 | After studying for a short time at Cambridge, he was from 1584 to 1587 in the service of William Davison(? |
19699 | Brome, 1652?) |
19699 | Carboniferous? |
19699 | Do you imagine that I am not able to supply the wants of so many mendicants?" |
19699 | He said to her,"Have you the mustard- seed?" |
19699 | If they revile you what will you do?" |
19699 | Is it necessary to go from door to door begging your food? |
19699 | Is there anything put together which shall not dissolve? |
19699 | Now what are these books? |
19699 | She went to Gotama; and doing homage to him said,"Lord and master, do you know any medicine that will be good for my child?" |
19699 | The farmer, a wealthy br[=a]hmin, said to him,"Why do you come and beg? |
19699 | The old cathedral is a round domed structure of the 10th(?) |
19699 | The people said,"Here is mustard- seed, take it"; but when she asked,"In my friend''s house has any son died, or a husband, or a parent or slave?" |
19699 | Upaka says:"You profess yourself, then, friend, to be an Arahat and a conqueror?" |
19699 | all these have I; another imprisoned? |
19699 | contained_ Madd Couple Well Matcht_( acted 1639? |
19699 | so have I; another indebted to his hearts griefe, and fame would pay and can not? |
19699 | so have I; another long been sicke? |
19699 | so have I; another plagued with an unquiet life? |
19699 | what is this that you say? |
18713 | Ah, the Virgin-- she smiles at me because I did right, did I not sweet mother? 18713 Ah, why do n''t yer stop eatin''in school fer a change? |
18713 | But did you see how shamefully Maude flirted with Willie Howard? |
18713 | But the demoiselle wishes to appear a boy,_ un petit garcon_? |
18713 | Did she ask you for any? |
18713 | Did you ever see the like? |
18713 | Er-- your- er-- may I come in madam? 18713 Hello, Edgar,"he said,"What yer got fer lunch?" |
18713 | How dare you peep at other folks, and pry into people''s affairs? 18713 How did it happen?" |
18713 | I wonder what he''s up to now? |
18713 | I''m so warm and tired,cried Mama Hart, plaintively,"children how are we going to sleep to- night?" |
18713 | Most faithless of faithless women, think you that like the toy of a fickle child I can be thrown aside, then picked up again? 18713 Nice crowd, eh?" |
18713 | See that Mephisto and troubadour over there? |
18713 | The ring, where? |
18713 | What old man? |
18713 | What was the accident? |
18713 | Where? |
18713 | Whither away, oh sportive boy? |
18713 | Who dares stand forth? |
18713 | Why would you rather be a baby than any other personage? |
18713 | Wo n''t some of you fellows who''ve known him all your lives do to identify him? |
18713 | Yes, who are they? |
18713 | Your husband is an employee in the Fisher Oil Mills, is he not? |
18713 | An aching heart? |
18713 | And are the women with the indiscriminate tresses, near relatives, or only the landladies? |
18713 | And he? |
18713 | And why should n''t a poor little Creole old maid be interested too? |
18713 | Are they forgotten? |
18713 | Bernard? |
18713 | But if we want to dig deep into the child''s story for metaphysical morals, does it not also uphold the theory of re- incarnation? |
18713 | But in one place, in answer to the question,"Whom would you rather be, if not yourself?" |
18713 | Can it be possible that the crafty Numidian King, Nari Havas, is the intrepid, fearless and whole- souled Hasdrubal? |
18713 | Cuddling? |
18713 | Deceived me? |
18713 | Did you ever stop to see the analogy between a game of football and the interesting little game called life which we play every day? |
18713 | Do you ever think to go over the old school- days? |
18713 | Eat? |
18713 | Had he learned the cold lesson of self- control, or found one other thing more potent than love? |
18713 | Had some cruel chain of circumstances forced him to disobey her bidding-- or-- did he love another? |
18713 | Hart?" |
18713 | He must have it,--but how? |
18713 | He paused meditatively awhile, then turning to the regal- looking woman lounging before the fire, he asked:"Wife, did you ever send me these?" |
18713 | His mission? |
18713 | How could I ever send such sentimental trash to any one? |
18713 | I am younger than you, you know, but then, what have you to age you? |
18713 | Is it economy? |
18713 | Is there a strike? |
18713 | It is wicked, but what can one do if impressions come? |
18713 | It was not gone? |
18713 | It was really wonderful, was n''t it? |
18713 | It was this,_ Why should well- salaried women marry?_ Take the average working- woman of to- day. |
18713 | It''s Leon, see? |
18713 | Lodging- houses these, some of them, but one is forced to wonder why do the tenants sun their clothes so often? |
18713 | Look at you now, there-- and there-- and there?" |
18713 | Nay, but this is no hour for sorrow; They died at their duty, shall we repine? |
18713 | None of you Will mercy show, or pity sigh?" |
18713 | Nothing, nothing, almost, and las''night when it was so cold and foggy, eh? |
18713 | Or eyes burnt blind by unshed tears? |
18713 | Or is it only another deviation from the beaten track of history? |
18713 | Or stabs, More keen because unseen? |
18713 | Ring out your voices in praises loud, Sing sweet your notes of music gay, Tell me in all you loyal crowd Throbs there a heart unmoved to- day? |
18713 | See the big boy in front, he with iron grip, and determined, compressed lips? |
18713 | She heard the piping of an elfish voice,"Mother, why does the minister keep his hands over his heart?" |
18713 | So Miss Sophie stayed to the wedding, for what feminine heart, be it ever so old and seared, does not delight in one? |
18713 | So far as they were concerned it was all right, but what shall we say of the guests within? |
18713 | Some style about them, eh?" |
18713 | Strange, was n''t it? |
18713 | Tell me what fruit he beareth from his strivings and yearnings; know not ye? |
18713 | The ring? |
18713 | The ticket? |
18713 | The violets and pinks are from a bunch I wore to- day, and when kneeling at the altar, during communion, did I sin, dear, when I thought of you? |
18713 | Then, after a pause,"Well what else did he say?" |
18713 | There is murder, but by whom? |
18713 | Think you that I can take a soiled lily to my bosom? |
18713 | Was it merely fancy on the wife''s part, or did the husband really sigh,--a long, quivering breath of remembrance? |
18713 | We thought such foolish things then, did n''t we? |
18713 | What dost thou hold for me? |
18713 | What housewife dares call a moment her own? |
18713 | What kept him from her side? |
18713 | Why did I never marry? |
18713 | Why does n''t he get the ring from the owner?" |
18713 | Why not? |
18713 | Why ring ye now so joyful, so hopeful; then toll your dismal prophecies of o''er- cast skies? |
18713 | Why should she have hastened this; was aught lost by the delay? |
18713 | Yes, quite melo- dramatic, was n''t it? |
18713 | _ Moi?_ Well, I sawed wood and said nothing, but all the while there was forming in my mind, no, I wo n''t say forming, it was there already. |
18713 | for what? |
18713 | in all, no friendly face, No helping hand to stay his plight? |
18713 | screamed Mama Hart,"Dinner, who''s got time to fool with dinner this evening? |
18713 | the monarch cried,"Amid the throng, and dare to give Their aid, and bid this wretch to live? |
14087 | All your husband''s, I suppose? |
14087 | Are they dangerous, sir? |
14087 | Are you a musician yourself? |
14087 | Are you going to ruin her life as well as yours? 14087 Are you good at picking up native languages?" |
14087 | Are you keen on shooting, Wargrave? |
14087 | Are you travelling alone? |
14087 | Badshah? 14087 But Muriel? |
14087 | But are you not wounded? |
14087 | But how can I help him? |
14087 | But how could I go with you to this place in Bengal? 14087 But tell me what happened? |
14087 | But what can I do? |
14087 | But what have I got to do with your being sent there? |
14087 | But what have the Chinese to do with Bhutan? |
14087 | But what is it like? 14087 But what is it? |
14087 | But where is the doctor sahib? |
14087 | But where is this place they''re sending you to? |
14087 | But why? 14087 But would you be content to live as Mrs. Dermot does?" |
14087 | But-- pardon me-- is it quite safe? 14087 Can you deny that you''re in love with him?" |
14087 | Can you get out? |
14087 | Content? 14087 Could n''t we pass a resolution at the next Mess meeting that in future no guests are ever to be asked to dinner? |
14087 | Devils? 14087 Did you get any hunting?" |
14087 | Do n''t you understand? 14087 Do you mean-- run away with you?" |
14087 | Do you realise, William, that you will be the one to suffer? |
14087 | Do you really think we''ll be able to get through, sir? |
14087 | Does n''t it count everywhere? |
14087 | Does n''t it here? |
14087 | Eh-- is-- isn''t Miss Benson coming too? |
14087 | Eh? 14087 Er-- haven''t you heard from her?" |
14087 | Go with you? 14087 Good gracious, is that so?" |
14087 | Got to go? 14087 Has it not clawed you?" |
14087 | Have they a mother? |
14087 | Have you ever got a tiger? |
14087 | How can I, sir? 14087 How did you like that forty miles in a camel train over the salt desert? |
14087 | How do you do? |
14087 | How shall we do it? |
14087 | I say, Ray, what''s up? |
14087 | I say, is it hopeless asking you for a dance now? |
14087 | I wish you luck-- won''t you wish me the same? 14087 Is Wargrave in?" |
14087 | Is honour the word for it? 14087 Is that really a fact?" |
14087 | Is that you, Macdonald? |
14087 | Is the Colonel mad? |
14087 | Left Darjeeling? 14087 May I come in, Kevin?" |
14087 | May I come to- morrow? |
14087 | Muriel, wo n''t you go into the house? |
14087 | Nothing of any value,replied Norton"Have you finished? |
14087 | Oh, but do n''t you miss the gaieties of town, the theatres, the dances? 14087 Oh, do you think he does? |
14087 | Oh, do you think he has ever eaten any human being? |
14087 | Oh, is he dead? 14087 Oh, you shoot? |
14087 | Only a tiger, sir? |
14087 | Ranga Duar? 14087 Sending you away? |
14087 | Sending you away? |
14087 | Sending you where? |
14087 | Shall I have the_ mugger_ skinned and get a dressing- bag made out of his hide for you? |
14087 | So you like good music? |
14087 | Society? 14087 Sounds like a new disease, does n''t it?" |
14087 | Sure, do n''t we look like a State Banquet at Buckingham Palace or a charity dinner at the Dublin Mansion House? |
14087 | That will make it a very hard day for our ponies, wo n''t it? |
14087 | The Man? 14087 The tank is about eight miles away, is n''t it?" |
14087 | The way Mr. Wargrave has behaved----? 14087 Then will you marry me? |
14087 | To the what? |
14087 | Violet, you do n''t really want me, do you? 14087 Want? |
14087 | Was n''t it thrilling? 14087 Well, Harry, what do you want?" |
14087 | Well, what of it? 14087 What about next Thursday?" |
14087 | What am I to do? |
14087 | What are you going to do about her? |
14087 | What can I? |
14087 | What do you mean? 14087 What in Heaven''s name is it all about, Ray?" |
14087 | What is a Resident, exactly? |
14087 | What is his name? |
14087 | What is it, Frank? |
14087 | What is it, Noreen? 14087 What is it, sir?" |
14087 | What is it? 14087 What is this about your shooting a dog?" |
14087 | What on earth is that, sir? |
14087 | What the-- what''s she got to do with it? |
14087 | What''s a_ khakur_? |
14087 | What''s happened to the tank? |
14087 | What''s his wife like? |
14087 | What''s it supposed to be? |
14087 | What''s the matter with Noreen? |
14087 | What''s the use, dearest? |
14087 | What? 14087 What? |
14087 | What? 14087 Where can I send him?" |
14087 | Where to? |
14087 | Who is that fellow in khaki uniform, sir? |
14087 | Who''s that? 14087 Who''s the woman he''s dancing with?" |
14087 | Why is he called that? |
14087 | Why? 14087 Will you bring him to my house? |
14087 | Wo n''t you shake hands with him? |
14087 | Would he? |
14087 | Would it be possible to get it? |
14087 | Would n''t it be much pleasanter for you to come with me? |
14087 | Would you? |
14087 | Yes, dear; will you please bring me a_ khakur_ and some jungle fowl? 14087 You had some decent sport, had n''t you?" |
14087 | You have heard? |
14087 | You mean their elephant? 14087 You wanted to see me?" |
14087 | _ Khuda ke Nam men, kiya hai?_( In the Name of God, what is that?) |
14087 | _ Khuda ke Nam men, kiya hai?_( In the Name of God, what is that?) |
14087 | _ Kohn hai_? 14087 _ Memsahib hai_? |
14087 | ( Is anyone there?) |
14087 | ( Is the mistress in?)" |
14087 | ( Who goes there?)" |
14087 | ( Who''s that?)" |
14087 | A chance remark of Miss Benson on tiger- shooting made Wargrave ask:"Have you shot tigers, too, like Mrs. Dermot? |
14087 | After some conversation Mrs. Norton said to the adjutant:"Do you remember, Mr. Raymond, that you have promised to take me out shooting one day?" |
14087 | And how would I get there?" |
14087 | And the other, the jungle girl, where is she?" |
14087 | And where?" |
14087 | And you, Burke? |
14087 | Anywhere near Calcutta?" |
14087 | Are n''t you going to kiss me?" |
14087 | Are n''t you having one, too? |
14087 | Are n''t you very thirsty?" |
14087 | Are we going to be buried under a mound of sand, like the pictures we used to have in our schoolbooks of caravans overwhelmed in the Sahara?" |
14087 | Are you fond of pigsticking?" |
14087 | Are you here?" |
14087 | Are you ready, Frank?" |
14087 | As he came up to them he spluttered:"Is it safe? |
14087 | But how was I to know that there was a_ mugger_( crocodile) in the tank?" |
14087 | But how was he to meet her? |
14087 | But how? |
14087 | But mixed up with incoherent cries and sounds she caught the words:"Are you guarded?" |
14087 | But what about my elephants and baggage?" |
14087 | But, my dear Frank, does n''t it strike you that it''ll be rather dull for me staying by myself here? |
14087 | Can you meet me here and confer with me? |
14087 | Could Violet be mixed up in all this? |
14087 | Could it be----? |
14087 | Dermot?" |
14087 | Did I slip down in my sleep?" |
14087 | Did he know what his words meant? |
14087 | Did he really love her? |
14087 | Did he? |
14087 | Did n''t that dress suit her awfully well?" |
14087 | Did n''t you hear? |
14087 | Did she want him? |
14087 | Did you see, dear, he had lost the right hand as well?" |
14087 | Do n''t you see?" |
14087 | Do you mind calling the hotel''boy''and ordering a cocktail for me? |
14087 | Do you thrust at him?" |
14087 | Does n''t he look funny?" |
14087 | Does n''t it fit her?" |
14087 | Does n''t it seem a shame?" |
14087 | For had they not discussed the matter thoroughly and decided that they must wait? |
14087 | Frank flushed as he replied:"I suppose you mean Miss Benson? |
14087 | Had dared to? |
14087 | Had he so disgraced himself then that Hepburn considered the Colonel''s action justified? |
14087 | Has she no right to be considered?" |
14087 | Has that panther been prowling round the Mess again?" |
14087 | Have a drink, Wargrave? |
14087 | Have you heard of it?" |
14087 | Holding out a small and shapely hand in a dainty leather gauntlet she said in a frank and pleasant manner:"How do you do, Mr. Wargrave? |
14087 | How can I thank you?" |
14087 | How can I?" |
14087 | How could I? |
14087 | How could an insignificant little person like herself, she thought, hope to win affection from any man whom this radiant beauty deigned to favour? |
14087 | How could he go to their camp or lonely bungalow in the jungle and force his presence on her? |
14087 | How could he? |
14087 | How dare you say so? |
14087 | How did the_ mugger_ come here? |
14087 | How was I saved?" |
14087 | I could do with a drink, could n''t you, Ray?" |
14087 | I do n''t know much about those animals, but is n''t it unusual for him to have only a single tusk?" |
14087 | I say, old chap, how does one go for the pig? |
14087 | I thought I was much farther-- how did I get so close to it? |
14087 | If-- if she sets me free would you-- could you ever like me well enough to marry me?" |
14087 | In your bungalow? |
14087 | Is Wargrave dead?" |
14087 | Is he dead?" |
14087 | Is it a big station?" |
14087 | Is it dead?" |
14087 | Is it true?" |
14087 | Is n''t he going to kneel?" |
14087 | Is n''t it kind of him? |
14087 | Is n''t it strong, though?" |
14087 | Is n''t the heat awful?" |
14087 | Is there any water in the jungle? |
14087 | It was natural that the girl should blame him; but how could he have been false to his plighted word and desert the one who held his promise? |
14087 | It''s great sport, is n''t it?" |
14087 | Mrs. Dermot is your dear friend from Ranga Duar, is n''t she? |
14087 | Mrs. Dermot? |
14087 | Need you ask? |
14087 | No?" |
14087 | Norton?" |
14087 | Norton?" |
14087 | Norton?" |
14087 | Not got engaged or any silly thing like that, I hope?" |
14087 | Oh, how could he? |
14087 | Oh, is n''t it hot? |
14087 | Oh, what is it?" |
14087 | Poodlefaking at the Residency, as usual?" |
14087 | Remember, he loves you; and you do care for him, do n''t you? |
14087 | Seeing him she walked down the steps to meet him and held out her hand, saying in a pleasant, musical voice:"You are Mr. Wargrave, of course? |
14087 | Seven, is it? |
14087 | Shall I put another bullet into him?" |
14087 | Shall I? |
14087 | Shall we see them?" |
14087 | She badly treated? |
14087 | She neglected? |
14087 | She went on with a change of manner:"When are you coming to call on me? |
14087 | Should she go? |
14087 | Suddenly he cried angrily:"Mahbub Khan, why hast thou not gone for the doctor sahib as thou wert told, O Son of an Owl?" |
14087 | Suddenly he said:"She''s wonderful, Ray, is n''t she? |
14087 | Take me out and show me the place and the shops and the_ Gymkhana_--what do you call it here? |
14087 | Talking about you and me? |
14087 | That made you sit up a bit, eh?" |
14087 | Then he said:"I say, Ray; did n''t Mrs. Norton look lovely to- night? |
14087 | Then the butler''s voice rang out in challenge:"_ Kohn jatha_? |
14087 | Then the doubts came again-- did he know what he was saying? |
14087 | Then to the_ mahout_ she continued in Urdu,"Gul Dad, are you hurt?" |
14087 | Then turning to the Resident he continued:"How have you done, sir?" |
14087 | Then turning to the girl again, he continued,"Are n''t you ashamed av yourself for laving me to pine for a sight av ye all these weary months?" |
14087 | They''re yours, Captain Ross, are n''t they?" |
14087 | To leave me?" |
14087 | To- day? |
14087 | Walking to the hall door he cried:"_ Koi hai_?" |
14087 | Wargrave?" |
14087 | Was he always destined to be only the friend of the girl he loved, the lover of the woman to whom he wished to be a friend? |
14087 | Was he conscious? |
14087 | Was he speaking to her? |
14087 | Was he worth incurring social damnation for? |
14087 | Was his friendship with her perhaps the cause of the trouble? |
14087 | Was it perhaps only delirium that spoke, the fever of his wounds? |
14087 | Was it possible, he wondered, that the husband of this charming woman did not appreciate her and her attractions as he ought? |
14087 | We wo n''t let the divil come next or nigh ye, will we, Wargrave?" |
14087 | Well, of course he''s a marvellously well- trained animal; but is he really so reliable that he can always be trusted to look after those children?" |
14087 | Were n''t you sorry to leave it?" |
14087 | What am I to do?" |
14087 | What do you mean? |
14087 | What do you think of her?" |
14087 | What does it mean?" |
14087 | What had come to Violet? |
14087 | What had he done? |
14087 | What has happened?" |
14087 | What is happening?" |
14087 | What is it, I say?" |
14087 | What is it?" |
14087 | What of her? |
14087 | What should she do? |
14087 | What the devil have I done?" |
14087 | What was he to do? |
14087 | What was the meaning of it all? |
14087 | What''s all this----,"he waved his hand towards the lighted ballroom,"compared to Paris, Monte Carlo, Cairo, Ostend when the races are on? |
14087 | What''s the matter? |
14087 | What? |
14087 | What? |
14087 | When do you mean to give me your answer? |
14087 | When shall we go?" |
14087 | When she read the message she asked:"What''s she coming here for?" |
14087 | When this was done Wargrave, looking at his hands covered with blood and grime, said ruefully:"How on earth are we to get clean, sir? |
14087 | Where could I live?" |
14087 | Where for? |
14087 | Where has she gone?" |
14087 | Where is everyone?" |
14087 | Where is he? |
14087 | Where shall we go?" |
14087 | Where''s John? |
14087 | Who was she? |
14087 | Why are you going? |
14087 | Why?" |
14087 | Will he like it if you leave-- and will he continue your allowance?" |
14087 | Will you be ready to come with me?" |
14087 | Will you come to me?" |
14087 | Will you come?" |
14087 | Will you have a drink, Colonel?" |
14087 | Will you help me down, please? |
14087 | Will you please secure a table and I''ll follow you in a few minutes?" |
14087 | Will you wait for me here? |
14087 | Will you?" |
14087 | Would his companionship-- for she knew that she had not his love-- make up for a life of loneliness, debt and poverty in a frontier outpost? |
14087 | Would she ever be given the chance of it? |
14087 | Would she ever forgive him? |
14087 | Would you care for frontier political work here?" |
14087 | Would you like to be present?" |
14087 | Yes? |
14087 | Yet how could he have acted otherwise? |
14087 | You know that Gunesh is the Hindu God of Wisdom and is represented as having an elephant''s head with only the right tusk? |
14087 | You say there is no society here?" |
14087 | _ Koi hai_?" |
14087 | are we near a village, sir?" |
14087 | what''s that?" |
2017 | Flowers 44. Who shall overcome this earth, and the world of Yama( the lord of the departed), and the world of the gods? |
2017 | He himself does not belong to himself; how much less sons and wealth? |
2017 | He whom no desire with its snares and poisons can lead astray, by what track can you lead him, the Awakened, the Omniscient, the trackless? |
2017 | Him I call indeed a Brahmana who has no interests, and when he has understood( the truth), does not say How, how? |
2017 | How is there laughter, how is there joy, as this world is always burning? |
2017 | Is there in this world any man so restrained by humility that he does not mind reproof, as a well- trained horse the whip? |
2017 | Self is the lord of self, who else could be the lord? |
2017 | Those white bones, like gourds thrown away in the autumn, what pleasure is there in looking at them? |
2017 | Who shall find out the plainly shown path of virtue, as a clever man finds out the( right) flower? |
2017 | Why do you not seek a light, ye who are surrounded by darkness? |
2017 | what of the raiment of goat- skins? |
13831 | Are there no peculiar features of an Oriental, mental and moral, which infallibly and always distinguish him from an Occidental? |
13831 | Did not the Greeks transform Christianity before they accepted it? 13831 How can such a mushroom- growth, necessarily without deep roots in the past, be real and strong and permanent? |
13831 | ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS? |
13831 | Again, are they competent judges who say the Japanese are non- religious? |
13831 | And can we then remember our present life? |
13831 | And did not the Romans, and finally the Germans, do the same? |
13831 | And do we become new- created when we awake? |
13831 | And does impersonality mean the lack of such an effect? |
13831 | And how explain these unæsthetic phenomena? |
13831 | And how far, as a matter of fact, has this assimilation gone? |
13831 | And how has it come to pass that, ruled by this ideal until less than fifty years ago, Japan is now facing quite the other way? |
13831 | And if so, is this due to their nature, or may it be attributed to their family life as molded by the social order? |
13831 | And if the verbs in large numbers are impersonal, does not that clinch the matter? |
13831 | And in what land has the apotheosizing imagination been more active than in Japan? |
13831 | And is there not an unblushing prostitution in the larger cities of England and America which would put to shame the licensed prostitution of Japan? |
13831 | And what has been the relation of these world- views to the social order? |
13831 | And what is the true criterion for its measurement? |
13831 | Are Japanese cruel or humane? |
13831 | Are Orientals and their civilization universally esteemed and considerately treated in the Occident? |
13831 | Are naturalists and scientists"impersonal,"and are philosophers and psychologists"personal"in nature? |
13831 | Are not these ends incompatible? |
13831 | Are our facts correct? |
13831 | Are our theories wrong? |
13831 | Are the Japanese any less courageous now than they were thirty years ago? |
13831 | Are the Japanese conspicuously deficient in imagination, in the sense of the definition given above? |
13831 | Are the Japanese really better off without these implements of Western civilization? |
13831 | Are the assumptions wholly groundless? |
13831 | Are the destinies of the Oriental races already unalterably determined? |
13831 | Are the traits of Japanese character considered in this chapter inherent and necessary? |
13831 | Are there not here the most powerful representations possible of human emotions, both active and passive? |
13831 | Are these, properly speaking, Japanese works of art-- or Korean or Chinese? |
13831 | Are they inherent traits of the race? |
13831 | Are we to believe that these are individuals who have an excessive amount of"personality"? |
13831 | Are we to say that the Japanese are more courageous than other peoples? |
13831 | As a result conspicuous manifestations of the revengeful spirit have disappeared, and, may we not rightly say, even the spirit itself? |
13831 | As a truth, how is it to be explained? |
13831 | Beneath this light alliterative style, which delights the literary reader, do we find the truth? |
13831 | But did she develop nothing new and independent? |
13831 | But does not this introduce us to new confusion? |
13831 | But granting that this word is used with a legitimate meaning, we ask, is altruism in this sense an inherent quality of the Japanese race? |
13831 | But has this characteristic become congenital, or is it still only social? |
13831 | But have we not now traced one root of this seeming characteristic of New Japan? |
13831 | But in that case how can he help the poor man or even continue to think of him? |
13831 | But is jealousy a characteristic limited to women? |
13831 | But is not this an impossible condition to satisfy? |
13831 | But supposing them to be true, are they the differentiating characteristics of the Orient? |
13831 | But then arises the difficulty of understanding how the same individuals can be both profusely polite and morbidly sensitive at one and the same time? |
13831 | But what are the facts? |
13831 | But what shall we say in regard to the assumption made by young Japan in its attitude to foreigners? |
13831 | But why do they not so express it? |
13831 | Can a nation fully possessed by one type of civilization reject it, and adopt one radically different? |
13831 | Can a people change its character? |
13831 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots? |
13831 | Can they live together? |
13831 | Consider for a moment what was the position of woman in ancient times in the Occident, and what was the moral character of Occidental men? |
13831 | Did it not serve to maintain, if not actually to produce, a system of dissimulation and deception which could but injure the national character? |
13831 | Did the primitive Occidental man produce them outright from the moment that he discovered himself? |
13831 | Directly he feels, and directly does he respond.... Is not this the divinity of Heaven and Earth? |
13831 | Do Japanese husbands love their wives and wives their husbands? |
13831 | Do not the questions still remain-- Why did the Japanese so suddenly abandon Oriental for Occidental civilization? |
13831 | Do not these phenomena refute assertions to the effect that the Japanese are so impersonal as not to know what it is to"fall in love"? |
13831 | Do races have"souls"which are fixed and incapable of radical transformations? |
13831 | Do the Japanese excel in philosophy, or are they conspicuously deficient? |
13831 | Do we then cease to be, when we sleep? |
13831 | Does acquired personality react on intrinsic personality? |
13831 | Does moral or even national authority really reside in the Emperor? |
13831 | Does not that"bundle of ideas"become broken into as many wholly independent fragments as there are intervals between our sleepings? |
13831 | Does this not mean that appeal has been made from the communal sanctions of might to the supra- communal sanctions of right? |
13831 | Does"impersonality"then follow personality, as a matter of historical development? |
13831 | For in what land has not the prime interest in metaphysics been ethical? |
13831 | Has, then, any religion secured such a dual development as we have just seen to be necessary? |
13831 | He also asked the question who made God? |
13831 | How about the passionate features of the Ni- o, the placid faces of the Buddhas and other religious imagery? |
13831 | How about the pictures and the statues of warriors? |
13831 | How are we to account for the wide æsthetic development of all classes of the Japanese? |
13831 | How can it be otherwise if consciousness constitutes existence? |
13831 | How can it escape being chiefly superficial?" |
13831 | How can they be zealous for them or recognize any authority in them? |
13831 | How could the same social order produce two moral ideals? |
13831 | How explain the multiplied original ways in which bamboo and straw are used? |
13831 | How have these characteristics arisen? |
13831 | How long is it since fiendish mobs have burned or lynched the objects of their rage? |
13831 | How long is it since slaves were feeling the lash throughout the Southern States of our"land of freedom"? |
13831 | How long is it since societies for preventing cruelty to animals and to children were established in England and America? |
13831 | How long is it since the Inquisition was enforced in Europe? |
13831 | How long is it since witches were burned, not only in Europe by the thousand, but in enlightened and Christian New England? |
13831 | How much affection can be expressed by low formal bows? |
13831 | How say you that none will know it?" |
13831 | How shall he fall into error? |
13831 | How shall he forget it? |
13831 | How shall we explain this paradox? |
13831 | How was this to be explained? |
13831 | IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | If it is a fact, what is the interpretation? |
13831 | If not, how can we think at all? |
13831 | If not, why is it so widespread a belief? |
13831 | If so, which will be victor? |
13831 | If the psychic characteristics are equally distinct, why do not they who assert this distinctness describe and catalogue these differences? |
13831 | If their social intercourse is due only to the accident of business or of social functions, what true intimacy can possibly arise? |
13831 | If"impersonality"were an inherent characteristic of Japanese race nature, would it be possible for strong personalities to arise? |
13831 | In adopting Western methods of life and thought, is Japan advancing or receding? |
13831 | In either case, is the characteristic due to essential race nature or to some other cause? |
13831 | In other words, is her new civilization only external, formal, nominal, unreal? |
13831 | In other words, is there to be a new civilization-- a Japanese, an Occidento- Oriental civilization? |
13831 | In taking up our various illustrations regarding personality in Japan, three points demand our attention; what are the facts? |
13831 | In view of her protracted separation from the languages of other peoples, should we not expect marked deficiency in this respect? |
13831 | In what land have the ideal and practice of loyalty been higher? |
13831 | In what nation has there ever been such a setting aside of parental teaching and ancestral authority? |
13831 | Is Japan an exception? |
13831 | Is it a matter of inherent nature, or of civilization? |
13831 | Is it a quality, then, of the other person? |
13831 | Is it due to deep- lying race nature, to the quality of the race brain? |
13831 | Is it due to difference of race soul, and thus to racial antipathy, as some maintain? |
13831 | Is it due to the"impersonality"of the Orient, as urged by some? |
13831 | Is it more general? |
13831 | Is it not a fact that the studied evasion of first personal pronouns by cultured people in the West is due to their developed consciousness of self? |
13831 | Is it not a suggestive fact that it was needful to establish them and that it is still needful to maintain them? |
13831 | Is it now clear why Buddhism failed to reach the idea of the worth of the individual self? |
13831 | Is it possible for one who has no consciousness of self to conceive as impolite the excessive use of egoistic forms of speech? |
13831 | Is not prostitution licensed to- day in the leading cities of Europe? |
13831 | Is not"self- consciousness"here identified with"consciousness"in the preceding sentence? |
13831 | Is the change real or superficial? |
13831 | Is the self- confidence unjustified? |
13831 | Is the æsthetic sense more highly developed in Japan than in the West? |
13831 | Is there, then, no difference between consciousness and self- consciousness? |
13831 | Is this a fact? |
13831 | Is this from lack of emotion? |
13831 | It remains to be asked why the Japanese are more emotional than other races? |
13831 | Judging from the pre- Elizabethan literature, who would have expected the brilliancy of the Elizabethan period? |
13831 | Let us then ask: what does Heaven hate, and what does Heaven love? |
13831 | Looked at closely, and studied in its implications, what is this but a developing form of communal religion? |
13831 | Must we not say that the element of affection in the present social order is deficient because the Japanese themselves are naturally deficient? |
13831 | Now has Japan imported only the tools of civilization? |
13831 | Now is it not evident that such a method of introspection deprives the conception of self of all possible value? |
13831 | Now what is the cause of this characteristic of the Japanese? |
13831 | Old Japan was not accustomed to ask"Why?" |
13831 | Once when Confucius was asked about the doctrine of Lao- Tse that one should return good for evil, he replied,"With what then should one reward good? |
13831 | Or are they the product of the times? |
13831 | Or is it not rather the social and intellectual and ethical state of a people? |
13831 | Or is one going to drive out and annihilate the other? |
13831 | Or is there to be modification of both? |
13831 | Or may these characteristics change with the social order? |
13831 | Or rather is not each fragment a whole in itself, and is not the idea of self- continuity from day to day and from week to week a self- delusion? |
13831 | Rules of etiquette are the products of the æsthetic imagination, and in what land has etiquette been more developed than in feudal Japan? |
13831 | Said a professor of Harvard University to the writer some years ago:"Do you in Japan find it difficult to become truly acquainted with the Japanese? |
13831 | Shall we argue from this that the Japanese people have no sense of relation? |
13831 | Should we expect an immediate change of character when the social order has been suddenly changed? |
13831 | So they argue;"and who so fit to do it as we?" |
13831 | The Japanese think they have; and what foreigner can say that, under the circumstances and in view of the conditions of the people, they have not? |
13831 | The publicity of the private(?) |
13831 | The question of importance, however, is whether they have it in a marked degree, more, for instance, than Americans? |
13831 | The unity that pervades the Orient, if it is not due to the inheritance of a common psychic nature, to what is it due? |
13831 | Then, again, when we stop to think of it, is it not a pretty fine line that we draw between legitimate and illegitimate profits? |
13831 | This seems plain and straightforward, but is it really so? |
13831 | Though she does not work hard at any one time( and is it to be wondered at?) |
13831 | Toward the latter part of our conversation, referring to one idea expressed, he said,"That is about what Hegel held, is it not?" |
13831 | Under such conditions how was progress possible? |
13831 | We may suggest our line of thought by asking what is the fundamental element of civilization? |
13831 | Were the Japanese mere imitators, how could we explain their architecture, so different from that of China and Korea? |
13831 | Were these same tests applied to any European people, what would be the result? |
13831 | What are the steps by which she has effected this apparent national reversal of attitude? |
13831 | What are to be the final consequences of this wide intercourse? |
13831 | What as to the relation of mankind to that Ultimate Reality? |
13831 | What does this mean? |
13831 | What does this show? |
13831 | What foreigner ever decorated a little lapdog with a red- green- yellow- blue- and purple crocheted collar, four or five inches wide? |
13831 | What has taken place in Japan, a profound, or only a superficial change in psychical character? |
13831 | What have been their views as to the nature of the ultimate reality lying behind all phenomena? |
13831 | What is it that makes the Occidental longer- lived than the Japanese? |
13831 | What is the bond of connection that binds into one the successive consciousnesses of the successive days? |
13831 | What is the charm in these distortions? |
13831 | What is the nature of personal heredity? |
13831 | What is the origin of the characteristic? |
13831 | What more convincing evidence of powerful, though distorted, wills could be asked than that furnished by Oriental asceticism? |
13831 | What nation, for example, ever voluntarily set itself to learn the ways and thoughts and languages of foreign nations as persistently as Japan? |
13831 | What now is the sociological interpretation of the foregoing facts? |
13831 | What would be the psychic characteristics of that child when grown to manhood? |
13831 | What, then, did the new government do? |
13831 | What, then, is the meaning when applied to them? |
13831 | Whence is fortune? |
13831 | Which principle is to succeed, apotheosis and absolute Imperial sovereignty, or individualism with democratic sovereignty? |
13831 | Who can read of the tortures there inflicted without shuddering with horror? |
13831 | Who can say that no originality was required to develop such a system, so opposed at vital points to the prevalent Buddhism of the day? |
13831 | Who has done? |
13831 | Why are his children more energetic? |
13831 | Why are the young so prominent? |
13831 | Why has Japanese art made so little of man as man? |
13831 | Why has she so easily turned from the customs of centuries? |
13831 | Why is he a more developed personality? |
13831 | Why is he healthier? |
13831 | Why is he more intelligent? |
13831 | Why is the number of the blind steadily diminishing? |
13831 | Why is the rising generation so free from pockmarks? |
13831 | With this in mind, we naturally ask whether they show any unusual proficiency or deficiency in the acquisition of foreign languages? |
13831 | XXV ARE THE JAPANESE RELIGIOUS? |
13831 | XXX ARE THE JAPANESE IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | XXXII IS BUDDHISM IMPERSONAL? |
13831 | XXXVI WHAT ARE THE ESSENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ORIENT? |
13831 | Yet I would not lay much stress on this argument, for oftentimes( or is it always true?) |
13831 | Yet how is this consistent with the cheerful disposition which seems so characteristic of Japan? |
13831 | [ AM] What, then, are the facts? |
13831 | [ B] III THE PROBLEM OF PROGRESS What constitutes progress? |
13831 | and are the facts sufficiently accounted for by the communal theory of the Japanese social order? |
13831 | are they due to, and do they prove, the asserted"impersonality"of the people? |
13831 | or I? |
13831 | or he? |
13831 | or is it not also a characteristic of men? |
13831 | or when absorbed in thought or action? |
13831 | you? |
11079 | ''Ear that, Albert? |
11079 | ''Ear that, Albert? |
11079 | Ai n''t I a nice little girl? |
11079 | Ai n''t it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence? |
11079 | Ai n''t she got a cheek? |
11079 | All art--Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the policeman said"Grand Jury?" |
11079 | And why should n''t nice- lookin''people have a good blow- out, same as you? |
11079 | Any questions? |
11079 | Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners? |
11079 | Are those stains blood? |
11079 | Are those the beauties? |
11079 | Are we worse than Chinamen,he asked,"that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung from unknown forefathers?" |
11079 | Bit slow, is n''t it, old man? |
11079 | Can these smudgy, dirty, evil- smelling creatures compose the dominant race? |
11079 | Child, what hast thou with sleep to do? 11079 Do you mean to tell me that is all?" |
11079 | Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting time? |
11079 | Enjoy common humanity? |
11079 | Ernest what? |
11079 | Got a bit on? |
11079 | Have I not watched over my people? 11079 I beg your pardon, but may I remind you that you are standing on my steps? |
11079 | I should like to ask you, my man,said the venerable juror,"how you spell your name?" |
11079 | I suppose you do n''t happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an egg or two concealed about your person, do you? |
11079 | I thought that was the last_ Dreadnought_? |
11079 | I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the legal style or from association of ideas? |
11079 | Is it that they unconsciously appreciate''o''as the most beautiful of vowel sounds? 11079 Is n''t the retort a trifle middle- aged?" |
11079 | Is n''t this all a little personal? |
11079 | Is that a bath- brick you are manipulating? |
11079 | Is the King returning from the Opera? |
11079 | Is there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave? |
11079 | Just a drop of something to show there''s no ill- feeling? |
11079 | Let me see,said Mr. Clarkson,"which was Jim?" |
11079 | Like it warm? |
11079 | No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some special event,Mr. Clarkson continued,"and you are waiting for the account?" |
11079 | No ten? 11079 No, no, no life,"cries Lear:"Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all? |
11079 | Not come? |
11079 | Oh, that''s what you wanted to speak about so particular, is it? |
11079 | On what qualification are they selected as critics? |
11079 | Should not one question,he asked himself,"the possibility of creating beauty by preconcerted design? |
11079 | Six columns speeches in already; how much? |
11079 | Tea? |
11079 | That do n''t sound as if they was un''appy, do it, sir? |
11079 | That paperweight''s been lost these two or three days, and it was you who stole it, was it? |
11079 | Then, what_ do_ you do? |
11079 | This young nobleman''s name''s Looney, is n''t it? |
11079 | Well, boys, having a real good time, are you? 11079 Well, no; I have n''t exactly got anything on,"said Mr. Clarkson, uneasily;"but may I ask what cable you mean?" |
11079 | What do you think of the upper- cut? |
11079 | What do you want? |
11079 | What is the British Empire to me,I heard a Whitechapel man say,"when I have to open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?" |
11079 | What part of France do you come from? |
11079 | What tongue do your Visions speak? |
11079 | What''s the meaning of that? |
11079 | What''s yer name, fat-''ead? |
11079 | Who are you calling the Whistler? |
11079 | Who are you? 11079 Who hath believed our report?" |
11079 | Who''s that he''s callin''middle- aged? |
11079 | Why all this cookery? |
11079 | Why died I not from the womb? |
11079 | Why do the common people love to add''o''to their words? |
11079 | Why, what''s the matter with you? |
11079 | Why-- why, how can you help it? 11079 Witty?" |
11079 | Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon the doorstep? |
11079 | You alone in a house, sir? 11079 You fit for go shore one time?" |
11079 | You''ve not been here long, have you? |
11079 | ***** And will they not repay the treasures lent? |
11079 | --My brothers, You? |
11079 | A fashionable wit? |
11079 | A great Power says:"How much of Persia, Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to swallow? |
11079 | A plain duty confronted him, but how could he face it? |
11079 | Against such obstinacy, what headway can the critics make? |
11079 | And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking for-- the very reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a distance? |
11079 | And so on down to the lines:"If with such talents Heaven has blest''em, Have I not reason to detest''em?" |
11079 | And what has Hungary, Bohemia, Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria? |
11079 | And you''ll''ave children, of course?" |
11079 | And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German revolutionist, what was the good of it all? |
11079 | Are our praises of death in victory, then, all ca nt, and are all the eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham? |
11079 | Are we to suppose that no one grows fat on the people''s money? |
11079 | Are we to suppose the English people have not the hereditary instinct of sparrows to keep them outside its meshes? |
11079 | As to money, what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled, in Bishop Ken''s language, to live each day as it were his last? |
11079 | Besides, what manners, what sense, could be expected of a chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels and engines, instead of living things and corn? |
11079 | Better being here than starving outside, is n''t it?" |
11079 | But I wonder whether I ought to have blacked that range before I lighted the fire? |
11079 | But he refrained, and only remarked,"What_ is_ a Beauty Show?" |
11079 | But if word goes round that one or two prisoners have crept out of gaol, who would not burn to follow? |
11079 | But is there no other means? |
11079 | But of what service was nobility if its obligations were abolished? |
11079 | But should we pay the price of compulsion? |
11079 | But then come the deeper questions: Do people love peace? |
11079 | But what force could she bring against me, if it came to extremities, and what force could I set against hers?" |
11079 | But what is nationality? |
11079 | But what was the good of son or grandchild now? |
11079 | But where in the scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn but flying banner? |
11079 | But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what interval of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay and to be slain? |
11079 | Can it be that for that barren honour a human being dyed his hands with murder and risked momentary assassination for the remainder of his lifetime? |
11079 | Could anything be more desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more disagreeable? |
11079 | Could not a few timely words from them hold the productive powers of certain brains in check? |
11079 | Could the lilies of the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a finer indifference to worldly cares? |
11079 | Creeping down the passage, he said"Who''s there?" |
11079 | Did I not give him a great palace to live in, and gardens where he could walk with few to watch his safety? |
11079 | Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and books to read, and musicians to delight his soul? |
11079 | Did I not send him every day delicate food from my own table? |
11079 | Did it not seem that a true revolutionist was justified in comparing him to a boy chasing butterflies on the battle- field? |
11079 | Do n''t we, Ma?" |
11079 | Do the people call the tune of peace or war? |
11079 | Do they hate war? |
11079 | Do we not always get one or other of the lot? |
11079 | Do you suppose that Krupp''s Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates Norman Angell''s book for a new gospel? |
11079 | Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and prudent about a century ago began to regard the birth- rate? |
11079 | Dr. Adams:''What do you mean by damned?'' |
11079 | Even peace, they say, may be bought too dear, and what shall it profit a people if it gain a swill- tub of comforts and lose its own soul? |
11079 | For, after all, what is the root cause of all this dirt and ignorance and shabbiness and disease? |
11079 | For, though they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and have not action, what are they but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal? |
11079 | Has not the name of Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the world? |
11079 | Have I not toiled? |
11079 | Have I not upheld the city against the enemy? |
11079 | He wished to follow up a train of thought suggested by the question:"Should Aristotle be left out?" |
11079 | Horrible mutilations? |
11079 | How came it that there was always a candidate for that bloody deed and disquieting existence? |
11079 | How can a man or woman engaged in such labour for ten hours a day at subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life? |
11079 | How can you avoid it?" |
11079 | How then? |
11079 | I suppose, if you liked, you might without exaggeration call it the White Man''s Hope?" |
11079 | I wonder whether he misses me? |
11079 | If decent women took to this kind of service, where would the charm of womanhood be fled? |
11079 | If he left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise? |
11079 | If that feeble lot could win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect deliverance? |
11079 | If the working classes refuse to fight, what will the kings, ministers, speculators, and contractors do? |
11079 | If there is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the issue in the discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable? |
11079 | Is it a fad? |
11079 | Is it a plot for contemptible ends? |
11079 | Is it a riot-- a moment''s effervescence-- or a revolution glowing from volcanic depths? |
11079 | Is it a trick? |
11079 | Is it inevitable? |
11079 | Is it to be desired? |
11079 | Is not the parallel remarkable? |
11079 | Is there a Brixton Branch?" |
11079 | Is there not as much to be said for taking one line as another? |
11079 | Jones?" |
11079 | Joy in the divine service? |
11079 | Margate mystery? |
11079 | May we not advise them to drop the old method of frontal attack altogether? |
11079 | Might not teachers of eugenics do something drastic, and at once? |
11079 | Might one not rather say that the perpetual misfortunes of our friends are the chief plague of existence? |
11079 | Mr. Clarkson protested;"a trifle-- what should I say?--Oriental, perhaps?" |
11079 | Mr. Clarkson whispered,"or are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense that used to counteract the smell and infection of gaol- fever?" |
11079 | Nice, juicy cut from the joint, and a little dry sherry? |
11079 | Or let us take one verse from the lines,"O Lord, how long?" |
11079 | Or should it be little Ben, lying there with eyes sunk deep in his head, and one arm outside the counterpane? |
11079 | Or, in this country herself, what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they welcomed with their paeans of joy? |
11079 | Ought we to maintain soldiers for love-- for fear of losing the advantages of war? |
11079 | Perhaps you''ve never heard of the White Man''s Hope?" |
11079 | Pills, did we say? |
11079 | Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too common; or, if one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in life''s common round? |
11079 | Promise of future and eternal bliss? |
11079 | Shall I sit with a novel over the fire? |
11079 | Shall I take life at second- hand and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the exigencies of shadows? |
11079 | Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood, already so like his father, though he was only just nine? |
11079 | Still, at moments of deep distress or public wrong- doing, we may hear the echo of the Corn- law Rhymer''s anthem:"When wilt thou save the people? |
11079 | Suddenly the further question came-- which of the four? |
11079 | Swift appealed to him one day"whether the corruptions and villainies of men in power did not eat his flesh and exhaust his spirits?" |
11079 | That refined and respectable women should go on such an errand-- how could propriety endure it? |
11079 | The powerlessness of the word is the burden of writers, and"Who hath believed our report?" |
11079 | They''ve found the corpse? |
11079 | To come within our own sphere, what ecstatic rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising nationalism of Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt? |
11079 | To what can we look? |
11079 | Was there not, at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than annihilated? |
11079 | We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of some artist or poet like Heine-- or, shall we say? |
11079 | Well, and why on earth should they not? |
11079 | What are all the firesides and fictions of the world to me that I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good as die? |
11079 | What could a man do when exposed to temptation so severe? |
11079 | What could such a man do against temptation? |
11079 | What did the sorrows of exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause? |
11079 | What do I care about being healthier? |
11079 | What do we know of this woman, for instance-- her history, her distress, her state of mind?" |
11079 | What do you say?" |
11079 | What do you take me for?" |
11079 | What energy of the personal soul is exercised in a mill- hand, a tea- packer, a slop- tailor, or the watcher of a thread in a machine? |
11079 | What excess of delight have I taken with the women sent me as presents year by year? |
11079 | What future could be theirs? |
11079 | What have they said or done for freedom''s emblem in Persia, or in Morocco, or in Turkey? |
11079 | What is so terrible as death?" |
11079 | What of the possible results of a union with a being from the stage? |
11079 | What other Sultan has kept his own brother alive for thirty years? |
11079 | What pleasure have I given myself? |
11079 | What support have they given it in Finland, or in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic Provinces? |
11079 | What working man or woman on hearing of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the grievances of life harder to be tolerated than before? |
11079 | What would the host and daughter say if their guest began to prophesy or discuss the nature of justice? |
11079 | What''s a man to do at night out here? |
11079 | What''s them teachers got to learn_ me_, I''d like to know?" |
11079 | What''s your name, did you say?" |
11079 | What, would you kill a ruler like me? |
11079 | When asked if he had any message to send home before he died, he wrote upon the paper,"Did we win?" |
11079 | When have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are drunken? |
11079 | Where should we feel the difference most? |
11079 | Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save, From the cradle to the grave, Those ungrateful drones who would Drain your sweat-- nay, drink your blood?" |
11079 | Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery? |
11079 | Wherefore weave with toil and care The rich robes your tyrants wear? |
11079 | Which shall we recall of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame? |
11079 | Whither has the sweet gregariousness of human converse strayed? |
11079 | Who are the figures in history round whom the people''s imagination has woven the fondest dreams? |
11079 | Who could have given us a finer present?" |
11079 | Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
11079 | Who shall deliver us from the body of these shades? |
11079 | Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that? |
11079 | Who, without profanity, shall tell his wrath? |
11079 | Why are those rebels so quick? |
11079 | Why does not the telegraph speak? |
11079 | Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel? |
11079 | Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another at all? |
11079 | Why should only the law talk like that?" |
11079 | Why should we fluster ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its inevitable revenges? |
11079 | Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and intellectual interests when nature presents us with this sempiternal theme? |
11079 | Why should we seek to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life to the temperature of a torture- room? |
11079 | Why, then, did he do it? |
11079 | Why, then, should we not talk about rain, and leave plays and books and pictures and politics and scandal to narrow and abnormal minds? |
11079 | Will they go out to fight each other? |
11079 | Would not grievances then be simultaneously discovered to be intolerable? |
11079 | Would the total abolition of war be a good thing for the world? |
11079 | Would you kill an old, old man?" |
11079 | asked the cabman;"Jim Corbett, or John Sullivan?" |
11079 | is given, and they blow the souls out of one another:"Had these men any quarrel?" |
11079 | per cent., Blood, sweat, and tear- wrung millions-- why? |
11079 | said the superintendent,"what are you doing here?" |
11079 | when? |
11079 | would you live for ever?" |
19172 | But where is it? |
19172 | But why, señor? |
19172 | But''Australia''--where is it? |
19172 | Do we believe that these millions are without hope in the next world? 19172 How far is it now?" |
19172 | How many honourable and distinguished sons have you? |
19172 | Pardon me, Caballero,he said,"but will you do me the favour to tell me where you come from?" |
19172 | Pardon me, but will you do me the favour to look at this basin? |
19172 | Sir,he said,"do you wish anything?" |
19172 | The Chinese? 19172 Then you have a Chinese interpreter? |
19172 | What do I think of him? |
19172 | What is your noble and exalted occupation? |
19172 | What is your noble patronymic? |
19172 | What kind of a man is D.? |
19172 | What pidgin belong you? |
19172 | Where from? |
19172 | You speak Chinese, of course? |
19172 | A Chinese servant who can speak English? |
19172 | An English companion who can speak Chinese? |
19172 | And what is his reward? |
19172 | Any relation? |
19172 | But why does China grow this poppy? |
19172 | But why should they look south? |
19172 | But without doubt you are armed? |
19172 | Ca n''t you see I do n''t understand a word you say, you benighted heathen you? |
19172 | Could I get him a bottle of hair- dye? |
19172 | Could I give him any higher praise than that? |
19172 | Could anything be simpler? |
19172 | He continues--"How many tens of thousands of pieces of silver have you?" |
19172 | How much longer are we to persist in regarding the Chinese, as they now are, as a warlike power? |
19172 | In England this creek would be spanned by a bridge; but the poor heathen, in China, how do they find their way across the stream? |
19172 | In the same time how many hundreds of unoffending Chinese have been murdered in civilised foreign countries? |
19172 | Surely they will come to blows? |
19172 | Their fates were in his hands; which master should the Italian serve, the French or the Burmese? |
19172 | Town?" |
19172 | We went on another six li, when again he asked me:"Teacher Mô, how many li to Santien?" |
19172 | What did he mean by that? |
19172 | What do you think of him?" |
19172 | What is to be their condition beyond the grave? |
19172 | What part?" |
19172 | What was his probable tenure of life? |
19172 | What was the dispute? |
19172 | Which half should he hang, when all were equally guilty? |
19172 | Which is to be our colonist, the Asiatic or the Englishman? |
19172 | Who could ever have expected to meet_ you_ here?" |
19172 | gustar?_"is not meant to be accepted. |
19172 | he asked-- meaning what is your business? |
19172 | meaning how many daughters have you? |
19172 | my dear friends, may I say one word about that condition? |
19172 | so then you come from Austria?" |
19172 | what are they?'' |
19322 | Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world? 19322 For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? |
19322 | Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? 19322 --Has any one ever clearly understood the celebrated story at the beginning of the Bible-- of God''s mortal terror of_ science_?... 19322 --In the last analysis it comes to this: what is the_ end_ of lying? 19322 --Must I add that, in the whole New Testament, there appears but a_ solitary_ figure worthy of honour? 19322 --_What follows, then?_ That one had better put on gloves before reading the New Testament. 19322 And a dogma ofimmaculate conception"for good measure?... |
19322 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more_ than others_? |
19322 | And when one goeth through fire for his teaching-- what doth that prove? |
19322 | But the"will of God"had already been revealed to Moses.... What happened? |
19322 | But what actually happened? |
19322 | Can it be that this fact is not yet understood? |
19322 | Did n''t Kant see in the French Revolution the transformation of the state from the inorganic form to the_ organic_? |
19322 | Even to this day the crude fact of persecution is enough to give an honourable name to the most empty sort of sectarianism.--But why? |
19322 | How can any one call pious legends"traditions"? |
19322 | How is one to_ protect_ one''s self against science? |
19322 | Is all this properly understood? |
19322 | Is it understood at last,_ will_ it ever be understood,_ what_ the Renaissance was? |
19322 | It compares itself to the prophets...."Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and_ that_ the spirit of God dwelleth in you? |
19322 | It was through woman that man learned to taste of the tree of knowledge.--What happened? |
19322 | One Jew more or less-- what did it matter?... |
19322 | Only then did the chasm of doubt yawn:"_ Who_ put him to death? |
19322 | So little is this true that it is almost a proof against truth when sensations of pleasure influence the answer to the question"What is true?" |
19322 | So to live that life no longer has any meaning:_ this_ is now the"meaning"of life.... Why be public- spirited? |
19322 | This_ frightful impostor_ then proceeds:"Know ye not that we shall judge angels? |
19322 | To what end the Greeks? |
19322 | What actual difference does it make to a civilized man, when there is a steel strike, whether the workmen win or the mill- owners win? |
19322 | What do I care for the contradictions of"tradition"? |
19322 | What follows therefrom? |
19322 | What is the meaning of a"moral order of the world"? |
19322 | Whom do I hate most heartily among the rabbles of today? |
19322 | Whom, then, does Christianity deny? |
19322 | Why labour together, trust one another, or concern one''s self about the common welfare, and try to serve it?... |
19322 | Why take any pride in descent and forefathers? |
19322 | Would God have done anything superfluous? |
19322 | [ 21] What does he do? |
19322 | _ What_ is Jewish,_ what_ is Christian morality? |
19322 | _ What_ was the only part of Christianity that Mohammed borrowed later on? |
19322 | _ what_ does it call"the world"? |
19322 | and if the world shall be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters?" |
19322 | do not even the publicans so?" |
19322 | do not even the publicans the same? |
19322 | how much more things that pertain to this life?"... |
19322 | must a German first be a genius, a free spirit, before he can feel_ decently_? |
19322 | what was it_?" |
19322 | who had perhaps never experienced the rapturous_ ardeurs_ of victory and of destruction? |
19322 | who was his natural enemy?" |
18040 | ''And what, may I ask, do you call an unnatural thought?'' 18040 ''Sister Madeline,''I said,''you have been happy here, have you not? |
18040 | Do n''t you own a string of trotting horses? |
18040 | ''Tell me,''I continued,''is there any particular day you prefer?'' |
18040 | 2"What Shall I Do To Be Saved?" |
18040 | And is it any wonder that thousands of trusting and confiding wives and daughters are forced to the level of immorality by this belief? |
18040 | Are not the vices which have killed them-- apart from war-- the peculiar vices of popery, especially drunkenness? |
18040 | Are the policemen of the cities of Massachusetts servants of the Roman Catholic Church? |
18040 | Are we building our own sepulchers to bury all the hopes of liberty cherished by our forefathers? |
18040 | Are we nearing the crater of a Roman volcano that pours out its desolation and devastation upon free men? |
18040 | Are we nearing the great Romish chasm that has swallowed up the hopes of many nations? |
18040 | Are we nearing the inky night of servitude, where no light is possible, but the dim and treacherous lamp of idolatrous Catholicism? |
18040 | Are we nearing the stretch of waste lands that contains no friendly oasis for him who seeks liberty? |
18040 | Are we nearing the time when liberty shall be bound to the stake by Catholicism? |
18040 | Are we willingly carrying fuel for our own funeral pyres, there to be consumed by the greedy and relentless ghouls of Catholicism? |
18040 | But where do we get our ideas of what is morally right, and what is morally wrong, as the basis of our common law and jurisprudence? |
18040 | C. Peck, and the first question this reporter asked him was,"Is that the picture of your sister?" |
18040 | Can we expect Catholicism to change her abominations without force? |
18040 | Can we expect anything else should Roman Catholicism ever become numerically strong enough to rule by physical strength? |
18040 | Did the Roman Catholic Church excommunicate this bundle of perfidy for immorality? |
18040 | Did this exposure disgrace him in the eyes of the Catholic officials who were above him? |
18040 | Even the newspapers began to report the wonderful miracles(?) |
18040 | For instance, they will take the bone of some Catholic Saint(?) |
18040 | Have not the priests had control of them since this land was discovered? |
18040 | Have the courts the right to sentence prisoners to Catholic prisons, and after sentence, have the prisoners no right? |
18040 | Have they ever been Protestants? |
18040 | How do you Protestants like to hear this? |
18040 | If the rule of papal Rome be so intolerable to its friends, what might it not accomplish in the dominions of its opponents? |
18040 | Is it any wonder that France and Italy are to- day struggling with this polluted beast in order to free themselves from her filthy grasp? |
18040 | Is there any proof that the Virgin Mary appeared to Simon Stock and made to him the promise above related? |
18040 | Let me ask you, Mr. Protestant, if you ever heard of a Protestant teaching in a Catholic school? |
18040 | Mohammedanism converted(?) |
18040 | Now, do you expect an institution which teaches such doctrines to elevate a nation above their own doctrine? |
18040 | Now, if Catholicism is such a glorious creed, why is it that France is so anxious to get rid of her influence? |
18040 | Now, is not this common sense logic and every- day philosophy? |
18040 | Now, is not this true? |
18040 | Now, is there any politics in such an agreement? |
18040 | Now, what can we expect of the morals of a country which has for its leaders and teachers men of this caliber? |
18040 | Right here the reader may ask if these nuns are willing to submit to the embraces of these priests? |
18040 | The article follows:"Protestantism in Cuba? |
18040 | The question now arises, How did John H. Surratt escape from the same fate of Herald, Powell and Mrs. Surratt? |
18040 | The question then arose: Has the Roman Catholic Church the right to give sentence of imprisonment with hard labor as a penalty? |
18040 | Then, what can you expect of future generations, and what must eventually be the morals of a country which is controlled by the priestcraft? |
18040 | There are thousands-- yea, tens of thousands, who send handkerchiefs and trinkets each year to Rome to be blessed(?) |
18040 | To whom shall we look for the inculcation of those patriotic sentiments which should inspire the heart of every American citizen? |
18040 | Was one of your boys on this transport ship? |
18040 | We want to know if this attempted crime injured the priest in the estimation of Catholicism? |
18040 | West''at Peck''s farm is not Mrs. Mamie Kipp?" |
18040 | West,''do n''t you?" |
18040 | West?''" |
18040 | What book or books contain the best code of morals? |
18040 | What comfort did you get? |
18040 | What consolation? |
18040 | What do you think of a judge of a court who will sentence a child to a State prison for attending a Protestant meeting? |
18040 | What good have the priests wrought among them? |
18040 | What good will it do there? |
18040 | What hope? |
18040 | What is the consequence? |
18040 | Where are they now? |
18040 | Where are they? |
18040 | Where are they? |
18040 | Where does the vicious element which is found in this country come from, and to what church does it belong? |
18040 | Who could tell the many weary hours of heart anguish she had passed through? |
18040 | Who told you that?" |
18040 | Who was right-- Catholicism or Galileo? |
18040 | Why does this state of affairs exist? |
18040 | Will we have any one to blame for what Catholicism does to this country when such time arrives? |
18040 | Will you read a meditation for me?'' |
18040 | You love your present life?'' |
18040 | by the Pope, and who believe that by having some article which has been blessed(?) |
11091 | And is this all? |
11091 | And why not? |
11091 | Great inventors, say you? |
11091 | Have we no great uses_ here_ For the millions we outpour? 11091 Is that so? |
11091 | Is your heart a stone,the young man cried,"Hath all ambition within you died, That nothing seems to you worth while? |
11091 | Must all races prove decadent? 11091 Nay,"you cry in bitter protest,"Shall man have no perfect end, No millennial culmination, Toward which all the ages tend? |
11091 | Poor soul, cried one,"hast thou no fear To walk this haunted strand? |
11091 | That girl has smiled, the Colonel thinks,"but on whom''? |
11091 | The sun will set at day''s decline; Qu''importe? |
11091 | These pleasures will not come again; Qu''importe? |
11091 | This fleeting hour will soon be past; Qu''importe? |
11091 | What is Africa to me, If it swallow up my child? 11091 With time love''s ardor always cools"; Qu''importe? |
11091 | ( Can it be that_ that_ is he?) |
11091 | A STORY OF THE SEA Were you ever told the legend old Of the birth of storms at sea? |
11091 | A Union? |
11091 | AFTER THE VINTAGE How can my vineyard''s charm be told, As it basks in the autumn haze? |
11091 | Admit him? |
11091 | Again a stone of classic style The spade hath upward cast; How can such relics thus endure Two thousand years of sepulture? |
11091 | Ah, should I not have kept him here? |
11091 | Ah, who can doubt it, when these vines Form trellised screens for distant snow, And trace in arabesque designs Their profiles on the Alpine glow? |
11091 | All weaker species To the stronger yield their place; May the same law not be needed Through the boundless realms of space? |
11091 | Am I foolish to choose the purer air Of my glorious Promenade Solitaire? |
11091 | And how could I explain That I would come again? |
11091 | And if such men could not hinder Fate''s resistless rise and fall, How can we expect exemption From the common lot of all? |
11091 | And is there life beyond the grave? |
11091 | And then? |
11091 | And those who chant,--that exiled band, Expelled from France with scorn and hate, How fare they in this foreign land? |
11091 | And what of Man when the earth grows cold? |
11091 | And what will now thy future be, Thou pristine refuge of the brave, Which Rome''s last heroes fought to free, And vainly gave their lives to save? |
11091 | And whence comes Life,--that occult Force, So rich in its prolific range, So frail and swift to run its course, Yet deathless in protean change? |
11091 | And where will it go, when yonder snow Is reached in the morning light? |
11091 | And why not? |
11091 | And why presume I care to know More triflers in their world of show? |
11091 | Are not Thy promises to Jacob sure? |
11091 | Are our consciences quite clear In this war? |
11091 | Are there in truth Elysian Fields? |
11091 | Are thy plans noble, just, and fair? |
11091 | Are we better men than they? |
11091 | Are we wiser than the sages Of two thousand years ago? |
11091 | Before such marvels, what are we To plume ourselves in foolish pride? |
11091 | Beyond this tiny orb we tread Who can the spirit''s pathway trace, Or find a haven for our dead In seas of interstellar space? |
11091 | Bright with joy, or bowed with care? |
11091 | But an old man smiled, and asked"And then?" |
11091 | But still in the solar warmth I wait, The hand of my lov''d one clasped in mine; Is that a tear? |
11091 | But where are now his loyal soul, His loving heart and gifted mind; Do they survive-- a conscious whole-- The dwelling they have left behind? |
11091 | But why disturb the silent past? |
11091 | But why should we feel distress If the jar be far from filled? |
11091 | Can you that love forget? |
11091 | Can you walk? |
11091 | Canst thou forgive The momentary thought that I could live Without thee? |
11091 | Canst thou impart no sign? |
11091 | Canst travel without book? |
11091 | Children? |
11091 | Could the rumor, then, be true? |
11091 | Dark is the starless night; Only one feeble light Burns at the grating surmounting the door; Has his advance been heard? |
11091 | Did Pan frequent this charming site, So hidden from the haunts of men? |
11091 | Did he lie Long ill- treated by the foe? |
11091 | Did not Abyssinian sand Drink sufficiently our gore? |
11091 | Did nymphs and satyrs dance at night Within this moon- illumined glen? |
11091 | Did thy fair hands his shield embrace, The surface of whose golden bars Grew lovely from thy mirrored face? |
11091 | Do I come too late?" |
11091 | Do we thus ever fully know The boon of leaving far behind The world''s dull tales of crime and woe, The gossip of its vacant mind? |
11091 | Do you your love for me retain Beyond the silent sea you crossed? |
11091 | Does an endless line of failures Warrant brighter horoscopes? |
11091 | Does life''s dark problem grow more plain, As pass in prayer the tranquil years? |
11091 | Does the gay world leave us? |
11091 | Doth a busy world neglect thee, Careless of thy worth? |
11091 | Doth some Divinity each morn Cast over me its ancient spell, That this sweet landscape seems forlorn Without the gods who loved it well? |
11091 | Drive starving sons by thousands from thy shore, Or let them rot in Abyssinian graves, And hide the cancer festering at thy core? |
11091 | Eagle, Tyrolean eagle, Why are thy plumes so red? |
11091 | Eagle, Tyrolean eagle, Why are thy plumes so red? |
11091 | Eagle, Tyrolean eagle, Why are thy plumes so red? |
11091 | Far worthier men had vainly sought To win her for herself alone; What potent spell could Love have wrought To draw her to a tactless drone? |
11091 | For those who more existence crave Is there a Power to help and save? |
11091 | For what, in truth, are we who claim An endless life beyond the grave, But insects of a larger frame, Whose souls may be too small to save? |
11091 | Forsaken thus, what comfort, still remaining, Makes life worth while? |
11091 | Gods of Olympus, can ye not restore To outraged Rome her dignity of old? |
11091 | Good- night? |
11091 | Had she children? |
11091 | Hard, cruel, hopeless? |
11091 | Hast thou the secret consciousness That grief is not worth while? |
11091 | Hath not every race and nation Sunk from grandeur to decay? |
11091 | Have her old limbs failed at last In the chilling wintry blast? |
11091 | Have they escaped the sight of pain, Of social strife, of hopeless tears? |
11091 | Hear you that music, half song and half sigh? |
11091 | Hence over his sombre features There flickers a ghostly smile, As if he would say,"What matter? |
11091 | Here falls his gallant horse, Killed by his headlong course; Is it a warning to halt and retreat? |
11091 | How dare they give themselves the right, Unasked, to spoil my solitude? |
11091 | How dare you speak of Asian thought with pity or a sneer, When practically all you know originated here? |
11091 | How long, O Israel''s God, shall this endure? |
11091 | If o''er the dark, prenatal void No mental bridge be cast, No thread, however frail, to link The present to the past? |
11091 | In silence march to strife? |
11091 | In silence? |
11091 | In that shoreless sea of splendor What is one faint wave of light? |
11091 | In what have we surpassed them? |
11091 | Is life for them disconsolate? |
11091 | Is_ he_ not here?" |
11091 | Last of a gifted line, Years have gone by since we parted in hate; What have they taught to me? |
11091 | Latest of all to thus depart, Still is thy hand- clasp warm in mine; Wilt thou not tell me where thou art? |
11091 | Long to slip your gilded tether, And with Leo once more stroll, Heedless of the wind and weather? |
11091 | Make poorly paid officials banded knaves? |
11091 | More accomplished than the Grecians, Or than Buddha more divine? |
11091 | More devout than Hebrew prophets? |
11091 | More upright than Antonine? |
11091 | Moreover, why should former lives Bequeath their weight of woe, If with it comes no memory To guide us, as we go? |
11091 | Must doubt destroy our present bliss? |
11091 | Must we not hope that Death will clear The darkness here? |
11091 | Must we stain that fatal strand, As before?" |
11091 | Mute is the sky as an empty tomb; Trackless the path, and all unknown; What means this journey through its gloom, Which each must make alone? |
11091 | Nor do we claim to obey the God They worship in the West; But, since they do, is it not true That they mock at His first behest? |
11091 | Not all, indeed; for who but yearns To call some kindred heart his own? |
11091 | O Roman poet, dost thou know? |
11091 | Of Rome''s prodigious armaments, to Asian conquests led, Where is there now a souvenir save relics of the dead? |
11091 | Of such a"sluggish, inert mass"why should you be afraid? |
11091 | Of what are you secretly thinking, when You utter those mournful words,--''And then?''" |
11091 | Or are the years that Nature yields Confined this side the Stygian wave? |
11091 | Or if, on waking thus, one thinks That life was better in his dream? |
11091 | Or see in forms by ruins cast The phantoms of those warlike hosts? |
11091 | Or was it some bright scroll of fame Thus poised on thine extended knee, Upon which thou didst trace the name Of that fierce god so dear to thee? |
11091 | Out in the awful void of night, Numberless suns and planets roll; Has one of all those isles of light Received thy homeless soul? |
11091 | Preeminently merciful, Does not thy spirit long To guard from inhumanity The weak against the strong? |
11091 | Rome''s annals hint not of the name Of him whose dust lay treasured here, But could the fleeting breath of fame Have made him to her heart more dear? |
11091 | SERENADE TO NINON Ninon, Ninon, what life canst thou be leading? |
11091 | Seems India exceptional? |
11091 | Shall he explore? |
11091 | Shall not one produce in time Perfect types of men and women In a world devoid of crime?" |
11091 | Shall we through fear love''s rapture miss, Or lose the honey of its kiss? |
11091 | Shall we, then, grieve and sadly brood O''er the unknown cause that has made them changed? |
11091 | Since the summons comes from Rome, Can we really wish to keep Sons at home?" |
11091 | So full is life of hate and greed, So vain the world''s poor tinselled show, What wonder that some souls have need To flee from all its sin and woe? |
11091 | So hath it been, so shall it be, And to what end? |
11091 | Some Power, to read our hearts, and know How this wild beauty moves our tears; Some God that, as our spirits grow, Shall be discerned in after years? |
11091 | Still lives thy mate, to mourn thee sadly, Or is her life- course also run? |
11091 | Successive cycles, vast and small,-- Can these be all? |
11091 | Such muteness he had never shown; Was he so very near the end? |
11091 | Such thoughts, I know, to- day are flouted;"Have statues souls?" |
11091 | Sweet Faun, whence comes thy power of retaining Through storm and sunshine thine unchanging smile? |
11091 | Swift glide its hours, and day succeeds to day; How dost thou live, still deaf to Love''s sweet pleading? |
11091 | THE PAGAN PAST What sylvan god was worshipped here? |
11091 | THE RED TYROLEAN EAGLE Eagle, Tyrolean eagle, Why are thy plumes so red? |
11091 | TO- DAY"The sun will set at day''s decline"; Qu''importe? |
11091 | That pain is as impermanent As shadows on the hills, And that Nirvana''s blessedness Will cure all mortal ills? |
11091 | That sorrow is the consequence Of former lives of sin,-- The spur that goads us on and up A nobler life to win? |
11091 | That we let our boys be killed By the Turk?" |
11091 | The few I want I can invite; Hence why should others thus intrude? |
11091 | The"Star of Empire,"as you claim, has"westward"made its way; But what if now in Eastern skies it heralds a new day? |
11091 | Thou art to him the vision fair Of all he once had hoped to be; What wonder, then, that in despair His longing glances follow thee? |
11091 | Thou canst starless sail, and fear not to be lost? |
11091 | Thou tremblest still, as I approach thee; Do I, too, seem like all the rest? |
11091 | Time, which broke or blurred the rest, Tenderly has spared the best; For what better could there be? |
11091 | To whose grasp should it descend, Since with him it could not go? |
11091 | Transport to Africa thine eldest born, And let gaunt hunger blanch thy peasants''lips? |
11091 | Was he wounded? |
11091 | Was it blessing or curse That foreigners brought Japan? |
11091 | Was she fair? |
11091 | Was that a whispered word? |
11091 | Was this lady still a bride, Or a matron, when she died? |
11091 | Wast thou in truth conjoined with Mars? |
11091 | Waste precious substance upon useless ships? |
11091 | We"owners,"then, are but thy tenants Despite our purchase and our pride; To thee what is our transient presence? |
11091 | What Eastern casket ever held The perfume which their leaves unfold? |
11091 | What Moorish ceiling e''er excelled This arbor, roofed with cups of gold? |
11091 | What are his needs? |
11091 | What are they now? |
11091 | What art thou, ghostly visitant of flame? |
11091 | What bird, whose absence gives him pain, Doth he thus tenderly recall? |
11091 | What care these brutes if songs of rapture From thrush and lark are no more heard? |
11091 | What could this portend? |
11091 | What did war seem to these poor, driven cattle? |
11091 | What does it mean to live and die? |
11091 | What does it mean to live and die? |
11091 | What else indeed can such as they Invent to pass their time away? |
11091 | What had it meant to him to wake And mid familiar things to grope? |
11091 | What had you been, if our ideals, in art and faith expressed, Had not come down through Greece and Rome to civilize your West? |
11091 | What have I found in life''s whirlpool of haste? |
11091 | What hopeless sorrow brings thee here, Where dead men drift to land? |
11091 | What if her loss be really gain, That zone of silence a defence, A compensation for her pain, A quickening of her psychic sense? |
11091 | What if in truth there really be A soul within them to adore; Some half- revealed Divinity, Whose presence haunts us evermore? |
11091 | What in that shadow stirred? |
11091 | What is everyone demanding Of the stranger whom he meets? |
11091 | What is one brief existence worth, Which disappears, and leaves no trace? |
11091 | What is the cause of this passionate strain, Voiced by thy wavelets again and again? |
11091 | What is the real significance Of thine unchanging smile? |
11091 | What know we,--except in physics--, That the ancients did not know? |
11091 | What makes my heart thus vaguely yearn For strangers who will ne''er return? |
11091 | What martial soul there found rebirth, When on those cliffs, then scarcely known, There once more visited the earth The spirit called Napoleon? |
11091 | What marvel if the spirit shrinks From plunging in that turbid stream? |
11091 | What matter if the day be at its dusk or dawn, If from another''s life our own heart''s life be drawn? |
11091 | What matter if their modes of capture Denude the land of every bird? |
11091 | What mean you by that sphinx- like smile? |
11091 | What must I reject, And what for my permanent good select?" |
11091 | What nymph once made this grove her home, And bathed within its fountain clear, When Caesar ruled the world at Rome? |
11091 | What secret motive could have led This charming girl her life to stain By condescending thus to we d A husband whom she must disdain? |
11091 | What shall save us, then, from ruin? |
11091 | What so changed the warlord''s heart? |
11091 | What then? |
11091 | What though a dozen steeds Drop at his feet? |
11091 | What though their dwellings rise near thine? |
11091 | What though, remote from pomp and state, At Caesar''s court he could not shine? |
11091 | What to pious Theodelinda Could be recompense more sweet Than the nail, forever sacred, That once pierced her Saviour''s feet? |
11091 | What was their part in the horrible fray Save to be shot in the fury of battle, Or from exhaustion to fall by the way? |
11091 | What wonder that we hate you all? |
11091 | When his valiant host stood ready And impatient for the start, What reversed their king''s decision? |
11091 | When will the tragic tale be told? |
11091 | Whence come they? |
11091 | Whence did it climb on its path sublime, Ere it left that icy height? |
11091 | Where are they all, who crossed so gladly The lofty Alps to seek the sun? |
11091 | Where?" |
11091 | Whither do they go? |
11091 | Who can in words relate Oswald''s unhappy fate, Left to these monsters, whose hate was ablaze? |
11091 | Who can tell?" |
11091 | Who could such words suspect? |
11091 | Who could that call reject? |
11091 | Who knows where they are gone? |
11091 | Who my little home will save, When he lies there cold and dead In his grave?" |
11091 | Who so dutiful as he? |
11091 | Who so good and kind to me? |
11091 | Who will earn for me my bread? |
11091 | Whose glowing atoms, whirled in ceaseless strife, Where now chaotic anarchy is rife, Shall yet become the fair abodes of life? |
11091 | Why do they never think of me? |
11091 | Why grieve, dear heart? |
11091 | Why is it that I look,... and sigh? |
11091 | Why rouse the island''s sleeping ghosts? |
11091 | Why should I ask? |
11091 | Why should I grieve, if from my trees The gorgeous leaves fall, one by one? |
11091 | Why should they not partake of food Together with the common crowd? |
11091 | Why should they wish to see thee die? |
11091 | Why stultify thy boasted creed? |
11091 | Why, indifferent to this splendor, Do the people throng the streets? |
11091 | Wild are the winds above thy grave; Cold is the form I loved so well; But what to thee are storms that rave, Or the snow that last night fell? |
11091 | Will its face elsewhere be just as fair, When here it is lost to sight? |
11091 | Will mankind have reached perfection Ere that epoch has begun, Or grown bestial, as the heat- waves Issue feebly from the sun? |
11091 | Will no champion protect thee, Fairest spot on earth? |
11091 | Will not the eternal stars still shine? |
11091 | Wilt thou for fashion make thy Past forlorn? |
11091 | Wilt thou fulfil my fondest hopes? |
11091 | Would he say to them adieu? |
11091 | Would their idol and their pride, He whom they had deified, Leave his royal grenadiers, Veteran troops of twenty years? |
11091 | Would you know our planet''s value? |
11091 | Would you weary of control? |
11091 | Yet for the lives those heroes gave What have we that they died to save? |
11091 | Yet he''s gone across the sea, Who more valorous than he? |
11091 | Yet of them what remains? |
11091 | Yet when did ever a recluse Escape the baffled crowd''s abuse? |
11091 | Yet who, when passion pleads, Ever such warning heeds? |
11091 | Yet, in truth, what matters all, Save the fact these words recall? |
11091 | You think yourselves invincible? |
11091 | You treat us condescendingly, as if our gifts were small, But do you think Almighty God has dowered you with all? |
11091 | a watchman''s voice exclaimed;"Your rustic garb is much too poor; How comes it, you are not ashamed In such a place to play the boor? |
11091 | and yet, who can forget The heir to Prussia''s throne, Who here fought death with labored breath, And faced the great Unknown? |
11091 | for I must leave thee, My boat is waiting on the shore; May I not hope that it will grieve thee, When thou shalt see me here no more? |
11091 | how can they hate thee? |
11091 | said the youth,--and his eyes were wet,--"Is old age merely a vain regret, The retrospect of wasted years, Of false ideals and lost careers? |
11091 | that we are now estranged, And that for me thy charm exists no more? |
11091 | the cynic sneers,"The remnant of a shrine?" |
11091 | then, on every boat intent, He watched the crowd upon the pier, While every look and motion meant"Will_ he_ not come? |
11091 | thou hast not known love, and yet canst talk of life? |
11091 | when a prize so fair Doubtless awaits him there, Shall he now hesitate Here, at Forst''s very gate, Fearing to test his fate? |
11091 | why lies she there so still? |
11091 | wilt thou never Recover from thy fear and flight? |
17976 | And did he do it all right? |
17976 | Are they going all right? 17976 Do you keep on inventing new stories?" |
17976 | Have the men voted? |
17976 | Hello, Carnegie, when did you arrive? |
17976 | How on earth did you come to get this book? |
17976 | How''s that, when you are being carried down to the bottomless pit? |
17976 | Mr. Garrett,I said,"would you consider my personal bond a good security?" |
17976 | Mr. Johnson( who was chairman of the rail converters''committee),"have we a similar agreement with you?" |
17976 | No,he replied;"how could I, with Sir Charles giving me away like that?" |
17976 | Not at all, Naig; if Scotland were rolled out flat as England, Scotland would be the larger, but would you have the Highlands rolled down? |
17976 | Oh, why were n''t you dining with us last night? 17976 Salary,"I said, quite offended;"what do I care for salary? |
17976 | Then why do n''t you? |
17976 | Well, how did you come here? |
17976 | Well, would you let any nation insult and dishonor you because of its size? |
17976 | Well, you admit you changed the character of the correspondence? |
17976 | Well,he said,"what do you propose to do about it?" |
17976 | Well,he said,"what would you take?" |
17976 | Well,said Lincoln,"could you do that now?" |
17976 | What are you here for? |
17976 | What is Spain doing over here, anyhow? |
17976 | What is it, Lou? |
17976 | What is it? |
17976 | What is that? |
17976 | What is the matter with him? |
17976 | What would you call it? |
17976 | What would you have done if they refused? |
17976 | Who have you with you? |
17976 | Why did n''t you come first to see your relative who might have been able to introduce you here? |
17976 | Why did you not tell me before? 17976 Would a duck swim or an Irishman eat potatoes?" |
17976 | Yes, Mr. President, but do you notice what kind of boys they are? |
17976 | Yes,exclaimed the visitor, tremblingly,"I know that and you know it, but does the dog know it?" |
17976 | You do not mean that? 17976 You see our sailors were attacked on shore and two of them killed, and you would stand that?" |
17976 | ''Well, who gives me the other?'' |
17976 | Am I to be censured if I had little difficulty here in recognizing something akin to the hand of Providence, with Perry Smith the manifest agent? |
17976 | An old friend accosted him:"Well, Jim, how''s this? |
17976 | Bad master, I suppose?" |
17976 | Can you tell me anything about this?" |
17976 | Could I take it? |
17976 | Could you lend an admirer a dollar and a half to buy a hymn- book with? |
17976 | Did they, or did they not, prove to be as we had imagined them? |
17976 | Did you ever hear the like of that? |
17976 | Do you think you could manage the Pittsburgh Division?" |
17976 | During my first fourteen years of absence my thought was almost daily, as it was that morning,"When shall I see you again?" |
17976 | Finally, when Mr. Schwab was presented, the President turned to me and said,"How is this, Mr. Carnegie? |
17976 | Had he seen anything superb? |
17976 | Harcourt or Campbell- Bannerman? |
17976 | He asked:"Why not present him now? |
17976 | He began deprecatingly:"Why are you so hard on me, aunt? |
17976 | He was not disposed to admit anything and said:"What do you mean?" |
17976 | Here we are together, and are we not making a nice couple of fools of ourselves?" |
17976 | How are matters?" |
17976 | How can I leave?" |
17976 | How then could steel be manufactured and sold without loss at three pounds for two cents? |
17976 | I asked:"What did you say?" |
17976 | I came to a muffled figure and whispered:"What does''Gravity''out of its bed at midnight?" |
17976 | I do n''t like''many''; why not''all''the centuries to come?" |
17976 | I said to Harry:"If this is the concern we own shares in, wo n''t you please sell them before you return to the office this afternoon?" |
17976 | If I were not willing to sacrifice myself for the cause of peace what should I sacrifice for? |
17976 | If you made a fortune like that man what place would you make your home in old age?" |
17976 | Is it not disgraceful? |
17976 | It was not even"Captain"at first, but"''Colonel''Eads, how do you do? |
17976 | McLuckie was fairly stunned, and all he could say was:"Well, that was damned white of Andy, was n''t it?" |
17976 | Mr. Gladstone asked:"How long do you give our Established Church to live?" |
17976 | Need I add that it never passed out of my firm grasp again until it was safe in Pittsburgh? |
17976 | Not seldom I have to repeat to myself,"What, so hot, my little sir?" |
17976 | One Sunday, lying in the grass, I said to"Vandy":"If you could make three thousand dollars would you spend it in a tour through Europe with me?" |
17976 | Secondly: Am I willing to lose this sum for the friend for whom I endorse? |
17976 | Should he close? |
17976 | Should we no longer be welcome guests of Mrs. McMillan? |
17976 | The country responded to the cry,"What is Spain doing over here anyhow?" |
17976 | The district was placarded with the enquiry: Would you vote for a"Unitawrian"? |
17976 | The one has been created, why not the other? |
17976 | The query is: where could we get his equal? |
17976 | Then after a pause he asked reflectively:"But why should one go to slaughter houses, why should one hear hogs squeal?" |
17976 | Then:"How''s your father, Miss Ingersoll? |
17976 | They said to him:''What, so hot, my little sir?''" |
17976 | Tom Miller recently alleged that I once spoke nearly an hour and a half upon the question,"Should the judiciary be elected by the people?" |
17976 | Was that true or not, and what was to be the consequence of Tom''s declaration? |
17976 | We had never been separated; why should we be now? |
17976 | What do you say, and how could it be managed?" |
17976 | What do you think of a man who spells Rosebery with two_ r''s_?" |
17976 | What does you tinks of a man like dat? |
17976 | What had I done or not done? |
17976 | What has the child of millionaire or nobleman that counts compared to such a heritage? |
17976 | What is that new building for? |
17976 | What is your population?" |
17976 | What salary do you think you should have?" |
17976 | What was I good for? |
17976 | What was a country without Wallace, Bruce, and Burns? |
17976 | What was the old German ex- Governor going to say-- he who had never said anything at all? |
17976 | When did she ever fail? |
17976 | When he read this to me, I remember that the word"many"jarred, and I said:"Mr. Secretary, might I suggest the change of one word? |
17976 | When the furnaces were reached, Kelly called out to them:"Get to work, you spalpeens, what are you doing here? |
17976 | When the world''s foremost citizen passed away, the question was, Who is to succeed Gladstone; who can succeed him? |
17976 | When we returned home his first words were:"Well, what have you all to say? |
17976 | Where could we find bedrock upon which we could stand? |
17976 | Where is the Eastern Express?" |
17976 | Which has not fall''n in the dry heart like rain? |
17976 | Which has not taught weak wills how much they can? |
17976 | Who can blame them? |
17976 | Who was it who, being advised to disregard trifles, said he always would if any one could tell him what a trifle was? |
17976 | Who will tell me what these are?'' |
17976 | Who, then, could so well fill this description as our friend Professor John C. Van Dyke? |
17976 | Why should they, if every man''s signature was required? |
17976 | Will I do as a lecturer?" |
17976 | Will you please accept these ten thousand with my best wishes?" |
17976 | Would he reverse his engine and run back for it? |
17976 | Would he take me with him or must I remain at Altoona with the new official? |
17976 | Would it not be better for you to continue four months longer under this agreement, and then, when you sign the next one, see that you understand it?" |
17976 | Would that be satisfactory?" |
17976 | Would you have any objection to changing that clause, striking out the sum, and substituting''only suitable provision''? |
17976 | You know I have to keep out of the sun''s rays, and where can we do that so surely as among the heather? |
17976 | _ Judge, hesitatingly:_"He did not give you enough to eat?" |
17976 | _ Judge:_"He did not clothe you well?" |
17976 | _ Judge:_"He worked you too hard?" |
17976 | _ Judge:_"You had n''t a comfortable home?" |
17976 | _ Question:_"What you have told me suggests the question, why did Mr. Kloman leave the firm?" |
17976 | _ Slave:_"Not enough to eat down in Kaintuck? |
17976 | how is that? |
17976 | said Mr. Spencer,"in my case, for instance, was this so?" |
19308 | ''A witness of what?'' 19308 And who is JESUS?" |
19308 | Are there any in Rangoon? |
19308 | Are they foreigners? |
19308 | Are you willing to part with me? 19308 Art Thou not from everlasting, O Lord my God, mine Holy One? |
19308 | But how,he asked,"came the wish for this knowledge?" |
19308 | Can a mother forget? |
19308 | Has God commanded kings and indunas to learn His word? |
19308 | He is neither born nor begets,cried the Moollahs; and one said,"What will you say when your tongue is burnt out for blasphemy?" |
19308 | How do you hope to obtain forgiveness? |
19308 | How is your heart to be changed? |
19308 | How many were present? |
19308 | O vagabond,cried one man,"why didst thou not come to my house? |
19308 | Said I,writes Mr. Judson,"knowing his deistical weakness, do you believe all that is contained in the book of St. Matthew which I gave you? |
19308 | What was that sacrifice? |
19308 | What? 19308 What?" |
19308 | Who is GOD? |
19308 | Why do things go so well with them and so hardly with me? |
19308 | Will this be better than what I have found? |
19308 | Will you forgive injuries? |
19308 | Will you renounce all idolatry, feasts, poojahs, and caste? |
19308 | Will you renounce the world, the flesh, and the devil? |
19308 | Will you suffer for Christ''s sake? |
19308 | And where shall we ever expect but from that country the true Comforter to come to the nations of the East?" |
19308 | And who can paint our mutual joy When, all our wanderings o''er, We both shall clasp our infants three At home on Burmah''s shore? |
19308 | Are you like the Portuguese priests? |
19308 | Are you married?" |
19308 | Are you sure there is such a thing in existence, or are you merely subject to a delusion of the senses?" |
19308 | But as you burn with the intenseness and rapid blaze of phosphorus, why should we not make the most of you? |
19308 | But even if only one is gained, is not that an exceeding gain? |
19308 | But what was the word I spoke last? |
19308 | He writes:"What should a young minister do? |
19308 | How do you suppose we can waste any more time in praying for you?" |
19308 | If a British cruiser descended on a slave- ship, and released her freight, should he not also deliver the captive wherever he met him? |
19308 | If any of them did wrong, the alternative was--"Will you go to the Rajah''s court, or be punished by me?" |
19308 | If she answered,"It is matter,"he would reply,"And what is matter? |
19308 | In particular, do you believe that the Son of God died on a cross?" |
19308 | In the sun the bright waves glisten; Rising slow with solemn swell, Hark, hark, what sound unwonted? |
19308 | Is it an idea or a nonentity?" |
19308 | Is it matter or spirit? |
19308 | Is there no magic in the touch Of fingers thou dost love so much? |
19308 | Mr. Brown, on hearing of his plan, consented in these remarkable terms:"Can I then bring myself to cut the string and let you go? |
19308 | Presently he inquired,"How long a time will it take me to learn the religion of JESUS?" |
19308 | She wept much, and the Bishop said,"Bring them both to me; who knows whether they may live to wish for it again?" |
19308 | Such bitter disappointments occur in missionary life; and how should we wonder, since the like befel even St. Paul and St. John? |
19308 | The examination was thus, the Bishop standing in the midst:--"Are you sinners?" |
19308 | They demanded of him:"In the Gospel of Christ, is anything said of our Prophet?" |
19308 | Was Corpus very much changed, when, only eleven years after, John Keble entered it at the same age? |
19308 | Was it his fault, or was it any shortcoming in the teaching that was laid before him, and was that human honour a want of faith? |
19308 | What fruit has his mission zeal left? |
19308 | What words can befit this piteous history better than"This is the patience of the saints"? |
19308 | When did you arrive? |
19308 | When shall appear that new heaven and earth wherein dwelleth righteousness? |
19308 | Where should the phoenix build her odoriferous nest but in the land prophetically called the''blessed''? |
19308 | Why should we"faint, and say''tis vain,"after one hundred in India? |
19308 | Will he ever come again? |
19308 | Will he ever come again?" |
19308 | You speak Burmese-- the priests that I heard of last night? |
19308 | and be guilty of a breach of faith?" |
19308 | this little girl not converted yet? |
19308 | what can it avail?" |
19308 | what is rice? |
19308 | when shall time give place to eternity? |
19308 | when to meet again? |
14378 | * And if he wasthe inventor of letters,"and is"placed anterior to both Homer and Hesiod,"then what follows? |
14378 | Ah, no use, who will catch them? |
14378 | How Shall We Sleep? |
14378 | Is it supposed that the present European civilization with its offshoots.... can be destroyed by any inundation or conflagration? |
14378 | Pray explain,I said;"why do the Curumbers behave in this way, and what do they do to your people?" |
14378 | What is the use of bolts and bars to them? 14378 Why do you not close and bolt your doors securely?" |
14378 | Why not complain to the Government? |
14378 | Why not perform your ablutions in yonder stream? |
14378 | Why, what is wrong? |
14378 | ( 2) In which position did those on whom Baron von Reichenbach experimented lie? |
14378 | ), inquires:"Who knows from whence this great creation sprang? |
14378 | * How then can one maintain that the"old Greeks and Romans"were Atlanteans? |
14378 | -------- Was Writing Known Before Panini? |
14378 | --------* Though there is a distinct term for it in the language of the adepts, how can one translate it into a European language? |
14378 | --------- If the"Adepts"are asked:"What then, in your views, is the nature of our sun and what is there beyond that cosmic veil?" |
14378 | --A Chela THEOSOPHICAL What is Theosophy? |
14378 | --Damodar K. Mavalankar The Himalayan Brothers-- Do They Exist? |
14378 | .... What is it that is reborn? |
14378 | Again, the"Adepts"ask why should any one be awed into accepting as final criterion that which passes for science of high authority in Europe? |
14378 | And does each mineral monad eventually become a vegetable monad, and then at last a human being? |
14378 | And if Jesus was a true prophet despite existing confusion of authorities, why on the same lines may not Buddha have been one? |
14378 | And is the result of all that have gone before in that line sufficiently encouraging to prompt a renewal of the attempt? |
14378 | And is the result of all that have gone before in that line sufficiently encouraging to prompt a renewal of the attempt? |
14378 | And now, pray, what is this extremely"early date?" |
14378 | And now, what was the language spoken by the Atlantean Aeolians? |
14378 | And similarly has not Gaudapada been accounted a Sivite? |
14378 | And supposing they see the body of a MAHATMA, how can they know that behind that mask is concealed an exalted entity? |
14378 | And the ONE which is also ten? |
14378 | And what about the Pelasgi-- the direct forefathers of the Hellenes, according to Herodotus? |
14378 | And what becomes then of all rules of right and wrong, of all sanctions for morality? |
14378 | And where were the ancestors of the Semitic and Turanian races? |
14378 | And who will say that the physical is not a Maya? |
14378 | And why should European civilization escape the common lot? |
14378 | Are our existing arts and languages doomed to perish? |
14378 | Are there then material organizations living there? |
14378 | Are these children present to my consciousness in Devachan still as children? |
14378 | Attention has been asked above to the interesting fact that the god Orpheus, of"Thracia"(?) |
14378 | Buddha''s birth is placed( on p. 141) in the year 643 B.C.. Is this date given by the Adepts as undoubtedly correct? |
14378 | But how can the earth possess that which the sun has never had? |
14378 | But how does it become attracted toward its monad? |
14378 | But how many marriages do we find that are really spiritual and not based on beauty of form or other considerations? |
14378 | But then how about the Sanskrit roots traced in the Greek and Latin languages? |
14378 | But what evidence is there to show that Sankara was ever engaged in this task? |
14378 | But who of the men of science would consent to confront it with their own handiwork? |
14378 | By what again is egotism produced? |
14378 | By what are desire and the rest produced? |
14378 | By what is produced this taking of a body? |
14378 | By what is this want of right discrimination produced? |
14378 | By what standard are they to judge whether the Maya before them reflects the image of a true MAHATMA or not? |
14378 | Can a practical pantheist, or, in other words, an occultist, utter a falsehood? |
14378 | Can this discrepancy be explained? |
14378 | Consequently no valid inferences as regards the nature of the combinations in question can be drawn by analogy from the nature[ variety?] |
14378 | Do I imagine that they have died when I died? |
14378 | Do all souls which live on into the sixth round attain this power of remembrance? |
14378 | Do the Adepts, who, we presume, are equivalent to sixth rounders, recollect their previous incarnations? |
14378 | Does he suppose that this grand result can be achieved by a two or four hours''contemplation? |
14378 | Does the reader recall the old proverb,"Let sleeping dogs lie?" |
14378 | Fables? |
14378 | From the study of the sacred philosophy preached by Lord Buddha or Sri Sankara, paroksha knowledge( or shall we say belief? |
14378 | Has not Sankaracharya been usually classed as Vishnuite in his teaching? |
14378 | He said,"Why can not you give me your swami( family idol)?" |
14378 | Here, does the term"lower principles"include the Kama rupa also, or only the lower triad of body, Jiva, and Lingasarira? |
14378 | How a"Chela"Found His"Guru"The Sages of the Himavat The Himalayan Brothers-- Do They Exist? |
14378 | How are the five vital airs,** beginning with prana, named? |
14378 | How are we to do it? |
14378 | How are we to do it? |
14378 | How can that be, since both nations are Aryans, and the genesis of their languages is Sanskrit? |
14378 | How can they, with their physical eyes, hope to see that which transcends that sight? |
14378 | How can this Wisdom be acquired? |
14378 | How is the spirit different from the five sheaths? |
14378 | How soon after the wedding- day do they become disgusted with each other? |
14378 | How, then, are we to account for and explain the origin of our mental states, if they are the only entities existing in this world? |
14378 | If not, then how does he mean to attract all this time only those suited to his end? |
14378 | If so, how do they dispense with air and water, and how is it that our telescopes discern no trace of their works? |
14378 | If so, what relation does the monad bear to the atom, or the molecule, of ordinary scientific hypothesis? |
14378 | Is ignorance produced by anything? |
14378 | Is it meant that these subsidences are so sudden and unforeseen as to sweep away great nations in an hour? |
14378 | Is it not the loss of individualism? |
14378 | Is it the body-- a mere shell or mask-- they crave or hunt after? |
14378 | Is not this a guide or hint as to the true position? |
14378 | Is not this plain? |
14378 | Is or is not that which is called magnetic effluvium a something, a stuff, or a substance, invisible, and imponderable though it be? |
14378 | Is some other view as regards the maintenance of the sun''s heat held by the Adepts? |
14378 | Is the Desire to"Live"Selfish? |
14378 | Is the Nebular Theory, as generally held, denied by the Adepts? |
14378 | Is the expression"a mineral monad"authorized by the Adepts? |
14378 | Is the proper position in sleep lying on the back or on the stomach? |
14378 | Is the world of science aware of the real cause of Zollner''s premature death? |
14378 | Is there not some confusion in the letter quoted on p. 62 of"Esoteric Buddhism,"where"the old Greeks and Romans"are said to have been Atlanteans? |
14378 | It may be said, why do not the higher adepts protect him? |
14378 | Mere poetical fiction? |
14378 | Negative proof, perhaps? |
14378 | Now in what entity has this mysterious something its potential or actual existence? |
14378 | Now, what are the agencies for the bringing of this life into existence? |
14378 | Now, what is it that incarnates? |
14378 | Now, what is mind? |
14378 | Of dreaming? |
14378 | On the seventh day the dove is sent out; by sevens, Xisusthrus takes"jugs of wine"for the altar,& c. Why such coincidence? |
14378 | Or have the Christians alone the monopoly of absurd religious"inventions"and the right of being jealous of any infringement of their patent rights? |
14378 | Or, if not, how is it that no appreciable trace is left of such high civilizations as are described in the past? |
14378 | Or, perhaps, this is one of those poor rules which will not"work both ways?" |
14378 | Or, that the gentlemen of the West are better at intuitional chronology than conspicuous for impartial research? |
14378 | Otherwise, how could one account for and explain mathematically the evolutionary and spiral progress of the four kingdoms? |
14378 | Question 1.--Do the Adepts deny the Nebular Theory? |
14378 | Question II.--Is the Sun merely a cooling mass? |
14378 | Question III.--Are the great nations to be swept away in an hour? |
14378 | Question IV.--Is the Moon immersed in matter? |
14378 | Question VI.--"Historical Difficulty"--Why? |
14378 | That-- Yavanani does not mean"Greek writing"at all, but any foreign writing whatsoever? |
14378 | The central idea of the Eclectic Theosophy was that of a single Supreme Essence, Unknown and Unknowable; for"how could one know the knower?" |
14378 | The eye? |
14378 | The nose? |
14378 | The same roots must have been present in the Pelasgian tongues? |
14378 | The skin? |
14378 | The solar spots( a misnomer, like much of the rest)? |
14378 | The tongue? |
14378 | The truth is that, like the ancestors of nearly all the Indo- Europeans( or shall we say Indo- Germanic Japhetidae? |
14378 | Then also may he tauntingly ask"how it is that no appreciable trace is left of such high civilizations as are described in the Past?" |
14378 | Theosophical What is Theosophy? |
14378 | This discrimination of Spirit and Not- spirit is given below: Q. Whence comes pain to the Spirit? |
14378 | Thus, if the atmosphere of our earth, which in its relation to the"atmosphere"(?) |
14378 | To the question"how are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come?" |
14378 | Very well, and now what was the period during which this Siva- taught sage is allowed to have flourished? |
14378 | Well, there, as plainly as words can put it, is the PATH.... can they tread it? |
14378 | What about the Etruscans-- the race mysterious and wonderful, if any, for the historian, and whose origin is the most insoluble of problems? |
14378 | What are the Jnandendriyas? |
14378 | What are the eight centres? |
14378 | What are the external senses? |
14378 | What are the five sheaths? |
14378 | What are the five? |
14378 | What are the four qualifications? |
14378 | What are the organs of action? |
14378 | What are the proofs of science? |
14378 | What are the seven? |
14378 | What are the seventeen? |
14378 | What are the six qualities beginning with Sama? |
14378 | What are the six? |
14378 | What are the three bodies? |
14378 | What are the three states( mentioned above as those of which the Spirit is witness)? |
14378 | What by being ananda( bliss)? |
14378 | What by being chit( consciousness)? |
14378 | What courage or conduct would be called for in a man sent to fight when armed with irresistible weapons and clothed in impenetrable armour? |
14378 | What does it signify how he dies?" |
14378 | What is Not- Spirit? |
14378 | What is Spirit? |
14378 | What is impermanent? |
14378 | What is inanimate( jada)? |
14378 | What is it that constitutes this sensation of pleasure or displeasure? |
14378 | What is it that strikes us especially about this substitution of the divine- human for the human- natural personality? |
14378 | What is known or even"conjectured"about their territorial habitat after the division of the Aryan nations? |
14378 | What is meant by its being sat( presence)? |
14378 | What is that, in man, which gives him the impression of having a permanent individuality? |
14378 | What is the Anandamaya sheath? |
14378 | What is the Annamaya sheath? |
14378 | What is the Karana sarira? |
14378 | What is the Vijnanamaya sheath? |
14378 | What is the antahkarana? |
14378 | What is the cause of this? |
14378 | What is the ear? |
14378 | What is the force or energy that is at work, under the guidance of Karma, to produce the new being? |
14378 | What is the fulcrum for the critical lever he uses against the Asiatic records? |
14378 | What is the gross body? |
14378 | What is the next sheath? |
14378 | What is the organ of the hands? |
14378 | What is the reason that our position in sleep should be of any consequence? |
14378 | What is the right discrimination of permanent and impermanent things? |
14378 | What is the state of dreamless slumber? |
14378 | What is the state of wakefulness? |
14378 | What is the subtile body? |
14378 | What is the third sheath? |
14378 | What is there in the embryonal germ that evolves out of the materials stored up therein a frame similar to the parents? |
14378 | What is vach? |
14378 | What kept me in the same serene and calm spirit, as if I were in a room of my own house? |
14378 | What more could I want? |
14378 | What physical desires are to be abandoned and in what order? |
14378 | What prevented the owners of the hut from penetrating to the second room? |
14378 | What relation does the monad bear to the atom? |
14378 | What then is its real origin, what is the philosophical conception which the Zodiac and its signs are intended to represent? |
14378 | What weapon does he use to weaken this foundation- stone of a chronology upon which are built and on which depend all other Buddhist dates? |
14378 | What will be the consequence? |
14378 | What, then, is meant by the life- atoms, and their going through endless transmigrations? |
14378 | What, then, was the parent tongue of the latter unless it was the language"spoken at one time by all the nations of Europe-- before their separation?" |
14378 | When asked what was this language, the Western voice answers:"Who can tell?" |
14378 | When,"during what geological periods did this nascent race flourish?" |
14378 | Whence do they appear? |
14378 | Whither are they engulfed? |
14378 | Who are worthy of engaging in such discussion? |
14378 | Who could they be, these Pelasgians? |
14378 | Who was Manu, the son of Swayambhuva? |
14378 | Who were they? |
14378 | Why are these four mentioned as distinct from each other and not consolidated like the first part? |
14378 | Why does it become so by Karma? |
14378 | Why is it called the witness of the three states? |
14378 | Why is it so? |
14378 | Why is the spirit said to be different from the three bodies? |
14378 | Why not try and find out, before condemning, the true meaning of the figurative statement? |
14378 | Why not? |
14378 | Why should we scoff before we understand? |
14378 | Why then should the case be otherwise with the inner man? |
14378 | Why? |
14378 | Will any of our Brothers tell us how our Mahatmas stand to these revered personages? |
14378 | With such remarkable pacta conventa between modern exact(?) |
14378 | Yet what, after all, is sympathy but the loosening of that hard"astringent"quality( to use Bohme''s phrase) wherein individualism consists? |
14378 | You will ask:"Can a man exist without food?" |
14378 | and placed much later than"Esoteric Buddhism"( p.147) places him? |
14378 | or do I merely imagine them as adult without knowing their life- history? |
14378 | or was it only the earlier races who were thus profoundly disjoined from one another? |
14378 | the answer would be:"Was the seed which generated a Bacon or a Newton self- conscious?" |
20583 | At intervals in the midst of the blessing the bridegroom and bride are asked in Persian,''Have you chosen her?'' |
20583 | If God will make me a Turk by Him will I be circumcised; if a man becomes a Turk by being circumcised what shall be done with a woman? |
20583 | Taking a pot of the sacred milk in his hands he mounted the house- top and cried,''Who will drink the milk?'' |
20583 | The girl''s father, if he approves of the match, says in reply,''Why should I not catch it?'' |
20583 | They call on Devi, saying,''_ Maiji, Maiji Mata meri, kahe ko janam diya_''or''Mother, mother, why did you bring me into the world?'' |
20583 | Tylor says:"The Dayak will not speak of the smallpox by name, but will call it''The Chief,''or''Jungle leaves,''or say,''Has He left you?'' |
20583 | Whose am I the Sudra? |
20583 | Whose art thou the Brahman? |
20583 | Whose blood am I? |
20583 | Whose milk art thou? |
20583 | Women would ask,''Who is the mother of a child so beautiful that its eyes are like the lotus?'' |
20583 | [ 170] What does the Djiitgun eat?'' |
20583 | and''Have you chosen him?'' |
146 | A BLACK one? |
146 | A black frock? |
146 | Ai n''t I jist? |
146 | Ai n''t yer goin''to tell the missus? |
146 | Ain''t-- ain''t yer angry, miss? |
146 | And then she came in and got the buns, and gave them to you, did she? |
146 | And will you tell me all about it? |
146 | Any diamond mines? |
146 | Are there RATS there? |
146 | Are you SURE the child was left at a school in Paris? 146 Are you absolutely hardened?" |
146 | Are you as poor as a beggar? |
146 | Are you going to let him in, miss? |
146 | Are you hungry yet? |
146 | Are you hungry? |
146 | Are you learning me by heart, little Sara? |
146 | Are you making something up in your head, miss? |
146 | Are you so stupid that you can not understand? 146 Are you very poor now, Sara?" |
146 | Are you-- are you very unhappy? |
146 | Becky,she said,"were n''t you listening to that story?" |
146 | But what am I to do? |
146 | But why do solemn things make you laugh so? |
146 | But you are not one of her pupils? |
146 | But you had reason to think the school WAS in Paris? |
146 | Can I work? |
146 | Can she-- walk? |
146 | Can you do it, miss? |
146 | Can you do that-- as well as speak French? 146 Can you get across?" |
146 | Could it be-- robbers? |
146 | Could n''t you go to school, too? 146 Could n''t you go to that place with me, papa?" |
146 | Could you suppose and pretend if you were a beggar and lived in a garret? |
146 | Dare you stay here a few minutes? |
146 | Did Ram Dass bring the things? |
146 | Did he tell Ram Dass to do it? 146 Did n''t you think you heard something?" |
146 | Did they, miss? |
146 | Did you expect me to keep it hot for you? |
146 | Did you find it? |
146 | Did you see her? 146 Did you see,"said Janet to Nora, as they went back to the room--"the little- girl- who- is- not- a- beggar was passing? |
146 | Did you tell Mr. Carrisford,Donald shouted again,"about the little- girl- who- isn''t- a- beggar? |
146 | Did you? |
146 | Do n''t you intend to thank me? |
146 | Do n''t you remember? |
146 | Do yer like it, Miss Sara? |
146 | Do yer? |
146 | Do you always pretend it is the Bastille? |
146 | Do you know where she is? |
146 | Do you like it? |
146 | Do you think I am very happy? |
146 | Do you think he is a Chinee? 146 Do you think she DOESN''T know things?" |
146 | Do you think you can? |
146 | Do you think,Becky faltered once, in a whisper,"do you think it could melt away, miss? |
146 | Do you think-- you COULD? |
146 | Do you want to buy something? |
146 | Does n''t it LOOK real? |
146 | Does your papa send you books for a birthday present? |
146 | Found out what? |
146 | Has she a black frock in her sumptuous wardrobe? |
146 | Have YOU, Miss Minchin? |
146 | Have n''t you had any dinner? |
146 | Have you a-- a pain? |
146 | Have you any new suggestion to make-- any whatsoever? |
146 | Have you done your work? |
146 | Have you forgotten? 146 Have you never tried?" |
146 | He IS plain- looking, miss, ai n''t he? |
146 | He always says,''Tom, old man-- Tom-- where is the Little Missus?'' |
146 | He-- he wo n''t run out quickly and jump on the bed, will he? |
146 | Here, miss? 146 How are you getting on with your French lessons?" |
146 | How are you? |
146 | How dare you think? 146 How did your father lose his money?" |
146 | How do I know? |
146 | How do you know he is a Lascar? |
146 | How many? |
146 | How-- how are you? |
146 | I like it, do n''t you? |
146 | I? |
146 | If she was turned out where would she go? |
146 | If she''s so fond of her, why does n''t she keep her in her own room? 146 If you please, Miss Minchin,"said Sara, suddenly,"may n''t Becky stay?" |
146 | If you please,said Sara,"have you lost fourpence-- a silver fourpence?" |
146 | Is it a nice one? |
146 | Is it anything to do with the row that has been going on? |
146 | Is it the Bastille yet? |
146 | Is it true,Ermengarde whispered, as they went through the hall--"is it true that you have a playroom all to yourself?" |
146 | Is it, papa? |
146 | Is it-- something that will frighten me? |
146 | Is it? |
146 | Is n''t it nice? |
146 | Is n''t it? |
146 | Is that there your best? |
146 | Is this a new pupil for me, madame? |
146 | Is this the place? |
146 | Jist ai n''t I? |
146 | Lavinia,with a new giggle,"what do you think Gertrude says?" |
146 | Laws, who does it, miss? |
146 | Like it? |
146 | Listen; the two knocks meant,''Prisoner, are you there?'' |
146 | M- must I go and tell her now? |
146 | May I creep up here at night, whenever it is safe, and hear the things you have made up in the day? 146 May I have something to eat?" |
146 | May I, really? 146 May I?" |
146 | May we talk about the lost little girl? |
146 | Me hear it? |
146 | Might I-- would you allow me-- jest to come in? |
146 | Miss Amelia,she said in a low voice,"Miss Minchin says I may try to make her stop-- may I?" |
146 | Not go in? |
146 | Now wo n''t you tell your part of it, Uncle Tom? |
146 | Of what? |
146 | Oh, DO you think you can? |
146 | Oh, Donald,( this was Guy Clarence''s name), Janet exclaimed alarmedly,"why did you offer that little girl your sixpence? |
146 | Oh, have you seen her since then? |
146 | Oh, may I? |
146 | Oh,she exclaimed,"why did I not think of that before?" |
146 | Sara,she said in a timid, almost awe- stricken voice,"are-- are-- you never told me-- I do n''t want to be rude, but-- are YOU ever hungry?" |
146 | Sara,she said,"do you think you can bear living here?" |
146 | Set the table, miss? |
146 | Shall I give him to the Lascar? |
146 | Shall she? |
146 | Shall you drive in a drosky? |
146 | Shall you see the Czar? |
146 | Since when? |
146 | So you are Miss Minchin? |
146 | That I did not know what I was doing? |
146 | That what? |
146 | The child the Russian people adopted? |
146 | The diamond mines? |
146 | Things that''s good to eat? |
146 | This''ere,she suggested, with a glance round the attic--"is it the Bastille now-- or has it turned into somethin''different?" |
146 | To eat, miss? |
146 | To you? |
146 | Was he,she said, with a glance toward the closed door of the library--"was HE the wicked friend? |
146 | Was it-- a ghost? |
146 | Was that a rat? |
146 | What IS she crying for? |
146 | What IS the matter, sister? |
146 | What IS the matter? |
146 | What WERE his business troubles? |
146 | What WERE they? |
146 | What am I to do? |
146 | What are they now, miss? |
146 | What are you crying for, Ermengarde? |
146 | What are you doing? |
146 | What are you going to tell your father? |
146 | What are you laughing at, you bold, impudent child? |
146 | What are you staring at? |
146 | What are you thinking of? |
146 | What are you''supposing,''Sara? |
146 | What child am I? |
146 | What could it be? |
146 | What did she say? |
146 | What did you say? |
146 | What do you mean by bringing her here? |
146 | What do you mean by such conduct? 146 What do you mean by''At first,''my child?" |
146 | What do you mean? |
146 | What do you mean? |
146 | What do you think? |
146 | What for? |
146 | What is Sara thinking of? |
146 | What is her name? |
146 | What is in them? |
146 | What is it, darling? |
146 | What is that? |
146 | What is the matter, Becky? |
146 | What is your name? |
146 | What news? |
146 | What next, now? |
146 | What shall I do when I have no one to say solemn things to me? 146 What shall you do with him?" |
146 | What sort of things? |
146 | What was it? 146 What was it?" |
146 | What was your father''s name? |
146 | What were they doing when Miss Minchin caught them? |
146 | What were you thinking? |
146 | What were you wondering? |
146 | What''ll we set it with? |
146 | What-- sort of thing? |
146 | What? |
146 | What? |
146 | Where do you live? |
146 | Where does it all come from? |
146 | Where have you wasted your time? |
146 | Where is my room? |
146 | Where is she? |
146 | Where is your papa? |
146 | Where? 146 Which hungry day was it?" |
146 | Who gave you those buns? |
146 | Who is Emily? |
146 | Who is Emily? |
146 | Who is she? |
146 | Who is that little girl who makes the fires? |
146 | Who planned it? |
146 | Who was he? |
146 | Who-- who ARE you talking to, Sara? |
146 | Why did n''t you stay all night? |
146 | Why do you look at me like that? |
146 | Why does she say I am a beautiful child? |
146 | Why is n''t it, Sara? |
146 | Why not? |
146 | Why should n''t she? |
146 | Why was I not man enough to stand my ground when things looked black? |
146 | Why? |
146 | Why? |
146 | Will Moscow be covered with snow? |
146 | Will he come? 146 Will he let me catch him?" |
146 | Will she come in here? |
146 | Will there be ice everywhere? |
146 | Will you-- tell me-- about the diamond mines? |
146 | Will you? |
146 | Would you like to see Emily? |
146 | You can speak French, ca n''t you? |
146 | You live next door? |
146 | You sent the things to me,she said, in a joyful emotional little voice,"the beautiful, beautiful things? |
146 | You think that it can be done while she sleeps? 146 You were born in India,"he exclaimed,"were you? |
146 | ''I beg your pardon, cook'';''May I trouble you, cook?'' |
146 | ''If you please, cook'';''Will you be so kind, cook?'' |
146 | All about the Prince-- and the little white Mer- babies swimming about laughing-- with stars in their hair?" |
146 | Am I the same cold, ragged, damp Sara? |
146 | And oh, wo n''t you invite the prisoner in the next cell?" |
146 | Are n''t you hungry?" |
146 | Are you sure it was Paris?" |
146 | Are you too frightened to want to see him?" |
146 | But what did it all matter while she was living in this wonderful mysterious story? |
146 | CAN you?" |
146 | Can you guess what he says, Carmichael?" |
146 | Carrisford?" |
146 | Carrisford?" |
146 | Could I do that?" |
146 | Did he make the dream that came true?" |
146 | Did you see how queer she looked?" |
146 | Did you tell him she has new nice clothes? |
146 | Do n''t you know that Sara is your mamma? |
146 | Do n''t you think so?" |
146 | Do n''t you want Sara for your mamma?" |
146 | Do you hear-- papa is dead? |
146 | Do you hear? |
146 | Do you hear?" |
146 | Do you think he ever WOULD jump?" |
146 | Do you wonder that she felt sure she had not come back to earth? |
146 | Does Miss Minchin know? |
146 | Had n''t we better be quick?" |
146 | Has she a black one?" |
146 | Has she been sent away? |
146 | Have you never pretended things?" |
146 | How can she know things?" |
146 | How did you find it out?" |
146 | How do we know he does n''t think things, just as we do? |
146 | How do you know mine are fairy stories? |
146 | How is a man to get back his nerve with a thing like that on his mind? |
146 | If-- if, oh please, would you let me wait on her after I''ve done my pots an''kettles? |
146 | Is this my garret? |
146 | May I try, Miss Minchin?" |
146 | Me?" |
146 | Miss Minchin''s voice was almost fierce when she answered:"Where is Sara Crewe?" |
146 | Monkey, my love, have you a mind?" |
146 | Nobody said,''Would n''t you rather be a sparrow?''" |
146 | She paused a moment, and then added with a touch of awe in her voice,"You are CLEVER, are n''t you?" |
146 | That she is left on my hands a little pauper instead of an heiress?" |
146 | That there does seem real now, does n''t it? |
146 | That was about it, was n''t it?" |
146 | The card, miss,"rather doubtfully;"''t warn''t wrong of me to pick it up out o''the dust- bin, was it? |
146 | Was the row about that? |
146 | What CAN have happened?" |
146 | What DO you think of them?" |
146 | What SHALL I do?" |
146 | What are you now?" |
146 | What can I do?" |
146 | What can I do?" |
146 | What could such a thing mean? |
146 | What did she say that for?" |
146 | What does this mean?" |
146 | What is the matter? |
146 | What steps shall I take next?" |
146 | What was the child made of? |
146 | What were you thinking?" |
146 | What would HE say if he knew where you are tonight?" |
146 | What would happen now? |
146 | Where? |
146 | Why ca n''t you tell your father_ I_ read them?" |
146 | Why did she write? |
146 | Why do n''t you like me any more?" |
146 | Will he come?" |
146 | Will you not do your duty to your poor papa and come home with me?" |
146 | Would he let her catch him, or would he be naughty and refuse to be caught, and perhaps get away and run off over the roofs and be lost? |
146 | Would you have me for yours? |
146 | Would you like to hear the rest?" |
146 | Would you like to hold her?" |
146 | You should n''t eat sweets,''and my uncle is always asking me things like,''When did Edward the Third ascend the throne?'' |
146 | You would, would n''t you, Little Missus?" |
146 | and,''Who died of a surfeit of lampreys?''" |
21080 | It was thus described four thousand years ago in the Egyptian papyrus of the Scribe Ani:"What manner of place is this unto which I have come? |
13364 | Fair love,she says,"canst thou forget so soon, 285 At this soft hour under this sweet moon?" |
13364 | What, poor Kai dead? |
13364 | _ ° ° 248 And, greatly moved, then Rustum made reply:--O Gudurz, wherefore dost thou say such words? |
13364 | )_ What seems to be the author''s attitude toward death? |
13364 | --My princess, art thou there? |
13364 | --Whither does he wander now? |
13364 | 1- 4? |
13364 | 10- 15? |
13364 | 100 How shall I name him? |
13364 | 115 Whom we have left in the snow? |
13364 | 125 And to what goal, what ending, bound? |
13364 | 131- 150? |
13364 | 15 Dost thou to- night behold, Here, through the moonlight on this English grass, The unfriendly palace in the Thracian wild °? |
13364 | 150 Thou hast not lived, ° why should''st thou perish, so? |
13364 | 150 What tale did Iseult to the children say, Under the hollies, that bright- winter''s day? |
13364 | 160 He gazes down into the room With heated cheeks and flurried air, And to himself he seems to say:_"What place is this, and who are they? |
13364 | 165 And on his pillows that pale Knight Who seems of marble on a tomb? |
13364 | 205 What news? |
13364 | 310 Where do the children sleep? |
13364 | 37- 42? |
13364 | 40 What, thou think''st men speak in courtly chambers Words by which the wretched are consoled? |
13364 | 45 When did music come this way? |
13364 | 55 Iseult of Brittany?--but where Is that other Iseult fair, That proud, first Iseult, Cornwall''s queen? |
13364 | 575 But, with a cold incredulous voice, he said:--"What prate is this of fathers and revenge? |
13364 | 65 This his idol? |
13364 | 740 But Sohrab look''d upon the horse and said:--"Is this, then, Ruksh? |
13364 | 75 A DREAM Was it a dream? |
13364 | 75 She is here who had his gloom, Where art thou who hadst his bloom? |
13364 | 80 Art thou cold, or false, or dead, Iseult of Ireland? |
13364 | 9- 14? |
13364 | 90 GEIST''S GRAVE ° Four years!--and didst thou stay above The ground, which hides thee now, but four? |
13364 | = 151- 161.= What in these lines enables you to determine the people and country alluded to? |
13364 | = 373- 374.= From a dramatic standpoint, what is the purpose of these two lines? |
13364 | = 54.= Why"down swung the sound of a far- off bell"? |
13364 | A happier? |
13364 | Ah, who comes forth To thy side, Goddess, from within? |
13364 | Alter''d, Tristram? |
13364 | And bade betwixt their shores to be The unplumb''d, salt, estranging sea. ° ° 24 KAISER DEAD °_ April_ 6, 1887 What, Kaiser dead? |
13364 | And is she happy? |
13364 | And thou, too, sleeper? |
13364 | Antecedent? |
13364 | Are not they mortal, am not I myself? |
13364 | Are the incidents he speaks of in the order of their occurrence? |
13364 | Are they from Heaven, these softenings of the heart? |
13364 | Art them not Rustum? |
13364 | At what point in the story as told in the introductory note does the poem take up the narrative? |
13364 | But who for men of nought would do great deeds? |
13364 | But who,"I said,"suffices here? |
13364 | Can you give any reason for this? |
13364 | Can you see how he might find help in dwelling on the pictures of the blind beggar and happy lovers? |
13364 | Can you think of any historical characters of whom the poem might aptly have been written? |
13364 | Can you think of any other author or authors who have held a like view? |
13364 | Can you think of any other poem that has this as its central thought? |
13364 | Can you think of any other possible interpretation? |
13364 | Children dear, was it yesterday 30 We heard the sweet bells over the bay? |
13364 | Children dear, was it yesterday( Call yet once) that she went away? |
13364 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
13364 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
13364 | Children dear, were we long alone? |
13364 | Chill blows the wind, the pleasaunce- walks ° are drear-- ° 161 Madcap, what jest was this, to meet me here? |
13364 | Do not we... await it too? |
13364 | Do you agree with this philosophy of life? |
13364 | Do you condemn Margaret for the way she has done, or do you feel she was justified in her actions? |
13364 | Do you consider it apt? |
13364 | Do you feel the form of verse used( Pindaric blank) to be adapted to the theme? |
13364 | Do you see why their"name"would be used on signs as here mentioned? |
13364 | Do you think she intended to return? |
13364 | Does Arnold''s plan seem more or less mechanical than Tennyson''s? |
13364 | Does he praise or belittle his act of charity? |
13364 | Does it give him courage or fortitude? |
13364 | Does the author agree with the implication? |
13364 | Does the author here allude to death? |
13364 | Does the author prove his point by his poem? |
13364 | Does the love- draught work no more? |
13364 | Dost thou ask proof? |
13364 | For his morose frame of mind? |
13364 | For what care I, though all speak Sohrab''s fame? |
13364 | For what wears out the life of mortal men? |
13364 | From what source does he seek aid? |
13364 | From what source must one''s help and comfort then be drawn? |
13364 | Have the merman and his children just reached the shore, or have they been there some time? |
13364 | He spoke; and Sohrab answer''d, on his feet:--"Art thou so fierce? |
13364 | How account for his wanderings? |
13364 | How account for the feeling of despair, l.13? |
13364 | How do you explain the"easy access"of the Dorian shepherds to Proserpine, l. 91? |
13364 | How does he greet Circe; how the youth? |
13364 | How does he seek consolation? |
13364 | How does he show his interest in nature? |
13364 | How does the Scholar- Gipsy yet live to him? |
13364 | How does the author secure the proper atmosphere for the theme of the poem? |
13364 | How does the calm of the Muses affect him? |
13364 | How is Iseult trying to entertain her children? |
13364 | How is the wounded knight identified? |
13364 | How the lady? |
13364 | How was it rewarded? |
13364 | How was the latter reassured? |
13364 | I forgive thee, Iseult!--thou wilt stay? |
13364 | If so, what? |
13364 | If so, when? |
13364 | In human beings? |
13364 | In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell? |
13364 | In what frame of mind does the poem leave you? |
13364 | In what mood is the author at the opening of the poem? |
13364 | In what sense do we live"alone,"l.4? |
13364 | Is it adapted to the theme of the poem? |
13364 | Is it apt? |
13364 | Is it that the bleak sea- gale Beating from the Atlantic sea On this coast of Brittany, 35 Nips too keenly the sweet flower? |
13364 | Is it, then, evening So soon? |
13364 | Is my page here? |
13364 | Is she not come °? |
13364 | Is she not come? |
13364 | Is that sign the proper sign Of Rustum''s son, or of some other man''s?" |
13364 | Is there any especial reason for having the time Christmas night? |
13364 | Is there any hint of fatalism in the poem, or are we held accountable for our own destiny? |
13364 | Is there no life, but there alone? |
13364 | Just what is meant by"soul"as the word is used in the poem? |
13364 | Let me entreat for them; what have they done? |
13364 | Madman or slave, must man be one? |
13364 | My princess... good night.= Are Tristram''s words sincere, or has he a motive in thus dismissing Iseult? |
13364 | O strong soul, by what shore ° ° 37 Tarriest thou now? |
13364 | Of what is the Palladium typical? |
13364 | One lesson.= What lesson? |
13364 | Others will front it fearlessly-- But who, like him, will put it by? |
13364 | Rustum!= Why did this word so affect Sohrab? |
13364 | Servants of God!--or sons Shall I not call you? |
13364 | She will cry:"Is this the foe I dreaded? |
13364 | She, whom Tristram''s ship of yore From Ireland to Cornwall bore, 60 To Tyntagel, ° to the side ° 61 Of King Marc, ° to be his bride? |
13364 | Soft-- who is that, stands by the dying fire? |
13364 | That loving heart, that patient soul, Had they indeed no longer span, 10 To run their course, and reach their goal, And read their homily ° to man? |
13364 | The wise Ulysses, Laertes''son? |
13364 | Then through the great town''s harsh, heart- wearying roar, Let in thy voice a whisper often come, 235 To chase fatigue and fear:_ Why faintest thou? |
13364 | They out- talk''d thee, hiss''d thee, tore thee? |
13364 | This spare, dark- featured, Quick- eyed stranger? |
13364 | Thou lovest it, then, my wine? |
13364 | To what is Thyrsis( Clough) likened in stanzas 6, 7, and 8? |
13364 | To what is each individual likened? |
13364 | To what truth does the author suddenly awake? |
13364 | To whom is it addressed? |
13364 | Was Christ a man like us? |
13364 | Was he about to say more? |
13364 | Were feet like those made for so wild a way? |
13364 | What answer does he receive? |
13364 | What atmosphere is given the poem by the first stanza? |
13364 | What caused the"Scholar"to join himself to the gipsies? |
13364 | What change has come over nature when Tristram awakes? |
13364 | What comparison does he make between Clough and the Scholar- Gipsy? |
13364 | What do Shakespeare''s smile and silence imply on his part? |
13364 | What do you think of the author''s philosophy of life as set forth in this poem? |
13364 | What does Tristram''s question( l. 7) reveal of his condition physically and mentally? |
13364 | What does his presence suggest to the latter? |
13364 | What effect did Judas''s story have on Saint Brandan? |
13364 | What effect did his appearance have on the saint? |
13364 | What effect does it have upon him? |
13364 | What effect does the"liquor"have upon the youth? |
13364 | What effect does this determination have upon the ultimate outcome of the situation? |
13364 | What effect is gained by closing the poem with the same words with which it is opened? |
13364 | What evidently brought it to the author''s mind? |
13364 | What finally is"the poet''s sphere,"l. 127? |
13364 | What foul fiend rides thee? |
13364 | What foul fiend rides thee?= What evil spirit possesses you and keeps you from the fight? |
13364 | What human frailties are indicated in the answer to the host''s question? |
13364 | What important incident in the destiny of the soul is alluded to in stanza 1? |
13364 | What is gained by its use? |
13364 | What is gained by their use? |
13364 | What is her attitude toward him? |
13364 | What is his attitude toward music? |
13364 | What is his mood now? |
13364 | What is his purpose in recalling the haunts once familiar to him about Oxford? |
13364 | What is implied by the word"even,"l. 1? |
13364 | What is implied in l. 6? |
13364 | What is meant by_ ringing shot_, l. 11? |
13364 | What is one more, one less, obscure or famed, Valiant or craven, young or old, to me? |
13364 | What is revealed by their conversation? |
13364 | What is shown by his repeated question--"was it yesterday"? |
13364 | What is shown by the fact that Tristram''s mind dwells on Iseult of Ireland even at the time of battle? |
13364 | What is the author''s mood? |
13364 | What is the central thought of the poem? |
13364 | What is the dominant mood of the poem? |
13364 | What is the final thought of the poem? |
13364 | What is the force of the references of stanza 4? |
13364 | What is the import of the preacher''s response? |
13364 | What is the light sought by the Scholar- Gipsy and by the poet? |
13364 | What is the office of the parts of the poem coming between the intervals of conversation? |
13364 | What is the opening situation in the poem? |
13364 | What is the poet''s attitude toward life? |
13364 | What is the poet''s final conclusion? |
13364 | What is the poet''s mood as shown in the opening stanzas? |
13364 | What is the purpose in introducing the Huntsman on the arras? |
13364 | What is the purpose of the first four lines? |
13364 | What is the significance of her smile just before departing? |
13364 | What is the significance of strewing on the roses? |
13364 | What is the significance of the"tree"so frequently alluded to in the poem? |
13364 | What is the situation at the beginning of the poem? |
13364 | What is the source of nature''s repose? |
13364 | What is the underlying thought in the poem? |
13364 | What is the"eternal note of sadness"? |
13364 | What is the"gracious light,"l. 201? |
13364 | What is the_ narrow bed_, l. 1? |
13364 | What is there in the poem that helps you to see wherein lay Shakespeare''s power to interpret life? |
13364 | What kind of a life does she lead? |
13364 | What lights in the court-- what steps on the stair? |
13364 | What lights will those out to the northward be °? |
13364 | What limitations of the painter''s art are pointed out by the poet? |
13364 | What new qualities are added to the nightingale''s song, l. 25? |
13364 | What power is ascribed to the poet? |
13364 | What quest is to be begun, l. 10? |
13364 | What reason or reasons can you give for Proserpine''s love of things Dorian? |
13364 | What should I do with slaying any more? |
13364 | What sport? |
13364 | What sport?" |
13364 | What stand did the poet''s friend take regarding poetry? |
13364 | What thought next presents itself to the author''s mind? |
13364 | What voice whispers to him amid the"heart- wearying roar"of the city? |
13364 | What voices are these on the clear night- air? |
13364 | What was the Scholar- Gipsy''s_ one_ motive in life? |
13364 | What was the topic of conversation? |
13364 | What were his original intentions? |
13364 | What will that grief, what will that vengeance be? |
13364 | What would they probably say on finding the body near the wall? |
13364 | What youth, Goddess,--what guest Of Gods or mortals? |
13364 | What, I hear these bitter words from thee? |
13364 | What, thou think''st this aching brow was cooler, Circled, Tristram, by a band of gold? |
13364 | What... be?= That is, what lights are those to the northward, the direction from which Iseult would come? |
13364 | Whence art thou, sleeper? |
13364 | Where and how must the human soul find its contentment? |
13364 | Where finally are the aids to a nobler life to be found? |
13364 | Where found? |
13364 | Where, however, is there a difference? |
13364 | Wherein then is poetry superior to the other arts? |
13364 | Which is better? |
13364 | Which would be the more dangerous, a"single"or"common"combat? |
13364 | Who are the victors, l. 14? |
13364 | Who are they that start well, but fall out by the wayside? |
13364 | Who art thou then, that canst so touch my soul? |
13364 | Who can stand still? |
13364 | Who has your sympathy most, Margaret, the forsaken merman, or the children? |
13364 | Who is he, 90 That he sits, overweigh''d By fumes of wine and sleep, So late, in thy portico? |
13364 | Who is that kneeling Lady fair? |
13364 | Who order''d, that their longing''s fire Should be, as soon as kindled, cool''d? |
13364 | Who speaks? |
13364 | Who, if not I, for questing here hath power? |
13364 | Why are the terms here used so forcible in the mouth of Gudurz? |
13364 | Why can not we live"chance''s fool"? |
13364 | Why connect it in thought with the sea? |
13364 | Why did the woman solicit aid from the laboring men? |
13364 | Why does Rustum determine to lay aside his accustomed arms and fight incognito? |
13364 | Why does he call some one to look on the scene with him? |
13364 | Why does he say"that_ chance_ act of good"? |
13364 | Why does he urge the children to call? |
13364 | Why does the merman still linger, when he is convinced that further delay will count for nothing? |
13364 | Why does this thought suggest Sophocles? |
13364 | Why give up the struggle? |
13364 | Why have it a stormy night? |
13364 | Why her frequent glances toward the door? |
13364 | Why his order for her to retire? |
13364 | Why his pensive air? |
13364 | Why his"pain"? |
13364 | Why introduced? |
13364 | Why is the path of those who have chosen a"clear- purposed goal"pictured so difficult? |
13364 | Why is the presence of Ulysses so much in harmony with the situation? |
13364 | Why locate in the sea without a"human shore,"l. 12? |
13364 | Why not from the wealthy? |
13364 | Why so effective with Rustum? |
13364 | Why so? |
13364 | Why so? |
13364 | Why so? |
13364 | Why the irregular verse used? |
13364 | Why the irregular versification? |
13364 | Why the mention of the Scholar- Gipsy? |
13364 | Why this change? |
13364 | Why this reference to the clear Oxus stream at this moment of intense tragedy? |
13364 | Why this restlessness on the part of Iseult? |
13364 | Why tremblest thou? |
13364 | Why turn to Greece in considering the arts? |
13364 | Why used by the poet? |
13364 | Why will he not despair so long as the"lonely tree"remains? |
13364 | Why would he avoid others than members of the gipsy crew? |
13364 | Why"Better so,"l. 10? |
13364 | Why"endless bounds,"l.6? |
13364 | Why"never a spray of yew"? |
13364 | Why"silver''d"branches? |
13364 | Why, then, did he continue with them till his death? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why? |
13364 | Why_ eternal_ passion,_ eternal_ pain? |
13364 | Will Margaret ever grieve for the past? |
13364 | With whom has it been waged? |
13364 | Wouldst more of it? |
13364 | Yet that severe, that earnest air, I saw, I felt it once-- but where? |
13364 | [ 167] What is the opening situation in the poem? |
13364 | [ 209] What is the author''s mood, as shown by the first stanza? |
13364 | _ Pitch this one high!_ Sits there no judge in Heaven, our sin to see? |
13364 | are thy lips blanch''d like mine? |
13364 | art thou not he?" |
13364 | at every turn? |
13364 | do not we... await it too=? |
13364 | dost thou start? |
13364 | his eyelids slowly break Their hot seals, and let him wake; 295 What new change shall we now see? |
13364 | into no more? |
13364 | is it gone? |
13364 | is there news, or any night alarm?" |
13364 | secret in his breast.= What secret? |
13364 | she cries,"that strife divine, Whence was it, for it is not mine? |
13364 | this that royal bride? |
13364 | what bell for church is toll''d? |
13364 | what boots it?= That is, what difference will it make? |
13364 | what trouble''s on his brow? |
13364 | wherefore dost thou vainly question thus 365 Of Rustum? |
13364 | who, will make us feel The cloud of mortal destiny? |
13364 | why she, than they, Fewer fine successes can display? |
13364 | ° 110 Art thou he, stranger? |
13364 | ° 124 Hies, ah, from whence, what native ground? |
13364 | ° 18 Dost thou again peruse With hot cheeks and sear''d eyes 20 The too clear web, and thy dumb sister''s shame °? |
13364 | ° 238 What foul fiend rides thee °? |
13364 | ° 29 Again-- thou hearest? |
13364 | ° 343 Art thou not Rustum °? |
13364 | ° 367 Is it with Rustum only thou wouldst fight? |
13364 | ° 4 I met a preacher there I knew, and said: 5"Ill and o''erwork''d, how fare you in this scene?" |
13364 | ° 71 Art ° tired with hunting? |
13364 | ° 71 What matters it? |
19914 | How many beams,said he,"are there in the roof?" |
19914 | ''Know ye what month this is? |
19914 | ''Suppose now,''said Al- Ashari,''that the child should wish to ascend to the place occupied by his virtuous brother, would he be allowed to do so?'' |
19914 | ''What else was the lamented deceased pleased to observe?'' |
19914 | ''What is it?'' |
19914 | ''What on earth, you scoundrel, do you mean by this conduct?'' |
19914 | ''Wherefore?'' |
19914 | ''Why?'' |
19914 | A certain king asked his vizier whether habit can vanquish nature, or nature habit? |
19914 | And why do none of the Muslims recite the funeral prayer over his body? |
19914 | Do you mock me or wish to show your levity?'' |
19914 | Had He anything to do with the sects called Essenes, Therapeuts, Gnostics, Nazarites, the Brethren, which existed both before and during His lifetime? |
19914 | Had He studied under Buddhist missionaries? |
19914 | Had He taken the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, before He was baptized by John the Essene? |
19914 | Had He travelled Himself to the further East? |
19914 | He also recalled Ibn Al- Mukaffa''s joke about Sofyan''s big nose, because he had one day asked the governor,''How are you and your nose?'' |
19914 | I asked:"How can that be?" |
19914 | I remained silent, and on his uttering them more emphatically, replied:"Will you please listen to me, O Commander of the Believers?" |
19914 | Is there any title that can answer?'' |
19914 | Look to the left; do you see aught but woe?'' |
19914 | Look, then, to the right; do you see aught but affliction? |
19914 | Now Ben Almugázeli said to himself:"What is the odds if I get three strokes with the sock?" |
19914 | She had him then brought to her, and said:''What did you eat these days past?'' |
19914 | Shortly afterwards some of his concubines observed that his behaviour towards them had changed, and one of them said:''My lord, what is this?'' |
19914 | The male said"How was that?" |
19914 | The other asked,''Who could procure me that felicity?'' |
19914 | The servant Masrur, who happened to be standing near, burst out laughing at these words, and the Khalif continued:''What are you laughing for? |
19914 | The she- partridge asked,"How was that?" |
19914 | What day?'' |
19914 | What territory is this? |
19914 | When the little fish had heard this wonderful confession it asked:''What can I do for you?'' |
19914 | When, however, one of the three hundred exclaimed:''Was not Abu Nuwas a Muslim? |
19914 | since you knew what awaited him, you must have known what awaited me; why, then, did you act for his advantage and not for mine?"'' |
19914 | what induced you to wish for that which you can never obtain?'' |
19914 | who taught you to make such a just distribution?'' |
17737 | And do you suppose that the Belgians protested? 17737 Say, Yes or No, wilt thou go with me to the conquest of the world? |
17737 | What need I say of Turkey that you do not know already? 17737 After our experiences of 1868 and 1869--and even 1870--how can we be guilty of running the same risks again? 17737 Am I not entitled to say to you, dear readers,I have fulfilled the mission that I set before myself, my work amongst you is accomplished"? |
17737 | And what is more, has not the new President of the Evangelical Church just proclaimed William II as_ summus episcopus_? |
17737 | Are not the intentions of Germany plain enough now and sufficiently proved? |
17737 | Are we, then, to see the Reichstag in its turn, like the French and Italian Parliaments, wasting its millions and its men in colonial adventures? |
17737 | As to such questions as those of territorial frontiers, or the banks of the Rhine, Bamberger used to ask,"Who thinks of such things in Germany? |
17737 | Between this German conception of peace and ours, is there not a gulf that nothing can ever bridge? |
17737 | But if not, why should they have been at such pains formerly to prove to me that the thing was inconceivable? |
17737 | But what does the Constitution matter to William II? |
17737 | But what have they done? |
17737 | But why, and to what end? |
17737 | Can any one possibly find any absolution, any excuses, for such a deplorable mismanagement of our material and moral interests in the East? |
17737 | Can the heavens that look down on Mount Sinai smile on William II, sheltering in the shadow of Turkish bayonets? |
17737 | Could any one be more determined to be a pillar of the Church? |
17737 | Could anybody be more pious, a more resolute foe of those vices which he pursues with such energy? |
17737 | Did he not do everything to lull the suspicions of Napoleon whilst he himself was arming to the teeth? |
17737 | Does it mean to say that the French would threaten us with war if we continue to celebrate our victories over them? |
17737 | Does not this constitute an insolent challenge to the decision which the Powers are supposed to have taken for the observation of neutrality? |
17737 | Has he not composed psalms? |
17737 | Has the Hamburg Congress disabused the minds of French Socialists on the brotherhood of their German brethren? |
17737 | Have the wings of the German Emperor the span of those of Lucifer, as he believes? |
17737 | How can anybody suppose that William II really wishes to do honour to French art? |
17737 | How could we forget those who have not ceased to remember? |
17737 | How many strengthening and encouraging letters have I not received from you? |
17737 | How often have I not told him that all he has to gain by playing this game is a final surrender on the part of France? |
17737 | I wonder whether the ever- mystical William II sometimes reflects on the ways by which God leads men into His appointed ways? |
17737 | If it is difficult now to expel all malcontents from Prussia, what will it be when their number is legion? |
17737 | If they reflect, will not the Powers of the Concert realise that Germany''s every act is either a challenge or a lesson? |
17737 | If you ask: To whom does William II give satisfaction? |
17737 | In binding herself to Germany, has not Italy given herself over into bondage to the Teuton and especially to Austria, her hereditary foe? |
17737 | In different words they ask:"Is n''t the young Emperor amusing?" |
17737 | In the Empire of the Hapsburgs, as in Germany, people are asking;"What is going to be the end of all this expenditure?" |
17737 | Is he not about to take possession, in theatrical fashion, of the Holy Places? |
17737 | Is he not the_ summus episcopus_, who conducts the service in person? |
17737 | Is it generally known that the German subjects of the poorer class who inhabit Paris, receive an annual subsidy of 100 marks? |
17737 | Is it not the same for all evil- doers, no matter to what heights they may attain, who only climb that they may be hurled to lower depths? |
17737 | Is it possible that the mind of such a man, thus inflated with pride, should not succumb to every temptation of ambition? |
17737 | Is not this clear enough? |
17737 | Is not this in itself good and sufficient reason to make him wish to prove that no one in his Empire can do as much brain work as he can? |
17737 | Is there any one of those about him, or amongst his subjects, who can say where these ambitions will end? |
17737 | Is there not something astounding about the use of the possessive pronoun in connection with the word"august,"implying sovereignty? |
17737 | Let the effrontery of his lies return to him in bitterness?" |
17737 | May not the explanation of King Leopold''s journey be, that William II would like a mobilisation in Belgium just as he wants one in Italy? |
17737 | Moreover he had a stiff fight in the Parliament of the Empire with regard to the new relations with[ Transcriber''s note: which?] |
17737 | Now, what has the young King of Prussia done since his accession to the Throne? |
17737 | One would like to know where the war party in Russia can possibly be at the present moment? |
17737 | Pope, Emperor and King-- but does anybody suppose that this will satisfy him? |
17737 | Shall it be said that we failed those who rather than yield have suffered every form of torture? |
17737 | Surely that is simple enough? |
17737 | These people ask: How is it that_ your_ Emperor of Russia has delayed so long in expressing to us his condolence? |
17737 | Von Bismarck? |
17737 | Was not William I, King of Prussia, amiable enough? |
17737 | We have_ permitted_ them to become Germans, why then, should they refuse the privilege?" |
17737 | What change has there been in the situation since Kronstadt? |
17737 | What does Russia, so jealous for the Holy Places, think of the intrusion into them of the German Kaiser? |
17737 | What matters it that the Chinese will not resist, that they will fall prostrate before him? |
17737 | What more could he ask? |
17737 | What need is there for us to seek to reconcile Germany and Russia in China? |
17737 | What object had he in going there, and what has he attained? |
17737 | What say you, Parisians of the Siege, Frenchmen who have seen the Prussian conqueror dragging his guns and booty along the roads of our France? |
17737 | What say you, men of Alsace- Lorraine, heroes all? |
17737 | What say you, veteran soldiers, who fought in the Terrible Year? |
17737 | What then would have been the results had she paid us an official visit? |
17737 | What would be the cumulative effect of want of exercise at the end of a year? |
17737 | What would have been the good? |
17737 | What would one think of a creditor who allowed the debtor to persuade him that the debt no longer existed? |
17737 | What, then, is the good of all their talking at Münich? |
17737 | When shall we have a determined coalition against Germany? |
17737 | When will they have done, once and for all, with inscribing these cruel records of theirs in the golden book of Germany, and shut the clasp upon it? |
17737 | Who could fail to be roused to indignation by the display of German fanaticism which has taken place at Vienna? |
17737 | Who wanted our government to go there? |
17737 | Whom can he possibly hope to deceive? |
17737 | Why is it that William II wearies not in thus renewing his attempts at reconciliation with France? |
17737 | Why should we go to Kiel? |
17737 | Why was the King of Belgium in such a hurry? |
17737 | Why? |
17737 | Will Austria follow once more the lead of Berlin? |
17737 | Will Denmark, whom William II has had the audacity to invite, go to Kiel? |
17737 | Will Germany continue to become Prussianised or will she remain German? |
17737 | Will Germany yield, or will she resist the will of the Emperor thus clearly expressed? |
17737 | Will it ever be finished, this tale? |
17737 | Will this"new course"of Imperial policy, as they call it in Germany, last any longer than its predecessor? |
17737 | Would Italy have recovered Lombardy and Venice had she not unceasingly protested against the Austrian occupation? |
17737 | [ 10] What are the qualities which have distinguished the Government of Germany since the victories of Moltke? |
17737 | [ 11] May we not flatter ourselves that the torments of William II are now beginning? |
17737 | [ 16] But no, it can not be, for has he not been converted? |
17737 | [ 16] How can one avoid taking an interest in William II of Hohenzollern? |
20427 | How foolish your songs,said a lump of clay,"What is there, I ask, to prove them? |
20427 | = The Tulip Bed At Greeley Square= You know that oasis, fresh and fair In the city desert, as Greeley square? |
20427 | And if he chanted, who would list his songs, So hurried now the world''s gold- seeking throngs? |
20427 | And who save Custer and his gallant men Could calm the tempest into peace again? |
20427 | And who shall claim them when I pass away? |
20427 | And yet shall silence mantle mighty deeds? |
20427 | Are you easing the load, Of overtaxed lifters, who toil down the road? |
20427 | Can blooming June be fond of bleak December? |
20427 | Have I done nobly? |
20427 | Have I done wrong? |
20427 | Have you considered, friend? |
20427 | In which class are you? |
20427 | Just look at the walls between you and the day, Now, have you the strength to move them?" |
20427 | Or are you a leaner, who lets others share Your portion of labor, and worry and care? |
20427 | Right in the breast of the seething town Like a gleaming gem or a wanton''s gown? |
20427 | That bright triangle of scented bloom That lies surrounded by grime and gloom? |
20427 | Upon those spreading plains is there not room For man and bison, that he seals its doom? |
20427 | What other hero in the land could hope With Sitting Bull, the fierce and lawless one to cope? |
20427 | What other warrior skilled enough to dare Surprise that human tiger in his lair? |
20427 | What pleasure lies and what seductive charm In slaying with no purpose but to harm? |
20427 | What though the foe outnumbers two to one? |
20427 | What were her vaunted independence worth If to obtain she sells her sweetest rights of birth? |
20427 | Why sit down in gloom and darkness, With your grief to sup? |
20427 | Yet are these treasures mine, or only lent me? |
19003 | But now, what do we mean by this affirmation of absolute reality independent of the conditions of the process of knowing? 19003 Given a rare and widely diffused mass of nebulous matter,... what are the successive changes that will take place? |
19003 | How could matter of itself produce order, even if it were self- existent and eternal? 19003 That Omnipotency can not make a substance to be solid and not solid at the same time, I think with due reverence[ diffidence? |
19003 | ''The wicked flees when no one pursueth;''then why does he flee? |
19003 | Am I told that I am not competent to judge the purposes of the Almighty? |
19003 | Am I told that this is arrogance? |
19003 | And as to the argument,"Why does the wicked flee when none pursueth? |
19003 | Are we leading a sermon on the datum"God is love"? |
19003 | But it may still be retorted,''Is not that which is_ most_ conceivable_ most likely_ to be true? |
19003 | But let us in fairness ask, What was the essential substance of that theory? |
19003 | But what is the''Iliad''to the hymn of creation and the drama of providence?" |
19003 | But what, let us ask, is the proximate cause of this difference? |
19003 | But why do I speak of forgetting? |
19003 | But why is there such a law? |
19003 | But you will say, Is it not impossible to admit of the making anything out of nothing, since we can not possibly conceive it? |
19003 | But, as a logician, I must be permitted to observe, that if I ask, Why am I not better than I am? |
19003 | But, granting this, and also that conscious matter is the sole alternative, and what follows? |
19003 | For example, my right hand writes, whilst my left hand is still: what causes rest in one and motion in the other? |
19003 | For to ask, Why is there Existence? |
19003 | How are we to classify that which contains all possible classes? |
19003 | How then did he meet it? |
19003 | How then does it fare with the last of the arguments-- the argument from an ultimate teleology? |
19003 | How then, it will be asked, did the vast nexus of natural laws which is now observable ever begin or continue to be? |
19003 | If it be asked, What other gauge of probability can we have in this matter other than such a direct appeal to consciousness? |
19003 | If there is no God, where can be the harm in our examining the spurious evidence of his existence? |
19003 | In what sense, then, is the word"Absolute"used? |
19003 | Interpreting the mazy nexus of phenomena only by the facts which science has revealed, and what conclusion are we driven to accept? |
19003 | Is it said that there are compensating enjoyments? |
19003 | Let us then first ask, What is"Nothing"? |
19003 | May it not appeal to hearts which long have ceased to worship? |
19003 | Must we not feel that had there not been intelligent agency at work somewhere, other and less terrifically intricate results would have ensued? |
19003 | Nay, may it not do more than this? |
19003 | No; but a work on the questions, Is there a God? |
19003 | Now in what does the evolution of intelligence consist? |
19003 | Now what are these features? |
19003 | Now what may we affirm of noumena without departing from a scientific or objective mode of philosophising? |
19003 | Or, otherwise phrased, is Nothing possible or impossible? |
19003 | Or, to state the case in another way, if it is asked, Why is there not Nothing? |
19003 | Or, what is the same thing, in refusing to predicate multiplicity of it, do we not virtually predicate of it unity? |
19003 | Starting, then, with these data,--matter, force, and the law of gravitation,--what must happen? |
19003 | The question is-- Has law a reason, or is it without a reason? |
19003 | The question, however, is, Which class of studies ought to be considered the more authoritative in this matter? |
19003 | The question, therefore, I conceive to be, What amount of evidence is there in favour of this metaphysical system of teleology? |
19003 | To which, then, of these distinct theories is Cosmic Theism most nearly allied? |
19003 | What is our warrant for ranking this assertion? |
19003 | What is the consequence? |
19003 | What is the state of the present argument as between a materialist and a theist? |
19003 | What origin are we to give them? |
19003 | What plainer manifestation of design can there be than this difference?" |
19003 | What shall we say of the despotism of preformed beliefs? |
19003 | What then shall we say is the final outcome of this discussion concerning the rational standing of the teleological argument? |
19003 | Where are we to look for an explanation of Existence?" |
19003 | Where is the proof that nothing can have caused a mind except another mind? |
19003 | Who but the"image"of his own thought? |
19003 | Who is it that he sees in solitude, in darkness, in the hidden chambers of his heart? |
19003 | Why does like produce like?... |
19003 | Why is this? |
19003 | [ 30]''But what is''the satisfactory positive evidence''that is offered me? |
19003 | [_ All rights reserved_]*****_ CANST THOU BY SEARCHING FIND OUT GOD?_***** PREFACE. |
19003 | and, if so, Is he a God of love? |
19003 | is, upon the supposition which has been conceded, equivalent to asking, Why is the possible possible? |
19003 | whence his terror? |
19003 | whence his terror?" |
2076 | May then a subject,he asked,"put his sovereign to death?" |
2076 | What do you mean? |
2076 | At length he was summoned into the presence of Kublai Khan, who said to him,"What is it you want?" |
2076 | How should such men trouble themselves with the conventionalities of this world, or care what people may think of them?" |
2076 | How, then, is it that some men are evil while others are good? |
2076 | Light asked Nothing, saying:"Do you, sir, exist, or do you not exist?" |
2076 | My fields, my gardens, are choked with weeds: should I not go? |
2076 | My soul has led a bondsman''s life: why should I remain to pine? |
2076 | Of what use, asked his great rival, is Hui Tzu to the world? |
2076 | The four seasons pursue their courses and all things are produced; but does God say anything?" |
2076 | The latter pointed out that Confucius, when asked to speak, so that his disciples might have something to record, had bluntly replied:"Does God speak? |
2076 | The times are out of joint for me; and what have I to seek from men? |
2076 | Then when nothing came into existence, could one really say whether it belonged to existence or non- existence?" |
2076 | This brings us at once to the question-- What is meant by the term China? |
2076 | To the same man, who inquired his views on capital punishment, Confucius replied:"What need is there for capital punishment at all? |
2076 | What boots it to wear out the soul with anxious thoughts? |
2076 | Where can he come from except from the small islands which fringe the Middle Kingdom, the world, in fact, bounded by the Four Seas? |
2076 | Where does he come from? |
2076 | Why rob one to feed the other?" |
2076 | Why, then, not set our hearts at rest, ceasing to trouble whether we remain or go? |
2076 | cried Light;"who can equal this? |
10868 | After that? 10868 And are you?" |
10868 | And can it never be changed? |
10868 | And this is a free country? 10868 And to avenge his death, must other innocent lives also be sacrificed?" |
10868 | And what is that? |
10868 | And what is the answer to the riddle? |
10868 | And what proof have we of His coming? |
10868 | And what then? |
10868 | Answer? 10868 Are those my thoughts?" |
10868 | Are you satisfied now? |
10868 | But did He save it? 10868 But why stir people up?" |
10868 | But, my dear fellow, if you see this shameful thing, why not try to prevent it? |
10868 | By love of those who believe? |
10868 | Dear old Bodhisattva,he said,"what do you want to do? |
10868 | Did he suffer much? |
10868 | Did they cure the others? |
10868 | Did you not want to see me? |
10868 | Do n''t you believe that I see what infinitely small chances of success a revolution would have now in our country, under present conditions? 10868 Do you believe in miracles?" |
10868 | Do you certainly know what is in vain? 10868 Do you mean that I am not free to say what I think?" |
10868 | Do you think belief comes by willing to have it? |
10868 | Even so,he said,"do you think that your republic will have no need of astronomers, just as the first one could get along without chemists? |
10868 | Forgive you for what? 10868 Free?" |
10868 | Give the boche your skin for a present? 10868 Have you had any news?" |
10868 | Help from me? |
10868 | Him? 10868 How about the excitable Lagneau, who talks about blowing everything to pieces?" |
10868 | How about the present? |
10868 | How can you imagine such things to add to your trouble? |
10868 | I admit that a scholar is bound to defend the Truth that he has discovered, but is this social question your mission? 10868 I did fall, I assure you....""No, I know it is not true... tell me,... someone struck you...?" |
10868 | Is it an article of faith? |
10868 | Is it not always through love, and only in that way, that we learn to trust? |
10868 | Is this what you wished? |
10868 | It amounts to this, that you think I am wrong? |
10868 | It ought, at least, to be of some use,--why play into their hands? 10868 Look here, my little girl, you think as I do about this, do you not?" |
10868 | My dear friend,said he,"have you been ill?" |
10868 | My name? 10868 Now? |
10868 | Ought I to betray the truth, when it is clear to me? |
10868 | Stay at home, why? 10868 Tell me about this fortune of hers?" |
10868 | Then you agree that I ought to fight against these murderous mistakes? |
10868 | Then you think I am right? |
10868 | They had no pity on us,thought the unhappy ones,"why should we pity them?" |
10868 | Time is not the only one you kill? |
10868 | War with whom? |
10868 | Was he happier towards the last? |
10868 | Was it a wound? |
10868 | We are the miracle, for is it not one that in this world of perpetual violence we have kept a constant faith in the love and the union of men? |
10868 | What do you mean, my good friend? |
10868 | What have I done? |
10868 | What have we to do with truth? 10868 What is the matter?" |
10868 | What was that, Agénor? 10868 What would become of France, of Europe, in twenty years?" |
10868 | What? 10868 Where are you wounded?" |
10868 | Where are you? |
10868 | Who, all? |
10868 | Why do you say that? |
10868 | Why does this desire flame up so furiously? 10868 Why not, by gosh? |
10868 | Why not? 10868 Why not? |
10868 | Would you like to see him? |
10868 | Would you resist her laws? |
10868 | Yes, Papa, I suppose so...."You only suppose?... 10868 Yes,"said Clerambault, pulling himself together,"you must have known Sergeant Clerambault?" |
10868 | You are a revolutionary then because you are discouraged? |
10868 | You come from the country? |
10868 | You have lost someone? |
10868 | You here? |
10868 | You old humbug,said his father, laughing gaily,"What does happen then all day long in your trenches?" |
10868 | You say it is not,--not? |
10868 | You were watching over me, were you not?... 10868 You yourself,"repeated Clerambault,"do you believe in it?" |
10868 | You? 10868 --Is that all?" |
10868 | --"With Servia?" |
10868 | --Clerambault did not dare to ask for details, but after a pause:"Do you suffer much?" |
10868 | ... Our modern faith sees in the social group the summit of human evolution, but where is the proof? |
10868 | ... We did what we had to do, and let it go at that;--the end? |
10868 | A little while before he went, Maxime came into his father''s study resolved to explain himself:"Papa, are you quite sure?" |
10868 | After a moment''s silence, Clerambault asked:"Has he been wounded?" |
10868 | After four years of unheard- of pain and ruin, can we possibly admit that it was all for nothing? |
10868 | All his doubts came back upon him.... What forced him to speak? |
10868 | Am I wrong in thinking that the shoe should be made to fit the foot, not the foot for the shoe?" |
10868 | And do we not often see ourselves small and humble under the eyes of a child? |
10868 | And must your sons be not only victims but accomplices, assassinated and assassins?..." |
10868 | And of what use had been all the efforts of the ages? |
10868 | And particularly for talking differently from other people?" |
10868 | And to what end? |
10868 | And to what end? |
10868 | And whom would you save?" |
10868 | And why so much hidden hatred?--What had he done to them?... |
10868 | Are their fifty acres of ground on the globe where independent honest people can take refuge? |
10868 | Are we to leave these crazy countries, this old continent, and emigrate? |
10868 | Are you afraid lest I should prove to be in the right?" |
10868 | Are you free to act? |
10868 | Are you free to speak or to write? |
10868 | Are you quite sure?" |
10868 | Because you have lost someone you love, must you lose your head too? |
10868 | Brothers of the world, which of you envies the others or would deprive them of this just happiness? |
10868 | But at what time were they darker than they are now? |
10868 | But do you believe when I was working in the soil, sweating all the fat off my bones, that any of them bothered their heads about me? |
10868 | But do you really care? |
10868 | But how can he be, if his self is merged in others? |
10868 | But now our souls are poisoned, since thou hast called these things sacred....__ Why these combats? |
10868 | But perhaps it was not necessary to write it....""Not necessary? |
10868 | But was he sure that it was not there?... |
10868 | But was it a question simply of his country? |
10868 | But what can I say?" |
10868 | But what did I do to defend him against this scourge which was coming upon us_? |
10868 | But what would life be without it? |
10868 | But where? |
10868 | Butcher, murderer, you have had no pity, why should you implore it for yourself today?... |
10868 | By what right do a hundred, a thousand, one or forty millions of men, demand that I shall renounce my soul? |
10868 | Cain, what hast thou done with them? |
10868 | Can it ever come to pass? |
10868 | Can you even think for yourselves? |
10868 | Can you expect me to love or hate a nation? |
10868 | Can you tell beforehand which seed will germinate and which will turn out sterile and perish? |
10868 | Clerambault felt a pang as he said quickly:"When he came back?" |
10868 | Clerambault looked at Rosine, whose eyes, in spite of herself, shone with happiness:"And my little girl is not''poor''any longer, is she?" |
10868 | Clerambault started:"Pleasure,"he said,"pleasure?" |
10868 | Country? |
10868 | Dear boy, what do you think of it yourself?" |
10868 | Did not the wisest people set him the example of silence? |
10868 | Did we unite to increase, and grow stronger to hate and destroy? |
10868 | Did you ever see such a darling?" |
10868 | Do n''t you think it is right?" |
10868 | Do not think me so vain; but how can I help it, if I feel it is my duty to speak?" |
10868 | Do not try to spare me now, but tell me, am I wrong to think as I do?" |
10868 | Do we not see the beginnings already? |
10868 | Do you remember the beautiful words of the Seer of St. Jean d''Acre? |
10868 | Do you suppose that the people are of our way of thinking? |
10868 | Do you think I am insensible to the pain of these poor souls whose faith I undermine? |
10868 | Do you want to know what is at the bottom of it all, Sir? |
10868 | Does God rule, or do some charlatans speak for the oracle? |
10868 | Does it soothe my pain to inflict injury on others? |
10868 | Does justice demand that millions of innocents should fall, a ransom for the sins and the errors of others? |
10868 | For do we respect the plans of Nature when we stifle one part of its thought, and the higher, at that? |
10868 | For how could he tell, who thought very little about it, his head being always full of some new work? |
10868 | For some minutes they continued in silence; then Moreau seized his old friend''s arm, and said excitedly:"How did you know it?" |
10868 | For the sake of whom, or what? |
10868 | For what do they grow up? |
10868 | For who will speak, if we do not? |
10868 | For, on the contrary, he believed that the means are even more important to real progress than the end... what end? |
10868 | Had he not done his duty? |
10868 | Had they not trouble enough? |
10868 | Has the war been really more atrocious? |
10868 | He is like a soldier in battle, to whom a dangerous message is entrusted; is he free to shirk it?... |
10868 | He might very well have come of his own accord; and it was impossible to say what his intentions were, perhaps he hardly knew himself? |
10868 | He was awfully sorry... hoped there was no hard feeling?... |
10868 | How can people be so wicked?" |
10868 | How could he like extremes of thought, which are the cultures in which the germs of war develop? |
10868 | How did it get in here?) |
10868 | How is he to communicate his calm to them? |
10868 | How many sons are there who feel a devout paternal affection for an old mother? |
10868 | How then was he to get out of this tragic no- thoroughfare? |
10868 | I do not oblige you to come with me, so why are you angry? |
10868 | I must rebuild my house, the home of us all, for you have none, yours is a dungeon.... How can it be done, where shall I look, or find shelter?... |
10868 | I wept with joy as I read them; I am not then left alone to suffer? |
10868 | I wonder what will happen to this poor little chap twenty years hence?" |
10868 | I''m no good,--what could I work at? |
10868 | If not, what remains? |
10868 | If we are not to be the masters, then we shall be victims;... we, do I say? |
10868 | If you are alone against the world, have you cause to complain? |
10868 | In the name of what theory? |
10868 | Is crime to be washed out by crime? |
10868 | Is he at the Front?" |
10868 | Is it not the ideal of most Frenchmen to accept their plan of life ready- made in childhood and never change it? |
10868 | Is it right, is it even possible for us to utter all our thoughts? |
10868 | Is it so much less dangerous to believe oneself His manager, or His secretary? |
10868 | Is it to satisfy the greed of some among us, and can it be that the Country will fill their maw at the cost of public misfortune_? |
10868 | Is not this the first law, the first of joys? |
10868 | Is that what you want? |
10868 | Is that what you would have? |
10868 | Is the price too high? |
10868 | Is there no place in your mind for the hope of a higher future?" |
10868 | It is clear enough, despair is all that drives me to will anything....""Why despair?" |
10868 | It is terribly difficult for one soul to communicate with another, impossible perhaps, and who knows?... |
10868 | It was terribly painful to break these ties, to meet the hatred of others halfway.... Was he strong enough to resist?... |
10868 | Long enchained instincts stretch their stiffened limbs, cry out and leap into the open air, as of right-- right, do I say? |
10868 | No, do n''t look at me like that, I shall not follow Pilate''s example, and ask: What is Truth? |
10868 | Non- resistance? |
10868 | Now where have we been led? |
10868 | Of all these, which are the worst? |
10868 | On what did he found this overweening self- confidence? |
10868 | One conviction a day is enough for them; and what does the quality matter, since they are fresh every hour? |
10868 | Or are they all to be mobilised? |
10868 | Or humanity itself? |
10868 | Or must we all sit down to leeward? |
10868 | Or shall we join in and cut the throats of the weak, without the shadow of an illusion as to the blind cosmic cruelty? |
10868 | Outside in the throng, how can he see over the heads of those who press about him? |
10868 | Queer enough, is n''t it?... |
10868 | Rosine blushed:"Why do you say that?" |
10868 | Shall we resign ourselves to a voluntary sacrifice through pity or weariness? |
10868 | Shall we spread them broadcast?--Suppose the seed of thought may spring up in weeds or poisonous plants...? |
10868 | Shall we stifle thought, uproot living ideas? |
10868 | Sometimes at night he had moments of oppression, he was uneasy, wakeful, discontented, ashamed;... but of what? |
10868 | Sometimes they all blow up together.... How guard against this danger? |
10868 | Still he could not seem to understand;"I do n''t hear,--Jaurès? |
10868 | Suppose there were no more conquerors left in France? |
10868 | Surely it is not for our sakes that men wage these combats between nations, this universal brigandage? |
10868 | That could be settled afterwards.--Conquer? |
10868 | The State? |
10868 | The earth we tread on? |
10868 | The family? |
10868 | The lofty thoughts of the sages, of Jesus, of Socrates; how were they received? |
10868 | The question was to conquer; at what price? |
10868 | The sadness and folly of the present day, what do they matter? |
10868 | The same intelligence which darkened my eyes, has now torn away the bandage; how can it be, at the same time, a power for truth and for falsehood?" |
10868 | The worst is to be off by yourself; and you''re not lonesome, are you, boy?" |
10868 | Their own suffering? |
10868 | Then is it because men had more faith in the war of today? |
10868 | Then turning to Clerambault, he added:"He is the one who keeps us all up, is it not so, Madame Fanny?" |
10868 | There is no going, back, but I often think that if I had to begin over again--""When did you change your mind about all these things?" |
10868 | There''s no merit in being patient when there''s nothing else to do.... A little more or less, what does it matter?... |
10868 | These people wound me? |
10868 | They asked him if he thought himself cleverer than anyone else, that he set himself up against the entire nation? |
10868 | They lived in different worlds... could they ever understand each other again?... |
10868 | They really exist, and can not be destroyed? |
10868 | This is the hardest battle, that waged by the man divided against himself; and in the end who will conquer? |
10868 | This liberty of which he was the master and the slave-- this imperious need to be free? |
10868 | Those which rouse long echoes in the conscience of mankind, or those which are known alone to the stifled victim? |
10868 | To be butchered like this? |
10868 | To satisfy blind instincts, or rogues? |
10868 | To set us free? |
10868 | To what end? |
10868 | Was there nothing left? |
10868 | We are all answerable, do you say? |
10868 | We must wait and not go too fast for nature...""Wait, until the appetites of the exploiter, and the folly of the exploited are equally exhausted? |
10868 | Were you unhappy?" |
10868 | What are we to do, if our hands are full of verities? |
10868 | What are you free from, and which of you is free in your countries today? |
10868 | What can you expect from such feather- headed creatures who do not know if they are on their heads or their heels? |
10868 | What causes them the most pain? |
10868 | What choice is left, but to try to keep out of the struggle through selfishness-- or wisdom, which is another form of the same thing?" |
10868 | What could he mean? |
10868 | What could this wretched man do, symbol as he was, of the mutilated, sacrificed people? |
10868 | What did this poet mean by giving lessons to the socialists in a party paper? |
10868 | What do you say? |
10868 | What does it matter, since we are all in the same column? |
10868 | What else mattered? |
10868 | What else was there for them to do but talk? |
10868 | What good is it to us? |
10868 | What have we to do with the ambitions and rivalries, covetousness, and ills of the mind, which they dignify with the name of Patriotism? |
10868 | What help have we ever given him? |
10868 | What is it that possesses us all? |
10868 | What is she? |
10868 | What is this blind love, of which the other side of the shield is an equally blinded hate? |
10868 | What meaning had there been in this long troubled course, now ending in darkness? |
10868 | What need have we of further conquests, when the land of our fathers has grown too wide for their children? |
10868 | What of the youth of Europe remained behind the lines? |
10868 | What remains? |
10868 | What should we have left on earth if it were not for our country?" |
10868 | What then is this Country, this living thing to which a man sacrifices his life, the life of all but his conscience and the consciences of others? |
10868 | What was this freedom, then, which intoxicated him so completely? |
10868 | What was this mania he had for talking? |
10868 | What wicked insanity that turns us against our better selves?... |
10868 | What will it find outside? |
10868 | What would it be in the case of a nation, of ten nations, or of civilisation as a whole?... |
10868 | When Xavier Thouron first came to see Clerambault how could anyone know if he was in the Secret Service? |
10868 | When an artist submits his work for your approval, is it proper to say to him:"I should prefer to read another one quite different from this?" |
10868 | When the boat leans over, must I not throw my weight on the other side to keep an even keel? |
10868 | When will you cease to insist on the absolute good?" |
10868 | Where are those who travail all over the world? |
10868 | Where had he seen her before? |
10868 | Which we can only maintain, it would seem, by renouncing it; and for the sake of what carnivorous gods?... |
10868 | Who can tell? |
10868 | Who will give us back the sun, and our love for our brothers?... |
10868 | Who would listen to him, and what good would it do? |
10868 | Whom did he wish to justify? |
10868 | Whom do you mean?" |
10868 | Why choose this inoffensive, unbiassed man, who was kind to everyone, and almost too comprehending to all sides? |
10868 | Why do they not see the imbecility of their conduct, in face of the gulf that swallows up each man that dies, all humanity with him? |
10868 | Why do we have children? |
10868 | Why do you say such things?" |
10868 | Why does not everyone understand these things?" |
10868 | Why is it that in this war men lost their mental balance more than in any other at any previous time? |
10868 | Why not urge him to act, instead of trying to hold him back? |
10868 | Why not? |
10868 | Will it be in the East, or in Europe? |
10868 | Will it die out? |
10868 | Will there ever be such a thing? |
10868 | Will you come another time?" |
10868 | Yes, or no?" |
10868 | You ask why I did it? |
10868 | You can not set others free, in spite of them, and from the outside; and even if it were possible, what good would it do? |
10868 | You have fought and suffered for your country, and what have you gained by it? |
10868 | You must think me terribly selfish?" |
10868 | You talk of struggles and hatred between races? |
10868 | You would not wish to stay its course?" |
10868 | Your way is the best, the only one, you say? |
10868 | _ What glory can be found in death and destruction? |
10868 | _ What have I to do with your nations? |
10868 | _ What have these shadows of the past to do with us today? |
10868 | and you)? |
10868 | he commanded, and standing behind his brother- in- law as he read, he went on:"What does the beastly thing mean?" |
10868 | is that you, old man?" |
10868 | or murder by murder? |
10868 | said Moreau,"are you ill?" |
10868 | the Clergy? |
10868 | thought Clerambault, and in the hearts of these good people he read the answer:"Why not?" |
10868 | what can I do? |
10868 | what have you been doing now?" |
10868 | why hast thou deserted and betrayed me? |
10868 | why hast thou forsaken us?" |
10868 | you tripped and fell?..." |
10868 | you''think''that you struck your cheek?... |
20206 | A reed( from the wilderness) shaken with the wind? |
20206 | And what means the so- much abused word Catholic if not inclusiveness? |
20206 | Another problem was: what were more salvatory, faith or works? |
20206 | But what led to the Churches''surrender? |
20206 | But which of the Churches ought to give this example for the salvation of Europe and of the world? |
20206 | But who am I to teach you? |
20206 | CHAPTER IV THE VICTORY OF THE CHURCH WHAT IS THE CHURCH? |
20206 | Christ, God''s Holy Wisdom, includes all of us, why should we exclude each other? |
20206 | Did she agree with them? |
20206 | Did you ever think that St Paul is the greatest prophet of a new and desirable statesmanship? |
20206 | Do you think that the Arabs, who gave Europe knowledge, are expecting from Europe knowledge? |
20206 | ECCLESIA TRIUMPHANS How can the church get her past strength again and triumph over the evil inside and outside her walls? |
20206 | Have we still this exclusive spirit which moved the world effecting the greatest revolution in History? |
20206 | He would ask: What happened with the spirit he preached? |
20206 | How can a wounded man be healed unless his wounds are unveiled? |
20206 | How could an unholy Europe preach the Holy One? |
20206 | How to connect them? |
20206 | How to reach it? |
20206 | Or another: in our moral perfection how much is God''s grace operating and how much our human collaboration? |
20206 | Or another: what part worship plays in our salvation( the problem known in theology as opus operatum)? |
20206 | Or did she oppose and protest as she did against Rome and the Crescent? |
20206 | Or do you think that Chino- Japanese civilisation has anything worth mentioning to borrow from Europe but Christian ideals? |
20206 | The Struggle for a True Doctrine.--The central problem for the living Church has always been: Who was Jesus? |
20206 | To start what? |
20206 | Well, was not His life- drama typical and prophetic for His Church? |
20206 | Well, what would a Buddhistic painter put as a simile of consolation for the man in agony? |
20206 | Were not His last words to the disciples: go to all nations? |
20206 | What did He ever exclude-- save unclean spirits? |
20206 | What does that mean, but that I can not be saved without God and my neighbours? |
20206 | What else if not a Buddha''s sentence or word? |
20206 | What happened with this spirit which excommunicated de facto the Jewish narrow Patriotism and the Roman Imperialism? |
20206 | What is the Church viewed from the point of view of the world war? |
20206 | What is the Church, historically viewed? |
20206 | What is the Church, psychologically viewed? |
20206 | What is the Church, sociologically viewed? |
20206 | What is the consequence if a Christian Church adopts the standpoint of a worldly Government as the true one? |
20206 | What is this great thing? |
20206 | What was the Church''s attitude towards the European imperialistic formulae? |
20206 | Where has fled Europe''s soul? |
20206 | Who of us and of you asks about the integrity of the Christian spirit? |
20206 | Why has the Church stopped being a drama? |
20206 | Why is she hesitating and fearing? |
20206 | Why not just your Anglican Church? |
20206 | You are a Christian? |
20206 | and how to worship Him? |
18503 | Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? |
18503 | Do people die with you? |
18503 | Have you no charm against death? |
18503 | He gilds earth''s darkest valleys With light and joy and peace; Then what must be the radiance Where sin and death shall cease? |
18503 | How is that? |
18503 | O, how shall we stand that moment of searching, When all our sins those books reveal? 18503 O, how shall we stand that moment of searching, When all our sins those books reveal? |
18503 | What Shall be the Sign? |
18503 | What doth hinder me to be baptized? 18503 What shall I do then with Jesus?" |
18503 | Where will the sinner hide in that day, in that day? 18503 _ Ques._--How prove you that? |
18503 | --Who shall mourn her fate? |
18503 | --_"Library of Christian Doctrine: Why Do n''t You Keep the Holy Sabbath Day?" |
18503 | 24: 37- 39. Who can look out upon mankind today without the conviction that this scripture is being fulfilled? |
18503 | 4:4. Who has not, in hurried times, missed a meal, working on through the day, never thinking of the prolonged fast? |
18503 | And now what is its state? |
18503 | And what could be more against the honor of the Most High than that to mortal man should be ascribed the titles and attributes of divinity? |
18503 | And what is six thousand years in working out the divine plan? |
18503 | Are"Soul"and"Spirit"Deathless?_"Are not the soul and spirit said to be deathless?" |
18503 | Are"Soul"and"Spirit"Deathless?_"Are not the soul and spirit said to be deathless?" |
18503 | As soon as they were alone on the Mount of Olives overlooking the city, the disciples came to Jesus, saying:"Tell us, when shall these things be? |
18503 | At what season of the year did the king take the throne? |
18503 | But in answer to the question,"How long?" |
18503 | But one in a certain place testified, saying, What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? |
18503 | Christ''s Second Coming When is this first resurrection, in the order of events in this"day of the Lord"? |
18503 | Do we at times feel a sense of weakening of the spiritual power, a letting down of the vital forces of the soul? |
18503 | Do we find in the record that the Church of Rome has fulfilled these specifications also? |
18503 | Following that, what comes? |
18503 | For what nation is there so great, who hath God so nigh unto them?" |
18503 | His father rebuked him for telling the dream, saying,"Shall I and thy mother and thy brethren indeed come to bow down ourselves to thee to the earth?" |
18503 | If they are immortal, why may they not yet prevail against God? |
18503 | Is creation Groaning for her latter day?" |
18503 | Is the First- day Rest an Institution of God''s Planting? |
18503 | Is the Seventh- day Sabbath a Plant of Our Heavenly Father''s Planting? |
18503 | JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH"How should man be just[ righteous] with God?" |
18503 | Jesus answered them with another question,"Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?" |
18503 | Know ye not that we shall judge angels?" |
18503 | Man by Nature Mortal The word"mortal,"as used in that ancient question by Eliphaz, describes man''s nature:"Shall mortal man be more just than God?" |
18503 | Now we may ask, When was this supremacy to begin? |
18503 | Of the angels it is written,"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
18503 | Of the change from immersion to sprinkling, he says:"What is the justification of this almost universal departure from the primitive usage? |
18503 | On which side shall we stand? |
18503 | Shall God be recognized as supreme? |
18503 | The Free Gift of Christ Following that despairing cry of human helplessness,"Who shall deliver me?" |
18503 | The Image to the Papacy What is this image? |
18503 | The Lord said to Job:"Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?... |
18503 | The Next Great Event And what next? |
18503 | The Saviour replied:"Seest thou these great buildings? |
18503 | The Thief on the Cross_"Did not Christ promise the thief on the cross that he would be with Him that day in Paradise?" |
18503 | The patriarch Job said:"Man dieth, and wasteth away: yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where is he? |
18503 | The patriarch continued:"If a man die, shall he live again? |
18503 | The question is, to be exact, Did Artaxerxes come to the throne in December, 465 B.C., or at some time in the year 464 B.C.? |
18503 | The question was,"How long?" |
18503 | The scribes had come to Jesus with the complaint,"Why do Thy disciples transgress the tradition of the elders?" |
18503 | The tide has turned, and who am I, and who are we, that we should attempt to stem the tide? |
18503 | The"Living Soul"_ Says one,"Did not the Lord put into man an immortal soul?" |
18503 | They"serve"in the temple of the Lord, the prophet says; while the poet sings:"Whence came the armies of the sky, John saw in vision bright? |
18503 | Under whose banner shall we be found when the judgment hour closes? |
18503 | Was every sin confessed? |
18503 | We read:"What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? |
18503 | What else can I call these but preachers of Antichrist?" |
18503 | What next in the program of world- shaping events? |
18503 | What was the trouble? |
18503 | What year was this seventh year of Artaxerxes-- a date so important to fix to a certainty? |
18503 | What, then, is involved in the cleansing of the sanctuary, the time of which is marked by the long prophetic period? |
18503 | When Christ was about to cast certain of them out of one who was possessed, they cried out,"Art Thou come hither to torment us before the time?" |
18503 | When did this baptism and anointing take place? |
18503 | When from that court, each case decided, Shall be granted no appeal?" |
18503 | When from that court, each case decided, Shall be granted no appeal?" |
18503 | Whence came their crowns, their robes, their palms, Too pure for mortal sight? |
18503 | Where will the sinner hide in that day? |
18503 | Which mark will men receive, as the issue is pressed upon every soul for decision? |
18503 | Which of these two institutions has our heavenly Father planted? |
18503 | Which one answers to the language of the prophecy as"the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem"? |
18503 | Who can not see the hand of God in this? |
18503 | Who has authority to change an express commandment of Almighty God? |
18503 | Why may they not be immortal, beyond the power of God to destroy? |
18503 | Why, is not this to be the place of marshaling on the day of judgment, where the gathering together and the appointment will take place? |
18503 | With history- making changes passing rapidly before men''s eyes, the questions press upon thoughtful minds in all lands, What do these things mean? |
18503 | [ Illustration: CHRIST ANSWERING HIS DISCIPLES''QUESTIONS"When shall these things be? |
18503 | [ Illustration: JACOB''S DREAM IN BETHEL"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
18503 | [ Illustration: PHILIP AND THE EUNUCH"Understandest thou what thou readest?" |
18503 | [ Illustration: PILATE''S FATAL DECISION IN THE HOUR OF TRIAL"Pilate saith unto them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called Christ?" |
18503 | [ Illustration: SIGNS IN THE HEAVENS"Can ye not discern the signs of the times?" |
18503 | [ Illustration:"AM I MY BROTHER''S KEEPER?" |
18503 | _ How Shall We Stand? |
18503 | and what events mark the ending of the 1260 years? |
18503 | and what shall be the sign of Thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
18503 | and what shall be the sign of Thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
18503 | and, What shall be the signs of the end of the world? |
18503 | but by whom? |
18503 | on behalf of the living should they seek unto the dead?" |
18503 | or literally,"Until when?" |
18503 | or shall this ecclesiastical power, whose rise and work were foretold in the prophecy, be recognized as the great authority? |
18503 | or the son of man, that Thou visitest him? |
18503 | or the son of man, that Thou visitest him? |
18503 | what soundeth? |
18503 | what would mark the rise of the Papacy to acknowledged supremacy? |
18503 | when the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?" |
18503 | who is able to make war with him?" |
18503 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
14490 | A soldier? 14490 A success?" |
14490 | And do you think you could find room for this in one of your boxes? 14490 And have you no more news from home for me, Miss Kimpsey?" |
14490 | And may I ask-- whether you_ have_ come back for that? |
14490 | And now,she said at last, with a little hard air,"what do you propose?" |
14490 | And now,she said,"shall we talk of something else?" |
14490 | And pray what would become of you all by yourself for a year, sir? |
14490 | And the supper? |
14490 | And why not-- for a little while? 14490 And why?" |
14490 | And, Jack, have n''t you any-- compunctions about exhibiting that portrait? |
14490 | Are n''t you charmed with Elfrida, Leslie? 14490 Are these your diggings?" |
14490 | Are you going to accept Miss Bell''s souvenir of her shattered ideal? 14490 Are you really a journalist?" |
14490 | As a source of gratification is n''t it rather limited? |
14490 | At what time and on what day does he usually come? |
14490 | Besides,Mrs. Jordan reasoned,"if it''ad been that person, ware is the corrispondent all this time? |
14490 | But are you going in for this sort of thing seriously? 14490 But are you sure,_ perfectly_ sure,"she went on, with dainty emphasis,"that you can stay different? |
14490 | But why do you ask me? |
14490 | But why? 14490 Ca n''t you think of them apart?" |
14490 | Can I do anything for you? |
14490 | Can there be anything you ought not to tell me? |
14490 | Did n''t she? 14490 Did she know?" |
14490 | Did you notice,asked Lawrence Cardiff,"that she did n''t tell you where she was living?" |
14490 | Do n''t you feel,she said, looking up at him with a little childish gesture of confidence,"as if you had stolen something from me?" |
14490 | Do n''t you think it''s worth making the best of? 14490 Do n''t you?" |
14490 | Do you know her? 14490 Do you know why I am doing it?" |
14490 | Do you mean,said Janet slowly,"that they dispense with the ceremony?" |
14490 | Do you really hope you will marry? |
14490 | Do you really want to know? |
14490 | Do you see no more in her than_ that?_she exclaimed. |
14490 | Do you think you can do it? |
14490 | Does he know where it comes from and where it''s going to? 14490 Does it-- does it concern another person?" |
14490 | Does it? |
14490 | Does n''t it distress you to think that she believes you incapable of speaking of her like this? |
14490 | Does n''t the phenomenal squash make up for all that? |
14490 | Does that make me out a Philistine, or a Hindu, or what? |
14490 | Does the sea in Norway sound like that? |
14490 | Elfrida did n''t tell you, then? |
14490 | For instance? |
14490 | Frida,she said,"you are beautiful to-- to hurt to- night Why has nobody ever painted a creature like you?" |
14490 | Has he mentioned me? |
14490 | Has-- has she promised, daddy? |
14490 | Have they taken it? |
14490 | Have you written anything, anywhere, for the press before? |
14490 | Her soiree last night? 14490 How can I guess,"she said, looking beyond him at the wall, which she did not see,"without anything to go upon? |
14490 | How can the child reach any true development,she asked,"if you interfere with her like this?" |
14490 | How could I divine an inanity in connection with you? |
14490 | How could I possibly know? |
14490 | How did it go-- last night? |
14490 | How do you know all that? |
14490 | How do you propose to help it, if you go in for doing better or cheaper what somebody else has been doing before? |
14490 | How do you, do? |
14490 | How does the novel come on? |
14490 | How is Janet? |
14490 | How is it? |
14490 | I ca n''t think where she gets the energy or the brains--"Ca n''t you? |
14490 | I know I''m late, but you will not punish me by another postponement, will you? |
14490 | I said''Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool?'' |
14490 | In London? 14490 In the original?" |
14490 | Is Golightly Ticke your friend-- completely? |
14490 | Is it an order? |
14490 | Is it true that you are going to write your own experiences in the_ corps de ballet?_she asked ironically. |
14490 | Is n''t he-- atheistical, Mrs. Bell, and improper every way? |
14490 | Is n''t that dainty? |
14490 | Is she as pretty as I am? |
14490 | Is that all? |
14490 | Is that to be the limit of your heartless proceedings? |
14490 | Is, that all? |
14490 | It is I, Janet,she said;"may I?" |
14490 | It shows a taste in reading beyond her years, does n''t it, Miss Kimpsey? 14490 It_ is_ chic, is n''t it? |
14490 | May I ask what particular thing occurs to you? |
14490 | May I show those two little things I copied? |
14490 | Miss Cardiff asked you who wrote it? |
14490 | More than one? |
14490 | More than two or three? 14490 Mr. Kendal went to remonstrate with you, too, did n''t he? |
14490 | Much over thirty? |
14490 | My darling, it ca n''t hurt-- it does n''t, does it? |
14490 | My father thought that we were being improperly robbed of your society, and went to try to persuade you to return, did n''t he? 14490 My good friends,"cried Mademoiselle Palicsky from the doorway,"have you been quarrelling?" |
14490 | No? |
14490 | Now,said she,"do you understand?" |
14490 | Oh, is n''t he? 14490 Paris?" |
14490 | Pit did you say, sir? 14490 Playing with fire?" |
14490 | Really? 14490 Really?" |
14490 | Shall I tell you truly, literally-- brutally? |
14490 | Shall we go downstairs now? |
14490 | Should you be opposed to it? |
14490 | Still nobody in the secret but Lash and Black? |
14490 | Suppose we go up and propose it to her? |
14490 | Tell me, Buddha, why have they all been sent back? 14490 Tell me, do_ you_ want me to give it up-- my book-- last night I finished it-- my ambition?" |
14490 | The Lord Mayor''s Show? |
14490 | The man who did that had a joy in his life, had n''t he? 14490 The old rooms in Bryanston Street, I suppose?" |
14490 | Then you_ have_ been in London? |
14490 | Then,she said, with just a little more significance in her voice than she intended,"you would rather not find out?" |
14490 | To what,she demanded mockingly,"am I to attribute the honor of this visit?" |
14490 | Truly am I, Janetta? 14490 Well,"she asked directly, with a failing heart as she saw his face,"what is your good news?" |
14490 | Well? |
14490 | Well? |
14490 | Were you paid for them? |
14490 | What colored eyes? |
14490 | What do you suggest? |
14490 | What does Mr. Tommy Morrow do? |
14490 | What else could you have meant? 14490 What has happened, dear?" |
14490 | What have we that is so important that you have n''t got? |
14490 | What have you been doing? |
14490 | What is it, Nadie? |
14490 | What is it? |
14490 | What made you think of it? 14490 When am I to be allowed to see the proofs?" |
14490 | When did I come back? |
14490 | When will you be ready for inspection? |
14490 | While I think of it, Janet,said she laying a mittened hand on Miss Cardiff''s arm,"what has become of your eccentric little American friend? |
14490 | Why did n''t you go? |
14490 | Why should n''t Frida go to Kamschatka, if she wants to, without giving us notice? 14490 Why, Ticke lives here too-- the gentle Golightly-- do you know him?" |
14490 | Why? |
14490 | Will it come soon? |
14490 | Will you give us our tea? |
14490 | Yes? |
14490 | You are an American, are n''t you? |
14490 | You ask me to give it up? |
14490 | You did not expect me to deny myself that pleasure? |
14490 | You have come back sooner than you intended? |
14490 | You know, then? |
14490 | You little brute,she said to Buddha, who still smiled as she blew out the candle,"ca n''t you forget it?" |
14490 | You paint yourself, I fancy? |
14490 | You said something about being like Cleopatra, a creature of infinite variety, did n''t you? 14490 You would n''t have, would you?" |
14490 | You''ll be very careful, wo n''t you, daddy dear-- not to hurt her feelings in any way, I mean? |
14490 | You''ve never thought of doing a novel? |
14490 | You_ sail?_ On Thursday? |
14490 | You_ sail?_ On Thursday? |
14490 | _ Cher maitre!_ You mean it? |
14490 | _ How_ are we so different, Elfrida? |
14490 | A dozen, perhaps?" |
14490 | After all, what business of his was it to interfere, especially when he knew that she attached such absurd importance to his opinion? |
14490 | Ah, should Janet''s friend go so far as to say that? |
14490 | Am I very unreasonable? |
14490 | And I thought--""What did you think, dearest?" |
14490 | And can he choose? |
14490 | And did you go to Barbizon?" |
14490 | And has he the touch? |
14490 | And has n''t he been too long a Royal Academician and a member of the Church of England, and a believer in himself? |
14490 | And how old?" |
14490 | And if you believed it, what more is there to say?" |
14490 | And it has made a tremendous hit, has n''t it?" |
14490 | And now, do n''t you think we''ve had enough of Miss Elfrida Bell for the present?" |
14490 | And of course you know about your mother''s idea of coming over here to settle?" |
14490 | Another in her place might have added,"And why did you write so seldom?" |
14490 | Apparently not, for she went on:"It seems to me it is the exception in that class, as in all classes, that rewards interest--"That rewards interest? |
14490 | Are n''t you the least bit afraid that in the end your work may become-- pardon me-- commercial, like the rest? |
14490 | Are there no more-- anywhere?" |
14490 | At any moment her father might come in, and then how could she support the situation? |
14490 | Besides, Lady Halifax is quite equal to representing the whole British public by herself, are n''t you, dear?" |
14490 | But he lingered over his tea, and when he took her hand to bid her good- by he looked down at her and said,"Was I very brutal?" |
14490 | But in that case would not Mrs. Jordan have written"Gone to America"? |
14490 | But is n''t it ridiculous to pay for apples by the_ pound?_ And then they''re not worth eating. |
14490 | But it''s adorably savage, is n''t it?" |
14490 | But there must be scullery- maid''s work in literature-- in journalism, is n''t there? |
14490 | But what about always-- what about generally, Janetta? |
14490 | But why not for the Academy, since you are disposed to do me that honor?" |
14490 | But why this talk of forgiveness? |
14490 | But,"she clinched it notwithstanding, and rather quickly,"will you take me to see Miss Cardiff? |
14490 | But-- have you given up Lucien?" |
14490 | Ca n''t we make up our minds to have a little charity for the flaws?" |
14490 | Ca n''t you understand?" |
14490 | Candidly,"she added, looking at him with a courageous smile,"prejudice apart, is it not magnificent material?" |
14490 | Could she induce him to show it to her, some day? |
14490 | Could you give me a cigarette?" |
14490 | Could you imagine,"she went on, with a whimsical spoiled shake of her head,"any one else doing it?" |
14490 | Curtis?" |
14490 | Did she suppose that she advanced palpably nearer to the proprieties in dining with him in one place rather than the other? |
14490 | Did this strange young woman not realize that it was impossible to discuss beings like"Sapho"with one''s father in the room? |
14490 | Do n''t you find him rather-- a good deal-- interested?" |
14490 | Do they talk of it seriously?" |
14490 | Do you feel disposed to do it?" |
14490 | Do you find London confusing? |
14490 | Do you love me, Janetta? |
14490 | Do you love me-- are you quite sure you love me?" |
14490 | Do you mind if I put it in a better light?" |
14490 | Do you see her often? |
14490 | Do you see the_ Decade?_ The_ Decade''s_ article on the pictures in last week''s number fairly brought me back to town." |
14490 | Do you think people woo with improper warmth-- at that age, Miss Kimpsey?" |
14490 | Do you understand that? |
14490 | Elfrida cried, noting Janet''s hesitation with a kind of wonder-- how should it be exacted of her to be anything more than frank? |
14490 | From what you see, Janetta_ mia_, what should you_ think?_ Myself, I do n''t quite know. |
14490 | Had there always been this absolute single- mindedness between them? |
14490 | Has n''t Philadelphia improved her beyond your wildest dreams?" |
14490 | Has there ever been anything but the clearest honesty between us? |
14490 | Have n''t you felt that?" |
14490 | Have you ever done anything of the sort before? |
14490 | He felt an inexplicable jar when she suddenly said,"Did you ever do anything-- of this sort-- for Janet?" |
14490 | He was conscious only that it was a bore that she should refuse, and very inconsistent; had n''t she often dined with him at the Cafe Florian? |
14490 | Her heart stood still with another thought-- could she have gone with Kendal? |
14490 | Home supplies stopped?" |
14490 | How are-- how are_ you?_"The slight emphasis she placed on the last word was airy and regardless. |
14490 | How could it possibly matter? |
14490 | How could she say it, and yet seem uneager, indifferent? |
14490 | How long have you got for this-- experiment?" |
14490 | I did n''t know there were any ladies on the London press, except, of course, the fashion- papers, but that is n''t quite the same, is it?" |
14490 | I mean,"she added, noting his look of consternation,"will you ask her if I may come? |
14490 | I''d engage a special policeman-- the policemen_ are_ polite, are n''t they? |
14490 | I''m dying to see the phenomenal squash, and the prodigious water- melon, and--""And the falls of Niagara?" |
14490 | If you are going out, Mr. Ticke, will you post this for me? |
14490 | If you think her capable of assuming a motive--""Well, do you know what I think?" |
14490 | In Bohemia-- our country-- one may share one''s luck with a friend,_ n''est ce pas?_ I will not ask to be forgiven." |
14490 | In the meantime have you had the pneumonia?" |
14490 | Is it to be dumbness between us?" |
14490 | Is n''t it a good idea?" |
14490 | Is n''t it an uncommon grind?" |
14490 | Is that nothing to you?" |
14490 | Is the editor of the_ Athenian_ a dolt, Buddha? |
14490 | Is there anything here?" |
14490 | Is there no danger?" |
14490 | Is this one of them?" |
14490 | It is better so, do n''t you think?" |
14490 | Lucien, what was he like? |
14490 | May I keep it?" |
14490 | May I light a cigarette?" |
14490 | No, it was not probable that he understood-- what did a man know of love? |
14490 | No? |
14490 | Now, what is it, my dear child?" |
14490 | Oh, you got my note about the concert, dear lady?" |
14490 | Really?" |
14490 | Really_ love_ me? |
14490 | See? |
14490 | Shall I stop this''bus?" |
14490 | Shall we say good- by here and now? |
14490 | Shall we walk a bit along these dear boulevards, or shall I get a fiacre? |
14490 | She would change, he averred; might he be allowed to hope that she would change, and to wait-- months, years? |
14490 | She would write and ask him for something-- for what? |
14490 | So I have come to ask you whether you seriously thought so, or whether it was only politeness--_blague_--or what? |
14490 | So I suppose we can go on, ca n''t we?" |
14490 | Successful? |
14490 | Suppose that I was not quite mistress of myself-- I would rather not tell you why--""Is that true?" |
14490 | Tell me, though, what is she like, and particularly how old is she?" |
14490 | That comes off in November-- don''t you remember? |
14490 | The rooms are rather warm, do n''t you think?" |
14490 | Then why did n''t you remonstrate with me? |
14490 | To- day is very cheap and common, do n''t you think?" |
14490 | Was it a granduncle you were-- fond of?" |
14490 | Was it coming already, then? |
14490 | Was monsieur then not aware? |
14490 | Was_ that_ what they gave you the medal for?" |
14490 | What brutality had she been guilty of toward Elfrida in that moment of unreasonable jealousy that surged up between them? |
14490 | What did you say?" |
14490 | What do you mean? |
14490 | What do you think of it? |
14490 | What do you think of the meals in Victoria''s country, Miss Bell? |
14490 | What had become of her strained feeling about Janet? |
14490 | What had come to her with this thing Janet had told her? |
14490 | What had she thought they could possibly signify-- what could anything she might say possibly signify? |
14490 | What new preposterous caprice was this? |
14490 | What shall I do if malice and all uncharitableness follow? |
14490 | When did you come back to town?" |
14490 | When is he likely to be in? |
14490 | When will you come? |
14490 | Where are you living, Miss Bell?" |
14490 | Why did n''t you let me know?" |
14490 | Why do you laugh?" |
14490 | Why had not Elfrida come up at once to this third- story den of theirs she knew so well? |
14490 | Why should she be frightened? |
14490 | Why should you have been so good? |
14490 | Why the devil had n''t he locked the door? |
14490 | Will Thursday suit?" |
14490 | Will you come to- morrow?" |
14490 | Will you tell her that there is somebody who takes a special delight in every word she writes?" |
14490 | Yet how could she unsay anything? |
14490 | You agree, do n''t you, that it is the best of me?" |
14490 | You ask me to_ forgive_ you-- but what question is there of forgiveness? |
14490 | You do n''t lie as a general thing, and why now? |
14490 | You have everything; you succeed in_ all_ the things you do-- you suffocate me-- do you understand? |
14490 | You want to prepare me for anything, do n''t you? |
14490 | You will let me give you a cup of tea now, wo n''t you?" |
14490 | You will not be angry-- perhaps?" |
14490 | You would not have thought anything so bad of me perhaps?" |
14490 | _ Ce n''est pas poli_, Buddha dear, but you are always honest, are n''t you?" |
14490 | cried Janet,"it''s a find, is n''t it, daddy?" |
14490 | he cried,"how did you know I had come back?" |
14490 | he went on impatiently, as she still sat silent,"why are you so unnaturally dull, Janet? |
14490 | said she,"you refer me to those, do you? |
12983 | ''Have you the CODE WORD?'' 12983 ... We could hear a voice boasting:''Did you see that BLOOD in yonder? |
12983 | A nice party, is n''t it? |
12983 | Again your fairy tale? |
12983 | Alex, are you really going? |
12983 | Anything identical with our six weeks of life? |
12983 | Are you crazy? |
12983 | Are you getting tired of this muzzle, too? 12983 But-- tell me before everything else, can I stay here?" |
12983 | Ca n''t the Princess understand how risky these writings are for us? |
12983 | Can I join you? |
12983 | Can not you arrange something for me so that I could be with you in your business? 12983 Cold outside, is n''t it?" |
12983 | Comrades, do you think I am going to drive so far for his rotten wound? |
12983 | Did he say who wrote this? |
12983 | Did the British Embassy intervene? |
12983 | Did you consent, Fost? |
12983 | Do n''t they get enough? 12983 Do n''t_ we_ have a table cloth? |
12983 | Do you realize, what you are talking about? 12983 Do you remember the man who was playing near me in Monte Carlo the day we met?" |
12983 | Do_ your_ questions give_ me_ the same right of investigation? 12983 Ever see the bloodsucker before? |
12983 | Going to stay, or going further,--what do you ask for? 12983 Have_ we_ anything to eat?" |
12983 | How do you like it? |
12983 | How do you like this costume? |
12983 | Is that so? |
12983 | Is_ that_ so? |
12983 | It''s easy,he continued,--"supposing I give you a good letter of recommendation to my people in Ekaterinburg? |
12983 | Maroossia? 12983 May I ask you the real cause of your resignation?" |
12983 | May I take these with me? |
12983 | Now,--she said, gazing around with a dear grimace,--"again in your element, in dirt? |
12983 | Now,--what is it? |
12983 | Petrograd? |
12983 | Please,the same voice said,"ca n''t you give any advice to us? |
12983 | Say,the Englishman asked,"are you English? |
12983 | Since when has it been your business, your burjooi honor? |
12983 | So I feel, old man, exactly so,he laughed,--"aren''t all of them the rottenest types one ever saw? |
12983 | Stay here? 12983 Syvorotka and Lucie?" |
12983 | This ass is propagating,--don''t you see, comrades? |
12983 | Try?--"Why? |
12983 | Tumen? 12983 Vysotsky?" |
12983 | Wait a while,Botkin said,"I still would like to know whom I have the pleasure of speaking to?" |
12983 | What do you advise me to do? |
12983 | What is your business? |
12983 | Where to? |
12983 | Where? |
12983 | Who are''they''? 12983 Who asked_ you_ to come?" |
12983 | Who is_ he_? |
12983 | Who_ is_ he? 12983 Why do n''t we shoot? |
12983 | Why not? |
12983 | You do? 12983 You see, you boneheaded fool,"Mikhalovsky continued,"what was the danger? |
12983 | _ Fox_--who was''Fox''? |
12983 | ''And what did he DO with the bodies?''... |
12983 | ''Are you an Englishman, or a Russian,--you CAN NOT BE A GERMAN,--or ARE YOU AN AMERICAN? |
12983 | ''Are you not satisfied with results?''... |
12983 | ''Are you sure this man has it?''... |
12983 | ''BURNED UP?... |
12983 | ''Did n''t throw them in the well?''... |
12983 | ''How do you KNOW I wo n''t swindle you?'' |
12983 | ''I am taking my ORDERS from above,''he answered....''_ Who?_''I asked. |
12983 | ''If regicides are so easily arranged,''I observed cautiously,''perhaps the duration of this"Revolution"is also definitely determined?''... |
12983 | ''Nonsense,''grunted the other;''have n''t we a thousand eyes at Harbin who know about the Chinese Eastern deal?''... |
12983 | ''WHAT?''... |
12983 | ''WHO DID THE KILLING?''... |
12983 | ''What instructions?'' |
12983 | ''What kind of a mountebank was RASPUTIN?'' |
12983 | ''What manner of TRAP is she setting for me now?''... |
12983 | ''Who burned them?''... |
12983 | ''Who is this encyclopà ¦ dic lady?'' |
12983 | ''Who is this man?'' |
12983 | ''Why did you SANDBAG me?'' |
12983 | ''Will you be blindfolded?'' |
12983 | ''_ Captain?''_... |
12983 | ''_ Where are the others_?'' |
12983 | 46 I wonder where Lucie is now? |
12983 | 51 To kill a man? |
12983 | A cave man? |
12983 | A fat butcher? |
12983 | A man who looks like Turguenev, smells of French perfumes, speaks of the arts and is a contractor!?... |
12983 | A sentimental, but dirty druggist? |
12983 | A sick man? |
12983 | Again I muttered my thanks....''How long have you been a member?'' |
12983 | Am I not an old ass? |
12983 | An ex- soldier? |
12983 | And how about_ you_ knowing too much?" |
12983 | And if so,--how deep is your interest? |
12983 | Anything to look at? |
12983 | Anyway, WHAT can I do?... |
12983 | Are n''t these youngsters peculiar? |
12983 | Are n''t you going to tell me? |
12983 | Are n''t you mean to your Lucie?... |
12983 | Are they both dead? |
12983 | Are you following me? |
12983 | Are you in love, young man?" |
12983 | Are you wounded? |
12983 | Ask fifty rubles, understand?" |
12983 | Balniaux and the Petite Valon at the card tables after our sparkling dinners a few years ago.... And where is that fire- eating Prince now?... |
12983 | Besides he gives me money, so why should n''t I? |
12983 | Besides, why should I? |
12983 | Better tell me if I can have some beer? |
12983 | But WHAT IF WE ALL ARE BURIED HERE like the happy families of Herculaneum and Pompeii?... |
12983 | But WHAT KIND of help?... |
12983 | But first-- what are you doing here? |
12983 | But it would be an excellent idea to appreciate this mere fact properly, do n''t you think so?" |
12983 | But she-- a Foreign Lady?... |
12983 | But she? |
12983 | But what can one think of murders? |
12983 | By whom? |
12983 | Ca n''t we live without deceiving each other, without robbing,--eh? |
12983 | Ca n''t you keep in your mind your impressions? |
12983 | Ca n''t you picture how happy we can be afterwards? |
12983 | Ca n''t you see? |
12983 | Ca n''t you tell this to the Budishchev''s-- perhaps they can do something?" |
12983 | Can I chat with you a bit? |
12983 | Can we try these bloodsuckers here?" |
12983 | Can you believe me when I swear I am telling the truth? |
12983 | Cash? |
12983 | Could n''t you join me for dinner tonight at Contant, say at seven- thirty?" |
12983 | Could you take me to the depot, then?" |
12983 | Could you take me to the hospital on the Devitche Pole?" |
12983 | Could you use your power and place him in a hospital? |
12983 | Demobilized?" |
12983 | Democratisation of French cooking, or vulgarisation of exclusive tastes(?) |
12983 | Did Russia take_ from them_ Pushkin, Chaikovsky, Mechnikov, Tolstoi and the brilliant web of savants, musicians, soldiers, explorers and poets?... |
12983 | Did not you ask me before to do so? |
12983 | Did she cry for the past, or dream of the future?... |
12983 | Did she pray-- crushed, humble, and lost? |
12983 | Did she think of our black ingratitude, she who did so much for the wounded soldiers and for the families of those killed? |
12983 | Did she think of the capricious Fate, which played with her young life so nastily? |
12983 | Did you see how I treat him?" |
12983 | Do n''t you need a friend? |
12983 | Do n''t you need me? |
12983 | Do n''t you see that the building up of the state needs the full co- operation of every element of Russia,--the new ones, as well as the old?" |
12983 | Do n''t you think I saw you here? |
12983 | Do n''t you think the air is pacifying? |
12983 | Do n''t you think, mister writer, of what a sweet, what a wonderful word''revenge''is? |
12983 | Do you know the contents?" |
12983 | Do you promise? |
12983 | Do you think that you can protect us? |
12983 | Does it only look, or did it become?... |
12983 | Electrified-- they all got up, Trotsky first, although with the remark"For why"? |
12983 | Finally he asked,''Would you not like to meet my SISTER who has been so much_ interested_ in you?'' |
12983 | Friend,--what can I do to hasten it? |
12983 | God, what will grow out of_ you_?... |
12983 | Going to stay in Tumen, or plan to go further?" |
12983 | Goroshkin put in the bag in Moscow? |
12983 | Have you come from Russia? |
12983 | He continued...."You ask how we get this money? |
12983 | He entered the Kornilov House, and after short conversation with the chamber- lackey,--"Did you wish to speak to me?" |
12983 | Her lover?... |
12983 | His suffering face was not at all familiar to me,--so, when he asked me,"Have n''t we met before?" |
12983 | How about other private citizens? |
12983 | How about the chart, and about the?..." |
12983 | How are you?" |
12983 | How can I avenge Russia?..." |
12983 | How can I do otherwise? |
12983 | How can I explain your presence here? |
12983 | How did she get them? |
12983 | How did you happen to pick out_ your name_?" |
12983 | How did you think of leaving Tumen? |
12983 | How do you like_ this_? |
12983 | How in the devil am I to slip through the lines with those devilish English and French officers scattered around everywhere?... |
12983 | How is it? |
12983 | How is your cook?" |
12983 | How_ did_ you dare to write such stories about me? |
12983 | I answered as nonchalantly as I could, having covered my mouth with my glove,"soll''ich noch warten?" |
12983 | I answered oracularly....''You still remember your instructions?''... |
12983 | I asked, assuming an air of astonishment,"Vysotsky?" |
12983 | I gasped,--''what brings YOU here?'' |
12983 | I have to protect you besides, you idiot; Fost can only see what is in the house, but supposing someone comes from down here? |
12983 | I heard no answer....''DO YOU HEAR ME?''... |
12983 | I know enough Russian to make out that much--""Evidently one of the Revolutionary officials?" |
12983 | I received the impression( or perhaps I am getting too nervous and suspicious?) |
12983 | I said with extreme pleasure and tapping him on the shoulder,"Where are their rooms?" |
12983 | I see you can not decide, though you_ all_ do n''t want the trial_ here!_ Is that so? |
12983 | I thought a little while before asking,''When do I start?''... |
12983 | I wonder if you''d mind looking them over if the nurse''d get them out?" |
12983 | I wonder what Goroshkin and Marchenko think of me? |
12983 | I wonder whether she is trying to get the Emperor out too?... |
12983 | I wonder who is praying?..." |
12983 | If he has the code from Odessa he will ask:''_ Are you taking me to be shot_?''... |
12983 | If he is dead-- what happened to Marchenko? |
12983 | If police officers enlist in the communists,--what is next? |
12983 | If so, why this game of the Smolny crowd? |
12983 | In the same shrill voice the man asked:''Have you memorized it?'' |
12983 | Is he dead? |
12983 | Is it a pose? |
12983 | Is it true they are to take Father away? |
12983 | Is n''t he a...?" |
12983 | Is n''t it a correct translation from my Russian into theirs? |
12983 | Is n''t it a crowd of the same enemies of the people? |
12983 | Is n''t it funny, Alex, how the time has passed?" |
12983 | Is n''t there anyone to choke him?" |
12983 | Is n''t this''Parliament''against our will? |
12983 | Is she paid? |
12983 | Is she sick? |
12983 | Is that so?" |
12983 | Is the former Czar and his Imperial family still alive? |
12983 | Is the history of Russia-- these pages of blood and sacrifices--_made by them_? |
12983 | Just a trip?" |
12983 | Lucie? |
12983 | Maintain perfect silence, answer all question,--make NO inquiries-- understand?''... |
12983 | Monsieur Makarov? |
12983 | My''prisoner''poked me in the ribs impulsively and smiled....''Where are the BODIES?''... |
12983 | No moon, no electricity.... Where is my new Peugeot now? |
12983 | No? |
12983 | No? |
12983 | Now what is their plan? |
12983 | Now, what do you say to giving them a night to think the matter over before we_ line them up_? |
12983 | Now, what in the hell of hells, do they mean by this? |
12983 | Of course, it is transitory.... Wo n''t you take some more, please?... |
12983 | On the other hand-- woman speaks to the man about it with a concealed contempt: what does_ a man_ understand? |
12983 | Once only, when Kobylinsky was changing sentinels he bumped into the Emperor, and the latter said''"Still a Colonel?" |
12983 | Or Canadian, I fancy?" |
12983 | Or are you serious? |
12983 | Or napkins? |
12983 | Or, perhaps, in her mind was the present,--and behind those noble eyebrows, were thoughts and plans to fight still.... Perhaps there was hope? |
12983 | Or, true to his master, was he hanged defending my automobile? |
12983 | Perhaps she has more of self- control not to show it,--nevertheless the amount of her bitterness of life must be the same, if not deeper, than mine? |
12983 | Promises?... |
12983 | Say,_ who_ is against it? |
12983 | Shall I consider myself in the game, or did the whole organization end; shall I continue on my own behalf? |
12983 | Shall we, proletarians, consider the question of a Constituent Assembly? |
12983 | She answered my question by asking,''Were they not BURNED?''... |
12983 | So what''s the big idea?" |
12983 | So you see.... What were we talking about?... |
12983 | So, regardless of other things,--what would you advise me to do now?" |
12983 | Spying?" |
12983 | Supposing there were someone among them who would go and try this buying proposition? |
12983 | The Baroness, who?... |
12983 | Then that deep heavy voice:''What did it look like?'' |
12983 | Then the Pole approached:"How much would you take from me not to go up at all, and let me do it alone?" |
12983 | Then the question was asked:"Any idea who wrote this diary-- the one written in a quick running hand?'' |
12983 | There was a_ silence_ that could be felt.... None offered an explanation that I could hear....''Why do n''t you answer?'' |
12983 | This entry follows:"I must jot this down now-- who knows what may happen?... |
12983 | To whom? |
12983 | Trotzky''s going to a high mass? |
12983 | Understand?" |
12983 | Usually,"Very cold,"or"How snowy,"or"Have you a cigarette?" |
12983 | Vysotsky, Vysotsky, what was the Christian name, perhaps that would help me out?" |
12983 | WHO was that woman?... |
12983 | We all enjoyed this little story:-- A German girl was asked:"Können sie Ibsen?" |
12983 | What are these daggers for?" |
12983 | What are"they"( meaning the prisoners) doing? |
12983 | What can we do? |
12983 | What do you mean by''going away''?" |
12983 | What do you think if I scare him more?" |
12983 | What does it mean?... |
12983 | What is it!?..." |
12983 | What is the use of the Emperor''s release to me? |
12983 | What is the use? |
12983 | What is this plan? |
12983 | What is your suspicion?" |
12983 | What shall I do with you, Alex? |
12983 | What will they do with the Emperor? |
12983 | What would you advise us to do? |
12983 | What''s in it?" |
12983 | What? |
12983 | What_ is_ a Constituant Assembly? |
12983 | What_ is_ the use?" |
12983 | When I informed her that I had never met this gentleman her eyes grew very big...."''What ARE you?'' |
12983 | When I was thinking over how to do it-- a voice called:"Bist du dort, Swartz?" |
12983 | Where in the hell could I?... |
12983 | Where is Anton? |
12983 | Where was I going? |
12983 | Which one do you mean?" |
12983 | Who and what brought you here?" |
12983 | Who are these people? |
12983 | Who are you?" |
12983 | Who in the devil will nowadays snivel about Spring and myths? |
12983 | Who is Syvorotka? |
12983 | Who is building the state? |
12983 | Who is driving it now? |
12983 | Who knows? |
12983 | Who said it is_ not_ so? |
12983 | Who told you that something happened to her?" |
12983 | Who_ is_ this woman? |
12983 | Whose baggage?" |
12983 | Why am I so sad and so blue? |
12983 | Why did you drag Maroossia into your business? |
12983 | Why did you leave? |
12983 | Why do you do it? |
12983 | Why do you risk your life? |
12983 | Why do you think we intend to send him to Ekaterinburg? |
12983 | Why is there such a hatred for these,--this poor man, these five women and a boy? |
12983 | Why not go to England, or Japan, or Sweden? |
12983 | Why not take him? |
12983 | Why should I trouble you with my questions? |
12983 | Why should lawyers be convinced, that their profession gives them the right,_ primo genio_ to be statesmen? |
12983 | Why should n''t you? |
12983 | Why should we send him towards the approaching Czechs?" |
12983 | Why should_ you_ be disgusted, and why should_ you_ leave us at this strenuous moment? |
12983 | Why? |
12983 | Why? |
12983 | Wie macht man das?" |
12983 | Wo n''t you sit down, please?" |
12983 | Would it not be an act of counter- revolution? |
12983 | Would you talk to a man with such a name? |
12983 | Yes? |
12983 | You ca n''t blame me, can you?" |
12983 | You never answer my letters, but could n''t you manage to acknowledge them? |
12983 | You remember''L''Aiglon?'' |
12983 | You think they will forget such an outrage to the Soviets? |
12983 | You understand?" |
12983 | You would not call such a case so gently, I suppose?" |
12983 | You''ll try? |
12983 | You,--you call yourself a Russian sailor? |
12983 | You? |
12983 | _ Did they_ make efforts to save small mutilated nations? |
12983 | _ Where''s my lieutenant_?''... |
12983 | and"Somebody open the window; who in hell is smoking such... tobacco( I omit the adjective, though correct and strikingly expressive, but profane)?" |
12983 | case, and how is she now?" |
12983 | exclaimed Maria....''WHY ca n''t we start doing THAT NOW?'' |
12983 | from HE of Gallipoli;''when will my lieutenant report?''... |
12983 | he continued aloud,''this merely says that the Heir Apparent will make a cruise of the world in a man- of- war; what does that signify?''... |
12983 | lamented the ex- Czar....''May I ask your actual estimate of creatures like Rasputin?'' |
12983 | said one of the men whom I had all along suspected of being_ suspicious_ of MY conduct....''What say the rest of you?'' |
12983 | she asked taking me by the arm,"Are you_ really_ going out just not to be with me? |
12983 | she asked,"You want to see the Princess? |
12983 | she insisted;''did n''t I see that little wasp Kerensky give it to his cousin, and did n''t I see that cousin give it to this man in America?''... |
12983 | she muttered, as if to herself, and swallowing the words,"you are Syvorotka? |
12983 | which? |
12983 | who got it? |
12983 | why, did you notice those stoves in the house?... |
2156 | How could we have attained this measure of victory had not your Majesty''s soul in heaven bestowed upon us your protecting influence? |
2156 | How should it endure that the spirits of the great dead should be insulted by the everlasting visitation of this scourge? |
2156 | The question was this: May converts to Christianity continue the worship of ancestors? |
2156 | Why then should we repine to- day that victory has tarried long? |
20668 | ''Has she glass beads round her neck?'' |
20668 | ''Have they bracelets on their hands?'' |
20668 | ''Have they crowns on their heads?'' |
20668 | ''Have they rings in their ears?'' |
20668 | ''Have they shoes on their feet?'' |
20668 | ''Have they the doll in their hands?'' |
20668 | ''What can the washerman do in a village where the people live naked?'' |
20668 | ''Why, what is the worst,''he said,''that you can do to me?'' |
20668 | A cocoanut was placed on the ground, and the priest, holding the pickaxe by the point in his right hand, said,''Shall I strike?'' |
20668 | A similar state of things prevailed in classical antiquity: Who are these coming to the sacrifice? |
20668 | And did he not die within three months?" |
20668 | And did he not the very day after their execution begin to spit blood? |
20668 | Do you take me for an Arain?'' |
20668 | From Ratanpur they all journeyed to Chura( Chhuri? |
20668 | My husband will beat me and who will pay him the compensation? |
20668 | On coming to the house they kick down the matting which covers the doorway; the man inside says,''Who are you?'' |
20668 | So he asked the Banjaras,"What have you done with the five travellers, my good friends? |
20668 | The priest is on the roof of the house, and before the wedding he cries out:''Are the king and queen here?'' |
20668 | To what green altar, O mysterious priest, Lead''st thou that heifer lowing at the skies, And all her silken flanks with garlands drest? |
20668 | When Mudhaji Sindhia caused seventy Thugs to be executed at Mathura was he not warned in a dream by Devi that he should release them? |
20668 | Who cares for sisters and cousins in these days of civilisation?'' |
20668 | how may he cross the border of another country? |
20668 | how may he eat another''s_ banwat_? |
20668 | how may he go to another country? |
20668 | how may he touch another''s bower? |
20668 | how shall he bathe with strange water? |
20668 | how shall he marry another woman? |
20668 | said the king, observing him;''the monthly bill, is it?'' |
20423 | And as to other kinds of knowledge, erudition, learning, how do they profit the possessor? |
20423 | But if that is so, why are we not all perfectly complacent and contented, why do we love and grieve and wish to be different? |
20423 | But is it true? |
20423 | Can I say what I believe the wine of life to be? |
20423 | Can not we somehow learn to simplify life? |
20423 | Did he indeed do that? |
20423 | How many people, I wonder, can say that of any home that has sheltered them for so long? |
20423 | How then is this faith to be sustained? |
20423 | It was Scott, I think, who asked indignantly, Lives there the man with soul so dead, Who never to himself hath said This is my own, my native land? |
20423 | Just to live and forget, to be hurt and healed, to be strong and grow weak? |
20423 | Must we continue to think that we can inspire children in rows? |
20423 | Ought one not to be able to take beauty as it comes? |
20423 | Shall we then draw a cynical conclusion from all this, and say that knowledge is a useless burden; or if we think so, why do we think it? |
20423 | That as the spirit falls into faintness, the body should curdle into worse than dust? |
20423 | The other said,"Why do you say that? |
20423 | The thing is to say, as the prim governess says in Shirley,"You acknowledge the inestimable worth of principle?" |
20423 | To give each a memory of things sharp and sweet, that no one else remembers, and then to destroy that? |
20423 | Was that a relation it was well to establish? |
20423 | What are we to do? |
20423 | What if one does not want to know these things, as Shelley said to his lean and embarrassed tutor at Oxford? |
20423 | What is his renunciation to be? |
20423 | What part did it play in the mighty universe? |
20423 | What then is one born for? |
20423 | What was it all about? |
20423 | What was the significance of the little business that had been engaging our minds and tongues? |
20423 | What were we all doing there? |
20423 | What would one think of a host, whose one object was to make his guests eat and drink and do exactly what he himself enjoyed? |
20423 | When shall I awake? |
20423 | Why do they lose it, why do they settle down on the lees of life, why do they snuggle down among comfortable opinions? |
20423 | Why will you go no further with me?" |
19321 | Then comes the question, Why do some live rather than others? 19321 Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
19321 | _ Now, is not this a most extraordinary situation? 19321 ( Quoted by W. H. Griffith Thomas in_What about Evolution? |
19321 | And did those paws gradually become enlarged, till, after some generations, they were real wings? |
19321 | And how could these organs serve their purpose while the complex instincts required for their functioning were only in course of development? |
19321 | And was not that ancestor probably a wingless, though not a legless mammal? |
19321 | And what becomes of the"ages"of speculative geology? |
19321 | Are we to admit, in the face of all that has been said about the fixity of species( to mention only this), the reasonableness of such an assumption? |
19321 | But do they? |
19321 | But how could a spur be evolved in either sex? |
19321 | But how did Cromwell, Lincoln, Bismarck arise? |
19321 | But what are the facts? |
19321 | But what are the facts? |
19321 | But what happened in the meantime to those connecting links whose wings were but partly developed? |
19321 | But when are the contents of a parent''s mind transmitted to the child? |
19321 | Can anything be more cogent, more conclusive? |
19321 | Can we find any approximation to this in the different races known to be produced by selective breeding from a common stock? |
19321 | Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season? |
19321 | Civilization[ tr note: sic] have risen, civilizations have perished: is there in this traceable the working of natural law? |
19321 | Compare all that has been said by scientists themselves about the evolutionary theory, and what remains? |
19321 | Did he attempt to spring into the air and seize a passing insect, and reach out his paws to catch it? |
19321 | Do we find that scientists, though forced to surrender this prop, have given up atheistic evolution? |
19321 | Does it account for the origin of the universe, of life, and of the various forms of life? |
19321 | Does it conform to this scheme? |
19321 | Does orderliness and plan argue for development? |
19321 | For, indeed, what natural law can account for the rise of human institutions, so infinitely diversified in their structure? |
19321 | Has religion so developed? |
19321 | Have we not here a perfect case of what logicians call"reasoning in a circle,"or"begging the question?" |
19321 | He asks, concerning the heavenly bodies:"Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
19321 | How could they arise through natural selection( which is simply_ accident,_ of course), at all? |
19321 | How could they have been produced by evolution? |
19321 | How have they come to be what they are? |
19321 | How then explain the origin and rise of religion? |
19321 | If a special fiat was necessary at this point, why may it not have been at others? |
19321 | In a recent book,_"Creation or Evolution? |
19321 | Is it able to account for those things which it is set forth by its spokesmen to account for? |
19321 | Is it not clear that the same result can not be produced by causes so dissimilar? |
19321 | Is there a demonstrable development, by inherent forces, of human society, from lower to higher ranges of culture? |
19321 | It is an attempt to answer the old question, suggested to the thinking mind by a contemplation of nature:_ Whence_ these things? |
19321 | It is not extremely likely, assuming the development theory to be true, that both the mole and the bat sprang from a common ancestor? |
19321 | Now, how came the bat to acquire his wings? |
19321 | Or canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons?" |
19321 | The question arises: Can such characteristics be transmitted? |
19321 | The question suggests itself, do scientists to- day believe as Darwin did? |
19321 | The questions insistently call for an answer: How could these instincts preserve the animal when they were still in an incipient, undeveloped state? |
19321 | The real question is, What is the nature and the cause of the prevailing order? |
19321 | We now turn to the geologist and ask: How do you determine the age of the strata? |
19321 | We repeat it,--is not this a very, very extraordinary situation? |
19321 | We shall try to answer the question: Is the evolutionary theory entitled to the name of a working hypothesis? |
19321 | What force produced them? |
19321 | What is that? |
19321 | What made this one country boy the most astonishing genius in all the history of literature? |
19321 | What reason has a Christian to surrender his faith on account of the contradiction of scientists? |
19321 | What, in view of this situation, becomes of the evolutionist''s argument from fossils? |
19321 | What, then, is the verdict of history? |
19321 | What, then, remains of the theory? |
19321 | Whence did they evolve? |
19321 | Whence do all things come? |
19321 | Whence is force? |
19321 | Where is one single fact?" |
19321 | Why did they appear in the best place and nowhere else? |
19321 | Yet when is a girl born with ears and nose already pierced? |
19321 | _ Whence the backbone?_ All animals are divided into vertebrates and invertebrates, the animals with a backbone and animals without. |
19321 | _ Whence the breast?_ Vertebrates are either mammals or submammals. |
19321 | _"What is Physical Life? |
19321 | how can he help you? |
19321 | note: sic] Constantine the Great, Luther, Napoleon I, and Bismarck? |
19321 | note: sic] regarding these? |
19321 | what do you mean by trusting? |
16752 | A_ johur_, a last death- rush, is it not? |
16752 | Ah, that''s why you wore the rose that I came by at the_ nautch_? |
16752 | Ajeet has told why the men were brought-- for what purpose? |
16752 | And Sindhia took from Karowlee some territory, did n''t he? |
16752 | And as to Nana Sahib? |
16752 | And has any native seen these papers, Captain? |
16752 | And if they were lulled, and the message stolen, it would cause trouble? |
16752 | And meaning, Sahib, it would not be right if they saw you bearing on your horse one who is not a memsahib? |
16752 | And now, Gulab,he persisted,"if you thought I loved you would you kill the Missie Baba?" |
16752 | And that''s your reason for taking this awful chance, to save Ajeet and the others-- is it? |
16752 | And the Sahib is troubled? 16752 And the man to whom you were bound by your parents died?" |
16752 | And think you, Guru, that Ajeet will give you a present of rupees for this talk that is like the braying of an ass? |
16752 | And thou wert one of them? |
16752 | And was there talk of this message from the British to--? |
16752 | And you will, girl? |
16752 | Are you-- again? |
16752 | But have none been kind, Gulab-- pleased by your flower face, has no one warmed your heart? |
16752 | But if it were stolen would not Nana Sahib demand it, and then kill Ajeet? |
16752 | But is Amir Khan to be unavenged? |
16752 | But it is the message, Sahib, that is more than the life of a_ sepoy_, is it not? |
16752 | But pardon me, Prince,Barlow said hesitatingly,"did n''t going across the black- water to England break your caste anyway-- so why cut out the peg?" |
16752 | But the Sahib questioned of love; and how can one such know of love? 16752 But the dead Chief, Commander--?" |
16752 | But the gaol, Hazari Sahib? |
16752 | But why has Hunsa brought this tale to men of affairs? |
16752 | Did you hear all of Ajeet Singh''s story? |
16752 | Did you know then that I was a Sahib-- how did you know? |
16752 | Do n''t you know, Captain Barlow,the girl demanded,"that this woman, the Gulab, is one who uses her beauty to betray men, even Sahibs?" |
16752 | Dost hear that, Guru? |
16752 | For God''s sake, Elizabeth, what impossible thing has led you to believe that Captain Barlow has anything to do with this girl? |
16752 | Good day, Sirdar,he cried gaily; and,"How listen the gods to your prayers, my dear Dewani?" |
16752 | He is jamadar to the other, Prince-- but why? |
16752 | Here, you, what comes? |
16752 | Here,Kassim said, addressing the Hindu,"what means this spear upon this document? |
16752 | How-- who? |
16752 | I came to warn Amir Khan, and--"And what, woman-- the decoits were your own people? |
16752 | If I were thus would they know me? |
16752 | In a decoity is not the lowing of a cow in a village held to be an evil omen? |
16752 | Is not the voice of the cow heard at sunset a good omen, Guru? |
16752 | Is the Gulab jealous of the Missie Baba? |
16752 | Is there a memsahib in the home of the Sahib? |
16752 | It ca n''t be-- how could the princess be with men such? |
16752 | Not drinking, Prince? |
16752 | Now that a message has come will the Sahib go to the Pindari camp? |
16752 | Of Sindhia? |
16752 | Others-- who are they? |
16752 | Pardon, Sir? |
16752 | Sahib,she answered,"do not ask-- just go, because--""Yes, girl, why?" |
16752 | See, Dewani? |
16752 | Shall I read the written word? |
16752 | Sirdar, when you give an order to a soldier and he refuses to obey, what do you do? |
16752 | The Presence has observed Bootea, the one called Gulab Begum, who is with Ajeet Singh? |
16752 | The Sahib still has the Akbar Lamp-- the ruby? |
16752 | The attar, Sahib? 16752 The last one, my Prince?" |
16752 | The two who rode-- they were the Captain Sahib''s servants? |
16752 | These Bagrees are in the protection of Rajas, Karowlee, are they not? |
16752 | They were on the murdered messenger-- he was killed, was n''t he, Barlow? |
16752 | Thou art a seemly man, Ayub Alli, but thinkst thou that Amir Khan would have fear that thou sendst thy playthings by the orderly? |
16752 | Thou sayest so, but how know I that Hunsa is not in thy hand, and that thou didst not prepare the way for the killing? 16752 To the Sahib?" |
16752 | Were the bodies robbed by your men-- they would be-- did they find papers that would indicate the two were messengers? |
16752 | Were they servants of yours, Sahib-- these men who rode? |
16752 | What do the pilgrims there, for they go, it would seem, to Omkar? |
16752 | What do you mean by that? |
16752 | What has happened, Jamadar? |
16752 | What is it, Bootea? |
16752 | What is it-- you fear him? |
16752 | What is the way? |
16752 | What makes you say that? |
16752 | What of the two soldiers? |
16752 | What say you, Ajeet Singh? |
16752 | What then do you fear, Gulab? |
16752 | What was it? |
16752 | What would it avail? 16752 Where did Hunsa get it?" |
16752 | Where did you get this magnificent ruby, girl-- it is of great value? |
16752 | Where go you? |
16752 | Where is it now? |
16752 | Where is the woman you call the Gulab? |
16752 | Who has passed the guard here? |
16752 | Who is the handsome native-- he looks like a Rajput? |
16752 | Who sent thee to murder Amir Khan? |
16752 | Who? |
16752 | Why did n''t you tell me this before? |
16752 | Why do you ask that question? 16752 Why do you ask that, Gulab?" |
16752 | Why do you ask, Gulab? |
16752 | Why has the Afghan Musselman become a Hindu? |
16752 | Why have you come, Jamadar? |
16752 | Why should I go to Khureyra, Gulab? |
16752 | Why tell me this now,--to mock me, to exult? |
16752 | Why, Bootea? |
16752 | Why, lotus-- why, Gulab? 16752 Will the Commander have Hunsa searched for the paper the Sahib has spoken of?" |
16752 | Will they kill Ajeet? |
16752 | Would the Sahib sleep, and would his mind rest if he knew where the two who rode are? |
16752 | You are going now? |
16752 | You are going to the shrine of Omkar? |
16752 | You ca n''t save Amir Khan''s life unless you betray the Bagrees to him? |
16752 | You have the keys to the chest, Hunsa? |
16752 | You know something? |
16752 | You said, Gulab, that you had another reason for this awful trip; what is it? |
16752 | _ Me_, Gulab? |
16752 | _ Tulwar_ play, sir, and an appeal for protection to the British, eh? |
16752 | A jealous lover, perhaps, I think-- it would not have been Ayub Alli by any chance?" |
16752 | Again he sat up:"Why do you say this-- do you know where it is?" |
16752 | Ajeet turned upon the jamadar:"The one who is to be destroyed, say you, Hunsa? |
16752 | Am I right, Sirdar?" |
16752 | And Barlow, rather to hear her voice, for it was sweet like flute music, chaffed:"What is he like, the one that you love? |
16752 | And as to the_ chota hazri_, Sahib?" |
16752 | And has Amir Khan heard a whisper of reward and a dress of honour from Sindhia''s Dewan for his head?" |
16752 | And was there a sealed message?" |
16752 | Are ye all agreed that it is acceptable to our people?" |
16752 | Are you a princess in disguise?" |
16752 | At sight of Ajeet he descended, salaamed, and asked:"Has there been a decoity in the village-- is it war and bloodshed?" |
16752 | At this Sookdee laughed:"Jamadar,"he said,"what matters to a dead man the manner of his killing? |
16752 | Barlow laughed,"Because you are a girl who dances you are not to be saved, eh?" |
16752 | Barlow shot a quick searching look into the Pindari''s eyes; was it a covert threat? |
16752 | Barlow, though startled, schooled his voice to an even tone as he asked:"Where did you get this-- where is Ajeet?" |
16752 | But Barlow putting his fingers under her chin and gently lifting the face asked,"And what-- what?" |
16752 | But stay here, Sahib, they may be--"She stopped, and he asked,"May be who, Gulab?" |
16752 | But the guard swept him back with the butt of his long smooth- bore, crying:"Dog, where go you?" |
16752 | But this is heaven; and perhaps Omkar, when I make the sacrifice-- I mean offering-- will listen to Bootea''s prayers, and-- and--""And what, Gulab?" |
16752 | But you understand, do n''t you, Captain? |
16752 | CHAPTER XX"Is the one alone?" |
16752 | Captain Sahib; is it a message to send that is worthy of men to men?" |
16752 | Did n''t you ride this morning, or are you back early?" |
16752 | Did the Risiladar see my two servants that were mounted?" |
16752 | Did you see two riders of large horses, such as Arabs or of the breed I ride, men who rode as do_ sowars_?" |
16752 | Gently the soft voice of the_ chowkidar_ pulled him back out of his Nirvana of non- existence, and he called sleepily,"What is it?" |
16752 | Have you brought women with you that will lead this force? |
16752 | Have you heard from lips-- perhaps loosened by wine or desire-- aught of this?" |
16752 | He clasped her tight and laid his cheek against hers soothingly, and said,"Gulab, what is it? |
16752 | He continued:"We had talk on the road about the Pindaris; what did they who whisper in the dark say?" |
16752 | Hodson asked;"why were they here in this land and at the camp of the Bagrees?" |
16752 | If you pass the order that we are not to have rations now that we are far from home, what are we to do? |
16752 | Is it a hint to drive it home?" |
16752 | Is it of an alliance?" |
16752 | Is it some raja''s elephants and carts with his harem going to a_ durbar_?" |
16752 | It is as the runner said, war-- is it so, Sahib?" |
16752 | Kassim bellowed an order subduing the tumult; then he asked:"What art thou, a Patan, or as the woman says, an Englay?" |
16752 | Kassim held the paper at arm''s length toward Barlow, asking:"Is this the message thou brought?" |
16752 | Kassim whirled on Hunsa,"Where didst thou get it, dog of an infidel?" |
16752 | Presently she asked,"Will the Sahib go to Khureyra and have a knife thrust between his ribs?" |
16752 | Prosaically taking the matter in hand Barlow said,"You would wish to go back to your people at Chunda-- is it not so?" |
16752 | Rising he seized his tongs asking,"Who now will have it placed upon his palm?" |
16752 | See you not the jackal?" |
16752 | Seest that, Ajeet?" |
16752 | She saw his eyes looking down into hers, and asked,"What is it, Sahib-- what disturbs you? |
16752 | Something of robbery-- of a raid, was it?" |
16752 | The Commander turned to the Afghan:"Why hadst thou audience with the Chief alone and at night here-- what was the mission?" |
16752 | The Dewan turned to the Bagree,"Will Ajeet consent to the Gulab acting thus?" |
16752 | The Pindaris are the wild dogs of Hind, they are wolves, and is it easy to trap a wolf?" |
16752 | The Resident pushed irritably some papers on his desk, and turning in his chair, asked,"Can you explain this, Captain-- what it is all about?" |
16752 | The commander reined his Arab to a stand beside Barlow and saluted, saying,"Salaam, Major Sahib-- you ride alone?" |
16752 | The fighting Rajputs-- what of them? |
16752 | The girl pondered over this for a little, and then asked;"Does the Sahib think perhaps it is war against his people?" |
16752 | The priest shot a quick, searching look into the eyes of the speaker, then he asked,"And what service would the Sahib ask?" |
16752 | Then coming up to Barlow he held out his hand saying:"My dear boy, God be with you; but do n''t take chances-- will you?" |
16752 | Then he thought of Hunsa, and asked,"But are n''t you afraid to go with that beast, Hunsa?" |
16752 | Then, going out, he opened the door leading to the room of clamour, exclaiming angrily,"You fool, why do you scream in your dreams?" |
16752 | Then,"What made you say that?" |
16752 | Think you, then, Sahib, that an Ossary would betray a trust?" |
16752 | This is the reason you spoke of, Gulab-- good deeds; is it the only other reason?" |
16752 | What say thou, Captain Sahib?" |
16752 | What service want they of Amir Khan?" |
16752 | What''s up?" |
16752 | When the clattering scurry of Nana Sahib''s Arab had died out Baptiste turned to the Dewan, saying:"Well?" |
16752 | Who spoke in council that the merchant was to be killed? |
16752 | Why had he not treated her as an alien, kept all interest in abeyance? |
16752 | Why should I slay one such who was veritably a soldier, who was a follower of Mahomet?" |
16752 | Why was the shot, Hunsa?" |
16752 | You know, Sir, the playful name the chaps have given me for years?" |
16752 | You saw the Englishman, Captain Barlow?" |
16752 | You wish me to get that from the Rana?" |
16752 | and does anybody except the pater love Elizabeth?" |
16752 | if the one is killed how shall we know the truth?" |
16752 | the father gasped,"do you know what you are saying?" |
20382 | Are you badly hurt? |
20382 | How do you do? |
20382 | ( Since the above was written has it not been abundantly verified?) |
20382 | After selling the cattle and ranch the question at once came up-- What now? |
20382 | And meantime how were affairs going in my little place? |
20382 | And what does the golfer care about his game if he have not an opponent or a crowd to witness his prowess? |
20382 | And yet, can one be expected to practically throw his life away, not for a principle, but for a few head of young colts not even his own property? |
20382 | Are they not dogies? |
20382 | At Baroda I received into my compartment the brother of the late Gaikwar( uncle of the present?). |
20382 | But does polygamy deserve all that is said about it? |
20382 | But have we got all the cattle? |
20382 | But what is the feeling between the two races that keeps them thus apart? |
20382 | But where is Pete? |
20382 | By the way, is not scalping spoken of in the Book of Maccabees as a custom of the Jews and Syrians? |
20382 | Can he be lost and still wandering round? |
20382 | Can it be imagined for a moment that any of our raw recruits enter the service from a love for King and country? |
20382 | Did he mean rashness? |
20382 | Do they depend for protection and safety on their grotesque appearance? |
20382 | Does this individual cow select and appoint herself to the office; or is she balloted for, or how otherwise is the selection made? |
20382 | How did they get there? |
20382 | How often nowadays does one ever see a carriage pair, or fours in the park or elsewhere that really needs"driving"? |
20382 | Is he not gaining time for his mares and progeny to get out of danger? |
20382 | Is not the private soldier of this country, alone of all others, refused admission to certain places of entertainment open to the public? |
20382 | Is the name not appropriate? |
20382 | Loyalty? |
20382 | Someone has asked me which was the most beautiful place I had ever seen? |
20382 | The fortunate fisherman''s name? |
20382 | The ponies could hardly keep up with them; and what cowman does not know the pleasure of driving fast walking beef cattle? |
20382 | The result? |
20382 | Water was never too plentiful; so why not make use of the soap- suddy washings which the boys and all of us habitually threw out there? |
20382 | What can one do in such a case? |
20382 | What does the angler care for catching a large basket of trout if there be no one by to show them to? |
20382 | What holds these offshoots to the mother stem? |
20382 | What methods did they adopt to counteract the discomfort of_ mal de mer_? |
20382 | What then is that of the monkey, the bird, the reptile or the fish? |
20382 | What''s the matter?" |
20382 | Where is our population going to come from? |
20382 | Where''s Pete? |
20382 | Why? |
20382 | _ Note III._--Might a just comparison not be drawn between these"dogies"and the type of men we now recruit for our standing Army? |
20382 | and where''s Red? |
20382 | and"How are you?" |
20382 | or do their gaudy robes disarm and enchant their ferocious and cannibalistic brethren? |
19696 | If that powerful corrosive, alcohol, only makes us do a little first- class work, what matter if it corrode us to death immediately afterwards? 19696 Maggie, is the new pianny broke?" |
19696 | What is all this,I heard the reader ask,"about a joy- digesting apparatus?" |
19696 | What,asked the porcupines of one another,"can they be doing, all alone there in those solitary huts? |
19696 | Yes, Father? |
19696 | And do we realize how many Shelleys we may actually have lost already? |
19696 | And how did we treat them from the first? |
19696 | And how do they account for the flourishing condition of some of our other arts? |
19696 | And this was eleven years after that brave spirit''s single cry of reproach:"Why can we poets dream us beauty, so, But can not dream us bread?" |
19696 | And what is a man''s own soul but a small stream of the infinite, eternal water of life? |
19696 | And what is heaven but a vast harbor where myriad streams of soul flow down, returning at last to their Source in the bliss of perfect reunion? |
19696 | And why should their strongest, most original, most significant work be precisely in the sphere of poetic, suggestive landscape, and ideal sculpture? |
19696 | Are you a fairly able person?" |
19696 | Are your veins the kind that tingle? |
19696 | Buddha''s better self? |
19696 | But as it is, how can they have the joyful heart when they are continually being tortured by regret because God did not make masters of them? |
19696 | But is there not another ideal which is as far above mere quality as quality is above mere quantity? |
19696 | But then, why should any haphazard group of creative artists be expected to be judicial, anyway? |
19696 | But"is not he hospitable,"asks Thoreau,"who entertains good thoughts?" |
19696 | Do your senses say you sooth? |
19696 | For is it any less praiseworthy to make a master than to make a masterpiece? |
19696 | How do they explain the fact that our annual expenditure on the art of music is six times that of Germany, the Fatherland of Tone? |
19696 | If we are hopelessly materialistic, why should American painters and sculptors have such a high world- standing? |
19696 | If we would bring joy to the masses why not first vitalize the classes? |
19696 | Is the reader still unconvinced that physical exuberance is necessary to the artist? |
19696 | Is your crony Moderation? |
19696 | Is your soul awake in truth? |
19696 | The master in art is learning modesty, and from whom but the master in sport? |
19696 | This accounts for the anguish of his reproach:"Could ye not watch with me one hour?" |
19696 | To whom, then, should the decision be left? |
19696 | What does this spirit need? |
19696 | What honest man would live like that? |
19696 | What made the game of art so brilliant in the age of Pericles? |
19696 | When an inspiration comes to them, what do they do? |
19696 | Whence comes it, anyway, that music sounds so friendly, if it is not the doing of the one or two people whom one loves as I love you?" |
19696 | Where is this young man? |
19696 | Who dares say that the city is unpoetic? |
19696 | Who was Molière''s hidden prompter? |
19696 | Who were the secret commanders of Grant, Wellington, and CÃ ¦ sar? |
19696 | Who, for instance, was Lincoln''s silent partner? |
19696 | Why endow these would- be interpreters of poetry, to the neglect of the class of artists whose work they profess to interpret? |
19696 | Why has art never again reached the Periclean plane? |
19696 | Why has the present renaissance of the poetry- lover not brought with it a renaissance of the American poet? |
19696 | Why have we never had a Wordsworth, or a Browning? |
19696 | Why should not a few thousands out of the millions we spend on education be used to found fellowships of creative poetry? |
19696 | Why? |
19696 | Why? |
19696 | Wordsworth''s lines on Chatterton have a wider application:"What treasure found he? |
19696 | Yes, but what of the weaker brothers and sisters in art who have not yet succeeded-- perhaps for want of these very qualities? |
19696 | the conductor of the orchestra called Beethoven? |
19696 | the power behind the throne of Charlemagne? |
19696 | the psychic comrade of Columbus? |
13450 | A flask of water from a spring on the sacred mountain would do, would n''t it? |
13450 | A kind of sympathy in detachments, is it? |
13450 | After the great excitement may I not have the pleasure of offering you a reviving cup of tea at my house? 13450 An acre or so?" |
13450 | And Mr. Campbell is building a railroad, you say? |
13450 | And are n''t you overjoyed for your little daughter to have such an opportunity to see the other side of the world? |
13450 | And are we to have tea now? |
13450 | And have you been writing a letter to thank the Compassionate God Jizu for your recovery? |
13450 | And how''s little daughter''s friend? |
13450 | And is that poor soul going to turn into a horse and pull me? |
13450 | And sleep with your head on a bench and eat with chop sticks? |
13450 | And to make assurance doubly sure, you thought you would just mention the matter to us? |
13450 | And what did you tell her? |
13450 | And will the''Cornet''go, too? |
13450 | And you know many of them, I suppose? |
13450 | And, surely,put in Miss Campbell,"if the machinery broke down, you would n''t compel your wife to repair it?" |
13450 | Are n''t some of the descendants of the old warrior samurai rather fanatical? |
13450 | Are these the ones? |
13450 | Are they not charming little creatures? |
13450 | Are we entertaining a family of sons this evening or have we just decided to celebrate whether we have sons or not? |
13450 | Are you a Samurai? |
13450 | Are you a spy? |
13450 | Are you from Holland? |
13450 | Are you going to Nikko, too, O''Kami San? |
13450 | Are you going to build those little funny openwork bridges over all the streams? |
13450 | Are you in a''riksha? |
13450 | Are you looking for Onoye? |
13450 | Are you one of the engineers on the new railroad they are building? |
13450 | Are you quite well again, Onoye? |
13450 | But how did it happen? |
13450 | But what about? |
13450 | But what did you bring with you? 13450 But what does Nancy know about opening a safe, Papa? |
13450 | But what does she do? |
13450 | But what is it, little girl? |
13450 | But what is it? |
13450 | But what of it? |
13450 | But what were they? |
13450 | But where are we going? |
13450 | But who? |
13450 | But why was it? |
13450 | But why, pray, did n''t you take Nancy''s? |
13450 | But why? |
13450 | But you and Elinor and Mary have n''t any moles on the soles of your feet, have you? |
13450 | Buxton, do n''t you think we''ve had enough? |
13450 | By Jove,he exclaimed,"did you find that among my papers?" |
13450 | Ca n''t we call her back and ask her some more questions? |
13450 | Ca n''t we see her? |
13450 | Ca n''t you tell me what happened? |
13450 | Ca n''t you understand that we are sorry and anxious to help you? |
13450 | Could n''t you get away and go with us? |
13450 | Dearest old great- grandmama,cried Nancy, kneeling beside the aged pug and hiding her face in the tawny coat,"are you really glad to see me, too?" |
13450 | Delightful weather, is n''t it? 13450 Did you forget it?" |
13450 | Did you notice,said Mary,"that the Japanese lady in the''riksha wore her arm in a sling?" |
13450 | Do I look like a wife beater? |
13450 | Do n''t you think it''s very hot, Mary? |
13450 | Do n''t you think that is rather an uncomplimentary question? |
13450 | Do n''t you think we had better get your father, Billie, or one of the boys? |
13450 | Do you love him? |
13450 | Do you remember how she called Miss Campbell''the honorable old maid''? |
13450 | Do you think I have the ghost of a chance? |
13450 | Do you think Miss Campbell would consent to let you make a visit, Nancy? |
13450 | Do you think Papa would look after himself if he thought I was lost on the mountain? 13450 Do you think she could be doing it for some one else?" |
13450 | Do you think the rain will ever let up, Papa? |
13450 | Does anyone in the house know? |
13450 | For whom is the other tray, then? |
13450 | Good heavens, Billie, what am I to do? 13450 Good heavens, Komatsu, what are we to do? |
13450 | Good,exclaimed Billie,"I thought you were a Dutchman and it''s lots nicer to be an American, do n''t you think so?" |
13450 | Goodness gracious me, what is it? |
13450 | Has Nancy got it? |
13450 | Has anything happened to you? |
13450 | Has the doctor seen you? |
13450 | Has the place caught fire, or did n''t we give the right amount of change? |
13450 | Have we brought everything? |
13450 | Have you been getting married? |
13450 | How are you going to find her, Papa? |
13450 | How could you? |
13450 | How did she happen to go alone on a tramp like that? 13450 How do my five beautiful American ladies feel?" |
13450 | How do we dress? |
13450 | How do we give the tip? |
13450 | How do you feel now, Miss Billie? |
13450 | How do you know you shot him? |
13450 | How do you know? |
13450 | How would four young parties and another younger party, who claims to be old and rheumatic, but is n''t, like to take a trip? |
13450 | How? |
13450 | I do n''t like him, Papa,broke in Billie,"and-- you did n''t know that he has been married and divorced?" |
13450 | I hope I did n''t kill him? |
13450 | I thought you promised to call me Nicholas? 13450 If I almost passed away from homesickness in one night, how should I have borne it for-- for longer?" |
13450 | In her room, I suppose? |
13450 | In the name of good health and excellent digestion, tell me what are doormats? |
13450 | Is it possible that this is your house we have broken into so rudely? |
13450 | Is it possible that you are the Motor Maids who have ridden so many thousands of miles in a red car? |
13450 | Is it your head, dear? 13450 Is n''t it cunning?" |
13450 | Is n''t it? |
13450 | Is there any rude person in the length and breadth of Japan? |
13450 | Is there anything the matter with Onoye? |
13450 | Is this a common occurrence with Miss Campbell? |
13450 | Is this any inducement? |
13450 | It''s romantic,observed Billie,"but what will Cousin Helen say? |
13450 | Komatsu, where are they? |
13450 | Mary, what shall I say? |
13450 | May I ask your pardon for intruding on your beautiful gardens? |
13450 | May I not see you again to- morrow, Miss Brown? |
13450 | Meaning for the fifth the beauteous lady who lingers in her room? |
13450 | Meaning, Mr. Ito, that the American floors are not as entirely free from dust as the Japanese floors? |
13450 | Mr. Ito, will you sit on a mat on the floor or in a chair? |
13450 | Much sickness? |
13450 | Nancy has been greatly troubled about something lately, has n''t she, little daughter? |
13450 | Nancy, Nancy, how could you? |
13450 | Not even the austere old lady who chaperones you? |
13450 | Not exactly? 13450 Not know, but honorable young lady not look inside?" |
13450 | O''Kami San, will you not ask her? |
13450 | Of course, you poor dear, but how did you injure yourself? |
13450 | Oh, Nancy, Nancy,she groaned inwardly,"could it have really been you and are you out there in the typhoon?" |
13450 | Oh, Nicholas,she cried,"do you think Papa could still be looking for me? |
13450 | Oh, are these the swords of a samurai warrior? |
13450 | Oh, you little witch,cried Miss Campbell, pinching Nancy''s cheek,"what shall I do with you, making eyes at these Orientals who do n''t understand?" |
13450 | One never wears shoes in the house, Cousin, do n''t you remember? 13450 Papa did n''t come?" |
13450 | Papa, do you think she could have gone to that widow? 13450 Papa, is there any trouble brewing in this house?" |
13450 | Papa,she began,"ca n''t we take the''Comet''and go sight- seeing? |
13450 | People? |
13450 | Rested with humble refreshment in poor modest little house? |
13450 | Scold her? 13450 Shall it be a love song?" |
13450 | Shall we put on our kimonos and lie on the floor in the library? |
13450 | Silk robe? |
13450 | So you decided to come back to us, Nancy? |
13450 | The guitar and the tea basket and the luncheon hamper--"And the mackintoshes? |
13450 | The what? |
13450 | Then what are you driving at? |
13450 | Then you do know something? |
13450 | There were only three Graces, were there not? |
13450 | There''s nothing to knock on, so why knock? |
13450 | They are foolish children, are n''t they, Komatsu? |
13450 | They look as if they were going to play a joke on us,observed Billie,"Did you ever see anything so guileless and simple- hearted as they are?" |
13450 | Think garden pretty, O''Kami San? |
13450 | Was it an enemy of yours or some one who wanted to exterminate us because we are foreigners? |
13450 | Was it in the library that night? |
13450 | Well, Miss Nancy,''is''what? |
13450 | Well, if you had one, what would you do with her? 13450 Were you the first person on the scene? |
13450 | What are you going to do? |
13450 | What are you talking about, Mary? |
13450 | What did I tell you? |
13450 | What did she mean about Papa''s work? |
13450 | What did you say to him, Papa? |
13450 | What do you do all day, O''Kami San? |
13450 | What do you mean, Onoye? |
13450 | What do you think, Cousin? |
13450 | What in the name of all the powers are you driving at? 13450 What in the world are they doing?" |
13450 | What in the world is the matter? |
13450 | What is his name? |
13450 | What is it all about, Papa? |
13450 | What is it, Onoye? |
13450 | What is it? |
13450 | What is the matter with our little maid? 13450 What is the matter with this household?" |
13450 | What kind of business, O''Haru? |
13450 | What makes you think so, sweetheart? |
13450 | What number do you want? |
13450 | What on earth do you want? |
13450 | What on earth? |
13450 | What was the honorable wish of the young lady? |
13450 | What''s the matter, Papa? |
13450 | What''s the reason, then, Cousin Helen? |
13450 | Where are the others? |
13450 | Where are your friends? 13450 Where did you come from?" |
13450 | Where did you find her, Buxton? |
13450 | Where do you keep the real papers, Papa? |
13450 | Where is Onoye, O''Haru? |
13450 | Where is Onoye? 13450 Where is it to be this time, Nancy- Bell?" |
13450 | Where was she yesterday? |
13450 | Where''s your guitar? |
13450 | Who am I to be scolding anybody? |
13450 | Why are you so unhappy, Onoye? 13450 Why ca n''t we give him a real Japanese surprise party, Cousin Helen, and invite those nice men to come? |
13450 | Why ca n''t we go to the Arakawa Ridge? |
13450 | Why did n''t you borrow Nancy''s, Billie? |
13450 | Why do you think she ran away? |
13450 | Why does n''t that good- for- nothing brother teach her something? 13450 Why not let Komatsu go along?" |
13450 | Why not? |
13450 | Why on earth did n''t you tell me about it immediately? |
13450 | Why, have you forgotten, boy, that this is your birthday? 13450 Why, what on earth is the matter with them?" |
13450 | Why, you poor dear, what have I to forgive? |
13450 | Will a hundred do? |
13450 | Will honorable ladies be pleased to employ humble refreshment? |
13450 | Will you ask your mother, Mr. Ito, if-- she suffers from rheumatism from sitting on the floor so much? |
13450 | Will you lend me your raincoat, Miss Nancy? |
13450 | Wo n''t some little maid keep a lonely man company? |
13450 | Wo n''t you come with me first to get my handkerchief? |
13450 | Would you be interested in seeing the garden? |
13450 | Would you have us dress like men? |
13450 | Yes, gracious lady"What is the matter with you? |
13450 | You are not thinking of marrying, surely? 13450 You do n''t know who his first wife was, do you, Nicholas?" |
13450 | You like all same American food? 13450 You mean four days ago?" |
13450 | You mean that a young lady chauffeur would make an excellent wife? |
13450 | You mean your husband is not young? |
13450 | You wo n''t think me silly if I tell you this? 13450 ''But why hast thou done this deed?'' 13450 After all was she so sure about that other person crouching somewhere-- anywhere? 13450 After all, was it really necessary to warn Nancy not to talk too much and tell all she knew? 13450 After all, was it the act of true friendship to pick out all the defects and flaws in a friend''s nature? 13450 All the way, she kept thinking:What is Nancy- Bell up to? |
13450 | Am I not right, Yoritomo?" |
13450 | And besides what would she want with plans for government improvements or whatever they are?" |
13450 | And do you call it lady- like and honorable? |
13450 | Any girl who is cool- headed enough to run a motor car and-- and keep machinery in order and--""Well-- and what?" |
13450 | Are you all right?" |
13450 | Are you alone?" |
13450 | Are you glad to see me, Billie, dearest?" |
13450 | Are you sure nothing else is involved? |
13450 | At last Billie said softly:"What are we going to do, Mary, dear?" |
13450 | Beat her?" |
13450 | Besides, what earthly use could she have with those papers?" |
13450 | Billie knew perfectly well that Nancy was going to say:"Is Yoritomo going?" |
13450 | But who could be in a bad humor on such a glorious morning? |
13450 | But who is this caller, I wonder?" |
13450 | Buxton?" |
13450 | Ca n''t you tell them that?" |
13450 | Campbell?" |
13450 | Campbell?" |
13450 | Can you deny it? |
13450 | Can you imagine, Billie, spending two hours arranging three lilies in a bowl to make them look as if they had grown there?" |
13450 | Could n''t you just tell Miss Nancy to be careful without explaining why? |
13450 | Do n''t girls ever do that? |
13450 | Do n''t you remember what the missionary on the steamer told us? |
13450 | Do you live here, too?" |
13450 | Do you suppose Nancy has anything on her mind?" |
13450 | Do you think we could slip into the garden? |
13450 | Does she know you were out walking?" |
13450 | Drink it down?" |
13450 | Everything is picturesque in this country from beggars to railroad bridges, and, speaking of bridges, have you explored the garden yet? |
13450 | Fontaine? |
13450 | Fontaine?" |
13450 | Fontaine?" |
13450 | His most esthetic Very magnetic Fancy took this turn: If I can wheedle A knife or a needle, Why not a Silver Churn? |
13450 | How about it, old man? |
13450 | How are you, little daughter?" |
13450 | How can we go on like this when we are drifting farther and farther away?" |
13450 | How could Nancy have thought of such things? |
13450 | How did you know I was here? |
13450 | How had she done it, this mysterious foreigner who could handle the English language even better than English people? |
13450 | I do n''t suppose I could tempt either of you two hot- house plants to come with me, could I?" |
13450 | I suppose we could n''t get to all the famous cherry blossom places in one afternoon?" |
13450 | Is n''t that delightful, Captain Brown?" |
13450 | Is she unhappy? |
13450 | Is there anything we can do for you?" |
13450 | It is true that Onoye was on the pay roll of the household servants, but then, did not her mother do work for two when Onoye was not actively engaged? |
13450 | Ito, Nancy?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Ito?" |
13450 | Must I continue to smile and bob and bow forever? |
13450 | No indigestion or pains at the neck or burning at the pit of the stomach?" |
13450 | Oh, heavens, why did we count those old broken statues?" |
13450 | Only Yoritomo''s face remained impassive, but who could tell what angry thoughts were hidden behind that mask- like face? |
13450 | Perhaps you would like to explore the garden if you have had enough honorable refreshment?" |
13450 | Promise?" |
13450 | See?" |
13450 | She began to sing softly to herself Elinor''s favorite song:"''Know''st thou the land of the citron bloom?''" |
13450 | She was thrown to the floor; a shot; a cry-- was it her own or another person''s voice? |
13450 | That skirt I caught-- that-- that something-- where is it?" |
13450 | Then Nicholas cleared his throat and began in an embarrassed and hesitating way:"Miss Billie, can you keep a secret?" |
13450 | Then she remarked:"Mr. Ito, is your aunt married?" |
13450 | Then you do know something?" |
13450 | There had been no chairs in the way before,--was it an hour ago or only a minute? |
13450 | They spread their ideas and customs-- they get a foot- hold-- then-- all of a sudden, what is it? |
13450 | Was I right in my method of dismissing your suitor, Miss Nancy?" |
13450 | Was it an English cry for help? |
13450 | Was it possible that time had slipped by so fast? |
13450 | Was she not bound by a secret tie to this fascinating person because of their chance meeting in the garden in the rain? |
13450 | Were they all going to be cut to pieces or was only the"Comet"to be sacrificed in revenge for the accident? |
13450 | Were you able to find out?" |
13450 | What am I to do with it? |
13450 | What am I to do? |
13450 | What could it mean? |
13450 | What country had given her those strangely incongruous locks? |
13450 | What is the matter? |
13450 | When are you going to take us to the mountains? |
13450 | Where is your daughter?" |
13450 | Where is your raincoat? |
13450 | Where was Nancy? |
13450 | While this little colloquy was going on, Yoritomo was whispering into Nancy''s ear:"You think they are pretty? |
13450 | Who could expect an assassin to wait and be caught? |
13450 | Who knows? |
13450 | Who wants to see it?" |
13450 | Why had she been so angry? |
13450 | Why had she ever written it at all? |
13450 | Why had she not burned it in a charcoal brazier? |
13450 | Why had she not torn it into smaller bits? |
13450 | Why should Nancy Brown have unexpectedly grown up like this and become so independent and secretive? |
13450 | Why should her father need a pistol? |
13450 | Why should she write letters that way? |
13450 | Why was she so frightened? |
13450 | Why was she so panic- stricken? |
13450 | Why-- why--? |
13450 | Will gracious lady make eyes to look?" |
13450 | Will you call my''riksha now, Mr. Campbell? |
13450 | Will you come?" |
13450 | Would Elinor Butler''s father and mother consent to her taking this long journey? |
13450 | Would Mrs. Price be willing to part with Mary for many, many months while that young person journeyed to the other side of the world? |
13450 | Would it not be a good precaution to go to the library and get her father''s pistol? |
13450 | Would it, now, honor bright?" |
13450 | Would she?" |
13450 | You do n''t think she could be a bit daffy, do you?" |
13450 | You wo n''t tell your Mr. Campbell that I trespassed on his garden, will you? |
13450 | asked Billie proudly,"and is n''t Onoye clever to have carried out the scheme so perfectly?" |
13450 | but had changed her mind, when she asked instead:"Is Nikko a town?" |
15180 | ''Merican game? |
15180 | Afraid? |
15180 | All right? |
15180 | Alone? 15180 Am I keeping you too long from the dance?" |
15180 | Am I solemn? |
15180 | And I can take any man''s partner away by simply laying my hand on his shoulder? |
15180 | And do you shoot? |
15180 | And sha''n''t I ever know what your friend was thinking? |
15180 | And were you hard- hearted enough to confiscate it? |
15180 | Another dare, as I think you call it? |
15180 | Beg pardon? |
15180 | Bento? |
15180 | But do n''t you like the poem? |
15180 | But how can you like me when I''m all wrong? |
15180 | But if I may ask, how on earth did you know that I sang? |
15180 | But is it all right for me to take a present like this? 15180 But is n''t it too late to be taking a walk?" |
15180 | But they must come back, must n''t they? 15180 But you do n''t mind my being proud of you, do you?" |
15180 | But-- but do n''t you love me? |
15180 | Ca n''t you guess? |
15180 | Ca n''t you speed her up a bit? |
15180 | Can you spare me five minutes? |
15180 | Could they have gone back another way? |
15180 | Crowds, too, eh? 15180 Did she give you a reason?" |
15180 | Did she say she wanted it? |
15180 | Did the Daughter of the Revolution go along? |
15180 | Did ye see her the other day when she climbed to the crow''s- nest? |
15180 | Did you address me? |
15180 | Did you see the way she looked at him at dinner? 15180 Did-- did she buy your steamer- coat?" |
15180 | Do n''t you think you''d better come down, too, Bobby, and close yours? |
15180 | Do you see that lovely carom over there beyond the Dipper? |
15180 | Do you think it is? |
15180 | Do you think it would work? |
15180 | Do you wish to know what I''m thinking about just now? |
15180 | Do_ I?_she challenged him instantly. |
15180 | For a mother to mention her own child? |
15180 | Forku? |
15180 | Has she sailed? |
15180 | Have n''t you a fork? |
15180 | Have you any objections? |
15180 | Have you been up here all afternoon? |
15180 | Have you seen anything of that naughty Bobby Boynton? |
15180 | How do you mean? |
15180 | How does it happen that you are n''t off with the crowd doing the sights? |
15180 | How long have you had the tourniquet on, Madam? |
15180 | How many entries? |
15180 | How many more events are there? |
15180 | How much? |
15180 | How''s that? |
15180 | How_ can_ you talk to me like this? |
15180 | I beg your pardon, but did you know we were passing Bird Island? |
15180 | I did n''t,she said;"but they dared me to ask you, and I would n''t take a dare, would you?" |
15180 | I say,he said,"will you kindly arrange for a bit of air to enter this room? |
15180 | I suppose it''s the Englishman who is making you anxious? |
15180 | I suppose my tailor does rather understand my figure,said Percival;"but what puzzles you about my speech?" |
15180 | If you are not feeling quite the thing, sir,said the valet, solicitously,"shall I serve your dinner on deck, sir?" |
15180 | In the wind- shelter? |
15180 | Is it a love- story? |
15180 | Is n''t it a tulip? 15180 Is n''t that like a woman? |
15180 | Is n''t that the prettiest thing you ever saw? |
15180 | Is n''t there a good deal of motion? |
15180 | Is n''t there a-- a-- Mrs. Ford on the ranch? |
15180 | Is she what? |
15180 | Is she? |
15180 | Jolly? |
15180 | Kimono? 15180 Like what?" |
15180 | May I choose? 15180 May I speak to Miss Boynton for a moment?" |
15180 | Miss Boynton? |
15180 | Mr. Hascombe, are n''t you going to ask me to dance? |
15180 | Oh, that''s the game, is it? 15180 Oh, you mean the Honorable Percival?" |
15180 | Oppose it? 15180 Permanently?" |
15180 | Rather dressy for the morning, are n''t they? |
15180 | Really, why was she chosen to be the Daughter of the Regiment? |
15180 | Really? |
15180 | Really? |
15180 | Renig? |
15180 | Ripping, is n''t it? |
15180 | Roberta,he called sternly,"What are you doing out here?" |
15180 | Say, why do n''t you ever let yourself have a good time? |
15180 | Seen that girl of mine since she came ashore? |
15180 | Shall we go to the ball- room? |
15180 | Shall we have one more go? |
15180 | Smart? |
15180 | South American? |
15180 | Street- car? 15180 Tan San? |
15180 | Tea? |
15180 | The Pali? 15180 The captain? |
15180 | The girl you let down easy? |
15180 | The strap on his arm? |
15180 | The what? |
15180 | The_ Saluria?_repeated the man with maddening deliberation. |
15180 | Then why scruple at my gift? |
15180 | Then you advise me to take Hal? |
15180 | Then you want me to be serious, and believe everything you say? |
15180 | Two, three, four? |
15180 | Was the Wyoming affair quite out of the question? |
15180 | Way? |
15180 | Well, why should n''t her mother mention her? |
15180 | Were you ever in love? |
15180 | What about? |
15180 | What are the rules of the game? |
15180 | What are you doing out here? |
15180 | What are you doing out here?] |
15180 | What are you homesick for? |
15180 | What are you laughing at? |
15180 | What did he give me to the Fords for if he did n''t think they were good enough? 15180 What did he say?" |
15180 | What do you want to do that for? |
15180 | What do_ you_ think? |
15180 | What for? |
15180 | What for? |
15180 | What for? |
15180 | What has he to do with it? |
15180 | What have I done now? |
15180 | What is the meaning of this? |
15180 | What makes everybody think so? |
15180 | What makes him think so himself? |
15180 | What makes you think it''s Hascombe? |
15180 | What of that? 15180 What shall it be?" |
15180 | What sort of a girl could she have been to act like that? |
15180 | What sort of a word? |
15180 | What the deuce do I care about your confounded old tire? 15180 What time do you make it?" |
15180 | What''s happening now? 15180 What''s taking place?" |
15180 | What''s the use of going anywhere? |
15180 | What''s this lovely thing? |
15180 | What''s this she''s putting on me? |
15180 | What''s wrong with them? |
15180 | What, pray, is Hieizan? |
15180 | What? |
15180 | What? |
15180 | Whatever do you find to shoot? |
15180 | When is the next train for Kioto? |
15180 | Where next, sir? |
15180 | Where to, sir? |
15180 | Where''s the girl going now? |
15180 | Which will you have? |
15180 | Who is Hortense? |
15180 | Who is Pa Joe? |
15180 | Who is the girl at the captain''s right? |
15180 | Who wo n''t? |
15180 | Who''ll have some Chinese chow? |
15180 | Why do n''t you let yourself have a good time? |
15180 | Why do you ask? |
15180 | Why does n''t the girl go away, and leave me alone? |
15180 | Why not? |
15180 | Why not? |
15180 | Why wo n''t you come? |
15180 | Why? |
15180 | Why? |
15180 | Will you sit out the next dance with me? |
15180 | Would n''t it be a lark if we were left? |
15180 | You do n''t mind? |
15180 | You mean,she went on,"that they are sending you off to keep you from marrying some one they do n''t like?" |
15180 | You mean? |
15180 | You wo n''t mind my telling you a few things for your own good, will you? |
15180 | A person in my position, you know--""You mean because of the Honorable? |
15180 | After all, why should he consider his family before himself? |
15180 | And send somebody up from the office, do you understand?" |
15180 | And you promise to forget all those girls over in England, and pretend that I am the nicest girl you know?" |
15180 | And yours?" |
15180 | Any kin to the Texas Hascombes?" |
15180 | Anything else you''d like?" |
15180 | Aquarium?" |
15180 | Besides, what headway will I make by steering that girl of mine off one shoal to land her on another?" |
15180 | But are you quite sure I''m not getting on your nerves?" |
15180 | But how are we to get to the hotel?" |
15180 | But where shall I put them, sir?" |
15180 | But where was one to look for her? |
15180 | But who is it from?" |
15180 | But why consult Sister Cordelia at all? |
15180 | But why had that impossible young American ruined a pretty compliment by her parting shot? |
15180 | Ca n''t we dodge it?" |
15180 | Ca n''t you manage to give me another state- room?" |
15180 | Can buy?" |
15180 | Can you swim?" |
15180 | Come see? |
15180 | Come see? |
15180 | Could any one but an American, he soliloquized, be guilty of starting on a journey in such a costume? |
15180 | Did she expect him to pay her any attention? |
15180 | Did she feel that she had any claim upon him? |
15180 | Did you look in the writing- room?" |
15180 | Do you hear?" |
15180 | Do you suppose it ever will be possible?" |
15180 | Do you think I have turned merchant, and have got wares for sale? |
15180 | Do you think anybody will recognize me when I get back to Wyoming?" |
15180 | Do you understand?" |
15180 | Had n''t she told him it was one of her foster- brothers, one of those lads whom he persisted in regarding as children? |
15180 | Had not some one told him of an unhappy love- affair? |
15180 | Hascombe?" |
15180 | Have some of this tropical mess?" |
15180 | He gloried in her plasticity; after all, was it not among the chief of feminine virtues? |
15180 | Honest, now, have I got anything else as bad as that?" |
15180 | How did you know that Black fellow would n''t come?" |
15180 | How many children are there?" |
15180 | How much?" |
15180 | I wonder if you realize that you saved my life last night?" |
15180 | Is there any earthly reason why it should always be done at dawn?" |
15180 | Is this our wave? |
15180 | Is this your chair?" |
15180 | It was rather queer of her calling, was n''t it? |
15180 | Makes you feel so beastly seedy afterward, does n''t it?" |
15180 | May I choose a letter?" |
15180 | May I offer my congratulations?" |
15180 | May I trouble you for the mustard?" |
15180 | Meanwhile he listened with increasing impatience for the first flutter of the siren''s wings,"Wanchee Manchu coatt?" |
15180 | No? |
15180 | No? |
15180 | Of course there have been a lot of girls who were foolish enough to-- er-- to think--""To think they were in love with you? |
15180 | Perhaps I could meet them halfway?" |
15180 | Please?" |
15180 | Pray do not discommode yourself?" |
15180 | Punch- Bowl? |
15180 | Rhomenade?" |
15180 | Say, did you all know we were passing Bird Island?" |
15180 | Say, you would n''t think I had the blues, would you?" |
15180 | See the way the wind flecks the water over there? |
15180 | Shall we go find out?" |
15180 | Shall we run for it?" |
15180 | So desu ka?" |
15180 | So desu ka?" |
15180 | So?" |
15180 | There was a short silence, then Percival asked:"What''s the name of that young South American who went ashore with your daughter?" |
15180 | Twoing more in your line?" |
15180 | Waikiki? |
15180 | Wanchee buy?" |
15180 | Was he to suffer this refinement of cruelty in having the very air he breathed saturated with her memory? |
15180 | Was he, who had always had everything, now missing something-- something that other people had? |
15180 | Was it possible that she had divined his state of mind? |
15180 | Was she pretty?" |
15180 | We are mad, are n''t we? |
15180 | What if he should demand satisfaction? |
15180 | What if he were defeated? |
15180 | What possible secrets could she have with this unknown friend, who waxed sentimental over moonlit trails and wind- swept grassfields? |
15180 | What satisfaction would be due in the circumstances? |
15180 | What time does the next launch go ashore?" |
15180 | What would you do then?" |
15180 | What''s that book you''ve been reading?" |
15180 | What''s the matter with Andy?" |
15180 | What''s to be done?" |
15180 | Where did_ you_ come from?" |
15180 | Where did_ you_ come from?" |
15180 | Where did_ you_ come from?"] |
15180 | Where was I? |
15180 | Where''s your room?" |
15180 | Where''s your wrap?" |
15180 | Why did n''t you tell me you were hurt?" |
15180 | Why in the name of heaven was everything round? |
15180 | Why not seek some"blossomed bower in dark purple spheres of sea"? |
15180 | Why should he ever go back to England at all? |
15180 | Why, you promised to help me, and now--""Hal Ford?" |
15180 | Will you?" |
15180 | Wo n''t you?" |
15180 | Would you like me to try and help you out-- share the responsibility of chaperoning her, I mean?" |
15180 | Yellow funnels, ai n''t she? |
15180 | You are quite determined on the races?" |
15180 | You do n''t suppose anything has happened to her, do you?" |
15180 | You remember that day on deck you got me to give back Andy''s scarf- pin?" |
15180 | You remember that little skirmish that took place in''75?" |
15180 | You remember, Bobby, the last time I was at the ranch? |
15180 | You understand?" |
15180 | Your chin''s nice, too, is n''t it?" |
15180 | [ Illustration:"Is n''t that the prettiest thing you ever saw?" |
15180 | cried Percival in tones of horror,"not a puncture?" |
15180 | she cried"What''s the matter with your arm? |
15180 | she cried, her voice trembling with indignation,"after what I told you that day in the wind- shelter?" |
15180 | she demanded breathlessly,"you''ll take me out in the surf boat, wo n''t you?"] |
15180 | she demanded breathlessly,"you''ll take me out in the surf- boat, wo n''t you? |
15180 | she demanded breathlessly,"you''ll take me out in the surf- boat, wo n''t you?" |
15180 | she said defiantly; then she suddenly changed her tactics, and added with childish insistence:"But you_ are_ going to take me now, are n''t you? |
16470 | And he got what? |
16470 | And what was your impression of him? |
16470 | Are you in the success sphere? |
16470 | But, friend,I protest,"do n''t you feel the earth under your feet?" |
16470 | But-- I beg pardon-- are you a thief? |
16470 | Do You Love This Old Man? |
16470 | Do n''t have anything to do with Madame Tingley,whispers a Theosophist lady to my Wife; and when my wife in all innocence inquires,"Why not?" |
16470 | Has the Church done anything to try to help these people, or to bring about peace? |
16470 | He received you? |
16470 | Hermit? |
16470 | How then can any man be just before God? 16470 Spiritual things come first?" |
16470 | What are Dollars? |
16470 | What is Poverty? |
16470 | What is eternity? |
16470 | What is your rating in the Spiritual Bradstreet? |
16470 | Who made him? |
16470 | # Land and Livings# And how is it in the twentieth century? |
16470 | # Priests and Police# And how is it in our national capital, the palladium of our liberties? |
16470 | # The Church Redeemed# Do I mean that I expect to see the Church-- all churches-- perish and pass away? |
16470 | # The Church Triumphant# The question may be asked, What of it? |
16470 | After all, what is it that Hereditary Privilege wants in America? |
16470 | Also, why does the magazine refuse to give its readers a chance to judge its conduct? |
16470 | Am I"living in grace"? |
16470 | And Joshua said, Why hast thou troubled us? |
16470 | And by this I mean the right to vote for the Democratic, Socialist, or Republican parties when and where I please?" |
16470 | And do you imagine they wo n''t remember it when the revolution comes? |
16470 | And do you think that the late Bishop of J.P. Morgan and Company stands alone as an utterer of scholarly blasphemy, a driver of golden nails? |
16470 | And how did the clergyman prepare for him? |
16470 | And how do you proceed to open your account? |
16470 | And is that merely the spiritual deficiency of a Nibelung-- or the effort of a young author to be smart? |
16470 | And now, what has the clerical camouflage to say on this proceeding? |
16470 | And now, what is the position of education in such camps? |
16470 | And now, what of those editors who supported it? |
16470 | And now-- here is the crux of the argument-- do these aged gentlemen rule of their own power? |
16470 | And the men of Beth- shemesh said, Who is able to stand before this holy Lord God? |
16470 | And the son of man, which is a worm?" |
16470 | And then, of course, the inevitable religious tag:"How will men obey you, if they believe not in God, who is the author of all authority?" |
16470 | And what are we writing? |
16470 | And what did the pious sisters make of all this? |
16470 | And what was the basis of their protest? |
16470 | And what was this homage? |
16470 | And when the broker''s shop is full of other suspicious goods? |
16470 | And when the thief swears that the broker knew him? |
16470 | And why? |
16470 | And you think that conditions are changed to- day? |
16470 | Are not these three professors men of culture? |
16470 | Are they not as"spiritual"as any men of learning you can find in our present- day society? |
16470 | Art thou such a one that can escape a yoke? |
16470 | Behold, even the moon hath no brightness, and the stars are not pure in His sight: How much less man, that is a worm? |
16470 | But did all this avail him? |
16470 | But do we do that, we human sheep? |
16470 | But do you imagine even that would sicken the pious jackals of their offal? |
16470 | But do you imagine that this"Law"applies to your Catholic neighbors? |
16470 | But do you think that troubles him? |
16470 | But granting such occult powers in a world of economic strife, what follows? |
16470 | But then, what is this I find in one issue of the organ of the"Church of Good Society"? |
16470 | But what are we to say when we see the formulas of heroic self- deception made use of by unheroic self- indulgence? |
16470 | But what do these quotations mean, unless they mean what I have said? |
16470 | But what was the Holy Father doing through the forty- three years that the Potsdam gang were preparing for their assault on the world? |
16470 | But when the thief is the most notorious in the city-- when his picture has been in the paper a thousand times? |
16470 | Can you go all the way back and show there is no flaw anywhere in your title? |
16470 | Canst thou be thine own judge, and avenger of thy law? |
16470 | Canst thou give to thyself thy good and thine evil, and hang thy will above thee as thy law? |
16470 | Clear shall your eye tell me: free to what? |
16470 | Could the house of J. P. Morgan and Company ask more of their ecclesiastical department? |
16470 | Did it speak boldly for the gentle Jesus, and the cause of peace on earth and good- will towards men? |
16470 | Discoursing about what?--About righteousness and judgment? |
16470 | Do n''t you see what these clerical crooks are for? |
16470 | Do we find Catholic papers printing accounts of the Ludlow massacre? |
16470 | Do you imagine that they are bound by the restraints that bind# you#? |
16470 | Do you know: What you appear to be to others? |
16470 | Do you not feel the spell of ancient things, the magic of the past creeping over you, as you read those Latin trade- marks? |
16470 | Do you not think that there may be some who will choose freedom and self- respect on those terms? |
16470 | Do you want to be the only people left on earth? |
16470 | Does it approve it? |
16470 | Free from what? |
16470 | Had some new"revelation"been handed down? |
16470 | Had the"law of God"been altered? |
16470 | Has any utmost precision of barometer been able to drive the priest out of his prerogatives as rainmaker? |
16470 | Have conditions been much improved? |
16470 | Have you an account with the First( and only) Bank of Spirit? |
16470 | He takes in the Catholic festivity; and does it phaze him? |
16470 | Here is a chance for the big thieves to baptize themselves-- or shall we say to have the water in their stocks made"holy"? |
16470 | How can we determine which of these opposite statements is the very truth# till we know what motion is#? |
16470 | How has that doctrine worked out in Spain? |
16470 | How is it possible that none of them should suspect the futility of their procedure? |
16470 | How then are we to proceed? |
16470 | How was the Holy Father manifesting his love of peace and good will? |
16470 | I approach one and say to him,"Friend, what is this you are doing?" |
16470 | I did not see the connection, and asked,"Because you were so successful with this one?" |
16470 | I say, and she replies,"Did n''t you know there was a hermit? |
16470 | I step up, and in timid tones begin,"Reverend sir, will you tell me by what right you take this wealth?" |
16470 | I watch him for a while, and finally approach and ask,"What are you doing, sir?" |
16470 | If we wish to find them we have only to ask ourselves: What countries are making no contribution to the progress of the race? |
16470 | If you draw a spiritual draft are you sure of its being honored? |
16470 | In the words of Tabi- utul- Enlil, King of ancient Nippur: Who is there that can grasp the will of the gods in heaven? |
16470 | Is this criminal destruction of evidence? |
16470 | Is your credit with the Bank of the Universe good or poor? |
16470 | Its literary style? |
16470 | Let me quote some words from a teacher you will not accuse of holding to the slave- moralities: Free dost thou call thyself? |
16470 | Or can it really be that I am uncomprehending? |
16470 | Or how can he be clean that is born of a woman? |
16470 | Or was it the love of man for all things living, the lesson of charity upon which the Catholics lay such stress? |
16470 | Return to the method of the Spartans, exposing our sickly infants? |
16470 | Said the hostess,"Will you pass the curate, please?" |
16470 | Scientists and reformers are clamoring for restriction;--and what prevents? |
16470 | See how I rise?" |
16470 | Shall I say that there are no auras, simply because I do not happen to have this gift of seeing them? |
16470 | Shall we erect the mystery into an Unknowable, like Spencer, and call ourselves Agnostics with a capital letter, like Huxley? |
16470 | Shall we follow Frederic Harrison, making an inadequate divinity out of our impotence? |
16470 | So, what more natural than that mediums should resort to faking? |
16470 | Such was Old Trinity to my young soul; and what is it in reality? |
16470 | Sums had been paid directly to more than a thousand newspapers--$3,000 to the Boston"Republic", and when the question was asked"Why?" |
16470 | That all the intellectual prestige of the Church should be lent to the support of vagueness, futility, and deliberate evasion? |
16470 | That beer is a food and not a poison? |
16470 | That in some way they are actually getting off the ground, or about to get off the ground? |
16470 | That the whole field should be reeking with fraud, and science should be held back from understanding an extraordinary power of the subconscious mind? |
16470 | The Book of Job has been called a"Wisdom- drama": and what is the denouement of this drama, what is ancient Hebrew wisdom''s last word about life? |
16470 | The earth was made for all, rich and poor alike; where do you get your title deeds to it? |
16470 | The plan of a god is full of mystery-- who can understand it? |
16470 | The thunder of His power who can understand?" |
16470 | There are a thousand religious papers in America, weekly and monthly; and what is their attitude on this question? |
16470 | This young man came to Billy and said:"What shall I do to inherit eternal life?" |
16470 | Was he the only prelate of his time led up by such hands for consecration? |
16470 | Was it for this-- that men should make Thy name a fetter on men''s necks, Poor men made poorer for thy sake, And women withered out of sex? |
16470 | Was it for this-- that slaves should be-- Thy word was passed to set men free? |
16470 | Was it their insistence upon conscience, their fear of God as the beginning of wisdom? |
16470 | Was it their sense of the awful presence of divinity, of the soul immortal in its keeping? |
16470 | Was there any difficulty in persuading the established church of Jesus to bless this holy war? |
16470 | What are they taught about life? |
16470 | What are we to say when we see asceticism preached to the poor by fat and comfortable retainers of the rich? |
16470 | What attitude should a magazine editor take to the matter? |
16470 | What countries have nothing to give us, whether in art, science, or industry? |
16470 | What happens then? |
16470 | What if the Church were to rule? |
16470 | What is it that gives to the Bible the vitality it has today? |
16470 | What is it that keeps the average workingman in subjection to the exploiter? |
16470 | What is it they do inside? |
16470 | What is our intellectual life? |
16470 | What is to be done about this? |
16470 | What of the Catholic Church and these evils? |
16470 | What shall we do? |
16470 | What stands in the way of their realization? |
16470 | What was the condition of the people in those times? |
16470 | What was the reason? |
16470 | What would overcome your present and future difficulties? |
16470 | What you really are? |
16470 | What you want to be? |
16470 | When some one called him"good Master,"he answered, quickly,"Why callest thou me good? |
16470 | Who but the Catholic Church can handle these polyglot hordes? |
16470 | Who can blind the eyes of this giant, who can chain him to his couch of slumber? |
16470 | Who can furnish teachers and editors and politicians familiar with all these languages? |
16470 | Who does not know the genius of revolt who demonstrates his repudiation of private property by permitting his lady loves to support him? |
16470 | Who does not know the man who finds in the phrases of revolution the most effective devices for the seducing of young girls? |
16470 | Who does not know the radical woman who demonstrates her emancipation from convention by destroying her nerves with nicotine? |
16470 | Who gave it to you? |
16470 | Who let that material cat out of the spiritual bag? |
16470 | Who supports them, and to what end? |
16470 | Why did the"Outlook"practically take back Mr. Spahr''s revelations concerning the Powder barony of Delaware? |
16470 | Why else do you drive out the workers from all share in Nature, and claim everything for yourselves? |
16470 | Why is it that the Pope has such tremendous power? |
16470 | Why not? |
16470 | Why, if there be a power which loves and can be persuaded to aid us, may there not also be a power which hates, and can be persuaded to destroy? |
16470 | With the sword of truth and the armor of the spirit? |
16470 | Would you like to be an Impressive Personality? |
16470 | Would you like to hear that view of the most vital of Christian doctrines set forth in the language of scholarship and culture? |
16470 | Would you like, for example, to understand why America entered the War? |
16470 | You have piled up your dirty millions, but what wages have you paid to the poor devils of farm hands you have robbed? |
16470 | You serpents, you generation of vipers, how can you escape the damnation of hell? |
16470 | You think there is exaggeration in that statement? |
16470 | You think this is empty rhetoric-- you comfortable, easy- going, ultra- cultured Americans? |
16470 | You think this is exaggeration? |
16470 | Your father? |
16470 | Your grandfather, you say? |
16470 | asks William Morris Nichols in the publication of the"''Now''Folk", San Francisco: Is it low or high? |
21258 | Whence do you come? |
21258 | Whither do you go? |
21258 | 33 and the square of gold, which signify the supreme place in the world assigned to the liberty of gold"? |
21258 | Does not the Englishman, consciously or otherwise, put a curse on everything he touches? |
21258 | How came this red- tied scoffer so far on the road of religion as to be damned? |
21258 | How did Leo Taxil become possessed of these rituals? |
21258 | If the Eucharist be liable to profanation, why reserve the Eucharist? |
21258 | Is that a Manichæan doctrine? |
21258 | Is that diabolism? |
21258 | Is that the cultus of Lucifer? |
21258 | Need I say that Miss Vaughan''s first impulse was to fall in worship at his feet? |
21258 | Some time subsequently to the third of August, our witness published a volume entitled"Are there Women in Freemasonry?" |
21258 | Under what circumstances and why did it do that? |
21258 | When the doctor subsequently drew her on the subject of this history, she replied, after the manner of the walrus,"Do you admire the view?" |
21258 | Where is it practised? |
21258 | Who are its disciples? |
21258 | Why did Signor Margiotta abandon Palladism and Masonry? |
21258 | Why has he changed the impeachment? |
21258 | Why was the doctor privileged to be present at these proceedings? |
21258 | _ A House of Rottenness._ Who would possess a lingam which was an_ Open Sesame_ to devildom and not make use thereof? |
20927 | And say to those who have been given the Scripture, and to the common folk, Do you surrender yourselves unto God? 20927 And the faithful will say,''Are these they who swore by God their(_ Jahda_) utmost oath that they were surely on your side?'' |
20927 | But what is this? 20927 How can they who add gods to God be in league with God and His Apostle, save those with whom ye made a league at the sacred temple? |
20927 | How_ can they_? 20927 The angels, when they took the souls of those who had been unjust to their own weal, demanded,''What hath been your state?'' |
20927 | Will ye not do battle with a people(_ the Meccans_) who have broken their covenant and aimed to expel your Apostle and attacked you first? 20927 [ 134] Dr. Marcus Dods writes:--"But is Mahommed in no sense a Prophet? |
20927 | Did God command such slaughter of idolaters, as he commanded the destruction of the Canaanites or of the Amalekites? |
20927 | From Ibn Ishak we learn that Mohammad had said with reference to Abú Afak,"Who would rid me of this pestilent fellow? |
20927 | He said,''May it not be that if to fight were ordained you, ye would not fight?'' |
20927 | He said,''May it not be that when fighting is ordained you, ye would not fight?'' |
20927 | How much is Sir W. Muir in the wrong, who says, that fighting was prescribed on religious grounds? |
20927 | Huweisa cried,"wouldst thou have slain thine own brother at Mahomet''s bidding?" |
20927 | I do not understand why, if such was the case, Khálid did not refer the believers to the so- called"cunning device"of the Koran? |
20927 | Is there no blood in the streets? |
20927 | Then why should the execution be considered a worst act? |
20927 | They replied,''Was not God''s earth broad enough for you to flee away in?'' |
20927 | They said,''And why should we not fight in the cause of God, since we are driven forth from our dwellings and our children?'' |
20927 | They said,''And why should we not fight in the cause of God, since we are driven forth from our dwellings and our children?''.... |
20927 | Wakidi and Ibn Sád do not affirm that Mohammad, being annoyed at her lampoons, said dejectedly,"Who would rid me of that woman?" |
20927 | Where are the bodies of the thousands that have been butchered? |
20927 | Why hast thou forbidden thyself that which God hath made lawful unto thee,[363] out of desire to please thy wives; for God is forgiving and merciful? |
20927 | Will he not trample on them, torture them, revenge himself after his own cruel manner? |
20927 | Will ye dread them? |
20927 | Will you dread them?"] |
20927 | [ Footnote 10:"Will ye not do battle with a people who have broken their covenant and aimed to expel your Apostle and attacked you first? |
20927 | [ Footnote 208: Sir W. Muir writes that"Hishami says, that Mahomet, being vexed by Asma''s verses, said_ publicly_,''Who will rid me of this woman?''" |
20927 | [ Sidenote: When the word Jihád was diverted from its original signification to its figurative meaning of waging religious war?] |
20927 | bring us forth from this City whose inhabitants are oppressors; give us a champion from thy presence; and give us from thy presence a defender?''" |
2022 | And do the people actually believe all that? |
2022 | Are we but automata, worked by springs, moved by the stronger impulse, and unable to choose for ourselves which impulse that shall be? 2022 But their bodies were found?" |
2022 | But,I said, and paused--"are you sure your watch was right?" |
2022 | Can I have a word alone with you, sir? |
2022 | Never seen again? 2022 No,"she said,"I did not see him; where was he?" |
2022 | Stop and lunch, wo n''t you? 2022 The Bloody Doctor"was in_ Macmillan''s Magazine_,"The Confessions of a Duffer,""Loch Awe,"and"The Lady or the Salmon?" |
2022 | Then why did you smile-- don''t you remember? 2022 To the Devil?" |
2022 | ( A BAD DAY ON CLEARBURN) Thou askest me, my brother, how first and where I met the Bloody Doctor? |
2022 | A plan occurred to me; I tore a leaf from my sketch- book, put the paper with pencil in his hand, and said,"Where do you live? |
2022 | Anglus.--Now, Scholar, said I not so? |
2022 | Are not these triumphs chronicled in the"Scotsman?" |
2022 | But what joy was there in this while the"take"grew fainter and ceased at least near the shore? |
2022 | But, Scholar, with what fly caught ye these, and where? |
2022 | Came we not forth to catch fish? |
2022 | Dost thou remember, fair lady of the ringlets? |
2022 | Had I, too, lost my Eurydice? |
2022 | He might"otter"the loch, but how could I prevent him? |
2022 | Ho, runaway, how have you sped? |
2022 | How long? |
2022 | I am an hungered; wilt thou taste my cates? |
2022 | I said;"what wind blew_ you_ here?" |
2022 | In a moment of profane confidence my younger brother once asked me:"What do_ you_ do in sermon time? |
2022 | It was no affair of mine, and yet-- where had I seen him before? |
2022 | Ladies, would you have acted as Olive Dunne acted? |
2022 | Life has for weeks been odious to me; for what is life without honour, without love, and coupled with shame and remorse? |
2022 | Men call it a Phantom, Master; wilt thou not try my Phantom? |
2022 | Men, my brethren, would ye have deserted the salmon for the lady, or the lady for the salmon? |
2022 | Mortby?" |
2022 | Next time I met Miss Breton I told her the story, and said,"You remember how we saw Allen, at Blocksby''s, just as we were going away?" |
2022 | Or was it a treasure of Michael Scott''s, who lived at Oakwood, says tradition? |
2022 | Probably it was not dark and windy enough, but who can explain the caprices of salmon? |
2022 | Scotus.--And now, Master, wherefore wert thou wroth with me? |
2022 | Scotus.--Oh, Master, what is this? |
2022 | Scotus.--What, Master, this dry ditch? |
2022 | THE LADY OR THE SALMON? |
2022 | Then why, a persevering reader may ask, do I fish? |
2022 | There was a town we could n''t get into"( Seringapatam? |
2022 | Was the trout not morally caught, was there no way of getting him to see this and behave accordingly? |
2022 | Were they lost in the snow?" |
2022 | What could I do with him? |
2022 | What fiend is it that prompts a man just to try a hopeless cast, in a low water, without testing his tackle? |
2022 | What had gone wrong? |
2022 | What pleasure is there in landscape and tradition when such accidents befall you? |
2022 | What says the poet? |
2022 | What think you of my song, Scholar? |
2022 | Where is my landing- net? |
2022 | Where is thine usquebaugh? |
2022 | Where were you at a quarter to four?" |
2022 | Where, Master, is your river? |
2022 | Wherefore are the trout in Loch Tummell so big and strong, from one to five pounds, and so scarce, while those in Loch Awe are numerous and small? |
2022 | Who forgets his first trout? |
2022 | Why has Yarrow been so much more besung than Tweed, in spite of the greater stream''s far greater and more varied loveliness? |
2022 | Why on earth do you ask?" |
2022 | Why should I not take a farewell cast, alone, of course? |
2022 | Wilt thou, of thy courtesy, throw it up for my Scholar? |
2022 | Would pride, or pardon, or mirth have ridden sparkling in your eyes? |
2022 | and"What flies?" |
2022 | how bring him to a warm and dry place? |
2022 | they were not found indeed till this day"? |
22601 | As these people were low in the arts of life, were they also low in natural capacity? |
22601 | What was the intellectual capacity of man when he made his first appearance upon the earth? |
14406 | A white man''s tracks? 14406 And do you suppose I''d pay five thousand pounds to see my nephew wronged?" |
14406 | And so you trust Blake, in spite of his story? |
14406 | And the other side? 14406 And the remedy?" |
14406 | And you kept him waiting? 14406 Anyway, you will let me know how you get on?" |
14406 | Are n''t you and Benson taking what you mean by the truth too much for granted? |
14406 | Are there minerals up yonder? |
14406 | Are these animals yours? |
14406 | Are you interested in my nephew? |
14406 | Are you making a bold guess, or have you any ground for what you''re saying? |
14406 | Are you supposed to sit up all night and watch the animals for her? |
14406 | Are you? |
14406 | But after such a life as his daughter must have led, do you consider her a suitable person to take about with you? 14406 But how can people live in a rugged land covered with snow that melts only for a month or two?" |
14406 | But how did you come here? |
14406 | But how did you manage? |
14406 | But suppose you wished to marry? |
14406 | But the arctic frost and the snow? |
14406 | But was that long enough to learn much about him? 14406 But what did you do when you left England?" |
14406 | But what particular things were you referring to? |
14406 | But what was the story? 14406 But what''s Clarke''s object?" |
14406 | But what''s her object in buying these creatures? |
14406 | But who''ll look after Blake? 14406 But why?" |
14406 | But you believe this venture will pay you? |
14406 | But, as they do n''t speak English, how does the fellow get on with them? |
14406 | Ca n''t you guess? |
14406 | Ca n''t you say something for yourself? |
14406 | Can you? |
14406 | Clarke? 14406 Colonel Challoner, I presume?" |
14406 | Considering that you came across the man lying frozen after one of the worst storms you remember, what did you expect to find? |
14406 | Could you not have gone back when you were no longer needed? |
14406 | Did I hear aright? |
14406 | Did he ever speak of having malaria here? 14406 Did n''t you hear it?" |
14406 | Did you ever see signs of oil? |
14406 | Did you find what you were looking for? |
14406 | Did you have much trouble? |
14406 | Did you see the Buddha? |
14406 | Do you know the bride? |
14406 | Do you know these white men? |
14406 | Do you know whether she ever goes down to a little place in Shropshire? |
14406 | Do you mean that? 14406 Do you seriously mean that you are going about selling these things?" |
14406 | Do you suppose it''s likely, after I''ve ridden all this way? |
14406 | Do you think I ca n''t see where I''m drifting? 14406 Do you think that fellow Clarke can hear? |
14406 | Do you? |
14406 | Does it matter? |
14406 | Does that matter, when it is through no fault of yours? |
14406 | Does that mean that yours is not the same as mine? |
14406 | Does the fellow live at Sweetwater? |
14406 | Eustace Graham? 14406 Feel like getting down to business, or shall we put it off again?" |
14406 | From the south? 14406 Getting off the subject, was n''t I? |
14406 | Guess you mean the secrets of their medicine- men? 14406 Had n''t you better go after him?" |
14406 | Have you any plan for the future? |
14406 | Have you done much prospecting? |
14406 | Have you ever thought about your future? |
14406 | Have you gaged the consequences of your refusal? |
14406 | Have you got Benson here? |
14406 | Have you heard anything from Mr. Blake since he left Montreal? |
14406 | Have you met his companion? 14406 How are you going to find the place?" |
14406 | How can I tell him? |
14406 | How can I tell? |
14406 | How did the thing get lighted? |
14406 | How far do you make it to the logging camp? |
14406 | How long did you stay at the factory? |
14406 | How long has he been like that? |
14406 | How often must I tell you that the thing will wear off? |
14406 | How was it you did n''t go straight to Sandymere, where your uncle is eagerly awaiting you? |
14406 | How was it you left the white man in your village by himself? |
14406 | How would you define them? 14406 I can imagine your making others easily; but have n''t you retained one or two? |
14406 | I certainly feel much better; but what prompted your remark? |
14406 | I do n''t know that it was of much importance; speaking of degenerates, were n''t we? 14406 I guess you have seen nothing like this round here?" |
14406 | I heard about his American companion; who was the other? |
14406 | I suppose I need n''t consider you a friend of Clarke''s? |
14406 | I suppose it struck you that he made no attempt to get your friend back? |
14406 | I suppose you mean she is too good for the post? |
14406 | I suppose you saw nothing? |
14406 | I take it that your uncle is a man who tries to do the square thing? |
14406 | I wonder what use you think I would be? |
14406 | I wonder,Harding went on,"whether Clarke knows about this gas? |
14406 | If you doubt my professional skill or good faith, why do you put your partner in my charge? |
14406 | Is it yours? |
14406 | Is n''t a low flash- point a disadvantage? |
14406 | Is n''t it curious that no news of it has reached the settlements? |
14406 | Is that all? |
14406 | Is there anything else you wish to know? |
14406 | Is your companion fond of attending to wild animals? |
14406 | It was your soldiers''business to be made use of, was n''t it? |
14406 | Now that you have come back, what do you mean to do? |
14406 | Or the brass plate with the fantastic serpent pattern round the rim? |
14406 | Richard Blake? |
14406 | She said a bobcat? |
14406 | Since you surreptitiously said good- by to me at Peshawur? 14406 Six of you? |
14406 | Suppose the fellow goes to work without you? 14406 The Northern Stonies? |
14406 | The lady I saw at the Frontenac, with the autocratic manners? 14406 Then I suppose you do n''t know where he is?" |
14406 | Then how do you account for the fellow''s being there alone? |
14406 | Then you came up after me, Tom? |
14406 | Then you get on with Indians? |
14406 | Then you have given up all idea of clearing yourself? 14406 Then you knew him?" |
14406 | Then you know the Jack- pine? |
14406 | Then you mean never to question the story of the Indian affair? |
14406 | Then you were not deterred by what you learned? |
14406 | Then, if it''s not an impertinence, your means are small? |
14406 | Then, who''s the doctor? |
14406 | Then, why do n''t you quit? |
14406 | Then,Harding asked bluntly,"what brought you to Sweetwater?" |
14406 | They extract it from crude petroleum, do n''t they? |
14406 | This is to salve my feelings; to make the thing look like a business transaction? |
14406 | Tired? |
14406 | Truly sorry? 14406 Was n''t it?" |
14406 | Was n''t that rather hard for both of you? |
14406 | Well,Benson asked,"what''s your opinion?" |
14406 | Well? |
14406 | What about Benson? 14406 What about the petroleum?" |
14406 | What are you doing up here? |
14406 | What are you going to do about the petroleum? |
14406 | What business have you gone into? |
14406 | What business is it of yours to preach to me? 14406 What do you know about it?" |
14406 | What do you specialize in? |
14406 | What have you got on? 14406 What have you to do?" |
14406 | What is it? |
14406 | What is this? |
14406 | What was that? |
14406 | What will you do if it comes up to your expectations? |
14406 | What would you call this? |
14406 | What would you do with gas in this wilderness? |
14406 | What would you think of it as a business proposition? |
14406 | What''s that? |
14406 | What''s that? |
14406 | What''s your plan? |
14406 | When I joined the army, I hated it; that sounds like high treason, does n''t it? 14406 Where are the dogs?" |
14406 | Where are ye making for? |
14406 | Where could I go? 14406 Where did you find the half- breed?" |
14406 | Where''s the key? |
14406 | Who you talking to? |
14406 | Who''s he? 14406 Whom are you looking at so hard?" |
14406 | Why are n''t you fit? 14406 Why did n''t you send for Bertram?" |
14406 | Why do n''t you make your offer to some company floater or stockjobber? |
14406 | Why do you ask, when you mean to keep him? 14406 Why do you ask? |
14406 | Why do you give him the liquor? |
14406 | Why does he wish you to know? |
14406 | Why should his people think less of him because he likes to paint? 14406 Why?" |
14406 | Will these do? 14406 Will you give me the key to the Indian collection?" |
14406 | With the ax? |
14406 | Would n''t it be better to wait until I''m here in the daylight? 14406 Yes?" |
14406 | Yes? |
14406 | You are a nephew of Colonel Challoner? |
14406 | You are going back to Canada? |
14406 | You are going now, by the Vancouver express? |
14406 | You are surprised at my turning up? |
14406 | You emptied the pockets? |
14406 | You have brought me some news of my nephew, Richard Blake? |
14406 | You hear somet''ing? |
14406 | You imagined that a dog- fancier would specialize in cats? |
14406 | You mean me? |
14406 | You mean to infer that my son is a coward and gave the shameful order? |
14406 | You mean you will stake all you have on it? |
14406 | You mean your life? 14406 You suggest that that is what the fellow wished?" |
14406 | You will no doubt mention it? |
14406 | You would n''t have got much farther with that team; but who sent you? |
14406 | You''re going to bring him here? 14406 You''re in lumber, are n''t you?" |
14406 | You''re interested in Eastern brasswork, I think? |
14406 | You''re wondering who we are? |
14406 | A looker, is n''t he?" |
14406 | Are n''t some of the creatures savage?" |
14406 | Are n''t you sorry now?" |
14406 | Are you going to play a low- down game on him; to twist the truth so''s to give him a chance for deceiving himself?" |
14406 | Are you looking forward to the trip?" |
14406 | Are you satisfied with your lot? |
14406 | Are you willing to leave him with us?" |
14406 | Are you willing to let Clarke get hold of you again?" |
14406 | As you do n''t speak of having been in India, may I ask who gave you the information?" |
14406 | Besides, how could you have had bad hours? |
14406 | But I understand you are a doctor?" |
14406 | But I''m only one of the party; what would he gain if you and Blake came to grief?" |
14406 | But are you content to quietly suffer injustice?" |
14406 | But did n''t your fondness for sketching amuse the mess?" |
14406 | But did you starve yourselves in Canada?" |
14406 | But how long must you stay?" |
14406 | But maybe ye''ll be wanting supper?" |
14406 | But was n''t there some scandal about a cousin?" |
14406 | But we''ll take it that the change in me is an improvement?" |
14406 | But what about your collection of gum?" |
14406 | But what of that? |
14406 | But what would you have done if you had n''t found the post?" |
14406 | But why did you say you_ were_ sorry for him? |
14406 | But why do you suggest our taking him?" |
14406 | But will you come to Montreal with me to- night?" |
14406 | But you wo n''t go away, Dick?" |
14406 | But, if I may ask, how was it he let you come to his flat?" |
14406 | By the way, how long is it since he left India?" |
14406 | Ca n''t I induce you to give us a trial? |
14406 | Ca n''t you see that he could n''t use his absurd story to bleed you unless I supported it?" |
14406 | Challoner._''""That sets you free, does n''t it?" |
14406 | Confound you, who are_ you_? |
14406 | Did you find them easy to get on with?" |
14406 | Did you get any information from the Hudson Bay man?" |
14406 | Do n''t you get the material you make good varnish of from the tropics?" |
14406 | Do you deny the story this man told me?" |
14406 | Do you know his history?" |
14406 | Do you make the stuff?" |
14406 | Do you suppose I''m a fool and do n''t know what you think?" |
14406 | Had you any cause to doubt his courage?" |
14406 | Have n''t I marched and starved and shared my plans with you? |
14406 | Have n''t you the courage to insist on being reinstated?" |
14406 | Have you been serenading somebody?" |
14406 | Have you had enough of this trip yet, or are you going on?" |
14406 | Have you known him long?" |
14406 | Have you no friends or relatives in England to whom you owe something? |
14406 | Have you thought about your future?" |
14406 | He was with Outram, was n''t he? |
14406 | How are we to find you with our trail drifting up? |
14406 | How are you going to get the money?" |
14406 | How did he come to be here with only about three days''rations?" |
14406 | How else could Clarke have put the screw on him?" |
14406 | How is it that nobody else suspects the belt contains oil?" |
14406 | How much farther is it?" |
14406 | How will the fellows you left up yonder get on?" |
14406 | How would you say it had been treated?" |
14406 | How''s the leg this morning?" |
14406 | I believe Benson spent some time with you this morning; are you taking him?" |
14406 | I wonder who the fellows are?" |
14406 | If he had done something to be ashamed of?" |
14406 | If there had been any meanness in you, would n''t I have found it out? |
14406 | If you liked a man who was far from rich, would you marry him?" |
14406 | Is it a habit of yours?" |
14406 | Is it nothing to have gone where other men seldom venture?" |
14406 | Is the old set of Indian chessmen still in the drawer?" |
14406 | Is there anything doing in my line there?" |
14406 | Is there no romance in that?" |
14406 | Is your life worth nothing, that you''re willing to throw it away?" |
14406 | Keith?" |
14406 | Man, do n''t you realize that talking''s of no use? |
14406 | May I ask how it came into your possession?" |
14406 | Millicent''s color deepened, and she added quickly:"Do you like the life in the Northwest?" |
14406 | No doubt, you know something about his history?" |
14406 | Of course, I know you were in some danger; but was it so serious?" |
14406 | Of late they had seemed heavier than formerly, for in tempting him Clarke had made a telling suggestion-- suppose he married? |
14406 | Onslow?" |
14406 | Petroleum''s a cheap product to handle when you''re a long way from a market, is n''t it?" |
14406 | Shall we go and look at them?" |
14406 | So you consider this trip to the Northwest your opportunity? |
14406 | The question is----""It strikes me it''s when are we going to have the house to ourselves? |
14406 | Then there was another point that struck me-- why''s he going so far to stay with those Indians?" |
14406 | They talked a while about English friends and relatives; and then Blake asked rather abruptly:"And the Colonel?" |
14406 | Those who do n''t fit in with your ideas of the normal?" |
14406 | Want to cut your old friendsh? |
14406 | Was n''t he in rather bad odor-- only tolerated on the fringe of society? |
14406 | Was the strain equally virile?" |
14406 | What are you going to do, now that we do n''t seem able to find the gum?" |
14406 | What did the man say?" |
14406 | What do you think, Blake?" |
14406 | What do you think?" |
14406 | What do your friends think? |
14406 | What ever possessed you to get yourself up like an Italian opera villain and go round the town with a wild beast under your arm?" |
14406 | What good would it do? |
14406 | What had they to say that took so long, when there was a risk of Captain Challoner''s being discovered? |
14406 | What led him to talk of the thing to an outsider?" |
14406 | What made you jump to the conclusion?" |
14406 | What would have happened if we had n''t met the police?" |
14406 | What''s he like?" |
14406 | Whatsh you doing here?" |
14406 | Where are the rest? |
14406 | Where are you staying? |
14406 | Where do ye hail from?" |
14406 | Who can he be?" |
14406 | Who is the painter?" |
14406 | Why did Blake make no defense, unless it was because he knew that to clear himself would throw the blame upon his friend?" |
14406 | Why did he, without permission and abusing his authority over the guard, spend two hours late at night with Blake, who was under arrest? |
14406 | Why did n''t you tell me who you were?" |
14406 | Why did you go to the village?" |
14406 | Why do n''t you look after the fool? |
14406 | Why have you let that fellow Clarke suck the life and energy out of you, as well as rob you of your money?" |
14406 | Why?" |
14406 | Will you come along?" |
14406 | You do n''t mind her?" |
14406 | You found the muskeg too difficult to cross? |
14406 | You know something about that material?" |
14406 | You know we may have to live in Canada?" |
14406 | You mean that?" |
14406 | You wo n''t mind if I confess that a view of this kind makes me long to paint?" |
14406 | You would n''t consider that much to begin on?" |
14406 | You would rather have him a soldier?" |
14406 | You''re for Sweetwater?" |
14406 | You''re satisfied that this is a project I can recommend to my friends?" |
22739 | Can anyone be in doubt here, if he has read the preceding chapters? |
22739 | WHAT IS THE HUMAN AURA? |
22739 | What color should we use in this form of auric protection? |
22739 | Who has not met persons of this kind, who seem to sap one''s very life force away from him? |
2124 | ( 13) Was, or could, this prefect be Le E? |
2124 | ( 2) Was it a custom to wash the hands with"earth,"as is often done with sand? |
2124 | ( 3) Are two classes of opponents, or only one, intended here, so that we should read"all the unbelievers and Brahmans,"or"heretics and Brahmans?" |
2124 | ( 4) What can we do?" |
2124 | ( 6) Where and when? |
2124 | ( 7) Did they not contrive to let him in, with some cachinnation, even in so august an assembly, that so important a member should have been shut out? |
2124 | ( 8)? |
2124 | (? |
2124 | Are we now with them in 402? |
2124 | But what had disciples of Buddha to do with hunting and taking life? |
2124 | Fa- Hsien first spoke assuringly to them, and then slowly and distinctly asked them,"Who are you?" |
2124 | He asked further,"What country is this?" |
2124 | He then asked,"What are you looking for among these hills?" |
2124 | How should there be eighteen copies, all different from the original, and from one another, in minor matters? |
2124 | I am( but) a woman; how shall I succeed in being the first to see him? |
2124 | Must it not have been a good act, when it was attended, in the very act of performance, by such blessed consequences? |
2124 | The Tushita heaven was a more likely place to find her than the Trayastrimsas; but was the former a part of the latter? |
2124 | They replied,"We are disciples of Buddha?" |
2124 | Was there a repetition of it here in the Deer- park, or was a prediction now given concerning something else? |
2124 | What has he to do with the Path( of Wisdom)? |
2124 | When was this first assembly in the time of Sakyamuni held? |
2124 | Why should there not have been schools in those monasteries in India as there were in China? |
2124 | here be extended to the Vinaya rules, as well as the Sutras, and mean"the standards"of the system generally? |
2124 | munshee(? |
17682 | ''What have you got in that great waggon?'' 17682 But is it the truth? |
17682 | But what do you know about oxalic acid? |
17682 | How can beauty grow in these vile cities? |
17682 | If we all adopt_ that_ diet,her pseudo- disciples cry,"what is to become of the potatoes?" |
17682 | May I safely do this? 17682 Really, Mr Taste, you would not, I presume, have me suppress the truth simply because it happens to be profitable?" |
17682 | The moral of which is? |
17682 | What is the use of your music, your statuary, your fine pictures, your poetry, to the starving and the oppressed? |
17682 | What kind of animals? 17682 Why not from your relative, Unnatural Taste? |
17682 | ( 2) Are cooked lentils, butter- beans, macaroni, etc., more beneficial taken hot than after they have cooled? |
17682 | ( 3) Could uncooked vegetables_ of sufficient nutriment_ be substituted for these? |
17682 | ( 3) Is olive oil good to take? |
17682 | ( 4) Is it good for children? |
17682 | ( 5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional dietary( often found amongst food reformers)? |
17682 | ( 5) Is the diet satisfying, or is there a longing for conventional dietary( often found amongst food reformers)? |
17682 | ( 5) What nuts are richest in phosphorus? |
17682 | ( 6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter? |
17682 | ( 6) Is the diet quite satisfactory in winter? |
17682 | ( Or do you?) |
17682 | ***** CAKEOMA PUDDING? |
17682 | ***** WHAT WOULD YOU GIVE FOR A PERFECT SKIN? |
17682 | Again, who does not love a library catalogue? |
17682 | And is that diet so very expensive that it would be beyond the means of an agricultural labourer in any country? |
17682 | And is the desiccated or dry malt extract to be preferred to the ordinary sticky article? |
17682 | And what would you do without your patients?" |
17682 | Are lemons or eggs injurious to the heart? |
17682 | Are there any dangers even here? |
17682 | Are there not too many ugly and discordant posters? |
17682 | Are these pains likely to be due to wrong food? |
17682 | Being human, how can she but envy those of her old friends who have their evenings to themselves? |
17682 | Bile? |
17682 | But does all this go far enough? |
17682 | But is it not the more or the less of our imagination that makes such dealings possible? |
17682 | But is not the converse at least as often true? |
17682 | But is not the question of how much food we ought to eat equally urgent whether we are vegetarian or omnivorous? |
17682 | But it may be said:"How can you substantiate such a general and sweeping statement?" |
17682 | But to test it we should ask ourselves: What is the reason for the necessity to take food into the body? |
17682 | But what doses of sugar did the rabbits get?" |
17682 | But what is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help, to do under present conditions? |
17682 | But where are they? |
17682 | But who can say whether these changes are attributable merely to a deficiency or to a previous excess? |
17682 | But why put all the trouble down to present deficiency instead of to previous excess? |
17682 | But, if this standpoint is right, is not fear at least a vestigial organ, a survival of a mental activity which served its purpose in times gone by? |
17682 | CAN MALARIA BE PREVENTED? |
17682 | Can inconsistency go further? |
17682 | Can these generally"instructive"and"useful,"generally also solitary, occupations be called play? |
17682 | Do you consider it better to use the enema than to take a mild aperient? |
17682 | Do you consider trade and manufacture so sordid that they are beneath the ministrations of beauty? |
17682 | Do you think dried milk is harmful to me? |
17682 | Do you think it a degradation of art that it should be enlisted by the makers of wall- papers? |
17682 | Do you think that if I went on to a milk diet for a time it would do good? |
17682 | ENVOY Prince whose course through the world is free, Fare you better than dreamers do? |
17682 | HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT? |
17682 | HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT? |
17682 | HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT? |
17682 | Has not every life its revelations? |
17682 | He seems to be a vegetarian? |
17682 | His father is away all day, and mothers are, as a rule, soft marks, are they not? |
17682 | Hodge, 597 Vegetalism, The Scientific Basis of, Prof. H. Labbe, 549, 584 West Wind, Ode to, Shelley, 555 What makes a Holiday? |
17682 | How are we to tell when a given person is getting enough food, either natural or partly natural? |
17682 | How can she help gleaning the impression that such work is"menial,"when her employers more or less openly despise her? |
17682 | How do you make bread then?" |
17682 | How does he account for that? |
17682 | How is it, again, that the natives of the West Indies, when living on sugar( in its crude state, I suppose) have excellent teeth and perfect health? |
17682 | I think they must be the most proper sowing- time, for is it not clear that Nature sows seed, not in spring, but in autumn? |
17682 | I wonder how many of us could conscientiously say that we devote fifteen or twenty minutes regularly every day to the system? |
17682 | IS PURE LIME JUICE OBTAINABLE? |
17682 | If so how is it to be administered? |
17682 | If so, how does he account for it? |
17682 | If the coal in the fireplace_ were_ the cause of the heat of the fire( but is it? |
17682 | If we discard our natural guides, which of the claimants to knowledge is to be followed, and is there any knowledge at all such as is claimed? |
17682 | Is it to give strength and heat to the body? |
17682 | Is not raw sugar better the less manufactured it is? |
17682 | Is not the same thing the explanation of shop- gazing? |
17682 | Is not this attitude of mind due to a misunderstanding? |
17682 | Is saccharine less harmful than sugar for sweetening? |
17682 | Is there not too little consideration given to theoretical issues underlying practical experience of disease? |
17682 | Is this a uric acid condition, or do you think it merely due to a lack of nourishment, causing a lack of synovial fluid? |
17682 | Its hardships? |
17682 | Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is: What if my leaves are falling like its own? |
17682 | O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind? |
17682 | One of"The Jolly Rhymster''s"best things begins--"Finger- post, finger- post, why do you stand Pointing all day with your silly flat hand?" |
17682 | Or is it to restore the waste of the body sustained by the action on it of the force of life or zoo- dynamic which inhabits it? |
17682 | Ought I to refrain from that?" |
17682 | Resolved into a single sentence, what all my correspondents wish to know is this: Is a two- meal dietary best for all? |
17682 | Seekest thou repose now? |
17682 | Should I use an enema when I feel like this, or wait for natural results? |
17682 | Suppose the milk contains disease germs, would not this cheese be injurious, as the milk is not sterilised by being brought to boiling point? |
17682 | Tell me, thou star, whose wings of light Speed thee in thy fiery flight, In what cavern of the night Will thy pinions close now? |
17682 | The price is reasonable; but I think I would rather see a sample first, would n''t you? |
17682 | Then what are you going to do about it?" |
17682 | UNFIRED DIET FOR A CHILD: IS IT SUITABLE? |
17682 | WHAT MAKES A HOLIDAY? |
17682 | WILL OTHER READERS DO LIKEWISE? |
17682 | Weary wind, who wanderest Like the world''s rejected guest, Hast thou still some secret nest On the tree or billow? |
17682 | What contentment can she find in a life of drudgery unenlightened by intelligent interest in learning how to do something well? |
17682 | What do these 200 grammes really bring in nutritive elements? |
17682 | What does it all mean? |
17682 | What grounds has Dr Knaggs for speaking so definitely about human magnetism and that of vegetables? |
17682 | What is it makes a holiday? |
17682 | What is it that induces boils in one person and not in another under identical circumstances? |
17682 | What is the homemaker of limited means, who must have some help, to do under present conditions? |
17682 | What of this method? |
17682 | What proof have you?" |
17682 | What proportion( approximately) is it to total body weight? |
17682 | What would your patients do without it? |
17682 | What, then, must be our conclusions in reference to these and similar facts of which it is only possible to give a mere outline here? |
17682 | When you say that''fruit is mostly sugar,''are you not leaving the water of the fruit out of account? |
17682 | Where are the streets and their smoke and stain When to the land of the lark we flee? |
17682 | Where can I get information_ re_ Professor Atwater''s experiments and other recent works on similar subjects? |
17682 | Where is the sight that we may not see, Cloudland''s citadel passing through? |
17682 | Which of all these things makes these days my holiday? |
17682 | Which of these definite and contradictory assertions does Dr Knaggs support, and why? |
17682 | Who amongst ordinary men and women has a reliable natural taste that would be an infallible guide in all matters of food? |
17682 | Who can say what the Cornish sea means to that tired worker? |
17682 | Who does not know the charm of looking down the theatre- list of the morning paper? |
17682 | Who does not know the peaceful activity of a Sunday evening, the fruitful quiet of a long railway journey or sea- voyage_ at the end_ of a holiday? |
17682 | Who does not like looking over prospectuses of lectures and classes at the beginning of the winter session? |
17682 | Who has not been tempted to shirk practice of some sort in thinking of a prize? |
17682 | Whoever heard of music without instruments? |
17682 | Whoever heard of statues dancing? |
17682 | Why is this so? |
17682 | Why not live on unfired food, such as tinned tongue, sardines and bottled shrimps?" |
17682 | Why of the bondage of earth complain? |
17682 | Why should meat have any bad effect upon the kidneys? |
17682 | Why, then, do you recommend fruit, which is mostly sugar?" |
17682 | Will any average person say that that quantity, divided into three meals, would be nauseating to him? |
17682 | Will you kindly enlighten me on the subject? |
17682 | Will you tell me if the same applies to dried milk-- will it tend to increase intestinal trouble? |
17682 | Would any reader care to try this and report upon it? |
17682 | Would bathing myself with cold water over the region of the heart strengthen the muscles? |
17682 | You chose such as are used to taking shop sugar as part of their ordinary food, of course?" |
17682 | _ This soup is not so much nutritive as cleansing and antiseptic._ TASTE OR THEORY? |
17682 | _ What_ organic salts are so converted? |
17682 | means by_ each pound_ of_ bone_ and_ muscle_ in the body weight? |
17682 | say:"These quantities were settled by physiologists many years ago, and no good reasons have since been adduced for altering them"? |
17682 | says is necessary, either for himself or his children? |
17682 | says that"some twenty years ago most people lived fairly close to the old physiological quantities"( but what are these? |
17682 | too much? |
17682 | writes.--Is malt extract a good thing to take daily with an ordinary non- flesh diet, two teaspoonfuls or so at breakfast? |
17682 | writes:--Is there any way, independent of diet, of increasing the red corpuscles in the blood? |
17682 | |||+--------------------------------------------------------------+ HOW MUCH SHOULD WE EAT? |
2036 | Echo answers''Where?'' |
2036 | Again I ask, is this the effect of"chance?" |
2036 | But all this entails expense, and upon whom is this to fall? |
2036 | But are our missionaries capable? |
2036 | But the question will then arise, Where is the gold? |
2036 | But what can be expected from an apathetic system of government? |
2036 | But what remains of its grandeur? |
2036 | Can he understand why the greater portion of Ceylon is covered by dense thorny jungles? |
2036 | Cinnamon thrives; but why? |
2036 | Have the soils of various districts been tested? |
2036 | Have we not botanical gardens? |
2036 | How can he possibly get a correct aim with"ball"out of a smoothbore, without squinting along the barrel and taking the muzzle- sight accurately? |
2036 | How has this ended? |
2036 | How many millions of human beings of all creeds and colors does she control? |
2036 | How would you open such a creature without a knife? |
2036 | However, this was not elephant- shooting, and the question was, how to get at them? |
2036 | In fact, has ANYTHING ever been done by government for the interest of the private settler? |
2036 | Is it"chance"that has worked this change? |
2036 | Is it, therefore, a mystery that Ceylon is covered with such vast tracts of thorny jungle, now that her inhabitants are gone? |
2036 | Let us think; what was the subject? |
2036 | Quiet again for a few seconds, when presently the loud alarm of the plover rings over the plain--"Did he do it?" |
2036 | The ancient deities of Ceylon are in the same spots, unchanged; the stones of the Druids stand unmoved; but what has become of the nations? |
2036 | The only trouble was, How to get the cow up? |
2036 | What benefit have they been to the colony? |
2036 | What can be more beautiful than to watch the judgement displayed by these dogs in driving a large flock of sheep? |
2036 | What can better exemplify the case than the recent discovery of gold at Newera Ellia? |
2036 | What do they know of Ceylon? |
2036 | What has the purchaser obtained for this sum? |
2036 | What is the government price of land in Ceylon? |
2036 | What is the reader''s conceived opinion of the duties and labors of a missionary in a heathen land? |
2036 | What will the future be in these days of advancement? |
2036 | Where does the needle and thread come from? |
2036 | Where is he? |
2036 | Where is the forest- covered country and its savage race, its skin- clad warriors and their frail coracles? |
2036 | Who can be so presumptuous as to predict the changes of future years? |
2036 | Who does not want nuggets? |
2036 | Why should not schools be established, a comfortable hotel be erected, a church be built? |
2036 | Why should not the highlands Of Ceylon, with an Italian climate, be rescued from their state of barrenness? |
2036 | Why should this great tract of country in such a lovely climate be untenanted and uncultivated? |
2036 | Why should this place lie idle? |
2036 | and what is the real cost of the land? |
2036 | have dyes been extracted? |
2036 | have improvements been suggested in the cultivation of any of the staple articles of Ceylon export? |
2036 | have medicinal drugs been produced? |
2036 | have new fibres been manufactured from the countless indigenous fibrous plants? |
2036 | have new oils been extracted? |
2036 | that he leaves all to follow"Him?" |
2036 | that millions of others still exist, which are too minute for any observation? |
2036 | what can I say to describe the wonderful effects of such a pure and unpolluted air? |
2036 | what, not one bit for me?" |
18969 | What makes a poet? |
18969 | Who is this Davidson? |
18969 | ***** Then what does the superlative writer do? |
18969 | A training for the living of a life-- is that object not sufficiently practical for the modern man? |
18969 | And again I ask, has there, at first sight, been anything more like Shelley since Shelley''s_ Cloud_? |
18969 | And as our mistaken pessimist listens, what then becomes of his theory that science and philosophy have killed the poet in mankind? |
18969 | And how does he paint it? |
18969 | And is it inevitable that the destined social existence shall be arid and hard, cramping, drab, and dreary? |
18969 | And is that Woman all her crew? |
18969 | And is this a mere knack, with which brain- power has little or nothing to do? |
18969 | And what does that proud injured Ajax reply? |
18969 | And what is the province of art? |
18969 | And what preparation for life could surpass that of the student who has thus taken all literature for his province? |
18969 | And what then of Homer? |
18969 | And why are these employed? |
18969 | And why? |
18969 | Are those her ribs through which the Sun Did peer, as through a grate? |
18969 | Are we incapable of ardent idealism? |
18969 | At first sight, has there been anything better in this vein since_ Lycidas_? |
18969 | At what date philosophy? |
18969 | But do we then think a Kipling proved equal to a Shakespeare in sheer excellence of his gift? |
18969 | But was it, after all, so transcendently difficult to do? |
18969 | But what manner of rain, O thou ordinary and inadequate writer? |
18969 | But what of that? |
18969 | But what of that? |
18969 | But why, it may be asked, should all this exquisite expression of nature and man and life take shape in verse? |
18969 | But, it may be objected, the influence of a writer may indeed thus stimulate, but what if it stimulates irrationally and amiss? |
18969 | Can I dread such things of England? |
18969 | Can we call_ his_ task a difficult one? |
18969 | Can you doubt that Coleridge saw this in his brain exactly as if it were real? |
18969 | Can you express simply what you then saw and heard, so that all who have witnessed the same can see and feel it over again? |
18969 | Do we feel less awe before the infinitude of space and the insignificance of our own selves? |
18969 | Do we find our Anglo- Saxon fore- fathers in this respect superior to Chaucer, Chaucer superior to Shakespeare? |
18969 | Do we find the most consummate poets in a semi- barbarian world? |
18969 | Do we lack sympathy with the tragic feeling? |
18969 | Do we less marvel at the stupendous order of the solar and astral circles? |
18969 | Do we not almost rejoice to think that we ourselves shall not live to shiver in its bleakness? |
18969 | Do we shrink from it? |
18969 | Do we think Kipling possessed of an extraordinary degree of the literary gift? |
18969 | Does modern science begin with Darwin, with Newton, with Copernicus, or with Aristotle? |
18969 | Does not even Macaulay tell them that there will be"abundance of verses, even of good ones"? |
18969 | Does philosophy date from Kant, or from Bacon, or from Plato? |
18969 | Does the essence of poetry lie at all in myths and superstitions? |
18969 | Dreamer of dreams, born out of my due time, Why should I strive to set the crooked straight? |
18969 | Have we no sense of humour, or only a gross and vulgar sense of humour? |
18969 | Have you seen and heard the lark, and studied his movements and his song aloft in the sky of Europe? |
18969 | He was an"upstart crow,"and what right had he to be"as well able to bumbast out a blank verse as the best of you?" |
18969 | How are we to be sharers in that conception? |
18969 | How can we describe in brief and intelligible terms these two spirits, the Hebraic and the Hellenic? |
18969 | How can we tell when a writer is succeeding in his effort to communicate, to body forth what he seeks to body forth? |
18969 | How is he prompted to find such language there? |
18969 | How many words would you take, and how vivid might your picture be? |
18969 | If he does apply it, what then? |
18969 | If they can not, has criticism any real existence? |
18969 | In the domain of literal and historical truth what becomes of_ Gulliver''s Travels_, or Scott''s novels, or, for the matter of that,_ Paradise Lost_? |
18969 | Is Death that Woman''s mate? |
18969 | Is Goethe the inferior of Hans Sachs in any poetic quality, or still more the inferior of the nameless author of the_ Nibelungen Lied_? |
18969 | Is a capacity for profound reverence and adoration not ours? |
18969 | Is he without a creed? |
18969 | Is he, too, full of infinitely delicate or far- reaching thoughts and feelings? |
18969 | Is it just to the meaning of"poetry"or just to the nature of mankind? |
18969 | Is it necessary that this clear light of science should be dry and cold? |
18969 | Is it not one of alarm and disgust? |
18969 | Is it to write in a particular style, in a given lucid style, a given figurative style, or a given dignified style? |
18969 | Is that a Death? |
18969 | Is the verse of Cædmon of imagination more compact than_ Paradise Lost_? |
18969 | Is there any doubt which aspect ultimately concerns us the more as human beings, livers of human lives? |
18969 | Is there any ground in speculation? |
18969 | Is there any such application, practical and living? |
18969 | Is there evidence in fact? |
18969 | Is there in theory? |
18969 | Is there no room for lyrics and for the poetical expression of great truths? |
18969 | Is this the just account? |
18969 | Is verse a mere conviction? |
18969 | Is, after all, the final cause of society to be simply manufacturing and underselling, eating, drinking, and sleeping? |
18969 | Listen once more to this:-- Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
18969 | Might he not say that it was precisely the new light shed by the dawning Renaissance which elicited the poetry of Dante''s day? |
18969 | Might not some reasoner of the more cheerful school urge in triumph just the contrary? |
18969 | Nature is full of joy, man may find abounding delight of life in the midst of it; but what of his destiny? |
18969 | No doubt justice will be done in the end, but why not do as much of it as possible at once? |
18969 | Or is the_ Roman de la Rose_ more poetical, in any sense ever attributed to the term, than_ La Légende des Siècles_? |
18969 | Perfectly easy, is it not? |
18969 | That it was precisely the flood of illumination on English thought in the sixteenth century which called forth the Elizabethan outburst? |
18969 | That the advances of science have made him gaze less lovingly, less wonderingly, upon any created thing? |
18969 | That the progress of philosophy has hardened Browning''s heart to accesses of passion, or cramped his creative imagination? |
18969 | To tickle the ear? |
18969 | Well, at what date was modern science born? |
18969 | Well, let us keep company like that, and what is the result? |
18969 | What are the external marks of poetry as distinct from real prose? |
18969 | What is our own state of mind-- yours and mine-- when we contemplate the threatened unpoetical future? |
18969 | What is the special power of Carlyle in his dealings with history? |
18969 | What is there but the same stormy phrase, tumultuous almost to chaos? |
18969 | What is there here but the uncompromising moral attitude and denunciation of the Hebrew seer? |
18969 | What shall we Drink? |
18969 | What shall we Eat? |
18969 | What warped its valves? |
18969 | What was his preparation? |
18969 | What would those suggestions naturally be? |
18969 | When shall we Eat? |
18969 | Who could think otherwise, seeing that he can effect exactly what he sets out to effect by means of words? |
18969 | Who shall expound the mystery of the lyre? |
18969 | Who wore it out with sensual drudgery Before it came to me? |
18969 | Why did the people of Verona whisper of Dante,"Yonder is the man who has been in Hell?" |
18969 | Why so provocative of genius? |
18969 | Why so wondrously prolific in song and play? |
18969 | Will analysis destroy all wonder, or classification annihilate all beauty? |
18969 | Will you pardon me if I repeat an illustration which has been used before, though I forget where? |
18969 | With such temperaments and mental habits, what view of life did the Hebrews entertain, and what the Hellenes? |
18969 | Wretched, thick- eyed, gross- hearted mortals, why will ye worship lies and stuffed cloth suits, created by the ninth parts of men? |
18969 | Yet how could one sum up the transformation except by those terms"converted"and"in love"? |
18969 | Yet who will tell us that Tennyson looks out on nature or on man with a colder, less imaginative, eye than Chaucer? |
18969 | Yet, if we do not ask our superlative writers to be heaven- sent teachers, to be prophets, to be discoverers, what do we ask of them? |
18969 | and are there two? |
18969 | the other:"From what arguments are we to conclude that the future must of necessity prove barren of poetry?" |
2133 | Do n''t you foreigners also dread the denizens of the inner apartments? |
2133 | While you do not know life, how can you know about death? |
2133 | And what are these passages? |
2133 | And what is the result of all this? |
2133 | By what means would a man chronicle the glory of his ancestors, indite the marriage deed, or comfort anxious parents when exiled to a distant land? |
2133 | Can it be supposed that, if true, nothing of all this has yet been brought to light? |
2133 | For these men are not of us; We are like the horse and the cow;[@] If you associate with them, Who will expel these crocodiles and snakes? |
2133 | For who but a barbarian would defile the banquet hour"when the wine mantles in the cups"with a_ white_ table- cloth, the badge of grief and death? |
2133 | How then about this one, stranger than Buddhist or Taoist creed? |
2133 | How then can men willingly walk with devils? |
2133 | I ask what and whence is this loving- kindness of which he speaks? |
2133 | Is it below Christianity in this? |
2133 | Is it that no holy and wise men have appeared? |
2133 | It is always a compliment to an old man, who is justly proud of his years, and takes the curious form of"your venerable teeth?" |
2133 | Of all religions the only true one, What false doctrine can compare with it? |
2133 | On receiving an affirmative reply, the Emperor added,"Even down to the crutch on which you lean?" |
2133 | Say will you come back, little red- coat, again? |
2133 | Should we not run the risk of sowing seed for future and bloody religious wars on soil where none now rage? |
2133 | The shapeless, voiceless imp-- Why worship him? |
2133 | Where, then, is this scourge of which men speak? |
2133 | Who ever sees in China a tipsy man reeling about a crowded thoroughfare, or lying with his head in a ditch by the side of some country road? |
2133 | Why then sacrifice so much for such trifling gain? |
2133 | Would Christianity raise the Chinese to the standard of European sobriety? |
2133 | Would it bring them to renounce opium, only to replace it with gin? |
2133 | [ A drunken man does n''t know heaven from earth, how can he be expected to distinguish right from wrong? |
2133 | [+]"The miseries and horrors(?) |
2133 | which are now destroying(?) |
22178 | Are your herds in fine condition? |
22178 | Did you travel in peace? |
22178 | Does tranquillity prevail? |
22178 | What can you do against sea- monsters? 22178 ''But could you not seek justice from the tribunals?'' 22178 ''But if the Chinese are so baneful to you, why did you allow them to penetrate into your country?'' 22178 ''Has peace accompanied your progress?'' 22178 ''Oh, not at all,''replied we, with a profound bow;''your souan- pan is excellent; but who ever heard of a calculator always exempt from error?'' 22178 ''Peace and happiness unto you, Sirs Lamas; do you need the whole of your room, or can you accommodate me?'' 22178 ''Sirs Lamas,''said she, raising her hands,''is this place auspicious for an encampment?'' 22178 ''Sirs, where is your country?'' 22178 ''Through what districts have your beneficial shadows passed?'' 22178 ''Whither are you bound? 22178 ''Why not? 22178 And on such poor fare as this was that pale boy expected to become a hearty man? 22178 And why not? 22178 And you-- are you at peace, and what is your country?'' 22178 Are you going to buy up salt or catsup for some Chinese company?'' 22178 Does it seem strange that a stationer''s daughter should be so lovely, and should learn Latin? 22178 Else why were the tears in her eyes so often as she returned? 22178 PRICE 1- 1/2_d._ WHO SHALL RULE THE WAVES? 22178 Suddenly the goose was gone, but his eye followed it, his mind was wrapt up in his struggle with it; what did he know of that lady? 22178 We should like to know in what other country travellers would be so treated? 22178 how should we make a fire? 15210 A nigger? |
15210 | And do you like them all? |
15210 | And this man here? |
15210 | Are they alive? |
15210 | Are you going into town? |
15210 | But how about them? 15210 Do all eating places discriminate?" |
15210 | Do you know the code? |
15210 | Do you know where I can get a good colored cook? |
15210 | Do you mean to sit there and tell me that this is what happens to you each day? |
15210 | Eh? 15210 Fleming?" |
15210 | Fred,she murmured, almost vaguely,"is the world-- gone?" |
15210 | Have you had to work hard? |
15210 | Here, my good fellow,he said, thrusting the money into the man''s hands,"take that,--what''s your name?" |
15210 | How many? |
15210 | How much do I git a day? |
15210 | I beg your pardon,--I think I have met you? |
15210 | Many? 15210 Shall we teach Latin, Greek, and mathematics to the''masses''?" |
15210 | The comet? |
15210 | Then you only fear it will happen? |
15210 | Valdosta? |
15210 | Valdosta? |
15210 | Well, have n''t you the courage to rise above a-- almost a craven fear? |
15210 | Well, what do you think of that? |
15210 | What can we do? |
15210 | What has happened? |
15210 | What has happened? |
15210 | What''s this man doing here, anyway? |
15210 | When shall culture training give place to technical education for work? |
15210 | Where is he? |
15210 | Where is it? |
15210 | Who shall go to college? |
15210 | Who was it? |
15210 | Who was saved? |
15210 | Why do n''t you stop all this? |
15210 | Why should you fight for this country? |
15210 | You''ll come and see my gold? |
15210 | You''ll come? |
15210 | You-- you remember me, do you not? |
15210 | Again, what is this theory of benevolent guardianship for women, for the masses, for Negroes-- for"lesser breeds without the law"? |
15210 | All this of woman,--but what of black women? |
15210 | Am I, in my blackness, the sole sufferer? |
15210 | And if all this be a lie, is it not a lie in a great cause? |
15210 | And is its beauty real or false? |
15210 | And must we not blame ourselves? |
15210 | And unless men rule industry, can they ever hope really to make laws or educate children or create beauty? |
15210 | And was this shifty dodging of the real issue the wisest statesmanship? |
15210 | And yet the mothers and fathers and the men and women of my race must often pause and ask: Is it worth while? |
15210 | And yet,--and yet is it so easy to give up the dream of democracy? |
15210 | Are Negroes human, or, if human, developed far enough to absorb, even under benevolent tutelage, any appreciable part of modern culture? |
15210 | Are not Negroes servants? |
15210 | Are the methods of such a revolt wise, howsoever great the provocation and evil may be? |
15210 | Are we not coming more and more, day by day, to making the statement"I am white,"the one fundamental tenet of our practical morality? |
15210 | Are we today evoking the necessary ability? |
15210 | Are you well? |
15210 | Are, then, these bullets piercing Thee? |
15210 | Behold little Belgium and her pitiable plight, but has the world forgotten Congo? |
15210 | Blood? |
15210 | Broadway? |
15210 | But could this program be expected long to satisfy colored folk? |
15210 | But how far shall this change go? |
15210 | But how? |
15210 | But is it not education that is the creator of this freedom and equality? |
15210 | But may not the world cry back at us and ask:"What better thing have you to show? |
15210 | But suppose that the out- voted minority is necessarily always a minority? |
15210 | But what of the darker world that watches? |
15210 | But what of this? |
15210 | But what shall we say of work where spiritual values and social distinctions enter? |
15210 | But where is the misfortune? |
15210 | But who set the limit of ten million dollars? |
15210 | But why am I talking simply of"colored"children? |
15210 | But why does hunger shadow so vast a mass of men? |
15210 | But, it is objected, what else can we do? |
15210 | But, now, are we prepared to spend less to make a world in which the resurgence of such devilish power will be impossible? |
15210 | Can all these women be vile and the hunted race continue to grow in wealth and character? |
15210 | Can it be the end, so long as sits enthroned, even in the souls of those who cry peace, the despising and robbing of darker peoples? |
15210 | Can not machinery, in the hands of self- respecting and well- paid artisans, do our cleaning, sewing, moving, and decorating? |
15210 | Can not the training of children become an even greater profession than the attending of the sick? |
15210 | Can so vast a power be kept from the people? |
15210 | Can they steal? |
15210 | Can we afford less? |
15210 | Can we do this and still make sufficient goods, justly gauge the needs of men, and rightly decide who are to be considered"men"? |
15210 | Can we not transfer cooking from the home to the scientific laboratory, along with the laundry? |
15210 | Can we teach Revolution to the inexperienced in hope that they may discern progress? |
15210 | Consider our so- called educational"problems";"How may we keep pupils in the high school?" |
15210 | Did this man sin? |
15210 | Did you ever see a"Jim- Crow"waiting- room? |
15210 | Do we despise darker races? |
15210 | Do we despise women? |
15210 | Do we really want war to cease? |
15210 | Do we sense somnolent writhings in black Africa or angry groans in India or triumphant banzais in Japan? |
15210 | Do we want the wants of American Negroes satisfied? |
15210 | Do you doubt it? |
15210 | Do you hear that noise? |
15210 | Does this sound like an impossible dream? |
15210 | Even the president, as he entered, smiled patronizingly at him, and asked:"Well, Jim, are you scared?" |
15210 | For what am I thankful this night? |
15210 | For while the motive was pure and the outer menace undoubted, is shielding and indulgence the way to meet it? |
15210 | Given ten millions of dollars a year, what can we best do with the education of a million children? |
15210 | Had not their mothers wept enough? |
15210 | Has not the experiment been tried in Haiti and Liberia, and failed? |
15210 | Has our own life failed? |
15210 | Has the minority, even though a small and unpopular and unfashionable minority, no right to respectful consideration? |
15210 | Have all the lies and thefts and hates-- Is this Thy Crucifixion, God, And not that funny, little cross, With vinegar and thorns? |
15210 | Have all the wars of all the world, Down all dim time, drawn blood from Thee? |
15210 | Have we any right to make human souls face what we face today? |
15210 | Have we degraded service with menials? |
15210 | He hurried the bishop to the waiting limousine, asking him anxiously:"Did you hear anything? |
15210 | He looked away, holding her hand in his, and said dreamily:"You love your neighbor as yourself?" |
15210 | He pointed down to the waters, and said quietly:"The world lies beneath the waters now-- may I go?" |
15210 | He, the beggar man, was-- was what? |
15210 | Here all honest minds turn back and ask: Is menial service permanent or necessary? |
15210 | His trumpet,--where does it sound and whither? |
15210 | How could he have forgotten? |
15210 | How did I dare these two things? |
15210 | How did the colonel come to invite this man here? |
15210 | How do we arrange to accomplish these things today? |
15210 | How far may those who reach up out of the slime that fills the pits of the world''s damned compel men with loaves to divide with men who starve? |
15210 | How far shall the modern world recognize nations which are not nations, but combinations of a dominant caste and a suppressed horde of serfs? |
15210 | How great a failure and a failure in what does the World War betoken? |
15210 | How is the drudgery of the world distributed, by thoughtful justice or the lash of Slavery? |
15210 | How long shall the mounting flood of innocent blood roar in Thine ears and pound in our hearts for vengeance? |
15210 | How many months saved on a high school course will make the largest export of wheat? |
15210 | How shall we be rid of him?" |
15210 | How should we think such a problem through, not simply as Negroes, but as men and women of a new century, helping to build a new world? |
15210 | How will it function? |
15210 | I am quite straight- faced as I ask soberly:"But what on earth is whiteness that one should so desire it?" |
15210 | I hear strong prayers throng by, Like mighty winds on dusky moors-- Can God pray? |
15210 | I see greens,--is it moss or giant pines? |
15210 | I sense that low and awful cry-- Who cries? |
15210 | If I cry amid this roar of elemental forces, must my cry be in vain, because it is but a cry,--a small and human cry amid Promethean gloom? |
15210 | If he had been black, like Paul Laurence Dunbar, would the argument have been different? |
15210 | If millionaires can buy science and art, can not the Democratic state outbid them not only with money but with the vast ideal of the common weal? |
15210 | If, now, we have a democracy with no excluded groups, with all men and women enfranchised, what is such a democracy to do? |
15210 | In fine, can we not, black and white, rich and poor, look forward to a world of Service without Servants? |
15210 | Is democracy a failure? |
15210 | Is it Thine? |
15210 | Is it a paradise of industry we thus contemplate? |
15210 | Is it better because Europeans are better, nobler, greater, and more gifted than other folk? |
15210 | Is it inconceivable that now and then it bursts all bounds, as at Brownsville and Houston? |
15210 | Is it necessary to ask how much of high emprise and honorable conduct has been found here? |
15210 | Is it wet with blood? |
15210 | Is not the God of the Fathers dead? |
15210 | Is not the problem of their education simply an intensification of the problem of educating all children? |
15210 | Is not the world wide enough for two colors, for many little shinings of the sun? |
15210 | Is not this its headlong progress? |
15210 | Is not this the record of present America? |
15210 | Is the appeal from a numerous- minded despot to a smaller, privileged group or to one man likely to remedy matters permanently? |
15210 | Is the cause racial? |
15210 | Is there anything we would accomplish with human beings? |
15210 | Is this Thy kingdom here, not there, This stone and stucco drift of dreams? |
15210 | Is this a dream? |
15210 | Is this our attitude toward education? |
15210 | Is wealth too crude, too foolish in form, and too easily stolen? |
15210 | Is yonder wall a hedge of black or is it the rampart between heaven and hell? |
15210 | Is, then, this war the end of wars? |
15210 | Mine? |
15210 | Must industry rule men or may men rule even industry? |
15210 | Must it apply to all human beings and to all work throughout the world? |
15210 | Not a soul was stirring, and yet it was high- noon-- Wall Street? |
15210 | Now what is the effect on a man or a nation when it comes passionately to believe such an extraordinary dictum as this? |
15210 | Of this there is no doubt and never has been; but why is it better? |
15210 | Or shall it be a new thing,--a new peace and a new democracy of all races,--a great humanity of equal men? |
15210 | Or shall we all be artists and all serve? |
15210 | Ought children be born to us? |
15210 | Out of this, what sort of black women could be born into the world of today? |
15210 | Paint with all riot of hateful colors the thin skin of European culture,--is it not better than any culture that arose in Africa or Asia?" |
15210 | Perhaps she had seen the elf- queen? |
15210 | Prayest Thou, Lord, and to me? |
15210 | Shall we step backward a thousand years because our present problem is baffling? |
15210 | She did not look, but said:"You have lost-- somebody?" |
15210 | She spoke almost before she thought:"You will enter and rest awhile?" |
15210 | She stood to us as embodied filth and wrong,--but whose filth, whose wrong? |
15210 | She thought it was the new Negro until he said in a soft voice:"Will you give me bread?" |
15210 | Subtly had they been bribed, but effectively: Were they not lordly whites and should they not share in the spoils of rape? |
15210 | Surely-- no-- was it the click of a receiver? |
15210 | That black and riven thing-- was it Thee? |
15210 | That gasp-- was it Thine? |
15210 | The lady sank into her chair and thought:"What will the judge''s wife say? |
15210 | The voice of the tall stranger in the corner broke in here:"It will be a good thing for them?" |
15210 | The world still wants to ask that a woman primarily be pretty and if she is not, the mob pouts and asks querulously,"What else are women for?" |
15210 | The world- old and fearful things,--war and wealth, murder and luxury? |
15210 | Then a new thought seized him: If they found him here alone-- with all this money and all these dead men-- what would his life be worth? |
15210 | Then returning to his guest,"You will excuse me, wo n''t you?" |
15210 | Then the tired agent yells across, because all the tickets and money are over there--"What d''ye want? |
15210 | This gold? |
15210 | This led to some grim bantering among Negroes:"Why do you want to volunteer?" |
15210 | This pain-- is it Thine? |
15210 | Those eyes,--where had he seen those eyes before? |
15210 | Thou needest_ me_? |
15210 | Thou_ needest_ me? |
15210 | To death? |
15210 | To life? |
15210 | Unfortunate? |
15210 | Unharmed?" |
15210 | VIII THE IMMORTAL CHILD If a man die shall he live again? |
15210 | Very many?" |
15210 | War? |
15210 | Was I the masterful captain or the pawn of laughing sprites? |
15210 | Was everybody dead? |
15210 | Was he looking at her or away? |
15210 | Was it fear of the balance of power in Europe? |
15210 | Was it national jealousy of the sort of the seventeenth century? |
15210 | Was it not curious? |
15210 | Was it that dark, little house in the far backyard that flamed? |
15210 | Was this the place to begin my life work? |
15210 | Was this the work which I was best fitted to do? |
15210 | We ask, and perhaps there is no answer, how far may the captain of the world''s industry do his deeds, despite the grinding tragedy of its doing? |
15210 | Welcome, dark sleep!_ Whither? |
15210 | What business had I, anyhow, to teach Greek when I had studied men? |
15210 | What came of it? |
15210 | What choir is it?" |
15210 | What did they see? |
15210 | What did they see? |
15210 | What did we study? |
15210 | What do we see today? |
15210 | What does it mean-- what does it mean? |
15210 | What does this mean? |
15210 | What happened? |
15210 | What have you done or would do better than this if you had today the world rule? |
15210 | What hinders our approach to the ideals outlined above? |
15210 | What hinders the answer to this question? |
15210 | What is that breath of life, thought to be so indispensable to a great European nation? |
15210 | What is the cause of the undoubted reaction and alarm that the citizens of democracy continually feel? |
15210 | What is the inevitable result of the clash of such ideals and such facts in the colored group? |
15210 | What is the least sum that will keep the average youth out of jail? |
15210 | What is the real lesson of the life of Coleridge- Taylor? |
15210 | What is the trouble? |
15210 | What is to hinder the same ability and foresight from being used in the future as in the past? |
15210 | What is today the message of these black women to America and to the world? |
15210 | What shall the end be? |
15210 | What shall we say to this new economic equality in a great laboring class? |
15210 | What sort of a world would this be if yellow men must be treated"white"? |
15210 | What was it? |
15210 | What was it? |
15210 | What was marriage? |
15210 | What was that awful word Thou saidst? |
15210 | What was that which he, too, heard beneath the rhythm of unnumbered feet? |
15210 | What was that whirring? |
15210 | What were petty slights, silly insults, paltry problems, beside this call to do and dare and die? |
15210 | What will be its field of work? |
15210 | What with all my dreaming, studying, and teaching was I going to_ do_ in this fierce fight? |
15210 | What would be in the present chaos your outlook and plan for the future? |
15210 | What would you say to a soft, brown face, aureoled in a thousand ripples of gray- black hair, which knells suddenly:"Do you trust white people?" |
15210 | What''s the crowd, Jim?" |
15210 | What''s the use? |
15210 | What, then, is this dark world thinking? |
15210 | What? |
15210 | What? |
15210 | When in this world a man comes forward with a thought, a deed, a vision, we ask not, how does he look,--but what is his message? |
15210 | Where is he? |
15210 | Where?" |
15210 | Whey, then, does it linger? |
15210 | Which is life and what is death and how shall we face so tantalizing a contradiction? |
15210 | Whither is this expansion? |
15210 | Whither? |
15210 | Whither? |
15210 | Who are the folk who live here? |
15210 | Who bought and sold their crime and waxed fat and rich on public iniquity? |
15210 | Who controls them? |
15210 | Who does the physical work of the world, those whose muscles need the exercise or those whose souls and minds are stupefied with manual toil? |
15210 | Who goes to high school, the Bright or the Well- to- Do? |
15210 | Who honored and loved"niggers"as they did? |
15210 | Who made these devils? |
15210 | Who makes these inner, but powerful, rules? |
15210 | Who may be excluded from a share in the ruling of men? |
15210 | Who nursed them in crime and fed them on injustice? |
15210 | Who prays? |
15210 | Who ravished and debauched their mothers and their grandmothers? |
15210 | Who says it shall not be ten thousand millions, as it ought to be? |
15210 | Who shall be Artists and who shall be Servants in the world to come? |
15210 | Who sought to own their black slaves but they? |
15210 | Who was I to fight a world of color prejudice? |
15210 | Who was this who dared to"interfere"with their labor? |
15210 | Who weeps? |
15210 | Why are we silent about it? |
15210 | Why in the minds of so many decent and up- seeing folks does the whole Negro problem resolve itself into the matter of their getting a cook or a maid? |
15210 | Why not always yield-- always take what''s offered,--always bow to force, whether of cannon or dislike? |
15210 | Why not, rather, face the facts and tell the truth? |
15210 | Why should he have worked so breathlessly, almost furiously? |
15210 | Why unanswered? |
15210 | Why, then, is Europe great? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | Why? |
15210 | With silent sob that rends and tears-- Can God sob? |
15210 | With what characteristic complacency did the slaveholders assume that Canaanites were Negroes and their"brethren"white? |
15210 | Would the world_ answer_? |
15210 | Yet today who goes to college, the Talented or the Rich? |
15210 | You know,--but you, how did you escape-- how have you endured this horror? |
15210 | _ Fourthly_, the children of such a union-- but why proceed? |
15210 | _ Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners!_ And yet, whose is the deeper guilt? |
15210 | _ Hear us, O heavenly Father!_ Doth not this justice of hell stink in Thy nostrils, O God? |
15210 | _ Justice, O Judge of men!_ Wherefore do we pray? |
15210 | _ Suppose_ I had missed a Harvard scholarship? |
15210 | _ Suppose_ my good mother had preferred a steady income from my child labor rather than bank on the precarious dividend of my higher training? |
15210 | _ Suppose_ the Slater Board had then, as now, distinct ideas as to where the education of Negroes should stop? |
15210 | _ Thou?__ Thee?__ I lynched Thee?_ Awake me, God! |
15210 | _ Thou?__ Thee?__ I lynched Thee?_ Awake me, God! |
15210 | _ Thou?__ Thee?__ I lynched Thee?_ Awake me, God! |
15210 | _ Thou_ needest me? |
15210 | and,"Suppose you think them ugly, what then? |
15210 | you say? |
20380 | ''Let''s see-- what''s the matter now?'' 20380 ''What of it?'' |
20380 | And he has attended to all his little wants? |
20380 | And how came you to be lame like that, my poor little one? |
20380 | And they give you? |
20380 | Did any one ever see such a troublesome animal? 20380 Do you remember the fried eggs which tasted of straw, and the dreadful rice- milk of the Princess Chocolawska? |
20380 | Does she know a little of all that? |
20380 | Does she know how to sew, to wash, to make soup? |
20380 | Everything going well? |
20380 | Have you a father or mother? |
20380 | Is that so, my girl? 20380 Is the landlady here a relative of yours?" |
20380 | Tell me, little one,added the Captain, speaking to the child,"I am not scaring you-- no? |
20380 | The Forgets agree? |
20380 | The matter, good sir? |
20380 | The nurse of Leon? 20380 We wo n''t drift apart again, will we?" |
20380 | Were you at the opening of the Variétès yesterday? |
20380 | What have I said? |
20380 | What have you done with your wooden shoe, little wretch? |
20380 | What is the matter with you? |
20380 | Who-- Pierette? 20380 You live in this house, then? |
20380 | ''Are you going to worry me about that, too, like Catherine and Camille? |
20380 | ***** But what of that? |
20380 | ***** Each of us was as much pleased as the other at thus meeting again; and after the first"What, is that you? |
20380 | A valet, how''s that?" |
20380 | Ah, monsieur le curé, why did he use that unhappy phrase? |
20380 | And her little daughter?" |
20380 | And who furnished the coal? |
20380 | And why not? |
20380 | Are you going to send me to prison?" |
20380 | But do they know, do they understand, that their luxury is made from many miseries? |
20380 | But what could I do, since I loved them both? |
20380 | But what of it, my good fellow? |
20380 | But what of that? |
20380 | But who had woven that satin? |
20380 | By- the- way,"added the widow, addressing her son,"you have taken the poor fellow out, have you not?" |
20380 | Could she die thus? |
20380 | Do they think of it as often as they should? |
20380 | Do they think of it sometimes? |
20380 | Do they think of it?" |
20380 | Do you know that I only wanted two more like that to pay for my vineyard? |
20380 | Eh? |
20380 | How old are you?" |
20380 | How we exhausted the"Do n''t you remembers?" |
20380 | In passing, we could catch fragments of conversation like this:"When will the affair begin?" |
20380 | Is it possible? |
20380 | Is that you?" |
20380 | It is the grief of my life, do you see? |
20380 | No doubt M. Coppée''s_ contes_ have not the sharpness of M. de Maupassant''s, nor the brilliancy of M. Daudet''s-- but what of it? |
20380 | Now you understand me, do you not? |
20380 | Of what use is sorrow? |
20380 | Provided that they were accessible to pity, charitable-- and these happy people probably were that-- who could distress them? |
20380 | See the dents? |
20380 | Suddenly, as the priest began his Latin prayers, Doctor Arnould seized me by the arm and whispered in my ear,"You know that he killed himself?" |
20380 | Suppose we give her a home?" |
20380 | That wo n''t ruin us, eh? |
20380 | Things go on marvellously well with us, and we will portion her and marry her, shall we not, when she comes to a suitable age?" |
20380 | We will go after the child Sunday to Argenteuil, sha''n''t we?" |
20380 | Well, my good woman, will you let me have her? |
20380 | What had happened? |
20380 | Who knows? |
20380 | Why should not these members of the_ élite_ have exceptional enjoyment? |
20380 | Why should one think of things so sad, so ugly? |
20380 | Why?" |
20380 | Would he become a Socialist, perhaps? |
20380 | You care for me a little, do you not? |
20380 | [ Illustration]"Ah, well, old man, things are not going well?" |
20380 | and the German who used to pawn his god every three months?" |
20380 | and the melancholy air of the old dictator? |
20380 | little girl, what''s your name?" |
20380 | was she losing her head? |
20380 | what could injure them? |
19916 | All lite? |
19916 | All lite? |
19916 | All lite? |
19916 | All lite? |
19916 | And how did_ you_ obtain a Government report? |
19916 | Are you a Seditionist, Sir? 19916 I see,"said Madame Maubert slowly,"five instead of four-- five would have made it safe for you-- eh? |
19916 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
19916 | Spying, eh? |
19916 | The lonely man? |
19916 | Well enough for me,remarked the Bishop,"but how did you come by it?" |
19916 | What is it? |
19916 | What is this Colony, Sir,continued the young man gaining control of himself,"but a market for the opium your Government sells? |
19916 | What like man? |
19916 | Whatever for? |
19916 | When? |
19916 | Where get this? |
19916 | Who will take her? 19916 Why do n''t you enlist yourself? |
19916 | With whom? |
19916 | You do n''t understand, eh? |
19916 | You would not mind, perhaps,continued the Captain,"if, after all-- in spite of this long delay-- we still found time for the lonely man? |
19916 | Afraid? |
19916 | All for what-- for money? |
19916 | And do you know what your Government makes out of this trade, Sir-- the revenue it collects from selling opium to my people? |
19916 | Ashamed to face him, ashamed to come to him? |
19916 | Bundled off in disgrace from home, willy- nilly, and now here,--hiding? |
19916 | But after all, why not such a book? |
19916 | But be a little careful of him-- considerate, I mean-- he''s not very strong----""Chandoo?" |
19916 | But what about the races you colonise and subject-- who ca n''t protect themselves? |
19916 | But what can one expect? |
19916 | But what can you expect on the China Coast? |
19916 | But why then these appeals? |
19916 | Come to see them at his bungalow, if we''d time? |
19916 | Could the youth have deliberately done this? |
19916 | Do you think people ever recover themselves again? |
19916 | Do you wonder that he shifted himself back and forth, morally, first from this point of view, then to that? |
19916 | Felt what? |
19916 | Flag pathetic? |
19916 | Foolish thing for his Government to do-- yet what would become of Lawson if the undertaking were abolished? |
19916 | From without came the voices, insistent, asking what he was doing now? |
19916 | Has it gone shooting off into the Pacific, futile? |
19916 | How dare you criticise the Government?" |
19916 | How little do you spend on schools, so that you may keep us submissive and ignorant? |
19916 | How many opium divans, where we may smoke, are licensed by your Government, and the license money pocketed as part of the revenue?" |
19916 | How many shops do you say there are-- how many smoking places? |
19916 | How many shops in this town are licensed by your Government for the sale of opium-- and the license money pocketed as revenue? |
19916 | I did n''t insist-- I gave in----""You wish to say----?" |
19916 | If his mother, pure Chinese, was good enough for his father, why was not he, only half- Chinese, good enough for his father''s people? |
19916 | Is he afraid, the Emperor? |
19916 | Now look at us-- what do you see? |
19916 | Or was it natural to have died, at the age of thirty, out here on the edge of the world? |
19916 | Otherwise, why come? |
19916 | Pathetic? |
19916 | Perhaps they would be going on, into the north again, after they had finished---- Finished? |
19916 | Proof of that? |
19916 | Several hundred? |
19916 | Shall we go?" |
19916 | She felt, then, hey? |
19916 | That name on the passenger list a week ago, the name slightly different yet curiously alike-- could it have been altered slightly on purpose? |
19916 | The revolt a year ago? |
19916 | The tale jerks here-- why should n''t it? |
19916 | Their offense? |
19916 | There were enough men on the island to have done it properly-- only what was the use? |
19916 | They were for ploughing the rice fields, but who had the heart to oversee the work? |
19916 | To suppress gambling amongst the Chinese? |
19916 | Was she not accustomed to convicts, as servants? |
19916 | Well, it is late September-- this unnatural heat,--why will it not leave? |
19916 | Were all colonies like that-- run on these principles? |
19916 | Were there not many families on the island, the officials and their families, a good ten or fifteen of them? |
19916 | What become of business here in Tientsin if you go America? |
19916 | What can you do, I''d like to know, when you are like this? |
19916 | What did he know of them, a comparative newcomer? |
19916 | What did he, the Bishop, know of young men and their difficulties? |
19916 | What dowry can we give her? |
19916 | What happened? |
19916 | What is this fear? |
19916 | What was moral or immoral, anyway? |
19916 | What was right and wrong, anyway? |
19916 | When the precious thing in them, the spirit of them has been overlaid and overlaid, covered deep with artificial layers----? |
19916 | Where was her charm? |
19916 | Where were they going, those two? |
19916 | Who cared-- whether they raised their own rice or brought it from the mainland twice a month? |
19916 | Who cares? |
19916 | Who was he to guide the footsteps of an erring one? |
19916 | Who will take her-- ignorant, uneducated-- without a_ dot_? |
19916 | Why did n''t the prisoners revolt now, he wondered? |
19916 | Why had his father seen to that? |
19916 | Why money-- what can it mean? |
19916 | Why must it linger till torn like a blanket from the sweating earth, by this hurricane from the Southern seas? |
19916 | Why toil for something which one has no use for, can not spend? |
19916 | Why? |
19916 | You go of your own choice, do n''t you? |
19916 | You see?" |
19916 | he concluded passionately,"and besides, this year you have sold us two millions more than last year----""Where did you get your figures?" |
14409 | Always missed your man? |
14409 | Am I really beautiful? |
14409 | Am I to do the old- school Puritan with him, or what? |
14409 | And how did it suit you, Esther? |
14409 | And what do you mean to do with them when they_ are_ educated? |
14409 | And whose secrets can I tell if not our own? |
14409 | And you were not homesick or lonely? |
14409 | Are you joking now, or serious? |
14409 | Are you never homesick for your prairie? |
14409 | Are you sure he''s not right? |
14409 | Are you telling me the truth? |
14409 | Aunt, do you think I am fit to be his wife? |
14409 | But I suppose you believe at last in something, do you not? |
14409 | But do n''t you see that she is a woman, and you are trying to make a man of her? |
14409 | But if I were able to be a professional, do you think I would be an amateur? |
14409 | But suppose she takes a fancy to him? |
14409 | But what will Wharton and the committee say? |
14409 | Can I do any thing for you? |
14409 | Can you remember them? |
14409 | Catherine, how are your sheep? |
14409 | Congratulations? 14409 Could you be ready to start for Niagara by to- morrow morning?" |
14409 | Could you get some pleasant man to go with you? |
14409 | Could you not sit yourself as St. George on the dragon? |
14409 | Did he leave her? |
14409 | Did he say whether he wanted me or Catherine? |
14409 | Did you hear my sermon? |
14409 | Did you never read Dickens? |
14409 | Do n''t you know where? |
14409 | Do n''t you think it rather a moist joke? |
14409 | Do n''t you think we had better go to bed just now, and elope in the morning? |
14409 | Do we want more figure- heads there? |
14409 | Do you believe in a God? |
14409 | Do you believe in nothing? |
14409 | Do you expect to convert any one to such a religion? |
14409 | Do you feel afraid, too? |
14409 | Do you have to begin so high up? 14409 Do you know that Wharton has come back?" |
14409 | Do you mean that there is any doubt about it? |
14409 | Do you mean to break up this engagement? |
14409 | Do you mean to go too? |
14409 | Do you really believe in the resurrection of the body? |
14409 | Do you seriously think she will break it off? |
14409 | Do you suppose St. Cecilia ever read Dickens or would have liked him if she had? |
14409 | Do you suppose she would accept him? |
14409 | Do you think I have done wrong? |
14409 | Do you think I should be so distressed if Esther had only joined the church? 14409 Do you think she would feel at home here if she were younger or prettier?" |
14409 | Do you think so? |
14409 | Do you think this picture will ever be like me? |
14409 | Does Mr. Wharton really care for Catherine? |
14409 | Does art say that a woman is no use? |
14409 | Does he really paint so very well? |
14409 | Does your idea mean that the next world is a sort of great reservoir of truth, and that what is true in us just pours into it like raindrops? |
14409 | Have they always been laid? |
14409 | Have you an Indian grandmother? |
14409 | Have you been trying to supplant me in order to get yourself in my place? |
14409 | Have you heard of this too, and not told me? |
14409 | He would n''t know how to use a revolver, would he? 14409 How can I stop to think whether it is good or not,"said Esther,"when I hear you telling all our secrets to our whole visiting list? |
14409 | How can I tell without knowing all your reasons? |
14409 | How can I tell? 14409 How did Mr. Wharton bear it?" |
14409 | How many did she manage in the end? |
14409 | How many people at his church could tell you what they believe? |
14409 | I do n''t remember,answered Wharton vaguely;"what was it about?" |
14409 | I never could have given you help enough for that, Mr. Wharton; but what does it matter about my poor Cecilia? 14409 I never could make it out myself; let''s ask him;"and he called across the room:"Wharton, will you explain to Miss Brooke what your picture is about? |
14409 | I suppose Murray means to terrify this poor creature into a sacrifice of her rights? |
14409 | I will ask my aunt to help you,replied Strong;"but how are we to do it? |
14409 | I wish I could, but--"But what? 14409 I? |
14409 | If I am willing to risk every thing for you, why should you refuse to grant me so small a favor as I ask? 14409 If I, seeing all this, am willing to take the risk, why should you ally yourself against me with all the petty gossip of a parish?" |
14409 | If you will not return to help us, what do you look forward to doing? |
14409 | Is Esther very much in love? |
14409 | Is any thing else the matter? |
14409 | Is he a great genius? |
14409 | Is he easily shocked? |
14409 | Is it not enough to know myself? |
14409 | Is it possible you have come all the way alone? |
14409 | Is n''t it horrible, your doctrine? |
14409 | Is religion true? |
14409 | Is science true? |
14409 | Is that all? |
14409 | Is that in the marriage service? |
14409 | Is that your idea of our national type? |
14409 | Lean and dingy, in a faded brown blanket? |
14409 | May I come over and see you there? |
14409 | May I have first a cup of tea, Miss Dudley? 14409 May I?" |
14409 | Mere friends, are we? |
14409 | Must you know why I have broken down and run away? |
14409 | My wife? |
14409 | Not to her face? |
14409 | Now what mischief are you brewing, Aunt Sarah? 14409 Oh, are you in earnest?" |
14409 | Or in future rewards and punishments? |
14409 | Shall I tell them you are coming? |
14409 | Should you know better if I said they were mind and matter? |
14409 | Should you think so,he asked quickly,"if I were a lawyer, or a stock broker?" |
14409 | Suppose they catch us? |
14409 | Suppose we go mad together? |
14409 | The struggle is going to tear both their poor little hearts out; but what can we do about it? 14409 Then he has a wife already, when he is breaking my young heart?" |
14409 | Then it is decided? |
14409 | Then it was your wife? |
14409 | Then that is to be the fruit of all this to- do? |
14409 | Then there is really something mysterious about his life? |
14409 | Then what is it that I can do? |
14409 | Then what is it you want? |
14409 | Then why do n''t you tell him so, and let him run away? |
14409 | Then why do you believe in it? |
14409 | Then why do you belong to it? |
14409 | Then why do you hesitate? |
14409 | To- day? |
14409 | Was n''t it a good sermon? |
14409 | Was your''s worse? |
14409 | Well, and what am I to say? |
14409 | What are the signs of the most marked American type you ever saw? |
14409 | What are then your plans for the future? |
14409 | What are they, if you please? |
14409 | What are you going to do? |
14409 | What could I do? |
14409 | What did they say? |
14409 | What did you say? |
14409 | What did you think of it, Esther? |
14409 | What do they know about it? |
14409 | What do you expect her to be, and how long will she stay? |
14409 | What do you know about it, George? 14409 What does she want?" |
14409 | What good can my praise do you? |
14409 | What has become of her? |
14409 | What have you to say about it, Esther? |
14409 | What is Nirvana? |
14409 | What is the good of your adoring Wharton? |
14409 | What is the use of any thing? |
14409 | What is your name in Sioux, Catherine,he would ask;"Laughing Strawberry, I suppose, or Jumping Turtle?" |
14409 | What is your objection to that, aunt Sarah? |
14409 | What kind of a revolver do you carry? |
14409 | What mischief are they doing now? |
14409 | What more proof do you need? 14409 What of that, if it''s true? |
14409 | What on earth do you mean? |
14409 | What reason does she give? |
14409 | What shall I do? |
14409 | What shall it be? |
14409 | What shall we do about it? |
14409 | What sort of a world does this new deity of yours belong to? |
14409 | What under the sun are you afraid of? |
14409 | What was your motive? |
14409 | What will he talk about,asked Catherine;"are all professors as foolish as you?" |
14409 | What will you give me to do? |
14409 | What would you do, Catherine, if you were in my place? |
14409 | What? |
14409 | When do you expect to be there? |
14409 | When shall we go? 14409 Where are your questions?" |
14409 | Where do you expect the poor man to get a wife, if all of us say we are not fit for him? |
14409 | Where is it, Miss Brooke? |
14409 | Where is the harm? |
14409 | Where to? 14409 Where was it?" |
14409 | Which of them can tell a story like this, or a millionth part of it? |
14409 | Who was Laura? |
14409 | Why ca n''t some of you make me? 14409 Why ca n''t you let her go her own way, Mr. Wharton, and see what she means to do?" |
14409 | Why ca n''t you paint innocence? |
14409 | Why do n''t you put it into one of your saints in the church, and show what you mean by American art? |
14409 | Why does he make it so dark and dismal? |
14409 | Why have you never applied for a divorce from poor Murray? |
14409 | Why not? |
14409 | Why run away? 14409 Why should you care what he preaches?" |
14409 | Why should you drive and force me to take this leap? 14409 Why should you stop at the very moment when you have most to gain?" |
14409 | Why should you tear yourself up by the roots to please Hazard? |
14409 | Why? |
14409 | Will Mr. Wharton go to work again at the church? |
14409 | Will he preach at me? |
14409 | Will you answer me a question? 14409 Will you run off with me?" |
14409 | Will you try to be serious a moment for my sake? |
14409 | With you and Miss Brooke in the neighborhood? 14409 Would n''t it be like Mr. Wharton to be stabbed to the heart on the steps of a church, just as his great work was done? |
14409 | Would you have gone into the ministry if you had been tormented by them as I am? |
14409 | You are going to send us away? |
14409 | You are really going abroad? |
14409 | You are willing to give us a chance? |
14409 | You believe in nothing else? |
14409 | You do n''t mean to tell me that Catherine has run off with Wharton? |
14409 | You know what has happened? |
14409 | You promise not to change the idea? |
14409 | You really mean that this life is every thing, and the future nothing? |
14409 | You saw her? |
14409 | You see that Cecilia there? |
14409 | You want me to find a husband for Esther? |
14409 | You will? |
14409 | You? 14409 Am I going mad? |
14409 | Are all men so tyrannical with women? |
14409 | As he paused here, and seemed again to be musing over St. Cecilia, Esther''s curiosity made her put in a word,"And your wife?" |
14409 | At last he turned at bay, and broke out:"Do you think all this is new to me? |
14409 | But how can I? |
14409 | Ca n''t I go off alone with Catherine?" |
14409 | Ca n''t we, Esther?" |
14409 | Can we start now?" |
14409 | Can you manage to get every thing ready?" |
14409 | Can you, without feeling still more shocked, think of a future existence where you will not meet once more father or mother, husband or children? |
14409 | Catherine, if I ask you to marry me, will you turn serious?" |
14409 | Catherine, will you try to read it if I bring you a copy here?" |
14409 | Could n''t you start easy, and like a few things first,--me for instance-- and let the rest wait?" |
14409 | Did you ever hear that Laura found fault with Petrarch, or, if she did, that any one believed she was in earnest?" |
14409 | Do n''t you see that I ca n''t retreat? |
14409 | Do n''t you see? |
14409 | Do n''t you see? |
14409 | Do you ever reflect how much you will hurt me by refusing? |
14409 | Do you know how solitary I am? |
14409 | Do you know that I have already a girl on my hands? |
14409 | Do you like solitude?" |
14409 | Do you mean to separate yourself from all communion?" |
14409 | Do you remember how we fought when we were children because you would have your own way? |
14409 | Do you see it? |
14409 | Do you suppose girls are so savage in Denver as not to know when they are pretty? |
14409 | Do you think I feel about him as you would about a lump of coal? |
14409 | Do you think I should hesitate to break it off, even if I broke my heart with it, if I thought it was going to bring trouble on him?" |
14409 | Do you want me to find out?" |
14409 | Esther gave a little gasp:"You do n''t think he will do that? |
14409 | Esther, how is your father to- day?" |
14409 | Has he behaved himself?" |
14409 | Has not Esther told you?" |
14409 | Hazard at heart?" |
14409 | Hazard voice enough to fill the church?" |
14409 | Hazard will permit you to do so in his church?" |
14409 | Hazard''s opinions?" |
14409 | Hazard,"that Mr. Wharton insists on my painting Catherine as though she were forty years old and rheumatic?" |
14409 | Hazard? |
14409 | He has been as kind to me as though I were his mother; but why is he so mysterious? |
14409 | He is quite right to take her if he can get her, and what does his parish expect to do about it?" |
14409 | He rose to greet Strong with a laugh like a boy, and cried:"Well, skeptic, how do the heathen rage?" |
14409 | How are you satisfied?" |
14409 | How can I tell?" |
14409 | How could I, with such ideas, join you at communion?" |
14409 | How do you like it?" |
14409 | I can give you a cup of tea if you will come in?" |
14409 | I meant to ask whether you wanted to go to George''s tea party?" |
14409 | I will go any where; the further the better; but how can I drag you and poor Uncle John away from town at this season? |
14409 | If I think your work good, have I not a right to call on you for it?" |
14409 | If Wharton is willing to teach, why not be willing to learn? |
14409 | If the soul of a sponge can grow to be the soul of a Darwin, why may we not all grow up to abstract truth? |
14409 | If you think you can put it into the St. Cecilia, why not try? |
14409 | Is that square?" |
14409 | Is there no room for a Jezebel in your portrait gallery?" |
14409 | It all comes to this: is religion a struggle or a joy? |
14409 | Now I am low enough, am I not? |
14409 | Now do you understand?" |
14409 | Now what am I to say?" |
14409 | Now, why wo n''t you let Esther marry George?" |
14409 | On what?" |
14409 | She had not the patience to be thorough, but who had? |
14409 | She listened quietly to his story, and after a little reflection, asked:"Where do you think we had best go?" |
14409 | She said only:"Why be anxious? |
14409 | Stephen?" |
14409 | Tell me instantly, Sarah; is St. Stephen a success?" |
14409 | Tell me now honestly, would you not sell yourself and me and all New York, like Faust in the opera, if you could paint one picture like Titian?" |
14409 | Tell me, do you think my figure of St. Paul here self- conscious? |
14409 | Then he said:"Do you think it would be improved by being lighter?" |
14409 | Was he afraid? |
14409 | Was mine worse? |
14409 | Wharton?" |
14409 | Wharton?" |
14409 | What am I to do?" |
14409 | What business had these strangers with her love? |
14409 | What can I do about it?" |
14409 | What can I do?" |
14409 | What criticism do you make, Miss Brooke?" |
14409 | What do you gain by getting rid of one incomprehensible only to put a greater one in its place, and throw away your only hope besides? |
14409 | What do you mean by your Codlins and Shorts?" |
14409 | What do you think about marrying clergymen? |
14409 | What had she to do with it? |
14409 | What has become of your admirer, Mr. Van Dam?" |
14409 | What is apostolic succession?" |
14409 | What is the use of appealing to my sex? |
14409 | What is the use of having a world to one''s self?" |
14409 | What is the use of trying to go forward when one feels iron bars across one''s face?" |
14409 | What more can I do? |
14409 | What more do you want?" |
14409 | What shall I do? |
14409 | What stands in your way?" |
14409 | What was she to do with middle- life? |
14409 | What will you give me for my pew?" |
14409 | What would they think of him in Paris?" |
14409 | When is the engagement to be out?" |
14409 | Where are you coming out?" |
14409 | Where shall I begin?" |
14409 | Who is she? |
14409 | Whose first attempt in a new style ever paired with its conception? |
14409 | Whose idea was that?" |
14409 | Why ca n''t it leave me alone?" |
14409 | Why do n''t you get her to paint?" |
14409 | Why do you want me to answer him?" |
14409 | Why may I not have a soul as well as you?" |
14409 | Why may you not take mine?" |
14409 | Why not? |
14409 | Why should I care?" |
14409 | Why should I submit to it? |
14409 | Why should it trouble me? |
14409 | Why should she share it with them? |
14409 | Why should you meddle? |
14409 | Why should you refuse it with me? |
14409 | Will you ever find another man to love you as I do?" |
14409 | Will you give it to me?" |
14409 | Will you go up with Wharton and me by the early train to- morrow?" |
14409 | Will you let me stay here on the chance of your needing help?" |
14409 | Will you not make a little sacrifice of pride for me? |
14409 | Would n''t it almost be better to marry a painter, or even a professor?" |
14409 | Would you like to have the world think you were jilted?" |
14409 | You are not going to make me look like that?" |
14409 | You knew it would be so? |
14409 | asked Catherine;"and why should she not have a dozen children?" |
14409 | asked George, gravely, at his first interview with her;"do you like yours heavy, or say a 32 ball?" |
14409 | if you really want to get rid of him, why not make him run away?" |
14409 | said his aunt solemnly;"do you know the mischief you and your friends have done?" |
14409 | said she solemnly;"what am I to do? |
14409 | what is your motive?" |
14409 | wo n''t you stop him?" |
22599 | [ 288] The second question relating to Boethius is this: Could he possibly have known the Hindu numerals? 22599 ( 2) Could he have known these numerals? 22599 ( 2) Did Boethius know them? 22599 ( 3) Is there any positive or strong circumstantial evidence that he did know them? 22599 ( 4) What are the probabilities in the case? 22599 304- 305, and note, p. 305; Karl Krumbacher,Woher stammt das Wort Ziffer( Chiffre)? |
22599 | And if these Kufic characters reached there, then why not the numeral forms as well? |
22599 | And why should this not be the case? |
22599 | As to the fourth question, Did Boethius probably know the numerals? |
22599 | How did such an inscription find its way, perhaps in the time of Alcuin of York, to England? |
22599 | In answer therefore to the second question, Could Boethius have known the Hindu numerals? |
22599 | Let us now consider the third question, Is there any positive or strong circumstantial evidence that Boethius did know these numerals? |
22599 | Now what numerals did Mesopotamia use? |
22599 | Shall we say that it was mere accident that one people wrote"one"vertically and that another wrote it horizontally? |
22599 | The question is often asked, why did not these new numerals attract more immediate attention? |
22599 | The question then remains, how did this second form find its way into Europe? |
22599 | This large question[273] suggests several minor ones:( 1) Who was Boethius? |
22599 | Two questions are presented by Woepcke''s theory:( 1) What was the nature of these Spanish numerals, and how were they made known to Italy? |
22599 | Why did they have to wait until the sixteenth century to be generally used in business and in the schools? |
22599 | Why should such a scholarly writer have given them with no mention of their origin or use? |
22599 | Why, then, did the Chinese write{ 29} theirs horizontally? |
22599 | [ 101] Now where did China get these forms? |
22599 | [ 104] What interpretation shall be given to these facts? |
22599 | [ 1]"_ Discipulus._ Quis primus invenit numerum apud Hebræos et Ægyptios? |
22599 | [ 297] Rameses II(? |
22599 | [ 343] They are found in none of the very ancient manuscripts, as, for example, in the ninth- century(?) |
22599 | { 71} First, who was Boethius,--Divus[274] Boethius as he was called in the Middle Ages? |
22599 | ¶ why ten fyguris of Inde? |
22829 | All these and many other questions are answered in Prof. Andrews Great Book What Shall We Eat? |
22829 | But when he sees the grazing ox, or the wallowing hog, do similar gustatory desires affect him? |
22829 | Can anyone deny that Nature intended the cow''s milk for the nourishment of her calf and the hen''s egg for the propagation of her species? |
22829 | How much does the ordinary individual know about nutrition, or about obedience to an unperverted appetite? |
22829 | Is it not evident that it is because of this lamentable ignorance so many people nowadays suffer from ill- health? |
22829 | Is it reasonable to suppose that Nature ever intended the milk of the cow or the egg of the fowl for the use of man as food? |
22829 | May it not be that wrong feeding and mal- nutrition are at the root of most disease? |
22829 | Moreover, what effect has the work of a slayer of animals upon his personal character and refinement? |
22829 | The first question about vegetarianism, then, is this:--Is it the best diet from the hygienic point of view? |
22829 | What animal possesses the enormous strength of the herbivorous rhinoceros, who, travellers relate, uproots trees and grinds whole trunks to powder? |
19665 | Does that not sound familiar to thine ears? 19665 How have you eaten?" |
19665 | Thou hast seen her? |
19665 | 25 Is there anything so wonderful as being the mother of a son? |
19665 | 26 Dost thou know what love is? |
19665 | 4 My Dear Mother, Dost thou remember Liang Tai- tai, the daughter of the Princess Tseng, thine old friend of Pau- chau? |
19665 | And what is our conscience but the inherited sum of countless dead experiences with all things good and evil?" |
19665 | Are not our ancestors in very truth our souls? |
19665 | Art thou dissatisfied with me? |
19665 | Art thou not glad that thou art in a far- off country? |
19665 | Art thou not tired of that far- off country? |
19665 | But why? |
19665 | But, instead, what have they done? |
19665 | Can I ever forget that day when I came to my husband''s people? |
19665 | Canst send me Feng- yi, who understands our customs? |
19665 | Canst thou hear her, and see her shake her head dolefully over the dismal fact that thou hast left the narrow way of Confucius and the classics? |
19665 | Canst thou imagine it? |
19665 | Canst thou imagine thy Mother''s face if a God from a stranger family was in the niche above the stove? |
19665 | Canst thou send me Wong- si for a few months? |
19665 | Did I say I disliked these foreigners? |
19665 | Did he not say frankly that he must consult his mother, and was he not honoured and given permission to come to his home to have thy blessing? |
19665 | Did not thy son have to ask thy leave before he would decide that he could go with His Highness to the foreign lands? |
19665 | Do I love thee? |
19665 | Do I speak strongly, my Mother? |
19665 | Does it bring back thy son? |
19665 | Does it bring thee happiness, my lord? |
19665 | Does it make a quick little catch in thy breath? |
19665 | Does not that make thee think of thy childhood''s days? |
19665 | Does thy pulse quicken at the thought that soon thou wilt be a father? |
19665 | Dost thou remember Chen- peh, who is from my province and who married Ling Peh- yu about two moons after I came to thy household? |
19665 | Dost thou remember him? |
19665 | Dost thou remember him? |
19665 | Dost thou remember it? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the Kwan- lin Pagoda? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the servant Cho- to, who came to us soon after I became thy bride? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the story over which the Chinese in all the Empire laughed within their sleeves? |
19665 | Dost thou remember the wife of Wang, the secretary of the embassy at London? |
19665 | Dost thou remember when first thou raised my veil and looked long into my eyes? |
19665 | For centuries untold, men have been able to support their wives; why enter the market- places? |
19665 | Have I done wrong? |
19665 | He said, just like a child,"Why should I go? |
19665 | How can I describe them to thee so that thou wilt understand? |
19665 | How can she feel, how can she know, that thing of gilded wood and plaster? |
19665 | How can they expect us to believe in this great Teacher when they themselves are doubtful of his message, and criticise quite openly their Holy Book? |
19665 | I do everything the same as if thou wert here, and in everything I say,"Would this please my master?" |
19665 | I often ask, when looking at my son, what is his gain? |
19665 | I said nothing-- what is the use? |
19665 | I said, quite calmly for me,"Thou meanest thou art choosing thy wife instead of allowing thy father and mother to choose her?" |
19665 | I said,"Do you want little eyes to fill with tears each time they see you coming across the courtyard? |
19665 | I said,"Is not four years of college in America enough? |
19665 | I said,"There are too many Gods-- why add a new one? |
19665 | I said,"Why, is she a friend of thy sister''s?" |
19665 | I sat back in my chair and looked at him, and said within myself,"Was ever mother blessed with such children; what may I next expect?" |
19665 | I say,"I am too old; I have suffered in the binding, why suffer in the unbinding?" |
19665 | I say,"Thou dost not understand? |
19665 | I was thinking,"Will he find me beautiful?" |
19665 | I wonder what will be the outcome of it all; if after all this turmoil and bloodshed China will really become a different nation? |
19665 | If a woman bear not sons for her lord, what worth her life? |
19665 | If it is true, should education and science make its teaching less authentic? |
19665 | If it were not for the kindly sun which dries them, how could they toil and work and drag the great rice- boats up to the water- gate? |
19665 | In this passage from the unknown to the unknown, this pilgrimage of life, which is the straight path, which the true road-- if indeed there be a Way? |
19665 | Is he not a God to them?" |
19665 | Is it not enough that they take care of the home, that they train the children and fulfill the duties of the life in which the Gods place women? |
19665 | Is it not ridiculous, little Mah- li needing a strong hand? |
19665 | Is not every action the work of the dead who dwell within us? |
19665 | Is there not work enough for our men in the province without going to that land of heat and sickness? |
19665 | Is this a long and tiresome letter, my Honourable Mother? |
19665 | My husband was bewailing the fact of the empty strong- box, and Wang said,"Why do n''t you do what I did when I was in command of the troops? |
19665 | My last letter was unhappy, and these little slips of paper must bring to thee joy, not sorrow, else why the written word? |
19665 | My wife, my sons, my home, my all, were within the walls; why go outside?" |
19665 | Now would this tortoise rather be dead and have its remains venerated, or be alive and wagging its tail in the mud?" |
19665 | Of what use is it in the end? |
19665 | Of what worth that clothing lying in that box of camphor- wood? |
19665 | Oh, Mother mine, why didst thou send to me that priest of thine? |
19665 | Oh, dear one, dost thou understand that, to a woman who loves, her husband is more than Heaven, more than herself? |
19665 | Shall we insist that they return to the old regime and learn nothing but embroidery? |
19665 | She gave her sleep; and who can blame her? |
19665 | She was cold, and thy Mother came to me so gently and said,"Kwei- li, hast thou no clothing for the child that was found by thy servants?" |
19665 | Should we think of that thing which is in each of us and which we call''I''should it be''I''or''they''? |
19665 | Sometimes I think,"If something should happen; if the Gods should be jealous of my happiness and I should not see thee more?" |
19665 | Their courtesy, what is it? |
19665 | Then he thought,"If there is ater here for me, why not for all this great city of many tens of thousands?" |
19665 | What can we do? |
19665 | What do I do? |
19665 | What is honour, what is this country, this fighting, quarrelling, maddened country, what is our fame, in comparison to his dear life? |
19665 | What is it that has given these men this marvellous adaptability to all conditions, however hard they may seem? |
19665 | What is life? |
19665 | What is our pride or shame but the pride or shame of the unseen in that which they have made? |
19665 | What is progress? |
19665 | What is the true answer; where may we find it? |
19665 | What is there to compare in binding power to the family customs of our people? |
19665 | What will become of the filial piety that has been the backbone of our country? |
19665 | What will they do to gain their food in this great country which is already full to over- flowing? |
19665 | When wilt thou come to me, thou keeper of my heart? |
19665 | Whence do I come; where do I go? |
19665 | Where is there one so autocratic in her own home as a Chinese mother? |
19665 | Which is the Way, which path to God is broad enough for all the world? |
19665 | Which is the best? |
19665 | Whose holy book holds the key that will open wide the door? |
19665 | Why can not we, with our unlimited numbers, make an army that will cause our country to be respected and take its place among the powers of the world? |
19665 | Why can they not take what is best for an Eastern woman from the learning of the West, as the bee selects honey from each flower, and leave the rest? |
19665 | Why could they not have left thy son for thee to see? |
19665 | Why four years''separation to prepare to go to that college? |
19665 | Why then not set our hearts at rest, why wear the soul with anxious thoughts? |
19665 | Why, Mother- mine, didst thou send the old priest from the temple down here? |
19665 | Why, then, should our young people be ashamed of their country''s learning? |
19665 | You ask me how I pass my days? |
2352 | I replied:"From the United States of America, and what country is this?" |
2352 | I went ashore, when I was accosted in English with a foreign accent by a venerable looking man with the question:"Where did you come from?" |
2352 | Will you do unto others always as you would desire that others should do to you? |
17108 | A new dress, Saint Jinny? |
17108 | And without knowing these things you love him, Zura? |
17108 | Are n''t they darlings? |
17108 | Are you not going with us? |
17108 | Beautifully simple, and tin milk must be so nourishing, is it not? |
17108 | Beloved goddess, tell me-- what did I do with them? 17108 Both the boys gone? |
17108 | Build a hospital without money? |
17108 | But how did you manage so many pleasures while you were attending school? |
17108 | But,I asked almost peevishly,"what made him go so soon?" |
17108 | But,I asked,"did your mother permit you to be out at such an hour?" |
17108 | By- the- way,he asked, pausing at the door,"where is that chap I met when I was here before, who took such an interest in my business? |
17108 | Did you come direct from America to Japan? |
17108 | Do I? 17108 Do they?" |
17108 | Do you mean that clean, raggy little man who looked through you, but not at you? |
17108 | Do you smoke much? |
17108 | Does she not know that a woman''s only pleasure is obedience? 17108 Does your Mission Board give you permission to live in a place or fashion like this?" |
17108 | For Heaven''s sake, Jane, do you mean airs and manners? |
17108 | From where did you come to Japan? |
17108 | Go with him? 17108 Good- by?" |
17108 | Hanaford? 17108 Have you been ill a long time?" |
17108 | Have you ever seen a garden in this country which boasts some three or four centuries of birthdays? |
17108 | He has cabled, has he? 17108 How can I? |
17108 | How can you? |
17108 | How do you know he wants parrots or tracts? |
17108 | How do you know it, my child? 17108 How do you know this?" |
17108 | How do you know? 17108 How long have you been in this country?" |
17108 | I? 17108 If you are that kind of a magician, perhaps you can tell me where I can find so many students that riches will pour in upon me?" |
17108 | In a cable? |
17108 | Independent what? |
17108 | Interrupt? 17108 Is he dead?" |
17108 | Is n''t it sweet? |
17108 | Is n''t she the very sweetest thing? |
17108 | It does? 17108 Jane, what is the matter with you?" |
17108 | Jane,I asked at last,"what shall we do?" |
17108 | Jane,I asked,"what do young girls in our country like best?" |
17108 | Madam, would you condescend to inform my ignorance how love is joined to obedience? 17108 Oh, Zury,"pleaded the harassed woman,"what''s the use of putting it on? |
17108 | Oh, do n''t you really know what tolu is? 17108 Oh, is n''t it?" |
17108 | One time I say''Master, have got painful in brain spot? 17108 School?" |
17108 | Talking banks, are you? 17108 Tell me, what kind of girls does America produce? |
17108 | Then what else happened? |
17108 | Then why do you stay out here? 17108 Think it''s funny? |
17108 | Well, it did n''t even give a hint that Page was that nice cashier gentleman from Chicago, did it? |
17108 | Well, what is it? |
17108 | Were you ill before you left America, or after you sailed? |
17108 | What about your father? |
17108 | What are they doing with their throats, Miss Jenkins? |
17108 | What do they do at this ceremony? |
17108 | What do you mean? 17108 What do you mean?" |
17108 | What do you think the girl back home would think? 17108 What if to- morrow''s care were here Without its rest? |
17108 | What is it, son? 17108 What is it?" |
17108 | What is the matter now down at Omoto''s house? |
17108 | What''s what? |
17108 | What, Zura? |
17108 | What? |
17108 | Which one? |
17108 | Who''s going to make me? 17108 Why do you hint at such a thing?" |
17108 | Why do you say that of my people? |
17108 | With what, son? |
17108 | Would you grant me permission to send her to you daily as a student? 17108 You mean plans, do n''t you? |
17108 | You mean they are coming to take Page away? |
17108 | You mean they are inconsistent? |
17108 | You what? |
17108 | Zura,I said,"who was that man who stuck to me all afternoon like furniture varnish? |
17108 | *****"Where''s Pink Tommy?" |
17108 | A little depressed at losing her as a pupil and knowing that her defiance could only bring sorrow, I asked her gently,"Do you love good times?" |
17108 | Also, does not your own holy book write plainly on this subject of obedience of women and children?" |
17108 | And why? |
17108 | Are n''t the curves of that roof lovely? |
17108 | Are n''t your feet burned?" |
17108 | Are you with me?" |
17108 | But what mattered that? |
17108 | But who are you, sir? |
17108 | But why did n''t he speak out, and why hide his talents in this obscure place? |
17108 | Ca n''t you hear me? |
17108 | Chalmers?" |
17108 | Did he ask you about Page? |
17108 | Did n''t that splendid Japanese man clothe and educate hundreds of orphans for years on faith, pure and simple? |
17108 | Did n''t we yank''em out of their hermits''nest and make them play the game whether they wanted to or not? |
17108 | Did n''t you have any''movies,''any chums, any boys to treat you now and then to a sundae?" |
17108 | Did n''t you hear me call to you?" |
17108 | Did n''t you say he was in a hurry?" |
17108 | Did not my own mother think home and country well lost for love? |
17108 | Did she not think it would be well for her to write to her grandfather and tell him she could see now that she had made it most difficult for him? |
17108 | Do I interrupt?" |
17108 | Do n''t they know there are ninety millions of us? |
17108 | Do n''t you know that in this country a young man and woman walking and talking together can not be permitted? |
17108 | Do not the morals of your own country need uplifting before you insist on sending emissaries to turn my people from the teachings of many centuries? |
17108 | Do you like Japan?" |
17108 | Do you remember the hat I wore the first day I came to see you? |
17108 | Do you suppose they sat under the wistaria?" |
17108 | Do you think I intend to bend to the rules of this law- cursed country? |
17108 | Does n''t that halo around her look like a chapeau?" |
17108 | Everywhere I looked I seemed to see this question written: Was Page Hanaford''s absence at the time of the detectives''visit accidental or planned? |
17108 | For had I not seen what tricks the heat of the Orient could play with the brain cells of a white man? |
17108 | Had not I in the long ago longed for liberty and for life as I had never craved orthodox salvation? |
17108 | Hanaford?" |
17108 | Has he told you the real reason for his being in Japan? |
17108 | Has he told you why fear suddenly overtakes and confuses him? |
17108 | Has not the breaking of traditions threatened the very foundations of our homes? |
17108 | Has your religion and system of education proved so infallible for yourselves that you must force it upon others? |
17108 | Have not our misconceptions of progress cost us countless lives and sickening humiliations? |
17108 | Have they no understanding of the one great law for women?" |
17108 | He knows, does he? |
17108 | He went on slowly:"I was wondering if it is the custom in your country for ladies to smoke and drink liquor in public places?" |
17108 | He went on:"What of the teachings for your young? |
17108 | Her only comment was,"His memory has long ears, has it? |
17108 | How could you understand? |
17108 | How dare you brawl before this sacred place? |
17108 | How dared he speak of it with his life wrapped in the dark shadows of some secret? |
17108 | How did you ever teach your face to look that way? |
17108 | How did you know?" |
17108 | I came this afternoon to ask-- do you not think it would be pleasant if you came to my house every day for a little study-- just to keep in practice?" |
17108 | I do n''t want to be a cold- water dasher but, Jane Gray, where will your visions lead you?" |
17108 | I had been too busy a woman to indulge in many novels, but in the few I had read the hero lost no time in saying,"Will you?" |
17108 | I knew she was laughing at me, but what mattered? |
17108 | I prayed that might be true, but why his confusion and evasion? |
17108 | I wonder if you would come to- morrow morning and permit me to show it to you?" |
17108 | I wondered if the man who framed that edict had a vision of what foreign teachings might bring in its trail? |
17108 | If Page Hanaford could not explain himself honorably, what right had he to look at the girl with his heart in his eyes? |
17108 | If his knowledge were so all- inclusive, why had it failed to suggest some path up or down which he could peacefully lead Zura Wingate? |
17108 | If no explanation could be given, what right had Zura Wingate to grow prettier and happier every day? |
17108 | If some cruel mistake had darkened his life, why did he not say so and let us, his friends, help him forget? |
17108 | If this be truthful why he not give quick return to''Merica?" |
17108 | Is n''t Jane the realest saint you ever knew? |
17108 | Is n''t that a bit of heaven?" |
17108 | Is n''t that what Zura says? |
17108 | Is n''t the blessedest thing in the world to have one to go to? |
17108 | Is their place never taught them? |
17108 | Is there not enough of my blood in her to make her bow to the law? |
17108 | Laying my hand upon her arm I asked,"Oh, Zura, why did you do it? |
17108 | Miss Gray exclaimed anxiously,"But you are not going?" |
17108 | My granddaughter announced she will not? |
17108 | Now your other name?" |
17108 | Or has he only dared to tell you other things?" |
17108 | Or have fox spirit got brain?'' |
17108 | Or was it for the moment he was permitted one more joyous flight in the blue skies of freedom before he was finally caught in the snare of the shadow? |
17108 | Our visitor''s face crinkled with suppressed amusement at the little lady''s funny mixture of words and he asked,"Are you never discouraged?" |
17108 | Page joined us, inquiring anxiously,"You are not hurt? |
17108 | Rather interesting, was n''t it?" |
17108 | See what paper says? |
17108 | See? |
17108 | Steadying myself I asked:"Was he? |
17108 | Suppose somebody treated her as you have treated Zura? |
17108 | Sure there will be no risk of wearing out a welcome? |
17108 | Tell me, in heaven''s name, tell me where could a man hide a million dollars?" |
17108 | That while she did n''t want to be taken back she would like to be friends with him? |
17108 | The dim light from the old bronze lantern reflected the tears in his eyes as he answered:"Help me? |
17108 | The flower- like children wear on their heads the grotesque combinations of muslin and chicken feathers they called hats? |
17108 | The mighty honorable Boss has been laying plans, has he? |
17108 | The moment was tense; we waited breathlessly; at last Page asked:"But, Father, what did I do with them?" |
17108 | Then after a pause:"That program did not say what particular thing our boy was wanted for, did it?" |
17108 | Was it the magic of love that made him hopeful, almost gay? |
17108 | Was n''t it good of him to do it? |
17108 | Was that what Jane Gray had been smiling to herself about? |
17108 | What are you saying, Jane?" |
17108 | What better proof does anybody want than the story of Mr. Hoda''s Orphan Asylum?" |
17108 | What could people mean by giving things and taking away the excitement of stealing them? |
17108 | What did he have to say?" |
17108 | What did it all mean? |
17108 | What do I mean by that? |
17108 | What do you call me?" |
17108 | What does it matter? |
17108 | What have you to say of the vast army of American women who could not be forced into doing the things you mention?" |
17108 | What is it, Miss Jenkins?" |
17108 | What is your boasted freedom for women but license? |
17108 | What matters the outside so long as you make your hearts sweet and shiny and true? |
17108 | What more natural than for a lonely girl to seek for pastime the company of a youth of her own kind? |
17108 | What was he doing here anyhow?" |
17108 | What was the harm in my having a little pleasure? |
17108 | What''s the argument?" |
17108 | What''s the use of poking up a tiger when he''s quiet?" |
17108 | Where did he come from?" |
17108 | Where did you find him? |
17108 | Where did you get it?" |
17108 | Where would they be anyhow if it was n''t for America? |
17108 | Why did n''t he throw me over into a bramble patch and tell me not to get scratched? |
17108 | Why must the youth of the land adopt those hideous imitations of foreign clothes? |
17108 | Why not start anew with love as a guide? |
17108 | Why not?" |
17108 | Why should n''t I? |
17108 | Why waste words? |
17108 | Will you not let me help you, Miss Gray?" |
17108 | With a girl?" |
17108 | Would I bring my most august body into the living- room and hang my honorable self upon the floor? |
17108 | Would n''t it be truly splendid if dear Page Hanaford and Zura were to fall in love? |
17108 | Would n''t you be very happy if you were as certain and sure of all your dreams as we are?" |
17108 | Would you be so kind? |
17108 | You know Hanaford San?" |
17108 | You know the old saw about a rolling stone?" |
17108 | You remember Pinkey Chalmers, do n''t you-- the nice boy you and Ursula entertained so beautifully in the garden when he called the last time? |
17108 | You, a young girl, go with a man who is in charge of an officer? |
17108 | Zury, are n''t you glad for me?" |
17108 | can you think of anything more sweetly romantic?" |
17108 | do you mean the day I flew into the''Misty Star''and right out again? |
17108 | is that what the women of this country have to go up against?" |
17108 | you knew this and did not tell?" |
23229 | And after two years? |
23229 | And you are happy? |
23229 | He will leave her? |
23229 | How can I go to my children? |
23229 | Queen? 23229 What bird?" |
23229 | When will the Thakin tire of this? |
23229 | Whence will it come? |
23229 | You are, then, content? |
23229 | Have I not gazed on my sons and seen their royal bearing, and known their touch?" |
23229 | Have I not looked on my heart''s beloved one for five years-- looked on his face-- heard his voice-- trembled with joy at his footsteps? |
23229 | Have I not waited and watched? |
23229 | He will have no choice-- who can war with Fate?" |
23229 | What Queen?" |
19630 | Didst thou say that Sindhu''s monarch on my Abhimanyu bore,-- He alone,--and Jayadratha leagued with six marauders more? 19630 Have I heard thee, menial, rightly?" |
19630 | Have I lain too long and slumbered, sweet Savitri, faithful spouse? 19630 Heard ye not,"the Brahmans questioned,"in Panchala''s fair domain, Drupad, good and gracious monarch, doth a mighty feast ordain? |
19630 | Strange thy accents,spake Uttara,"stranger are the weapons bright, Are they arms of sons of Pandu famed on earth for matchless might? |
19630 | Tell me,questioned Aswapati,"for I may not guess thy thought, Wherefore is my daughter''s action with a sad disaster fraught? |
19630 | Tell me,_ rishi_, then thy reason,so the anxious monarch cried,"Why to youth so great and gifted may this maid be not allied? |
19630 | Tell me,_ rishi_,said the monarch,"for thy sense from me is hid, Has this prince some fatal blemish, wherefore is this match forbid?" |
19630 | Who is noblest,quoth Yudhishthir,"in this galaxy of fame, Who of chiefs and crownéd monarchs doth our foremost honour claim?" |
19630 | And Draupadi noble princess, purest best of womankind, Doth she wander with Yudhishthir, changeless in her heart and mind?" |
19630 | And I weep not for Duryodhan, like a prince he fought and fell, But my sorrow- stricken husband, who can his misfortunes tell? |
19630 | And if freed from shame and bondage in his folly played again, Lost again and went to exile, wherefore doth he now complain? |
19630 | And thy limbs so young and tender, on the bare earth do they lie, Where the hungry jackal prowleth and the vulture flutters nigh? |
19630 | Are the solid mountains splitting, is it bursting of the earth, Is it tempest''s pealing accent whence the lightning takes its birth? |
19630 | Art thou slain, my gallant warrior, and thy father was not nigh? |
19630 | Ask him to restore the kingdom on the sacred Jumna''s shore? |
19630 | Ask the chief who proudly boasted, archer Arjun he would slay, Helméd Arjun sways the battle, whither now doth Karna stay? |
19630 | Ask the dark and deep Sakuni, where is now his low device, Wherefore wields he not his weapon as he wields the loaded dice? |
19630 | Bow to them while warlike Drona leads us as in days of old, Bhishma greater than the bright- gods, archer Karna true and bold? |
19630 | Bring me forth a chariot- driver, let me speed my battle- car, And in wonder they will question-- Is this Arjun famed in war?" |
19630 | Can I ask him, worse than woman, in the battle''s ranks to lead?" |
19630 | Challenge from a crownéd monarch can a crownéd king decline, Can a Kshatra warrior fathom fraud in sons of royal line? |
19630 | Could''st thou, impious Valadeva, midst these potentates of fame, On Yudhishthir pious- hearted cast this undeservéd blame? |
19630 | Dear or hated be the foeman, Arjun, thou shalt fight and slay, Wherefore else the blood of nations hast thou poured from day to day?" |
19630 | Didst thou bear that peerless archer, all- resistless in his car, Sweeping with the roar of ocean through the shattered ranks of war? |
19630 | Didst thou bear the mighty hero, mortal man of heavenly birth, Crushing''neath his arm of valour all his foemen on the earth? |
19630 | Didst thou fight a holy battle when with six marauders skilled, Karna hunted Abhimanyu and the youthful hero killed? |
19630 | Didst thou hide the birth and lineage of that chief of deathful ire, As a man in folds of garments seeks to hide the flaming fire? |
19630 | Didst thou in the council chamber with your insults foul and keen By her flowing raven tresses drag Yudhishthir''s stainless queen? |
19630 | Didst thou say the impious Kurus stooped unto this deed of shame, Outrage on the laws of honour, stain upon a warrior''s fame? |
19630 | Didst thou speak to warlike Bhima as thy serf and bounden slave, Wrong my father, righteous Arjun, peerless prince and warrior brave? |
19630 | Didst thou then fulfil thy duty when, Yudhishthir''s exile crost, Krishna asked in right and justice for Yudhishthir''s empire lost? |
19630 | Didst thou tread the path of honour on Yudhishthir''s fatal fall, Heaping insults on Draupadi in Hastina''s council hall? |
19630 | Didst thou with the false Sakuni win a realm by low device, Win his kingdom from Yudhishthir by ignoble trick of dice? |
19630 | Do those warriors in my absence Matsya''s far- famed cattle steal? |
19630 | Dost thou, sage and saintly_ rishi_, know of wife or woman born, By such nameless sorrow smitten, by such strange misfortune torn? |
19630 | Doth a man of sense and honour, blest with wisdom and with pride, Thus proclaim his wedded consort was another''s loving bride? |
19630 | Doth a secret love for Pandavs quell our leader''s matchless might? |
19630 | Doth he as Yudhishthir''s kinsman count as foremost and the best? |
19630 | Doth he as a sage and elder claim the homage to him done? |
19630 | Doth he as a wise preceptor claim the highest, foremost place, When the great preceptor Drona doth his royal mansion grace? |
19630 | Drupad monarch of Panchala sleeps by foeman Drona''s side? |
19630 | Friendless, kinless, on this wide earth whither shall they turn and fly? |
19630 | Gold and jewels graced thy bosom, gems bedecked thy lofty crest, Doth the crimson mark of sabre decorate that manly breast? |
19630 | Golden suns of wondrous brightness on this fourth their lustre lend, Who may be the unknown archer who this stately bow can bend? |
19630 | Hast thou in thy ancient legends heard of true and faithful wife, With a stronger wife''s affection, with a sadder woman''s life?" |
19630 | Hast thou lost thy fair Draupadi, is thy wedded wife our slave?" |
19630 | Hath not truthful Bhishma sworn, He will fight no wounded warrior, he will fight no woman born? |
19630 | Hear ye not the deep_ gandiva_? |
19630 | Here in glory, son of DHARMA, sits my noble righteous lord, Sin nor shame nor human frailty stains Yudhishthir''s deed or word, Silent all? |
19630 | III The Fated Bridegroom"Whence comes she,"so Narad questioned,"whither was Savitri led, Wherefore to a happy husband hath Savitri not been we d?" |
19630 | If Yudhishthir, fond of gambling, played a heedless, reckless game, Lost his empire and his freedom, was it then Duryodhan''s blame? |
19630 | If the truth resides in_ Vedas_, brave Duryodhan dwells above, Wherefore linger we in sadness severed from his cherished love? |
19630 | In this throng of crownéd monarchs, ruling kings of righteous fame, Can this uncrowned Vrishni chieftain foremost rank and honour claim? |
19630 | Is Satyavan free in bounty, gentle- hearted, full of grace, Duly versed in sacred knowledge, fair in mind and fair in face?" |
19630 | Is he son of chariot- driver? |
19630 | Is it that the fates of battle''gainst the Kuru house combine, Is it that thy heart''s affection unto Panda''s sons incline? |
19630 | Is the youth of noble lustre, gifted in the gifts of art, Blest with wisdom, prowess, patience daring, dauntless in his heart?" |
19630 | Knowest thou good and noble Krishna; as a child I climbed his knee, As a boy I called him father, hung upon him lovingly? |
19630 | Mark ye not these pointed arrows falling prone before my feet? |
19630 | Mighty Bhishma, hath he fallen? |
19630 | Next are these with vulture- feather, golden- yellow in their hue, Made of iron, keen and whetted, whose may be these arrows true? |
19630 | Pained at heart was good Vidura, and he asked in sore distress:"_ Arya_ Pritha, will she wander in the pathless wilderness? |
19630 | Rend my hard and stony bosom crushed beneath this cruel pain, Should Gandhari live to witness noble son and grandson slain? |
19630 | See the chieftains with their maces and their swords of trusty steel, Still they grasp their tried weapons,--do they still the life- pulse feel?" |
19630 | Shall he, sending them to slaughter, now survive and learn to flee, Shall he, ruler over monarchs, learn to bend the servile knee? |
19630 | Shall we, who to mighty INDRA scarce will do the homage due, Bow to homeless sons of Pandu and their comrades faint and few? |
19630 | Shall ye range the pathless forest dreary day and darksome night, Reft of all save native virtue, clad in native, inborn might? |
19630 | Should he rather send a message to the proud unbending foe, And Duryodhan''s haughty purpose seek by messenger to know? |
19630 | Should he send a noble envoy, trained in virtue, true and wise, With his greetings to Duryodhan in a meek and friendly guise? |
19630 | Should he smite his ancient foemen skilled in each deceitful art, Unforgiving in their vengeance, unrelenting in their heart? |
19630 | Soft thine eye as budding lotus, sweet and gentle was thy face, Are those soft eyes closed in slumber, faded in that peerless grace? |
19630 | Speak, what nameless guilt or folly, secret sin to me unknown, Turns from me your sweet affection, father''s love that was my own? |
19630 | Sure some great and mighty monarch owns this other bow of might, Set with golden glittering insects on its ebon back so bright? |
19630 | Sure the Brahman boy in folly dares a foolish thoughtless deed, Shame amidst this throng of monarchs, shall it be the Brahman''s meed? |
19630 | Think, Duryodhan, when_ gandharvas_ took thee captive and a slave, Did not Arjun rend thy fetters, Arjun righteous chief and brave? |
19630 | Unto Krishna as a_ rishi_ should the foremost rank be given? |
19630 | Unto Krishna for his knowledge should the noble prize we yield? |
19630 | Unto Krishna should we render honour for his warlike fame? |
19630 | Warlike Drona, doth he guard us like a broad and ample shield? |
19630 | Was he then our eldest brother we have in the battle slain, And our nearest dearest elder fell upon the gory plain? |
19630 | Was this dream my fair Savitri, dost thou of this Vision know? |
19630 | Weak are they in friends and forces, feeble is their fitful star, Wherefore then in pride and folly seek with us unequal war? |
19630 | What great crime or darkening sorrow shadows o''er my bitter fate, That ye chiefs and Kuru''s monarch mark Duryodhan for your hate? |
19630 | When in Matsya''s fields of pasture captured we Virata''s kine, Did not Arjun in his valour beat thy countless force and mine? |
19630 | Where are now those pious princes by a dire misfortune crossed, Warlike Arjun, good Yudhishthir, by his subjects loved and lost? |
19630 | Where is tiger- waisted Bhima, matchless fighter in the field, And the brave and twin- born brothers skilled the arms of war to wield? |
19630 | Wherefore doth our leader linger when he hears the battle cry? |
19630 | Wherefore then before yon Arjun do the valiant Kurus fly? |
19630 | Wherefore then in every battle are the Kuru chieftains slain, Wherefore lie my warlike brothers lifeless on the ghastly plain? |
19630 | Wherefore voice of evening bugle speaks not on the battle- field, Merry conch nor sounding trumpet music to the warriors yield? |
19630 | Who doth own these shining arrows with their heads in gold encased, Thousand arrows bright and feathered, in the golden quivers placed? |
19630 | Who doth own this wondrous sabre, shape of toad is on the hilt, On the blade a toad is graven, and the scabbard nobly gilt? |
19630 | Who shall face the twin- born brothers by the mighty Bhima led, And the vengeful chief Satyaki with his bow and arrows dread? |
19630 | Who shall meet the helméd Arjun in the gory field of war, Krishna with his fiery discus mounted on his battle- car? |
19630 | Whose this second ponderous weapon stout and massive in the hold, On the staff are worked by artists elephants of burnished gold? |
19630 | Wilt thou as a crownéd monarch rule a mighty nation''s weal? |
19630 | Wilt thou do Duryodhan''s mandate, proud Duryodhan''s willing slave? |
19630 | With a halting zeal for Kurus doth the noble Bhishma fight? |
19630 | Woe to me, from rocky mountains where I dwelt by Pandu''s side, When I lost him, to Hastina wherefore came I in my pride? |
19630 | Would that son of chariot- driver fling on us this insult keen, Hadst thou, noble king and elder, staked nor freedom nor our queen?" |
19630 | Youngest, gentlest Sahadeva, dearest to this widowed heart, Wilt thou watch beside thy mother, while thy cruel brothers part?" |
19630 | and will no chieftain rise to save a woman''s life, Not a hand or voice is lifted to defend a virtuous wife? |
19630 | base, insulting Karna slain, Karna dealing dire destruction on this battle''s reddened plain? |
19630 | bound by battle''s sacred laws, Wherefore fightest not with Arjun for thy house and for thy cause? |
19630 | cheerless is that young heart, Abhimanyu''s princess- wife, What can sad Subhadra offer to her joyless sunless life? |
19630 | dost thou lead the Kurus in this battle''s crimson field? |
19630 | elders, noble lords are here, Can a modest wedded woman thus in loose attire appear?" |
19630 | peerless in the art of war, Can it be that we shall falter while thou speed''st the battle- car? |
19630 | quenched is archer Karna''s pride? |
22848 | What can my love say At this sad sacred hour? |
22848 | [ 1] Who are you? 22848 13 Why this return? 22848 45 RAIN What world- agony distils its poignancy this day? 22848 49 TRUCE A field of battle-- this sky, The sun, the hero bleeding to death; The shadows and lights hurl their Hosts of clouds ceaselessly: No peace? 22848 60 I have drunk your tears with insatiate lips; I have broken like a toy the heart of your life; What have I given? 22848 And called me from the deeps of time? 22848 Art thou the breath That burns my being When cold feel my limbs in terror, and awe? 22848 Exquisite, pain- laden, peaceful, This night most beautiful, What love forsaken by loving Sets his heart a''singing? 22848 From the far reaches of the marshland Along and beyond the crescent- bed of the sea- sand What tempest on the wave''s- strings makes its cadences? 22848 My love? 22848 Oh, In what dark, in what forest roamest thou? 22848 PALE, COOL LIPS THAT BURN7 FORLORN 8 AFTER A BENGALI SONG 9 MOONRISE 10 AT VENTURA, CALIFORNIA 11"THE SAME AIR THAT YOU BREATHE"12"WHY THIS RETURN?" |
22848 | Recedes the bank of space; Fades away even the unfilled time, No light, no sound, not even a dream; Yet who speaks through silence? |
22848 | The calm of its shadow Protects me, but where my peace? |
22848 | Though cry I without end, Yet a thought of thee heals many wounds, Why? |
22848 | Warfare all? |
22848 | What fiery wine Tingles in these vines Weaving golden arabesques On the pale evening sky? |
22848 | What matters if winter be nigh? |
22848 | What pain- laden heart pours out its exhaustless lay Of tormenting woe and tortured silences? |
22848 | Whence this call? |
22848 | Who are you? |
22848 | Who art thou? |
22848 | Who art thou? |
22848 | Who has lived with me? |
22848 | Who knows? |
22848 | Who plays this music of night? |
22848 | Who wills this cruel decree? |
22848 | Whom do I know in this emptiness? |
22848 | Why do I look For your coming? |
22848 | Why make me wait From the hour of dew Till another sunset? |
22848 | Why make spring- flames leap From passion''s autumn leaves? |
22848 | Why seek I ever without, O guest at my door? |
22848 | Why this sunlight When all seemed without sun? |
22848 | Why this urge through fatigue When time falls fast asleep Under the shadow of its grave-- The winter ice? |
22848 | Why, how, when? |
22848 | goddess, why this gray measure In thy starry harmony? |
22848 | thou ask me; how can I tell? |
22848 | who are you? |
22848 | who knows? |
15743 | ''S''at_ so_? |
15743 | ''S''at_ so_? |
15743 | A child of your age? |
15743 | Ai n''t got a friend, has she? |
15743 | And this one, too? |
15743 | Anything loose in the house? |
15743 | Are everything there yours? |
15743 | Are everything there yours? |
15743 | Are you glad to go? |
15743 | Been plowing with our heifer? |
15743 | Can I find him in the histories? |
15743 | Did I not say Ram- tah? |
15743 | Did you know old Syc? |
15743 | Do what? |
15743 | Do you? |
15743 | Drink? |
15743 | Eh? 15743 Eh?" |
15743 | Enough? |
15743 | Er-- what''s his name? |
15743 | Ever take any drugs? 15743 Everything_ there_?" |
15743 | Find out something in this office? |
15743 | Four hundred thousand margins? |
15743 | Good shape? |
15743 | Got any vicious habits? |
15743 | Grounds? |
15743 | Hadjer lunch? |
15743 | Have n''t we? |
15743 | Have n''t we? |
15743 | Have to give''em up you know; ca n''t allow_ that_ sort of underhand work; where''d the world be, where''d it be, where''d it_ be_? 15743 He coming, too?" |
15743 | He know_ you_? |
15743 | He was a fighter? |
15743 | Hold''ny Federal? |
15743 | How about it, Joe? 15743 How about old Cy Young? |
15743 | How can you_ know_? |
15743 | How could you? 15743 How do you know?" |
15743 | How do you like his hair parted that way in the middle? |
15743 | How long will it be, do you think? |
15743 | How long you had that Federal stock? |
15743 | How many lumps? |
15743 | How many shares? |
15743 | How much? |
15743 | How old are you? |
15743 | How''s your health? 15743 I just perfectly darling well knew you''d say that; and I''m sending you down a car--""A what? |
15743 | I know where the chap makes them perfectly-- brings a mummy back to life--"A mum-- what mummy? |
15743 | I think I''d rather--"You wo n''t sell? |
15743 | I-- I suppose-- you''re sure there ca n''t be any doubt about this? |
15743 | I-- uh-- what''s the price of that dog in the window? |
15743 | In the box, to- day? |
15743 | Inside play, there? |
15743 | Is n''t it too close for you in here? |
15743 | Is n''t she a perfectly old dear? |
15743 | Is this Perfesser Balthasar? |
15743 | Know how much you made on that Federal stuff? |
15743 | Like it? |
15743 | Living out this way? |
15743 | Match pockets, change pockets, pencil pockets, fountain pen pockets, improved secret money pocket, right here; see? |
15743 | More than any two people ever did before, do n''t we? |
15743 | Nerves? |
15743 | Never? |
15743 | Oh, me? 15743 Plug pulled? |
15743 | Say, friend, I guess you''re forgetting something, ai n''t you? |
15743 | Say, where you been? |
15743 | Say, you want to come inside a while? |
15743 | Say,called the expert, as if on second thought,"you''re up at Breede''s office, ai n''t you-- old J.B.''s?" |
15743 | See the three skirts in the back? 15743 Seven hundred shares, did he say?" |
15743 | Smoke? |
15743 | Take-- mornings? |
15743 | That you, Ed? 15743 That you, Ed?" |
15743 | That you, Howard? 15743 That your first drink s''morning?" |
15743 | That''s the way to look at it, friend, but how much you got on you? |
15743 | Things looking up any over your way? |
15743 | Think there''s a doctor on this little old steamer? |
15743 | Too much for you, eh? 15743 Want to sell?" |
15743 | Was the conditions right? |
15743 | We_ do_, do n''t we? |
15743 | Well, how can you know about him? |
15743 | Well,he said,"if it wo n''t be too much trouble?" |
15743 | Well? |
15743 | Wha''d I tell you? 15743 Wha''d I tell you? |
15743 | Wha''s matter these cuffs? |
15743 | What am I? |
15743 | What board of directors? |
15743 | What boat? |
15743 | What can I do? 15743 What did you say your name was?" |
15743 | What in time_ have_ you done? 15743 What is the point?" |
15743 | What is this-- what is this-- what_ is_ this? |
15743 | What is this? 15743 What make is it?" |
15743 | What next? |
15743 | What''d it cost? 15743 What''s the idea? |
15743 | What? |
15743 | When did he-- pass on? |
15743 | When did_ you_ first know? |
15743 | When? |
15743 | Where do they eat? |
15743 | Where to, Boss? |
15743 | Where you been all the time? |
15743 | Where you_ been_? |
15743 | Where? |
15743 | Who-- who is she? |
15743 | Why did n''t J.B. here assert himself then? |
15743 | Why would n''t I? 15743 Wo n''t he ever come?" |
15743 | Would you part from twenty, if you was told what you want to know? |
15743 | Yah, you know vot? 15743 Yes, sir; black or green, sir?" |
15743 | You did n''t say anything about-- you know-- to poor old Pops, did you? |
15743 | You go in for dogs? |
15743 | You interested in the movement? |
15743 | You knew who I was,_ did n''t_ you? |
15743 | You know what she_ says_? |
15743 | You often hear skeptics say they is sometimes trickery in this,said the Countess,"but say, listen now, how could it be? |
15743 | You told me what I was-- last time, do n''t you remember? 15743 You vant him, hey? |
15743 | You''ve perfectly worked it all out, have n''t you? |
15743 | Your heifer? 15743 _ How_ much?'' |
15743 | _ What?_He could not believe this thing. |
15743 | _ Who was I in my last incarnation?_He tore the small sheet from the pad, folded it tightly and, with elbows on the table, pressed it to his brow. |
15743 | _ Why_, if you''re sure it''s there? |
15743 | A flirt, and engaged, too, was she? |
15743 | A puzzle was he?" |
15743 | All right about being a king, but how were other people to know it? |
15743 | Am I as rich as_ that_??" |
15743 | Am I as rich as_ that_??" |
15743 | And Breede was puzzled by him_ that_ way, was he? |
15743 | And extension safety pockets, I suppose?" |
15743 | And how about that small place with flowers and a tennis court and a motor to go marketing in? |
15743 | And how far was this present affair going? |
15743 | And how long had they meant? |
15743 | And if she did n''t want to be"led on,"he thought indignantly, why did she so persistently put herself in the way of it? |
15743 | And that little old man-- perfumery not used since the Chicago fire, or had he said the Mexican War? |
15743 | And there never was any one before, was there? |
15743 | And what did it mean to him now? |
15743 | And what was the flapper just perfectly doing at that moment? |
15743 | And what was you wishing to know now?" |
15743 | And would he have said to Breede with magnificent impudence,"I can imagine nothing of less consequence?" |
15743 | Anything else?" |
15743 | Anything loose in the house?" |
15743 | Are you paying attention? |
15743 | Ask me was I at the dentist''s? |
15743 | At the doorway of a drawing- room that looked out upon the column the Swiss suggested coffee-- perhaps? |
15743 | Beat him down, would they? |
15743 | Broadway car, yesterday, me goin''uptown with Max, see? |
15743 | But if you have been afraid of nearly everything nearly all your life, how then? |
15743 | But some time-- yet, would it be this same animal? |
15743 | But the three B''s were there; did they not point psychically to the golden bees of the Corsican? |
15743 | But was a financier who had been netted four hundred thousand dollars to be put afloat upon the waters at the whim of a flapper? |
15743 | But what of it? |
15743 | But why do n''t you wear''em_ on_--like this?" |
15743 | Car?" |
15743 | Chubbins, eh? |
15743 | Could he bear to look? |
15743 | Could he develop it? |
15743 | Could he live through that? |
15743 | Could n''t he say a word to her without being snapped at? |
15743 | Could n''t make out how many kinds of perfectly swear- word fool he was? |
15743 | Could n''t the man pick out something natty, a shapelier toe, buttons, a neat upper of tan or blue cloth-- patent leather, of course? |
15743 | D''you think the Pirates are trying to help''em play inside ball? |
15743 | Did every one talk, or only the head director? |
15743 | Did he believe that women ought to be classed legally with drunkards, imbeciles and criminals? |
15743 | Did he possess it latently? |
15743 | Did little old George W. Wisenham have you doped out right or not? |
15743 | Did n''t he walk over them, though? |
15743 | Did one say"garrash"or"garrige"? |
15743 | Did they believe he was made of money? |
15743 | Do you understand? |
15743 | Ever been sick much?" |
15743 | Ever get any habits like that?" |
15743 | Feel better already, yes? |
15743 | For all his stern and kingly bearing might he not have been a little timid-- afraid of people now and then? |
15743 | Gamble, play cards, bet on races, go around raising cain with a lot of young devils at night?" |
15743 | Going to let him get away with it?" |
15743 | Granny herself says it should never be taken lightly, unless you just perfectly know, but of course we do, do n''t we? |
15743 | Had he lived before, would he live again? |
15743 | Had he not been drawn irresistibly to Egypt? |
15743 | Had he told them he was nothing, after all? |
15743 | Had he, perchance, been even the rajah himself? |
15743 | Had n''t his whole life been a proof of this? |
15743 | Have n''t you ever had any fun?" |
15743 | He could almost remember Marengo-- or was it Austerlitz? |
15743 | He does n''t consider it... well, you know one of you chaps here, if you were n''t all loyal, might very often take advantage-- you get my point?" |
15743 | He is plotting the assassination of a Doge--""Please get still farther back, ca n''t you?" |
15743 | How about Wagner out there-- think he''s only nineteen-- hey? |
15743 | How about old Callahan of the Sox? |
15743 | How did she know he had time for all that tea and Grandma nonsense? |
15743 | How had he come there? |
15743 | How had he ever done it? |
15743 | How had he got into it? |
15743 | How in-- how can I tell? |
15743 | How much, how much, how much?" |
15743 | How was his life to be modified by it? |
15743 | How''d you happen to get down on such a dead one?" |
15743 | I ai n''t ever met him, understand what I mean? |
15743 | I do not know, but-- you will pardon the bluntness--_can_ you afford it?" |
15743 | If I ever have a kid, you know what''s going to happen? |
15743 | In his own place he went quickly to Its closet, pulled open the door and shouted aloud:"Well, what do you make of_ that_?" |
15743 | Is n''t it the funniest?" |
15743 | Is n''t it the funniest?" |
15743 | Is n''t it the funniest?"] |
15743 | It was uneventful and distinguished only by your wise and humane statesmanship--""What name?" |
15743 | Lord, what would his father make of this place and our little Jim, if he was to come back? |
15743 | Married?" |
15743 | Me doin''the nuptial in a family like that, and bein''under Pop''s thumb the rest of my life? |
15743 | Name? |
15743 | Napoleon of Finance, eh? |
15743 | No baseball? |
15743 | Oh, yes, what was I going to say? |
15743 | One day, a week, a month? |
15743 | Or had she sent to White Plains for some more? |
15743 | Private theatricals?" |
15743 | Put him in jail, would they? |
15743 | Really? |
15743 | Say, what else is there? |
15743 | Send him unpoisoned canned food? |
15743 | Shall I keep on him?" |
15743 | She all right?" |
15743 | She says she''s got it all reasoned_ out_, do n''t I tell you?" |
15743 | So that was their game, was it? |
15743 | Still, he could n''t help being a man, could he? |
15743 | Suppose the professor pleaded unexpected outlays, officials not too easily bribed or something, and demanded a further sum? |
15743 | Tell me, do you like a panelled dining- room, you know, fumed oak, or something?" |
15743 | That grocer gave me the nicest little book,''Why Did Your Husband Fail in Business?'' |
15743 | That was when the news of his marriage came to them-- for what was she? |
15743 | The calamity was overwhelming, but how could dogs know any better? |
15743 | The person in a taxi- cab which made the same turn a moment later was heard to say,"What the devil now?" |
15743 | Then, to Bean, her tone slightly raised:"Which way?" |
15743 | Then,"Where''d you get yours? |
15743 | They say he''s a wonder, but what do_ we_ know about it? |
15743 | They think I''m afraid of police?" |
15743 | Think I''m going to put_ you_ wise?" |
15743 | Those directors were undoubtedly rascals, but was he not a rascal himself? |
15743 | Wait for him, would they? |
15743 | Want t''know_ where_ it was pulled? |
15743 | Want to know who pulled it? |
15743 | Was he not one of that same Wall Street ring? |
15743 | Was he to go down there and wait, pallid, perhaps trembling, until they came in and did things with him? |
15743 | Was his present state a reward or a penance? |
15743 | Was it all a dream-- and the flapper, too? |
15743 | Was it strange that a woman had fallen before him? |
15743 | We''ll try it, anyway, and there''s a triple- plate spoon in every package, so if I order a dozen... and oh, yes, what was I going to say? |
15743 | Well? |
15743 | Were there not steel kings, and iron kings, railway kings, oil kings-- money kings? |
15743 | Were there not three B''s in his own name? |
15743 | Were they trying to assure themselves that he was a fit man to be in the employ of old Breede? |
15743 | Wha''_ tamount_?" |
15743 | Wha''d I_ tell_ you?" |
15743 | Wha''s that? |
15743 | Wha''s''at? |
15743 | Wha''s''at?" |
15743 | What about his own shares? |
15743 | What about that? |
15743 | What about the Corsican? |
15743 | What am I?" |
15743 | What amount? |
15743 | What are you doing all the time?" |
15743 | What business was it of theirs whether he had habits or not... any kind of habits? |
15743 | What can_ I_ do?" |
15743 | What did she mean by looking at him that way? |
15743 | What did that signify in her character? |
15743 | What did the woman think she was talking about? |
15743 | What had he said? |
15743 | What if they did put him in jail? |
15743 | What is this I get from you, my young friend?" |
15743 | What is this? |
15743 | What kinda puzzle?" |
15743 | What might he have been? |
15743 | What more natural than that the freed soul, striving for another body, should have selected one of distinguished French ancestry? |
15743 | What more proof did he want? |
15743 | What should it mean to him? |
15743 | What time''s''at game called?" |
15743 | What was prison? |
15743 | What was the man trying to get at, anyway? |
15743 | What was the use of saying you had paid inside? |
15743 | What was twenty dollars to a king and a sire of kings? |
15743 | What would that flapper do next? |
15743 | What''s his darling name?" |
15743 | What? |
15743 | What? |
15743 | Where was I? |
15743 | Where was I?" |
15743 | Where''s she work?" |
15743 | Whereupon you said curtly that you did n''t know anything about_ that_--you could n''t fetch any package if it had n''t come, could you? |
15743 | Who knew of Ram- tah''s fictive origin, or even of Ram- tah at all? |
15743 | Who would have her otherwise? |
15743 | Why could n''t they be reasonable and let things stay quiet for a while? |
15743 | Why do n''t you tell me something? |
15743 | Why had he not the presence of mind to cut in and just perfectly tell her where they were going? |
15743 | Why not? |
15743 | Why should it now? |
15743 | Would he be disgraced? |
15743 | Would that suit? |
15743 | Would the flapper telephone to him there? |
15743 | Would they find him out at once, or not until it was too late? |
15743 | Would they have_ it_ done the next time they took him out in that car for tea and things? |
15743 | Would wonders never cease? |
15743 | Yes, sure thing, dontchu un''stand? |
15743 | Yes; but what about to- morrow-- out in the world? |
15743 | You and me-- us-- understand what I mean? |
15743 | You are the last king of the pre- dynastic era--""What kind of a king-- one of those fighters?" |
15743 | You know what?" |
15743 | You wished to consult me?" |
15743 | exclaimed the waster,"are n''t you even keen on watching it?" |
15743 | he thought, and then,"Why do n''t she take a look at old Cufflets there, and get him in right?" |
15743 | in daylight, passing the policeman on the corner, down at the office? |
15743 | yes?" |
21661 | ''Av a''oss, guv''nor,''av a''oss? |
21661 | A very dark day, is it not? |
21661 | Ah,said he,"another earthquake, is it not?" |
21661 | And all your friends? |
21661 | And have you no high buildings either? |
21661 | Bully, is n''t it? |
21661 | Custos, quid de nocte? |
21661 | Did I not expect to meet a lot of savages? |
21661 | Hallo, you, with whom are you dining to- night? |
21661 | Have you no street cars like in New York? |
21661 | Is that one, there? |
21661 | My goodness, is n''t that Lord Roberts? |
21661 | Rest, long rest, is what we want, I suppose; but how can a fellow get rest working in a big newspaper office in this city? |
21661 | Was I not surprised to hear them speaking English? |
21661 | What did I think of the Boers? |
21661 | What is a company promoter? |
21661 | Why do n''t you get married? |
21661 | A man near me said to me,"Do you hear the steam escaping? |
21661 | A soldier galloped along and called out,"Hallo, Johnny, what are you doing here? |
21661 | As I write I am looking down from the thirtieth story of one of the highest, feeling as if I had been"set on the pinnacle of the Temple"( of Mammon?). |
21661 | But she said, laughing,"Is it not just like a curio- dealer''s shop?" |
21661 | How was it that no one seemed to be laughing and enjoying himself out of all the crowd? |
21661 | I wonder what that other city looked like from the pinnacle of whose temple He looked down on the other great cities that had their day? |
21661 | If they did not enjoy it, why did they do it? |
21661 | Is there no knight to champion the cause of the toilers of London and in earnest tackle this dragon problem of distances? |
21661 | Is there no place where one can get away from that air? |
21661 | It was a strain; but is not successful effort Brian L''Estrange''s definition of happiness? |
21661 | No idea in such a car of the men sitting down, against whose knees hers rubbed, to get up and relinquish their seats-- why should they? |
21661 | Or are they going at the pace that kills? |
21661 | Or at least the pace that tires into premature exhaustion? |
21661 | That is left to enterprising Americans who come over from pure philanthropy(?) |
21661 | The English equivalent is"How- d- do?" |
21661 | To whom does the City belong, and the river? |
21661 | Up above a wood- pigeon keeps cooing that ceaseless question, or is it a question, or the plaint call of his pigeon heart for love? |
21661 | Wait until the world was aired? |
21661 | Was it a sort of neuter gender, a sexless being that was there in course of development? |
21661 | Was it not a great epoch in his life, this arrival of his in London? |
21661 | Was she not by her very going down town taking the place of a possible man there? |
21661 | Was this severe struggle and necessity of existence to eliminate the supreme joy of motherhood from their lives? |
21661 | What Carthage looked like? |
21661 | What is the voice of London? |
21661 | What will it be in fifty years-- at the end of the century? |
21661 | What will the offspring of these quivering, twitching, highly strung men and women be like? |
21661 | What wonder, then, that weak nerves can not stand it, but sometimes break down under the strain? |
21661 | Why could not men wait for light? |
21661 | Why should they be hauled out to fight in the dark? |
21661 | Would they ever reach the point of the hill? |
21661 | Would they succeed? |
21661 | X EX ORIENTE LUX What is a barbarian? |
21661 | blush to eat lobster mayonnaise? |
21661 | member who has just been making a noise with his face on this amendment"--how would that sound? |
21661 | or has he lost his love, and croons a mourning for her? |
21661 | was she not showing that she could do a man''s work? |
13335 | And he sighed deeply in his spirit, and saith,` Why doth this generation seek after a sign? 13335 Are there few that be saved?" |
13335 | Are ye also without understanding? |
13335 | Can the children of the bridechamber fast, while the bridegroom is with them? |
13335 | How are you to escape the judgement of Gehenna? |
13335 | How will this look in the Universe,he asks,"and before the Creator of Man?" |
13335 | If the friend in the house to your knowledge has the loaves, you will knock until you get them; and has not God the gifts for you that you need? 13335 Is it possible,"he will ask himself,"that I am deluded?" |
13335 | Is not this the carpenter? |
13335 | My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
13335 | The Son of Fact,--do you think this a true epithet? |
13335 | What could you do with signs? 13335 What went ye out into the wilderness for to see? |
13335 | Why callest thou me good? |
13335 | ( Mark 6:3); Matthew adds a word that may or may not be significant"his sisters are they not all with us?" |
13335 | ), or to the interpretation of this teaching by scholars of the apocalyptic school? |
13335 | 12:11), or will he refrain from leading his ox to the water on the Sabbath( Luke 13:15)? |
13335 | 1:21)? |
13335 | 21:23)? |
13335 | 5:28)? |
13335 | 5:39)? |
13335 | 5:41)? |
13335 | 6:26)? |
13335 | 6:32)? |
13335 | 6:32)? |
13335 | 7:5)? |
13335 | A dreamer, with the clouds of the visionaries and apocalyptists ever in his head? |
13335 | A glance at pearls on a table-- this, and this, and this he will take the other, perhaps; he would look at that one-- the rest? |
13335 | A man clothed in soft raiment? |
13335 | A prophet? |
13335 | A reed shaken with the wind? |
13335 | A warning to those who do not heed another''s need of"inward sustenance,"of spiritual life, of God? |
13335 | Again, when we read of his happy way in dealing with children, are we to draw no inference as to his face, and what it told the children? |
13335 | And another thought rises up again and again,"Where will it take me?" |
13335 | And even if they do not ask, because they do not know their need, will he not answer the prayers that others, who do know, make for them? |
13335 | And how long, under various names, had Cybele, Mother of Gods, been worshipped in Asia? |
13335 | And the Lord said to him,` How sayest thou,"The law I have kept and the prophets?" |
13335 | And the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
13335 | And there is another question: is this story going to be repeated? |
13335 | And to whom did he say this? |
13335 | And what the heart and nature, from which came this incredible power and reach of appeal? |
13335 | And whom would he describe as"lost"? |
13335 | And yet, where is that religion to- day? |
13335 | Are his own desires finally out of the reckoning? |
13335 | Are these pictures fanciful-- mere imagination? |
13335 | Are we afraid that our picture will be too modern, too little Jewish? |
13335 | Are we to think his face gave no sign of what he was doing? |
13335 | Are we to think that all the tenderness of Jesus came to him by a miracle when he was thirty years of age? |
13335 | Are you quite sure that there is any distinction in the other world between good and bad, between Jew and Gentile? |
13335 | As he sat out in the wild under the open sky, did the stars never speak to him, as to Hebrew psalmist and Roman Virgil? |
13335 | As we gradually realize what he has in mind, must we not feel that we have not grasped anything like the full grandeur of his thought? |
13335 | At any rate, there they are in the Christian experience; and where does anything that matters flow from but from God? |
13335 | But have they gone? |
13335 | But have we left the text too far? |
13335 | But how are they to go on? |
13335 | But is it the detail or the central fact that matters? |
13335 | But is that all? |
13335 | But still our first question is unanswered; why should it have been the cross? |
13335 | But was it not, perhaps, for far simpler and more natural reasons just because they were children, and little, and delightful? |
13335 | But what do we mean by x and y? |
13335 | But what evidence is there for that? |
13335 | But why no sign? |
13335 | But why should that involve the cross? |
13335 | But why? |
13335 | But, in fact, is it not true now that we really only know God through Jesus? |
13335 | Can he matter? |
13335 | Can not you trust your Father to control his wind and his sea? |
13335 | Can sin be put away at all? |
13335 | Can we penetrate to the analogy which he finds between the Jesus of the new experience and the old term which he uses? |
13335 | Can we say that we have any real, sure, and intimate knowledge of his experience of God? |
13335 | Can we, when we see what he has experienced, grasp the substance and build on that to the neglect of the term? |
13335 | Could a man count on God and how far? |
13335 | Could any one, on the other hand, forget it? |
13335 | Could he rely on God supporting him, on God wishing to have him in this world and the next? |
13335 | Could not the whole presentation of Christ be much simpler? |
13335 | Did he speak quickly or slowly? |
13335 | Did he, he asked, or was it"by the finger of God"( Luke 11:20)? |
13335 | Did it differ from St Paul''s? |
13335 | Did no one see the scene pictured with his own mind''s eye-- no one grasp the humour and the irony with delight? |
13335 | Did no one smile as the story was told? |
13335 | Do not men and women frankly enjoy the grappling of the little mind with big things? |
13335 | Do not such words reveal nature? |
13335 | Do not the diminutives mean something? |
13335 | Do they not take us into the midst of a group where friendship is real? |
13335 | Do we feel what he felt in the so- called trials-- or was he dull and numbed by the catastrophe? |
13335 | Do we pray in order to change the will of God? |
13335 | Do you agree that they are the principal ones? |
13335 | Do you agree with the writer''s exposition? |
13335 | Do you find this sort of antithesis in the Gospels? |
13335 | Do you, he asks, pray with anything like their determination to be heard? |
13335 | Does God care for people beyond the grave? |
13335 | Does God make His message clear, does He properly authenticate Himself? |
13335 | Does he choose God without reserve, and in a way that God, knowing his heart, will call a whole- hearted choice? |
13335 | Does he mean to be God''s up to the cross and beyond? |
13335 | Does he, in fact, deny-- negate-- himself( Mark 8:34)? |
13335 | Does intercourse with Nature make communion with God more real? |
13335 | Does our emphasis fall on the great features of that nature-- are they within our vision, and in our drawing? |
13335 | Does our explanation of him really explain him, or leave him more a riddle? |
13335 | Does the writer make Jesus too human? |
13335 | Does the writer overdo the importance of history? |
13335 | Does the writer underestimate the actual impress made on his age by Jesus? |
13335 | Does this belittle him? |
13335 | Does your reading of the Gospels incline you to agree with the writer? |
13335 | Embarrassment rises on their faces-- is it a mistake? |
13335 | First of all, how far does Jesus understand salvation to take a man? |
13335 | For it is hard to believe in man--"What is man that thou shouldest magnify him? |
13335 | For the insincere and the trivial there is no message from God, no truth of God-- how should there be? |
13335 | Had Jesus a sense of humour? |
13335 | Had he a method of teaching: if so, what was it? |
13335 | Has forgiveness been, in fact, achieved-- or salvation from sin? |
13335 | Has not this been the secret of the spread of the Gospel? |
13335 | Have we given his meaning to his term-- force, value, emotion, and suggestion? |
13335 | Have we realized the experience behind his thought? |
13335 | He is too busy, we think; and yet, after all, if God is so great, why should he be so busy? |
13335 | He smiled and said to his two troubled friends:"Is that all? |
13335 | Heaven has been invoked-- and what is Heaven? |
13335 | How and where did he begin himself? |
13335 | How came he to achieve poem or picture, so profound and so true? |
13335 | How can I forget you? |
13335 | How can ordinary people"make sure of the experience behind the thought of Jesus?" |
13335 | How can they be so light and yet have such power? |
13335 | How can they? |
13335 | How could they fail to? |
13335 | How did he bear the beating of triumphant hatred upon a forsaken spirit? |
13335 | How did he come to speak in this manner, to say this and that? |
13335 | How did he know that Peter was there, and what led him to turn at that moment? |
13335 | How did the Church do it? |
13335 | How did they come? |
13335 | How do they look at it? |
13335 | How do you picture the life he lived with his disciples? |
13335 | How does Jesus conceive of salvation? |
13335 | How does a man come to think and feel as he does? |
13335 | How does he face them? |
13335 | How far are we prepared to go in sharing that experience? |
13335 | How far will men commit themselves to God? |
13335 | How has it come about? |
13335 | How is it that Jesus comes into the wasted life and makes it new? |
13335 | How is it that men can"reject the counsel of God,"refuse God''s plans and ideas( Luke 7:30)? |
13335 | How is it that they forget God altogether? |
13335 | How is it that to another man, with the same upbringing as ours, everything is different, everything means more? |
13335 | How is it that, when John Wesley made the same discovery, and once more staked all on faith in Christ, again the Church felt the pulse of new life? |
13335 | How many men to- day will say what they really think before a man in clerical dress, or a dignitary however trivial? |
13335 | How many of the parables turn on energy? |
13335 | How much is involved in the name"Father,"which Jesus so uniformly gives to God? |
13335 | How much of a human father is available for his children? |
13335 | How should a person, who does not care for men, understand the cross? |
13335 | How was it done? |
13335 | How would you introduce the Christian faith to one who believed and took part in the Eleusinian cult of Demeter? |
13335 | How would you state to a non- Christian the three principal elements in Jesus''teaching about the character of God? |
13335 | How? |
13335 | How_ can_ a man know that he has done his best? |
13335 | How_ could_ it go? |
13335 | If Jesus comes to them with a word from God, can he not prove its authenticity preferably with"a sign from the sky"( Mark 8:11)? |
13335 | If Paul was wrong, how did he capture the Christian Church for his ideas? |
13335 | If he is a real Father, why should not he be at leisure for his children? |
13335 | If he speaks of prayer, must we not think he means that God wants it as much as his child can want it? |
13335 | If it is the incarnation of God, what right have we not to be afraid? |
13335 | If it is urged that such things are natural to man--"do not even the publicans the same?" |
13335 | If the friend in the house to your knowledge has the loaves, you will knock till you get them; and has not God the gifts for you that you need? |
13335 | Ignorance, as to germs or precipices or what not, leads to destruction"in pari materia"; in the moral sphere can it be otherwise? |
13335 | In a word, what is a man''s fundamental attitude to God and God''s facts? |
13335 | In his case, as in every other, the central and crucial question is, What is his experience of God? |
13335 | In other words, What has he found in God? |
13335 | In the meantime, if God was going to damn the Gentiles in the next world, why should not the Jews do it in this? |
13335 | In what does he differ from other men, that he should do work so fundamental and so eternal? |
13335 | In what way? |
13335 | Is he short of the power to help, or is it the will to help that is wanting in God? |
13335 | Is he short of the power to help, or is it the will to help that is wanting in God?" |
13335 | Is it a great figure? |
13335 | Is it a real fatherhood where such things do not appeal? |
13335 | Is it in our picture? |
13335 | Is it not fair to say that many of our current judgements upon Jesus Christ are no better founded? |
13335 | Is it not so still in the East? |
13335 | Is it not the same picture which Jesus draws of"joy in heaven in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth"? |
13335 | Is it not the sternest and deepest feeling, after all, when a man will not"unpack his heart with words"? |
13335 | Is it not true that we come nearer to him in that cry in the language strange to us, but his own? |
13335 | Is it possible for those incapacitated by sin to regain, or to enjoy, relation with God? |
13335 | Is it the same type of character which is exalted by Christian piety, stained- glass windows, and the calendars of Saints? |
13335 | Is it too big a thing for the Giver of Life to give food-- which is the more difficult thing to give? |
13335 | Is not one of the most real features of parenthood enjoyment of the child? |
13335 | Is not that friendship? |
13335 | Is not that very like the Christian religion? |
13335 | Is there a warning in this picture of the people on the left hand that applies to deeper things than physical hunger? |
13335 | Is there another teacher of those times who is at all so sure that God loves bird and flower? |
13335 | Is there any truth in this charge as regards( a) the portrait in the Gospels, or( b) the presentation of Jesus in the teaching of the Church? |
13335 | Is there in all his parables a blurred picture, the edges dim or the focus wrong? |
13335 | Is there no evidence of God in restored sanity? |
13335 | Is there not for Christians in every age a joy and an inspiration in knowing the very sounds his lips framed? |
13335 | Is this leaving the real? |
13335 | It is our experience that we repent and fall again; what else was the experience of the people whom John baptised? |
13335 | It is unthinkable; God-- will God do less? |
13335 | John taught prayer-- all sorts of people teach prayer; but what sort of prayer? |
13335 | Look at the freedom, the growth, the power of the Christian life-- where do they all come from? |
13335 | Might it not be said that God had discredited John the Baptist, now his head was taken off? |
13335 | Moses is very well, but if God has higher ideas of marriage-- what then? |
13335 | Must we not think it was all growing up in that house and in that shop? |
13335 | No hint of dread that his work might indeed be undone? |
13335 | Nor is it this sort of surrender to God that Jesus calls for-- no, the question is, how thoroughly is a man going to put himself into God''s hands? |
13335 | Nothing else, he will say, seemed feasible; the thing was borne in on me, it came to me: reasons? |
13335 | Of what character were the prayers that John taught his disciples? |
13335 | On the famous occasion, when John the Baptist sent two of his disciples to Jesus with his striking message:"Art thou he that should come? |
13335 | Once again, in the plainest language, are we prepared to follow, as the disciples followed, afraid as they were? |
13335 | One of them speaks for the rest:"Lord, when saw we thee an hungered and fed thee?" |
13335 | Or did he never tell a story-- he who tells them so charmingly-- till he wanted parables? |
13335 | Or has the reading of this book made you feel his divinity more strongly just because he was so perfectly human? |
13335 | Or has the writer too narrow a conception of the nature of Art? |
13335 | So with us-- to decide the issue, how far are we prepared to go with Jesus? |
13335 | Something less than the word carries in the case of a human father, or more? |
13335 | That is saying a great deal, but when we look at Christian history, is it saying too much? |
13335 | The Latin dramatist Terence pictures the young man looking at one of these paintings and saying to himself,"If Jupiter did it, why should not I?" |
13335 | The Pharisee lied-- lying to oneself or lying to another, which is the worse? |
13335 | The Sabbath-- is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath? |
13335 | The answer was, why should your father not come with the redeemed Israel? |
13335 | The bird flying to her nest, the fox creeping to his hole( Luke 9:58)--did these break into the prayers of Jesus-- and with what effect? |
13335 | The cup is clean enough without; it is septic and poisonous within-- and from which side of it do you drink, outside or inside? |
13335 | The elements and the stars come over us, as they came over George Fox in the Vale of Beavor; what is man? |
13335 | The moon and the stars which thou hast ordained; What is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
13335 | The more relevant question for us is: How came he to wait till he was at least about thirty years old before he began to teach in public? |
13335 | The old problem returns upon us: Who and what is this Jesus Christ? |
13335 | The price? |
13335 | The question will rise, Have Christians overstated their experience, or even misunderstood it? |
13335 | The real crux comes when the question rises in a man''s own heart,"Does God love me?" |
13335 | The time would come when new clothes were needed; but why could not the old ones be patched, and passed down yet another stage? |
13335 | Then finally the question comes, how to secure continuity? |
13335 | There are gaps in the record-- for instance, how and why did the school of John survive as it did( Acts 18:25, 19:1- 7)? |
13335 | There is an inherited element in them, but how much else? |
13335 | There were men whom John had taught to pray; was it they who asked Jesus to teach them over again? |
13335 | There yawns the chasm; with your driving, how do you think you can avoid disaster? |
13335 | They are happy living things that come to his mind, as it were, of themselves, because, shall we say? |
13335 | To any reader who has any feeling or imagination, what do these short sentences mean? |
13335 | To turn again to passages already quoted, will a father give his son a serpent instead of the fish for which he asks, a stone for bread? |
13335 | To what extent was the hardness of the world during the early Roman Empire due to current conceptions of God? |
13335 | To what feeling or thought, to what attitude to life, is this or the other saying due? |
13335 | Two questions arise: Is it possible to recover lost moral quality and faculty? |
13335 | Very well then; does a man choose God? |
13335 | Waiving the fact that he had not much evidence for this in the mythology, how was a man to distinguish god from daemon, to know which is which? |
13335 | Was Jesus fond of life and Nature? |
13335 | Was he justified? |
13335 | Was he not probably more widely known? |
13335 | Was it an arm of the sea, a vast bay, or was it a great river? |
13335 | Was it continued in the Apostolic Church? |
13335 | Was it in such hours that he learnt his deepest lessons from the birds and the lilies of the field? |
13335 | Was there no smile? |
13335 | We have, as we agreed, to ask ourselves, what is the experience which led him to think as he did? |
13335 | We have, then, to ask ourselves, What is the experience that leads Jesus to speak as he does, to think as he does? |
13335 | Well, if a man''s one sheep is in a pit on the Sabbath, what will he do? |
13335 | What are the modern parallels to"the four outstanding classes whom Jesus warns of the danger of hell?" |
13335 | What are the three ways of answering the question:"Who and what is this Jesus Christ?" |
13335 | What becomes of ordinary simple people untrained in historical research, who are not experts and merely want help in living and dying? |
13335 | What brought them? |
13335 | What but unspeakable peril? |
13335 | What can they mean, from the lips of a thinker so clear and so serious, and a friend so tender? |
13335 | What characteristics of the mind of Jesus does this chapter emphasize as principal? |
13335 | What could their minds be like? |
13335 | What did God mean? |
13335 | What did Jesus teach his disciples concerning prayer? |
13335 | What did they expect? |
13335 | What did they mean by their words? |
13335 | What do we know of man apart from Jesus Christ? |
13335 | What do we make of his originality? |
13335 | What do you imagine Jesus looked like? |
13335 | What do you think of the conventional figure of modern Art?) |
13335 | What does Jesus mean by"lost"? |
13335 | What does he expect of God? |
13335 | What does it cost a man to do that? |
13335 | What does it matter now, if God redeems his people, or if he does not? |
13335 | What does it mean to them? |
13335 | What does it mean? |
13335 | What does the discovery of God mean? |
13335 | What does this involve? |
13335 | What does this mean? |
13335 | What does"lost"mean? |
13335 | What elements in the teaching of Jesus and the relation of God to the individual would be new to a Jew who knew his Old Testament? |
13335 | What follows? |
13335 | What had happened? |
13335 | What has been his appeal? |
13335 | What has influenced him? |
13335 | What is God to him? |
13335 | What is God''s mind, God''s conduct, toward those people whom men think they can afford to despise? |
13335 | What is it that has led him to such a view? |
13335 | What is it that makes the poem? |
13335 | What is it? |
13335 | What is our right to an opinion on Jesus Christ? |
13335 | What is prayer? |
13335 | What is that between you and me?" |
13335 | What is the attitude of a father to his child? |
13335 | What is the connection between the Kingdom of Heaven and the Cross in the teaching of Jesus as recorded in the Gospels? |
13335 | What is the explanation of it? |
13335 | What is the innermost thing in a father''s relation to his children? |
13335 | What is the mind that can do such things? |
13335 | What is the power that is to carry John''s disciples through the rest of their lives? |
13335 | What is the value of the Agony in the Garden, of the cry,"Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani"( Mark 15:34)? |
13335 | What is there about Shiva, Kali, or Shri Krishna that essentially differentiates them from the gods of Greece and Rome and Egypt? |
13335 | What is to be the method? |
13335 | What made them? |
13335 | What pain must that have involved? |
13335 | What parent ever analysed reasons for loving his children, or would tabulate them for you? |
13335 | What takes men there? |
13335 | What type of character does Jesus admire? |
13335 | What was the secret of Jesus''attractiveness, and what kinds of men and women did he attract? |
13335 | What was to keep them on the new level-- not only in the isolation of the desert, but in the ordinary routine of town and village? |
13335 | What will be the result? |
13335 | What will the evidence for this be? |
13335 | What would he do next? |
13335 | What would our evidence be for"spiritual religion"if we had not the record of actual history to check fancy and support the ventures of faith? |
13335 | What, then, and how much, does he mean by"to save,"and how does he propose to do it? |
13335 | What, then, did his choice involve? |
13335 | What, we asked, did Jesus mean by"lost"? |
13335 | When a man avows that he does not care for art or poetry, who would wish to show him poem or picture? |
13335 | When someone in his old age challenged him with the question,"Who will be judge?" |
13335 | When the question is asked,"Was Jesus the Messiah?" |
13335 | When we survey the four groups, it comes to one central question at last: Has a man been in earnest with himself about God''s dealings with him? |
13335 | When"the Lord turned and looked upon Peter"( Luke 22:61), what did it mean? |
13335 | Whence came his consciousness of God, his gift for recognizing God? |
13335 | Whence came the inherited element? |
13335 | Where did our own thoughts of God begin? |
13335 | Where does a man''s_ Will_ point him? |
13335 | Where does anyone begin, who takes us any great distance? |
13335 | Where does your theology come from? |
13335 | Where does"revelation to babes"come in? |
13335 | Where in all this is the artistic temperament? |
13335 | Where is he going? |
13335 | Where is he taking them? |
13335 | Where is the old religion? |
13335 | Wherein does Jesus''standard of sin differ from the standard of sin current to- day? |
13335 | Who authorizes the living man to live? |
13335 | Who can kill or rob another man, when he remembers whose hands were nailed to the Cross for that man? |
13335 | Who did the thinking in that ancient world? |
13335 | Who fasts at the wedding feast, in the hour of gladness? |
13335 | Who gave him that authority? |
13335 | Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
13335 | Who was this Jesus that he should produce this result? |
13335 | Whose children are you? |
13335 | Whose sea is it? |
13335 | Whose wind is it? |
13335 | Why are they so still? |
13335 | Why can you not think for yourselves? |
13335 | Why did Jesus pray? |
13335 | Why did they go? |
13335 | Why did they go? |
13335 | Why does he speak in this way? |
13335 | Why had Christian churches to be so much larger than pagan temples? |
13335 | Why has Jesus meant so much? |
13335 | Why must people make up their minds about him? |
13335 | Why not? |
13335 | Why not? |
13335 | Why should I not live in it?" |
13335 | Why should all this be associated with him? |
13335 | Why should it have been so? |
13335 | Why should men do such things? |
13335 | Why should not_ you_ believe? |
13335 | Why should there be this correspondence between Jesus of Nazareth and human life? |
13335 | Why, then, do the Evangelists, writing for Greek readers, keep the Aramaic sentences? |
13335 | Why? |
13335 | Why? |
13335 | Why? |
13335 | Why? |
13335 | Why? |
13335 | Will a father refuse his child bread; will God not give what is good? |
13335 | Will a man take Jesus at his word, and commit himself to God? |
13335 | Will it be in Jerusalem or in heaven? |
13335 | Will the movement outlast his personal influence? |
13335 | Will the whole Finance Ministers and Upholsterers and Confectioners of modern Europe undertake, in joint- stock company, to make one Shoeblack happy?" |
13335 | With what aspects of the religion and life of the early Roman Empire, as outlined in the chapter, would the Church find itself in conflict? |
13335 | With what voice could religion speak for morality in Corinth? |
13335 | Would he have trusted even the best organized church as such? |
13335 | Would not Virgil and Horace, it was asked, have taken notice of the massacre at Bethlehem, if it was historical? |
13335 | Would not"spiritual religion"suffice without a"historical basis,"as some Indians and others suggest? |
13335 | Would they not? |
13335 | Would you admit this? |
13335 | [ 18] But is this kingdom of the Messiah to be an earthly or a heavenly kingdom? |
13335 | [ 30] How else can he, with his serious view of sin, say to a man,"Thy sins are forgiven thee"? |
13335 | and are not his sisters here with us?" |
13335 | and that thou shouldest set thine heart upon him?" |
13335 | break on his ears-- on his mind? |
13335 | from God, or was it of men? |
13335 | has the baptismal formula at the end of Matthew been adjusted to the creed of Nicaea? |
13335 | or look we for another?" |
13335 | or move his hand when he spoke? |
13335 | or was it a delusion? |
13335 | people at Nazareth asked,"the son of Mary, the brother of James and Joseph, and of Judah and Simon? |
13335 | redemption) mean the Cross for Jesus? |
13335 | the obvious reply is,"Which Messiah?" |
13335 | was he right? |
13335 | what is at the heart of it all? |
13335 | what relations has he with God? |
22136 | Pray, Mr Surtees,said the great man,"do you think that any other undergraduate in the college would have taken that liberty?" |
22136 | Was not that then an awful wasting of his substance on vanities? |
22136 | What had the brother paid for that bauble[ a picture by Wouvermans], for instance? |
22136 | You fool,was the reply,"is that any reason why you should go to hell?" |
22136 | ''No, thank you, sir; I have ordered a bit of supper; perhaps you will walk up with me?'' |
22136 | A nervous inquiry in later years, if he heard of any guest being expected, was,"He, or she, will not meddle with me, will he?" |
22136 | Being endowed with power and wealth, and putting to himself the question,"What can I render to the Lord for all that he hath conferred on me?" |
22136 | But how many instances far more flagrant could be found in picture- buying? |
22136 | Every tribute from such_ dona ferentes_ cost him much uneasiness and some want of sleep-- for what could he do with it? |
22136 | He is known to quote Scripture for his purposes, but who ever before heard of his writing a sermon-- and, as it seems, a sound and orthodox one? |
22136 | How are you all? |
22136 | How many drops? |
22136 | If a novel was recommended to him he used to inquire,"Is there plenty of murder in it?" |
22136 | In what mood and shape shall he be brought forward? |
22136 | Is it not something in itself to possess genius? |
22136 | May the writer here be permitted to state that she considers this small and little- noticed work the best of all her husband''s productions? |
22136 | Might it not be as well to remain until that period, when I might attend the Circuit and bring you back? |
22136 | Quo innumerabiles libros et bibliothecas, quarum dominus vix tota vita indices perlegit? |
22136 | Surely you will not let this cruel king rob us of the fruits of our industry? |
22136 | The reason for sorrow, then, what is it? |
22136 | The stranger replied--"Sir, I am a minister; let me hear the text?" |
22136 | These he set to cater for him, and he triumphantly asks,"Among so many of the keenest hunters, what leveret could lie hid? |
22136 | True, the world at large has gained a brilliant essay on Euripides or Plato-- but what is that to the rightful owner of the lost sheep? |
22136 | What can be the theory of such a costume? |
22136 | What can it be? |
22136 | What fry could evade the hook, the net, or the trawl of these men? |
22136 | What use of putting notions into the greedy barbarian''s head, as if one were to find treasures for him? |
22136 | What would you think of such an association? |
22136 | When he had come so close that I could hardly escape him, he roared out:''Is''t you''at''s the laad Colonel H.''at''s been runnan''awa''?'' |
22136 | Where next are we to be disenchanted? |
22136 | Who can deny it? |
22136 | Who could gainsay those believed to hold in their hands the issues of life and death? |
22136 | Who knows what he may be reduced to? |
22136 | Who shall say what the belated traveller may make of this? |
22136 | Why was he taken away from his attendance at Mr Winchester''s office? |
22136 | [ 79] What would the learned world give for the restoration of these things? |
22136 | a street- boy of some sort? |
22136 | and whose fault is that?" |
22136 | cries the carle;''Gie me an answer, short and plain-- Is the sow flitted, yammerin''wean?''" |
23546 | By what authority do you demand such submission? |
23546 | What will I give ye, mother? |
23546 | And how to get there? |
23546 | And the interesting problem is-- how was the sawing process accomplished? |
23546 | At midnight when Bob was about to leave, the old woman said,"What will ye gie me if I find yer money for ye?" |
23546 | But what are those holes high up on the faces of the rock? |
23546 | But what is that pile of variegated disk- like objects looking like the primitive Mexican ox- cart wheels? |
23546 | But where could he hide in that desolate flat? |
23546 | But why should any one desire to leave such a beautiful island to spend the rest of his life in London smoke and fog? |
23546 | CHAPTER IX THE PRIMAL HOME OF THE SARACEN Who has not had the youthful imagination fired by the"Arabian Nights"? |
23546 | Did not their neighbors find them? |
23546 | Pointing to the roof with his candle he said:''Do you see that piece of rock partly detached and ready to fall at any moment?'' |
23546 | Should they go on? |
23546 | Should they press on or retreat, as those before them had done? |
23546 | The engineer said,"Why not use as a power electricity generated by the river itself?" |
23546 | The hardest of work was but a pastime, for if they did not find diamonds to- day, would they not to- morrow? |
23546 | Then snatching the volume from the hand of the priest, Atahuallpa scornfully threw it on the ground, saying,"What right have you in my country? |
23546 | What better business could there be than to ship apples and pears fresh from the Tasmanian orchards? |
23546 | What children are not attracted by pebbly streams? |
23546 | Who are they? |
23546 | Who could have taken them? |
23546 | Whoever saw water in the channel, or"wash,"of the Mohave? |
23546 | wealth in these great wastes? |
20709 | A large number of bridges must be necessary across all the large rivers? |
20709 | And ten spare dromedaries for the booty? |
20709 | And the other gold mine, then? |
20709 | And the provisions packed in their bags? |
20709 | And where are you going? |
20709 | Are the powder and shot horns filled? |
20709 | Are there dangerous beasts of prey in these mountains? |
20709 | Are you an Englishman? |
20709 | But the storms can not be very dangerous? |
20709 | Can not one sleep in peace in the middle of the night? |
20709 | Can this unfortunate man live long in such misery, and what is the end? |
20709 | Do you mean me to go to Central Africa? |
20709 | Do you think he is alive? |
20709 | How are you, White Man? |
20709 | How are you, sir? |
20709 | How do you do? |
20709 | How do you explain this rapid development of railway enterprise? |
20709 | How many slaves? |
20709 | I suppose that there are bridges over the Niagara River as over all the others in the country? |
20709 | In this village? 20709 Is that you, Kasim?" |
20709 | Is there not also a reserved area in the Rocky Mountains? |
20709 | Moving, do you say? 20709 Must all men die?" |
20709 | Myself also? |
20709 | New York lies, then, on the Hudson River? |
20709 | Shall we empty the waterskins so as to make the loads lighter for the attack? |
20709 | Swede? 20709 Tell me, where does all this water go to below Niagara?" |
20709 | What can we do? 20709 What do they do there?" |
20709 | What does that matter? 20709 What is death?" |
20709 | What is the matter? |
20709 | Where have you come from? |
20709 | Whereabouts does it lie? |
20709 | Who the mischief are you? |
20709 | Why is Canada so valuable? 20709 Yes, but how many do you think remain in New York? |
20709 | You are quite at home on these lakes? |
20709 | You mean the Falls of Niagara, which I have heard described so many times? |
20709 | You surely mean three weeks? |
20709 | (_ Quo vadis?_) at the point in the road where Peter saw his vision. |
20709 | A few minutes later he asked,"Is this the Luapula?" |
20709 | Again Shah Sevar stares into the fire for a while and then asks,"Are the_ jambas_ in good condition?" |
20709 | And is he not the commander- in- chief of an army which, on a war footing, is as large as the whole population of Scotland? |
20709 | And what wages do they receive for a journey of thirty- five days up the river? |
20709 | Are there not in the sacristy twenty- four Bibles, which in their gold- studded cases weigh two hundred pounds each? |
20709 | Are they not like a row of keys moved by invisible gigantic fingers?" |
20709 | At length he asks,"Is everything ready?" |
20709 | Bennett asked him,"Where do you think Livingstone is?" |
20709 | But I suppose we can not prevent him going if his heart is set on it?" |
20709 | But the_ Niña_ could not hold them all, and how were they to get back to Spain? |
20709 | But where are you bound for?" |
20709 | But where were the clothes to replace their worn rags, which would scarcely hang together on their bodies? |
20709 | Could they reach the mainland in this way? |
20709 | Did its waters run in an inexhaustible stream to the western ocean, or did they flow gently through forests, swamps, and deserts to Egypt? |
20709 | Do not Kamtchatka and Korea, Arabia and the Indian Peninsula all point south? |
20709 | Does not the Church of the Divine Wisdom possess forty thousand chalice veils all embroidered with pearls and precious stones? |
20709 | Had he not at twenty years of age taken over the government of the little country of Macedonia, and subdued the people of Thrace, Illyria, and Greece? |
20709 | Has he not presented to the church seven crosses of gold, each weighing a hundred pounds? |
20709 | Have you ever seen anything to equal this sheet of dark- blue water, the dark- green woods, and the grand peaceful shores? |
20709 | Have you noticed how colossal everything is in this country, whether the good God or wicked man be the master- builder? |
20709 | He asked his attendant what was the matter, and was told that the man was ill."Can illness afflict all men?" |
20709 | He heeds not the hardest storm, and, indeed, where could he hide himself from its violence? |
20709 | How came the change about? |
20709 | How can you account for New York becoming so large? |
20709 | Is Dr. Livingstone here?" |
20709 | Is it not delightful with its leafy trees and cool pools? |
20709 | Is it true, as a skipper on Lake Michigan told me, that there are trees here in the west which are over three hundred feet high?" |
20709 | Is the albatross hindered in his flight by the rain which pelts violently down on his back and wings? |
20709 | On what do these huge fleshy animals live in a country where, broadly speaking, nothing grows and where a caravan may perish for want of fodder? |
20709 | Perhaps a fox? |
20709 | Perhaps you wonder why all the continents send out peninsulas southwards? |
20709 | Shall I and my white brother go alone? |
20709 | Shall we look into a couple of shops? |
20709 | Surely it is not intended that the train shall go on right across the sea? |
20709 | The Sultan goes up to him and asks,"Why?" |
20709 | Then again,"How many days is it to the Luapula?" |
20709 | Then all danger is past, and what does it matter if we are dead tired? |
20709 | Then the Sultan draws his sabre, and, cutting the man down, exclaims,"Dogs, have you not loot enough? |
20709 | Was I to die of thirst in the middle of a river- bed? |
20709 | Was Livingstone still alive, or was he a mere dream figure which vanished when approached? |
20709 | Was he dead long ago, or was he still wandering about the forests as he had done for nearly thirty years? |
20709 | Was it possible that the whole bed was dry? |
20709 | Was land near, or what were these fellows doing out here on the ice- covered sea? |
20709 | What could he be looking for here in the midst of the eternal ice? |
20709 | What is that?" |
20709 | What more could a man want? |
20709 | What now? |
20709 | What use is it to till fields and rear palms when the Tuaregs always reap the harvest? |
20709 | What will be the end of it?" |
20709 | When such is the summer of the South Pole, what must the winter be like? |
20709 | Where was the white man''s hut? |
20709 | Where was the_ Fram_? |
20709 | Where was this wonderful Livingstone, whom all the world talked about? |
20709 | Which is the capital?" |
20709 | Why is not New York, the most important city, also the capital of the country?" |
20709 | Why was this immense wall erected? |
20709 | Will he fly? |
20709 | You are no doubt from Ironhead''s country?" |
22213 | Quid referam ut volitet crebras intacta per urbes Alba Palaestino sancta columba Syro? 22213 Si tribuunt fata genesis, cur deos oratis?" |
22213 | [ 29] Must we then believe that Hebraic monotheism had some influence upon the mysteries of the Great Mother? 22213 --Sollte übrigens die{ 259} Bedeutung Welt diesem Worte erst durch Einfluss griechischer Speculation zu Teil geworden sein? 22213 And are not the physical and moral qualities of the different races manifestly determined by the climate in which they live? 22213 And how could it be otherwise? 22213 Bréhier,Orient ou Byzance?" |
22213 | But how can the presence in the Occident of that begging and low nomadic clergy be explained? |
22213 | But how did he get to Italy from the Persian uplands? |
22213 | By what principle have such a quality and so great an influence been attributed to the stars? |
22213 | By what secret virtue did the Egyptian religion exercise this irresistible influence over the Roman world? |
22213 | Compare what{ 270} Hippolytus,_ Philos._, V, I, says of Isis( Ishtar?) |
22213 | Did any exchange take place between these rival sects? |
22213 | Did not the blending of the races result in multiplying the variety of disagreements? |
22213 | Did the success of their preaching mean progress or retrogression from the standard of the ancient Roman faith? |
22213 | Does not the movement of the tide depend on the course of the moon? |
22213 | For instance, Were all the men that perish together in a battle, born at the same moment, because they had the same fate? |
22213 | From what sources are we to derive our knowledge of the Oriental religions in the Roman empire? |
22213 | Had not a complacent syncretism engendered a multiplication of sects? |
22213 | Had not the confused collision of creeds produced a division into fragments, a communication of churches? |
22213 | How did the barbaric ideas refine themselves and combine with each other when thrown into the fiery crucible of imperial syncretism? |
22213 | However, can we speak of_ one_ pagan religion? |
22213 | Is his name derived from that of the Egyptian god Osiris- Apis, or from that of the Chaldean deity Sar- Apsi? |
22213 | Is it for reasons derived from their apparent motion and known through observation or experience? |
22213 | Is not the rising of certain constellations accompanied every year by storms? |
22213 | Is the study which we have just outlined possible? |
22213 | It speaks of a"de[orum?] |
22213 | Obdormiscunt enim superi remeare ut ad vigilias debeant? |
22213 | Or, on the other hand, do we not observe that twins, born at the same time, have the most unlike characters and the most different fortunes? |
22213 | Quid dormitiones illae quibus ut bene valeant auspicabili salutatione mandatis?" |
22213 | See Yasht V, XXI, 94: What"becomes of the libations which the wicked bring to you after sunset?" |
22213 | Under what influences did the Persian magic come into existence? |
22213 | Was Serapis of native origin, or was he imported from Sinope or Seleucia, or even from Babylon? |
22213 | Were not a great number of famous jurists like Ulpian of Tyre and Papinian of Hemesa natives of Syria? |
22213 | What called forth and permitted this spiritual commotion, of which the triumph of Christianity was the outcome? |
22213 | What do we find three centuries later? |
22213 | What items will be of assistance to us in this undertaking? |
22213 | What new elements did those priests, who made proselytes in every province, give the Roman world? |
22213 | What was the result of this confusion of heterogeneous doctrines whose multiplicity was extreme and whose values were very different? |
22213 | What was the superiority attributed to the creeds of that country? |
22213 | What was this Asiatic religion that had suddenly been transferred into the heart of Rome by an extraordinary circumstance? |
22213 | When and how did it spread? |
22213 | Who can tell what influence chambermaids from Antioch or Memphis gained over the minds of their mistresses? |
22213 | Why did even an Illyrian general like Aurelian look for the most perfect type of pagan religion in that country? |
22213 | Why was the influence of the Orient strongest in the religious field? |
22213 | Why was this Egyptian worship the only one of all Oriental religions to suffer repeated persecutions? |
22213 | Will a girl just coming into this world have gallant adventures? |
22213 | [ 13] What was the theology they learned? |
22988 | ''Asn''t''e got no civvies at all? |
22988 | ''Asn''t''e got no one as''d lend''i m a soot? 22988 ''Oo''d walk about in a shirt?" |
22988 | AND WHAT DID YOU THINK OF COLONEL CHURCHILL''S SPEECH, SIR? |
22988 | Corporal''e ses to me, las''kit inspection,broke in the fresh- faced youth, disregarding this nice point of ethics,"''W''ere''s your tooth- brush?'' |
22988 | Do they want you to return your small kit when you get the mitten? 22988 Granted as''e ca n''t walk about naked; granted as''e''asn''t got a suit o''civvies of''is own-- wot_ is_''e to do?" |
22988 | Mabel,he cried,"you are sure? |
22988 | Oh, what is it? 22988 This''ere''s''ow it stands-- see? |
22988 | Well, wot''s the feller to do? 22988 What is it, dearest? |
22988 | What is it? |
22988 | What is it? |
22988 | What sort of party? |
22988 | What? |
22988 | Yes, but''e''d''ave to carry''em to the Post Office naked, would n''t''e? 22988 ''''Oo''re you talkin''to?'' 22988 ( Is my heart throbbing now?) 22988 *****[ Illustration:_ Artistic Lady( who has just had her drawing- room redecorated)._Well, cook, what do you think of it?" |
22988 | An''''ow about goin''to buy new ones? |
22988 | And----?" |
22988 | Can you?" |
22988 | Did you ever hear of such a thing?.... |
22988 | Didst thou in sooth believe Thy presence would be welcome? |
22988 | If the tie of wedlock is not to take precedence of every other tie, including that of country, where are we? |
22988 | If there had been delay in the progress of the new Dreadnoughts why was it? |
22988 | If''e''adn''t got no clothes for to fetch''is pay in, wot then?" |
22988 | Is steam up?" |
22988 | It is covering-- what? |
22988 | Lord of the rheumy eyes and blowing nose, On whom no fostering sun has ever shone, What mak''st thou here? |
22988 | Possibly; but the vital question is-- would not this diet induce in us a tendency to become conscientious objectors? |
22988 | The messenger bent low and asked huskily--"Is this''ere comp''ny edquarters?" |
22988 | Then''e gets''is_ dis_charge, an''they tells''i m to return''is kar- kee_ an''_ small kit----""An''small kit?" |
22988 | This request only produced the senseless interrogation,"What_ is_ a bratting- slat?" |
22988 | What have I done?" |
22988 | What''ave I done now?"] |
22988 | When have you a free evening? |
22988 | Why couldst thou not in thine own realms have stayed? |
22988 | Why, what''d folks think of me with no badge, nor harmlet, nor nothin''?"] |
22988 | Will you very kindly waive all ceremony and join us at a friendly little dinner on the 10th, at 7.30? |
22988 | Wot d''yer call yourself, any''ow,''I ses,''you an''yer stripe?'' |
22988 | Would he be nicer this time? |
22988 | _ Central sector_--Mine? |
22988 | _ Cook._"It''s a bit bare- like, is n''t it, Mum? |
17201 | ''How dieth the wise man? |
17201 | ''_ I should enquire after its shape_,''he says:--''_Has it legs or arms? |
17201 | ''_ If the materialist is confounded_,''he says,''_ and science rendered dumb_, who else is prepared with an answer? |
17201 | ''_ What shall we do to be saved?_''men are again crying. |
17201 | ''_ What then are the alternative pleasures that life offers_ me? |
17201 | Am I guilty, and must I seek repentance? |
17201 | And do not they check the latter by being thus bound up with it?_''But what really can be more misleading than this? |
17201 | And do not they check the latter by being thus bound up with it?_''But what really can be more misleading than this? |
17201 | And for what reason? |
17201 | And has not it so been followed? |
17201 | And have we still some right to that reverence that we have learnt to cherish for ourselves? |
17201 | And if so, to what extent does it? |
17201 | And is every hope that has hitherto nerved our lives, melting at last away from us, utterly and for ever? |
17201 | And what is the result on Romanism? |
17201 | And what, as a natural religion, is its working power in the world? |
17201 | And what, let us again ask, will this worth, be? |
17201 | And when it is got, what will it be like? |
17201 | And when shall that be? |
17201 | And will it, when we have found it, be found to merit all the praise that is bestowed upon it? |
17201 | And will the''_ gladness of true heroism_''visit him if he proclaims it to everyone in his club? |
17201 | And would not man''s history strike more clearly on us as the ghastly embodiment of a vast injustice? |
17201 | Are our positive moralists prepared to admit this? |
17201 | Are they the same or not the same, now the balls correspond to consciousness, as they were before, when the balls did not correspond to it? |
17201 | Are we moral and spiritual beings, or are we not? |
17201 | As we surveyed our race as a whole, would its brighter future ever do away with its past? |
17201 | Because one undoubted fact is a mystery, is every mystery an undoubted fact? |
17201 | But a denial of what? |
17201 | But are these altogether so destructive as they seem? |
17201 | But granting all this, what does this do for her? |
17201 | But here comes the point at issue-- What is this general good, and what is included by it? |
17201 | But how is he to do this? |
17201 | But if not material, what are they, acting on matter, and yet distinct from matter? |
17201 | But in what aspect of this does the real tragedy lie? |
17201 | But that first decision-- how shall we make it? |
17201 | But we might ask with exactly equal force, what is the good of true physical science, and why should we try to impress on the world its teachings? |
17201 | But what do the individuals want? |
17201 | But what do they mean by_ may be_? |
17201 | But what is communion? |
17201 | But what is it when approached from the other? |
17201 | But what proof can he discover of this sacredness? |
17201 | But when men choose vice instead of virtue, what is happening? |
17201 | But why? |
17201 | But why? |
17201 | But why? |
17201 | Can human life, cut off utterly from every hope beyond itself-- can human life supply it? |
17201 | Can we still resolve to say,''I believe, although it is impossible''? |
17201 | Do our exact thinkers in the least know what they are prophesying? |
17201 | Do the''_ perceptions_,''which are for him the only valid guides, tell him so? |
17201 | Do they mean that that''_ heathen_''and''_ gross_''conception of an immaterial soul is probably after all the true one? |
17201 | Does any positive method of experience or observation so much as tend to suggest it? |
17201 | Does it do more than present her to us as the toughest and most fortunate religion, out of many co- ordinate and competing ones? |
17201 | Does it tend in any way to set her on a different platform from the others? |
17201 | Does the general reverence with which life is at present regarded rest in any degree upon any similar misconception? |
17201 | Does this logically go any way whatever towards discrediting its claims? |
17201 | Does water think or feel when it runs into frost- ferns upon a window pane? |
17201 | Has Professor Huxley, for instance, ever enjoyed it himself, or does he ever hope to do so? |
17201 | Have the secrets of the prison- house really been revealed to Canon Farrar or Mr. Beresford Hope?... |
17201 | Have we been hitherto deceived in ourselves, or have we not? |
17201 | Have we indeed some aims that we may still call high and holy-- still some aims that are more than transitory? |
17201 | Having made it, does he feel any consolation in the knowledge that it is the entire truth? |
17201 | His main difficulty is nothing more than this: How can an infinite will that rules everywhere, find room for a finite will not in harmony with itself? |
17201 | How far is the treasure incorruptible; and how far will our increasing knowledge act as moth and rust to it? |
17201 | How shall he make it most joyful? |
17201 | How shall we love? |
17201 | How then has physical science in the same way failed to upset morality? |
17201 | How will he make love? |
17201 | How will he spend his days? |
17201 | How, then, can an intimacy with this eternal criminal be an ennobling or a sacred thing? |
17201 | I, however, reject neither, and thus stand in the presence of two Incomprehensibles, instead of one Incomprehensible._''Now what does all this mean? |
17201 | IS LIFE WORTH LIVING? |
17201 | If God would have all men do His will, why should He place the knowledge of it within reach of such a small minority of them? |
17201 | If not, what is the meaning of their prophecy? |
17201 | If so, when, where, and how? |
17201 | If you can, you must trust me all in all; for the very first thing I declare to you is, I have never lied.__ Can you trust me thus far? |
17201 | In the first place, then, what is art? |
17201 | Indeed, does he not himself say so? |
17201 | Is Life Worth Living? |
17201 | Is it Human Nature as opposed to Nature?--Man as distinct from, and holier than, any individual men? |
17201 | Is it Nature? |
17201 | Is it Truth, then-- pure Truth for its own sake? |
17201 | Is it in human nature to make this sacrifice? |
17201 | Is it known only in brief moments of Neoplatonic ecstasy, to which all the acts of life should be stepping stones? |
17201 | Is it simply because the fact in question is the truth? |
17201 | Is it simply the product of the brain''s movement; or is the brain''s movement in any degree produced by it? |
17201 | Is it something brief, rapturous, and intermittent, as the language often used about it might seem to suggest to one? |
17201 | Is that solemn value a fact or fancy? |
17201 | Is the will strong enough to hold on through this baffling and monstrous world, and not to shrink back and bid the vision vanish? |
17201 | Is the will to assert our own moral nature-- our own birthright in eternity, strong enough to bear us on? |
17201 | Is there anything very high or very sacred in that discovery? |
17201 | Is this machinery self- moving, or is it, at least, modulated, if not moved, by some force other than itself? |
17201 | Is this majestic conception a true one, or is it a dream only, with no abiding substance? |
17201 | Is truth to be sought only because it conduces to happiness, or is happiness only to be sought for when it is based on truth? |
17201 | It comes long before, How much shall we love? |
17201 | Let us suspend this judgment for a moment, and what will become of these two dramas? |
17201 | Let us then make it quite plain, at starting, that when we ask''Is life worth living?'' |
17201 | Mallock''s"Is Life Worth Living?" |
17201 | May my body be likened to the temple of the Holy Ghost defiled? |
17201 | Need the answer we are speaking of be definite and universal? |
17201 | Now is such a happiness a reality or is it a myth? |
17201 | Now tell me, I beseech you tell me, is mine really the desperate state I have been taught to think it is? |
17201 | Now what is a code of morals, and why has the world any need of one? |
17201 | Now what is the cause and what the conditions of this change? |
17201 | Now what is there in common between Dr. Tyndall and the starry heavens, or that''_ power_''of which the starry heavens are the embodiment? |
17201 | Now what is this treasure-- this inward state of the heart? |
17201 | Now what on positive principles is the groundwork of this teaching? |
17201 | Now what shall we say to this? |
17201 | Now why is this? |
17201 | Now why should this be? |
17201 | Now, in producing this estimate, what is the chief faculty in us that they appeal to? |
17201 | Or are we indeed what we have been taught to think we are? |
17201 | Or supposing Mr. Stephen does love them, why is that love''_ lofty_''? |
17201 | Or, if they are, why is that any condemnation of them? |
17201 | Or, if we do condemn them, what else are we to praise? |
17201 | Our question is, What is the true happiness? |
17201 | Should the intellect of the world return to theism, will it ever again acknowledge a special revelation? |
17201 | Supposing science not to be inconsistent with theism, may not theism be inconsistent with morality? |
17201 | That as to whether consciousness is wholly a material thing or no, they_ will_ give no answer 237 But why are they in this state of suspense? |
17201 | The end had ceased to charm, and how could there ever again be any interest in the means? |
17201 | The first is, Why, when the air goes through them, are the organ- pipes resonant? |
17201 | The first question is,--How are these kindled, and what are they all about? |
17201 | The great question is, what shape finally will this dawning self- consciousness take? |
17201 | The only question for us is, is it curable or incurable? |
17201 | The question is what laws and what impetus are these? |
17201 | The question that I have to ask is, are they? |
17201 | The second is, What controls the mechanism by which the air is regulated-- a musician, or a revolving barrel? |
17201 | The second question is, What is it when connected? |
17201 | There are many practical rules for which it no doubt can do so; but will these rules correspond with what we mean by morals? |
17201 | They are asked, have we a soul, a will, and consequently any moral responsibility? |
17201 | This figure of human dreams has grown and grown in stature: does anything divine descend to it, and so much as touch its lips or its lifted hands? |
17201 | This first question is, Why should consciousness be connected with the brain at all? |
17201 | Was the discovery of the truth of his danger very glorious for the patient? |
17201 | What are we? |
17201 | What can obscure intellectual propositions,_''it is asked,''_ have to do with a religion of the heart? |
17201 | What do you offer me? |
17201 | What is its analysis, and why is it so precious? |
17201 | What is the use of bidding us? |
17201 | What is this free- will when it comes to use its tools? |
17201 | What must be done to get it, and what must be left undone? |
17201 | What shall I get? |
17201 | What shall it say, then, when assailed by the rational moralist? |
17201 | What shall we say of him, then, when he applies the argument in his own way? |
17201 | What sort of happiness shall I secure for others? |
17201 | What sort of morality do they find in it? |
17201 | What then has modern criticism accomplished on the Bible? |
17201 | What then will this change be? |
17201 | What then, let us ask the enthusiasts of humanity, will humanity be like in its ideally perfect state? |
17201 | What will he be like? |
17201 | What will he laugh at? |
17201 | What will he long for? |
17201 | What will he take pleasure in? |
17201 | What will it be like? |
17201 | What wonder then that they should have kept their condition to themselves? |
17201 | What, then, let us ask, is the nature of the belief? |
17201 | Where, then, is it? |
17201 | Who or what shall help us, or give us counsel? |
17201 | Why are they in this state of suspense? |
17201 | Why are they rank and steaming? |
17201 | Why should it be? |
17201 | Why should phenomena have two sides? |
17201 | Why should''_ harsh_''things be loveable? |
17201 | Why then should our positivists treat in this way the alleged immaterial part of consciousness? |
17201 | Why, let me ask him, should the truth be loved? |
17201 | Will it be worth having? |
17201 | Will it contain in it that negation of the supernatural which our positive assertions are at present supposed to necessitate? |
17201 | Will it fall to pieces before the breath of a larger knowledge? |
17201 | Will it incite men to virtues to which heaven could not incite them? |
17201 | Will not the dreams continue, when the reality has passed away? |
17201 | Would not the depth and the darkness of the shadow grow more portentous as the light grew brighter? |
17201 | _ In how many ways am_ I_ capable of feeling_ my_ existence a blessing? |
17201 | _ Low_ and_ lofty_--what has Mr. Stephen to do with words like these? |
17201 | _ Why so can I, or so can any man, But will they come when you do call for them?_ Henry IV. |
17201 | and I? |
17201 | and I? |
17201 | and I? |
17201 | and how joyful will it be when he has done his utmost for it? |
17201 | and in what way shall_ I_ feel the blessing of it most keenly_?'' |
17201 | and is not the positivist position, to a large extent at any rate, proved? |
17201 | and me? |
17201 | and me? |
17201 | and what is the reason that it pleases us? |
17201 | and what sort of happiness will others secure for me? |
17201 | and why should he so brusquely command all other men to share it? |
17201 | or am I not guilty, and may I go on just as I please?'' |
17201 | or can we look forward to its remaining undecided till the end of time? |
17201 | or do I owe it no more reverence than I owe the Alhambra Theatre? |
17201 | or lure them away from vices from which hell- fire would not scare them? |
17201 | or was its publication very sacred in the nurse? |
19871 | Are not the Turks made of flesh and blood as you? 19871 I do n''t know,"replied the cow;"but tell me: Is it right that the grass grows up from the bodies of my parents and will grow up from my own body?" |
19871 | If a poor man can not serve God with his heart, how can a rich one serve Him with gold? |
19871 | If the simple mind of the unlearned man can not know God, how can the bewildered mind of a learned man know Him? 19871 O man, why do you look at us?" |
19871 | Where to? |
19871 | Why are you listening to me? |
19871 | Why do you come every day to me? |
19871 | Would you kill them, Andrea? |
19871 | ***** What is Death? |
19871 | ***** What is it to be a gentleman? |
19871 | ***** What is man? |
19871 | *****"Why should not I believe in Fate?" |
19871 | A beggar? |
19871 | A gentleman from South Africa wrote to me the other day and asked about my country--"why it is so shining"? |
19871 | A gipsy asked a king: Of how much value are your riches? |
19871 | A king asks another king: How many people do you govern? |
19871 | Among the population in Serbia there is the greatest misery and almost starvation_ en masse._"What happened? |
19871 | And the poor sons of Serbia, that thou visitest them? |
19871 | And the poor sons of Serbia, that thou visitest them? |
19871 | And what happened with the ship of the Serbian nation? |
19871 | Another: Why are there so many Mohammedans in the world? |
19871 | Are you afraid to touch the unclean man? |
19871 | As they reached the rocky frontier of Albania, the girls asked the mother:"And now, whither?" |
19871 | But if God speaks to a king, he asks: How many people are you helping? |
19871 | But to come how and where? |
19871 | But when by such a people is meant a people of the European, Aryan race-- what then? |
19871 | Can not their blood be shed as yours? |
19871 | Can you not equal a woman? |
19871 | Chastity? |
19871 | Chivalry? |
19871 | Could you imagine England without Stratford, the birthplace of Shakespeare? |
19871 | Cowardice? |
19871 | Death? |
19871 | Dishonour? |
19871 | Do n''t you agree with me? |
19871 | Do n''t you think indeed that there is something wrong about this life of ours? |
19871 | Do you think that it is difficult for a rich nation as well as for a rich man to come into the kingdom of Heaven? |
19871 | Do you want a proof? |
19871 | Even the dry leaves cry out when trodden on; why should not the trodden man cry out? |
19871 | Fearlessness? |
19871 | For there they that carried us away captive required of us a song, saying, Sing us one of the songs of Zion? |
19871 | For who can be proud believing in God? |
19871 | For who created the small nations if not He that created all great and small things in this wonderful world? |
19871 | For whose cause indeed is Belgium''s and Serbia''s, if not God''s cause? |
19871 | Freedom? |
19871 | God and a mother asked each other the same question:"How long will you continue to forgive your children?" |
19871 | God? |
19871 | He was asked:"Why did you take such a burden, since you are a burden to yourself?" |
19871 | Home? |
19871 | Honour? |
19871 | How can you understand its language? |
19871 | How could we now sing our songs while our homes are transformed into empty caves? |
19871 | How could we sing now, when all our past protests against you and all our dead are disturbed in their graves? |
19871 | How could we sing, seeing our bread in strangers''hands and cold stones in ours? |
19871 | How shall we sing the Lord''s song in a strange land?" |
19871 | Humility? |
19871 | I read the other day a German menacing song: We are going, we are going to see Who will henceforth govern the world-- England or God? |
19871 | If you should ask any of the Serbian peasants:"To whom does this house belong? |
19871 | Injustice? |
19871 | Is that not Fate?" |
19871 | Is that the principle of Frederick the Great, or Leasing, or Kant and Schiller?" |
19871 | Justice? |
19871 | Love? |
19871 | Mercifulness? |
19871 | Not to drop the cup-- And tell me, brother, Why to- day does slumber''s power subdue thee?" |
19871 | Now thy wings are from thy body riven?'' |
19871 | Obedience? |
19871 | Or who can feel God in this Universe and still say, I am great? |
19871 | Patience? |
19871 | Prayer? |
19871 | Protection of the weak? |
19871 | Serbs?? |
19871 | Serbs?? |
19871 | Shall I remind you of the results? |
19871 | Shall I say that is Serbia? |
19871 | Shall I say that is Serbia? |
19871 | Still it might be asked: Has such a great body indeed an aim? |
19871 | Suffering? |
19871 | Tell me, tell me, hast thou kill''d my brother?'' |
19871 | Tell us, how we could sing now? |
19871 | The French sailor said:"But you will perish if you do not give Macedonia to the Bulgars?" |
19871 | The angel said:"If the clear eyes of a child can not see God, how can the dim eye of passionate man see Him? |
19871 | The foolish man speaks much because he has to apologise his foolishness, but why must you speak so much? |
19871 | The grass asked a cow:"Is it right that you eat me and tread on me?" |
19871 | The peasant was asked:"What are you digging for?" |
19871 | The sun complain''d to God of such an insult:"What shall be done with this presumptuous maiden?" |
19871 | WHAT IS SERBIA THEN? |
19871 | Was it not likewise the belief and hope of King Ethelbert, of Saint Oswald and Edward the Confessor? |
19871 | We, men, either great or little? |
19871 | We, nations, rich or poor? |
19871 | We, the churches, either right or wrong? |
19871 | Wealth? |
19871 | What are we, then, on this small grain of dust? |
19871 | What can we say about THE AIM OF THE GREATEST EMPIRE? |
19871 | What did they do? |
19871 | What do the Serbian men need? |
19871 | What is God? |
19871 | What is clay? |
19871 | What is the first principle for humanity? |
19871 | What is the news? |
19871 | What is this morale, taught by Serbian poetry and proverbs, when uttered in a dry form? |
19871 | What is, indeed, the whole of our planet? |
19871 | What may it be? |
19871 | What may such a people be doing? |
19871 | What represents a boastful man? |
19871 | What shall I say then about our women''s singing in the autumn in the dry and soft moonlight? |
19871 | What, then, is this first principle? |
19871 | When will the world become better? |
19871 | When will the world become better? |
19871 | When will this suffering of man from man stop? |
19871 | When will you show us your virtues? |
19871 | When wolves and sheep are brothers, what will the wolves eat? |
19871 | Where are all the greatest empires of the past? |
19871 | Whither are we all going, great or small? |
19871 | Whither are you running? |
19871 | Why am I protesting now before you, sons and daughters of Great Britain? |
19871 | Why does God send suffering to the best of His children? |
19871 | Why should not men think better of birds? |
19871 | Why should you lament? |
19871 | Why? |
19871 | Why? |
19871 | Why? |
19871 | Why? |
19871 | Why? |
19871 | Work? |
19871 | Would you know assuredly through which of the powerful nations God is working to- day? |
19871 | Yet who can see any end of God, either in the past or in the future? |
19871 | [ Illustration: CROWN PRINCE ALEXANDER][ Illustration: PREMIER N.???] |
19871 | [ Illustration: CROWN PRINCE ALEXANDER][ Illustration: PREMIER N.???] |
19871 | [ Illustration: CROWN PRINCE ALEXANDER][ Illustration: PREMIER N.???] |
19871 | [ Illustration: KING PETER:"How did it happen, General, that you Turks lost the battle on Kumanovo?" |
19871 | [ Illustration:???] |
19871 | [ Illustration:???] |
19871 | [ Illustration:???] |
19871 | away?? |
19871 | away?? |
19871 | or this field? |
19871 | or this harvest?" |
19871 | say, where hast thou been wandering; Tell me where thou hast so long been lingering; Where hast white days three so wasted,--tell me?" |
19871 | say, why art thou dejected? |
19871 | the????] |
19871 | the????] |
19871 | the????] |
19871 | the????] |
19871 | why look so deadly Pale, as if in death thou hadst been sleeping?" |
25900 | ***** FOOTNOTES:[ A]"Will chloroform make the operation less beneficial?" |
25900 | How, but as a man of principle, shall he stand for- ever in our memory and in the human mind? |
25900 | What is the reason of the wide consequence of this event? |
25900 | Who shall say such as Agassiz and Sumner are dead? |
25900 | _ Cold_ was he indeed? |
18422 | ''... Quis jam locus... Quæ regio in terris nostri non plena laboris?'' 18422 A State?" |
18422 | And pray, my young sir,asked a stern matron of forty,"will you please to tell us what is the appropriate sphere of woman?" |
18422 | And who are those gentlemen up there on the elevation looking so pale and frightened and eating nothing? |
18422 | Are ye, are ye,he would say, with a voice of exultation, and yet softened with melancholy,"Are ye our children? |
18422 | But whereabouts on your person? |
18422 | But,said I, anxiously,"do you really regard that circumstance as reflecting disparagingly upon the man''s work in the next room?" |
18422 | But,said the corporal,"President Lincoln knows, does n''t he?" |
18422 | Do you pretend to say Iowa has sent 39,000 men into this cruel Civil War? |
18422 | Have yez? 18422 How many men has she sent to this cruel war?" |
18422 | Is this one part of the great reward, for which my brethren and myself endured lives of toil and of hardship? 18422 Now, how could you get wounded in the face while on the retreat?" |
18422 | Now,he says,"we have arrived at the stairs; will you kindly tell me which way the stairs run?" |
18422 | Surely,said he,"you noticed that two- thirds of the works in the next room are already sold?" |
18422 | Well, perhaps, by and by? |
18422 | Well,he said,"you Dutch did lick us on the Excise question, did n''t you?" |
18422 | Well,says he,"where''s Iowa?" |
18422 | What are you looking at, Mike? |
18422 | What do you mean? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What may that be? |
18422 | What shall I do to make my son get forward in the world? |
18422 | Will you now kindly give the location of the hall in which the accident occurred? |
18422 | ( Need I say I mean his fishing- smack?) |
18422 | A friend came along, and seeing that the man did not look as pleasant as usual, said to him,"What is the matter? |
18422 | A traveller passing through Concord inquired,"How do all these people support themselves?" |
18422 | After that I had a very good mind to come back to America, and say, like the Queen of Uganda:"There, what did I tell you?" |
18422 | And can you not help the world abroad as well as at home? |
18422 | And how comes it that the workers of evil just as instinctively aim to fraudulently use it or silence it, and with such poor success? |
18422 | And the Cavaliers, who missed their stirrups, somehow, and got into Yankee saddles? |
18422 | And was not Eve, the first of orthodox women, the type of every feminine perfection? |
18422 | And what does a poet want that he does not find in New England? |
18422 | And what has Virginia done for our Union? |
18422 | And what was the answer? |
18422 | And who doubts it? |
18422 | And why not? |
18422 | And, if we should care to pursue the subject farther back, what about Ethan Allen and John Stark and Mad Anthony Wayne-- Cavaliers each and every one? |
18422 | Another servant came to him and said,"Sir, shall I take your order? |
18422 | Are they not? |
18422 | Are we a degenerate people? |
18422 | Are we going to cure it by more tinkering? |
18422 | Are we to be daunted, therefore, because the conditions are new? |
18422 | Beasley?" |
18422 | But did they forget the principles on which they acted because the conditions were unprecedented? |
18422 | But the question has also been asked, here and there-- and very naturally-- is a Minister to a foreign Court to be appointed for such a purpose? |
18422 | But to speak more seriously: Is modern journalism, then, nothing but a reflection of the frivolity of the day, of the passing love of notoriety? |
18422 | But what is a critic? |
18422 | But what is culture? |
18422 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
18422 | But where meanwhile is the substance of power? |
18422 | Did not John Bull, in his rough methods with the Celestial Empire, sometimes literally act"like a bull in a China shop"? |
18422 | Did they not discover new applications for old principles? |
18422 | Did you ever have anything to do with indorsements?" |
18422 | Do I err in supposing this an illustration of the supremacy which belongs to the triumphs of the moral nature? |
18422 | Do we need to look further for a reply to the question,"Why are the New Englanders unpopular?" |
18422 | Do you ever think of him? |
18422 | Do you ever think of his career, that of the prototype of our own Washington? |
18422 | Do you know what the effect will be? |
18422 | Do you remember to what circumstance Chicago owed its fame? |
18422 | Does he belong to the flag of the country? |
18422 | Does he rest under the eagle and the Stars and Stripes? |
18422 | Does that flag protect him? |
18422 | Does this scene of refinement, of elegance, of riches, of luxury, does all this come from our labors? |
18422 | Edwin Arnold, the author of"The Light of Asia,"said:"Do you think you can do all this?" |
18422 | Else how could this noble city have been redeemed from bondage? |
18422 | For what does America stand? |
18422 | Great heavens, men, do you want to live forever?" |
18422 | Have we lost the old principle and the old spirit? |
18422 | Have we not been rook- shooting with Mr. Winkle, and courting with Mr. Tupman? |
18422 | Have we not played cribbage with"the Marchioness,"and quaffed the rosy with Dick Swiveller? |
18422 | Have we not ridden together to the"Markis of Granby"with old Weller on the box, and his son Samivel on the dickey? |
18422 | Have we not together investigated, with Mr. Pickwick, the theory of Tittlebats? |
18422 | Have we not walked with him in every scene of varied life? |
18422 | He poked his head out of the upper berth at midnight, hailed the porter and said,"Say, have you got such a thing as a corkscrew about you?" |
18422 | Her friend said,"Shall I pour some water in your whiskey?" |
18422 | His reward was what? |
18422 | How can I best serve them?" |
18422 | How can it be that any man should make a decent portrait of his fellow- man in these days? |
18422 | How did they achieve it? |
18422 | How shall we account for this reception? |
18422 | How was I to prove that what I have said is true? |
18422 | I am not here to urge a return to the Puritan life; but have you forgotten that the Puritans came into a new world? |
18422 | I am not only unlike other gentlemen, taken by surprise, but I am absolutely without a subject, and what am I to say? |
18422 | I came to civilization, and what do you think was the result? |
18422 | I know that what I say is true when I charge the Chairman with irony, for do not I feel his iron entering my soul? |
18422 | I mean by that, the lawyer says in a dignified way,"What principle is involved, and how can I best serve my client, always forgetting myself?" |
18422 | I regard true beauty as the divinest gift which woman has received; and was not Pandora, the first of mythical women, endowed with every gift? |
18422 | I said to him:"I never felt better in all my life; how do you feel?" |
18422 | I said:"What does that mean to me? |
18422 | I was received by the Paris Geographical Society, and it was then I began to feel"Well, after all, I have done something, have n''t I?" |
18422 | I will confess that I do not know what I mean by this; for what is beauty? |
18422 | I would enter a protest, but what use? |
18422 | If we give up that Constitution, what are we? |
18422 | In that hour of trial which you and I, sir, know to have been a menace and a reality to whom did she turn for succor? |
18422 | Is he an American-- is he of us? |
18422 | Is it a place?" |
18422 | Is it spelled with an O or a W?" |
18422 | Is it wonderful that we are delighted to see him, and to return in a measure his unbounded hospitalities? |
18422 | Is n''t it strange that two of the smallest sections of the earth should have produced most of the grandest history of the world? |
18422 | Is there a New Englander here who would wipe"Bunker Hill"from his list for any price in Wall Street? |
18422 | Is this magnificent city, the like of which we never saw nor heard of on either continent, is this but an offshoot from Plymouth Rock? |
18422 | Is this modern ideal to survive throughout the future? |
18422 | It has been said that a good woman, fitly mated, grows doubly good; but how often have we seen a bad man mated to a good woman turned into a good man? |
18422 | MR. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN:--[3]_Voulez- vous me permettre de faire mes remarques en français? |
18422 | May we not foresee the nature of the difference? |
18422 | Not the lawyer in politics; but"What is there in it for the people I represent? |
18422 | Now what are you going to do with a people like that? |
18422 | Now, here we are asked, why did Virginia go into the War of Secession? |
18422 | Now, what are we going to do? |
18422 | Now, who achieved that? |
18422 | Of our sweethearts the humorist hath it:--"Where are the Marys and Anns and Elizas, Lovely and loving of yore? |
18422 | One question, with its answer, and I shall have done: Are these Southerners in Wall Street divorced in spirit and sympathy from their old homes? |
18422 | Respecting the exact nature of the proposition I shall not reveal? |
18422 | Said some one to him when the prayer was over,"My dear brother, why were you so hard upon the Hottentot?" |
18422 | Said the man,"To Ireland? |
18422 | Shakespeare naturally said what every artist must feel; for what is an artist? |
18422 | Shall we learn the lesson which is taught us in this recent war? |
18422 | Shall we not imagine our foe in the future, as might well be the case, to be superior to the one over which we have been victorious? |
18422 | Shall we rest on the laurels which we may have won, or shall we prepare for the future? |
18422 | Should your country decide to keep the Philippines, what would be the consequences? |
18422 | That is the fact of the matter; nobody can deny that; but what are we going to do? |
18422 | The General said:"Why do n''t you work?" |
18422 | The President, Cornelius N. Bliss, proposed the query for Dr. Wayland,"Why are New Englanders Unpopular?" |
18422 | The commonplace question:"How is the weather going to be?" |
18422 | The first inquiry of the lawyer and politician is,"What is there in it?" |
18422 | The next question is, is there any practical means of improving this state of things? |
18422 | The old gentleman says:--"General, what troops are these passing now?" |
18422 | The politician, and not the statesman, says,"What is in it?" |
18422 | The question now arises, is such a state of things necessarily connected with a Republican government? |
18422 | The"Daily Telegraph''s"proprietor cabled over to Bennett:"Will you join us in sending Stanley over to complete Livingstone''s explorations?" |
18422 | Then how did we lose it? |
18422 | They are laughing in their sleeves and saying:"Watch him, watch him; did you ever hear lawyers talk as much for nothing? |
18422 | They may have their faults, but who has not? |
18422 | They opened that highway to you, and shall no honor be given to them? |
18422 | To which she returned the still more laconic autograph,"Wo n''t I?" |
18422 | Under all the circumstances, who will dispute the magnificence of that showing? |
18422 | Was the inexorable unrelaxing determination with which they, being so few and so poor, maintained their point somewhat wrought into their faces? |
18422 | We have had tariffs, have we not, every few years, ever since we were born; and has not the farmer become discontented under these conditions? |
18422 | Well, what about this Forefathers''Day? |
18422 | Well, what moved in your splendid Dix when he gave that order? |
18422 | What New England Society has ever made so good a showing of hospitality and good cheer? |
18422 | What am I to talk about? |
18422 | What are the Dutch? |
18422 | What are the ethics of the press of Chicago? |
18422 | What are the truths that have gone into her blood and made her strong and beautiful and dominant? |
18422 | What do you mean by 39th?" |
18422 | What has Virginia done for our common country? |
18422 | What is it? |
18422 | What is the Senate? |
18422 | What is the charm that unites so many suffrages? |
18422 | What is the matter now? |
18422 | What is the result? |
18422 | What is to become of our English landscape if it is to be simply a sanitary or advertising appliance? |
18422 | What made your section great, dominant, glorious in the history of our common country? |
18422 | What man would part with the fame of Harrison and of Perry? |
18422 | What more can a poet desire? |
18422 | What names has she contributed to your historic roll? |
18422 | What reflecting mind can contemplate some of those characters without being made more kind- hearted and charitable? |
18422 | What river is this?" |
18422 | What then was the course of Virginia? |
18422 | What was the answer? |
18422 | What would a poet sing about, I wonder, who lived on the Kankakee Flats? |
18422 | What, then, is the part of Her Majesty''s Government in this critical and difficult circumstance? |
18422 | When he got through she said,"How did you like that?" |
18422 | When he had finished his remarks a French gentleman sitting beside me inquired:"Where is he from?" |
18422 | Whence came these qualities? |
18422 | Where is there such a galaxy of great men known to history? |
18422 | Where will you look for its parallel? |
18422 | Who are Still first in colleges and letters in this land? |
18422 | Who asks what State you are from, in Europe, or in Africa, or in Asia? |
18422 | Who had the first chance on your destiny, your character, your development? |
18422 | Who in the imposing troop of worldly grandeur is now remembered but with indifference or contempt? |
18422 | Who is here to deny it? |
18422 | Who to- day are the first to rally to the side of a good cause, on trial in the community? |
18422 | Who, east or west, advocate justice, redress wrongs, maintain equal rights, support churches, love liberty, and thrive where others starve? |
18422 | Whoever saw a satisfactory definition of love? |
18422 | Why did n''t we see it before? |
18422 | Why should they not feast and why should they not dance? |
18422 | Why should we not welcome him as a friend? |
18422 | Why, I repeat it, the intense unpopularity of New England? |
18422 | Why? |
18422 | Will not old principles be adaptable to new conditions, and is it not our business to adapt them to new conditions? |
18422 | Will you have some of the chicken soup?" |
18422 | Would he gaze at you with sad, sad eyes, and weep over you as the degenerate sons of noble sires? |
18422 | Yes, but what would you have, gentlemen? |
18422 | Yet how should we get on without them? |
18422 | You, the father, come home, and you say:"Fannie, what are you doing in the kitchen? |
18422 | [ 3] TRANSLATION.--Will you kindly allow me to make my speech in French? |
18422 | [ A Voice:"Which is the eighth Commandment?"] |
18422 | and the woman replied,"For God''s sake, have n''t I had trouble enough already to- day?" |
18422 | enforcing it with the following quotations:"Do you question me as an honest man should do for my simple true judgment?" |
18422 | go back to Africa? |
18422 | is that a thunder- cloud in the North? |
18422 | maiden fair, wilt thou be mine? |
18422 | that makes 22,000 men?" |
18422 | where is Minnesota?" |
15467 | ''Whom shall_ I send_, and who will go for us?'' 15467 A little tiff with the leader or somebody?" |
15467 | An inclusive line must be exclusive also, must it not? |
15467 | And are you called? |
15467 | And at Bethany? |
15467 | And do you find the knowledge such a joy? |
15467 | And is that,he asked with some irony,"the only way you can find of following Him? |
15467 | And may I ask why? |
15467 | And the other one? |
15467 | And the other places? |
15467 | And you have no pity on poor me, going without you? |
15467 | And you? |
15467 | Anybody here? |
15467 | Are you going to hear Doctor Schoolman? |
15467 | Are you still reading it? |
15467 | Are you sure of the contrary? |
15467 | At Doctor Schoolman''s? |
15467 | At whose feet, then,he persisted,"would you think to lay it down?" |
15467 | But to return to the Pentecostal precedent,said Mr. Gray;"if we were to sell out, at whose feet would you propose laying the proceeds?" |
15467 | But what can be your reasons? |
15467 | But what did your friends think? |
15467 | But would it be better not to say it? |
15467 | But, Hubert,he said,"do you remember what they did with the proceeds of their sales?" |
15467 | But, Hubert,he went on,"you are a thoughtful young man-- how do you account for the fact that Christ, Himself, attended social functions? |
15467 | Can I take the truth too seriously, Father? |
15467 | Dear mother,said Winifred fondly,"do you not see that He will gather you?" |
15467 | Dear, do you think I am very ill? 15467 Did I hear it? |
15467 | Did it really? |
15467 | Did you hear me? |
15467 | Did you hear the sermon to- day, George? |
15467 | Didst Thou cause grief? |
15467 | Do you know what is in the wind, Winifred? 15467 Do you remember our discussion of the Scripture about it?" |
15467 | Do you say,continued Mr. Carew,"that God will be merciful to the heathen because of their ignorance? |
15467 | Do you see the parable in lights, Winnie? 15467 Do you think that means, Hubert,"said Winifred,"that He does not pray for the world? |
15467 | Does n''t your father approve of it?--or your mother?--of going off like that, I mean? 15467 Eh? |
15467 | Father,said he,"what do you think Jesus meant by saying,''Sell that ye have and give alms?''" |
15467 | Had I not better give them an object lesson? |
15467 | Has father told you my news, mother? |
15467 | Has your headache gone, dear? |
15467 | Have I heard the voice of His need? |
15467 | Have you quarreled with Mercer? |
15467 | How could you desert us with your charming voice? 15467 How did you find Him? |
15467 | How did you know? |
15467 | How did you like the sermon? |
15467 | How do you know, Winnie? |
15467 | How do you know? |
15467 | How does He manifest Himself? |
15467 | How is this? 15467 How much does it mean? |
15467 | How was that? |
15467 | Hubert at the Mission last night? 15467 Hubert,"she said,"have you found Him?" |
15467 | I hope not for good? |
15467 | I hope you do n''t wear that red hat of yours and your usual stunning costumes, Adèle? |
15467 | I should not think this work you are doing would tend to recovery? |
15467 | I wonder if you are going to hear the Reverend Professor Cutting''s lecture on the Higher Criticism? 15467 If that were so--?" |
15467 | In what capacity do you think He went? |
15467 | Is it quite disobedience? |
15467 | Is it true, Winnie? |
15467 | Is n''t this a funny crowd? |
15467 | Is there a way for me,she prayed,"a way to come to Thee just as I am?" |
15467 | It might suit your own feelings better, but what about ours? 15467 No,"he reflected,"why should I seek to communicate my doubts? |
15467 | No? 15467 No?" |
15467 | No? |
15467 | Not ready? |
15467 | O Lord,he prayed,"am I walking in Thy footsteps, or am I a deluded wretch, bringing sorrow, and it may be death, to those I love most?" |
15467 | Oh, that young fellow? |
15467 | Orpheus? |
15467 | Pray, why should n''t I go? 15467 Really? |
15467 | Really? 15467 Really?" |
15467 | Really? |
15467 | Shall I see if the carriage is waiting, mother? |
15467 | Shall I take you to the refreshment room? |
15467 | Shall we begin to- day? |
15467 | Singing, little sister? |
15467 | So you still keep up your service at the mission? |
15467 | That I have not been a Christian? 15467 Then it was not upon Doctor Schoolman''s invitation?" |
15467 | Then why do you do it? |
15467 | They do not know Him,he thought passionately,"and I-- am I under a delusion? |
15467 | We shall still be friends? |
15467 | Well, Hubert,he said,"did you have a good time?" |
15467 | Were you up with the birds? 15467 What about''what He did when He got there''?" |
15467 | What can you be thinking of? 15467 What do you think of it now, Hubert?" |
15467 | What do you think that means, Hubert? |
15467 | What does it mean? |
15467 | What else should one do? |
15467 | What happened? |
15467 | What is electricity? |
15467 | What is he going to preach about? |
15467 | What shall I sing? |
15467 | What shall we do? 15467 Where are the poor people?" |
15467 | Where''s-- my-- hat? |
15467 | Which one do you think is on the Lord''s side? |
15467 | Who-- who is it, Hubert? 15467 Why are you so radiant?" |
15467 | Why not? 15467 Why-- what, Winnie? |
15467 | Why? |
15467 | Will it need altering, do you think? |
15467 | Winifred, dear,she said,"have you looked at your new white dress to see if it requires anything to be done before Mrs. Butterworth''s party? |
15467 | Winnie, dear, is that you? |
15467 | Winnie,he said to her after breakfast,"do you still think you have begun to know God?" |
15467 | Winnie,she said finally,"could you sing just a little for me?" |
15467 | Would you like that little Scotch song from Sankey''s book? |
15467 | Yes, dear mother? |
15467 | Yes? 15467 You are surely not in earnest?" |
15467 | You say it will increase the responsibility of the heathen if they hear, and put them in worse case if they reject the message? 15467 You were not in the choir this morning?" |
15467 | _ Whom shall I send and who will go for us_? |
15467 | ''All work and no play''--you know the old adage, eh? |
15467 | ''He gathers in His bosom?'' |
15467 | ''Is there not another way?'' |
15467 | After a moment the weak voice spoke again:"Winnie,_ you_ know Him; will you pray? |
15467 | Am I right?" |
15467 | And if staying away from Mrs. Butterworth''s were a precedent to be followed, where should she ever wear it? |
15467 | And now?--should it not go on? |
15467 | And was it already accomplished? |
15467 | And was it not the regular thing to do? |
15467 | And what fellowship can life have with death? |
15467 | And you told him?" |
15467 | Are not people usually most sociable about the things that interest them most? |
15467 | Are we indeed His sons and daughters, that His supreme wish should be our last concern?" |
15467 | Bond, that we must take things as they are? |
15467 | Bond, that you put it just a little grain too stiff?" |
15467 | But can you expect the favor of God upon a mission undertaken in disobedience?" |
15467 | But church? |
15467 | But did He really mean it? |
15467 | But have you ever watched the glance of His eye with another thought, not for yourself, but_ for Him_? |
15467 | But her friends would tell her she sang it with feeling, she argued defensively, and then asked herself candidly, what sort of feeling? |
15467 | But how was she to explain the truth to Frothingham? |
15467 | But if he should_ do_ her act of faith--? |
15467 | But is n''t it a bit queer that, as a company, we should lead off in those things? |
15467 | But is there not some other Scripture that will tell us the relative positions of the church and the world to us in our giving?" |
15467 | But my earthly father? |
15467 | But now, Winnie,"she added,"are you not going to keep on singing, only''in spirit and in truth,''as you say?" |
15467 | But now, just what is the principle-- what is the true spirit of the text? |
15467 | But pray tell me, Adèle, how happens it that you were there?" |
15467 | But should God be sought for as a force or as a personality? |
15467 | But suppose_ he_ take a mite- box? |
15467 | But the anthem-- was it unto the Lord she sang her part? |
15467 | But those--? |
15467 | But was it so? |
15467 | But was there no other way? |
15467 | But we know that God loves the world?" |
15467 | But what said her own conscience? |
15467 | But what was it to"receive"Him? |
15467 | But where was the theory that had seemed so clear and sensible to both Hubert and herself when they came to the meeting? |
15467 | But why does it never occur to them-- to those who can afford it, I mean-- to_ give_? |
15467 | But you do n''t mean you''ve left for good? |
15467 | But, do you know, I''ve sometimes thought it rather queer that Mr. Francis should sing in our choir? |
15467 | But, granted that it means_ something_, was it of limited application, or would Christ say the same thing to His followers to- day?" |
15467 | CHAPTER V IS GOD DEMONSTRABLE? |
15467 | Can no one follow Him at home?" |
15467 | Can one man who sees the point work a revolution in the whole church? |
15467 | Can two walk together except they be agreed?" |
15467 | Can you follow the course of life he would plan, and still serve Christ? |
15467 | Could he leave all these for the sake of the joyful message of his Lord? |
15467 | Could she think for a moment of stopping it all? |
15467 | Did He care for him or about him? |
15467 | Did He mean, not literally that they were to sell all and give, but rather to emphasize the supreme importance of the treasure in heaven? |
15467 | Did the church turn the machine and grind out praises by proxy? |
15467 | Did we not think the girdle should be altered slightly?" |
15467 | Did you ever see such a bargain? |
15467 | Do I hear sermons when I go to church? |
15467 | Do n''t you think so?" |
15467 | Do say what you think of it, Winifred? |
15467 | Do you doubt my qualifications? |
15467 | Do you know who he is? |
15467 | Do you mean to say singing in the choir is wrong? |
15467 | Do you say that men will be_ saved_ by lack of knowledge? |
15467 | Do you still enjoy your singing?" |
15467 | Does the doctor say so?" |
15467 | For how could he transgress the boundaries of the human sphere into which he had been born, and lift himself into the higher? |
15467 | For what other than the dearest object would God have been willing to give His most priceless treasure-- the Son of His love? |
15467 | Granted that there is a great deal of unreality in the church, what are we going to do about it? |
15467 | Gray?" |
15467 | Had it been put in words it would have been something like this:"How are we_ to act_ with reference to new light on the will of God? |
15467 | Had she any clearer ideas as to what Winifred Gray might mean? |
15467 | Had she been foolish? |
15467 | Had she thought of Him in all this? |
15467 | Hall?" |
15467 | Have you had your invitation?" |
15467 | He answered it by asking:"Shall I go?--for Him, Winnie?" |
15467 | He did not consciously remember the words,"he that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
15467 | He that formed the eye, shall He not see?" |
15467 | He was not conscious of prayer, but it was in his heart, making response to the revelation which had come to him,"Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" |
15467 | He went on:"It will not excuse me, I suppose, but whose is the greater sin? |
15467 | His hungry soul echoed their"Where dwellest Thou?" |
15467 | How can we ever excuse ourselves that it has been a matter of such indifference to us? |
15467 | How could I explain myself?" |
15467 | How could he give her up? |
15467 | How could he leave her undefended now by his watchful love? |
15467 | How could she have told him she was not going? |
15467 | How do you think he occupied himself in the midst of Morning Prayer a couple of Sundays ago? |
15467 | How had it come to pass? |
15467 | How happened you to go at all?" |
15467 | How many of them would be required to hold the hoarded, unnecessary, unused wealth at his command? |
15467 | How much merit did they accumulate thereby in the eyes of God who is a Spirit, and would be worshiped"in spirit and in truth"? |
15467 | How should she excuse herself at this late day? |
15467 | How would the poor, irrelevant argument I have quoted have affected Paul? |
15467 | Hubert, perhaps you would like to meet him?" |
15467 | I hope there is no ill news?" |
15467 | I saw him-- eh, Winnie, what''s the matter?" |
15467 | I shall be very glad, if you do n''t mind it too much, mother, if I may stay at home?" |
15467 | I suppose you agree with Winifred?" |
15467 | I thought you were a bit of a sceptic yourself?" |
15467 | I wonder if the principle in the other text will apply to that? |
15467 | If a man with doubts should give himself up would he be received? |
15467 | If he asked for light, was he ready to follow the light? |
15467 | If it meant to fly away to heaven--? |
15467 | If one honest man had met me with the question,''Can you lead that part of our worship to God in spirit and in truth?'' |
15467 | In Hubert''s soul still the question was burning,"Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" |
15467 | In short, what are we_ to do_ about it?" |
15467 | In what sense did they in the days of His fleshly life receive Him? |
15467 | Is He willing?" |
15467 | Is it all a farce?" |
15467 | Is it mine, or theirs who hired me? |
15467 | Is it not dark-- what we do not know?" |
15467 | Is it not sufficient that the Commander has said,''Go_ ye_''? |
15467 | Is it--?" |
15467 | Look, sister, do you see that impulse of the dawn, as though the darkness pulsated with premonition of its coming?" |
15467 | More than that, what would her mother think? |
15467 | Must he break his father''s heart? |
15467 | Must he so find out God? |
15467 | Must not any loyal child_ if he hear_ his Father''s appeal say,''Here am I''?" |
15467 | Must she give her up also? |
15467 | Must the hope of happy comradeship in future years be put aside, and with the disappointment his father age and weaken irrecoverably? |
15467 | Must we not just take conditions as they are and make the best of them?" |
15467 | Not to see in it provision and help for you; but to see to what He is looking, for what He is longing-- what it is that will give joy to Him? |
15467 | Now she interrupted:"What does it say, Winifred? |
15467 | On a sharp, clear morning Hubert Gray walked through the cutting air toward his office, and meditated thus:"What am I doing? |
15467 | Or what must be true of Him, granted that He is? |
15467 | Perhaps you do not know my prowess in those lines? |
15467 | Please let me know if it is right to give it up? |
15467 | Shall I fight him?" |
15467 | Shall I wait first to bury him? |
15467 | So may not God be, invisible, uncomprehended, but real, and demonstrable to the man who applies himself to know Him?" |
15467 | Suppose God should reveal Himself? |
15467 | That is what sermons are for, I believe?" |
15467 | That''s rather in your line, is n''t it? |
15467 | The Spirit pleaded:"O Soul, if to you to live is Christ, why do you bring into your life''s closest fellowship an alien to Him? |
15467 | Then she played"Alice, Where Art Thou?" |
15467 | Then,"Is George gone?" |
15467 | They were scarcely seated in the light trap and facing toward home when the young minister said:"Well, Mr. Gray, have you found God demonstrable?" |
15467 | Was he following a delusion that would make himself an exile and lay his father prematurely in his grave? |
15467 | Was he his father''s murderer? |
15467 | Was he leaving behind him converted areas, whose every inhabitant magnified God in Christ Jesus? |
15467 | Was it a heart- rest that David longed for? |
15467 | Was it for the sake of_ doing the word_ that he pondered its meaning? |
15467 | Was it in a more physical, tangible way than would he possible to man now? |
15467 | Was it not better to go on as he was, rich, independent, self- governed? |
15467 | Was it not sin to take sacred words on her lips and not mean them? |
15467 | Was it the burden of a new motive, or the sudden smiting of a chord he knew right well? |
15467 | Was it to meet that One, to gaze in spirit upon His pierced hands and side, as the minister was saying, and to rejoice in Him as the risen Lord? |
15467 | Was it worship? |
15467 | Was it worth it? |
15467 | Was she a true worshiper? |
15467 | Was she mad, that she should drive him away when_ she loved him_? |
15467 | Was she not taking an unheard- of stand? |
15467 | Was that the way to"believe"? |
15467 | Was that what it meant? |
15467 | Was there an atom of sincerity in the sentiment she sang? |
15467 | Was worship in spirit such a real thing as that? |
15467 | We have to go back to first principles and inquire afresh:''_ What is the will of God_?''" |
15467 | Were there laws of the unseen kingdom, which, if obeyed, brought demonstration? |
15467 | Were there such principles to be observed in the spiritual realm? |
15467 | Were they not all as he thought them in the days of his scepticism? |
15467 | What did he know about God? |
15467 | What did he mean? |
15467 | What did it mean? |
15467 | What did you do?" |
15467 | What do they believe that they did not? |
15467 | What do you make of it?" |
15467 | What do you think was on it? |
15467 | What do you think, child?" |
15467 | What if the priest were not acceptable, and she were to go back with the debt uncanceled-- with reconciliation not effected? |
15467 | What if there were a flaw in the offering? |
15467 | What is it?" |
15467 | What is the occupation that employs so much of my waking time and the powers that God has given me? |
15467 | What makes you so happy, Winnie?" |
15467 | What may I do to please Thee? |
15467 | What object could be dearer to the heart of God? |
15467 | What ought he, one unit among the whole, to do about it? |
15467 | What relation had he with it? |
15467 | What shall I do with them?" |
15467 | What should be done about it? |
15467 | What was it that the evening lacked? |
15467 | What was it? |
15467 | What would Mrs. Butterworth think? |
15467 | What would be a lifelong fellowship? |
15467 | What would he say to this? |
15467 | What would that be?" |
15467 | What would you think it meant?" |
15467 | What''s that you are saying? |
15467 | What''s the use?" |
15467 | What? |
15467 | When His friends thought Him beside Himself, and she with them sought to take Him away from His work, He said,''Who is My mother? |
15467 | When will he come?" |
15467 | Where was the true worship she had coveted and found? |
15467 | Where will it lead to?" |
15467 | Who ever heard of its being wicked to sing in the choir? |
15467 | Who shall give me power to choose, If the love of light I lose?" |
15467 | Who was she, who was only"just beginning to worship,"that she should entertain ideas contrary to them all? |
15467 | Who will stretch out his hands to lay hold upon the things of eternal life?" |
15467 | Why did he still hesitate? |
15467 | Why did his"here am I"linger for hours unsaid? |
15467 | Why do they plead poverty there? |
15467 | Why had she come? |
15467 | Why had she never seen it before? |
15467 | Why should an infinite God limit Himself to finite man in carrying out His great design? |
15467 | Why should she be disturbed from the commonly accepted course by a single sermon preached by a stranger, and he a young man? |
15467 | Why was it so hard to speak it before him? |
15467 | Why was she there that morning? |
15467 | Why, Winnie, not a bit of the fowl? |
15467 | Will He-- gather-- me?" |
15467 | Winifred, can it be a Christian life at all into any avenue of which Christ is an intrusion? |
15467 | With ears now open, should he not hear much which would cause his heart to burn within him? |
15467 | Wo n''t it be gay? |
15467 | Would God reveal Himself to such an atom in the wide universe as he? |
15467 | Would I act on them if I did? |
15467 | Would he call the choir that? |
15467 | Would he not be bound to serve Him? |
15467 | Would it have been better to go along and conform her course to the popular conscience instead of her own, perhaps very silly, one? |
15467 | Would she not be much annoyed? |
15467 | Would they not be like flaming brands, igniting one another in their fervent zeal? |
15467 | Would this one stand the test of love''s requirement? |
15467 | Yes, I am certainly that, but what is it all for? |
15467 | You are not going to desert us for some other field of conquest?" |
15467 | You are not ill, I hope?" |
15467 | You are not ill, certainly?" |
15467 | You know I was in the Berkshire Hills last summer? |
15467 | You know that man-- what''s his name?--he''s a stock broker, who sits down the right aisle? |
15467 | You know what James says about the''hearers only''of the word?" |
15467 | You not sing in the choir any more?" |
15467 | You will come for a little while, wo n''t you, child?" |
15467 | he observed,"eh-- well--"then, with a sly twinkle as though rather enjoying a coat that fitted tightly,"it does n''t sound very obscure, does it? |
23542 | ''Aw, wot''s de use, Mike?'' 23542 ''Did you see me?'' |
23542 | ''Fangs pulled, eh?'' 23542 ''Mebbe he knows dat, mebbe you knows dat; but how does I know dat?'' |
23542 | ''My deluded colored brother,''says he,''Do you appreciate the fact that you are going to a certain and horrible death? 23542 ''Well, what''s the matter with''em?'' |
23542 | ''What''s all this row about, anyway?'' 23542 ''You got it, did n''t you?'' |
23542 | ''You''re a blame fine figure of a fat man, are n''t you, now?'' 23542 But what was the inside history of the Forepaugh white elephant?" |
23542 | But where is the great loss? |
23542 | Did business improve? |
23542 | Did he return to the show? |
23542 | Did you have no insurance? |
23542 | Do the other animals possess the same barometric accomplishments? |
23542 | Have you found that early association with human beings makes the other animals easier to train? |
23542 | How did the scheme work? |
23542 | How did you settle it-- did he get damages? |
23542 | How do you account for it all-- her infatuation for the bear and her intuitive knowledge of the dispositions of the lions? |
23542 | How does a fake always work in New York? 23542 Improve? |
23542 | Is n''t that a high figure, even if they all die? |
23542 | What does the boss know about''em? 23542 What happened?" |
23542 | With what result? |
23542 | _]''It''ll make a good newspaper story, all right; but where do we come in on it?'' |
23542 | _]''Look''ee here, wot kinder a skin game be youse fellers runnin''here?'' |
23542 | ''Are n''t they good pictures?'' |
23542 | ''Did you observe the wonderful hypnotic power which overcame the prowess of the serpent?'' |
23542 | ''He spouts bum poetry about her, an''I wo n''t stand fer it, see? |
23542 | But say, would you believe it? |
23542 | Ever hear of''Big Pete''?" |
23542 | Leave the business? |
23542 | Me?'' |
23542 | Would it interest you to hear a rather unusual romance of the menagerie business?" |
21668 | what are the motive- forces which drive us into this process which we call philosophizing? |
21668 | why philosophize at all? |
21668 | And what is the deepest and furthest reach of our individual soul? |
21668 | And what precisely is the attitude of love towards the physical body? |
21668 | Are not both the"companions of men"and men themselves denied by the very nature of things the realization of this idea? |
21668 | But are there any permanent laws of Beauty by which we may analyse the verdict of this objective vision? |
21668 | But is there not an inevitable frustration and negation of this desire and this will? |
21668 | But it may be asked--"Why can not the physical body serve this necessary purpose of giving personality a local and concrete identity?" |
21668 | But what has common- sense to do with art? |
21668 | But what of"malice"all this time? |
21668 | Can"truth,"can"beauty,"can"goodness"be conceived of as existing in the universe apart from any individual soul? |
21668 | Does he find himself flowing mysteriously forth, along some indescribable"durational"stream, and, as he flows, feeling himself to be that stream? |
21668 | Does it despise the physical body? |
21668 | Does its activity imply an ascetic or a puritanical attitude towards the body and the appetites of the body? |
21668 | Does this hypothesis reduce the tragedy of life to a negligible quantity, or afford a basis upon which any easy optimism could be reared? |
21668 | How should it be that when it is the projection, into the heart of the objective mystery, of the soul''s manifold and complicated essence? |
21668 | How should it be that, when it is one aspect of the outpouring of the very stuff of the soul itself? |
21668 | How should we not understand it, when it has been in so large a measure created by our sorrow and our desire? |
21668 | How then can any philosophy be regarded as a transcript and reflection of reality when at the very start it refuses to take cognizance of this fact? |
21668 | Is it therefore no more than a shred or shard or husk or remnant of inconceivably soulless matter? |
21668 | Is it, for instance, when we know all the conditions of its activity, entirely limited? |
21668 | Is the freedom of the will an illusion? |
21668 | Is the substratum of the soul a portion of it also? |
21668 | My answer to the question"Why do we philosophize?" |
21668 | Of every new aesthetic judgment the question is asked,"does it conflict with private property?" |
21668 | Of every new idea the question is asked,"does it conflict with private property?" |
21668 | Of every new moral valuation the question is asked,"does it conflict with private property?" |
21668 | Or are we made aware of it, in each individual case, by a pure intuitive apprehension? |
21668 | Surely, such an one might protest, it is in the physical body that these find their unity? |
21668 | The sensations of pain and pleasure-- who can deny the primordial and inescapable character of these? |
21668 | We say"the universe"; yet may it not be that there are as many"universes"as there are conscious personalities in this unfathomable world? |
21668 | What does this"love"of his actually imply? |
21668 | What is this mysterious medium? |
21668 | What then is this invisible standard of arbitration? |
21668 | Who can say? |
21668 | Why then do I drop completely, or at least considerably modify, this stress upon the soul''s"creative"power in my final chapter? |
21668 | Why then, when it comes to this particular axiom of irrational common- sense, does he balk and sheer off? |
21668 | _ how_ have we to philosophize if our philosophy is to be an adequate expression of our complete reaction to life? |
21668 | let us leave out the soul, then, and confront the original dilemma"? |
2631 | But what is the good of it all in the face of Leviticus on the one hand and of palaeontology on the other? |
2631 | I am really grieved to be obliged to say that this third( or is it fourth?) |
2631 | It may be so, or it may not be so; but where is the evidence which would justify any one in making a positive assertion on the subject? |
21504 | Ah, is that you, Marsden? |
21504 | And if I have, what is that? |
21504 | And the passengers who wo n''t join-- what''s to be done with them? |
21504 | And what is your name, my man? |
21504 | And where is Nowell? 21504 Are none of the officers here?" |
21504 | But what is that? 21504 But where is he now? |
21504 | Can Alfred himself be here? |
21504 | Can not you tell me where he is? |
21504 | Could it be possible that Mr Henley or any of the crew of the_ Orion_ have escaped and given information of our being left on the island? |
21504 | Did he remember me? 21504 Do you think we are afraid of any such thing happening to us? |
21504 | Hang your proverbs-- what do you mean? |
21504 | Have you remarked anything strange about him lately, Marsden? |
21504 | Hillo, youngster, what are your dog and you come aboard here to do, I should like to know? |
21504 | How did you find your way here? |
21504 | It''s a comfort, is n''t it, Broom, to find that anybody thinks we shall escape? |
21504 | Marsden!--who are you? |
21504 | Ralph, Ralph, is it you indeed come to look for me? |
21504 | Shall we give him another broadside, sir? 21504 Shall we try to overtake her in the boat?" |
21504 | Though I get more kicks than halfpence, what are the odds? |
21504 | We have nothing to do and plenty to eat-- what more do we want? |
21504 | Well, Spratt, what do you think of her? |
21504 | What I have you entered the navy? |
21504 | What are you about, Grimes? |
21504 | What are you talking about, Mr Henley?--the crew not to be trusted? 21504 What can he want with us?" |
21504 | What can that be? |
21504 | What do you propose to do, then? |
21504 | What do you think of that little fellow out there? |
21504 | What is Monasticism but Buddhism under a slightly different form? 21504 What is it you are looking at?" |
21504 | What is it, Tommy? |
21504 | What is the matter? 21504 What is to be done, sir?" |
21504 | What is your demand? |
21504 | What ought to be done? |
21504 | What was the` Age of Reason''in France but Buddhism fully developed? 21504 What''s the matter? |
21504 | Where away? |
21504 | Where is Mr Grimes? 21504 Where was he then?" |
21504 | Who are you?--what do you know about the matter? |
21504 | Who is he-- pray tell me? |
21504 | Why do you ask, sir? |
21504 | Why should we wait a moment then? |
21504 | Why, what do you think of me and my craft that you refuse to join us? |
21504 | Will you tell me, have you ever had a son called after yourself? |
21504 | You wish to pay a visit to your grandfather, Mr Coventry, you say? |
21504 | Are you ready?" |
21504 | But, lads, where is Mr Henley and the others who were left here with you?" |
21504 | Can you tell me nothing more about him?" |
21504 | Dear old Solon, you will stick by me, I know, and help me to find out Alfred, wo n''t you? |
21504 | Did he talk about me, the poor dear little chap?" |
21504 | Do you know anything about Buddhism? |
21504 | Have you not found him?" |
21504 | He looked at the booby, and the booby looked at him, as much as to say,"What do you want with me?" |
21504 | He will probably lower his sails when we range up alongside, and ask why we fired at a quiet, harmless trader like him?" |
21504 | How came you here?" |
21504 | However, a minute afterwards, as I stood where he had at first addressed me, I heard him sing out--"What''s your name, youngster?" |
21504 | I awoke by hearing Johnny Spratt exclaim--"Where can she be?" |
21504 | Is not this the animal referred to by Job when he says,"Canst thou bind the unicorn with his hand in the furrow? |
21504 | Is that your dog? |
21504 | Is there no one here who can tell me about him?" |
21504 | One day observing the doctor looking graver than usual, I inquired, as he was passing along the deck,"What is the matter, doctor?" |
21504 | She may be the_ Orion_ or she may not-- will you make the attempt to get on board her? |
21504 | Should I run, or face him, and attempt to leap aside as he came near me? |
21504 | Solon looked up affectionately in my face, as much as to say,"Master, what shall I do?" |
21504 | The contemplation of such a catastrophe was not pleasant; but still, what was to be done? |
21504 | Thinks I to myself, I wonder now if you knew what sort of a rogue he is whether you would be so friendly? |
21504 | Were they about to charge us? |
21504 | What are hermits but Buddhists? |
21504 | What can be that red glare over where we just saw the ship?" |
21504 | What hope had I of escape? |
21504 | What say you to taking a boat and trying to catch a few? |
21504 | What were its results? |
21504 | What would become then of the unfortunate people on board? |
21504 | Who can picture his sensations? |
21504 | Who can they be?" |
21504 | Wilt thou believe him, that he will bring home thy seed, and gather it into thy barn?" |
21504 | Wilt thou trust him, because his strength is great? |
21504 | You betrayed your own shipmates, and do you think that I would trust you and such as you? |
21504 | You can spare him us?" |
21504 | You heard nothing of him at the Mauritius, I fear?" |
21504 | he exclaimed, hesitatingly, drawing deeply his breath;"is it you, is it you indeed?" |
21504 | nonsense,"exclaimed Mr Waller;"what should they want to do that for?" |
21504 | or will he harrow the valleys after thee? |
21504 | or wilt thou leave thy labour to him? |
21504 | what is the fellow about? |
21504 | what wind has brought you here in that rig?" |
21504 | who cried out, Marsden?" |
21504 | who wants me?" |
21504 | who''s going to mutiny?" |
25888 | Mon,he would say to a shirking, shrinking coolie second- story man,"mon, do you t''ink dis the time to sleep? |
25888 | And what is it they have gained-- what pledge of success in food, in safety, in propagation? |
25888 | Did she once look behind her, did she turn aside for a second, just to feel the cool silk of petals? |
25888 | Was it sheer lack of something to do? |
25888 | What could have raised the ire of such stolid neuters against one another? |
25888 | What crime of ancestors are they expiating? |
25888 | What toughts have you in your bosom, dat you delay de Professor''s household?" |
25888 | each time the dipteron passed? |
19509 | Ancestors? 19509 And how do you cure your patients who suffer from the error of typhoid fever?" |
19509 | And this is all? |
19509 | And what did you tell them? |
19509 | And what if I should forbid you to do anything of the sort? |
19509 | And you wish to follow in her footsteps, my dear? 19509 Are you going to let them take everything?" |
19509 | But how about the other mornings and all the afternoons? |
19509 | But what if the doctors said I had? |
19509 | But you are sure you believe that I should not have typhoid fever? |
19509 | But you cure sick people? |
19509 | But, Josephine,I added,"why do you include Spinney and Nick Long in the same category of wickedness?" |
19509 | But, my dear child, surely you do not mean to tell me that if I were to have typhoid fever, I should n''t have it? |
19509 | By what active means? 19509 Can you see him?" |
19509 | Caught anything? |
19509 | Did I? |
19509 | Did n''t I read in the newspaper this morning that he is a notorious spoilsman? |
19509 | Do n''t you see any difference between them? |
19509 | Do you mean that you gave it to them? |
19509 | Do you really, seriously think, Fred, that they are to be mentioned in the same breath as ladies? |
19509 | Does she cure all her patients? |
19509 | Fred, are there burglars in the house? |
19509 | Fred,whispers the dear woman at my side, breaking in upon my cogitation,"what were you like as a boy-- er-- a young man, I mean?" |
19509 | Had a bite? |
19509 | Has n''t he nearly ruined you? |
19509 | Has she ever studied medicine? |
19509 | Has the Supreme Court decided another case against you? |
19509 | How better than by having a silver wedding? |
19509 | How dare they? 19509 How long you been fishing?" |
19509 | How old are you, Winona? |
19509 | I do n''t usually praise you to your face and make an undue fuss about you, do I, dear? 19509 I give my consent? |
19509 | Is it he, dear? |
19509 | Is it the extra tub in the laundry, then? |
19509 | Is n''t it magnificent? |
19509 | Is n''t it perfectly ludicrous, Fred? 19509 Is not that rather to her credit?" |
19509 | Is that all? |
19509 | Light- hearted? 19509 No, no, on what day?" |
19509 | Nor had any special advantages or opportunities to investigate the nature of disease? |
19509 | Oh, Fred, who are they? |
19509 | Oh, was that the man? 19509 On the University foot- ball eleven?" |
19509 | Only, do you think it is the usual way? |
19509 | Queer? |
19509 | Sam,she gasped,"how many are there?" |
19509 | Seen the morning paper? 19509 Should you? |
19509 | Tell them? 19509 The usual way?" |
19509 | Then there is something? |
19509 | Then why are there so many physicians? |
19509 | Then why do you believe it? |
19509 | They said a great many Republicans would vote for you, did n''t they? 19509 Was Miss Jacket responsible for that?" |
19509 | Well, supposing I died, would n''t I be dead? |
19509 | Well, the Mayor then? |
19509 | Well, then, how can you say that he is n''t a bad fellow at bottom? |
19509 | What are you doing, Fred? 19509 What are you trying to do, Josephine?" |
19509 | What did he spend it for? |
19509 | What do you mean, Fred? 19509 What is it she wishes to do?" |
19509 | What is over and done with? |
19509 | What makes you think so? |
19509 | What right have they to do it? |
19509 | What were you like as a young woman? |
19509 | What would you have had me do? 19509 What_ do_ you mean, Fred? |
19509 | What_ do_ you mean, Sam? 19509 Where did they come from?" |
19509 | Who is it? |
19509 | Who was he? 19509 Why did you buy a pistol, then?" |
19509 | Why do you say''at times?'' |
19509 | Why should I wish to repeat it? |
19509 | Why, oh why, did you give your consent to his playing foot- ball? |
19509 | With Winona? 19509 Yet you will not cease to love me now that I am doomed to be only a poor private citizen for the rest of my days?" |
19509 | You do n''t mean to tell me, Fred, that you stopped and chatted with that wretch? |
19509 | You have never studied medicine, I believe? |
19509 | You took me in splendidly, did n''t you? 19509 A close fight, was n''t it? |
19509 | After all, who of us to- day would give a rush to be a king or queen? |
19509 | Am I, little lamb?" |
19509 | And by the shades of my forefathers, purified by pie, how shall we best help our sons and daughters to hitch their wagons to stars? |
19509 | And they thought you would be elected?" |
19509 | And what follows? |
19509 | And yet I hear Josephine ask, for the discussion is uppermost in our thoughts at the moment:"Do you wish Winona to become a second Miss Jacket?" |
19509 | Are these young giants and giantesses our children? |
19509 | Are you certain you have never seen him before? |
19509 | Binkey?" |
19509 | Bull- dog? |
19509 | But are not Christian Scientists doctors?" |
19509 | Cockroaches? |
19509 | Cut? |
19509 | Did n''t I, dear?" |
19509 | Did she not wear the same sweet, trusting smile, the same noble look in her dear eyes? |
19509 | Do n''t you know that I should like nothing better than to go with you every Sunday, and that I am ready to go to any church you will select?" |
19509 | Do n''t you think so? |
19509 | Do you happen to know what Miss Jacket''s antecedents were, and what her life has been?" |
19509 | Do you know what the period of an idolized daughter''s engagement seems to the disdained and discarded husband and father? |
19509 | Do you mean to tell me, dear, they are going to send you to Washington? |
19509 | Do you realize what the child wishes to do?" |
19509 | Does n''t he, dears?" |
19509 | Expense? |
19509 | Foot- ball? |
19509 | Fred, what do you suppose he could have used all that money for?" |
19509 | Good counsel? |
19509 | Had I any objection to the scheme? |
19509 | Have you ever entered a drawing- room just after a healthy, thorough fall of soot? |
19509 | Have you ever fished for pickerel through a hole in the ice? |
19509 | Have you ever seen an intercollegiate foot- ball field? |
19509 | He_ was_ sheriff of the county, was n''t he, dear?" |
19509 | How could I afford to move? |
19509 | How dare they?" |
19509 | I keep you from church? |
19509 | If you are to become merely men in petticoats, what will become of us? |
19509 | In appearance he does not seem to me to differ from nine- tenths of the young men who in the course of the last five years have said,"How d''y do?" |
19509 | It is not little Fred, but might it not have been? |
19509 | It is really true? |
19509 | Make a fell assault upon his hair and eyeballs? |
19509 | May not the cleverest man and woman fitly quail before the soul- hunger of eager adolescent youth? |
19509 | Now that I thought of it, what was the especial virtue of being a plain citizen? |
19509 | Of course you will accept? |
19509 | Oh, Fred,"she exclaimed, in a tone of solicitude,"do you really think it''s safe?" |
19509 | Perhaps I seem to be worked up on the subject? |
19509 | Shall I begrudge to my darlings the happiness that I have known in the too swiftly fleeting years of our married life? |
19509 | She looked from me to it and back again from it to me, then with a joyous laugh she exclaimed,"Really? |
19509 | The Governor?" |
19509 | Then I said, with as much cheer as I could muster:"And so you wish to practise medicine, Winona?" |
19509 | Then it was that I remarked:"So the house suits you, my dear?" |
19509 | Titus?" |
19509 | Was that not unassumingly and beautifully put, father?" |
19509 | Was there not insect powder? |
19509 | What are their names? |
19509 | What boots it to protest that we feel as young as we ever did? |
19509 | What can one say in the teeth of professional authority? |
19509 | What did he look like, Fred? |
19509 | What do you do?" |
19509 | What is it?" |
19509 | What is one to think of it all? |
19509 | What is to become of us when we go hence? |
19509 | What was the use of accepting if you did n''t intend to win if you could?" |
19509 | When she spoke at last it was to ask:"Have n''t you a pistol?" |
19509 | When?" |
19509 | Where the dickens, by the way, is Mrs. Sloane? |
19509 | Whither is civilization tending? |
19509 | Who has asked you? |
19509 | Who was it introduced Winona to Mrs. Titus, I should like to know?" |
19509 | Why did n''t you tell me before?" |
19509 | Why did they come to worry us? |
19509 | Why had I bought a six- shooter shortly after our marriage except to be equipped for just such an emergency? |
19509 | Why should they? |
19509 | Why should we move? |
19509 | Why were we born? |
19509 | Why? |
19509 | Why? |
19509 | Why? |
19509 | Will it never end? |
19509 | Will they catch him? |
19509 | Will they kill him? |
19509 | Yes, a thousand times yes; but who will counsel the counsellors? |
19509 | You remember the case of the burglars? |
19509 | You remember, perhaps, that Josephine induced me earlier in our wedded life to give a large party for her sister Julia? |
19509 | just think: you''re sure it was n''t Mr. Dyer or Mr. Benson? |
19509 | or happily? |
12924 | ;How does it bring to us a renewal of life?" |
12924 | ;How does it make the meaning of things clearer for us? |
12924 | A speck? |
12924 | And I to thee, by Heaven, My light steel life have given; When shall the knot be tied? 12924 And dost thou suffer, my brother?" |
12924 | And how is this, my little chit? |
12924 | And how is this? |
12924 | Art thou a Lombard, my brother? 12924 Art thou a Romagnole?" |
12924 | Art thou from Tuscany, brother? 12924 But canst thou marvel that, freeborn, With heart and soul unquelled, Throne, crown, and sceptre I should scorn, By thy permission held? |
12924 | But what fear''st thou? |
12924 | But what good came of it at last? |
12924 | But what with you Has one to do? |
12924 | Great chiefs, why sink in gloom your eyes? 12924 I might have bowed before, but where Had been thy triumph now? |
12924 | Not always, sir; but what of that? |
12924 | O chuse, O chuse, Lady Marg''ret,he said,"O whether will ye gang or bide?" |
12924 | O wha is this has done this deed, And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time of the year, To sail upon the sea? 12924 O where will I get a gude sailor, To take my helm in hand, Till I get up to the tall top- mast, To see if I can spy land?" |
12924 | What are the bugles blowin''for? |
12924 | What makes that front- rank man fall down? |
12924 | What makes the rear- rank breathe so''ard? |
12924 | What makes you look so white, so white? |
12924 | What''s that so black agin the sun? |
12924 | What''s that that whimpers over''ead? |
12924 | What''s that? |
12924 | Where can her dazzling falchion be? 12924 Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found?" |
12924 | Wherefore curl''st thou my hair? 12924 ( 2) How long an interval elapsed between the writing of the above two poems? 12924 ( 3) What is the story in the poem, and in what manner is it told? 12924 ( 4) How does Tennyson all through the poem make it a parable of human life? 12924 ***** BREATHES THERE THE MAN? 12924 ***** MEN AND BOYS The storm is out; the land is roused; Where is the coward who sits well housed? 12924 ***** WHAT CONSTITUTES A STATE? 12924 ***** WHAT IS THE GERMAN''S FATHERLAND? 12924 ***** WHERE ARE THE MEN? 12924 Ah, what avails the silver horn, And what the slender spear? 12924 All? 12924 Along the battery- line her cry Had fallen among the men, And they started back;--they were there to die; But was life so near them, then? 12924 And have they fixed the where and when, And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And murder sullies in heaven''s sight The sword he draws:-- What can alone ennoble fight? 12924 And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall we not proclaim That blood of honest fame Which no tyranny can tame By its chains? 12924 And what man, seeing this, And having human feelings, does not blush, And hang his head, to think himself a man? 12924 And what wealth then shall be left us, when none shall gather gold To buy his friend in the market, and pinch and pine the sold? 12924 And whence be the grapes of the wine- press that ye tread? 12924 And where are they? 12924 And where are ye to- day? 12924 And where are ye, O fearless men? 12924 And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? 12924 And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all? 12924 And wherefore doth your rout send forth a joyous shout? 12924 And you? 12924 Approach, thou craven, crouching slave; Say, is not this Thermopylae? 12924 Are the gleaming snows and the poppies red All that is left of the brave of yore? 12924 Are there none to fight as Theseus fought, Far in the young world''s misty dawn? 12924 Art thou the son of Tamburlaine, And fear''st to die, or with a curtle- axe To hew thy flesh, and make a gaping wound? 12924 Bavaria, or the Styrian''s land? 12924 Be we men, And suffer such dishonor? 12924 Before thy song( with shifted rhymes To suit my name) did I undo The persian? 12924 Bright jewels of the mine? 12924 Brother, wert thou born of it? 12924 But Jessie said,The slogan''s done; But winna ye hear it noo,_ The Campbells are comin''_? |
12924 | But for whom shall we gather the gain? |
12924 | But in the tent that night awake, I ask, if in the fray I fall, Can I the mystic answer make, When the angelic sentries call? |
12924 | But what are the deeds of to- day, In the days of the years we dwell in, that wear our lives away? |
12924 | But where to find that happiest spot below, Who can direct, when all pretend to know? |
12924 | But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? |
12924 | But who that fought in the big war Such dread sights have not seen? |
12924 | By their right arms the conquest must be wrought? |
12924 | Ca n''t you see I am dying? |
12924 | Can dungeons, bolts, or bars confine thee? |
12924 | Can sin, can death, your worlds obscure? |
12924 | Clan- Alpine''s best are backward borne-- Where, where was Roderick then? |
12924 | Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper? |
12924 | Dead? |
12924 | Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me Kneeling at my feet? |
12924 | Deep drank Lord Marmion of the wave, And, as she stooped his brow to lave,--"Is it the hand of Clare,"he said,"Or injured Constance, bathes my head?" |
12924 | Did a father''s first command Teach thee love or scorn of it? |
12924 | Did an Irish mother''s hand Guide thee in the morn of it? |
12924 | Did the hero''s evil prophecies come true? |
12924 | Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
12924 | Did you mind the loud cry When, as turning to fly, Our men sprang upon them, determined to die? |
12924 | Do our numbers multiply But to perish and to die? |
12924 | Do they thrill the soul of the years no more? |
12924 | Do we dream? |
12924 | Do you love it or slavery best? |
12924 | Does any change in style or trend of thought indicate the lapse of time? |
12924 | Does any falter? |
12924 | Does he ever admit that he judged them harshly? |
12924 | Does it astonish thee that I approved My warrior''s purpose, since a hostile fate Attempted to dethrone, not only me, But all Valhalla''s gods? |
12924 | Does it astonish thee that I should wish Quickly to rid myself of such a foe? |
12924 | Does thy land''s reviving spring, Full of buds and blossoming, Fail to make thy cold heart cling, Breathing lover''s vows for it? |
12924 | Dost think that cunning or that cowardice Could e''er have carved these wrinkles on my brow? |
12924 | Dost thou bring to me What thou didst promise? |
12924 | Ef I turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front parlor stairs, Would it just meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs? |
12924 | Else why so swell the thoughts at your Aspect above? |
12924 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
12924 | Fitz- Eustace where? |
12924 | Fond impious man, think''st thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day? |
12924 | For whom did he cheer and laugh else, While Noll''s damned troopers shot him? |
12924 | From the cold and frost collect them? |
12924 | From the vale On they come!--and will ye quail? |
12924 | Gone? |
12924 | HAKON.--Asleep? |
12924 | Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by Superstition''s rod To bow the knee? |
12924 | Has he for you? |
12924 | Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks? |
12924 | Has he to you in like manner through his poem given a truer conception of the nature and use of poetry? |
12924 | Has our love all died out? |
12924 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
12924 | Has the past no goading sting That can make thee rouse for it? |
12924 | Has the poem for you a music of its own which haunts you like a remembered vision? |
12924 | Hast been successful? |
12924 | Hast thou chosen, O my people, on whose party thou shalt stand, Ere the Doom from its worn sandals shakes the dust against our land? |
12924 | Have its altars grown cold? |
12924 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
12924 | Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
12924 | Hope ye mercy still? |
12924 | How has this poem influenced you? |
12924 | How is the story continued in"Sixty Years After"? |
12924 | How long shall they reproach us, where crowd on crowd they dwell,-- Poor ghosts of the wicked city, the gold- crushed hungry hell? |
12924 | How long the indolence, ere thou dare Achieve thy destiny, seize thy fame; Ere our proud eyes behold thee bear A nation''s franchise, nation''s name? |
12924 | How many hast thou broken? |
12924 | How soon, who knows? |
12924 | How wouldst thou tremble then, my lord, if thou Shouldst see it on his body? |
12924 | I met with Napper Tandy, and he tuk me by the hand, And he said,"How''s poor ould Ireland, and how does she stand?" |
12924 | If so, do you agree with him altogether? |
12924 | If the work be really poetry, its study ought to give a help toward the solution of the first great problems:"What is poetry?" |
12924 | If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort? |
12924 | Is it Prussia, or the Swabian''s land? |
12924 | Is it Switzerland? |
12924 | Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees? |
12924 | Is it the Mark where forges blaze? |
12924 | Is it the gurgle of water whose flow Ofttimes has come to him, borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees? |
12924 | Is it the land which princely hate Tore from the Emperor and the State? |
12924 | Is it the lightning''s quivering glance That on the thicket streams, Or do they flash on spear and lance The sun''s retiring beams? |
12924 | Is it the thunder''s solemn sound That mutters deep and dread, Or echoes from the groaning ground The warrior''s measured tread? |
12924 | Is it where the Master''s cattle graze? |
12924 | Is it where the grape glows on the Rhine? |
12924 | Is the effect of the rhythm optimistic as opposed to the pessimism of the"Triumph of Time,"and why? |
12924 | Is the emotional side of the hero as finely balanced as the intellectual side? |
12924 | Is the sable warrior fled? |
12924 | Is there never a one of ye knows how to pray, Or speak for a man as his life ebbs away? |
12924 | Is this all our destiny below,-- That our bodies, as they rot, May fertilize the spot Where the harvests of the stranger grow? |
12924 | Is this the end? |
12924 | Is''t Yon churchyard''s bowers? |
12924 | Is''t death to fall for Freedom''s right? |
12924 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | Lies not our father Cold and silent in death? |
12924 | Living on its first and best, Art thou but a thankless guest Or a traitor foe for it, If thou lovest, where''s the test? |
12924 | Mother Earth, are the heroes dead? |
12924 | Mother Earth, are the heroes gone? |
12924 | Must we ask a mother''s blessin''from a strange and distant land? |
12924 | Must we but blush? |
12924 | Must we but weep o''er days more blest? |
12924 | My sword, why clatter so? |
12924 | Never again shall my brothers embrace me? |
12924 | No more shall freedom smile? |
12924 | Now Tories all, what can ye say? |
12924 | Now, look at me Full in the eyes; consider well my brow: Hast thou among the thralls e''er met such looks? |
12924 | Now, my boys, what think ye of a wound? |
12924 | O Erin, must we leave you, driven by a tyrant''s hand? |
12924 | O Paddy dear, an''did you hear the news that''s goin''round? |
12924 | O lonely Himalayan height, Gray pillar of the Indian sky, Where saw''st thou last in clanging fight Our wingèd dogs of Victory? |
12924 | O loved ones lying far away, What word of love can dead lips send? |
12924 | O shade of the mighty, where now are the legions That rushed but to conquer when thou led''st them on? |
12924 | O, wherefore come ye forth, in triumph from the north, With your hands and your feet and your raiment all red? |
12924 | OLAF.--But wilt thou first not look at Olaf''s head? |
12924 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
12924 | Oh, why and for what are we waiting, while our brothers droop and die, And on every wind of the heavens a wasted life goes by? |
12924 | Once more, I say,--are ye resolved? |
12924 | Or have the lips of a sister fair Been baptized in their waves of light? |
12924 | Or shall the darkness close around them, ere the sun- blaze breaks at last upon thy story? |
12924 | Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir? |
12924 | Or teach as gray- haired Nestor taught? |
12924 | Or that I should retain my right Till wrested by a conqueror''s might? |
12924 | Or where the Danube''s surges roar? |
12924 | Or whips thy noble spirit tame? |
12924 | Or who a friend or foe can meet So generous as an Irishman? |
12924 | Page, squire, or groom, one cup to bring, Of blessèd water from the spring, To slake my dying thirst?" |
12924 | Pomerania''s strand? |
12924 | Say, darkeys, hab you seen de massa, Wid de muffstash on he face, Go long de road some time dis mornin'', Like he gwine leabe de place? |
12924 | Says he,"''Tis a snug little island; Sha''n''t us go visit the island?" |
12924 | Shall Britons languish, and be men no more? |
12924 | Shall I bring these songs together? |
12924 | Shall I now the end unfasten Of this ball of ancient wisdom? |
12924 | Shall I now these boxes open, Boxes filled with wondrous stories? |
12924 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischiefs breeding, With hireling hosts, a ruffian band, Affright and desolate the land, While peace and liberty lie bleeding? |
12924 | Shall it be love or hate, John? |
12924 | Shall mine eyes behold thy glory, O my country? |
12924 | Shall mine eyes behold thy glory? |
12924 | Shall not the self- same mould Bring forth the self- same men? |
12924 | Shall the ear be deaf that only loved thy praises, when all men their tribute bring thee? |
12924 | Shall the mouth be clay that sang thee in thy squalor, when all poets''mouths shall sing thee? |
12924 | Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease? |
12924 | Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall? |
12924 | Small was the band that escaped from the slaughter, Flying for life as the tide''gan to flow; Hast thou no pity, thou dark rolling water? |
12924 | Somebody''s hand hath rested here-- Was it a mother''s, soft and white? |
12924 | Stay in thy chamber near, My love; what wilt thou here? |
12924 | Sword, on my left side gleaming, What means thy bright eye''s beaming? |
12924 | Systematic study such as that suggested above will help in answering the questions,"What charm has this poem for us?" |
12924 | That I deceived a dreamer who despised The mighty gods,--does that astonish thee? |
12924 | That''s all very true: what more could he do? |
12924 | That''s hallowed ground where, mourned and missed, The lips repose our love has kissed;-- But where''s their memory''s mansion? |
12924 | The fight,-- How goes it, say?" |
12924 | The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear? |
12924 | The mellow note of bugles? |
12924 | The sturdy trooper straight repeated,"When all the village cheers us on, That you, in tears, apart are seated? |
12924 | Then what is man? |
12924 | There are three words to speak:_ We will it_, and what is the foeman but the dream- strong wakened and weak? |
12924 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim- band: Why had they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
12924 | These ancestral lays unravel? |
12924 | These waters blue that round you lave, O servile offspring of the free,-- Pronounce what sea, what shore is this? |
12924 | They are gone; there is none can undo it, nor save our souls from the curse: But many a million cometh, and shall they be better or worse? |
12924 | They fly, or, maddened by despair, Fight but to die,--"Is Wilton there?" |
12924 | They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done? |
12924 | Thou who tread''st its fertile breast, Dost thou feel a glow for it? |
12924 | To incantations dost thou trust, And pompous rites in domes august? |
12924 | To whom used my boy George quaff else, By the old fool''s side that begot him? |
12924 | Turn those tracks toward Past or Future, that make Plymouth rock sublime? |
12924 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
12924 | Wait''st thou his sign? |
12924 | Was Locksley Hall an inland or a seashore residence, and why? |
12924 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
12924 | Was it well for Amy to marry as she did? |
12924 | Was there a man dismayed? |
12924 | We have a right to ask of each poem three questions:"How does it charm our senses? |
12924 | We have no slaves at home.--Then why abroad? |
12924 | We know thee and we love thee best; For art thou not of British blood? |
12924 | We''ll cross the Tarnar hand to hand, The Exe shall be no stay; We''ll side by side from strand to strand, And who shall bid us nay? |
12924 | Westphalia? |
12924 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
12924 | Wha for Scotland''s king and law Freedom''s sword will strongly draw, Freeman stand, or freeman fa''? |
12924 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
12924 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
12924 | What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? |
12924 | What can he tell who treads thy shore? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What constitutes a state? |
12924 | What hallows ground where heroes sleep? |
12924 | What health to France, if France be she, Whom martial progress only charms? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the mystical vision he sees? |
12924 | What light is thrown on the character of his love by his outbursts against Amy? |
12924 | What man is there so bold that he should say,"Thus, and thus only, would I have the Sea"? |
12924 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
12924 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
12924 | What means this restless glow? |
12924 | What of the bow? |
12924 | What of the cord? |
12924 | What of the men? |
12924 | What of the shaft? |
12924 | What profit now that we have bound The whole round world with nets of gold, If hidden in our heart is found The care that groweth never old? |
12924 | What profit that our galleys ride, Pine- forest like, on every main? |
12924 | What sought they thus afar? |
12924 | What suggestions are there regarding the characters of Amy and Edith? |
12924 | What the roll Of drums? |
12924 | What then? |
12924 | What though no monument epitaphed Be built above each grave? |
12924 | What though no sculptured shaft Immortalize each brave? |
12924 | What to him are all our wars?-- What but death- bemocking folly? |
12924 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon or set of sun, Hand of man or kiss of woman? |
12924 | What''s hallowed ground? |
12924 | What''s hallowed ground? |
12924 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
12924 | What, Morris, a tear? |
12924 | What, was it a dream? |
12924 | When can their glory fade? |
12924 | When obedience to parental wishes and love are in conflict, which should be followed? |
12924 | When was ever his right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun? |
12924 | When wilt thou take thy bride?" |
12924 | When, doffed his casque, he felt free air, Around''gan Marmion wildly stare:--"Where''s Harry Blount? |
12924 | Where are the brave, the strong, the fleet? |
12924 | Where are the men who went forth in the morning, Hope brightly beaming in every face? |
12924 | Where be your tongues that late mocked at heaven and hell and fate? |
12924 | Where hast thou got it? |
12924 | Where is my cabin door, fast by the wildwood? |
12924 | Where is our English chivalry? |
12924 | Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O''Kellyn? |
12924 | Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? |
12924 | Where sea- gulls skim the Baltic''s brine? |
12924 | Where the sand drifts along the shore? |
12924 | Who found me in wine you drank once? |
12924 | Who gave me the goods that went since? |
12924 | Who guards to- day my stream divine?" |
12924 | Who helped me to gold I spent since? |
12924 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win-- ditto tails_? |
12924 | Who now shall lead thy scattered children forth, And long- accustomed bondage uncreate? |
12924 | Who raised me the house that sank once? |
12924 | Who would soothe your pain? |
12924 | Whose banner do I see, boys? |
12924 | Whose heart has ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
12924 | Whose love do you think was the greatest, Amy''s, or his, or the Squire''s? |
12924 | Why are the lines of this poem so easily carried in the memory? |
12924 | Why called Trochaic Octameter? |
12924 | Why champ your teeth in pain? |
12924 | Why change the titles of your streets? |
12924 | Why did I cross the deep? |
12924 | Why in the scabbard rattle, So wild, so fierce for battle? |
12924 | Why is the later one less popular? |
12924 | Why is this metre peculiarly adapted to the sentiment of"Locksley Hall"? |
12924 | Why rest with babes and slaves? |
12924 | Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_? |
12924 | Why the de''il dinna ye march forward in order? |
12924 | Why, then, and for what are we waiting? |
12924 | Why? |
12924 | Will Gaul or Muscovite redress ye? |
12924 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
12924 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
12924 | Will ye to your_ homes_ retire? |
12924 | Wilt thou strike a blow for it? |
12924 | World, art thou''ware of a storm? |
12924 | Would it be fair to judge of Amy and her husband by what he says of them in his first anguish? |
12924 | Would they not feel their children tread With clanging chains above their head? |
12924 | Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir? |
12924 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet,-- Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
12924 | You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
12924 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
12924 | Young Romance raised his dreamy eyes, O''erhung with paly locks of gold,--"Why smite,"he asked in sad surprise,"The fair, the old?" |
12924 | Your stage- plays and your sonnets, your diamonds and your spades? |
12924 | _( Chorus)__ King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | _( Chorus)__ King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | a soldier''s spirit in you all? |
12924 | am I all alone In the dreary night and the drizzling rain? |
12924 | and seest thou, dreaming in pain, Thy mother stand in the piazza, searching the list of the slain?" |
12924 | and silent all? |
12924 | and where art thou, My country? |
12924 | and wouldst thou know Why we should call it Father Land? |
12924 | and"How does it put a deeper meaning into the events it records?" |
12924 | and"What is its revelation to the life of our senses, our hearts, and our souls?" |
12924 | are not your beings pure? |
12924 | can a Roman senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death? |
12924 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
12924 | can man resign thee, Once having felt thy generous flame? |
12924 | cried the caliph;"is it, friend, a secret blow? |
12924 | do ye hear him where he comes? |
12924 | do ye know him as he comes, In thunder of the cannon and roll of the drums, As we go marching on? |
12924 | he cried,"my bleeding country save!-- Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
12924 | he gruffly said, A moment pausing to regard her;--"Why weepest thou, my little chit?" |
12924 | how shall I thank thee for all? |
12924 | is this the end? |
12924 | know ye not, Who would be free themselves must strike the blow? |
12924 | long abandoned by pleasure, Why did it dote on a fast- fading treasure? |
12924 | men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
12924 | must this last? |
12924 | must thou yield For every inch of ground a son? |
12924 | run you not, then, Just where you please and when?" |
12924 | say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John; Now which is your idee? |
12924 | say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? |
12924 | shall ne''er again The smile of thy most holy face, From thine ethereal dwelling- place, Rejoice the wretched, weary race Of discord- breathing men? |
12924 | silent still? |
12924 | the foe Who madly seeks your overthrow, Dread not his rage and power; What though your courage sometimes faints? |
12924 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
12924 | was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our sovereign lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre? |
12924 | what means the trampling of horsemen on our rear? |
12924 | what mortal hand Can e''er untie the filial band That knits me to thy rugged strand? |
12924 | what shall men say of thee, Before whose feet the worlds divide? |
12924 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
12924 | what treachery is here? |
12924 | who comes there? |
12924 | who goes there?" |
12924 | why do n''t ye proceed? |
12924 | why left I my hame? |
12924 | why left I the land Where my forefathers sleep? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? |
12924 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
23196 | A maid, who would not dream her ta''en to wife? |
23196 | After Mr. Dulcet has been introduced, and after he has expressed his mortification( or is it gratification?) |
23196 | Ah, can we ever know again Such friends as were those chosen men, Such men to drink, to bike, to smoke with, To worship with, or lie and joke with? |
23196 | And Peter Pan is dead? |
23196 | And when it''s over, will there be In his grey house above the Dee A mug to drain? |
23196 | And who, of wise and valiant men, Can answer those mute questionings? |
23196 | And will there still Be flappers in the surf at Rhyl? |
23196 | Can Morris- chair or papier- mache bust Revivify the failing pressure- gauge? |
23196 | Could you remember him as always kind? |
23196 | Do their small hot fingers wilt you? |
23196 | Do they stroke you and caress you Kiss the silky balls of fur, Take you to the priest to bless you And pretend to hear you purr? |
23196 | Doris, Vera, and Kathleen-- Where are they? |
23196 | FOR THE PRESENT TIME"If the trumpet speak with an uncertain sound, Who shall prepare himself for the battle?" |
23196 | Here is the tragedy: losing or winning Who profits a copper? |
23196 | In blessed singleness of heart, What heed has she for nations''wrath? |
23196 | In her boudoir( Her"sulking room"I call it: did you know It means that?) |
23196 | Is it waffles and syrup, or cinnamon toast? |
23196 | MY PIPE My pipe is old And caked with soot; My wife remarks:"How can you put That horrid relic, So unclean, Inside your mouth? |
23196 | One witless woman seeing there How tired, how contemptuous He is of all the smell and fuss Asks him,"Poor fellow, are you sick?" |
23196 | Or all the cruelties of men? |
23196 | Our Cotswold tramps? |
23196 | Remember just your lad, uncouthly good, Forgetting when he failed in spleen or spite? |
23196 | Say, can_ you_ fight? |
23196 | Say, can_ you_ shoot? |
23196 | Seeing a pulpit, who can silence keep? |
23196 | Smith:__ I do love poetry, do n''t you?_ Romance abides in humble things, And humble people understand That feathers from an angel''s wings_ Mrs. |
23196 | So War hath still some ruth? |
23196 | So all things end: and what is left at last? |
23196 | So many divers voices call, And cloud our souls with dull dismay: O when shall cry, clear over all, The Voice that none can disobey? |
23196 | THE YOUNG MOTHER Of what concern are wars to her, Or treaties broken on the seas? |
23196 | The Crown of Thorns hath reverence even now? |
23196 | What do_ you_ choose when you''re offered a treat? |
23196 | What does it matter where they build the tomb? |
23196 | When Mother says,"What would you like best to eat?" |
23196 | Who garners the fruit? |
23196 | Who invented goldenrod? |
23196 | Will we renew The dreams of all we hoped to do? |
23196 | and where are those Moons we saw at seventeen? |
23196 | some sense of shame? |
20555 | *****"_ But how_,"it will be asked,"_ are the Utopian children, one and all, induced to exert themselves? |
20555 | *****"_ But is there not too much joy in Utopia? |
20555 | A lady who was looking on remarked to me:"This is all very fine; but if this sort of thing goes on, where are we going to find our servants?" |
20555 | And if it is positive, what is its character, and how is it to be realised? |
20555 | And if not, will the path be continued beyond that abrupt turn in it which we call death? |
20555 | And if so, are we to regard it as the highest of motives to moral action? |
20555 | And not in this country only, but in the whole Western world? |
20555 | Are the results worth the sacrifice? |
20555 | Are those potencies worth realising? |
20555 | Are we therefore to predicate original depravity of a new- born lamb, of a new- laid egg, of an acorn, of a grain of wheat? |
20555 | Are we therefore to predicate original depravity of man''s body? |
20555 | Are we therefore to predicate original depravity of man''s heart and soul? |
20555 | But how does knowledge of God show itself? |
20555 | But how will this end be achieved? |
20555 | But how, it will be asked, is such a school as I have described to be kept going? |
20555 | But if education is hateful to the child, how is he to be induced to submit to being educated? |
20555 | But if there is honour for failure what shall be the guerdon of success? |
20555 | But is it possible, within the limits of one earth- life, to follow the path of self- realisation to its appointed goal? |
20555 | But is the assumption correct? |
20555 | But what chance have they? |
20555 | But what is knowledge? |
20555 | But what is one''s true self? |
20555 | But what is the value, what is the meaning of work of this kind? |
20555 | But what of the child''s emotional faculties? |
20555 | But what will be the signs of his advent? |
20555 | But when separate grants ceased to be paid for class subjects, were not the teachers free to teach them by rational methods? |
20555 | But where, it will be asked, are we to find Egerias to man our elementary schools? |
20555 | Can we wonder that in many cases the experiment has proved a failure? |
20555 | Do the two groups of faculties admit of being separately trained? |
20555 | Does the Utopian never act from a sense of duty? |
20555 | Does this mean that he has been conceived in sin? |
20555 | For if what grows is intrinsically evil, what can growth do for it but carry it towards perdition? |
20555 | Has he never to do anything that is distasteful to him?_"This objection raises an interesting question. |
20555 | How can he? |
20555 | How can you alter it?" |
20555 | How does she provide for the growth of what we have agreed to call the soul? |
20555 | How has this change been wrought? |
20555 | How is it to be secured? |
20555 | How is this anomaly to be accounted for? |
20555 | How many Wranglers, other than those who have or will become schoolmasters or college tutors, continue to study mathematics? |
20555 | How many had he then? |
20555 | How many of the First Classmen in Science, History, Law, and other Honour"Schools"continue to study their respective subjects? |
20555 | How, then, shall he be induced to walk in the path which the Law has prescribed for him? |
20555 | I said,"In such and such a part is yours the same as the leaf? |
20555 | If human nature is innately evil, if it has no inborn capacity for goodness or truth, what is there in it that is worth training? |
20555 | In what relation do the perceptive faculties stand to the expressive? |
20555 | Is it Christian? |
20555 | Is it in order that their teacher may show them how to master the more difficult words in their reading lesson? |
20555 | Is it intended that education should do all this? |
20555 | Is it possible to cultivate either group without regard to the other? |
20555 | Is it possible to devote this hour or half- hour to the training of perception, and that to the training of expression? |
20555 | Is it the same with Man? |
20555 | Is its ethical ideal positive or merely negative? |
20555 | Is life worth living? |
20555 | Is not that word_ God_? |
20555 | Is not the atmosphere too clear? |
20555 | Is not the sky too cloudless? |
20555 | Is the function of the sense of duty to enable us to do distasteful things? |
20555 | Is this the end of the average man? |
20555 | Or is it in order that elocution may be cultivated? |
20555 | Or is it in order that the teacher may help his pupils to understand what they are reading? |
20555 | Or shall we say that education is not so much the first act in the drama of salvation as the first rehearsal of the play? |
20555 | Shall we blame the Training Colleges because, with an unhappy past behind them, they have yet many things to unlearn? |
20555 | Shall we blame the local Education Authorities because, with an unknown future before them, they have yet many things to learn? |
20555 | Shall we blame the teachers as a body because too many of them are machine- made creatures of routine? |
20555 | The Board of Education? |
20555 | The Local Authorities? |
20555 | The Teachers? |
20555 | The Training Colleges? |
20555 | The question is, then, Does the system of education which prevails in all Western countries provide for self- expression on the part of the child? |
20555 | The source of our life, the ideal end of our being,--how shall we think about these if we may not speak of them as_ divine_? |
20555 | Their Inspectors? |
20555 | Those among us who are of larger discourse than the rest and less absorbed by personal aims, ask themselves mournfully: What is the meaning of life? |
20555 | What are we to infer from this? |
20555 | What does it all mean? |
20555 | What end does he set before the teachers of our elementary schools? |
20555 | What is all this doing for the child? |
20555 | What is different? |
20555 | What is it that grows? |
20555 | What is it that is present in embryo in the new- born child? |
20555 | What is it, then, that kills, in nine cases out of ten, the classical student''s interest in the masterpieces of antiquity? |
20555 | What is the culture of the child''s expansive instincts likely to do for him? |
20555 | What is the explanation of this significant fact? |
20555 | What is the purpose of the cycle of existence? |
20555 | What is the sense of duty? |
20555 | What part do we play in this mighty drama? |
20555 | What then? |
20555 | What tribute shall we pay to those who have fought and won? |
20555 | What use will he make of those years? |
20555 | What will happen to it when its subjects begin to ask it for its credentials? |
20555 | What will happen to the prize- winner when there are no more prizes for him to compete for? |
20555 | What will happen to them when that motive is withdrawn, as it will be when the child becomes the adolescent? |
20555 | What will it do for the boy who goes through it? |
20555 | What would have happened to the Utopian children if there had been no Egeria to lead them into the path of self- realisation? |
20555 | What, then, are the faculties which education is supposed to train? |
20555 | While the path of self- realisation is emancipating us from egoism and sensuality, in what general direction is it leading us? |
20555 | Whom shall we blame for the shortcomings of our elementary schools? |
20555 | Why are they doing this? |
20555 | Why are we here? |
20555 | Why are we to follow the path of self- realisation? |
20555 | Why is the Church, after having evangelised the West and ruled it for a thousand years, allowing it to slide back into paganism? |
20555 | Why is the teacher so ready to do everything( or nearly everything) for the children whom he professes to educate? |
20555 | Why should these ancient and famous institutions be content to train one only of the six expansive instincts instead of at least_ two_? |
20555 | Why should this be so? |
20555 | Why should this be? |
20555 | Will Nature admit final defeat? |
20555 | Will he continue to pursue knowledge for its own sake? |
20555 | Will he lead the child into the path of self- realisation, and so give a lifelong impetus to the growth of his soul? |
20555 | Will not the beauty of the Gospel stories, will not the sublimity of the Old Testament poetry, make their own appeal to these? |
20555 | Will the true self never be realised? |
20555 | With what purpose does God visit the world which has forfeited his favour, and what does he propose to do for ruined Nature and fallen Man? |
20555 | [ 39] And if there is a directer path to spiritual maturity than that which is ordinarily followed, is not the name for it_ Self- realisation_? |
20555 | _ But so is the human ideal in Utopia._ But what of the children who do not belong to Utopia? |
20555 | c''est à votre insu? |
21533 | Is this a reason against it? 21533 Is this hypothesis so laughable merely because it is the oldest? |
21533 | What demon is this that has taken possession of me? |
21533 | What have I done? |
21533 | Why act at all, the objection will be urged, if everything is foreseen by the Law? 21533 A man clothed in soft raiment? 21533 A prophet? 21533 A reed shaken with the wind? 21533 And his disciples asked him, saying: Master, who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born blind? 21533 And once more, why not another time all those steps, to perform which the views of Eternal Rewards so powerfully assist us? 21533 And that which even I must forget_ now_, is that necessarily forgotten for ever? |
21533 | And would this chastisement, multiplied millions of times without the faintest reason, never have stirred the conscience of the Church? |
21533 | And yet, who suspected this until he had gone out for a few minutes and then returned to the bed- room? |
21533 | As a final example, do not infant prodigies prove that men are not born equal? |
21533 | As children have in them no sin capable of meriting so terrible a punishment, tell me what answer can be given?" |
21533 | Because the human understanding, before the sophistries of the schools had disciplined and debilitated it, lighted upon it at once? |
21533 | But Herod said, John have I beheaded; but who is this of whom I hear such things? |
21533 | But what went ye out for to see? |
21533 | But what went ye out for to see? |
21533 | But why should not every individual man have existed more than once in this world? |
21533 | Can he have been in one and the self- same life a sensual Jew and a spiritual Christian? |
21533 | Can no reply be given to this terrible charge brought against Divinity? |
21533 | Can the millions of descendants of the mythical Adam have been chastised for a crime in which they have had no share? |
21533 | Could divine Law be less compassionate than human law? |
21533 | Could the assassin, who has lost all memory of the crime committed the previous evening, change his deed or its results in the slightest degree? |
21533 | Did he mention it only to ridicule the superstitions of his contemporaries, as seems evident from the_ Timæus_? |
21533 | Did the Fathers of the Church teach Pre- existence? |
21533 | Do I bring away so much from once that there is nothing to repay the trouble of coming back? |
21533 | Does Plato take metempsychosis seriously, as one would be tempted to believe after reading the_ Republic_? |
21533 | Does forgetfulness efface faults or destroy their consequences? |
21533 | Does human justice, in spite of its imperfection, punish the offspring of criminals? |
21533 | Does not the man, who commits suicide, himself push forward the hand on the dial of life, setting it at the fatal hour? |
21533 | Does not the study of Nature, at each step, belie this insensate waste, of which no human being would be guilty? |
21533 | Goethe writes as follows to his friend Madame von Stein:"Tell me what destiny has in store for us? |
21533 | Have such arguments ever been justified by the voice of conscience? |
21533 | Have travelled over in one and the same life? |
21533 | Have you never had remembrances of a former state?... |
21533 | How can such frightful inequalities be made to appear consistent with the infinite wisdom and goodness of God?... |
21533 | How can we be said to have been banished from a place in which we never were? |
21533 | In the lineage of these prodigies has there been found a single ancestor capable of explaining these faculties, as astonishing as they are premature? |
21533 | Is it not rash for us, in our profound ignorance, to criticise the workings of a boundless Wisdom? |
21533 | Is it not sheer blasphemy to attribute such folly to the Soul of the world? |
21533 | Is it possible to attribute to the influence of surroundings alone a degree of moral poverty so profound as this? |
21533 | Is it the Church which has always imposed_ the letter_ of the Bible and condemned all who have attempted to set forth_ its spirit_?] |
21533 | Is man to remain in a state of dejection and discouragement, as though some irreparable catastrophe had befallen him? |
21533 | Is not the Law strong enough to save him, if he is not to die; and if he is, have we any right to interfere?... |
21533 | Is or is not that which is called magnetic effluvia a something, a stuff or a substance, invisible and imponderable though it be?... |
21533 | Is there a previous life the elements of which have prepared the conditions of the life now being lived by each of us? |
21533 | Is this another instance, like the one just mentioned, of tampering with the writings of this Father of the Church? |
21533 | Jesus began to say unto the multitudes concerning John, What went ye out into the wilderness to see? |
21533 | On Charpignon recommending that she should try to turn_ her_ aside from her purpose, she replied:"What can I do? |
21533 | Or because I forget that I have been here already? |
21533 | Ought not baptism to have been instituted immediately after the sin, and should it not have been placed within the reach of all? |
21533 | St. Augustine said:"Did I not live in another body, or somewhere else, before entering my mother''s womb? |
21533 | The question, however, might be asked: How is the transition made from one kingdom to another? |
21533 | To every awakened soul the question comes: Why does evil exist? |
21533 | WHY DOES PAIN EXIST? |
21533 | What is the missing link? |
21533 | What soul could admit that the innocent should be punished for the guilty? |
21533 | When Jesus came into the coasts of Cæsarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am? |
21533 | Where in Nature can there be found such lack of proportion between cause and effect, crime and punishment? |
21533 | Where lingers eternal justice then? |
21533 | Wherefore are thrift and foresight lacking in so many men, who are consequently condemned to lifelong poverty and wretchedness? |
21533 | Wherefore has it bound us so closely to each other? |
21533 | Who is to interpret the Bible if it is an allegorical book? |
21533 | Who would affirm that the dimensions of space are limited to four? |
21533 | Why does the astral body leave the physical during sleep? |
21533 | Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
21533 | Why may not even I have already performed those steps of my perfecting which bring to men only temporal punishments and rewards? |
21533 | Why not try and understand the true meaning of the figurative statement before criticising? |
21533 | Why should I not come back as often as I am capable of acquiring fresh knowledge, fresh expertness? |
21533 | Why stretch out a hand to the man who falls into the water before our very eyes? |
21533 | Why this excess of intelligence, used mainly for the exploiting of folly? |
21533 | Would not this delay in itself be an injustice? |
21533 | [ Footnote 196: Does this obscure passage refer to the resurrection of the body?] |
21533 | genus attonitum gelidæ formidine mortis, Quid Styga, quid tenebras, quid nomina vana timetis, Materiam vatum, falsique piacula mundi? |
26412 | Are you really the grand duke? |
26412 | How do you like the Chinese? |
26412 | Amongst many curious things which I thus heard the following has always puzzled me with the conjecture,"Can there possibly be any truth in it?" |
26412 | But, you will ask, what besides amusing themselves have these Anglo- Chinese to do? |
26412 | Can do, no can do?" |
26412 | Does she hope to conquer, to change or to purify?" |
26412 | Her husband was dead, she had bewailed him and burnt incense at his grave, and what further could this poor, broken woman do? |
26412 | How then about foreigners''knowledge of the language? |
26412 | I have often heard the question asked--"Would the Chinese be any the better for becoming Christians?" |
26412 | One of the most frequent questions that I am asked at home is,"Do not Chinamen wear the finger- nails very long?" |
26412 | Putting aside all criticism of missionaries themselves, the vital question is--"Will they succeed in converting China to Christianity?" |
26412 | Sometimes, in order to keep up his courage, I have even heard him shout"I see you,""I know who you are,""I''m coming,""Who''s afraid?" |
26412 | What could be done in the face of such horrifying circumstances? |
26412 | What has been the cause of this descent? |
26412 | What to say anent missionaries? |
26412 | With the thermometer standing at ninety degrees in your bedroom you frame the mental query"Can I last through the day?" |
26412 | she inquired with striking accent;"are you really a prince?" |
17958 | A machine? 17958 And have you communicated with God, Lee Rynason?" |
17958 | And they''re using them, eh? |
17958 | And what about the Outsiders? 17958 And what about the men outside? |
17958 | And what would happen if you_ had_ to step on them to make your money? 17958 Anything else?" |
17958 | Are there memories of Tebron''s conversation with Kor? |
17958 | Are there memories of Tebron''s conversation with Kor? |
17958 | Are there memories of what was said? |
17958 | Are they using the machine... the altar? |
17958 | Are we to abandon all progress? 17958 Are you all right? |
17958 | Are you sure you are n''t afraid of your own mob? |
17958 | But are n''t primitive languages usually composed of simple, basic words and concepts? 17958 But things are just beginning to break for me-- did you see my note this afternoon?" |
17958 | But you can remember these if you try? |
17958 | Butchery? 17958 Can you explain your term more fully?" |
17958 | Can you find among any of the rest of Tebron''s memories any thoughts about Kor? |
17958 | Can you get one for me? |
17958 | Can you go down and see what they''re doing? 17958 Can you imagine actually feeling him, right next to you in your mind like you were one person, hating you?" |
17958 | Can you still believe that Kor is a god? 17958 Check back? |
17958 | Could n''t there have been direct contact between the Hirlaji and the Outsiders back when the Hirlaji were just evolving out of the beast stage? |
17958 | Did you also know that he''s been buying men here to stand with him in case someone else is appointed? |
17958 | Did you make any effort at all to keep him from finding out too much about us? |
17958 | Do they have souls? |
17958 | Do they know what you''re saying to me? |
17958 | Does it give you a right to live, while you slaughter the Hirlaji? |
17958 | Has it occurred to you, Lee, that if these horses_ are_ the Outsiders, that maybe they know a little more than we do? 17958 Have you all got plastic for brains? |
17958 | Have you been preaching to the Hirlaji? |
17958 | He just looked at you? |
17958 | How am I to suppress the race? 17958 How did he unite the planet?" |
17958 | How did the men find out about Kor? |
17958 | How did they bring her down? |
17958 | How is this known? 17958 How long ago was all this? |
17958 | How many men are we taking with us? |
17958 | How many of the Hirlaji do you think we''ll have to kill to make it look important to the Council? |
17958 | I suppose I have n''t even put a doubt in your mind about them? 17958 In any case, is there a better man on the planet?" |
17958 | Including the information that these sciences were prohibited? |
17958 | Is anyone picking this up? 17958 Is butchery your only goal in life, Manning?" |
17958 | Is n''t this a bit out of your line? |
17958 | Is she one of those vices you were telling me about, Manning? |
17958 | Is that the only reason you can think of that I might have for wanting to prevent a massacre? |
17958 | Is that true, Manning? 17958 Is that what''s really bothering you?" |
17958 | Is that your pitch to the Council? |
17958 | Is this other race so much more advanced than we are? |
17958 | Jules and Stoworth? 17958 Lee, do you hear me?" |
17958 | Lee, where are we? |
17958 | Lee? |
17958 | Manning? |
17958 | No purpose to the report? |
17958 | No, but really-- what do you think of that idea? 17958 Nothing else?" |
17958 | Our new- found knowledge is n''t doing us much good, is it? |
17958 | Part of Kor? |
17958 | Ready? |
17958 | Report me to the Council? 17958 So Mara''s against you too?" |
17958 | So now they''re people to you, Lee? 17958 So that''s your purpose?" |
17958 | Speaking of indecent reports, what have we turned up on their sex lives? |
17958 | Tebron spoke with Kor? |
17958 | The Hirlaji? 17958 The same day?" |
17958 | The time does n''t matter, does it? |
17958 | Then it was Tebron who abolished war on Hirlaj? |
17958 | Then it''s real? 17958 They built their computers in the grand manner, did n''t they?" |
17958 | This look familiar to any of you? |
17958 | This order came from the machine? |
17958 | Unless they''re the Outsiders after all? |
17958 | Was Tebron Marl king of all Hirlaj? |
17958 | What I need is some good healthy vice, is that what you mean? |
17958 | What I want to know is, why did n''t any of the rest of you see this? |
17958 | What about the weapons? |
17958 | What are people? 17958 What are you?" |
17958 | What did this machine say about us? |
17958 | What did you expect? 17958 What do you mean by that?" |
17958 | What do you think of your horses now, Lee? |
17958 | What do you want? |
17958 | What happened to your arm? 17958 What if they capture you too?" |
17958 | What makes you so sure of that? |
17958 | What the hell are you talking about? |
17958 | What the hell are you trying to do, Lee? 17958 What were the sciences of Kor?" |
17958 | What were the sciences of Kor? |
17958 | What were these sciences? |
17958 | What were you doing among those men who came at me on the steps earlier? |
17958 | What were you doing with him, anyway? 17958 What will you do,"Malhomme asked,"if Manning decides that''s enough cause to kill the Hirlaji?" |
17958 | What''s our problem today? |
17958 | What''s this about a city, Lee? 17958 What''s this nonsense about some damned block you ran into? |
17958 | What''s wrong? |
17958 | What''s your mission now? |
17958 | What, then? |
17958 | Where are they? 17958 Where is the machine?" |
17958 | Where''s Mara? |
17958 | Who said that? |
17958 | Who_ is_ religious in these days? |
17958 | Why are you unloading the arsenal? |
17958 | Why ca n''t you remember this conversation? |
17958 | Why did you want me to stay? |
17958 | Why did you want to see me? |
17958 | Why should I? |
17958 | Why were the Hirlaji supposed to stay away from us? |
17958 | Why? 17958 Why? |
17958 | Why? |
17958 | Why? |
17958 | Will an alien god do? |
17958 | With stunners? |
17958 | Would it make any difference if they had n''t? |
17958 | You always have to have a cause, do n''t you, Rene? |
17958 | You know-- why should I crack down on drinking or smoking, for instance, when I do it myself? |
17958 | You spoke with Kor? |
17958 | You think that will impress the Council? 17958 You trust them?" |
17958 | You want to warn me to stay away from her? |
17958 | You''re busy? |
17958 | You''re not coming? |
17958 | You''re pretty sure that what you''ve been getting out of that horseface''s head is real? |
17958 | You''re religious? |
17958 | You''re sure of that? |
17958 | You''re telling them that Hirlaj is an important archaeological area and that''s why you should get the governorship? |
17958 | _ Can you remember_ the actual communication? |
17958 | _ For their what?_Rynason stood up, and looked toward the city; he could see no movement there. |
17958 | _ Is_ it better, Manning? |
17958 | A merely alien science? |
17958 | All right, what''s their reaction going to be when they realize that the Outsiders, their god, overestimated us? |
17958 | An incomplete science? |
17958 | And who would lead such a suicidal attack? |
17958 | Anybody disagree?" |
17958 | Are the stars so dangerous?" |
17958 | Are they people to you?" |
17958 | Are we supposed to be hiding anything?" |
17958 | Are you going to kill them?" |
17958 | Are you hurt?" |
17958 | Are you hurt?" |
17958 | Are you sure? |
17958 | Are you trying to measure these aliens by our standards? |
17958 | But could he be sure that the Hirlaji were as harmless as they seemed? |
17958 | But could he credit those memories of a voice of an alien god? |
17958 | But have you considered that maybe when the Outsiders pulled out of our area they simply moved on elsewhere? |
17958 | But is it a good idea? |
17958 | But it does n''t necessarily prove that these... how many of them are there? |
17958 | But why do n''t you kiss me or something?" |
17958 | But why should the Hirlaji be able to use it?" |
17958 | But... when I disconnected the wires of the telepather, Horng looked at me.... Have you ever looked into his eyes, up close? |
17958 | Can you see them any more clearly?" |
17958 | Could he have simply claimed to have done so in an effort to stabilize his own power? |
17958 | Could they believe what the machine of the Outsiders told them, after it had been proven fallible? |
17958 | Damn it, since when do machines make guesses? |
17958 | Did n''t she tell you that the altar is just a computer? |
17958 | Did they know that? |
17958 | Did you put it that way to them?" |
17958 | Direct contact with a mind so alien?" |
17958 | Do n''t you realize that?" |
17958 | Domestic tranquillity, shall we say?" |
17958 | For how many days had he fought toward this? |
17958 | Have I ever expostulated to you upon the Janus- coin that is good and evil?" |
17958 | Have you found them yet?" |
17958 | Have you got a crazy horse on your hands?" |
17958 | He had scaled one of these ancient walls, but would they try it? |
17958 | He raised the interpreter''s mike and said,"How long ago?" |
17958 | He sat further back into the chair and said,"Why?" |
17958 | He was a warrior, and a quester... how could he give up all such pursuits, and how could he be expected to force all his people to do the same? |
17958 | How did this happen?" |
17958 | How long would they wait? |
17958 | How well could they communicate in such a language?" |
17958 | Humans? |
17958 | If the alarm turned out to be a false one, would he be as easily able to stop them then? |
17958 | If you start any violence that is n''t necessary....""What will you do, Lee?" |
17958 | Is anyone there?" |
17958 | Is he still trying to work the townsmen up against them?" |
17958 | Is it possible to convince each of them of the necessity for abandoning forgetting all questing?" |
17958 | Is that where they are?" |
17958 | It was definitely Outsiders work, but what was it? |
17958 | It''s so strange, in that language of theirs... those thin, high voices, and the echoes....""They''re holding you prisoner?" |
17958 | Lee, do you think that''s really the Outsiders?" |
17958 | Lee, what are you doing? |
17958 | Manning''s voice came coldly through the radioset:"Are you giving orders now, Lee?" |
17958 | Mara She wanted to save the aliens, but did they want to be saved? |
17958 | New:"Where''s Mara?" |
17958 | No purpose? |
17958 | Not one doubt?" |
17958 | Now that the ancient, muddled religion had been brought to life again, could it have the same hold on them that it had once had? |
17958 | Now we can avoid arguments-- right, Lee? |
17958 | Now what do you think of that?" |
17958 | Old:"Where''s Mara? |
17958 | Once they were turned loose, what could stop them? |
17958 | Or are you one of them now?" |
17958 | Or can you?" |
17958 | Or do you have a better one?" |
17958 | Or had they degenerated physically through the centuries? |
17958 | Or later, during the Renaissance?" |
17958 | Or reasoning beings you can talk to, communicate with?" |
17958 | Or would he even try? |
17958 | Quaint, are they? |
17958 | Rynason leaned over to Mara and murmured,"What''s his problem today?" |
17958 | Rynason watched the grey being staring silently up those broken steps, and asked softly,"What are you doing?" |
17958 | Slaughtering the only intelligent race we''ve found?" |
17958 | So if they cooperated with the survey team on codifying and recording their history, who was the servant? |
17958 | Sometimes you might ask your alien friends up there, Lee... what did they get out of choosing peace?" |
17958 | Sweat broke out on his back-- his own, or Tebron''s? |
17958 | Tebron broke the power of the priesthood, did n''t he?" |
17958 | Tell me, old Kor, what do we do now? |
17958 | The Outsiders? |
17958 | The part about this Tedron or whatever his name was?" |
17958 | Their god is real?" |
17958 | They did n''t want to see that... because they hated it, or because they wanted it? |
17958 | Think of it as clearing the area of hostile native animal life-- that comes under the duties of a governor, now does n''t it?" |
17958 | Twenty- five? |
17958 | WARLORD OF KOR by TERRY CARR GOD, MACHINE-- OR LISTENING POST FOR OUTSIDERS? |
17958 | Was he with them, then? |
17958 | Was it a threat in any real sense, or was Manning just letting off steam? |
17958 | Was that true about the governorship?" |
17958 | Was this land of mercenary, slipshod rush really what had carried Earthmen to the stars? |
17958 | What are they doing, anyway?" |
17958 | What could have happened during that conversation that would have caused its memory to be so deeply buried? |
17958 | What if Hirlaj does n''t turn out to have any natural resources worth exploiting-- a whole civilization has been here for thousands of years? |
17958 | What if I had a telepather, and I could link minds with Horng? |
17958 | What if the colony here starts to falter, and the men move on?" |
17958 | What makes you so sure that they''re dangerous?" |
17958 | What the hell do you mean, you wo n''t have much to report?" |
17958 | What use was all this, the killing, the blood and sweat and pain? |
17958 | What was she doing with Manning? |
17958 | What will they do?" |
17958 | What''s going on there?" |
17958 | What''s happened to the woman?" |
17958 | When did this occur?" |
17958 | While you were looking into Horng''s mind, how do you know he was n''t spying in yours? |
17958 | Who was he?" |
17958 | Why? |
17958 | Why?" |
17958 | Will you help me once more?" |
17958 | Wrong ones, at that?" |
17958 | You had an equal hookup, right?" |
17958 | You understand me?" |
17958 | You''ve always like peaceful settlements, have n''t you?" |
26974 | So you are a Cornishman, are you? |
26974 | Well, what do you want to know that for? 26974 Well, you sent for me, and I have come; what do you want?" |
26974 | What is that to you? |
26974 | I wonder if you were born there in one of those cottages? |
1994 | ''I am disinclined to seem impertinently curious,''I answered,''but the ladies in this fair, smiling country-- have the gods made them poetical?'' 1994 ''In what can my knowledge of the Paradise of Poets be serviceable to you, sir?'' |
1994 | ''Is there nobody here,''said I,''who is happy with his Ideal-- nobody but has exchanged Ideals with some other poet?'' 1994 ''Then wherefore,''I interrupted,''do I see Robert Burns loitering with that lady in a ruff,--Cassandra, I make no doubt-- Ronsard''s Cassandra? |
1994 | And to me, the least and the youngest, what gift for the slaying of ease? 1994 Any of them married?" |
1994 | For where was that Charity that buildeth upon the foundation of Humility, which is Christ Jesus? 1994 How?" |
1994 | Is he a poet like Sir Walter Scott? |
1994 | Mr. Witham,said Lady Violet,"did you meet your ideal woman when you were in the Paradise of Poets?" |
1994 | Sir,said Poole, looking Mr. Utterson in the eyes,"was that my master''s voice?" |
1994 | Very well, fork it out; you must give a dinner, all new fellows must, and_ you_ are not going to begin by being a stingy beast? |
1994 | Where, or at what time, was I ever innocent? |
1994 | Who ever loved like the poets? |
1994 | Why? |
1994 | Will it last? 1994 ''And now, will you kindly tell me why these ladies are here, if they were not poets?'' 1994 ''May we not be let off with the preface?'' 1994 ''May we not glance at the table of contents and be done with it?'' 1994 ( 2) The Russian Princess, her friend( need I add that, to meet a public demand,_ her_ name was Vera?). 1994 And then what do her words mean? 1994 And what do the nested swallows chirrup to each other in their sleep? 1994 And what was the end of it all? 1994 And who? 1994 Are we to end happily, with a marriage or marriages, or are we to wind all up in the pleasant, pessimistic, realistic, fashionable modern way? 1994 As to Dick, is he to be a Lothario, or a lover_ pour le bon motif_? 1994 But have they penetrated into the chill galleries of the Castle of Udolpho? 1994 But how to be in earnest, how to keep the note of disbelief and derisionout of the memorial"? |
1994 | But what had Miriam and the spectre of the Catacombs done? |
1994 | But where are they now? |
1994 | Can anything be more"amazing horrid,"above all as there are mysterious figures in and about the tower? |
1994 | Can this be she-- The lady who knelt at the old oak tree?" |
1994 | Can we suppose that Monica laughed, or was it only the heathen father who approved of"roughing it?" |
1994 | Close to the letter of the Greek he usually keeps, but where are the surge and thunder of Homer? |
1994 | Did the ghost of Darius, in"AEschylus,"frighten the Athenians? |
1994 | Do we not see and hear a little too much of him? |
1994 | Do you care for the"first lover,"the Photographer''s Young Man? |
1994 | Does not this solve the vexed question whether lobsters are fish, in the French sense?" |
1994 | Get over all this quicker? |
1994 | Have they shuddered for Vivaldi in face of the sable- clad and masked Inquisition? |
1994 | He ends with,"How much tin have you got?" |
1994 | Here he finds, in a large chest-- what do you suppose he finds? |
1994 | How can I discount the"personal bias"? |
1994 | How could I do a Tory leader? |
1994 | How did she leave her home with Paris-- beguiled by love, by magic, or driven by the implacable Aphrodite? |
1994 | How did the passion come to them? |
1994 | How far it is really beautiful how can I tell? |
1994 | How long did it stay? |
1994 | How many sisters have you?" |
1994 | How? |
1994 | In the Paradise of Poets has he discovered the secret? |
1994 | Is Mary to drown the baby in the Muckle Pool? |
1994 | Is he to plunge into vice till everybody is virtuous again? |
1994 | Is it not the motive of half our politics, and too much of our criticism? |
1994 | Is she to suffer the penalty of her crime at Inverness? |
1994 | Is this not a pleasing opportunity for Gentlemen, and Others, whose Aunts have beheld wraiths, doubles, and fetches? |
1994 | Is this not a very original, striking, and affecting situation; provocative, too, of the utmost curiosity? |
1994 | It is blasphemy to ask the question, but is the ghost in"Hamlet"quite a success? |
1994 | Lady Alice de la Barde hears of the death of her knight:--"ALICE"Can you talk faster, sir? |
1994 | Most of us have gone through that, the Millevoye phase, but who else has shown such a wise and gay acceptance of the apparently inevitable? |
1994 | Now, does any grown- up man call this state of society civilisation? |
1994 | Of what do babies dream? |
1994 | On the frontier of Italy, why should he not do as the Italians do? |
1994 | Poor man, why should I stay thee? |
1994 | Probably she already had a lover; how should she behave to that lover? |
1994 | Radcliffe?). |
1994 | Seek''st thou for maggots such as have affinity With those in thine own brain, or dost thou think That all is sweet which hath a horrid stink? |
1994 | Shall not my soul be subject to God, for of Him is my salvation? |
1994 | That she did so was no good reason for hanging or burning a number of parishioners; but, did she float, and, if so, how? |
1994 | The Smolletts were not"kinless loons"; they had connections: but who, in Scotland, had money? |
1994 | The great question, which I shall not answer, is,_ what did the Black Veil conceal_? |
1994 | The literary life is very like any other, in London, or is it that we do not see it aright, not having the eyes of genius? |
1994 | The men at Oxford asked,"Did he come in the''One Hoss Shay''?" |
1994 | The story was entitled"Where is Rose?" |
1994 | Then they all prayed, and a Voice came from under the bed:"Would you know the Witches of Glenluce?" |
1994 | Then, why, some one may ask, write about"The Death Wake"at all? |
1994 | There_ must_ be an explanation of proceedings so highly unconventional, and what can the reason be? |
1994 | They had not travelled long together before the young lady, turning to the squire, said,"_ Vous parlez francais, Monsieur_?" |
1994 | This needs a great deal of subtlety, and what is to become of the hero? |
1994 | To be sure Roderick does befriend"a reclaimed street- walker"in her worst need, but why make her the_ confidante_ of the virginal Narcissa? |
1994 | Was her heart ever with Paris? |
1994 | Well, one has run away to literature since, but where is the matutinal beer? |
1994 | What did he want? |
1994 | What did she want? |
1994 | What did the lady in the Geni''s glass box want with the Merchants? |
1994 | What had occurred? |
1994 | What harm can the story do to a child? |
1994 | What is frank, natural verse, if not that of the old_ Pastourelles_? |
1994 | What is her secret? |
1994 | What is poetical, if not the"Song of Roland,"the only true national epic since Homer? |
1994 | What is the mysterious art by which these things are done? |
1994 | What is_ Qrart_? |
1994 | What makes the well- told story seem real, rich with life, actual, engrossing? |
1994 | What new idea is gained by this title but one subversive of all credit-- which the tale should force upon us-- of its truth?" |
1994 | What so natural as that, disguised as a page, her Majesty should come spying about the Court of Holyrood? |
1994 | What was it that Mr. Green knew? |
1994 | What was it-- the"sight to dream of, not to tell?" |
1994 | What was so taking in him? |
1994 | What was the horror she revealed to the night in the bower of Christabel? |
1994 | What was the use of it, who ever spoke in it, who could find any sense in it, or any interest? |
1994 | What''s your father?" |
1994 | When did the Muse say good- bye? |
1994 | Whence did she come? |
1994 | Where are Warrington, and Foker, and F. B.? |
1994 | Where is the back- kitchen? |
1994 | Where is the lad of twenty who has written as well to- day-- nay, where is the mature person of forty? |
1994 | Where is there_ naivete_ of narrative and unconscious charm, if not in_ Aucassin et Nicolette_? |
1994 | Where is"Ajalon of the Winds"? |
1994 | Where was the secret? |
1994 | Where_ was_ Rose? |
1994 | Who was she? |
1994 | Who was the spectre? |
1994 | Who were these base and pitiless dastards? |
1994 | Who will end for me the novel of which Byron only wrote a chapter; who, as Bulwer Lytton is dead? |
1994 | Why dost thou make Haut- gout thy sole divinity? |
1994 | Why is Hermes"The Flitter"? |
1994 | Why reward Strap with her hand? |
1994 | Why rouse again the nightmare of a boy of twenty? |
1994 | Why should they not be revived, these strangely coloured and magical dreams? |
1994 | Would I contribute? |
1994 | Would I do a"leader"? |
1994 | Would life be worth living( whatever one''s religious consolations) on these terms? |
1994 | You fellow, what''s your name?" |
1994 | _ Ou le didacticisme va t''il se nicher_? |
1994 | what meant all these conversations between the Fat Knight and_ Ford_, in the"Merry Wives"? |
1994 | { 11} Can not the reader guess? |
1994 | { 11} If Coleridge knew, why did he never tell? |
22085 | How can our Nation give out of the fulness of the life that is in it, and how can a new Indian University help in the realisation of this object? 22085 I quietly said to myself, Kaloo Singh, Kaloo Singh, who sent you here? |
22085 | In realising this, is our sense of final mystery of things deepened or lessened? 22085 A failure? 22085 And does the plant then exert itself to make one overwhelming reply, after which response ceases altogether? 22085 And is it not shocks of adversity, and not cotton- wool protection, that evolve true manhood? 22085 And is it not shocks of adversity, and not cotton- wool protection, that evolve true manhood? 22085 And lastly, when by the blow of death, life itself is finally extinguished, will it be possible to detect the critical moment? 22085 Another striking experiment was to show how ordinary plants could be made sensitive by the mere process of amputation of the balancing half? 22085 Are there any such spontaneously beating tissues in a plant? 22085 Are these dead failures, so utterly unrelated to some great success that we may acclaim to day? 22085 Are they your countrymen? 22085 Are we of to- day to be debtors only? 22085 Are we to be a living nation, to be proud of our ancestry and to try to win renown by continuous achievements? 22085 By what favourable circumstances will this rate of transmission become enhanced, and by what will be retarded or arrested? 22085 Can anything small or circumscribed ever satisfy the mind of India? 22085 Could plants be made similarly to write their own autographs revealing their hidden story? 22085 DUTY TO OUR COUNTRY And lastly, what are our duties to our country? 22085 DUTY TO SELF As regards duty to self, can there be anything so inclusive as being true to your manhood? 22085 Do you think he suffered in vain and that his voice remained unheard? 22085 Does advance of science hold any such possibility? 22085 Does she not realise that it is helpless passivity that directly provokes aggression? 22085 Does she not realise that it is helpless passivity that directly provokes aggression?... 22085 Does this latent period undergo any variation with external conditions? 22085 For do we not find something very like it in Mediaeval Europe? 22085 For the attainment of this exalted condition, also, is it not necessary to have previous storage, with a consequent bubbling overflow? 22085 For the trust that you imposed on me could I do anything less than place before you the highest that I knew? 22085 Has her own history and the teaching of the past prepared her for some temporary and quite subordinate gain? 22085 Has not the recent happenings in China served as an object lesson? 22085 Have not the ballads of these illiterates rendered into English by our Poet touched profoundly the hearts of the very elect of the West? 22085 Have not the stories of their common life appealed to the common kinship of humanity? 22085 How are we to know what unseen changes take place within the plant? 22085 How are we to magnify this so as to make it instantly measurable? 22085 How chaotic appear the happenings in Nature? 22085 How circumscribed was their knowledge? 22085 How did these problems first dawn in the minds of some men who forecast themselves by half a century? 22085 How do we realise his sufferings? 22085 How does the plant then give its last answer? 22085 How does the plant then, give this last answer? 22085 How fared their hopes, how did their dreams become buried in oblivion? 22085 How is the hidden to be made manifest? 22085 How then are we to know what unseen changes take place within the plant? 22085 How then was it that these pulsations became spontaneous? 22085 How then was it that these pulsations became spontaneous? 22085 How were the invisible, internal changes to be made externally visible? 22085 If it be excited or depressed by some special circumstance, how are we, on the outside, to be made aware of this? 22085 If so, again, at what rate does the nervous impulse travel the plant? 22085 If so, is there anything analogous to the nerve of the animal? 22085 Illiterate in what sense? 22085 Is it not rather that science evokes in us a deeper sense of awe? 22085 Is it possible in any way to have these revealed to us? 22085 Is it possible that in plants also any parallel phenomena might be observed? 22085 Is it possible to counteract the effect of one by another? 22085 Is it possible to make the plant itself record this rate and its variations? 22085 Is it possible to make the plant itself write down this excessively minute time- interval? 22085 Is it possible to make the plants write down their own autographs and thus reveal their history? 22085 Is it to be under hopeless compulsion or of voluntary acceptance? 22085 Is the burden to fall on the weak or the strong? 22085 Is the power with which the people endow their king identical with the power of wealth with which we enrich him by paying him his Royal dues? 22085 Is there any resemblance between the nervous impulse in plants and animals? 22085 It is true that here we suffer from many difficulties, but how does it help us, to envy the good fortune of others? 22085 Like the great human system plants were subject to periodic conscianimal[_ sic._, consciousness?] 22085 May it not be said that this story has a pathos of its own beyond any that we may have conceived? 22085 May it not be said that this their story has a pathos of its own, beyond any that the poets have conceived? 22085 Next, does the effect of the blow given outside reach the interior of the plant? 22085 Now, what is to be the future of our nation? 22085 Of these which is more real, the material body or the image which is independent of it? 22085 Perhaps some of us can tell from our own experience whether similar differences obtain amongst human kind or not? 22085 SENSITIVE OR INSENSITIVE? 22085 Supposing that the plant does not give answers to external shock, what time elapses between the shock and the reply? 22085 THE TWO IDEALS What is it that India is to win and maintain? 22085 The mind can not grasp the meaning of this stupendous magnification; how then could we translate it in terms which may be understood? 22085 Then how are we to make this invisible visible? 22085 They may say that you are but a small handful, what of the vast illiterate millions? 22085 They may well be proud of a consecrated life-- consecrated to what? 22085 Was her mind paralysed by weak superstitious fears? 22085 Were they afraid that the march of knowledge was dangerous to true faith? 22085 What are the variations in this infinitesimal growth under external shock? 22085 What coercion do they exercise upon it? 22085 What happens, then, to the incident energy? 22085 What is it that has bridged over the distance and blotted out all differences? 22085 What is that subtle bond by which all distances are bridged over, and by which an individual life becomes merged in larger life? 22085 What is the difference between the living and the dead? 22085 What is the machinery which sets a going a world movement for the redress of wrong? 22085 What is the meaning of spontaneity? 22085 What subtle impress did they leave behind? 22085 What subtle impress do they leave behind? 22085 What was it that stood in her way? 22085 What would she do with it, if it did not raise her above death? 22085 Where lies the secret of that potency which makes certain efforts apparently doomed to failure, rise renewed from beneath the smouldering ashes? 22085 Which is more potent, Matter or Spirit? 22085 Which of these is undecaying, and which of these is beyond the reach of death? 22085 Who cares? 22085 Why does the water- lily''Kumud or Nymphaea''keep awake all night long and close her petals during the day? 22085 in which the human mind is some day to realise the uniform march of sequence, order and law? 22085 what changes are induced by the action of drugs or poisons? 22085 will the action of poison change with the dose? 2058 ''And anything else?'' |
2058 | Ah, sir,Marco laughed,--"and, Li Po, what is ill treatment to me? |
2058 | Ah, wee lady,--he turned to Golden Bells,--"wee lady, wee lady, why did n''t you let me die in the desert? |
2058 | And does n''t it make you happy, Golden Bells? |
2058 | And now, my child, you might say,''What is the use of sending me to China if he knows I can not bring these millions into the fold? 2058 And was n''t that a wonderful thing from a daughter of Kubla to me, a poor sailor- man? |
2058 | And what are you? |
2058 | And what did you think, sir, of what I said? 2058 And what do you think of New York, Malachi?" |
2058 | And why have you no fear of me, Marco Polo? |
2058 | And why should you die, Marco Polo? |
2058 | Are you there, Golden Bells? 2058 Barring myself, is there no one in this house that takes snuff? |
2058 | But the sin, Marco Polo? |
2058 | But, sir, was n''t it a great miracle of the Lord''s, my rescue in the Gobi Desert? |
2058 | Could n''t you save him, Sanang? |
2058 | Did my father or I ever do anything to you, Li Po, that you should make a song such as they sing in the market- place? |
2058 | Did n''t you come here to give your message? 2058 Did you ever see a scholar standing in front of a slip of a girl? |
2058 | Did you ever see her? |
2058 | Did you know them? |
2058 | Do n''t you think I suffer now, sir? 2058 Do you know me, Marco Polo?" |
2058 | How about you, Matthew? |
2058 | How did I know what? |
2058 | How did you know, Uncle Matthew? |
2058 | Is it long since you''ve been in China? |
2058 | Is it money, Marco Polo? |
2058 | Is it so terrible to be old? |
2058 | Is it, Marco Polo? 2058 Is she a dancing- girl?" |
2058 | Mark, Mark, where have you got to? 2058 Now, Marco of my heart, did n''t I say not to be taking it amiss? |
2058 | Oh, sir, why did you come to me? 2058 Poh- lo? |
2058 | Polo? 2058 Sanang,"says Kubla Khan to the magician,"could n''t you do something for this poor lad?" |
2058 | Sin? 2058 Sir, what have I done to dissatisfy you? |
2058 | Then what the hell''s the use of your going to China? |
2058 | Then why am n''t I in your garden, Old Man of the Mountain? |
2058 | Then why must not the young men look at the young women, Marco Polo? 2058 Well, now, laddie,"said the great Khan,"when we come to examine this sermon you quoted to us, what is there in it but the rule of the righteous man? |
2058 | Well, then, how about young Marco? |
2058 | What can I do sir? |
2058 | What song? |
2058 | Where''s the lad, Matthew? 2058 Who saw Him, then?" |
2058 | Whom will you write the marriage- song for, Li Po? |
2058 | Whose poem is that poem, Brian Oge? |
2058 | You never,says young Marco,"met anybody in China by the name of Polo?" |
2058 | You will go back? |
2058 | ''How could I be a queen? |
2058 | ''The sun of China is in my heart, and you would n''t have me go up into the great coldness to shiver and die?'' |
2058 | ''Where do you go?'' |
2058 | Am n''t I a Christian? |
2058 | Am n''t I converted? |
2058 | And Balkis, queen of Sheba, with her apes, ivory, and peacocks? |
2058 | And I said to myself with impatience,"Must every man born ninety years ago be dead?" |
2058 | And am n''t I your convert, Marco Polo?" |
2058 | And are you so imprisoned here, Li Po? |
2058 | And can you not see, sir, the truth that''s in me?" |
2058 | And did n''t I hear your message? |
2058 | And do you see the little tortoise, Marco Polo, and he sunning himself on a leaf? |
2058 | And how do you know your preaching will convert any? |
2058 | And hurled the Saracen from Saint John of Acre''s walls? |
2058 | And see the blue heron by the lotus flowers? |
2058 | And to make converts? |
2058 | And was the other a cold, dark man, a good judge of a jewel and a grand judge of a sword?" |
2058 | Are you there at all, at all? |
2058 | Boots, clothes, bread? |
2058 | But our Man of War, Malachi?.. |
2058 | But they have wisdom, else what is the use of having died? |
2058 | But what''s the use of complaining? |
2058 | But where did he come from? |
2058 | But why must not the young men look at the young women, Marco Polo? |
2058 | Could n''t you save him?" |
2058 | Did he tell you you were to convert the men of Cathay?" |
2058 | Do n''t you know I believe you? |
2058 | Do n''t you know? |
2058 | Do you hear the bees, Marco Polo-- the bees among the almond- blossoms? |
2058 | Do you remember the farmer who was such a bad shot, and his wife with the red petticoat? |
2058 | Do you remember the peaches of Champagne, wife, and the cherry- trees of Antrim? |
2058 | Do you think I could suffer more?" |
2058 | Does an oppressed man complain of injustice, does a merchant complain of being cheated, or a woman say she was wronged?" |
2058 | Have n''t you heard? |
2058 | How could I be cruel to you?" |
2058 | I suppose, if they go back to China, you''ll be going with them?" |
2058 | If to our three voices, who love you, there is added a sign from Golden Bells, will you leave China?" |
2058 | In all my embassies have I been weak to the strong or bullying toward the weak? |
2058 | Is it a faith only for men, then? |
2058 | Is it against women? |
2058 | Is it because of Paul?" |
2058 | Is it wrong to see the beauty of the almond blossoms, wrong to taste the scented wind? |
2058 | Is it wrong to watch the kingfisher seeking his nest? |
2058 | Is it wrong to watch the moon, the stars? |
2058 | Is it wrong to watch them?" |
2058 | Is it? |
2058 | Is there any one closer to me nor you, or is it likely I''d be listening to stories brought against you? |
2058 | Is there evil in me, Marco Polo, that your eyes should avoid me as the fox avoids the dog? |
2058 | Lad of our heart, where are you?" |
2058 | Little brown Golden Bells, in her Chinese garden, singing the song of the Willow Branches at the close of day... Is that not better nor Venice?" |
2058 | Look at it simply, and what was the story of Troy but a dirty row over a woman? |
2058 | Must the young men not look at the young women?" |
2058 | Now, if you were to look at the Lord Jesus with physical eyes, what would it be but a kindly, crazy man and He coming to a hard and bitter end? |
2058 | O, my Lord Jesus, must it end here?" |
2058 | Poh- lo? |
2058 | Polo? |
2058 | Sailors? |
2058 | She might be sorry, but would there be pride on her? |
2058 | So why should I want to go to China?" |
2058 | Sure, what''s the difference? |
2058 | Tell me, did you ever hear an old tune called''Bundle and Go!''?" |
2058 | Was one of them a big red- bearded man with a great eye for a horse and a great eye for a woman?" |
2058 | Was this where the loveliest face of ages wept?" |
2058 | What did I care about paradise? |
2058 | What do you say, Nicolas? |
2058 | What do you say? |
2058 | What struck Constantinople like a thunderbolt but the mailed hand of Venice? |
2058 | Where''s our lad?" |
2058 | Who humbled proud Genoa? |
2058 | Why could n''t he have stayed and died at home? |
2058 | Why did n''t I die?" |
2058 | Why must they not look with their eyes?" |
2058 | Why should I go back? |
2058 | Why should Li Po say one thing and Saint Paul another?" |
2058 | Why should there be sin? |
2058 | Wo n''t you please explain to me, Marco Polo? |
2058 | Wo n''t you tell me why?" |
2058 | Would you mind telling me when I had bound black hair?" |
2058 | You might now stand where Troy''s walls once were and say to yourself:"Was this where Helen walked with her little son? |
2058 | You must n''t think I''m running down your country, mister,"says he;"but for greatness, where is the beating of Venice in this day? |
2058 | You would not be cruel to me?" |
2058 | You''re the son of one and the nephew of the other?" |
1943 | Again, how can we recognize as divine the principle within us which can be overthrown by a few glasses of rum? 1943 And are there not in our inner nature phenomena of weight and motion comparable to those of physical nature? |
1943 | And do you understand Him? |
1943 | And it will always be so, will it not, my beloved? 1943 And what is to become of me?" |
1943 | And with what word can I conclude when I cease writing to you, and yet do not part from you? 1943 Are you my future? |
1943 | But do you write down the things he says? |
1943 | But from what cause? 1943 But is it not so with every root word? |
1943 | Can life be long when it is thus consumed hour by hour? 1943 Do you ever feel,"said he to me one day,"as though imagined suffering affected you in spite of yourself? |
1943 | Do you pray to God? |
1943 | How could so well organized a brain go astray? |
1943 | How is it that men have hitherto given so little thought to the phenomena of sleep, which seem to prove that man has a double life? 1943 Indeed, monsieur,"said I,"was it not perhaps the result of its being so highly organized? |
1943 | Is it to this time- honored spirit that we owe the mysteries lying buried in every human word? 1943 Is not my position a dreadful one? |
1943 | Is so perfect an attachment happiness? 1943 Is the world eternal? |
1943 | Shall I ever seen you again? |
1943 | Then you have not heard his story? |
1943 | What would Madame la Baronne de Stael say if she could know that you make such nonsense of a word that means noble family, of patrician rank? |
1943 | When I am away from you in the darkness of absence, am I not reduced to use human words, too feeble to express heavenly feelings? 1943 When I come back half dead with fatigue from my long excursions through the fields of thought, on whose heart can I rest? |
1943 | Whence did He derive the essence of creation? 1943 Where do you find''heart''in_ nobilis_?" |
1943 | Who will sit next to him? |
1943 | Why are there so few straight lines in nature? 1943 Why did I come here? |
1943 | Why do you insist that our happiness, which has no resemblance to that of other people, should conform to the laws of the world? 1943 Why in great joy do we always want to quit the earth? |
1943 | Why is green a color so largely diffused throughout creation? |
1943 | Why should I? |
1943 | Why, then, yesterday, did I fail to read your soul? 1943 Why? |
1943 | And are not the supernatural beings before whom the people tremble the personification of their feelings and their magnified desires? |
1943 | And could not I, for you, Pauline, imitate the exquisite reserve of a woman? |
1943 | And is your love endless, like mine? |
1943 | And who better than he could inspire or feel love? |
1943 | And will you fill all my days as you now fill my heart? |
1943 | Are modern monuments as fine as those of the ancients? |
1943 | Are not most words colored by the idea they represent? |
1943 | Are there not certain men who by a discharge of Volition can sublimate the essence of the feelings of the masses? |
1943 | Armed with that thought, ought not a man to sweep everything before him? |
1943 | But is death a farewell? |
1943 | But is not this purpose, in some cases, the result of a vocation? |
1943 | But why then have I such vast faculties without being suffered to use them? |
1943 | Can an idea cause physical pain?--What do you say to that, eh?" |
1943 | Chance or Providence? |
1943 | Could it so early follow the flight of the Holy Spirit across the worlds? |
1943 | Could that childish imagination understand the mystical depths of the Scriptures? |
1943 | Did not I know, at once, that your carriage had been overthrown and you were bruised? |
1943 | Did you not enchant me by the words,''Now and for ever?'' |
1943 | Did you wish to hide the cause of your grief? |
1943 | Do not some of them endeavor to concentrate their powers by long silence, so as to emerge fully capable of governing the world by word or by deed? |
1943 | Do you remember it, dear life? |
1943 | Does it not prove some inscrutable locomotive faculty in the spirit with effects resembling those of locomotion in the body? |
1943 | Does my soul foresee evil in the future? |
1943 | Does not the compact brevity of its sound suggest a vague image of chaste nudity and the simplicity of Truth in all things? |
1943 | Has not one celestial glance given us assurance of always understanding each other? |
1943 | Have I not met on this earth with an angel who had made me know all its happiness, as a reward, perhaps, for having endured all its torments? |
1943 | Have you not bestowed on me every gladness man can desire in that chaste-- lavish-- timid glance? |
1943 | He who struggles and endures, while marching on to a glorious end, presents a noble spectacle; but who can have the strength to fight here? |
1943 | How conceive of immaterial faculties which matter can conquer, and whose exercise is suspended by a grain of opium? |
1943 | How could He have failed to foresee all the results? |
1943 | How could He have subsisted through an eternity, not knowing that He would presently want to create the world? |
1943 | How else can we account for a scheme devoid of method or any notion of the future? |
1943 | How imagine that we shall be able to feel when we are bereft of the vehicles of sensation? |
1943 | I alone was allowed really to know that sublime-- why should I not say divine?--soul, for what is nearer to God than genius in the heart of a child? |
1943 | I love you too selfishly perhaps? |
1943 | If I should ever cease to think of you, to love you whether in happiness or in woe, should I not deserve my punishment?" |
1943 | If I was here while I was asleep in my cubicle, does not that constitute a complete severance of my body and my inner being? |
1943 | If evil does not exist, what do you make of social life and its laws? |
1943 | If he is the end- all of the explained transmutations that lead up to him, must he not be also the link between the visible and invisible creations? |
1943 | If it be so, must we not shudder for ourselves, we who are superhumanly happy? |
1943 | If it takes great intelligence to create a word, how old may human speech be? |
1943 | If man is bound up with everything, is there not something above him with which he again is bound up? |
1943 | If man is not free, what becomes of the scaffolding of his moral sense? |
1943 | If nature sells us everything at its true value, into what pit are we not fated to fall? |
1943 | If the common law of school entitled them to thrash us, did it not require them to keep silence as to our misdeeds? |
1943 | If we reflect on man, is not that to consider mankind? |
1943 | If, then, the world proceeds from God, how can you account for evil? |
1943 | In the word_ True_ do we not discern a certain imaginary rectitude? |
1943 | Is earthly fame a guerdon to those who believe that they will mount to a higher sphere? |
1943 | Is he not wholly mine? |
1943 | Is it not during the youth of a nation that its dogmas and idols are conceived? |
1943 | Is not the motion given to the worlds enough to prove God''s existence, without our plunging into absurd speculations suggested by pride? |
1943 | Is not this a need of the age? |
1943 | Is the vitality of matter in its innumerable manifestations-- the effect of its instincts-- at all more explicable than the effects of the mind? |
1943 | Lambert owed the favor and patronage of this celebrated lady to chance, or shall we not say to Providence, who can smooth the path of forlorn genius? |
1943 | Like some beings who dwell in the grosser world, might not he die of inanition for want of feeding abnormal and disappointed cravings? |
1943 | May there not be a new science lying beneath them?" |
1943 | Merely to live, was he not compelled to be perpetually casting nutriment into the gulf he had opened in himself? |
1943 | Merely to regard it in the abstract, apart from its functions, its effects, and its influence, is enough to cast one into an ocean of meditations? |
1943 | Might we not speak of it as a lover who finds on his mistress''lips as much love as he gives? |
1943 | Must this new science destroy them? |
1943 | Must we not attain to the conviction that man is the end of all earthly means before we ask whether he too is not the means to some end? |
1943 | Must we not reverse philosophical science? |
1943 | Or, if he can control his destiny, if by his own freewill he can interfere with the execution of the general plan, what becomes of God? |
1943 | Otherwise, of what value would the sacred words be of this letter, my first and perhaps my last entreaty? |
1943 | Shall we not die in a first embrace? |
1943 | She would have been obliged to do so if he had been her husband, she said, and could she do less for him as her lover? |
1943 | Something most extraordinary must have happened?" |
1943 | Then, after speaking a few words in an undertone to the class- master, he said:"Where can he sit?" |
1943 | Then, to whose genius are they due? |
1943 | This pitiless demon mows down every flower, and mocks at the sweetest feelings, saying:''Well-- and then?'' |
1943 | Was not this a sort of debauchery of the intellect which might lead to spontaneous combustion, like that of bodies saturated with alcohol? |
1943 | Was the world created? |
1943 | We gave the accusers a glance of stern reproach: had they not delivered us over to the common enemy? |
1943 | We hurried up to crowd round the superintendent and pester him with questions:"Where was he coming from? |
1943 | Well, then, if my spirit and my body can be severed during sleep, why should I not insist on their separating in the same way while I am awake? |
1943 | Were you sad or suffering? |
1943 | What can_ farewell_ mean, unless in death? |
1943 | What indeed was that time when I knew you not? |
1943 | What is to become of me? |
1943 | What scholar has not many a time found pleasure in seeking the probable meaning of some unknown word? |
1943 | What was his name? |
1943 | Whence came my distress? |
1943 | Which class would he be in?" |
1943 | Which of us all but remembers with delight, notwithstanding the bitterness of learning, the eccentric pleasures of that cloistered life? |
1943 | Which of us all can recollect ever having had a sou left to spend on the Sunday following? |
1943 | Who is it that drives me away? |
1943 | Why did I not know it? |
1943 | Why is it that he alone, of all creatures, has a sense of straightness?" |
1943 | Why is it that man, in his structures, rarely introduces curves? |
1943 | Why must God perish if matter can be proved to think? |
1943 | Why speak of this anguish when my visions are to become realities? |
1943 | Why such differences, due to the more or less ample diffusion of light to men? |
1943 | Why then do we rebel? |
1943 | Would not my spirit be then more closely one with yours? |
1943 | tell me if I can in any way have displeased you yesterday? |
1943 | whence comes the longing to rise which every creature has known or will know? |
20184 | ''An''see more niggers? 20184 ''No,''I sez,''ai nt I seen you?'' |
20184 | ''Well, where will you go?'' 20184 ''Will you go to the Irish village, thin?'' |
20184 | All right, Johnny,said Uncle, as he shook the train- boy''s hand,"how much extra allowance will that take?" |
20184 | All right, eh? |
20184 | And ai n''t my folks all burnt up? |
20184 | And you were listening to all we said? |
20184 | Annymone, what the dickens are they? |
20184 | Are you a musician, sir? |
20184 | Are you a reporter, Miss? |
20184 | Are you riding around for your health, or do you want to go somewhere? |
20184 | Arrah,said an Irishman to the proprietor,"raley now, is it in grane all the Oirish girruls do be drissed? |
20184 | Baggage, have your baggage checked? |
20184 | But how high is it? |
20184 | But what can these lettersM. K. S. L. N."here at the top of the badge mean?" |
20184 | But what is the use to yell,one said,"if they have determined that we are to die here?" |
20184 | Can any of you tell me where or how I may find the gentleman named on this card? |
20184 | Did n''t he do any of''em? |
20184 | Did this boat take part in the review at New York? |
20184 | Did we come acrost that bridge? |
20184 | Did you know Bill Simmons what lost five thousand dollars here last year? |
20184 | Do you mean on the north side or the south side? |
20184 | Do you mean up in the little round cupola? |
20184 | Do you speak French? |
20184 | Do you speak Greek? |
20184 | Ever hear of the grand basin, the gold statue, the lagoon? |
20184 | For how long? |
20184 | Georgeturned at once, and said:"How do you do, Henry? |
20184 | Have you seen the papers? |
20184 | Have you told anybody yet? |
20184 | How d''ye like that, Mariar? |
20184 | How did we git acrost without coming acrost? |
20184 | How do I know? 20184 How long do you think you will live?" |
20184 | How was it? 20184 How''s that?" |
20184 | I swan, is that you? 20184 Is that their foghorn I''ve heerd about?" |
20184 | Is there any question before this deliberative body of girls? |
20184 | Is this where Mr. Sterling lives? |
20184 | Is ze ladies seen eet all they want? |
20184 | Johnny, Johnny,said Uncle sternly,"do n''t you know what I''ve told you about letting other people''s business alone?" |
20184 | Keep it? 20184 La- Ra- La what? |
20184 | Of course you will help us keep this secret, you girls? |
20184 | Papers, Mister? 20184 Say, Bess,"said a young fellow, nudging his girl and pointing to the Queen of Beauty,"ai n''t she a corker?" |
20184 | Say, can you tell me-- is these''ere things all Columbus''works-- did''e do''em all? |
20184 | Shall I book you? |
20184 | She''ll be here all summer, will she? |
20184 | Sprechen sie Deitsch? |
20184 | That I got what? |
20184 | The Agricultural building? 20184 There, Fanny, how do you excuse them for that piece of mockery? |
20184 | Well, how do you do, Deacon Jones? 20184 Well, how long will it be before a launch will come along?" |
20184 | Well, well, my girl, this looks like a dream, but it ai n''t, is it? |
20184 | Well, which side did you come from? |
20184 | What are you bringing beer into machinery hall for? |
20184 | What are you looking at, child? |
20184 | What did you mean by telling me you had no beer? |
20184 | What hotel? |
20184 | What is the matter? 20184 What kind of things has it got inside to have such a name?" |
20184 | What shall we do? |
20184 | What was that, Fanny, that you used to tell me about Alladin and his wonderful lamp? |
20184 | What''s that for? |
20184 | What''s that? |
20184 | What''s the matter with you? |
20184 | Where are your baggage checks? |
20184 | Where have you been? |
20184 | Where is Johnny? |
20184 | Where on earth have you been? |
20184 | Where were you? |
20184 | Where wuz ye goin''? |
20184 | Which is that? |
20184 | Who do you want to see, sir? |
20184 | Who is calling me? |
20184 | Why, Grandpa, what''s the matter? |
20184 | Why? |
20184 | Widow Brown''s son George? |
20184 | Would n''t I, though? 20184 You did n''t notice when the gentleman across the aisle made change for you that you got flim- flamed did you?" |
20184 | You weak- minded old gazabo, is it to hear ye singin''topical songs thot Oi came down from Archery road? 20184 Address,******But, Fanny, where''s the monkey to exchange?" |
20184 | Ai n''t they anthropological, ethnographic biology or something like that?" |
20184 | An officer caught him by the arm and said:"Old man, where did you get that money?" |
20184 | Are them people down there the bulls and bears themselves, and are they the Board of Trade and are they the people that the farmers are so afraid of?" |
20184 | Are you the young lady I have been teasing him about? |
20184 | As they came up to him, he said:"Say, you remember the Century plant, do n''t you, down in the Horticultural hall, wot''s jest bloomed? |
20184 | At last without moving from his place at the door, he said:"What can this mean, may I ask? |
20184 | Be they goin''to have a corn palace at this''ere fair?" |
20184 | Beckoning him to his side the guard feebly said,"What was that stuff in the bottle?" |
20184 | Bring your folks?" |
20184 | Can they snatch the fire from heaven and make the lightening a plaything?" |
20184 | Columbus?" |
20184 | Did y''r never ride in a seedin''chair, George? |
20184 | Did you count your change when that young gent gave it to you? |
20184 | Do the launches go there?" |
20184 | Do you?" |
20184 | Each was asking the other as he ran,"What is it?" |
20184 | Fol- der- rol, de- rol de raddle, fol----""An''what did ye do with O''Connor?" |
20184 | Going to stay long?" |
20184 | Honest?" |
20184 | How high are your rates?" |
20184 | How may I be sure you are a responsible officer?" |
20184 | How may that all be, Fanny?" |
20184 | How often do you have to pay-- every once in a while?" |
20184 | How tall do you think she is?" |
20184 | How was it?" |
20184 | I am to take this, am I? |
20184 | I could n''t tell what to make of it when a feller came up to me an''says,''Do you want anything, old lady?'' |
20184 | I went up to one of the officers when I fust come in and I says, says I,"Are you regular army folks or Illinois militia?" |
20184 | I''m Jeremiah Jones, and what is your name?" |
20184 | It is tempting enough for anyone to ask:"Where did you get that hat?" |
20184 | Let me see; that is over----""Do you know where the colonnade is?" |
20184 | Made of brick, eh?" |
20184 | Mariar, with all your good qualities yer never could hold a candle to that''ere girl, could yer, now? |
20184 | May I ask what is the nature of your trouble?" |
20184 | O''Connor tuk me in there first, but what do Oi ca- are for show cases full uv dhried prunes, ould r- rocks an''silk handkerchers? |
20184 | On hearing this the Egyptian will talk something like this:"Do for me? |
20184 | One said:"Well, what in the world are you doin''here?" |
20184 | Say, stranger, what time do you think we''ll arrive?" |
20184 | The woman said:"Did he keep the whole of it?" |
20184 | They meet in clubs to worship the rich, and who will do our mending and cook our meals? |
20184 | What ails ye?" |
20184 | What are you doin''here?" |
20184 | What does it mean?" |
20184 | What good is them picters over there, I''d like to know? |
20184 | What more was wanting? |
20184 | What on earth is the matter with you, Johnny?" |
20184 | What''s the matter?" |
20184 | What, you insist on it? |
20184 | When Uncle and his family came down, he went up to the doorkeeper and asked,"Say, do you belong here?" |
20184 | When the music ceased and he withdrew the tubes from his ears he said to the boy,"Was n''t that out of sight?" |
20184 | When will we ever get to see the Fair? |
20184 | Where is it?" |
20184 | Which do you want?" |
20184 | Who am I that a humble follower of Mohammed should dare to ask of you, my great lord and master, the very slightest favor? |
20184 | Wusn''t he helping to rob your grandad as he was a coming out of the train, and did''nt I nab his pal with the wad of stuff in his hand? |
20184 | [ Illustration:"IS THEM THE FELLERS THAT THE FARMERS IS AFRAID OF?"] |
20184 | _ CHAPTER XVII_ CAIRO STREET"And so you call this the Anthropological building?" |
20184 | or"Where did you hit that shoe?" |
20184 | said the policeman,"ai n''t he crazy?" |
20248 | I wonder,mused the Martian,"did the grim spectre of death finally instill a grain of scepticism into his mind?" |
20248 | Again Jerome Davis asks,"Is it possible that our Church leaders are to some extent blinded by current conventional standards? |
20248 | Again, if witchcraft is given up, why not the chief witch of the Bible, the Devil? |
20248 | Aloud he muses,"Is there no place on Earth which is free from this contradiction?" |
20248 | And how well he must have rewarded his faithful servants, for was this not done in His name? |
20248 | And then all Gods laughed and shook on their chairs and cried:"Is Godliness not just that there are Gods, but no God?" |
20248 | And, behold, they cried out, saying,''What have we to do with thee, Jesus, Son of God? |
20248 | Are not the wants of his family, the hunger, and ostracism torture? |
20248 | Are they so busy sharing the wealth of the prosperous with others in spiritual quests that they fail to see some areas of desperate social need? |
20248 | Art thou come hither to torment us before the time?'' |
20248 | Brahmanism, Jainism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confucianism, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, Hebrewism, Mohammedanism, Christianity-- which is the true religion? |
20248 | But actually who created this creator? |
20248 | But does the Mohammedan or the Christian analyze as critically each his own belief? |
20248 | But if the wife is displeased, is there any justice? |
20248 | But what effectual check has Christianity contributed? |
20248 | But, is the modern worshipper who is contemptuous of the ancients very different from them? |
20248 | By what process of thought had Mohammed come to exalt Allah not merely above all Arabian gods, but above the gods of all times? |
20248 | Can anything stronger be said to discourage research, investigation, experiment, and retard progress? |
20248 | Did the clergymen stand firm when men with dollars talked? |
20248 | Divine Justice? |
20248 | Do certain diseases as yet remain to plague man? |
20248 | Do certain diseases still baffle the physician? |
20248 | Do they to some degree unconsciously exchange the gift of prophecy for yearly budgets and business boards?" |
20248 | Does any one believe that Jew, Mohammedan, Catholic, and Protestant can long live in peace together? |
20248 | Does not this apologist confuse his god with his devil? |
20248 | For how much longer will man be a slave to his inferiority complex with regard to his own rational capacities? |
20248 | Furthermore, why was he so certain of his own intimate association with Allah? |
20248 | Good God-- surely in the face of all this sense of aliveness and motion, and this and that, there should be some intimation of WHY? |
20248 | Has man profited by having remained in his mental infancy so long? |
20248 | Has not his mind so co-*ordinated his movements that he has enslaved those forces of nature to be his aid? |
20248 | How can we attribute these qualities to a being who is described to us as devoid of any nerve structure? |
20248 | How can we know the actual number of earthlings that are sceptics? |
20248 | How much longer before humanity can begin to build on a sound foundation? |
20248 | How, then, could an omnipotent being permit wholesale and private murder? |
20248 | However, the Martian argues,"Is it not a fact that in your earthly experience, you have created your gods in your own image? |
20248 | If everything must have a cause, then the First Cause must be caused and therefore: Who made God? |
20248 | If faith is vital to man, why not relate it to that which at least holds a promise of solution? |
20248 | If men were possessed of devils in Jesus''time, what has happened to these devils now? |
20248 | If the God of these earthlings bothers not about them, why should they trouble about God? |
20248 | If the grocer, the butcher, the doctor, the lawyer, the scholar, the business man, were to boldly announce his scepticism, what would happen to him? |
20248 | If this be God''s word, did God err when He said it? |
20248 | In how many of the advanced ideas of our time has the Church taken the lead? |
20248 | In this series of complications where may we discern a first cause? |
20248 | Is He not rather a demon than a God? |
20248 | Is anything so pitiful to behold as the firm grasp that the Church places on the mind of the youngest of children? |
20248 | Is it necessary that you should salt your truth that it will no longer quench thirst_? |
20248 | Is it not a fact that if the Christian nations of the world would only live at peace together, war would be impossible? |
20248 | Is it not renowned for being a long way in the rear rather than in the vanguard of progressive thought and action? |
20248 | Is religion, is church membership a help to virtue? |
20248 | Is religion, is church membership, a help to virtue? |
20248 | Is this all that is left to the theologian: that he must use the pitiful"Theology of Gaps"? |
20248 | It is an absurd answer to reply that the creator created himself, yet, even if this is granted, may not the universe have created itself? |
20248 | It is an excellent and comprehensive statement, but one is left wondering why the name"religious humanism"? |
20248 | It was Lactantius who asked,"Is there any one so senseless as to believe that there are men whose footsteps are higher than their heads? |
20248 | Must it take five hundred years for all mankind to come to a similar conclusion? |
20248 | Now is it strange that Sinai should have excited reverence and dread? |
20248 | Now it is the Martian''s turn to inquire of the Hebrew whether the latter had ever read this story to his own daughter? |
20248 | Or did the Divine Father know that even a self- respecting germ could not inhabit the filthy floor of the Tabernacle? |
20248 | Or, the story of Abraham''s affair with Hagar, his handmaiden? |
20248 | Professor James T. Shotwell when speaking of paganism reminds us,"Who of us can appreciate antique paganism? |
20248 | Surely, Jesus could not misinterpret his own words or deeds, if the religionists contend that we are now misinterpreting the Bible? |
20248 | Surely, a man is not burned at the stake for his scepticism in this age; but is he not done to death? |
20248 | That I have ten coats in my wardrobe while he goes naked? |
20248 | That at each of my meals enough is served to feed his family for a week? |
20248 | That the crops and trees grow downward? |
20248 | That the rains and snow and hail fall upwards toward the earth? |
20248 | The oft- repeated question still admits of no answer,"Who created the creator"? |
20248 | Then again, has it not occurred to this apologist that he is in all futility attempting to prove something which is a contradiction within itself? |
20248 | Then was heard the last despairing cry of the desolate, dying martyr,"My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
20248 | To confuse the evil spirit causing the disease? |
20248 | Truly, Jehovah at that time must have loved them well, or did some other Deity form the Egyptians? |
20248 | Was it the brotherhood of man that Christianity bestowed on the conquered Mexican and Peruvian nations, and on the Indians of our own country? |
20248 | What could be more explicit? |
20248 | What did the prophetic movement do with his sacred powers? |
20248 | What effect has Christianity had upon our moral life, upon crime, drug- addiction, sexual immorality, prostitution, and perversion? |
20248 | What immense structures have been founded on these shifting sands, on this morass of ignorance and childish fable? |
20248 | What is the cause? |
20248 | What is the value of a church that has claimed the moral leadership of the world when such things can happen? |
20248 | What kind of brotherhood did Christians bestow on Jews or heretics in the Middle Ages? |
20248 | What of those countless millions of men that died before Christ came to save the world from damnation? |
20248 | What sort of person would be the father who would announce divine punishment or reward in order to obtain the love and respect of his children? |
20248 | What supernatural in their deeds? |
20248 | What wisdom poured forth from their lips which did not come from other philosophers? |
20248 | When the minds of men are from infancy perverted with these ideals, how can mankind build a virile race? |
20248 | Who does not feel the absurdity of the opinion that the lavish care for a sick child by a mother is given because of a belief in God and immortality? |
20248 | Why do n''t the masses go to Church?'' |
20248 | Why does the ecclesiastic not leave off his advances until the child reaches a mature age, an age when he can reason? |
20248 | Why, therefore, not give Allah, the leading icon in Arabia, an opportunity? |
20248 | Why? |
20248 | Wieman, Macintosh, and Otto:"Is There a God? |
20248 | Will he endeavor to analyze it at all? |
20248 | Years ago I was asked,''Why do n''t people accept religion? |
22210 | ''Smart,''sir? |
22210 | ''Wild''you spell w- i- l- d? |
22210 | And where does he live? |
22210 | Are the people very obsequious to the Rajiwar? |
22210 | Are you quite sure, Kachi, that this lake is the home of the gods? |
22210 | Cut off my head? |
22210 | Cut off my head? |
22210 | Cut off our heads? |
22210 | Did you not feel the earth shake and quiver? |
22210 | Do the natives adopt any special method to protect themselves from these mountain demons? |
22210 | Do the spirits ever speak? |
22210 | Do you ever expect to become a saint? |
22210 | Do you hear the sound of bells? |
22210 | Do you know any one who has seen them? |
22210 | Does not Mr. Landor remind you of''that other''eccentric gentleman that came through here last year? |
22210 | Does not that sound more like an attack of indigestion? |
22210 | Have we passed the Gomba? 22210 Have you ever seen a spirit, Jagat Sing?" |
22210 | How is he clothed? |
22210 | How many coolies will you take, sir? |
22210 | Is it a Plenki? |
22210 | Sahib, do you see that island? |
22210 | Tell me,I said to Jagat Sing,"are there''spirits of the mountain''in these ranges? |
22210 | What are the evil qualities to be mostly avoided? |
22210 | What are you doing, sir? |
22210 | What are you going to do? |
22210 | What do you do with these? |
22210 | What have you done with it? |
22210 | What is that? |
22210 | What is that? |
22210 | What is your name? |
22210 | What? |
22210 | Where are your certificates? |
22210 | Where is my book, Chanden Sing? |
22210 | Where is your son? |
22210 | Where? |
22210 | Which way did it go? |
22210 | Who is that? |
22210 | Who is that? |
22210 | Why is that? |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_("Where are you going?") |
22210 | _ Kuan hai?_("Who is there?") |
22210 | _ Kuan hai?_("Who is there?") |
22210 | And do the people really believe in them?" |
22210 | And if it were the God''s decree that he should die, what could be the use of rebelling against it? |
22210 | And who better than the Lamas could make peace between God and him? |
22210 | And you?" |
22210 | Are you married? |
22210 | Are you one of his advance guard?" |
22210 | Are you still at Almora? |
22210 | Are your dear parents alive? |
22210 | As time went on, and they did not put in an appearance, we began to entertain doubts as to their safety, or would they betray us and never return? |
22210 | Besides, what does it matter whether you die to- day or to- morrow?" |
22210 | But how could they be when you consider the gallons of filthy tea which they drink daily, and the liquor to which they are so partial? |
22210 | Can we stop near your camp and pick up the food that you will throw away?" |
22210 | DEAR MR. LANDOR, Do you remember the night when we separated near Lama Chokden in Tibet, you to proceed towards Lhassa, and I to return to India? |
22210 | Had he come across some of his mates? |
22210 | Have we not yet reached it?" |
22210 | Have you any brothers and sisters? |
22210 | Have you not got a copy of my official report? |
22210 | Having come thus far, should I be compelled now to go back or give in, and be captured by the Tibetan soldiers whom I had so successfully evaded? |
22210 | How are your eyes and spine? |
22210 | How could we now turn back when so near our goal? |
22210 | How did the photographs which we took up at the Lippu Pass turn out? |
22210 | How many times had not my schemes been upset? |
22210 | How much do they want?" |
22210 | How spell?" |
22210 | I said to the Rongba,"what is that?" |
22210 | Is that the care you take of my notes and sketches? |
22210 | No doubt the satisfaction of going up high mountains is very great; but can it be compared to that of coming down? |
22210 | Or, as was more likely, had they been caught by the Jong Pen( the master of the fort), and been imprisoned and tortured? |
22210 | Should I dwindle painlessly away, preferring rest and peace to effort, or should I make a last struggle to save myself? |
22210 | THE BIOLOGICAL PROBLEM OF TO- DAY: Preformation or Epigenesis? |
22210 | Then you, sir, I, sir, five coolies, sir, start night- time, what clock?" |
22210 | Tumka hatte?_ Come, come, come quickly! |
22210 | Was what I saw before me real? |
22210 | Were the Tarjum''s men coming, preceded by their animals? |
22210 | Were these Tibetans trying to surprise us in our sleep, or could they be our men returning at last? |
22210 | Were we discovered? |
22210 | What have you done with them?" |
22210 | What is meaning? |
22210 | What is your name?" |
22210 | What is''kiang''in English?" |
22210 | What painter could do those mountains justice?" |
22210 | Where are you?" |
22210 | Why then should we expect them to be faithful to us? |
22210 | Will five do?" |
22210 | Would all the brides of the first man become the brides of the second? |
22210 | Would it be possible, I asked them, to get over the Lumpiya Pass or the still higher Mangshan? |
22210 | [ Illustration: THE LADY IN QUESTION]"''Why did you marry me?'' |
22210 | [ Illustration: THE NERPANI ROAD]"Where are they?" |
22210 | [ Illustration: THE PHOTOGRAPH THAT CAUSED THE CHILD''S DEATH]"And how about your husband?" |
22210 | [ Illustration: WOMAN CARRYING CHILD IN BASKET]"_ Kiula tuku taka zando?_"("How many children have you?") |
22210 | [ Illustration: WOMAN CARRYING CHILD IN BASKET]"_ Kiula tuku taka zando?_"("How many children have you?") |
22210 | asked he inquisitively,"how long have you taken to come from Ladak?" |
22210 | or had he heard from the sepoys that they were in the neighbourhood? |
22210 | where has it gone?" |
10056 | ''A Sage and a Philanthropist?'' 10056 ''His words-- uttered with difficulty?''" |
10056 | ''Who can give it to him?'' 10056 A rude life,"said some one;--"how could you put up with it?" |
10056 | Am I, indeed,said the Master,"possessed of knowledge? |
10056 | And after enriching them, what more would you do for them? |
10056 | And are not those who, while not comprehending all that is said, still remain not unpleased to hear, men of the superior order? |
10056 | And can he be said to be wise who, with a liking for taking part in the public service, is constantly letting slip his opportunities? |
10056 | And if you are obliged to give up one of the remaining two, which would it be? |
10056 | And what call you the five excellences? |
10056 | And with you, Kung- si, how would it be? |
10056 | And with you, Tsang Sin? |
10056 | And you, too, Tsz- kung,he continued,"have your aversions, have you not?" |
10056 | Are such available? |
10056 | As to those of whom you are uncertain, will others omit to notice them? |
10056 | But Yen, then-- he had a State in view, had he not? |
10056 | But had not Kung- si also a State in view? |
10056 | But two tithings would not be enough for my purposes,said the duke;"what would be the good of applying the Statute?" |
10056 | But was he a man of fellow- feeling? |
10056 | But was he a man of fellow- feeling? |
10056 | But was not Kwan Chung wanting in good- will? 10056 But,"he asked,"how am I to know the sagacious and talented, before promoting them?" |
10056 | But,said the disciple,"if you can not really have all three, and one has to be given up, which would you give up first?" |
10056 | Can any do otherwise than assent to words said to them by way of correction? 10056 Can it be so?" |
10056 | Ch''ang,said he,"is wanton; where do you get at his inflexibleness?" |
10056 | Does Heaven ever speak? |
10056 | Does a gentleman,asked Tsz- lu,"make much account of bravery?" |
10056 | Does that make them''superior men''? |
10056 | From what do you know that I am competent to that? |
10056 | Had they any feelings of resentment? |
10056 | He knew the Rules of Propriety, I suppose? |
10056 | He of Lu? |
10056 | How is it possible indeed to serve one''s prince in their company? 10056 How shall I dare,"he replied,"even to look at Hwúi? |
10056 | How should I dare to die,said he,"while you, sir, still lived?" |
10056 | How should such a rule of life,asked the Master,"be sufficient to make any one good?" |
10056 | How then,he answered,"would you requite kindness? |
10056 | How would you describe those who are at present in the government service? |
10056 | How,exclaimed the Master,"can such words be appropriated in the ancestral hall of the Three Families?" |
10056 | If I were to take a raft, and drift about on the sea, would Tsz- lu, I wonder, be my follower there? |
10056 | If the''superior man''make nought of social good feeling, how shall he fully bear that name? 10056 If you would know one who without effort ruled well, was not Shun such a one? |
10056 | If your Majesty say,''What is to be done to profit my kingdom?'' 10056 If your Majesty wishes to carry out a benevolent government, why not turn back to what is the essential step to its attainment? |
10056 | In the Declaration of T''ang it is said,''O Sun, when wilt thou expire? 10056 Is it not this,"he replied--"to make that which is of benefit to the people still more beneficial? |
10056 | Is it so bad as that? |
10056 | Is not this apropos in such cases? |
10056 | Is that the case with him? |
10056 | Is that what is meant by proper regard for one''s fellow- creatures? |
10056 | Is the philanthropic spirit far to seek, indeed? |
10056 | Is there, then,he asked,"one sentence which, if acted upon, would have the effect of ruining a country?" |
10056 | May I ask, please, what these are? |
10056 | May I presume,said his questioner,"to ask what sort you would put next to such?" |
10056 | May I still venture to ask whom you would place next in order? |
10056 | May they not be of use to the villages and hamlets around you? |
10056 | Nothing more than that? |
10056 | O Heaven, what crimes have we to own, That death and ruin still come down? 10056 Of that I am not sure,"he answered;"how am I to get at that?" |
10056 | Of that I am not sure,he replied;"how am I to get at that?" |
10056 | Of what sort? |
10056 | Once, though, he was standing alone when I was hurrying past him over the vestibule, and he said,''Are you studying the Odes?'' 10056 Say you, is there any one who is able for one whole day to apply the energy of his mind to this virtue? |
10056 | Sir,replied Confucius,"in the administration of government why resort to capital punishment? |
10056 | Sir,said Tsz- kung,"how comes it to pass that no one knows you?" |
10056 | Sir,said Tsz- kung,"if you were never to speak, what should your pupils have to hand down from you?" |
10056 | So far as I have to do with others, whom do I over- censure? 10056 So then Tsz- chang is the better of the two, is he?" |
10056 | Suppose that he take his duty to his fellow- men as his peculiar burden, is that not indeed a heavy one? 10056 Take Tsz- hwa, then; what of him?" |
10056 | That is the man,said he,"who knows things are not up to the mark, and is making some ado about them, is it not?" |
10056 | That, and yet no more? |
10056 | There is Yu''s harpsichord,exclaimed the Master--"what is it doing at my door?" |
10056 | Those men are right,they fiercely say,"What mean your words so bold?" |
10056 | Those men are right,they fiercely say,"What mean your words so loud?" |
10056 | To have associates in study coming to one from distant parts-- does not this also mean pleasure in store? 10056 Tsz- lu,"said the Master,"you have heard of the six words with their six obfuscations?" |
10056 | Was he miserly? |
10056 | Was not Tsang Wan like one who surreptitiously came by the post he held? 10056 Well, are they then,"he asked,"such as will follow their leader?" |
10056 | Well, is not putting duty first, and success second, a way of raising the standard of virtue? 10056 What are ancestral temples and Grand Receptions, but for the feudal lords to take part in? |
10056 | What harm? |
10056 | What mean you,asked Tsz- chang,"by bounty without extravagance?" |
10056 | What rudeness would there be,he replied,"if a''superior man''was living in their midst?" |
10056 | What say you then of Yen Yu? |
10056 | What says your Master? |
10056 | What, I wonder, do you mean by one who is influential? |
10056 | What, then, do you call the four evils? |
10056 | What, then, if they all disliked him? |
10056 | When there is ability in a ruler to govern a country by adhering to the Rules of Propriety, and by kindly condescension, what is wanted more? 10056 Where a man,"said he again,"has not the proper feelings due from one man to another, how will he stand as regards the Rules of Propriety? |
10056 | Where from? |
10056 | Where there is difficulty in doing,the Master replied,"will there not be some difficulty in utterance?" |
10056 | Who can go out but by that door? 10056 Why did you smile at Tsz- lu, sir?" |
10056 | Why must you name Káu- tsung? |
10056 | Why not apply the Tithing Statute? |
10056 | Why should he really do so? |
10056 | Why so late? |
10056 | Why so much ado,said the Master,"at my merely permitting his approach, and not rather at my allowing him to draw back? |
10056 | With one who does not come to me inquiring''What of this?'' 10056 Yen,"said Confucius,"does not the fault lie with you? |
10056 | Yen,said he,"how would it be with you?" |
10056 | You are a follower of Confucius of Lu, are you not? |
10056 | ''Etiquette demands it,''so people plead,"said he;"but do not these hankerings after jewels and silks indeed demand it? |
10056 | --"I do,"he replied;"is it not so?" |
10056 | --"Too much?" |
10056 | A high State official, after questioning Tsz- kung, said,"Your Master is a sage, then? |
10056 | A person remarked to him,"Can you not yet bear to withdraw?" |
10056 | Abruptly he asked me,''How can the kingdom, all under the sky, be settled?'' |
10056 | Addressing Tsz- kung, the Master said,"Which of the two is ahead of the other-- yourself or Hwúi?" |
10056 | Addressing Tsz- kung, the Master said,"You regard me as one who studies and stores up in his mind a multiplicity of things-- do you not?" |
10056 | Afterwards, when Fan Ch''i was driving him, the Master informed him of this question and answer, and Fan Ch''i asked,"What was your meaning?" |
10056 | Again,"Let a ruler but see to his own rectitude, and what trouble will he then have in the work before him? |
10056 | Alluding to the matter of the Chief of the Ki family worshipping on Tai- shan,[ 7] the Master said to Yen Yu,"Can not you save him from this?" |
10056 | Although I do not go to you, Why from all word do you refrain? |
10056 | Although I do not go to you, Yet why to me should you not come? |
10056 | Although he had his tower, his pond, birds and animals, how could he have pleasure alone?" |
10056 | Am I eminently worthy and wise?--who is there then among men whom I will not bear with? |
10056 | And am I the great Monarch of the line of Han? |
10056 | And if it should happen that my services were enlisted, I might create for him another East Chow-- don''t you think so?" |
10056 | And in such a case, what shall we say of his sense of harmony?" |
10056 | And is not attacking the evil in one''s self, and not the evil which is in others, a way of reforming dissolute habits? |
10056 | And moreover what permanent preceptor could he have?" |
10056 | And parents, how are you restrained, In this so dreadful day? |
10056 | And since only with death it is done with, is not the way long?" |
10056 | And though I should fail to have a grand funeral over me, I should hardly be left on my death on the public highway, should I?" |
10056 | And what does he account next, as that about which he may be indifferent? |
10056 | And what harm, I ask, can a man do to the sun or the moon, by wishing to intercept himself from either? |
10056 | And where is the wisdom of those who choose an abode where it does not abide? |
10056 | And why can not they do so? |
10056 | And yet the people of the neighboring kings do not decrease, nor do my people increase-- how is this?" |
10056 | And you are a follower of a learned man who withdraws from his chief; had you not better be a follower of such as have forsaken the world?" |
10056 | Another day, when he was again standing alone and I was hurrying past across the vestibule, he said to me,''Are you learning the Rules of Propriety?'' |
10056 | Are there no dice and chess players? |
10056 | Are we now with them in 402?] |
10056 | Assuming that the words were good, and that none withstood them, would not that also be good? |
10056 | Attended once by the two disciples Yen Yuen and Tsz- lu, he said,"Come now, why not tell me, each of you, what in your hearts you are really after?" |
10056 | But I have seen my lord again;-- Should not my heart rejoice? |
10056 | But had there been none of superior quality in Lu, how should this man have attained to this excellence?" |
10056 | But how is it that this heart has in it what is equal to the attainment of the Royal sway?" |
10056 | But if they can not exert themselves to expel the barbarians, why call for the princess to propitiate them? |
10056 | But so long as Heaven does not allow it to perish, what can the men of K''wang do to me?" |
10056 | But soon what changes may betide? |
10056 | But though Ts''e be narrow and small, how should I grudge a bull? |
10056 | But what had disciples of Buddha to do with hunting and taking life? |
10056 | But with such uncommon attractions, what chance has kept you from our sight? |
10056 | But,"said he,"what need of such in these days? |
10056 | But-- when the people have not enough, who will allow their prince all that he wants?" |
10056 | Can any be other than pleased with words of gentle suasion? |
10056 | Can any one refuse to exhort, who is true- hearted?" |
10056 | Can my suffering''scape their ken? |
10056 | Can this man have enjoyed the three years of loving care from his parents?" |
10056 | Can ye not devise a way to send out these foreign troops, without yielding up the princess for the sake of peace? |
10056 | Can ye withhold Your sympathy, who lately reigned? |
10056 | Ch''ang- tsü said,"Who is the person driving the carriage?" |
10056 | Chung- ne said,''Was he not without posterity who first made wooden images to bury with the dead?'' |
10056 | Commenting on these lines the Master said,"There can hardly have been much''thought going out,''What does distance signify?" |
10056 | Confucius gave him a seat, and among other inquiries he asked,"How is your master managing?" |
10056 | Covering the jujubes the dolichos grows, The graves many dragon- plants cover; But where is the man on whose breast I''d repose? |
10056 | Do I not night and day, Revere great Heaven, That thus its favor may To Chow be given? |
10056 | Does Heaven indeed speak?" |
10056 | Does he investigate matters? |
10056 | Does that coincide with your remark?" |
10056 | Does your Majesty know the way of the growing grain? |
10056 | Dost think that my thoughts go not out to thee? |
10056 | During life I am determined to have abundance of riches; what care I for the curses of mankind after my death? |
10056 | From them our thoughts quick to our husbands pass? |
10056 | From what quarter come such superior charms? |
10056 | Fâ- hien first spoke assuringly to them, and then slowly and distinctly asked them,"Who are you?" |
10056 | Give me a cup from that gilt vase-- When shall this longing end in sight? |
10056 | Had he not plenty of ladies in his palace, of whom he might have sent me one? |
10056 | He asked further,"What country is this?" |
10056 | He asked,"Can any one refuse to toil for those he loves? |
10056 | He replied,"If I act in a straightforward way in serving men, whither in these days should I go, where I should not be thrice dismissed? |
10056 | He said,"I have heard that superior men show no partiality; are they, too, then, partial? |
10056 | He then asked,"What are you looking for among these hills?" |
10056 | His face beamed with pleasure, and he said laughingly,"To kill a cock-- why use an ox- knife?" |
10056 | His rule is-- covet nought, none hate;-- How can his steps from goodness stray? |
10056 | How am I to be strung up like that kind of thing-- and live without means?" |
10056 | How are such to come from book- learning?" |
10056 | How can sorrow from my heart In a case like this depart? |
10056 | How can such a thing as entrapping the people be done under the rule of a benevolent man?" |
10056 | How can they know, who never try To learn whence comes our woe? |
10056 | How can your Majesty have such a desire on account of them?" |
10056 | How else could all your evil dreams And slanders work their way? |
10056 | How goes the night? |
10056 | How goes the night? |
10056 | How in our absence shall their wants be met? |
10056 | How indeed could such as he be equalled?" |
10056 | How is this? |
10056 | How know we what difference there may be in them in the future from what they are now? |
10056 | How may a master play fast and loose in his methods of instruction? |
10056 | How shall our parents find their wonted food? |
10056 | How shall our parents their requirements get? |
10056 | How should I derive pleasure from these things? |
10056 | How should I have the ambition?" |
10056 | How should they know who never try To learn whence comes our woe? |
10056 | How should your carriages, large or little, get along without your whipple- trees or swing- trees?" |
10056 | I am but a woman; how shall I succeed in being the first to see him?" |
10056 | I know not about his good- naturedness; but at any rate what need of that gift?" |
10056 | I never can ask''What of this?'' |
10056 | I replied,''It will be settled by being united under one sway,''"''Who can so unite it?'' |
10056 | I should say he was not a man who had much good- will in him-- eh?" |
10056 | I turn my gaze to the great sky;-- When shall this drought be done, and I Quiet and restful be?" |
10056 | If Kung- si were to become an unimportant assistant at these functions, who could become an important one?" |
10056 | If he be unable to rectify himself, how is he to rectify others?" |
10056 | If he knew the Rules of Propriety, who is there that does not know them?" |
10056 | If there be no reverential feeling in the matter, what is there to distinguish between the cases?" |
10056 | If these, then, also make an administrator, how am I to take your words about being an administrator?" |
10056 | If with one part you try to subdue the other eight, what is the difference between that and Tsow''s contending with Ts''oo? |
10056 | If you felt pained by its being led without any guilt to the place of death, what was there to choose between a bull and a sheep?" |
10056 | If you, sir, as a leader show correctness, who will dare not to be correct?" |
10056 | If, on the other hand, he habituate himself to impetuosity of mind, and show it also in his way of doing things, is he not then over- impetuous?" |
10056 | In archery What man with him can vie? |
10056 | In eager pursuit of her, I have reached the imperial palace.--Is not this she? |
10056 | In his case, what is the use of reprimand? |
10056 | In such a case, who will oppose your Majesty? |
10056 | In the core of my heart I love him, but say, Whence shall I procure him the wants of the day? |
10056 | In the core of my heart do I love him, but say, Whence shall I procure him the wants of the day? |
10056 | In the course of conversation Yen Yu said,"Does the Master take the part of the Prince of Wei?" |
10056 | In the gentleman is there indeed such variety of ability? |
10056 | Is an exception to be made here? |
10056 | Is it not because you show yourself so smart a speaker, now?" |
10056 | Is it not so indeed? |
10056 | Is not his way of arriving at things different from that of others?" |
10056 | Is not this the Emperor, my sovereign? |
10056 | King Seuen of Ts''e asked, saying,"May I be informed by you of the transactions of Hwan of Ts''e and Wan of Ts''in?" |
10056 | Know ye in what place she grieves, listening like me to the screams of the wild bird? |
10056 | Laid is the bamboo mat on rush mat square;-- Here shall he sleep, and, waking, say,"Divine What dreams are good? |
10056 | Let your Majesty likewise make benevolence and righteousness your only themes-- Why must you speak of profit?" |
10056 | May I not as well give up?" |
10056 | May I request that you proceed against him?" |
10056 | Mencius continued,"Is there any difference between doing it with a sword and with governmental measures?" |
10056 | Mencius replied,"If the people of Tsow were fighting with the people of Ts''oo, which of them does your Majesty think would conquer?" |
10056 | Mencius replied,"Is there any difference between killing a man with a stick and with a sword?" |
10056 | Mencius replied,"Why must your Majesty used that word''profit''? |
10056 | Mencius resumed,"Are you led to desire it because you have not enough of rich and sweet food for your mouth? |
10056 | Mencius said,"May I hear from you what it is that your Majesty greatly desires?" |
10056 | Might he be called philanthropic?" |
10056 | Might he then learn something of gardening? |
10056 | Min Tsz- k''ien observed,"How if it were repaired on the old lines?" |
10056 | No brother lives with whom my cause to plead;-- Why not perform for me the helping deed? |
10056 | No brother lives with whom my cause to plead;-- Why not perform for me the helping deed? |
10056 | No food is left our parents to supply; When we are gone, on whom can they rely? |
10056 | Now suppose some one got to know you, what then?" |
10056 | O azure Heaven, from out thy deeps Why look in silence down? |
10056 | O azure Heaven, that shinest there afar, When shall our homes receive us from the war? |
10056 | O azure Heaven, that shinest there afar, When shall our homes receive us from the war? |
10056 | O azure Heaven, that shinest there afar, When shall our homes receive us from the war? |
10056 | O how is it, I long to know, That he, my lord, forgets me so? |
10056 | O how is it, I long to know, That he, my lord, forgets me so? |
10056 | O how is it, I long to know, That he, my lord, forgets me so? |
10056 | O noble chiefs, who then the West adorned, Would ye have thus neglected me and scorned? |
10056 | Of Wei- shang Kau he said,"Who calls him straightforward? |
10056 | On going in to him, that disciple began,"What sort of men were Peh- I and Shuh Ts''i?" |
10056 | On one occasion he exclaimed,"Heaven begat Virtue in me; what can man do unto me?" |
10056 | Once the Master said,"Because we allow that a man''s words have something genuine in them, are they necessarily those of a superior man? |
10056 | Once when the stabling was destroyed by fire, he withdrew from the Court, and asked,"Is any person injured?" |
10056 | Or it is,''The study of Music requires it''--''Music requires it''; but do not these predilections for bells and drums require it?" |
10056 | Person slighted, life all blighted, What can the future prove? |
10056 | Regard you only me? |
10056 | Sad dreams returned to our lonely pillow; we thought of her through the night: Her verdant tomb remains-- but where shall we seek her self? |
10056 | Said he,"It is a year of dearth, and there is an insufficiency for Ways and Means-- what am I to do?" |
10056 | Shall I become a carriage driver, or an archer? |
10056 | Should I deceive Heaven? |
10056 | Should we oppose the Tartars, and be defeated, what will remain to us? |
10056 | So when his desire is the virtue of humaneness, and he attains it, how shall he then be covetous? |
10056 | Some one asked,"What say you of the remark,''Requite enmity with kindness''?" |
10056 | Some one thereupon remarked,"Who says that the son of the man of Tsou[ 8] understands about ceremonial? |
10056 | Some one, speaking to Confucius, inquired,"Why, sir, are you not an administrator of government?" |
10056 | The Master added,"Where there is found, upon introspection, to be no chronic disease, how shall there be any trouble? |
10056 | The Master asked him,"Would it be a satisfaction to you-- that returning to better food, that putting on of fine clothes?" |
10056 | The Master heard of this, and mentioning it to his disciples he said,"What then shall I take in hand? |
10056 | The Master replied,"Where there is scarcely the ability to minister to living men, how shall there be ability to minister to the spirits?" |
10056 | The Master''s reply was,"In a case where there is a father or elder brother still left with you, how should you practise all you hear?" |
10056 | The bird, although a creature small, Upon its mate depends; And shall we men, who rank o''er all, Not seek to have our friends? |
10056 | The followers introduced him; and, on leaving, he said to them,"Sirs, why grieve at his loss of office? |
10056 | The king asked,"How may the difference between him who does not do a thing and him who is not able to do it be graphically set forth?" |
10056 | The king laughed and said,"What really was my mind in the matter? |
10056 | The king said,"Is such an one as poor I competent to love and protect the people?" |
10056 | The king said,"May I hear what they will be?" |
10056 | The king said,"Of what kind must his virtue be who can attain to the Royal sway?" |
10056 | The man of my heart is away and I mourn-- What home have I, lonely and weeping? |
10056 | The minister replied,"So long as the people have enough left for themselves, who of them will allow their prince to be without enough? |
10056 | The three other disciples having gone out, leaving Tsang Sin behind, the latter said,"What think you of the answers of those three?" |
10056 | They asked in reply whether, if they did so, they should omit the consecration of the bell, but the king said,"How can that be omitted? |
10056 | They replied,"Who are you that say you are our mother?" |
10056 | Tigers do we care to be? |
10056 | To his disciples he once said,"Do you look upon me, my sons, as keeping anything secret from you? |
10056 | To the disciple Tsz- lu the Master said,"Shall I give you a lesson about knowledge? |
10056 | To the great sky I look with pain;-- Why do these grievous sorrows rain On my devoted head? |
10056 | Tsz- chang in a conversation with Confucius asked,"What say you is essential for the proper conduct of government?" |
10056 | Tsz- k''in asked of Pih- yu,"Have you heard anything else peculiar from your father?" |
10056 | Tsz- kung asked,"I suppose a gentleman will have his aversions as well as his likings?" |
10056 | Tsz- kung asked,"What of me, then?" |
10056 | Tsz- kung asked,"What say you, sir, of the poor who do not cringe and fawn; and what of the rich who are without pride and haughtiness?" |
10056 | Tsz- kung put to him the question,"Is there one word upon which the whole life may proceed?" |
10056 | Tsz- kung was consulting him, and asked,"What say you of a person who was liked by all in his village?" |
10056 | Tsz- lu inquired of him,"Have you seen my Master, sir?" |
10056 | Tsz- lu rejoined,"But he will have the people and their superiors to gain experience from, and there will be the altars; what need to read books? |
10056 | Tsz- lu then put his question to Kieh- nih; and the latter asked,"Who are you?" |
10056 | Tsz- lu used always to be humming over the lines--"From envy and enmity free, What deed doth he other than good?" |
10056 | Tsz- lu was averse to this, and said,"You can never go, that is certain; how should you feel you must go to that person?" |
10056 | Tsz- lu, with indignation pictured on his countenance, exclaimed,"And is a gentleman to suffer starvation?" |
10056 | Wang- sun Kiá asked him once,"What says the proverb,''Better to court favor in the kitchen than in the drawing- room''?" |
10056 | Was it not, however, just like him-- that remark of the Chief?" |
10056 | We have complied with all our minister''s propositions-- shall they not, then, accede to ours? |
10056 | Well, are not filial piety and friendly subordination among brothers a root of that right feeling which is owing generally from man to man?" |
10056 | Were I to adopt crooked ways in their service, why need I leave the land where my parents dwell?" |
10056 | Were not my forefathers men? |
10056 | Were the Empress Leuhow alive-- let her utter a word-- which of them would dare to be of a different opinion? |
10056 | What can I say-- a poor fellow like me? |
10056 | What can I say-- a poor fellow like me? |
10056 | What can I say-- a poor fellow like me? |
10056 | What can Liáu do against Destiny?" |
10056 | What can we do?" |
10056 | What course is to be pursued to accomplish this?" |
10056 | What did he indeed do? |
10056 | What does a master, in his methods of teaching, consider first in his precepts? |
10056 | What find we on the Chung- nan hill? |
10056 | What has he to do with the Path of Wisdom? |
10056 | What in his angling did he catch? |
10056 | What is meant by that?" |
10056 | What is the use of all that?" |
10056 | What lady plays there? |
10056 | What need to turn his hand to husbandry? |
10056 | What place is this? |
10056 | What say you of him?" |
10056 | What say you of him?" |
10056 | What the cause? |
10056 | What was his meaning?" |
10056 | What would you think if these, because they had run but fifty paces, should laugh at those who ran a hundred paces?" |
10056 | When Tsz- yu became governor of Wu- shing, the Master said to him,"Do you find good men about you?" |
10056 | When a rhinoceros or tiger breaks out of its cage-- when a jewel or tortoise- shell ornament is damaged in its casket-- whose fault is it?" |
10056 | When have they employed a single day in the service of their prince? |
10056 | When he selects for them such labors as it is possible for them to do, and exacts them, who will then complain? |
10056 | When he was asked about spiritual beings, he remarked,"If we can not even know men, how can we know spirits?" |
10056 | When it does so, who can keep it back? |
10056 | When shall we back from this service be led? |
10056 | When the Master heard of this he remarked,"Does that high official know me? |
10056 | When the music- master had left, Tsz- chang said to him,"Is that the way to speak to the music- master?" |
10056 | When they are so bent, who will be able to keep them back?" |
10056 | When we are gone, who will to them be good? |
10056 | When will he come to heal its smart? |
10056 | When you changed a large one for a small, how should they know the true reason? |
10056 | Where can I fly? |
10056 | Where could be found to share our prince''s state, So fair, so virtuous, and so fit a mate? |
10056 | Where seek repose? |
10056 | Where the ability to govern thus is wanting, what has such a ruler to do with the Rules of Propriety? |
10056 | Which of them need be rinsed? |
10056 | Which of them will drive back for us these foreign troops? |
10056 | Who buried were in duke Muh''s grave, Alive to awful death consigned? |
10056 | Who buried were in duke Muh''s grave, Alive to awful death consigned? |
10056 | Who buried were in duke Muh''s grave, Alive to awful death consigned? |
10056 | Who dares despise your cattle too? |
10056 | Who planned, and helped those slanderers vile, My name with base lies to defile? |
10056 | Whom should I delude, if I were to pretend to have officials under me, having none? |
10056 | Why do we brand him in our satire here? |
10056 | Why such rectification?" |
10056 | Why upon me has come this drought? |
10056 | Why walks no one by these guiding principles? |
10056 | Wi- shang Mau accosted Confucius, saying,"Kiu, how comes it that you manage to go perching and roosting in this way? |
10056 | With dignity in presence of them all, My conduct marked, my goodness who shall scout? |
10056 | Within the precincts of the palace, as without them, who is there but bows before me-- who is there but trembles at my approach? |
10056 | Would he go down after him?" |
10056 | Would they not indeed be sages, who could take in at once the first principles and the final developments of things?" |
10056 | Would you guard it carefully in a casket and store it away, or seek a good price for it and sell it?" |
10056 | Ye travellers, who forever hurry by, Why on me turn the unsympathizing eye? |
10056 | Ye travellers, who forever hurry by, Why on me turn the unsympathizing eye? |
10056 | Ye whom I constantly revere, Why do I this endure? |
10056 | Yen Yu asked him,"Seeing they are so numerous, what more would you do for them?" |
10056 | [_ Hears the lute._] Is not that some lady''s lute? |
10056 | [_ Hears the wild fowl''s[ 2] cry_] Hark, the passing fowl screamed twice or thrice!--Can it know there is no one so desolate as I? |
10056 | [_ Seeing Maouyenshow_] What person are you? |
10056 | and the inferior officers and the common people will say,''What is to be done to profit our persons?'' |
10056 | and which need not? |
10056 | and''What of that?'' |
10056 | exclaimed the Master,"are we to say that the spirits of T''ai- shan have not as much discernment as Lin Fang?" |
10056 | how long has Tsz- lu''s conduct been false? |
10056 | how shall there be any apprehension?" |
10056 | is an exception to be made here? |
10056 | it is to begin in others?" |
10056 | it was Hwúi, was it not? |
10056 | or are the facts given him?" |
10056 | or because there are not voices and sounds enough to fill your ears? |
10056 | or because you have not enough of attendants and favorites to stand before you and receive your orders? |
10056 | or because you have not enough of beautifully colored objects to satisfy your eyes? |
10056 | or because you have not enough of light and warm clothing for your body? |
10056 | or words carrying only an outward semblance and show of gravity?" |
10056 | said he;"if I am not to do so for him, then-- for whom else?" |
10056 | said he;"not that: he married three rimes, and he was not a man who restricted his official business to too few hands-- how could he be miserly?" |
10056 | the great officers will say,''What is to be done to profit our families?'' |
10056 | when shall I again behold your Majesty? |
10056 | whom do I over- praise? |
10056 | ~In Praise of a Ruler of Ts''in~ What trees grow on the Chung- nan hill? |
10056 | ~The Condition of King Seuen''s Flocks~ Who dares to say your sheep are few? |
10056 | ~The King''s Anxiety for His Morning Levée~ How goes the night? |
10056 | ~There is a Proper Way for Doing Everything~ In hewing an axe- shaft, how must you act? |
27422 | Why, one asks in amazement, did England part with this Eastern Paradise? |
16894 | ''How could you help loving Narcissus?'' 16894 ''How dared you say such a thing about your son and me?'' |
16894 | ''Was he beautiful?'' 16894 ''Who should know that better than you?'' |
16894 | ''Why does he give it back to me?'' 16894 ''Would n''t let you''? |
16894 | ''You said you were sorry,''questioned his mother, leaning over him,''and asked God to make you a good boy?'' 16894 ''You silly fellow,''I exclaimed,''of course not; I''m always glad to be with you: but perhaps you will be coming up to Trinity too; wo n''t you?'' |
16894 | ''You will write to me, Oscar, wo n''t you, and tell me about everything?'' 16894 After the second offence you went back?" |
16894 | Among the five men Taylor introduced you to, was one named Parker? |
16894 | And did you find any teacher there like Mahaffy? |
16894 | And you took money from this man who had violated you against your will? |
16894 | But how did he come to know a creature like Wood? |
16894 | But how did such a letter,I cried,"ever get into the hands of a blackmailer?" |
16894 | But the letter? |
16894 | But what can I do, Frank? |
16894 | But what good is it, Frank, what good is it? |
16894 | But what will people say? |
16894 | But where to? |
16894 | But why not? |
16894 | But will Carson call witnesses? |
16894 | But you are innocent,I cried in amaze,"are n''t you?" |
16894 | But you did know that Parker was not a literary character or an artist, and that culture was not his strong point? |
16894 | But you went back to Dr. Wilde''s study after the awful assault? |
16894 | But, Frank, what about the people who have stood bail for me? 16894 Come now, really,"cried Knight,"you can not think much of the play?" |
16894 | Did Charlie Parker go and have tea with you there? |
16894 | Did I say anything in the heat of argument that could have offended Oscar or Douglas? |
16894 | Did Mr. Wilde ever consider the effect in his writings of inciting to immorality? |
16894 | Did Taylor bring Scarfe to you at St. James''s Place? |
16894 | Did Taylor''s rooms strike you as peculiar? |
16894 | Did he ever attempt to repeat the offence? |
16894 | Did he ever repeat it again? |
16894 | Did he tell you that he was employed by a firm of bookmakers? |
16894 | Did n''t you? |
16894 | Did that cause you to drop your acquaintance with Taylor? |
16894 | Did they give you anything? |
16894 | Did you ask him to dinner at Kettner''s? |
16894 | Did you call him''Charlie''and allow him to call you''Oscar''? |
16894 | Did you call him''Fred''and let him call you''Oscar''? |
16894 | Did you ever kiss him? |
16894 | Did you get Taylor to arrange dinners for you to meet young men? |
16894 | Did you get on friendly terms with him? |
16894 | Did you give Charlie Parker a silver cigarette case at Christmas? |
16894 | Did you give Scarfe a cigarette case? |
16894 | Did you give him money or a cigarette case? |
16894 | Did you give him money? |
16894 | Did you give him money? |
16894 | Did you give money or presents to these five? |
16894 | Did you go in for games? |
16894 | Did you go to Paris with him? |
16894 | Did you know Parker was a gentleman''s servant out of work, and his brother a groom? |
16894 | Did you know Taylor was being watched by the police? |
16894 | Did you know Walter Grainger?... |
16894 | Did you know that Charlie Parker had enlisted in the Army? |
16894 | Did you know that Taylor was arrested with a man named Parker in a raid made last year on a house in Fitzroy Square? |
16894 | Did you make friends with any of them? |
16894 | Did you meet him afterwards? |
16894 | Did you say that in support of your statement that you never kissed him? |
16894 | Did you tell anyone of what had taken place? |
16894 | Did you visit him one night at 12:30 at Park Walk, Chelsea? |
16894 | Did you write him any beautiful prose- poems? |
16894 | Difficult to explain, Frank, is n''t it, without the truth? |
16894 | Do you know the meaning of the word, sir? |
16894 | Do you mean it really? |
16894 | Do you mean you will not come and spend a week yachting with me? |
16894 | Do you see those lights yonder? |
16894 | Do you think so, really? |
16894 | Do you understand? |
16894 | Had Mr. Wilde written in a publication called_ The Chameleon_? |
16894 | Had he kept it in his hands, then, all the time you were unconscious? |
16894 | Had he written there a story called''The Priest and the Acolyte''? |
16894 | Had you chambers in St. James''s Place? |
16894 | Has Taylor been to your house and to your chambers? |
16894 | Have n''t you a watch? |
16894 | Have you been to Taylor''s rooms to afternoon tea parties? |
16894 | Have you ever met Sidney Mavor there at tea? |
16894 | Have you ever met there a young man called Wood? |
16894 | Have you ever seen them lit by anything else but candles even in the day time? |
16894 | He was the Gamaliel then? |
16894 | How do you mean? |
16894 | How many young men has Taylor introduced to you? |
16894 | How old was Parker? |
16894 | How wonderful of you, Frank; what do you like so much? |
16894 | I hope the warders are kind to you? |
16894 | I said to him,''I suppose, Lord Queensberry, you have come to apologise for the libellous letter you wrote about me?'' 16894 I was not at any of the rehearsals; but so far it is surely the best comedy in English, the most brilliant: is n''t it?" |
16894 | Is it possible? |
16894 | Is that going in a book, Oscar? |
16894 | Is the food good? |
16894 | Is there nothing I can do for you, nothing you want? |
16894 | It is impossible, Frank, and ridiculous; why should I give up my friends for Queensberry? |
16894 | Just to show it to you? |
16894 | Loves? |
16894 | May I bring Bosie? |
16894 | Much smoke, then,I queried,"and no fire?" |
16894 | My friend was very silent, I remember, and only interrupted me to ask:''When do you go, Oscar?'' |
16894 | No, no,I said,"why should I be angry? |
16894 | Nonsense,I cried;"now where are we going?" |
16894 | Nonsense,I replied,"who would arrest you? |
16894 | Not a literary man or an artist, was he? |
16894 | Not even your father? |
16894 | Nothing,I answered,"why should I bother? |
16894 | Of course he defied you? |
16894 | Oh, Frank, how could I? |
16894 | Oh, Frank,he cried,"how can I do that?" |
16894 | Scarfe was out of work, was he not? |
16894 | Surely you went about with some younger boy, did you not, to whom you told your dreams and hopes, and whom you grew to care for? |
16894 | Thank God,I said,"but why did n''t Sir Edward Clarke bring that out?" |
16894 | The Wood letters to Lord Alfred Douglas I told you about? 16894 The prophet must proclaim himself, eh? |
16894 | The question is,said someone,"will Wilde face the music?" |
16894 | Then they knew you as a great talker even at Oxford? |
16894 | Then why did you mention his ugliness, I ask you? |
16894 | Then why not cease to see Bosie? |
16894 | Then, Oscar,I said,"perhaps you wo n''t mind Shaw hearing what I advise?" |
16894 | They are pork- packers, I suppose? |
16894 | This is the first time you have told about this second and third assault, is it not? |
16894 | Was Taylor at the dinner? |
16894 | Was that a reason why you should say the boy was ugly? |
16894 | Was that story immoral? |
16894 | Was that the reason why you did not kiss him? |
16894 | Was there ever any impropriety between you? |
16894 | What about the inside of the platter, Oscar? |
16894 | What age was he? |
16894 | What are you laughing at, Frank? |
16894 | What can I do, Frank? |
16894 | What could I say, Frank? 16894 What did he give you in return?" |
16894 | What do you mean? |
16894 | What do you say, Oscar, will you come and try a homely French bourgeois dinner to- morrow evening at an inn I know almost at the water''s edge? 16894 What do you think of this view?" |
16894 | What happened? |
16894 | What has happened since? |
16894 | What is it, Frank? |
16894 | What is one to do with such a madman? |
16894 | What letters do you mean, Frank? |
16894 | What on earth can you see in him to admire? |
16894 | What on earth''s the matter? |
16894 | What was there in common between you and Charlie Parker? |
16894 | What was your connection with Taylor? |
16894 | What were the students like in Dublin? |
16894 | What''s impossible? |
16894 | What''s it all about? |
16894 | What''s the matter, Oscar? |
16894 | When did you first meet Ernest Scarfe? |
16894 | When did you first meet Fred Atkins? |
16894 | When did you first meet Mavor? |
16894 | When you heard that Taylor was arrested what did you do? |
16894 | Where are you going? |
16894 | Where did you first meet Parker? |
16894 | Who introduced him to you? |
16894 | Who is Bosie? |
16894 | Why did you mention his ugliness? |
16894 | Why did you not answer Miss Travers when she wrote telling you of your husband''s attempt on her virtue? |
16894 | Why let your imagination run away with you? |
16894 | Why not? |
16894 | Why not? |
16894 | Why not? |
16894 | Yes, Frank, where to? |
16894 | Yet you returned again? |
16894 | You asked him for money? |
16894 | You really would not like the Café Royal? |
16894 | You say that the defendant is''not guilty,''and that is the verdict of you all? |
16894 | You should have gone,I cried in French, hot with indignation;"why did n''t you go, the moment you came out of the court?" |
16894 | You went again and again, did you not? |
16894 | Your brother? |
16894 | *****"Do n''t you want to make them all speak of you and wonder at you again? |
16894 | Again the judge interposed with the probing question:"Did you say anything about chloroform in your pamphlet?" |
16894 | Alfred Douglas? |
16894 | Almost immediately scandalous stories came into circulation concerning them:"Have you heard the latest about Lord Alfred and Oscar? |
16894 | And I went on arguing, if Gattie were right, why_ two_ boys? |
16894 | And how can this man have a fair trial now when the papers for weeks past have been filled with violent diatribes against him and his works?" |
16894 | And then the last verse would be quoted:--"Divine, do n''t ye think?" |
16894 | As we turned into Oakley Street, Oscar said to me:"You are not angry with me, Frank?" |
16894 | At the very door Mrs. Jeune came up to me:"Have you ever met Mr. Oscar Wilde? |
16894 | Being a little short- sighted, I asked:"Is n''t that Mr. Oscar Wilde?" |
16894 | But Carson was not to be warded off; like a terrier he sprang again and again:"Why, sir, did you mention that this boy was extremely ugly?" |
16894 | But after all how could he help it? |
16894 | But at the time all such matters were lost for me in the questions: would the authorities arrest Oscar? |
16894 | But was there a seduction? |
16894 | But why not boys of his own class? |
16894 | But why on earth did Alfred Douglas, knowing the truth, ever wish you to attack Queensberry?" |
16894 | Could anything be done? |
16894 | Could more be desired than perfection perfected? |
16894 | Did Jesus suffer in vain? |
16894 | Did he postpone the sentence in order not to frighten the next jury by the severity of it? |
16894 | Did you ever adore any man?" |
16894 | Do you happen to know where Erith is?" |
16894 | Do you remember Wordsworth speaks''of the wind in the trees''? |
16894 | Do you still hold to that assertion?" |
16894 | Does not the prospect tempt you?" |
16894 | English judges always resent and resist such popular outbursts: why not in this case? |
16894 | Examining Oscar as to his letters to Lord Alfred Douglas, Sir Frank Lockwood wanted to know whether he thought them"decent"? |
16894 | Foreman:"Or ever contemplated?" |
16894 | Frank, would you? |
16894 | Gill:"And Lord Queensberry may be discharged?" |
16894 | Had he acted out of aristocratic insolence, or was he by any possibility high- minded? |
16894 | Had not Wilde also rendered distinguished services to his country? |
16894 | Had the police asked for a warrant? |
16894 | He must be mad, Frank, do n''t you think? |
16894 | He questioned me:"What is the alternative, Frank, the wisest thing to do in your opinion? |
16894 | He surprised me by saying:"A year, Frank, they may give me a year? |
16894 | Here you have the opportunity of making your name known just as widely; why not avail yourself of it? |
16894 | His efforts to collect his ideas were not aided by Mr. Carson''s sharp staccato repetition:"Why? |
16894 | His reputation was always rather--''_high_,''shall we call it?" |
16894 | How can I get evidence or think in this place of torture? |
16894 | How could I verify this impression, I asked myself, so as to warn him effectually? |
16894 | How did he know Dogberry and Pistol, Bardolph and Doll Tearsheet? |
16894 | I asked him could I charter it? |
16894 | I asked, smiling,"or in an article? |
16894 | I asked,"any professor with a touch of the poet?" |
16894 | I gasped; what had happened? |
16894 | I have also got a new sitting- room.... Why are you not here, my dear, my wonderful boy? |
16894 | I questioned,"at whose feet you sat?" |
16894 | I wonder can I do it in a week, or will it take three? |
16894 | If you were in France, everyone would be asking: will he come back or disappear altogether? |
16894 | In one hour she would be free of the Thames and on the high seas--(delightful phrase, eh?) |
16894 | Is it not dreadful the way they insult the fallen?" |
16894 | Is this true, or do you not know of it? |
16894 | Mr. Carson:"Of course the costs of the defence will follow?" |
16894 | Mr. Justice Wills:"Were you agreed as to the charge on the other counts?" |
16894 | My contempt for Courts of law deepened: those twelve jurymen were anything but the peers of the accused: how could they judge him? |
16894 | On all sides one was asked:"Have you seen Oscar''s latest?" |
16894 | Oscar then rose and asked,"Where shall I be taken?" |
16894 | Robert Ross urged him to accept Mathew''s offer; but he would not: why? |
16894 | Seeing that I did not respond he challenged me:"What do you think of it?" |
16894 | Shall I come to Salisbury? |
16894 | Still she could not give him much; the difficulty was only postponed; what was to be done? |
16894 | Subtle, was n''t it?" |
16894 | Suddenly the younger of the boys asked:"Did you sy they was niked?" |
16894 | That is our duty to our neighbour, Frank; but sometimes we mislay it, do n''t we?" |
16894 | The issue had narrowed down to terrible straits: would it be utter ruin to Oscar or merely loss of the case and reputation? |
16894 | The judge here interposed with the crucial question:"Did you know that you had been violated?" |
16894 | The jury having consulted for a few moments, the Clerk of Arraigns asked:"Do you find the plea of justification has been proved or not?" |
16894 | The man turned round, recognised Him and said,''I was blind; Thou didst heal me; what else should I do with my sight?''" |
16894 | The uncle wonders why Lord Dartmoor wants to marry an American and grumbles about her people:"Has she got any?" |
16894 | They allow you books, do n''t they?" |
16894 | To my astonishment he faced me and said:"And my sureties?" |
16894 | To my surprise he was cold and said, a little bitterly, I thought:"''You seem glad to go?'' |
16894 | Was it worth while to stir up all the foul mud again, in order to beat the beaten? |
16894 | What am I to do?" |
16894 | What can I do?" |
16894 | What could I say?" |
16894 | What did he mean by saying that Oscar was a"centre of extensive corruption of the most hideous kind"? |
16894 | What do I care? |
16894 | What was to be done next? |
16894 | What was to be done? |
16894 | What will this professor of Æsthetics make of it? |
16894 | What would people think if they saw you?'' |
16894 | What would you give, when a book of yours comes out, to be able to write a long article drawing attention to it in_ The Pall Mall Gazette_? |
16894 | Where Whistler had missed the laurel how could he or indeed anyone be sure of winning? |
16894 | Where did he get this new knowledge? |
16894 | Who had given him the new and precise information? |
16894 | Who was inspiring him? |
16894 | Why are you alone in London, and when do you go to Salisbury? |
16894 | Why did he not tell him his case could not possibly be won? |
16894 | Why give up like that? |
16894 | Why had he taken the risk? |
16894 | Why had not Mr. Carson put some of the young men he spoke of in the box? |
16894 | Why is Pears''soap successful? |
16894 | Why not? |
16894 | Why on earth did Sir Edward Clarke not advise Oscar in this way weeks before? |
16894 | Why should I belabour the beaten? |
16894 | Why should I cringe to this madman?" |
16894 | Why should any taste be ostracised? |
16894 | Why? |
16894 | Wilde rose and cried,"Can I say anything, my lord?" |
16894 | Will civilisation never reach humane ideals? |
16894 | Will men always punish most severely the sins they do not understand and which hold for them no temptation? |
16894 | Willie''s friend seemed amused at the lyrical outburst of the green spinster, for smiling a little she questioned him:"''Speranza''is Lady Wilde?" |
16894 | Would Sir Edward Clarke fight the case as it should be fought? |
16894 | Would he be able to do that? |
16894 | Would he bridle his desires, live savingly, and write assiduously till such repute came as would enable him to launch out and indulge his tastes? |
16894 | Would he put Taylor in the box? |
16894 | Would the huntsman give the word? |
16894 | Would vanity do anything? |
16894 | Would you in your position as editor of_ The Fortnightly_ come and give evidence for me, testify for instance that''Dorian Gray''is not immoral?" |
16894 | You''ve never seen the mouth of the Thames at night, have you? |
16894 | and declare his own mission?" |
16894 | half the possible sentence: the middle course, that English Judges always take: the sort of compromise they think safe?" |
16894 | or will he manifest himself henceforth in some new comedies, more joyous and pagan than ever?" |
16894 | or would they allow him to escape? |
16894 | why did you add that?") |
16894 | why? |
11263 | A telegraph messenger? |
11263 | A trip round the world? |
11263 | Agreed,said I;"but if there is no danger under this head, are there not a lot of scoundrels prowling about Mongolia and Northern China?" |
11263 | An exalted personage? |
11263 | And at Kachgar? |
11263 | And do they only speak Chinese? |
11263 | And do you know what line these players are in? |
11263 | And do you know why, Monsieur Bombarnac? 11263 And for the convenience of the guards, I suppose? |
11263 | And for your temperament, doctor? |
11263 | And how do you know that? 11263 And how is Asia to be united by railway with Africa?" |
11263 | And how long would the line be? |
11263 | And how? |
11263 | And in what way? |
11263 | And it is? |
11263 | And medresses? |
11263 | And no accident up to now? 11263 And no one suspected the presence of my dear Kinko?" |
11263 | And so, this mandarin, Yen Lou? |
11263 | And that is? |
11263 | And the English? |
11263 | And the Russians in charge of the train are replaced by Chinese, are they not? |
11263 | And the Straits of Gibraltar? |
11263 | And the second? |
11263 | And the wife? |
11263 | And these two Chinese, do you know them? |
11263 | And what can he do? 11263 And what has it got in it?" |
11263 | And what may be in those cases, if you please? 11263 And when does it get there?" |
11263 | And when shall we be at the frontier? |
11263 | And where are the four Mongols who were in the rear van? |
11263 | And where are these lyrical people going? |
11263 | And where is his friend Ghangir? |
11263 | And where were you before you left France? |
11263 | And why not the old one first? 11263 And why will you never forget Khodjend, Monsieur Caterna?" |
11263 | And why? |
11263 | And why? |
11263 | And why? |
11263 | And with that name is he going to Pekin? |
11263 | And you are going to Pekin? |
11263 | And you think these scoundrels will be daring enough to attack the train? |
11263 | And you went back to Bucharest? |
11263 | And you, Kinko? |
11263 | And your cases? |
11263 | Are all your goods on board? |
11263 | Are the stations very far from each other? |
11263 | Are you ever seasick? |
11263 | Are you going for a run round the town, Monsieur Claudius? |
11263 | Are you subject to seasickness? |
11263 | Are you sure that Kardek is at the points? |
11263 | Are you surprised? |
11263 | Baron Weissschnitzerdörfer? |
11263 | Baron Weissschnitzerdörfer? |
11263 | Before we begin,said Pan Chao,"tell me, doctor, how many fundamental rules there are for finding the correct amounts of food and drink?" |
11263 | Betray you, my boy? 11263 Beyond?" |
11263 | Birds that talk--"What-- parrots? |
11263 | Breakfast? |
11263 | But I wonder how the train could have got on the Nanking branch without being noticed? |
11263 | But how could the chief be informed of the treasure being sent? |
11263 | But who was this Tamerlane? |
11263 | But you have lived in France? |
11263 | But,said Pan- Chao,"how does it happen the Nanking branch was open when the Tjon viaduct is not finished? |
11263 | Dead? |
11263 | Do you forget that those millions would be a temptation to scoundrels? 11263 Do you know that German''s name?" |
11263 | Do you see these peaches? |
11263 | Do you think Major Noltitz would consent? |
11263 | Ephrinell? |
11263 | Excellent? |
11263 | Explore it? |
11263 | Fourteen ounces of solid or liquid--"An hour? |
11263 | Frenchman? 11263 Going all the way to Pekin?" |
11263 | Have they not told you? |
11263 | Have you forgotten it? 11263 Have you much?" |
11263 | He consents? |
11263 | He-- the manager of the Transasiatic? |
11263 | How can I repay you? |
11263 | How far is it to Fuen Choo? |
11263 | How long do we stop at? |
11263 | How so? |
11263 | I believe I am, Monsieur Claudius,said the actor,"and why? |
11263 | I believe you, Kinko, I believe you; and on your arrival at Pekin? |
11263 | I have no doubt of it; but how am I to know it? |
11263 | I hope you have lost nothing, Monsieur Ephrinell? |
11263 | I want you to be a witness--"An affair of honor? 11263 If they find me out?" |
11263 | In the train? |
11263 | In this box? |
11263 | In those cases? 11263 In what way have they looked upon the progress of the Russians through Central Asia?" |
11263 | Is Madame Caterna to come to the wedding? |
11263 | Is it Ki- Tsang and his gang that we have to do with? |
11263 | Is it a lovely dream that dazes me, or am I awake? |
11263 | Is it of any real use, this wall of China? |
11263 | Is it the day after to- morrow,he asked,"that we arrive at Pekin?" |
11263 | Is not its mouth near Tien Tsin, where the baron thinks of catching the mail for Yokohama? |
11263 | Is that a green light? |
11263 | Is that in time to catch the boat for Uzun Ada? |
11263 | Is there a refreshment bar in the station? |
11263 | Kinko? 11263 Mademoiselle Zinca-- Kinko--""He asked you to come and tell me he had arrived?" |
11263 | Marry her? |
11263 | May I ask how many teeth you are importing into China in those cases? |
11263 | Mr. Bombarnac,said Ephrinell to me,"are you serious in regretting all those fine things?" |
11263 | No one can see us, nor hear us? |
11263 | Oak, I admit, but sentimental--"Do you know why the baron has patronized the Grand Transasiatic? |
11263 | Poor brute? 11263 Popof, where is that van going?" |
11263 | Practical, Mr. Reporter? 11263 Same trade?" |
11263 | See here,said Madame Caterna,"is there any need of a subscription to defray the cost of the affair?" |
11263 | Serious? |
11263 | Shall I tell you what I think about that couple, Monsieur Bombarnac? |
11263 | Sir,said he to me,"are two Frenchmen going all the way from Baku to Pekin without making each other''s acquaintance?" |
11263 | Sir,says a good little Jew to me, showing me a certain habitation which seems a very ordinary one,"you are a stranger?" |
11263 | So that we shall have Chinese engine drivers and stokers? 11263 That will not delay us?" |
11263 | The guard? |
11263 | The manager of the company who so courageously drove off the bandits and killed their chief Ki- Tsang with his own hand? |
11263 | The most curious thing, Adolphe? 11263 The younger Dumas after Sainte Beuve?" |
11263 | Then I beg to ask why you, a sailor, did not go by way of the sea? |
11263 | Then you will not forget to explore the establishment of Strong, Bulbul& Co.? |
11263 | There has been a crime-- a crime intended to bring about the destruction of the train and passengers--"And with what object? |
11263 | These papers-- how have they gone astray? 11263 This Tio- King?" |
11263 | To appear at Shanghai in the French troupe at the residency as--"You know all that, then? |
11263 | To marry-- Mademoiselle Zinca--"Zinca? |
11263 | Was there a young lady with us? |
11263 | Well, Monsieur Bombarnac, if I am not taking too great a liberty, may I ask a favor of you? |
11263 | Well, Monsieur Bombarnac,asked the major,"do you not admire the square?" |
11263 | Well, Popof, when this exalted personage gets out perhaps you will let me know? |
11263 | Well,said I to the Yankee,"how are you getting on with your cargo?" |
11263 | Well,said I to the major,"I hope you have abandoned your suspicions with regard to my lord Faruskiar?" |
11263 | What are they for? |
11263 | What do you think? |
11263 | What has it got in it? 11263 What is he to do?" |
11263 | What is it about? |
11263 | What is it? |
11263 | What is that? |
11263 | What is the matter, Popof? |
11263 | What is the matter, Popof? |
11263 | What is the matter? 11263 What is your name?" |
11263 | What marriage? |
11263 | What may that be, an arba? |
11263 | What traveling companion? |
11263 | What would you have had us do, sir? 11263 What would you have, Caroline?" |
11263 | What would you have, Monsieur Bombarnac? |
11263 | What would you have? |
11263 | What? 11263 When is there a train for Baku?" |
11263 | When shall we be at the junction? |
11263 | Where, then? 11263 Who is he?" |
11263 | Who knows what the dining- car kitchen will give us on the Chinese railways? 11263 Why not, Monsieur Claudius? |
11263 | Why not? 11263 Why not?" |
11263 | Why not? |
11263 | Will Major Noltitz and you allow me to join you? |
11263 | Yes, Gibraltar? |
11263 | Yes, to work at my trade there until the day came when it was impossible for me to resist the desire to leave--"To leave? 11263 Yes-- but-- you understand-- he is very tired after so long a journey--""Tired?" |
11263 | Yes-- pay the carriage--"It will not be long now? |
11263 | You are a Frenchman? |
11263 | You are going to Baku? |
11263 | You are not unwell, Madame Caterna? |
11263 | You know my name? |
11263 | You know? |
11263 | You must have been a good deal about the world, Monsieur Caterna? |
11263 | You saw me? |
11263 | You will come to our country some day? |
11263 | A cat? |
11263 | A cupboard I propose to open? |
11263 | A dog? |
11263 | A panther, a tiger, a lion? |
11263 | A visit to the passengers and their baggage? |
11263 | All? |
11263 | Am I in my right senses? |
11263 | An animal? |
11263 | And Baron Weissschnitzerdörfer? |
11263 | And Faruskiar, whom Major Noltitz so unjustly suspected? |
11263 | And Kinko, what about him?" |
11263 | And as to the section between the frontier and Pekin?" |
11263 | And can you believe that I, a journalist--""You are a journalist?" |
11263 | And for him, as for all other theatrical folks, is not the money the most serious and the least disputable manifestation of the dramatic art? |
11263 | And if he could not be understood, what explanation could he give? |
11263 | And in the first place of Major Noltitz? |
11263 | And is not the box a cupboard? |
11263 | And is not the young Roumanian like a snail in his shell, for it is as much as he can do to get out of it? |
11263 | And is there not a good deal of landscape about geography? |
11263 | And so, Monsieur Caterna--""You know my name?" |
11263 | And the baron, what has become of him? |
11263 | And to begin with, at what o''clock did the train for Tiflis start from the Caspian? |
11263 | And was that the only way-- a desperate way-- of stopping the train before it reached the viaduct? |
11263 | And was there anything astonishing in that, considering that the newspapers, even those of Paris, had published the fact many days before? |
11263 | And what are they saying? |
11263 | And what could this young Roumanian do who did not know a word of Chinese, but explain matters in the sign language? |
11263 | And what is it these big people make? |
11263 | And who is this Kardek they are talking about? |
11263 | And why are these houses always in a state of defence? |
11263 | And why should they not be, considering that they take the name of"zenbusis,"which signifies"women''s kisses?" |
11263 | And with whom, if you please?" |
11263 | And, Monsieur Ephrinell, when you read of traveling in Transcaucasia forty years ago, do you not regret it? |
11263 | Are there stores of these things at the principal stations of the Transcaspian? |
11263 | Are they not descended from them? |
11263 | Are they suspicious of Kinko? |
11263 | As I put my foot on the platform I hear the young Chinese say to his companion:"Well, Dr. Tio- King, did you see the German with his performing hat? |
11263 | As soon as Popof reappeared I said to him:"Anything fresh?" |
11263 | At Sou Tcheou or Lan Tcheou, while we stop a few hours?" |
11263 | At this moment Popof says to me:"Are you not going to sleep to- night, Monsieur Bombarnac?" |
11263 | Bombarnac?" |
11263 | But am I in Persia or in Russia? |
11263 | But are there not any Europeans in this Grand Transasiatic train? |
11263 | But how will the poor fellow take it? |
11263 | But is it a man or a woman? |
11263 | But is not thirty hours enough to make Baron Weissschnitzerdörfer lose the mail from Tient- Tsin to Yokohama? |
11263 | But we can not yet have reached Gheok Tepe? |
11263 | But what are they doing there? |
11263 | But what is he doing now? |
11263 | But what is that I hear being recited, or rather intoned at the end of our compartment? |
11263 | But what was there in these two missing vans which could be of interest to them? |
11263 | But what would you have? |
11263 | But whether this van started or did not start, whether it was attached to our train or left behind, what could it matter to him? |
11263 | But whither did this bell invite the witnesses and guests? |
11263 | But why is Popof not in his seat? |
11263 | But why should I have doubted what Popof told me, and why should Popof have suspected what the Persians had told him regarding this Yen Lou? |
11263 | By its light what do I read? |
11263 | By the by, you have not met our traveling companion?" |
11263 | Can a Yankee wait?" |
11263 | Caroline, can not you imagine him as''Morales''in the_ Pirates of the Savannah_?" |
11263 | Caterna?" |
11263 | Could anything be more ridiculous than this Russian mismanagement? |
11263 | Did the Chinaman speak the language of Boccaccio? |
11263 | Did you say nothing? |
11263 | Do you want a light or a fire? |
11263 | Does he know them? |
11263 | During my promenade, one thought besets me: is the voyage to end without my getting anything out of it as copy for my journal? |
11263 | Empty? |
11263 | Encouragements? |
11263 | Ephrinell?" |
11263 | Fail in what, considering that he is going to Pekin? |
11263 | For what motive are they on the platform which is just behind the tender? |
11263 | Fulk Ephrinell and Miss Horatia Bluett? |
11263 | Had Kinko been found in his box? |
11263 | Had he alighted at one of the small stations between Tchertchen and Tcharkalyk, where we ought to have been about one o''clock in the afternoon? |
11263 | Had he begun to suspect him? |
11263 | Had the Mongol brought some news which had made them throw off their usual reserve and gravity? |
11263 | Had the fraud been discovered? |
11263 | Had the switch been interfered with?" |
11263 | Has Popof obtained from the mutes who are on guard the name of this high personage? |
11263 | Has he given us the slip? |
11263 | Has he got away? |
11263 | Has he slipped out at one of the stations without my seeing him? |
11263 | Has it not a right to be so called? |
11263 | Has my news gone with him? |
11263 | Has the Hunson the same properties as the Garonne? |
11263 | He will not only be sent to prison, but the bastinado--""The bastinado-- like that idiot Zizel in_ Si j''etais Roi? |
11263 | How could I tell this unfortunate girl that her sweetheart would never reach Pekin station? |
11263 | How far off are they? |
11263 | How long have I slept? |
11263 | How long will it last? |
11263 | How otherwise could the fair Celestials admire their almond eyes and their elaborate hair? |
11263 | How will this late comer get on board? |
11263 | How would he submit to this examination? |
11263 | How would they dare-- six strong-- to attack a hundred passengers, including the Chinese guard? |
11263 | I a traveler in news, and he a traveler in-- In what? |
11263 | I ask Popof what is meant by the governor''s presence, has it anything to do with us? |
11263 | I asked,"who are they?" |
11263 | I exclaimed,"and Miss Horatia Bluett, the Englishwoman? |
11263 | I have a presentiment that something is in the wind Perhaps by listening? |
11263 | I must know at all costs to whom this wild beast is being sent; is it going to Uzon Ada, or is it going to China? |
11263 | I said to Major Noltitz:"If it is not trespassing on your kindness, may I ask you to go with me?" |
11263 | I was not mistaken, then; they are compatriots, but of what class? |
11263 | I will help her to get the nails out of it--""The nails out of it, Monsieur Bombarnac? |
11263 | If an American commercial and an English ditto were not in order, who would be? |
11263 | In this van?" |
11263 | Is he going towards the gate to escape me? |
11263 | Is it a reply to my wire sent from Merv, relative to the mandarin Yen Lou? |
11263 | Is it a wild animal? |
11263 | Is it credible? |
11263 | Is it iron bridges, or locomotives, or armor plates, or steam boilers, or mining pumps? |
11263 | Is it not a happy chance-- and a rare one-- to meet with French people away from France? |
11263 | Is it not written in Chinese characters? |
11263 | Is it possible that I shall have to do without the company of any of my numbers? |
11263 | Is it possible? |
11263 | Is it some Chinese formality? |
11263 | Is it the influence of the surroundings which produces the increase of the birth rate? |
11263 | Is it to renew his provisions at the refreshment bar? |
11263 | Is my man not here? |
11263 | Is she a young woman or an old girl? |
11263 | Is she old? |
11263 | Is she plain? |
11263 | Is she pretty? |
11263 | Is she young? |
11263 | Is the poor fellow ill?" |
11263 | Is the province affected by the prolific example of the Celestial Empire? |
11263 | Is this an advantage or otherwise? |
11263 | Is this lady going to be my companion all the way to the terminus of the Grand Transasiatic? |
11263 | It becomes more distinct, and I ask if the panel is going to slide, if the prisoner is coming out of his prison to breathe the fresh air? |
11263 | Labiche, could you ever have imagined that this adorable composition would one day charm passengers in distress on the Grand Transasiatic? |
11263 | Linen? |
11263 | Makes you feel easy?" |
11263 | Must I have recourse to the German baron? |
11263 | My Lord Faruskiar? |
11263 | My head swims-- Is it true we are running towards the abyss? |
11263 | My intention is to take notes hour by hour-- what did I say? |
11263 | My panel? |
11263 | No; there is only one way--""And what is that?" |
11263 | Not an adventure from Tiflis to Pekin? |
11263 | Now he interrupted Popof, and in a voice heard by all he asked:"Where is Faruskiar?" |
11263 | Now it is Manchoo; what it is to be next what matters? |
11263 | Now the road is clear to Tcharkalyk; what do I say? |
11263 | On the contrary, is not his intention, as I am afraid it is, to get away from us? |
11263 | Only to a certain extent? |
11263 | Ought I not to tell Popof? |
11263 | Ought I to attempt to see him to- night? |
11263 | Perhaps he would have become a Genghis Khan? |
11263 | Perhaps the sons of Israel are not masters in this country, as in so many others? |
11263 | Perhaps two eyes are looking through these holes, watching what is going on outside? |
11263 | Provisions? |
11263 | Shall I be present at one of those merry- makings which charm the tourist? |
11263 | Shall I exchange a sympathetic salute with her in the streets of Pekin? |
11263 | Shall I see one of those villages inhabited by Cossacks who are soldiers and farmers at one and the same time? |
11263 | Shall I send it by telegram to our cabinet ministers? |
11263 | Shall I speak, shall I not speak? |
11263 | Shall I stop him? |
11263 | Shall I wait till it is extinct, or, as is very probable, will it not last till the morning? |
11263 | Shall we be obliged to take refuge in the vans, as behind the walls of a fortress, to entrench ourselves, to fight until the last has succumbed? |
11263 | Should I not call the attention of the stationmaster to this disquieting case? |
11263 | Suppose it is Zeitung who makes a trade of this sort of thing and manages to make a little money out of public generosity? |
11263 | Suppose the case is passed? |
11263 | Supposing I were superstitious? |
11263 | Surely the general manager of the line ought to keep an eye on the illustrious defunct, entrusted to the care of the Grand Transasiatic? |
11263 | That respiration, that sneeze; had I dreamed it all? |
11263 | The Nanking branch? |
11263 | The actor and the actress? |
11263 | The box will be taken to Avenue Cha- Coua, and she--""Will pay the carriage?" |
11263 | The case is lighted within; if I were to peep through those holes? |
11263 | The major said to me in a low voice:"Why Ki- Tsang? |
11263 | The railroad not finished-- and they sold me a through ticket from Tiflis to Pekin? |
11263 | The readers of the_ Twentieth Century_ will ask how are the furnaces fed in a country in which there is neither coal nor wood? |
11263 | The switch over? |
11263 | The two Celestials? |
11263 | There, at the end of the streets near the citadel, what do we see? |
11263 | These valves and levers, what shall we do with them? |
11263 | They are some of the passengers, evidently; but why here-- at this hour? |
11263 | To find out who are my traveling companions, whence they come, where they go, is that not the duty of a special correspondent in search of interviews? |
11263 | Useless eloquence? |
11263 | Was I deceived on board the_ Astara_? |
11263 | Was he arrested? |
11263 | Was he in prison? |
11263 | Was he not entitled to consider that the Russo- Chinese railways were the very apex of absurdity and disorder? |
11263 | Was his imagination working with the same activity as mine, and was he taking seriously what was only a joke on my part? |
11263 | Was it any business of his? |
11263 | Was it by chance? |
11263 | Was it for that reason that at Donchak they had so carefully watched the van which contained the corpse? |
11263 | Was it not for the purpose of robbing the train that we were attacked between Tchertchen and Tcharkalyk?" |
11263 | Was it the mandarin, Yen Lou? |
11263 | Was there no one in the case, not even Zeitung? |
11263 | Was this an article in request at the shops of the Middle Kingdom? |
11263 | We are in wedding garments, and it is a pity to have had all this fuss for nothing, is n''t it, Caroline?" |
11263 | Well, would you believe it? |
11263 | Were not subscriptions opened in their favor? |
11263 | Were these really glass goods exported to Miss Zinca Klork, Avenue Cha- Coua, Pekin, China? |
11263 | What adventures they have had since we left Tiflis? |
11263 | What an indefatigable humorist is our actor? |
11263 | What do I say? |
11263 | What does he mean? |
11263 | What had been arranged? |
11263 | What had happened? |
11263 | What is the good of coal when the bare and arid soil of Apcheron, which grows only the Pontic absinthium, is so rich in mineral oil? |
11263 | What is the matter?" |
11263 | What is this gentleman going to do? |
11263 | What switch? |
11263 | What was he thinking about? |
11263 | What was the meaning of this Italian word in an Oriental mouth? |
11263 | What was to be done? |
11263 | What will he think to find me here? |
11263 | What would you have? |
11263 | What would you haye? |
11263 | What, my young Roumanian did not perish in the explosion? |
11263 | What? |
11263 | What? |
11263 | What? |
11263 | Whence comes this noise? |
11263 | Where does the train stop next?" |
11263 | Where is Ephrinell? |
11263 | Where is Faruskiar? |
11263 | Where is there not a Hôtel de France? |
11263 | Who knows if we may not meet Faruskiar and his Mongols on the road?" |
11263 | Why did Major Noltitz ask the Chinaman this question? |
11263 | Why do they continue to look out over the immense desert? |
11263 | Why have they hidden a domestic animal in this case? |
11263 | Why is he shaking, and bending, and diving into his pockets like a man who has lost something valuable? |
11263 | Why not my lord Faruskiar?" |
11263 | Why not resume the marriage ceremony interrupted by the attack on the train? |
11263 | Why not? |
11263 | Why pursue them, now that the battle has ended in our favor? |
11263 | Why should I hide it from myself? |
11263 | Why should I not confess it? |
11263 | Why this escape? |
11263 | Why?" |
11263 | Will I buy any? |
11263 | Will it be believed that these peculiar Orientals can see no progress in this prohibition to beat their wives? |
11263 | Will it be put hind side before or upside down? |
11263 | Will its position be shifted? |
11263 | Will they not be more intent on the security of their dividends than of their passengers? |
11263 | Will you come with me?" |
11263 | With regard to my newspaper, and that telegram relative to the mandarin our train is"conveying"in the funereal acceptation of the word? |
11263 | Without going back to Marco Polo in the thirteenth century, what do we find? |
11263 | Without it, what would become of the eloquence of our legislators?" |
11263 | Would it not, Fulk?" |
11263 | Would they catch him? |
11263 | You are a Frenchman?" |
11263 | You are a Roumanian, are you not?" |
11263 | You have noticed the gentleman in our train?" |
11263 | asked Caterna,"what is the right quantity?" |
11263 | do not be alarmed--""Is he ill?" |
11263 | he exclaims,"that that drunken moujik actually asked me for something to drink?" |
11263 | how do you know that?" |
11263 | said I, laughing at the thought which crossed my mind,"if that is--""Who?" |
11263 | to Pekin? |
23107 | ''What has brought thee here, little one, to this isle, which is in the sea and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?'' 23107 Ar''n''t you Nansen?" |
23107 | Are we about Ice Point? |
23107 | But who in his senses would believe this? |
23107 | Did you see the stripes of the tiger? |
23107 | Do they come from the sun or the moon? 23107 Have ye come through the sky? |
23107 | How else could they have reached us through the woods and rapids which even we find it hard to pass? |
23107 | How far is it to the end of the lake? |
23107 | I perceive,said Imam,"that you are fond of visiting distant countries?" |
23107 | The other end of the lake? 23107 This Davis hath been three times employed; why hath he not found the passage?" |
23107 | Were we to be the fortunate ones to reach this goal, which navigators for centuries had striven to reach? |
23107 | What does this mean? |
23107 | What great creatures are these? |
23107 | What has brought you hither? |
23107 | What is this, Christians? 23107 What kind of a country is it to the north along the river?" |
23107 | What was the name of the owner of the goods? |
23107 | What wind blows so strongly against the side of the house? |
23107 | What, have you no slaves in England? |
23107 | Where are you bound for? |
23107 | Where is Barker? |
23107 | Why do we waste time on this barbarian? 23107 Why have ye come hither unto this land, which the people of Egypt know not?" |
23107 | Why not call it Stanley Pool and those cliffs Dover Cliffs? |
23107 | And the deserted Pizarro? |
23107 | And the people crowded round and asked them,"Who are you that sit weeping here?" |
23107 | And what of Richard Chancellor on board the_ Bonadventure_? |
23107 | And where, on our modern maps, was this little earth, and what was it like? |
23107 | And why? |
23107 | As they came to anchor, a boat shot alongside and a voice cried out in Swedish,"Is it Nordenskiold?" |
23107 | But then had not the Vikings already discovered this country five hundred years before? |
23107 | But to- day we ask: Was it Iceland? |
23107 | But what if there were a northern route? |
23107 | But where is the beginning? |
23107 | CHAPTER III IS THE WORLD FLAT? |
23107 | Could they be Speke and Grant? |
23107 | Did rivers flow into the sea? |
23107 | Did trees and flowers cover the land? |
23107 | Did ye sail upon the waters or upon the sea?" |
23107 | Do they give us light by night or by day?" |
23107 | Do we wonder to read that"one of the ships stole away privily and returned into Spain,"and the remaining men begged piteously to be taken home? |
23107 | Everywhere Cortes and his men were received with friendship and reverence, for was he not the long- lost Child of the Sun? |
23107 | Four centuries have passed away, but--"When shall the world forget The glory and the debt, Indomitable soul, Immortal Genoese? |
23107 | From a photograph by a member of Younghusband''s expedition to Tibet and Lhasa, 1909(?).] |
23107 | Had Pytheas indeed found the end of the world? |
23107 | Here were the fair- skinned men in shining armour marching back to their own again, and Cortes at their head-- was he not the god himself? |
23107 | I raised my hat; we extended a hand to one another with a hearty''How do you do?'' |
23107 | IS THE WORLD FLAT? |
23107 | Is it for such a little thing that you quarrel? |
23107 | Is it necessary to add that this Staaten Land was really New Zealand, and the bay where the ships anchored is now known as Tasman Bay? |
23107 | Is it the Niger or Congo?'' |
23107 | Is the Lualaba, which Livingstone had traced along a course of nearly thirteen hundred miles, the Nile, the Niger, or the Congo? |
23107 | Livingstone, I presume?'' |
23107 | Was he not the"Admiral of the Ocean Sea, Viceroy of the Western Indies,"the only man who had crossed the unknown for the sake of a cherished dream? |
23107 | Was it Lapland? |
23107 | Was it an island? |
23107 | Was it mainland? |
23107 | Was it not one of the largest trade markets in Asia, where rode the strange ships of many a distant shore? |
23107 | Was it one of the Shetland Isles? |
23107 | Was not this the long- sought passage to India? |
23107 | Was there not land beyond? |
23107 | Was there some vexation in the heart of the"Admiral of India"when the command of the new fleet was given to Pedro Cabral? |
23107 | Was this, after all, the source of the Niger? |
23107 | Were Asia and America joined together, or was there a strait between the two? |
23107 | What about El Dorado? |
23107 | What about a North- West Passage leading round Labrador from the Atlantic to the Pacific? |
23107 | What can I give that is acceptable to the King of England?" |
23107 | What had he done? |
23107 | What if the commander himself left a young wife and a son of six months old? |
23107 | What if this act of reckless daring was unsuccessful? |
23107 | What was it like before the first explorers made their way into distant lands? |
23107 | What was the map like? |
23107 | What were we to do? |
23107 | Where is the dawn of geography-- the knowledge of our earth? |
23107 | Where were these tin islands, kept so secret by the master- mariners of the ancient world? |
23107 | Which of us has a horse? |
23107 | Who ever heard of such a thing? |
23107 | Who shall describe the terrors of that homeward voyage, the suffering, starvation, and misery of the weary crew? |
23107 | Why should England not find a way to that glorious land by taking a northern course? |
23107 | Would not such a name deter the seamen of the future? |
23107 | cried the natives, probably surprised at their foreign dress;"and what seek ye so far from home?" |
27233 | A question that is very frequently put is,"What has been the influence of Christianity upon Japanese life and thought?" |
27233 | How long, without the mainstay of religion, will the Japanese cling to this outworn but beautiful relic of his old life? |
27233 | On the other side patriotism is kept alive by the pilgrimages of school children to the national shrines, but one is confronted with the questions? |
27233 | WILL THE JAPANESE RETAIN THEIR GOOD TRAITS? |
27233 | What is it that has kept them unspotted from the world of business? |
26842 | And where could we find a more exquisite charm? |
26842 | Are all things beautiful? |
26842 | Are all things beautiful? |
26842 | Are all types equally beautiful when we abstract from our practical prejudices? |
26842 | But how shall we reconcile our sympathy with his dream and our perception of its absurdity? |
26842 | But what can that have to do with my actual sense of what a tree should be? |
26842 | But what does the circle express except circularity, or the oval except the nature of the ellipse? |
26842 | But why, in that case, this infinite variability of ideal trees? |
26842 | How does the unity we call a character arise, how is it described, and what is the basis of its effect? |
26842 | How else establish any relation between that eternal object and the type in my mind? |
26842 | How much is not gained by the dumb fidelity of the fool, and by the sublime humanity of Lear, when he says,"Art cold? |
26842 | If Sybaris is so sad a name to the memory-- and who is without some Sybaris of his own? |
26842 | If we mean by love of nature aesthetic delight in the world in which we casually live( and what can be more_ natural_ than man and all his arts? |
26842 | May we not prefer the unchangeable to the irrecoverable? |
26842 | Shall we take the Platonic myth literally, and say the idea is a memory of the tree I have already seen in heaven? |
26842 | The Platonic idea of a tree may exist; how should I deny it? |
26842 | The test is always the same: Does the thing itself actually please? |
26842 | Was the Tree Beautiful an oak, or a cedar, an English or an American elm? |
26842 | What could be better than Homer, or what worse than almost any translation of him? |
26842 | What more could be needed to suffuse the world with the deepest meaning and beauty? |
26842 | What wonder, then, that we are not constantly conscious of that perfection which is the implicit ideal of all our preferences and desires? |
26842 | _ Are all things beautiful?_ § 31. |
20111 | ''Aunt Rose,''he asked even before we embraced,''is there any one else stopping with you?'' 20111 ''Well then, Dubois, what''s all this nonsense? |
20111 | ''What? 20111 ''_ Eh bien, nos patés_? |
20111 | And Vauquois? |
20111 | And at Beausejour? |
20111 | And mine, Madame, how about him? |
20111 | And no one complains, Madame Dumont? |
20111 | And that does happen often? |
20111 | And you? |
20111 | Are n''t you afraid you might miss forty winks? |
20111 | Are n''t you going to mend my pick- axe, Maxence? |
20111 | Bah, what difference does that make so long as they are happy and can live in peace? 20111 But how about_ their_ incendiary shells? |
20111 | But the economical struggle? |
20111 | But your husband? |
20111 | But, Jules, why do you write such things? |
20111 | But, was he educated for the career? |
20111 | But,I suggested,"do n''t you realise what a risk you are taking? |
20111 | Can you just see something happening to him with his father out there in the trenches? |
20111 | Did you bring a letter? |
20111 | Did you come across Lucien, and Bataille''s son? |
20111 | Did you hear what I said? 20111 Gentlemen,"said he,"excuse me for interrupting, but do any of you know the exact depth to which an aeroplane bomb can penetrate?" |
20111 | Good evening, mother; how''s your man to- day? |
20111 | He''s at the front? |
20111 | How about your regiment? 20111 How old are you?" |
20111 | I say, Paul,he called out to him,"would you do us the honour of dining with us? |
20111 | I''ve been saying to myself every day,he continued,"Is n''t it a pity that nobody should see them? |
20111 | I? 20111 In four years? |
20111 | In the trenches? 20111 Is Madame at home?" |
20111 | Is he one of ours? |
20111 | Is n''t mine at Verdun? |
20111 | Is that so? 20111 Just look at them, are n''t they splendid? |
20111 | Look here, Business, did I hear you say it wo n''t be over in four years? |
20111 | Madame, you wo n''t mind if I come after them to- morrow, would you? |
20111 | Now, then, how many of you are there in your trenches? |
20111 | Oh, shut up, ca n''t you? 20111 One or two rooms?" |
20111 | Over? 20111 Pistre? |
20111 | That goes right to the spot, does n''t it? |
20111 | That''s a good strong- box, is n''t it? |
20111 | The Germans back here? 20111 The President of the Republic once asked General de Castelnau,''Well, General, what shall you do after the war is over?'' |
20111 | Then your father is coming later? |
20111 | Three months? 20111 We thought we knew how much we loved them, did n''t we, Madame? |
20111 | What are you doing there, Jules? |
20111 | What are you looking for? |
20111 | What are you writing? |
20111 | What difference does that make? |
20111 | What forces have we in front of us? |
20111 | What have you got to kick about? |
20111 | What time did you start out, child? |
20111 | What''s become of Chenu, and Morlet and Panard? |
20111 | Where did they fall? 20111 Where is your mother, dear?" |
20111 | Where on earth did you get wool? 20111 Who is it?" |
20111 | Who''s excited? |
20111 | Who? |
20111 | Why is n''t he at the front? |
20111 | Why, Madame, what on earth would we do about the inventory when peace comes, if we were not to put a little order into our stock? |
20111 | Why, what were you expecting? |
20111 | With or without bath? |
20111 | Would you prefer number six or number fourteen? |
20111 | Yes, and what are you going to do if the letter carrier gets killed, or the Boche locate the mail waggon on the road every other delivery? 20111 Yes-- why?" |
20111 | You mean old Père François who keeps the public gardens? |
20111 | You wicked, wicked girl-- what made you tell such lies? |
20111 | You''re as well off here as you were in the trenches of Bois Le Pretre, are n''t you? |
20111 | You''ve all doubtless seen the sign that I put up in my window? |
20111 | You''ve gotten used to this life? |
20111 | Your son? 20111 Your what?" |
20111 | ''Who was leading, and who first cut the German barbed wire?'' |
20111 | Absinthes, bitters and their like have not only been abolished, but replaced-- and by what? |
20111 | After all, I keep telling them there must be a few, otherwise who''s going to write history? |
20111 | After all, could it be possible that this was the very midst of war? |
20111 | After presentations and greetings:"You are not leaving town this Summer?" |
20111 | And did they not witness the battles in the streets, all the horrors of the Commune, after having experienced the agonies and privations of the Siege? |
20111 | And history''s got to be written, has n''t it?" |
20111 | And the bombardment?" |
20111 | And the dahlias I gave you? |
20111 | And we who are going out to meet death have got to face it on empty stomachs?'' |
20111 | And when will it all be over? |
20111 | And your papa?" |
20111 | Are you ready? |
20111 | Are you ready?" |
20111 | Besides, the women gave up pastry, did n''t they? |
20111 | But hold on a minute, is n''t Lorrain a friend of yours?" |
20111 | But we''d never have realised how really deep it was if it had n''t been for this war, would we?" |
20111 | But what''s the use of trying to shape your own destiny?" |
20111 | But why do n''t you go and see''Père François''? |
20111 | Can you blame him? |
20111 | Cut it out, wo n''t you? |
20111 | Cyprien,"his friends enjoined;"shut up a bit, ca n''t you?" |
20111 | Did n''t Mr. Dumont who used to teach the third grade, draw it all out for us on the blackboard the last time he was home on leave? |
20111 | Do you hear me?" |
20111 | Do you know we found that monogram on an old 18th century handkerchief? |
20111 | Does he still live where he used to?" |
20111 | Fair Soissons, what is now your fate? |
20111 | Follow in line-- what''s the use of crowding?" |
20111 | For once again, to quote the laundress of the rue de Jouy--"Trials? |
20111 | For what home did she thus pine? |
20111 | He is n''t too awfully ugly, is he? |
20111 | How about my eau- de- Cologne?'' |
20111 | How about them? |
20111 | How can a fellow think if you all scream at once? |
20111 | How did they turn out?" |
20111 | How in the presence of such calm can we believe in war? |
20111 | I remember a druggist who on greeting me exclaimed:"A pretty life, is it not, for a man who has liver trouble?" |
20111 | I''d like to know what your wife would say if she caught you smoking a pipe in her hay loft?" |
20111 | I''d like to know where you''d be then? |
20111 | I''m so sorry, what''s the trouble-- nothing serious, I hope?" |
20111 | In what state shall we find you? |
20111 | Is it not on those same fertile fields so newly consecrated with our blood that every struggle for world supremacy has been fought? |
20111 | Is n''t he the image of the Bacchus who forms the centre of the painting? |
20111 | It used to be--''Popaul here-- Popaul there-- where''s my tobacco? |
20111 | Leaving? |
20111 | Now, with your mad idea, just suppose those who had a right foot all wanted tan shoes, and those who had a left could n''t stand anything but black? |
20111 | Poor, melancholy_ Mireille_, what master was she mourning? |
20111 | Ready to protest against this disfigured travesty of their war? |
20111 | See that little fellow rolling his cigarette? |
20111 | Shall I give Madame their address at Houlgate? |
20111 | Should n''t you think their Officers would look after them? |
20111 | So how is the brave little woman even to think of paying four years''rent, which when computed would involve more than two- thirds of her capital? |
20111 | Sometimes when you would all start out for some excursion I''d see him coming back towards the gate:"''You''re not going with them then, Jacques?'' |
20111 | Stationary?" |
20111 | Suppose the Germans were to get back here again before you sell it? |
20111 | That''s an awfully bad sign, is n''t it?" |
20111 | That''s no reason why you should mess up a house that belongs to your own people, is it? |
20111 | That''s the principal thing, the one for which we''re all working, is n''t it?" |
20111 | This one or that one? |
20111 | Thus armed can they not look the horrid spectres square in the face? |
20111 | To whom is this due? |
20111 | Was it such a terrible thing, since the air fairly rung with merriment? |
20111 | Well then, when a bombardment sets in how on earth could I get home quickly without my bicycle?" |
20111 | Well, do you think that prevented the Parisians from fishing in the Seine, or made this café shut its doors? |
20111 | What can one more or less mean now? |
20111 | What could they do? |
20111 | What did they all contain? |
20111 | What do you take us for? |
20111 | What good can that do them?" |
20111 | What has become of those fifteen or sixteen hundred brave souls who loved you so well that they refused to leave you? |
20111 | What on earth are you doing here?" |
20111 | What shall I do?" |
20111 | What ultimate destiny is reserved for your cathedral, your stately mansions, your magnificent gardens? |
20111 | What will become of me now? |
20111 | What''s a war cross more or less to me? |
20111 | What''s artillery for, anyway?" |
20111 | What''s the matter back there?" |
20111 | When did you get here?" |
20111 | Where have they gone? |
20111 | Where''s mamma?" |
20111 | Which way?" |
20111 | Who were they? |
20111 | Why did n''t Madame know that both Monsieur and Madame left for the seashore last evening? |
20111 | Will Monsieur kindly give me the baggage check?" |
20111 | Would they not be disgusted? |
20111 | Would you mind walking around to the farms and telling them that Maxence will be here to- morrow morning? |
20111 | You''re better off here than in the trenches, are n''t you? |
20111 | _ Qui sait_? |
20111 | and then turning to his mother,"I say, mamma, if one of them lands on our house, you promise you''ll wake me up, wo n''t you? |
20111 | boys, who''s ready?" |
20111 | exclaimed H."Do you hear the_ pompiers_? |
20111 | he cried,"is it thus that you receive your sons who shed their blood for you?" |
20111 | what terrors can lack of work, food shortage, or war hold for such people? |
20111 | you''re surely not thinking of leaving your babies alone in the cellar?" |
22749 | How did it get along? |
22749 | MY DEAR W. B.,--You ask me about sport, and if I''ve got near a tiger? 22749 No;""Legs?" |
22749 | So and so is looking well is n''t he? |
22749 | To God,he said shortly--"And where will mine go?" |
22749 | What is it these travelling people put on paper? |
22749 | What was it like,said R.;"had it arms?" |
22749 | ( My own dear countrymen you will not be taken in by this chaff for ever, will you?) |
22749 | 27th Evening.--To what shall I liken this evening on deck? |
22749 | A lift of the eye to the left, and a thousand yards off, I see faint forms of does, then I spot a buck!--question, can we spare the time? |
22749 | After all, who may write about India? |
22749 | Ahem-- may that pass as a"digression?" |
22749 | And at night have you heard it? |
22749 | And how do we so often run up against people we met on the ship coming out? |
22749 | And why leave Bangalore at all? |
22749 | As we crossed the river in our canoes, the sun was setting, and Carter said,"Is n''t this like the West Highlands?" |
22749 | As we pull up my brother, Colonel and Agent on the platform, remarks,"Well, here you are, you''re looking well-- have you any luggage?" |
22749 | B. Blank''s writings?" |
22749 | But whither have I strayed in this discourse? |
22749 | But why hurry? |
22749 | By the way what is a Euroclydon; is it a Levanter? |
22749 | Could she forget? |
22749 | Curious seat-- do you remember the way he rode with his toes out?" |
22749 | Do n''t you wish we could too? |
22749 | Fairly concentrated mental food, is it not? |
22749 | Good horseman-- wasn''t he? |
22749 | Had the silent bare- footed Burman...? |
22749 | Here there seems to be a hiatus in these notes of mine-- it is rather a jump from the British India steamer to a Gymkhana dance? |
22749 | I believe a jackal slunk past; it was getting light-- first jackal I''ve seen outside a menagerie-- an event for persons like us? |
22749 | I do not write much about cooking, and the table, in these notes, do I? |
22749 | I met a man at the club who said,"Wo n''t you come with us to- morrow( Sunday) and have a try for duck?" |
22749 | I tailed behind and sketched as per margin, as we went through the sand-- shockingly unacademical was n''t it, to draw walking? |
22749 | I wonder if our nobility will take it lying down-- and if I may be forgiven, this extra wide digression? |
22749 | Is there not a wind, however, called the Mistral, in the Gulf of Lyons, and a Euroclydon further east, mentioned by St Paul? |
22749 | It is distinctly British-- who on earth did it? |
22749 | It was something like,"Sahib General?" |
22749 | It was the Correggio brothers, was it not? |
22749 | Major Jones said to me the other day,"Why on earth is Smith writing about India-- what does he know? |
22749 | May I go on to the end of Callum''s story; though it is rather a far cry from this hot Red Sea to the cool Sound of Jura? |
22749 | Mrs Fraser, wife of the Resident, was at home, and wore a very pretty dress of soft grey and black muslin(?) |
22749 | One speaks near me--"You knew so and so? |
22749 | Ought I to have corrected him? |
22749 | Ought I to have told him seriously that I am an artist!--a professional painter from choice, and necessity? |
22749 | Our Stroke points ashore and grins, and says,"Elephanta,"and we say,"Are you sure, is it not an island on Loch Katrine?" |
22749 | Page vi:[ Bands p aying God save the King-- Edward the--? |
22749 | Perhaps the arrangements could not have been better? |
22749 | Shooting and other sports we can have at home, and after all, is not trying to see things and depict them the most exciting form of sport? |
22749 | Should I question the servant-- would he, or could he, explain? |
22749 | Sir Arthur Sullivan did study Burmese music, but was not that quite exceptional? |
22749 | So, perhaps, if one Eastern can grasp Ruskin''s best thoughts it may be worth the effort of trying to teach thousands who ca n''t? |
22749 | There are sandy cliffs here, riddled with holes made by blue rock- pigeons(?) |
22749 | They sang in full chorus with a reed piping between each line, liquid quiet music; who was it said-- like the sound of grass growing? |
22749 | Was there ever a voyage so vividly described, in more concentrated and pithy words? |
22749 | We are jogging south on Akbar''s road with Akbar''s men on a foray, or is it a great invasion? |
22749 | We finished our concert at one, and the young soldiers had to get home, and start up the river before daybreak for warlike manoeuvres--(or polo?) |
22749 | Well, you know they were n''t bad, were they?" |
22749 | What a list of water- fowl there would be, and where would turtle go?--under Game or Fish? |
22749 | What is the good of having a country or a forest if you do n''t breed a good stock, be it either deer or people? |
22749 | What sort of bag did you get; good sport, eh?" |
22749 | What subjects for pictures-- rather shoppy this for you? |
22749 | What would the latter end of that man be; would she forgive? |
22749 | When we pieced together what each had heard, it came to"what the blankety blank has come over your-- tut tut- down- stream cargo boat? |
22749 | Where is his boy-- Sandhurst? |
22749 | Why do we not make dishes like this at home? |
22749 | Why do women at home not adopt Spanish dancing? |
22749 | Why fatigue ourselves seeing more places and sights than these we have near us? |
22749 | Why on earth do people look over the shoulders of persons painting, when they would never dream of looking over the shoulder of any one writing? |
22749 | Would you like a description of Calcutta? |
22749 | _ R._--"Who was''we''?" |
22749 | and I saw boys doing Sandow exercises, evidently trying to bring up their biceps-- poor little devils-- how can they? |
22749 | asks_ G.-K._!--"Why did n''t you stop them taking the gates?" |
22749 | but he did, and I mended it!--It''s pretty well done, is n''t it? |
22749 | met in Simla last, did n''t we-- wasn''t it cold last night?" |
22749 | there was a streak along the foot of the door-- it had been dragged out!--Or was it floor varnish? |
22749 | treasures up and what the Anglo- Indian hastens to throw away? |
22749 | why must we hide all beauty of form except that of animals-- hide fearfully God''s image? |
27556 | At the command( or, the instance) of the guru, the grateful----(?) |
27556 | But where is the man that can live without dining? |
27556 | He may live without books,--what is knowledge but grieving? |
27556 | He may live without hope,--what is hope but deceiving? |
27556 | He may live without love,--what is passion but pining? |
27152 | Brapa lama("How long")? |
27152 | Can I take a sadoe? |
27152 | How far am I from Tji Wangi? 27152 How you spell it?" |
27152 | Mana Tji Wangi("Where is Tji Wangi")? |
27152 | Tell Mr. X---- What is your name? |
27152 | Tell Mr. X---- that Mynheer Veasfolt----"Who? |
27152 | Tell Mr. X---- that Mynheer Versfolt----"Who? |
27152 | Versfolt? |
27152 | What Englishman? |
27152 | Who? |
27152 | Who? |
27152 | Who? |
27152 | Yes; what about him? |
27152 | How did that happen?" |
27152 | I suppose you want something with a_ cachet_ for the public?" |
27152 | I would add that, having tried Japan( and who has not? |
27152 | In the next place, all the Dutch officials, and the planters and their wives, were travelling second class, and I was left to enjoy(?) |
27152 | Is it within driving distance?" |
27152 | May not an influence of the same kind have operated in Java, and have preserved some of these chronicles from corruption? |
27152 | Such a phrase, for example, as this:_ Apa nama ini?_("What is the name of this?") |
27152 | Such a phrase, for example, as this:_ Apa nama ini?_("What is the name of this?") |
27152 | This latter says,"Ca n''t sleep? |
27152 | We met some natives; I accosted them with"Mana Tji Wangi?" |
27152 | Why not adopt this method in Java? |
27152 | X----?" |
13415 | Ah, it is you, Volodya? 13415 And Tanya?" |
13415 | And are you sure that the men of genius, whom all men trust, did not see phantoms, too? 13415 And ca n''t you stay?" |
13415 | And he''s not been away? |
13415 | And is it necessary to speak? |
13415 | And it does not bore you? |
13415 | And what do you want clouds for? |
13415 | And what is the object of eternal life? |
13415 | And where is my father''s fortune? 13415 And why are there no thunderstorms in the winter, father?" |
13415 | And your irony? 13415 Andryusha, whom are you talking to?" |
13415 | Anna Pavlovna, you are not going, dear? |
13415 | Are n''t you asleep? |
13415 | Are you going? |
13415 | Are you here? |
13415 | Are you ill? |
13415 | Are you jealous? |
13415 | Are you reading? 13415 Are you taking a walk?" |
13415 | At the Conservatoire? |
13415 | Besides, why should they be remembered? 13415 But do you know, Volodya, why you are such a clumsy seal? |
13415 | But does it make any difference? |
13415 | But how about the husband? |
13415 | But shall we not meet again to- day? |
13415 | But why is it she does n''t rob me or say insulting things to me? 13415 But why?" |
13415 | But why? |
13415 | But will the gods be suddenly wrathful? |
13415 | But... why have they been rummaging here? |
13415 | Can it have been so difficult to see through him? 13415 Certainly, but about what?" |
13415 | Did you catch the train? |
13415 | Do those knockings worry you? |
13415 | Do you believe in the immortality of man? |
13415 | Do you hear, Dmitri Dmitritch? 13415 Do you know,_ George_, what is one of the secrets of your success? |
13415 | Do you publish your stories in magazines? |
13415 | Do you read a great deal? |
13415 | Do you remember how I took you to the dance at the club? |
13415 | Do you see anything at night? |
13415 | Do you understand? 13415 Does this happen to you often?" |
13415 | Everything is over for me, and I want nothing.... What more is there to say? |
13415 | Forgiven? 13415 Go where?" |
13415 | Good- morning,said the monk, and after a brief pause he asked:"What are you thinking of now?" |
13415 | Has Georgy Ivanitch been staying here long? |
13415 | Has he come back? 13415 Have you been out late? |
13415 | Have you finished at the high school here? |
13415 | Have you no friends? |
13415 | Have you really nothing fresher to tell me than this everlasting tale of your servant''s misdeeds? |
13415 | Have you? 13415 How are you getting on? |
13415 | How are you getting on? |
13415 | How could I despise you? |
13415 | How do you do, if you please? |
13415 | How do you do, if you please? |
13415 | How do you feel? |
13415 | How is one to say it? |
13415 | How? 13415 How?" |
13415 | I am in error? |
13415 | I do n''t say she took the brooch,said Fedosya Vassilyevna,"but can you answer for her? |
13415 | If I know I am mentally affected, can I trust myself? |
13415 | If one does n''t play, what is one to do here? |
13415 | If you are ill, why do you take a place? |
13415 | In childbirth? |
13415 | Indeed? 13415 Is Georgy Ivanitch at home?" |
13415 | Is Georgy Ivanitch at home? |
13415 | Is Georgy Ivanitch up? |
13415 | Is Zinaida Fyodorovna at home? |
13415 | Is it for long? |
13415 | Is it really so serious? 13415 Is joy a supernatural feeling? |
13415 | Is n''t the soup good? |
13415 | Is she having another attack? |
13415 | Is that enough now? 13415 Is there any one here?" |
13415 | Is there any one with Georgy Ivanitch? |
13415 | Is your husband a German? |
13415 | Is your mistress at home, too? |
13415 | It''s nice, is n''t it? |
13415 | Let us say no more about that.... Let us put it off till to- morrow.... Now tell me about Moscow.... What is going on in Moscow? |
13415 | Liza, you do n''t know why they have been rummaging in my room? |
13415 | Madam, should n''t I fetch a doctor? |
13415 | May I come in? |
13415 | May I come in? |
13415 | May I give him a bone? |
13415 | May I? |
13415 | My views? 13415 My views?" |
13415 | No telegram has come? |
13415 | No, she must stay,_ George!_ Do you hear? 13415 Offended, I suppose? |
13415 | Oh, you think so? |
13415 | On your word of honour? |
13415 | Shall I get drunk? 13415 Shall I go, or not?" |
13415 | She ca n''t be more harmful than a hare? 13415 Surely you can rise above such paltriness?" |
13415 | Tell me, where have you been? |
13415 | That''s a good thing... a good thing...."Will you be quick? |
13415 | Then you do n''t exist? |
13415 | Then you wo n''t stay? |
13415 | Then,I went on,"you believe there will be a day of judgment, and that we shall have to answer to God for every evil action?" |
13415 | There is something I wanted to tell you,said Zinaida Fyodorovna, and she laughed;"shall I? |
13415 | To call logic to our aid...."Georgy, why are you torturing me? |
13415 | We will see each other and talk, wo n''t we? 13415 Well, how are you getting on there?" |
13415 | Well, young man? |
13415 | Well? |
13415 | What am I now? |
13415 | What am I to say? |
13415 | What are we waiting for? |
13415 | What are you to do? |
13415 | What can it be from? 13415 What do I hear?" |
13415 | What do you say to me? |
13415 | What do you want? |
13415 | What does this mean? |
13415 | What exactly? |
13415 | What fate has brought you? |
13415 | What for? 13415 What for?" |
13415 | What have you been reading this week since I saw you last? |
13415 | What have you got to tell me, young man? 13415 What if I have? |
13415 | What if you are? 13415 What is it for? |
13415 | What is it you want? |
13415 | What is it? |
13415 | What is it? |
13415 | What is one to do with these accursed people? |
13415 | What is she crying about? 13415 What is the third course?" |
13415 | What need was there to search her room? 13415 What news?" |
13415 | What notion is this? |
13415 | What room will you give me? 13415 What shall I play?" |
13415 | What will our children and grandchildren do? |
13415 | What''s this? |
13415 | What''s wrong? |
13415 | What... what does this mean? |
13415 | What? 13415 What?" |
13415 | What? |
13415 | What? |
13415 | Where am I to go? 13415 Where are you going?" |
13415 | Where can I go? |
13415 | Where have you studied? |
13415 | Where shall we go now? 13415 Where? |
13415 | Where?... 13415 Who goes there?" |
13415 | Who is here? |
13415 | Who is the low scoundrel who has dared to tie this horse to an apple- tree? 13415 Who is there?" |
13415 | Who tied this horse to an apple- tree? |
13415 | Who was it? |
13415 | Why are we worn out? 13415 Why are you angry? |
13415 | Why are you here and sitting still? 13415 Why are you never so tender or so gay as you used to be at Znamensky Street? |
13415 | Why are you standing still? |
13415 | Why are you staying? |
13415 | Why did n''t you come in in time for tea? |
13415 | Why did n''t you wire? |
13415 | Why did you not believe me? |
13415 | Why do n''t you eat, Varvara Vassilyevna? |
13415 | Why do n''t you say something? |
13415 | Why do n''t you speak, then? |
13415 | Why do n''t you speak? 13415 Why do you speak to me like that?" |
13415 | Why do you talk about generals and baronesses? 13415 Why do you talk like that? |
13415 | Why do you want me at once? |
13415 | Why do you? 13415 Why does she not turn him out?" |
13415 | Why go home? 13415 Why have you changed?" |
13415 | Why is it nothing of the sort ever happens to me? |
13415 | Why not? 13415 Why should I read him? |
13415 | Why should you worry yourself? |
13415 | Why tell lies? |
13415 | Why the cemetery? 13415 Why was it? |
13415 | Why, do you live as you like best? 13415 Why, do you want me to go down on my knees to you, or what? |
13415 | Why? 13415 Why? |
13415 | Why? 13415 Why?" |
13415 | Will you be kind and take me to the Petersburg Side? 13415 Will you have some wine and some coffee, though? |
13415 | Yes, but what of it? 13415 Yes, but why have they been rummaging in my room?" |
13415 | You are not going? |
13415 | You are out of humour? |
13415 | You do n''t come and see us-- why? |
13415 | You mean that you ca n''t part with her?... 13415 You went to the cemetery?" |
13415 | After I had said good- night and had my hand on the door- handle, she said:"What do you think? |
13415 | Am I obliged to give an account of my doings to any one? |
13415 | And I wanted to forget, to forget you; but why, oh, why, have you come?" |
13415 | And Kitten? |
13415 | And how can you go on thinking, thinking, thinking?... |
13415 | And if so, why should we worry and write despairing letters?" |
13415 | And not only here at Nice, but in general?" |
13415 | And the Turkins? |
13415 | And the purse? |
13415 | And there is something cold in your jokes.... Why have you given up talking to me seriously?" |
13415 | And wait a bit, Ivan Karlovitch, what will he be in ten years''time? |
13415 | And what had I to sacrifice, indeed? |
13415 | And what had he to talk of? |
13415 | And what''s here?" |
13415 | And when at a neighbouring table there is talk of the Turkins, he asks:"What Turkins are you speaking of? |
13415 | And you? |
13415 | Are n''t you glad?" |
13415 | Are you all right? |
13415 | Are you always like that in the morning, or is it only to- day? |
13415 | Are you free? |
13415 | Are you satisfied? |
13415 | As he eats his supper, he turns round from time to time and puts in his spoke in some conversation:"What are you talking about? |
13415 | At Dyalizh and in the town he is called simply"Ionitch":"Where is Ionitch off to?" |
13415 | Besides, what did it matter? |
13415 | But can I wish for copper saucepans and untidy hair, or like to be seen myself when I am unwashed or out of humour? |
13415 | But he did not mix up ideas with his deceit, and you...""For goodness''sake, why are you saying this?" |
13415 | But is eternal truth of use to man and within his reach, if there is no eternal life?" |
13415 | But one asks oneself: what is it all for? |
13415 | But the day before, when during a quarrel he had cried out in a tearful voice,"My God, when will it end?" |
13415 | But the point is, why have n''t you been sincere? |
13415 | But what are the profits, and how do they enjoy them? |
13415 | But what is the matter with you?" |
13415 | But what was it for? |
13415 | But what would she have said if she found out the actual truth? |
13415 | But what''s the good of talking?" |
13415 | But when I die, who will look after it? |
13415 | But where was it? |
13415 | But who and what needed my sacrifices now? |
13415 | But why do I ask you? |
13415 | But why do you look at me with such enthusiasm? |
13415 | But why do you look so solemn? |
13415 | But why have you fallen-- you? |
13415 | But why make the husband a party to your secrets? |
13415 | But why talk of them?" |
13415 | But, what''s it for? |
13415 | But... but, Vladimir Ivanitch, for God''s sake, why are you not sincere?" |
13415 | Could it be Orlov, to whom perhaps Kukushkin had complained of me? |
13415 | Did you stay long in Paris?" |
13415 | Do you hear what I say? |
13415 | Do you hear? |
13415 | Do you hear? |
13415 | Do you hear?" |
13415 | Do you know what he costs me? |
13415 | Do you know, you nasty boy, what you cost me? |
13415 | Do you like me?" |
13415 | Do you mean the people whose daughter plays on the piano?" |
13415 | Do you remember Pekarsky? |
13415 | Do you suppose she would understand me? |
13415 | Do you understand? |
13415 | Do you understand? |
13415 | Do you want me to whip you, you young ruffian?" |
13415 | Do you? |
13415 | Eh? |
13415 | Eh? |
13415 | Excuse my frankness; what are you? |
13415 | Five minutes later Pekarsky''s footman came out, bareheaded, and, angry with the frost, shouted to me:"Are you deaf? |
13415 | For God''s sake,_ George_.... Shall we?" |
13415 | Had he been in love, then? |
13415 | Had there been anything beautiful, poetical, or edifying or simply interesting in his relations with Anna Sergeyevna? |
13415 | Has anything happened?" |
13415 | Have I heard it? |
13415 | Have I read it somewhere? |
13415 | Have you read Balzac?" |
13415 | He looked at_ maman_''s sharp profile, at her little nose, and at the raincoat which was a present from Nyuta, and muttered:"Why do you powder? |
13415 | He pressed his head tightly in his hands and said miserably:"Why, why have you cured me? |
13415 | He sat down to the piano, struck one chord, then began playing, and sang softly,"What does the coming day bring me?" |
13415 | He slowly and with obvious reluctance drank the tea, and returning the glass to me, asked timidly:"Can you give me... something to eat, my friend? |
13415 | How are things? |
13415 | How can I? |
13415 | How can they waste whole days doing nothing? |
13415 | How could they be free from this intolerable bondage? |
13415 | How do we live here? |
13415 | How should we meet? |
13415 | How was it that a man who had thought and read so much could not imagine anything more sensible? |
13415 | How? |
13415 | How?" |
13415 | I am asking you,"she went on, beating her hand on the table, as though marking time,"what ought I to do here? |
13415 | I am only fetching the drops....""What for?" |
13415 | I ask, what harm did that do any one?" |
13415 | I believe what is going on about us is inevitable and not without a purpose, but what have I to do with that inevitability? |
13415 | I forget the name.... Convallaria, is n''t it?" |
13415 | I may seem to you indelicate, cruel, but I do n''t care: you love me? |
13415 | I meant to ask: what will happen to the garden when I die? |
13415 | I saw hallucinations, but what harm did that do to any one? |
13415 | I suppose you still go in chiefly for philosophy?" |
13415 | I, too, hate and despise my past, and Orlov and my love.... What was that love? |
13415 | Is Polya still living there?" |
13415 | Is n''t that true? |
13415 | Is she the match for you? |
13415 | Is that a bedroom? |
13415 | Is that anybody''s business? |
13415 | Is that right? |
13415 | Is that the way decently brought up children sit? |
13415 | Is your son asleep? |
13415 | It was true it was terrible to lose her place, to go back to her parents, who had nothing; but what could she do? |
13415 | It''s my own money I lose, I suppose? |
13415 | Let me ask you bluntly, what is there for me to do here, and what am I to do?" |
13415 | Listen; you want me to tell you what I wo n''t tell the priest on my deathbed?" |
13415 | May I think so?" |
13415 | Moved by the music, Zinaida Fyodorovna stood beside him and asked:"Tell me honestly, as a friend, what do you think about me?" |
13415 | On whose account? |
13415 | Or do you imagine that I coin money, that I get it for nothing? |
13415 | Or do you want me to tell you what I would not tell as Confession? |
13415 | Or playing cards?" |
13415 | Ought it not to be the normal state of man? |
13415 | Ought n''t he, darling?" |
13415 | Shall we drive somewhere?" |
13415 | She is charming and exquisite-- who denies it? |
13415 | She is spoilt, whimsical, sleeps till two o''clock in the afternoon, while you are a deacon''s son, a district doctor....""What of it?" |
13415 | She made the sign of the cross over her son, and said in French, turning to Nyuta:"He''s rather like Lermontov... is n''t he?" |
13415 | So I am mentally deranged, not normal?" |
13415 | So there is only one thing left to do....""What?" |
13415 | So you wo n''t stay, then? |
13415 | Sometimes he would sit down at the piano, play a chord or two, and begin singing softly:"What does the coming day bring to me?" |
13415 | Surely I have n''t to live another month or two like this? |
13415 | Tell me, Andryusha, honestly,"she began eagerly, looking him in the face:"do you feel strange with us now? |
13415 | The gardener? |
13415 | The labourers? |
13415 | There was no one, and, indeed, who would come here at midnight? |
13415 | They''ve searched your things, but you... what does it matter to you? |
13415 | Thinking? |
13415 | To dispose as quickly as possible of the oppressive, inevitable question, which weighed upon him and me, he asked:"Zinaida Fyodorovna is dead?" |
13415 | Was not she mixed up in something dreadful? |
13415 | Was not their life shattered? |
13415 | Was there any need for that?" |
13415 | Well?" |
13415 | What am I to do? |
13415 | What are you doing here? |
13415 | What are you doing? |
13415 | What book have you there?" |
13415 | What could be better? |
13415 | What could this unknown regiment that came by chance to- day and would depart at dawn to- morrow mean to them? |
13415 | What did he care for words? |
13415 | What did you say? |
13415 | What do you mean by''eternal truth''?" |
13415 | What do you want?" |
13415 | What do you want?" |
13415 | What fatal, diabolical causes hindered your life from blossoming into full flower? |
13415 | What for? |
13415 | What for? |
13415 | What for?" |
13415 | What for?" |
13415 | What had Fedosya Vassilyevna been looking for in her work- bag? |
13415 | What had I to think of and to do? |
13415 | What had happened? |
13415 | What if from the point of view of God it''s wrong? |
13415 | What is happiness?" |
13415 | What is it you want? |
13415 | What is it?" |
13415 | What is the use of preliminaries and introductions? |
13415 | What is the use of unnecessary fine words? |
13415 | What is there nice in it?" |
13415 | What right had she to suspect me and to rummage in my things?" |
13415 | What shall I do in the night?" |
13415 | What time is it now?" |
13415 | What was I living for? |
13415 | What was I now? |
13415 | What was he to do for that half- hour? |
13415 | What would his colleagues say when they heard of it? |
13415 | What would this romance lead to? |
13415 | What''s the object of it?" |
13415 | What''s the use?..." |
13415 | Whenever I took off his fur coat he tittered and asked me:"Stepan, are you married?" |
13415 | Where are you living?" |
13415 | Where do you intend to go?" |
13415 | Where is your money? |
13415 | Where was I to go? |
13415 | Where, in what land or in what planet, was that optical absurdity moving now? |
13415 | Who the devil is that?" |
13415 | Who was that ringing? |
13415 | Who will work? |
13415 | Who would stand up for her? |
13415 | Whom?" |
13415 | Whom?" |
13415 | Whom?" |
13415 | Why are we, at first so passionate, so bold, so noble, and so full of faith, complete bankrupts at thirty or thirty- five? |
13415 | Why change? |
13415 | Why did she love him so much? |
13415 | Why did you make me promises, why did you rouse mad hopes? |
13415 | Why do n''t you flirt with me, for instance?" |
13415 | Why do n''t you say so?" |
13415 | Why do n''t you? |
13415 | Why do you look at me like that from under your brows? |
13415 | Why does n''t she believe me? |
13415 | Why have n''t you introduced me to your father or your cousin all this time? |
13415 | Why have you come? |
13415 | Why have you concealed what is and talked about what is n''t? |
13415 | Why is it I never notice the maids nor the porters nor the footmen? |
13415 | Why is it lying about here? |
13415 | Why is it that, having once fallen, we do not try to rise up again, and, losing one thing, do not seek something else? |
13415 | Why is it? |
13415 | Why is it? |
13415 | Why is it? |
13415 | Why publish?" |
13415 | Why should my ego be lost?" |
13415 | Why should you? |
13415 | Why trouble yourself? |
13415 | Why was it necessary?" |
13415 | Why was it? |
13415 | Why was one drawer of the table pulled out a little way? |
13415 | Why were you silent or encouraged me by your stories, and behaved as though you were in complete sympathy with me? |
13415 | Why write? |
13415 | Why, do you think I ought to be pleased with the boy? |
13415 | Why? |
13415 | Why?" |
13415 | Why?" |
13415 | Will you be mine?" |
13415 | Will you come with me? |
13415 | Yes? |
13415 | Yes? |
13415 | Yes? |
13415 | You are naughty and then you cry? |
13415 | You love me, do n''t you?" |
13415 | You say it''s a girl?" |
13415 | You say no? |
13415 | You turn away? |
13415 | Zinaida Fyodorovna, may I come in?" |
13415 | _ George_, I''ll begin with the question, when are you going to give up your post?" |
13415 | _ Maman!_ My God, why didst Thou give me such a mother? |
13415 | _ Tout comprendre, tout pardonner._ Will you stay?" |
13415 | he asked; and when she nodded he asked courteously,"Have you been long in Yalta?" |
13415 | or"Should not we call in Ionitch to a consultation?" |
13415 | romantic attitude?" |
13415 | you cry? |
20083 | ''And if they have been remiss?'' 20083 ''Does God show mercy to literary men?'' |
20083 | ''What are they?'' 20083 ''Who lives there?'' |
20083 | ''Would she leave?'' 20083 A ripping day, was n''t it?" |
20083 | A war poem, I suppose? |
20083 | After all,the other continued,"the regulations say that married men have to deduct sixpence for their wives, do n''t they?" |
20083 | An unsettler? |
20083 | And against whom have you given it? |
20083 | And how long are you yourself to live? |
20083 | And what happened? |
20083 | Are n''t you? |
20083 | Are you good? |
20083 | But what is it? |
20083 | But,remarked another of the guests, who had told us that she was looking for a_ pied- à- terre_,"there''s a catch somewhere, is n''t there? |
20083 | Damn it,I said,"what are you doing? |
20083 | Do n''t you believe in some women being as strong as men? |
20083 | Do you often come here? |
20083 | Enough? 20083 Have they written anything about you in the papers?" |
20083 | How do you begin? |
20083 | How do you mean-- extraordinary? |
20083 | How long may I laugh? |
20083 | How long should I weep? |
20083 | How many did you have? |
20083 | How? |
20083 | I suppose,I said, indicating the various speakers with a semicircular gesture,"they do n''t do all this for nothing?" |
20083 | Is n''t his face,she asked, in a deathless sentence,"like the inside of an elephant''s foot?" |
20083 | It was n''t empty, then? |
20083 | It''s a long time,he said,"since you saw any of my kind, I expect?" |
20083 | It''s delightful,I said; adding, as one always does:"How_ did_ you get to hear of it?" |
20083 | My what? |
20083 | On whose evidence? |
20083 | Only----Here they looked at each other, and Red Hair said,"Shall we?" |
20083 | Shall I send them in? |
20083 | The left, is it? |
20083 | Then why did n''t you spot us before? |
20083 | Then,said Ruh,"why not go forth and attack that enemy of God?" |
20083 | There you are,he said;"and what do you see to- day? |
20083 | Was it more than eight, anyway? |
20083 | We''re very strong,Red Hair said,"only----""Only what?" |
20083 | Well,said the prince,"I conjure thee by my own rights; wilt thou not tell it to me now?" |
20083 | Well? |
20083 | What about your patella? |
20083 | What actions of mine should I conceal? |
20083 | What are the actions which I should do openly? |
20083 | What did he say about me? |
20083 | What did you do before the war? |
20083 | What do they want? |
20083 | What do you accept? |
20083 | What do you see? |
20083 | What do you think I am? |
20083 | What do you think the man said to that? |
20083 | What happened? |
20083 | What is it? |
20083 | What use to the Army are weaklings who ca n''t stand the strain? 20083 What''s this rubbish about not seeing a doctor?" |
20083 | When do you expect to leave? |
20083 | When he died,says the Katib Imad Ad- Din,"I was in Syria, and I saw him one night in a dream, and said to him:''How has God treated thee?'' |
20083 | Where is it, anyway? |
20083 | Which one is it? |
20083 | Which,asked Abu Tammam,"does the Emir mean?" |
20083 | Who are you, pray? |
20083 | Who art thou? |
20083 | Why do n''t you tell them that they must see the doctor and have done with it? |
20083 | Why should I? 20083 Why so?" |
20083 | Will you promise,said Red Hair,"that you will treat as confidential anything we say to you?" |
20083 | Will? |
20083 | Yes, what was done about it? 20083 Yes?" |
20083 | Yes? |
20083 | You do n''t mean----? |
20083 | You''re from a man, I suppose? |
20083 | ''Do you mean to disobey me?'' |
20083 | ''Do you really want to leave?'' |
20083 | ''Tell me,''said I,''if I remain with thee and thou takest any game, wilt thou give me a share?'' |
20083 | ''What,''said I,''could have induced thee to do so?'' |
20083 | ''Why not?'' |
20083 | ''Why?'' |
20083 | Abu''l- Aina immediately replied:"And why then do book- makers not relate such fables of you, O vizier?" |
20083 | Adi Ibn Arta, who was blind, went to the kadi''s house one day, and the following dialogue ensued:"Where are you, kadi? |
20083 | And how should I behave if I heard them round the corner? |
20083 | And then, the Poilu continues, he became a soldier, which leads to the awkward question, had he always behaved himself as such? |
20083 | And what is this new meaning? |
20083 | And what of the notable phrase? |
20083 | And who cares about little boys anyway? |
20083 | As I was travelling in a certain desert, I beheld a man who had just pitched his toils to catch game, and I said to him:''Why art thou sitting here?'' |
20083 | As how could they not be? |
20083 | Because, given wings, neither of which is broken, how would it have allowed itself to come into that posture at all? |
20083 | But even if you got through, how do you think you would be helping your country? |
20083 | But suppose some one else wanted it? |
20083 | But was that his duty? |
20083 | But why should we not say at once that it was the introduction of Pekingese spaniels into England from China? |
20083 | But why, you ask, Gambogia? |
20083 | But, how do you end?" |
20083 | Can we possibly visit other cities in our sleep? |
20083 | Could there be a more beautiful epitaph or a more poignant commentary on a world askew? |
20083 | Could there be a much more fascinating name than"Clouds"? |
20083 | Did I say I had been reading it? |
20083 | Did he agree to send it?" |
20083 | Do n''t you see any weak point?" |
20083 | Do n''t you see that?" |
20083 | Do you follow me?" |
20083 | Do you mean to say the doctors did n''t talk about that?" |
20083 | Do you remember when, in a life of misery, you said:''Where is death sold, that I may buy it? |
20083 | Do you see it? |
20083 | Do you see?" |
20083 | Does the Church command you to obey the legitimate laws of your country?__ A. |
20083 | Has each of us an_ alter ego_, who can really behave, elsewhere? |
20083 | Hast thou then conferred a government upon me, since thou sendest me a spear to which a flowing mane serves as a banner? |
20083 | Have you got your X- ray photograph?" |
20083 | Have you thought for a moment what it would be like to find yourselves in barracks with the ordinary British soldier? |
20083 | How could he eat?" |
20083 | How could he pray? |
20083 | How could it be enough, with all the complications? |
20083 | How is that?" |
20083 | How many operations did you have?" |
20083 | How much should I eat?" |
20083 | How to play the part of Paris where all the competitors have some irresistibility, as all have of either sex? |
20083 | If so, why not Captain Macdonald should be the former? |
20083 | If so, why not Mr. J. D. Ward would be the latter? |
20083 | It has a sister beside it which is now on sale, and you have always money to bestow._"How much,"said Abu Dulaf,"is the price of that sister?" |
20083 | Jaafar addressed him in these terms:"You pretend that the khalif is to die in the space of so many days?" |
20083 | Just as Shakespeare''s orator,"when he is out,"spits, so does the funny man, in similar difficulties, if he is wise, say,"Do you call that a face?" |
20083 | Long smoked, pondered, and thus delivered himself:"But is it not paramount that these gentlemen should have trousers?" |
20083 | Might their melodies not strike freshly and alluringly on the ear to- day? |
20083 | Now what is it that old ladies most dislike? |
20083 | On whom do you count to assist you?__ A. |
20083 | Perhaps we shall not have any more of these statues; but is it impossible to remove those that we have? |
20083 | Presents have ceased and are not to be replaced?_''So the person he meant to praise would not give him anything nor even listen to his poem." |
20083 | Should I run? |
20083 | Sight? |
20083 | Some one, horrified at the impiety, said to him:"Art thou not keeping a fast?" |
20083 | That is excellent prose, is it not? |
20083 | That is fine, is it not? |
20083 | The first Mac would then express an overwhelming surprise, as he countered with the devastating question,"Was_ that_ her face?" |
20083 | The iron laws of etiquette( or is it finance?) |
20083 | Their graves had already received them when a voice was heard exclaiming:"Where are the thrones, the crowns, and the robes of slate? |
20083 | There were wax- lights burning, at the time, before the prince, and this led him to say to the poet:"Canst thou recollect any verses on wax- lights?" |
20083 | There-- won''t you find that useful? |
20083 | These old nurses, the nurses of whom the older we grow the more tenderly and gratefully we think-- will no one give them a book of praise? |
20083 | These stones are a little damp and moss- covered( for our ancestors insisted on building in a hole, or where would Friday''s fish come from? |
20083 | This person expressed his desire to know how there could, in that case, be anything more exalted than the lowest heaven? |
20083 | What about?" |
20083 | What did the man mean? |
20083 | What is the road to Heaven?__ A. |
20083 | What is your ambition?__ A. |
20083 | What life can now be pleasing after the loss of Bakr?_ When Sukaina heard these verses, she asked who was Bakr? |
20083 | What life can now be pleasing after the loss of Bakr?_ When Sukaina heard these verses, she asked who was Bakr? |
20083 | What would your people say?" |
20083 | When Ibn Ar- Rumi had eaten it, he perceived that he was poisoned, and he rose to withdraw; on which the vizier said to him:"Where are you going?" |
20083 | When he appeared before Adud Ad- Dawlat, that prince said to him:"What motive could have induced thee to compose an elegy on the death of my enemy?" |
20083 | Where are now the faces once so delicate, which were shaded by veils and protected by the curtains of the audience- hall?" |
20083 | Where the country folk for whom all these and smaller cottages were built now live, who shall say? |
20083 | Who are your enemies?__ A. |
20083 | Who would expect Sir Sidney Lee to have had so remote an exemplar? |
20083 | Why do n''t you go? |
20083 | Why was he just a private?" |
20083 | are you in debt?'' |
20083 | exclaimed the khalif;"how could he then lean on his staff? |
20083 | is posted up the notice,"Passengers to Lower Blinds"? |
20083 | that little blackamoor who used to run past us? |
20083 | what is most beautiful in the sky?" |
20083 | why not cut it off by the wrist?" |
12788 | ''From whence do you come?'' 12788 ''Well-- from what country?'' |
12788 | And I replied,''What can I do with an empty house, And a host who is himself thus utterly destitute? 12788 And did Kay get the Princess?" |
12788 | And how came you, madame,quoth I,"to this deep knowledge of pleasure? |
12788 | And the mother? 12788 And was it the innermost heart of the bliss To find out so, what a wisdom love is? |
12788 | Are you sensible of any change? |
12788 | But Kay-- little Kay,asked Gerda,"when did he come? |
12788 | But how are we to manage it? 12788 But what is become of it?" |
12788 | But will you give me that splendid golden sword? 12788 Ca n''t you do something for him, sir?" |
12788 | Ca n''t you do something for him? |
12788 | Can I depend on that? |
12788 | Can you lay eggs? |
12788 | D''ye think this is all the world? |
12788 | Did life roll back its record dear, And show, as they say it does, past things clear? 12788 Do you not hear me? |
12788 | Do you remember this? |
12788 | Do you see? 12788 Does he live with a princess?" |
12788 | Dost thou think I will do so? |
12788 | Dost thou think then that I will have thee in the kitchen, if such be the case? |
12788 | Father,answered Aucassin,"what are you saying now? |
12788 | Hast thou not had enough of wrestling, O conquered one? |
12788 | Have you a pass? |
12788 | How canst thou, ere thou hear, discern If I speak folly? 12788 How have matters gone with you in town?" |
12788 | How long? |
12788 | How was he drowned? 12788 I am going out in the world to see if I can get employment,"answered the youth.--"Wilt thou serve us?" |
12788 | I have got a hundred dollars in my chest at home; will you venture the like sum? |
12788 | I? |
12788 | In Paradise what have I to win? 12788 Is it possible?" |
12788 | Is my son to stay like that on the stones, and I not stay there too?--like that, on the stones, my own son? |
12788 | Is that so, mother? |
12788 | Is this,he said,"That happy earth they brought me forth to see? |
12788 | It is n''t very far from daybreak,said I;"and besides, what can robbers take from a traveler in utter poverty? |
12788 | O Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"what may this meane?" |
12788 | Or was it a greater marvel to feel The perfect calm o''er the agony steal? 12788 Perhaps you do not know that my papa and my mamma were morocco slippers, and that I have a cork inside me?" |
12788 | Say you so? |
12788 | See, now; I will listen with soul, not ear: What was the secret of dying, dear? 12788 Shall I sing once more before the Emperor?" |
12788 | Shall we lay a wager? |
12788 | Should you like,said he,"to hear of one or two, yes, or a great many of her performances? |
12788 | The Nightingale? 12788 Was it the infinite wonder of all That you ever could let life''s flower fall? |
12788 | Was the miracle greater to find how deep Beyond all dreams sank downward that sleep? 12788 Well, how goes it?" |
12788 | Well, sister,said the worthy Panthea,"shall we hack him to pieces at once, like the Bacchanals, or tie his limbs and mutilate him?" |
12788 | What are we to say, sister,[ said one to the other] of the monstrous lies of that silly creature? 12788 What are you thinking of?" |
12788 | What did he go in for, if he did not know how to swim--? |
12788 | What do you say now? 12788 What is the function of criticism at the present time?" |
12788 | What kind of a woman is this innkeeper, so powerful and dreadful? |
12788 | What should I have done with a sheep? 12788 What should we have done with a pig? |
12788 | What sort of a one are you? |
12788 | What was the merchant''s name? |
12788 | What''s that? |
12788 | What''s this? |
12788 | What, wilt thou pray, and get thee grace, And all grace shall to me be grudged? 12788 What,"said I,"will become of me, when this man is found in the morning with his throat cut? |
12788 | What-- do you really think so? |
12788 | Whence in the name of Heaven didst thou come? |
12788 | Where am I going now? |
12788 | Whither art thou going? |
12788 | Who knows if life and death be truly one? |
12788 | Why do you wish to put a pain in your heart? |
12788 | Why does the color vary on your skin? 12788 Why,"asked Giorgio,"do you not place him in the shade, in one of the houses, on a bed?" |
12788 | Why? |
12788 | Why? |
12788 | Will you fly about at liberty? |
12788 | ''Mother,''she cried,''what will the little dogs think when they see me in all these fine clothes?''" |
12788 | ***** All these have sorrow, and keep still, Whilst other men make cheer, and sing, Wilt thou have pity on all these? |
12788 | *****"What say my Father and my Mother dear? |
12788 | --"Well, then, for Christ,"thou answerest,"who can care? |
12788 | 448- 380?) |
12788 | 448- 390? |
12788 | A young lad, a stranger in the district, the son of a mariner, repeated contemptuously,"Yes, what did he go in for? |
12788 | After salutation and duty done, with some other talk, I asked her why she would leese[ lose] such pastime in the park? |
12788 | After some time the horse again said,"Look back: can you see anything now?" |
12788 | Ah, where are the mighty now? |
12788 | And besides these there_ shall be_ two_ other_ gardens:( Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny?) |
12788 | And he fell to reciting: How many by my labors, that evermore endure, All goods of life enjoy and in cooly shade recline? |
12788 | And his airs and his tunes, and his songs and lampoons, Were recited and sung by the old and the young: At our feasts and carousals, what poet but he? |
12788 | And how, said the Emeer, can we contrive to enter it, and divert ourselves with a view of its wonders? |
12788 | And in the lower part of the tablet were inscribed these verses:-- Where are the Kings and the peoplers of the earth? |
12788 | And news of how the kingdoms change, The pointed hands, and wondering At doers of a desperate thing? |
12788 | And pray, then, why do you marry us, If we''re all the plagues you say? |
12788 | And she sang on:--"Why have I sent you forth from my house? |
12788 | And the Cat said,"Can you curve your back, and purr, and give out sparks?" |
12788 | And the irate woman:--"Who was it sent him? |
12788 | And the sheykh said, Are there in this place any of the''Efreets confined in bottles of brass from the time of Suleymán, on whom be peace? |
12788 | And truly while I speak, O King, I hear the bearers on the stair; Wilt thou they straightway bring him in? |
12788 | And what is it I hope for? |
12788 | And where is that which they collected and hoarded? |
12788 | And why do you take such care of us, And keep us so safe at home, And are never easy a moment If ever we chance to roam? |
12788 | And why should I then pant for treasures? |
12788 | And why? |
12788 | And yet, if she is really ignorant of her husband''s appearance, she must no doubt have married a god, and who knows what will happen? |
12788 | Are you not come into a warm room, and have you not folks about you from whom you can learn something? |
12788 | Asked the Caliph,"Dost thou remember what he said?" |
12788 | Aucassin, my love, my knight, Am I not thy heart''s delight? |
12788 | Bavaria, or the Styrian''s land? |
12788 | Beauteous flowers why do we spread, Upon the monuments of the dead? |
12788 | But about the woodwork? |
12788 | But among friends( for only friends are here), Why should we blame the Spartans for all this? |
12788 | But didst thou find The seed?" |
12788 | But for him who dreadeth the tribunal of his LORD_ are prepared_ two gardens:( Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny?) |
12788 | But is a calm like this, in truth, The crowning end of life and youth, And when this boon rewards the dead, Are all debts paid, has all been said? |
12788 | But might not other forces, combined with the attraction of gravitation, produce gradually increasing perturbations such as Newton and Euler feared? |
12788 | But most the women gathering in the doors Asked,"Who is this that brings the sacrifice So graceful and peace- giving as he goes? |
12788 | But since the longed- for day is nigh, And scarce a god could stay us now, Why do ye hang your heads and sigh, And still go slower and more slow? |
12788 | But since we ne''er can charm away The mandate of that awful day, Why do we vainly weep at fate, And sigh for life''s uncertain date? |
12788 | But the King spake:--"What fool is this, that hurts our ears With folly? |
12788 | But what is thy name, boy? |
12788 | But what saw he in the clear water? |
12788 | But where was it to be found? |
12788 | But where was it? |
12788 | But why should I stand surety for his contracts? |
12788 | Can he be Sâkra or the Devaraj?" |
12788 | Child of the ocean, is your promise sure?" |
12788 | Cowley''s Translation, THE SWALLOW Foolish prater, what dost thou So early at my window do, With thy tuneless serenade? |
12788 | Did I not tell thee that lying is shameful?" |
12788 | Do n''t you know the roads are infested by robbers? |
12788 | Do n''t_ you_ know, you fool, that a naked man ca n''t be stripped by ten athletes?" |
12788 | Do they expect any other than the punishment awarded against the_ unbelievers_ of former times? |
12788 | Do you think she wants to swim, and let the water close above her head?" |
12788 | Do you think so?" |
12788 | Do you tremble, you who were so bold?" |
12788 | Dost thou grant this?" |
12788 | Dost thou not see that GOD sendeth down rain from heaven, and that we thereby produce fruits of various colors? |
12788 | Drive ye the flocks adown under high noon, Since''tis at evening that men fold their sheep?" |
12788 | Fill up the bowl then, fill it high, Fill all the glasses there; for why Should every creature drink but I? |
12788 | Flowers have withered thus before,-- And, my poor heart, what wouldst thou more? |
12788 | For am not I but one of the Ghazîyah? |
12788 | For what availed it, all the noise And outcry of the former men?-- Say, have their sons achieved more joys, Say, is life lighter now than then? |
12788 | Fragile and small, and set in quiet places, My worth should I forget? |
12788 | From sin, which Heaven records not, why forbear? |
12788 | Graciously smiling, now she whispers low:--"The runes are dark, would you their meaning know? |
12788 | HOW CAN THE ABSOLUTE BE A CAUSE? |
12788 | Hast thou ever before seen battle and wars?_[ His next adventure brought him to the notice of the chief of the tribe,--King Zoheir. |
12788 | Hath Yudhisthira vanquished self, to melt With one poor passion at the door of bliss? |
12788 | He asked them next( Wishing to see them more perplexed) Which of the two contending powers Was chiefly abused by this bard of ours? |
12788 | He demanded Which of the rival States commanded The Grecian seas? |
12788 | Hereupon Gudbrand opened the door:--"Have I won your hundred dollars?" |
12788 | How Should she o''er- sound the storm their wings have raised? |
12788 | How can I pay you?" |
12788 | How could he think of wishing to have such loveliness as they had? |
12788 | How could it be? |
12788 | How did the villains come to spare you, a witness of the murder? |
12788 | How didst thou pass the night, O hero, after we went away and left thee? |
12788 | How is it with my lord? |
12788 | How long is that to last? |
12788 | How then will the insane act? |
12788 | I Are they of Umm Aufà''s tents-- these black lines that speak no word in the stony plain of al- Mutathellam and al- Darraj? |
12788 | I am as good as half engaged to a swallow: every time I leap up into the air he sticks his head out of the nest and says,''Will you? |
12788 | I buy''em of him? |
12788 | I know not-- by Heaven I swear, and here is the word I say!-- this pang, is it love- sickness, or wrought by a spell from thee? |
12788 | I said to her, when she fled in amaze and breathless before the array of battle,"Why dost thou tremble? |
12788 | I said,"Is it''Abdallâh, the man whom you say is slain?" |
12788 | I stood as a camel stands with fear in her heart, and seeks the stuffed skin with eager mouth, and thinks-- is her youngling slain? |
12788 | If I tell the truth, who will believe a word of the story? |
12788 | If impersonality is a good, why am I not consistent in the pursuit of it? |
12788 | If one asked her,"Are you not related to John Bull?" |
12788 | Inheritors of thy distress, Have restless hearts one throb the less? |
12788 | Is a man''s throat to be cut before your eyes, and you keep silence? |
12788 | Is happiness anything more than a conventional fiction? |
12788 | Is it Prussia, or the Swabian''s land? |
12788 | Is it Switzerland? |
12788 | Is it anything more than the temper in which he worked, and the spirit which he evoked in the reader? |
12788 | Is it the Mark where forges blaze? |
12788 | Is it the land which princely hate Tore from the Emperor and the State? |
12788 | Is it where the Master''s cattle graze? |
12788 | Is it where the grape glows on the Rhine? |
12788 | Is not universal leveling down the law of nature?... |
12788 | Is there aught good in life? |
12788 | Is there no life, but these alone? |
12788 | Is there such a bird in my empire, and in my garden to boot? |
12788 | It is inevitable that he should chose one of the three, but which? |
12788 | Knowest thou not that the cup of death will be filled for thee, and that in a short time thou wilt drink it? |
12788 | Look round: can you see anything?" |
12788 | Madman or slave, must man be one? |
12788 | May I then make bold to crave a boon of thy highness?" |
12788 | Moreover, he gifted Jarir with the ornaments of his sword; and Jarir went forth to the other poets, who asked him,"What is behind thee?" |
12788 | Must I say it to you? |
12788 | Nay, but our children in our midst, what else but our hearts are they, walking on the ground? |
12788 | No friend hast thou like kindly snow; Sleep is well for thee, For whom no second spring will blow; Then why, poor heart, still beating so? |
12788 | Noble wines why do we pour? |
12788 | Now must I call thy grief not wise, Is he thy friend, or of thy blood, To find such favor in thine eyes? |
12788 | Now, was it its blaze, or the lamps of a hermit that dwells alone, and pours o''er the twisted wicks the oil from his slender cruse? |
12788 | O men, remember the favor of GOD towards you: is there any creator, besides GOD, who provideth food for you from heaven and earth? |
12788 | Oh, wo n''t you take me to the palace?" |
12788 | Or had they any share in_ the creation of_ the heavens? |
12788 | Or shall we say that to suffer subsists according to something common? |
12788 | Or where the Danube''s surges roar? |
12788 | Pace) 1226- 1274 On the Value of Our Concepts of the Deity(''Summa Theologica'') How Can the Absolute Be a Cause? |
12788 | Poetry of this factitious kind may beguile one at twenty, but what can one make of it at fifty? |
12788 | Pomerania''s strand? |
12788 | Quoth Omar,"And who praised him?" |
12788 | Quoth Omar,"What have I to do with the poets?" |
12788 | Quoth Omar,"Who[ of the poets] is at the door?" |
12788 | Reaching the spot, somewhat out of breath, he inquired:--"What has happened?" |
12788 | Said Cædmon,"What shall I sing?" |
12788 | Said I,"O Rais, what mean these words, seeing that I have told thee my case?" |
12788 | Say, what think ye of your deities which ye invoke besides GOD? |
12788 | Shall I never be at peace with myself? |
12788 | Shall we not be lovers? |
12788 | She said:--"The Nightingale? |
12788 | She''s the grandest of all here; she''s of Spanish blood-- that''s why she''s so fat; and do you see? |
12788 | So how canst thou pretend that thou art the owner of the goods?" |
12788 | So let me go again, will you?" |
12788 | So she turned to him laughing, and said,"What wouldst thou? |
12788 | So the sheykh''Abd- Es- Samad said, May not the keys of the city be with this sheykh? |
12788 | So what hast thou to boast of? |
12788 | Spake then as follows, his past thus reviewing, Years full of slaughter and struggle and strife:--"Wither, alas, have my horses been carried? |
12788 | Stay''st thou for this, who didst not stay for them,-- Draupadí, Bhima?" |
12788 | THE HOLY GRAIL From Malory''s''Morte d''Arthur''"Faire knight,"said the King,"what is your name? |
12788 | THE KING O Vizier, I may bury him? |
12788 | THE SONG OF THE FIELD- MARSHAL What''s the blast from the trumpets? |
12788 | That thousands counted every groan, And Europe made his woe her own? |
12788 | The Emeer said to him, How long a period doth it require? |
12788 | The Emperor jumped at once out of bed, and had his own doctor called; but what could he do? |
12788 | The cloud of mortal destiny, Others will front it fearlessly-- But who, like him, will put it by? |
12788 | The day done, at eve glad comes he home to his eyes''delight: he needs not to ask of her,"Say, where didst thou pass the day?" |
12788 | The most famous of these,''What is the German''s Fatherland?'' |
12788 | The mother continued:--"O my son, who was it sent you; who was it sent you here, to drown?" |
12788 | The mother gazed upon the little shirt, all soiled and torn, over which her tears fell rapidly, and said,"Must I put that shirt on him?" |
12788 | The officer begins:--"''Who are you?'' |
12788 | The porter, who was lying on the ground behind the door, only grunted,"Why do you want to begin a journey at this time of night? |
12788 | Then he took it into his forge, intending to temper it, for, thought he, what harm could that possibly do? |
12788 | Then must it not follow That we are to you all as the manifest godhead that speaks in prophetic Apollo? |
12788 | Then pray who is to understand you? |
12788 | Then she said to him,"O Muslim, it is lawful among you to kill Christians: what sayest thou to my killing thee?" |
12788 | Then the Emeer Moosà said, Knowest thou if any one of the Kings have trodden this land before us? |
12788 | Therein_ shall be_ agreeable and beauteous_ damsels_: Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | They out- talked thee, hissed thee, tore thee? |
12788 | They were long in bringing the goods ashore, so I asked the master,"Is there aught left in thy ship?" |
12788 | This hound hath ate with me, Followed me, loved me: must I leave him now?" |
12788 | This troop, by whom my master''s blood was shed, Medoro, ought not I to sacrifice? |
12788 | Though he told me, who will believe it was said? |
12788 | To- day is ours, what do we fear? |
12788 | WARREN]''TIS OF AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE Who would list to the good lay, Gladness of the captive gray? |
12788 | WHAT IS THE GERMAN''S FATHERLAND? |
12788 | Was he among the number?" |
12788 | Was it sunlight? |
12788 | We go so nicely together? |
12788 | Well, and what did they each directly lead up to in science? |
12788 | Well, with weather such as this, let us hear, Trygæus tell us What should you and I be doing? |
12788 | Westphalia? |
12788 | What are the elements it has been found necessary to confront with each other in order to arrive at results expressed with such extreme precision? |
12788 | What countless paths wind down, from divers points, To yonder city gates!--Oh, wilt not thou, My star, appear to me on one of them? |
12788 | What crime have you been guilty of? |
12788 | What did it lead up to in English literature? |
12788 | What distance is there between us and it? |
12788 | What gave him vogue, then, and what still keeps his more literary work alive? |
12788 | What helps it now that Byron bore, With haughty scorn which mocked the smart, Through Europe to the Ætolian shore The pageant of his bleeding heart? |
12788 | What is his caste? |
12788 | What is life for us, when the uplands and valleys are ours no more? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the distance of the sun from the earth? |
12788 | What is the land of their origin, and what is the significance of their symbolism? |
12788 | What is the relation of all these versions to one another? |
12788 | What more would thy Anacreon be? |
12788 | What other thing is left me, here above, Deprived of thee, Medoro mine? |
12788 | What says my God, who bends from heaven to hear?" |
12788 | What shall we have? |
12788 | What should I have done with a goose? |
12788 | What should we have done with a cock? |
12788 | What should we have done with a goat? |
12788 | What should we have done with a horse? |
12788 | What was it that Mephistopheles lacked? |
12788 | What was the intellectual generation that sprang from each of them? |
12788 | What would they ask of love? |
12788 | What, must I howl in the next world, Because thou wilt not listen here? |
12788 | What, then, do I believe in? |
12788 | What_ aileth_ them, therefore, that they believe not_ the resurrection_; and that, when the Korân is read unto them, they worship not? |
12788 | When he saw that this creature was alive, he addressed it and said,"Who and whence are you?" |
12788 | When is the mother coming?" |
12788 | When the trumpet shall sound, On that day, The wicked, slow- gathering, Shall say,"Is it long we have lain in our graves? |
12788 | When you ought to be thanking heaven That your Plague is out of the way, You all keep fussing and fretting--"Where is_ my_ Plague to- day?" |
12788 | Whence comest thou and whither art thou bound? |
12788 | Where are the joys of the hall I have known? |
12788 | Where are the troops? |
12788 | Where are those who possessed the countries and abased the servants of God and led armies? |
12788 | Where is he? |
12788 | Where is he?--The president Peisthetairus? |
12788 | Where is my giver of treasure and feasting? |
12788 | Where is the scar of a gash so deep and so recent?" |
12788 | Where is the sponge? |
12788 | Where is the wound? |
12788 | Where sea- gulls skim the Baltic''s brine? |
12788 | Where the sand drifts along the shore? |
12788 | Where was he? |
12788 | Where? |
12788 | Where? |
12788 | Where?" |
12788 | Which are the oldest, and which are copies, and of what versions are they copies? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Whither, alas, are my kinspeople gone? |
12788 | Who can save himself?" |
12788 | Who filched them? |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door?" |
12788 | Who is at the door?" |
12788 | Who ordered that their longing''s fire Should be, as soon as kindled, cooled? |
12788 | Who were the carpenters? |
12788 | Why are you tricked out like this? |
12788 | Why do we precious ointments show''r? |
12788 | Why has no one ever told me anything about it?" |
12788 | Why have I sent you to your death? |
12788 | Why was it that you were not assassinated too? |
12788 | Why, man of morals, tell me why? |
12788 | Will fortune ever, O daughter of Malik, ever bless me with thy embrace, that would cure my heart of the sorrows of love? |
12788 | Will you give me that rich banner? |
12788 | Will you give me the Emperor''s crown?" |
12788 | Will you go with us, and become a bird of passage? |
12788 | Will you listen to us, who are so anxious for your precious safety, and avoiding death, live with us secure from danger, or die horribly? |
12788 | Will you send?" |
12788 | Wilt thou go away, and leave the wretched stranger, the broken- hearted slave of love?" |
12788 | [ in a fidget_]--But who served the masons Who did you get to carry it? |
12788 | ["What is thy news?"] |
12788 | _ Dion_.--Euripides--_ Eur_.--Well, what? |
12788 | _ Dion_.--What the mischief have the smelling- salts got to do with it? |
12788 | _ Dion_.--While sacrificing? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--Let me say the whole verse, wo n''t you? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--So, you''ll show me, will you? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--What do I care? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--What? |
12788 | _ Euripides_--With a flask of smelling- salts? |
12788 | _ Mess_.--To carry it? |
12788 | _ Messenger_--Where is he? |
12788 | _ Orpheus:_ Or pleasureless shall we pass by The long cold night and leaden day, That song and tale and minstrelsy Shall make as merry as the May? |
12788 | _ Orpheus:_ Or wilt thou climb the sunny hill, In the October afternoon, To watch the purple earth''s blood fill The gray vat to the maiden''s tune? |
12788 | _ Shall_ the reward of good works_ be_ any other good? |
12788 | _ The Sirens_: Ah, will ye go, and whither then Will ye go from us, soon to die, To fill your threescore years and ten With many an unnamed misery? |
12788 | and if it is a temptation, why return to it, after having judged and conquered it? |
12788 | and what did chiefly allure you unto it, seeing not many women, but very few men, have attained thereunto?" |
12788 | and will ye stop your ears, In vain desire to do aught, And wish to live''mid cares and fears, Until the last fear makes you naught? |
12788 | asked the Princess;"or would you like to have a steady place as court Crows with all the broken bits from the kitchen?" |
12788 | but after all, to load your hods, How did you manage that? |
12788 | can it be That one exalted should seem pitiless? |
12788 | canst thou see aught of ladies, camel- borne, that journey along the upland there, above Jurthum well? |
12788 | dost thou glory in overthrowing these girls? |
12788 | hast thou forgotten it? |
12788 | how have you lost Your appetite, so as now to be content With the scant rations of one ship of war?" |
12788 | my father,"said Aucassin,"tell me where is the place so high in all the world, that Nicolette, my sweet lady and love, would not grace it well? |
12788 | or the windows of a gleaming mosque at eve, Lighted up for festal worship? |
12788 | or was all my fancy''s dream? |
12788 | or what drunken slave? |
12788 | poor souls and timorous, Will ye draw nigh to gaze at us And see if we are fair indeed? |
12788 | said I,"where are you? |
12788 | said I:"what does this mean? |
12788 | said the Troll,"will you stare your eyes out?" |
12788 | that the breeze Carried thy lovely wail away, Musical through Italian trees Which fringe thy soft blue Spezzian bay? |
12788 | the spears and generous hands? |
12788 | the world around So little loves thy strain? |
12788 | what can be In happiness compared to thee? |
12788 | what covenant, fair son?" |
12788 | what is this you ask? |
12788 | whence hath he eyes so sweet? |
12788 | whispered one to the other,"Do you remember that?" |
12788 | who could have built it? |
12788 | who, will make us feel? |
12788 | will you?'' |
12788 | wilt thou go? |
12788 | wilt thou go? |
12788 | wilt thou go?" |
12788 | wilt thou go?" |
27717 | Can not it be proved without question that the illiteracy of Spain was the result of centuries of religious oppression and of the inquisition?" |
27717 | If the fountain from which all life springs is poisoned by evil thoughts, how can the soul and body be healthy? |
27717 | If they can pull hemp, why not do other work? |
27717 | The Bible says:"If the_ salt_( the will) of the earth is worthless, wherewith shall it be salted?" |
27717 | Then came the nitrous oxide, introduced by Dr. Wells, of Hartford, and promptly discountenanced by the enlightened(?) |
27717 | Well, who cares? |
27717 | Who is in fault? |
27717 | Why Should the Chinese go? |
27717 | must the many ever suffer that the few may shine?'' |
26364 | And his disciples asked him, saying,''Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind?'' |
26364 | A well- known man once was asked the question:"What becomes of a man''s soul after death?" |
26364 | Are not the great majority of the events of our present life completely forgotten? |
26364 | But under this view, what is the exact significance of the Judgment Day and the Physical Resurrection? |
26364 | But why spread these instances over more pages? |
26364 | Do you know the dogma of the Church and the belief of masses of the orthodox Christians of the early centuries? |
26364 | How have those deserved the partiality of fortune, who live in happy lands, while many of their brethren suffer and weep in other parts of the world?" |
26364 | How many can recall the events of the youthful life? |
26364 | I said to myself, what is this? |
26364 | In the first place, let us consider that phase of the question which asks:"Does the soul incarnate immediately after death?" |
26364 | Is it Reincarnation? |
26364 | Is it not perfectly fair and reasonable to consider these cases as similar to the absence of memory in cases of Reincarnation? |
26364 | Is it not worthy of our attention and consideration? |
26364 | Is that"something"connected with the"soul"rather than the mind of the child? |
26364 | Is that"something"that which men call Metempsychosis-- Re- Birth-- Reincarnation? |
26364 | Is this equality of opportunity and experience, or Justice? |
26364 | Is this phenomena to be included in the Proofs of Reincarnation? |
26364 | Rather an advanced form of philosophy for"barbarians,"is it not? |
26364 | Some other factor is there-- is it Reincarnation? |
26364 | St. Augustine, in his"Confessions,"makes use of these remarkable words:"Did I not live in another body before entering my mother''s womb?" |
26364 | The next phase of the question:"Where does the soul dwell between incarnations?" |
26364 | The question is, Will the immortal soul be born again in the same individual, physically transformed-- into the same person?" |
26364 | The third phase of the question:"What is the final state or abode of the soul?" |
26364 | Think of this-- is this Justice? |
26364 | This being so, why should we attempt to speculate about The End? |
26364 | What are the cause of these phenomena? |
26364 | What crime have they committed? |
26364 | What has Adam to do with your soul, if it came fresh from the mint of the Maker, pure and unsullied-- how could his sin taint your new soul? |
26364 | Who has not been seized at times with the consciousness of a mighty''oldness''of soul? |
26364 | Who has not experienced the consciousness of having felt the thing before-- having thought it some time in the dim past? |
26364 | Who has not gazed at some old painting, or piece of statuary, with the sense of having seen it all before? |
26364 | Who has not had these experiences?" |
26364 | Who has not met persons for the first time, whose presence awakened memories of a past lying far back in the misty ages of long ago? |
26364 | Who has not witnessed new scenes that appear old, very old? |
26364 | Why am I not a prince and a great lord, instead of a poor pilgrim on the earth, ungrateful and rebellious? |
26364 | Why are they here on earth? |
26364 | Why is not a wretched African negro in my place in Paris, in conditions of comfort? |
26364 | Why is the unequal distribution of the terrible evils that fall upon some men, and spare others? |
26364 | You doubt it? |
27963 | Cicero asked the question,"What have we to learn?" |
27963 | Each morning the wife was expected to ask her husband nine times,"What do you wish me to do?" |
27963 | REIN, W. Am Ende Der Schulreform? |
27963 | Shall I tell you what knowledge is? |
17959 | ''The man with the limp,''he said, and slowly rose to his feet--"what do you know of the man with the limp?" |
17959 | A sort of tapping? |
17959 | Afraid? |
17959 | Am I alive? |
17959 | And that was? |
17959 | And what aroused your suspicions? |
17959 | And who paid you? |
17959 | And who was the patient? |
17959 | Are n''t you going to open it? |
17959 | Are you satisfied,she said, speaking unemotionally,"or,"holding up her wrists,"would you like to handcuff me?" |
17959 | Besides, sir,he said,"you say he came to deposit valuables of some kind here?" |
17959 | But surely,I interrupted, in surprise,"Sir Baldwin did not take his instruments?" |
17959 | But the attack on Dr. Hamilton''s man? |
17959 | But the term has some other significance, sir? |
17959 | But where were you going? |
17959 | But will they ever find us? |
17959 | But, Smith, why did you direct me to- night to repeat the words,''Sâkya Mûni''? |
17959 | But, if what you suspect, Smith, be only partly true, with what object was I seized and carried to that singular interview? 17959 But,"reiterated the other, his voice rising higher and higher,"what does it mean, my dear sir? |
17959 | By the way, Inspector,added Smith, a sudden gleam of inspiration entering his keen eyes--"did I not see that the s.s._Andaman_ arrived recently?" |
17959 | By the way,I said,"have you Oriental guests with you, at the moment?" |
17959 | Can you do it? |
17959 | Can you see any one? |
17959 | Do you know so little of the resources of Dr. Fu- Manchu that you would throw yourself blindly into that den? 17959 Do you think--""What do you propose to do?" |
17959 | Do you understand, Petrie? |
17959 | Do you understand, Petrie? |
17959 | Do you understand? |
17959 | Doctor Petrie? |
17959 | Dr. Petrie,Frazer said, still in the same hoarse and unnatural voice,"what else can we do? |
17959 | Eh, sniping? |
17959 | Eh? |
17959 | Eh? |
17959 | Flowers, sir? 17959 For God''s sake what has happened, Petrie?" |
17959 | For God''s sake what is going on, Smith? 17959 For God''s sake, what does it man?" |
17959 | For Heaven''s sake what was that, sir? |
17959 | For what reason?--and why have you so suddenly changed your mind? |
17959 | Half- past four A.M."What did you do? |
17959 | Has Fu- Manchu never attempted outrage, murder, in the heart of London before? |
17959 | Has the real head of affairs arrived, then? |
17959 | Have any flowers been brought into the room today, Beeton? |
17959 | Have you a button- hook, Petrie,he asked,"or anything of that nature?" |
17959 | Have you a knife with a corkscrew in it? |
17959 | Have you smelled the petals? |
17959 | He was amongst the piles upholding the old wharf at the back of the Joy- Shop? |
17959 | How did he get in? 17959 How did_ you_ come to be trapped?" |
17959 | How in Heaven''s name did he get in? |
17959 | How should you act in the circumstances, Petrie? |
17959 | How will this do? |
17959 | Hurt much? |
17959 | I only returned in time to see our Fenimore Cooper friend retreating through the window,he replied;"but no doubt you had a good look at him?" |
17959 | Inspector Weymouth? |
17959 | Is he mad? |
17959 | Is this what mystifies you? |
17959 | Might I invite you to accompany me into the bedroom yonder for a moment? |
17959 | Not a certain Oriental lady? |
17959 | Now, madame,said Nayland Smith,"will you be good enough to raise your veil?" |
17959 | Opium? |
17959 | Possibly monsieur has seen one of the_ ayahs?_ There are several Anglo- Indian families resident in the New Louvre at present. |
17959 | Probably the breaking of a bloom..."Ejects some of this acrid oil through the thorn? 17959 See anything?" |
17959 | Shall we lay him on the bed? |
17959 | Shall you open it now? |
17959 | Sir Lionel? |
17959 | Smith,I interrupted bitterly,"what chance have we? |
17959 | Smith,I said,"how long have you been standing there?" |
17959 | Surely you understand? |
17959 | Tell me-- what hurt you? |
17959 | The Flower of Silence? |
17959 | The Oriental Navigation Company''s boat? |
17959 | The exact address? |
17959 | Then what part do_ I_ play? |
17959 | Then why do you stay? |
17959 | Three Colt Street? |
17959 | To the Chinese Legation? |
17959 | Was this the object of our visit here? |
17959 | Well,I said, standing amid the litter cast out from the trunk, and watching him eagerly,"what''s afoot?" |
17959 | Well,I said,"what has Zagazig to do with Fu- Manchu, or to do with us?" |
17959 | Well? |
17959 | Well? |
17959 | Well? |
17959 | Were you surprised? |
17959 | Were you the first to learn of his death? |
17959 | What can we kill it with? |
17959 | What d''you mean? 17959 What do you know of this Ismail?" |
17959 | What do you make of it? |
17959 | What do you mean, Smith? |
17959 | What do you mean? |
17959 | What do you mean? |
17959 | What do you think, Lewison? |
17959 | What does it all mean?--what have you learnt? |
17959 | What does it mean? 17959 What does it mean?" |
17959 | What is a mere lock where Fu- Manchu is concerned? |
17959 | What is it, Kennedy? 17959 What is it?" |
17959 | What is it? |
17959 | What is she like? |
17959 | What is the Si- Fan? |
17959 | What is the matter? |
17959 | What is the meaning of Si- Fan? |
17959 | What is the nature of this clue? |
17959 | What is the place for which we are bound, Smith? |
17959 | What is this Joy- Shop? |
17959 | What part of the wall? |
17959 | What time was it? |
17959 | What time was that?'' 17959 What time?" |
17959 | What you and your strong friend drinking? |
17959 | What? 17959 What?" |
17959 | Where am I going? |
17959 | Where are we? |
17959 | Where are you going? |
17959 | Where do you live, then? |
17959 | Where is this place situated, exactly? 17959 Where the devil do they go?" |
17959 | Who are you, and what''s your trouble? |
17959 | Who are you? |
17959 | Who are you? |
17959 | Who brought up the meals, then? |
17959 | Who is this Ismail? |
17959 | Who or what is this Si- Fan at whose existence you hint? |
17959 | Who''s there? |
17959 | Who''s there? |
17959 | Who''s there? |
17959 | Why do you dread this man, Ki- Ming, so much? |
17959 | Why,demanded Nayland Smith,"have I never been told of the existence of this place?" |
17959 | Why? 17959 Why?" |
17959 | Will they reach us in time? |
17959 | Will you oblige me by telephoning for Inspector Weymouth? 17959 Yes?" |
17959 | You also, Weymouth? |
17959 | You are certain of that? |
17959 | You are interested in this, then? |
17959 | You blinger fliend, Charlie? |
17959 | You did not break that stalk? |
17959 | You did not say he was dead? |
17959 | You do something for me-- eh? |
17959 | You have met him, then? |
17959 | You jealous, eh, Charlie? |
17959 | You know into whose room it opens? |
17959 | You know the street along which, ordinarily, one would approach the wharf? |
17959 | You mean...? |
17959 | You realized at once that Samarkan was dead? |
17959 | You recall his brother, Petrie? |
17959 | You remember where the dead Burman was found? |
17959 | You see the mark, Petrie? |
17959 | You see, old man? |
17959 | You see? |
17959 | You think the hashish den is in some adjoining building? |
17959 | You were in charge of the prisoner Samarkan? |
17959 | Your reference to a''rendezvous''was presumably addressed to a hypothetical spy? 17959 _ Was_ she safe in Egypt?" |
17959 | ''Do you hear him dragging himself along?'' |
17959 | ...""_ Who_ can not speak?" |
17959 | A stone, was it?" |
17959 | A strange cracked voice( which, nevertheless, I recognized for Smith''s) cried,"Hullo, Martin!--cough no better?" |
17959 | Above all, what could their presence there at that time portend? |
17959 | An_ ayah?_ It was just possible, of course. |
17959 | And can this be my fee? |
17959 | As the door closed--"Unless what, Smith?" |
17959 | At times I have been tempted to believe that the fate which frequently befalls the specialist had befallen me? |
17959 | But I thought the Fu- Manchu case was off the books long ago? |
17959 | But do you recall the_ report?_""The report? |
17959 | But do you recall the_ report?_""The report? |
17959 | But what does it all mean? |
17959 | But"--I found myself confronted by a new problem--"what caused his death?" |
17959 | But, Smith--_who_ is that woman?" |
17959 | By what right did I presume to force my way into other people''s apartments? |
17959 | CHAPTER V JOHN KI''S"What is the meaning of Si- Fan?" |
17959 | CHAPTER XI IN THE FOG"But, Smith,"I began, as my friend hurried me along the corridor,"you are not going to leave the box unguarded?" |
17959 | CHAPTER XIV THE GOLDEN POMEGRANATES"What was it that he cried out?" |
17959 | CHAPTER XVI I TRACK ZARMI"What does it mean?" |
17959 | Could it be that the Café de l''Egypte was the place of her captivity? |
17959 | Did you observe, Petrie, if her eyes were_ oblique_ at all?" |
17959 | Do n''t you understand? |
17959 | Fu- Manchu is dead, so what have we to fear?" |
17959 | Have you any suggestion to offer respecting it?" |
17959 | Having got his pipe going well--"What do you know of animal magnetism?" |
17959 | How did he die? |
17959 | How did he die? |
17959 | How do we proceed?" |
17959 | How had they been introduced, and by whom? |
17959 | How much were you paid for the job?" |
17959 | How should I act? |
17959 | How was the Flower of Silence introduced into his closely guarded room?" |
17959 | I began,"for Heaven''s sake what are you about?" |
17959 | I cried,"what is it? |
17959 | I cried,"what is the Si- Fan?" |
17959 | I cried--"What''s the matter with him?" |
17959 | I demanded excitedly--"aren''t you going to open it?" |
17959 | I do n''t know what it can have been----""Where did this attack take place?" |
17959 | I muttered, moistening my parched lips with my tongue--"Sir Baldwin!--how----""It is Dr. Petrie, is it not?" |
17959 | I said,"of Half- Moon Street? |
17959 | I turned to him, momentarily at a loss for words; then--"Was this the object of our journey?" |
17959 | I understand, sir, that you believe him to have been a high official of this dangerous society? |
17959 | I uttered a short cry, of which I was instantly ashamed, for Nayland Smith''s voice came:--"I startled you, eh, Petrie?" |
17959 | I was past greater amazement; but--"This lady can be no longer young, then?" |
17959 | I whispered huskily--"God forgive me, what have I done? |
17959 | I whispered--"what was it? |
17959 | In the first place, Sir Gregory Hale is here----""Here?" |
17959 | In the past, Sir Lionel Barton had had spies in his household; what if the dark- faced Greek, Homopoulo, were another of these? |
17959 | Is there any one of my readers in doubt respecting my reception of this proposal? |
17959 | It was a curious case, was n''t it, Lewison?" |
17959 | My friend having ordered cocktails--"And now perhaps you will explain to me the reason for your mysterious behavior?" |
17959 | Nayland Smith''s eyes were on fire now; he literally quivered with excitement, when--"_ Ssh!_ what''s that?" |
17959 | Now-- what is the next move?" |
17959 | One thing in particular was puzzling me extremely: if Smith doubted the good faith of the sender of the message, why had he acted upon it? |
17959 | Petrie!--my dear sir, in mercy tell me-- what does this mean? |
17959 | Petrie?" |
17959 | Practically the uncanny thing stings when it is hurt? |
17959 | Pulling from his overcoat pocket a copy of a daily paper--"Have you seen this, Weymouth?" |
17959 | Shall we then determine your immediate future upon the turn of a card, as the gamester within me, within every one of my race, suggests? |
17959 | Shall you open the brass chest?" |
17959 | Smith?" |
17959 | Smith?" |
17959 | Surely I could not have imagined it? |
17959 | Then, to Logan:"Anything else?" |
17959 | Then--"Do you hear anything, Petrie?" |
17959 | Then--"_ Ssh!_what''s that?" |
17959 | There lies the first Zagazig message; here is the second; and you know the context of the note pinned upon the door? |
17959 | This one a strong feller?" |
17959 | To what strange adventure were we committed? |
17959 | To whom were you to deliver the box? |
17959 | What can we do? |
17959 | What danger, other than that which has threatened us for over two years, threatens us to- night?" |
17959 | What did he come for?--and what has happened to him?" |
17959 | What did it all mean? |
17959 | What did it contain? |
17959 | What did it mean? |
17959 | What did the brass coffer contain which Sir Gregory had guarded night and day? |
17959 | What did the darkness mask? |
17959 | What has befallen her? |
17959 | What have I done?" |
17959 | What have you done with him? |
17959 | What roof in broad England sheltered Kâramaneh, the companion of my dreams, the desire of every waking hour? |
17959 | What was coming? |
17959 | What was it?" |
17959 | What was the Si- Fan? |
17959 | What was the meaning of the sound which had disturbed me? |
17959 | What was the meaning of the whole solemn farce?" |
17959 | What you doing here?" |
17959 | What''s afoot, then?" |
17959 | What? |
17959 | Where did the dreadful Chinaman hide, with his murderers, his poisons, and his nameless death agents? |
17959 | Where had I met with it before? |
17959 | Where had I previously encountered the glance of those splendid, savage eyes? |
17959 | Where have you been?--what has happened?" |
17959 | Where is he?" |
17959 | Where, and when, had I met their glance before? |
17959 | Who could this late caller be, this midnight visitor who rapped, ghostly, in preference to ringing the bell? |
17959 | Who had killed him? |
17959 | Who was the"man with the limp"? |
17959 | Why do you ask?" |
17959 | Why is he so confident? |
17959 | Why the long harangue and the pose of friendship? |
17959 | Why was I silent?--why did I not warn Smith of the presence of one of Dr. Fu- Manchu''s servants? |
17959 | Why, therefore, does he risk his neck in London?" |
17959 | Yet-- what else can we_ do?_""There are several alternatives, but I prefer to follow the advice of Ki- Ming." |
17959 | You experience this? |
17959 | You had met Samarkan before?" |
17959 | You remember Summers, the Suez Canal pilot whom you met at Ismailia two years ago? |
17959 | You understand?" |
17959 | You will not have forgotten the wild- cat Eurasian Zarmi?" |
17959 | _ What_ threatens us to- night?" |
17959 | _ You_ were present?" |
17959 | can it be Hale?" |
17959 | can we make no move to round up the devils who defy us, here in the very heart of civilized England? |
17959 | cried Smith, who was leading--"what now?" |
17959 | cried Smith--"where does the passage lead to beyond that doorway? |
17959 | do n''t you understand?" |
17959 | he cried,"where are you? |
17959 | he demanded;"and what business have you with the Si- Fan?" |
17959 | he said slowly, and I knew that I had betrayed my secret,"Petrie-- where did you learn all this?" |
17959 | he said,"am I mad-- or did I_ really_ perform that operation? |
17959 | made no report?" |
17959 | she asked in a low voice,"and what are you talking about?" |
17959 | snapped Smith,"on the wharf?" |
17959 | snapped Smith;"but you are sure the cab is from the Yard? |
17959 | the chapel?" |
17959 | what chance have we? |
17959 | what do you mean? |
17959 | what does it mean?" |
17959 | what has happened?" |
17959 | what is it?" |
17959 | when and where?" |
10095 | ''Did I not tell you so? 10095 ''Hast thou come,''said I,''to solicit me to abet thee in any new imposture? |
10095 | ''How knewest thou this, my son?'' 10095 ''How many?'' |
10095 | ''I would not have taken fifty bezants for that shield, and what good is it now?'' 10095 ''O Abdallah,''I exclaimed,''wherefore this atrocity?'' |
10095 | ''O Abdallah,''I inquired,''where is thy beard?'' 10095 ''Or helmets?'' |
10095 | ''Pythagoras, then,''said Euphronius addressing me,''did not resort to India to be instructed by the Gymnosophists?'' 10095 ''Surely,''said he,''thou would''st not take away her husband without giving her another in his stead?'' |
10095 | ''Think you I can not pass through a stone wall?'' 10095 ''Well,''said Euphronius in a disdainful tone,''and what about this vaunted wisdom of the Indians?'' |
10095 | ''Whence are these weals and scars?'' 10095 ''Whence this sleekness of body, my son?'' |
10095 | A bishop, then,inquired Gaddo,"may be guilty of any enormity sooner than wedlock, which money itself can not expiate?" |
10095 | According to you, then,said Euphronius,"the fates of men are not spun for them by Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, but by their predecessors?" |
10095 | Am I not the modern Coriolanus? 10095 Am I,"he questioned,"ending where Polyphemus began?" |
10095 | An enemy of Zeus, then? |
10095 | And Liberty? |
10095 | And am not I? |
10095 | And for thee, Prometheus? |
10095 | And how are the people taking it? |
10095 | And how did the Bee learn, do you suppose, unless by imbuing her mind with the elementary principles of mathematics? 10095 And now, mistress, what further? |
10095 | And that is? |
10095 | And the citizens are really ready for this? |
10095 | And the gold? |
10095 | And therefore your Holiness has brought these rats upon us, enlisted, I nothing doubt, in the infernal regions? |
10095 | And this palace is? |
10095 | And what becomes of us while this prodigious moonshine is concocting? |
10095 | And what can they want with an amphitheatre? |
10095 | And what demanded they? |
10095 | And what skills what I do with a piece of common glass? |
10095 | And when comes it? |
10095 | And why in the name of Zernebock should we carry_ you?_demanded some, while others ran off to lug forth the image, the object of their devotion. |
10095 | And why should not Mantua have a tyrant? |
10095 | Are not his entrails burned up with fire? 10095 Are we not the heads of the Virgilian party?" |
10095 | Art thou at this present time betrothed to a Vampire? |
10095 | Art thou not a sorcerer? |
10095 | But the imputation of cruelty which might attach to your majesty''s proceedings? |
10095 | But who shall be Regent? |
10095 | But, Pan, how can any one think thoughts without something to think them with? 10095 By what process are these merits acquired?" |
10095 | By whom? |
10095 | Call you chess an amusement? |
10095 | Can a God feel hunger and thirst? |
10095 | Can the source of his being originate in himself? |
10095 | Can this indeed be but a trance? |
10095 | Can you possibly be plunged into such utter oblivion of your embryonic antecedents? |
10095 | Canst thou balance our city upon an egg? |
10095 | Could n''t we leave him to mind himself? 10095 D''ye think I''m not a thousand times more afraid of your mistress than of all the saints in the calendar? |
10095 | Daniel,said the Lord,"what answerest thou?" |
10095 | Dear friend,said the Princess,"thou dost not imagine that I have part or lot in these odious imputations? |
10095 | Declare now, wherein consists my sin? |
10095 | Deems your Highness that Bishop Addo will send another cupful, once he is assured of my death? |
10095 | Did you really know nothing of that sliding panel? 10095 Didst thou not say that if thou couldst discover her who had wronged thee, thou wouldst wreak thy vengeance on her, and molest Basil no further?" |
10095 | Do I not sufficiently indicate the followers of Epicurus? |
10095 | Do n''t you know_ that_? |
10095 | Do you actually mean to say you do n''t know that? |
10095 | Does your Lordship think that one might venture to go so far as a little unweaned child? |
10095 | Fettered and manacled? |
10095 | For a library, perhaps? |
10095 | For example? |
10095 | For example? |
10095 | Gerbert,said the devil, with tears in his eyes,"I put it to you-- is this fair, is this honest? |
10095 | Good monk,said the fiend,"what dost thou here?" |
10095 | Has not my immortality been one of pain? |
10095 | Hast thou never heard of the priest Eubulides? |
10095 | Hast thou sacrificed thy mother and sister to the infernal powers? |
10095 | Hast thou swallowed the ninety- nine poisons? |
10095 | Hast thou undergone the seven probations? |
10095 | Hast thou wedded a Salamander, and divorced her? |
10095 | Heavens,exclaimed Mnesitheus and Rufus,"can the life of a man suffice to study all this?" |
10095 | How a beginning? |
10095 | How can I feel, if I have no feeling? 10095 How can I other? |
10095 | How could I compromise Epimetheus, Prometheus? |
10095 | How else should François Rabelais have affirmed it? |
10095 | How has it all come about? |
10095 | How many gladiators, said you? |
10095 | How shall this be accomplished? |
10095 | How shall we henceforth exchange the sweet tokens of our undying affection, my Otto? |
10095 | How so, father? |
10095 | How so? 10095 How so? |
10095 | How so? |
10095 | I am not happy,rejoined the Firefly;"what am I, after all, but a flying beetle with a candle in my tail? |
10095 | I can have the blood of a goat? |
10095 | Indeed? |
10095 | Is Man, then, the maker of Deity? |
10095 | Is the Lady Adeliza''s loveliness in sooth so transcendent? |
10095 | Is there nought else? |
10095 | Is this indeed sooth? |
10095 | Is this no sorrow to thee? |
10095 | It is true, then? |
10095 | It seems likely to rain,he said,"have you an umbrella?" |
10095 | Look here, what do you call this? |
10095 | May I,inquired Ananda of the fiend he had before addressed,"presume to ask the signification of Kammuragha and Damburanana?" |
10095 | May we not,said one at last,"may we not cast lots, and each take a phial in succession, as destiny may appoint?" |
10095 | Miraculously kept alive to this day? |
10095 | Must we then part? |
10095 | Nay, sister, or sister- in- law,responded Prometheus,"if it comes to that, where were you while I was on Caucasus? |
10095 | Needs it not that I should renounce my baptism? 10095 No? |
10095 | No? |
10095 | Nonnus,said Phoebus, passing noiselessly through the unresisting wall,"the tale of thy apostasy is then true?" |
10095 | Not even in consideration of the benefit which will accrue to thee by this event? |
10095 | Not if I know it,sharply replied Madam Lucifer,"You ca n''t bear to part with her, ca n''t you? |
10095 | Nothing? |
10095 | Now, how go things in the city? |
10095 | O Emperor,he murmured, deeply abashed,"what can I urge? |
10095 | O King,urged Mithridata,"how could this countenance do thy son any good? |
10095 | O Majesty,said his wisest counsellor,"is there any sect in thy dominions that possesses the secret of perpetual youth?" |
10095 | O dear master,remonstrated Porphyry,"thou didst not deem that philosophers could be induced to settle in a spot devoid of these necessaries? |
10095 | Of course,said the student,"Hast thou attestations of all these circumstances under the hands and seals of a thousand and one demons?" |
10095 | Of what nature are these? |
10095 | Oh, father,urged they,"savoureth not this of vaingloriousness? |
10095 | Or I, until I have had speech of the man in the moon? |
10095 | Or in the irregularity of my deportment? |
10095 | People say,she continued--"What say they?" |
10095 | Peradventure,hesitatingly interrogated the youth,"peradventure you are_ he_?" |
10095 | That aged crone thy daughter, daughter to thee so youthful and so fresh? 10095 The conclusion of the whole matter, then,"summed up the sage,"is that not one of you will make a venture for the cup of immortality?" |
10095 | The most notorious character in Rome, who, finding her charms on the wane, has lately betaken herself to philosophy? |
10095 | Then why does the Plato of our age hesitate to welcome his Diotima? |
10095 | Then will not the crops be burned up? 10095 There? |
10095 | This, at least,asked the student,"is not devoid of virtue?" |
10095 | Thou didst bear away the tincture? 10095 Thou didst elude them? |
10095 | Thou didst leave it this morning a heathen? |
10095 | Thou hast discovered that, my son? |
10095 | Thou hast obtained it? |
10095 | Thou returnest a Christian? |
10095 | Thou wert the priestess of this temple? |
10095 | Thy predecessor? |
10095 | To my utility to mankind? |
10095 | To what cause do they attribute the public calamity? |
10095 | To what condition were you pleased to allude? |
10095 | To what then? |
10095 | To whom belongeth it then? |
10095 | To whose service, Phoebus? |
10095 | Tortured, of course? |
10095 | Well,demanded Aboniel at length, with real or assumed surprise,"wherefore tarry ye thus? |
10095 | Well,rejoined the Governor,"what say you to the twenty- second?" |
10095 | Were it not better to circumcise me? |
10095 | What ails thee, child? |
10095 | What caldron? |
10095 | What does the man mean? |
10095 | What else should I speak? |
10095 | What else? 10095 What fear you?" |
10095 | What have ye found so exceedingly reprehensible in the Emperor''s conduct? |
10095 | What have you, Pan? |
10095 | What is that? |
10095 | What is the occasion of thy imprisonment? |
10095 | What is winter? |
10095 | What manner of woman was thy mother? |
10095 | What may these virtues be? |
10095 | What meanest thou? |
10095 | What means all this, Porphyry? |
10095 | What of her? |
10095 | What of quarter- day? |
10095 | What seest thou here? |
10095 | What shall be done with him, mistress? |
10095 | What the guy dickens be a concatrenation, Geoffrey? |
10095 | What trash have we here? |
10095 | What was that, my Lord? |
10095 | What was the impediment? |
10095 | What would you be? |
10095 | What''s o''clock? |
10095 | What''s this? 10095 Whatever will happen next?" |
10095 | Whence comest thou to be ignorant of that? |
10095 | Where dwells Louis the Disesteemed? |
10095 | Where shall I find another great king? |
10095 | Wherefore not to- day? |
10095 | Wherefore? |
10095 | Wherefore? |
10095 | Wherein, then,demanded the agonized apostle,"doth the path of safety lie?" |
10095 | Which be they? |
10095 | Who art thou, thou pantaloonless one? |
10095 | Who art thou? |
10095 | Who art thou? |
10095 | Who but we? |
10095 | Who could have believed it? |
10095 | Who is Homer? 10095 Who is that person?" |
10095 | Who is thy daughter? |
10095 | Who then has persuaded thee to renounce Apollo? |
10095 | Who was with thee just now? |
10095 | Who would have thought it? |
10095 | Who? |
10095 | Whose book is this? |
10095 | Whose virtue then? |
10095 | Why not consult Manto, the alchemist''s daughter, our prophetess, our Sibyl? |
10095 | Why not, indeed? |
10095 | Why not? |
10095 | Why not? |
10095 | Why should I harm you? 10095 Why tarries Cardinal Barbadico thus?" |
10095 | Why the devil, if I may so express myself,pursued Anno,"did not your Holiness inform us that you_ were_ the devil? |
10095 | Why,he exclaimed,"why was I ever an apostle? |
10095 | Will it ever rain again? |
10095 | Wilt thou then first be healed, and moreover become the instrument of converting the entire realm of Magadha? |
10095 | Would have outraged my daughter, would he? |
10095 | Ye would learn the secret of my celebrated dilemma,said he,"which no sophist can elude? |
10095 | You probably refer to my agility,suggested the Caterpillar;"or perhaps to my abstemiousness?" |
10095 | You? |
10095 | A further and more awkward question arose, how on earth was he to get back to Paradise? |
10095 | A tremendous stroke caught him on the hand; his blade dropped to the earth; why did not the fingers follow? |
10095 | About your age, I think?" |
10095 | Am I inferior to Aspasia in beauty?" |
10095 | Am I to lose the reward of my incredible sufferings?" |
10095 | An early martyr, doubtless?" |
10095 | And as the amazed priest preserved silence, she pursued:"Can aught be more shameful in a religious man than ignorance of the very nature of religion? |
10095 | And fair female forms came veiled with drooping heads, and murmured,"We are thy virtues, and would be rewarded-- would''st thou cheat us?" |
10095 | And he said,"Against what wilt thou write first, Daniel?" |
10095 | And how knowest thou,"added he, striving to soothe her,"that I will not give thee to drink of the miraculous potion?" |
10095 | And know I not that even if I would accept the boon, thou would''st never give it?" |
10095 | And now I ask thee, art thou yet minded to go forth as a missionary of the truth?" |
10095 | And now, Holy Father, your Holiness''s resolution? |
10095 | And others said,"We are thy memories-- wilt thou live on till we are all withered in thy heart?" |
10095 | And others said,"We are thy strength and thy beauty, thy memory and thy wit-- canst thou live, knowing thou wilt never see us more?" |
10095 | And the man in black reasoned with Daniel, and said,"Thou seest this multitude of people, but which of them shall deliver thee out of my hand? |
10095 | And this other? |
10095 | And were you ignorant that whatever one says in the blue chamber is heard in the green?" |
10095 | And who will feed_ you_?" |
10095 | And, it being a red mouse as it indubitably was, to what end fancy it a tawny- throated nightingale?" |
10095 | Are there no means by which the course of study may be accelerated?" |
10095 | Are they not withering already? |
10095 | Are your intentions really honourable?" |
10095 | As soon as the room was clear, he repeated:"What_ does_ the man mean?" |
10095 | At length the youngest exclaimed:"O Emperor, how can we tell thee, unless we know what thou thinkest thyself?" |
10095 | Burned you? |
10095 | But a sorcerer hath arisen, saying,"Why follow ye Abdallah, seeing that he breathes not fire out of his mouth and nostrils?" |
10095 | But how?" |
10095 | But if I can feel no pain, how can I feel any pleasure? |
10095 | But indeed, why few? |
10095 | But where was it? |
10095 | But who was to profit by his communicativeness? |
10095 | Can I consent to lay it down ere I have sounded the seas of the seven climates?" |
10095 | Canst thou counterfeit her signature?" |
10095 | Could it be the ticking of watches? |
10095 | Could the Muses speak with their own voices as they had spoken by Sappho''s? |
10095 | Dared men believe that their shadows were actually lengthening? |
10095 | Daughter Truth, is this a befitting manner of presenting yourself before your divine father? |
10095 | Deemest thou that I will brook being thus cheated of my dear- bought talisman? |
10095 | Did I ever promise any disciple any recompense for his enlightenment and good deeds, save flogging, starvation, and burning?'' |
10095 | Did I understand you to mention my name in connection with those flutterers?" |
10095 | Did Narses experience blacker ingratitude than I? |
10095 | Do I not hear that that creature Pannychis has obtained the freedom of the philosophers''city, and the right to study therein?" |
10095 | Do you pretend not to know that the hussey forsook Olympus ten years ago, and has turned Christian?" |
10095 | Do you really mean to say that you do not know me?" |
10095 | Even could I deem them true, should I not think charitably of thee, but yesterday a heathen, and educated in impiety by a foul sorcerer? |
10095 | For what saith the Scripture? |
10095 | From whom save thee, since I closed my father''s eyes, have I heard the tongue of Homer and Plato?" |
10095 | Gallienus was often cruel, but could he intend such a revolting massacre? |
10095 | Had she really nothing else to do? |
10095 | Has not his skin already peeled off his body? |
10095 | Has your Holiness forgotten your Rabelais?" |
10095 | Hast thou peradventure any subtleties in perfumery? |
10095 | Hearest thou not the moaning and pelting of the rising storm, and the muttering and scraping of my imprisoned goblins? |
10095 | How am I to live without anything alive about me? |
10095 | How did she acquire her sting, think you? |
10095 | How indeed was he to prove to them that he_ was_ Euschemon? |
10095 | How shall it be dedicated to Desmotes in Desmotes''lifetime? |
10095 | How shall this be accomplished?" |
10095 | How should this be, seeing that there is no such person? |
10095 | How so?" |
10095 | How to choose the new consuls?" |
10095 | How would my own skin appear in the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus? |
10095 | How, then, shall she be terrible as an army with banners? |
10095 | I deemed it had been determined long ago in favour of Aspasia?" |
10095 | I did but even now open his sacred volume at hazard, and on what did my eye first fall? |
10095 | I exclaimed,''hast thou dared to espouse more wives than one? |
10095 | I see, indeed, people looking up from the earth by night towards me, but how do I know that they are looking at me?" |
10095 | If I think with nothing, and about nothing, is that thinking, do you think?" |
10095 | If the oracle of Dorylà ¦ um was an imposture, hadst thou no oracle in thine own bosom? |
10095 | If the voice of Religion was no longer breathed from the tripod, were the winds and waters silent, or had aught quenched the everlasting stars? |
10095 | If there was no power to impose its mandates from without, couldst thou be unconscious of a power within? |
10095 | If they existed, would they tolerate this vile mockery? |
10095 | If thou hadst nothing to reveal unto men, mightest thou not have found somewhat to propound unto them? |
10095 | If you take away my hands, and my heart, and my brains, and my eyes, and my ears, and above all my tongue, what is left me to live in Elysium?" |
10095 | Is he not suffering from the effects of seventy- two poisons?" |
10095 | Is he not tormented by incessant gripes and vomitings?" |
10095 | Is it a bargain? |
10095 | Is it error or malignity? |
10095 | Is it not thence manifest that the virtue resides solely in the bell of the blessed Euschemon?" |
10095 | Is it possible that the accounts connected with the installation of a few abstemious lovers of wisdom can have swollen to such a prodigous bulk? |
10095 | Is man more conceited than woman, or more confiding? |
10095 | Is not his flesh in a state of deliquescence? |
10095 | Is not the ideal of creation impersonated in me already?" |
10095 | Is the Church to frame herself after the prescriptions of heathen philosophers and profane jurists? |
10095 | Is the storming column ready?" |
10095 | Is there another judge of morals than the Pope speaking_ ex cathedra_, as I always did? |
10095 | Is there indeed no hope?" |
10095 | John?" |
10095 | Know you not that no good man can enter my dominions? |
10095 | Knowest thou not that the inestimable blessings of religion are of an inward and spiritual nature? |
10095 | Legions of little black imps surrounded him crying,"We are thy sins, and would be punished-- would''st thou by living for ever deprive us of our due?" |
10095 | Must I not subscribe an infernal compact?" |
10095 | Needs there, peradventure, any greater miracle for the decipherment of these epistles than a hot needle? |
10095 | No? |
10095 | O Majesty, whence these republican and revolutionary pantaloons?" |
10095 | Otto''s blood ran chill, but he mustered sufficient courage to inquire hoarsely:"What of its further virtues?" |
10095 | Plotinus, how can you? |
10095 | Rememberest thou not what is written in the Book of the prophet Ad?'' |
10095 | Said I not so?" |
10095 | Seest thou these scrolls? |
10095 | Shall I look on and see him murdered? |
10095 | Shall I, an innocent proprietor, be mulcted of my right by thy fraud and covin? |
10095 | Shall I, having first unwittingly done my friend the most grievous injury, proceed further to betray her, and doom her to a cruel death? |
10095 | Shall matter prevail over mind? |
10095 | Shall medicine, the most uncertain of sciences, override law, the perfection of human reason? |
10095 | Shall we not appear like foxes, vilipending the grapes that we can not reach? |
10095 | Should he execrate her, or her venerable grandmother, or some unknown person? |
10095 | THE DEMON POPE"So you wo n''t sell me your soul?" |
10095 | That enormous serpents infested her cradle, licking her face and twining around her limbs? |
10095 | That her tiny fingers patted scorpions? |
10095 | That muffled sound from the vast, silent multitude was, doubtless, the quick beating of innumerable hearts; but that sharper note? |
10095 | The city of the Emperor Apollyon? |
10095 | Thou art surely yet a votary of Zeus?" |
10095 | Thou desirest to gather all sorts of philosophers around thee, but to what end, if they are restrained from manifesting their characteristic tenets? |
10095 | Thou hast done some bishoping in thy time, peradventure?" |
10095 | Thou hast never practised riding a broomstick? |
10095 | Thou hast no evidence but her threats, I suppose? |
10095 | Thou hast not caught her tampering with poisons? |
10095 | Thou preferrest the mitre to the laurel chaplet, and the hymns of Gregory to the epics of Homer?" |
10095 | To be misjudged and haply reviled by thy fellows for failing to do what it is not given thee to do? |
10095 | To pine with fruitless longings for good? |
10095 | Was Aurelia deceiver or deceived? |
10095 | Was he about to use it? |
10095 | Was the sun''s rim really drawing nigh yonder great edifice? |
10095 | Were it not a most blissful and appropriate coincidence if the day of the consecration were that of the saint''s migration to a better world? |
10095 | Were it not therefore fitting that thou shouldst encounter the first risk in my stead?" |
10095 | What Deity could die for Olympus, as Leonidas had for Greece? |
10095 | What boots it to describe Otto''s feelings upon this revelation of Aurelia''s sentiments? |
10095 | What could the bishop do but salute them? |
10095 | What did they? |
10095 | What else can Heaven render? |
10095 | What is her name? |
10095 | What name bears she? |
10095 | What of wells and rivers, and the mighty sea itself? |
10095 | What passed? |
10095 | What reply did he vouchsafe to these admonitions? |
10095 | What room hath she for more? |
10095 | What said you to them? |
10095 | What say ye?" |
10095 | What say you to this?" |
10095 | What should she do now? |
10095 | What then? |
10095 | What will the vulgar think when they see the sty of Epicurus sumptuously adorned, and the porch of Zeno shabby and bare? |
10095 | What wonder if they suspect your Holiness of familiarity with Beelzebub, the patron of vermin, and earnestly desire that he would take you to himself? |
10095 | What''s this? |
10095 | Whence this mistrust of your faithful Anno, who has served you so loyally and zealously these many years?" |
10095 | Whence, in the name of the Naiads, do you come? |
10095 | Where abides he now?" |
10095 | Where would the temporal power be but for me? |
10095 | Wherefore have I been true to thee, if not that our ashes might mingle at the last? |
10095 | Wherefore speaks he not?" |
10095 | Which of them could raise his fellows nearer to the source of all Deity, as Socrates and Plato had raised men? |
10095 | Which of them could, like Iphigenia, dwell for years beside the melancholy sea, keeping a true heart for an absent brother? |
10095 | Who cares about the thirteenth book? |
10095 | Who could portray himself as Phidias had portrayed Athene? |
10095 | Who gave the Popes to dwell quietly in their own house? |
10095 | Who is Plato?" |
10095 | Who shall describe the conflict in Lucifer''s bosom? |
10095 | Who smote the Colonna? |
10095 | Who so pleased as Theocles now? |
10095 | Who squashed the Orsini? |
10095 | Who will feed your cattle? |
10095 | Who will want breast- plates now?'' |
10095 | Why can not you store up honey, as she does?" |
10095 | Will the fair Euphronia also have undergone fifteen transmigrations, and will her charms have continued unimpaired?" |
10095 | Will the fruits mature? |
10095 | Will they not deem that the Epicureans are highly respected and the Stoics made of little account? |
10095 | Will you die for me? |
10095 | Will you lie for me? |
10095 | Wilt thou take from me my Pannychis, an object pleasing to the eye, and leave yonder fellow his tatters and his vermin?" |
10095 | Would Prometheus lend him half a talent? |
10095 | You are going to marry that poor young fellow''s betrothed, are you? |
10095 | You are not really such an ass as to imagine that your virtue has anything to do with the virtue of this bell?" |
10095 | You can catch our rats, can you? |
10095 | You have committed sundry rascalities, no doubt? |
10095 | You probably next addressed yourself to the middling orders of society? |
10095 | You returned, then, to the latter with this design? |
10095 | You want a patent or a privilege for your ratsbane? |
10095 | You would intrigue with her under my nose, would you? |
10095 | _ To put the devil into a hole_.--"Then sayd Virgilius,''Shulde ye well passe in to the hole that ye cam out of?'' |
10095 | a hundredth? |
10095 | a quarter? |
10095 | a tenth? |
10095 | and afterwards?" |
10095 | and tied knots in the tails of vipers? |
10095 | and to consume with vain yearnings for usefulness? |
10095 | and what am I to do without it?" |
10095 | and what shall hinder me?" |
10095 | any secrets in confectionery? |
10095 | any skill in the preparation of soup?" |
10095 | asked I,''and what signifies this protrusion of thy bones?'' |
10095 | asked he,"and wherefore makest thou this lamentation?" |
10095 | asked the Emperor,"is not that a name dear to those misguided creatures?" |
10095 | exclaimed Ananda, weeping bitterly,"and is all the work undone, and all by my fault and folly?" |
10095 | exclaimed Ananda,"whither shall I fly?" |
10095 | exclaimed Chrysostomus,"is this thy grief for thy daughter?" |
10095 | exclaimed Eubulides,"how was that?" |
10095 | exclaimed he in extreme perturbation,"whither shall I turn? |
10095 | exclaimed he, with equal surprise,''know ye not that this is the Palace of Illusion, where everything is inverted and appears the reverse of itself? |
10095 | exclaimed the Emperor;"but wherewithal shall it be executed?" |
10095 | exclaimed the Lamp,"am I not shining by my own light?" |
10095 | exclaimed the youth,"was Abdallah the Adite thy disciple?" |
10095 | he gasped, as audibly as she would let him,"is this the way it welcomes its own Lucy- pucy?" |
10095 | or but the wanton freak of an idle imagination?" |
10095 | or here?" |
10095 | or is it rather that none can set bounds to the licence of romancers? |
10095 | replied Lucifer contemptuously;"do you imagine that Adeliza would look at_ you_?" |
10095 | said he to the latter,"would ye rob me of my reputation? |
10095 | she exclaimed,"must ye learn your duty from a woman?" |
10095 | she exclaimed;"who cares? |
10095 | shouted the exasperated youth,"is this the way in which the treasures in thy custody are protected by thee? |
10095 | that, were such a thing possible, my empire would become intolerable to me, and I should be compelled to abdicate?" |
10095 | thou hast it now?" |
10095 | what am I to do?" |
10095 | what''s that?" |
10095 | whence this forlorn semblance? |
10095 | whence this osseous condition?" |
10095 | wherefore?" |
10095 | why didst thou not disclose that thou wert a Jogi? |
27568 | The spirits of the dead men? |
27568 | What is the matter, Nina? 27568 What reason have you for saying so?" |
27568 | What will you do,asked a missionary,"to bring those around you to Christ?" |
27568 | Where is the Bishop? |
27568 | Why? |
27568 | [ 8] Are you as fond of frogs as you used to be? 27568 About a year afterwards Sir James Brooke said to me,Did you ever feel pleasure at hearing of the death of an old friend?" |
27568 | Are not such pricks of conscience common to us all when our dear ones leave us? |
27568 | Are you ill, that you are eating no supper?" |
27568 | Now the six months had passed away, were they prepared to assent to the law? |
27568 | Shall I ever forget my first impressions of the rajah''s bungalow? |
27568 | So I whispered,"Are you happy, child?" |
27568 | The first question the Dyaks asked, if told a new missionary was coming, would always be,"Is he clever at physic?" |
27568 | They looked out of their doors, asking what was the matter? |
27568 | What should we do? |
27568 | Who would have thought of a Dyak Undine? |
27568 | With no better guide than the untutored imagination of a mind which in religious matters is a blank, who shall wonder that this is so? |
27568 | how could it be otherwise? |
26687 | And_ La Luna_? 26687 Are you sure the train goes at 6.11?" |
26687 | But it''s a_ ghost_, I tell you,almost screamed the innkeeper;"are ghosts afraid of firearms?" |
26687 | But the Turners? |
26687 | Could we stay at the Albergo del Sole? |
26687 | Did you ever stay there? |
26687 | Does M. l''Américain go with us? |
26687 | How should I know? 26687 I never told you how Nils and I went over the hills to Hallsberg, and how we found the Dead Valley, did I? |
26687 | I say, old man, shall we let the 2.46 go to thunder? |
26687 | Is there a story of_ La Villa Bianca_? |
26687 | Let us be careful,I said;"who knows what we may find?" |
26687 | My God, man, what is the matter with you? 26687 Then tell us what to expect,"I said;"what kind of a ghost is this nocturnal visitor?" |
26687 | This was a Carmelite convent, then? |
26687 | Was there any other train? |
26687 | What do you suppose she did there? |
26687 | What do you want? 26687 What for a blockhead are you?" |
26687 | What is that Johnny waving his arm at us for? |
26687 | What time are you? |
26687 | Why do n''t you get up and get into bed? |
26687 | You do not live in your aunt''s house? |
26687 | And then? |
26687 | But the Duke was young, and he married her, and for her built the white villa; and it was a wonder throughout Campania,--you have seen? |
26687 | But where? |
26687 | But why did Otto sleep so soundly; why did he not awake? |
26687 | Catarina? |
26687 | Could I resist the mad horror of this silence, the deepening dark, the creeping numbness? |
26687 | Dead? |
26687 | Did ever you see such a perfect place for lawlessness?" |
26687 | Do you like it?" |
26687 | Had he dreamed? |
26687 | He turned to me:"Signore, it is already two o''clock and too late for mass, is it not?" |
26687 | I sat and waited; my mind was still keen, but how long would it last? |
26687 | If I could only hold my mind, my consciousness, I might still be safe, but could I? |
26687 | In hell? |
26687 | It was not easy; why did I eat that lettuce salad at Père Garceau''s? |
26687 | Or had the horror of the real thing blotted Nils''s mind into blankness so far as the events of the night in the Dead Valley were concerned? |
26687 | Shall we go in?" |
26687 | The lantern, too, was_ that_ going out? |
26687 | The latter explanation seemed the only one, else how explain the sudden illness which in a night had struck us both down? |
26687 | Then, turning to me,"You will go, will you not? |
26687 | Therefore she can not sleep in peace,--_non è vero_? |
26687 | Valguanera thought a moment, then he said,"Bring two horses; the Signor Americano will go with you,--do you understand?" |
26687 | Was it all but the floating phantasm of delirium? |
26687 | Was it imagination? |
26687 | Was it the actual physical paralysis born of killing fear that held me down? |
26687 | Was there cause? |
26687 | Was there still time? |
26687 | We climbed it wearily, reached the top, and found ourselves gazing down into a great, smooth valley, filled half way to the brim with-- what? |
26687 | What can we do?" |
26687 | What was it that I was fighting? |
26687 | Where was he? |
26687 | Where was the rise of hill? |
26687 | Who shall know? |
26687 | Why did that great iron hook stand out so plainly? |
26687 | Would Monsieur like the number and the street? |
26687 | Would the cloud never pass? |
26687 | Would the darkness never be broken? |
26687 | You will tell it, will you not?" |
26687 | what is the matter with you?" |
27480 | ( 2) who are the proper subjects? |
27480 | ( The tree falls; dost thou see it?) |
27480 | 7), Uriconium( Wroxeter),[ v.03 p.0472] Chester(?) |
27480 | Aka(? Nka- ka-); usually diminutive, sometimes honorific." |
27480 | And in how many years, continues the prince, does this fate befall man? |
27480 | BARBOUR, JOHN(? |
27480 | Estudio de Antropologia_( San Sebastian, 1889); and the same author''s_ Existe una raza Euskara? |
27480 | Finally, in the system of Basilides, the( seven?) |
27480 | For what is the use of that baptism which cleanses the flesh and body alone? |
27480 | I- n- or I- ni-(? Ngi- ni-)." |
27480 | Is it possible that the words"for the dead"signify"because of contact with the dead"? |
27480 | Is there_ no_ way of escape? |
27480 | It tree this here it falls; thou it seest? |
27480 | Iti-, Izi-, Iti- n-, Izi- n-(? Ñgi- ti-)." |
27480 | No means of eschewing this wretched state of decay? |
27480 | Others( Trier[? |
27480 | Rendered into_ Kiguha_ of North- West Tanganyika, this would be:--_ U_m_u_ti_ gu_no_ gu_gwa u_gu_mona? |
27480 | Say not: How can my sins be wiped out? |
27480 | Shall all men have such ills? |
27480 | The development of their doctrine as to baptism was marked along three lines of dispute:--(1) who is the proper administrator of baptism? |
27480 | The word=[ Greek: kauchêma]=[ Hebrew: THLH](? |
27480 | This tree this here this falls; thou this seest? |
27480 | Ubu-(? Mbu- bu-); sometimes used in a plural sense; generally employed to indicate abstract nouns." |
27480 | Utu(? Ntu- tu-); often diminutive in sense." |
27480 | We can, therefore, paraphrase v. 29 thus:"Else what shall they do which are baptized for their dead selves?" |
27480 | Wherefore He asked them, Do ye believe that I am able to do this thing?" |
27480 | Why should persons still in the age of innocence be in a hurry to be baptized and win remission of sins? |
27480 | and must he expect death as inevitable? |
27480 | and( 3) what is the proper mode? |
23092 | But what would be the use? |
23092 | Why did you hire out as a_ cordon bleu_? 23092 ***** But why linger over these things? 23092 ***** May I be permitted, in this appeal for simplicity of speech, to frame a wish whose fulfilment would have the happiest results? 23092 *****And what about the necessary distinctions in life?" |
23092 | Am I_ not_ blowing trumpets for those who hold trumpet- blowing in horror? |
23092 | And common sense-- do you not find what is designated by this name becoming as rare as the common- sense customs of other days? |
23092 | And what shall we say of the pride of good men? |
23092 | And who will furnish the money? |
23092 | And yet, what would become of us if these cares absorbed us entirely? |
23092 | Are there not various fashions of being vanquished? |
23092 | Are they not unreasonable to complain of envy, after having done everything to provoke it? |
23092 | As the only human means of soothing grief is to share it in the heart, how must a sufferer feel, consoled in this fashion? |
23092 | Ask different people, of very unlike surroundings, this question: What do you need to live? |
23092 | But does their inhumanity or hypocrisy take away the value of the good that others do, and that they often hide with a modesty so perfect? |
23092 | But suppose they are not found? |
23092 | But the middle classes themselves-- do they consider themselves satisfied? |
23092 | But what generally happens in our day? |
23092 | Can you combat it, suppress it? |
23092 | Can you do it? |
23092 | Did our mothers look for pay in loving us and caring for us? |
23092 | Do not the very sinews of virtue lie in man''s capacity to care for something outside himself? |
23092 | Do you think it the height of pleasure for others to admire us, to admit our superiority, and to act as our tools? |
23092 | Does anyone suppose that in this way men can be shaped who shall respect country, religion and law? |
23092 | Does the rain- drop doubt the ocean? |
23092 | Does this mean that in order to defend herself against her enemies and to honor her flag, a country need only be rich? |
23092 | Frank libertinage, does it deaden the sting of the senses? |
23092 | Has drunkenness, inventive as it is of new drinks, found the means of quenching thirst? |
23092 | Has this desirable result been more nearly attained through the great care bestowed upon instruction? |
23092 | Have we the perilous honor of being always in view, of marching in the front ranks? |
23092 | He errs greatly who thinks that the query,"What shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed?" |
23092 | How can we talk of liberty so long as this grave problem of free- will is not solved? |
23092 | How do you think a man can be amused while he has his doubts whether after all life is worth living? |
23092 | How is it that she passes pure and scathless in the midst of these dark enemies, like the prophet of the sacred legend among the roaring beasts? |
23092 | How much of it do they owe to the unselfishness of the simple- hearted? |
23092 | If in the midst of means continually more and more perfected, the workman diminishes in value, of what use are these fine tools at his disposal? |
23092 | In reality, our language translated into truthful speech would amount to this:"You suffer, my friend? |
23092 | In what does this strength consist, or where is it found? |
23092 | Is it an indifferent matter to add to defeat, discouragement, disorder, and demoralization? |
23092 | Is it liberty still, when it is the prerogative of criminals or heedless blunderers? |
23092 | Is it nothing to be without home and its love, without future, without personal ambition? |
23092 | Is not this better than to covet what one has not, and to give one''s self up to longings for a poor imitation of others''finery? |
23092 | Is there anything in the world so disgusting as to feel one''s self patronized, made capital of, enrolled in a claque? |
23092 | Is this a proper respect-- this respect which does not extend beyond what touches and belongs to ourselves? |
23092 | Is this true of men? |
23092 | It is better to put the question otherwise, and ask: Is my own religion good, and how may I know it? |
23092 | It is true that he feels impelled to run to the succor of these unfortunates, but at the same time he asks himself,"What is the use?" |
23092 | May we be permitted to record here some observations made from life? |
23092 | Need we say that one does not rise to this point of view without a struggle? |
23092 | Of what value is the mercenary journalist? |
23092 | On the various rungs of the bourgeois ladder people reply to the question, what is necessary to live? |
23092 | Shall liberty, then, be proscribed? |
23092 | Should I keep this modesty, this naturalness, this uprightness which uses its own as though it belonged to others?" |
23092 | Since no one can hold life in check, is it not better to respect it and use it than to go about making other people disgusted with it? |
23092 | The papers say enough of those who break windows; but why do they make no mention of those who spend their nights toiling over problems? |
23092 | Then shall we stop the people''s ears, suppress public instruction, close the schools? |
23092 | Then why did they engage themselves with you? |
23092 | To be a painter, does it suffice to arm one''s self with a brush, or does the purchase at great cost of a Stradivarius make one a musician? |
23092 | To console a person, what do we do? |
23092 | To defend your country? |
23092 | To do good? |
23092 | Upon what does it rest its peremptory claims? |
23092 | VII SIMPLE PLEASURES Do you find life amusing in these days? |
23092 | We owe everything to them-- do we not? |
23092 | Well; what remedy for it do you offer? |
23092 | What are this stranger''s rights? |
23092 | What charm could you find in this borrowed language? |
23092 | What conclusion shall we draw from this, if not that with us there is a considerable elasticity in the nature and number of needs? |
23092 | What do we ordinarily do? |
23092 | What does it cost you to speak the truth? |
23092 | What good can come from this habit of exaggerated speech? |
23092 | What is a good lamp? |
23092 | What is the meaning of this persistent instinct which pushes us on? |
23092 | What material things does a man need to live under the best conditions? |
23092 | What would become of filial piety if we asked it for loving and caring for our aged parents? |
23092 | What would you say of a young girl who expressed her thoughts in terms very choice, indeed, but taken word for word from a phrase- book? |
23092 | When damage is done, who should repair it? |
23092 | When shall we be so simply and truly_ men_ as not to obtrude our personal business and distresses upon the people we meet socially? |
23092 | Whence comes it that it lights only an incomplete circle, when in olden times young and old sat shoulder to shoulder? |
23092 | Whence comes their heart- burning? |
23092 | Where can the fault be? |
23092 | Where lies the cause of this phenomenon? |
23092 | Who talk of them? |
23092 | Who then shall give him the first enlightenment and put him in the way he should go? |
23092 | Why does the peasant desert for the inn the house that his father and grandfather found so comfortable? |
23092 | Why should I not say it? |
23092 | Why, under pretext of decorating our homes, do we destroy that personal character which always has such value? |
23092 | Why? |
23092 | Why? |
23092 | Will you wait to find the man who caused the mischief? |
23092 | Without it, what is the most richly decorated house? |
23092 | Would they have succeeded had they met only shrewd men of their own sort, having for device:"No money, no service?" |
23092 | [ A] After this, is there any need to ask if we have become better? |
23092 | its titles? |
23092 | or suppose they can not or will not make amends? |
23092 | the ray mistrust the sun? |
23092 | to take upon one''s self that cross of solitary life, so hard to bear, especially when there is added the solitude of the heart? |
27796 | And what do we find now? 27796 But what does science do with this fact? |
27796 | How old is this fact? 27796 What do all these names mean? |
27796 | And in consequence the old depressing question,"Is life worth living?" |
27796 | Are they, for the most part, relics of names imposed by Northmen once residing here? |
27796 | For example, this country is now enjoying the benefits of fish culture, but why did we not enjoy it a hundred years ago? |
27796 | How far have we risen in eighteen centuries above the barbarism of Rome? |
27796 | How then does the right side of one compare with the right side of the other, and the left side with the left? |
27796 | Of most of them is there any conceivable source other than the memories lingering among a people whose ancestors were familiar with them? |
27796 | Then came the nitrous oxide, introduced by Dr. Wells, of Hartford, and promptly discountenanced by the enlightened(?) |
27796 | What is the loss of five centuries in geographic truth to the loss of a thousand years in astronomic science? |
27796 | What was the reception of the illustrious surgeon, physiologist, and physician, John Hunter? |
27796 | Why, then, take the extravagant course? |
27796 | Will your support be continued or withdrawn for the next volume, and can you do anything to extend its circulation? |
27021 | ''Smart,''sir? |
27021 | ''Wild''you spell w- i- l- d? |
27021 | And where does he live? |
27021 | Are you quite sure that this lake is the home of the gods? |
27021 | Do you ever expect to become a saint? |
27021 | Do you hear the sound of bells? |
27021 | Have we passed the Gomba? 27021 How is he clothed?" |
27021 | How many coolies will you take, sir? |
27021 | Is it a_ Plenki_? |
27021 | Sir, do you see that island? |
27021 | Tell me, first, how you reached Taklakot? |
27021 | What are the evil qualities to be mostly avoided? |
27021 | What are you doing, sir? |
27021 | What are you going to do? |
27021 | What do you do with these? |
27021 | What have you done with it? |
27021 | What is that? |
27021 | What is that? |
27021 | What is that? |
27021 | What is your name? |
27021 | Where are Mansing and the goat? |
27021 | Where are they? |
27021 | Where are your certificates? |
27021 | Where? |
27021 | Why is that? |
27021 | Will five do? |
27021 | _ Chuwen bogpe, tsamba, chon won ì?_( Will you sell me flour or_ tsamba_?) |
27021 | _ Chuwen bogpe, tsamba, chon won ì?_( Will you sell me flour or_ tsamba_?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddo ung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Keran ga naddoung?_( Where are you going?) |
27021 | _ Kiula tuku taka zando?_( How many children have you?) |
27021 | _ Kiula tuku taka zando?_( How many children have you?) |
27021 | _ Kuan hai?_( Who is there?) |
27021 | _ Kuan hai?_( Who is there?) |
27021 | And if it be God''s decree that he should die, what would be the use of rebelling against it? |
27021 | And you,"asked he, inquisitively--"how long have you taken to come from Ladak?" |
27021 | Are you one of his advance- guard?" |
27021 | Can we stop near your camp and pick up the food that you will throw away?" |
27021 | Had he come across some of his mates, or had he heard from the soldiers that they were in the neighborhood? |
27021 | Have we not yet reached it?" |
27021 | How could we now turn back when so near our goal? |
27021 | How much do they want?" |
27021 | How spell?" |
27021 | Or had they been caught by the Jong Pen( the Master of the fort), and been imprisoned and tortured? |
27021 | Should I let myself go, choosing rest and peace rather than effort, or should I make a last struggle to save myself? |
27021 | Tumka hatte?_"( Come, come, come! |
27021 | Undoubtedly the satisfaction of going up high mountains is great, but can it ever be compared to the delight of coming down again? |
27021 | Was what I saw before me real? |
27021 | Were the Tarjum''s men coming, preceded by their animals? |
27021 | Were these Tibetans trying to surprise us in our sleep or were they my men returning at last? |
27021 | Were we discovered? |
27021 | What clock?" |
27021 | What is meaning? |
27021 | What is''_ kiang_''in English?" |
27021 | Where are you?) |
27021 | Would they betray us and never return? |
27260 | Could the Mighty One at Berlin condone the offense if China gave Germany a harbor to be used as coaling station and naval headquarters? |
27260 | I''ll write home for funds,he decides;"but how am I to live while awaiting the remittance?" |
27260 | See here, you drooling idiot; what do you think I have hired you for? 27260 What are the two annas for, and who is this man?" |
27260 | Why not fabricate her own raw silk, and send it to market ready for wear? |
27260 | Why? |
27260 | Would you like to go down in a diving- costume from a boat alongside the barque? |
27260 | ****** Were these the scenes that poet looked upon, Whose lyre though known to fame knew misery more? |
27260 | Adept in the art of warfare he surely is; but have not the Fatherland''s victories under his rule been those of peace, and those only? |
27260 | And of a people with a capacity to perform in two generations such amazing things who shall dare say what to them is impossible? |
27260 | And what is back of it? |
27260 | And what is this India, governed by Great Britain through its delegated officials? |
27260 | And what of the"hinterland,"compassed by the 45-mile semicircle, dotted with thirty odd native towns, the whole having a population of 1,200,000? |
27260 | But the appointment with the state elephant-- what of that? |
27260 | Can it be an alarm of fire, or have the customs officials at the gates apprehended a flagrant smuggler? |
27260 | Can these Easterners, squatting on mats like fakirs in open- front stalls, judge the merits of a pearl? |
27260 | Could it be cholera, the plague, or simply appendicitis with which I was stricken? |
27260 | Did I try my luck? |
27260 | Do we not already lead in foreign trade? |
27260 | Does it deal with"spicy breezes,"and"pleasing prospects?" |
27260 | Does the fishery pay? |
27260 | France? |
27260 | Has Germany been involved in strife possessing the dignity of war since he came to the throne? |
27260 | How do the gastronomic experts of pagan Asia acquire their skill? |
27260 | Is there anything like it, strategically and trade wise, in the East? |
27260 | Its purpose? |
27260 | May not insular Japan become in time the Asiatic equivalent of Great Britain? |
27260 | Some are satisfying in the extreme; but these waiters, can they be described as in uniform? |
27260 | What country was to benefit through this, with Russia''s moral support and permission, had the Czar''s legions been successful? |
27260 | What is it? |
27260 | What is the purpose of the appropriation of 14,000,000 marks for Kiau- chau in last year''s official budget of the German government? |
27260 | What of the German colony in China-- Kiau- chau, on the east coast of the Shan- tung peninsula, whose forts frown upon the Yellow Sea? |
27260 | Who could resist the temptation? |
27260 | Who, then, could stand in a likelier position to become legatee of this valued privilege than the Trade- Lord of Germany? |
27260 | Why War- Lord, as an appellation for the august William? |
27260 | Why not make it the Hamburg of the East? |
27260 | Why, then, may she not do what England has done? |
27260 | Why? |
27260 | Would the sahibs care to witness the combat?" |
27260 | Would you have me set myself up for a wiser person than my revered parent?" |
27260 | [ Illustration: TYPICAL BUSINESS STREET IN A CHINESE CITY] Then why not Trade- Lord, for this is what the German Emperor is? |
28340 | After noting some movements of the body that seemed familiar he said:"Jack, where did you come from?" |
28340 | As a nation she blundered in days agone, but what nation has not made mistakes? |
28340 | Great preparation had been made for this visit and as a worshipper(?) |
28340 | Is it not about time we were getting acquainted and shaking hands with each other? |
28340 | Of course I was shown the exact(?) |
28340 | Rather strange, is n''t it, that United States farmers should be teaching the Brazilian farmers Japanese agriculture? |
28340 | We laugh at this but how much worse is it than some of the things we license today? |
28340 | What kind of men have you got over there, anyway? |
28340 | Would you like to go nutting? |
20444 | ''''And how did little Tim behave?'' |
20444 | ''''What has ever got your precious father, then?'' |
20444 | ''''What place is this?'' |
20444 | ''''Why, where''s our Martha?'' |
20444 | ''Ah, Harson?--it''s you, is it?'' |
20444 | ''And Ned Somers?'' |
20444 | ''And the tale?'' |
20444 | ''Any thing else?'' |
20444 | ''But do n''t you think, Doctor, do n''t you think, my good friend, that she looks a little better this evening? |
20444 | ''Do you know a man by the name of Michael Rust?'' |
20444 | ''Do you know them to be the same?'' |
20444 | ''Enoch Grosket?'' |
20444 | ''Go on; what do you want?'' |
20444 | ''Good,''said Holmes, in his short, abrupt manner:''Where are these children now?'' |
20444 | ''How did you first become acquainted with him?'' |
20444 | ''How long have you known him?'' |
20444 | ''How so? |
20444 | ''I had to get rid of him: what could I do while he was dallying round the girl? |
20444 | ''Is there nothing left to live for?'' |
20444 | ''Of what importance,''cried the king,''are the menaces of Hercules, the Lybian? |
20444 | ''Oh, yes, very sorry; do n''t you think so? |
20444 | ''Oh, you have been writing it down, have you? |
20444 | ''Really,''said Mr. Lee,''that is too bad; am I that sort of person? |
20444 | ''The Spirit did not tarry here, but bade Scrooge hold his robe, and passing on above the moor, sped whither? |
20444 | ''The color? |
20444 | ''Then why the deuce do you imagine for an instant that_ I_ would?'' |
20444 | ''To do what?'' |
20444 | ''Too late? |
20444 | ''Vat is dish?'' |
20444 | ''Well, Doctor, and how goes on the experiment?'' |
20444 | ''Well?'' |
20444 | ''What are you talking about, there?'' |
20444 | ''What brought me here? |
20444 | ''What brought_ you_ here?'' |
20444 | ''What have I to dread from a knowledge of the future?'' |
20444 | ''What is truth?'' |
20444 | ''What led to your acquaintance?'' |
20444 | ''What news of the boy?'' |
20444 | ''What other name did you ever know him to bear?'' |
20444 | ''What woman?'' |
20444 | ''Where had Scrooge heard those words? |
20444 | ''Where was it?'' |
20444 | ''Who was that man?'' |
20444 | ''Who was this man?'' |
20444 | ''Why should I go over it again? |
20444 | ''Will you give me the information I require? |
20444 | ''Will you swear that they are the same children brought to you four years since?'' |
20444 | ''You accuse him of forgery; what does that mean?'' |
20444 | ''You are acquainted with Michael Rust?'' |
20444 | ''_ All?_''replied the professor, with a look of mingled piety and triumph;''why, Sir, did you ever know a wax- figure to wear its own hair? |
20444 | ''_ All?_''replied the professor, with a look of mingled piety and triumph;''why, Sir, did you ever know a wax- figure to wear its own hair? |
20444 | ''_ Quamdiu etiam?_''I implore your commiseration, Captain BASIL. |
20444 | ''_ Quousque tandem?_''Beg your pardon, Mrs. TROLLOPE. |
20444 | A pause of some moments ensued, and Rust said:''Is there any thing more that you want? |
20444 | A smell like an eating house, and a pastry cook''s next door to each other, with a laundress''s next door to that? |
20444 | AMERICAN PTYALISM:''QUID RIDES?'' |
20444 | And are you, Sir Baronet of the realm imaginary, subject to no gross corporeal needs and operations? |
20444 | And if, as you will say, you perform those foul rites in a state of retiracy, are you not adding the sin of hypocrisy to your preëxistent guilt? |
20444 | And shall the passage of one such soul across the mere brook of Death dissolve affiances so deep, so latent, and so pure as this? |
20444 | Are we willing to expend toil and cost on that which will never gratify our senses? |
20444 | At length the physician appeared:''Now,''said he, on accosting Mr. Lee,''do you think I know my own business or not? |
20444 | BYRON a sorry bard?'' |
20444 | But the reader would ask, how came these temples in such a state of ruin? |
20444 | But what remains of this great temple? |
20444 | But who may venture to choose their own time for showing kindness? |
20444 | But_ pocas pallabras_--enough of this preface: will not the thing speak for itself? |
20444 | Can any one tell us where to look for sonnets, more satisfactory than these? |
20444 | Can you understand my motive now? |
20444 | Could any thing be more life- like, more beautiful, more touching, than this description? |
20444 | Did it yet upbraid him? |
20444 | Do I make mountains of mole- hills or not? |
20444 | Do I not show it in every feature and limb? |
20444 | Do n''t you twig, ABEDNEGO?'' |
20444 | Do they not know that most of the elegant as well as the useful, is the rich bequest of these ancients whom they affect to despise? |
20444 | Do they not militate against certain theories of''nervous sensation''recently promulgated in our philosophical circles? |
20444 | Do we not all finally resort to_ ourselves_ in order to decide a difficult question in morals or religion? |
20444 | Does it not strike your ear as smoothly as Puseyite, or Presbyterian? |
20444 | Does not he who extends among the people the use of this democratizing weed, emphatically give them a''_ quid_ pro quo?'' |
20444 | Does she communicate what she knows willingly or under compulsion?'' |
20444 | From this deserted citadel, called of''Labdalus,''the eye embraces the whole site of the once populous Syracuse; and what does it behold? |
20444 | Have you Carlyle or Emerson at hand?'' |
20444 | He smiled as he looked at them, and then asked:''Will you promise?'' |
20444 | Holmes paused to make a note of it, and then asked:''What is the name of the person, in the country, who took charge of the children?'' |
20444 | How does he like the new definition of Transcendentalism:_ Incomprehensibilityosityivityalityationmentnessism_?'' |
20444 | How is it that you allow men to befool you? |
20444 | How much is due to nature? |
20444 | How much? |
20444 | I knew what I was about, did n''t I?'' |
20444 | I think he''s far more sorry than PETRARCA; do n''t you?'' |
20444 | I thought he was a favorite with Italians?'' |
20444 | I would ask such persons, what would have been our state if the ancients had entertained such grovelling notions? |
20444 | I would ask, is there such a lofty feeling among us? |
20444 | I would like to ask you if in the wide earth under heaven you can find such another profit- yielding market as this is? |
20444 | If this port of Canton, however, were to be shut against you, how could you scheme to reap profit more? |
20444 | If we look to intents,( and what ought we to look at?) |
20444 | Is it a fit he''s got?'' |
20444 | Is it not sufficiently euphonious? |
20444 | Is it the sound of the word? |
20444 | Is n''t that''standing_ cart- balance_''rich? |
20444 | Is not the following a most glowing sketch of a well known pastime? |
20444 | Is not this then a lesson to us? |
20444 | Is not your conduct egregiously strange? |
20444 | Is that right? |
20444 | Is truth discovered? |
20444 | It is as difficult to be answered as the question, What is Christianity? |
20444 | Lilies, Nature gave thy face-- Say, thy_ heart_ do lilies grace? |
20444 | May we not in these things read deep lessons applicable to ourselves? |
20444 | My secret can do me no good; why should I keep it? |
20444 | Need we ask the interest of our friends, of the friends of the Departed, in behalf of the volume in question? |
20444 | Not to sea? |
20444 | Now, can any man doubt that the custom of defrauding the customs has endured more than a hundred years? |
20444 | Occasionally calling, they were eloquent in excuses for their neglect; for when did the prosperous lack an excuse for neglecting the unfortunate? |
20444 | Raising his hat, as he did so, he said:''You seem, like myself, to be an admirer of this noble river?'' |
20444 | See how animatedly she is listening to that young man: by- the- by, who is he?'' |
20444 | Shall the soul that lingers here still retaining its identity lose that which has chiefly formed for it a distinctive being? |
20444 | Suppose a book- worm should light on poetry of equal merit among FLATMAN''S, FALCONER''S, PRIOR''S, or PARSELL''S collections? |
20444 | The doctor here mused again for a few moments:''You say she has seemed happy until very lately?'' |
20444 | The lawyer turned to Harson, and then said:''I promise; do you, Harson?'' |
20444 | These passages are full of transcendental ideas; do you object to them? |
20444 | They both thanked me, and looked upon me as their best friend; and so I was, for I kept up hope; and what is life without it? |
20444 | This Life of Life, is it to be so suddenly quenched in man, and man himself continue to exist? |
20444 | WHAT IS TRANSCENDENTALISM? |
20444 | WHERE IS THE SPIRIT- WORLD? |
20444 | Was he not a pagan? |
20444 | What can be more admirable than this''de bon air''plebeianism, and universal right- hand of fellowship? |
20444 | What did it mean? |
20444 | What more do you want?'' |
20444 | What seems at the first glance freer from this dross than the love of man to man? |
20444 | What''s the news at Hackney?'' |
20444 | What''s your name?'' |
20444 | Whence these floods of light, Rich with all hues? |
20444 | Where and what are they? |
20444 | Where do you live?'' |
20444 | Where is my sainted father, who took me in his arms, And held me to the minister, and kissed away alarms? |
20444 | Where is the multitude that once thronged around its walls? |
20444 | Where were his principles? |
20444 | Who can aid us in this?'' |
20444 | Who can not imagine the conclusion? |
20444 | Who may, having refused to''do good when it was in the power of his hand to do it,''resume at will the precious privilege? |
20444 | Who''d have thought he had a heart?'' |
20444 | Why did he not go on? |
20444 | Why dost thou start? |
20444 | Why place yourself in our power, or run the risk of our interfering with your future movements?'' |
20444 | Why so? |
20444 | Why? |
20444 | Would it not shine forth, think you? |
20444 | Would you condemn Christianity because of the weaknesses and sins of one of its professors? |
20444 | Would you have the mischiefs of this tower unbound, and let loose to shake the earth to its foundations?'' |
20444 | Would you like to see the woman?'' |
20444 | Ye who read this doleful ditty, Ask ye where is UWINS now? |
20444 | Yes, yes; I_ did_ worship her; Why deny it? |
20444 | You went to- day then, Robert?'' |
20444 | _ molto triste_--very mel-_an_-choly; do n''t you find him so? |
20444 | and can his enchantments have aught avail against a believer in our holy faith? |
20444 | and how much of falsehood is mixed up with what_ is_ known to be true? |
20444 | and is not the decision more or less correct accordingly as we refer it to the better or to the baser portion of our nature? |
20444 | cried they,''what is it your majesty requires of us? |
20444 | demanded Grosket, impatiently:''is it empty?'' |
20444 | do they_ all_ wear wigs?'' |
20444 | exclaimed Rust, fiercely;''what cared I for gold? |
20444 | exclaimed he;''_ nothing_ left? |
20444 | has your father, Think you, made a deal of brass?'' |
20444 | have the spherà © d stars, Powdered in shining atoms, fallen and filled The ambient air with their invisible dews? |
20444 | how forego Thy sweet converse and love so dearly join''d To live again in these wild woods forlorn? |
20444 | inquired Holmes, anxiously,''and to whom did you entrust them?'' |
20444 | is it too late now?'' |
20444 | or will you accept the alternative?'' |
20444 | replied Mr. Lee;''why what can they have to do with your prescriptions? |
20444 | said Don Roderick,''dost thou love me?'' |
20444 | that the change suggested in the mere inscription of his epigram,''_ Religious Disputation_,''would be entirely out of keeping? |
20444 | the bailiff mutter''d, Rushing in with fury wild;''Ish your muffins so vell butter''d Dat you darsh insult ma shild?'' |
20444 | the love of the creature for his fellow; the ordained test of his love to his Creator? |
20444 | what did his heart say now? |
20444 | where his wisdom? |
20444 | where his_ honor_?'' |
20444 | who would have thought that the flint which the old fellow calls his heart had feeling in it?'' |
20444 | why make we such ado? |
21041 | ''A witness of what?'' 21041 ''All that you have told me is very sad and strange,''I said,''but now, will you allow me to ask you why you have appeared to me? |
21041 | ''And that of the lady opposite, my cousin, Lucretia Carbury?'' 21041 ''Have you anything more to ask?'' |
21041 | ''Who was the man?'' 21041 ''Why do you come to me?'' |
21041 | And curly and long? |
21041 | And what can I do about any young man? |
21041 | As soon as I was sure of this, I said:''You are Captain Richard Carbury?'' 21041 But ca n''t you account for it at all?" |
21041 | But what can_ I_ do in the matter, even if it be as you say? |
21041 | But what happened_ afterwards_--after I left Warwickshire, I mean? |
21041 | But you will join us on Wednesday at the meeting, I trust? 21041 Could you describe the man at all?" |
21041 | Did Frank never write? |
21041 | Did you want to know about anyone who lived here long ago? |
21041 | Did your brother Frank ever tell you of a letter he received from me in Oxford? |
21041 | Do n''t you remember my asking you if you had noticed anything curious, or heard or seen anything, during your visit? 21041 Do n''t you see that girl over there?" |
21041 | Do you know any William? 21041 Finish the text? |
21041 | Has anyone died here lately? |
21041 | How do you do, Jem? |
21041 | How long ago? |
21041 | I replied that I should gladly hear what he had to tell, but would he allow me to ask him one question? 21041 In what city?" |
21041 | Is any writing really coming? |
21041 | Is it that you are not happy? |
21041 | Is she mad? |
21041 | Miss Bates, I see? 21041 Oh yes; was n''t he just exasperating?" |
21041 | Really, dear? 21041 Shall I be able to hear? |
21041 | Shall I be able to write automatically? |
21041 | Still, I could put it with the others, and let it go to Warwick, and then tell the man not to do anything with it-- but what would Edward say? 21041 Then you have not had bad news?" |
21041 | What young man? |
21041 | Which room he slept in? 21041 Who could foretell when he might have another chance?" |
21041 | Why not say''_ I_''and have done with it? |
21041 | Will she give a name? |
21041 | Will that lady kindly sit down? 21041 Yes, of course, we know all that, you and I, but what is the use of making this fuss about it? |
21041 | _ Bien, Madame, qu''est- ce- que je vous ai dit?_demanded the Abbà ©, turning to me in triumph. |
21041 | _ Boston._"Was it in a private house, a hospital, a hotel, or_ where_ did you die? |
21041 | _ What business is it of yours?_was the constant reply to my questions. |
21041 | ''Can I be of use to you? |
21041 | ''Can not you speak?'' |
21041 | ''Is anything the matter?'' |
21041 | ''You are not frightened of me?'' |
21041 | -- Trumpington Street?" |
21041 | After wishing very fervently one night, Sister Margaret appeared dressed in mob cap and gown, saying:"Do n''t you see my dress? |
21041 | Again I ask: How about the"_ Cui Bono_"argument? |
21041 | Again I ask: How about the"_ Cui Bono_"argument? |
21041 | Are you at the same point of view? |
21041 | Are you not thinking of Mr Loseby?" |
21041 | Are you quite sure you mean Henry Halifax? |
21041 | Are you willing?'' |
21041 | As I remained silent she whispered:"Do n''t you know me?" |
21041 | At last, about three months ago, he turned round suddenly, and said:"''When are you going to send those pictures to be cleaned?'' |
21041 | B.--"Who do you mean by''_ them_''?" |
21041 | B.--Is there any help here for my constant problem: Why should one''s individual life be only_ now_ evolving in Eternity? |
21041 | B.--Why is Imperator so slow in throwing off his own spiritual limitations? |
21041 | But nothing more could be got out of him, so I dismissed him impatiently, saying:"What is the good of telling me such nonsense? |
21041 | But then again, how could I_ see_ her, since the room was quite dark? |
21041 | But what of it? |
21041 | Can you_ imagine_ his allowing the picture to be taken down upon this evidence?" |
21041 | Charlie Bates? |
21041 | Could Mr Kitchener or any other person present have had to do with the matter? |
21041 | Could it have creaked itself farther open? |
21041 | Could she find out what was the cause? |
21041 | Did this moment of intense desire for her, project itself into the appearance she saw in her room? |
21041 | Disappointed by this, I asked;"Can you not speak to us?" |
21041 | Do n''t you understand what I am saying? |
21041 | Do you see Truth in this idea, and can you tell me if it extends also to Space? |
21041 | Do you see what I mean? |
21041 | Do you suppose the master would have done such a thing?" |
21041 | H. D.--You want me to tell you just my position about the Imperator group before and since I passed to this side? |
21041 | Have you had any curious experiences since I saw you last?" |
21041 | He says:"Why do people in the earth life quote our words as if we were Delphic Oracles?" |
21041 | He thought for a moment, then said:''Chomley? |
21041 | His next remark was:"_ What does it matter what_ YOU_ think or what you mean to do or not to do? |
21041 | His reply was as follows:-- Time is really a form of perception,_ not a thing in itself_--do you understand? |
21041 | How could the hinges have creaked then, and whose cautious footsteps had I heard? |
21041 | How could we gain the real education of life were it otherwise? |
21041 | I can not talk, but I can listen; or do you think possibly you could get a little writing for me? |
21041 | I have been frequently asked:"Should you have recognised her as your friend had no name been given?" |
21041 | I whispered to my friend:"Shall I ask him?" |
21041 | If they do come they wo n''t stay-- why should they? |
21041 | In addition to this, the Hindoostanees consider( and who shall say without ample cause?) |
21041 | Is it not apparent, therefore, that there has been wisdom and goodness in our very theological mistakes and illusions? |
21041 | Is it strange that the same rule should apply to the universe that applies to the tiny portion of it that we know? |
21041 | Is it then permitted to mortals to have personal intercourse with spirits?'' |
21041 | Is that correct?" |
21041 | Is there any restitution to be made, or justice to be administered? |
21041 | Is there anything you want done on earth that I can do? |
21041 | Life is just the same on the outer; but on the_ inner?_ Well, I can not describe it!" |
21041 | Miss Boyle told me you wrote automatically sometimes?" |
21041 | My last question was:"What was your age when you passed over?" |
21041 | My next question naturally was:"Then shall I be able to_ see_ very soon?" |
21041 | On arrival there Miss Rowan Vincent said to me very kindly:"Can I do anything for_ you_ now, Miss Bates? |
21041 | Shall I become clair- audient?" |
21041 | Shall I try if I can see anything for you?" |
21041 | Shall you be afraid?'' |
21041 | She is still alive, however, and is to be taken to the hospital at one P.M.""But what has happened, Küntze?" |
21041 | She looked incredulous, and then said cheerfully:"Well, if it is as bad as that, do n''t you think you ought to go and see how she is?" |
21041 | Someone_ did_ come to my bedside last night, and said:''I am Gifford-- will you listen to me?'' |
21041 | Something induced me, quite against my will, to say:"Do you ever get messages by writing, Miss Vincent?" |
21041 | Suddenly she looked up, and said:"_ Ã � propos des bottes._""How about that young man, ma''am? |
21041 | Surely we are one large family, whether here or there? |
21041 | Surely you must feel how much you have gained since you faced your own facts? |
21041 | The father guessed the letter from the child''s description, and asked me if the first one were correct? |
21041 | The impression was so vivid that I called out instinctively:"What is it, Mabel? |
21041 | The matter did not specially interest me; but on arrival at Rangoon, the only decent(?) |
21041 | The old lady(?) |
21041 | Then I asked:"In what country did you pass away-- Europe or America, or elsewhere?" |
21041 | Then swiftly came the second idea:"And how in the world does it happen that I do n''t feel a bit frightened?" |
21041 | Then turning round carelessly, she remarked:"I suppose_ you_ have not seen or heard anything, Miss Bates, since you came? |
21041 | Thinking I would verify Miss Whiting''s story if possible, my first question was:"Can Stead''s Julia give me her surname?" |
21041 | This message gave me a hard problem to solve:"What should I do with it?" |
21041 | Was it a seducing spirit or a friendly intelligence who reminded me that my opponent had only quoted half the text--_the half that suited him_? |
21041 | Was it another case of mental affinity which had induced him unconsciously to choose a gold brooch with two swallows in gold and pearls? |
21041 | What are you going to do about him?" |
21041 | What can I do for you?" |
21041 | What could he be doing or_ waiting for_? |
21041 | What do you mean?" |
21041 | What horrors, to justify such awful shrieks, could be taking place at this quiet hour and in this quiet, respectable hotel? |
21041 | What more can any of us say? |
21041 | What_ should_ I do?" |
21041 | When I suggested that the judgment was at least very flattering to the Burmese, this Burmese gentleman laughed, and said:"Flattering? |
21041 | When people say to me:"How can a sensible woman like yourself be so foolish as to think such things?" |
21041 | When the doctor arrived, his first question was:"Have you had any special shock lately? |
21041 | Where did it go to? |
21041 | Where did_ you_ know him?'' |
21041 | Which of us has not groaned under these self- conscious euphemisms? |
21041 | Who can say? |
21041 | Why did he appear with flesh like a living man? |
21041 | Why not ask the UNSEEN themselves for a decision in the matter? |
21041 | Why, indeed? |
21041 | You have noticed my portrait in the gallery?'' |
21041 | You never saw it again? |
21041 | _ Where was the man?_ The door had not closed again, so far as I could hear. |
21041 | so interested in everything-- a_ clergyman_, my dear Miss Bates, and so_ good!_ How could there be anything painful connected with his death?" |
21041 | you remember my telling you about her the other day, and how her manager had run away with all that money? |
27481 | What sort of a foreign woman was this? |
27481 | Why should they learn to read? 27481 (All right?") |
27481 | A few were in chairs; I had long since jumped out of mine, although as Liu complained,"Why does the Ku Niang hire one if she will not use it?" |
27481 | And now-- is it too late? |
27481 | And who can blame them? |
27481 | But where was the famous lamassery that lay at its foot? |
27481 | Did ever pilgrim tread a more beautiful path to the Delectable Mountains? |
27481 | Do trees anywhere group themselves as picturesquely as in China? |
27481 | How did I live? |
27481 | How would the wheels go round in the East without"chits"? |
27481 | Old wall, new railway; which will serve China best? |
27481 | The question one naturally asks is, Why do these men become lamas; do they do it willingly or under compulsion? |
27481 | Then, riding up with thumbs held high in greeting, they would cry to me"San?" |
27481 | To whom will they now fall? |
27481 | What are the chair and the pony for? |
27481 | What lies behind the riddle of their impassive faces? |
27481 | What of the Mongols nowadays? |
27481 | What was I writing? |
27481 | What was the land that bred such a race? |
27481 | What''s the use? |
27481 | Where in a Western frontier town could one find the like? |
27481 | Where would I go when I went away? |
27481 | Who can call China aged and in decay face to face with her success in conquering a passage up these gorges? |
27481 | Who can tell what the Chinese coolie is doing in the same way? |
27481 | Why does not the shoemaker of the West, if he wishes to secure an Eastern market, study the foot of the native, and make him shoes suited to his need? |
27481 | Will it sweep away the elephant? |
27481 | Without his soul he would die, and then what would his mother, a widow, do? |
27481 | Would she not fare worse if her husband found she had missed a sale than if she disobeyed orders? |
27481 | a mountain? |
27481 | a rock? |
21988 | ... do you? |
21988 | And if it''s a solid, where did that much matter come from? 21988 And yours?" |
21988 | But do n''t put it off too long, huh? 21988 But what''s old Nicky going to be?" |
21988 | Can you recall what was said just before they appeared? |
21988 | Damn it--_what_ do you wonder? |
21988 | Dangerous how? |
21988 | Did I? |
21988 | Did n''t you? |
21988 | Do n''t you think they ought to be answered? |
21988 | Do they? |
21988 | Do you extrapolate your mastications, too, and get frightened of the stink you might get? |
21988 | Do you usually think better on an empty stomach? |
21988 | Does n''t it figure? |
21988 | Does that knock solid? |
21988 | Everyone? |
21988 | Food?... 21988 Got a better hypothesis?" |
21988 | Got something for him to do? |
21988 | He really thought he flew us out, did n''t he? |
21988 | Hoskins,said Paresi,"why are you playing chess?" |
21988 | Hoskins,said the Captain,"is n''t there some way we can get out? |
21988 | Hoskins? |
21988 | How about dead people? |
21988 | How do you think they got it? |
21988 | How much more of that scuttle- and- slither treatment do you think he could have taken? |
21988 | How sure are you of that? |
21988 | I mean, which way: the right way, or the wrong way? |
21988 | I''m the M. O., remember? 21988 Is he, now? |
21988 | Is that what I''m doing? |
21988 | Jeannie''s with you, Louise? 21988 Martin who?" |
21988 | Me? |
21988 | Nothing can change you, can it, Nick? |
21988 | Now what? |
21988 | Oh, dear God...."''Smatter, Nick? |
21988 | Paresi,said the Captain,"what happens when he wakes up?" |
21988 | Suppose you had n''t? |
21988 | They were Ives''hallucinations? |
21988 | Told? |
21988 | Well, Captain? |
21988 | Well? |
21988 | Well? |
21988 | What about the ventilators? |
21988 | What are they after? |
21988 | What are you doing? |
21988 | What are you talking about? |
21988 | What are you talking about? |
21988 | What do they want? |
21988 | What do you suppose it''s made of? |
21988 | What does that mean, Hoskins? |
21988 | What in God''s name was that? |
21988 | What in time does a ship like the_ Ambassador_ need with a lifeboat? |
21988 | What is it this time? |
21988 | What''s he doing? |
21988 | What''s that? |
21988 | What''s the matter with you, out there? |
21988 | What''s the matter? |
21988 | What, especially? |
21988 | Where did they come from? |
21988 | Where the hell_ did_ that vermin come from? |
21988 | Where''s the port? 21988 Which of two mutually exclusive facts are you going to reason from? |
21988 | Who are you playing with? |
21988 | Who ever says exactly what they mean anyhow? 21988 Who has, at the best of times?" |
21988 | Who hit me with what? |
21988 | Who the hell is Martin? |
21988 | Who''s next? 21988 Who?" |
21988 | Why I''m going to get loopin'', stoopin''drunk? 21988 Why does it have to be you?" |
21988 | Why him? 21988 Why not?" |
21988 | Why you, then? |
21988 | Why-- how close do you usually come? |
21988 | You are convinced it''s being done from outside? |
21988 | You mean he''s back in school? |
21988 | You mean just sit here and wait until they do something else? |
21988 | You psychic? |
21988 | You say''until'', or''unless''? |
21988 | You think I can? |
21988 | You think that would help? |
21988 | You trust the counter? |
21988 | You waiting for me to sober up? 21988 You want-- me?" |
21988 | You''re sure I can tell you? |
21988 | _ I_ did? |
21988 | After that the rebound, hm?" |
21988 | Am I in your way? |
21988 | Am I-- all right? |
21988 | Anderson asked,"What knocked him out? |
21988 | Anderson asked,"Women do n''t like you, do they, Nick?" |
21988 | Anderson said,"Closest thing to being a mother-- is that it?" |
21988 | Anderson said,"Who''s there?" |
21988 | Anybody else want to be Captain?" |
21988 | Are we getting auxiliary power?" |
21988 | Do I have to tell you what your bugaboo is now?" |
21988 | Get it?" |
21988 | Give me a hand, will you?" |
21988 | Got any better ideas?" |
21988 | Graven images, huh?" |
21988 | Have I done anything to stop you? |
21988 | Have n''t you forgotten someone?" |
21988 | Have you any idea of how we move now?" |
21988 | He breathed deeply, twice, and then whispered,"Louise?" |
21988 | Hold your blaster at the ready, aimed down-- you hear me? |
21988 | Hoskins said,"Hm?" |
21988 | Hoskins-- are those landing suits ready?" |
21988 | Hoskins-- what made you say that?" |
21988 | How do you feel?" |
21988 | How long have you been awake?" |
21988 | How''d you ever bring yourself to sign your contract?" |
21988 | III_ The unfamiliar, you say, is the unseen, the completely new and strange? |
21988 | Is n''t that countermove enough?" |
21988 | Is that clear?" |
21988 | Ives said,"Johnny, take it easy and be quiet, huh? |
21988 | Or are you going to reason that the ship_ can_ fail? |
21988 | Paresi grinned broadly, and the exchange between them was clear:_ Why do you needle the kid?_ and_ Quiet, Engine- room. |
21988 | Paresi said bitterly,"You think it makes any difference if we_ say_ what we think?" |
21988 | She''s all right? |
21988 | So who called up the spider?" |
21988 | Some of these things are very hard to--""You do know, do n''t you?" |
21988 | That it?" |
21988 | That the ship ca n''t fail? |
21988 | That what you mean?" |
21988 | The Captain demanded,"What was it?" |
21988 | The Captain looked away from him and hazarded,"Big frog in a small pond, Nick?" |
21988 | Then assure him, with great authority, that not only is he right but that it''s about to jump any minute, and what have you done?" |
21988 | Then he spoke briskly:"Ca n''t you see they''re not doing anything to him? |
21988 | Then the Captain prompted,"About the different breaking point....""Yes, Captain?" |
21988 | Through the hull?" |
21988 | To Johnny, he called,"Hiya, John?" |
21988 | To the blackness he said,"Look, I got neat habits, do n''t leave me on no deck, hear? |
21988 | V"_... and there I was, Doctor, in the lobby of the hotel at noon, stark naked!_""_ Do you have these dreams often?_""_ I''m afraid so, Doctor. |
21988 | We sow no panic seed, do we?" |
21988 | What about the tubes?" |
21988 | What am I going to do?" |
21988 | What are you going to do about Ives?" |
21988 | What are you staring at?" |
21988 | What are you thinking about?" |
21988 | What do people do with their time in a place like this?" |
21988 | What is it I''m going to be? |
21988 | What''s for chow?" |
21988 | What''s on your mind?" |
21988 | When he had quite finished Anderson said,"I was wondering,_ who''s next?_"Paresi nodded and shut the kit with a sharp click. |
21988 | When the Captain had no answer, Paresi asked him,"Then why wonder about a thing like that?" |
21988 | Where''s the outboard bulkhead? |
21988 | Why Johnny? |
21988 | Why did n''t they force me to misread the tape? |
21988 | Why did you use that on him?" |
21988 | You want me to be myself before you fix me up? |
21988 | You want to know something? |
21988 | You''re-- all right?" |
21988 | You?" |
21988 | Your question was,''who''s next?'' |
21988 | _ Beep... boop..._"What else do you expect?" |
21988 | gone where?" |
21988 | he roared suddenly at the blackness,"what are you waiting for? |
23559 | Are we not all children of one Father? |
23559 | As big as this? |
23559 | As big as this? |
23559 | But suppose one is in delicate health, or especially subject to drafts? |
23559 | How big is your sea? |
23559 | How do we know,was the reply,"that he is not witnessing it all? |
23559 | How much bigger, then? |
23559 | How then can you describe so accurately the disease with which he is afflicted? |
23559 | May it not be good policy,says one,"to be governed sometimes by one''s surroundings?" |
23559 | The sea? 23559 Where are you going?" |
23559 | Who are you? 23559 A Brahmin or a Buddhist asks,Are not the Vedas inspired?" |
23559 | A Christian asks,"But is not our Christian Bible inspired?" |
23559 | And here shall we consider a few facts in connection with sleep, in connection with receiving instruction and illumination while asleep? |
23559 | And how can one find his centre? |
23559 | And how could it be otherwise? |
23559 | And how could it do otherwise? |
23559 | And how will you do it? |
23559 | And what do we mean by the unseen side of life? |
23559 | And what does this mean? |
23559 | And what is a God- man? |
23559 | And what is the result of this particular form of violation? |
23559 | And why should not the power of effecting such cures exist among us today? |
23559 | And why should we go to another for knowledge and wisdom? |
23559 | And why should we not have the power today, the same as they had it then? |
23559 | And would you have in your body all the elasticity, all the strength, all the beauty of your younger years? |
23559 | And, truly,"are they not all ministering spirits sent forth to minister to those who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
23559 | Another who is a Buddhist asks,"Was not Buddha inspired?" |
23559 | Are the laws at all different? |
23559 | Are we not satisfied with whatever comes into our lives? |
23559 | Are you a minister, or a religious teacher of any kind? |
23559 | Are you a painter? |
23559 | Are you a singer? |
23559 | Are you a writer? |
23559 | Are you an orator? |
23559 | Are you out of a situation? |
23559 | But some one says,"May it not be dangerous for us to act always upon our intuitions? |
23559 | But why had not Pharaoh the power of interpreting his dreams? |
23559 | Can anything be clearer than this? |
23559 | Do I fear a draft? |
23559 | Do n''t you? |
23559 | Do you know the circumstances under which Mr. Sankey sang for the first time"The Ninety and Nine?" |
23559 | Do you want to be a power in the world? |
23559 | Does this mean that we must literally betake ourselves to a private closet with a key in the door? |
23559 | Does this or that occurrence or condition cause you annoyance? |
23559 | For what, let us ask, is a miracle? |
23559 | He looked at me in surprise and said,"Why, you do not know my father?" |
23559 | His question almost invariably was,"Dost thou believe?" |
23559 | How can anything die before it is really born? |
23559 | I am sometimes asked,"To what religion do you belong?" |
23559 | I hear the question, What can be said in a concrete way in regard to the method of coming into this realization? |
23559 | If this is true of a beast, what can we say of its power upon human beings, especially upon a child? |
23559 | If this is true, does it not then follow that in the degree that man opens himself to this divine inflow does he approach to God? |
23559 | In this do we not see a complete parallel so far as human life is concerned? |
23559 | In this light is it not then evident that both conceptions are true? |
23559 | Is it something supernatural? |
23559 | It was Goethe who said:"Are you in earnest? |
23559 | No? |
23559 | One who does n''t grasp this great truth, a Christian, for example, asks"But was not Christ inspired?" |
23559 | Patriotism is a beautiful thing; it is well for me to love my country, but why should I love my own country more than I love all others? |
23559 | Religion dying out? |
23559 | Religion dying out? |
23559 | Said the young man, Jesus, Know ye not that I must be about my Father''s business? |
23559 | Say not Lo here nor lo there, know ye not that the kingdom of heaven is within you? |
23559 | Suppose we should have an intuition to do harm to some one?" |
23559 | The Hindu has said,"The narrow minded ask,''Is this man a stranger, or is he of our tribe?'' |
23559 | We sometimes hear the question asked,"Can they be overcome?" |
23559 | What is good policy? |
23559 | What is that? |
23559 | What religion? |
23559 | Where do you live?" |
23559 | Where is that?" |
23559 | Which is right? |
23559 | Who has ever appointed any man, whoever he may be, as the keeper, the custodian, the dispenser of God''s illimitable truth? |
23559 | Who is my mother and who are my brethren? |
23559 | Why are you powerless to move? |
23559 | Why did he not only dream, but had also the power to interpret both his own dreams and the dreams of others? |
23559 | Why do you tremble? |
23559 | Why is it? |
23559 | Why not go directly to the mountain top itself, instead of wandering through the by- ways, in the valleys, and on the mountain sides? |
23559 | Why should we not go direct to the Infinite Source itself? |
23559 | Why should we seek these things second hand? |
23559 | Why should we thus stultify our own innate powers? |
23559 | Why was Joseph the type of the"truly gifted seer?" |
23559 | Why waste time with this practice or that practice? |
23559 | Why, then, waste time in running hither and thither to acquire power? |
23559 | Why, then? |
23559 | Why? |
23559 | Will you? |
23559 | Would you remain always young, and would you carry all the joyousness and buoyancy of youth into your maturer years? |
23559 | and more, that he is not having a hand in it all,--a hand even greater, perhaps, than when we_ saw_ him here?" |
23559 | and more, that they are one and the same? |
27452 | How long, O Lord, how long? |
27452 | How shall they preach, except they be sent? |
27452 | Of whom speaketh the prophet this? 27452 But how can one who is not sure that Jesus ever uttered the words of the Great Commission urge the churches to fulfil that command of Christ? 27452 Can not a document have more than one author? 27452 Can we more surely dry up the sources of missionary contributions, than by yielding to the pernicious influence of this way of treating Scripture? 27452 Could one of these modern interpreters have taken the place of Philip, when he met the Ethiopian eunuch? 27452 Do men believe in Christ''s deity who ignore his promise to be with them to the end of the world, and who refuse to address him in prayer? 27452 He answers them by asking,How then doth David, in the Spirit, call him Lord?" |
27452 | He must begin his investigations with one of two assumptions: Is the Bible only man''s word? |
27452 | His searching examination propounds to the unbelieving Jews the question,"What think ye of the Christ? |
27452 | How can one who has had no experience of Christ as a present and divine Saviour, have power to stand against the rationalism and apathy of the church? |
27452 | How can one who has never felt his own need of an atonement adjure his brethren, by Christ''s death for their sins, not to let the heathen perish? |
27452 | How should we reach that threatening height? |
27452 | If his knowledge of things so essential be denied, what trust can we place in any other of his utterances? |
27452 | In literature, is there any more acknowledged fact than that Erckmann- Chatrian''s battle- stories were the work of two writers, and not of one? |
27452 | In painting, did not Landseer get Millais to paint the human figure into the picture of his dogs? |
27452 | Is it a mere product of human intelligence? |
27452 | On being asked who the father was, the mother replied:"How should I know? |
27452 | Shall we begin with the particular, leaving out for the time all thought of the universal? |
27452 | THE THEOLOGY OF MISSIONS 199- 212 Is man''s religious nature only a capacity for religion? |
27452 | The heat reminded us of the conundrum:"Why is India, although so hot, the coldest country on the globe?" |
27452 | They are only a good set of human beings made in the divine image, for is it not written that even"He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh"? |
27452 | Was his interpretation of Scripture correct? |
27452 | What are the facts in other realms of art? |
27452 | What is the effect of this method of interpretation upon missions? |
27452 | What is the effect of this method of interpretation upon the churches of our denomination? |
27452 | What is the effect of this method upon our theological seminaries? |
27452 | What is the truth in this matter? |
27452 | What right has he to surrender himself, body and soul, to a man like himself? |
27452 | What sort of systematic theology is left us, when the perverted historical method is made the only clue to the labyrinth of Scripture? |
27452 | Whence has come this so- called"historical method"of interpreting Scripture? |
27452 | Who can measure the corrupting influence of this temple upon the lives of the people over a wide area in Assam? |
27452 | Who shall count the billows past? |
27452 | Ye divinities on earth, sinners? |
27452 | of himself, or of some other?" |
27452 | or, Is it also Christ''s word? |
27452 | whose son is he?" |
28979 | Sleep, my child, sleep, my child, Where is thy nurse gone? 28979 What shall we do then?" |
28979 | After thus secluding himself for some time, he called the woman and asked,"Was your father an adept in the art of second sight?" |
28979 | What pattern do you wish?'' |
28979 | What shall she buy thee? |
16534 | ''Alma, my child,''I said,''you believe that the Lord made your hip?'' 16534 ''Do you think that the Lord can, mother?'' |
16534 | ''Well, the Lord can make something there in place of your hip, do n''t you believe he can, Alma?'' 16534 And did he not cast him out of you?" |
16534 | Did not he go to you and tell you that an angel had appeared unto him and told him to get the horse from you? |
16534 | Did not the prisoner, Joseph Smith, have a horse of you? |
16534 | Did the prisoner, Joseph Smith, Jr., cast the devil out of you? |
16534 | Have you had your pay? |
16534 | He bought him of me as another man would do? |
16534 | My boy, where are you from? |
16534 | Well, how had he the horse of you? |
16534 | What for? |
16534 | What name? |
16534 | Where are you going? |
16534 | Who leads the camp? |
16534 | Why, have you not had the devil cast out of you? |
16534 | You''ve prayed me here; now what do you want of me? |
16534 | 10. Who composed the third party of missionaries? |
16534 | 10. Who dedicated it? |
16534 | 10. Who first helped Joseph to translate? |
16534 | 10. Who first planned the move to the mountains? |
16534 | 10. Who returned to Winter Quarters? |
16534 | 10. Who was the first governor? |
16534 | 10. Who were Peter, James, and John? |
16534 | 10. Who were William and Augustus Anderson? |
16534 | 11. Who was Oliver Cowdery? |
16534 | 12. Who was Dr. Bennett, and what did he do? |
16534 | 13. Who were the first to fill this position? |
16534 | 13. Who were with Joseph in jail? |
16534 | 13. Who wrote it? |
16534 | 14. Who are the present First Presidency? |
16534 | 14. Who had charge of the plates? |
16534 | 16. Who translated them into the English language? |
16534 | 17. Who wrote an interesting account of this exodus? |
16534 | 2. Who chose the names? |
16534 | 2. Who were the"Jack Mormons?" |
16534 | 2. Who were they? |
16534 | 3. Who composed it? |
16534 | 4. Who composed the Liberal party? |
16534 | 4. Who proved false to Joseph? |
16534 | 4. Who was Governor Cumming? |
16534 | 4. Who was John Carlin? |
16534 | 5. Who was John the Baptist? |
16534 | 5. Who were the Pilgrims? |
16534 | 6. Who opened the Japanese mission? |
16534 | 6. Who was Chief Walker? |
16534 | 6. Who was Major Parker? |
16534 | 6. Who was Newel K. Whitney? |
16534 | 7. Who testified at the second trial? |
16534 | 7. Who was the first stake president in Utah? |
16534 | 7. Who were the Lamanites? |
16534 | 7. Who were the second missionaries to England? |
16534 | 8. Who baptized you? |
16534 | 8. Who were the United Brethren? |
16534 | 9. Who appeared to Joseph and Oliver in the temple? |
16534 | 9. Who helped him to escape? |
16534 | 9. Who organized the first Sunday School? |
16534 | About how far is it from Fayette to Independence, Mo.? |
16534 | About how many Saints were left in Nauvoo? |
16534 | About how many people were traveling across Iowa that summer? |
16534 | After his discharge what did the mob intend to do to Joseph? |
16534 | After leaving Nauvoo where was the first stopping place? |
16534 | Can you not see what a cruel thought that is? |
16534 | Did the Father and the Son come to Joseph solely because of this prayer? |
16534 | Did you not notice what a calm, sweet feeling came over you while there? |
16534 | For what was Joseph arrested? |
16534 | From Jackson county where did the Saints go? |
16534 | From what body were the first Twelve Apostles called? |
16534 | From what section did the Saints come? |
16534 | From what sections did most of the early settlers of Missouri come? |
16534 | How came it to be issued? |
16534 | How did Joseph and Oliver get the authority to baptize? |
16534 | How did Joseph fulfill his own prophecy in Jackson county? |
16534 | How did President Grant treat the"Mormons?" |
16534 | How did President Young locate the temple spot? |
16534 | How did he cross the plains? |
16534 | How did he get the authority to baptize? |
16534 | How did people travel in those days? |
16534 | How did the Saints come from Europe in early days? |
16534 | How did the Saints know that Joseph was not a fallen prophet? |
16534 | How did the mob make the people believe that the"Mormons"were burning houses, etc.? |
16534 | How did the people receive the elders? |
16534 | How did the three get their testimony? |
16534 | How did they escape? |
16534 | How did they try to get their homes again? |
16534 | How did you become a member of the Church? |
16534 | How far was it? |
16534 | How is it performed? |
16534 | How is salvation obtained? |
16534 | How long after was it fulfilled? |
16534 | How long did it take them? |
16534 | How long did the defenders hold out? |
16534 | How long has he been President of the Church? |
16534 | How long was the world without the gospel? |
16534 | How long were they in Liberty jail? |
16534 | How long were they on the journey? |
16534 | How many Seventies''quorums are there in the Church? |
16534 | How many members are there in the Church today? |
16534 | How many of you have seen him and heard him speak? |
16534 | How many persons were in the first or pioneer company? |
16534 | How many temples have been built by the Church? |
16534 | How many visits did he make to Cumorah? |
16534 | How many were killed? |
16534 | How old was Joseph at this time? |
16534 | How old was Joseph when he was killed? |
16534 | How was Bishop Partridge abused? |
16534 | How was Zion''s camp organized? |
16534 | How was it enforced? |
16534 | How was it fulfilled? |
16534 | How was the Church treated in that body? |
16534 | How was the camp organized? |
16534 | How was the city built up? |
16534 | How was the city laid out? |
16534 | How was the evil one cast out in former days? |
16534 | How were the Saints to obtain the land of Zion? |
16534 | How were the brethren saved from their enemies on Fishing river? |
16534 | How were the crops saved? |
16534 | How were they fed? |
16534 | How were they treated in Richmond jail? |
16534 | How, then, did the boy get his education? |
16534 | In the Word of Wisdom, what does the Lord say is not good for the body? |
16534 | In what land did these people live? |
16534 | Is salvation limited to this life? |
16534 | May we not draw a great lesson from all this? |
16534 | Name the first Twelve Apostles? |
16534 | On what occasion did Joseph deliver his last speech? |
16534 | Pratt escape from the officer? |
16534 | Tell what you can about Orson Pratt? |
16534 | The apostles and prophets of old had it, but where were they to look for this power now? |
16534 | Through what states did it march? |
16534 | To Brother Jones he whispered,"Are you afraid to die?" |
16534 | To what places did Joseph move? |
16534 | To what two places were the Saints now gathering? |
16534 | To where were the Saints driven? |
16534 | What advice did Governor Dunklin give? |
16534 | What advice did Joseph give the Saints who lived there? |
16534 | What answer did President Martin Van Buren make? |
16534 | What apostles were chosen February 12, 1849? |
16534 | What are some of the uses of temples? |
16534 | What became of Sidney Rigdon? |
16534 | What came of Joseph''s trip to Daviess county? |
16534 | What causes many to fall from the Church? |
16534 | What could they do? |
16534 | What did Brigham Young now do? |
16534 | What did Colonel Cooke say about it? |
16534 | What did Colonel Hinkle do? |
16534 | What did Colonel Kane do at Washington? |
16534 | What did Colonel Kane get the governor to do? |
16534 | What did General Clark say in his speech? |
16534 | What did Governor Dunklin do? |
16534 | What did Governor Ford promise? |
16534 | What did Jesus say about persecution? |
16534 | What did Joseph do there? |
16534 | What did Joseph find there? |
16534 | What did President Young say? |
16534 | What did Sidney Rigdon want? |
16534 | What did he do? |
16534 | What did he have orders to do? |
16534 | What did he say about the place? |
16534 | What did he want of the"Mormons?" |
16534 | What did many of the Saints think of the call? |
16534 | What did people say of Joseph''s first vision? |
16534 | What did the Battalion men do in California? |
16534 | What did the Lord reveal to Joseph Smith on this subject? |
16534 | What did the Prophet Joseph Smith say about the future of the Church? |
16534 | What did the Saints do for amusement? |
16534 | What did the Saints offer to do? |
16534 | What did the Utah militia do? |
16534 | What did the brethren propose to the citizens of Jackson? |
16534 | What did the enemies of the Church expect to do by killing Joseph Smith? |
16534 | What did the governor find in Salt Lake City? |
16534 | What did the mob do? |
16534 | What did the mobbers want the Saints to promise? |
16534 | What did the people wish to name the state? |
16534 | What did the"Mormons"resolve to do? |
16534 | What did they do? |
16534 | What did they propose doing if the army came to harm them? |
16534 | What did trappers and hunters say of Salt Lake valley? |
16534 | What difference of opinion existed between the people of the north and the people of the south? |
16534 | What does He say is good? |
16534 | What does that testimony say? |
16534 | What experiences did the Latter- day Saint boys and girls of Jackson county pass through? |
16534 | What further laws did the enemies of the"Mormons"wish passed against them? |
16534 | What great blessings are to be had in a temple? |
16534 | What happened October 30, 1838? |
16534 | What happened after the brethren had given up their arms? |
16534 | What happened at Chatburn? |
16534 | What happened at Nauvoo in the summer of 1846, when the Battalion was on the march? |
16534 | What happened in November, 1833? |
16534 | What happened in the spring of 1834? |
16534 | What happened in the spring of 1848? |
16534 | What have some preachers of religion taught regarding salvation? |
16534 | What help did the Whitmers give Joseph? |
16534 | What high position did Sidney Rigdon hold? |
16534 | What hindered the traveling? |
16534 | What hindered the troops from entering Salt Lake valley that year? |
16534 | What historical places has the Church purchased and improved? |
16534 | What instruction did the Lord give them? |
16534 | What is Priesthood? |
16534 | What is an angel? |
16534 | What is baptism for? |
16534 | What is meant by a law being constitutional? |
16534 | What is meant by the gathering? |
16534 | What is said in the Book of Mormon about this land? |
16534 | What is salvation? |
16534 | What is the Book of Mormon? |
16534 | What is the Constitution of the United States? |
16534 | What is the Doctrine and Covenants? |
16534 | What is the First Presidency? |
16534 | What is the Millennial Star? |
16534 | What is the duty of the Seventies? |
16534 | What is the duty of the Twelve? |
16534 | What is the duty of the high council? |
16534 | What is the law of tithing? |
16534 | What is the law of tithing? |
16534 | What is the state militia? |
16534 | What is the"manifesto?" |
16534 | What kind of boy was Nephi? |
16534 | What kind of city did Nauvoo become? |
16534 | What kind of city will it be? |
16534 | What kind of court did General Lucas have to try Joseph and his brethren? |
16534 | What kind of journey was it? |
16534 | What kinds of food were eaten? |
16534 | What kinds of"soldiers"surrounded Far West? |
16534 | What leading men were converted there? |
16534 | What led Joseph and Oliver to ask the Lord about baptism? |
16534 | What led Joseph to ask God for wisdom? |
16534 | What led President Buchanan to send an army to Utah? |
16534 | What led to the war between the North and the South? |
16534 | What may we learn from this vision? |
16534 | What message did President Snow deliver regarding the law of tithing? |
16534 | What might be the outcome of this war? |
16534 | What might this last move of the Saints be likened to? |
16534 | What offer did the Jackson people make to the Saints? |
16534 | What other testimony is found in the Book of Mormon? |
16534 | What place is now nearly the center of the United States? |
16534 | What prediction did Joseph make while on the way? |
16534 | What prevented a band of pioneers from going to the mountains that summer? |
16534 | What promise is made to those who keep the Word of Wisdom? |
16534 | What report did he make to the government about Utah affairs? |
16534 | What reports were brought to Governor Boggs? |
16534 | What revelation was given on Fishing river? |
16534 | What river flows by Jackson county? |
16534 | What testimony was given the Saints at the meeting on August 8th? |
16534 | What took place December 5, 1847? |
16534 | What took place during the summer of 1848? |
16534 | What trouble did the Provo settlers have? |
16534 | What was Heber C. Kimball''s prophecy? |
16534 | What was Joseph''s errand in Colesville? |
16534 | What was Orson Hyde''s mission to Palestine? |
16534 | What was Parley P. Pratt and Lyman Wight''s mission to Kirtland? |
16534 | What was President Young''s Indian policy? |
16534 | What was accomplished in eight months? |
16534 | What was agreed upon in the treaty of peace? |
16534 | What was done March 4, 1849? |
16534 | What was done at that meeting? |
16534 | What was his mission there? |
16534 | What was his mission to Utah? |
16534 | What was its name before it was called Nauvoo? |
16534 | What was its object? |
16534 | What was its object? |
16534 | What was the Battalion wanted for? |
16534 | What was the Colesville Branch? |
16534 | What was the Edmunds Bill? |
16534 | What was the Edmunds- Tucker Law? |
16534 | What was the Nauvoo Expositor? |
16534 | What was the Nauvoo Legion? |
16534 | What was the Parliament of Religions? |
16534 | What was the Revolutionary war about? |
16534 | What was the Times and Seasons? |
16534 | What was the Urim and Thummim? |
16534 | What was the case of the new trouble between the Saints and the Missourians? |
16534 | What was the cause of the famine in 1855- 6? |
16534 | What was the exterminating order? |
16534 | What was the fate of James Campbell? |
16534 | What was the first building in the valley? |
16534 | What was the fort? |
16534 | What was the object in annoying the troops? |
16534 | What was the object in making these settlements? |
16534 | What was the object of sending this army? |
16534 | What was the object of the company? |
16534 | What was the special object of this mission? |
16534 | What was the"School of the Prophets?" |
16534 | What was their condition? |
16534 | What was their sentence? |
16534 | What were Governor Cumming''s feelings? |
16534 | What were Joseph''s teachings about kindness to animals? |
16534 | What were his ideas of slavery? |
16534 | What were the duties of Sidney Gilbert and Edward Partridge? |
16534 | What were the feelings of the Saints? |
16534 | What were the handcart companies? |
16534 | What will then become of all these people? |
16534 | When and by whom was Ogden settled? |
16534 | When and where did President Taylor die? |
16534 | When and where did President Woodruff die? |
16534 | When and where did the Saints then go? |
16534 | When and where was Joseph Smith born? |
16534 | When and where was plural marriage revealed to the Church? |
16534 | When and where was the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints organized? |
16534 | When did Joseph get the plates? |
16534 | When did Joseph go to Washington? |
16534 | When did Joseph visit Jackson county the second time? |
16534 | When did President Young arrive? |
16534 | When did it take place? |
16534 | When did most of the Saints move to Kirtland? |
16534 | When did the Saints first hear of it? |
16534 | When did the camp start west? |
16534 | When did the main body reach Salt Lake valley? |
16534 | When did the move westward begin? |
16534 | When did they leave Utah, and where did they go? |
16534 | When the First Presidency is taken away, what is the next presiding authority in the Church? |
16534 | When was Joseph nominated for President of the United States? |
16534 | When was Utah Territory organized? |
16534 | When was Utah admitted as a state? |
16534 | When was it dedicated? |
16534 | When was the Book of Mormon published? |
16534 | When was the First Presidency organized again? |
16534 | When was the first conference of the Church held? |
16534 | When was the first law passed against this practice? |
16534 | When was the prophecy on war given? |
16534 | When were the first missionaries sent to England? |
16534 | When, where, and how was the foundation of Zion laid? |
16534 | Where and when was Zion''s camp disbanded? |
16534 | Where and when was it? |
16534 | Where are new temples being built? |
16534 | Where did Jesus go while his body lay in the sepulchre? |
16534 | Where did Joseph go to work? |
16534 | Where did the soldiers camp? |
16534 | Where is Clay county? |
16534 | Where is Colesville? |
16534 | Where is Hiram? |
16534 | Where is Jackson county? |
16534 | Where is Kirtland? |
16534 | Where is the hill Cumorah? |
16534 | Where is the land of Zion? |
16534 | Where is the temple lot? |
16534 | Where is the testimony of the three witnesses found? |
16534 | Where next were they sent? |
16534 | Where was Adam- ondi- Ahman? |
16534 | Where was Kanesville? |
16534 | Where was Winter Quarters? |
16534 | Where was the army camped? |
16534 | Where was the first gathering place? |
16534 | Where was the first sermon preached? |
16534 | Where was the second settlement in Utah made? |
16534 | Where were Garden Grove and Mount Pisgah? |
16534 | Where were Joseph and Hyrum buried? |
16534 | Where were most of the Twelve at the time of the martyrdom? |
16534 | Where were the large meetings in Nauvoo held? |
16534 | Where were they hidden? |
16534 | Where were they next taken? |
16534 | Where were they taken next? |
16534 | Where will the New Jerusalem be built? |
16534 | Who constituted the fifth Presidency of the Church? |
16534 | Who constituted the fourth First Presidency of the Church? |
16534 | Who was Captain James Allen? |
16534 | Who was Judge Drummond? |
16534 | Who was Lehi? |
16534 | Who was Parley P. Pratt? |
16534 | Who was President Joseph F. Smith''s father? |
16534 | Who were taken as prisoners to Independence? |
16534 | Whom did he marry? |
16534 | Whom did they meet? |
16534 | Why can not all the sects in the world be right? |
16534 | Why could the Utah officials greatly annoy the Saints? |
16534 | Why could they not trust the army? |
16534 | Why did Joseph object to being tried in Carthage? |
16534 | Why did Lehi want the records of his forefathers? |
16534 | Why did he leave the Church? |
16534 | Why did many outlaws come to Missouri? |
16534 | Why did not Joseph carry away the plates the first time? |
16534 | Why did not Joseph go west to the mountains? |
16534 | Why did not the Saints accept this offer? |
16534 | Why did people persecute a young boy like Joseph? |
16534 | Why did the Missourians hate the"Mormons?" |
16534 | Why did the Saints move south? |
16534 | Why did the Saints work so hard to finish the temple, knowing they would have to leave it? |
16534 | Why did the angel repeat so often his instructions to Joseph? |
16534 | Why did the evil one try to destroy Joseph? |
16534 | Why did the law not protect the Saints? |
16534 | Why did the people of Clay county wish the Saints to leave them? |
16534 | Why did the pioneers know very little about irrigation? |
16534 | Why did the scourge come upon the camp? |
16534 | Why did they leave Jerusalem? |
16534 | Why have the Saints had to leave Mexico? |
16534 | Why is America the"Land of liberty?" |
16534 | Why was food so scarce in 1848? |
16534 | Why was it a hardship on the Saints at that time to furnish five hundred soldiers? |
16534 | Why was it destroyed? |
16534 | Why was it not carried out? |
16534 | Why was it so called? |
16534 | Why was it useless to expect justice from Missouri? |
16534 | Why was the Church in debt? |
16534 | Why was the Jackson county militia raised? |
16534 | Why was the attempt to escape a failure? |
16534 | Why was there no danger to the Church at the death of President Young? |
16534 | Why were the Nephites destroyed? |
16534 | Why were the Saints troubled about a leader? |
16534 | Why were the missionaries forbidden to preach among the Indians? |
16534 | You can hardly blame them for that, can you, knowing some of their past history? |
25909 | An''had n''t ye better leave the gun, sir? 25909 Do you think hers broke?" |
25909 | Have you never heard the story? |
25909 | JimFisk had traits like these, but who now applauds them? |
25909 | Let me ask, What is a bum? 25909 The real question,"he declares,"to ask about any form of religious belief, is: Does it kindle the fire of love? |
25909 | What did you do that for? |
25909 | Where would our Chicago poverty be, if$ 40,000 families were each spending in legitimate trade$ 83 a month? 25909 And what have Calvin''s five points, or the composite origin of the Pentateuch, or the virgin birth of Christ to do with such worship? 25909 And when thus a Bible reader has got his text before him, how can he understand it, except by using his own reason and judgment? 25909 And who knows if, after all, it be a mistake? 25909 But if he can not honestly credit them, why should we shut the doors of the church against him and threaten him with excommunication? 25909 But let us stop for a moment and ask whence came these creeds and catechisms themselves? 25909 But oh, my beloved, if they falter or go wrong, those little hands, who would pity their polluted owner? 25909 But what liberty can he invoke-- he who has disavowed and injured all liberties? 25909 C. Wood, Should the Nation Own the Railways?, 152, 273. 25909 Can it be doubted any longer that history reveals an inherent providential justice? 25909 Can we wonder that the European despairs? 25909 Does anyone claim that Constantine was inspired? 25909 Does it make the life stronger, sweeter, purer, nobler? 25909 Does it run through the whole society like a cleansing flame, burning up that which is mean and base, selfish and impure? 25909 Elizabeth Cady, Where Must Lasting Progress Begin?, 293. 25909 Fiction? 25909 God? 25909 Great success with him, if he achieves it, will be-- what? 25909 Has free trade been an unquestionable benefit not merely to the industrial but to all classes in England? 25909 Healed? 25909 Henry Cabot, Protection or Free Trade, Which?, 652. 25909 His heart was breaking; could words help_ that_? 25909 History? 25909 How brilliant has been its success in practise? 25909 How is it possible, then, to get Bible- truth independently of the reason or in entire exemption from error? 25909 How near has free trade come to performing all that its original promoters claimed in its behalf? 25909 I admit it._ But why do they pick on me? 25909 If doubt humbles the Church and acts as a thorn in its flesh, may not such chastening be providential, quite as much as the things which puff it up? 25909 In astronomy, in politics, in law, we demand what business the dead hand of the past has on our lip, our brain, our purse? 25909 Is it not sufficient to claim urgency for the prohibition issue, to say that no work should take precedence of prohibition in party performance? 25909 Is there a member of the American Sabbath Union who keeps the law for which they are clamoring? 25909 Is there any limit to the great good that could come to the city with this amount expended in proper channels? |
25909 | It will necessarily demand what better evidence the law of Moses or the creed of Nicea has than the law of Mana or the text of the Zendavesta? |
25909 | Nay, more, was he not, as an active participant in this great game of chance, morally responsible to a certain degree? |
25909 | No one has heart to probe the next decade, to ask,"Where shall we be in ten years,--in fifty years?" |
25909 | Now, I ask what Bible authority has Doctor Patton, or any of the Sabbath day advocates for ignoring or abridging any of these seventy- seven commands? |
25909 | PROTECTION OR FREE TRADE-- WHICH? |
25909 | Poetry? |
25909 | Politics? |
25909 | Protection or Free Trade, Which?, 652. |
25909 | Shall we commend him? |
25909 | Should the Nation Own the Railways?, 152, 273. |
25909 | Tranquil? |
25909 | Was it speaking to him, that wild, midnight wind? |
25909 | Were these the requirements that Jesus Christ laid on his disciples? |
25909 | What can he tell us? |
25909 | What concerted action is the church with her tens of thousands of communicants putting forth? |
25909 | What does he know? |
25909 | What estimate, then, shall we put on this tendency? |
25909 | What is the condition of the question of free trade to- day in its practical aspect? |
25909 | What of that? |
25909 | What programme can Bismarck develop to his colleagues which will have the moral character of necessary work? |
25909 | What remains for him to do? |
25909 | What shall the Church do about them? |
25909 | What was it? |
25909 | When and whose will be the extirpating hand? |
25909 | Where Must Lasting Progress Begin?, 293. |
25909 | Who can understand, and who dares judge God''s plans? |
25909 | Whom can he blame but himself? |
25909 | Why should the dead hand of an Augustine or Calvin be exempt from giving its authority? |
25909 | _ Why this culpable dereliction of duty_ until_ after_ the anti- vice society and the postal department had been criticised by Mr. Caldwell? |
25909 | and"Look here, what are you giving us?") |
25909 | or not rather charge him with culpable negligence? |
10440 | ''N pull up the hedge? |
10440 | A gay burlesquer? |
10440 | A paltry hundred thousand? 10440 A professor of what?" |
10440 | Absolutely and finally? |
10440 | Address? |
10440 | Ah Fong, do you believe in any god? |
10440 | Ah Fong, do you think God will punish you if you tell a lie? |
10440 | Ah Fong, will you respect the oath to testify truthfully, about to be administered to you? |
10440 | Ai n''t that just a sweetie? 10440 Ai n''t they beauties?" |
10440 | And George Washington-- maybe? |
10440 | And did n''t you have warning that the dog was there? |
10440 | And may I ask why you should come to me? |
10440 | And now, Miss Wiggin, how about a cup of tea? |
10440 | And of course in that case you would turn over whatever collateral is on deposit to secure the note? |
10440 | And so they want to prosecute the dog? 10440 And sting all the boobs?" |
10440 | And suppose I do n''t choose to give it to you? |
10440 | And that in the end he''ll get his hair cut? |
10440 | And then you''ll steal the rest? |
10440 | And wave my client into the chair? |
10440 | And what may that be? |
10440 | And what was the man''s name? |
10440 | And who are they? 10440 And you feel just at present as if life were''flat, stale and unprofitable?''" |
10440 | Anyhow, ai n''t it a crime to go to sleep in another man''s bed? |
10440 | Are n''t you afraid to leave them that way? |
10440 | Are you dissatisfied with your twenty per cent? |
10440 | Are you not aware that you are a party to an escape-- a crime? |
10440 | Are you quite ready to proceed with the case? |
10440 | Are you the blackmailer who''s been writing me those letters? |
10440 | Ask the witness if the oath that he has now taken will bind his conscience? |
10440 | But I say, why should n''t he have? |
10440 | But after all what good would all that money have done you? |
10440 | But how about progress? |
10440 | But how about the other stockholders in Horse''s Neck that Beck referred to? 10440 But may I ask what this is all about?" |
10440 | But what can we do? 10440 But what good would that do?" |
10440 | But what was your client doing in the house? |
10440 | But who is Andrew? |
10440 | But who''s the warrant for? |
10440 | But why on earth would n''t he? |
10440 | By the way,she remarked casually as he passed her,"what shall I charge that check to? |
10440 | Ca n''t you indict him for burglary? |
10440 | Ca n''t you read? |
10440 | Ca n''t you see''em? |
10440 | Can you read it, Herman? |
10440 | Convict him? |
10440 | Could-- could you let me have the loan of seventy- five cents? |
10440 | Did n''t I show you my papers? 10440 Did n''t Mr. Appleboy ask you to keep off?" |
10440 | Did n''t you know it was a vicious beast? |
10440 | Did n''t you obstinately refuse to do so? |
10440 | Did n''t you tear a hole in the hedge and stamp down the grass when by taking a few extra steps you could have reached the beach without difficulty? |
10440 | Did n''t your wife tell you about it? |
10440 | Did they ever try birds? |
10440 | Did we really ever get out any circular like that? |
10440 | Did you ever know it was a crime to mismanage a steam boiler? 10440 Did you have a silver tea set of the value of-- er-- at least five hundred dollars in the house?" |
10440 | Did you know that Andrew was a vicious dog? |
10440 | Did you sign this circular in 1914? |
10440 | Did your firm sell any of its holdings in Horse''s Neck after the issuance of that circular? |
10440 | Do I get the five thousand? |
10440 | Do n''t you remember those great piles of bonds and stocks that Doctor Barrows left here with you to keep for him? |
10440 | Do sit down, Mrs. Effingham wo n''t you? 10440 Do you know anybody who''s got one? |
10440 | Do you know his reputation for peace and quiet? |
10440 | Do you know how he got his stock? |
10440 | Do you know how many times you''ve had me down here in your office in the last three weeks? 10440 Do you know those people, Samuel?" |
10440 | Do you know where he got it? |
10440 | Do you know, sir, there are fortunes lying all about us? 10440 Do you mean to imply that I''m not able to take care of myself?" |
10440 | Do you mean to tell this jury that you did n''t know that that dog was one of the worst biters in Livornia? |
10440 | Do you really wish to have me dispose of your securities for you? |
10440 | Do you see any reason why Mr. Tutt should n''t interrogate the witness? |
10440 | Do you think they can raise that amount of money? |
10440 | Doc,answered Mr. Tutt,"did you really want that ten thousand?" |
10440 | Does Your Honor hold that an obliging acquiescence in local theology constitutes such a religious belief as to make this man''s oath sacred? |
10440 | Does not that satisfy you? |
10440 | Eh? 10440 Elderberry telephone you?" |
10440 | Ever been in Mr. Badger''s office? |
10440 | Father''s daguerreotype and the bracelet of mother''s hair? |
10440 | Five? |
10440 | Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon a verdict? |
10440 | Gentlemen of the jury,chanted the clerk:"How say you? |
10440 | Good looking? |
10440 | Got the bird? |
10440 | Had you ever seen that dog before? |
10440 | Have a cigar? 10440 Have a stogy?" |
10440 | Have a weed? |
10440 | Have n''t they now? |
10440 | Have you ever been convicted before? |
10440 | Have you got rid of your bonds? |
10440 | Have you now? |
10440 | Have you set Bonnie Doon looking up witnesses? |
10440 | Have you the trousers which you wore upon that occasion? |
10440 | He had no particular business in it, had he? |
10440 | He says what kind of a promise? |
10440 | He worked for your firm, did n''t he? |
10440 | His name? |
10440 | How about that man who stole a razor? |
10440 | How are you going to get rid of the fifty thousand other stockholders? |
10440 | How are you? 10440 How did she come to lend it to you?" |
10440 | How did you come to invest in his oil stock? |
10440 | How do we come into it, anyhow? |
10440 | How do you earn your living? |
10440 | How do you know that? |
10440 | How do you make that out? |
10440 | How does it look, Mabel? |
10440 | How long do you want to sum up? |
10440 | How long have you been attorney for Scherer, Hunn, Greenbaum& Beck? |
10440 | How long have you known him? |
10440 | How many shares are there? |
10440 | How many times have you got it? |
10440 | How much is the ticket? |
10440 | How much money have you got? |
10440 | How old are you, Tutt? |
10440 | How on earth did old Doc manage to get hold of them? |
10440 | How say you? 10440 I am, am I?" |
10440 | I mean-- is it legal? |
10440 | I mean-- is it legal? |
10440 | I still keep the house; but do you know how old I am, Mr. Tutt? 10440 I suppose you''ve got something in the way of evidence, have n''t you? |
10440 | I wonder if it ever does any good? 10440 I''ll show you--""You want to be fair, do n''t you?" |
10440 | I? |
10440 | If it''s exhausted why do they want to reorganize it? |
10440 | If you feel that way about it why do n''t you defend him? |
10440 | Indeed? |
10440 | Is he in court? |
10440 | Is it a squeal or a fall? |
10440 | Is it all right for us to underwrite the stock ourselves at half price? |
10440 | Is that a real case? |
10440 | Is that all? |
10440 | Is that right, Chippingham? |
10440 | Is there any chance of disposing of this case by a plea? |
10440 | Is there--he forced himself to utter the word with difficulty--"a-- a man involved?" |
10440 | Is this the Loan Department of the Mustardseed National? |
10440 | Is your name Appleboy? |
10440 | It will not be necessary for me to go to court, will it? |
10440 | It''s so homy now, is n''t it? |
10440 | Just to show there''s no ill feeling, wo n''t you give me another cup of tea? |
10440 | Leggo my arm, ca n''t yer? 10440 Let me try him on that?" |
10440 | Loaned it? 10440 May I ask what collateral there is?" |
10440 | Me? |
10440 | Miss Duryea, will you kindly take the witness chair? |
10440 | Miss Duryea,began Mr. Tutt,"do you know the defendant?" |
10440 | Mr. Tompkins-- will you take the chair? |
10440 | Mrs. Appleboy,called out Tutt,"will you kindly take the chair?" |
10440 | Now who says the law is n''t the perfection of common sense? |
10440 | Now, Miss Duryea, did you see Mock Hen at any time on May sixth? |
10440 | Now, if you''re feeling stale-- and we all are apt to get that way this time of year-- why do n''t you take a run down to Atlantic City? |
10440 | Of whom? |
10440 | Of your own knowledge? |
10440 | Of your own knowledge? |
10440 | Oh, those over there? |
10440 | Oh,said Mr. Tutt,"so you are going to sell all her securities and put the proceeds into your bogus oil company-- whether she wishes it or not? |
10440 | Perhaps under the circumstances you''ll tell us what you were doing in Mr. Hepplewhite''s bed? |
10440 | Rather nice, I think, eh? 10440 Say, watcha drivin''at?" |
10440 | Say, what yer doin''wit''my Chink? |
10440 | See here, captain,he directed sharply,"I want you to keep all those Chinamen out in the corridor; understand?" |
10440 | Shall I enter the lady''s name in the address book? |
10440 | Shall I take him to the house-- or do you want to examine him? |
10440 | Shall we proceed to select the jury? |
10440 | So Scherer, Hunn, Greenbaum& Beck are going to reorganize something, are they? 10440 So you admit that the charge against my client is without foundation?" |
10440 | Some bonds-- what? |
10440 | Somebody''s got to underwrite it; why not us? |
10440 | Something about bonds, was n''t it? |
10440 | Suppose I appoint an official umpire to say which of the other two interpreters is correct-- and let them decide who he shall be? |
10440 | Suppose it is a promise to tell the truth? |
10440 | Supposing they had n''t? 10440 That bunch of pirates? |
10440 | That every Samson has his Delilah? |
10440 | That''s a grand name for a case, is n''t it? 10440 The court will, I suppose, grant me a moment or two to confer with my client?" |
10440 | The essence of your testimony is that the defendant set a dog on you, is it not? 10440 The first witness-- Bibby-- is in your employ?" |
10440 | The police''attended''to my client for you, did they? 10440 Then why did n''t you take the ten thousand and call it quits while the getting was good?" |
10440 | Then why did you have the police put him under arrest and hale him away? |
10440 | Then,snapped Pepperill,"why did you send for him?" |
10440 | There is some collateral, I suppose? |
10440 | Trouble brewin'', eh? |
10440 | Trying to get out of it, are you? 10440 Um-- you do n''t say?" |
10440 | Waiting for me, eh? 10440 Warrant for what?" |
10440 | Warrant? |
10440 | Well, how long is it going to take? |
10440 | Well, what about it? |
10440 | Well, what is it this time? |
10440 | Well, who cut Samson''s hair? |
10440 | Well, who knows? |
10440 | Well, why do n''t you like your investment? |
10440 | Well? |
10440 | Were n''t any of the domestics about? |
10440 | Were the statements contained in it true? |
10440 | What am I to do? 10440 What are they?" |
10440 | What are you going to do with a fellow like that? |
10440 | What are you talking about? |
10440 | What can I do? |
10440 | What crime? |
10440 | What did Chassensà © e get out of it? |
10440 | What did I tell you? 10440 What did they do with the three little pigs?" |
10440 | What did you say to your aunt in your letter? |
10440 | What did you say, Mister Foreman? |
10440 | What difference would it make? |
10440 | What do you call well? |
10440 | What do you know about Samson and Delilah, Tutt? |
10440 | What do you mean by''exactly?'' |
10440 | What do you want it for? |
10440 | What does he say? |
10440 | What five thousand dollars? |
10440 | What for? |
10440 | What for? |
10440 | What god do you believe in? |
10440 | What good would a doctor do me? |
10440 | What greater compliment could I receive? |
10440 | What had you and Miss Malone been doing that afternoon? |
10440 | What happened if they were exorcised? |
10440 | What has become of the prisoner? |
10440 | What has it paid? |
10440 | What have n''t you told her about? |
10440 | What have you pulled this time? |
10440 | What is her occupation? |
10440 | What is it? |
10440 | What is the lady''s name? |
10440 | What kind of a case is it? |
10440 | What of it? 10440 What on earth for? |
10440 | What papers? |
10440 | What securities are those? |
10440 | What sort of an undershirt is that? |
10440 | What sort was it? |
10440 | What thing? |
10440 | What was its name? |
10440 | What was the name of the unfortunate deceased? |
10440 | What was the weapon? |
10440 | What were you going to do? |
10440 | What''s a disbursing noise? |
10440 | What''s become of Sorg? |
10440 | What''s ever got into you? |
10440 | What''s that? |
10440 | What''s the Last Chance Gold Mining Company? |
10440 | What''s the matter? |
10440 | What''s the matter? |
10440 | What''s the use of our both wasting a couple of weeks trying a Chinaman who is bound to be convicted? 10440 What-- are-- you-- talking about?" |
10440 | When and how did he become possessed of his stock? |
10440 | When did they give up trying animals? |
10440 | When you have n''t anything better to do,he said to her,"why do n''t you go round and see what has become of-- of-- Horse''s Neck Extension?" |
10440 | Where am I? |
10440 | Where have you been? |
10440 | Where on earth did you meet Badger? |
10440 | Where shall I write? |
10440 | Where was I? 10440 Where you goin''?" |
10440 | Wherever did you get them? 10440 Which is this great exception?" |
10440 | Who are they? |
10440 | Who controls Amphalula? |
10440 | Who got''em off? |
10440 | Who invited you to testify in this case? |
10440 | Who is this? |
10440 | Who''s Andrew? |
10440 | Whose check is it-- his or the company''s? |
10440 | Why not kill one rooster and swear all the witnesses at once? |
10440 | Why not? |
10440 | Why should n''t they be? 10440 Why the devil should you come to me? |
10440 | Why was that a crime? |
10440 | Why-- how do I know? 10440 Why?" |
10440 | Will you kindly be silent, madam? 10440 Wo n''t you have a stogy?" |
10440 | Wo n''t you stay a little while? |
10440 | Would you be honest with a burglar? |
10440 | Would you mind going there again? 10440 Yes?" |
10440 | You absolutely and finally decline to give up the securities? |
10440 | You are the Mr. Hepplewhite who has been referred to in the testimony as the owner of the house in which the defendant was found? |
10440 | You deny that you ordered Bibby to charge the defendant with burglary? |
10440 | You do n''t take cream, do you? |
10440 | You have been sued by my client for one hundred thousand dollars, have n''t you? |
10440 | You know the Hepplewhite house up on Fifth Avenue-- that great stone one with the driveway? |
10440 | You mean that she is upon the stage? |
10440 | You practised up state, did n''t you? |
10440 | You remember my husband-- Jim? 10440 You said one of them had been dealt in on the curb? |
10440 | You say Scherer, Hunn, Greenbaum& Beck are proposing to reorganize a mining company? 10440 You say it''s full of water?" |
10440 | You there? |
10440 | You want to do just what I tell you, do n''t you? |
10440 | You want to make a confession? 10440 You''re sure it''s perfectly honest, Mr. Tutt? |
10440 | _ Did_ you? |
10440 | *****"What on earth is that sign?" |
10440 | A big book for instance?" |
10440 | A strike suit? |
10440 | And you recall that accident case we had-- Bump against the Railroad?" |
10440 | Are n''t they all right? |
10440 | Are you thinking of what your position will be if the defendant is acquitted-- with an action against you for one hundred thousand dollars?" |
10440 | As First Lord of the Treasury, Lord Chamberlain, Attorney- General, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Privy Purse or Private Secretary?" |
10440 | Attempting to avoid responsibility? |
10440 | Barrows?" |
10440 | Barrows?" |
10440 | Beside him Mr. Edgerton was saying protestingly:"May I ask why you made those fool statements on the witness stand?" |
10440 | But how? |
10440 | But if they were going to, why in hell could n''t they have done it three months ago?" |
10440 | But what is he presumed to be guilty of? |
10440 | But, as O''Brien afterward asked Peckham,"How in thunder could you tell?" |
10440 | By the way, are we retained or assigned by the court?" |
10440 | Ca n''t yer tell a feller?" |
10440 | Ca n''t you ask him a simple question and get a simple answer? |
10440 | Call you this a man?" |
10440 | Can the law thus indirectly tear the seal of confidence from the Confessional? |
10440 | Can you imagine me going to court in a bowler hat or arguing to the jury in a cutaway coat or bobtail business suit? |
10440 | Can you picture Ephraim Tutt with his hair cut short or in an Ascot tie, any more than you can envisage him in riding breeches or wearing lilacs? |
10440 | Could you blame people for being Bolsheviks? |
10440 | Did he know anyone connected with the case? |
10440 | Did n''t the events demonstrate the wisdom of my judgment?" |
10440 | Did the witness recognize the defendant''s young wife? |
10440 | Did you ever hear of such an outrageous verdict? |
10440 | Did you know anything about the dog before you sent for it?" |
10440 | Did you pay them for their little attention?" |
10440 | Do I have to go to court?" |
10440 | Do n''t you agree with me?" |
10440 | Do you find the defendant guilty or not guilty?" |
10440 | Do you find the defendant guilty or not guilty?" |
10440 | Do you really want this book?" |
10440 | Do you suppose Mr. Badger would buy the stock back?" |
10440 | Effingham?" |
10440 | Eighty- nine How many times you''ve sent me flowers? |
10440 | Elderberry?" |
10440 | For the last time, will you take it or not?" |
10440 | For what had he succeeded in adducing in his behalf? |
10440 | Had a bite?" |
10440 | Had he any objection to the infliction of capital punishment? |
10440 | Had he? |
10440 | Have I made myself clear to Your Honor?" |
10440 | Have n''t you any other charge on which you can try this defendant?" |
10440 | Have you any more witnesses, Mister District Attorney?" |
10440 | Have you got your stock with you?" |
10440 | Have you spoken to Chippingham?" |
10440 | He is a bona fide stockholder--""May I be pardoned for interrupting?" |
10440 | He was not responsible for what had been done-- why then, was he being treated so abominably? |
10440 | How did you happen to have the idea of getting a dog?" |
10440 | How have you been, my dear Mrs. Effingham? |
10440 | How many feet? |
10440 | How many letters you''ve written me? |
10440 | How many times you''ve taken me out to lunch? |
10440 | How often you''ve called me on the telephone? |
10440 | How would you like a glass of toddy? |
10440 | I ask you!--when he turns down the Fat and Skinnies?" |
10440 | I have n''t seen you for-- well, how long is it?" |
10440 | I suppose we had better make the charge burglary, sir?" |
10440 | I wonder if we''ll all get a raise?" |
10440 | If I got''em cheap that was my good luck, was n''t it? |
10440 | If a woman like that, thought the jury, was ready to vouch for Mock''s good character, why waste any more time on the case? |
10440 | If animals have souls why should n''t they be responsible for their acts?" |
10440 | In other words you could demur to the indictment for insufficiency?" |
10440 | In which of my capacities? |
10440 | Is he presumed to be innocent? |
10440 | Is it equity? |
10440 | Is n''t that enough?" |
10440 | Is that a Corot?" |
10440 | Is that justice? |
10440 | Is that right? |
10440 | Is that right?" |
10440 | Is there anything the matter with you?" |
10440 | It seems Horse''s Neck is played out and they are going to reorganize it--""Who are?" |
10440 | Later in the evening he turned to her between the acts and remarked inconsequently:"Say, Abbie, do I look as if I''d just had my hair cut?" |
10440 | Letters or photographs or something?" |
10440 | May I ask if it is secured?" |
10440 | May I relieve you of your wrap?" |
10440 | May sixth? |
10440 | Meanwhile, was not the jury ever going to set the poor man free? |
10440 | Never had done him any wrong, had he? |
10440 | Now how much do you want to call off your suit?" |
10440 | Now will you go upstairs first or have tea first?" |
10440 | Now will you kindly turn over to me all the securities?" |
10440 | Peck 1:"Did you not knock Mrs. Appleboy''s flower pots off the piazza?" |
10440 | Peck 2:"Did n''t you steal her milk bottles?" |
10440 | Peck 3:"Did n''t you tangle up their fish lines and take their thole- pins?" |
10440 | Perhaps you would like me to open an account here?" |
10440 | Reorganize? |
10440 | See the morning paper?" |
10440 | See?" |
10440 | Shall I recall the jury and reopen the case by consent?" |
10440 | Suppose, then, that they should return at noon? |
10440 | That is, are you on friendly terms with him?" |
10440 | That''s enough, is n''t it? |
10440 | That''s the case, is n''t it?" |
10440 | The dog attacked and bit you? |
10440 | The one you just drew to cash for five thousand dollars?" |
10440 | The two muttered and chortled at each other until O''Brien, losing patience, jumped up and called out:"What''s all this? |
10440 | The witness had been an old friend of Mr. Appleboy''s, had he not? |
10440 | Then leaning forward he asked significantly:"Did you see Crocedoro threaten the defendant with his razor?" |
10440 | Then like the sword of Damocles the bessemer voice of Pepperill severed the general atmosphere of amiability:"Where did you get that dog?" |
10440 | Therefore he was surprised to hear himself say in soothing, almost cooing tones:"Well, my dear, what can I do for you?" |
10440 | They never will hold the way you want, will they?" |
10440 | This old jailbird swindled another crook, Bloom--""Oh, Bloom was a crook too, was he?" |
10440 | To me?" |
10440 | Tunnygate?" |
10440 | Tutt?" |
10440 | Tutt?" |
10440 | Tutt?" |
10440 | Tutt?" |
10440 | Understand? |
10440 | Was Mr. Walsh sure he had no prejudices against Italians or foreigners generally? |
10440 | Was n''t the law intended to cover Chinamen as much as Italians, Poles, Greeks and niggers? |
10440 | Well, Mr. Tutt, what do you wish to do under the circumstances? |
10440 | Well, any wrong? |
10440 | Well, did that do the witness any harm? |
10440 | Well, where was he sitting, then? |
10440 | What a sweet room? |
10440 | What advice did you give him?" |
10440 | What am I worth in your opinion?" |
10440 | What amount, he inquired through Wong Get, would satisfy the face of the Duck family? |
10440 | What are you leaving all these bonds here for against that note? |
10440 | What business had these condescending second- raters to presume to improve a perfectly good beach which was satisfactory to other folks? |
10440 | What do you mean-- for you? |
10440 | What do you say to a little dinner at a restaurant and then going to the play?" |
10440 | What do you say?" |
10440 | What do you think, Mr. Tutt? |
10440 | What is the case?" |
10440 | What kind of a chicken''s head?" |
10440 | What man is safe?" |
10440 | What shall we do?" |
10440 | What was it? |
10440 | What was there to prevent one of them from getting right up in court and putting a bullet through you? |
10440 | What will you say to Aunt Eliza?" |
10440 | What''d yer want, anyway?" |
10440 | What''d yer want? |
10440 | What''s bitin''yer?" |
10440 | What''s it selling for now?" |
10440 | What''s this one? |
10440 | Where are they, anyway?" |
10440 | Where do they come in?" |
10440 | Where was he killed?" |
10440 | Where was the witness standing? |
10440 | Where''s your check book, Sam?" |
10440 | Who cares a damn? |
10440 | Who drew it?" |
10440 | Who is he to challenge the future? |
10440 | Who''s been croaked, eh?" |
10440 | Why ca n''t you stay in the path?" |
10440 | Why do n''t you write to Aunt Eliza to- night?" |
10440 | Why had God made him a rich man? |
10440 | Why not beg off?" |
10440 | Why not call yourself Mrs. Winthrop Oaklander?" |
10440 | Why not say that crime is progress?" |
10440 | Why should he be if he falls asleep in my bed?" |
10440 | Why should n''t they reorganize a mine if it''s exhausted?" |
10440 | Why was he compelled to suffer those terrible indignities? |
10440 | Why, it''s marvelous-- and absolutely safe? |
10440 | Will not even the cross upon her breast protect her from being compelled to reveal those secrets that are sacred to wife and motherhood? |
10440 | Will they be able to prove where he got the pistol?" |
10440 | With not a scrap of evidence to support it?" |
10440 | Wo n''t you lay us all open to the accusation of being strikers?" |
10440 | Would any member of the jury hang a dog, even a yellow one, on such testimony? |
10440 | Would n''t it be fine, Mr. Tutt, to be rich? |
10440 | You admit we hold some of the stock? |
10440 | You hope for mercy, do you? |
10440 | You know there is such a crime as perjury, do you not?" |
10440 | You there, Emma?" |
10440 | _ Is_ the complainant an ex- convict?" |
10440 | _ Was_ this a man? |
10440 | adjured the captain"Will you have your butler act as complainant sir?" |
10440 | gasped Murtha, shuddering"What''s the matter, boys?" |
27861 | Have not the colonists a right to import a drug, which is legally an article of import, allowed by the crown? |
27861 | Oh know you the land of the orange and myrtle? |
27861 | Zounds, how he sleeps,"where, where, oh where is my hammock boy? |
27861 | And whence gains the cheroot its magical properties? |
27861 | And where will be those who breathe and walk one hundred years hence? |
27861 | But what does my poor pen with what our own wizard of the west, Washington Irving, has made immortal? |
27861 | But_ will_ they come?" |
27861 | Cheroots, then; who is there amongst the masculine dwellers of the land of"_ musquitoes_ and myrtle,"that affects not the gentle cheroot? |
27861 | Had something of a nightmare, eh? |
27861 | If Faust was supposed to have been assisted by the Evil One, what would his persecutors have said, had they been shown a picture like this? |
27861 | Is it not faithfully recorded on these pages? |
27861 | It had been the practice to fish(?) |
27861 | One gentleman asks in relation to the subject:"What do we know of the rebellion? |
27861 | She had barely touched the water, when the men gave way; but now came the difficulty, which way to steer? |
27861 | So, if you now in glowing numbers shine, Did I not_ right_(?) |
27861 | They walked and talked, and in what phrase? |
27861 | Was either good? |
27861 | What would they have said? |
27861 | Will the parallel hold good between this rock and China? |
27861 | Yet need this be? |
27861 | how can make walkee? |
27861 | no can see, how can walkee?" |
27861 | when twice I''ve crossed the Line? |
14587 | ''And thou, Tien?'' 14587 ''And what wouldst thou do, Chih?'' |
14587 | ''What harm in that?'' 14587 Can one get Tao to possess it for one''s own?" |
14587 | For whom have you come? |
14587 | Have you never heard of the Frog of the Old Well? 14587 How shall I treat you?" |
14587 | If you do not understand life,said he,"how can you understand death?" |
14587 | The Master smiled,--''What wouldst thou do, Ch''iu?'' 14587 Well; did you find the pearl?" |
14587 | What is a pure idea? 14587 Who is it you are?" |
14587 | Would you have me grapple with these? |
14587 | ''If for this man I do not give way, for whom shall I give way?... |
14587 | --"And why none?" |
14587 | --"And why,"said the Marquis,"can not the Master himself"( Confucius, of course)"perform such feats?" |
14587 | --"If that is so,"said the fisherman,"why not plunge into the current, and make its foulness clean with the infection of your purity? |
14587 | --"Then what,"asked Wuti,"is real merit?" |
14587 | --"What has brought you hither?" |
14587 | --"What name is on you?" |
14587 | --"What of him?" |
14587 | --"What will the stake be?" |
14587 | --"Who, then, would have the other two?" |
14587 | --"Why, my friend,"said the Marquis,"can not you do all these marvels?" |
14587 | --''Am I giving way?'' |
14587 | --''Wherefore not?'' |
14587 | ------*_ Ancient India,_ by E. J. Rapson------ What came before? |
14587 | --Lieh the Master smiled and said:''Do you suppose that Hu Tzu dealt in words? |
14587 | --and did another reply:''It looks to me like a_ potato;_ let''s call it that!''? |
14587 | ... Or was it the supreme mistake of his life.... one would say the only mistake? |
14587 | ; and no doubt there were plenty then where it was pompous 1919.--Can anyone tell me, by the bye, what year it happens to be in Europe now? |
14587 | A man came in from the ramparts;--"What news with you?" |
14587 | A neat compliment, thinks good externalist Wuti, may improve things.--"If nothing can be called holy,"says he,"who is it then that replies to me?" |
14587 | Above all, in place of the cry of bewilderment that closes the_ Choephori_--''What is the end of all this spilling of blood for blood?'' |
14587 | Actual men, there may yet be mirrored in them the history-- shall we say of the whole sub- race? |
14587 | After what would he be inquisitive? |
14587 | All the light is there for him; all the suns are kindled for him;--why should he light wax candles? |
14587 | An unreal lot, with not the ghost of a Man between them;--what should the one Great Man of the age find in them to disturb the least ofhis dreams? |
14587 | And Arthur said to him,''Hast thou news from the gate?'' |
14587 | And for what end do I toil? |
14587 | And how much, desiring it, would he possess? |
14587 | And now? |
14587 | And of the infinite knowledge at his disposal, would the Man of Tao choose to burden himself with one little item of which there was no present need? |
14587 | And the Odyssey? |
14587 | And the meaning of it all? |
14587 | And what shall we know of ancient Athens and Rome? |
14587 | And where should you look, back of 850 B. C., to find actual history-- human motives, speech and passions-- or what to our eyes should appear such? |
14587 | And why not? |
14587 | Are the deserts desolate and terrible? |
14587 | Are the mountains noble? |
14587 | Are there no words from the lips of Hu- Ch''iu Tsu- lin that you can impart to us?'' |
14587 | Are they not here in the host, from the shores of loved Lacedaimon? |
14587 | Are we to judge by the impressiveness of the personality? |
14587 | Balance,--Middle lines,--Avoidance of Extremes,--Lines of Least Resistance:--by whom are we hearing these things inculcated daily? |
14587 | Besides, where will you put the earth and stones?" |
14587 | Blavatsky had died in 1879....? |
14587 | Bodhidharma-- are you to call him a_ Messenger_ at all? |
14587 | But I wonder what would have happened if Pan Chow had succeeded in reaching his arm across, and grasping hands with Trajan? |
14587 | But as reasoning human beings, does it not appeal to you? |
14587 | But can you not equally hear the voice of Confucius:"too far is not better than not far enough"? |
14587 | But come to India, and alas, where are you? |
14587 | But how far do you think the Legions of the Rhine are going to support this young revolting- habited madman against the first general of the age? |
14587 | But now for the Sixth Root- Race: is that to figure mainly on the plane of intellect? |
14587 | But now you begin to leave regions where Normans can be remembered or imagined at all:"Spake the youth,''Is there a porter?'' |
14587 | But one of his ministers dissuaded him thus:"Has your majesty,"said he,"any diplomatist in your service like Tse Kung? |
14587 | But suppose a man, as they say one with Tao, in which all knowledge rests in solution: what knowledge would he desire? |
14587 | But the summer was icumen in; and what were consuls and Senate for? |
14587 | But then, where was it more manifest, in Pope or in Keats? |
14587 | But what about the standpoint of the Gods? |
14587 | But what could a song do? |
14587 | But what, against a man so golden- panoplied? |
14587 | But where does this Homeric mood lead us? |
14587 | But where in Europe was there national consciousness? |
14587 | But while the world endured, and the Last Trump had not sounded, of course the Roman empire would stand.--Christianity? |
14587 | But who, except enthusiasts, was to treat religion seriously? |
14587 | But whose is the greatest name in it? |
14587 | But why bother about it? |
14587 | But why did he not stay at Rome for his orgies: doing at Rome as the Romans did, and thereby perhaps earning a measure of popularity? |
14587 | But, you say, no Aeschylus or Shakespeare? |
14587 | Can music be a mere thing of drums and bells?" |
14587 | Can you conceive that their appearance, all in that one epoch, was a matter of chance? |
14587 | Can you fancy Latona and her children so received by Greekish or Latin monks into the Communion of Saints? |
14587 | Can you nourish men upon poisons century by century, and expect them to retain the semblance of men? |
14587 | Ch''iu asked,''Shall I do all I am taught?'' |
14587 | Could he have known the teachings, had he not been instructed in a school where they were known? |
14587 | Could he have urged such a plea, had it not been known he was uninitiated? |
14587 | Did he go to break a way into India, perhaps there to find a light beyond any that was in Rome? |
14587 | Did he go to reap glory that he might have used, or thought he might have used, in his grand design? |
14587 | Did he hide it away, lest others should be as happy as himself? |
14587 | Did not experience show that opposites proceed from opposites? |
14587 | Did she mean by that merely an initiate of the Official Mysteries as they still existed at Eleusis and elsewhere? |
14587 | Did some echo of ancient wisdom, Druidic, survive in Britain from Pre- roman days? |
14587 | Did someone ask:''What shall we name this God- given thing?'' |
14587 | Did they not teach Raja- Yoga in ancient China? |
14587 | Do you remernber how Abraham haggled with the Lord over the Cities of the Plain? |
14587 | Do you see where these leads? |
14587 | Does anyone know what place in history he is to fill? |
14587 | Does it not seem as if that great Far Eastern note could not be struck without this little far western note vibrating in sympathy? |
14587 | Does not this satisfy you? |
14587 | Even Tse Lu was shaken.--"Is it for the Princely Man,"said he,"to suffer the pinch of privation?" |
14587 | Even if Spain should set herself to the Gods''work of union- making, what path should she take towards it? |
14587 | For what had he to do with what followed? |
14587 | Greatly capable in action, saintly in life and ideals: what could Rome ask better? |
14587 | Had that last known, how should he escape being bowed down with grief: then in those years when all his powers and energies were needed? |
14587 | Has Your Highness no mind to acquire such a secret as this?" |
14587 | Have any of you heard of literary savages? |
14587 | Have not our school and its principles a Chinese smack about them? |
14587 | He did n''t see why we Romans should not have our ancient greatness sung in epic; were n''t we as good as Homer''s people, anyhow? |
14587 | He did, I believe;--but why? |
14587 | He looked at them in blank amazement.--"What is this you are telling me?" |
14587 | He proceeded with the utmost severity against such as betrayed their[ proscribed?] |
14587 | He was an impostor, was he? |
14587 | He went unnoticed; Drusus was the pet of all; under such conditions how much harmony as a rule exists between two brothers? |
14587 | Heavy- hearted, Tse Kung followed him in.--"What makes you so late?" |
14587 | His stables having been burnt, the Master, on his return from court, said:''Is anyone hurt?'' |
14587 | How dare we pretend, because we can do a few things with a piston or a crucible, that we know the limits of natural and spiritual law? |
14587 | How do they loose such fragments of old inspiration? |
14587 | How does he manage it? |
14587 | How much Numa may have given his Romans, who can say? |
14587 | How much merit may I be supposed to have accumulated?" |
14587 | How old? |
14587 | How shall we compare him with those others, his great compeers on the Mountain of Song? |
14587 | How should we dare say that Julius was ambitious, Augustus not? |
14587 | How the devil did Tacitus know? |
14587 | How then about the theory that some life and light remained or was revivable in it in Britain? |
14587 | How then should you get Tao so as to possess it for your own?" |
14587 | How to account for this unsubduability? |
14587 | How would Ts''in Shi Hwangti, barbarian, wild Taoist, and man of swift great action, appear to them? |
14587 | How would he go to work? |
14587 | How would such a prodigy in time appear to his own age? |
14587 | How, pray, are nations brought into being? |
14587 | How, then, did this submersion and obliteration of the Roman soul come to pass? |
14587 | I have a disease; can you cure it, Sir?" |
14587 | I mean, is it not highly probable? |
14587 | I suppose ballot- boxes and referenda and recalls and the like were specified, when it was said_ Of such is the kingdom of Heaven?_... |
14587 | If Greece had not stepped in, myth- making and euhemerizing, who would have saved the day at Lake Regillus? |
14587 | If I do not associate with mankind, with whom shall I associate?" |
14587 | In a thousand years''time, will English be as much a Latin language as French is? |
14587 | In preparation for what? |
14587 | In what sense, then, was he different from the pigs?" |
14587 | In which is the greater sum of energies included? |
14587 | Is Mercury''s caduceus, here too, a symbol of the way evolution is done? |
14587 | Is a new Root- Race developed, not from the one immediately preceding it, but from the one before? |
14587 | Is it a memory of the fate of Lemuria? |
14587 | Is it likely that, while he kept his laws and language, he let his religion go? |
14587 | Is it primitive, or ultimate? |
14587 | Is not some prearrangement suggested,--a_ put- up job,_ as they say: a definite plan formed, and a definite end aimed at? |
14587 | Jan Yu said:--"Shall I do all I am taught?" |
14587 | Kung- hsi Hua said:"Yu asked,''Shall I do all I am taught?'' |
14587 | Let the madman be murdered,--and who shall be called the murderer? |
14587 | Liehtse said:--"Will you explain what you mean by the Theory of Consequents?" |
14587 | May it not have been-- as Sicily was to be-- a mainly European country under Egyptian influence, and a seat of Egyptianized culture? |
14587 | May not Crete have played a like part in ancient times? |
14587 | My principles make no progress: how will it be in the after ages?" |
14587 | Need we be surprised, then, at His Excellency''s remark?" |
14587 | Neither Augustus, nor yet Livia, then, had Agrippa killed; must we credit it to Tiberius? |
14587 | No Dante or Homer? |
14587 | Now how am I to know whether I was then, Chwangtse dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am now a butterfly dreaming I am Chwang?" |
14587 | Now then, is Chinese primitive, or is it an evolution far away and ahead of us? |
14587 | Now what is strength like, and civilization? |
14587 | Now what was the ferment behind this man''s mind;--this barbarian--for so he was-- of tremendous schemes and doings? |
14587 | Now whether you call Tao_ duty,_ or_ silence,_--what should the Man of Tao desire beyond the fulness of it? |
14587 | Now, in what condition does a race gain such qualities? |
14587 | Now, what does it all mean? |
14587 | Now, what may this indicate? |
14587 | Now, what more can we learn about the inner and real Homer? |
14587 | Of what race are we? |
14587 | Oh no, nothing at all: this is Kali- Yuga, and what should be doing? |
14587 | On the other hand, how was any Church eager to burn out heresy and heretics to deal with him? |
14587 | Or Root- race? |
14587 | Or a general to compare with Tse Lu? |
14587 | Or anyone so fitted to be prime minister as Yen Huy? |
14587 | Or did he call in his neighbors at once and annouce it? |
14587 | Or didst thou reach this state by the natural course of old age?'' |
14587 | Or for the passage of the Licinian Rogations, or the high exploits of Terentilius Harsa? |
14587 | Or shall we then take intellectual things somewhat for granted, as having learnt them and passed on to something higher? |
14587 | Or the whole natural order of human evolution? |
14587 | Or was it superstition again? |
14587 | Or-- hath a pleasant little lie or twain served their turn? |
14587 | Perhaps it was in Ireland that the White Adepts of the Fifth made their first stand against the Atlanteans? |
14587 | Persia, better called a kingdom, perhaps, than an empire, commands about forty millions of subjects; as against imperial Rome''s-- who can say? |
14587 | Said Confucius:"What precedent is there for that?" |
14587 | Said Tse Kung( just as you or I would have done):--"Then Shih is the better man?" |
14587 | Said he:--"Which is the most important of the holy doctrines?" |
14587 | Shall we not call him Such a One as only the Gods send? |
14587 | Should they be as these irresponsibles of the comitia? |
14587 | So ended an impulse that began, who knows when? |
14587 | So far it had been a case of Initiate appointing Initiate to succeed him: Augustus, Tiberius;--but whom should Tiberius appoint? |
14587 | So there must be some further value to the tales of the Roman kings; else why are they so much better than the Republican annals? |
14587 | Some queer uncouth Italian nature- spirit gods? |
14587 | Supposing that there were some such scheme of evolution here, as in the world- chain? |
14587 | Supposing the Octave_ West Asia_ were under the fingers of the Great Player, would not the corresponding note in Europe vibrate? |
14587 | Supposing the note_ China_ is struck in the Far Eastern Octave; would there not be a vibration of some corresponding note in the octave Europe? |
14587 | That human language is_ one thing;_ and all the differences, the changes rung on that according to the stages of evolution? |
14587 | That they propagate their species freely, as if they were wild? |
14587 | That they roam at large in the park, yet never claw and bite one another? |
14587 | The Master turned to his disciples and said:--"What shall I take up? |
14587 | The comitia vote against it? |
14587 | The final comment on the interview is given by a Japanese writer thus:"Can an elephant associate with rabbits?" |
14587 | The former were Macedon and Syria, or Macedon with Syria in the background; what better could you ask that a good square se- to with these? |
14587 | The war, then, must be finished; and could Rome let it end on terms of a Parthian victory? |
14587 | The_ human_ Soul? |
14587 | Their music is soon drowned in catcalls: What the dickens do we Romans want with such_ footling tootlings?_ Then the presiding magistrate has an idea. |
14587 | Then by whom? |
14587 | Then what would have happened? |
14587 | Then, what was Italy like in the heyday of the Etruscans, or under the Roman kings? |
14587 | They foresaw Wu Taotse and Ma Yuan; they foresaw Ssu- k''ung T''u and the Banished Angel; and asked"Is it not enough?" |
14587 | They had the Kilkenny Catterwauling in their ears daily; would they have allowed to any Pagan times a quieter less dissonant music? |
14587 | This show of ministers, when I have none,--whom will it deceive? |
14587 | Three millenniums ago, how many were the Latins? |
14587 | Tsai Wo, continues Liehtse, told this story to Confucius.--"Is this so strange to you?" |
14587 | Two millenniums ago, how many were the Anglo- Saxons? |
14587 | Until starvation forced them to disgorge All of their million to thee? |
14587 | Was Pheidias too? |
14587 | Was he a pedant? |
14587 | Was it they in part, who lit up that ancient European cycle of from 2980 to 1480 B. C.? |
14587 | Was it weakness on his part, that he concurred? |
14587 | Was it weakness? |
14587 | Was our man a prig at all? |
14587 | Was the Celtic Empire then, what the roman Empire became in the later time? |
14587 | Was the whole Sassanian period divisible into a day, a night, and a day? |
14587 | Was there, at some time, such a change in his life that it was as if a new Soul had come in to take charge of that impersonal unfailing personality? |
14587 | We can see this now; I wonder did he see it then? |
14587 | Well; and Xerxes carried it on; he too played the great Achaemenid game; did he not send ships to sail round Africa? |
14587 | Well; had ye a name in the world, what would ye do?''" |
14587 | Well; what was Augustus to do, having to keep up human appearances, and suit his action to the probabilities? |
14587 | Were ditectives set to watch him, to spy out the cause of a habit of sleek rotundity that was growing upon him at last visibly? |
14587 | Were my grey hairs reserved for such intolerable disgrace? |
14587 | Were you to look back into Paganism for your Christian millennium, to come not till Christ came again? |
14587 | What can I tell you in the way of literary criticism, to fill out the picture I have attempted to make? |
14587 | What can a stranger like you have to teach me?" |
14587 | What comes down to us from old Europe between its waking and the age of Pericles? |
14587 | What could be more appropriate than such a gift? |
14587 | What disease is this? |
14587 | What do you want:--to be a great towering personality; or to remember that you are a flame of the Fire which is God? |
14587 | What does History care for the election results in some village in Montenegro? |
14587 | What does one mean by''basic form''? |
14587 | What hindered Rome from mastery of Europe; absolute mastery; and keeping it forever? |
14587 | What is a Spaniard? |
14587 | What is it accounts for race- persistence? |
14587 | What is it that baffles us and remains undefined and undefinable? |
14587 | What is the end of being, after all? |
14587 | What is the meaning of the incessant need we see for reform? |
14587 | What keeps us from seeing the meanings of life? |
14587 | What light from the Spirit shone among them? |
14587 | What light, what life, what vigor was there in Rome or Constantinople a century and a half after Alaric or Heraclius? |
14587 | What may we not expect then? |
14587 | What remedy will cure it?" |
14587 | What sculptor''s name is known? |
14587 | What then are_ you?_ That which occupies and adapts itself to the point? |
14587 | What then are_ you?_ That which occupies and adapts itself to the point? |
14587 | What then will happen, unless you have the surest moral training for foundation? |
14587 | What was his sword of strength? |
14587 | What was the Fourth Sub- race? |
14587 | What was the secret of England''s greatness? |
14587 | What were the inner sources of this people''s strength? |
14587 | What will remain of England in the memory of three or four thousand years hence? |
14587 | What would this, or any other country, become, were law, order, the police and every restraining influence made absolutely inefficient? |
14587 | What, but appear put out, insulted, angry? |
14587 | When did he become an Initiate? |
14587 | When modern creeds are gone, to what in literature will men turn for their inspiration? |
14587 | When shall we stop imagining that any possible inventions or discoveries will enable us to circumvent the fundamental laws of Nature? |
14587 | When? |
14587 | Where Roman authority( a more real and valuable thing)? |
14587 | Where and when did this high tradition grow up? |
14587 | Where are you to say that Liehtse''s Confucianism ends, and his Taoism begins? |
14587 | Where did Homer live? |
14587 | Where did he live? |
14587 | Where to find a Soul capable, or who would dare undertake the venture? |
14587 | Where were the Allies in whom he trusted? |
14587 | Where( it would be argued) would then be Roman prestige? |
14587 | Where, you asked, are the great creative energies? |
14587 | Whether they had been active continuously since this Fifth Root Race began, who can say? |
14587 | Which is nearer the material or intellectual, and which, the spiritual, pole? |
14587 | Who is it that enlightens the assembly upon the mountain, if not I? |
14587 | Who led the victors at Marathon? |
14587 | Who showeth the place where the sun goes to rest? |
14587 | Who telleth the ages of the moon, if not I? |
14587 | Who then? |
14587 | Who understood well the limitations of quack magic: if he was to be beaten at these tricks, where would his influence be? |
14587 | Who was_ Ho Basileus, The King_ par excellence? |
14587 | Who were the earliest Italians? |
14587 | Who, then, was Romulus?--Some king''s son from Ruta or Daitya, who came in his lordly Atlantean ships, and builded a city on the Tiber? |
14587 | Who, then, was to transmit his doctrine? |
14587 | Whom should he fear, who had conquered Pompeius Magnus? |
14587 | Whom, then, shall we blame? |
14587 | Why can we not listen, till we hear and apprehend the tune? |
14587 | Why did he allow himself to be dissuaded from the public investigation? |
14587 | Why did he not get a divorce? |
14587 | Why did he talk like that: thus_ reasoning_ about reincarnation, and not stating it as a positive teaching? |
14587 | Why do you not come, Sir, and pay me a visit?''" |
14587 | Why not, then, count as manvantaric doings in West Asia this rise of the Parthians to power? |
14587 | Why relegate them and their activities to the dimness of pralaya? |
14587 | Why should it? |
14587 | Why should not he create again the glory that once was Greece? |
14587 | Why then is this culture lost, since if it existed, it was practically contemporary with that of the Greeks? |
14587 | Why then should I despair of leveling them to the ground at last?" |
14587 | Why was it that the children of the Norman invaders of Ireland became_ Hiberniores ipsis Hiberniis?_ Because of the astral mold, certainly. |
14587 | Why, then, should we not ascribe the epics to this Buddhist Kshattriya period? |
14587 | Why? |
14587 | Why? |
14587 | Why?--Why is an army drilled? |
14587 | Will it deceive Heaven? |
14587 | With none of Anthony''s soldiership, he had easily brought Anthony down.--Why did Cleopatra lose Actium for Anthony? |
14587 | Would burning it be altogether an evil? |
14587 | Would not Your Highness care to know that secret?" |
14587 | Would you like to hear about death?'' |
14587 | You go through everything; see him under all sorts of circumstances; and ask at last:"Is this all?" |
14587 | You have seen? |
14587 | You must have killed the deer yourself, since you have it there; but where is your fuel- gatherer?" |
14587 | _ Anax andron Agamemnon_--what Greek could hear a man so spoken of, and dream he compounded of common clay? |
14587 | _ We_ have our grand Jupiter on the Capitoline, resplendent in vermilion paint; what say you to that? |
14587 | catch Laotse? |
14587 | have those who have sedulously spread that report of him in the West told the truth about him? |
14587 | he cried;"for whom have you come?" |
14587 | said Confucius when it was told him;"shall I not associate with mankind? |
14587 | said he once;"do you think they are a mere matter of silken robes and jade omaments? |
14587 | said the Christians in reply;"did not we set a saint on the beach at Epidaurus, before whom the oncoming billow stopped, bowed its head, and retired?" |
14587 | sing small, will you? |
14587 | to 630 A.D.? |
14587 | too fond of the pleasures of the table;"a gluttonous man and a winebibber"? |
14587 | what is the result? |
14587 | with Karma? |
14587 | you have noted? |
14587 | you must have a Jupiter to worship, must n''t you? |
14587 | you say, where is the great creative energy? |
18674 | A charm, eh? 18674 Ah,"he said, looking the great cat straight in the eye,"you have come to eat me, have you? |
18674 | All right, father, I''ll do what you tell me; but suppose the foreign soldiers should come while you are gone? 18674 Am I not your master, you mad creature?" |
18674 | Am I to be changed into a bird? |
18674 | And I shall never again have to beg for crusts on the street? |
18674 | And are you sure of this wondrous beauty you describe so prettily? |
18674 | And has this gracious goddess brought sunshine into your life, my pretty one? |
18674 | And is it far? |
18674 | And there were only fourteen then? |
18674 | And what did they do with the mule he was riding, his bed, and the money in his bag? 18674 And when, most august King, would you have me decide?" |
18674 | And where are you going, Lu- san, now that you have left your father? 18674 And where do you live?" |
18674 | And yet, nephew, you think this fellow is really peaceably inclined and is not coming among us as a spy? |
18674 | Are n''t you afraid of Blackfoot? |
18674 | Are n''t you even going to give him a scolding? |
18674 | Are there not moments when you would prefer to be a man? |
18674 | Are you mad from hunger, or have you caught another flea? |
18674 | Are you quite sure there was not some friend of the miser''s spending the night with him? |
18674 | Are you speaking of Su- nan? |
18674 | But did n''t he live here, too? |
18674 | But did n''t it kill me? |
18674 | But did you count them again last night? |
18674 | But how can_ I_ help to punish the Emperor? |
18674 | But how shall you get the tablet off your back? |
18674 | But what about you, my boy? 18674 But what am I to do?" |
18674 | But when was it, little one, that they did this? |
18674 | But, father,persisted the boy,"have n''t you forgotten? |
18674 | But, mother, what has this brass bauble to do with the dumplings, these wonderful pork dumplings, the finest I ever ate? |
18674 | But, woman, are you mad? |
18674 | Ca n''t be found? 18674 Can a carpenter make shoes?" |
18674 | Can you think of nothing else? |
18674 | Ch''ang,he asked,"what was it you called your guest when you spoke of her a minute ago?" |
18674 | Count you? |
18674 | Did you not find the fruit we told you about? |
18674 | Did you not know it? 18674 Did you not say it was a tiger that killed your son? |
18674 | Do n''t want me to go, eh? 18674 Do n''t you see me swimming? |
18674 | Do you indeed? |
18674 | Do you not know me, father? 18674 Do you remember me?" |
18674 | Does he have a fire in cold weather? |
18674 | Doing about it, sir? 18674 First of all, are you willing to help me bring good fortune back to our family?" |
18674 | First tell me what good fairy of a rich man has been filling our hands with silver? |
18674 | Forgive me, kind sir, but what have you done to my master? |
18674 | Going? 18674 Have you come here to laugh at our misfortunes?" |
18674 | Have you suffered many a cruel pain since you were snatched away so suddenly? 18674 Help to devour myself, eh?" |
18674 | How long? |
18674 | How many have you? |
18674 | I know you are telling the truth,wailed Wang,"but how, oh, how can I ever work with all these feathers sticking out of me? |
18674 | I wonder if I dare? |
18674 | I? 18674 If he asks even a peach, how can you refuse and at the same time save your face?" |
18674 | Is he nothing but a cry- baby? |
18674 | Is that true? |
18674 | It takes me back to my boyhood,he cried,"why, oh why, is it not the fashion to swim? |
18674 | Just a little business for the mandarin, is n''t it? 18674 Kwan- yin,"he continued,"do you wish to pass by the green spring of youth, to give up this mighty kingdom? |
18674 | May I try it now? |
18674 | Now what is the silly boy blubbering about? |
18674 | Now, old woman, are you satisfied? |
18674 | Now, what do you propose doing about it? |
18674 | Oh, can you not, good fairy, will you not restore my parents and brothers, and give them another chance to be good and useful people? |
18674 | Oh, that was it, hey? 18674 Oh, who has brought this woe upon us?" |
18674 | So I am the tiger- forest, am I? |
18674 | Then he is your husband? |
18674 | Then, are you indeed contented with your lot? |
18674 | Tiger,said he, turning toward the prisoner,"did you eat the woodman whom you are charged with killing?" |
18674 | Well, that''s rather strange for a miser, do n''t you think? |
18674 | Well, what''s your business, friend Wang? 18674 Well, you did n''t forget me, did you?" |
18674 | What am I doing now? |
18674 | What are they? 18674 What are you doing in my bedroom and who is this child who seems so frightened?" |
18674 | What are you doing, Daddy? |
18674 | What can those queer- looking papers be? |
18674 | What do they care for a man when he is sick? |
18674 | What do you know about success and failure? 18674 What do you mean, fellow?" |
18674 | What do you mean? |
18674 | What do you suggest? |
18674 | What does this mean? |
18674 | What have we to gain by deceit, we who have performed our miracles before the countless hosts of yonder Western Heaven? |
18674 | What is a sin, Daddy? |
18674 | What is it, father? 18674 What is the matter, old woman? |
18674 | What killed you, foolish boy? 18674 What kind of bird is that yonder in the sky?" |
18674 | What shall we command them to do? |
18674 | What time do you suppose I have for Classics? 18674 What trick is this you have played on me, masters? |
18674 | What use, what use? 18674 What will he say if he finds us here?" |
18674 | What''s the matter? 18674 What, masters, a peach?" |
18674 | What,shouted the other,"you say I am still young?" |
18674 | Whatever is the matter with you? |
18674 | When will it be finished? |
18674 | Where am I? |
18674 | Where are we? |
18674 | Where are you going? |
18674 | Where is the beginning of the world? |
18674 | Who can be knocking in that fashion? |
18674 | Who has done this great evil? 18674 Who knows a man by what he wears, By what he says or by his prayers? |
18674 | Whom have you here, my lad? |
18674 | Why did n''t you say something about it before? |
18674 | Why did you laugh? 18674 Why do n''t you flee the country?" |
18674 | Why do they have a turtle? 18674 Why is it that the gods have not given me a taste of duck during the past year? |
18674 | Why not borrow Mrs. Wang''s charm for a few days until we can pick up a little flesh to keep our bones from clattering? 18674 Why not, boy? |
18674 | Why, surely you ca n''t help me to earn a living? |
18674 | Why, what''s the matter? 18674 Why, you old goose, do n''t you know what a fairy is?" |
18674 | Will it be the largest in the world? |
18674 | Yes, but in what a shape? |
18674 | You remember the day Mr. and Mrs. Chu were here, and how Mrs. Chu returned in the afternoon after master and mistress had gone to the fair? 18674 You would, eh?" |
18674 | You? |
18674 | ''What do I care for a spirit that lives on my father''s land?'' |
18674 | A duck''s a duck, is n''t it, and surely you would like to know how you lost it?" |
18674 | After all, what was a hook to a fish when he was dying? |
18674 | And Kwan- yu-- what of Kwan- yu, the frantic father? |
18674 | And besides, would not all the other villagers be hungry, too? |
18674 | And is not every lad in China taught to honour his ancestors? |
18674 | And what could he do if he did find you? |
18674 | And why not? |
18674 | Are not the daughters of our nation often wedded long before they reach that age? |
18674 | Are not the wise men always saying that study brings its own reward? |
18674 | Are those big eyes of yours made of glass?" |
18674 | Are you ill?" |
18674 | Are you never coming to the hero of this tale?" |
18674 | Are you not afraid to be alone here at night on the bank of this great river?" |
18674 | Are you ready?" |
18674 | As a cannon- maker you are successful, but who can say about the other task? |
18674 | As she hobbled from the room, she cast sour glances at the judge, muttering over and over again,"Who ever heard of a tiger taking the place of a son? |
18674 | As you have n''t a sign of a scale, how will people judge you? |
18674 | As you look back through your wicked lives can you think of any reason why you deserved this rescue? |
18674 | But surely you would not have a labourer do more than his employer requires? |
18674 | But we must hurry on with our story, or some of our readers will be asking,"But where is Dr. Dog? |
18674 | But what will become of the real me? |
18674 | But, here we are, and that is enough, is n''t it, enough for any one? |
18674 | Ca n''t you recognise your old friend? |
18674 | Can it be that you do not know my rank? |
18674 | Ch''ang was staring at her with wide- open frightened eyes that seemed to be asking,"What can it all mean? |
18674 | Could he have heard correctly? |
18674 | Could his eyes be deceiving him? |
18674 | Could it be possible that they would soon be living in it? |
18674 | Could it be that the turtle would carry him beyond the forest? |
18674 | Could it really be that the old family property would be given back to his father? |
18674 | Could the priest have told the truth? |
18674 | Did his ears deceive him? |
18674 | Did they try to restore them to his people?" |
18674 | Did you not say that you came from the land of dreams? |
18674 | Do n''t you know it is the custom now to put prisoners on their honour? |
18674 | Do n''t you know this is not the proper place for you?" |
18674 | Do n''t you know what the Classics say about such rudeness?" |
18674 | Do n''t you wish it was yours?'' |
18674 | Do you know where she hides it?" |
18674 | Do you not know that when she cries the gods themselves are weeping?''" |
18674 | Do you remember now, my child?" |
18674 | Do you think it possible that he could change me in some manner into a fish and accept me as a subject?" |
18674 | Do you think it would be convenient if you had to flop yourself out on to the land every time you wanted a bite to eat? |
18674 | Do you think them suitable to protect you from cold and sickness? |
18674 | Do you wish to enter the doors of a convent where women say farewell to life and all its pleasures? |
18674 | For what strange reason, however, did the gods write this beggar''s name on the stone?" |
18674 | Had Wang discovered the absence of his employer? |
18674 | Had he been dreaming? |
18674 | Has old Black Heart been beating you?" |
18674 | Has your life been filled with sorrow?" |
18674 | Have you not been whipped and punished all your life? |
18674 | Have you nothing new with which to regale my guests on this holiday?" |
18674 | How can a tiger be brought to justice? |
18674 | How can they afford such eating?" |
18674 | How can you say so? |
18674 | How could he say it was my fault?" |
18674 | How then did you learn to look with love at those in tears?" |
18674 | How to get something to eat? |
18674 | Hurt a neighbour''s feelings just for a duck? |
18674 | I will bring it to you in a jiffy, but how shall we exist when our charm is gone? |
18674 | If they should come here, what must I do?" |
18674 | Is it strange that they did not have hearts full of pity for you when you looked like a beggar?" |
18674 | Is that the moon rising over yonder? |
18674 | Is there not one little deed of goodness that was not selfish? |
18674 | Is this an age when old men are good for nothing?" |
18674 | May n''t we keep our sins a little longer?" |
18674 | My darling daughter, where have you been all these years?" |
18674 | No matter if the dragon does think he can fly faster, I beat him, did n''t I? |
18674 | Of course, K''ang- p''u promised, for he was always obedient; and was not this little man who spoke so strangely, the spirit of his grandfather? |
18674 | Oh, how can he cross over?" |
18674 | See the point, eh? |
18674 | Shall I have to be a fox and look like you?" |
18674 | Should he sell his last outer garment for a few pennies and buy millet for her? |
18674 | Surely you would n''t wish them to burn your father''s tablet?" |
18674 | The greybeard bent over until his mouth was at Ying- lo''s ear:"Did you ever see me before?" |
18674 | Then, as the fever began to rise again, he sprang up with a determined cry,"What am I waiting for? |
18674 | There are talking birds and talking beasts for that matter; but talking fish, who ever heard of such a wonder? |
18674 | To cure my daughter?" |
18674 | True, he had been able to produce the magic peach which the mandarin had called for, but his son, where was his son? |
18674 | Was that a servant calling? |
18674 | Were all his hopes to be suddenly dashed by the failure of the metals to mix and harden properly? |
18674 | Were the gods, in answer to his prayer, sending fire to burn the vessel? |
18674 | Were your mistress''s ancestors followers of the sage?" |
18674 | What are you doing inside the temple in the dirt? |
18674 | What can you be talking about? |
18674 | What could have taken place while he was sleeping? |
18674 | What do you know about water? |
18674 | What do you say to going with me then? |
18674 | What do you think of that for honour, Sir Rat? |
18674 | What does he care if I die of a raging fever? |
18674 | What does he care if I pass away? |
18674 | What have I done to be thus denied?" |
18674 | What is the world coming to?" |
18674 | What is to prevent my getting my freedom this very night? |
18674 | What kind of food is your master eating now, that you should be so round and plump when I am thin and scrawny?" |
18674 | What must I do to save my family? |
18674 | What power is it that has saved you from his clutches? |
18674 | What reason have you for wanting to see me weighed down here all the rest of my life with a mountain on my back? |
18674 | What say you, will you accept my offer?" |
18674 | What wonderful discovery have you made-- that every rat has one tail?" |
18674 | What would you do if you really lived here always?" |
18674 | What would you do to keep yourself from starving? |
18674 | When heaven itself has commanded, what can even a princess do but listen to that power which rules the earth?" |
18674 | When others work, why do you lie down and sleep your time away? |
18674 | When would you find them away from home, now that they do n''t have to work any more? |
18674 | Where did you learn so much?" |
18674 | Where should you think I would want to go after my century in prison? |
18674 | Where was he going, and what should he do? |
18674 | Who knows but that they have sent this flock thinking I would have sense enough to grab one? |
18674 | Who now will look after my grave when I am gone?" |
18674 | Who will take care of me in my old age? |
18674 | Why be a coward? |
18674 | Why did you come to see me at all if you thought I did not know you were guilty?" |
18674 | Why do n''t you get up and shake your lazy legs? |
18674 | Why do you make a poor man like me run his legs off for nothing on a hot day?" |
18674 | Why do you raise such an uproar in front of my yamen? |
18674 | Why do you speak of it?" |
18674 | Why have the gods treated me in this cruel way?" |
18674 | Why is it that other people have all the luck? |
18674 | Why is it that to- day you try to get out of your promise? |
18674 | Why not a lion or an elephant?" |
18674 | Why not order her father to bring her to the palace that you may we d her and place her in your royal dwelling?" |
18674 | Why not tell him that old Sen stole his duck, and get him to give Sen a scolding? |
18674 | Why, are you not eighteen? |
18674 | Wo n''t they save you the trouble of wearing clothing?" |
18674 | Would he sound the alarm, and would the whole place soon be alive with men searching for the fever- stricken patient? |
18674 | Would his father come and find out what had happened? |
18674 | Would that not be quite contrary to the teachings of our fathers? |
18674 | Would those three minutes never pass? |
18674 | You are a pretty fellow to be complaining, are n''t you?" |
18674 | You are the same fellow that carried off the woodman last month, are n''t you? |
18674 | You remember all our big dinners that came from the pot? |
18674 | _ your_ father helped make the world?" |
18674 | and all over your body? |
18674 | but did n''t I do a great trick? |
18674 | do n''t you count your old grand- daddy? |
18674 | looking for you in the ashes? |
18674 | losing a duck? |
18674 | said the dog angrily,"what did I tell you? |
18674 | said the small man, laughing,"so you thought you''d bury your old grandfather in feathers, did you? |
18674 | shall you leave us?" |
18674 | she cried,"of what use is it to live? |
18674 | so it''s because I make you a good playmate, eh? |
18674 | they laughed;"do you know what you have done?" |
18674 | what ever shall we do?" |
18674 | what honour has a rat?" |
18674 | what''s that?" |
18674 | what''s the matter, man?" |
18674 | why do n''t you let me out? |
18674 | why had he not asked the friendly nephew a few simple questions? |
18674 | would you hesitate between love upon a throne and death? |
18674 | would you lay your wicked hands on one who made the tears of Kwan- yin flow? |
18674 | you think old Sen is a thief, do you, and that he has been stealing from me?" |
23096 | And you believe in God, do you? |
23096 | But_ when_? |
23096 | By whose authority? |
23096 | If God be for us who can be against us? |
23096 | Is Jesus divine? |
23096 | Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? |
23096 | Then one of the twelve called Judas Iscariot, went unto the chief priests, and said unto them, What will ye give me, and I will deliver him unto you? 23096 What can I do for you, dear?" |
23096 | What have they seen in thy house? |
23096 | Why must I have this trial or pain or trouble? |
23096 | ( Now that he ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? |
23096 | After all, it is not so much a question of the knowledge of the day, or the hour, or the month of one''s conversion as"Do we now know Christ?" |
23096 | And so for those of us whose lives have been such a struggle we cry,"Is there no deliverance?" |
23096 | And then the question came to him as from God,"What do you believe?" |
23096 | And they said, What is that to us? |
23096 | Are there not hundreds and thousands of other men waiting, as the chief justice waited, for some one to speak or write? |
23096 | As has been indicated, the text proves that we may choose life if we will, but I have more especially in mind the question,"Why should we do it?" |
23096 | At the day of Pentecost people were saying,"What do these things mean?" |
23096 | But how about the sins of the past? |
23096 | But on the other hand, what if we should simply be faithful? |
23096 | But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste? |
23096 | But"Is there no deliverance that is complete?" |
23096 | Could anything be more inspiring than to know that we have the approval of the Holy Ghost of the things we say or think? |
23096 | Did n''t you notice a fresh little grave near the one with the stone? |
23096 | Do I know when I was converted? |
23096 | Do you reject hell, because it seems to you to be inconceivable? |
23096 | Do you think for a moment that those who gaze at us would imagine that we had the least conviction that people away from Christ were lost? |
23096 | Does your life parallel God''s law or cross it? |
23096 | Finally they met, and the infidel with a sneer said,"So you believe the Bible, do you?" |
23096 | For the angel had said,"The Lord is with thee, Gideon,"and Gideon had said,"If the Lord is with us, then how can these things be?" |
23096 | For this day we hope and pray and cry aloud,"O Lord, how long, how long?" |
23096 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
23096 | God seemed to say to him,"Have you ever taken that stand where you would say,''I am committed to the right even if it ends in death''?" |
23096 | Has he not said,"Ye shall receive power"? |
23096 | Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil?" |
23096 | Have we failed to take both? |
23096 | Have you ever seen a perfect rainbow-- that is, a rainbow in a perfect circle? |
23096 | Have you ever stopped to think what is really associated with the full acceptance of the third Person of the Trinity? |
23096 | He granted Saul of Tarsus a vision of himself as he approached Damascus until he cried,"Who art thou?" |
23096 | He then lying on Jesus''breast saith unto him, Lord, who is it? |
23096 | How about your living? |
23096 | How about your testimony? |
23096 | How could we expect them to have the same experience in coming to Christ? |
23096 | How may I be converted? |
23096 | How may I know certainly? |
23096 | How may we know that he is striving? |
23096 | How may we know that the Bible is the word of God? |
23096 | How may we secure such a possession? |
23096 | How then ought we to live? |
23096 | How wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan? |
23096 | I The natural question that comes to every student of the life of Judas must be,"Why was he chosen?" |
23096 | I What is conversion? |
23096 | I What is the striving of the Spirit? |
23096 | I ask you the question, Do you believe in heaven as a place of rewards? |
23096 | I doubt not the question has often come to us,"How can God be just and be the justifier of them that believe?" |
23096 | I found myself becoming unscrupulous in my business life and now I am wrecked, certainly for time-- oh,"said he,"can it be for eternity? |
23096 | I looked the other day into the face of a man who said to me,"Do you know me?" |
23096 | II Have you really taken all that God meant you should have? |
23096 | II How may I be converted? |
23096 | II Why are we not having revelations to- day as we know they have been given at other times? |
23096 | III Did you ever realize that you were standing in the way of the conversion of your friends? |
23096 | III Do you know when you were converted? |
23096 | III Oh, is there no hope? |
23096 | III What would be the consequences of the Spirit ceasing his work? |
23096 | IV How may we know that we have passed from death into life? |
23096 | IV Why should he cease his striving? |
23096 | If these things are true of us-- and they are, according to the Word of God-- then what prospect is there for us but that of eternal punishment? |
23096 | If this is true then what is consecration? |
23096 | In the twenty- first chapter of John the fifth and sixth verses we read,"Then Jesus saith unto them, Children, have ye any meat? |
23096 | Is it not like this with our sins? |
23096 | Is not this written in the book of Jasher? |
23096 | Is such a deliverance as this from individual sins possible? |
23096 | It is indeed a black picture, and with whitened faces and rapidly beating hearts we ask, Is there any hope? |
23096 | It is not giving God something, for how could we give him that which is already his own? |
23096 | It is true that we shall go on from light into darkness, from morning into the night, but is there no final deliverance? |
23096 | It may be that some will say,"Why insist upon conversion when my life is a moral one?" |
23096 | Just what is the burden of this prayer of Paul''s? |
23096 | Man tells the depraved man to change his surroundings; but how about the heart that is unclean? |
23096 | Man tells the sinner to do his best; but how about the will which has been weakened by sinful practices, and which seems unable to act? |
23096 | Napoleon once was asked,"What is the greatest need of the French nation?" |
23096 | Oh, if it be true that the_ way_ of the transgressor is hard, in the name of God what shall we say of the end? |
23096 | Oh, may I say that it is a great sin to be untrue? |
23096 | One man called my attention to it and said,"It is amusing, is n''t it?" |
23096 | Second: Just what, therefore, is this work of sanctification? |
23096 | THE MORNING BREAKETH TEXT:"_ Watchman, what of the night? |
23096 | That is, do you know the exact time? |
23096 | The biography of Helen Kellar[ Transcriber''s note: Keller? |
23096 | The great temperance leader went to speak to him and said"Edward, why do n''t you pray?" |
23096 | The old minister looked at him and said simply,"Well, is that anything to be proud of?" |
23096 | The rest of the verse is a question,"God that justifieth?" |
23096 | The thirty- fourth verse reads,"Who is he that condemneth?" |
23096 | The words"unto them"are in italics, so not in the original, and we ask"added to what?" |
23096 | Then said I, O my Lord, what are these? |
23096 | Then the question for the moralist is this,"Have you ever offended in one point?" |
23096 | Then why not now? |
23096 | They spent the night in the kirk in prayer, when the minister said,"Why not ask God to restore his body?" |
23096 | This appealed to the dying man and he said,"Where shall I read?" |
23096 | V But what must I do to take advantage of all this gracious offer of God? |
23096 | V What is meant by the Spirit not striving? |
23096 | V"_ And the host ran, and cried and fled._"What hosts are against us to- day? |
23096 | Was there ever such a catalogue of mercies? |
23096 | Watts[ Transcriber''s note: Watt?] |
23096 | What hope is there for the moralist when Jesus said,"Except ye be converted"? |
23096 | What if God''s will should be done for but one year in all things in any of our cities; would the result be anything else than perfect joy? |
23096 | What if I had said,"I will decorate the well house that I may change the water?" |
23096 | What if he had hidden behind some great rock and simply waited? |
23096 | What if he had tarried behind some one of those great trees near the city along the way which he should walk, or, possibly on the Emmaus way? |
23096 | What if instead of going out to the scene of his disgraceful death he had waited until after Jesus had risen? |
23096 | What is it, therefore? |
23096 | What should he do with it? |
23096 | When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman? |
23096 | When the minister said to the old sea captain,"Why do you do this? |
23096 | Who ever heard of a boy growing in this way? |
23096 | Who ever heard of a doctor who had a prescription for growth? |
23096 | Who knows but one could speak and the other could sing? |
23096 | Who was that Robert? |
23096 | Who, then, would be without it? |
23096 | Why have we not this power of his? |
23096 | Why is not some one in our own land especially working out some of the great plans and purposes of God? |
23096 | Why should God continue when we only spurn his offers of mercy? |
23096 | Why take such a risk?" |
23096 | Will you not come while he calls to- day? |
23096 | With such a work as this, who shall lay anything to the charge of God''s elect? |
23096 | Would God that justifieth do it, or Christ that died consent to it? |
23096 | and he said,"Yes, sir; do you?" |
23096 | and in thy name done many wonderful works?" |
23096 | and in thy name have cast out Devils? |
23096 | and where be all his miracles which our fathers told us of, saying, Did not the Lord bring us up from Egypt? |
23096 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
26893 | And he said unto them, Why have you saved the women and the children? 26893 How do you know?" |
26893 | What next is going to happen? |
26893 | When then,said Socrates, in the_ Phædo_,"does the soul light on the truth? |
26893 | : the intelligent Will of Man, determined to govern his own house, and responsible for results? |
26893 | Again I ask,"Is it not worth while?" |
26893 | And is this a"Study in Psychology"? |
26893 | And what has this to do with America? |
26893 | And what is all this but a lesson in practical psychology, the growth of the soul? |
26893 | And who_ constrains_ us but_ ourselves_? |
26893 | Can God and Nature be so prodigal, noting even the sparrows fall, and yet disregard the children of men? |
26893 | Can it be that there is no great truth back of all these struggles and aspirations of the human soul? |
26893 | Can the reader imagine such a degree of_ Self- Control_? |
26893 | Can you wonder that the real science of the Human Soul found little recognition, or that it was denied as possible to man? |
26893 | Can you wonder why so few"understand Browning"? |
26893 | Could many an English judge say the same?" |
26893 | Did Jesus of Nazareth differ in kind or in_ Degree_, from the rest of Humanity? |
26893 | Did it pay? |
26893 | Do not the principles that adhere in atom, molecule and mass, still hold in worlds and solar systems? |
26893 | Does it elevate or degrade him? |
26893 | Does it pay? |
26893 | How do you know anything, except as you see, or experience it? |
26893 | If man were built upon some other scheme or plan than the rest of nature, how could he apprehend or adjust himself to Nature? |
26893 | If this be true, and it is readily demonstrable, what subject is of equal importance; and what facts and considerations are so transcendent as these? |
26893 | Is Tantalus, after all, the creator and Father of Man? |
26893 | Is it not plain, therefore, how impossible it is to separate the Individual and the Social status? |
26893 | Is it not purely a question of_ fact_, and of scientific demonstration, to be determined by experiment? |
26893 | Is it not through personal experience? |
26893 | Is it not_ worth while_? |
26893 | Is it worth while? |
26893 | Is it_ worth while_? |
26893 | Is not this precisely what is meant by"The Reign of Law"? |
26893 | Is there not something after all in the_ Measure of Values_, and in the inexorable_ Law of Use_? |
26893 | It is awareness of an idea, percept, concept, or act awakened, called to attention by another, with the question, how does it strike you? |
26893 | It may be well to reflect a moment, and ask ourselves, how it is that we really know anything? |
26893 | May not the Individual Intelligence on the physical plane communicate with the denizens of the spiritual plane_ at his own volition, independently_? |
26893 | One further consideration remains to be noted at this time, as the question is sure to arise:"How about woman in the Great Work?" |
26893 | Put the question,"does it pay?" |
26893 | Shall we ever meet them again? |
26893 | Start almost any subject, propose almost any scheme, adventure, or investment, and the question is asked,"Will it pay?" |
26893 | That there is no possible realization back of these soulful endeavors? |
26893 | The Measure of Values, and the Law of Use_ hold everywhere_, in every department of human life; and the question,"Does it pay?" |
26893 | The aim and the results along these lines are often good and helpful; then why clothe them in the garb of absurdities? |
26893 | The foregoing quotations have been made from a little volume,"India: What Can It Teach Us?" |
26893 | The question is continually asked,"Why do the Masters of Wisdom Conceal their Knowledge?" |
26893 | The question is no longer,"What think ye of Jesus?" |
26893 | What are the_ facts_? |
26893 | What do they reveal and signify? |
26893 | What is this but the_ methods_ of Natural Science applied to Psychical Science upon the basis of the Unity of Natural Phenomena and Universal Law? |
26893 | What will become of us when we die? |
26893 | What will the new religion-- the new revelation-- be? |
26893 | What would I have my readers do? |
26893 | When asked by the average intelligence,"What does it all mean?" |
26893 | Where are they? |
26893 | Who can tell? |
26893 | Will it_ pay_? |
26893 | Will the day darken, the Light be quenched? |
26893 | With Psychology? |
26893 | With the Measure of Values? |
26893 | Would not Jesus become, indeed and in truth, a_ Living Example_, in place of a"Blood Offering"? |
26893 | _ And why not?_ If man can conceive it, why may he not_ realize_ it? |
26893 | _ And why not?_ If man can conceive it, why may he not_ realize_ it? |
26893 | _ Does it pay?_ It all depends on_ use_. |
26893 | _ Of what use to man_, measured by these scientific standards of value, are Popery and Priestcraft? |
26893 | and whence will it come? |
26893 | but"What_ know_ ye of your own soul?" |
26893 | inspired only by love of disappointment, defeat, and despair, in his children? |
26893 | or,"Does the real man ever die at all?" |
26893 | what do you think of it? |
26893 | what, if anything, do you wish, or propose to do about it? |
27080 | And what happened then? |
27080 | Pilate asked,''What is truth?'' 27080 What is your wand?" |
27080 | What the devil are you talking about? |
27080 | Why should it not make lamp- posts fairer than Greek lamps, and an omnibus- ride like a painted ship? 27080 (_ O Mother, Mary Mother,__ Why laughs she thus between Hell and Heaven?_) The trouble about the latter variety is its extreme simplicity. 27080 A suggestive French farce may be a dirty joke, but it is at least a joke; but a play which raises the question Is marriage a failure? 27080 Ah, my brethren, what indeed? |
27080 | And I suppose, to the medical mind, seeing fairies means much the same as seeing snakes? |
27080 | And then the sudden obvious truth burst upon Chesterton, What if Christianity was the happy mean? |
27080 | And what a mass of harm may have come of not believing in Apollo? |
27080 | And what harm came of believing in Apollo? |
27080 | And what have I stolen? |
27080 | And what is that? |
27080 | And what is the cruellest crime? |
27080 | Art for the people, eh? |
27080 | But what the devil are you for, if you do n''t believe in a miracle? |
27080 | But who is Sunday? |
27080 | Chesterton''s answer to this is:"I used to think so, but what about Lord Murray, Mr. Lloyd George, and Mr. Godfrey Isaacs?" |
27080 | Could I not be grateful to Santa Claus when he put in my stockings the gift of two miraculous legs?" |
27080 | Do n''t women help to pay the hangman''s wages with every ounce of tea or of sweets they buy? |
27080 | Do n''t you know what it is to be in all one family circle, with aunts and uncles, when a schoolboy comes home for the holidays? |
27080 | Do they, Smith? |
27080 | Do they, fasting, tramping, bleeding, Wait the news from this our city? |
27080 | Does it never strike you that doubt can be a madness, as well be faith? |
27080 | Have I committed a worse crime than thieving? |
27080 | He immediately raises the question, Can we dissociate beer from skittles? |
27080 | He observed,"Well, little one, are n''t you going to show me any gratitude?" |
27080 | He would have liked( as who would not?) |
27080 | How is he able to deal with ideas and inventions stated in a more definite and particular manner? |
27080 | I thought you yourself considered the family superstition bad for the health? |
27080 | I understand that you appear here to give evidence on behalf of the average man? |
27080 | If the voice of Cecil falters, If McKenna''s point has pith, Do they tremble for their altars? |
27080 | Is it not desirable that Hampstead and Highgate should each have an opportunity of finding out independently what they like? |
27080 | Is there no such thing as irreligious mania? |
27080 | Is there no such thing in the house at this moment? |
27080 | Juries may differ in their judgments; but why not? |
27080 | May they not compete in taste one against the other? |
27080 | Now what has become of Chesterton''s decencies? |
27080 | Offering the Garter is no go-- BUT WILL YOU LEND ME TWO- AND- SIX? |
27080 | Really, Smith? |
27080 | Smith''s case is,"How can the Church have a right to make men fast if she does not allow them to feast? |
27080 | Such as"But will you lend me two- and- six?" |
27080 | Suppose that Chesterton is n''t a Socialist, is he more on the side of the Socialists or on that of the Free Trade Liberal capitalists and landlords? |
27080 | Surely the Duke''s house would contain a spare room? |
27080 | That asking questions may be a disease, as well as proclaiming doctrines? |
27080 | The whole scene has been, so far, a discussion on Do Miracles Happen? |
27080 | Then you think no one should question at all? |
27080 | Upon whom has the curse fallen? |
27080 | We must answer the questions; to what extent does he represent mere unqualified reaction? |
27080 | Well now, are these indecencies sincere or simulated? |
27080 | Were n''t there as many who believed passionately in Apollo? |
27080 | What are his qualifications as a craftsman? |
27080 | What does your coat mean if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as the supernatural? |
27080 | What does your cursed collar mean if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as a spirit? |
27080 | What if he can not tell the time himself? |
27080 | What, after all, has he done? |
27080 | Where did the Conjuror go, at the end of the Third Act, in the small hours of the morning? |
27080 | Where the Breton boat- fleet tosses, Are they, Smith? |
27080 | Why ca n''t you leave the universe alone and let it mean what it likes? |
27080 | Why should any man suppose that he pleases God by patiently hearing an Ignorant fellow render Religion ridiculous?" |
27080 | Why should n''t the thunder be Jupiter? |
27080 | Why should the Conjuror rehearse his patter out in the wet? |
27080 | Will anybody revise his political views on this basis? |
27080 | Yes, but, Mr. Chesterton, are n''t they just as responsible for it in any case? |
27080 | ["Are you interested in modern progress?" |
27080 | [_ Exasperated._] Why the devil do you dress up like that if you do n''t believe in it? |
27080 | [_ Looking at him._] Do you believe in your own religion? |
27080 | [_ With violence._] Or perhaps you do n''t believe in devils? |
27080 | _ Do Miracles Happen?_ Report of a Discussion at the Little Theatre in January, 1914. |
27080 | _ Was_ Joan of Arc a Vegetarian? |
27080 | _ What''s Wrong with the World?_ Cassell. |
28690 | And what remark shall I make of Japanese curios, the trade in which has assumed such very large dimensions? |
28690 | Are there any signs or portents of his advent? |
28690 | Have they no claim, some of my readers may ask, to be included in a chapter on art? |
28690 | If such an upheaval is possible for one nation, who shall put any bounds to the potentialities of the world? |
28690 | It is well to get down from eloquence of this kind to concrete facts, to come back to the point whence we started, viz., What will Japan become? |
28690 | Now what do these several trivial, indeed contemptible, anecdotes prove? |
28690 | The great poet or painter, the great artist in words, on canvas, in marble, or in wood-- where is he? |
28690 | Underneath the portrait the inquiry was printed,"What will he become?" |
28690 | What conclusion, may I ask, can the logical, reasoning Japanese come to in these matters? |
28690 | What is her present condition? |
28690 | What is to be the outcome of it all? |
28690 | Where can the aspiring artist, under modern conditions of life, find such a haven of rest? |
22884 | Ah, do you mean Sir Tatsu? 22884 And then,--if I become what you say,--how soon?" |
22884 | And where here? |
22884 | And where, if it is not rude to ask, has my friend Ando sojourned during the long absence? |
22884 | Ando Uchida, is it indeed you? 22884 Are not these-- all of them-- your work, the creations of your fancy?" |
22884 | But we will get the ihai, will we not, Master? 22884 Come,"said Tatsu, rudely,"did I not forbid you to speak of death? |
22884 | Could you lie to me of such a thing as this? |
22884 | Did you bring it only to torture me? 22884 Do I look like my mother, Mata San?" |
22884 | Do you call my son a fool? |
22884 | Do you give yourself so tamely to a dangerous wild creature from the hills? |
22884 | Do you inquire who I am? |
22884 | Do you mean that I should paint things as paltry as your own? |
22884 | Does she require mercy? 22884 Eh, young mistress, you know what I mean? |
22884 | Father,asked Tatsu, rising slowly to his feet, his arms still close about the other,"can it be joy that is to find me, even in this life?" |
22884 | Have I the arms of a Hundred- Handed Kwannon that I can do all the household work at once? 22884 Have my young mistress and her august spouse already taken leave?" |
22884 | He must be clothed,--but how? 22884 How came she under bondage to you? |
22884 | How old was my mother when she came here, Mata? |
22884 | Is it indeed so long? |
22884 | Is it of the scavenger''s daughter that you speak? |
22884 | Is it possible that you do not yet know the meaning of the name of Kano? |
22884 | Is it that you are outraged, my Umè- ko, at your father''s strange demand upon you? 22884 Is it-- is it-- Tatsu?" |
22884 | Is this not the home of an artist, Kano by name? |
22884 | Is this the home of Kano Indara? |
22884 | Me? 22884 Mortified?" |
22884 | Not painted? 22884 Now of whom can my master be speaking?" |
22884 | Preserve it? 22884 Shall I believe? |
22884 | Shall I live at all? 22884 Since we are indeed hopelessly of the present,"ventured he,"may it not be as well to let the foreigners teach us their methods of success?" |
22884 | Success? |
22884 | Tatsu, my son, may I depend upon you? 22884 Tell me, beloved, if death indeed should come--?" |
22884 | That beautiful maiden whom I saw will be given to such a one? |
22884 | To- night? 22884 Was not her own deed that of self- destruction?" |
22884 | Was that not Kano Umè- ko, your daughter? |
22884 | Well,said her father with impatience,"do you agree? |
22884 | What am I to do with this wild falcon for a month? |
22884 | What comfort would painting be? 22884 What do they succeed in except the grossest material gains? |
22884 | What do you mean? 22884 What was it? |
22884 | When is the Dragon Maiden to appear? |
22884 | When will you give her to me, Kano Indara? 22884 Where is the dragon here?" |
22884 | Who are you, and why have you sent for me? |
22884 | Why did you summon me when you had nothing to reveal? 22884 Why do you repeat it?" |
22884 | Why have you not influenced him as you should? 22884 Why should I go to the city?" |
22884 | Why should it be unnecessary between us? |
22884 | Why,he thought,"in Shaka''s name, could n''t she have been a son?" |
22884 | Why? 22884 Wild thing? |
22884 | Would he augustly condescend? |
22884 | Yes, but where,--where? 22884 Yes, she appears,--many of us appear,--but can she be happy? |
22884 | You say she is not to come before me in this house to- day? |
22884 | You say that you paint nothing else? |
22884 | After a long while the old man whispered,"What name shall I use in my prayer?" |
22884 | After all, what did it matter? |
22884 | After some hesitation and a spasmodic clearing of the throat, the old man asked,"Will you accompany me, young sir, upon a short walk to the city?" |
22884 | Ah, Mata,--you? |
22884 | Am I to have no moments to myself?" |
22884 | And were her master and Miss Umè weltering in gore? |
22884 | And what had there been in Kano''s look and voice to rouse those sleeping demons of despair? |
22884 | And what is the earliest possible date?" |
22884 | And why did she go without telling me? |
22884 | And would a ghostly hand use brushes and pigments of ground- earth? |
22884 | And would a spirit- robe brush surfaces so vehemently? |
22884 | Besides, why should he? |
22884 | Buddha the Merciful, could it be true? |
22884 | But, after all, could she have really done it? |
22884 | Could Death be the secret of this pale tranquillity? |
22884 | Could I have seen aright? |
22884 | Could any new sorrow await him at the temple? |
22884 | Could he endure another revelation of joy? |
22884 | Could it be true, as the old priest said, that her soul continually hovered near, waiting only for him to give it recognition? |
22884 | Could robbers have come in the night? |
22884 | Could something be wrong? |
22884 | Defaced? |
22884 | Did he not paint in August? |
22884 | Did you not see that her face was as a bean- curd in its whiteness? |
22884 | Do n''t you remember me, Master Tatsu? |
22884 | Do you mean a man?" |
22884 | Do you not always listen at the shoji? |
22884 | Do you not see on what the maiden stands?" |
22884 | Does not even your old mumbling abbot on the hill tell you so much? |
22884 | Does that mean a painter of dragons, like me?" |
22884 | Even among the men of the day, corrupted and distracted as they are by foreign innovations, could real strength be found? |
22884 | Had he not seen just such a one in Kiu Shiu,--had he not scaled it, crying aloud upon its summit to the gods to yield him there his bride? |
22884 | Have I not sought her through a thousand lives? |
22884 | Have I not sought you all these years, tracing your face on rocks and sand- beds of my hills, hanging my prayers to every blossoming tree? |
22884 | Have you, by any chance, a powder, or an amulet, or a magic invocation you could give me?" |
22884 | How shall I believe that in this desert of houses a true Dragon Maiden can be found?" |
22884 | Is a month decent in convention''s eyes?" |
22884 | Is he dangerous? |
22884 | Is it not a custom here?" |
22884 | Is it that your hearing is honorably non- existent?" |
22884 | Is it true that for this-- to make me paint-- you consented to become my wife?" |
22884 | Is that not what you call enlightenment? |
22884 | Is the whole world on its head? |
22884 | Might the boy not lose himself by the way? |
22884 | My hot bath, is it ready? |
22884 | My master is a true believer, poor man, and what has his belief brought him? |
22884 | Of what was her nursling thinking? |
22884 | Old man, can not even you feel the horror of it? |
22884 | Others had thus drawn visions from the under- world, and why not he? |
22884 | Replacing the smoking vessel and maintaining a face of decorous interest, she asked, hypocritically,"And was my poor Miss Umè mortified?" |
22884 | Shall I fill it?" |
22884 | Shall anything have power to separate us now?" |
22884 | Shall it be to- night?" |
22884 | Shall the soul of Umè- ko seek and find no shelter? |
22884 | Shall we not go to the autumn flowering garden of the Hundred Corners?" |
22884 | Shall we strive to become as dead things?" |
22884 | Shall you deign to honor us with a sight of your illustrious work?" |
22884 | Slipping his hands within his gray sleeves, the acolyte began fingering his short rosary as he asked,"Is the-- wild man now under this very roof?" |
22884 | Something might befall this untrained citizen at any hour,--then where would the future of the Kano name be found? |
22884 | The one hope of existence during this interval is to get him engrossed in painting; but where is he to paint? |
22884 | Then, a little later, when she had become more calm,"Are your tears for me or for Umè- ko?" |
22884 | This day, as soon as the light begins to fail?" |
22884 | Together, when you are strong, we will climb the long road to the temple?" |
22884 | Was Umè- ko to cheat them all, at the last, by self- destruction? |
22884 | Was he too waking, watching, feeling himself intruder upon a soundless ritual? |
22884 | Was her master demented through sorrow that he so challenged public censure, and was willing to cast dishonor upon the name of his only child? |
22884 | Was this the way in which she was to manifest herself? |
22884 | What are cold and heat to a true artist? |
22884 | What are you saying?" |
22884 | What can you mean?" |
22884 | What could she do? |
22884 | What could you do with a son like me? |
22884 | What else could he be doing?" |
22884 | What else did he live for, if not to paint? |
22884 | What has all this to do with the Dragon Maiden?" |
22884 | What has arisen that you think I may wish to oppose?" |
22884 | What has come to us both? |
22884 | What must the dead girl''s mother have been thinking all this time? |
22884 | What need had Art of a constitution? |
22884 | What then have you done with all the golden hours of these interminable days?" |
22884 | What was the tumult of that ignorant young breast? |
22884 | When I die she will marry, and then how many pictures will she paint? |
22884 | Where did he take her? |
22884 | Where did my Umè go? |
22884 | Where was she now? |
22884 | Who is there?" |
22884 | Why did you let me make that foolish promise of giving them an entire week? |
22884 | Why did you never answer me upon the mountains?" |
22884 | Why did you send her away?" |
22884 | Why had her heart tormented her to go into the night? |
22884 | Why had she not thought of this possibility? |
22884 | Why should Umè- ko have left him again, and at such an hour? |
22884 | Why should she have pinned to her pillow a slip of written paper? |
22884 | Will he bite her?" |
22884 | Will two weeks be too soon?" |
22884 | Will you deign to enter now and partake of food?" |
22884 | Yes, why could she not have been a son? |
22884 | You are thinking of it?" |
22884 | all this mummery and service and what has come of it?" |
22884 | the thin voice came,"are you certain that this is but the sixth day of my son''s wedding?" |
27404 | A cowboy''s costume? |
27404 | Are they to be trusted? |
27404 | Are you stifling with blood? |
27404 | Back to the Big Town? |
27404 | Born on Van Rensselaer street, you say? 27404 Brigands, you mean?" |
27404 | But how did you work it? |
27404 | But what do you want with a race course? |
27404 | But why not telegraph the King? |
27404 | But why? |
27404 | But why? |
27404 | Ca n''t you stir''em up a little? |
27404 | How about these men? |
27404 | How does it happen that you speak such good English? |
27404 | How much will the tips amount to? |
27404 | How soon,I countered,"can you have a letter of credit ready?" |
27404 | In Siam? 27404 Mem,"he said, in a course of conversation,"how could you write such unkind things about my father? |
27404 | Menjepee, eh? |
27404 | Pig? |
27404 | So you''re a good Christian now, I suppose? |
27404 | Surely you do n''t mean to tell me that there is no way in which I can get across the island today? |
27404 | Tell me,I queried, as I was about to enter the car,"are these girls I''ve heard so much about really pretty?" |
27404 | Then you did n''t get any pictures? |
27404 | To God''s Country? |
27404 | Were the pictures a success? |
27404 | Were they punished? |
27404 | What did n''t happen? |
27404 | What happened to the husband and to the man who suggested the plan? |
27404 | What happened? |
27404 | Where are they? |
27404 | Where has everyone gone? |
27404 | Where? 27404 Who are they?" |
27404 | Why not? |
27404 | Wo n''t you have a drink? |
27404 | ''Leave? |
27404 | ''What did you think that I attended this party for?'' |
27404 | A picture of a widow being burned on her husband''s funeral pyre would be a bit out of the ordinary, would n''t it? |
27404 | Grass? |
27404 | How far is it to Den Pasar?" |
27404 | How soon can you be ready to start?" |
27404 | How would you like to encounter that sort of thing when you were having a pleasant swim, I ask you? |
27404 | In a land where the thermometer frequently registers 100 and above, you could n''t keep a corpse around the house for several months, could you? |
27404 | So why ca n''t you suggest some to take pictures of?" |
27404 | That is the worst of this gadding up and down the earth-- it is always--"How d''ye do?" |
27404 | That''s what I went there for, was n''t it?" |
27404 | That''s what you particularly want here, is n''t it-- foreign capital?" |
27404 | To a public school?" |
27404 | We want pictures that will make''em sit up in their seats and exclaim,''Well, what d''ye know about that?'' |
27404 | We want the people who see the pictures to say:''Where the dickens_ is_ that place? |
27404 | What else was there for them to do? |
27404 | What for?'' |
27404 | What say, old chap?'' |
27404 | Who in the name of Heaven wants it?" |
27404 | Why not curl this fellow up on her bed? |
27404 | bawled one of them,"Have you seen the white elephant?" |
29778 | But what can be expected in a land where the ant- heaps are ten feet high and twenty- four feet in circumference? |
29778 | But where was Goa? |
29778 | What country in the world is more independent than we are? |
29778 | When, in reply to her touching inquiry,''Is it quite hopeless?'' |
29286 | ''But why was it postponed?'' |
29286 | ''Oh, it is sad, sad,''May Nathan wrote in her diary,''such valuable lives; and who will be the next? |
29286 | ''What do you want?'' |
29286 | ''What is it, darling?'' |
29286 | ''Where is Ladoinski?'' |
29286 | ''Where is he?'' |
29286 | Can anyone imagine a more crushing sorrow for a woman than this which Mrs. Ogren had to bear? |
29286 | Could they have captured any of the defenders? |
29286 | Is that true?'' |
29286 | Many will say,''Why did she go? |
29286 | On her death- bed she looked at those standing around her and asked anxiously''Where is Grizel?'' |
29286 | Shall all the nations lie prostrate at his feet, and Poland alone be permitted to stand by his side as an equal? |
29286 | Shall we men stay, and you women go, as there is not room enough for us all on the vessel? |
29286 | The British would have to be warned of the attack, but who could he get to pass the American pickets and carry a message through twenty miles of bush? |
29286 | WAS I RIGHT? |
29286 | Were they Ghurkhas or Manipuris? |
29286 | or shall we all stay?'' |
29286 | or shall we try all of us to go? |
29024 | But do n''t you see that you have burned up that whole mountain''s side, destroyed thousands of trees, and absolutely ruined this end of the valley? |
29024 | But,I said,"where did the fourth sheep come from? |
29024 | Did n''t you know that the ram which walked by us went over to the others? |
29024 | In the name of the five gods why did you do it? |
29024 | Of course,we answered,"but how can you get them?" |
29024 | What about that ravine? |
29024 | As we walked back to camp in the late afternoon, we often saw a kangaroo rat(_ Alactaga mongolica_?) |
29024 | But what could be more desertlike than our north China landscape when frost has stripped away the green clothing of its hills and fields? |
29024 | But what has all this to do with the wild sheep? |
29024 | Ca n''t you see him?" |
29024 | Can you wonder that I loved him? |
29024 | Did n''t all white men speak the same language? |
29024 | He looked back at me, as much as to say,"Do n''t you see those antelope?" |
29024 | How on earth did you miss capsizing when you went over that bank?" |
29024 | If every tree on the mountain was destroyed in the process, what difference did it make? |
29024 | In that event what would be the attitude of the Mongolian government? |
29024 | Meanwhile, why worry? |
29024 | Moreover, he appointed the Living Buddha''s good friend(?) |
29024 | Of course he never intended to live in it, but other kings had useless palaces and why should n''t he? |
29024 | Ought I to have let that ram go? |
29024 | Prisons, description of Pucrasia Rat, kangaroo(_ Alactaga mongolica_?) |
29024 | They agreed that it_ looked_ all right, but the question was, how did it_ feel_? |
29024 | They called to us,"Would you like some fish?" |
29024 | What is it? |
29024 | Who knows what the future has in store for her? |
29024 | Why, then, should the railroad be long delayed? |
29024 | Would it intern the belligerents, or allow them to use the Urga district as a base of operations? |
29759 | As Byron says:"Temples, baths, or halls? |
29759 | N, Temple(?). |
29759 | Temple of Poseidon, at Pæstum, in South of Italy(? |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Temple of(?) |
29759 | Zeus, at Selinus, in Sicily(? |
29759 | [ 15]? |
22782 | How do I know? |
22782 | Must die? |
22782 | Oh, Channa,said I to the charioteer:"Why does this happen? |
22782 | A self? |
22782 | ANATHA PINDIKA stands below with clasped hands.__ KALA UDAYIN sinks to his knees with clasped hands.__ B._ My friend, what brings you here? |
22782 | And can you not Search for the truth here in this pleasant garden? |
22782 | And he is my son Siddhattha? |
22782 | And if he is the Buddha, is it right to wage a war against his people?--What shall I do? |
22782 | And shall I listen to its tender voice? |
22782 | At a distance a flourish of trumpets.__ D._ What military signals do I hear? |
22782 | But tell me How is to- day Kala Udayin''s father? |
22782 | Did the Buddha ever beg you to support his brotherhood? |
22782 | Dost thou forget the promise made me on our wedding day? |
22782 | Has the Buddha received these men? |
22782 | Have you seen my son? |
22782 | He stands pondering for a moment.__ B._ Who will instruct me where my duty lies? |
22782 | How deserves this man The wretchedness of his great agonies?" |
22782 | How did you die? |
22782 | I ask you, will you be such friends to me? |
22782 | I clasp my hands to him as to a god; and so do you mother, do you not? |
22782 | Is father a king? |
22782 | Is old age truly telling on him? |
22782 | Is that my duty? |
22782 | Is this, in sooth, my duty? |
22782 | KALA stops them.__ K._ What do you carry? |
22782 | Must I be gone? |
22782 | O Kala, advise me, what can I do? |
22782 | Say, is that my duty? |
22782 | Shall women rule, Or art thou master still in thine own home? |
22782 | Thou sayest I do wrong? |
22782 | VISAKHA knocks at the gate._ Who is on guard? |
22782 | What are wealth and power? |
22782 | What crown and scepter? |
22782 | What does Siddhattha say? |
22782 | What is a kingdom? |
22782 | What is thy doctrine, venerable monk? |
22782 | What profit can there be in gossip such as you two carry on? |
22782 | What shall I do? |
22782 | Where are you? |
22782 | Where is your mother? |
22782 | Who art thou? |
22782 | Who is this? |
22782 | Whose is it then, yours or mine? |
22782 | Why are you so excited? |
22782 | Why borrow trouble before it comes? |
22782 | Why did you leave me? |
22782 | Why didst thou go begging Here in my capital? |
22782 | Why dost thou shame thy father in his own home? |
22782 | Will you, my good Lord? |
22782 | With bowl in hand, a homeless mendicant? |
22782 | Would you deign to accept his invitation? |
22782 | Would you like me to play with a viper? |
22782 | [_ The maid takes his bundle and carries it into the house._] What news do you bring of Prince Siddhattha? |
22782 | _ A._ Indeed he is and may I be permitted to inform him of the danger that threatens his father''s house? |
22782 | _ A._ What do you mean? |
22782 | _ A._ Why? |
22782 | _ Ap._ Did he ever offer you the support of his vows, or did he ever praise the efficacy of his holiness? |
22782 | _ Argues with himself._ May I not listen to a traitor''s words, Nor hear him,--profit by his information? |
22782 | _ B._ And how is Rahula? |
22782 | _ B._ And shall the world wait for another Buddha? |
22782 | _ B._ And tell me how the princess fares? |
22782 | _ B._ But who will laugh at it, my friend? |
22782 | _ B._ Could we be truly happy while the world Is filled with misery? |
22782 | _ B._ Dost thou not know this boon is but a burden? |
22782 | _ B._ How can that be, my good Kala Udayin? |
22782 | _ B._ Tell me, my friend, how is my father? |
22782 | _ B._ Thou speakst of Bimbisara, King of Magadha? |
22782 | _ B._ What sayest thou? |
22782 | _ B._ Who tells him? |
22782 | _ B._ Why art thou sad, my good Yasodhara? |
22782 | _ B._ Wouldest thou not rejoice if I fulfilled My mission; if I reached the highest goal? |
22782 | _ B._ Wouldst thou by night sleep under forest trees? |
22782 | _ B._ Wouldst thou go begging food from house to house? |
22782 | _ B._ Wouldst thou go with me? |
22782 | _ B._[_ Addressing the vision in the air._] Mara, thou here? |
22782 | _ Bb._ Are you not a disciple of Gotama, who is called the Buddha? |
22782 | _ Bb._ What brings you to my presence? |
22782 | _ Bb._[_ With an inquiring look_] Why? |
22782 | _ Bb.__ Nodding kindly to VISAKHA, then turning to NAGADEVA._ Is our kingdom in readiness? |
22782 | _ Dd._ Why do you waste your time, Siddhattha, with this frivolous lad? |
22782 | _ Exit.__ KALA UDAYIN enters and bows to ANATHA PINDIKA.__ A._ You want to see the Blessed One? |
22782 | _ G._ First, you are not everybody, and secondly, would it not be a blessing if the whole world would try to be sanctified? |
22782 | _ G._ Well? |
22782 | _ G._ What do you want? |
22782 | _ GS._ Are you the steward of the goddess''property? |
22782 | _ GS._ What crowd is gathered there with flags and flowers? |
22782 | _ GS._ What does that signal mean? |
22782 | _ GS._ Who art thou, wondrous monk? |
22782 | _ He hesitates.__ S._ Well, Devala? |
22782 | _ K._ And why should it not, sweet Prince? |
22782 | _ K._ Could you help him, princess? |
22782 | _ K._ How can you doubt, my Prince? |
22782 | _ K._ Then wilt thou be a Buddha? |
22782 | _ K._ Well then? |
22782 | _ K._ Why then, good Lord, Why wilt thou not its merry lesson learn? |
22782 | _ Lost in contemplation._ Is Sakyamuni the Buddha?--Is he truly the Buddha? |
22782 | _ M._ Wilt thou not listen to my good advice? |
22782 | _ M._ Wilt thou not stay, my noble Prince Siddhattha? |
22782 | _ P._ Who told you any news? |
22782 | _ Pr._ How dar''st thou rudely interfere, strange monk, With our most sacred sacrifice? |
22782 | _ R._ Did he find them? |
22782 | _ R._ Did you see father? |
22782 | _ R._ Has father found the cause of evil? |
22782 | _ R._ How does a man find the truth? |
22782 | _ R._ Is father rich? |
22782 | _ R._ Mother, what is a Buddha? |
22782 | _ R._ Self? |
22782 | _ R._ What does that mean, Kala? |
22782 | _ R._ What does that mean? |
22782 | _ R._ What is the cause of evil? |
22782 | _ R._ What? |
22782 | _ R._ Why does Kala not speak to father? |
22782 | _ R._ Why does he? |
22782 | _ R._ Why must he find out the cause of evil? |
22782 | _ R._ Why should mother not mention father? |
22782 | _ R._ Will he be king of it? |
22782 | _ S._ And he is here, this wonderful man? |
22782 | _ S._ At last thou comest back, my wayward son, But why didst shame me? |
22782 | _ S._ Bring you good news, Udayin? |
22782 | _ S._ Do you love him more than your grandfather? |
22782 | _ S._ Tell me at once, how did your mission speed? |
22782 | _ S._ There he lives in luxury? |
22782 | _ S._ What kind of a place is that? |
22782 | _ S._ What sayest thou, my trusty counselor? |
22782 | _ S._ What then is your opinion of the case? |
22782 | _ S._ Where did you find him? |
22782 | _ S._ Where did you find him? |
22782 | _ Servant exit.__ Ap._ Is he not one of the disciples of the Buddha? |
22782 | _ She can scarcely conceal her joy.__ Y._ You heard grandfather say so? |
22782 | _ The BUDDHA nods and with a distant look sits a few moments in silence.__ B._ And she is a good mother? |
22782 | _ The moon sinks behind a cloud.__ SIDDHATTHA comes.__ B._ What may the trouble be? |
22782 | _ The others rise gradually.__ F._ What shall I do, good master? |
22782 | _ The people rise to their feet again; KALA joins GOPA.__ S._ Tell me, what are the rules of former Buddhas? |
22782 | _ V._ And has Siddhattha succeeded? |
22782 | _ V._ Is he dying? |
22782 | _ V._ What is the idea of these fasts? |
22782 | _ Y._ And whither did Siddhattha go from Rajagaha? |
22782 | _ Y._ But where does the thought come from? |
22782 | _ Y._ Did he speak kindly of us? |
22782 | _ Y._ Did you meet people who saw him? |
22782 | _ Y._ How do you know? |
22782 | _ Y._ How is his health, and will he come back? |
22782 | _ Y._ Is King Bimbisara so religious? |
22782 | _ Y._ O good Kala, what shall I do? |
22782 | _ Y._ What did he bid him? |
22782 | _ Y._ What did the people of Rajagaha say? |
22782 | _ Y._ What is it, boy? |
22782 | _ Y._ Why do you think so? |
22782 | _ Y._ Why dost thou trouble about others? |
22782 | _ Y._[_ Addressing Devadatta_] And brother, will you come along? |
22782 | _ Y._[_ rises_] Why, is it possible? |
22782 | _ Y._[_ with passionate outburst_] Siddhattha, O my Lord, my husband, what wilt thou do? |
22782 | _ YASODHARA and PAJAPATI withdraw to the partition behind the curtains.__ S._ You say, that my son is greeted even by kings with clasped hands? |
22782 | _ YASODHARA picks RAHULA up.__ R._ Why do you sleep on the floor, Mother? |
22782 | cried I,"What does that word portend?" |
22782 | did he really say so? |
22782 | did you hear the news? |
22782 | enters.__ Ap._ Are they gone, my Lord, and what did you decide? |
22782 | how is Rahula? |
27228 | But tell, I pray thee, whence the gloomy spots Upon this body, which below on earth Give rise to talk of Cain in fabling quaint? |
27228 | Do you see yonder church? |
27228 | My eyes were dim, and so were Mr. Peggotty''s; but I repeated in a whisper,''With the tide?'' 27228 Trot, trot, trot; how do you enjoy that, my little man? |
27228 | What are you relating to me now? |
27228 | What signs of bad weather are there which sometimes you notice when storms are coming on? 27228 Who is she that looketh forth, fair as the moon?" |
27228 | Why does the dog waggle his tail? |
27228 | ''Hev I seed her out o''doors afore?'' |
27228 | ''Wherefore dost thou depart from the sun, Wandering by night alone, Courting the morning star?''" |
27228 | 4"Who''ll Smoak with the Man in the Moon?" |
27228 | And now some inquisitive individual may be impatient to interrupt our eloquence with the question,"What are you going to make of the man in the moon?" |
27228 | As these two desiderata seem indispensable to lunar inhabitation, we may chiefly consider the question, Do these conditions exist? |
27228 | Because what?" |
27228 | Besides, is the moon''s influence in disease an admitted fact? |
27228 | But some sceptic may assail us with a note of interrogation, saying,"Is there a man in the moon?" |
27228 | But who ever heard of the_ lunar_ rays as beneficial? |
27228 | For, as Pope puts it,--"Who shall decide, when doctors disagree, And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me?" |
27228 | Hast thou not dropp''d from heaven? |
27228 | Have not we all frequently affirmed that we knew no more about certain inscrutable matters than the man in the moon? |
27228 | He had wandered long, when a_ hare_ accosted him:''Can not I help thee? |
27228 | If he doth so, why should not you Drink until the sky looks blew?" |
27228 | Indeed, what more have amateurs that they can do? |
27228 | Is n''t that nice?" |
27228 | Looking up to it, she said,''Why can not you come down and let my child have a bit of you?'' |
27228 | The Fabricator of terrestrial organizations has limited himself to no one type or form, why then should man be the model of beings in distant worlds? |
27228 | The man stopped, and asked the faggot- bearer,''Do you know that this is Sunday on earth, when all must rest from their labours?'' |
27228 | Then a voice came from the heavens, saying:--''Wouldst thou, thief, like Thy cheek to strike This fair key, scorching- red with heat?'' |
27228 | Thomas Dekker, a British dramatist, wrote in 1630:"A starre? |
27228 | To the question,''Is the moon inhabited?'' |
27228 | We know something of his residence, whenever he is at home: what do we know of the man? |
27228 | Well, my lord bishop, is not that how we die on earth? |
27228 | What beside sexuality suggested the thought of the Chevalier Marini? |
27228 | What good would that do you, then?" |
27228 | What? |
27228 | Where did we get these ideas? |
27228 | Which of the twain is its true gender? |
27228 | Who can fail to discern slight touches of the same hand which we see displayed in other designs? |
27228 | Who can reflect upon this dream of human childhood, and not recall some dreams of later years? |
27228 | Who can tell what the last fifteen years of this eventful century may develop in the same direction? |
27228 | Who shall prescribe to science her boundaries, or restrain the active and insatiable curiosity of man within the circle of his present acquirements? |
27228 | Why so? |
27228 | [ 169] And now what does Confucianism say of moon- worship? |
27228 | [ 24] This may be rendered,"Do you not know what the people call the rustic in the moon who carries the thorns? |
27228 | [ 354] In Dekker''s_ Match Me in London_, Act i., the King says,"My Lord, doe you see this change in the moone? |
27228 | [ 50] What more needs to be said? |
27228 | [ 53] We are here told how the author,"making himself a kite of ye hight(?) |
27228 | [ 6] Several astronomers assert the absence of water in the moon; if this be the case, what is the poor man to drink? |
27228 | _ The Man in the Moon_, London, 1827(?). |
27228 | why came he down From his peaceful realm on high; Where sorrowful moan is all unknown, And nothing is born to die? |
30073 | DIAMANTE, JUAN BAUTISTA( 1640?-1684? |
30073 | How far, and in what sense, can action which is determined by motives be said to be free? |
30073 | How much does"this law"include? |
30073 | || Morte slates(?). |
30064 | But I hear some one asking, How do you live and travel in such a country? |
30064 | How shall I give you an idea of it? |
28222 | And do you believe there is any efficacy in such a proceeding? |
28222 | And is that all the instruction imparted to them? |
28222 | And what is this for? |
28222 | Of course,he replied;"what else do they require in Morocco?" |
28222 | What do you do with your dead? |
28222 | Why? |
28222 | All show places, and especially royal palaces, have their romantic legends: what would guides and guide- books otherwise amount to? |
28222 | As we left the grounds each was presented with a bouquet by the disinterested(?) |
28222 | But what do they really amount to? |
28222 | Can not the priests do something to mitigate this great evil? |
28222 | Do not people, who call themselves Christians, believe in prayer?" |
28222 | Does it require a cold, unpropitious climate, a sterile soil and rude surroundings, to awaken human energy and put man at his best? |
28222 | If contemporary record so often belies itself, what ought we to consider of that which comes through the shadowy distance of ages? |
28222 | Is it because surrounding nature is so bountiful, so lovely, so prolific in spontaneous food, that these, her children, are lazy, dirty, and heedless? |
28222 | Is it imagination, or can one really trace somewhat of the same idea in Flora''s kingdom? |
28222 | Is it possible that this was once the largest city in the western world,--once the centre of European civilization? |
28222 | Is there anything new under the sun? |
28222 | The theory that they are royal tombs is generally accepted; and yet have not the mummies of bulls and other animals been found in them? |
28222 | There are sixteen open courts within its outer walls, eighty staircases, twelve thousand doors(? |
28222 | These creatures were frequently tied to the house door like a dog, but for what purpose who can say? |
28222 | They call all white people"master"when addressing them:"Yes, master,"or"No, master,""Will master have this or that?" |
28222 | Was it a petition for forgiveness of sins, or asking consolation for some great bereavement? |
28222 | Were not the groves God''s first temples? |
28222 | What could have swept from the globe a population of millions, and left us no clearer record of their once highly civilized occupancy? |
28222 | What lay before us in the many thousand miles of land and ocean travel? |
28222 | What perils and experiences were to be encountered? |
28222 | What was to be done? |
28222 | Where could such an accumulation of wealth come from? |
28222 | Who could say that we should all, or indeed any of us, live to return to our several homes? |
28222 | Why should a people''s hair, eyes, and complexion be dark or light, simply because an imaginary line divides them territorially? |
28222 | Why should not the Chinese have their swine as objects of veneration? |
28222 | Why struggle? |
19150 | ''And you made those bricks he sold?'' 19150 ''And your propaganda programme,''I ventured,''is as strong and far- reaching as ever?'' |
19150 | ''Are the members of your local prepared to take over and conduct wisely and well the affairs of your town and county? 19150 ''Are you trying to get me a little conviction, also, Judge?'' |
19150 | ''But I say, how much will the boss sell those bricks for?'' 19150 ''But did n''t you make them?'' |
19150 | ''But where does he get the money to pay you with?'' 19150 ''But why do you make them, if you do n''t intend to use them for anything?'' |
19150 | ''But why does n''t the Socialist administration take control of industry and commerce, and put the interests out of power?'' 19150 ''But wo n''t the Third Internationale send its Russian agitators abroad then, thus making it unnecessary for you to come here?'' |
19150 | ''Did he dig the clay hole?'' 19150 ''Do n''t know what you are going to do with your own bricks?'' |
19150 | ''Do n''t you think you''d better come inside?... 19150 ''How long will it take you to make them?'' |
19150 | ''How much does the boss pay you for working so hard?'' 19150 ''How should I know? |
19150 | ''If Mr. Debs were elected in 1920, how would you proceed to inaugurate[12] him, as he is serving a twenty- year sentence?'' 19150 ''Is it part of the Socialist Party plans to use the general strike to back up political action?'' |
19150 | ''Oh, did n''t he make the kiln?'' 19150 ''Then how comes it that the boss owns them?'' |
19150 | ''What are the bricks for?'' 19150 ''Why do they dig clay holes?'' |
19150 | ''Why? 19150 And what happened? |
19150 | Do you know that a regular secret service system is being employed by these''bosses''to hunt down the undesirables? 19150 Shall we honor the Massachusetts militiamen who, without the slightest provocation, murdered a young worker? |
19150 | Shall we pray to a power not human For guidance miraculous When the nearest man or woman Will give help, and without that fuss? 19150 The fear that weighs upon the world of Capitalism and the diplomats in Paris is: Who next? |
19150 | What does he trust in? 19150 What flag? |
19150 | What will Russia do if this be so? 19150 Which of these, think you, Mr. Wage- Slave, is your friend and the friend of your class?.... |
19150 | Why do you not go away from here? |
19150 | Why the sudden change of front? 19150 Why, then, hesitate to affiliate with them?" |
19150 | You are still alive? |
19150 | ''What for?'' |
19150 | ..."''Do you uphold and approve of, as a leader of the Socialist Party, the words that Mr. Debs pronounced, and for which he was convicted?'' |
19150 | ..."''Have you any respect at all for the decision of the tribunal to the contrary?'' |
19150 | And for what? |
19150 | And was this to give Soviet Russia a chance to put through a temporary peace or truce with Europe to stave off"economic catastrophe?" |
19150 | And what is it that Noske and his''Socialist''colleagues are defending? |
19150 | And what shall we say of such evidence? |
19150 | Are bakery workers planning to go on strike? |
19150 | Are n''t we taking a long excursion into the domain of the future and into the domain of speculation? |
19150 | Are we to take it at its own word? |
19150 | Are you going to present something to them that you know is not contained in the Socialist program? |
19150 | Are you prepared to meet the militia when the powers of the State and courts are against you? |
19150 | Are you training your members in scientific Socialism?'' |
19150 | Arson? |
19150 | At$ 1,000,000,$ 10,000,$ 1,000, or$ 100? |
19150 | Blasphemy? |
19150 | But does American labor think such an experiment_ here_ would be worth what it costs? |
19150 | But how? |
19150 | But if this public profession of lawfulness meant nothing to 70,000 of them, why think it means more to the rest? |
19150 | But what of the Russian workers? |
19150 | But why not strike against this slavery? |
19150 | CHAPTER XV PATRIOTISM RIDICULED AND DESPISED 207 Socialists Against Patriotism, 207; American Flag Scouted, 207;"Honor the Uniform? |
19150 | CHAPTER XXIV EXPERTS IN THE ART OF DECEPTION 363 Must Socialism Be Good Because Something Else Is Bad? |
19150 | Can anything be sacred which is based on a lie or on impurity, or on ignorance? |
19150 | Can they give any convincing argument? |
19150 | Can you afford, as representatives of this great revolutionary party, to do that which in a few years you will be ashamed of? |
19150 | Could idiocy be more abject? |
19150 | Counterfeiting? |
19150 | Did Christ ascend into heaven? |
19150 | Did Christ rise from the dead as Christianity teaches? |
19150 | Did he allude to some pink tea party? |
19150 | Do not the Marxians know that poverty, rather than wealth, fosters religion and piety, the greatest of all factors in keeping persons pure? |
19150 | Do not the"workmen"produce the food? |
19150 | Do the Reds deny that millions and millions of the very poorest are chaste? |
19150 | Do the Socialists claim that the average poor woman is less moral than the average rich one? |
19150 | Do we exaggerate the humbuggery of leadership uncloaked in this Emergency Convention of the Socialist Party of America? |
19150 | Do you hope to deceive some one as to the actual, real program of scientific Socialism? |
19150 | Do you think that is nice? |
19150 | Does he work? |
19150 | Does the wireless operator know who may intercept his call? |
19150 | Even if at last they are able to produce and distribute enough to clothe and feed themselves, can human beings be happy in such a state? |
19150 | Has it changed since the break with the Communists? |
19150 | Has man an immortal soul as Christianity teaches? |
19150 | Has the Socialist Party of America contributed its Executive Committeeman to this revolutionary machine? |
19150 | Has your manhood rotted into cowardice? |
19150 | Have the Socialist peoples the world over become truly"divine"by their attacks on God and all religions? |
19150 | Have they become"omnipotent"wherever they are in power-- so omnipotent that law, order and decency are no longer needed? |
19150 | He continued:"What is the charge here? |
19150 | Hillquit''s letter in the"Call"raised the question,"What shall be the attitude of the Socialist Party toward the newly formed Communist organization?" |
19150 | Hillquit, do you wish to be understood as saying that you approve of the words spoken by Mr. Debs for which he was convicted?'' |
19150 | Honor that which gives a free license to kill, if the victim happens to be a worker? |
19150 | Honor that which stands for oppression, for the loafer against the worker, for the master against the slave? |
19150 | Honor the Judases, the Benedict Arnolds of the working class? |
19150 | Honor the uniform? |
19150 | How can the power be cut off? |
19150 | How could insurance companies, in which the American people have invested so much, and which depend on interest, exist under Socialism? |
19150 | How did man originate? |
19150 | How do we know whether the co- operative commonwealth will infer and arrange it in that way? |
19150 | How long, O poor and exhausted workingmen of the world, will the shameful comedy continue? |
19150 | If Moscow''s"programs and methods"are only the minor reason for supporting Moscow, what is the major reason for this"support?" |
19150 | If a man can control a few votes, they reason, why should n''t he have a job? |
19150 | If a man wanted ten pairs of sandals or shoes he could have them, but why would he want them? |
19150 | If a wage slave is paid only enough to live on, anyhow, what difference to him does it make whether his boss is a Britisher or a Chinaman?" |
19150 | If not, would state officials or politicians decide the cases? |
19150 | If so, how many thousands of such courts would be required? |
19150 | If so, where is their proof? |
19150 | If the fuel reaches its destination what is simpler than to set the pockets on fire and have the coal burn in the yards instead of the furnaces? |
19150 | If this is not treason-- wickedness using"political party"methods both as a mask and a blackjack to destroy the State-- what is it? |
19150 | If you are a joiner or woodworker, what is simpler than to ruin furniture without your boss noticing it, and thereby drive his customers away? |
19150 | If you do n''t use the bricks, who will?'' |
19150 | If, indeed, workers want only reforms, why take the longest way around?" |
19150 | In July 2, 1901,"The Haverhill Social Democrat,"apparently without fear of offending its subscribers, asked:"What is there sacred in the modern home? |
19150 | In the May, 1917, issue of the"International Socialist Review,""God and My Neighbor,"by Blatchford, is thus advertised:"Is the Bible true? |
19150 | In"The Revolutionary Age,"Boston, January 11, 1919, page 4, we read:"What is Socialism? |
19150 | Indeed, if the"workers"take everything, what will become of the drones-- the Socialist political hacks? |
19150 | Is Christianity desirable? |
19150 | Is Hillquit Lenine''s pupil or Lenine''s teacher? |
19150 | Is a strike in sight in steel mills? |
19150 | Is civil war worth while-- for such a barren result? |
19150 | Is he the God who inspireth Buddha and Shakespeare and Beethoven and Darwin and Plato? |
19150 | Is he the son of God? |
19150 | Is it in irony that Eyre speaks of these"workers"as"the ruling class"? |
19150 | Is it nice to shoot men? |
19150 | Is it not time for the American people to awake? |
19150 | Is it possible that such an organization is not engaged in a conspiracy against our country? |
19150 | Is it to secure votes? |
19150 | Is it true that God has never been revealed? |
19150 | Is it true that after Christ''s death the Apostles received the Holy Ghost? |
19150 | Is it worth while? |
19150 | Is it worth while? |
19150 | Is it worth while? |
19150 | Is not one mind, one aim, one intent, one purpose and hatred consistently evident in all these utterances? |
19150 | Is not such mental, moral and spiritual death a greater calamity than physical death? |
19150 | Is that what you want us to do, you capitalists, you cardinals and presidents? |
19150 | Is there communion of saints? |
19150 | Is this definition an alibi for Hillquit and Berger? |
19150 | Is this right? |
19150 | Is this the dream of the dreamer come true? |
19150 | It is interesting to know what professors will lecture in this new university, and who will form their audience?" |
19150 | Moreover, where would the Socialists draw the line of lawful possession? |
19150 | Murder? |
19150 | Now the things of which we''re talking we are mighty sure about.-- So what''s the use to strike the way you ca n''t win out? |
19150 | Now, you can not blame me if I do not care for more for some time to come...."''Could you give any information? |
19150 | Of what use are higher wages won by strikes, if the cost of living ascends still more rapidly? |
19150 | One of the foremost opponents of the proposition was Delegate Morris Hillquit, who asked:"What does the amendment mean? |
19150 | Or are you, in other words, going to lie to the farmers of this country in order to secure their suffrage? |
19150 | Perjury, false testimony, fraud, theft of inheritance, fraudulent failures? |
19150 | Presently a lunatic looked over the fence and asked:"''What are you doing?'' |
19150 | Quotations from this base free- love book will end with the following:"If it be asked''is marriage a failure?'' |
19150 | Russia passed through three revolutions and is that the kind of result we want in order to overthrow what he calls this robber nation?'' |
19150 | Shall not the tomb Yield heavy harvest where such seed is sown?" |
19150 | Shall we hasten such a conflict by continuing to preach the sacredness of fecundity and of war? |
19150 | Should he survive this, must he begin the same round over again? |
19150 | Should we take the name of God in vain? |
19150 | Socialism having ruined the insurance companies, would the millions of policyholders just sit down and have a good, hearty laugh over their losses? |
19150 | The American flag? |
19150 | The Stars and Stripes? |
19150 | The flag which floats over every hellhole of mine and mill and prison? |
19150 | The question may now be asked, What means is the Russian Bolshevist government using to incite revolution in America? |
19150 | The"New York Times,"April 28, 1919, commented in part on the debate as follows:"''Who wants war?'' |
19150 | Then why do they not take it and cut the throats of these drones? |
19150 | They must capture and establish a sort of dictatorship of the proletariat(?) |
19150 | This is the Creator of the Milky Way? |
19150 | This is the Father of Christ? |
19150 | Up to the moment of separation were not all alike under the same"pledge"to use"lawful and rightful means?" |
19150 | Was this denied by the Socialist defense at Albany? |
19150 | Was this record questioned by the Socialist defense at Albany? |
19150 | We do n''t mind taking their capitalistic locomotives and farming machinery, so why should they mind taking our Socialistic wheat, flax and platinum?" |
19150 | What are the real workmen in Russia but victims of this cruel experiment of tyrannizing Socialist"intellectuals"? |
19150 | What are they? |
19150 | What can they do there? |
19150 | What does it matter to me?'' |
19150 | What does this mean? |
19150 | What flag? |
19150 | What hypocrisies, shams and illusions are referred to? |
19150 | What is God? |
19150 | What is heaven? |
19150 | What is our duty when we have learned that there is no God? |
19150 | What is the Holy Spirit? |
19150 | What is the object of it? |
19150 | What is the purpose of it? |
19150 | What will bring on strikes more readily than to teach rebellion against all conservative labor leaders who would oppose uncalled- for walk- outs? |
19150 | What''s the railroad for, if not to provide jobs? |
19150 | When the two Wings of the Convention raised the question,"Who called the cops?" |
19150 | When will you open your eyes to the truth of Socialism, and realize that finally upon you alone depends your salvation?" |
19150 | Whence will the impulse for the revolutionary struggle come? |
19150 | Where do Socialists fit into the State? |
19150 | Who but the long- suffering Russians would endure the hopeless fate imposed by Socialism on Russian labor? |
19150 | Who can turn a deaf ear to the call? |
19150 | Who gets shot with the gun? |
19150 | Who gets the bad clothes? |
19150 | Who is Jesus Christ? |
19150 | Who makes the gun? |
19150 | Who makes the nice suit? |
19150 | Who should find satisfaction in committing arson when society has removed all cause for hatred? |
19150 | Who were their authors? |
19150 | Whom am I calling? |
19150 | Why did it either openly favor the war or adopt a policy of petty- bourgeois pacifism?" |
19150 | Why did the Socialist leaders in the parliaments of the belligerents vote the war credits? |
19150 | Why disfranchise the revolutionary Socialists? |
19150 | Why do you make agreements that divide you when you fight And let the bosses bluff you with the contract''s"sacred right?" |
19150 | Why is this resolution here? |
19150 | Why rob themselves? |
19150 | Why should there be on a free earth? |
19150 | Why should there be peace as long as any manhood is left in Russia to lift up its hand out of its despair against its Bolshevist oppressors? |
19150 | Why steal votes away from the Left Wing candidates? |
19150 | Why, then, should the Socialists not engage in an open aggressive campaign against the church? |
19150 | Why? |
19150 | Will Christ come to this earth? |
19150 | Will Christ return on judgment day? |
19150 | Will not this be"militarism?" |
19150 | Will the people be forced to labor at repugnant tasks? |
19150 | Will there be anything left for the rump N. E. C. to expel by August 30th?" |
19150 | Will they presently be offering arguments to prove that the Bolshevists were not Socialists at all, but traitors to the whole Marxian movement? |
19150 | Workers? |
19150 | Would not this result in widespread discontent? |
19150 | Would the American working- man think this worth while in America? |
19150 | Would the Socialist Party of America accept its inclusion among those in"America"thus designated, or refuse? |
19150 | Would the decision be reached peaceably? |
19150 | Would the use and possession of government bonds be allowed? |
19150 | Would these things happen in our country if the Reds gained control? |
19150 | Would wage courts decide the value of their services? |
19150 | Would you like to shoot a man? |
19150 | does he pay you, too, to make these bricks?'' |
29399 | ''Where? 29399 Annie Besant 1 0 Death-- and After? 29399 But how, it may be asked, is access to be gained to them? 29399 But let the surface of the water be ruffled by the wind and what do we find then? 29399 But where, it will be said, is the qualified teacher to be found? 29399 Frommt''s, den Schleier aufzuheben, wo das nahe Schreckniss droht? 29399 How is the aspirant thirsting for knowledge to signify to them his wish for instruction? 29399 In that time she heard the bridge clock strike two, and a while after said:''In the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, what art thou?'' 29399 In the case then of a detailed vision of the remote past, how is it obtained, and to what plane of nature does it really belong? 29399 Now supposing that in addition to this he obtained the sight of the astral plane, what further changes would be observable? 29399 Now what is the rationale of this kind of clairvoyance? 29399 Of course he might, but what if he did? 29399 What is the matter?'' 29399 What profits it to lift the veil where the near darkness threatens? 29399 When, for example, a man here in England sees in minutest detail something which is happening at the same moment in India or America, how is it done? 29399 With regard to this latter proviso people often say,But why should he not? |
29399 | what is it?'' |
29399 | what? |
29399 | which may perhaps be translated"Why hast thou cast me thus into the town of the ever- blind, to proclaim thine oracle by the opened sense? |
29399 | you heard it? |
22177 | How are you going to obtain it? 22177 What more,"asks Micah,"doth the Lord require of thee than to do justice, love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" |
22177 | What''s in a name? |
22177 | And have we not taught representative institutions to the world? |
22177 | And if disunion, the true mark of error, be at work among them, can we believe that the future is reserved for it? |
22177 | And what has been the effect of such teaching on humanity? |
22177 | And what is it which governs the will of man? |
22177 | And where were they, and what were they doing? |
22177 | And why not? |
22177 | And, if so, how is such a_ volta face_ in nature explicable on purely mechanical grounds, even if the process itself were so explicable? |
22177 | And, if such be the case, in what sense is God"unknown"? |
22177 | And, now, how many of the human family are enrolled as"citizens of the holy places"; what numbers assemble for worship in the great cathedral? |
22177 | And, now, what is the truth about the"judgment to come"? |
22177 | Are men and women to be decimated by consumption in the poisoned atmosphere of some of our factories? |
22177 | Are we asked for further evidence of this position? |
22177 | Are we asked for the supreme object of religion? |
22177 | Because man came thence? |
22177 | But are we to conclude therefrom that conscience is nothing more than a product of organic evolution? |
22177 | But does any one propose to alter the moral law for them? |
22177 | But does any one really suppose that the natural order of the phenomena has been altered at the request of the clergy by an Almighty mind? |
22177 | But how is it that in this epistle he comes to be designated as a priest at all? |
22177 | But how is it that things are so ordered? |
22177 | But how is such training possible, except through the unceasing watchfulness of the parents''? |
22177 | But how much better is man than many animals, and what is merely instinctive in them shall not he consciously obey as his acknowledged law of life? |
22177 | But of what God? |
22177 | But what are we to say to such testimonies? |
22177 | But what had religion done for France in the hour of her trial? |
22177 | But what is the faculty which corresponds to the word conscience? |
22177 | But what of the alleged answers to prayers which are held to establish its efficacy? |
22177 | But where does history record the act of any religious leaders of those times denouncing war as contrary to the gospel of Christ and of reason alike? |
22177 | Could any one seriously propose to erect feeling into a supreme criterion whereby to judge of the conduct of life? |
22177 | Does not the fiction of the day represent a tendency to allow an increased laxity in the interpretation of the matrimonial contract? |
22177 | Even of the comparatively few in the vast family of humanity who own its supremacy, how many can repeat its shibboleths in common? |
22177 | For what does his famous law amount to? |
22177 | For whence this sublime law of life unless we conceive mind, not blind chance, as the arbiter of things? |
22177 | For where is God revealed as_ worshipful_ except in the lives of the great and good? |
22177 | Has he not convinced Protestant clergymen and other learned people? |
22177 | Has he not the solid earth and the realm of sense? |
22177 | Has not some of the sublimest verse been Nature poetry? |
22177 | Has not the time come to begin anew; to reconstruct, to reorganise society? |
22177 | Has the time come to reconsider our position with regard to marriage and the permanent obligations hitherto associated with it? |
22177 | Have we ever sufficiently reflected that the purely negative philosophy has done nothing for idealism in any shape or form? |
22177 | Helbeck, it is plain, can never win Laura, but can Laura ever hope to win Helbeck? |
22177 | How can he? |
22177 | How can we explain this? |
22177 | How can we hold one intelligence to know and another to originate them? |
22177 | How is he dogmatically certain of that one thing, while all the rest is in a haze? |
22177 | How shall not man, then, be better than many economical laws? |
22177 | How, we ask, in wondering gratitude, did the world ever escape the tyranny of such superstition? |
22177 | However that may be, what answer is forthcoming to the retort which the phenomena of to- day unmistakably suggest? |
22177 | If the Deity is inhuman, why should man be otherwise? |
22177 | If their practices were but a shadow of the horrors he was supposed to be everlastingly inflicting on mankind, who could raise a protest against them? |
22177 | In what, indeed? |
22177 | Is a stone, a star, a heaven studded with infinite glories, a greater place than your eternal soul? |
22177 | Is conscience a development of the cosmic process? |
22177 | Is it indeed so? |
22177 | Is it not true that there are murmurs and mutterings of revolt both amongst men and women against a burden too grievous to be borne? |
22177 | Is it urged that religion apart from a belief in God is an impossibility? |
22177 | Is not the man more than the meat, and the body more than the raiment? |
22177 | Is not the soldier hero, the military chieftain, the idol of all mankind? |
22177 | Is the criterion of conduct in the custody of the scientific experimenter? |
22177 | Is the matchbox- maker to go on for ever turning out a gross for 2 1/4d., providing her own paste and string? |
22177 | Is there any answer conceivable but that the power responsible for the world is a moral power? |
22177 | Is there any god in the wastes of infinity, in a sunstar, a swarm of worlds, who is not in that miraculous soul of yours? |
22177 | Is there aught anywhere greater than a son of God? |
22177 | Is this mysticism? |
22177 | Must this false teaching indeed go on for ever? |
22177 | Now what has experimental science to say about the conscience? |
22177 | Now, what is this new controversy? |
22177 | Now, whence did he learn this strange teaching? |
22177 | Or, how are we to explain the appearance of so strange a visitant in a universe which is dominated by the"struggle for existence"? |
22177 | Shall man be juster than his God? |
22177 | The commanding voice is heard throughout the ages, and men will, men must, ask: Who is it-- what is it that spoke? |
22177 | The question is, which conforms to type, the old or the modern English Catholic? |
22177 | Then what else is left to inspire to us? |
22177 | There is a philosophy in language however much we continue to ask,"What''s in a name?" |
22177 | This my Begetter? |
22177 | To begin, then, whence arose the idea of a priest? |
22177 | Was there ever such a suggestion? |
22177 | We are Divine by nature, by what other law of life should we live? |
22177 | Well does the ethic master say,"What is the use of affecting indifference towards that about which the mind of man never can be indifferent?" |
22177 | Well, but the ordering of things, the ordaining of a course of things, what is this but the work of intelligence? |
22177 | What are we to say of lives such as those of Gotama, Socrates and Christ? |
22177 | What can not, what shall not man under such circumstances accomplish? |
22177 | What god are you praying to, we ask in dismay, when you lift up your hands and your eyes, or turn to east or west, or kneel or lie? |
22177 | What has philosophy, creed or council to say to that high and ennobling conception? |
22177 | What have they taught you? |
22177 | What hope of answer or redress? |
22177 | What is a government to do then? |
22177 | What is a prophet? |
22177 | What is it that governs the reason? |
22177 | What is it that governs the world of phenomena outside us? |
22177 | What is it? |
22177 | What is that event? |
22177 | What is the attitude of a human and ethical religion towards that characteristic manifestation of piety which we call prayer? |
22177 | What is the ethical equivalent of"hell fire"? |
22177 | What is the meaning of the word? |
22177 | What is the very concept of law, or system, but a metaphysical idea? |
22177 | What on earth can we be searching for when the"candle of the Lord,"as Locke called it, is the very illuminant we must employ in our search? |
22177 | What one would like to ask is this: Do these credulous people suppose that the event would have been otherwise, had the young candidate not prayed? |
22177 | What picture does man make for himself of the force of gravitation, nay of the force which drives the crocuses out of the soil in spring? |
22177 | What, then, are these Catholic, Protestant, Mohammedan and Buddhist religions? |
22177 | What, then, is morality_ in se_ apart from its history? |
22177 | What, we ask, is there to cheer the heart in the Thirty- nine Articles, the Vatican decrees, or the Westminster Confession? |
22177 | Whence is existence itself but from the subsistent source of all being? |
22177 | Whence is intelligence but from the world''s Soul, which is the soul of men? |
22177 | Whence is life but from one ever- lasting source? |
22177 | Whence these uniformities of approbation and disapprobation? |
22177 | Whence this constraining power within me, exerting itself to the uttermost to win my allegiance to the right, unless I am free to obey or disobey? |
22177 | Where and what are these men now? |
22177 | Where did Jesus''spirit go on his death? |
22177 | Where is limbo, and where is purgatory? |
22177 | Where the god has no sense of justice, why should man? |
22177 | Where were heaven and hell in the new version astronomy gave of things? |
22177 | Whither did he go when he ascended bodily into the air? |
22177 | Whither have they led you? |
22177 | Whose duty shall it be to perform such rites? |
22177 | Why not a poor, untutored girl such as her? |
22177 | Why not? |
22177 | Why not? |
22177 | Why not? |
22177 | Why should he seek what is beyond it? |
22177 | Why should not these two pass out of each other''s lives, as do numberless others who realise the mistake of their projected union? |
22177 | Why, then, do not all Christians turn Helbecks? |
22177 | Yes, but with what nature? |
22177 | [ 5] What we ask, then, is precisely this: Was Jesus a priest in this sense? |
22177 | a week and pay lodging and keep a family out of it? |
22177 | but whence has it power to command me, even in the sanctuary of my deepest solitude, in the loneliness of my silent thoughts? |
22177 | the intellectual element in religion requires some one to express it, and this, in some form or other, will be the clergy"? |
22177 | the whole world has gone after him?" |
14176 | A specialist''s? |
14176 | Affected? 14176 Ah?" |
14176 | And Chichester? 14176 And Lady Sophia?" |
14176 | And Mr. Harding, sir? |
14176 | And by that you mean--? |
14176 | And d''you know why I liked his sermons? |
14176 | And do you believe in them? |
14176 | And do you think his saintly curate has found it out? |
14176 | And how long did you continue the sittings? |
14176 | And if truth slays? |
14176 | And my husband''s sermon? |
14176 | And now? 14176 And out of it-- especially out of it?" |
14176 | And so Mr. Chichester is quite altered by his grief? |
14176 | And that is? |
14176 | And then? |
14176 | And where''s the connection you speak of? |
14176 | And why not? |
14176 | And yet is n''t there a saying of Newton''s,''A little science sends man far away from God, a great deal of science brings man back to God?'' 14176 And you did n''t encourage him?" |
14176 | And you have n''t got nervous dyspepsia? |
14176 | And you have''placed''them all? |
14176 | And you on being skeptical? |
14176 | And you? |
14176 | And your address? |
14176 | And-- and would you say I looked a happier, as well as a-- a stronger man? |
14176 | And-- for clergymen? |
14176 | Any unusual change in his outward man since you knew him two years ago? |
14176 | Anything new or interesting? |
14176 | Are they what they were? 14176 Are you certain of that?" |
14176 | Are you going far? |
14176 | Are you going to be away long? |
14176 | Are you walking my way? |
14176 | Are you? |
14176 | As they grow older? 14176 At half after seven?" |
14176 | But are there such cases? 14176 But do n''t we all need a crutch to help us along on the path of life?" |
14176 | But do you mean that a rector should depend on his curate''s advice rather than on his own judgment? |
14176 | But is it quite fair to Chichester? |
14176 | But perhaps the ambition to spur on another successfully? 14176 But-- as a rule?" |
14176 | But-- but-- you-- I was not wrong in feeling sure that you were-- that something in me had aroused your attention? |
14176 | Can I tell you? |
14176 | Can I tell you? |
14176 | Chichester? 14176 Could this be so if I were like other men, other clergymen?" |
14176 | Could you come on Wednesday week? 14176 Could you take him my card?" |
14176 | Did he? 14176 Did you come to hear me preach again?" |
14176 | Did you expect Chichester to behave like that, to be like that? |
14176 | Did you expect this? |
14176 | Did you know I was Mr. Harding''s curate the first time you met me? |
14176 | Did you not give to the double the attributes of a man? 14176 Did you succeed in that effort?" |
14176 | Did you want to see him? |
14176 | Did you-- did you stay for the sermon? |
14176 | Did you? 14176 Do I look so?" |
14176 | Do I, indeed? 14176 Do men want facts?" |
14176 | Do n''t you think it higher? |
14176 | Do n''t you think so? |
14176 | Do n''t you understand? 14176 Do n''t you?" |
14176 | Do you believe that there are such things as doubles? |
14176 | Do you claim to have some special faculty? |
14176 | Do you claim to stand outside the ranks of the clergy? |
14176 | Do you claim to stand outside the ranks of the scientists? |
14176 | Do you find him much changed? |
14176 | Do you know also his senior curate, Henry Chichester? |
14176 | Do you know where he is staying? |
14176 | Do you know? |
14176 | Do you mean ecclesiastical authority? |
14176 | Do you mean that you want to come in? |
14176 | Do you mean the greatest truths in the possession of Anglican clergymen? |
14176 | Do you mean to say you did n''t notice it? |
14176 | Do you mean to tell me you do n''t believe it? |
14176 | Do you mean what are sometimes called occult questions? |
14176 | Do you mean your nervous affection? |
14176 | Do you mind if we have a little air? |
14176 | Do you mind,said the curate, slightly lowering his voice,"if I speak rather-- rather confidentially to you?" |
14176 | Do you say it is possible? |
14176 | Do you say such an experience as that described in my sermon is impossible? |
14176 | Do you smoke? |
14176 | Do you think Harding a whited sepulcher? |
14176 | Do you think he would be more or less likely to unbosom himself now than he was then? |
14176 | Do you think it is right? |
14176 | Do you think that would supply a natural explanation of the mystery? |
14176 | Do you think the alteration in Mr. Harding may be due to nervous dyspepsia? |
14176 | Do you think there''s no room for pencil and note- book there? 14176 Do you think,"he said after a pause,"that it is possible for another, an outsider, to know a man better than he knows himself?" |
14176 | Do you think,he said,"I am much altered since we used to meet two years ago? |
14176 | Do you think? |
14176 | Do you wish me to be frank, and do you mean the two sermons? |
14176 | Does Mr. Chichester share your interest? |
14176 | Does n''t he agree with you? |
14176 | Does n''t he care for pictures? |
14176 | Does n''t he suffer very much from nervous dyspepsia? |
14176 | Even now has n''t he learnt the value of the matter- of- fact? 14176 Figments?" |
14176 | For being unselfish? |
14176 | For long? |
14176 | Had you ceased from them when I first met you? |
14176 | Has he said anything to you about leaving? |
14176 | Has it been going on long? |
14176 | Has n''t Harding ever talked to you on the subject? |
14176 | Have n''t you been sleeping well lately? |
14176 | Have the reverend gentlemen of St. Joseph''s been at it again-- successfully? |
14176 | Have you any reason to suppose that Harding has been making any experiments? |
14176 | Have you been here long? |
14176 | Have you been in these rooms long? |
14176 | Have you ceased from them now? |
14176 | Have you ever seen a double? |
14176 | Have you ever told Chichester what grave distress he is causing you? |
14176 | Have you far to go? |
14176 | Have you heard of him? |
14176 | Have you just begun tea? |
14176 | Have you made many experiments yourself, may I ask? |
14176 | Have you seen him lately? |
14176 | Have you,exclaimed Mr. Harding--"have you some reason to believe Chichester has ever contemplated departure?" |
14176 | He does n''t strike you as a man of power? |
14176 | Heard about Harding? |
14176 | How can I explain exactly? 14176 How can I, or you, for that matter?" |
14176 | How can one see if a soul is the double of another soul? |
14176 | How could a man''s double be a man? |
14176 | I dare say you think it impossible that a clergyman should know more than a scientific man? |
14176 | I suppose you disbelieve in them? |
14176 | I wonder where the railway- guide is? |
14176 | If I go to St. Joseph''s to- morrow, afterward may I see you again? |
14176 | If I were to say so would you believe me? |
14176 | Illegitimate? |
14176 | In appearance, you mean? |
14176 | In church music, biblical criticism, or what? |
14176 | In the hall? |
14176 | In the interests of science? |
14176 | In the pulpit? |
14176 | In what respect do you consider Mr. Harding typical? |
14176 | Is Mr. Chichester at home? |
14176 | Is Mr. Harding so very much changed? |
14176 | Is he ill? |
14176 | Is it getting late? |
14176 | Is it this way? |
14176 | Is n''t the rector coming to see me? |
14176 | Is the rector coming in to tea? |
14176 | It did n''t occur to you, I suppose, when composing your sermon to follow that train of thought? |
14176 | It''s odd how men change, is n''t it? |
14176 | Just tell me, have you any trouble of that kind, or did you merely invent it as an excuse for any failure you made from time to time? |
14176 | Know? |
14176 | May I ask you why? |
14176 | May I have another cup? |
14176 | May I say good- by to Lady Sophia? 14176 May I, without indiscretion, ask what that is?" |
14176 | No? 14176 Nothing more than that?" |
14176 | On Westminster Bridge? 14176 Or that Chichester has?" |
14176 | Over- exertion--"Am I an invalid? |
14176 | Perhaps you think it rather a strange one for a clergyman to select? |
14176 | Quite another man, does he? |
14176 | Rector-- curate-- archbishop-- what does it matter? 14176 Right?" |
14176 | Say in psychical research? |
14176 | Shall I give you some strange facts, the strangest perhaps you have ever met with? |
14176 | Shall I tell you what I really think? |
14176 | Shall we go there and wait for him? |
14176 | Should I be even a meliorist-- as I am-- if I had? |
14176 | Should you prefer to search for it in that malefic region which is the abiding- place of nervous dyspepsia? |
14176 | Since when? |
14176 | Sir? |
14176 | So, the modern clergyman still believes in slip- slop, does he? |
14176 | Such as I? |
14176 | Suppose I obtained, for instance, a less favorable, or even an unfavorable impression of him now? 14176 Suppose the man to remain and, in hiding, to watch the life of his double, what effect would such an observation be likely to have upon the double?" |
14176 | Tell me,he said,"do you think your knowledge can help me? |
14176 | That I had left him? 14176 That sermon? |
14176 | The light is rather strong, do n''t you think? |
14176 | The link? |
14176 | Then did n''t you know? |
14176 | Then you advise me--? |
14176 | Then you think such a story as Mr. Chichester related in his sermon all nonsense? |
14176 | Then,said Chichester,"you think the lesson men learn from being contemplated tends only to destroy them?" |
14176 | Then,said Malling,"you think that Mr. Harding changed you by his influence?" |
14176 | To evening church? |
14176 | To- night? |
14176 | Was her ladyship in the drawing- room? |
14176 | Was it? 14176 Well, Mr. Malling? |
14176 | Well, what if I was? |
14176 | Well? |
14176 | What about my cup of tea, then? |
14176 | What about? |
14176 | What are you about, Malling? |
14176 | What became of him? |
14176 | What do you mean by that? 14176 What do you mean to do?" |
14176 | What do you mean? |
14176 | What do you mean? |
14176 | What do you mean? |
14176 | What do you say? |
14176 | What evidence has he rejected? |
14176 | What has that got to do with it? |
14176 | What is it in me which has attracted your attention? |
14176 | What is it? 14176 What is it?" |
14176 | What is that? |
14176 | What is the word? |
14176 | What makes you ask? |
14176 | What makes you think so? |
14176 | What malady? |
14176 | What were you saying about our friend Chichester''s sermon? |
14176 | What were your speculations? |
14176 | What''s that about Malling? |
14176 | What? |
14176 | What? |
14176 | What? |
14176 | When do I encourage clergymen to talk about psychical research? |
14176 | When? |
14176 | Where is he, Thomas? |
14176 | Where''s the rector? 14176 Which part?" |
14176 | Who? |
14176 | Why are you not so sure? |
14176 | Why do you think Chichester''s departure from St. Joseph''s impossible? |
14176 | Why does n''t Mr. Harding take a long rest? |
14176 | Why have you selected me to be the hearer of this-- this very extraordinary statement? |
14176 | Why not? 14176 Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why not? |
14176 | Why should there not be some hope? |
14176 | Why? |
14176 | Why? |
14176 | Why? |
14176 | Will you have a quail? |
14176 | Will you take him this card and ask if I can see him? 14176 Wo n''t you tell me what it is?" |
14176 | Would n''t you do just the opposite? 14176 Yes, sir?" |
14176 | You are going? |
14176 | You are good enough to do me the honor of putting me in a class? |
14176 | You are talking perhaps of what is called conversion? |
14176 | You are the Mr. Malling of whom Professor Stepton has spoken to me,he said,--"who has done so much experimental work for him?" |
14176 | You can believe nothing on the mere word of another? |
14176 | You do n''t mind my company for a little longer, I hope? |
14176 | You do n''t object to my getting on this subject, I hope? |
14176 | You do n''t think it would be wiser to take a hansom? |
14176 | You do n''t? |
14176 | You have heard Professor Stepton speak of Mr. Malling, have n''t you? |
14176 | You have n''t observed it? |
14176 | You have no objection, I hope? |
14176 | You have seen him since he-- altered? |
14176 | You know a clergyman called Marcus Harding? |
14176 | You know my name? |
14176 | You know your way? |
14176 | You live here? |
14176 | You mean Mr. Harding''s death? |
14176 | You mean you want to know--? |
14176 | You mean-- the contrast? |
14176 | You prefer seeing pictures alone, perhaps? |
14176 | You read that sermon? |
14176 | You really think the matter important? |
14176 | You remember our former conversations with regard to Henry Chichester? |
14176 | You said--? |
14176 | You saw we were looking at the river? 14176 You think he needs one?" |
14176 | You think if a man lives by a lie he is better dead? |
14176 | You think it was that? |
14176 | You think so? |
14176 | You typed it for your own use? |
14176 | You were at church at St. Joseph''s this morning? |
14176 | You were feeling ill? |
14176 | You were n''t with him? |
14176 | You wish very much that Chichester should resign his curacy and go entirely out of your life? |
14176 | You''re not overworked? |
14176 | You-- you observe a difference? |
14176 | ''What is it? |
14176 | After two or three minutes of silence the rector remarked:"You know Chichester well?" |
14176 | And how could he assist me?" |
14176 | And is that goodness, righteousness? |
14176 | And may I ask the manifestation''s name?" |
14176 | And now-- you?" |
14176 | And the doctor, is n''t he the clergyman of the body? |
14176 | And was Mr. Harding the powerful preacher he was reputed to be? |
14176 | And was that why now, as Malling walked home in the darkness and rain, he felt himself humbled, diminished? |
14176 | And what followed?" |
14176 | And what had these sittings led to, what had been their result? |
14176 | And what sort of man was it that thus preceded him not very far away? |
14176 | And when would that moment come? |
14176 | And why not Majors, if you come to that? |
14176 | And why not?" |
14176 | And yet was he? |
14176 | And yet-- did he know it? |
14176 | And you never did that?" |
14176 | Another quail? |
14176 | Any interesting manifestations?" |
14176 | Are you busy to- day?" |
14176 | Are you going to be long in London?" |
14176 | Are you thinking that?" |
14176 | As if to cover some emotion, he looked at Malling''s plate, and added:"Have some more? |
14176 | As she passed Malling, she whispered:"The strength-- where is it? |
14176 | As soon as she had put it on the table and departed, Chichester continued:"How does Mr. Harding strike you? |
14176 | At church?" |
14176 | At this point the professor thrust his head toward Chichester, and added,"you ca n''t tell me the reason, I suppose?" |
14176 | But does he never criticize you in words? |
14176 | But have n''t you heard?" |
14176 | But how can I do otherwise? |
14176 | But how shall I approach him? |
14176 | But how? |
14176 | But if I invite you to meet him, in my house or elsewhere, will you promise me to come?" |
14176 | But if the man had stayed, what would have been the effect on the double? |
14176 | But sometimes--""Yes?" |
14176 | But surely development is natural and to be expected?" |
14176 | But they must say something, must n''t they?" |
14176 | But was he not now, perhaps, exaggerating its character,"suggestioned"as it were by the obvious turmoil of Mr. Harding? |
14176 | But was it certain that the feelings generated in sittings never persisted after they were broken up? |
14176 | But what does it matter?" |
14176 | But what was the character of the man himself? |
14176 | But what were you talking about? |
14176 | But what? |
14176 | But when a man changes drastically, sheds his character and takes on another?" |
14176 | But who was he? |
14176 | But why should he not call upon Chichester, an acquaintance, almost a friend? |
14176 | But with Chichester-- did I ever succeed? |
14176 | But, then, you thought of the double as a living man, with all the sensations of a man?" |
14176 | But-- going back to our subject-- don''t you still think that men should live by the truth?" |
14176 | Can you explain the nature of that obligation?" |
14176 | Chichester, you say, was a saint?" |
14176 | Could I ever succeed with such an one as he had become? |
14176 | Could I give them up? |
14176 | Could they be continuing the sittings, if there had ever been sittings? |
14176 | Could you? |
14176 | Could you?" |
14176 | Did he really think it nothing more than that? |
14176 | Did n''t I tell you I would give you some of my power?'' |
14176 | Did they belong to a man or a woman? |
14176 | Did you not make his wife come to bid him good night, bend down to kiss him, waft him a characteristic farewell?" |
14176 | Did you tell him you were coming?" |
14176 | Directly her husband had left the room Lady Sophia turned to Malling and said:"Had you ever heard my husband preach till this morning?" |
14176 | Do n''t they, Lady Sophia? |
14176 | Do n''t you think so?" |
14176 | Do you deny it?" |
14176 | Do you expect me to be sorry? |
14176 | Do you look upon it as a case of transferred personality? |
14176 | Do you mean by grief?" |
14176 | Do you mean that you do n''t know?" |
14176 | Do you or do you not, see a great change in Henry Chichester?" |
14176 | Do you think Galileo deserved our censure?" |
14176 | Do you think Marcus is losing his mind?" |
14176 | Do you wish me to introduce him to you?" |
14176 | Does he never express an adverse opinion upon what you say or do?" |
14176 | Eh?" |
14176 | For now, was it not almost as if something of Harding in Chichester watched, criticized, Chichester in Harding? |
14176 | For what more natural than that Chichester should be coming? |
14176 | For what?" |
14176 | Had he looked forward to some such change? |
14176 | Had he seen it? |
14176 | Had the strong man troubled the waters of the weaker man''s soul, and were those waters still agitated? |
14176 | Harding?" |
14176 | Harding?" |
14176 | Harding?" |
14176 | Harding?" |
14176 | Has he sailed for Australia?" |
14176 | Has it ever struck you that Harding was almost too successful a clergyman to be a genuinely holy man?" |
14176 | Has n''t it?" |
14176 | Has-- has anything happened to-- why do you want me at such an hour?" |
14176 | Have n''t you noticed that?" |
14176 | Have you come across him?" |
14176 | Have you ever felt such a sensation? |
14176 | Have you seen Chichester since his death?" |
14176 | He glanced at the rector rather doubtfully, seemed to take a resolution, and with an air almost of doggedness added,"May I?" |
14176 | He looked up at Malling, and almost solemnly he said:"Are you still going on with all those investigations?" |
14176 | He paused, then said again,"Well, Professor Stepton?" |
14176 | Her reason? |
14176 | How could that be? |
14176 | How could they be anything else? |
14176 | How could you know?" |
14176 | How shall I say? |
14176 | How, then, could he refuse to continue when success was already in sight? |
14176 | I do n''t quite understand?" |
14176 | I happened to be at church this morning--""At church-- where?" |
14176 | If I did, should I not again find peace? |
14176 | If I send it to you do you think you could find time to read it?" |
14176 | If we can learn by contemplation, can we not, must we not, learn by being contemplated? |
14176 | In reply to Malling''s half- laughing question, Lady Sophia said:"You''ve studied all these things, have n''t you?" |
14176 | In the course of conversation the doctor remarked:"Is your friend Stepton going to set up in Harley Street?" |
14176 | In the evening Mr. Harding had listened to Chichester-- how? |
14176 | In those few frightful moments what had become of myself, of Henry Chichester? |
14176 | In what respects was Mr. Harding typical?" |
14176 | In what way?" |
14176 | Is it saintliness to torture a fellow- creature?" |
14176 | Is it the instinct of the Creator burning like an undying spark in the created? |
14176 | Is n''t it sad?" |
14176 | Is n''t it too absurd?" |
14176 | Is that what you''d have me believe?" |
14176 | Is there anything to be done for me, anything that will restore me to my former powers? |
14176 | It did not mean"Why have you come?" |
14176 | It had come to this, then, to- night that he could be patient no longer? |
14176 | Joseph''s?" |
14176 | Malling, do you know whom this telegram is from?" |
14176 | Malling?" |
14176 | Malling?" |
14176 | Might not the former, therefore, conceivably draw in strength, while the other faded into weakness? |
14176 | My curates, for example--""Yes?" |
14176 | No? |
14176 | Now the professor''s"What is it?" |
14176 | Now what I want you to do is this: will you go upstairs and spend a few minutes alone with Chichester? |
14176 | Of double transfer, I mean?" |
14176 | On Friday afternoon, coming suddenly upon Stepton at a corner, he stopped abruptly, and said:"May I ask if you want anything of me?" |
14176 | Or-- did they? |
14176 | Ought he not to interrupt such a torture? |
14176 | Shall I tackle him?" |
14176 | Shall we add Chichester''s discovery of secret lapses in his worshiped rector''s life, to the nervous dyspepsia and the sittings? |
14176 | Shall we do an addition sum? |
14176 | Shall we do that?" |
14176 | Shall we go by Wilton Place, or--?" |
14176 | She looked up at him from the low chair in which she was sitting, gave him her left hand, and said,"Are you very tired?" |
14176 | Something within him-- was it something holy? |
14176 | Tell me-- did you mean them?" |
14176 | The clergyman is the doctor of the soul, is n''t he? |
14176 | The point is not what rank in the hierarchy a man has, but what, and how, does he see? |
14176 | Then he said:"The question is, Should the approach be casual or direct? |
14176 | Then why not publish?" |
14176 | Then you think he''s caught something of my manner and way of looking at things? |
14176 | They are so absurdly small this season, are n''t they? |
14176 | Was he a man of real force, or was he painted lath? |
14176 | Was he one of the few men? |
14176 | Was he saint or sinner, or just ordinary, normal man, with a usual allowance of faults and virtues? |
14176 | Was it certain that in every case the waters that had been mysteriously troubled settled into their former stillness? |
14176 | Was it his fancy which made him think that it looked slightly bowed, even perhaps a little shrunken? |
14176 | Was it the voice of conscience? |
14176 | Well, what did you think of it? |
14176 | Well?" |
14176 | Were vergers"bribable"? |
14176 | Were you at the Huntingham''s ball? |
14176 | Were you satisfied with that? |
14176 | What about Podmore,--there''s a loss!--and a dozen others? |
14176 | What answer should he return to the rector? |
14176 | What can it be? |
14176 | What did this_ so- called_ man of science do? |
14176 | What did you think of it?" |
14176 | What did you think of it?" |
14176 | What do you claim?" |
14176 | What do you say?" |
14176 | What had been the emotions only shadowed faintly forth in that ghastly face? |
14176 | What has happened?'' |
14176 | What have I done? |
14176 | What impression does he make upon you?" |
14176 | What is it? |
14176 | What is it?" |
14176 | What is it?" |
14176 | What is it?'' |
14176 | What more natural than that the professor should chance to be coming out of it? |
14176 | What novelty do you claim to present to startle science?" |
14176 | What of him?" |
14176 | What shall I do without him?" |
14176 | What were his expectations? |
14176 | When he was shown into the curate''s sitting- room, his first remark was:"Sent that very interesting story to''The Cornhill''yet?" |
14176 | When tea was finished and cleared away, he observed:"And now, Malling, what is your view? |
14176 | When would he arrive at Henry Chichester? |
14176 | Where could this person be going? |
14176 | Where would it end? |
14176 | Which is it now-- you professor, you? |
14176 | Which is it now?" |
14176 | Who can ever really expose himself?" |
14176 | Who can say? |
14176 | Who could this be whose familiar entry into his--_his_ home thus at night caused no disturbance? |
14176 | Who is it?" |
14176 | Whose?" |
14176 | Why did not she succeed? |
14176 | Why do I bear it? |
14176 | Why not follow Stepton''s advice? |
14176 | Why not study Lady Sophia? |
14176 | Why should not I break this mysterious link, impalpable yet strong? |
14176 | Why should we waste a thought on such nonsense?" |
14176 | Why? |
14176 | Why?" |
14176 | Will you do this for me?" |
14176 | Will you give me your word not to share what I shall tell you with any one, unless, later on, I am willing that you should?" |
14176 | Will you go and pay a visit of condolence to Chichester on the death of his rector, and then come round to the White House and report?" |
14176 | Will you make a little investigation for me? |
14176 | Will you promise me one thing? |
14176 | Will you stay? |
14176 | Would the rector be at the station? |
14176 | Would you like to come to my study?" |
14176 | Would you like to see him for me?" |
14176 | Would you say he was a man to have much power over others, his fellow- men?" |
14176 | XI"You have heard of doubles, of course, Professor?" |
14176 | Yet he had often said to himself,"Who can ever really expose another? |
14176 | Yet was it really so very marked? |
14176 | You can understand the position, I dare say?" |
14176 | You have heard?" |
14176 | You remember, I asked you not to tell him you were coming?" |
14176 | You think he would be a difficult customer to tackle now?" |
14176 | You wo n''t? |
14176 | You''ll have tea with me, I hope? |
14176 | You, a clergyman, think that it is good to bolster up truth with lies?" |
14176 | You-- you have no objection to promising to tell me?" |
14176 | but"Why are you obsessed at this moment, and by what?" |
14176 | said the professor,"that Henry Chichester will be greatly affected by this death?" |
14176 | who-- what?" |
27784 | Am I not to be your wife? 27784 And did n''t you?" |
27784 | Apa? |
27784 | Baboo find, and say,''Bagus kuching( pretty kitty), see Baboo''s doll?'' 27784 Big as Negri Blanda?" |
27784 | But the great laksamana? |
27784 | But what did he take her for? |
27784 | Do you know how died his Highness, Montezuma of Mexico, Tuan? |
27784 | Do you see that man? |
27784 | Do you take me for a tourist? 27784 How big your country?" |
27784 | How can dig? 27784 How long does it take to finish it?" |
27784 | How much you pay for wife? |
27784 | How old is he? |
27784 | Is he a year old? |
27784 | Is this she? |
27784 | It will be a hard climb and a hard day''s work? |
27784 | Jim, did you ever hear of one Crusoe? |
27784 | Mem see Baboo? |
27784 | Then why take so much trouble to secure it? 27784 Twenty- five dollars?" |
27784 | Well, how much do you want for him? |
27784 | Well,I said, after we had thoroughly inspected each other,"where are my shoes?" |
27784 | Were you listening to the call of the coo- ee? |
27784 | What became of the woman? |
27784 | What is it your Koran says that the wise king''s ships brought from Ophir? |
27784 | What is it, Aboo Din? |
27784 | What is it, Tiger- Child? |
27784 | What''s that? |
27784 | What''s the matter? |
27784 | What, that miserable little monkey? |
27784 | When is the Prince coming? |
27784 | Why did you come? |
27784 | Why? |
27784 | You think that it was for you that I put on all this bravery? |
27784 | Your little what? |
27784 | ( How are you, my lord?) |
27784 | ( What does it mean?) |
27784 | After each Malay had taken the little fellow in his arms, I turned to Baboo and said, while I tried to be severe,--"Baboo, where is tiger?" |
27784 | Baboo hid from sladang,--Aboo Din no whip Baboo?" |
27784 | Ca n''t you give me something new? |
27784 | Can I not dress in honor of the young Prince and-- Allah?" |
27784 | Can you say as much for your people?" |
27784 | Do you see the little Arabic character on the rim of each? |
27784 | For had not his Highness spoken twice to her father and called him a good man? |
27784 | He arose, smiling, touched his forehead with the back of his brown palm, and asked blandly:--"Tuan, want to buy?" |
27784 | He gracefully touched his forehead with the back of his open palm, and mumbled the Malay greeting:--"Tabek, Tuan?" |
27784 | He had been trying to make love in a blind, stumbling way; he did not know it,--why should he? |
27784 | How can Rajah say his country big?" |
27784 | How much you pay?" |
27784 | Is it because the Koran teaches modesty in woman, or is it because you are over- proud of your husband when you see him among other men?" |
27784 | Is it not so written in the Koran,--a wife shall reverence her husband?" |
27784 | Is your father, the captain, displeased with my father''s, the punghulo''s, dowry?" |
27784 | Sabe?" |
27784 | Shall syce buy ribbons?" |
27784 | She was wondering if he would notice her above the bridesmaids,--if it was not for her sake he was coming? |
27784 | She wondered why every one must be married,--why could she not go on and live just as she had,--she could weave and sew? |
27784 | Turning his eyes on me as I sat in the bow, the captain said, while he bent his sinewy back to the oar,"Jack, are you a good shot?" |
27784 | Was Montezuma''s capital greater?" |
27784 | What does this all mean?" |
27784 | What is it you want?" |
27784 | Where does she come in?" |
27784 | Why do you wait? |
27784 | Will you send a despatch by the steam- cutter to Prince Suliman, asking for the launch? |
27926 | Man is mortal,so we yield to the temptation, especially as we are awfully hungry-- when is a sailor not so? |
27926 | They had beat us,they said,"and to their entire satisfaction; what more could they desire?" |
27926 | Well''_''tis_ an ill wind that blows_ nobody_ good,''is it not? |
27926 | ? |
27926 | A somewhat curious way in which to commence my narrative, say you? |
27926 | And see, too, this systematic arrangement of bars, transverse and upright, is it possible they are anything naval? |
27926 | Annoying, was it not? |
27926 | Any plates left, any basins? |
27926 | Are we ever to hear anything of our relief? |
27926 | But are we really at sea? |
27926 | But surely no, it ca n''t be? |
27926 | But what is this? |
27926 | But where was it? |
27926 | Can it be that this is the primitive Japanese race-- that the more enlightened people of Niphon trace their origin to such a degraded source? |
27926 | Can it be that those concerns up there are meant for the stowage of boxes and hats? |
27926 | Can these be dwelling houses? |
27926 | Did you ever see such a wonderful plant as that same bamboo? |
27926 | Do these people desecrate their idols thus? |
27926 | Does it convey an adequate idea of the subject- matter? |
27926 | Have they forgotten us at home? |
27926 | Have they though? |
27926 | How often, dear reader, have you and I not done similarly at school feasts? |
27926 | How shall I describe it? |
27926 | I would claim for mine at least that merit; for is not every sea over which we have voyaged to the eastward of England? |
27926 | In the face of this can I agree with Miss Bird? |
27926 | It is at these sales that one sees the sailor come out in-- what shall I say, a new character? |
27926 | It was so, however; for suddenly somebody asked, in splendid English,"Do you require anything, gentlemen?" |
27926 | One may frequently meet in the streets vendors of poor puss, easily recognisable by their suggestive cry,"mow( miow?) |
27926 | Query, what do they live on? |
27926 | September 20th.--Exactly one month ago to- day the ship was docked-- to- day she came out; what do you think of that for expedition? |
27926 | Stay, are they_ all_ absent? |
27926 | That innocent lady, turning to her unnatural father- in- law, asked what the shouting meant and what the people wanted of her? |
27926 | The"mokes"are so well trained-- or is it that they have traversed the same ground so often? |
27926 | To which did the answer refer, the_ commissioning_, or the_ sailing_? |
27926 | Under such a state of affairs, who shall predict the fate of Admiral Willes''treaty? |
27926 | Up the beach was his hut-- I have seen many a stye a king to it-- and in the doorway his-- wife must I call her? |
27926 | Well, what was to be done? |
27926 | What though there be no crisp seasonable snow, no exhilarating frost, no cosy chimney nooks, or no ladies muffs and comfortable ulsters? |
27926 | What was on fire, the ship? |
27926 | What was to be done? |
27926 | What''s gone? |
27926 | What, not finished yet? |
27926 | Whither has the crowd conducted us? |
27926 | Who are they? |
27926 | Why? |
27926 | Why? |
27926 | Will they, can they by any fortuitous combination of circumstances, put in an appearance before we leave? |
27926 | With the intention, perhaps, of sharing the delicacy with her brothers and sisters, who shall say? |
27926 | Would we like to see them? |
27926 | call you this nothing?" |
27926 | how long, I wonder, before we shall be similarly decorated? |
27926 | who ever saw the like? |
23802 | Ca n''t I sell ye a bath sponge? |
23802 | Can such die? |
23802 | Come here, sir; what''s your name, sir? 23802 Do you mean?" |
23802 | Now,I said,"what do these rumors mean? |
23802 | Toleration? |
23802 | Will you come, you bit of carrion, or shall I fetch you? |
23802 | ''Wall,--no-- I come dasignin''--''''To see my ma? |
23802 | ''You want to see my pa, I s''pose?'' |
23802 | ( Did anybody expect old Nancy to tell him that was the crown crime of cowardice?) |
23802 | (_ Laughing._)_ Doctor._ I used to respect you...._ Philip._ Why not, for heaven''s sake? |
23802 | (_ Seats himself at table._) Say, Jack, d''you know, you left a goose a- layin''on Jim Adamses bar las''night? |
23802 | (_ Sulkily._)_ Uncle Nat._ What''s he calkalate t''do with mother? |
23802 | (_ They face each other._) Will yeh or wo n''t yeh? |
23802 | --"Why not?" |
23802 | A slur upon His justice, and a lie to His divine goodness? |
23802 | A traveller in Algiers relates the following conversation he had with a Moorish woman of high class:"When ill do you go to the doctor?" |
23802 | And then, yet again, there was the whist club, how could he leave that? |
23802 | At least what one did you leave on the book out there?" |
23802 | But how many does Mr. Savage want an individual to count? |
23802 | But if"freely chosen"will it not be the same as his individualism? |
23802 | But suppose I had? |
23802 | But this name,"Army of Industry,"fills our peaceful Mr. Savage with horror-- a remedy worse than the disease? |
23802 | By what authority is one part declared binding through ages and the other ignored? |
23802 | Can the building forces be strengthened, stimulated, and made more harmonious and divine? |
23802 | Chicking? |
23802 | D''you know, I can shave myself better''n any barber thet ever honed a razor? |
23802 | Did I keep y''waitin''? |
23802 | Did n''t he tell yeh? |
23802 | Do failures occur? |
23802 | Do you remember what a bright, beautiful morning it was? |
23802 | Do you say it can not be done? |
23802 | Do you stop this lecture to say that all this is a truism-- a"chestnut"? |
23802 | Even the Roman Pilate( if we are to take the reports?) |
23802 | Has mental healing a philosophical and scientific basis, or is it variously composed of quackery, superstition, and assumption? |
23802 | How to be the freest and therefore the best people that have ever lived? |
23802 | How to better education and thereby check this stream of"learned ignorance"? |
23802 | How to call out statesmen and abolish demagogues? |
23802 | How to destroy this struggle for government employ, this passion to be a public parasite and live off of others''toil? |
23802 | How to make the best of governments by ever- lowering taxes? |
23802 | How to prevent crime and suffering by removing causes? |
23802 | How to reach the consummation of the best government because the least governed? |
23802 | How to reform our judiciary until justice between men shall be nearly instantaneous and the next cheapest thing to air and water? |
23802 | How to save the weak( the majority) from the strong and selfish? |
23802 | How to understand that real statesmen repeal and never enact? |
23802 | How''re the sick folks? |
23802 | I rocked you in y''r cradle-- I''m blessed if I did n''t make the cradle you was rocked in, did n''t I, mother? |
23802 | If a skilful exercise of baseless superstition upon mind can be so efficacious, what results are possible by a judicious use of the truth? |
23802 | If so, under what conditions and subject to what limitations? |
23802 | In the simplest terms, how much truth does it contain? |
23802 | In this scramble and hurly- burly where is the"statesman"who can point to any similar act of his own in behalf of his fellow- man? |
23802 | Is it desirable to find some new vantage ground, and some more effective weapons? |
23802 | Is it possible that such can pass away into eternal torment?" |
23802 | Is it surprising that no one is perfectly healthy? |
23802 | Is n''t it just as revolting in a husband?... |
23802 | Is someone murdered?" |
23802 | Is there a necessity for some radical reinforcement to conventional instrumentalities to aid us in our warfare with human ills? |
23802 | It closes thus patriotically:--"Shall it be love, or hate, John? |
23802 | It was his mother''s fault that public_ interest_(?) |
23802 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside?'' |
23802 | Martin Berry, bean''t you a- comin''to your dinner t''day? |
23802 | Natural? |
23802 | Should these limitations discourage anyone? |
23802 | Such would be his democracy certainly, but then how can this Nationalism also"freely chosen"commit murder_ and_ suicide, and both at once? |
23802 | Suppose_ I_ had broken faith with you? |
23802 | The question then urges upon us in every direction: Shall the people become the slaves of this capital, or its masters? |
23802 | Then ca n''t you see that it is simply impossible for me to live with you again? |
23802 | These Christians(?) |
23802 | To them there was nothing heroic in the answer,"Because_ my_ life is ruined, shall I ruin his?" |
23802 | Warn''t they glorious? |
23802 | What all our lives to save thee? |
23802 | What does this mean, if not that our dramatists have been too distrustful of the public? |
23802 | What has the fellow done? |
23802 | What if he should convince them that eternal punishment was a myth, and an insult flung in the face of the Creator? |
23802 | What if he snapped his finger at a lake of brimstone and of eternal fire? |
23802 | What if those old sin- blackened souls should comfort themselves with the new doctrine, the idea that no good can be lost? |
23802 | What is disease? |
23802 | What is it all but a roaring farce? |
23802 | What lurking- place, thought we, for doubts or fears, When, the day''s swan, she swam along the cheers Of the Acalà ¡, five happy months ago? |
23802 | What were our lives without thee? |
23802 | What will be the future of Theosophy? |
23802 | What words divine of lover or of poet Could tell our love and make thee know it, Among the nations bright beyond compare? |
23802 | What''s this, Mary? |
23802 | When did the change come? |
23802 | When''d she die? |
23802 | Where d''s he talk o''beginnin''? |
23802 | Where''s my clean shirt? |
23802 | Who is it anyhow of the"magnetic"tribe that may cast the first stone at the"haystack"? |
23802 | Who knows? |
23802 | Who will assert that God is changeable, so that any divinely bestowed boon to one age could be withdrawn from a subsequent one? |
23802 | Why did this movement originate among women, and why have so large a proportion of its exponents belonged to the so- called weaker sex? |
23802 | Why does this prejudice exist, when advancement in physical science uniformly meets with a friendly reception? |
23802 | Why have we not the discerning eyes and impartial brains of Mr. Savage to read them? |
23802 | Why should a wife bear the whole stigma of infidelity? |
23802 | Wood Davis_,"Should the Nation own the Railways?" |
23802 | Would his face be any the less hard at the expiration of his term? |
23802 | Would it not have been better for THE ARENA to have been kept open, as if by the aforesaid Deity, with a level head and a stiff and silent upper lip? |
23802 | Would you live with me again? |
23802 | Yeh do n''t begrutch it to her, do yeh, Martin? |
23802 | _ Doctor._ Strange that she should want to be near you, ai nt it? |
23802 | _ Jack._ Feel my face now-- ain''t it as smooth as any baby''s? |
23802 | _ Jack._ Hey? |
23802 | _ Jack._ Honest? |
23802 | _ Jack._(_ Kissing her._) Then what''n thunder you want to talk about a feller''s gettin''old for? |
23802 | _ Lish._ Jack, have you got the time o''day? |
23802 | _ Lish._(_ Taking off mittens, cap, comforter, etc._) Whatcher got? |
23802 | _ Marg._ That''s a terrible thing to ask me to do, Philip....(_ She hesitates._)_ Philip._ Of course you''ll get a divorce? |
23802 | _ Martin._ Out there at the nothe eend o''the shore pint? |
23802 | _ Mary._(_ Falteringly._) Do you remember Bella and John in"Our Mutual Friend"that I read to you? |
23802 | _ Mother._ Yes, Jack, an''d''ye remember what yeh made it out of? |
23802 | _ Philip._ Is it degrading to forgive? |
23802 | _ Philip._ That''s my sentence.... We''ll be friends? |
23802 | _ Philip._ Well, I''ve done all I can to--_ Doctor._ Yeh have, eh? |
23802 | _ Philip._(_ After a pause subdued._) What d''ye want me to say to her? |
23802 | _ Philip._(_ His eyes meet those of the Doctor, then drop to the floor._) How in God''s name did they come to send for you? |
23802 | _ Uncle Nat._ D''ye think any fancy price he d ought to buy mother''s grave? |
23802 | _ Uncle Nat._ Did yeh tell him thet mother''s berried there? |
23802 | _ Uncle Nat._ Dooze''e? |
23802 | _ Uncle Nat._ Then who''s got so good a right to it as mother hez? |
23802 | _ Uncle Nat._ Yeh do n''t mean up yander? |
23802 | _ Uncle Nat._(_ Picks up a straw and chews it._) Hez''e? |
23802 | and what everybody wants,--and so all right? |
23802 | he mused,"such faithfulness, such magnificent courage, such glorious fidelity? |
23802 | say, look here now, thet ai n''t fair; a feller do n''t know nothin''till he''s forty, does he, mother? |
23802 | who''m I thet I should set my face agin improvemints, I''d like t''know? |
23802 | yet who dare call it blind, Knowing what life is, what our humankind?" |
26430 | Under what condition, in a symphonic work, is the visual image, introduced by the psychic image, produced? 26430 ''What time are vespers sung in your town?'' 26430 After this, is it necessary to remark that belief depends peculiarly on the motor elements of our organization and not on the intellectual? 26430 And why so? 26430 Are not these dispositions of the mind fertile in artifices, stratagems, inventions of all kinds? 26430 Are there characters peculiar to each one? 26430 Are there races or groups of men totally devoid of myths? 26430 Are these images complete, in the strict sense of the word? 26430 Are these two views irreconcilable? 26430 Besides, has an experiment, in the strict sense of the word, ever been made at thepsychological moment"? |
26430 | But is there a criterion other than that? |
26430 | But what is the nature of this work? |
26430 | But what is their nature? |
26430 | By what positive signs do we recognize it? |
26430 | CHAPTER II THE CREATIVE IMAGINATION IN THE CHILD At what age, in what form, under what conditions does the creative imagination make its appearance? |
26430 | CHAPTER V LAW OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE IMAGINATION Is imagination, so often called"a capricious faculty,"subject to some law? |
26430 | CONCLUSION I THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE CREATIVE IMAGINATION Why is the human mind able to create? |
26430 | Classifications are made according to the essential dominating attributes; but, as regards the varieties of the creative imagination, what are they? |
26430 | Consequently, is it not paradoxical to relate it to plastic imagination, as species to genus? |
26430 | Dare we hold that hypochondria and insanity following upon the delirium of persecution are devoid of imagination? |
26430 | Difficulties of the subject.--The degree of imagination in animals.--Does creative synthesis exist in them? |
26430 | Do not people discuss seriously the objective value of certain myths, and of metaphysical theories? |
26430 | Does experimentation, strictly so called, teach us anything on this point? |
26430 | First of all, do all representations include motor elements? |
26430 | Flechsig''s theory.--Physiological conditions: are they cause, effect, or accompaniment? |
26430 | Greatness is altogether a relative idea; and would not our great creators seem, to beings better endowed than we, very small? |
26430 | Has it not often been said that the religion of one is superstition to another, and_ vice versâ_? |
26430 | Has the creative power of the human mind also analogous antecedents, a physiological equivalent? |
26430 | Have not psychologists distinguished, according as one or another of image- groups preponderates, visual, auditory, motor and mixed types? |
26430 | Have they inspired myths? |
26430 | He was so absorbed in the matter that he did not notice a man coming toward him, and at the question,''M......, if you please--?'' |
26430 | Here is an idea_ A_; it is the center of a network; it can radiate in all directions--_B, C, D, E, F, etc._ Why does it call up now_ B_, later_ F_? |
26430 | How are we to determine these varieties? |
26430 | How draw a dividing line so as to assign to the imagination only its rightful share? |
26430 | How many creators have been wrecked because the conditions necessary for their inventions were lacking? |
26430 | How may we rightly assert that a form of imaginative life is clearly pathologic? |
26430 | If, for example, some lower type had the power of arresting pain, how could it lose it? |
26430 | In conclusion, I anticipate a possible question:"Does the unconscious factor differ in nature from the two others( intellectual and emotional)?" |
26430 | In passing, let us put the opposite question, Why is one_ not_ imaginative? |
26430 | In short, should we look for his representative character within him or without? |
26430 | In what respect does this mode of creation differ from others, at least in the practical order? |
26430 | Is a psychology of great inventors possible? |
26430 | Is association by resemblance, which Wundt calls internal, strictly speaking, an elementary law? |
26430 | Is it based on a special structure in the brain, or rather on special irritability? |
26430 | Is it only a superficial likeness, a hasty judgment, a metaphor, or does it rest on some positive basis? |
26430 | Is it psychological? |
26430 | Is it purely physiological? |
26430 | Is it useful or hurtful? |
26430 | Is not the way clear and is it not well enough to go in this direction? |
26430 | Is the stick that he bestrides perfectly identified with a horse? |
26430 | Is there a connection between the development of the generative function and that of the imagination? |
26430 | Is there a"seat"of the imagination? |
26430 | Is there not an art frankly and deliberately pessimistic? |
26430 | Is this sometimes found in the animal kingdom? |
26430 | Judging from this, how refuse them invention altogether? |
26430 | Let us now study the psychology of this creative activity, reducing it to these two questions: How are myths formed? |
26430 | May the type of imagination, the chief manifestations of which we have just enumerated, be considered as identical with the idealistic imagination? |
26430 | Need we mention the Middle Age practice of charms, which even in our day still has adherents among cultured people? |
26430 | Plato and More-- would they have wished to realize their dreams? |
26430 | Shall we say that it is"instinctive,"consequently unconscious? |
26430 | Then they have been led to ask: Which of these two elements is the primitive one? |
26430 | There are some associations based on contiguity and on resemblance which one may foresee, but how about the rest? |
26430 | They are helpers of inspiration.--Is there any analogy between physical and psychic creation? |
26430 | This method aside, since the determination must be made according to the individuality of the architect, what method shall we follow? |
26430 | This much admitted, let us return to our special question, which Flechsig asks in these words:"On what does genius rest? |
26430 | To begin with, is it necessarily inherent in the human mind? |
26430 | To keep even to esthetic creation, is it necessary to recall the saying_ facit indignatio versum_? |
26430 | Was Sully''s child, that showed its doll a series of engravings to choose from, completely deceived? |
26430 | We might just as well ask why does man have eyes and not an electric apparatus like the torpedo? |
26430 | We shall try later( in the Conclusion) to answer the question,_ Why_ is one imaginative? |
26430 | What business has this affectation this morning in a classic and dull building, in a common environment of poor workmen? |
26430 | What could he accomplish? |
26430 | What does it produce in the practical, esthetic, scientific, moral, social, religious field? |
26430 | What is superstition? |
26430 | What line does their evolution follow? |
26430 | What more have poets and artists done? |
26430 | What more then is needed? |
26430 | What then shall we do with the emotional geniuses-- the poets and artists? |
26430 | What theory was more clinging, more fascinating in its applications, than that of phlogiston? |
26430 | What, indeed, could it be? |
26430 | Whence, then, comes this persistent and in some respects seductive idea that creation is an instinctive result? |
26430 | Where does it begin, and where does it end? |
26430 | Where, indeed, find more favorable conditions for knowing it? |
26430 | Which is the chief process here? |
26430 | Who created those legends and tales of adventure constituting the subject- matter of mythology? |
26430 | Who does not know of Newton''s apple, Galileo''s lamp, Galvani''s frog? |
26430 | Who does not know the symbolism of the cathedrals, and the vagaries to which it has given rise? |
26430 | Why are people inclined to believe that our present subject, if not entirely foreign to the imagination, is only an impoverished form of it? |
26430 | Why does a man create? |
26430 | Why does he perceive changes of odors but not magnetic changes? |
26430 | Why does he perceive directly sounds but not the ultra- red and ultra- violet rays? |
26430 | Why is one called up rather than another, and at such a moment rather than at another? |
26430 | Why, then, the view above mentioned? |
26430 | Why? |
26430 | Would it be improper to consider as a variety of the genus a mode of representation that could be expressed as_ clearness in simplicity_? |
26430 | Would it be possible? |
26430 | Yet is it not the mother of phantoms, of numberless superstitions, of altogether irrational and chimerical religious practices? |
26430 | [ 39] Has not chorea itself been called a muscular insanity? |
26430 | that is, according to our present notions, on chemical factors? |
26430 | the action of a novel or drama as though it were a matter of real events? |
26430 | the character of the_ dramatis personae_ as though they were living flesh and blood? |
26430 | which is a slightly different question from that usually asked,"Are there tribes totally devoid of religious thoughts?" |
13158 | ''And do you think she cares about Blake?'' 13158 ''And if I will not?'' |
13158 | ''And then?'' 13158 ''And your promise shall be irrevocable?'' |
13158 | ''Be your wife?'' 13158 ''But if he leaves disgraced, proved to be a villain, a deceiver, a blackleg, or worse than that, while I show up as an angel of light?'' |
13158 | ''Come to what?'' 13158 ''Come to what?'' |
13158 | ''Denied nothing?'' 13158 ''Drearwater Pond? |
13158 | ''Have you no mercy?'' 13158 ''See you anything by which the mystery can be learned?'' |
13158 | ''Spirit of Ilfra,''said Abou,''are you here?'' 13158 ''Voltaire,''I said,''is this quite fair?'' |
13158 | ''Well, what for that?'' 13158 ''Well, you''ll do your best for me, wo n''t you?'' |
13158 | ''Well?'' 13158 ''What are you writing?'' |
13158 | ''What do you want with me, man?'' 13158 ''What expect you, Abou?'' |
13158 | ''What see you, son Herod?'' 13158 ''What, am I to leave you at once?'' |
13158 | ''Who are you, man?'' 13158 ''Why?'' |
13158 | ''You answer, Miss Forrest?'' 13158 ''You refuse me?'' |
13158 | After all,remarked Simon, slowly,"it shows us how a feller can live away from his body, do n''t it, then? |
13158 | Ah, that will do, will it? |
13158 | Ah, what then? |
13158 | Am I bold to speak thus? |
13158 | Am I guilty of so much, then? |
13158 | Am I to understand that you doubt the truth of my words? |
13158 | Am I, Justin? 13158 And I had a promise, too,"I said;"will it be painful for you to keep it?" |
13158 | And Miss Forrest? |
13158 | And do you mean to say that what you have mentioned exists in reality? |
13158 | And have I ever given evidence of belonging to that class, Miss Forrest? |
13158 | And he would be able to catch a train from there? |
13158 | And her answer? |
13158 | And how far is the next station beyond that? |
13158 | And how far the other way? |
13158 | And how long will it be before there''s another train to Dingledale Junction? |
13158 | And if I refuse? |
13158 | And is the Egyptian at home now? |
13158 | And it stops at the next station? |
13158 | And she? |
13158 | And that? |
13158 | And were the movements of her legs and arms natural? |
13158 | And what did you see? |
13158 | And what did you think she was like? |
13158 | And what for all this? |
13158 | And what may be your ideas concerning education? |
13158 | And what then? |
13158 | And what then? |
13158 | And what''s he doing now? |
13158 | And when is it to come off, Simon? |
13158 | And where did he book for? |
13158 | And where is Kaffar? |
13158 | And who was that? |
13158 | And who''s the chap as hev got to be waccinated-- or mesmerized, as you call it? |
13158 | And you do n''t feel tired now? |
13158 | Any message for me? |
13158 | Any particular guest, Tom? |
13158 | Are n''t you afraid yourself, then? |
13158 | Are they all Europeans? |
13158 | Are they at home during the day? |
13158 | Are those all your commands? |
13158 | Are you quite justified in saying that? |
13158 | Are you sure this is all, Jane? |
13158 | Bad luck with your letters, Simon? 13158 But ca n''t Slowden remain as he is and watch him?" |
13158 | But do you know what has become of Kaffar? |
13158 | But do you think there is any hope of finding him? |
13158 | But does Mr. Blake mean to insinuate that Mr. Kaffar and myself have learnt such a code as this? |
13158 | But has the knowledge come since? |
13158 | But he has a ticket; ca n''t you see it? |
13158 | But might I ask why you saw fit to change your conduct from friendliness to extreme aversion? |
13158 | But not simply from a feeling of pity? |
13158 | But surely such nonsense is not believed in now? |
13158 | But they come home at night? |
13158 | But what is to be done, Simon? |
13158 | But what must I do? |
13158 | But why should we be watched? 13158 But why will they have dealings with you? |
13158 | But would Mr. Blake like to be convinced? |
13158 | But you are not afraid? 13158 But you found no difficulty in getting her consent, Tom?" |
13158 | But you''ll go back to the drawing- room? |
13158 | But,I asked anxiously,"can you tell me Kaffar''s whereabouts now?" |
13158 | By the way, Tom,I said, after another short silence,"have you found out anything in relation to the ghost which appeared here during my visit?" |
13158 | Can you describe the street in which this hotel is? |
13158 | Can you draw a sketch of the road to it from the railway station? |
13158 | Can you give me ten minutes before dinner, sur? |
13158 | Can you repeat what he said? |
13158 | Can you see the name of the station? |
13158 | Can you,I went on,"tell the whereabouts of a man whom I may describe to you?" |
13158 | Can''ee come this yer way a minit, yer honour? |
13158 | Come,he said,"do you consent to my terms? |
13158 | Could you not by any means find out? 13158 Could you obtain one?" |
13158 | Could you tell me where he is? |
13158 | Did I do anything very foolish? |
13158 | Did I kill him? 13158 Did I really kill that man?" |
13158 | Did she go to him? |
13158 | Did that Mr. Voltaire, I think you call him, make passes? |
13158 | Did this gentleman have any luggage? |
13158 | Did you feel no strange influences coming back just now? 13158 Did you have a good journey, Simon?" |
13158 | Do I annoy you, astonish you, Miss Forrest? |
13158 | Do n''t you know it was very foolish of you to think of coming alone? |
13158 | Do you doubt the existence of the forces I have mentioned? |
13158 | Do you feel shaky and shivery, Simon? |
13158 | Do you know any of the people who are here? |
13158 | Do you know of what you are in danger? |
13158 | Do you know what country the town is in? |
13158 | Do you know what is on the programme for to- night? |
13158 | Do you know what it did, Simon,said Tom, turning to that worthy,"after it lifted its knife in the air?" |
13158 | Do you know where he is now? |
13158 | Do you know where he''s going? |
13158 | Do you mean to say you have seen similar feats before? |
13158 | Do you not like them? |
13158 | Do you remember a man coming for a ticket that night who struck you as peculiar? |
13158 | Do you see Kaffar, the Egyptian? |
13158 | Do you see Kaffar, the Egyptian? |
13158 | Do you think she will marry Voltaire,I said, after a short silence,"if I can not find Kaffar or prove that he is alive?" |
13158 | Do you think that the matters to which I have referred exist only in the mind? 13158 Do you?" |
13158 | Gentlemen? |
13158 | Has any one been asking for me? |
13158 | Have we been together? |
13158 | Have we? |
13158 | Have you bin a- waccinatin''me? |
13158 | Have you brought me here to tell me that? |
13158 | Have you found out anything more about him? |
13158 | Have you many lodgers at present? |
13158 | Have you many lodgers now? |
13158 | Have you thought my conduct strange since we last rode out together? |
13158 | Help you, Mr. Blake? 13158 How are you this morning? |
13158 | How can I say? |
13158 | How dare you come here? |
13158 | How do you know they are in this direction? |
13158 | How do you know this? |
13158 | How do you know? |
13158 | How do you know? |
13158 | How far is the nearest station in the Leeds direction? |
13158 | How many? |
13158 | How''s that? |
13158 | How, yer honour? |
13158 | How? |
13158 | I am sure I have Miss Staggles''sympathies, but will some one assist me in what I am about to do? 13158 I do not wish to have anything to do with him,"I said,"and might I also say something to you? |
13158 | I playing a losing game? 13158 I suppose Voltaire has told every one the circumstances of last night?" |
13158 | I want to know what this means? |
13158 | Indeed? |
13158 | Interested? |
13158 | Is Mr. Blake convinced? |
13158 | Is it manly,I said to him,"to persecute a lady thus? |
13158 | Is it true? |
13158 | Is it you, Justin? |
13158 | Is that all, Simon? |
13158 | Is that all, Tom? |
13158 | Is that all? |
13158 | Is that all? |
13158 | Is that old woman to be in this carriage with me for five or six long hours? 13158 Is that the only hope?" |
13158 | It''s a shame that you should be under such a ban, because if a man ca n''t make himself pleasant to ladies, what_ can_ he do? |
13158 | Kaffar is at Torino, is he? |
13158 | Kaffar? 13158 Kill him?" |
13158 | Look, Mr. Blake; do you recognize this? |
13158 | Mad, am I? |
13158 | May I claim your pardon, your forgiveness? |
13158 | May I know what? |
13158 | Me, sir? |
13158 | Might I ask if you are somewhat of a-- well, a gentleman fond of play? |
13158 | Might I ask their nationality? |
13158 | Might I ask when he will be home? |
13158 | Might I ask your business? |
13158 | Mr. Blake,she said, after pausing a second,"do you remember what we were talking about that day when we last rode out together?" |
13158 | Mr. Kaffar will have supper, I suppose? |
13158 | My advantage? 13158 No idea whatever?" |
13158 | No one? |
13158 | No-- what? |
13158 | No-- why? |
13158 | No? |
13158 | No? |
13158 | Not with the appearance of the ghost last night? |
13158 | Now do you believe? |
13158 | Now,he said,"what do you see?" |
13158 | Of what? |
13158 | Oh, are you safe-- are you safe? |
13158 | Oh, what- what? |
13158 | Painful, Justin? |
13158 | Perhaps you know this? |
13158 | Pray why? |
13158 | Say, Justin, my boy,he said,"what do you say to a gallop of four?" |
13158 | Simon,I said, after some time,"have you thought any more of the wonderful ghost that you saw last night?" |
13158 | Simon,said Tom a second after,"what colour are the chestnut mare''s eyes?" |
13158 | So surprised, was he? 13158 So you believe in this ghost?" |
13158 | Surely you are sufficiently interested in me to save me from a man like Voltaire? |
13158 | Surely you do not believe in his foolish story or conjuring tricks? |
13158 | Surely you have n''t taken me up here to give me your impressions concerning Miss Staggles? |
13158 | That is, you looked into the passage? |
13158 | The fir plantation? 13158 Then why must you have any dealings with them?" |
13158 | Then you go to church this morning? |
13158 | Then you will not release Miss Forrest? |
13158 | Think you I have not thought of that? |
13158 | This midnight train is a stopping train? |
13158 | To Mr. Kaffar''s advantage? |
13158 | True enough; but what''s this got to do with the matter? |
13158 | Well, Simon, what was her reply? |
13158 | Well, Simon? |
13158 | Well, what for that? |
13158 | Well, what now? |
13158 | Well, what then? |
13158 | Well, what''s the name? |
13158 | Well, what? 13158 Well?" |
13158 | Well? |
13158 | Well? |
13158 | Were you at the booking- office on the day after New Year''s Day? |
13158 | Were you with Kaffar last night after he had so abominably insulted you and left the house? |
13158 | What are the servants doing at this time? |
13158 | What are they? |
13158 | What do you know of this? |
13158 | What do you mean by what you call the vaccination dodge? |
13158 | What do you see now? |
13158 | What do you wish me to tell you about? |
13158 | What does he say? |
13158 | What does this mean? |
13158 | What does this mean? |
13158 | What does this mean? |
13158 | What for? |
13158 | What in the world drew you away so suddenly? |
13158 | What is he doing? |
13158 | What is it, Simon? |
13158 | What kind of a man, sir? |
13158 | What next, Tom? |
13158 | What was her answer? |
13158 | What was it, Tom? |
13158 | What''s delightful? |
13158 | What''s the matter, Simon? |
13158 | What''s the matter? |
13158 | What, after all,was the thought that maddened me,"if he should be lying at the bottom of Drearwater Pond?" |
13158 | What, waccinatin''? |
13158 | What? 13158 What?" |
13158 | When will Mr. Kaffar be back? |
13158 | When, then? |
13158 | Where am I? |
13158 | Where is he going? |
13158 | Where is he now? |
13158 | Where is he? |
13158 | Where''ve I been? |
13158 | Where? |
13158 | Where? |
13158 | Which way did they go, and how long have they been gone? |
13158 | Who are the four? |
13158 | Who are you? |
13158 | Who is he? |
13158 | Who''d''a thought it? |
13158 | Who''s there? |
13158 | Who? |
13158 | Why did I not, then? |
13158 | Why do n''t you get an influence over her, as you did over Blake? 13158 Why have you brought me here?" |
13158 | Why, Simon? |
13158 | Why, Simon? |
13158 | Why, again? |
13158 | Why, what do you think? |
13158 | Why, what have I done? |
13158 | Why,I thought,"should I follow these men? |
13158 | Why? |
13158 | Why? |
13158 | Why? |
13158 | Why? |
13158 | Will he let you know when he is coming back? |
13158 | Will you come here at three o''clock? |
13158 | Will you kindly sit down,said Voltaire,"while I go to my room for a book?" |
13158 | Will you not, for my sake, if not for your own, exert yourself? 13158 Will you tell me,"said Miss Forrest,"what my aunt is doing just now?" |
13158 | Would you mind leading him to the library? |
13158 | Would you mind letting me know the train? 13158 Yes, yes, I shall be delighted; and then, when he comes, we''ll-- But what name shall I write on my message?" |
13158 | Yorkshire? |
13158 | You ai n''t a- seen that''ere hinfidel willain since he went away from''ere, Mr. Blake, have''ee? |
13158 | You are a professor of mesmerism and clairvoyance, I believe? |
13158 | You are not a- gwine to waccinate me, be''ee? |
13158 | You do n''t think that''ere waccinatin'', sumnamblifyin''willain''ev got the thing in''and? |
13158 | You have inquired about her? |
13158 | You have lived in the East? |
13158 | You hear? |
13158 | You knew I was following you, did you? |
13158 | You make me? |
13158 | You mean nothing wrong? |
13158 | You think it was got up, then? |
13158 | You thought you would master me, did n''t you? |
13158 | You will admit I have brought you here, then? |
13158 | You will not allow him to touch me? |
13158 | _ Your_ only son? 13158 ''But what then?'' 13158 ''How?'' 13158 ''Think not?'' 13158 ''What do you mean?'' 13158 ''What mercy did he have upon my friend? 13158 ''What''s that? 13158 ''Why, what will you do?'' 13158 ''You saw Kaffar challenge Mr. Blake in the drawing- room?'' 13158 A monster of frightful mien? 13158 Again, if he were alive, where was he? 13158 And a man did not conduct her business? 13158 And again, whence the idea of God, whence the longing for Him? 13158 And did I spare him? 13158 And her name? |
13158 | And she?" |
13158 | And what is this?" |
13158 | And yet who gave us love-- made us capable of loving? |
13158 | Are they, in your idea, no sciences in reality?" |
13158 | Are you not staying here now against your will? |
13158 | At length Tom Temple said--"Would one of the servants do, Voltaire?" |
13158 | At this the housekeeper became conscious and said in a hoarse whisper,"Is she gone?" |
13158 | Besides, did not the longing for Him give evidence of His being? |
13158 | Besides, what about the booking- clerk that issued a ticket to Kaffar two hours after you and Mr. Temple found me?" |
13158 | Blake?" |
13158 | Blake?" |
13158 | Blake?" |
13158 | Blake?" |
13158 | But I did not trouble, for was not Gertrude Forrest near me, and did we not have delightful conversation together? |
13158 | But how''s it to be done?" |
13158 | But might not I have been deceived by the professor? |
13158 | But what did you hear?" |
13158 | But what is the use? |
13158 | But, Justin, can you really give no explanation of these things? |
13158 | Ca n''t you see how she scorns you, hates you, loathes you? |
13158 | Can it be he? |
13158 | Can you help me to find out his whereabouts?" |
13158 | Could I have killed him? |
13158 | Could I see her? |
13158 | Could he not make my friend say, not what really existed, but what existed in his own mind? |
13158 | Could he tell me of any boarding or lodging establishment in the street? |
13158 | Could it be that I had come all these weary miles again only for a bitter and terrible disappointment? |
13158 | Could it be that I had murdered this man? |
13158 | Could not some one you know, and who knows him, sketch a faithful likeness from memory?" |
13158 | Could you manage to put me in a room where I can see him at supper without being observed? |
13158 | Did I kill him? |
13158 | Did Miss Gertrude Forrest live there? |
13158 | Did he give his name?" |
13158 | Did he remember such a passenger as I described? |
13158 | Did he see Kaffar? |
13158 | Did he stay at home during the day? |
13158 | Did her quick mind guess my condition? |
13158 | Did she keep a boarding- house? |
13158 | Did she understand me? |
13158 | Did she, I wondered, care anything for me? |
13158 | Did you not come here against your will? |
13158 | Did you not hear me asking you to avoid having anything to do with him?" |
13158 | Do you feel quite right?" |
13158 | Do you relinquish all thoughts, all hopes, of ever winning Gertrude Forrest?" |
13158 | Do you think I killed Kaffar, the Egyptian?" |
13158 | Had I in my mesmeric condition yielded to his will in such a degree as to kill the wily Egyptian and hurl him in the pond? |
13158 | Had I? |
13158 | Had I? |
13158 | Have you one?" |
13158 | He continued--"''Does any one know of these things besides you two?'' |
13158 | He dare not come; how dare he? |
13158 | Herod Voltaire came up to me, however, and hissed in my ear--"Do you yield to my power now?" |
13158 | How can he help us?" |
13158 | How could I find Kaffar? |
13158 | How could I tell whether he were alive or dead? |
13158 | How did I know it was Voltaire''s power that made me do the deed? |
13158 | How did they know that?" |
13158 | How much shall it be?" |
13158 | How? |
13158 | How?" |
13158 | How?" |
13158 | How?" |
13158 | I am very sorry; will you forgive me?" |
13158 | I do not comprehend in the least; but, tell me, who is this some one to whom you or he has related last night''s affair, and why was it done?" |
13158 | I have been looking over the subjects of examination, and what are they? |
13158 | I suppose you had breakfast before you came here?" |
13158 | I would give the world if I could: but how can I? |
13158 | Is he not a wonderful man?" |
13158 | Is he sufficiently susceptible?" |
13158 | Is there any mystery connected with him?" |
13158 | Is this true?" |
13158 | Is your mind clear?" |
13158 | It is a queer name though, ai n''t it?" |
13158 | It looked very innocent to be mesmerized last night, did n''t it? |
13158 | Kaffar held down his head for a minute, and then said hastily,"And his message?" |
13158 | Love, astonishment, pain, vexation, or joy? |
13158 | Man, where is he now?" |
13158 | Might not my blind passion have swept me on to this dark deed? |
13158 | Must I give up, then? |
13158 | Need I relate what followed that night? |
13158 | Need I say that my morning was truly enjoyable? |
13158 | No? |
13158 | No? |
13158 | Now, where is your power, and where are the charges you have brought?" |
13158 | Perhaps"--turning, I thought, eagerly to me--"Mr. Blake will be the one?" |
13158 | Shall you go?" |
13158 | Sharp?" |
13158 | She had no husband? |
13158 | Should I renounce my life''s love? |
13158 | Should I yield my darling to Voltaire? |
13158 | Should he take me? |
13158 | Should she have the pleasure of selling me some? |
13158 | So, seeing a soldier pass up the street, I saluted him and asked him whether he knew a lodging- house or private boarding establishment in the street? |
13158 | Some servant walking in her sleep?" |
13158 | Still, there were twenty- four days; but what were they? |
13158 | Supposing I succeeded, was I any more fit to be her husband than he? |
13158 | Supposing he had gone to Egypt, how could I find him? |
13158 | Surely I, a man of thirty, ought to know better? |
13158 | Surely no one perceives that we are suspicious parties?" |
13158 | Surely you must be able to?" |
13158 | Take, for example, the ordinary English education, and what does it amount to? |
13158 | Temple,''she cried to me,''you will not tell, will you? |
13158 | Temple?" |
13158 | Temple?" |
13158 | Temple?" |
13158 | Temple?--a red hand appears from the water, and whoever sees it will be led to commit murder?" |
13158 | That terrible place to which we rode the other day?'' |
13158 | There''s a railway station in the town; can you not see the name there?" |
13158 | They have as much right here as I have, and surely two friends can leave the house and come out for a stroll without being watched?" |
13158 | This was a lodging- house, was it not? |
13158 | To search out all the gambling- houses in Paris would be a hopeless task; besides, would he gamble in Paris, a city of which he knew nothing? |
13158 | Voltaire,''said a voice,''you have been out looking for Mr. Blake; have you found him?''" |
13158 | Voltaire?" |
13158 | Voltaire?" |
13158 | Von Virchow began by asking the same question he had asked in the morning:"Do you see Kaffar, the Egyptian?" |
13158 | Was He here now-- to help, to save? |
13158 | Was I right in thus openly defying the man who possessed such a terrible power? |
13158 | Was Jesus Christ still the same wonderful power? |
13158 | Was Kaffar in Turin? |
13158 | Was Professor Virchow at home? |
13158 | Was all this mesmerism so much hocus- pocus and nonsense to deceive me, a credulous fool? |
13158 | Was he alive? |
13158 | Was he or had he been there? |
13158 | Was it right to stand listening thus? |
13158 | Was love the result of chance, which was in reality nothing? |
13158 | Was not Herod Voltaire your master?" |
13158 | Was not I the victim of some Quixotic ideas? |
13158 | Was not the creation of Cervantes''brain about as sensible as I? |
13158 | Was she at home? |
13158 | Was she the proprietor of this establishment? |
13158 | Was there any vestige of interest in her heart beyond that which she felt for any passing acquaintance? |
13158 | Was there hope for me? |
13158 | Was there one about the middle of the street? |
13158 | Was this a ruse on the part of the Egyptian? |
13158 | Well, but''twill be grand if we can find''i m, yer honour, wo n''t it then?" |
13158 | Were Voltaire''s words true? |
13158 | Were not my thoughts concerning Voltaire''s schemes about Miss Forrest all fancy? |
13158 | What could it be? |
13158 | What do you mean?" |
13158 | What do you say? |
13158 | What do you think of it, Justin?" |
13158 | What had I done? |
13158 | What is it?" |
13158 | What is that in your hand?" |
13158 | What is your will now?" |
13158 | What kind of a man?" |
13158 | What motive, I asked, could Kaffar have in connecting me with the ghost, and what was the plot which was being concocted? |
13158 | What must I do? |
13158 | What then? |
13158 | What then?" |
13158 | What was I? |
13158 | What was his purpose in getting at a correct estimate of Miss Forrest''s character? |
13158 | What was it? |
13158 | What was that? |
13158 | Where is Kaffar now?" |
13158 | Where was Kaffar? |
13158 | Where was he, then? |
13158 | Where, then? |
13158 | Where? |
13158 | Where?'' |
13158 | Which was he? |
13158 | Who can bear to think of having taken away a fellow- creature''s life? |
13158 | Who could tell? |
13158 | Who do you mean?" |
13158 | Why are they plotting against you?" |
13158 | Why should I struggle and resist? |
13158 | Why should Miss Staggles be so willing to help Herod Voltaire, and what were the designs in his mind? |
13158 | Why should Miss Staggles pose as a ghost, even at the instigation of Voltaire? |
13158 | Why should any exception be made for me? |
13158 | Why should the thoughts of a Christmas holiday so unfit me, a staid old bachelor of thirty, for my usual work? |
13158 | Why, do you know, that takes away another day? |
13158 | Why, then, should such a terrible suspicion be aroused? |
13158 | Why?" |
13158 | Why?" |
13158 | Will any gentleman or lady show me any curiosity he or she may have?" |
13158 | Will you come and spend a fortnight or so at Temple Hall? |
13158 | Will you explain?" |
13158 | Will you insist on her abiding by a promise which was made in excitement to save an innocent man?" |
13158 | Will you not think of my happiness a little? |
13158 | Would Kaffar have allowed himself to be followed in such a way? |
13158 | Would the inquiries be successful? |
13158 | Would you mind taking this chair, my friend?" |
13158 | You did not think I could crush you like a grasshopper, did you? |
13158 | You feel like defying me, do n''t you? |
13158 | You know Miss Forrest well, do n''t you, her education, and her disposition?" |
13158 | You will not spread such a deceptive story about?'' |
13158 | You''ll attend to my wishes with regard to our friend, wo n''t you? |
13158 | _ Yours?_"cried Miss Forrest''s aunt. |
13158 | and should I be happy? |
13158 | cried Tom,"we did not expect to see you just yet Surely something''s the matter?" |
13158 | give''em to me?'' |
13158 | he cried,"you defy me, eh? |
13158 | he exclaimed,"do you mean to say that the villain used such means to get you out of his road and win Miss Forrest for himself?" |
13158 | the ghost of some murdered man or woman? |
13158 | would Gertrude be freed from Voltaire? |
13158 | you are cowed at last, are you?" |
13158 | you''ve brought him?" |
29288 | And those books? |
29288 | But do you not see that the powerful, and the rich, sow among the children of Israel a spirit of rebellion against the eternal power of Heaven? |
29288 | But you, yourselves; do you not possess copies of the scrolls bearing upon the prophet Issa? |
29288 | But,said the priests,"how could the people live according to your rules if they had no teachers?" |
29288 | By whose command the angels compiled His Word in laws for the governance of His people, which were given to Zoroaster in Paradise? 29288 Can one raise against estrayed men, to whom darkness has hidden their road and their door?" |
29288 | Did you enjoy our little festival? |
29288 | Do all perform mysteries similar to that which I have just witnessed? |
29288 | Does Cæsar possess a divine right? |
29288 | How is Issa looked upon in Thibet? 29288 In what language are written the principal scrolls bearing upon the life of Issa?" |
29288 | Is there not, among those books, some account of the prophet Issa? |
29288 | Of what new God dost thou speak? 29288 Where can those writings be found, and who compiled them?" |
29288 | Which Dalai- Lama of the Christians do you refer to? |
29288 | Who, then, art thou, who darest to utter blasphemies against our God and sow doubt in the hearts of believers? |
29288 | Who, then, has caused that this star lights the day, warms man at his work and vivifies the seeds sown in the ground? |
29288 | Why dost not thou perform a miracle,replied the priests,"and let thy God confound ours, if He is greater than they?" |
29288 | Why? |
29288 | Would you commit a sin in reciting your copy of the life of Issa to a stranger? |
29288 | --"And he said unto them, How is it that ye sought me? |
29288 | And now comes another question: Why should he, a prince, have attached himself to the Israelites? |
29288 | But, how could this be? |
29288 | Could you not tell me anything about him?" |
29288 | Has he the repute of a saint?" |
29288 | How did this legend take root? |
29288 | How otherwise could his great legislative work, his broad views, his high administrative qualities be satisfactorily explained? |
29288 | I showed my manuscript to a cardinal very near to the Holy Father, who answered me literally in these words:--"What good will it do to print this? |
29288 | Is it lawful to give tribute unto Cæsar, or not?" |
29288 | It makes one''s heart ache to see the pale and tired- looking figures of these carriers; but what is to be done? |
29288 | Man; that thou incitest the populace against the authorities, with the purpose of thyself becoming King of Israel?" |
29288 | Then the elders asked him:"Who art thou, and from what country hast thou come to us? |
29288 | Thereupon the governor said to the judges:"Have you heard this? |
29288 | Where, truly, in man, is the line that separates courage from cowardice? |
29288 | Who is he?" |
29288 | Will you kindly excuse me?" |
29288 | _ Chapter XII__ § 1_--"Tell us therefore, What thinkest thou? |
29288 | the spies asked him again;"and is he the best of mortals?" |
29288 | wist ye not that I must be about my Father''s business?" |
16101 | A silence strike? |
16101 | A singular conveyance, is it not, Poynter? |
16101 | A while back,mused Diane innocently,"there was a shooting star above the ridge--""Yes?" |
16101 | And I? |
16101 | And I? |
16101 | And Philip? |
16101 | And Ras? |
16101 | And Ronador? |
16101 | And Themar? |
16101 | And at sunset? |
16101 | And having disposed of her,supplied Carl,"you flew up the stairs, applied the key made from the impression-- and stole the paper?" |
16101 | And sometime you will come here again? |
16101 | And the Princess Phaedra? |
16101 | And the first paper? |
16101 | And the key, Themar,he reminded gently,"the key to the Baron''s desk? |
16101 | And the over- feminine woman? |
16101 | And the proposition which is at the same time commercial, eugenic and-- er-- personal? |
16101 | And the source? |
16101 | And what have you accomplished? |
16101 | And what,begged Diane presently,"do you do when it rains?" |
16101 | And you''ve never been honestly contented since? |
16101 | And you, Poynter? |
16101 | And you? |
16101 | And your cousin? |
16101 | And your father, Philip? |
16101 | And your name? |
16101 | Are you a fussy pessimist? |
16101 | Are you asleep? |
16101 | Are you aware,inquired the girl, biting her lip,"that you''re trespassing?" |
16101 | Are you hurt? |
16101 | Are you man or devil? |
16101 | Are you man or saint,he cried at last,"that you can forgive as I have seen your eyes forgive to- night?" |
16101 | Are you-- er-- sinking or merely there? |
16101 | Aunt Agatha,exclaimed the girl impetuously,"why have you always been so reticent about my mother?" |
16101 | Aunt Agatha,grumbled Carl kindly,"why fuss so? |
16101 | Aunt Agatha,said Diane kindly,"why not remember that you''re no longer burdened with the terrible responsibility of bringing Carl and me up? |
16101 | Aunt Agatha,she exclaimed,"what is it? |
16101 | But the trail, Philip? |
16101 | But why should I worry? |
16101 | But,purred the Baron,"why seek a keyhole?" |
16101 | Can you add anything to that? |
16101 | Can you follow us to the camp fire yonder? |
16101 | Carl,he said at last,"tell me, are you honestly in earnest when you rag the fellows so about work and decency and all that sort of thing?" |
16101 | Diane,he asked gravely,"I wonder how much that incredible tale of the old candlestick pleased you?" |
16101 | Did n''t the dub carry any conventional antiseptics? |
16101 | Did n''t we take a whole year to motor over Europe? |
16101 | Did n''t you know,_ really_? 16101 Did n''t you tell me yesterday that you''d had a feeling some one had been spying on your camp?" |
16101 | Did you find it during your ten days in the town- house? |
16101 | Did you like your shirt? |
16101 | Difficult, too, is n''t it? |
16101 | Do n''t you remember Mrs. Jarley''s wagon? |
16101 | Do n''t you remember? 16101 Do you like to float about and smoke?" |
16101 | Do you withdraw into a sound- proof shell when you think? |
16101 | Does Johnny have complete freedom in your camp? |
16101 | Does it pain much? |
16101 | Has a_ real_ air of distinction, has n''t he, Susanne? 16101 Has n''t Ann told you? |
16101 | Have I ever misplaced your trust? |
16101 | Have I not even kept your secret from your father? |
16101 | Have you ever endured hardship of any kind? |
16101 | Have you ever met this king- pin I''m exploiting? |
16101 | Have you forgotten? |
16101 | He is here? |
16101 | Honest Injun? |
16101 | How did you discover its whereabouts? |
16101 | How did you know? |
16101 | How long since you''ve had a drink, Dick? |
16101 | How many times,she begged hopelessly,"must I tell you that I am not collecting ridiculous bugs?" |
16101 | Hunch,he exclaimed with an involuntary glance at the mended candlestick,"where in the devil did you get this?" |
16101 | I am to understand that I would undertake this peculiar mission equipped with no further information than you have offered? |
16101 | I beg your pardon,stammered Diane,"but-- but are you by any chance waiting-- to be rescued?" |
16101 | I believe,said Diane disapprovingly,"that you were cutting giddy circles over the water and dipping and skimming, were n''t you?" |
16101 | I may be honored by your reasons, Poynter? |
16101 | I may speak with freedom? |
16101 | I meant to mention it before--"What is it? |
16101 | I take it then,he suggested,"that you know the nomadic lady, Baron Tregar?" |
16101 | I trust,said Philip politely,"that you are better?" |
16101 | I wonder,begged Diane impetuously,"if you''ll tell me who Mic- co is? |
16101 | I-- I am indeed, but I could n''t in the least know that he went about killing people, could I, Diane? |
16101 | If I do not mind it,said Carl in aggrieved surprise,"why should you?" |
16101 | In God''s name what threatens her, that even here in these God- forsaken wilds she is not safe? |
16101 | In God''s name,thundered practical Philip,"why did n''t you look in the other candlestick?" |
16101 | Is he the first? |
16101 | Is it not a pretty farewell? |
16101 | Is n''t it? |
16101 | Is that possible? |
16101 | Is there not more romance and adventure in the life of a wandering minstrel than in that of an idle seeker after health? 16101 Is there nothing I may keep from you?" |
16101 | It spoke of-- of marriage? |
16101 | It would give a definite and unselfish direction to your own life, would it not, like those weeks at the farm with Wherry? |
16101 | Johnny,begged Philip,"get Miss Diane some chicken implements, will you, old man? |
16101 | Johnny,she said,"just why are there so many drowsy negroes about driving loads of hay? |
16101 | Just what do you mean? |
16101 | Just what do you mean? |
16101 | Just what, Poynter,begged the Baron,"is a black- and- tan?" |
16101 | Just when,said he lazily,"did you steal the paper I found in the candlestick? |
16101 | Just why,begged Philip icily,"did you wish me to intrude further upon the hospitality of Miss Westfall?" |
16101 | May I see you? |
16101 | May I-- may I not know that too? |
16101 | May a man look upon such remorse as that,asked Mic- co,"and not forgive? |
16101 | Miss Westfall-- I spied upon her camp in Connecticut--"Yes? |
16101 | My good man,she demanded,"what do you mean by lying here on a lace spread with your feet tied and your head scarred?" |
16101 | My word as a gentleman is sufficient? |
16101 | Of-- of the Indian mother? |
16101 | Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? 16101 One does not quite understand,"he suggested raising handsome eyebrows in subtle disapproval;"the negro, the hay-- the curious camp?" |
16101 | One may pay his respects to Miss Westfall? |
16101 | One o''them damned black- and- tans, eh? |
16101 | Philip,he choked, unnerved by the other''s gentleness,"you don''t-- you ca n''t mean-- you believe in me--_yet_?" |
16101 | Philip,she whispered with dark, tragic eyes fixed upon his face,"who-- who shot the bullet that night? |
16101 | Philip-- was it-- was it Themar''s knife? |
16101 | Quarreled with his father or something, did n''t he? |
16101 | See here,broke in Jem, somewhat staggered by the careless manner in which Mr. Poynter handled fortunes,"hain''t no foul play about this here, eh? |
16101 | She told you? |
16101 | So Monsieur has heard that tune before? 16101 So?" |
16101 | So? |
16101 | So? |
16101 | Surely, Carl,she exclaimed with a swift, level glance,"you do n''t mean that you care?" |
16101 | Tell me where in the world did you get your camp equipment? |
16101 | Tell me, Keela, what does it mean? |
16101 | Tell me, old man,begged Philip whimsically,"what would you do? |
16101 | Tell me,she begged impetuously,"what was that other reason why I must not journey to Florida in the van? |
16101 | The Baron knew of your ten days in my cousin''s house? |
16101 | The music? |
16101 | The white father? |
16101 | Themar? |
16101 | Then you will answer what I ask? |
16101 | There was passion and dishonor in my heart, Keela, until, one night, I fought and won--"Is it not enough for me that you won? |
16101 | There''s a lot to tell--"The other candlestick? |
16101 | Throw them out? |
16101 | To whom? |
16101 | Was it necessary to affect callow inexperience and such a happy- go- lucky, imbecile philosophy? |
16101 | Was it necessary to humiliate me in the presence of Miss Westfall? |
16101 | We fly this morning? |
16101 | Well,fumed Starrett irritably,"why in thunder do n''t you say something?" |
16101 | Well,said Mr. Poynter indifferently,"where are you going?" |
16101 | Well,said Philip abruptly,"do you mind if I say that your trip seems a most imprudent venture?" |
16101 | Well? |
16101 | Well? |
16101 | What are you going to do with these? |
16101 | What bullet? |
16101 | What did he hope to gain by writing to Houdania? |
16101 | What do you mean? |
16101 | What do you understand, little Indian lady? |
16101 | What glints so oddly there,he wondered,"when the fire leaps?" |
16101 | What in the world are you going back to the farm for? 16101 What in the world is it all about?" |
16101 | What in the_ world_ is it all about? |
16101 | What is he doing? |
16101 | What is it, Aunt Agatha? |
16101 | What is it, Diane? |
16101 | What is it? |
16101 | What is it? |
16101 | What is it? |
16101 | What is your favorite painting? |
16101 | What is your real name? |
16101 | What of her? 16101 What reason?" |
16101 | What was it? |
16101 | What was it? |
16101 | What were Tregar''s intentions about the paper? |
16101 | What will you do now, Dick? 16101 What''s the trouble?" |
16101 | What''s wantin''? |
16101 | What''s wrong? |
16101 | What,asked the girl seriously,"is a palmer?" |
16101 | What,questioned the Baron presently,"think you, are my fine gentleman''s plans, Poynter?" |
16101 | What,said he sullenly to Philip,"would you have us do?" |
16101 | What? |
16101 | When did you hit the trail? |
16101 | When do you think you''ll go? |
16101 | When you took service with my aunt in the spring, you were looking for a certain paper? |
16101 | Where are you going? |
16101 | Where are you? |
16101 | Where are your lights? |
16101 | Where did you get tomatoes? |
16101 | Where have you been all day? |
16101 | Where in thunder have I seen him before? |
16101 | Where is Themar? |
16101 | Where is he? |
16101 | Where is the paper now? |
16101 | Where is this persistent young nomad of the hay- camp anyway? |
16101 | Where were you? |
16101 | Where ye want him took? |
16101 | Where''s His Nibs? |
16101 | Where,demanded Diane hopelessly,"did you get this ridiculous outfit?" |
16101 | Where,demanded Diane indignantly,"did you come from anyway?" |
16101 | Where,demanded Diane,"is the hay- camp?" |
16101 | Who are you,he whispered,"that you suffer with him now? |
16101 | Who attempted to kill Miss Westfall? |
16101 | Who blundered? |
16101 | Who,he demanded elaborately,"who ever heard of a treasonous barnacle before? |
16101 | Who,said the girl gravely in a clear, rich contralto,"who are you?" |
16101 | Why are you following me with the music- machine? |
16101 | Why are you here? |
16101 | Why are you so quiet? |
16101 | Why are you so suspicious? |
16101 | Why did n''t you float about and smoke on Mr. Sherrill''s lake? |
16101 | Why did you serve in my cousin''s house without the knowledge of the Baron? |
16101 | Why do n''t you break away from this sort of thing, Dick? |
16101 | Why do you look at me so? |
16101 | Why do you speak of it? |
16101 | Why do you think I adopted the stained face-- the disguise of a wandering minstrel? |
16101 | Why does Ronador fear for his son? 16101 Why does he ride away for days with Sho- caw?" |
16101 | Why fuss now? |
16101 | Why is it that you must ask me all these things that I may not honorably answer? |
16101 | Why is it,she demanded,"that no one ever seems to understand what I''m saying? |
16101 | Why must we talk in riddles? |
16101 | Why not bring your own plate, knife, fork, spoon and a good saw over to my hay- camp and dine with me? 16101 Why not give me a logical reason for your presence in America?" |
16101 | Why not? 16101 Why not?" |
16101 | Why take to the highway,begged Philip guilelessly,"when the task is so unpleasant?" |
16101 | Why were you happier after the storm? |
16101 | Why were you in the forest that night of storm and wind? |
16101 | Why,cried Diane,"did you fight with Themar in the forest? |
16101 | Why,hissed the Baron,"did you lie? |
16101 | Why? |
16101 | Why? |
16101 | Why? |
16101 | Why? |
16101 | Will you be through by noon? |
16101 | Will you go alone? |
16101 | Will you take Diane an extra raincoat and rubbers? |
16101 | Will you? |
16101 | Yes,said Ronador impatiently,"what is it?" |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | Yes? |
16101 | You are fully decided to break faith with Phaedra, knowing what may come of it? |
16101 | You are strong-- and sure? |
16101 | You have been lonely? |
16101 | You hear it, Tregar? 16101 You honestly mean that you do n''t know?" |
16101 | You like it? |
16101 | You mean--"That they did not take a child away from the Indian village as the paper in the candlestick declares--"And the daughter of Theodomir? |
16101 | You read the paper of course when you stole it from my desk? |
16101 | You spoke of seeing Carl? |
16101 | You went back later? |
16101 | You will go again to- night? |
16101 | You will we d Prince Ronador? |
16101 | You would go back then, ill, sullen, resentful, with the news that we must lay before your father? 16101 You would not have me break mine?" |
16101 | You-- you dragged him there? |
16101 | Your money is quite gone, is it not? |
16101 | Your trip to New York last night was-- hum-- uneventful? |
16101 | A fool might have turned-- and been shot in the back for his pains, eh? |
16101 | A king so mad that the affairs of a nation must be administered by a prince regent-- your father? |
16101 | And added naïvely,"She was the Roman goddess of light-- and of hunting, is it not so?" |
16101 | And added, acidly,"Where are you going?'' |
16101 | And if it is, where under Heaven has he been driving that hay for the last three days?" |
16101 | And the paper? |
16101 | And who may say? |
16101 | And who taught you how to walk? |
16101 | And why in thunder did Themar crib an aeroplane and bump his fool head?" |
16101 | And why must his life touch mine after all these years?" |
16101 | And why, Monsieur,"purred Carl softly,"did you seek to kill me by a trick?" |
16101 | And you, Keela?" |
16101 | Are love and hatred then akin?" |
16101 | Are you a guest of hers?" |
16101 | Are you an orphan?" |
16101 | Are you better now?" |
16101 | Are you coming along to- night or not?" |
16101 | Are you going to fuss about that?" |
16101 | Away from Ronador? |
16101 | But that night by the old chief''s camp fire, Philip discovered--""Yes?" |
16101 | But what of it? |
16101 | But why?" |
16101 | By and by, Diane, you will write to the lodge of Mic- co? |
16101 | CHAPTER II AN INDOOR TEMPEST"If you''re broke,"said Starrett, leering,"why do n''t you marry your cousin?" |
16101 | CHAPTER XXXVII IN THE GLADES"What the devil is the matter with you, Carl?" |
16101 | Can you get down?" |
16101 | Can you not see it?" |
16101 | Did I tell you that last night, after all our discomfort, I got nothing but a smelly buzzard? |
16101 | Did n''t I rescue a dime from the fish?" |
16101 | Did n''t you know she was at the farm?" |
16101 | Did the Baron''s eyes flash suddenly with a queer dry humor? |
16101 | Did the storm get you last night, Philip?" |
16101 | Do n''t I, mother?" |
16101 | Do you know the Sherrills?" |
16101 | Do you know the way to the attic door in the west wing?" |
16101 | Do you know what I thought that day on the lake when I saw you coming through the trees? |
16101 | Do you know?" |
16101 | Does n''t it ever get you?" |
16101 | Doubtless the Baron''s hostess had heard? |
16101 | Excellency knows the-- er-- romantic ensemble?" |
16101 | French, was it not? |
16101 | From the forest came again the signal:"Where are you?" |
16101 | Had n''t you heard? |
16101 | Has it not occurred to you that after all it is the sanest way out of this horrible muddle?" |
16101 | Have I not said again and again that I am Sigimund Jokai, of Vienna, touring in America?" |
16101 | Have you by any chance a reputable rope anywhere about you?" |
16101 | Have you ever longed to sleep in the woods,"she added abruptly,"with stars twinkling overhead and the moonlight showering softly through the trees?" |
16101 | Have you no single thought of regret for that fair land of ours you left?" |
16101 | He taught you about Rome?" |
16101 | Hello, Hunch, is that you?" |
16101 | How could I take that other man''s child? |
16101 | How did you know?" |
16101 | How safeguard his life from the men who were hunting him? |
16101 | How should I know why it was burning? |
16101 | I am assured of your interest, Poynter?" |
16101 | I am hot of temper--""And kill whoever angers you? |
16101 | I knew it would come out-- though how could I foresee that the Baron and Mr. Poynter and the Prince would know? |
16101 | I know your head was turned a bit by the salary Starrett gave you, but you''ll not go back to that sort of work for a while anyway, will you?" |
16101 | I may trust at least to your silence?" |
16101 | I sincerely hope you''re not too fastidious for tin cups?" |
16101 | I think I know--""You will not tell me?" |
16101 | I was not in the_ least_ aware that our mysterious incognito was a prince, were you, Diane?" |
16101 | I''ve a little--""Would a thousand a year see you through, with what you''ve got?" |
16101 | I-- I''ve never spoken of her before-- I was n''t fit--""Yes?" |
16101 | If-- if you could have told me something different--""Is it useless to ask you to trust me, Diane?" |
16101 | Is it a candle or an electric bulb?" |
16101 | Is it an inherited appetite?" |
16101 | Is it not better to tell me than foolishly to waste such splendid nerve and grit as you possess?" |
16101 | Is it the revolver?" |
16101 | Is n''t it funny? |
16101 | Is n''t it plaintive?" |
16101 | Is n''t it romantic? |
16101 | Is n''t it_ wonderful_ to have such unique and thrilling adventures? |
16101 | Is not that enough? |
16101 | It was bad enough to have you in those horrible Glades, but Diane--""Aunt Agatha,"said Carl patiently,"what in thunder are you driving at anyway?" |
16101 | It''s the best farm in the valley, but, you see, he has n''t the time and he''s growing old--""Why not take a course at an agricultural college?" |
16101 | Johnny, old top, see if you can rustle up a loaf of bread to lend me for breakfast, will you? |
16101 | Just how,"begged Philip,"does one go about effecting a national ordinance to keep hay- carts off the highway?" |
16101 | Mamma, too, had a gift of feeling things she did n''t know for sure-- mamma did!--and the servants talk-- of course they do!--who would n''t? |
16101 | May I not do that too?" |
16101 | May I smoke?" |
16101 | May we not wander casually into camp and look at my beautiful gypsy lady without fussing unduly about this infernal mission? |
16101 | Might not something utterly new and barbaric come of it with proper direction? |
16101 | Miss Westfall, are you a slave driver?" |
16101 | More coffee?" |
16101 | Must I alter my plans for somebody''s stray bullet?" |
16101 | Must you add to all this the disgrace of breaking faith with Galituria and plunging your country into war? |
16101 | No? |
16101 | Now why Diane''s cheeks should blaze so hotly at this aristocratic claim of Mr. Poynter''s, who may say? |
16101 | Odd, was n''t it?" |
16101 | Or is that the same one? |
16101 | Poynter, who in blue blazes are you looking for?" |
16101 | Poynter?" |
16101 | Queer, are n''t they? |
16101 | Romantic, is n''t it? |
16101 | Seems to have blowy white things at the sides like window curtains, does n''t it?" |
16101 | Singular, was it not? |
16101 | So disturbing is the notion,"added Philip unquietly,"that--""Yes?" |
16101 | Staring intently at the sunlit road, he added:"Is it a common mode of travel-- here in America?" |
16101 | Surely it is not difficult to catch his meaning?" |
16101 | Symbolic of the spirit of progress which hangs now above the Glades, is it not? |
16101 | Tell me,"he added humorously to Diane,"just how do you contrive to remember bread and salt?" |
16101 | That is fair?" |
16101 | That was your intention?" |
16101 | There are but few--""She spoke of your own father?" |
16101 | There are possibilities of confidences over a camp fire--""You expected me to-- spy upon Miss Westfall?" |
16101 | There is more?" |
16101 | There remained, financially, what? |
16101 | There''s something else--""Yes?" |
16101 | Think I told you I''d spent a month or so in a Houdanian monastery several years ago, did n''t I, Dick?" |
16101 | To what do you attribute it?" |
16101 | Uncah? |
16101 | Was Ronador forgotten? |
16101 | Was not my wildest error,"he demanded reverting afresh to the other''s reproach,"that homesick letter that brought him to my side? |
16101 | Well, young fellow, what do you think of yourself, eh?" |
16101 | What did he mean to- night?" |
16101 | What do you want?" |
16101 | What has Themar been doing? |
16101 | What have you done? |
16101 | What if Diane were to--_die_? |
16101 | What in the world am I to do with him? |
16101 | What is he to me? |
16101 | What is it? |
16101 | What made the racket?" |
16101 | What man is better than another? |
16101 | What might opportunity do for this strange, exotic flower of Osceola''s people? |
16101 | What stung so?" |
16101 | What was the portent of his peculiar interest anyway? |
16101 | What were you doing in the meantime?" |
16101 | What wonder if Diane built faces and fancies in the ember- glow of the Seminole fire- wheel? |
16101 | What wonder if Indian instincts had driven her forth to the wild? |
16101 | What wonder if like the pine- wood sparrow and the wind of Okeechobee the voice of the woodland always questioned? |
16101 | What wonder if the dawn was streaked with imperial purple? |
16101 | What wonder if the soft, musical tongue of the Seminole had come lightly to her lips? |
16101 | What wonder that he lingered? |
16101 | What ye goin''to do with him?" |
16101 | What''s the matter with my legs, Carl?" |
16101 | When in the world did you come back from the farm, child? |
16101 | Where is the candlestick? |
16101 | Where was Houdania? |
16101 | Who are you that you know the tongue of my country?" |
16101 | Who came to America when his letter of homesick pleading came? |
16101 | Who found it?" |
16101 | Who is Theodomir? |
16101 | Who killed him when conscience and duty would have sent him back to the court of his father? |
16101 | Who knew when he fled wildly away from the pomp and inequalities he hated? |
16101 | Who knows? |
16101 | Who watched for his secret letters? |
16101 | Who? |
16101 | Why are you so white and quiet, Diane? |
16101 | Why did he follow-- always follow? |
16101 | Why did he make me ridiculous at the Sherrill fête? |
16101 | Why did my first inkling of its effect come in the sight of your face in suspicious territory? |
16101 | Why did you go to the Westfall camp and attack Poynter? |
16101 | Why did you hum when you cooked his supper and called to him through the trees?" |
16101 | Why did you swear these scars came from a disastrous flight in a stolen aeroplane? |
16101 | Why do you fuss so about little things? |
16101 | Why fuss about it, Diane? |
16101 | Why had he not thought of that before? |
16101 | Why had the Baron wished him to stay in the camp of Diane? |
16101 | Why has it been ignored? |
16101 | Why have you been spying upon Miss Westfall when I expressly forbade it?" |
16101 | Why have you night after night watched my camp? |
16101 | Why impoverish my existence by a lost opportunity? |
16101 | Why is Granberry still alive? |
16101 | Why is he driving about now in the music- machine to mock me? |
16101 | Why mean anything when words come so easy without? |
16101 | Why moon so and shoot pebbles at the frogs?" |
16101 | Why not stay in bed and let Johnny bring your breakfast to you?" |
16101 | Why not wait until your tea is a little cooler?" |
16101 | Why should I tell him? |
16101 | Why that mad stir of love- hunger to- night as Diane stood in the doorway? |
16101 | Why the swift black flash of hatred now? |
16101 | Why were you creeping to her wigwam to- night with a knife in your hand?" |
16101 | Why write? |
16101 | Why,"he added curtly,"did you later spy upon my cousin''s camp when Tregar had expressly forbidden it?" |
16101 | Why? |
16101 | Why? |
16101 | Will you contribute enough hay for a cushion? |
16101 | Will you lend me an inch or so of that stout invertebrate climbing out of the can by you?" |
16101 | Will you never get over it? |
16101 | Will you permit me to care? |
16101 | Would he, think you, dare all this for the sake of-- spying?" |
16101 | Would you believe that I lived for two days and nights in a mountain cave? |
16101 | Would you mind,"her wonderful black eyes met his in a glance of frank inquiry,"would you mind-- explaining? |
16101 | You are annoyed?" |
16101 | You are sure about the paper?" |
16101 | You go in the morning?" |
16101 | You have climbed it perhaps-- touring?" |
16101 | You know that?" |
16101 | You know what lies on the other side?" |
16101 | You mean your daughter?" |
16101 | You remember?" |
16101 | You trust me, Mic- co?" |
16101 | You will not ride away soon to the far cities of the North?" |
16101 | You wo n''t forget me, Keela?" |
16101 | You''ll forgive me?" |
16101 | You''ll go back to her?" |
16101 | You''ll go-- for me?" |
16101 | You''ll grant that?" |
16101 | You''ll motor back with me?" |
16101 | You''re strong enough to start now?" |
16101 | Your aunt sat upon the floor of the hall crying--""Yes?" |
16101 | Your father knows you are here in America?" |
16101 | Your resolution to leave me-- that is final?" |
16101 | _ To spy_? |
16101 | begged Diane helplessly in a flash of foreboding,"what in creation are you trying to say?" |
16101 | do I ever know, Jethro? |
16101 | exclaimed Ann Sherrill one lazy morning,"what in the_ world_ is that exceedingly mournful tune you''re humming?" |
16101 | guessed Carl keenly,"so you''re in some muddle there, too, eh?" |
16101 | said Diane,"for Arcadia is Together- land, is n''t it, Philip?" |
16101 | said Philip politely;"that was tough, was n''t it?" |
12527 | A disgusting thing, is it not? |
12527 | A pretty face, eh? |
12527 | About Reggie? |
12527 | After all,she said,"is it any worse than Piccadilly Circus at night?" |
12527 | And Mrs. Barrington''s money? |
12527 | And are you intending to get married soon? |
12527 | And have you no more intimate experience? |
12527 | And how about the people who make money out of such a place? |
12527 | And if I drown your fiancée? 12527 And is this your oriental version of Véronique?" |
12527 | And my father? |
12527 | And these also? |
12527 | And this Asa San? |
12527 | And this at the end? |
12527 | And this one? |
12527 | And this writing here? |
12527 | And this? |
12527 | And we are to have a Japanese Lord Brandan, sitting in the House of Lords? |
12527 | And what do you want me to say? |
12527 | And what will you give me if I am right? |
12527 | And who is making money out of all this filth? |
12527 | And you really want to go to Japan, sweetheart? 12527 And you''re sorry now?" |
12527 | Answer me, my darling; do you want me to go? |
12527 | Are her parents here? |
12527 | Are these ladies relatives of the Fujinami family? |
12527 | Are they all bad? |
12527 | Are they pretty? |
12527 | Are they very rich? |
12527 | Asa Chan,said the lady,"do n''t you remember me? |
12527 | Asako dear,Countess Saito continued,"would you like to go to England?" |
12527 | Asako, do you mean this? |
12527 | Asako,said Geoffrey sternly,"what does this mean?" |
12527 | Big captain, may I? |
12527 | But are you sure that she wants to marry him? |
12527 | But do you think Geoffrey had been-- love- making to Miss Smith? |
12527 | But do you think Geoffrey was to blame for what happened? |
12527 | But for a young girl--? 12527 But if this Asa is barren?" |
12527 | But is it so serious, Lady Cynthia? 12527 But is n''t it much the same as taking a lady to a public brothel?" |
12527 | But is that a nice sight for a lady? |
12527 | But it is nice to think you have always got an extra home in Paris, is n''t it? |
12527 | But it is not an art like painting or playing the piano, just pouring out tea? |
12527 | But my wife? |
12527 | But the guests of last evening, what is one to think? |
12527 | But what about the other people here? |
12527 | But what am I to do now? |
12527 | But what did he think of his friends? |
12527 | But what did you actually see? |
12527 | But what do you mean by the second stage? |
12527 | But what do you propose doing? |
12527 | But what has that got to do with the lady? |
12527 | But what have I done? |
12527 | But where are the beds? |
12527 | But where can I go? |
12527 | But where is the Yoshiwara? |
12527 | But whom do these women belong to? |
12527 | But why drag me into it? 12527 But why is there a hospital here?" |
12527 | But why not come and stay here with me? |
12527 | But why not? |
12527 | But why? |
12527 | But why? |
12527 | But will Mr. Fujinami allow me to go? |
12527 | But would he fall in love with women in England? |
12527 | But you know the name, do you not? |
12527 | But you will be married sometime, I suppose? |
12527 | But you would never notice it with Asako, would you? 12527 But,"said Geoffrey,"when you saw your friends in England choosing for themselves, and falling in love and marrying for love''s sake--?" |
12527 | Ca n''t he be recalled to London? |
12527 | Can I stop here to- night, then? |
12527 | Can we go in? |
12527 | Can you see in there, Mrs. Barrington, or shall I turn the lights on? |
12527 | Captain Barrington, would you care to play the part of a real hero, a real theatre hero, playing to the gallery? |
12527 | Curio dealers? |
12527 | Dear Mrs. Barrington, are you a daughter of Japan, and have never heard of the Twenty- four Children? |
12527 | Did she love him,her daughter wondered,"as I love Geoffrey?" |
12527 | Did you ever hear of Madge Carlyle? |
12527 | Did you look? |
12527 | Did you notice anything unusual in my manner last night? |
12527 | Did you see the marks? |
12527 | Do many Englishmen have Japanese wives? |
12527 | Do n''t you think that people in England marry because they love each other? |
12527 | Do they live there? |
12527 | Do you ever have dances? |
12527 | Do you feel that you are very much in love with her? |
12527 | Do you know any one who goes? |
12527 | Do you know the Japanese well? |
12527 | Do you know why the Englishman went away? |
12527 | Do you like_ geisha_ girl? |
12527 | Do you love him? |
12527 | Do you mean that I am to go without you? |
12527 | Do you often have tea- ceremonies? |
12527 | Do you say prayers there? |
12527 | Do you think that, if the Barringtons go to Japan, there is any danger of Asako being drawn back into the bosom of her family? |
12527 | Does Lordship pay his_ devoir_ to relatives of Ladyship? |
12527 | Does marriage hurt like this? 12527 Doing? |
12527 | Father is practising handwriting again? |
12527 | Geoffrey darling,said his wife hesitating,"will you give me something?" |
12527 | Geoffrey, will you please take me to see the Yoshiwara? |
12527 | Good class Japanese do n''t come here, then? |
12527 | Good day to you,they squeaked in comical English,"How do you do? |
12527 | Has Captain Barrington--? |
12527 | Have n''t you got any say in the matter? |
12527 | Hello, Barrington,he said,"you all alone?" |
12527 | Hello, Geoffrey, enjoying yourself? |
12527 | How are you, my dears? |
12527 | How can I confess what I have not done? |
12527 | How did Takeshi San become sick? |
12527 | How do you do it? |
12527 | How do you do, Mrs. Harrington? 12527 How do you know all these terrible things?" |
12527 | How do you know? |
12527 | How long are you staying in Japan? |
12527 | How long have you been learning? |
12527 | How many times do you say that you have met this Ito? |
12527 | How much do we pay to Asa San? |
12527 | How old do you think Tanaka is? |
12527 | How''s little Véronique? |
12527 | I am feeling sick,pleaded Asako;"may I eat something?" |
12527 | I suppose you know the Fujinamis, Asako''s relatives in Tokyo? |
12527 | I''m glad it was n''t as bad as all that,said Geoffrey, coming to his wife''s rescue;"would that have been the worst that could possibly happen?" |
12527 | If Ladyship is so sad,he began, as he had been coached in his part beforehand by the Fujinami,"why Ladyship stay in this house? |
12527 | If it is worth it? |
12527 | Indeed, it has been so noisy, composition has become impossible,he complained;"has that foreigner come, to the house?" |
12527 | Is Tanaka there? |
12527 | Is all well? |
12527 | Is any one about? |
12527 | Is anything wrong? 12527 Is it far from here?" |
12527 | Is it so difficult then? |
12527 | Is n''t he fine? |
12527 | Is n''t it a pity they have to wear bathing dress? |
12527 | Is there a great objection? |
12527 | Is there any tennis? |
12527 | Is there anything to be done? |
12527 | Is_ Okusama_( lady) Japanese? |
12527 | It is a fine country, a noble country; and you will be happy to see your husband again? |
12527 | It is the story of a bad man and a bad woman,she said;"Geoffrey, why do you read bad things? |
12527 | Japanese_ geisha_,said the tea- house girl,"if_ danna san_ wish to see_ geisha_ dance--?" |
12527 | Japanese_ saké_said Sadako to her cousin,"you do not like?" |
12527 | Ladies are allowed to go and look? 12527 Lady Cynthia, are n''t you being rather pessimistic? |
12527 | Ladyship has Japanese name? |
12527 | Ladyship''s relatives have noble residence? |
12527 | Leave Japan? |
12527 | Like your lady friends in Tokyo, the Japanese ones, I mean? |
12527 | Look here,said Geoffrey,"is it the thing for ladies-- English ladies-- to go to a place like that?" |
12527 | May I send word to my friends? |
12527 | Miss Smith,he began at last,"do you think you will be happy with Reggie?" |
12527 | My poor little darling,he said, lifting her in his arms,"whatever is the matter?" |
12527 | No really, is it as bad as all that? 12527 No; who are they?" |
12527 | Not ever? |
12527 | Not much about, is there? |
12527 | Not quite like a lake, it is? |
12527 | Oh yes, of course,assented Geoffrey,"but what exactly are her investments? |
12527 | Oh, did he? |
12527 | Oh,_ monsieur le capitaine_, what shall I do? |
12527 | Perhaps,said the young diplomat,"but what about the Ideal at the back of our minds? |
12527 | Previous to the_ fiancée_,Tanaka began,"did Lady Barrington live long time in Japan?" |
12527 | Really? |
12527 | Reggie, are you quite sure? |
12527 | Reggie, do you believe him? 12527 Reggie, for God''s sake, tell me, is this true?" |
12527 | Reggie,he said to his friend Forsyth,"what do you think of that little Japanese girl?" |
12527 | Relations? |
12527 | Shall we get out and explore, sweetheart? |
12527 | Shall we go and see_ Dai- Butsu_? |
12527 | Shall we go into the garden? |
12527 | She is a half- caste? |
12527 | So you are making the most of your opportunity, studying night- life, eh, naughty boy? |
12527 | So you are my little cherry- blossom-- is that right? |
12527 | Tanaka, what does this mean? |
12527 | Thank goodness,said Geoffrey,"what have you been doing? |
12527 | Then Japanese people do n''t kiss? |
12527 | Then Tanaka, where is he? |
12527 | Then are you giving up diplomacy because you are fed up with it? 12527 Then do you think she is homesick sometimes for Japan?" |
12527 | Then what about the Japanese ladies,he asked,"if the men are blossoms?" |
12527 | Then what am I to do? |
12527 | Then what does the Japanese girl do? |
12527 | Then what is there to do? |
12527 | Then what she says is absolutely true? |
12527 | Then when you see foreign people kissing in public, you think it is very funny? |
12527 | Then why are we here? |
12527 | Then why did no one tell me? |
12527 | Then why say prayers, if they are bad? |
12527 | Then you have not actually seen them yourself? |
12527 | Then you_ do_ love him? |
12527 | Then, do you think I ought to forgive Geoffrey? |
12527 | Then, when you are married, will you flirt? |
12527 | Tokyo? |
12527 | Wait,said Asako;"how old is he?" |
12527 | Was he at the dinner last night? |
12527 | We can never get rid of Tanaka,she said,"can we? |
12527 | Well, Daddy,the Countess addressed her husband in English,"what are you talking about so earnestly?" |
12527 | Well? |
12527 | What Ark? |
12527 | What are you going to do with all these things? |
12527 | What class of people are these? |
12527 | What did he do it for? |
12527 | What did you say to him? |
12527 | What do you mean by the curse? |
12527 | What do you mean? |
12527 | What do you mean? |
12527 | What do you think of him? |
12527 | What do you think of our highland home? |
12527 | What do you want then? |
12527 | What do you want to leave us for? |
12527 | What does it mean? |
12527 | What does she mean? |
12527 | What exactly does he mean? |
12527 | What has happened? |
12527 | What have you done? |
12527 | What is Love? 12527 What is that?" |
12527 | What is that? |
12527 | What is that? |
12527 | What is the Japanese for''kiss''? |
12527 | What is the matter? |
12527 | What is this talk of tall beds and special cooking? |
12527 | What is your name? 12527 What is your name? |
12527 | What is your name? |
12527 | What kind of people are they, do you know? 12527 What shall I do?" |
12527 | What was Brandan dreaming of,snorted General Haslam,"to allow his son to marry a yellow native?" |
12527 | What''s coming? |
12527 | What''s that, old chap? |
12527 | What? |
12527 | What? |
12527 | What? |
12527 | Whatever is that? |
12527 | Where are these wretched women kept? |
12527 | Where are they going? |
12527 | Where can one get them? 12527 Where does their money come from?" |
12527 | Where has she gone? |
12527 | Where have you been? |
12527 | Where is he? |
12527 | Where is the motor car, Tanaka? |
12527 | Where is your bedroom? |
12527 | Who are the Goonies? |
12527 | Who are they? |
12527 | Who did? |
12527 | Who is it from, Tanaka? |
12527 | Who is this Tanaka? |
12527 | Who killed him then? 12527 Why do n''t you hire one?" |
12527 | Why do you tease me because I am Japanese? |
12527 | Why do you want to see it? 12527 Why not?" |
12527 | Why so silence, little girl? 12527 Why thank God?" |
12527 | Why, darling, I did n''t think you had read it,Geoffrey expostulated,"who has been telling you about it?" |
12527 | Why, little Yum Yum,cried her husband, delighted,"are you tired of Pharaohs?" |
12527 | Why, what do you mean? |
12527 | Why, what is the matter with Mr. Takeshi? 12527 Why, what was wrong with it?" |
12527 | Why,asked Geoffrey,"do the Japanese make such a fuss about their cherry- blossoms?" |
12527 | Why? 12527 Why?" |
12527 | Why_ did_ you let him do it? |
12527 | Will you come? |
12527 | Will you now confess? |
12527 | Would n''t it be sweet to have a ducky little Japanese house all our very own? |
12527 | Yes, but word for word, Tanaka, what does it mean? |
12527 | Yes, is n''t he? |
12527 | Yes, of course, my sweetheart, what do you want? |
12527 | Yes; but the others who marry girls of their own set? |
12527 | Yes; is anything the matter? |
12527 | Yes; would you kindly tell me the way to the Miyako Hotel? |
12527 | You do n''t mind trusting other people,he said,"to arrange your marriage for you?" |
12527 | You do not know how the Fujinami have made so much money? |
12527 | You have been with Sekiné? |
12527 | You think Asako is still very Japanese, then? |
12527 | You told him? |
12527 | _ Danna San_( master) Ingiris''? |
12527 | _ Eh bien, cette fois qui est- il?_she asked. |
12527 | _ Kore wa ikura_? 12527 ''Any children?'' 12527 ''Why, how old are you?'' 12527 ( How much is this?) |
12527 | ***** A few minutes later there was a loud banging at the door, followed by Reggie''s voice, shouting,--"Are you coming down for a bath?" |
12527 | A good thing, and the husband?" |
12527 | After all, after his long service, was his request so unreasonable? |
12527 | Already the people of Asia are saying, Why should these white men rule over us? |
12527 | And how can we jump with such goat- like agility from one circle of thought into another without ever noticing the change in the landscape?" |
12527 | And the silent groups beyond? |
12527 | And then the crowd of half- caste brats? |
12527 | And who were these Fujinamis whom Count Saito knew, but did not know? |
12527 | And why has this foreigner come to Japan?" |
12527 | Any clean- minded girl--""Geoffrey, old man, would_ you_ like to see the place?" |
12527 | Are all women ugly? |
12527 | Are you going to stop in Japan much longer?" |
12527 | Are you married? |
12527 | Are you not?" |
12527 | As they turned down the village street she announced:"The worst has happened-- I suppose you know?" |
12527 | At last, Asako said helplessly:"Is he dead?" |
12527 | Barrington?" |
12527 | Barrington?" |
12527 | Barrington?" |
12527 | Besides, did I not give fifty thousand_ yen_ to the funds of the_ Seiyukwai_?" |
12527 | Besides, what can I do?" |
12527 | But Asako asked the question,--"Why is the choice so small?" |
12527 | But are you quite ready to say''Yes''? |
12527 | But in her kimono did she wholly belong to him? |
12527 | But it makes one sad, do n''t you think? |
12527 | But was she really the same Asako? |
12527 | But what did he find out? |
12527 | But what had Asako done to deserve it? |
12527 | But where could she escape to? |
12527 | But where had she gone to? |
12527 | But where was the Japanese community in London? |
12527 | But where were those butterfly girls, who dance with fan and battledore on our cups and saucers? |
12527 | But who were these fluttering women, so attentive in removing their cloaks and hats? |
12527 | But whom to? |
12527 | But why did you leave so early?" |
12527 | But why do n''t you come down and join us?" |
12527 | But would she always be happy? |
12527 | But, when Tanaka protested his devotion, did he mean what he said? |
12527 | CHAPTER XII FALLEN CHERRY- BLOSSOM_ Iro wa nioedo Chirinuru wo-- Woga yo tore zo Tsune naran? |
12527 | CHAPTER XIII THE FAMILY ALTAR_ Yume no ai wa Kurushikari keri? |
12527 | CHAPTER XXIII THE REAL SHINTO_ Yo no naka wo Nani ni tatoyemu? |
12527 | Chonkina!_ Why should n''t he go? |
12527 | Could n''t you get the things you wanted?" |
12527 | Could she face poverty with him? |
12527 | Did Miss Cairns go too?" |
12527 | Did not the old woman of Akabo say so? |
12527 | Did that ruthless"Impossible"apply to his case also? |
12527 | Did their heart beat for one man, or did their vanity drink in the homage of all? |
12527 | Did you kill him? |
12527 | Do Japs have an aristocracy and society and all that kind of thing?" |
12527 | Do you ever read to your husband, Mrs. Barrington? |
12527 | Do you know the Japanese name for wisteria? |
12527 | Do you know the name, Tanaka?" |
12527 | Do you know where it comes from?" |
12527 | Do you not know what is our business?" |
12527 | Do you think he is a bad man?" |
12527 | Do you understand now?" |
12527 | East is East and West is West, eh? |
12527 | First of all they went to Paris, which Asako adored; for was it not her home? |
12527 | Had Asako yielded at the last moment unable to dispense with her faithful squire? |
12527 | Had he acquired it already, that expression which marked the faces of the unfortunates at the Kobe Club? |
12527 | Had he married a coloured woman? |
12527 | Had the talk suddenly swung over to amateur theatricals? |
12527 | Harrington?" |
12527 | Has he told you?" |
12527 | Have you considered well?" |
12527 | Have you ever heard anybody ask where Eurasia was? |
12527 | Have you ever walked about a Japanese city in the twilight when the evening bell sounds from a hidden temple? |
12527 | Have you heard the broken_ samisen_ music tracking you down a street of_ geisha_ houses? |
12527 | Have you heard the drums of Priapus beating from the gay quarters? |
12527 | Have you read Lafcadio Hearn''s books about Japan?" |
12527 | Have you seen the_ geisha_ herself in her blue cloak sitting rigid and expressionless in the rickshaw which is carrying her off to meet her lover? |
12527 | How can madame go to the Holy Mass? |
12527 | How can madame tell the good confessor? |
12527 | How could he divorce his wife, when he had nothing against her? |
12527 | How could she defend herself in a language which was strange to her mind? |
12527 | How could she make this judge, who seemed so pitiless and so hostile to her, understand and believe her broken sentences? |
12527 | How did you kill him? |
12527 | How did you know that I had any hand in this? |
12527 | How is Lamia?" |
12527 | How long have you known this man? |
12527 | How much did she actually know about these far- away cousins? |
12527 | How often does this performance take place?" |
12527 | I mean, she does not drop her Japanese aitches, and that sort of thing, does she?" |
12527 | I said to him,''Tanaka, are you married?'' |
12527 | I think we''ve seen about all there is to be seen here, do n''t you?" |
12527 | If he married Asako, however, was he still capable of breeding healthy children? |
12527 | If her husband left her for a half- caste, what chance had she of keeping him when once he got back among the women of his own race? |
12527 | In this world of ours who Shall remain forever? |
12527 | Is that right?" |
12527 | Is the vision of Aphrodite Anadyomene an artist''s lie? |
12527 | Is there any chance of your coming to England? |
12527 | It does not matter? |
12527 | It is a kind of Vanity Fair, is n''t it, for all the_ cocottes_ Of Tokyo?" |
12527 | It is not improper?" |
12527 | It was like crossing London for the space of distance covered; an immense city-- yet is it a city, or merely a village preposterously overgrown? |
12527 | It would be nice to see green fields again, would n''t it, Geoffrey dearest?" |
12527 | No dirty Jap, no yellow man, what? |
12527 | No, he had never been there? |
12527 | No? |
12527 | Not since she was a baby? |
12527 | Not to those filthy Fujinami?" |
12527 | Now do you understand?" |
12527 | Now, as to the present, how about this Osaka business?" |
12527 | Now, why did she do that? |
12527 | Of course he could not have Asako looking like a doll; but still-- had he fallen in love with a few yards of silk? |
12527 | One day a woman, rather old, asked him:''How much pay you get?'' |
12527 | Or had he come of his own accord? |
12527 | Or was Asako saved-- by her money? |
12527 | Or was she a Japanese again, a Fujinami? |
12527 | Perhaps the Governor of Osaka? |
12527 | Rather spicy, was n''t it? |
12527 | Rather wild and savage-- isn''t it? |
12527 | Really? |
12527 | She could bring her mother or one of her brothers? |
12527 | She did not think he would like it very much-- indeed, Reggie was already shuddering in anticipation-- or else? |
12527 | Snow in Japan, snow in April, snow upon the cherry trees, what hospitality was this? |
12527 | So it is love, is it? |
12527 | So this girl love you, and this girl, and this girl, and this very pretty girl, I do n''t know?" |
12527 | Some time about midnight Asako heard her name called:"Asa Chan, are you awake?" |
12527 | Stripped of her gauzy nightdresses, was she like this? |
12527 | Supposing he were killed? |
12527 | The desired abode was found at last on the river- bank at Mukojima just on the fringe of the city? |
12527 | The girl at once felt the absence of the response, and said,--"What, you do not like the_ capitaine Geoffroi_?" |
12527 | Then what about Geoffrey, his friend who had betrayed him? |
12527 | There is always a personal query arising,''I, too, might have chosen that life-- what would it have brought me?'' |
12527 | There was an earthquake last night?" |
12527 | They reminded her of-- what? |
12527 | This evening? |
12527 | This foreigner, what of him?" |
12527 | To try the cake, you eat some? |
12527 | To what shall I compare This world? |
12527 | Very well, to- morrow? |
12527 | Warren''s Profession''? |
12527 | Was he a squaw''s man? |
12527 | Was he guilty of that worst offence against Good Form, a_ mésalliance_? |
12527 | Was it Asako? |
12527 | Was it a dream? |
12527 | Was it possible that the laws of Good and Bad Form were only locally binding, and that here in Japan they were no longer valid? |
12527 | Was it very pretty?" |
12527 | Was she going mad? |
12527 | Was that why you came to Japan?" |
12527 | Was there not a small house by the river side at Mukojima, which had been rented for Asa San? |
12527 | Were any of these her relatives? |
12527 | Were there no Fujinami left of the collateral branches? |
12527 | Were they Fujinami or waiters? |
12527 | Were they happy to be so acclaimed? |
12527 | Were they proud to wear such finery? |
12527 | Were they relations of hers? |
12527 | Were they relatives or waitresses? |
12527 | Were you on familiar terms? |
12527 | What are your father''s and mother''s names?" |
12527 | What are your father''s and mother''s names?" |
12527 | What can one expect? |
12527 | What could have happened? |
12527 | What did he see? |
12527 | What do you think is the greatest shock for the average traveller who goes there?" |
12527 | What do you think of Japan, now? |
12527 | What do you think of him?" |
12527 | What does he do with his spare time, of which he has so much? |
12527 | What happens when the big tree is taken away? |
12527 | What is your address? |
12527 | What is your age? |
12527 | What is your age? |
12527 | What was she doing that for? |
12527 | What was that? |
12527 | What was the remedy? |
12527 | What would be the end of it? |
12527 | Where do they get them from?" |
12527 | Where do you live? |
12527 | Where ignorance is bliss, you understand?" |
12527 | Where is the trouble to come from?" |
12527 | Where is your husband? |
12527 | Where was Tanaka? |
12527 | Where was the luxury which her money used to buy? |
12527 | Who is not interested in his arch- enemy? |
12527 | Who is taking her to the court? |
12527 | Why adopt a_ tanin_( outside person)? |
12527 | Why ca n''t we choose what we are? |
12527 | Why can not I be free like men are free to love as they wish? |
12527 | Why can not I love him? |
12527 | Why did monsieur stay away so long time?" |
12527 | Why did n''t you write to me, child?" |
12527 | Why did not Tanaka come? |
12527 | Why did you come?" |
12527 | Why did you kill him?" |
12527 | Why do all_ geisha_ love_ sumotori_( professional wrestlers)? |
12527 | Why do n''t you go up to the mountains for a week or so, and stop with Reggie?" |
12527 | Why do our dull insular minds mix up these four entirely separate notions? |
12527 | Why had she, who was so socially careful, taken so much for granted just because Asako was a Japanese? |
12527 | Why is he not here? |
12527 | Why not marry Ito San? |
12527 | Why not try?" |
12527 | Why not? |
12527 | Why should he? |
12527 | Will madame leave her husband and go to these people who pray to stone beasts? |
12527 | Will you take Yaé for an hour or two''s sail? |
12527 | Would Lady Everington''s door be closed to him on his return? |
12527 | Would she come to tea with him at the Embassy? |
12527 | Would the Japanese heiress be married in a kimono with flowers and fans fixed in an elaborate_ coiffure_? |
12527 | Would you like to go?" |
12527 | You think such a shock is strong enough to upset the Barrington_ ménage_?" |
12527 | You understand?" |
12527 | You will not be afraid?" |
12527 | You''re not going there for business, I presume?" |
12527 | and Matsuko San and the children?" |
12527 | and if so, why? |
12527 | and what woman does not want to know by what unholy magic her unfair competitor holds her power over men?" |
12527 | and_ so des''ka_( is it so?) |
12527 | grunted the old gentleman, squinting sidelong at his son;"this Governor, has he a private fortune?" |
12527 | he asked Asako;"what is your age? |
12527 | he called out to an impassive Japanese man- servant,"have the flowers come yet, and the little trees?" |
12527 | old chap, does she love you?" |
12527 | or for Yaé Smith''s sake? |
12527 | remarked the elder after a pause;"what is to be thought of her? |
12527 | said Asako, who was romantically set on seeing evil everywhere,"Is it quite safe?" |
12527 | said Geoffrey; and then he asked suddenly,--"Do you think he would take his wife to see the Yoshiwara?" |
12527 | she asked,"or was she before your time?" |
12527 | your father''s and mother''s name? |
29727 | Chief, what''s up? 29727 Huh? |
29727 | I''m not at all satisfied with the color, are you? 29727 No? |
29727 | Now do you think we ca n''t see you? |
29727 | We''ve come a long way from Gimlet Street, have n''t we, Jasey? 29727 Well?" |
29727 | What did you do? |
29727 | What happened? |
29727 | What''s the matter with you, now? |
29727 | Why do n''t you buy one for your place, Captain? |
29727 | Yeah? 29727 You still have n''t changed a bit, have you, Jasey? |
29727 | _ What?! 29727 But you would n''t listen, Lonnie, would you? |
29727 | Care for a drink? |
29727 | Do you know? |
29727 | He picked a fairly early hour, too, because what matter if a few yawps gawked as the Tiara vanished? |
29727 | How about knocking off?" |
29727 | How? |
29727 | Huh?... |
29727 | It''s off a little, do n''t you think?... |
29727 | Lonnie was gone... or was he? |
29727 | Remember when Aggie told you about it? |
29727 | Then,"Say, Jase, how about it? |
29727 | Well?... |
29727 | What do we do?" |
29727 | What was it?" |
29727 | What''d you say?" |
29727 | What''s happening up there?" |
29727 | What''s happening?" |
29727 | What? |
29727 | What?... |
29727 | Where''s it got you?" |
29727 | Who but he had developed such an efficient philosophy to such an unfailingly incisive point? |
29727 | Yes? |
29727 | You remember Gawley Worin, our famous leg- man, folks, do n''t you? |
30750 | How is the motive expressed in sex worship a part of our motives and feelings of today? |
30750 | Is this day dreaming beneficial to the adult? |
30750 | Is this not true of the individual? |
30750 | Why should superstitions of this kind live century after century? |
27604 | Do you contemplate retiring? |
27604 | Dost thou never make a mistake and strike the stone? |
27604 | How can peace be brought to the people,he asked,"by tormenting them to subscribe for such a purpose?" |
27604 | Is the prime minister jesting? |
27604 | Of what service is the sword to me? |
27604 | Wherein lies the value of a rule of conduct? 27604 1407? 27604 And how was it that Yoshisada allowed her to do such a thing? |
27604 | But by what avenue would he enter the Sea of Japan? |
27604 | But had the Japanese a script of their own at any period of their history? |
27604 | But how did the Japanese converts reconcile its acceptance with their allegiance to the traditional faith, Shinto? |
27604 | But how were these prescriptive privileges to be abolished? |
27604 | But if they turn not to the Three Treasures, wherewithal shall their crookedness be made straight? |
27604 | But if wise men and sages be not found, how shall the country be governed? |
27604 | But what is to be said of Ieyasu? |
27604 | But what meaning is to be assigned to the"plain of high heaven"( Takama- ga- hara)? |
27604 | But what was to be done with the troops which had debarked? |
27604 | Can we desert both Emperor and parent and join with you? |
27604 | Could a reformer with such a record be regarded as altogether sincere? |
27604 | Dare we omit to practise our warlike exercise and drill?" |
27604 | Did the overtures come originally from Hideyoshi, or did they emanate from Ieyasu and Nobukatsu? |
27604 | For if they do not attend to agriculture, what will they have to eat? |
27604 | For instance, is the earth suspended in space or does it rest upon something else? |
27604 | He that has not learned the sacred doctrines, how can he govern himself? |
27604 | He that is ignorant of the classics, how can he regulate his own conduct? |
27604 | How are we to account for this seemingly rapid change of mood on Hideyoshi''s part? |
27604 | How can anyone lay down a rule by which to distinguish right from wrong? |
27604 | How can heaven be concerned about a loss of time?" |
27604 | How can such be tolerated?" |
27604 | How can the Emperor struggle against heaven? |
27604 | How can they, as well as the Government, presume to levy taxes on the people? |
27604 | How can we grudge our favour to so great meekness? |
27604 | How could she venture to insult me with words so shameless? |
27604 | How is it that none was found to die the death of fidelity?" |
27604 | How shall a man who does not order himself be able to order his country? |
27604 | How, then, are we to account for Masanori''s infidelity to the cause he had embraced? |
27604 | How, then, did they proceed? |
27604 | Ieyasu is reported to have avowedly adopted for guidance the precept,"Before taking any step propound to your heart the query, how about justice?" |
27604 | If I had lost my brother, what consolation would my rank have furnished?" |
27604 | If it be finite, what causes the air to condense in one particular spot, and what position shall we assign to it? |
27604 | If it be said that the earth rests upon something else, then what is it that supports that something else? |
27604 | If rats, weasels, and certain birds see in the dark, why should not the gods have been endowed with a similar faculty?.... |
27604 | If the lord and the vassal observe good faith one with another, what is there which can not be accomplished? |
27604 | If they do not attend to the mulberry trees, what will they do for clothing? |
27604 | If to this day I have survived all peril, may I not regard it as an answer to my prayer? |
27604 | If you have desired to send your envoys to China, how much more should we? |
27604 | If, then, the bells be classed as adjuncts of the Yamato culture, shall we be justified in assigning the bronze weapon to a different race? |
27604 | Is he not also a hero who has made firm his country at the expense of his own life?" |
27604 | Is it only when one has conquered in battle that one is to be called a hero? |
27604 | Is there, perchance, anyone who could join with me in governing the world?" |
27604 | Of complaints preferred by the people there are a thousand in one day: how many, then, will there be in a series of years? |
27604 | Only the fool fears death, for what is there of life that does Not die once, sooner or later? |
27604 | Shall we not keep the name of that ship from being lost and hand it down to after ages?" |
27604 | Surely the Court is in error? |
27604 | TRACES OF FOREIGN INFLUENCE What traces of Chinese or foreign influence are to be found in the legends and myths set down above? |
27604 | The question is, was the shogun himself privy to the deed? |
27604 | Then the Great- Name Possessor inquired, saying,"Then who art thou?" |
27604 | To what quarter, then, is the instigation to be traced? |
27604 | Was it Korea or was it China? |
27604 | Was it to be supposed that heaven would hearken to the intervention of such sinners? |
27604 | What is there that can not be then accomplished? |
27604 | What is to be said, however, of the apparently radical policy of the Soga chief? |
27604 | What man in what age can fail to revere this law? |
27604 | What more do I desire?" |
27604 | What talk is this of our joining you against China? |
27604 | What was Kwammu''s motive? |
27604 | What will the world call me?" |
27604 | When I reflect that the life of man is less than one hundred years, why should I spend my days in sorrow for one thing only? |
27604 | Where dost thou now wish to dwell?" |
27604 | Where was the place thus designated? |
27604 | Where, then, is collateral evidence to be found? |
27604 | Wherefore just on this night when I am in childbirth and hanging between life and death, must thou go to Fujiwara?" |
27604 | Who were these captives? |
27604 | Who will dare to suggest contumely?" |
27604 | Who, then, were they? |
27604 | Why is it that you are not willing to admit the suzerainty of the Emperor, instead of harbouring such hostile intents against him? |
27604 | Why should he have advocated so readily the introduction of a foreign creed? |
27604 | Why the vice- provincial allowed merchants of his nation to buy Japanese and make slaves of them in the Indies?'' |
27604 | Why they and other Portuguese ate animals useful to men, such as oxen and cows? |
27604 | Why they had induced their disciples and their sectaries to overthrow temples? |
27604 | Why they persecuted the bonzes? |
27604 | Why, then, did the former never dare to take up arms against the Bakufu, whereas the latter never ceased to assault the Ashikaga? |
27604 | Yasutoki answered:"How can you call an incident insignificant when my brother''s safety was concerned? |
20615 | ''Why should an author fret about The judgment of posterity? 20615 About inventions and so on? |
20615 | About what, most worshipful seigneur? 20615 Adam,"she said abruptly,"if we had children, in what religious faith would you bring them up?" |
20615 | After all, can we do better than follow the dictates of Nature? |
20615 | And I should answer,--''What is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
20615 | And decided? |
20615 | And if I give you my left hand--? |
20615 | And keep it regenerated? |
20615 | Are you sure it is n''t just loneliness and propinquity? |
20615 | Are you sure you are not making a virtue of necessity? |
20615 | Because there are no doctors in the world? |
20615 | But are we sane? |
20615 | But as to happiness? |
20615 | But if she was merciful to them,said Robin, quickly,"why were we omitted?" |
20615 | But if there is no continent left? |
20615 | But surely you do not believe in the Immaculate Conception? |
20615 | But there was no madness in this music,Adam answered,"except, except--""The supreme, sublime madness of love? |
20615 | But they gave boxes in England, did n''t they? 20615 But you surely do n''t believe in the miracles?" |
20615 | But, on the other hand,he said,"are we justified in snuffing it all out? |
20615 | Content? |
20615 | Dare we dash the full goblet of joy and opportunity from them? |
20615 | Dare you cross it? |
20615 | Did n''t he write a Jungle tale about''How Fear Came''? 20615 Did you ever hear of a man called Hertzka? |
20615 | Did you? 20615 Do you know how much corn it takes to plant an acre?" |
20615 | Do you know that you quote entirely too much? |
20615 | Do you know what it is for? |
20615 | Do you know, Adam,said Robin, when they had walked a mile in silence,"do you know that you are a fraud?" |
20615 | Do you know? |
20615 | Do you like it? |
20615 | Do you mean to look through Nature up to Nature''s God? |
20615 | Do you really think more people are guided by thought than by feeling? |
20615 | Do you really think we have nothing? 20615 Do you remember Gabriel Betteredge?" |
20615 | Do you remember Gannett''s''Not All There''? |
20615 | Do you remember how the Swiss Family were always worrying for fear they would n''t have enough to eat? |
20615 | Do you remember telling me, long ago, of a story in which the woman said she had never seen but one man whose mother she would be willing to be? 20615 Do you remember the name of that man we knew,"said Adam one day,"who wrote a book to prove the immortality of the body? |
20615 | Do you still doubt me? 20615 Do you think I never remembered the granger vote in my ambitions?" |
20615 | Do you think it possible,she said slowly,"that we are dead?" |
20615 | Do you think you do love me as fully as you might have loved some one else, younger and happier than I, better fitted to you? 20615 Do you want me to?" |
20615 | Have you been happy here? |
20615 | Have you ever thought that it may be so? |
20615 | Have you ever thought what it will mean,he said,"if we adopt the other alternative? |
20615 | How can we worship any God as pitiless as Nature? 20615 How did you come to sing in opera? |
20615 | I can plow, and I have planted and snapped corn, and cut fodder, and dug potatoes-- I wonder if there are any here? |
20615 | I must try it on,she said,"before Adam comes; there will be plenty of time, and then I will put it away until--"Shroud or wedding- gown? |
20615 | I wonder if whoever is left cares for grand opera? |
20615 | I wonder where''s she from? |
20615 | I wonder,she mused,"what I shall set free if I open this box; is it Pandora''s? |
20615 | If we are to be stuffed, we prefer to have it an ante- mortem performance, do n''t we, little dog? |
20615 | In the name of wonder, why? |
20615 | Is it enough to regenerate the earth? |
20615 | Is it so? 20615 Is n''t it a good thing we had n''t civilized the whole world to such a degree that only patent high- grade flour was used? |
20615 | Is n''t it the most beautiful Christmas present you can imagine, Adam? |
20615 | Is that all? |
20615 | Is that necessary before one can believe in his teachings? 20615 Never mind about dates, but tell me why you did n''t use the rifle instead of the lariat? |
20615 | No? 20615 Or did he build the raft to get to the wreck? |
20615 | Shall we go farther up the mountain? |
20615 | Some of the things you mention; very much that I had not encouraged you more to go on with your work, but mainly--"Well, mainly? |
20615 | Sweet, must I envy that violin? |
20615 | Then I am your wife while living water runs? |
20615 | Then you think-- you mean-- you do n''t believe-- surely you do n''t believe we have anything to do with our coming here? |
20615 | True,answered Adam,"but given flax or fleece, what would you do with it?" |
20615 | Truly, Adam,she said,"speaking just of the physical part of it, would you regret this year?" |
20615 | Unwilling? 20615 Was n''t it Adam who named the animals? |
20615 | We could not choose differently? |
20615 | What are the sentimental reasons? |
20615 | What did we determine? 20615 What else would you wish you had done?" |
20615 | What is it, dear? |
20615 | What is it? |
20615 | What is it? |
20615 | What is she dreaming? |
20615 | What shall we call them? |
20615 | What would you regret? |
20615 | What? 20615 When do you expect to weave your first linen?" |
20615 | Where is the hand that wrote this? 20615 Where on earth did you get all that?" |
20615 | Which do you believe? |
20615 | Who really knows? 20615 Why, it sews very well,"she said;"who taught you that?" |
20615 | Why, no,said Adam,"I did n''t know you had one; why did n''t you tell me?" |
20615 | Why? |
20615 | Why? |
20615 | Will your Majesty deign to look at this? |
20615 | Willingly,gasped Robin, climbing down from her slippery eminence on top of the load of grain;"but do you think we are going to have any winter?" |
20615 | You are an absurd child,he said, laughing;"but does that mean that you have really decided to go on living?" |
20615 | You are not very vain, my sweetheart; how could I help loving you? |
20615 | You know the story of Steiner''s violins, do you not? 20615 You may not shrink from death as I do, or enjoy life so keenly, but is n''t it a good thing to be alive to- night? |
20615 | You were not one of my friends then; how could you be, if there existed anything in common between you two? 20615 A living might be wrung from nature, but for ambition,--what? 20615 Adam watched her silently for awhile, and then said curiously,I wonder what you have missed most this year?" |
20615 | After all, does one care to be the champion bareback rider in life''s hippodrome? |
20615 | Ah, well, when has the Apple of Sodom failed to deceive the eye and undeceive the tongue? |
20615 | All my plans had centered in a political career, and yet how could a man touch politics and remain undefiled? |
20615 | Am I going to stand carping,''Can any good come out of Nazareth?'' |
20615 | And do n''t you remember how, when the boa constrictor killed one of their zebras, little Fritz asked pathetically if boas were good to eat?" |
20615 | And the applause? |
20615 | And what do we know, you and I, after all these years? |
20615 | And you said you felt so about me? |
20615 | And, after all, what was it, that career from which we hoped so much? |
20615 | Are n''t you glad you came?" |
20615 | Are we to follow no higher law than the blind instinct that moves the house- fly? |
20615 | Are you sure what we ought to do? |
20615 | As Adam closed the gate, she said half fearfully,"Shall we ever see them again?" |
20615 | As she began milking she looked over her shoulder at the man watching her and said,"Wo n''t you build a fire?" |
20615 | But do you really dislike quoting? |
20615 | But have you any one left on earth; if this continent is all gone, who would look for you? |
20615 | But what if our hearts are at war with our heads? |
20615 | But who would have known of Moses, save for Christ? |
20615 | By the way, which side of this question are you on?" |
20615 | Can it satisfy you, who hoped and expected so much?" |
20615 | Can you honestly say that you find''to utter love more sweet than praise''? |
20615 | Can you open the desk?" |
20615 | Could the real sea look more wonderful than that? |
20615 | Could you make that cheerful and homelike?" |
20615 | Did I answer out loud? |
20615 | Did the Atlantis people leave any literature behind them?" |
20615 | Do n''t you see that I can disagree_ with_ you, while I must differ_ from_ you? |
20615 | Do you know what there is in it? |
20615 | Do you know, we have been very silent? |
20615 | Do you not know the secret of Antonio Stradivari, of all the great makers of violins? |
20615 | Do you not know, surely you do, that every perfect violin is as much man and woman as you and I? |
20615 | Do you remember Andersen''s story of the flax? |
20615 | Do you remember my girls''club down on-- I do n''t think there were any streets, but the inhabitants called the place''Kerry Patch''?" |
20615 | Do you suppose there is any one else on earth? |
20615 | Do you think I am talking like a Populist campaign book? |
20615 | Do you think any one would choose such surroundings?" |
20615 | Do you think it would do to make ourselves presents of them? |
20615 | Do you think we can be simply another disappearance?" |
20615 | Do you understand?" |
20615 | Does n''t it look dear and homey?" |
20615 | Had she really gone mad, at last? |
20615 | Has it ever struck you that we have neither of us been sick for a day this year? |
20615 | Have you ever been in Mexico? |
20615 | Have you noticed how warm it is, how very unlike what it has always been? |
20615 | Have you noticed that there are almost no insects here, not even flies and mosquitoes? |
20615 | He noticed that she was very white, and that her eyes looked as if she had not slept, but he only said,"Have you thought?" |
20615 | How can it end?" |
20615 | How dare I say I should have been any better than the rest?" |
20615 | How do we know that the next generation would be better and stronger than we are? |
20615 | How many million lovers have envied Adam and Eve their paradise? |
20615 | How should she know how to make hoe- cake? |
20615 | How when his friends got rich they first built a beautiful house, and then went abroad for three years? |
20615 | I believe I shall call you so; may I? |
20615 | I know the program we had mapped out, the triumphal entry, the daring leaps, the cheers,--but was it worth while? |
20615 | I thought you knew; you are sure I would not trick you? |
20615 | If Christ could pray that the cup of suffering and death might pass from Him, dare we press the bitter draught of being to other lips?" |
20615 | If it be true, how universal is the destruction? |
20615 | In the first place, granting that my hypothesis is true, how can we tell whether to live is gain? |
20615 | Is it therefore the less gone? |
20615 | Is n''t it fine to be a mile or so above the rest of humanity and the deadly conventionalities? |
20615 | Is n''t it strange that we never seemed able to realize that the Greek fashions were immortal because they were beautiful?" |
20615 | Is n''t it strange that when we might have been so happy we preferred to be so wretched? |
20615 | Is the discovery recent?" |
20615 | Is there any place on earth that can mean as much to us as this island? |
20615 | It meant the eternal question of what shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and where- withal shall we be clothed? |
20615 | It was beautiful before, but what would n''t it mean now, Adam? |
20615 | Lassie will look after Daisy and Lily, wo n''t you, little dog? |
20615 | Let us go traveling; would n''t you like it?" |
20615 | Nature is strong, but is it our place to help her in her care for the single type? |
20615 | Nature''s laws are immutable, so we have been told with wearying insistence, but suppose you and I have wills as strong as Nature herself? |
20615 | No; how could I be? |
20615 | No? |
20615 | Now are you answered?" |
20615 | Now it recedes,--was it not real?" |
20615 | One woman, in a Persian lamb jacket, spoke on the evils of the overcheck; you know how they get that wool? |
20615 | Our life is here, here,--do you understand? |
20615 | Perhaps--""Perhaps what?" |
20615 | Remembering their trip of a few weeks previous, that now seemed so long ago, Adam said,"Are you too tired to sing, dear? |
20615 | Robin made no reply, and her very silence made Adam repeat, but as a self- addressed question,"Go where? |
20615 | Robin, where was''the land of Nod''?" |
20615 | Shall we give hostages to Nature when she has given nothing to us?" |
20615 | Shall we not go to these other orphans, deserted by Mother Earth, our brothers and sisters, through our common calamity?" |
20615 | Shall we pass the gateway?" |
20615 | She considered for a moment, then said brightly,"Do n''t you remember what Myron used to say? |
20615 | She did not answer for some moments, and then said slowly,"If it were a dream, and we were going back to the old life, what would you regret most?" |
20615 | She had been playing a few desultory airs, and looking up asked,--"Who is it says''music is love in search of a word''?" |
20615 | She sighed so heavily, that Adam asked quickly,"What is it?" |
20615 | So careful of the type she seems, So careless of the single life: So careful of the type? |
20615 | Spinoza never burned any one, did he, nor preached that hell was paved with infants''skulls?" |
20615 | Suppose the ship is all right, and that she stops, and the crew are not pirates, and are willing to take us aboard, where are we to go? |
20615 | Suppose we ask what she has done for the humanity of which we are a part, that she should demand fresh victims from us? |
20615 | That it is n''t a dream, and that we are sane and alive? |
20615 | The flax is not nearly ready for spinning yet; can a bride forget her attire? |
20615 | The imperative mandates of our own hearts? |
20615 | This Nature against which you bring so railing an accusation,--has she taken away more than she has given us? |
20615 | To love one''s neighbor as oneself,--isn''t that code enough for any world? |
20615 | Truly, Adam, do n''t you feel sometimes as if you would rather have died with the rest?" |
20615 | V Why wilt thou take a castle on thy back When God gave but a pack? |
20615 | We had overcome the sharpness of death, but whence could we hope for deliverance from the sharpness of living?" |
20615 | We have sung,''''Tis love, it makes the world turn round,''but is it so? |
20615 | We know now, pretty well, from the time that has passed,--by the way, how long is it?" |
20615 | We were back in the old house, in the library, do n''t you remember it? |
20615 | What can it do? |
20615 | What did you take it for?" |
20615 | What difference does it make whether the one who utters it be human or divine, bond or slave, Æsop or Marcus Aurelius? |
20615 | What do I care if it comes out of Sodom and Gomorrah, if it is good?" |
20615 | What do you think it is? |
20615 | What does it mean?" |
20615 | What has happened to us, Adam? |
20615 | What is Nature, and on what compulsion must we obey her? |
20615 | What is it all about, love?" |
20615 | What is the use of labor- saving inventions, if the time saved is n''t of some great value? |
20615 | What is to be the chief end of man in a dispensation that has no catechism as a guide- post?" |
20615 | What made it so sorrowful, Adam?" |
20615 | What was the use in living? |
20615 | What were you thinking of, Adam?" |
20615 | What will be the end of it all? |
20615 | What''s the world, my lad, my love? |
20615 | When we grew wealthy we moved into houses of more stories; but how often did we say:''Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul''? |
20615 | When will you come to me, love, when?" |
20615 | Where are the crowns now, and how can we say Solomon was not right when he said the end of it all was vanity? |
20615 | Where are we, and why were we left?" |
20615 | Where should we be now without the simple devices of the good people of the Stone Age, and their survivors on whom we looked down with so much scorn?" |
20615 | Why is it better to disagree than to differ?" |
20615 | Why, if a ship should come here now, do you know what they would do first, unless they happened to be East Indians? |
20615 | Why, why, had he been so blind? |
20615 | Why?" |
20615 | With gown of honest wear, why wilt thou tease For braid and fripperies? |
20615 | Would you give your world that one great principle as the whole of its code of laws?" |
20615 | XVIII Are God and Nature then at strife, That Nature lends such evil dreams? |
20615 | You are not, are you?" |
20615 | You did n''t know I was brought up on a ranch, did you? |
20615 | You know I could not?" |
20615 | You will stay here, and we will work together, and be content for awhile?" |
20615 | and the son of man that thou visitest him? |
20615 | she said,"content? |
20615 | then we ca n''t do like those men Cooper told about, in''The Pioneers,''was n''t it? |
19142 | A little agreement in black and white? |
19142 | A water- rat? 19142 Almost childish, is it not?" |
19142 | And Lejay? |
19142 | And he is one of the gang? |
19142 | And how did he die? |
19142 | And now, what took place to- night? |
19142 | And then? |
19142 | And then? |
19142 | And what is the plan? |
19142 | And what is this he knows? |
19142 | Anything else? |
19142 | Are we--he glanced about him as though the vastness were peopled with listening Chinamen--"_followed_?" |
19142 | Ask yourself the question: what would any ordinary man be doing motoring in a place like this at two o''clock in the morning? |
19142 | At his office? |
19142 | Bells? |
19142 | But I was sitting up--"With the light on? |
19142 | But in what way does the case enter into your province? |
19142 | By what right do you reproach me?--Have you ever offered me friendship, that I should repay you with friendship? 19142 Can I show you anything, sir?" |
19142 | Can you forgive my clumsiness? |
19142 | Certainly,I said with surprise;"is there any reason why I should not?" |
19142 | Colombo? |
19142 | Could you rest in peace if you thought that he lived? 19142 Dead, Petrie-- already?" |
19142 | Did Burke go back? |
19142 | Did any one come? |
19142 | Did he confirm the ringing? |
19142 | Did he give you any particulars? |
19142 | Did it sound like it? |
19142 | Did the officer see this person? |
19142 | Do I understand that Burke is actually too afraid to go out openly even in daylight? |
19142 | Do you mean something that came up out of the sea? |
19142 | Do you seriously believe that my ghost- hunting was undertaken for amusement? 19142 Do you wish to see me professionally?" |
19142 | Does no explanation occur to you? |
19142 | Dr. Petrie--"Well? |
19142 | Ever seen anything like that? |
19142 | Every one is in bed,I said ruefully;"and how can I possibly see a patient-- in this costume?" |
19142 | For God''s sake, Smith, what was it? |
19142 | For Heaven''s sake, why not? |
19142 | Go onI said rather hollowly;"what next?" |
19142 | Go on,said Nayland Smith, turning the ray to the left;"what did she have in the basket?" |
19142 | Good evening, sir,he said monotonously, with a slight inclination of the head;"is there anything which you desire to inspect?" |
19142 | Good morning,I said;"can I assist you in any way?" |
19142 | Has he heard no other sound? |
19142 | Have we been over- confident? |
19142 | Have you a flask? |
19142 | Have you a whistle with you? |
19142 | Have you any idea...? |
19142 | Have you ever known me to waste my time when there was important work to do? |
19142 | Have you got it, Smith? |
19142 | Have you got it? |
19142 | Have you killed it, Petrie? |
19142 | Have you some one waiting? |
19142 | He came in a cab which he dismissed--"He has not left again? |
19142 | He had dealings with Chinamen? |
19142 | He wants to see_ me_? |
19142 | How can you be sure of that? |
19142 | How long have you been here? |
19142 | How long was I insensible? |
19142 | How so? |
19142 | How was it done? |
19142 | I ask but one thing from an Englishman; your word of honour? |
19142 | I do not know what_ you_ would have done in the circumstances, Petrie, but I--"Yes? |
19142 | I shall take a little walk,announced Eltham;"for I gather that you do n''t expect to be detained long? |
19142 | I should like to examine the silver image yonder,I said;"what price are you asking for it?" |
19142 | I take it that the place is being watched? |
19142 | I warned him, sir, that it would come to this--"That_ what_ would come to this? |
19142 | I wonder what piece of_ my_ personal property Fu- Manchu has pilfered,he said,"in order to enable it to sleuth_ me_?" |
19142 | If I assure you that your presence is necessary to my safety,he said,"that if you fail me I must seek another companion-- will you come?" |
19142 | In sanity''s name what is it--_what is it?_"Come downstairs,replied Smith quietly,"and see for yourself." |
19142 | In what way? |
19142 | Instinctive, I suppose,he snapped;"but what do we expect to see in the air?" |
19142 | Is Burke--? |
19142 | Is it certain that they went there? |
19142 | Is it characteristic of Fu- Manchu to kill a man by the direct agency of a snake and to implicate one of his own damnable servants in this way? |
19142 | Is it some species of bird? |
19142 | Is it to this paragraph that I owe the pleasure of seeing you here? |
19142 | Is that Carter? |
19142 | Is that all you know? |
19142 | Is the man established there again, then? |
19142 | Is there no means of learning,I said,"from whence this message emanated?" |
19142 | Is your hand steady? 19142 It''s a legitimate case of a haunted house, then?" |
19142 | Maddison? |
19142 | Merely marsh- lights, I take it? |
19142 | Mrs. Hewett has been taken more seriously ill. Could you come at once? |
19142 | Mrs. Hewett requires me? |
19142 | My dear Pearce,he cried,"do you hear the ringing of bells?" |
19142 | Now,continued Smith,"you, Petrie, will want to examine him, I suppose?" |
19142 | Really? |
19142 | Released what? |
19142 | Shall we get out again? |
19142 | Shall you keep any appointment which he may suggest? |
19142 | Should you care to take a run down and see for yourself? |
19142 | Smith,I said shortly,"you remember Azîz?" |
19142 | Smith,I said,"what, in Heaven''s name, were you doing on the mound? |
19142 | So you know me no more? |
19142 | So you know me no more? |
19142 | Something urgent? |
19142 | Surely some arrests were made? |
19142 | That we have followed the right car? |
19142 | The Gables will be watched? |
19142 | The attempt did not succeed? |
19142 | The house is called The Gables,continued the Scotland Yard man,"and I knew I was on a wild- goose chase from the first--""Why?" |
19142 | The mulatto?... |
19142 | Then why do you serve this inhuman monster? |
19142 | Then you have some idea respecting Kâramanèh''s quarry? |
19142 | Then you wo n''t come? |
19142 | There was no one else in the hall? |
19142 | There will be a sufficient number of men? |
19142 | Very high- handed? |
19142 | Was I mistaken? |
19142 | Was it a man? |
19142 | Was she a servant? |
19142 | Well, even so, there can be no objection to my examining it? |
19142 | Well? |
19142 | Well? |
19142 | Well? |
19142 | What bird? |
19142 | What did you do? |
19142 | What do you make of it, Petrie? |
19142 | What do you mean, Smith? |
19142 | What do you mean? |
19142 | What has given you this idea? |
19142 | What have you done with the-- body? |
19142 | What is he afraid of exactly? |
19142 | What is it? 19142 What is it?" |
19142 | What is this? |
19142 | What killed him, Petrie? |
19142 | What kind of thing, what unnatural, distorted creature, laid hands upon my throat to- night? 19142 What now?" |
19142 | What strange bird are you seeking,_ Kâramanèh_? |
19142 | What was he? 19142 What were you about to do?" |
19142 | What''s that? |
19142 | What''s this? |
19142 | What-- a woman or something? |
19142 | Whatever for? |
19142 | When did it happen, and how? |
19142 | Where did you engage him? |
19142 | Where did you find it, Petrie? |
19142 | Where did you find this? |
19142 | Where did you last see Eltham? |
19142 | Where is Eltham? |
19142 | Where is Fu- Manchu? |
19142 | Where is it being sent from? |
19142 | Where is the girl? |
19142 | Where''s your lantern? 19142 Where''s your patient?" |
19142 | Who he is? 19142 Why did you start without--?" |
19142 | Why do you look at me so? |
19142 | Why do you question me if you think that everything I say is a lie? |
19142 | Why do you treat me so? |
19142 | Why should you interest yourself in The Gables? |
19142 | Why? |
19142 | Why? |
19142 | Will there be room in the wagon? |
19142 | Yes; nothing was removed--"Who kept the place in order? |
19142 | Yes; who is speaking? |
19142 | You are interested in my poor_ Cynocephalyte_? |
19142 | You are not going to attempt anything, single- handed-- against_ him_? |
19142 | You are wondering, perhaps,he suggested,"what caused the mysterious light? |
19142 | You can swear to that? |
19142 | You hear that, Petrie? |
19142 | You imply that Dr. Fu- Manchu has something to learn from The Gables? |
19142 | You know what this is, Petrie? |
19142 | You recognize it-- yes? |
19142 | You remember the Call of Siva? |
19142 | You saw her? |
19142 | You see that clump of bushes on the other side of the road? |
19142 | You see,he continued, peering across at me in his oddly nervous way--"one never knows, does one? |
19142 | You think he may have sunk so low as to become a creature of Fu- Manchu? |
19142 | You will excuse the seeming discourtesy of an invalid, gentlemen? |
19142 | You will''phone us, then? |
19142 | You--he hesitated diffidently--"searched in Egypt with Nayland Smith, did you not?" |
19142 | You-- er-- were interested? |
19142 | _ What_ may be amongst the trees, Smith? |
19142 | _ Wo n''t_ you heed me? 19142 --He shook his head sadly--But, except the All Powerful, who is so powerful as the_ Hâkîm_ Fu- Manchu? |
19142 | --the laughter was gone from his eyes, and they were steely hard again--"what the blazes have we here?" |
19142 | A second shot cracked sharply; and a voice( God, was I mad?) |
19142 | Am I to resort again to_ the question_ to learn his name?" |
19142 | Are you armed?" |
19142 | But a sudden death always excites suspicion, and--""A sudden death?" |
19142 | But about The Gables?" |
19142 | But"--he had been wearing a silk scarf about his throat and now he unwrapped it--"did you ever see a water- rat that could make marks like these?" |
19142 | But_ what_ claws?" |
19142 | CHAPTER XV BEWITCHMENT"You say you have two pieces of news for me?" |
19142 | Can I turn him over?" |
19142 | Can you give me the address of the place to which Mr. Smith went last night?" |
19142 | Can you overtake it?" |
19142 | Could it be that his visit formed part of a plot? |
19142 | Did you see him?" |
19142 | Digging something up?" |
19142 | Directly they find that you are alive, they will treat you the same-- you understand? |
19142 | Do you doubt it?" |
19142 | Do you know what that islet in the pond really is?" |
19142 | Do you wish to know?" |
19142 | Evidently you apprehend some attempt upon me?" |
19142 | Explain who I am--""But if it is the inspector--?" |
19142 | Following the death of Mr. Maddison, The Gables remained empty until a while ago, when a French gentleman, named Lejay, leased it--""Furnished?" |
19142 | For God''s sake, what has happened?" |
19142 | For had not Forsyth come to a dreadful end while Smith and I were within twenty yards of him? |
19142 | Have you any sort of idea, Dr. Petrie, respecting the identity of the sender?" |
19142 | He got away in the confusion following the raid, and has been hiding ever since with a cousin-- a nurseryman out Upminster way....""Hiding?" |
19142 | He is little better than a blackmailer--""How do you know?" |
19142 | He made no direct reply, but--"Have you any milk?" |
19142 | How often in the past had we blindly hurled ourselves into just such a trap as this? |
19142 | I am to come at once?... |
19142 | I can safely leave this part of the case to you, I think?" |
19142 | I could not trust myself to speak for a moment, then--"If I am a stranger to you, as you claim, why do you give me your confidence?" |
19142 | I cried from the window;"Smith, for mercy''s sake where are you?" |
19142 | I cried,"do you mean that_ Fu- Manchu_...?" |
19142 | I cried,"have you found anything?" |
19142 | I do n''t think there can be any doubt that what killed him was fear at seeing a repetition--""Of the fiery hand?" |
19142 | I heard Slattin call,"who is speaking?... |
19142 | I said, my eyes ever seeking the curtained doorway;"how''s that?" |
19142 | I said,"how could you submit me...?" |
19142 | I trust, Dr. Petrie, that you suffer no inconvenience?" |
19142 | I whispered, plucking at his arm--"is it--?" |
19142 | I whispered,"what has happened?" |
19142 | I whispered--"what is it? |
19142 | I''ve leased the house in the name of Professor Maxton....""But, Smith,"I cried,"what possible reason can there be for disguise?" |
19142 | If only I had a pistol, or a revolver--""What should you do?" |
19142 | In fact, I believe he thought that it was one of those staffs mentioned in biblical history--""Aaron''s rod?" |
19142 | In short, she did not descend into the roadway and did not come out by the door....""Was there a gallery outside the window?" |
19142 | Is there time to summon assistance?" |
19142 | It was a signal, and it read: S M I T H... S O S.""Well?" |
19142 | My mind cleared rapidly now, and standing up, but without releasing the girl''s hands, so that I drew her up beside me, I said:"Weymouth-- where is--? |
19142 | Of course you will remain to- night, and I trust for some days to come?" |
19142 | Perhaps, when I know more-- will you forget my words, for the time?" |
19142 | Petrie?" |
19142 | Shall I say that I was surprised? |
19142 | She has been here three times--""Kâramanèh?..." |
19142 | She made out that she and Singapore Charlie were prepared to give away the boss of the Yellow gang--""For a price, of course?" |
19142 | Should I place the facts of the matter, as I knew them to be, before the Captain? |
19142 | Should we never learn that, where Fu- Manchu was, impetuosity must prove fatal? |
19142 | Should you not fear for your life every time that a night- call took you out alone? |
19142 | Smith-- how do we know--?" |
19142 | Surely there could not be two such in the world? |
19142 | That he had seen me, I could not doubt; but had he seen my companion? |
19142 | There was a short silence; then--"And you have been down to The Gables again?" |
19142 | This M. Lejay had no enemies?--there could be no possible motive?" |
19142 | Those were two creatures of Dr. Fu- Manchu...."The thunder died away, hollowly, echoing over the distant sea...."That light on the moor to- night?" |
19142 | Was I awake? |
19142 | Was I losing my senses indeed? |
19142 | Was this another effort of the unknown jester? |
19142 | We were both silent for some moments; then--"What do you propose to do?" |
19142 | Were there no means whereby I could induce the marmoset to approach me? |
19142 | What change had taken place in those limpid, mysterious pools? |
19142 | What could be the meaning of the mysterious summons? |
19142 | What could we do?" |
19142 | What do you make of the sound like the cracking of a whip?" |
19142 | What had been the meaning of that scream which I had heard but to which in my frantic state of mind I had paid comparatively little attention? |
19142 | What information had Burke to sell? |
19142 | What of poisoned darts? |
19142 | What of the damnable reptiles and insects which form part of the armoury of Fu- Manchu?" |
19142 | What was afoot? |
19142 | When did you warn him, and of what?" |
19142 | Where did he come from?" |
19142 | Where had I heard that soft voice? |
19142 | Where had I seen this graceful Eastern youth before? |
19142 | Where was this man--?" |
19142 | Where were the detectives? |
19142 | Where_ was_ my patient? |
19142 | Whom could my late visitor be? |
19142 | Why was Forsyth standing there at the gate? |
19142 | Why was a wild madness growing up within me like a flame? |
19142 | Why was the old longing returned, ten- thousandfold, to snatch that pliant, exquisite shape to my breast? |
19142 | Will you come up?" |
19142 | Will you take a look around now that you are here?" |
19142 | Wo n''t you help me to understand?" |
19142 | You have a knife? |
19142 | You recall them?" |
19142 | You remember Shen- Yan''s place-- by Limehouse Basin? |
19142 | You said he was not married?" |
19142 | You thought it was Indian? |
19142 | You understand? |
19142 | You wedged your door?" |
19142 | You will meet me there?... |
19142 | are we to stand here and see him taken away to--?" |
19142 | he said, thrusting me away irritably,"--two years ago-- and what it meant to those who obeyed it?" |
19142 | he said,"am I fated_ always_ to come too late?" |
19142 | he snapped,"do you recognize this odour?" |
19142 | is Eltham here?" |
19142 | like the call of a nighthawk-- is it some unknown species of-- flying thing?" |
19142 | or could I hope to apprehend Fu- Manchu''s servant by the methods suggested by my poor friend? |
19142 | rapped Smith;"one like the cracking of dry branches, for instance?" |
19142 | was I sane? |
19142 | where are you?" |
19142 | you are interested? |
28117 | Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me? |
28117 | Have you procured the mustard seed? |
28117 | What is the chief gate to hell? 28117 All we can do in its presence is to ask-- is this all that man, the flower of God''s universe, is to arrive at? 28117 And are they not at heart loyal to the caste of their fathers? 28117 And can anything be more degrading to an intelligent human being? 28117 And what is Rahu? 28117 And what shall I say of Jesus, the Christ? 28117 And what was the chief ambition for personal achievement sought by Jesus and Gautama? 28117 And who is to decide as to which catalogue is the worse and the more heinous in the sight of God? 28117 And why should they not, if our faith is to fit well the Oriental mind, and is to become a gracious power in its life? 28117 Are you satisfied? 28117 Are you satisfied? 28117 But to harbour him means to be outcast as a family; and how can they endure that? 28117 But what is it that such men as Vivekananda and Abhedananda, and all the rest of the_ Ananda_ tribe, teach upon their return to India? 28117 But what is one such school among the many millions of this community in India? 28117 But what is the picture which Hinduism has drawn of the finality of life to its followers? 28117 But, you ask, will not the_ Sattia yuga_--the golden age-- return again? 28117 For is notThou shalt obey implicitly thy caste,"the first law of the Hindu decalogue, and the one most sincerely believed by all Hindus? |
28117 | For was it not the five thousandth year of_ Kali yuga_? |
28117 | For, say many, are not these immoralities and evils an integral part of the time; and, if so, what harm is there in our partaking of them? |
28117 | Gentlemen, can any amount of esoteric whitewashing justify these disgraceful and fairly incredible practices? |
28117 | Has he heaped upon her abuse and called her"donkey"and"buffalo"? |
28117 | Has man kept her in ignorance? |
28117 | How can one expect such a man to meet with a foreigner on even terms, or to treat him with equality and true friendship? |
28117 | How can one substitute here a sameness of_ Karma_ for identity of soul? |
28117 | How can the diminutive doses of the white man and his establishment remove important difficulties and heal serious diseases? |
28117 | How shall we account for this strange and very striking fact? |
28117 | Hundreds of people saw her dying agonies as they passed by during those days; but no heart of sympathy went out to her; for was she not a stranger? |
28117 | III What is there in the recent condition of the country and of the people, which warrants this unrest and discontent? |
28117 | In further enforcement of this Oriental character he continues:--"Was not Jesus Christ an Asiatic? |
28117 | In view of all these things, who would say that God did not visit this people, or left Himself without witness among them? |
28117 | Is it a wonder that life is a weariness, and existence itself an unspeakable burden to such a man? |
28117 | Is it not, to a very considerable extent, the reason why there are so few whole- hearted reformers in India? |
28117 | Is it true, in this sense also, that"there is nothing new under the sun"? |
28117 | Is that any reason why we should associate them with our religion and tempt the devil himself with their presence in our holiest places and shrines?" |
28117 | Is there no_ progress_ in time? |
28117 | Is there nothing better for him than to end his long, dreary existence in such an abject failure? |
28117 | Must he descend from the plain of even a wretched human life to this the lowest reach of existence, if such we must call it? |
28117 | Now, in view of all this, what shall the Christian teacher do in this land? |
28117 | On another occasion he says:--"Where, then, is Christ now? |
28117 | Parental love and family tenderness cling to the Christian youth; and is he not the hope of the family for the years to come? |
28117 | Shall he also exalt this ideal and temper it with Christian wisdom and chasten it with Christian meaning? |
28117 | The old system of_ Sati_, whereby a woman immolated herself on the funeral pyre of her dead husband, what was it? |
28117 | The people said,"Here is mustard seed;"but when she asked,"Has there died a son, a husband, a parent, or a slave in this house?" |
28117 | V Many are now asking,"How shall this trouble be removed and peace and good- will be restored to the land?" |
28117 | What was the caste system recently enunciated by Abhedananda in Madras? |
28117 | What was there, then, to connect one birth with another, according to his teaching? |
28117 | Who could know the veritable Christ of God without light from above?... |
28117 | Who, then, can dogmatically tell us that these centuries have been better or worse than the eras preceding them? |
28117 | Why should she demean her lord by pronouncing publicly his sacred name? |
28117 | Why should we be content with our dependence and not reveal our manhood and our prowess, as Japan did?" |
28117 | With his own right arm of virtue he wished to carve his way into eternal life-- or, shall I say, eternal death? |
28117 | Without a son, who is there to relieve their soul from destruction, and to bring to them future peace and rest through the_ Shradda_ ceremony? |
28117 | even for the sake of sovereignty over the three worlds, how much less than for this earth( alone)?" |
28117 | they replied:"Lady, what is this that you ask? |
29294 | And was my decision,replied the Judge,"not in accordance with law as well as with justice?" |
29294 | Judge,said he,"did you not recently decide an important case against our company?" |
29294 | Now, in the name of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed, That he hath grown so great? |
29294 | And he ought to pay 20, as against 13? |
29294 | And they were languishing and suffering? |
29294 | And what do you think of this plan? |
29294 | And you acted as a fostering mother to A. T. Stewart& Company to build it up? |
29294 | Are there no human rights, for the protection of which government was established, more sacred than the rights of a wealthy corporation''s dollar? |
29294 | At 20 against 13? |
29294 | Can the imagination picture the infinite sufferings that would at once result to every man, woman and child in the whole country? |
29294 | Can we afford to ignore the lessons of history? |
29294 | Can you use it?" |
29294 | Do railway investments form the only property in the land which requires the protection of the law? |
29294 | Do you call that the same chance? |
29294 | Do you know H. S. Ballou, of Rochester? |
29294 | Do you know anything of G. C. Buell& Company? |
29294 | Finally Prof. Hadley says:"Where are we to find the limit to such unwise action? |
29294 | Have you seen any tickets yet? |
29294 | He asks:"Why should for any public reasons-- for any reason of public safety-- the Interstate Commerce Law have come to stay?" |
29294 | He seems to be a grocer there? |
29294 | How long had the factories of A. T. Stewart& Company been in existence? |
29294 | How long would the people of this country endure such a condition of things? |
29294 | If the State should refuse to levy its share( and how could such share be ascertained? |
29294 | In a recent article published by the Arena Publishing Company, entitled"Should the Nation own the Railways?" |
29294 | Is it not far below such reasonable amount? |
29294 | Q. January 11th, 1879? |
29294 | Should the State sacrifice the welfare of all her people rather than lay its"withering or destroying"hand on a single dollar of corporate wealth? |
29294 | Small concerns are not worth developing, according to your opinion? |
29294 | That is to say, a small concern ought to pay 40, 30, 25 and 20, as against a large concern, 13; that is your rule? |
29294 | That small man has no right to develop? |
29294 | That was the object? |
29294 | The main question to be determined is: Shall the railroads be owned and operated as public or as private property? |
29294 | The question would then arise, what proportion must be levied upon State and interstate traffic respectively? |
29294 | Was that to build up and develop their business? |
29294 | What reason can be assigned why the weaker should thus be discriminated against? |
29294 | Who would condemn such an organization more severely than the advocates of the Traffic Association? |
29294 | Why can not we secure two good things instead of one? |
29294 | Why is it that when a legislature is in session passes are as plentiful as leaves in the forest in autumn?... |
29294 | Why, then, should privileges be conceded to one beneficiary which are denied to all others? |
29294 | Will Mr. Hadley please explain why railroad construction has ceased in Connecticut? |
29294 | You consider it the same chance? |
29294 | You made the rate for A. T. Stewart& Company? |
29294 | You thought that business was not yet sufficiently built up and developed? |
29294 | You wanted to develop their business? |
26924 | ''But do they drown the girl babies now?'' 26924 ''But who usually kills the girl babies?'' |
26924 | ''Do they bury it then?'' 26924 ''How many passengers have we on board?'' |
26924 | Ah, he was a soldier? |
26924 | And that boyish American was----"Who? |
26924 | And what are they protesting against? |
26924 | And what do you think of that way? 26924 And what is Mr. Bear doing all that time?" |
26924 | And what is that may I ask? |
26924 | And you would not tell him their names? |
26924 | Are they like our American Indians in looks, since their history is so much like them? |
26924 | But how do you live yourselves; how are you training your children? |
26924 | But there must have been some men to start it? |
26924 | But what has that to do with us? |
26924 | But why do they do it? |
26924 | But why may we not sing''Rock of Ages''? |
26924 | But you; you know better? 26924 Did he eat it himself?" |
26924 | Did he really mean it? |
26924 | Did the old man eat that one? |
26924 | Did the old man, whom we had decided was more of an animal than a human being, eat that one? |
26924 | Did they do it? |
26924 | Did twenty millions of people all get together then, and plan? |
26924 | Do they often indulge in that little friendly game with the Devil? |
26924 | Do you know about the Independence Movement? |
26924 | Do you know him? |
26924 | Do you live in American fashion or Japanese fashion? |
26924 | Do you see these needles? |
26924 | Does he say so? |
26924 | Even though your father married a Scotch woman? |
26924 | Fear of what? |
26924 | From whence did it spring? |
26924 | Had they been tried? |
26924 | Have they a history? |
26924 | Have you a family? |
26924 | Have you a mother? |
26924 | Have you seen Korean kiddies with flags painted on their stomachs? |
26924 | How could you stand it? |
26924 | How did you feel? |
26924 | How did you guess it, my friend? |
26924 | How do they worship bears and kill them at the same time? |
26924 | How long will they stay with us? |
26924 | How many children? |
26924 | How old are they? |
26924 | How? |
26924 | Is it getting better or worse? |
26924 | Is n''t it just a sort of an appendix of China, after all? 26924 Is there no one who had charge of this movement from the beginning?" |
26924 | My God man; you do n''t mean that they let the dogs eat their babies because they are afraid of the devil? |
26924 | Now what are you going to do? |
26924 | Now will you refrain from yelling''Mansei?'' |
26924 | One dog he a great, what you call him-- Coolie? 26924 Perhaps the good Christian God is lighting the fires for you?" |
26924 | Perhaps? 26924 Sauci,"said he to her, recognizing her for an intelligent Korean girl,"why do not the Koreans like us?" |
26924 | Since when was it begun? |
26924 | So that''s what they''re waiting for; to undress us? |
26924 | Sun''s got who, fool? 26924 The big dog say,''Little dog, for why you have your tail all bandaged up like that? |
26924 | The old idea of a fear religion, a fear social life, a fear family life and a fear surgery prevails in Korea as it does in China? |
26924 | Then what will your children do when they grow a bit older and go out on the streets and yell this cry? |
26924 | There is what? |
26924 | What are you doing in Japan? |
26924 | What are you doing, my boy? |
26924 | What did you do? |
26924 | What do you mean? |
26924 | What do you mean? |
26924 | What do you most need? |
26924 | What do you want? |
26924 | What do you want? |
26924 | What does Japan most need to learn? |
26924 | What had happened? |
26924 | What is his name? |
26924 | What is it? |
26924 | What is your occupation? |
26924 | What kind are you looking for? |
26924 | What was that for? |
26924 | What would be the worst of it? |
26924 | What would have happened if somebody in a fit of patriotism had shouted''Mansei''? |
26924 | What''s the matter, Pop? |
26924 | What? 26924 Where did you find them?" |
26924 | Where is it that fear holds sway? |
26924 | Who tells you to do these things; you students? 26924 Why are they making all this fuss over Shantung?" |
26924 | Why are you leaving a good position and going to Java? |
26924 | Why did he beat you? |
26924 | Why did n''t you fire him? |
26924 | Why do they kill girl babies? |
26924 | Why do you not sit down and eat with us? |
26924 | Why is that strange wall built in front of every household door and even before the Temples? |
26924 | Why is that? 26924 Why should you not give them?" |
26924 | Why will you not marry James? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Why? |
26924 | Will I not get to meet her before I go? |
26924 | Will there be any Japs in Heaven? |
26924 | Will they get it? |
26924 | You speak good English? |
26924 | ''Surely not the mother?'' |
26924 | Are you here again? |
26924 | But why such a thought at this ungodly hour? |
26924 | Can this scene be duplicated in Formosa and Korea, where the Japanese hold sway? |
26924 | Despise the mother? |
26924 | Do you not like that way better than the Korean way?" |
26924 | Does that sound as if it might be China''s appendix? |
26924 | Hate the Priest? |
26924 | He did it in the following language as nearly as I can remember it:"I feel like a cartoon I see in your peculiar paper-- what you call him--_Puck_? |
26924 | Her lover?" |
26924 | I said to a high official of the Government,"Does that painting represent the way you Filipinos feel to- day?" |
26924 | I said to him"Are things better or worse in Korea?" |
26924 | I said to this missionary, who had just arrived from Korea,"Is it true that the cruelties have stopped in Korea?" |
26924 | I took dinner in Shanghai with one of the foremost merchant princes of China and said,"Are you selling any Japanese- made goods?" |
26924 | Mr. Choi said,''What do you want me to confess? |
26924 | No-- he bin in that peculiar paper,_ Life_? |
26924 | One Korean child said,"Do we have to put in that little group of islands east of the coast of China?" |
26924 | Pug? |
26924 | The missionary woman said to the Korean when the Jap ran;"Why do you not report this to the Japanese police?" |
26924 | Then much to my astonishment this Kansas man turned to me, and said,"Did it ever occur to you that these fields of Shantung look just like Kansas?" |
26924 | Was it something like our''button, button, whose got the button?''" |
26924 | What a painting they would make?" |
26924 | What about your children, when they take sick?" |
26924 | Who but a group of insane foreigners would drop into a town at three o''clock in the morning with a blizzard blowing? |
26924 | Who could pass up that group of a dozen little rascals who followed us through the ruins of the old Summer Palace? |
26924 | Who could resist their imitations of everything one did? |
26924 | Who teaches you to treat your Japanese teachers in that manner?" |
26924 | You have an accident?'' |
26924 | You have been in an American School?" |
26924 | _ Judge_? |
26924 | asked the Japanese official,"Did the visitor tell you how to run your house?" |
31043 | Exguse me, madame, is this not Mrs. Daway? 31043 And I saidIs that so?" |
31043 | But do you think they will do that? |
31043 | But if he is stuck up what should I be when a woman appears for the first time in history at a men''s carouse in Japan? |
31043 | Did this affect his status? |
31043 | Have I told you we bathe in a Japanese tub? |
31043 | How long are we to stand here?" |
31043 | I said to her:"How is he coming, in an automobile? |
31043 | In the midst of the passing I asked the companion with me,"Which is the Emperor?" |
31043 | Is another world war already preparing? |
31043 | Is n''t it strange that in the latitude of New York this drought should be expected every spring? |
31043 | One girl of seventeen said she loved babies and how many did I have? |
31043 | What is the number of your room, madame?" |
31043 | Why potatoes under glass? |
31043 | Will it be effective? |
31043 | Will you not come in and look at our many curios? |
21104 | A bird? |
21104 | A man in the forepeak, and dead, is he, bosun? 21104 A man in the forepeak-- eh?" |
21104 | Ah, the new apprentice Mr Mackay was telling me about just now-- eh? |
21104 | All ready forrud? |
21104 | An''is it axin''why, yez are? |
21104 | An''is it manin''yez, I am? |
21104 | And are you really the only sailors on board? |
21104 | And is he a Chinaman? |
21104 | And is that the captain up there now with Mr Mackay? |
21104 | And so, Allan, you wish to go to sea? |
21104 | And the cable-- how many shackles have you got up? |
21104 | And the captain,I inquired,"what sort of a man is he?" |
21104 | And we''ve come so far already? |
21104 | And what did you do, measter? |
21104 | And what have you here, Allan? |
21104 | And what is that? |
21104 | And where is this boat ye''re going in? |
21104 | And why wo n''t you, Allan? |
21104 | And will he bring any more sailors with him? |
21104 | And will he come on board there? |
21104 | Are you all right now? |
21104 | Are you ready, sir? |
21104 | Are you ready? |
21104 | Are you really such a very important personage? |
21104 | Are you sure? |
21104 | Arrah, laive''em alone, ca n''t ye? |
21104 | Arrah, sure now, Misther Gray- ham, arn''t ye sorry ye iver came to say, at all at all? |
21104 | Arrah, will a dook swim? |
21104 | But I may go up by and by? |
21104 | But where shall I go, sir? |
21104 | But, is there no other profession you would prefer-- the law, for instance? 21104 But, who''s that you''ve got in tow?" |
21104 | Ca n''t you see its nice shiny black- and- green plumage, and its yellow bill like a blackbird? 21104 Carry- on? |
21104 | D''ye happen to know what''s inside av an egg, now, whither it''s a chicken, sure, or ownly the yoke an''white, till ye bhrake the shill? |
21104 | D''ye hear me there, forrud? |
21104 | Dick, Dick, what do you think of it all? |
21104 | Did they speak of doing anything? |
21104 | Did ye? 21104 Do n''t ye think so, too, Misther Gray- ham?" |
21104 | Do n''t ye think we''ve made pretty sharp work of it at the last, sorr, eh? |
21104 | Do n''t ye, honey? |
21104 | Do n''t you see that boat there coming towards us to capture the ship? |
21104 | Do n''t you see that yellow devil''s murdering him? 21104 Do n''t you think so, sir?" |
21104 | Do ye know how to fire a pistol? |
21104 | Do you know you''re liable to three months imprisonment with hard labour for stowing yourself aboard my ship? |
21104 | Do you mean me? |
21104 | Do you think it''s a pirate ship? |
21104 | Do you think, though, sir, we can carry those topgallants much longer? 21104 Does it?" |
21104 | Eh, my boy, eh? |
21104 | Fighting, I suppose,--eh? |
21104 | Fun, you call it? |
21104 | Ha, ha, cap''en,laughed Mr Mackay,"you said so last time, do n''t you remember? |
21104 | Hail from? |
21104 | Has he? |
21104 | Have either of ye handled ere a one before? |
21104 | Have ye minny of me unshaved sons aboard? |
21104 | Have you got your traps with you all right, Mr Graham? |
21104 | Have you had any breakfast? |
21104 | Have you seen any of your mess- mates yet, my boy-- eh? |
21104 | Hear that now? |
21104 | Here, lads,he said, emptying out an old arm- chest which was stowed under his bunk on to the floor,"lend a hand, will ye?" |
21104 | How can you say so? |
21104 | How will ye be able to steer for Canton? |
21104 | How''s that, Rooney? |
21104 | Hullo, Ching Wang,I said,"what are you about?" |
21104 | Hullo, found your sea- legs already? |
21104 | I call this going-- eh? |
21104 | I hope you had a sound, healthy sleep, my boy? |
21104 | I mane are yez houngry? 21104 I suppose he''s come to fill the place of young Rawlings, who, you may remember, cut and run from us at Singapore on our last voyage out?" |
21104 | I think, Mr Graham,said the lieutenant, noticing my admiring gaze,"we''ll be able to teach your Malay friends something of a lesson-- eh?" |
21104 | Is he breaking things? |
21104 | Is it really so? |
21104 | Is the anchor all clear? |
21104 | Is the bosun there? |
21104 | It ai n''t as good as Paydro''s tay that we had jist now, is it? |
21104 | Joe Fergusson? |
21104 | Let us stand towards them, Mackay and see what they''re made of-- eh? |
21104 | Me askee him me watchee if kyphong catchee ship, no sabey? |
21104 | New hand? |
21104 | None of your sky- larking there, d''ye hear? 21104 Not bad that, Mackay,"he said;"not bad-- eh? |
21104 | Now, me bhoys, are ye riddy? |
21104 | Oh, aye, it''s wonderful enough our getting here; but how are we going to get out-- eh? |
21104 | Oh, did you? |
21104 | Ours was the Lizard; did n''t you notice Cap''en Gillespie taking the bearings of it as we passed this afternoon? |
21104 | Peckish? |
21104 | Perhaps he''ll say he has nothing left, now that the others have all had their dinner? |
21104 | Sha''n''t I, sir? |
21104 | Spring from? |
21104 | Still, ye ca n''t deny now that ye do n''t know for sure what''s insoide the shill till ye bhrake it, an''say for yoursilf-- eh? |
21104 | Sure, an''I ca n''t hilp me brogue, ye know, if ye manes that? |
21104 | That chap in the red sash? |
21104 | That means, I suppose, bosun,replied Mr Mackay laughing and coughing as the tea- dust caught his breath,"that I don''t-- eh?" |
21104 | That the skipper? 21104 That''s the joker, is it?" |
21104 | The dickens I should? 21104 The measles?" |
21104 | The sailors? 21104 Then I should like to know what the dickens he means by such conduct as this? |
21104 | There he is, Rooney,--do you see him? |
21104 | Too many of the family in orders already-- eh? 21104 Turn where?" |
21104 | Was he? |
21104 | Well, dear? |
21104 | Well, take the same weapon again now, lad, as you''re familiar with it; and you, youngster, have you got any choice? |
21104 | Well, what have become of all the sailors? |
21104 | Well,cried Captain Gillespie as soon as Mr Mackay stepped up the poop ladder,"how''s that rascal getting on?" |
21104 | Wh- a- at-- what the dickens d''ye mean? |
21104 | Wh- wh- what d''ye mean, I say? |
21104 | Wh- wha- what the dicken''s d- d- d''ye mean by this? |
21104 | What are you fellows doing below there? |
21104 | What did you do that for? |
21104 | What did you do when you could n''t sail round it? |
21104 | What do I want, me joker? |
21104 | What do you make out? |
21104 | What do you think of doing sir? |
21104 | What do you think of it all-- eh, Dick? |
21104 | What does it mean? |
21104 | What is a typhoon? |
21104 | What is he doing? |
21104 | What is that? |
21104 | What new hand? |
21104 | What ship is that? |
21104 | What the dickens do ye mean, man? |
21104 | What the dickens does all this mean? |
21104 | What the mischief are ye standin''star- gazin''there for, ye lazy swabs, chatterin''an''grinnin''away loike a parcel av monkeys? |
21104 | What was that? |
21104 | What will you do if I let you off? |
21104 | What you wanchee-- hey? |
21104 | What you want-- hey? |
21104 | What''s the matter, old fellow? 21104 What, worse than the Bay of Biscay?" |
21104 | What? |
21104 | When is that? |
21104 | Where away? |
21104 | Where away? |
21104 | Where d''ye hail from, me joker? 21104 Where do we get our meals?" |
21104 | Where is the Chinaman? |
21104 | Where is the captain, then? |
21104 | Where on earth can we''ve got to? 21104 Who is our friend here alongside of you, bosun? |
21104 | Who is that man? |
21104 | Who is the man that fell? |
21104 | Who is the man? |
21104 | Who the dickens is that troubling my pigs? |
21104 | Who''s going to pay your passage- money? 21104 Why ca n''t you turn out? |
21104 | Why do you say so, sir? |
21104 | Why should n''t I? |
21104 | Why should you pity me? |
21104 | Why the dickens do n''t ye go into the cuddy aft an''warrum y''rsilf, an''dhry y''r wit clothes be the stowve there, youngster? |
21104 | Why, what the dickens have you got to be afraid of, man? 21104 Will it reach them inside the reef, sir?" |
21104 | Would it be safe, sir? |
21104 | Ye niver tould me that afore, Sails, how''s that? |
21104 | Ye''ll fight''em, then? |
21104 | Yes, I see, sir,said I;"but suppose we were going to the east instead of the west?" |
21104 | Yez aid y''r name''s Grame, did n''t ye? 21104 You fightee number one chop, tyfong makee scarcee chop chop, Sabby? |
21104 | You thought, I suppose,observed Jerrold with a grin,"that you''d have a nice bath- room and a shampooing establishment for your accommodation-- eh?" |
21104 | You''re always napping,retorted Tom;"and I should like to know what the dickens you mean by going snoozing in my bunk? |
21104 | --"And how about the starling?" |
21104 | A rum chap, ai n''t he?" |
21104 | Ai n''t ye sorry, Misther Gray- ham, as how ye iver wint to say, now?" |
21104 | An'', sure, it''s now me toorn to be afther axin''quistions, me bhoy-- don''t ye feel peckish loike?" |
21104 | An''sure, Misther Gray- ham, does ye loike bayin''at say yit?" |
21104 | And the ship? |
21104 | Another youngster from Leadenhall Street-- eh?" |
21104 | Are n''t ye sorry now ye came to say, as I tould ye-- hey?" |
21104 | Are you ready for anchoring?" |
21104 | Are you really so fond of the sea?" |
21104 | But which of these things would ye like best-- eh?" |
21104 | Come in to forage-- eh?" |
21104 | D''ye fale hoongry yit?" |
21104 | D''ye hear that?" |
21104 | Did you notice anything particular about him?" |
21104 | Do you agree, eh, to our making order out of chaos?" |
21104 | Do you twig?" |
21104 | How far do you think we''ve run?" |
21104 | Howly Moses, what is that?" |
21104 | Howsomedevers, youngster, we naydn''t argify the p''int; but if the foorst mate were ownly aboord, d''ye know what I''d loike to do?" |
21104 | I asked, full of curiosity;"a real, live Chinaman from the East?" |
21104 | I rejoined, laughing at his affected air--"as big a man as the captain?" |
21104 | I thought our starting- place was the Thames? |
21104 | I wor too busy to say you or ax you afore?" |
21104 | I''ll ax ye for the last toime-- whare d''ye spring from?" |
21104 | Is n''t there something I can do, sir?" |
21104 | Is there innythin''I can do in the manetoime to oblige ye, Misther Gray- ham?" |
21104 | Just look, will ye, bosun?" |
21104 | Misther Gray- ham, why do n''t ye fire away, ma bouchal? |
21104 | Pass the word forrud for the bosun-- where is he?" |
21104 | Pedro?" |
21104 | S''pose now, he warn''t y''r ould father, loike?" |
21104 | So, that accounts for your liking for it-- eh?" |
21104 | Sure, an''will ye till me now, are ye goin''as a cabin passinger or what, avic?" |
21104 | Tell me, would you like to be a doctor-- eh?" |
21104 | They''ve worruked loike blue nayghurs; specially that l''adin''man av theirs, that chap there, see him, wid the big nose on his face? |
21104 | To- morrow week, you said, the ship was to sail-- eh, dear?" |
21104 | Was it an actuality that I saw all these things with my own eyes; or, was I dreaming? |
21104 | Was it really I, Allan Graham, standing there on the deck of the good ship Silver Queen, or somebody else? |
21104 | What can you, a bricklayer according to your own statement, do aboard ship? |
21104 | What do ye take me an''me lazy mates here for, ma bouchal?" |
21104 | What is it?" |
21104 | What is that?" |
21104 | What more can a man wish for?" |
21104 | What say you pilot?" |
21104 | What say you, Allan, I repeat, to being a clergyman-- the noblest profession under the sun?" |
21104 | What was I to do? |
21104 | What will ye do-- cave in to''em or fight''em?" |
21104 | What''s your name-- eh?" |
21104 | When you came up to town the other day from that place in the country-- West something or other?" |
21104 | Where are the other''prentices?" |
21104 | Who ilse should I mane?" |
21104 | Who knows but that Sharpe may have his good points like others? |
21104 | Who''d a- thought av sayin''ye ag''in in the ould barquey, Ching Wang? |
21104 | Who''s been looking after the dock mateys below, seeing to the stowage?" |
21104 | With such a mixture of things as this, it is not surprising that it should taste so nasty when swallowed-- is it? |
21104 | Wo n''t we, boys?" |
21104 | You wanchee-- hey?" |
21104 | You were well enough when you called me four hours ago-- shamming Abraham, I suppose,-- eh?" |
21104 | You''re getting used to the motion of the ship by this time-- eh?" |
21104 | asked Captain Gillespie sniffing--"even if ye know all about managing the boat?" |
21104 | cried the captain, staggering up to the poop rail and looking towards the bows,"what''s the row there?" |
21104 | he ejaculated, taking no notice of my dignified demeanour;"yis, an''that''s it, is it? |
21104 | he thereupon roared out a second time;"an''ye''d betther look sharp, too, d''ye hear?" |
21104 | what''s the row with you?" |
30948 | Are you listening Paul and Paula? |
30948 | Bombers turning into butterflies? |
30948 | Escape From Freedom? |
30948 | Hitchhiking to California? |
30948 | How, with all the wallow of thick muck making suction noises and the teams in relays searching nightly with baited hounds, do you pull free? |
30948 | MANGROVES How do you survive in the mangrove swamps-- amid the twitchings of fetid water& water lice thick as baby tears? |
30948 | Remember the Greening of America? |
30948 | Sixties Hangover Dash Into Realism: Escape Pad From The Sixties What Colour Is Love? |
30948 | The Electric Acid Kool- Aid Test, anyone? |
30948 | The futuristic think tankers? |
30948 | WHAT BECAME OF THE SIXTIES? |
30948 | WHAT COLOUR IS LOVE? |
30948 | What''s next in the social roller derby? |
30948 | What, exactly, was a true child of the sixties? |
30948 | Whatever became of Carnaby Street or bell bottoms? |
30948 | Who remembers? |
30948 | Who was Bobby Seale? |
30948 | consciousness III? |
31462 | Have you got an engraving?" |
31462 | Have you seen it, Sam? |
31462 | The same generous soul exclaimed:"Is there a man, sir, now, who can pen an essay with such ease and elegance as Goldsmith?" |
31462 | Then suddenly he said:"Sam, have you seen my picture by Sir Joshua Reynolds? |
31462 | What such an author has told, who would wish to tell again?" |
31462 | Who would have expected this great personage capable of indulging in a school- boy prank? |
31462 | Who would not have accepted anything Gibbon said without criticism? |
25904 | A prophet? 25904 ART THOU HE?" |
25904 | And John, calling unto him two of his disciples, sent them to the Lord, saying, Art Thou He that cometh, or look we for another? |
25904 | Art Thou He? |
25904 | But how canst Thou say that he is to be compared with Moses, Isaiah, or Daniel? 25904 But what went ye out to see?" |
25904 | But wherefore went ye out?--to see a prophet? 25904 But, dost Thou really mean, most holy Lord, that this one is the greatest born of woman?" |
25904 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, and figs of thistles? |
25904 | I have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me? |
25904 | I have need,said he,"to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?" |
25904 | Is not that Zaccheus? |
25904 | Is that all? 25904 Mother, why do I wear my hair so long? |
25904 | Mother, why may I not taste the grapes? 25904 Need I pass through that rite?" |
25904 | Need I perform that lowly act? |
25904 | Need I renounce my liberty of action in that respect? |
25904 | The Jews sent unto him from Jerusalem priests and Levites to ask him,''Who art thou?'' 25904 What has He done since last you were here?" |
25904 | What is he doing here? |
25904 | What shall I ask? |
25904 | What went ye out into the wilderness to behold? 25904 Where is the lore the Baptist taught, The soul unswerving and the fearless tongue? |
25904 | Ye offspring of vipers, who warned you to flee from the wrath to come? |
25904 | ...''Why baptizest thou?''" |
25904 | 17)? |
25904 | 37), they said,"Art thou the Prophet?" |
25904 | A reed shaken with the wind?" |
25904 | And did he work no miracle? |
25904 | And if the incidence of pain and sorrow on the world be explained by its ungodliness, why does nature groan and travail? |
25904 | And is not that the point where our faith staggers still? |
25904 | And may there not be even more than this? |
25904 | And might not Herod attempt to induce the prophet to take back his ruthless sentence? |
25904 | And when they send from their prisons, saying, Art Thou He? |
25904 | And why should we not attribute them to"the Mother"herself? |
25904 | Art thou Elijah?" |
25904 | But how can we be rid of this accursed self- consciousness and pride? |
25904 | But is this the loftiest ideal of character? |
25904 | But what more?" |
25904 | But what more?" |
25904 | But what was in our Lord''s thought when He made the reservation,"_ Yet he that is but little in the Kingdom of heaven is greater than he_"? |
25904 | But why? |
25904 | Can we wonder that under such a regimen he grew strong? |
25904 | Could this be He? |
25904 | Did He not wield the sceptre of the house of David? |
25904 | Did all eyes turn towards the Christ? |
25904 | Did any realize the unearthly beauty and spiritual power of his presence? |
25904 | Did he not learn this blessed art from his master, the Baptist? |
25904 | Did they doubt Thee thus? |
25904 | Do crowds gather around thy steps and throng thy audience- chamber? |
25904 | Do you tell me that He is preaching, and that all come to Him? |
25904 | Does it seem difficult to have always a full heart? |
25904 | Does that not indicate that He stood in a relationship to God and man which has never been realized by another? |
25904 | From the slopes of Mount Moriah, a young voice has expressed the longing of the ages,"Behold the fire and the wood; but where is the lamb?" |
25904 | Had any strain of music been waited down to him? |
25904 | Had he not foretold that the greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven should be given to the saints of the Most High? |
25904 | Had the Baptist heard aught of the unseemly revelry? |
25904 | Has He in anger shut up his tender mercies?" |
25904 | Has He not used the fan to winnow the wheat, and the fire to burn up the chaff? |
25904 | Has one dared to adopt an unbending posture? |
25904 | Has one resisted the current or stood stoutly forth in protesting non- compliance? |
25904 | Hast thou great success in thy life- work? |
25904 | Have not I seen Him, standing amid your crowds, yea, descending these very banks?" |
25904 | He found himself perpetually asking, How did Elijah act, and what would he do here and now? |
25904 | How great the contrast between that and this sorrowful cry,"Art Thou He?" |
25904 | How have you repaid the heavenly Husbandman? |
25904 | I. JOHN''S MISGIVINGS.--Can this be he who, but a few months ago, had stood in his rock- hewn pulpit, in radiant certainty? |
25904 | If it be said that it could not be produced, because it had been taken away, let this further question be answered: Who had taken it away? |
25904 | If they had worded their question rather differently, and put it thus,"Hast thou come in the power of Elias?" |
25904 | Is it the most desirable and blessed? |
25904 | Is it the music of his people''s prayer? |
25904 | Is it the thunder of the Lord''s appearing? |
25904 | Is it to be wondered that the godly remnant would meet in little groups and secluded hiding- places to comfort themselves in God? |
25904 | Is it wonderful that our Lord was speechless before such a man? |
25904 | Is not this what we do? |
25904 | Is not this, in fact, the meaning of the apostle, when he says that faith is reckoned to us for righteousness? |
25904 | Is there anything like that in your life, my reader? |
25904 | It is only after severe and searching scrutiny that the word goes forth:"Cut it down; why cumbereth it the ground?" |
25904 | It was as though they said,"Master, is it not too bad? |
25904 | May He not be considering whether any result will accrue from prolonging your opportunities for bearing fruit? |
25904 | May I not, next vintage?" |
25904 | Must not the hearts of hundreds of saintly priests have been filled with the same inquiry, Where is the lamb? |
25904 | Of what good is it to reason about the Trinity if thou hast no spiritual appetite for the gifts of the Trinity? |
25904 | People laid them up in their hearts, saying,"What, then, shall this child be?" |
25904 | Peter and John broke off together-- at least they ran together to the sepulchre; but where were the rest? |
25904 | Surely the home at Bethany would have welcomed Him? |
25904 | The much- enduring wisdom, sought By lonely prayer the haunted rocks among? |
25904 | The waters of a full cup are wrung out in days like these; and the cry is extorted,"How long, O Lord, how long?" |
25904 | To whom shall we go? |
25904 | Two or three could localize the scene where the deputation from the Sanhedrim accosted the Baptist with the enquiry,"Who art thou?" |
25904 | Was He baptized because He needed to repent, or to confess his sins? |
25904 | Was He not the opener of prison- doors? |
25904 | Was he wondering why he was allowed to lie there month after month, silenced and suffering? |
25904 | Was his mind glancing back on those never- to- be- forgotten days, when the heaven was opened above him, and he saw the descending Dove? |
25904 | Was it that his priestly lineage gave Him a special right to coin and use this appellation? |
25904 | Was not all power at his disposal? |
25904 | Was there a ripple of interest and expectancy through the crowd? |
25904 | We are all believers in Jesus, but did we receive the Holy Ghost when we believed? |
25904 | We have said,"Hath God forgotten to be gracious? |
25904 | Were you not under the influence of passion? |
25904 | What answer and explanation can be given to account for the marvellous spell that the Cross of Christ exerts over the hearts of men? |
25904 | What arrested that process and made it impossible? |
25904 | What else could He be? |
25904 | What heard that they can not detect? |
25904 | What if her power over the capricious tyrant were to begin to wane, and the Baptist gain more and more influence, to her discredit and undoing? |
25904 | What is it to be"strong in spirit"? |
25904 | What is the process of lighting? |
25904 | What is there to be seen that they can not see? |
25904 | What sayest thou of thyself?" |
25904 | What shall we think of a mother who could expose her daughter to such a scene, and suggest her taking a part in the half- drunken orgy? |
25904 | What though, when on the following day he repeats his exclamation, his whole congregation leaves him to follow the Man of Nazareth to his home? |
25904 | What was your state of mind when you pledged your word? |
25904 | What were the sources from which the third Evangelist drew his information? |
25904 | Where is the light needed so much as on a dark landing or a sunken reef? |
25904 | Who counts it gain His light would wane, So the whole world to Jesus throng?" |
25904 | Why can not you leave the king and his private affairs alone? |
25904 | Why did the Son of Man banish Himself from the city He loved so dearly? |
25904 | Why did they not do it? |
25904 | Why was this? |
25904 | Why, then, did that myth not spread, until it became universally accredited? |
25904 | Why? |
25904 | _ He sent them to Jesus, saying, Art Thou He that should come_? |
25904 | why are the forest glades turned into a very shambles? |
25904 | why does creation seem to achieve itself through the terrific struggle for survival? |
31181 | A cake- walk? |
31181 | Ashamed of what we have to go through at the end of this filth and stupidity? |
31181 | Could it be more is known of outer space than your mind or that leaves, frosted with cold, are conducting interviews maliciously within the park fold? |
31181 | Expensive? |
31181 | Keen vision? |
31181 | Nuggets or nougats? |
31181 | Panatellas? |
31181 | Restrictions? |
31181 | See the sudden bandanna of rock squeezed so tight by shore''s edge that a grim hammer of stones intones a warning? |
31181 | Should I call you"opaque", use coke- bottle glass as a symbol of light- headedness, transparency? |
31181 | The man''s wishes? |
31181 | Who knows? |
26320 | And where are your Venetian embroideries? |
26320 | Do you mean that the incidents are untrue? |
26320 | I have since wondered, could he have evoked the goddess then? 26320 Shall I bring her in here?" |
26320 | What is there to do in Paris in August but to enjoy oneself? |
26320 | What style of room? |
26320 | What would the Master say? |
26320 | When will you look up the little_ Polonaise_? |
26320 | Why do n''t you come along? |
26320 | Would he approve of such a proceeding? 26320 Your daughter, I take it, is a modern girl?" |
26320 | _ Et ta soeur?_he demanded as he disappeared down the staircase. |
26320 | _ Peut- être que la petite Polonaise vous suffira à tous les deux?_"_ Jamais de la vie!_I shouted,"_ Flûte, Mercure, allez! |
26320 | _ Qu''est- ce que monsieur a mangé?_Sometimes it is very difficult to remember, but it is necessary. |
26320 | All very well for the day, no doubt, but could Cuzzoni sing Isolde? |
26320 | And if they are to be thus collected may we not hope for one or two new essays with, say, for subjects, Flaubert and Huysmans? |
26320 | And the Signora, Pietro''s mother? |
26320 | And the_ monde_; who goes there? |
26320 | And what modern parts would be allotted to the Julian Eltinges of the Eighteenth Century? |
26320 | Are long compositions better than short ones? |
26320 | Are short compositions better than long ones? |
26320 | Are there no answers to these conundrums and the thousand others that might be asked by a person with a slight attack of curiosity?... |
26320 | Bernard Shaw says,"Who ever failed or could fail as Rosalind?" |
26320 | But where might Pietro''s father be? |
26320 | But, some one will argue, with the passing of_ bel canto_ what will become of the operas of Mozart, Bellini, Rossini, and Donizetti? |
26320 | By this time we were determined to dance; but where? |
26320 | Can any of our young misses hum_ Di Tanti Palpiti_? |
26320 | Can we judge music by academic standards? |
26320 | Could Faustina sing Mélisande? |
26320 | Did not the great Carmencita herself visit America twenty or more years ago? |
26320 | Did saucy Marie Jansen awaken your admiration? |
26320 | Dites, plutôt, pourquoi la vie?_"In"A Transaction in Hearts"[15] the Reverend Christopher Gonfallon falls in love with his wife''s sister, Claire. |
26320 | Do you know how to go there? |
26320 | Does she overdo the use of_ portamento_,_ messa di voce_, and such devices? |
26320 | Et pour monsieur, votre ami?_""_ Je ne desire rien_,"I replied. |
26320 | Has any one read the Joseph Jefferson acting version of_ Rip Van Winkle_? |
26320 | Has she ever been careless before the public? |
26320 | Has she taste in ornament? |
26320 | Have you missed the Gibbons carving? |
26320 | Have you seen Bernard Bégué standing before his cook stove preparing food for his patrons? |
26320 | He says that he dictated certain passages in the book....""What is it, then? |
26320 | Heinrich Conried( or was it Maurice Grau?) |
26320 | Her imitators( and has any other interpretative artist ever had so many?) |
26320 | How could it be otherwise? |
26320 | How is her shake? |
26320 | How many times did you go to see Marie Tempest in_ The Fencing Master_, or Alice Nielsen in_ The Serenade_? |
26320 | I gasped,''what is she doing? |
26320 | I walked to the window, drew aside the red curtains, and looked out into the fountain- splashed court below....*****"What is the difference?" |
26320 | If that were true, why is not some one else performing this drama today to large audiences? |
26320 | In the case of Henry Irving, who was the creator, the actor or the authors of_ The Bells_ and_ Faust_( not, in this instance, Goethe)? |
26320 | In the case of Sarah Bernhardt, who was the creator, the actress or Sardou? |
26320 | Is Christine Nilsson still alive? |
26320 | Is Langdon Mitchell''s version of"Vanity Fair"sufficiently a work of art to exist without the co- operation of Mrs. Fiske? |
26320 | Is Mozart''s_ G minor Symphony_ more important( because it is more complicated) than the same composer''s,_ Batti, Batti_? |
26320 | Is a string quartet better than a piece for the piano? |
26320 | Is an opera better than a song? |
26320 | Is he therefor to be regarded as the peer of Gluck? |
26320 | Is it Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday that the Moulin de la Galette is open? |
26320 | Is simple music supermusic? |
26320 | Is there a cooking theme in_ Siegfried_ to describe Mime''s brewing? |
26320 | Is what is new better than what is old? |
26320 | Is what is old better than what is new? |
26320 | It is a bore to wait in a room with red curtains and a picture of_ Amour et Psyche_ on the walls.... What have you been doing?" |
26320 | Madge Lessing in_ Jack and the Beanstalk_, Edna May in_ The Belle of New York_, Phyllis Rankin in_ The Rounders_, or Gertrude Quinlan in_ King Dodo_? |
26320 | May we not herein find some small explanation for his apparent neglect? |
26320 | Melba? |
26320 | Never was there a more popular composer, and yet aside from the violin concerto what work of his has maintained its place in the concert repertory? |
26320 | Nor can we trust the public with its favourite Piccinnis and Puccinis.... What then is the test of supermusic? |
26320 | Not long ago I heard a man speak of the cadet operas in Boston( did a man named Barnet write them?) |
26320 | One more, I must mention, her answer to Guido''s insistent,"_ Cet homme t''a- t- il prise_?"... |
26320 | Or have you seen Giacomo( and have not Meyerbeer and Puccini been bearers of this name?) |
26320 | Or is harmonization the important factor? |
26320 | Or is supermusic always grand, sad, noble, or emotional? |
26320 | Perhaps with you it was not Della Fox.... Who then? |
26320 | Schoenberg is new; is he therefor to be considered better than Beethoven? |
26320 | Should we not allot similar approval to the actor or actress who makes a fine effect in one part or in one kind of part? |
26320 | Should we regard, for example,''Imperial Purple''less a work of creative art than''The Rise of Silas Lapham''?" |
26320 | Should we say that there is no art of painting because the Germans have no great painters? |
26320 | Should we thank the behemoth for this miracle? |
26320 | Still the music critics with strange persistence continue to adjudge a singer by the old formulæ and standards: has she an equalized scale? |
26320 | Stravinsky is new; is he therefor to be considered worse than Liszt? |
26320 | That stinging, cynical attack on the courts of Justice(?) |
26320 | The book is dedicated to John S. Rutherford and bears as a motto on its title page this quotation from Rabusson:"_ Pourquoi la mort? |
26320 | Theresa Vaughn in_ 1492_, May Yohe in_ The Lady Slavey_, Hilda Hollins in_ The Magic Kiss_, or Nancy McIntosh in_ His Excellency_? |
26320 | They assembled by hundreds, and even thousands, in the great Theatre of San Carlo to do-- what? |
26320 | Was Saltus ballyhooing for this institution? |
26320 | Was Virginia Earle in_ The Circus Girl_ the idol of your youth or was it Mabel Barrison in_ The Babes in Toyland_? |
26320 | Was it because of the greatness of the play? |
26320 | Was it the Rue Jessaint? |
26320 | Was pert Lulu Glaser the object of your secret but persistent attention? |
26320 | Was the author laughing at the Eighteen Nineties? |
26320 | We learn from some sources that music stands or falls by its melody but what is good melody? |
26320 | What do you whistle in your bathtub when you are in a reminiscent mood? |
26320 | What else could you expect? |
26320 | What has become of_ Semiramide_,_ La Cenerentola_, and the others? |
26320 | What is the difference? |
26320 | What is the essential difference between an air by Mozart and an air by Jerome Kern? |
26320 | What is the test of supermusic? |
26320 | What makes a melody commonplace or cheap? |
26320 | What makes a melody distinguished? |
26320 | What more is there to say? |
26320 | What would we think of an actor who could make no effect save in the tragedies of Corneille? |
26320 | What, after all, constitutes training? |
26320 | When Duse electrified her audiences in such plays as_ The Second Mrs. Tanqueray_ and_ Fedora_, were the dramatists responsible for the effect? |
26320 | Which of our playwrights are taken seriously by the pundits? |
26320 | Who will sing them? |
26320 | Who wrote it? |
26320 | Why could not some similar plan of appreciation be followed in the houses of our very rich? |
26320 | Why do some melodies ring in our ears generation after generation while others enjoy but a brief popularity? |
26320 | Why is Chopin''s_ G minor nocturne_ better music than Thécla Badarzewska''s_ La Prière d''une Vierge_? |
26320 | Why is Musetta''s waltz more popular than Gretel''s? |
26320 | Why is a music drama by Richard Wagner preferable to a music drama by Horatio W. Parker? |
26320 | Why is this book not dedicated to author of"The Turn of the Screw"rather than to"E. A. S."? |
26320 | Why should he listen to his_ gigolette_? |
26320 | Why should the Hottentots be able to make so many delightful noises that we are incapable of producing? |
26320 | Why should the gamut of expression on our opera stage be so much more limited than it is in our music halls? |
26320 | Will any composer arise with the courage to write an opera which_ can not_ be sung? |
26320 | Will the young man at the back of the hall please page Avery Hopwood and Philip Moeller?... |
26320 | Will you rise up to deny that is singing?" |
26320 | Would_ monsieur_ care to visit a_ bal musette_? |
26320 | _ Sweet Marie_ is certainly a melody; why is it not as good a melody as_ The Old Folks at Home_? |
26320 | and"Who goes there?" |
26320 | de Thèbes done better? |
26320 | or Does the stage director make the actor? |
26478 | A what? |
26478 | Ad was n''t i d beade? |
26478 | And are they always obliged to wear those horrible wire cages over their heads? |
26478 | And is that his Majesty at the other end of the room? |
26478 | And she''s so fond of fish too, as a rule, ai n''t she, mum? |
26478 | Anything else? |
26478 | Are they born with wheels on, or do they grow afterwards? |
26478 | But I assure you that--"How was your friend dressed? |
26478 | But are you sure that gentlemen wear these sort of things? |
26478 | But what does it all mean, Putchy? |
26478 | But what is a surprise party? |
26478 | By steamer? |
26478 | By train? |
26478 | Dear me,I exclaimed in alarm,"I do n''t think my housekeeper could possibly--""Why not ask her?" |
26478 | Detached? |
26478 | Did he drive?--or come on a bicycle, or walk? |
26478 | Did you see the Armoury at the Tower? |
26478 | Did you see the Lions? |
26478 | Did you see the Sleeping Beauty? |
26478 | Do n''t you take any other newspapers than these? |
26478 | Do you think she will see me? 26478 Does your Majesty mean that you received no education at all?" |
26478 | Does your Majesty remember any of the incidents of your early life? |
26478 | Er- er- how do you do? |
26478 | Fod of fish? |
26478 | Good gracious,I replied,"and does he pay you well for them?" |
26478 | Have n''t you had any rain here? |
26478 | Have you really never seen any before? |
26478 | Heard the news? |
26478 | His Majesty of Why, sir? 26478 His name? |
26478 | How did he come? |
26478 | How did you enjoy the Academy? |
26478 | How did you go? |
26478 | How much do you want? |
26478 | How much is the entrance fee to the Academy? |
26478 | How much will you give me for telling you? |
26478 | I suppose her Majesty has a crown of her own, has n''t she? |
26478 | I suppose you can manage to put us up here for a month or two? |
26478 | I''d never met a single one of Henry the Eighth''s wives in my life, and how was I to recognize them? |
26478 | If a person is not attached to anyone else, they are detached, I suppose, are they not? |
26478 | Is n''t it affecting? |
26478 | Is n''t it now? |
26478 | No? |
26478 | Oh, please, sir, will you go down? 26478 Oh,_ how_ do you do? |
26478 | Shall I really see the Queen of England? |
26478 | The most important question for the moment is, where are we all going to sleep? |
26478 | There were n''t any; you did n''t see any, did you? |
26478 | They have to catch dogs for a living? |
26478 | To Hammersmith? |
26478 | Well, candidly, I''m afraid not very much,I replied;"and what on earth do you call it an ode for?" |
26478 | Well, how was I to know? |
26478 | Well, then, how do you suppose that I am going to manage? 26478 Well, what is an armoury?" |
26478 | Well, where were the names of the stations then? |
26478 | Well, why do n''t you go to the Public Library then? |
26478 | Well, why do n''t you see that we get it then? 26478 What are they doing here at all?" |
26478 | What did he say a critic was? |
26478 | What do you mead? |
26478 | What do you mean? |
26478 | What does he say? |
26478 | What ever do you mean? |
26478 | What for? |
26478 | What is it? |
26478 | What is your favourite diet, your Majesty? |
26478 | What on earth do you mean? |
26478 | What were they? 26478 What''s his name?" |
26478 | What''s his name? |
26478 | What''s in the big box? |
26478 | What''s that? |
26478 | Whatever is that; I do n''t think it was mentioned on the cards of invitation, was it? |
26478 | Where did he come from? |
26478 | Where did the engine go? |
26478 | Where is it then? |
26478 | Where were you educated, your Majesty? |
26478 | Where''s the Wallypug? |
26478 | Whoever do you mean? |
26478 | Why do n''t they call things by their proper names then? 26478 Why not?" |
26478 | Why? 26478 Yes, but who was to know which were wax figures and which were not?" |
26478 | Yes; you said she wore a train, did n''t you? |
26478 | You mean, has she a sweetheart? 26478 --_Pall Mall Gazette._# J. Maclaren Cobban.# WILT THOU HAVE THIS WOMAN? 26478 And can you tell me why, good sir, The birds receive no pay For singing sweetly in the grove Throughout the livelong day? 26478 Are you going to give me a letter or not? |
26478 | CHAPTER III SUNDRY SMALL HAPPENINGS Whatever could it all mean? |
26478 | Can you kindly inform me is she detached?" |
26478 | Can you tell me how I can set to work about it?" |
26478 | Could you make out what he was driving at?" |
26478 | Dear me, and shall I be presented to his Majesty?" |
26478 | Do people ever get paid for writing poetry?" |
26478 | Do you remember?" |
26478 | Do you think that we could manage anyhow to find room for them, for a few days at any rate?" |
26478 | I cried,"whatever do you mean?" |
26478 | I replied,"and what is all this crowd doing here?" |
26478 | Must I keep my crown on or take it off?" |
26478 | Now then,"he continued,"how much are you going to pay us for staying with you?" |
26478 | Of course we must do our best, and how fortunate that I put on my best gown to- day, is n''t it? |
26478 | Surely that''s not correct, is it?" |
26478 | They tell me, dear, you have no feet; But what is that to me? |
26478 | What am I to do with all the beautiful Christmas and New Year''s cards which I have received? |
26478 | What could have become of him? |
26478 | What could it all mean? |
26478 | What do you think of it?" |
26478 | What have you brought, may I ask, your Grace?" |
26478 | What is he?" |
26478 | What is it?" |
26478 | What marmalade in fancy pot Or cream meringue, though fair it be, Thine image e''er can mar or blot? |
26478 | What must I say? |
26478 | Whatever was happening? |
26478 | Whatever was to be done? |
26478 | Whatever were they up to? |
26478 | Where did the man, or Wallypug, or whatever you call him, come from?" |
26478 | Where is it?" |
26478 | Who could he be? |
26478 | Who knows? |
26478 | Why doth the little busy bee Not charge so much an hour, For gathering honey day by day From every opening flower? |
26478 | Will she bow to me? |
26478 | Would n''t you like to know what they are all about, eh?" |
26478 | You are the gentleman, I think, who is to introduce me to his Majesty, are you not?" |
26478 | You had better go and make yourself tidy, had n''t you?" |
26478 | You''re surely not so mean as to mind tenpence, are you?" |
26478 | [ Illustration: THE FINISH]"I suppose we ca n''t stick it together again?" |
26478 | [ Illustration:"ARE YOU GOING TO GIVE ME A LETTER OR NOT?"] |
26478 | [ Illustration:"WALK UP, WALK UP, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN"]"What do you mean?" |
26478 | by the bye, I might call it''A Toad''s Ode,''might n''t I? |
26478 | discount for cash, 3 6 2--------- £26 4 11"What do you mean by moral deterioration?" |
26478 | do they?" |
26478 | do you?" |
26478 | nothing could be fairer than that, could it?" |
26478 | oh, what will become of us?" |
26478 | she exclaimed directly she saw me,"what do you think? |
26478 | what ever for?" |
26478 | would n''t you like to know?" |
31329 | You wantchee my no wantcheeis nothing more nor less than literally rendered Chinese:[ Ch][Ch][Ch][Ch][Ch]"Do you want me or not?" |
31329 | ( simple query);_ 3rd tone_: Dead? |
31329 | Now what as to the grammar? |
31329 | The Emperor Wu Ti was inclined to be sceptical, and one day said to him:"Come, tell me, what are these famous four tones?" |
31329 | The question is often asked: What sort of instrument is Chinese for the expression of thought? |
31329 | [ Ch][Ch][Ch][Ch][Ch] Would you command a prospect of a thousand_ li_? |
29096 | Dost thou remember, Peter, that tree which the Lord cursed, because, when He had a right to expect fruit from it, it bore none? 29096 He saith to him again the second time, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me? |
29096 | He saith unto him the third time, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me? 29096 A third passage comes before us; for some one will say,We believe, and is it not written that he that believeth hath everlasting life?" |
29096 | And now how do we come to this place of triumph? |
29096 | And we will not marvel if to us, as to Saul of Tarsus, the answer to the question,"What wilt thou have me to do?" |
29096 | And what else is taught by the Apostle when he says,"The Spirit maketh intercession_ in the Saints_ according to the will of God"? |
29096 | But can we honestly go on to base the assertion on the fact of our own love to men, to-- souls? |
29096 | But then circumstances change, and what becomes of the peace? |
29096 | But will something within us object and say,"Shining means burning up and burning out: the candle will grow shorter, and the battery weaker"? |
29096 | But, do you say,"Are we then to seek for signs and wonders, to fast and pray, ardently longing for the Divine revelation, until the vision dawns?" |
29096 | By what means is it granted us to enter so fully into the songs which shall one day resound through the universe? |
29096 | Death is only a kiss to those who love God; and if I had not followed the will of my God in this, what had I not lost? |
29096 | Did you never read that"They that are wise shall shine as the sun, and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever"? |
29096 | Does it matter in what order we ascend our virtue- scale? |
29096 | Does that seem strange? |
29096 | Finally, does it seem a contradiction in terms to talk of becoming a child? |
29096 | Have you learnt and practically entered into the truth that the supreme love is also the universal love, and that God is no respecter of persons? |
29096 | How much, therefore, hast thou received from thy Lord?" |
29096 | Is it Pacific Ocean then; or do we find, as may be those early adventurers, that it was too hastily named? |
29096 | Is it not rather God''s way of showing us how He is unceasingly glorified in those who live nearest Him, whose lives worship Him? |
29096 | Is there this property of radiation about the light that God has given you? |
29096 | Is this a little knowledge? |
29096 | It is of the utmost importance that we should take counsel''s opinion about our lives, and that we should pray,"Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" |
29096 | Of what use would a hand be that never grasped anything? |
29096 | Our question, then, is,"Whereby shall we know that we are of the truth?" |
29096 | Peter had professed to be faithful above others; and now the Lord asks him,"Lovest thou Me more than these?" |
29096 | Peter was grieved because He saith unto him the third time, Lovest thou Me? |
29096 | V HE RESTORETH MY SOUL"So when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me more than these? |
29096 | Was there ever a time when the Master expected so much from thee as this? |
29096 | We have conferences on many subjects-- on peace, on holiness, on temperance: who ever heard of another conference( as this was) on_ death_? |
29096 | What is involved in thus becoming a child of God? |
29096 | What is your sect? |
29096 | What shall we then say: Is a new Sinai set up on the square of the New Jerusalem? |
29096 | What, will you complain, like little children, because your Teacher has been giving you too many rows to add up? |
29096 | When the boat had been brought to land, the Lord questioned Peter, not saying,"Thou didst deny Me,"but"Dost thou love Me?" |
29096 | Whither shall I go from Thy Spirit, or whither shall I flee from Thy Presence? |
29096 | Who was it that answered so readily,''Lord, to whom shall we go?'' |
29096 | Will not the greatness of thy privilege be the greatness of thy condemnation? |
29096 | Would He not have to say,''None of them is lost, except the Sons of Perdition, the Denier and the Betrayer''? |
29096 | Would He speak like that now, if He were beginning His intercessory prayer again? |
29096 | XII TESTS OF FAITH, LOVE, AND RIGHTNESS What are the experimental bases of our Christianity? |
29096 | and may we not rest upon the assurance conveyed by the present tense of the verb employed? |
29096 | and were they dead before? |
29096 | and whereby shall we know that we are of the truth and assure our hearts before Him? |
29096 | how long does it take one to reach love? |
28189 | ( and its steam sirens?) |
28189 | A man and woman can not exactly agree as husband and wife? |
28189 | Am I before the savage infancy of a people, or the spent senility of a race, lost sight of in the course of centuries? |
28189 | And besides, who could say that the one I had seen was really gone towards my home? |
28189 | And does it not approach foolishness? |
28189 | And if we did not find them? |
28189 | And in civilized Italy is there not a superstition very like this of the poor savages? |
28189 | And of looking forward, asking: where shall we finish?". |
28189 | And the tiger? |
28189 | And why should they kill anybody? |
28189 | Are they then taking a long journey that they are so well provided with food? |
28189 | But are they wrong, after all? |
28189 | But for one who has the compensation of devotion and affection from the humble and good, is not the hatred of malefactors a thing to be proud of? |
28189 | But he feels the need of looking back and asking: where did we begin? |
28189 | But in what way? |
28189 | But might I not have met a dozen of them on my road from Tapah? |
28189 | But what does this matter to her? |
28189 | But... what is this hissing? |
28189 | Did I do this not to see the approaching danger and inevitable fate which was fast overtaking me? |
28189 | Do not its trees provide us with shelter and their bark with a covering for our bodies, when it is necessary? |
28189 | Do you not think so, kind reader? |
28189 | Does he not also believe that the mysterious words muttered by the_ Alà_ give greater force to his murderous preparations? |
28189 | Does it not produce, for our use, roots, bulbs, truffles, mushrooms, edible leaves and exquisite fruit? |
28189 | Does not the earth give us, spontaneously, more than enough for our need without tormenting it with implements?". |
28189 | Does not the forest supply us with flesh, fish, and fowl? |
28189 | Follow them? |
28189 | For pure malignity? |
28189 | From whence did they come? |
28189 | How many centuries have they dwelt in those lone, wild parts? |
28189 | How many ladies in civilized Europe and America would be prepared to make a similar avowal? |
28189 | I have vainly asked: from whence came those who have found shelter and solitude in the obscure depths of its wooded hills? |
28189 | If they should ever come to taste them and procure them easily will they not crave for them like all other savages? |
28189 | In the fervour of their passion would they notice the dainty meal prepared for them in my person? |
28189 | Is it not just then that we should have some recompense, that certain of our needs should be considered?". |
28189 | Is it possible that everything has been buried from the sight of modern man, under the rank luxuriance of grass and bush? |
28189 | Is not this the acme of maternal feeling? |
28189 | Now tell me under what impulse can the Sakai become a criminal? |
28189 | Of what nature were they? |
28189 | Paolo Mantegazza, the scientific poet writes:"Man is eternally tormenting himself with unanswered questions: Where did our species first come from? |
28189 | The girl, on the contrary, remains with her mother and is taught to help in household(?) |
28189 | The old man quickly retorted:"And what does that matter? |
28189 | Very quietly, and without the least hesitation, he replied:"Why should we give ourselves the pain and fatigue of working like slaves? |
28189 | Was he too bound for my place of martyrdom? |
28189 | Was this a good or a bad omen? |
28189 | Was this conviction the effect of the terror which had taken possession of me or was it a horrible fact? |
28189 | Was this fact due to the merits of lime, charcoal, or urine? |
28189 | Well, what do you think? |
28189 | What could I do? |
28189 | What had I better do? |
28189 | What is their origin? |
28189 | What more could be desired? |
28189 | What more could one desire?". |
28189 | What surprises were reserved for me up on the wooded mountains towards which we were bending our steps? |
28189 | What things, what habits would be revealed to me when I reached my goal? |
28189 | What was it? |
28189 | What was to be done? |
28189 | When did this life first begin? |
28189 | When everything is everybody''s, be it a rich supply of meat, fruit, grain, tobacco or accomodation in a sheltered hut? |
28189 | When wilt thou understand this, my Italy, risen as thou art to the third maturity of thy civilization and glory? |
28189 | Who are they? |
28189 | Who knew how my Italian enterprise would be judged on territory protected by H. B. M.? |
28189 | Who were they? |
28189 | Who will defend us? |
28189 | Why should they rob when their neighbours''goods are also theirs? |
28189 | Will they succeed? |
28189 | With a shake of his head my humble host hastened to answer:"Can not man live without these trifles? |
28189 | [ 8] and their choice would be appropriate, for where else could the Borgias be so well remembered as in a land famous for its poisons? |
28189 | and who were they? |
28189 | for what? |
28189 | we protect animals, even the birds that fly wild in the woods, we surround them with attention, we make laws in their favour, why? |
3121 | Are the proceeds of labor more evenly distributed? |
3121 | Are there more purity, more honest, fair dealing, genuine work, fear and honor of God? |
3121 | By what logic can I say that I should have a part in the conduct of this world and that my neighbor should not? |
3121 | Can you mention any class in this country whose interest it is to overturn the government? |
3121 | Did it occur to Mr. Froude to ask the man whether he would be contented with a good trade and the Ten Commandments? |
3121 | Has he fled?" |
3121 | How are we to select the few capable men that are to rule all the rest? |
3121 | If he had been conscious of rectitude, would he not have relied upon his simple denial?" |
3121 | Perhaps the man would like eleven commandments? |
3121 | The next day the newspaper asks:"Where''s Blank? |
3121 | What is this progress, and where does it come from? |
3121 | Who is to decide what degree of intelligence shall fit a man for a share in the government? |
3121 | You must work for a living anyway; and why, now, should you unsettle your minds? |
29546 | ''Being without anxiety or fear,''said New,''does this constitute what we should call the superior man?'' 29546 And how much is paid per day when a single day''s labor is wanted?" |
29546 | But is n''t the system weakening now? |
29546 | But where are the bereaved families? |
29546 | Do you know what has brought about the change in China? |
29546 | Have you had plenty chow- chow? |
29546 | If we are to die, we shall die; why offend the gods by attempting interference with their plans? |
29546 | See that grave over there? 29546 The Master replied,''When a man looks inward and finds no guilt there, why should he grieve? |
29546 | You are married, of course? |
29546 | ''Absence of grief and fear?'' |
29546 | And the buggies, carriages, and automobiles: what on earth has become of them? |
29546 | And those two men bowing to each other as they meet-- are they rehearsing as Alphonse and Gaston for the comedy show to- night, or are they serious? |
29546 | And what may we do for the conservation of these qualities? |
29546 | And why? |
29546 | At first you ask,"But why are there no windows in the houses? |
29546 | But, after all, reverting to the question of mourning, why should the Hindu mourn for his dead? |
29546 | Could n''t they get anybody to have you?" |
29546 | Do you wonder that I avoided telling the Japanese educational officer just how our provision for farm boys and girls compared with Japan''s? |
29546 | Has America given anything more than a half- hearted assent to the idea? |
29546 | How about two of twelve each?" |
29546 | How do Kipling''s verses go? |
29546 | How then can you expect the poor, ignorant Chinaman to shake off the clutches of opium?" |
29546 | One of the greatest and wealthiest temples in Kyoto is more notorious right now for the vices of its sacred(?) |
29546 | Or if a doctor, lawyer, teacher, or preacher, how much income? |
29546 | Or if a manufacturer, how much business? |
29546 | Or if a newspaper man, how much circulation? |
29546 | Or if a railroad man, how much traffic? |
29546 | Or if you are a banker, what sort of deposits could you get among such a people? |
29546 | Or of what should he be afraid?''" |
29546 | Rather should America ask:"If Japan in a primitive stage of industrial evolution is doing so much, how much more ought we to do?" |
29546 | Snapshots of Japanese Life and Philosophy 9 What a Japanese City Is Like Strange Clothing of the Japanese Who Ever Saw So Many Babies? |
29546 | Surely the people could leave openings in the clay walls that would give light and ventilation?" |
29546 | The Master said,''If a man look into his heart and find no guilt there, why should he grieve? |
29546 | Then the babies-- who ever saw as many babies to the square inch? |
29546 | Was it not an Oriental prophet who wrote:"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge?" |
29546 | What can be the effect of your new tariff except to increase the burdens of the farmer for the benefit of the manufacturer?" |
29546 | What is the lesson of it all? |
29546 | What need to produce what can not be taken to market? |
29546 | What shall be the outcome? |
29546 | Where three or four farms come near together, why should not the dwellings be grouped near a common centre? |
29546 | Why is it that the Oriental gets such low wages, and has such low earning power? |
29546 | Why may not our civic improvement associations, women''s clubs, etc., get an idea here for our American towns? |
29546 | or what should he fear?''" |
29546 | said Niu,''Is this the mark of a princely man?'' |
29546 | the zenana women will ask when an American Bible- woman calls on them; and, if the answer is in the negative,"Why not? |
29546 | { 261} XXVI WHAT THE ORIENT MAY TEACH US But, after all, what may the Orient teach us? |
29546 | { 34} V DOES JAPANESE COMPETITION MENACE THE WHITE MAN''S TRADE? |
29546 | { 9} II SNAPSHOTS OF JAPANESE LIFE AND PHILOSOPHY"What is a Japanese city like?" |
19264 | Ah,thought she,"where am I amidst all this splendor? |
19264 | Am I really like this image which I see of myself? |
19264 | And how came you to know her? |
19264 | And what answer have you brought me? |
19264 | And what has become of Ukon? |
19264 | And what,inquired Genji,"were the words of her message?" |
19264 | Are you? 19264 But tell me what has happened; any unusual event to the girl?" |
19264 | But what? 19264 But where can we find a spot where there are fewer observers than here?" |
19264 | Can it be,thought he,"that I am leaving this place as a lover?" |
19264 | Did she leave any offspring? |
19264 | Do you mean to send me away again disappointed? 19264 Does Iyo respect her? |
19264 | Fancy if I had not got this sash? |
19264 | Has he again been the cause of this? 19264 His days will not be many,"thought Genji,"what is he praying for?" |
19264 | How are you my friend, were you in earnest? |
19264 | How are you? 19264 How can I ascertain this?" |
19264 | How can I do so? 19264 How can you be so cruel to me? |
19264 | How does she bear it? |
19264 | How is it the casement is closed? |
19264 | If Tô- no- Chiûjiô observed this, what would he not have to say? |
19264 | If she leaves this place,thought he,"and I lose sight of her-- for when this may happen is uncertain-- what shall I do?" |
19264 | In this hot weather,said Genji, in a low tone,"what makes him come here?" |
19264 | Is Ki- no''s sister here? 19264 Is it not a pity that the fate of so fine a prince should be already fixed?" |
19264 | Is she really gone? |
19264 | Love thee? |
19264 | No; why so? 19264 Perhaps you are the one who sent for me the other day? |
19264 | Pray do not think me presumptuous,said Genji;"but may I beg you to transmit this poetical effusion to your mistress for me? |
19264 | Suppose I pay my visit to her, too? 19264 There are many things one might write on fans,"thought he;"what made her think of writing such odd lines as these?" |
19264 | We are expecting her father to- morrow, and what are we to say to him? |
19264 | Well,replied Genji,"This secret if so well you know, Why am I now disturbed by you?" |
19264 | Were you fatigued last night, eh? |
19264 | What am I to do? |
19264 | What brings you here so late? |
19264 | What can it be? 19264 What can the boy do?" |
19264 | What does this mean? |
19264 | What has become of her? |
19264 | What has become of the ladies? 19264 What is his daughter like?" |
19264 | What is the matter? 19264 What is the matter? |
19264 | What mistake can I have made? 19264 What possible object could it serve if she were carried to the bottom of the sea? |
19264 | What shall I do? |
19264 | What worth hearing can your humble servant tell you? |
19264 | What would she think of me were she to return to life? |
19264 | What, in three short years since I left it,He cries in his wonder sore,"Has the home of my childhood vanished? |
19264 | What? |
19264 | What? |
19264 | When I become ornamented in this way what shall I be like? |
19264 | When will be mine this lovely flower Of tender grace and purple hue? 19264 Where can there be such a woman as that? |
19264 | Where is she now? |
19264 | Where shall I go then? |
19264 | Who are you? |
19264 | Who can there be to meet such wishes? |
19264 | Who can this be? |
19264 | Who''s that? |
19264 | Whom, then, are we to choose? 19264 Whose house may that be?" |
19264 | Why am I so anxious to examine and criticise? |
19264 | Why are you so shy? |
19264 | Why be so angry? 19264 Why did I not go with her?" |
19264 | Why did she not reveal to me all her past life? 19264 Why do you grieve so uselessly? |
19264 | Why do you recur to that so often? |
19264 | Why so soon? |
19264 | Yet, how can I disobey his commands to go back? |
19264 | You do not suppose that I have any worth reading, do you? |
19264 | All at once his late father appeared before his eyes in the exact image of life, and said to him,"Why are you in so strange a place?" |
19264 | And approaching near to Genji said,"Shall I call in some more servants?" |
19264 | And can it be that e''en a father''s word, Like snow that falling melts, is scarcely heard, But''tis unheeded? |
19264 | And can you find it in your heart to leave me now?" |
19264 | And do your words, Who''s there, who''s there? |
19264 | And yet, what answer might be mine If, pausing on her way, Some gossip bade me tell Whence the deep sighs that from my bosom swell? |
19264 | Another answered her,"How was it we did not like the mansion when the late Prince was living?" |
19264 | Are all men sad, or only I? |
19264 | Are you becoming less childish now?" |
19264 | Are you not well?" |
19264 | As I may not we d the man I love What profits me my life? |
19264 | As I stood there aghast, holding in my hand the sword your lordship gave me, your son called out,"Why doth Nakamitsu thus delay?" |
19264 | At this moment, the tremulous voice of an aged female domestic, who appeared quite unexpectedly, exclaimed--"Who is there?" |
19264 | BIJIYAU.--And what is it that hath now brought thee? |
19264 | BIJIYAU.--But how may he who never bent his wit To make the pencil trace Asaka''s[163] line Spell out one letter of the book divine? |
19264 | BIJIYAU.--Shall I, then, go without saying anything to the priests, my preceptors? |
19264 | BIJIYAU.--Why heed a life my sire himself holds cheap? |
19264 | Besides, what is the use?" |
19264 | But do you disapprove of my sending this?" |
19264 | But has Koremitz come?" |
19264 | But have you come from the palace? |
19264 | But to what end? |
19264 | But where are they all?" |
19264 | But where is his native hamlet? |
19264 | But whose residence is it? |
19264 | But yet her first question,"Who''s there?" |
19264 | But"--she continued, wonderingly--"how could he have known about the young grass?" |
19264 | CHORUS.--Whom, then, to profit wentest thou to school? |
19264 | Can you assure me you will be so?" |
19264 | Do you hear? |
19264 | Do you know what the Prince himself will think of your childish trick?" |
19264 | Do you mean that she is not worth seeing?" |
19264 | Do you mean that you have made up your mind to brave me? |
19264 | Do you? |
19264 | Does he intend to imitate the treacherous example of one who made a deer pass for a horse? |
19264 | For what does it all amount to? |
19264 | Genji partly wiped it off, saying,"Need I wipe it off any more? |
19264 | Genji thought,"this is singular, coming from whence it does,"and turning to Koremitz, he asked,"Who lives in this house to your right?" |
19264 | Genji was amused at her girlish mode of expression, and earnestly said,"Which of us is a fox? |
19264 | Genji, as he surveyed the scene from without, thought within himself,"If she is thus fair in her girlhood, what will she be when she is grown up?" |
19264 | Going off where? |
19264 | HUSBAND.-- And I should purchase me an horse, Must not my wife still sadly walk? |
19264 | HUSBAND.--Are you there? |
19264 | HUSBAND.--Really and truly? |
19264 | HUSBAND.--Really and truly? |
19264 | HUSBAND.--Some devotion to be performed at home? |
19264 | HUSBAND.--Then for how long would my darling consent to it without complaining? |
19264 | Had Prince Genji been kind enough to repair the place, it might have become transformed into a golden palace, and how joyous would it not be? |
19264 | Hast lost thy tongue, young fool? |
19264 | Have you ever?" |
19264 | Have you not? |
19264 | Have you quarrelled with the boy?" |
19264 | He did not yet know who she was, and asked,"Ca n''t you let me know your name? |
19264 | He entered the little room, saying,"Are you not quite well? |
19264 | He heard a tender voice, probably that of Kokimi, the boy spoken of before, who appeared to have just entered the room, saying:--"Are you here?" |
19264 | He said,"You seem still excited; is your illness not yet quite passed?" |
19264 | He stopped his carriage, and said to Koremitz, who was with him as usual--"Is this not the mansion of the Princess Hitachi?" |
19264 | He would then approach her side, and say,"How are you? |
19264 | He would then smooth her wavy hair, and say,"Are you sorry when I am not here?" |
19264 | Hereupon Tô- no- Chiûjiô gave him a taunt:"What would you do,"said he,"if I were to follow you very often? |
19264 | Hoaxing me and going off-- where? |
19264 | How can I make her mine?" |
19264 | How can I tell him so?" |
19264 | How can we judge by so little? |
19264 | How can you sleep so soundly in such a place? |
19264 | How is my boy? |
19264 | How much less could one ever entertain such an idea in a case like my own? |
19264 | How then do you venture to say such things against the Prince? |
19264 | How was this? |
19264 | How will he have been keeping my place for me? |
19264 | How would it be if I had free control over her, and had her brought up and educated according to my own notions?" |
19264 | How, then, can you expect him to say that, because you have been faithful to him, he will therefore come to you again?" |
19264 | I have carefully ordered the weekly requiem for the dead; but tell me in whose behalf it is, and what was her origin?" |
19264 | I shall tear you in pieces? |
19264 | If you can only be so, how can I do otherwise than love you? |
19264 | If you think it so serious why should you go to him at all?" |
19264 | Into what class will you allot_ these_?" |
19264 | Is it not always true that reality and sincerity are to be preferred to merely artificial excellence? |
19264 | Is it not so?" |
19264 | Is it not true? |
19264 | Is it so?" |
19264 | Is it some cruel god that hath bereft me? |
19264 | Is it that the mother of her father and of Wistaria is the same person? |
19264 | Is she here now?" |
19264 | Is that Kauzhiyu? |
19264 | Is the bamboo fence no more? |
19264 | Is there nobody there? |
19264 | Is, then, the sister you mentioned your stepmother?" |
19264 | KAUZHIYU.--Who is it that deigneth to ask admittance? |
19264 | Kauzhiyu, Kauzhiyu, art thou there? |
19264 | MITSUNAKA.--And music? |
19264 | MITSUNAKA.--So thou hast killed the fellow? |
19264 | MITSUNAKA.--Why stayed''st thou my hand? |
19264 | Mean that you wait for lovers twain? |
19264 | NAKAMITSU.--But why will he not seek refuge somewhere? |
19264 | NAKAMITSU.--What may it be? |
19264 | NAKAMITSU.--Where is my lord Bijiyau? |
19264 | NAKAMITSU.--Who is it that asks to be admitted? |
19264 | No one to play with the girl? |
19264 | Not knowing exactly how to soothe her, he exclaimed,"What makes you treat me so coolly? |
19264 | Now, when complete confidence is placed by one person in another, does not Nature teach us to expect resentment when that confidence is abused? |
19264 | ON THE DEATH OF THE POET''S MISTRESS How fondly did I yearn to gaze( For was there not the dear abode Of her whose love lit up my days?) |
19264 | Of a lady such as this we may simply remark,''Why, and how, is it that she is so brought up?'' |
19264 | One thought fills all my heart:-- When wilt thou come no more again to part? |
19264 | Or hath some mortal stol''n away his heart? |
19264 | Please, wo n''t you grant me leave for at least a day and a night? |
19264 | SECRET LOVE If as my spirit yearns for thine Thine yearns for mine, why thus delay? |
19264 | SERVANT.--In that case, how can I keep anything from you? |
19264 | SERVANT.--Pray, what may it be? |
19264 | SERVANT.--Pray, what may it be? |
19264 | Say, will he come or no?" |
19264 | Shall we fix our aspirations on the beautiful goddess, the heavenly Kichijiô? |
19264 | She is not only incapable of sharing these with him, but might carelessly remark,''What ails you?'' |
19264 | Sincere and devoted as she is, thought I, is there no means of ridding her of this jealous weakness? |
19264 | So I answered by singing:-- Who comes to see you Hana dear, Regardless of the soaking rain? |
19264 | So I gave a gentle rap on the back door, on hearing which she cried out:"Who''s there? |
19264 | Suppose I go with this to the Palace?" |
19264 | Suppose I wish to write to you hereafter?" |
19264 | Taraukuwazhiya, are you there? |
19264 | The line:"Where do we seek our home?" |
19264 | The little Prince, who watched her face, replied,"Like Shikib? |
19264 | Then he really has gone to Hana''s house, has he? |
19264 | Thereupon the latter went to the boat, thinking as he went,"How could he come to this place amidst the storms which have been raging?" |
19264 | This is the best plan; and why should we not do so? |
19264 | This was, no doubt, a plain truth; but what answer could I give to such a terribly frank avowal? |
19264 | To which a female voice replied,"Yes, dear, but has the visitor yet retired?" |
19264 | Under the auspicious care of the late Emperor, what prince or princess could have failed to attain the knowledge of such arts? |
19264 | WESHIÑ.--Prithee, Nakamitsu, wilt thou not dance and sing to us awhile, in honor of this halcyon hour? |
19264 | WIFE.--A day and a night? |
19264 | WIFE.--About how long does it take? |
19264 | WIFE.--Abstraction? |
19264 | WIFE.--Now tell me, how came you to be sitting there? |
19264 | WIFE.--Then where shall you go? |
19264 | WIFE.--What is it? |
19264 | WIFE.--Why, just simply this: you will arrange the blanket on top of me just as it was arranged on the top of you; wo n''t you? |
19264 | WIFE.--Will it? |
19264 | Was it your official watch- night? |
19264 | Was there any such?" |
19264 | We all admire the moon,''tis true, Whose home unknown to mortal eye Is in the mountains hid, but who To find that far- off home, would try?" |
19264 | Were his Majesty to see you in these disguises, what would he then think?" |
19264 | Were you not frightened?" |
19264 | What devotion could it be? |
19264 | What does it mean? |
19264 | What foolish fear is this?" |
19264 | What harm?" |
19264 | What is that? |
19264 | What is the matter with the girl?" |
19264 | What makes him come?" |
19264 | What may it be that makes you thus call me? |
19264 | What objection then is there in the idea of introducing our only child to a man like him? |
19264 | What of verse- making, then? |
19264 | What sort of people are they?" |
19264 | What use to me the gems most rich and rare? |
19264 | What use to me the gold and silver hoard? |
19264 | What was to be done? |
19264 | What were then the thoughts of the desolate mother? |
19264 | What will be the issue of all these things? |
19264 | What will he eventually do about this matter? |
19264 | What would the lady, the jealous lady, in the neighboring mansion think or say if she discovered their secret? |
19264 | When came the fatal messenger, I knew not what to say or do:-- But who might sit and simply hear? |
19264 | When she came nearer she said, addressing the supposed Mimb,"Have you been waiting on the young mistress this evening? |
19264 | When will he come? |
19264 | Whence did they come, my life to cheer? |
19264 | Where can the bird be gone? |
19264 | Where did you learn such things?" |
19264 | Where has my old man gone? |
19264 | Where have you been, sir? |
19264 | Where is his mother''s cottage? |
19264 | Where, again, I say, are we to go to find the one who will realize our desires? |
19264 | Wherefore, if Kauzhiyu was sacrificed, did he, too, not slay himself? |
19264 | Who can she be? |
19264 | Who can they be?" |
19264 | Who knows? |
19264 | Who would run down the fame of Narihira for the sake of the pretentious humbug of our own days?" |
19264 | Why are you so? |
19264 | Why do you trouble yourself? |
19264 | Why have you left me thus bereaved?" |
19264 | Why should I? |
19264 | Will not you show me some? |
19264 | Will you not let me ask you if you will see him for a few minutes, then all matters will end satisfactorily?" |
19264 | Will you speak to her grandmother about it? |
19264 | Will you? |
19264 | Will you? |
19264 | Wo n''t you lift off that"abstraction blanket,"and take something, if only a cup of tea, to unbend your mind a little? |
19264 | Wo n''t you speak? |
19264 | Wo n''t you speak? |
19264 | Wo n''t you speak? |
19264 | Wo n''t you speak? |
19264 | [ 110] Why then should not Genji have sent to her whom he knew this stanza? |
19264 | [ 152]_ Heñzeu._ XI Can I be dreaming? |
19264 | [_ He goes to Mitsunaka''s apartment._ How shall I dare to address my lord? |
19264 | [_ He goes to Mitsunaka''s apartment._] How shall I venture to address my lord? |
19264 | [_ He goes to his master''s apartment._] How shall I dare address my lord? |
19264 | [_ He retires into another apartment._] What is this horror unutterable? |
19264 | [_ Peeping._] What''s this? |
19264 | [_ The figure nods acquiescence._] So you would like to? |
19264 | [_ The husband runs away._ Where''s the unprincipled wretch off to? |
19264 | [_ They depart from the temple, and arrive at Mitsunaka''s palace._ NAKAMITSU.--How shall I dare address my lord? |
19264 | [_ They enter Mitsunaka''s apartment._ MITSUNAKA.--What may it be that has brought your reverence here to- day? |
19264 | _ Anon._ COUPLET When the great men of old pass''d by this way, Could e''en their pleasures vie with ours to- day? |
19264 | _ Enter husband, singing as he walks along the road._ Why should the lonely sleeper heed The midnight bell, the bird of dawn? |
19264 | _ Kuronushi._ VIII Whom would your cries, with artful calumny, Accuse of scatt''ring the pale cherry- flow''rs? |
19264 | _ Miss_ Hana, do you say? |
19264 | _ Narihira._ VI Tell me, doth any know the dark recess Where dwell the winds that scatter the spring flow''rs? |
19264 | _ Sosei._ VII No man so callous but he heaves a sigh When o''er his head the withered cherry- flowers Come flutt''ring down.--Who knows? |
19264 | and then the general public? |
19264 | another messenger? |
19264 | are you there, pray? |
19264 | are you there? |
19264 | at this late hour?" |
19264 | do you hear me? |
19264 | exclaimed Genji,"shall I visit him privately?" |
19264 | halloo? |
19264 | he that sadly press''d, Leaving my loving side, alone to roam Magami''s des''late moor, has he reached home? |
19264 | he thought again; and exclaimed,"Whose writings are these?" |
19264 | he''ll come his own dear love to we d."What though my mother bids me flee Thy fond embrace? |
19264 | is a devotion like that to suit_ me_--a layman if ever there was one? |
19264 | is any within? |
19264 | is n''t it a pity? |
19264 | my good little fellow, I have not seen you for some time, but you do not forget me, do you?" |
19264 | no attendants? |
19264 | no reply? |
19264 | say you a messenger hath come? |
19264 | so he means to come and tell me that he has been performing his devotions? |
19264 | tell me why These silv''ry dews so marvellously dye The autumn leaves a myriad colors bright? |
19264 | then Where mayest thou farther flee to search for peace? |
19264 | well, who can tell? |
19264 | what devotion shall it be? |
19264 | when Genji replied,"No, why so? |
19264 | where have you been? |
19264 | who''s there?" |
19264 | why desert us? |
19264 | why should I conceal it from you? |
19264 | you, you rascal? |
31608 | And what was there at the beginning? |
31608 | But is it true? |
31608 | Delitzsch voluminously asked:_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ There it is. |
31608 | Have you approached your neighbour''s wife? |
31608 | Have you stolen your neighbour''s garment? |
31608 | He asked the patient: Have you shed your neighbour''s blood? |
31608 | Or is it that you have failed to clothe the naked? |
31572 | ''If the husband pursue an evil course,''argued the liberal- minded prince,''what fault is it of the wife? |
31572 | And if the father rebel, how can the children be blamed?'' |
31572 | But how were they to resist a motion which affected the authority of Akbar? |
31572 | { 71} Akbar replied:''He is now no better than a dead man; how can I strike him? |
30225 | Better illusion tho than giving Faith to a fatal loveless Law? |
30225 | But it was destined? |
30225 | But there is living soul beyond them, And it is love''s till all things end? |
30225 | Heaven,you breathe,"will join the broken?" |
30225 | A lone ship sails from the harbour: Whom does it bear away? |
30225 | Ah, you are deaf? |
30225 | But in an ancient lie what''s good? |
30225 | But what is that to him, a stranger lonely, In a land strange to all his faith and dim? |
30225 | Children about their garments cling, To me shall none be born? |
30225 | Come, was the Infinite e''er we d, That He must evermore be thinking Of your wedding bed? |
30225 | Death? |
30225 | Do you believe words can enamour Death and dry up Lethe''s stream? |
30225 | For naught knows she of her beauty, More than the palm of its peace; And who beyond Christ''s portal to mortal Desires would bend her knees? |
30225 | He is dead? |
30225 | He the great interpreter And seer-- England''s noblest head? |
30225 | Her lover who sin- hearted has parted And left her but to pray? |
30225 | III"And is all well, O Thou Unweariable Launcher of worlds upon bewildered space,"Rose in me,"All? |
30225 | Is it dawn that is breaking?... |
30225 | Is it not better just to call things What they are-- not what we would? |
30225 | Is it not only in blaspheming Truth is ever to be found? |
30225 | It is hushed? |
30225 | Kings they will call you and uplifters Of your kind? |
30225 | LOVE IN JAPAN I Dragon- fly lighting On the temple- bell, Whose soul do you hear On the Day of the Dead? |
30225 | MEREDITH What am I reading? |
30225 | NAVIS IGNOTA Lord, what ship goes forth to- day? |
30225 | Now her lights are lost in tides Of the windy spray that glides Thro the darkness, Lord, abides Thy Dove with her-- or Doom? |
30225 | O was it launched too soon or launched too late? |
30225 | Oft I have sought thy temples, By Ganges now I seek, Where ashes of all the dead are strewn, And is my prayer not meek? |
30225 | Oh, what sin in a life begot Thousands of lives ago did he sin That he is now by all forgot, Even by Lord Gautama? |
30225 | Or can it be a derelict that drifts Beyond thy ken toward some reef of Fate On which Oblivion''s sand forever shifts?" |
30225 | Shall she have thy winds aright, Stars to guide her with their light, Shall she sweep the seas to sight Of land and harbour- rest? |
30225 | Shall she, Lord, escape the scath And live, with all her souls? |
30225 | The deepest voice that life had found To read a century profound With all time''s seethe and stir? |
30225 | The ghats and the shrines and the people That bathe in the holy Stream Have heard my cry, O goddess high, Shall I not have my dream? |
30225 | The soul of my lover? |
30225 | The sun we worship daily Shrined it for seven years, Then shall it go to cruel beaks, There where the sea- wind veers? |
30225 | The wind?... |
30225 | There is a certain Socratean Saying that swine of their ditch are sure; Yet do they prove by their contentment That it will endure? |
30225 | VII"Then the world on a lie is living?" |
30225 | Wait? |
30225 | What am I reading? |
30225 | What rue, then, if his desecrated face Rots now at Cairo in a mummy case? |
30225 | Whether it be, one thing I ask you, Lovers and poets, tell, I pray, Was there ever a love- oath ended Ere the Judgment Day? |
30225 | or did thy hand grow dull Building this world that bears a piteous race? |
30225 | you scorn me And loathe, as a thing defiled? |
23074 | Are you for a ride? |
23074 | Are you the new youngster who is to sail with us? |
23074 | Brand, can you make out the schooner anywhere? |
23074 | But I wonder, if they do catch us, what they will do to us all? |
23074 | But are we saved? |
23074 | But how are we to find our way to the boat in the dark? |
23074 | But what has become of old Surley? |
23074 | But, I say, I wonder if the gentlemen over heard talk of what my lady did? 23074 Can he ever swim through it?" |
23074 | Can the dear old fellow be washed overboard? |
23074 | Could n''t we contrive to make a signal to let the people of the man- of- war know that we are kept here in durance vile? |
23074 | Could n''t you bring down a few of the niggers, sir? |
23074 | Did you hear it, Jerry? |
23074 | Do you know anything of Mr Brand and the other men? |
23074 | Do you know that that man has received a couple of desperate wounds with a long, sharp knife? |
23074 | Do you know what that is? |
23074 | Do you know what that land is? |
23074 | Do you want a boat, gintlemen? |
23074 | Going? 23074 Has any one a file?" |
23074 | Heave that corpse overboard,he exclaimed;"why do you let it remain there cumbering the deck?" |
23074 | How can those clouds of red dust come all the way out here in the teeth of the north- east trade- wind? |
23074 | How can we prove that we are honest people? |
23074 | How is that to be done? |
23074 | How near do you judge that we shall drift to the station? |
23074 | I agree with you,said I;"but what is to become of the doctor? |
23074 | I did it finely-- didn''t I? 23074 I say, Brand, do n''t you think we could manage to right the boat?" |
23074 | I say, Harry, do n''t you think we could manage to get it? 23074 I say, Harry, does not this remind you of the night we spent at the Falkland Islands?" |
23074 | I say, Harry, what are you heaving at me? |
23074 | I say, Harry, would it not be a joke if they were to fall in with the corvette again? |
23074 | I say, Harry,exclaimed Jerry, suddenly,"I wonder what has become of the_ Dove_?" |
23074 | I say, Jerry, when are we to fall in with all the wonderful adventures you told me of? |
23074 | I say, Tom, do n''t you think that there is a chance of her making sail, and leaving us here? |
23074 | I say, cook,exclaimed Jerry,"you give us very good food to eat, but could n''t you add a bit of meat now and then? |
23074 | I say, father, can you tell Harry and me all about this trade- wind, which we have got hold of it seems? |
23074 | I wonder what the pirates will do with us? |
23074 | I wonder what they would say if I was to let you loose? |
23074 | If that does not do, what will happen? |
23074 | Is he following us? |
23074 | Is it a bull? |
23074 | Is it all over? |
23074 | Is it possible that they are aboard here all this time, do you think? |
23074 | It was a gallant thing, was n''t it? |
23074 | Jerry,I exclaimed,"where can our friends be all this time? |
23074 | My friends,said he, in a calm, grave tone, but without a sign of agitation,"has it occurred to you that we may soon be called upon to die? |
23074 | Now, tell us, what do you think we ought to do next? |
23074 | O Jerry, where are we going to? |
23074 | Of what? |
23074 | Oh, where is Jerry-- where is Jerry? |
23074 | Or a raft, eh, Harry? 23074 Perhaps you will tell us what you wish to have done?" |
23074 | Pleasant, wo n''t it be? |
23074 | Poor father, what will he do? 23074 Rather, what are you throwing at me?" |
23074 | Shall I fire and give notice to the ship? |
23074 | Should you like to go to sea, Harry? |
23074 | Tell me, are your wishes the same as when you last left home? |
23074 | Then you know something about them? |
23074 | They do n''t want us to eat these, surely, for our luncheon? |
23074 | Trite!--where''s Trite? 23074 What account should I have to give to the captain if either of you got knocked on the head and I escaped? |
23074 | What are these toadstools for, old gentleman? |
23074 | What are those? |
23074 | What are you youngsters about there? |
23074 | What are you? 23074 What becomes of the north- east trade- wind when it reaches the end of its journey, and where is that end think you, my boy?" |
23074 | What can have become of Mr Brand, and Ben Yool, and the Kanaka? |
23074 | What can they be? |
23074 | What chance have we now, Mr Stone? |
23074 | What chance have we, do you think, of getting away from her, Mr Stone? |
23074 | What chance, then, have we of making ourselves heard, and getting help from them? |
23074 | What do you advise? 23074 What do you mean, sir?" |
23074 | What is she, Ben, do you think? |
23074 | What is that, Harry? |
23074 | What is the use of property, unless to do good with it? |
23074 | What is this? |
23074 | What is to be done with him? |
23074 | What is to be done? |
23074 | What shall we say to him, though? 23074 What''s going to happen?" |
23074 | What''s that? |
23074 | What''s the matter? 23074 Where are we going to, my friend?" |
23074 | Where away? 23074 Where away?" |
23074 | Where can Fleming have got to? |
23074 | Where? 23074 Who are you, and where do you come from, who go about prying into other people''s affairs?" |
23074 | Who cares? 23074 Will the ship be able to come back? |
23074 | Would n''t you like a ride, Mr Brand? |
23074 | Yes; did you? 23074 Yet, if it is n''t, who can he be?" |
23074 | You do n''t believe in ghosts, do you? |
23074 | You know what that means, master? |
23074 | You will fire over their heads, will you not? |
23074 | You''d like to know how we took the_ Esmeralda_, I daresay? |
23074 | And am I actually going to sail all round the world in my first voyage? |
23074 | And shall I become like one of these men? |
23074 | Are you prepared for death? |
23074 | Are you ready to stand in the presence of the Judge of all the earth?" |
23074 | At length he gained courage, and both of us slowly approaching the man, he said, with a desperate effort,"Pray, tell me who you are?" |
23074 | But I say, do you remember what Mr Brand talked about when we were holding on by the bottom of the boat among the Falklands?" |
23074 | But do n''t you think that you might buy yourself off? |
23074 | Can I describe that parting? |
23074 | Captain Stone, do n''t you agree with me?" |
23074 | Could it be from Indians or robbers? |
23074 | Could they have been stopped by robbers? |
23074 | Could we survive through another day? |
23074 | Did any one think of the poor wretches we had left dying on the road-- men-- brethren by nature, by a common faith-- men with souls? |
23074 | Do you think our fathers would have all along been satisfied with them if they had n''t been good? |
23074 | Far be it from me to say that this is always the case, but who can deny that it is too often so? |
23074 | Have we gone to the Fountain which washes away all sins, to be cleansed from our iniquities? |
23074 | Have you the same hope, young gentleman? |
23074 | He gave us everything-- are we to return him only a few hurried prayers and ejaculations of sorrow? |
23074 | He has an eternity prepared for us-- are we to give him alone the dregs of our short span of life? |
23074 | How can they feed themselves, for they have no bills? |
23074 | How comes it then, it will be asked, that they form islands which rise several feet above the sea? |
23074 | How could I help him? |
23074 | How could he have written his life if he had not lived, I should like to know?" |
23074 | How could they have come here? |
23074 | How could we hope to hold out without food, should the savages attack us? |
23074 | How is this? |
23074 | How should we go through the world without the protection of an all- merciful God? |
23074 | I cast my eyes aloft? |
23074 | I suppose there is some cause for it?" |
23074 | I wonder what the doctor thinks?" |
23074 | If it were not for them mists, how could the rivers of the north be supplied with their waters, and the fields of our own land be made fertile? |
23074 | If they are still alive,( and what chance is there of it?) |
23074 | Is it not so with all of us? |
23074 | Is it possible that they can have been among the grass, and that the fire may have caught them up? |
23074 | Is n''t it a first- rate chance, papa?" |
23074 | May I venture to run for the satchels and some of the game?" |
23074 | My noble- hearted cousin, was he then to be the first victim among us? |
23074 | My poor father!--what will he do?" |
23074 | On what do you trust? |
23074 | Remember that God is a just God-- what, in justice, do we deserve? |
23074 | She sails to- night, do n''t she, Tom?" |
23074 | Should you like to try another cruise on one?" |
23074 | The chief looked at us, as much as to ask,"What will you do, friends?" |
23074 | The question, of course, was-- Would the inhabitants appear as friends or foes? |
23074 | The time had arrived for us to endeavour to make our escape-- but could we go and leave Jerry? |
23074 | We cry out for mercy-- on what do we ground our expectations of receiving it? |
23074 | We had got up almost close enough to fire when Jerry whispered,"O Harry, what is that? |
23074 | Were they the figures of men? |
23074 | What can have got hold of him?" |
23074 | What can it be?" |
23074 | What could the phenomenon portend? |
23074 | What could we expect but to be instantly murdered? |
23074 | What do men do? |
23074 | What had become of him? |
23074 | What has caused it, Mr Brand; can you tell me?" |
23074 | What has it been doing since the flood? |
23074 | What hope had I now of being preserved? |
23074 | What is going to happen? |
23074 | What is the world doing at the present moment? |
23074 | What is to be done?" |
23074 | What shall we do then?" |
23074 | What should we have done without you?" |
23074 | What was that I saw? |
23074 | What was to be done with the game now that we had got it? |
23074 | What will you have-- hot or cold?" |
23074 | What would have become of Lot had he followed the example of those among whom he took up his abode? |
23074 | What, however, had become of Mr Brand, and Ben, and the native? |
23074 | What, however, was likely to be our own fate? |
23074 | Where was poor Jerry, though? |
23074 | Who could say that we were not met for the last time in our lives? |
23074 | Who ever heard of sailors who did n''t want to ride? |
23074 | Who gave Solomon this information? |
23074 | Who would have thought of Shakspeare in the Sandwich Islands? |
23074 | You stay, and de oder midshipmens stay; why should n''t I?'' |
23074 | You''ll have something? |
23074 | You''re not going with us, sir? |
23074 | ` We have before been preserved, why give up all hope now?'' |
23074 | ` What''s to be done with him?'' |
23074 | am I still alive?" |
23074 | and if she does, will they see us, do you think?" |
23074 | cried the doctor;"I felt something soft slip through my fingers-- animals of some sort-- what can they be?" |
23074 | exclaimed Jerry and I together;"you wo n''t leave us behind?" |
23074 | exclaimed Jerry soon after this,"what has come over the air, I wonder? |
23074 | have a bit of your brother?" |
23074 | have you found me out, my friends?" |
23074 | is that your game?" |
23074 | or could any Indians have attacked them? |
23074 | what are they about now?" |
23074 | what do you want?" |
23074 | what is happening now?" |
23074 | what is that?" |
23074 | what of the kelp?" |
23074 | what''s going to happen next?" |
23074 | what''s the matter?" |
23074 | where are we?" |
23074 | where away?" |
23074 | where?" |
21622 | And what is that? |
21622 | Bennie? 21622 But how hast thou become a beggar? |
21622 | But how,asked the duke,"came you by the knowledge of all these things?" |
21622 | But what becomes of the American daughters,asked the English lady,"when there is no money left?" |
21622 | But where shall I go? |
21622 | But where will it end? |
21622 | But who will take care of you? |
21622 | Do you intend taking the dome of St. Paul''s for a gasometer? |
21622 | Do you know him, then? |
21622 | Do you know what God puts us on our backs for? |
21622 | Do you know, sir,said a devotee of Mammon to John Bright,"that I am worth a million sterling?" |
21622 | Do you understand geometry, Latin, and Newton? |
21622 | Do you want anything? |
21622 | Do you wish to live without a trial? |
21622 | Do? 21622 Does one need to know anything more than the twenty- four letters, in order to learn everything else that one wishes?" |
21622 | Fear? |
21622 | Has Ali Hafed returned? |
21622 | How did you acquire your great fortune? |
21622 | How do you manage it, Dick? |
21622 | How is this, Dick? |
21622 | How shall I a habit break? |
21622 | How shall I know when I have found the place? |
21622 | Of what use is it? |
21622 | Of what use? |
21622 | Seest thou a man that is hasty in his words? 21622 Storms may howl around thee, Foes may hunt and hound thee: Shall they overpower thee? |
21622 | Well, my child,said the President in pleasant, cheerful tones,"what do you want so bright and early this morning?" |
21622 | Well, what shall I give you for your secret? |
21622 | Well,said the commissary,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you?" |
21622 | Wh-- what did you say? |
21622 | What could you do? |
21622 | What do you want of diamonds? |
21622 | What does he know,said a sage,"who has not suffered?" |
21622 | What is that you say, child? 21622 What is the use of a child?" |
21622 | What is your business? |
21622 | What name? |
21622 | Who is Alexander? |
21622 | Who is the richest of men,asked Socrates? |
21622 | Who knocks? |
21622 | Why charge me double? |
21622 | Why do n''t you send in a bid? |
21622 | Why do you lead such a solitary life? |
21622 | Why does not America have fine sculptors? |
21622 | Why not? |
21622 | Why not? |
21622 | Will any one explain how there can be a light without a wick? |
21622 | Will he not make a great painter? |
21622 | Will the sheriff sell me? |
21622 | Will you give me ten years to learn to paint, and so entitle myself to the hand of your daughter? |
21622 | Yours? |
21622 | A hundred years hence what difference will it make whether you were rich or poor, a peer or a peasant? |
21622 | A learned clergyman was thus accosted by an illiterate preacher who despised education:"Sir, you have been to college, I presume?" |
21622 | After a few moments of silence the wife looked into his face and asked,"Will the sheriff sell you?" |
21622 | After asking news of the battle the gentleman observed,"But you are wounded?" |
21622 | All the world cries, Where is the man who will save us? |
21622 | And of all heroes, what nobler ones than these, whose names shine from the pages of our missionary history? |
21622 | Are n''t you afraid of the situation? |
21622 | Are the results so distant that you delay the preparation in the hope that fortuitous good luck may make it unnecessary? |
21622 | Are we tender, loving, self- denying, and honest, trying to fashion our frail life after that of the model man of Nazareth? |
21622 | Are you an animal loaded with ingots, or a man filled with a purpose? |
21622 | Arnold left only a few thousand dollars, but yet was he not one of the richest of men? |
21622 | As Emerson says, Talleyrand''s question is ever the main one; not, is he rich? |
21622 | As a rule, eccentricity is a badge of power, but how many women would not rather strangle their individuality than be tabooed by Mrs. Grundy? |
21622 | Bruno was burned in Rome for revealing the heavens, and Versalius[ Transcriber''s note: Vesalius?] |
21622 | But have these rivers therefore no influence? |
21622 | But shall it therefore rot in the harbor? |
21622 | But what difference may it not make whether you did what was right or what was wrong? |
21622 | By any fascination of manner? |
21622 | By eloquence? |
21622 | By office? |
21622 | By rank? |
21622 | By talents? |
21622 | By wealth? |
21622 | By what was it, then? |
21622 | Can anything be so elegant as to have few wants and to serve them one''s self? |
21622 | Can he will strong enough, and hold whatever he undertakes with an iron grip? |
21622 | Can you believe it? |
21622 | Can you conceive anything more absurd?" |
21622 | Compared with it, what are houses and lands, stocks and bonds? |
21622 | Could you make all the looms work as smoothly as yours?" |
21622 | Did Anna Dickinson leave the platform when the pistol bullets of the Molly Maguires flew about her head? |
21622 | Did you ever see a man in anguish stand as if carved out of solid rock, mastering himself? |
21622 | Did you ever see a man receive a flagrant insult, and only grow a little pale, bite his quivering lip, and then reply quietly? |
21622 | Do you think yourself free? |
21622 | Does any one wonder that such a youth succeeded? |
21622 | Does competition trouble you? |
21622 | Does it mean a broader manhood, a larger aim, a nobler ambition, or does it cry"More, more, more"? |
21622 | Does it say to you,"Eat, drink, and be merry, for to- morrow we die"? |
21622 | Does it speak to you of character? |
21622 | Had he not been detained who can tell what the history of Great Britain would have been? |
21622 | Has any scholar defined luck? |
21622 | Has it built any cities? |
21622 | Has it built any steamships, established any universities, any asylums, any hospitals? |
21622 | Has it invented any telephones, any telegraphs? |
21622 | Hast thou spent thy substance in riotous living?" |
21622 | Have we no higher missions, no nobler destinies? |
21622 | Have you a hot, passionate temper? |
21622 | Have you never seen similar insensibility to danger in those whose habits are already dragging them to everlasting death? |
21622 | Have you not seen one bearing a hopeless daily trial remain silent and never tell the world what cankered his home peace? |
21622 | Hereditary bondsmen, know ye not Who would be free themselves must strike the blow? |
21622 | Honors? |
21622 | How came writers to be famous? |
21622 | How can I develop myself into the grandest possible manhood? |
21622 | How could I leave you?" |
21622 | How could the poor boy, Elihu Burritt, working nearly all the daylight in a blacksmith''s shop, get an education? |
21622 | How know we what lives a single thought retained from the dust of nameless graves may have lighted to renown?" |
21622 | How many a round boy is hindered in the race by being forced into a square hole? |
21622 | How many are fettered with ignorance, hampered by inhospitable surroundings, with the opposition of parents who do not understand them? |
21622 | How many centuries of peace would have developed a Grant? |
21622 | How many go bungling along from the lack of early discipline and drill in the vocation they have chosen? |
21622 | How many have to feel their way to the goal, through the blindness of ignorance and lack of experience? |
21622 | How many men would like to go to sleep beggars and wake up Rothschilds or Astors? |
21622 | How many would fain go to bed dunces and wake up Solomons? |
21622 | How many young men are weighted down with debt, with poverty, with the support of invalid parents or brothers and sisters, or friends? |
21622 | How much do you think Homer got for his Iliad? |
21622 | How to constitute one''s self a man? |
21622 | How was this attained? |
21622 | If he found abundant time for study, who may not? |
21622 | If so, why does not luck make a fool speak words of wisdom; an ignoramus utter lectures on philosophy? |
21622 | If such concentration of energy is necessary for the success of a Gladstone, what can we common mortals hope to accomplish by"scatteration?" |
21622 | If this is so, why should not one be able, by his own efforts, to give this long- growing organ a particular bent, a peculiar character? |
21622 | Is any argument needed to show the superiority of Pericles? |
21622 | Is it a message of generosity or of meanness, breadth or narrowness? |
21622 | Is it any wonder that our children start out with wrong ideals of life, with wrong ideas of what constitutes success? |
21622 | Is it necessary to add that all difficulties yielded at last to such resolute determination? |
21622 | Is it not large or small, stunted wild maize or well- developed ears, according to the conditions under which it has grown? |
21622 | Is it, as has been suggested, a blind man''s buff among the laws? |
21622 | Is luck that strange, nondescript fairy, that does all things among men that they can not account for? |
21622 | Is there any man who would not have done the same?" |
21622 | Is there no desirable thing left in this world but gold, luxury, and ease? |
21622 | It is not a question of what some one else can do or become, which every youth should ask himself, but what can I do? |
21622 | Like Horace Greeley, he could find no opening for a boy; but what of that? |
21622 | Must not earth be rent Before her gems are found? |
21622 | OPPORTUNITIES WHERE YOU ARE"How speaks the present hour? |
21622 | Of what use is a man who knows a little of everything and not much of anything? |
21622 | Opportunities? |
21622 | Opportunities? |
21622 | Poverty pinched this lad hard in his little garret study and his clothes were shabby, but what of that? |
21622 | Shall we idolize our stomachs and our backs? |
21622 | Shall we seek happiness through the sense of taste or of touch? |
21622 | Shall we"disgrace the fair day by a pusillanimous preference of our bread to our freedom"? |
21622 | The chief said,"Does the sun shine on your country, and the rain fall, and the grass grow?" |
21622 | The chief then asked,"Are there any cattle?" |
21622 | The corn that is now ripe, whence comes it, and what is it? |
21622 | This is my world now; why should I envy others its mere legal possession? |
21622 | Torture and death are awaiting me, but what are these to the shame of an infamous act, or the wounds of a guilty mind? |
21622 | Was Garrison heard? |
21622 | Was there any chance in Caesar''s crossing the Rubicon? |
21622 | Were Beecher and Gough to be silenced by the rude English mobs that came to extinguish them? |
21622 | What are the works of avarice compared with the names of Lincoln, Grant, or Garfield? |
21622 | What brings the prisoner back the second, third, or fourth time? |
21622 | What cared Christ for the jeers of the crowd? |
21622 | What cared Wendell Phillips for rotten eggs, derisive scorn, and hisses? |
21622 | What cares Henry L. Bulwer for the suffocating cough, even though he can scarcely speak above a whisper? |
21622 | What chance had such a boy for distinction? |
21622 | What chance had the young girl, Grace Darling, to distinguish herself, living on those barren lighthouse rocks alone with her aged parents? |
21622 | What constitutes a state? |
21622 | What could be more eloquent? |
21622 | What could he do? |
21622 | What does your money say to you: what message does it bring to you? |
21622 | What good are powers, faculties, unless we can use them for a purpose? |
21622 | What good would a chest of tools do a carpenter unless he could use them? |
21622 | What had chance to do with Napoleon''s career, with Wellington''s, or Grant''s, or Von Moltke''s? |
21622 | What had luck to do with Thermopylae, Trafalgar, Gettysburg? |
21622 | What has chance ever done in the world? |
21622 | What if a man should see his neighbor getting workmen and building materials together, and should say to him,"What are you building?" |
21622 | What infirmity have I mastered to- day? |
21622 | What is a man without a will? |
21622 | What is luck? |
21622 | What is more common than"unsuccessful geniuses,"or failures with"commanding talents"? |
21622 | What is opportunity to a man who ca n''t use it? |
21622 | What is the happiness of your life made up of? |
21622 | What message does it bring you? |
21622 | What more do I want? |
21622 | What more glorious than a magnificent manhood, animated with the bounding spirits of overflowing health? |
21622 | What power can poverty have over a home where loving hearts are beating with a consciousness of untold riches of head and heart? |
21622 | What were impossibilities to such a resolute will? |
21622 | What will she not do for the greatest of her creation? |
21622 | What?" |
21622 | When Stephen of Colonna fell into the hands of base assailants, and they asked him in derision,"Where is now your fortress?" |
21622 | When does a man feel more a master of himself than when he has passed through a sudden and severe provocation in silence or in undisturbed good humor? |
21622 | Where is that drum? |
21622 | Where, thy true treasure? |
21622 | Who can calculate the future of the smallest trifle when a mud crack swells to an Amazon, and the stealing of a penny may end on the scaffold? |
21622 | Who can deny that where there is a will, as a rule, there''s a way? |
21622 | Who can estimate the power of a well- lived life? |
21622 | Who dares conduct his household or business affairs in his own way, and snap his fingers at Dame Grundy? |
21622 | Who does not know that the act of a moment may cause a life''s regret? |
21622 | Who is Bennie?" |
21622 | Who is the favorite actor? |
21622 | Who would not prefer to be a millionaire of character, of contentment, rather than possess nothing but the vulgar coins of a Croesus? |
21622 | Why not economize before getting into debt instead of pinching afterwards? |
21622 | Why should I scramble and struggle to get possession of a little portion of this earth? |
21622 | Why should the will not be brought to bear upon the formation of the brain as well as of the backbone?" |
21622 | Why should we wish to get rid of them? |
21622 | Why were the Roman legionaries victorious? |
21622 | You may leave your millions to your son, but have you really given him anything? |
21622 | a ruse among the elements? |
21622 | a trick of Dame Nature? |
21622 | am I unable to perform a problem in algebra, and shall I go back to my class and confess my ignorance? |
21622 | any chemist shown its composition? |
21622 | any philosopher explained its nature? |
21622 | but is he anybody? |
21622 | does he stand for something? |
21622 | exclaimed Rebecca,"how can they use it? |
21622 | has he this or that faculty? |
21622 | he asked, seeing that the youth was apparently thunderstruck,"is it you?" |
21622 | heard of the death of Calvin he exclaimed with a sigh,"Ah, the strength of that proud heretic lay in-- riches? |
21622 | is he committed? |
21622 | is he of the establishment? |
21622 | is he of the movement? |
21622 | is he well- meaning? |
21622 | or Dante for his Paradise? |
21622 | said Aristides,"or has he in any way injured you?" |
21622 | was he wise? |
21622 | what passion opposed? |
21622 | what temptation resisted? |
21622 | what virtue acquired?" |
21622 | work away; what is your competitor but a man? |
13261 | ''Ill chosen''? |
13261 | ''We''? 13261 A matter of five metres? |
13261 | And the third man? |
13261 | And what can come to spoil our life for us? 13261 And your sister?" |
13261 | Are you fit to go? |
13261 | Are you going back to town,he asked,"or do you mean to stay the night?" |
13261 | Are you mad? |
13261 | Are you quite mad? |
13261 | Aye, who knows? |
13261 | Bayard? |
13261 | Ca n''t you be quick? 13261 Ca n''t you truly believe what you''ve said?" |
13261 | Ce vieillard? |
13261 | Coira,cried the man,"do you mean that you carried me bodily all that long distance? |
13261 | Did I say''afraid''? |
13261 | Did I see her? |
13261 | Did that sound regretful? |
13261 | Did what I say sound-- disloyal to my father? 13261 Did you notice that girl?" |
13261 | Did you see her face? 13261 Did you speak with Arthur?" |
13261 | Do I seem brutal? |
13261 | Do I seem glad, Coira? |
13261 | Do n''t you understand,he cried,"that life''s only just beginning-- day''s just dawning, Coira? |
13261 | Do you believe my uncle has been responsible for Arthur''s disappearance? |
13261 | Do you call poison nothing? |
13261 | Do you dream of me, Bayard? |
13261 | Do you know any such men? |
13261 | Do you know what this is? |
13261 | Do you know what''s in this? |
13261 | Do you know who that woman is? |
13261 | Do you love this boy? |
13261 | Do you mean to tell me that after all you''ve done and-- and gone through, Helen has thrown you over? 13261 Do you mean,"she said, after a moment--"do you mean that_ you_ are working with him-- to find Arthur?" |
13261 | Do you read Spanish,he demanded,"and Latin, as well as French and English?" |
13261 | Do you realize,demanded Captain Stewart,"what risks we run while that fellow is alive-- knowing what he knows?" |
13261 | Do you really think that? 13261 Do you remember that evening we were going home from the Madrid and motored round by Montmartre to see the fête?" |
13261 | Do you set ambition before love, my Queen? |
13261 | Do you think so? |
13261 | Do you think,said she,"that knowing what I know now I would go on with that until he has made his peace with his family? |
13261 | Do? |
13261 | Has he,she said, slowly,"done even this for me? |
13261 | Has that wretched animal touched your coffee? |
13261 | Have you any reason for thinking that? |
13261 | Have you been in this game, too? |
13261 | Have you spoken of this to my uncle? |
13261 | He is waiting to hear how I feel about it all, is n''t he? |
13261 | He wo n''t go to your father and make a scene? |
13261 | Helen had yellow hair, had n''t she? |
13261 | How dare you question me? |
13261 | How do I know that? 13261 How do I know you''re telling the truth?" |
13261 | How is he? 13261 How is he?" |
13261 | How much have you told him? |
13261 | How''s the leg--_and_ the head? |
13261 | How''s the leg? |
13261 | How? 13261 I beg your pardon?" |
13261 | I seem to start badly, do n''t I? 13261 I suppose I must not ask to see your father?" |
13261 | I suppose you can sit up against your pillows? 13261 I suppose,"he said, rising again--"I suppose when the man comes out of this he''ll be frightfully exhausted and drop off to sleep, wo n''t he? |
13261 | I take it,said he,"that means that you''re-- that she has accepted you, eh?" |
13261 | I''ve always been fair with you, have n''t I? |
13261 | I-- how should I know? 13261 I? |
13261 | Idleness and all? 13261 If this also fails, I think-- well, I think the bon Dieu will have to help us then.--Michel,"he inquired,"do you know how to pray?" |
13261 | If we try to carry him away by force there''ll be a fight, of course, and-- who knows what might happen? 13261 If you''ve that motor here, may I use it?" |
13261 | In Heaven''s name,he cried, shrilly,"why did n''t that one- eyed fool kill the fellow while he was about it? |
13261 | Is Arthur Benham in the house on the Clamart road? 13261 Is Captain Stewart in the house?" |
13261 | Is it believed that I could leap over it? |
13261 | Is it fair,queried Captain Stewart--"is it fair, as a rival investigator, to ask you what success you have had?" |
13261 | Is it not rather foolish,she asked,"to warn us-- to warn me of possibilities like that? |
13261 | Is it so hard as that? |
13261 | Is love all? 13261 Is love all?" |
13261 | Is n''t this new? |
13261 | Is that true? |
13261 | Is young Arthur Benham in the house on the Clamart road? |
13261 | It is my old friend? |
13261 | It sounds rather appalling, does n''t it? 13261 Lady in the blue hat too friendly? |
13261 | Left it at the house? |
13261 | Long before his-- before he left his home? 13261 Mademoiselle, are you telling me the truth?" |
13261 | May I ask whose books these are? |
13261 | May I make a suggestion? |
13261 | More merciful? 13261 My uncle?" |
13261 | Name of a dog, why? |
13261 | Need it be a lie? |
13261 | Nothing? |
13261 | Now? |
13261 | Oh, I? |
13261 | Oh, do n''t you? |
13261 | Oh, you''ve heard of him, too, then? |
13261 | Other matters? |
13261 | Quoi, donc? |
13261 | Rather good-- what? 13261 Real? |
13261 | Rich? |
13261 | Shall I always drag along so far behind him? |
13261 | Shall I never rise to him, save in the moods of an hour? |
13261 | Shall we have a look? |
13261 | She has accepted you, I take it? |
13261 | So old Charlie''s with us to- day, is he? |
13261 | That''s rude, is n''t it? 13261 The flower- gardens, Michel?" |
13261 | The name? |
13261 | The patient? |
13261 | The wedding? |
13261 | Then? |
13261 | There has been no news at all this week? |
13261 | They are before us? |
13261 | They''re lying to him and making him think--What was it they were making him think, these three conspirators? |
13261 | This man, now-- this man whom you saw to- night-- what sort of looking man will he have been? |
13261 | To the east, Monsieur? |
13261 | Was n''t it Richard Hartley? 13261 Was n''t it Richard?" |
13261 | Was young Richard Hartley at your dinner- party? |
13261 | What I want to know,said he,"is how the boy is supporting himself all this time? |
13261 | What about my father? 13261 What are you doing here?" |
13261 | What are you going to do? |
13261 | What chance have I ever had? |
13261 | What d''you mean? 13261 What did my grandfather say to you?" |
13261 | What did the young man look like? |
13261 | What did you come here to do? 13261 What did you say?" |
13261 | What did you say? |
13261 | What do you mean by that? |
13261 | What do you mean--''become of him''? |
13261 | What do you mean? |
13261 | What else? |
13261 | What is her name? 13261 What is it? |
13261 | What is not permitted? |
13261 | What is that? 13261 What is that?" |
13261 | What is the matter with you? |
13261 | What is to be done? |
13261 | What must she think of me? |
13261 | What must she think of me? |
13261 | What right have you to ask me questions about such a thing? 13261 What the devil is it? |
13261 | What then? |
13261 | What time are we asked for-- eight- thirty? 13261 What was that for?" |
13261 | What''s the matter? |
13261 | What? 13261 What?" |
13261 | Where is Arthur Benham? |
13261 | Which is his room? |
13261 | Who are you,the girl cried, in a bitter resentment,"that you should understand? |
13261 | Who has ever talked to you about me? |
13261 | Who is she? |
13261 | Who is there, please? |
13261 | Who said that? |
13261 | Why are you about at this hour? |
13261 | Why could n''t he have been killed? 13261 Why could n''t the fellow have been killed by that one- eyed fool?" |
13261 | Why did I let him go? |
13261 | Why do you tell me things like that? |
13261 | Why have n''t you gone yourself? |
13261 | Why keep up the pretence? 13261 Why my uncle?" |
13261 | Why not live instead? |
13261 | Why not? |
13261 | Why three months? |
13261 | Why? |
13261 | Will you believe,she cried,"that I had nothing to do with this? |
13261 | Would you prefer croissants or brioches or plain bread- and- butter? 13261 Yes, he does go into the world also, does n''t he? |
13261 | You do n''t know Broadway, Coira, do you? 13261 You have an idea? |
13261 | You have heard no-- news? 13261 You knew why I did it?" |
13261 | You like my museum? |
13261 | You mean--? |
13261 | You two are emphatic enough about him, are n''t you? |
13261 | You-- knew Arthur Benham last winter? |
13261 | Your mother? 13261 _ You?_""And why not I?" |
13261 | _ You?_"And why not I? |
13261 | ... Not a dream?" |
13261 | A voice, very faint and weary, called:"Who is there? |
13261 | After all, of what use was speech? |
13261 | After all, was she not one to make any boy-- or any man-- forget duty, home, friends, everything? |
13261 | Afterward he smoked a little while in silence, but presently he said, as if with some hesitation:"May I be permitted to offer a word of advice?" |
13261 | Am I a dog, to be beaten? |
13261 | Am I going to lose you, after all... now that we know?" |
13261 | Am I going to lose you... like this? |
13261 | Among themselves they spoke, I think, English, though I do not understand it, except a few words, such as''''ow moch?'' |
13261 | And I remember-- Yes, it was odd, was it not, your meeting him like that, just as you were talking of Arthur? |
13261 | And after another little pause he asked:"Was there any reason why he should have gone away-- any quarrel or that sort of thing?" |
13261 | And all the others have given a different date? |
13261 | And as they went along down the Avenue Hoche, he demanded:"Why are you a dolt and whatever else it was? |
13261 | And how much had she told? |
13261 | And so,"she said,"when I met Arthur Benham last winter, and he-- began to-- he said-- when he begged me to marry him.... Ah, ca n''t you see? |
13261 | And the man said,"What is it, Mademoiselle?" |
13261 | And what did he mean by the words which he had used afterward? |
13261 | And yet,"she cried, wringing her hands,"how could I know? |
13261 | And, by- the- way, what are we waiting for? |
13261 | Any help that might come to him must come from outside-- and what help was to be expected there? |
13261 | Are n''t there, though? |
13261 | Are we not all here? |
13261 | Are we to-- simply to go our different ways like this, as if we''d never met at all?" |
13261 | Are you always as silent as this?" |
13261 | Are you ill, or are you making up little epigrams to say at the dinner- party?" |
13261 | Are you keeping back anything? |
13261 | Are you mad? |
13261 | Are you sure he''s all right-- that he is n''t badly hurt?" |
13261 | Because I meet a man at a dinner- party and say I like him, must I marry him to- morrow? |
13261 | Before that?" |
13261 | Believe what? |
13261 | But I was wondering-- would it be better or not to tell Arthur the truth? |
13261 | But after a pause he said:"Could you give me the-- lady''s name, by any chance? |
13261 | But if I succeed--""Then?" |
13261 | But the voice which had accused her said,"If he knew, would he say he loves you?" |
13261 | But what chance have I had? |
13261 | But what-- what? |
13261 | But why am I of course going to fall in love with her?" |
13261 | But you never can tell, can you?" |
13261 | But-- Oh, Lord, who would understand such an idiocy? |
13261 | But-- am I as cold as you say? |
13261 | Ca n''t we sit down for a little chat? |
13261 | Ca n''t you see what it means to me? |
13261 | Can I not have my poor little hour of pretence? |
13261 | Can you realize,"he cried--"can you even begin to think what a great joy it is to me to know at last that you have had no part in all this? |
13261 | Can you think of a name?" |
13261 | Coira, can you love a jilted man? |
13261 | Coira, do you think I might be kissed before I go to sleep?" |
13261 | Could I just see him for a moment?" |
13261 | Could he have lost his head, rushed across the city at once to confront the middle- aged villain, and then-- disappeared from human ken? |
13261 | Could you come for him or send for him to- morrow-- toward noon?" |
13261 | Could you get him on the bed here?" |
13261 | D''you know what I''d do? |
13261 | D''you think I''m a fool? |
13261 | D''you think I''m a kid? |
13261 | D''you think you could let me in?" |
13261 | D''you think you could take me in?" |
13261 | Detective work?" |
13261 | Did he say anything to you about going anywhere in particular the next day-- yesterday? |
13261 | Did he tell you? |
13261 | Did n''t he tell you or write to you what he had discovered, and so set you upon the right track? |
13261 | Did n''t you know I''d understand?" |
13261 | Did n''t you know that? |
13261 | Did the young fool think he was being paid for his efforts? |
13261 | Did you by any chance recognize the other?" |
13261 | Did you notice the little Show medallions with the swastika? |
13261 | Did you think I stumbled in here by accident? |
13261 | Do I seem very ungenerous and wrapped up in my own side of the thing? |
13261 | Do n''t you see that? |
13261 | Do they?" |
13261 | Do you happen to remember Olga Nilssen?" |
13261 | Do you know anything about him?" |
13261 | Do you know what would occur if your father should take a serious turn for the worse to- night-- or at any time? |
13261 | Do you know where he sleeps? |
13261 | Do you mean that you did n''t know it before? |
13261 | Do you mean to tell me that?" |
13261 | Do you remember this lady?" |
13261 | Do you think I might be allowed to stagger about the garden for an hour, or sit there under one of the trees? |
13261 | Do you understand at all?" |
13261 | Do you want anything to eat? |
13261 | Do you want to read it?" |
13261 | Do you wonder that I want to have her free of it all, married and safe and comfortable and in peace? |
13261 | Do you? |
13261 | Do you? |
13261 | Do you? |
13261 | Ducrot?" |
13261 | Eh, what? |
13261 | Eh?" |
13261 | For love of whom?" |
13261 | For my father''s sake, will you listen to me for five minutes?" |
13261 | For was it at all likely that he could succeed in what he had undertaken? |
13261 | Fourteen hours, and at the end of them-- what? |
13261 | Good Lord, you do n''t think he''s funked it, do you? |
13261 | Grateful? |
13261 | Hang it, man, d''you understand? |
13261 | Hartley searched in his pockets, and while he did so the man beneath asked:"Is old David Stewart alive?" |
13261 | Has any of it stuck to her? |
13261 | Has he given me his honor, too? |
13261 | Has he given-- his honor, also-- when everything else was-- gone? |
13261 | Has it cheapened her in any littlest way? |
13261 | Have I the right, I wonder, to give it all up?" |
13261 | Have you any money in your pockets? |
13261 | Have you any more islands for me?" |
13261 | Have you ever fallen in love?" |
13261 | Have you ever heard anything about me which would give you the right to suspect me of any dishonesty of any sort? |
13261 | Have you?" |
13261 | Have you?" |
13261 | He asked:"Is it fair to inquire how long I may expect to be confined here? |
13261 | He came to your party last night, did n''t he? |
13261 | He could have laughed at it in scornful anger, and yet-- What else was she? |
13261 | He cried out:"If I should go back there-- mind you, I say''if''--d''you know what they''d do? |
13261 | He fell into step beside her, and as they ran he said,"You''re going with him? |
13261 | He has n''t tried to walk into the city?" |
13261 | He heard him say:"What''s up in that tree? |
13261 | He looked Olga Nilssen full in the eyes, saying:"It is safe to leave you here with him while I call the servant? |
13261 | He looks rather an ascetic-- rather donnish, do n''t you think? |
13261 | He looks the part, does n''t he?" |
13261 | He might be anywhere for a single day, might he not? |
13261 | He might suspect Stewart of complicity in this new disappearance, but how was he to find out anything definite? |
13261 | He said, gazing up at her:"Is it-- another dream?" |
13261 | He said, standing, to say it more easily:"You know why I came here to- day? |
13261 | He said,"Would you mind waiting a moment?" |
13261 | He said:"And now that you-- imagine yourself to know so very much, what do you expect to do about it?" |
13261 | He said:"Does the young idiot want to rouse the whole place? |
13261 | He said:"Who is there? |
13261 | He said:"You refuse to join forces with us, then? |
13261 | He wo n''t have done that-- for safety?" |
13261 | He wo n''t have left written word behind him, eh? |
13261 | He would come again on the next morning, and then he would begin to be alarmed and would start a second search-- but with what to reckon by? |
13261 | He''s a good old chap, though, is n''t he? |
13261 | He''s rather handsome, is n''t he?" |
13261 | He-- you must know that he went away very angry, after a quarrel with his grandfather? |
13261 | Hein? |
13261 | Hein?" |
13261 | Hein?" |
13261 | How about his friends, when he does n''t turn up to- night? |
13261 | How are we to get back over the wall?" |
13261 | How badly was he hurt?" |
13261 | How can I prevent you? |
13261 | How could I know?" |
13261 | How dare you frighten me so?" |
13261 | How did that happen?" |
13261 | How does one cherish people?" |
13261 | How is he managing to live if your theory is correct-- that he is staying away of his own accord? |
13261 | How many nationalities should you say there are in this room now?" |
13261 | How much did Olga Nilssen know? |
13261 | How old are you by- the- way? |
13261 | How was an ill and tired and wicked old man to fight against these? |
13261 | How was any one to do so? |
13261 | How''s the head?" |
13261 | I asked you, but-- can''t you see? |
13261 | I believe he is to lead you to the place where food is, is n''t he?" |
13261 | I can not, can I? |
13261 | I did bungle it, did n''t I? |
13261 | I do n''t want to seem critical, but is n''t your figure somewhat ill chosen?" |
13261 | I hesitate because I do n''t like people who presume too much upon a short acquaintance-- and our acquaintance has been very, very short, has n''t it? |
13261 | I may call it a game? |
13261 | I ought to know that well enough, ought n''t I?" |
13261 | I sleep like the good dead-- under the trees, not too near the lilacs, eh? |
13261 | I suppose I should n''t find Olga Nilssen there?" |
13261 | I suppose you have no clews to spare? |
13261 | I wonder what''s wrong with him?" |
13261 | I wonder where he is-- Captain Stewart?" |
13261 | I wonder why it is? |
13261 | I wonder? |
13261 | If he were accidentally killed there would be a record of that, too; and, of course, you are having all such records constantly searched?" |
13261 | If you do n''t mind my saying so, sir-- I do n''t want to seem rude-- your trained detectives do not seem to accomplish much in two months, do they?" |
13261 | In the first place, what did the boy mean by"dirty work"? |
13261 | Is Arthur Benham in the house on the Clamart road?" |
13261 | Is it impossible, Mademoiselle?" |
13261 | Is it possible that Stewart has lied to you all-- to one as to another? |
13261 | Is n''t there something odd connected with the family? |
13261 | Is that agreed to? |
13261 | Is that all?" |
13261 | Is that possible?" |
13261 | Is that the word? |
13261 | Is that understood?" |
13261 | Is there not some way-- are there hot some terms under which we could meet without embarrassment? |
13261 | It''s like the garden of the Hesperides, is n''t it?" |
13261 | It''s you?" |
13261 | Madame your mother is well, I hope-- and the bear?" |
13261 | Marie and marry him, are you?" |
13261 | Marie de Mont Perdu?" |
13261 | Marie de Mont- Perdu? |
13261 | Marie has disappeared? |
13261 | Marie in here married a Spanish lady, did n''t he?" |
13261 | Marie is taking a little holiday, do you? |
13261 | Marie with you?" |
13261 | Marie''? |
13261 | Marie, did you undertake this quest-- this search for Arthur Benham? |
13261 | Marie, do you think-- my father-- knew?" |
13261 | Marie, have you?--and finding that he has great charm?" |
13261 | Marie, was it, after all, you? |
13261 | Marie,"she demanded, very soberly,"when they ask you if I-- if Arthur should be allowed to-- come back to me?" |
13261 | Marie,"she said,"why did you never fall in love with me, as the other men did?" |
13261 | Marie,"the individual on the bench across the street?" |
13261 | Marie,"will you promise me something?" |
13261 | Marie-- I mean about Arthur Benham? |
13261 | Marie-- what she is like and-- and how she lives-- and things like that?" |
13261 | Marie--"not the sort of young man to do anything desperate-- make away with himself?" |
13261 | Marie? |
13261 | Marie? |
13261 | Marie? |
13261 | Marie? |
13261 | Marie? |
13261 | Marie? |
13261 | Marie?" |
13261 | Marie?" |
13261 | Marie?" |
13261 | Marie?" |
13261 | Marie?" |
13261 | Marie?" |
13261 | Maries, that you must be forever leading forlorn hopes? |
13261 | May I sit down?" |
13261 | May I?" |
13261 | Mischief of some kind-- bien entendu-- but what?" |
13261 | Must she not shrink from him when she knew? |
13261 | Must we forever glare at each other and pass by warily, just because we-- well, hold different views about-- something?" |
13261 | Must we go on always and never know? |
13261 | Of course, I could n''t do that quite literally, now, could I? |
13261 | Of what use to him is she?" |
13261 | Oh, can nothing be done?" |
13261 | Oh, how about Stewart?" |
13261 | Oh,"she said,"why could I not have died when I was a little child? |
13261 | Or,"said the elderly Belgian, laughing gently--"or perhaps the other thing might do it best-- the more obvious thing?" |
13261 | Ought one to think of nothing but love when one is settling one''s life forever? |
13261 | Out of what misery did they call-- and for what? |
13261 | Over him their eyes met and they questioned each other with a mute and anxious gravity:"What will he do?" |
13261 | Perhaps to- morrow-- you do n''t mind?" |
13261 | Richard, do you believe that my uncle has hidden poor Arthur away somewhere or-- worse than that? |
13261 | Sacred name of a pig, why do you sit there? |
13261 | Shall I have nothing at all?" |
13261 | Shall I leave the books here?" |
13261 | Shall we ever have news of him, I wonder? |
13261 | Shall we ever see him again? |
13261 | Shall we get out, and walk across the bridge and up the Champs- Elysées? |
13261 | She asked the admirable Peters, who opened to her,"Is he awake?" |
13261 | She might have held up her head among the greatest, this adventurer''s girl; but what chance had she had? |
13261 | She said,"Oh, why should I lie to you?" |
13261 | She said:"Why are you wasting your time among these canaille? |
13261 | She thought he had seen something from the window which had wrung that exclamation from him, and she asked:"What is it?" |
13261 | She tried to speak, and he heard a whisper:"Why? |
13261 | The boy wondered about that, too, but abruptly he cried out:"What''s up? |
13261 | The girl''s raised eyebrows questioned him, and when he did not answer, she said:"What thing, then?" |
13261 | The man came to you-- sought you out to tell his story, did n''t he? |
13261 | The situation is rather paralyzing to endeavor, is n''t it?" |
13261 | The tempter said:"My good Michel, would you care to receive this trifling sum-- a hundred francs?" |
13261 | Then he gave a shout of laughter, demanding:"Well, what of it? |
13261 | There is a cabstand near you?" |
13261 | There''ll be no more--?" |
13261 | There''s no news?" |
13261 | They have found no trace?" |
13261 | They never do use a Monsieur or anything, do they? |
13261 | This must be the first time you two have met, is it not? |
13261 | To what pitiful shreds might it not be rent while he who only could renew it was away? |
13261 | To- night?" |
13261 | Twenty- two? |
13261 | Waiting for what? |
13261 | Was it true that one man''s joy must inevitably be another''s pain? |
13261 | Was it you who brought Arthur to us?" |
13261 | Was n''t it Richard who first began to suspect my uncle? |
13261 | Was not the inference plain enough-- sufficiently reasonable? |
13261 | Well? |
13261 | Were you going to speak?" |
13261 | What absurdities could not such a man as Captain Stewart instil into the already prejudiced mind of that foolish lad? |
13261 | What are you going to do to me?" |
13261 | What are you looking at me like that for? |
13261 | What are you looking so solemn about, though? |
13261 | What are you to him?" |
13261 | What but one thing can she possibly think? |
13261 | What can be done?" |
13261 | What can she have seen in him? |
13261 | What can we do, Richard? |
13261 | What can we do?" |
13261 | What could you do that they have n''t done?" |
13261 | What did she know of old David Stewart or of the Benham family? |
13261 | What did you talk about to- day?" |
13261 | What difficulty or trouble could happen to me? |
13261 | What do you know about gods and stars? |
13261 | What do you know of the sort of life I have led-- we have led together, my father and I? |
13261 | What do you mean by that?" |
13261 | What do you mean-- vanished? |
13261 | What do you think?" |
13261 | What do you think?" |
13261 | What do you want?" |
13261 | What does a foolish word like grateful mean? |
13261 | What does he know?" |
13261 | What else?" |
13261 | What has happened to them?" |
13261 | What invisible nets for his feet? |
13261 | What is it?" |
13261 | What is the matter with my head? |
13261 | What is the matter with my head? |
13261 | What is the thing I can not quite recall? |
13261 | What kind do you want?" |
13261 | What merest ghost of a chance? |
13261 | What might it not work with the new thing that had come? |
13261 | What motive could the man have for harming my brother?" |
13261 | What other matters?" |
13261 | What plans were they perfecting among them? |
13261 | What possible chance would you have of success? |
13261 | What possible thing could they make him think other than the plain truth? |
13261 | What struck you so suddenly?" |
13261 | What the devil you looking like that for?" |
13261 | What then?" |
13261 | What was it I had in mind to ask you about? |
13261 | What was it they suffered? |
13261 | What will she think of me? |
13261 | What would she think of him, who had sworn to be true knight to her, if she could know how he had bungled and failed? |
13261 | What would you? |
13261 | What would you? |
13261 | What would you? |
13261 | What would you? |
13261 | What''s he idling about here for? |
13261 | What''s the matter with my head? |
13261 | What, in Heaven''s name,_ did_ you think?" |
13261 | What-- May I ask what sort of an idea?" |
13261 | What? |
13261 | What?" |
13261 | When did he vanish?" |
13261 | When shall we come to get you out-- you and the boy? |
13261 | Where are you going?" |
13261 | Where can he be to- night, I wonder? |
13261 | Where have you been, and who were there?" |
13261 | Where is Captain Stewart? |
13261 | Where is he? |
13261 | Where is it?" |
13261 | Where was it? |
13261 | Where was that splendid frenzy that had been wo nt to sweep him all in an instant into upper air-- set his feet upon the stars? |
13261 | Where, then, the fine, pure fervor that should, at thought of her, whirl him on high and make a god of him? |
13261 | Who do you mean by''we''?" |
13261 | Who is it?" |
13261 | Who is it?" |
13261 | Who is ringing, please?" |
13261 | Who is the Spanish- looking man with him, I wonder? |
13261 | Who is the desiccated gentleman bearing down upon us?" |
13261 | Who knows? |
13261 | Who knows? |
13261 | Who knows? |
13261 | Who knows?" |
13261 | Who knows?" |
13261 | Who knows?" |
13261 | Who knows?" |
13261 | Who wants to see me? |
13261 | Who were there?" |
13261 | Who''d have thought it?" |
13261 | Who''s there? |
13261 | Why afraid?" |
13261 | Why ca n''t I have my little sweet hour?" |
13261 | Why ca n''t he come quietly?" |
13261 | Why could I not have done that? |
13261 | Why could n''t he have keen killed?" |
13261 | Why could n''t he have slipped up behind this fellow and knocked him on the head, instead of shooting him from ten paces away? |
13261 | Why did Arthur Benham leave his home two months ago?" |
13261 | Why did n''t I think of it before?" |
13261 | Why did n''t that shambling idiot kill him?" |
13261 | Why did you ask that?" |
13261 | Why did you come?" |
13261 | Why do you ask me that? |
13261 | Why ill chosen?" |
13261 | Why is n''t he in Parliament, where he belongs?" |
13261 | Why not you and your partner-- or shall I say assistant?" |
13261 | Why should I hesitate? |
13261 | Why was I ever born? |
13261 | Why, what should I do? |
13261 | Why? |
13261 | Why? |
13261 | Why? |
13261 | Why?" |
13261 | Will he believe you? |
13261 | Will that be all right?" |
13261 | Will you believe me? |
13261 | Will you do that?" |
13261 | Will you grant me your pardon for that? |
13261 | Will you sit down for a little while? |
13261 | Will you sit up and have the tray on your knees?" |
13261 | Will you tell him I said that? |
13261 | Will you tell him a little lie for me, Richard? |
13261 | Would he be able to stand against them? |
13261 | Would she ever understand? |
13261 | Would you have me marry one of them-- one of those men? |
13261 | Yes? |
13261 | Yes? |
13261 | Yes?" |
13261 | Yes?" |
13261 | You do n''t suppose that the lady could account for him?" |
13261 | You enchant us all, somehow, do n''t you? |
13261 | You knew it before, though, did n''t you? |
13261 | You know him, then? |
13261 | You looked at him just now through the crack of the door; do you know who he is? |
13261 | You never can tell about people, can you? |
13261 | You were n''t committing any crime, were you? |
13261 | You will hardly presume, I take it, to question your sister''s motive in wanting you to return home? |
13261 | You''d try to make me turn on old Charlie, would you? |
13261 | You''re coming with us?" |
13261 | You''ve been having a fine, low- comedy time laughing yourselves to death at me, have n''t you? |
13261 | You''ve been making sure of the reward down- stairs, I dare say? |
13261 | You-- oh, you did n''t speak to him, you say? |
13261 | _ You_?" |
13261 | a little more of that, and-- who knows? |
13261 | he cried, in a lower tone,"how about this fellow''s friends? |
13261 | he said, aloud, and Michel queried:"Comment, Monsieur?" |
13261 | he said, in a whisper,"if-- old Charlie is rotten, who in this world is n''t? |
13261 | outside?... |
13261 | she cried,"shall we ever have my brother back? |
13261 | she cried--"that, too?" |
29277 | And have you seen it? |
29277 | And pray how has the Church dealt with the war? |
29277 | And why is he dead,said the mother to me,"and where is he?" |
29277 | Better? |
29277 | But do you know what I did? |
29277 | Can it be lawful to handle the sword,asked Tertullian,"when the Lord Himself has declared that he who uses the sword shall perish by it?" |
29277 | Can you deny,she asks,"that nothing exists for you but that which you allow to enter your mind?" |
29277 | Can you tell me,said a charming but agitated old lady from Bath one day,"of a hotel where there are no foreigners?" |
29277 | Did you grasp what I said? |
29277 | Do you believe you have a brain? |
29277 | How can people be so blind? |
29277 | I mean, do you believe there is real progress-- that we are better than we used to be? |
29277 | Lor a bun, ma pettit fille, eh? |
29277 | What is the good of all your struggle and your agitation? |
29277 | A confused series of faces flash through my mind-- Abraham, Tolstoy, Jesus Christ? |
29277 | And what is the British Empire? |
29277 | And, if not, is it not time we found other guardians and promoters of high conduct? |
29277 | Are nations made by war and conquest? |
29277 | Are peoples amalgamated by oppressive legislation? |
29277 | Are we not all goats before the gaze of more finely organized creatures? |
29277 | But is it done? |
29277 | But is it true? |
29277 | Can anything be more soul- satisfying than a community of those who think alike, who feel alike, and who work for the same end? |
29277 | Can anything be more sweeping? |
29277 | Can anything be more untrue? |
29277 | Did kind Fates design it as a guarantee of peace and stability? |
29277 | Do not the civilizations of the past with their perfection of knowledge and art mock our faith in the permanency of human achievement? |
29277 | Do political alliances between States create international unities? |
29277 | Does he feel and remember? |
29277 | Does he know? |
29277 | Education-- can any one deny the overwhelming need of proper concentration on its possibilities? |
29277 | Have I the right to believe that the landscape was designed for him-- the cretin, and the irony for me-- the chance visitor?" |
29277 | Have they had, or used, a particle of moral influence throughout the whole bloody business? |
29277 | Here I must check myself: what does"educated"mean? |
29277 | His ways may be crotchety and his temper irritable-- what does it matter so long as he is carrying out his appointed task in the cosmic order? |
29277 | How could it be otherwise? |
29277 | How do you respect life and the teaching of Jesus Christ? |
29277 | I again quote Mr. McCabe: What did the clergy do to prevent the conflict? |
29277 | If these things are possible, we are told, why not here, now, anywhere, in broad daylight? |
29277 | In which country did they denounce the preparations for the conflict, or the incentives of the conflict? |
29277 | Is any one great outside Germany? |
29277 | Is any one so dense as not to perceive the all- pervading importance of the guidance we give to the young?" |
29277 | Is it, then, all a matter of change and recurrence? |
29277 | Is life then really still worth living? |
29277 | Is the human soul more remote and inscrutable? |
29277 | Is there an eternal gulf of silence between us?" |
29277 | Love, marriage, procreation, can not these be purged from the base and degrading obsessions of sex? |
29277 | Supposing all humanity could be withdrawn, every precious brand snatched from the burning and the whole made into a vast monastery? |
29277 | Surely this is better than the strife and the sordid cares of the camp; surely one may walk apart and enjoy the fruits of tranquillity? |
29277 | The war has made it paramount, and only second in importance to the crucial query: Do they live? |
29277 | This explains why, Churches and missionary effort notwithstanding, we have always savages, cannibals, and barbarians( and Prussian militarists?) |
29277 | To be able to read and write, and say"Hear, hear"at public meetings? |
29277 | To have a pretty idea of the positions of Huxley and Haeckel by which to confound the poor old Bible? |
29277 | Was not France invigorated by the wild Northmen who overran her territories and settled wherever they found settlement advantageous? |
29277 | We do not want Leslie Stephen''s reminder of metaphysical riddles,"Where does Mont Blanc end and where do I begin?" |
29277 | Were we, then, really so bad that"this visitation"was needed to save us from voluntary sterility( by imposing compulsory?) |
29277 | What could be the significance of this mysterious contrast? |
29277 | What guarantee is there that his voice would not be drowned in the general clamour of the truth- mongers of the marketplace? |
29277 | What have they done since it began to confine the conflict within civilized limits? |
29277 | What have they done to prevent the conflict? |
29277 | What is a crank? |
29277 | What is the exact relation of religion to civilization? |
29277 | What was the sense of this irony in a solitude? |
29277 | What, then, is this mysterious power which seems to master the Old World, whilst it is mastered by the New World? |
29277 | Who can deny that nations have been made by conquest? |
29277 | Who can deny that reformers are more interesting than preservers? |
29277 | Who says God must only be worshipped in creeds and churches? |
29277 | Who says we are prisoners of darkness? |
29277 | Who says we are puppets of the devil? |
29277 | Why do they climb? |
29277 | Why have their intellectual giants failed to impress upon mankind the folly of war? |
29277 | Why mystifying circles, cabinets, and subdued light? |
29277 | Why should a new world- teacher be more successful? |
29277 | and the other delinquencies enumerated by the Dean? |
29277 | net._ What is the true Shaw? |
29277 | rude, bare, and high, Ghastly, and scarred, and riven.--Is this the scene Where the old Earthquake- dæmon taught her young Ruin? |
26405 | A year at Muldoon''s would n''t bring me back the thoughtless joy of a hockey game, would it? 26405 Are you looking for trouble?" |
26405 | Boy,we heard him say, in a deep, tragic voice,"can you swim?" |
26405 | But did the peppermints really make great grandmamma beautiful? |
26405 | But how do they get back? |
26405 | But the music? |
26405 | Clarkie,he said,"you were always up on such things-- is it rats or warts that you write a note to when you want''em to go away?" |
26405 | Could the ashes have been preserved if Madeline had not given the matter her personal attention, but had trusted to a housemaid? |
26405 | Could you spin a top now? |
26405 | Decided to try again, eh? |
26405 | Did n''t I tell you under no consideration to take away any of my ashes? |
26405 | Did we use to wander aimlessly round that way? |
26405 | Do n''t they know how, even out here? |
26405 | Do n''t you remember being made to soak your feet in a tub on the back porch before going to bed, and going fast asleep in the process? |
26405 | Do n''t you remember the fun of stoning those gray hornets''nests which used to be built under the school- house eaves in summer? 26405 Do n''t you remember?" |
26405 | Do you remember,said I,"how we passed it last year, and found the woods all cut and the water drained off?" |
26405 | Do? |
26405 | Ever play duck- on- the- rock? |
26405 | Gracious,said I,"are you going to give up War forever, too?" |
26405 | How many times have you gone home barefoot, with your stockings and your undershirt, in a wet knot, tied to your fish- pole? |
26405 | How shall I array my love? |
26405 | I suppose you think I''ve forgotten how I always licked you at stick- knife? |
26405 | I was n''t looking, where''d it go? |
26405 | I wonder where they are now? |
26405 | I wonder,said I,"if I could still skin the cat?" |
26405 | I wonder,said Old Hundred, as we moved out of the station,"whether we''d better go to Young''s or the Parker House?" |
26405 | If they do n''t know how, we''ll teach''em, eh Rube? 26405 Is that why you eat peppermints?" |
26405 | Just what are you getting at? |
26405 | Relievo-- relievo? |
26405 | Remember that? 26405 Remember the marble rakes we used to make? |
26405 | Remember the new boy? 26405 Shall you ever forget Emily Ruggles''s? |
26405 | We ai n''t afraid, are we Bill? |
26405 | Wha-- what do you do first? |
26405 | Whar be ye now, Noo York? 26405 What do you say to the club for dinner?" |
26405 | What was it, then? |
26405 | What? |
26405 | What_ was_ relievo, by the way? |
26405 | Where in blazes is all that steam which woke me up at daylight? |
26405 | Where''s the swimming hole now? |
26405 | Who''s a liar? |
26405 | Why does a bee have such a fascination for a boy? 26405 Why not set the whole court to playing squat- tag?" |
26405 | Why that was a game we played mostly on the ice, up on Birch Meadow, do n''t you remember? 26405 Yes, it''s rats, is n''t it?" |
26405 | Yes, yes,said we,"but is it warts or rats?" |
26405 | Your new book,she begins, as if she had been waiting all day to ask that question,"--what is it going to be about? |
26405 | ( By the way, was ever a man so brave as to say the cut_ was n''t_ all right, when the barber held that hand- glass behind his head? |
26405 | ( Do any boys have their heads clean- clipped in summer any more?) |
26405 | ("Is it Hen Flint, that used to drive the meat wagon with the white top?" |
26405 | ("Know him?" |
26405 | A precious lot of reminiscences we''d have to- day, would n''t we? |
26405 | And each time his greeting has been the same:--"Have you got rid of that hook yet?" |
26405 | And what would he reply? |
26405 | And what would the barber say if he did?) |
26405 | And why can not I hear at least a simple little song in the melody that my one finger plays? |
26405 | As she finally finished, and pushed in her silly little drawer, I said:"Do you call that thing a button box? |
26405 | But do you say that the original bird is not like that at all, that he is the most stupid of fellows? |
26405 | But how can I ever forget the two lines of"grape- vine"at the very bottom which filled out an otherwise vacant quarter inch? |
26405 | But if you do not like cats and snowstorms, why then you will not like me, and we need n''t bore each other, need we? |
26405 | But need one go to Europe to demonstrate the principle? |
26405 | But who has the price? |
26405 | Can I hold them till they are set down? |
26405 | Can it be that the present revival of poetry is due to the passing of the memory- gem book? |
26405 | Come back to look over the old place, eh? |
26405 | Could good come out of Nazareth, after all? |
26405 | D''you know what I''m going to do to- morrow, though? |
26405 | Did our regretful poet dream at twenty- one of being the perfect lover? |
26405 | Do n''t you remember the story of how she paid for a substitute in the Civil War, because she could n''t go to the front and fight herself? |
26405 | Do you know, I wonder, the derivation of this word? |
26405 | Do you object to that in an American city? |
26405 | Do you remember Miss Campbell? |
26405 | Do you remember the sundial over which Dolly and Mr. Carter philandered, the one which bore the motto-- Horas non numero nisi serenas? |
26405 | Do you remember the sundial, exactly at stage centre, in the latter play? |
26405 | Do you still hesitate to turn over in bed?" |
26405 | Do you? |
26405 | Doubtless the new circulation is n''t more than a million,--and what is a mere million nowadays? |
26405 | Flint?" |
26405 | For Heaven''s sake, ca n''t you have a pleasant afternoon thinking of your boyhood without becoming maudlin?" |
26405 | Had not a maiden aunt of mine, after many trips to the library of the New England Genealogical Society, traced back our line to William the Conqueror? |
26405 | Have not these lines a magic simplicity? |
26405 | Have you ever seen it on a foggy day going up out of sight into the driving vapors? |
26405 | Have you seen it, too, down Madison Avenue in the mysterious twilight hour of blue and gold when all New York is beautiful? |
26405 | He, too, has become a name in the mouths of thousands-- as a mouth wash. And how about the only daughter of the Prophet? |
26405 | Her bow( or was it her stern?) |
26405 | How else can we account for the success of Mr. Belasco? |
26405 | How is that for a neck- and- neck finish at the tape? |
26405 | I mean the one that wore the derby which we used to push down over his eyes? |
26405 | I tried to picture her asking_ him_, as he entered her shop,"Which side, old man?" |
26405 | I wonder what I should have thought had I known its author was a Methodist? |
26405 | I wonder what ever became of old Goodknocker?" |
26405 | I wonder where we got that superstition that it brought bad luck? |
26405 | I wonder why we always fought in the holy horse- sheds? |
26405 | If one had to be remembered by a dog, what better dog could he select, save possibly an Airedale? |
26405 | If, on a very clear day, the cloud should dry up what, I speculated, would the angels walk on? |
26405 | Is it a picture of Pope and Dryden sitting in a London coffee- house? |
26405 | Is it a picture of the lady or her period? |
26405 | Is it because he makes honey?" |
26405 | Is it not, perhaps, this fact which has caused so many artists, consciously or unconsciously, to believe in"inspiration"? |
26405 | Is there really any loss of sharpness in the imagery here because of the rhyme and metre? |
26405 | Must we be forever told that this is not a spire in praise of God but a monument in praise of Mammon? |
26405 | Or are we stretching the poet''s ambitions to be known as a poet? |
26405 | Perhaps you do n''t know what"grape- vine"is? |
26405 | Remember how there was always a spelling match Friday afternoons? |
26405 | Remember how we used to play follow- your- leader by the hour? |
26405 | Remember the day I got the rabbit down there on the edge of the swamp? |
26405 | Remember the sign you painted to that effect? |
26405 | Remember the''comics''? |
26405 | Remember when she caught us with the pail of water?" |
26405 | Remember?" |
26405 | Shall I blow it up and"bust"it? |
26405 | Shall we grown- ups never learn that their minds do n''t work as ours do, and what may be poetry for some of us is cod- liver oil for them? |
26405 | That elderly man who hobbles goutily out of his club and walks a few short blocks to his house on Murray Hill,"for exercise"? |
26405 | That fifteen- dollar- a- week chorus- girl in a cab, half buried under a two- thousand- dollar chinchilla coat? |
26405 | That stout woman riding by in her limousine, with a Pomeranian on her lap instead of a baby? |
26405 | Then he leaned forward, poking the fire meditatively, and added:"Steam heat in Madeline''s chamber? |
26405 | Want to learn, boys?" |
26405 | Was Miss Emily so terrible a person, I wonder now? |
26405 | Was he the cook, or the man cooked for? |
26405 | Was it Lord Brougham, too? |
26405 | Was it a thorn that touched the flesh? |
26405 | Was n''t it Oscar Wilde who said that there is only one thing more tragic than failure-- success? |
26405 | Was there another boy or girl in the school who had descended from William the Conqueror? |
26405 | What does it matter if he scruffs his approach? |
26405 | What does it matter if he takes three putts? |
26405 | What is_ Tosca_ compared to this? |
26405 | What kept the furnaces in position? |
26405 | What shall I do?" |
26405 | What was it we used to sing about her? |
26405 | What was she? |
26405 | What was their courtship, their marriage? |
26405 | Who that saw it, however, can forget that final picture? |
26405 | Who was King, for instance? |
26405 | Who was Lord Raglan, or was he a lord? |
26405 | Who was Mr. Baldwin? |
26405 | Who was Mr. Mackintosh? |
26405 | Why do n''t you have a real one?" |
26405 | Will they show frozen, flabby, withered leaves, or will their centers be bright with new promise? |
26405 | Wo n''t you tell me just a bit of what you said?" |
26405 | Would she dare, I wondered? |
26405 | Yet actually what was he? |
26405 | You were the bareback, as I recall it-- or was it Fatty Newell? |
26405 | [ Illustration]_ The Button Box_"Have you,"said I,"anything like the ones left?" |
26405 | or did The poke- berry spit purple on my hand? |
26405 | when will she come who made the hills so fair? |
26405 | when will the light of the darkened house return? |
29921 | ''And where shall I find the Deathless Land?'' |
29921 | ''But what is to the south of the earth?'' |
29921 | ''Doth not Rosemary and Romeo both begin with a letter?'' |
29921 | An indispensable instrument, one may say; for was ever a magician depicted in book, in picture, or in the mind''s eye, without a wand? |
29921 | And how does he come to exercise such a fascination over all mariners, even unto this day? |
29921 | And then, how do we know that words had the same meaning to the ancients as they have to us? |
29921 | And who was Davy Jones? |
29921 | And, further, how is it that we find the same myth, with slight alterations, in various parts of the world, but with totally different names? |
29921 | Are they, in short, surviving relics, or were they germs? |
29921 | But did he bring it? |
29921 | But does any exist between the moon and the brain? |
29921 | But how did the lily become the badge of France? |
29921 | But how did the name come from Arabia, and what is the connection between Pliny''s theory and the legend, of St. Patrick''s victory over the vermin? |
29921 | But how did the phrase originate? |
29921 | But how did the thistle become the emblem of Scotland? |
29921 | But how does this theory square with the story of Linnæus, told by a writer in_ The Gentleman''s Magazine_ in 1752? |
29921 | But how, then, did the vagabond users of''flash''language get hold of this word? |
29921 | But the centre of the world, in an actual, physical, racial, and mundanely comprehensive sense-- where is it? |
29921 | But what of the''locker''? |
29921 | But whence came this vision? |
29921 | But who and what is he? |
29921 | But who was he? |
29921 | Did not these circles, it was argued, appear in the course of a single night? |
29921 | From Bantry Bay to Ballyack, When you fell down and broke your back? |
29921 | Had this belief, one may wonder, anything to do with the special effect on the eye always supposed to be possessed by rue? |
29921 | Have the Pygmies made you drunken, Bathing in mandragora, Your divine pale lips that shiver Like the lotus in the river?'' |
29921 | Hence, no doubt, its origin in Gay''s riddle:''What flower is that which royal honour craves, Adjoins the Virgin, and''tis strewn on graves?'' |
29921 | How can they be all right? |
29921 | How often times stayed she her chariot when she saw any simple body offer to speak to her Grace? |
29921 | How, then, could Sir John Hawkins bring it from Santa- Fé in 1565, or Sir Walter Raleigh from Virginia in 1584? |
29921 | If this be so, then what was the''moly''given to Odysseus by Hermes wherewith to counteract the charms of Circe? |
29921 | Is there any connection between the old central hearthstone and the Dillestein-- Lid of Hell-- one meets with in Grimm? |
29921 | Looking up, she said:''Why can not you come down and let my child have a bit of you?'' |
29921 | May not a similar motive have originated the Greek practices? |
29921 | May not this hare of the Indian mythology be the moon- dog of some of our own legends? |
29921 | Mr. Hussin holds this view, but is not the story of the Cat and the Well capable of the same kind of reading? |
29921 | That the lily should symbolize purity seems appropriate enough, but why should parsley in olden times have been associated with death? |
29921 | The answer is''Onion,''and the speculation which results is: Why does a raw onion make the eyes water? |
29921 | The same idea is reflected in Mrs. Browning''s Dead Pan:''In what revels are ye sunken In old Ethiopia? |
29921 | They heard her voice calling to them, and they looked, crying:''"Oh, who are you, after all? |
29921 | This is all very well as to past events, but what shall we say to a case such as the following, among Miss Goodrich''s experiments? |
29921 | W. J.,''in The Book of Days? |
29921 | Was it a totally different plant, or was it merely the same applied on the homoeopathic principle? |
29921 | Was this coincidence, or prevision, or what Mr. Dessoir calls the''falsification of memory''? |
29921 | We have seen that the centre of the world is placed in Europe, in Asia, and in Africa, but who would expect to find it in America many centuries ago? |
29921 | What association has conjured up this picture? |
29921 | What have I done to- day? |
29921 | What is a myth? |
29921 | What, may it be, that even in heavenly place That busy archer his sharp arrow tries? |
29921 | What, then, is the Soma, or Homa, of the Hindu mythology-- the ambrosia of the Indian gods? |
29921 | Where is it? |
29921 | Who was Mother Carey the appearance of whose''chickens''is supposed by the mariner to foretell a coming storm? |
29921 | Who was he? |
29921 | Who, also, was''Uncle Peleg,''of whom a somewhat similarly exhaustive history is chanted? |
29921 | Whose mind is not led astray by the thickly- clustering moonbeams?'' |
29921 | tell me where thou hid''st the smith, Hammer and pinchers, thou unshodd''st them with? |
29921 | what lock or iron engine is''t That can the subtle secret strength resist? |
32319 | Darest thou slay me? |
32319 | What are you doing in my country? |
32319 | Who are you? |
32319 | But Chaska returned with his gun broken by a fall, and after a long silent smoke he said:"Yan hunt in Moose Mountain?" |
32319 | But which way was southeast? |
32319 | Go?" |
32319 | Here was one track; where was the next? |
32319 | One of our wise men has said, the body is the soul made visible; is your spirit then so beautiful-- as beautiful as wise? |
32319 | Was this the end? |
32319 | Was this the real chase? |
32319 | Where were the charms that he had never failed to find until now? |
32319 | Why? |
29893 | Does Heaven plainly declare its Ming? |
29893 | For whom did ye fashion me,she says;"wherefore was I made?" |
29893 | A man ceases to think for himself what is right and good, and only asks, What does the law say? |
29893 | And for what end does he wield this mighty rule? |
29893 | And how indeed is he to be related to the world? |
29893 | And lastly, What is the religion of Egypt? |
29893 | And should it not be the same in religion? |
29893 | Art thou become like unto us?" |
29893 | But can he not worship another god when the first one is out of sight and out of mind? |
29893 | But how could all mankind forget a pure religion? |
29893 | But how did early man regard these great powers before this? |
29893 | But if religion is in this way a public matter, a matter of the tribe and its concerns, what place is there in it for the individual? |
29893 | But it presents the gravest difficulties; for why should the savage make a god of a stick or a stone, and attribute to it supernatural powers? |
29893 | Can the higher nature- deities be accounted for by this theory as well as the minor spirits of the parts of nature? |
29893 | Can this be called religion? |
29893 | Did beast worship spring by a process of degradation from the worship of the high gods? |
29893 | Did he make it, and is he responsible for it? |
29893 | Did he really need to argue out the belief that they had souls, before he felt drawn to wonder at them, and to seek to enter into relations with them? |
29893 | Did the Chinese conceive this ruler as identical with heaven, or as a personality dwelling in it or above it? |
29893 | Did the higher worship then spring by a process of development out of the lower? |
29893 | Did they not appear to him adorable by the very impressions they made upon his various senses? |
29893 | Early Religion and Morality.--How did this early religion bear upon morality? |
29893 | How did it get there? |
29893 | How, by whom, and when were they formed into a nation? |
29893 | In how far was it a power for righteousness? |
29893 | Is it possible to give any description of the religion the Aryans had in common before they developed it in different ways in their various lands? |
29893 | Is it the cross?] |
29893 | Is that because such worship did not flourish in their day? |
29893 | Nirvana.--Our account of the doctrine would appear incomplete if we did not attempt to answer the question, What is Nirvana? |
29893 | Religious faith forbade the thought that such a thing was possible; if Israel was destroyed, where would Israel''s religion be? |
29893 | See Psalms Iceland, 264 decay of old religion of, 272 Idols, none in primitive religion, 73 Arabia, 219, 220 German? |
29893 | The Doctrine.--And what is the message he proclaims? |
29893 | The Homeric Gods.--What, then, is the religion of Homer? |
29893 | The Vedic Gods.--And who are the gods who receive this worship? |
29893 | The great discovery being made, and duly pondered and realised, the question arose, What was to be done with it? |
29893 | Theories Accounting for Animal Worship.--What did this worship mean? |
29893 | This world of change and decay, of disappointment and sorrow, what has the perfect being to do with that? |
29893 | Though he worshipped heaven yesterday, can he not worship the sun to- day, or the storm, or the great sea? |
29893 | Was the legend of Mahavira, then, a sectarian version of the legend of Gautama, did no such person exist, at least as the founder of a religious body? |
29893 | What are the earliest gods of the land, and in what relation do the various gods which were worshipped in it stand to each other? |
29893 | What are these? |
29893 | What is religion morally? |
29893 | What is the motive of worship? |
29893 | What is the relation between the divine laws which are written in the hearts of all men, and human laws which sometimes contradict these older ones? |
29893 | What is the worshipper to do? |
29893 | What then is thought of the present existence of the hero? |
29893 | What was the method which was held to have had such results? |
29893 | When he does tell us of the beginnings of religion, what is his view? |
29893 | When we ask for the common type of working Semitic religion, where are we to look for it? |
29893 | Where, then, was the early home of the undivided Aryan[1] race, from which the swarms first issued which were to conquer and rule the various lands? |
29893 | Who are the Egyptians, and where did they come from? |
29893 | Who told him about a god, that he should call a stick god, or about supernatural powers, that he should suppose a stick to work wonders? |
29893 | Why does a curse cleave to a certain house, evil producing evil from generation to generation? |
29893 | Why is Prometheus, though the noblest benefactor of the human race, doomed to undergo such sufferings? |
29893 | Wonder, no doubt, is always present in it, but what is there in it beyond wonder? |
29893 | Worship in Homer.--The gods being of such a nature, what relations does man keep up with them, and how do they affect his life? |
29893 | and how are we to account for it? |
23752 | ''Am I then to be thy queen?'' 23752 ''And why to me, Ram Lal?'' |
23752 | ''At least,''insisted Lal Lu, whose quick glance had detected the irresolution of the instant preceding,''at least, tell me this: Was it my father?'' 23752 ''Did you see that scratch which the point of your dagger made upon the wrist of the prince?'' |
23752 | ''Everything?'' 23752 ''Is it with thee?'' |
23752 | ''It is a time- honored custom for the suppliant to signalize his appreciation of the importance of the favor he solicits, is it not so?'' 23752 ''May I ask the privilege,''said Ram Lal,''of composing the features and the body of the prince?'' |
23752 | ''My father?'' 23752 ''Of what avail is it to subdue this frail body? |
23752 | ''What do you mean?'' 23752 ''What is that?'' |
23752 | ''What now?'' 23752 ''What, then?'' |
23752 | ''What, then?'' 23752 ''Who gave you this?'' |
23752 | ''Who told thee so?'' 23752 ''Will his highness deign?'' |
23752 | ''Yes?'' 23752 ''You could not?'' |
23752 | ''Your grandfather----''''Is dead?'' |
23752 | Ah, you remember, then? |
23752 | Ah, you remember? |
23752 | An''true, now,asked Dennis with genuine Irish impulse,"an''true, now, were you?" |
23752 | An''was n''t that Raikes a div-- a tight one, I mean? |
23752 | An''what kind of flowers did all this? |
23752 | An''why flowers? |
23752 | An''would you like to hear the rest? |
23752 | And if I do? |
23752 | And now,concluded Raikes,"what have you to say to all this? |
23752 | And that? |
23752 | And those? |
23752 | And what is that? |
23752 | And_ now_ what have you to say? |
23752 | Another brilliant aggravation? |
23752 | Are you any judge of brilliants? |
23752 | But to what does all this lead? |
23752 | But where is your establishment? |
23752 | But why all this again? |
23752 | But,demanded Raikes,"why this substitution of coals? |
23752 | But,interrupted Raikes,"can you get him?" |
23752 | Can I be spared the humiliation of meeting that old dotard you have sent for? |
23752 | Do n''t you think that I am right? |
23752 | Do you know him, then? |
23752 | Do you recall the Dupont mystery? |
23752 | Do you want to hear the rest? |
23752 | For what reason had not double the quantity been removed? 23752 How about to- morrow evening?" |
23752 | How did these pebbles reach this hiding place? 23752 How will Wednesday evening suit?" |
23752 | I am answered,responded his companion,"When can you come?" |
23752 | I guess that''s about all,answered Dennis,"an''it do n''t sound so very much, does it?" |
23752 | I? |
23752 | If that''s the only way? |
23752 | In the meantime,he continued, as he inserted his hand in his waistcoat pocket,"what do you think of this?" |
23752 | Is it necessary? |
23752 | Is n''t it enough? |
23752 | Is that the end? |
23752 | May I ask why? 23752 May I ask,"he ventured after a few inhalations of his vicarious smoke,"may I ask the nature of your business?" |
23752 | May I see them? |
23752 | My business? |
23752 | No? 23752 No?" |
23752 | No? |
23752 | Of the secret service? |
23752 | Of what? |
23752 | Oi do n''t mane that,with less severity at this frank acknowledgment;"but where do yez hail from-- Limerick or Jerusalem?" |
23752 | Oi do,replied the foreman;"an''now that we have inthroduced th''subject, excuse a personal quistion: Do ye wet yure whistle in business hours?" |
23752 | Pebbles for diamonds? |
23752 | Phwat are ye, annyway? |
23752 | Phwat? |
23752 | Rodman? |
23752 | Suppose you return to- morrow, then, directly after breakfast? |
23752 | The Sepoy? |
23752 | The thief? |
23752 | Then,cried Dennis,"you mean that I must leave at once?" |
23752 | Was n''t it? |
23752 | Well,inquired Gratz, when the two were again alone,"what have you to say to me that you do not want Raikes to hear?" |
23752 | Well,inquired this observing woman,"what is it?" |
23752 | Well? |
23752 | Well? |
23752 | Were you ever,he asked, looking directly at Raikes,"in this apartment during the absence of its occupant?" |
23752 | What did you think of the performance? |
23752 | What do you gain by it? |
23752 | What do you think of that? |
23752 | What favor could he grant in proportion to the value of such means of overture? 23752 What is it?" |
23752 | What is it? |
23752 | What is it? |
23752 | What is that? |
23752 | What is that? |
23752 | What news? |
23752 | What standpoint had I? |
23752 | What th''div-- now, what do you think of that? 23752 Where were you?" |
23752 | Where''s Robert? |
23752 | Who are you? 23752 Why do you call him that?" |
23752 | Why do you pause at such a point? 23752 Why else should I make the request?" |
23752 | Why just this exchange of a handful? 23752 Why not?" |
23752 | Why not? |
23752 | Why not? |
23752 | Why not? |
23752 | Why? |
23752 | Will twenty dollars a week and your board satisfy you for the present? |
23752 | Would you mind? |
23752 | Would you object to relating it to me? |
23752 | You are curious, then, to hear the rest? |
23752 | You have attended me, then? 23752 You have heard of Gratz?" |
23752 | You have succeeded, then? |
23752 | You mean he drinks? |
23752 | You want to see me? |
23752 | ''Can this be true?'' |
23752 | ''How far in advance of the detachment are you?'' |
23752 | ''Well, how speeds thy traffic and thrive thy caravans?'' |
23752 | ''What can be worse?'' |
23752 | ''What does this mean?'' |
23752 | ''What of it, O merchant?'' |
23752 | ''Why speak of him now? |
23752 | ''You recall the stone of Sardis?'' |
23752 | *****"Is that all?" |
23752 | 2? |
23752 | Am I right?" |
23752 | And with a scarcely perceptible tightening of her beautiful lips, she said:"''Dost remember thy promise to give me news of him to- day?'' |
23752 | As a measure in this assurance, would not the proprietor feel justified in calling upon the widow for indorsement of the statement of the young man? |
23752 | As the Sepoy pocketed the gem he looked at Raikes with a glance at once searching and derisive as he asked:"Was I not right in calling it a marvel?" |
23752 | But this one from which all specific gravity seemed to have departed-- what did it contain? |
23752 | By what right do you detain me?" |
23752 | Can you trace the blemish?" |
23752 | Could he persuade that cynical- visaged individual to trust him until he received his first week''s pay? |
23752 | Dennis flushed as he replied:"I''ll tell you by- and- by,"and added:"Will you do me a great favor?" |
23752 | Did you ever hear such a tale as that?" |
23752 | Do you know the guilty party?" |
23752 | Do you see any evidences of determination in my face?" |
23752 | Have you a stray glass? |
23752 | His present employment brought him just ten dollars and the association of a barkeeper-- would it satisfy him? |
23752 | His well- known apathy, his exasperating negation of demeanor, where were they now? |
23752 | How could he so easily forget what he had said the day before? |
23752 | However, there is one question more: Can you tell me how that substitution was made?" |
23752 | However,"he added abruptly,"why did you end that extraordinary tale so inconclusively? |
23752 | I hope this is not habitual?" |
23752 | Is it not worthy of a Poe or a Maupassant? |
23752 | Is not my word sufficient?'' |
23752 | Is not the present enough?'' |
23752 | Is the inner compartment closed?" |
23752 | Is there more?'' |
23752 | Listen: Will you do me the favor of assuming that your comprehensive résumé of a few moments ago is all I care to hear on the subject?" |
23752 | Married? |
23752 | May I ask if you have business transactions with him?" |
23752 | May I ask you to be seated?" |
23752 | Muldoon?" |
23752 | Nay, why not all, since it was possible to abstract a portion? |
23752 | Reply, then, to this: Thy wife-- am I to be thy wedded wife?'' |
23752 | Suppose I say next Monday?" |
23752 | Then with an unreflective inspiration:"Did you ever read about Launcelot and Guinevere?" |
23752 | Then, after a moment''s reflection, he inquired:"Am I at liberty to nose around this room?" |
23752 | Then, evidently impressed by something shadowed in the expression of his ill- omened Mercury, he exclaimed:''You have more to tell me?'' |
23752 | There is but one conclusion----""And that?" |
23752 | To whom?'' |
23752 | Under the circumstances, what did a shirt more or less matter? |
23752 | Was he not about to be admitted into paradise and receive twenty dollars per week besides? |
23752 | What do you mean?'' |
23752 | What else?" |
23752 | What is the conclusion?" |
23752 | What is the joy of such a conquest? |
23752 | What is your business?" |
23752 | What was it caused those sharp suggestions in its accustomed rotundity-- those angular points? |
23752 | What will she not attempt with that old driveller?'' |
23752 | When Robert had concluded his brief delineation, Raikes hastened to inquire:"Why do you ask about him so particularly? |
23752 | Where the pleasure in an empty casket?'' |
23752 | Why do n''t ye presint that face at th''front? |
23752 | Why not? |
23752 | With characteristic concentration, therefore, Gratz began:"Do you suspect anybody in particular?" |
23752 | Would he be credited if he related his prospects? |
23752 | Would you like to come and help me here?" |
23752 | Wurrk, is it? |
23752 | You say your daughter greets you not?'' |
23752 | an''it''s there ye are?" |
23752 | cried Dennis,"tell me, have I offended? |
23752 | cried the unhappy girl,''what shall I do? |
23752 | demanded Lal Lu, ignoring the question and the yearning intonation of his address, each word of which was like a caress;''my father, what of him?'' |
23752 | exclaimed Dennis as he went through an absurd pantomime of punching himself,"an''is it awake you are, Dennis Muldoon?" |
23752 | exclaimed Dennis, a degree too cheerily, the foreman thought, in view of his delinquencies with the brush,"sure; but why do you ask?" |
23752 | exclaimed Dennis, brightening,"when shall it be?" |
23752 | exclaimed Raikes,"you will leave this stone with me?" |
23752 | exclaimed his companion, with a rosy enjoyment of this unstudied situation and frank appreciation,"and what was the other?" |
23752 | he cried,"what ails your face?" |
23752 | he muttered,"why do you pause? |
23752 | inquired the Sepoy as he met the inquiring glance of his furtive auditor,"what of the flaw in the sapphire? |
23752 | inquired the widow;"and that splendid sapphire, that magnificent diamond to tempt the detective?" |
23752 | interrupted the maiden;''what of my father, O prince?'' |
23752 | laughed the Sepoy,"is that your estimation of the sapphire?" |
23752 | re- echoed Lal Lu with a questioning stress which the prince could not ignore--''everything?'' |
23752 | what are they to me?" |
23752 | what of him?'' |
18470 | A trick? |
18470 | Ah, of course, you have_ plenty_ of friends to choose from; and so the wedding will be to- morrow? |
18470 | Ah, then that lovely blue diamond was sold with the other things the Van Vreck agent lost on the_ Monarchic_? |
18470 | Am I not to know the end of the act? |
18470 | An understanding? |
18470 | And the answer? 18470 And the first name?" |
18470 | And you-- will you come to the desk? 18470 Are we_ dreaming_ this?" |
18470 | Are you all very brave? |
18470 | Are you sure? |
18470 | Are you very sorry he did n''t? |
18470 | As bad as that?... 18470 At what church will the''ceremony take place''as the newspapers say?" |
18470 | But how ought I to treat him? 18470 But why should you take so much trouble-- and how can you tell that the editor''s paragraph would make the Annesley- Setons want to know us?" |
18470 | Ca n''t we will them to want our house in town, and invite us to visit them? |
18470 | Ca n''t you give me a grain of hope? |
18470 | Ca n''t you make it come back if you concentrate? |
18470 | Can you do that, do you think, Anita? 18470 Can you see what I lost-- and whether it was Dick''s or mine, or both?" |
18470 | Did I say anything about jewels? |
18470 | Did he tell you to come to a table here and wait for him? |
18470 | Did n''t you read in the newspapers about the queer thing that happened on board the_ Monarchic_? |
18470 | Did you ever hear of the Countess de Santiago, when you lived in America? |
18470 | Did you? 18470 Did you?" |
18470 | Do n''t you believe she really is clairvoyant, and sees things in her crystal? |
18470 | Do n''t you hear a sound? |
18470 | Do you mean what you say? 18470 Do you really?" |
18470 | Do you_ honestly_ think it no wonder? |
18470 | Does she think she can stay in this house? 18470 Does that plan suit you-- as well as any other?" |
18470 | Drift? |
18470 | Had n''t you better go to bed now I am back? |
18470 | Has she told you anything? |
18470 | Has_ he_ written and told her to come? |
18470 | Have n''t you met him, Miss Grayle''s fiancà ©? |
18470 | Have you decided? |
18470 | He told you? |
18470 | His wife was an American girl, was n''t she? |
18470 | How are we to set about it? |
18470 | How can I live through it? |
18470 | How can I thank you? |
18470 | How can you be certain? |
18470 | How could I go with you, and live under the same roof, with everything so changed? |
18470 | How dare you hurt my hand? 18470 How do you know?" |
18470 | How far_ did_ you expect me to get it? |
18470 | How much has he paid you for coming here? |
18470 | How soon do you think your husband will come? |
18470 | How_ can_ you keep such uninteresting things in your mind-- just now? |
18470 | I guessed by the startled tone of your voice, when you asked,''Who is there?'' 18470 I have n''t had much chance to ask questions, have I?" |
18470 | I hope you were able to get a nice stateroom? |
18470 | I suppose there''s no chance of shaking them off? |
18470 | I thought-- oh, what good is it now to tell you what I thought? |
18470 | I wonder if Paul Van Vreck was here in disguise among the tourists? |
18470 | I wonder? |
18470 | I''m so happy; that''s all,she would explain, if he asked"What has happened?" |
18470 | I? |
18470 | If the dragon comes out of her den and catches us at the door, will that mean a catastrophe for you, or can I be explained away? |
18470 | If we''re in it, you must both come and stay, and not only''think''of us, but be with us: must n''t they, Anita? |
18470 | If you feel that, you do n''t want to send me out of your life, do you?--after you''ve stood by and sheltered me from danger? |
18470 | Is Los Angeles farther than El Paso? |
18470 | Is it all right? |
18470 | Is n''t it? |
18470 | Is that why you hate to think of the trip-- because you lost your watch? |
18470 | It does n''t matter, does it, as I_ must_ go on past Kansas City? |
18470 | It is to be a fashionable one? |
18470 | Like a prince, am I? |
18470 | Madame is glad now that I persuaded her not to go? |
18470 | May I call you''Knight''? |
18470 | May I talk to you frankly till Don does come? |
18470 | No doubt.... And you''re worried? |
18470 | Not a big bag, is it? 18470 Oh, but if it is n''t_ really_ your name, we sha''n''t be legally married, shall we?" |
18470 | Oh, how do you do? |
18470 | Oh, indeed, did she? 18470 Oh, what is it?" |
18470 | Only that-- that-- I fancied----"You fancied I did n''t like to talk about the_ Monarchic_? |
18470 | Ought we to have had the Countess de Santiago last evening? |
18470 | Perhaps if--_what_? |
18470 | Rather theatrical, do n''t you think? |
18470 | Really? 18470 Related to you?" |
18470 | Save us from what? |
18470 | See how_ what_ works out? |
18470 | Shall I draw the curtains? |
18470 | Shall we ask the Countess? |
18470 | Shall we meet at the-- Waldorf-- is it?--at luncheon time? |
18470 | She died? |
18470 | She gave you_ that_ impression, did she? 18470 She said that to you, too?" |
18470 | So_ you_ had something stolen? |
18470 | Somebody else? |
18470 | Something nice, or horrid? |
18470 | Sure I''m not what? |
18470 | Sweet of her, is n''t it? |
18470 | That goes without saying, does n''t it? 18470 That''s not an exaggeration, is it, Anita?" |
18470 | The Countess de Santiago? |
18470 | The Countess de Santiago? |
18470 | The Countess did n''t warn you off me? |
18470 | Then it was n''t_ that_ Mr. Smith you came to meet at the Savoy? |
18470 | Then--and Knight did not take his eyes from the window--"why not drift?" |
18470 | There''s a Lord Annesley- Seton, is n''t there? |
18470 | There''s no danger of our being disturbed, is there? 18470 They are n''t gone?" |
18470 | Was this table taken in his name or yours? 18470 Well, what about their cousin, that Mr. Ruthven Smith who used to stay at your''gorgon''s''till our friends the burglar- band called on him? |
18470 | Well? 18470 Were n''t you coming in?" |
18470 | What about Los Angeles? |
18470 | What date? |
18470 | What did she say? 18470 What do you call playing the fool?" |
18470 | What do you mean? |
18470 | What do you mean? |
18470 | What do you want me to do? |
18470 | What does this mean? |
18470 | What if they make me pay for dinner after I''ve kept the table so long? |
18470 | What is it? 18470 What is it?" |
18470 | What kind of a shopping expedition? |
18470 | What past? |
18470 | What same thing? 18470 What was the miniature like? |
18470 | What will Parker think if she finds your bed has n''t been slept in? |
18470 | What will become of me? |
18470 | What''s the matter? 18470 What, precisely, is her place?" |
18470 | What-- do you want me to say? |
18470 | When you heard the truth about the diamond, it was the same as if you''d heard everything, was n''t it? 18470 Where?" |
18470 | Where? |
18470 | Who cares? |
18470 | Who is it? |
18470 | Who is there? |
18470 | Who''s this strange man in my house? 18470 Why did n''t you tell me so?" |
18470 | Why do you do that? |
18470 | Why expect a man like him to keep a promise? |
18470 | Why not give the poor man a chance to decide? |
18470 | Why not think about saving yourself? |
18470 | Why not? |
18470 | Why not? |
18470 | Why should I not wish to tell you? |
18470 | Why should n''t I speak to them together? |
18470 | Why should you save_ me_? |
18470 | Why trouble to excuse yourself? |
18470 | Why, what can have upset you? |
18470 | Will you please tell me where to leave my wrap? |
18470 | Wo n''t we, Anita? |
18470 | Wo n''t you come in-- into the living room? 18470 Wo n''t you tell me about your evening when you are in bed and I have made up your fire? |
18470 | Would you like to go to California? 18470 Would you rather go to the dining car alone, or have me take you?" |
18470 | You are still working the crystal? |
18470 | You ask me that--_you_? |
18470 | You can_ forgive_ me? 18470 You care for him after all, then?" |
18470 | You know my name? |
18470 | You mean I do n''t understand_ you_? 18470 You remember my saying that night in the taxi that the worst I''d ever done was to try and pay back a great wrong, and take revenge on society? |
18470 | You tell me--_you_, madame, that you are this man''s wife? |
18470 | You think that, do you? |
18470 | You were n''t very nice to her, were you? |
18470 | You wo n''t forget that we''re Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Smith? |
18470 | You''ve got in touch with_ him_, have you? |
18470 | You-- swear you will let me live my own life? |
18470 | _ Are_ you a millionaire? |
18470 | _ One more?_ How terrible! 18470 _ Too_ big, eh? |
18470 | _ What became of your latchkey?_it asked. |
18470 | A prophecy of mine has come true?" |
18470 | Ah,_ why_? |
18470 | And as the waiter went away,"What are they doing now?" |
18470 | And at dinner that evening she forced herself to ask,"Do we get to Albuquerque to- night?" |
18470 | And now you know I''m both, you hate me, Anita? |
18470 | And then, out of a plunge into thought,"You say you''ve never seen the Mr. Smith you came to meet at the Savoy? |
18470 | And what must he himself be thinking at this moment as he peered through his eyeglasses? |
18470 | And whatever it was, how could she prevent it happening? |
18470 | And would n''t it be more_ like_ the man, than to say what he said_ sincerely_?" |
18470 | And yet,_ might_ he not have known? |
18470 | And you''ve never asked him to anything, have you?" |
18470 | Are n''t_ you_ going to sit? |
18470 | Are they going to let us?" |
18470 | Are you expecting any one to join you? |
18470 | Are you sorry?" |
18470 | As for the name-- what''s in a name? |
18470 | Before you go, may I have the pleasure of a nearer look at that beautiful enamel brooch of yours?" |
18470 | Besides, they have to know about your ancestors back to the Dark Ages, do n''t they, or else they''cancel''you? |
18470 | But I wonder if I could persuade her to look in her crystal for you, Lady Annesley- Seton? |
18470 | But could n''t you spare us two or three days before you start?" |
18470 | But has n''t destiny decided? |
18470 | But how can he have found out that I am wearing it?" |
18470 | But how? |
18470 | But tell me, before we go farther-- does it matter to you, Miss Grayle, that in a little while you and I may see the last of each other? |
18470 | But the question is, how are we two to go on?" |
18470 | But what''s the use of going on? |
18470 | But who else knew besides the man who sold it to Knight? |
18470 | But who knows? |
18470 | But you? |
18470 | But-- isn''t there a_ young_ Smith in your Archdeacon''s family?" |
18470 | But-- it comes to me suddenly that this thing is n''t directly or entirely what brought you here?" |
18470 | But-- what am I to do?" |
18470 | CHAPTER VII THE COUNTESS DE SANTIAGO"You do n''t wish to tell me the name?" |
18470 | Ca n''t we-- hadn''t we better go?" |
18470 | Ca n''t you understand you''re doing for me more than any woman ever has done, or any man would do? |
18470 | Can you guess what became of her?" |
18470 | Can you keep your wits and not give me away, whatever happens?" |
18470 | Can you see any excuse for me in going against the world to pay it out for going against me and mine? |
18470 | Could it be Knight, home already and on foot? |
18470 | Could it be possible that some thief had stolen the latchkey from Knight, and used it when Mrs. Ellsworth''s house was robbed? |
18470 | Could it be that Mrs. Ellsworth knew of the trick played on her-- knew that her companion had not been to the Smiths''? |
18470 | Could it be that he wanted an excuse to have her near him? |
18470 | Could it be that now in a moment something dreadful would happen? |
18470 | Could it be that this scene had pictured itself in the crystal? |
18470 | Could it be, she asked herself, that the_ watchers_ were somehow mixed up in the business? |
18470 | Could it possibly be on account of the blue diamond? |
18470 | Could she--_could_ she do the thing? |
18470 | Could_ her_ blue diamond be the famous diamond, about which the jewel expert was telling Lady Cartwright? |
18470 | Did Don ever excuse himself by mentioning the influence I brought to bear on him when he was almost a boy?" |
18470 | Did you forgive Donaldson four hundred and eighty- nine times, and draw the line at the four hundred and ninetieth?" |
18470 | Did you think I would n''t? |
18470 | Do n''t you see I''m right?" |
18470 | Do n''t you see-- don''t you hear-- the fight''s going farther away? |
18470 | Do n''t_ I_ know that? |
18470 | Do you believe there can be such a thing as love at first sight?" |
18470 | Do you blame me for that?" |
18470 | Do you know, your trust, your faith in me, in spite of appearances, are the best things that have come into my life? |
18470 | Do you like her better than you did?" |
18470 | Do you much mind all these complications?" |
18470 | Do you think I told you a lie? |
18470 | Do you think those brutes would advertise themselves with their guns if they had n''t been attacked?" |
18470 | Do you want-- shall I come in?" |
18470 | Do you?" |
18470 | Does n''t that sound pitiful? |
18470 | Does that interest you?" |
18470 | Does that make it hurt less?" |
18470 | Donaldson?" |
18470 | Even now, you wo n''t believe I was innocent of that thing you accused me of doing?" |
18470 | Good Lord, how were you brought up? |
18470 | Had Knight heard what_ she_ had heard there at the dinner- table, and was he anxious about what might happen next? |
18470 | Had he not decided upon Sidmouth the instant she mentioned their ownership of a place in the neighbourhood? |
18470 | Has she told you anything wonderful?" |
18470 | Have I lost you if I go on?" |
18470 | Have you lost your_ senses_? |
18470 | Have you noticed, by the way, that she has a nickname for me?" |
18470 | Have you? |
18470 | He would wonder perhaps, when the blow fell, and say to himself,"Can Madalena have done this?" |
18470 | How could he have got the key? |
18470 | How dare she let such a disloyal fancy even cross the threshold of her mind? |
18470 | How did you come to be Annesley?" |
18470 | How did you find me?" |
18470 | How did you get it?" |
18470 | How do you know but I may be a thief or a murderer?" |
18470 | How have I hurt you worse than you were hurt already by finding out?" |
18470 | How soon can you come down and talk over plans? |
18470 | How would it be if you took_ our_ house for a couple of months, while you''re looking round? |
18470 | I believe that''s the legal term, is n''t it?" |
18470 | I could n''t resist asking how Miss Grayle slept, and if there''s anything I can do for her in the shops?" |
18470 | I did n''t dream that you were a----""That I was-- what?" |
18470 | I hope you do n''t mind having the Countess down, do you, child? |
18470 | I hope you do n''t mind? |
18470 | I hope you''re not afraid of me now?" |
18470 | I knew he''d married an English girl of good connections( is n''t that what you say on your side? |
18470 | I knew you were a saint, but I did n''t know that saints forgave men like me.... Shall I really tell you from the beginning? |
18470 | I point toward the door-- or is it at something on the wall-- or is it a person? |
18470 | I suppose he''s not in England now by any chance?" |
18470 | I suppose there''s nothing for us to do but to go?" |
18470 | I suppose you did know? |
18470 | I suppose you read of that affair?" |
18470 | I suppose you''d like me to leave you now, to rest till dinner time? |
18470 | I suppose you''ve made up your mind what you want to do?" |
18470 | I wonder if we saw it when we were here the other day, Anita? |
18470 | I''ve bought a thin gold chain, and you can hang it round your neck, unless-- I almost think you''re inclined to refuse?" |
18470 | I----""Are you_ sure_ you want me?" |
18470 | If I come out of this trouble, and can ask a girl like you to give herself to me, will you do it?" |
18470 | If she did that, Ruthven Smith would think-- what would he not think? |
18470 | If they must go, we''ll see them off, wo n''t we, Steve?" |
18470 | Is it yours?" |
18470 | Is n''t it aggravating? |
18470 | Is n''t it, to you-- as bad as that?" |
18470 | Is n''t that a latchkey in the front door?" |
18470 | Is that the one thing too much?" |
18470 | It was on the tip of her tongue to call,"Who are you?" |
18470 | It was vague in my mind----""No other reason?" |
18470 | It''s time we showed the fair Madalena her place, do n''t you think so, Lady A?" |
18470 | Murder!_"CHAPTER VI THE BEGINNING-- OR THE END? |
18470 | Not--_here_?" |
18470 | Now do you guess?" |
18470 | Now, did or did_ not_ a certain person walk in and surprise you at the Archdeacon''s? |
18470 | Now, is n''t that a combination of brilliant ideas?" |
18470 | Now, will you go on helping me? |
18470 | Oh,_ you_ must be sorry?" |
18470 | Only-- was it payment in full, or an instalment? |
18470 | Or was n''t that what you meant?" |
18470 | Or"--the thought was sharp as a gimlet--"what if he_ saw_ you, and knew you were listening? |
18470 | Or-- did you chance it?" |
18470 | Ought I to tip the waiter?" |
18470 | Over and over again she asked herself:"What shall I do? |
18470 | Perhaps I may be an acquaintance of Archdeacon Smith''s, may n''t I, if worst comes to worst? |
18470 | Perhaps the chauffeur had made a mistake? |
18470 | Perhaps the wish would have conquered if some imp had not whispered,"What about that purple envelope, addressed in a woman''s handwriting? |
18470 | Perhaps you''ve guessed that?" |
18470 | S.''as they call him at Van Vreck''s, wanting to play you a trick-- give you a surprise?" |
18470 | Shall we go to the other room and have tea?" |
18470 | Shall you and I do it ourselves, or would you like to have the Countess de Santiago''s taste?" |
18470 | Somehow, he must be stopped with a word-- but what word? |
18470 | That did not seem likely, for how could a man like Knight have got involved with thieves? |
18470 | That''s all the difference, is n''t it? |
18470 | The Beginning-- or the End? |
18470 | Then will you sit on the top of these steps in this heavenly moonlight and let me tell you things that are important to me? |
18470 | There''s enough to make you comfortable----""Do you think I''d take a penny of such money?" |
18470 | Things being as they are, it was well I had your ticket to show with mine, was n''t it?" |
18470 | Vaguely distressed, however, by the flash in the handsome eyes, and the curt"How do you do?" |
18470 | Was I mistaken?" |
18470 | Was he concentrating his mind upon some plan of escape from these mysterious enemies? |
18470 | Was it in the papers?" |
18470 | Was n''t it_ too_ unlucky? |
18470 | Were_ they_ members of the supposed gang? |
18470 | What about her? |
18470 | What about the jade Buddha in the Chinese room?" |
18470 | What about the rest?" |
18470 | What business have_ I_ with a soul, except in church, where it''s proper to think about such things? |
18470 | What else am I-- to you?" |
18470 | What have you seen?" |
18470 | What if he talked just for effect? |
18470 | What if she were never to see him again, and this hour which had seemed the beginning of hope were to be its end? |
18470 | What if the band of thieves supposed to be"working"lately in London should try to make him a cat''s paw in bringing off their big haul? |
18470 | What if the watchers should still be there when they went out of the house together? |
18470 | What if there were some scheme for a robbery on a vast scale at Valley House, and this letter were part of the scheme? |
18470 | What if those two met on the stairs, or in the room on the second floor? |
18470 | What impression did it give you?" |
18470 | What is it you see?" |
18470 | What is to become of me-- of both of us?" |
18470 | What might she expect to happen? |
18470 | What precious thing which has to be hidden hangs on that chain? |
18470 | What precisely had he come to Valley House to do? |
18470 | What shall we do? |
18470 | What was it like? |
18470 | What was left for Annesley to say? |
18470 | What was she talking about?" |
18470 | What would you say or do?" |
18470 | What''s the good of being a man at all, if I ca n''t get her back?" |
18470 | What''s this talk about''engagements''?" |
18470 | What_ am_ I like?" |
18470 | What_ shall_ we do?" |
18470 | When I ask you to be my wife you''ll say to me what you_ would n''t_ have said to the other Smith?" |
18470 | When did you remember what you had read in the newspapers?" |
18470 | When they see us go in, will they believe the story and drive away, or-- will they stay on?" |
18470 | Where do we live?" |
18470 | Where is your wife?" |
18470 | Who but he would have remembered at such a moment to snatch up a compromising hat and take it with him? |
18470 | Who could have written the anonymous letter? |
18470 | Who could the woman be? |
18470 | Who knows, for instance, through how many hands the Malindore diamond may have passed? |
18470 | Who knows?" |
18470 | Who will be your other witness, if it''s not indiscreet to ask?" |
18470 | Who would ever have thought of meeting you two expensive creatures on board_ this_ tub?" |
18470 | Why do n''t you ask Anita? |
18470 | Why for Knight''s sake? |
18470 | Why should she care? |
18470 | Why_ not_ tell?" |
18470 | Will he be strong enough alone to spread over us that mantle of mysterious protection your crystal showed you?" |
18470 | Will that do? |
18470 | Will you believe this-- and trust me for the rest?" |
18470 | Will you breakfast with me, or have you finished? |
18470 | Will you fetch it for him to look at? |
18470 | Will you give it to me? |
18470 | Will you go on alone from the place we''re coming to, or-- will you try the thin wall?" |
18470 | Will you go on as you''ve begun, and trust me farther, by letting me drive with you to your home, if necessary, in case of being followed? |
18470 | Will you make up a name for me, and begin to get used to it to- day? |
18470 | Wo n''t you show that you forgive me for the mistake I made-- I think it was natural-- and tell me what your married name will be?" |
18470 | Would it have sent you these thousands of miles with me unless it meant you to fight it out on those lines? |
18470 | Would it seem dreadful to him to buy a jewel which he might guess, from its low cost, had to be got rid of at almost any price? |
18470 | Would madame care to take it-- it is here, close to the door-- and watch for the gentleman when he comes?" |
18470 | Would she like to have a week or so in some warm county like Devonshire or Cornwall, or would she enjoy a trip to Paris or the Riviera? |
18470 | Would the next payment be for them, and what form would it take? |
18470 | Would you care to live with Archdeacon Smith and his wife?" |
18470 | Yes or no?" |
18470 | Yet, after all, what did it matter? |
18470 | You call that complimentary? |
18470 | You did n''t even know we_ had_ been robbed, did you?" |
18470 | You''ll let me order dinner? |
18470 | You''ll listen-- and bear it? |
18470 | _ How do you know which is nearer the house, Don and his men, or the others?_"She stared at him, panting,"Don and his men?" |
18470 | _ How do you know which is nearer the house, Don and his men, or the others?_"She stared at him, panting,"Don and his men?" |
18470 | _ Now_ do you understand?" |
18470 | _ What_ had been put into the jewel expert''s head? |
18470 | was her query, and the first time she did this he answered with another question:"Do you want her for your own pleasure? |
18470 | what if the darn running up the heel of the pearl- gray silk stocking should show, or have burst again into a hole as she jumped out of the omnibus? |
18470 | where is the Fragonard?" |
18470 | with a glance for the silent husband,"and bring them books and chocolates and flowers?" |
18470 | would not be finished, so that they might come back in time for Henley and Cowes? |
23737 | All by yo''se''f''? |
23737 | And were you afraid? |
23737 | And what are you doing at my door? |
23737 | Another cat? |
23737 | Anyway, do you know any way we can get out of your inside? |
23737 | Are there ghosts at Grandfather''s house? |
23737 | Are you afraid to go down? |
23737 | Are you in there? |
23737 | Because if it has n''t any smell it has n''t any taste, and how can you bite a thing if you ca n''t taste it? |
23737 | But how can I? |
23737 | But not here? |
23737 | But we''re so small, how''ll we ever get to the bottom of the chute? 23737 But what do you want him for?" |
23737 | But what good will that do? |
23737 | But what of the others? |
23737 | But you''ll come, wo n''t you? |
23737 | Ca n''t you get a rope? |
23737 | Can you find a foothold and follow me? |
23737 | Can you help us? |
23737 | Could n''t you tell whose house it is by looking at it? |
23737 | Did he find the valuable jewel? |
23737 | Did n''t you have any luncheon? |
23737 | Did you see or hear anything? |
23737 | Do fiddles have fits? 23737 Do n''t you see that you''ve grown small?" |
23737 | Do you know what will happen? |
23737 | Do you know,he added,"I believe this is the very spot which Fergus pointed out to us? |
23737 | Do you remember the story I told you about my friend who sought a rare jewel and who, when he died, sent me this image? 23737 Do you suppose we''d grow little if we ate thirteen apples?" |
23737 | Do you suppose,said Grandfather at last,"that the pig got into the sofa and carried it off, or the sofa came out and swallowed the pig?" |
23737 | Do you think it was the''ha''nt''? |
23737 | Do you think we dare? |
23737 | Does yo''like ginger cookies? |
23737 | Dog, doggedly, see? |
23737 | Done et all yo''hay, have yo''? 23737 Have they been out again?" |
23737 | Have you ever seen them? |
23737 | Hear him? |
23737 | Hello,said the Clock,"is it you again? |
23737 | Honest? |
23737 | How can you be sure any one will come? |
23737 | How come yo''''quire''bout dat? |
23737 | How could I? |
23737 | How could it possibly have got here? |
23737 | How did you get in there? |
23737 | How is that? |
23737 | How is this? 23737 How many things are clear?" |
23737 | How will we ever get onto their backs? |
23737 | How''ll we ever grow big again? |
23737 | However can you chase the cat if you do? |
23737 | However did you get there? |
23737 | I always wondered-- or should I say I_ owlways_ wondered? |
23737 | I suppose I could get out of my window all right,said Andy doubtfully,"but how could I get into your house?" |
23737 | I wonder how many Alligator would have to eat? |
23737 | I wonder where this ladder goes? |
23737 | If you think things are true, then they are true, are n''t they? |
23737 | Is he the''ha''nt,''as Aunt Esmerelda calls it? |
23737 | Is it mine? |
23737 | Is it true? |
23737 | Is it you, Alligator? |
23737 | Is n''t this an awfully big house? |
23737 | Is that you, Andy? |
23737 | Is the house right among the mountains? |
23737 | It wan''t nothin''? |
23737 | Lan''s sakes, wha''s dat? |
23737 | Mawnin'',says Lijah, keerless like,"yo''been a hoodooin''any one lately, Aunt Maria?" |
23737 | May I ask the little boy who lives next door to come in and play? |
23737 | May I come? |
23737 | May I go with you, Mary, when you clean? |
23737 | May I have a candle, Aunt Esmerelda? |
23737 | May I have some cookies, Aunt Esmerelda? |
23737 | May I not have them? |
23737 | May I not say a farewell to Lowboy? |
23737 | Oh,said Hortense suddenly,"what do you suppose will become of Tom and Jerry? |
23737 | Really? |
23737 | Really? |
23737 | See its short curved legs, just like an alligator''s? 23737 Shall we open it?" |
23737 | She''d better look out for ghosts up at the big house, had n''t she, Uncle Jonah? |
23737 | Take a bite out of Grater? |
23737 | Talks just like a copy book, does n''t he? |
23737 | That sounds sensible,answered Fergus,"but how do you think you can free alligator sofa and Coal and Ember? |
23737 | The Little People are fairies, are n''t they, who live in Ireland? |
23737 | The point is, who is to be_ It_? 23737 Was it a dream, Highboy?" |
23737 | Well, Hortense,began Grandfather,"why do n''t you tell Fergus about your adventures?" |
23737 | Well, who would carry it out and leave it in such a place, anyhow? |
23737 | Were n''t you frightened? |
23737 | Wha''s dat? |
23737 | What are they? |
23737 | What are your names? |
23737 | What did you know? |
23737 | What difference does it make, anyhow? |
23737 | What do they sound like, Uncle Jonah? |
23737 | What do we do to- night? |
23737 | What do you here? |
23737 | What do you suppose he''s doing there? |
23737 | What does? |
23737 | What fo''yo''goin''? |
23737 | What fo''yo''wants a candle? |
23737 | What good does it do to eat things when you have to give them up in the morning? |
23737 | What good does it do you to eat supper when you have to eat breakfast in the morning? |
23737 | What have we here, a traveling circus? |
23737 | What have we here? |
23737 | What house? |
23737 | What in the world is this? |
23737 | What is incense? |
23737 | What is it? |
23737 | What is that, Aunt Esmerelda? |
23737 | What is the hoodoo, Uncle Jonah? |
23737 | What knife are you talking about? |
23737 | What next? |
23737 | What shall we do now? |
23737 | What was that? |
23737 | What was the thing you and Uncle Jonah heard? |
23737 | What''s happened to us? |
23737 | What''s happening to me? |
23737 | What''s that boy''s name? |
23737 | What''s that? |
23737 | What''s that? |
23737 | What''s that? |
23737 | What''s this? |
23737 | What''s up to- night? |
23737 | What''s your name? |
23737 | When I''m asleep, where does time go? |
23737 | Where could they come from and what are they doing here? |
23737 | Where do you suppose it goes? |
23737 | Where do you suppose it goes? |
23737 | Where do you suppose the Cat hid the night I followed him and he disappeared? |
23737 | Where does it go? |
23737 | Where have you been keeping yourselves? |
23737 | Where have you been? |
23737 | Where is the Princess? |
23737 | Where shall we hide? |
23737 | Where were you, Coal and Ember? |
23737 | Where''s Highboy? |
23737 | Where''s that Cat? |
23737 | Where''s that? |
23737 | Who all said anythin''''bout dis yere ha''nt? 23737 Who are Malay Kris and Alligator Sofa?" |
23737 | Who are you? |
23737 | Who can say? |
23737 | Who could have opened it? |
23737 | Who dares speak so to me? |
23737 | Who is Malay Kris? |
23737 | Who is it? |
23737 | Who knows? |
23737 | Who said I was afraid? |
23737 | Who tole you''bout dat? |
23737 | Who would dig a tunnel to nowhere? |
23737 | Who''s tickling me? |
23737 | Who, who are you? |
23737 | Why ca n''t you? |
23737 | Why did n''t you do something? |
23737 | Why did n''t you let me at him? |
23737 | Why did n''t you let me run him through first? |
23737 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
23737 | Why do n''t you go down and see him now? 23737 Why do n''t you speak?" |
23737 | Why do we wait here? |
23737 | Why do you say fit as a fiddle? |
23737 | Why is it you weep such wet tears? |
23737 | Why is n''t it fair? |
23737 | Why? |
23737 | Will you come with me, Shamus? |
23737 | Would you go down to the storeroom and get me an apple if I gave you something nice for your own? |
23737 | Would you like Mary to put you to bed? |
23737 | Would you like to stay with Grandfather and Grandmother while Papa and Mamma are away? |
23737 | Yo''didn''see nothin''? |
23737 | Yo''s Miss Hortense, is n''t yo''? |
23737 | You are sure that he is a nice little boy? |
23737 | You have done all that I asked,said the King,"and do you still wish to return to the world?" |
23737 | You here again? 23737 You wo n''t be afraid to climb the ladder all alone in the dark?" |
23737 | You would n''t let me carry it? |
23737 | An''how is yo''gittin''''long?" |
23737 | And also what if Jeremiah should trap you in the tunnel?" |
23737 | Andy and Hortense looked at each other as though to say,"We''ll find out, wo n''t we?" |
23737 | Are there any questions? |
23737 | Before he had done two steps, however, Alligator sofa roused from his nap and said,"Did I hear someone say they wanted some cookies? |
23737 | Besides, how can you know so much about-- him-- unless you are his servants? |
23737 | But if I were to go up there on the mountain side what could I tell Mary? |
23737 | But where could he have gone?" |
23737 | Cookies? |
23737 | Could n''t you get into the cellar and open it?" |
23737 | Do you see that dark place in the rocks halfway up the mountain?" |
23737 | Do you suppose she is responsible?" |
23737 | Do you think they move sometimes at night?" |
23737 | Doan you- all know you might git sick a- eatin''so much?" |
23737 | Have you a wife?" |
23737 | Have you the courage to do so?" |
23737 | He looks as if he could talk, does n''t he? |
23737 | How much is four times thirteen?" |
23737 | How then, will Grandmother get at her knitting?" |
23737 | How''ll we ever get there?" |
23737 | However could it have gotten here?" |
23737 | I wondered if you could help her, Fergus?" |
23737 | It roars louder than it did, do n''t you think?" |
23737 | More cookies?" |
23737 | Not bad is it?" |
23737 | On their way to the barn she finally said,"Grandfather, is Grandmother awfully unhappy about the firedogs?" |
23737 | One gets awfully attached to old clothes, do n''t you think?" |
23737 | Shall we hide and see?" |
23737 | Spec''s dis po''niggah to climb dose staihs and tho''down some mo''? |
23737 | The King said never a word, but his glance said plain as day,"Is n''t it as I said?" |
23737 | There was a slight stir of the bronze lips; then a soft measured voice said,"I wait, what is it you ask?" |
23737 | Three guesses, what has he done?" |
23737 | What do you suppose we found this morning? |
23737 | What have you to say for yourselves?" |
23737 | What made you think of such a thing?" |
23737 | What was it Grandfather had said? |
23737 | What will you give me if I carry you down?" |
23737 | What''s yours?" |
23737 | Wheh yo''git ideas like dat?" |
23737 | While they were eating their bits of cooky to make them large again, Hortense said,"How can we prevent Jeremiah from setting Grater free?" |
23737 | Whoffo you wants all those cookies, girl? |
23737 | Whom shall I bring?" |
23737 | Why should n''t there be ghosts? |
23737 | Will you grant us permission?" |
23737 | Without opening his eyes, Alligator grunted,"Where do I come in?" |
2234 | ''Are you there, dear?'' 2234 ''Oh, so it''s come to you, has it?'' |
2234 | ''Oo''s cheated''oo out''o fourpence? |
2234 | ''See what?'' 2234 ''Then in Jefferson,''said the mother,''it would be still earlier, would n''t it?'' |
2234 | ''What time is it now in New York?'' 2234 ''What''s this?'' |
2234 | About what? |
2234 | An''I give''er--he pointed towards the younger lady--"fourpence, did n''t I?" |
2234 | And I gave you sixpence and two pennies, did n''t I? |
2234 | And about coming home? |
2234 | And are not you men every bit as foolish? |
2234 | And did Mr. Hodskiss make a noise in the vestry? |
2234 | And did Pyramids discourage him? |
2234 | And did the countess take the matter quietly? |
2234 | And does she insist on your going to church every Sunday morning? |
2234 | And have you given up the old business? |
2234 | And how are you getting on? |
2234 | And how is father? |
2234 | And how long are you going to remain here? |
2234 | And is she willing to marry you? |
2234 | And it was really you who wrote that clever book? |
2234 | And mother? |
2234 | And the little one? |
2234 | And what became of Clementina? |
2234 | And what became of her lover? |
2234 | And who do you think will receive you? |
2234 | And who''s keeping you all? |
2234 | Are you happy? |
2234 | Are you happy? |
2234 | Are you sure you made it clear to him? |
2234 | But have you no notion of the sort of street or the kind of house it was? |
2234 | But how did she manage about her travelling frock? |
2234 | But where am I to go, nurse? |
2234 | But why did you take it? |
2234 | But, my dear Blake,urged Mr. Eppington,"for your own sake, is it wise? |
2234 | Ca n''t you make believe to have one? |
2234 | Ca n''t you see he is? |
2234 | Can you forgive me? 2234 Can you forgive me?" |
2234 | Can you hear me? |
2234 | Cart upset? |
2234 | China? |
2234 | Did I really say''Julia''? |
2234 | Did I take Hallyard with me in the cart to Richmond this afternoon? |
2234 | Did it hurt you? |
2234 | Did n''t it bring you luck? |
2234 | Did the naval lieutenant, while the others were at church, dash up in a post- chaise and carry her off? |
2234 | Did you ever hear the story of the marriage? |
2234 | Do you know of any cure for it? |
2234 | Do you like her? |
2234 | Do you mind throwing me back my ball? |
2234 | Do you often drink it? |
2234 | Do you think Pyramids would come and stop with me for a week? |
2234 | Do you think she knows enough? |
2234 | Does it matter very much what they think? |
2234 | Entirely your own inspiration, or suggested? |
2234 | Feeling bad? |
2234 | Fool of a cabman took me to Alfred Place instead of--"Well, what do you want now you are come? |
2234 | Had an accident? |
2234 | Have n''t you any money? |
2234 | Have you heard the news,he said,"about young Harjohn?" |
2234 | Have you no sense of shame? |
2234 | Have you tried any of the lodging- houses? |
2234 | How could I be happy having lost you? |
2234 | How did I get Friday fixed in my mind? |
2234 | How did it come about? |
2234 | How did it happen? |
2234 | How did that impress you? |
2234 | How do you know she does n''t care for you? |
2234 | How much did you give the fellow, my dear? |
2234 | I can not agree with you,replied the Minor Poet,"if we were simply automata, as your argument would suggest, what was the purpose of creating us?" |
2234 | I suppose it could be fifteen-- twenty years ago that strangers to you lived in this room? |
2234 | I suppose,he said,"you would n''t care to pretend you were ill, and stop in bed just for the day?" |
2234 | In this room? |
2234 | In which case it''s just as well to have a note of the advance down in black and white, eh? |
2234 | Is he ill? |
2234 | Is he married? |
2234 | Is he weaker, nurse? |
2234 | Is it all right? |
2234 | Is she married? |
2234 | Is that you, old man? |
2234 | Is_ he_ in love? |
2234 | It''s a fact,said the doctor,"though she does not suggest the shop- girl, does she? |
2234 | My God, what am I saying? 2234 My dear fellow,"he replied,"what would people say?" |
2234 | Never mind,I said,"supposing someone did?" |
2234 | No,I replied,"whose marriage? |
2234 | None of them can what? |
2234 | Oh, but who would shoot Renshaw? |
2234 | Oh, do_ you_ know her? |
2234 | Playing tennis? |
2234 | Put my--? |
2234 | Seen whom? |
2234 | Suppose someone killed the lot, should we hear less of Renshaw? |
2234 | Tell me about it? |
2234 | The North Pole? |
2234 | The horse did n''t make you drink, did he? |
2234 | The one with the curls? |
2234 | Then what do you intend to do? |
2234 | Tried Central Africa? |
2234 | Was it a sudden conversion? |
2234 | Was this the canary young lady? |
2234 | What are you doing? |
2234 | What are you fellows going to do this afternoon? |
2234 | What are you going to do? |
2234 | What ball? |
2234 | What did it do to you? |
2234 | What did she leave here? |
2234 | What did you do with it? |
2234 | What do they say? |
2234 | What do you mean, girl? |
2234 | What do you think the animal is? |
2234 | What do you want me to do with it,I heard her asking an excited lady on one occasion;"cook it?" |
2234 | What else? |
2234 | What happened then? |
2234 | What have you come about? |
2234 | What is it? |
2234 | What made you call him''Pyramids''? |
2234 | What makes you think so? |
2234 | What the devil do you mean? |
2234 | What were you doing with it? |
2234 | What would you do? |
2234 | What''s she like? |
2234 | What''s the confounded cat got to do with it? |
2234 | What''s the matter with him? |
2234 | What, Bessie, sir? |
2234 | When are you going to get to the ones we all know? |
2234 | When did the story appear? |
2234 | Whereabouts? |
2234 | Who shall be judge? |
2234 | Who''s she? |
2234 | Why do I lie to myself? 2234 Why do n''t you go home?" |
2234 | Why do n''t you save him? 2234 Why have you followed me?" |
2234 | Why is it,asked the Philosopher,"that women are such slaves to fashion? |
2234 | Why not? |
2234 | Why talk love or any other kind of sentiment before old Pyramids here? |
2234 | Why the devil ca n''t she be careful? |
2234 | Why, has anything given way? |
2234 | Why? |
2234 | Will you be at Leightons''to- morrow? |
2234 | Wo n''t he ever eat any dinner till he''s got over it? |
2234 | Wo n''t you read it? |
2234 | Would you have refused him if you had? |
2234 | You are sure,I said, after thinking a while,"that this Maria is a good Spirit? |
2234 | You do love me, Jack? |
2234 | You fish? |
2234 | You have been letting lodgings for a long time? |
2234 | You think I must, nurse? |
2234 | You''re surely not going to church a fine day like this? 2234 A CHARMING WOMANNot_ the Mr.---_,_ really_?" |
2234 | A dozen sentences later Dick stopped me again with:--"Who''s Julia?" |
2234 | After a few minutes Dick interrupted me with:--"I thought you said her name was Naomi?" |
2234 | And are you content with this marriage? |
2234 | And how about myself? |
2234 | And this woman that was like me-- she could have made a man''s life? |
2234 | And what am I? |
2234 | Are n''t you coming, Marion? |
2234 | Are not the stones of our streets red with the blood of wife and child that they have slain? |
2234 | Are you going to leave Harry alone with two pairs of lovers? |
2234 | As for his good name, what could that matter? |
2234 | At the third he said--"Whatever have you done to her feet? |
2234 | Between the leer of the man and the smile of the girl, where lay the difference? |
2234 | Born and bred in the atmosphere of the Reform Club, what gentleman could go wrong? |
2234 | But whether she was our enemy, and we were to fear her, or whether we had to fear her enemies( and, if so, who were they? |
2234 | Ca n''t you do it in the daytime?" |
2234 | Could life after all be ruled by maxims learned from copy- books? |
2234 | Curious to hear old Leman talking like that, was n''t it?" |
2234 | Did n''t she tell you what for?" |
2234 | Do men let the wolf go free when they have trapped him with meat? |
2234 | Do n''t you remember, finding me one Saturday afternoon all alone, stuffing myself with cake and jam?" |
2234 | Do you know what I am, and have been for two years?" |
2234 | Do you know what this house is for me, with its gilded mirrors, its couches, its soft carpets? |
2234 | Do you know who it is?" |
2234 | Do you really care for Harry, Marion? |
2234 | Do you remember the first night at old Fauerberg''s? |
2234 | Does it matter that one keel should slip through the grip of the Polar ice? |
2234 | Does it matter whether a Union Jack or a Tricolor floats over the turrets of Badajoz? |
2234 | Does it matter whether one star more or less is marked upon our charts? |
2234 | Does it matter? |
2234 | Had she dealt with these questions wisely? |
2234 | Had she many faults? |
2234 | Harjohn?" |
2234 | Has_ he_ written anything?" |
2234 | Have I no shame, no strength? |
2234 | Have you no influence over him? |
2234 | Having rescued him, the teacher said:"Why do n''t you keep with the little boys? |
2234 | He was an artist-- was ever story of this type written where the hero was not an artist? |
2234 | He wo n''t object to a few inquiries? |
2234 | Her slender stock of money would soon be gone; how could she live? |
2234 | I allus promised the old lady as she should ride behind her own''oss one day,"he continued, turning to me,"did n''t I, mother?" |
2234 | I answered somewhat sharply,"or are you joking?" |
2234 | I asked with a laugh,"an evil spirit"? |
2234 | I exclaimed,"what are you doing here? |
2234 | I forgot,"he explained;"she never would tell her name before you, would she? |
2234 | I heard her calling shrilly after me,''Who stole the goose?'' |
2234 | I interrupted, looking perhaps a little sternly at him,"who''s Maria?" |
2234 | I picked it up and hit him back with it, and a policeman came up with the usual,''Now then, what''s all this about?'' |
2234 | I said,"and what''s that?" |
2234 | I said,"are you doing here? |
2234 | If I came down in red she would say,''Why do n''t you try green, dear? |
2234 | If in the courses of evolution they grow bigger in brain and body, they may become powerful rivals, who knows?'' |
2234 | Make me weep? |
2234 | May I ask you a question? |
2234 | Might it not have been better had she thought for herself? |
2234 | Might it not have been better to have treated them more seriously? |
2234 | O God, why are you so good to me? |
2234 | Of course, it''s absurd, but--""But what?" |
2234 | Of what use was it? |
2234 | Oh, mother, tell me, what is life?" |
2234 | Presently he said:--"Have you ever tried drinking beer?" |
2234 | Shall I go abroad?" |
2234 | She scribbled the name down, and then said, looking the boy squarely in the face:"Tell me frankly, Jack, do you want to marry me, or do you not?" |
2234 | Should not one be glad to know one''s friends better? |
2234 | Society is so hollow and artificial; do n''t you find it so? |
2234 | The earl''s?" |
2234 | The first breakfast bell rang, and then he said,"You have n''t got any proper clothes with you, have you?" |
2234 | The question is, how much will compensate you for your natural disappointment?" |
2234 | The stone age, the iron age, the age of faith, the age of infidelism, the philosophic age, what are they but the passing fashions of the world? |
2234 | Then an evil voice arose in the town, and said:"Who are these that have come among us to share our land? |
2234 | Then it was he who spoke:"Do you think I have n''t told myself all that?" |
2234 | Then she could do nothing? |
2234 | Waller''?" |
2234 | Was the man completely under his wife''s thumb; or, tired of her, was he playing some devil''s game of his own? |
2234 | What about him?" |
2234 | What are you doing along with him?" |
2234 | What argument could I show stronger than that he had already put before himself? |
2234 | What do you say?" |
2234 | What do you think of this one?" |
2234 | What happened to her?" |
2234 | What has happened?" |
2234 | What is a photographer? |
2234 | What is the latest scandal? |
2234 | What is the world doing? |
2234 | What questions has it been asking you? |
2234 | What right have they to bully you into paying what you do n''t owe?" |
2234 | What saint has been discovered sinning? |
2234 | What shall I talk to you about? |
2234 | What should it do? |
2234 | What the devil''s the good of talking about it?" |
2234 | What was she like? |
2234 | Where do you think I am you old fool?'' |
2234 | Where had I seen her, and when? |
2234 | Where on earth did you get the idea from?" |
2234 | Whibley would amuse himself of an evening asking it questions, being careful to choose tolerably simple themes, such as,"Are you there?" |
2234 | Which philanthropist has been robbing the poor? |
2234 | Who did it?" |
2234 | Who has been found out? |
2234 | Who has been swindling whom? |
2234 | Who has run away with whose wife? |
2234 | Why am I a useless, drifting log upon the world''s tide? |
2234 | Why did I let them persuade me to send that lying letter? |
2234 | Why did n''t you? |
2234 | Why do I deceive myself? |
2234 | Why had I never seen her again? |
2234 | Why had she passed so completely out of my mind? |
2234 | Why have all the young men passed me? |
2234 | Why should I put my shirt on Mrs. Waller? |
2234 | Why should she die, never having known what it was to live? |
2234 | Why should she prostrate herself before this juggernaut of other people''s respectability? |
2234 | Why should you pay for water you have never had? |
2234 | Why? |
2234 | Wo n''t you tell me about her? |
2234 | Would it amuse you? |
2234 | You know Canon Whycherly, the great preacher?" |
2234 | You''re sure this is n''t the spirit of some deceased lunatic, playing the fool with you?" |
2234 | and what is everybody saying about it? |
2234 | and what is it they have been doing? |
2234 | do you think I do n''t know what that woman will do for me? |
2234 | every one says you look so well in green''; and when I wore green she would say,''Why have you given up red dear? |
12768 | ''D''ye mean to tell me hooses hev picture- galleries?'' 12768 ''Oh, do n''t you remember? |
12768 | ''To eat your supper in a room Blazing with lights, four Titians on the wall And twenty naked girls to change your plate?'' |
12768 | ''What''s that?'' 12768 Ai n''t it, Miss? |
12768 | Am I making too much of an ordinary little country girl, Biddy? |
12768 | Am I simple, Jean? |
12768 | And Jock, too? |
12768 | And am I to answer you in one word, Jean? 12768 And did it love its own mummy, then, darling snub- nose pet?" |
12768 | And do the people speak Scots on one side and English on the other? 12768 And feel it home?" |
12768 | And how are all the people-- the Jowetts and the Watsons and the Dawsons? 12768 And how is my dear Jock? |
12768 | And is n''t it awful,said Miss Watson in a pause,"about our minister marrying?" |
12768 | And now may I hear your wishes? |
12768 | And so you gave him that song- book you value so much? |
12768 | And the wonderful descriptions--''I know corries in Argyle that whisper silken''... do you remember that? 12768 And were n''t you charmed? |
12768 | And what are the''tenths,''to be used for? |
12768 | And what are you going to do with your share? |
12768 | And why not? |
12768 | And would you like me to go away? |
12768 | And, do you know, Biddy''s coming home? |
12768 | Are n''t I, Jean? 12768 Are n''t you cold up there?" |
12768 | Are there sons to inherit? |
12768 | Are we all met? |
12768 | Are you asking me to marry you? 12768 Are you comfortable at the Temperance?" |
12768 | Are you keeping well, Miss Abbot? 12768 Are you staying in Priorsford?" |
12768 | Are you tempting your old minister, Jean? 12768 Are you very busy just now?" |
12768 | Are you_ fearfully_ keen on Shakespeare? 12768 As Boswell said to Dr. Johnson,''What of death, Sir?'' |
12768 | Aw, Jean,said Mhor,"if you had a million pounds would you buy me a bicycle?" |
12768 | Because it is n''t my name? |
12768 | Besides, you ought to settle at home for a bit now, do n''t you think? 12768 Biddy,"said his sister,"why did n''t you wire to me? |
12768 | But Jean, beloved, you do n''t suppose I want to take you away from them? 12768 But how do you learn those things?" |
12768 | But if it''s dreary for a man,said Pamela,"what of us? |
12768 | But please tell me more about your minister''s bride-- does she belong to Priorsford? |
12768 | But what,asked Mrs. Duff- Whalley,"can Miss Reston have in common with people like the Jardines? |
12768 | But why? |
12768 | But why? |
12768 | But, Beller, do n''t you think things work out more h''even than they seem? 12768 But,"she brightened,"he seemed pleased, do n''t you think? |
12768 | But-- has he any claim on you? |
12768 | But-- you''re not going to buy it, are you? |
12768 | Ca n''t you adopt me as well? 12768 Can I do just as I like with the money? |
12768 | Can you actually still read goody- goody girls''stories? |
12768 | Can you really believe that_ he_ sat here?--actually in this little room? 12768 Certainly without an aitch,"thought Pamela, as she said,"You like travelling, Mawson?" |
12768 | Could n''t the things have waited? 12768 D''ye ken whit ye''ll dae?" |
12768 | D''ye think I keep tea biscuits and cake to feed dowgs wi''? 12768 D''ye think Miss Jean''s sitting here waitin''to jump at a man like a cock at a grossit? |
12768 | D''you know a house called The Rigs? |
12768 | D''you mind coming into my den? 12768 D''you think,"said Mhor in a pleasantly interested voice,"that Mr. M''Cosh is in heaven?" |
12768 | David,she said,"what_ is_ the matter?" |
12768 | Dear me, Augusta, am I hearing right? 12768 Dear me, woman, how can I tell? |
12768 | Did you actually pay for the damage done and let them keep the fowls? |
12768 | Did you ever see anything quite so new? |
12768 | Did you notice that he was very clean, and that his hair was sleeked down with brilliantine? 12768 Did you think of buying it yourself?" |
12768 | Do I look like a millionaire? |
12768 | Do I? 12768 Do n''t they look nice and tea- partyish? |
12768 | Do you cry over books, Jean? |
12768 | Do you realise that Davie will be home next week? |
12768 | Do you remember a story we liked when we were children,_ The Gold of Fairnilee_? 12768 Do you teach the Mhor?" |
12768 | Do you think all the little pepper- pot towers must have an effect on the soul? 12768 Does Miss Bathgate talk to you, Mawson?" |
12768 | Does it seem so short to you? |
12768 | Does n''t it seem to you rather awful to care about bonnets at ninety- four? |
12768 | Does she know? |
12768 | Draw up that basket chair, wo n''t you? 12768 For me? |
12768 | Had you a nice time this afternoon? |
12768 | Happy, Jean? |
12768 | Has anything happened to her? 12768 Has n''t she charming manners? |
12768 | Has she got lodgers just now? |
12768 | Has the lawyer been? |
12768 | Have n''t you finished eating yet, Jock? |
12768 | Have n''t you relations? |
12768 | Have you got them all, Jean? |
12768 | Have you no great friends-- no one you are interested in? |
12768 | Have you noticed a whitewashed house standing among trees about half a mile down Tweed from the bridge? 12768 Have you really been away for thirty years? |
12768 | Have you seen one? |
12768 | Have you written any more, Davie? |
12768 | Having a great game, are n''t you? |
12768 | Her argument was,''Why get clothes from Paris if you can get them in Priorsford?'' 12768 How do you manage to keep them so fresh looking? |
12768 | I do n''t,said Jean,"but does that matter? |
12768 | I expect,she broke out after a silence,"your brother will take you away?" |
12768 | I hope they''re the kind you like? |
12768 | I need n''t ask if you are happy, my Jean girl? |
12768 | I suppose you do n''t want me to go with you? 12768 I suppose you wo n''t have heard from Miss Reston since she went away?" |
12768 | I told you about Mrs. M''Cosh? 12768 I understood you had only two brothers?" |
12768 | I was wondering if you could do some sewing for me? 12768 I wonder if any man ever had such a difficult lady,"he said,"or one so uncompromisingly truthful?" |
12768 | I wonder,said Jean politely, having cast round in her mind for a topic that might interest--"I wonder what you will attempt next? |
12768 | I wonder,said Mrs. Hope, breaking the silence,"what has become of Lewis Elliot? |
12768 | I wonder,said Mrs. Jowett to her hostess, as she peeled a pear,"if you have met a newcomer in Priorsford-- Miss Reston? |
12768 | I wonder,said Peter Reid,"if you know a song my mother used to sing--''Strathairlie''?" |
12768 | I''ll leave it to the first person who does something for me without expecting any return.... By the way, what do I owe you? |
12768 | If you are n''t happy, what does anything matter? 12768 In Shelley''s dreams of Heaven there are always a river and a boat-- I read that somewhere.... Well, what do you think of Mintern Abbas? |
12768 | In one of the Jungle Books there was a man called Sir Purun Dass-- do you remember? 12768 Is Biddy amusing himself well?" |
12768 | Is Priorsford amusing? |
12768 | Is Priorsford sociable? |
12768 | Is all our company here? |
12768 | Is it that you are n''t well? |
12768 | Is it, do you suppose, because we had a Scots mother that I find, deep down within me, that I am''full of seriousness''? 12768 Is luncheon ready?" |
12768 | Is n''t Laverlaw a lovely place? |
12768 | Is n''t it fine? |
12768 | Is n''t it fun Peter''s going? 12768 Is n''t it odd that no one ever leaves us a legacy? |
12768 | Is n''t it strange to think of Miss Jean as an heiress? 12768 Is n''t it, Bing? |
12768 | Is n''t it? |
12768 | Is n''t life frightfully well arranged? 12768 Is n''t that wall damp?" |
12768 | Is that all that''s coming? |
12768 | Is that all? |
12768 | Is that why you have remained Pamela Reston? 12768 Is there a line across the road?" |
12768 | Is your minister''s bride pretty? |
12768 | It is generally considered rather necessary, is n''t it? |
12768 | It is good to be back.... Ah, Mrs. Duff- Whalley, how are you? 12768 It is n''t only your title: it''s everything-- oh, ca n''t you_ see_?" |
12768 | It must n''t go on,said Jean,"but once in a while....""And d''you know where I''m going to- night?" |
12768 | It''s a charming cottage,Mr. Dickson said,"but wo n''t you want something roomier? |
12768 | Jean says it''s Richard Plantagenet--_is_ it? |
12768 | Jean, what is Lord Bidborough''s Christian name? |
12768 | Jean, will it always matter to you more than anything in the world what David and Jock and Mhor think? 12768 Jean,"said Lord Bidborough,"will you tell me-- is there any other man?" |
12768 | Jean,said Pamela,"do you actually mean to tell me that everybody in Priorsford is nice? |
12768 | Live? |
12768 | May I come again? |
12768 | May n''t I feed with you? 12768 Mhor?" |
12768 | Miss Jean, wo n''t you sing us a song? 12768 Miss Jean?" |
12768 | Must we always call you Lord? |
12768 | My dear child, do you invite every stranger to stay with you if you think he is poor? |
12768 | My dear mother,she said,"why excite yourself? |
12768 | My dear, you do n''t suppose the boys come first now, do you? 12768 My dear,"said Pamela,"is there anything wrong?" |
12768 | Need you ask? |
12768 | Nice? |
12768 | No, are you? 12768 No,"Jean said,"but you do n''t try, do you? |
12768 | No-- o, but-- don''t you think, Mother, we need n''t work quite so hard for our social existence? 12768 No? |
12768 | Not the Mhor? |
12768 | Now, Jean, does Jock look as if anything so small as a fortune could put him wrong? 12768 Of course Quentin Durward had his sword-- but you know that way Charlie has with a stick?" |
12768 | Oh, Jock, would n''t that be fine? |
12768 | Oh, but would n''t that be rather familiar? 12768 Oh, do you remember the little old man who came one day to look at the house and stayed to tea and I sang''Strathairlie''to him? |
12768 | Oh, is n''t there? |
12768 | Oh, is she? |
12768 | Oh, must you go, Mr. Reid? 12768 Oh, wumman,"said Bella, as she dumped a loaf viciously on the platter,"d''ye need a Bishop to tell ye that? |
12768 | Oh,_ is_ it? 12768 Pam, dear, you do n''t mind? |
12768 | Philanthropic schemes, I suppose? |
12768 | Poor Penny- plain, are you going to be forced into being twopence coloured? 12768 Really, Jean?" |
12768 | Red Indians? |
12768 | Reids who lived in The Rigs thirty years ago? 12768 Rejoice in your happiness, and God grant that the evil days may never come to you.... What, Jock? |
12768 | Sha n''t I? |
12768 | Shall I meet you in London? 12768 She''s quite well, but have n''t you heard? |
12768 | Sitting alone, Jean? 12768 Sporting?" |
12768 | Tell me, did you know Lewis was here when you came to Priorsford? |
12768 | That''s pretty old, is n''t it? |
12768 | The Jardines are great Free Kirk people, like the Hopes of Hopetoun-- but the Parish is far more class, you know what I mean? 12768 Then you want him to have a full share?" |
12768 | Then, Mrs. Jowett, I can depend on you to look after that collecting? 12768 Then,"said Jean,"are you a relative of his?" |
12768 | Then,said Pamela,"we are to take it that you are ready to spring across any minute?" |
12768 | They do n''t talk: they just look into each other''s eyes in a sort of ecstasy, saying,''Is it I? 12768 Was it likely? |
12768 | Was n''t that right, John? |
12768 | Weel, and hoo''s the Bishop? |
12768 | Well, Jean, and whither away? 12768 Well, what is it?" |
12768 | Well,he said, when the examination was over,"how long are you going to keep me from my work?" |
12768 | Were you by any chance coming in? |
12768 | Were you so very busy that you could n''t write so much as a post card? 12768 What are ye wantin''here wi''thae dirty boots?" |
12768 | What could you do? |
12768 | What does David want you to do? |
12768 | What does he do? |
12768 | What happens when you arrive in a place like Priorsford and stay in lodgings? 12768 What made you do it, sonny?" |
12768 | What made you settle in Priorsford? |
12768 | What was that one we played with Pamela, you remember, Jock? 12768 What would you call''ladylike''?" |
12768 | What would you do with a fortune if you got it? |
12768 | What would you like to play at? |
12768 | What wud ye write? |
12768 | What''s the sun going on shining like that for? 12768 What''s the use of me if I''m not to help? |
12768 | What''s wrang wi''the egg? |
12768 | What''s your Christian name, please? |
12768 | What''s your name? |
12768 | What? |
12768 | Whaur''s Miss Reston the nicht? |
12768 | Whaur''s he awa to the noo? |
12768 | When did you see hell last? |
12768 | Where in the world have you been? 12768 Which road do we take?" |
12768 | Who are they, please? 12768 Who can tell?" |
12768 | Who did you like best, Richard Plantagenet? |
12768 | Who is it that''s coming? |
12768 | Why do n''t you marry him, Pamela? |
12768 | Why in the world has he left it to me? |
12768 | Why is she called Duff- Whalley? 12768 Why not Miss Jean?" |
12768 | Why not? 12768 Why should I? |
12768 | Why should Lewis Elliot have anything to do with it? |
12768 | Why should he not want to come? 12768 Why should n''t we, Penny- plain? |
12768 | Why? 12768 Will Peter have a diamond collar now?" |
12768 | Will Richard Plantagenet mind if he chases rabbits? |
12768 | Will it be all right, Stark? |
12768 | Will people call on me? |
12768 | Will you call me Richard Plantagenet, Miss Jean? |
12768 | Wo n''t she be disappointed? 12768 Wo n''t she think me rather pushing?" |
12768 | Wo n''t you tell me what''s wrong? 12768 Would Richard Plantagenet be there? |
12768 | Would n''t you rather we stayed at home with you? |
12768 | Would you mind,said Lord Bidborough,"walking on with me for a little bit?..." |
12768 | Yes,one woman was saying;"I said to my sister only to- day,''What would we do if there was a sudden alarm in the night?'' |
12768 | You are really very like Jock, my Jean.... D''you remember what your admired Dr. Johnson said? 12768 You do n''t mean to say it''s luncheon time already? |
12768 | You do n''t suppose_ Lewis_ wants to marry me, do you? 12768 You mean the Honourable Pamela Reston? |
12768 | You remember, Anne, when you tried to get him to say he would be a minister? 12768 You saw what a fuss Miss Reston made of Jean the other day when we called? |
12768 | You see how simple it is, and vivid, rather like Noah''s Ark scenery? 12768 You will like to come to Mintern Abbas, wo n''t you, Mhor?" |
12768 | You wo n''t, will you, Biddy? |
12768 | You''re going to stay to tea, are n''t you? 12768 You''ve no photographs of relations? |
12768 | You-- you ca n''t mean that I''m really ill? |
12768 | You_ are_ Miss Bathgate, are n''t you? |
12768 | Young folk? |
12768 | _ Can you make me happy_? 12768 _ Me_? |
12768 | ''A characteristic Cotswold Tudor house''--doesn''t that sound delicious? |
12768 | ''D''you care for him, Mirren?'' |
12768 | ''Does anybody die?'' |
12768 | ''Does anybody marry?'' |
12768 | ''Now,''I thought,''having learned how cruel a thing a snub is, will she be kind?'' |
12768 | ''There are vineries, peach- houses, greenhouses, and pits''--what do you do with pits?" |
12768 | ''Wha was Evangeline? |
12768 | ... Wo n''t you stay to tea?" |
12768 | A biscuit or a bit of cake? |
12768 | A bread- and- butter fly, shall we say? |
12768 | A cup of tea, you understand, and a friendly chat in my own drawing- room You will both join us, I hope?" |
12768 | A knock came to the back door and a boy''s voice said,"Is Peter in?" |
12768 | After all, why should he turn these people out of their home? |
12768 | Alison was about our levity-- especially mine? |
12768 | Always so witty, is n''t she? |
12768 | Am I all right?" |
12768 | Am I going to the play? |
12768 | And David-- by the way, where is David?" |
12768 | And I do n''t believe you know that I''m an heiress?" |
12768 | And Lewis Elliot-- have you seen him lately, Jean?" |
12768 | And did they realise that the words they heard were deathless words? |
12768 | And he uses words well himself, have you noticed? |
12768 | And her brother too?" |
12768 | And how are you? |
12768 | And of such a calm little gentleman?''" |
12768 | And tell Pam-- Mad? |
12768 | And the dear Macdonalds? |
12768 | And the last scene of all when John Splendid rides away?" |
12768 | And we wondered, Mrs. Macdonald, if you and your husband would add to your kindness by staying on here for a few days with the boys? |
12768 | And what could I do to the walls? |
12768 | And who do you dence with out at Colinton?'' |
12768 | And why had Cuddy Brig been altered? |
12768 | And why not-- at nineteen? |
12768 | And why not? |
12768 | And you came into my life again and I found I could n''t marry the other man and his position....""Pamela, can you really marry a fool like me? |
12768 | Are you dreading having me undiluted?" |
12768 | Are you going to tell the King the sky''s falling?" |
12768 | Are you going, Cousin Lewis? |
12768 | Are you going, Jean?" |
12768 | Are you going?" |
12768 | Are you hungry?" |
12768 | Are you quite comfortable Mawson?" |
12768 | Are you quite sure you know what you''re going to do? |
12768 | Are you so enamoured of the simple life that you can go on indefinitely living in Miss Bathgate''s parlour and eating stewed steak and duck''s eggs?" |
12768 | Are you sure you are warmly clad? |
12768 | Are you sure you want me? |
12768 | As if Mhor was n''t the best gift we ever got.... And when you have divided it, I wonder if you would take a tenth off each share? |
12768 | Baith Peter an''him are fair Bolsheviks... Did I tell ye that Miss Reston sent me a grand feather- boa-- grey, in a present? |
12768 | Beller, I was thinking to myself when they were h''all talking, what if Lady B. should be a Priorsford lady? |
12768 | Biddy got me these turquoises in Tibet: that is a devil charm: is n''t that jade delicious? |
12768 | But about the Miss Watsons-- d''you think I might call on them?" |
12768 | But one must be absorbed in something-- why not sheep?" |
12768 | But tell me, Jean, how is Miss Reston conducting herself in Priorsford?" |
12768 | But tell me, Pam, how long is this to continue? |
12768 | But there''s no doubt men like sweet, sentimental women, and I suppose they are restful in a house.... Shall we have coffee in the drawing- room? |
12768 | But what am I raging about? |
12768 | But what''s the good of talking about money? |
12768 | But wo n''t you sit down and rest? |
12768 | But you''ll come back to- morrow, wo n''t you? |
12768 | But, oh, ai n''t it bleak? |
12768 | CHAPTER VII"Is this a world to hide virtues in?" |
12768 | CHAPTER XIII"Hast any philosophy in thee?" |
12768 | CHAPTER XIV"Pray you, sir, how much carnation ribbon, may a man buy for a remuneration?" |
12768 | CHAPTER XVI"What''s to be said to him, lady? |
12768 | Can I make you happy?" |
12768 | Can ye picture her peelin''tatties? |
12768 | Can you imagine it furnished with a''suite''and ordinary pictures, and draped curtains at the windows and silver photograph frames and a grand piano? |
12768 | Could he afford a holiday? |
12768 | Could he have a tea biscuit-- not an Abernethy one, please, he does n''t like them-- or a bit of cake?" |
12768 | Could there be another such in the wide world? |
12768 | D''ye think ye should come in?'' |
12768 | D''you know him, by any chance?" |
12768 | D''you remember Davie? |
12768 | D''you remember that, John?... |
12768 | D''you think I''m priggish, Richard Plantagenet? |
12768 | D''you think he''ll be changed?" |
12768 | D''you think you can spare the time? |
12768 | Dear, dear, I told Dickie not to send in any more of that plant-- what d''you call it?" |
12768 | Did Biddy say anything in particular?" |
12768 | Did Great- aunt Alison tell you it was wrong?" |
12768 | Did I overpraise?" |
12768 | Did he tell Anne Hathaway wonderful tales? |
12768 | Did n''t you know? |
12768 | Did n''t you see that placard?" |
12768 | Did n''t you see, little blind Jean, that I was head over ears in love with you? |
12768 | Did she imagine, this girl, that hotel bills were of any moment to him? |
12768 | Did you ever try the Caddon Burn? |
12768 | Did you ever try to write, Jean?" |
12768 | Did you ever wonder-- everybody else did, I know-- why I never married? |
12768 | Did you give her the miniature?" |
12768 | Did you say she was living in Priorsford?" |
12768 | Do I know them?" |
12768 | Do n''t you know that Lewis....""What?" |
12768 | Do n''t you know that you seem to me almost too dear for my possessing? |
12768 | Do you approve?" |
12768 | Do you hear that, Jean?" |
12768 | Do you invite me to come to- morrow?" |
12768 | Do you know all about the different makes? |
12768 | Do you know where he is just now?" |
12768 | Do you know your_ Pilgrim''s Progress_, Pamela? |
12768 | Do you mind?" |
12768 | Do you realise that I''ve been here two months, Jean?" |
12768 | Do you realise that we are only ten minutes behind the others?" |
12768 | Do you remain seated alone with your conscience, or do people call? |
12768 | Do you remember the end of_ The Mill on the Floss_? |
12768 | Do you remember the scene with the blind widow of Glencoe? |
12768 | Do you remember what good times we used to have with him when he came to stay with the Greys? |
12768 | Do you remember what is said of Martin Ross? |
12768 | Do you remember where Christiana and the others reach the Land of Beulah? |
12768 | Do you suppose I have n''t known they did n''t want to come here and visit us? |
12768 | Do you suppose she made her début then? |
12768 | Do you think I am?" |
12768 | Do you think I would let you burden yourself with all my family? |
12768 | Do you, by any chance, know our landlord in London? |
12768 | Does a man never think how awful it is for a woman who has to wait without speaking? |
12768 | Does it count if it is given in charity, or ought it to be given to Church things and missions?" |
12768 | Duff- Whalley?" |
12768 | Elliot?'' |
12768 | Even if there was nothing else in the way, what about Davie and Jock and the dear Mhor? |
12768 | Father treasured that-- and have you seen this?" |
12768 | First, your long exploring expedition and then the War: have n''t you been across the world, away long enough to make you want to stay at home? |
12768 | Funny, ai n''t it? |
12768 | Had n''t you better put on your hat?" |
12768 | Had she addressed her rightly? |
12768 | Hae ye tell''t her aboot Peter?" |
12768 | Has Jean got the fur coat she coveted?" |
12768 | Has he spoken to her?" |
12768 | Has she children?" |
12768 | Have n''t you noticed what a wonderful way she has with the poor people? |
12768 | Have we, Miss Augusta?" |
12768 | Have you kept Priorsford lively through the Christmas- time, you and your daughter?" |
12768 | Have you not a qualm?" |
12768 | Have you nothing to say to me?" |
12768 | He merely said,"Oh, and will you be married and have a bridescake? |
12768 | He''s a relation of yours, is n''t he?" |
12768 | Here, did the Lord send Miss Jean a present?... |
12768 | Hope?" |
12768 | How Shakespeare_ knew_... why should she mourn because Age must come? |
12768 | How can I make this money a blessing?" |
12768 | How can you get rid of it?" |
12768 | How could I eat it? |
12768 | How could I know you were going to say anything so silly? |
12768 | How could he? |
12768 | How could it be anything but insipid with Mrs. Jowett saying only"How nice,"or"What a pity"at intervals? |
12768 | How could there be? |
12768 | How long do you give me?" |
12768 | How old is he now?" |
12768 | However-- now that we are really friends, what did you do this afternoon that was so very important?" |
12768 | I always think, do n''t you, that there''s something awful pathetic about Christmas? |
12768 | I do hope Mhor has n''t been worrying you?" |
12768 | I do n''t know whether you ever go out by the day?" |
12768 | I do n''t suppose you have anything for Peter? |
12768 | I do n''t suppose you know him well enough to ask him not to sell The Rigs? |
12768 | I do n''t think anything in life could ever quite down you, and even death-- what of death, Jean?" |
12768 | I do wish you were coming, Pamela-- won''t you think better of it?" |
12768 | I find that irritates that class of person frightfully... How do you like my sables, Jean? |
12768 | I forgot about''happy''being the word; d''you think she''ll mind?" |
12768 | I hate it.... Why do you want to behave like that? |
12768 | I mean to say, the child had to ask herself,''How will this action look when I am on my death- bed?'' |
12768 | I somehow felt he was ill.""And why have they written to tell you?" |
12768 | I sometimes think I hear them laugh as I teach Mhor_ What is the chief end of man?_... |
12768 | I squealed and dropped it, and he said,''Afraid? |
12768 | I suppose I''d better gie the laddie a piece?" |
12768 | I suppose it''ll do if we stay an hour?" |
12768 | I think when you get it home you''ll like it awful well--''Who would refuse a hat after such a recommendation?" |
12768 | I was four, was n''t I, Jean? |
12768 | I wonder if anyone ever does buy these houses, or if they are merely there to tantalize poor folk? |
12768 | I wonder whether I should take rooms for him in the Hydro, or in one of these nice old hotels in the Nethergate? |
12768 | I''m lunching at Hillview on Friday May I come in after luncheon? |
12768 | I''m so glad you came to see The Rigs, but I wish you could have stayed....""Is he an old friend?" |
12768 | I''ve been lecturing her.... By the way, where are the boys to- day? |
12768 | If I wired to- day, do you think they would come? |
12768 | If anyone could do for Tweeddale what she has done for Angus I would be glad....""You care for poetry, Miss Reston? |
12768 | If we did n''t know that we had all to die we could hardly go on living, could we?" |
12768 | If we needed a doctor or a policeman? |
12768 | Is anything wrong?" |
12768 | Is dear Lord Bidborough not with you?" |
12768 | Is he old, our landlord?" |
12768 | Is it because poor Great- aunt is n''t here to make me? |
12768 | Is it thou?''" |
12768 | Is n''t Biddy a delightful fellow?" |
12768 | Is n''t it a nice place? |
12768 | Is n''t it fine that Davie will be home to- morrow? |
12768 | Is n''t it heavenly to think that we shall be together now all the rest of our lives? |
12768 | Is n''t it wonderful how simple and pleasant they are considering their lineage? |
12768 | Is n''t it, Toutou? |
12768 | Is there no chance of a weddin''''ere?" |
12768 | Is''t a fac''?" |
12768 | It deserves more than just to be slept in....""Are n''t English breakfasts the best you ever tasted?" |
12768 | It is rather disconcerting to think oneself a butterfly and find out suddenly that one is a-- what? |
12768 | It''s as new- looking as the day he left it.... You do n''t want to leave The Towers, Muriel?" |
12768 | Jaques is astonishingly good, do n''t you think? |
12768 | Jean said as she stroked the little head,"and yet so independent? |
12768 | Jean, could you ever-- I mean, d''you think it possible-- oh, Jean, will you marry me?" |
12768 | Looked out of the window-- isn''t it_ wonderful_, Jock?" |
12768 | M''Cosh?" |
12768 | May I come in for a second and look at them?" |
12768 | May I have the book you spoke of? |
12768 | May I really have it for my own? |
12768 | Mrs. Duff- Whalley waited expectantly for a moment, but as Jean said nothing more she continued:"Did she talk of future plans? |
12768 | Mrs. Jowett was pouring out a second cup of tea for Mrs. Duff- Whalley when she said,"And have you heard about dear little Jean Jardine?" |
12768 | Mrs. M''Cosh, our servant-- perhaps you noticed her when you came in? |
12768 | Nice people? |
12768 | No money, you mean? |
12768 | Not much romance about it now, is there? |
12768 | Or are you merely being charitable? |
12768 | Ought she to say things to him? |
12768 | Pamela asked,"Do you understand about things?" |
12768 | Pamela stood very still for a second, and then said,"Yes?" |
12768 | Pamela waited for further information before she spoke, while Mrs. Jowett said,"Do n''t you consider it a suitable match?" |
12768 | Pamela, who had not a notion what a gazogene was, gasped the required surprise and horror and said,"But how did she do it?" |
12768 | Perhaps, Mrs. Duff- Whalley, you will bring your daughter to one of Jean''s parties when you are in London? |
12768 | Peter Reid sat silent for a minute; then he broke out:"Who am I to leave my money to? |
12768 | Presently he said,"You are very fond of The Rigs?" |
12768 | Reid?" |
12768 | See these cookies? |
12768 | She is''andsome, do n''t you think?" |
12768 | She looks at me as if she actually thought she was my equal, and was n''t she positively rude to you, Muriel, when you called with some message?" |
12768 | She thrilled again as she seemed to feel the touch of his hand and heard his voice saying,"Oh, Penny- plain, are you going to send me away?" |
12768 | She was sittin''horn- idle, an''I said to her,''D''ye niver tak''up a stockin''?'' |
12768 | She''s no a bad lassie, Miss Jean, and wonderfu''sensible considerin''.... Are ye finished, Mhor? |
12768 | Some of the''little''people might call and ask you to tea-- the kind''little''people-- but--""Who do you call the''little''people?" |
12768 | Something more imposing for an heiress?" |
12768 | Suppose I ask them to meet you, and then you could fix a day for them to have tea with you? |
12768 | Tell me, Jean, girl-- no, I''m not laughing-- how will this day look from your death- bed?" |
12768 | Tell me, Penny- plain, you''re not fretting about leaving the boys? |
12768 | That would have savoured of sacrilege.... Are we finished? |
12768 | The boys''ll think we are lost.... Oh, Biddy, have I done right? |
12768 | Then Jock laughed at him learning,''What is your name, A or B?'' |
12768 | There are hot things in that dish-- or would you rather have a sandwich? |
12768 | They are not so devoured by gentility as our Edinburgh friends; they are more living, more human....""Are Edinburgh people very refined?" |
12768 | Twenty years ago I was twenty and you were twenty- five-- why did n''t you speak then, Lewis? |
12768 | Two months in London would do wonders for you--"The handle of the door turned and a voice said,"May I come in?" |
12768 | Warn him against lurking evils? |
12768 | Was he_ quite_ sure that there were no relations, no one who had a real claim? |
12768 | Was n''t it Samuel Rutherford who advised people to''forefancy their latter end''? |
12768 | Was n''t that good? |
12768 | Was the Globe filled, I wonder, with a quite unexpectant first night audience? |
12768 | Was the money to be a treasure to her or the reverse? |
12768 | Well, Miss Bathgate, I wonder if you would mind if Mawson-- my maid, you know-- carried away some of those ornaments and photographs to a safe place? |
12768 | Well, will you please divide it into four parts? |
12768 | Were they all Shakespeare lovers? |
12768 | What about dinner?" |
12768 | What are conveniences compared to old thick walls and queer windows and little funny stairs? |
12768 | What are three times three?" |
12768 | What could be more suitable? |
12768 | What do you say the other man''s name is? |
12768 | What does being young matter if you''re awkward and dull and shy as well? |
12768 | What does it matter to me, when all''s said? |
12768 | What does''stawsome''mean exactly?" |
12768 | What effect will the money have, I wonder?" |
12768 | What have you got now, Biddy? |
12768 | What is the child to do with a great fortune? |
12768 | What is the owner like?" |
12768 | What makes you want to think all the time about slum children?... |
12768 | What of the''left ladies,''as I heard a child describe spinsters?" |
12768 | What part of Scotland is''home''to you?" |
12768 | What was I saying? |
12768 | What was the name? |
12768 | What''s the use of having a funeral pyre if you do n''t light it?" |
12768 | When are you two babes in the wood going to be married? |
12768 | When do you go exactly?" |
12768 | When is the wedding?" |
12768 | When she came back to Mrs. Duff- Whalley that lady was saying:"Did you say, Jean, that Miss Reston is coming back to Priorsford soon?" |
12768 | When will you come and see Davie?" |
12768 | Where do you live?" |
12768 | Where''s the caddy?" |
12768 | Whether do you think Quentin Durward or Charlie Chaplin would be the better man in a fight?" |
12768 | Who is more severe than you on the mad women who dance, and sup, and frivol their money away? |
12768 | Who lives in the one at the corner with the well- kept garden?" |
12768 | Who lives in the pretty house with the long ivy- covered front?" |
12768 | Why did Pamela never mention him? |
12768 | Why had n''t he written to congratulate her on the fortune? |
12768 | Why not call me Biddy?" |
12768 | Why not motor there? |
12768 | Why should n''t we? |
12768 | Why would n''t you come?" |
12768 | Why, he asked himself had he not told them at once that he was their landlord? |
12768 | Will this do? |
12768 | Will you be there, Miss Reston?" |
12768 | Will you go upstairs?" |
12768 | Will you learn to love it, do you think?" |
12768 | Will you marry me?" |
12768 | Will you never care for anyone as you care for them?" |
12768 | Will you, Jean? |
12768 | Wishart?" |
12768 | Wo n''t that be nice?" |
12768 | Would he be content always to be settled at home? |
12768 | Would it be very rash and impulsive to ask him to stay at The Rigs? |
12768 | Would n''t it be a fine thing for Miss Jean?" |
12768 | Would the possession of money spoil the boys? |
12768 | Would you like me to say some?" |
12768 | Would you mind coming with me just now to look at the puddock- stools? |
12768 | Would you mind?" |
12768 | Yes, is n''t it? |
12768 | You could arrange about the preaching, John, but what about the spring cleaning? |
12768 | You do n''t think it an unfriendly act? |
12768 | You do n''t want to be drowned, do you?" |
12768 | You do''ave to give the Scotch time: bit slow they are.... What I wanted to h''ask, Miss, is where am I to put your things? |
12768 | You have n''t talked about it yet? |
12768 | You would like that, would n''t you, Jock?" |
12768 | You''ll stay and have luncheon with us, wo n''t you?" |
12768 | You''re happy, are n''t you? |
12768 | You''re not going to send me away, Penny- plain?" |
12768 | You''ve never been so very happy in The Towers, have you, Mother?" |
12768 | _ Do_ you remember his scorn of knight- errants who rescued distressed damsels? |
12768 | _ Nelly''s Teachers_?" |
12768 | and where does she live? |
12768 | and why do they come to see me?" |
12894 | All flesh suffering great sorrow, who shall deliver, like a loving father? 12894 Brahman says to him:''How dost thou obtain my male names?'' |
12894 | For having spewed forth lust, passion, and ignorance, shall I return to feed upon it? 12894 Is not Belief the true god- announcing Miracle?" |
12894 | What do I see? |
12894 | ''How actions?'' |
12894 | ''How flavors of food?'' |
12894 | ''How forms?'' |
12894 | ''How journeyings?'' |
12894 | ''How joy, delight, and offspring?'' |
12894 | ''How pleasures and pain?'' |
12894 | ''How smells?'' |
12894 | ''How sounds?'' |
12894 | ''How thoughts, and what is to be known and desired?'' |
12894 | ''Who art thou?'' |
12894 | --He went out for the last time into the mosque, two days before his death; asked, If he had injured any man? |
12894 | A false man found a religion? |
12894 | A hare rescued from the serpent''s mouth, would it go back again to be devoured? |
12894 | A man blind and recovering his sight, would he again seek to be in darkness? |
12894 | After a misfortune hath befallen you at Ohod( ye had already obtained two equal advantages), do ye say, Whence cometh this? |
12894 | Again, if Isvara be the maker, all living things should silently submit, patient beneath the maker''s power, and then what use to practise virtue? |
12894 | Again, if self- nature be the cause, why should we seek to find''escape''? |
12894 | Agastya: Why dost thou wish to kill us, O Indra? |
12894 | Alas, is not this the history of all highest Truth that comes or ever came into the world? |
12894 | All crowns and sovereignties whatsoever, where would_ they_ in a few brief years be? |
12894 | And God said, How long hast thou tarried here? |
12894 | And having shown the way to all the world, who would not reverence and adore him? |
12894 | And how can ye take it, since the one of you hath gone in unto the other, and they have received from you a firm covenant? |
12894 | And how should God go about to punish you, if ye be thankful and believe? |
12894 | And how will they submit to thy decision, since they have the law, containing the judgment of God? |
12894 | And if the state of''no continuance''and of sorrow is opposed to''self,''what room is there for such idea or ground for self? |
12894 | And now Yasodharâ, deeply chiding, spoke thus to Kandaka:"Where now dwells he, who ever dwells within my mind? |
12894 | And now with lion- voice he joyfully inquired, and asked Kaundinya,"Knowest thou yet?" |
12894 | And thereupon the unbelievers sneer and ask, Is this your man according to God''s heart? |
12894 | And they who believe will say, Are these the men who have sworn by God, with a most firm oath, that they surely held with you? |
12894 | And unto them whose faces shall become black, God will say, Have ye returned unto your unbelief, after ye had believed? |
12894 | And what harm would befall them if they should believe in God and the last day, and give alms out of that which God hath bestowed on them? |
12894 | And when Abraham said, O Lord, show me how thou wilt raise the dead; God said, Dost thou not yet believe? |
12894 | And when God shall say unto Jesus, at the last day, O Jesus, son of Mary, hast thou said unto men, Take me and my mother for two gods, beside God? |
12894 | And when Moses said unto his people, Verily God commandeth you to sacrifice a cow;[28] they answered, Dost thou make a jest of us? |
12894 | And when one saith unto them, Believe ye as others believe; they answer, Shall we believe as fools believe? |
12894 | And who is more unjust than he who hideth the testimony which he hath received from God? |
12894 | Answer it;_ thou_ must find an answer.--Ambition? |
12894 | Answer, Have ye received any promise from God to that purpose? |
12894 | Answer, Why therefore doth he punish you for your sins? |
12894 | Are not they themselves corrupt doers? |
12894 | Are not they themselves fools? |
12894 | Are not you yourselves there? |
12894 | Are we to suppose that it was a miserable piece of spiritual legerdemain, this which so many creatures of the Almighty have lived by and died by? |
12894 | As some man grievously afflicted eats food not fit to eat, and so in ignorance aggravates his sickness, so can he get rid of lust who pampers lust? |
12894 | As the Maruts pass along, they talk together on the way: does anyone hear them? |
12894 | Brahman asks:''How my female names?'' |
12894 | Brahman asks:''How my neuter names?'' |
12894 | Brahman asks:''What is the true?'' |
12894 | Brahman says to him:''Who am I?'' |
12894 | Buddha, knowing all thoughts, spoke thus to Kâsyapa, questioning him:--"What profit have you found in giving up your fire- adoring law?" |
12894 | But how will they behave when a misfortune shall befall them, for that which their hands have sent before them? |
12894 | But if any advantage happen to the infidels, they say unto them, Were we not superior to you, and have we not defended you against the believers? |
12894 | But now to disregard your family duties, to turn against father and mother, how can this be called love and affection? |
12894 | But now we see the marks of joy and sorrow, what room for constancy then is here? |
12894 | But they who considered that they should meet God at the resurrection, said, How often hath a small army discomfited a great army, by the will of God? |
12894 | But what is this letting go gunas( cords fettering the soul); if one is fettered by these gunas, how can there be release? |
12894 | But when Jesus perceived their unbelief, he said, Who will be my helpers towards God? |
12894 | By what strong desire may we arrest them, they who float through the air like hawks? |
12894 | CHAPTER IV FLOWERS Who shall overcome this earth, and the world of Yama, the lord of the departed, and the world of the gods? |
12894 | CHAPTER XI OLD AGE How is there laughter, how is there joy, as this world is always burning? |
12894 | Can the Haoma that has been touched with Nasu from a dead dog, or from a dead man, be made clean again? |
12894 | Destroying life to gain religious merit, what love can such a man possess? |
12894 | Did ye think ye should enter paradise, when as yet no such thing had happened unto you, as hath happened unto those who have been before you? |
12894 | Distracted, as I never was before; sleepless by night and day, how can I then indulge in pleasure? |
12894 | Do not they know that God knoweth that which they conceal as well as that which they publish? |
12894 | Do the infidels expect less than that God should come down to them overshadowed with clouds, and the angels also? |
12894 | Do these heroes sing forth their own strength, wishing for wealth? |
12894 | Do they envy other men that which God of his bounty hath given them? |
12894 | Do they not attentively consider the Koran? |
12894 | Do they therefore desire the judgment of the time of ignorance? |
12894 | Do they therefore seek any other religion but God''s? |
12894 | Do ye not therefore understand? |
12894 | Do ye not therefore understand? |
12894 | Do ye therefore believe in part of the book of the law, and reject other parts thereof? |
12894 | Do ye therefore desire that the Jews should believe you? |
12894 | Do you not seek a light, ye who are surrounded by darkness? |
12894 | Does fire kill? |
12894 | Does water kill? |
12894 | Dost thou not know that God is almighty? |
12894 | Dost thou not know that the kingdom of heaven and earth is God''s? |
12894 | Dost thou not know that unto God belongeth the kingdom of heaven and earth? |
12894 | Dost thou not wish to give to us? |
12894 | Each stanza concludes with the refrain,"Who is the God to whom we shall offer sacrifice?" |
12894 | FUNERALS AND PURIFICATION If a dog or a man die under a hut of wood or a hut of felt, what shall the worshippers of Mazda do? |
12894 | Faults? |
12894 | For fire may be put out by water in excess, but what can overpower the fire of lust? |
12894 | For how can misfortunes or frequent calamities possibly affect it, in the presence of so great a man? |
12894 | For the sake of what liberal giver did they run, and their comrades followed, as streams of rain filled with food? |
12894 | Forger and juggler? |
12894 | From of old, a thousand thoughts, in his pilgrimings and wanderings, had been in this man: What am I? |
12894 | God has made many revelations: but this man too, has not God made him, the latest and newest of all? |
12894 | God said, Are ye firmly resolved, and do ye accept my covenant on this condition? |
12894 | Has the world such men as these? |
12894 | Hast thou not considered him who disputed with Abraham concerning his Lord, because God had given him the kingdom? |
12894 | Hast thou not considered those to whom part of the scripture hath been given? |
12894 | Hast thou not considered those who left their habitations( and they were thousands) for fear of death? |
12894 | Hast thou not observed those unto whom it was said, Withhold your hands from war, and be constant at prayers, and pay the legal alms? |
12894 | Hast thou not observed those unto whom part of the scripture was given? |
12894 | Hast thou not observed those unto whom part of the scriptures was delivered? |
12894 | Hast thou not observed those who justify themselves? |
12894 | Hast thou not observed those who pretend they believe in what hath been revealed unto thee, and what hath been revealed before thee? |
12894 | Having approached his father, he asked:"Thus has Kitra asked me; how shall I answer?" |
12894 | Having neither profit nor advantage in this world, how can he in the next world reap content? |
12894 | Having said this he took fuel in his hand, like a pupil, and approached Kitra Gângyâyani, saying:"May I come near to you?" |
12894 | He answered, Lord, how shall I have a son, when old age hath overtaken me, and my wife is barren? |
12894 | He established the earth and this heaven:--Who is the God to whom we shall offer sacrifice? |
12894 | He himself does not belong to himself; how much less sons and wealth? |
12894 | He said, How shall God quicken this city, after she hath been dead? |
12894 | He that committeth an Âgerepta, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | He whom no desire with its snares and poisons can lead astray, by what track can you lead him, the Awakened, the Omniscient, the trackless? |
12894 | Him I call indeed a Brâhmana who has no interests, and when he has understood the truth, does not say How, how? |
12894 | Hot weather? |
12894 | How can I reply to the reproaches of all the dwellers in the palace with suitable words? |
12894 | How far from one another? |
12894 | How far from the consecrated bundles of Baresma? |
12894 | How far from the consecrated bundles of Baresma? |
12894 | How far from the consecrated bundles of Baresma? |
12894 | How far from the faithful? |
12894 | How far from the faithful? |
12894 | How far from the faithful? |
12894 | How far from the fire? |
12894 | How far from the fire? |
12894 | How far from the fire? |
12894 | How far from the former six? |
12894 | How far from the water? |
12894 | How far from the water? |
12894 | How far from the water? |
12894 | How is it that ye believe not in God? |
12894 | How is it that you fear not this dread arrow? |
12894 | How large shall be those rooms for the dead? |
12894 | How long shall the piece of ground lie fallow whereon dogs or men have died? |
12894 | How many in number are thy contracts, O Ahura Mazda? |
12894 | How much are those three paces? |
12894 | How much is the pace? |
12894 | How much more should those not yet delivered from desire, fear and dread its power? |
12894 | How shall I fight against that Drug who from the dead defiles the living? |
12894 | How shall I fight against that Drug who from the dead defiles the living? |
12894 | How shall I fight against that Drug who from the dead rushes upon the living? |
12894 | How shall I fight against that Drug who from the dead rushes upon the living? |
12894 | How shall I fight against that Nasu who from the dead defiles the living? |
12894 | How then ought you to guard yourselves? |
12894 | I am full of fear and alarm, my tongue can utter no words; tell me then what words to speak; but who is there in the empire will believe me? |
12894 | I am indeed but young, the sun of wisdom has but just arisen, how can I then explain the master''s doctrine? |
12894 | I do not assert Mohammed''s continual sincerity: who is continually sincere? |
12894 | I invite these bounteous sons of Rudra, will these Maruts turn again to us? |
12894 | I? |
12894 | If God help you, none shall conquer you; but if he desert you, who is it that will help you after him? |
12894 | If a man break the field- contract, how many are involved in his sin? |
12894 | If a man break the field- contract, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man break the hand- contract, how many are involved in his sin? |
12894 | If a man break the hand- contract, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man break the man- contract, how many are involved in his sin? |
12894 | If a man break the man- contract, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man break the ox- contract, how many are involved in his sin? |
12894 | If a man break the ox- contract, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man break the sheep- contract, how many are involved in his sin? |
12894 | If a man break the sheep- contract, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man break the word- contract, how many are involved in his sin? |
12894 | If a man break the word- contract, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Aredus for the sixth time, without having atoned for the preceding, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Aredus, and refuse to atone for it, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Aredus, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Avaoirista for the seventh time, without having atoned for the preceding, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Avaoirista, and refuse to atone for it, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Avaoirista, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Âgerepta for the eighth time, without having atoned for the preceding, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit an Âgerepta, and refuse to atone for it, what penalty shall he pay? |
12894 | If a man commit that deed and refuse to atone for it, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man commit that deed for the fifth time, without having atoned for the preceding, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man shall throw clothes, either of skin or woven, upon a dead body, enough to cover both legs, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man shall throw clothes, either of skin or woven, upon a dead body, enough to cover the feet, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man shall throw clothes, either of skin or woven, upon a dead body, enough to cover the whole body, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another and hurt him sorely, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another so that he break a bone, and if he refuse to atone for it, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another so that he break a bone, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another so that he give up the ghost, and if he refuse to atone for it, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another so that he give up the ghost, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another so that the blood come, and if he refuse to atone for it, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man smite another so that the blood come, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a man voluntarily commits the unnatural sin, what is the penalty for it? |
12894 | If a man, by force, commits the unnatural sin, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If a worshipper of Mazda, walking, or running, or riding, or driving, come upon a corpse in a stream of running water, what shall he do? |
12894 | If he commit that deed again, without having atoned for the preceding, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If he commit that deed for the fourth time, without having atoned for the preceding, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If he commit that deed for the third time, without having atoned for the preceding, what is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | If he owed any man? |
12894 | If in the end the law of entire destruction is exacted, what use is there in indolence and pride? |
12894 | If not a healer of diseases, what means the name of''Good Physician?'' |
12894 | If so, if such a self it is that acts, let there be no self- mortifying conduct, the self is lord and master; what need to do that which is done? |
12894 | If the summer is past and the winter has come, what shall the worshippers of Mazda do? |
12894 | If they shall not look on the ground for any bones, hair, dung, urine, or blood that may be there, what is the penalty that they shall pay? |
12894 | If worshippers of Mazda want to till that piece of ground again, to water it, to sow it, and to plough it, what shall they do? |
12894 | If you remove heat from fire, then there is no such thing as fire, or if you remove surface from body, what body can remain? |
12894 | If you say there is no''knower,''then who is it that is spoken of as''knowing''? |
12894 | If, however, the body be already falling to pieces and rotting, what shall the worshipper of Mazda do? |
12894 | In the beginning mutual strife produced destruction, how now can it result in glory or renown? |
12894 | Indra speaks: Where, O Maruts, was that custom with you, when you left me alone in the killing of Ahi? |
12894 | Is his body suddenly dried up by the heat, or has he been born in this way?" |
12894 | Is it of man or of woman? |
12894 | Is it of sheep or of oxen? |
12894 | Is it true that thou, Ahura Mazda, seizest the waters from the sea Vouru- kasha with the wind and the clouds? |
12894 | Is not a man''s walking, in truth, always that:"a succession of falls"? |
12894 | Is not that a sign?" |
12894 | Is not the help of God nigh? |
12894 | Is there in this world any man so restrained by shame that he does not provoke reproof, as a noble horse the whip? |
12894 | Like a man whose house has caught fire, by some expedient finds a way to escape, will such a man forthwith go back and enter it again? |
12894 | Miracles? |
12894 | Moreover, unto those whom the angels put to death, having injured their own souls,[75] the angels said, Of what religion were ye? |
12894 | Neither capable of increase or diminution, how can there be deliverance? |
12894 | O Rudra, where is thy softly stroking hand which cures and relieves? |
12894 | O lord of men, what has thus happened to thee? |
12894 | O ye Maruts, who are armed with lightning- spears, who stirs you from within by himself, as the jaws are stirred by the tongue? |
12894 | O ye to whom the scriptures have been given, why do ye dispute concerning Abraham, since the Law and the Gospel were not sent down until after him? |
12894 | O ye who have received the scriptures, why do ye clothe truth with vanity, and knowingly hide the truth? |
12894 | O ye who have received the scriptures, why do ye not believe in the signs of God, since ye are witnesses of them? |
12894 | Of all acts, is not, for a man,_ repentance_ the most divine? |
12894 | On this the Likkhavis, harboring thoughts of pride and disappointment, said:"Why should that one take away our profit?" |
12894 | On what errand of yours are you going, in heaven, not on earth? |
12894 | Once more he asked,"What is this they carry? |
12894 | One alive, the other dead, gone by different roads, where now shall she be found? |
12894 | Or hast thou not considered how he behaved who passed by a city which had been destroyed, even to her foundations? |
12894 | Passed the sea of birth and death, without desire, with nought to seek, we only know how much we love, and, grieving, ask why Buddha dies so quickly?" |
12894 | Po- lo, and Sakra king of Devas, and Nung- Sha returning to Sakra; what certainty is there, even for the lord of heaven? |
12894 | Pure? |
12894 | Really his utterances, are they not a kind of"revelation";--what we must call such for want of other name? |
12894 | Remember when the apostles said, O Jesus, son of Mary, is thy Lord able to cause a table to descend unto us from heaven? |
12894 | Replying, they said:"With respect to this youth, has he long arms and the signs of a great man? |
12894 | Say unto them, Will ye worship, besides God, that which can cause you neither harm nor profit? |
12894 | Say, Are ye wiser, or God? |
12894 | Say, O ye who have received the scriptures, why do ye keep back from the way of God him who believeth? |
12894 | Say, O ye who have received the scriptures, why do ye not believe in the signs of God? |
12894 | Say, Shall I declare unto you better things than this? |
12894 | Say, Shall I denounce unto you a worse thing than this, as to the reward which ye are to expect with God? |
12894 | Say, Why therefore have ye slain the prophets of God in times past, if ye be true believers? |
12894 | Say, Will ye dispute with us concerning God, who is our Lord, and your Lord? |
12894 | Scatter the fire amid the desert grass, dried by the sun, fanned by the wind-- the raging flames who shall extinguish? |
12894 | Seeing the wanderer, not showing him the way, why then should I be called''Good Master- guide?'' |
12894 | Self is the lord of self, who else could be the lord? |
12894 | Shall he therefore who followeth that which is well pleasing unto God, be as he who bringeth on himself wrath from God, and whose receptacle is hell? |
12894 | Shall the man be clean who has touched a corpse that has been dried up and dead more than a year? |
12894 | Shall they have a part of the kingdom, since even then they would not bestow the smallest matter on men? |
12894 | Shall we, in search of this, slay that which lives, in worship? |
12894 | She was a widow; old, and had lost her looks: you love me better than you did her?" |
12894 | So whilst this question hangs in suspense, why should a man give up his present pleasure? |
12894 | Sorrow and joy are not self- existing, how can these be made by self? |
12894 | That he may approach us with the Good Mind, and that our souls may advance in good, let it thus come; yea,"how may my soul advance in good? |
12894 | That thou, Ahura Mazda, takest them down to the corpses? |
12894 | The Dialogue The Maruts speak: From whence, O Indra, dost thou come alone, thou who art mighty? |
12894 | The Epilogue The sacrificer speaks: Who has magnified you here, O Maruts? |
12894 | The Maruts: O Brother Agastya, why, being a friend, dost thou despise us? |
12894 | The Parsis had been the teachers of Anquetil; and who could ever understand the holy writ of the Parsis better than the Parsis themselves? |
12894 | The angels replied, Was not God''s earth wide enough, that ye might fly therein to a place of refuge? |
12894 | The baptism of God[30] have we received, and who is better than God to baptize? |
12894 | The enlightened man distinguishes truth from falsehood; but how can truth be born from such as those? |
12894 | The eye beholding such signs as these before it, how can it not be oppressed by a desire to escape? |
12894 | The foolish men will say, What hath turned them from their Keblah, towards which they formerly prayed? |
12894 | The friends of the dead then came to the lord and asked,"Where have our friends and relatives deceased, now gone to be born, after this life ended?" |
12894 | The nobleman replied,"Not give; why then said you,''Fill it with yellow gold''?" |
12894 | The prince asked his charioteer,"What sort of man, again, is this?" |
12894 | The prince seeing the old man, filled with apprehension, asked his charioteer,"What kind of man is this? |
12894 | The prophet answered, If ye are enjoined to go to war, will ye be near refusing to fight? |
12894 | The world ensnared in the toils of folly, who shall destroy the net? |
12894 | Then Brahman says to him:''Who art thou?'' |
12894 | Then Geta said:"I will not give, why then spread you your gold?" |
12894 | Then tell me, why should I return again?" |
12894 | Then why should we be forbidden to pay our reverence to his body- relics? |
12894 | These three, at this time, advanced together, and addressed their father Pisuna and said:"May we not know the trouble that afflicts you?" |
12894 | They called him Prophet, you say? |
12894 | They suffered calamity and tribulation, and were afflicted; so that the apostle, and they who believed with him, said, When will the help of God come? |
12894 | They who take the unbelievers for their protectors, besides the faithful, do they seek for power with them? |
12894 | They who wait to observe what befalleth you, if victory be granted you from God, say, Were we not with you? |
12894 | They will ask thee what is allowed them as lawful to eat? |
12894 | This Law, this fiend- destroying Law of Zarathustra, by what greatness, goodness, and fairness is it great, good, and fair above all other utterances? |
12894 | This is the Work he and his disciples made so much of, asking all the world, Is not that a miracle? |
12894 | This night the watchman on the streets of Cairo when he cries,"Who goes?" |
12894 | This was imperfect enough: but to welcome, for example, a Burns as we did, was that what we can call perfect? |
12894 | Thou, the remover of all heaven- sent mischief, wilt thou, O strong hero, bear with me? |
12894 | Though all men walk by them, what good is it? |
12894 | To adore with worship the great merciful, and yet to gender wide destruction, how is this possible? |
12894 | To be Sheik of Mecca or Arabia, and have a bit of gilt wood put into your hand,--will that be one''s salvation? |
12894 | To solve a doubt is only reasonable, who could forbid a man to seek its explanation? |
12894 | To what well- born generous worshipper have the Maruts gone to- day on that march, on which you bring to kith and kin the never- failing seed of corn? |
12894 | To whom shall they apply here below, who want to cleanse their body defiled by the dead? |
12894 | We can not even talk of putting self away, truth is the same as falsehood; it is not''I''that do a thing, and who, forsooth, is he that talks of''I''? |
12894 | Were ye present when Jacob was at the point of death? |
12894 | What am I to believe? |
12894 | What am I to do? |
12894 | What is Life; what is Death? |
12894 | What is the atonement for it? |
12894 | What is the atonement for it? |
12894 | What is the chief end of man here below? |
12894 | What is the cleansing from it? |
12894 | What is the cleansing from it? |
12894 | What is the food that fills the Religion of Mazda? |
12894 | What is the penalty that he shall pay? |
12894 | What is there now throughout the world equal to overcome the springs of these great sorrows? |
12894 | What law most excellent have you obeyed? |
12894 | What may not their arts accomplish in promoting in men a lustful desire?" |
12894 | What part of a sheet of snow or hail does the Drug Nasu defile with corruption, infection, and pollution? |
12894 | What part of the water in a pond does the Drug Nasu defile with corruption, infection, and pollution? |
12894 | What part of the water in a well does the Drug Nasu defile with corruption, infection, and pollution? |
12894 | What part of the water of a running stream does the Drug Nasu defile with corruption, infection, and pollution? |
12894 | What room for sport or laughter, beholding those monsters, old age, disease, and death? |
12894 | What shall be his reward, after his soul has parted from his body, who has cleansed from the Nasu the man defiled by the dead? |
12894 | What shall be the place of that man who has carried a corpse alone? |
12894 | What sort of paces? |
12894 | What then are the three sources of advantage? |
12894 | What though their fathers knew nothing, and were not rightly directed? |
12894 | What will become of your harvest through all Eternity? |
12894 | What? |
12894 | What_ is_ this unfathomable Thing I live in, which men name Universe? |
12894 | When a tree is burning with fierce flames how can the birds congregate therein? |
12894 | When he has thus returned to the earth, someone, a sage, asks:''Who art thou?'' |
12894 | When is it so? |
12894 | When thou saidst unto the faithful, Is it not enough for you, that your Lord should assist you with three thousand angels, sent down from heaven? |
12894 | When will you take us as a dear father takes his son by both hands, O ye gods, for whom the sacred grass has been trimmed? |
12894 | Whenever they make a covenant, will some of them reject it? |
12894 | Where all delights? |
12894 | Where are your cows sporting? |
12894 | Where are your newest favors, O Maruts? |
12894 | Where now? |
12894 | Where the blessings? |
12894 | Where, O Maruts, is the top, where the bottom of the mighty sky where you came? |
12894 | Whether they shall take him to be a god, to be a prophet, or what they shall take him to be? |
12894 | Which are those words in the Gâthas that are to be said four times? |
12894 | Which are those words in the Gâthas that are to be said thrice? |
12894 | Which is the fifth place where the Earth feels most happy? |
12894 | Which is the fifth place where the Earth feels sorest grief? |
12894 | Which is the first place where the Earth feels most happy? |
12894 | Which is the first place where the Earth feels sorest grief? |
12894 | Which is the fourth place where the Earth feels most happy? |
12894 | Which is the fourth place where the Earth feels sorest grief? |
12894 | Which is the second place where the Earth feels most happy? |
12894 | Which is the second place where the Earth feels sorest grief? |
12894 | Which is the third place where the Earth feels most happy? |
12894 | Which is the third place where the Earth feels sorest grief? |
12894 | Which is the urine wherewith the corpse- bearers shall wash their hair and their bodies? |
12894 | Whither shall we bring, where shall we lay the bodies of the dead, O Ahura Mazda? |
12894 | Whither shall we bring, where shall we lay the bones of the dead, O Ahura Mazda? |
12894 | Who could reach, O Maruts, the great wise thoughts, who the great manly deeds of you, great ones? |
12894 | Who has heard them when they had mounted their chariots, how they went forth? |
12894 | Who has turned the Maruts to his own sacrifice? |
12894 | Who is called there"the man according to God''s own heart"? |
12894 | Who is he that is a Deva before he dies, and becomes one of the unseen Devas after death? |
12894 | Who is he that is a worshipper of the Devas? |
12894 | Who is he that points the prickly thorn? |
12894 | Who is he that will lend unto God on good usury? |
12894 | Who is more unjust than he who prohibiteth the temples of God, that his name should be remembered therein, and who hasteth to destroy them? |
12894 | Who is the fifth that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy? |
12894 | Who is the first that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy? |
12894 | Who is the fourth that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy? |
12894 | Who is the man that is a Deva? |
12894 | Who is the second that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy? |
12894 | Who is the third that rejoices the Earth with greatest joy? |
12894 | Who is the victorious who will protect thy teaching? |
12894 | Who is the victorious who will protect thy teaching? |
12894 | Who knows what strange thing this is? |
12894 | Who now shall give us life again with the cool water of his doctrine? |
12894 | Who shall declare the way of rest to instruct the heart of all that lives, deceived by ignorance? |
12894 | Who shall find out the plainly shown path of virtue, as a clever man finds the right flower? |
12894 | Who then can claim exemption? |
12894 | Who will be averse to the religion of Abraham, but he whose mind is infatuated? |
12894 | Who will point out the quiet place, or who make known the one true doctrine? |
12894 | Who, O ye men, is the strongest among you here, ye shakers of heaven and earth, when you shake them like the hem of a garment? |
12894 | Who, when the brightness of the sun gives light, would call for the dimness of the lamp? |
12894 | Whom but thy Âtar and Vohu- manô, through whose work I keep on the world of righteousness? |
12894 | Whom, but thy Âtar and Vohu- manô, through whose work I keep on the world of Righteousness? |
12894 | Whose prayers have the youths accepted? |
12894 | Why are ye divided concerning the ungodly into two parties; since God hath overturned them for what they have committed? |
12894 | Why in a moment is it snapped? |
12894 | Why is the bridge or raft of wisdom in a moment cut away? |
12894 | Why then should I preserve this body? |
12894 | Why then would you molest and hinder one who seeks to banish sorrow from the world? |
12894 | Will they dispute with you before your Lord? |
12894 | Will they not therefore be turned unto God, and ask pardon of him? |
12894 | Will ye command men to do justice, and forget your own souls? |
12894 | Will ye direct him whom God hath led astray; since for him whom God shall lead astray, thou shalt find no true path? |
12894 | Will ye furnish God with an evident argument of impiety against you? |
12894 | Will ye require of your apostle according to that which was formerly required of Moses? |
12894 | Will ye say, Truly Abraham, and Ismael, and Isaac, and Jacob, and the tribes were Jews or Christians? |
12894 | With what thoughts?--from whence are they come? |
12894 | Would you have pleasure, or would you practise that which brings it near? |
12894 | X What then now? |
12894 | XIV Who are these resplendent men, dwelling together, the boys of Rudra, also with good horses? |
12894 | XIX Who knows their birth? |
12894 | Your harvest? |
12894 | am I unable to be like this raven, that I may hide my brother''s shame? |
12894 | and are you resting in the face of such calamity? |
12894 | and how shall the ties of relationship escape rending? |
12894 | and that then thou, Ahura Mazda, makest them flow back unseen? |
12894 | and what the doctrine you have learned? |
12894 | and who your master that has taught you? |
12894 | but who is better than God, to judge between people who reason aright? |
12894 | cries he; What miracle would you have? |
12894 | for God will not act contrary to his promise: or do ye speak concerning God that which ye know not? |
12894 | holding a torch and burning himself, would not a man let it go? |
12894 | or who was of yore in the favor of the Maruts, when they harnessed the spotted deer? |
12894 | possesses this knowledge); if there be a possesor, how can there be deliverance from this personal''I''? |
12894 | such misery, how could I bear? |
12894 | that is a female paramour of the Devas? |
12894 | that is a male paramour of the Devas? |
12894 | that is a wife to the Deva? |
12894 | that is as bad as a Deva? |
12894 | that is in his whole being a Deva? |
12894 | that thou, Ahura Mazda, makest them flow back to the sea Pûitika? |
12894 | that thou, Ahura Mazda, takest them down to the Dakhmas? |
12894 | that thou, Ahura Mazda, takest them down to the bones? |
12894 | that thou, Ahura Mazda, takest them down to the unclean remains? |
12894 | the rich, does he sigh for poverty? |
12894 | the wise, does he long to be ignorant? |
12894 | this was the work indeed of the gods; and what was I, or what my strength, compared with theirs?" |
12894 | though their fathers knew nothing, and were not rightly directed? |
12894 | what joy or charm has such a life as this? |
12894 | what of the raiment of goat- skins? |
12894 | what then becomes of this idea of rescue? |
12894 | when he said to his sons, Whom will ye worship after me? |
12894 | when the fire shall burn the body always, what length of sleep will then be possible? |
12894 | where shall I seek another mode of life? |
12894 | where then can this be sought? |
12894 | while the hate of the wicked encompasses me? |
12894 | while the hate of the wicked encompasses me? |
12894 | who shall again exhibit qualities like his? |
12894 | who shall, by his teaching, cause the stream of birth and death to turn again? |
12894 | who threatens to take away fulness and increase from the world, and to bring in sickness and death? |
12894 | why destroy and sink it? |
12894 | why do you not tremble?" |
12894 | why has he caused thee grief and pain? |
12894 | why should I be sorrowful? |
12894 | why should not his feelings be aroused? |
12894 | why would you cut it down? |
12894 | why would you extinguish it? |
12894 | without a saviour now, what check to sorrow? |
12894 | yet ye read the book of the law: do ye not therefore understand? |
30693 | Then they are devils? |
30693 | Where is your daughter? |
30693 | And all not so long ago? |
30693 | And did not Dante relate a journey into Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise? |
30693 | And why not, dear friends? |
30693 | At other times she is pious, resigned, almost serene; for is that not Abélard''s wish? |
30693 | But how show that they too had seen them? |
30693 | But of the feeling, the poetry of this greatest of all scenes, what is there? |
30693 | For what was the sacrifice which witches and warlocks notoriously offered their Master? |
30693 | Had not St. Anthony of Padua held the Divine Child in his arms? |
30693 | Hast never heard of the familiar dæmon of Socrates, whispering to him superhuman wisdom? |
30693 | Here you have your arm working up, backwards or forwards; but how about pulling it down? |
30693 | How could St. Luke recommend us to desist from getting back our stolen property? |
30693 | How then do matters stand between art and civilisation? |
30693 | Jervase and Protasius? |
30693 | Look at the human arm: what engineer would have dared to fasten anything to such a movable base as that? |
30693 | Might we not be tempted to believe that the divine son of Semele had vouchsafed a similar boon to the happy sculptor of this marble?" |
30693 | Nay, is not the suffering Christ a fresh creation of the Middle Ages, made really to bear the sorrows of a world more sorrowful than that of Judea? |
30693 | Nay, why should God prefer the penitence of one sinner to the constant goodness of ninety- nine righteous men? |
30693 | Two orders, did I say? |
30693 | V What art would there have been without that Franciscan revival, or rather what emotional synthesis of life would art have had to record? |
30693 | What train of thought has been set up? |
30693 | Will the beloved have no mercy? |
30693 | Yet, let us ask ourselves, what is the value of the result? |
30693 | become absentees from the poor, much troubled Present; turn your backs to Realities, become idle strollers in the Past? |
30693 | what was the emotional synthesis of life given by those who had come too early to partake in the new religion of love? |
30693 | why not admit, just because work has to be done and loads to be borne, that we can not grind and pant on without interruption? |
30693 | why not recognise the need for a holiday? |
30693 | why should we sicken ourselves with the thought of this long dead and done for abomination? |
31571 | Are those two little boats coming to attack our whole fleet? |
31571 | How can she make so shameless a request? 31571 Is the man mad?" |
31571 | What have you to say? |
31571 | Who can these be, and whence have they come? |
31571 | Why do you trouble yourself to conquer Kumaso? |
31571 | With all the ships? |
31571 | Would you like to live? |
31571 | Yes,he replied;"my father and mother are both dead, and who but I can pray for their happiness in the world to come?" |
31571 | ''Why do you not leave the place?'' |
31571 | And why did Nitta, who is himself a samurai, permit her to do so?" |
31571 | But who among them was ready to yield life for duty? |
31571 | Can you design to do so?" |
31571 | Could she deliver up her babes to death? |
31571 | Did she owe the greatest duty to her mother, or to her children? |
31571 | Do you think the Mogu are coming?" |
31571 | Does not this make them thieves and villains? |
31571 | Have the gods forsaken us, and sent this host of strangers to our undoing?" |
31571 | His kinsmen advised him to refuse, but Mehe sent the horse, saying,"Would you quarrel with your neighbor for a horse?" |
31571 | How can such as these put down evil and preserve holiness? |
31571 | Is there a country in the sky? |
31571 | Meanwhile how was Galdan engaged? |
31571 | Mehe again complied, saying to his friends,"Would you have me undertake a war for the sake of a woman?" |
31571 | Should I be acting against thy decrees, O Heaven, if I sought to place a new prince on the throne?" |
31571 | Tell me, who are they at the chase who pursue and capture the prey? |
31571 | The dogs.--But who direct and urge on the dogs? |
31571 | Thus far his progress had been irresistible, and should a mere expanse of water put an end to his westward march? |
31571 | What say you to that?" |
31571 | What were the steps taken by the new shogun to insure this happy result? |
31571 | Why, then, should they not speak to me?" |
31571 | Yet could she abandon her mother, whom she had been taught as her first and highest duty to guard and revere? |
31571 | _ But that is all._""And how many can you lead?" |
2500 | An advice? 2500 And do you know,"Siddhartha continued,"what word it speaks, when you succeed in hearing all of its ten thousand voices at once?" |
2500 | And do you, sir, intent to continue travelling without clothes? |
2500 | And now, Siddhartha, what are you now? |
2500 | And what''s the use of that? 2500 And would you rather die, than obey your father?" |
2500 | And would you write something for me on this piece of paper? |
2500 | Are you Siddhartha? |
2500 | Are you kidding? |
2500 | But did n''t you yesterday wear a beard, and long hair, and dust in your hair? |
2500 | But if you do n''t mind me asking: being without possessions, what would you like to give? |
2500 | But what are you planning to live of, being without possessions? |
2500 | But what if I had n''t been willing? |
2500 | But where would you be without me? 2500 Dear Kamala, thus advise me where I should go to, that I''ll find these three things most quickly?" |
2500 | Did you,so he asked him at one time,"did you too learn that secret from the river: that there is no time?" |
2500 | Do you hear? |
2500 | Do you think so? |
2500 | How come? |
2500 | How come? |
2500 | How could I part with him? |
2500 | How do you think, Govinda,Siddhartha spoke one day while begging this way,"how do you think did we progress? |
2500 | However did you get here? |
2500 | I do n''t quite understand yet,asked Govinda,"what do you mean by this?" |
2500 | If you''re coming from the Samanas, how could you be anything but destitute? 2500 No, my dear, how should I be sad? |
2500 | Nothing else? |
2500 | O Siddhartha,he exclaimed,"will your father permit you to do that?" |
2500 | Permit me to ask, sir, from where do you know my name? |
2500 | Siddhartha,he spoke,"what are you waiting for?" |
2500 | So will you abandon your plan? |
2500 | That''s everything? |
2500 | Were n''t you already standing out there yesterday, greeting me? |
2500 | What are you waiting for? |
2500 | Why did you take the axe along? |
2500 | Why have you told me this about the stone? |
2500 | Will you always stand that way and wait, until it''ll becomes morning, noon, and evening? |
2500 | Would you like to ferry me over? |
2500 | You have achieved it? |
2500 | You have found peace? |
2500 | You''ll go into the forests? |
2500 | You''re able to read? 2500 You''ve lost your riches?" |
2500 | Alas, I have also grown old, old-- could you still recognise me?" |
2500 | And Siddhartha said quietly, as if he was talking to himself:"What is meditation? |
2500 | And asked:"And only to tell me this, Siddhartha has come to me?" |
2500 | And could you in any way protect your son from Sansara? |
2500 | And have you not at one time said to me, you would not walk the path of the Samanas for much longer?" |
2500 | And now let''s get to it: You are n''t satisfied with Siddhartha as he is, with oil in his hair, but without clothes, without shoes, without money?" |
2500 | And what about the gods? |
2500 | And what is it now what you''ve got to give? |
2500 | And write?" |
2500 | Are n''t the Samanas entirely without possessions?" |
2500 | Are n''t you able to do anything else but thinking, fasting, making poetry?" |
2500 | Are n''t you too, ferryman, a searcher for the right path?" |
2500 | But are n''t you mistaken in thinking that you would n''t force him, would n''t punish him? |
2500 | But do we, you and me, know what he is called upon to do, what path to take, what actions to perform, what pain to endure? |
2500 | But have you not also developed a desire, an eagerness, to hear these teachings? |
2500 | But he, Siddhartha, where did he belong to? |
2500 | But is n''t every life, is n''t every work beautiful?" |
2500 | But look, how shall I put him, who had no tender heart anyhow, into this world? |
2500 | But speak, lovely Kamala, could n''t you still give me one small advice?" |
2500 | But tell me, how should this be possible? |
2500 | But tell me: Have you seen the multitude of my Samanas, my many brothers, who have taken refuge in the teachings? |
2500 | But tell us, oh mother of the pilgrims, do you know him, the Buddha, have you seen him with your own eyes?" |
2500 | But what will become of you? |
2500 | But where, where was this self, this innermost part, this ultimate part? |
2500 | But you, Siddhartha, where are you going to?" |
2500 | But you, my honoured friend, do n''t you also want to walk the path of salvation? |
2500 | By means of teachings, prayer, admonition? |
2500 | By what do I still recognise that you''re Siddhartha? |
2500 | Did any Samana or Brahman ever fear, someone might come and grab him and steal his learning, and his religious devotion, and his depth of thought? |
2500 | Did he have to leave them to become a Kamaswami? |
2500 | Did he not have to expect the same fate for himself? |
2500 | Did he not, again and again, have to drink from holy sources, as a thirsty man, from the offerings, from the books, from the disputes of the Brahmans? |
2500 | Did he still need her, or she him? |
2500 | Did she not always expect it? |
2500 | Did the sacrifices give a happy fortune? |
2500 | Did they not play a game without an ending? |
2500 | Did we reach any goals?" |
2500 | Did you mark my words?" |
2500 | Do n''t you make him feel inferior every day, and do n''t you make it even harder on him with your kindness and patience? |
2500 | Do n''t you see that he does n''t want to be followed?" |
2500 | Do n''t you shackle him with your love? |
2500 | Do you have a faith, or a knowledge, you follow, which helps you to live and to do right?" |
2500 | Do you have a spell?" |
2500 | Do you have a teaching? |
2500 | Do you know it now, Samana from the forest? |
2500 | Does it please the venerable one to listen to me for one moment longer?" |
2500 | For example, the fasting-- what is it good for?" |
2500 | For what else? |
2500 | For whom else were offerings to be made, who else was to be worshipped but Him, the only one, the Atman? |
2500 | Govinda said:"But is that what you call` things'', actually something real, something which has existence? |
2500 | Had his father not also suffered the same pain for him, which he now suffered for his son? |
2500 | Had his father not long since died, alone, without having seen his son again? |
2500 | Had not this bird died in him, had he not felt its death? |
2500 | Have n''t you''ve been a Samana? |
2500 | Have you never thought of this?" |
2500 | He smiled a little--was it really necessary, was it right, was it not as foolish game, that he owned a mango- tree, that he owned a garden? |
2500 | How come? |
2500 | How could you have learned meditation, holding your breath, insensitivity against hunger and pain there among these wretched people?" |
2500 | How could you? |
2500 | How should the Gotama''s teachings, even before we have heard them, have already revealed their best fruit to us?" |
2500 | Is n''t forced, is n''t he punished by all this?" |
2500 | Is n''t it just a deception of the Maja, just an image and illusion? |
2500 | Is n''t it just as if I had turned slowly and on a long detour from a man into a child, from a thinker into a childlike person? |
2500 | Is n''t it so?" |
2500 | Kamala pointed to her boy and said:"Did you recognise him as well? |
2500 | Kamaswami left the room and returned with a scroll, which he handed to his guest while asking:"Can you read this?" |
2500 | Make offerings? |
2500 | Might it come from that long, good sleep, which has done me so good? |
2500 | Might we get closer to enlightenment? |
2500 | Might we get closer to salvation? |
2500 | Might you have become destitute, Brahman, so that you seek to serve?" |
2500 | Often I have thought: Wo n''t Govinda for once also take a step by himself, without me, out of his own soul? |
2500 | Only Kamala had been dear, had been valuable to him-- but was she still thus? |
2500 | Or do we perhaps live in a circle-- we, who have thought we were escaping the cycle?" |
2500 | Or from the fact that I have escaped, that I have completely fled, that I am finally free again and am standing like a child under the sky? |
2500 | Or from the word Om, which I said? |
2500 | Or might you have only travelled for your amusement?" |
2500 | Perhaps that you''re searching far too much? |
2500 | Perhaps, he had really died, had drowned and was reborn in a new body? |
2500 | Practise meditation? |
2500 | Quietly, he asked:"What do you think should I do?" |
2500 | Quoth Siddhartha after a long pause:"What other thing, Vasudeva?" |
2500 | Quoth Siddhartha:"What should I possibly have to tell you, oh venerable one? |
2500 | Quoth the Brahman:"Is that you, Siddhartha? |
2500 | Sad was how Govinda looked like, sadly he asked: Why have you forsaken me? |
2500 | Siddhartha answered:"How old, would you think, is our oldest Samana, our venerable teacher?" |
2500 | So what if he died, how did this concern the boy? |
2500 | So, where, where was it? |
2500 | Speak, friend, would n''t we want to go there too and listen to the teachings from the Buddha''s mouth?" |
2500 | Study? |
2500 | Tell me, my dear: you''re not taking control of your son''s upbringing? |
2500 | That in all that searching, you do n''t find the time for finding?" |
2500 | That perhaps your little son would be spared, because you love him, because you would like to keep him from suffering and pain and disappointment? |
2500 | The sacrifices and the invocation of the gods were excellent-- but was that all? |
2500 | Tiredness and hunger had weakened him, and whatever for should he walk on, wherever to, to which goal? |
2500 | To reach this place, the self, myself, the Atman, there was another way, which was worthwhile looking for? |
2500 | Very good are the teachings of the exalted one, how could I find a fault in them?" |
2500 | Was he not a Samana, a man who was at home nowhere, a pilgrim? |
2500 | Was it necessary to live for this? |
2500 | Was it not a comedy, a strange and stupid matter, this repetition, this running around in a fateful circle? |
2500 | Was it not due to this death, that he was now like a child, so full of trust, so without fear, so full of joy? |
2500 | Was it not the Atman, He, the only one, the singular one? |
2500 | Was it not this what he used to intend to kill in his ardent years as a penitent? |
2500 | Was it not this, which today had finally come to its death, here in the forest, by this lovely river? |
2500 | Was it possible, to breathe in again and again, to breathe out, to feel hunger, to eat again, to sleep again, to sleep with a woman again? |
2500 | Was it really Prajapati who had created the world? |
2500 | Was it still at all possible to be alive? |
2500 | Was it therefore good, was it right, was it meaningful and the highest occupation to make offerings to the gods? |
2500 | Was not Atman in him, did not the pristine source spring from his heart? |
2500 | Was this cycle not exhausted and brought to a conclusion for him? |
2500 | Was this not the river in which he had intended to drown himself, in past times, a hundred years ago, or had he dreamed this? |
2500 | Were his father''s religious devotion, his teachers warnings, his own knowledge, his own search able to keep him safe? |
2500 | Were the gods not creations, created like me and you, subject to time, mortal? |
2500 | What can stand the test? |
2500 | What is fasting? |
2500 | What is holding one''s breath? |
2500 | What is it that you''ve learned, what you''re able to do?" |
2500 | What is leaving one''s body? |
2500 | What might you be able to do?" |
2500 | What remains? |
2500 | What would be its title?" |
2500 | What would you be, if Kamala was n''t helping you?" |
2500 | What, oh Siddhartha, what would then become of all of this what is holy, what is precious, what is venerable on earth?!" |
2500 | Whatever should I do at home and at my father''s place? |
2500 | When was there ever a time when he had experienced happiness, felt a true bliss? |
2500 | Where are you going to, oh friend?" |
2500 | Where else might my path lead me to? |
2500 | Where is Siddhartha the Brahman? |
2500 | Where is Siddhartha the Samana? |
2500 | Where is Siddhartha the rich man? |
2500 | Wherever from, he asked his heart, where from did you get this happiness? |
2500 | Who has kept the Samana Siddhartha safe from Sansara, from sin, from greed, from foolishness? |
2500 | Who would n''t like to give an advice to a poor, ignorant Samana, who is coming from the jackals of the forest?" |
2500 | Whose language would he speak? |
2500 | Why did he, the irreproachable one, have to wash off sins every day, strive for a cleansing every day, over and over every day? |
2500 | Why had Gotama, at that time, in the hour of all hours, sat down under the bo- tree, where the enlightenment hit him? |
2500 | Why not? |
2500 | With whom would he share his life? |
2500 | Would n''t you, ferryman, like to accept these clothes, which are a nuisance to me, from me? |
2500 | Would you actually believe that you had committed your foolish acts in order to spare your son from committing them too? |
2500 | Would you like to give me a kiss for a poem?" |
2500 | Would you like to tell me something, oh honourable one?" |
2500 | Would you think, my dear, anybody might perhaps be spared from taking this path? |
2500 | Would you want to hesitate, do you want to wait any longer?" |
2500 | Yes, he thought, standing there with his head low, what would remain of all that which seemed to us to be holy? |
2500 | You also do not love-- how else could you practise love as a craft? |
2500 | You do n''t beat him? |
2500 | You do n''t force him? |
2500 | You do n''t punish him?" |
2500 | You''ve changed a lot, my friend.--And so you''ve now become a ferryman?" |
2500 | Your stone, your tree, your river-- are they actually a reality?" |
31479 | And how is it you have not taken another wife, as your law allows-- a strong and healthy woman who might have brought you children? |
31479 | Have you any children? |
31479 | I called him back, and rising in my turn, exclaimed:''Will the difficulties be as great in the way of an ascent of the Mönch? 31479 Is the young lady in command,"they said,"the Sultan''s sister? |
31479 | This region, where everything is cold and inert, has been represented, has it not? 31479 ''Are you aware,''said they,''that yonder mountain has never been ascended?'' 31479 ''Whatever happens,''he said,''do you take the responsibility?'' 31479 But let us be gentle in our criticism, for may not this be said, all too truly, of our own lives? 31479 But what means this noisy music, this charivari of flutes and trumpets, drums, and stringed instruments? 31479 Can any author inveigh against the men who read his books? 31479 Comes she to assist or to persecute us? |
31479 | Here, again, worship seemed the only attitude for a human spirit, and the question was ever present,''Lord, what is man, that Thou art mindful of him? |
31479 | How many of her sex could endure for a week the exposure and fatigue to which she subjected herself year after year? |
31479 | If it were possible by any amount of physical pain to still and silence the agony of conscience, who would not endure it? |
31479 | If one lady can make a voyage round the world, why should not another ride across Patagonia? |
31479 | It is free from mist, why should we not reach its summit?'' |
31479 | Or how could a race, kept in the bonds and fetters of an accursed degradation, be fitted to play the part of apostles and missionaries? |
31479 | She can not accustom herself to it But you will give her back her sight, will you not, Bessadée?" |
31479 | Their doctors asserted that the drinking of milk gave yellowness to the complexion; yet milk was her only food, and was not her face white?" |
31479 | This admirable reticence, this nobility and simplicity of manner, do they owe it to education? |
31479 | What could the negro think of a Christianity that justified his subjugation by oppression? |
31479 | What is your name?" |
31479 | What monument, asks Miss Bremer, could have been more beautiful for those brave men whose dust has been mingled with the earth? |
31479 | What torture of the body can equal the torture of the soul? |
31479 | What wants he more, so long as the earth does not fail him?" |
31479 | What, then, must be the feeling with which they are regarded by those to whom that religion is the sure promise of eternal life? |
31479 | Who but must admire her wonderful physical capabilities? |
31479 | Who is it that realizes his own ideal? |
31479 | Who will refuse a tribute of admiration to the courage, self- reliance, and intrepidity of this remarkable woman? |
31479 | Why? |
31479 | Why? |
31479 | Would it be just to take these as the types of the regiment? |
31479 | and the son of man, that Thou visitest him? |
31479 | and the son of man, that Thou visitest him?'' |
32752 | ''Bank clerks at Tooting do n''t have centipedes on their bedroom walls, do they?'' |
32752 | ''Got what?'' |
32752 | ''That dispels the bank clerk idea altogether, does it not?'' |
32752 | ''What do they mean by calling this something country a something tableland? |
32752 | ''What is it?'' |
32752 | But why should we have grieved? |
32752 | But, even so, what fool shall rush in and criticise the East? |
30758 | How is it that on the Continent democratic bodies are so sceptical, or sceptical bodies so democratic? 30758 Where,"he asks,"shall we classify the stand of the Catholic Church against the open shop? |
30758 | ( 4) that a personal destroyer- Devil, incarnated in a talking serpent, tempted them into disobedience; or that there ever was any such Devil? |
30758 | And what shall we say of all the inorganic and organic movements in a small cup of whole drops of water, let alone those of a great ocean of them? |
30758 | But does wage- labor create any property for the laborer? |
30758 | But why go further into this subject? |
30758 | But why should I go while any of my brother clergymen remain? |
30758 | Do the ideas of the ruling class, in any given epoch, correspond with the prevailing mode of economic production? |
30758 | Do you mean the property of the petty artisan and of the small peasant, a form of property that preceded the bourgeois form? |
30758 | Do you not now see with me that the christ of the world is not a conscious, personal god, but an unconscious, impersonal machine? |
30758 | Have you ever been to Crazy Land,[N] Down on the Looney Pike? |
30758 | How can I adequately express my contempt for the assertion that all things occur for the best, for a wise and beneficent end? |
30758 | How do you explain the phenomena of History? |
30758 | How many American families of five have even the smaller of these sums at their disposal? |
30758 | How then, can the United States become the standard for the governments of the nations? |
30758 | IV Would Socialism Change Human Nature? |
30758 | If he is willing and can, which is the only one of these suppositions that can be applied to God, how happens it that there is evil on earth? |
30758 | In what economic system, past or present, does surplus value appear? |
30758 | Is the story of Adam and Eve a true story? |
30758 | Or do you mean modern bourgeois private property? |
30758 | Sceptics are reverently but earnestly asking: Why does He not keep the sparrows from falling? |
30758 | Since labor power is a commodity, what condition is it subject to? |
30758 | Since the economic factor is the determining factor, what does the law of Surplus Value furnish us? |
30758 | So when all Israel saw that the king harkened not unto them, the people answered the king, saying, What portion have we in David? |
30758 | Strange, is it not? |
30758 | V What Will be the Form of the Workers''State? |
30758 | WOULD SOCIALISM CHANGE HUMAN NATURE? |
30758 | What bearing does this have on the materialistic conception of history? |
30758 | What determines the value of labor power? |
30758 | What effect do these ideas of the ruling class have on the interests of the subject class? |
30758 | What effect have"great men"had on history? |
30758 | What function does the state perform in the class struggle? |
30758 | What great factor is responsible for the rise of"great men?" |
30758 | What has brought about this startling change? |
30758 | What is responsible for the birth of new ideas, and do they occur to some one individual only? |
30758 | What is the most important question in life? |
30758 | What man is found such an idiot as to suppose that God planted trees in Paradise like an husbandman? |
30758 | What need have we for"ifs"and"buts"? |
30758 | What of the attitude of the combined commission in Denver of Catholics, Protestants and Jews on the street car strike?" |
30758 | What shall be said of the Interchurch report on the steel strike? |
30758 | What single great idea occurred to both Darwin and Wallace independently? |
30758 | What single great idea occurred to both Marx and Engels independently? |
30758 | What was to be done? |
30758 | What, then, is this right? |
30758 | Why all these age- long safeguards against change? |
30758 | Why do social institutions change and not remain fixed? |
30758 | Why not? |
30758 | Why? |
30758 | where dost thou run? |
26933 | Handy- dandy, which is the Magistrate and which is the Thief? |
26933 | What have I done to thee? |
26933 | What voices are those in the still night air? 26933 What,"said he to Goethe,"is the leading Idea in the Poem?" |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | A Joy? |
26933 | After all, what do we know? |
26933 | All that has been exaggerated, and, anyway, what does it matter now? |
26933 | All the World''s a Puppet- Show, and if the Big Showman jerks his wires so extravagantly, why should not the Little Showman do the same? |
26933 | And how can one"strike back"unless one converts unconscious machinery into a wanton Providence? |
26933 | And if my Innocents ask-- as they do sometimes-- Innocents are like that!--"Why must we consider the other person?" |
26933 | And in what did he believe, this Lord of Time and Space, this accomplice of Jehovah? |
26933 | And is not Christianity itself one of these facts? |
26933 | And that Explorer-- did we only dream of his Return? |
26933 | And the touches of"infernal colloquialism,"so deliberately fitted in, and making us remember-- many things!--is there anything in the world like them? |
26933 | And what about the ancient antagonist of the Earth? |
26933 | And what are the elements, the qualities, that go to make up this"grand style"? |
26933 | And what is this manner? |
26933 | And what of the lady who, when she was asked whether she had ever loved, answered,"never or always"? |
26933 | And when my moral nature requires a Personal God--_there is room for That also? |
26933 | And who can bear to listen to them? |
26933 | And who can read the verses of Shelley without recalling such? |
26933 | And why can not one go a step with this dreamer of dreams without dragging in the Higher Reality? |
26933 | Are these the sheer precipices of Chaos, against which the Redeemer hangs, or the frozen edges of the grave of all life? |
26933 | Are we not these very wretches whose blind life is so base that they envy every other Fate? |
26933 | Are we not this very tribe of caitiffs who have committed the"Great Refusal?" |
26933 | At what figured symbol points that epicene child? |
26933 | Besides, who am I to"improve"upon Rabelais? |
26933 | But because of these"virtuous"prophets of"action,"are we to give up our Beatific Vision? |
26933 | But what matter where he fled-- he who always followed the"shady side"of the road? |
26933 | But what matter? |
26933 | But what matter? |
26933 | But what of the Greeks? |
26933 | But who can say that? |
26933 | But-- who can tell? |
26933 | By the door of a Legended Tomb, And I said:''What is written, sweet sister, On the door of this legended Tomb?'' |
26933 | Christ? |
26933 | Did he discern-- the sublime Olympian-- what a cunning flute player lurked under the queer mask? |
26933 | Dionysus? |
26933 | Edgar Allen Poe''s philosophy of Life? |
26933 | Exhausted, the wisdom of Goethe? |
26933 | GOETHE As the enigmatic wisdom of Goethe been exhausted-- after these years-- and after the sudden transits across our sky of more flashing meteors? |
26933 | Gath and Askalon in gross triumph-- must this thing be? |
26933 | Grandeur and nobility, beauty and heroism, live still; and while these live, what matter though our bravest and our fairest perish? |
26933 | Has attention been called, for instance, to the sardonic cynicism which underlies his most thrilling effects? |
26933 | Has it been noticed how all material objects dissolve at his touch, and float away, as mists and vapours? |
26933 | Has it been noticed how inhumanly immoral this great poet is? |
26933 | Has it been realized how curiously the interpreters of Shakespeare omit the principal thing? |
26933 | Has it occurred to you, gentle reader, to note how"Protestant"this New Artistic Movement is? |
26933 | Has my reader ever read the little poem called"Tears"? |
26933 | Has that been properly understood? |
26933 | Have I succeeded in making clear what I feel about the Shakespearean attitude? |
26933 | How else could those indescribable pearly shimmerings, those opal tints and rosy shadows, be communicated to our poor language? |
26933 | How shall I express what this is? |
26933 | How should it not be so? |
26933 | I wonder if that curious novel of Goethe''s called the"Elective Affinities"is perused as widely as it deserves? |
26933 | In Lear he puts the very voice of Anarchy into the mouth of the King--"Die for adultery? |
26933 | In the suggestiveness of_ names_--to mention only one thing-- can anyone touch him? |
26933 | Intellectual Fashion? |
26933 | Is any one simple enough to think that whatever Secret Cosmic Power melts into human ecstasy, it waits to be summoned by certain particular syllables? |
26933 | Is it a pity, one asks oneself, or is it a profound advantage, that enjoyment of Rabelais should be so limited? |
26933 | Is it a secret still, then, the magical unity of rhythm, which Walt Whitman has conveyed to the words he uses? |
26933 | Is it any longer concealed from us wherein the"immorality"of this lies? |
26933 | Is it for me now to prove that? |
26933 | Is it not sacrosanct and holy within and without; and yet, at the same time, is it not a huge and palpable absurdity? |
26933 | Is it possible that words, mere words, can work such miracles? |
26933 | Is it possibly_ courage?_ Well, Rabelais is, of all writers, the one best able to give us that courage. |
26933 | Is not Newman right when he says that the heart of man does not naturally"love God?" |
26933 | Is not the body of man the temple of the Holy Ghost? |
26933 | Is she alive? |
26933 | It brings us back once more to"Values"; and whether our"Values"are values of taste or values of devotion what matter? |
26933 | It is realized, I suppose, what the history of his spiritual contest actually was? |
26933 | John Keats was haunted day and night by the simple refrain in Lear,"Canst thou not hear the Sea?" |
26933 | Moral Opinion? |
26933 | Or does anything, in this terrible flowing tide, even_ begin_? |
26933 | Or shall we say he is the only kind of philosopher who_ must_ be taken seriously-- the philosopher who creates the dreams of the young? |
26933 | Or that phrase about the sailors"stemming mightly to the pole"? |
26933 | Or the sudden terror of that guarded Paradisic Gate--"with dreadful faces thronged and fiery arms"? |
26933 | Our conclusion? |
26933 | Society? |
26933 | Such exposures humiliate and disgrace? |
26933 | Such revelations provoke and embarrass? |
26933 | Surely it is wisdom, in us terrestrial mortals, to make what imaginative use we can of_ every phase_ of our earthly condition? |
26933 | Sweet reader, do you know the pain of these"really and truly"questions? |
26933 | The crowd, the verdict of his friends-- what did all that matter? |
26933 | The end of the poem is like the beginning, and who can utter the feelings it excites? |
26933 | The manners and customs of the Upper Classes? |
26933 | The three great royal giants, Graugousier, Gargantua and Pantagruel-- have there ever been such kings? |
26933 | The word"Gala- Night"--has it not the very malice of the truth of things? |
26933 | Tis a Gala- Night Within the lonesome latter years--"Is not that an arresting commencement? |
26933 | WALTER PATER What are the qualities that make this shy and furtive Recluse, this Wanderer in the shadow, the greatest of critics? |
26933 | Was Nietzsche really Greek, compared with-- Goethe, let us say? |
26933 | Was the"Divine Comedy"too clear- cut and trenchant for Walter Pater? |
26933 | What about the Great Deep? |
26933 | What does one expect when one looks through opal- clouded windows? |
26933 | What does she do-- a child of pure lyrical poetry-- a thing out of the old ballads-- in this queer, grave, indecent company? |
26933 | What in this mad world, do we lack, my dear friends? |
26933 | What is the_ use_ of this constant repetition of the obvious truism:"When we are born we cry that we are come to this great stage of fools?" |
26933 | What lights in the court? |
26933 | What matter by what name you call them? |
26933 | What matter if his"division"is not our"division,"his"formula"our"formula"? |
26933 | What matter if, in reality, they have their kingdoms in the heart of man rather than the Empyrean or Tartarus? |
26933 | What matter? |
26933 | What matter? |
26933 | What matter? |
26933 | What steps on the stair?" |
26933 | What stray visitor to Madrid would guess the vastness of the intellectual sensation awaiting him in that quiet, rose- coloured building? |
26933 | What were all these but vain impertinences, interrupting his desperate Pursuit? |
26933 | What? |
26933 | When shall I come to appear before the presence of God?" |
26933 | When"the grand obsession"was not upon him, who, like Keats, can make us feel the cool, sweet, wholesome touch of our great Mother, the Earth? |
26933 | Where is that girl now, I wonder? |
26933 | Where, in such a world as this, does_ that_ begin? |
26933 | Wherefore wilt thou go? |
26933 | Wherein does the difference lie? |
26933 | Who can deny that this formidable vision answers the deepest need of the modern world? |
26933 | Who can endure while the heavens, that are"themselves so old,"bend down with the burden of their secret? |
26933 | Who can forget how that"Simonist"and"Son of Sodom"lifts his hands up out of the deepest Pit, and makes"the fig"at God? |
26933 | Who can forget"the fleecy star that bears Andromeda far off Atlantic seas"? |
26933 | Who can tell? |
26933 | Who knows if the new prominence given by the war to Russian thought may not incredibly hasten such a Vita Nuova? |
26933 | Who knows? |
26933 | Who knows? |
26933 | Who wants to know what Professor So- and- so''s view of Life may be? |
26933 | Who, in cold blood, can receive the sorrows of the"many waters"? |
26933 | Who, like Dostoievsky, has shown the tragic association of passionate love with passionate hate, which is so frequent a human experience? |
26933 | Why did not Aubrey Beardsley stop that beautiful boy on the threshold? |
26933 | Why is it precisely this Borgian type, this Renaissance type, among the world''s various Lust- Darlings that he chooses to select? |
26933 | Why must this monstrous shadow of the Hyperborean Ibsen go on darkening the play- instinct in us, like some ugly, domineering John Knox? |
26933 | Why need we always fuss ourselves about logical_ names_? |
26933 | Why not simply react to one mysterious visitor after another, as they approach us, and caress or hurt us, and go their way? |
26933 | Why not, for an interlude, be Life''s children, instead of her slaves or her masters, and let Her lead us, the great crafty Mother, whither she will?" |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why should we attempt to deceive ourselves? |
26933 | Why should we not forget the whips and scorns for a while, and fleet the time carelessly,"as they did in the golden age?" |
26933 | Why, then, pretend that we know the importance of being"up and doing"? |
26933 | Will she ever blush with anger at being thus gently lifted up, from beneath the kind Somersetshire mists, into an hour''s publicity? |
26933 | Will the Lord of Hosts lift no finger to help his own? |
26933 | Yet who is there, but does not feel_ glad_ that the"Pistoian"uttered what he uttered-- out of his Hell-- to his Maker? |
26933 | You ask me what the Philosophy of Matthew Arnold was? |
26933 | You can not, simply by assuming grave airs about your personal"taste,"or even about the"taste"of your age, give it_ that consecration._ Beauty? |
26933 | _ Is it not worth it?_ Beauty! |
26933 | _ Self- realization?_ Certainly! |
26933 | has there ever been such pain as my pain?" |
26933 | must remain forever the dominant"note"in the Faith of Christendom? |
26933 | than to cry out, as Antony cries out, for the hot kisses of Egypt? |
26933 | than to say,"Her lips suck forth my soul-- see where it flies!"? |
26933 | that proud, reserved face seems to say, as it looks out on us from its dusty title- page;"what have I done to thee, that I should despise thee so?" |
26933 | the Public? |
27347 | Am I not clean? |
27347 | Am I not healthy? 27347 And that is contrary to the system?" |
27347 | And that one thing? |
27347 | Are you getting your share of applications? 27347 At least,"he said,"you do not pretend that this is religion?" |
27347 | But how can they govern what they ca n''t even see? |
27347 | But why should the proper thing be done? |
27347 | But your friend? |
27347 | Can the souls of men be reincarnated as animals? |
27347 | How about these beautiful spring days for hustling? 27347 Meaning by Culture?" |
27347 | No,said my friend,"but do n''t you wish they were?" |
27347 | One does not expect--why not? |
27347 | Rocks that are bones, earth that is flesh, what, what do you mean Eyeing me silently? 27347 So many times the question is asked,''Why is it, and how is it, that Mr. So- and- so writes so much business? |
27347 | The system? |
27347 | Then what is this that looks like Life? |
27347 | What_ do_ you want? 27347 Who can say?" |
27347 | Why do you do it? |
27347 | Why worry us? |
27347 | _ Instead of being ashamed of his calling, he should be mortally ashamed of his not calling._Are you happy in your work? |
27347 | _ Master._ But, my dear sir, why should you call it an earthen image? 27347 ANTÆUS 211 CONCLUDING ESSAY 218 PART I INDIA I IN THE RED SEABut why do you do it?" |
27347 | Am I not athletic and efficient?" |
27347 | And China does not change? |
27347 | And after burial? |
27347 | And in all this, is there no room for God? |
27347 | And is not the following exactly parallel to a denunciation, from the mission- pulpit, of the unprofitable servant? |
27347 | And should we ever have been presented with that new shibboleth"unassimilable"? |
27347 | And the Jade Emperor-- is he a mere idol? |
27347 | And the music? |
27347 | And the other? |
27347 | And what sense would there be if duty were nonsense? |
27347 | And, if you do n''t, what becomes of your reputation?" |
27347 | And--"would you believe it?" |
27347 | Are there any opposites that exclude one another? |
27347 | Are these people idolaters, these dignified old men, these serious youths, these earnest, grave musicians? |
27347 | Are you?" |
27347 | As we waited for the tram, someone said,"Would you like to see Kali?" |
27347 | Because of the position of women? |
27347 | But China? |
27347 | But can you imagine a rural council in England breaking into this personal note? |
27347 | But if education is to mean the substitution of the gramophone and music- hall songs for this traditional art, these native hymns? |
27347 | But there was-- has the reader ever heard the second-- or is it the third?--overture to"Leonora"? |
27347 | But they may say, some of them, as the Indian will certainly say,"Is that all? |
27347 | But where is our sacred mountain? |
27347 | But will their civilisation be of a kind to invite such reflection? |
27347 | But, really, does anyone-- does any man of business-- think it a better education than Greek? |
27347 | Can the ice be changed into red coal in your hearts? |
27347 | Can we not save him? |
27347 | Come along!--Success? |
27347 | Could I have a bathing costume? |
27347 | Did a host move out to meet the foe? |
27347 | Did a wounded hero fall? |
27347 | Did he see a warrior fall? |
27347 | Did not we discover them? |
27347 | Did not we squat upon them? |
27347 | Divine somehow in its potentialities? |
27347 | Divine to a deeper vision than mine? |
27347 | Do I love God? |
27347 | Do n''t you see? |
27347 | Do you hear it? |
27347 | Do you see it? |
27347 | Drama was it? |
27347 | Faster and faster, louder and louder, more and more intensely, crying and flaming towards-- what? |
27347 | For good or for evil? |
27347 | Forget what? |
27347 | Had the writer, I wonder, ever been in Japan? |
27347 | Had there been anyone? |
27347 | Have I myself known God? |
27347 | Have we not''mixed our labour with them''?" |
27347 | Have you no place for the Eternal and the Infinite?" |
27347 | Have you not observed? |
27347 | He regrets to have missed my visit; will I not return and let him show me the school? |
27347 | He thinks to himself,''Is it possible that the thought of God can make a man forget the world? |
27347 | How can I describe it? |
27347 | How long will it last? |
27347 | How real is it, even now? |
27347 | I reached the hotel; I bowed and smiled to the group of kow- towing girls; but how to tell them that I wanted a bathe and a meal? |
27347 | I wonder? |
27347 | III ULSTER IN INDIA"Are you a Home Ruler?" |
27347 | If detected, will it be prosecuted? |
27347 | If it is illegal, will it be detected? |
27347 | If some other agent is up early, wide- awake and alert, putting in from ten to fifteen hours per day, he is bound to do business, is n''t he? |
27347 | If the Japanese had had white skins, should we ever have heard of the economic argument? |
27347 | In this respect what nation can compete with them? |
27347 | Interesting, is it not? |
27347 | Is East East? |
27347 | Is West West? |
27347 | Is he Buddhist or Taoist? |
27347 | Is he right? |
27347 | Is it Gounod''s"Faust"or an Anglican hymn? |
27347 | Is it courage? |
27347 | Is it family life? |
27347 | Is it honesty? |
27347 | Is it industry? |
27347 | Is it sexual purity? |
27347 | Is not that delightful? |
27347 | Is patriotism the standard? |
27347 | Is there also an East? |
27347 | Is there going to be a melody?" |
27347 | Might not this almost as well have been an address from the headquarters of the Salvation Army? |
27347 | Money? |
27347 | On that point, what Western nation can hold up its head? |
27347 | On the contrary, I was pressed, urged, implored almost with tears in the eye-- to reform them? |
27347 | Once more, what_ do_ the foreigners want? |
27347 | Once more, what_ does_ he want? |
27347 | Or am I wrong? |
27347 | Or opera? |
27347 | Or the wholesale massacre, robbery, and devastation which followed when the siege was relieved? |
27347 | Or what? |
27347 | Or_ is_ it divine? |
27347 | Really, sir, what are we to think?" |
27347 | Sacred to what god? |
27347 | Streams that are voices, what, what do you say? |
27347 | The men were dead, then, too? |
27347 | The one or two children who died in the Legation, and the one or two men who were killed? |
27347 | The question is a large one; but, summarily, where do the Japanese fail, as compared with the Western nations? |
27347 | The real question is, will it pay? |
27347 | This is the shop!--Health? |
27347 | To what result? |
27347 | To what, in fact, are most people on this continent turning theirs? |
27347 | WHY IS IT? |
27347 | Was battle engaged? |
27347 | Was it Homer or Shelley that grasped Reality? |
27347 | Was there a real voice? |
27347 | Was there nothing else? |
27347 | Was this India or Athens? |
27347 | What English agricultural labourer would do as much? |
27347 | What are our resources for evading or defeating the law? |
27347 | What business have I to go about preaching to others? |
27347 | What do they do with it when they get there?" |
27347 | What has happened to religion? |
27347 | What is it? |
27347 | What is the sun?" |
27347 | What is this? |
27347 | What is this? |
27347 | What is this? |
27347 | What manner of man, then, was this Sri Ramakrishna? |
27347 | What matters the form of the struggle, whether it be in arms or commerce, whether the victory go to the sword, or to shoddy, advertisement, and fraud? |
27347 | What messages were they, I wondered, that were passing across the mountains? |
27347 | What now is Sri Ramakrishna''s view of this matter? |
27347 | What of it? |
27347 | What of the honesty of the West? |
27347 | What people are braver? |
27347 | What really makes this difference? |
27347 | What then? |
27347 | What? |
27347 | What_ do_ foreigners want? |
27347 | When men worship the mountain, do they worship a rock, or the spirit of the place, or the spirit that has no place? |
27347 | Where could I change? |
27347 | Where, in all the country, that charming mythology which once in Greece and Italy, as now in China, was the outward expression of the love of nature? |
27347 | Where, outside the East, is found such solidarity as in Japan? |
27347 | Who is more industrious? |
27347 | Why did it spring? |
27347 | Why is it then, that She has bound us hand and foot with the chains of the world? |
27347 | Why then should I reason? |
27347 | Why, in this respect, is America, as undoubtedly she is, so sterile? |
27347 | Why? |
27347 | will it please Theophilus P. Polk or vex Harriman Q. Kunz? |
31923 | Dead relatives? |
31923 | Do you,was asked of the attendant priest at the time,"who are so intelligent, believe in the genuineness of these pretended stones?" |
31923 | How can these priests and their assistants maintain sufficient interest to keep up this terrible din so ceaselessly? |
31923 | Now,said our host,"will you touch the plant?" |
31923 | We are all hypnotized,said one of the spectators on the piazza,"else how could that ball come down to the earth and not be seen to do so? |
31923 | What has that to do with it? |
31923 | Whence comes the money? |
31923 | Who? |
31923 | Why do n''t they kill these nuisances? |
31923 | You certainly know that these so- called emeralds, rubies, and sapphires, are of glass and worthless? |
31923 | Are not snails sold in Paris and London as a table luxury? |
31923 | Do they, too, like human lotus- eaters, seek oblivion and exaltation through the subtle narcotic thus imbibed? |
31923 | Does the reader realize what an amount of solid masonry such a structure represents? |
31923 | How came Hindus, Buddhists, and Mohammedans alike to attribute special sanctity to this particular mountain? |
31923 | How could it be otherwise when the ruling power is itself a slave to the same idea? |
31923 | Is it all reality, we ask ourselves, or a dream from which we shall presently awake? |
31923 | Is it an instinct of man, one pauses to ask, which leads him to ascend such a height that he may seem to be a little nearer to the God he worships? |
31923 | Is it possible that we of to- day are no better navigators than those who sailed the Indian Ocean three thousand years ago? |
31923 | Is it possible? |
31923 | Is the worship of one any more idolatrous than of the other? |
31923 | Is there not also a legalized system of social debasement in Japan, so utterly vile in our estimation as to be absolutely unmentionable in detail? |
31923 | Of the origin of the Sphinx, older than the Pyramids, what do we really know? |
31923 | The Western mound builders were undoubtedly a distinctive race, yet who can tell their story? |
31923 | The redundancy of insect and reptile life is wonderful in equatorial regions, but as regards the mosquito, where is this pest not encountered? |
31923 | Was it indigenous, one would like to know, in both of these tropical islands so very far apart? |
31923 | Was the brain yielding to the subtle breath of those gorgeous lotus flowers, which opened wide their delicate pink petals to the sunshine? |
31923 | What have we in modern times to equal these ruins in spaciousness? |
31923 | Where did that island come from, and what became of its people? |
31923 | Where were those tiger- fish at this critical moment? |
31923 | _ Quien sabe?_ The white ants are the most extraordinary creatures of the formican tribe. |
31923 | whence does this man obtain power to perform miracles?" |
31877 | ( Whom, O wind of the wold?) |
31877 | A WORD''S MAGIC Do you remember Etajima, And how, upon a moon- fogged sea, As ghostly as ever a tide shall be, We passed an island silently? |
31877 | A lone ship sails from the harbour: Whom does it bear away? |
31877 | And how a low voice in the gloom Of the temple pine- trees leaning there Said_ sayonara_ to one somewhere Unseen in the shadow- haunted air? |
31877 | And what will the last sight be of life As lone we fare and fast? |
31877 | Are you the ghosts Of Erin''s dead? |
31877 | But if it is not, shall we say,"Let man scuttle his ship, And drown in universal death The griefs that at him grip?" |
31877 | Came up like a phantom silently And dropped her shroud on the red night sea, Then walked, a spectral mystery, Unwaking? |
31877 | Does the wind call to prayer from it? |
31877 | Ever for Joy That ever dwindled? |
31877 | Ever for Light That never kindled? |
31877 | Ever for Love that stung? |
31877 | Ever for Song No lips have sung? |
31877 | For what? |
31877 | Grief and a face we love in mist-- Then night and awe too vast? |
31877 | Her lover who, sin- hearted, has parted And left her but to pray? |
31877 | How far leads it, how far? |
31877 | How, sudden, her silver self shone thro, Tranquilly free of the earth''s stained hue, And found a way where the clouds were few To bind her? |
31877 | III"And is all well, O Thou Unweariable, Who launchest worlds upon bewildered space,"Rose in me,"All? |
31877 | Is not that gull a roc? |
31877 | O was it launched too soon or launched too late? |
31877 | Of the forlorn Whose days went sighing Ever for Beauty That ever fled? |
31877 | Or can it be a derelict that drifts Beyond thy ken toward some reef of Fate On which Oblivion''s sand forever shifts?" |
31877 | SAPPHO''S DEATH SONG(_ On her sea- cliff in Leucady_) What have I gathered the years did not take from me? |
31877 | She speaks of_ him_ and my reply Is silence: does she wonder why? |
31877 | So starting toward the slipping rail I called,"What is it? |
31877 | That rocky pinnacle a minaret? |
31877 | That sail Sindbad''s? |
31877 | The seven fleets of Venice-- And what shall be their fate? |
31877 | Wherefore when glacial Silence comes With Death shall I emerge From that as from the frozen Past, Under Life''s endless urge? |
31877 | Whom have I bound to me never to break from me? |
31877 | Will it be so of all our thoughts When we set sail on Death? |
31877 | Will not Haroun and Bagdad rise up now There on the shore, to beating of his drums? |
31877 | You know how, sudden, there came a change, When she had left the sea''s low range, Its lurid crimson, stark and strange, Behind her? |
31877 | You know this? |
31877 | or did thy hand grow dull Building this world that bears a piteous race? |
31877 | where?" |
32248 | Art thou not it that hath cut Rahab and wounded the dragon? 32248 Eli, Eli, lama sabacthani?" |
32248 | *****"Then Jessie said,''The slogan''s dune, But can ye no hear them noo? |
32248 | 6, quartet("Who hath seen the Troubadour? |
32248 | And let the Prince of Ill Look grim as e''er he will, He harms us not a whit; For why? |
32248 | And why prefer Acis to my embraces?" |
32248 | Are you Christian monks or heathen devils, To pollute this convent with your revels?" |
32248 | As it comes to an end he continues his song("Heavenly Tones, why seek me in the Dust? |
32248 | Before she enters she sings an aria, of a tranquil, dreamy nature("Whither away, my Heart? |
32248 | Do you not think that this might develop into a new style of cantata? |
32248 | For why, rejecting the Cyclop, dost thou love Acis? |
32248 | Huntsman, who gave thee the Diamond Ring? |
32248 | In the next two numbers, an adagio("To whom can I turn me? |
32248 | Is this a tavern and drinking- house? |
32248 | It is followed by Mephistopheles''serenade("Why dost thou wait at the Door of thy Lover? |
32248 | It is followed by the tenor recitative and aria,"Why hast Thou, O my God, in my sore Need so turned Thy Face from me?" |
32248 | Know ye not it is forbidden By the edicts of our foemen?" |
32248 | Mazeppa( 1862); The Page(?). |
32248 | O dinna ye hear The slogan far awa? |
32248 | Say, who can lift the deathly blight That covers king and lord and knight, To give them back to life and light, And awake them?" |
32248 | The MacGregors? |
32248 | The Queen appeals to him,"What seest thou, O King?" |
32248 | The cantata has no overture, but opens with a choral introduction("Where is the Maiden of Mortal Strain?"). |
32248 | The catastrophe accomplished, the work closes with the sad lament of Galatea for her lover("Must I my Acis still bemoan?") |
32248 | The chorus intervenes with a reflective number("What thinks she now? |
32248 | The chorus,"Why, my Soul, art thou vexed?" |
32248 | The last scene opens with a joyous chorus of the people("Say, have ye heard the Tidings of Joy? |
32248 | The musical setting of the question,"What sought they?" |
32248 | The next melody, an_ allegro vivace_,--"What see I? |
32248 | The next number is an effective alto solo("Art thou not it which hath dried the Sea?") |
32248 | The second part opens with the curse of the prefect, a very passionate aria for bass("What mean these Zealots vile? |
32248 | The second("Thou Delphic Rock, who can he be?") |
32248 | The sentiment of the latter is expressed by the following verse:--"What mean this revel and carouse? |
32248 | Then follows a full chorus beginning with male voices in unison("Why, my Soul, art thou cast down? |
32248 | Then who shall call the branches bare, When gems like those are sparkling there?" |
32248 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?''" |
31875 | In death,the Psalmist says to the Lord,"there is no remembrance of thee: in Sheol who shall give thee thanks?" |
31875 | Shall they that are deceased arise and praise thee? 31875 What,"Mr. Hobhouse enquires in his_ Morals in Evolution_( II, 74),"What is the ethical character of early religion?" |
31875 | BOUSSET, W. What is Religion? |
31875 | But their chronological order is irrelevant to the question: Which of them best realises the end at which religion, in all its forms, aims? |
31875 | But, why? |
31875 | Give it to us!"? |
31875 | How then are we to explain the absence of any such reference? |
31875 | How, then, will the applied science differ from the pure science of religion? |
31875 | If there is no such thing as magic, how did man come to believe that there was? |
31875 | If, now, we enquire, What are the earliest offences against which public action is taken? |
31875 | If, then, it was not an act of public worship originally, how are we to understand it? |
31875 | If, therefore, morality can stand by itself, and all along has not merely stood by itself, but has really upheld religion, in what is morality rooted? |
31875 | It may perhaps be asked, Why should those differences exist? |
31875 | MARETT, R. R. Is Taboo a Negative Magic? |
31875 | Nothing would be more natural, then, than that the natives, when asked by Dr. Nassau,"Why do you not worship him?" |
31875 | Now, starting from this position that prayer is the expression of desire, we have only to ask, whose desire? |
31875 | Shall thy loving- kindness be declared in the grave?" |
31875 | To whom is it responsible? |
31875 | To whom? |
31875 | What evidence then is there on the point? |
31875 | What knowledge have we of the future? |
31875 | What more? |
31875 | What then is the fundamental opposition between magic and religion? |
31875 | What, then, are these"ancient modes of thought"and what the primitive customs based upon them? |
31875 | What, then, is this ancient and primitive mode of thought? |
31875 | Whence does primitive man get his idea that the soul continues to exist after the death of the body? |
31875 | Where then lies the strength of Buddhism, if as a logical structure it is rent from top to bottom by glaring inconsistency? |
31875 | Who will visit it with punishment, unless it makes haste to set itself right? |
31875 | Whom, then, has it offended? |
31875 | and for whom? |
31875 | and why? |
31875 | art thou there?" |
31875 | or"thy righteousness in the land of forgetfulness?" |
31875 | that of the individual or of the community? |
31875 | that of the individual or that of the community? |
31875 | thought he, art thou there? |
31875 | where art thou?" |
31875 | with what end? |
31875 | with what purpose and for whose benefit? |
26523 | A what? |
26523 | But did he never tell you anything about me, Jackie? |
26523 | But will the knight come to find you? |
26523 | Did he often talk to you? |
26523 | Does he ever sing, Jack? |
26523 | What does he like best? |
26523 | ( Query: Does Gabriel understand Latin, or is Hebrew your only celestial speech?) |
26523 | --Have we? |
26523 | A question far more to the point is, Did they find_ you_ impossible to live with? |
26523 | Address your next letter not to the office but to----; and when I open that letter will it bring me joy or grief? |
26523 | Ah, Jack, there was a happy hour and a happy year and a blissful life for the lady and her knight then, was there not? |
26523 | Ah, would you have thrust me away so easily if I had not seemed to you wrapt up in a strange shadow life into which no reality of passion could enter? |
26523 | And after all do you think you are the only one who may claim them? |
26523 | And all the while I was writing, I kept saying to myself, How will Jessica answer that? |
26523 | And as for our greeting-- you have made a very pretty story out of that, but have you not omitted Philip from the account? |
26523 | And could it have been, do you think, a message foretold to me of this magic future, full of intangible fears, wherein I am to live with you? |
26523 | And his pitiful wan- faced boy-- who was the child''s mother? |
26523 | And how shall I persuade him that I have faith or that my faith is in any way an equivalent for his belief in the Christian dogma? |
26523 | And how will Jessica meet me? |
26523 | And is not the_ Æneid_ surcharged with pitying love for mankind,"the sense of tears in mortal things"? |
26523 | And now, dear girl, do you ask me to apply my preaching to my own case? |
26523 | And shall I not imitate her in this as in all her high- born originalities?" |
26523 | And so is it strange that I should approach you asking for love that my soul may have peace? |
26523 | And so, fixing me with a pair of accusing glasses, he inquired:"My daughter, where did you see this remarkable word?" |
26523 | And was ever a man in such a position as mine? |
26523 | And was it not Keats( or who was it?) |
26523 | And was your love, too, only a shadow? |
26523 | And what do you suppose was in their packs? |
26523 | And why do n''t you make that precocious imp write to me? |
26523 | And yesterday, Sunday, he preached impressively from the text,"Why do the heathen rage and the people imagine a vain thing? |
26523 | And, dear Jack, do you wish to know how the battle ended? |
26523 | Are our lives no better than glinting pebbles that are tossed on the beach and never rest? |
26523 | Are they not more terrible than the beasts at Ephesus? |
26523 | Are you laughing at me, or are you scandalised at such a proposition? |
26523 | Are you shocked, dear Shadow, at such a creed of sun and dust?--you, a dishoused soul, wandering like a vagrant ghost along life''s green edge? |
26523 | At this the travellers would stop and say:"But what shall we do, wise witch, and whither shall we go?" |
26523 | Because I revolt from this false and canting conception of brotherly love, am I therefore devoted to"conscientious selfishness"? |
26523 | Besides, are we not now a part of the natural order, and does not everything there hint of a divine progression? |
26523 | Besides, could we not make a providential offering of Jack, as Abraham did of the goat when he was about to slay Isaac? |
26523 | Besides, did not Isaac become a righteous man, even if he was not offered up and did live in this world of temptations an unconscionably long time? |
26523 | But another question is, How could I, after being lost to you in this dear way, turn my face from you at the command of a religious enthusiast? |
26523 | But do you know how terrifying you are to a primitive original woman such as I was then? |
26523 | But do you know that there is more life in a little forest when darkness falls than in a big town? |
26523 | But do you know that you have appealed to the missionary instincts of a barbarian? |
26523 | But do you know, my Philip, that a woman''s convictions are never reached by a mere argument? |
26523 | But have I not made myself understood? |
26523 | But what right have you to slip out of your stern character as a merely spiritual man, and assume the guise of a good Samaritan? |
26523 | But what was our first great parent to me? |
26523 | But when the first chill touched her heart, she uttered a loud cry of fear:"Dear knight, dear knight,"she called out,"where are you? |
26523 | But who shall say the dear little wag has no vocation because his small feather- soul is expressed by a minuet instead of an anthem? |
26523 | But why did you not rescue me from these delusions? |
26523 | But why do I write such grim reflections? |
26523 | By the way, did you ever think what an unmanageable estate that is--"And I will give you the heathen for your inheritance"? |
26523 | Can he not love and cherish his wife even if he does question the veracity of Jonah''s whaling experience?" |
26523 | Can it be that love has transformed you a little and added grace to grace, or is it only my vision that has been purged of its earthly dulness? |
26523 | Can it be that this law which darkened my boyhood shall arise again and claim the joy of my maturer years? |
26523 | Can you guess what it is? |
26523 | Can you not get some one to write an article outlining a plan by which the"average reader"may be abolished? |
26523 | Can you not recall a score of examples in history of men who have led this dual existence? |
26523 | Can you not see, Philip, it is not your views I combat, your theory about humanitarianism and all that? |
26523 | Could anything be more illuminating than that? |
26523 | Could anything be more mortifying? |
26523 | Dear Jessica, you will not forsake me now; you will put away your perversity and love me simply and unreservedly? |
26523 | Dear Philip, could_ we_ not adopt him? |
26523 | Dear girl, when you have given me your heart, do you suppose I shall be slow to confiscate your will? |
26523 | Did I ever intimate a willingness to do such a thing? |
26523 | Did I make clear that my hostility to modern humanitarianism is not due to any contempt for charity or for the desire of universal justice? |
26523 | Did he not sail away carrying anguish in his heart,_ multa gemens_? |
26523 | Did you ever observe how few of their characters survive the ordeals of art? |
26523 | Did you know, dear Philip, that every woman is born with a secret? |
26523 | Did you once intimate to me that if ever I conjured you out of the shadows which seem to surround you, I should be horrified at the vision? |
26523 | Do I not stand to him_ in loco parentis_? |
26523 | Do n''t you know that it is all a lie about the city you are seeking? |
26523 | Do not be angry, my beloved, I do love you; but can not you understand that I must get used to the idea of your being some one very real? |
26523 | Do you know what will happen when you come to Morningtown? |
26523 | Do you know, by the way, what a quaint little ragamuffin philosopher that child is? |
26523 | Do you not know that this is man''s way? |
26523 | Do you not take even greater liberties with poor human souls? |
26523 | Do you recall the woman I told you of last summer, whose sorrow- smitten face in the church terrified me so? |
26523 | Do you reflect that we have seen each other only twice? |
26523 | Do you remember how you warned me of dangers when I reviewed Miss Addams''s book? |
26523 | Do you remember the note- book of O''Meara''s that I told you about? |
26523 | Do you remember the story of Iphigenia in Lucretius and that resounding line,"So much of ill religion could persuade"? |
26523 | Do you see why I call them the real followers of Simon Magus, who sought to buy the gift of God with a price? |
26523 | Do you suppose he was long in rising and following the clever little elf back to their mistress? |
26523 | Do you think for an instant that I can cease to love? |
26523 | Do you understand what I mean by the false emphasis of our humanitarianism? |
26523 | First of all, why do you blame me for my"foreknowledge"? |
26523 | For had you not promised to attend me? |
26523 | For my own part, I often wonder if there will remain any opportunities for literary intelligence to expand at all when the happy(?) |
26523 | For upon that occasion we only ran an editorial handicap just to try each other''s intellectual paces, did we not? |
26523 | For, after all, if I came, what could I do? |
26523 | Have I made myself clear? |
26523 | Have I not made this clear to you? |
26523 | Have you ever read the_ Imitation_, and do you remember these verses? |
26523 | Have you forgotten that in the very letter before this one you called me"Dear Philip"? |
26523 | Have you kept God''s common dayspring imprisoned among your garden trees and flowers? |
26523 | Have you never suspected that she also has fair kingdoms of thought apart from your science of her? |
26523 | How could we live peacefully in the world without it? |
26523 | How do you like that? |
26523 | How in that idyllic retreat should I keep my heart and mind on the stern purpose I have set before me? |
26523 | How shall I tell your father this? |
26523 | How should I make them know who never knew? |
26523 | How should I make them see who never saw thee? |
26523 | How was I to know there was such a mad lover lying concealed behind your classic pose? |
26523 | I am young and very happy"? |
26523 | I can not understand this war between your heart and your will; am I very stupid? |
26523 | I have no anxiety about gaining a modest income-- and can you imagine what that means to you and me? |
26523 | In what sad purple dreamshine paint thee true? |
26523 | Indeed, when it comes to the issue, I can not quite decide to let him go entirely from me, for is he not one of the ties that bind me to you? |
26523 | Is a man''s heart so divided from his philosophy? |
26523 | Is he not now all that Cæsar and Virgil are? |
26523 | Is it not a strange thing that death should have this power of benediction? |
26523 | Is it not absurd for such a barbarian as I am to discuss these gospel- makers of literature with you? |
26523 | Is it not just possible that he may mar all Jessica''s nicely laid plans? |
26523 | Is it quite fair, Philip? |
26523 | Is it too late to rehearse that curtain- raiser? |
26523 | Is there no speech left to tell you all the truth? |
26523 | Nothing could be simpler, more elemental, than my love is; and do I reserve a single thought of it from you? |
26523 | Of course I see the good, even the wise, things that are in the book, but why did n''t you expose the serpent that lurks under the flowers? |
26523 | Or do you intend to make a mystic of that poor child, so that he may escape the woes of his condition? |
26523 | Out of the great store of happiness that God has given you, could you not spare one little morsel? |
26523 | P. S.--But, dear Philip, how am I to reconcile this tender charity to Jack with your anti- humanitarian views? |
26523 | Philip, why does a woman always weep when the first man kisses her the first time, no matter how glad she is? |
26523 | Shall I bring happiness to you when I come? |
26523 | Shall I drift away into the hideous nightmare that pursued O''Meara? |
26523 | Shall I take from you only happiness, and give in return only this spectral dread? |
26523 | Shall I tell you, sweetheart, some of the things I learned during my three days in Morningtown? |
26523 | Shall a man do more than this? |
26523 | Shall you, indeed? |
26523 | Some day, when I am bolder, I may unfold to you the whole story of my ruin-- for it is a ruin to be disembodied, is it not? |
26523 | Suppose I did not comprehend their important relation to the subject from your point of view? |
26523 | TOWERS: Can you believe it? |
26523 | Tell me, are"philosophic propositions"alien to love? |
26523 | That is a malicious revenge for his"tedious accuracy,"is it not? |
26523 | Then why did you ask my advice? |
26523 | There is a beautiful lady in the South who loves you as she loves me; will not her love make you happy?" |
26523 | Towers, what is the matter with your spelling? |
26523 | VIII PHILIP TO JESSICA MY DEAR MISS DOANE: Is my suspicion right? |
26523 | Was I too deliberately turning my back on the light? |
26523 | Was it not characteristic of me that I could not revel in that present bliss without seeking some warrant for my joy in ancient poetry? |
26523 | Was it not the rising colour on Cynthia''s cheek that the poet described as"rose leaves floating in the purest milk"? |
26523 | Was my last letter to you really a tangle of crude ideas? |
26523 | Was such a prayer more selfish than the sobbing petitions of the penitents there about the church- rail, asking for heavenly peace? |
26523 | What demon of perversity tempted you to send me such a review of Miss Addams''s Hull- House heresies? |
26523 | What is the meaning of these endless meetings and partings-- meeting and parting till the last great separation comes and then no more? |
26523 | What is this strange white space in my soul that love has made, so real, yet so holy that I dare not myself lift the veil of consciousness before it? |
26523 | What shall I do with the goblin boy? |
26523 | What shall I not say? |
26523 | What shall I say? |
26523 | What shall I think of this if I read it ten years hence? |
26523 | What would you think of me as a preacher expounding the gospel over a piano- stool for pulpit to a rapt congregation of three? |
26523 | Where is Jack? |
26523 | Who is he anyhow? |
26523 | Why did you consent to this sacrilege? |
26523 | Why did you quote these sentences with approval? |
26523 | Why did you turn me away without one word of hope or consolation when I visited you in Morningtown? |
26523 | Why do nt he take out after them and leave the witch to bleed to death? |
26523 | Why do the knight stand there fighting the witch when the old man have run off with his girl? |
26523 | Why does not some man with a real spade and hoe give his experience in a sure- enough garden? |
26523 | Why will you not be content with a companionship on this basis? |
26523 | Will he listen to me if I say that a man may believe the whole catechism and yet have no faith? |
26523 | Will you not overlook this fault of egotism? |
26523 | Will you remember this? |
26523 | Will you turn away in horror if you see a wretched creature hobbling with cloven hoof up the scented lane of your village? |
26523 | Would it help me in your esteem if I flung away all my hard- won philosophy and ranged myself with the sentimentalists of the day? |
26523 | Would it pain you to leave them and come with me into this great solitude of people which we call New York? |
26523 | XIII PHILIP TO JESSICA MY DEAR MISS DOANE: What mental blindness led me to give you such a book? |
26523 | XXVIII JESSICA TO PHILIP KIND SIR: Which do you think requires the more grace in a woman, to hold out against a dear enemy or to yield? |
26523 | XXXVI PHILIP TO JESSICA Just a note, sweet lady, to bid you expect me on the afternoon train Thursday-- and is not that a long while from to- day? |
26523 | Yet, withal, would you be willing to forego your"brothers,"as you call the trees, and this vision of hidden peace? |
26523 | You accused me once of conscientious selfishness-- have I made you a victim of that sin? |
26523 | You remember the little volume you gave me,_ The Forest Philosophers of India_? |
26523 | Your only sin is that you love me, and do you think I shall grant absolution for that? |
26523 | and that every living thing there recognises you as an intruder with warning calls from tree to tree? |
26523 | and, Will not Jessica believe now that my hatred of humanitarianism does not spring from selfishness or contempt, but from sympathy for mankind? |
26523 | did you, Jack? |
26523 | is it wrong that I would love and be loved in the flesh? |
26523 | knowest thou not that Jessica lives in the South, and treats her_ r_''s with royal contempt as she was taught to treat the black man? |
26523 | then what did he do?" |
26523 | what manner of man is he?" |
26523 | who vowed he could"die of a rose in aromatic pain"? |
32803 | Why? |
32803 | A life of Christ? |
32803 | A treatise on Greek philosophy? |
32803 | For is not manner the comparative of man? |
32803 | For, is it not said that"Manners make the man"? |
32803 | He is more ready to ask"What do you think?" |
32803 | Is there a moral philosophy in the list? |
32803 | Or does each interpretation intimate a side of the polygon? |
32803 | Or, take economic affairs-- what are the reasons for and against a protective tariff? |
32803 | Rather silly way, in some respects, was n''t it? |
32803 | That is, Do manners create the man? |
32803 | They follow the sentiment which Pasteur expressed near the close of his great career:"Say to yourselves first:''What have I done for my instruction?'' |
32803 | What are the limitations of such a tariff? |
32803 | What is X^2 but a form of the mind? |
32803 | What is cultivation, and who is the cultivated person? |
32803 | What merits has the study of language for making the thinker? |
32803 | What were the causes of this vast advance? |
32803 | What were the causes of this war? |
32803 | Which of the three interpretations is sound? |
32803 | and, as you gradually advance,''What have I done for my country?'' |
32803 | that is, Do manners express the character of the man? |
32803 | that is, Do manners give reputation to the man? |
16730 | About what? |
16730 | And are they outside? |
16730 | And are you going to accept Thigh''s terms? |
16730 | And he dropped her for Lady Helen? |
16730 | And how did you get away? |
16730 | And how is the paper going? |
16730 | And now, ma''am, what can I do for you? |
16730 | And she? |
16730 | And this is the way you come for your dance, Mr. Fletcher, is it? |
16730 | And what about the young ladies? 16730 And what are you going to do after dinner? |
16730 | And what does she do now? |
16730 | And what is she? |
16730 | And what will you do,said Mike,"if you do n''t settle with Thigh?" |
16730 | And when shall we go? |
16730 | And who are you, and where do you live? |
16730 | And who is your lover? |
16730 | And who was he? |
16730 | And why do n''t you? |
16730 | And would that matter much? |
16730 | And you have found that your faith and your morals are being weakened by association with these men? |
16730 | And you stopped to look at the view instead? |
16730 | Are you ill? 16730 Are you mad?" |
16730 | Are you sure she was staying at the castle? 16730 Are you the gentleman who''s come to be married by special license, sir?" |
16730 | At what time could you drink one then? 16730 But I do not understand, I have n''t had any letter; what letter?" |
16730 | But it was for me you left the convent? |
16730 | But where are you staying? |
16730 | But you are happy now; do n''t you like being married? |
16730 | But you have never joined in it? |
16730 | Can you tell me the way off these infernal downs? |
16730 | Cards? |
16730 | Cards? |
16730 | Dark or fair? |
16730 | Did Seymour, that fellow with the wide hips, ever have success with women? 16730 Did he never write anything but this diary?" |
16730 | Did he say that? 16730 Did no woman ever inspire both loves in you?" |
16730 | Do n''t you care for dancing? |
16730 | Do you believe he is in love? |
16730 | Do you care for him still? |
16730 | Do you fear their morality, my son? |
16730 | Do you know anything of the old gentleman-- Senbrook''s his name? |
16730 | Do you remember that morning when Lady Helen committed suicide? 16730 Do you remember, Harding, that it was in this room we saw Lady Helen alive for the last time? |
16730 | Do you think he is faithful to you all that time? |
16730 | Do you think you can gain love by clasping me to your bosom? 16730 Do you want to leave me?" |
16730 | For if the paper''bursts up''how shall I live, much less support a wife? 16730 For man''s history, what is it but the history of crime? |
16730 | Had a rippin''day all the same, did n''t we, old Dicky? 16730 Have they begun dancing? |
16730 | Have you had a baby? |
16730 | Have you seen Mike lately? |
16730 | How am I to find out, damn it? |
16730 | How can a girl be respectable under such circumstances? |
16730 | How can you think of such things? 16730 How did you dream of me?" |
16730 | How did you guess that? |
16730 | How did you know she cared for you? |
16730 | How do you do, Emily? |
16730 | How far are we from Belthorpe Park now? |
16730 | I am much obliged to you for the information; but I should like to have my question answered-- When am I to put on the ring? |
16730 | I believe I am in love; it sounds rather awful, does n''t it? 16730 I can not say I can call to mind at this moment any exact idea of his philosophy; does it include a denial of the existence of God?" |
16730 | I dreamed of you madly, and why do you destroy my dream? 16730 I may be hard up,"cried the lord;"but I''m damned if I ever look hard up; do I, Lubi?" |
16730 | Is it day or night? |
16730 | It is all here? |
16730 | It is out of my way, but if you are all going... Where''s John Norton? |
16730 | Lily, is it possible? 16730 May I not even kiss you?" |
16730 | Mike, darling, are we in Italy? 16730 My dear fellow, why not? |
16730 | No, no, but I must get home; what will father think? |
16730 | No; they are wonderful, are n''t they? 16730 Not able to get to sleep sir?" |
16730 | Now tell me which is the way? 16730 Now then, Lubi,"cried the lord,"which is it? |
16730 | Oh, Mrs. Jellaby, where art thou? |
16730 | Oh, Parker, how did you miss me? 16730 Oh, is that you, Mr. Fletcher? |
16730 | Oh, so soon,exclaimed Miss Dudley, waking from her dream;"must you go?" |
16730 | Oh, you are a pauper, then? |
16730 | Oh, you have sold part of the paper already, have you? 16730 Oh, you men, what would you do without us? |
16730 | Shall I bring in your hot water, sir? |
16730 | Shall I keep places for you? |
16730 | She tried to drown herself in the fountain, did she? 16730 Since you turn up head when you like, why should you look hard up?" |
16730 | So this is where you live? 16730 Tell me his name? |
16730 | The real and the ideal; why distinguish as people usually distinguish between the words? 16730 Then what explanation do you give of his success?" |
16730 | Then why do n''t you kiss me? |
16730 | Then why do we go to Death with terror- stricken faces and reluctant feet? 16730 Then you will run away with me? |
16730 | Very pleased to make your acquaintance, sir; the editor of the_ Pilgrim_, I presume? |
16730 | Was he the first? |
16730 | We ca n''t wait here while you are paying visits; who does n''t like getting drunk or singing,''What cheer, Ria?'' 16730 We should find heaven dull; but when shall we go across that sea, or when shall we go from here-- now?" |
16730 | Well,he said at last,"what terms do you propose to offer me?" |
16730 | Well,said Mike,"what do you intend to do?" |
16730 | What am I to do with it? 16730 What are you laughing at?" |
16730 | What cheer, Ria? 16730 What could I say? |
16730 | What day will suit you-- some day next week? |
16730 | What did you say? |
16730 | What do I care for my family? 16730 What do you get?" |
16730 | What do you mean? 16730 What do you mean? |
16730 | What do you mean? |
16730 | What do you think of that poem he told us of the other night? |
16730 | What does it matter to me whether you admire me or not? 16730 What does it matter whether he is or not? |
16730 | What have you been talking about to- night? |
16730 | What horse will you ride, sir? |
16730 | What is the matter, old chap? 16730 What is there to do? |
16730 | What part of Oireland do ye come from? 16730 What shall I do?" |
16730 | What shall we do? 16730 What was his name?" |
16730 | What was she like? |
16730 | What will you take, whiskey or brandy? |
16730 | What!--not gone to bed yet? |
16730 | What, all about the nymph? 16730 What, another?" |
16730 | What, did n''t you know that? 16730 What, leaving? |
16730 | What, not dressed yet? |
16730 | Where am I staying? 16730 Where are we?" |
16730 | Where are you going? 16730 Where are you?" |
16730 | Where close by? |
16730 | Where is he now? 16730 Where is here?" |
16730 | Where is the furze- bush? |
16730 | Which of these neckties do you like? |
16730 | Who are you talking of, mother? 16730 Who is this Johnny?" |
16730 | Who''s going to be married? 16730 Why deceive myself with false hopes? |
16730 | Why do n''t you sell a share in the paper? |
16730 | Why do n''t you write an article on suicide? 16730 Why do they love me? |
16730 | Why not? 16730 Why not?" |
16730 | Why not? |
16730 | Why see another day? 16730 Why should I care? |
16730 | Why should I not write and ask her to marry me? |
16730 | Why should n''t you marry her if you love her? 16730 Why?" |
16730 | Will you be my wife? |
16730 | Will you have a bath this morning, sir? |
16730 | Wo n''t you come? |
16730 | Wo n''t you take them? |
16730 | Yes, I''m always in in the evening; will you come to dinner? |
16730 | Yes, but how did you know that? |
16730 | Yes, but tell me, how can I get rid of him for nothing? |
16730 | Yes, yes.... Shall my courtesan go on the stage? 16730 Yes, yes; but do you know the way home?" |
16730 | Yes; do you come from there? |
16730 | You came on at once to find me? |
16730 | You did n''t find many opportunities of gratifying your tastes in Cashel? |
16730 | You did not see that I was looking at you tonight; you did not guess what I was thinking of? |
16730 | You do n''t mean to say seriously that you have burnt your poems? |
16730 | You do n''t mean to say,cried John,"that he has persuaded one of the nuns to leave the convent and to come and see him in Temple Gardens? |
16730 | You do n''t think me a brute like that fellow Fletcher, do you? |
16730 | You know what tune that is? 16730 You mean to say that you have burnt_ The Last Struggle_--the poem you told us about the other night?" |
16730 | You wo n''t make much noise, like a good fellow, will you? 16730 You''ll come with us, Harding?" |
16730 | You''re on, Jem, are n''t you? 16730 Your continuation of my series,_ Lions of the Season?_ Very good; I only saw one or two. |
16730 | A brandy?" |
16730 | A visit to the Haymarket Theatre being arranged, he said--"May I hope to be permitted to form one of the party?" |
16730 | And an omelette soufflée-- what do you think? |
16730 | And do you love me? |
16730 | And have you forgotten the accusations that were brought against them before the ecclesiastical tribunal assembled in London? |
16730 | And if it were summer- time?" |
16730 | And if she had not been killed? |
16730 | And now, what about witnesses? |
16730 | And that Virgin? |
16730 | And to stimulate the mental antics in which he was so much interested, he said,"Do you believe she is in hell?" |
16730 | And what are those rooms?" |
16730 | And where am I to find this combination of qualities?'' |
16730 | Are you going to warn me off your restaurant?" |
16730 | Are you ill?" |
16730 | Are you strong enough, my darling, to come with me? |
16730 | At last he folded up a sheet upon which he had written--"Dearest Lily, you are the only woman I may love; will you allow me to love you for ever?" |
16730 | But I''m forgetting-- why did you not answer my letter? |
16730 | But he had not yet made up his mind how he should act, and to gain time to think, he said--"Tell me why you thought of entering a convent?" |
16730 | But is that your bed?" |
16730 | But no-- what am I saying? |
16730 | But tell me, do you think he''ll marry?" |
16730 | But tell me, how do you think I am looking? |
16730 | But to whom shall I leave all my money in the funds? |
16730 | But what does it matter? |
16730 | But what was there to do? |
16730 | But why fear the facts? |
16730 | But will she come?" |
16730 | But you''ll not forget me, you''ll come and see me one of these days?" |
16730 | CHAPTER IX"And how are you, old chap? |
16730 | Ca n''t you hear her saying it, her sweet face like a tea- rose, those innocent blue eyes all laughing with happiness? |
16730 | Ca n''t you understand that?" |
16730 | Can the mind conceive more perfect nonsense?" |
16730 | Can you tell me the way?" |
16730 | Come, Tilly; do you hear me? |
16730 | Could they really desire us? |
16730 | Could they touch us without a revulsion of feeling? |
16730 | Could you write a poem on her death?" |
16730 | Crossed in love; tired of life; which was it?" |
16730 | Did I never tell you of my first love affair? |
16730 | Did any one ever hear of such a thing? |
16730 | Did any one ever hear such rot? |
16730 | Did he love her? |
16730 | Did you buy those pictures?" |
16730 | Did you notice if the writing materials had been used?" |
16730 | Did you tell him that?'' |
16730 | Did you think I was in love with Miss Young?" |
16730 | Did you, Escott?" |
16730 | Do I look any older?" |
16730 | Do n''t you believe me?" |
16730 | Do n''t you remember when Peggy Praed got on the table and made a speech?" |
16730 | Do they never keep their appointments?" |
16730 | Do you ever have a ladies''night? |
16730 | Do you ever see it? |
16730 | Do you hate to kiss me?" |
16730 | Do you hear? |
16730 | Do you remember the room in the Alexandra Hotel, the firelight, with the summer morning coming through the Venetian blinds? |
16730 | Do you think I''m looking very ill?" |
16730 | Do you think that either of my girls were-- Victoria, for instance, was attracted by him? |
16730 | Do you think you could get your things packed in time to catch the six o''clock?" |
16730 | Do you want a stamp?" |
16730 | Do you want any money? |
16730 | Does not the_ dénouement_ seem too violent? |
16730 | Does this dress suit me? |
16730 | Escott?" |
16730 | Few words were spoken, only a few ejaculatory phrases such as"How dare you?" |
16730 | For the last five years...""Potter, Potter, show these people out; how dare you admit people who were in a state of inebriation?" |
16730 | Giving up your rooms?" |
16730 | Had fate designed him to float over every rock? |
16730 | Harding, in reply to a question as to what he thought of Silk, said--"What do I think of Silk? |
16730 | Have I not all things-- talent, wealth, love? |
16730 | Have you ever heard him tell of the poem he is writing? |
16730 | Have you ever seen him play billiards? |
16730 | Have you ever seen him play tennis? |
16730 | Have you ever seen him play whist? |
16730 | Have you ever seen him ride? |
16730 | Have you ever seen him shoot? |
16730 | Have you forgiven me my conduct the day when you came to see me?" |
16730 | Have you many outstanding debts?" |
16730 | Have you nothing more to show me? |
16730 | Have you seen him do tricks with cards? |
16730 | He had sacrificed marriage for self, and what had self given him? |
16730 | Her girl friends advised her to marry, and the landlady when appealed to said,"What could you want better than a fine gentleman like that?" |
16730 | How could I be in love with her while you are in the room? |
16730 | How dare you? |
16730 | How devilish pleasant it is to be free!--to say,''Where shall I dine?'' |
16730 | How did you know I was here?" |
16730 | How do you know your friend will consent to be bought out? |
16730 | How far was He from me? |
16730 | How many are we?" |
16730 | How old were you?" |
16730 | How would he be received by the county folks? |
16730 | However, if you could spare me a tenner?" |
16730 | I failed, but had I succeeded you would have come back to me; I failed, is not that punishment enough? |
16730 | I have been ill, have I not? |
16730 | I have stated both cases-- on which side does the balance turn?" |
16730 | I knew you when you were a boy; and is his lordship in good health?" |
16730 | I loved to read of the miracles He performed, and one night I dreamed I saw Him in my cell-- or was it you?" |
16730 | I must die very soon, why not at once? |
16730 | I must leave it to a woman; I hardly know any one but women; but to whom? |
16730 | I never could understand you.... Have you heard of Lily Young lately?" |
16730 | I said,''Do you not think it would be a good thing if it did?'' |
16730 | I said,''What do you mean?'' |
16730 | I said,''What do you mean?'' |
16730 | I said,''What do you mean?'' |
16730 | I saved you from God, am I to lose you to Man? |
16730 | I saw her walking one day on...""You must mean Lady Alice Hargood, a very tall girl?" |
16730 | I says,''What is my duty?'' |
16730 | I should like to taste of every pleasure-- of every emotion; and what have I tasted? |
16730 | I suppose the world to have ended; but ended, how? |
16730 | I went to try to effect some sort of reconciliation with Mount Rorke; but-- and you, where are you going?" |
16730 | I wonder what he has done with his money?" |
16730 | If he had married her? |
16730 | In what light was he to view this strange death as a symbol, as a sign? |
16730 | In what measure was he to blame? |
16730 | Is it Tipperary?" |
16730 | Is it not shocking to think that we shall lie mouldering in our graves while women are dancing and kissing? |
16730 | Just look at the other papers-- here is the_ Club_--did you ever see such a rag? |
16730 | Laughing, Mike placed her in a chair, and uncovering a dish, said--"What shall I give you this happy day?" |
16730 | Long may he live, the singer of"What cheer, Ria?" |
16730 | Lying on the bed, cleanly shaved, wearing evening clothes, silk socks, patent leather shoes and white gloves? |
16730 | Man''s life, what is it but a disgraceful episode in the life of one of the meanest of the planets? |
16730 | Must he burn the poems? |
16730 | Must he marry Agnes? |
16730 | Must he renounce all his beliefs? |
16730 | My love shall give you health; we shall go-- where shall we go? |
16730 | Or should he win a peerage for himself by some great poem, or by some great political treachery? |
16730 | Ria''s on the job; What cheer, Ria? |
16730 | Shall I burn it? |
16730 | Shall I get you a drink?" |
16730 | Shall he who came from the bottom go to the top?" |
16730 | She drinks something before she goes to bed?" |
16730 | She was speaking to me about him the other day, and when I said,''Why did n''t you leave him when the money was settled?'' |
16730 | Should he go to her? |
16730 | Should he make love to her? |
16730 | Should he marry one of the sisters? |
16730 | Should he pass his arm round her? |
16730 | Should he post the letter? |
16730 | Should it not prove to be Lily? |
16730 | So you thought I was in love with Miss Young? |
16730 | Suddenly awaking to a sense of his responsibility Muchross roared--"What about the milk- cans?" |
16730 | Suddenly he saw Frank; and turning from a golden- haired actress who was smiling upon him, he said--"How do you do?" |
16730 | Supposing I were to marry her?" |
16730 | Tell me, Mr. Fletcher, do you think it will ever succeed?" |
16730 | Tell me, how did he leave you?" |
16730 | Tell me, will you come and see me? |
16730 | The conversation had fallen, and Mike said--"So you are going away? |
16730 | The engagement ring would cost five- and- twenty pounds, and where was he to get the money? |
16730 | The girls in the theatre all say,''What in the world do you see in him?'' |
16730 | The mantle and the rapier are essential; and angry words....""Are angry words picturesque?" |
16730 | The policemen consulted each other, and then one said--"You did n''t hear about the little shindy we had here last night, sir? |
16730 | Then realizing that he was compromising his chances, he said--"How can I marry you? |
16730 | Then why not take that step which would bring her to me?" |
16730 | Throwing himself on his back, Frank argued prosaically--"Then you mean to say you really care about me more than any one else?" |
16730 | To Italy, and write my poem? |
16730 | To Italy? |
16730 | To Italy?" |
16730 | To Paris or Norway? |
16730 | To a hospital? |
16730 | To a woman? |
16730 | To the post- office? |
16730 | Was he anything like me?" |
16730 | Was he not the Don Juan and the poet-- a sort of Byron doubled with Byron''s hero? |
16730 | Was he to allow all that had passed between them to slip? |
16730 | Was it Harding? |
16730 | Was my kiss so disagreeable? |
16730 | Was the Venus we saw yesterday among the myrtles more lovely than I?'' |
16730 | We''ll have a Chateaubriand-- what do you say? |
16730 | Were they included in the hospitality?" |
16730 | What about the black idol with shining eyes and gilded head?" |
16730 | What are her opinions of love? |
16730 | What are you putting on those clothes for? |
16730 | What could have induced her to do it?" |
16730 | What could he do? |
16730 | What damned libel have you in this week? |
16730 | What did it mean? |
16730 | What did you think of my article?" |
16730 | What do I want with a wife? |
16730 | What do you think of Norton, Harding?" |
16730 | What do you think of my articles?" |
16730 | What do you think of the painting?" |
16730 | What do you think of this? |
16730 | What do you think was the matter?" |
16730 | What does it matter whether I am like the statue or not? |
16730 | What graceful and noble words were spoken!--and that man walking into the poetry of the laburnum gold, did he put his arm about her? |
16730 | What has my family ever done for me?" |
16730 | What have you got, Kitty?" |
16730 | What is her furniture like? |
16730 | What is it to me whether you like me or whether you hate me? |
16730 | What more do you want?" |
16730 | What more do you want?" |
16730 | What painter of Madonnas does the world agree to consider as the greatest? |
16730 | What right have we to analyse her motives?" |
16730 | What shall I do? |
16730 | What shall I do?--where shall I go?--how shall I live if I do n''t get you?" |
16730 | What shall it be?" |
16730 | What should I do if it ever came out? |
16730 | What should he do if she awoke, and, taking him for a robber, raised the alarm? |
16730 | What should he write? |
16730 | What time is it now?" |
16730 | What was he like? |
16730 | What was he to say to this girl? |
16730 | What was her name? |
16730 | What was that delightful witty remark he made to some stupid husband who lay on the ground, complaining that Casanova had n''t fought fairly? |
16730 | What will she say? |
16730 | What will they think? |
16730 | What will you have, Kitty, what will you have? |
16730 | What will you have, Kitty? |
16730 | What would Seymour say? |
16730 | What would the nuns think if they saw me here? |
16730 | When did you arrive in Nice? |
16730 | When will you come again?" |
16730 | When will you come and see us?" |
16730 | When? |
16730 | Where are you going?" |
16730 | Where did this ploughed field come from? |
16730 | Where shall we go? |
16730 | Where should he dine? |
16730 | Where should he take her? |
16730 | Where''s the use?" |
16730 | Where, Mike?--Heaven?" |
16730 | Which way are you going? |
16730 | Whither lay his duty? |
16730 | Whither shall I go? |
16730 | Whither? |
16730 | Who are your other lions and lionesses?" |
16730 | Who could it be? |
16730 | Who was the man that had deserted her? |
16730 | Whom shall I go and see?" |
16730 | Why are we taught to love our parents? |
16730 | Why deceive myself? |
16730 | Why do you tremble so? |
16730 | Why had he not asked her to marry him instead of striving to make her his mistress? |
16730 | Why is she standing there?" |
16730 | Why make her ridiculous by forcing her heart into the groove of your philosophy? |
16730 | Why more stupid to go than to remain?" |
16730 | Why see another day? |
16730 | Why should she not be Lady Mount Rorke? |
16730 | Why then did he not have wife and children? |
16730 | Why were we born? |
16730 | Will you promise me this?" |
16730 | Will you tell me if this is so?" |
16730 | Wo n''t you come with me, Mr. Fletcher, and help me to find the way?" |
16730 | Would he love her always? |
16730 | Would he throw himself on his knees? |
16730 | Would it not be better if the man were to succeed in escaping from her, and then vexed with scruples to return and find her dead? |
16730 | Would yer like to see the room? |
16730 | Would yer like to sit down there and wait? |
16730 | Would you mind holding my liquor for me? |
16730 | Would you mind witnessing it?" |
16730 | You are n''t going off like that?" |
16730 | You did not tell him I was coming?" |
16730 | You must give your mother a sleeping potion, will you? |
16730 | You remember, Thompson, the day he stood us a lunch? |
16730 | You remember? |
16730 | You take me for a pump, do you? |
16730 | You will not mind coming home alone?" |
16730 | Your family-- what would they say? |
16730 | and for what?" |
16730 | and who was the fairy that threw such fortune into your lap? |
16730 | are you going to cut me? |
16730 | but-- perhaps you have finished your education?" |
16730 | darling Mike, I have left home; I could n''t live without you;... are n''t you glad to see me?" |
16730 | do I turn to the right or left?" |
16730 | do n''t you know his story? |
16730 | do you remember,"she said,"when I was at the Avenue, and you used to come behind? |
16730 | dost thou turn in the end, and devour thyself? |
16730 | dost thou vomit folly? |
16730 | exclaimed Frank,"and where is the registry office for Pimlico in Kensington?" |
16730 | how can you do that? |
16730 | how dare you?" |
16730 | must he wait till the years let through the waters of disease, and he foundered obscurely in the immense loneliness he had so elaborately prepared? |
16730 | of father?" |
16730 | or is folly born of thee? |
16730 | what is it but the correlative of pain? |
16730 | what shall we do? |
16730 | where am I? |
16730 | who would refuse me? |
16730 | why do I risk so much? |
16730 | why drink again the bitter cup of life when we may drink the waters of oblivion?" |
32086 | And what do you say to that for a clever fraud, Inchie? |
32086 | Do you know, it has been a matter of great care, this placing of the plant in the room in relation to other objects? |
32086 | How in the world is it,you ask yourself,"that by a series of apparent accidents everything appears beautiful?" |
32086 | How much is this? 32086 I no understand,"said little Inchie, his face falling,--"why he no open the door?" |
32086 | Now, how can a man turn out decent work with tools like that? |
32086 | Well, what''s up now, Inchie? |
32086 | What do you claim to be the chief advantages of Japanese as compared with European theatres? |
32086 | What shall we do, Bill, when this blooming job''s over? |
32086 | Why did you not tell me so at once? |
32086 | Why only one branch of blossom in a pot?--why only one? |
32086 | Yes; but why must he think on that bald plot of ground? 32086 Yes; but, Inchie,"I remonstrated,"why wo n''t you serve her? |
32086 | But let me ask-- and this is much more to the purpose-- what would an uneducated Jap think? |
32086 | Can this be true?" |
32086 | Can you imagine a tradesman and his family, wife and children, running across the Strand to watch the placing of a saucepan in their window? |
32086 | Can you manage it?" |
32086 | Could the same be said of our beloved Tommy? |
32086 | Have a drink?" |
32086 | Menpes, you bought number one curio in Japan?'' |
32086 | Now, suppose that bird suddenly moves one leg up-- what does the English artist do then?" |
32086 | Seeing that the small man was becoming a little offended, I said,"Fire away, Inchie,--what next?" |
32086 | She no friend of yours?" |
32086 | Somebody must talk, all quiet; you rest long time no talk, and big- pockety man say,''Berry much number one curio that I think-- how much you sell?'' |
32086 | They had all mysteriously disappeared-- where? |
32086 | Was this really the little man, the laughing- stock of the hotel, bullied and sworn at by every one? |
32086 | We were all chaffing him about getting married, and one of my friends said to him,"Well, why do n''t you get married? |
32086 | What if the geisha entertain her husband''s guests? |
32086 | What is he going to do?" |
32086 | Who but my inartistic countrymen would insist on their cabinets being smothered with endless and miscellaneous carvings? |
32086 | Why is this?" |
32086 | Would a tradesman in England hesitate before placing his stamps on a bill? |
32086 | You say,''You friend, you number one friend? |
32086 | [ Illustration: FLOWER- PLACING]"But why are there so few flowers in this Japanese method of flower decoration?" |
32086 | [ Illustration: MAKING UP ACCOUNTS] What chance has a European against a genius like this? |
32086 | and how can he detect deception in objects that have been the result of such minute care and consideration? |
32086 | and how much is that?" |
32086 | he would say, and"What do you suppose you''d charge for that?" |
33079 | Baxter?" |
33079 | Can such kindness as those friends conferred upon me ever be forgotten? |
33079 | Do you wonder that epidemics prevail? |
33079 | I said, and she replied:"And this my Mrs. Hunt, of whom dear Senator Morrill has so often spoken?" |
33079 | Is begging contagious, or is their need so great? |
33079 | Is life worth living to them? |
33079 | On a recent occasion he was asked:"What would be the effect on the harem if the slaves and eunuchs were no longer on guard?" |
33079 | The great question of the Orient is: Will the day ever come when an equality of sex will be acknowledged? |
33079 | To see the bees so thickly settled there was of little satisfaction, but what were we there for if not to touch, taste and handle? |
33079 | What am I to do if the good lady will not assist me to send some help to her?" |
33079 | What bliss was this? |
33079 | Why did he not survive the Deluge? |
33131 | And who knows if that day has not already dawned, and the sun not risen, in the Easternmost horizon of Asia? |
33131 | But is this the ideal of man which we can look up to with pride? |
33131 | Can we have no doubt in our minds, when we rush to the Western market to buy this foreign product in exchange for our own inheritance? |
33131 | Do we not see signs of this even now? |
33131 | I asked myself,--''Will the dense mist of the iron age give way for a moment, and let me see what is true and abiding in this land?'' |
33131 | Is the instinct of the West right, where she builds her national welfare behind the barricade of a universal distrust of humanity?" |
32399 | Are there no means to study in India? 32399 Do you know him?" |
32399 | If this is your conviction, will you please exchange them for my bonds? |
32399 | Shall I not be excommunicated when I return to India? 32399 ''What caste do you belong to?'' 32399 ''Whence do you come?'' 32399 ''Where do you go?'' 32399 ''Who are you?'' 32399 ''Would n''t you have done the same?'' 32399 And is this great and glorious Rome? 32399 And who would not rather be a Father Nugent than a king? 32399 But now the question was, what should I do? 32399 But who cares for money at that age? 32399 But why should they? 32399 Dear audience, does it become my native and Christian brethren to be so uncharitable? 32399 Do you think I should be filled with consternation at this threat? 32399 Does not this show that the Kali Ugla has stamped its character on the minds of the people? 32399 For why should they take the trouble to study or work when the whole world with its joys, pleasures and honors is open to them anyway? 32399 General, do you remember Tommy Donald? 32399 Has it come to this? 32399 Have they the courage to do this? 32399 How can liberty and the rankest tyranny have anything to do with each other? 32399 I asked myself; is this the goal of all my ambition and hopes? 32399 I see many faces about me that have not been seen by mortal man for the last three years; and what have you been doing all that time? 32399 If my countrymen wish to excommunicate me, why do they not do it now? 32399 Others walking in the streets stood laughing, and crying out so that I could hear:''What is this? 32399 Perhaps you would like to see the remains?'' 32399 To what purpose, then, all noble endeavors, whose aim and object only relate to the uncertain future? 32399 Was his longing only a mockery, or was it a foreshadowing of that which is to come? 32399 Was there nothing more than that shell, consumed before our eyes? 32399 What is the reason that politically Russia has always been on the most friendly terms with the United States? 32399 What would life be if all terminated in the pyre or in the grave? 32399 Where is the Fakir who mortified his body by all kinds of torture, who struggled and suffered in order to become acceptable to the gods? 32399 Who can fail to see the stamp of the Scandinavian people on the entire social fabric of the new world? 32399 Who can wonder that a stranger, witnessing such a ceremony, experiences in his own breast questions and surmises such as these: Is this, then, all? 32399 Who is this lady who is going to school with boots and stockings on?'' 32399 Why should I be cast out, when I have determined to live there exactly as I do here? 32512 And what is that?" |
32512 | But by whom,Io asked,"is Destiny ruled?" |
32512 | But who are you? |
32512 | What dower did you bring your husband? |
32512 | Why,said the belle Isaud to Sir Dinadan,"are you a knight and not a lover? |
32512 | 9: Nam quo non prostat femina templo? |
32512 | A DANCER What will you see in the Shulamite whom the King has compared to an army? |
32512 | A woman, cognizant, as all Florence was, of the circumstances said to him:"Since you barely dare to look at Beatrice, what can your love for her be?" |
32512 | Ah, wilt thou slay me lest I kiss thee dead? |
32512 | Apollonius asked:"Is it true that Helen went to Troy?" |
32512 | At the marriage of Cana he said to his mother:"Woman, what have I to do with thee?" |
32512 | CHORUS OF MEN Who is this that cometh out of the wilderness, exhaling the odor of myrrh and of frankincense and all the powders of the perfumer? |
32512 | CHORUS OF ODALISQUES In what is the superiority of thy lover, O pearl among women, that thou beseechest us so? |
32512 | CHORUS OF ODALISQUES Whither is thy beloved gone, O pearl among women? |
32512 | If to him Egeria came, would it not, a poet somewhere asked, be uncivil to depict her as less than he? |
32512 | In the_ Somnambula_ the tenor sings_ O perché non posso odiarte_--Why can I not hate thee? |
32512 | On seeing them one does not say, Can this be Sappho? |
32512 | Regrettez- vous le temps où le Ciel, sur la terre, Marchait et respirait dans un peuple de dieux? |
32512 | Said Themistocles,"You see that boy of mine? |
32512 | Si Vénus de retour sous son joug me ramène? |
32512 | Si j''ai regret de ma première chaine? |
32512 | Si je refuse à l''autre, et te rends mon amour? |
32512 | THE CHORUS(_ astonished at the_ SHULAMITE''S_ scorn of the King._) Who is it that is beautiful as Tirzah but terrible as an army in battle? |
32512 | What shall we do with her when she is spoken for? |
32512 | Where is Agathon? |
32512 | Which way did he turn, that we may seek him with thee? |
32512 | Would she fish, would she walk, would she drive? |
32512 | You can not be a goodly knight except you are?" |
32491 | ''What tumbling cloud did you cleave, Yellow- eyed hawk of the mind, Last evening? |
32491 | AHERNE And then? |
32491 | AHERNE And what of those That the last servile crescent has set free? |
32491 | An old man cocked his ear._ AHERNE What made that sound? |
32491 | And yesterday the youngest son, A humorous, unambitious man, Was buried near the astrologer; And are we now in the tenth year? |
32491 | But what has brought you here? |
32491 | But who could have foretold That the heart grows old? |
32491 | Do you dance, Minnaloushe, do you dance? |
32491 | Does Minnaloushe know that his pupils Will pass from change to change, And that from round to crescent, From crescent to round they range? |
32491 | GOATHERD How does she bear her grief? |
32491 | How but in zigzag wantonness Could trumpeter Michael be so brave?'' |
32491 | ILLE And did he find himself, Or was the hunger that had made it hollow A hunger for the apple on the bough Most out of reach? |
32491 | ILLE His art is happy but who knows his mind? |
32491 | LINES WRITTEN IN DEJECTION When have I last looked on The round green eyes and the long wavering bodies Of the dark leopards of the moon? |
32491 | Lord, what would they say Should their Catullus walk that way? |
32491 | No thought, Body perfection brought, For what but eye and ear silence the mind With the minute particulars of mankind? |
32491 | Oh, who could have foretold That the heart grows old? |
32491 | Oh, who could have foretold That the heart grows old? |
32491 | ROBARTES Have you not always known it? |
32491 | THE PEOPLE''What have I earned for all that work,''I said,''For all that I have done at my own charge? |
32491 | TO A SQUIRREL AT KYLE- NA- GNO Come play with me; Why should you run Through the shaking tree As though I''d a gun To strike you dead? |
32491 | TO A YOUNG BEAUTY Dear fellow- artist, why so free With every sort of company, With every Jack and Jill? |
32491 | Though I have many words, What woman''s satisfied, I am no longer faint Because at her side? |
32491 | Under blank eyes and fingers never still The particular is pounded till it is man, When had I my own will? |
32491 | What made us dream that he could comb grey hair? |
32491 | What portion in the world can the artist have Who has awakened from the common dream But dissipation and despair? |
32491 | What''s dying but a second wind? |
32491 | Where have they laid the sailor John? |
32491 | and is that spectral image The man that Lapo and that Guido knew? |
29896 | ; why the Jews claimed to be God''schosen people;"what makes for"immortal godhood? |
29896 | But,questions the initiate,"why can not those who know, if there be such in the world today, give us this mystical formula? |
29896 | 159 Can there be standards of morality in the sex- relation; if so what are they? |
29896 | ; what is the symbolical"flaming sword? |
29896 | An abstract principle called God, or Aum or any other impersonal formless all- inclusive Being? |
29896 | And is marital infidelity in such instances immoral? |
29896 | Applying this truth to individual human life, and we have what? |
29896 | Are all marriages that are not soul- mate unions immoral? |
29896 | Are our social conditions so ideal that they can not be improved? |
29896 | Are they immoral, and are they to be abandoned? |
29896 | Are they immoral? |
29896 | Are they less courageous than their progenitors? |
29896 | Are they to be abandoned as of no value? |
29896 | Ask one hundred men or one hundred women this question:"Is the sex- relation right or wrong?" |
29896 | But in what does the misfortune consist, and wherein are they ruined? |
29896 | But is it not possible that women no longer need restraint if they ever needed it? |
29896 | But is our morality so tender that it needs protection? |
29896 | But what of our modern Christian creeds, and their idea of the Holy Trinity composed of three male beings? |
29896 | But why stone anybody? |
29896 | Byron says:"There are two souls of equal flow, Whose gentle streams so calmly run, That when they part-- they part? |
29896 | CHAPTER IX WHAT CONSTITUTES SEX IMMORALITY? |
29896 | CHAPTER IX WHAT CONSTITUTES SEXUAL IMMORALITY? |
29896 | CHAPTER VII SOUL- UNION: WHERE WILL IT LEAD? |
29896 | CHAPTER XI THE LAW OF TRANSMUTATION 209 The spiritual cause of all physical activity; two words that are of vital import today; did Jesus lie? |
29896 | Can there, then, be established a universal standard of sexual morality? |
29896 | Do men and women who are living in secret unfaithfulness hold exalted ideals of sex? |
29896 | Do skyscrapers, or air ships, or wireless telegraph systems make us happier? |
29896 | Does not everything point to it? |
29896 | Does the libertine believe in the sacredness of sex? |
29896 | Does the prostitute claim for herself spotless purity? |
29896 | For are we not promised, the"glory of the world"if we will seek and find? |
29896 | Has it any real place and purpose beyond that of procreation, or any more spiritual function than the perpetuation of the human species? |
29896 | How did the"Holy Family"differ from other families? |
29896 | How else can it be? |
29896 | How is it possible to have a perfect flower-- a healthy, normal and wholesome sprout from a diseased root? |
29896 | How much more, then, should you guard the honor of your wife, from these pestilential marauders?" |
29896 | How, then, can we say that love is always pure when it leads to such disaster? |
29896 | If it is immoral to be born, no matter what the conditions of such birth, what possible chance have we to live morally? |
29896 | If so, why, and if not why not? |
29896 | If they do, is it not because of their ethical rather than their so- called practical value? |
29896 | If we prefer to use the word God, then let us say why can not we trust God? |
29896 | Is a woman ever unfortunate if she gives birth to a child because she has loved, and because she loves the child? |
29896 | Is it applied to women of the half- world, to recognized, and legalized prostitution? |
29896 | Is it fame, or wealth, or lands, or gems or kingdoms? |
29896 | Is it not because they prove to man his power to use the plastic material of the planet and control it to do his bidding? |
29896 | Is it to the average man who is known to be a Lothario in matters of sex? |
29896 | Is she ruined in any way except that she becomes the target for our inhumanity; our well- nigh unforgivable stupidity? |
29896 | Is this fact so unmanifest? |
29896 | It is said of the sages of India that they can live in the jungles and the ferocious tigers will not harm them; how do they accomplish this? |
29896 | Mankind has always been promised immortality through spiritual union-- with what? |
29896 | May this not be Nature''s revenge upon our inhuman treatment of girls who become mothers without first becoming wives? |
29896 | Most"Civic- Leaguers"and members of"Vice- Commissions"( why that name, anyway?) |
29896 | Now, the only question asked is,"Is she efficient?" |
29896 | Or are women less capable of love-- either love of children or love of the father who begets the children? |
29896 | The question then arises:"Are we to consider it moral and legitimate for women to have children before they have been married?" |
29896 | They may become masons( builders of the temple), but how can they become Architects, when they have not entered the tabernacle? |
29896 | To whom is this epithet most frequently applied? |
29896 | What Constitutes Success? |
29896 | What Is Personal Magnetism? |
29896 | What constitutes the beauty and the value of gems-- diamonds; rubies; sapphires; emeralds; topaz; pearls? |
29896 | What did it feed upon? |
29896 | What is its function in the life of the social body; in the existence of the sphere itself; of the entire Cosmos? |
29896 | What is the cause? |
29896 | What is the glory of the world? |
29896 | What is this but prostitution? |
29896 | What, for example, is there in a modern sky- scraper indicative of man''s advanced civilization? |
29896 | Whence came this wonderful thing manifested as generative power? |
29896 | Which was the more worthy of deification-- the yoni, or the phallus? |
29896 | Who has constituted you book- keeper for the universe? |
29896 | Who is the more chaste? |
29896 | Why are women refusing to marry, or when they do marry refusing to live with their husbands? |
29896 | Why can not we trust the Cosmic Law which has always given us a better ideal in the place of the decadent one? |
29896 | Why do they not tell us how we may reach this desirable state of spiritual sex- love, which affords such divine happiness to those who find it?" |
29896 | Why do they shrink from child- birth? |
29896 | Why should it not manifest in this most important of all our systems of intercourse? |
29896 | Why? |
29896 | With a sentiment such as this between two beings, what need for vows and promises, and bonds? |
29896 | Woman, or man? |
29896 | Would you attain to the status of the divine man? |
29896 | _ Counterpartal Sex- union._ CHAPTER VII SOUL- UNION: WHERE WILL IT LEAD? |
29896 | is monogamy the ideal sex relationship? |
29896 | is polygamy a future possibility? |
29896 | is the kingdom within an actual truth? |
29896 | mistaken ideas of morality in dress and manners; what sort of beings constitute"the kingdom of God?" |
29896 | the ark in religious symbology; its interior meaning; what were the"tablets of stone?" |
29896 | the reality of the"cherubim"and the"seraphim;"the inner meaning of the symbolical"ark of the Covenant;"is spiritual love devoid of sex? |
29896 | the theory of"counterparts"and its spiritual significance; is procreation the highest function of sex; what constitutes the fundamental law of love? |
29896 | too much made of the marriage ceremony and too little of fitness; is it better to be"respectably bonded"or spiritually mated? |
29896 | what is the"bliss of Nirvana?" |
29896 | what is to be done with sex relations that are not spiritual unions? |
29896 | why the average"Knight Templar"fails to attain the powers and privileges of esoteric Free- masonry; what is the"gate of life?" |
30198 | A withered atom''s space Within a withered brain? 30198 And my full heart within whose fount I hear Your voices that are vanished, Can it forget its gratitude or fear Foes that you braved and banished? |
30198 | Do you so proud forget what hands have borne You to the heights and crowned you? 30198 My Sires,"I said,"think you I have forgot The fervor of your living? |
30198 | Respect?... 30198 Spring, Spring, Spring?" |
30198 | Think you I do not feel my every drop Of blood is as an ocean In which are surging and will never stop All things your hope gave motion? 30198 Whence come to you this joyance and this strength"It said,"this might of vision? |
30198 | --Is the world so fair To him, fool, that he has no care As he cuckoos it all day? |
30198 | --What reck the proud For the God of Ills? |
30198 | A woman? |
30198 | And how was the spell burst? |
30198 | And since your soul in my soul''s zone is set Will it sometimes ask other spheres to rove Where touch and voice of me shall not be met? |
30198 | And so is lost, It may be-- All? |
30198 | And then..."My thought?" |
30198 | Are you the ghosts Of Erin''s dead? |
30198 | BEWITCHED(_ On a Devon Moor_) Why do I babble of bitter chills-- And icy trees-- and snowy fallows? |
30198 | But faulty and failing? |
30198 | But if I saw her lay Her hand upon her breast, As once she used, and send her soul to say A word with those dark eyes... Ha, what is that, signor? |
30198 | But shall no gift be made? |
30198 | But wait, the Day Will come-- shall it not come? |
30198 | But would he ever know the feel Of Spring again, of its ribald reel, As once_ I_ did, the best? |
30198 | But... who comes hither? |
30198 | Can it so be? |
30198 | Clench with a manly foe? |
30198 | Dare you sputter Shame on the awful gods? |
30198 | Did ever woman love Whose faith wreathed not about the brow she chose Aureolas illumining him above All that another thinks he is, or knows? |
30198 | Do they know, do they know-- with their cold dead faces!-- Know... my sin? |
30198 | Does He not care? |
30198 | Ever for Joy That ever dwindled? |
30198 | Ever for Light That never kindled? |
30198 | Ever for Love that stung? |
30198 | Ever for Song No lips have sung? |
30198 | God, shall we let such cowards ride And burn and beat and stain? |
30198 | Ha, is it cracking of ice in the bog That is clutching my throat, Or devils gnawing the widow''s shoat? |
30198 | Have they fled? |
30198 | Her hands plied on-- with but a husk Of bread to break And for Christ''s sake To bless: was_ He_ not human? |
30198 | I ask it bravely, for the way is long, And, haloless, should I not lead you wrong? |
30198 | If I should tell him there''s no gap Between her and a... nameless hap, Would he still want his"dove"? |
30198 | Is he quite sure-- quite sure the sap Of life''s not hate, but love? |
30198 | Is it Romance''s magic realm Spring reigns forever o''er? |
30198 | Is it this burning Far in my breast Melting my soul to thine? |
30198 | Is it this power Hid in my eyes Shaping thy face On hill and cloud? |
30198 | Is it this whisper, As of sea- waves, Singing thy name to me? |
30198 | Love, say you? |
30198 | My wife?" |
30198 | NECROMANCE Can heedless gazing teach me more than toil? |
30198 | O have they no grave in the salt sea- places To lay them in? |
30198 | Oaths forgotten, Would they we d? |
30198 | Of getting or of giving? |
30198 | Of the forlorn Whose days went sighing Ever for Beauty That ever fled? |
30198 | One gives too small? |
30198 | Or can it from the Wain To far Orion race?" |
30198 | Or can the wintry sumac sably stooping So charm and lift my heart from heartless drooping When other healings all were asked in vain? |
30198 | QUARREL And is it so That two who stand Heart closed in heart, Hand knit to hand, Can let love go Asunder, so? |
30198 | Romance that our morning hearts could see Across the darkest foam? |
30198 | Speak hard-- not understand? |
30198 | Symbolled by circles, Endless in being, Dost thou love life- blood As Druids say? |
30198 | That for a touch Of pride we such A heaven can let fall? |
30198 | That one asks much? |
30198 | The Sovereign Law that you flaunt and daunt, Will she lie always dumb? |
30198 | The sea- birds whirling Saw what, dashed hoar? |
30198 | The seven fleets of Venice-- And what shall be their fate? |
30198 | There lies a sick boy, fever- weak; Who comes forth at call? |
30198 | This will that measures all things to its length, That cuts with calm decision? |
30198 | UNCROWNED I am not other than men are, you say? |
30198 | VI(_ In After Years to Him_) You say that love then led us-- you and me? |
30198 | WORMWOOD(_ In Old England_) What is he whispering to her there Under the hedge- row spray? |
30198 | What is love, Brude wise and noble? |
30198 | What is their errand? |
30198 | When the white maiden''s Pierced on the altar Dost thou drink praises From her wide wound? |
30198 | Whence flows it, from what grape that is divine, Or trodden from what presses? |
30198 | Where would you be? |
30198 | Why do I shudder as twilight spills A ghostly gray and the bent moon sallows The moor with her wicked flame? |
30198 | Will ye still daunt Your necks to the noose? |
30198 | Will you e''en now With tongue spit poison On my last ebbing hour? |
30198 | Will you have any grief that can forget How grief should find forgetfulness in love? |
30198 | Would you behold what sackcloth has been worn That laurels may surround you?"... |
30198 | XVI For to the stake they bound her-- fire They lit-- to be her fate.... O- Shichi, have I dreamt it all? |
30198 | Yet ere a year he''ll draw no breath But is another''s!--Will God let it be? |
30198 | You rise? |
30198 | You so passionate, yet quick To escape from passion''s mastery, When clasping and kiss and touch are gone, And days and space are between us drawn? |
30198 | Your face, the temple gate, The fair boy- priest shut from desire In Buddhahood to- be? |
30198 | [_ Has heard a moan._ Hither harasser Of these my thoughts? |
30198 | [_ They lie down._ HORMA,_ the hag, who has heard__ them, creeps maundering up and gazes at them.__ Horma._ Owl and eaglet? |
30198 | _ Brude( waking)._ What was my dream?... |
30198 | _ Lamora._ We d thee?--thee?... |
30198 | and hate rent us apart? |
30198 | is it Lamora Followed by Cormo? |
30198 | love? |
30198 | manly fight? |
33413 | ( by way of exercise?) |
33413 | Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord? |
33413 | CHAPTER VII WHO INVENTED MOVEABLE TYPES? |
33413 | These rooms had wainscots of Irish[ bog?] |
33413 | Who Invented Moveable Types? |
19945 | Aikawa Sama, is it not fact? 19945 And Katai( tough) Isuké, his experience has gone beyond his powers?" |
19945 | And Okumura Dono? |
19945 | And later; the traces of the deed, these are to be removed? |
19945 | And now-- the bath? 19945 And so the honoured Shukké Sama would ask the name of this Jimbei? |
19945 | And the roaring and noises, these did not frighten Isuké into his faint? |
19945 | And this? |
19945 | And you? |
19945 | Aoyama Uji, is this not a strange meeting? 19945 Are you thirsty?... |
19945 | At least one attendant? 19945 But why stop at the surface? |
19945 | But... in this lonely place how effect such change? 19945 But...."--"But what?" |
19945 | Chu[u]dayu Dono-- where is Aikawa Sama to be found? |
19945 | Deign to come up here.... For food? 19945 Difficulties? |
19945 | Does not her ladyship set the example for others to follow? 19945 For what is the month''s wage paid to a_ chu[u]gen_? |
19945 | Fox or badger? 19945 Fox or badger? |
19945 | Had he seen a ghost? |
19945 | How else succeed in life? 19945 How, now, ancients? |
19945 | Is not Takigawa Dono, of the San no Ma, the Ojo[u]san of the House? |
19945 | Is not the food furnished by his lordship ample supply for the belly? 19945 Kiku, why are you here, not joining in the feast? |
19945 | Kiku? 19945 Mucous?" |
19945 | O''Kiku Dono, why are not thanks given for such condescension on the part of the Tono Sama? 19945 Obasan( auntie)? |
19945 | Six.... No confession? |
19945 | Spy? 19945 The distance is but short? |
19945 | The girl Somé, where is she? 19945 The honoured_ samurai_(_ buké- sama_), who then favours Yodo?" |
19945 | The matter in hand-- has all gone well? 19945 Then O''Kiku San has favoured the_ shugenja_ and his spouse with feast and gifts?" |
19945 | Then credit at the Echigoya is good? |
19945 | Then the mother lives? |
19945 | There is no one here.... Kiku? 19945 These girls-- their looks and age?" |
19945 | This Kiku; would you deny it? |
19945 | Tono Sama, is not the purpose satisfied? 19945 Vamoose? |
19945 | What book; and where seen?... 19945 What means this fierceness of battle?" |
19945 | What now? |
19945 | What then tickles the palate of Juro[u]? |
19945 | Where could she possibly have gone, for_ baya_ saw no exit? 19945 Where have these fellows been?" |
19945 | Who and where from? 19945 Who speaks? |
19945 | Who? |
19945 | Why laugh, Endo[u] Uji? 19945 You, fellow... what manner of man to act as constable are you? |
19945 | --"A lady waiting? |
19945 | --"A means of escape will be found?" |
19945 | --"And the foxes of Nakano( Shinjuku)?" |
19945 | --"Another bottle?... |
19945 | --"At this_ yashiki_ is there not a woman labouring, one O''Kiku?" |
19945 | --"But how?" |
19945 | --"Has Jimbei been to Odawara?" |
19945 | --"Is that so?" |
19945 | --"Just beyond? |
19945 | --"Of what?" |
19945 | --"The honoured chamberlain? |
19945 | --"Then the affair of the Senhimégimi did not block matters? |
19945 | --"What is it?" |
19945 | --"Why so?" |
19945 | A girl too? |
19945 | A hail came to his ears--"Sir priest, have you not dropped coin?" |
19945 | A little further off, good Sir: now-- who is this would be interviewer?" |
19945 | A shudder went through the frame of the horse--"Why speak thus? |
19945 | A wave of the hand--''Is it Kiku?... |
19945 | Again around? |
19945 | All milk livers? |
19945 | And Genzaémon Uji?" |
19945 | And does one go to Nakanocho[u] by Suido[u]bashi? |
19945 | And is there aught to outweigh life?" |
19945 | And the banquet? |
19945 | And the other man?" |
19945 | And the voice made answer--"Has Endo[u] Sama no eyes? |
19945 | And what concerning?... |
19945 | And who refuses to obey the mandate of the king of hell? |
19945 | And you, Kosaka?" |
19945 | Answer-- who?" |
19945 | Aoyama Uji, in this great heat how explain a thing so strange? |
19945 | Aoyama met defiantly the hard look of Endo[u], the inquiring question of O[u]kubo--"Is it true Aoyama? |
19945 | Apart from his rank is not the experience of his fifty years, on the battle field of war and love, to count in his favour? |
19945 | Are not others so affected?" |
19945 | Are we not lucky, Danna?" |
19945 | Are you afraid of the ghost? |
19945 | Are you mad? |
19945 | Are you not a bit of a rascal?" |
19945 | Armed as he was Chu[u]dayu was afraid--"''Pollution''--''beast''? |
19945 | As he would take the towel he spoke in surprise--"Who may this be, awake at this late hour for Shu[u]zen''s service?" |
19945 | As they left O[u]kubo said to Endo[u] Saburo[u]zaémon--"Really Endo[u] Uji, why so rough in speech with Aoyama? |
19945 | Asakusa and Yoshiwara? |
19945 | At first voices said--"Who is speaking in these ribald terms? |
19945 | Be assured that before day these very people will urge departure.... How so? |
19945 | Be more careful henceforth.... You live hereabouts?" |
19945 | Be once more the object of his embraces? |
19945 | Besides would he not follow his master to Meido itself? |
19945 | But can not the shape be seen? |
19945 | But from time to time a visit to this Han? |
19945 | But he will take no less?... |
19945 | But how face the mother without the child-- and then, the lot of one''s favoured child in the house of strangers and under their cold glances? |
19945 | But the Lady Merciful-- Kwannon Sama-- why not make his petition to her? |
19945 | But the lantern they carried? |
19945 | But what as to the child? |
19945 | But what their numbers? |
19945 | But why prolong this uselessness? |
19945 | But why regret past failure? |
19945 | By such means are Sampei and Jumatsu really to be saved?" |
19945 | By the outraged wife, O''Kiku, as later tradition would assert? |
19945 | Call up that old fellow there.... Who? |
19945 | Can not one please his lordship, all night and every night, without promise of an heir to the House? |
19945 | Deep the respect due to twelve hundred_ koku_ Aoyama, but had he been drunk or dreaming?--"Has not your lordship mistaken the_ yashiki_?" |
19945 | Deign but the required pledge...."--"The pledge?" |
19945 | Did beautiful eyebrows inspire this deed? |
19945 | Did he not have an eye in the middle of his forehead? |
19945 | Did he not have claws? |
19945 | Did not the Go Shukké Sama take food at Odawara? |
19945 | Did some over bold and infamous apparition seek to delude him? |
19945 | Did they send you forth with empty belly? |
19945 | Did you really value a human life against a plate, and kill her?" |
19945 | Disloyal wench, would you aim to make the beloved of your mistress partner of your bed?... |
19945 | Does Kiku still pursue and solicit Shu[u]zen? |
19945 | Does a_ chu[u]gen_ question his lord''s generosity? |
19945 | Does he keep faith with Han? |
19945 | Does illness or luxurious idleness summon the honoured_ Amma San_ to the couch?... |
19945 | Does not the change of masters attract?" |
19945 | Does she seek Shu[u]zen''s bed? |
19945 | Drinking wine, does Kagé also gamble?" |
19945 | Fifty_ ryo[u]_: not down: but ten suffices for the occasion.... Come and demand it of the Okusama? |
19945 | For a moment he would rest--"To see this Aoyama?" |
19945 | For whom was he spy? |
19945 | Fox or badger? |
19945 | From the Zo[u]jo[u]ji; by that_ kesa_( stole), dress, and carriage? |
19945 | Good fellow, are you mad? |
19945 | Had he a wife? |
19945 | Had he not suffered equal good fortune with the beauties of Yoshiwara? |
19945 | Had she really known the man before, and not pretended new acquaintance? |
19945 | Had the ghosts appeared? |
19945 | Has another Yoshi encountered Kuro[u]ji Dono?" |
19945 | Has not ill fortune enough fallen upon the home of Zeisuké?" |
19945 | Has not long since his command been issued? |
19945 | Has not some injury befallen the person of Ne[e]san? |
19945 | Has some other lost his life at Jimbei''s hand?" |
19945 | Has the girl really mistaken the hour?... |
19945 | Has the horse power of human speech?" |
19945 | Have not the honoured sirs made a mistake? |
19945 | He edged the fellow off, called up another man--"The Danna stands not on the fare? |
19945 | He is not lying?" |
19945 | He laughed harshly--"Why tell these facts to neighbour O[u]kubo?" |
19945 | He stretched himself in weariness--"A dream? |
19945 | He will again make the venture?" |
19945 | Her ladyship too far gone to note his conduct? |
19945 | Her name? |
19945 | Her voice was in his ears; without, in talk with the_ kago_ men? |
19945 | Her well? |
19945 | His heart leaped within him--"Is it Kiku? |
19945 | Honoured Sir, was not the former site in Mita? |
19945 | Honoured Sir, what is to be done? |
19945 | How about the gold and silver? |
19945 | How avoid the eternal grudge? |
19945 | How bring to prominence such meagre gifts of proportion as one does possess? |
19945 | How came the change?" |
19945 | How comes the wife here at this hour? |
19945 | How could Yokubei Sama find a substitute for the one; and secure the real presence of the other? |
19945 | How does Jisuké know? |
19945 | How has exit from the_ yashiki_ been permitted?" |
19945 | How is it then that you thus deign to rejoice? |
19945 | How meet them in true shape? |
19945 | How now: a sword?" |
19945 | How now: is not her ladyship already something of a demon? |
19945 | How then was the old spirit of the warrior to be maintained? |
19945 | How was it their own parents had spawned such incapacity? |
19945 | How would his lordship take it? |
19945 | Husband? |
19945 | In aid or menace? |
19945 | In resentment? |
19945 | In the priest''s room at the Fukuganji? |
19945 | Is Jimbei one to carry the big...."--"Body in which is lodged such a small soul? |
19945 | Is Rokuzo a thief?" |
19945 | Is he friend or relative of the honoured Shukké Sama? |
19945 | Is he friend or relative that thus inquiry is made?" |
19945 | Is he milk livered? |
19945 | Is he to be given drink money for carrying out his duties? |
19945 | Is it agreed?... |
19945 | Is it mother?'' |
19945 | Is it not so, Aoyama Uji?" |
19945 | Is it not so, Kagé?" |
19945 | Is it of the house?" |
19945 | Is no one hiding hereabouts, to make a fool of Kakunai?" |
19945 | Is not the meat of this_ tanuki_ tender beyond measure? |
19945 | Is not this truly love? |
19945 | Is that so?" |
19945 | Is the life of a human being to be put against a piece of porcelain?" |
19945 | Is the matter so beyond remedy? |
19945 | Is there no one to attend?" |
19945 | Is will or power lacking?" |
19945 | Isuké, eh?" |
19945 | It is for_ waraji_, with cloth in front and rear, indispensable.... Not found here? |
19945 | It was not Chu[u]dayu;''twas the Tono Sama who dealt the fatal blow.... What? |
19945 | Jimbei was at home--"And the eight mat room over looking the street?... |
19945 | Jizo[u] Sama, or the six Jizo[u] Sama, but a little way off? |
19945 | Kakunai San is it not? |
19945 | Kondo[u] Uji, has he found means to unbend, to thaw out those fingers? |
19945 | Let all burn together?" |
19945 | Mate, it is to Nakanocho[u]; but Nakanocho[u] whither? |
19945 | Meanwhile what was the cause of objection, thus expressed by force of arms, to the conduct and nuptials of the Sen- himégimi? |
19945 | Mio no Matsubara? |
19945 | My followers? |
19945 | Nakanocho[u], Nakacho[u]--is it Yoshiwara, or Fukagawa, or Naito[u] Shinjuku to which the Danna goes? |
19945 | Never again.... What''s that?" |
19945 | No? |
19945 | No? |
19945 | No?... |
19945 | Not even the whole private apartments of a_ daimyo[u]_ satisfies this lecher? |
19945 | Not so with others: to turn the page to a second instance-- One day a maid from above called to the gate guard--"Stop that man!"--"Who?" |
19945 | O''Kiku''s face? |
19945 | Of luxurious living and a splendid home? |
19945 | Okitsu? |
19945 | One all closed? |
19945 | One could stay here forever... what call you this place?... |
19945 | One under condemnation is not to be seen.... You have come far? |
19945 | Or does illness follow food partaken in a dream? |
19945 | Or had some maid displeased the Tono Sama, and hence suffered death at his hand(_ te- uchi_)? |
19945 | Or is it a lover who is in question?" |
19945 | Probably the honoured priest has a long journey before him-- to the capital?" |
19945 | Return? |
19945 | Rude? |
19945 | Said Dentatsu in some amaze--"Where did you get them?" |
19945 | Said Dentatsu, heavy- eyed--"The mission settled? |
19945 | Said Dentatsu, scared and annoyed--"Why loiter then in such a dangerous place?" |
19945 | Said Saburo[u]zaémon from the_ ro[u]ka_--"Whom do you address, O[u]kubo Uji?" |
19945 | Said Saburo[u]zaémon sourly--"What has the purpose to do with a low fellow''s entertainment? |
19945 | Said he, with a touch of his usual insolent jesting--"How explain to the ladies the presence of the honoured chamberlain? |
19945 | Said one more malicious,"And the repast? |
19945 | Said one more persistent--"At least a cup of wine...."--"Without fire or heating? |
19945 | Said the first girl--"Is the wage insufficient? |
19945 | Said the sister--"Is that so? |
19945 | Said the veteran Matsudaira Montaro[u]--"O[u]kubo, what think you? |
19945 | Shamed before the whole household? |
19945 | She is well-- in mind and body?" |
19945 | She said this-- then went away."--"Whither?" |
19945 | Shioki? |
19945 | Should his lordship be informed? |
19945 | So near, how suspect misfortune at hand? |
19945 | Still in bed? |
19945 | Surely the_ hatamoto_ was as well entertained as the_ chu[u]gen_?" |
19945 | The Buddha called wine_ hannyato_--hot water bringing wisdom? |
19945 | The Sempstress? |
19945 | The character_ ki_, what did it portend? |
19945 | The coin? |
19945 | The costume of the famed robber at this noted execution in Edo''s annals? |
19945 | The father? |
19945 | The fellow sprawled on the ground under the blow--"Is this a funeral procession? |
19945 | The ghosts would rest this night?" |
19945 | The gift of Kiku''s chastity secures for them oblivion.... You would ask time? |
19945 | The honoured Shukké Sama, is he prepared?" |
19945 | The lady regretted the Danna''s absence, said that she would wait the honoured return.... Who? |
19945 | The man eyed him with the contemptuous tolerance of him who knows--"Woman labouring? |
19945 | The object? |
19945 | The suffering?... |
19945 | The wench no longer troubles the peace and future of the_ okugata_?" |
19945 | The_ waraji_? |
19945 | Then and there would she not draw her dagger to accomplish the deed? |
19945 | Then holding the dagger daintily he spoke his will--"Is not this madness, O''Kiku Dono? |
19945 | Then with some curiosity--"But what has a tree leaf to do with purpose?" |
19945 | Then--"What maid is this? |
19945 | There is a purchase to make.... By the house? |
19945 | They laughed at him--"Wisteria in the seventh month? |
19945 | They shall have answer.... For whom? |
19945 | This Yoshi yet is to ride in palanquin, to be a_ daimyo[u]''s_ wife?" |
19945 | This beast of a_ bo[u]zu_( priest), what purge did he use, thus to cut off at once the breath of Kagé? |
19945 | This bundle-- how now? |
19945 | This has been the experience of the_ chu[u]gen_?" |
19945 | This in lower tones--"If Shimo becomes the favourite of her lord, how is such inexperience to meet the evil passions roused in those around her? |
19945 | This is of the thieves.... What''s that?" |
19945 | This lantern... how now? |
19945 | This? |
19945 | Townsman, surely the crossing is not to be trod without the practised guidance of the coolies? |
19945 | Tradesman, have you gone mad? |
19945 | Tribulation of the Five Viscera?" |
19945 | Trust not only the thief, but the trader to know the signs of cash.... You would breakfast at Totsuka town? |
19945 | Tsuta no Hosomichi? |
19945 | Vamoose? |
19945 | Veiling the sharpness--"Is this not the_ yashiki_ of Okumura Dono?" |
19945 | Vision, or fact? |
19945 | Was he awake or dreaming? |
19945 | Was he speaking truth, or trying to get rid of him? |
19945 | Was it accident or the work of thieves, this disaster? |
19945 | Was it in malice, or as warning? |
19945 | Was it not witchcraft? |
19945 | Was it the love for O''Hagi now, or love for O''Han hereafter? |
19945 | Was it_ shinju[u]_--a mutual suicide to insure happiness together in the next life? |
19945 | Was she not the daughter of old Taro[u]bei, the water drinker? |
19945 | Was there not a"parc aux cerfs"half way round the world? |
19945 | Was there not something deeper? |
19945 | What and why this word vamoose?" |
19945 | What banquet tempted this rascal...?" |
19945 | What command would he urge? |
19945 | What could be the social condition of these women, thus treated so familiarly by a mere_ chu[u]gen_? |
19945 | What could it be? |
19945 | What expiation?" |
19945 | What explanation can be offered? |
19945 | What fearful shriek was that? |
19945 | What greater proof of love could she have? |
19945 | What has got into the man this past month?" |
19945 | What has occurred? |
19945 | What is to be done? |
19945 | What lascivious slut is this, who thus would creep into the mistress''bed, to take her place?... |
19945 | What manner of company has this Dentatsu fallen in with?" |
19945 | What may be the reward?" |
19945 | What might he not do to others in whom the abbot had far greater interest? |
19945 | What now is to be done?" |
19945 | What place is this?" |
19945 | What place yonder?" |
19945 | What say the women to the presence of the beast? |
19945 | What the identity of the evil spirit which caused these wonders? |
19945 | What was its depth? |
19945 | What was suspension to this? |
19945 | What was to be done with farm and girls? |
19945 | What would anyone have done, thus treated at start as evil doer, as intruder? |
19945 | What would be the fate of both if their treachery were suspected? |
19945 | What would happen? |
19945 | What''s gone wrong?" |
19945 | What''s this?" |
19945 | What''s to be done? |
19945 | What''s to be done? |
19945 | What''s to be done?" |
19945 | What? |
19945 | Where could such beauty be encountered? |
19945 | Where from? |
19945 | Where is the package to be bestowed? |
19945 | Where now should he go for counsel? |
19945 | Where was Chu[u]dayu in all this confusion? |
19945 | Who brings a woman to this market where he comes to purchase?" |
19945 | Who is there, to walk such a stage in a day?" |
19945 | Who more virtuous than the honoured suzerain?" |
19945 | Who the companion?... |
19945 | Who volunteers to enter? |
19945 | Who would have thought it? |
19945 | Who would not cheat barrier and customs, and feel all the better for the deed? |
19945 | Whose was the child she bore? |
19945 | Why did she not die together with Hidéyori?" |
19945 | Why did this great lord, so near home in his progress-- his fief was in Ko[u]shu[u]--deign thus to rest? |
19945 | Why disturb oneself? |
19945 | Why neglect to take the reward now close to hand? |
19945 | Why not Jinnai? |
19945 | Why not ascertain the fact? |
19945 | Why not favour the curiosity of the Osho[u] Sama? |
19945 | Why not remain as now, perform the tasks of this house? |
19945 | Why refuse to follow the example of the other women of the household-- and share with them? |
19945 | Why rouse envy or show favour by giving name of this or that lusty fellow? |
19945 | Why show favouritism? |
19945 | Why so? |
19945 | Why then fear the dead; when ye are part and parcel of them? |
19945 | Why then should speech be aught else than to possess the organ? |
19945 | Why this concealment from the eyes of Saburo[u]zaémon?" |
19945 | Will he not do more? |
19945 | With some severity--"Kakunai, does this horse talk?" |
19945 | Within? |
19945 | Women? |
19945 | Women? |
19945 | Would Isuké abandon it?" |
19945 | Would Kagé trifle with the relics of his kind? |
19945 | Would he learn the art of converse over his master''s wine?" |
19945 | Would he slay them all in sacrifice to his lust? |
19945 | Would the Tono Sama deign to rest? |
19945 | Would you know about her? |
19945 | Yakushi? |
19945 | Yanagibara? |
19945 | Yoshi was not fit to be the wife; nay, not even the female companion of this arrogant lord?" |
19945 | You refuse?... |
19945 | Your name is Kiku.... And age?... |
19945 | [ 21]"The ambition of this Tomizawa?" |
19945 | _ Kago_ men, whither now? |
19945 | _ Shiruko_ and_ saké_ for a beast? |
29903 | But this can not be a man? 29903 But what do I see? |
29903 | ''Who are these three ladies?'' |
29903 | (_ b_)_ Objective_: Is the work very good, good, mediocre or bad, compared with the normal human average? |
29903 | (_ d_) A heavily tainted couple, desperately enamored of each other, came to me in great distress to ask:"May we get married?" |
29903 | = Civil Marriage.=--What then is civil marriage, and what ought it to be? |
29903 | = Conclusions.=--What are the principal conclusions to which we are led by this short study of the ancestral history or phylogeny of man? |
29903 | = Definition of Morality.=--How can we define morality or ethics? |
29903 | = Human and Religious Morality.=--What then constitutes ethics or true human morality? |
29903 | = The Fate of Prostitutes.=--What becomes of prostitutes in the course of time? |
29903 | According to the legend, sodomy was a vice of the inhabitants; is this why it is punished at the present day? |
29903 | All State regulation of prostitution is to be absolutely condemned; but what position should civil law take up with regard to free prostitution? |
29903 | And we should sit still and witness our civilization go into decay and fall to pieces without raising the cry of warning and applying the remedy? |
29903 | But has confession been specially instituted for this type of character? |
29903 | But of what use is it to be jealous? |
29903 | But this is hardly explicit, for what do we understand by good and evil? |
29903 | But what else? |
29903 | But what is charity but the synthesis of the social sentiments of sympathy, devotion and self- denial, for the benefit of humanity? |
29903 | But what is the use of being blind to such patent facts? |
29903 | But when suddenly freed from all pain she immediately replied:"How could it hurt me, Theophilus? |
29903 | But why should they be hidden? |
29903 | Can it be conscientiously said that hygiene has benefited? |
29903 | Can not it, therefore, be established on another basis than that of cheques to be drawn on paradise? |
29903 | Can not man also be more happy in giving than receiving? |
29903 | Can we pretend that they are properly prepared for it? |
29903 | Do they imagine that they have done anything that will improve these children? |
29903 | Does a normal man ever marry without knowing what he is doing? |
29903 | Does not this account to a large extent for the great number of unhappy marriages recorded nowadays? |
29903 | Does the whole duty of the doctor consist in dissuading the patient from marriage? |
29903 | Have they punished the real culprit? |
29903 | How are we to begin? |
29903 | How can it be otherwise in a species which has lived for thousands or perhaps millions of years as small hostile tribes, separated from each other? |
29903 | How can one judge and condemn one''s neighbor without having the least idea of the state of mind of these pariahs of society? |
29903 | How could I prove the matter before a tribunal? |
29903 | How does the law obtain the right to punish an act which does no harm to any one, nor to society, nor even to an animal? |
29903 | How is it possible for a young girl to remain pure in mind after such conversations with an unmarried man? |
29903 | How is it that such a brave and industrious woman can feel repulsion toward her own child? |
29903 | If no mystery is made of these things in the case of plants and animals, why should not instruction be given in human reproduction? |
29903 | In order to prepare our daughters for marriage, is it not logical to begin by telling them what it is, what it involves and what it exacts?" |
29903 | Is he conscientious? |
29903 | Is it necessary to say that any self- respecting doctor who is aware of this state of affairs should never countenance such marriages? |
29903 | Is it not a ridiculous and cruel irony to call_ natural children_ those born apart from marriage? |
29903 | Is it surprising that love in such cases becomes replaced by bitterness and despair? |
29903 | Is it to be wondered that they have recourse to prostitution? |
29903 | Is not the quality of dogs improved by breeding from the good and eliminating the bad? |
29903 | Is she not more prepared for the depths of vice than for conjugal life?" |
29903 | Is that morality? |
29903 | Is the man less guilty than the woman in procreation apart from marriage, if we can use the term guilt in such cases? |
29903 | Is the pupil worthy of trust? |
29903 | Let us return to our example: why does the idea of my wife call to mind that of the journey? |
29903 | Must husband and wife, who love and esteem each other, be separated? |
29903 | Nudity.=--What is the origin of the fact that man is ashamed of his genital organs? |
29903 | On the other hand, are not cowardice, falseness and meanness, etc., reproduced with quite as much certainty in other families? |
29903 | Or should they abandon sexual intercourse all together and live like brother and sister? |
29903 | Sexual continence in wedlock? |
29903 | Should the law punish artificial abortion? |
29903 | Starvation? |
29903 | Then her terrestrial lover, Theophilus, forcing his way through the crowd, burst her bonds and said with a sad smile,"Does it hurt you, Dorothea?" |
29903 | There is one question, however, which arises: Can prostitution in itself be regarded as a misdemeanor punishable by law? |
29903 | This traffic is formally prohibited by most laws; but what are laws made for, if not to be broken? |
29903 | Well, how is it to be done? |
29903 | What are the effects of this state of things on the sexual life of modern society? |
29903 | What can one reply to such logic? |
29903 | What can we expect from the descendants of a population so completely degenerate? |
29903 | What happens when two persons live exclusively for each other, if one of them dies? |
29903 | What is human right? |
29903 | What is the use of procreating healthy and robust children if they are vain, egoistic, impulsive, crafty, wanting in will power, or perhaps criminal? |
29903 | What is the use of prosecuting inverts? |
29903 | What is the use of the theoretical belief in free- will in this case? |
29903 | What is to be done when law and religion forbid the application of preventive measures and even prosecute the person that recommends them? |
29903 | What is to be done? |
29903 | What standpoint are we to take in the sexual domain, which is free from prejudice, with regard to true human morality? |
29903 | What then are the types of men which we should endeavor to produce? |
29903 | What was she to do? |
29903 | What will be the consequences of such a state of things? |
29903 | What will marriage be like? |
29903 | Who then can decide where art ends and pornography begins, or how far eroticism may without danger be expressed in art? |
29903 | Why can not the same means of existence which allow concubinage suffice for marriage? |
29903 | Why did you bring me into this world? |
29903 | Why not teach them? |
29903 | Why should a more and more international union between men be impossible? |
29903 | Why should men be the only ones to perform obligatory social service? |
29903 | Why should that be so? |
29903 | Why should the common use of an international language and the suppression of war between civilized countries be Utopias? |
29903 | Why should the mother conceal the fact that it is nearly the same in man as in animals? |
29903 | Why should the suppression of the use of narcotic substances such as alcohol, opium, hashish, etc., which poison entire nations, be Utopian? |
29903 | Why that of the trunk? |
29903 | Would it not be wiser to take things in time and warn them of the dangers ahead? |
29903 | _ Fecisti fornicationem contra naturam, i d est, cum masculis vel animalibus coire, i d est, cum equo, cum vacca vel asina, vel aliquo animali?_( vol. |
29903 | _ Fornicationem fecisti cum masculo intra coxas; ita dico ut tuum virile membrum intra coxas alterius mitteres, et sic agitando semen funderes?_ 3. |
2290 | Is this a fancy of mine? 2290 Where did you get these?" |
2290 | Where would you go? 2290 Why should you make way with yourself? |
2290 | A star- gazer and a chariot- maker work for other people, do they not?" |
2290 | And Calamity seemed to be looking on, thinking:"Whom shall I embrace?" |
2290 | And Cloud- banner said:"My son, I only want the kingdom for you, and if you give it up from benevolent motives, what good is it to me? |
2290 | And Hero was amazed, and timidly asked her:"Who are you, and why do you weep?" |
2290 | And King Shudraka saw all this and went back without being seen himself, and climbed to the roof, and called:"Who is there at the gate?" |
2290 | And again the king thought to test his behaviour, and climbing to the roof he called out toward the palace gate:"Who is there?" |
2290 | And as he walked along, the goblin on his shoulder said to him again:"O King, why do you take such pains for that wretched monk? |
2290 | And as soon as the counsellor was refreshed, the king said:"Counsellor, why did you leave us? |
2290 | And as to his knowledge of the speech of beasts and birds, of what practical use is it? |
2290 | And he also thought: Why does this girl reject kings and fall in love with a thief like me? |
2290 | And he asked her:"What does it mean, dearest? |
2290 | And he ran between them and spoke again to the agitated bird:"O Garuda, what madness is this? |
2290 | And he thought:"If I am born a prince, why am I so poor? |
2290 | And he thought:"Who is this who laments so piteously, as if in deep despair? |
2290 | And he wondered:"Oh, where has my wife gone? |
2290 | And her mother and father were surprised and asked her:"Why did you come back so soon, and in this condition?" |
2290 | And how can you blame either or both of the charitable people who gave food to a guest who arrived unexpectedly? |
2290 | And if I am to be poor, why did God give me so many desires? |
2290 | And if this is a usual occurrence at sea, why do not other goddesses arise?" |
2290 | And she thought:"Who can he be in this forest? |
2290 | And the concealed thief saw it all and thought:"What has the wicked woman done? |
2290 | And the counsellor''s son said to the old woman:"Old woman, do you know anybody named Bite in this city?" |
2290 | And the goblin on his shoulder saw that he was silent and said:"O King, why are you so obstinate? |
2290 | And the goblin said reproachfully:"O King, why was not the general better? |
2290 | And the goblin spoke to him again:"O King, why do you go to such pains in this cemetery at night? |
2290 | And the hermit said:"My boy, what is this wailing we hear? |
2290 | And the king fell in love with her and thought:"Who is she? |
2290 | And the king respectfully asked her:"My good girl, what happy family does your friend adorn? |
2290 | And the king said:"What can I say? |
2290 | And the king said:"Why are you so sad, my dear? |
2290 | And the king thought:"Ah, what does this mean? |
2290 | And the loud shouts of angry gamblers seemed to suggest the question:"Who is there that would not be fleeced here, were he the god of wealth himself?" |
2290 | And the prince mounted his father''s judgment throne, and when he had heard the cause of the quarrel, he asked the thrush:"How are men ungrateful? |
2290 | And the princess trusted him and said after a little hesitation:"My dear girl, why should I not trust you? |
2290 | And the spell appeared in bodily form, and said:"What shall I do?" |
2290 | And then she spoke to Sandal with words punctuated by smiles:"My dear, why do you not show hospitality to the fairy prince? |
2290 | And what child would give his body?" |
2290 | And what did you fall into?" |
2290 | And what good is a Brahman who neglects his own affairs and turns magician, despising real courage? |
2290 | And what good is there except helping others? |
2290 | And what is this hermit garb? |
2290 | And when he saw that he had come there so suddenly, he thought:"Oh, what does it mean? |
2290 | And when he saw that the culprit was dressed like a hermit, he asked him very gently:"Holy sir, where did you get this pearl necklace? |
2290 | And when the king saw him following, he spoke lovingly:"My good man, do you perhaps know the way we came?" |
2290 | And when the monk came the next day, he asked him:"Monk, why do you keep honouring me in such an expensive way? |
2290 | And where are they now? |
2290 | And where are you going?" |
2290 | And where did you come? |
2290 | And where did you stay? |
2290 | And why should feet fit to saunter in a court, press this thorny ground? |
2290 | Are men bad, or women? |
2290 | Are the crows to blame when the geese eat up the rice?" |
2290 | Are you not aware that I am a connoisseur in food? |
2290 | At that moment a serving- maid came into the room and said to the king:"Your Majesty, why have you come into the jaws of death? |
2290 | Besides, what nonsense are you talking?" |
2290 | Besides, you have surely heard what the poet says: What fool would go into a house? |
2290 | But Cloud- chariot said to his father:"Father, how can you take your weapons and fight? |
2290 | But Fierce- lion said:"My son, what do you mean? |
2290 | But after all, who can understand the strange workings of stern necessity? |
2290 | But her father said:"What do you mean, my daughter? |
2290 | But his parents immediately said:"Son, what are you saying? |
2290 | But presently she rose, lamenting for the pair so unexpectantly dead, and thought:"What is my life good for now?" |
2290 | But the goblin said:"How could it be the king''s fault? |
2290 | But the goblin said:"Why not Hero, the like of whom as a servant is not to be found in the whole world? |
2290 | But when the eldest said this, the two younger said:"Sir, if you feel disgust, why should n''t we?" |
2290 | But while he reflected, Cloud- chariot said:"O king of birds, why do you stop? |
2290 | Can women be so dreadful as this? |
2290 | Did he weep or laugh? |
2290 | Did he weep or laugh?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started. |
2290 | Did you understand the signs I made, or was it the counsellor''s son?" |
2290 | Do you not know that money is uncertain as an autumn cloud? |
2290 | Do you not know this, you who know things above and things below? |
2290 | Do you not see how gentle his appearance is?" |
2290 | Do you not see that I have the hood and the forked tongue? |
2290 | Do you not see the home of the ghosts, full of dreadful creatures, terrible in the night, wrapped in darkness as in smoke? |
2290 | Do you not see the rock of sacrifice wet with the blood of serpents, the terrible plaything of Death? |
2290 | Have you no sense about this fruitless task? |
2290 | Have you the rheumatism? |
2290 | He thought:"Is she the goddess of love, plucking the spring flowers in person? |
2290 | He went himself to see Good, and asked him soothingly:"What does this mean? |
2290 | How about generosity and that kind of thing? |
2290 | How can I comfort it? |
2290 | How can I do such a wicked thing? |
2290 | How can I find her? |
2290 | How can I partake of such a meal?" |
2290 | How can I save him from the king? |
2290 | How can I touch this loathsome thing?" |
2290 | How can a good counsellor be happy when his master devotes himself to a vice? |
2290 | How can he live then? |
2290 | How can it bear the pangs of being eaten by Garuda? |
2290 | How could I be mad enough to eat a future Buddha? |
2290 | How could a man in my position overlook such a transgression? |
2290 | How could a teacher with such powers promise falsely? |
2290 | How could a warrior''s daughter be given to a working- man, a weaver? |
2290 | How could he be so mean as to beg Garuda to destroy his own race? |
2290 | How could this woman have a goaty smell?" |
2290 | How could you bring yourself to do so harsh and loveless a thing? |
2290 | How could you do this thoughtless thing?" |
2290 | How did you come to this inaccessible under- world? |
2290 | How much less in the case of others? |
2290 | How shall I find another such master? |
2290 | How shall I live without you?" |
2290 | If I should transgress, who would be virtuous? |
2290 | If not, why do you talk nonsense? |
2290 | If the counsellor is lost, the fundamental principle is lost; how then can virtue be preserved? |
2290 | If you know and do not tell, then remember the curse I spoke of before?" |
2290 | Is it good manners to enter the heart of an innocent girl by force, steal her thoughts, and run away? |
2290 | Is n''t it possible to prepare for heaven in your own house?" |
2290 | Is she a goddess come to bathe in these waters? |
2290 | Is she angry with me? |
2290 | Is there no other kind of virtue except in pilgrimages? |
2290 | Is this a dream, or an illusion?" |
2290 | Is this hermit manners, to run away?" |
2290 | Just then the thief came up and said to the king''s men:"Why do you kill this man without any good reason? |
2290 | Or Gauri, separated from her husband Shiva, leading a hard life to win him again? |
2290 | Or a dream? |
2290 | Or an illusion? |
2290 | Or are you possessed by a devil? |
2290 | Or from sorrow because the king came back, and he could no longer act as king? |
2290 | Or how can Garuda, the heavenly bird, do such a crime? |
2290 | Or is she a forest goddess, come here to worship the spring- time?" |
2290 | Or is she playing hide- and- seek with me, to see how I will take it?" |
2290 | Or the favour of the goddess?" |
2290 | Or the lovely moon, taking a human form, and trying to be attractive in the daytime? |
2290 | Or to a farmer, either? |
2290 | Or why at her age does she torture a body as delicate as a flower with a hermit''s life in a lonely wood?" |
2290 | Or why is not the boy Trusty the most worthy, who showed such wonderful manhood when only a little boy? |
2290 | Or why should not his wife receive the most praise, who did not waver when she saw her son killed like a beast before her eyes? |
2290 | Otherwise, why did the fire seem cool to you? |
2290 | Shall I go into the fire, or go home? |
2290 | So Spotless went and saw how his son was acting, and said:"My son, why should you be downcast? |
2290 | So at night he climbed to the palace roof and cried:"Who is there at the gate?" |
2290 | So how can I touch it?" |
2290 | So now I say: What good is life to me without my children? |
2290 | So now why should I want to live alone? |
2290 | So the eldest brother straightway plucked up heart, and said:"What virtue is it which we should acquire?" |
2290 | So the king knew that a goblin lived in it, and said without fear:"What are you laughing about? |
2290 | So what shall I do now?" |
2290 | The brave man said:"If I had not killed the giant in the fight, who would have saved her in spite of all your pains? |
2290 | The wise man said:"If I had not discovered her by my wisdom, how could you have found her hiding- place? |
2290 | Then Cloud- chariot asked one of her friends:"My good girl, what is your friend''s sweet name? |
2290 | Then a voice cried from heaven:"O Hero, who else is devoted to his master as you are? |
2290 | Then she slowly spoke:"Who are you, sir? |
2290 | Then the chief of police went and asked him:"Holy sir, how did this pearl necklace come into your pupil''s hand?" |
2290 | Then the counsellor''s son said:"Did you not see all that she hinted with her signs? |
2290 | Then the eldest said:"What? |
2290 | Then the king broke silence and said:"Who did the murder? |
2290 | Then the younger brothers said to him:"Sir, why is an intelligent man sad for lack of money? |
2290 | There he saw great heaps of bones, and he asked Friend- wealth:"What creatures did these heaps of bones belong to?" |
2290 | Therefore, as you are a wise man, tell us what you mean by embracing this dead body?" |
2290 | To which should the girl be given? |
2290 | To which should the girl be given? |
2290 | To which should the girl be given?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started. |
2290 | Was his wife his or the other man''s? |
2290 | Was it from grief because he did not win the fairy himself? |
2290 | Was not Rama forced to abandon his good wife by popular clamour? |
2290 | Was the night jealous of your beauty; did she carry you away? |
2290 | What advantage would it be to you if all the serpents were slain at once?" |
2290 | What are the syllables of her name, which must be a delight to the ear? |
2290 | What could she do, poor woman? |
2290 | What do you mean by your hour for begging? |
2290 | What does the question mean? |
2290 | What family does she adorn?" |
2290 | What fool would begin a thing and then stop?" |
2290 | What good would life be to us otherwise?" |
2290 | What happiness is there in a life of constant mourning for your children? |
2290 | What high- minded man would want a kingdom after killing his relatives just for the sake of this wretched, perishable body? |
2290 | What is it to them, or they to it? |
2290 | What is the use of throwing him into a well now? |
2290 | What madness is this? |
2290 | What might she not do next?" |
2290 | What need of more words? |
2290 | What relation were their children? |
2290 | What rights have you in my wife? |
2290 | What shall I do?" |
2290 | What will happen now, when he loves a fairy? |
2290 | What will holy men not do out of regard to those who seek aid? |
2290 | What would my father say if he saw me now, or any relative, or any friend? |
2290 | When Hero heard this, he was frightened and said:"Goddess, is there any remedy for this, any way in which the king might be saved?" |
2290 | When Lotus- lake saw that terrible fall, he cried:"Oh, what does it mean?" |
2290 | When he had told this story, the goblin asked:"O King, which of them was the most delicate?" |
2290 | When he had told this story, the goblin said:"O King, when the king was so happy, why should the counsellor''s heart break? |
2290 | When he had told this story, the goblin said:"O King, who murdered the Brahman? |
2290 | When so good a wife is gone, how could I think of another?" |
2290 | When the counsellor was rested, the merchant asked him:"Who are you? |
2290 | When the goblin had told this story on the road in the night, he said:"O King, which was the most foolish among those who died for love? |
2290 | When the goblin had told this story, he asked King Triple- victory:"O King, which of all these was the most worthy? |
2290 | When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king:"O King, when they were mingled in this way, which should be her husband? |
2290 | When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king:"O King, which of these two deserves more credit for plunging into the sea?" |
2290 | When the goblin had told this strange story, he asked the king:"O King, why did the boy laugh at the moment of death? |
2290 | When the king saw this, he took it and asked the treasurer:"Where have you been keeping the fruits which the monk brought? |
2290 | Whence do you come? |
2290 | Where can I find such a sacrifice for the giant? |
2290 | Where did you go? |
2290 | Where has the great being been carried by my enemy? |
2290 | Where is that heavenly garden? |
2290 | Where is the great man? |
2290 | Where shall I go now, naked and dusty as I am? |
2290 | Where shall I see you again? |
2290 | Which are worse, men or women? |
2290 | Which are worse, men or women?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree to fetch the goblin. |
2290 | Which combination of head and body is her husband? |
2290 | Which is the cleverest? |
2290 | Which is the more deserving? |
2290 | Which is the more deserving?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder as before, and started. |
2290 | Which is the more self- sacrificing? |
2290 | Which is the more self- sacrificing?_ So the king walked along with the goblin. |
2290 | Which is the more worthy? |
2290 | Which is the more worthy?_ Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder as before, and started. |
2290 | Which is the most delicate? |
2290 | Which is the most delicate?_ Then the king went to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder once more, and started toward the monk. |
2290 | Which is to blame when he kills them all? |
2290 | Which of the five deserves the most honour? |
2290 | Which of the five deserves the most honour?_ Then King Triple- victory went back under the sissoo tree and caught the goblin, who gave a horse- laugh. |
2290 | Which of these are you? |
2290 | Which of these are you? |
2290 | Which was the more self- sacrificing, Cloud- chariot or Shell- crest? |
2290 | Which was the most foolish? |
2290 | Which was the most foolish?_ Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, took the goblin on his shoulder, and set out in haste. |
2290 | Who can she be?" |
2290 | Who could expect a good result from creating a bad- tempered creature? |
2290 | Who is to blame for his death? |
2290 | Who is to blame for his death?_ Then the King went back under the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started as before. |
2290 | Who killed the Brahman? |
2290 | Who will save my son?" |
2290 | Who would break a promise that had been made solemnly? |
2290 | Who would sacrifice his child for money? |
2290 | Who would save a common stone at the cost of a pearl? |
2290 | Whose fault was the resulting death of his parents- in- law? |
2290 | Whose fault was the resulting death of his parents- in- law?_ There is a city called Benares where Shiva lives. |
2290 | Whose wife is she? |
2290 | Whose wife should she be? |
2290 | Whose wife should she be? |
2290 | Whose wife should she be?_ Then King Triple- victory went back under the sissoo tree to fetch the goblin. |
2290 | Why did he fail to win the magic spell? |
2290 | Why did he laugh at the moment of death? |
2290 | Why did he laugh at the moment of death?_ Then the king went to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder as before, and started in silence. |
2290 | Why did he weep and dance? |
2290 | Why did his counsellor''s heart break? |
2290 | Why did his counsellor''s heart break?_ Then the king went as before to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started back. |
2290 | Why did the Creator and the serpent- king choose my only son from the broad serpent- world, and seize upon him?" |
2290 | Why did they lose their magic, when everything had been done according to precept?" |
2290 | Why did you not save me?" |
2290 | Why do we keep such a wishing- tree for the sake of transient blessings? |
2290 | Why do you not seize her?" |
2290 | Why do you say that King Shudraka was the best among them?" |
2290 | Why do you urge me to a sin which is pleasant for the moment, but causes great sorrow in the next world? |
2290 | Why do you vainly try to comfort me?" |
2290 | Why do you work so hard and grow weary for the sake of that monk? |
2290 | Why does that magic goblin keep wasting my time? |
2290 | Why does the fruit of the poison- tree of sin taste sweet?" |
2290 | Why have you come into this lonely wood? |
2290 | Why have you killed my husband and my brother at one fell swoop? |
2290 | Why insist on more? |
2290 | Why not trust a loving, innocent girl like me? |
2290 | Why not?" |
2290 | Why seek the pains of hell by suicide?'' |
2290 | Why should I deceive an honourable man, especially as your noble character has made me feel like a servant? |
2290 | Why should I not please the goddess by sacrificing myself?" |
2290 | Why should I not win her favour by sacrificing myself?" |
2290 | Why spend your time in such an evil pursuit?" |
2290 | Why then delay? |
2290 | Why then do you uselessly kill the wild beasts? |
2290 | Why torture me yet more? |
2290 | the snake, or the hawk, or the woman who gave him the food, or her husband? |
30440 | ''And have you no explanation of these hauntings?'' 30440 ''But within a radius of a few miles?'' |
30440 | ''How far are the houses off the hill?'' 30440 ''Well,''William replied, a puzzled expression on his face,''you noticed an ebony chair in the room?'' |
30440 | And what would be the after- effect, Mr O''Donnell? |
30440 | But why did you venture here alone? |
30440 | Is n''t it terrible? |
30440 | Pray what was the matter with her? 30440 Well?" |
30440 | What is your opinion on that point? |
30440 | Where is she? |
30440 | Wo n''t you come with me? |
30440 | Yes,I replied;"but how on earth do you know?" |
30440 | You will let me know when you do? |
30440 | ''Are the houses close together-- in the same road or valley?'' |
30440 | ''Whoever can it be?'' |
30440 | ; or are they things that were never carnate? |
30440 | A phantasm of some dead tree? |
30440 | And, if they have one sense, have they not others? |
30440 | Another glass of Moselle?" |
30440 | Are the insects, the trees, the fish responsible for the diseases with which they are inflicted? |
30440 | Are their crude devices and mad, tomboyish pranks merely reactionary, and the only means they have of finding vent for their naturally high spirits? |
30440 | But are we always right? |
30440 | But be serious now, I beg you, and tell me what made you come to- night and what you have been doing all these years? |
30440 | But what caused the man in the street to notice me? |
30440 | But, of course, you wo n''t mind spending a night in it?'' |
30440 | CHAPTER VI COMPLEX HAUNTINGS AND OCCULT BESTIALITIES What are occult bestialities? |
30440 | Ca n''t you see it?" |
30440 | Can I expect you to believe that? |
30440 | Can they see, hear, or smell? |
30440 | Can they, like certain-- not all-- dogs and horses and other animals, detect the proximity of the unknown? |
30440 | Can you see any association in the two hauntings-- any possible connection between what you heard and what Mr Vercoe saw?" |
30440 | Could anyone save the blindest and most fanatical of biblical bigots call the ordainer of such a punishment merciful? |
30440 | Dingan exclaimed, when I approached him on the subject,''the mango tree on the Yuka Road, just before you get to the bridge over the river? |
30440 | Do they tremble and shake with fear at the sight of some psychic vegetation, or are they utterly devoid of any such faculty? |
30440 | Do you know what the sounds were, Baroness? |
30440 | Had she no dowry, or was she an heiress with an ogre of a father, or was she already married?" |
30440 | Hans inquired,"and why unarmed? |
30440 | Have I seen them? |
30440 | Have they any senses at all? |
30440 | Have you heard from Mr Vercoe lately?" |
30440 | How came you to get hold of such a crazy idea?'' |
30440 | How utterly futile, for who, in God''s name, would hear me? |
30440 | I fell on my knees before her and kissed-- what? |
30440 | I murmured,''why Dolmen?'' |
30440 | I was at an"at home"one afternoon several seasons ago, when an old friend of mine suddenly whispered:"You see that lady in black, over there? |
30440 | If the unknown brain has a separate existence, and can detach itself at times( as in"projection"), why must it wait for death to set it entirely free? |
30440 | In my dreams, in the wild fantasies that had oft- times visited my pillow at night-- in delirium, in reality, where? |
30440 | Is n''t she divine? |
30440 | Is n''t that so, Jacques?'' |
30440 | It is more than twelve hours since he was executed; will anything-- will the shape, the personality, I anticipate-- come? |
30440 | Leaning over the little tile- covered table at which we sat, the stranger suddenly said:"Do you see anything by me? |
30440 | May not that creaking be sometimes due to an invisible presence in the chair? |
30440 | Now, what do you think of that?" |
30440 | Or is it the reverse? |
30440 | Over and over again I asked myself the hackneyed, but none the less thrilling question,''What form will it take? |
30440 | Presently a voice, every whit as lovely as the face, said:"So you are Jack''s chum?" |
30440 | Shall we leave the beast here or take it with us?" |
30440 | Something is coming, and, if that something is not the phantasm of him whom I believe is earthbound, whose phantasm is it? |
30440 | The Crescent, Bath?" |
30440 | Then, quite suddenly, a man stepped out from the dark entrance to a by- street, and, touching me lightly on the arm, said,"Is there anything amiss? |
30440 | WHERE? |
30440 | Was it a shape of my fancy, or was it horrible reality that I heard and saw on that night? |
30440 | What ails you?" |
30440 | What are pixies? |
30440 | What do you think of them?" |
30440 | What had I seen? |
30440 | What is the matter?" |
30440 | What phantasm of any standing at all would be attracted by such baubles? |
30440 | What prompted him to lend me his aid? |
30440 | What shall I do?" |
30440 | What was it? |
30440 | What was it? |
30440 | What was the history of the house?" |
30440 | What, then, is it? |
30440 | When will you start, and what will you take with you?'' |
30440 | When would he begin his job and how? |
30440 | Whence came it? |
30440 | Whence come these strangers, to all appearance of flesh and blood like myself? |
30440 | Where could one find a greater combination of typically criminal characteristics? |
30440 | Who has not seen, or fancied he has seen, a fire- coffin? |
30440 | Why not? |
30440 | Why should He? |
30440 | Why? |
30440 | Will it be simply a phantasm of a dead Celt, or some peculiarly grotesque and awful elemental[1] attracted to the spot by human remains?'' |
30440 | Would it be rid of him? |
30440 | Would that God, if He were almighty, have permitted the existence of such an enemy( or indeed an enemy at all) as the Devil? |
30440 | Yet of what? |
30440 | Yet what could I do? |
30440 | Yet where did these articles go, and of what use would they be to a poltergeist? |
30440 | You ask me why? |
30440 | _ Fire- coffins_ Who has not seen all manner of pictures in the fire? |
30440 | _ Mermaids_ Who would not, if they could, believe in mermaids? |
30440 | or a vice- elemental, whose presence there would be due to some particularly wicked crime or series of crimes perpetrated on or near the spot? |
30440 | some peculiar species of spirit( I have elsewhere termed a vagrarian), attracted thither by the loneliness of the locality? |
30440 | some vicious, evil phantasm? |
30440 | was it true? |
30440 | what shall I do? |
21616 | A great many in the same house? |
21616 | Ai n''t goin''to drink all o''that, are you? |
21616 | Ai n''t you going, you crazy old tramp? 21616 And Basilio is in the corral now?" |
21616 | And betrays it? |
21616 | And do the others suspect nothing? |
21616 | And he had shaved? |
21616 | And perfectly willing? |
21616 | And the next after that? |
21616 | And you have been in the dungeon ever since? |
21616 | Anything the matter? |
21616 | Apart from weakness, is your health good? |
21616 | Are n''t you afraid that much more than that would make you sick? |
21616 | Are there more dangers? |
21616 | Are you afraid of death, Baker? |
21616 | Are you afraid of it? |
21616 | Are you afraid to do it? |
21616 | Are you ready? |
21616 | Are you the doctor? |
21616 | Baker, can you keep a secret? |
21616 | Baker, do you want anything? |
21616 | Baker? 21616 Certainly,"answered Dr. Rowell, smiling;"what else can it be?" |
21616 | Da w''at? |
21616 | Did n''t they ever call you anything else? |
21616 | Did you say you are quite ready? |
21616 | Did you see the blade? |
21616 | Die? |
21616 | Do n''t they give you sufficient? |
21616 | Do you desire any-- any subsequent disposition? |
21616 | Do you want a man? |
21616 | Do you wish to speak of me? |
21616 | Does any one know you came to this house? |
21616 | Every day? |
21616 | Hain''t you got it wrong? |
21616 | Has he regularly taken the medicine which I prescribed? |
21616 | Have you a choice in the method? |
21616 | Have you ever seen people die? |
21616 | Have you reflected that so long as you harbor a determination to kill the warden you may be kept in the dungeon? 21616 Have you seen it before?" |
21616 | Have you suspicions? |
21616 | How did you know these things? |
21616 | How do you know? |
21616 | How long can I live? |
21616 | How long was I that way, old fellow? 21616 How long will it take?" |
21616 | How long? |
21616 | How much do they give you? |
21616 | How was he lashed to the horse? |
21616 | How? 21616 How?" |
21616 | Is it cutting? |
21616 | Is that all? |
21616 | Is your patient very ill, doctor? |
21616 | It is not,protested Arnold;"why do you think the blow was struck by a woman?" |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Me? |
21616 | Mine? |
21616 | Must you know? |
21616 | No delivery to your friends? |
21616 | No; but is not that enough? |
21616 | Of what? |
21616 | Of what? |
21616 | Oh, ai n''t you? |
21616 | On bread and water? |
21616 | Pie? |
21616 | Pie? |
21616 | Piece of what? |
21616 | The which? |
21616 | The-- ah-- the tattooed woman? 21616 Want?" |
21616 | Was you a- talkin''''bout wantin''me to wait on him? |
21616 | Well, Baker, how are you getting along? |
21616 | Well, after you refused to go to work what did the warden do? |
21616 | Well, now, I was jess a- thinkin''that one or two more pieces fur dinner every day-- every day----"Pie? |
21616 | Well, now, you see-- there ai n''t nobody a- listenin'', is there? |
21616 | Well,he remarked, contemptuously, drawing Zoà « closer and holding her with a tender solicitude--"well, what of it?" |
21616 | Well? |
21616 | Well? |
21616 | Well? |
21616 | What are you going to do? |
21616 | What can you do? |
21616 | What color? |
21616 | What did they do then? |
21616 | What do you propose to do? |
21616 | What do you propose to do? |
21616 | What do you think they would do if they should discover everything? |
21616 | What do you want here? |
21616 | What do you want me to do? |
21616 | What do you want, Basilio? |
21616 | What does it mean? |
21616 | What for? 21616 What has all this to do with me?" |
21616 | What is the matter? |
21616 | What is the weapon, doctor? |
21616 | What is your name? |
21616 | What of that? 21616 What part of Georgia?" |
21616 | What salary do you want? |
21616 | What then? |
21616 | What think you, doctor? |
21616 | What was it? |
21616 | What? 21616 When was this done?" |
21616 | Where are those dogs? 21616 Where is Basilio?" |
21616 | Where is the weapon? |
21616 | Who? 21616 Why did you manacle this man,"he demanded,"when he is evidently so weak, and when none of the others were manacled?" |
21616 | Why not? 21616 Why?" |
21616 | Will they use the sword first, as they did with those who had the jewelry? |
21616 | With what agent? |
21616 | Yes; but how do you know? |
21616 | Yes; can you keep a secret? |
21616 | You are younger than I,he said;"wo n''t you go to the bar and buy a bottle of absinthe, and bring a pitcher of water and some glasses? |
21616 | You don''know da Mugga? |
21616 | You have no lingering desire to retract? |
21616 | You lika da gal, too, ha, Samp? |
21616 | You lika da show, ha, Samp? 21616 You say she appeared to be frightened?" |
21616 | You shall certainly have it; but do n''t they give you any? |
21616 | You swear it? |
21616 | You would not kill him now, would you? |
21616 | A duel? |
21616 | A week-- perhaps a month?" |
21616 | Afraid of the oar? |
21616 | After all, whom would that disturb, with whose pleasure interfere? |
21616 | Am I right?" |
21616 | And then, was there any one so noble of character, with integrity so unfailing and so far beyond temptation, that he might say he was better than she? |
21616 | And then, where could be the benefit of adding physical suffering to mental? |
21616 | And, in a frightened whisper, she asked,"Did you kill him?" |
21616 | Are you afraid to go?" |
21616 | Are you in the game? |
21616 | At a certain place I heard another conversation, as follows:"Does he know what they will do with him?" |
21616 | At a convenient ditch they slaked their thirst, and in an orchard they found ripe apricots; but what can satisfy the hunger of an ape or an idiot? |
21616 | Besides, would it punish Stockton to kill him? |
21616 | But after the arrival of her husband-- what then? |
21616 | But has he consulted no physician?" |
21616 | But how account for its presence? |
21616 | But how could an ape or an idiot know of a freedom so sweet and silent and unencompassed and unconditional as death? |
21616 | But how could he escape? |
21616 | But was not her Robert the most generous of men? |
21616 | But wherefore the need of all this talk? |
21616 | But would she really do that? |
21616 | By the way, how should you feel_ without a head_? |
21616 | By thus summoning her husband was she not inviting him to a mortal struggle with a desperate man better armed than he? |
21616 | Can I prevent it?" |
21616 | Can a brave man, of mature judgment and in possession of his faculties, do such a thing? |
21616 | Can nothing be done for him?" |
21616 | Can you face the Virgin with that? |
21616 | Can you get that philosophy through your thick skull, my friend? |
21616 | Castellani''s daughter?" |
21616 | Coming, coming.... Is that-- that-- water?... |
21616 | Could he live sufficiently long to have an ox killed and roasted whole for his supper? |
21616 | Could he not order a supper with his earnings? |
21616 | Could he reach the floor in safety? |
21616 | D''ye want to shpile th''mon''s thrick, Misther Bat? |
21616 | Did he come in?" |
21616 | Did he suffer much afterwards? |
21616 | Did instinct arise and dumbly plead for mercy? |
21616 | Did you ever see blinding flashes that tear through your brain and turn the sun black? |
21616 | Did you ever see the dungeon?" |
21616 | Do n''t want my money, eh? |
21616 | Do n''t you know?" |
21616 | Do sharks ever go to the dogs? |
21616 | Do they come to you or do you go to them? |
21616 | Do you know what is said of you? |
21616 | Do you think you have kept your windows so closely shut that no sound has ever penetrated beyond them? |
21616 | Do you understand?" |
21616 | Do you want anything?" |
21616 | Dripping? |
21616 | Entrefort?" |
21616 | For what purpose? |
21616 | For what reason? |
21616 | Gooda place, ha, Samp?" |
21616 | Had he been struck upon the head or stabbed to the heart? |
21616 | Had he thus, in blind self- sacrifice to the whim of a foolish girl, cast himself into a pit? |
21616 | Have they not? |
21616 | He asked:"Where are you from?" |
21616 | He looked at me pretty sharply, and said,''How did you get back in that line?'' |
21616 | He said to me,''I''ll give you one more chance: will you go to work to- morrow?'' |
21616 | He said,''Will you behave yourself and go to work to- morrow?'' |
21616 | How could he accomplish the impossible task? |
21616 | How long did he live? |
21616 | How long has it been since he was let out of Joliet?" |
21616 | How many glorious hot meals did that bill represent? |
21616 | How many such jobs have you done in this miserable old hole? |
21616 | How should Randolph employ these weary hours? |
21616 | How was it with Zoà «? |
21616 | I feel it coming.... What was that?... |
21616 | I pushed a little closer under the safety which the occasion lent, and overheard this conversation:"How many will get some of it?" |
21616 | I_ will_ succeed.... And after success-- what?... |
21616 | If I succeed--_if?_ I_ shall_ succeed. |
21616 | If so, what meant his light step and cheerful smile as soon as she was out of sight? |
21616 | If they could, why should they not? |
21616 | In what is man superior to the others? |
21616 | In what single place could he find sufficient to satisfy his hunger? |
21616 | Is it a wonder that Randolph shuddered when he thought of it? |
21616 | Is not their character concrete and visible? |
21616 | Is that a go? |
21616 | Is that well understood? |
21616 | Is there anything that I can do to avert the tragedy?" |
21616 | It would be merely revenge-- revenge upon both of them; and where lies the nobility of such revenge? |
21616 | May I call him?" |
21616 | Me?" |
21616 | Meanwhile, do you know how to throw dice?" |
21616 | Muggie? |
21616 | Murder and suicide? |
21616 | No? |
21616 | No? |
21616 | Nothin''pertickler to complain on, excep''----""Well?" |
21616 | Pie?" |
21616 | Publish the plan and the result? |
21616 | Rowell?" |
21616 | Say, did you ever feel like that? |
21616 | See this visiting card, you villain? |
21616 | Should either Romulus or Moses judge between these peoples? |
21616 | That much was good-- what next? |
21616 | The chairman turned to the convict, and in a kindly manner said,"Do you know who we are?" |
21616 | The next Sunday night the warden came and said,''Are you ready to go to work to- morrow?'' |
21616 | Then what should he do? |
21616 | Then, which should it be-- revolver or poison? |
21616 | Thought I was going over, eh? |
21616 | Trickling? |
21616 | Understand, my friend? |
21616 | Was it possible to wipe out the past with exposure, humiliation, shame, and blood? |
21616 | Was there any reason under the sun that wisdom, charity, compassion, and a high manhood could give why they should not be happy? |
21616 | Was there any way to prevent the birth of such a suspicion? |
21616 | Was there ever a more generous fellow? |
21616 | We are free-- we two; but to what purpose? |
21616 | Well, then, have men? |
21616 | Well, what''s your other name?" |
21616 | Were these all the methods? |
21616 | Were you ever that way, partner? |
21616 | What do you want?" |
21616 | What good would come from this revenge of humiliation and exposure? |
21616 | What is this jealousy, which all animals may have? |
21616 | What mercy had been shown that mercy could be expected? |
21616 | What miracle would this superhuman monster next accomplish? |
21616 | What part of Georgia are you from?" |
21616 | What possible abstractions are there in them? |
21616 | What was I doing all this time? |
21616 | What was I thinking? |
21616 | What was becoming of these men? |
21616 | What would be the benefit of removing him from her life? |
21616 | What would people think? |
21616 | When it was done he asked me,--"What is that crazy Frenchman going to do to me?" |
21616 | When will the tragedy occur? |
21616 | Where do you keep your infernal implements?" |
21616 | Which loved she?--or loved she either? |
21616 | While doing this he asked:"Have you ever had any irregularity of the heart?" |
21616 | Who ever heard of a shark that was n''t always hungry? |
21616 | Who had handled the weapon, and for what possible cause? |
21616 | Who knows why she fell? |
21616 | Why should not a partner be a son- in- law? |
21616 | Why should they not be happy? |
21616 | Will you kindly summon the skipper?" |
21616 | With his passionate nature could he resist the temptation to cut the fellow''s throat before her very eyes? |
21616 | With unwise zeal I asked Entrefort,--"Is there not danger of lockjaw?" |
21616 | Would he not eat now-- ah, would he not? |
21616 | Would it be possible to spare her? |
21616 | Would you have my blood on your hands? |
21616 | Yes; what? |
21616 | You do n''t believe in the reformation of the dying, eh? |
21616 | You like''i m?" |
21616 | You understand?" |
21616 | are n''t you hungry, too? |
21616 | asked the surgeon,"and what are you seeking?" |
21616 | do n''t know your other name?" |
21616 | he said,"who but an angel could show a mercy tenderer than human? |
21616 | she cried;"what does that mean? |
21616 | what will become of me? |
21616 | who are you?" |
21616 | you have brought it? |
33365 | *||+-----------------------------------------------+---------------------+----------+-----------+|/_ Ostrea lunata_( Norfolk)| Danian? |
33365 | 1600? |
33365 | CESTI, MARC''ANTONIO( 1620?-1669? |
33365 | CETINA, GUTIERRE DE( 1518?-1572? |
33365 | CETYWAYO(?-1884), king of the Zulus, was the eldest son of King Umpande or Panda, and a nephew of the two previous kings, Dingaan and Chaka. |
33365 | CHANDOS, SIR JOHN(?-1370), one of the most celebrated English commanders of the 14th century. |
33365 | CHAPMAN, GEORGE(? |
33365 | Egg sacs minute and functionless(?). |
33365 | He compiled the_ Garden of the Soul_( 1740? |
33365 | How long are you going to stand it?" |
33365 | Qu''a- t- il? |
33365 | The Roman legates, who were absent( designedly?) |
33365 | The synodal letter states that twenty- one bishops assembled to take action concerning Eustathius( of Sebaste?) |
33365 | To the Abbé Sieyès Chamfort had given fortune in the title of a pamphlet("_ Qu''est- ce que le Tiers- État? |
33365 | What form is this of more than mortal height? |
33365 | What matchless beauty, what inspiréd ire? |
33365 | within the heart of this great flight, Whose ivory arms hold up the golden lyre? |
33338 | And is that spectral image The man that Lapo and that Guido knew? |
33338 | But how does it follow that souls who never have handled the modelling tool or the brush, make perfect images? |
33338 | Does their stature alter, do their eyes grow more brilliant? |
33338 | HIC Why should you leave the lamp Burning alone beside an open book, And trace these characters upon the sand? |
33338 | Had she perhaps to exhaust her allotted years in the neighbourhood of her home, having died before her time? |
33338 | How could I have mistaken for myself an heroic condition that from early boyhood has made me superstitious? |
33338 | How is their dream changed as Time drops away and their senses multiply? |
33338 | ILLE And did he find himself, Or was the hunger that had made it hollow A hunger for the apple on the bough Most out of reach? |
33338 | ILLE His art is happy, but who knows his mind? |
33338 | Rimbaud had sung:"Am I an old maid that I should fear the embrace of death?" |
33338 | What one, in the rout Of the fire- born moods, Has fallen away? |
33338 | What portion in the world can the artist have, Who has awakened from the common dream, But dissipation and despair? |
33376 | If we do supply the opium, why do you smoke it? 33376 Are we ready to go to that length to enforce our advanced ideas of total abstinence on the independent States of Holkar and Scindia? 33376 But what are the enormities of which England has been guilty? 33376 Do the supporters of this theory mean that the cultivation of opium should be forbidden throughout_ all_ India? 33376 First, how far is it desirable? 33376 For what purpose but to satisfy such a craving can Nature have scattered in such profusion the materials for its gratification? 33376 For why, if opium be the only obstacle to conversion, are we not more successful in India? 33376 Utri creditis, Quirites?_[ 69] Don Sinibaldo( p. 11). 33376 What, then, are the causes of our failure? 33376 What, then, are the effects of opium- smoking on the Chinese individually and as a nation? 33376 What, then, should a missionary do in the face of all these difficulties? 33376 Why do you even grow it? |
33376 | [ 130] How, then, could the loss be made good? |
33376 | and what if it be wholly unjustifiable? |
32418 | ''Will you give your daughter Bilitsonnon in marriage to my son Zamamanadin?'' 32418 What is civilization?" |
32418 | Who was Cain''s wife? |
32418 | Why do you not get him to prescribe for your son- in- law? |
32418 | Why dost thou weep, daughter of Ali Altar? |
32418 | Why has this strain,says the king,"thrown over me so deep a melancholy, as though I am separated from some loved one?" |
32418 | ......................................... Gilead abode beyond Jordan And why did Dan remain in ships?" |
32418 | And is she not accursed rather than blessed of the gods? |
32418 | But does not the young lady need a longer time to prepare for an event of so great moment in her life? |
32418 | But how does the queen amuse herself? |
32418 | But some hold back:"Why abodest thou among the sheepfolds, To hear the bleatings of the flocks? |
32418 | But there are gods above; how can I deceive them? |
32418 | But what say the fathers and brothers of the purloined damsels to this high- handed procedure of the young men of Benjamin? |
32418 | Could a woman hold this place of dignity and power? |
32418 | Could he be satisfied with a creature of a lower order as fellow and friend? |
32418 | Could he, by subduing and having dominion, find in dog, camel, or favorite steed a sufficient helpfulness, a satisfaction for his human longings? |
32418 | Did she ever live, move, and have her remarkable being? |
32418 | Does one ask of courtship in China? |
32418 | For centuries the story of the lives of the patriarchs has thrilled and edified many a young heart, but what of the credit due to the_ matriarchs_? |
32418 | For has she not disgraced her husband? |
32418 | Have we here the echo of that ancient tradition that once the gods and men intermarried and from the union the great heroes of the past were born? |
32418 | Hence arose the habit of saying to a newly married man,"_ Maza_ or_ Moze?_""Have you found a''good thing''or a''bitter''?" |
32418 | Hence arose the habit of saying to a newly married man,"_ Maza_ or_ Moze?_""Have you found a''good thing''or a''bitter''?" |
32418 | How did the average women of the Nile busy themselves during the long days? |
32418 | How did the little girls amuse themselves in those far- off Egyptian days? |
32418 | How did the ordinary housewife spend her time? |
32418 | How, then, ought you to guard yourselves? |
32418 | If I hit the female, shall the lady whom I most admire in this company be mine?" |
32418 | In the sacred_ Book of Poetry_ it is expressly written:"How do we proceed in taking a wife? |
32418 | My ancestors are beside me; how can I present myself before them?'' |
32418 | Shall a tribe be lost to Israel? |
32418 | Should thy spouse speak to thee, what wilt thou answer? |
32418 | The Persian poet Hafiz is said once to have been asked by the philosopher Zenda what he was good for, and he replied:"Of what use is a flower?" |
32418 | This protector approaches the girl and says to her:"Wilt thou repent of thy fall? |
32418 | To which self- denying love, the husband graciously replies:"And I should purchase me a horse, Must not my wife still sadly walk? |
32418 | What are we to think of this story of the very wonderful lady of the Orient of long ago? |
32418 | What is the attitude of a Chinese husband toward his wife? |
32418 | What must be done when the dust of battle has rolled away? |
32418 | What preparation does the Japanese girl have for her position in the social fabric of her people? |
32418 | What should he do? |
32418 | Who can adequately describe the effect which that first death must have had upon the maternal heart? |
32418 | Who then should be chosen heir to the throne? |
32418 | Will he break his vow? |
32418 | Will she not wake To madness? |
32418 | Will the young woman herself, this Hebrew Alcestis, shrink from the sacrifice? |
32418 | Would the sons and successors of the sturdy Maccabeans give away the fruits of the hard- won victory? |
32418 | Would the young Tobias prove strong enough bravely to face the record of the seven deaths? |
32418 | Zoroaster inquires of Ormuzd which is the second best place, when earth feels most happy? |
32418 | by the hopes thy smiles allowed, Bright soul- inspirer, who art thou?" |
32418 | why is the Alhambra so forlorn and desolate? |
34209 | Are you then still ignorant of what the word gospel means? |
34209 | Equally untrustworthy is the story that the duke, suspecting an attachment between hi? |
34209 | Much rustic or popular verse in England is satisfied with assonance, as in such cases as"And pray who gave thee that jolly red_ nose_? |
34209 | On the 1st of June 1554 he married Margaret Howe, whom he described as niece of Sir R.(? |
34209 | The last king, Croesus(? |
34209 | When Assur- bani- pal died in 626(?) |
34209 | [ 4] Thus already Delitzsch,_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. 252. |
34209 | [ Greek: askaulaes][?] |
31890 | ''Tis fair, ah!--but keepest thou Not me depriven Of some one-- somewhere-- who needeth most me? 31890 And freedom is better than love?" |
31890 | Glad it is ended,are you? |
31890 | Immortal? |
31890 | No young in the nest, no mate, no duty? |
31890 | The mother of him at the window looks out thro''the lattice to listen-- Why roll not the wheels of his chariot? 31890 _ But, all unasked, we''re hither hurried Whence? |
31890 | _ Then, strange, is''t not? 31890 3 But where now art thou? 31890 A dog out of Canaan!--thought he I was woman alone? 31890 ASHORE What are the heaths and hills to me? 31890 After how many lives returning Shall I hither come? 31890 Ah me, do women weep when men have died? 31890 And from his finger strive to draw The ring that bound him to her spell? 31890 And what will the last sight be of life As lone we fare and fast? 31890 And where did the lark ever learn his speech? 31890 And, all unasked, we''re Whither hurried hence? 31890 But can the soul not break the crumbling Crust In which he is encaged? 31890 But one said,Why weepest thou Here in God''s heaven-- Is it not fairer than soul can see?" |
31890 | But, in each bubble, may there be no Breath That lifts it and at last to Freedom flies, And o''er all heights of Heaven wandereth?" |
31890 | Did I curse God and rave When they came shrinkingly to tell me''twas A witless child? |
31890 | Did she not say? |
31890 | Do women weep-- not gaze stone- eyed? |
31890 | FAUN- CALL Oh, who is he will follow me With a singing, Down sunny roads where windy odes Of the woods are ringing? |
31890 | Grief and the face we love in mist-- Then night and awe too vast? |
31890 | How shall your baby now be fed, Ukibo fed, with rice and bread-- What if I hush his prattle?" |
31890 | I can not cry in the jungle''s deep-- Is it not time for the Tomb-- and Sleep? |
31890 | I can not look upon Him, So strangely burn His eyes-- Hath not some grieving drawn Him From Paradise? |
31890 | I wonder why he has heard my call, My giftless call-- and what shall befall?... |
31890 | Is he not here? |
31890 | Is more than the rapture of earth can teach In its creed? |
31890 | Listening through dim trees Some thrilled muezzin of the forest cry From his leafy minaret? |
31890 | Must we not cross the Sky Unto Eternity upon his wings-- Or, failing, fall into the Gulf and die?" |
31890 | My rage was undammable.... Could a stiletto''s one prick be prettier? |
31890 | Or could my gaze more tenderly entwine Each pallid beech and silvery sycamore Outreaching arms in patience to divine If winter''s o''er? |
31890 | Palely she took it-- did it give Ease there against her breast? |
31890 | Shall I not learn if she lives? |
31890 | Shall he not return with the booty of battle, and glisten In songs of his triumph-- ye women, why do ye not say?" |
31890 | Some love- fear for ever shades All with sere shadows-- Had I no child_ there_--whom I forget?" |
31890 | Speak they not vision-- and frenzy to dare, That still in me yearn?... |
31890 | Spend all upon the Wine the while I know A possible To- morrow may bring thirst For Drink but Credit then shall cause to flow?" |
31890 | Sunk? |
31890 | TEARLESS Do women weep when men have died? |
31890 | THE OUTCAST I did not fear, But crept close up to Christ and said,"Is he not here?" |
31890 | That day, can it fade?... |
31890 | The Bird of Time has but a little way To flutter-- and the Bird is on the Wing._""The Bird of Time?" |
31890 | The Master of the Well has much to spare: Will He say,''Taste''--then shall we no more be?" |
31890 | The Nightingale that on the branches sang, Ah, whence, and whither flown again, who knows?_""So does it seem-- no other joys like these! |
31890 | The Spring and its nuptial fear? |
31890 | The lotus leans her head on the stream-- Shall I not lean to thy breast and dream, Dream ere the night- cool dies? |
31890 | They have forgotten life, Forgotten sunless death; Desire is gone-- is it not gone for ever? |
31890 | Till on her closed his hand whose awe No curse could quell? |
31890 | To hope or to Despair he will-- which is more wise or just?" |
31890 | Under the eyes does a marvel not burn? |
31890 | Wait? |
31890 | Watching with love''s eye The eve- star wander? |
31890 | What have I dreamed? |
31890 | What is it tells me mystically That strange one was I?... |
31890 | Who shall the gods be then, the millions Meek, entreat or praise? |
31890 | Why does she lie so cold? |
31890 | Why then should I o''ermuch for earth- sight care? |
31890 | Will it be so of all our thoughts When we set sail on Death? |
31890 | Yet Summer comes, and Autumn''s honoured ease; And wintry Age, is''t ever whisperless Of that Last Spring, whose Verdure may not cease?" |
31890 | Yet lie to sleep, and lo, The soul seems quenched in Darkness-- is it so? |
31890 | again, still"beauty"? |
31890 | ah, bob, bob- white, Still calling-- calling still? |
31890 | all-- all-- is beauty?" |
31890 | and climb the votive Ever mossy ways? |
31890 | and could I more of thee ask?... |
31890 | and now He sinks, who climbed for the crown To the Summit''s brow? |
31890 | and tho''she struggled pale, Did it not hold her cold and fast, Till crawled the tide o''er rock and swale, To her at last? |
31890 | art Thou not stronger than gods of the heathen? |
31890 | art Thou not stronger than gods of the heathen? |
31890 | art thou sunken? |
31890 | is this your song? |
31890 | take the Cash and let the Credit go? |
31890 | though but kisses-- she swore!--he had of her, Was it so little? |
31890 | why does he stay? |
32375 | Art thou a man of the day or a man of the night? |
32375 | Can any one tell me,asked the king,"who commands our foes?" |
32375 | Has this wicked man robbed as much as the people say? 32375 Hast thou anything to say why thou shouldst not be impaled or given to the tigers to eat?" |
32375 | Hast thou not heard how many of my followers have been caught and executed? 32375 He has not even hands to help, and what can our lord''s slave do to avoid the great trouble to which I have arrived?" |
32375 | Indeed I would,said the tiger;"but where is the lord of this wonderful flute? |
32375 | O friend horse,he cried,"where can I go? |
32375 | O sister,they called,"are you coming to the feast?" |
32375 | Son of the Sun,replied the servant, trembling very much as he kneeled before him, for who would not be afraid when the king is angry? |
32375 | Upon what day wast thou born? |
32375 | What can I do? |
32375 | What do you mean by that? |
32375 | What is this I hear? |
32375 | Who was your brother? |
32375 | After a while, when it had become still darker, he called to the hare:"O friend, what is the matter with the sky? |
32375 | Ai looked at the stone and said,"Who will give me food and clothes for a little red stone like that? |
32375 | And now at last the mother of Nang E was chief wife, but do you think she was satisfied? |
32375 | Art thou not afraid?" |
32375 | At first the tiger did not answer, so the hare then called,"Does not our lord see the great danger approaching? |
32375 | Can a common man eat of the golden food and live? |
32375 | Can he be a spy sent by the_ amat_ whom I tricked so nicely the other day, I wonder?" |
32375 | Dost hear? |
32375 | Dost thou hear?" |
32375 | Even if she had, what could she do? |
32375 | Everybody declined to take the risk, and said:"Of what use is money, or horses, or buffaloes, to a man bitten by a cobra? |
32375 | Her husband has no hands, how could he row against and defeat the swift boatmen who have been called by the princesses?" |
32375 | How that the tigers at the entering in of the villages will not now eat oxen but wait till one of my men is tied up for them? |
32375 | I can guide thee to the place, for I know it well; wilt thou follow?" |
32375 | If I go, how shall I be delivered from the great dangers which will surround me in the Golden Palace? |
32375 | Is there any more cunning man in the palace now than before? |
32375 | It was not the Lord Sa Kyah who descended yesterday, but his son, my husband, and myself, and to prove my words, whose are these?" |
32375 | Let me see,"he continued,"how shall I kill them? |
32375 | Now it happened that as they walked along toward the city the thief began to think within himself,"Who can this new disciple be? |
32375 | Of what use will our houses be to us if we have no husbands? |
32375 | The face of the king blanched with terror as he asked in a whisper,"Who is this man?" |
32375 | The soldiers derided him, saying that the bravest of them could not draw the bow and how was a beggar to do it? |
32375 | The tiger gave chase, but after a while he saw the hare sitting down and watching something intently, so he asked,"What are you looking at?" |
32375 | Were I to marry her, who will go surety for her that she will not do the same to me? |
32375 | What can I do to be freed from this great danger?" |
32375 | What can I do?" |
32375 | What is going to happen?" |
32375 | What shall we do to escape and be freed from the impending punishment?" |
32375 | What should be done to such guards as these?" |
32375 | Where are their_ dahs_? |
32375 | Where is a place of refuge that I can escape the fire?" |
32375 | Where shall we bury it? |
32375 | Which will be the best way? |
32375 | Who could tell? |
32375 | Whom shall I ask for permission?" |
32375 | Why hast thou not caught him as it was thy duty to do?" |
32375 | Why have you fastened up the window and doors with bamboos and rattan? |
32375 | Will that free him from death? |
32375 | Will the Son of the Sun execute his slave for following his words?" |
32375 | Will the disciple order his teacher to be executed? |
32375 | Will you take compassion on me and allow me to rest in your house and get warm before I return home?" |
32375 | Will you take pity on me and show me the way and I will give you a great reward?" |
32375 | Would our lord like to play?" |
32375 | and he called out:"O friend hare, what are you doing up there on the roof of your house?" |
32375 | can you tell me how I can kill my father?" |
32375 | cried the_ amat_, in a loud, angry voice,"has he not stolen from me? |
34268 | A HOMILY OF CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, entitled, Who is the Rich Man that is Being Saved? |
34268 | Friction makes the gyrostats fall, what is it that causes a top to rise? |
34268 | If we have a spinning ball and we give to it a new kind of rotation, what will happen? |
34268 | Or this--"What metal is as strong compared with steel as steel is compared with lead? |
34268 | What do they do?" |
34268 | What is it all about? |
34268 | Where has its flexibility gone? |
34268 | Who are the members of the British Association? |
34268 | Who ever heard of an old inhabitant of Japan or Peru writing an interesting book about those countries? |
34268 | Why did they destroy what never can be replaced?" |
26238 | A fine old place, is it not? |
26238 | Am I to blame for that?'' 26238 An omen of what, dearest?" |
26238 | And Lady Mabel? 26238 And do you really advise me to publish?" |
26238 | And do you think your last winter''s jacket will do? |
26238 | And how many copies of Doré''s''Idylls of the King''? |
26238 | And how many''Christian Years''? |
26238 | And my income, Conrad; that dies with me, does it not? |
26238 | And she was born and brought up here? |
26238 | And who would not envy Harley such a wife as Violante,returned Lord Mallow,"if she was like-- the woman I picture her?" |
26238 | And you really think my thought stands out more clearly? |
26238 | And you will deal frankly with me? 26238 Are those Jersey people you have picked up?" |
26238 | But how did you come here? |
26238 | But it might have been? |
26238 | But what becomes of all these gowns? |
26238 | But what does he say of my heart? 26238 But, dear mother, you did not marry Captain Winstanley in order to lead such a life as that? |
26238 | Can I be angry with him for that? 26238 Can we ever be good enough to others?" |
26238 | Can you keep a secret? |
26238 | Can you trust me with that precious volume? |
26238 | Conrad, what have I done that you should talk of such a thing? 26238 Did I not say so?" |
26238 | Did n''t I tell you''The Sceptic Soul''was too fine for ordinary intellects, Mab? |
26238 | Do I taunt you with it now? 26238 Do n''t you think you might take me with you? |
26238 | Do n''t you want to see your presents? |
26238 | Do you intend me to live there for ever, mamma? |
26238 | Do you know anything about this place to which I am going, mamma? |
26238 | Do you know what became of Arion? |
26238 | Do you mean that Mrs. Winstanley has heart disease-- something organically wrong? |
26238 | Do you mean to say there are no other servants in this great house-- no housemaids, no cooks? |
26238 | Do you suppose I would not share my income with you? 26238 Do you want to raise the devil that was raised last night? |
26238 | Does your aunt live hereabouts,_ par exemple_, Captain Winstanley? |
26238 | For you? 26238 From whom can this be?" |
26238 | Had you not better go for a walk with your dog? 26238 Had you not better see to the packing of your trunks?" |
26238 | Has Miss Skipwith a horse and trap? |
26238 | Has it been used as a prison, or a madhouse, or what? 26238 Has the result of the session disappointed you?" |
26238 | Have I ever opposed you in anything? |
26238 | Have I really? 26238 Have you arranged with my mother for my leaving home?" |
26238 | Have you not been happy, Pamela? 26238 How can you be so cruel?" |
26238 | How dare you? |
26238 | How did you find me here? |
26238 | How do you mean? |
26238 | How do you mean? |
26238 | How many lockets inscribed with A. E. I. or''Mizpah''? |
26238 | I hope they will,replied Miss McCroke;"but do n''t you think Bates ought to have seen the freshness taken out of them before we started?" |
26238 | I may have paid her compliments, and praised her beauty; but how could I think of her for a wife, when you were by? 26238 I suppose I may take my dog with me?" |
26238 | I think I led you a life in those days, did n''t I, Rorie? |
26238 | I wonder if you would much mind going to Africa? |
26238 | If you have nothing better to do this afternoon----"Could I have anything better to do? |
26238 | Is it not like death? 26238 Is it-- positively-- too late?" |
26238 | Is mamma very ill? |
26238 | Is n''t it dreadful? |
26238 | Is not that my duty, when I know how clever and far- seeing he is? |
26238 | Is that a bill you are examining? 26238 Is there a Bluebeard chamber?" |
26238 | Is there a history hanging to it? |
26238 | Is there not a steamer that leaves Southampton nightly? 26238 Is this the bay that some people have compared to Naples?" |
26238 | It was almost like giving away your property, was n''t it, Vixen? |
26238 | May I come to the Duchess''s kettledrum?'' 26238 May I go to mamma at once?" |
26238 | My dear Pamela, is it possible that these whimpering little speeches of yours mean jealousy? |
26238 | My dearest Pamela, why beat about the bush? 26238 My dearest mother, how can you be poor and I rich?" |
26238 | My love, do you think I could live in this house without you? |
26238 | Oh dear, what a useless creature I am,she thought;"and why do people strap portmanteaux so tightly? |
26238 | Oh why did I not say Yes that night in the fir plantation? 26238 Only almost, mother darling?" |
26238 | Ought he to have gone into mourning? 26238 Out where? |
26238 | Pamela, do you remember what Tom Jones said to his mistress when she pretended to doubt his love? |
26238 | Please, Miss Skipwith, will you give me some books about Buddha? |
26238 | Shall I send you something? 26238 Shall we have another opinion?" |
26238 | Surely you would never give twenty pounds for a gown you wear when you are having your hair dressed? |
26238 | That is beginning at the beginning, is it not? |
26238 | That last clause was sensible, anyhow, was it not, Vixen? |
26238 | The bill is more than a hundred then? 26238 The horses are ordered for five,"she said, as she locked the precious volume in her desk;"will you get yours and come back for me?" |
26238 | Then it was you I saw in the fly? 26238 Then you and Lady Mabel have changed your plans?" |
26238 | Then your mother was a Skipwith? |
26238 | There is a dreadful unanimity about my critics, is there not? |
26238 | To think what, love? |
26238 | Violet, how can you? |
26238 | Violet, how could you send me such a message? |
26238 | Was n''t that rather an odd proceeding, and likely to cause scandal? |
26238 | Was that reasonable, Pamela, when I have never felt it? |
26238 | What am I to do with you? |
26238 | What can you expect from a courtship between cousins? 26238 What can you mean, child?" |
26238 | What does it matter? 26238 What does the London doctor say of me, Conrad?" |
26238 | What have you been doing with yourself all the morning, Roderick? |
26238 | What horse have you got there? |
26238 | What horse? 26238 What in mercy''s name is a_ fichu?_ It sounds like a sneeze." |
26238 | What in the name of all that''s reasonable is_ pain brûlé?_asked the Captain impatiently. |
26238 | What is to become of my horse? |
26238 | What secret, dear? |
26238 | When, dear? |
26238 | Who can give back the past, or the freshness and brightness of one''s youth? 26238 Who said I was going to be married, sir?" |
26238 | Who would not miss youth and happiness? |
26238 | Whose lines are those? |
26238 | Why I thought Lady Mabel adored you? |
26238 | Why did you leave me so long in ignorance of her illness? 26238 Why did you not go to see the ruins?" |
26238 | Why did you not tell me that? |
26238 | Why do n''t you state the case in plain English? |
26238 | Why is Jersey the peculiar haunt of the vulgar? |
26238 | Why not rig up a few hammocks in the nearest pine plantation? |
26238 | Why not say your property? 26238 Why not wear your black velvet?" |
26238 | Why not? |
26238 | Why should you relinquish society, or leave off dressing stylishly? 26238 Why two balances and two accounts, when one will do?" |
26238 | Will you come, Roderick? 26238 Would a small idea be worth the devotion of a life? |
26238 | Would n''t you rather Mr. Vawdrey had him? |
26238 | Would you have had me stand three yards off and bawl at the lady? 26238 Would you like me to unpack your trunks for you?" |
26238 | Would you really like----? |
26238 | Yes, Violet, once I may have been full of fancies: but now I know that I am ill. You will not be unkind or unjust to Conrad, will you, dear? 26238 You are not going to the north of Europe?" |
26238 | You would like to see your bedroom, perhaps? |
26238 | You would not like to live in a semi- detached villa on the Southampton Road, would you, my dear Pamela? |
26238 | ''Do you think I would go through this labour,''he says,''if you were not to halve this success? |
26238 | A cup of tea, the wing of a chicken, a little wine and water?" |
26238 | After all, what did it matter where she went? |
26238 | Ah, when should she ever know such a summer night as that again? |
26238 | And Roderick, what of him? |
26238 | And now I suppose I am to lose you, Violet?" |
26238 | And then the table of dynasties: can anything be more interesting than those? |
26238 | And when you come of age, will you live here, miss?" |
26238 | Are there any fishing- costumes, or riding- habits, in the bill?" |
26238 | Are you really positive that you have dresses enough to carry you over next winter?" |
26238 | But I hoped----""What?" |
26238 | But I suppose that is too much to expect from any great poet?" |
26238 | But can there be anything in the world nicer than a good old- fashioned stable, smelling of clover and newly- cut hay?" |
26238 | But he has always been kind to you, has he not, mamma? |
26238 | But perhaps you would rather Lord Mallow had bought him?" |
26238 | But, after all, if the old lady and Miss Skipwith were both happy in their harmless self- deceptions, why should one pity them? |
26238 | Can I really believe this?" |
26238 | Can Theodore''s highest art make you better than that? |
26238 | Can a woman''s forehead at forty be quite as smooth as it was at twenty? |
26238 | Can he forget those days, when they are thus ever present to my mind? |
26238 | Can you forgive me, Violet? |
26238 | Can you save my wife, or am I to lose her?" |
26238 | Could she come back to see Roderick Vawdrey happy with his wife? |
26238 | Could she school herself to endure life under the roof that sheltered Conrad Winstanley? |
26238 | Dear Conrad thinks me extravagant for giving sixty guineas for a dress-- what might he not think if I gave as much for a single plant? |
26238 | Did he know yet that she was gone-- vanished out of his life for ever? |
26238 | Did it remind you of any contemporary poet?" |
26238 | Did you ever know of a family mansion without one?" |
26238 | Do I know anyone in Jersey?" |
26238 | Do I know him?" |
26238 | Do n''t you think that would seem very much like for ever, mamma?" |
26238 | Do you know if she has gone down?" |
26238 | Do you know if she has had any particular occasion for worry?" |
26238 | Do you know that a suit of dress- clothes costs me nine pounds, and lasts almost as many years?" |
26238 | Do you like sage- green?" |
26238 | Do you think I am too bold, darling? |
26238 | Do you think I hold my poor mother to blame for any wrong that is done to me, or to others, in this house? |
26238 | Do you think I would take your money, and let people say I robbed my own daughter? |
26238 | Do you want another conflagration? |
26238 | Does he think me very ill? |
26238 | Does it not bring change and parting to old friends? |
26238 | Had he forgiven Vixen for refusing to abet him in treachery against his affianced? |
26238 | Had he made up his mind to keep faith with Lady Mabel? |
26238 | Had her dear Violet considered the climate, and the possibility of being taken prisoners by black people, or even devoured by lions? |
26238 | Have I asked you to let Violet come home?" |
26238 | Have I ever seen him? |
26238 | Have I not been with you? |
26238 | Have men no memories? |
26238 | He does n''t belong to you, surely?" |
26238 | How can you say such cruel things?" |
26238 | How could I ever doubt you? |
26238 | How could she expect that anyone wanted her here, where she was a stranger, preceded, perhaps, by the reputation of her vices? |
26238 | How could she tell when she would see it again-- or if ever, save in sad regretful dreams? |
26238 | How could you be so heartless as to ask me such a question?" |
26238 | How does he explain that dreadful fluttering-- the suffocating sensation-- the----?'' |
26238 | How is dear mamma? |
26238 | How many church- services have people sent me, mamma?" |
26238 | I suppose a hundred pounds will cover it?" |
26238 | I thought you were going to Wellbrook Abbey with the house party, Mabel?" |
26238 | I wonder whether in some odd corner of Les Tourelles I could find such a thing as a spare table?" |
26238 | Is that sensible or reasonable, in a woman of your age and experience?" |
26238 | Is there anything wrong with my lungs?" |
26238 | Is your book nearly finished?" |
26238 | It seems such a commonplace ending, does it not?" |
26238 | It was an omen, was it not?" |
26238 | Of what use could pretty dresses be in a desert island? |
26238 | Oh, Conrad, could that be true?" |
26238 | Or am I bound to assume that bored and vacuous countenance which some young men consider good form? |
26238 | Ought I to go on my knees, love, and make you a formal offer? |
26238 | Perhaps you would like a cup of tea?" |
26238 | Pray when have I ever thwarted you in anything?" |
26238 | Pray, is this the nearest way to Norway?" |
26238 | She is with you, of course?" |
26238 | She said,''How could she?'' |
26238 | She wondered what Rorie was doing at this midnight hour? |
26238 | Suppose you and Miss McCroke drive over and drink tea with me this afternoon? |
26238 | That is part of your tour, I suppose?" |
26238 | The light had burned low in the socket; and who shall reillumine that brief candle when its day is over? |
26238 | They are yours, are they not?" |
26238 | To the colonies?" |
26238 | Was humanity''s portion as sad, fate as adverse, there as here? |
26238 | Was it any wonder that her head ached almost to agony, and that the ringing of imaginary wedding bells sounded distractingly in her ears? |
26238 | Was it not better that she should be far away, hidden from her small world; while those marriage bells were ringing across the darkening beech- woods? |
26238 | Was n''t it fun, Vixen?" |
26238 | What could they say to each other-- they, whose thoughts and feelings were so wide apart? |
26238 | What did it matter, then, whether she went to Jersey or Kamtchatka, the sandy desert of Gobi or the Mountains of the Moon? |
26238 | What is the use of marrying one''s old playfellow if one can not be uncivil to her now and then? |
26238 | What is there in him that I should care for him?" |
26238 | What little girl does not take kindly to anything in the shape of a boy, when they are both in the nursery? |
26238 | What would Miss Skipwith say? |
26238 | What would become of me, if I lost that? |
26238 | What would that dear creature''s feelings be if he saw himself exposed to the attacks of a savage dog?" |
26238 | When I was a child, and was taken to the dentist, did I ever whine and howl like vulgar- minded children? |
26238 | When was that ever otherwise? |
26238 | When you are Lady Mabel Vawdrey, can I ever be with you as I am now? |
26238 | Where in Heaven''s name did you spring from?" |
26238 | Why can you not devise some pursuit to fill your idle hours? |
26238 | Why did the great Creator make the lower animals exempt from sorrow, and give us such an infinite capacity for grief and pain? |
26238 | Why did you not send for me sooner?" |
26238 | Why do you not strive to continue your education? |
26238 | Why give unnatural prominence to a cipher? |
26238 | Why have you not warned me before?" |
26238 | Why should I keep all my frankness till after the first of August? |
26238 | Why should the lover be less sincere than the husband? |
26238 | Why should we not have all our friends round us at such a time?" |
26238 | Why should you add to these an imaginary trouble, a torment that has no existence, save in your own perverse mind? |
26238 | Will you kindly send one of the maids to help me unpack my portmanteau?" |
26238 | Would it not have been better to avoid any farewell?" |
26238 | Would she please to go to Captain Winstanley in the study? |
26238 | You are not hiding any sorrow of yours from me?'' |
26238 | You do n''t mind that artless device, I hope?" |
26238 | You will be as severe as an Edinburgh reviewer?" |
26238 | You will not flatter? |
26238 | You will write often, wo n''t you, mamma?" |
26238 | asked Vixen, letting her mother''s last speech pass without comment;"or the lady who is to be my duenna?" |
26238 | asked the Captain, folding up the bill;"what do you do with them?" |
26238 | cried the female vindictively, flapping her apron at the dog,"whose dog is this, sir? |
26238 | exclaimed the Captain, with a very real burst of feeling,"what can I do to make your life happy? |
26238 | she asked wonderingly,"with the Jersey post- mark? |
26238 | she asked, after a long pause, during which she had wavered between submission and revolt,"and my maid?" |
26238 | what can I do to assure you of my love?" |
32980 | Advertising? |
32980 | And now, one question,says Mademoiselle,"Is your stage level, or does it slope towards the back? |
32980 | But where do the artists of the theatres usually live? |
32980 | Well, after all,answered my mother,"who knows where most of the great singers of today made their débuts?" |
32980 | What is this institution? |
32980 | What were they doing? |
32980 | _ Sind Sie satt?_They would ask each other gravely--"_Ich bin nicht satt!_"Meaning literally,"Are you full?" |
32980 | _ Sind Sie satt?_They would ask each other gravely--"_Ich bin nicht satt!_"Meaning literally,"Are you full?" |
32980 | A Cockney super, on his way out, remarked in passing me,"I s''y, wot price Destinn''s hat?" |
32980 | A porter caught sight of me, pushed back the other men on both sides of me, and said,"Get out of the loidy''s wy, cahn''t yer, Bill? |
32980 | And indeed why should one have? |
32980 | And then why stick slavishly to the bow tie of white cotton? |
32980 | And yet what is a young fellow in his position to do? |
32980 | Are n''t my things good enough for you?" |
32980 | But_ what_ would the Kaiser say? |
32980 | Can you flip them from the edge of the table into your own hand? |
32980 | Can you?" |
32980 | Could n''t the curls then be worn at least three times without being re- dressed? |
32980 | During the second year I was told one day:"This is Irene''s wedding day; will you say something to her?" |
32980 | F---- hailed him and said,"But where''s your horse?" |
32980 | For form''s sake he kept saying,"_ Sie verstehen mich, Fräulein?_"and when I answered"_ Ja_,"he was satisfied. |
32980 | He rushed at me and caught my wrists and shouted,"_ Was faellt Ihnen denn ein_"("What''s the matter with you?") |
32980 | How can they enter into the spirit of an opera when they are guessing whether that is a love phrase or an insult that the tenor is singing? |
32980 | I remember his singing,"And how would you get your ships along, Admiral, If your sails and oars were shot overboard?" |
32980 | I said once to F----,"Is Karl your servant?" |
32980 | I used to say to them,"But how can I ever get experience if you wo n''t give me a chance?" |
32980 | My sister said,"Why did you make up with rouge and not have the pallor we agreed upon?" |
32980 | One clever actor always made his greatest climax by suddenly throwing back his coat edge as he finished a"There, what do you say to that?" |
32980 | S---- was famous for his sharpness in choosing and trading horseflesh, and F---- used to call him on the''phone, saying"Is this Herr S----? |
32980 | Students often ask me"How did you get your first engagement?" |
32980 | The Director said at once,"How much did they offer you in----?" |
32980 | The Parthenon freeze-- is it not music? |
32980 | The old Dames call out to you,"Well, Madamsche'', nothing from me today? |
32980 | Then I thought"Flowers or no flowers?" |
32980 | There is a curious phrase for parents--"How are your_ Herren_ Parents?" |
32980 | There was a tank of real water on the stage, in which they loved to splash, but do you suppose a German goose was ever allowed to go near it? |
32980 | Therefore in our short talk before the second act, I told him my positions as nicely as I could, he saying to everything,"_ Aber warum? |
32980 | Unbecoming-- it was admitted--, but"man"did it in Paris and should Darmstadt lag behind? |
32980 | Warum?_"( But why, why?). |
32980 | Warum?_"( But why, why?). |
32980 | What example was he to the others? |
32980 | When I appeared on the stage, they all demanded"And what, pray, are_ you_ supposed to represent?" |
32980 | Where in America in a town of Darmstadt''s size could you see such a performance? |
32980 | Who longed for real, that is, one- side real, tents-- with steam escaping from a semi- hidden pipe through the top? |
32980 | Would I be so awfully kind as I was coming anyway, to help her out? |
32980 | Yesterday I bought a bunch of violets, and do you know why? |
32980 | endlich weiss man was est ist ein schoenes Weib i m Arm zu haben?_"("Ah! |
28783 | Are we through the Bay yet? |
28783 | Are you a Winchester man? |
28783 | Are you far out? |
28783 | Are you going to live out here permanently? |
28783 | Are you to Australie going? |
28783 | But how did you know? |
28783 | But how in the world does anything manage to grow? |
28783 | But there''s a lack of water, is n''t there? |
28783 | But why did she hiss? |
28783 | Got a rough job? |
28783 | Have you money-- English? |
28783 | I suppose your brother is like a king out here? |
28783 | May I get them some sweets? |
28783 | See the nets? |
28783 | Then when you''ve left him at Calcutta you''ll go back to the infected district? |
28783 | They''re not real? |
28783 | To Australia? |
28783 | What about Jones? 28783 Where would they be? |
28783 | Which is the bath? |
28783 | Why could n''t they arrange things better? |
28783 | Why does that man in the saffron- coloured robe have yards too much of it? |
28783 | Yes, of course, why not? 28783 You have a sheep- farm? |
28783 | You want guide? |
28783 | A curious building, is n''t it? |
28783 | A voice behind us says timidly,"Will the honourable sirs be pleased to employ this humble servant as interpreter?" |
28783 | A"rotter"? |
28783 | Ah, what is that gruesome object? |
28783 | And I asked cautiously--"Have you been stung, Joyce?" |
28783 | Another beast? |
28783 | Are n''t you going to send him off too?" |
28783 | Are you awake? |
28783 | As if we had only just finished breakfast? |
28783 | As we are undressing you give a sudden start,"What''s that?" |
28783 | But what is it they are carrying? |
28783 | By the dim light I make out the form of the lady in my bunk; but that is surely not the brother in the one opposite? |
28783 | CHAPTER III FIERY MOUNTAINS Do you learn Physical Geography? |
28783 | CHAPTER XXXII THE GREAT LAKES If we found the prairie astonishing even when uncultivated, what of this? |
28783 | Can you hear me? |
28783 | Comic, is n''t it? |
28783 | Did n''t you notice them when we came on board? |
28783 | Did you ever see anything like it in your life? |
28783 | Did you ever see anything so impudent? |
28783 | Did you see him wriggle across among the interlacing shadows of the trees? |
28783 | Did you see that red glint from the top as the sun caught the htee at an angle? |
28783 | Do they force their mixture of guidebook and water on each other? |
28783 | Do they sit in bushes, though? |
28783 | Do you hear that curious singing like a chant? |
28783 | Do you know those preserved fruits which generally appear about Christmas- time in oval cardboard or long wooden boxes? |
28783 | Do you see that huge column rising skyward from the plain? |
28783 | Do you see that mother- dog lying in the roadway, too lazy to move, with six yellow puppies sprawling over her? |
28783 | Do you see that white rat with pink eyes restlessly doing sentry- go in his cage? |
28783 | Do you see the name up there? |
28783 | Do you see what a simple arrangement these ponies drag? |
28783 | Do you think we ought to do it back again? |
28783 | Does n''t it make us feel that, as a nation, we are rather young after all? |
28783 | Does n''t it spur you on to feel how much we have to learn and how ignorant we are in our stay- at- home villages? |
28783 | Esquimaux? |
28783 | Everyone follows suit, and soon anxious voices can be heard asking,"How many got in with you?" |
28783 | Examine that slab of granite there beside you; do you see that it has a most wonderfully carved snake upon it-- a cobra with seven heads? |
28783 | Grand, is n''t it?" |
28783 | Hard life, is n''t it?" |
28783 | Has it been eaten by a fish? |
28783 | Has it come up to expectation? |
28783 | Have you ever realised that Great Britain is an island? |
28783 | Have you ever thought what it must be like right down there in the deeps below the green water? |
28783 | Have you ever wondered if they are real fruit, and where they come from? |
28783 | Have you seen the Eiffel Tower? |
28783 | He greeted us very shortly:"For Mr. Humphrey''s ranch?" |
28783 | He is a monster spider, is n''t he? |
28783 | Here, wait a second, say to the father in your best French this sentence--"Ils sont à vous, ces garçons, Monsieur? |
28783 | How are we going to stand it? |
28783 | How can we ever take in all this varied life, so different from the life we are used to? |
28783 | How did it get there? |
28783 | How do we like Japan? |
28783 | How is anyone going to take the trouble to climb up there? |
28783 | How long is it since we had bacon and eggs for breakfast? |
28783 | How was it achieved? |
28783 | How will you like that? |
28783 | How, above all, are carts or carriages going to manage it? |
28783 | However did you get here? |
28783 | I saw you talking to him this morning; what do you make of him? |
28783 | I wonder what sort he was? |
28783 | Is it not a very poor, mean country compared with the glorious and august land we belong to? |
28783 | Is it possible we ca n''t use it, one after the other? |
28783 | Is it the rain, or because we are so much higher up? |
28783 | Is the motion making you uncomfortable? |
28783 | It gives one a mighty idea of power, does n''t it? |
28783 | It is odd they should go through all that pain; what''s the use of it? |
28783 | It would be funny to learn lessons lying flat on the floor, would n''t it? |
28783 | It''s funny that they all have just the same sort of hair, is n''t it? |
28783 | Japan is on the other side of the world from England; shall we ever get there again? |
28783 | Look at that balustrade, gleaming deep green; examine it-- do you see what it is? |
28783 | Look up into the clear blue sky overhead, do you see a black speck? |
28783 | May n''t I give them to the children?" |
28783 | Nearer still-- what is that crawling about on the edge of the great cone? |
28783 | Never was prize- packet opened with greater eagerness; suppose it should only contain enough for one? |
28783 | No? |
28783 | Not got it yet? |
28783 | Notice their greasy straight hair, their flat, broad, good- humoured faces and little stocky figures; what race do you think they are? |
28783 | Perhaps you have never even read_ The Wild Man of the West_, or_ Nick o''the Woods_? |
28783 | Pretty good sport to be able to drop a fishing- line out of one''s front door, is n''t it? |
28783 | Putting your boots out to be cleaned? |
28783 | Quite funny, was n''t it?" |
28783 | ROUND THE WONDERFUL WORLD CHAPTER I WHICH WAY? |
28783 | Seems early, you say? |
28783 | She has her own bunk, I suppose?" |
28783 | That child? |
28783 | That is only a Lascar, one of the sailors, a picturesque fellow, is n''t he? |
28783 | That tall post like a flagstaff, with streamers flying from it, is a praying- post; can you make out the figure like a weather- cock at the top? |
28783 | The recollection of the bath? |
28783 | The road? |
28783 | The women sitting on the balconies above, the pariah dogs prowling for scraps below, the druggists and spice- sellers, the fruit and vegetable stalls? |
28783 | There are three hundred and seventy- nine steps to climb to the top; do you want to try them? |
28783 | There is something moving close to it, in the shadow; what is it? |
28783 | They say,"What does it matter what happens to our bodies?" |
28783 | Think of the blasting and of the machinery which had to be used; how did they ever manage it? |
28783 | This produces great consternation in Yosoji; who ever heard of each person having a bath to himself? |
28783 | Up in Assouan, one of the larger towns, which we shall visit, they say, for instance,"Rain? |
28783 | WHICH WAY? |
28783 | Was it intended to be a god? |
28783 | Was there ever a time when one had not heard of the Pyramids and pictured their vast triangles rising out of the desert? |
28783 | We are right under a high, old- fashioned- looking trading ship now; do you see that great eye painted on the bows? |
28783 | We discover these are called Indian figs; but why Indian? |
28783 | We steam on round the next corner and see more of them and yet more again; how many have we not seen already in the short time we have been on deck? |
28783 | Well, what is it? |
28783 | What are those strange- looking beasts mincing along like gigantic peacocks? |
28783 | What are you doing? |
28783 | What are you going to do?" |
28783 | What are you smiling at? |
28783 | What do these hats remind you of? |
28783 | What do you notice about the streets that strikes you most particularly? |
28783 | What do you suppose they are? |
28783 | What does it remind you of? |
28783 | What had happened to it? |
28783 | What happens to the people if the boiling lava rolls down through their vineyards and into their houses? |
28783 | What is it? |
28783 | What is that? |
28783 | What is the North- East monsoon? |
28783 | What would an English yokel, meandering along at the tail of his two slow horses, say to that? |
28783 | What would happen to an English sailor who knelt to say his prayers on an English dock? |
28783 | What? |
28783 | What? |
28783 | When we arrived at Port Said-- how many weeks ago was it? |
28783 | Where are we going to? |
28783 | Where have we come from? |
28783 | Where shall we begin? |
28783 | Where would I get another man from at this time of the season? |
28783 | Which was worst, snakes or the buffalo? |
28783 | Why ca n''t a whole village form a company and get some sort of machine to work? |
28783 | Why do you start and catch hold of my arm to draw my attention? |
28783 | Why on earth did n''t you let us know? |
28783 | Why on earth do n''t they grease them? |
28783 | Why, there is one who has reached the top; he is not to be compared with a fly so much as a midge-- who would have thought it? |
28783 | Would you like to come along to the bows after dinner? |
28783 | Yet how can one describe it? |
28783 | You are not likely to travel? |
28783 | You are not sorry you went with me? |
28783 | You can hardly imagine any British boy doing it, can you? |
28783 | You do n''t believe it surely? |
28783 | You have often heard of the"potter''s thumb,"I expect? |
28783 | You have seen an arc- light which seems to scintillate rays? |
28783 | You know this well in tinned salmon, do n''t you? |
28783 | You know, too, the look of the tins, with their gaudy- coloured labels, as they are sold in shops in England? |
28783 | You prefer to ride? |
28783 | You remember that it was to Mount Moriah Abraham was told to take his son Isaac and sacrifice him? |
28783 | You remember the dark wood of the Circuit House and the poongyi choung? |
28783 | You remember we saw a deserted town, solitary and silent, on the inner curve of the bay? |
28783 | You see the branch of a tree stuck between the boards there? |
28783 | You thought they were girls? |
28783 | [ Illustration] CHAPTER XXXI ON A CATTLE RANCH Do you remember your first sight of the sea? |
28783 | _ Now_ do you see? |
28783 | was living?" |
30204 | But why,I asked,"have you brought me hither, and how did you obtain my guarantee of safety?" |
30204 | What,asks Talmage,"is the matter with Joshua? |
30204 | Where am I? |
30204 | Against the existence of_ what_ God? |
30204 | And how is it to be overcome? |
30204 | And how many Theists are there who think of God in the presence of Nature, who see God''s smile in the sunshine, or hear his wrath in the storm? |
30204 | And in our own history have not our greatest achievers of noble things been very indifferent to theological dogmas? |
30204 | And was not the earth certainly flat, as millions of flats believed it to be? |
30204 | And whence the First Napoleon? |
30204 | And who are these enemies? |
30204 | And why, if it was right to thank God for saving Thomas Cooper, would it be wrong to curse him for smashing all the rest? |
30204 | Are intellectual causes dominant or subordinate? |
30204 | Are you something better than a vegetable highly cultivated, or than your brothers of the lower animals? |
30204 | But if the Lord overlooks the great ones of the earth, why is he not impartial? |
30204 | But what has happened since? |
30204 | But who gave us our evil passions? |
30204 | But who is responsible for the moral chaos and the existence of evil? |
30204 | But why did he not continue the quotation? |
30204 | But why should we wrangle? |
30204 | But why? |
30204 | Did not the Bible say that General Joshua commanded the sun to stand still, and how could this have happened unless it moved round the earth? |
30204 | Does he know any Atheists, and has he found them one half as dreary as Scotch Calvinists? |
30204 | Does he think that the brains of an Atheist are addled? |
30204 | Does his lordship remember Byron''s epitaph on his Newfoundland dog, and the very uncomplimentary distinction drawn therein between dogs and men? |
30204 | Does not your lordship remember, too, Hamlet''s pursuing the dust of Cæsar to the ignominious bunghole? |
30204 | Does this make him a barren sceptic? |
30204 | Hamlet goes on to say,"And yet, what to me is this_ quintessence of dust?_"How now, your lordship? |
30204 | Hamlet goes on to say,"And yet, what to me is this_ quintessence of dust?_"How now, your lordship? |
30204 | Has he fallen in an apoplectic fit? |
30204 | Have you a mind? |
30204 | How can a man of Dean Stanley''s eminence and ability write such dishonest trash? |
30204 | How then did we come by them? |
30204 | How then do you know that you yourself exist? |
30204 | If Jesus was the Christ, the Messiah, the Deliverer, why is the world still so full of sin and misery? |
30204 | If he were questioned as to his principles, he would probably reply like Artemus Ward--"Princerpuls? |
30204 | If the sun and moon keep watch over General Joshua''s grave, what are we to do? |
30204 | If to say_ Christ_ is absurd, and to say the_ Devil_ blasphemy, what alternative is left? |
30204 | Is it not plain that Christians in all ages have believed in the power and subtlety of the Devil as God''s sleepless antagonist? |
30204 | Is it the Devil then? |
30204 | Is not this a relic of astrology? |
30204 | Must we charitably, though with a touch of sarcasm, repeat Lamb''s words of Coleridge--"Never mind; it''s only his fun?" |
30204 | Now the question arises: Who made the chaos and who is responsible for the evil? |
30204 | Once, while lying on his mattress- grave, he said with a sigh:"If I could even get out on crutches, do you know whither I would go? |
30204 | Or rather does it not suggest the three- card trick? |
30204 | Paine has been accused of drunkenness; but by whom? |
30204 | Still, I can not doubt that the most[? |
30204 | Surely not Assyria, Egypt, Greece, or Carthage? |
30204 | That hell should receive another shock is very proper, but why is there to be an earthquake at the same time? |
30204 | There be Gods many and Lords many; which of the long theological list is to be selected as_ the_ God? |
30204 | WHO ARE THE BLASPHEMERS? |
30204 | WHO ARE THE BLASPHEMERS? |
30204 | Was he of more importance than any of the others? |
30204 | Was it all a dream? |
30204 | Was it because Garfield was a President instead of a King, the elected leader of free men instead of the hereditary ruler of political slaves? |
30204 | Was it through a mere process of spontaneous generation that they sprang up to alter by their genius and overwhelming will the destinies of the world? |
30204 | We will assume its truth; but the important question then arises-- What kind of persons are those who dispense with the rites of religion? |
30204 | What are the distinctions of rank and wealth? |
30204 | What are their names? |
30204 | What can we think of his reticence on such a subject? |
30204 | What differentiates you from the lower animals? |
30204 | What does the general consent of mankind prove in regard to beliefs like Theism? |
30204 | What else could be expected from a Scotchman who has mounted to the spiritual Primacy of England? |
30204 | What has it done, he asks, to abolish drunkenness and gambling? |
30204 | What has the place in which a book is written to do with its value? |
30204 | What is the meaning of_ providential?_ God does all or nothing. |
30204 | What is the name of this abominable print?" |
30204 | What is the use of thinking if I may not express my thought? |
30204 | What more can he ask without declaring himself a weakling or a fool? |
30204 | What more does he need? |
30204 | What more does he require? |
30204 | What nation has declined because of a relapse from religious belief? |
30204 | What right have you to associate Infidelity with fraud and lust? |
30204 | What though tempests beat and billows roar? |
30204 | What would have happened if the Ark had been buried with Jehovah safely fastened in? |
30204 | What, God''s own language inferior to that of the Dean of Westminster? |
30204 | When the patient was thoroughly restored the following conversation ensued:-- Jesus.--Are you well now, my Father? |
30204 | Whence Charlemagne? |
30204 | Whence came Alexander the Great? |
30204 | Whence came Homer, Shakespeare, Bacon? |
30204 | Whence came Plato and all the bright lights of divine philosophy, of divinity, of poetry? |
30204 | Whence came all the great historians? |
30204 | Where are the Atheists who say there is no God? |
30204 | Where is the pith that filled these arms when I fought for my chosen people? |
30204 | Where the fiery vigor that filled my veins when I courted your mother? |
30204 | Who are the blasphemers? |
30204 | Who can say? |
30204 | Who gave you a will? |
30204 | Who gave you a will? |
30204 | Who has the audacity to say that the God who will not aid a mother in the death- chamber shelters the Queen upon her throne? |
30204 | Who then is responsible for the fate of those who perish? |
30204 | Why all this pother if he really exists? |
30204 | Why can not Englishmen enjoy their Sunday''s leisure like the French? |
30204 | Why did God permit the Nihilists to assassinate the late Czar of Russia? |
30204 | Why did n''t you preach a different Gospel while you were about it? |
30204 | Why did the Lord protect him, and not his fellow- travellers? |
30204 | Why do things outside you obey your will? |
30204 | Why should God care for princes more than for peasants, for queens more than for washerwomen? |
30204 | Why should God help a few of his children and neglect all the others? |
30204 | Why this paltering with us in a double sense? |
30204 | Why was he so indifferent in this case? |
30204 | Why was the last plot allowed to succeed? |
30204 | Why, was not Jesus Christ a man, a most literal fact,"gross as a mountain, open, palpable?" |
30204 | Will the infant mind of man, when it reaches maturity, be thus related to God''s? |
30204 | Will the law of human growth and divine decay stop here? |
30204 | Will this new movement die away like so many others? |
30204 | Would his godship have mouldered to dust? |
30204 | Yes, we reply, but when will come the redemption? |
30204 | _ Where else should one go with crutches?_"Such exquisite and mordant irony is strange indeed in a defender of the holy and blessed Trinity. |
30204 | and if you have not, what is it that enables you to think and reason, and fear, and hope? |
30204 | and, if so, what is it that differentiates your superiority? |
30204 | and, if so, what is it? |
30204 | is just as sensible a question as Who gave you a nose? |
34341 | ''To which race do the Japanese belong?'' |
34341 | And why can heaven and earth endure and be lasting? |
34341 | Do you ask why? |
34341 | Is it not because he seeks not his own? |
34341 | To indulge in Hamlet- like musing, deep in the grand doubt and sublime melancholy of the never- slumbering question''To be, or not to be?'' |
34341 | What name might fitly tell, what accents sing, Thy awful, godlike grandeur? |
34341 | Who would deny that it has reflected in its serenity and grace as seen on a bright day all the ideals of the Japanese mind? |
32011 | --_und also des tragischen_--what in God''s name does he mean by that--? 32011 About this PTA business-- you sure you want to go?" |
32011 | All right, what I really mean--_why_ am I wearing this necktie? |
32011 | And he sees what you see, he knows what you''re thinking, he can hear when people talk to you? |
32011 | And if that''s it, what''ll happen when he wakes up? |
32011 | And you wo n''t say anything about Leo to Mrs. Greer or anybody? |
32011 | Any headaches? 32011 Are you sure he''s really conscious at all?" |
32011 | Bad one? |
32011 | Can he read mine? |
32011 | Did n''t you want your coffee? |
32011 | Did they show anything unusual? |
32011 | Have they come back yet? |
32011 | He''ll need an incubator... to live... wo n''t he? |
32011 | Hm? |
32011 | How''s Leo taking it? |
32011 | How''s it going? |
32011 | How''s the money? |
32011 | Huh? 32011 I mean is he awake, or asleep and dreaming about us, like the Red King?" |
32011 | Kicks? |
32011 | Mm? |
32011 | Moy, do you remember when we used to worry about the law of opposites? |
32011 | Moy? |
32011 | No, who? |
32011 | No...."Belly hurt, too? |
32011 | Not till he''s born, I think, do n''t you? 32011 Okay now?" |
32011 | Seems that way sometimes, does n''t it? 32011 That''s g-- Well, that''s a funny thing for him to think, is n''t it?" |
32011 | The baby is absolutely normal? |
32011 | To be continued-- what kind of talk is that? |
32011 | We''ve always had it pretty good, have n''t we? 32011 Well, do you want another cup now?" |
32011 | Well, is n''t this nice? 32011 Well?" |
32011 | Well? |
32011 | What I mean--"Are you sure you''re really conscious? |
32011 | What for? |
32011 | What now? |
32011 | What was that about your mother? |
32011 | What''s the matter now? |
32011 | What''s the matter now? |
32011 | What''s the matter? |
32011 | What''s the matter? |
32011 | What''s wrong? |
32011 | What--? |
32011 | What? |
32011 | Where do you think labor pains usually start? |
32011 | Where the devil is the other baby book? |
32011 | Which, damn it? |
32011 | Why not try the English edition? |
32011 | You want me to see if there''s anything in the pot? |
32011 | _ Bluh!_"Why do you keep reading that stuff, if it makes you feel that way? |
32011 | _ Is that you, Connington? 32011 _ Why?_""We ca n''t sleep in the same bed,"she wailed. |
32011 | ***** Len stared at her; the whites of her eyes were showing:"Is there anything the matter with you?" |
32011 | And if that''s it, what will happen when he gets twice as much?" |
32011 | And you''ll go see the doctor tomorrow?" |
32011 | Are you crazy?" |
32011 | But are you feeling up to it?" |
32011 | But since the question had been"Do you plan to make teaching your career?" |
32011 | Can he read other people''s?" |
32011 | Did you know that a fetus in the womb only gets about half the amount of oxygen in his blood that he''ll have when he starts to breathe?" |
32011 | Dizziness? |
32011 | Do you seem to hear a real voice, or do you just know what he''s telling you, without knowing how you know?" |
32011 | Do you think Leo really knows what he''s doing?" |
32011 | Does it hurt much?" |
32011 | Dread? |
32011 | Have we had any soreness in our stomach?" |
32011 | He still is n''t talking to you?" |
32011 | How about Ganesh and Zeuxias?" |
32011 | How am I going to take care of the house and do Leo''s writing for him?" |
32011 | How are you young folks this warm evening?" |
32011 | How did women do housework every day, seven days a week, fifty- two goddam weeks a year? |
32011 | How have we been feeling?" |
32011 | How much could you say about his-- his personality? |
32011 | I do n''t care how much of a superbrain he is, once he''s born-- you know what I mean? |
32011 | I mean does he seem to know what he''s doing, or is he just striking out wildly in all directions?" |
32011 | I wanted to sink through the floor, but I had all I could do to keep from laughing when she fell down.... Len, what are we going to do?" |
32011 | It''s pretty important, is n''t it? |
32011 | Len, how could anybody go through nine hundred dollars that fast?" |
32011 | Now is n''t that a nuisance? |
32011 | See about that coffee, will you? |
32011 | Swelling in our legs or ankles?" |
32011 | The sheets are in the bottom--""On that couch? |
32011 | Uncertainty? |
32011 | Vomiting? |
32011 | What I want to know is, what is it like? |
32011 | What I''m getting at is, it ca n''t be because he''s getting more than the normal amount of oxygen, can it? |
32011 | What is this all--""Said what?" |
32011 | What were you going to say?" |
32011 | What, Len?" |
32011 | What?" |
32011 | You know who it was that raped Marianne in the garden?" |
32011 | You remember when you said suppose he''s asleep and dreaming, and what happens if he wakes up?" |
32011 | _ How are you feeling?_ His answer was muddled-- because of the anesthetic?--but she did n''t really need it. |
32011 | _ Tell him stop blurrrr too dangerrrr stop I feel worrrr stop I tellrrrr stop_"What, Leo? |
32011 | _ This disorderly cell growth... like a cancer._ Unpredictable: extra fingers or toes or a double dose of cortex? |
33712 | A more serious question for the ruler was, how did it affect his own position with regard to his subjects? |
33712 | An officer( Kho Dalay?) |
33712 | And how had this soldier of fortune acted towards his own country when he had received everything from her that he needed? |
33712 | And what was that law? |
33712 | But what is that fortunate stroke of diplomacy to be? |
33712 | Did Yakoob Beg appear in the eyes of the Kashgari as an exacting and oppressive tyrant on account of these heavy impositions? |
33712 | Does this concession, which we never made use of, entitle us to send a mission to the Chinese in Kashgar? |
33712 | For all Russia''s protestations of friendship and good- will, what advantages has China reaped from those high- flown promises? |
33712 | He died near the town of Balisan(? |
33712 | How can it be peacefully solved, if Russia will not accede to the terms from which China is resolved not to budge? |
33712 | If we admit this, as can scarcely be gainsaid, what becomes of the Kuldja question, and of its peaceful solution that many claim to see? |
33712 | Mulla Yunus Jan, the Governor of Yarkand, and his son and brother fell into the hands of Hasan Jan Bai, Ikskal(? |
33712 | The question then was, who was Hakim Khan Torah? |
33712 | The three great Asiatic Powers have now converged upon a point; what is to be the result? |
33712 | To so courageous and so honourable a reply what rejoinder could be made by the abashed officers? |
33712 | We can scarcely persuade ourselves that he was aware of these occurrences, and yet how could he be ignorant of them? |
33712 | What better epitaph could be placed over a courageous and just ruler? |
33712 | What can we judge from this, but that the rule of Yakoob Beg, while presenting some striking features, was inferior in degree to that of the Chinese? |
33712 | What have been the mutual relations between England, Russia, and China? |
33712 | What necessity could be alleged to justify a scarcely excusable attack in a moral sense, and a quite unnecessary in a political? |
33712 | What, then, have been the mutual relations between England and China in the past? |
33712 | Why therefore will you persist in coming to it? |
33712 | and how is it to be brought to pass? |
18239 | A water drinker? |
18239 | After all, what does it amount to with them but the fear of evil spirits and the propitiation of_ nats_ and demons? 18239 Ah, so you''ve not taken a pull at yourself yet?" |
18239 | Ah, you mean the sack and plunder of London? |
18239 | Ah-- I wonder when the war will be over? |
18239 | All right then; I''ll turn up and you will report progress; but how am I to spot you among the crowd of priests? |
18239 | All right, I''ll be ready in two jiffs-- you wo n''t forget the coat? |
18239 | All right-- and you? |
18239 | And Mrs. Shafto, how does_ she_ bear this double loss? |
18239 | And Mrs. Shafto-- how is she? |
18239 | And Number Four has gone home? |
18239 | And do you really believe there is anything in this comfortable faith, Aunt Flora? |
18239 | And have you always known this? |
18239 | And my aunt? |
18239 | And so you could n''t sleep for thinking of her, eh? 18239 And so your aunt has been ill?" |
18239 | And the young lady? |
18239 | And to be shure I am; ye do n''t think I look like a nun, do ye? |
18239 | And what about the people who run it? |
18239 | And what do you think about Buddhism in Burma? |
18239 | And what do you think of Rangoon? |
18239 | And what takes you to Rangoon? |
18239 | And what will herself say,with a glance towards Sophy on the main deck,"to all this fighting and flying?" |
18239 | And when do you leave?'' |
18239 | And when does the blow fall? |
18239 | And where was her lord and master? |
18239 | And which is the worm-- Miss Leigh or I? |
18239 | And who can minister to a mind diseased? |
18239 | And you have kept her supplied-- you get it from Ah Shee? |
18239 | And you suspect both? |
18239 | And you will never return to Burma? |
18239 | And, of course, you would like to go home, Aunt Flora, would you not? |
18239 | Anything up? |
18239 | Are you really? |
18239 | Bad news? |
18239 | Blinds down? |
18239 | But I say, Roscoe; can you do nothing? |
18239 | But as you happen to be in Rangoon, and_ not_ Piccadilly Circus, why do n''t you open your eyes and see the place, and enjoy it? |
18239 | But ca n''t you do something to stop it? |
18239 | But can nothing be done to stop this hellish business? |
18239 | But do you not think that Aunt Flora should see a doctor? 18239 But how about the passage money?" |
18239 | But how can they possibly land the stuff? |
18239 | But how did you get into the Burmese priesthood? |
18239 | But how does the fellow live?'' |
18239 | But surely you can free yourself and your restless heart? 18239 But surely you have some remedy?--something that will bring her to? |
18239 | But that does n''t apply to the native? |
18239 | But what about informers? |
18239 | But what about the car? |
18239 | But what about the cocaine? |
18239 | But what about the hundreds and thousands of holy priests who spend all their lives in profound meditation? 18239 But what had that to do with religion, my dear?" |
18239 | But whoever dreamt of that? |
18239 | But why nine o''clock, my dear Cinderella? |
18239 | But why not? |
18239 | But why should you imagine that I am in any difficulty or, as you call it,''a hole''? |
18239 | But would you not like to hear my other piece of news, which is even better? |
18239 | But you have a horse to ride? |
18239 | But, my dear child, how can I help it when I live in a country where millions of people worship and fear them? |
18239 | But, my dear mother, what is the use of her sticking to me? |
18239 | By the way, Ryan, what did you mean by saying you were a magician? |
18239 | Can ye not, sir? |
18239 | Come, I say, is n''t this a bit too thick, Mung Baw? |
18239 | Could n''t you drop her some sort of gentle hint? 18239 Did any of you ever happen to read a story by Frank Norris about a girl who was lost?" |
18239 | Did you ever know them all away together? 18239 Did you hear someone say that he was_ pushed_ in?" |
18239 | Did_ you_ know? |
18239 | Do n''t you know? |
18239 | Do you know anyone that the cap fits? |
18239 | Do you mean to tell me that their employers would n''t stick at murder? |
18239 | Do you see over the starboard bow, that faint dark streak upon the sky line? |
18239 | Do you think this will put an end to the traffic? |
18239 | Drink? |
18239 | Even if there were, do you expect me to make you my Father Confessor? |
18239 | Fine and idle, eh? |
18239 | Getting copy for a book, eh? 18239 Had I not better dress?" |
18239 | Have you ever seen anyone who took those drugs? |
18239 | He is in the White Hussars at Lucknow-- he was at Sandhurst with you, was n''t he? |
18239 | How are you? |
18239 | How can it be understood, when I have never asked the girl to marry me and never shall? 18239 How could Sophy tolerate these stupid people,"Fuchsia asked herself,"with their sharp, probing questions and heavy jokes? |
18239 | How did he discover it? |
18239 | How did you get rid of the yellow robe? |
18239 | How did your aunt come across him? |
18239 | How do you hit it off with your uncle? |
18239 | How do you mean hum? |
18239 | How do you mean luck? |
18239 | How have you been getting on? |
18239 | How have you managed that? |
18239 | How is Mrs. Krauss? 18239 How is my aunt?" |
18239 | How long have you known? |
18239 | How on earth did it happen? 18239 How was she left? |
18239 | How, are we to set about getting a haul? |
18239 | I am so pleased to see you,said Mrs. Gregory, making room for Sophy beside her;"what has become of you all these weeks?" |
18239 | I expect she will have a good time in Burma? |
18239 | I hope you will be a fixture in Rangoon? |
18239 | I know she is subject to it, but surely she does not require you to be with her_ all_ day? |
18239 | I know you are fond of riding,he began;"do you think you could come for a gallop if I produced a pony?" |
18239 | I say, did you ever see such a horror? |
18239 | I say, that''s bad; ca n''t you take a pull at yourself? |
18239 | I say, you do n''t mean to tell me that you are a_ real_ Buddhist? |
18239 | I say,he began,"have you heard? |
18239 | I should be delighted,assented Shafto,"if it wo n''t be putting you out?" |
18239 | I should enjoy it of all things; perhaps you will have tiffin with me at the hotel? |
18239 | I suppose this is all new to you? |
18239 | I suppose you could n''t borrow? |
18239 | I suppose you have just come from Upper Burma? |
18239 | I suppose you made lots of friends on board ship? |
18239 | I thought you were vowed to poverty and had nothing in your wooden bowl? |
18239 | I wish you could,said Shafto;"have you no clue, no suspicions?" |
18239 | I wonder if that''s meant sarcastic? 18239 I''m glad to hear it; and now, before you depart, will you tell me something else? |
18239 | If he gets through this, do you suppose he will return to his monastry? |
18239 | Is it a bit of dialogue in the play you are rehearsing? |
18239 | Is it cocaine? 18239 Is it kick me out? |
18239 | Is it not too perfect, exquisitely carved, and smooth with age? 18239 Is it stop it? |
18239 | Is n''t it an orgy of colour-- rose, orange, purple, scarlet? 18239 Is n''t it too-- too awfully provoking? |
18239 | Is that so? |
18239 | Is the den in Rangoon? 18239 Is this the daughter following up the gangway?" |
18239 | It beats me to understand how these beggars manage to find the money? |
18239 | It''s not Roscoe,said Shafto, striking a match;"who are you?" |
18239 | It''s rather a case, is it not? 18239 Married to a Burmese?" |
18239 | Maybe your young lady would fancy it? 18239 Mee Lay, here''s Mr. Shafto, one of our new assistants, just out from England; I hope you can give him a good dinner?" |
18239 | Might I ask yer name, sorr? |
18239 | Miserable-- but why? |
18239 | Missy going to tell_ him_? 18239 Most of her friends have been away and my aunt has had no one to look after her, except you? |
18239 | Mr. Levison,she exclaimed,"are you aware that this is my private apartment, and that such an intrusion is unwelcome?" |
18239 | Mrs. Gregory has sent me to ask if you wo n''t sit by her? 18239 No, I shall not open my lips; how could I? |
18239 | No, indeed, why should I be ill? 18239 No, indeed; shall I_ ever_ forget that day we had off Crete? |
18239 | No, who would lend_ me_ money? 18239 No?" |
18239 | Not even fiction? |
18239 | Not really? 18239 Odd?" |
18239 | Oh, Aunt Flo, why do you say this? |
18239 | Oh, Aunt Flora,expostulated the girl,"how can you say such things? |
18239 | Oh, Douglas, surely you do n''t mean that_ he_ was in it? |
18239 | Oh, Fuchsia, this is too dreadful-- how can you? 18239 Oh, I''m good now, am I?" |
18239 | Oh, Mr. FitzGerald-- the police- officer? 18239 Oh, are you?" |
18239 | Oh, but are you certain? |
18239 | Oh, but surely Mrs. Krauss is her own aunt? |
18239 | Oh, dear Mrs. Milward, what do you mean? |
18239 | Oh, do you? |
18239 | Oh, is it? |
18239 | Oh, is she? |
18239 | Oh, my dear Aunt Flora,said Sophy kneeling beside her and taking her limp hand,"why did you not let me know? |
18239 | Oh, where? |
18239 | Oh, yes,he added quickly,"I know what you are going to say:''How about a chaperon?''" |
18239 | Out of the running-- what do you mean? |
18239 | Perhaps they do n''t keep chaperons in Rangoon? |
18239 | Perhaps you will have another try? |
18239 | Pray, how do you know? |
18239 | Roscoe''s out; what do you want? |
18239 | Same as the late Richard Roscoe? |
18239 | Shall you be one of the flies? |
18239 | She has? 18239 She keeps you from goin''to the Salters, does n''t she? |
18239 | She took me to see the corpse; he looked beautiful, just like a marble statue; and there in front of the dead, what do you think Hannah told me? 18239 So soon,"she exclaimed cheerfully;"I wonder what Cossie will say?" |
18239 | So then I''m to be under police protection, am I? |
18239 | So then you''re a celibate-- a monk? |
18239 | So you are coming back? |
18239 | So you have no clue? |
18239 | So you honestly believe that Krauss is not on the square? |
18239 | So you would like a home on the rolling deep? |
18239 | So you''re not a Burman? |
18239 | Sometimes they do just as well; are they pretty? |
18239 | Tell me, Miss Leigh, what is the real truth about your aunt''s illness? |
18239 | Tell me, dear lady,said Mrs. Maitland, sinking into a deck- chair beside Sophy''s chaperon,"do you intend anything to come of_ that_?" |
18239 | That will do,exclaimed Shafto impatiently;"leave the ladies alone, or, if you must discuss them, what about the little American Miss Bliss? |
18239 | Then I expect you have picked up some facts about cocaine smuggling? |
18239 | Then I suppose it was he who put FitzGerald on the track of this splendid haul-- six hundred ounces of cocaine? |
18239 | Then do you mean, Fuchsia, that I am to sit by, utterly helpless, whilst my aunt slowly puts herself to death? |
18239 | Then who does work? |
18239 | Then, in that case, why do n''t you go up to the house and inquire? |
18239 | Tiger shooting where? |
18239 | Too much of what? |
18239 | Too much work, eh? 18239 Was he about to fall in love?" |
18239 | Well, Eliza, what is it? |
18239 | Well, even if I did and, mind you, I''m not saying that I do, it is no worse for my health than dancing all night, is it? 18239 Well, he had n''t much of a life to lose, had he? |
18239 | Well, now, if I promise you one thing will you promise me another? 18239 Well, to turn to another subject, am I to inform Mr. Levison that you refuse his offer of two hundred a year? |
18239 | Well, we have often wondered who she was? 18239 Well-- what?" |
18239 | What about your cousin? 18239 What are the symptoms?" |
18239 | What can be done to cure it? 18239 What could have made her take to it?" |
18239 | What did I tell you? |
18239 | What do you mean by''the Potter''s Field''? |
18239 | What do you mean? |
18239 | What do you mean? |
18239 | What do you say, Hutton? |
18239 | What has happened? |
18239 | What have you been doing with yourself to- day? |
18239 | What have you got hold of now? |
18239 | What have you got to say? |
18239 | What have you seen? |
18239 | What is he like? |
18239 | What is her particular illness? 18239 What is it-- or_ who_ is it?" |
18239 | What is it? |
18239 | What is that? |
18239 | What on earth ails you? |
18239 | What was the cause of his death? 18239 What''s that?" |
18239 | What''s that? |
18239 | When do you wish me to start? |
18239 | When next you meet will you give her my humble respects and tell her I''ve not forgotten her invitation, an''I''m coming to the wedding? |
18239 | Where does the stuff come from? |
18239 | Which of you is Miss Leigh? |
18239 | Who is she? |
18239 | Who were you talking to, my dear? |
18239 | Whom you are struggling to release? 18239 Why are you in such a taking, Jane? |
18239 | Why do you say that? |
18239 | Why do you say this to me? |
18239 | Why not? 18239 Why the mischief did you put him in there? |
18239 | Why, of course I am; what else would I be? 18239 Yes, mother, all right,"but nevertheless he remained standing;"what is it?" |
18239 | Yes,assented his host;"I suppose this,"pointing to his yellow gown with his stick,"is a fancy dress, for, of course, you are not a real_ pongye_?" |
18239 | Yes-- and what did she tell you? |
18239 | Yes; where is he now? |
18239 | You are enemies? |
18239 | You have been wounded? |
18239 | You have seen nothing so far? |
18239 | You know I''d love to go down to''Tremenheere,''but how can I? 18239 You know her, do n''t you?" |
18239 | You think I''m a naughty boy? |
18239 | You''ve been over four years with us as correspondence clerk? |
18239 | Your religion forbids you to take life? |
18239 | _ Why_ is she like this? 18239 After a moment''s pause, which gave his companion time to digest this surprising statement, he went on,Have you ever seen Herr Krauss?" |
18239 | After a short pause he changed the topic and asked:"Do you ride, Miss Leigh?" |
18239 | After an unusually long silence FitzGerald exclaimed, apropos of nothing in particular:"So-- sits the wind in that quarter?" |
18239 | After you had recovered your memory and become a_ pongye_, what happened next?" |
18239 | Always so shy-- so odd and so foolish?" |
18239 | An altar vessel, too; a most perfect, complete, and unique specimen of Chinese enamelled porcelain, dating from the Kang dynasty? |
18239 | And here she came to yet another question: What was the matter with Mrs. Krauss? |
18239 | And how is yourself, sir?" |
18239 | And if I were carried off, where would_ you_ be?" |
18239 | And if not, what? |
18239 | And what would Sophy Leigh think when she saw him accompanied by Mrs. So- and- So''s European nurse? |
18239 | And who was the officious and familiar ayah, her attendant and shadow, an obtrusive creature with bold black eyes and a resolute mouth? |
18239 | And why not? |
18239 | And you are going to join up too, sir?" |
18239 | And, sure, are n''t we Buddhists all over the world? |
18239 | Any escaped convicts on board?" |
18239 | Are you engaged to be married?" |
18239 | As for me, my mother was English-- you could not tell that I was not born an Englishman?" |
18239 | As he concluded, a spare, middle- aged man wearing a large topee and a dust- coloured suit approached and said:"Mr. Shafto, I believe?" |
18239 | As he drew back quickly, she burst out laughing and exclaimed:"But why are you so shy, dear boy? |
18239 | As he muttered something indefinite, she added,"What''s your book?" |
18239 | As there was no immediate answer on the part of Mrs. Maitland, she added quickly:"Do n''t you think so?" |
18239 | Besides, what is the good? |
18239 | But do n''t you ever get your Sunday off or your day out?" |
18239 | But do you mean to tell me that_ you_ run the house?" |
18239 | But how can I leave Karl? |
18239 | But tell me-- why am I to refuse Ma Chit''s cigarettes?" |
18239 | But what grounds had he for hoping that she would marry him? |
18239 | By accident-- or on purpose?" |
18239 | By the way, have ye the talisman I give you?" |
18239 | By the way, sir,"he continued in another tone,"did ye see Ma Chit the day we were leavin''Rangoon, signin''and wavin''to ye as we cast off?" |
18239 | By the way, talking of loot, do you know that Herr Krauss is dead?" |
18239 | By the way,"turning to Shafto,"I suppose you do n''t know a word of Burmese or Hindustani?" |
18239 | Can you imagine great trees entirely covered with exquisite blooms, and garlands of pink and lilac creepers interlacing the jungle?" |
18239 | Can you not make confitures and cakes and salads? |
18239 | Come now-- speak out-- is it a love affair, or money? |
18239 | Could Shafto believe his ears? |
18239 | Could a man marry on such an income, or on the supposition that what was barely enough for one would be sufficient for two? |
18239 | Could n''t he sit in the veranda, like other people?" |
18239 | Could this be a fact? |
18239 | Did any suspicion sink into her simple mind? |
18239 | Did n''t I see you slip money into the hand of that broken- down Englishman?" |
18239 | Did the German ladies come to see her?" |
18239 | Did you see him?" |
18239 | Do I look like an invalid?" |
18239 | Do n''t you remember how nice it was last year, talking over everything together after dances and the theatre? |
18239 | Do they call me rich in trade? |
18239 | Do you know what wolfram is?" |
18239 | Do you know, Geoff, I''d give ten years of this life to have a good chance of seeing the world-- especially the East?" |
18239 | Do you mind telling me some more? |
18239 | Do, like a good chap and say a word to my aunt? |
18239 | Does Herr Krauss know?" |
18239 | Had she departed already? |
18239 | Have n''t I seen with me own two eyes all the terrible harm this drug- takin''leads to? |
18239 | Have n''t we the mass, and vespers, and beads, and monasteries, and Lent,--all complate?" |
18239 | Have you any news?" |
18239 | Have you any relations in the Army?" |
18239 | Have you heard from Mrs. Milward lately?" |
18239 | Have you never noticed anything? |
18239 | Have you no suspicions about people?" |
18239 | Have you seen anything of Sophy-- I mean,"correcting herself,"Miss Leigh?" |
18239 | He and you are about the same age, are you not?" |
18239 | He paused to clear his throat, and continued:"I suppose, you have not seen anything of Ma Chit lately?" |
18239 | He paused, and surveying Shafto with half- closed eyes, added:"I suppose you do n''t know what her complaint is?" |
18239 | He raised his eyes as Douglas entered, and said:"Hullo, that you, Shafto? |
18239 | How are you, old man?" |
18239 | How could Krauss have known that he had gone tiger shooting? |
18239 | How dare you interfere with me? |
18239 | How did you get hold of it?" |
18239 | How did you manage it?" |
18239 | How do you contrive to get so much liberty-- careering round the town with Tommies and coming to look me up? |
18239 | How do you get on together?" |
18239 | How long has my aunt been like this?" |
18239 | How long has this been going on?" |
18239 | How would you like a little promotion?" |
18239 | I am certain; and why not? |
18239 | I am telling dreadful tales, am I not? |
18239 | I ca n''t think what ails ye to be so stiff- necked; is there nothing at all I can do for ye?" |
18239 | I hope you are not ill?" |
18239 | I know you have been poking round with Roscoe and diving into queer places-- are you as keen as ever?" |
18239 | I say, Mung Baw, do n''t your friends in the monastery wonder why I so often ride round this way and look you up?" |
18239 | I say,"addressing himself particularly to Roscoe and MacNab,"did you know that this fellow is going out tiger shooting? |
18239 | I suppose Mr. Krauss knows?" |
18239 | I suppose the guests are his own compatriots?" |
18239 | I suppose the lines are fairly close?" |
18239 | I suppose there will be an auction at''Littlecote''?" |
18239 | I suppose you have heard about your friend, Mr. FitzGerald, and Miss Bliss?" |
18239 | I suppose you know that Gregory''s is one of the oldest- established houses here?" |
18239 | I suppose you''ve seen the wrestlers?" |
18239 | I wonder what you will think of the unknown uncle; perhaps some day you will tell me?" |
18239 | I wonder who she was?" |
18239 | I''m told you''ve been in some heavy fighting?" |
18239 | In silence Sophy followed her down to the car and, as she tucked in the knee- sheet, she raised her eyes and asked:"What is this wonderful last word?" |
18239 | Is it fever?" |
18239 | Is it serious?" |
18239 | Is my salary paid in advance?" |
18239 | Is this your first journey out of England?" |
18239 | It is not a malignant growth, please God?" |
18239 | Krauss?" |
18239 | Look here, have you never noticed how brilliant and lively Mrs. Krauss is at times, with shining eyes and a colour in her cheeks? |
18239 | May I ask why you find yourself among the Seven Dials, or devils, of Rangoon?" |
18239 | Miss Leigh, they want me to sing Gounod''s''Ave Maria,''so will you be an angel and come and play my accompaniment?" |
18239 | Mr. Martin informed me the firm never paid in advance, as cholera carried off people in a few hours-- cheerful, was n''t it? |
18239 | Mrs. Malone coloured like a young girl-- or was it the blush of guilt? |
18239 | No doubt you would like to talk over the matter with your people?" |
18239 | Now tell me how you account for that?" |
18239 | Now the question that puzzled Fuchsia was, what was the nature of the dose? |
18239 | Now, as I have two legacies, I want to know if you will take one of them off my hands?" |
18239 | Now, before you go, can I get you a drink or a smoke?" |
18239 | Now, tell me, have you ever heard of the cocaine trade in Burma?" |
18239 | Now, what do you say to that?" |
18239 | Once seen, never forgotten, eh? |
18239 | One of your underworld friends, I take it?" |
18239 | Or give me an order?" |
18239 | Or was the whole thing a mere coincidence? |
18239 | Perhaps Miss Leigh could come with me to the Gymkhana dance next week?" |
18239 | Perhaps you think good wine needs no bush? |
18239 | Perhaps, as you have no bodily ailment, there is something on your mind?" |
18239 | Polly Gregory-- she is so clever, clear- headed and decided, and will be a rock of strength-- she is sure to like Sophy, eh?" |
18239 | Rangoon has an enormous trade; I wonder what you will think of it?" |
18239 | Rather appropriate to the occasion, eh?" |
18239 | SERGEANT- MAJOR RYAN THE ROAD TO MANDALAY CHAPTER I BLINDS DOWN"What do you think, Mitty? |
18239 | Say, have you never heard of the cocaine business?" |
18239 | Shafto or the girl?" |
18239 | Shafto, who was reading, looked up over the edge of his book and said:"How do you know you wo n''t be declined with thanks?" |
18239 | Should she put him off with a_ lie_? |
18239 | Some day you will tell me all about them, will you not? |
18239 | Still in the office?" |
18239 | Suicide? |
18239 | Surely the affairs of an insignificant fellow like himself never crossed the mental horizon of such a big and busy person as Karl Krauss? |
18239 | Surely you do n''t believe in evil spirits?" |
18239 | Surely, you can do something for her?" |
18239 | Talking of fools-- what about your crazy expedition to- morrow? |
18239 | Tell me-- how is your aunt to- day?" |
18239 | Tell me-- why you have such a hideous suspicion?" |
18239 | Thank you, sir,"accepting a tip,"I suppose I could not tempt you with a splendid fur- lined overcoat? |
18239 | The big Chesterfield sofa-- a wonderful bargain-- had broken springs( perhaps it was not such a wonderful bargain?) |
18239 | The capital he invests in these concerns can not come from ordinary speculation in rice and teak-- so the question is, where does he get it?" |
18239 | Then, with a quick movement, she put the hat aside and, confronting her companion, said,"Surely-- surely, you do n''t mean_ Aunt Flora_?" |
18239 | There''s many a queer place here?" |
18239 | There''s nothing to tell about my career-- let''s hear yours?" |
18239 | Tiger shooting is to be his way of spending the Sabbath; what do you say to_ that_, my stiff- necked Presbyterian?" |
18239 | Tremenheere?" |
18239 | Was he obsessed by FitzGerald and suspecting an honest man, who might have been shooting in the swamps-- why not? |
18239 | Was it her, Sophy''s, duty to raise it? |
18239 | Was she recalling a domestic picture? |
18239 | Was there not a bowl of specimens in the drawing- room already consigned to oblivion and dust? |
18239 | Well, what do you think, Shafto?" |
18239 | Well, why do you stand glowering there?" |
18239 | What are you doing here?" |
18239 | What could it be? |
18239 | What did he want?" |
18239 | What do you say to that? |
18239 | What do you think yourself, dear?" |
18239 | What does he talk about? |
18239 | What does it mean?" |
18239 | What does it mean?" |
18239 | What had I to live for? |
18239 | What had become of all the money? |
18239 | What is it? |
18239 | What is it?" |
18239 | What is your real name?" |
18239 | What leave have you got?" |
18239 | What on earth are_ you_ doing here?" |
18239 | What put it into your head to throw off the yellow robe and take this sudden start?" |
18239 | What was that funny thing he said last?" |
18239 | What was the boy going to do? |
18239 | What was the good of going on? |
18239 | What was"Dacoit"doing in the jungle, thirty miles from Rangoon? |
18239 | What would you think of going abroad for a change-- say, to Burma?" |
18239 | What''s the price of the China demon?" |
18239 | What''s to be done?" |
18239 | Whatever are you doing here?" |
18239 | When she grew to woman''s estate, which of the races would predominate? |
18239 | Where would she settle? |
18239 | Which will you have? |
18239 | Who could expect the greatest nation in the world to remain cooped up in the North Sea? |
18239 | Who is she?" |
18239 | Why did Mrs. Krauss invite them?" |
18239 | Why did she speak so authoritatively to her mistress? |
18239 | Why did she wear such handsome jewellery and expensive silk saris, heavily fringed with gold, and strut about with such an air of importance? |
18239 | Why is_ he_ going home?" |
18239 | Why not walk out of this filthy den with us? |
18239 | Why, that''s abroad-- some place near India-- or is it the West Indies?" |
18239 | Why? |
18239 | Wo n''t you tell Mrs. Gregory? |
18239 | Wolfram or sausages?" |
18239 | Would her sin find her out? |
18239 | Would she not be glad to get rid of some of her smart summer clothes, now that she would be in weeds for at least two years? |
18239 | Yes; he suddenly made up his mind that he would confide in_ her_--and why not? |
18239 | You know Kipling''s lines to Rangoon?" |
18239 | You know it is the duty of a new arrival to wait on the residents?" |
18239 | You see him there grinning at us out of the cabinet? |
18239 | You speak German, of course?" |
18239 | You''ll let us have a line to say how you get on, wo n''t you?" |
18239 | Your aunt refuses to see a doctor, for a doctor would diagnose her case the instant he set eyes on her; she also refuses to quit Rangoon, and why? |
18239 | _ What_ about her sables?" |
18239 | _ Why_ did you not wire for me? |
18239 | and the other?" |
18239 | are you? |
18239 | echoed Shafto,"you are not serious?" |
18239 | ejaculated Miss Tebbs;"you do n''t say so; but how?" |
18239 | he exclaimed,"what are these police doing? |
18239 | he inquired at last,"and where ye live?" |
18239 | inquired Krauss;"what is the matter with my wife? |
18239 | inquired Sophy,"and how do you like Burma?" |
18239 | muttered Shafto indifferently-- what could its temptations offer in comparison to London? |
18239 | now I suppose you think you''re carrying the war into the enemy''s quarter, do n''t ye? |
18239 | repeated FitzGerald with a dramatic gesture;"see it? |
18239 | what can we do? |
18239 | where''s my begging- bowl?" |
32998 | Anything I can do for you to- day? |
32998 | Everything ready? |
32998 | What about the cost of the grub? |
32998 | What can he do? |
32998 | What can he not do rather? 32998 ''And what would you say if I told you your wife was waiting outside to see you?'' 32998 ''Blighty''--how many of those who use it realise the meaning of the word? 32998 ''Good- night, my lad,''said the leader,''can I do anything for you?'' 32998 ''Save you from a crime-- whatever do you mean?'' 32998 ''Then what makes you cry like that?'' 32998 ''Then what makes you cry? 32998 ''What do you mean?'' 32998 ''You help?'' 32998 Am I doing the right thing?'' 32998 And what did they find at the sign of the Red Triangle? 32998 And what is its significance? 32998 And why not? 32998 And yet, what of the young officer himself? 32998 At times suffering from the reaction, he would ask himself the question,''Is it worth while? 32998 CHAPTER IX''LES PARENTS BLESSÉES''The Y.M.C.A.? 32998 Can it be that God was waiting for His people to seek His aid? 32998 Can we have a talk in your own place-- away from the crowd? |
32998 | Could God possibly hear and answer a prayer like that? |
32998 | Could anything be more desolate? |
32998 | Could anything bring home more clearly the horrors of war? |
32998 | Did he know the type of man it was for whom he was about to make the supreme sacrifice? |
32998 | Had he anywhere to go? |
32998 | Have you anywhere to go?'' |
32998 | His only reply was,''Is it not always the unexpected that happens in war?'' |
32998 | How could the British have known when Fritz would fire again? |
32998 | I went into the next ward, and said to the Tommies"There''s a German dying, will one of you lend him your pillow?" |
32998 | In what direction? |
32998 | Is it not worth any effort and any cost to help the loved ones of these men who have made such great sacrifices for us? |
32998 | Is the pain worse?'' |
32998 | Later on they took it for granted that the Red Triangle was there and asked,"Where is the Y.M.C.A.?" |
32998 | Now they always say,"Where is it?" |
32998 | One day he called, and said cheerily,''Well, old fellow, how goes it to- day?'' |
32998 | Some people have spoken sneeringly of''canteen religion''; the soldier never does-- and why should he? |
32998 | The question has frequently been asked,''What is done with the profits?'' |
32998 | Then stooping over him, she whispered,''You remember little Lizzie and little Willie at home, do n''t you?'' |
32998 | Was it because they liked that kind of thing? |
32998 | Was it? |
32998 | We knew we were all right, a room having been retained for us at the Station Hotel; but what of him? |
32998 | What can you do to help us? |
32998 | What would you like me to do? |
32998 | What would you like next best?'' |
32998 | When she came back she said she had asked the invalid,''What would you like best in all the world?'' |
32998 | When the request has come to open a new centre, the determining factor has been,''Is it needed?'' |
32998 | Where then does the spiritual work of the Red Triangle come in? |
32998 | Who knows? |
32998 | Why? |
32998 | Wo n''t any one oblige you? |
32998 | Wo n''t you let us make a whip up round the houses and see what we can do?'' |
32998 | You understand?" |
32998 | huts after the war?'' |
32998 | in Ypres? |
32998 | in the village?" |
32998 | leader, and cried in a voice that every one could hear:''What''s the matter, Boss? |
32998 | not''Will it pay?'' |
32998 | queried the vicar;''how can you help?'' |
32998 | than they could do without munitions at the Front? |
32998 | who goes there?'' |
33359 | ''And who the devil is Atisa?'' |
33359 | ''But has he no interests or amusements?'' |
33359 | ''But what does he do all day?'' |
33359 | ''But why did you not treat with the Tibetans themselves?'' |
33359 | ''Do you get much of this sort of thing?'' |
33359 | ''Do you read much?'' |
33359 | ''The ruler of your country leaves his palace and capital, and you know nothing?'' |
33359 | ''What the devil is that old thief doing over there?'' |
33359 | ''Who are you?'' |
33359 | A transport officer was shouting:''How many bags have you, babu?'' |
33359 | And the rabble? |
33359 | And what Englishman with the same prospect to face, caught in this dark eddy of circumstance, would not have done the same thing? |
33359 | And who is he? |
33359 | Answer:"What signifies whether it was a bird or not?" |
33359 | But the men who attacked the Kangma post, what parallel in history have we for these? |
33359 | But what was left him if he lived except shame and humiliation? |
33359 | But what was the flame that smouldered in these men and lighted them to action? |
33359 | But why not own up that one travels for the glamour of the thing? |
33359 | Do you know where he is?'' |
33359 | Have we removed it? |
33359 | How in the name of all their Buddhas were they to stop such a man? |
33359 | It may be asked, then, What is, or was, the nature of the Russian menace in Tibet? |
33359 | One wondered, were they pursuing truth or were they petrified by ritual and routine? |
33359 | Or are they depths? |
33359 | Or were we noted as food for gossip and criticism when their self- imposed ordeal was done? |
33359 | Says I,"Was that a bird at the magistrate''s that flapped so loud?" |
33359 | We will not molest you, but we refuse to accept your terms''? |
33359 | What could they have done? |
33359 | What, then, drove them on? |
33359 | When Colonel Younghusband put the question direct to a head Lama in open durbar,''Have you news of the Dalai Lama? |
33359 | Where else can one find a racecourse, polo- ground, fishing, and shooting, and a rainfall that is little more than a third of that of Darjeeling? |
33359 | Who can tell what they think or what they wish, these undivinable creatures? |
33359 | Who knows? |
33359 | Why could we not have left at least one city out of bounds? |
33359 | Why do n''t they send up the--th Light Cavalry?'' |
33359 | Why should he? |
33359 | Why should not the Tibetans, who are of the same stock, yield themselves to enlightenment? |
33359 | Why should they? |
33359 | Why, in the name of all their Bodhisats and Munis, did they not run? |
33359 | Why, then, deal with China at all? |
33359 | You do n''t understand? |
33359 | _ Officer coming up_:''... Up above Phari ideal country for native cavalry, is n''t it?... |
33755 | And the Briton himself-- what became of him? |
33755 | But how is one to describe the confused play of forces in a cyclone which has centres within centres? |
33755 | But it could not be much, he thought, as he had all the nobles, and how could there be a rising{ 262} without nobles? |
33755 | Could anything else have been expected? |
33755 | Dismayed at the swiftness of the movement, England hesitated; but how could she{ 235} deny her colony the right of self- defence? |
33755 | Had this people the right, or had they not the right to plant a State bearing a foreign flag, which should effectually bar the path to the north? |
33755 | If engines could be made to plough through the water, why might they not also be made to walk the earth? |
33755 | If such was the condition of the honest{ 153} working poor, what was that of the criminal? |
33755 | Is England richer or poorer for this outpouring of blood and treasure? |
33755 | Is it a wonder that there was always disorder and violence from a chronic tithe- war in Ireland, which it is said has cost a million of lives? |
33755 | Is it strange that Sydney Smith said no abuse as great could be found in Timbuctoo? |
33755 | Is it strange that the plantation in Massachusetts had fresh recruits? |
33755 | Is not every type of English manhood explained by such an inheritance? |
33755 | Or did the splendid heroism of Wallace, and the spirit it evoked in the people, awaken a slumbering patriotism in his own romantic soul? |
33755 | Should the English Government allow a people fiercely antagonistic to itself to build up an unfriendly State on its border? |
33755 | Then Banquo said,''How is it ye gaif to my companyeon not onlie landis and gret rentis, bot Kingdomes, and gevis me nocht?'' |
33755 | Was it not from their impious hands, that this new knowledge of the physical universe had been received? |
33755 | Was it through a complicated struggle of forces, in which ambition played the greatest part? |
33755 | Was it worth seven{ 271} years of such struggle to emancipate the land from a foreign tyranny, only to have it fall into a degrading domestic one? |
33755 | Was the man mad? |
33755 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
33755 | What are we to conclude? |
33755 | What did death matter, in form however terrible, to one who was to be so remembered nearly five centuries later by Scotland''s greatest bard? |
33755 | What sort of a race were they? |
33755 | What would be the need of a Parliament, if he did not require money? |
33755 | Whether it was premeditated, or in the heat of passion, who could say? |
33755 | Who was the Lady Cæsair, who fled with her household to Ireland from the coming deluge after being refused shelter by Noah? |
33755 | With king so false, and with justice so polluted at its fountain, what hope was there for the people but in Revolution? |
33755 | and who Nemehd, the next colonist from the East, who heads the royal procession of one hundred and eighteen kings? |
33189 | Do I then always think, even in sleep? |
33189 | No one can feel my individual pain; every one can see the truth which I contemplate-- why is it so? 33189 What were a God that only impelled the world from without?" |
33189 | What,he asks,"would become of the power of that imaginary infinite if it could create nothing? |
33189 | When they divided man, how many did they make him? 33189 [ 21] But if we know external things only through their idea in God, how do we know ourselves? |
33189 | [ 36] What can be called his own? 33189 (?). 33189 1521? 33189 And the great question of ethics is, How far can man partake in this liberty? 33189 Because in June 1568 that version, forged, was in the Scots collection of the Casket Letters? 33189 But again, even if we allow to Descartes that God is the unity of thought and being, we must still ask what kind of unity? 33189 But if the intelligence in itself is but a mode of one of the attributes, how can it be itself the source of their distinction? 33189 CASTELLO, GIOVANNI BATTISTA( 1500?-1569? 33189 CASTILLO SOLÓRZANO, ALONSO DE( 1584?-1647? 33189 Can the passions be annihilated, or can they be spiritualized? 33189 Did Malebranche realize what he was saying when he declared that God wasbeing in general,"but not any particular being? |
33189 | He can not know clearly and distinctly either himself or anything else; how then can he know his own good or determine himself by the idea of it? |
33189 | How can anything be prior to the first principle of knowledge? |
33189 | How then, they argued, could God''s truthfulness be our security for a principle which we must use in order to prove the being of God? |
33189 | If the priest must be satisfied with little, why be at the trouble of offering more? |
33189 | In selling my goods, is it enough not to disguise their shortcomings, or ought I candidly to admit them? |
33189 | In_ The Ordinary_( 1635?) |
33189 | Is it a mere generic unity, reached by abstraction, and therefore leaving out all the distinguishing characteristics of the particulars under it? |
33189 | Is it also through the idea of us in God? |
33189 | Is it ever right to tell a lie? |
33189 | Is reason able to crush this intruder, or to turn it into a servant? |
33189 | It may be asked why, after being with Wood on the 11th of June, did Lennox still rely on Moray''s version of Mary''s letter? |
33189 | May a lawyer defend a client whom he knows to be guilty? |
33189 | Of this he( Darnley) denies half, and above all that he( the brother?) |
33189 | Or is it a concrete unity to which the particular elements are subordinated, but in which they are nevertheless included? |
33189 | Or was it possible to patch up a compromise between them? |
33189 | Ought one to swallow up the other-- and, if so, which should prevail? |
33189 | Rabbat Umma,"the great mother"; Baalat haedrat,"mistress of the sanctuary"; Ashtoreth( Astarte), Illat, Sakon, Tsaphon, Sid, Aris(? |
33189 | Still more outspoken is the Savoyard vicar in the_ Émile_( 1762) of Jean Jacques Rousseau:"Whence do I get my rules of action? |
33189 | The drama that has made Castro''s reputation is_ Las Mocedades del Cid_( 1599? |
33189 | What could they possibly do but cling to their priest with a"blind and unexpressed faith"? |
33189 | What then is the point where the subjective consciousness passes out into the objective, from which it seemed at first absolutely excluded? |
33189 | What was his mouth? |
33189 | When Carnot''s arrest was demanded in May 1795, a deputy cried"Will you dare to lay hands on the man who has organized victory?" |
33189 | Why am I assured of my own existence? |
33189 | Wood was to ask,"if the French originals are found to tally with the Scots translations, will that be reckoned good evidence?" |
33189 | a forged interpolation, based on another document, not by Mary? |
33189 | in Scots, did Lennox follow Moray''s erroneous version of July 1567? |
33189 | what are called his thighs and feet? |
33189 | what his arms? |
33189 | xiii., 1900, and"Ist Otocyon die Ausgangsform des Hundegeschlechts oder nicht?" |
34299 | But are these offspring any better than they would have been had their parents given birth to a larger number? |
34299 | But what has meanwhile happened to the outer digits? |
34299 | Can he do this well if he knows nothing of what the bent of the child''s genius from ancestral influence is? |
34299 | Can we reconcile this want of correspondence? |
34299 | Can we remove them? |
34299 | Educate another for a blacksmith who should have been a preacher, is there not also a great loss? |
34299 | How can an instinct like this have been acquired by being performed but once? |
34299 | How can sexual cells develop brain cells, with their wonderful modes of action? |
34299 | How can this egg, formed in special organs, develop other organs than those like the ones in which it was formed? |
34299 | How can war injure children? |
34299 | If you educate a boy which nature intended for a blacksmith for a preacher, has not the world lost something? |
34299 | Is it a vain hope? |
34299 | Is this not a grievous burden which cripples or paralyzes his life and reacts on his offspring? |
34299 | Now, if acquired characters_ are not_ transmitted to offspring, how should these facts affect our methods of educating children? |
34299 | The question now arises, How can the parent make use of this agent in altering the nature of a child from one that is not desirable to one that is? |
34299 | What is the Germ- plasm? |
34299 | Why should they crucify their desires for the benefit of the race? |
34299 | evidently meaning,"How shall we train and educate him?" |
30768 | Do n''t you know whether it is good or bad? |
30768 | Do you know where the snags and sand- bars are? |
30768 | Have you ever heard the gospel? |
30768 | Have you heard the report? |
30768 | How much? |
30768 | No sir,"Well, how do you expect to take me out of here if you do n''t know where the snags and sand- bars are? |
30768 | Remember, I pray thee,said one of them,"who ever perished, being innocent? |
30768 | What is his name? |
30768 | What is the value of this estate? |
30768 | What kind of seed? |
30768 | Why do you ask? |
30768 | Why has he wings on his feet? |
30768 | Why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie unto( deceive) the Holy Ghost? 30768 Why is his face hidden?" |
30768 | Why not? |
30768 | Will you drive the nail into the board? |
30768 | ''My child,''He said,''what is the matter?'' |
30768 | ''Yes, father,''I said,''but ca n''t you help me out?'' |
30768 | ''Yes,''I answered,''I fell into it; ca n''t you help me out?'' |
30768 | A man said to me some time ago,"Why is it that we can not get honest clerks now?" |
30768 | A man said to me some years ago:"Do n''t you think David fell as low as Saul?" |
30768 | After the meeting, a friend stepped up to him and said:"What is your trouble?" |
30768 | Ah, who shall thus the Master meet, And bring but withered leaves? |
30768 | And do I show less love for him because I warn him against actions that will bring a harvest of misery and despair? |
30768 | And how does it propose to do it? |
30768 | And on the other hand, of prayer, of fearing God and doing His commandments? |
30768 | And what does Paul say are the works of the flesh? |
30768 | Are they straight? |
30768 | Are we hoping to reap eternal life? |
30768 | Are you leading the little ones safe to the Great Shepherd? |
30768 | Are you setting your children a good or a bad example? |
30768 | As a certain deacon passed on his way to church, he followed and said,"Deacon, can you tell me how far it is to hell?" |
30768 | At the time of harvest his master went to the place, and, seeing the green oats springing up, asked him:"Did I not tell you to sow barley here? |
30768 | Boating, fishing, hunting, or on excursions? |
30768 | But what became of the old man? |
30768 | Ca n''t you help me out?'' |
30768 | Can you turn to any walking behind you and say:"Follow me as I follow Christ?" |
30768 | Come, my friend, what kind of seed are you sowing? |
30768 | Did He not warn? |
30768 | Did not God make Adam reap even before he left Eden? |
30768 | Do we desire the love of our fellows in our seasons of trial? |
30768 | Do we long for sympathy in our sorrow and pain? |
30768 | Do you doubt it? |
30768 | Do you fancy that He will pay spiritual excellence with plenty of custom? |
30768 | Do you never write home to your parents? |
30768 | Do you not believe it? |
30768 | Do you read any literature that makes your thoughts impure? |
30768 | Do you spend your time at the saloon or the club, until you have become almost a stranger to them? |
30768 | Do you tell me God does n''t detest it also? |
30768 | Do you think ministers are old fogies-- that the Bible belongs to the dark ages? |
30768 | Does he always reap punishment here? |
30768 | Does not the drunkard make his wife and children reap a bitter harvest? |
30768 | Does not the gambler make his relatives reap? |
30768 | Does not the harlot make her parents reap agony and shame? |
30768 | Eventually a hard- looking fellow came on board and said:"Captain, I understand you want a pilot to take you out of this difficulty?" |
30768 | Father, mother, neighbor, are your tracks true? |
30768 | Father, what seed are you sowing in your family? |
30768 | Had not Cain to reap outside of Eden? |
30768 | Had they not to reap a multiplied harvest? |
30768 | Has France not reaped? |
30768 | Have you been living a double life? |
30768 | Have you been making a profession without possessing what you profess? |
30768 | Have you ever heard of the like?" |
30768 | Have you never noticed the same thing about the mind and the heart? |
30768 | He thought,"Shall I lie for my employer, as he undoubtedly means I shall; or shall I tell the truth, come what will?" |
30768 | He was asked:"What did you go into secession for?" |
30768 | His master said,"What foolish idea is this? |
30768 | How can I harmonize the doctrine of forgiveness with the doctrine of retribution? |
30768 | How could it be otherwise? |
30768 | How do you spend the Sabbath? |
30768 | I have a wife and three children; how can I bring the disgrace upon them?" |
30768 | I said,"Why do n''t you go back and give yourself up and face the law, and ask God to forgive you?" |
30768 | I said:"What is it?" |
30768 | I say to my man:"Do you know anything about the thistles in the field?" |
30768 | I would ask them,"Why wo n''t you come to the church?" |
30768 | If God did not spare David, do you think He will spare us if we fall into sin and do not confess and turn from our sins? |
30768 | If a friend of mine were about to invest in a worthless silver- mine, do you think I would be true to him if I did not caution him against it? |
30768 | Many a time I have had men say,"You think Jacob was a saint, do n''t you? |
30768 | My brother, do you think that God is going to reward honor, integrity, high- mindedness, with this world''s coin? |
30768 | My friend, why not call on God now as David did when he came to himself? |
30768 | My friend,_ what kind of seed are you sowing?_ Let your mind sweep over your record for the past year. |
30768 | Nothing but leaves? |
30768 | On another occasion they gathered round Him and asked,"How long dost thou hold us in suspense? |
30768 | One day, when this man was in hiding, he heard his little boy say:"Mamma, does n''t papa love us any more?" |
30768 | Perhaps he was a sort of a Cainite, saying,"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
30768 | Speaking of his reckless career, he said:"How could it be otherwise, when I had such bad training? |
30768 | Suppose I meet a man who is sowing seed, and say:"Hello, stranger, what are you sowing?" |
30768 | Tell me, are these beans the same quality throughout the entire barrel as they appear on the top?" |
30768 | Tell me, how do you spend your spare time? |
30768 | Telling vile stories, polluting the minds of others, while your own mind is also polluted? |
30768 | The captain said,"Are you a pilot?" |
30768 | The child of my love and prayer? |
30768 | The clerk seeing this, said:"Do you think, sir, that it is right to mark those beans A 1?" |
30768 | The employer retorted sharply:"Are you head of the firm?" |
30768 | The employer said to him:"Did you sell that man those beans?" |
30768 | They clothed you and educated you, and now do you spend your nights in gambling? |
30768 | To whom are their daughters married? |
30768 | Was anybody ever more severe in denouncing hypocrisy than Christ? |
30768 | Was it to go unpunished? |
30768 | What are its fruits? |
30768 | What are the fruits of extravagance, of pride, of covetousness? |
30768 | What are the fruits of heathenism? |
30768 | What brought ruin on Babylon? |
30768 | What does he gain? |
30768 | What has become of Greece and all her power? |
30768 | What has become of Rome and all her greatness? |
30768 | What has become of the Jews? |
30768 | What has become of the monarchies and empires of the world? |
30768 | What has been the harvest? |
30768 | What kind of seed are you sowing, my friend, good seed or bad seed? |
30768 | What must be the intelligence and moral sense of people who will worship such things? |
30768 | What was to be the result of this attack? |
30768 | What will the harvest be? |
30768 | What would a man do in heaven who can not bear to be in the society of the pure and holy down here? |
30768 | Where are my friends? |
30768 | Where are the sons of liquor dealers? |
30768 | Who has not proved the truth of the Scripture:"The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked; who can know it?" |
30768 | Who warns like a mother, and who loves like a mother? |
30768 | Who would have expected this result of the world or of riches? |
30768 | Why continue to sear you conscience, and sow the seeds of keener remorse? |
30768 | Why, then, have you sown oats?" |
30768 | Will it be a black harvest, or are you going to have a joyful harvest? |
30768 | Will these non- Christian religions bear the test? |
30768 | Will you imperil your eternity for the sake of some present gain or pleasure? |
30768 | Will you part with that for his harvest?" |
30768 | With a great deal of emotion he said:"Young men, for the first time in my life this question came over me-- who is going to pray for my lost soul now? |
30768 | Would Christ have made a child the standard of faith if He had known that it was not capable of understanding His words? |
30768 | You would say that he was a first- class lunatic, would n''t you? |
30768 | Young man, are you letting some secret sin get the mastery over you, binding you hand and foot? |
30768 | can you help me?'' |
30768 | or are you training them for God and righteousness? |
30768 | or where were the righteous cut off? |
30768 | said Coleridge,"would you have me prejudice the ground in favor of roses and lilies?" |
30768 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
30768 | why not make it on your knees now? |
28528 | ''It''s hell, ai n''t it?'' 28528 ''Well, Mr. Saunders,''said the reporter,''what seems to be the judgment of the people about Penloe and the sermon? |
28528 | A what? |
28528 | After dinner one day, we had just left the house when one of the men said,''Did n''t the old woman give the boss hell, this noon? 28528 And did you ever see a more perfect specimen of physical manhood than he is, so symmetrical in his build?" |
28528 | And, why can you not go? |
28528 | Any news? |
28528 | But, Clara, have you not heard? 28528 Can she do housework?" |
28528 | Certainly,said Penloe,"but which is it you wish me to describe: What is an ideal marriage? |
28528 | Clara, can you estimate what a great gift Penloe gave you in imparting those very important truths? 28528 Dan said:''How does he get along?'' |
28528 | Dan said:''Is Penloe working on the Simmons ranch?'' 28528 Dan said:''What kind of a chap is he, anyway? |
28528 | Did you let them go? |
28528 | Do you think she will get lonesome? |
28528 | Do you think she will put her foot down on Charles Herne furnishing his men with so many luxuries? |
28528 | Do you think that is strange? |
28528 | Do you think they will get along well together? |
28528 | Has she much style about her? |
28528 | I am going to ask you now, Penloe,said Mrs. Herne,"to tell me from your standpoint, what kind of unions would you consider the best ones?" |
28528 | I said:''Did he ever do any of the kind of work he has been doing at the different places he worked at before he came to Orangeville? 28528 Is he really all that?" |
28528 | Is she a scold? |
28528 | Is she a society lady? |
28528 | Is she close and saving? |
28528 | Is she extravagant? |
28528 | Is she fond of children? |
28528 | Is she fond of dress? |
28528 | Is she happy? |
28528 | Is she much account with a needle? |
28528 | Is she pretty? |
28528 | No, I never heard her voice,said Barker,"but what did he mean by saying she called him?" |
28528 | No,said Brookes,"did you?" |
28528 | No,said Mrs. Herne,"who are they?" |
28528 | Tell me,he said,"in what way do you feel different?" |
28528 | Well, Carrie,said Sarah Gilmore to Mrs. Green,"what do you think has happened? |
28528 | Well, Clara,said her mother,"you do n''t expect to have the high- strung, pleasurable excitement of a bride all the time, do you? |
28528 | Well, whatever could his subject have been about, to cause those feelings? |
28528 | What is it? |
28528 | What kind of a man is he? |
28528 | What''s up now? |
28528 | When I came up to the barn at night, Pete was there putting up his broncho, and he greeted me with,''Well, Charles, how do you like your job?'' 28528 Who do you think I saw, and heard preach this afternoon?" |
28528 | Why, how is that? |
28528 | Why, what could it be to affect you in that way? |
28528 | Will she wear the breeches? |
28528 | Will they have any babies? |
28528 | Wo nt you both come to the house? |
28528 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
28528 | ''Why,''I said to Mrs. Lenair,''how could you do such a thing? |
28528 | A lady remarked:"Is he not handsome?" |
28528 | After Penloe had left them, Barker said to Brookes:"Did you hear Stella calling Penloe?" |
28528 | After Stella had left the room, Penloe chatted with the young men about the C.M., and then said:"Would you like to take a walk about the place?" |
28528 | After shaking hands and exchanging a few pleasant words, Mr. Barker asked:"Are Penloe and Stella here?" |
28528 | All nature seemed smiling, for was it not its mating season? |
28528 | And as for my husband, do you think he would have laughed and sat in the buggy, like a hen on her nest? |
28528 | And did you ever see a place where men worked so orderly, harmoniously, and thoroughly as they do on the Herne ranch? |
28528 | And when you said to him,''Andrew, you are going to see so you can read yourself,''he believed you, and was he not healed according to his faith?" |
28528 | And why should the heavens not be brilliant on an occasion when the love in two divine ones is plighted? |
28528 | And, supposing I wanted to, do you think it would do any good? |
28528 | Are other married persons like that?" |
28528 | Are the great Sannyasins and Yogis looking forward to receiving a visit from you? |
28528 | Are there any purer- minded persons than they are? |
28528 | As she wished him good- bye, he said to them:"What must I do in return for the great blessing of sight which has been given me to- day?" |
28528 | Barker replied:"Is not that strange, where we see them almost every day, as we have done for about two years? |
28528 | Bitterness-- am I bitter? |
28528 | But are there not some who are ready to live the better way without having any experience?" |
28528 | But is it not only the fruits of your own work, after all? |
28528 | But she kept thinking,"Did it have to be so?" |
28528 | Can we ever reconcile ourselves to persons of both sexes and all ages undressing in the presence of each other and all bathing together naked? |
28528 | Charles Herne asked Penloe:"What time would you like to leave here?" |
28528 | Charles Herne thought,"Why is this so?" |
28528 | Clara laughed and said:"Well, Charles, do you think I was made to order for you?" |
28528 | Clara said:"Why, Stella, dear, what is the matter?" |
28528 | Continuing, she said:"Do you know that the fight I have just had has been the most trying and severe I ever experienced?" |
28528 | Could a man be more popular than I was in Orangeville? |
28528 | Could you keep your son from getting that waiter girl in trouble? |
28528 | Did I not always have more fine clothes than I could wear? |
28528 | Did I not always have more money than I needed to spend? |
28528 | Did I not always have more of the very best and greatest variety of food than I could eat? |
28528 | Did he not think that you were the embodiment of all goodness, all power, and all truth? |
28528 | Did not Penloe or Stella tell you?" |
28528 | Did they not tell how living the life helped them intellectually and spiritually?" |
28528 | Did you not take Stella, a green, ignorant girl as she was, and lead her to her freedom?" |
28528 | Do n''t you see how she is wearing him out by inches?" |
28528 | Do n''t you think they are pretty?" |
28528 | Do n''t you, Penloe?" |
28528 | Do not the best people of the city open their houses to welcome them? |
28528 | Do you notice how fresh and fine she looks, but how poor and worn out he is? |
28528 | Does it help them intellectually? |
28528 | Does it help them spiritually? |
28528 | Does that kind of recreation help them physically? |
28528 | Has he any other name?" |
28528 | Have I not in my thought trained little feet To venture, and taught little lips to move Until they shaped the wonder of a word? |
28528 | Have you lost your appetite?" |
28528 | He said:"Am I? |
28528 | He said:"Stella, why should I care whether I am here or going on a wedding tour through the Orient with you? |
28528 | Her mother said:"Stella, do you know why Penloe took the subject he did to- day and spoke from it? |
28528 | Her mother said:"Why, dear, what do you mean?" |
28528 | His wife saw that he was taking his last puffs, so she said,"Sam, can I have the bays to go over to the Henshaws''this afternoon?" |
28528 | How can I thank you for what you have done for us? |
28528 | How can I?" |
28528 | How did you hear the news, Sam?" |
28528 | How do they feel during the next day? |
28528 | How else? |
28528 | I am become a danger and a menace, A wandering fire, a disappointed force, A peril-- do you hear, Giovanni? |
28528 | I can not see them, hear them-- Does great God Expect I shall clasp air and kiss the wind Forever, and the budding cometh on? |
28528 | I do n''t suppose you were ever on that road were you?" |
28528 | I felt like saying,''Must I yield? |
28528 | I looked up in the starry firmament, and did my eyes see some of the angelic host looking down on them as they sang? |
28528 | I said to her:''Does Penloe have much business in San Francisco?'' |
28528 | I said,''Have you no respect for me or yourself to act so senselessly?'' |
28528 | I said,''Must I let it die out by consuming its own self?'' |
28528 | I said,''Why in the devil do n''t you get some hinges and hang your gates?'' |
28528 | I threw my hands up in astonishment, and said:''You do n''t say so?'' |
28528 | If you do n''t go now, but postpone it till you think you can go, then perhaps Penloe might be dead and how could you enjoy traveling without him?" |
28528 | In course of conversation Mr. Barker said:"Mrs. Marston, have you been to Orangeville lately?" |
28528 | In short, could a man have a much better all round time anywhere than I had in Orangeville? |
28528 | Is it tameness? |
28528 | Is there a man here to- night who does not think that woman has a divine nature the same as man? |
28528 | Is there any idolatry in the world that is stronger than that which is found in the so- called"Christian"world in the year 1900? |
28528 | Is yielding the only way out of this? |
28528 | It was raining hard, and the thought came to him, another long tedious wet day''s journey; how much longer would this fearful traveling last? |
28528 | Lanair?" |
28528 | Lenair, do you have any ailments? |
28528 | Listen to some of the inquiries:"Is she proud?" |
28528 | Marston?" |
28528 | Mr. Barker said:"By the way, Mrs. Marston, is there another Miss Stella Wheelwright in Orangeville besides your niece?" |
28528 | Mrs. French said:"Is not that very fine, Penloe? |
28528 | Mrs. French said:"Stella, how could you take it so cheerfully? |
28528 | Mrs. Marston said to Mrs. Rogers:"Did you come over on your bicycle?" |
28528 | Must I give way and let it have full sway over me?'' |
28528 | On returning to the room Penloe opened the conversation by saying:"Well, Stella, could you find anything interesting in the books?" |
28528 | On taking it she said:"Is not the box beautiful?" |
28528 | Penloe said:"Did any of you ever hear the story of Shuka?" |
28528 | Penloe said:"Have you thought over the practical side of our union? |
28528 | Penloe said:"So you are going to make a ministering angel of me, are you, my dear?" |
28528 | Penloe said:"Why, Stella, were you not the instrument through which Andrew received his sight? |
28528 | Penloe took a newspaper and gave it to him, saying:"See if you can read that?" |
28528 | Seeing in her face that something was not quite right, he said:"What is the matter, dear, you look as if something troubled you? |
28528 | So I said:''Did you hear what a hard time Mrs. Dunn had in confinement? |
28528 | Stella said:"Have you any reading matter to lend me which touches on this subject, Penloe?" |
28528 | Stella smiling, went to the door, and holding out the front of her dress said, laughing,"Penloe, how do you like these hieroglyphics on my dress?" |
28528 | Then he thought, why was he here? |
28528 | Then how will it be if a good prospect is found? |
28528 | Then the thought came to her why was it not so to- day? |
28528 | Then why am I here in this strange country, away from friends and loved ones? |
28528 | Then why pursue a course of recreation_ so immoderately_ as to be detrimental to their highest interests? |
28528 | We question whether society is ready for such a change? |
28528 | Well, what do you think? |
28528 | What are your orders, my dear?" |
28528 | What do you think Mrs. Lenair had him do, Mrs. Herne? |
28528 | What do you think of that?" |
28528 | What does a fellow want with such a girl as that? |
28528 | What is it?" |
28528 | What is the result? |
28528 | What is the result? |
28528 | What say you, readers? |
28528 | What time do you want them?" |
28528 | What will you do?" |
28528 | When Green entered the house his wife said:"Horace, what do you think? |
28528 | When will you break these various bonds and be free? |
28528 | Where do you find any greater idolatry than that which is bestowed on money and on woman? |
28528 | While we admit the state of society is morally low, yet what can be done to improve it? |
28528 | Who can describe the thoughts that filled the mind of Clara the night previous to her marriage? |
28528 | Who, indeed, can describe the thoughts that fill the mind of any maiden as she lays her head on her pillow the night previous to her marriage? |
28528 | Why are you here?'' |
28528 | Why could not the same attractive power which exists between some couples when they are married be continued? |
28528 | Why did I come here? |
28528 | Why did I not take better care of myself?" |
28528 | Why do n''t he throw that woman off and be free like ourselves? |
28528 | Will everything be as beautiful on my wedding day, I wonder?" |
28528 | Will you help me?'' |
28528 | Would he not be right in thinking I was ignorantly and foolishly jealous, and that that feeling ought not to exist in a true follower of Buddha? |
28528 | Would they ever reach Dawson City, or would they, like many others, die on the road? |
28528 | and Stella laughed and said:"I got some new figures on my wedding dress, do n''t you think they are pretty?" |
28528 | or what are the ideals of those who get married, and who realize them?" |
34324 | ''Why so silent?'' |
34324 | ( Examples might include: Why did Bodhidharma come from the West, that is, from India to China? |
34324 | But how can such a truth be taught? |
34324 | Does Ryoan- ji have beauty in any conventional sense? |
34324 | Does a dog have Buddha- nature? |
34324 | How do you write a critical analysis of a work of art that only takes shape after it gets inside your head? |
34324 | How does the Japanese- style room alter human perception in such a way that people''s experience of each other is intensified? |
34324 | It is clearly a symbol-- but a symbol of what? |
34324 | It is clearly an invitation to open one''s perception-- but open it to what? |
34324 | Not knowing what to make of his guest, the emperor backed away and inquired,"Who exactly are you who stands before me now?" |
34324 | The emperor was startled but persisted,"Tell me then, what is the most important principle or teaching of Buddhism?" |
34324 | Therefore, I ask you: What is my merit: What reward have I earned?" |
34324 | What did Zen artists look for when they scavenged the surrounding mountains for special rocks? |
34324 | What do you do about daily life, where the world carries on as though it really does exist, dualities and all? |
34324 | What exactly can you make of a philosophical system whose teacher answers the question,"How do you see things so clearly?" |
34324 | What is the counter mind really like? |
34324 | What is there about it that has caused Western thinkers to disavow its functions for so many centuries? |
34324 | What was your face before your mother was born?) |
34324 | What were the qualities of these stones that they should have been hauled for hundreds of miles and prized by shoguns and Zen aesthetes alike? |
34324 | Why do Zen ceramics always manage to make one take special notice of their surface? |
34324 | Why, for instance, does a Japanese garden often seem much larger than it really is? |
34324 | With no usable rhymes and no stress, how can the music of poetry be created? |
34324 | [?]-ca. |
34324 | _ Haru ya mukashi no_ Can it be that the spring_ Haru naranu_ Is not the spring of old times? |
34324 | _ Tsuki ya aranu_ Can it be that the moon has changed? |
34324 | with the seeming one- liner,"I close my eyes"? |
32756 | Dost thou believe on the Son of God? |
32756 | Have we not all one Father, hath not God created us? |
32756 | Lord, who shall sojourn in thy tabernacle, who shall dwell in thy holy hill? 32756 What doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God?" |
32756 | What kind of life am I living now? 32756 Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?" |
32756 | 2.--What has given these Scriptures such authority? |
32756 | 3.--Again, I repeat the question, what gave them that authority? |
32756 | And how do we grow to know our friends? |
32756 | And is it not the same with the affections? |
32756 | And last of all, in answer to our question, How should we pray? |
32756 | And what is prayer? |
32756 | And why not forthwith? |
32756 | Are not such songs in such an age one of the miracles of history? |
32756 | Are the movements in nature the product of law,--and how did the laws begin to operate and when? |
32756 | But what is the knowledge of God that has been revealed? |
32756 | Can death touch that life? |
32756 | Could God build the human soul with all its capacities for the few years of this fleeting life on earth? |
32756 | Did you ever hear a man tell of the peace and hope and power to conquer evil which he had won by an earnest study of the Latin classics? |
32756 | Do you not feel that you must have done the same if you had been there? |
32756 | Does Science throw any light on our problem? |
32756 | Does nature reveal an intelligence behind the universe and working in it? |
32756 | Does this internal condition correspond to reality? |
32756 | Every man should therefore put the question to himself:"If_ I_ die, shall I live again?" |
32756 | HOW HAS HE DONE THIS? |
32756 | Has there not been a tendency to suppress the emotions because there are emotional religious cults almost divorced from morality and the intellect? |
32756 | He alone could fearlessly ask the question:--"Which of you convicteth me of sin"? |
32756 | How could men help loving and reverencing and preserving such songs? |
32756 | How could the people doubt it? |
32756 | How could they help feeling that a divine Spirit was behind them? |
32756 | How could they help it? |
32756 | How did men come to believe and obey as Divinely inspired the words of Moses, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Hosea, and the rest? |
32756 | How will it be recognized or known? |
32756 | IF A MAN DIE SHALL HE LIVE AGAIN? |
32756 | In trying to answer the question,"What is prayer?" |
32756 | Is it a friendship with God which death can never extinguish?" |
32756 | Is it life eternal, or life merely temporal? |
32756 | Is it not also true of man? |
32756 | Is it nothing more than a"looking upward"by one in need to one able to supply the need? |
32756 | Is matter the real thing and the true explanation of it all? |
32756 | Is this difficult? |
32756 | It comes to us full of answers to our question, Why should we pray? |
32756 | Man''s conscience whispers that the Judge of all the earth will do right; but how can He do right with all His creatures, unless He has more time? |
32756 | Need we be disquieted about a Book that comes to us thus accredited in so many powerful ways? |
32756 | No one who can think or feel is able to look unmoved on the face of death: he must ask"Shall he live again?" |
32756 | Now it would seem as if the morning, first thing in the morning, is the time especially to do this? |
32756 | Perhaps, too, it has something to do with temperament? |
32756 | This sometimes seems a very mystical, far away subject, does it not? |
32756 | WHAT DO WE KNOW OF GOD? |
32756 | WHAT IS FAITH? |
32756 | WHERE CAN WE LEARN OF GOD? |
32756 | Was ever national history so extraordinarily written? |
32756 | Well, but why was it accepted before their day without any such formal sanction? |
32756 | Well, how has his prophecy been fulfilled? |
32756 | What candles, then, does Science light up for us? |
32756 | What is one to do with it in an essay limited to twenty pages? |
32756 | What is prayer? |
32756 | What is the inference? |
32756 | What is this thing which is so great, and yet so close to hand, which is so worth while doing, and which we can all do, and do at once? |
32756 | What is worship? |
32756 | What then is this faith which Jesus Christ asks of people? |
32756 | What truths does it contain? |
32756 | Who can know what love is except by loving? |
32756 | Whoever met the lover who became so through his intellect? |
32756 | Why have not men reached a decisive answer? |
32756 | Why not? |
32756 | Why then were their utterances accepted? |
32756 | Yes, but when? |
32756 | Yes, but when? |
32756 | [ 3] HOW SHOULD WE PRAY? |
35425 | He thought: Where was there food, food that lived, that would not fight back? |
35425 | Would it suggest an inspiration now? |
31229 | But why should Mr. Bell suppose that the forms that move him are the only ones proper to move others? |
31229 | How far can society affect art, or art society? |
31229 | Was the nineteenth century a disaster or only a failure? |
31229 | What might we have made of machinery and what has machinery made of us? |
31229 | What sort of truths do the majority rally round? 31229 ... Do you read much? 31229 After all, why should they? 31229 Agreed: and how have the moneyed classes in England respected art? 31229 And did not the delightful mother who encouraged him to express himself deserve something better for her son? 31229 And here we would interpose a query-- Was it really necessary to suppress the names? 31229 And is n''t it pretty clear that Marchand would have painted in an altogether different style if Cézanne had never existed? 31229 And now what are we to say ofManon Lescaut"? |
31229 | And was it not in 1667 that England suffered what has been called her greatest humiliation? |
31229 | And what is"Le faux bon"? |
31229 | And, above all, is my vision absolutely sharp and sure? |
31229 | And, unless it be infinitely better, what sense is there in despising Thackeray and extolling Mr. Wells? |
31229 | Are not these the people who were telling us just now that this was no time for art? |
31229 | Are there no trappings, no overtones, nothing but what is essential to express my vision of reality? |
31229 | Are they really talking nonsense when they speak of"works of art,"including under that head pictures, pots, buildings, textiles, etc.? |
31229 | At such moments, can he be less than partial to the man who understood so well the greatness and the dignity of those nameless artists? |
31229 | But can we? |
31229 | But if by Mr. Bennett''s standards we are to give Marivaux his due, what is there left to say about Shakespeare? |
31229 | But what about the ideals? |
31229 | But what about the truth? |
31229 | CARLYLE''S LOVES AND LOVE- LETTERS[8] I[ Sidenote:_ Athenæum May and Oct. 1909_] Are people still interested in the Carlyles? |
31229 | Can the classic distinction between East and West, that venerable mother of trite reflections and bad arguments, be, after all, mutable? |
31229 | Combien en vois ie ordinairement, qui mescognoissent la pauvreté: combien qui desirent la mort, ou qui la passent sans alarme et sans affliction? |
31229 | Do they not feel as much emotion for a picture of a round of beef as for a picture of the Crucifixion, and do they feel less for a Sassanian textile? |
31229 | Does Mr. Davies assert that only pictures and statues can be works of art? |
31229 | Does it ever occur to them that their proper rivals, the men whose rivalry is stimulating and not merely disquieting, are not to be found in London? |
31229 | For us the first question to be asked is:"Is this a fine work of art?" |
31229 | Has any one met a rich man who denied himself a motorcar to keep a genius? |
31229 | Has he merely a brilliant gift for description, helped out and sophisticated by a subtle taste? |
31229 | Have I pushed simplification as far as it will go? |
31229 | Have you forgotten that a son ought to love and honour his father and mother? |
31229 | He is clever enough to pick up some one else''s style with fatal ease; is he not clever enough to diagnose the malady and discover a cure? |
31229 | Heard any ever the like of their impudence, these who have nothing to do with the war, Preaching of bobbins, and beatings, and washing- tubs? |
31229 | His skill and scholarship are amazing, and he seems to have convictions; but what are they? |
31229 | How are these strange, turbulent, individualistic creatures to be fitted into any rational collectivism? |
31229 | How are you to be seriously interested in a woman who has murdered her mother and boiled her father- in- law before the play begins?" |
31229 | How can he be better off who has already attained beatitude? |
31229 | How could Ibsen help being something of a politician? |
31229 | How, then, does it stand? |
31229 | How? |
31229 | IBSEN[2][ Sidenote:_ Athenæum June 1912_] Was it chance made Mr. Ellis Roberts mention Cézanne on the fourth page of a book about Ibsen? |
31229 | If I now contrive to escape the consequences of my own axiom it is thanks to you, My Publisher-- or Publisher''s representative must I say? |
31229 | If private reasons forbade fullness, was it wise to print scraps? |
31229 | If they are not, what characteristic distinguishes the species? |
31229 | Is Mr. Kipling''s thrilling line no more than the statement of a geographical truism? |
31229 | Is he a plastic artist or an extraordinarily gifted statuary? |
31229 | Is he ever plagued with nightmares, I wonder, in which he dreams that outside England no competent amateur could possibly take him seriously? |
31229 | Is it seemly in them, is it prudent even, to revile their own class in Germany for caring as little about art as themselves? |
31229 | Is it, perhaps, only the imitation of one? |
31229 | Is that man expressing what he feels or is he paying out what he thinks he is expected to feel? |
31229 | Is the unchanging East changeable? |
31229 | Is there no voice in your mother''s heart that forbids you to destroy your son''s ideals? |
31229 | It was absurd of him, no doubt, to say,"Am I not fortunate in having something about me that interests most people at first sight in my favour?" |
31229 | Let us ask: Ought Oswald to love and honour Chamberlain Alving? |
31229 | May we hope that young English artists will venture to take theirs in an international league of youth? |
31229 | Mr. Bennett can be as sharp as a special constable with Thackeray: is it as good as"Pendennis"? |
31229 | Nothing in him is more lovable than this passionate hero- worship; and what quality is more lovable or more common in the ordinary man? |
31229 | Now what figure, think you, would a critic cut who besprinkled these writers with such compliments as Mr. Bennett peppers his contemporaries withal? |
31229 | Of Milton and Keats we know something; yet, knowing nothing, should we enjoy their work the less? |
31229 | One new as our new- come affliction, Or an old toil returned with the years? |
31229 | Or are we to assume that he gibbers? |
31229 | Or, rather, are they not all equally sincere? |
31229 | PEACOCK[4] I[ Sidenote:_ Athenæum Feb. 1911_] In the first place, were these plays worth publishing? |
31229 | Pray, Mr. Bennett, how good is this book? |
31229 | That it is a million times better than Milton and knocks spots off Homer? |
31229 | The question is, What will he make of it? |
31229 | This is very pretty, but is it Sophocles?--or Swinburne? |
31229 | Was it the best, or one of the two or three best, comedies of the year? |
31229 | Well, is it of the class of"Evelina"or of"Adolphe,"or of"Consuelo"even? |
31229 | Were not the masterpieces of Attic comedy written in a beleagured State in the throes of a disastrous war? |
31229 | What are the causes of British provincialism? |
31229 | What art thou, O Heavenly One, O Word of the Houses of Gold? |
31229 | What do they say? |
31229 | What else can it stand for? |
31229 | What institution do we starve so abjectly as we starve the National Gallery? |
31229 | What is it, then? |
31229 | What is the meaning of this, Temple? |
31229 | What is the meaning of this? |
31229 | What is the true cause of this hubbub of inconsequent words and contradictory actions? |
31229 | What is this but the shy jauntiness, the elaborate understatement, of something small in the presence of something great? |
31229 | What panegyric does not? |
31229 | What place can be found in Utopia for people who do not work to live, but live to do what they consider their own peculiar piece of work? |
31229 | What remains of Egypt but her monuments? |
31229 | What sacrifices, material, moral or military, have they made? |
31229 | What task, O Affrighter of Evil, what task shall thy people essay? |
31229 | When Byron posed Trelawny posed, and when the one sulked the other sulked; but was any man except Shelley big enough to brook his lordship''s moods? |
31229 | Which is the word, which the gesture, that, springing directly from the depths of one character, penetrates to the depths of another? |
31229 | Who shall say what surprises are too fantastic for his contriving? |
31229 | Why is Oriental art generally superior to European? |
31229 | Why tantalize us? |
31229 | With"Liaisons Dangereuses"? |
31229 | Yet, reading this book, I find that the question that interests me most is:"Why does Clutton Brock tend to overrate William Morris?" |
31229 | You call it"cowardice"to do your plain duty? |
31229 | You will not imagine, surely, that I am putting myself forward as a candidate? |
31229 | _ Aurons- nous changé tout ça? |
31229 | _ Nothing to do with it_, wretch that you are? |
31229 | and no one was expected to inquire"Whither?" |
31229 | de Sévigné, Horace Walpole, Byron, and whom else? |
31229 | do you really expect to unravel a terrible war like a bundle of tow? |
31229 | the poet[ Shelley] was a thorough mormon-- why did he not declare himself and anticipate the sect? |
34417 | ***** Have you thought there could be but a single supreme? |
34417 | And is this all? |
34417 | And that there is no God any more divine than Yourself? |
34417 | Are the motives high and noble, or low and infamous? |
34417 | Dark mother always gliding near with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
34417 | Do you know what it is? |
34417 | Do you understand it? |
34417 | Have you ever read the account of the stage- driver''s funeral? |
34417 | He describes the ideal American citizen-- the one who Says indifferently and alike"How are you, friend?" |
34417 | He is one of Those that look carelessly in the faces of Presidents and Governors, as to say"Who are you?" |
34417 | If our colors are struck and the fighting done? |
34417 | Is death the end? |
34417 | Is it for good or evil? |
34417 | Is rhyme a necessary part of poetry? |
34417 | Is there anything in the wide universe more wonderful than this? |
34417 | The respectable prudes and pedagogues sound the alarm, and cry, or rather screech:"Is this a book for a young person?" |
34417 | This poet has asked of us this question: What do you suppose will satisfy the soul, except to walk free and own no superior? |
34417 | WHAT IS POETRY? |
34417 | What is this dust-- this womb? |
34417 | Which way does the great stream tend? |
34417 | Will the forthgoer be lost, and forever? |
34417 | Would you hear of an old- time sea fight? |
34417 | Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars? |
34417 | must all then amount to but this? |
30207 | I see; but if he treats them all that way, do n''t you think it is rather natural that they should go and hunt up another god to admire? |
30207 | You are? |
30207 | * Is it owing to the superior blessings of the Mormon faith that its followers are more thrifty, and that paupers are few or unknown among them? |
30207 | --not,"Am I benefited by her ecclesiastical bondage and credulity? |
30207 | 4 Jesus saith unto her,_ Woman, what have I to do with thee?_--John ii, 3- 4. |
30207 | 5- 8: 5 And they called unto Lot, and said unto him, Where_ are_ the men which came in to thee this night? |
30207 | And does dod love you? |
30207 | And does you love dod?" |
30207 | And how can they think it is evidence of goodness to believe it? |
30207 | And how does the durability of that bone strike you? |
30207 | And then suppose she has n''t any husband? |
30207 | And why tolerate them coming from it? |
30207 | And, by the way, if you had happened to live in one of those cities, what opinion do you think you would have had of Jehovah? |
30207 | Are you willing to think they are the word of God? |
30207 | As he stood by the font he asked the bishop,"Where are the souls of my heathen ancestors?" |
30207 | Aside from its being dishonest, is it safe? |
30207 | But if she does not complain that the water is bitter, and if her"Amen"is perfectly satisfactory all round, and she be pronounced innocent, what then? |
30207 | But seriously, if it is necessary to believe such stories as that in order to go to heaven, do n''t you think the admission fee is a trifle high? |
30207 | But suppose that faith in a myth is destroyed and another mysticism be not set up in its place, what then? |
30207 | But the angels will ask, What good deeds has he sent before him?" |
30207 | But what else did he tell you in that talk?" |
30207 | But what on earth was man created for? |
30207 | But what shall we say of our president-- Ingersoll? |
30207 | But why are his commands not followed to- day? |
30207 | DID HE TALK? |
30207 | DID HE TALK? |
30207 | Did it ever occur to you that those absurd tales have as much claim to be called the"word of God"as any of the rest of it? |
30207 | Did n''t those ten women belong to David? |
30207 | Did the Lord"reveal"to Moses that he should drink the rest of that holy water and dirt? |
30207 | Did you ever know a pious man do a real mean thing-- that succeeded-- who did not claim that Providence had a finger in it? |
30207 | Do n''t you know that God made those dear little flies, and that he loves them?" |
30207 | Do n''t you think it was kind of him to feed them? |
30207 | Do you believe it? |
30207 | Do you believe it? |
30207 | Do you believe that God told Moses that? |
30207 | Do you believe there is a God who is a thief, a murderer, and a defiler of innocent girls? |
30207 | Do you know anything about it?" |
30207 | Do you know it was settled by vote which manuscripts God did and which he did not write? |
30207 | Do you know who compiled the Bible? |
30207 | Do you think a man who could offer such an indignity to a sorrowing mother has a perfect character, is an ideal God? |
30207 | Do you think it was godlike? |
30207 | Do you think that is a safe doctrine to teach to the criminal classes? |
30207 | Do you think that was kind? |
30207 | Do you think that water would be bitter to the priest? |
30207 | Do you think that, even if he were to cure the child then, he would have done a noble thing? |
30207 | Do you think the world has any farther use for the man who can gravely tell those stories about Samson, for instance, as truth-- as the word of God? |
30207 | Do you think they do honor to the most attenuated intellect? |
30207 | Do you think you would? |
30207 | Do you want your children taught to believe in the purity and honor of such men? |
30207 | Do you want your children taught to worship a God who sanctioned, commanded, and gloried( and usually participated) in their worst crimes? |
30207 | Does it give me unlimited power over her?" |
30207 | Does it not put a premium on crime? |
30207 | Even if Eve did eat that apple, why should_ we_ insist upon having the colic? |
30207 | For the time we will grant this, and respectfully inquire-- what does it prove? |
30207 | For what is a Christian to- day without his hell? |
30207 | Had n''t he a perfect right to shut them up and feed them if he wanted to? |
30207 | Have any of you ever met a saint at the bar? |
30207 | His friend ran to the window and exclaimed,"Are ye kilt, Mike?" |
30207 | His sworn preconceptions warping his discernment, adherence to his sect or party engenders intolerance to the honest convictions of other inquirer? |
30207 | How can people say they believe such nonsense? |
30207 | How many did Moody touch in this city during his revival days? |
30207 | How much longer is one form of society and life to content itself with the morality made for another? |
30207 | How would that work in a court of justice? |
30207 | I am sometimes asked,"What do you propose to give in place of this comforting faith? |
30207 | If he were going to take the trouble to say anything, would it not seem more natural that he should say something important? |
30207 | If religion decided and produced the civilization of a people, what sort of civilization would exist to- day among the Jews? |
30207 | If she fails in that, what wonder that with broken hope comes broken virtue or despair? |
30207 | If she knows and does the will of God so much better than man, why did he not reveal himself to her and place his earthly kingdom in her hands? |
30207 | If she knows more about it, if she understands it all better than men, why does she not occupy the pulpit? |
30207 | If there is a hereafter, could there be a better preparation for it than that? |
30207 | Is he prepared to say that Mohammedanism is superior to Christianity because its followers outdo the Christians in honesty? |
30207 | Is it a debt of gratitude? |
30207 | Is it evidence of a perfect character to accompany a service with an insult? |
30207 | Is she cruel or only sensible? |
30207 | Is the husband in any way reproved for his brutality? |
30207 | Is there trouble in the cabinet?" |
30207 | Now what did David do that for? |
30207 | Now, if God did kill that man for touching the ark to save it from falling, what do you think of him-- as a God? |
30207 | Odd idea, is n''t it? |
30207 | Perhaps he had eaten too much pie and felt cross; and what else were those women for but to be made stand around on such occasions? |
30207 | Pretty slim hold on heaven for most women, is n''t it? |
30207 | SHALL PROGRESS STOP? |
30207 | SHALL PROGRESS STOP? |
30207 | See?" |
30207 | She said,"Is it not horrible, the ignorance and superstition of these poor people? |
30207 | She was standing by the window killing flies, and her mother called her and said,"My child, do n''t you know that is very wicked? |
30207 | Suppose he had not touched it and it had fallen? |
30207 | The questions--''Shall women be allowed to enter colleges?'' |
30207 | They do not ask,"Would_ I_ like to see woman do thus or thus?" |
30207 | Well is that all he said?" |
30207 | Were n''t they his property? |
30207 | What Christian will admit that it is the religion of the Chinese that makes them the most orderly, law- abiding, mob- avoiding people on the globe? |
30207 | What did he know about women anyway? |
30207 | What do you think of a religion that upholds such morals and such justice as that just quoted? |
30207 | What do you think of women supporting the Bible in the face of that as the will of God? |
30207 | What has not woman lost by that silly fable which made her responsible for transgression? |
30207 | What is his intellect for? |
30207 | What is your creed?" |
30207 | What sort of a soul would it be that could have a heaven apart from those it loved? |
30207 | What then? |
30207 | What would you think of a person who coolly thanked a judge who had knowingly allowed the wrong man to be hung? |
30207 | When he dies, people will ask, What property has he left behind him? |
30207 | Which of them can bear the test? |
30207 | Which one of those boys do you think would be the best company for her in the next world? |
30207 | Which will you accept? |
30207 | Which? |
30207 | Who ever heard of a minister being surprised that God did not reveal any of the forms of belief through a woman? |
30207 | Why are not the words, sister, mother, daughter, wife, only names for degradation And dishonor? |
30207 | Why does she not hold the official positions in the Churches? |
30207 | Why has she not received even recognition in our system of religion? |
30207 | Why is his mind one vast interrogation point? |
30207 | Why not accept the miracle of the loaves and fishes on evidence, as readily as the victories of Napoleon? |
30207 | Why not be honest and say it is because they like to live? |
30207 | Why not believe in the Bible as well as in other history? |
30207 | Why not, if you believe in a God at all, give him credit for placing you where he wanted you? |
30207 | Why not, on the testimony of witnesses, believe that Christ turned water into wine, as readily as that a man was hung? |
30207 | Why should any book bind us to sentiments that we would not tolerate if they came from any other source? |
30207 | Why should not Eve have grasped with eagerness the fruit of the tree of knowledge? |
30207 | Why try to bind the human mind by the silly theory that a God requires man to crush out or subject the intellect he has given him? |
30207 | Why will they listen to such nonsense? |
30207 | Why? |
30207 | Will he not learn to cry,''Peace,''to me, when there is no peace? |
30207 | With such a champion, what cause could fail? |
30207 | With such a leader, what should not be achieved? |
30207 | With these before him will a Christian suppose that morals are dependent upon our Bible? |
30207 | Would he have impressed you as a loving Father? |
30207 | Would you like him as a family physician? |
30207 | Would you worship him if he had? |
30207 | You are the jury, what is the verdict? |
30207 | and''Shall they be admitted into the professions?'' |
30207 | but,"Have I a right to keep in ignorance, have I a right to degrade, any human intellect?" |
30207 | but,"Have_ I_ a right to dictate the limit of her efforts or her energy?" |
30207 | but,''Is it true?''" |
16433 | A real fire, Pussy? 16433 About the beads?" |
16433 | About what? |
16433 | Ah,said O- liver,"if I had--""Ai n''t you got any ambition?" |
16433 | Ahead of what? |
16433 | Ai n''t women the limit, Tommy? |
16433 | Ai n''t you goin''to sleep in the bed? |
16433 | All the year round? |
16433 | All what? |
16433 | Ambition for what? |
16433 | Amy,she said,"how soon do you think we can go to Aunt Elizabeth''s?" |
16433 | An emperor against an emperor? |
16433 | And because of what people think, Amy is to starve? |
16433 | And do you like the modern type best? |
16433 | And do you never gallop? |
16433 | And he''s coming? |
16433 | And is n''t she now? |
16433 | And leave the world behind you? |
16433 | And no chaperons? |
16433 | And now may I tell you what my dreams have been for her? 16433 And pretty women?" |
16433 | And what can I do-- what can any woman do? |
16433 | And you do? |
16433 | And you told him that I was here? |
16433 | And you? |
16433 | Anne, how can you? 16433 Anne, how can you?" |
16433 | Anne, if you had married me... do you think...? |
16433 | Anne, why would n''t you kiss me on that last night? |
16433 | Anything the matter? |
16433 | Are n''t you well, Anne? |
16433 | Are you going to spend the precious years ahead of you in the company of cows? |
16433 | Are you going to stay? |
16433 | Are you taking anything for your cough? |
16433 | Are you tired? |
16433 | Aunt Elizabeth''s? 16433 Because of the robins?" |
16433 | Being sorry does n''t help any, does it, Ridgeley? |
16433 | Black men? 16433 Bonaparte?" |
16433 | Brought up on him? |
16433 | But Napoleon, monsieur-- surely he would not fail France? |
16433 | But afterward, Christopher,_ afterward_...? |
16433 | But first will you feed a starving castaway? |
16433 | But how can he? 16433 But now you see it differently, Dulcie?" |
16433 | But we can remedy that, ca n''t we, Amy? 16433 But were any of them killed?" |
16433 | But what of this afternoon, my dear? |
16433 | But why not? |
16433 | But why, Elizabeth? 16433 But why,"was Nancy''s demand,"did you build there?" |
16433 | But you believe they are just my own ideas-- you do n''t believe they are true? |
16433 | But you do n''t agree about Dickens? |
16433 | But you meant it? |
16433 | But, William, on such a day? |
16433 | But, my dear girl, why not? |
16433 | Ca n''t I get you something? |
16433 | Ca n''t I have a new one, Amy? |
16433 | Ca n''t what? |
16433 | Ca n''t you sleep, my dear? |
16433 | Can you come back, please? 16433 Can you mail parcel post packages to the-- Flying Dutchman? |
16433 | Could you think of your mother as having been happy with any one else but your father? |
16433 | Did he? |
16433 | Did they? 16433 Did you think that bolts and bars could keep me from you?" |
16433 | Did you? |
16433 | Did-- Mr. Knox have anything to do with it? |
16433 | Do gentlemen cook in your country? |
16433 | Do n''t you love me, Mary? |
16433 | Do n''t you love-- the baby--? |
16433 | Do n''t you, Elizabeth? |
16433 | Do they want to make a stuffed pig of you? |
16433 | Do you believe that, Jim Crow? |
16433 | Do you go alone? |
16433 | Do you know it? |
16433 | Do you know, I have never been to Europe? 16433 Do you know,"he said,"that you have the sweetest way of putting things? |
16433 | Do you like it? |
16433 | Do you mean it? |
16433 | Do you mean that I am to go-- alone? |
16433 | Do you mean to say,Anthony demanded,"that you accepted a gift like that from a man you did n''t know?" |
16433 | Do you mind my coming out? |
16433 | Do you remember my freckles and red hair? |
16433 | Do you think I shall paint peacocks and parrots for the rest of my life, Jim Crow? |
16433 | Do you think he''d come-- if we did? 16433 Do you think she is perfectly well?" |
16433 | Do you want to be found? |
16433 | Do you wonder that she has n''t time to warm my slippers? |
16433 | Does he always stare like that? |
16433 | Does she know you''re married? |
16433 | Does she love him? |
16433 | Does she warm yours? |
16433 | Does-- your wife make that now? |
16433 | Done what? |
16433 | For mademoiselle? |
16433 | For what? |
16433 | From the roof? |
16433 | Funny thing, was n''t it, for a man to make a will like that? |
16433 | Get what? |
16433 | Gone? |
16433 | Gone? |
16433 | Greatheart? |
16433 | Had you quarreled or anything? |
16433 | Has he done anything? |
16433 | Have I ever seen him? |
16433 | Have him? |
16433 | Have n''t you any pride, Anne? |
16433 | Have n''t you made money enough? |
16433 | He did? 16433 He?" |
16433 | Hello,he called,"did you want me?" |
16433 | Her baby-- Cecily''s--"_ Then you''re a grandmother_? |
16433 | Her eyes? |
16433 | Here? |
16433 | How are the kittens? |
16433 | How can I tell? |
16433 | How could he know about the gods? |
16433 | How could you think it, Anne? 16433 How did it happen?" |
16433 | How did she happen to be up there alone? |
16433 | How did you know it was-- my husband? |
16433 | How do you know I am strong? |
16433 | How do you know that everything is ahead? |
16433 | How do you know? |
16433 | How do you mean''begin,''Mary? |
16433 | How is the island? |
16433 | How long do they live? |
16433 | How long was he here? |
16433 | How''d he get that name-- O- liver? |
16433 | How? |
16433 | How? |
16433 | I am going so early in the morning,he said,"will you give me just one little minute now?" |
16433 | I am not-- dependable--"How old are you? |
16433 | I could n''t call him Crusoe, could I? |
16433 | I should never say a thing like that to-- Billy--"What would you say? |
16433 | I think it is a shame to tell Pussy such--"Corking things? |
16433 | I wonder what she thinks of you? |
16433 | I''m tired of it--"Finish it, and then you''ll be free--"Shall I ever be free? |
16433 | I''ve another name-- but-- if people around here question you-- you wo n''t tell them, will you, that I am here--? |
16433 | I-- I do n''t know anything about him, do I, Elizabeth--? 16433 If Fluffy Ruffles and old St. Nick come by and find you up they wo n''t stop--""Wo n''t they?" |
16433 | If I let him? |
16433 | If anything should happen to you-- if anything should happen-- I should-- I should-- oh, why will women ask things like that--? |
16433 | If it is deadened, how do you know it is beauty? |
16433 | If she did, what then? 16433 In the hills? |
16433 | In what way? |
16433 | Is Dick McDonald coming to- night? |
16433 | Is he very ill? |
16433 | Is it silly to say that I love you, Anne? |
16433 | Is it true? 16433 Is n''t he a darling, Winifred?" |
16433 | Is n''t it a lovely world? |
16433 | Is n''t it beautiful, Billy? 16433 Is n''t it heavenly to be alone, Jim Crow?" |
16433 | Is n''t it queer that he goes to church and sings hymns? |
16433 | Is she like you? |
16433 | Is the man a dressmaker? |
16433 | Is work the best? |
16433 | It was a dreadful thing to say, was n''t it? 16433 Jimmie,"she said, and her rich voice above the tumult was clear as a bell,"do you know how great you are?" |
16433 | Leeks and lettuce? 16433 Leeks and lettuce?" |
16433 | Like bees round a honey pot? 16433 Like it?" |
16433 | Like you--"And St. Nicholas said,''Will you keep your pink slippers clean and your nice pink frock clean if I give you to a poor little girl?'' 16433 Look here, why ca n''t you and your sisters come out to my farm?" |
16433 | Marry? 16433 May I have three?" |
16433 | May I leave it open? |
16433 | May I show you? |
16433 | May I walk a little way with you? 16433 Mother-- are you going to marry him?" |
16433 | Mr. Tony, did you get the candle? |
16433 | Murray, did you ever eat tripe? |
16433 | Must you really go? |
16433 | My cigarette? |
16433 | My dear,he said,"you heard?" |
16433 | My good people-- if she would dine with us--? |
16433 | My grandfather had the bed sawed to his own length,he explained;"did you ever hear the story?" |
16433 | My son which was dead is alive again? |
16433 | Never--"Why not? |
16433 | No? 16433 Not even with me?" |
16433 | Of what? |
16433 | Oh, Jim Crow, why did God let my poor Peer die? |
16433 | Oh, do you like it? |
16433 | Oh, do you mean the others in the car? |
16433 | Oh, how can you-- when he loves you? |
16433 | Oh, mother, do n''t you like Dick? |
16433 | Oh, what would I do without you, Jim Crow? |
16433 | On Dick? |
16433 | On what? |
16433 | Opportunity for what? |
16433 | Perhaps I shall regret it-- but oh, uncle, ca n''t I have for this one evening the joy of his presence? 16433 Perry?" |
16433 | Really? |
16433 | Ridgeley, did you write it because I was-- afraid? |
16433 | Robinson Crusoe did n''t have stores, did he? 16433 Sha n''t I?" |
16433 | Shades of Jefferson!--why should they? |
16433 | Shall I ever be free? 16433 She belongs to the island?" |
16433 | So soon? 16433 So that''s it, is it? |
16433 | So you are going to church? 16433 So your young viking did n''t stay, Elizabeth?" |
16433 | Spoil what? |
16433 | Talk what out? |
16433 | That he cares? |
16433 | That little redhead? |
16433 | The Wetherells? |
16433 | The baby--? |
16433 | The child is awfully ill."Are you afraid? 16433 The end of it?" |
16433 | The pills man? 16433 The truth?" |
16433 | Then I am not to sleep in the canopy bed? |
16433 | Then I may sleep in the canopy bed? |
16433 | Then why should he talk of Nancy''s clothes? |
16433 | Then, may we do it, Milly? |
16433 | There''s plenty of time---"Plenty of time for what? |
16433 | They are rather great dears, are n''t they? |
16433 | They''s a man been hangin''round this mawnin'',he complained,"an''a dawg--""What kind of man, William?" |
16433 | To leave here? 16433 To leave here?" |
16433 | To you? |
16433 | To- day? |
16433 | Up a hill? |
16433 | Was it a Christmas tree? |
16433 | We have plenty-- why should n''t we give? |
16433 | We know each other too well to have to drag in a lot of people, do n''t we? 16433 Well, are you happy?" |
16433 | Well, he must n''t be wasting time,said Elise,"must he? |
16433 | Well, why not? 16433 Well, will you be any happier?" |
16433 | Well-- guardian angels-- do you believe in them? |
16433 | Well? |
16433 | Were the things in your car? |
16433 | Were there many kiddies? |
16433 | Were you afraid? |
16433 | What a heavenly place,Christopher said, toward the end of dinner;"how did you happen to find it?" |
16433 | What am I? |
16433 | What brought you to life? |
16433 | What could I give that would compare with these? |
16433 | What did he say? |
16433 | What do Mills and I care for people? 16433 What do you expect to do, my dear?" |
16433 | What do you know about Lee? |
16433 | What do you mean? |
16433 | What do you mean? |
16433 | What do you think of it? |
16433 | What do you think? |
16433 | What does he mean by''lift her up,''Nannie? |
16433 | What does it mean, Elizabeth? |
16433 | What girl? |
16433 | What had Billy to do with it? |
16433 | What happened to the rest--? |
16433 | What has happened? |
16433 | What is different? |
16433 | What makes you ask that, Mary? |
16433 | What makes you? |
16433 | What solution? |
16433 | What things? 16433 What things?" |
16433 | What things? |
16433 | What things? |
16433 | What would you like to do? |
16433 | What''s a Buddha? |
16433 | What''s the matter with her? |
16433 | What''s the matter with him? |
16433 | What''s the matter? |
16433 | What? |
16433 | What? |
16433 | What? |
16433 | When are you going to let me see-- the baby--? |
16433 | When did he tell you that? |
16433 | When will it be? |
16433 | Where did you get them, Nannie? |
16433 | Where''s Anne? |
16433 | Who ever heard of a corking tree? |
16433 | Who is Anthony? |
16433 | Who is Murray? |
16433 | Who knows? 16433 Who knows? |
16433 | Who knows? 16433 Who knows?" |
16433 | Who said I had anything to do with it? |
16433 | Who said I was going to marry him? |
16433 | Who''s coming at five? |
16433 | Who''s the girl? |
16433 | Why are you going now? |
16433 | Why are you sending me alone, Jim Crow? |
16433 | Why ca n''t I have butter on my bread? |
16433 | Why did n''t he ask me himself? |
16433 | Why did n''t you go? |
16433 | Why did n''t you let Charlotte go, Ethel? |
16433 | Why do n''t you have sails then,Nancy challenged him,"instead of steam?" |
16433 | Why do n''t you like Dickens, Murray? |
16433 | Why do n''t you marry one of them, Murray? |
16433 | Why do you always harp on it? |
16433 | Why do you deaden your beauty with dull colors? |
16433 | Why fifteen? |
16433 | Why have n''t you shown it to me? |
16433 | Why not? 16433 Why not? |
16433 | Why not? 16433 Why not? |
16433 | Why not? 16433 Why not?" |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why not? |
16433 | Why queer? 16433 Why should it drive you on?" |
16433 | Why should n''t I be here? |
16433 | Why should one think about such things-- when there is so much else in the world? |
16433 | Why should she like Dicky best? |
16433 | Why should we care what the world would say? |
16433 | Why should we care? 16433 Why should you care if your hair gets wet? |
16433 | Why three, monsieur? |
16433 | Why would n''t they want you? |
16433 | Why, dearest? |
16433 | Why? |
16433 | Why? |
16433 | Why? |
16433 | Why? |
16433 | Why? |
16433 | Will he? 16433 Will you ever grow old, O- liver?" |
16433 | William Watters? |
16433 | Worth what? |
16433 | Would it be happiness? |
16433 | Would it be throwing yourself away to marry Dick? |
16433 | Would n''t he, Elizabeth? 16433 Would n''t it be-- corking-- to see a Fluffy Ruffles doll-- a- walking up the street?" |
16433 | Would n''t you? |
16433 | Would you be, Billy? |
16433 | Would you like that-- to be a lady of leisure? |
16433 | Yet you have asked him to come again to- night? |
16433 | You are sure she carried a cloak? |
16433 | You are sure you are making no mistake, Max? |
16433 | You believe that, do n''t you? |
16433 | You dispense charity? |
16433 | You do n''t mind, do you? |
16433 | You hate them? 16433 You have n''t time to think of it either,"she told them;"have you, men of Tinkersfield?" |
16433 | You have stolen your-- nest--"Why should n''t I steal it? 16433 You like it? |
16433 | You liked it? |
16433 | You loved him too? |
16433 | You mean that it does n''t seem real? |
16433 | You take them down? |
16433 | You think he would n''t like it? |
16433 | You will let me do it? |
16433 | You''ve seen her,he said,"_ you''ve seen her_--?" |
16433 | You? |
16433 | Your viking was singing as we passed his boat--"Singing? |
16433 | ***** When I told Nancy that Anthony had been invited, she demanded,"How did Olaf Thoresen know about him?" |
16433 | After a pause, the Madonna- creature asked,"Who is Valentine Landry?" |
16433 | After all, Aunt Cilla, we are what we are fundamentally, and we Puritans ca n''t get away from our consciences, can we?" |
16433 | After that there was a silence, out of which Nannie asked:"Does your head ache, Mary?" |
16433 | And Jane, dreaming, asked herself"Why?" |
16433 | And anyhow, what can you expect of a man like that?" |
16433 | And at last it said to St. Nicholas,''Oh, dear St. Nick, I want to find a little girl who has n''t any doll--''""Like me?" |
16433 | And at last she said, her face softened,"You silly little thing, what do you want me to do?" |
16433 | And had n''t Browning said something like that--"_Who knows but the world may end to- night_?" |
16433 | And he said:"Dad, will you kill the fatted calf?" |
16433 | And if now I want to have my little fling, why not? |
16433 | And if she was Maxwell''s advocate how could she be Murray''s? |
16433 | And then, immediately:"You live here? |
16433 | And there was n''t any particular reason why he should tell the rest of you, was there? |
16433 | And was it small? |
16433 | And we were never alone--""What had you said to make him-- like that?" |
16433 | And what do you think I heard her say? |
16433 | And why begin? |
16433 | And would he meet her on the corner under the street lamp that night when she came home from the office? |
16433 | And you are going to church?" |
16433 | Anne, bending over her, said,"Why, Amy, are you sick?" |
16433 | Anne, do you remember what you said... this morning? |
16433 | Anne... Anne, do you love me enough to do it?" |
16433 | Anthony, breaking in, demanded,"Did he stare at Nancy?" |
16433 | Anthony, forcing a smile, asked,"Where did you get it, Nan?" |
16433 | Are n''t you well?" |
16433 | Are they like hers?" |
16433 | Are you afraid?" |
16433 | Are you sure about her heart?" |
16433 | Ask Marion if she remembers the days when we read Stevenson together in the garden? |
16433 | Before they sold the rabbits the old people had made one condition:"If we may have a bit for mademoiselle--?" |
16433 | Billy went down with him, and when he came back we stood looking into the fire, and he said,"You did n''t tell him?" |
16433 | But I''m not"Ollie"from this time on, understand?'' |
16433 | But because I could n''t be an every- day wife--""What kind of wife did you want to be?" |
16433 | But could any man make such demands upon her? |
16433 | But how will Mary like that?" |
16433 | But there''s nothing really the matter, is there?" |
16433 | But to get her away-- how? |
16433 | But what did it matter? |
16433 | But which one of us knows the Truth? |
16433 | But you had to prove it to yourself?" |
16433 | But you must n''t blame him, Tommy, and now that we both know, everything is all right, is n''t it?" |
16433 | But-- have you told Max?" |
16433 | Ca n''t you see how the crowd draws to you on Saturday nights?" |
16433 | Can you grasp the meaning of that to me?--the heritage of suppressed longings? |
16433 | Could he ever have written it if Elise had not kept him at it? |
16433 | Could this be Petronella-- confident, imperious, the daughter of a confident and imperious race? |
16433 | Did I tell you old dears that I am going to write a play?" |
16433 | Did n''t he? |
16433 | Did you hear them shout, Elise?" |
16433 | Did you see how they had shrunk since I last saw them-- and the veins in their hands-- and the skull showing through his forehead?" |
16433 | Do great souls find time for such small business? |
16433 | Do you mean that I am-- going to die, Ridgeley?" |
16433 | Do you mind if I cry a little, you very dear?" |
16433 | Do you really and truly think he would?" |
16433 | Do you remember the place you always talked about-- up in the hills?" |
16433 | Do you see what I mean? |
16433 | Do you swim? |
16433 | Does n''t that sound a little-- pushing?" |
16433 | From somewhere in the darkness went up the words of an evil chant: What''s the matter with O- liver, O- liver, White- livered O- liver? |
16433 | Had the time not come for a nation to seek its leader in the golden West? |
16433 | He did not answer at once, then he said, abruptly,"Anne, how did it happen that you and Ridgeley drifted apart?" |
16433 | He heard it, too;"Who in the dickens?" |
16433 | He just eats and drinks?" |
16433 | He knew that it was not all lovely, that somewhere there were lean and hungry kittens and lean and hungry folks-- but why remind her at such a moment? |
16433 | He left to get it, and Nancy said to me,"Ducky, will you pinch me?" |
16433 | He took refuge in the question,"But who is coming at five?" |
16433 | He wanted to build a house-- and have me warm-- his slippers--""And so you quarreled?" |
16433 | He was silent for a moment, and then he said:"Would you have time to read my book to- night?" |
16433 | He wondered as he went home-- what storm? |
16433 | He-- he will go sailing on-- alone--""My dear, how do you know?" |
16433 | How could I... with all the facts that men like me have to deal with? |
16433 | How could he know that the change was one of desperation? |
16433 | How did it ever happen?" |
16433 | How did it happen? |
16433 | How many of you have made Tillotson your father confessor? |
16433 | How many years? |
16433 | How''s that?" |
16433 | I always feel like calling up to him when I go there,''Oh, Anne, Sister Anne, do you see anybody coming?''" |
16433 | I feel like the old woman in the nursery rhyme,''Alack- a- daisy, do this be I?''" |
16433 | I have lost-- my wife--""Dead?" |
16433 | I want it in the window-- to shine out--""To shine out-- why?" |
16433 | I wonder what he meant, Christopher? |
16433 | I''d love to hear a kettle sing like that, Murray; would n''t you?" |
16433 | If he left her now, how could she stand it-- the days with no one but Jeanette Ware, and the soul- shaking knowledge of what was ahead? |
16433 | In Nantucket?" |
16433 | In the garden he asked,"Are you going to kiss me good- bye?" |
16433 | Is anybody? |
16433 | Is he in love with her?" |
16433 | Is it true?" |
16433 | Is there anything like it in the whole wide world? |
16433 | It was Aunt Elizabeth who said in her commanding voice:"What are you talking about, Anne?" |
16433 | It was n''t a thing to keep, was it?" |
16433 | It was on a morning following one of these struggles that Cissy said to her daughter, wearily,"I ca n''t escape it--""Escape what?" |
16433 | Jane, will you believe this-- that what I may be hereafter will be because of you? |
16433 | Jimmie''s rather wonderful, is n''t he?" |
16433 | Marry whom?" |
16433 | Mary did not argue, but when a little later Nannie told of her broken engagement, Mary said sharply:"But, Nannie-- why?" |
16433 | Mary lay for a long time with her hand over her eyes; then she said:"If you do n''t marry Dick, what about your future, Nannie?" |
16433 | Maxwell, noting her paleness, demanded,"What''s the matter? |
16433 | Me? |
16433 | Mills grew tragic:"Oh, my beloved, have you come too late?" |
16433 | Milly, who was resting her tired young body in a big rocker with the baby in her arms, asked:"Can we put it in a bottle or stand it in a cup? |
16433 | Nancy and Anthony-- freedom and self- confidence-- why should I try to match their ideals with my own of yesterday? |
16433 | Now and then he would laugh a little, and say, under his breath:"How did I ever write it? |
16433 | Oh, why not--? |
16433 | Or express things to-- to Odin?" |
16433 | Or have they? |
16433 | Or was it Randolph? |
16433 | Or was it-- pork?" |
16433 | PETRONELLA"If you loved a man, and knew that he loved you, and he would n''t ask you to marry him, what would you do?" |
16433 | Pussy, economically anxious, asked,"Can we eat the salt afterward?" |
16433 | Ridgeley, you''ll go too?" |
16433 | Searching for words which might comfort her, might clear away her doubts, might bring hope to her heart? |
16433 | Shall I ever know? |
16433 | Shall I show you the picture of it?" |
16433 | She bent and read.... Oh, was this the way he had spent the hours of the night? |
16433 | She came back at him with a question:"What have you done?" |
16433 | She drew a quivering breath--"It is n''t quite fair-- is it?" |
16433 | She had no answer for that, and presently he said,"Are you warm enough?" |
16433 | She looked at it, and asked,"When did it come?" |
16433 | She looked at me sharply, and then she laid her hand over mine:"Are you lonely, my dear?" |
16433 | She spoke of it afterward,"Does he always stare like that?" |
16433 | She started to leave him as she said it, but he held her with a question:"Shall you sit up all night?" |
16433 | She turned you down, Tommy?" |
16433 | She was glowing with gratitude, and Maxwell was asking insistently,"Wo n''t you, Anne?" |
16433 | Some day, when she is old, will she walk up the street and be sorry to find strangers in the house? |
16433 | That wo n''t be breaking your promise, will it?" |
16433 | That you were going to pack the days full? |
16433 | The Admiral, arriving early, demanded:"My dear, what is this? |
16433 | The Japanese, for example--""Why should civilization advance? |
16433 | The door opened and a voice said,"Oh, if you are eating supper, may I have some?" |
16433 | The voices were distinct as she stood in the library, and Christopher''s words came to her,"What''s the matter with Anne?" |
16433 | Then she said:"What are you doing here, Tommy?" |
16433 | Then the quick voice said:"Will you tell your mistress that I shall wait?" |
16433 | Then to me, in English:"Do you see it?" |
16433 | Then you''ll come?" |
16433 | Then, unsteadily:"Why should you want that?" |
16433 | Then, very low,"Why do you-- make it hard for me?" |
16433 | There was a movement inside, and then Mazie Wetherell asked softly:"Who''s there?" |
16433 | There was a silence out of which I said:"Did you ask her to warm your slippers?" |
16433 | There was n''t any particular reason why he should tell Tillotson?" |
16433 | They had single beds and it was in the middle of the night that Mrs. Ashburner said:"Are you awake, Nannie?" |
16433 | Tony?" |
16433 | Was Christopher right--"You''ll have more happiness in a few months than some people in a lifetime?" |
16433 | Was it any wonder that Jane, talking to Tommy the next morning about O- liver, felt her pulses pounding, her cheeks burning? |
16433 | We have n''t been able to get a doctor-- will you get one for us?" |
16433 | Were the guardian angels driven out...? |
16433 | What are you going to do about her?" |
16433 | What earthly difference would it make? |
16433 | What had he ever done to prove that he''d make good? |
16433 | What made you change your mind?" |
16433 | What more, he would ask, could the gods give? |
16433 | What would people think?" |
16433 | What''s he going to do when he''s old?" |
16433 | When he had her safely beside him in his big car he asked,"What made you run away from me in Chicago?" |
16433 | When he told her good- bye he asked a question:"Are you happy?" |
16433 | When she had gone, Olaf said to me, abruptly,"Why does she wear gray?" |
16433 | When will you come to me, Jane?" |
16433 | Where did you get it?" |
16433 | Who knows that he will be alive to- morrow? |
16433 | Who knows? |
16433 | Who was Lee anyhow? |
16433 | Why do n''t you get married and try it out?" |
16433 | Why not?" |
16433 | Why not?" |
16433 | Why should he go up- town and up- town, and take all the things to children who have more than they want?" |
16433 | Why should n''t he come here? |
16433 | Why should we care?" |
16433 | Why shout it from the housetops?" |
16433 | Why wo n''t you take her, Dunbar? |
16433 | Why worry? |
16433 | Why, Anne?" |
16433 | Why?" |
16433 | Will you come?" |
16433 | Will you say''warm''and''cold''to me? |
16433 | Will you-- will you-- show me-- how?" |
16433 | Will you? |
16433 | Would Christopher give her all that she had hoped of Ridgeley? |
16433 | Would it move her, as it had moved him when he reread it? |
16433 | Yet I sometimes wonder-- will the ship which carried her away ever sail back into the harbor? |
16433 | Yet how can he know? |
16433 | You believe that, do n''t you?" |
16433 | You did n''t dream, did you, that I was pale because I had n''t had enough to eat? |
16433 | You see-- I''ve promised--""That you would n''t tell me?" |
16433 | You wo n''t mind, mother?" |
16433 | You''ll let me do it, wo n''t you? |
16433 | _''What you think is evil-- cannot be evil''?_ Do you think he meant-- Death?" |
16433 | _''What you think is evil-- cannot be evil''?_ Do you think he meant-- Death?" |
34071 | If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen? |
34071 | If it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France? |
34071 | No government without the consent of the governed, eh? 34071 And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was he doing to save her? 34071 And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate-- while the_ Faubourg St. Germain_"stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his brand- new aristocracy? |
34071 | And then what did it mean to Frenchmen to be suddenly lifted to dazzling ascendancy in Europe? |
34071 | And where was"His Majesty"while this work was being done? |
34071 | And while France was thus weaving her future, what were the other nations doing? |
34071 | Are we sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years,_ without_ our consent?" |
34071 | Business suspended, private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life, treasure, all eagerly given-- for what? |
34071 | But how could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread? |
34071 | But may one not suspect anything of a woman capable of a St. Bartholomew? |
34071 | But what availed it for Abelard to lead an intellectual revolt against corrupted beliefs in the North, or the Albigenses a spiritual one in the South? |
34071 | But what could he do? |
34071 | But what if he ceased to be ornamental? |
34071 | But where was his knighthood, where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest against her fate? |
34071 | But, was there not equal opportunity for every man in the Empire? |
34071 | Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly? |
34071 | Charles abandoned hope; how could he struggle against such a combination? |
34071 | Could any scales weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been endured? |
34071 | Could the upper ranks fall lower than this? |
34071 | Did Madame du Barri think of it, did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged shrieking and struggling to the guillotine? |
34071 | Did she hasten them? |
34071 | Did she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his heads? |
34071 | Did they recall this time? |
34071 | Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it? |
34071 | Every soldier''s knapsack, might it not hold a Marshal''s baton? |
34071 | Had not monarchy given them life and hope? |
34071 | Had not the kingdom reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour? |
34071 | Had she been, not set free, but simply annexed to the realm of the Barbarian across the Rhine? |
34071 | Had she exchanged one servitude for another? |
34071 | How was it with Catharine? |
34071 | How would a barefooted, rope- girdled monk, however inspired and eloquent, fare to- day in New York, or London, or Paris? |
34071 | Is it strange, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled, that Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages? |
34071 | Now, Marie would be Queen, and who so natural advisers as her uncles of the house of"Lorraine"? |
34071 | Of all miracles, is not this the greatest? |
34071 | THE EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE A BRIEF HISTORICAL SKETCH OF FRANCE BY MARY PARMELE_ Author of"Evolution of Empire Series, Germany;""Who? |
34071 | That thrones, empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before his name? |
34071 | Was not the Emperor himself a living illustration of what a man from the people might become? |
34071 | Was this not an embodiment of their dreams? |
34071 | Was this the equality they expected when they cried"Down with the Aristocrats"? |
34071 | What sort of a ruler would he be-- this dark, mysterious, unmagnetic man? |
34071 | What would they do with it? |
34071 | What? |
34071 | When an Assembly is at war with the President because it desires to restrict the suffrage, and he to make it universal, can any one doubt the result? |
34071 | When has our consent been asked, the consent of twenty- five million people? |
34071 | When? |
34071 | Where were the pale- faced, determined patriots who sat in the"National Assembly"? |
34071 | Who could be good, with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with Catharine de Medici as preceptress? |
34071 | Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the most regenerative force the world had ever known? |
34071 | Why had Henry of Navarre been spared? |
34071 | Why should the simple- hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see: that victory or failure were alike full of peril for France? |
34071 | the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what miracle could he produce the other? |
32775 | About how to deal with the natives? |
32775 | About the sky- fleet? 32775 And suppose they chose not to go?" |
32775 | And why is the dirt so_ red_ right here? |
32775 | And you? |
32775 | And yours, Meikl? |
32775 | Any of your population understand the mechanisms? |
32775 | Are n''t you getting anything? |
32775 | Are you an analyst or a dramatist, Meikl? |
32775 | But what of the welcome we have made for our brethren in the feast- glades? |
32775 | But why? 32775 Can you revive the devices that speak across space?" |
32775 | Deserter troubles? |
32775 | Found any of them? |
32775 | Have the Pedaga nothing to do but wait on the Geoark to make up its mind? |
32775 | Have you any further clarifications to make, Meikl? |
32775 | Have you anything else to say? |
32775 | He''ll need it now, wo n''t he, Analyst? |
32775 | How can''death''be hurled? |
32775 | How could it be otherwise? 32775 How much notice?" |
32775 | How? 32775 How?" |
32775 | Is it strange that you and I should have two brains? 32775 Is my presence at this meeting still imperative, sir?" |
32775 | Learning the game, you mean? |
32775 | Meikl, why will you tell us nothing of space-- how you''ve lived since the Exodus? |
32775 | My death- allegiance to the ship- people takes precedence? 32775 Now it''s come to this, has it?" |
32775 | Now we are old and withered, Meikl? |
32775 | Our brothers from the Exodus? 32775 So?" |
32775 | That constitutes your entire opinion? |
32775 | The Geoark? 32775 Was it settled?" |
32775 | We were the mother- culture, Meikl? |
32775 | We''ll wake it up, wo n''t we? |
32775 | Well, Letha? |
32775 | Well, Meikl? 32775 What are the chances of utilizing native labor?" |
32775 | What are the metal tubes that point from the front and the sides of the ships, Meikl? |
32775 | What did they want, Meikl? |
32775 | What do you think they''ll do? |
32775 | What is it you wish to know? |
32775 | What makes you think we wo n''t? |
32775 | What patterns do you mean? |
32775 | What, the kult''laenger lines? |
32775 | Where are they going? |
32775 | Where were you born, Wingman? |
32775 | Why will you never return to your home? |
32775 | Will you? |
32775 | Yes, Meikl? 32775 You belong to another, Letha?" |
32775 | You know what it is for? |
32775 | You mean the telepathic experiments with infants? 32775 You think he has the genemnemon, Marrita?" |
32775 | You want to_ infect_ them, Thaüle? |
32775 | You wonder what it''s like, Evon? |
32775 | Your woman, Earthling? |
32775 | _ And what will ye leave to your ain mither dear, Edward, Edward? 32775 _ And whatten penance will we dree for that, Edward, Edward? |
32775 | _ Me?_ What_ are_ you thinking of, Letha? |
32775 | _ Me?_ What_ are_ you thinking of, Letha? |
32775 | _ Now_ do you know? |
32775 | _ Two_ Geoarks? 32775 A second childhood? 32775 And we are the barbarians, eh? |
32775 | And what will ye leave to your ain mither dear, My dear son, now tell me, O?" |
32775 | And who knows what to say?" |
32775 | And you have accused me for being a carrier of the war plague, eh?" |
32775 | Are n''t they worth considering, sir?" |
32775 | Are you going back?" |
32775 | Brought back the old seeds of hate?" |
32775 | But there''s nothing about''brethren''in the tactical handbooks, is there, Baron?" |
32775 | But what of her inhabitants? |
32775 | But why not on Mars? |
32775 | HAVE YOU FUELING FACILITIES FOR 720 SHIPS OF THOR- NINE CLASS? |
32775 | Had they no resistance at all to exploitation, or any concept for it? |
32775 | Have you watched our people?" |
32775 | If there was a genemnemon, I''d remember where he buried it, would n''t I?" |
32775 | If you people''d stop the mystical gibberish, and deal in facts....""Do you regard parent- child rapport as a fact?" |
32775 | Inflicted them with conflict? |
32775 | Is that what we''ve done? |
32775 | Is this agreed?" |
32775 | Last night, when I saw them first, it was like looking at something I expected to happen... or... or....""Something familiar?" |
32775 | No further reasons?--in terms of danger to ourselves?" |
32775 | Or were you aware that I have one too?" |
32775 | See? |
32775 | See?" |
32775 | Shall I go back?" |
32775 | The coming of the sky- fleet might be a cultural coitus, but could there be conception? |
32775 | The voice of the child:"See the pretty birdlights? |
32775 | Was she really that blind? |
32775 | Was there a fourth phase?--a final perpetual youth that would never reach another puberty? |
32775 | Were all of them? |
32775 | What are you doing in here?" |
32775 | What else could they do?" |
32775 | What''s that to do with it?" |
32775 | Whatten penance will ye dree for that? |
32775 | Where are your women and children?" |
32775 | Why did they_ stop_ being willing?" |
32775 | Why does your brand sae drop wi''blude, And why sae sad gang ye, O?" |
32775 | Why must it be Earth?" |
32775 | Why should they cooperate with ours?" |
30087 | And what did you see at the fair? |
30087 | Aw, can''ee? 30087 But is n''t he ugly? |
30087 | But what did I do? 30087 But where is he?" |
30087 | Can I help''ee? |
30087 | Care I for the thews and sinews of a man? |
30087 | Do you see the Lamp? |
30087 | Flowers bean''t no use on; such trumpery as that; what do''ee want a- messing about arter thaay? 30087 Gone-- wur?" |
30087 | Has anyone ever been able to write with free and genuine appreciation of even the later novels? |
30087 | Has he sent anything? 30087 Have n''t I told you how to cut bread twenty times? |
30087 | How can you eat such a quantity of salt?) |
30087 | How dare you say such a thing? 30087 How dare you speak of your grandfather like that? |
30087 | How ever could I do such a stupid thing? |
30087 | How many voters now? |
30087 | Indoors-- at least-- I think-- no----"Have n''t you got no sewing? 30087 Is it not full of digressions? |
30087 | Is it not noble? |
30087 | Is n''t he ugly? |
30087 | Is n''t he ugly? |
30087 | Is your father coming? |
30087 | It be, bean''t it? |
30087 | Only think, to open in all this wind, and so cold-- isn''t it beautiful? 30087 Perhaps you would like to dine with me?" |
30087 | Perhaps you''d have a seat? |
30087 | Really I should have liked you to have seen the house-- will you sit down a moment? 30087 Richard?" |
30087 | Shall you be going presently? |
30087 | Should you like a little more? |
30087 | Thought there was nothing but lies and rubbish in them, according to you? |
30087 | Thought you despised the papers? |
30087 | Want any wood for the fire-- or anything? |
30087 | Well, and when am I going to have the boots? |
30087 | Well, when will he be in? |
30087 | What bean''t you going to yet( eat) up that there juicy bit, you? |
30087 | What do other people go for? |
30087 | What has he been talking to you about? |
30087 | What''s the use of his going out to work for half an hour? |
30087 | Whatever_ are_ you going to do now? |
30087 | When_ are_ they going to be finished? |
30087 | Where be this yer flower? |
30087 | Where is it? 30087 Where is your mother?" |
30087 | Wherefore come ye not to court? 30087 Who have you brought in with you now? |
30087 | Why ca n''t you do like other people? 30087 Why ca n''t you eat your cheese at the table, like other people?" |
30087 | Why ever could n''t you pass it on the tray? |
30087 | Why would n''t thaay a''done for he as well as for we? |
30087 | Will you get us some ale? |
30087 | You going, m''m? 30087 You had plenty of fun, did n''t you?" |
30087 | You''re not gone, then? |
30087 | Your family do n''t drink, then, I suppose? |
30087 | A bold and adventurous man in his youth, why did he gossip at the stile now in his full and prime of manhood? |
30087 | A robin came into the court, and perching on the edge of a tub, fluttered his wings, cried"Check, check,""Anything for me this morning?" |
30087 | And if this is so, how can the book be so fine an achievement?" |
30087 | And what does he Do, when he''s out of Sight? |
30087 | Are n''t they_ all_ ugly? |
30087 | Are not these ghastly figures? |
30087 | At last a man cured me; and how do you think he did it?" |
30087 | Awful this, was it not? |
30087 | Because extremes meet? |
30087 | Because the boys bawl do you suppose they are happy? |
30087 | But Iden is a personal portrait, the reader may object, Well, what about Uncle Toby? |
30087 | But the"mouse,"--what was the"mouse?" |
30087 | But what caused the most"wonderment"was the planting of the horse- chestnuts in the corner of the meadow? |
30087 | But what is a novel? |
30087 | But you may ask, how do_ you_ know, you''re not a doctor, you''re a mere story- spinner, you''re no authority? |
30087 | Ca n''t you help her? |
30087 | Call they swede tops? |
30087 | Could any blundering Sultan in the fatalistic East have put things together for them with more utter contempt of fitness? |
30087 | Could anything be more nauseous? |
30087 | Did ever anyone have a beautiful idea or feeling without being repulsed? |
30087 | Did he not? |
30087 | Did not Benvenuto design fortifications? |
30087 | Did not Michael Angelo build St. Peter''s at Rome? |
30087 | Did you ever read Al Hariri? |
30087 | Did you ever see the Giant Quaritch in the auction- room bidding for books? |
30087 | Does that sound like an echo of the voice that ceased on the Cross? |
30087 | Does the butcher, or the baker, or the ironmonger, or the tallow- chandler rely on personal merit, or purely personal ability for making a business? |
30087 | Dreadfully, horribly wicked, is it not, in an age that preaches thrift and-- twaddle? |
30087 | Duck?" |
30087 | Except an author, or an artist, or a musician, who on earth would attempt to win success by merit? |
30087 | From what void did he spring? |
30087 | Hardly credible is it? |
30087 | Have you brought anything for me? |
30087 | Have you ever ascended the dirty, unscrubbed, disgraceful staircase that leads to a famous barrister''s"chambers"? |
30087 | Have you ever seen the dingy, dark china- closets they call offices in the City? |
30087 | He made his money in a waggon-- a curious place, you will say; why so? |
30087 | He was a peer at such moments; a grandee-- the grandee who can wear his hat or sit down( which is it? |
30087 | How can that be? |
30087 | How can you draw life itself? |
30087 | How could this be? |
30087 | How dare you insult my mother? |
30087 | How should such a chant as this enter a young man''s heart who felt himself despicable in the sight of his mistress? |
30087 | How_ can_ people pass without seeing them? |
30087 | I just come up to ask if you''d ride in my dog- trap?" |
30087 | If a man asks for bread, will ye give him a stone? |
30087 | If life be not a dream, what is the use of living? |
30087 | If you can not even make a horse, do you think you are likely to_ make_ a woman do anything? |
30087 | In short, is not the book a disquisition on life from the standpoint of Jefferies''personal experiences? |
30087 | Is not that description of Iden''s dinner a little-- well, a little unusual? |
30087 | Is not this an age of humanity indeed? |
30087 | Look about you: Are the prosperous men of business men of merit? |
30087 | Looking for a thunderstorm?" |
30087 | Mrs. Iden then had her turn at him: the old story-- why did n''t he do something? |
30087 | Now, do n''t you think you could talk to him, and persuade him to be more practical?" |
30087 | Taste it? |
30087 | Telling you about the old people? |
30087 | The good turn from them with horror-- Are they not sin made manifest? |
30087 | To come back to"Amaryllis at the Fair,"why is it so masterly, or, further, wherein is it so masterly, the curious reader may inquire? |
30087 | What are the sayings of the seven wise men of Greece compared to_ that_? |
30087 | What do_ he_ want wi''such geates? |
30087 | What does it matter whether a revelation of human life is conveyed to us by pictures or by action so long as it is conveyed? |
30087 | What good be you on?" |
30087 | What is Mahomet''s Paradise to_ that_? |
30087 | What is it?" |
30087 | What is life? |
30087 | What matter? |
30087 | What on earth can a tramp find to please him among all this? |
30087 | What use to care for him? |
30087 | What will you take?" |
30087 | What would have been the value of their lives between a finger and thumb that could crack a ripe and strong- shelled walnut? |
30087 | What would you like to show her?" |
30087 | What''s the use of digging? |
30087 | What''s the use of talking of people who have been dead all this time? |
30087 | What''s your family then, that you should be so grand? |
30087 | Whatever did he want with horse- chestnuts? |
30087 | Whatever_ can_ morning seem like to the starved and chilly wretches who have slept on the floor, and wake up to frost in Fleet Street? |
30087 | When will he send it up?" |
30087 | Where''s Upper Court? |
30087 | Where''s the Manor? |
30087 | Whoever could tell what they were talking about? |
30087 | Why ca n''t you mind your business? |
30087 | Why did he gossip at the stile with the small- brained hamlet idlers? |
30087 | Why did he work in the rain under a sack? |
30087 | Why did n''t you say so? |
30087 | Why do n''t you make some money? |
30087 | Why do they break out of reformatory institutions? |
30087 | Why does n''t he do something himself? |
30087 | Why does n''t he go in to market and buy and sell cattle, and turn over money in that way? |
30087 | Why not set up the Apparatus? |
30087 | Why so very,_ very_ still? |
30087 | Why then do they set fire to training ships? |
30087 | Why was he so poor? |
30087 | Why, Measter Duck, what''s up? |
30087 | Would her father see it if she used it, or might he, perhaps, fail to notice? |
30087 | Would n''t I put a thou on the Middle Park Plate? |
30087 | You ca n''t eat''em, can you, like you can potatoes?" |
30087 | You have a recollection of the giant who sat by the highway and devoured the pilgrims who passed? |
30087 | and what about the Widow Wadman? |
30087 | are n''t you going to change your dress?" |
30087 | are they all clever? |
30087 | are they geniuses? |
30087 | bean''t you a- going to fair? |
30087 | how did she suppose they were to keep her, and she not earn the value of a bonnet- string? |
30087 | what would her grandfather say? |
30087 | where''s_ The Standard_, then?" |
30342 | Are you faithful to things? 30342 Dark Mother, always gliding near, with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
30342 | Have I sung so capricious and loud my savage songs? |
30342 | Have you learn''d lessons only of those who admired you and were tender with you? 30342 What do you suppose creation is? |
30342 | Who is he that would become my follower? 30342 ( who is it? 30342 ***** What is this you bring my America? 30342 And how shall I deck my song for the large sweet soul that has gone? 30342 And shall it be said that the poet who does this has no worthy art? 30342 And that that is what the oldest and newest myths finally mean? 30342 And that there is no God any more divine than yourself? 30342 And that you or any one must approach creations through such laws? |
30342 | And what else do we finally demand of any work than that it be inspired? |
30342 | And what shall my perfume be, for the grave of him I love? |
30342 | Are the precise, the regular, the measured, the finished, the symmetrical, indispensable to our conception of art? |
30342 | Are we quite sure, after all, that what we call"artistic form"is in any high or fundamental sense artistic? |
30342 | Are you done with reviews and criticisms of life? |
30342 | Are you not of some coterie? |
30342 | Ask yourself, What is the point of view of absolute, uncompromising science? |
30342 | But do they? |
30342 | But what of that? |
30342 | Can he stand the test of nature? |
30342 | Can it face us in undress? |
30342 | Can it go alone? |
30342 | Can we absorb and assimilate him? |
30342 | Can we name them better than St. Paul named them eighteen hundred years ago,--faith, hope, charity? |
30342 | Can we say, therefore, they are more artistic? |
30342 | Can you hold your hand against all seductions, follies, whirls, fierce contentions? |
30342 | Can your performance face the open fields and the seaside? |
30342 | Could any one else have done it? |
30342 | Could any sane man have written the Children of Adam poems who was not sustained by deepest moral and æsthetic convictions? |
30342 | Depleted and enervated, or full and joyous? |
30342 | Did he not lay claim to the vices and vanities of men also? |
30342 | Did it not attest reality? |
30342 | Did our skepticism, our headiness, our worldliness, threaten to eat us up like a cancer? |
30342 | Do his lines cut to the quick, and beget heat and joy in the soul? |
30342 | Do we get the reality, or words about the reality? |
30342 | Do we not gain in scope and power what we lose in art and refinement? |
30342 | Do we not gain just what Whitman had in view, namely, direct contact with the elements in which are the sources of our life and health? |
30342 | Do we not know that true greatness, true nobility and strength of soul, may go and do go with commonplace, every- day humanity? |
30342 | Do we not, consciously or unconsciously, ask this or a similar question of every poet or artist whom we pass in review before us? |
30342 | Do you teach what the land and sea, the bodies of men, womanhood, amativeness, heroic angers, teach? |
30342 | Does Nature preach such a system? |
30342 | Does he exalt the pride of man in himself, or egoism? |
30342 | Does he flout at the old religions? |
30342 | Does he glory in the present? |
30342 | Does he make it the quarry from which he carves statues or builds temples? |
30342 | Does he make man- stuff of it? |
30342 | Does he make us more religious, more tolerant, more charitable, more candid, more self- reliant? |
30342 | Does he nourish the manly and heroic virtues? |
30342 | Does he praise candor? |
30342 | Does he retain the native savage virtues, or is he entirely built up from the outside? |
30342 | Does he sound the call of battle for the Union? |
30342 | Does he stamp it with his own image? |
30342 | Does he strike back through it to simple, original nature, or is he a potted plant? |
30342 | Does he toughen us, does he help make arterial blood? |
30342 | Does it answer universal needs? |
30342 | Does it not assume that what is notoriously gone is still here? |
30342 | Does life, does death, does nature, respect our proprieties, our conventional veils and illusions? |
30342 | Has it not dangled long at the heels of the poets, politicians, literats of enemies''lands? |
30342 | Has not the Bible worked evil also? |
30342 | Have I not told how the universe has nothing better than the best womanhood?" |
30342 | Have real employments contributed to it? |
30342 | Have you not imported this or the spirit of it in some ship? |
30342 | Have you not learn''d great lessons from those who reject you, and brace themselves against you? |
30342 | Have you sped through fleeting customs, popularities? |
30342 | Have you the brooding, warming, vivifying mother- mind? |
30342 | Have you vivified yourself from the maternity of these States? |
30342 | Have you, too, the old, ever- fresh forbearance and impartiality? |
30342 | How dare he do it? |
30342 | How do I know but you are a secessionist? |
30342 | How does he justify himself to himself? |
30342 | How much of a man are you? |
30342 | How much of a man is he? |
30342 | How shall a poet in our day and land treat this fact? |
30342 | How vital and fundamental is your poetic gift? |
30342 | I do not ask, Does he work it up into what are called artistic forms? |
30342 | I said,"What is it, my dear? |
30342 | I said:''Why, Oscar, do n''t you think you will get well?'' |
30342 | IV"The friendly and flowing savage, who is he? |
30342 | If he loved praise, why should he not be frank about it? |
30342 | In what other poet do these men, or others like them, find themselves? |
30342 | Is Japanese pottery, the glazing often ragged and uneven, less artistic than the highly finished work of the moderns? |
30342 | Is a gold coin of the time of Pericles, so rude and simple, less artistic than the elaborate coins of our own day? |
30342 | Is he adequate to absorb and digest it? |
30342 | Is he animating to life itself? |
30342 | Is he master of his culture, or does it master him? |
30342 | Is he tonic and inspiring? |
30342 | Is he waiting for civilization, or is he past it and master of it?" |
30342 | Is his fashion adequate? |
30342 | Is it at all probable that Tennyson can ever be to any other age what he has been to this? |
30342 | Is it health, life, power, or what is it? |
30342 | Is it not a mere tale? |
30342 | Is it not something that has been better done or told before? |
30342 | Is it plastic in his hands? |
30342 | Is it the general intelligence that speaks, the culture and refinement of the age? |
30342 | Is it through you? |
30342 | Is it uniform with my country? |
30342 | Is reform needed? |
30342 | Is the air, the sunshine, the free spaces, the rocks, the soil, the trees, and the exhilaration of it all, nothing? |
30342 | Is the interpretation vivid and real? |
30342 | Is there no room for the new man? |
30342 | Is this the democracy of religion? |
30342 | King said to him,"Why, how can I do this thing, or anything for you? |
30342 | Me ruthless and devilish as any, that my wrists are not chain''d with iron, or my ankles with iron?" |
30342 | On firmer ground, or in the mire? |
30342 | On the street the promenaders would turn and look after him, and I have often heard them ask each other,"What man was that?" |
30342 | One tipsy man in a buggy responded,''Why, pap, how d''ye do, pap?'' |
30342 | Original makers, not mere amanuenses? |
30342 | Out of these vast, rolling, cloud- like masses does there leap forth the true lightning? |
30342 | The content of his verse,--what is it? |
30342 | The hymn- book seeks to embody or awaken religious emotion alone; would its religious value be less if its poetic value were more? |
30342 | The message of beauty,--who would undervalue it? |
30342 | The new poet has this or that gift, but what is the human fund back of all? |
30342 | The only question is, Has he a law, has he a steady and rational point of view, is his work a consistent and well- organized whole? |
30342 | The question is, Did he master it? |
30342 | The question is, Is he adequate, is he man enough, to do it? |
30342 | The vital question is, Where does he leave us? |
30342 | Then the strain goes on:--"O how shall I warble myself for the dead one there I loved? |
30342 | These things are indispensable in the mill and counting- house, but why should we insist upon them in poetry? |
30342 | Think of manhood, and you to be a man; Do you count manhood, and the sweet of manhood, nothing? |
30342 | Think of womanhood and you to be a woman; The Creation is womanhood; Have I not said that womanhood involves all? |
30342 | To put his arms around it? |
30342 | We are not to ask, Is it like this or like that? |
30342 | We ask ourselves, Does he breathe the air of health? |
30342 | We demand of the new man, of the overthrower of our idols, but one thing,--has he authentic inspiration and power? |
30342 | We lose something certainly, but do we not gain something also? |
30342 | What are the enemies of art? |
30342 | What are the questions or purposes, then, in which his work has root? |
30342 | What are the three great life- giving principles? |
30342 | What do you suppose I would intimate to you in a hundred ways, but that man or woman is as good as God? |
30342 | What do you suppose will satisfy the soul but to walk free and own no superior? |
30342 | What is he like? |
30342 | What is his endowment of the common universal human traits? |
30342 | What place have they in the antique bards?--in Homer, in Job, in Isaiah, in Dante? |
30342 | When will he redeem all these promises, and become a fixed centre of thought and emotion in himself? |
30342 | Where is he who tears off the husks for you and me? |
30342 | Where is he who undoes stratagems and envelopes for you and me?" |
30342 | Which is really the most artistic? |
30342 | Whitman certainly has a form of his own: what would a poet, or any writer or worker in the ideal, do without some kind of form? |
30342 | Who would sign himself a candidate for my affections? |
30342 | Why does Whitman''s material suggest to any reader that it is poetic material? |
30342 | Why not allow and even welcome the freedom of half- rhymes, or suggestive rhymes? |
30342 | Why should we call this verse- tinkering and verse- shaping art, when it is only artifice? |
30342 | Why should we cling to an arbitrary form like the sonnet? |
30342 | Why should we insist upon a perfect rhyme, as if it was a cog in a wheel? |
30342 | Why, anyway, fold back a sentence or idea to get it into a prescribed arbitrary form? |
30342 | Will he be true to his ideal through thick and thin? |
30342 | Will he not falter, or betray self- consciousness? |
30342 | Will it absorb into me as I absorb food, air, to appear again in my strength, gait, face? |
30342 | With levity and by throwing over it the lure of the forbidden, the attraction of the erotic? |
30342 | XI What has a poet of Whitman''s aims to do with decency or indecency, with modesty or immodesty? |
30342 | a pettiness?--is the good old cause in it? |
30342 | a rhyme? |
30342 | and stood aside for you? |
30342 | animating now to life itself? |
30342 | are you really of the whole people? |
30342 | are you very strong? |
30342 | but, Is it vital, is it real, is it a consistent, well- organized whole? |
30342 | did our hardness, our irreligiousness, and our passion for the genteel point to a fugitive, superficial race? |
30342 | do you not see how it would serve to have eyes, blood, complexion, clean and sweet? |
30342 | do you want anything?" |
30342 | does Nature preach at all? |
30342 | how could he do it, and not betray hesitation or self- consciousness? |
30342 | is it you?) |
30342 | liberty, fraternity, and equality carried out in the spiritual sphere? |
30342 | or have we a new revelation of life, a new mind and soul? |
30342 | or who treat you with contempt, or dispute the passage with you?" |
30342 | some consistent and adequate vehicle of expression? |
30342 | some school, or mere religion? |
30342 | was our literature threatened with the artistic degeneration,--running all to art and not at all to power? |
30342 | were our communities invaded by a dry rot of culture? |
30342 | were we fast becoming a delicate, indoor, genteel race? |
30342 | will it improve manners? |
29527 | ''And after thou hast run over all things, what will it profit thee if thou hast neglected thyself?'' |
29527 | ''And if a young man fell in love with a girl?'' |
29527 | ''And if he did n''t?'' |
29527 | ''And then?'' |
29527 | ''And yet what would I have gained by wailing and lamenting either for myself or for others? |
29527 | ''Are there not charms that will prevent you being hurt if you are hit, and that will not allow a sword to cut you? |
29527 | ''Can you do anything,''I asked,''to cheer him? |
29527 | ''Could government do nothing?'' |
29527 | ''Did n''t anyone come to call?'' |
29527 | ''Has ever anyone died in your household?'' |
29527 | ''How can I take you back again?'' |
29527 | ''I wonder what''s in that tin box?'' |
29527 | ''Is n''t that rather old to be just married?'' |
29527 | ''Is there no food in the bazaar, that you must go and take the lives of animals?'' |
29527 | ''It is your own look- out,''they would say;''if you want to die why should we prevent you? |
29527 | ''Suppose you think of your good deeds, what then? |
29527 | ''Thakin,''she said at last,''what am I to do? |
29527 | ''The blossoms are beautiful,''they said;''what care we for the thorns? |
29527 | ''Then, who wrote the letter?'' |
29527 | ''They are very beautiful,''they said,''but these roads that pass through them, whither do they lead? |
29527 | ''To see him,''he said,''I must remove the hand of his mother, and she may awake; and if she awake, how shall I depart? |
29527 | ''Was I not aware,''he said, with bitter indignation at his weakness,''that when I became a recluse I must eat such food as this? |
29527 | ''What did she pray for?'' |
29527 | ''What is the use of that?'' |
29527 | ''What is the use,''said my friend,''of this religion that we see so many signs of? |
29527 | ''What seek you here? |
29527 | ''What should she pray for, thakin? |
29527 | ''What would happen,''I asked once,''if anyone went into that wood? |
29527 | ''When were you married?'' |
29527 | ''Why does the law discriminate?'' |
29527 | ''Why is this difference?'' |
29527 | ''Why should that be so?'' |
29527 | ''Would he return?'' |
29527 | ''You are so strong, have you no compassion for him who is weak, who is tempted, who has fallen?'' |
29527 | ''You would n''t have one law for a man and another for a woman?'' |
29527 | --_Burmese Love- Song._ If you were to ask a Burman''What is the position of women in Burma?'' |
29527 | A Burman would not ask,''Were they married?'' |
29527 | All was as before, and the truth-- the truth, where was that? |
29527 | And amongst the audience were there not the girls''relations, their sisters, their lovers? |
29527 | And beyond death? |
29527 | And he who can live his life, what cares he for reading of the lives of other people? |
29527 | And how can you turn your mind to meditation and thought if your body is in suffering? |
29527 | And if there is any merit in such little charity, as the Burmese say there is, why should I not gain it, too? |
29527 | And if we have none? |
29527 | And if we should say that this Deliverance from life, this Great Peace, is Death, what matter, if it be indeed Peace? |
29527 | And if you ask them, they will say:''If a man be sick, do you shoot him? |
29527 | And is the girl alone? |
29527 | And my gift? |
29527 | And the Burman would say at length to himself, Can this be the belief of this people at all? |
29527 | And the boy? |
29527 | And the lady? |
29527 | And the paper? |
29527 | And then? |
29527 | And what would he see? |
29527 | And when he dies, shall they go down into the void with him? |
29527 | And why? |
29527 | And yet what could I have gained by wailing and lamentation either for myself or for others? |
29527 | And yet what have I done? |
29527 | Are not visions and trances, dreams and imaginations, the very proof of holiness? |
29527 | But do you think a Burman would render this homage to a monk whom he could not respect, who did actions he should not? |
29527 | But if they had been chained together, what then? |
29527 | But now, what was to be done? |
29527 | But what is the use of Buddhism? |
29527 | But what is the use of Buddhism?'' |
29527 | But, after all, could he help it? |
29527 | CHAPTER XII PRAYER''What is there that can justify tears and lamentations?'' |
29527 | Can anyone ever tell when the influence of a monk has been other than for pity or mercy? |
29527 | Can there be a more valuable knowledge for anyone than this? |
29527 | Can there be anywhere a greater contrast than this? |
29527 | Can you imagine a more successful end than that? |
29527 | Can you imagine the religious teachers of any other religion being warned to keep themselves free from visions? |
29527 | Can you imagine this happening anywhere else? |
29527 | Can you think of any other schoolboys sparing any animal they caught, much less poisonous snakes? |
29527 | Can you wonder that his followers love him? |
29527 | Can you wonder that his teaching has come home to them as never did teaching elsewhere? |
29527 | Could anything be expected from this except what actually did happen? |
29527 | Could they act one thing and believe another? |
29527 | Could they be reconciled? |
29527 | Did I not live in one of their monasteries for over two months when we first came and camped there with a cavalry squadron? |
29527 | Did not our teacher fail? |
29527 | Did not the Buddha prove the futility of this long ago? |
29527 | Do you speak to him of what may happen after death, of hopes of another life?'' |
29527 | Do you suppose the people would reverence it as they do if it were corrupt? |
29527 | Do you think I could now turn round and criticise you? |
29527 | Do you think a queen would pray differently to any other woman?'' |
29527 | Do you think that a Burmese boy would be allowed to birds''-nest, or worry rats with a terrier, or go ferreting? |
29527 | Do you think that when she talked religion with her husband she ever thought that it would cause him to leave her and go away for ever? |
29527 | Does it matter much which was right or wrong, now that the mischief was done? |
29527 | Does not this out- miracle any miracle? |
29527 | For are not these, too, of the very soul of the people? |
29527 | For does he not daily see people who know of their former lives? |
29527 | For if you lose your temper, who is the sufferer? |
29527 | For life is short, and though to- day be to us, who can tell for the morrow? |
29527 | Has any religion ever had for twenty- four centuries such a proof as this? |
29527 | Has not everyone learnt it, this, the first truth of Buddhism, long before his hair is gray, before his hands are shaking, before his teeth are gone? |
29527 | Have not all religions been glad to give their fanes the glory and majesty of great trees? |
29527 | Have not trees been always sacred things? |
29527 | He bent forward till his head was close to the merchant''s head, and whispered:''Friend, have you any whisky?'' |
29527 | He played his game, he lost, and paid; but the girl? |
29527 | He would find---- But need I say what he would find? |
29527 | How can you forget the body, and turn the soul to better thoughts, if you are for ever torturing that body, and thereby keeping it in memory? |
29527 | How could I have lived those years alone? |
29527 | How else should it be determined? |
29527 | How shall a man so think and so act that he shall come at length unto the Great Peace? |
29527 | How shall we escape from it? |
29527 | How were the beliefs of a people to be known, and why should there be such difficulties in the way? |
29527 | I can smell it, ca n''t you?'' |
29527 | I could forgive the theft, but the being in gaol-- how can I forgive that?'' |
29527 | If he injure his spine so that he will be a cripple for life, do you put him out of his pain?'' |
29527 | If it be a different way of soothing a man''s end from those which other nations use, is it the worse for that? |
29527 | If many of you had not admitted me, a stranger, into your friendship during my many very solitary years, of what sort should I be now? |
29527 | If the fruit be rotten, can the tree be good? |
29527 | If there be trouble for to- day, what can it matter if you do but command yourself? |
29527 | If they should do so, can you wonder? |
29527 | If we can get it up, may we have it back to hang in our pagoda as our own again?'' |
29527 | If we find the way dark and weary, if our footsteps fail, if we wander in wrong paths, did not he do the same? |
29527 | If you are guilty of disgraceful acts, of discourteous words, who suffers? |
29527 | If you say by religion, he laughs, and asks what religion has to do with such things? |
29527 | In a summer sea, where is the need of havens? |
29527 | In this terrible scene of anarchy and confusion, in this death peril of their nation, what were the monks doing? |
29527 | Is it an exception? |
29527 | Is it true, he would say to himself, that these people believe that riches are an evil thing? |
29527 | Is not this teaching the very reverse of that of all other peoples and religions? |
29527 | Is the Nat really gone? |
29527 | Is this always true? |
29527 | Martyrdom-- what is martyrdom, what is death, for your religion, compared to living within its commands? |
29527 | Men would help me if they could, but they can not; surely there will be someone?'' |
29527 | Nay, does he not himself, often vaguely, have glimpses of that former life of his? |
29527 | Nothing is worth anything to him compared with that, for while a man lives, what is the good of all these things if he have no leisure to enjoy them? |
29527 | Shall I give him up to death?'' |
29527 | She hath precious stones in her ears, but her eyes, what jewels can compare unto them? |
29527 | So I went to a friend of mine, a Burman magistrate, and I asked him:''When a man is dying, what does he try to think of? |
29527 | So, then, the question, How do you know that your faith is true? |
29527 | Surely someone will help me? |
29527 | Surely they believe their religion? |
29527 | That a woman should have a nagging tongue, that a man should be a drunkard, what could be better cause than this? |
29527 | The men joke and laugh, and you laugh, too; the children smile at you as they pass, and you must smile, too; can you help it? |
29527 | The slave was much troubled at this, and he did his best to avoid her; but he was a slave and under orders, and what could he do? |
29527 | They did not dance very well, perhaps; they were none of them very beautiful; but what matter? |
29527 | They nearly always ended in our favour-- how could it be otherwise? |
29527 | Think not that I, though the Buddha, have not felt all this even as any other of you; was I not alone when I was seeking for wisdom in the wilderness? |
29527 | To see the moon rise on the river as you float along, while the boat rocks to and fro and someone talks to you-- is not that better than any tale? |
29527 | Truly,_ are_ these their beliefs? |
29527 | Was I not alone when I was seeking for wisdom in the wilderness? |
29527 | Were the fares too high?--was it uncomfortable? |
29527 | What business is it of ours?'' |
29527 | What could I say but that I would remember, that I was not offended, but would be careful? |
29527 | What do these monks do? |
29527 | What do they care for justice? |
29527 | What do women care for laws of righteousness? |
29527 | What do you say to comfort him that his last moments may be peace? |
29527 | What does it matter to us?'' |
29527 | What does it matter who the other person be? |
29527 | What does my husband care that we were married by your law? |
29527 | What for the everlasting sequences that govern the world? |
29527 | What help did it give to its believers in their extremity? |
29527 | What if the people make merry, too, if they make their holy days into holidays, is that any harm? |
29527 | What is change but the death of the present? |
29527 | What is so terrible as a war of religion? |
29527 | What made you wait so long?'' |
29527 | What makes you think that?'' |
29527 | What was Buddhism doing? |
29527 | What would be the good of charms?'' |
29527 | What would the forest be without its thorns? |
29527 | Whence, then, come their acts, for their acts seem to show that they hold riches to be a good thing? |
29527 | Where was his help? |
29527 | Where would be the use? |
29527 | Who are more criminal than English boys? |
29527 | Who can tell in this war?'' |
29527 | Who can tell? |
29527 | Who could this woman be, he thought, to ask such a question? |
29527 | Who gave that? |
29527 | Whom was she beseeching? |
29527 | Will Time never cease to drive us on and on? |
29527 | Will not the sahib keep the paper?'' |
29527 | Will that bring peace?'' |
29527 | Will these lights_ never_ cease to flash to and fro?'' |
29527 | Wo n''t that be best?'' |
29527 | Would all people have done this? |
29527 | Would any people, not firmly bound by their religion, put up with it all for a moment? |
29527 | Would he be killed, or what?'' |
29527 | Would it have been any help to those I had left?'' |
29527 | Would it have been any help to those whom I had left? |
29527 | Would it have brought to me any solace from my loneliness? |
29527 | Would it have brought to me any solace from my loneliness? |
29527 | Would not they involve all other men, all earth and heaven, in bottomless chaos, to save one heart they loved? |
29527 | You may force or persuade him into an outer agreement with you, but what is the value of that? |
29527 | but,''Are they man and wife?'' |
29527 | he said, shaking his head;''what could they do?'' |
29527 | or if evil so outnumbered the good deeds as to hide and overwhelm them, what then? |
29527 | she would say,''why should I hurt it? |
29527 | would not that alone make the girls dance well, make the audience enthusiastic? |
36386 | [ 9]_ Antiquitates Americanæ._ Were they Picts? |
34513 | Ah,said my friend,"as I have never seen either angel or dragon, how can I tell whether it is one or the other?" |
34513 | A Confession of Faith; Forward or Back? |
34513 | After a long trial he was condemned for attacking the Trinity, and beheaded at Berne, 26(?) |
34513 | Also Religion not History,''77; What is Christianity without Christ? |
34513 | Among his writings are Dilettantism in Science,''42; Letters on the Study of Nature,''45- 46; Who''s to Blame? |
34513 | Amongst his writings are An Address to Men of Science, The Gospel according to R. Carlile, What is God? |
34513 | Blasphemy No Crime; Arrows of Freethought; Prisoner for Blasphemy( 1884); Letters to Jesus Christ; What Was Christ? |
34513 | Has Man a Soul, Is there a God? |
34513 | Has contributed largely to the leading Radical journals, and has written numerous works of fiction, of which we must mention Under which Lord? |
34513 | He has also written Jesus as a Jewish Reformer, The Egyptian Religion and Positivism, and Is the Pentateuch by Moses? |
34513 | He has also written many pamphlets, of which we mention New Lives of Abraham, David, and other saints, Who was Jesus Christ? |
34513 | He has also written several pamphlets: Thomas Paine was Junius, 1880: Self Contradictions of the Bible; Is the Bible a Lying Humbug? |
34513 | He has of late been engaged upon the question: Are the Effects of Use and Disuse Inherited? |
34513 | He held a public discussion with J. Brindley at Liverpool, in 1840, on"What is Christianity?" |
34513 | He rejects all supernaturalism, and has written The Bible, What Is It?, Studies in Theology, The Bible Against Itself, etc. |
34513 | He translated into German Cabet''s Voyage en Icarie, and in an important work entitled Qu''est ce que La Religion? |
34513 | Hell, The Dying Creed, Myth and Miracle, Do I Blaspheme? |
34513 | His Man Where, Whence, and Whither?,''67, advocating Darwinian views, made some stir in Scotland. |
34513 | His bold romance, What is to be Done? |
34513 | In 1857 Mr. Bradlaugh commenced a commentary on the Bible, entitled The Bible, What is it? |
34513 | In a succeeding volume What is the Bible? |
34513 | In''10 he published anonymously A Letter Concerning the Two First Chapters of Luke, also entitled Who was the Father of Jesus Christ? |
34513 | In''21 he wrote Elements of Philosophy, followed by What is a Sound Mind? |
34513 | In''40 appears his memoir, What is Property? |
34513 | In''78 he wrote a study on Frederick the Great entitled Un Roi Philosophe, and in''83 Is God Dead? |
34513 | Montaigne took as his motto: Que sçais- je? |
34513 | Mr. Massey has also lectured widely on such subjects as Why Do n''t God Kill the Devil? |
34513 | One day a spy asked Boindin,"Who is this M. de l''Etre with whom you seem so displeased?" |
34513 | One of the founders of French Theophilanthropy; published many writings, the best known of which is entitled What is Theophilanthropy? |
34513 | Owenite author of Is the Bible True? |
34513 | Porzio( Simone), a disciple of Pomponazzi, to whom, when lecturing at Pisa, the students cried"What of the soul?" |
34513 | Poulin( Paul), Belgian follower of Baron Colins and author of What is God? |
34513 | Renard( Georges), French professor of the Academie of Lausanne; author of Man, is he Free? |
34513 | The Bible, Is it the Word of God? |
34513 | We mention What must I do to be Saved? |
34513 | What did Jesus Teach? |
34513 | What is Man? |
34513 | [ What know I?] |
34513 | and Man: Whence and Whither? |
34513 | and What is Blasphemy? |
15614 | ''It was all perfectly legal? 15614 A bad girl?" |
15614 | A bit up in the world again; eh? |
15614 | A brick? |
15614 | A doctor? 15614 A novelist?" |
15614 | A sail? |
15614 | Add that to what she is now suffering? 15614 Afraid?" |
15614 | And money? |
15614 | And partly what else? |
15614 | And what are you going to do with her, supposing I''m fool enough to take this boy with me? |
15614 | And what is a geisha girl? |
15614 | And what is that? |
15614 | And what might that be? |
15614 | And what should a young man like this one have to forget? |
15614 | And why should you care whether she forgave you or not? |
15614 | And you have seen... drunken men? |
15614 | And you married me, knowing? |
15614 | And you saw all that in your mind? |
15614 | And you want me to find a minister? |
15614 | And you whipped the beast? 15614 Anything like that?" |
15614 | Are n''t you afraid? |
15614 | Are there no men a woman may trust absolutely? |
15614 | Are they good? |
15614 | Are you a human being, to leave her thus? |
15614 | Are you a nurse? |
15614 | Are you a poltroon, after all? |
15614 | Are you a real nurse? |
15614 | Are you friendly toward him? |
15614 | Are you indeed my daughter''s lawful husband? |
15614 | Are you returning to Hong- Kong to- morrow by the day boat? |
15614 | As an honest Chinaman? |
15614 | Auntie? |
15614 | Bat!--can''t you see that she''s the kind who would understand and forgive? 15614 Because he said he was a Yale man?" |
15614 | Because you did not wish to hurt me? |
15614 | Been to those places? |
15614 | Beg pardon,he said,"but is n''t smoking allowed in the dining room?" |
15614 | But how in the Lord''s name was she brought up? 15614 But if you do not find this aunt, what will you do? |
15614 | But this is good enough to travel in, is n''t it? |
15614 | But was n''t I right? 15614 But what can you do?" |
15614 | But what does he mean by calling you a wanton?--you, my wife? |
15614 | But what is it? |
15614 | But what, in God''s name, possessed you? 15614 But what, may I ask, arouses the thought?" |
15614 | But why did n''t you oppose him? |
15614 | But why not? |
15614 | But why? 15614 But, Lord, man!--don''t you ever get lonesome?" |
15614 | By the name of_ The Tigress_? |
15614 | By the way, did you read those stories? |
15614 | Ca n''t you see? 15614 Ca n''t you see? |
15614 | Can you pull him through? |
15614 | Come up by the packet? |
15614 | Could n''t you speak to him? |
15614 | Could n''t... could n''t I go with you this afternoon? |
15614 | Could you get any of the music last night? |
15614 | Did Ah Cum advise you? |
15614 | Did I ask for it? |
15614 | Did he owe you money? |
15614 | Did he say he was a Yale man? |
15614 | Did n''t some of them... try to touch you? |
15614 | Did n''t the natives have a name for you? |
15614 | Did n''t you despise the men your father brought home-- the beachcombers? |
15614 | Did you bring me down here to crucify me? |
15614 | Did you ever hear me whine? |
15614 | Did you ever see the like of her? |
15614 | Did you write it? |
15614 | Do girls have puppy- love? |
15614 | Do n''t you want to live? |
15614 | Do n''t you? |
15614 | Do you believe his failure caused...."What? |
15614 | Do you know what you make me think of? |
15614 | Do you mean to tell me he''s come and gone in an hour? 15614 Do you realize that you are several kinds of a damned scoundrel?" |
15614 | Do you suppose he knew? |
15614 | Do you suppose that young fool has done anything? |
15614 | Do you want it back under the pillow? |
15614 | Do you want me to tell her that I am grateful? |
15614 | Enschede? |
15614 | Enschede?--her father? 15614 Ever play one of these machines?" |
15614 | For a bit of kindness? |
15614 | For an old bachelor? |
15614 | Good Lord!--cannibals? |
15614 | Got a man''s breakfast? |
15614 | Has no man ever kissed you? |
15614 | Have n''t I seen you somewhere before? |
15614 | Have you ever been so lonely that the soul of you cried in anguish? 15614 Have you told her?" |
15614 | He is dying? |
15614 | He made you wear shoes and stockings? |
15614 | He will pull through? |
15614 | He? 15614 How did he take it?" |
15614 | How do you spell the last name? |
15614 | How goes it? |
15614 | How is the patient? |
15614 | How long have I been in bed? |
15614 | How long shall I be here? |
15614 | How long will he be laid up? |
15614 | How long will you be here? |
15614 | How old are you? |
15614 | How shall I get to you? |
15614 | How would you like a job on a copra plantation? |
15614 | Hurt her? 15614 I have n''t offended you?" |
15614 | I rather fancy, as you Britishers say, that you know the nature of my visit? |
15614 | I wonder how she picked up Kanaka? 15614 I wonder if you know how kind you are? |
15614 | I wonder if you will understand what this kindness means to me? 15614 I wonder where the deuce I''ll be able to get some writing paper? |
15614 | I, a thief? |
15614 | If you thought that, why did you give me this job? |
15614 | Is it wrong, then, to surrender to good impulses? |
15614 | Is n''t that lagoon gorgeous? 15614 Is there anything I can do?" |
15614 | Is there anything wrong with it? |
15614 | Is there no charity? 15614 Just to give her her freedom?" |
15614 | Killed someone? |
15614 | Know anything about ships? |
15614 | Let him have it? 15614 Lie?" |
15614 | Lord!--think of having sharks for neighbours? 15614 Loves me? |
15614 | Mac, did you ever run across a missioner by the name of Enschede? |
15614 | Meaning that I do n''t belong anywhere, in heaven or on earth? |
15614 | Miss Enschede-- such an odd name!--are you French? |
15614 | No,admitted McClintock"You''ve no objection to my dropping in again later, after your guests go?" |
15614 | Nothing else? |
15614 | Of what? |
15614 | Or is there a taint of insanity in your family history? 15614 Out of the beaten track, with a real man for an employer? |
15614 | Piano- player? 15614 Professional?" |
15614 | Rot, were n''t they? |
15614 | Ruth what? |
15614 | Ruth? |
15614 | Ruth? |
15614 | Ruth? |
15614 | Shall I tell you a real story? |
15614 | She? 15614 Silly love stories?" |
15614 | So she got away as far as this, eh? 15614 So that was it? |
15614 | So the wheelman told you? 15614 So you''re writing under a nom de plume, eh?" |
15614 | Somebody coming? |
15614 | Something you have seen? |
15614 | Sounds romantic, eh? 15614 Speak English?" |
15614 | Suppose we go and have tea? 15614 Tell me, what did they call you?" |
15614 | That is to say, you wish you had let me die? |
15614 | The pianist? |
15614 | Then I owe my life to her? |
15614 | Then he has been unfortunate? |
15614 | Then why do you wish to know? |
15614 | Then you are taking me on? |
15614 | Then you have n''t heard? |
15614 | There are bad stories, then, just as there are bad people? |
15614 | There was a yacht in the river? |
15614 | They know what? |
15614 | This your regular business? |
15614 | To Mr. Taber? 15614 To make him forget the knock?" |
15614 | Told her? 15614 Treated you like a white man there, did they?" |
15614 | Understand what? |
15614 | Was I out of my head? |
15614 | Was there any other woman back there in the States? |
15614 | Well, are n''t you? |
15614 | Well, how goes it? |
15614 | Well, lad, supposing you read what the editor has to say? |
15614 | Well, what can you expect, guzzling poison like that? 15614 Well,"she said, as they reached the hotel portal,"what is your advice?" |
15614 | Well? |
15614 | Well? |
15614 | What about it? |
15614 | What are those odd- looking things on the roofs? |
15614 | What can I do? |
15614 | What can I do? |
15614 | What did I forget? |
15614 | What did I say? |
15614 | What did he have to drink over here last night? |
15614 | What do you want me to do? |
15614 | What else did you do when alone? |
15614 | What for? 15614 What gives you that idea?" |
15614 | What good would it do you to destroy me? 15614 What happened?" |
15614 | What has happened? |
15614 | What has happened? |
15614 | What has he done? |
15614 | What has he done? |
15614 | What have you got there in your breast-- a stone? 15614 What in the world is it?" |
15614 | What is a family album? |
15614 | What is a sing- song girl? |
15614 | What is it you want of me? |
15614 | What is it you want? |
15614 | What is it? |
15614 | What is it? |
15614 | What is she saying to me? |
15614 | What is that? |
15614 | What is this? |
15614 | What is your name? |
15614 | What is your name? |
15614 | What kind? |
15614 | What made him buy that sing- song girl? |
15614 | What makes you think he has had a hard knock? |
15614 | What poet was that? |
15614 | What shall I say? 15614 What sort of a detective do you think I am?" |
15614 | What was it? |
15614 | What was it? |
15614 | What would you like most in this world? |
15614 | What''ll it cost to have you all to myself for the day? |
15614 | What''s become of Ruth? |
15614 | What''s he know about copra and native talk? |
15614 | What''s that got to do with it? 15614 What''s that?" |
15614 | What''s that? |
15614 | What''s that? |
15614 | What''s the matter, Ruth? |
15614 | What''s the matter, lad, after all the wonderful fireworks at lunch? |
15614 | What''s the matter? |
15614 | What''s the particular dope? |
15614 | What''s your name? |
15614 | What? 15614 What?" |
15614 | What? |
15614 | What? |
15614 | What?--and be insulted for my trouble? 15614 What?--help take care of him? |
15614 | What?... 15614 When will you want me?" |
15614 | When you heard what was going on, why did n''t you send for me? |
15614 | Where am I? |
15614 | Where did I hear that before? |
15614 | Where did you go to school? |
15614 | Where did you pick it up? |
15614 | Where? |
15614 | Where? |
15614 | While I look as if I had stepped out of the family album? |
15614 | Who is she? 15614 Who made such a law?" |
15614 | Who would n''t be lively after thirty years''sleep? 15614 Why ca n''t I?" |
15614 | Why did I want it under my pillow? |
15614 | Why did n''t he arrest Mr. Spurlock then? |
15614 | Why did n''t you head him off, explain that it could n''t be done by a white man? |
15614 | Why did you bother with me? |
15614 | Why did you use the name of Taber? |
15614 | Why do you laugh? |
15614 | Why do you laugh? |
15614 | Why do you wish to know? |
15614 | Why does she weep? |
15614 | Why not? |
15614 | Why should n''t a Chinaman be honest? 15614 Why the devil not? |
15614 | Why? 15614 Why?" |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Will McClintock take us both? |
15614 | Will he live? |
15614 | Will there be any danger? |
15614 | Will you be taking a pole- chair? |
15614 | Will you write,asked the doctor,"and tell me how you are getting along?" |
15614 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
15614 | Wo n''t you take these? |
15614 | Worth anything? |
15614 | Would you be angry if I offered it to you? |
15614 | Would you follow it? |
15614 | Would you like to have me come in and talk? |
15614 | Would you like to have me read to you? |
15614 | Would you rather be alone? |
15614 | Wrong? 15614 Wrong? |
15614 | Yale? 15614 Yes?" |
15614 | You are Ruth? |
15614 | You are alone? |
15614 | You are angry? |
15614 | You are from America? |
15614 | You are giving that chap the boot rather suddenly? |
15614 | You are interested? |
15614 | You are not going to be harsh? |
15614 | You are offering your hand to me? |
15614 | You begin to have doubts, eh? 15614 You can give me a little of his history, ca n''t you? |
15614 | You did n''t spend it? |
15614 | You do love me? |
15614 | You do n''t like your island? |
15614 | You do n''t remember your mother? |
15614 | You have always spoken it? |
15614 | You have extradition papers? |
15614 | You love the memory of your mother? |
15614 | You mean Miss Enschede? |
15614 | You mean you were just sorry for him? |
15614 | You mean, it does n''t matter? |
15614 | You once saw a man die that way? |
15614 | You play? |
15614 | You poor child, do you mean to tell me you''ve never seen a family album? 15614 You read those yarns?" |
15614 | You see? |
15614 | You want him? |
15614 | You want me, then? |
15614 | You were born on the island? |
15614 | You were saying--? |
15614 | You wo n''t tell me what he has done? |
15614 | You''ll pardon an old woman, Miss Enschede,said Sister Prudence;"but where in this world did you get that dress?" |
15614 | You, Miss Enschede? |
15614 | You.... need me a little? |
15614 | Your husband? |
15614 | Your name is Spurlock? |
15614 | Your wife? |
15614 | ( What was the name he had given her that day?) |
15614 | A subconscious resentment against the idea of entering darkness while our neighbour will proceed with his petty affairs as usual? |
15614 | After all, why should I care what strangers think?" |
15614 | And in these crowded four weeks, what had she learned? |
15614 | And what must have been the man''s thought as he came upon Ruth wearing a gown of her mother''s?--a fair picture of the mother in the primrose days? |
15614 | And what the devil are you doing here, moping alone on the beach? |
15614 | And what was he going to do when they left his island? |
15614 | And what will they do, and where will they go?" |
15614 | And when she learned that she had been doubly cheated, what then? |
15614 | And yet, often when alone, he wondered: had McClintock been wrong, or had she ceased to care in that way? |
15614 | And, say, can I have some eggs? |
15614 | Are n''t they wonderful?" |
15614 | Are n''t we funny? |
15614 | Are you returning with us to Hong- Kong in the morning?" |
15614 | As for that, what man ever had? |
15614 | Because of the thought of love and companionship? |
15614 | Bring your liveralong?" |
15614 | But after all, what did it matter whether she had secrets or not? |
15614 | But did you ever hear of a djinn in a blue- serge coat? |
15614 | But had n''t he fascinated her by his talk, gentle and winning? |
15614 | But how far could he fly on a few hundred? |
15614 | But how? |
15614 | But if he''s in bed, how the devil is he going with me, supposing I decide to hire him? |
15614 | But should he warn the boy? |
15614 | But supposing he is? |
15614 | But was it Faith? |
15614 | But what did he know beyond these facts? |
15614 | But what did the occupant of the box care? |
15614 | But what frying- pan could be equal to this fire? |
15614 | But when she learns that you are a fugitive from justice....""What proof have you that I am?" |
15614 | But where does she come in?" |
15614 | But where is the girl? |
15614 | But why did he turn away? |
15614 | But why? |
15614 | But you love me, do n''t you?" |
15614 | But, Auntie, however in this world did you find this island?" |
15614 | By the way, what did he say when he was out of his head?" |
15614 | Ca n''t I make you see?" |
15614 | Ca n''t I make you understand? |
15614 | Can you afford to give this time? |
15614 | Could she go through with it? |
15614 | Did he act to you that day as if he knew what he was doing?" |
15614 | Did he talk a little when you took him into the city?" |
15614 | Did he tell you anything about himself?" |
15614 | Did you break my mother''s heart as you tried to break mine? |
15614 | Did you bring any luggage?" |
15614 | Did you ever see anything more tender or beautiful?" |
15614 | Did you hear her explain about beachcombers? |
15614 | Do n''t you remember? |
15614 | Do n''t you understand? |
15614 | Do you know what Spurlock has done?" |
15614 | Do you know what? |
15614 | Do you mean someone who plays for you?" |
15614 | Do you remember how she said--''If only my mother had lived''? |
15614 | Eh? |
15614 | Ever hear of the djinn in the bottle? |
15614 | Evidently he was gazing at the dull red roofs of the city: but was he registering what he saw? |
15614 | For our sins? |
15614 | For what could be more ironical than for Howard Spurlock to see himself grow famous under the name of Taber? |
15614 | For what was the sing- song girl but a slave, the double slave of custom and of men? |
15614 | From where had he come, and why? |
15614 | Funny codgers, are n''t they?" |
15614 | Given the proper incentive, who could say that he might not likewise go nobly to some fine end? |
15614 | Got you interested in something, then? |
15614 | Great sport, eh? |
15614 | Had he been sick in the mind when he had done this damnable thing? |
15614 | Had he been trying to stop the grim descent, and had he dimly perceived that perhaps a fine deed would serve as the initial barrier? |
15614 | Had she clothed this unhappy young man with glamour? |
15614 | Had she not seen them go forth with tracts in their pockets and grins in their beards? |
15614 | Had she too been flying from something and had accepted this method of escape? |
15614 | Had the license been procured? |
15614 | Has she any funds?" |
15614 | Have you any idea of the tragedy she is bound to stumble upon some day? |
15614 | Have you got someone in mind for me?" |
15614 | Have you never loved anything?" |
15614 | Have you suffered?" |
15614 | Have you thought of that? |
15614 | Have you thought of the monstrous lie you are adding to your theft?" |
15614 | He was beginning to notice things, then? |
15614 | Her mother.... Do you recall the night she showed you the face in the locket? |
15614 | His aunt, here at McClintock''s? |
15614 | His name is Taber?" |
15614 | Hoddy, what made you do it? |
15614 | How long shall I be kept in this bed?" |
15614 | How often had these two things entered his thoughts since his wanderings began? |
15614 | How the deuce, though, am I going to account for her? |
15614 | How was he to anticipate the girl and the sea- tramp called_ The Tigress_? |
15614 | How would he act when he learned that it had vanished? |
15614 | How would that strike you?" |
15614 | How''s that strike you?" |
15614 | I wonder if she has any idea how oddly beautiful she is?" |
15614 | I wonder if there''ll be sharks?" |
15614 | I wonder what he meant by that?" |
15614 | If he died, here in this hotel, who would care? |
15614 | If the boy did not love the girl, why the devil had he dragged her into this marriage? |
15614 | In passing, why do we fear death? |
15614 | In the name of God, why? |
15614 | Is n''t it understood?" |
15614 | Is that it? |
15614 | Is there anything you want?" |
15614 | Is there anything you''d like?" |
15614 | Is there blood or water in your veins?" |
15614 | It does n''t look bad, does it?" |
15614 | It occurred to the spinster to ask:"Have you ever seen a fashion magazine?" |
15614 | It was as if she had asked:"What is Paris?" |
15614 | Just how particular are you? |
15614 | Mac, what do you suppose the natives used to call her? |
15614 | Man, if you tell her you love her, and later they took you away to prison, who would sit at the prison gate until your term was up? |
15614 | Music-- was that it? |
15614 | New? |
15614 | Of what use was the temporary set- back to memory, when it always returned with redoubled poignancy? |
15614 | Once she had asked him:"Are you my father?" |
15614 | Or if she died, who would care? |
15614 | Or was it because he was so alone? |
15614 | Pig? |
15614 | Remember, in your story-- look at it, scattered everywhere!--that line? |
15614 | Ruth?" |
15614 | Say, ever see any one resembling that photograph I dropped?" |
15614 | Say, how about this Ah Cum: is he honest?" |
15614 | Sewn on that button yet?" |
15614 | Shall I sew it on for you?" |
15614 | Shall I tell you, or shall I leave you in the dark-- as I must always leave her? |
15614 | She wondered if the second part would overcome his objections? |
15614 | So he''s come around, then? |
15614 | Something about his people?" |
15614 | Something that was n''t in the play at all but had walked out of the scenery like the historical black cat? |
15614 | Supposing Ah Cum''s luck failed for once? |
15614 | Supposing he made but one misstep? |
15614 | Supposing he too wanted love and his arms were as empty as hers? |
15614 | Supposing her father had made her assist him in the care of the derelicts solely to fill her with loathing and abhorrence for mankind? |
15614 | Supposing she saw the young man at dinner that night, emptying his bottle? |
15614 | Supposing that was it; at least, a solution to part of this amazing riddle? |
15614 | Supposing the wire should break and her head tumble off her shoulders into the street? |
15614 | Supposing they find you and take you away?--and she unprepared? |
15614 | Supposing you take them and read them? |
15614 | Taber?" |
15614 | Taber?" |
15614 | That pair?" |
15614 | That would be fun, eh?" |
15614 | The future? |
15614 | The pearls were really yours?" |
15614 | The trader you spoke about: he disliked your father, did n''t he? |
15614 | Then somebody was coming? |
15614 | Then you wo n''t tell me where he''s going?" |
15614 | There is nobody, then?" |
15614 | There must be real Valjeans, else how could authors write about them? |
15614 | There were words, then, that ran on indefinitely, with reversals? |
15614 | This girl was strong and vital: how would she take it when she learned that she had cast her lot with a fugitive from justice? |
15614 | To- morrow!--who knew? |
15614 | Told her what?" |
15614 | Twenty- four hours a day to think in, alone?... |
15614 | Was Ah Cum offering him an opportunity to warn Spurlock? |
15614 | Was he powerless to stir her without the gift? |
15614 | Was he really awake? |
15614 | Was he something of a moral pervert, then? |
15614 | Was he, too, on the way to the beach? |
15614 | Was it what he had lost-- the familiar world-- rather than what he had done? |
15614 | Was n''t the river beautiful under the moonlight?" |
15614 | Was she interested in that young ass who was risking his bones over there in the city? |
15614 | Was that it? |
15614 | Well, what about it?" |
15614 | Were not his own sentiments inclined in favour of the patient? |
15614 | Were the parents agreeable? |
15614 | Were they of age? |
15614 | What about that?" |
15614 | What are those little red circles?" |
15614 | What are you going to do?" |
15614 | What are you going to tell me?" |
15614 | What can you do to protect yourself against hunger?" |
15614 | What did we know about Father, except when he was around the house? |
15614 | What did you do when your father went on trips to other islands?" |
15614 | What do you think of the old tub?" |
15614 | What do you want of them?" |
15614 | What had led him into that? |
15614 | What happened between Ruth and her father that made him hurry off without passing ordinary courtesies with me?" |
15614 | What happened here just before I came?" |
15614 | What instinct had impelled him swiftly to assume his Oriental mask? |
15614 | What instinct had stuffed it back into his throat? |
15614 | What is a Yale man?" |
15614 | What is he-- English or American?" |
15614 | What is it?" |
15614 | What is it?" |
15614 | What is physical torture, if someone who loves you is nigh? |
15614 | What is the supreme idea in the heart and mind of youth? |
15614 | What is your father''s business?" |
15614 | What kind of a woman do you want, anyhow?" |
15614 | What manner of tourist was this who had heard neither of the geisha of Japan nor of the sing- song girl of China? |
15614 | What right had a young woman to possess the scarring and intimate knowledge of that dreg of human society, the beachcomber? |
15614 | What shall I say except that I am accursed of men? |
15614 | What sort of a human being are you, anyhow?" |
15614 | What the devil could be wrong?" |
15614 | What the devil have you been up to, to land in this bog?" |
15614 | What the devil kind of a father is he?" |
15614 | What was all this pother about hell as a future state? |
15614 | What was it in her heart or mind or soul that went out to this man? |
15614 | What was the matter with Spurlock that was to keep him in bed three or four weeks? |
15614 | What was the matter with the dress? |
15614 | What was the name she had given? |
15614 | What was this man?" |
15614 | What would Donald McClintock be doing with himself, when youth left the island, never more to return? |
15614 | What would happen to her? |
15614 | What would happen when confronted by the actual? |
15614 | What!--add another drop to her cup? |
15614 | What!--you know so little of that child? |
15614 | What''ll you be doing?" |
15614 | What''s all this about, anyhow? |
15614 | What''s happened?" |
15614 | What''s the idea of the black border?" |
15614 | What''s the trouble?" |
15614 | Whatever made you do it?" |
15614 | When will he be up?" |
15614 | Whence had she come: whither was she bound? |
15614 | Where can I get one?" |
15614 | Where does she come from?" |
15614 | Where was this kindly world she had drawn so rosily in fancy? |
15614 | Where''s the dining room? |
15614 | Who could say that the two were n''t in collusion? |
15614 | Who invented them? |
15614 | Who knows? |
15614 | Why all this pother about what one''s neighbour thought, when this pother was not energized by any good will? |
15614 | Why am I here-- thirty years of loneliness? |
15614 | Why are n''t you with her in this hour of bitterness?" |
15614 | Why are you so anxious?" |
15614 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
15614 | Why did people hide their natural kindliness as if it were something shameful? |
15614 | Why did the beggar hang on down there, when he could have enjoyed all that civilization had to offer? |
15614 | Why did this young man have one name on the hotel register and another on his lips? |
15614 | Why did you let him have it?" |
15614 | Why did you marry her?" |
15614 | Why do n''t you come to China as I went to America-- with an open mind?" |
15614 | Why do n''t you try to find out how the every- day Chinese lives, how he treats his family, what his normal habits are, his hopes, his ambitions? |
15614 | Why do you suppose she married you if she did n''t love you? |
15614 | Why had Ruth married_ him_? |
15614 | Why had he kissed her? |
15614 | Why had he offered her that kiss on board_ The Tigress_? |
15614 | Why had n''t he admitted that he recognized the photograph? |
15614 | Why had n''t he gone on with the girl''s story? |
15614 | Why had she married him, off- hand, like that? |
15614 | Why not let him imagine himself secure? |
15614 | Why not? |
15614 | Why not? |
15614 | Why should God give particular attention to such a prayer, when He had ignored all others? |
15614 | Why should he stare at her in this fashion?--for all the world as if she had pointed a pistol at his head? |
15614 | Why should n''t James Boyle pinch out a little fun while waiting? |
15614 | Why should n''t people say what they thought and act as they were inclined? |
15614 | Why should she? |
15614 | Why should there be this inexplicable compassion, when the normal sensation should have been repellance? |
15614 | Why should you want to shield him?" |
15614 | Why the devil did_ you_ marry_ her_? |
15614 | Why the inexplicable impulse to hurry this rather pathetic derelict on his way? |
15614 | Why was n''t the world full of love, when love made happiness? |
15614 | Why was she bothering about him at all? |
15614 | Why was truth avoided as the plague? |
15614 | Why, then, did he touch it? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why? |
15614 | Why?" |
15614 | Will he have to bring recommendations?" |
15614 | Will you be wanting me alone?" |
15614 | Will you come sensibly, or shall I carry you? |
15614 | Will you leave us for a few minutes?" |
15614 | Will you marry me, Ruth?" |
15614 | Will you read to me? |
15614 | Will you stand by and watch me?" |
15614 | Would a hundred dollars interest you?" |
15614 | Would her soul be shaken, twisted, hypnotized?--as it had been those other times? |
15614 | Would n''t it be fun to see his name on a book- cover some day? |
15614 | Would there be enough in the young man''s envelope to pay the doctor and the hotel bill-- and in the event of his death, enough to ship the body home? |
15614 | Would you like a peg?" |
15614 | Would you like to see them at work?" |
15614 | Would you mind?" |
15614 | Yesterday!--who cared? |
15614 | You are French?" |
15614 | You are a detective?" |
15614 | You do n''t want me to spoil the story, do you?" |
15614 | You told him there was n''t anything in the pockets?" |
15614 | You wo n''t mind if I empty this gin?" |
15614 | You''ll be along next spring?" |
15614 | You''re a friend of the young man?" |
15614 | You''ve never seen a typhoon, have you?" |
15614 | _ How long wilt thou forget me, O Lord? |
15614 | for ever? |
15614 | now?" |
30882 | What do you do? |
30882 | What is it all,we say,"but a trouble of ants in the gleam of a million million of suns?" |
30882 | After all, is it a greater miracle that consciousness should exist_ de_tached from matter than that it should exist_ at_tached to matter? |
30882 | And approbation? |
30882 | And does not this lend a strange fascination to the adventure of life? |
30882 | And how does he effect his purposes? |
30882 | And now comes the question, What does God do? |
30882 | And what are the grounds of that reconcilement? |
30882 | And what if, for contents and malcontents alike, he had an uncovenanted bonus up his sleeve? |
30882 | And what is this"racial adventure"? |
30882 | And what of the great selflessnesses? |
30882 | And what shall we say, for example, of the case of a young biologist who dies of blood- poisoning on the eve of a great and beneficent discovery? |
30882 | And, even if this point could be granted, where is the organizing power? |
30882 | Besides, when we come to think of it, why this prejudice against miracles? |
30882 | But have we any use for a God who can teach us nothing? |
30882 | But is Mr. Wells, on his side, quite courteous, or even quite fair, to the Veiled Being? |
30882 | But is it not a phenomenon of a new and perhaps an epoch- marking order? |
30882 | But is it really, to our Western sense, a misfortune to be a masterless man? |
30882 | But is that any reason why an intelligent Power should be unable to devise a really helpful miracle? |
30882 | But is the glamour of his name quite what it once was? |
30882 | But seriously, is any conceivable sort of theocracy a desirable ideal? |
30882 | But where are the men and women who feel the immortality of God, however we define or construct him, a rich compensation for their own mortality? |
30882 | But why this irony? |
30882 | But will they understand if you tell them that we triumph over the grave because God dies with us and yet never dies? |
30882 | CONTENTS I The Great Adventurer 1 II A God Who"Growed"3 III New Myths for Old 8 IV The Apostle''s Creed 32 V When Is a God Not a God? |
30882 | Can any thinking man say that the world is quite the same to him since the invention of wireless telegraphy? |
30882 | Can it be that, hurried or tired out, The hand of the juggler shook? |
30882 | Can it minister any substantial comfort or fortification to the normal man in the moment of peril or agony? |
30882 | Can there be any doubt that the Bishop was either telling-- well, not the truth-- or shamelessly playing with words? |
30882 | Can we beat into a ploughshare the sword of St. Bartholomew, and a thousand other deeds of horror? |
30882 | Can we view his action with approval, even with gratitude? |
30882 | Could the world have been appreciably worse off without it? |
30882 | Did Buddha,''neath the bo- tree''s shade, Learn how the stars were poised and swayed? |
30882 | Did Jesus still pain''s raging storm, And dower the world with chloroform? |
30882 | Does Mr. Wells know his modern Englishmen or Anglo- Americans? |
30882 | Does the healthy human spirit suffer from having no one to bow down to, no one to relieve it of the burden of choice, responsibility, self- control? |
30882 | Does this seem a concession to obscurantism? |
30882 | For is not Mr. Wells the great Adventurer of latter- day literature? |
30882 | From what, then, are you saved? |
30882 | Has he himself always kept to it? |
30882 | Has revelation e''er revealed Aught from its age and hour concealed? |
30882 | Has there been any voluntary"slaying of self"on so huge a scale since the world began? |
30882 | Have we not in such an experience an irrefutable proof of the inefficacy of Mr. Britling''s God? |
30882 | He is only concerned to disentangle it a little, to reduce the chaos of the world to some sort of seemliness and order"? |
30882 | How can one worship an insoluble problem? |
30882 | I am proud to think that Mr. Wells and I are soldiers in the same army; ought we not at all costs to maintain a united front? |
30882 | I am simply asking:"Will they work?" |
30882 | I asked,"with the stumps of the trees you fell? |
30882 | I can not but think that the poet got nearer the heart of the matter who wrote:-- Was Moses upon Sinai taught How Sinai''s mighty ribs were wrought? |
30882 | If it did exist, and made the world an appreciably better place to live in, why should we grudge it a few miracles? |
30882 | If we accept this hypothesis, can we acquit the Artificer of wanton cruelty? |
30882 | In that case the Scottish Catechism would be justified, which asks"What is the chief end of man?" |
30882 | Is God only a luxury for the intellectually wealthy? |
30882 | Is he a helpful or a detrimental"synthesis"? |
30882 | Is he outside that causal plexus, self- begotten, self- existent? |
30882 | Is it necessary to protest once more that this assurance of progress towards the good is not to be confounded with optimism? |
30882 | Is it not Mr. Wells''s endeavour in this very book to claim our devotion for the all- embracing and ultimate ideal-- the human race? |
30882 | Is it not as though a ventriloquist were to prostrate himself before his own puppet? |
30882 | Is it possible thus to dissociate him from the Veiled Being, and proclaim him an independent, an agnostic God? |
30882 | Is it possible to deodorize a word which comes to us redolent of"good, thick stupefying incense- smoke,"mingled with the reek of the auto- da- fé? |
30882 | Is it wise or kind to seek to impose on the future an endless struggle with its sinister ambiguities? |
30882 | Is not this a case in which the modern God might with advantage have swerved from his principles and( for once) played the part of Providence? |
30882 | Is there any more substantial solace in it than in the"Oh, may I join the Choir Invisible"aspiration of mid- nineteenth- century positivism? |
30882 | Is there any real escape from the fact that for each of us the one thing that actually exists is our individual consciousness? |
30882 | Is this an optimistic statement? |
30882 | It may be, for example, that the elimination of Pain would only leave a vacuum for Tedium to rush in; but how are we to decide this_ à priori_? |
30882 | May it not be that the time has come to give the name of God a rest? |
30882 | Nay, may it not be said that my criticism of_ God the Invisible King_ is a breach of discipline, like duelling in the face of the enemy? |
30882 | Or Mahomet a jehad decree''Gainst microbe- harboring gnat and flea? |
30882 | Or are we to regard God as the Viceroy of the Veiled Being, to whom, in that case, our ultimate allegiance is due? |
30882 | Or can it be restored to its pristine potency? |
30882 | Or miracle, since time began, Conferred a single boon on Man? |
30882 | Or only the last of a thousand Dr. Cooks? |
30882 | Or, for that matter, what has he been doing since July, 1870? |
30882 | Or, to put the same question in more general terms, is it wise of Mr. Wells to make such play with the word"God"? |
30882 | Ought one not rather to hold one''s peace than to afford the common enemy the encouragement of witnessing a squabble in the ranks? |
30882 | Perhaps I am on the verge of extinction-- if so, what does it all matter? |
30882 | Perhaps to ask"When?" |
30882 | Short of this, however, is no other simplification possible? |
30882 | The God who can work upon the human mind has the key to the situation in his hands-- why, then, does he make such scant use of it? |
30882 | The champagne of the spiritual life? |
30882 | The doctrines of"the modern religion"may give us a new motive for living; but how can they at the same time diminish our distaste for dying? |
30882 | To what, now, does all this amount? |
30882 | V WHEN IS A GOD NOT A GOD? |
30882 | Was Mr. Wells to be the Peary of the great quest? |
30882 | Was ever there such a sight in the world? |
30882 | Were we on the brink of another and much more momentous discovery? |
30882 | What about kneeling through the C Minor Symphony? |
30882 | What does he aim at? |
30882 | What if it should be given him to sign his name to the first truly- projected chart of the scheme of things?" |
30882 | What of the ideal loyalties? |
30882 | What was the Invisible King about when that catastrophe happened? |
30882 | What, then, does he tell us of his God? |
30882 | What, then, has the Invisible King made of his opportunities? |
30882 | What, then, is"faith"in this context? |
30882 | When all is said and done, is there not more hope, more solace, in an enigma than in a_ façon de parler_? |
30882 | Where do you guess he learned the trick To hold us gaping here, Till our minds in the spell of his maze almost Have forgotten the time of year? |
30882 | Where is the God( as Mr. Zangwill has pertinently enquired) who will give us a cure for cancer? |
30882 | Where the passion of a battle if its issue were foreknown? |
30882 | Where was the Invisible King in July, 1914? |
30882 | Where would be the interest of a race if its result were a foregone conclusion? |
30882 | Which of the other Gods who have announced themselves from time to time has found such a megaphone to reverberate his voice? |
30882 | While you lurk obstinately behind that veil, how can I even know that your political views are sound? |
30882 | Why are order, justice, courage, humanity good? |
30882 | Why is England more than the mere rocks of which it is composed? |
30882 | Why is Mr. Wells so sternly opposed to the bare idea of Providence? |
30882 | Why is a regiment more than a mob? |
30882 | Why is a temple more than a heap of stones? |
30882 | Why is egoism evil? |
30882 | Why seek to revive and rehabilitate a word of such a dismal connotation? |
30882 | Why should we trouble about vastness-- mere extension in space? |
30882 | Will Mr. Wells succeed any better? |
30882 | Will an enigma die with me in a reeling aeroplane? |
30882 | Would not this have been a good occasion for a similar exercise of urbanity? |
30882 | Yet why he disposed to twit A fellow who does such wonderful things With the merest lack of wit? |
30882 | or at any rate tempt the weaker brethren to do so? |
30882 | who has to be taught by us before he can do anything worth mentioning? |
36471 | -------- Analysis of liebenerite? |
36471 | Do the public schools educate children beyond the position which they must occupy in life? |
36471 | Is history a science? |
36569 | WHAT DO WE KNOW CONCERNING ELECTRICITY? |
2141 | ''Get anything out of that?'' 2141 ''How am I supposed to push along your scramble for prominence?'' |
2141 | Ai n''t it a corkin''situation? 2141 Ai n''t progress ever appealed to none of yez? |
2141 | All in? |
2141 | And in the name of the seven sacred saddle- blankets of Sagittarius, where did the stage and literature get the stunt? |
2141 | And say-- did you ever hear a man complain of hippopotamuses? 2141 Any joolry displaced? |
2141 | Any silver missing? |
2141 | Are all these men druggists? |
2141 | Are you afraid you''ll get a free ride? |
2141 | Are you afraid, Eddie? |
2141 | Are you coming along to the house? |
2141 | Are you dressed warm enough, Daise? |
2141 | Are you sure you know me? |
2141 | Are you willing to return to your old home if you are assured of a welcome and restoration to favor? |
2141 | Before we go out,she whispered in his ear--"before anything happens, tell me again, Eddie, do you l-- do you really like me?" |
2141 | Can this be Longhorn Merritt? |
2141 | Cherry loves me? 2141 Did I hear ye open the book?" |
2141 | Did you ever hear that story about the man from the West? |
2141 | Did you see it, Billy? |
2141 | Did you see it? |
2141 | Did you? |
2141 | Do I look bughouse? |
2141 | Do n''t I tell you it''s too late? 2141 Do n''t you like this_ filet mignon_?" |
2141 | Do n''t you remember me, Helen-- the one who has always loved you best? 2141 Do they want me back?" |
2141 | Do you hear our lad readin''to me? |
2141 | Do you know how much money it would take to pay back the losses of consumers during that corner in flour? |
2141 | Do you know the''Falling Waters''? |
2141 | Does mother want to see me? |
2141 | Eddie, do you really like me? |
2141 | For an excipient in manipulating a pill mass which do you prefer-- the magnesia carbonate or the pulverised glycerrhiza radix? |
2141 | For love of me? |
2141 | Gawd knows I love him; but if he has done this deed--you sabe, do n''t you? |
2141 | Got any dough with you, Annie? |
2141 | Had any drinks? |
2141 | Have I no right to come in? |
2141 | Have I no right to stay in it? 2141 Have I? |
2141 | Have another beer? |
2141 | Have you been taking him to the Zoo? 2141 Have you heard any talk of a hippopotamus?" |
2141 | Have you read the last story I sent you--''The Alarum of the Soul''? |
2141 | How could I tell? |
2141 | How could you do that? |
2141 | How did you happen to see me? |
2141 | How do I know? |
2141 | How do you do? |
2141 | How goes the writing? |
2141 | How many this week, Miss Mary? |
2141 | How much capital have you got, Billy? |
2141 | How much did he pay you for it? |
2141 | How was the range when you left the Gila? |
2141 | How''d you like to play a game or two of seven- up? 2141 How''s that?" |
2141 | How? 2141 How?" |
2141 | I think so, Mr. Hildebrant-- the one that lives the longest-- Is that right? |
2141 | I was doing the Monte Cristo act as adapted by Pompton, N. J., was n''t I? |
2141 | If I could prove to you that I am right? |
2141 | Is it evening yet? |
2141 | Is n''t it in the still, quiet places that things do happen? 2141 Is that Jimmy Dunn?" |
2141 | Is that a new one? 2141 Is that so, sport?" |
2141 | Is that you, Annie? |
2141 | Is there a conundrum without an answer in the next number? 2141 Is there a crush already in the waiting rooms of the old doctor that does skin grafting?" |
2141 | Is you from the South, suh? 2141 Ladies?" |
2141 | Longy,he said, in a melancholy voice that disturbed traffic,"what have they been doing to you? |
2141 | Loves me? |
2141 | Man,said Sam Griggs severely, puckering his old, smooth, lined face,"are you a chess automaton or a human pincushion? |
2141 | May I ask what your name is? |
2141 | Me? 2141 Me?" |
2141 | Mr. Pinkhammer,he said, giving the bulk of his attention to his forefinger,"may I request you to step aside with me for a little conversation? |
2141 | Now, what is this foolishness he talks of hippopotamuses? |
2141 | On the dead level? |
2141 | One for the lady? |
2141 | Ought n''t I to? |
2141 | Pardon me,said Mr. Kelley, to the General,"but you got balled up in the shuffle, did n''t you? |
2141 | Paresis or superannuated? |
2141 | Say, Mike,said James Turner,"what''s your line, anyway-- shoe laces? |
2141 | Say, Sport, do you know where you are at? 2141 Say, Tim,"he said to the waiter,"why do they have Easter?" |
2141 | Say,said the girl, blazing upon him with low- voiced indignation,"what do you think I am? |
2141 | Say,''Bo,said Black Riley to him,"where did you cop out dat doll?" |
2141 | She has n''t much money to speak of, has she? |
2141 | Should I stay in? 2141 Smoke, Shack?" |
2141 | Spanish or Dago? |
2141 | Tell me,asked Dawe, with truculent anxiety,"what especial faults in''The Alarum of the Soul''caused you to throw it down?" |
2141 | That''s the way I want it; because--"Because what? |
2141 | The riddle? 2141 Then the charge is fifty cents, I suppose?" |
2141 | They have been pounding your stocks to- day on the Street, Pierpont? |
2141 | This doll? |
2141 | Thursday? |
2141 | Vell,said Hildebrant, shaking all over with the vile conceit of the joke- maker,"haf you guessed him? |
2141 | Vell,said Hildebrant,"haf you guessed him? |
2141 | W''at''s he come makin''a noise like a penny arcade for amongst gen''lemen that comes in the square to set and think? |
2141 | Waiter, bring an absinthe frappé and-- what''s yours, Greenbrier? |
2141 | Want to be in at the death, do you? |
2141 | We''ll drink our beer before we go, ha? |
2141 | Well, how is that for a bum guess? 2141 Well, you''ve been speaking it, ai n''t you?" |
2141 | What I wanted? |
2141 | What are they? |
2141 | What are youse doin''in here? |
2141 | What did you wish to see me about? |
2141 | What do you mean? |
2141 | What house is this? |
2141 | What is it to you? |
2141 | What is it, Doctor Volney? 2141 What t''ell you doin''?" |
2141 | What the deuce are you doing in New York? 2141 What the deuce,"said he, wonderingly,"is old Bell doing here? |
2141 | What to me is war and politics? 2141 What was in the bundle that they left?" |
2141 | What would I think? |
2141 | What would you think,I said, a little anxiously,"if I were to tell you that my name is Edward Pinkhammer, from Cornopolis, Kansas?" |
2141 | What young man? |
2141 | What''s doing at church? |
2141 | What''s his line? |
2141 | What''s that? 2141 What''s the diagnosis of your case, Freddy?" |
2141 | What''s the matter with her? |
2141 | What''s the old lady want this cherry- buster to do? |
2141 | What''s the professor''s line? |
2141 | What''s the use to try? |
2141 | What''s wrong? 2141 What? |
2141 | What? |
2141 | When are you coming to see me-- where I live? |
2141 | Who do you think you are talking to? 2141 Who pays the rent and buys the food that is eaten in this house?" |
2141 | Who pays the rent and buys the food that is eaten in this house? |
2141 | Who? |
2141 | Why are you going in there? |
2141 | Why did you do it? |
2141 | Why fetch and carry,said Black Riley,"when some one will do it for ye? |
2141 | Why should I not be going out? |
2141 | Why, Corrigan,he asked,"is Easter? |
2141 | Why, Shack, is this you? |
2141 | Why, what do you think? 2141 Will that be you, lad?" |
2141 | Will you undertake the treatment of my case, Doctor Volney? |
2141 | Wo n''t that be enough? 2141 Wot''ll you take for it, den?" |
2141 | Would it be too late,I asked, somewhat timorously,"to offer you congratulations?" |
2141 | Would you like me to-- Eddie? |
2141 | You do n''t think I''d fall to that, do you? 2141 You have n''t dined, then?" |
2141 | You see that bundle of printed stuff in the corner, Billy? 2141 You''re quite a big lawyer out West-- Denver, is n''t it, or Los Angeles? |
2141 | You''ve been looking for me,said Thomas,"and do n''t know my name? |
2141 | Young man,said old Jacob, severely,"how about that parlor maid you were engaged to?" |
2141 | ''A sidewalk merchant?'' |
2141 | ''Contrast?'' |
2141 | ''Vat kind of a hen lays der longest?''" |
2141 | ''Vat kind of a hen lays der longest?''" |
2141 | ''What do you call this-- letter to a Hardware Merchant from His Nephew on Learning that His Aunt Has Nettlerash? |
2141 | ''What kind of a hen lays the longest? |
2141 | ( And then to his friend)''Say, Tommy, does a thirty- two bullet make a big hole? |
2141 | --wouldn''t that put pink icing and a little red sugar bird on your bridal cake? |
2141 | A poor coal- digger( ever hear of a rich one?) |
2141 | A young man who can not riddles antworten, he is not so good by business for ein family to provide-- is not that-- hein?'' |
2141 | Ai n''t Rooney''s all right? |
2141 | Ai n''t it all right in here? |
2141 | Ai n''t it hell, now, Shack-- ain''t it? |
2141 | Ai n''t it like a Dutchman to risk a man''s happiness on a fool proposition like that? |
2141 | Ai n''t it lovely? |
2141 | Ai n''t that reason enough?" |
2141 | Ai n''t you got any other recommendations?" |
2141 | Ai n''t you just put in an invoice of a pint of peanuts or another apple? |
2141 | Although you married him, Helen--""_ Who Are You?_"cried the woman, with wide- open eyes, snatching her hand away. |
2141 | Am I as good as a horse? |
2141 | Am I nothing in this house?" |
2141 | And for what?" |
2141 | And have you seen Sara Bernhardt in''Andrew Mack''yet?" |
2141 | And if dere''s any picnics or red balloons to be dealt out here, Mike''s money pays for''em-- see? |
2141 | And say-- we''ve got vinegar pretty well in hand, have n''t we?'' |
2141 | And then he gave a short roar at the top of his voice, and said:"Was it the hippopotamus you wanted to be read to about then?" |
2141 | And then he said:"Helen, do you not remember me? |
2141 | And then what?" |
2141 | And what am I doin''here with him? |
2141 | And what had Fuzzy to do with any of it? |
2141 | Any of the old ladies''sunshades disappeared? |
2141 | Are they wearing those things on Broadway now?" |
2141 | Are you coming to church with me?" |
2141 | Are you some wiser now, uncle, or do you want to scrap wit''Mike O''Grady for de Santa Claus belt in dis district?" |
2141 | As the doctor was moving off I heard Uncle Cæsar''s voice inside:"Did he get bofe of dem two dollars from you, Mis''Zalea?" |
2141 | Bellchambers? |
2141 | Bessie led away by a strange man? |
2141 | But do n''t you think it about time, now, for you to introduce yourself?" |
2141 | But how did you get wise, doc? |
2141 | But if he has or he ai n''t, what does he want to go''round butting into other folks''s business for? |
2141 | But no more Rooney''s at one o''clock-- see?" |
2141 | But what''s the use of talking about it? |
2141 | But when did these stunts happen?" |
2141 | But will they have me again? |
2141 | But, the bone? |
2141 | Can you forgive the past and remember the love that has lasted for twenty years? |
2141 | Can you, will you, forgive me?" |
2141 | Could it be possible?" |
2141 | Could you get me a drink from the sideboard, Tommy? |
2141 | Cut that out, please-- who do you think I am? |
2141 | Did the gentlemen wish to speak with one of the brothers? |
2141 | Did you ever do that and listen to the words of grief and despair as they flowed spontaneously from her lips?" |
2141 | Did you ever know a man to give a woman a dollar without any consideration? |
2141 | Do n''t you think I was right?" |
2141 | Do n''t you think you might before long?" |
2141 | Do you catch the idea?" |
2141 | Do you know the family of Van Smuythes living in Washington Square North?" |
2141 | Do you see those hills over there?" |
2141 | Do you suppose I''d lie to you? |
2141 | For you were there, and you wrote a note to Fannie on the hotel paper, and mailed it, just to show her that-- you did not? |
2141 | Forster?" |
2141 | Get the point? |
2141 | Get them statistics?" |
2141 | Had you forgotten about it?" |
2141 | Hardly had time to yawn, did you? |
2141 | Has he been found? |
2141 | Have they got them yet?" |
2141 | Have ye hippopotamuses in the lease? |
2141 | Have you heard this fellow Crusoe sing? |
2141 | He called a waiter and said:"Is Mr. Gilmore still behind the desk? |
2141 | Hello, what''s this? |
2141 | Hey-- what?" |
2141 | Hey-- what?" |
2141 | His mind? |
2141 | Horse with the heaves? |
2141 | How did you manage to get past my office- boy and invade my sanctum? |
2141 | How do you know this ai n''t the man I want? |
2141 | How have you been so blind?" |
2141 | How is that?" |
2141 | How long do you expect to hold an audience in a court- room with that kind of stuff? |
2141 | How many square pounds of baled hay do you think a jackass could eat if he stopped brayin''long enough to keep still a minute and five eighths?" |
2141 | How much do you get a week for the stunt you do now?" |
2141 | How much would it be worth to you?'' |
2141 | Huh?--why, Macy''s-- don''t it fit nice? |
2141 | I know it comes the first time you''re full after the moon rises on the seventeenth of March-- but why? |
2141 | I might have concealed the name; but why always hold back your mystery till the end? |
2141 | I seen you on Sixth Avenue Tuesday afternoon, Mr. De Forest-- swell?--oh, my!--who is she? |
2141 | I slide a little lower on the leather- cornered seat and, well, order another Würzburger and wish that Longstreet had-- but what''s the use? |
2141 | I''ve give the missionary societies$ 2,000,000, but what did I get out of it? |
2141 | If it was the_ d t''s_, why am I so sore?" |
2141 | Is Mrs. B. along or is this a little business run alone, eh?" |
2141 | Is aphasia curable? |
2141 | Is it a proper and religious ceremony, or does the Governor appoint it out of politics?" |
2141 | Is she nothing to you? |
2141 | Is that too much powder? |
2141 | Is there any life so devoid of impossibilities as life in this city? |
2141 | Is there any way it can be done, old Ways and Means?" |
2141 | Is this ten thousand dollars money, or do I have to save so many coupons to get it?" |
2141 | It was a good story, except--""I can write English, ca n''t I?" |
2141 | It''s kind of hard luck, ai n''t it? |
2141 | Know where a fellow could get action on about$ 9 or$ 10? |
2141 | McCree?" |
2141 | Mike''s got de stomach- ache privilege for every kid in dis neighborhood-- see? |
2141 | Morgan?" |
2141 | Morgan?" |
2141 | Mr. Bassett-- you''re always fooling-- no--? |
2141 | Neither of you never knew One- eyed Peters, did you, while you was around Little Rock? |
2141 | Nerve-- but just here will you oblige by perusing again the quotation with which this story begins? |
2141 | No, then?" |
2141 | Now, could you enjoy having the news read to you from an evening newspaper unless you could see the colors of the headlines? |
2141 | Now, what is there about Rooney''s to inspire all this pother? |
2141 | Now, what''s the prize for the best answer to all this?" |
2141 | Now, what''s the use? |
2141 | Oh, what is it?" |
2141 | Oh, you''ve still got your hammer out for New York, have you? |
2141 | Ought n''t I to know? |
2141 | Say, Cele, what''s the use of waiting now? |
2141 | Say, do I look like I''d climbed down one of them missing fire- escapes at Helicon Hall? |
2141 | Say, who do you think you are talking to? |
2141 | Shall I come to believe in the Chaldean Chiroscope myself? |
2141 | Should he curse this mountain of pernicious humor-- curse him and die? |
2141 | So you know Miss Adair?" |
2141 | Sprinkle a little gasoline on''i m, and drop''i m on the Drive-- well?" |
2141 | That store of mine ai n''t very big, but--""Oh, ai n''t it?" |
2141 | That suit you?" |
2141 | That''s enough to marry on, ai n''t it? |
2141 | That''s rather a new design in waistcoats you have on, is n''t it, Gilliam? |
2141 | The fingers of one hand fumbled with a button on his coat as he blurted between his pale lips:_"Say, Shack, ai n''t that a hell of a note? |
2141 | Then, with quickly returning conviction, he asked blandishingly:"What are you gwine there for, boss?" |
2141 | They stand in the( ranch) library, which is furnished with mounted elk heads( did n''t the Elks have a fish fry in Amagensett once? |
2141 | Those wreaths and festoons of holly with their scarlet berries making the great hall gay-- where had he seen such things before? |
2141 | Und''stand?" |
2141 | Waitin''for me, you say? |
2141 | Walter?" |
2141 | Was it copying ink that you wanted or just writing fluid?" |
2141 | Well, dis is Mike O''Grady''s district you''re buttin''into-- see? |
2141 | Well, now, can you whistle up a fairy that''ll solve this hen query, or not?" |
2141 | Well, when do you want to begin?" |
2141 | What are you doing in here with him?" |
2141 | What are you doing with that girl?" |
2141 | What devil''s city is this?" |
2141 | What did Mr. Morgan say he''d give for it? |
2141 | What did the noisiest project in the world-- I mean the building of the Tower of Babel-- result in finally? |
2141 | What did you call that mess in the crock with the handle, Longy? |
2141 | What have I up?" |
2141 | What have you got against this town, Jack? |
2141 | What kind of a hen lays the longest? |
2141 | What manner of entertainment, adventure, or excitement have you to offer to the stranger within your gates?" |
2141 | What part of the house do you work in?" |
2141 | What saloon does he work in?" |
2141 | What to me should be glory and the shooting of mans? |
2141 | What''s the answer-- two apples or a yard and a half?" |
2141 | What''s the matter with her?" |
2141 | What''s the matter with_ you_? |
2141 | What''s this? |
2141 | What''s vitiating you, anyhow?" |
2141 | What? |
2141 | What?" |
2141 | When a man loses his memory does it return slowly, or suddenly?" |
2141 | When is a hen?" |
2141 | When that part of it was over, Mary said:"And did you find what you wanted while you were abroad?" |
2141 | Where do druggists mostly keep''em? |
2141 | Who earns the money for the rent and the breakfast you''ve just eat, I''d like to know? |
2141 | Who else was there to take it? |
2141 | Who wears the diamonds in this town? |
2141 | Who''s got the money in the world? |
2141 | Why ca n''t they stay at home and forget?" |
2141 | Why ca n''t we get married next week?" |
2141 | Why do we do it? |
2141 | Why should this man, prosperous, happily married, and respected, choose suddenly to abandon everything? |
2141 | Why should we not shake hands-- at least once in fifteen years?" |
2141 | Why was n''t somebody looking after her, I''d like to know? |
2141 | Why, it was this:''What kind of a hen lays the longest? |
2141 | Why? |
2141 | Why? |
2141 | Why? |
2141 | Will you keep company with me, Ruby?" |
2141 | Will you not trust me?" |
2141 | Would an offer of$ 2.25 for it cause you to knock over any fragile articles of your stock in hurrying it off the nail?" |
2141 | Would n''t that knock you off your perch, Shack? |
2141 | Would you be willing at all to entertain the hypothesis that my name is Edward Pinkhammer, and that I never saw you before in my life?" |
2141 | You never was interested in Africa, was you, Miss Cherry?" |
2141 | You old fool nigger, ca n''t you tell people from other people when you see''em?" |
2141 | You see that bottle of blue ink on the table? |
2141 | You see this robe that I wear?" |
2141 | You talk about being cut to a pattern-- well, ai n''t the pattern all right? |
2141 | You und''stand? |
2141 | are we that high up?" |
2141 | asked Thomas, with the freemasonic familiarity of the damned--"Booze? |
2141 | did you ever wonder where they get the other 364? |
2141 | he said with a grin;"but you mean a peroxide Juno, do n''t you?" |
2141 | said Daisy, with a brief flash of spirit,"where do you think I come from-- Brooklyn? |
2141 | said the General, feelingly and finally,"is it that you have never eaten of the corned beef hash that Madame O''Brien she make?" |
2141 | she cried anxiously--"When?--where? |
2141 | she cried, weeping and laughing, and hanging upon his neck,"why did you do it?" |
2141 | that ai n''t the District of Columbia you''re talking about, is it?" |
2141 | what did you do it for, old man?" |
3106 | A young man will catch the whole family with this flaming message, but where is that sentiment that once set the maiden heart in a flutter? |
3106 | And how does he find out that? |
3106 | And is this because we do not like to be insulted with originality, or because in our experience it is only the commonly accepted which is true? |
3106 | And what effect would this change in relations have upon men? |
3106 | And what would become of us without Receptions? |
3106 | And would this change be of any injury to them in their necessary fight for existence in this pushing world? |
3106 | Are we exaggerating this astonishing rise, development, and spread of the chrysanthemum? |
3106 | Are we not always trying to adjust ourselves to new relations, to get naturalized into a new family? |
3106 | Art is good in its way; but what about a perfect figure? |
3106 | But is it true that a woman is ever really naturalized? |
3106 | But is it well- founded, is there any more mystery about women-- than about men? |
3106 | But is not the sunshine common, and the bloom of May? |
3106 | But the inquiry has come from many cities, from many women,"Can not something be done to stop social screaming?" |
3106 | Can the lady act? |
3106 | Can training give one an elegant form, and study command the services of a man milliner? |
3106 | Can we reform London and Paris and New York, which our own hands have made? |
3106 | Could these men have conquered the world? |
3106 | DOES REFINEMENT KILL INDIVIDUALITY? |
3106 | Did not Mr. Tupper, that sweet, melodious shepherd of the undisputed, lead about vast flocks of sheep over the satisfying plain of mediocrity? |
3106 | Do not men do the same? |
3106 | Do we not like the books that raise us to the great level of the commonplace, whereon we move with a sense of power? |
3106 | Do you adapt yourself and your surroundings to him, or insist that he shall adapt himself to you? |
3106 | Does anybody regard it as anything but a sham and a burden? |
3106 | Does anything really take the place of that entire ease and confidence that one has in kin, or the inborn longing for their sympathy and society? |
3106 | Does he examine the subject, and try to understand it? |
3106 | Does he study that bill? |
3106 | Does he take pains to inform himself by reading and conversation with experts upon its probable effect? |
3106 | Does it require nowadays, then, no special talent or gift to go on the stage? |
3106 | Does one ever do it entirely? |
3106 | Does our process too much eliminate the rough vigor, courage, stamina of the race? |
3106 | Does she dress for her lover as she dresses to receive her lawyer who has come to inform her that she is living beyond her income? |
3106 | Does she ever lose the instinct of it? |
3106 | Does the gate of divorce open more frequently from following the one theory than the other? |
3106 | Does the time ever come when the distinction ceases between his family and hers? |
3106 | Even throw in goodness, a certain amount of altruism, gentleness, warm interest in unfortunate humanity-- is the situation much improved? |
3106 | Has a novelist the right to subject his creations to tortures that he would not dare to inflict upon his friends? |
3106 | Have they not the time? |
3106 | Have women more time? |
3106 | How do you treat the stranger? |
3106 | How long did"The Country Parson"feed an eager world with rhetorical statements of that which it already knew? |
3106 | If all the artificial round of calls and cards should tumble down, what valuable thing would be lost out of anybody''s life? |
3106 | If he can not be trusted in the matter of worsted- work, why should he have such distinctive liberty in the most important matter of his life? |
3106 | If we can not, where is the difficulty? |
3106 | In a word, if the world were actually all civilized, would n''t it be too weak even to ripen? |
3106 | Is Christmas swelling away? |
3106 | Is any one deceived by it? |
3106 | Is anybody beginning to feel it a burden, this sweet festival of charity and good- will, and to look forward to it with apprehension? |
3106 | Is he ever anything but a sort of tolerated, criticised, or admired alien? |
3106 | Is it in fact till we come to mediaeval times, and the chivalric age, that women are set up as being more incomprehensible than men? |
3106 | Is it in her nature to be? |
3106 | Is it not necessary to have an authentic list of pasteboard acquaintances to invite to the receptions? |
3106 | Is it not necessary to keep up what is called society? |
3106 | Is it only thoughtlessness? |
3106 | Is it true that cultivation, what we call refinement, kills individuality? |
3106 | Is it true that the mental process in one sex is intuitive, and in the other logical, with every link necessary and visible? |
3106 | Is n''t it indeed the golden era of letters? |
3106 | Is not this book pleasing because it is commonplace? |
3106 | Is not this, O brothers and sisters, an evil under the sun, this dinner as it is apt to be conducted? |
3106 | Is the Atlantic shore the only coast where beauty may lounge and spread its net of enchantment? |
3106 | Is the feminine nature any more difficult to understand than the masculine nature? |
3106 | Is the rage for this flower typical of this fast and flaring age? |
3106 | Is the time approaching when we shall want to get somebody to play it for us, like base- ball? |
3106 | Is there a barbaric force left in the world that we have been daintily trying to cover and apologize for and refine into gentle agreeableness? |
3106 | Is there nothing outside of that envied circle which you make so brilliant? |
3106 | Is there nothing stimulating in the conflict of mind with mind? |
3106 | Is there nothing, then, in the exchange of ideas? |
3106 | Is this a hopeless world? |
3106 | Is this an accident, or is it a necessity of the refinement that we insist on calling civilization? |
3106 | Is this an intangible matter? |
3106 | Is this an old sermon? |
3106 | Is your compact, graceful, orderly society liable to be monotonous in its gay repetition of the same thing week after week? |
3106 | It may be that this treatment has excited the sympathy of the world, but is it legitimate? |
3106 | Let it be common, and what distinction will there be in it? |
3106 | Must it always go on by spurts and relapses, alternate civilization and barbarism, and the barbarism being necessary to keep us employed and growing? |
3106 | Must the Congressman read it? |
3106 | Or is there some mistake about our ideal of civilization? |
3106 | Or, worse than that even, that one loses his taste by over- cultivation? |
3106 | Probably when the Great Assize is held one of the questions asked will be,"Did you, in America, ever write stories for children?" |
3106 | SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3106 | Should one take a cynical view of mankind because he perceives this great power of the commonplace? |
3106 | Suppose the proposal were made to women to exchange being mysterious for the ballot? |
3106 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3106 | THE LOSS IN CIVILIZATION Have we yet hit upon the right idea of civilization? |
3106 | That is to say, are not barbarism and vast regions of uncultivated land a necessity of healthful life on this globe? |
3106 | That is, less logical, more whimsical, more uncertain in their mental processes? |
3106 | The Atlantic shore and Europe? |
3106 | The subject is a delicate one, and should not be confused with the broader one, what is the purpose of the higher education? |
3106 | Was there ever a greater exhibition of power, while it lasted? |
3106 | What can be done with those who are described as"East- Londoners"? |
3106 | What can one do with this new favorite? |
3106 | What is gained, he asks, by leaving cards with all these people and receiving their cards? |
3106 | What is this London, the most civilized city ever known? |
3106 | What is this naturalization, however, but a sort of parable of human life? |
3106 | What more can a man do with it? |
3106 | What poet could now sing of the"awful chrysanthemum of dawn"? |
3106 | What satisfaction has a man in it if he really gets to the end of his power to improve it? |
3106 | What went ye out for to see? |
3106 | What would be the effect upon courtship if both the men and the women approached each other as wooers? |
3106 | What would be the effect upon the female character and disposition of a possible, though not probable, refusal, or of several refusals? |
3106 | When a woman makes her tedious rounds, why is she always relieved to find people not in? |
3106 | When she can count upon her ten fingers the people she wants to see, why should she pretend to want to see the others? |
3106 | Where is the primeval, heroic force that made the joy of living in the rough old uncivilized days? |
3106 | Who can tell how much this notion of mystery in the sex stands in the way of its free advancement all along the line? |
3106 | Why does the lady intending suicide always throw on a waterproof when she steals out of the house to drown herself? |
3106 | Why not settle down upon the formula that to be platitudinous is to be happy? |
3106 | Why should not women propose? |
3106 | Why should they be at a disadvantage in an affair which concerns the happiness of the whole life? |
3106 | Why struggle with these things in literature and in life? |
3106 | Will not the wise novelist seek to encounter the least intellectual resistance? |
3106 | Will she press a chrysanthemum, and keep it till the faint perfume reminds her of the sweetest moment of her life? |
3106 | Without the necessity of putting forth this energy, a survival of the original force in man, how long would our civilization last? |
3106 | Would her own sex be considerate, and give her a fair field if they saw she was paying attention to a young man, or an old one? |
3106 | Would it not render that sporadic shyness of which we have spoken epidemic? |
3106 | Would not the lover be spared time and pain if he knew, as the novelist knows, whether the young lady is dressing for a rejection or an acceptance? |
3106 | Would she become embittered and desperate, and act as foolishly as men often do? |
3106 | Would they do it? |
3106 | and if they have, why should they spend it in this Sisyphus task? |
3106 | and is not dressing an art? |
31876 | If,says J. E. McFadyen,[13]"it should be made highly probable that the stories were not strictly historical, what should we then have to say? |
31876 | To what end,says Professor Delitzsch,[5]"this toil and trouble in distant, inhospitable and danger- ridden lands? |
31876 | What is there,says Richard Hooker,[16]"necessary for man to know which the Psalms are not able to teach? |
31876 | What would it matter,he asks,"if Moses did not write the Pentateuch?" |
31876 | [ 21] Admitting now the presence of discrepancies between science and the Old Testament, what becomes of the Old Testament? 31876 [ 27] Is it right to raise a different standard for the Scriptures? |
31876 | [ 28] Finally, how can we estimate highly enough the devotional value of the Old Testament as illustrated, for example, in the book of Psalms? 31876 [ 30] But if this be true, how can any authority which rightly belongs to the Old Testament be affected by criticism? |
31876 | ( 2) What are the more important conclusions of criticism that have secured wide recognition? |
31876 | ( 3) What is the bearing of these conclusions, if true, upon the Christian view of the Old Testament? |
31876 | ), large lapis lazuli, couches of ivory, thrones of ivory, ivory,_ usu_ wood, box wood(? |
31876 | ), the question may well be asked, Why should he be considered less of a higher critic than, for example, Wellhausen? |
31876 | 1, which reads, in the Authorized Version,"Who hath believed our report?" |
31876 | 31, which, referring to the same statement, introduces it by,"Have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God?" |
31876 | A few of these passages may be quoted: O Jehovah God of hosts, Who is a mighty one, like unto thee, O Jehovah? |
31876 | Again, have those early chapters of Genesis lost their doctrinal value? |
31876 | And Jehovah said unto him, Wherewith? |
31876 | And Jehovah said, Who shall entice Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth- gilead? |
31876 | And could a Divine Providence have chosen a different method? |
31876 | Are the Proverbs less instructive because criticism claims that they do not all come from the son of David? |
31876 | Are the religious and ethical truths taught intended to be final, or do they mark a stage in the development toward perfection and finality? |
31876 | But even admitting that Jesus used in these and other passages a personal name, does this imply a decision respecting authorship? |
31876 | But man dieth, and is laid low; Yea, man giveth up the ghost, and where is he? |
31876 | But what is higher criticism? |
31876 | But where was Israel at the time? |
31876 | Can any Christian believe that our God who is infinitely pure and holy ever did persuade anyone to tell a lie? |
31876 | Can any Christian believe that the God of love revealed by Jesus ever acted in such arbitrary manner? |
31876 | Do these similarities prove beyond question the dependence of the one upon the other? |
31876 | Does it necessarily follow that the Decalogue was borrowed from Buddha? |
31876 | Does logic demand, therefore, the conclusion that the Decalogue owes its existence to the sacred law of the Egyptians? |
31876 | Does such conflict exist? |
31876 | Doth scripture lie? |
31876 | Every book of it, every chapter of it, every verse of it, every word of it, every syllable of it( where are we to stop? |
31876 | Has anyone supplied a substitute for the simple"In the beginning God created heaven and earth"? |
31876 | Has archà ¦ ology thrown any light on the origin of the Sabbath day? |
31876 | Has he approached the wife of his neighbor? |
31876 | Has he grasped the garment of his neighbor? |
31876 | Has he spilled the blood of his neighbor? |
31876 | Have they not meditated, watched, and prayed-- Great souls with vision purged and purified? |
31876 | Hence, why not interpret the word metaphorically in Gen. 1? |
31876 | How are we to account for these differences? |
31876 | How do the conclusions of the nontraditional higher criticism affect the authority of Jesus Christ? |
31876 | How far divine? |
31876 | How far is it human in origin? |
31876 | How is this to be explained? |
31876 | How much truth is there in these claims? |
31876 | I sent forth a raven and let her go; The raven flew away, she saw the abatement of the waters,{ 211} She drew near, she waded(? |
31876 | If he found in the pages of the Old Testament weapons with which to put to flight the Evil One, might not we? |
31876 | If the Bible is not the final authority, where can be found a criterion by which the biblical, or Old Testament, statements may be judged? |
31876 | If this is not criticism, what is? |
31876 | Is it history or poetry? |
31876 | Is it necessary to have absolute scientific accuracy in every detail in order to do this{ 55} effectively? |
31876 | Is it not natural to find it in the fact that one and the same divine spirit overshadowed the many men who made contributions to the Book? |
31876 | Is it to be understood as literal history? |
31876 | Is its essential purpose didactic, without special regard for historic accuracy in{ 79} every detail? |
31876 | Is the book of Job less majestic and sublime because we know not the time or place of its birth? |
31876 | Is this the proper attitude? |
31876 | Is, then, the scientific teaching of the Bible false? |
31876 | Might it not have been the same with omniscience? |
31876 | Moreover,{ 51} where in Scripture could there be found an analogy to this mode of procedure? |
31876 | The Church''s holy fathers, were they wrong? |
31876 | The Revised Version reads,"Who hath believed our message?" |
31876 | The great question is, What does this name convey? |
31876 | The important question is not, Where do we find the natural basis upon which the system is built up by men under divine guidance? |
31876 | There are, however, three questions which are worthy of serious consideration:( 1) What is modern criticism? |
31876 | These words of the prophet Isaiah imply a lofty conception of true religion:"What unto me is the multitude of your sacrifices? |
31876 | We may inquire, in the first place, what is the New Testament view of the purpose of the Old Testament Scriptures? |
31876 | What are the facts in the case? |
31876 | What did we know a century ago of Elam? |
31876 | What enables the humblest Christian to come safely through the cursing Psalms and go straight to forgive his enemy? |
31876 | What have I done against the king my lord? |
31876 | What is its theological content? |
31876 | What is the true situation? |
31876 | What of Assyria? |
31876 | What of its inspiration? |
31876 | What other literary compositions lift us into such atmosphere of religious thought and emotion? |
31876 | What should be the attitude of the Christian toward this method of study? |
31876 | What tells us that we may eat things strangled, though the whole college of apostles deliberately and expressly prohibited such eating? |
31876 | What, now, is the general bearing of these discoveries on the trustworthiness of the Old Testament? |
31876 | What, then, are the most important finds? |
31876 | What, then, are the results of this comparative study? |
31876 | What, then, is biblical criticism? |
31876 | What, then, is the bearing of the conclusions of modern science upon the permanent value of the Old Testament? |
31876 | When ye come to appear before me, who hath required this at your hand, to trample my courts? |
31876 | Which one of the evangelists has preserved the actual words of Jesus? |
31876 | Who assures us that we need not anoint the sick with oil, although in the New Testament we are explicitly commanded to do so? |
31876 | Who has not heard sermons that created a profound spiritual impression, though their science and history were not altogether faultless? |
31876 | Who whispers as we read Genesis and Kings,''This is exemplary; this is not''? |
31876 | Why is it they impress us so? |
31876 | Why should I commit a sin against the king my lord?" |
31876 | Why this zealous emulation on the part of the nations to secure the greatest possible{ 123} number of mounds for excavation? |
31876 | Why, they ask, go to the Old Testament when we have the New with its more complete and perfect revelation? |
31876 | Will the lives of Abraham, Joseph, Samuel, Elijah, David, and many others ever lose their lessons? |
31876 | Will the revelation of the nature and character of God contained in the Old Testament ever lose its doctrinal value? |
31876 | Will we ever get beyond the moral duties which are, according to the Old Testament, obligatory upon man? |
31876 | With 30 talents of gold[ and] 800 talents of silver, precious stones,_ gukhli daggassi_(? |
31876 | Would it not be well to imitate him in the use of the Old Testament Scriptures? |
31876 | Would such an attitude be fair? |
31876 | Would the Psalms cease to lift us into the presence of God, if it should be demonstrated that most of them came{ 100} from a period later than David? |
31876 | [ 22] Must it be{ 53} discarded as no longer"profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for instruction which is in righteousness"? |
31876 | [ 23] What is the universe but a manifestation of God? |
31876 | but, Does the spirit and character of the system indicate such guidance? |
31876 | is it narrative or prediction? |
31876 | or any one of the various kinds of literature? |
31876 | { 233} What of its claims? |
30710 | ; but the question answered, satisfactorily or unsatisfactorily, was,Is there a remedy?" |
30710 | Whither shall I go from Thy spirit? 30710 --is this a mockery? 30710 A mockery? 30710 And if the question were asked-- When does monarchical or constitutional England first distinctively pass into Imperial Britain? 30710 And in their effect upon the national consciousness of Britain have these incidents followed any law traceable in other nations or empires? 30710 And in what cause have we died? |
30710 | And knowledge-- of what avail is knowledge?--or to scan the abysses of space and search the depths of time? |
30710 | And that army of ours which day by day advances not less irresistibly across the veldt of Africa, what does that army portend? |
30710 | And that steed, is it not nearing England now? |
30710 | And the campaigns of Napoleon, republican, consular, imperial? |
30710 | And those moments of serenest peace, when the desire of the heart is one with the desire of the world- soul, are not these attained by conflict? |
30710 | And to the Netherlands what does that army bring? |
30710 | And what is its place in the life- history of a State considered as an entity, an organic unity, distinct from the unities which compose it? |
30710 | And what is the faith of Algernon Sidney? |
30710 | And who shall affirm from what branch of the stock the architects of the sky- searching cathedrals sprang? |
30710 | Both ponder the question,"How could the disaster have been averted? |
30710 | But another aspect of the question concerns us here-- What is War in itself and by itself? |
30710 | But of England and the Teutonic race what shall one say? |
30710 | But to arraign the fountain and the end of the high action because of this baser alloy? |
30710 | CONTENTS PART I THE TESTIMONY OF THE PAST LECTURE I SECTION WHAT IS IMPERIALISM? |
30710 | Consider in contrast with these empires the question-- What is the distinction in this phase of human life of the Empire of Britain, of its history? |
30710 | Does not this vault then, arching above us, appear but as a vast amphitheatre? |
30710 | Doubt, contrition of soul, and the other modes of spiritual_ agonia_, are not these equivalent with the life, not death, of the soul? |
30710 | Even a partial solution of this problem requires a consideration of the question"What is War?" |
30710 | Fixed in her resolve, the will of God behind her, whither is her immediate course? |
30710 | For the sake of such emotional excitement or parade as are now by smokeless powder, maxims, long- range rifles, and machine guns abolished? |
30710 | For what does the fall of Rome mean, and what are its relations to this Empire of Britain? |
30710 | From what causes and by the operation of what laws has the great disillusion fallen upon the heart of Europe? |
30710 | Given that death is nothing, and the decline of empires but a change of form, will this empire of Imperial Britain also decline and fall? |
30710 | Has Count Tolstoi a campaign to narrate, or a battle, say the Borodino, to describe? |
30710 | Has all the blood from Lodi and Arcola to Austerlitz and the Borodino been shed in vain? |
30710 | Has he the enigma of modern times to solve, Napoleon I? |
30710 | Has not the present war given a harvest of instances? |
30710 | How could the decline of Rome have been stayed?" |
30710 | How is it related to the Divine? |
30710 | How is this ideal of the Imperialistic State related to that from which all States originally derive? |
30710 | How many Franks, one asks, followed the red banner of the Bastard to Senlac, or, leaning on their shields, watched the coronation at Westminster? |
30710 | How shall England, conqueror of those monarchs at Creçy and on other fields, reverence Rome, the dependent of a defeated antagonist? |
30710 | How shall it cease? |
30710 | How shall its bounds be made secure against encroachment, its own shores from coalesced foes? |
30710 | How shall the Eternal come or the Infinite be far off? |
30710 | How shall the justice of God be reconciled with the destiny He assigns to the souls of men? |
30710 | How then does Tolstoi regard War? |
30710 | I now spoke with myself thus--''O my soul, how long wilt thou continue to take pleasure in sin? |
30710 | If our forefathers found in this the true path, why should we seek another? |
30710 | In religion itself have we not similar variety of expression? |
30710 | In that final solitude what are pomp and circumstance to the heart? |
30710 | Is it not the procession of the gladiators and the amphitheatre of Rome? |
30710 | Is it possible to trace the process by which it has emerged? |
30710 | Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? |
30710 | Is there in human history a document more blasting to the reputation for political wisdom or foresight of him who penned it? |
30710 | It is the star of the future and the memory of Vergniaud''s phrase,"Posterity? |
30710 | LECTURE V WHAT IS WAR? |
30710 | Lodi, Arcola, Marengo, Austerlitz, Eyiau, Friedland, Wagram, Borodino, Leipzig, Champaubert, and Montmirail? |
30710 | MILITARISM LECTURE V WHAT IS WAR? |
30710 | Now what is Cosmopolitanism? |
30710 | Passing to the second point-- at what epoch do we now stand as compared with Rome or Islam? |
30710 | THE IDEALS OF A NEW AGE PART I THE TESTIMONY OF THE PAST REFLECTIONS ON THE ORIGINS AND DESTINY OF IMPERIAL BRITAIN LECTURE I WHAT IS IMPERIALISM? |
30710 | THE PLACE OF WAR IN WORLD- HISTORY The question"What is War?" |
30710 | THE UNCONSCIOUS AND THE CONSCIOUS IN HISTORY What is the nature of this Consciousness? |
30710 | The Girondinist queen climbing the scaffold, not less a lover of love and of life than Marie Antoinette-- what nerves her? |
30710 | The narrow space of the path in front of her that is discernible even dimly-- whither does it tend or appear to tend? |
30710 | The question asked was,"Is there a law regulating the fall of empires? |
30710 | The question resolves itself into two parts-- in what does the youth of a race or of an empire consist? |
30710 | The question,"What is History?" |
30710 | The second drama is named_ Ignatius Loyola_; the theme is not less absorbing--"Art thou then so sure of the truth and of thy sincerity, O my brother?" |
30710 | These are the forces contending against each other on the sterile veldt; this is the first act of the drama whose_ dénouement_--who dare foretell? |
30710 | Thus if the question were asked, With what period in the history of Rome does the present age correspond? |
30710 | To impeach on this account all the valour, all the wisdom long approved? |
30710 | To the brooding soul of the hermit, as to that of the warrior of Jehovah, what is earth, what are the shapes of time? |
30710 | WHAT IS MEANT BY THE"FALL OF AN EMPIRE"? |
30710 | WHAT IS MEANT BY THE"FALL OF AN EMPIRE"? |
30710 | War may change its shape, the struggle here intensifying, there abating; it may be uplifted by ever loftier purposes and nobler causes-- but cease? |
30710 | Was machst du an der Welt? |
30710 | Was there then no"zone of death"between the armies at Eyiau or at Gravelotte? |
30710 | We are in the thick of the deed-- how are we to judge it? |
30710 | Well might men ask themselves: Has then Voltaire lived in vain, and the Girondins died in vain? |
30710 | What characteristic, then, common to the whole Teutonic race, does this Empire of Britain represent? |
30710 | What distant generation shall behold_ that_ curtain? |
30710 | What have we to do with posterity? |
30710 | What is its historical basis? |
30710 | What is its historical significance compared with the wars of the past, what is the presage of this great war-- if it be a great war-- for the future? |
30710 | What is the ideal powerful enough to make the hazard of a nation''s death preferable to the abandonment of that ideal? |
30710 | What to me are Mondays and Tuesdays? |
30710 | What tragedy of a lost leader equals this of Napoleon? |
30710 | What were the armies of Napoleon and the ruin of Europe''s dream to Háfiz and Sádi, and to the calm of the trackless centuries far behind? |
30710 | What, then, are the principles at issue in the present war? |
30710 | Where in the history of England, in the life of England as a State, does this energy, exalted by the hour of tragic vision, manifest itself? |
30710 | Which of the multifarious kingdoms and duchies could form the centre of a new union, federal or imperial? |
30710 | Whither are vanished the glorious hopes with which the century opened? |
30710 | Whither is this impulse to be directed? |
30710 | Whither then shall we turn for an explanation of his arraignment of war? |
30710 | Who are the founders of England, of Imperial Britain? |
30710 | Who can confront this unappalled? |
30710 | Who founded the Roman State? |
30710 | Who that has read the historian of Alva can forget the march of his army through the summer months some three hundred and thirty years ago? |
30710 | Why shapest thou the world? |
30710 | Will War then never cease? |
30710 | Will the form it now enshrines pass away, as the forms of Persia, Rome, the Empire of Akbar, have passed away? |
30710 | Will universal peace be for ever but a dream? |
30710 | Wondrous indeed is man''s course across the earth, and with what shall the works of his soul be compared? |
30710 | Would one discover the secret at the close of the century of the alliance of Russia and France, freedom''s forlorn hope when the century began? |
30710 | Would you see the end of Rome as in a figure darkly? |
30710 | Yet what is Carlyle''s judgment upon war? |
30710 | [ 2] Was machst du an der Welt? |
30710 | [ 5] Napoleon was fighting for a dead ideal with the strength of the men who had overthrown that ideal-- how should he prosper? |
30710 | [ 8] France has given the world the Revolution; Germany, the Reformation; Italy, modern Art; but Russia? |
30710 | and the"Whither?" |
30710 | is but the question,"What is Life?" |
30710 | or whither shall I flee from Thy presence? |
30710 | who was there any longer to remember Marengo and Austerlitz, Wagram, and Schönbrunn? |
31920 | But,I will be asked,"do you advocate a religion of humanity? |
31920 | Nay now, of the dead what can you say, Little brother? |
31920 | Why did you melt your waxen man, Sister Helen? 31920 110 X DO MIRACLES HAPPEN? 31920 And are not his sisters{ 79} here with us? |
31920 | And is it not a wonderful conception? |
31920 | And was it not a wonderful place, since the heat and light of the sun and the warm, fructifying rain came from it? |
31920 | And what were the clouds that floated across it like huge birds or strange, gigantic creatures? |
31920 | And why was it celebrated with such fervor? |
31920 | Are You Human? |
31920 | Are the wicked such hopeless creatures? |
31920 | Besides, is not might the sanction of right? |
31920 | But does it do this? |
31920 | But does not this rejection involve a similar rejection of science? |
31920 | But is it anything more than daydreaming? |
31920 | But is not the theological miracle an instance of just such uncontrolled speculation? |
31920 | But is not this, itself, one of those deluding hopes which the attitude of compromise fosters? |
31920 | But what have modern science and philosophy to say about these age- old ideas? |
31920 | But why are such apologies felt to be necessary? |
31920 | But why save them? |
31920 | But will there be less of secret disappointment with life, less of wounded affection? |
31920 | Can it be denied that the burden of proof rests on those who assert immortality? |
31920 | Can one deny that this subtle personality, for all his gifts, brought distorting values into the current of life? |
31920 | Can our musings become definite without revealing themselves as fancies? |
31920 | Can science admit the reality of a special providence at work in the world? |
31920 | Can this primary assumption be taken from religion without destroying it? |
31920 | Can we find a clew to guide us? |
31920 | Could the thought help coming to him that perhaps he was the one to inaugurate the kingdom? |
31920 | Did the prophetic claim that social justice was{ 173} sanctioned by Yahweh help its advance? |
31920 | Do miracles happen? |
31920 | Do not the dead, then, have some sort of life? |
31920 | Do the decencies of life find sufficient ground in human nature for their continuance and increase? |
31920 | Do we not know that many great medià ¦ val doctors had to fight against their love of literature and art? |
31920 | Does democracy yet accord with such a religion? |
31920 | Does it help us to meet the facts and events of human life? |
31920 | Does it to- day stress the most important things? |
31920 | Does morality any longer need the sanctions and supernatural setting which helped to support it in other days? |
31920 | Does the recognition of historical continuity preclude the acknowledgment of very radical changes? |
31920 | Has not the free life of the present outgrown any centralized and institutionalized control? |
31920 | Has not the idea of another life encouraged a false perspective in regard to this one? |
31920 | Has science dug so sharply around the roots of these old beliefs that they are bound to decay? |
31920 | Have human values become self- supporting and self- justifying? |
31920 | Have we not here a mark of identity which justifies the retention of the age- old word? |
31920 | How can we expect to revive a zest in life by cutting the grown personality loose from what it has fed upon? |
31920 | How can we harmonize this cry with his earlier faith in an Everlasting Will and a Providential Government of the world? |
31920 | How could it be shown that these peculiar events were the acts of a supernatural agent? |
31920 | How did man arise? |
31920 | How did the earth come to be? |
31920 | How far is this a genuine antithesis? |
31920 | How is it that an omnipotent and noble God permits these{ 162} things to be? |
31920 | If the mind- body problem were solved in a concrete, empirical way, what then? |
31920 | If the religious view of the world leads to this_ impasse_, may it not be better to take a more inductive way of approach to what we call evil? |
31920 | In ethical monotheism, may not the_ monotheism_ be the protecting envelope from which the butterfly has already flown? |
31920 | In the first place, was the physical{ 42} world created? |
31920 | Is it fruitful? |
31920 | Is it justifiable to retain the term religion when its ancient setting has been so completely discarded? |
31920 | Is it necessary to say that primitive man thought of all evils as due to mysterious potencies which surrounded him on every hand? |
31920 | Is it not evident that the wish has been father to the thought in this case? |
31920 | Is it not evident that we have in these beliefs the expression of personal agency, an idea continuous with mythology? |
31920 | Is it not evident that we must apply to them the same stringent tests that the scientist employs? |
31920 | Is it not like exploring the chambers and corridors of a house in which one shall live for a stated period? |
31920 | Is it to be placed on the dissection- table and teased apart into its component strands? |
31920 | Is not even the soul to be spared the siege before which the human body fell? |
31920 | Is not the question in large measure one of definition? |
31920 | Is not this positive enough? |
31920 | Is not, therefore, the very meaning of mental capacity connected with the needs and activities of the organism? |
31920 | Is punishment an end in itself? |
31920 | Is the Christian view of the world inseparably bound up with this ancient outlook, or can it be purged of it? |
31920 | Is the explanation far to seek? |
31920 | Is the moral fervor and idealism of Christianity its essential and permanent contribution, a contribution to a rational appreciation of human life? |
31920 | Is the soul any longer in favor? |
31920 | Is there a better term than religion? |
31920 | Is there any reason to suppose that its theological envelope will be able to place a boundary to the extent of this change? |
31920 | Is there not more than a note of skepticism in that much- approved saying:"God helps those who help themselves?" |
31920 | Is there not something Byronic in much of Arnold''s religious poetry? |
31920 | Is there not something parallel to this in ethics? |
31920 | Is there not too much of the pageant of the bleeding heart in his sighs of regret and farewell? |
31920 | Is this not the inevitable deduction from an ethical monotheism? |
31920 | Is this view very far different from the account given in the so- called second story of creation beginning with verse four of Genesis? |
31920 | It is, according to Reinach, the development of the following naïve dialogue:"Why is this eagle crucified? |
31920 | Its motto is,"What hath not man wrought?" |
31920 | Man is naturally dramatic in his interpretation of life, and what can be more thrilling than a miracle? |
31920 | May it not be that the real strength and freeing power of ethical monotheism is due to the reason which created it and speaks through it? |
31920 | May it not be that these sentiments can be given another setting and other objects? |
31920 | May it not remove a dead- weight of inhibitions which has kept the human spirit under bonds to past attitudes and methods? |
31920 | May not God guide the course of natural change? |
31920 | May not reality be of such a character that evil is as natural as good? |
31920 | Must not the same arrow transfix an effective God that does away with an effective Devil? |
31920 | Need he who has an inalienable treasure fear robbery? |
31920 | Now the question, Do miracles happen? |
31920 | Or does it simply mean that men have never before thought of such things as indeterminate sentences and reformation? |
31920 | Or is it still too timid, negative, thin and uninstructed? |
31920 | Or is the rescuing hand of a supernatural grace necessary to prevent deterioration? |
31920 | Our answer to the question, Do miracles happen? |
31920 | Plato''s idea of the{ 146} soul as a simple, indestructible substance awakens hardly an echo in their minds-- and why should it? |
31920 | Science has helped to do away with the devil; but, in so doing, has it not also undermined the idea of Providence? |
31920 | Shall we assert that Greek art was supernatural because it was unique? |
31920 | Shall we say that English constitutional development is supernatural because no other nation achieved such a form of government by itself? |
31920 | Should not the vice- regent of God rule upon the earth and make the divine law the law of the nations? |
31920 | The basic problem may be put in this way: Can human personality be included in nature in a theoretically satisfactory way? |
31920 | The query will not down, Why does this omnipotent and ethically perfect deity permit such a being to exist to work havoc amongst his children? |
31920 | The test questions are, first, Is it his nature to want to do these abrupt things? |
31920 | The waters desired,''How can we be reproduced?'' |
31920 | To many it will come like a plunge in cold water: but may not such a plunge do them good by waking them from their dogmatic slumbers? |
31920 | Under such conditions of origin, how can we begin to separate reason and revelation? |
31920 | Was this not because man and human society had evolved ethically and socially? |
31920 | Were the views of Jesus like those of his age? |
31920 | What advance did they contain? |
31920 | What answer must be given to these troubled minds? |
31920 | What are some of the social conditions of a noble life? |
31920 | What can a trance be if not the temporary absence of just such an agent? |
31920 | What could be more natural than this parallelism? |
31920 | What critic can pass assured judgment upon this continuous play? |
31920 | What factual basis could there be for such myths of the end of the world? |
31920 | What is magic? |
31920 | What is myth and legend and what is historic fact? |
31920 | What is this Hell into which Jesus is supposed to have descended? |
31920 | What is this Word or Logos with which the historical Jesus was identified? |
31920 | What moorings did they have? |
31920 | What more is there to say? |
31920 | What motive would there be for skepticism? |
31920 | What shall we say of it? |
31920 | What was more natural than the hypothesis that those whom disasters overtook had been guilty of some secret wrong? |
31920 | What was the weakness of the movement? |
31920 | What, then, are the limits of personal agency? |
31920 | When the necessary critical work has been done, what is left of the stately theology reared by Church Fathers, councils and scholastics? |
31920 | Who has not heard of the Cathars or Albigenses of the Middle Ages? |
31920 | Who set the stage and placed the puppets on it? |
31920 | Why did he permit them? |
31920 | Why did this type of ritual arise? |
31920 | Why? |
31920 | Why? |
31920 | Will not the next step in religion be the relinquishment of the supernatural and the active appreciation of virtues and values? |
31920 | Will sufficient identity remain to make the term still significant? |
31920 | With the advent of the Copernican view what becomes of these age- old ideas? |
31920 | Would progress come if the generations did not pass? |
31920 | Yet how else can critical thought portray creation? |
31920 | _ Is God an agent or an ideal_? |
31920 | _ Is not loyalty to these spiritual values of human life coming to be the sole meaning of religion_? |
31920 | second, Is this conception of an omnipotent God the most satisfactory hypothesis? |
31920 | { 123} CHAPTER X DO MIRACLES HAPPEN? |
31920 | { 169} CHAPTER XIII RELIGION AND ETHICS What was the exact relation between religion and morality in the past? |
19412 | Ah, but what of the enemy? |
19412 | Am I to understand that? |
19412 | Am I? |
19412 | And dear Mrs. Norton another? |
19412 | And you do think I was right to let you know? |
19412 | Are n''t you cold? |
19412 | Are you flirting with Dick, then? |
19412 | Are you hungry? |
19412 | Are you offended with me? |
19412 | But do n''t they ever take them over to see the British Museum or the National Gallery? 19412 But you are wet, are n''t you?" |
19412 | But-- but if he''s poor? |
19412 | Could you imagine a girl wanting to marry Dick Burden? |
19412 | Did he tell you so? |
19412 | Did n''t Ellaline warn you I was a regular dragon? |
19412 | Did n''t you buy her anything good enough for dances that day in Bond Street? |
19412 | Did you ever see a young lady who did n''t want to dance, especially on a man- o''-war? |
19412 | Did you ever see anything so beautiful? |
19412 | Did you give it to Starlin? |
19412 | Do I look like a flirt? |
19412 | Do n''t you know I love you-- worship you-- adore you? |
19412 | Do n''t you like Dick Burden? |
19412 | Do n''t you think women love the truth as much as men? |
19412 | Do you insinuate that marrying my aunt would make him miserable? |
19412 | Do you want them to come? |
19412 | Do you want to dance it with him? |
19412 | Do you want to hear what he''s got to say? |
19412 | Does Mrs. Norton know about-- me? |
19412 | Does he know-- forgive me-- does he know that you do n''t love him-- a little? |
19412 | Does n''t it look like translucent coral, and would n''t you like to have a dress exactly that colour? |
19412 | First volume of a human documentis n''t inexpressive of a young girl, is it? |
19412 | Had n''t I better see her now? |
19412 | Have I a black on my nose, or is my dress undone at the back? |
19412 | Have I had a serious fire, and what has been burnt? |
19412 | Have you already got all you want of them, or could you make use of more? |
19412 | Have you come to say-- that Miss Lethbridge has been prevented from meeting me? |
19412 | How does she spell her name of Audrie? |
19412 | How would you like a motor- car trip? |
19412 | How''s that? 19412 I beg your pardon, but are n''t you Sir Lionel Pendragon?" |
19412 | I ca n''t be mistaken, sir, can I? |
19412 | I hope you have n''t gone to the trouble of engaging a nurse for me? |
19412 | I suppose you do n''t recognize me? |
19412 | I wonder if birds will cover us with leaves? |
19412 | I? |
19412 | If that is so, what have you done to him, to give him hope? |
19412 | If you call her deceitful, what are you? |
19412 | In spite of all the injustice I did you-- and showed that I did you? |
19412 | Indeed? |
19412 | Is it Sir Lionel who''s making you play it? |
19412 | Is n''t it rather old- fashioned, in these rapid days, for a young man to ask a guardian''s permission to make love to his ward? |
19412 | Is she-- by any chance-- the daughter of a_ Frederic_ Lethbridge? |
19412 | Is that your last word? |
19412 | Might n''t it have been at Paris? |
19412 | Not even-- Venice? |
19412 | Not to-- what? |
19412 | Now, where_ could_ it have been? 19412 Oh, ca n''t they?" |
19412 | Oh, may n''t I have a peep to- night? |
19412 | Oh, then you thought I_ would_ be an incubus? |
19412 | On leave, I suppose? |
19412 | On my character, perhaps? |
19412 | Only in women? |
19412 | Only, if you''ll just trust me to manage him? |
19412 | Shall I give it to you now? |
19412 | Should you think so? |
19412 | Since when? |
19412 | So that''s the theory? 19412 Surely we have met before, Miss Lethbridge?" |
19412 | Thank God? |
19412 | The question is-- do you hate me? |
19412 | Then, he is n''t in it? |
19412 | To get it, then? |
19412 | To marry him at once? |
19412 | Was there a villa? |
19412 | Well, you were n''t disappointed in my surprise, I think? |
19412 | Went off-- where? |
19412 | Wh- what do you mean? |
19412 | What army? |
19412 | What did he do? |
19412 | What else_ could_ it be? |
19412 | What fire? |
19412 | What have I done to you, that you should interfere? |
19412 | What is he afraid to say to me? |
19412 | What ought you to be prepared to see me do? |
19412 | What put such a ghastly idea into your head? |
19412 | What then? |
19412 | What''s that? |
19412 | What''s the difference? |
19412 | What''s your birth month? |
19412 | What-- this very month? 19412 What?" |
19412 | What_ shall_ I do? |
19412 | Where did you get that? |
19412 | Where''s your chaperon? |
19412 | Where? |
19412 | Who are they? |
19412 | Who can that be? |
19412 | Who has been telling you tales about me in Bengal? |
19412 | Why do you ask that? |
19412 | Why does Mrs. Senter want to come with us? |
19412 | Why, even if you did,said she,"it would n''t matter greatly to them, because Dick has something of his own, and she is an heiress, is n''t she?" |
19412 | Why, is anybody dead? |
19412 | Why, was there a cemetery there? |
19412 | Why? |
19412 | Why? |
19412 | Why? |
19412 | Would they fit you? |
19412 | Would you be willing to trust me? |
19412 | Would you like me to love him? |
19412 | Would you like to dance? |
19412 | You are sure she has done that? |
19412 | You call this_ mere_ business? |
19412 | You did n''t come here alone? |
19412 | You do, at all events, wish to be engaged to Burden? |
19412 | You knew? |
19412 | You mean that? |
19412 | You wo n''t actually refuse your consent, then? |
19412 | You would n''t refuse the first thing I''ve asked you? |
19412 | You''d tell her, if I refused to hunt in that way? |
19412 | You_ wo n''t_ tell Sir Lionel I interfered, will you? |
19412 | _ Do_ you want to? |
19412 | ( But what is there that my good sister does, which she does not do religiously?) |
19412 | ( By the by, I wonder if the inquisitors ever hit on the ingenious plan of making prisoners torture themselves? |
19412 | ( Do n''t you think other animals must consider the laughter of humans an odd noise, without rhyme or reason?) |
19412 | ( I forget if I mentioned that he has nice eyes? |
19412 | ( I told you I''d lost my head, did n''t I?) |
19412 | ( Or would Jephtha''s daughter be more appropriate? |
19412 | ( Sounds like something new in embroidery, does n''t it?) |
19412 | ( We all have our"mouse,"have n''t we? |
19412 | A charming fashion he''s taken to show it, has n''t he? |
19412 | A pity we could n''t have been here earlier in the year, is n''t it? |
19412 | A"sportin'', huntin'', don''t- you- know-- what?" |
19412 | All that sounds bad enough for me, does n''t it? |
19412 | Am I crabbed age? |
19412 | Am I gabbling school- girl gush, or am I groping toward light? |
19412 | And I ca n''t possibly be falling in love with Ellaline''s Dragon, can I? |
19412 | And at nineteen you have enlisted in that army?" |
19412 | And by the way, how_ are_ your poor dear bones? |
19412 | And is n''t it nice, the Bankes still have the old keys, where they live, at Kingston Lacy? |
19412 | And it is splendid, is n''t it, darling? |
19412 | And that news does seem to settle the man''s character, does n''t it? |
19412 | And was n''t it odd, we had the same favourites? |
19412 | And what bad luck that he should know Ellaline''s guardian, was n''t it? |
19412 | And what d''you think, ladies, he says, when I accused him o''savin''my life?" |
19412 | And what has he found out? |
19412 | And what was my covered balcony for, if not to dream dreams and think thoughts, by moonlight? |
19412 | And would I have a sandwich, and then start, or would I prefer to wait for dinner? |
19412 | And, do you know, I''m afraid she''s going on the motor trip with us? |
19412 | Are n''t they all as crystal as the depths of mountain tarns, or that amethystine colour of the sky behind the clear profiles of high peaks? |
19412 | Are you surprised I had n''t the heart to refuse? |
19412 | As long as I do n''t betray myself, why not? |
19412 | Beastly, is n''t it? |
19412 | But I suppose I''ve said that about other places, have n''t I? |
19412 | But I wonder what you''ll say in your next, after my last? |
19412 | But how can you be witty when the only thing you want to say is"devil and damn,"of which he would violently disapprove from a lady''s lips( or pen)? |
19412 | But if I did take it? |
19412 | But if Providence did n''t wish women to lace, why were n''t our ribs made to go all the way down? |
19412 | But if they care for each other?" |
19412 | But in what way do you mean?" |
19412 | But is n''t this funny talk, in the midst of describing Exeter? |
19412 | But one often respects people one dislikes, does n''t one? |
19412 | But perhaps they will be, some day before long-- who knows? |
19412 | But the real Audrie was always decently truthful, was n''t she? |
19412 | But to be serious-- and goodness knows it''s serious enough-- what''s to be done, little mother? |
19412 | But what can you do between two evils? |
19412 | But what could a king do with a cave nowadays? |
19412 | But why should she bother? |
19412 | But would n''t it be dreadful if I should go and fall in love with Sir Lionel Pendragon of all other men in the world? |
19412 | But would n''t she be ungrateful if she had n''t? |
19412 | But, why not, after all? |
19412 | But-- I wonder if there is a"but"? |
19412 | But-- do you want to marry Dick Burden, some day?" |
19412 | But----""What?" |
19412 | By the way, can one''s stays be a quality? |
19412 | Ca n''t you see the beautiful picture? |
19412 | Can it have been this Frederic Lethbridge, and if so, had it anything to do with money matters? |
19412 | Can she have had an escapade, I wonder? |
19412 | Can you answer me that?" |
19412 | Can you imagine me in such a dream? |
19412 | Cloud? |
19412 | Dear little, wise mother, I wonder if you ever thought it might end like this? |
19412 | Did Dragons of old insist on their fairy princess- prisoners having exquisite clothes, and say"hang the expense"? |
19412 | Did I tell you that before? |
19412 | Did it concern me? |
19412 | Did you ever hear of them, Parisienne mamma? |
19412 | Do n''t you remember, it was from Conway Castle that Richard the Second started out to meet Bolingbroke? |
19412 | Do n''t you think"Apollo"an appropriate name for such a magnificent car as I''ve described to you? |
19412 | Do write me the minute you get this, wo n''t you? |
19412 | Do you happen to know what a microcosm means? |
19412 | Do you know what it is to think architecturally? |
19412 | Do you know, I had almost forgotten Dick for two or three days? |
19412 | Do you know, he''s in the act of doing it on the Bayeux tapestry? |
19412 | Do you remember dear old Ennis''s Rooms, which you and I used to think the height of luxury and gaiety? |
19412 | Do you remember how, when we were boys, we discussed favourite names, and placed Audrey high in the list among those of women? |
19412 | Do you remember reading about Keats, that he wrote a lot of"Endymion"at Burford Bridge? |
19412 | Do you remember the pig- baby in"Alice''s Adventures"? |
19412 | Do you remember? |
19412 | Do you suppose a condemned person finds his last sip of life the sweetest in the cup? |
19412 | Do you think, dear, that if I were in a novel they would have me for a heroine or a wicked adventuress? |
19412 | Does n''t Macaulay refer to that as"the last fight deserving the name of battle, fought on English soil"? |
19412 | Does n''t that prove the type of mind he has? |
19412 | Does n''t that take one back to long ago? |
19412 | Does that come back to you, from Arthur''s speech to Bedévere? |
19412 | Dost like the picture? |
19412 | Eaten something with the wrong fork?" |
19412 | For instance, she asked Sir Lionel, apropos of woman''s suffrage, whether, on the whole, he preferred a man''s woman, or a woman''s woman? |
19412 | From Sidmouth we went to Budleigh Salterton( why either, but especially both? |
19412 | Have you noticed it? |
19412 | He did n''t tell me that part, naturally, but there was no need, because I guessed----""What-- what have you done to him?" |
19412 | He says that I-- Ellaline-- can afford to have everything that''s nice; so what_ can_ I do? |
19412 | He told Dick the same thing; so there''ll be no leaving us two alone in lovesick corners( can corners be lovesick? |
19412 | He''d bought back the darling ring in Chester, and now he put it on my finger again; and I''m sure, dearest, that you wo n''t mind our being engaged? |
19412 | His look is a mixture of laziness and impudence, and half his sentences he ends up with"What?" |
19412 | How am I to support the shopping ordeal? |
19412 | How comes Ellaline de Nesville''s and Fred Lethbridge''s daughter to be what this girl seems? |
19412 | I do hope it has n''t upset you too much?" |
19412 | I do hope you wo n''t think me impertinent and interfering? |
19412 | I do pray I''m not getting kitten- catty? |
19412 | I even saw waste- paper pots; and if that is n''t like Broek in Waterland, what is? |
19412 | I felt like their mother( I hope that''s not unmaidenly?) |
19412 | I hope it did n''t sound pert, to answer like that? |
19412 | I hope that''s a good omen? |
19412 | I implored, helplessly drifting; and then, to my surprise-- can you"find"that you''ve lost a thing? |
19412 | I ought to write a better letter in such a mood, ought n''t I? |
19412 | I say to myself,"Well, if this is his opinion of me, why not believe there''s something in it, and do as other men have done before me? |
19412 | I suppose it''s the way I do my hair for school, which does give me a look of incorruptible virtue, does n''t it? |
19412 | I suppose one ca n''t have a soul for Paris fashions and English architecture too? |
19412 | I suppose she ca n''t be cherishing a hidden passion for you? |
19412 | I suppose that ought to make me feel rather young, ought n''t it? |
19412 | I suppose that was an answer? |
19412 | I think I can guess who the somebody was, ca n''t you? |
19412 | I think he has behaved like a saint on a stained- glass window, do n''t you? |
19412 | I think women ought to be as"well found"for motoring, as for yachting, do n''t you? |
19412 | I told you how nice Sir Lionel looks in evening clothes, did n''t I? |
19412 | I was never so happy in my life, and when I just could n''t help saying so to Sir Lionel, what do you suppose he answered? |
19412 | I wonder does the climate of Bengal preserve people, like flies in amber? |
19412 | I wonder how many people in the hundreds of motors that flash back and forth each day do think of it all? |
19412 | I wonder if Ellaline realizes his importance in that way? |
19412 | I wonder if a child sheds its first hair, like its first teeth? |
19412 | I wonder if eggs can be post- dated, like cheques? |
19412 | I wonder if girls were pretty in those days, or men handsome, and if anyone cared? |
19412 | I wonder if he_ can_ know she is merely"the alleged"? |
19412 | I wonder if it meant that the mother has any weird sort of disease-- contagious, perhaps? |
19412 | I wonder if it might n''t be nice for you to spend a season, taking the waters, or bathing, or whatever is the smartest thing to do? |
19412 | I wonder if she''d heard that, or made it up? |
19412 | I wonder if they are talking about each other, to each other, or-- about_ Dick and me_? |
19412 | I wonder if you are sparing a few minutes to- night to dream of Your Audrie? |
19412 | I wonder if_ it_ was chopped off in the neighbourhood, too, or if it''s only a pleasant fancy, to cover up the Buckingham stain in the yard? |
19412 | I wonder what going to school was like when all the world was young? |
19412 | I wonder what would have happened if I had? |
19412 | I wonder which was right? |
19412 | I''m certain I should have proposed before breakfast( I wonder if any other man was ever in love enough for that?) |
19412 | I''m not, am I? |
19412 | If I am ever Lady Pendragon( sounds well, does n''t it?) |
19412 | If it came to that, I might in my rage wax unladylike; so perhaps, of the two evils, the lesser would be the sneak act--_n''est ce pas_? |
19412 | In my short note from Launceston, did I mention the old Norman house which belongs to cousins of Sir Lionel''s? |
19412 | Is it possible you defended me to her?" |
19412 | Is it three or four years old? |
19412 | Is it true or is it not that you wanted to go with the Tyndals in their motor to- day?" |
19412 | Is n''t Gallantry Bower a fine name? |
19412 | Is n''t it a beautiful miracle, the banishing of black darkness by the clear light of genius? |
19412 | Is n''t it a law of nature, or something, to choose the lesser? |
19412 | Is n''t it charming of them? |
19412 | Is n''t it nice that men are so much stronger than women, and that we''re meant to like them to be? |
19412 | Is n''t that a good plan to make on my twenty- first birthday? |
19412 | Is n''t"jingle"good? |
19412 | Is that a wrong note for a prayer? |
19412 | Is that why they''re dangerous? |
19412 | Is your mother really ill? |
19412 | It appeared that the Dragon''s sister( who would suspect a dragon of sisters?) |
19412 | It seems_ meant_, does n''t it? |
19412 | It was by moonlight, in a garden, so who can blame the poor child? |
19412 | It was easy to see that he hoped he''d excited our curiosity; and he must have been disappointed in Sir Lionel''s half- hearted"Indeed?" |
19412 | It would be like tempting Providence to polish off dust or mud, in such circumstances, would n''t it? |
19412 | It''s true, is n''t it? |
19412 | Just for the length of this tour in the motor- car, which throws us so constantly together? |
19412 | Maybe the vinegar has pickled me internally? |
19412 | My things usually do, do n''t they? |
19412 | Not bad, that, was it? |
19412 | Not devilled, I hope? |
19412 | Nothing more than that; and why should I mind, when in any case there could never have been a question of my marrying Sir L.? |
19412 | Now, what shall I say to you of Bamborough Castle, which is the crown of our whole tour? |
19412 | Now,_ is_ it possible for a man like that to be treacherous to women, and to accept bribes for being guardian to their children? |
19412 | Of course there''s nothing for it but she must marry the young man now, yet it seems a poor outlook, does n''t it? |
19412 | Once she asked me what I did for_ my_ soul? |
19412 | One ca n''t help admiring as well as wondering at that sort of ineradicable, persistent Britishness, can one? |
19412 | Only, I do n''t think people do things from motives as a rule, do you? |
19412 | Or are they the nuns come back in disguise? |
19412 | Or can it be a mask, handed down by noble ancestry to cover up moral defects in a degenerate descendant? |
19412 | Or is it only my bad conscience? |
19412 | Or will she be sold as bankrupt stock? |
19412 | Or will she become a kitchen- maid or"tweeny"in King Arthur''s Castle? |
19412 | Ought I to repeat to Ellaline what Mrs. Senter told me about the money? |
19412 | P. S.--Of course, it is n''t as if this man were an ordinary, nice, inoffensive human man, is it? |
19412 | P. S.--That was an inspiration of mine about the Cheddar Cavern, was n''t it? |
19412 | Perhaps Dick left a note with Mrs. Senter, which she is to put into Sir L.''s hand at an appropriate moment? |
19412 | Perhaps I might say good- night to you both?" |
19412 | Quite a coincidence, is n''t it?" |
19412 | Rather awful about the gray serge and sailor hat, is n''t it? |
19412 | Rather cruel of us, accusing her of being a flirt in those days, if she were in earnest all the time, eh? |
19412 | Shall we talk here, while we have the chance?" |
19412 | She asked her brother as gravely as possible at breakfast this morning:"Had you a harem in Bengal, dear?" |
19412 | She does n''t know much about these things( how could she)? |
19412 | She wants to see you, now that she understands, but----""Understands?" |
19412 | Should you say that would be enough to satisfy them?" |
19412 | Since we had our trouble?" |
19412 | So that was a good entrance to Arthurian country, was n''t it? |
19412 | So there I was with Sir Lionel once more; and I wondered if he thought of that night when we rushed through the storm from Tintagel to Clovelly? |
19412 | So what_ will_ your telegram be? |
19412 | Some people-- Mrs. Norton, for instance-- might say:"What on earth does the silly thing mean?" |
19412 | Sounds disgusting, does n''t it? |
19412 | Surely you must have seen about it in to- day''s London papers?" |
19412 | Tell me-- did that cad try you too far at Bamborough, and did you defy him?" |
19412 | That did n''t sound exciting, did it? |
19412 | That goes unsaid, does n''t it? |
19412 | That idea may still fit in rather well, may n''t it? |
19412 | That is n''t a very dragonish sentiment, is it? |
19412 | That is something to have divined by the magic of the forest, is n''t it, after I''ve been puzzling so long? |
19412 | That must mean some correspondence in character, must n''t it? |
19412 | That sounds entertaining, does n''t it? |
19412 | That was old- fashioned, too, was n''t it? |
19412 | That was quite right, was n''t it? |
19412 | The Sun God-- Driver of the Chariot of the Sun? |
19412 | The lady inquired nasally of our old friend,"Is this hall mod- ern; what you call mod- ern?" |
19412 | Then, when we had finished, Sir Lionel said,"Now, Mrs. Tupper, can you take us for a stroll round the farm?" |
19412 | There is no rage like the dress rage, is there? |
19412 | There speaks true appreciation, does n''t it? |
19412 | There''s nothing more glorious than music in a cathedral, is there? |
19412 | They knew each other in Bengal, and she kept saying to him in a cooing voice,"_ Do_ you remember?" |
19412 | This_ was_ my début, I suppose? |
19412 | Though, in our day together, we did n''t carry this, eh?" |
19412 | To be sure, because of my position at Madame de Maluet''s, I have got a few outside pupils; but that''s indirectly through Ellaline, too, is n''t it? |
19412 | To remember every dress I ever owned? |
19412 | To- day, for instance, what do you think I did? |
19412 | Unless Dick has told her something, after all? |
19412 | Was I a great friend of Miss Bennett''s, and was it probable that she had my portrait? |
19412 | Was n''t Amesbury a beautiful"leading up"to Stonehenge? |
19412 | Was n''t Ellaline a relation of the millionaire family of Lethbridges? |
19412 | Was n''t that a conceited idea? |
19412 | Was n''t that a good idea, when they''d got nervous prostration having everybody tell them? |
19412 | Was n''t that kind of him? |
19412 | Was n''t that low of me? |
19412 | Was n''t the cathedral begun by the father of Ælfred on the foundations of that poor church as well as those of a Roman temple? |
19412 | Was n''t there a Christian church before the days of Arthur, my alleged ancestor? |
19412 | We walked back to the hotel together, and he asked me, just as we were coming in, whether my allowance was enough, or would I like to have more? |
19412 | Well, I had no answer to make; for it''s true, is n''t it? |
19412 | Well, I''ve kept you waiting long enough, or have you, perhaps, read ahead? |
19412 | Were the"dear, dead women"so much more desirable than we? |
19412 | What can he mean? |
19412 | What could we ask more than that? |
19412 | What do you do on holidays? |
19412 | What had I done? |
19412 | What had become of him, I''d like to know? |
19412 | What if I do have to pump up an intelligent interest in politics in general, and affairs in the Far East in particular? |
19412 | What is to become of her? |
19412 | What is your middle name?" |
19412 | What shall I do, I wonder, if I have to part with her-- give her to some other man, perhaps? |
19412 | What to make of it, however, that she told me only about ten days ago, she did n''t like him? |
19412 | What was St. Swithin thinking of to let them do it? |
19412 | What was his, in a woman? |
19412 | What''s a girl doing out alone?" |
19412 | What''s the harm, as long as we''re both English, and this is Paris?" |
19412 | What?" |
19412 | What?" |
19412 | What_ can_ I know about him? |
19412 | Whence can I have inherited these vicious tendencies? |
19412 | Where-- how-- when?" |
19412 | Which is it?" |
19412 | Who but a Frenchwoman could combine all these qualities with the latest thing in hair- dressing and the neatest thing in stays? |
19412 | Who will that somebody be? |
19412 | Why do n''t men do such things for us nowadays? |
19412 | Why does he go out of his way to avoid mentioning her name?" |
19412 | Why not revel in borrowed sunshine? |
19412 | Why should I care what becomes of them? |
19412 | Why should n''t I triumph on both counts? |
19412 | Why, did n''t the custodian point out to us, in the picture of an ancient plan of the chapel, the actual spot where their bodies lay? |
19412 | Why, therefore, should this couple choose Ennis''s for supper? |
19412 | Will she have to go to the place of unclaimed parcels? |
19412 | Will you, when you get this, wire to me at once,"Writing according to your request to Sir L."? |
19412 | Witches were fascinating; but many martyrs probably marted out of sheer obstinacy, do n''t you think? |
19412 | Wo n''t you, Emily? |
19412 | Would I be kind to him, and accept his present? |
19412 | Would n''t I make it rattle? |
19412 | Would n''t that be awful? |
19412 | Would n''t that have been dreadful? |
19412 | Would n''t they sell like hot cakes? |
19412 | XIII AUDRIE BRENDON TO HER MOTHER_ Lulworth Cove_,_ July 30th_ Why are n''t you with me, dearest, seeing what I am seeing? |
19412 | Yet I can see you looking puzzled as well as startled, and muttering to yourself:"Take Ellaline''s place? |
19412 | Yet what would Elaine, the Lily Maid of Astolat, say to such a liberty, I wonder? |
19412 | You and I were born knowing quite a lot of nice little things like that, were n''t we? |
19412 | You believe that, do n''t you? |
19412 | You ca n''t have centuries roll away, like a mere cloud of dust raised by your motor, and be perfectly normal, can you? |
19412 | You know how, in the nave, you see so plainly the transition from one architectural period to another? |
19412 | You know what I mean? |
19412 | You know when we came back from our walk, and saw them sitting on the beach together, I said what a pretty picture they made?" |
19412 | You know, there''s a magnificent Roman amphitheatre near by; but did we stay to look at it? |
19412 | You know:"Do you like your lessons? |
19412 | You remember Rolde, in Holland, do n''t you, with its miniature Stonehenge? |
19412 | You remember it all, do n''t you? |
19412 | You remember it? |
19412 | You remember the day you and I walked to Winchester from Portsmouth, starting early in the morning, with our lunch in our pockets? |
19412 | You remember, do n''t you, George?" |
19412 | You seem to learn more about a flower by inhaling its perfume after rain, do n''t you think, than by dissecting it, petal by petal? |
19412 | You swear you did n''t hypnotize him to say that? |
19412 | You would have thought that that must have softened even a hard heart, would n''t you? |
19412 | You would n''t mind a motor tour, would you, Emily?" |
19412 | You would never guess what I''m going to do to- morrow morning? |
19412 | _ Can_ she? |
19412 | do?" |
19412 | he asked,"or will you wait till to- morrow?" |
19412 | or even"What- what?" |
29939 | Ah,said the ape,"is it so high that it outranks all other dignities?" |
29939 | And have you come? |
29939 | And how do you know this? |
29939 | And what have you done during all those long years? |
29939 | And where do you wish to go now? |
29939 | And where is Molo? |
29939 | And where is the heartless husband? |
29939 | And who might he be? |
29939 | And why should we not celebrate,answered his wife,"since we have now become emperor and empress?" |
29939 | Are all the stars in their places? |
29939 | Are you able to walk? |
29939 | But she is up in Heaven,said the Herd Boy,"and how can I get there?" |
29939 | But what are rain- sheep? |
29939 | But what shall I do now? |
29939 | But where is your daughter? |
29939 | Can one gain eternal life by means of them? |
29939 | Can one gain eternal life in this way? |
29939 | Can one secure eternal life by means of it? |
29939 | Could you present him to me some time? |
29939 | Did all go well? |
29939 | Did not grandmother tell us that we must save no black- headed human beings? |
29939 | Did you kill any one? |
29939 | Do you imagine,he told her,"that because your parents can visit human beings with misfortune, that a real man would be afraid of a frog?" |
29939 | Do you wish to marry some one else, seeing that he has been missing so long? |
29939 | Has she also invited me? |
29939 | Have you enough? |
29939 | Have you seen the girl in the red coat? |
29939 | How could we claim such high descent? |
29939 | How many are there of you brothers? |
29939 | How many did you slay? |
29939 | How so do our lines not make sense? |
29939 | I am the man,answered Dung, alarmed,"how do you happen to know me?" |
29939 | I am the third,he answered,"and you?" |
29939 | May one sit down here? |
29939 | Now just tell me what tricks you are up to? 29939 O youth, whence do you come, that you dare to take our clothes?" |
29939 | Shall I teach you the sciences? |
29939 | Then, if you are no blessed god, how comes it you sing that divine song? |
29939 | Well, what are these evils? |
29939 | Were any fields damaged? |
29939 | What are the sciences? |
29939 | What can be the matter with the horse? |
29939 | What does that teach? |
29939 | What is the way of repose? |
29939 | What is to be done? |
29939 | What rank has this office? |
29939 | What sort of a god is he? |
29939 | When is the great flood coming? |
29939 | Where are you going? |
29939 | Where is your home? |
29939 | Who is Tsian Tang? |
29939 | Why are you making such a noise? |
29939 | Why are you so sad? 29939 Why did you not tell me at once?" |
29939 | Why do you ask me how I am getting along? |
29939 | Why do you not go along yourself and hunt up your father? |
29939 | Will it give one eternal life? |
29939 | Will you not rest a bit? |
29939 | A leaden bullet is no bird, the stable- boy does his work outside, would you call him into the room? |
29939 | After they had driven a good ways, they asked:"Will we soon get to grandmother''s house?" |
29939 | And now, who are you? |
29939 | And the emperor said:"What shall we do?" |
29939 | And the father said:"Are those not my daughters''voices?" |
29939 | And then I must ask you whether there is anything else you can do, aside from playing your tricks of transformation?" |
29939 | And to his apes he said:"What should be done?" |
29939 | And what are you doing before my door?" |
29939 | And when he entered the hall, an old lady with white hair and bent back, leaning on a cane, came forward and asked:"What man is this?" |
29939 | And when the fire had heated him thoroughly, he suddenly opened his mouth-- and can you imagine what came out of it? |
29939 | And when they saw that the struggle had still not come to an end she said to Laotzse:"How would it be if we helped Yang Oerlang a little? |
29939 | And who are you, tell me that, who instead of grieving for yourself, are grieving for others? |
29939 | Are there gods who teach men to fear their wives? |
29939 | Astonished, he inquired:"Who are you? |
29939 | At once a warrior emerged from the waves of the sea, and asked:"Whence come you, honored guest?" |
29939 | Before long one of the saint''s disciples came and opened the door and said:"What sort of a beast is it that is making such a noise?" |
29939 | But his brother was jealous of him, and said to him, harshly:"Where did you manage to steal the money?" |
29939 | But is your hat genuine?" |
29939 | But since a ruler has already arisen to reign over it, what is there to keep me in this country? |
29939 | But the ancient was already there, took him by the hand and said:"Are you back already to where you were? |
29939 | But the sorcerer answered:"Did not my ship turn turtle at sea, and yet you try to deceive me?" |
29939 | But what magic power have you at your disposal, that you were able to get here?" |
29939 | Can you fly already?" |
29939 | Can you prevent it?" |
29939 | Do the gods slaughter cattle like men?" |
29939 | Do you know of any one who might answer?" |
29939 | Do you not want to tell your old slave about it?" |
29939 | Dschou Bau asked him:"Who are you?" |
29939 | Dung asked him:"Did anything out of the ordinary happen when Sir Wang died?" |
29939 | Dung was agreeable and asked:"But what really brings you here?" |
29939 | Full of joy he leaped up and said:"How is it you have come back to me?" |
29939 | Have I no halo which makes you fear me, instead of going walking with me?" |
29939 | Have you any other income aside from it?" |
29939 | Have you come from the castle of the Lady in the Moon, or the Jade Spring of the Queen- Mother of the West?" |
29939 | Have you heard anything regarding a hero who is supposed to be in this neighborhood?" |
29939 | Have you no kinsfolk who will hasten to help you in your need, that you are compelled to turn to a mortal man?" |
29939 | Have you still not forgotten your pain?" |
29939 | He asked him:"Where is Old Dschang''s country house?" |
29939 | He asked them:"How many trees in all are there in the garden?" |
29939 | He belonged to the butterfly dancers, said he, and asked casually:"Are you sick because of Rose of Evening?" |
29939 | He called Sun Wu Kung up to him and asked:"What progress have you made with your art? |
29939 | He called out to his Master:"What does all this mean?" |
29939 | He was angry and scolded them, saying:"Why did you disobey my command?" |
29939 | Her father asked angrily:"Why did you throw the ball into the beggar''s hands?" |
29939 | His foster- mother was frightened, and asked:"Where have you been all year long?" |
29939 | His hand is not a foot long; how could I help but leap out of it?" |
29939 | How are you?" |
29939 | How can I honorably live again with such a man as you?" |
29939 | How can it possess a god''s power? |
29939 | How can you be of aid to him? |
29939 | How can you expect to rule here as Lord of the Heavens? |
29939 | How could the light have gone out?" |
29939 | How could you arrange our marriage?" |
29939 | How dare you claim that you have left my hand? |
29939 | How did you happen to meet my sister?" |
29939 | How does that happen?" |
29939 | How is it that another one comes now?" |
29939 | How is it with my merit?" |
29939 | How is it you do not return to us until now?" |
29939 | How many years would you have to pass before you could attain the dignity he has gained? |
29939 | How would it be if we were to buy steel and iron and have those smiths weld weapons for us?" |
29939 | How would it be possible to win into it?" |
29939 | IV WHO WAS THE SINNER? |
29939 | In she came, much excited, and began:"Have I ever omitted, as is right and proper, to visit you morning and evening? |
29939 | In the morning the father was very angry with the children, and said:"Who wants to go along to grandmother?" |
29939 | Is it possible for you to walk through the water?" |
29939 | Is it possible that she may be up there?" |
29939 | Is that not better than dying of hunger as a poor scholar?" |
29939 | Liu I asked:"What is this place called?" |
29939 | Liu I asked:"Why should the matter be kept from him?" |
29939 | Liu I went on to ask:"Why is he interested in the sacred book of the fire?" |
29939 | Ma asked:"Did not a man with two pails of water on his shoulder just go in?" |
29939 | Mosu bowed with lowered head and said:"But what have I done?" |
29939 | Moved to tears, he asked:"O my father, why are you here?" |
29939 | Notscha, however, came to them and said:"Why do you weep? |
29939 | On the way he met the Bare- Foot God and asked him:"Where are you going?" |
29939 | Once he was asked:"About how old might this tortoise be?" |
29939 | Round the Blue Pass snow towers high, And who will lead the horse aright? |
29939 | Said Sun Wu Kung to him:"To whom do you belong, little one? |
29939 | Said Sun Wu Kung:"What does magic teach one?" |
29939 | Said the Great Saint:"And who are all those whom the Queen- Mother has invited?" |
29939 | Said the wood- chopper:"I am only a workman; why do you call me divine master?" |
29939 | Softly he said to his friend:"What are the three river- gods called?" |
29939 | Suddenly an ancient man stood before him, leaning on a staff, who said:"What do you lack since you complain so?" |
29939 | Suddenly he saw a creature rise out of the waves, on whose back sat an armed man who cried in a loud voice:"Who has slain my Triton?" |
29939 | Sun Wu Kung answered:"If you do not know me then why did you send for me and have me dragged to this place? |
29939 | Sun Wu Kung grew very angry and said:"What sort of a devil is this who dares be so impudent?" |
29939 | Sun Wu Kung shouted at him:"Accursed devil, where are your eyes, that you can not see the venerable Sun?" |
29939 | Sun Wu Kung snorted and said:"Who are you, who dare to speak to me?" |
29939 | Surely that is enough to entitle me to be the Lord of the Heavens?" |
29939 | Tell me, pray, whence you come?" |
29939 | The Emperor said:"What do you know?" |
29939 | The King of the Apes said:"Where do these three kinds of beings live?" |
29939 | The Lord of the Heavens asked:"Then this hairy face with the pointed lips is Sun Wu Kung?" |
29939 | The ancient man said:"How much money would you need in order to live in all comfort?" |
29939 | The ancient seized his arm and said:"Where are you going? |
29939 | The ape leaped out, and when he saw the powerful hero with the three- tined sword standing before him he asked:"And who may you be?" |
29939 | The cow said:"Do you see that old willow- tree there on the shore? |
29939 | The eight boys changed into old men again and said:"Do you wish to go to school to us, O King? |
29939 | The eight old men smiled and said:"Oh, and are we too old to suit you? |
29939 | The giant called out harshly:"Who are you? |
29939 | The great king nodded, looked around and asked:"Are all the folk of the Wo- Me hills present?" |
29939 | The inn- keeper received him with the words:"Are you Master Dung, and have you come from the bay of Kaiutschou?" |
29939 | The king asked:"Are you not a living human being? |
29939 | The latter cried out:"How are you? |
29939 | The sea- dragon cried:"Who is disturbing me here in my own kingdom?" |
29939 | The ten Princes of the Dead were frightened, bowed before him and asked:"Who are you?" |
29939 | The wise man asked:"And have you still in your possession the stone which compels the dragons to do your will?" |
29939 | The woman answered:"How could I use you as a stranger? |
29939 | Then Sun Wu Kung was frightened and asked:"Is there any means of protection against these dangers?" |
29939 | Then he asked them:"Whom have I really the honor of entertaining? |
29939 | Then he looked at the merchant and asked:"Why is your necklace so short?" |
29939 | Then he questioned them further:"Have you the dragon- brain vapor?" |
29939 | Then he said in a deep voice:"Where are you? |
29939 | Then he saw the merchant and asked:"From whence does he hail?" |
29939 | Then some one asked:"If you have pears then why do you not eat your own?" |
29939 | Then the Master asked:"Shall I teach you the way of magic?" |
29939 | Then the apes opened their mouths and stuck out their tongues, and said:"Father, how is it possible for you to carry that heavy thing?" |
29939 | Then the daughters asked:"Mother, what are you eating?" |
29939 | Then the fox said:"How about it? |
29939 | Then the girls within called out:"Who is knocking at our door?" |
29939 | Then the soldier showed her the rope and said with a laugh:"Is this the thing you mean? |
29939 | Then the woman asked:"And where did you pass on your way?" |
29939 | Then there were doubts and questionings:"But the river- god lives a thousand miles away from here, how does he get to this place?" |
29939 | They sat down beside each other and the stranger asked:"What have you to eat?" |
29939 | They thanked him and began to flatter him:"With your power and wisdom, great king, why should you have to serve the Lord of the Heavens? |
29939 | What are you doing here?" |
29939 | What are you waiting to learn, then?" |
29939 | What difference does it make?" |
29939 | What do you mean by carrying on in such an unfitting manner?" |
29939 | What do you wish me to change myself into?" |
29939 | What has brought you here?" |
29939 | What has the Lord of the Heavens accomplished that entitles him to remain eternally on his throne? |
29939 | What is the punishment you wish to lay upon me?" |
29939 | What is this one ear worth to you? |
29939 | What need was there for him to lure me into his heaven to feed horses? |
29939 | What need was there for the body to go along? |
29939 | What shall I do with it?" |
29939 | What should be done?" |
29939 | What sort of a creature must I be? |
29939 | What sort of a title is that?" |
29939 | When Sky O''Dawn had died, the Emperor called the astrologer to him and asked:"Did you know Sky O''Dawn?" |
29939 | When he reached his house he asked:"Who is weeping here so pitifully?" |
29939 | When he reached land he saw a youth who asked him with astonishment:"Are you not from the Middle Kingdom?" |
29939 | When the rice was nearly boiled his sister- in- law said:"Wo n''t your leg be injured?" |
29939 | When they admitted that they had not, the wise man said:"How then will you compel the dragons to yield their treasure?" |
29939 | Where are you? |
29939 | Which way shall I teach you?" |
29939 | While the daughters replied:"Is that not our father''s voice?" |
29939 | While they were at table Sun Wu Kung asked accidentally:"Stablemaster? |
29939 | Why are you not asleep? |
29939 | Why did you have to marry her to such a wrinkled old gardener? |
29939 | Why do you have to turn yourself into a pine- tree? |
29939 | Why do you speak about my having been gone a year?" |
29939 | Why is this?" |
29939 | Why not let me go instead? |
29939 | Why should I continue to live?" |
29939 | Why should a gentleman''s beautiful daughter condescend to marry a poor old gardener like yourself? |
29939 | Why should he withdraw from you the enjoyment of the incense?" |
29939 | Why suddenly grow so angry about it?" |
29939 | Will you not come home with me?" |
29939 | Will you not speak one little word to save me? |
29939 | With tears in his eyes Sun Wu Kung asked him:"But where shall I go?" |
29939 | Wo n''t you say one little word to me? |
29939 | Yet the Sea of Dungting is long and broad, and how am I to find him?" |
35685 | We are like the birds of the air,said a Kuki to T. C. Hodson,"we make our nests here this year, and who knows where we shall build next year[409]?" |
35685 | # Hottentots#:_ Wa- Sandawi(? |
35685 | # Negrilloes#:_ Akka_;_ Wochua_;_ Dume(? |
35685 | ), the whole representing a money value of about £ 4,000,000(?). |
35685 | )_;_ Doko(? |
35685 | )_;_ Wandorobbo(? |
35685 | ? Kwakiutl( Wakashan stock). |
35685 | Are they to be really taken as objectively one, or are they merely artificial groupings, arbitrarily arranged abstractions? |
35685 | Are we then to conclude that there have been Hindu invasions and settlements in all these regions, the most populous on the globe? |
35685 | But here arises the more important question, by what right are so many and such diverse peoples grouped together and ticketed"Caucasians"? |
35685 | But whence came the hundreds of Aztec names in the lands between Chiapas and Nicaragua? |
35685 | Did they bring their different languages with them, or were these specialised in their new upland homes? |
35685 | Egypt[95] Babylonia[96] Aegean[97] Greece[98] Bronze Age in Europe[99] 3300 Dynasty I 3200 3100 3000 Dynasty of Opis? Early? Pre- Mycenean 2900 Dyn. |
35685 | Egypt[95] Babylonia[96] Aegean[97] Greece[98] Bronze Age in Europe[99] 3300 Dynasty I 3200 3100 3000 Dynasty of Opis? Early? Pre- Mycenean 2900 Dyn. |
35685 | Here it may be asked, What is to be thought of the already- mentioned pebble- markings from the Mas- d''Azil Cave at the close of the Old Stone Age? |
35685 | How is its presence in East Central Asia, including Manchuria and Korea, to be explained? |
35685 | IV.)? |
35685 | IV.,"Whence came the Acheans?" |
35685 | Individuals worship the shades of their immediate ancestors or elder relatives; and the_ k''omas_[ souls?] |
35685 | Is it a wonder that the clothes do not fit? |
35685 | Mpondo||_______|_______ Ama- Tembus Palo( 1780?) |
35685 | Nirvana? |
35685 | The earlier Achaian(?) |
35685 | The question is, Can all these have come from North Africa? |
35685 | The recent finds in Bosnia also[1277], besides the historically proved(?) |
35685 | Thus with the root,_ ahong_, come, and infix_ jám_, slow, is formed the retardative_ náng ahongjámrangmoh_,"will- you- come- slowly?" |
35685 | To what cause is to be attributed this profound modification of this branch of the Nordic type in the direction of the south? |
35685 | W. Ridgeway,_ Who were the Romans?_ 1908. |
35685 | When rallied for burning flash notes at a popular shrine, since no spirit- bank would cash them, a Chinaman retorted:"Why me burn good note? |
35685 | Where did this babel of tongues come from? |
35685 | Where have we to seek the primeval home of this most vigorous and dominant branch of the human family? |
35685 | [ 1058]_ Early Age of Greece_, 1901, p. 237 ff., and"Who were the Romans?" |
35685 | [ 1261] H. Zimmer,"Auf welchen Wege kamen die Goidelen vom Kontinent nach Irland?" |
35685 | [ 145]"Chaque fois que j''ai demandé avec intention à un Mandé,''Es- tu Peul, Mossi, Dafina?'' |
35685 | [ 776]"Whence came the American Indians?" |
35685 | _______________________/\________________________/\ Tembu Xosa( 1530?) |
35685 | unconscious rest or absorption in the eternal essence? |
36146 | What must be the feelings of Dr. McLoughlin? 36146 ''What does Congress care about measuring wheat? 36146 And did not the Delegate and the Chief Justice say that Dr. McLoughlin was so dangerous and unprincipled a man as not be entitled to his land claim? 36146 And did the secular department of the Methodist Mission assist these early pioneers in any way similar to what was done by Dr. McLoughlin? 36146 And now, as they have succeeded, where is the Hudson Bay Company? 36146 And referring to the early immigrants and Dr. McLoughlin''s treatment of them, Dr. Hines said:What would Dr. McLoughlin do? |
36146 | And that he refused to become an American citizen? |
36146 | And what will be the consequences? |
36146 | And who was Dr. McLoughlin to Congress? |
36146 | And who, at that advanced age declares his intention of becoming a citizen of our great Republic.--I say what must be his feelings? |
36146 | And why the necessity of such secular business as a part of a mission to convert Indians to Christianity? |
36146 | And yet this same Honorable(?) |
36146 | At the election I happened to be one of the Judges; Dr. McLoughlin came up to vote; the question was asked by myself, if he had filed his intentions? |
36146 | But if that was his intention, as he refused to sell, where was to be the profit? |
36146 | Did not the first Delegate from Oregon advocate it? |
36146 | Did not the first Territorial Chief Justice of Oregon then in Washington, advise it? |
36146 | For what? |
36146 | Have you anyone in Portland that would help any and all such men off to the mines on such chances of getting their pay? |
36146 | He then commenced at the head man saying,''Your name, if you please; how many in the family, and what do you desire?'' |
36146 | How, sir, would you reward Benedict Arnold, were he living? |
36146 | I immediately rushed on them with my cane, calling out at the same time,''Who is the dog that says it is a good thing to kill the Bostons?'' |
36146 | Is it to be wondered at that he sometimes felt bitter? |
36146 | Is not the hand of Providence in all this? |
36146 | Is this not the cunning of the fox? |
36146 | Or that they were not grateful? |
36146 | Or think that Jason Lee would ever forget? |
36146 | Thurston said:"The_ names_ must be given, and for what? |
36146 | What were the wrongs and misfortunes of one old man to Congress? |
36146 | What would he do? |
36146 | Who ever knew or heard of Dr. McLoughlin telling a lie? |
36146 | Why did he ask me for my vote if I had not one to give? |
36146 | Why did he ask me for my vote if I had not one to give? |
36146 | Would he deny asylum to the weary, footsore, famishing immigrants? |
36146 | Would he lock the doors of his granaries? |
36146 | Would he shut the gates of his fortress? |
36146 | Would you have me turn the cold shoulder to the men of God, who came to do that for the Indians which this Company has neglected to do?" |
36146 | [ 14] From this act alone could anyone doubt that Dr. McLoughlin was a sympathetic, kind, thoughtful, and considerate man? |
36146 | [ 26] In his answer Dr. McLoughlin said, concerning his treatment of the missionaries:"What would you have? |
36146 | or a contest between two milling companies?'' |
36559 | Elkswatawa, N- tha- thah( my brother), why do you seek my life? 36559 A native orator, speaking of the good qualities of his people, said:Are we brave and valiant? |
36559 | Are our women beautiful? |
36559 | Are we strong? |
36559 | But art thou hungry?" |
36559 | Did the Great Spirit manifest displeasure? |
36559 | Had bad spirits entered the brain of Pa- che- ta, whose noble deeds would ever after be celebrated by the nation? |
36559 | Had he taken refuge in the mountains of the West and left his helpless daughter at the mercy of the enemy? |
36559 | Is it a matter of surprise that he should oppose, with ceaseless energy, the encroachment of the white man? |
36559 | Might it not be more just to explain that daily baths in the river, in a cold climate, were the causes of mortality? |
36559 | That his talents should be unsparingly used in the hopeless endeavor to stay the westward progress of civilization? |
36559 | The Pottawatomie, disclosing a great wound in his side, said:"Did n''t you shoot an owl at your house, last night? |
36559 | The Shawnees said:"Can you show us anything better than we have-- good wives, good children, good dogs and plenty of deer?" |
36559 | The fourth night something touched him and said:"What are you doing here?" |
36559 | The gentle voice said:"Why does he who is the kernel of the snail look terrified? |
36559 | The question now obtruded itself,"What should be done with Maune ´?" |
36559 | Was all hope lost? |
36559 | What was the cause of that cruel, crafty expression? |
36559 | Whence came these legends and traditions? |
36559 | Where was the Kansas chief? |
36559 | Why is he faint and weary?" |
36559 | Will you pity my age and helplessness and release him to me?" |
26985 | A find,--a real find, Captain? |
26985 | A tip? |
26985 | A tumble,--a fall; did it hurt him much? |
26985 | Ai n''t they good to her where she is? |
26985 | Ai n''t worth what? 26985 All right, is he?" |
26985 | And I guess thirty- five dollars will run those rosebud rooms of yours pretty safe and slick; wo n''t they, Mrs. Mulligan? 26985 And did they never get her up?" |
26985 | And do you ever really sell anything? |
26985 | And is n''t all fishing killing? |
26985 | And is n''t that an awful name to give to a Christian shore? |
26985 | And is that the way ye talk? |
26985 | And is that the way ye''d be talking before his reverence? |
26985 | And it is only of Aunt Winnie you are thinking, Dan? |
26985 | And now where is this seashore place? |
26985 | And that is what you do at the hospital, Marraine? |
26985 | And the others,--the little chap who was with you? |
26985 | And what are you going to give him for it, Dud? |
26985 | And when we have the chairs and tables and cushions and curtains-- who is going to pick out the cushions and curtains, dad? |
26985 | And where is your place? |
26985 | And you left laddie, that lone innocent, with a dying man? |
26985 | And you mean-- you mean--( Dan''s voice trembled, his eyes shone,)--"you mean I can come back?" |
26985 | And you nursed them all night? |
26985 | And you would give me a thousand dollar star? 26985 And-- and what did he say?" |
26985 | And-- and you do n''t mind it if--"If she is with the Little Sisters of the Poor, Pollykins? 26985 Are they better this morning?" |
26985 | Are you going to stay long? |
26985 | Are you in with the''high brows''for good and all? |
26985 | Are you not rather young to be facing it alone? |
26985 | Are you sure of that? |
26985 | Both boats, sir? |
26985 | But I''m out of the bootblack business for good and all; so what are you going to do about it? |
26985 | But daddy,--my own dear, lost daddy? |
26985 | But it is n''t true: your aunt is n''t in the poorhouse, Dan? |
26985 | But what are you doing here, Aunt Win? |
26985 | But why-- were you hiding, daddy? 26985 Ca n''t I get up to- day, Brother?" |
26985 | Ca n''t you keep quiet in a decent crowd? |
26985 | Calling me fool, are you? |
26985 | Can you have ice- cream,--all you want? |
26985 | Could n''t he tow it into port? |
26985 | Daddy, daddy!--O Uncle Tom, is daddy dead? |
26985 | Did n''t I tell you to duck, ye rascal? |
26985 | Did you ever cast a harpoon? |
26985 | Did you ever fish like that, Dan? |
26985 | Did you say you were going to Killykinick? |
26985 | Disgracing you? |
26985 | Do I look it? |
26985 | Do n''t you see everybody staring at us? |
26985 | Do n''t you see the gates, Danny,--gates that seem to open in the shining way that leads to God''s Throne? 26985 Do you feel me now?" |
26985 | Do you feel me now? |
26985 | Do you like it here, Dan? |
26985 | Do you mean that this is for me? |
26985 | Dolan,--Dolan? 26985 Dolan?" |
26985 | Down and out, my boy? 26985 Eh!--what? |
26985 | Eh? |
26985 | For we can have a real true home now, ca n''t we? |
26985 | For what? |
26985 | Forgotten you? 26985 Four of them?" |
26985 | Freddy Neville? 26985 Give who?" |
26985 | Good? 26985 He did n''t like the girls,--did you, Rex?" |
26985 | He is good to him, you mean? |
26985 | He is n''t the kind of dog to leave around here for any tramp to pick up, I''ll agree; but how are we to haul him back, unless he chooses to come? 26985 Hev you got a medal?" |
26985 | His father left him? |
26985 | How did you push in so quick to the Foresters? |
26985 | How soon must you make your choice, Dan? |
26985 | How-- how did you get up? |
26985 | How? |
26985 | I am her godmother real and true,--am I not, Polykins? 26985 I''m not worrying over that, are you?" |
26985 | Is he-- he sick, too? |
26985 | Is it Dan Dolan with the rest? |
26985 | Is it a museum? |
26985 | Is it much further to Killykinick? |
26985 | Is n''t she the cutest thing? |
26985 | Is that a jump or a kick out? |
26985 | Is this Killykinick? |
26985 | Is-- is he dead, Dan? |
26985 | It''s all-- all a horrid story; I''m sure it is,--isn''t it, Dan? |
26985 | Killykinick? |
26985 | Killykinick? |
26985 | Killykinick? |
26985 | Little Boy Blue, do n''t you know your own daddy? |
26985 | Loaf? |
26985 | Lost her? 26985 Meat business, sausage? |
26985 | My boy,--where is my boy? 26985 My choice? |
26985 | My little girl crying,--crying? |
26985 | My, he is a beauty,--isn''t he, Dan? 26985 News for me?" |
26985 | O daddy, daddy, what are you going to do? |
26985 | Oh, are you staying there? |
26985 | Oh, ca n''t you do it, daddy? |
26985 | Oh, did he? |
26985 | Oh, did you, Dan? |
26985 | Oh, did you, Father? |
26985 | Oh, do n''t you, daddy? |
26985 | Oh, does he mean my--_my_ Dan, Marraine? |
26985 | Oh, does it? |
26985 | Oh, is it? |
26985 | Oh, was n''t it, Marraine? |
26985 | Oh, we wo n''t? |
26985 | Oh, what will we do when she is gone, daddy? |
26985 | Oh, what''s the good? |
26985 | One of the Dolans of Maryland, you say, Pemberton? 26985 Only a dollar, Marraine? |
26985 | Right off now? |
26985 | Saint Andrew''s? |
26985 | Sell? |
26985 | So Dan Dolan wants a gold watch, does he? |
26985 | So you gave up your real true friend? |
26985 | So your brave Dan is striking for ready cash, is he? |
26985 | Stake you for all you could earn here? |
26985 | Still here,he murmured,--"still here? |
26985 | Stubborn pride? |
26985 | Sure, Danny,--Danny boy, have ye come back with a fever on ye? |
26985 | Sure-- can''t we right one of the boats? |
26985 | That ar medal? |
26985 | That''s a lighthouse, is n''t it? |
26985 | The Lord be merciful to us both if we''re not to see the morning light!--Ah, are ye back, Dan Dolan? |
26985 | The seashore? 26985 Then what is he doing up here with boys like you?" |
26985 | Then what the deuce did you do it for? |
26985 | Then whose is he? |
26985 | Warn''t nothing special to you, was he? |
26985 | Well, we do n''t like to call them either; do we, Polly? |
26985 | Were you looking for me,--were you wanting to talk to me, my son? |
26985 | What are you crying about? |
26985 | What did you go tumbling off like that for? |
26985 | What do girls know about fishing? 26985 What do you see in it, Danny?" |
26985 | What do you see, Aunt Win? |
26985 | What does he say? |
26985 | What does it tell, Aunt Lena? |
26985 | What does she dream, Dan? |
26985 | What is a second mate''s work? |
26985 | What is high or low to Him? 26985 What is it now,--what is it now?" |
26985 | What is it you see? |
26985 | What is it? |
26985 | What is it? |
26985 | What is the matter? 26985 What is your name?" |
26985 | What reason? |
26985 | What sort of a rig is she, anyhow? |
26985 | What will I do with it? |
26985 | What will you do with it? |
26985 | What would it do for you? |
26985 | What would you pay me? |
26985 | What would you wish for, Pollykins? |
26985 | What''s that? |
26985 | What''s that? |
26985 | What''s''temperature''? |
26985 | When is it coming off? |
26985 | When will you want me? |
26985 | Where did you get it? |
26985 | Where is that at all? |
26985 | Where is_ our_ home, daddy? |
26985 | Where? |
26985 | Who told him? |
26985 | Who wants me? |
26985 | Who-- what are you? |
26985 | Who? |
26985 | Why did you have to see him, if it killed you? |
26985 | Why not? |
26985 | Why not? |
26985 | Why should I? |
26985 | Why will it be the last time? |
26985 | Why will you let the child give you that ridiculous name, my dear? |
26985 | Why, yes, we know him,--don''t we, Pollykins? |
26985 | Why? |
26985 | Why? |
26985 | Would n''t take the glad hand if I stretched it out to him and said I was sorry? |
26985 | Would n''t you, kid? |
26985 | Would she-- wish it, at such-- such a cost, Dan? |
26985 | Would you? |
26985 | Would-- would you like me to say an act of contrition for you? |
26985 | Would_ I_ do, Freddy? |
26985 | Ye do n''t? |
26985 | Ye made it all right again wind an''tide-- but where''s the other? |
26985 | Ye would? |
26985 | You are going to Killykinick? 26985 You are not going to bother with the children, surely, Stella?" |
26985 | You are? |
26985 | You down? |
26985 | You give up and go down, Danny? 26985 You know the place, Father?" |
26985 | You mean you want to hire out? |
26985 | You need a nurse? |
26985 | You think they are in danger there? |
26985 | You want me to do something for him? 26985 You''re not having a good time to- night, are you?" |
26985 | You''re not-- not sending me to a Reform, Father? |
26985 | You''re there, are you? 26985 You, Miss Stella,--_you_,--_you_?" |
26985 | ''Lord, Lord,''sez I to myself,''if Dan Dolan had n''t gone and got that eddycation bug in his head, would n''t this be the chance for him?" |
26985 | About leaving, you mean, Father? |
26985 | And I have four boys here, but they''ve been under my eye day and night,"he continued anxiously;"so, in God''s name, what are ye after them for, sir? |
26985 | And I was a tough patient, too; was n''t I?" |
26985 | And are we to leave laddie in that wild place beyond all night?" |
26985 | And did you catch anything, Dan?" |
26985 | And now you''re all broken up yourself?" |
26985 | And stubborn pride is something bad; is n''t it, Marraine?" |
26985 | And this medal was left here by a boy, you say, my man?" |
26985 | And what in Heaven''s name is his medal doing here?" |
26985 | And what''s to hurt him, anyhow, Padre? |
26985 | And where-- where are the others?" |
26985 | Are n''t you a little hard on him, Brother Bart?" |
26985 | Are we out at sea now?" |
26985 | Are you real or a death dream?" |
26985 | Are you related to them?" |
26985 | Brother Tim around?" |
26985 | But how are they to get back?" |
26985 | But they do n''t go wrong; that''s the wonder of it, is n''t it?" |
26985 | But to shake a nice little chap like Freddy I call a dirty, mean trick, do n''t you?" |
26985 | But what would twenty- five dollars mean to him, to Aunt Winnie? |
26985 | But would she be happy at such a sacrifice? |
26985 | But, Lord, what could you expect, doused and drenched and shaken up like he was yesterday? |
26985 | But, O my laddie, my little laddie, why did I let you go from me into the darkness and storm, my little boy, my little boy?" |
26985 | Ca n''t I have a little more toast, Brother James, please? |
26985 | Clams or lobsters?" |
26985 | D''ye ever see her as ye pass their gate?" |
26985 | Did n''t I tell you this warn''t no play- place? |
26985 | Did n''t you hear me say these''ere waters had sharks in''em?" |
26985 | Did she die?" |
26985 | Did you ever have the whooping cough?" |
26985 | Did you ever watch the sunset, Danny?" |
26985 | Did you know her?" |
26985 | Did-- did you ever black boots? |
26985 | Do n''t ye know there''s sharks about in these waters? |
26985 | Do n''t you know the tree is unsafe?" |
26985 | Do n''t you, daddy? |
26985 | Do ye ever say a prayer, Jeroboam?" |
26985 | Do you know what navigation means? |
26985 | Do you think Brother Andrew will let us have him out in the stable at St. Andrew''s? |
26985 | Do you think she will stand till morning, Neb?" |
26985 | Does n''t He give ye life and breath and strength and health and all that ye have? |
26985 | For me it is justice, judgment; but, O my God, why should Thy curse fall on my boy,--my innocent boy?" |
26985 | From what star of hope did you drop, Miss Stella?" |
26985 | Going to walk or ride, Dan?" |
26985 | Got to keep this sort of thing up all summer?" |
26985 | Has harm come to him?" |
26985 | Have you an aunt in the poorhouse, as Minna Foster says?" |
26985 | Have you been living long in this place we are going to?" |
26985 | Have you ever been to the seashore?" |
26985 | Have you forgotten this?" |
26985 | Have you heard about Killykinick, Jim?" |
26985 | He wo n''t fight any more, will you, Dan?" |
26985 | Hedn''t we been showing a light thar for nigh onto fifty years? |
26985 | Hit some pretty rough weather, I reckon, out at sea?" |
26985 | How in thunder did this get here?" |
26985 | How is Dudey''s nose?" |
26985 | How is it that you''re such friends?" |
26985 | I am going to forget the years( do n''t be cruel enough to count them, Cousin Pen), and for two hours( is it only two hours we have, Pollykins?) |
26985 | I told them I would n''t believe them,--that I would come right to Dan and let him speak for himself.--Were you ever a newsboy and a beggar boy, Dan? |
26985 | I wonder how he lived and died? |
26985 | I''d work, I''d starve, I''d die, I believe, rather than give up my chance here?" |
26985 | I''ll get sick of things here pretty soon; wo n''t you, Jim?" |
26985 | If you would like to accompany them--""To a party, is it?" |
26985 | In what?" |
26985 | Is it still standing?" |
26985 | Is it the tumble-- or typhoid?" |
26985 | Is n''t He the Lord and Maker of the land and sea? |
26985 | Is n''t it time for you to turn in now?" |
26985 | It was Dan Dolan calling,--but how, where? |
26985 | Meanwhile what did the little fellow call you?" |
26985 | Now, Dan, what''s the good of college anyhow fur a chap like you? |
26985 | Now, what in thunder was his name? |
26985 | Oh, how could you fool me so, Dan?" |
26985 | Suppose you come with us, and see the owner of the medal, and strike a bargain yourself?" |
26985 | Suppose, being second mate, you swing a hammock up on the deck with Jeb and me?" |
26985 | That angel boy of yours, Brother Bart?" |
26985 | That you, Dan? |
26985 | The sea lapping the sands to the right was the only bath- room, but what finer one could a boy ask? |
26985 | This is the holy place to die in, and what could a poor sick ould woman ask more?" |
26985 | Three points to the south of Numskull Nob,--what d''ye see?" |
26985 | Were you ever at Mass?" |
26985 | What are you talking about, you foolish boy, when I am only sending you all off for a summer holiday at the seashore?" |
26985 | What d''ye see now?" |
26985 | What do you say to four dollars a week and board?" |
26985 | What for?" |
26985 | What harm is there in staying up here?" |
26985 | What is the boy''s-- what is your price?" |
26985 | What is the matter?" |
26985 | What is your name, my good man?" |
26985 | What right had he to leave the good old woman, who had mothered him, lonely and heartsick that he might climb beyond her reach? |
26985 | What shall we do?" |
26985 | What was it that holy saint, Father Mack, said to you, alanna? |
26985 | What were you thinking of doing this summer?" |
26985 | What will you take?" |
26985 | What''s come to him?" |
26985 | What''s the good of a strong, husky fellow fooling along with Latin and Greek, that will never be no use to him? |
26985 | What''s the good of yer going back to the Sisters at all?" |
26985 | What''s the matter, anyhow? |
26985 | What''s the trouble?" |
26985 | What''s wanted, Mr. Forester? |
26985 | What''s your name?" |
26985 | What-- what do you think killed him, Dan?" |
26985 | Where are you going, Dan?" |
26985 | Where are you off so fast, Dan?" |
26985 | Where are you, Dan? |
26985 | Where?" |
26985 | Who and where is the boy?" |
26985 | Who ever saw a nurse woman pretty as that?" |
26985 | Why did you stay away so long?" |
26985 | Will ye do that?" |
26985 | Will you take the star, dear lady nurse?" |
26985 | Wirt?" |
26985 | Would n''t you like to come, Dan?" |
26985 | Would n''t you, Marraine?" |
26985 | Would she not grieve even at the fireside she had regained over her broken dreams? |
26985 | Would you consider him Jack Farley''s heir, Captain Carleton?" |
26985 | Would you like to see it?" |
26985 | You feel better already?" |
26985 | You know the boy?" |
26985 | You know where that is, Polly?" |
26985 | You''ve come to take the job?" |
26985 | You''ve found the chap that owns it, you say?" |
26985 | You''ve made up your mind for good and all to stick to the highbrows? |
26985 | echoed Brother Bart, grimly,--"dull is it, yer reverence? |
26985 | has there never been word or sign from him, Father?" |
26985 | if these here engines took to shirking and kicking where would we be? |
26985 | it''s good we''re not engines, is n''t it, Dan? |
26985 | said Dan,"what would poor old Nutty be doing with a twenty- five dollar medal?" |
31525 | Could I ever be saved? |
31525 | We are going to heaven; would you not like to go and see the Lord Jesus? |
31525 | Well, then,said I,"is my coat alive because I fill it?" |
31525 | What do you want? |
31525 | What to do? |
31525 | ''"Are all the heathen who have not heard the Gospel damned? |
31525 | ''"Are there prophets now? |
31525 | ''"Did Buddha live?" |
31525 | ''"Do your unbelieving countrymen in England all go to hell? |
31525 | ''"Has anybody died, gone to heaven or hell, and come back to report? |
31525 | ''"How can Christ save a man? |
31525 | ''"If a man disregards Christ, but worships a supreme God in an indefinite way, is he saved or not? |
31525 | ''"If a man lives without sin, is he damned? |
31525 | ''"If a man prays for a thing, does he get it? |
31525 | ''"If a man prays to Christ to save him morn and even, but goes on sinning meantime, how about him? |
31525 | ''"If so, how do you know that the account of Christ is not made up in the same way? |
31525 | ''"Is a new- born child a sinner? |
31525 | ''"Is one man then punished for another''s fault? |
31525 | ''Are the young men to blame? |
31525 | ''Do you know_ In the Volume of the Book_, by Dr. Pentecost? |
31525 | ''Has Christ saved you? |
31525 | ''Have you been to any Salvation Army efforts? |
31525 | ''I sometimes have deep fits of the blues when I think of the children, but their mother was able to trust Jesus with them, and why should not I? |
31525 | ''If anyone asks,"Would it not have been better if Mr. Gilmour had taken more care of himself and lived longer?" |
31525 | ''It is a_ disease_; if you get it can you leave it off? |
31525 | ''Many of these sins you not accused of, but you have sin: sin is fatal, can you free yourself? |
31525 | ''Now, how does the matter stand? |
31525 | ''Now,_ we believe_: how much do we do? |
31525 | ''Often a gentleman would come up and ask,"Where are you going?" |
31525 | ''Shortly after this Toobshing set himself up and proposed questions and cases such as:''"Is hell eternal? |
31525 | ''Suppose you were freed only from Hell, and transported to Heaven, could you be happy? |
31525 | ''Taking these things into consideration, I did not regard their great and often- repeated question,"How about the harvest?" |
31525 | ''The question of"How did you get this disease?" |
31525 | ''Then the Chinese would ask,"How many people have believed and entered the religion since you left Peking?" |
31525 | ''_ June 12, 1870._--I am to- day twenty- seven years of age, and what have I done? |
31525 | ''_ October 25._--God has given the hunger and thirst for souls: will He leave me unsatisfied? |
31525 | 32- 39)? |
31525 | A smoker there spends a few coppers, and smokes; what harm does he do? |
31525 | And if so, do not tobacco and whisky take the bread out of men''s mouths and the clothes off their backs? |
31525 | And if so, has not every smoker and drinker a part in this sin? |
31525 | And if the old women sang thus, what of the young people? |
31525 | And is there a trouble or hardship we have yet surmounted for Christ''s sake that does not seem sweet to look back on? |
31525 | And why not? |
31525 | Ar''n''t you? |
31525 | Are not souls valuable enough for us to face anything if only we can save some? |
31525 | Are there none of you who could study medicine and go out as doctors to some of the many needy places? |
31525 | Are there not some men whom we might stir up who now escape? |
31525 | Are your schoolfellows Jesus''boys? |
31525 | But for these three things many more men could find a living within the bounds of the district Is not that little district an epitome of the world? |
31525 | But what about the work as regards the saving of souls and establishing of a Church? |
31525 | But where do you live?" |
31525 | But why did God call him away in the midst of life and work? |
31525 | By the mail that conveyed the letter quoted on page 263 he also wrote to an Edinburgh friend:--''Do you know Adolphe Monod''s_ Farewell_? |
31525 | Can not God keep us yet-- will He not do it? |
31525 | Can not the same wonders be done now as of old? |
31525 | Can they not be had? |
31525 | Could not the disciples conspire to make the Gospels? |
31525 | Could we do more? |
31525 | Could you not get a doctor who would be willing to remain single till a location could be secured? |
31525 | Did he tread upon God? |
31525 | Did the hot tea not scald Him? |
31525 | Did you see in_ The Christian_ some time ago a story from Annan, of an old woman who was on the point of being sold out for not paying her rent? |
31525 | Do n''t you know of one who would do? |
31525 | Do not the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, still to show Himself strong on behalf of those who put their trust in Him? |
31525 | Do we not in our day rest too much on the arm of flesh? |
31525 | Do you ever tell them of Him? |
31525 | Do you think we''ll be able to go up to Him at last and say,"We did our part, but you did not do yours, Lord"? |
31525 | Does it not seem clear that what is described can not be the case of one who has the repentant heart? |
31525 | Does not Christ save men from distance from God and bring us near? |
31525 | Does not he increase trade and help the revenue? |
31525 | Does this prove that God is unfaithful? |
31525 | Does this tend to show that the enterprise is hopeless? |
31525 | Frequently they would anticipate me in this, and say,"If tobacco is wrong, how about whisky?" |
31525 | God replies,"If you trust Me with it, do n''t you think I''d give them it as they needed?" |
31525 | He said,"Who are you?" |
31525 | How am I to pack and carry my goods? |
31525 | How is my mission to get on beginning thus? |
31525 | How then? |
31525 | How''s your soul, brother? |
31525 | I ask them if I burnt them would they think they were going to heaven? |
31525 | I asked him if a fly were inside the kettle, would the kettle be alive? |
31525 | I asked him,"Have you travelled this way before?" |
31525 | I heard of Mr. Lovett being in America--_American Pictures_ on the stocks? |
31525 | I knew nothing of anatomy, had no books, absolutely nothing to consult; what could I do but pray? |
31525 | I say then, Did God cast off His people? |
31525 | I wonder is this so? |
31525 | If God has no form, how can anyone be at His right hand? |
31525 | If I love you more abundantly, am I loved the less? |
31525 | If a man is insured against all possible harm, why should he be afraid? |
31525 | If you say so, I may just say that I have something of the same feeling; but what am I to do? |
31525 | In God? |
31525 | In the main, his bold summons was,"Do you believe on the Lord Jesus Christ?" |
31525 | In them? |
31525 | Is he marking out a road map, so that he can return guiding an army? |
31525 | Is he taking notes of the capabilities of the country? |
31525 | Is he, as a wizard, carrying off the good luck of the country in his note- book? |
31525 | Is it last time? |
31525 | Is it not blessed of Christ to care so much for us poor feeble men, so sinful and so careless about honouring Him? |
31525 | Is it not so?'' |
31525 | Is it not true that but for tobacco and whisky there would be food and clothes for a much larger population? |
31525 | Is n''t it all very silly and very sad? |
31525 | Is not the real lesson of James Gilmour''s life twofold? |
31525 | Is that not so? |
31525 | Is the kingdom a harvest field? |
31525 | Is this the way to get better harvests? |
31525 | Is what is true of that district not true of the whole world? |
31525 | It was the great religious event of the year for the neighbourhood, and how do you think they do? |
31525 | Jesus died to save us: surely we can show our gratitude by giving Him some of our money?'' |
31525 | Now when that comes, what are you to do? |
31525 | Ought we not to have it? |
31525 | Passed through large orchards of apple(?) |
31525 | Shall we be able to understand how we were ashamed to do what we knew was a Christian duty before one whom we knew to be a mocker at religion? |
31525 | Shall we be able to understand why we were afraid to speak to this man or that woman about salvation? |
31525 | So we felt with Peter,"Can any man forbid water that these should not be baptized?" |
31525 | That gave us twenty- three miles''private conversation, and a good answer to give to all who demanded,"Where are you going?" |
31525 | The growth of tobacco was defeating heaven''s purpose, and as long as they did so, what face had they to ask for good seasons? |
31525 | The reply of Candace''s eunuch,''How can I understand unless someone shall guide me?'' |
31525 | The subject fixed one Friday evening for debate in the discussion class was,"Have animals souls?" |
31525 | The thought passed through my mind,"Can that be the messenger?" |
31525 | The thousands here need salvation; God is most anxious to give it to them: where, then, is the hindrance? |
31525 | Then I say,"What will you have me do?" |
31525 | Then is not this what God wants in us? |
31525 | Then said,"Would any one pray to go there if it were not a good place?" |
31525 | Then was God inside the kettle? |
31525 | Then, again, if God is everywhere, Christ is everywhere right and left of God, and how can that be? |
31525 | They have a system which quite satisfies them, and what more do they want? |
31525 | Thinking round to see what it can be, I hear a voice saying,"Ca n''t you trust Me with the money you have laid up for your children?" |
31525 | To Mr. Owen he wrote on March 2:--''Does God not mean to have a medical man here? |
31525 | Was God in that pot, in the tent, in his boot? |
31525 | Was n''t she a stupid old woman? |
31525 | We may be all dead men directly; are we afraid to die? |
31525 | We must die some time or other; now that we have a near view of its possibility, how can we look forward to it? |
31525 | We trust Him, He saves us; and all He asks is that we should tell men about what He has done; and is there one man we meet to whom we shall not speak? |
31525 | We''ll all go some day and be with her, wo n''t that be good? |
31525 | We_ do_ that, do n''t we? |
31525 | Well, as the men in the furnace said of God,"Will He care to defend us? |
31525 | What if you do n''t like each other? |
31525 | What then? |
31525 | What use are they to me? |
31525 | What were we to do? |
31525 | What_ can_ he be up to? |
31525 | When shall I be able to speak to the people? |
31525 | Where is now the Lord God of Elijah? |
31525 | Whisky and tobacco reduce the comforts and the number of the population there-- is their effect not the same on the world in general? |
31525 | Who can be restrained by the cold- blooded calculation of preserving health? |
31525 | Who would be your companions? |
31525 | Why should n''t I? |
31525 | Why should we be spiritually bankrupt? |
31525 | Why should we be trammelled by the opinions and customs of men? |
31525 | Why should we care what men say of us? |
31525 | Why should we confer with men?'' |
31525 | Would Christ have said that? |
31525 | Would not this be ideal Christian life? |
31525 | Would you believe it? |
31525 | Would you credit it? |
31525 | You, Jimmie, know Jesus; does Willie? |
31525 | and if she still insisted he would add in a solemn manner:"_ Mother_, what if the door should be shut when I get there?" |
31525 | shall Christ look to us in vain to declare simply what He has done? |
31525 | to his name would have done? |
31525 | was the question;"would I ever have the hope that I knew others had?" |
33345 | ''But you did not bring your American friend''s picture?... 33345 ''Was it in the Western country?'' |
33345 | All to what end? |
33345 | And the emotion itself-- what is it? 33345 Do you think well enough of me to try to get me employment at a regular salary, somewhere in the United States?"... |
33345 | I asked myself:''If it was I?'' 33345 Is it possible you do not know?" |
33345 | Of course we shall never see each other again in this world, and what is the use of being unkind after all?... 33345 So you read my translation of''Sylvestre Bonnard?''" |
33345 | Surely you are joking? |
33345 | That set me thinking,Hearn adds,"if Kazuo feels like his father about pretty girls,--what shall I do with him? |
33345 | The fairy was altogether Japanese-- don''t you think so? 33345 Well, young man, what ambition do you nourish?" |
33345 | What had I known of strangers''hands all through my childhood? 33345 What will you do with your little man when he grows up? |
33345 | Why such beauty, to be blighted, By the swarm of foul destruction? 33345 ''I am certainly stronger than you,''she said;''now shall we wrestle?'' 33345 --Will I ever see you? 33345 Above all, where was the photograph of theLady of a Myriad Souls,"and the one of Mitchell McDonald that he mentioned as hanging on the ceiling? |
33345 | Absurd?... |
33345 | After a while, Amenomori goes on, he held up his head,"and what did I see? |
33345 | Am I right or wrong? |
33345 | And do n''t you feel just a little bit ashamed?''" |
33345 | And do n''t you think that one gets all the benefit of travel only by keeping away from fashion- resorts and places consecrated by conventionalism? |
33345 | And is there not something of the serpent in the beauty of all graceful women? |
33345 | And will he be like you? |
33345 | And will he ever see the little cousin who has just entered the world? |
33345 | Army, or Civil Service? |
33345 | But is it not pleasant to observe that the members of the broken circle have been mounting higher and higher to the Supreme Hope? |
33345 | But what_ were_ you,--long ago? |
33345 | But who is not bewildered by the gods? |
33345 | But who made his eyes blue and his hair brown? |
33345 | But who was she? |
33345 | But--"_ Must I believe that I really exist?..._"Out of this idea he weaves a chapter of thrilling possibilities, and ends,"I am awake, fully awake!... |
33345 | Can you not tell me some of yours when you are feeling very, very well, and do n''t know what to do? |
33345 | Can you run?'' |
33345 | Do n''t you know that you are very happy to be able to live in England? |
33345 | Do you hear the voices of the frogs and the Uguisu singing?" |
33345 | Do you know that terribly pathetic poem of Robert Bridges'':''Pater Filio''?" |
33345 | Do you remember that splendid Creole who used to be your city editor-- John----?--is it not a sin that I have forgotten his name? |
33345 | Does a portrait of an ugly man make one desirous to read his books? |
33345 | Forgot to put it into the valise?... |
33345 | Have you tried Southern Italy? |
33345 | How about the Continent? |
33345 | How about the real compound race- soul, though? |
33345 | How can we pity the folly of Urashima after he had lived so long alone with visible gods? |
33345 | How could the little woman guess that his busy brain was weaving the fine Essay on"Ants,"published under the heading of"Insect Studies"in"Kwaidan"? |
33345 | How could you think that I have got even half way to the bottom? |
33345 | I am sorry not to see you-- but since you live in Hell what can I do?" |
33345 | I wish one would come-- and stay: the one I saw that night when we were looking at... what was it? |
33345 | If it is beautiful in art, why should it not be beautiful in nature? |
33345 | Illusion? |
33345 | Is not the serpent a symbol of grace? |
33345 | Is not the so- called''line of beauty''serpentine? |
33345 | Marry him at seventeen or nineteen? |
33345 | Newspapers, forsooth!--why not collect and store the other things that wise men throw away, cigar- ends and orange- peelings? |
33345 | No was said to everything, softly; but if he had accepted, how could he exist, breathe, even have time to think, much less write books? |
33345 | Or send him to grim and ferocious Puritans that he may be taught the Way of the Lord? |
33345 | Or that the universe exists for us solely as the reflection of our own souls? |
33345 | Or the old Chinese teaching that we must seek the Buddha only in our hearts?" |
33345 | She would ask him,"Did you finish your last story?" |
33345 | Symbolising what? |
33345 | They were of use in the world, but of what use was he?... |
33345 | Thus did Lafcadio Hearn lose his inheritance, but if he had inherited it would he ever have been the artist he ultimately became? |
33345 | To her he turned for advice and guidance, for"did she not represent to his imagination all the Sibyls? |
33345 | What can you think of me? |
33345 | What had I known of other men''s voices? |
33345 | What is Life itself but a bewilderment? |
33345 | What matter a heavy heart and an empty stomach, when you are stuffing your brain to repletion with new impressions and artistic material? |
33345 | What memories most haunt you of places and people you liked? |
33345 | What wild Arabic blood may he not, therefore, have inherited on his mother''s side? |
33345 | What would you do if you were me? |
33345 | When he was dying he had said to her:''Sally, you know what to do with the property?'' |
33345 | When she saw the picture, she clasped her hands in delight, but how was she ever to repay the master? |
33345 | Why such innocence delighted, When sin stalks to thy seduction? |
33345 | Will they be preserved in vain? |
33345 | Would n''t this be the best advice? |
33345 | Would that be very, very naughty? |
33345 | Yet, is it not most probable that this aloofness and seclusion from the world invested his Tokyo work with its unique and original quality? |
33345 | and was not her wisdom as the worth of things precious from the uttermost coasts?" |
33345 | something of Lilith and Lamia?" |
33345 | something of undulating shapeliness, something of silent fascination? |
33345 | what have you dared to say? |
28164 | After making these discoveries what did you do? |
28164 | Ah, good afternoon, Mr. Cantercot,he said, rubbing his hands, half from cold, half from usage;"what have you brought me?" |
28164 | Always one shadow? |
28164 | And if he did, why did n''t they prove it the first time? |
28164 | And if they want to arrest him, why could n''t they leave it till the ceremony was over? 28164 And if you have n''t been murdered what have you been doing?" |
28164 | And what''s the name of the paper? |
28164 | And when the Beautiful was not gossiping with her landlady, did she gossip with you as you passed the door? |
28164 | And you could n''t write with your left? |
28164 | And you still call Nature beautiful? |
28164 | And, while occupying this front bedroom, did not the prisoner once lose his key and have another made? |
28164 | Another lady of your acquaintance? |
28164 | Are n''t you going to earn it, you beggar? 28164 As yours, for instance?" |
28164 | But suppose she had n''t? |
28164 | But what are you doing in this miserable spot, so far from home? |
28164 | But what is Ugliness but a higher form of Beauty? 28164 But what was the use of breaking your head to save him?" |
28164 | But why do n''t you give him up to justice? |
28164 | But why should you arrest me? |
28164 | By whom? |
28164 | Ca n''t remember any more? 28164 Can you ask? |
28164 | Dead? 28164 Dead?" |
28164 | Did Mortlake tell you he was jealous? |
28164 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
28164 | Did she live alone? |
28164 | Did you know a Miss Dymond? |
28164 | Do you really think he was murdered, Tom? |
28164 | Do you recognize it? |
28164 | Do you still hope to discover the Bow murderer? |
28164 | Does he care if my children are hungry? |
28164 | Eh? |
28164 | Fifty? |
28164 | Good- looking, I suppose? |
28164 | Have you any fresh concrete evidence? |
28164 | He always struck you as a thorough gentleman? |
28164 | He might have done it without your noticing it, I suppose? |
28164 | How can I help Tom hanging? |
28164 | How did he behave when he read it? |
28164 | How did she appear? |
28164 | How did we get on to it? 28164 How do you account for the extra sleepiness?" |
28164 | How do you know? |
28164 | How do you mean? |
28164 | How has the prisoner behaved since the murder? |
28164 | How much money do you want? |
28164 | How should I know what became of you? 28164 How-- how do you know that?" |
28164 | How? 28164 Indeed?" |
28164 | Is Mr. Grodman in? |
28164 | Is that what the paper will be devoted to? |
28164 | It was n''t the dull, foggy weather? |
28164 | Mortlake knew nothing of their meetings? |
28164 | Mortlake of course knows where she is? |
28164 | Murder? 28164 My dear Denzil, how often am I to point out that I went through the experiences that make the backbone of my book, not you? |
28164 | No; how could that be? 28164 Of course it is about Mortlake?" |
28164 | Oh, ai n''t I? |
28164 | Oh, yes; how do you do, Tom? 28164 On the night of December 3d, you gave the prisoner a letter?" |
28164 | Only once or twice, you say? |
28164 | Par,said Wilfred Wimp,"what''s a alleybi? |
28164 | Peter, do you want to drive me from the house? 28164 Portraits? |
28164 | Pray do not consider me impertinent, but have you ever given any attention to the science of evidence? |
28164 | Ready, Mr. Templeton? 28164 Really?" |
28164 | She might have been out with Tom? |
28164 | So that is the reason? |
28164 | Templeton,said the Minister,"have you got down every word of Mr. Grodman''s confession?" |
28164 | That is not your usual time? |
28164 | That was Cantercot just went in, was n''t it, Grodman? |
28164 | The others carried the cups on their feet, I suppose? |
28164 | Then how did you know they were quarreling? |
28164 | Then, when was he murdered? |
28164 | Those were his very words? |
28164 | Was the prisoner the sort of man who, in your opinion, would commit a murder? |
28164 | We now come to the second alternative-- was the deceased the victim of homicide? 28164 Well, shall I say unpleasant, then?" |
28164 | Well, what have you been doin''all this time? |
28164 | Well, where was the justice for Arthur Constant if he, too, was innocent? |
28164 | What about Jessie-- I mean Miss Dymond? 28164 What did he go there for?" |
28164 | What do I mean? |
28164 | What do you mean? |
28164 | What do you mean? |
28164 | What do you think,said Crowl,"of Republics?" |
28164 | What do you want me to write? |
28164 | What happened then? |
28164 | What in the devil''s the matter? |
28164 | What paper, sir? |
28164 | What should you say if prisoner dropped something in it to make you sleep late? |
28164 | What sort of a paper? |
28164 | What time did you get up the next morning? |
28164 | What was she? |
28164 | What''s the Good of Society? 28164 What?" |
28164 | What? |
28164 | When am I to have that new dress, dear? |
28164 | Where did she meet him? |
28164 | Where is that sweetheart now? |
28164 | Where, indeed? |
28164 | Who else keeps him I should like to know? |
28164 | Who then should I be alludin''to, Mr. Cantercot? 28164 Who wants to hear Gladstone? |
28164 | Who''s fribbling now, you or me, Cantercot? 28164 Whose book?" |
28164 | Why have you come to give fresh evidence? |
28164 | Why not? |
28164 | Why, was he not dead? |
28164 | Why, what should I be doing? |
28164 | Why, where have you been all these days? |
28164 | Will you come up and see him? |
28164 | Will you have the goodness to explain how the trick was done? |
28164 | Will you tell the jury what followed? |
28164 | Wo n''t you come under my umbrella? 28164 Wrong you? |
28164 | Yes; how did you get it? 28164 You did n''t go in?" |
28164 | You did n''t hear what they said? |
28164 | You do n''t mean anything more than that? |
28164 | You drink something before going to bed? |
28164 | You found out whose? 28164 You knew her then?" |
28164 | You know Mr. Cantercot, I suppose? 28164 You know about her disappearance?" |
28164 | You mean to say you found Arthur Constant alive? |
28164 | You really believe him innocent? |
28164 | You were the last person to see him, Tom, were n''t you? |
28164 | A Juryman: How do you know it was not somebody else? |
28164 | A Juryman: Is n''t Shoppinhour one of the infidel writers, published by the Freethought Publication Society? |
28164 | A little? |
28164 | A marble?" |
28164 | Am I not the most copious correspondent of the Press?" |
28164 | And can you also explain how the prisoner could have bolted the door within from the outside?" |
28164 | And this Madame Blavatsky''s book-- what is that? |
28164 | And what should you think was the condition of Arthur Constant when the door yielded to my violent exertions and flew open?" |
28164 | And when did she leave?" |
28164 | And yet, had not Mrs. Wimp let out as much at the Christmas dinner? |
28164 | And, after all, is it not enough to have been an influence for good over one or two human souls? |
28164 | Brown- Harland, Q. C.( sarcastically):"And locked the door from within with it on leaving?" |
28164 | By a Juryman: Did the news concern him? |
28164 | CHAPTER V."Yes, but what will become of the Beautiful?" |
28164 | Can a mother see her babe''s ugliness, or a lover his mistress''shortcomings, though they stare everybody else in the face? |
28164 | Can we see ourselves as others see us? |
28164 | Constant and the prisoner''s sweetheart?" |
28164 | Constant might have the two rooms on the same floor?" |
28164 | Constant spoke about on the night of December 3d?" |
28164 | Constant took her off his hands?" |
28164 | Constant''s bedroom with the key you found?" |
28164 | Constant''s rooms?" |
28164 | Constant?" |
28164 | Constant?" |
28164 | Coroner: And did you wake him? |
28164 | Coroner: And that was the last you saw of the deceased? |
28164 | Coroner: And what did you do then? |
28164 | Coroner: Are you sure that you shut the street door? |
28164 | Coroner: Could you show the jury the letter you received? |
28164 | Coroner: How was he when you left him? |
28164 | Coroner: I mean did he seem afraid of being robbed? |
28164 | Coroner: Otherwise you saw nothing unusual about him? |
28164 | Coroner: There had been no quarrel with Miss Brent? |
28164 | Coroner: Was the deceased left- handed? |
28164 | Coroner: Was the toothache very violent? |
28164 | Coroner: Was there any private trouble in his own life to account for the temporary despondency? |
28164 | Coroner: What time did you leave him? |
28164 | Coroner: What time did you leave the house on Tuesday morning? |
28164 | Crowl?" |
28164 | Crowl?" |
28164 | Denzil gasped,"What for?" |
28164 | Did she not always remind the poet of Joan of Arc? |
28164 | Did you do that?" |
28164 | Do our friends appear to us as they appear to strangers? |
28164 | Do our rooms, our furniture, our pipes strike our eye as they would strike the eye of an outsider, looking on them for the first time? |
28164 | Do you think Kitty has any secrets from me? |
28164 | Drinking again?" |
28164 | Evidently the sole performer of my experiment must be myself; the subject-- whom or what? |
28164 | First, did the deceased commit suicide? |
28164 | Grodman?" |
28164 | Grodman?" |
28164 | Had the prisoner ceased to care for Miss Dymond?" |
28164 | Has it ever struck you, sir, that we never see anyone more than once, if that? |
28164 | Have n''t I taken the chair at all the meetings? |
28164 | Have n''t touched a drop since----""The murder?" |
28164 | He entered one way or another into the lives of a good many people; is it true that he nowhere made enemies? |
28164 | How do you expect me to think of these details?" |
28164 | How do you know it was a murder?" |
28164 | How is he then to get out without attracting the attention of the now roused landlady? |
28164 | How is he to go away and yet leave the doors and windows locked and bolted from within? |
28164 | How is she, Tom?" |
28164 | How much have you let him in for?" |
28164 | How''s that for alliteration? |
28164 | I could invent hundreds of such crimes, and please myself by imagining them done; but would they really work out in practice? |
28164 | I mean anything beyond the current misconceptions? |
28164 | I mean did you try to wake him? |
28164 | I was very sorry to do this, as I rather liked that particular person, but when one has such ingenious readers, what can one do? |
28164 | I''m only a plain man, and I want to know where the fun of anonymity comes in? |
28164 | I''m only a plain man, and I want to know where''s the sense of givin''any one person authority over everybody else?" |
28164 | If England dropped its fad of Monarchy and became a Republic to- morrow, do you mean to say that----?" |
28164 | If Jessie had wrongs why should she not have avenged them herself? |
28164 | In short, sir, what guarantee have we that the whole tale is not a cock- and- bull story, invented by the two persons who first found the body? |
28164 | In view of this letter, are the relatives of the deceased justified in entrusting him with any private documents? |
28164 | In which hand did you have this cramp?" |
28164 | Is he not a secularist, who has lectured at the Hall of Science? |
28164 | Is it likely that if he had chosen it, he would not have left letters and a statement behind, or made a last will and testament? |
28164 | Is it likely that this was the night he would choose for quitting the scene of his usefulness? |
28164 | Is n''t that rather a proof that it was suicide? |
28164 | Is that all? |
28164 | Is that also pheelosophy? |
28164 | Is that too fast for you, Mr. Templeton? |
28164 | Might not that have been due to the disappearance of his sweetheart?" |
28164 | Mortlake''s, perhaps?" |
28164 | Mr. Wimp was convinced by it, too, were n''t you, Edward?" |
28164 | Mrs. Drabdump( breaking down): Oh, my lud, how can you ask? |
28164 | Not bad, those old times, eh?" |
28164 | Not bludgeoned by the police at the meeting this morning, I hope?" |
28164 | Now, what are the facts? |
28164 | Or is it likely he would have concealed the instrument? |
28164 | Or was there no such place? |
28164 | Perhaps you would like to inspect the book? |
28164 | Seen the''New Pork Herald''lately? |
28164 | Shall I send you on her book? |
28164 | She sat in her room reading, and cast a shadow--""On your life?" |
28164 | She was engaged to Mortlake?" |
28164 | Should you say I was quarreling?" |
28164 | The Coroner: Was deceased at all nervous? |
28164 | The Juryman: Were you not shocked to find the friend of a meenister reading such impure leeterature? |
28164 | The answer, then, to our first question, Did the deceased commit suicide? |
28164 | The man had his moments of despondency-- as which of us has not? |
28164 | The only uncertain link in the chain was: Would Mrs. Drabdump rush across to get me to break open the door? |
28164 | To have learnt to know of such, to have been of service to one or two of such-- is not this ample return? |
28164 | To what do you think I''ve been devoting my days and nights but to the cultivation of the Beautiful?" |
28164 | Was I to be disappointed after all? |
28164 | Was it a prophecy? |
28164 | Was it the mention of Lucy Brent that had moved him to his depths? |
28164 | Was not Grodman, too, on the track? |
28164 | Was there any reason why the deceased should wish to take his own life? |
28164 | Were n''t you on your oath? |
28164 | What does he want with all that money and those houses-- a man with no sense of the Beautiful? |
28164 | What had you been doing to bring it on?" |
28164 | What shall one man''s life-- a million men''s lives-- avail against the corruption, the vulgarity and the squalor of civilization? |
28164 | What the devil have you been doing with yourself since the inquest? |
28164 | What was it to do with him that he could see no way by which the wound could have been inflicted by an outside agency? |
28164 | What was the matter with the clock? |
28164 | What wonder if the shrewder sort divined that the indomitable detective had fixed his last hope on the girl''s guilt? |
28164 | What would the great labor leader have to say at this supreme moment? |
28164 | What''s put salt on your wounds?" |
28164 | What''s that ticket you''re looking so lovingly at, Peter?" |
28164 | When was the last time you saw the two together?" |
28164 | When''s your next show?" |
28164 | When? |
28164 | Where were you when the prisoner told you he was going to Devonport?" |
28164 | Where''s the justice of it, where''s the justice of it?" |
28164 | Where? |
28164 | Which, then, got to heaven? |
28164 | Who wants more polish and refinement than that showed?" |
28164 | Who?" |
28164 | Whose corns did he tread on? |
28164 | Whose was the second shadow?" |
28164 | Why does all the world watch over barbers and conspire to promote their interests? |
28164 | Why have n''t you been to see me since the murder? |
28164 | Will a sovereign get you out of it?" |
28164 | Wimp said"Yes?" |
28164 | Writing what?" |
28164 | You did n''t leave it a shadow of doubt?" |
28164 | You follow me, sir?" |
28164 | You tried to rouse him? |
28164 | did n''t I tell you so?" |
28164 | do you call Queen Victoria visible?" |
28164 | said Denzil,"and shall I write the story for you?" |
35495 | Does this realize your idea of Hellenism, Shelley? |
35495 | If two children,he writes,"were placed together in a desert island and they found some scarce fruit, would not justice dictate an equal division? |
35495 | Is it capable of no extension, no communication? |
35495 | What art thou, Freedom? |
35495 | What is it? |
35495 | What is love or friendship? |
35495 | Why,Trelawny asked him once,"do you call yourself an atheist?" |
35495 | [ 120] But did he not write_ The Necessity of Atheism_ for which he was expelled from Oxford? 35495 [ 86] In_ The Revolt of Islam_ Shelley says: Oh wherefore should ill ever flow from ill, And pain still keener pain forever breed? |
35495 | ''What is the matter?'' |
35495 | At this sight Jupiter is filled with terror and exclaims,"Awful shape, what art thou?" |
35495 | But of what use are talents and sentiments in the corrupt wilderness of human society? |
35495 | Can he who the day before was a trampled slave suddenly become liberal- minded? |
35495 | Can they whose mates are beasts condemned to bear Scorn, heavier far than toil or anguish, dare To trample their oppressors? |
35495 | Does it serve any purpose apart from giving pleasure to the aesthetic faculties? |
35495 | How are we going to reconcile this with his love for truth? |
35495 | How is it possible, then, that the former produced the latter? |
35495 | How then are our ideas acquired? |
35495 | How though can we measure the pleasure and the pain that flows from an action? |
35495 | I will ask a materialist, how came this universe at first? |
35495 | In the_ Essay_, II, 1- 2, we read:"All ideas come from sensation and reflection.... Whence has it( mind) all the materials of reason and knowledge? |
35495 | In_ The Revolt of Islam_, Cythna says: Can man be free if woman be a slave? |
35495 | Is it not the same, are not its decrees invariable? |
35495 | Is there any charge so frivolous, upon which men are not consigned to those detested abodes? |
35495 | Is there any villainy that is not practiced by justices and prosecutors, etc.?" |
35495 | It is Miss Owenson''s_ Missionary_, an Indian tale; will you read it? |
35495 | Laon answers:"The missionary cast on them a glance of pity and contempt and"''What do ye seek? |
35495 | Other men put up with their wives''imperfections, and why could not Shelley have done the same? |
35495 | Strange idea this, was it not? |
35495 | War shall cease Did ye not hear that conquest is abjured? |
35495 | Was not this first cause a Deity? |
35495 | Was not this then a cause; was it not a first cause? |
35495 | What about the suffering of the poor woman that forced her to commit such a terrible deed? |
35495 | What are the reforms that he advocates? |
35495 | What chance? |
35495 | What value has it for mankind? |
35495 | What was it that induced him to make the change? |
35495 | What would hell be were such a woman in heaven?" |
35495 | When do we see effects arise without causes?" |
35495 | Why not then, argued Shelley, abolish this institution which makes hypocrites of men? |
35495 | [ 102]"The poor,"writes Shelley,"are set to labor-- for what? |
35495 | [ 119] But in the next canto does he not say explicitly,"There is no God"? |
35495 | can I dissemble The agony of this thought?" |
35495 | sacrificed all?" |
35495 | sans le souvenir de ton amour, qui donc aurait pu m''empecher de terminer mes peines? |
35495 | why not true to me?" |
35495 | writes Godwin,"Is that a country of liberty, where thousands languish in dungeons and fetters? |
35960 | But who was the real Elsmere? |
35960 | Of course you''ll go to Nuneaton? |
35960 | The walls were hung round with family pictures, and I said to my brother,''Dare you strike your whip through that old lady''s petticoat?'' 35960 You say stands are forbidden-- would it be an infraction of the rules if I were to rest my camera on a table or chair?" |
35960 | ***** Who knows not Melville''s beechy grove And Roslin''s rocky glen, Dalkeith, which all the virtues love, And classic Hawthornden?" |
35960 | A little girl of twelve was tugging at her father''s coat- tails--"Papa, ca n''t I go?" |
35960 | And every one who has been there can appreciate the poet''s feeling when he wrote:--"I ask myself, Is this a dream? |
35960 | And will it ever mean anything to anybody? |
35960 | Any houses where Hawthorne had lived? |
35960 | But what of the three who left them? |
35960 | Can it be possible that now we are to have Italian opera? |
35960 | Could he direct us to the Custom House? |
35960 | Did he know whether there was a real"House of Seven Gables"? |
35960 | Did they not melt into Wordsworth''s mind? |
35960 | Does its boasted regularity only mean that while it plays once in sixty- five minutes, yet the height of some of the eruptions may be only trifling? |
35960 | For rest of body perfect was the spot, All that luxurious nature could desire; But stirring to the spirit; who could gaze And not feel motions there?" |
35960 | For, says Wordsworth,--"What want we? |
35960 | Had any of his family ever seen Hawthorne, or spoken of him? |
35960 | Had we not embarked upon a foolhardy undertaking? |
35960 | He made no reply, and his silence seemed to disturb her...."Thou''rt not doubting the Lord''s goodness, Henry?" |
35960 | Hotel? |
35960 | How are we to realize these enormous depths? |
35960 | How can I ever thank him enough? |
35960 | How did the novelist happen to remember that"arm akimbo,"if, as is quite likely, she had not seen the room for more than twenty years? |
35960 | How in the world did you find out so quickly that your mule''s name was Sam?" |
35960 | Is not this worth while? |
35960 | Is that all? |
35960 | Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty anywhere? |
35960 | Moreover, things were where he could get at them, and from a man''s point of view what better housekeeping could anybody want? |
35960 | Of course, I could not expect to walk into private houses and grounds to make photographs, and how was I to make the acquaintance of these people? |
35960 | She exercised the woman''s privilege of asking"Why?" |
35960 | She says:"Who shall describe that wonderful voice of the sea among the rocks, to me the most suggestive of all the sounds in nature? |
35960 | Suppose any of the mules should slip? |
35960 | This was the only place where Sailor Ben felt at home-- and no wonder, for how could any room have a more inviting fireplace? |
35960 | To whom and to what have I been useful? |
35960 | Was it her beauty that attracted the crowds to the theater, and that alone? |
35960 | Was she totally lacking in that consummate art which the great Frenchwoman admittedly possessed? |
35960 | What can this mean? |
35960 | What quality is hidden in this thin soil, which so transfigures all the familiar flowers with fresh beauty?" |
35960 | Whence came thy wondrous power? |
35960 | Why should the poppies blaze in such imperial scarlet? |
35960 | Will it all vanish into air? |
35960 | Will my name survive me a single day? |
37072 | Author Tribal Analysis of the Bible, Are Cathedral Institutions Useless? |
37072 | Author Why Come Ye Not to Court? |
37072 | Susan Fielding, Ought We to Visit Her? |
35564 | As you walked by the way, whom did you meet? |
35564 | Did you see twelve maidens hastening toward the city? |
35564 | Have you seen twelve maidens pass this way? |
35564 | Have you the wishing- jewel with you? 35564 How did you, who are but a gardener, gain all this gold?" |
35564 | How do you secure your desires? |
35564 | If it is found in your boat, what will you promise? |
35564 | If we find it in the boat, what will you do? |
35564 | If we show you such a skull, what will you give unto us? |
35564 | Is there not yet a man who has not come to the feast? |
35564 | Know you not anything? 35564 My friend, where do you go?" |
35564 | My son, will you ever remember benefits? |
35564 | O owl,asked the hermit,"why didst thou frighten the deer?" |
35564 | O, chow, wouldst thou desire to go where all is pleasure and delight? |
35564 | What do you say as you go along, my son? |
35564 | What do you say as you walk along, my son? |
35564 | What do you say as you walk along, my son? |
35564 | What do you seek? |
35564 | What seekest thou? |
35564 | What seekest thou? |
35564 | Who can help me? |
35564 | Why are your hearts thus troubled? |
35564 | Why do you call him a fool? |
35564 | Why dost thou draw of the water? |
35564 | Why dost thou fall upon the rice? |
35564 | Why dost thou work after that fashion? |
35564 | Why shall you die, my father? |
35564 | And the hermit asked,"O mon- goose, why didst thou throw the fruit?" |
35564 | And the hermit asked,"O seed, why didst thou fall into the hen''s eyes?" |
35564 | And, as they approached the trader''s home his daughter called,"O father, what have you brought?" |
35564 | Filled with wrath, the man ran up to him crying,"You will come back again, will you? |
35564 | Great sport was made of him, and tauntingly the people cried,"Does this bent stick think he is mate for our lotus flower?" |
35564 | How was I to know ye were wise men? |
35564 | If I stole a melon, where is it?" |
35564 | May I sit here near you?" |
35564 | Not long after, a servant of the chow of the neighboring province came to the_ sala_, and the boys asked,"For whom is the mourning in the city?" |
35564 | One man, wiser than the others, said,"Why do we endanger our lives for our possessions? |
35564 | Running up to him, he called,"Father, do you not hunger for some pork? |
35564 | Tell me, do I talk to one who has another lover?" |
35564 | The boy called to them,"Where go ye, old men?" |
35564 | The hermit asked,"O ants, why did ye bite the mon- goose?" |
35564 | The hermit asked,"O hen, why didst thou fly against the red ants''nest?" |
35564 | The hermit said unto the deer,"O deer, why didst thou shake down the seed?" |
35564 | The men angrily replied,"Wherefore dost thou, who art but a child, speak thus to us who are old and the judges of the villages from whence we come?" |
35564 | Tying them all, the boy ran to the city, where he met a man whom he asked,"Dost thou wish to purchase three slaves? |
35564 | We must flee from his face for, is not he as strong and brave as the elephant? |
35564 | Where is yours?" |
35564 | Why movest thou?" |
35564 | Will you condemn me to death on the word of a bird?" |
35564 | Will you take him for a husband?" |
35564 | Willingly did the giants consent to aid them, but asked,"Why labor to dig the earth and pile it into a mound? |
35564 | Would you like her for a wife?" |
35564 | will cause me this trouble again, will you?" |
31779 | But were not these men divinely inspired? |
31779 | Strange is it not? 31779 Was he not freely forgiven?" |
31779 | What must I do to be saved? |
31779 | What then shall I do unto Jesus, who is called Christ? |
31779 | Wherewith shall I come before Jehovah, and bow myself before the high God? 31779 A real snake, or the devil? 31779 A simple rule of conduct may be this: In view of any proposed course of conduct, word or act, these questions may be asked:What may be the result? |
31779 | And as such does he not need a Savior? |
31779 | And if death only entered the world because of sin, why does all nature die? |
31779 | And if not, why make such a fuss about it? |
31779 | And if rebellious angels had to be punished why not do it by annihilation instead of making this burning hell for them? |
31779 | And if so when, if ever, was it withdrawn? |
31779 | And if so,_ which_ is the right one? |
31779 | And is there but_ one_ true path to God, while all the others only lead to hell? |
31779 | And what is this"scheme"of redemption, or"plan"of salvation? |
31779 | And who, or what was the serpent? |
31779 | But after all, what about the salvation of the race since the death of Christ? |
31779 | But for tasting the forbidden fruit, in what respect could man have become a being of higher order than the beast of the field?" |
31779 | But how could it_ all_ be true, when it told so many different and conflicting stories about the same thing? |
31779 | But if the Bible in which we find it can not be relied upon infallibly,_ how_ are we to know? |
31779 | But supposing this story of the fall to be true, what was the penalty for it,--physical death, as we have seen, or eternal spiritual death, or both? |
31779 | But was he ever otherwise? |
31779 | But who would dare defend them now? |
31779 | CHAPTER VII A NEW INTERPRETATION OF RELIGION What is religion? |
31779 | Can a just God do that? |
31779 | Can any mortal in this age of the world believe such nonsense, or perpetrate such a caricature of God? |
31779 | Can perfection, or that which is perfect, fall? |
31779 | Can these later books be quoted as_ authority_ for that which existed, in some instances, a thousand years before they were written? |
31779 | Could a just God be guilty of such outrageous conduct? |
31779 | Could n''t God take care of himself and find his way back to Nazareth at any time he wished to go? |
31779 | Could such a God be just? |
31779 | Did all this come upon all nature because Adam ate an apple? |
31779 | Did death enter the world, as we have always been taught, because of this sin? |
31779 | Did he walk uprightly before, and did he have legs and feet? |
31779 | Did that spirit of truth ever come? |
31779 | Does not Christianity meet this necessity? |
31779 | Does not this confirm that what the serpent said was true? |
31779 | Does the reader inquire here what are the"ordinary methods of interpretation"? |
31779 | During these years of Paul''s obscurity, both in Arabia and at Tarsus, what was he probably doing? |
31779 | He created some that way, why not all? |
31779 | How are we to know what is inspired from what is not? |
31779 | How can man attain unto right relations with his God? |
31779 | How could anything fit to be called_ character_ ever have been produced there? |
31779 | How could the Holy Spirit"inspire"in two different men, writing upon the same subject, such varying and irreconcilable accounts of the same event? |
31779 | How could we know anything about the one but thru its contrast with the other? |
31779 | How could we know that it was good? |
31779 | How then did the idea of a supernatural birth and the deification of Jesus come about, if it was not a real fact? |
31779 | I asked myself the questions: May not Christianity be substantially true after all? |
31779 | If God could so use the Methodist Church for this purpose, why might not I? |
31779 | If God foresaw what Adam would do and the dreadful consequences of it, why did He not make him different so he would not fall? |
31779 | If either man or angels were created pure, perfect, holy, and in the image and likeness of God, how can such a being fall? |
31779 | If his spirit could enter into the hearts of men and direct their thoughts and minds, why did He not do it and stop this useless slaughter? |
31779 | If man was so perverse that he needed to be destroyed, why wreak vengeance also on the animal creation that had not sinned? |
31779 | If so, how many were saved? |
31779 | If the New Testament was truly inspired of God and infallibly true, what difference did it make if the Old was doubtful and uncertain? |
31779 | If there were no such thing as evil, how could we be conscious of the good? |
31779 | If we had never tasted anything but sugar, could we know what bitterness is? |
31779 | Is any possible evil consequence, either to myself or any one else, likely to come of it?" |
31779 | Is it not of vital importance to know? |
31779 | Is not man a sinner? |
31779 | Is not the Bible after all, tho of purely human origin as I now conceived, a valuable book? |
31779 | May not the"great plan of salvation"be true after all? |
31779 | May we not yet find much valuable truth in it, tho neither inspired nor infallible? |
31779 | No need to go into any argument here upon the question of whether,"If a man die shall he live again?" |
31779 | Now, was the first sin that eternally damned the whole human race a mere matter of eating from a forbidden tree? |
31779 | Or just the reverse? |
31779 | Shall I come before him with burnt- offerings, with calves a year old? |
31779 | Shall I give my first- born for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" |
31779 | The question arises: Was Eve never to be a mother but for this transaction? |
31779 | The question has been asked, why_ burn_ the offering? |
31779 | The test of inspiration is whether or not it reproduces its kind:--Does it inspire? |
31779 | Then how was the race to be propagated? |
31779 | Then if the Jews_ had not_ rejected Jesus and thereby caused his blood to be shed, what would have been the eternal destiny of the whole human race? |
31779 | Then what is religion? |
31779 | Then where did Luke get this information? |
31779 | Then why save any seed of such perverse stock? |
31779 | Then, what do we_ know_ about Jesus? |
31779 | Turning now for a moment to the New Testament: Is it the source and authority for Christianity? |
31779 | Was Adam to be immortal in the flesh if he had not eaten of the forbidden fruit? |
31779 | Was character of no avail? |
31779 | Was faith the only thing that could merit the favor of God? |
31779 | Was it not just as easy? |
31779 | Was it possible that all this upon which I had staked my whole life, and had been preaching for years, was a mere fiction? |
31779 | Was not God the very essence of truth? |
31779 | Was salvation after all as arbitrary as that described in"Holy Willie''s Prayer"? |
31779 | Were none of these things on the earth before? |
31779 | Were the rose bushes in the Garden of Eden"thornless"? |
31779 | What about the"plan of salvation,"the remission of sins only thru the"power of the blood"? |
31779 | What did baptism amount to anyway? |
31779 | What did he eat before? |
31779 | What do we know about Jesus anyway? |
31779 | What is there in all the world''s literature more inspired and more inspiring than this? |
31779 | What is_ my_ conception of God? |
31779 | What must man do to be saved? |
31779 | What then is to be the test of inspiration? |
31779 | What was the meaning, intent and purpose of this vicarious atonement? |
31779 | When Joseph and Mary found him in the temple, she is quoted as saying,"Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? |
31779 | Whence came these beliefs? |
31779 | Which was first of the two? |
31779 | Who can believe such a caricature of God? |
31779 | Who can read Emerson''s essay on Spiritual Laws, or The Over- Soul, and not be inspired? |
31779 | Who created the angels, or were they co- eternal with God? |
31779 | Who made hell? |
31779 | Why did not God reveal this promise to all mankind alike, so that all might be saved, instead of to one family and one nation? |
31779 | Why was it not sufficient simply to shed the blood? |
31779 | Will Jehovah be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
31779 | Will it in any way injure me, or any one else? |
31779 | With these records as a basis, or starting point, we must work out the problem for ourselves: Who and what was Jesus? |
31779 | Would an all- wise, a just and good God create such beings, knowing in advance what they would do and what the consequences of it would be? |
31779 | Yet, I could not see why we might not affiliate with, and co- operate more with our Methodist brethren, imperfect and unscriptural(?) |
31779 | _ HEAVEN AND HELL_ But do I not believe in heaven and hell? |
31779 | _ MAN_"What is man that thou art mindful of him?" |
31779 | _ SALVATION_ What is salvation? |
31779 | and whence came the devil? |
31779 | or Bryant''s Lines to a Water- fowl, or Thanatopsis, and not be inspired? |
31779 | or Longfellow''s Resignation? |
31779 | or was it to be propagated at all? |
31779 | that of the myriads who, Before us passed the door of darkness thru, Not one returns, to tell us of the road, Which to discover, we must travel too?" |
34215 | And after--? |
34215 | But what of the planetary core?--has that, too, felt and thought? |
34215 | But will you not soon get tired of me? |
34215 | But ye have died innumerable times? |
34215 | Can there really have been in this world,he murmured to himself,"so delicious a creature? |
34215 | Do ye fear? |
34215 | Good or evil,muttered the Man,--"what signifies either? |
34215 | Have you no one in the house to help you? |
34215 | O my good young lady,the mother of Seiza asked,"whence have you come; and whom do you want to see?" |
34215 | See this pretty foundling,he says to the father of the girl,--"will you not take care of it?" |
34215 | Then what am I to do? |
34215 | What is nothingness? |
34215 | [ 67][ 67]Better half?" |
34215 | (?) |
34215 | (?) |
34215 | (?) |
34215 | (_ Cosmopsaltria Opalifera?_) 2,_ Tsurigané- Zémi_. |
34215 | (_ Cosmopsaltria Opalifera?_) 2,_ Tsurigané- Zémi_. |
34215 | ***** Now what is the emotion that such a vision excites,--an emotion too powerful to be called wonder, too weird to be called delight? |
34215 | ***** Perhaps that"Why?" |
34215 | ***** Why was I thus insanely afraid? |
34215 | And who can ever have had the sensation of being touched by ghosts? |
34215 | And who has not been fascinated also by the sight of the human stream that pours and pulses through the streets of some great metropolis? |
34215 | But when did ever a wave return from the place of breaking?" |
34215 | Butterfly or flower? |
34215 | COMIC SONG(_ Province of Shinano_) Ano yama kagé dé Hikaru wa nanja?-- Tsuki ka, hoshi ka, hotaru no mushi ka? |
34215 | Chôchô ka?--hana ka? |
34215 | Did any save thyself make thy vile body? |
34215 | Does not a herd of cattle, a herd of deer, a flock of sheep, offer us the same phenomenon of mutual yielding? |
34215 | Had it not been for old theories concerning the Unknowable, what should we have been able to learn about the Knowable? |
34215 | Her eyes at the same instant met his own; and with a happy smile she greeted him,--asking only:--"When did you come back to Kyôto? |
34215 | How can we hate? |
34215 | How did the fancied motion, having so little in common with any experience of active life, become a universal experience of the life of sleep? |
34215 | How did you find your way here to me, through all those black rooms?" |
34215 | How interpret the extraordinary massiveness and depth of the thrill? |
34215 | How should I rise again? |
34215 | II(_ Period of Bunrokû--1592- 1596_) Who twice shall live his youth? |
34215 | III Whence the fancy of those shapes? |
34215 | Moon is it, or star?--or is it the firefly- insect? |
34215 | Murmuring, the Wave replied:--"Shall I not be scattered presently to mix with the mingling of all these myriads? |
34215 | Nightmare- Touch[ Decoration] I WHAT_ is_ the fear of ghosts among those who believe in ghosts? |
34215 | Or a flock of birds-- gregarious birds especially: crows, sparrows, wild pigeons? |
34215 | Or a shoal of fish? |
34215 | Shô aru naraba, Hito ga fusagu ni Nazé hiraku? |
34215 | Smiling, she asked:--"Do you not know that I was sent for to become your wife?" |
34215 | Then, as in horror of doubting, he questioned:--"Wherefore should ye fear-- if nothingness be the end?" |
34215 | Utterly incalculable.... Why do I think so? |
34215 | Was it not while in pursuit of the Impossible that we stumbled upon the undreamed- of and infinitely marvellous Possible? |
34215 | Was it shapen-- or misshapen-- by any deeds or thoughts except thine own?" |
34215 | What art thou but a charnel- house, a mortuary- pit? |
34215 | What can lend them such enchantment? |
34215 | What experience? |
34215 | What flower faded blooms again? |
34215 | What is thine''I''? |
34215 | What originates the feeling? |
34215 | When any one sorrows as I am sorrowing, why dost thou bloom? |
34215 | Whence and what are these, if I be not real?" |
34215 | Where did she live? |
34215 | Wherefore they now have power to help him at his need.... How hast thou reverenced or pleasured us?" |
34215 | Who was she? |
34215 | Why do they appear divine?... |
34215 | Why should any expression of Christian ecstasy inspire alarm?..." |
34215 | Why should shapes that symbolize spiritual longing create horror? |
34215 | Why should we find them deeper than the sea, deeper than the day,--deep even as the night of Space, with its scintillant mist of suns? |
34215 | Why this differentiation? |
34215 | Why was I forbidden to talk about what I saw, and even heard,--on creaking stairways,--behind wavering curtains? |
34215 | Will the sémi continue to cry till the night- dew fills its mouth? |
34215 | Wilt thou not quickly cast it from thee? |
34215 | Yet how was he to find her? |
34215 | Yû- tsuyu no Kuchi ni iru madé Naku sémi ka? |
34215 | _ Au_("Meeting") 2_ Bun_("Composition"--in the literary sense)[34] 1[ 34] Might we not quaintly say,"A Fair Writing"? |
34215 | _ Kané- ko_"Going around"(?). |
34215 | _ Kata- ko_"Condition"? |
34215 | _ O- Hina_[85]"Doll,"--a paper doll? |
34215 | _ O- Iku_"How Many?" |
34215 | _ O- Kuru_"She- who- Comes"(?). |
34215 | _ O- Miwa_"Three Spokes"(?). |
34215 | _ O- Nibo_"Palanquin"(?). |
34215 | _ O- Ruri_[64]}"Emerald,"--emeraldine? |
34215 | _ Taichokané!__ Sôkané don- don!_ Flower is it?--butterfly is it? |
34215 | _ Tôtô!_ That which yonder flies,-- Wild goose is it?--swan is it? |
34215 | _ Yanrei!_"O my dear mother,"answered O- Kichi,"what is this that you ask me to do? |
34215 | cried the Man,--"how can ye hate?" |
34215 | cried the Man--"why did ye not guide me?" |
34215 | is not this O- Kichi that has come? |
36912 | He is altogether dead in sin? |
36912 | Of his present darkness what shall we say? |
36912 | What shall be done to quiet the heart- cry of the world: how answer the dumb appeal for help we so often divine below eyes that laugh? |
11004 | ''How did you know?'' 11004 ''Where did you get that?'' |
11004 | A pot and a wok-- what more do you need? |
11004 | A restaurant, bar? |
11004 | A week from Friday? |
11004 | A week? |
11004 | About what? |
11004 | AhnRee? |
11004 | AhnRee? |
11004 | Alcohol consumed? |
11004 | Am I missing something here? |
11004 | And are you content here, Willow? |
11004 | And did n''t I have a hell of a time understanding that? 11004 And what do I have to do?" |
11004 | And you are? |
11004 | And you? 11004 And you?" |
11004 | Anybody hungry? |
11004 | Are there two? 11004 Are you O.K.?" |
11004 | Are you a friend of Winifred''s? |
11004 | Are you a model? |
11004 | Are you a writer? |
11004 | Are you bored? 11004 Are you clear on that now?" |
11004 | Are you from Woodstock? |
11004 | Are you from around here? 11004 Are you going to stay in Honolulu, Joe?" |
11004 | Are you in touch with Martin? |
11004 | Are you kidding? |
11004 | Are you sure? |
11004 | Are your folks here, Jackson? |
11004 | Baby, are you sure? |
11004 | Banana pancakes? 11004 Benedictine or Kingston?" |
11004 | But my father? 11004 Buy me drink? |
11004 | Can I help it if my father is a Darwin freak? 11004 Can you believe our little girl is getting married?" |
11004 | Can you drive? |
11004 | Can you get in with the truck? |
11004 | Can you walk? |
11004 | Canada? |
11004 | Canyon first? |
11004 | Champagne? |
11004 | Chevre? |
11004 | Chocolate chips? |
11004 | Claude is a famous ski jumper, did you know? |
11004 | Claude, have you seen Jim? |
11004 | Could I ask you a question? |
11004 | Could you hide it somewhere? |
11004 | Could you make me a roast beef sandwich? 11004 Could you move it over there by those books? |
11004 | Dad, how long are you going to be in Seattle? |
11004 | Daisy? |
11004 | Did he ever show up again? |
11004 | Did he give you a hard time when you, umm, came out? |
11004 | Did n''t someone write about it? 11004 Did they take anything?" |
11004 | Did you come on the Clipper? |
11004 | Did you go to school here? |
11004 | Did you notice the Kentucky Fried Chicken place on the way in to Lihue? |
11004 | Did you see the other guy? |
11004 | Did you sell everything? |
11004 | Did you tell him where it was? |
11004 | Did your window open? |
11004 | Do n''t you get lonely? |
11004 | Do n''t you think they''re cute sometimes? 11004 Do you know how many of us there are in the world?" |
11004 | Do you know where Mead''s Meadow is? |
11004 | Do you like him? |
11004 | Do you live around here? |
11004 | Do you live in Seattle? |
11004 | Do you play? |
11004 | Do you remember Martin Merrill in Woodstock-- lived on the Byrdcliffe Road, played banjo and fiddle? |
11004 | Do you think I ought to let my hair get longer? 11004 Do you think he felt it coming?" |
11004 | Do you think of her often? |
11004 | Do you want some wine? |
11004 | Dylan? |
11004 | End the summer? |
11004 | Every story is a love story, is n''t it, Patrick? |
11004 | FUCKING IDIOT? |
11004 | Fired? |
11004 | First time in the Depresso? |
11004 | Five o''clock? 11004 For what?" |
11004 | Gate? |
11004 | Germany? |
11004 | Ginger? |
11004 | Good pictures, huh? |
11004 | Good stuff, no? |
11004 | Got ta smoke? 11004 Had you?" |
11004 | Have a beer while you wait? |
11004 | Have you been drinking, lady? 11004 Have you been working on it long?" |
11004 | Have you been writing long? |
11004 | Have you heard from Maxie lately? |
11004 | He has a gallery, did he tell you? |
11004 | He married the boxer? |
11004 | Hendrik, are you there with Patrick? |
11004 | Hey Joe, is this one of your father''s? |
11004 | Hey Parker, you need anybody? |
11004 | Hobby? 11004 Hobby? |
11004 | Horseradish? |
11004 | How about Mo? |
11004 | How about a back rub? |
11004 | How about a game? |
11004 | How about a nightcap, Joe? |
11004 | How about dinner, Joe? 11004 How about tomorrow night? |
11004 | How am I going to get a picture of that? |
11004 | How are they? |
11004 | How are ya? |
11004 | How are you going to get in? |
11004 | How are you going to meet people that way? |
11004 | How are you? |
11004 | How can she be so busy and so serene at the same time? |
11004 | How come Florida? 11004 How come it''s the only one in color?" |
11004 | How did you fasten the head? 11004 How did you get into the info game?" |
11004 | How do you cook without pans, Joe? |
11004 | How do you do? |
11004 | How do you get by? |
11004 | How is he? |
11004 | How long are you going to be staying? |
11004 | How long have you been here? |
11004 | How long have you been here? |
11004 | How long have you been in town? |
11004 | How old is Kate? |
11004 | How on earth? |
11004 | How was the trip, Dad? |
11004 | How you doing, Patrick? |
11004 | How you getting along with Willy? |
11004 | How''s he doing? 11004 How''s that Chevy running?" |
11004 | How''s that? |
11004 | How''s your course? |
11004 | How''s your mom doing? 11004 Huh?" |
11004 | Huh? |
11004 | I call you when I get back, huh? |
11004 | I do n''t know-- Aloha? |
11004 | I''m a virgin-- can you imagine? |
11004 | If he felt it coming, why would n''t he have come home? |
11004 | If you could do anything you wanted, what would you do? |
11004 | Is he coming, Kate, by the way? |
11004 | Is he on the list? |
11004 | Is it Patrick? 11004 Is it Patrick?" |
11004 | Is it serious? |
11004 | Is it true that Episcopalians are baptized in Harvey''s Bristol Cream? |
11004 | Is n''t Vermeer a painter? |
11004 | Is n''t it driving you crazy? |
11004 | Is n''t it great, Mo? 11004 Is she friggin beautiful, or what?" |
11004 | Is she your girlfriend? |
11004 | Is that what you call it? |
11004 | Is that what you want to do, Joe, make money? |
11004 | Is this Coltrane? |
11004 | Is your mom here? |
11004 | Isabelle? |
11004 | It''s time, do n''t you think? 11004 It, Patrick?" |
11004 | Jason? |
11004 | Joe, are you there? |
11004 | Joe, what can I get you? |
11004 | Joe, where are you tonight? |
11004 | Joe, will you come see me in Wisconsin? 11004 Joe, would you come exploring with me? |
11004 | Joe-- could I stay? 11004 Joe?" |
11004 | Joe? |
11004 | Kate? |
11004 | Learn the hard way, huh? |
11004 | Like? |
11004 | Listen, Mo, now that you feel sorry for me, how about dinner next week? 11004 Long night, huh Patrick?" |
11004 | Look, Max, why do n''t you take the truck? |
11004 | Look, do you want to go? |
11004 | Looking for someone? |
11004 | Martin? 11004 Maybe you''d like to spend some of the winter out here?" |
11004 | Mexico, right? |
11004 | Mo? 11004 More wine, mother?" |
11004 | Morgan, what are significant digits? |
11004 | Much farther? |
11004 | New Zealand? 11004 Nice day, huh, AhnRee?" |
11004 | No kidding? 11004 No shit?" |
11004 | No? 11004 Now, I''m trying to remember-- weren''t you into music?" |
11004 | O''Shaunessy? |
11004 | Oh no, your nice landlady? |
11004 | Oh yeah? |
11004 | Oh, what kind of writing? |
11004 | Oh, yeah? |
11004 | Oh, you have some? |
11004 | Oh? |
11004 | On the porch, yes? |
11004 | Or was it Mark Twain? |
11004 | Parker? |
11004 | Patrick O''Shaunessy? |
11004 | Patrick O''Shaunessy? |
11004 | Patrick said to him,''Wedding present? 11004 Patrick, are you jealous?" |
11004 | Patrick? |
11004 | Pie,Joe continued,"what''s the name of that place on Hausten Street where they have great pie? |
11004 | Pretty good catcher, was n''t he? |
11004 | Prospects, plural? |
11004 | Really? |
11004 | Really? |
11004 | Remember Parker? |
11004 | Remember that guy, Wendell? 11004 Roast beef?" |
11004 | Say hi to Lovena for me, will you? |
11004 | School? |
11004 | See that hedge? 11004 See what?" |
11004 | See you around noon, then? |
11004 | See? |
11004 | She''s been good to us all, right? |
11004 | So how''s your love life? |
11004 | So it''s a canary I hired? |
11004 | So soon? |
11004 | So what is this''fine art?'' |
11004 | So who''s Jim? |
11004 | So who''s this? |
11004 | So you grew up with it? |
11004 | So you had to serve thirty extra days? |
11004 | So you went from home to the church life-- and you never got married? |
11004 | So, Joe, you heading back soon? |
11004 | So, Patrick, how long will you be in Woodstock? |
11004 | So, Patrick, what''s happening? |
11004 | So, did you find out? 11004 So, did you like her? |
11004 | So, how do you like our fair town? |
11004 | So, how''s your business? |
11004 | So, what are you doing? |
11004 | So, what brings you to Hawaii? |
11004 | So, what do you do? |
11004 | So, what does your mom do? |
11004 | So, what happened? |
11004 | So, what happened? |
11004 | So, what have you been doing? |
11004 | So, what have you been doing? |
11004 | So, what have you been up to? |
11004 | So, what next? |
11004 | So, where are you from, Sue? |
11004 | So, where did you find PrettyLocks? |
11004 | So, who''s watching? |
11004 | So, you work around here? |
11004 | So,Joe said to them both,"this is where you''re going to make a stand-- gallery and print shop?" |
11004 | Speaking of fathers, how is yours? |
11004 | Take with you? 11004 Tell her,"Max said, and added,"where''s my quarter?" |
11004 | That is Go, is n''t it? 11004 The little one?" |
11004 | The one describing your house and your new friend? |
11004 | The skinny one? |
11004 | The town, you mean? |
11004 | Then he slowed down-- know what I mean? |
11004 | Tomorrow? |
11004 | Tomorrow? |
11004 | Tomorrow? |
11004 | Tops-- near the Ilikai? |
11004 | Trojans, right? 11004 Truck?" |
11004 | True? |
11004 | Two for five hundred each? |
11004 | Two of them? 11004 Ugh, hlo?" |
11004 | Uh, when? |
11004 | Uh-- what do you do? |
11004 | Uh-- when will I see you again? |
11004 | Umm, with me? |
11004 | Under the banyan tree? |
11004 | Vino? |
11004 | Want a beer or something? |
11004 | Want a beer? |
11004 | Want some wine? |
11004 | Want to go? |
11004 | Want to meet me at the Depresso later? |
11004 | Was it so bad being normal? |
11004 | Was it the FBI or the CIA that Sam was working for? |
11004 | Was n''t she from the Bay Area? |
11004 | Well, if you''re a romantic, why are n''t you naked with a rose in your teeth? |
11004 | Well, why does n''t he look at me? |
11004 | Were you at the festival? |
11004 | What about Morgan? 11004 What about the chest? |
11004 | What are you doing in Woodstock? |
11004 | What are you going to do now? |
11004 | What are you going to do today? |
11004 | What are you going to do? |
11004 | What are you looking at? |
11004 | What are you reading? |
11004 | What are you reading? |
11004 | What are you studying? |
11004 | What became of the babe? |
11004 | What brings you to Woodstock? |
11004 | What did I know? 11004 What did he do?" |
11004 | What did you do? |
11004 | What did you think of Edie? |
11004 | What did you think? |
11004 | What do think of the place? |
11004 | What do you do here? |
11004 | What do you do? |
11004 | What do you do? |
11004 | What do you mean? |
11004 | What do you mean? |
11004 | What do you mean? |
11004 | What do you really like to do? |
11004 | What do you think about Vietnam? |
11004 | What do you think for a frame? |
11004 | What do you think? 11004 What do you think?" |
11004 | What do you want? |
11004 | What does he do? |
11004 | What ever happened to Joe Burke? |
11004 | What for? |
11004 | What for? |
11004 | What happened to her? |
11004 | What happened? |
11004 | What is art, anyway? |
11004 | What is the damned Internet anyway? |
11004 | What is your book about? |
11004 | What kind of work? |
11004 | What needs doing? |
11004 | What was he like? |
11004 | What was your mother like? 11004 What would it cost?" |
11004 | What would you do? |
11004 | What!? |
11004 | What!? |
11004 | What''cha doing, if you do n''t mind my asking? 11004 What''s got into you today?" |
11004 | What''s happening, Patrick? |
11004 | What''s happening? |
11004 | What''s her name? |
11004 | What''s it been? 11004 What''s new with you?" |
11004 | What''s next? |
11004 | What''s she like? |
11004 | What''s the matter? |
11004 | What''s the matter? |
11004 | What''s the matter? |
11004 | What''s the music? |
11004 | What''s this? |
11004 | What''s wrong with getting along? |
11004 | What''s wrong with that? |
11004 | What''s your little one like? 11004 What''s your name?" |
11004 | What? |
11004 | When are you going? |
11004 | When did you leave? 11004 When the going gets tough, the tough get going, right?" |
11004 | When will you be here? |
11004 | Where did you learn this stuff? |
11004 | Where did you work? |
11004 | Where is everybody? 11004 Where is the hospital?" |
11004 | Where is this place? |
11004 | Where you going? |
11004 | Where your wheels? |
11004 | Where''s Amber? |
11004 | Where''s Beethoven? |
11004 | Where? |
11004 | Which airline? |
11004 | Which flight are you on? |
11004 | Which service? |
11004 | White, wheat, pumpernickel, light rye, dark rye? 11004 Who are you?" |
11004 | Who we? |
11004 | Who''s Sumoko? |
11004 | Who''s he? |
11004 | Who''s your friend? |
11004 | Who? |
11004 | Why are n''t you in school somewhere? |
11004 | Why are n''t you teaching in a university somewhere? |
11004 | Why did you get fired, if you do n''t mind my asking? |
11004 | Why do n''t I believe you? |
11004 | Why do n''t you take it? 11004 Why is he turned? |
11004 | Why not? 11004 Why not?" |
11004 | Why would he be like that? 11004 Why, Patrick?" |
11004 | Willow, right? |
11004 | Willow? |
11004 | Willy-- is every woman in Woodstock good looking? |
11004 | With your body, who needs distraction? |
11004 | Wo n''t you be lonely? |
11004 | Woodstock, the Woodstock? |
11004 | Would you drive? |
11004 | Would you show me your place some time? |
11004 | Write stories? |
11004 | Yeah, pretty good, huh? 11004 Yeah? |
11004 | Yes, yes? |
11004 | Yes? |
11004 | Yes? |
11004 | Yes? |
11004 | Yes? |
11004 | You a painter? |
11004 | You are n''t sorry, are you? |
11004 | You can tell? |
11004 | You get back to Woodstock, much? |
11004 | You going to be all right? |
11004 | You going? |
11004 | You got a buck for some cigarettes? |
11004 | You got any Coltrane? |
11004 | You just get here? |
11004 | You know Bob Dylan''s line about the difference between hospitals and universities? |
11004 | You know Ox? |
11004 | You know Willow? |
11004 | You like it? |
11004 | You like your Bella, do n''t you? |
11004 | You never know, do you? |
11004 | You seen Jim: tall, cute? |
11004 | You ski, Patrick? |
11004 | You staying here? |
11004 | You want some horseradish in there? 11004 You want something to eat?" |
11004 | You want to come down to headquarters and try identify them? |
11004 | You want to give us a hard time? |
11004 | You want to go exploring sometime? 11004 You want to go swimming?" |
11004 | You want to know the trouble I''m having? |
11004 | You want your Bella? |
11004 | You were from Woodstock, right? |
11004 | You''re a bad boy, are n''t you? |
11004 | Your roots in Hawaii? |
11004 | _ How can there be a cherry that has no stone? 11004 _ How does it feel? |
11004 | ''Is it-- a boy or a girl?'' |
11004 | ''You mean our father, do n''t you?'' |
11004 | ''You stole it, did n''t you? |
11004 | ''Your Honor,''Billy said,''Assault? |
11004 | > From who? |
11004 | A fisherman, rescued twenty- four hours later, was asked by a reporter,"What did you do all that time out there with no life jacket?" |
11004 | A little after?" |
11004 | An old guy? |
11004 | And Gino?" |
11004 | And Shannon? |
11004 | And art-- what the hell was art all about? |
11004 | And come and have dinner with us sometime, wo n''t you?" |
11004 | And how can you call Patrick a stranger? |
11004 | And if the banjo was in the back seat, took second place, what difference did it make so long as he was contributing and doing his best? |
11004 | And now, for a dollar, grand prize-- an educated man?" |
11004 | And the book, how''s that coming along?" |
11004 | And then,"Joe?" |
11004 | And you survived?" |
11004 | Any work around?" |
11004 | Are you Heidi Merrill?" |
11004 | Are you a painter?" |
11004 | Are you all right?" |
11004 | Are you all right?" |
11004 | Are you an airman or a goddamn philosopher, Burke?'' |
11004 | Are you looking for a system to replace the I.R.S.?" |
11004 | Are you writing?" |
11004 | Around five?" |
11004 | At the coffee shop on King Street, Joe asked,"Remember that week we spent on Kauai? |
11004 | Both islands? |
11004 | But, do it right, you know?" |
11004 | CIA?" |
11004 | Ca n''t you see them: the finished barn and the design together, sort of turning into each other?" |
11004 | Can you imagine any of our politicians leaving anything as good?" |
11004 | Can you make it, 6:30 at the Moana? |
11004 | Catch an early plane, drive around, look at things, and be back by dinner? |
11004 | Closest flight to seven o''clock, two weeks from Friday?" |
11004 | Come on over, or are you just flying through?" |
11004 | Could you close it for me?" |
11004 | Did I tell you that I started a novel?" |
11004 | Did I tell you that?" |
11004 | Did developments in the story make sense in terms of earlier events? |
11004 | Did he want to go back east? |
11004 | Did she mean every story about anything? |
11004 | Did you ever hear of Franz Griessler, the painter?" |
11004 | Did you ever see a chameleon change color?" |
11004 | Did you get my last letter?" |
11004 | Did you go?" |
11004 | Did you know it was written by Queen Liliuokalani? |
11004 | Did you see Maxie''s giant sculpture?" |
11004 | Do I look so much like him?" |
11004 | Do you have a violin, umm, fiddle?" |
11004 | Do you know them?" |
11004 | Do you know what art is, Willow?" |
11004 | Do you know where she lives?" |
11004 | Do you know where the hospital is?" |
11004 | Do you need reminding to eat out?" |
11004 | Do you play chess, Joe?" |
11004 | Do you think if I''d wanted to hit Dusty, I''d have missed him?'' |
11004 | Do you travel a lot?" |
11004 | Dutch treat?" |
11004 | Dylan?" |
11004 | E- Z big tips?" |
11004 | FBI? |
11004 | For the week? |
11004 | For what? |
11004 | Had he really left Maine? |
11004 | Has he caused you to lose your mind completely?" |
11004 | Have you been here long? |
11004 | Have you been?" |
11004 | Have you heard of Goddard, in Vermont?" |
11004 | Have you seen Ingrid?" |
11004 | Have you seen it, Amber-- a red''52 convertible?" |
11004 | He around?" |
11004 | He could n''t decide whether or not to go to Florida? |
11004 | He does n''t make any money, but what else is new?" |
11004 | He had a glamorous mother, right?" |
11004 | He thought about crawling to the telephone and knocking it to the floor with the broom, but who would he call? |
11004 | He turned and shouted over the engine,"Where you coming from?" |
11004 | He was from Ten Mile Creek, south of Pittsburgh; what had happened to him? |
11004 | Hendrik''s lover? |
11004 | Her father was a Brahms expert; how could he? |
11004 | Here, after work?" |
11004 | Here, where? |
11004 | Herself? |
11004 | Hey, how are you?" |
11004 | How about Keo''s? |
11004 | How about Tuesday? |
11004 | How about a drink-- under the boardwalk?" |
11004 | How about dessert?" |
11004 | How about the week after, say Friday? |
11004 | How about turkey, today?" |
11004 | How are you doing these days, by the way?" |
11004 | How are you?" |
11004 | How can he possibly have a conference without coffee or wine?" |
11004 | How can that be? |
11004 | How can there be a baby with no cryin''? |
11004 | How come you stopped playing the violin?" |
11004 | How could he skimp? |
11004 | How could someone be running around one day and then be totaled the next? |
11004 | How could that be fun? |
11004 | How could this man with nothing, kneeling on the sidewalk before an empty church, be so complete? |
11004 | How could you regret a life which produced your children? |
11004 | How did they get the piano up here?" |
11004 | How do I get to your place?" |
11004 | How does Patrick like it at the university?" |
11004 | How good is this? |
11004 | How is Brian? |
11004 | How many hours could he work if he became a full time student? |
11004 | How much for?" |
11004 | How old are you, Joe?" |
11004 | How relaxing can you get? |
11004 | How was the flight?" |
11004 | How was your trip?" |
11004 | How was your trip?" |
11004 | How ya doin'', buddy?" |
11004 | How ya doing? |
11004 | How''s the history going?" |
11004 | Hungry already?" |
11004 | I mean, he liked himself; everyone in the place liked him; how could she not? |
11004 | I mean, you have to go back and back to the old neighborhoods? |
11004 | In Hanalei?" |
11004 | In return, a bit of modeling, say, once a week? |
11004 | In the light of eternity, what difference does it make?" |
11004 | In what way were writers artists? |
11004 | Is Parker here?" |
11004 | Is he the one with the red hair?" |
11004 | Is it big?" |
11004 | Is it good?" |
11004 | Is it when you do n''t care what happens? |
11004 | Is that a rock?" |
11004 | Is that where you keep your gold?" |
11004 | Is that your studio over there?" |
11004 | Isabelle? |
11004 | Isabelle?" |
11004 | It has been, what, six years now?" |
11004 | Joe, have you written down the story about the girl and the cat burglar?" |
11004 | Joe:"Women?" |
11004 | Joe?" |
11004 | Kegs, music-- why do n''t you ride up with us?" |
11004 | Look at things?" |
11004 | Martin, can you come over? |
11004 | May I get you a drink?" |
11004 | Maybe we could meet later?" |
11004 | Maybe when I get back from Florida?" |
11004 | Mayo? |
11004 | Memory was suspect; did he really do that? |
11004 | Morgan explained,"Joe was too-- what was it-- delicate?" |
11004 | Now what have I done? |
11004 | Of what? |
11004 | On Kauai? |
11004 | On the other hand, no flying plates, no loud exits, no sobbing? |
11004 | One sick guy with a rifle against marines and cannon-- he killed, what? |
11004 | Or are you a student or a professional or something?" |
11004 | Or did n''t she? |
11004 | Or every story a writer felt was worth the effort? |
11004 | Or to Woodstock? |
11004 | Or under it?" |
11004 | Or was he just going back to work? |
11004 | Or was this just an extended visit that was coming to an end? |
11004 | Parties are for fun, right? |
11004 | Rehearsing?" |
11004 | Reservations? |
11004 | Rhiannon?" |
11004 | Rob?" |
11004 | Sally and Ingrid on the same island? |
11004 | Same genes? |
11004 | Scone?" |
11004 | Seasoned investors said that these companies were scams nineteen times out of twenty, so why bother at all? |
11004 | Seattle?" |
11004 | See you in the morning?" |
11004 | She made it sound completely possible, like-- why not have it done by dark? |
11004 | She smiled because it was a joke between them,"In the light of eternity, what difference does it make?" |
11004 | She was in the back room, looking down into a carton, when a voice called out,"Anybody home?" |
11004 | Should he go back to Maine? |
11004 | Should we have more light? |
11004 | Small or large? |
11004 | So, how''s Daisy doing? |
11004 | So, how''s your love life?" |
11004 | So, want to come out with me?" |
11004 | So, what have you been up to?" |
11004 | Some time later, she said,"The Big Bang Theory? |
11004 | Start with coffee?" |
11004 | Take bus? |
11004 | That good, huh? |
11004 | That right?''. |
11004 | The Irish? |
11004 | The bartender laid two quarter rolls soundlessly next to the bill and asked,"You come around just to look up Bobby Shannon?" |
11004 | The best banjo player he''d ever heard was returning from an international data conference? |
11004 | The same things all over again? |
11004 | They were well around the island, past Kilauea, when Joe asked,"The Tahiti Nui, do you know it? |
11004 | To go?" |
11004 | Tomorrow, 12:30 or thereabouts?" |
11004 | Twenty years?" |
11004 | UNDER A FUCKING ROCK?" |
11004 | Until my plane?" |
11004 | Vassar? |
11004 | Wait a minute, where?" |
11004 | Want a lift?" |
11004 | Want one?" |
11004 | Want to come?" |
11004 | Want to have lunch?" |
11004 | Want to hear about it?" |
11004 | Want to practice something complicated?" |
11004 | Was he writing a story or a novel? |
11004 | Was it Marx who said that the smallest indivisible human unit was two? |
11004 | Was it a nice wedding?" |
11004 | Was it always about money? |
11004 | We are n''t tired, are we Morgan?" |
11004 | Were his parents closet rebels? |
11004 | What are you doing here?" |
11004 | What are you doing up?" |
11004 | What are you going to do?" |
11004 | What are you going to do?" |
11004 | What are you studying?" |
11004 | What are you writing, if you do n''t mind my asking?" |
11004 | What are you?" |
11004 | What brings you out in the rain?" |
11004 | What did I say? |
11004 | What did he say? |
11004 | What did he want? |
11004 | What did she want? |
11004 | What do I do now? |
11004 | What do they call them?" |
11004 | What do you do at 52 when the kids are grown? |
11004 | What do you do now? |
11004 | What do you do on weekends?" |
11004 | What do you do?" |
11004 | What do you think you''re doing?'' |
11004 | What else could he do? |
11004 | What else was there? |
11004 | What happened to PrettyLocks? |
11004 | What happened to Rolf?" |
11004 | What if they come back?" |
11004 | What is a story, anyway? |
11004 | What is fun? |
11004 | What is it about Coltrane?" |
11004 | What is math, anyway? |
11004 | What kind of car do you like to drive?" |
11004 | What more could a parent ask? |
11004 | What traffic? |
11004 | What was getting into everybody? |
11004 | What was he like?" |
11004 | What was it? |
11004 | What was the story about? |
11004 | What were they like?" |
11004 | What will it be?'' |
11004 | What''s a story?" |
11004 | What''s the matter with you? |
11004 | What''s the matter?" |
11004 | What''s your name?" |
11004 | What''s your name?" |
11004 | What''s your secret?" |
11004 | What?" |
11004 | Where am I?" |
11004 | Where are we going?" |
11004 | Where are we?" |
11004 | Where are you?" |
11004 | Where d''ja come from? |
11004 | Where did the name come from?" |
11004 | Where did you say you were going to school?" |
11004 | Where had he gone? |
11004 | Where was San Juan Island, anyway? |
11004 | Where''s my bass man?" |
11004 | Where''s the party?" |
11004 | Where''s your father?" |
11004 | Where''s your fiddle?" |
11004 | Which characters were convincing? |
11004 | Who does n''t? |
11004 | Who is he looking at?" |
11004 | Who was he? |
11004 | Who was she, anyway? |
11004 | Who would have thought it? |
11004 | Why deny it? |
11004 | Why did that have to be? |
11004 | Why do n''t we go over to Kauai some time? |
11004 | Why do n''t you come over in about twenty minutes? |
11004 | Why had n''t he reported for his plagu shot? |
11004 | Why not come sit? |
11004 | Wilcox?" |
11004 | Women in general? |
11004 | Would you have an opinion on that?" |
11004 | Would you like it?" |
11004 | You are my friend, are n''t you?" |
11004 | You have a sister, do n''t you?" |
11004 | You know about Kertesz? |
11004 | You know what I keep seeing?" |
11004 | You know what he told me last night?" |
11004 | You mean in some other setting?" |
11004 | You remember my maxim about what to do when you''re really attracted to a woman?" |
11004 | You remember? |
11004 | You sure you do n''t want your face looked at? |
11004 | You think we were n''t young once?" |
11004 | You want me to miss my shower?" |
11004 | You want pu- pu''s?" |
11004 | You want seven decimal places? |
11004 | You want some eggs?" |
11004 | three of them before they gave up? |
11004 | what day? |
11004 | what do you prefer to be called?" |
33771 | A wife? 33771 And my sister Edith?" |
33771 | And that you be Sir John Horseleigh of Clyfton? |
33771 | And the pistol wounds? |
33771 | And this Girondin-- is he in hiding here? |
33771 | And you gave notice of his presence to the authorities? |
33771 | And you? |
33771 | But do the animals never attempt to escape? |
33771 | But in a privy way? |
33771 | Did you see him? 33771 For what? |
33771 | Has your brother- in- law never been hurt by any of these animals? |
33771 | Have you had a sunstroke, my girl? |
33771 | How did thy mind get filled with such as this? |
33771 | How now? |
33771 | How often doth he come? |
33771 | I have heard such a fearsome rumor-- what doth it mean? 33771 In New England? |
33771 | Mrs. Spencer, has anything happened at home that you have come to me, and not mother? 33771 So you have a Girondin here, have you?" |
33771 | The stranger? |
33771 | Was he older than my sister? |
33771 | Well, my Jeanne,he said, in his gibing tone,"are you longing for my news?" |
33771 | What do you say of him? |
33771 | What do you say of this man? |
33771 | What in the world does this mean? 33771 What is it? |
33771 | What is it? |
33771 | What is that? |
33771 | What is that? |
33771 | What is this? |
33771 | What, doctor? |
33771 | Where have you been dawdling, lazy- bones? |
33771 | Where in the next county? |
33771 | Where in the realm of thought, whose air is song, Does he, the Buddha of the West, belong? 33771 Where is it?" |
33771 | Where? |
33771 | Which animals show the most intelligence? |
33771 | Who are-- who are these gentlemen? |
33771 | Who wrote the review of''Jane Eyre''? |
33771 | Why do you want that? |
33771 | Why not use your stool? |
33771 | Why not? |
33771 | Why? |
33771 | Why? |
33771 | You are? |
33771 | You have your papers, citizens? |
33771 | You say your friend was killed in a railroad accident on his vacation trip? 33771 You will not give him up?" |
33771 | And what contributes to all this more than rest, which gives time to think? |
33771 | Are they all well at home-- Lucia, and mother and the girls? |
33771 | At all events, is n''t the remark nine times out of ten true? |
33771 | But who deceived him, and why? |
33771 | But, if so, why this mystery? |
33771 | Did he marry''ee at church in orderly fashion?" |
33771 | Did you ever think how much is gained by making the first verse begin with the singular number? |
33771 | Do you not understand, fool, that he is worth five crowns? |
33771 | For what, may I ask?" |
33771 | Hagenbeck?" |
33771 | Have the queens of to- day any such honors? |
33771 | Have you heard of Louvet? |
33771 | He says:"Assuming the editor''s responsibility for the incriminated interpolations, who wrote the article itself? |
33771 | He turned around at my exclamation of surprise and asked,"Why, do n''t they grow like that where you live?" |
33771 | His mother was a second wife, was n''t she, and there was another family who lived with their grandmother?" |
33771 | How are we to account for these, as it would seem, contemporaneous wives? |
33771 | How be I going to face her with the news, and how be I to hold it from her? |
33771 | How was it? |
33771 | How was the body identified? |
33771 | I heard Charlie remark as I went up- stairs:"Game, for such a pious old lady, is n''t she?" |
33771 | I remember that I once spoke of"the three great prefaces,"and quick as light Emerson said,"What are the three great prefaces?" |
33771 | I wonder what crime he has committed-- robbery, or perhaps murder-- who knows?" |
33771 | I wonder what he has done? |
33771 | Is it not perhaps possible that Carlyle would not have been Carlyle but for Emerson? |
33771 | It must have happened yesterday, did n''t it?" |
33771 | Mellermann?" |
33771 | Not_ our_ country, but''_ My_ country,''''_ I_ sing of thee''? |
33771 | Now, were n''t there other Mansfield boys besides Chester? |
33771 | Of what standing is your husband, and of where?" |
33771 | Pétion,"continued the spokesman to one of his companions,"can you kindle a light? |
33771 | See you home, Mish Spencer?" |
33771 | Sir John what d''ye call''n?" |
33771 | The sailor kissed her, looked at her sternly for a few moments, and pointing to the infant, said:"You mean the father of this?" |
33771 | There was a young woman in the opposite berth-- was she killed, I wonder? |
33771 | There was something so formidable in their appearance that his voice faltered as he added:"But where is the mayor, gentlemen? |
33771 | To the common question,"But how are you to come back?" |
33771 | Was I much hurt?" |
33771 | Was it you or Lowell who called him the Yankee Plato? |
33771 | Was the accident very fatal?" |
33771 | What Frenchman said:"Truth is a wedge that makes its way only by being struck"? |
33771 | What are they? |
33771 | What did she mean? |
33771 | What had come to her? |
33771 | What manner of man was he?" |
33771 | What position save that of the Pope afforded a more enviable outlook? |
33771 | What will become, this side of the Orient, of our profession?" |
33771 | What word could we send to the young wife, about whom he continually asked, and the old mother? |
33771 | What''s the matter?" |
33771 | What''s to become of her? |
33771 | What, then, was young Reynolds''interest in him? |
33771 | When we told Chester that she had been sent for he exclaimed,"How can she leave her baby? |
33771 | Where did this cosmopolite, who really has no English roots, learn the system? |
33771 | Where have you been these many days? |
33771 | Where is thy husband?" |
33771 | Who knoweth but that he have a wife already? |
33771 | Who saw it after it was sent home?" |
33771 | Why can not this young man, whatever he may have done, be saved through this early training? |
33771 | Why concealment if there was nothing discreditable to conceal? |
33771 | Why did you go away so suddenly? |
33771 | Why not keep me company a bit? |
33771 | Why should he mar our life? |
33771 | Why this mean and cramped lodging in this lonely copse- circled town? |
33771 | You know how he was hurt?" |
33771 | and how many were hurt in the accident?" |
33771 | and then,"Well, then, how in thunder do they get it if they''re too pious to steal?" |
33771 | you said you had a brother at sea-- where is he now?" |
37017 | ''Did you ever,''said he,''know a plumber who had grown rich?'' |
37017 | ''Who ever heard of a bureau in a library? |
37017 | ''_ How_ about a bureau in the library? |
37017 | ''_ Is_ the house afire?'' |
37017 | And on his pedestal I would carve the motto,--''Did You Ever Know a Plumber Who Had Grown Rich?'' |
37017 | But about that bureau? |
37017 | But this digression into the''ichthus and pause''of housework-- I seem to hear my mother,''Who_ is_ the lunatic?'' |
37017 | But what in the world have they done with the matches? |
37017 | Granting that electric lights, a furnace, and a bath- room are anachronisms in this quaint old colonial cottage-- what am I but an anachronism myself? |
37017 | Had he rested on the floor? |
37017 | He puts on--''Curse it,_ where_ is that sleeve?'' |
37017 | Indeed, how could he? |
37017 | Is anybody really expected to believe it? |
37017 | Or had he rested on either of the rare old colonial chairs-- or both together, using one for his feet? |
37017 | Or is domestic service itself a phase of domesticity that can be so cheerfully eliminated? |
37017 | Or is the stairless, servantless, atticless cottage--''truly the little house is the house of the future''--meant also to be childless? |
37017 | Sooner or later, in either case, the bather must sit down-- and where then is his personal dignity? |
37017 | THE PLUMBER APPRECIATED''DID you ever,''said he,''know a plumber who had grown rich?'' |
37017 | To sit mug- a- mugging The fire who could, That might be out lugging In armfuls of wood? |
37017 | Was it not before an open fire that Cain killed Abel? |
37017 | Was this all of life-- smacking Albert and"rowing"with his mother? |
37017 | We sparkle( for us); we become( or at least we feel) engagingly animated; but is it really the open fire? |
37017 | Where now is the lark? |
37017 | Why does n''t somebody solve the problem of domestic living by suggesting that we all live in house- boats? |
37017 | the word has often enough been a term of honor-- no really fine and enduring place in the scheme of gracious and cultivated domestic management? |
33889 | What could a man require more from a nation so pliant and so prone to seek after knowledge? 33889 And are we to stop at a United States of the Old World? 33889 And could it not be extended from its present limited range until it reached practically the whole adolescent community? 33889 And how can we set about doing it? 33889 And if so, will the debacle extend to America? 33889 And is this a mere fantastic talk, or is this a thing that could be done and that ought to be done? 33889 And it is equally reasonable to ask the great political personages of the British Empire: what will Ireland be in twenty- five years''time? 33889 And now what else? 33889 And outside this canonical Book or Books, shall we leave all the rest of literature in a limitless Apocrypha? 33889 And we have a very considerable literature of books on-- what shall I call it? 33889 And what will be the chief organs and organizations and works and methods with which this Council of the World State will be concerned? 33889 And what would the American community probably do in such a case? 33889 Are not we and they and all the race still just as much adrift in the current of circumstances as we were before 1914? 33889 Are theygenerally necessary to salvation"? |
33889 | Are we just drifting into an unknown darkness in all these matters with blind leaders of our blindness? |
33889 | Are we to contemplate the prospect of a modern Bible in twenty or thirty thousand volumes? |
33889 | But are these intellectuals right in their estimate of the common man? |
33889 | But are they sound questions? |
33889 | But are we to contemplate a sort of dual world-- the New World against the Old? |
33889 | But do we provide that idea of a place in the world for our people to- day? |
33889 | But does it do that to- day? |
33889 | But how are those relations going to develop? |
33889 | But is it a league of nations that is wanted? |
33889 | But is it so? |
33889 | But is our race capable of such an effort, such a complete reversal of its instinctive and traditional impulses? |
33889 | But would he be right? |
33889 | But you see my conception of the college course? |
33889 | But_ must_ you? |
33889 | Can so little a leaven leaven so great a lump? |
33889 | Can there be any comparison between the educational efficiency of the two methods? |
33889 | Can we extend it over most or all of a modern population? |
33889 | Can we find premonitions of any such bold and revolutionary adaptations as these, in the mental and political life of to- day? |
33889 | Can we re- cement our increasingly unstable civilization? |
33889 | Could we not do much more than we do to make the broad issues of various current questions plain and accessible to our students in the college stage? |
33889 | Did the prosperities and confident hopes with which the twentieth century opened, mark nothing more than a culmination of fortuitous good luck? |
33889 | Discussed and re- discussed? |
33889 | Do we even keep them steadfastly in our minds? |
33889 | Do we want to get rid of patriotism altogether? |
33889 | Does education even pretend to do as much to- day? |
33889 | Does it sound like rubbish to you? |
33889 | Has the cycle of prosperity and progress closed? |
33889 | How are we to choose him? |
33889 | How can one take sides between them? |
33889 | How can we have forecasts and prophecies of things that are happening now? |
33889 | How do they mean them to develop? |
33889 | How else, we ask, could you have it? |
33889 | How far are we, reader and writer, for example, working for these large new securities? |
33889 | How is it with the people around us? |
33889 | If it is possible for us isolated workers to do as much then why should not the thing be done in a big and authoritative manner? |
33889 | If the mass of common men are incurably patriotic and belligerent why is there a note of querulous exhortation in nearly all patriotic literature? |
33889 | Is a response to this appeal latent in the masses of mankind? |
33889 | Is he so patriotic as they make out? |
33889 | Is he such a shallow and vehement fool as they seem to believe? |
33889 | Is it a preposterous one? |
33889 | Is it an offence to gamble? |
33889 | Is it an offence to hold fertile fields and not cultivate them? |
33889 | Is it an offence to hold fertile fields and undercultivate them? |
33889 | Is it an offence to speculate? |
33889 | Is it an offence to spend exorbitant sums that might otherwise go in reproductive investments, to gratify the whims and vanities of your wife? |
33889 | Is it an offence to spend your money on yourself and refuse your wife more than bare necessities? |
33889 | Is it an offence to use your invested money merely to live pleasantly without working? |
33889 | Is it any wonder that the bookings from London to Warsaw are infinitesimal in comparison with the bookings from New York to St. Louis? |
33889 | Is it possible to rationalize the at present chaotic will of mankind? |
33889 | Is not this idea a legacy from the days when states were small communities needing a leader in war and diplomacy? |
33889 | Is the college stage of our present educational system anywhere near its maximum possible efficiency? |
33889 | Is there any precedent to justify us in hoping that such a change in world ideas is possible? |
33889 | Is there anything in history to justify hope for so gigantic a mental turnover in our race? |
33889 | It is a tremendous exercise to read and understand, but is it universally necessary? |
33889 | It would be a quite possible thing to do.... Is it worth doing? |
33889 | Let us ask whether it is probable that the world state will have any single personal head at all? |
33889 | May they not be a little affected by false analogies? |
33889 | Now how is this to be done? |
33889 | Now is this a final limitation? |
33889 | Now what is this_ schooling_ to do-- what is it doing to the new human being? |
33889 | Now what should college give the young citizen, male or female, upon the foundation of schooling we have already sketched out? |
33889 | Now what was this change in conditions that had confronted mankind with the perplexing necessity of abandoning war? |
33889 | Or can not a lot of these things be figured out by able and intelligent people? |
33889 | Or is the American( and Pacific?) |
33889 | Or whether they think that there will be a greater United States-- of all America-- or of all the world? |
33889 | Or will there be a World King? |
33889 | Our test of a college education is-- Does it make a successful business man? |
33889 | Polished and finished, and made the opening part of a new Bible of Civilization, a new common basis for a world culture? |
33889 | Should we include the Book of Job? |
33889 | Should we include the Song of Songs? |
33889 | Some sort of genteel recluse-- or men and women? |
33889 | That it is a reasonable and proper thing to ask our statesmen and politicians: what is going to happen to the world? |
33889 | They ask, for example, where will the World Congress meet; and how will you elect your World President? |
33889 | To what will this staggering and blundering, the hatreds and mischievous adventures of the present time, bring us? |
33889 | We must ask:"What have you done, what are you doing to help or hinder the peace and order of mankind?" |
33889 | Well, what were they? |
33889 | What are the modern equivalents of these books? |
33889 | What are we going to do about Shakespear? |
33889 | What do they think they are training? |
33889 | What is happening to our race? |
33889 | What is it that intervenes between the universal human need and its satisfaction? |
33889 | What is the To- morrow they are making? |
33889 | What is the life it produces? |
33889 | What is this greater idea to be? |
33889 | What is want of aptitude? |
33889 | What loyalty and what devotion can we expect this multiple association to command? |
33889 | What sort of better social order are you making for? |
33889 | What sort of world order are you creating? |
33889 | What will India be? |
33889 | What would an American citizen think of such an outbreak? |
33889 | What would be our equivalent of this part of the Bible to- day? |
33889 | What would be the equivalent for the Bible of a world civilization? |
33889 | Whither are they guiding our destinies? |
33889 | Why make two bites at a planet? |
33889 | Why should that draft not be revised by scores of specialists? |
33889 | Why should we not make all this classification of property and the restraints upon each class of property, systematic and world- wide? |
33889 | Why, for instance, is Mr. Rudyard Kipling''s"History of England"so full of goading and scolding? |
33889 | Will he pack his bag, get aboard a train and go there? |
33889 | Will this council be directly elected? |
33889 | Wo n''t your World President, they say, be rather a tremendous personage? |
33889 | You think I am talking of a dreamland, of an unattainable Utopia? |
33889 | system still sufficiently removed and still sufficiently autonomous to maintain a progressive movement of its own if the Old World collapse? |
2085 | A flat nose? |
2085 | Ah, but,said Astyages,"is not this a far better meal than you ever had in Persia?" |
2085 | Ah,cried Cyrus,"is that so? |
2085 | Ah,said Cyrus,"I suppose they were glad to hear we were coming so soon?" |
2085 | Ah,said Cyrus,"what would you give to have as much said of you? |
2085 | And are those enemies too? |
2085 | And do you know what they amount to? |
2085 | And for your sons? |
2085 | And how did you discover that, my boy? |
2085 | And how would you set about it? |
2085 | And if he have great riches, to you leave him all his wealth, or do you make him a beggar? |
2085 | And if you found him deserting to your enemies, what would you do? |
2085 | And now tell me, father, while we are still in friendly country, if you know of any resources that I could make my own? |
2085 | And pray, father,asked Cyrus,"how can I succeed in that?" |
2085 | And their commander? |
2085 | And then,Cyrus continued,"once inside the walls, he could put the place into our hands?" |
2085 | And were you conquered by him, and did you agree to pay tribute and furnish troops whenever he required, and promise not to fortify your dwellings? |
2085 | And what do they do,he asked,"when they see the signal?" |
2085 | And what if other benefits were gained by peace? |
2085 | And what is that? |
2085 | And what is the quickest way,asked Cyrus,"to win that reputation?" |
2085 | And what stands in their way? |
2085 | And what will that good treatment be? |
2085 | And where,asked Cyrus,"may those treasures be?" |
2085 | And who is he? |
2085 | And who is to find that out, if not he who holds the keys of power? 2085 And who shall try me?" |
2085 | And why not? |
2085 | And why? |
2085 | And why? |
2085 | And will you not do your best,added Cyrus,"to bring me others too?" |
2085 | And would they not be safe enough,suggested Cyrus,"if this pass were held for you?" |
2085 | And yet,his father went on,"you are prepared to rely on what you do not know? |
2085 | And you will not be annoyed if I tell you the plain truth? |
2085 | And you will not turn aside as you did just now? |
2085 | But do you suppose,rejoined he,"that any phalanx so deep that the rear- ranks can not close with the enemy could do much either for friend or foe? |
2085 | But even so,said the Egyptians,"how can we act in honour if we save ourselves?" |
2085 | But have you a fortune on your side,asked Cyrus,"to match the bride''s?" |
2085 | But if he came back of his own accord, how would you treat him then? |
2085 | But surely,said Cyrus,"the best way to avoid copying the wrongdoer is to practise what is right?" |
2085 | But why should that be,said Cyrus,"seeing you are my kinsman?" |
2085 | But why? |
2085 | But would you wish your vengeance to do you harm instead of good? |
2085 | But, Cyrus,put in his mother,"why are you so unkind to Sacas?" |
2085 | But,went on Chrysantas,"how can they support each other at such a distance?" |
2085 | Can they have any value,asked Cyrus,"when they are detected doing wrong?" |
2085 | Can you tell us why? |
2085 | Certainly,he answered,"why should they say what is false?" |
2085 | Could I forget them? |
2085 | Do you not know,he said,"that my father put him to death?" |
2085 | Do you think,asked Cyrus,"that you will find the Assyrian already there?" |
2085 | Good,answered Cyrus,"but is not that already twice as much as you possess? |
2085 | How can that be? |
2085 | How can that be? |
2085 | How can you say that? 2085 How do you know that you do?" |
2085 | How many of those? |
2085 | Hunger now and thirst, for ye shall be filled--is that it? |
2085 | I see,said Aglaïtadas,"you are trying to get a laugh out of me, are you not?" |
2085 | I would kill him,he said:"why should I perish with a lie on my lips rather than speak the truth and die?" |
2085 | If you have an officer and he does wrong, do you suffer him to remain in office, or do you set up another in his stead? |
2085 | Is there any other reason,he asked,"for your present poverty, except your lack of fertile soil?" |
2085 | Nay,said Gadatas,"what could that be?" |
2085 | Of work as well? |
2085 | Or failed to do anything you ordered? |
2085 | Rich? |
2085 | Shall I really tell you? |
2085 | So be it then,answered Cyrus,"and to ransom your wife, how much money would you give?" |
2085 | So,said the father,"and you really mean, my son, that you are relying only on these supplies of Cyaxares for this campaign of yours?" |
2085 | Son of Armenia, we have heard your own judgment in this case, and now tell us, what ought we to do? |
2085 | Son of Armenia,said Cyrus,"would you take this land for grazing, if by paying a small sum to the Chaldaeans you got a far greater return yourself?" |
2085 | Tell me then,said the other,"have you ever called me and found I refused to come?" |
2085 | Tell me, Gobryas, would you be better pleased to give your daughter to one of our company to- day than the day when you met us first? |
2085 | Tell me, then, before we go further, did you see any wrong in this? 2085 Tell me,"said Cyrus,"were you the only man he treated thus, or did others suffer too?" |
2085 | Then I may kiss you? |
2085 | Then by all the gods,said Chrysantas,"tell me what sort of wife would do for me?" |
2085 | Then we must give battle? |
2085 | Then why were you taught to shoot? 2085 Then you would call sober- mindedness a condition of our nature, such as pain, not a matter of reason that can be learnt? |
2085 | Then, you maintain,said Cyrus,"that fear will subdue a man more than suffering?" |
2085 | Then,said Cyrus,"this plan of ours had better be kept secret, had it not?" |
2085 | True,answered Cyrus,"but how would it be if the pass were held for you?" |
2085 | Was there any talk about us down there? |
2085 | Well, have I ever been slow in coming? |
2085 | Well,said Cyrus,"are you not longing to go home yourself?" |
2085 | Well,said Gobryas,"am I also to tell the truth?" |
2085 | Well,said the father,"suppose the cost is more than Cyaxares can bear, or suppose he actually meant to deceive you, how would your soldiers fare?" |
2085 | What art is that? |
2085 | What else should I do,the old man answered,"but clap irons on him and set him to work in chains?" |
2085 | What happens then? |
2085 | What is it, my lord? |
2085 | What? 2085 Whatever I had to do, I always did it eagerly and with all my heart, did I not?" |
2085 | When? |
2085 | Who has won? |
2085 | Who was it then? |
2085 | Why is it, then, that to- day you have neither brought the tribute nor sent the troops, and are building forts? |
2085 | Why,answered they,"who so fit to persuade him as yourself?" |
2085 | Why? |
2085 | ''Now, my boy,''you said,''did this teacher you want to pay ever mention economy among the things a general ought to understand? |
2085 | ( But has Cyrus a touch of superhuman conscious rectitude?) |
2085 | : Are any of these tactical improvements by Xenophon himself? |
2085 | : What was Xenophon''s manner of composing? |
2085 | A slight( intentional?) |
2085 | A sort of Socrates- Lycurgus? |
2085 | Accordingly he began thus:"Tell me, grandfather,"said he,"if one of your slaves were to run away, and you caught him, what would you do to him?" |
2085 | After we have set aside the customary portion for the gods and a fair share for the army, shall we not give all the rest of the spoil to him? |
2085 | An army on forced march: are there any novelties here? |
2085 | And Cyrus answered,"What, are you my kinsman too?" |
2085 | And Cyrus said,"If you really do not want them yourself, grandfather, will you give them to me? |
2085 | And hundreds been deprived of their horses and their arms? |
2085 | And if any of them do hold firm, how can they fight at once against cavalry, infantry, and turrets of artillery? |
2085 | And is it not clear that the one who feels the pain of forfeiture the most will be the one most grateful for the granting of the gift? |
2085 | And later, when you returned to bring us aid, did we not see for ourselves how your friends poured after you? |
2085 | And now tell me, how far from here do the Assyrian headquarters lie, and their main body?" |
2085 | And now,"he added,"what need of further words? |
2085 | And tell me now,"he continued,"would you be more willing to advise me as a friend?" |
2085 | And tell me, do you think the god will still speak truth? |
2085 | And that not even without his own consent? |
2085 | And then he asked himself whether it would not be the best of plans to drive off booty from the country of the Medes? |
2085 | And they answered,"Is it possible that we can be saved and yet keep our reputation untarnished?" |
2085 | And we ought to have a large supply of straps-- I wonder what is not fastened by a strap to man or horse? |
2085 | And what do you take your own to be?" |
2085 | And what, think you, does my father feel at this moment? |
2085 | And where is coldness so ugly as between brothers? |
2085 | And where, I ask, shall we find a nobler opportunity than this, to show what we have learnt?" |
2085 | And why did you never meet the lion or the bear or the leopard in fair fight on equal terms, but were always trying to steal some advantage over them? |
2085 | And will you roam the world together, you and the lad who sits beside you, because there is none so fair as he?" |
2085 | Any touch of the sycophancy of the future in it? |
2085 | Are any of the names real or all invented to give verisimilitude? |
2085 | Are you not going to wait until we bring the hostages? |
2085 | Artabazus"the kinsman"named now for the first time, why? |
2085 | At this the men behind took up the shout till it rang through the field like a battle- cry:"Who follows? |
2085 | At which he turned right round and addressed the ranks:''Do n''t you hear the officer abusing you? |
2085 | But by what right can a man, who is bad himself, punish others for badness or stupidity? |
2085 | But he answered,"Is it not adornment enough for me to have adorned you? |
2085 | But he who was to take it said,"And how shall I find them, my lord?" |
2085 | But now,"he added,"have you any need of us at all? |
2085 | But the Medes and the Hyrcanians asked Cyrus:"How are we to distribute the spoil alone, without your men and yourself?" |
2085 | But what is the joke? |
2085 | But why did we teach you that? |
2085 | But why should you see it?" |
2085 | But you,"he added,"could not your fathers let you go out to hunt too?" |
2085 | But your mirth- makers, can you say they benefit the body or edify the soul? |
2085 | Can I never act for you, and you for me? |
2085 | Can he learn economy or statesmanship from a grin?" |
2085 | Can not one see the little boy doubling his little fists, a knife in his pocket, possibly a ball of string? |
2085 | Can not you see,"he cried,"how he has taught all the Medes to have less than himself? |
2085 | Can not you understand that the time it takes to wink is a whole eternity if it severs me from the beauty of your face?" |
2085 | Can smiles make a man a better master or a better citizen? |
2085 | Can these rival fastnesses of the Carians be identified? |
2085 | Can you deny that all that was craft and deceit and fraud and greed?" |
2085 | Could he not see the danger he had run? |
2085 | Curious Cyrus should be so little suspicious of Abradatas''death, is it not? |
2085 | Cyaxares means to kidnap them, does n''t he? |
2085 | Cyaxares was well pleased at his celerity, but troubled by the plainness of his attire, and said to him,"What is the meaning of this, Cyrus? |
2085 | Cyrus asked,"what was his object?" |
2085 | Cyrus caught sight of him:--"You have forgotten something? |
2085 | Cyrus plied his retinue with questions about the creatures they came across, which must he avoid and which might he hunt? |
2085 | Cyrus said,"how are they drawn up? |
2085 | Did H. have to drive back the great cavalry division of the enemy? |
2085 | Did I not come myself with the best and bravest I could bring?" |
2085 | Did I not pass sentence on myself, when I confessed I was too weak to consort with loveliness and remain unmoved? |
2085 | Did ever an undisciplined garrison save a friendly town? |
2085 | Did the modern rights of non- combatants so originate? |
2085 | Did you not charge him with unbridled insolence?" |
2085 | Do you forget that the needs of the morrow must be high, not to speak of the outlay for the day?" |
2085 | Do you not know,"he went on,"that I neither eat nor drink nor sleep with any more zest than I did when I was poor? |
2085 | Do you not see that all these soldiers of ours have been raised by us to the pitch of expectation? |
2085 | Do you not think so yourself? |
2085 | Do you remember the day you left us to go home to Persia? |
2085 | Do you think that, knowing myself, I can be happy now? |
2085 | Does any learned German know? |
2085 | Does he also desire his archic man to be got up in a manner befitting royalty at a certain date? |
2085 | Does he wish us to draw conclusions? |
2085 | Does it work? |
2085 | Fear of exile; autobiographical touch? |
2085 | For who but a brother can win glory from a brother''s greatness? |
2085 | Had that writer any echo of the names in his head? |
2085 | Has he any_ parti pris_, for or against? |
2085 | Has he one eye on the old insurrection against Persia,_ tempore_ Histiaeus, and another on the new arrangements,_ tempore_ Antalcidas? |
2085 | Has it any analogue nowadays anywhere? |
2085 | Has not the enemy''s camp been taken? |
2085 | Have not hundreds of your assailants fallen? |
2085 | Have you adopted the Hellenic fashion too? |
2085 | Here love of Spartan simplicity, and there of splendour and regality and monarchism? |
2085 | How are we to remember our valour and train our skill? |
2085 | How could she be enamoured at once of nobleness and baseness, or at once desire and not desire one deed and the same? |
2085 | How could you show yourself in this guise to the Indians? |
2085 | How did matters go between you and the oracle at Delphi? |
2085 | How far are we to be consciously self- regarding? |
2085 | How far was this a custom among Hellenes? |
2085 | How has he drawn you to himself?" |
2085 | How shall we dare to think well of ourselves again? |
2085 | How we felt there were certain things that the gods had permitted us to attain through learning and study and training? |
2085 | I cried out,''You, sir, what are you doing?'' |
2085 | I mean, did Xenophon find or hear any such story current? |
2085 | If not, what is the prototype? |
2085 | If we had but a single soul, how could she be at once evil and good? |
2085 | If you need money, who will provide the ways and means better than he who knows and can command all the resources of the country? |
2085 | Is Xenophon obscure? |
2085 | Is anything passing through the mind of Xenophon? |
2085 | Is cowardice, then, an adjunct of happiness? |
2085 | Is ever disaster nearer than when each solider thinks about his private safety only? |
2085 | Is it a sign of senility, or half- thought- out ideas, or what? |
2085 | Is it conceivable that Xenophon shrinks from using a proper name except when he has some feeling for the sound of the language? |
2085 | Is it dramatic to make Cyrus speak in this way as if he were lecturing a class on strategics? |
2085 | Is it likely that men who forsook the shelter of their own fortress will ever face us in fair field on level ground? |
2085 | Is it simply and solely Oriental, or general, and Hellenic also? |
2085 | Is it, as far as the army goes, novel in any respect, do you suppose, or only idealised Hellenic? |
2085 | Is not the spoiler spoiled? |
2085 | Is that a slip, or how explainable? |
2085 | Is there a touch of flunkeyism in this? |
2085 | Is this a carelessness, or what? |
2085 | Is this a novelty? |
2085 | Is this also Xenophon''s view? |
2085 | Is this by chance a situation in Elizabethan or other drama? |
2085 | Is this tale"historic"at all? |
2085 | Is this worthy of the archic man? |
2085 | It is a method, no doubt, of{ arkhe}, but has it any spiritual"last"in it? |
2085 | It is an historical difficulty which Xenophon has to get over or round, or is Xenophon himself in the same condemnation, so to speak? |
2085 | Nay, in peace as in war, can any good be gained if men will not obey their betters? |
2085 | Now what greater joy could there be than the good fortune which waits on us to- day? |
2085 | Of everything?" |
2085 | One day at a drinking- bout this monster had the youth seized and mutilated, and why? |
2085 | Only one thing puzzles me: how am I to show my joy at your success? |
2085 | Or does it correspond to a moral meeting of the waters in his own mind? |
2085 | Or else,"Gentlemen, can we invite each other to a more glorious feast than this? |
2085 | Or is Xenophon thinking of the Spartan Crypteia? |
2085 | Or is it simply because we have slaves and must punish them if they do wrong? |
2085 | Or is it that we seem to be happier to- day than heretofore? |
2085 | Or to hurl the javelin? |
2085 | Or to snare stags with cords and caltrops? |
2085 | Or to trap wild- boars? |
2085 | Or where is reverence so beautiful? |
2085 | Or whether we should hold that cowardice makes no difference in the end, seeing that we all must share alike?" |
2085 | Or who so safe from injury as the brother of the great? |
2085 | Or will they show themselves our equals in daily life and on the field of battle when the time comes to meet the foe?" |
2085 | Perhaps it was only a false alarm that troubled you, and the enemy are not advancing?" |
2085 | Say he may not sit upon the throne of Armenia, will he suffer from that as we shall suffer? |
2085 | Say he need not lose his children and his wife, will he love you for that more than one who knows he well deserved the loss? |
2085 | Say you let a man live who has never done you wrong, will he be grateful for the boon? |
2085 | Semi- historical? |
2085 | Shall I clap my hands and laugh, or what shall I do?" |
2085 | Shall we not gain ourselves by all they gain in valour?" |
2085 | Shall we say it is because we have won an empire? |
2085 | Should we not feel we had done you wrong, and taken advantage of you?" |
2085 | Spartan? |
2085 | The boy was taken aback by their profusion, and exclaimed,"Grandfather, do you give me all this for myself, to do what I like with it?" |
2085 | The lady of Susa, quasi- historic, or wholly imaginative, or mixed? |
2085 | The last remark is so silly(?) |
2085 | The mass of the enemy we should not think of pursuing; indeed, how could we overtake them? |
2085 | The passage in brackets might be a gloss, but is it? |
2085 | Thebans''? |
2085 | Then Astyages laughed and said,"Can you not see how prettily he mixes the cup, and with what a grace he serves the wine?" |
2085 | Then Cyrus asked,"Are his dwellings strongly fortified, or could they be attacked?" |
2085 | Then Cyrus called some of his squires and said:"Tell me, have any of you seen Abradatas? |
2085 | Then Cyrus, who was standing by, asked Cyaxares,"May I too say what is in my mind?" |
2085 | Then Tigranes answered,"You speak of friendship, but can you ever find elsewhere so great a friendship as you may find with us?" |
2085 | Then Tigranes turned to his wife and asked,"Did Cyrus seem so beautiful in your eyes?" |
2085 | There is something else you wanted to say?" |
2085 | They have lost their best and bravest, and will the cowards dare to give us battle?" |
2085 | Think you the honours of the dead would still abide, if the souls of the departed were altogether powerless? |
2085 | This slipshod style, how accounted for? |
2085 | To have it reported on all sides and wherever you wished to stand well that you were a man of wit?" |
2085 | To ride a- horseback is surely pleasanter than to trudge a- foot? |
2085 | Was Alexander''s army a highly- organised, spiritually and materially built- up, vitalised machine of this sort? |
2085 | Was I not obedient to your word? |
2085 | Was it conceivably a Persian custom too? |
2085 | Was it not rather a service and a kindly act?" |
2085 | Was not that enough in the case of the competitions?" |
2085 | Was there one of us, young or old, who did not follow you until Astyages turned us back? |
2085 | Were these tribal customs of the Persians, as doubtless of the Dorians, or is it all a Dorian idealisation? |
2085 | What advantage is it to me for my lands to be made broad if I myself am dishonoured? |
2085 | What bitter sight have you seen to make you feel such bitterness?" |
2085 | What city could be at rest, lawful, and orderly? |
2085 | What could be more blessed than to lie in the lap of Earth, the mother of all things beautiful, the nurse of all things good? |
2085 | What else do we need? |
2085 | What household could be safe? |
2085 | What is Xenophon''s intention with regard to it? |
2085 | What is more lawful than self- defence? |
2085 | What is nobler than to succour those we love? |
2085 | What is the end and aim of our training? |
2085 | What is the relation, if any, to it of Xenophon Ephesius, Antheia, and Abrocomas? |
2085 | What language are"Pantheia"and"Abradatas"? |
2085 | What light does Arrian, that younger Xenophon, throw upon it? |
2085 | What say you then? |
2085 | What ship sail home to her haven? |
2085 | What would you have said about us then? |
2085 | What would your empire profit you if you alone were left without hearth or home? |
2085 | When did Xenophon himself first learn to ride? |
2085 | When discipline was gone, did ever an army conquer? |
2085 | Which are the better at heavy physical tasks, boys or men? |
2085 | Who but he could stretch out an arm and take vengeance on his enemies when yet they were months and months away? |
2085 | Who can be honoured as a brother can through a brother''s power? |
2085 | Who could give you stouter help in return for your own support? |
2085 | Who do you think will win her? |
2085 | Who follows me? |
2085 | Who is this ancient teacher or who is his prototype if he is an ideal being? |
2085 | Who will lay the first Assyrian low?" |
2085 | Whose bad manners is Xenophon thinking of? |
2085 | Why does n''t he point out its hollowness also? |
2085 | Why is the Hyrcanian never named? |
2085 | Why not simply issue a general order that you intend to do this? |
2085 | Why plural,"the trenches"? |
2085 | Why should I try to speak? |
2085 | Why should you, any more than we, be found lacking in that power which takes the goods of weaklings and bestows them on the strong?" |
2085 | Why was she not present? |
2085 | Why? |
2085 | Will Cyrus take her to wife, his old playmate? |
2085 | Will it be with the new dynasty, or with the old familiar house? |
2085 | Will those who shrink from us before they put our prowess to the test ever withstand us now when we have overthrown and shattered them? |
2085 | Would a modern force storm a camp without taking rations? |
2085 | Would it not be a noble thing, a sign and symbol at the outset that we desire to outdo in well- doing those who do good to us?" |
2085 | Xenophon''s dramatic form is shown in the intellectual and emotional side of his characters, rather than by the diction in their mouths, is it not? |
2085 | Xenophon''s own father, is he there? |
2085 | [ 10]"Answer then,"said Cyrus,"did you once make war upon Astyages, my mother''s father, and his Medes?" |
2085 | [ 10]"How far is your army from here?" |
2085 | [ 10]"Then why, Cyrus, why, in heaven''s name, have you singled out Chrysantas for a more honourable seat than me?" |
2085 | [ 10]"You want to know where you could find resources of your own?" |
2085 | [ 11] At that one of his officers cried,"Why not pursue at once, if such triumphs are before us?" |
2085 | [ 11] Maybe; but are boys more capable of learning what they are taught then grown men? |
2085 | [ 11]"And what are they doing now?" |
2085 | [ 11]"Well, but, boy,"said Astyages,"does your father never lose his head when he drinks?" |
2085 | [ 12]"Then,"said Cyrus,"if love be voluntary, why can not a man cease to love when he wishes? |
2085 | [ 12]"Then,"said they,"why not go and lay the matter before Cyaxares?" |
2085 | [ 12]"Well, my son,"the father resumed,"and do you remember certain other points which we agreed must never be overlooked?" |
2085 | [ 12]"Well,"said Cyrus,"who will speak to Astyages for us?" |
2085 | [ 13] Then he bade the Hyrcanians lead the way, but they exclaimed,"What? |
2085 | [ 13] Why, then, did I ask Cyaxares to put the question to debate? |
2085 | [ 14] But if he met soldiers who had fought for him before, he only said,"To you, gentlemen, what need I say? |
2085 | [ 14] How did our friends here learn their endurance? |
2085 | [ 14]"And is not the shame justified?" |
2085 | [ 15] And Cyrus said,"Hystaspas, did you hear the saying of Gobryas?" |
2085 | [ 15] Where is the warrior, stout of heart and strong of will, who can wage war with cold and hunger? |
2085 | [ 16] Then said his mother,"But justice and righteousness, my son, how can you learn them here when your teachers are at home?" |
2085 | [ 17] How can we differ from one another with these arms? |
2085 | [ 18] But Gobryas interposed,"And if one of us wants to give his daughter in marriage, to whom should he apply?" |
2085 | [ 18]"Well, after the enemy had come, and we had to fight the matter out, did you ever see me shrink from toil or try to escape from danger?" |
2085 | [ 19] If this were what you had heard of the enemy, I as you, once again, you who are now so fearful what would you have done? |
2085 | [ 19]"And then,"continued Cyrus,"to rouse enthusiasm in the men, there can be nothing, I take it, like the power of kindling hope?" |
2085 | [ 19]"But what defeat,"said Cyrus,"can you find in your father''s case to make you so sure that he has come to a sober mind?" |
2085 | [ 19]"But why,"asked Chrysantas,"why discuss the point? |
2085 | [ 20]"And the Egyptians?" |
2085 | [ 20]"At close quarters?" |
2085 | [ 20]"So you think,"said Cyrus,"that merely to learn another is stronger than himself is defeat enough to bring a man to his senses?" |
2085 | [ 21] Can we deserve blame for doing him a service? |
2085 | [ 22] Now it chanced that another brigadier was among the guests, and he spoke up and said to Cyrus:"But will you never ask my men to dinner too? |
2085 | [ 22]"And now,"said Chrysantas,"in heaven''s name, tell us the bride for a flat king?" |
2085 | [ 22]"Then,"said the chieftain,"as soon as the Cadousians arrive and the Sakians and my countrymen, we must, must we not? |
2085 | [ 22]"You would have me understand,"said Cyrus,"that the best way to secure obedience is to be thought wiser than those we rule?" |
2085 | [ 23] It was thus we started, and after we had gone, was there, I ask you, a single deed of mine that was not done in the light of day? |
2085 | [ 23]"But,"said Cyrus,"how can a man really and truly attain to the wisdom that will serve his turn?" |
2085 | [ 23]"Do you mean to tell me,"said Cyrus,"that this is a regular rule of yours?" |
2085 | [ 23]"Do you suppose then,"asked Tigranes,"that anything can enslave a man more utterly than fear? |
2085 | [ 25] Thereupon Cyrus put his questions:"Does the king suppose that you alone are his enemies, or do you know of others who hate him too?" |
2085 | [ 26] Then Cyrus said:"Why should they not take service with me? |
2085 | [ 26]"Then you think,"said Cyrus,"that they would be glad to attack him in our company?" |
2085 | [ 27] At that Cyrus turned to Gobryas:"And what of this lad who is now on the throne? |
2085 | [ 27] Cyrus said,"If you go now, when will you reach home?" |
2085 | [ 27]"But how can a man make sure that he will gain?" |
2085 | [ 28] Then the Mede, emboldened by the kiss, took heart and said,"So in Persia it is really the custom for relatives to kiss?" |
2085 | [ 28]"And I,"said Cyrus,"when could I be there with my army?" |
2085 | [ 28]"And who,"said Cyrus,"who was it that lived that life of happiness?" |
2085 | [ 28]"But how comes it,"said his son,"that the lessons you taught us in boyhood and youth were exactly opposed to what you teach me now?" |
2085 | [ 28]"Many others,"said Gobryas,"but some of them were weak, and why should I weary you with the insults they endured? |
2085 | [ 29] Then the Sakian opened his eyes and asked whom he had hit? |
2085 | [ 29]"But to- day, and now, can you find another man in the world whom you could benefit as you can benefit my father? |
2085 | [ 29]"Well,"rejoined Cyrus,"I take it, you believe he would welcome us, if he thought we came to help him?" |
2085 | [ 2] I would have you ask yourselves, was ever a hostile city captured by an undisciplined force? |
2085 | [ 30]"And how is it,"asked the other,"that he does not even turn his head?" |
2085 | [ 30]"And where is the difficulty in that?" |
2085 | [ 31]"And so,"said another,"for all these virtues you give him, I take it, the kiss of kinship?" |
2085 | [ 33] And Cyrus said,"Tell me then, and tell me true: how great is your power and your wealth?" |
2085 | [ 33] Whereas, if it be thought that we left Gadatas in the lurch, how in heaven''s name shall we persuade another to show us any kindness? |
2085 | [ 34] Are these, I ask you, Cyrus, are these the deeds of a benefactor? |
2085 | [ 35] I seem to hear some one say, why did you not think of this before you revolted? |
2085 | [ 36] And you, Tigranes,"said he,"at what price would you redeem your bride?" |
2085 | [ 36]"But how,"asked Cyrus,"can I catch him in all these blunders?" |
2085 | [ 37] Then Cyrus asked,"And are these the only cases where one can apply the great principle of greed, or are there others?" |
2085 | [ 38] When Gadatas heard that, he breathed again, and he said:"Could I really be in time to make my preparations and be back before you leave? |
2085 | [ 3] And we, to what do we owe our triumph, if not to our obedience? |
2085 | [ 3] And when he saw them, he gazed in wonder and said:"Dear wife, and did you destroy your own jewels to make this armour for me?" |
2085 | [ 40] But Pheraulas answered:"Do you really think, my friend, that my joy in life has grown with the growth of my wealth? |
2085 | [ 41]"Then you can really bring yourself to leave the beautiful Pantheia?" |
2085 | [ 43] And Cyrus laughed and said,"What will you take to let us tell your wife that you have become a baggage- bearer?" |
2085 | [ 43]"And if we become your friends,"said they,"how will you treat us?" |
2085 | [ 44] But Cyrus met question by question:"Do you really think, gentlemen, that we must all preside over every detail, each and all of us together? |
2085 | [ 47] How was he to guard against it? |
2085 | [ 49] Then Chrysantas turned to Cyrus:"What if you also were to summon our men, while there is yet time, and inspire them with your words?" |
2085 | [ 4] Then one of them asked him,"And you, O Cyrus, when will you adorn yourself?" |
2085 | [ 4] To that Araspas replied,"Have you seen the lady whom you bid me guard?" |
2085 | [ 4]"How do you know?" |
2085 | [ 51]"But,"replied Chrysantas,"could you not make the brave men braver still, and the good better?" |
2085 | [ 5]"And do you remember,"asked his father,"certain other conclusions on which we were agreed? |
2085 | [ 5]"Do you think,"said Cyrus,"we should overtake the Assyrians before they reach their fortresses? |
2085 | [ 5]"What?" |
2085 | [ 6] Cyrus sent again and asked,"Why do you sit there, then, and refuse to come down?" |
2085 | [ 7]"Ah,"said Cyaxares,"and perhaps you feel that the force you are bringing from Persia is very small?" |
2085 | [ 7]"Can you give us any guarantee,"said Cyrus,"that what you say is true?" |
2085 | [ 7]"Why are they doing that?" |
2085 | [ 85] What, then, would I have you do? |
2085 | [ 8] Of course the captain called them back, and they began to grumble and growl:''Which of the two are we to obey? |
2085 | [ 8] Then Chrysantas spoke:"Does not the river flow through the middle of the city, and it is not at least a quarter of a mile in width?" |
2085 | [ 8]"Well,"said Chrysantas,"do you think the movement wise?" |
2085 | [ 9] Presently as the wine went round and round, Hystaspas turned to Cyrus and said:"Would you be angry, Cyrus, if I asked something I long to know?" |
2085 | [ 9]"But,"said the other,"can you see anything else to be done?" |
2085 | _ quasi_-historical? |
2085 | cried Cyrus,"you dared to let that be known whether I wished it or not?" |
2085 | cried others,"what do you mean? |
2085 | cried the Sakian,"surely, when it is all safe, to see so much of your own must make you much happier than me?" |
2085 | said Cyrus,"what fault did he find in him?" |
2085 | said Cyrus,"who is he?" |
2085 | said Cyrus;"do you think it will be possible for the soldiers to diet and train themselves?" |
2085 | said he,"or at long range?" |
2085 | said the other,"why?" |
2085 | semi- historical? |
2085 | the boy asked,"those who are riding over there?" |
2085 | wrong and there is no bathos? |
2085 | wrong? |
36039 | A lie, is it? 36039 All very well,"grumbled the Tortoise,"but how am I to get there? |
36039 | And how did you manage that? |
36039 | And what do you want? |
36039 | And who ever heard, my lord, of a rat eating a plough? |
36039 | And why do you face the sun? |
36039 | And why do you keep your mouth open? |
36039 | Are you such a fool as to think that any creature keeps its heart in a tree? 36039 But how can I get across a wide river like this?" |
36039 | But, sir, if you eat me now, you''ll be hungry to- morrow, wo n''t you? |
36039 | Ca n''t you see I''m waiting? |
36039 | Ca n''t you see him, lying up in the sky? |
36039 | Can you give me a night''s shelter? |
36039 | Crane dear,said he,"are n''t you going to put me in the lake?" |
36039 | Do you see that cluster of round things up in the tree there, on the further bank? 36039 Do you think I ca n''t catch you anywhere?" |
36039 | How did you get here? |
36039 | How on earth did you do that? |
36039 | I see you have eaten all the fruit on these trees; but why do n''t you try the trees on the other side of the river? 36039 Now then, who''s next?" |
36039 | Now, do we look like robbers? |
36039 | Oh dear, oh dear, what in the world are you doing? 36039 Oh dear, oh dear,"he said,"what is to be done? |
36039 | Oh,said he,"where is your heart, then?" |
36039 | Up in the air? |
36039 | Was the Great Yellow King so kind to you as all that? 36039 Well, what are we to do?" |
36039 | Well, what is it then? |
36039 | Well, what is it? |
36039 | What are you doing, clumsy? |
36039 | What do you mean by that? |
36039 | What do you mean? |
36039 | What do you mean? |
36039 | What do you say to selling me that diamond? |
36039 | What does he want? |
36039 | What is that? |
36039 | What is the matter? |
36039 | What is this? |
36039 | What is your complaint? |
36039 | What is your name, sir? |
36039 | What on earth do you mean? |
36039 | What proverb do you mean? |
36039 | What will you give me for it? |
36039 | What will you give me for it? |
36039 | What''s that, Quailie? |
36039 | What''s the matter? |
36039 | Where is he? |
36039 | Where is my boy? |
36039 | Where is the Lion you have killed? |
36039 | Who ever heard of a hawk carrying off a boy? |
36039 | Who is this? |
36039 | Why do you stand on one leg? |
36039 | Why not? 36039 Why, how are you going to carry me?" |
36039 | Why, what on earth is the matter? |
36039 | Why, wife,said he,"what are you crying about?" |
36039 | Your boy? 36039 And how rich is he? |
36039 | Are n''t you afraid? |
36039 | As he turned the diamond about in his hand and saw it flash, he suddenly thought to himself,"What if the pig should wake? |
36039 | But for a long time Tweaky would say nothing but the same words over and over again,"Where''s your feathers, Tell- tale tit?" |
36039 | But who would take care of the park and garden? |
36039 | He suggested that perhaps one of them was a better King than the other; what were his master''s virtues, would the other coachman kindly tell him? |
36039 | How could a pig fly through the air? |
36039 | How old is your King?" |
36039 | If I were only up in that tree, now----"But what on earth had happened? |
36039 | Kill a Lion? |
36039 | My heart, I think you said? |
36039 | Still, who knows what they say behind my back? |
36039 | Suppose I keep a holy fast to- day? |
36039 | Suppose I try to see?" |
36039 | The Tortoise on hearing this was so angry that he forgot all about his danger, and opened his mouth to cry out:"What''s that to you? |
36039 | The horse fluttered down, and hovered just above them, crying out, in a human voice:"Who wants to go home? |
36039 | Then her smile changed, and she sneered,"So Beaky is going to tell, is he? |
36039 | They said"How do you do?" |
36039 | This was very generous, was n''t it? |
36039 | Was not that a mean trick to serve a friend? |
36039 | What can I do for you? |
36039 | What could poor Quailie do now? |
36039 | What was he to do? |
36039 | What were they to do? |
36039 | Where''s your feathers, Tell- tale tit? |
36039 | Where''s your feathers, Tell- tale tit?" |
36039 | Where''s your feathers, Tell- tale tit?" |
36039 | Why did he keep on trying to catch them, then? |
36039 | Why did not the Governor come to see me instead, as usual-- aw?" |
36039 | Will you give me a kiss?" |
36039 | Will you marry me? |
36039 | Will you water my garden while I am away?" |
36039 | Wisdom has the best of it: Where''s your feathers, Tell- tale tit?" |
36039 | and worships the sun-- eh? |
36039 | do you see that fellow? |
36039 | do you suppose I want bruised old hacks like that? |
36039 | said the Crane,"do you suppose I was born to carry crabs about? |
36039 | who wants to go home? |
36039 | who wants to go home?" |
36767 | Are all the fine personalities dead? |
36767 | Are there no feet it is an honor to sit at, no heads it is a privilege to anoint, no hands it is a dignity to kiss? |
36767 | Are there no leaders worth following, no causes worth espousing? |
36767 | Are there none to love with enthusiastic ardor? |
36767 | At what moment was Israel fully persuaded of its providential destiny? |
36767 | But do we accept Plato''s portrait of Socrates, as a piece done to the life? |
36767 | But why did they believe him? |
36767 | But why was it not dispelled? |
36767 | Could the Jewish Messiah attribute to Samaritans a grace that was the highest adornment of faithful Jews? |
36767 | Do no individuals whatever loom up? |
36767 | How do we know that Jesus was such a person? |
36767 | How would the dead know that the time of resurrection had arrived? |
36767 | If a great deal, why not altogether? |
36767 | If the figure is glorified a little, why not a great deal? |
36767 | In truth, was such a person as Jesus is presumed to have been, necessary to account for the existence of the religion afterwards called Christian? |
36767 | In what order? |
36767 | Is Jesus the central figure in the Nicene, or the Athanasian creed? |
36767 | Is he the God of Calvin, or of Luther, of Augustine, even of Borromeo, or Fénélon? |
36767 | Is it not a weakness to love dreams better than realities? |
36767 | Is it true that it has worshipped Jesus? |
36767 | The Lord would come; of that there could be no doubt; the dead would rise, that was certain; but in what form? |
36767 | The bitter cry of the crucified as he hung on the cross,"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
36767 | The question"What think ye of the Christ?" |
36767 | Where would the meeting take place? |
36767 | Who have made us think so, if not they by whom all amiable and adorable attributes have been claimed before? |
36767 | Who shall decide how much? |
36767 | Whose fault can this be, if not theirs who challenged the adoration of men and women and pronounced it consecrated because rendered to him for one? |
36767 | Why did they believe, in the face of the crushing demonstration of the cross? |
36767 | Why did they believe, when month after month, year after year, went by and still he did not return? |
36767 | Why not be content with the facts, and the more content, because the fancies are gone that disguised them? |
36767 | Would the living have precedence of them? |
36767 | can his picture be accepted as a portrait? |
36767 | meaning"What think ye of Jesus?" |
36568 | And what will the people be taught in these schools? |
36568 | And its last word? |
36568 | And the name of the Roman civilization? |
36568 | And the proof? |
36568 | But if no person has seen it, how is it that men have come to believe in its existence? |
36568 | But suppose it were definitely developed, what could it give us? |
36568 | But, if this social power exists, why has it not sufficed hitherto to moralize, to humanize men? |
36568 | But, then, what is their God? |
36568 | Could they have received in the distribution a particle at once divine and stupid? |
36568 | Do you know what took place in the great Social Revolution of 1789- 1793? |
36568 | Do you wish to render its authority and influence beneficent and human? |
36568 | Does it follow that I reject all authority? |
36568 | GOD AND THE STATE Who are right, the idealists or the materialists? |
36568 | How do they get over this? |
36568 | How is this sanction manifested? |
36568 | How solve this antinomy? |
36568 | In France, Chateaubriand, Lamartine, and-- shall I say it? |
36568 | In the name of the bourgeois interest bluntly confessed? |
36568 | In the name of what? |
36568 | Is it necessary to point out to what extent and in what manner religions debase and corrupt the people? |
36568 | Is it not plain that all these governments are systematic poisoners, interested stupefiers of the masses? |
36568 | Is not the number of men who find supreme enjoyment in sacrifice and devotion exceedingly limited? |
36568 | May we not suppose that all men are equally inspired by God? |
36568 | Must it be concluded that this exploitation and this oppression are necessities absolutely inherent in the very existence of human society? |
36568 | Must we, then, eliminate from society all instruction and abolish all schools? |
36568 | Now, where find it if not in religion, that good protectress of all the well- fed and the useful consoler of the hungry? |
36568 | On the contrary, can we not foresee in these new masters the same follies and the same crimes found in those of former days and of the present time? |
36568 | Shall we blame the science of history? |
36568 | To- day even, what is it that kills, what is it that crushes brutally, materially, in all European countries, liberty and humanity? |
36568 | Unless we suppose that the various divine particles have been irregularly distributed, how is this difference to be explained? |
36568 | Was not everybody mistaken? |
36568 | What does it care for the particular conditions and chance fate of Peter or James? |
36568 | What has been and still is the principal object of all her contests with the sovereigns of Europe? |
36568 | What is authority? |
36568 | What is more ancient and more universal than slavery? |
36568 | What matters it? |
36568 | Whence, then, could we derive the power and the wish to rebel against them? |
36568 | Which is the most materialistic, the most natural, in its point of departure, and the most humanly ideal in its results? |
36568 | Which? |
36568 | Who are the real idealists-- the idealists not of abstraction, but of life, not of heaven, but of earth-- and who are the materialists? |
36568 | Why not? |
36568 | Why? |
36568 | [ 7] But until the masses shall have reached this degree of instruction, will it be necessary to leave them to the government of scientific men? |
20015 | Is something worrying you? |
20015 | ''"Are you not cold?" |
20015 | ''"As long as that?" |
20015 | ''"Do you want to kill yourself?" |
20015 | ''"Look,"she said, pointing to the acacias,"would you not say they were in flower?" |
20015 | ''"Out of spirits? |
20015 | ''"What can that bell be ringing for?" |
20015 | ''"Why?" |
20015 | ''A month, at the very least, eh, Don Manuel? |
20015 | ''About Giorgio perhaps?'' |
20015 | ''Ah, do you remember, in London, how he used to make tea after the poetical method of the Great Emperor?'' |
20015 | ''Ah, then you have set up a home here?'' |
20015 | ''Ah, when?'' |
20015 | ''Ah, why did he break the spell we ourselves had woven? |
20015 | ''All will be over? |
20015 | ''Am I then so deeply in love with her already?'' |
20015 | ''An Incognita?'' |
20015 | ''And Francesca?'' |
20015 | ''And did you accept it?'' |
20015 | ''And how perfectly aghast he looked when he saw who it was? |
20015 | ''And if it is not fine?'' |
20015 | ''And loved much?'' |
20015 | ''And me?'' |
20015 | ''And now I ask myself-- What do I really want? |
20015 | ''And shall I not see you before Saturday evening?'' |
20015 | ''And the words you said to me?'' |
20015 | ''And what do you suppose is going to become of me now?'' |
20015 | ''And what of Francesca?'' |
20015 | ''And where shall I find Clara Green?'' |
20015 | ''And where were you, may I ask?'' |
20015 | ''And who else?'' |
20015 | ''And you?'' |
20015 | ''And your incognita?'' |
20015 | ''Are matters going on favourably?'' |
20015 | ''Are you going to stay long in Rome?'' |
20015 | ''Are you going to the French Embassy to- morrow evening?'' |
20015 | ''Are you not coming on to Laura Miano''s?'' |
20015 | ''Are you?'' |
20015 | ''At last, curiosity got the better of me and I said--"Well-- what is it?" |
20015 | ''At the Palazzo Barberini perhaps?'' |
20015 | ''But is she English?'' |
20015 | ''But what if my intellect has become decadent?--if my hand has lost its cunning? |
20015 | ''But what is he really thinking of? |
20015 | ''But why did she go away sooner than usual this year?'' |
20015 | ''But why did she place each thing upon the table instead of passing it to him?'' |
20015 | ''But why had she ever consented to come? |
20015 | ''But why let my sad thoughts get the upper hand over me again? |
20015 | ''Can it be that I love her?'' |
20015 | ''Can you forgive me?'' |
20015 | ''Can you love me?'' |
20015 | ''Could you bear,''she cried turning at bay at last, indignant at his violence,''could you bear to share me with another?'' |
20015 | ''Dead? |
20015 | ''Did Delfina tell you of our meeting this morning in the Piazza di Spagna?'' |
20015 | ''Did he understand, I wonder, how much of myself, of my thoughts and griefs found voice in the music of others? |
20015 | ''Did you not notice him before?'' |
20015 | ''Did you see Madame de Cahen?'' |
20015 | ''Do I love her? |
20015 | ''Do n''t you think so?'' |
20015 | ''Do you hear it beat?'' |
20015 | ''Do you hear that?'' |
20015 | ''Do you hear, Delfina? |
20015 | ''Do you know it?'' |
20015 | ''Do you know this man-- this Ferrès?'' |
20015 | ''Do you remember Vicomile? |
20015 | ''Do you remember at school,''broke in Francesca,''how we were all wild to comb your hair? |
20015 | ''Do you remember,''Elena went on,''do you remember the Brother who came to open the gates for us when we rang the bell?'' |
20015 | ''Do you remember-- do you remember?'' |
20015 | ''Do you remember?'' |
20015 | ''Do you smell that?'' |
20015 | ''Do you understand?'' |
20015 | ''Does anybody know anything about it yet?'' |
20015 | ''Does she love me, or does she not?'' |
20015 | ''Does she receive?'' |
20015 | ''Does the Signor Conte wish for anything in particular?'' |
20015 | ''Don Manuel Ferrès, the Minister for Guatemala----''''Well?'' |
20015 | ''Far, far away----''''Nonsense-- tell me now,--home?'' |
20015 | ''From whom?'' |
20015 | ''Going already?'' |
20015 | ''Going so soon?'' |
20015 | ''Going to call on the Scerni?'' |
20015 | ''Has she any special reason for recommending this to me?'' |
20015 | ''Have you forgotten anything?'' |
20015 | ''Have you heard what happened last night?'' |
20015 | ''He asked me--"Would it tire you too much to come on horseback? |
20015 | ''He spoke a second time, at greater length, close to my side while I walked on under the trees as in a dream.--Under the trees was it? |
20015 | ''How is the betting on Mallecho?'' |
20015 | ''How much does he want for it?'' |
20015 | ''How shall I receive her-- what shall I say?'' |
20015 | ''How was that?'' |
20015 | ''I am going, and what will he do when I am far away? |
20015 | ''I am so thirsty-- where can we get some water?'' |
20015 | ''I ask myself-- am I sincere in my pain and regret at this unexpected revelation? |
20015 | ''I really can not say-- and you?'' |
20015 | ''I say,''said Grimiti,''do you know that the fair Clara Green is in Rome? |
20015 | ''I will not-- do you hear?'' |
20015 | ''Indeed, why?'' |
20015 | ''Is it far now?'' |
20015 | ''Is it still raining? |
20015 | ''Is it true? |
20015 | ''Is she an American?'' |
20015 | ''Is she here?'' |
20015 | ''Is that right now?'' |
20015 | ''It seems to me, my dear fellow,''returned Sperelli unmoved''that you are a little out of temper----''''And if I am?'' |
20015 | ''Just now, do you mean?'' |
20015 | ''Let us wait for Delfina,''she said,''and then, what do you say to our going as far as the gate of the Cybele? |
20015 | ''May I remind the Signor Conte that it is three o''clock?'' |
20015 | ''No, leave it there-- why should you take it away?'' |
20015 | ''No, what?'' |
20015 | ''Nothing? |
20015 | ''Now there you have seen it, will you come there sometimes-- in spirit?'' |
20015 | ''Of course you are only joking, Elena?'' |
20015 | ''Oh no, she is incredibly lazy-- ah, there is Delfina, do you see her?'' |
20015 | ''Pinturicchio,''asked Giulia turning to Barbarisi;''who''s that?'' |
20015 | ''Presently she asked--"How long will you be with your mother?" |
20015 | ''Ready?'' |
20015 | ''Shall I see you down to the street? |
20015 | ''Shall we dance?'' |
20015 | ''Shall we go?'' |
20015 | ''Shall we see the Princess Issé this evening?'' |
20015 | ''Tell me, Ugenta, has she been received at court yet?'' |
20015 | ''The Signor Conte is cold?'' |
20015 | ''The footman bent down from the box and asked in a low voice--"Who is it?" |
20015 | ''The season is in full swing, I suppose?'' |
20015 | ''Then I_ do_ love her still?'' |
20015 | ''Then it is all over between you-- quite over?'' |
20015 | ''Then when may I see you?'' |
20015 | ''Then why did you come?'' |
20015 | ''Then, you will design those clasps for me?'' |
20015 | ''These verses are a spiritual record, are they not?'' |
20015 | ''To whom are you bowing?'' |
20015 | ''To you-- to- day?'' |
20015 | ''To- morrow?'' |
20015 | ''To- morrow?'' |
20015 | ''Very good-- at what hour?'' |
20015 | ''Was Francesca up when you came out?'' |
20015 | ''Was it really typhus?'' |
20015 | ''Well, I was thinking of another introduction I gave you about two years ago, which I accompanied by a delightful prophecy-- you remember?'' |
20015 | ''Well, Ugenta, what have you bought?'' |
20015 | ''Well, well-- so it is to come off to- morrow, is it?'' |
20015 | ''Well?'' |
20015 | ''Well?'' |
20015 | ''Well?'' |
20015 | ''Well?'' |
20015 | ''Well?'' |
20015 | ''Well?'' |
20015 | ''What ails you?'' |
20015 | ''What are you going to do this evening?'' |
20015 | ''What are you laughing at?'' |
20015 | ''What are you looking at?'' |
20015 | ''What are you thinking about?'' |
20015 | ''What are you thinking about?'' |
20015 | ''What are you thinking of at this moment?'' |
20015 | ''What comparison?'' |
20015 | ''What could be her secret reasons for this abrupt departure?'' |
20015 | ''What did you do yesterday evening?'' |
20015 | ''What did you say?'' |
20015 | ''What do I care for your sisterly affection? |
20015 | ''What do you know of all that has occurred, or of what I have had to go through?--What do you know?'' |
20015 | ''What does it tell you?'' |
20015 | ''What does it tell you?'' |
20015 | ''What does she think of me? |
20015 | ''What have you to fear? |
20015 | ''What if I were killed, or received such a wound as to maim me for life?'' |
20015 | ''What if she did not come at all?'' |
20015 | ''What if she does not come?'' |
20015 | ''What is coming next?'' |
20015 | ''What is it, Elena-- tell me-- What is it?'' |
20015 | ''What is the matter?'' |
20015 | ''What is the matter?'' |
20015 | ''What is the matter?'' |
20015 | ''What is to be done? |
20015 | ''What memories?'' |
20015 | ''What shall I do-- what shall I say when she comes?'' |
20015 | ''What time is it?'' |
20015 | ''What were you doing in there?'' |
20015 | ''What were you thinking about me?'' |
20015 | ''What will you give me if I do?'' |
20015 | ''What will you give me,''continued Andrea,''if I extract from the holy sermon a voluptuous motto to fit you?'' |
20015 | ''What, have you forgotten the famous May Bazaar of 1884?'' |
20015 | ''What? |
20015 | ''What?'' |
20015 | ''What?'' |
20015 | ''What?'' |
20015 | ''When is the goblet coming on?'' |
20015 | ''When shall I see you again?'' |
20015 | ''When shall I see you again?'' |
20015 | ''When we came in sight of the pine- wood, he suddenly said to me:"Shall we ride through it?" |
20015 | ''When will you come?'' |
20015 | ''When, in the avenue, we passed again by the fountain where he first spoke to me, did I not call him_ Life of my life_? |
20015 | ''Where are you bound for?'' |
20015 | ''Where shall I take you?'' |
20015 | ''Where would you put these two chests? |
20015 | ''Which of the saints are already in Rome?'' |
20015 | ''Which of them is the Princess of Ferentino?'' |
20015 | ''Which way are you going?'' |
20015 | ''Who has been writing verses here.--You?'' |
20015 | ''Who is playing the piano downstairs, I wonder? |
20015 | ''Who would have thought that we should ever be together again, Andrew?'' |
20015 | ''Whom else have you got for seconds?'' |
20015 | ''Whom should I love?--Art?--a woman?--what woman?'' |
20015 | ''Why did I consent-- why did I follow him? |
20015 | ''Why did you not come to Cento Celli this morning?'' |
20015 | ''Why did you not come to Nini Santamarta''s to- day? |
20015 | ''Why do you ask me that?'' |
20015 | ''Why do you laugh?'' |
20015 | ''Why do you shut your eyes?'' |
20015 | ''Why lucky?'' |
20015 | ''Why not, Maria?'' |
20015 | ''Why perhaps?'' |
20015 | ''Why should I be so alert, so watchful, so curious? |
20015 | ''Why so late?'' |
20015 | ''Why this unreasoning terror? |
20015 | ''Why, what has become of you this evening? |
20015 | ''Why, what is the matter?'' |
20015 | ''Why?'' |
20015 | ''Why?'' |
20015 | ''Will he understand me still? |
20015 | ''Will the Signor Conte go to bed at once?'' |
20015 | ''Will you come into the drawing- room?'' |
20015 | ''Will you excuse me then if I leave you alone for a moment? |
20015 | ''Will you excuse me, Princess, I have a consultation at two with the veterinary surgeons at my stables?'' |
20015 | ''Will you give them to me that I may not forget them?'' |
20015 | ''Will you not sit down?'' |
20015 | ''Will you promise me,''Andrea said to Donna Maria, as they began to ascend the steps--''will you promise me not to go to the Villa Medici without me? |
20015 | ''Will you take my arm?'' |
20015 | ''With whom do you lunch?'' |
20015 | ''With whom?'' |
20015 | ''With you-- have you not observed it yet?'' |
20015 | ''Wo n''t you take off your coat?'' |
20015 | ''Yes,''she answered simply,''do you like it?'' |
20015 | ''You are not dancing, Sperelli?'' |
20015 | ''You are not leaving Rome again so soon, I hope?'' |
20015 | ''You do n''t believe me?'' |
20015 | ''You fear?'' |
20015 | ''You hear that?'' |
20015 | ''You know?'' |
20015 | ''You remember,''she said,''that morning at Schifanoja when I threw a handful of leaves down to you from the higher terrace? |
20015 | ''You remember? |
20015 | ''You remember? |
20015 | ''You sing?'' |
20015 | ''You too-- you think we shall never meet again?'' |
20015 | ''You will not wait till the end?'' |
20015 | ''_ A stranger here_?'' |
20015 | ''_ Che pensi?_''she asked, pronouncing the Italian words with a certain hesitation which was very taking. |
20015 | ''_ October 8th._--Did I sleep last night-- did I wake? |
20015 | ''_ September 26th._--Was it true? |
20015 | ''_ September 29th._--Why did he speak? |
20015 | ''_ Tibi, Hippolyta!_ Then you will come? |
20015 | --would''st thou divinely Love?'' |
20015 | A former lover? |
20015 | A little while afterwards there came a gentle knock at the door and Francesca''s voice asking--''May I come in?'' |
20015 | After an interval of silence, she began again--''Who was that Elena?'' |
20015 | And did you not sell cigarettes that you lighted up first yourself for a louis?'' |
20015 | And he received comfort and encouragement; for who ever confided his pain, his yearnings or his dreams to her in vain? |
20015 | And how are you? |
20015 | And if she comes alone, shall I tell her that I love her?'' |
20015 | And if so, in what manner? |
20015 | And supposing she really did not? |
20015 | And what does she think? |
20015 | And why let memory cause me pain? |
20015 | And why, when I repeat them to myself, does a wave of ineffable rapture sweep over my soul? |
20015 | And why--_A stranger_? |
20015 | Andrea Sperelli turned to Elena with as constrained smile--''With your human drinking- cup-- how much did you get?'' |
20015 | Are they playing still? |
20015 | As he entered the enclosure, Andrea Sperelli thought to himself--''Fortune is with me to- day, but how will it be to- morrow?'' |
20015 | As she entered her carriage after the Princess, she turned to him again--''Won''t you come too? |
20015 | As the subtle perfume of the violets reached him, he murmured--''These are not those of last night, are they?'' |
20015 | As they moved away, he suddenly stopped short, and looking back towards the tower,''How did you manage to get those roses?'' |
20015 | As you know all about it, tell me-- what flowers does she like best?'' |
20015 | At the Casa Zuccari again? |
20015 | At this moment, this very moment, was not the child stealing something from him? |
20015 | Bending towards his companion, Andrea whispered softly:''What are you thinking about?'' |
20015 | But the roses, the beautiful roses, were they, too, faithless to their promise? |
20015 | But what did it matter to him one way or another? |
20015 | But why renew a pursuit so useless and so perilous? |
20015 | But you were not there-- who told you? |
20015 | Can he fathom the deep anguish of the woman as he understood the vague and fitful melancholy of the girl? |
20015 | Could a lover wish for anything more exquisite and more suggestive? |
20015 | Could any one ever succeed in conquering a part-- even the very smallest atom of that heart? |
20015 | Did I perhaps, on that first night in the loggia, open my heart too wide to their seductive fragrance while Delfina slept? |
20015 | Did he expect her to join him here for some secret interview? |
20015 | Did she accept that kind of speech, or was she, by her gravity, amusing herself at his expense? |
20015 | Did she expect me to confide in her? |
20015 | Did you not_ feel_ my thought?'' |
20015 | Do all your thoughts belong to me?'' |
20015 | Do n''t you think so, Ruggiero?'' |
20015 | Do n''t you think so?'' |
20015 | Do you know her?'' |
20015 | Do you know the poem attributed to John Wilkes,_ An Essay on Women_? |
20015 | Do you love me? |
20015 | Do you not believe it?'' |
20015 | Do you remember our ride through the wood on that evening in October?'' |
20015 | Do you remember when I copied them at Schifanoja? |
20015 | Do you remember, Maria? |
20015 | Does he know it? |
20015 | Does he not know how deeply, deeply, deeply I love him? |
20015 | Does she still dress in green and wear sunflowers in her hat? |
20015 | Elena broke in--''do you know when she is coming back?'' |
20015 | Every hope was dead, every voice mute, every anchor gone-- what use was life? |
20015 | Everybody laughed, and Grimiti asked,''Is betting permitted?'' |
20015 | Finally he asked me--"Do you sing?" |
20015 | Giulio, will you sit here?'' |
20015 | Great heaps of gold? |
20015 | Had she any idea of his agitation?'' |
20015 | Had she followed him with her eyes and her thoughts down the long flights of steps? |
20015 | Had she perception and consciousness of her manifold changes, or was she impenetrable to herself and shut from her own mystery? |
20015 | Had she the intention of taking up the adventure at the point where it broke off? |
20015 | Had this interval of idleness been harmful to his technical capacities? |
20015 | Have you forgotten all the rest? |
20015 | Have you noticed her particularly? |
20015 | He buried his face in the fur collar which had been next her throat and her hair--''What is it called?'' |
20015 | Her husband accompanied him to the door, where he repeated in a low voice--''You wo n''t forget those clasps?'' |
20015 | How is it that I think perpetually of those words? |
20015 | How long have you been in Rome?'' |
20015 | How much does she know? |
20015 | How would he have sought to relieve him-- what would he have done? |
20015 | How?'' |
20015 | I saw you in Paris in your affair with Gauvaudan-- you remember? |
20015 | I shall be on the look- out for you all the afternoon, from two o''clock till evening-- Is that settled?'' |
20015 | I was in despair-- You smile? |
20015 | I wonder why? |
20015 | In an album of''Confessions''at his cousin''s, the Marchesa d''Ateleta, against the question--''What would you most like to be?'' |
20015 | In both instances, he will lose his head-- it behoves me to keep calm on both fields----''Then--''I wonder what Donna Ippolita feels about it?'' |
20015 | In her expression, her manifestation of herself, how much was artificial and how much spontaneous? |
20015 | In short, was she or was she not the sort of woman to succumb to his attack? |
20015 | Is something troubling you?--do you not feel so well?'' |
20015 | Is that not so, Andrea?'' |
20015 | Look at the sea over there-- has it not more the appearance of an atmosphere than of a solid mass of water? |
20015 | Lord Heathfield was certainly in Rome-- how would she explain her nocturnal absence? |
20015 | Might not the result be entirely fallacious? |
20015 | Must I renounce-- shall I accept? |
20015 | Obviously, she had founded her plan of impeccability on the grand phrase--''Could you endure to share me with another?'' |
20015 | Of what nature is his pain? |
20015 | On hearing Andrea''s hackneyed phrases, she exclaimed in graceful surprise--''What, have you forgotten Elena so soon?'' |
20015 | On these conditions is the grace accorded?'' |
20015 | One evening Andrea, thinking of her husband, asked her--''Since I knew you, have you always been_ wholly_ mine?'' |
20015 | One of his own lines ran persistently in Andrea''s head--''Have I attained, have I then paid the price?'' |
20015 | Or has he no suspicion of the fact? |
20015 | Perhaps she would soon be down-- should he write the madrigal he had promised her? |
20015 | Presently, after a pause, Elena said without looking at him:''You are very young-- have you often been in love?'' |
20015 | Secretly? |
20015 | Shall I be able to escape from the passion that attracts and blinds me? |
20015 | Shall I carry you?'' |
20015 | Shall we go? |
20015 | She had been out then? |
20015 | She had returned alone? |
20015 | She hesitated for a moment, and then--''Do you love only me? |
20015 | She is very like her mother-- Look, Andrea, is not that rose just like velvet? |
20015 | She loves him-- but since when?--and does he know it? |
20015 | She read, written in Andrea''s hand, an epigram of Goethe''s, a distich, the one beginning--_Sage, wie lebst du?_ Say, how livest thou? |
20015 | She read, written in Andrea''s hand, an epigram of Goethe''s, a distich, the one beginning--_Sage, wie lebst du?_ Say, how livest thou? |
20015 | She would like to have said:''Then you are not going to fight to- morrow?'' |
20015 | Since nothing was altered in the_ mise- en- scène_ of their love, why should their love itself be changed? |
20015 | Slaves? |
20015 | So she loves him too?--and since when? |
20015 | Suffering? |
20015 | Surely their destinies were indissolubly knit together now? |
20015 | Tell me a thousand, thousand things----''''What sort of things?'' |
20015 | Tell me, say it a hundred, a thousand times-- always-- you love me?'' |
20015 | That evening, in the great room opening off the hall, she went over to the piano, and opening it, she said:''Do you still play, Francesca?'' |
20015 | The concert over, she said to Sperelli:''Will you see us to the carriage?'' |
20015 | The conversation around them grew more animated, and Elena asked him--''Are you staying the winter in Rome?'' |
20015 | The loggia attracts me-- shall we go out and dream a little, my heart and I?--dream of what? |
20015 | The modern arrangement is very ugly, do you not think so, Sperelli?'' |
20015 | The question that most often rose to her lips if Andrea seemed moody and silent was,''What are you thinking about?'' |
20015 | The sound of that voice made a singular impression on Andrea-- it reminded him vaguely of a voice he knew-- but whose? |
20015 | Then, after a moment''s hesitation--''Do you mind if I am rather silent this morning?'' |
20015 | Then, catching sight of his discomposed face,''You are suffering?'' |
20015 | Then, seized with a sort of frenzy, he burst out again-- Why was she going away? |
20015 | There are certain memories that can perfume a soul for ever-- Do you love me very much, Andrea?'' |
20015 | These pictures are your beloved Botticelli''s.--Where would you hang these tapestries?'' |
20015 | Think you that the goddess of Love considered long in the grove of Ida that day Anchises found favour in her eyes? |
20015 | Thinking? |
20015 | To- day again, when he turned up so unexpectedly in the street, had she not had an instinctive movement of suspicion? |
20015 | Touched with sudden melancholy she said:''Who knows how many times you have come here to feel yourself beloved?'' |
20015 | Ugenta will come and lunch with us to- morrow? |
20015 | Under what pretext? |
20015 | Was it in remembrance of the 25th of March two years ago? |
20015 | Was it merely artistic curiosity? |
20015 | Was it not merely some illusion of my overwrought and distracted spirit? |
20015 | Was she coming as friend or lover?--to renew old ties or to destroy all hope of such a thing for ever? |
20015 | Was she coming? |
20015 | Was she listening, or was she thinking of something else? |
20015 | We will all go, will we not, Francesca? |
20015 | Well-- and what then? |
20015 | Were not those the very words-- and spoken in her very tone-- that Elena had used on the evening she offered him her love? |
20015 | What about the doctor?'' |
20015 | What are her feelings towards me? |
20015 | What are his thoughts?--what are his sufferings? |
20015 | What are you saying?'' |
20015 | What course should he pursue? |
20015 | What did she think? |
20015 | What did you know or care about me in such moments? |
20015 | What do you think?'' |
20015 | What does she think? |
20015 | What does she think? |
20015 | What good would it do him to know? |
20015 | What had become of all his loves and his illusions, his disappointments and his disgusts, and the implacable reaction after pleasure? |
20015 | What had been the true cause of Elena''s departure two years before? |
20015 | What had she been doing-- what had been her thoughts-- how had she spent the days since they parted? |
20015 | What if I am no longer_ worthy_?'' |
20015 | What is any one''s love to you? |
20015 | What is it?'' |
20015 | What is on your mind?'' |
20015 | What language? |
20015 | What part had this man in Elena''s life? |
20015 | What should he do then? |
20015 | What then was the true essence of this creature? |
20015 | What ties, beyond the convention of marriage, bound her to him? |
20015 | What transformations had the physical and moral contact of this husband brought to pass in her? |
20015 | What troubles are in store for me in the future? |
20015 | What vicissitudes had not occurred in this woman''s soul during the last two years? |
20015 | What was she doing at this moment? |
20015 | What were her feelings? |
20015 | What will Francesca do? |
20015 | What would her eyes say when, at last, she looked at him? |
20015 | What would his father say could he see his son thus crushed under the weight of a nameless distress? |
20015 | When Andrea Sperelli entered the room with the Princess di Ferentino, he looked about him rapidly with a secret tremor-- Is_ she_ here? |
20015 | When he went to get the keys of the church, he left us alone in the vestibule-- and you kissed me-- do you remember?'' |
20015 | When presently they rejoined one another, Andrea said--''Tell me-- what is the matter? |
20015 | When was he likely to see her again? |
20015 | Where have you been all this time?'' |
20015 | Where were now all his vanities and his cruelties, his schemes and his duplicities? |
20015 | Where were you coming from?'' |
20015 | Which of the two paths am I to choose? |
20015 | While the servants were filling the glasses with iced champagne, she added,''Do you remember, Elena, our stalls were close together?'' |
20015 | Who can it be? |
20015 | Who could ever break that chain? |
20015 | Who gave you those violets?'' |
20015 | Who was this Giorgio? |
20015 | Why did I feel a sudden vague distrust of him, as if some instinct warned me of hidden danger? |
20015 | Why did he break the enchanted silence in which I let my soul be steeped, almost without regret or fear? |
20015 | Why did she want to break with him? |
20015 | Why disturb these rare and delicious emotions by a hurried search after rhymes? |
20015 | Why do I thrill to the heart''s core at the imagined prospect of hearing more-- more such words? |
20015 | Why had Delfina not returned yet? |
20015 | Why had she not the strength to repress them or put them away from her altogether? |
20015 | Why not? |
20015 | Why play this part, call up all these emotions, arrange this comedy? |
20015 | Why should I act towards you like an ordinary foolish woman? |
20015 | Why should I hide my heart from you? |
20015 | Why should every sound startle me to- night? |
20015 | Why should that hour yesterday seem to me so far away, so_ unreal_? |
20015 | Why should these doubts and suspicions, beaten down and stifled under the flood of her passion, rise up again now with so much vehemence? |
20015 | Why stretch out his hand again towards the tree of knowledge? |
20015 | Why tear away the veil of uncertainty and put me face to face with his unveiled love? |
20015 | Why this struggle between hope and anxiety lest she should discover them and read them? |
20015 | Why was Andrea so long in returning? |
20015 | Why? |
20015 | Why_ never_? |
20015 | Will you fetch me at one?'' |
20015 | Will you?'' |
20015 | With a smile so faint that he hardly caught it, she answered:''Do you remember the 22nd of September?'' |
20015 | Would he ever hear such words from her lips again? |
20015 | Would he find therein the woman and the work capable of dominating his heart and becoming an object in life to him? |
20015 | Would it not be better to abandon oneself frankly to the first ineffable sweetness of new- born love? |
20015 | Would she dare to traverse the garden on foot? |
20015 | Would she risk such an imprudence a second time? |
20015 | Would that suit you?'' |
20015 | Would you mind helping me, Francesca?'' |
20015 | Would''st fashion an immortal hymn? |
20015 | Would''st kill? |
20015 | Would''st thou Bid marble breathe? |
20015 | Would''st thou set up a temple? |
20015 | Yet, on the other hand, can one imagine Andrea and Elena, Giorgio and Ippolita arguing with our advanced thinkers of the moment: Is Monogamy Feasible? |
20015 | Yet, what had she to regret? |
20015 | You are not acquainted with Daniel Maclisius?'' |
20015 | You have suffered greatly?'' |
20015 | You here? |
20015 | You remember her passion for you, and how she went on when she thought you were in love with Constance Landbrooke? |
20015 | You remember, Francesca?'' |
20015 | You remember?'' |
20015 | You remember?'' |
20015 | You shall see me some other time-- whenever you like, but go now, I entreat you----''''Where shall I see you again?'' |
20015 | You will find Elena and Barbarella Viti and my cousin there----''''At what time?'' |
20015 | You will give me a glove before you leave?'' |
20015 | _ Attendre pour atteindre._ And sure enough----''''Well?'' |
20015 | _ Tibi, Hippolyta, semper!_''But where are we going to?'' |
20015 | and--''Could you suffer to share me with another?'' |
20015 | are you alone?'' |
20015 | asked Donna Maria, turning round too,''who are those ladies?'' |
20015 | exclaimed the Princess--''In the"pays du Tendre?"'' |
20015 | he thought to himself--''Is she still the woman of_ my dreams_?'' |
20015 | in the same tone in which he would have said--"Do you love me?" |
20015 | is it true?'' |
20015 | or Can Men and Women be Friends? |
20015 | other, and far other spoils? |
20015 | said Musellaro,''and how is your affair with Donna Elena progressing?'' |
20015 | she asked, leaning over the balustrade,''what have you got for me?'' |
20015 | she repeated, in a faint voice like the echo of a moan out of the depth of her soul--''is that true?'' |
20015 | where is that promised peace? |
20015 | white herds of captive women? |
20015 | why reduce this far reaching sentiment to a brief metrical sigh? |
20015 | would''st thou behold rivers of blood? |
36840 | Art Thou the Christ, or look we for another? |
36840 | Peter, turning about, seeth the disciple whom Jesus loved following.... Peter therefore seeing him saith to Jesus, Lord, and what shall this man do? 36840 Simon, son of John,"said the Master,"lovest thou Me more than these([ Greek:_ agapáo_])?" |
36840 | What think ye of Christ? 36840 Whom seek ye?" |
36840 | _ Such as I have!_Who would not desire to share in a possession so rich? |
36840 | A rich young ruler came to Jesus to ask the momentous question,"What shall I do to inherit eternal life?" |
36840 | And when he was in the house He asked them, What were ye reasoning in the way? |
36840 | Could it be the writer of the Fourth Gospel himself, John the Divine? |
36840 | Couldest thou not watch_ one hour_? |
36840 | Does not the risen Lord still continue to issue His summonses to the souls of men? |
36840 | For what doth it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his life? |
36840 | For what should a man give in exchange for his life?" |
36840 | How will his commission affect the faithful discharge of yours? |
36840 | Is not the same process going forward even now? |
36840 | Jesus continued His interrogation by the further inquiry:"But whom say_ ye_ that I am?" |
36840 | Jesus saith unto him, If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? |
36840 | One day, on His way through the villages of Cæsarea Philippi, He suddenly put to His followers the question,"Who do men say that I am?" |
36840 | Shall we say that the experience of the next few days was the greatest crisis in his career? |
36840 | Suppose that yours is to strive and lead, and his to stand and wait? |
36840 | The narrative goes on to say that Peter was grieved because he was asked the third time"Lovest thou Me?" |
36840 | Their reply was the counter question,"Rabbi, where abidest Thou?" |
36840 | This reticence puzzled the religious leaders a good deal, as is evident from their somewhat peremptory demand,"How long dost Thou make us to doubt? |
36840 | What a contrast between the Peter who inquired,"What shall we have therefore?" |
36840 | What is it, at last, But selfishness without example? |
36840 | What was the reason of this strange outburst? |
36840 | What, then, shall we have?" |
36840 | What, then, was His ideal? |
36840 | Who but Jesus would have thought it worth while to do it? |
36840 | Who was the other? |
36840 | Whose son is He?" |
37290 | --("What is Property?" |
37290 | Already in his first work,"What is Property?" |
37290 | Does this mean that after the collapse of the old order of society there will be a new class domination culminating in a new political power? |
37290 | His first work,"What is Property?" |
37290 | How can a class which does not work produce more marvellous works than the whole ancient and mediæval world? |
37290 | How has this complicated variety of human thought and action come about? |
37290 | How is this explained, according to Marx? |
37290 | How is this to be explained? |
37290 | How, then, can the equal rate of profit in the case of capitals of different organic composition be harmonised with the theory of surplus value? |
37290 | I begin,''What is Communism?'' |
37290 | In this book("What is Property?" |
37290 | In what measure will commodities exchange with one another? |
37290 | Is that just?" |
37290 | Labour or Capital? |
37290 | Of critical social writers outside Germany it was Proudhon, in particular, who, in his works"What is Property?" |
37290 | Surplus value or profit? |
37290 | The question he put was no longer"What is the substance of wealth and how is it measured?" |
37290 | The question is: How is that to be done? |
37290 | What happens to them? |
37290 | What happens when the capitalist observes that the extraction of absolute surplus value comes up against an insurmountable obstacle? |
37290 | Whence comes this gain, this increase? |
37290 | but"How is its growth and continual accretions to be explained?" |
37658 | Demy 8vo, 15_s._ Salvator Mundi; or, Is Christ the Saviour of all Men? |
37658 | Shall I have the thought To think on this, and shall I lack the thought That such a thing bechanc''d would make me sad? |
37658 | _ Salar._ Not in love neither? |
34810 | And how will Mr. Kit- ze feel toward us, uncle, if we do not? |
34810 | And lose his mind with it? 34810 And thus encourage Mr. Kit- ze in his silliness?" |
34810 | Are you sure of that? 34810 But do n''t you see that the sight of it that way excites them the more?" |
34810 | But first,said Clarence,"had n''t you better search him? |
34810 | But how are we to teach them a better worship until we take their miserable idols from them? |
34810 | But how can we help him? |
34810 | But how did you know that I knew about the_ miriok_? |
34810 | But the_ miriok_, Mr. Kit- ze, the_ miriok_? |
34810 | But what can we do for this poor fellow here? |
34810 | But why act in that demented way? 34810 But, my father, if cannon were used, what would be the result? |
34810 | Can he be deaf and dumb? |
34810 | Come, is this all you want? |
34810 | Could it be possible,they asked each other,"that there was One in the world who could love as this one loved? |
34810 | How are we to go on without our sampan man? |
34810 | How old are you? 34810 How then, Helen?" |
34810 | I? |
34810 | Now, how are we to get them? |
34810 | O Helen, are you sure you did n''t scream, not the least little bit? 34810 Oh, Dorothy, how can you do that?" |
34810 | Oh, uncle, you call that a_ little_? |
34810 | Oh, what is it? |
34810 | Oh, would n''t you girls like a wing each for your hats? |
34810 | Old friend,cried Mr. Reid delighted,"can it be that I greet you again?" |
34810 | Only try him, wo n''t you? 34810 Tell them of God''s love ever waiting to receive them, you mean, father?" |
34810 | The_ miriok_? |
34810 | We do n''t want to eat it, so why destroy it? |
34810 | Well, Mr. Kit- ze,said Mr. Reid,"are you ready to take another journey with your sampan up the South Han?" |
34810 | Well, what are you doing in the country, anyhow? 34810 Well, what else is he? |
34810 | Well, what is you name, and whence do your come? |
34810 | Well? |
34810 | What can he mean? |
34810 | What do you mean by demon worship, uncle? |
34810 | What is all this commotion about? |
34810 | What makes you say that? |
34810 | What then? |
34810 | What was that I heard him say last night? |
34810 | What were the words? 34810 Where are the mothers,"he continued,"to let them run so into danger?" |
34810 | Where shall we spend the Sabbath? |
34810 | Who are these who have dared to approach me? |
34810 | Why are you running after me in this way? 34810 Why, Helen, how did he ever manage to get here so far ahead of us?" |
34810 | Why, are there really any treasures to be found in those mountains? |
34810 | Why, how could you see it in''the black dark''? |
34810 | Why, my daughter, how do you know? |
34810 | You do n''t really know that he ca n''t help you with the sampan, do you? |
34810 | You know him? |
34810 | After so bravely coming to the rescue, was he going to abandon them in that strange place to make their way back to the sampan alone? |
34810 | And she continued, her eyes softening:"If it will make him feel better to know it is destroyed, is n''t it worth while?" |
34810 | And what might not happen? |
34810 | But she seemed to take a second thought, and asked cautiously,"How many_ yen_?" |
34810 | But where was such another as this_ miriok_ to be had? |
34810 | Come, sir, what have you to say for yourself?" |
34810 | Could he bestow honor and wealth as well as friendship? |
34810 | Could he, or would he, then, do aught else but what is best for the one beloved?" |
34810 | Could n''t he have explained to us, and then gone after it in a respectable fashion?" |
34810 | Could they take off their eyes and pull out their teeth as it had been reported that they could? |
34810 | Did he mean Mr. Choi- So? |
34810 | Did their ancestors occupy tombs on the hillside? |
34810 | Do they know you are away? |
34810 | Do you get a salary? |
34810 | For if the_ miriok_ disappeared, how could she ever carry out her good intentions for either Mr. Kit- ze or Choi- So? |
34810 | For would not Mr. Kit- ze be violently angry? |
34810 | Had he alone learned of their whereabouts, and how had it so happened? |
34810 | Had he seen him among the spectators? |
34810 | Had not the old woman shown her greed for them during the afternoon? |
34810 | Has your father gone and left you? |
34810 | He could not think of going on the journey without his_ miriok_, for would not disaster be sure to befall him if he did? |
34810 | He wanted to know if this Jesus, who could do so much for men, who wanted to be their friend, was very rich and powerful? |
34810 | How had he come there, and where were the others? |
34810 | How had he come there? |
34810 | How much is it?" |
34810 | In the meantime, what was to be done? |
34810 | Kit- ze?" |
34810 | Kit- ze?" |
34810 | Kit- ze?" |
34810 | Kit- ze?" |
34810 | Kit- ze?" |
34810 | Mr. Kit- ze, is there no place, not so far away, where we can tie up without the prospect of having such curiosity as this to endure?" |
34810 | O exalted teacher, do I see you once more?" |
34810 | Oh, could it be that he was at last awakened, that he would search until he had found the truth, would accept Jesus as the one faithful Friend? |
34810 | Oh, what was she to do? |
34810 | Oh, wo n''t that be glorious?" |
34810 | Then he asked,"Is n''t the journey attended by some degree of danger?" |
34810 | Was his mind upset? |
34810 | Were their families respectable? |
34810 | What would happen? |
34810 | Whence had they come? |
34810 | Who were they? |
34810 | Why did n''t he take it away and destroy it, if he was that afraid of it?" |
34810 | Why do you offer me_ yen_?" |
34810 | Why had he not thought of it before? |
34810 | Why had n''t he thought of that ere coming away? |
34810 | Would not you think these far better than money or land, my friend?" |
34810 | Would the honorable teacher tell him again the name of this wonderful Friend? |
34810 | You understand?" |
34810 | and was he an honorable man?" |
34810 | and would he not at once charge the theft to Choi- So? |
34810 | asked Dorothy, a mischievous light in her eyes,"about sons and how they were like dragon''s teeth in the sides of their parents?" |
34810 | do you not hear that strange rat- ta- tat noise? |
34810 | exclaimed Clarence in disgust;"what made him leave his hat with us? |
34810 | for aside from the pain and discomfort that it gave him, how were they to get on with the sampan without him? |
34810 | who could and did give his friendship''without money and without price''?" |
33677 | And that is? |
33677 | Courage? |
33677 | How do I love thee? 33677 What is your greatest hour?" |
33677 | Why not do right? 33677 Why was I made thus blind and sinful?" |
33677 | _ Therefore the moral question always takes the form of asking: What am I to do? 33677 And are not all such forms of religion, as far as they go, practical? 33677 And by what means shall we decide such questions? 33677 And does the conclusion merely result from our power to form abstract ideas? 33677 And his failure, to what was it due? 33677 And if so,_ why_ is it rational? 33677 And in this case, as you may now say, why use two words at all? 33677 And may not just this be a source of insight which is employed in many of the processes ordinarily known as reasoning processes? 33677 And now, I ask you, What is the spirit which rules such lives? 33677 And so the question has presented itself: Have we any evidence that such a superhuman type of life is a real fact in the world? 33677 And the question: What is it that, on the whole, I would choose to do if I had the power? 33677 And when he returned to battle, what became of Hector? 33677 Are there as many supreme aims of life as there are individuals? 33677 Are there as many ways of salvation as there are religions that men follow? 33677 Are these objections just? 33677 Are they right? 33677 As for our blunders, what more precious privilege do we all claim than the privilege of making our own blunders, or at least a due proportion of them? 33677 But are the partisans of ways of salvation{ 15} confined to such serious and unworldly souls as were the early Buddhists and the ancient moralists? 33677 But can it enter into our will and give us a plan of life? 33677 But can it save us? 33677 But how is this divine to be known? 33677 But is it rational to do this? 33677 But what are the merits of the case? 33677 But what, you may ask, do I mean by the salvation of man or by man''s need of salvation? 33677 But when you form an opinion, what are you trying to do? 33677 But who amongst us ever goes beyond thus confidently holding that he reflects the common- sense of mankind? 33677 But-- so such teachers hold-- why sell all that you have to buy that pearl, when by nature you are able to win it through a reasonable effort? 33677 By revelation? 33677 Can a plain man who is no philosopher feel this need? 33677 Can it direct life? 33677 Can one face{ 243} sorrow with any really deeper trust in life? 33677 Can such an ideal remain wholly a matter of theory? 33677 Can these objects be defined as realities or asvalues"that our social experience sufficiently brings to our knowledge? |
33677 | Can this view satisfy? |
33677 | Can we say that this source gives us genuine insight and is trustworthy? |
33677 | Could one love such a being, or devoutly commune with his perfect but motionless wisdom? |
33677 | Could one steadily conceive God in these terms without constantly renewing one''s power to face the world with courage? |
33677 | Do n''t you see what ails your father''s point of view, and my wife''s? |
33677 | Do they merely say: God is omniscient, therefore our life has its purpose defined, and we are saved? |
33677 | Does it belong only to the childhood of the spirit? |
33677 | Does it teach us about anything that is real; and if this be so, how far does this source of insight go? |
33677 | Does this statement seem to you an absurd quibble? |
33677 | Face such tragedy, however, and what does it show you? |
33677 | For now the question arises: What way leads to salvation? |
33677 | For the question arises: What is it, on the whole, that I choose to do? |
33677 | Granting the validity of the argument sketched in our last lecture, what has the all- wise knower of truth to do with our salvation? |
33677 | Had he chosen to be a hermit, or a saint, or a Stoic, what would just such{ 188} a career and such a reputation have been to him? |
33677 | Has its cause the characters that mark a fitting cause of loyalty? |
33677 | How can a good God permit this horror in my life?" |
33677 | How could he have lost unless he had sought? |
33677 | How does pragmatism view the very problem about the truth and error of our human opinions which has led me to such far- reaching consequences? |
33677 | How does such a view give a man the power to live more reasonably than he otherwise would live? |
33677 | How does the insight of the reason enlighten us in this respect? |
33677 | How is the bank able to recognise this revelation of the depositor''s will? |
33677 | How is this apparition of the divine in the human, of the supernatural in the natural, conceivable? |
33677 | How is tribulation related to religious insight? |
33677 | I"What does one mean by the Reason?" |
33677 | In what sense can there be a religion of the social consciousness? |
33677 | Is it a barren abstraction? |
33677 | Is it consistent only with a highly sensitive and mystical temperament? |
33677 | Is it exclusively connected with the belief in some one creed? |
33677 | Is it not from its very essence an appeal to the will? |
33677 | Is it the fruit of abstract thinking alone? |
33677 | Is it the peculiar possession of the philosophers? |
33677 | Is life really a good at all, since there is so much sorrow in it? |
33677 | Is not such a conception a vitally important spring of action for those who possess it? |
33677 | Is such a direct touch with the divine possible? |
33677 | Is the recognition of an all- seeing insight, as something real, not in itself calming, sustaining, rationalising? |
33677 | Is there any mode of living that is just_ both_ to the moral and to the religious motives? |
33677 | Is there any value in considering this abstract statement of the principles upon which this dilemma seems to be founded? |
33677 | Is this form of consciousness something belonging only to highly and intellectually cultivated souls? |
33677 | May not all genuine demonstration involve synthesis as well as analysis, the making of new constructions as well as the dissection of old assertions? |
33677 | May not analysis be merely an aspect, a part of our live thinking? |
33677 | May there not be another source of knowledge? |
33677 | Must not any prudent person be afraid of life? |
33677 | Must one choose between inarticulate faith and barren abstractions? |
33677 | Must one face the alternative: Either intuition without reasoning, or else relatively fruitless analysis without intuition? |
33677 | Nevertheless, the question: How far is man naturally in danger of missing this supreme goal? |
33677 | Now do you not know people whose religion is of this sort? |
33677 | Now is this conclusion the result of a mere analysis of either of the two assertions made? |
33677 | Now, how shall such a knowledge of the divine autograph have arisen in the mind of the individual believer? |
33677 | Or, on the other hand, does it arise solely through dumb and inarticulate intuitions? |
33677 | Ought n''t one to try to be safe?" |
33677 | Ought the lovers to defy fortune and to ignore obvious worldly prudence? |
33677 | Our question is:"Is there, indeed, such a diviner life?" |
33677 | The problem with which these lectures are to deal is: What are the sources of such insight? |
33677 | The question is, how is this possible? |
33677 | The question remains: Through what source of insight are we able to adjust our daily lives to this divine wisdom and to this divine will? |
33677 | The question: What am I to do? |
33677 | The verdict of humanity? |
33677 | V Now in what way can I hope, you may ask, to answer these impressive and to many recent writers decisive considerations of the pragmatists? |
33677 | We now ask: What is the principle which dominates such lives? |
33677 | Were all of them more or less right? |
33677 | Were any of them wholly deluded? |
33677 | Were not the prophets of Israel social reformers? |
33677 | Were not the world as it now is very evil, what, then, were the call for religion? |
33677 | What does it profit a man, you will say, to view the whole world as the object present to an all- embracing and divine insight? |
33677 | What does poor humanity know as to the real values of our destiny? |
33677 | What has religion had to teach us, some will insistently ask, more saving, unifying, sustaining, than this love of man for man? |
33677 | What is the extent, what are the limitations of the truth that one can hope in this way to gain? |
33677 | What light can my individual experience throw upon vast problems such as this? |
33677 | What man ever finds immediately presented to his own personal insight that totality of data upon which this verdict is said to depend? |
33677 | What need do they show? |
33677 | What would one do for a divine Logos, for an all- observant and all- comprehending seer? |
33677 | Whatever they may think of my philosophy, have I been just to their practical fervour and to their energetic devotion? |
33677 | When did they begin to be really patriots and servants of mankind? |
33677 | When did they begin to be truly and heartily religious? |
33677 | When the plain man feels what I venture thus to formulate, how will he express his longing? |
33677 | Who amongst us personally and individually experiences, at any moment, the confirmation said to be given by the verdict of humanity? |
33677 | Who of us can tell? |
33677 | Who, amongst us, whatever his own cause, is not instructed and aided in his loyalty by the faithful deed of such a devoted soul? |
33677 | Why not choose one who brings no such sorrow with her? |
33677 | Why, then, have I introduced this mere sketch of philosophical idealism into our inevitably crowded programme? |
33677 | Would you forget your lost love, or your dead, or your"days that are no more,"even if you could? |
33677 | Yet how can mortals thus ignorant pretend to get insight into anything that is divinely exalted? |
33677 | { 112} The common- sense of mankind? |
33677 | { 135} Was not my elder friend finding a guiding principle of action in a world where he was often misunderstood? |
33677 | { 143} But does pragmatism forbid us to have religious insight? |
33677 | { 291} Do you serve with all your heart, and soul, and mind, and strength a cause that is superhuman and that is indeed divine? |
3631 | He repudiates science and art, he wants to send people back again into a savage state; so what is the use of listening to him and of talking to him? |
3631 | What is to be done? |
3631 | What to do? 3631 ART*** Transcribed from the 1887 Tomas Y. CrowellWhat to do?" |
3631 | After a conflagration, one can warm one''s self, and light one''s pipe with a firebrand; but why declare that the conflagration is beneficial? |
3631 | And such a man will never answer the question,"What is to be done?" |
3631 | And this confession of a man''s obligation constitutes the gist of the third answer to the question,"What is to be done?" |
3631 | And what is it necessary for me to do, in order to comply with the requirements imposed upon me by the demands of individual and universal welfare? |
3631 | And what is to be done with the remaining eleven hours? |
3631 | And why, apparently, should art not be of service to the people? |
3631 | And, as we are indebted for all this marvellous progress to the division of labor, why not acknowledge it? |
3631 | And, in fact, how am I to answer the question,"What is to be done?" |
3631 | And, what then? |
3631 | Before that time I had not been able to answer the question:"What is to be done?" |
3631 | But what does it mean, that some people and their children toil, while other people and their children do not toil? |
3631 | But what facts? |
3631 | But what have we added to the popular_ bylini_[ the epic songs], legends, tales, songs? |
3631 | But what have we taught them, and what are we now teaching them? |
3631 | But who will make these boots and this calico? |
3631 | Does not this peculiar good fortune arise from the fact that man can not and will not see his own hideousness? |
3631 | First of all, in answer to the question,"What is to be done?" |
3631 | For the uninitiated man the question immediately presents itself:"What are you talking about? |
3631 | Had the question then stood as it stands before me now, after I have repented,--"What am I, so corrupt a man, to do?" |
3631 | Hence I think, that the man who will honestly put to himself the question,"What is to be done?" |
3631 | How can we fail to accept so very beautiful a theory? |
3631 | How did this come to pass? |
3631 | How, in this fashion, make recompense with that education and those talents, for what I have taken, and for what I still take, from the people?" |
3631 | How, then, can the necessity for burdensome, oppressive toil be more profitable for people? |
3631 | I often hear the questions of good young men who sympathize with the renunciatory part of my writings, and who ask,"Well, and what then shall I do? |
3631 | In answer to the question, Would not this unaccustomed toil ruin that health which is indispensable in order to render service to the people possible? |
3631 | It is very possible that this is so; but still the question remains, Of what nature is that division of labor which I behold in my human society? |
3631 | More profitable for whom? |
3631 | Our position is a very difficult one, but why not look at it squarely? |
3631 | Precisely what to do?" |
3631 | Surely I can not say,"Why do not you eat hay, when it is the indispensable food?" |
3631 | Then how can this be more profitable for men? |
3631 | Then, what is to be done? |
3631 | These, then, are the answers which I have found for myself to the question,"What is to be done?" |
3631 | They can in no wise solve the problem,"What to do?" |
3631 | This is the lie of which we must not be guilty if we are to be in a position to answer the question:"What is to be done?" |
3631 | This was the case with me; and then another, arising from the first answer to the question:"What is to be done?" |
3631 | To the question,"What is it necessary to do?" |
3631 | To the question,"Will it not seem strange to people if you do this?" |
3631 | We have invented telegraphs, telephones, phonographs; but what advances have we effected in the life, in the labor, of the people? |
3631 | What am I to do, now that I have finished my course in the university, or in some other institution, in order that I may be of use?" |
3631 | What are we to do? |
3631 | What does that power which has created and which leads me, demand of me and of every man? |
3631 | What is the inference? |
3631 | What music, what pictures, have we given to the people? |
3631 | Why are they such fools as to give birth to children, when they know that there will be nothing for the children to eat? |
3631 | Why is mankind an organism, or similar to an organism?" |
3631 | Why is there nothing left of those sciences, and sophists, and Cabalists, and Talmudists, but words, while we are so exceptionally happy? |
3631 | Why precisely these facts, and no others? |
3631 | With regard to the question,"Is it necessary to organize this physical labor, to institute an association in the country, on my land?" |
3631 | edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org ON THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SCIENCE AND ART-- FROM"WHAT TO DO?" |
3631 | is it that division of labor which should exist? |
32369 | All that does not dazzle me, dearest uncle-- for what are thrones and splendor where love is not? 32369 And how shall I explain conduct that will appear so strange as this to you? |
32369 | And is he not a prince? 32369 And of that other, whose name I will not write-- he who died in the convict''s cell-- my friend,_ had I_ aught to do with that man''s crimes? |
32369 | And thou art poor, Margaret? |
32369 | And thou lovest him not, nor dost thou wish to we d him? |
32369 | And what of George Stephenson? 32369 And why not, Mildred? |
32369 | And young? |
32369 | Are you here, Margaret? |
32369 | Art thou the Lady Isoleth of Fernheath? 32369 Bless her little heart, what is the child raving about? |
32369 | But whither go you now to banishment? |
32369 | But you are surely laughing at me; you did not really suppose, now did you, that I could love such a man? |
32369 | But your majesty will limit the period of his disgrace? |
32369 | But, my dear, dear, dearest young lady, what_ will_ you do? |
32369 | By what authority,said the king, interrupting him,"have you ventured to intrude yourself upon our presence, contrary to our express commands?" |
32369 | Can it be possible you have refused Signor Perozzi? |
32369 | Can it be that my grandfather, my kind grandfather, would have me marry Perozzi-- is it so, mamma? |
32369 | Can you see him? |
32369 | Dost thou know me? 32369 Father-- what mean you?" |
32369 | Hark ye, Perozzi; what would you say if I could this moment promise to place you in possession of one hundred thousand dollars and-- a wife? |
32369 | How do you feel? |
32369 | I ca n''t see him-- can you? |
32369 | Mamma,said the child,"we will keep a place for you and dear papa, and will you come soon?" |
32369 | Mildred,said Rupert,( for it was indeed Rupert,)"what mean these tears? |
32369 | My dear uncle-- has he come? |
32369 | My father, would you mock me with this show of kindness, when it is too late to profit by it? 32369 Name it, my darling Isy-- what wouldst thou have, little enthusiast?" |
32369 | Nor shalt thou-- his name, most beautiful? |
32369 | Nor the money? |
32369 | Odd- fish, my lord,exclaimed Charles, now laughing heartily,"and were you the necromancer, too?" |
32369 | One hundred thousand dollars, did you say, Donaldson? |
32369 | One like me-- just like me? 32369 So, my dearest, I have given you a true history of my_ coquetting_(?) |
32369 | So, then, thou wert thyself in masquerade? |
32369 | So, they call thee Margaret? |
32369 | The Scotchman''s-- Donaldson''s? |
32369 | Then thou''rt the_ Duke_ of Bernstorf, my father''s cousin? |
32369 | There-- that was his voice certainly-- can''t you see him yet? |
32369 | They must be very happy, are they not? |
32369 | Well, dear nurse, what would you have me do, or what shall I leave off from doing, now that I have grown so exceedingly old? |
32369 | Well, mother,he said, as he suffered her to proceed with the examination,"find you aught here to fear?" |
32369 | What does this mean? |
32369 | What is that you are muttering about, nursey dear? 32369 What is this, my good friend?" |
32369 | What must be? 32369 What say you, Cousin of Bernstorf, to such a bride as that for the proposed alliance-- a wild one, is it not?" |
32369 | What would my pet bird have that she seeks her uncle thus early? |
32369 | Where am I? |
32369 | Whereaway is he? |
32369 | Who else, fairest cousin? 32369 Who, the prince?" |
32369 | Who?--where? |
32369 | Why are we here alone? |
32369 | Why do you cry, Gary? |
32369 | Why, my dear child, have you turned gipsy? 32369 Will your majesty_ write_ your request for him to come to the palace? |
32369 | Wilt thou not deign to look over this precious book with me, most beauteous lady? 32369 With what nation, most sapient sir?" |
32369 | You will meet me here again to- morrow morning? 32369 You will relent, my sweet child, will you not?" |
32369 | ''Then came one of his disciples unto him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? |
32369 | ''s, who have not disdained to pour forth their thoughts like water on this exhausted(?) |
32369 | Ah, now I remember-- or was it some dreadful dream?" |
32369 | And is he not heir to a powerful, wealthy ducal throne? |
32369 | And that Flory Cleveland will not prove herself quite tractable and human, although people have dared and presumed to call her a''desperate flirt?'' |
32369 | And then it was incessantly,''Florence, why do you allow that cox- comb to visit you?'' |
32369 | And were not these high words to flow From woman''s breaking heart? |
32369 | And what does the author labor and strive for, through dreary days and sleepless nights? |
32369 | And what does the warrior battle for? |
32369 | And when will my cousins of Bernstorf return from those hideous wars? |
32369 | And--_is_ this_ once_ prolific topic_ yet_ exhausted? |
32369 | Are the writers of_ our_ day satisfied with_ one_ brilliant and successful effort in the field of literary labor? |
32369 | At length, raising his eyes hastily to mine, he said,"Young lady-- do you think that_ I_ am happy?" |
32369 | But what is it, the most beautiful, most lovely of her beautiful, lovely sex would ask? |
32369 | But where is your bonnet?" |
32369 | But will you not come now and try on your splendid dress? |
32369 | But, if man, in his wonderful wisdom, can suffer himself to be so fooled, pray whose fault or sin is it? |
32369 | Come, unfold thy important, mysterious budget-- who is it?" |
32369 | Did any of those glorious beings who, with their death- stiffened fingers_ can_ write for us no more? |
32369 | Do you see yonder mansion, with the green verandas stretching itself out on the hill- side like an anaconda at play?" |
32369 | For which of these do you come?" |
32369 | Had Mrs. Donaldson forgotten her own youth? |
32369 | Had he not been a reckless youth ever; disliked of all the village boys, whose friendship, even his wealth and good family could not buy for him? |
32369 | Has it ever yet been"set to music?" |
32369 | Have I been too hasty in urging my love? |
32369 | Have not new affections warmed the heart, or old ones sent out new tendrils to cling with a stronger hold upon us? |
32369 | Have we not been made participants of high gratifications-- domestic, social, public associations of instructive and pleasant operation? |
32369 | He was''found drowned,''so the verdict of the coroner''s jury ran; but have none others been ever''found drowned,''than men who were in love? |
32369 | How can that be?" |
32369 | How changed, dear nurse? |
32369 | How could my dear father--""Dearest cousin, trust to me-- wilt thou not? |
32369 | How hast thou mourned the broken faith Of thy degenerate sons? |
32369 | How hast thou mourned the civil broils That shook thy peaceful homes? |
32369 | How shall I describe her? |
32369 | How shall I describe to you, gentle coz, that dear old woods, as on that eventful day its beauties and wonders first greeted my gaze? |
32369 | How will all these things abroad affect us here? |
32369 | How, then, shall I describe thee, beautiful Isoleth? |
32369 | I always laugh when I think of him--_do you_, dear? |
32369 | I am ready-- what is it? |
32369 | I guess, then, my proud uncle and aunt of Allwrath, and my aristocratic cousins, their haughty sons and daughters?" |
32369 | If I would not we d a villain such as he, where rests the blame? |
32369 | Is he not all a woman could desire? |
32369 | Is it for the enlightenment of mankind-- the improvement of his fellows? |
32369 | Is it not so, fairest lady?" |
32369 | Is she or any of hers coming here again? |
32369 | Is there, then, any thing wonderful in the fact that woman loves admiration? |
32369 | Know you not that she is now dying of consumption? |
32369 | Mildred, you surprise me-- pray what can be your objections?" |
32369 | Miss Ward is handsome, you say?" |
32369 | Nor shalt thou ever, dearest, most beautiful-- for_ I_ will prevent it, I--""Thou? |
32369 | Now do you remember the thick pimento walk between this and the hospital?" |
32369 | Now was it not presumption, Carry? |
32369 | Now what think you, Perozzi, of the charming Mildred for a wife?" |
32369 | Now, mark me, at that moment I rush upon you and rescue the lady-- do you understand?" |
32369 | Or bid the willow bend, or cypress twine? |
32369 | Or doleful tokens to his fame combine? |
32369 | Or is it,"said he, fixing his gray eyes searchingly upon her,"or is it that thou hast met some sighing Adonis in the woods? |
32369 | Said you, my good woman, that he is now in a prison, and for debt?" |
32369 | Say, doth the sculptor''s ready tool engrave A_ mournful_ stanza o''er a_ conqueror''s_ grave? |
32369 | Shall I expound the past to you?" |
32369 | Shall I ring for Dame Hildreth, or some of your maidens?" |
32369 | Shall the new_ territories_ be allowed by Congress to authorize slavery within their borders? |
32369 | She approached him gently, and asked him in a soft voice,"What are thy meditations, beautiful stranger?" |
32369 | So should the blessing of the fields and woods Be moulded into curses? |
32369 | So thou and my goodly son hast met before-- is it not so? |
32369 | Strange, was it not, darling, that I should not have recognized you? |
32369 | Suddenly I reflected-- what if I should miss the frigate? |
32369 | Talented, too-- was he not? |
32369 | Then Ned will join us in Wisconsin-- and who says we shall not be a happy family there? |
32369 | They say that Rochester is banished from King Charles''s court, and what hope could I have of pleasing if he could be dispensed with? |
32369 | Thou hatest him, dost thou?" |
32369 | Thus the sin is on us both; Was the dance a time to woo? |
32369 | Was Alexander? |
32369 | Was Cortes? |
32369 | Was I so soon becoming exhausted? |
32369 | Was I to perish, and within hearing too, in consequence of this mistake of my messmates? |
32369 | We have all been watching--""Has he come?" |
32369 | Well, what do you think of coquettes_ in general_, my friend-- what do you think of those with whom you have had to do with_ in particular_? |
32369 | What is her name?" |
32369 | What objection can you possibly have to such a noble, handsome, princely prince? |
32369 | What shall I write about? |
32369 | What then was to be the result of her father''s unexpected visit-- was it freedom for Mildred-- was it to heap disgrace upon her husband? |
32369 | What will I do, dear nurse? |
32369 | What will be the influence upon the United States of these revolutionary movements in Europe? |
32369 | When women are blessed(?) |
32369 | Where hast thou been? |
32369 | Who ever depicted her one half as lovely and loving as she is? |
32369 | Who will say that_ this_ is not oftenest, when indeed it is thought of at all, the_ secondary_ consideration? |
32369 | Who would have told his mother?" |
32369 | Who''d have thought it? |
32369 | Whom dost thou mean, dear baby, by_ him_?" |
32369 | Whose fault is it if he does not_ continue_ to please, when the eyes of the fair one are awakened to his numberless"short comings?" |
32369 | Why what wouldst thou have better? |
32369 | With such noble examples before her, why should she not? |
32369 | With these means to be multiplied indefinitely, and a free mind, what has America to fear? |
32369 | _ Art_ thou? |
32369 | _ This?_"touching the handle of his knife. |
32369 | dearest, beloved Mildred-- tell me-- tell me quick-- this marriage-- is it not your own choice?" |
32369 | is there any thing so very_ unnatural_ in the fact that her human heart cries"more?" |
32369 | or,''how_ can_ you endure that conceited fool?'' |
32369 | or,''why did you go to the party last night when I was away?'' |
32369 | pride, anger, enduring obstinacy, where are ye now? |
32369 | she asked, seeming to realize, and be startled at the idea, for the first time;"where is the friend who introduced you-- where is Master Granby?" |
32369 | she cried, starting up wildly--"how came I here-- what has happened? |
32369 | till seven times? |
32369 | was it not just the mouth one loves to kiss? |
32369 | whom shall he blame, if the smile does not always await him? |
36149 | King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight May the Holy Grail be found? |
36149 | O Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this marvel mean?" |
36149 | O Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this sight avail?" |
36149 | O, Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this marvel mean?" |
36149 | O, Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this sight avail?" |
36149 | Where is the queen? |
36149 | ***** Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont In''97 on Jackson''s day? |
36149 | A curious boy asks an old soldier Sitting in front of the grocery store,"How did you lose your leg?" |
36149 | A thousand years are but a day, A little day within Thine eye: We thirst for love, we yearn for life; We lust, wilt Thou the lust record? |
36149 | And I ask: For the depths Of what use is language? |
36149 | And gave her a marvellous riddle That the eyeless should read as he ran: What crawls and runs and is baffled By woman, the sphinx-- but a man? |
36149 | And she says to me:"You do not know me at all, How can you love me? |
36149 | And that day I said: There are wild places, blue water, pine forests, There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads Around Elk Lake-- shall we go? |
36149 | And what shall I do?" |
36149 | And who made reply? |
36149 | And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan, So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser, Or so little to be forgiven?... |
36149 | And you asked,"Is there a town near? |
36149 | Beneath that ancient sky Who is not fain to fly As men have fled? |
36149 | But could we speak of it, even though I saw your eyes when you thought of it? |
36149 | But he asked all the twelve,"Who am I?" |
36149 | But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:"Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness, What has it to do with poetry, tell me?" |
36149 | Choose me as mistress-- how can I do less for dearest? |
36149 | Do shadows crouch within the mocking light? |
36149 | Do we not understand Why thou didst leave thy land, Thy spouse, thy hearth? |
36149 | Do you make merry, do you weep? |
36149 | Do you wonder sometimes men Kill women with a knife or strangle them? |
36149 | Dost Thou not see about our feet The tangles of our erring thought? |
36149 | Dost thou bewail love''s end and friendship''s doom, The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom? |
36149 | Eh? |
36149 | For had her soul not been as pure As sifted snow, could she endure Antonio''s passion and be sure Against his passion''s strength and lure? |
36149 | He was a trained collie, And he looked like a lion, There in the convention of''96--What do you know about that? |
36149 | Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor-- Who knocks? |
36149 | How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief? |
36149 | How do you live without me, is the fear? |
36149 | If I gave a cell Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:"After me what, a stalk, a flower, life That swims or crawls?" |
36149 | If we who are in life can not speak Of profound experiences, Why do you marvel that the dead Do not tell you of death? |
36149 | In whose arms are you now asleep? |
36149 | It ai n''t really a hat at all, Ed: You know that, do n''t you? |
36149 | It seemeth, now that you are gone, My heart a measured pain doth keep:-- Are you now, as I am, alone? |
36149 | John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,"Nay, lovest thou me?" |
36149 | Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God? |
36149 | My feeling with this money which I''ve made And can not use? |
36149 | Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight? |
36149 | Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood? |
36149 | So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances, Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last? |
36149 | Surely your ermine furs were warm, And warm your flowing cloak of red; Was it the wild wind kept you thus Pensive and with averted head? |
36149 | The world seems better, Julia, For that kiss which you gave me at the door.... Breakfast? |
36149 | Then a certain god, Of less power than mine, Came and sat beside me and said:"Why do you allow this to be? |
36149 | Then came King Pelles out and said,"Your name, brave Knight and true?" |
36149 | They are all seeking, Why do you not let them find their heart''s delight? |
36149 | Think you not that there doth pass In them something we did know? |
36149 | Though you know That I am fifty- one, can you imagine My feeling with no children growing up? |
36149 | To''scape the blustering breath of March, Or was it for your mind''s disguise? |
36149 | We bleed, we fall, we rise again; How can we be of Thee abhorred? |
36149 | Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars? |
36149 | What could I do but take a boat And go to meet you? |
36149 | What has the artist caught? |
36149 | What is it I see? |
36149 | What is the origin Of spiritual species? |
36149 | What shall be done with love? |
36149 | What strains of ancient blood Move quicker to the music''s passionate beat? |
36149 | What though there are remnants here Of faded coronals, And bits of silver string Torn from forgotten harps? |
36149 | What was the charm and what the spell That made one hour of life become A memory ever memorable? |
36149 | What was the world? |
36149 | What''s the pons For you to cross to fame?--Your head in bronze? |
36149 | When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared Did you wait till he neared? |
36149 | Where is my lady?" |
36149 | Where now do I go? |
36149 | Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor? |
36149 | Why do you allow this to be?" |
36149 | Why do you never tire of playing, Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise? |
36149 | Why try to tell you? |
36149 | Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand? |
36149 | Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay, Wilt Thou deny when we deny? |
36149 | Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath? |
36149 | Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win? |
36149 | You are tired of the house? |
36149 | You understand? |
36149 | You will not sleep? |
36149 | asked the Knight,"There in the Castle Case?" |
3327 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
3327 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
3327 | Cruel wall,they said,"why do you keep two lovers apart? |
3327 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for you worthy of your praise? |
3327 | Have you any doubt of my love? 3327 Have you come at last,"said he,"long expected and do I behold you after such perils past? |
3327 | Have you heard anything of Arion? |
3327 | Have you the head of Medusa? |
3327 | Is it thus I find you restored to me? |
3327 | Most undutiful and faithless of servants,said she,"do you at last remember that you really have a mistress? |
3327 | O ruler of the gods, if I have deserved this treatment, and it is your will that I perish with fire, why withhold your thunderbolts? 3327 Oh, Pyramus,"she cried,"what has done this? |
3327 | Shall such wickedness triumph? |
3327 | Then Bacchus, for it was indeed he, as if shaking off his drowsiness, exclaimed,''What are you doing with me? 3327 Thine oracle, in vain to be, Oh, wherefore am I thus consigned, With eyes that every truth must see, Lone in the city of the blind? |
3327 | Ungrateful man,she exclaimed,"is it thus you leave me? |
3327 | What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turned your affection from me? 3327 What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? |
3327 | What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? 3327 What herb has such a power?" |
3327 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
3327 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Baldur?" |
3327 | Whence came these stories? 3327 Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the goddess? |
3327 | Why should you wish to behold me? |
3327 | Will nothing satisfy you but my life? |
3327 | ''What will love not discover? |
3327 | ''Why do you refuse me water?'' |
3327 | AEneas, horror- struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose punishments produced the sounds he hear? |
3327 | AEneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination? |
3327 | After having disobeyed my mother''s commands and made you my wife, will you think me a monster and cut off my head? |
3327 | Alcinous says to Ulysses,"Say from what city, from what regions tossed, And what inhabitants those regions boast? |
3327 | And can any other woman dare more than I? |
3327 | And is Lorenzo''s salamander- heart Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?" |
3327 | And shall I let you go into such danger alone? |
3327 | And what cowardice makes thee sink under this last danger, who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy former?" |
3327 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
3327 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
3327 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
3327 | Boots it th veil to lift, and give To sight the frowning fates beneath? |
3327 | But Psyche said,"Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? |
3327 | But a voice from the tower said to her,"Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy days in so dreadful a manner? |
3327 | But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? |
3327 | But how? |
3327 | But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to deserve such a fate? |
3327 | But shall he then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? |
3327 | But what has become of my glove?" |
3327 | But what if I offer him to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
3327 | But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feat? |
3327 | But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster? |
3327 | But who can withstand Jupiter? |
3327 | But why ask the gods to do it? |
3327 | Could you keep your course while the sphere was revolving under you? |
3327 | Cupid, beholding her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and said,"O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? |
3327 | Did he fall by the hands of robbers, or did some private enemy slay him? |
3327 | Do you ask me for proof that you are sprung from my blood? |
3327 | Do you ask why?" |
3327 | Do you not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
3327 | Dying now a second time she yet can not reproach her husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her? |
3327 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied,"Would you then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? |
3327 | For how could Achilles require the aid of celestial armor if he were invulnerable?) |
3327 | Go home to seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? |
3327 | Had he lost there a father or brother, or any dear friend? |
3327 | Has earth no more Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?" |
3327 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
3327 | Have I not cause for pride? |
3327 | Have they a foundation in truth, or are they simply dreams of the imagination?" |
3327 | Have you any wish ungratified? |
3327 | Have you learned to feel easy in the absence of Halcyone? |
3327 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
3327 | He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said,"If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" |
3327 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
3327 | He was loth to give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a simple heifer? |
3327 | He, starting from his sleep, cried out,"My daughters, what are you doing? |
3327 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
3327 | His father cried,"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?" |
3327 | How could Hercules take his place? |
3327 | How extricate the youth? |
3327 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
3327 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
3327 | I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life? |
3327 | I think we shall be conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war? |
3327 | Is it for this that I have supplied herbage for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars? |
3327 | Is this the reward of my fertility, of my obedient service? |
3327 | Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said,"Do you recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? |
3327 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
3327 | Nisus said to his friend,"Do you perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
3327 | Oh, spare me one of so many?!" |
3327 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
3327 | Or have you rather come to see your sick husband, yet suffering from the wound given him by his loving wife? |
3327 | Or would it be better to die with him? |
3327 | Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to discover himself and make his wants known? |
3327 | Shaking her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed,"Am I then to be eclipsed in my honors by a mortal girl? |
3327 | Shall I trust AEneas to the chances of the weather and winds?" |
3327 | Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son, while the house of Thestius( Thestius was father of Toxeus, Phlexippus and Althea) is desolate? |
3327 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed,"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
3327 | Skrymir awakening cried out,"What''s the matter? |
3327 | Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she exclaims,"O, dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?" |
3327 | Suppose I should lend you the chariot, what would you do? |
3327 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is that which in the morning goes on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
3327 | The Trojans heard with joy, and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
3327 | The parents consent( how could they hesitate?) |
3327 | The voice said,''Why do you fly, Arethusa? |
3327 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
3327 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
3327 | This is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:"You have the letters Cadmus gave, Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
3327 | Through a marble wilderness? |
3327 | To what deed am I borne along? |
3327 | To which question the river- god replied as follows:"Who likes to tell of his defeats? |
3327 | To whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise, What was thy pity''s recompense? |
3327 | Was then the rumor true that you had perished? |
3327 | What advantage to disclose it now? |
3327 | What could Jupiter do? |
3327 | What has become of them?" |
3327 | What have I done that you should treat me so? |
3327 | What have the cranes to do with him?" |
3327 | What is this fighting about? |
3327 | What is''t you do? |
3327 | What shall he do? |
3327 | What shall he do? |
3327 | What should he do? |
3327 | Where are you going to carry me?'' |
3327 | Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? |
3327 | Where is that love of me that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? |
3327 | Who brought me here? |
3327 | Who lived when thou was such? |
3327 | Why do you hang round my neck and still entreat me? |
3327 | Why should Latona be honored with worship rather than I? |
3327 | Why should he alone escape? |
3327 | Why will you not take a lesson from the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one? |
3327 | Will any one deny this? |
3327 | Will you kill your father? |
3327 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
3327 | Woe; great Jove have pity, Listen to my sad entreaty, Yet for what can Hero pray? |
3327 | Would you rather have me away?" |
3327 | Yet can ye relieve my grief? |
3327 | Yet where is your triumph? |
3327 | did he say?" |
3327 | said AEneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life, as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
3327 | she cried;"whither do you fly? |
37796 | = Zimmern( Antonia).= WHAT DO WE KNOW CONCERNING ELECTRICITY? |
36627 | WHAT WAS THE RELIGION OF SHAKESPEARE? |
36627 | Am I trying to offend people by intimating that the Bible was_ invented_? |
36627 | And do you know why, if Shakespeare can stand criticism, the Bible should shrink from it? |
36627 | And what about his general policy, to be all things to all men,--that is to say, to trim and compromise? |
36627 | And where? |
36627 | And why did the translators of the Bible wait two thousand years before they gave out this information? |
36627 | And why did they go to medium Huldah, if everybody knew what the book was? |
36627 | And why have I told this story? |
36627 | But does the evidence which I have offered prove that the Bible was invented? |
36627 | But is it fair to include the whole Bible in this accusation? |
36627 | But why should Hilkiah have meant one thing and said another? |
36627 | Could we ask for a stronger proof that the Bible is the work of men-- and not of honest men, at that? |
36627 | Did it invite native and foreign scholars to pronounce upon it? |
36627 | Did it study the book? |
36627 | Do you know of any good reason, reader, why every other subject may be independently discussed or investigated, except religion? |
36627 | Do you think the Church will let a man close his eyes and open his mouth and say whatever comes into his head? |
36627 | He expresses a wish, shall we not fulfill it? |
36627 | How could Paul, an exceptionally intelligent man, be guilty of such blasphemy? |
36627 | How could he so damage the character of the God he loved? |
36627 | How could the people, under these circumstances, get at the book? |
36627 | How did they decide which"ending of the Gospel"to print as the Word of God? |
36627 | How do Christian scholars explain this Hilkiah episode? |
36627 | How explain the vogue which lying for religion enjoyed after the conversion of the Roman Empire? |
36627 | How would that do? |
36627 | How, then, did this passage creep into the works of the Jewish historian? |
36627 | If Hilkiah made any changes in the book, how is the world to know which is Hilkiah''s and which is Moses''contribution to the Bible? |
36627 | Is it fair to demand so great a sacrifice to prolong the fantasy of a foolish woman? |
36627 | Is it not, nevertheless, true that the Bible teaches righteousness? |
36627 | Is not that edifying? |
36627 | Is not this ingenious? |
36627 | Or was it just put there for Hilkiah to find it? |
36627 | Perhaps I am to be blamed for taking this matter so seriously, but how can I help it? |
36627 | THE TRUTH ABOUT JESUS: IS HE A MYTH? |
36627 | That is the crucial question? |
36627 | Was Ezra inspired? |
36627 | Was it never put there? |
36627 | Was it so profitable to manufacture Gospels that everybody tried his hand at it? |
36627 | What better proof of the Trinity do we need? |
36627 | What did the committee do? |
36627 | What does Christian Scholarship think of his character? |
36627 | What fate had befallen it? |
36627 | What is your opinion of such a suggestion? |
36627 | What kind of a man was this compiler or inventor of the Book of the Law? |
36627 | What kind of a prophetess would she have been if she could not answer any questions offhand? |
36627 | What made lying so popular and profitable all at once? |
36627 | What was it that gave an impetus to the industry of imposture? |
36627 | When Uzzah, and the five thousand and seventy men were killed for touching the ark, was it empty? |
36627 | Where is it now? |
36627 | Which of us deserves most to be drowned? |
36627 | Why is it proper to disagree with a Greek or a Roman, but blasphemy to disagree with a Jew? |
36627 | Why was it, we ask again, that Europe became a market for forgeries, immediately after its conversion to the Asiatic cult? |
36627 | Why were there so many lying Gospels? |
36627 | Would that be asking too much? |
36627 | why is it a heresy to differ from Moses, Solomon, Jonah or Jesus? |
37574 | What are you bothering yourselves with a knitting machine for? 37574 What is your name, sir?" |
37574 | What shall I say, brave Adm''r''l, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
37574 | ''It''s easy enough for you to guess that Clay is at the head of the ticket, but Frelinghuysen-- who is Frelinghuysen?'' |
37574 | And why were Hargreaves and Arkwright driven out of Lancashire? |
37574 | Brave Adm''r''l, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
37574 | Brave Adm''r''l, speak, what shall I say?" |
37574 | How is this possible in so short a time? |
37574 | In the opinion rendered in favor of Whitney, Judge Johnson said of the cotton- gin:"Is there a man who hears us who has not experienced its utility? |
37574 | Is there any good reason for supposing that our pigmy planet, so insignificant compared with many celestial bodies, is the only one containing life? |
37574 | Lord Clarendon, in an interview with Field, had remarked:"But, suppose you do n''t succeed? |
37574 | Morse replied,"Why ca n''t it be done?" |
37574 | Suppose you make the attempt and fail-- your cable is lost in the sea-- then what will you do?" |
37574 | What is the difference between the life of the cave- dweller and the life of the modern New Yorker? |
37574 | What was the reason? |
37574 | Why do n''t you make a sewing machine?" |
2507 | A star? 2507 And are n''t they a change to the ditches And tunnels of Poverty Flat?" |
2507 | And how do I like my position? |
2507 | And is n''t it nice to have riches, And diamonds and silks, and all that? |
2507 | And now, in my higher ambition, With whom do I waltz, flirt, or talk? |
2507 | And what do I think of New York? |
2507 | Are we men? |
2507 | But what if you make a mistake? |
2507 | But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? 2507 But whence,"I cried,"this masquerade? |
2507 | But you''re tried and condemned, And skelping''s your doom,And he paused and he hemmed-- But why this resume? |
2507 | For instance, take some simple word,sez he,"like''separate:''Now who can spell it?" |
2507 | HOW ARE YOU, SANITARY? |
2507 | Have I ever a message to send? |
2507 | How fares my boy,--my soldier boy, Of the old Ninth Army Corps? 2507 How fell he? |
2507 | Is she dead? |
2507 | Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come? |
2507 | Lives she yet? |
2507 | Lives she yet? |
2507 | Lost a day? |
2507 | My name? 2507 No sight? |
2507 | Oh, you ask what that''s for? 2507 SEVENTY- NINE"( MR. INTERVIEWER INTERVIEWED) Know me next time when you see me, wo n''t you, old smarty? |
2507 | Shall we stand here as idle, and let Asia pour Her barbaric hordes on this civilized shore? 2507 THE BABES IN THE WOODS"( BIG PINE FLAT, 1871)"Something characteristic,"eh? |
2507 | The FIRST of June? 2507 The Union,"--that was well enough way up to''66; But this"Re- Union,"maybe now it''s mixed with politics? |
2507 | Then you told her your love? |
2507 | What happens when signals are wrong or switches misplaced? |
2507 | What if,''mid the cannons''thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb? |
2507 | What, sit by the side of a woman as fair as the sun in the sky, And look somewhere else lest the dazzle flash back from your own to her eye? 2507 Who were they?" |
2507 | Why are my eyelids so open and wild? |
2507 | Why, indeed? |
2507 | Why, oh, why? |
2507 | Yes; if not rude, When did you make east longitude? |
2507 | ''Twould serve me right if I prattled thus wildly To-- say a sheriff? |
2507 | A race that is not to the swift, a prize that no merits enforce, But is won by some faineant youth, who shall simply walk over the course? |
2507 | A something trembled o''er the well, Bright, spherical-- a tear? |
2507 | AFTER THE ACCIDENT( MOUTH OF THE SHAFT) What I want is my husband, sir,-- And if you''re a man, sir, You''ll give me an answer,-- Where is my Joe? |
2507 | AVITOR( AN AERIAL RETROSPECT) What was it filled my youthful dreams, In place of Greek or Latin themes, Or beauty''s wild, bewildering beams? |
2507 | Ah, is it? |
2507 | Ai n''t I a bad lot, sonny? |
2507 | Ai n''t I funny? |
2507 | Ai n''t she a lamb? |
2507 | All his fond foolish trophies pinned yonder-- a bow from HER hair, A few billets- doux, invitations, and-- what''s this? |
2507 | Am I not right? |
2507 | And Billy? |
2507 | And Echo sez"Where?" |
2507 | And I asks,"Is this Nation a White Man''s, and is generally things on the square?" |
2507 | And I gave her four apples that evening, and took her to ride on my sled, And--"What am I telling you this for?" |
2507 | And I said,"What is written, sweet sister, At the opposite end of the room?" |
2507 | And I''d know why papa shut the door with a slam, And said something funny that sounded like"jam,"And then"Edith-- where are you?" |
2507 | And as dumb we lay, till, through Smoke and flame and bitter cry, Hailed the"Serapis:""Have you Struck your colors?" |
2507 | And is that why? |
2507 | And likewise what''s gone of the Established Church? |
2507 | And must thou, foundling, still forego Thy heritage and high ambition, To lie full lowly and full low, Adjusted to thy new condition? |
2507 | And the question goes round How the thing kem to pass? |
2507 | And then where''ll you be? |
2507 | And week from next is Conference.... You said the twelfth of May? |
2507 | And what did Jones, Lycurgus B., With his known idiosyncrasy? |
2507 | And what do I call you? |
2507 | And what if I try your ideal With something, if not quite so fair, at least more en regle and real? |
2507 | And why? |
2507 | And you have sailed the Spanish Main, And knew my Jacob?... |
2507 | And you want to know my name? |
2507 | And you''ll say that she was a Maltese, and-- what''s that you asked? |
2507 | And"Wot''s this yer yarn of the Major and you?" |
2507 | And-- That''s a peart hoss Thet you''ve got,--ain''t it now? |
2507 | Any complaints to make? |
2507 | Are there no laws,-- Laws to protect such as we? |
2507 | Are they misplaced Clasping or shielding some delicate waist? |
2507 | Are things what they seem? |
2507 | Are things what they seem? |
2507 | Are we left in the lurch? |
2507 | Are you listening? |
2507 | As a child- like diversion? |
2507 | BOBBY Do you know why Aunt Jane is always snarling At you and me because we tells a lie, And she do n''t slap that man that called her darling? |
2507 | BOBBY Do you know why Nurse says it is n''t manners For you and me to ask folks twice for pie, And no one hits that man with two bananas? |
2507 | BOBBY Do you know why they''ve put us in that back room, Up in the attic, close against the sky, And made believe our nursery''s a cloak- room? |
2507 | BOBBY She hurt it-- and that''s why; He made it well, the very way that Mamma Does do to I. JOHNNY I feel so sleepy.... Was that Papa kissed us? |
2507 | Busted hisself in White Pine, and blew out his brains down in''Frisco? |
2507 | But Melican man He washee him pan On BOTTOM side hillee And catchee-- how can?" |
2507 | But WHY? |
2507 | But instead, Who is this leaning forward with glorified head And hands stretched to save? |
2507 | But when he came, with smile and bow, Maud only blushed, and stammered,"Ha- ow?" |
2507 | But, however, I read it-- or how could I quote? |
2507 | Ca n''t a man drop''s glass in yer shop But you must r''ar? |
2507 | Can this be she of haughty mien, The goddess of the sword and shield? |
2507 | Cost? |
2507 | Could it be, Bobby, something that I dropped? |
2507 | Couldst thou not in grace Have borne with us still longer, and so spare The scorn we see in that proud, placid face? |
2507 | Dead? |
2507 | Did I say before That the Fray was a stranger? |
2507 | Did he preach-- did he pray? |
2507 | Did you know Briggs of Tuolumne? |
2507 | Do I wonder and doubt? |
2507 | Do the souls of the dying ever yearn To some favored spot for the dust''s return, For the homely peace of the family urn? |
2507 | Do they ever say that to such people as you? |
2507 | Do you know what that date means? |
2507 | Do you know why? |
2507 | Do you know why? |
2507 | Do you know why? |
2507 | Do you think that he meant that she kissed him? |
2507 | Dost thou answer to my kiss? |
2507 | Dost thou still wonder, and ask why these arms Fill thy soft bosom with tender alarms, Swaying so wickedly? |
2507 | Eh!--are you mad? |
2507 | Eh, little rogue? |
2507 | Eh, what? |
2507 | Eh, you knew HER? |
2507 | Eh? |
2507 | Eh? |
2507 | Eh? |
2507 | FURTHER LANGUAGE FROM TRUTHFUL JAMES( NYE''S FORD, STANISLAUS, 1870) Do I sleep? |
2507 | Fifteen year? |
2507 | For why? |
2507 | For you see the dern cuss had struck--"Water?" |
2507 | Had I fired the magazine? |
2507 | Had angels kind Touched with compassion some weak woman''s breast? |
2507 | Had she found the Anian passage famed, By lying Maldonado claimed, And sailed through the sixty- fifth degree Direct to the North Atlantic Sea? |
2507 | Hain''t got no tongue, hey, hev ye? |
2507 | Has the White Man no country? |
2507 | Hast lost thy ready skill of tongue and pen? |
2507 | Have you Ever seen this Australian Emeu? |
2507 | He called me"daughter,"as he raised his jeweled hand to bless; And then, in thrilling undertones, he asked,"Would I confess?" |
2507 | He came down to the Ford On the very same day Of that lottery drawed By those sharps at the Bay; And he says to me,"Truthful, how goes it?" |
2507 | He still comes to confession-- You''d"like to catch him"? |
2507 | He was that scarred trunk, and she the vine that sweetly Clothed him with life again, and lifted-- SECOND TOURIST Yes; but pray How know you this? |
2507 | He''s gone, and for what? |
2507 | Hot work; eh, Colonel, was n''t it? |
2507 | How dared you get rich-- you great stupid!-- Like papa, and some men that I know, Instead of just trusting to Cupid And to me for your money? |
2507 | How dared you-- how COULD you? |
2507 | How did I get in here? |
2507 | How did she get there? |
2507 | How do you think the man was dressed? |
2507 | How old you think, Senor? |
2507 | How passed the night through thy long waking?" |
2507 | How''s Thompson? |
2507 | I have seen danger? |
2507 | IN THE MISSION GARDEN( 1865) FATHER FELIPE I speak not the English well, but Pachita, She speak for me; is it not so, my Pancha? |
2507 | IN THE TUNNEL Did n''t know Flynn,-- Flynn of Virginia,-- Long as he''s been''yar? |
2507 | If this be the grace He showeth thee Who art His servant, what may we, Strange to His ways and His commands, Seek at His unforgiving hands?" |
2507 | In this brand- new hotel, called"The Lily"( I wonder who gave it that name?) |
2507 | Is it Nye that I doubt? |
2507 | Is our civilization a failure? |
2507 | Is our civilization a failure? |
2507 | Is there naught in the halo of youth but the glow of a passionate race--''Midst the cheers and applause of a crowd-- to the goal of a beautiful face? |
2507 | JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG"HOW ARE YOU, SANITARY?" |
2507 | JOHNNY Do you know why that man that''s got a cropped head Rubbed it just now as if he felt a fly? |
2507 | Jim cursed As the fireman, there in the cab with him, Kinder stared in the face of Jim, And says,"What now?" |
2507 | Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view-- And what could you, what should you, what would YOU do? |
2507 | Kick her? |
2507 | Know the old ford on the Fork, that nearly got Flanigan''s leaders? |
2507 | Know you not what fate awaits you, Or to whom the future mates you? |
2507 | LUKE( IN THE COLORADO PARK, 1873) Wot''s that you''re readin''?--a novel? |
2507 | Little Red Riding- Hood, when in the street, Why do I press your small hand when we meet? |
2507 | Look at it; do n''t it look pooty? |
2507 | Look''ee here, stranger, Whar HEV you been? |
2507 | Lost is that camp and wasted all its fire; And he who wrought that spell? |
2507 | MISS BLANCHE SAYS And you are the poet, and so you want Something-- what is it?--a theme, a fancy? |
2507 | MISS EDITH MAKES ANOTHER FRIEND Oh, you''re the girl lives on the corner? |
2507 | MORAL You see the point? |
2507 | Mary Ellen? |
2507 | Money? |
2507 | Must thou go When the day And the light Need thee so,-- Needeth all, Heedeth all, That is best? |
2507 | NATIONAL JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg?--No? |
2507 | Never in jail before, was you, old blatherskite, say? |
2507 | No, Senor? |
2507 | No? |
2507 | No? |
2507 | No? |
2507 | No? |
2507 | No? |
2507 | No?--just caballero? |
2507 | Not hidden in the drifted snows, But under ink- drops idly spattered, And leaves ephemeral as those That on thy woodland tomb were scattered? |
2507 | Nothing more, did I say? |
2507 | Nothing of that kind, eh? |
2507 | Nothing of that sort, eh? |
2507 | Of course the young lady had beaux by the score, All that she wanted,--what girl could ask more? |
2507 | Oh, why did papa strike pay gravel In drifting on Poverty Flat? |
2507 | Or an innocent"Jack pot"that-- opened-- was to us ez the jaws of the tomb? |
2507 | Or had she found the"River of Kings,"Of which De Fonte told such strange things, In sixteen forty? |
2507 | Or is the Caucasian played out? |
2507 | Or is the Caucasian played out? |
2507 | Or is visions about? |
2507 | Or is visions about? |
2507 | Or shall I go bid him believe in all womankind''s charm, and forget In the light ringing laugh of the world the rattlesnake''s gay castanet? |
2507 | Or shall you walk in the garden with Pancha? |
2507 | P''r''aps Some on you chaps Might know Jim Wild? |
2507 | PENELOPE( SIMPSON''S BAR, 1858) So you''ve kem''yer agen, And one answer wo n''t do? |
2507 | PHILOSOPHER Is this true? |
2507 | PHILOSOPHER Rosa? |
2507 | POET What? |
2507 | POET Who? |
2507 | POET YOU? |
2507 | Quien sabe? |
2507 | Rapid to stay? |
2507 | Really now Did I ever leap like this springald, with Love''s chaplet green on my brow? |
2507 | Rum? |
2507 | See that big man who looked up and bowed? |
2507 | Seest thou these hatchments? |
2507 | Shall I speak of my first love-- Augusta-- my Lalage? |
2507 | Shall I tear out a leaf from my heart, from that book that forever is shut On the past? |
2507 | Shall I tell him first love is a fraud, a weakling that''s strangled in birth, Recalled with perfunctory tears, but lost in unsanctified mirth? |
2507 | Shall I? |
2507 | Shall a youth of noble race In affairs of love give place To a Cooke?" |
2507 | So she asked to know"whar I was hid?" |
2507 | So you thought of the rusty old cabin, The pines, and the valley below, And heard the North Fork of the Yuba As you stood on the banks of the Po? |
2507 | Some figure for to- night''s charade, A Watteau shepherdess or maid?" |
2507 | Speakin''o''gals, d''ye mind that house ez you rise the hill, A mile and a half from White''s, and jist above Mattingly''s mill? |
2507 | Stay one moment: you''ve heard Of Caldwell, the parson, who once preached the word Down at Springfield? |
2507 | Still silent, Stranger? |
2507 | Stop, yes; do you see that chap,-- Him standin''over there, a- hidin''his eyes in his cap? |
2507 | THE GODDESS CONTRIBUTED TO THE FAIR FOR THE LADIES''PATRIOTIC FUND OF THE PACIFIC"Who comes?" |
2507 | Tears upon that painted cheek? |
2507 | Thar is n''t her match in the county; Is thar, old gal,--Chiquita, my darling, my beauty? |
2507 | Thar''s your way, To the left of yon tree; But-- a-- look h''yur, say? |
2507 | That little cuss? |
2507 | That when waltzing she drooped on his breast, and the veins of her eyelids grew dim,''Twas oxygen''s absence she felt, but never the presence of him? |
2507 | That''s its name; And I reckon that you Are a stranger? |
2507 | The Station- Master? |
2507 | The delicate odor of mignonette, The ghost of a dead- and- gone bouquet, Is all that tells of her story; yet Could she think of a sweeter way? |
2507 | The girl interests you? |
2507 | The same? |
2507 | The sentry''s warning cry Rings sharply on the evening air: Who comes? |
2507 | The younger looked up with a smile:"I sat by her side half an hour-- what else was I doing the while? |
2507 | Then I looked up at Nye, And he gazed upon me; And he rose with a sigh, And said,"Can this be? |
2507 | Then a man of affairs? |
2507 | Then said Nye to me,"Injins is pizen: But what is his number, eh, James?" |
2507 | Then why waste your labors, brave hearts and strong men, In tracking a trail to the Copperhead''s den? |
2507 | Thou who now and then Touched the too credulous ear with pathos, canst not speak? |
2507 | To yield our tribute, stamped with Caesar''s face, To Caesar, stricken in the market- place? |
2507 | Twenty years was its age, did you say? |
2507 | Twenty years? |
2507 | Twenty? |
2507 | WHAT THE WOLF REALLY SAID TO LITTLE RED RIDING- HOOD Wondering maiden, so puzzled and fair, Why dost thou murmur and ponder and stare? |
2507 | Was I such an ass? |
2507 | Was ever morn so filled with all things new? |
2507 | Was he blind? |
2507 | Was it a trick? |
2507 | Was it euchre or draw Cut us off in our bloom? |
2507 | Was it faro, whose law Is uncertain ez doom? |
2507 | Was it guile, or a dream? |
2507 | Was it really Augusta? |
2507 | Was it the trick of a sense o''erwrought With outward watching and inward fret? |
2507 | Was the victory lost or won? |
2507 | Well what''ud you give to know? |
2507 | Well, here''s to us: Eh? |
2507 | Well, thar-- Good- by-- No more, sir-- I-- Eh? |
2507 | Well, this yer Jim,-- Did you know him? |
2507 | Well? |
2507 | What had they come to see? |
2507 | What if I told you my own romance? |
2507 | What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?" |
2507 | What made him sigh, and look up to the sky? |
2507 | What made me launch from attic tall A kitten and a parasol, And watch their bitter, frightful fall? |
2507 | What makes you star'', You over thar? |
2507 | What matters? |
2507 | What might be her cost? |
2507 | What nerves its hands to strike a deadlier blow And hurl its legions on the rebel foe? |
2507 | What of the lady? |
2507 | What recked we then what beasts or men around might lurk or creep? |
2507 | What stories? |
2507 | What strange spell Kept her two hundred years so well, Free from decay and mortal taint? |
2507 | What things? |
2507 | What was their greeting, the groom and bride, They whom that steel and the years divide? |
2507 | What would you? |
2507 | What youthful dreams of high renown Bade me inflate the parson''s gown, That went not up, nor yet came down? |
2507 | What''s that you say? |
2507 | What''s that? |
2507 | What''s that?--a message? |
2507 | What''s the thing to do? |
2507 | What''s this? |
2507 | What''s your name? |
2507 | What''s your view? |
2507 | What, no? |
2507 | What, no? |
2507 | When he talks of her cheek''s loveliness, Shall I say''twas the air of the room, and was due to carbonic excess? |
2507 | Where shall we find thy like? |
2507 | Where was the galleon all this while? |
2507 | Where, oh, where, shall he begin Who would paint thee, Harlequin? |
2507 | Who cares? |
2507 | Who else should know? |
2507 | Who shall say? |
2507 | Whom do you shoot? |
2507 | Whose eye was this beneath that beetling frown? |
2507 | Why are they all Looking and coming this way? |
2507 | Why come we here-- last of a scattered fold-- To pour new metal in the broken mould? |
2507 | Why do n''t you go? |
2507 | Why do n''t you say suthin, blast you? |
2507 | Why do they call? |
2507 | Why doth that lovely lady stare? |
2507 | Why, I thought you might be diverted Hearing how Jones of Red Rock Range Drawed his"hint to the unconverted,"And saying,"Whar will you have it?" |
2507 | Why, dern it!--sho!-- No? |
2507 | Why, when you timidly offered your cheek, Why did I sigh, and why did n''t I speak? |
2507 | Why? |
2507 | Will nobody answer the bell? |
2507 | Will you hear? |
2507 | Will you not enter? |
2507 | With his face to the foe, Upholding the flag he bore? |
2507 | With my luck, Where''s the chance of being stuck? |
2507 | With scenes so adverse, what mysterious bond Links our fair fortunes to the shores beyond? |
2507 | Wo n''t you come up to tea? |
2507 | Wot''s that you got?--tobacco? |
2507 | Would ye b''lieve it? |
2507 | Would you-- if your lips was n''t sore? |
2507 | Wrecked on some lonely coral isle, Burnt by the roving sea- marauders, Or sailing north under secret orders? |
2507 | YOU do? |
2507 | Ye noticed Polly,--the baby? |
2507 | Yet here should stand the blasted pine that marked our farther range; And here-- what''s this? |
2507 | You did n''t meet Euchre- deck Billy Anywhere on your road to Cairo? |
2507 | You do not use Snuff? |
2507 | You do? |
2507 | You know it? |
2507 | You know that he''s got the consumption? |
2507 | You like the wine? |
2507 | You mean Something milder? |
2507 | You see that pear- tree? |
2507 | You smile, O poet, and what do you? |
2507 | You think it ai n''t true about Ilsey? |
2507 | You wants to know the rest, my dears? |
2507 | You were speaking of his daughter? |
2507 | You wo n''t turn your face this way? |
2507 | You would crush THEM as well as the robbers,-- Root them out, scatter them? |
2507 | You would try to ARREST him? |
2507 | You''d fill my Jack''s place? |
2507 | You''re no believer? |
2507 | You, with a warrant? |
2507 | and it''s"Belle, is it true?" |
2507 | and the other ones?--Eh? |
2507 | and-- What did you say?-- Oh, the nevey? |
2507 | are they not? |
2507 | do I dream? |
2507 | do they, eh? |
2507 | eh? |
2507 | hath the sea Yielded its dead to humble me? |
2507 | he tells it to every stranger: Folks about yer say the old man''s my father; What''s your opinion? |
2507 | how we shall dine? |
2507 | if I try, you will sit here beside me, And shall not laugh, eh? |
2507 | it''s true We buried him at Gettysburg: I mind the spot; do you? |
2507 | let me see; it''s a year now,''most, That I met Jim, East, and says,"How''s your ghost?" |
2507 | no offense, son,-- You are a soldier? |
2507 | no sound?" |
2507 | really? |
2507 | says Joe Johnson,"and list to this jaw, Without process of warrant or color of law? |
2507 | shall I shock his conceit? |
2507 | to Miss Ilsey? |
2507 | what is the row about? |
2507 | what is this Lieth there so cold? |
2507 | what shapes and laughing graces Slipped from its point, when his full heart went out In smiles and courtly phrases? |
2507 | where''s Sal? |
2507 | who are YOU, anyhow, goin''round in that sneakin''way? |
2507 | will he be there? |
2507 | you not understand? |
2507 | you saw her? |
36585 | I will make mention of a Bahai christening[?] 36585 In view of the differences among the friends and the lack of unity among the maid servants of the Merciful, how can Abdul Baha hasten to those parts? |
36585 | What rascally knave calls me abusive? 36585 Will you curse Baha?" |
36585 | [ 443] Now, what are the facts? 36585 [ 585]"These funds Abbas Effendi appropriated and with these made his charitable gifts(?) |
36585 | 3,"What is his name and what his son''s name?" |
36585 | Again I return to the question,"Is Bahaism specially adapted to be universal?" |
36585 | Are you again planning to get me a wife? |
36585 | As to unification, how is it? |
36585 | At length we said,''She has come, what shall we do?'' |
36585 | Azal then asked whether, if God should lay upon him the command to do this, he would obey it? |
36585 | Besides, what advantage is it for a religion to be set forth in 100 volumes? |
36585 | But does not truth demand that it be stated that his reputation in Persia is sullied by definite accusations of vice and immorality? |
36585 | Can this be right to accept worship?" |
36585 | Can we believe that the"Incarnated Father of all"has revealed a new"Most Holy Book"in which bigamy is permitted? |
36585 | Did the"Infallible Pen"err in the former character sketch? |
36585 | Direct inquiry is made,"Are you a Bahai?" |
36585 | Do you not remember your sodomies? |
36585 | Had not a"universal religion"better let linguistics alone? |
36585 | Had not a"universal religion"better let politics alone? |
36585 | He said,"What is it?" |
36585 | How can I classify the late Prof. T. K. Cheyne of Oxford? |
36585 | How can a sinner like me reach Thee? |
36585 | How do such changes aid universality or unification? |
36585 | How shall we settle the question of veracity? |
36585 | I called Maskin Kalam and said to him,"What are these words and doings? |
36585 | I said,"You say they do not work miracles, but must there not be personal power and influence in words? |
36585 | I, p. 169._ Can Bahaism make good its claim to be the fulfillment of and substitute for Christianity? |
36585 | If Baha is true why does he talk so? |
36585 | In either case, what do we see? |
36585 | Is Bahaism fitted to be a universal religion? |
36585 | Is it possible? |
36585 | Is not Bahaism a mass of assertions? |
36585 | Mr. Laurence Oliphant reports that the Court put the question to Baha,"Will you tell the Court who and what you are?" |
36585 | My brother saw that there was something unusual afoot, so he demanded of us with considerable energy,''What is this? |
36585 | My companion said to Ishan,"Why do they curse so?" |
36585 | Perhaps some one remarks,"What''s the difference?" |
36585 | Professor Browne says:"What could be more impractical than the adoption of the number nineteen as the basis of measures or calculations?" |
36585 | Some years ago a Bahai was called before the Governor of Tabriz and questioned,"Are you a Bahai?" |
36585 | The spirit of_ love_(?) |
36585 | There are those who will say,''Have we not Jesus? |
36585 | These are samples of its new and superior(?) |
36585 | V Bahaism and Christianity(_ Continued_) Mrs. Goodall:--"Is it necessary to arise to say the midnight prayers and to make ablution before them?" |
36585 | V. What does Bahaism teach as to the_ political equality of man and woman_? |
36585 | W. A. Shedd, D. D., of Urumia writes,"Does the religion bring about a change of life and character? |
36585 | Was he mistaken in so important a matter? |
36585 | Was this fulfilled in Baha? |
36585 | What are all the people smiling about? |
36585 | What does such language mean? |
36585 | What might the minority expect? |
36585 | What of Abul Fazl''s question,[491]"Have you ever heard of a Bahai accused[492] of drinking wine? |
36585 | What of the progress of Bahaism in America? |
36585 | What of those who remain Moslems and Christians? |
36585 | What shameless ruffian have I abused that he should dare accuse me?" |
36585 | What were the social results of her breaking through the restrictions of Islam? |
36585 | When this was reported to the Bab, he said,"Was there no one to smite him on the mouth?" |
36585 | Where is the boast of progress and superiority, when the most essential unit of human society is nullified? |
36585 | Who else can do that?" |
36585 | Who else can do this?" |
36585 | Why can not Christian people see that its claims annul faith and loyalty to Christ? |
36585 | Why did not Baha preserve alive one of the sons rather than wish him to marry a companion- wife in order to have another? |
36585 | Why did they do so? |
36585 | Why do these brothers revile each other? |
36585 | Why does Abdul Baha encourage them? |
36585 | Why will not Bahai writers give the facts straight? |
36585 | Will God be heard for His much speaking any more than man would be? |
36585 | Would they possibly have shown him visions with the hope of persuading him of the truth of Bahaism? |
36585 | Yet why was I startled? |
36585 | [ 619] The"Kitab- ul- Akdas"commands that the hair should not be allowed to grow below the level of the ear: why does not Abdul Baha keep this law? |
36585 | [ 87] Is not this a high- handed way to deal with God''s Word, as they profess to regard it? |
37145 | Are these the men? |
37145 | Are you sure we''re on the right island? |
37145 | At what altitude was this taken? |
37145 | Can you fly? |
37145 | Feel better? |
37145 | Good afternoon, how are you? 37145 Have you eaten?" |
37145 | How far are we from Moscow? |
37145 | Is that Island of Celebes? |
37145 | Now would n''t_ that_ be an interesting end? |
37145 | Oh,said Baker innocently,"Then perhaps it could be arranged for us to meet him?" |
37145 | Phobat Rau has spoken to you of my birth and life here? |
37145 | So now,said our host,"you would like to hear a word of explanation, perhaps?" |
37145 | So you took him over? |
37145 | Speaking for myself, Stimson, when do we leave? |
37145 | Then what is it? |
37145 | Well, could n''t they estimate? |
37145 | What are you going to do next? |
37145 | What does the rest of the world think about all this? 37145 What is it?" |
37145 | What-- how did he--? |
37145 | Where does the Great One live? |
37145 | You can stand now, yes? |
37145 | You spend nice night, yes? 37145 You took good advantage of your chance with our simple giant, did you not? |
37145 | Any questions?" |
37145 | Anyone have an idea?" |
37145 | Besides, where could it come from? |
37145 | But how can you fight seven hundred million people?" |
37145 | But to whom? |
37145 | But what if they do not obey? |
37145 | Cady, what''s your opinion?" |
37145 | Clear?" |
37145 | Did you notice that rickshaw boy? |
37145 | Finally, just who is involved in it? |
37145 | Get plenty sleep?" |
37145 | Have you talked to any Europeans, or heard a radio?" |
37145 | How can I bring peace without the use of violence? |
37145 | How long for British and Americans to wake up?" |
37145 | How should we address you?" |
37145 | Is New Buddhism entirely Asiatic, as they claim, or has Russia cut herself in too?" |
37145 | Is your radio working?" |
37145 | Should I use force? |
37145 | So you doubt that he is alive?" |
37145 | The big question is, is it mechanical or-- alive?" |
37145 | To America, or to Russia? |
37145 | Want to join the party?" |
37145 | What do you think of our Buddha?" |
37145 | What will Russians do? |
37145 | Where is leadership in China I can trust? |
37145 | Why do you stop?" |
37145 | Why? |
37145 | Will you help me?" |
37145 | You will tell me of rest of world?" |
37614 | Would the sahib like to see the library? |
37614 | Had my week of scrutiny brought me any closer to the real intimacies of evolution? |
37614 | It was all as good- natured as it sounded, for, after all, had we not already found the birds themselves and obtained our notes and photographs? |
37614 | Must go and show nest, eh?" |
37614 | Or-- evading these questions for the time-- was there nothing I could do in the few precious moments left? |
37614 | Then a ghostly goatsucker called eerily,"Who- are- you?" |
37614 | Then, still out of sight, came a voice on the stairway:"Salaam, sahib, will sahib come see dance and see wedding?" |
37614 | Was it the first-- or the last-- to appear above the waters? |
37614 | Was there any clearing up of the mystery of the jungle? |
37614 | Was there any stranger life in the world? |
37614 | Were we two not all alone? |
37614 | What had I learned after all? |
37614 | Who was I not to be bound in chivalry by the accredited customs of his race? |
37614 | _ Wh-- y?_ and after a little time,_ Wh-- y?_ I looked about me despairingly. |
37614 | _ Wh-- y?_ and after a little time,_ Wh-- y?_ I looked about me despairingly. |
34578 | But,replied the monarch,"are we not the descendants of the illustrious Prince Thamadat? |
34578 | But,retorted Buddha,"if in that new place we be likewise reviled, what then?" |
34578 | But,said Buddha,"if we be ill- treated in the new place we go to, what is to be done?" |
34578 | By what means,said he to himself,"can a heart find peace and happiness?" |
34578 | How is this? |
34578 | How is this? |
34578 | Is it you, great Rahan,cried Kathaba,"whom we see here?" |
34578 | My son,answered Buddha,"in what country does your brother Thariputra spend his season?" |
34578 | To whom,said he,"shall I announce the law?" |
34578 | What is the doctrine of that great master? |
34578 | What wonder will you work, my daughter, Garamie? |
34578 | What? |
34578 | Where is he now? |
34578 | Who advised you to commit the murder? |
34578 | Who are you? |
34578 | Who is here watching? |
34578 | Who is that man? |
34578 | Anatapein asked Gaudama how he wished the donation should be made and effected? |
34578 | And have you no other science to teach us?" |
34578 | As soon as he saw him he exclaimed:"Illustrious Buddha, why do you expose us to such a shame? |
34578 | Buddha considered a third time, and said to himself:"To whom shall I go to preach the law?" |
34578 | Buddha coolly asked the king,"What is that object which is stretched before us?" |
34578 | Buddha said to him:"Do you believe those beauties before you to be equal to Dzanapada?" |
34578 | Buddha said to them,"Which, in your opinion, is the best and most advantageous thing, either to go in search of yourselves or in search of a woman?" |
34578 | Buddha then thought: Where shall I find a stone to rub it upon? |
34578 | Buddha, addressing Ratha''s father, said to him,"What will you have to state in reply to what I am about to tell you? |
34578 | But how is a world brought into existence? |
34578 | But such a happy state is, as yet, at a great distance; where is the road leading thereto? |
34578 | But why is it so? |
34578 | By what means can a man get out of the stream or current of passions? |
34578 | By what means can such an invaluable treasure be procured? |
34578 | By what means can this ignorance be done away with? |
34578 | By what possible means could you ever succeed in bringing me back into the whirlpool of passions?" |
34578 | Can his parents or wife be really happy by the mere accidental ties that connect them with his person? |
34578 | Can it be conferred upon man by the possession of some exterior object? |
34578 | Could not a better and more decent mode be resorted to for supplying your wants?" |
34578 | Could you ever prove, by indisputable evidence, that you have ever made offerings enough to be deserving of this throne?" |
34578 | FOOTNOTES[ 1] Which of the two systems, Buddhism or Brahminism, is the most ancient? |
34578 | Gaudama hearing all these words said:"What means this? |
34578 | He asks himself, In what consists true and real happiness? |
34578 | He said aloud,"Who are they that can do wonders? |
34578 | He said to him,"O wretched one, are you not aware that fear is no longer to be found in him who has become a Rahanda?" |
34578 | He thought again: Where is a fit spot to extend my clothes upon? |
34578 | He thought again: Where is a proper place to dry it upon? |
34578 | How can he cross over the sea of existences? |
34578 | How can he free himself from the evil influence? |
34578 | How could that be so? |
34578 | How is it that at midnight there was such an uncommon splendour? |
34578 | How is it, moreover, that the tree Yekadat is now bending down its branches?" |
34578 | How is this power conferred upon him? |
34578 | How shall he be able to purify himself from the smallest stain of concupiscence?" |
34578 | I am old now, and the end of my existence is quite uncertain; could you not undertake to bring my son over to me? |
34578 | In what consists the fulfilment of the religious duties? |
34578 | In what does such a perfection consist? |
34578 | Is it necessary to go from door to door to beg your food? |
34578 | It may be asked what becomes of the sum of demerits and its consequent evil influence, whilst the superior good influence prevails? |
34578 | May I be allowed to ask what country you belong to, who you are, and from what illustrious lineage and descent you are come?" |
34578 | On hearing this unusual noise, the chief of Nagas awoke from his sleep, and said:"How is this? |
34578 | On my appearance before the crowd they will ask, What is this water- fowl? |
34578 | Phralaong at that moment said to Manh:"How do you dare to pretend to the possession of this throne? |
34578 | Shall I not be able to get a person who could procure for me some information respecting my son?" |
34578 | Surprised at what he perceived, he said to Buddha:"O Rahan, formerly there were here neither tank nor stone; how is it that they are here now? |
34578 | The enraged Manh cried to his followers,"Why do you stand looking on? |
34578 | The heretics, informed of this, said,"What will become of us? |
34578 | The king said to them,"Wicked men, is it true that you have killed the woman Thondarie?" |
34578 | The members of the deputation having duly paid their respects, said to him,"O most excellent Phra, which is the best thing to be bestowed in alms? |
34578 | They continued addressing Buddha, and said:"What shall we henceforth worship?" |
34578 | They said to Thindzi,"Teacher, is this all that you know? |
34578 | To what law or doctrine have you given preference in your arduous studies?" |
34578 | To what purpose are uttered so many fine expressions?" |
34578 | To what shall I liken it as regards the happy results it produces? |
34578 | To whom shall I go now?" |
34578 | Under what teacher have you become a Rahan? |
34578 | Unmoved by all their allurements, Buddha said to them,"For what purpose do you come to me? |
34578 | Was the monarch induced by considerations of a higher order to send for Buddha? |
34578 | What are the causes productive of such a burning? |
34578 | What are the duties to be performed in order to become a real Pounha?" |
34578 | What causes birth, old age, and death? |
34578 | What has become of that form which deceived and enslaved so many? |
34578 | What is meant by Dzan? |
34578 | What is meant by the religious disposition? |
34578 | What is pain, which is the first of the great truths? |
34578 | What is the destruction of pain, which is the third great truth? |
34578 | What is the production of pain, the second sublime truth? |
34578 | What is the real renouncing? |
34578 | What is the true knowledge? |
34578 | What is the way leading to the destruction of that desire, which is the fourth great truth? |
34578 | What shall it avail any man to feel envious at the success he obtains by so legitimate a means?" |
34578 | What will become of my throne? |
34578 | What will become of our country?" |
34578 | Whence comes the name Pounha? |
34578 | Whence that involuntary cry for assistance, but from the innate consciousness that above man there is some one ruling over his destinies? |
34578 | Where is it to be found? |
34578 | Which is the best and the fittest thing to put an end to passions?" |
34578 | Which is the most pleasurable? |
34578 | Which is the most savoury and relishing of all things? |
34578 | Which is the most valuable, a small quantity of water or the lives of countless beings, and, in particular, the lives of princes?" |
34578 | Who could, then, wonder at the conduct of Tsampooka? |
34578 | Who has ever thought of giving any credence to those fables? |
34578 | Who is your guide in the way to perfection? |
34578 | Who will now ever presume to say that he ought to subject himself again to them and bend his neck under their baneful influence?" |
34578 | Why do they exist? |
34578 | Why is there birth? |
34578 | Why should I bestow signs of compassion upon it? |
34578 | Would any one take her now for half that sum?" |
34578 | [ 2] I will repay their good offices to me, by preaching to them the law, but where are they now?" |
34578 | [ 4] Is not that young man doing the duty of forerunner of Buddha on the occasion of his solemn entry into the city of Radzagio? |
34578 | and what is the doctrine he is preaching to you?" |
34578 | said he, with an unfeigned feeling of surprise,"and by what way did you come and contrive to arrive here before me?" |
34578 | said he,"is it against me alone that such a countless crowd of warriors has been assembled? |
34578 | said the astonished Thagia;"am I doomed to lose my happy state?" |
34578 | what does this mean?" |
34578 | who has ever equalled him? |
28815 | ''What think you now, Tohomish?'' |
28815 | Alas,replied Cecil,"how could we escape? |
28815 | Alas? |
28815 | Am I a weight on you? 28815 And has Multnomah, chief of the Willamettes and war- chief of the Wauna, lived to hear his daughter say that war is terrible to her? |
28815 | And who are they who bring us our doom? 28815 And you slew him for it? |
28815 | Are they not bright? |
28815 | Are you going away? |
28815 | But our hearts burned within us and we replied,''Our hunting- grounds and our food you have taken; will you have our lives also? 28815 But suppose the ideal work is given? |
28815 | But you have chosen no one? |
28815 | Can I do anything for you? |
28815 | Can the sachems put love in my heart? 28815 Can they not see that the tribes are on the verge of revolt?" |
28815 | Can you not control your young men? 28815 Did you see the races?" |
28815 | Do the women of the Willamette feel sad when they go to live with their husbands? 28815 Do you know what it would be for me to be an Indian''s wife? |
28815 | Do you no longer love Wallulah? 28815 Do you think Snoqualmie goes back to his_ illahee_ and leaves his woman behind?" |
28815 | Do you think so? |
28815 | Do you want me to hate him? 28815 Does the young squaw tremble at these things? |
28815 | Have you never thought of this,--that some time I must give you to a warrior? |
28815 | How can they breathe, shut in, bound down like that? 28815 How comes it that your braves lift their tomahawks against Multnomah in his own council and on his own land? |
28815 | How is that? |
28815 | I saved your life once, will you not give me his? |
28815 | If Multnomah knew,he thought,"what would he do?" |
28815 | Is it not lovely? |
28815 | Is my mission a failure? |
28815 | Is not that better than tribe forever warring against tribe? 28815 Is not this as fair as anything in your own land? |
28815 | Is she worse? |
28815 | Is there a chief here that thinks it? 28815 Is this all?" |
28815 | It is only a Bannock; who cares what is done with it? |
28815 | Must you go so soon? |
28815 | My brother is brave,said the grave chief who had opened the council,"but are his words wise? |
28815 | Oh, Mox- mox, my son, why did you go away and leave our wigwam empty? 28815 Our pastor is a fine speaker,"said another,"but why will he bring such unpleasant things into the pulpit? |
28815 | Seeing that it is so, would it not be best to let this missionary subject go, and preach on practical every- day matters? 28815 Shall we choose another war- chief to sit in Multnomah''s place? |
28815 | Shall we kill the other? |
28815 | Shall we see it soon? |
28815 | Shall we stay here to die? |
28815 | Suppose he rode me, what would_ he_ care? 28815 Tell me about it; is it high?" |
28815 | That language? |
28815 | The Indian has his laws and customs, and that is well; but why not council with the white people, even as chiefs council together? 28815 They are kind to women, instead of making them mere burden- bearers; they have pleasant homes; they dwell in cities? |
28815 | To- day? |
28815 | Tohomish will be at the council and speak for his chief and his tribe? |
28815 | Trouble? 28815 Was it not smoked in the great council a moon ago? |
28815 | What are you doing here, and in Indian garb, too? |
28815 | What became of the book that told of God? |
28815 | What do you mean? 28815 What does this mean?" |
28815 | What is it? |
28815 | What is it? |
28815 | What is it? |
28815 | What is that? |
28815 | What is the name of the one you love? 28815 What is the word of the council? |
28815 | What think you now, Tohomish, you who love darkness and shadow, what think you? 28815 What will you do now?" |
28815 | When I met her, she turned her face aside, for was she not the wife of another? 28815 Where have you seen Snoqualmie?" |
28815 | Where will you go when the council is ended, that we shall see you no more? |
28815 | Who are you? |
28815 | Who built those houses? |
28815 | Who made the Willamettes masters over us? 28815 Who talks of dying?" |
28815 | Who will help me bury this man? |
28815 | Why do I let a girl''s beauty move me thus, and she the promised wife of another? 28815 Why does he give us such bitter suffering? |
28815 | Why is this? |
28815 | Why should the Willamettes rule the other tribes? 28815 Why should the peace- pipe be smoked?" |
28815 | You are going? |
28815 | You have chosen, then? 28815 You have come from the council? |
28815 | You hear it? 28815 You say that we shall see the Bridge of the Gods to- day?" |
28815 | You will come back to- morrow? |
28815 | After a while Cecil said,"I have told you the story of my life, will you not tell me the story of yours?" |
28815 | All the chiefs have slaves, but who will have a white slave like Multnomah?" |
28815 | Am I not war- chief of the Willamettes? |
28815 | And Mishlah? |
28815 | And had he a right to love any one?--had he a right to love at all? |
28815 | And now may I bury this dead body?" |
28815 | And your people are not afraid to talk of the dead?" |
28815 | Another thought the same; but then, how about that vision of Mr. Grey? |
28815 | Are not our hearts as one? |
28815 | Are they better than we? |
28815 | Are you afraid I will bring a curse upon you? |
28815 | Are you asleep that you stare at me so? |
28815 | Are you not weary and hungry? |
28815 | Are your shoulders strong enough to bear the weight of power, the weight that crushes men? |
28815 | But Multnomah trusted his allies; for had they not smoked the peace- pipe with him and gone with him on the war- trail? |
28815 | But in such cases, is it not always the woman that is strongest? |
28815 | But they were the stronger, and when did the heart of a Willamette feel pity? |
28815 | But who are you, and how came you here?" |
28815 | But you_ are_ white, like her people?" |
28815 | By and by, when she awoke from the stupor of despair and realized her future, destined to be passed with the murderer of her lover, what then? |
28815 | Can I forsake him who is as my own child? |
28815 | Can the edge of the tomahawk turn back sickness? |
28815 | Can the sachems make my heart receive him as its lord? |
28815 | Can the words of wise men stay disease? |
28815 | Can we trust them? |
28815 | Can you break down revolt and read the hearts of plotters,--yes, and detect conspiracy when it is but a whisper in the air? |
28815 | Can you fight against the Great Spirit? |
28815 | Can you sway council and battle to your will as the warrior bends his bow? |
28815 | Choose no chief, for who will be left for him to rule? |
28815 | Come back!_"]"Do you mock Multnomah? |
28815 | Could Cecil, of all men, thrilling through all his sensitive and ardent nature to the music, thrilling still more to a mighty and resistless love? |
28815 | Could any man resist the appeal? |
28815 | Could it be that her spirit felt that unuttered cry, and that it brought her back? |
28815 | Could it have been that the stormy influences at work in Nature lent energy to the orators that day? |
28815 | Could the death''s head before them be that of Tohomish? |
28815 | Could those harsh and broken tones be those of the Pine Voice? |
28815 | Did Homer write in satire, and is the Iliad but a splendid mockery of justice, human and divine? |
28815 | Did I not carry you in my arms then, and has not your roof sheltered me since? |
28815 | Do they cut off their hair and blacken their faces, as the Indians do, when they lose one they love?" |
28815 | Do we not know too that their spirits would try to frighten our dreamers with omens and bad_ tomanowos_? |
28815 | Do you think that he could meet you alone and say sweet things to you and caress you,--you who were the same as my squaw,--and I not harm him? |
28815 | Does n''t he care? |
28815 | Does not the Klickitat''s name mean''he that steals horses''? |
28815 | Finally, should he attempt to fly with her to some other land? |
28815 | For him the quiet pastorate is impossible; nay, were it possible, it would be wrong, for would he not be keeping back the message God had given him? |
28815 | Glancing across the river, he descried on a knoll on the opposite bank-- what? |
28815 | Had Multnomah''s wonderful astuteness failed him now when it was never needed more? |
28815 | Had he taken any precautions against surprise? |
28815 | Has anything happened to him? |
28815 | Has he done evil? |
28815 | Has it not put down revolt to- day, and held the tribes together?" |
28815 | Have the stones of that bridge begun to crumble, that our hearts should grow weak?" |
28815 | Have they harmed him?" |
28815 | Have you nothing of your father in you? |
28815 | He could never say,''Why is it not done?'' |
28815 | He could not believe his eyes; could it be possible? |
28815 | He had not loved her, but still she had been a part of his life; with what was he to fill it now? |
28815 | He said,''Remember;''and shall we forget? |
28815 | Her way is parted from my way; Out of sight, beyond light, at what goal may we meet? |
28815 | How came such beautiful things here among the Indians?" |
28815 | How can I bear his presence, his touch?" |
28815 | How can I go and leave him for others? |
28815 | How can I go to him, now that I have known you? |
28815 | How can they live, so tied and burdened?" |
28815 | How could I think that any but Indians had built those houses?" |
28815 | How could he tell her that he came to put her away from him, that he came to bid her farewell? |
28815 | How dare I think of aught beside the work God has sent me here to do? |
28815 | How is that? |
28815 | How_ could_ he meet this emergency? |
28815 | If so, what then? |
28815 | If so, why not to him, the great chief, the master of all the tribes of the Wauna? |
28815 | Is he a chief? |
28815 | Is it a charm that draws the life from your heart? |
28815 | Is it at the thought of blood?" |
28815 | Is it not better to do those things faithfully than to spend our time longing for some more ideal work not given us?" |
28815 | Is it not better to fall in battle like warriors than to perish of disease like dogs?" |
28815 | Is it not better to live like men than to lurk in dens and feed on roots like beasts? |
28815 | Is it true? |
28815 | Is it wise to call those that are stronger than ourselves into our wigwam, when their hearts are bitter against us? |
28815 | Is not the arm of the Willamette strong? |
28815 | Is not the ideal life, after all, the one that is kindest and humblest?" |
28815 | Is that your peace? |
28815 | Is there a tribe that thinks it? |
28815 | Is there anything_ beyond_ the darkness into which generation follows generation and race follows race? |
28815 | Is there not perfect trust between us? |
28815 | Know you not that Multnomah holds your lives in his hand, and that he can crush you like an eggshell if he chooses?" |
28815 | Might it not be some chief, who, having heard of his intended mission, had come forth to meet him? |
28815 | Multnomah''s seat is empty: shall we choose another war- chief?" |
28815 | Now I ride him, what do I care? |
28815 | Now she was gone; what could it mean? |
28815 | Of what use is your council? |
28815 | Or do I dream? |
28815 | Or is life so sad that every tale woven of it must needs become a tragedy?" |
28815 | Or was it the Divine Strength coming to him in answer to prayer? |
28815 | Our brothers lie in the death- huts on_ mimaluse_ island;--how can we leave them? |
28815 | Peace? |
28815 | Reader, would you know the tale of the fair oriental of whom was born the sweet beauty of Wallulah? |
28815 | Shall Multnomah choose the tomahawk also? |
28815 | Shall Tohomish tell it? |
28815 | Shall disease burn out the life of our warriors, when they might fall in battle? |
28815 | Shall the peace- pipe be lighted and the talk begin?" |
28815 | Shall the runners be sent out to call the council?" |
28815 | Shall the white man live or die?" |
28815 | Shall we call the tribes to meet us here on the island of council? |
28815 | Shall we fail in fidelity to our chief?" |
28815 | Shall we not be friends?" |
28815 | Shall we smoke the pipe of peace before we hear our brother''s words?" |
28815 | Shall we stay here to perish while life is yet strong within us? |
28815 | Shall we stay in our lodges, and die without lifting a hand? |
28815 | Shall we then lie down like dogs and wait for death? |
28815 | Should he himself become a suitor for her hand? |
28815 | Should he tell Multnomah of Snoqualmie''s cruelty, representing his unfitness to be the husband of the gentle Wallulah? |
28815 | Suppose a man is called to proclaim new truths, and be the leader in a new reform? |
28815 | Tell me, what do your people do when they have trouble? |
28815 | Tell me,--the dead are wise and know that which comes,--what is this unknown evil which threatens me and mine?" |
28815 | The Great Spirit gave us freedom, and who may make himself master and take it away? |
28815 | The chief believed that the departed could talk to him if they would; for did they not talk to the medicine men and the dreamers? |
28815 | Then he said:"Cold lips and breast without breath, Is there no voice, no language of death?" |
28815 | There was a weight on your spirit; what is it? |
28815 | They_ must_ part; was it not God''s will? |
28815 | Think you Multnomah''s seat is empty? |
28815 | Think you it means that the war- strength is gone from us, that we shall no longer prevail in battle? |
28815 | Was I not like his mother? |
28815 | Was I not your nurse in childhood? |
28815 | Was he not going, perchance like the martyrs of old, to the fagot and the stake? |
28815 | Was it any wonder that her glance, the touch of her dress or hair, the soft tones of her voice, had for him an indescribable charm? |
28815 | Was it any wonder that his heart went out to her in a yearning tenderness that although not love was dangerously akin to it? |
28815 | Was it not bad_ tomanowos_ that Tohomish saw? |
28815 | Was it not well to fight? |
28815 | Was it this flaming- up of the almost burned- out embers of life that animated Cecil now? |
28815 | Was that all? |
28815 | Was the war- chief aware of his interview with Wallulah? |
28815 | We may; but will he be Multnomah? |
28815 | Were the mountains angry? |
28815 | Were you searching for me?" |
28815 | What black thing is it you are hiding and covering up with words? |
28815 | What cared he for the salutation of the living or the dead? |
28815 | What could I do? |
28815 | What could it mean? |
28815 | What could she do against her father''s granite will? |
28815 | What do I care?" |
28815 | What do I care?" |
28815 | What had he been doing in the eight years that had elapsed since he left his New England home? |
28815 | What has he to say why his life should not pay the blood- debt?" |
28815 | What have you to say? |
28815 | What is to be done? |
28815 | What say the wise chiefs of the Willamettes? |
28815 | What say you? |
28815 | What was he thinking of? |
28815 | What was he to do? |
28815 | What was he to set before himself? |
28815 | What will be left me after you are gone? |
28815 | What would it be? |
28815 | Where could she have come from? |
28815 | Wherever he went there was silence and respect, for was he not the great white medicine- man? |
28815 | Who is brave like my man?''" |
28815 | Who knows what plots they might lay, or how suddenly they might fall on us at night or in the day when we were unprepared? |
28815 | Who was it that had dared to visit the island of the dead after dark? |
28815 | Who was it? |
28815 | Who was she? |
28815 | Who, then, was this,--the first for generations to set foot on the_ mimaluse illahee_ after dark? |
28815 | Whose lodge was as clean as his? |
28815 | Why are you troubled?" |
28815 | Why did she always seem so sad? |
28815 | Why did she die? |
28815 | Why did she so often steal away to weep over her child? |
28815 | Why did they wish to go to the council with poisoned arrows? |
28815 | Why did you bring into a council of warriors dreams fit only for old men that lie sleeping in the sun by the door of the wigwam?" |
28815 | Why did you do it? |
28815 | Why did you go? |
28815 | Why dwell longer on scenes so terrible? |
28815 | Why fly from the disease here, to die with it in some far- off land?" |
28815 | Why must you go away and leave Wallulah in the dark?" |
28815 | Why must you go? |
28815 | Why not fling all thought of consequences to the winds, and gather into my arms the love that is offered me? |
28815 | Why not have sent runners to his tribe asking why it was returned, and demanding to know what wrong you had done, that you might right it? |
28815 | Why not open my heart to the bliss it brings? |
28815 | Why should they dread their coming back? |
28815 | Why should we be? |
28815 | Why then should she droop and die like a winged bird that one tries to tame by tying it to the wigwam stake and tossing it food? |
28815 | Why_ would_ she always sit at that window looking so sorrowfully, so abstractedly at the sea, as if her heart was buried there with her dead lover? |
28815 | Will Multnomah listen while Tohomish shows what is to befall the bridge and the Willamettes in the time that is to come?" |
28815 | Will ye hear?" |
28815 | Will you come? |
28815 | Would Cecil hear? |
28815 | Would any one see the sail and bring the news? |
28815 | Would he declare for the council or against it; for peace or for war? |
28815 | Would he give the other half,--the downward gesture? |
28815 | Would they be as enthusiastic when he made the application of his discourse? |
28815 | Would this man whose influence was so powerful declare for action or delay? |
28815 | Would you know what that future will be? |
28815 | You promise that though you fall in death, the summons shall go on?" |
28815 | You that were a chief, you whose people sleep in the dust,--what have you to say in your defence? |
28815 | _ THE OPENING OF THE DRAMA._ CHAPTER I. SHALL THE GREAT COUNCIL BE HELD? |
28815 | _ THE OPENING OF THE DRAMA._ I. SHALL THE GREAT COUNCIL BE HELD? |
28815 | _ Was_ the Great Spirit angry with them because they had rejected him? |
28815 | exclaimed Cecil;"then you have books?" |
28815 | he cried out, throwing up his arms with a despairing gesture,"must I give up everything, everything?" |
28815 | he exclaimed;"white men like me?" |
28815 | he said;"how can I give you up?" |
28815 | love? |
28815 | shall I turn back from the very threshold of my work? |
28815 | she asked sorrowfully,"and shall I never see you again?" |
28815 | she cried in sudden transition, her face darkening, her eyes growing large and pathetic,"why did you not come yesterday? |
28815 | what will become of her?" |
28815 | who thinks it?" |
28815 | why not know its warmth and thrill for one golden moment, even though that moment ends in death?" |
30482 | A woman? |
30482 | Am I to understand that some one has given you orders referring to the Princess? 30482 And do you believe that you have succeeded in taking a house in Petersburg without his knowledge? |
30482 | And have you ascertained----? |
30482 | And her name? |
30482 | And how long will this stupor last? |
30482 | And if I am caught in the act of taking it? 30482 And if she were?" |
30482 | And in what other light is it possible for me to regard you, dear Princess? |
30482 | And is that all? |
30482 | And my dress as a pilot of the Kiel Canal? |
30482 | And now, by what means do you purpose that I shall assume the appearance of death? |
30482 | And since when have you known that dear Monsieur Place? |
30482 | And suppose I consent, into what family do you purpose to introduce me? |
30482 | And that word? |
30482 | And the Princess Y----? 30482 And they are?" |
30482 | And this proposal is? |
30482 | And what does my reason matter? |
30482 | And what is the tone of the fleet generally? |
30482 | And what time does the next train leave? |
30482 | And you meant to give me this warning all along? |
30482 | And you think the war sure to come? |
30482 | Are we friends or foes this morning? |
30482 | Are you pretending? |
30482 | Ask if he approves of the present policy of the German Emperor? |
30482 | Ask if he remembers telling me, the last time I saw him, that Russia was smothering Germany in bed? |
30482 | At all events, they will not be frightened by the sight of the Union Jack? |
30482 | At least you can try? |
30482 | Because? |
30482 | But his friends, who see him every day-- surely they can not be deceived? 30482 But how, sir?" |
30482 | But in that case we can not be involved, surely? |
30482 | But is n''t that against the rule of the road? |
30482 | But now, surely, you have made up your mind to break lose from this thraldom? |
30482 | But this man-- how can he be obtained? |
30482 | But we are friends, after to- day, I understand? |
30482 | But what are you doing? |
30482 | But what interest? |
30482 | But where will you go? |
30482 | But will they be satisfied with a look only? |
30482 | But you are a banker? |
30482 | But, after all, what does it matter? 30482 By what right?" |
30482 | Can you doubt that I have done so for a long time? |
30482 | Can you forgive me for intruding on you? 30482 Can you give me a light? |
30482 | Can you spell it for us? |
30482 | Can you tell us his real name? 30482 Did she tell you where she was going?" |
30482 | Did you tell him I was not an easy man to kill? |
30482 | Do n''t you understand? |
30482 | Do you know where he is? |
30482 | Do you mean to say that you did n''t know you were carrying out the instructions of Wilhelm II.? |
30482 | Do you mean what you say? 30482 Do you refuse to answer that question?" |
30482 | Do you see anything else? |
30482 | Do you share the hopes of the Princess? |
30482 | Do you tell me that it is too late for you to interfere with effect? |
30482 | Does not-- friendship do away with all sense of obligation? |
30482 | Does that mean that you want a tip? |
30482 | Does this money come from Germany? |
30482 | Fauchette? |
30482 | For me? |
30482 | For the Princess Y----? |
30482 | For what is this torpedo boat designed? |
30482 | From what Emperor? |
30482 | Got a revolver handy? |
30482 | Have you been with her long? |
30482 | Have you got the tickets? |
30482 | Have you had any authority from me for anything you have done up to the present, sir? |
30482 | How do I know that you are not a Japanese spy? |
30482 | How do you know that I am not going to arrest you for stealing and destroying the Czar''s letter? |
30482 | How do you purpose to carry out your scheme? 30482 How does that affect your friends?" |
30482 | How many men do you estimate are required to navigate a submarine? |
30482 | How much can you do with till the fleet sails? |
30482 | How so? |
30482 | How soon can you have them here? |
30482 | I expect you must have heard of him already, It is----"_ Monsieur V----?_The second Empress nodded. |
30482 | I hope that message I brought to the Princess did not contain any bad news? |
30482 | I presume she is not the object of your suspicions? |
30482 | In that case, should you be willing to share the bet? |
30482 | In the meantime, I think you said something about an invitation? |
30482 | In what way? |
30482 | Is it an assumed name? |
30482 | Is it permissible to ask the spirit''s name? |
30482 | Is it true that you bring me a letter from the Russian Emperor? |
30482 | Is not that object rather small? |
30482 | Is that right? |
30482 | It is true, then, what they have been telling me? 30482 It was, if I remember rightly, that you should employ only Japanese in the service of Japan?" |
30482 | Marie, have you seen any letter about? |
30482 | Of Sterling, do you mean? |
30482 | On what business are you going to Tokio? |
30482 | On what grounds? |
30482 | On what pretext? |
30482 | Or has some fool ordered you to shadow me? |
30482 | Rather sudden, was n''t it? |
30482 | Since when have the police of the Third Section been obliged to render an account of themselves to the officers of the customs? |
30482 | So that is why you got me here? |
30482 | So you have a message for my dear mistress? |
30482 | Surely you understand? 30482 That?" |
30482 | The Family Statute? |
30482 | The Manchurian Syndicate? |
30482 | The Princess Y----? |
30482 | The Princess has left Petersburg by the midday train for----"For? |
30482 | The Syndicate which has obtained the concessions in Korea? |
30482 | The hour? |
30482 | The message you have just received bears on the subject of our conversation, does it not? |
30482 | The messenger who is starting to- night-- does the Princess know who he is? |
30482 | Then in that case you will not require my services? |
30482 | Then it is you who are----? |
30482 | Then what is to be done? |
30482 | Then why have you come here? |
30482 | Then you propose, sire----? |
30482 | Then you refuse my help? |
30482 | Then you regard this war----? |
30482 | Then you undertake to keep the war from extending to us? |
30482 | Then you will do nothing against this woman at present? |
30482 | Then, as my carriage is outside, may I take you to the Winter Palace? |
30482 | Was it not death, then? |
30482 | Well, and what about yourself? |
30482 | Well, and what then? |
30482 | Well, if they come near enough, we''ll give the beggars a cheer; what d''ye say? |
30482 | Well, now,the promoter resumed,"all that being over, is there any reason why we should not be friends? |
30482 | Well, what did the Mikado say? |
30482 | Well, what do you want? |
30482 | Well? |
30482 | Well? |
30482 | Well? |
30482 | Well? |
30482 | Were you surprised by that? |
30482 | What Princess? |
30482 | What are you going to tell me? |
30482 | What are you prepared to do? |
30482 | What conditions? |
30482 | What do you advise? |
30482 | What do you propose? |
30482 | What does it taste like? |
30482 | What has been the result? 30482 What has he to do with me?" |
30482 | What has the Statute to do with you? |
30482 | What is it, gentlemen? |
30482 | What is the matter? |
30482 | What subject are you? |
30482 | What would the world do without such men as you? 30482 Where are you going?" |
30482 | Where is he? 30482 Where is it now? |
30482 | Where is it? 30482 Where is it?" |
30482 | Where? 30482 Where?" |
30482 | Who are you, and how dared you interfere with me? |
30482 | Who are you? |
30482 | Who authorized you to mention the Emperor? |
30482 | Who told you that he was my comrade, as you call it? |
30482 | Why did n''t you tell me so at once? |
30482 | Why, Hull? |
30482 | Why, is there anything in that to make us enemies? 30482 Why, sir, do you suppose that if I had a message to send to my brother in St. Petersburg I should have to stoop to arts like these? |
30482 | Why, what do you mean? |
30482 | Why? 30482 Why? |
30482 | Will you answer any other questions from this gentleman? |
30482 | Will you permit us to see whether it is possible to save any of the crew? |
30482 | Wo n''t you try one of mine? |
30482 | Would you be willing to accept a retainer from us? |
30482 | Would you like to have the body carried into another room? |
30482 | Would you like to hear from any other spirits? |
30482 | Yes? 30482 You do not mean-- you are not asking us to fire on the British fleet?" |
30482 | You forget, do you not, that you yourself are not free? 30482 You knew what I was carrying?" |
30482 | You mean? |
30482 | You think so? 30482 You think so?" |
30482 | You think some one else will be appointed to dispose of me? |
30482 | You understand the navigation of the Canal, I suppose? |
30482 | Your majesty does not trust him entirely, then? |
30482 | Your name, sir? |
30482 | ----?" |
30482 | Am I right in thinking that you have come to me for aid?" |
30482 | And it was to cost him? |
30482 | And now tell me which is the train for Dalny and Port Arthur, and when does it leave?" |
30482 | And the word-- what shall it be?" |
30482 | And then his business-- his correspondence-- but perhaps you are able to feign handwriting?" |
30482 | And with what motive? |
30482 | And you saw the death"--her words were interrupted by a shudder--"of that unhappy man?" |
30482 | Are not such things done every day in secret politics? |
30482 | Are you Witte''s man, I wonder?" |
30482 | As soon as he recognized me, I said:--"You know the Princess Y----?" |
30482 | At least they have never required such work of you before?" |
30482 | Auguste?" |
30482 | Beg pardon, Captain,"--he came and moved along beside me--"but you do n''t happen to know of a job for a seafaring man, I suppose?" |
30482 | But are you in such a hurry to leave me?" |
30482 | But at all events you will dine with me before you go?" |
30482 | But is there any one with whom Nicholas has influence?" |
30482 | But what has he to do with me?" |
30482 | But what then?" |
30482 | But what was the"luggage"which I was described as having left in the hands of M. Petrovitch? |
30482 | But you-- would a million rubles tempt you to come over, to be neutral, even?" |
30482 | By what time do you want the despatch?" |
30482 | CHAPTER XVIII THE MYSTERY OF A WOMAN Who was M. Auguste? |
30482 | Can you guess the meaning of the diadem above-- which I have designed myself? |
30482 | Did n''t the Princess see you?" |
30482 | Did she wish to save my life, or her own? |
30482 | Did you not hear of it? |
30482 | Do you know anything about them?" |
30482 | Do you know what you have said?" |
30482 | Do you understand?" |
30482 | For nothing? |
30482 | Had the commander of the other submarine noticed mine, and did he suspect my intention to frustrate his design? |
30482 | Has it sunk, or has it gone back to where it came from?" |
30482 | Have you any password by which the Czaritza will know whom you come from?" |
30482 | Have you never intercepted a despatch?" |
30482 | He is so good, is he not? |
30482 | He said----""Well, what did he say?" |
30482 | His initials will do?" |
30482 | How did he get there? |
30482 | How do I know that you are not a Nihilist?" |
30482 | I exclaimed,"the Imperial Bank of Japan is a_ bona fide_ concern? |
30482 | I thought this was simply some idle suspicion of your own?" |
30482 | I wish to know whether you and your friends have determined that this particular prophesy shall come true-- perhaps to fulfill it yourselves?" |
30482 | If I engage to say nothing to the Princess-- who, as you say, might be annoyed-- will you undertake to leave me alone for the future?" |
30482 | If any of the naval authorities question my movements?" |
30482 | If your majesty will be gracious enough to impart your criticism on my proposal?" |
30482 | In the meantime, where can I find you?" |
30482 | Instead of promptly relinquishing it to me, the man turned his head in search of Orloff, saying at the same time,"Do you understand the course, sir?" |
30482 | Is it not possible for you and me-- I say nothing about our respective Governments-- to co- operate for certain purposes? |
30482 | Is n''t that dangerous?" |
30482 | Is there anything I can do?" |
30482 | Is there no prayer that you wish to say?" |
30482 | It negotiates loans, and carries on the ordinary business of a bank?" |
30482 | May I fetch some from the next room?" |
30482 | Monsieur, do you know what I have come here to tell you?" |
30482 | Now, what is it?" |
30482 | Or was this merely a ruse to win my confidence; or, perhaps, to frighten me into resigning my task and leaving the Russian capital? |
30482 | Perhaps Princess Y---- has also given you an account of my own adventures?" |
30482 | Perhaps you do not care to know it?" |
30482 | Perhaps,"I gave her a searching look,"perhaps the Dowager Czaritza has enlisted you on our side?" |
30482 | Petrovitch?" |
30482 | Shall I tell you what my sentence was?" |
30482 | She had come to suspect you, had she not?" |
30482 | Sterling!--Monsieur V----?" |
30482 | That any subject of mine would dare to plot against me, to seduce my messengers, to drug and rob them? |
30482 | The Privy Councillor''s look became positively affectionate as he responded:"If you would honor me by becoming my kinsman?" |
30482 | The other?" |
30482 | Then you know?" |
30482 | V----?" |
30482 | V----?" |
30482 | Were we slackening speed by any chance? |
30482 | What do you say?" |
30482 | What end have you in view that is likely to bring us into collision?" |
30482 | What has become of him?" |
30482 | What has she done with it?" |
30482 | What in?" |
30482 | What is he afraid of now?" |
30482 | What is his name?" |
30482 | What is it doing there?" |
30482 | What is your name, again?" |
30482 | What makes you think that?" |
30482 | What then? |
30482 | What was I to think? |
30482 | What was this woman''s real purpose in coming to me? |
30482 | What will have become of him, do you suppose?" |
30482 | Where can I see her?" |
30482 | Where did it go? |
30482 | Who, then, was the person by whom I had been anticipated? |
30482 | Why did n''t you tell me this before?" |
30482 | Why not? |
30482 | Why, I wonder?" |
30482 | Why? |
30482 | Will you accept my own berth for the night, sir?" |
30482 | Will you, or will you not, reclaim his majesty''s letter-- the letter entrusted to your honor?" |
30482 | You are staying at the----?" |
30482 | You have come here to tell me this, I suppose?" |
30482 | You heard of it, I suppose?" |
30482 | You mean?" |
30482 | You surely do not mean that you would lay aside your work for my sake?" |
30482 | You were the man, dressed as an inspector of the Third Section who traveled on the train with me? |
30482 | _ How_ long did you say you had known that good Mr. Place? |
30482 | he added after a short silence,"what do you say?" |
31162 | Ah, Excellency, can you think so? 31162 And Helen-- Miss Digby-- is she much changed?" |
31162 | And Ilu,[17] what has become of him-- do you know? |
31162 | And did your master teach you,he said, with a bitter smile,"that there is beauty in suffering?" |
31162 | And she answered? |
31162 | And the Padrone? |
31162 | And you have not called to ascertain? |
31162 | And you really believe the young Englishman loves her? |
31162 | And you think not in any way swayed by interest in his affections? |
31162 | Answerest thou not, bewitching Sol? |
31162 | But am I to be exposed to the possibility of such a meeting? 31162 But the heart?" |
31162 | But, I suppose,he continued, smiling,"you were like all women, too much terrified to think of any thing but your own safety?" |
31162 | But, after all, suppose you were to say that the same thing could not be black and white? |
31162 | But, perhaps,suggests some candid and youthful conjecturer--"perhaps Randal Leslie is in love with this fair creature?" |
31162 | Can I set you down any where? |
31162 | Catherine, is it to be an enemy to worship you as I have done? |
31162 | Certainly,interposed Giacomo;"how could he dare to speak, let him love ever so well?" |
31162 | Certainly,said Spendquick, with great spirit--"public property, or why should we pay them? |
31162 | Dear daughter,said they at length to her,"what do you propose to do? |
31162 | Dear me, Leonard, will he want? 31162 Did he tell you that?" |
31162 | Did the girl scorn my precious one? |
31162 | Did you fight?--did you see the enemy? |
31162 | Do you not fear to speak such words to me? |
31162 | Do you not know me, much as I must be altered? |
31162 | Do you see the star at his breast? |
31162 | Egerton is always the same man, I suppose-- too busy for illness, and too firm for sorrow? |
31162 | He makes a sensation? |
31162 | Hearest thou all this, stubborn girl? |
31162 | How are you, Judge? |
31162 | How can I have any idea of it? |
31162 | How can you doubt it? 31162 How do you do, sir?" |
31162 | How is it that you alone can meet this appalling danger in such perfect calm? |
31162 | How is the sweet daughter of the Oneida named? |
31162 | How? 31162 How?" |
31162 | I shall see her again? |
31162 | Impossible; how could he discover you? |
31162 | In your case, what is that motive? 31162 Is it possible?" |
31162 | Is my carriage here? |
31162 | Is the house inhabited? |
31162 | Is your home near this? |
31162 | Juana, if the old Finn were here now, would n''t he be useful? |
31162 | No; the old woman who serves us said that she was asked at a shop''if we were not Italians?'' |
31162 | Oh, my dear lord, what else can it be? 31162 Oh,"said Avenel,"public men, whom we pay, are public property-- aren''t they, my lord?" |
31162 | Plait- il, M''nsieu? |
31162 | Pressed it? 31162 Pressed upon you!--I? |
31162 | She has not yet read them, then?--not the last? 31162 Something that induces you to bestow your daughter on me?" |
31162 | Surely it''s not Faustina''s dream you are thinking of? |
31162 | Then tell me, do you know Randolph Abbey? |
31162 | Then you will love me for his sake, will you not? |
31162 | This is not all,said Sir Michael, who had watched the scene; he turned to Lady Randolph--"Will she come?" |
31162 | Very true; why, indeed? |
31162 | Was ever so original and exquisite a compliment? |
31162 | Well, how was the throne of France to be reached, the very idea of which made her head turn? 31162 What Finn?" |
31162 | What a marvellous doctrine; where can you have learned such untenable philosophy? |
31162 | What are you going to do? |
31162 | What did he say, in that sharp voice? |
31162 | What do you suppose Ashburner wants to see a country belle for? |
31162 | What has gone wrong? |
31162 | What makes you think so? |
31162 | Where could Mendez be? 31162 Who is committing sin?" |
31162 | Why else should he come, Excellency? |
31162 | Why not? |
31162 | Why,said he to the innkeeper,"do n''t you know how to look at men''s faces? |
31162 | Will you excuse me for an instant? 31162 Would you have the kindness to spik Angleesh?" |
31162 | Yes, I am Lilias Randolph; did you know, then, that I was expected? |
31162 | You confess, then, that you wounded him with the intent to kill? |
31162 | You think, then, that the ministry really can not last? |
31162 | You think, then, that this poor kinsman will not need such an alliance in order to regain his estates? |
31162 | Your mother, where is she? 31162 ''Do you like flowers?'' 31162 ''Then she is going to be married?'' 31162 ''Well, Jenny, you are going to- night to the ball?'' 31162 ''Well, father, what do you think of it?'' 31162 ''What do you say, my dear angel?'' 31162 Aletheia,exclaimed Walter,"happy, did you say-- happy to die by that cruel blow?" |
31162 | And now, ere I go, one question more: You indulge conjectures as to Riccabocca, because he has changed his name-- why have you dropped your own?" |
31162 | And the first thing the clever schemer said to himself was this:--"But what can be the man''s motive in what he said to me?" |
31162 | And what is supposed to bring hither the Count di Peschiera?" |
31162 | And why should my poor puppet be the only one to know himself, and perish for it?" |
31162 | Are their husbands also shut up in gardens? |
31162 | Are we justified in rendering ourselves guilty of present and positive injustice, from the imaginary dread of evils to come?" |
31162 | Are you not his murderer?" |
31162 | Are you resolved to embrace the law of Mahomet?" |
31162 | At length, however, Ripa arrived, and the first question that was put to him was:"What had he done with his rival?" |
31162 | Besides, as she said, she ca n''t_ wish_ you to marry a foreigner; though once married, she would----But how do you stand now with the Marchesa? |
31162 | Bless my wits, what is the matter with me?" |
31162 | But from what reason did you assume the strange and fantastic name of Oran?" |
31162 | But if he was innocent, who was the criminal? |
31162 | But if no pretty girl there be The light may soon so out, for me Why should the candle burn and beam Unless bright eyes reflect its gleam? |
31162 | But, by what conveyance, think you, can his lordship have voyaged or travelled hither? |
31162 | But, though you may help me, how can I help you?" |
31162 | By the by, shall we have up the waggon, or walk down?" |
31162 | By the bye,"said the Judge,"I never knew any one yet a judge of the Common Pleas, unless he was either a lawyer or a farmer: did you, Benson?" |
31162 | By the way, I have had an interview with Peschiera--""About his sister''s debts?" |
31162 | By your account, if successful in his suit, he might fail to find an heiress in the bride?" |
31162 | Can it be true? |
31162 | Can the Austrian Count dictate a marriage to the daughter as a condition of grace to the father?" |
31162 | Can we, without reason, deprive them of that liberty and protection which we grant here to all men, and especially to men of prayer? |
31162 | Did not I make thee? |
31162 | Did you say you had never seen any of them?" |
31162 | Dim and faded, did you call him? |
31162 | Do n''t you know that their eyes are always blue, and their hair quite red?" |
31162 | Do you know her too?" |
31162 | Do you not dread my vengeance?" |
31162 | Do you still believe that men are turned into beasts, and beasts into men?" |
31162 | Do you think it an improvable property?" |
31162 | Do you think that sea- monsters could live on land, and ride on horseback, as we do?" |
31162 | Does any one deny it?" |
31162 | Dost thou wish to be freed from her power this very day? |
31162 | Eluding yet love''s sweet control, Yet raining dreams elysian? |
31162 | Fairfield?" |
31162 | Grà © try pressed his daughter to his heart,''Jenny, are you suffering?'' |
31162 | Had his daughter the remotest probability of becoming the greatest heiress in Italy, would he dream of bestowing her on me in this off- hand way? |
31162 | Has he been put to death, or exiled?" |
31162 | Has she consented to accept you?" |
31162 | Have you heard from the Hall lately?" |
31162 | Have you not got rid of your ideas of metempsychosis yet, eh? |
31162 | His motives?" |
31162 | Ho- le!_"said he, slapping his forehead;"what a blockhead I am-- what was I thinking about? |
31162 | How can he help, since Nature points the way, Following, if so he does, their noble school? |
31162 | How can truth be hurtful to mankind? |
31162 | How can you fancy that these men can be Yang- koueï-Dze? |
31162 | How could you shepherds have the courage of soldiers? |
31162 | How has he dared-- how have you dared to molest me thus?" |
31162 | How strange to reflect that all this elaborate and inimitable contrivance has been devised for the well- being of a despised shell- fish? |
31162 | I am without money; be so good as to lend me thy purse?... |
31162 | I ask not if summer will soon by here, And I ask not if long my life shall be; I ask-- if I''m loved by my Rosalie? |
31162 | I want to know where your master is, and why he has not been to my house this evening as he promised?" |
31162 | I was playing with death; why do you not let the children play?'' |
31162 | If he thought it was his master, as he said, why had he not come down at once to admit him? |
31162 | In a few moments, however, a girl made her appearance with the usual inquiry,"Did you call, sir?" |
31162 | In fact, what do they care as long as their salary is regularly paid? |
31162 | Innocent? |
31162 | Is Wauchee content to make the trial?" |
31162 | Is it for man to say,"What is the use of seeing?" |
31162 | Is it not a sin to kill any living thing?" |
31162 | Is it so unusual a misfortune?--so rare a triumph? |
31162 | Is that, too, the custom in France?" |
31162 | Is there one of the Randolphs now located in this house who can complain of me, in any way whatsoever?" |
31162 | Is this all?" |
31162 | It is very cold to- day; wilt thou give me thy coat?" |
31162 | Ki- Chan then inquired after Palmerston, and asked if he was still intrusted with foreign affairs?... |
31162 | L''Estrange started; and as Randal again took his arm, said--"So that Italian lodges here? |
31162 | Let us examine both sincerely and attentively; if yours is the best, we will adopt it; how could we refuse to do so? |
31162 | May I think that we have now an interest in common?" |
31162 | Montaigne''s words are:"When I play with my cat, who knows whether I do not make her more sport than she makes me? |
31162 | My husband? |
31162 | My own dear and noble friend!--is it possible? |
31162 | Not that of pecuniary or ambitious calculations; for how can such calculations enlist you on behalf of a ruined exile? |
31162 | Or you, by birth and habit, knave and fool, How can you help the trash you write-- for pay? |
31162 | Pressed what?" |
31162 | Reader, have you a clear idea of what this"passing out"is? |
31162 | Shall we be friends?" |
31162 | She went on, gazing fixedly at him with the most frigid coldness,"This Lilias is the daughter of your favorite brother, is she not? |
31162 | Sweet Sol, dost thou not understand me?" |
31162 | Tell me, father, do you make as many happy every day as I have just witnessed?'' |
31162 | Tell me, shall we live?" |
31162 | The flowers recall the birth, the natal land, the garden of the family, and what more? |
31162 | The next was:--"Egerton ruined? |
31162 | They say there are other countries in Europe where women govern-- is it true? |
31162 | Was it not a distinct stipulation that he should avoid even the risk of encountering me? |
31162 | Was it with anger or shame? |
31162 | What am I, then?" |
31162 | What can you do, they said, against sea- monsters? |
31162 | What could have detained him? |
31162 | What do you say?" |
31162 | What does he yet desire? |
31162 | What had he to do while painting queens of comedy, or dryads of the opera, with the heart, tears, or divine sentiment? |
31162 | What had we then to fear? |
31162 | What has occurred?" |
31162 | What injury I ever did him was like to this?" |
31162 | What lady is that I see at the far end of the garden?" |
31162 | What other motive can he possibly have? |
31162 | What remains? |
31162 | What the deuce did he do there? |
31162 | What were left to us of the Hookers and Barrows, Taylors and Miltons, if their controversial writings were excepted? |
31162 | Who sends you? |
31162 | Who shall describe these afflicting interviews? |
31162 | Why art thou near my soul Yet flying my fond vision? |
31162 | Why do n''t you keep to the point?" |
31162 | Why is this? |
31162 | Why should Levy have spoken, to me of this?" |
31162 | Why were these works the object of the sage''s study? |
31162 | Why, who have you got with you?" |
31162 | Why? |
31162 | Why?" |
31162 | Will Monega free the bondsman? |
31162 | Will you promise me not to mention to any individual whatever at Randolph Abbey that you have met me? |
31162 | Would any of our readers have fancied, for instance, that a search after_ argols_ could be an exciting employment? |
31162 | Would not that suffice? |
31162 | You agree with me?" |
31162 | You ask me why I think there will be a general election so soon? |
31162 | You thought I should forget him, did you, in the midst of all this luxury? |
31162 | You wanted to speak to me, Frank?" |
31162 | You will wait for him?" |
31162 | _ Micsoda csárdaez? |
31162 | and will she fly with him to be the bride of his heart, and the queen of the Mohawk people? |
31162 | and you know him?" |
31162 | be csinos?_ What inn is this which here I see? |
31162 | be csinos?_ What inn is this which here I see? |
31162 | continued Arbi Esid;"fair as the Houris of the Prophet''s Paradise, canst thou refuse to embrace his faith? |
31162 | demanded the witch;"did yonder sniffling hypocrite thrust my darling from his door? |
31162 | exclaimed the enraged governor;"thus dost thou profane the most sacred names, thus dost thou reject all consideration? |
31162 | exclaims M. de R.,"who are you?" |
31162 | exclaims a low but most expressive voice,"you come to rob me of Theodore''s letters? |
31162 | he said, his face growing white with anger,"and to irritate me thus bitterly, when you know I have no power to control the fierceness of my passions? |
31162 | how can I dream that one so beautiful, so peerless, will confirm the hope you have extended to me?" |
31162 | how could you abhor him-- you who have seen him in his living grace and goodness?" |
31162 | is it not strange, Leslie, that no wealth, no fashion, no fame can wipe out that blot? |
31162 | is this you? |
31162 | lunch-- or what?" |
31162 | returned Malfi;"what in the world can have become of him?" |
31162 | said Harley, with visible emotion,"Is it so?" |
31162 | the light goes out, Have you no pretty girl about? |
31162 | thought the old witch,"what step is that? |
31162 | why will you torture me? |
31162 | £20,000 down-- how to get the sum? |
36916 | Art Thou the Christ? 36916 Aye, even so"--replied a priest:"Was not that city in the east? |
36916 | I said ye are gods--? |
36916 | Tell me, O priest, was it not worth Eternity of hell, When in your heart dear love had birth? |
36916 | Wherefore upon the rood Christ died, If not our souls to win? |
36916 | Why,you ask me, dearest,"why Did we leave that place-- Is it such a thing to die?" |
36916 | Yes, I forget-- and gladly too-- That ancient Hebrew tale: How God began a thing to do-- Can the Eternal fail? 36916 Your fortune?" |
36916 | A QUESTION Have you Christ found-- Whose eyes are cold And lips are set? |
36916 | Ah, would your will Make mine As grapes bruised for the wine? |
36916 | And would you fare this lonely way, This starry way? |
36916 | Are we not part of the All, and as pure? |
36916 | Are you a liar, a sycophant''s self Sold for a shekel and pandering pelf? |
36916 | Are you a snob or a murderer, thief, Cringing to hell with the devil for chief? |
36916 | Are you come, Laden with sweet spice and gum,"Out of Orphir?" |
36916 | CAN YOU FORGET Can you forget the pyramids, Persepolis and Tyre? |
36916 | Can you forget the barges on the Nile, The sculptor with his chisel and his artist- soul a- fire With a dream of Mother Isis and her smile? |
36916 | Canst thou play thy part With an empty heart, If I fill it full to the brim Of the wine of prayer From the bowl I bear?" |
36916 | Comrade, can this be true That I Must yield or die? |
36916 | Comrade, what befell you That you missed the King Crowned with purple pansies of the day? |
36916 | Dear, do you not know They who drive the patient plough And the furrows sow, Own the sinews of the strong-- Reap the harvest with a song? |
36916 | Dear, there is surprise Blent with hunger and with thirst In your eager eyes, And you whisper:"Is it true?" |
36916 | Did you, dearest, understand Why the scarlet grew On my forehead, when my hand Your fair fingers knew? |
36916 | God does not want your temples, Whose domes are in the sky; With archangelic anthems How dare we mortals vie? |
36916 | God of the lily and vine, Is he not mine? |
36916 | Have you not seen, have you not heard How death rules over all?" |
36916 | I know not what to do or say, I stand with vacant stare Upon the brink of pain to think:"Love, whither dost thou fare?" |
36916 | Know that your shame is the shame of the stream-- Memory floods all its banks, but the end-- What is the end? |
36916 | Know you the Piper? |
36916 | Never more go gladly back? |
36916 | Oh, hark to his cry:"Sabachthani?" |
36916 | Ponder for a space: What if love must lose to gain, Find eternal peace in pain? |
36916 | Prophet, tell us-- who smote Thee?" |
36916 | Said the Aster to the Violet:"What shall the dowry be, And what my stated fortune, If I should marry thee?" |
36916 | Seek you To run me through? |
36916 | THE LONELY ROAD O will you take the lonely road, The upward road, Among the many stars? |
36916 | THE PIPER AND THE REED_ Know you a garden near the road? |
36916 | There she paused and looked on me, Laughing:"Boy, what do you see In my eyes, you tremble so?" |
36916 | Three times I fell, three times I rose To face the menacing of foes-- What gave me strength again to stand? |
36916 | Uncouthly you sprawled And frequently fell, Learning to walk: Was falling a sin, Were bruises a shame, Baby, my brave little baby? |
36916 | Upon the table is a crown-- Where is the King? |
36916 | What are their crowns? |
36916 | What do ye down in Bethlehem? |
36916 | What does it mean that we die? |
36916 | What does it mean we are born? |
36916 | What dreams do you dream, What sounds do you hear Out of the splendour-- Out of the wonder-- Out of the peace Of Rest- A- While Land? |
36916 | What is their palace? |
36916 | What is thy will? |
36916 | What of the night? |
36916 | What thing? |
36916 | What thing? |
36916 | When you awake Will you forget All the old toys, The lessons you learned, The bruises that hurt When you fell down? |
36916 | Where doth he dwell? |
36916 | Who comes there? |
36916 | Who sent thee here? |
36916 | Whose thought begets a flower- form, With leaves for avatars;"Can He who crowns the grass with dew, And gems the wood with rain; Fail of His purpose?" |
36916 | Why-- why Dared we to try, To prove Our love? |
36916 | Why?--Why? |
36916 | Worked your will? |
36916 | who rolled the stone away? |
26666 | A ball? |
26666 | A child, a regular child; or a cunning woman? |
26666 | ALEXÁNDRA IVÁNOVNA[ contemptuously] And what are the many things that Nicholas Ivánovich maintains that are quite true? |
26666 | After all, was that what I agreed to when I married? |
26666 | Agreed? |
26666 | Alexander Mikáylovich? |
26666 | Alexander Petróvich, who gets money out of you? |
26666 | All this nonsense? |
26666 | Am I not ill? |
26666 | And Lyubóv Nikoláyevna? |
26666 | And Lyúbov Nikoláyevna? |
26666 | And Lyúbov Nikoláyevna? |
26666 | And did he fast, or prepare for communion? |
26666 | And do you agree with Nicholas Ivánovich and Mr. Renan? |
26666 | And have you any children? |
26666 | And have you had a successful day? |
26666 | And how are the people to be guided-- without any really definite truth? |
26666 | And is the estate his or his wife''s? |
26666 | And reported as ill? |
26666 | And that she will give up educating the children properly, and will abandon them? |
26666 | And the children''s too? |
26666 | And we? |
26666 | And what am I to do? |
26666 | And what are you copying out? |
26666 | And what can you have in common with such a man as that? |
26666 | And what do we teach them? |
26666 | And what is his official rank? |
26666 | And when will my better- half be back? |
26666 | And where are you going? |
26666 | And where has he found in the Sermon on the Mount that we must shake hands with footmen? |
26666 | And where have you been? |
26666 | And where is Peter? |
26666 | And you did not approve of the verdict? |
26666 | And you think that you will persuade Mary of this? |
26666 | And you will be kept here? |
26666 | And, of course, you are married? |
26666 | Are not you ashamed to talk so? |
26666 | Are we the first? |
26666 | Are you Prince Borís Siménovich Cheremshánov, who refuses to take the oath? |
26666 | Are you not afraid to take so much sin upon yourself? |
26666 | Are you not ashamed to do all this? |
26666 | Are you staying with us? |
26666 | At home, at this time? |
26666 | Aunty, she is blushing, is n''t she? |
26666 | Aunty, who is it from? |
26666 | BORÍS[ absently] Music? |
26666 | BORÍS[ approaching Lyúba] And what do you say to me? |
26666 | Because I am a Maréchal de la Noblesse? |
26666 | Because I am not Cheremshánov? |
26666 | But are we doing no harm? |
26666 | But beside this method of exposing and persuading, do you approve of any others? |
26666 | But do explain to me, Mary, what is this new movement? |
26666 | But even if we were to admit that Christ established the Church, how do I know that it was_ your_ Church? |
26666 | But how could one get on without an army? |
26666 | But how did this befall him? |
26666 | But how is it a transgression-- when we live without doing harm to anyone? |
26666 | But how is it that the rich young man was told that the rich can not enter the Kingdom of Heaven? |
26666 | But how is it that they speak of"the Christian army"? |
26666 | But how is one to live if one gives everything away? |
26666 | But how? |
26666 | But if you are, as it is called, a faithful servant of the Church, why do n''t you convert Nicholas Ivánovich? |
26666 | But is Iván dying? |
26666 | But is it not torturing me to leave me and to go away? |
26666 | But is not this sonata lovely? |
26666 | But still?... |
26666 | But then how is one to pray, and all that? |
26666 | But then in what sense is that meant? |
26666 | But what am I to do, if I do n''t understand? |
26666 | But what can one do? |
26666 | But what do you mean by that? |
26666 | But what do you offer? |
26666 | But what is to become of the world? |
26666 | But what of it? |
26666 | But what will become of him if he believes you? |
26666 | But who is proud? |
26666 | But why should your honour trouble to learn to be a carpenter? |
26666 | Bórya, my darling, you understand, do n''t you, what I suffer? |
26666 | Can I be glad about it? |
26666 | Can I be of any use? |
26666 | Can it be Golitzin''s daughter? |
26666 | Can it be really true? |
26666 | Can it be that I have been mistaken? |
26666 | Can such things be taught? |
26666 | Can we not settle our own affairs? |
26666 | Come, what is it that torments you? |
26666 | Consider, is it possible to go on living in this way? |
26666 | Did Alexándra Ivánovna really go on purpose to fetch Father Gerásim? |
26666 | Do n''t we anyway think too much about ourselves? |
26666 | Do n''t you hear baby crying? |
26666 | Do you know Ivashénko? |
26666 | Do you know, Aunt, that Lisa takes Papa''s side entirely in everything? |
26666 | Do you not wish to receive my blessing? |
26666 | Do you remember his prelude? |
26666 | Do you think I should disturb him if I followed him to the village? |
26666 | Do you wish to overthrow them? |
26666 | Does he agree? |
26666 | Excuse me, but if so, what are you doing here? |
26666 | Give him time to settle down and petrify in falsehood? |
26666 | Good morning, papa[ kisses him], where are you going? |
26666 | Guess who is coming? |
26666 | Has he proposed, then? |
26666 | Has he refused? |
26666 | Have n''t I told you? |
26666 | Have they rung for dinner? |
26666 | Have you done your business? |
26666 | Have you read it? |
26666 | Have you sent the coachman for her? |
26666 | Have you told him? |
26666 | He came to me, but how can I decide? |
26666 | He lives in the same house with you, and writes you letters? |
26666 | He maintains that the Christian law forbids a man to own any property; but how is that possible? |
26666 | He''s ill, and what about me? |
26666 | How am I to act? |
26666 | How can I break all that off? |
26666 | How can I live without suffering from this internal discord? |
26666 | How can one go on living like this? |
26666 | How can one help? |
26666 | How can the woman get in the harvest? |
26666 | How can we trust in it, when there are contradictions? |
26666 | How can we trust in it, when there are contradictions? |
26666 | How can you say such wicked things? |
26666 | How can you so grieve the authorities by refusing to fulfil the duty of a Christian, to serve the Tsar and your Fatherland? |
26666 | How d''you do, Princess? |
26666 | How d''you do? |
26666 | How did I get my savings? |
26666 | How did it begin? |
26666 | How do I torture you? |
26666 | How do you know? |
26666 | How is it you say you do n''t believe the teaching of the Church? |
26666 | How not on you? |
26666 | How often have you been told to? |
26666 | How''s that? |
26666 | How_ can_ one deny the Church? |
26666 | I asked myself:"What, then, has God created us for?" |
26666 | I did n''t wake you this morning, did I? |
26666 | I do n''t feel the least bit hurt; do n''t I see it all myself? |
26666 | I suppose it''s Peter? |
26666 | I will go and help her, if I may? |
26666 | I''m coming, coming? |
26666 | If it is right to do so-- why not give away everything and die? |
26666 | In all, about 450,000 trees-- is that correct? |
26666 | In order to breed more parasites like myself? |
26666 | In the first place, tell me your name, your calling, and your religion? |
26666 | In the pine- tree plantation? |
26666 | In what way? |
26666 | Is he at home? |
26666 | Is it here that the conscript, Prince Cheremshánov, is being kept? |
26666 | Is it not done by everyone-- both here and abroad? |
26666 | Is it possible that you have thrown it all up? |
26666 | Is it possible, realising all this, to live quietly and consider oneself a Christian? |
26666 | Is it too hard for you? |
26666 | Is it true that the Sermon on the Mount bids us give our property away to strangers and let our own families go begging? |
26666 | Is n''t it the conscript''s evidence? |
26666 | Is n''t it true that at any moment we may die, and either cease to exist, or go to God who expects us to live according to His will? |
26666 | Is n''t that so? |
26666 | Is she quite well? |
26666 | Is that not terrible? |
26666 | Is this Christianity? |
26666 | It may be well; but when will they set him free? |
26666 | Klein? |
26666 | LYÚBA[ crying] Papa, what can be done? |
26666 | LYÚBA[ sits down in front of samovár] Will you have tea or coffee? |
26666 | Leave it to you? |
26666 | Like whom? |
26666 | Lyúba, is that true? |
26666 | MARY IVÁNOVNA[ behind door] May I come in? |
26666 | MARY IVÁNOVNA[ to Pianist] Have you come to play? |
26666 | MARY IVÁNOVNA[ to young Priest] And what now? |
26666 | May I wire to my people that I have been accepted and am happy? |
26666 | May we announce it? |
26666 | Mistaken in believing in Thee? |
26666 | NICHOLAS IVÁNOVICH[ takes a board from the vice] Is that all right? |
26666 | NICHOLAS IVÁNOVICH[ turns to Priest] Well, what impression did the book make on you? |
26666 | Nicholas Ivánovich, stopping one of the Peasants] Ermíl, wo n''t you take on the job of carting for these people? |
26666 | No, even there, you are not united, but have all gone asunder; so why should I believe you rather than I would believe a Buddhist Lama? |
26666 | No, you are a Christian, you wish to do good, and you say you love men; then why do you torture the woman who has devoted her whole life to you? |
26666 | No? |
26666 | Nor here? |
26666 | Not asleep still, surely? |
26666 | Not take part in it? |
26666 | Not yours? |
26666 | Now is it worth while, and can one really decide, to tear a man away from his family and put him in prison for that? |
26666 | Oh, the one called the George Sand prelude? |
26666 | Old age will come, and death, and I shall ask myself:"Why have I lived?" |
26666 | On what grounds do you do so? |
26666 | One word more: how will Nicholas Ivánovich take it? |
26666 | Only because I happened to be born in your faith? |
26666 | Or else, why are you a priest, and why do you wear long hair and a cassock? |
26666 | Or let alone a Christian-- simply not a beast? |
26666 | PRIEST[ agitated] How shall I put it? |
26666 | PRINCESS[ to Nicholas Ivánovich] Why do you say nothing? |
26666 | Really, ca n''t you rise above that? |
26666 | STARKÓVSKY[ takes Lyúba''s hand] Lyúba, may I? |
26666 | Sha n''t we see Nicholas Ivánovich? |
26666 | Shall I give you a cup? |
26666 | Shall I read it? |
26666 | She has two children, has she not? |
26666 | So he has refused to take the oath and to serve? |
26666 | So what was he to do? |
26666 | So you are ashamed of what people say? |
26666 | Styópa, will you play? |
26666 | Suppose I hire a labourer; who will he be? |
26666 | Tell me what you have come for-- surely it was not simply to scold me? |
26666 | Tell me, have I been going to balls, or gone in for dress, or flirted? |
26666 | Tell me, what do you want of me? |
26666 | That twice two are four; and that one should not do to others what one would not like oneself; and that everything has a cause? |
26666 | The point is this: if he denies the Church, what does he want the Gospels for? |
26666 | Then how was it? |
26666 | Then the lad asked his father:"What am I to do then-- not go and plough after all?" |
26666 | Then what am I to do? |
26666 | Then why do n''t you renounce worldly advantages, and not go about smoking a cigarette? |
26666 | Then you do n''t wish to walk? |
26666 | Then you''re warm now? |
26666 | To Peasants] Whom do you want? |
26666 | To Priest] Now tell me, I ask you, what new religion is this you have discovered? |
26666 | To beggar your children for the sake of drunken Yefím and his sort? |
26666 | To go where? |
26666 | Well, Lyúba, what now? |
26666 | Well, and ca n''t anything be done? |
26666 | Well, and what have you decided on? |
26666 | Well, and what now? |
26666 | Well, and what of Cheremshánov? |
26666 | Well, but why do n''t you wish to take your oath? |
26666 | Well, even supposing he does give to the poor? |
26666 | Well, has Styópa decided on anything? |
26666 | Well, have you convinced her? |
26666 | Well, have you got them? |
26666 | Well, were they sentenced? |
26666 | Well, what can I do in this life other than what the supreme judge in my soul, my conscience-- God-- requires of me? |
26666 | Well? |
26666 | Well? |
26666 | Well? |
26666 | Well? |
26666 | What am I to do, if you want to leave the children penniless? |
26666 | What are you saying? |
26666 | What are you saying? |
26666 | What are you suffering from? |
26666 | What book are you returning? |
26666 | What can I do? |
26666 | What can I do? |
26666 | What can I think? |
26666 | What can one do with such a man? |
26666 | What could be better? |
26666 | What d''you mean by leaving the baby? |
26666 | What d''you think, Nicholas Ivánovich, will he die? |
26666 | What did he write? |
26666 | What did you answer? |
26666 | What do I care? |
26666 | What do you feel? |
26666 | What do you mean by not recognising? |
26666 | What do you mean? |
26666 | What do you mean? |
26666 | What do you think? |
26666 | What do you wish to know? |
26666 | What enabled me to save up? |
26666 | What for? |
26666 | What good can it do for her to see you? |
26666 | What has happened to him? |
26666 | What has happened? |
26666 | What has happened? |
26666 | What have these poor fellows got in their heads? |
26666 | What have you for dinner? |
26666 | What is all this for? |
26666 | What is one to do? |
26666 | What is the good of talking about him? |
26666 | What is there odd about it? |
26666 | What is there to believe in, if not the Church? |
26666 | What is your opinion, Father? |
26666 | What right have you? |
26666 | What sin? |
26666 | What sort of an example is it for them? |
26666 | What sort of religion is it, when he does not go to church, and does not believe in the sacraments? |
26666 | What then is your religion? |
26666 | What will everybody say? |
26666 | What''s all this for? |
26666 | What''s the use of guessing? |
26666 | What? |
26666 | What? |
26666 | What? |
26666 | Where are all the young ones? |
26666 | Where are the contradictions? |
26666 | Where are the young folk? |
26666 | Where is Mamma? |
26666 | Where is Mary? |
26666 | Where is she? |
26666 | Where is the Colonel? |
26666 | Where is the pride, since it is said that what is hidden from the wise is revealed to babes? |
26666 | Where to? |
26666 | Where''s mamma? |
26666 | Which Cheremshánova is it? |
26666 | Who are they? |
26666 | Who is it from? |
26666 | Who is it that has just come? |
26666 | Who is the telegram from? |
26666 | Who told you that? |
26666 | Who? |
26666 | Whose then is the sin, when you deceive such numbers of people? |
26666 | Why are you blushing? |
26666 | Why choose a middle course: an equipoise between the two? |
26666 | Why d''you do it? |
26666 | Why decide? |
26666 | Why did you invite that wretched, erring man? |
26666 | Why do n''t you consider yourself a member of the Russian Empire? |
26666 | Why do n''t you wish it? |
26666 | Why do those noisy women and that priest come into our most intimate life? |
26666 | Why do you always beat the youngster and make him howl? |
26666 | Why do you do it? |
26666 | Why do you drink it like that? |
26666 | Why do you hate and torture your wife, who has given up everything for you? |
26666 | Why has he gone to town to- day? |
26666 | Why have you chosen this wicked, cruel profession? |
26666 | Why have you come here? |
26666 | Why have you come out here? |
26666 | Why indeed? |
26666 | Why is he nearer to you than your own wife? |
26666 | Why need he have been ruined? |
26666 | Why not? |
26666 | Why not? |
26666 | Why should I laugh? |
26666 | Why should I? |
26666 | Why should he suffer so? |
26666 | Why this cruelty? |
26666 | Why? |
26666 | Why? |
26666 | Why? |
26666 | Why? |
26666 | Why? |
26666 | Why? |
26666 | Will you have the goodness to lie down? |
26666 | Will you please go to your ward? |
26666 | Wo n''t you have a cup of tea? |
26666 | Wo n''t you have some lunch? |
26666 | Wo n''t you have something to eat? |
26666 | Yes; but why wo n''t your father agree to it? |
26666 | Yes? |
26666 | Yes? |
26666 | You are reading the evidence? |
26666 | You do me that honour? |
26666 | You do n''t recognise authority? |
26666 | You know that when Pilate said:"I adjure thee by the living God, art thou the Christ?" |
26666 | You know the Cheremshánovs are coming? |
26666 | You know? |
26666 | You mean the Church? |
26666 | You receive me? |
26666 | You think I should take to drink again? |
26666 | Your own children too? |
26666 | [ 23] They did not steal them-- but only took the wood? |
26666 | [ 28][ To her husband, who utters something] What''s the matter? |
26666 | [ Begins touching him] You feel no pain here? |
26666 | [ Borís is silent] Why do n''t you answer? |
26666 | [ Kisses her] Sha n''t we? |
26666 | [ To Adjutant] Is the Priest here? |
26666 | [ To Borís] How do you work for it? |
26666 | [ To Borís] Well? |
26666 | [ To Colonel] Have you spoken to him? |
26666 | [ To Nicholas Ivánovich] Well, have you persuaded him? |
26666 | [ To Policeman] Ca n''t you let him remain here for the present? |
26666 | [ To Warders] What are you after? |
26666 | [ Voice outside the door] Papa, may I come in? |
26666 | _ J''aurais mis bon ordre à toutes ces lubies._[5] What does it all mean? |
26666 | _ They_ confessed their guilt,_ et vous leur avez donné un démenti_? |
26666 | and Nicholas Ivánovich said:"Why not plough? |
26666 | for vódka, and abandon our own families? |
37186 | Are the Japanese, or the bulk at least of the Japanese, indigenous or immigrant? |
37186 | But how can we know whether a country has reached a stage of civilisation advanced enough to have its own record? |
37186 | CHAPTER II THE RACES AND CLIMATE OF JAPAN Which is the more potent factor in building up the edifice of civilisation, race or climate? |
37186 | Could any line of social demarcation be drawn according to the difference of classes in the face of such shiftings upwards and downwards? |
37186 | Could it have been otherwise only in our country as an exceptional case? |
37186 | Could such a way of introducing an alien civilisation be designated a servile imitation? |
37186 | For centuries in Europe historians successively tried to solve the question, What is feudalism? |
37186 | Here one might perhaps ask, could not Buddhism give them any solace at all? |
37186 | Here the question must naturally arise, how were those multiplied books distributed? |
37186 | Here the reader would perhaps ask, must the condition of ancient Japan remain shrouded in mystery forever? |
37186 | How comical it would have been if such a retrogression had been allowed to proceed even for a generation? |
37186 | How could Christianity force her way into our country in the state such as it was, unless by the endeavour of fanatics? |
37186 | How could a few patches of straw floating on the surface stop the forward movement of a strong undercurrent, however slowly the stream might run? |
37186 | How could a shrewd politician like Yoritomo be expected to imitate the blunder of his opponent? |
37186 | How could this demand, not sufficiently conscious to the claimants themselves, be provided for? |
37186 | How did such a difference come into existence? |
37186 | How did such a style come into being? |
37186 | How is the word"feudalism"rightly to be defined then? |
37186 | How then did it come to be consolidated? |
37186 | How then, did such an incongruous idea with its fatal conclusions come to be entertained by scholars? |
37186 | If it is most probable that the Japanese is a heterogeneous race, then what are the elements which constitute it? |
37186 | If the Japanese are an immigrant race, then whence did they originate, and what is the probable date of their immigration into this country? |
37186 | If the Japanese were heterogeneous, who were the first comers among them? |
37186 | If this were so, by whom were those documents transcribed? |
37186 | Is Japan specially adapted for the production of this grain? |
37186 | May it not be extended to a similar system which prevailed in western Europe, but not under Frankish authority? |
37186 | Moreover, in what field could we have been able to beat any European nation except in battle, if we could beat her at all? |
37186 | Returning to the point, did Japan become a country resembling China, as was wished by the Sinophil Japanese of old times? |
37186 | Then how did this momentous change happen to be achieved by the Japanese? |
37186 | Then how is it with Japan? |
37186 | Then to what race do the Japanese belong? |
37186 | Then where lies the reason which makes the Ainu line so significant? |
37186 | Then where should we turn to obtain more learning and more culture except to China herself? |
37186 | Then why did our forefathers prefer rice to other kinds of cereals, in spite of the uncertainty of its harvests? |
37186 | Was it possible that such a ruthless state could continue for long without any counteraction? |
37186 | Was it really a choice made in Japan? |
37186 | Were the vanquishers a homogeneous people, or a heterogeneous one? |
37186 | Were they the Japanese in the same sense as the word is understood by us now? |
37186 | What could we expect from men of such knavish characters as regards the moral regeneration of the contemporary Japanese? |
37186 | What is the cause of this difference in the use of rice? |
37186 | What race, if not the Japanese, are the aborigines of these islands? |
37186 | What then was the chief occupation of these conquerors? |
37186 | What was the result, then, of the reform undertaken partly from national necessity, but partly also from love of imitation? |
37186 | What was then the civilisation, which had been supported and sheltered by this organisation and régime? |
37186 | What wonder if they began to regret and whine for better days of the past? |
37186 | What, then is the historic age? |
37186 | What, then, was the state of Japan in the beginning of her history? |
37186 | Whence, then, did the ancient Japanese get this unique custom? |
37186 | Who then were appointed as the scribes? |
37186 | Who were the most prominent? |
37186 | Who would have dreamt, however, of the victory of the Japanese over the Russians in January of 1904? |
37186 | Who, then, first countenanced, patronised, and was converted to the newly imported religion? |
37186 | Why do they cling to it so tenaciously? |
37186 | Why should it be otherwise only in the case of Christianity? |
37186 | Will it be utterly impossible to know something positive about it? |
37186 | Would it not be ridiculously absurd to assume the existence of such a tendency in any living nation in the world? |
33030 | All right, where can we go? 33030 An''who be ye thot ye want a gamblin''house at this time o''night? |
33030 | And do n''t I get a chance to say a teeny, weensy word? 33030 And from whence come these sisters and daughters?" |
33030 | And that is the man who did the deed? |
33030 | Are these places clean? |
33030 | Are you going west? |
33030 | But what of your friends, Chiquita, those who taught you of the religion of our people, of the only Christ who died to save mankind? |
33030 | Ca n''t you get a job as porter rather than beg? |
33030 | Can we find the provisions if we leave them here? |
33030 | Chiquita, the injun gal? |
33030 | College? |
33030 | Did n''t you lose some blankets about a year ago in the Wet Mountain valley, near Buena Vista? |
33030 | Did n''t you say''yes, yes, yes?'' |
33030 | Did you bring any Indian things? |
33030 | Do n''t skip any of the incidents, will you? 33030 Do those western stores carry as fine a line of goods as our folks do in the east?" |
33030 | Do you have such awful storms as early as September? |
33030 | Do you know who did throw it? |
33030 | Do you notice at every table in the room some one is drinking, either a malt beverage or wine, and at a majority of the tables some one is smoking? |
33030 | Does the white man sabe, what you call''em when white sister learn A, B, C? |
33030 | Does the white man sabe? |
33030 | Had you no money saved up to fall back upon at such a time? |
33030 | Has Yamanatz bet anything yet? |
33030 | Have a private room, sir? |
33030 | Heap big gold mine somewhere? |
33030 | How about that redskin g-- g-- gal? 33030 How about the range you spoke of?" |
33030 | How many moons take Chiquita college? |
33030 | How much cost Chiquita in college? |
33030 | How much gold Jack want make Chiquita like white sister? |
33030 | How often are you called upon to make this collection, division and delivery? |
33030 | How''s the stock, Tracy? |
33030 | I did not buy any corn, did I? |
33030 | I do n''t care, I think it is real mean I ca n''t catch one,replied Miss Asquith,"but oh, ai n''t they pretty?" |
33030 | I say Jack,said Hazel,"where is the pony you promised me?" |
33030 | I suppose you will have to go on the road and take long trips out west to-- sell goods? 33030 If Colorow meet white man, Colorow got no bullets-- got knife-- suppose white man kill Colorow, will Utes kill white man?" |
33030 | If I were to walk into that Sunday- school class of mine, of ten- year- olds, in this rig, I wonder if the shorter catechism would stand any show? |
33030 | In this legacy is found the answer,''Whence come my people?'' 33030 Is he the genuine article with a dragon on his blouse?" |
33030 | Is it necessary, Jack,asked his father,"that you should go to this unheard- of mine with the old Indian? |
33030 | Jack had one habit that city boys think belong to themselves--"Midnight lunches?" |
33030 | Jack, did you throw that paper wad? |
33030 | Jack, is it such an awful long time since I was a little girl and you pulled my sled on the hill for me? |
33030 | Jack, you know something? |
33030 | Just look at that, is n''t it grand? |
33030 | Mebbe so Colorow want to kill white man Jack? |
33030 | Mebbe so white man see''em ponies? |
33030 | Now will you be good? |
33030 | Oh, dear, is n''t it sad? |
33030 | Oh-- ee, Jack, is that real gold dust in that nasty looking bag? |
33030 | Pardon me, but do you mean to say you have been twenty- five years with one firm? |
33030 | Sabe camp where Utes sleep? |
33030 | Sabe usted the great white chief at Washington City? |
33030 | Say, kid, you''re sure of what you just said? |
33030 | Say, yer know when yer shot the antelope and Irish Mike got sore at it because he missed the whole bunch? 33030 School?" |
33030 | She died alone? |
33030 | Shoot''em, why do n''t you shoot? 33030 Shotgun?" |
33030 | Sure as I live,replied Jack;"why?" |
33030 | Tell Chiquita, does the white man''s squaw carry the wood for the fire so the warrior can cook his venison? |
33030 | Thanks; and, Chiquita, who would have thought it? 33030 The styles out there are about two years behind ours; do n''t the girls look old fashioned?" |
33030 | Tommy, are you in trouble that you come in with an officer at this hour? |
33030 | Well, Jack, are you going to head a tribe of Utes to drive us back across the big sea? |
33030 | Well, sweetheart, what is it? |
33030 | What corn? |
33030 | What d''yer mean? |
33030 | What is that you call me, tenderfeet? 33030 What is that-- you say I did not? |
33030 | What iss dot? 33030 What pleases you, stranger?" |
33030 | What? 33030 When did you leave Roaring Forks?" |
33030 | When race? |
33030 | When will you start on this quest? |
33030 | Where can you get a bed for a nickel? |
33030 | Where is he, that I may see him? |
33030 | Where were you? |
33030 | Who did it? |
33030 | Who threw the wad? |
33030 | Who''d you mean, my brodder or my fadder? 33030 Why are you without work?" |
33030 | Why do n''t the police shut it off? |
33030 | Why do you tell me it is wicked to fight and punish me for getting licked? 33030 Why need we falter, you and I?" |
33030 | Why should n''t he? 33030 Why were the orders canceled?" |
33030 | Why, what is that for? |
33030 | Why, yes; but what made you ask it? |
33030 | Will Jack come back Rock Creek when beaver cut''em big tree? |
33030 | Will it beat this one? |
33030 | Will you tell now? |
33030 | Would the fair- faced sister of the white man save Jack all same Chiquita? 33030 Yes?" |
33030 | You mean a whole bed and room by yourself? |
33030 | You say a''claim''on the floor; you do n''t pay for sleeping on the floor? |
33030 | ''Nother medicine man stand by give''em heap strong stuff on cloth, sabe? |
33030 | Again he inquired,"Ute dog, mebbe so?" |
33030 | Ain''d dis a new town? |
33030 | Allowing his curiosity to prevail, he asked abruptly,"Mr. Lillis, were you ever in Silver Cliff?" |
33030 | And what nation has ever disputed the title of land conveyed by the Indians? |
33030 | As the new comers faced square about Cal eyed them a moment and then said to Jack:"You see that red- faced, black mustached feller standin''there? |
33030 | As the scenes vanished she shyly snuggled a little closer and whispered,"Jack, we will always be happy, wo n''t we?" |
33030 | As they were instructing the corral men what to do with the horses Miss Asquith said to Hazel,"Oh, Mrs. Sheppard, is n''t that a stunning turnout? |
33030 | Beaver begin to chew the trees down in early March, do n''t they?" |
33030 | Been about fifteen years making it?" |
33030 | Besides, what is the old trapper to do when he returns?" |
33030 | Both Yamanatz and Chiquita understood, and Chiquita replied,"Ten snows Chiquita like white sister, know heap?" |
33030 | But may I ask you a pertinent question regarding the social part of your life?" |
33030 | But that reminds me: what will be the theme for my valedictory? |
33030 | But what be you doin''in here?" |
33030 | Can I live and see him the husband of another and not betray my secret? |
33030 | Can you tell us anything about the road?" |
33030 | Chiquita looked surprised and interrogatively answered,"Mebbe so''Brown Dick''beat''em Ute ponies, white man ride back?" |
33030 | Chiquita turned to Jack and asked:"Is there another nation in the world where their criminals return of their own accord to suffer the death penalty?" |
33030 | Colorow remained in his chair and thus addressed Jack:"Sabe white man Rock Creek trail?" |
33030 | Cut out big chunk, mebbe so little chunk, all same; sew''em up again, so, sabe? |
33030 | Did he live?" |
33030 | Did n''t the trapper tell you anything?" |
33030 | Dis will be a fine blace for a town, und Cohen will be der bioneer merchant, ai n''t it?" |
33030 | Do I make it clear?" |
33030 | Do you think her thirst will find a quencher?" |
33030 | Does Chiquita sabe?" |
33030 | Does a son, born of such parents, have that respect and confidence toward father and mother that he should? |
33030 | Does he think I will desert my camp outfit and provisions? |
33030 | Don''the shentlemans wand a negdie or hangerchief? |
33030 | Every once in a while it comes out in a little different cover, but are we to blame for the actions of our ancestors? |
33030 | Get out o''here, there be''s not a gamblin''din in all Chicago fer the last three years thot I''ve been on the cintral detail, is there, Jawn?" |
33030 | Going to Colorado? |
33030 | Going to leave Boston? |
33030 | Had the new administration declined to give gold for the"coin"notes and tendered silver, could any greater ruin have overtaken American commerce? |
33030 | Has he not danced to Wakantanka with a buffalo skull hung to a thong that passed through the flesh of his back? |
33030 | He tol''me that ther day afore he struck out, savvey?" |
33030 | Hello, Isaac; where''s Abraham?" |
33030 | How be ye?" |
33030 | I know that by heart; skip the''lover''pages and read about the coach ride from Lyons, for we will get to Lyons Friday, wo n''t we?" |
33030 | I suppose I will have to leave Saturday, and this is Wednesday--""Well, well, who are these girls conspiring against now?" |
33030 | I thought I should faint, but I''m your wife, ai n''t I, Jack?" |
33030 | I-- did you ever see me before?" |
33030 | If yer comin''in that soon, why in Christmas do n''t yer stay now? |
33030 | Is it any wonder my people resent the intrusion of the paleface?" |
33030 | Is it envy?" |
33030 | Is n''t it lovely of them?" |
33030 | Is there any excuse a mother can give her daughter, budding into womanhood, for bringing her into the world to face disgrace, possibly crime? |
33030 | Jack pondered a long time while the would- be college girl and her father watched his ever varying expression as he thought,"How can it be done?" |
33030 | Pays, did you ask? |
33030 | Said Jack as the guide bid him good- bye,"Do n''t you ever get tired of seeing these peak scalers come near the place? |
33030 | Say, but did you ever see two hundred and fifty crazy, desperate men push and crowd out of gun play range? |
33030 | Shall you have the choice of territory when you get to be a salesman?" |
33030 | Sun low-- Chiquita come, no find white man, go back Indian village, mebbe so white man see Colorow?" |
33030 | Them there cattle drifted all the way to Texas, and do you suppose the lazy dude would try to round''em up? |
33030 | Then aloud, as a bright thought came to him,"Does Chiquita sabe name of white man''s ponies?" |
33030 | This account being settled the cashier said to him,"Pickett, what are you going to do with that corn?" |
33030 | To Jack''s greeting of"How?" |
33030 | Two sleeps before can take''em trail to follow Colorow, sabe? |
33030 | WHENCE COME MY PEOPLE? |
33030 | Was it a frontier conspiracy in which both white and red men were equally interested? |
33030 | Was it a put- up job between the trapper and Joe and the Indians-- merely a coincidence in the commission of the trade? |
33030 | Were it not better that the sister of the forest should never have been educated? |
33030 | What Jack do to make Chiquita''s heart glad?" |
33030 | What? |
33030 | What_ would_ Mrs. Grundy say? |
33030 | When yer goin''out?" |
33030 | Whence Come My People? |
33030 | Where Yamanatz, Colorow, Antelope?" |
33030 | Where''s an egg?" |
33030 | White man no got''em big gun; little gun not much good, mebbe so?" |
33030 | White man sabe?" |
33030 | Why not let him go and return with the treasure alone as he has done before?" |
33030 | Will Chiquita and Yamanatz go then with Jack to Blazing- Eye- by- Big- Water?" |
33030 | Will Chiquita be in tepee near Pony Creek or White River?" |
33030 | Will one who has danced to the Sun be afraid to return to the Kiowa dogs? |
33030 | Will you give me a penny? |
33030 | Will you take Chiquita to a gambling den that she may see the class of men found at the tables?" |
33030 | With that Mr. Dunbar stepped up to the desk and with a bow naively asked,"Can you tell me where there is a first- class gambling hall? |
33030 | Wo n''t it strike us?" |
33030 | Would the pale- face maiden bring firewood and sleep in willow bed to save white man''s life?" |
33030 | Would you mind giving me a copy of those verses when we get to the ranch? |
33030 | Yamanatz saw the sparkle in Jack''s eyes and laconically remarked,"Sabe?" |
33030 | Yamanatz stopped speaking for a moment to give his hearers ample time to fully understand him, then continued:"White man sabe? |
33030 | You see that bend in the river? |
33030 | You will go, wo n''t you, Cal?" |
33030 | so it is Miss Asquith you seek to waylay, is it? |
33030 | what shall I do?" |
33416 | ''And where are you going to put up in Paris?'' |
33416 | ''And,''I said to him,''to what in particular do you attribute your youth? |
33416 | ''Are you sure you had an umbrella when you came?'' |
33416 | ''But when a Democrat becomes a Republican, what do you call him?'' |
33416 | ''Do I love Algy-- do I adore him as he deserves? |
33416 | ''Do you reproach me for doing you honour and being at the same time careful? |
33416 | ''Have you worn this?'' |
33416 | ''How can you take off your hat to a beggar?'' |
33416 | ''Well,''they said to him,''is it all right?'' |
33416 | ''What do you think of Diderot?'' |
33416 | ''What is a mugwump?'' |
33416 | ''What''s all this?'' |
33416 | ''What''s home without a mother?'' |
33416 | ''Where am I going?'' |
33416 | ''Where are you going?'' |
33416 | ''Where should I spend my honeymoon?'' |
33416 | ''Who could have slandered me so? |
33416 | ''Why do I find that Angelina looks better in gray than in red? |
33416 | ( how much? |
33416 | *** They look at him, and seem to say:''Are n''t you a man?'' |
33416 | ARE MEN FAIR TO WOMEN? |
33416 | After he sat down, I said to him:''Are you not tired of cheers and applause, after all these years of triumphs?'' |
33416 | Am I worthy of him? |
33416 | And Madame will answer more or less sourly,''Is it because I am your wife that I must grow ugly? |
33416 | And are you going to do your utmost to help him? |
33416 | And even if it did not last, what of that? |
33416 | And if this is a correct statement, to what shortcoming of man are we going to attribute it? |
33416 | And is not the_ Adam Bede_ of George Eliot a variation of Goethe''s_ Faust_? |
33416 | And that marvellous hero Tartarin of Alphonse Daudet: do you not recognise in him Don Quixote? |
33416 | And when I see Lancashire make girls work in the coal- mines I may ask,''What work is there that women can not do?'' |
33416 | And why ca n''t you marry him? |
33416 | And, pray, why do you see the man on business every day? |
33416 | Are we not to admire the sun because it is followed by night and obscurity? |
33416 | Are we to conclude that loyalty is a virtue for men alone, such as willpower, magnanimity, energy, bravery, and straightforwardness? |
33416 | Are we to despise spring because it is followed by winter one day? |
33416 | Are you aware that matinee girls invariably love madly? |
33416 | Are you going to trust to his intelligence, his tact, his love, his devotion, to win your affections? |
33416 | Are you not the most beautiful of flowers? |
33416 | Are you sorry I am careful of my clothes and have them put away, well folded in tissue- paper, when I have no need of them? |
33416 | At a café? |
33416 | At a club? |
33416 | But what about this world? |
33416 | But why does she wear red? |
33416 | But, my dear lady correspondent, are you going to tell that man honestly on what terms you are going to marry him? |
33416 | But, out of one hundred women, will you find one who will not be of opinion that mother is foremost? |
33416 | By the way, would not, perchance, that man be the''juvenile lead''who acts in the romantic drama which is being played every day in your city? |
33416 | CHAPTER IV RAMBLES ABOUT MATRIMONY-- I I have many times been asked the question, Who are the best subjects for matrimony? |
33416 | CHAPTER IV WOMEN LOVE BETTER THAN MEN How many people understand what love means? |
33416 | CHAPTER IX COQUETRY IN MATRIMONY No coquetry in matrimony? |
33416 | CHAPTER V IS WOMAN A RESPONSIBLE BEING? |
33416 | CHAPTER VII WHICH SEX WOULD YOU CHOOSE TO BE? |
33416 | CHAPTER VIII''OMELETTE AU RHUM''When you are dining with an intimate friend, and an_ omelette au rhum_ is served, what do you do? |
33416 | CHAPTER XI IS WOMAN INFERIOR TO MAN? |
33416 | CHAPTER XV ACTRESSES SHOULD NOT MARRY''Are you married?'' |
33416 | CHAPTER XVII WHAT IS GENIUS? |
33416 | CHAPTER XXIX SHALL LOVE BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY? |
33416 | CHAPTER XXIX SHOULD YOUNG GIRLS READ NOVELS? |
33416 | CHAPTER XXX ARE MEN FAIR TO WOMEN? |
33416 | CHAPTER XXX NOW, WHAT''S THE MATTER WITH FATHER? |
33416 | CHAPTER XXXIV IS HOMOEOPATHY A CURE FOR LOVE? |
33416 | Ca n''t you be precise? |
33416 | Can we for a moment suppose society without her? |
33416 | Could n''t you now and then tell us something of what you think of men, especially in their relations with women? |
33416 | Could such a genius as Balzac be accused of plagiarism because he expressed a thought practically in the very words of La Bruyère? |
33416 | Did he even try to shield woman after the offence was committed? |
33416 | Do men mean to say that loyalty and sincerity should not be or could not be expected to be found in women? |
33416 | Do we not love Burns and Shelley? |
33416 | Do you want my hair to fall over my neck and shoulders to- morrow like weeping willows? |
33416 | Do you want my hands to be red and chappy? |
33416 | Had he even the power of resistance? |
33416 | Has a royal escapade of recent date, like a''penny dreadful,''created a disturbance in your otherwise well- balanced mind? |
33416 | He does not say to the animal,''I like you; I will treat you better than your master; will you come with me?'' |
33416 | He goes out when he likes, where he likes, and would never think of asking her,''Wo n''t you come along?'' |
33416 | He, too, would like a little change of air; but what''s the matter with father? |
33416 | How can they know if you are careful in concealing paper money under cover? |
33416 | How could I be unfaithful to you if you loved me? |
33416 | How could it be possible for me to prefer any other to you? |
33416 | How is it that she so rarely avails herself of it when she is wrong? |
33416 | How is it that you receive him in your club, welcome him in your house, and not uncommonly congratulate him on his good fortune? |
33416 | How many appreciate it? |
33416 | How many ever realize what it is? |
33416 | I confess that I am a little tired, and I will say so frankly, of continually hearing such phrases as''What is home without a mother?'' |
33416 | I should like to use an Americanism and ask,''Now, pray, what''s the matter with father?'' |
33416 | I wonder if the poor darling is consumptive? |
33416 | I wonder if there is anything wrong?'' |
33416 | IS HOMOEOPATHY A CURE FOR LOVE? |
33416 | IS WOMAN INFERIOR TO MAN? |
33416 | If he should hear complaints from her he has a beautiful phrase ready for an answer:''What did my mother do? |
33416 | If she is sometimes the cause of a crime, is she not always the cause of the most heroic deeds performed by man? |
33416 | If so, how dare you leave unpunished the man who takes it away from them? |
33416 | If so, in what doses? |
33416 | In what awful set do you move?'' |
33416 | Is he your confessor, your doctor, your music- teacher, your dancing- master? |
33416 | Is it a manly occupation to be assistant in a draper''s store, to be a hairdresser, copyist, to make women''s dresses, hats, corsets? |
33416 | Is it to give that child a good digestion? |
33416 | Is man more intelligent than woman? |
33416 | Is not woman the direct or indirect motive for all our actions? |
33416 | Is not, after all, pure whiteness incomparable? |
33416 | Is not_ Tess_ of Thomas Hardy another? |
33416 | Is she not the embodiment of the beautiful, and therefore the mother of Art? |
33416 | Is that a reason for not going to see her play Phedre, Tosca, Fedora, or any other of her marvellous creations? |
33416 | Kendal?'' |
33416 | May not the question resolve itself into the following: Of old bachelors and old maids, which are the happier? |
33416 | NOW, WHAT''S THE MATTER WITH FATHER? |
33416 | No, the world is not so bad as that; you will return, wo n''t you?'' |
33416 | Now, are you aware that we never fall in love madly except with people whom we can not marry? |
33416 | Now, can you answer the question more easily? |
33416 | Now, do you believe that all those learned, bearded philosophers and theologians encouraged her, applauded her? |
33416 | Now, here is a problem if you like: Can matrimony be administered as an antidote? |
33416 | Now, is this really the case? |
33416 | Oh, why?'' |
33416 | Personally, I think the question practically amounts to this: Which would you rather be, a man or a woman? |
33416 | SHALL LOVE BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY? |
33416 | SHOULD YOUNG GIRLS READ NOVELS? |
33416 | Shall I be able to keep the love of a man so handsome, so kind, so clever? |
33416 | She is beautiful, no doubt, but what is her beauty compared to yours? |
33416 | She took an infallible drug-- a rather unpleasant one, it is true; but what is that compared to the benefit derived from it? |
33416 | Should I make such a remark if my love was intense? |
33416 | Should I marry another man who is now seeking my hand, who can offer me a very good position, but whom I do not love?'' |
33416 | So I ventured:''So you think that now English women can obtain in London dresses just as pretty as women can in Paris and New York? |
33416 | So you look at him and add:''Oh, you know her, then?'' |
33416 | Tell me if the bumptious rose does not generally carry the day over the modest, retiring violet?'' |
33416 | That is the lot of many men-- may I not even say of most husbands? |
33416 | Then why, in the name of common- sense, do we expect to find in women virtues that demand a strength of which we men are not capable? |
33416 | They hate him, but as he is content with smiling, and goes no further, what are they to do? |
33416 | They laugh at their anecdotes heartily, and invite you to do so with such a suggestion as''That''s a good one, is n''t it?'' |
33416 | To good health and careful living, I suppose?'' |
33416 | To plunge_ in medias res_, Are men fair to women? |
33416 | True, beauty does not last for ever; but who would think of singing the praises of ugliness because it does last? |
33416 | Very well, will you listen to me? |
33416 | WHAT IS GENIUS? |
33416 | WHICH SEX WOULD YOU CHOOSE TO BE? |
33416 | WOMEN LOVE BETTER THAN MEN 16 V. IS WOMAN A RESPONSIBLE BEING? |
33416 | Was I a brute for making it before her? |
33416 | What business has she to be well? |
33416 | What did your mother do? |
33416 | What do I care about that? |
33416 | What do I care if this enabled him to write''Lohengrin,''''Tannhäuser,''and the Trilogy? |
33416 | What does it matter so long as it is not some materials for sale or any other commercial purpose? |
33416 | What happens then? |
33416 | What is her perfume? |
33416 | What is her shape compared to your glorious figure? |
33416 | What of that? |
33416 | What''s the matter with father? |
33416 | When you are in an Italian shop and you ask the price of an article you wish to buy, say to the man''_ Quanto_?'' |
33416 | Where are you going to stop yourself?'' |
33416 | Which of us, my dear fellow- men, has not admired a woman of ours whose toilet was finished? |
33416 | Who ate the apple? |
33416 | Who has not been able to translate a pressure from a woman''s hand by''stay''or''go''? |
33416 | Who is the Philistine who dares utter such blasphemy? |
33416 | Why do I say was? |
33416 | Why do they not consult and listen to the advice of married lady friends, choosing those who are happy, of course? |
33416 | Why does a grandmother indulge a young child, give it sweets and candies? |
33416 | Why in the world do you want £ 5 now?'' |
33416 | Why is n''t he sick, too? |
33416 | Why should it not be priceless in the eyes of a man who loves his wife? |
33416 | Why should men who deceive women be received by it with open arms? |
33416 | Why should not books be reviewed in the same way? |
33416 | Why should not women get all this? |
33416 | Why should she? |
33416 | Why should they not be reviewed and criticised by the author or the publisher? |
33416 | Why will young girls leave it to their imagination to find out what married life is? |
33416 | Why? |
33416 | Why? |
33416 | Why? |
33416 | Will you tell me, is there any way to please you? |
33416 | Would life be worth living without the sweet presence of kind, cheerful, and amiable women? |
33416 | Would you seriously accuse Thomas Hardy and George Eliot of plagiarism, and say that they owed their plots to Goethe''s''_ Faust_''? |
33416 | X. is very beautiful, is n''t she?'' |
33416 | Yet, can I tell her that? |
33416 | Yet, is not my wife my most valuable property?'' |
33416 | and of a hundred women,''What is the ideal husband?'' |
33416 | who on earth can you be? |
37795 | Do you want to know how I manage to talk to you in this simple Saxon? 37795 Have you ever rightly considered what the mere ability to read means? |
37795 | Is it not a new England for a child to be born in since Shakspeare gathered up the centuries and told the story of humanity up to his time? 37795 What is a great love of books? |
37795 | Do you suppose when you see men engaged in study that they dislike it? |
37795 | Has it been superseded by a later book, or has its truth passed into the every- day life of the race? |
37795 | Is it within my grasp? |
37795 | Is the author such a man as I would wish to be the companion of my heart, or such as I must study to avoid? |
37795 | Is the book simple enough for me? |
37795 | Is the matter inviting my attention of permanent value? |
37795 | That it enables us to see with the keenest eyes, hear with the finest ears, and listen to the sweetest voices of all time?... |
37795 | V. Will the book impart a pleasure in the very reading? |
37795 | What effect will it have upon character? |
37795 | What effect will the book produce upon the mind? |
37795 | What is the relation of the book to the completeness of my development? |
37795 | What will be the effect on my skills and accomplishments? |
37795 | When did a thing such as that ever happen? |
37795 | Will it exercise and strengthen my fancy, imagination, memory, invention, originality, insight, breadth, common- sense, and philosophic power? |
37795 | Will it fill a gap in the walls of my building? |
37795 | Will it give me a knowledge of what other people are thinking and feeling, thus opening the avenues of communication between my life and theirs? |
37795 | Will it give me the quality of intellectual beauty? |
37795 | Will it help to build a standard of taste in literature for the guidance of myself and others? |
37795 | Will it make me bright, witty, reasonable, and tolerant? |
37795 | Will it store my mind full of beautiful thoughts and images that will make my conversation a delight and profit to my friends? |
37795 | Will it supply a knowledge of the best means of attaining any other desired art or accomplishment? |
37795 | Will it teach me how to write with power, give me the art of thinking clearly and expressing my thought with force and attractiveness? |
37795 | _ Do they live?_ If so, believe me, TIME hath made them pure. |
34199 | About how many inhabitants has Thaï-ouan, the capital? |
34199 | And I suppose there is ever so much traffic on it? |
34199 | And are there many Christians in China now? |
34199 | And are there many holidays at Chinese schools? |
34199 | And ca n''t they be cured, father? |
34199 | And did it keep out the Tartars? |
34199 | And did they not let him off,Leonard asked,"as the son had suffered so much for him?" |
34199 | And do children often worship at their parents''tombs? |
34199 | And do people really sell their children? |
34199 | And he is a living man? |
34199 | And he suffered all that? |
34199 | And how long were they in Formosa? |
34199 | And in this case was the real culprit ever found out? |
34199 | And is anything more done for the dead after this except worship being paid to them? |
34199 | And that of the other convert? |
34199 | And what do those characters mean? |
34199 | And what does''Yantze- kiang''mean? |
34199 | And what is the height of the wall, father? |
34199 | And what sort of dress does he wear? |
34199 | And what''s done on his first birthday? |
34199 | And, father,he said later,"I wonder why so many of them wear turbans? |
34199 | Are all Chinese parents so silly as to have their little girls''feet bandaged? |
34199 | Are the priests very good men? |
34199 | Are these people rich or poor? |
34199 | But how are these letters made to''arrive?'' |
34199 | But what is the use of preparing feasts for the dead? |
34199 | But what shall give us comfort? 34199 But who, then, is the great Lama? |
34199 | Can I forget thy cares, from helpless years Thy tenderness for me? |
34199 | Can a mandarin be punished when he does wrong? |
34199 | Che- fan,or"Have you eaten your rice?" |
34199 | Did grandfather make many converts? |
34199 | Did you ever go into a boy''s school, father? |
34199 | Did you ever see them at drill, father? |
34199 | Did you ever want to be a sailor then? 34199 Do Chinese girls learn lessons? |
34199 | Do Taouists and Buddhists believe in, and read, the writings of Confucius? |
34199 | Do n''t you? |
34199 | Do you mind waiting one minute, father, just to tell me a thing I have forgotten, and you told me once? |
34199 | Do you think, Sybil, that the heathen Chinese could teach the Christian English anything? |
34199 | Does anything else happen on the grand shaving day? |
34199 | Does the Emperor''s eldest son always reign? |
34199 | Father, do you remember well when you were just eleven? |
34199 | Father, why do Chinamen wear pig- tails? |
34199 | Father, will you tell us something now about the children? |
34199 | Have you a picture of it, father? |
34199 | How I shall think of you, father, and the Hong- Kong Mission on Intercession Day, when it comes round, sha n''t I? |
34199 | How could he have done so? |
34199 | How far did you get? |
34199 | How far is Tientsin from the capital? |
34199 | How long is it now since the Dutch were driven away? |
34199 | How long was he left there? |
34199 | How many gods have the Chinese? |
34199 | I suppose children give their parents beautiful presents on their birthdays? |
34199 | I suppose tea is n''t ever sent about in wheel- barrows? |
34199 | I suppose you know, Sybil, that there are some wild beasts in Formosa? |
34199 | I thought the Chinese were clever people,Sybil said;"if so, how can they believe in so many gods?" |
34199 | I wonder if you and Sybil can tell me what grows principally in Formosa? |
34199 | I wonder what Swatow is like? |
34199 | I wonder what made people first think of doing this? |
34199 | I wonder whether I shall be able to do anything to help him there? |
34199 | Is it not strange New Year''s Day next year will be on the twenty- ninth of January, and in 1882 on February eighteenth? 34199 Is it very difficult to teach the Chinese, father?" |
34199 | Is n''t Tientsin noted for something? |
34199 | It must be an important one, I should think, as it carries things, does n''t it, from the sea- coast to near to Peking? |
34199 | Now, father, do n''t you think it''s high time you began to tell us about old Peking? |
34199 | Now, father, will you please describe a Chinese house to us? |
34199 | Oh yes you do, Sybil,was the answer;"you like your father to be a missionary very much, you know, do you not?" |
34199 | People have not known very long, have they, that the island of Formosa is important? |
34199 | Shall you have one? |
34199 | So they can not believe at all in the immortality of the soul? |
34199 | Supposing I do not know anything about it, though; what are we to do then? 34199 That was a beautiful name, was n''t it? |
34199 | The Chinese part of the island, I suppose, belongs to Fukien? |
34199 | The east coast has n''t a harbour at all, has it? |
34199 | Then a priest is not obliged to go to the funeral? |
34199 | Then what do you want to be now? |
34199 | Then, when children do wrong, their parents and schoolmasters are blamed? |
34199 | They can not think that the dead really eat the food? |
34199 | To what part of China are we going, father? |
34199 | WILL you please tell us to- day, father, something about the religion of the Chinese? 34199 Well, what should you like to hear now?" |
34199 | What are mandarins, please, father? |
34199 | What are the most peculiar of them like? |
34199 | What are you here for? |
34199 | What does casting his horoscope mean? |
34199 | What does that mean? |
34199 | What does the ancestral tablet mean? |
34199 | What does the word China mean? |
34199 | What games do they like? |
34199 | What is opium? |
34199 | What is scented Caper Tea? |
34199 | What is the name of your beautiful dwelling? |
34199 | What made the Chinese call Formosa Tai- wan? |
34199 | What sort of flags do Chinese boats have, father? 34199 What was his name?" |
34199 | What would happen,Sybil asked,"if a child were to do anything very dreadful to a parent in China?" |
34199 | When was the Hong- Kong mission begun? |
34199 | Where_ did_ they all come from? |
34199 | Who is that Jui- Lin of whom you have a picture? 34199 Who was the founder of Buddhism?" |
34199 | Whoever thought,Sybil said one day on board,"that we should actually be on the Yellow Sea ourselves? |
34199 | Why did that policeman come after you to- day, father, and take down the name of the boat that we got into? |
34199 | Why did you say that opium- smoking was so dreadful? |
34199 | Why do Chinese ladies have small feet? |
34199 | Why do people not kill their boys too? |
34199 | Why do so many Chinese rivers end in ho and kiang? |
34199 | Why does all that happen? |
34199 | Why is your house called a yamen? |
34199 | Will you please go on about the religion now, father? |
34199 | Will you take me to see a school in China? |
34199 | You were saying the other day, father, that Chinese people smoke something else besides tobacco? |
34199 | _ I like my father to be a missionary very much._ He must be glad too; is n''t he, mother? |
34199 | A missionary''s children must not shrink from fulfilling, must not fail to fulfil, the mission on which they are sent, must they?" |
34199 | And do you know what river it is on?" |
34199 | And what does this teach us, children?" |
34199 | Another time she meant to ask Sybil if she were not very rich, so she said,"You can muchee money?" |
34199 | Are n''t you glad to go to China?" |
34199 | Before E- Chung heard that Sybil had a brother, she said to her,"You one piecee chilo?" |
34199 | But I wonder if Leonard knows what''shan''means?" |
34199 | But what are these, when we think that this vast empire alone contains 400,000,000 people, one- third of the human race?" |
34199 | Does it not seem greedy, when people have so much to eat, to take poor little birds''-nests which have been made with such pains by their owners? |
34199 | Had she been grown up, this question would probably have been,"What is your venerable age?" |
34199 | How can we?" |
34199 | How many native communicants are there in Hong- Kong?" |
34199 | I do n''t think I shall ever want to say it again now; and I used to say it rather often, usen''t I? |
34199 | I know tea comes from an evergreen plant, something like a myrtle, but that is n''t much information, is it? |
34199 | I know they worship idols, but how do they believe in them?" |
34199 | I wonder if you would like it? |
34199 | Is it not kind of Che- Yin? |
34199 | Is it not so, my child?" |
34199 | Is it not so?" |
34199 | Is n''t it a pity that they do n''t know better? |
34199 | Is n''t that nasty? |
34199 | It will be longer for poor old Leonard, wo n''t it?" |
34199 | Leonard said;"with no end of ships to be seen?" |
34199 | Must not this scene have been very lovely? |
34199 | Should n''t you like it too? |
34199 | We can not help feeling sorry to leave our old friends, can we?" |
34199 | What could this be for?" |
34199 | What other amusements have they?" |
34199 | What religion had the aborigines? |
34199 | When she went out visiting, questions such as the following were generally put to her,"What honourable name have you?" |
34199 | Who will be our guide, stay, and comfort, when we are separated from one another?" |
34199 | Why is it called that?" |
34199 | Will Jesus chide thy weakness, Or call thy labour vain? |
34199 | and is he alive now?" |
34199 | and"What age have you?" |
34199 | but what was the Christian name she chose? |
34199 | ever think for certain you would be one?" |
34199 | or is it only the boys?" |
34199 | ought n''t we to be careful, then, Leonard? |
34199 | she said;"and leave you and mother?" |
34199 | she then asked;"to the same place where you were before?" |
34199 | she then said,"is n''t the time dreadfully near now? |
34199 | though, as a rule, when people said"How do you do?" |
34199 | to her it was"Chin- chin mississi?" |
34199 | was"How do you do?" |
34199 | what shall we think about when we are trying to do our several duties, though apart, I hope contentedly and well? |
36791 | Shall our own brethren drag the chain Which not even Russia''s menials wear? |
36791 | After recovery from the first consternation over the awful tragedy, they began to ask themselves, Who shall rule the Church? |
36791 | Among them Robert Browning answered the question in this characteristic sonnet:"Why? |
36791 | And does not the fact of the large Christian element in the Mormon religious system show that it must not be treated as a pagan religion? |
36791 | And to what better use could the money be put? |
36791 | And what has brought about this difference? |
36791 | And what was the policy pursued by the National Government toward them there? |
36791 | And where will you find a more heroic one than this of the Mormon people? |
36791 | And who will say that it is not wonderful and strangely unique? |
36791 | Are these all pretenders and knaves, or the willing dupes of such? |
36791 | Besides, let us ask the question, Who is responsible for the present state of affairs in Utah? |
36791 | But in the twenty years of missionary work what has been accomplished? |
36791 | Can a man excuse his practices to the country because of his religious belief? |
36791 | Did it die out? |
36791 | Do we see apostates? |
36791 | Having thus endeavored to answer the question, Why was polygamy promulgated? |
36791 | How many converts from Mormonism have been obtained? |
36791 | Is all of this endurance of trial with a devotion approaching heroism the outcome of charlatanism, hypocrisy, and libertinism? |
36791 | Is it_ just_? |
36791 | Is it_ wise_? |
36791 | Is not that slavery? |
36791 | Is not that the great doctrine of the Jesuit--"_The end justifies the means_"? |
36791 | It took the shape of a book entitled"Why am I a Liberal?" |
36791 | Jesus had given His life to redeem; why could they not help to save? |
36791 | Now, we raise the question,_ Can any Christian sect be easily annihilated?_ Should it be our desire to exterminate it? |
36791 | Now, we raise the question,_ Can any Christian sect be easily annihilated?_ Should it be our desire to exterminate it? |
36791 | Now, when the leaders commit perjury in that way, what can be expected from those who regard them as gods and as capable of no wrong act? |
36791 | Now, why is this? |
36791 | Now, with such natural resources, what might not Utah become? |
36791 | Now, with that practical example in mind, who would dare say that the scheme we advocate would not be effectual in breaking up polygamy? |
36791 | Should not the object of all our efforts be_ to reform it_--to purge the gold of its dross? |
36791 | The Lord is not coming down on the Wahsatch Mountains with horses and chariots of fire to deliver the persecuted(?) |
36791 | The great PUZZLE to solve is this: What remedies will be_ effective_ and accomplish the object in_ the shortest period of time_? |
36791 | The great question to be answered is: How are we to get rid of_ the erroneous doctrines of Mormonism_? |
36791 | The modest(?) |
36791 | The only questions to consider are: Is it_ lawful_? |
36791 | The question at once arises, WHY WAS IT PROMULGATED UNDER SUCH CIRCUMSTANCES? |
36791 | There will then be a hand- to- hand combat between Truth and Error; and who can doubt as to the result? |
36791 | These shall I bid men, each in his degree Also God- guided, bear, and gayly too? |
36791 | Think you that a man would work under a Mormon bishop for one dollar a day when under a non- Mormon he could double his wages? |
36791 | Was not that man in moral slavery? |
36791 | Were restrictive influences provided? |
36791 | What if no black wrist feels the iron chain, When snow- white breasts must bear the scarlet stain? |
36791 | What if the old plantation homes in ruin lie, If Mormon temples proudly kiss the sky? |
36791 | What think you of the_ men_ who have toiled with unmurmuring bravery for months through dangers of ambush and storm and flood on their westward way? |
36791 | What was the object of the leaders in declaring it to be a divine revelation? |
36791 | What will be the end of all this suffering?" |
36791 | Who ever knew of any matter of interest being left to the people to act upon freely and unrestrainedly? |
36791 | Who ever knew of any proposition being debated in their conferences, or any nomination voted down by the people? |
36791 | Why not, then, encourage emigration thither of the right class? |
36791 | _ The people must acquiesce and think as they do._ IS THAT LIBERTY? |
36791 | and that different methods must be adopted to overcome its evils? |
36791 | let us now direct our attention to another and more important question, WHY IS POLYGAMY PRACTISED? |
36791 | where art thou?" |
33089 | ''Where is now my dearest daughter? 33089 From the lake there comes rejoicing, And what song from lake re- echoes, 10 Far more joyous than aforetime, And a finer song than any?" |
33089 | How shall I for this reward her, Woman''s prank, and damsel''s mockery, 100 And destroy the base old woman, And that wicked wench, the bakeress? |
33089 | How then has your daughter vanished, What has happened to my sister? |
33089 | If the village folk had asked thee,''Why is in the room no cradle? 33089 Men, what tidings do you bring us, What fresh news, O heroes, bring you?" |
33089 | O my dearest of old women, Tell me, O my dear old woman, 130 Where I yet may find my father, Where the fair one who has borne me? |
33089 | O my dearest of old women, Tell me, O my dear old woman, How I best can journey to them, And the road I may discover? |
33089 | O thou wretched golden buckle, Kalervo''s surviving offspring, Wherefore art thou so unhappy, Wherefore is thy heart so troubled? 33089 Shall I tell you of your lineage, And shall I make known your honours? |
33089 | Star, whom Jumala created, Know you nothing of my infant, Where my little son is hidden, Where is hid my golden apple? |
33089 | Sun, whom Jumala created, Know you nothing of my infant, Where my little son is hidden, Where is hid my golden apple? |
33089 | Thus my mother always told me In the very words which follow:''Where has gone the yield of cattle, Whither has the milk now vanished? 33089 Whence the life he gave unto it? |
33089 | Where then can I place the infant, That we bring him to destruction, And that death may overtake him? |
33089 | Wherefore should I thus be treated, When I sent myself the barley? 33089 Wherefore whet the men their sword- blades, Wherefore sharpen they the lance- tips?" |
33089 | Who is longing for the maiden? 33089 Who shall cater for thy brother, Tend him day by day in future?" |
33089 | Who shall cater for thy sister, Tend her day by day in future? |
33089 | Who shall cater for your mother, And shall tend the old dame daily? |
33089 | Who was it the Frost who suckled, Bathed him in the glowing weather? 33089 10 Who should row the vessel onward? 33089 120 Shall I clothe myself in armour, In a coat of mail the strongest, Gird a belt of steel around me? 33089 140 Untamo again reflected,How can we o''ercome the infant, That destruction come upon him, And that death may overtake him?" |
33089 | 160 Said the aged Väinämöinen As he went towards the vessel,"Wherefore weep, O wooden vessel, Boat with rowlocks, why lamentest? |
33089 | 180 Whence shall now the screws be fashioned, Whence shall come the pegs to suit me?" |
33089 | 180"From what lake has come the stranger, From what country is the wanderer?" |
33089 | 190 Hundreds have been there devoured, Heroes have by thousands perished; Wherefore should they not devour thee, Kill thee likewise, unprotected?" |
33089 | 220 Has he travelled to Esthonia, Wandered from the land of Suomi?''" |
33089 | 230 Then her head the maiden lifted, In the snow she saw fresh footprints, And she thereupon inquired,"What has passed across our pathway?" |
33089 | 240 O my mother who hast reared me, Mother who thy milk hast given, Whither would''st thou bid me hide me, Whither should I now conceal me? |
33089 | 280 Whither shall I take my darling, And shall bring the shaggy creature?" |
33089 | 290 Ne''er in former times my father In a duel has been worsted, Why should then his son be different, Or his child be like a baby?" |
33089 | 300 Said the smith, said Ilmarinen,"How at Pohjola exist they? |
33089 | 300 Then said Lemminkainen''s mother,"O alas, my son unhappy, Dost thou think of former exploits, Brag''st thou of thy former journey? |
33089 | 360 Dost thou go for maidens''coyness, Or for scarcity of women?" |
33089 | 380 Whither then away, O heroes, Whither do you journey, heroes?" |
33089 | 390"Moon, whom Jumala created, Know you nothing of my infant, Where my little son is hidden, Where is hid my golden apple?" |
33089 | 440 Who shall dare to come to try him, Test him, and pass sentence on him? |
33089 | 460"Whither wilt thou go, O Kauko, Whither goes the son of Lempi?" |
33089 | 500 Hast thou perished, who hast borne me, Hast thou gone, O tender mother? |
33089 | 60 And the island- maids reflected, Said the maidens of the island:"What''s this strange thing in the water, What this wonder on the billows? |
33089 | 60 Shall you perhaps be weeping sorely, If you hear that I have perished, And have vanished from the people, And have perished in the battle?" |
33089 | 730 Whence was then its heart created? |
33089 | 740 Whence were the toad''s ears created? |
33089 | 750 Whence was then its back constructed? |
33089 | 90 If the horse has overcome you, Wherefore let the horse annoy you? |
33089 | ; or perhaps to a much earlier period, when, as old Persian books tell us, the climate of some part of Asia(?) |
33089 | And she pondered and reflected, And she spoke the words which follow:"Who can aid me now with counsel? |
33089 | And the grey hawk called unto him,"Ahti, O my dearest brother, Think you on our former combat, Head to head in equal contest?" |
33089 | Answered thereupon the net- man,"Would you call it proper threshing, 50 If with all your strength you threshed not, Putting forth your manly efforts?" |
33089 | Are blue stockings supposed to be an emblem of strength? |
33089 | But a little time passed over, When a little boy was born her, From a most unhappy mother, So by what name should they call him? |
33089 | By what names do people call you?" |
33089 | Chiefly from the great pike''s jawbones, Whence obtained he pegs to suit it? |
33089 | Did you with the spear attack him, Was he overcome with arrows?" |
33089 | Does this refer to stories of witches milking cattle? |
33089 | Does this refer to tides? |
33089 | Dost thou weep that thou art clumsy, And art dreaming at thy moorings?" |
33089 | Dove, why sit''st thou on the threshold?" |
33089 | Gave the wood the honey- eater, And a lynx to lord of forest, That you come among us singing, On your snowshoes come rejoicing?" |
33089 | Has the Sampo perhaps been stolen, And the whole been taken from us?" |
33089 | Hast thou harmed thyself by drinking At the drinking- bout of Pohja? |
33089 | Have the women laughed about you, Or the maidens ridiculed you? |
33089 | Have you eaten perhaps too freely, Eaten much, too much have drunken, Or at night perchance when resting Have you seen a dream of evil?" |
33089 | Have you left him in the icefield, In the snow- slush have you sunk him, Pushed him down in the morasses, Buried him upon the heathland?" |
33089 | Hearken, Pohjola''s great Master, Have you here within this dwelling, Barley for the horse''s fodder, Beer to offer to the hero?" |
33089 | Hereupon the bird spoke language, And the hawk at once responded:"What is this, O smith, thou makest, What, O blacksmith, art thou forging?" |
33089 | How at Pohjola exist they?" |
33089 | How shall I provide the harp- strings, Which shall yield the notes in playing?" |
33089 | I am aged Väinämöinen, Ilmarinen, smith, is with me, 150 But inform us of your kindred; By what name do people call you?" |
33089 | I who guiltless flesh have eaten, Drank the blood of those who sinned not?" |
33089 | Neptune''s trident? |
33089 | O my mother who hast borne me, Where do you advise my hiding?" |
33089 | Of the teeth of pike he made them; Out of what were harpstrings fashioned? |
33089 | Out of what did he construct it? |
33089 | Perhaps he ought to clear the forest?" |
33089 | Said the lively Lemminkainen,"O thou aged Väinämöinen, Wherefore didst forget to take me, As your very trusty comrade? |
33089 | Shall I take him into Russia, Shall I sell him in Carelia, 360 To the smith named Ilmarinen, That he there may wield the hammer?" |
33089 | Shall we go to look about us, Shall we nearer go to listen?" |
33089 | Shall you weep for my destruction, If you hear that I have perished, And have vanished from the people, And have fallen in the battle?" |
33089 | Shall you weep for my destruction, If you hear that I have perished, And have vanished from the people, And have perished in the battle?" |
33089 | Should I let him make a fencing?" |
33089 | Teeth for such an evil creature? |
33089 | Then did Pohjola''s great Master, Answer in the words which follow:"Wherefore have you then come hither, Who invited you among us?" |
33089 | Then her head the maiden lifted, In the snow she saw fresh footprints, And she thereupon inquired,"What has passed across our pathway?" |
33089 | Then her head the maiden lifted, In the snow she saw fresh footprints, And she thereupon inquired,"What has passed across our pathway?" |
33089 | Then his mother asked him quickly, Asked him thus, the aged woman:"O my son, what happened to thee, What the dreadful news thou bringest? |
33089 | Then his mother spoke and answered,"If you perish in the battle, Who shall cater for your father, And shall tend the old man daily?" |
33089 | Then said Lemminkainen''s mother,"What has chanced, my son, my darling, Hast thou perhaps encountered something As to Pohjola thou wentest? |
33089 | Then said Lemminkainen''s mother,"Wherefore art thou then in trouble, Wherefore is thy heart so troubled, As from Pohjola thou comest? |
33089 | Then said Lemminkainen''s mother,"Wherefore art thou then in trouble? |
33089 | Then the aged Väinämöinen Answered in the words that follow:"Where''s my guest to be conducted, Whither shall I lead my gold one? |
33089 | Then the little damsel Piltti, Answered in the words that follow:"Where am I to ask a bathroom, Who will help me to obtain it?" |
33089 | Then the lively Lemminkainen For a second time inquired,"Wherefore sing not, Väinämöinen? |
33089 | Then they questioned the intruder In the very words that follow:"What''s your news, you wretched fellow, What''s your need, O swimming hero?" |
33089 | Thereupon smith Ilmarinen Asked her in the words which follow: 370"Why, O bird, hast thou flown hither? |
33089 | Thereupon smith Ilmarinen Spoke aloud the words that follow: 330"Bird of prey, what brings thee hither, Sitting underneath my window?" |
33089 | To the barn shall I conduct him On a bed of straw to lay him?" |
33089 | Was''t thy father or thy mother, Or the eldest of thy brothers, Or the youngest of thy sisters, Or some other near relation? |
33089 | Wept the island girls already, Damsels at the cape lamented:"Wherefore goest thou, Lemminkainen, And departest, hero- bridegroom? |
33089 | What then gave the smith in payment? |
33089 | What would now avail my singing, If the songs I sang were bad ones, 550 If I sang in every valley, And I sang in every firwood? |
33089 | Whence a head, this foul enchantment? |
33089 | Whence its entrails were constructed? |
33089 | Whence its filthy gums created? |
33089 | Whence its sense obtained the monster? |
33089 | Whence its wriggling tail constructed? |
33089 | Whence the brains for this foul creature? |
33089 | Whence the tongue in mouth so evil? |
33089 | Whence was then its mouth constructed? |
33089 | Whence were then its eyes created? |
33089 | Where is now the sun imprisoned, Whither has the moon been taken?" |
33089 | Where should Untamo seek aidance,''Gainst this boy, the most unhappy? |
33089 | Wherefore do you bring more planking, Bringing timber to the vessel?" |
33089 | Wherefore does he thus come playing, Blowing tunes upon the cow- horn, Blowing till he bursts the eardrums, And he gives me quite a headache?" |
33089 | Wherefore have you locked the bath- house?'' |
33089 | Wherefore should our songs not falter; As our sweet songs we are singing, For the lengthy evenings''pleasure, Singing later than the sunset? |
33089 | Whither do you take your journey, Whither, heroes, are you going?" |
33089 | Who can help me in this trouble?" |
33089 | Who has made ye thus so angry, As to scorch my cheeks in thiswise, And to burn my hips so badly, And my sides so much to injure? |
33089 | Who has sent thee from thy nettles, Who has ordered and provoked thee That thy head thou liftest threatening, And thy neck thou stiffly raisest? |
33089 | Who has spoiled my well- known homestead, And destroyed my charming dwelling? |
33089 | Why delays the forest''s darling? |
33089 | Why returnest thou so sadly, Home from Pohjola''s dark regions? |
33089 | Why should I not also find it, As my father always found it?" |
33089 | Wilt thou now divide the Sampo, 210 Out upon the jutting headland, On the misty island''s summit?" |
37708 | ''Tells the cranes where our hiding- places are''"''Where are you going?'' 37708 And can not I have supper with you?" |
37708 | Are you hungry? |
37708 | But what shall I do? |
37708 | But when shall we know the secret? |
37708 | But would you not like to go and swim in the river? |
37708 | Can not I bring my bed into your garden and sleep there? |
37708 | Did the turtle drop from the sky as a warning to us? |
37708 | Did you count them? |
37708 | How can I do it? |
37708 | How can I fight two demons? |
37708 | If your bed carried you across seven jungles and over three ranges of hills, do n''t you think it can take you up into the sky? |
37708 | Is Nala here, and do you talk to her? |
37708 | Is there a pond in the Golden Cave? |
37708 | Tell me where she is? |
37708 | Then he is n''t really a fish? |
37708 | We are four brothers; will you be the fifth? |
37708 | What do you think of this? |
37708 | What is the matter? |
37708 | What shall we call him? |
37708 | Where are the Four Brothers? |
37708 | Where are you going? |
37708 | Where can we go? |
37708 | Where did you get this? |
37708 | Where is your drum? |
37708 | Why must I do this? |
37708 | Will you be one of us? |
37708 | _Half of it is surely true,"she said aloud, and suddenly, from behind her, the jackal asked,"Which half is true?" |
37708 | And the old tree asked,"Why do you want to know?" |
37708 | Are there no others like me; is there only one Nazim?" |
37708 | As soon as he had thrown himself into his great chair his oldest daughter asked him,"Have you got husbands for us yet?" |
37708 | I want you, and what will you do without me?" |
37708 | So she said to him one day,"Are you quite happy here, Athon- Rajah?" |
37708 | The fakir sat very still for a long time when he heard what the Prince wanted, and then he asked,"Why do you seek the Princess Lalun?" |
37708 | This made the turtle so angry that he wanted to say,"You miserable woman, what is it to you?" |
37708 | What can we do for you in return?" |
37708 | where are you?" |
37708 | who can get husbands for four daughters all at once?" |
36757 | Is there anything really afterwards?... 36757 Is this a psychological and moral paradox?" |
36757 | What became of the spiritual leaders of America during those thirty- two months when Europe and parts of Asia were passing through Gehenna? |
36757 | What people has God so nigh unto them as the Lord our God is in all things that we call upon Him for? 36757 [ 10] But what have been the effects of this war upon the home base of missions? |
36757 | And the question arises: What organized forces are to establish such righteousness and good will among the nations? |
36757 | And what concord hath Christ with Belial?" |
36757 | Are not the dominant forces operating today centrifugal rather than centripetal? |
36757 | Are the same forces at work there also? |
36757 | Are the wages of sin death, or does the good man simply lose a deal of fun and prove himself to be a foolish prig and superstitious other- worlding? |
36757 | Behold the birds of the heaven... Are not ye of much more value than they? |
36757 | But is it certain that it is also a Christian hope, a hope in Christ and a hope for Christ? |
36757 | But is their teaching justly and fairly interpreted? |
36757 | But still that question presses for an answer-- Why did not these spiritual forces for which Christianity stands prevent the war? |
36757 | But this demands the consent and good will of the governed, and how may these essentials be secured? |
36757 | But what is the case today? |
36757 | Can it not be in a measure abated? |
36757 | Did ever a people hear the Voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire as thou hast heard? |
36757 | Does death end all, or are there many mansions in the Father''s house? |
36757 | Does it not mean that we err tremendously in our sense of values? |
36757 | Finally, how is such a religious program to be carried forward? |
36757 | Has God assayed to take him a nation from the midst of another nation by signs, by wonders and by war, as the Lord hath done for you? |
36757 | Has this result, so apparent in most realms of activity and of ordinary life, been manifest in the realm of religion? |
36757 | He met the inevitable demand of the hierocracy,"By what authority doest thou these things?" |
36757 | How does God secure his adequate providential control of the course of history? |
36757 | How shall this trust be fulfilled? |
36757 | I daresay it was that which suggested his next words:"Or do we just go out? |
36757 | IV NON- RESISTANCE: CHRISTIAN OR PAGAN? |
36757 | If it does, will they be as extensive or the interest as great as formerly? |
36757 | If two local churches are to become one, where will their joint contributions go? |
36757 | In short, the weary Jesus was so irritated by the unexpected(?) |
36757 | In the first place, how can we be sure that such interventions have taken place, particularly in the external world? |
36757 | Is international good faith only an empty phrase, or is it a magnificent reality in the moral world to be upheld at any cost? |
36757 | Is it ready to pay the cost? |
36757 | Is not the life more than food and the body than raiment? |
36757 | Is the foreign missionary enterprise willing and competent to aid in the reconstruction soon to come in mission lands? |
36757 | Is the power of sacrificial love drawing the hearts of men and of nations together in the fellowship of Jesus Christ? |
36757 | Is there a God, and can we actually lead men to experience him and to grow like him? |
36757 | Is this great hope Christian? |
36757 | It never occurred to anyone to ask,"Why did not Big Business, or the Newspapers, or the Universities prevent the war?" |
36757 | It never seemed to occur to anyone to ask,"Why did not Science prevent the war?" |
36757 | Non- Resistance: Christian or Pagan? |
36757 | Or may we perhaps now raise the question whether the"inconsistency"is not rather chargeable to the interpreter''s account? |
36757 | Rightly or wrongly, it is the answer which has come to their agonized petition,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" |
36757 | Shall the new union divide its gifts? |
36757 | The fourth evangelist devotes the closing section of his story of the public ministry to this great question, Why Jesus came forward as the Christ? |
36757 | Was he, then, inconsistent with himself? |
36757 | What Christian will deny the Christ- likeness of this teaching? |
36757 | What does all this mean? |
36757 | What is Christian in these hopes that are filling the mind and heart of the world? |
36757 | What nation has statutes and judgments so righteous as the law which I set before you this day? |
36757 | What shall a man be profited if he shall gain the whole world and forfeit his life? |
36757 | When the war came men began to ask, sometimes with a sneer, and sometimes with a look of pain,"Why did not Christianity prevent the war?" |
36757 | Whence had the Baptist authority to inaugurate his prophetic reform, making ready for Jehovah a purified people prepared for his coming? |
36757 | Where in such pietism do we find the universality of obligation involved in the ethical law of benevolence or in the Christian law of love? |
36757 | Will anything permanently effective come out of this widely diffused desire? |
36757 | Will the result be more harm than good, or more good than harm? |
36757 | Will this deep, elemental, common religion of America come to understand itself, and to recognize its fundamentally Christian character? |
36757 | Would it be strange if some fathers decided to go with them? |
36757 | [ 2] Are we then to admit the"inconsistency"--not casual and incidental, as conceived in this pacifistic interpretation, but deliberate and flagrant? |
38485 | 176 we see it worshipped by human figures, with eagles''heads and wings, who present to it the pine- cone,= the testis, and the basket,= the scrotum(? |
38485 | 20, and ask what is meant by the phrase,"the hair of the feet"? |
38485 | After reading thus far, I can imagine many a person saying with astonishment,"Are these things so?" |
38485 | And what is the promise? |
38485 | But why? |
38485 | If, it may be asked, the common people are contented with a fable, believing it true, why seek to enlighten them upon its hidden meaning? |
38485 | Is it not because their ecclesiastics have adopted symbolism into their churches and into their ritual? |
38485 | What do men desire and long for most? |
38485 | What, then, was the Asharah? |
38462 | ''If they will do these things in a green tree, what will they do in the dry?'' |
38462 | --to a favourite of Teen Wang''s, who can trust himself among them, either as a missionary or a merchant? |
38462 | But of what avail are the choicest treasures of nature, if the mind be wanting which can turn them to their proper use, and elicit their real value? |
38462 | For his kind offices we promised him a present, upon which he asked with the most naïve simplicity:"You not talk lie?" |
38462 | Have you a hankering to visit the forests of Ilocos, northward from Manila, or to sail down the great river Lanatin? |
38462 | Police in the interior? |
38462 | Should you care to make an excursion to the Lagoons and thence proceed to the Pacific Ocean? |
38462 | Should you like to ascend the Majayjay, the highest hill in the interior? |
38462 | Suppose I could come to your island and take it? |
38462 | What more natural than to suppose that a path so well worn must necessarily lead to an important settlement? |
38462 | Will the tea plant repay the immense cost of cultivation, and compete successfully with the product of China? |
38462 | whether we wished to purchase cocoa- nuts, and would soon be leaving?" |
33019 | After Mr. Ashton had left you to retire? |
33019 | After that you retired at once? |
33019 | After you left Mr. Ashton''s room, what did you do? |
33019 | And he agreed? |
33019 | And he refused? |
33019 | And how did your daughter regard the bargain? |
33019 | And the matter was not settled before he left you? |
33019 | And they were--? |
33019 | And was he satisfied with that settlement? |
33019 | And you broke it open when you entered? |
33019 | And you insisted upon it? |
33019 | And you went to your room at once? |
33019 | And you were successful? |
33019 | And, when you have good news, you will come to The Oaks and tell us about it, will you not? |
33019 | Are we then really friends? |
33019 | Are you really the son of Edward Morgan? |
33019 | At what price? |
33019 | At what time did you retire on the night of the murder? |
33019 | Because of what? |
33019 | But how, after all, did the missing emerald come to be found in the cake of soap? |
33019 | But what is it that you fear? |
33019 | But who? |
33019 | But why? |
33019 | But you go to London, do n''t you? 33019 But you objected?" |
33019 | Can you expect a sane man to believe any such folly as that? |
33019 | Could he have fastened the window without your knowing it? |
33019 | Did Mr. Ashton threaten to take the stone elsewhere, in case you would not agree to pay his price? |
33019 | Did he close or open the windows or fastenings? |
33019 | Did he know the value of the jewel? |
33019 | Did it not occur to you that it might be in the nature of a warning? |
33019 | Did she do so last night? |
33019 | Did you accompany her to her room? |
33019 | Did you by any chance observe whether or not any of the windows in the room were open? |
33019 | Did you desire to marry him? |
33019 | Did you do so that night? |
33019 | Did you drop your handkerchief? |
33019 | Did you examine the windows at once? |
33019 | Did you go to sleep? |
33019 | Did you have any quarrel with Mr. Ashton before he left you? |
33019 | Did you have any reason to suspect that the jewel was hidden in the cake of soap? |
33019 | Did you hear any footsteps or other noises in the hallway during the night? |
33019 | Did you remove your clothing? |
33019 | Did you retire? |
33019 | Did you sleep? |
33019 | Did you wake during the night? |
33019 | Did your daughter join you? |
33019 | Did your father know of this feeling on your part? |
33019 | Do n''t you realize that that emerald is worth a hundred thousand pounds? |
33019 | Do n''t you remember, Mr. Morgan, that Boris was with us when we made our examination of the green room last night? 33019 Do you know?" |
33019 | Do you love me, dear? |
33019 | Do you recognize it? |
33019 | Do you see anything? |
33019 | Do you suppose Ashton smashed in his own skull by way of amusement? |
33019 | Do you think,she said, slowly,"that Li Min''s story of the vengeance of Buddha could really be true, after all?" |
33019 | Does he make his own bed? |
33019 | Had the door been locked? |
33019 | Has Buddha been at work again? 33019 Have you a telephone in the house, Major Temple?" |
33019 | Have you ever heard of the Cave of Dogs, near Naples? |
33019 | Have you known him long? |
33019 | Have you searched the attic above the room? |
33019 | He addressed you at that time, did he not, upon the subject of marriage? |
33019 | How could the window have been rebolted? 33019 How did Li Min come to know of it?" |
33019 | How do you explain its presence here? |
33019 | How far did you go? |
33019 | How much do you want? |
33019 | How was she dressed? |
33019 | How were you awakened? |
33019 | I merely asked you if such an event or events would not have been to her benefit? |
33019 | I-- I-- Why should I answer such a question? |
33019 | I-- I-- must I answer that question? |
33019 | Is it possible that you suppose_ I_ had anything to do with Mr. Ashton''s death? |
33019 | Is it really true? |
33019 | Is n''t Boris there? |
33019 | Is n''t that rather a large order? 33019 Is this fellow telling the truth?" |
33019 | Me? |
33019 | Mr. Morgan, have you anything to say in explanation of this letter? |
33019 | Muriel,he said, in a trembling voice--"what do you mean? |
33019 | Never saw him before? |
33019 | On what charge? |
33019 | Perfume? |
33019 | Sergeant,he said,"you have the handkerchief in question with you, I believe?" |
33019 | Shall I come in? |
33019 | Sir,thundered the Major,"do you mean for a moment to imply that my daughter had any hand in this business? |
33019 | The conspiracy? |
33019 | The corner of the west wing? |
33019 | The securing of the jewel, then, from Mr. Ashton would have released her from the arrangement? |
33019 | Then it was not in the green room? |
33019 | Then what did you do? |
33019 | Then whom, in Heaven''s name? |
33019 | Then, if Li Min had left the house by that time, you would not have known it? |
33019 | To which you objected strongly? |
33019 | Until what? |
33019 | Until you heard the commotion in the hall? |
33019 | Was it light? |
33019 | Was it light? |
33019 | Was it raining? |
33019 | Was the room dark? |
33019 | Was the stone of such value that its recovery would have been sought at so great a cost? |
33019 | Was this unusual? |
33019 | Was your daughter opposed to this arrangement? |
33019 | Well, Mr. Morgan,he inquired excitedly as we came in,"what have you discovered?" |
33019 | Were you out of the house this morning, Miss Temple, at or about the time of the murder? 33019 What are you aiming at?" |
33019 | What conspiracy? |
33019 | What did Mr. Morgan do? |
33019 | What did the stone cost you-- merely the cost of the trip, was n''t it? 33019 What did you do in Exeter?" |
33019 | What did you do then? |
33019 | What did you do then? |
33019 | What did you do? |
33019 | What did you do? |
33019 | What did you see? |
33019 | What do you know about this thing? |
33019 | What do you make of that, Sir? |
33019 | What do you make of that? |
33019 | What do you make of that? |
33019 | What do you mean? |
33019 | What do you mean? |
33019 | What does it mean? |
33019 | What does this mean? |
33019 | What evidence? |
33019 | What happened then? |
33019 | What happened then? |
33019 | What happened? 33019 What importance did you attach to that fact?" |
33019 | What in the name of Heaven did you do that for? |
33019 | What is the matter? |
33019 | What kind of a bottle? |
33019 | What on earth does he believe then? |
33019 | What on earth is the matter? 33019 What time did you leave this house?" |
33019 | What time was it? |
33019 | What was Major Temple doing? |
33019 | What was he doing? |
33019 | What was your reply? |
33019 | What''s the matter with your hand? |
33019 | What''s wrong here? |
33019 | What, then, seems more likely? |
33019 | When did you again leave your room? |
33019 | When did you first learn that Mr. Ashton had succeeded in his quest? |
33019 | When did you last see Mr. Ashton alive? |
33019 | Where can it be? |
33019 | Where did you get the key? |
33019 | Where did you go? |
33019 | Where did you spend last night? |
33019 | Where is she? |
33019 | Where, in Exeter? |
33019 | Which rooms, Sir, shall I show the gentlemen to? |
33019 | Which you refused? |
33019 | Who was it? |
33019 | Why did Miss Temple send you this? |
33019 | Why did you also conceal this important piece of evidence from Sergeant McQuade? |
33019 | Why did you not go further? 33019 Why did you remove it?" |
33019 | Why do n''t you simply say that I killed Ashton, and put the weapon in my dresser, and leave Miss Temple out of it entirely? |
33019 | Why does he believe that? |
33019 | Why not herself? 33019 Why,"I inquired,"did you come back?" |
33019 | Why-- you-- what could you have been thinking of? |
33019 | Why? |
33019 | Why? |
33019 | Will you tell us what you wished to say to Mr. Ashton that you regarded as so important as to take you to his room at midnight? |
33019 | With my daughter? |
33019 | Would the murderer have gone to all that trouble to get the stone, and then have left it behind? |
33019 | You did not go to bed, then? |
33019 | You did not leave your room, from the time you retired, until you heard Mr. Morgan''s cries? |
33019 | You had a strong aversion to him? |
33019 | You never use any? |
33019 | You sent for me, Father? |
33019 | You slept in the green room? |
33019 | You were alone? |
33019 | You were displeased with Mr. Ashton, were you not? 33019 You wrote this letter?" |
33019 | Are you hurt?" |
33019 | Ashton?" |
33019 | Ashton?" |
33019 | Ashton?" |
33019 | But where does it come from?" |
33019 | But would the police so regard it? |
33019 | Can you tell us how it came to be there?" |
33019 | Could he--? |
33019 | Did she see anyone on the roof-- and, if so, whom? |
33019 | Did she think for a moment that he had anything to do with Mr. Ashton''s death? |
33019 | Do any of the other servants sleep near him? |
33019 | Do n''t you see that--?" |
33019 | Had she then seen him there? |
33019 | How does he know that there was anyone upon the roof at all?" |
33019 | How old was Boris?" |
33019 | How, I wondered, did they know my address? |
33019 | I came back, did I not?" |
33019 | I was in the Indian service for fifteen years, and who did not know him, who has spent much time in that benighted country? |
33019 | If he did, how does it happen that he used Miss Temple''s handkerchief for the purpose? |
33019 | Is that true?" |
33019 | Is this window usually bolted?" |
33019 | May I ask what that perfume is, and where you procured it?" |
33019 | Morgan''s?" |
33019 | Morgan?" |
33019 | Tell us about it, ca n''t you?" |
33019 | Then I thought, what next? |
33019 | Then McQuade remarked, in his quiet voice, with a shade of comprehension in his tone and expression:"How do you make that out, Sir?" |
33019 | Was it he, then, that she had seen upon the roof? |
33019 | Was she shielding her father? |
33019 | Were you at the corner of the porch under Mr. Ashton''s room?" |
33019 | What caused you to stop?" |
33019 | What could they have wanted with them?" |
33019 | What does she know, that she should speak, and for what does she seek for forgiveness?" |
33019 | What have you learned-- anything?" |
33019 | What is it doing here?" |
33019 | What is your theory of the crime, Inspector Burns, upon the present evidence? |
33019 | What on earth had she gone to London to see me for? |
33019 | What then, could this Chinaman be searching for with such evident eagerness and anxiety? |
33019 | What was it?" |
33019 | What was that reward, Major Temple?" |
33019 | When Mr. Ashton first exhibited it to you, was Mr. Morgan present?" |
33019 | When was this?" |
33019 | Who attends to locking the house up?" |
33019 | Who knows? |
33019 | Whom did you see upon the porch roof?" |
33019 | Why do you ask?" |
33019 | Why should she want to see you, unless you understood something between you? |
33019 | Why should the murderer not have re- entered the house in the same way he left it? |
33019 | Will you be so good as to tell Sergeant McQuade and myself how it happened to be in your possession?" |
33019 | Would she, then, have had time to throw off her dress so quickly, wet and muddy as it must have been, and to change her shoes for slippers? |
33019 | Yet whom could it possibly involve but herself? |
33019 | You are no doubt aware that the doors of the two rooms are directly opposite each other?" |
33019 | You arrived yesterday?" |
33019 | You quarreled violently?" |
33019 | he cried,"What''s wrong with you?" |
34410 | A little courtesy does oil the creaking machinery of life, does n''t it? |
34410 | And did you never search for the gold, daddy? |
34410 | And may I take the Urchin with me? |
34410 | And now will you please tell me where the Urchin is? |
34410 | And so I frightened you? |
34410 | And then what''ll we do? |
34410 | And what better? |
34410 | And who is the Urchin? |
34410 | And who is the old hawker, daddy,she asked,"and what has he to do with it all?" |
34410 | Any defence? |
34410 | Any defence? |
34410 | Any further submission? |
34410 | Are those the princesses? |
34410 | Bless your heart,said the bird,"and who do you suppose We are? |
34410 | But are you really going to Fairyland? 34410 But how shall I know the main path?" |
34410 | But what did I say? |
34410 | But you have found a good many things already, apart from treasure, have n''t you, little daughter? |
34410 | But, daddy, it would be so extraordinary, would n''t it? |
34410 | Ca n''t I? |
34410 | Ca n''t you come back with me if I go daddy? |
34410 | Can you go on, Urchin? |
34410 | Can you tell me how to begin then, daddy? |
34410 | Could I see what you could not see? |
34410 | Daddy,said Fiona,"did one of the Armada ships really go ashore here?" |
34410 | Daddy,she said,"what does it all mean? |
34410 | Daddy,she said,"you ca n''t know if that''s true or not, can you?" |
34410 | Did we not hear talk of a treasure? |
34410 | Do n''t philosophers get cross? |
34410 | Do n''t you see that there are some things you_ ca n''t_ do, whatever anybody says? 34410 Do you know where he is?" |
34410 | Do you think you will go back? |
34410 | Do you want to come, Fiona? |
34410 | Does Miss Fiona see the bird? |
34410 | Fine, is n''t it? |
34410 | Fiona,said the boy,"do you really think it''s cricket?" |
34410 | Had far to come? |
34410 | Have n''t you a memory? |
34410 | Have you a hedgehog? |
34410 | Have you anything to urge against it? |
34410 | Have you come for your treasure, Fiona? |
34410 | Have you found out what my treasure is, daddy? |
34410 | Have you found out yet how to start? |
34410 | Have you seen my spectacles? |
34410 | How can I do anything else? 34410 How can I find the Urchin, then, please?" |
34410 | How come you to be doorkeeper? |
34410 | How did you come here? 34410 How is it then that I have seen you?" |
34410 | How many buttons do you want? |
34410 | How shall I know where to begin? |
34410 | How would I know when you do not know? |
34410 | I suppose you know lots of people with perfect memories; but you never knew one with a perfect forgetfulness, eh? 34410 Is it about my treasure?" |
34410 | Is n''t it all beautiful? 34410 Is n''t that lucky, now?" |
34410 | Is that all? |
34410 | Is there another way? |
34410 | It was to begin itself, was n''t it? 34410 Now, do n''t you see, Fiona? |
34410 | O daddy,said the girl,"did he really? |
34410 | O, do n''t you understand? |
34410 | Oh, I say,he said,"why did n''t you say before, instead of employing these people and frightening an honest bird out of his senses?" |
34410 | Oh, do you think you could? |
34410 | Please, may we start? |
34410 | Shall I catch him for Miss Fiona? |
34410 | Then am I not to find anything at the end of it? |
34410 | Then you knew yesterday, daddy? |
34410 | Then you''ve never heard of Hegel and the unity of opposites? 34410 Things like that do n''t_ really_ happen, do they? |
34410 | Urchin, are you afraid of ghosts? |
34410 | Urchin,said Fiona,"when you and I have a row, what happens?" |
34410 | Well? |
34410 | What are we going to do? |
34410 | What do you think, daddy? |
34410 | What for? |
34410 | What good do you and your inscriptions do, anyway? |
34410 | What is it? |
34410 | What is n''t cricket? |
34410 | What sort of things? |
34410 | What were they, then? |
34410 | Where did he go? |
34410 | Where do they try the prisoners? |
34410 | Whereever were you educated? 34410 Who are you, you beautiful girl?" |
34410 | Who''s they? |
34410 | Whose would they be? |
34410 | Why are there two? |
34410 | Why did n''t Apollo find you? |
34410 | Why do you want to bring him back? |
34410 | Why, Artemis, Apollo, what''s the matter? |
34410 | Why, daddy, have you been in Fairyland too? |
34410 | Will Miss Fiona give me leave to try my own dog? |
34410 | Will Miss Fiona take the bird now? |
34410 | Will what run? |
34410 | Will you die? |
34410 | Will you make them fall down dead? |
34410 | You know of course where he is? |
34410 | You will stay and have some dinner, will you not? |
34410 | You''ll interpret, wo n''t you? |
34410 | Your tail? 34410 ? 34410 And if so could it be done in time? 34410 And now what are we to do for you? |
34410 | And now what do you want, my dear?" |
34410 | And now what is it you want with me?" |
34410 | And then he will become a man, and what use is that? |
34410 | And what happened?" |
34410 | And when she had ended, he said,"So you never found your own treasure after all, Fiona?" |
34410 | And why have you told me nothing?" |
34410 | Any influence that boy?" |
34410 | Are the prisoners provided with counsel?" |
34410 | Are you going through with it, Fiona?" |
34410 | But Jeconiah? |
34410 | But do you know the danger? |
34410 | But do you know what you have done to- day? |
34410 | But why a hedgehog?" |
34410 | By the way, who are you?" |
34410 | CHAPTER VIII FIONA FINDS HER TREASURE And Fiona? |
34410 | Ca n''t you see?" |
34410 | Ca n''t you think where it could be, Fiona? |
34410 | Can you guess why?" |
34410 | Could it be done at all? |
34410 | Did he not swim out to your boat?" |
34410 | Did the Urchin fling himself on the grass at Fiona''s feet and thank her in broken accents for all she had done for him? |
34410 | Do any of these please you? |
34410 | Do you believe it?" |
34410 | Do you think kings want to remember_ everything_?" |
34410 | Dual personality? |
34410 | Ever studied philosophy?" |
34410 | Fiona, is this a dinner night?" |
34410 | Had a shock, you tell me? |
34410 | Have you an invitation?" |
34410 | Have you been told about the wish?" |
34410 | Have you come for your treasure, Fiona?" |
34410 | Her answer was"Have you seen the Urchin? |
34410 | How did you escape?" |
34410 | How did you make them do that? |
34410 | How long? |
34410 | How many buttons do you want?" |
34410 | How many grains of sand make a heap?" |
34410 | How old do you think I am?" |
34410 | I am old- fashioned; why should I take my neighbor by the throat and say,''Let me do good to you, or it shall be the worse for you and yours''? |
34410 | I see that you are kind; can you help us?" |
34410 | I suppose you came here to sell things? |
34410 | I suppose you know where the door is?" |
34410 | Is it true then?" |
34410 | Is your dog a conjurer?" |
34410 | It will all fade away again; but before it fades, will you kiss me?" |
34410 | Kind of change in personality? |
34410 | No one has ever crossed the South Arabian desert or explored the snow ranges of New Guinea, have they? |
34410 | Oh, ca n''t you see?" |
34410 | Or did the black terrier really wink? |
34410 | She looked up at the King''s face, and read there, was it disappointment? |
34410 | Tell me, why have you told me all this when I began by being rude?" |
34410 | The water was quite shallow at the edge, and he was a good swimmer, was he not? |
34410 | Then she said:"Will you please tell me where the Urchin can find his treasure?" |
34410 | Urchin, would you like a deed?" |
34410 | Was it a flicker of sunlight? |
34410 | Was not what she saw, so dim through the mist, the figures of the shepherd who had helped her on Glenollisdal and his black collie? |
34410 | Was this the prosperous financier, this wretched apology for a living being which the officer held out on the palm of his hand? |
34410 | Well, a treasure- hunt and a boy- hunt are only different aspects of a hunt, are n''t they? |
34410 | Well, for all anyone can say to the contrary, people may be carried off by fairies every day of the week in New Guinea or South Arabia, may n''t they? |
34410 | What did that old man tell you? |
34410 | What is it you have come to ask me?" |
34410 | What is it you know? |
34410 | What is it you want?" |
34410 | What''s he done?" |
34410 | When a stream is merely so many units of waterpower, how can a Naiad dwell there? |
34410 | When a tree has become so many cubic feet of timber, how can it shelter a Dryad? |
34410 | Where did you learn to do it?" |
34410 | Which of us is the better off?" |
34410 | Whoever heard of it?" |
34410 | Why are you going?" |
34410 | Why could n''t he have been beaten somewhere else? |
34410 | Will he thank you for bringing him back? |
34410 | Will it run to some tobacco?" |
34410 | Will it run to some tobacco?" |
34410 | Will you please put me down if you want to talk to me? |
34410 | Will you take him?" |
34410 | You are so beautiful; have n''t you any heart?" |
34410 | You never saw a woodcock Our size before, did you?" |
34410 | Your father has told you that?" |
34410 | _ Were_ they the King and the Chancellor? |
34410 | and why are you so strange and unconcerned? |
34410 | was it regret? |
27471 | A good deep one; whatever can they be settin''out to do? |
27471 | A week, say-- how will that do? |
27471 | About how soon, if I might ask so personal a question, do you think you could be ready to hand over the house to the new tenant? |
27471 | Afraid of yourself, eh? |
27471 | Ai n''t I? 27471 Ai n''t it sixty- nine?" |
27471 | Ai n''t she already left it to you in her will? |
27471 | Ai n''t you comin''? |
27471 | Ai n''t you curious to know who I''m goin''to leave my property to? |
27471 | Ai n''t you found it yet? |
27471 | Ai n''t you going? |
27471 | Ai n''t you got no interest in what I''m goin''for? |
27471 | Ai n''t you interested in money; or have you got so much already that you could n''t find a use for any more? |
27471 | Am I what_ you_ expected? |
27471 | An''do n''t you call that interestin''? |
27471 | An''how long, pray tell me, have you been goin''backwards an''forrads to the Howes, an''consortin''with their brother? |
27471 | An''how, pray, did you get so strong? |
27471 | An''what, may I ask, are you doin''with a bag of gunpowder in my brook? 27471 An''you managed to bring me here?" |
27471 | An''you mean to tell me you were the sole woman in a place like that? |
27471 | And is this you, Aunt Ellen? |
27471 | And where did your mother come in? |
27471 | And who, pray, is she? |
27471 | Any orders for to- morrow? |
27471 | B-- u-- t-- t-- how can you? 27471 Because-- well, ai n''t such things always interestin''?" |
27471 | But did not some vital difference of opinion arise between you recently? |
27471 | But now that he is here, do n''t you think he''d better come up? 27471 But the second will-- she spoke to you of that also?" |
27471 | But why, Aunt Ellen? 27471 But you ai n''t a- goin''to return the compliment?" |
27471 | By what right does he come over here, I''d like to know? |
27471 | Ca n''t you tell me what they are? |
27471 | Could I see her, do you think? |
27471 | Could you let me have a dozen eggs? |
27471 | Could you spare me as long as that? |
27471 | Danger of her findin''it? |
27471 | Did Miss Webster send you? |
27471 | Did n''t I write you I was lonesome? |
27471 | Did n''t you know that? |
27471 | Did you want me for something? |
27471 | Do n''t you like eggs? |
27471 | Do n''t you like your aunt? |
27471 | Do n''t you see I ca n''t? |
27471 | Do n''t you think there''s danger of their goin''to seed? |
27471 | Do you know where Miss Lucy is? |
27471 | Do you like it that much? |
27471 | Do you really mean it? |
27471 | Does n''t she know I''m here? |
27471 | Eh? |
27471 | Ellen Webster''s cows do n''t come up to this end of the pasture much, do they? |
27471 | Ellen Webster''s got you where she wanted you at last, ai n''t she, Martin? |
27471 | Every scrap of it? |
27471 | Falls to me? |
27471 | Has he been over before? |
27471 | Has he gone? |
27471 | Has he got Mr. Benton with him? |
27471 | Has-- has Mr. Benton gone? |
27471 | Have you any one in mind? |
27471 | Have you any reason to suppose, Miss Webster, that your aunt was-- shall we say annoyed, with you? |
27471 | Have you room to take me in? |
27471 | He comes over here an''works? |
27471 | He''s a fine looking man, is n''t he? |
27471 | Heard me? |
27471 | How are you feeling to- day, Aunt Ellen? |
27471 | How is yours coming on? |
27471 | How long before you''ve got to know? |
27471 | How many of them? |
27471 | How''d I come here? |
27471 | How''d you like to try settin''up a spell to- night? |
27471 | How? |
27471 | How? |
27471 | I ai n''t obliged to think as he does, am I? |
27471 | I mean where did he get acquainted with her? |
27471 | I mean who is in the family? |
27471 | I reckon there''s some place I could turn round, ai n''t there, if I was to drive in? |
27471 | I s''pose you could n''t find enough for a shortcake, could you? |
27471 | I''m sorry you''re ill."Are you? |
27471 | Is Lucy still outdoors? |
27471 | Is it that you''re lonely since Miss Ellen died? |
27471 | Is n''t there a nurse in the village? |
27471 | Is she a nurse? |
27471 | Is she expectin''us? |
27471 | Is she much hurt? 27471 Is the cream separator out of order?" |
27471 | It warn''t? |
27471 | Mar-- your brother''s? |
27471 | Martin Howe? |
27471 | Martin would n''t, eh? |
27471 | Mean? |
27471 | Melviny? 27471 Mercy, you''re not goin''to- night?" |
27471 | No one told you that? |
27471 | Not altogether, eh? |
27471 | Oh, my land, what are we going to do with it? |
27471 | Oh, she was? |
27471 | Oh, there''s plenty of room,Lucy answered,"only had n''t you better drop me here? |
27471 | On her land? |
27471 | On the train? |
27471 | Only had n''t you better call Lucy? |
27471 | Rainin''? |
27471 | Sha n''t I toast the bread? |
27471 | She knows, then? |
27471 | So Martin Howe saw you home, did he? |
27471 | So it''s because of her you''re stayin''here? |
27471 | So that''s the way you settle things in the West? |
27471 | So you''re tacklin''that wall in spite of all you said, are you, Martin? |
27471 | Strong, are you? |
27471 | Suppose I see if we can get her? |
27471 | Tell me instead what you want me to do to help you to- day? 27471 The Duquesnes?" |
27471 | The girl? |
27471 | Then what right, pray, had she to think so? |
27471 | Then why do n''t we sink the bag just across the wall? |
27471 | There warn''t much choice left your aunt, fur as relatives went, was there? 27471 There''s no trappin''you, Miss Lucy Webster, is there?" |
27471 | To Martin Howe? |
27471 | To go away from here? |
27471 | To whom? |
27471 | Unless we become more kind, how is the world ever to become better? |
27471 | Warn''t it just providential Martin took it into his head to go to the village this mornin''? 27471 We ai n''t done much neighboring, have we?" |
27471 | Well, Melviny, then-- where does she live? |
27471 | Well, ai n''t she? |
27471 | Well, what? |
27471 | Well? |
27471 | Well? |
27471 | Were you in pain? |
27471 | What about''em? |
27471 | What are them women a- doin''? |
27471 | What are you sinkin''in my brook? |
27471 | What bag? |
27471 | What did they do to them? |
27471 | What did you tell''em? |
27471 | What do you mean? |
27471 | What do you mean? |
27471 | What do you want us to do? |
27471 | What for, do you suppose? |
27471 | What for? |
27471 | What is it? |
27471 | What is it? |
27471 | What makes you so sure of that? |
27471 | What makes you so sure she has passed it on to me? |
27471 | What makes you think so? |
27471 | What matters? |
27471 | What sort of an aunt were you lookin''for? |
27471 | What things? |
27471 | What time? 27471 What use was there in my bringin''you home if you get soaked now?" |
27471 | What was the trouble? |
27471 | What would you do? |
27471 | What you got in that bag? |
27471 | What''d they say? |
27471 | What''s Martin Howe doin''in my garden? |
27471 | What? |
27471 | What? |
27471 | Whatever have you been putterin''about so long? |
27471 | When did she go? |
27471 | When is she comin''back? |
27471 | When? |
27471 | Where do you want I should carry her? |
27471 | Where is she? |
27471 | Where on earth have you been? |
27471 | Where you been? |
27471 | Where you goin''? |
27471 | Where''d you say? |
27471 | Where''d your father pick up your mother, anyway? |
27471 | Where''ve you been? |
27471 | Where-- where-- am-- I--? |
27471 | Where? |
27471 | Where? |
27471 | Who else is there to have it? |
27471 | Who is he? |
27471 | Who knows? 27471 Who lives in the next house?" |
27471 | Who was it? |
27471 | Who''s that out in the garden? |
27471 | Who? |
27471 | Why did n''t I know it? |
27471 | Why do n''t they fix it? |
27471 | Why do n''t they? 27471 Why do n''t you let me bring you a piece of fruit cake an''a glass of milk?" |
27471 | Why do n''t you? |
27471 | Why not? 27471 Why not?" |
27471 | Why not? |
27471 | Why should n''t I be independent? |
27471 | Why should n''t we do a bit of neighborin''together, now we''ve got the chance? |
27471 | Why should n''t we? |
27471 | Why should n''t you come over and have tea with us then? |
27471 | Why should we keep up a quarrel none of us approve of? 27471 Why?" |
27471 | Why? |
27471 | Why? |
27471 | Why? |
27471 | Why? |
27471 | Would you have liked to? |
27471 | Yes, but how was she to know that? |
27471 | Yes, what''s the matter? |
27471 | Yes, why do n''t they? 27471 Yes, you see, my aunt----""How old is she?" |
27471 | You ai n''t been to the Howes''? |
27471 | You ai n''t in bed? |
27471 | You ai n''t leavin''for good, Miss Lucy? |
27471 | You ai n''t seen a ghost? |
27471 | You ai n''t so keen on dividin''up, eh? |
27471 | You call that fine looking, do you? |
27471 | You can do things like that? |
27471 | You did n''t get any supper after all, did you, Martin? |
27471 | You did n''t leave nothin''? |
27471 | You did n''t mention to the Howes I was gettin''only sixty- six cents a dozen for eggs, did you? |
27471 | You do n''t s''pose he''s sick, do you, Jane? |
27471 | You do n''t s''pose there''ll be any danger''bout the cows drinkin''here, do you? |
27471 | You do n''t see what? 27471 You knew of your aunt''s will?" |
27471 | You mean somebody to help? |
27471 | You mean to say you''d set yourself up as knowin''mor''n your people before you did? |
27471 | You mean you''d break off from what your folks thought? |
27471 | You never heard the story? |
27471 | You want some eggs? |
27471 | You went to the Howes-- to the Howes-- an''told''em I did n''t give you enough to eat? |
27471 | You went to the_ Howes''_ for eggs? |
27471 | You were familiar with the contents of it? |
27471 | You''ll stay by me, wo n''t you? |
27471 | You''re disappointed I ai n''t sicker, eh? |
27471 | You''re worse, Aunt Ellen? |
27471 | You? 27471 Accordingly they bent their necks to his will; for did not Martin rule the house? 27471 After all, was it her duty to remain and waste her youth to no purpose? 27471 After all, what was there to say? 27471 Ai n''t he always fertilizin''an''irrigatin''? 27471 Ai n''t she most eighty? |
27471 | Ai n''t that queer? |
27471 | Ai n''t this your home?" |
27471 | Ai n''t we got an umbrella somewheres,''Liza?" |
27471 | Ai n''t you never heard of Melviny?" |
27471 | Ai n''t you tired,''Liza?" |
27471 | Ai n''t you''most dressed?" |
27471 | And am I at all what you expected?" |
27471 | And the farm once disposed of, what then? |
27471 | And who was this Martin that he should inspire such terror? |
27471 | As for Ellen, had she not herself put the will into the girl''s keeping-- as a weapon with which to meet this very emergency? |
27471 | As for the girl''s sentimental nonsense about its not being satisfactory to live alone, what was she talking about? |
27471 | Besides, was there not the miraculous bunch of flowers? |
27471 | But if so, why did he bother to send flowers to her? |
27471 | But of what consequence were crops and the garnering of them when weighed against an issue of such life import as this? |
27471 | But this call ai n''t like your usual ones, is it?" |
27471 | But was it jewel enough to prompt a man to uproot every tradition of his moral world for its possession? |
27471 | But when he started lightin''up his pipe----""What did you do, Jane?" |
27471 | By rights it had oughter come to you, had n''t it?" |
27471 | Ca n''t I persuade you to come in?" |
27471 | Ca n''t you keep your fingers out of the wet ink? |
27471 | Could it be? |
27471 | Could it have been the Howes? |
27471 | Could she face the horror of a stretch of years that held in them no human sympathy? |
27471 | Could this nymph, this dryad be a product of the same planet that had given birth to Mary, Eliza, and Jane? |
27471 | Did it not banish all the friction of opposing wills and make of one a monarch? |
27471 | Did n''t I just tell you I came to help? |
27471 | Did n''t lawyers always keep copies of every legal paper they drew up? |
27471 | Did n''t she tell you? |
27471 | Did you ever look on such an eyesore?" |
27471 | Did you ever see such doin''s? |
27471 | Did you think it was I who placed you on this bed? |
27471 | Do n''t I live close at hand, an''ai n''t I got eyes?" |
27471 | Do n''t it beat all how somethin''s always wearin''out? |
27471 | Do n''t you think so?" |
27471 | Do n''t you want a light?" |
27471 | Do n''t you?" |
27471 | Do you s''pose I do n''t know this country''s at war, an''that the authorities are on the lookout for folks concealin''gunpowder in their houses? |
27471 | Do you think I look like Dad? |
27471 | Dragging the girl to the window the old woman cried:"Do you see that pile of stones over there? |
27471 | Ellen Webster''s?" |
27471 | Had Ellen guessed his secret, and, armed with the knowledge, shaped her revenge accordingly? |
27471 | Had he not been taught that it was his mission to thwart and humble them? |
27471 | Had he not continually striven to do so? |
27471 | Had he not declared over and over again that Ellen Webster might die before he would lift a finger to help her? |
27471 | Had he not sacrificed his own dreams that his family might retain their old home? |
27471 | Had he not vowed that he would be burned at the stake first? |
27471 | Had not the Websters always been famed for their business sagacity? |
27471 | Hark, did she hear wheels? |
27471 | Have you thought that I can have you arrested for trespassing on my land?" |
27471 | He has n''t, eh?" |
27471 | How could it harm her if it was wet?" |
27471 | How do I know you were n''t goin''to make the stuff into bombs, or carry it somewheres an''blow up somethin''or other with it?" |
27471 | How long have the Howes been gettin''sixty- seven cents for their eggs, I''d like to know?" |
27471 | However, what did it matter now? |
27471 | I fell, did n''t I?" |
27471 | I was away and when I----""First shock?" |
27471 | If I prefer to stay here with you and earn my board there is no disgrace in it, is there?" |
27471 | If he did, why did n''t he make some further effort to talk with her? |
27471 | If in future she was to be forever cut off from all she loved on earth, what did it matter where she went? |
27471 | If you ai n''t got pride enough not to go hob- nobbin''with my enemies, I''ll forbid it for good an''all-- forbid it, do you hear? |
27471 | Instead, as if to change a dangerous topic, he asked:"How are you likin''Sefton Falls?" |
27471 | Is it any wonder that with only a stupid idiot like this for help, my garden''s always behind other folks'', an''my chores never done?" |
27471 | Is n''t it wonderful, unbelievable? |
27471 | My, but you have a fine big kitchen here, have n''t you?" |
27471 | Oh, Martin, you will let me go an''bring her back here, wo n''t you? |
27471 | On the day of her aunt''s seizure had she not witnessed the warfare between pity and hatred, generosity and revenge? |
27471 | Or had Lucy Webster dropped some remark that had shown him the folly and uselessness of his resentment? |
27471 | Or should he weakly repudiate his word and call her from the borderland to continue to taunt and torment him? |
27471 | Or were they the result of an abnormal intuition, a superhuman power for fathoming the souls of others? |
27471 | She ai n''t told you nothin''?" |
27471 | She was roused from her musings by Eliza''s voice:"What can be the matter with Martin?" |
27471 | Should he rail at them for asking Lucy to the house? |
27471 | Should he stand stanchly by his word and let her life go out into the Beyond when he might perhaps stay its flight? |
27471 | Should she go or stay? |
27471 | Still the woman lingered; then making a heroic plunge, she faltered:"There-- there ai n''t nothin''the matter, is there?" |
27471 | Still what can it be?" |
27471 | Stopping midway up the staircase Ellen wheeled and said indignantly:"An''Thomas kep''you in a settlement like that?" |
27471 | Suppose Lucy were worse? |
27471 | Suppose she declined to see him? |
27471 | Suppose she did not love him? |
27471 | Taking Lucy''s hand in a loose, pudgy grasp she remarked:"A shock?" |
27471 | That he would face persecution, nakedness, famine, the sword before he would do it? |
27471 | That they were spurred to deeds of courage; abandoned home, friends, their sacred honor; even tossed their lives away for such? |
27471 | That''s how you lie out of it, is it?" |
27471 | The moment the tramp of the horse''s hoofs sounded on the gravel outside, she was alert and called to Melvina, stationed at the window:"Is that Tony?" |
27471 | Then she suddenly turned suspiciously on the girl, adding sharply:"You ai n''t been over to the Howes''?" |
27471 | Then, changing a subject both seemed to regard as a delicate one, she asked in a more natural tone:"What were you plannin''to do this mornin''?" |
27471 | Then, gathering courage, he remarked shyly:"You like flowers?" |
27471 | To be sure she appeared artless enough; but what Webster was to be trusted? |
27471 | Was he angry? |
27471 | Was he not already tortured with pain too poignant to be endured? |
27471 | Was it Tony you was talkin''to outside?" |
27471 | Was it fortunate? |
27471 | Was it not Delilah who had shorn Samson of his might? |
27471 | Was it possible the girl was ignorant of her aunt''s mission? |
27471 | Was it to be marveled at that men pursued such enchantresses to the borderland of eternity? |
27471 | Was not Ellen her father''s sister, and would he not wish his daughter to be loyal to the trust it had fallen to her to fulfill? |
27471 | Was not her youth being spent to glorify an empty fetish which brought to no one any real good? |
27471 | Was she joyous? |
27471 | Was she not, as a Webster, in honor bound to do so? |
27471 | Was she sad? |
27471 | Was the revenge worth the hours of self- condemnation that might follow? |
27471 | Were the girl''s ingenuous observations as ingenuous as they seemed? |
27471 | What can it be?" |
27471 | What could have become of it? |
27471 | What did I tell you? |
27471 | What did it matter anyway? |
27471 | What did it portend? |
27471 | What did she say?" |
27471 | What do you reckon is in that bag? |
27471 | What do you s''pose it is? |
27471 | What do you s''pose they''d say?" |
27471 | What for?" |
27471 | What is the condition?" |
27471 | What motive prompted him to do it? |
27471 | What ought she to do? |
27471 | What shall we do? |
27471 | What should he do? |
27471 | What should she do? |
27471 | What was he doin''?" |
27471 | What was it all about? |
27471 | What was to be the fate of her possessions after she was gone? |
27471 | What wonder that a conscientious fellow like Martin Howe felt farming less a business to be accomplished than a choice of alternatives? |
27471 | What wonder that her aged fingers trembled as she tore open the envelope of the message and spread the snowy paper feverishly on the table? |
27471 | What would this hero of the present situation do? |
27471 | What''d I tell you? |
27471 | When did the message come?" |
27471 | When do you contemplate leaving town?" |
27471 | When she did it was to ask:"What''s Martin Howe doin''on my land?" |
27471 | Where did you go for them?" |
27471 | Where had they come from? |
27471 | Where you goin''--back out West?" |
27471 | Where''d you find me?" |
27471 | Who could tell? |
27471 | Who was he that he should judge Ellen Webster and cut off her life before its time? |
27471 | Why did n''t your father get a woman in?" |
27471 | Why did they now surge into his mind to weaken his resolve and cause him to waver in his intention? |
27471 | Why rivet more tightly the fetters that goaded him? |
27471 | Why should I?" |
27471 | Why should she bury her life in this cruel, rancorous atmosphere? |
27471 | Why?" |
27471 | Why?" |
27471 | With an augmented bank account and plenty of fertile land, what might he not accomplish? |
27471 | Would Jane never return? |
27471 | Would he leave even his worst enemy? |
27471 | Would he really leave her like this in the dust and heat? |
27471 | Would it not be ironic if the Webster mansion became a poor farm and she its first inmate? |
27471 | Would n''t you?" |
27471 | Would not such an inglorious termination of the feud go down to history as a capitulation of the Websters? |
27471 | Would the wagon stop or go on? |
27471 | Would you''a''dreamed there could be anything in the world so hard to get rid of? |
27471 | You ai n''t afraid, are you?" |
27471 | You ai n''t sick?" |
27471 | You do n''t s''pose there''s any danger that she will, do you, Jane?" |
27471 | You would n''t? |
27471 | You''ll do that much for me, wo n''t you?" |
27471 | she called,"is that you?" |
33411 | ,what is temperance? |
33411 | At the back of? |
33411 | What is prudence? |
33411 | What is temperance? |
33411 | ''What are you doing, my admirable friends? |
33411 | --meaning thereby"what are the true concepts or definitions of these things?" |
33411 | All things being material, what is the original kind of matter, or stuff, out of which the world is made? |
33411 | Am I to be called a materialist? |
33411 | Am I to be supposed to mean that Plato''s mind occupies more space than that of Callias? |
33411 | And Socrates, on seeing the man, said,''Well, my good friend, as you are skilled in these matters, what must I do?'' |
33411 | And by what process does water, in his opinion, come to be changed into other things; how was the universe formed out of water? |
33411 | And if it is good, how is it that there is evil in the world? |
33411 | And if so, what sort of a reality is it? |
33411 | And this gives us, too, the clue to the problem, what is the end of the State? |
33411 | And we are still left to enquire: what is the_ summum bonum_? |
33411 | Are not we, if we interpret him as an idealist, reading into him later ideas? |
33411 | At what position in this circular movement is our present world to be placed? |
33411 | But even if they had solved this minor problem, the greater question still remained in the background, what does this becoming mean? |
33411 | But has anybody since ever explained it better? |
33411 | But how are we to understand this"participation"? |
33411 | But how do we know the truth of this law of causation itself? |
33411 | But how is sensation more rational than nutrition? |
33411 | But how is this mixing of Being and not- being brought about? |
33411 | But if Plato, in answering the question,"What is knowledge?" |
33411 | But if knowledge is recollection, it may be asked, why is it that we do not remember at once? |
33411 | But if reality is not existence, what is it? |
33411 | But in that case why is there an Idea of whiteness? |
33411 | But in what relation does this supreme God stand to the Ideas, and especially to the Idea of the Good? |
33411 | But is it really surmounted? |
33411 | But it might be asked how we know that this universal tendency is right? |
33411 | But still, it may be asked, which is the true view of Parmenides? |
33411 | But the thought of what? |
33411 | But what concepts? |
33411 | But what is this matter, and where does it spring from? |
33411 | But why is it better to be more organized? |
33411 | But why should any cause be the first? |
33411 | But why should not sensation pass through nutrition into human reason? |
33411 | But why should the Idea of whiteness produce white things? |
33411 | But why should there be any copies of the Ideas? |
33411 | But why should there be such an Idea? |
33411 | But, quite shortly, the question is-- Is there any reason for believing that the ultimate explanation of things must be one? |
33411 | Did Zeno mean to say that when he walked about the streets of Elea, it was not true that he walked about? |
33411 | Did he mean that it was not a fact that he moved from place to place? |
33411 | Do they believe as they speak, or as they act? |
33411 | Do we feel that all our difficulties about the existence of evil are solved? |
33411 | Do we not mean that the thing appears to us irrational, and we want it shown that it is rational? |
33411 | Does his principle explain the world, and does it explain itself? |
33411 | Does it explain the world? |
33411 | Does this make the matter any clearer? |
33411 | Even if the Idea of whiteness explains white objects, yet why do these objects arise, develop, decay, and cease to exist? |
33411 | First, does it explain the world? |
33411 | For the fundamental problem here is, if we speak of higher and lower beings, what rational ground have we for calling them higher and lower? |
33411 | For what is the whole of Aristotle''s philosophy, put in a nutshell? |
33411 | Has not Plato asserted that the ultimate reason and ground of all the lower Ideas will be found in the supreme Idea of{ 244} the Good? |
33411 | Has the mind got a front and a back? |
33411 | He went about enquiring,"What is virtue?" |
33411 | How about the millions that have never been observed at all? |
33411 | How are we to characterize his system? |
33411 | How are we to know what is the proper mean in any matter? |
33411 | How are we to know whether any particular concept is part of the system of reason or not? |
33411 | How are we to know whether our ideas are correct copies of things? |
33411 | How are we to reconcile these two conflicting views of Parmenides? |
33411 | How can all the riches and variety of the world come out of this emptiness? |
33411 | How can design, order, harmony and beauty be brought about by blind forces acting upon chaotic matter? |
33411 | How can this air which has not in it the qualities of things we see, develop them? |
33411 | How can we hope to explain the world, if our very first principle itself contains irrationalities? |
33411 | How did Plato arrive at this doctrine? |
33411 | How did they{ 68} explain the existence of the world? |
33411 | How distinguish between reality and imagination, dreams, or illusions? |
33411 | How do the Ideas come to have their images stamped upon matter? |
33411 | How do we know that it is not merely a universal error? |
33411 | How do we know that this is true at those regions of the earth where no one has ever been to see? |
33411 | How do we know that water always freezes at 0Â ° centigrade( neglecting questions of pressure, etc.)? |
33411 | How do you know that they are similar? |
33411 | How does it help thus to duplicate everything? |
33411 | How is becoming possible? |
33411 | How is form a necessary and self- determining principle? |
33411 | How is it that some propositions can be self- evident and others must be proved? |
33411 | How is it that they are thus self- evident, that the mind can make these definite and far- reaching assertions without any evidence at all? |
33411 | How then can Parmenides be called a materialist? |
33411 | How then can the quality of things issue from it? |
33411 | How then did they derive the actual world from that principle? |
33411 | How then is reason to gain control over the appetites? |
33411 | How, now, have these various worlds been formed out of the formless, indefinite, indeterminate matter of{ 26} Anaximander? |
33411 | How, now, is the movement of the atoms brought about? |
33411 | If knowledge is neither perception nor opinion, what is it? |
33411 | If not, how do these properties arise? |
33411 | If the clod of earth, like the saintliest man, is God, and there is no more to say of the matter, then how is the saint higher than the clod of earth? |
33411 | If the world is illusion, then the problem is, how does that illusion arise? |
33411 | If the world is reality, then the problem of philosophy is, how does that reality arise? |
33411 | If virtue is the sole end of life, what precisely is virtue? |
33411 | In other words, the Ideas being the absolute reality, how does the world of sense, and, in general, the existent universe, arise out of the Ideas? |
33411 | In what sense, then, is this a theory of development or evolution? |
33411 | Is Being absolutely excludent of not- being? |
33411 | Is Spencer''s doctrine a theory of development at all? |
33411 | Is his philosophy a pure monism? |
33411 | Is it a pluralism? |
33411 | Is it good or evil? |
33411 | Is it matter, or mind, or something different from both? |
33411 | Is it, for example, a personal being like the God of the Christians? |
33411 | Is it, in the first place, really conceived as purely non- material and incorporeal? |
33411 | Is it{ 6} true, for example, that there is some single ultimate reality which produces all things? |
33411 | Is not even an appearance real? |
33411 | Is not the essential maxim of modern science to assume nothing, to take nothing for granted, to assert nothing without demonstration, to prove all? |
33411 | Is the Absolute an abstract One, utterly exclusive of the many? |
33411 | Is the actual existence of things, horses, trees, stars, men, explained by it? |
33411 | Is the principle of Ideas a self- explanatory principle? |
33411 | Is there development here, that is, is it a movement from something really lower to something really higher? |
33411 | Is there improvement, or only difference? |
33411 | Is there no logical or philosophical basis for the belief that the ultimate explanation of things must be one? |
33411 | It begins when men for the first time attempted to give a scientific reply to the question,"what is the explanation of the world?" |
33411 | Moreover, just as Socrates had occupied himself in attempting to fix the concepts of the virtues, asking"what is prudence? |
33411 | Moreover, what were the Stoics to say about themselves? |
33411 | Now if we try to go on asking,"why is it better to be more rational?" |
33411 | Now what does this mean? |
33411 | Now, keeping this in mind, are universals, as Plato asserts, substances? |
33411 | Of what kinds of things are there Ideas? |
33411 | Or does the scale stop there? |
33411 | Or is it a combination of the two? |
33411 | Or is it merely change from one indifferent thing to another? |
33411 | Or is it not rather simply a theory of change? |
33411 | Or suppose, in tracing back the chain of causes, we come upon one which we have reason to say is really the first, is anything explained thereby? |
33411 | Secondly, is the principle of form self- explanatory? |
33411 | So is not the distinction between appearance and reality itself meaningless? |
33411 | Suppose I ask you the question,"What is beauty?" |
33411 | The earliest Greek philosophers, the Ionics, propounded the question,"what is the ultimate principle of things?" |
33411 | The problem of all philosophers from Thales to Anaxagoras was, what is the nature of that first principle from which all things have issued? |
33411 | The question still remains, why do such copies exist, how do they arise? |
33411 | Their existence, we are told, is explained by the Idea of whiteness? |
33411 | Then what is happiness? |
33411 | Then what relation does X bear to Y? |
33411 | Then why is there an Idea of the Good? |
33411 | This does not mean, how has the State arisen in history? |
33411 | To put the matter bluntly, why is a man higher than a horse, or a horse than a sponge? |
33411 | Virtue is knowledge, but knowledge of what? |
33411 | Virtue is knowledge, but knowledge of what? |
33411 | Was not Plato in interpreting him idealistically reading his own thought into Parmenides? |
33411 | We are still left with the question,"what is virtue?" |
33411 | Were they wise men or fools? |
33411 | What alone interested them was the question, how am I to live? |
33411 | What can be more thoroughly intelligible than reason? |
33411 | What can he mean then, when he asserts that I am the wisest of men? |
33411 | What can thought understand, if not thought? |
33411 | What do such men really believe? |
33411 | What ground is there for regarding Parmenides as an idealist? |
33411 | What has Aristotle in common with such a writer a Herbert Spencer? |
33411 | What is a concept? |
33411 | What is it we want? |
33411 | What is knowledge? |
33411 | What is philosophy about? |
33411 | What is reality? |
33411 | What is substance? |
33411 | What is the cause then of the popular notion that{ 256} Aristotle was the opposite of Plato? |
33411 | What is the criterion here? |
33411 | What is the criterion of truth? |
33411 | What is the difference? |
33411 | What is the end of moral activity? |
33411 | What is the ground of this distinction? |
33411 | What is the necessity of that? |
33411 | What is the next step? |
33411 | What is the supreme good, the_ summum bonum_? |
33411 | What is this moving force? |
33411 | What is truth? |
33411 | What position, now, are we to assign to Parmenides in philosophy? |
33411 | What then is the end? |
33411 | What then were the real reasons for these accusations? |
33411 | What then? |
33411 | What was it, now, which led Anaxagoras to the doctrine of a world- governing intelligence? |
33411 | What was their moving force, if it was not weight? |
33411 | What, in the first place, is the relation between things and the Ideas? |
33411 | What, in the philosophy of Anaxagoras, is this force? |
33411 | What, then, is its form? |
33411 | What, then, is the good? |
33411 | What, then, is the special sphere of philosophy? |
33411 | What, then, is"whiteness"? |
33411 | When I heard the answer, I asked myself: What can the god mean? |
33411 | When I move my arms, did he mean that I am not moving my arms, but that they really remain at rest all the time? |
33411 | When death comes we shall not feel it, for is it not the end of all feeling and consciousness? |
33411 | When we demand the explanation of anything, what do we mean by explanation? |
33411 | Where does this matter come from? |
33411 | Which is the historical Parmenides? |
33411 | Which of all these impressions is true? |
33411 | Which of these will naturally be regarded as the most real? |
33411 | Who and what were the Sophists? |
33411 | Who is to judge? |
33411 | Why avoid evil, when evil is as much a manifestation of God as good? |
33411 | Why did Thales choose water as the first principle? |
33411 | Why do I call it paper? |
33411 | Why is the tedious process of education in mathematics necessary? |
33411 | Why should it not be the other way about? |
33411 | Why should it not remain by itself, apart, sterile, in the world of Ideas, for all eternity? |
33411 | Why should it stir itself? |
33411 | Why should not the order be reversed? |
33411 | Why should one ever struggle towards higher things, when in reality all are equally high? |
33411 | Why should philosophy be said to begin here in particular? |
33411 | Why should the Ideas give rise to copies of themselves, and how is the production of these copies effected? |
33411 | Why should there be a State at all? |
33411 | Why should there be such a principle as form? |
33411 | Why should they burden themselves with the control of that which nowise concerns them? |
33411 | Why should they go out of themselves into things? |
33411 | Why should they need to reproduce themselves in objects? |
33411 | Why should they not remain in themselves and by themselves? |
33411 | Why should we stop anywhere in the chain of causes? |
33411 | Why, then, should they not remain for ever simply as they are? |
33411 | what can he be hinting? |
33411 | what is happiness? |
33411 | { 98} What is the character of the Nous, according to Anaxagoras? |
3770 | And you, Gerald? |
3770 | Anybody about? |
3770 | Ca n''t you make a peephole through the bamboo? |
3770 | Mamma,Turiddu said to her,"do you remember that when I went away to be a soldier you thought I would never come back? |
3770 | What do you see, Frederick? |
3770 | What for? |
3770 | What god is mightier than Love? |
3770 | Why do n''t you go and say these nice things to Lola? |
3770 | Why? |
3770 | A man? |
3770 | And where did she get her chameleonlike nature? |
3770 | But everything appeals to the ear? |
3770 | But who shall hymn the blindness of Manoah''s son after Milton and Handel? |
3770 | But why are only the slums of Naples deemed appropriate for dramatic treatment? |
3770 | But why yield to such fancies and fears? |
3770 | Can such scenes be mimicked successfully enough to preserve a serious frame of mind in the observer? |
3770 | Does he doubt Nedda''s fidelity? |
3770 | Does he know when the robins nest in America? |
3770 | Does he suspect? |
3770 | Had she taken dancing lessons from one of the women of Cadiz to learn to dance as she must have danced to excite such lust in Herod? |
3770 | If Berlin, then why not New York? |
3770 | Is Samson a Hebrew form of the conception personified by the Greek Herakles? |
3770 | Is Turiddu not going to mass? |
3770 | Is it that? |
3770 | Is she amusing herself with quoits, or the jeu du crapaud, or pitch and toss? |
3770 | Is the story only a parable enforcing a moral lesson which is as old as humanity? |
3770 | It may be heretical to say so, but is it not possible that Lord Chamberlain and Critic have both taken too serious a view of the matter? |
3770 | Jasmin, say about eighteen, and already more of a woman; and when Loti says,"Why not her?" |
3770 | May not one criticise Goethe? |
3770 | Old friends are no longer noticed, eh?" |
3770 | Pourquoi nous annoncer Nabuchodonos-- or Quand c''est Nabuchodonos-- cuivre? |
3770 | Pretty birds, where are you going? |
3770 | St. Chrysostom set the fashion and Milton followed it:-- But who is this? |
3770 | The blow has scarcely been struck before a multitude of spirit- voices call his name and God thunders the question:"Where is Abel, thy brother?" |
3770 | The maidens who had come upon the scene with Dalila( are they priestesses of Dagon?) |
3770 | To the wise woman the ambassadors put the questions: Who shall be this ruler and by what sign shall they recognize him? |
3770 | Was she a monster, a worse than vampire as she is represented by Wilde and Strauss? |
3770 | Was she an innocent child, as Flaubert represents her, who could but lisp the name of the prophet when her mother told her to ask for his head? |
3770 | What is a Pagliaccio? |
3770 | What is he? |
3770 | What is it you say? |
3770 | What poetic field was open to him then? |
3770 | What though Harlequin steals his Columbine? |
3770 | What would M. Mendes say if he were accused of having taken the plot of"La Femme de Tabarin"from the"Drama Nuevo,"which dates back to 1830 or 1840? |
3770 | Where does Salome come from, anyway? |
3770 | Why not"Blanche"or"Arabella"? |
3770 | Why not? |
3770 | Yet might not even a geisha feel a genuine passion? |
3770 | You really do intend to kill me?" |
3770 | grumbled Lola when her husband prepared to go out;"where are you going in such a hurry?" |
36822 | Shall East and West Never Meet? |
36822 | What are the Japanese Doing towards Americanization? |
36822 | And you say that you do n''t understand the Japanese language sufficiently well to carry on a conversation with them? |
36822 | Are they patriotic in relation to the United States? |
36822 | As far as you know, their own intention is to live here, except for a visit home, perhaps, the rest of their lives? |
36822 | BOX:_ Q._ What is your name? |
36822 | But what is the assimilation but the approach to the common standard of culture and ideals? |
36822 | Can not different races, while remaining biologically distinct, form together the strong factors of a unified nation? |
36822 | Do they mean thereby to check Japanese immigration? |
36822 | Do you know this young lady that just testified? |
36822 | Do you remember when you were first told that you were a native- born American citizen; do you remember when that was first told you? |
36822 | GULICK, SYDNEY L._ How Shall Immigration be Regulated?_ 1920. |
36822 | How do we find the patriotism of the Japanese in America? |
36822 | How is the criterion to be determined? |
36822 | How long have you held that feeling of pride? |
36822 | How old are you? |
36822 | How old were you when you started? |
36822 | How, then, about the age distribution of the Japanese? |
36822 | How, then, about their cultural conditions? |
36822 | If Japan does not permit the ownership of land by Americans, they argue, by what right do the Japanese demand the privilege in America? |
36822 | Immediately the questions arise,"Is it possible to amalgamate the Japanese? |
36822 | In What Do| Born|Complete| Age of| Age of| in|cation.| They Excel? |
36822 | In the next place, how does the status of the Japanese population in California compare with that in the continental United States? |
36822 | Is Assimilation without Intermarriage Possible? |
36822 | Is it desirable to do so? |
36822 | Is it necessary to do so?" |
36822 | Is it, then, sufficiently happy for the couple? |
36822 | Is that the principal idea? |
36822 | Let us now consider the third question:--"Is intermarriage necessary for the assimilation of the Japanese?" |
36822 | Of allegiance to whom?... |
36822 | See? |
36822 | Shall the races of Asia and Europe, brought together by the progress of science, be once more strictly separated? |
36822 | Should white races organize in defense of themselves against"the rising tide of color"and invoke race war of an unprecedented scale and consequence? |
36822 | Suppose you are required to render military service to Japan, what would be your position on that subject? |
36822 | This being the case, our second query--"Is intermarriage desirable?" |
36822 | What influence has this æsthetic temperament exerted on the life of the Japanese? |
36822 | What made the Japanese accept so readily the teachings of the Jesuit Fathers during the latter half of the sixteenth century? |
36822 | What more recently induced Japan to insist at the Paris Conference on recognition of racial equality by the League of Nations? |
36822 | What, for instance, incited Hideyoshi to invade Korea in 1592? |
36822 | Why should I go back there? |
36822 | Will you kindly send me statement concerning the results in your schools? |
36822 | You know, do n''t you, that the Japanese Emperor still claims you as his subject? |
36822 | _ A._ In my home? |
36822 | _ A._ Why should n''t I remain an American? |
36822 | _ Must We Fight Japan?_ The Century Co., New York, 1921. |
36822 | _ Q._ A half a dozen? |
36822 | _ Q._ And they have encouraged you to be an American? |
36822 | _ Q._ And you did that from the time you were six until you were fourteen? |
36822 | _ Q._ And you like the idea? |
36822 | _ Q._ And your teachers have? |
36822 | _ Q._ Are there many such nice looking girls as she is in Seattle? |
36822 | _ Q._ Are there many young ladies? |
36822 | _ Q._ Are you full of Seattle spirits? |
36822 | _ Q._ Did n''t they succeed with a boy as bright as you are, going to high school? |
36822 | _ Q._ Did they teach you Japanese history? |
36822 | _ Q._ Did you attend the Japanese Language School? |
36822 | _ Q._ Do they talk English? |
36822 | _ Q._ Do you know a number? |
36822 | _ Q._ Following that, suppose you were required to render military service to the United States, what will be your position? |
36822 | _ Q._ Has every young Japanese boy here expressed that feeling as you do to us; have you heard them talk about it? |
36822 | _ Q._ How do they arrange to get along with you, if you ca n''t speak the language orally? |
36822 | _ Q._ How long have you felt the pride that you are a young American citizen? |
36822 | _ Q._ How many in your high school are Japanese boys? |
36822 | _ Q._ How old are you now? |
36822 | _ Q._ I guess you are about pretty near right, did n''t I? |
36822 | _ Q._ I know it is, but I think you know, my boy; tell us in your own language, in your own way? |
36822 | _ Q._ In other words, you have adopted the road of least resistance with the Japanese language? |
36822 | _ Q._ In the high school? |
36822 | _ Q._ Is it your intention to remain an American citizen or be a Japanese citizen? |
36822 | _ Q._ Let me ask you this; do you get along very well with them? |
36822 | _ Q._ Right here? |
36822 | _ Q._ So when you started to kindergarten did you start in the Japanese School? |
36822 | _ Q._ That was when? |
36822 | _ Q._ The Japanese language? |
36822 | _ Q._ What did they teach you there? |
36822 | _ Q._ When they talk to you, you understand them all right? |
36822 | _ Q._ Where do you live? |
36822 | _ Q._ Where were you born? |
36822 | _ Q._ You do n''t have any trouble with your classes, and boys? |
36822 | _ Q._ You get along all right in school? |
36822 | _ Q._ You go to school here? |
36822 | _ Q._ You have a good time? |
36822 | _ Q._ You have to renounce the Japanese Emperor before you are seventeen? |
36822 | _ Q._ You intend to remain an American citizen? |
36822 | _ Q._ You read the Japanese language now? |
36822 | _ Q._ You really ca n''t read any? |
36822 | _ Q._ You talk Japanese with your parents? |
36822 | _ Q._ You were born in the United States? |
36822 | _ Q._ You were not very quick to learn, but they did that, teach the history of Japan? |
36822 | _ Q._ Your father and mother intend to remain here all their lives, do they, as far as you know? |
36822 | _ Shall Japanese- Americans in Idaho be Treated with Fairness and Justice or Not?_ 1921. |
36822 | ||||| Drawback? |
36783 | A Madman? |
36783 | A beautiful thought, the reader will agree; but why could it not be uttered to a Japanese? 36783 Am I not addressing the celebrated author----?" |
36783 | And his mother was Greek? |
36783 | And in what place? |
36783 | Are you not a Greek? |
36783 | Can you save her? |
36783 | Den who got time for make merry, eh? 36783 Have you ever experienced the historic shudder?" |
36783 | His father was Irish, was he not? |
36783 | Is it true, Madame, that the owner of the land loses it if he cuts down the tree? |
36783 | May I ask, Madame, whether this palm- tree was truly planted by the Père Antoine? |
36783 | That great tall Titan of a fellow, with the yellow hair? |
36783 | Was it the Père Antoine, Madame? |
36783 | Who are you talking about?--that tall, dark Thracian? |
36783 | Who can it be? |
36783 | Why was I so foolish as to have a son? |
36783 | who among the living that lives_) does not compose poems? |
36783 | (?) |
36783 | A little Japanese girl was asked,"How can a doll live?" |
36783 | After a little while she saw a stone Jizo standing by the roadside, and she said:"O Lord Jizo, did you see my dumpling?" |
36783 | Am I demoralized; or am I simply better informed than before? |
36783 | And she came to a third Jizo, and asked it:"O dear Lord Jizo, did you see my dumpling?" |
36783 | And she came to another statue of Jizo, and asked it:"O kind Lord Jizo, did you see my dumpling?" |
36783 | And they mostly make answer,"_ Toutt douce, chè,--et ou?_"( All sweetly, dear,--and thou?) |
36783 | And they mostly make answer,"_ Toutt douce, chè,--et ou?_"( All sweetly, dear,--and thou?) |
36783 | And which one may not profit by the wisdom of the youth who knew nothing of science? |
36783 | And who shall answer the riddle of the Corpse Demon? |
36783 | And why had he always been so humble before that slight girl? |
36783 | Are you really-- what I see of you-- only an Envelope of something subtler and perpetual? |
36783 | Are you vile, Gabriel?--are you base?... |
36783 | Beyond a certain amount of money allotted( by his father?) |
36783 | But who or what could have killed it? |
36783 | But without the sacrifice, can we hope for the grace of Heaven? |
36783 | Could he not deceive her? |
36783 | Den who got time for make merry? |
36783 | Did Hearn know anybody of character in the West Indies? |
36783 | Did she doubt him still?--or was she afraid of her own heart? |
36783 | Did they give him the wooden sword?" |
36783 | Did you see the fool who threw her the rose?" |
36783 | Do you not like the word? |
36783 | Does she falter? |
36783 | For what is inspiration? |
36783 | Had he measured her by his own moral standard? |
36783 | Have you forgotten the mighty measure of that mighty song? |
36783 | I can earn only by writing, and yet if I remain a few years more, I will have become( perhaps?) |
36783 | I smell a smell of mankind somewhere-- don''t you?" |
36783 | Illusion? |
36783 | In the morning her husband awakened, and confused he cried out,"Woman, what hast thou done?" |
36783 | Is it all primitive childishness, this faith in a real breathing- in of the higher life into our more carnal hearts and minds? |
36783 | Is it strange that he should delight in these beautiful vampires? |
36783 | Is not the serpent a symbol of grace? |
36783 | Is not the so- called"line of beauty"serpentine? |
36783 | Is not the spell of the sea strong upon you still? |
36783 | Is there one who does not know that moment when the woman beloved becomes the ideal, and the lover feels his utter unworthiness? |
36783 | Moreover, of the alluring maiden in the dream of Itô Norisuké-- if one is to choose a ghost for a bride, who would not seek Himégimi- Sama? |
36783 | Or perhaps the mists escaped from Urashima''s box a thousand years ago? |
36783 | Or that the Universe exists for us solely as the reflection of our own souls? |
36783 | Or the old Chinese teaching that we must seek the Buddha only in our own hearts? |
36783 | Queer subjects, are they not? |
36783 | Save myself and leave the child to burn?... |
36783 | Shall not we too become_ Les Revenants_? |
36783 | Symbolizing what? |
36783 | The man had never mentioned the matter till long after the war-- why? |
36783 | Then Jizo said:"What are you going to do with that good old woman? |
36783 | They appear under his pen as pretty animals somewhat dangerous; but is it not their calling to be so? |
36783 | Was it possible that he had never before rightly looked at them? |
36783 | What does the memory hold of these stories and sketches? |
36783 | What is it? |
36783 | What is the reward? |
36783 | What was he to do? |
36783 | What would we think of the world if we carried before our eyes an opera- glass thus inverted? |
36783 | Where are the lions?" |
36783 | Where is that dumpling of mine?" |
36783 | Where is that dumpling of mine?" |
36783 | Where is that dumpling of mine?" |
36783 | White purified spirits of clouds, resting on their way to the beatitude of Nirvâna? |
36783 | Who but Hearn would have chosen this ghastly scene, and described it with such terrible reality? |
36783 | Wilt thou drive me from thee now?" |
36783 | With dear old Jean- Marie we wait for the return of Les Porteuses, and we hear his call:--"_ Coument ou yé, chè? |
36783 | Would he dare to ask their judgment of his sin? |
36783 | Would not a second''s such use be as foolish as continuous use? |
36783 | Would they smile thus--_if they knew_? |
36783 | Yet why should he so falter? |
36783 | coument ou kallé?_"...( How art thou, dear?--how goes it with thee?) |
36783 | coument ou kallé?_"...( How art thou, dear?--how goes it with thee?) |
36783 | have you forgotten the divine saltiness of that unfettered wind? |
36783 | the gladiator who killed the lions?" |
36783 | you will love my child?--Youma, you will never leave her, whatever happens, while she is little? |
38456 | Why should we annually pay hundreds of thousands of francs to foreign singers and concert- givers? |
38456 | And who was that white man, who voluntarily shared their misery, their wants, and their privations? |
38456 | And would he at some future period find companions to visit with him, and ultimately share these solitary desolate abodes? |
38456 | But who would boggle at any amount for an object which concerns the bodily health, not merely of the present, but of all succeeding generations? |
38456 | Does the auriferous quartz occur in veins, and are these still_ in situ_, or are they broken up? |
38456 | For to whom are we indebted for our capital, for the industry and commerce which we have? |
38456 | From the Altar the geologist might proceed, by way of San Luis,( Query, whether the primitive clay- slate found here be of the Silurian formation?) |
38456 | Had it been his own cradle? |
38456 | Have these been found, alongside of gold, diamonds, platinum, osmium, iridium, or mercury? |
38456 | Is Amsterdam really a sister- island of St. Paul? |
38456 | Is it, too, of volcanic origin, upheaved by the same subterranean energy, and does it still show similar traces of long- continued activity? |
38456 | LORD AUBREY; or, WHAT SHALL I DO? |
38456 | The highest mountain of the whole island, perhaps of the whole insular world of Southern Asia, is the Hina Baïlu( 12,850 feet?) |
38456 | The question may here be asked, why, in the present state of navigation, a sailing- vessel was preferred to a steamer for this voyage? |
38456 | To whom belong those manufactories which the people want to protect, and in whose favour so much is said? |
38456 | WHO SHALL BE DUCHESS? |
38456 | Was he a straggler? |
38456 | Was it the first time he had selected this island for a home? |
38456 | What could have condemned him to this self- imposed exile? |
38456 | What description of rock is traversed by these veins? |
38456 | What impressions are, for instance, deeper in young and old, and excite more delightful recollections than the starry sky of home? |
38456 | Which nation has done more for the propagation of Christianity among savage tribes all over the world? |
38456 | good friend?" |
38456 | of Otavalo? |
37852 | Baggage, in my godlike moment What have I to do with thee? |
37852 | I must not be so invaded,( In an anger then I cried)--"Ca n''t you see that I am busy? |
37852 | A faintly pensive frown Upon her forehead gathers now-- Ah, does the butcher-- heartless clown-- Beget that shadow on her brow? |
37852 | A maid, who would not dream her ta''en to wife? |
37852 | Ah, can we ever know again Such friends as were those chosen men, Such men to drink, to bike, to smoke with, To worship with, or lie and joke with? |
37852 | All gone? |
37852 | And Peter Pan is dead? |
37852 | And was there a meaning? |
37852 | Brave madness, built for beauty and the sun-- In such a town who can be sane? |
37852 | But when? |
37852 | But why should that embarrass me? |
37852 | Can Morris- chair or papier- mâchà © bust Revivify the failing pressure- gauge? |
37852 | Cook has gone, and all is dark-- Then the kitchen is your park: In the garbage heap that she leaves Do you browse among the tea leaves? |
37852 | Could you remember him as always kind? |
37852 | DO YOU EVER FEEL LIKE GOD? |
37852 | Do you chant your simple tunes Swimming in the baby''s prunes? |
37852 | Do you linger, little soul, Drowsing in our sugar bowl? |
37852 | Her ancient courage, patient toil, Her stubborn wordless pride? |
37852 | His work was hasty, harassed, vexed: His dreams were laid aside, perforce, Until-- in this world, or the next....( His trade? |
37852 | How delightful to suspect All the places you have trekked: Does your long antenna whisk its Gentle tip across the biscuits? |
37852 | I do not know your name, O tree( Are you a hemlock or a pine?) |
37852 | I wish( I hope I am not silly?) |
37852 | Is it waffles and syrup, or cinnamon toast? |
37852 | MY PIPE My pipe is old And caked with soot; My wife remarks:"How can you put That horrid relic, So unclean, Inside your mouth? |
37852 | Not love me, eh? |
37852 | Or, abandonment most utter, Shake a shimmy on the butter? |
37852 | PEACE What is this Peace That statesmen sign? |
37852 | Remember just your lad, uncouthly good, Forgetting when he failed in spleen or spite? |
37852 | SMELLS Why is it that the poets tell So little of the sense of smell? |
37852 | Seeing a pulpit, who can silence keep? |
37852 | So all things end: and what is left at last? |
37852 | So wise, so simple-- has she never guessed That through his laughter, love and terror run? |
37852 | THE BALLOON PEDDLER Who is the man on Chestnut street With colored toy balloons? |
37852 | The clock would tick, and we would sit, we two-- Life holds such meetings for us, does it not? |
37852 | The newly dedicated fire, The hearth unsanctified by flame? |
37852 | Then, when dawn comes, do you slink Homeward to the kitchen sink? |
37852 | Timid roach, why be so shy? |
37852 | Unhappy fool, you say, with pitiful air: Who was he, then, and where? |
37852 | What do_ you_ choose when you''re offered a treat? |
37852 | What is the virtue of that soil That flings her strength so wide? |
37852 | What was the service of this poet? |
37852 | When Mother says,"What would you like best to eat?" |
37852 | Who knows? |
37852 | You want to be big and fat Like Daddy, do n''t you? |
37697 | Who dare express him And who profess him Saying,''I believe in him?'' 37697 * The popular proverb,Is Saul among the prophets?" |
37697 | Ah, but was it not want that sapped their strength, and made them powerless to resist disease? |
37697 | Among the Crusaders the cry was raised,"We go to Palestine to slay the unbelievers; why not begin with the infidel Jews in our own midst?" |
37697 | And yet some will smile incredulously and ask, where are the men and women prepared to undertake such a task? |
37697 | Are we devoid of it? |
37697 | But do we educate them? |
37697 | But if the prevalent forms have ceased to satisfy us, can we therefore dispense with form altogether? |
37697 | But is this true? |
37697 | But let us ask ourselves what it is that alienates our sympathies from the ritual and ceremonial observances of the dominant creeds? |
37697 | But what large or effective measures are we taking to this most desirable end? |
37697 | But where I pray you is the sentiment of brotherly love considered as it should be? |
37697 | Can the laws of thought act otherwise than upon the material afforded by the senses? |
37697 | Can the mind feed upon itself? |
37697 | Conscience, righteousness, what is there new in these-- their maxims are as old as the hills? |
37697 | Could we not be free and strong? |
37697 | Could we not secure both? |
37697 | Denn wer wagte mit Gettern den Kampf? |
37697 | Did you not rebel against human slavery because you said it was wrong that any being born in the image of man should be the tool of another? |
37697 | For who, foreseeing that he can not always feed on healthy nourishment, would therefore sate himself with deadly poison? |
37697 | How are these physical processes connected by and with the facts of consciousness? |
37697 | How could they offer up their beloved sons for sacrifice, how could they give over their wives and daughters to shame? |
37697 | Is it in the hydrogen, in the oxygen, in the single atom? |
37697 | Is it not cruel mockery to say to these women that their business is in the household? |
37697 | Is it not true that something must be done, and can be done because it must? |
37697 | Is it the forms as such? |
37697 | Is not the fatality that so often attends our best efforts in this life, an argument against, rather than in favor of increasing felicity in another? |
37697 | Is not this an intolerable contrast? |
37697 | Is the God to whom men pray so poor a workman that he will change the mechanism of the Universe at their bidding? |
37697 | Is the course of the world''s affairs such as to encourage so flattering an hypothesis? |
37697 | Is there no outlook from this night of trouble? |
37697 | Is there no winged thought, that will bear us upward from out the depths; is there no solace to assuage our pangs? |
37697 | It is the martyrdom of the pure that has redeemed mankind from guilt and sin? |
37697 | Of it? |
37697 | Of what? |
37697 | Or the nature of the tree; is it in the roots, in the trunk, in the spreading branches, the leafy crown? |
37697 | Shall we rest quiet under the talk of irremediable evils? |
37697 | That all men are brothers, who did not concede it? |
37697 | That the world was ever created out of nothing, what human understanding can conceive of it? |
37697 | That we should relieve the necessities of the poor, who will deny it? |
37697 | The question returns to us, What is religion? |
37697 | There is this mighty riddle: who will solve it? |
37697 | To those who questioned him concerning religion he replied: Are ye then masters of the humanities, that ye seek to pry into divine secrets? |
37697 | Trammels of the flesh, contamination of the body? |
37697 | Was it not their life of pinched pauperism that ripened them for the reaper''s scythe? |
37697 | Were we created for misery? |
37697 | What single effort can achieve a change? |
37697 | What then shall be the form adequate to express the new Ideal? |
37697 | What was it that induced us to enter upon so perilous and for many reasons so uncertain an enterprise? |
37697 | What was the new revelation he preached to the sons of men? |
37697 | What was the startling truth he taught? |
37697 | What were music without the ear; what the symmetry of form, without the eye and touch? |
37697 | Whence did it come, whither has it vanished? |
37697 | Whither now, we ask, shall we turn for consolation? |
37697 | Who feeling, seeing, deny his being Saying I believe him not? |
37697 | Why should not beasts and rivers and stones have their ghosts like man? |
37697 | Why should we hesitate to acknowledge in the domain of ethics, what we concede in the realm of art and science? |
37697 | Why then call in the supernatural? |
37697 | avers, how could we account for the fact that Korah''s descendants filled high offices in the Temple at Jerusalem later on? |
37697 | or who, though he knew that the mind is not immortal, would therefore lead an empty life, devoid of reason''s good and guidance? |
37697 | whoever hears of it? |
37693 | Do any of these families,asks he,"know the questions which a priest puts to their families at the confessional? |
37693 | The secular orders,says he? |
37693 | And had these noble principles been available in supporting the pretension of the pope, would he have had the stupidity to denounce them? |
37693 | Ant_, c. 47), St. Palladus, seeing a hyena standing near his cave, addressing it, asked:"What''s the matter?" |
37693 | Are these sensational declamations? |
37693 | Are they not sacerdotal brothels? |
37693 | But after all what was the object of these institutions? |
37693 | But does society exercise its authority in the matter any more visibly than deity? |
37693 | But is not the contrary the fact? |
37693 | But what is a religious organization? |
37693 | But who is she that has the audacity to proclaim such principles? |
37693 | But why are these dens exempted from the common law of the land? |
37693 | Can the storm be averted? |
37693 | Can they be regarded as citizens? |
37693 | Did he not write against it, preach against if, and labor publicly and privately to arrest its progress? |
37693 | Did not John Wesley, its founder and spirit, oppose the American revolution? |
37693 | Did not all these facts occur in Home respecting Arnold of Brecia? |
37693 | Did they not fight to defend it in the war of 1812? |
37693 | Did they not fight to preserve its unity in the late rebellion? |
37693 | Do husbands know the questions which priests put to their wives at the confession?.... |
37693 | Do they not deprive their inmates of personal liberty? |
37693 | Do they not imprison them in dungeons? |
37693 | Do they not inflict on them barbarous chastisements? |
37693 | Do they not punish them? |
37693 | Does not man and woman blush at their dishonored nature? |
37693 | Does not the blood curdle in every vein at such recitals? |
37693 | Does prejudice forbid it? |
37693 | From nunneries governed and visited by priests of such a character, what is the logical inference? |
37693 | Had Methodism been chosen as the basis of our government, would a republic have been thought of? |
37693 | Had it been otherwise would he have denied their authority? |
37693 | How many escaped nuns have unaccountably disappeared from society? |
37693 | If the church shall ever gain in America the numerical strength for which she is striving, what will be the consequence to non- Catholics? |
37693 | Is God a fiction, or divine retribution a dream? |
37693 | Is it because they are too pious to violate the law of the land? |
37693 | Is not reason the clearest guide to truth, conscience its most powerful advocate, investigation its most formidable ally? |
37693 | It will be asked, Did not Catholics fight for the establishment of a free government in the revolutionary war? |
37693 | Ought any man who holds to this position be admitted to-- or permitted to hold Christian citizenship under this government? |
37693 | The signification of a corporate organization is well understood, but how shall we ascertain its principles and designs? |
37693 | Was he not an aspiring and unscrupulous despot? |
37693 | Was it to advance the capacities of individual man? |
37693 | Was it to enlighten society at large? |
37693 | Was there a man in England that inflicted deeper injury on the American cause? |
37693 | Were he confident that his pretensions are founded in truth, would he have prohibited investigation''? |
37693 | What infamous means have Catholic priests adopted to fill their nunneries? |
37693 | What is it? |
37693 | Which do you now chose? |
37693 | Who are they that prate about chastity? |
37693 | Who would, then, hesitate to sacrifice a prejudice that it may be effected? |
37693 | Why are not the interior of monastic institutions constantly and thoroughly inspected, and the authority of the common law maintained over them? |
37693 | Why are they allowed to bar their doors against the authority which all others must respect? |
37693 | Why are they allowed to organize within a government an independent government, nullifying its jurisdiction over them? |
37693 | Why do not grand juries, who visit other jails, penitentiaries, and asylums, inspect also the more secret and suspicious nunneries? |
37693 | Why not? |
37693 | Will she declare them legitimate, or respect their property titles? |
37693 | Would England consent, it may be asked, to ally herself with the papal despot? |
37693 | Would it not be that it claimed to be a political organization? |
37693 | and that to utter such a question in its domains was to provoke its heaviest penalty? |
37693 | that it was high treason in its estimation to question its right to this character? |
38104 | **Secularism: What Is It?" |
38104 | ****Why Are We Secularists?" |
38104 | * Buckle truly says,"Liberty is not a means, it is an end in itself,"But the uses of liberty are means to ends Else why do we want liberty? |
38104 | After taking these doctrines out of the minds of men, as far as reasoning criticism may do it, what is proposed to be put in their place? |
38104 | Am I deficient in the sense of duty?" |
38104 | And was he always able to direct his blow with unerring precision to one or other of those particular spots? |
38104 | Are there three places in the human body where a single blow will be sure to kill a man? |
38104 | Can it need miracle or prophecy, authenticity, or inspiration, to attest this story of the Jewish Jack- the- Giant- killer? |
38104 | Can we, in these days, conceive of religious persons being ignorant and dirty? |
38104 | Did Samson know those places? |
38104 | He said, moreover, unto me, Thine own things, and such as are grown up with thee, canst thou not know? |
38104 | How can he be a free thinker who thinks thinking is a sin? |
38104 | How did he know that? |
38104 | How should thy vessel, then, be able to comprehend the way of the Highest?.... |
38104 | If our towns and streets be made to give gladness and cheerfulness to all who live or walk therein-- is not that piety? |
38104 | If the Christian actually believed that the future was real, would he hang black plumes over the hearse, and speak of death as darkness? |
38104 | If the thousand Philistines"surrounded"him, how did he keep the others off while he struggled with the one he was killing? |
38104 | If there be moral maxims in the Scripture, what does it matter how they got there? |
38104 | If there is any revelation of God, it is truth; and what is science but truth ascertained? |
38104 | If they were_ sure_ of it, who of them would linger here when those they love and honor have gone before? |
38104 | If thou wert judge now betwixt these two, whom wouldest thou begin to justify? |
38104 | If, therefore, we send to heaven clean, intelligent, bright- minded saints-- is not that piety? |
38104 | Is it because the Christian doctrines have become antiquated, and does the church no longer adapt herself to the requirements of the present age? |
38104 | Is it not a higher morality to do good for its own sake, careless whether those benefited become adherents or not? |
38104 | Is it that the representative Christian thinkers are lacking in intellectuality and moral strength? |
38104 | Is not their motive proselytism? |
38104 | It will be asked, What are the deterrent influences upon which Secularism relies for rendering vice, of the major or minor kind, repellent? |
38104 | Men are continually injured by the truth, or how do martyrs come, or why do we honor them? |
38104 | My sole inquiry was, Did they contain clear moral guidance? |
38104 | Or is it that the world at large has outgrown religion and refuses to be guided by the spiritual counsel of popes and pastors? |
38104 | Professor Clifford exclaimed:"The Kingdom of God has come-- when comes the Kingdom of man?" |
38104 | The Bishop asks:''Whose words do you suppose they are? |
38104 | The example of self- sacrifice is noble-- but is it noble in any one who deliberately creates the necessity for it? |
38104 | The question will be put, Has independent morality ever been seen in action? |
38104 | Then answered I and said, What man is able to do that, that thou shouldest ask such things of me? |
38104 | Then answered he me and said, Thou hast given a right judgment; but why judgest thou not thyself also? |
38104 | To bring new beauty out of common life-- is not that piety? |
38104 | To change blank stupidity into intelligent admiration of any work of nature-- is not that piety? |
38104 | What are his hands for? |
38104 | What evidence is there that the unknown land is"dark"? |
38104 | What have you to say?" |
38104 | What is Secularism? |
38104 | What is free thought going to do? |
38104 | What moral good can arise from a narration which it is reverence to reject? |
38104 | What parents''love does not include the happiness of its offspring? |
38104 | What would be thought of a general who delayed occupying a country he had conquered until he had extirpated all the inhabitants in it? |
38104 | Whatever the reason may be, the fact itself can not be doubted, and the question is only, What will become of religion in the future? |
38104 | Where would science be but for open thought, the nursing mother of enterprise, of discovery, of invention, of new conditions of human betterment? |
38104 | Which marks thee? |
38104 | Why is it that Christianity is losing its bold on mankind? |
38104 | Why not light? |
38104 | Why should he be anxious to mitigate inequality of human condition? |
38104 | Why should purely Secular instruction be regarded with distrust, when purely religious education does not answer? |
38104 | Yet what has come out of his discovery? |
38104 | or whom wouldest thou condemn? |
38092 | * Now what is the exact value of these demonstrations? 38092 Try the spirits"is all right in its way; but what if you find that_ all_ the spirits are illusions? |
38092 | A man may be sure that God speaks to him, but how can he be sure that God has spoken to another man? |
38092 | And how was the doctrine decided? |
38092 | And how was their ignorance corrected? |
38092 | And is it not a shallow trick upon our intelligence to argue that different persons, using the same word, necessarily mean the same thing? |
38092 | And what follows? |
38092 | And what is culture? |
38092 | And what is the result? |
38092 | And what is this theory? |
38092 | And what was the result? |
38092 | But do they not contradict each other? |
38092 | But how are we to find it? |
38092 | But how on earth could the Christians use it in any other way? |
38092 | But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe my words?" |
38092 | But is he not a"reconciler"himself in regard to miracles? |
38092 | But is it fair to suggest that Arnold had any creed at all? |
38092 | But is not proving too much as bad as proving too little? |
38092 | But suppose all this be admitted-- and there is much to be said by way of qualification-- what does it amount to? |
38092 | But was it not David Hume who declared that"in all history"there is not a single miracle attested in this manner? |
38092 | But what does this mean? |
38092 | But what is the actual fact, when we view it in the light of history? |
38092 | But what is the logical conclusion? |
38092 | But what of the book which misled them? |
38092 | But what were those lessons as illustrated by their actions? |
38092 | Could anything be more repulsive? |
38092 | Did not the writers mean that the Word of God is included or comprehended in the Old and New Testament only, and is not to be found elsewhere? |
38092 | Do not travellers talk of the unchanging East? |
38092 | Does this prove that the Koran is the Word of God? |
38092 | Does this prove that the New Testament is not a revelation, and that Jesus Christ was not God? |
38092 | Does this prove that their beliefs were accurate? |
38092 | Dr. Farrar breaks away from both parties, and what is the result? |
38092 | Faithfulness to what? |
38092 | Further, if all that agrees with Christ''s Gospel is the Word of God, is it not superfluous as being a mere repetition? |
38092 | Is it not clear that the word"_ contained_"is used here in its primary meaning? |
38092 | Is it not misleading to talk of his"intense reverence and admiration for the Sacred Books"? |
38092 | Is there any excuse for putting such abominable feculence into the hands of children? |
38092 | Jesus indeed is reported to have said,"Why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?" |
38092 | Now, what has Dr. Farrar to urge_ per contra?_ Simply this: that the"early Christians"pleaded for toleration. |
38092 | The question in dispute was, Which_ were_ the heretics? |
38092 | The real question is, did Jesus Christ believe the story of Jonah and the whale? |
38092 | This is a sad state of things, and how is it to be met? |
38092 | Very good; but how was that discovered? |
38092 | What did Greece and Rome owe to the Bible? |
38092 | What is the criterion by which we are to separate God''s word from man''s word? |
38092 | What is the explanation, then? |
38092 | What is the use of"inspiration"if it does not appreciably quicken the natural development of the human conscience? |
38092 | What light does it really shed upon the following questions? |
38092 | What more could be said of the Koran or any other sacred book? |
38092 | What then is the way of escape from this grotesque confusion? |
38092 | Why is the Protestant Canon different from the Catholic Canon? |
38092 | Why is the book of Ecclesiastes in the Canon, while the book of Ecclesiasticus is( by the Protestants) relegated to the Apocrypha? |
38092 | Why is the book of Esther in the Canon, and the book of Judith in the Apocrypha? |
38092 | Why is the book of Jonah in the Canon, and the book of Tobit in the Apocrypha? |
38092 | Why is the book of Proverbs in the Canon, and the book of the Wisdom of Solomon in the Apocrypha? |
38092 | Would they not have been shocked to hear a clergyman of the Church of England say that some parts of the Bible were_ not_ the Word of God? |
12733 | Would you like a cigarette? |
12733 | A Russian boy with an unmemorable name? |
12733 | A boyfriend? |
12733 | A cat"Garfield? |
12733 | A gringo? |
12733 | A room? 12733 A transient?" |
12733 | About what? 12733 All of them?" |
12733 | Am I sick? |
12733 | American? |
12733 | And Rick? |
12733 | And Rita/ Lily Lily/ Rita? |
12733 | And become pregnant? |
12733 | And heaven? |
12733 | And the devil? |
12733 | And the dog? |
12733 | And what did you learn that was so instrumental to your personal development? |
12733 | And what is this grand purpose of yours? |
12733 | And where you will get other slave? 12733 And you take classes?" |
12733 | Any discount for me, Candyman? 12733 Anything important?" |
12733 | Anything wrong? |
12733 | Apple her? |
12733 | Are all Americans like this? |
12733 | Are n''t I right to contain males and movement? |
12733 | Are n''t you smart? 12733 Are we to believe this craziness we are hearing? |
12733 | Are you a gay? |
12733 | Are you a star? |
12733 | Are you awake? |
12733 | Are you familiar with Camille Saint- Saens  � N his Macabre Dance? |
12733 | Are you going to clean up the mess for Mommy? |
12733 | Are you happy to lie out here like an animal? |
12733 | Are you hungry, Rick? |
12733 | Are you in a lot of pain? |
12733 | Are you kidding? 12733 Are you kidding? |
12733 | Are you okay? |
12733 | Are you real? |
12733 | Are you staying for lunch? |
12733 | Are you still planning to go back next week? |
12733 | Are you stupid? 12733 Are you unhappy with something?" |
12733 | Bangkok? |
12733 | Because hotels aren � Ot cheap anywhere in New York City except exceptional ones"Exceptional? 12733 Beheading?" |
12733 | Both of us had to do something while we waited and waited for you, didn � Ot we? 12733 But I''m sure that if I were twenty years older it would be revolting to you, would n''t it?" |
12733 | Can I come in? |
12733 | Can I see you again? |
12733 | Can I wait at your place? 12733 Can you help me? |
12733 | Cat around? |
12733 | Christ, why ca n''t you just be happy? |
12733 | Christmas is so lovely with everyone being together, do n''t you think so? 12733 Comics about what?" |
12733 | Complicated and opposing, are they? 12733 Comrade Sangfroid?" |
12733 | Concerning Nathaniel? |
12733 | Corndogs-- wo n''t you have one, Gabriele? |
12733 | Could you ask her to come out and hold the ladder? |
12733 | David Hume? |
12733 | Did one of your friends say that? |
12733 | Did she meet this black man there? |
12733 | Did you drive up just for that? |
12733 | Did you learn of it? |
12733 | Did you lock the door? |
12733 | Did you resent your sister getting what you could n''t have? |
12733 | Did you write your mother? |
12733 | Didn � Ot he tell you where I was at? |
12733 | Dive? 12733 Do Americans think it was right?" |
12733 | Do I have to take care of both of those dogs out there? |
12733 | Do I need to check? |
12733 | Do n''t you have any goals? |
12733 | Do you always keep things in there like that? |
12733 | Do you always use profanity in your home in what you call choice occasions? |
12733 | Do you do that to your son-- put him in chains? |
12733 | Do you have a last name? |
12733 | Do you have a middle name? |
12733 | Do you have an empty beer can? |
12733 | Do you have his telephone number? |
12733 | Do you have mice inside there? |
12733 | Do you have money? |
12733 | Do you have two Master''s degrees? |
12733 | Do you know that girl? |
12733 | Do you like art? |
12733 | Do you live in Tonggyo- dong?,asked Sang Huin creating a mental barricade to stop the closure." |
12733 | Do you miss Rick? |
12733 | Do you not like something about me? |
12733 | Do you really give citations regardless of circumstances? 12733 Do you really think that thing in your mouth tastes good?" |
12733 | Do you stay in a hotel in that area? |
12733 | Do you think God is awful? |
12733 | Do you think I need to come out and look? |
12733 | Do you think IÂ � Od let an ugly dog like you slobber on me? |
12733 | Do you think Michael knows you meet me here? |
12733 | Do you want him to not know? |
12733 | Do you want me to leave you, Hilda? |
12733 | Do you want me to not care? |
12733 | Do you want me,said one,"or do you want another?" |
12733 | Do you want to tell me all your secrets and be truthful with me? |
12733 | Do you want? |
12733 | Do you? |
12733 | Does he want me to think this breakfast of his is my reward for this bit of a roll in the hay? |
12733 | Does it feel good to look at it directly? |
12733 | Doesn � Ot he? 12733 Doing what?" |
12733 | Don � Ot you think it is a little bit late for my two boys to be playing billiards like they are at a poker party? |
12733 | Dos meses? 12733 Ductility? |
12733 | Enter? |
12733 | Es verdad? |
12733 | Esta usted enferma otra vez? |
12733 | Even if she takes up all the toilet paper you want to use on your precious butt? |
12733 | Fed up with gentle Rick? |
12733 | Find any? |
12733 | Fish good, you say? |
12733 | For what reason? |
12733 | From the window? 12733 Gabriela, I was just thinking that--""A positive thought or something quite negative?" |
12733 | Gabriele, dear stupid Gabriele of such wasted intelligence, were you really so smashed by that tank which your parents drove off in? 12733 Gabriele? |
12733 | German massage? |
12733 | Going back to your son? |
12733 | Gone? 12733 Good?" |
12733 | Have to help you or have to leave? |
12733 | Have you decided that family loyalties are a bit more important than dabbling in petty jobs on the outside? |
12733 | Have you had breakfast? 12733 He hits?" |
12733 | He looks angry now, does n''t he? 12733 Hello, Gabriele, do you remember me?" |
12733 | Here? |
12733 | Hey, Hispanic Betty, why do you have two names? |
12733 | He � Oll be back, won � Ot he? |
12733 | Hispanic Betty, do you think school is like that? |
12733 | Hispanic Betty,Gabriele asked,"The mail has already come?" |
12733 | Hispanic who? |
12733 | How am I to tell if you suffocate me? |
12733 | How come you got that thing locked? 12733 How come?" |
12733 | How come? |
12733 | How did he learn to lie? |
12733 | How do you know that I do n''t know what you know? |
12733 | How is Rick? |
12733 | How long have you been over there? |
12733 | How long will you be here? |
12733 | How many people are there? |
12733 | How much? |
12733 | How would you know that? |
12733 | How would you know? |
12733 | How? |
12733 | Huh? 12733 Huh? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | I think you want to see him, do n''t you? |
12733 | I''ve been ill-- so ill."Ill? |
12733 | If God did n''t care about those people why should I think that he cares about me? |
12733 | Ilchik tangshin- tul rul basketball ul hayoshimnita kachi? |
12733 | In Braille? |
12733 | In a book? |
12733 | In a family of stars or with a husband who is a star? |
12733 | Is Betty busy cooking lunch? |
12733 | Is Nathaniel with you? |
12733 | Is he here? |
12733 | Is it as simple as jumping in a bunch of leaves? |
12733 | Is that a fact? 12733 Is that a fact? |
12733 | Is that a fact? |
12733 | Is that so? 12733 Is that so?,"he said. |
12733 | Is that stuff good? |
12733 | Is that what you said? 12733 Is there an ashtray? |
12733 | Is there? |
12733 | It bothers you because you are revolted by it or because it excites you? |
12733 | It is Athena, the insect, is it? 12733 It is just like any church?" |
12733 | Janet? |
12733 | Kennedy Smith of the Kennedy dynasty-- are you from the family of wealthy politicians? |
12733 | Koreans-- North Koreans or South Koreans? |
12733 | Kun mul? 12733 Lily who?" |
12733 | Little pig, little pig, will you let me come in? |
12733 | Look at that once stalwart face in the mirror-- is this a human face or a sponge that has sucked up too much water? |
12733 | Man problems? |
12733 | May I look? |
12733 | Miss,said Gabriele with contumely toward the secretary who was the only visible party responsible for making her wait,"will it be much longer? |
12733 | More ketchup? |
12733 | Mounted? |
12733 | Mouse, did you do something bad? |
12733 | Mr. Quest? 12733 Mrs. Sangfroid,"said Rick,"what are you eating? |
12733 | Nathaniel''s home room teacher? |
12733 | Nathaniel? |
12733 | Newfoundland? |
12733 | No Ramen noodles this time? |
12733 | No spells? |
12733 | No tienes un llave? |
12733 | No, I don � Ot Gabriele; and do you want me to tell you why? |
12733 | No, are you listening to me? |
12733 | No, why would you think I''d feel that way? 12733 No, you were in Japan, weren � Ot you? |
12733 | Not see Nathaniel and Rick? |
12733 | Not the owl? |
12733 | Odie ka?,( where you go?) |
12733 | Odie ka?,( where you go?) |
12733 | Oh, did I tell you about him? |
12733 | Oh? 12733 Orita? |
12733 | Other men? |
12733 | PLEASE wake me up, do n''t you mean? |
12733 | Pulled out like what? 12733 Quest as in Mr. Quest at the school?" |
12733 | Quest? |
12733 | Really? 12733 Really? |
12733 | Relatives? |
12733 | Rick? |
12733 | Rita/ Lily, what has happened to me? 12733 Rita/ Lily?" |
12733 | Scared that Mom might come over with the Ivory soap once again, eh? |
12733 | She should know how to sit in a taxi, do n''t you think? |
12733 | Since when have I told you to not paint? |
12733 | Smelling? |
12733 | So soon? 12733 So the darker reefer is richer?,"she asked. |
12733 | So what are you wanting? |
12733 | So you ran away from school? |
12733 | So, he will be her lover-- this MF? |
12733 | So, what about me do n''t I take responsibility for? 12733 Strange, huh? |
12733 | Sucked out? |
12733 | Tell me, did you do this? |
12733 | Tell me, with Easter and all, do n''t you and your family go to church? |
12733 | That is strange, isn � Ot it? |
12733 | That''s not right? |
12733 | The sink has the runs? 12733 Then maybe there are too many R- rated videos being played at home or other media where he might be hearing words like--""Fuck? |
12733 | Then really there is no reason to be up here, is there? |
12733 | These headaches again? |
12733 | They believe in God, do n''t they? |
12733 | This information is that obtainable? |
12733 | Time for what? |
12733 | To a ball game? |
12733 | Together in a dream? |
12733 | Tomorrow"What time? |
12733 | Turk? |
12733 | Turn? |
12733 | Upset that she brought in the cat instead of you? 12733 Uri- tul nun taxi ul sayang hata?" |
12733 | Vegetables for a cat? 12733 Volleyball?" |
12733 | Want a towel, amigo? |
12733 | Was all humanity this way? |
12733 | Was it right? |
12733 | Was that a question? 12733 Well, you ca n''t exactly say that you were n''t in Heaven, can you?" |
12733 | Were the perpetrators human or hominids? 12733 Were you looking for Mexican pussy out there?" |
12733 | What I want it to be? |
12733 | What about my father? |
12733 | What are they like? |
12733 | What are you doing, girls? |
12733 | What are you doing? � E Are you okay? � E Can you understand me? |
12733 | What are you laughing that way for? |
12733 | What are you saying? |
12733 | What are you smiling at? |
12733 | What call? |
12733 | What did you call him? |
12733 | What did you eat today, Rita? |
12733 | What did you say? |
12733 | What do I do with these things? |
12733 | What do I do? |
12733 | What do I do? |
12733 | What do I know about anything? |
12733 | What do I know about this? |
12733 | What do you do here? |
12733 | What do you want with it? |
12733 | What do you want? |
12733 | What does he do? |
12733 | What does he hit? |
12733 | What does he look like? |
12733 | What happened to me? |
12733 | What have I done? |
12733 | What if he gets lost? 12733 What if they did?" |
12733 | What if this is a reaction to Little Orphan Annie? |
12733 | What is a vagabond? |
12733 | What is all this? |
12733 | What is in this shit? 12733 What is in this special of yours?" |
12733 | What is it, Rita/ Lily? 12733 What is stinkiness? |
12733 | What is stinkiness? |
12733 | What is that? |
12733 | What is that? |
12733 | What is this? |
12733 | What is wrong with you? |
12733 | What is your friend amused about? |
12733 | What is your problem? |
12733 | What is your problem? |
12733 | What per se are you hoping to rob of a life? |
12733 | What sort of a person tells her son to leave? |
12733 | What time is it now? |
12733 | What time is it? |
12733 | What will you do with your knowledge? |
12733 | What would I want with a man, Lily? 12733 What would they have done to you if you cried?" |
12733 | What''d you say? |
12733 | What''s happened to you? |
12733 | What''s nothing? |
12733 | What''s that? |
12733 | What''s the difference? |
12733 | What''s the name of this guy? |
12733 | What''s with the cat? |
12733 | What''s wrong with you, woman? |
12733 | What''s wrong? 12733 What''s your problem?" |
12733 | What? 12733 What?" |
12733 | What? |
12733 | What? |
12733 | What?. |
12733 | Whatzure job? 12733 What � Os demolition?" |
12733 | What � Os his name? |
12733 | What � Os real? 12733 What � Os wrong?" |
12733 | What � Os  � Odead � O mean? |
12733 | When do you think you � Oll be paid from that burger joint you work for? |
12733 | When is she coming? 12733 When is this Sapporo thing going to happen?" |
12733 | When is your game? |
12733 | When will I see you again? |
12733 | When''s that shit on a shingle stuff gon na be done? |
12733 | When? |
12733 | Where am I? |
12733 | Where are you going? |
12733 | Where did you get it from? 12733 Where have you been? |
12733 | Where is the ball? |
12733 | Where would I go? |
12733 | Where you from? |
12733 | Which way? 12733 Who are you?,"she asked. |
12733 | Who did this to you? |
12733 | Who is it? |
12733 | Who is it? |
12733 | Who is this black man that makes up the face and body of a savage God in this grotesque and blasphemous mural? |
12733 | Who is this mother fucker? |
12733 | Who knows? |
12733 | Who won? |
12733 | Who''s that? |
12733 | Who? 12733 Who?" |
12733 | Who? |
12733 | Whose car is in the drive? |
12733 | Why are you just lying around? |
12733 | Why are you really living here in Tijuana? 12733 Why could n''t you have just drawn still- life or landscapes?" |
12733 | Why did it take you so long to get back? |
12733 | Why did you become a whore with such fancy- dancy words? |
12733 | Why do I need to do that when you understand what IÂ � Om saying in person? |
12733 | Why do n''t you ask her yourself? 12733 Why do n''t you believe in God?" |
12733 | Why do n''t you stay? |
12733 | Why do people have to match? 12733 Why do you think that God put stupid animals like Mouse on four legs? |
12733 | Why do you want me to walk you home? 12733 Why do you wear those things?" |
12733 | Why does it have to play with its prey? 12733 Why is the blood on my hands and vagina?" |
12733 | Why not address me? |
12733 | Why not? |
12733 | Why shoot they who give freely? |
12733 | Why would you think that? 12733 Why''s Rita/ Lily not coming?" |
12733 | Why? 12733 Why? |
12733 | Why? 12733 Why?" |
12733 | Why? |
12733 | Why? |
12733 | Whydaya think we got somethin � O like that in here? |
12733 | Will they do that to the North Koreans? |
12733 | Will you sleep with Cat tonight? |
12733 | Witches � O magic? |
12733 | With Monopoly money,he chuckled"With what?" |
12733 | With or without me? |
12733 | With what? |
12733 | Without me? |
12733 | Wo n''t Hispanic Betty answer the telephone? |
12733 | Would have? |
12733 | Would you care to come into my office? |
12733 | Would you like that? |
12733 | Y entonces tu volveres a nuestra hogar? |
12733 | Yes, but why do you want to know that? |
12733 | Yes, how can it be anything else? 12733 Yes, what about her?" |
12733 | Yes? |
12733 | Yes? |
12733 | Yongo mal ha su isumnika? |
12733 | You a cop? |
12733 | You are n''t feeling sick now, are you? |
12733 | You bored? |
12733 | You came all the way here by yourself? |
12733 | You do n''t eat meat, Gabriele? |
12733 | You gon na kick me out next? |
12733 | You gon na play checkers or am I gon na gota Chuck''s? |
12733 | You gotted all of the lights up there, Miss? |
12733 | You have n''t contacted that boy in all this time? |
12733 | You no can sleep none? |
12733 | You really wo n''t stay? |
12733 | You said something? |
12733 | You want to eat salami? |
12733 | You wo n''t fire me now for looking floja? |
12733 | You wouldn � Ot mind? |
12733 | You''ll buy one? |
12733 | Your food? |
12733 | You � Ore down here in the family room, and down here is mine, isn � Ot it? 12733 You � Ore kicking me out?" |
12733 |  � OHave always.  � O You haven � Ot seen me for two years so how would you know? |
12733 | ''Do you eat kimchee?'' |
12733 | ''Do you eat rice?'' |
12733 | ''Hate? |
12733 | ''How can I not?'' |
12733 | ''What is kimchee?" |
12733 | ''What is your name? |
12733 | ''What profession is that, dear son?'' |
12733 | ''When will she return?'' |
12733 | ( Early you basketball did?) |
12733 | ( We taxi to use?) |
12733 | -- My cousin is always wondering about you  � N What? |
12733 | -- can I say''My heavens''without getting my head cut off like a bad Turk or aberrant Afghan woman not wearing her burka?" |
12733 | A cat can pretend to be stealth and invisible, but does that mean it is smart? |
12733 | Africa?" |
12733 | After all, contemplation involved having to contemplate something and what else was there but this ball, this planet of movement? |
12733 | After all, how surprised should one be that the entity was grounded in simple pleasures? |
12733 | Ain � Ot Catholicism and Christianity pretty? |
12733 | All right? |
12733 | Also, as a sociable animal, do n''t you feel the need to follow the herd? |
12733 | Am I disturbing you?" |
12733 | Am I right? |
12733 | Am I right? |
12733 | And as for Mouse, what other name has it ever had? |
12733 | And could you call Nathaniel later this week just to ask him how he is? |
12733 | And do you take the same she, yourself, to be your wedded wife to have and to hold until death do you part? |
12733 | And if that is what you want why should I put these lights up for you?" |
12733 | And last week what had been her role of chauffeuring Nathaniel and his giddy date to an amusement park unless it were the beginning to that end? |
12733 | And of art, what was it actually? |
12733 | And yet if this were the true form of love, he often asked himself, would n''t it be so fulfilling that he would give himself to it completely? |
12733 | And yet there is a stepfather? |
12733 | And yet with each new house his aversion to say,"Trick or treat?" |
12733 | And you?" |
12733 | Antediluvian? |
12733 | Anything else?" |
12733 | Are all people so at a loss of identity that they grope in front of anything that has a chance of being less perishable than themselves? |
12733 | Are you a believer or a non- believer?" |
12733 | Are you angry?" |
12733 | Are you going to take my head off for that?" |
12733 | Are you here all by yourself?" |
12733 | Are you here now?" |
12733 | Are you listening? |
12733 | Are you sick? |
12733 | Are you still friends with Nathaniel?" |
12733 | Aren � Ot most problems on this planet due to this animalistic self- preserving cleverness? |
12733 | Aren � Ot you a little old for this thing?" |
12733 | As her house had myriad rooms, so she assumed, would be the amount of trespassers Gabriele( to all):"Who or what the hell are you?" |
12733 | At one moment she heard him say,"That steak sure looks good on the TV, does n''t it Honey?" |
12733 | Before that I thought of you as a caring mother and before that--""A disgusting whore?" |
12733 | But had he not mutilated four months earlier? |
12733 | But then yours was a little worse wasn � Ot it? |
12733 | But then, how did she know that she didn � Ot know what he thought he knew? |
12733 | But were they friends, more than friends, or less than friends? |
12733 | But why was the larger black billiard ball moving to begin with? |
12733 | By having a child I gained companionship on my journey into aloneness � N""And?" |
12733 | Ca n''t I be naked in my own home?" |
12733 | Ca n''t you do that?" |
12733 | Ca n''t you sweep it into the dustbin? |
12733 | Can I have it back?" |
12733 | Can I help you?" |
12733 | Can another be water or oxygen? |
12733 | Can another one be your sustenance? |
12733 | Can we have some privacy?" |
12733 | Can you really say that you have n''t known anything all these months?" |
12733 | Can you? |
12733 | Certainly a conversation beginning with"Hello; how are you?" |
12733 | Como se dice? |
12733 | Contact for what? |
12733 | Could she be so supercilious as to think that the common experiences of those normal or normal acting people counted for nothing? |
12733 | Could you bring it to me, and could you bring back a cold washcloth too?" |
12733 | Das stimmt, nitch wahr?" |
12733 | Did Seong Seob decide that the relationship was not for him? |
12733 | Did authority figures believe that making others wait aggrandized their influence? |
12733 | Did man have a higher purpose than this? |
12733 | Did n''t you say that the group home got you a job waiting on tables in the concession area of the skating rink?" |
12733 | Did she care to be as dour and sour as a spinster? |
12733 | Did she really contemplate more than others, and were here contemplations more trenchant than others? |
12733 | Did the mind fool a person into believing one spot was better than another one so that action could be implemented without lots of hesitation? |
12733 | Did the subconscious, like an empress dowager, make its maneuvers on conscious reality behind the scenes? |
12733 | Did this friend become busy? |
12733 | Did you eat anything nutritious earlier?" |
12733 | Did you find the contact man, Ricardo, waiting for you at the shelter?" |
12733 | Did you get back to your apartment okay? |
12733 | Did you guys just come from the museum?" |
12733 | Didn � Ot it bang around his mouth and peek loosely from his lips? |
12733 | Didn � Ot those eyes say,"What are you doing with that whore?" |
12733 | Didn � Ot you hear the car drive away?" |
12733 | Do I look mad? |
12733 | Do n''t you know that you ca n''t run away from me?" |
12733 | Do n''t you think so? |
12733 | Do n''t you think so?" |
12733 | Do n''t you want to follow this God unquestioningly and eat the fables that are thrown in your trough?" |
12733 | Do n''t you?" |
12733 | Do the two of you do anything together?" |
12733 | Do you approve of teachers doing that to students?" |
12733 | Do you have a hotel room?" |
12733 | Do you know how much international schools cost?" |
12733 | Do you like Rimsky?" |
12733 | Do you like that guy?" |
12733 | Do you need to use me?" |
12733 | Do you remember? |
12733 | Do you remember? |
12733 | Do you still have his mobile number? |
12733 | Do you think God is awful?" |
12733 | Do you think so? |
12733 | Do you think that could be making him angry?" |
12733 | Do you understand what sex is?" |
12733 | Do you want some chewing tobacco?" |
12733 | Do you want to hear everything?" |
12733 | Does that make sense?" |
12733 | Don � Ot you remember me?" |
12733 | For a moment she blamed a woman''s susceptibility to become a mother for her blas? |
12733 | For it perceived hospitals as containers of human suffering instead of deliverance from illness? |
12733 | From what state?" |
12733 | Gabriele again thought,"Once did n''t she claim that her mother and father would soon be experiencing their twenty- fifth wedding anniversary? |
12733 | Gabriele did n''t think that there was much of a similarity between the urbane Parisians and the dust city dwellers of Tijuana but what did she know? |
12733 | Gabriele, why do n''t you get married?" |
12733 | Gabriele? |
12733 | Gabriele?" |
12733 | Girl or guy friend? |
12733 | Gone where? |
12733 | Grading completed?" |
12733 | Had he, Sung Huin, personally said anything at all to cause this? |
12733 | Had her repugnance for men caused this? |
12733 | Had her senses been more astute than her cognition? |
12733 | Had n''t there been a time when he knew the brilliance of grass poking through the crevices of his bare feet? |
12733 | Had she bought at least one of these dogs for the experiment of discovering his ability to care or to prompt that attribute? |
12733 | Had she forgotten about her when there were other people in her life? |
12733 | Had she used Rita/ Lily to fulfill her limited social requirements and then dumped her, figuratively, on the side of the freeway linking to Albany? |
12733 | Had the two of them really neglected to contact the boys all this time--she with hers and he with his? |
12733 | Has life really been so flat ever since? |
12733 | Have n''t you ever eaten a corndog before?" |
12733 | Have n''t you ever seen a woman laugh while doing the laundry before? |
12733 | Have you always had this stuttering problem?" |
12733 | Have you ever thought about this issue? |
12733 | Have you never heard of Masters and Johnson? |
12733 | He did n''t say,"I''m sorry, but could you go?" |
12733 | He did not say that predominant thought that was in his eyes,"I''m sorry, but could you go, please?" |
12733 | He said,"Anyong Hashimnika?" |
12733 | He said,"No, I would n''t; but would you have a brother?" |
12733 | He thought this as Saeng Seob sat down in the living room and said,"Can you really think with that thing on?" |
12733 | Heart-- is that the receptacle of these highly prized human emotions for contemporary man? |
12733 | Hey amigo, wanna go downtown?" |
12733 | How are you?" |
12733 | How can a relationship change to be closer than what it started out initially?" |
12733 | How clever are disingenuous actions really? |
12733 | How come it''s my cat?" |
12733 | How could he be raping the woman when he, Sang Huin, had written him in his car, repressing his savage impulses like a good social creature? |
12733 | How could she contribute to society when she did not believe in it? |
12733 | How could she do functions that would keep it nice and operative looking? |
12733 | How could she, the maverick that she might be, add more purpose to the state of mankind than this? |
12733 | How did she know that he believed that her malingering was synonymous to theirs and had disdain for both? |
12733 | How did she know what he thought? |
12733 | How did you know it was me?" |
12733 | How do you, Mr. Petulant, know what I know?" |
12733 | How doya � O know Tunafish?" |
12733 | How have you been? |
12733 | How is it that such simple pleasures continually elude you? |
12733 | How is it that you have made such cynical and erroneous views of the world?" |
12733 | How is it, or lack of it, relevant to anything at all? |
12733 | How long does it take to piss, anyhow?" |
12733 | How many people are in your family?'' |
12733 | How much is it?" |
12733 | How supportive did you want me to be outside of becoming you? |
12733 | How was a self an extension of others? |
12733 | How was it that she continued to knock? |
12733 | How was school?" |
12733 | How would I get there?" |
12733 | How would she get it out now that it was there? |
12733 | How would she know whether or not it had ruptured? |
12733 | However, responsible as one should be to others how could she have disregarded the strange novel sounds that splashed in her imagination? |
12733 | Huh? |
12733 | I didn � Ot want to go on year after year fighting the temptation to wind it up and listen � E.Who is this with the dog? |
12733 | I guess that is a bit strange, huh?" |
12733 | I have n''t bothered to put on the mother garb equating it as garbled garbage but who is to say that it is not better for the boy in the long term? |
12733 | I need to change jackets so can you take the one I have on to the cleaners?" |
12733 | I suppose he could care about some of us and not others, but would n''t that lower him to human levels? |
12733 | I thought the last time we were together I was Aten and you were Akhenaten, or was it the other way around?" |
12733 | I''m no nurse so what would I know? |
12733 | If all people were like Moonie cult members avoiding negativity would n''t the illusion transform reality? |
12733 | If all people were shadows of this realm in the flickering of light, what solid entity cast the shadow? |
12733 | If not, wouldn � Ot that mean that she was back in Ithaca? |
12733 | If the shadows were more concrete than the light, what would this say about life? |
12733 | If they were human, what did that say about being human?" |
12733 | If you are needing a smuggler to get her across why isn � Ot that done in Tijuana?" |
12733 | In one quick gesture she snatched his Pocket PC out of his shirt pocket and asked,"What is this?" |
12733 | In this case, there will just be smiles on the kitten''s face, eh? |
12733 | Inertia? |
12733 | Is n''t that what those group home counselors of yours tell you?" |
12733 | Is that so bad? |
12733 | Is that the only thing you can say?" |
12733 | Is that your opinion of your people?" |
12733 | Is there no one at St. Michaels whom you play with?" |
12733 | Is your friend at the table with you? |
12733 | It happened?" |
12733 | It hurt; but, Sang Huin rationalized it was what Sung Ki needed so why should n''t he talk about it? |
12733 | It means what? |
12733 | It permeates everything in the trailer, does n''t it? |
12733 | It''s sick?" |
12733 | It''s still in my dreams--""What about me? |
12733 | It � Os a little late to go back in time, wouldn � Ot you say? |
12733 | Just me and my weird thoughts � E.Purpose? |
12733 | Like what? |
12733 | Lily gargled, spat, repeated the process, and then yelled back toward Gabriele,"Do you miss Nathaniel, your Adagio?" |
12733 | Maybe it was a little naughty, but men like that sort of thing, do n''t you think so Gabriele? |
12733 | More than the physical response what did he crave? |
12733 | No desea ir el vacaciones?" |
12733 | No mom?" |
12733 | No tiene sentido? |
12733 | No, I ca n''t blame it on a period every day of the month.... What am I doing here? |
12733 | Not much of a snowflake, are you? |
12733 | Now I can tell you things because there wo n''t be any damage, eh? |
12733 | Now did she once again have to prostitute herself in the physical domain with some stranger at the door? |
12733 | Of his friend, Yang Kwam, what importance to the long- term aspect of his life did this man make? |
12733 | Oh, why wo n''t my mouth work right at getting this out?" |
12733 | One could find in Chongju a McDonalds with an Internet caf? |
12733 | One of your Johns?" |
12733 | Petersburg?" |
12733 | Prior to the war, what American had ever known of the existence of Kuwait outside of geography teachers? |
12733 | Pussy, you say? |
12733 | Que significa"orita?" |
12733 | Quest?" |
12733 | Quest?" |
12733 | Really? |
12733 | Reflexively jumping into pleasure like a lifebuoy, as a human did, what could one expect? |
12733 | Remember? |
12733 | Right? |
12733 | Sangfroid?" |
12733 | She doubted it at first, but then why should she doubt? |
12733 | She has bona fide reasons to hate me so who am I to stop her? |
12733 | She heard further steps pursue the top story... or was she imagining them? |
12733 | She spoke,"What am I now-- this sexy art mom weirdo-- this idea of yours now at this stage?" |
12733 | Should I chase him away out of a fear that we are all strangers?" |
12733 | Should I cu- cu- cu- come inside?" |
12733 | Should she take her son with her as part of his education? |
12733 | Should she throw up what little energy she had? |
12733 | Simmons?" |
12733 | So are you saying that your feelings are mostly agitation or being agitated about being agitated?" |
12733 | So what were these ideas of yours about me in my many stages?" |
12733 | So, what if she were unfaithful in a sense? |
12733 | So, what is it?" |
12733 | So, what then does it mean? |
12733 | So, you ran away from work?" |
12733 | Sometimes at the primary school in Muguk he would ask,"Where are you from?" |
12733 | Stand for?" |
12733 | Still if you are going to give up women why stop there? |
12733 | Still that does n''t always happen, eh? |
12733 | Still that does n''t exactly make or break a relationship, does it?" |
12733 | Still, did he really want to write something that others might imitate unwisely? |
12733 | Still, what can I do? |
12733 | Surely there are blind bad guys in penitentiaries; and who am I to judge him?" |
12733 | Surely this God envisions a greater picture? |
12733 | Teenagers, right? |
12733 | The shaking was quite palpable but what could they do other than pretend that what they were creating was forever? |
12733 | Then I took the flight to Tokyo and then-- What does any of it matter anyway? |
12733 | Then she loudly asked and proclaimed,"Do you take this woman to be your lawful wedded wife to have and to hold until dead do you part? |
12733 | Then to MF she said,"So you guys are taking in Rome?" |
12733 | There are no pictures in that book, are there? |
12733 | They earn 150 pesos each week, but what can they do? |
12733 | Thick lips:"Call me Mr. P. How do you do, Mother? |
12733 | Was Candyman a hallucination like Rita/ Lily a few minutes ago? |
12733 | Was M for Michael? |
12733 | Was a split personality a real concept? |
12733 | Was he nothing but the composite of other people''s impressions of him? |
12733 | Was her door unlocked? |
12733 | Was her reasoning so fallible? |
12733 | Was her role as the mommy storming the party something so farcical? |
12733 | Was it God? |
12733 | Was it for the companionship of both boys or was it for her own companionship? |
12733 | Was it here in Tijuana, in Tokyo or Hong Kong, Seoul or Sapporo, or a mezcla( mixture)? |
12733 | Was it possible to live life without being in its illusions? |
12733 | Was it so awful to admit this? |
12733 | Was life just a pale version of what was really out there? |
12733 | Was n''t marriage created to give sense to such passions? |
12733 | Was she such a farce as a mother? |
12733 | Was that it? |
12733 | Was the Earth a good place? |
12733 | Was the boy too so unforgivable, so unreachable now? |
12733 | Was there a god? |
12733 | Was there no such thing as caring? |
12733 | Was there really a realm where ideas were the true form? |
12733 | Was this friend hit by a car? |
12733 | Was this malevolent rocker of the baby � Os body and soul God? |
12733 | Was this the epitome of a woman? |
12733 | Was this the only meaning of life, she asked herself, this soothing of imagined mental travail? |
12733 | Well, how do I say this? |
12733 | Well � Enow, you are wiser for knowing the situation with Santa so I can tell you things, eh? |
12733 | Were all humans this way? |
12733 | Were n''t more altruistic connections really what life was about? |
12733 | Were these the feelings of a secondary will or was it the voice of God trying to choke deleterious determination before she was choked by it? |
12733 | Were these women so unforgivable, so unreachable now? |
12733 | Were they Michael''s footsteps? |
12733 | Weren � Ot they impertinent? |
12733 | What about a dog or a gift certificate to Swenson''s Ice Cream parlor? |
12733 | What about her?" |
12733 | What about it? |
12733 | What about me?" |
12733 | What about you? |
12733 | What are you doing wasting all the minutes of your life trying to get someone to be with you? |
12733 | What are you doing?" |
12733 | What are you reading?" |
12733 | What can I do for you?" |
12733 | What can I give you? |
12733 | What could I do? |
12733 | What could have happened? |
12733 | What did a cockroach know? |
12733 | What did a dog know? |
12733 | What did any of his actions towards others matter? |
12733 | What did he know that he could teach? |
12733 | What did her disconnection matter at all in the scheme of things, anyway? |
12733 | What did her disconnection matter to the gods, who if they existed at all, despised life? |
12733 | What did it matter? |
12733 | What did you do?" |
12733 | What did you expect? |
12733 | What did you say?" |
12733 | What do I do?" |
12733 | What do n''t I concern myself with? |
12733 | What do you care about it?" |
12733 | What do you know of any of that? |
12733 | What do you know of finances and paying bills? |
12733 | What do you say?" |
12733 | What do you want?" |
12733 | What does it do to you to have to deliver a pizza to someone not wearing any clothes?" |
12733 | What else can I do but laugh at it? |
12733 | What if he does?" |
12733 | What if he gets hit by a car? |
12733 | What if the boys were to see you smoking that?" |
12733 | What is that? |
12733 | What is the source of this anxiety for my sake?" |
12733 | What is your first name?" |
12733 | What is your last name?" |
12733 | What made him attack himself so? |
12733 | What more could one want from a friendship? |
12733 | What on Earth makes you want to block off your own thoughts this way? |
12733 | What possibly can you see up there at this point?'' |
12733 | What right would I have to stop you?" |
12733 | What sort of graduate psychology classes at Rice University taught you parenting techniques like that?" |
12733 | What type of an example would I set if I were to cling to things, to relationships, never knowing myself? |
12733 | What was it to her? |
12733 | What was it? |
12733 | What was the prime mover of inertia? |
12733 | What well? |
12733 | What were your impressions of it?" |
12733 | What would she do now that her graduate studies had ended? |
12733 | What''s more revolting than a man? |
12733 | What''s your impression of Italy so far?" |
12733 | What, he thought to himself, was the word for lake? |
12733 | What? |
12733 | What? � E Why do I make jealousy equated to primal drives of cavemen and cave mice, of mice and men? |
12733 | What � Os the word?" |
12733 | What � Os wrong with that? |
12733 | When did you last communicate with her?" |
12733 | When one was n''t mandated to a table by one of those restaurant hosts, why would a given customer choose one table over that of another? |
12733 | When she gained composure she asked,"So then, should I say that you need no one?" |
12733 | When she was born did she bring them into existence, and when she died would the human race cease to exist? |
12733 | When you play dodge ball you run away from being hit by the ball, don � Ot you? |
12733 | Where did you study Spanish?" |
12733 | Where do you live? |
12733 | Where have you been? |
12733 | Where have you been?" |
12733 | Where is the babysitter, Nathaniel?" |
12733 | Where would I find something like that?" |
12733 | Where would she go? |
12733 | Who are they?" |
12733 | Who can blame him? |
12733 | Who knows? |
12733 | Who would dispute the docile make of a woman to be ravaged? |
12733 | Who would dispute the naturalness of a woman being there for a man''s pleasures? |
12733 | Who would they become? |
12733 | Why ca n''t they just love each other and appreciate their differences?" |
12733 | Why ca n''t you forgive her?'' |
12733 | Why can � Ot you just take me out and force me to buy a ticket? |
12733 | Why did human beings end in such closure? |
12733 | Why did they gain worth and awareness of their being only in personal interactions? |
12733 | Why does it have to be written down as a fine and a court appearance if I want to contest the fine? |
12733 | Why is your hair this way? |
12733 | Why not Puerta Vallerta or Mexico City?" |
12733 | Why should being in Kansas under the auspices of an aunt be different? |
12733 | Why should society be structured differently? |
12733 | Why would n''t they? |
12733 | Why?" |
12733 | Will I get a hateful text message on my cellular telephone? |
12733 | Will it expedite me getting out of here?" |
12733 | Will they tie me up until I make a vow of secrecy by signing my allegiance in blood? |
12733 | Will this be how it will go awry? |
12733 | Will you be here in a hundred years? |
12733 | Will you play checkers with me?" |
12733 | Willya''take me with you when you go off to the seventh continent?" |
12733 | Witching allows you to know who is on the phone?" |
12733 | With unapologietic indifference she said,"Does it happen very often?" |
12733 | Would n''t that be a pretty sight?" |
12733 | Would n''t you agree?" |
12733 | Would n''t you think so? |
12733 | Would she act the maternal part of worrying, crying, and feeling angry and betrayed? |
12733 | Would she let an external event discombobulate her in such a nervous disorder? |
12733 | Would you allow me to kiss your cheek?" |
12733 | Would you pay attention to this discussion if I threw coffee in your lap? |
12733 | Yang--""What do you want with him?" |
12733 | You alright in there?" |
12733 | You are such a baby, you are, but now you are a bit wiser, eh? |
12733 | You aren � Ot really kicking me out are you?" |
12733 | You can feel him but you will never see him again � Eunless  � N""Unless what?" |
12733 | You don � Ot understand?" |
12733 | You feel that you want to tell the truth?" |
12733 | You go to bed soon?" |
12733 | You have a wiser and smarter brain than any other 4 year old who has ever walked the planet, do n''t you think so? |
12733 | You have gotten more cynical with the years, haven � Ot you, Gabriele?" |
12733 | You know what I want to do? |
12733 | You sure you can get into something R- rated this way?" |
12733 | You?" |
12733 | Your mother has told you when she comes back?" |
12733 | [ That � Os so, isn � Ot it?] |
12733 | asked the obtuse girl"What call?" |
12733 | Â � N Special friend? |
38790 | But I do n''t look it a bit, do I? |
38790 | Is this Milton''s Cottage? |
38790 | Is this really Milton''s chair? 38790 Who are the Confederates?" |
38790 | Are there not numberless penny and halfpenny papers carrying on the good work to this day? |
38790 | As to the richer folk, is there anything fresh to be said? |
38790 | But is it"dramatic art"in the full sense of the word? |
38790 | But who may tell of the full delights of the Thames? |
38790 | CHAPTER XIII THE DEFENCE OF ENGLAND To keep this England secure, what are the means? |
38790 | Do they of nights climb down from their windows and trip a measure together? |
38790 | Does not every one at least think that he knows? |
38790 | Else why the street meeting, which in the English climate is usually a harsh tax on the comfort of speakers and audience? |
38790 | Here''s the up- and- downs; who''ll take a seat in the chair- o? |
38790 | If so, does the fact speak for good augury or evil augury? |
38790 | If they had had, would they have fought their hard fight for the freedom of the Press? |
38790 | Is this a casual incident or is it a habit? |
38790 | Sure?" |
38790 | The Englishman take his pleasures sadly? |
38790 | The Englishman take his pleasures sadly? |
38790 | The object of the drama? |
38790 | Torture scenes on the stage? |
38790 | What do I mean by dogma? |
38790 | What is life but a droll, rather wretched than rare- o? |
38790 | Who are the Confederates? |
38790 | Who can suggest, for instance, a common denominator to suit the Devonshire Moors, the Norfolk Broads, the Surrey Downs, and the Thames Valley? |
38790 | Will the youngster be good at cricket, or football, or rowing? |
3623 | ''So you went to Ka- thlu- el- lon, did you?'' 3623 And do tell me,"she said,"are you quite immortal? |
3623 | Can anything be plainer,he might say,"than that I light my twopenny candle on earth and that the sun then kindles his great fire in heaven? |
3623 | For why, say they, should they commit an act of aggression, when he and his kindred can so easily repay them? 3623 Of what was he guilty? |
3623 | Well,says she,"and where is your death? |
3623 | Whither will you send her? |
3623 | --"Whose is she?" |
3623 | ?\ it in the grass by the wayside. |
3623 | Again, though the sun may be said to die daily, in what sense can he be said to be torn in pieces? |
3623 | An old woman tended her; and when the girl was grown to maidenhood she asked the old woman,"Where do you go so often?" |
3623 | And are you too great an enchanter ever to feel human suffering?" |
3623 | And how does he think it may be guarded against? |
3623 | And is this the return you make to me?" |
3623 | And she meditated in her heart, saying,"Can not I by virtue of the great name of Ra make myself a goddess and reign like him in heaven and earth?" |
3623 | And the company of gods cried,"What aileth thee?" |
3623 | And who so well fitted to perform the ceremony as the king, the living representative of the sky- god? |
3623 | And why, before doing so, had he to pluck the Golden Bough? |
3623 | Are the other effigies, which are burned in the spring and midsummer bonfires, susceptible of the same explanation? |
3623 | As day by day the sun sank lower and lower in the sky, could he be certain that the luminary would ever retrace his heavenly road? |
3623 | As it is being launched, the people cry,"O sickness, go from here; turn back; what do you here in this poor land?" |
3623 | At Wiedingharde in Schleswig when a stranger comes to the threshing- floor he is asked,"Shall I teach you the flail- dance?" |
3623 | At every bunch of feathers the ghost stops to consider,"Is this the whole of my body or only a part of it?" |
3623 | At this juncture I ventured a question:"''Why do you not let him go, or give him some water?'' |
3623 | But how did it originate? |
3623 | But if his daily death was the theme of the legend, why was it celebrated by an annual ceremony? |
3623 | But if the object of the taboos is to save his life, the question arises, How is their observance supposed to effect this end? |
3623 | But if these personages represent, as they certainly do, the spirit of vegetation in spring, the question arises, Why kill them? |
3623 | But we have still to ask, What was the Golden Bough? |
3623 | But we have still to ask, What was the rule of succession to the kingdom among the old Latin tribes? |
3623 | But we naturally ask, How did it come about that benefits so great and manifold were supposed to be attained by means so simple? |
3623 | Can death never touch you? |
3623 | Can they have thought that the mistletoe dropped on the oak in a flash of lightning? |
3623 | Diana and Virbius WHO does not know Turner''s picture of the Golden Bough? |
3623 | Even if the fire, as seems probable, was originally always made with oak- wood, why should it have been necessary to pull the mistletoe? |
3623 | For was he not severing the body of the corn- god with his sickle and trampling it to pieces under the hoofs of his cattle on the threshing- floor? |
3623 | For what can grey or yellow- legged spiders do to the Thunder- beings? |
3623 | For who but the rich of this world can thus afford to fling pearls away? |
3623 | Her lament is for a wilderness where no cypresses(?) |
3623 | How are their relations to each other to be adjusted, and room found for both in the mythological system? |
3623 | How can history be written without names?" |
3623 | How could the loss of virtue in the poison be a physical consequence of the loss of virtue in the poison- maker''s wife? |
3623 | How could they continue to cherish expectations that were invariably doomed to disappointment? |
3623 | How dare to repeat experiments that had failed so often? |
3623 | How should_ you_ know?'' |
3623 | How, then, could they catch it? |
3623 | I should be glad to know whether, when I have put on my green robe in spring, the trees do not afterwards do the same? |
3623 | If a man has more vital places than one in his body, why, the savage may think, should he not have more vital places than one outside it? |
3623 | If such reasonings could pass muster among ourselves, need we wonder that they long escaped detection by the savage? |
3623 | If the priest of Nemi posed not merely as a king, but as a god of the grove, we have still to ask, What deity in particular did he personate? |
3623 | If the question is put, why do men desire to deposit their life outside their bodies? |
3623 | In another Hindoo tale an ogre is asked by his daughter,"Papa, where do you keep your soul?" |
3623 | In such cases the problem for mythology is, having got two distinct personifications of the same object, what to do with them? |
3623 | In what way did people imagine that they could procure so many goods or avoid so many ills by the application of fire and smoke, of embers and ashes? |
3623 | Is it fire? |
3623 | Is it not glorious to be eaten by the children of a chief?" |
3623 | Is the girl who awakens him the fresh verdure or the genial sunshine of spring? |
3623 | Is the sleeper the leafless forest or the bare earth of winter? |
3623 | It die? |
3623 | It is plaited and kept till the( next?) |
3623 | It only remains to ask, Why was the mistletoe called the Golden Bough? |
3623 | Loki asked him,"Why do you not shoot at Balder?" |
3623 | May not the same rule of descent have furnished a motive for incest with a daughter? |
3623 | May they not have believed, in fact, that it was a plant fallen from the sky, a gift of the divinity?" |
3623 | Mock thunder, we know, has been made by various peoples as a rain- charm in modern times; why should it not have been made by kings in antiquity? |
3623 | Next they run towards the carcase uttering lamentations and saying,"Who killed you? |
3623 | Not to touch the Earth AT THE OUTSET of this book two questions were proposed for answer: Why had the priest of Aricia to slay his predecessor? |
3623 | Now why is that? |
3623 | O how shall we part from thee? |
3623 | On perceiving him the peasant called out,"Who is this whom I see coming so proudly along?" |
3623 | Others answer thrice,"What have you?" |
3623 | She said,"What is it, divine Father? |
3623 | So he laughed and said,"Why do you wish to know? |
3623 | So the youth asked him,"Tell me, where is your soul hidden? |
3623 | The Burning of Effigies in the Fires WE have still to ask, What is the meaning of burning effigies in the fire at these festivals? |
3623 | The chief will assemble his men and say to them,''Are you in order in your villages?'' |
3623 | The intention doubtless was to keep the names a profound secret; and how could that be done more surely than by sinking them in the sea? |
3623 | The reader may well be tempted to ask, How was it that intelligent men did not sooner detect the fallacy of magic? |
3623 | The thief may even ask boldly,"Did I pay for it?" |
3623 | Then Loki asked,"Have all things sworn to spare Balder?" |
3623 | Then another farming- man shouts very loudly,''What have ye? |
3623 | Then he asks the woman,"Has the child come?" |
3623 | Then the executioner asks,"Shall I behead this King?" |
3623 | To enquire,"What is your name?" |
3623 | To keep up our parable, what will be the colour of the web which the Fates are now weaving on the humming loom of time? |
3623 | To the question, How was the representative of the corn- spirit chosen? |
3623 | To what causes does he attribute it? |
3623 | Was it fire? |
3623 | We have seen that at Spachendorf, in Austrian Silesia, on the morning of Rupert''s Day( Shrove Tuesday? |
3623 | We have still to ask, What is the meaning of such sacrifices? |
3623 | We must ask ourselves, Why did the author of these legends pitch upon Orestes and Hippolytus in order to explain Virbius and the King of the Wood? |
3623 | We must, therefore, ask: What does early man understand by death? |
3623 | What is life without thee? |
3623 | What is the object of slaying the spirit of vegetation at any time and above all in spring, when his services are most wanted? |
3623 | What more appropriate parentage could be invented for the corn which springs from the ground that has been fertilised by the water of heaven? |
3623 | What more could the spirits want? |
3623 | What then is the meaning of killing a turtle in which the soul of a kinsman is believed to be present? |
3623 | When the question was put, Why they did not hold their noses also, lest the child''s soul should get into one of them? |
3623 | Who cut off your head? |
3623 | Who knows which? |
3623 | Who skinned you? |
3623 | Why cling to beliefs which were so flatly contradicted by experience? |
3623 | Why is this? |
3623 | Why should it not have obtained in ancient Latium? |
3623 | Why then did the Greeks represent the corn both as a mother and a daughter? |
3623 | Why was he called the King of the Wood? |
3623 | Why was his office spoken of as a kingdom? |
3623 | Why were men and animals burnt to death at these festivals? |
3623 | Why were you our enemy? |
3623 | Why, since he can put his life outside himself, should he not transfer one portion of it to one animal and another to another? |
3623 | Will the great movement which for centuries has been slowly altering the complexion of thought be continued in the near future? |
3623 | With what heart persist in playing venerable antics that led to nothing, and mumbling solemn balderdash that remained without effect? |
3623 | Would it not have been better that we should remain friends? |
3623 | Would you not have been better with us? |
3623 | and could the good- man and the good- wife deny to the spirits of their dead the welcome which they gave to the cows? |
3623 | and may not their union have been yearly celebrated in a_ theogamy_ or divine marriage? |
3623 | and why had each candidate for the Arician priesthood to pluck it before he could slay the priest? |
3623 | and why in particular should a man be thought to stunt his growth by uttering his own name? |
3623 | he said at last,''know you not how precious it is? |
3623 | is it in your dwelling?" |
3623 | is it water? |
3623 | or will a reaction set in which may arrest progress and even undo much that has been done? |
3623 | retorted the German,"you the Son of God, and do n''t speak all languages, and do n''t even know German? |
3623 | was it water? |
3623 | what have ye? |
3623 | what have ye?'' |
3623 | what human vision could spy them glimmering far down in the dim depths of the green water? |
3623 | what is it?" |
3623 | what''s this? |
3623 | why should I salute the sun?" |
3623 | will it be white or red? |
30190 | Alone? |
30190 | And,sez I,"have you been all this time, months and months, a considerin''?" |
30190 | Arvilly? |
30190 | But,sez I,"did you ever expect to set your mortal eyes on''t?" |
30190 | Did I ask you to, Josiah? |
30190 | Did he turn away from sinners and the evils of the sinful world and say they wuz too vile for him to mix with? |
30190 | Did it make it any better for him to cry and take on? 30190 Did you see them officers last night to the table eatin''sass with a knife? |
30190 | Did you shed tears, Josiah? |
30190 | Do you spoze Serintha Jane would git excited and look any different and talk any faster or louder if the house should get afire? |
30190 | Do you think so? 30190 Do you vote, Elder Minkley?" |
30190 | Eat,sez I,"who can eat in such a time as this?" |
30190 | How can the crazed brain of a drunken man help a nation only to weaken and destroy? 30190 How did Ury fix it?" |
30190 | How did you git such dretful fears of marriage? |
30190 | How duz Robert Strong feel about it? |
30190 | How duz he protect her? |
30190 | How is the little girl different? |
30190 | How long do you lay out to wait, Josiah Allen? |
30190 | I-- I murder a man? |
30190 | If a man wuz dyin''of thirst, and that cup could be used to save him, do n''t you spoze the Lord would want it used for that, Elder Wessel? |
30190 | In secret? |
30190 | Is that much like that little slip of Sister Bobbett''s growin''in a tea- cup? 30190 Josiah,"sez I,"do you realize what a glorious day this is and how much, how much we have to be thankful for?" |
30190 | Mar? |
30190 | Neighbor? |
30190 | Oh, Samantha,sez he anxiously,"ca n''t you take a joke? |
30190 | Oh, why do n''t they call it a cow or a brindle calf? |
30190 | Or danger? |
30190 | Sister Henzy? |
30190 | Tea? |
30190 | Tirzah Ann? |
30190 | Well, I said hen, did n''t I? |
30190 | Well, then what made him eat it, grandpa? |
30190 | Well, what did you tell him, Josiah Allen? |
30190 | Well, what of it? 30190 Well, you can spozen the case, ca n''t you? |
30190 | Well,sez Arvilly,"what verdict do you think that fool brought in?" |
30190 | Well,sez I,"cinnamon trees; who ever thought of seein''cinnamon trees?" |
30190 | What a companion Waitstill would be for him? |
30190 | What are you a goin''to do, Samantha? |
30190 | What are you goin''to do? 30190 What do you mean, Samantha?" |
30190 | What do you spoze is goin''on inside of that great roarin'', blazin''monster? |
30190 | What duz he say to that? |
30190 | What duz she say about it? |
30190 | What fool? |
30190 | What hinders the poor man from''tendin''socials? |
30190 | What is it, Samantha? |
30190 | What will happen next to me? |
30190 | What would you do if you went back? |
30190 | Where art thou, Josiah, and when shall we meet agin? 30190 Where is Waitstill Webb?" |
30190 | Where will you put it? |
30190 | Who is accountable for the death of my husband? 30190 Who is the fourth?" |
30190 | Who is the third? |
30190 | Why did n''t Adam take the apple away from her and throw it away? 30190 Why should you leave it to Ury? |
30190 | Why,sez Meechim,"how could he see it? |
30190 | Will you vote as you pray? |
30190 | William? |
30190 | Agin he looked anxiously round as much as to say, oh why, why do n''t somebody else come to hear this remarkable talk? |
30190 | Ah, how, how could I forgit him? |
30190 | Am I to leave you, Josiah?" |
30190 | And Arvilly sez,"Where will you git your sling, and where will you git your Davids?" |
30190 | And I sez,"She wuz fainted away, how could she holler?" |
30190 | And I sez,"Why did n''t Adam do as you always do, Josiah, ketch up a stick and put an end to it?" |
30190 | And I sez:"No, dear lamb; what is it sayin''?" |
30190 | And I sez:"What makes you try to? |
30190 | And I, forgittin''his fashionable aims, sez to him,"See some what, Josiah?" |
30190 | And Josiah says,"Who is Pali?" |
30190 | And Josiah sez,"Why do n''t you say you wish you wuz a elephant and could look on? |
30190 | And Josiah sez:"What say, Samantha?" |
30190 | And Josiah whispered back in a loud shrill whisper that I know they hearn:"If they wanted to see Go- ethe, why did n''t they say Go- ethe?" |
30190 | And Josiah whispered to me and sez,"Gerty who? |
30190 | And Tommy called down,"What say, grandma?" |
30190 | And Tommy looked at him in wonder,"Did the apple make him sick, grandpa?" |
30190 | And Tommy sez,"Hain''t your heart here too, grandma? |
30190 | And are you sick a- bed? |
30190 | And he added with a sarcastick smile,"Do n''t that make you think of poker? |
30190 | And how did the world receive it? |
30190 | And if he can carry letters so much cheaper why ca n''t he carry packages at just the same reduced rate, and talk over the wires, etc., etc.? |
30190 | And if it wuz your boy what would you say of the legalized crime that made him so? |
30190 | And sez I, reasonable:"What is the use, Mr. Astofeller, of so much money, anyway? |
30190 | And so it went on, sad things put me in mind of him and joyful things, all, all speakin''of him, and how, how wuz I to brook the separation? |
30190 | And the hull twelve sez,"What did n''t the Lord mean? |
30190 | And where should I be?" |
30190 | And who do you spoze stood there? |
30190 | And who do you spoze wuz to be librarian and live here clost to her idol? |
30190 | And why, why do I not hear from thee?" |
30190 | And wuz not I happy? |
30190 | And wuzn''t Thomas J. happy? |
30190 | Are you a- backslidin''or hain''t you?" |
30190 | Arvilly snapped out:"What good will that do if we carry private hells to burn''em up before they die? |
30190 | But Arvilly always puttin''her oar in and always hash on our govermunt, sez:"Why, what is this different from what we do in America?" |
30190 | But Arvilly sez,"Well, how much better is it in the United States-- or most of''em? |
30190 | But I answered her evasive, and agin I giv vent to a low groan, and sez to myself,"Can I let the Pacific Ocean roll between me and Josiah? |
30190 | But I drawed Arvilly''s attention to one on''em that seemed extra dextrious in managin''his board and sez,"How under the sun duz he do it, Arvilly?" |
30190 | But I sez:"Josiah Allen, do you want some liniment on your hand and your tongue? |
30190 | But anon and bime bye these dark meditations died away, for what wuz cloud or cold, or white icy shores? |
30190 | But can you do it?" |
30190 | But could I-- could I take it? |
30190 | But fifty years hence where will her beauty be, if she wuz married alone for that? |
30190 | But how could they, dribblin''along as they did ten hunderd years? |
30190 | But how could twenty- two hands rest on that one small fore- top? |
30190 | But how did them doves know two from three? |
30190 | But how did they ever entice''em into that saloon?" |
30190 | But then what two folks ever did see each other? |
30190 | But what did that feeble old man want of twenty carriages? |
30190 | But what of that? |
30190 | But where is there anything perfect here below? |
30190 | But who wuz goin''with Tommy? |
30190 | But who wuz sot down guilty in God''s great book of Justice that day? |
30190 | But why should I sadden and depress the hearts of a good natered public? |
30190 | But why should n''t there be beautiful things in a country where every one is a artist? |
30190 | But, sez I to myself almost instinctively:"What if Sister Bobbett wuz here? |
30190 | Can I not everywhere behold the mirrors of the sun and stars? |
30190 | Could I frighten him into the right path? |
30190 | Could I influence him for the right? |
30190 | Could I leave him? |
30190 | Could I live through it? |
30190 | Could it be so? |
30190 | Could it be? |
30190 | Could it be? |
30190 | Dear Josiah, should I never see thee agin? |
30190 | Did I ever expect to witness such a seen? |
30190 | Did the Hongkongers ever think on''t, that they wuz ten thousand milds from Jonesville? |
30190 | Did they want to make me their brides? |
30190 | Did you ever think of seein''''em growin''fifty feet high? |
30190 | Do you know who you''re speakin''to?" |
30190 | Do you spoze I can git into my hen house ten thousand milds off to git you a hen? |
30190 | Does he keep your conscience and clean it off when it gits black and nasty by such doin''s as this?" |
30190 | Dorothy never knowed it-- what wuz the use of cloudin''her bright young life with the awful shadder? |
30190 | For what advantage is liberty of the body when the soul, the weak will, is bound in the most galling of chains? |
30190 | For what duz the Book say? |
30190 | For you must remember what it sez:"If you who have plenty give not to your brother in need, how dwelleth the love of God in you? |
30190 | Had he passed away callin''on my name? |
30190 | Had his fond heart broken under the too great strain? |
30190 | Hain''t that better than discontent and envy and despair, bloody riots and revolutions? |
30190 | Hain''t that better, Mr. Astofeller, than to leave jest money for a fashionable wife and golf- playin''sons to run through?" |
30190 | Have I got to see a back- slidden Josiah?" |
30190 | He acted real puggicky and sez:"Ca n''t I ever please you, Samantha? |
30190 | He hurried away, sayin''agin in them same heart- breakin''axents:"Where is Lucia?" |
30190 | He obeyed me implicitly, and sez he anxiously, as he laid''em all on the bed:"You''ve gin up the idee, hain''t you, Samantha?" |
30190 | He turned quick as a wink,"Then you wo n''t help me?" |
30190 | He wuz rejoiced to see me I knowed, though his words wuz:"What under the sun wuz you hangin''round and preachin''to a Emperor for? |
30190 | He''s afraid of race suicide; tell him I''m the father of forty- seven children-- will not that touch his heart?" |
30190 | Holy Land, wuz I, indeed, to see thee? |
30190 | How can a righteous ruler handle this menace to freedom and purity save to stamp it beneath his feet? |
30190 | How can children born under the curse of drink be otherwise than a burden and curse to the public weal? |
30190 | How can she be ketched up, weighin''pretty nigh two hundred?" |
30190 | How can the Scriptures be fulfilled if the rich lift up the poor and make them wealthy? |
30190 | How could you do it, Josiah?" |
30190 | How could you done it? |
30190 | How did he feel when he writ it? |
30190 | How duz he look?" |
30190 | How is Christina and Alfonso? |
30190 | How long,"sez I, turning toward him fierce in my aspect,"how long is the Lord and decent folks goin''to allow such things to go on?" |
30190 | How was he? |
30190 | How would it be with her if thrown with a wolf in sheep''s clothing? |
30190 | I have asked him sometimes,"Who is Carabi, I hearn you talkin''to out in the yard? |
30190 | I looked daggers at him out of my eyes and sez:"What wo n''t you take it into your head to do next, Josiah Allen?" |
30190 | I looked full in his face and sez,"Has foreign travel shook your morals till they begin to tottle? |
30190 | I sez agin,"reachin''out her long arms clear acrost the Pacific to lead them sweet girls into the pit she has dug for her soldiers? |
30190 | I sez to Josiah:"Did I ever expect to see allspice trees?" |
30190 | I sez,"Arvilly, ca n''t you wear sunthin''more appropriate to the occasion?" |
30190 | I sez,"Josiah Allen, be you a Methodist deacon, or be you not? |
30190 | I sithed,"why is it that the apron strings of Duty are so often made of black crape, but yet I must cling to''em?" |
30190 | I then spoke in anxious, appealin''axents:"Arvilly, are you there? |
30190 | I thought to myself:"Is Arvilly a- goin''to come up missin'', as our dear Aronette did?" |
30190 | I wonder how he felt as he stood amongst his playmates and if a shadow of what wuz to come rested on his young heart? |
30190 | I wuz at my wits''end; I glanced at the door; there wuz no lock on it; what should I do? |
30190 | Is it love that makes a ma stand by, and see her boy turn summer sets and warhoop in meetin''-houses? |
30190 | Is she any relation of old Ike Montague of North Loontown?" |
30190 | It beats all how much help there is here, the halls seemed full on''em, but what would our hired help say if we made''em dress like these Hindus? |
30190 | It wuz my pride in Jonesville; wuz I to lose my life for it? |
30190 | Josiah looked at the card intently and then whispered to me:"How be I goin''to know what I am eatin''from these duck tracks?" |
30190 | Josiah sez:"Why did n''t Ni- obe keep her mouth shet then?" |
30190 | Josiah stepped up and held out his hand, and sez:"Elder, I''m glad to see you, how do you do? |
30190 | Josiah whispered to me:"How be I agoin''to smoke tobacco, Samantha? |
30190 | Josiah worried some about it, and sez:"What duz one old man want of''leven thousand rooms? |
30190 | May I call you Auntie?" |
30190 | Miss Meechim said as we started back:"Did you ever see the like? |
30190 | Must I tell the shameful facts? |
30190 | Not one word from my beloved pardner do I hear-- is Josiah dead?" |
30190 | Oh, why do n''t Robert come and protect her?" |
30190 | Or are you dead? |
30190 | Or do you want me to steal one for you?" |
30190 | Or what wife ever see her husband''s real temper and character until after years of experience?" |
30190 | Or wuz it my good looks that wuz ondoin''of me? |
30190 | Part from your pardner for months and months?" |
30190 | Plow would I looked at my mother- in- law''s funeral with a white night gown on and my hair braided down my back with a white ribbin on it? |
30190 | Sez Arvilly,"Do you believe in following the Lord Jesus Christ?" |
30190 | Sez Arvilly,"What bridegroom ever did see his bride as she really wuz? |
30190 | Sez Arvilly:"Why not vote that men shall fasten their trousers to their vests with hook and eyes, they are so much less dangerous?" |
30190 | Sez I coldly,"Then you lay out to go to meetin''horseback, do you? |
30190 | Sez I, coldly,"How do you spell dogs, Josiah Allen?" |
30190 | Sez I,"Do you mean the coolies?" |
30190 | Sez I,"If you''re guiltless what makes you look so meachin?" |
30190 | Sez I:"Do you remember my little oleander growin''in a sap bucket, Josiah? |
30190 | Sez I:"What would Miss Bobbett and Sister Henzy say if they could see''em?" |
30190 | Sez Josiah,"What if Cousin Zebedee Allen could n''t wear whiskers? |
30190 | Sez he agin,"Rich men have their clubs to which they may go, and drink all they choose-- carouse, do as they please, and why not poor men, too?" |
30190 | Sez he to me one day:"I spoze they represent the new young woman?" |
30190 | Sez he to the dealer:"What do you mean by it, you dishonest tike, you? |
30190 | Sez he,"What foe do you allude to, mam?" |
30190 | Sez he,"What sovereign, madam, do you represent, and from what country do you come?" |
30190 | Sez he:"You consarned fool, how do you spoze I can give you a hen? |
30190 | Sez she,"Oh, why ca n''t they believe as we do in America? |
30190 | Sez she,"Would you want to set down happy, and rock, and eat peanuts, if you knew that your husband and children wuz drowndin''out in the canal?" |
30190 | Sez she:"Why do n''t they vote agin men''s suspenders? |
30190 | She was settin''in a big rocken''-chair rocken voyolently, and as I went past her she says:"Have we got to New York yet?" |
30190 | She wuz a foreigner, how could she know what I said? |
30190 | Swish, swash, roar, roar, Where is Josiah? |
30190 | There are lots of men carryin''round serpents, and I sez to Josiah,"Who under the sun would want to buy a snake unless they wuz crazy?" |
30190 | They could n''t have been got into any boat, and how did they do it? |
30190 | They wuz dressed well, but dretful bulged out and swollen lookin'', and I sez to their ma one day:"Are your children dropsical?" |
30190 | Thomas J. had got independent rich, and Maggie has come into a large property; they had means enough, but who wuz to go with him? |
30190 | Till the hard experience of married life brought out her hidden traits, good and bad? |
30190 | Tommy''s pretty face looked sad and he sez:"Why do good folks let it go on?" |
30190 | Was you prepared to see such magnificence, Josiah Allen''s wife?" |
30190 | We leave all we love, we go out and fight your battles when you tell us to, we face mutilation and death for you-- isn''t that enough? |
30190 | What did Miss Meechim know of that hallowed clime? |
30190 | What did she know of the grief that wrung my heart? |
30190 | What does she know of sin or sorrow, or worldliness or vanity?" |
30190 | What hain''t them old eyes seen if she senses anything? |
30190 | What have they done?" |
30190 | What kind of a mouth must Lord Buddha have had if that wuz a sample of his teeth? |
30190 | What more do you want?" |
30190 | What would Sister Sylvester Bobbett say? |
30190 | What would she say?" |
30190 | What wuz aginst common sense?" |
30190 | What-- what wuz goin''on way down in the depths below if this wuz the seen outside? |
30190 | When did a woman ever have any voice in saying that there should be a war? |
30190 | When shall I see thee agin?" |
30190 | Where are its powerful attractions? |
30190 | Where are you? |
30190 | Where is Josiah? |
30190 | Where is Lucia?" |
30190 | Where is Mr. Saladin and his folks? |
30190 | Where wuz the beauty and charm of that countenance-- that mouth that had spoke such wise words? |
30190 | Where wuz they takin''me? |
30190 | Where? |
30190 | Where?" |
30190 | Which looks the Worst in God''s sight? |
30190 | Who can tell the mysteries of love? |
30190 | Who is accountable for the death and everlastin''ruin of my son, my husband, my father and my lover? |
30190 | Whoever heard of common breakfast at twelve M.?" |
30190 | Whose hands made them statutes? |
30190 | Why are you here without him? |
30190 | Why ca n''t they all be Episcopalians?" |
30190 | Why should I take off my specs to meet Elder Minkley?" |
30190 | Why should anybody fear being burned if they had no knowledge of fire?" |
30190 | Why the name fairly takes hold of my heart- strings,"sez I;"has he made well by his big manufactory?" |
30190 | Why, as I told Josiah, Joel Gowdey is called our best carpenter in Jonesville, but if he should try to plan that buildin'', where would he be? |
30190 | Why, how it would look for that pa to let some of his children heap up more money than they could use, whilst some of the children wuz starvin''? |
30190 | Will Duty''s apron string hold up under the strain, or will it break with me? |
30190 | Will it stretch out clear to China? |
30190 | With the sweet gentleness and amiable nater of the Japans what will not the divine religion of the Lord Jesus do for them? |
30190 | Would n''t it have looked dog queer to the other nations of the world to have seen it done? |
30190 | Would n''t you turn the might of your great strength aginst it?" |
30190 | Would the old mair never whinner joyfully at my appearance, or Snip bark a welcome? |
30190 | Wuz I to perish in these wilds? |
30190 | Wuz they carryin''me off for booty? |
30190 | Wuz things comin''out as I wanted''em to come? |
30190 | Wuzn''t I proud of my lantanna growin''in Ma Smith''s blue sugar bowl? |
30190 | Wuzn''t it discouragin''to wash the feet of the poorer classes every year of her life, and then be shot down by one on''em? |
30190 | You say a man dug this plate up; what if some woman should go to diggin''and find a plate provin''that one woman ort to have''leven husbands?" |
30190 | and his dynasty? |
30190 | and the children and the grandchildren? |
30190 | can I believe my eyes?" |
30190 | do you want us to tell how many sands there wuz on the flashing white beach that stretched out milds and milds? |
30190 | had that man a idee of becomin''a Parsee? |
30190 | how did they ever do it? |
30190 | must I cling to thy apron- strings here and now, enjoyin''as I do poor health and in another woman''s room? |
30190 | or she that wuz, is it you?" |
30190 | sez I agin,"is it you?" |
30190 | sez I in horrow,"you hain''t a goin''to jine the Mormons are you?" |
30190 | sez I,"do n''t you want to see any happiness agin?" |
30190 | sez I,"is it you?" |
30190 | sez I,"why should you leave it to Ury? |
30190 | sez Tommy inquirin''ly,"Do you mean my mamma or my grandma?" |
30190 | sez he, takin''out his bandanna and weepin''in consort,"what is money or ambition compared to the idol of my heart? |
30190 | sez he,"how would manny show off by the side of this dressin''?" |
30190 | sez he,"what is the matter?" |
30190 | sez he,"why I never sucked eggs when a boy; have I got to come to it in my old age? |
30190 | what would she say? |
30190 | when did I not think of him? |
30190 | when should I see thee again? |
30190 | where are you? |
30190 | will my heart strings that are wrapped completely round that man, will they stretch out the enormous length they will have to and still keep hull?" |
30190 | would not delerium ensue instead of sooth? |
30190 | you do n''t say that that is Willieminy?" |
30190 | you go and leave all the pleasures of this trip and go alone? |
36609 | ''tis he? |
36609 | (_ Begins_)--A wench I had, But where is she--? |
36609 | And as I waited did a book of wisdom Not chance into my hands to show the way? |
36609 | And have you roots and fruit enough for food; And have you joy in singing holy Vedas Here in this leafy- hearted hermitage? |
36609 | And is my house Even as your house? |
36609 | And is this wet with dew? |
36609 | And therefore tears? |
36609 | And what is O- Umè''s?... |
36609 | And whither do you go? |
36609 | And you have drawn me from the city here To break into his holy breast with passion? |
36609 | Are not their passions blown by every wind? |
36609 | Are not those stones the pyramids that thro The ages have stood waiting for this hour-- When I shall bring her beauty back, today? |
36609 | Are we to die because not otherwise Than with alluring now we can appease them? |
36609 | Are you aware what hour you have chosen? |
36609 | At the prime moment? |
36609 | Believe-- do, do?--that she_ can not_ arise? |
36609 | But if, perchance, the Elixir does not prove----_ Arduin._ Availing? |
36609 | But what burns in you? |
36609 | But whence are you? |
36609 | But----_ Arduin._ Is this not that land? |
36609 | Coldly flitting? |
36609 | Come, What is it? |
36609 | Delay you still? |
36609 | Did not great Hermes say of the Elixir It should be found-- And did not Polydos, The Greek, chancing upon it, raise his friends In battle slain?... |
36609 | Did not the Jew of Galilee, the Christ, Whom even you name Prophet, likewise win it? |
36609 | Do they not seem On the night air to hover? |
36609 | Do you fear? |
36609 | Do you not Behold what manner of creature you so clasp? |
36609 | Do you not know He is without there, at this moment, saying Unto the seven planets in their spheres, The seven incantations against death? |
36609 | For do you think So to prevent me From my fate- way? |
36609 | Has the tomb treachery to change the soul? |
36609 | Have not all things pointed to it? |
36609 | Have they a want that wantons not with guile, A tear that is not turgid with deceit? |
36609 | Have they not all the straying heart of Helen? |
36609 | He waits then there? |
36609 | Hear me, for I love one who----_ Arduin._ Is not-- I? |
36609 | Her face which can alone sow finitude''s Fell desolation with enverdured dreams And fill the ways of the world again with hope? |
36609 | Here with moaning Does it not hang Upon the roof- tree Hungering for you? |
36609 | I do not dream?... |
36609 | I''m not your love--_ Arduin._ Not--? |
36609 | If you come back to the Raja And without him, Know you what then will happen? |
36609 | In skies from whence you come, what is its name? |
36609 | Is beauty not the bloom of piety? |
36609 | Is it not I? |
36609 | Is not that face the Sphinx, Whose timeless and intemperable meaning No man has read in desert, star, or sea, But which must be the secret I unsphere? |
36609 | Isotta? |
36609 | It is you? |
36609 | It was her voice? |
36609 | Knowing that...[_ Breaks off, tensely._ Where is the priest''s house? |
36609 | Like Ion the son of him who... you? |
36609 | My son, you call? |
36609 | Not mine?... |
36609 | O saint, is it peace with you, and is all well? |
36609 | O, unto one who is So beautiful, are not all things most meet? |
36609 | Old Gigia, is it? |
36609 | Only faith that fades? |
36609 | Or whether she may not yet return, today, And with a heart that is a nymph''s, a soul That is a nun''s, Beguile me back to doting? |
36609 | Shall I not bring the leech? |
36609 | Shall we sing for entrance? |
36609 | So pure are you that surely you can tell me? |
36609 | The blessed Buddha And all the tablets Kept, ancestral? |
36609 | The day she died Did I not hear a voice That breathed into my brain she should arise? |
36609 | The lights lit for them? |
36609 | The tale is out about the maid? |
36609 | Then at length she stops close up to him and murmurs_: Does it not fill your heart, O Rishyas, With longing? |
36609 | Then it too Has thorns and poison? |
36609 | Then why must I, Who had in me a hope That rivalled Raphael''s or Leonardo''s, Keep, cozened so, that I contemn her shame? |
36609 | There by the lights Are not their spirits present? |
36609 | This was known-- But kept from me, Kept in silence, Kept for Sanko?... |
36609 | To dance and sing and seize him? |
36609 | Were the first words I read not,_ In ten years The miracle shall come-- Revealed to you within the land of the Sphinx_? |
36609 | What is it he means? |
36609 | Where''s Messer Giorgione? |
36609 | Whether she may not-- With that body God Might once, deceived, have moulded angels after--? |
36609 | Who beholds her body Given... to unabated eyes-- yet lives? |
36609 | Who makes a mocking of him?" |
36609 | Who spoke? |
36609 | Why have you come here? |
36609 | Will this servant, Whom my mother Dying left me, Waste my heart so? |
36609 | Will you not eat or drink? |
36609 | Will you not sit? |
36609 | Will you pause not? |
36609 | Woman, is it true? |
36609 | Ye skies, must I go mad now at this moment When I have brought her back from destiny? |
36609 | You uprisen? |
36609 | You who so gaze upon my goaded brow And face grown old with toil to conquer death? |
36609 | [_ Again bowing._ Is he not strong? |
36609 | [_ As he gazes._ Do you not know? |
36609 | [_ As to invisible judges._ You hear her say it? |
36609 | [_ Drops the skull._ Why have you left the city and come here? |
36609 | [_ Immovably._ Is he not kind? |
36609 | [_ Mockingly._ And did his ghost Not come here flitting? |
36609 | [_ Sets vessel down.__ Rhasis._ And I rejoice, master, for I have toiled With you these many years-- but is it sure? |
36609 | [_ She struggles._ Do you not now remember with my lips To yours, the brimming beauty of our youth? |
36609 | [_ She turns paler._ But Giorgione, a vassal to your sway? |
36609 | [_ Shrinks from her and then speaks wanly._ Never is there Trust in any? |
36609 | [_ Starting._ Listen, is it not he? |
36609 | [_ Starts._ But ha? |
36609 | [_ Strangely kissing her._ Do you not hear the nightingale that sang The song of our betrothal in Provence? |
36609 | [_ Suddenly starting from her._ Or is it that there in the grave, another--? |
36609 | [_ Tortured by half- born thoughts._ O, have I fallen into demon- snares? |
36609 | [_ With emotions he does not understand._ Koïl, what has he said? |
36609 | [_ With polished anger._ You dwell in my garden? |
36609 | _ Ama._ And should his tongue be Like that of the other, The priest of the pain- god? |
36609 | _ Ama._ Is he not brave? |
36609 | _ Arduin._ And spurn me more with it? |
36609 | _ Arduin._ But fear? |
36609 | _ Arduin._ Fail, fail, fail? |
36609 | _ Arduin._ Such dreams as these? |
36609 | _ Aretino._ How, what is this? |
36609 | _ Bellini._ And then from you, repentant of her fate? |
36609 | _ Bellini._ And to what end? |
36609 | _ Gigia._ Before I speak? |
36609 | _ Gigia._ How can I tell you, if I may Not speak? |
36609 | _ Giorgione._ Of what? |
36609 | _ Giorgione._ The love of a wanton? |
36609 | _ Ion._ And have him at the breaking of his dream With none near-- and our love''s desire be lost? |
36609 | _ Ion._ And make you forget our love, And the long bridal- hope of it deferred? |
36609 | _ Ion._ And should it, will he not the more forgive me? |
36609 | _ Ion._ Now? |
36609 | _ Ion._ Than this when most your face would deeply move him? |
36609 | _ O- Umè._ And you conspire here With Ama against me? |
36609 | _ O- Umè._ Will you revile him? |
36609 | _ Rhasis._ And wherefore? |
36609 | _ Rhasis._ But, master... are dreams true? |
36609 | _ Rishyas._ And what is this I feel for you, O wise one? |
36609 | _ Rishyas._ Not meet for you? |
36609 | _ Rishyas._ Slay? |
36609 | _ Rishyas._ The arms of many? |
36609 | _ Titian._ Come, do you jest? |
36609 | and believe-- you do?--that all wise men Of all the world could so have been deceived? |
36609 | and blind? |
36609 | and turn from him Whom you betrayed me for-- and swear again False love to me? |
36609 | do you not know me? |
36609 | fear? |
36609 | if not-- if it be not-- Is it that here returned you wish another? |
36609 | now to restore her? |
36609 | that can not be true? |
36609 | what is this? |
36609 | whose every kiss.... Do you not see? |
36609 | whose? |
36609 | will he not help you? |
36609 | you are falling from me too? |
36609 | you have arisen?... |
36609 | you have sent for them? |
36609 | you too? |
36609 | you who so oft have told On saintly walls the Magdalen''s sad tears? |
38848 | Is pride a fault, or must one develop one''s pride? 38848 Where are you going?" |
38848 | Who is he then? 38848 As he put it himself,Is it necessary to be modest, or, in other words, an imbecile?" |
38848 | But where was Gauguin to find his religion? |
38848 | Can one help admiring his tenacity? |
38848 | He finished a large picture, a sort of strange allegory of despair, entitled_ D''où venons nous? |
38848 | How then had they reached Tahiti? |
38848 | If I have painted daubs, why set out to gild them, to deceive people as to their quality?" |
38848 | Let me die in peace, forgotten, or if I ought to live, let me live in peace, forgotten.... What matter if I am the pupil of Bernard or Sérusier? |
38848 | Où allons nous?_ and then took arsenic. |
38848 | Que sommes nous? |
38848 | To envisage happiness, is that not a foretaste of Nirvana? |
38848 | What matter? |
38848 | When the Emperor asked him:"But where are your pictures?" |
38848 | _ Le Christ au Jardin d''Oliviers_ echoes the awful cry,"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
19944 | A beggar, and such a fellow? 19944 A new recruit?" |
19944 | All is well? |
19944 | And the wife, what has become of her? |
19944 | And why? 19944 And you; whence from?" |
19944 | At what does the Danna Sama rejoice? 19944 But O''Iwa-- what has occurred? |
19944 | Densuké saw the head? |
19944 | Does Kwaiba Dono gain satisfaction by such a vengeance? 19944 Does not the Sensei need aid in the bath? |
19944 | Does the beauty want an apartment to herself? 19944 Down with this Jusuké? |
19944 | Father, why the forehead so wrinkled? 19944 Has the life of Hana been so foul as to deserve such punishment in a future life? |
19944 | He has the contract? |
19944 | How comes it that the Lady O''Iwa is found at the house of Toémon? |
19944 | How face two opponents-- to right and left? |
19944 | How so? 19944 Ill? |
19944 | Is it not a fine prospect-- for Kazuma Dono? |
19944 | Iwa, is there money in the house? |
19944 | Iémon Dono? 19944 Kangetsu Shinshi; Kangetsu Shimmyo[u]; O''Iwa San, these people have died on the same day of the month-- and the year?" |
19944 | Kibei? 19944 Kill the O''Baké? |
19944 | Respectfully heard and understood: has the income been reduced? 19944 Sell her? |
19944 | The Ojo[u]san knows nothing of what has occurred in Yotsuya? 19944 The bill is paid? |
19944 | The honour of Tamiya: Cho[u]bei San? |
19944 | The honoured return; has other misfortune fallen on the House? |
19944 | The''Sanryaku''--what''s that? |
19944 | There is a lover? |
19944 | There is naught wrong with wine or viands? |
19944 | What has been going on here, O''Iwa Dono? 19944 What has happened?" |
19944 | What has happened? |
19944 | What is that? 19944 What is the matter with you? |
19944 | What is there to know? 19944 What is to be done?" |
19944 | What is wrong? 19944 What nonsense is this? |
19944 | What stuff is this for the ears of Sho[u]gen? 19944 What suspicious rascal is this, travelling the quarter at this hour? |
19944 | What''s that-- standing, slinking yonder by the wall? 19944 What''s that?" |
19944 | Whence had the Sensei produced all this wondrous get- up? 19944 Whence was this rice had? |
19944 | Where have they gone to, Kakusuké? |
19944 | Who are you, out at this hour of the night and in such weather? 19944 Who are you? |
19944 | Who''s that fellow? |
19944 | Why did Kichiro[u] take the three hundred_ ryo[u]_, giving to these fellows such a paltry sum? |
19944 | Why do so in such a barn? |
19944 | Why hasten? 19944 Why not make appeal at once?" |
19944 | [ 50]Is there but that to prove wit?" |
19944 | ''Plaster''? |
19944 | ''Tamiya? |
19944 | ''Who are you?'' |
19944 | --"And Iémon San, the House; they will be secure?" |
19944 | --"And Mobei has the real?" |
19944 | --"And food?" |
19944 | --"And plasters?" |
19944 | --"And what was the date of this money bond?" |
19944 | --"At what cost?" |
19944 | --"But is O''Iwa San really the cause of the death? |
19944 | --"Can you cook rice?" |
19944 | --"For how much?" |
19944 | --"How then with this one?" |
19944 | --"In some tradesman''s family?" |
19944 | --"In the name of all the_ kami_ and Buddhas, how has he come to such an end? |
19944 | --"Is she a monster; one of those long- necked, pop- eyed_ rokurokubi_?" |
19944 | --"Is that so?" |
19944 | --"Kibei and Iémon stand as witnesses,"replied Kwaiba--"Then how is this?" |
19944 | --"Since when has Matsu had aught to do with the affairs of the house? |
19944 | --"The Inkyo[u] an_ hotoké_; Iémon Dono and O''Hana are the husband and wife not present?" |
19944 | --"What is it, Wakadono?" |
19944 | --"When did this take place?" |
19944 | --"Who is he?" |
19944 | --"Who said there were?" |
19944 | --"Your husband? |
19944 | 2_--"He? |
19944 | A cold? |
19944 | A moment, and would the teeth of Jusuké be fastened in his shoulder? |
19944 | A snake? |
19944 | A stranger, why bring him into the ward? |
19944 | A visit paid in such garb? |
19944 | A week''s service? |
19944 | After all he is but a_ kozo[u]_.... What can this Jibei do for the lady of Tamiya?" |
19944 | All is ready?" |
19944 | Am I not grieved? |
19944 | An early start To[u]kaido[u] way? |
19944 | And Watanabé wo n''t answer? |
19944 | And business?" |
19944 | And is not the object of their worship a woman? |
19944 | And the Ojo[u]san whither will she go; what will she do?" |
19944 | And the arm, does it honourably progress?" |
19944 | And the bail? |
19944 | And the household goods; and separate properties of Tamiya-- all gone?" |
19944 | And the week''s settlement to make with this house?" |
19944 | And this money? |
19944 | And turn some of this anger on himself? |
19944 | And what has become of her? |
19944 | Approaching them he said--"Is this the house of Baryu?" |
19944 | Are not the words of Ito[u] Dono, of Akiyama Sama, of Cho[u]bei San still in Iwa''s ears? |
19944 | Are you a woman lacking sense?'' |
19944 | Are you affected by the heat?" |
19944 | Are you not very much out of tone?" |
19944 | Are you on your return? |
19944 | As barely having listened he asked--"When was this fight? |
19944 | As for Cho[u]bei, is the precious rascal at home?" |
19944 | At Myo[u]zen''s question he expressed gratified surprise, and unlimbered his lingual member at once--"Whose honoured funeral this? |
19944 | At Toémon''s they are used to lies?" |
19944 | At all events they get to Ombo[u]bori? |
19944 | At one time I was priest."--"Whereabouts?" |
19944 | At the fisherman''s acknowledgement--"Has a girl come here?... |
19944 | At this hour-- what has happened?" |
19944 | Being dead, is it not a ghost? |
19944 | But Ito[u] Dono?" |
19944 | But for the meal money had first to be secured...."--"Then there is money, or means to procure it? |
19944 | But how is the Oni( demon)? |
19944 | But how secure the position? |
19944 | But how? |
19944 | But is all this stuff Densuké''s? |
19944 | But is it expedient? |
19944 | But is not Kondo[u] Sama the_ nako[u]do_? |
19944 | But just now.... Is she suckling the child?" |
19944 | But what are you doing here, and at this hour? |
19944 | But what did become of her? |
19944 | But when he did see it, was the thing a matter of his own imagination? |
19944 | But who would blame a_ samurai_ for testing his blade on a beggar? |
19944 | But why did he bring in as_ muko_ a stranger?" |
19944 | But why such hatred toward this Kichitaro[u]? |
19944 | But-- how avoid incurring the divine anger of the Yotsuya Inari; how avoid being charged with the divine punishment? |
19944 | Can a woman be pregnant otherwise than by a man?" |
19944 | Can not the Ojo[u]san favour us by pouring the wine?" |
19944 | Can not women take their pleasure with whom they please without such dire results? |
19944 | Can she have affection for such an ugly fellow? |
19944 | Can the pastes of Suian Sensei change black to white?" |
19944 | Cho[u]bei, are you mad?" |
19944 | Cold? |
19944 | Continued Yoémon--"And what is Iwa doing at the house of Yoémon? |
19944 | Could not Kibei go to the Yoshiwara for a space? |
19944 | Danna, did you know him? |
19944 | Decide: is it agreed? |
19944 | Densuké has committed the carnal sin with the demon? |
19944 | Did Iémon know of his intention?" |
19944 | Did Kwaiba speak? |
19944 | Did it not already somewhat taint the air? |
19944 | Did not Iémon accept her?" |
19944 | Did she drown herself? |
19944 | Did she not spend her time in idling, and teaching the child the ways of her questionable life--''how to please men,''forsooth?... |
19944 | Did sickness cause the loss?" |
19944 | Do n''t attempt to lie to the priest.... You do n''t know? |
19944 | Do n''t it yet appear? |
19944 | Do you propose to adopt her?" |
19944 | Do you really believe this? |
19944 | Does Kwaiba consort with wenches of such ilk?" |
19944 | Does a ghost really appear?" |
19944 | Does no one come forward? |
19944 | Does not Iémon, the one- time neighbour Kazuma, recognize Cho[u]bei? |
19944 | Does not the voice answer for the person? |
19944 | Does she not remember times past, the reproof of the Danna? |
19944 | Does the Danna remain here? |
19944 | Does the Sensei leave his clients to their fate, or have the clients abandoned the Sensei? |
19944 | Eh, Iémon, Uji? |
19944 | Eh, Muko San?" |
19944 | Feeling out of sorts, has it not died? |
19944 | Fish or wine? |
19944 | For Goémon there is neither food nor clothing? |
19944 | For a tradesman''s money belt were they to disturb themselves? |
19944 | For a year, at morn and night of each day? |
19944 | Fortunately she is only out of repair on the surface.... Say ten_ ryo[u]_?" |
19944 | From Jibei, the_ fudasashi_ dealer? |
19944 | Further advice to a husband who wants but to get rid of the sight of an ugly face? |
19944 | Gombei San, has he come again? |
19944 | Groaned Densuké--"Danna Sama, a request."--"What?" |
19944 | Had Iémon returned? |
19944 | Had another succeeded where he had failed? |
19944 | Had he deserted her? |
19944 | Had he gone forth? |
19944 | Had he misinterpreted on his entrance? |
19944 | Had these frightened the woman? |
19944 | Has Densuké turned thief? |
19944 | Has Kosuké returned? |
19944 | Has O''Iwa San no means, nothing in coin?" |
19944 | Has Sho[u]gen no obligation toward his old friend Kwaiba? |
19944 | Has it come?" |
19944 | Has not Ito[u] Dono two spearmen when he goes abroad? |
19944 | Has she been tried and found wanting? |
19944 | Has she not been seen? |
19944 | Has the Shiba Kirido[u]shi matter cropped up?" |
19944 | Has the woman erred, and is the father''s sword dulled?" |
19944 | Have matters gone badly with the Danna in Iwa''s absence?" |
19944 | Have public institutions occupied this"public land"? |
19944 | Have you again one of those hysterical attacks, now so frequent? |
19944 | Have you gone mad? |
19944 | He answered these questions with a laugh--"Afraid? |
19944 | He continued his search--"Is it my little black fellow?" |
19944 | He has not stolen it? |
19944 | He is fit for nothing but to be a story- teller.... And you, Taki, what are you about?" |
19944 | He knew it; but how end life? |
19944 | He knew they spoke of the horribleness of death; but what was the cold script to the actuality? |
19944 | He turned his face to one side in disgust and horror--"Is this Kwaiba already dead and rotten? |
19944 | He was continually going to the stair and calling down--"Danna Sama, has the time come?... |
19944 | He...."--"Age and appearance?" |
19944 | Hence on considering the matter, was not Kikugoro[u] in every way a talented man? |
19944 | Here is just the thing.... How much? |
19944 | His family was ruined or reprieved according to a capricious estimation of its power of resentment-- and it became a question of"who next?" |
19944 | Homma struck hard--"Why deny the plain fact? |
19944 | Honoured Sir, how answer Kibei Dono''s question?" |
19944 | How about it?" |
19944 | How break in and kill them all? |
19944 | How came she in this vile den? |
19944 | How can Hana be afraid of snakes, living in this_ yashiki_ overgrown by weeds and grass, from roof to garden?" |
19944 | How comes O''Kamé here? |
19944 | How comes it entrance has been had to the ward? |
19944 | How deny such a guest? |
19944 | How did he die? |
19944 | How distinguish my steps from those of Akiyama San or other constant callers?" |
19944 | How does the account yonder stand? |
19944 | How has it happened? |
19944 | How has this mad woman knowledge of this deed? |
19944 | How has this occurred? |
19944 | How is it that death has been escaped? |
19944 | How is this Iémon to act? |
19944 | How learn? |
19944 | How much?" |
19944 | How neglect such an elaborate structure as the hair? |
19944 | How now Akiyama San?" |
19944 | How now, O''Iwa Sama? |
19944 | How now? |
19944 | How then did it come to pass that the shrine was removed to this far off site in Echizenbori, with such incongruous surroundings? |
19944 | How then is the divine wrath incurred by publication? |
19944 | How then were they to be run down? |
19944 | How was this money secured? |
19944 | How were those scars on the face come by? |
19944 | How would Jubei face all those?" |
19944 | I say, Okusama; how long have you been in that state? |
19944 | If this be not widely published, will not the theatre be deserted? |
19944 | In a quarrel over his wares with the vile women of this district?" |
19944 | In fact this epitome of length rarely spoke in good faith or temper--"The Go Inkyo[u] is to be congratulated? |
19944 | In that manner painful the change in appearance."--"Why? |
19944 | In the purchase of cow or horse, what does the buyer know of the animal? |
19944 | In this gloomy situation what was she to do? |
19944 | In whispering voice--"The honoured father''s words have been heard? |
19944 | Is Akiyama San reconciled? |
19944 | Is Densuké afraid of a dead man?" |
19944 | Is Rokuro[u]bei to shift for himself?" |
19944 | Is he a test for some new sword? |
19944 | Is he fit for nothing?" |
19944 | Is it Cho[u]bei San? |
19944 | Is it Goémon San? |
19944 | Is it Kichitaro[u]?" |
19944 | Is it Kondo[u] Sama? |
19944 | Is it Kyu[u]bei? |
19944 | Is it agreed?" |
19944 | Is it allowed to Iémon Dono to accompany them?" |
19944 | Is it good or bad fortune? |
19944 | Is it man or woman?" |
19944 | Is it man or woman?" |
19944 | Is it part of his long experience that a servant should question the wages placed under his nose? |
19944 | Is it really true-- that the O''Baké will be expelled the ward, in disgrace?" |
19944 | Is it true?" |
19944 | Is more needed?" |
19944 | Is not Kibei Dono the_ bushi_? |
19944 | Is not that true?" |
19944 | Is not the master of the metal shop present? |
19944 | Is pain condescended?" |
19944 | Is rice powder found in such a place? |
19944 | Is she impotent, or deformed; or is Cho[u]bei making fools of us?" |
19944 | Is she mad? |
19944 | Is she not? |
19944 | Is she so angered that no answer is given? |
19944 | Is some jest deigned at the mother''s expense? |
19944 | Is such language, such abruptness, to be used in his presence?" |
19944 | Is that expected by the Kumi- gashira?" |
19944 | Is that her?... |
19944 | Is that it? |
19944 | Is that so? |
19944 | Is that the master''s order? |
19944 | Is the Wakadono, too, getting nerves? |
19944 | Is there a bent comb in stock?" |
19944 | Is there argument from wife to husband? |
19944 | Is there no harsh remark forthcoming as to one who holds illicit intercourse with the husband of another? |
19944 | Is there no money at the command of O''Iwa San? |
19944 | Is there no money in the house?... |
19944 | Is there no other place?" |
19944 | Is there no other place?" |
19944 | Is there no outbreak as to this? |
19944 | Is this Iémon to go without food because the_ hotoké_ dislikes the smell of eels?... |
19944 | Is your heart that of a demon? |
19944 | It being at one time a brothel, would not something appear in this house? |
19944 | It is in India.... And India? |
19944 | It is required now? |
19944 | It was the toilet dealer''s turn to show confusion--"Honoured lady, is nothing known?"--"Known?" |
19944 | Ito[u] Dono? |
19944 | Ito[u] Sama, Akiyama or Kondo[u] San, has misfortune come to them, without a word of condolence from Iwa? |
19944 | Iémon has surprised you?" |
19944 | Jinzaémon, can you cook eels?" |
19944 | Joy perhaps? |
19944 | Just like this--"_ Man_--"Where does it show itself?" |
19944 | Kanda? |
19944 | Kobé? |
19944 | Kwaiba gasped at his coolness--"And Iémon Dono, does he open Tamiya to the presence of its ex- lady and mistress?" |
19944 | Kwaiba turned to Iémon--"A draught: no? |
19944 | Matazaémon smiled faintly-- with gratification or grimness? |
19944 | More than once the remark has been heard as to these shrines of Nippon--"Their temples? |
19944 | No rice yet, Densuké? |
19944 | No? |
19944 | No?" |
19944 | Not afraid? |
19944 | Now he was in less haste:"The heart, how judge it? |
19944 | Now separated, again in what world will there be meeting? |
19944 | O''Iwa San; and to- night does Iémon join the company at the house of the_ Kumi- gashira_? |
19944 | O''Iwa San? |
19944 | O''Iwa, disturbed, anxious, when was her countenance to be open, her breast cleared of its darkness? |
19944 | O''Iwa? |
19944 | O''Taki heard her with rising rage--"O''Iwa? |
19944 | O''Yoshi as confessor or as midwife? |
19944 | On coming to the theatre--_ Friend_--"Good day: how goes it with Yoshi San? |
19944 | On my part-- on my part-- had I aught to do with this? |
19944 | Once dead, does the rascal die again?" |
19944 | Only a_ bu_.... Too high? |
19944 | Only then will you cease to afflict the ward?... |
19944 | Or has Kakusuké seen a ghost?" |
19944 | Or has is ended by going away? |
19944 | Or, are matters the other way? |
19944 | Out of Kibei''s sight? |
19944 | Pass him here at once.... Is it Cho[u]bei? |
19944 | Pickled_ daikon_(_ nukamisozuké_)?" |
19944 | Pledge? |
19944 | Pray who may he be, in these parts?" |
19944 | Prayers? |
19944 | Prayers?... |
19944 | Pressed by necessity? |
19944 | Probably she has killed herself.... And now, O''Taki San, is not your man Cho[u]bei a scoundrel?" |
19944 | Promptly he was on his feet--"A beggar has frightened Hana? |
19944 | Rokuro[u]bei had a last touch of conscience--"Cho[u]bei, what manner of man is this one you bring? |
19944 | Said Homma--"No confession yet?" |
19944 | Said Iémon--"What happened after this Iémon left Samoncho[u]? |
19944 | Said Jugoro[u]--"Banto[u] San, whither now? |
19944 | Said Kikugoro[u]:_ Kikugoro[u]_--"Onozo[u], do n''t I frighten you somewhat in this shape?" |
19944 | Said Kondo[u]--"Where have you been? |
19944 | Said Kuma--"A question or so: this tall_ samurai_, an oldish man, who lives close by; who is he?" |
19944 | Said Kwaiba--"''Tis the rats; they gnaw and worry at Kwaiba."--"Rats?" |
19944 | Said Kwaiba--"Did Iémon really beat her? |
19944 | Said Kwaiba--"Then Iémon Uji, you know this woman?" |
19944 | Said Kwaiba--"What have you there; the inventory? |
19944 | Said Rokuro[u]bei abruptly--"How knows O''Kamé of the death of Myo[u]zen; who told her of the fate of O''Tama?" |
19944 | Said Rokuro[u]bei--"What difficulty does the matter present? |
19944 | Said he to the captain of the_ tsujiban_--"Why truss up this man, even though a tradesman? |
19944 | Said he--"Not to see the lady.... Is she so horrible?" |
19944 | Said one--"Does Cho[u]bei San get the_ ryo[u]_ out of groom or bride? |
19944 | Said she crossly--"Who is it?... |
19944 | Said the child in troubled voice:_ Child_--"Honoured mother-- where go ye? |
19944 | Said the embarrassed and enraged Cho[u]bei--"Wh- what does this rude entrance of Taki mean? |
19944 | Said the official drily--"Magomé Dono is here to talk with Yo[u]gen. What has he been up to?" |
19944 | Said the one- time priest--"What of that? |
19944 | Said the woman--"Are you mad, to pay twenty_ ryo[u]_ for such an ugly wench? |
19944 | Said the younger man, in matter of fact tone--"Who could fail toward Iwa? |
19944 | She gave a little chuckle--"Who would have thought it!"--"What?" |
19944 | She is a bold wench, unmarried at that age; and none too chaste eh, Cho[u]bei San? |
19944 | She laughed wildly--"Who? |
19944 | She would cheat this Matsu out of twenty_ ryo[u]_? |
19944 | She''s forty at least.... What may be your honoured age?" |
19944 | Should he leave the body where it was? |
19944 | Since when has my face been like this? |
19944 | Since when were women exempt from service or punishment? |
19944 | Since when were_ samurai_ women sold to life service? |
19944 | Stammered Densuké--"On the rubbish heap?" |
19944 | Strange: is she not at home? |
19944 | Surely the gossip of the neighbours as to Densuké is not true? |
19944 | That is much to ask; particularly when the body is not in hand.... A substitute will do? |
19944 | That''s the tale, is it? |
19944 | The Daiho[u]-in eagerly leaned close over O''Hana--"O''Iwa: where are you? |
19944 | The Danna Sama has forgotten his pipe?" |
19944 | The O''Baké?" |
19944 | The Yamadaya had an idea--"It rarely passes a hundred_ ryo[u]_.... Five years is accepted? |
19944 | The bath, is it ready? |
19944 | The charm shakes and quivers; it possesses O''Iwa.... You would rest in Samoncho[u] ground? |
19944 | The consideration? |
19944 | The day of the vow and journey to Kompira? |
19944 | The debt will be forgiven?" |
19944 | The five_ ryo[u]_ you spoke of?" |
19944 | The girl smiled.--"I come from Fudarakusan in the South Ocean.... Where is Fudarakusan? |
19944 | The honoured business, is it on some matter of moment that Cho[u]bei is summoned?" |
19944 | The last words brought her full awake--"Is the Kashiku drunk with wine? |
19944 | The postponement in the first instance-- was it providential? |
19944 | The proof? |
19944 | The river? |
19944 | The woman? |
19944 | Then noting him closely--"What has happened, Kakusuké? |
19944 | Then take thirty_ ryo[u]_ and deliver this girl to the Yamadaya.... A true Tayu? |
19944 | There is no getting out of it?" |
19944 | There is nothing wrong with it?" |
19944 | This Kinsaburo[u], this Genzaémon has evil fortune led him into the clutches of the O''Baké? |
19944 | This Kosuké an adulterous fellow? |
19944 | This Mobei was amazed--''The O''Baké.... What O''Baké?'' |
19944 | This day a week; was it not the day to a year of the Ojo[u]san''s leaving the house in Yotsuya?" |
19944 | This man was to be the husband of the O''Baké? |
19944 | Those dirty, shabby places, without architecture or interest, the haunts of snotty, ragged children?" |
19944 | To Cho[u]bei--"You... my fine fellow... is this a time for_ go_? |
19944 | To Jubei''s question Takuan had answered--"The meaning? |
19944 | To draw out the dressing stand to hand: the little combs of willow, where are they? |
19944 | To poison her? |
19944 | To talk? |
19944 | To- night he is unwell, positively ill. Come at dawn and Myo[u]zen will receive you."--"Who? |
19944 | To[u]gané? |
19944 | Tomobei, are you mad? |
19944 | Too cordial entertainment by the_ chu[u]gen_ of Inagaki Dono? |
19944 | Unblushingly do you join in the hate of the Okumura, parent and child?" |
19944 | Unfeeling? |
19944 | Was Kwaiba frightened? |
19944 | Was Kwaiba mad? |
19944 | Was all affection gone? |
19944 | Was he a wicked fellow? |
19944 | Was he in real fact a magician?" |
19944 | Was he mad, or drunk? |
19944 | Was he mad? |
19944 | Was he not the mediator in the marriage between Iémon and Iwa? |
19944 | Was he not the son of Takahashi Daihachiro[u]? |
19944 | Was it a ghost, thought I? |
19944 | Was it''three years,''she said? |
19944 | Was she to be the victim of some crazy outburst? |
19944 | Was the Wakadono losing his nerve; as had the O''Dono? |
19944 | Was the question asked in innocence, or in deepest guile? |
19944 | Was this charlatan playing a double game? |
19944 | Was this the cause of Kondo[u]''s joy? |
19944 | Was this the ghost? |
19944 | Were such things said? |
19944 | Were the words true? |
19944 | What appears?" |
19944 | What are you about? |
19944 | What are you doing? |
19944 | What can be done? |
19944 | What can be the matter?" |
19944 | What did she pay you for the deed?... |
19944 | What difference will her looks make to Iémon thirty years hence? |
19944 | What disorder eats into the life and happiness of Kwaiba?" |
19944 | What does it amount to? |
19944 | What else has she had to console her during these bitter months but the thought of their kindness? |
19944 | What had Miemon said? |
19944 | What had a naked man to fear from getting wet? |
19944 | What had come into the soul of this gentle woman? |
19944 | What has Cho[u]bei San to do with any O''Iwa and the house of Toémon San? |
19944 | What has become of the girl? |
19944 | What has become of your body? |
19944 | What has happened? |
19944 | What has happened?" |
19944 | What has he done? |
19944 | What is Cho[u]bei to do? |
19944 | What is Jusuké''s purse worth with nothing in it? |
19944 | What is his real nature? |
19944 | What is it worth to Kwaiba Dono?" |
19944 | What is the name of that poisonous drug, begged of Suian until secured? |
19944 | What is to be done in such a case?" |
19944 | What is to be done, pressed as Iémon is for funds? |
19944 | What is to become of the unfortunate? |
19944 | What is wrong?" |
19944 | What kind of dress does that ghost wear? |
19944 | What should it be?" |
19944 | What then of Kibei? |
19944 | What thinks Kakusuké?" |
19944 | What was the offence of Myo[u]zen thus to deserve the hatred of Tamiya O''Iwa?" |
19944 | What were beggars for? |
19944 | What will become of O''Hana San?" |
19944 | What would you now? |
19944 | What''s that? |
19944 | What''s this? |
19944 | What''s this? |
19944 | When he has an interview with his lord does he tremble with fear? |
19944 | When he tried to stop her, he received the mess full in his bosom--"Mad? |
19944 | When the enemy in life, with all physical powers, is not feared; why fear a disembodied spirit deprived of all means of venting its wrath and spite? |
19944 | Whence does it come, Iémon San? |
19944 | Where did Iémon go? |
19944 | Where do you go?" |
19944 | Where does he go?" |
19944 | Where is it? |
19944 | Where is the fellow?" |
19944 | Where is this brothel?" |
19944 | Where lies she?" |
19944 | Where now were the promises of ransom, the blood- sealed vow to become husband and wife, to assume the relation which endures for two worlds? |
19944 | Where was the fire getting its start? |
19944 | Where?" |
19944 | Whereabouts is it? |
19944 | Which of them is to change? |
19944 | Which slut is it that refuses the service of the house?... |
19944 | Which was the most important? |
19944 | Whither away? |
19944 | Whither would you go? |
19944 | Whither? |
19944 | Whither? |
19944 | Who bought these at this year''s Sho[u]gwatsu( New Year)? |
19944 | Who can that rascal be?" |
19944 | Who could remain in such a den?" |
19944 | Who could think of injuring her in any way? |
19944 | Who else will Cho[u]bei bring in as his bails? |
19944 | Who has robbed the purse of Jusuké?" |
19944 | Who is that creature?" |
19944 | Who is that? |
19944 | Who is this O''Iwa?" |
19944 | Who may you be; and whence from? |
19944 | Who was he-- this man who had given him back mind and power of thought? |
19944 | Who was the maddest-- their lord or the shabby_ bo[u]zu_? |
19944 | Who was this man? |
19944 | Who would buy the ugly O''Iwa? |
19944 | Who would forget such a rascal? |
19944 | Who, in those iron days, would accept such excuse for absence? |
19944 | Why blame this Matsu? |
19944 | Why call the man of Taki a scoundrel?" |
19944 | Why do you stroke me thus? |
19944 | Why does her son come in petition to the mother?" |
19944 | Why fall into such a trap, with a woman old and ugly? |
19944 | Why had he not heard of it before it reached such extremes? |
19944 | Why had the summons for the day been anticipated? |
19944 | Why has such a misfortune befallen this Baryu? |
19944 | Why kill Cho[u]bei the leper? |
19944 | Why look like that? |
19944 | Why mingle vile blood with good? |
19944 | Why not join him in death? |
19944 | Why not keep to your pots and pans? |
19944 | Why not proclaim that Densuké murdered Jusuké? |
19944 | Why not treat the woman kindly, learn her story? |
19944 | Why rush into the room, clogs still on the feet? |
19944 | Why so late in returning?" |
19944 | Why speak so? |
19944 | Why tell such a tale to this Iwa? |
19944 | Why? |
19944 | Will it show itself to- night?" |
19944 | Will matters change before the_ Bon_?" |
19944 | Winding along what rivers, by what intersecting canals had they floated here? |
19944 | With the demon? |
19944 | Would he be haunted by her, be seized and killed with torture?... |
19944 | Would old Kwaiba-- his father Ito[u] Inkyo[u]--never be got out of men''s sight? |
19944 | Would the Ojo[u]san see a head, arms, legs, freshly severed?" |
19944 | Would the jade be jealous?" |
19944 | Would you publish the affairs of this Cho[u]bei to the world? |
19944 | You have the contract? |
19944 | You-- whence do you come?" |
19944 | Your honoured face.... Has O''Také San gone to bed in the dark with the cat?" |
19944 | _ Do[u]mo!_ Do n''t you think it is the work of fox or_ tanuki_?" |
19944 | _ Do[u]mo!_ The opponent being a ghost, will it appear to- night? |
19944 | _ Friend_--"Did it appear?" |
19944 | _ Friend_--"How now, Yoshi San? |
19944 | _ Friend_--"Is that so? |
19944 | _ Friend_--"What was it?" |
19944 | _ Friend_--"Yoshi San, did it appear at night?" |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"Are there male and female ghosts?" |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"Did it appear? |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"The dress?" |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"What its nature? |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"What? |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"Yoshi San, has it not yet appeared?" |
19944 | _ Kikugoro[u]_--"Yoshi San, how now-- the ghost?" |
19944 | _ Man_--"What is going to materialize? |
19944 | _ Man_--"What kind of a ghost?" |
19944 | _ Man_--"Yoshi San, is he at home?" |
19944 | _ Mikawaya_--"A ghost?" |
19944 | _ Mikawaya_--"Cleaned?" |
19944 | _ Mikawaya_--"Is it man or woman?" |
19944 | _ Mikawaya_--"What your business, Yoshi San?" |
19944 | _ Onozo[u]_--"Why is it then you would strike a fool and low fellow with a stick?" |
19944 | _ Yoshi_--"Here again?" |
19944 | _ Yoshi_--"Is that the case? |
19944 | _ Yoshi_--"Patron, do you condescend still to remember it?" |
19944 | _ Yoshi_--"Was he told I was here?" |
19944 | _ Yoshi_--"Who is there? |
19944 | _ Yoshi_--"Who said such a thing?" |
37964 | Is it inconceivable that Nature should sometimes do things with an ulterior object, an ethical one, for instance? 37964 ( What would be said of the soldier who should turn his back upon the enemy for fear of losing life even?) 37964 ***** Shall woman leave to man no field at all of natural supremacy? 37964 *****_ Do we not pitch our songs too low, O sweet-- my Singers?_ CHAPTER IX THE IMPENDING SUBJECTION OF MANThe Earth never tires.... |
37964 | Again,_ Why_? |
37964 | And do these two states alternate normally in the opposite halves of the brain, concurrently with the alternation of Day and Night? |
37964 | And now upsprings a further momentous consideration: Is this cause and effect? |
37964 | And to what end is it all? |
37964 | And yet-- Have we reached such a stage of development that emotional considerations are more binding on us than material ones are? |
37964 | And yet-- Whither will drift the Galley of Life when its rowers put their strength elsewhere? |
37964 | Arrogance? |
37964 | Boy- Work: Exploitation or Training? |
37964 | But by what precise means? |
37964 | But yet, in point of fact, what was it that inspired and energised the earlier processes, if not this same Divine Influx? |
37964 | But-- whither is all this trending? |
37964 | Do we, in sleep, when processes have exhausted our daily influx of Life- power, recruit this again from a psychical source? |
37964 | How and why should disease thus have stricken these in mid- career? |
37964 | How and why then did this happen? |
37964 | How is it that the mother, who belongs to one sex only, produces-- and produces in about equal number-- offspring of both? |
37964 | How is it, they inquire, that an embryo bred of two parents of opposite sex develops the sex of one only of these? |
37964 | I Of what order is this Woman- half of Mind which Feminism seeks to extinguish? |
37964 | In the exercise of what vital processes has it been fostered and furthered? |
37964 | In what nursery of Human Consciousness was this fair and gentle blossom sown; to spring, to develop, and to make for gracious growth? |
37964 | Intolerance? |
37964 | Is Sleep a recession merely from the state of Consciousness to the potential states of Sub- and Supra- consciousness? |
37964 | Is it an evolution of the self- negation and the tenderness of parents for their children? |
37964 | Is the power held latent in one generation the potential of the generation following? |
37964 | Is this dynamo re- charged during sleep from some Occult Power- station? |
37964 | It may be asked: Why should woman forgo possession and exercise of faculties available to her, in order to transmit these to sons? |
37964 | Nevertheless-- For how long after the clarion- note of aspiration sounded by Marriage should have ceased to vibrate, would the echo of it last? |
37964 | Otherwise, why two reproductive glands? |
37964 | Pharisaism? |
37964 | Shall she not be content with her beautiful part as generatrix of Faculty, but must seek to be exponent too? |
37964 | Since, in every equation of Science, an unknown factor reveals itself, why not candidly confess this to be a Spiritual factor? |
37964 | The Subjection of woman by man-- What was that evil compared with this other enormity: the Subjection of man by woman, which is fast replacing it? |
37964 | The burning wrongs of women? |
37964 | To say nothing of the less constitutionally- sound, the Ultra- Feminine being, for the most part, a neurotic? |
37964 | What are we? |
37964 | What is it that we, seeing this condition of things at our very door, have, as women, to be so grateful for in male legislation?" |
37964 | What is its significance-- what its explanation? |
37964 | Whence are we? |
37964 | Whence do we derive our daily influx of Life? |
37964 | Whither do we go? |
37964 | Who are we? |
37964 | Why? |
37964 | Yet how is this? |
37964 | Yet what has been the outcome of it all? |
37964 | what are they beside the burning wrongs of helpless babes and children? |
35373 | ''And our fame, my talent, our gains?'' 35373 ''What does it matter to you? |
35373 | A dreamed- of possession? |
35373 | A leaf in the wind? |
35373 | A means of escape-- does not danger ever hover over my head, mortal danger? |
35373 | Afraid again? 35373 All this-- and those precious stones, too? |
35373 | And if I do? 35373 And if I had done so? |
35373 | And that means? |
35373 | And the marriage will still take place to- morrow? |
35373 | And to such degradation shall I follow you, give myself up to such disappointment? 35373 And what are we, then, separately, each by herself? |
35373 | And what do you think of doing? |
35373 | Beate Romani-- whence did this golden orange drop? |
35373 | Bought herself off? |
35373 | But if we had reasons, proofs--"Aha, I repeat it, it is in vain-- we stand under the laws of Italy and of the Church, and what will you prove? 35373 But the other?" |
35373 | But why do you smile, Herr Doctor? |
35373 | But why in the world? |
35373 | Calculating? 35373 Can you pursue no respectable business?" |
35373 | Did you perhaps love him too? |
35373 | Do you then think that my passion for you is extinguished? 35373 Do you think so?" |
35373 | Do you think that I should have rejected you as Rama rejected his Sita, when the opinion of the people turned against her? 35373 Everlasting? |
35373 | For Heaven''s sake, where are we? |
35373 | Giulia,then he cried suddenly,"where are you, my sweet wife? |
35373 | Has this gentleman the right to intrude here? |
35373 | Has your rage nearly exhausted itself? |
35373 | Have you become dumb again? |
35373 | I a robber? 35373 I can not, indeed, understand why you plunged yourself into this danger?" |
35373 | Insane? 35373 Is it your wish?" |
35373 | Is she not your wife? |
35373 | Is there anything you wish, Baluzzi? 35373 Lent? |
35373 | Less? 35373 Nevertheless my heart is full of courage, and I said to myself, why this fear and alarm? |
35373 | Of whom do you speak? |
35373 | Oh, to be fettered to crime, and in addition by sacred bonds-- is there a more unhappy fate? 35373 Proofs never do any harm-- who knows what may happen? |
35373 | Shall I remind you of our past, of our agreement? 35373 That was the sleighing privilege, and now-- shall we glide together over the mirror- like surface of life, as we do over the ice? |
35373 | Then it was base treachery? |
35373 | To Italy? |
35373 | Well, and she? |
35373 | What are you thinking of? 35373 What do these insinuations mean, Herr Doctor?" |
35373 | What else can it be to me, but an atonement of the past, but a prayer, a prayer for forgiveness? 35373 What have you done?" |
35373 | What in the world brings you here? |
35373 | What in the world, Herr von Wegen, are we doing? |
35373 | What is that little box,said Giulia,"which you carry in your hand?" |
35373 | What outrage? |
35373 | What would a teacher of youth be, who possessed no susceptibility for the beautiful? |
35373 | Where am I? 35373 Where are the ladders?" |
35373 | Where are they, but upon the little rocky island of Berengar? 35373 Where have you been, Giulia, since you left me?" |
35373 | Who brings you here? |
35373 | Who can deprive them of the happiness that they conquer boldly? |
35373 | Who is the man? |
35373 | Who knows? |
35373 | Why not? |
35373 | Why? 35373 With the dagger in your hand?" |
35373 | Yes, I have always loved you, that is to say,added he in his love of truth,"after Cäcilie-- but you know it? |
35373 | You are contemplating a crime? |
35373 | You are not poor,said Baluzzi, suddenly,"is that your own?" |
35373 | You called me, Signor? |
35373 | You do not believe my story? 35373 You still doubt? |
35373 | You surely lead a very solitary life in Kulmitten? |
35373 | You wish to speak to me, dear Fräulein? |
35373 | Your wife, you say, your wife, but where were you married? |
35373 | A cry for help!--what is a cry for help but a cry for shame, for disgrace, for law and executioner? |
35373 | A lie for your heart, but a truth for the world; a vile, shameful truth if I do not-- but what matter is that to you? |
35373 | All were pursuing their own pleasures, why should she alone pass the time in solitude? |
35373 | Am I not a cowardly woman? |
35373 | And had not the worst happened already, and from no fault of hers? |
35373 | And here in the snow?" |
35373 | And if your plan miscarry, if they catch you--?" |
35373 | And now once more may I claim my sleighing rights?" |
35373 | And what is it really? |
35373 | And what were these Italian composers compared with him? |
35373 | And yet how could I plunge you too into destruction, require a sacrifice of you for which I can grant you no compensation?" |
35373 | Be my guest--_che ne dite?_""What shall I do there? |
35373 | Be my guest--_che ne dite?_""What shall I do there? |
35373 | Be you her friend; will you promise it me?" |
35373 | Besides, where is there any battle now? |
35373 | Blanden sat there so dreamily; was he revelling in the same recollections; did he smile in silent delight, or only out of politeness? |
35373 | Blanden smiled,"Probably some masquerade?" |
35373 | Blanden''s eyes became more and more concealed beneath their lids, imparting a dreamy appearance to him; was it fervour or abstraction? |
35373 | But now they shall have it in black and white, lithographed, engraved!--what do I care? |
35373 | But speak then, will you be mine?" |
35373 | But then the eager question arose as to how the fire had originated? |
35373 | But what do you wish?" |
35373 | But where are the witnesses-- the dumb walls, the lamps burning down? |
35373 | Can I assist you? |
35373 | Can I help you, my Fräulein? |
35373 | Could Blanden be unsusceptible to such silvery looks? |
35373 | Could the cursed ball not roll differently? |
35373 | Could you not release me one day sooner? |
35373 | Did not smiling Euphrosyne cast roses into her lap, as the goddess stood beside victory upon her car of triumph, decking her with laurels? |
35373 | Did not the lake of Orta roar outside? |
35373 | Did she complain that she had lost them? |
35373 | Did she wear these diamonds on her wedding day? |
35373 | Did she, in her power and beauty, not stand far above it? |
35373 | Did the castles of Kulmitten and Rositten belong to those in the air? |
35373 | Did the merry cupids take refuge in his flowers and lines of poetry, while he acted the part of grave invincibility? |
35373 | Did they come from Blanden? |
35373 | Do I grope in the air half unconsciously? |
35373 | Do I tear off the bandage which the wretched surgeon, the old frontier official, put on? |
35373 | Do you believe that you are less dear to me, fill my whole heart less, when the senseless mob calumniates you?" |
35373 | Do you remember the charming Indian poem,''Calidas,''of which I told you? |
35373 | Giulia, shall you appear upon the stage again?" |
35373 | Had I dreamed it? |
35373 | Had he not suffered heavy pain for the sake of the impossible, which could only become possible by impudent deception, and unbroken silence? |
35373 | Had she been mistaken? |
35373 | Haha-- am I a madman? |
35373 | He indeed knew where the lotus- flower bloomed, but could he know how he should be received? |
35373 | He was discreet, she might trust him, there was nothing remarkable about a chance meeting in the confectioner''s shop; but the reason? |
35373 | How could she meet her beloved one''s eye? |
35373 | How could you enter upon so insane an undertaking?" |
35373 | How different Blanden felt; was happiness secured in his own home, under the protection of his old household gods? |
35373 | How excuse myself?" |
35373 | I too would speak to you; you are probably afraid of me, little cat? |
35373 | Is despair not justified, even when it clutches convulsively at transient felicity? |
35373 | Is it impossible to resign a dreamed- of possession, a right that is dead?" |
35373 | Is it not so? |
35373 | Is it then so great a sacrifice not to utter words which would plunge two people into calamity? |
35373 | Is she the only woman in the world? |
35373 | Is the world but the veil, the dream, the existence?--why then is life full of nervous dread? |
35373 | Is there no higher decree than the mutable chequered one of these countries in our hemisphere? |
35373 | Is there not a holier love which may scorn an unholy bond? |
35373 | It was Baluzzi, but where had he remained? |
35373 | Lose my good name?" |
35373 | Major Bern''s wife appeared behind Cäcilie''s chair with the friendly words,"May we congratulate you, my dear Fräulein?" |
35373 | Need a ruler fear his conscience, that sentinel of the garrison? |
35373 | Now will you still cry for help?" |
35373 | Olga drew one hand out of her muff and extended it as if in protestation:"So suddenly, dear friend? |
35373 | Shall I call him out? |
35373 | She felt so lighthearted, so free-- and was she not beautiful, youthfully beautiful? |
35373 | She imagined she heard Blanden''s soft mellifluous voice in the melody of these lines; but why did he not come? |
35373 | She pointed to Giulia with outstretched arms, and said,"Must I take part in your wedding after all? |
35373 | Should she give him notice? |
35373 | Should she not now, if she confessed all, prepare him a certain painful disappointment, which hereafter only hostile chance could bring upon him? |
35373 | The man with the iron mask, thought she, he denies his flowers, but has he, like many, only warm feelings in his verses? |
35373 | The sleighing right for life?" |
35373 | Then, too, Blanden would be lost to me; would there be anything more degrading for me, than to have to acknowledge that man before all the world? |
35373 | Was he still tarrying in the vicinity? |
35373 | Was he the victim of a lie? |
35373 | Was her happiness only transitory? |
35373 | Was her heart not quite free? |
35373 | Was it chance, or intentional? |
35373 | Was it merely his eagerness to fulfil a social duty while he had time, or was it liking for, and interest in her poor self? |
35373 | Was it not a robber''s hand which grasped this family possession? |
35373 | Was not the sea, the kingdom of the old Vikings, subject to the island people; how long did the Sound stand beneath the dominion of Danish cannon? |
35373 | Was this meant for a significant or, perhaps, even a malicious allusion? |
35373 | Were they dreaming? |
35373 | What are your laurel wreaths to me? |
35373 | What could Böller''s volunteers, with their undisciplined enthusiasm do against these well trained troops, which could stand immovably under fire? |
35373 | What could have agitated Giulia so much? |
35373 | What disclosures menaced her? |
35373 | What else can I do with your little honorariums? |
35373 | What had happened? |
35373 | What has not this public already applauded? |
35373 | What have you to tell me?" |
35373 | What shall I say? |
35373 | What should you be without me? |
35373 | What, then, was left to him? |
35373 | When did you ever have such beautiful ornaments before?" |
35373 | When he opened his eyes again amidst violent pain, he fancied he was still under the spell of a dream: had he awoke in India amongst the peris? |
35373 | Where am I? |
35373 | Where is my pride, where is my strength? |
35373 | Where were the watchmen? |
35373 | Who can destroy what once was ours? |
35373 | Who could have come there on that day? |
35373 | Who dares to reproach me with a punishment that I have undergone?'' |
35373 | Who guarantees any long endurance to happiness? |
35373 | Why did she not save? |
35373 | Why does she live like a princess? |
35373 | Why not declare openly that Bartel knows on which side his bread is buttered?" |
35373 | Why was I obliged to go to the debtors''prison? |
35373 | Why waste so many words? |
35373 | Will you belong to me for ever?" |
35373 | Yet could she hesitate? |
35373 | You here?" |
35373 | You said this, and what have you done? |
35373 | asked the Doctor, as he stroked his moustache complacently,"where is her first mortgage now?" |
35373 | but how escape? |
35373 | or was he only teasing her? |
35373 | said Blanden,"shall even the beautiful recollection of the magic lake be buried? |
35373 | said Giulia thoughtfully"is my life not one already? |
37398 | And then? |
37398 | And what then? |
37398 | Are you sure? |
37398 | Baby Totesikins love her Pasy and want din- din also? 37398 Baby wants nice bickies?" |
37398 | But of course you did not let her when it came to the scratch? 37398 But suppose he was an all- powerful elemental,--a black magician, and he said that he was going to edit everything you wrote in the future?" |
37398 | But you believe that you lived before? 37398 Did you?" |
37398 | Go to Sing Sing prison? 37398 How could I live if you should cease to love me?" |
37398 | How could I? 37398 How could you even think of such a thing?" |
37398 | How would you have tackled the job? |
37398 | I am easier now; but for the morning? 37398 I did n''t really hurt you, did I? |
37398 | I thought it was my wheedling ways? |
37398 | I''ll put on your symbol of servitude and Babe goes to our wedding,--what do you say? |
37398 | I''m a pretty ill man, am I not, Mowgy? |
37398 | It''s taken bludgeoning blows, but, after all, we have absorbed something, do n''t you think? |
37398 | Little fur smoothed down and little taily waving in the air? |
37398 | Loves, Pasy? |
37398 | Since when have you developed the taste? |
37398 | So you think you would like to write, Bambina? 37398 Suppose we toss up now?" |
37398 | Suppose you became ill and you had to leave the old scoundrels to their fate? 37398 Surely you wo n''t mention the time I kicked the dog and smashed up the cut- glass?" |
37398 | Wants to lap up keemy and nibbst fish at the Prince George for your din- din? |
37398 | What am I to do,he asked,"when women persecute me like this? |
37398 | What are you laughing at? |
37398 | What can be coming over me? 37398 What did they say?" |
37398 | What did you decide to do,--run away? |
37398 | What do you mean? 37398 What do you think of it?" |
37398 | What of the morphine? |
37398 | What the devil do I care? |
37398 | What the devil do you care what people think? |
37398 | What would you do,I asked,"if, upon going into your study you found a giant elemental sitting at your desk tampering with your copy?" |
37398 | Why not try it for a pleasant change? |
37398 | Why? |
37398 | Will you wear your muzzle and not jerk at the lead? |
37398 | With whom do you wish to be buried? |
37398 | Would you make it into a training house for husbands-- or turn it into a zoo? |
37398 | You wo n''t tell the worst really, will you, Mowgy? 37398 You, too, are going to fail me at last? |
37398 | Am I going to be paralyzed?" |
37398 | And then he asked:--"Where shall we live?" |
37398 | But should he ever cease to love me--? |
37398 | But what would have been the use? |
37398 | Can I tear him out of my heart-- and live?" |
37398 | Can not you make your philosophy concrete?" |
37398 | Could I? |
37398 | Did n''t I know that no one, princess or queen, would be welcome to stay over a night? |
37398 | Did n''t I say the worst?" |
37398 | Do you remember you asked me what I should do and how I should act were I to lose you? |
37398 | Frequently of a Sunday morning he would call out:--"Anything worth while in the paper to- day?" |
37398 | Going to the office of the hotel, wherever we happened to be, he would say to the room clerk:--"I want to know if there is any objection to children?" |
37398 | Have you enough?" |
37398 | He broke off and inquired,"By the way, what are you going to do with Babe when we get to the church?" |
37398 | How can she remember yours? |
37398 | How could I? |
37398 | How does he do it? |
37398 | How is it that you are the one of your family I meet last?" |
37398 | If it does n''t? |
37398 | If it was, would it be carried past its destination? |
37398 | If one must die, why not peacefully and pleasantly in the sunshine? |
37398 | If the public is sufficiently interested to pass along and embellish these grotesque stories, will they not be equally interested to know the truth? |
37398 | In discussing them and women in general, I remembered his friend of the Los Angeles days and said:"Did you never hear what became of that clever girl? |
37398 | In the middle of a room of closely packed tables--? |
37398 | Is there no climax?" |
37398 | It resolves itself into the question"What is greatness?" |
37398 | Never can I enter the place until you return, and now when will that be? |
37398 | Now what animal will you attach to me?" |
37398 | One was as follows:--"What would you do if a fat woman came in with a bag in her hand, and tried to put me in it and take me away?" |
37398 | Reverently he approached the great one repeating, as he did so, the Byzantine formula,"May I speak and live?" |
37398 | Saltus?" |
37398 | Shall I put it down and rest?" |
37398 | Shall I take my medsy?" |
37398 | That letter brought the query,"Which, monkeys or blacks?" |
37398 | The newspapers began to quote his witticisms, as for example: Hostess--"Mr. Saltus, what character in fiction do you admire most?" |
37398 | Then the question of the future presented itself again, and he asked:--"When are you going to absorb me?" |
37398 | To quote again from a newspaper clipping of that day: Depraved Customer--"Do you sell the books of Edgar Saltus?" |
37398 | Unaccustomed as he had been in his youth to look upon anything other than"Will it please me or will it not?" |
37398 | What are your intentions?" |
37398 | What could one do with such a man? |
37398 | What do you suppose it was?" |
37398 | What the devil do you care for a pack of nincompoops?" |
37398 | What then?" |
37398 | When is this nightmare to end? |
37398 | While I live I can take care of you no matter what happens, but after----? |
37398 | Who can say how little or how great are such objectives? |
37398 | Why do you care how I treat others? |
37398 | Why should I? |
37398 | Why take chances on the rest? |
37398 | With autumn came the query, What and where? |
37398 | With his accustomed facetious flattery, he asked:"What do I get for lying at the feet of a child?" |
37398 | With his eyes still closed Mr. Saltus clutched me by the arm:--"Has it gone?" |
37398 | Would the luggage be put on the train? |
37398 | You may marry again some day?" |
37398 | You remembered that you were supposed to take care of her?" |
37398 | You will not mention the time I got squiffy, or the time I pretended I was a crazy man and miawed in the trolley car?" |
37398 | You wo n''t forget me-- Mowgy? |
32269 | A cipher, eh? |
32269 | About three? |
32269 | Afraid of an attack after dark, professor? |
32269 | Afraid the hobgoblins will kidnap us? |
32269 | Am I supposed to fit into that thing? |
32269 | And that is? |
32269 | And what would you want with the Golden Mouse, if I may inquire? |
32269 | Any ideas? |
32269 | Are you a Eurasian? |
32269 | Are you now? |
32269 | Are you sure? |
32269 | Bill, what kind of numbers are they? |
32269 | Bill? 32269 Bobby sox or bobby pin?" |
32269 | Bring that light here, will you, professor? |
32269 | Busy how? |
32269 | But from where? |
32269 | But how did you know about nulls? |
32269 | But may I ask why? |
32269 | But where did they come from in the first place? |
32269 | But will you know yer outside? 32269 But you did n''t see anything except the shadow?" |
32269 | But you know what I think this is? 32269 Can I help you, lads?" |
32269 | Can you tell us where it is? |
32269 | Chahda? 32269 Chahda?" |
32269 | Could n''t we look into this cave tonight? 32269 Could n''t we stir it up? |
32269 | Dark in here, is n''t it? |
32269 | Did you bring him along as an adviser, Mom? 32269 Did you see anyone?" |
32269 | Do I wash out my mouth with soap or do I get a medal? |
32269 | Do n''t suppose you''d consider substituting a pink rabbit? 32269 Do you know Long Shadow?" |
32269 | Do you know that name, Dad? |
32269 | Does n''t saying he has reconsidered mean that he''ll go? |
32269 | Does that mean anything? |
32269 | Dragon blood, huh? 32269 Eh? |
32269 | Golden Mouse, you say? 32269 Have n''t you solved that cipher yet?" |
32269 | Have you ever met Ko before? |
32269 | How about Captain Douglas? 32269 How about letting a Hong Kong police doctor take a look at it?" |
32269 | How about starting with that odd letter? |
32269 | How about that? |
32269 | How come Canton Charlie did n''t turn you over to the enemy as he did us? |
32269 | How did you know Ko had a glass eye? |
32269 | How do you know you ca n''t figure it out? 32269 How do you like the customer over there? |
32269 | How do you start on a job like this? |
32269 | How does one destroy a body of water? |
32269 | How many more days to Korse Lenken? |
32269 | How you see in dark? |
32269 | I wonder how long we''ll have to sit in this flea bag? |
32269 | I''m only speculating,Zircon replied,"but might n''t that have been a police boat on regular patrol? |
32269 | Is he wrong? |
32269 | Is n''t Whiteaway- Laidlaw in Bombay? |
32269 | Is n''t that right, colleague? |
32269 | It will be good to get back to our peaceful lab, eh, lads? |
32269 | Just to satisfy my curiosity,Scotty asked,"why did your men capture us, then bundle us into the boats and bring us here? |
32269 | Mighty funny how everything was arranged for us at Canton Charlie''s, was n''t it? 32269 My boss not come yet?" |
32269 | No? 32269 Notice the regularity of the slope? |
32269 | Now what? |
32269 | Now what? |
32269 | Of course you have testing equipment? |
32269 | Perhaps I can be of service, sir? 32269 Remember he said something about a job in his last letter? |
32269 | Remember the letter L? 32269 Shall we get to it?" |
32269 | Should I get my frying pan again? |
32269 | Since when do five people make a mob? |
32269 | Suppose we tie a few stalactites to your feet, and Ko''s, and see how long it takes for you to get down to where the heavy water is? |
32269 | The biggest one being: Where is Chahda? |
32269 | The suspicious one would n''t be able to tell what? 32269 Then what do we do with him?" |
32269 | Then why the gloom? |
32269 | Then you''ll go? |
32269 | We can keep on thinking while we eat, ca n''t we? |
32269 | We''ll need money, but why do all of us have to go see the consul? 32269 Well, Mr. Ko,"he said,"you got a little surprise, did n''t you?" |
32269 | Well, what do we do now? |
32269 | Were you going to use that grenade as a calling card? |
32269 | Western Union? 32269 What about Ko?" |
32269 | What are these? |
32269 | What are they? |
32269 | What are we hunting for? |
32269 | What are we supposed to do? |
32269 | What are we waiting for? |
32269 | What caused you to reconsider? |
32269 | What could it mean but twelve? |
32269 | What did he look like? |
32269 | What do we do now, professor? |
32269 | What do we do with our fat chum? |
32269 | What do you make of that, Dad? |
32269 | What do you make of that? |
32269 | What happened? |
32269 | What have you got? |
32269 | What is it? |
32269 | What is this, a meeting of the Silent Three? 32269 What kept you so long? |
32269 | What kind of bad name? |
32269 | What kind of cover? |
32269 | What makes you think so? |
32269 | What now for you? 32269 What now?" |
32269 | What other? |
32269 | What was it that he discovered? |
32269 | What will Zircon do for a rifle? |
32269 | What''s a null? |
32269 | What''s a prairie moose? |
32269 | What''s going on here? |
32269 | What''s it going to be like with a mob of strangers galloping all over the place? |
32269 | What''s that? |
32269 | What''s that? |
32269 | What''s the Nansen bottle for? |
32269 | What''s the matter, Dad? |
32269 | What,he demanded,"is the meaning of this?" |
32269 | What? |
32269 | Whatever got into you? |
32269 | Where do we camp tonight? |
32269 | Where is he? |
32269 | Where to? |
32269 | Where''s it from? |
32269 | Where''s the junk? |
32269 | Where''s there? |
32269 | Which one did he memorize? 32269 Which one?" |
32269 | Which way do I go? |
32269 | Which way? |
32269 | Who are you? |
32269 | Who is Carl Bradley? |
32269 | Who is Long Shadow? |
32269 | Who knows if the old High Lama might not be waiting? 32269 Who wants to go back?" |
32269 | Who you callin''a ruddy ox, you little blighter? |
32269 | Who''s on the wire? |
32269 | Who''s this? 32269 Why did n''t you yell?" |
32269 | Why do you think Canton Charlie did n''t deliver the message himself? |
32269 | Why not admit it and co- operate? 32269 Why not report it right now?" |
32269 | Why not? |
32269 | Why? |
32269 | Why? |
32269 | Will you have dinner at the table with us, or shall I ask mother to break out some emergency rations so you can stay on the job? |
32269 | Wonder what he''s going to give us? |
32269 | Wonder what''s keeping Canton Charlie? |
32269 | Would Chahda have a 1912 edition with him in Singapore? 32269 Would n''t it be better for me to go ahead and use the infrared beam with the glasses? |
32269 | You are stiff? 32269 You do n''t suppose it was Chahda?" |
32269 | You do, do n''t you, Rick? |
32269 | You expect to treat yourself? |
32269 | You taking the movie camera along? |
32269 | You''re Americans? |
32269 | A girl would make the group look even less suspicious, would n''t it?" |
32269 | After a moment, he asked,"Scotty, how would you like it if an expedition left Spindrift and we were n''t with it?" |
32269 | Am I supposed to gather that you do n''t have the key to the cipher?" |
32269 | And what happens? |
32269 | And where were you all that time?" |
32269 | And who were they? |
32269 | And why are you so excited about it?" |
32269 | And why? |
32269 | And why? |
32269 | Any questions? |
32269 | Are n''t you all fired up with curiosity?" |
32269 | Are you satisfied?" |
32269 | As Zircon tipped the Chinese bearers, Rick asked them,"What time is it?" |
32269 | As they unpacked, Scotty asked,"Is it safe to leave our rifles, and Rick''s camera and that scientific stuff you brought?" |
32269 | Barby asked impatiently,"How do we know?" |
32269 | But are they also good with code? |
32269 | But could a single candle have that much effect? |
32269 | But golly, you do n''t get heavy water out of natural water, do you?" |
32269 | But how do we get to the Caves of Fear?" |
32269 | But how to take it by surprise? |
32269 | But if there''s a null in this, which figure is it?" |
32269 | But who would have much excitement about ice? |
32269 | But why all the long faces? |
32269 | But why did n''t he have time?" |
32269 | By the way, where is the Schmeisser? |
32269 | Ca n''t you see? |
32269 | Can you or Scotty pick it up?" |
32269 | Chahda, do you see anything?" |
32269 | Chahda, have you seen men with water bags heading out of here? |
32269 | Could n''t we hunt prairie moose instead?" |
32269 | Do you happen to have a spoon seven hundred feet long?" |
32269 | Do you know the penalty for a double cross in the espionage racket?" |
32269 | Do you remember the code our former friend used when he was sending messages off the island?" |
32269 | Do you suppose Chahda would know about nulls?" |
32269 | Going to stay in the Far East for a while?" |
32269 | Had he been blinded in that eye? |
32269 | Had he wound it before coming to the cave? |
32269 | Had it been only a short while, or so many hours that his watch had run down? |
32269 | Had n''t he read a story when he was a kid about some children who had left a trail of crumbs only to have the birds eat them? |
32269 | Hartson Brant asked,"Then you will consider Zircon as my substitute? |
32269 | Hartson Brant paused in the act of filling his pipe and asked curiously,"How do you know so much about Asiatic animals, Steve?" |
32269 | Have you ever heard of Lake Baikal?" |
32269 | He asked,"Is something wrong with the Golden Mouse? |
32269 | Heavy water? |
32269 | Hobart, want to pick up where we left off?" |
32269 | How about it, Steve?" |
32269 | How about this''L''in front of his name?" |
32269 | How about you?" |
32269 | How can twins less than a year old trample anyone''s garden?" |
32269 | How could you?" |
32269 | How had Chahda ever heard of this place? |
32269 | How had Chahda heard of a place in such a poor quarter of the city? |
32269 | However, perhaps you will tell us how long it will take to get out of here?" |
32269 | I assume there are wounded? |
32269 | I think I know what the first two are, but what in the name of a blue baboon is a cyberneticist?" |
32269 | I wonder what kind?" |
32269 | If not, why so many?" |
32269 | Incidentally, do you have a spare?" |
32269 | Is it supposed to be a tourist place do you know?" |
32269 | Is that true?" |
32269 | Is that''s what''s been bothering you?" |
32269 | Know what a nuclear reactor is, Rick?" |
32269 | Men with anything at all suspicious about them?" |
32269 | Not until they were on the main street was there quiet enough for conversation, then Zircon demanded,"Would you mind giving us an explanation? |
32269 | Now tell us what is peculiar about all isotopes?" |
32269 | Now that he had reached the opposite shore, what was he to do? |
32269 | Now what?" |
32269 | Now, my next question is: Who was the Eurasian who got together with Keaton- Yeats?" |
32269 | Now, what are we to do?" |
32269 | Now, which of the entrances do we try first? |
32269 | Only suppose they catch us by surprise?" |
32269 | Or had he found a hide- out in the village itself? |
32269 | Or had they managed to keep to the right trail by following the tiny drops of candle wax? |
32269 | Or was it weeks? |
32269 | Professor, what is this transparent stuff inside?" |
32269 | Rick demanded swiftly,"You''re not going to object, are you, Dad?" |
32269 | Rick, is n''t yours a scout knife?" |
32269 | Scotty, find the first- aid kit, please? |
32269 | Sing, where do you suppose Ko''s mules are?" |
32269 | Suppose I start at the beginning?" |
32269 | Ten thousand miles from home, in the worst dive in Hong Kong, and what do we drink? |
32269 | The coolie who spoke the best English asked, hesitantly,"You pay now, sor? |
32269 | The question is, which way do we go now?" |
32269 | To whom? |
32269 | Want to place a call to Washington for me?" |
32269 | Was his friend hiding somewhere in the mountains around Korse Lenken? |
32269 | Was it Long Shadow? |
32269 | Was the Tibetan leading him out of the caves? |
32269 | We go?" |
32269 | We no wait here, yes?" |
32269 | Were they gathering for a rush? |
32269 | Were they lost, too? |
32269 | What chance have we in a fight?" |
32269 | What do you boys think of this strange shadow?" |
32269 | What if Long Shadow and Ko intended loading them in the boats? |
32269 | What is heavy water? |
32269 | What on earth was Chahda doing in Singapore? |
32269 | What to do?" |
32269 | What was he to do? |
32269 | What was it? |
32269 | What was more logical than to assume that the Tibetan had been heading for the hidden plant where heavy water was being produced? |
32269 | What we want to know is, why?" |
32269 | What''ll you drink?" |
32269 | What''ll you drink?" |
32269 | What''ll you have?" |
32269 | What''s up?" |
32269 | What? |
32269 | When can we pick it up?" |
32269 | When did Chahda learn anything about codes?" |
32269 | Where are you?" |
32269 | Where did that other chap go to?" |
32269 | Where does it come from?" |
32269 | Where is the Indian boy?" |
32269 | Where was Chahda now? |
32269 | Where''s the big light?" |
32269 | Which of them would fit your requirements best?" |
32269 | Which one did he use?" |
32269 | Which way? |
32269 | While they waited, Scotty asked,"What happened to you, Rick?" |
32269 | Who knows? |
32269 | Why borrow trouble in advance?" |
32269 | Why do n''t we get busy?" |
32269 | Why not try a bobby?" |
32269 | Why was your door locked?" |
32269 | Why would he say to bring a Nansen bottle if not to take a sample from the lake?" |
32269 | Why you take so long?" |
32269 | Would n''t they miss the Tibetan and the boat? |
32269 | You find Bradley?" |
32269 | You know?" |
32269 | You say Charlie told you to go to this junk?" |
32269 | Zircon asked,"You know street called Three Blind Fishermen?" |
34453 | ''What is that?'' 34453 Ah,"said Rhiannon,"wherefore didst thou give that answer?" |
34453 | And are ye going to sell cows that the Evil Eye has long been set on? 34453 And how will you get it?" |
34453 | And what did you want with the sheet just now, to wipe his blood if he was only a man of straw? |
34453 | And whence camest thou? |
34453 | And why did you bring away my gold that I was gathering for five hundred years throughout the hills and hollows of the world? |
34453 | And why? |
34453 | And will a foal come out of it? |
34453 | And would you give me up to that ugly black King of Moroco? |
34453 | Are we under you now? |
34453 | Are you here to- night again? |
34453 | Arrant rogue? |
34453 | But had n''t you better take the horse? 34453 But, Jack asthore, where did you get the fine clothes?" |
34453 | By what means will that be? |
34453 | Can ye move the chimney over beyant? |
34453 | Could I have a night''s lodging here? |
34453 | Dickens a notion have I;--how could I? |
34453 | Did you see anything wonderful? |
34453 | Do you know where the Sword of Light is, or who has it? |
34453 | Do you know who owns them bastes, neighbours? |
34453 | Faith, what is it like? |
34453 | For how long is the spell to be upon you? |
34453 | Go aisy, ca n''t ye? 34453 God between us and harm,"said he,"am I in my right senses?" |
34453 | Has he not given it before the presence of these nobles? |
34453 | Have they not reached you with Oifa? |
34453 | Have you any notion how far you have to travel till you find the golden bird? |
34453 | How am I to know them? |
34453 | How at all,said he,"has this head come here? |
34453 | How can I do that? |
34453 | How could Smallhead, the creature, be outside all the time? 34453 How dost thou think that?" |
34453 | How is the work going off? |
34453 | How many tricks canst thou do? |
34453 | I am after breaking my heart riding this ass of a horse; but will you give me the limping white garron for him? |
34453 | I am as hungry as yourself,said the boy,"but how can I go to the well without a light? |
34453 | I need give you no directions, my good woman,said Lusmore,"for this is Cappagh; and whom may you want here?" |
34453 | I wo n''t let it go,said Owen;"sha n''t I be drowned?" |
34453 | I''ll go with you, and welcome,said Paddy;"but what excuse will I make to my wife?" |
34453 | I''m going to America, with a letter from the master; is this the right road? |
34453 | Indade we will; what good is a house and garden, if we have to sit here all the rest of our lives? |
34453 | Indeed, then it is,says she,"who else would it be?" |
34453 | Is Fin at Home? |
34453 | Is it the book you are thinking of, you fool, to take it and lose it as you did the sword? 34453 Is it you?" |
34453 | Is n''t it all one to you where I got it? |
34453 | Is that branch thy own? |
34453 | Is there,said Fin,"no man to combat with him but yourself?" |
34453 | It is; keep straight to the west; but how are you going to get over the water? |
34453 | Lady,asked he,"whence comest thou, and whereunto dost thou journey?" |
34453 | Lady,he said,"wilt thou tell me aught concerning thy purpose?" |
34453 | Lady,said he,"art thou sleeping?" |
34453 | Look you,said Rhiannon:"will not his own name become him better?" |
34453 | Maybe you''re thirsty? |
34453 | Musha, sir,says he,"would you spare a bit of that meat to a poor body that''s hungry?" |
34453 | My lord,said his wife unto Teirnyon,"where is the colt which thou didst save on the night that thou didst find the boy?" |
34453 | My lord,said she,"what adventure is this?" |
34453 | My men,said Powel,"is there any among you who knows yonder lady?" |
34453 | My soul,said Gwawl,"will thy bag be ever full?" |
34453 | My soul,said Powel,"what is the boon thou askest?" |
34453 | Of what blood art thou? |
34453 | Oh, you may as well ask me where I got all that money? |
34453 | Oh,asked my wife,"why are you always laughing? |
34453 | Oh,said the king,"what was all your watching ever good for? |
34453 | Oh,_ musha_, do n''t you know your own son? |
34453 | Say,''Oh sweet- tongued singer, it is my own cock,''wilt thou not? |
34453 | Suppose some person were to bring the Sword of Light, and that person a woman, would you marry her? |
34453 | Tell me first in what place his hand was cut from him? |
34453 | Uill, uill, puil, uil liu-- who is killing me? |
34453 | Verily, lord,said she,"what sort of garments are there upon the boy?" |
34453 | Well, then,said the fox,"wouldst thou rather have the root or the tip? |
34453 | Well, what news? |
34453 | What advantage has your tree over mine, on which there are three rods of magic mastery growing? |
34453 | What are you doing here? |
34453 | What are you doing here? |
34453 | What can be done in the matter? |
34453 | What do you want? |
34453 | What have ye, Con? |
34453 | What is it, beloved brothers? |
34453 | What is it? |
34453 | What is your name? |
34453 | What little speck do I see there? |
34453 | What makes thee mad, son of learning? |
34453 | What man are you? |
34453 | What may ye be doing here instead of earning yer salt, ye seven big sturks? |
34453 | What name has he? |
34453 | What poor news have you? |
34453 | What reward would you give me if I shield you from the king from this hour to the same hour to- morrow? |
34453 | What set you weeping for the black horse? |
34453 | What tricks canst thou do? |
34453 | What vows are they? |
34453 | What work can you do? |
34453 | What work can you do? |
34453 | What would I do if tiredness should come on you before we got over? |
34453 | What''s to hinder me? |
34453 | What''s to hinder ye from getting up? 34453 What''s your news?" |
34453 | Where are ye going to, this fine morning? |
34453 | Where are you going this time of night? |
34453 | Where are you, Owen? |
34453 | Where did you get the money? |
34453 | Where have you been? 34453 Where is it?" |
34453 | Where is my mother? |
34453 | Where is the sword? |
34453 | Where''s the money? |
34453 | Which wouldst thou like best, the root or the crop this year? |
34453 | Who are you,said the chief,"and what''s your business?" |
34453 | Who ironed this linen? |
34453 | Who is that girl you have in the house, and where did you find her? |
34453 | Who''ll bring that fat bullock here,says Jack,"and use no violence?" |
34453 | Who''ll steal that wether,says Jack,"before it''s out of the wood, and no roughness used?" |
34453 | Whose wife will my daughter be? |
34453 | Why are you not praising the dinner like the others, you contemptible deer? |
34453 | Why do you cry and lament so? |
34453 | Why, nothing at all happened, thank God, since you rode out; where did you leave the horse? |
34453 | Why,said Fin,"should he not?" |
34453 | Why,said the King,"do you ask?" |
34453 | Will I turn the spit, your honour, while they''re catching the_ hareyeen_? |
34453 | Will any of you,says Jack,"undertake to steal that goat from the owner before he gets out of the wood, and that without the smallest violence?" |
34453 | Will ye give me the house and garden? |
34453 | Will ye sell it? |
34453 | Will you give me what I ask? |
34453 | Willest thou this, lord? |
34453 | Would the mistress have anything for me when dinner is over, your honour? |
34453 | Would you marry my second sister if you were to get the Black Book? |
34453 | Would you take me for him? |
34453 | Wouldst thou eat it with three others? |
34453 | Wouldst thou sell it? 34453 Ye''re a fine man, Giblin, and ye did it without making a bit of dirt; what''ll I give ye for so fine a job?" |
34453 | Ye''re in a sad plight, Shamus, roasting alive; what can I do for ye? |
34453 | ''Am I not the best warrior that ever sought you?'' |
34453 | ''Do n''t you know at all?'' |
34453 | ''Have you any token in proof of that?'' |
34453 | ''What aileth thee?'' |
34453 | ''What impertinent fellow are you that has dared to haul up your ship alongside of our ships?'' |
34453 | ''Why?'' |
34453 | After a while, Fin asked him again,"What are the Big Men doing now?" |
34453 | After they were gone says Jack to the wicked housekeeper,"Do these fellows ever make you a present?" |
34453 | And Mac Howg came down to the brink of the shore and said to them:"Are ye the children of Lir?" |
34453 | And as they came in, every one of Powel''s knights struck a blow upon the bag, and asked,"What is here?" |
34453 | And when meat was ended, Powel said,"Where are the hosts that went yesterday and the day before to the top of the mound?" |
34453 | And wilt thou tell me who thou art?" |
34453 | Are we not better without it?" |
34453 | Are you hurt? |
34453 | As she took hold of each body she said,''Are you alive?'' |
34453 | At last after much parleying the cock said to the hen,"My dear, do you not see a couple of hounds coming across the field?" |
34453 | But Master Rory said:"Is it a traitor I am, when all I have come to see you for is to tell you about a keg of butter I have found?" |
34453 | But the children of Lir-- what is their lot? |
34453 | Did n''t you fall down the stairs? |
34453 | Do ye mind the time yer father spoke ugly to her down by the cross- roads? |
34453 | Do you know what I am thinking of?'' |
34453 | Do you see yonder castle?'' |
34453 | Every one as he came in asked,"What game are you playing at thus?" |
34453 | Fin called to Bran,"Are you going to let him kill me?" |
34453 | Have you ever heard the way he gets rid of his fleas? |
34453 | Have you never heard about that? |
34453 | He spoke to Bran,"Are you going to allow him to kill me?" |
34453 | He summoned Smallhead and asked:"Can you amuse the strangers?" |
34453 | He then asked,"What was the reason for doing this?" |
34453 | How could he refuse her, and his heart tied up in every curl of her hair? |
34453 | How did ye find it out? |
34453 | How should we know where she is?" |
34453 | I asked,"Why are you crying?" |
34453 | I said to her,''Is there no way of killing him?'' |
34453 | I said to the old woman,''Is there any way of destroying him?'' |
34453 | I then said to the King of the Red Shield,''What were you going to do? |
34453 | I went down where he was, and said to him,''What impertinent fellow are you that has dared to haul up your ship alongside of our ships?'' |
34453 | I went to the door of the palace and knocked; and the doorkeeper called out,''Who is there?'' |
34453 | I wonder if you are anything to the young ladies who came the way this evening?" |
34453 | If he asks me how you made your money, what''ll I say?" |
34453 | Is he bigger than yourself?" |
34453 | Is that bag with ten guineas in it that''s hung round the goat''s neck yours?" |
34453 | Lir asked the messengers:"Wherefore are ye come?" |
34453 | No one took notice of him when he went in, or said"Where have you been?" |
34453 | Oh, my darling, my darling, is n''t this a trial?" |
34453 | On the building of the Magic Castle, Campbell remarks:"Twashtri was the Carpenter of the Vedic gods: can this be his work?" |
34453 | On the following morning she walked up to the King''s son and said:"I have the Sword of Light; now will you marry my sister?" |
34453 | One day she saw him alone in the garden, went up to him, and said:"Why are you not getting married, it is high time for you?" |
34453 | One of them said to another:"Why should you be comparing yourself with me, when there is not a king nor knight that does not come to look at my tree?" |
34453 | Paddy made the dog loose his hold, and said:"Tell me who you are, or why did you kill my horse and my cows?" |
34453 | Should we not go to look at the castle? |
34453 | Smallhead was a very beautiful woman now, and why not? |
34453 | That night Paddy went down to the cellar; the little man welcomed him and asked him did he wish to dance? |
34453 | The Farmer asked of him what he meant? |
34453 | The Farmer met him at the door, and asked him whither was he going, or what was he seeking? |
34453 | The King of Erin said to him,"Do you intend to take away the cattle that I promised you?" |
34453 | The hag asked me,"Why is he bellowing?" |
34453 | The king came and saw the cradle coloured with the blood, and he cried out"where was the child gone?" |
34453 | The rider of the black horse said to O''Cronicert, after they had set off,"Do you know who I am?" |
34453 | Then the little man gave a leap down to the floor, and said to Paddy:"Do n''t you like music?" |
34453 | There was no one but an old hag, tall and frightful, and she asked me,"What sort of person are you?" |
34453 | Was the Russet Dog afraid? |
34453 | What do you think was bobbing up and down at the window, and sossed down so heavy on the walk? |
34453 | What dost thou ask from this day to the day when the crop will be gathered in?" |
34453 | What happened at all? |
34453 | What have you done?" |
34453 | What will ye give me if I help you find yer feet?" |
34453 | What would bring three hung men so near one another? |
34453 | What''ll we do?" |
34453 | When Shamus came back, Giblin led him to the chair, saying:"Now, is n''t that a great deal better?" |
34453 | When all was over the rider of the black horse said,"Are you willing to return home now?" |
34453 | When he arrived he went on his knees to the king; and the king said to him,"What is your news, O''Cronicert?" |
34453 | Who are you, then, or what is your name?" |
34453 | Why did you not wait for me?'' |
34453 | Will we run out and pin him?" |
34453 | [ Illustration]"Well,"said the cock,"I could do three; how many canst thou do thyself?" |
34453 | and what wouldst thou require for it?" |
34453 | cried he,"do you want to knock us down?" |
34453 | cried he,"what''ll Joan say to me now? |
34453 | said O''Cronicert,"do you think that I can not keep that vow? |
34453 | said he, when he could speak,"how''s this? |
34453 | said the king,"I am sorry for you; what do you want?" |
34453 | says she,"is n''t the poor fellow all cut and bruised?" |
34453 | says the wife,"sure, you would n''t shoot the brave fellow?" |
34453 | what''ll we do? |
34453 | whatever kind of man it is that''s mocking you, is n''t that a fine condition you have got your father''s horse into?" |
34453 | who spoiled our tune?" |
38813 | * MUST RELIGION GO? |
38813 | HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? |
38813 | HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? |
38813 | IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT? |
38813 | IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT? |
38813 | IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING? |
38813 | IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING? |
38813 | IS DIVORCE WRONG? |
38813 | IS DIVORCE WRONG? |
38813 | IS IT EVER RIGHT FOR HUSBAND OR WIFE TO KILL RIVAL? |
38813 | IS SUICIDE A SIN? |
38813 | IS SUICIDE A SIN? |
38813 | Kraeling on Christ and the Devil � Would he make a World like This? |
38813 | SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? |
38813 | SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? |
38813 | SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? |
38813 | SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? |
38813 | Solemnity � Charged with Being Insincere � Irreverence � Old Testament Better than the New �"Why Hurt our Feelings? |
38813 | The"Inspired"Writers � Why did not God furnish Every Nation with a Bible? |
38813 | WHAT IS RELIGION? |
38813 | WHAT IS RELIGION? |
38813 | WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? |
38813 | WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? |
38813 | WHICH WAY? |
38813 | WHICH WAY? |
38813 | WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? |
38813 | WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? |
38303 | refutation(?) |
38303 | (?) |
38303 | 7)"For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory, why yet am I also judged as a sinner?" |
38303 | Again we ask, what can be the moral influence of such teaching? |
38303 | And his poor wife-- what became of her? |
38303 | And why should n''t he? |
38303 | But does_ Bystander_ himself believe in the God of the Bible? |
38303 | Children represent affections-- don''t fond mothers even yet call them''little loves?'' |
38303 | Does he believe in the God of whom the Bible itself gives the following description? |
38303 | Does it not"repel all decent men?" |
38303 | Does_ Bystander_ believe in a God like that? |
38303 | Draper, in speaking of the condition of the people under Catholicity in the 14th century, thus pictures the civilizing(?) |
38303 | Else why does he represent Freethought as a snake? |
38303 | From the days of Constantine to this year, 1880, the Church, of which this learned(?) |
38303 | He also repented(?) |
38303 | He asks,"Which of the two is the First Principle?" |
38303 | He asks:--"If this conception"( a conception of God)"flows from no reality, from what does it flow? |
38303 | He asks:--"Which of the two is the First Principle? |
38303 | He then goes on with his demonstration(?) |
38303 | How can she when she is infallible? |
38303 | If God implants the conscience in man, why not be fair and just and give_ all_ men consciences? |
38303 | If conscience is a Divine gift to humanity, how is it that consciences differ so widely, not only in_ degree_, but in_ kind_? |
38303 | If conscience is a Divine"monitor"and"guide"from heaven, why is it that it so often becomes a very blind guide, and leads people into many by- paths? |
38303 | If it will not bear such scrutiny, is it blasphemy to attack it, or its author? |
38303 | If so, it is very questionable work, surely, for a good(?) |
38303 | If the conception of, or belief in, a devil or devils, flows from no reality, from what does it flow? |
38303 | Is it not"offensive to any sensible and right- minded man?" |
38303 | Is it rational to- suppose that all the pain, sorrow, and evil in the world have been caused by the puerile circumstance of a woman eating an apple? |
38303 | Is it, I ask, on such grounds God distributes rewards and punishments? |
38303 | Is more evidence than this needed that"Rationalist"is living in the past, and has utterly failed to grasp modern thought? |
38303 | Now why have they done this thing? |
38303 | Now, according to this definition, who are the barbarians? |
38303 | Our theory of the presence of evil in the world is, therefore, at least rational; but, is the Christian theory rational? |
38303 | REPLY TO LYNCH A CRUSHING(?) |
38303 | Seeing, then, that the theology of Christianity is admittedly dead, why not give it up and come over to us? |
38303 | Tell me why it is, if Christianity is true that its foundations are melting down like wax in the light of Modern Science?'' |
38303 | That the dogmas upon which Christianity rests are doomed; and as Froude, the historian, says,"Doctrines once fixed as a rock are now fluid as water? |
38303 | The Freethinkers, or the Archbishop himself and those he ignominiously holds in mental bondage? |
38303 | This is benevolent(?) |
38303 | This proemial announcement is certainly calculated to excite high expectations; but it is only necessary to look into the rational(?) |
38303 | Was it ever answered? |
38303 | What can the Archbishop''s idea of barbarism be? |
38303 | What characteristic of the snake attaches to Freethought or Freethinkers? |
38303 | What does Prof. Tyndall say of Freethinkers and Atheists? |
38303 | What is that but the quintessence of bigotry and intolerance? |
38303 | What is the record of history touching this Empire under the aegis of Catholic Christianity? |
38303 | What more does he attack? |
38303 | What must be the moral influence of such a doctrine? |
38303 | What shall he do? |
38303 | What then, becomes of the"fall of man,"the"redemption"the"Ideal Man,"and the whole Christian Superstructure which rests upon the Mosaic Cosmogony? |
38303 | Why is it blasphemy to attack such a conception of God, any more than to attack any of the other Pagan gods of antiquity? |
38303 | Why then should they be longer denied equal rights with their Christian neighbors? |
38303 | Will intelligent Catholics put their necks in a yoke so galling? |
38303 | [ What did the"suckling"do to merit this?] |
38303 | and give them all the same article? |
38303 | or whether the"Ideal Man"ever set His seal upon any of it? |
38303 | or, indeed, whether this"Ideal Man"ever had other than a purely_ ideal_ or subjective existence in the minds of men? |
35099 | Are you gaining in weight? |
35099 | Did no other races develop a culture of equal value? |
35099 | In interpreting these facts, we must ask, Does the increase in the size of the brain prove an increase in faculty? 35099 Mental contents rather than mental capacities"? |
35099 | What then is the difference between the civilization of the Old World and that of the New World? 35099 ( 5) What conclusions are recommended byall these facts and factors"? |
35099 | And have twenty centuries of race prejudice and outrageous persecution availed to repress or depress the all- victorious sons of Israel? |
35099 | And how was this possible, if the latter was not inferior? |
35099 | And what opportunity has failed him? |
35099 | And whence came the"experience and training"of Hammurabi and Sin- mubalit and their ancestors? |
35099 | And where are the Peruvian or Aztec Homer and Thales, Apelles and Euclid, Cicero, Vergil, and Trajan? |
35099 | And why might it not have been? |
35099 | And, if so, is it likely to continue to be a fact? |
35099 | Are these formidable three at work against the American Negroid? |
35099 | Are things what they seem? |
35099 | At the same period the ancestors of the races, who are now among the most highly civilized, were in no[?] |
35099 | But does this anatomical difference prove that their mental capacity is lower than that of the white? |
35099 | But how can this be? |
35099 | But if you meet with some unfamiliar affirmation, then comes the question, why? |
35099 | But is the Black rate really so high? |
35099 | But is there any one that does not know the reason? |
35099 | But may we not check or arrest them? |
35099 | But the question still remains: Why does the South, if she be right in this matter, find the virtue and intelligence of the world arrayed against her? |
35099 | But to all in equal measure? |
35099 | But was the ability to understand algebra and geometry given by the actual study of the same, given step by step? |
35099 | But what is the meaning of the quicker respiration? |
35099 | But what, pray, if they deign to flutter through this volume, what will they do with this utterance of the Puritan_ pur sang_, the Chief Statistician? |
35099 | But where, we ask again, have real"mental gaps"been filled up by culture? |
35099 | But who ever held that such evidence was"conclusive"? |
35099 | But who knows that it rose earlier in the Old World? |
35099 | But why multiply illustrations? |
35099 | But why"objected"? |
35099 | But will they stand still? |
35099 | CHAPTER THREE 75 NURTURE? |
35099 | CHAPTER THREE NURTURE? |
35099 | CHAPTER TWO 29 IS THE NEGRO INFERIOR? |
35099 | CHAPTER TWO IS THE NEGRO INFERIOR? |
35099 | CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER ONE 3 THE INDIVIDUAL? |
35099 | Can they afford to wait? |
35099 | Can we imagine a more wanton folly? |
35099 | Can we say less, must we not say more, of the varieties of men? |
35099 | Certainly; but do not such objectors know in their hearts that their reply is no answer, but is utterly irrelevant? |
35099 | Did any amount of opportunity serve to raise any other member of the Bonaparte family quite to the level of the first Napoleon? |
35099 | Did it close up the"mental gap"? |
35099 | Did the former enjoy, like the latter, a contact for centuries with American missionaries and European civilization? |
35099 | Did they fall out of the sky into the empty skulls of Nineveh? |
35099 | Do I dream? |
35099 | Do I wonder and doubt? |
35099 | Does any one believe that Greek or Roman civilization would have gone down without a blow at the mere breath of Pizarro or Cortà © s? |
35099 | Does not every one see that any such test would be wholly impracticable and nugatory? |
35099 | Does not the tree of life bud and bloom and put forth new boughs at the top? |
35099 | Does some one reply that some Negroes are better than some Whites, physically, mentally, morally? |
35099 | Does some one say that physical beauty is a poor, inferior thing at best-- that beauty of soul is alone sufficient and only desirable? |
35099 | Especially, why did these invaders not yield to the new local or climatic distempers to which the invaded had long since become measurably immune? |
35099 | Even the highest success might seem humble enough, but is it sure that even such a lowly victory awaits him? |
35099 | For him the problem of race pathology exists as a purely practical one: At what rates can the Negro be insured? |
35099 | For over against all these transcendent achievements, what has the West African to set? |
35099 | For"who can so forecast the years?" |
35099 | Has any reason been opposed against which one could"object"? |
35099 | Have equal opportunities raised the 150,000 Negroes in Pennsylvania to the white level? |
35099 | Have they not called out of the nation''s heart all that was best to throttle and subdue all that was worst? |
35099 | Have we not already said that such is the end of the matter? |
35099 | How came it yours? |
35099 | How then shall such a product be imposed upon an alien and inferior race? |
35099 | If indeed"it is a question of mental contents rather than of mental capacities,"whence, we insist, came those"mental contents"? |
35099 | If not,"why, then, did the white race alone develop a civilization which is sweeping the whole world, etc.?" |
35099 | If so, pray tell us how many more years had the Sumerians lived seventy centuries ago than the citizens of Dahomey up to now? |
35099 | If then the Afro- American race stands even now at the entrance of the Valley of the Shadow of Death, what shall we say, what shall we do? |
35099 | If, then, such inherent disparities in individuals be undeniable, is parity among tribes or races to be expected? |
35099 | In Michigan there is no prejudice against the Negro, but rather for him, and how stands the court record? |
35099 | In what respect, pray then, are they distinguishable? |
35099 | Is it mainly, at least, an( average) uniform difference of faculty? |
35099 | Is it not, in fact, antecedently incredible? |
35099 | Is not such the obvious teaching of history? |
35099 | Is not this a proof of a higher organization of the inhabitants of Europe?" |
35099 | Is our civilization a failure? |
35099 | Is there any doubt whatever as to the alternative? |
35099 | Is there not every reason to hope that they will forge steadily ahead and widen still more and more the interval between? |
35099 | Is this rate a fact? |
35099 | Is, then, emancipation but an apple of Sodom, turning to ashes on his lips? |
35099 | It should have been said,"Was Greek civilization such as to indicate that the Athenian was superior to the Senegambian or the Hottentot?" |
35099 | Maybe these records are not worth the paper they were written on; but can the same be said of the New England records? |
35099 | Must he not, then, ultimately make them completely his own? |
35099 | Now can all this be accidental? |
35099 | OR NATURE? |
35099 | OR NATURE? |
35099 | OR THE RACE? |
35099 | OR THE RACE? |
35099 | Or in Chatham, Ontario? |
35099 | Or in Paris? |
35099 | Or is visions about? |
35099 | Or the 100,000 in New York? |
35099 | Or those in New England? |
35099 | Or to some in far higher measure? |
35099 | Or who cares? |
35099 | Ought Babylonian empire to have lifted up its lion wings over Western Asia? |
35099 | Perfect his type as you will, even as you perfect the type of a flower or a bird, does not the Sudanese remain at immense remove from the European? |
35099 | Shall we cry out to Heaven and to Congress against the crime of the centuries? |
35099 | Shall we lift up the trump of indignation against such red- handed iniquity? |
35099 | Shall we weep and wail and gnash our teeth? |
35099 | Should Roman legions have conquered Greece and girdled the Mediterranean with her civilization? |
35099 | Some one may ask, however, is there not some grain of correctness in this contention that capacity can not always be measured by achievement? |
35099 | That he has excelled all other sons of men in certain respects? |
35099 | That he has fallen markedly below the Jew and the German in others? |
35099 | The question is, Are they, in their own anatomical and historical connection, any proof? |
35099 | They ask( in effect): Does the civilization of the Greek indicate that he was superior to the West African? |
35099 | This question is: What has the future in store for the Negro? |
35099 | Though her blood might still flow pure in myriad veins, yet who could prove it? |
35099 | To the Black, or to the White? |
35099 | To whom was it due? |
35099 | True, but most inadequate; for why did not the contact with the new peoples affect the invaders as well as the invaded with new diseases? |
35099 | True, perhaps; but what of it? |
35099 | Turn back to it; perhaps the proof involves some still more fundamental property, and again you ask, why? |
35099 | Very true; but why stop here? |
35099 | W. B. S._ Tulane University, 25th October, 1904._ THE COLOR LINE CHAPTER ONE THE INDIVIDUAL? |
35099 | We appeal to the whole tribe of teachers, from Dan to Beersheba-- what one has ever supplied"mental contents"in the absence of"mental capacities"? |
35099 | We should really like to know, if the Greeks were neither superior nor inferior to the Bushmen, what was the real distinction between them? |
35099 | What art? |
35099 | What even one single aspect of civilization or culture or higher humanity? |
35099 | What fields of employment, then, remain open to the Negroid? |
35099 | What has been done in the last four hundred years, under the stimulus of Spanish contact? |
35099 | What history? |
35099 | What interest has any one in contesting such statements? |
35099 | What is the prison record? |
35099 | What means this expressive silence? |
35099 | What morality? |
35099 | What more do we ask? |
35099 | What more do we need? |
35099 | What niceties of demonstration, may they still insist, have passed unobserved? |
35099 | What philosophy? |
35099 | What religion? |
35099 | What science? |
35099 | What the cause? |
35099 | What then is to become of the Black Man? |
35099 | What, then, are the scruples of these critics? |
35099 | What, then, must we say? |
35099 | What, then, shall we say? |
35099 | When Greek culture led captive the Roman captor, did it arm him with Greek genius? |
35099 | When the bow of Hellenic science fell into the hands of the Arab, was he quite able to bend it? |
35099 | When we first meet with such denials, we are almost dumbfounded; we rub our eyes and exclaim with Truthful James:_ Do I sleep? |
35099 | Where are the blessings of freedom? |
35099 | Where have racial characteristics been transformed or abolished? |
35099 | Who argues therefrom? |
35099 | Who knows when the scion of a millionaire may turn into a motorman, or the son of a peasant hew his way to the Capitol? |
35099 | Who trained their trainers? |
35099 | Who, then, can compute its import for the history of the race? |
35099 | Why has century- long contact with other civilizations never enkindled the feeblest flame? |
35099 | Why not boldly urge that Plato might have traced back his lineage to an amoeba,--yea, to star- dust and curdling ether? |
35099 | Why not social separation and the race standard in the South, but social equality and the standard of personal merit in the North? |
35099 | Why should the spectacle of a racial diminuendo so arouse or revolt us? |
35099 | Why, if education could lift the Negro to the Caucasian level, to what, pray, in the meantime would it lift the Caucasian himself? |
35099 | Why, then, did this meteoric shower powder Mesopotamia so densely and sprinkle a dust so impalpable over the Sudan? |
35099 | Why, then, imagine that they may close up the far wider gap between individuals of different races-- between the races themselves? |
35099 | Will any one deny that the Greek was measurably superior to the Mede in a host of important particulars? |
35099 | Will any one deny that the degrees of faculty are often inexpressibly apart in members of the same family? |
35099 | Will any one hesitate for an answer? |
35099 | Would any such discrimination keep down the Anglo- Saxon? |
35099 | Would he not"make by force his merit known"? |
35099 | Would such an experiment beseem any other place so well as the madhouse? |
35099 | and can there be any doubt of the answer? |
13201 | ''Have you seen but a white lily grow?'' 13201 Ah, yes, I remember the volume, about the middle?" |
13201 | Am I not right? 13201 And a sole?" |
13201 | And did n''t I present an ideal appearance? |
13201 | And do they become Parisians? |
13201 | And off again early in the morning? |
13201 | And since I came back have you wished to go away? |
13201 | And that made no difference to you? |
13201 | And that was some years ago? |
13201 | And the music? |
13201 | And then? |
13201 | And where did all these things come from? |
13201 | And who is Monsignor Mostyn? |
13201 | And who was it,Evelyn said,"that told you I was a singer?" |
13201 | And whose mass are you going to play to- day? |
13201 | And you knew that I should care for you? |
13201 | And you think that we should begin by respecting the marriage ceremony? |
13201 | Are you going already? 13201 Are you going to marry him?" |
13201 | Are you not--? 13201 Are you sure, Owen? |
13201 | Are you very busy, then, are you expecting a pupil? |
13201 | Asking you to come to see him? |
13201 | But all prima- donnas can do that? |
13201 | But are you going away with him? |
13201 | But can I trust myself? 13201 But do we not inherit our reason just as much as we inherit our feelings?" |
13201 | But have you an idea of what life you wish to lead? |
13201 | But have you heard the Benedictine nuns sing the plain chant; they pause in the middle of the verse-- that is the tradition, is it not? |
13201 | But how about Grania? |
13201 | But how did you know he was not at home if you did not go to Dulwich? |
13201 | But if I loved someone? 13201 But is your father coming back at one?" |
13201 | But it is Evelyn-- it was her dearest wish.... Is it then impossible? 13201 But may I venture to advise you?" |
13201 | But this is not our carriage? |
13201 | But what are you looking for? |
13201 | But when I came to tell you about the ruined Valhala and the poor fallen Gods you were sorry? |
13201 | But who has gone away? |
13201 | But who would hurt you? |
13201 | But why are you like this? |
13201 | But why did you travel straight through? 13201 But why do you want to cost me nothing?" |
13201 | But why must I be quick? 13201 But why should you leave me?" |
13201 | But you are fond of me? |
13201 | But you are not cross with me? 13201 But you do n''t think he would hurt you?" |
13201 | But you do n''t want to go back to him? 13201 But you do not regret-- you would not go back?" |
13201 | But you had seen my photograph? |
13201 | But you seem sad; what is it? |
13201 | But you will come and see me soon? 13201 But, Monsignor, are you going to refuse me your absolution?" |
13201 | But, Monsignor, my Communion? 13201 But, father, do you think such orchestration realisable in modern music? |
13201 | But, father, do you think that the congregation of St. Joseph''s is one that would care for the refinement of Palestrina? 13201 Can they?" |
13201 | Can you not hear? 13201 Could you sing this? |
13201 | Dearest, do you know what time is it? 13201 Dearest, of what are you thinking?" |
13201 | Dearest, what are you thinking of? |
13201 | Did I make you a promise? |
13201 | Did I say so? 13201 Did I sing it as well as mother?" |
13201 | Did he not ask you to marry him? |
13201 | Did he say that? 13201 Did you love her very much?" |
13201 | Did you say it was half- past eight, Merat? |
13201 | Did you see Ulick Dean''s article? |
13201 | Did you think so? 13201 Did you, dear? |
13201 | Did you? |
13201 | Do I look as if I did n''t? |
13201 | Do I remind you of one of his characters? |
13201 | Do come, girls; can you come on Thursday night? 13201 Do n''t you believe that I am fond of you, Evelyn?" |
13201 | Do n''t you like those villas? 13201 Do n''t you wish to? |
13201 | Do you care to go in? |
13201 | Do you know what time it is? 13201 Do you not feel that it is to be?" |
13201 | Do you remember the lessons that you gave me on the viola da gamba? |
13201 | Do you think I can tell you anything about the music you do n''t know already? |
13201 | Do you think anyone''s life can be that? |
13201 | Do you think he will like the music you are going to give at the next concert? 13201 Do you think they do not seem long to me? |
13201 | Do you think you''ll come back? |
13201 | Do you want to see father very much about the Greek hymn? |
13201 | Do you? 13201 Does he succeed?" |
13201 | Does mademoiselle wish to sing as a professional or as an amateur? |
13201 | Evelyn, dear, is it quite essential that you should go? |
13201 | Evelyn, how can you speak like that? 13201 Evelyn, you can not mean that you will never see me again?" |
13201 | Evelyn, you have lived with me in spite of your scruples for the last six years; why should we not go on for one more year? 13201 Grania?" |
13201 | Has it got any other meaning? |
13201 | Have I been so severe with you, Evelyn, that you should dread me? |
13201 | Have you any books, father? 13201 Have you been long with my father? |
13201 | Have you copied the letter, dear? |
13201 | Have you forgotten the knight that came to release the sleeping beauty of the woods from her bondage? 13201 Have you written to him?" |
13201 | How am I to sing the Liebestod after all this? 13201 How can you act Elizabeth, she is so different from what you are?" |
13201 | How did I sing it? |
13201 | How did he pick her up? |
13201 | How do you do, Mr. Hermann Goetze? 13201 How do you do, sister? |
13201 | How do you know there is a Boucher drawing? |
13201 | How often? 13201 I can hardly fancy him braving the elements, can you, Evelyn?" |
13201 | I could not come to see you,she said, still looking at him fixedly;"you know that I could not.... Then why do you ask me?" |
13201 | I hope Mademoiselle is not ill? |
13201 | I hope she has not been wearying you with the details of our life? |
13201 | I should like to very much, but you will not sing with all your voice? |
13201 | I suppose that the temptation that we yield to is the temptation? |
13201 | I thought it was off the coast of Asia Minor? |
13201 | I thought you said that such a thing could not be; that no pupil of yours had ever gone straight into the opera class? |
13201 | I wonder if father was there? 13201 I wonder if we could get a nice dinner for him this evening?" |
13201 | I wonder of she''s faithful to him? |
13201 | I wonder what Lady Ascott will think? |
13201 | I wonder what your Elizabeth will be like? |
13201 | I wonder what your cooking is like? |
13201 | I wonder why that should remind you of me? |
13201 | I wonder,he said, assuming a meditative air,"what will become of you? |
13201 | I''ve not lost much of my playing, have I? |
13201 | I''ve put the case truthfully, have n''t I? 13201 If I am not to meet him I must go away-- but where? |
13201 | If I cared for anyone else, should I come to you to- night and offer to marry you? |
13201 | If I were to take Miss Innes to the organ loft and show her what music we have-- don''t you think so, Mother Philippa?'' 13201 If reality means what we understand, could anything be more unreal?" |
13201 | If your doubts were sincere, what has removed them? 13201 In the bottom of that bookcase, I think; do n''t you remember it?" |
13201 | Is Sister Mary John the sister who teaches you? |
13201 | Is he coming home? 13201 Is he lonely, do you think... in the evenings?" |
13201 | Is it, then, the same thing? |
13201 | Is my father coming home to dinner? |
13201 | Is n''t it? 13201 Is she?" |
13201 | Is that all? |
13201 | Is that really true? 13201 Is that right?" |
13201 | Is that the only reason you can give? |
13201 | Is that you, Sir Owen?... 13201 Is that your carriage?... |
13201 | Is this life, then, not real? |
13201 | It has been a charming day, has n''t it? |
13201 | It is only curiosity, but I wonder how he would make love-- how he''d begin? 13201 Lady Duckle is still at Homburg, is she not?" |
13201 | Laughing at us? 13201 Left the stage?" |
13201 | May I not come? |
13201 | No one, is there? |
13201 | No; it is not the sort of thing one generally tells one''s father, but-- I can not go away with you now--"When will you come? |
13201 | Nobly? 13201 Now, why did you think that? |
13201 | Of what do you think? |
13201 | Oh, am I not? |
13201 | Oh, do you sing? |
13201 | Oh, it is you? |
13201 | Oh, that''s it, is it? 13201 On what?" |
13201 | One of those men,he said,"has come again into your life?" |
13201 | Only I should feel tired in the morning.... Are you coming to my room? |
13201 | Owen, do you think you want to marry me? 13201 Plenty of chromatic writing?" |
13201 | Shall I go on doing these daily tasks for ever? |
13201 | Shall I never get away from this place? |
13201 | Shall you have time?... 13201 Since he became a Catholic, has he not done as much work as he used to do?" |
13201 | So it was not strange when you came here first? |
13201 | So many as that? |
13201 | So that is why you surrounded yourself with pious pictures-- to keep him away? |
13201 | So you are glad that she is not here? |
13201 | So you did n''t believe me when I said that it was to hear you sing that I came back? |
13201 | So you were surprised to hear that I had given up my trip round the world? |
13201 | Tannhäuseris the story of humanity, for what is the human story if it is n''t the pursuit of an ideal? |
13201 | Tell me more about the music? 13201 Tell me, do you think the concerts will ever pay?" |
13201 | That what was not your fault, dear? |
13201 | That you renounced your trip round the world? |
13201 | The All- Father? |
13201 | The woman with the red hair who was at your party? |
13201 | Then I am not to draw the curtains? 13201 Then I may run and tell Margaret?" |
13201 | Then Mademoiselle does not want the carriage? |
13201 | Then if I broke it off with you, or you broke it off with me, it would be for ever? |
13201 | Then it was she who got tired of you? 13201 Then passion is the highest plane to which the materialist can rise?" |
13201 | Then she thinks I''ve a good voice? |
13201 | Then what are you complaining of, darling? 13201 Then what are you going to do? |
13201 | Then what do you think I did? 13201 Then what happens to Bran, the son of Feval?" |
13201 | Then why ca n''t I imagine it? |
13201 | Then why did you say you would not come and see me? |
13201 | Then why does it not seem true? 13201 Then why should we say good- bye? |
13201 | Then you are coming with me to Paris? |
13201 | Then you did think of me whilst you were away? |
13201 | Then you do believe in a future state? |
13201 | Then you do love me a little, Evelyn? |
13201 | Then you do love me, dearest? 13201 Then you expected me, Ulick?" |
13201 | Then you knew the convent long before you came to be a nun yourself? |
13201 | Then, my child, are you so anxious to change your present life for that of the stage? |
13201 | This is terrible, is n''t it? 13201 This is the young lady of whom you spoke to me?" |
13201 | This morning? 13201 Twenty minutes? |
13201 | Veronica told you, Miss Innes, I was taking my watch? |
13201 | Warmed up? |
13201 | Was it to hear me sing that you came back? |
13201 | Was n''t it well sung? |
13201 | Was there ever such happiness? 13201 We had a beefsteak pudding for dinner; I wonder if you could eat beefsteak pudding?" |
13201 | Well, Asher, how is it that you are in town at this time of year? |
13201 | Well, I was thinking that you might like--Sister Mary John looked up at Evelyn--"I suppose you can sing B flat, or even C?" |
13201 | Well, little girl, what do you think? 13201 Well, will you come for a cruise with me in the_ Medusa_? |
13201 | Well,she said,"did I sing it to your satisfaction?" |
13201 | What am I to say, Miss Innes? 13201 What are you looking for? |
13201 | What did he say? 13201 What did it mean?" |
13201 | What did you know? |
13201 | What did you sing to him? |
13201 | What do you think? |
13201 | What do you think? |
13201 | What does it matter? 13201 What does she do?" |
13201 | What happiness? |
13201 | What has come between us, tell me? 13201 What has happened?" |
13201 | What is it, my girl? |
13201 | What is one to do? 13201 What is the matter? |
13201 | What is the matter? |
13201 | What is this instrument-- a virginal or a harpsichord? |
13201 | What is to be? |
13201 | What matter? |
13201 | What romance, what mystery? 13201 What shall we play-- a Bach sonata? |
13201 | What was I singing? 13201 What was the matter with you?" |
13201 | What were you going to say, father? |
13201 | What, miss, are you the great singer? |
13201 | When I like? 13201 When are you going?" |
13201 | When did you begin to write opera? 13201 When you were thinking of something different?" |
13201 | When? |
13201 | Where is the viola da gamba part? |
13201 | Where shall we sit? |
13201 | Where would you like to lunch? 13201 Which of his books is it like?" |
13201 | Which one? |
13201 | Which would you like, Evelyn? |
13201 | Which you used to see far away as in a dream? |
13201 | Who is about? |
13201 | Who is it who beckons me? 13201 Who taught you to kiss like that?" |
13201 | Who was Lucien? |
13201 | Why anything? 13201 Why are you singing that melancholy Mark motive?" |
13201 | Why are you so cruel? 13201 Why are you what you are? |
13201 | Why choose a day on which you have a rehearsal? |
13201 | Why did he not write the opera, Olive? |
13201 | Why did you not marry her when she was in love with you? |
13201 | Why did you order the brougham? |
13201 | Why did you stop and look so startled when you saw me? |
13201 | Why do you ask? |
13201 | Why do you call me Eve? 13201 Why do you think that? |
13201 | Why do you think that? |
13201 | Why do you turn your lips away? 13201 Why make my task more difficult than it is? |
13201 | Why must I? |
13201 | Why not to- morrow? |
13201 | Why not? 13201 Why not?" |
13201 | Why not? |
13201 | Why, Evelyn, have you got tired of me? |
13201 | Why, dearest? 13201 Will nothing ever happen? |
13201 | Will you come and see me to- morrow? |
13201 | Will you come away with me? |
13201 | Will you let me play my music to you? |
13201 | With whom is it, Ulick? 13201 Wo n''t you give me the keynote?" |
13201 | Wo n''t you let me help you to pick up your pictures? |
13201 | Wo n''t you sit down, Monsignor? |
13201 | Wotan, you say, forgives Brunnhilde, but does n''t he put her to sleep on a fire- surrounded rock? |
13201 | Would you know a certain sign, my daughters, by which you may judge of your progress in virtue? 13201 Yes, and then they both regret that they broke off--""Could they not begin it again?" |
13201 | Yes, but how did you know? |
13201 | Yes,he said;"I''ve not made much progress, have I?" |
13201 | Yes; what does that mean? |
13201 | You are going to shoot with Lord Ascott next month? |
13201 | You are in love with him? |
13201 | You are stopping to- night? |
13201 | You bought this carriage and these horses for me, Owen? |
13201 | You ca n''t have husbands without marriage, and if there were no husbands, who would look after our mistresses? |
13201 | You can cook a chicken, Agnes? |
13201 | You can not go to- morrow? |
13201 | You did n''t see him? |
13201 | You did not think we were going to the Lonchamps in a_ fiacre_, did you? 13201 You do n''t like''Carmen''?" |
13201 | You do n''t mean this very instant? 13201 You do n''t read much, father?" |
13201 | You do n''t think it wrong to kiss me? |
13201 | You do n''t think she suspects? |
13201 | You had written music before you had met father? |
13201 | You take no interest in jewels; are n''t you well? |
13201 | You think a man incapable of giving up anything for a woman? |
13201 | You told him so the other night? |
13201 | You want me to sing? |
13201 | You weary of the simplicity of your present life, and sigh for the brilliancy of the stage? |
13201 | You went to confession-- to him? |
13201 | You''ll send him a box for the first night? |
13201 | You''re very strange, Evelyn, and I do n''t know what answer to make to you.... Why did you send him away, and why did you refuse to marry him? |
13201 | You''ve got that--''so irreparable a wrong- doing as it might have been in other and easily imagined circumstances''? |
13201 | Your heart, Reverend Mother? 13201 Your old convent?" |
13201 | _ Must_ I? 13201 ''May we not meet again?'' 13201 A moment after she reached out her hand to him saying--You''re not angry with me? |
13201 | A moment afterwards he said, and she noticed that his voice trembled,"You are coming in to tea?" |
13201 | After all my teaching has it come to this? |
13201 | Am I not nice to you?" |
13201 | And Owen''s grey eyes fixed upon her: where had she seen them? |
13201 | And Owen? |
13201 | And the celebrated duet in the nuptial chamber-- what did it mean? |
13201 | And then? |
13201 | And what would she think of it? |
13201 | And who would play the viola da gamba at his concerts? |
13201 | And,"she exclaimed, clasping her hands,"who will play the viola da gamba?" |
13201 | Are n''t you satisfied? |
13201 | Are n''t you well? |
13201 | Are these her songs?" |
13201 | Are they not admirably drawn and painted? |
13201 | Are you fond of me?" |
13201 | Are you going to marry him?" |
13201 | Are you in such a very great hurry?" |
13201 | Are you sure of that?" |
13201 | Are you sure she''s not laughing at us?" |
13201 | As soon as she came into the room he said,"Well, have you seen your father?" |
13201 | At last it had come to him, perhaps through the sheer force of his desire, and now, should he refrain from the dream, or should he dream it? |
13201 | At last she said, raising her tearful eyes--"If I were to leave you, father, you would never forgive me? |
13201 | At last she said--"Why do n''t you speak? |
13201 | Be nice, do n''t refuse; what does it matter? |
13201 | Because there''s something about me in it?" |
13201 | But Elsa? |
13201 | But Elsa? |
13201 | But I am your only daughter, and you would forgive me; whatever happened, we should always love one another?" |
13201 | But I''ve heard of Wagner; you sing Wagner, do n''t you, Miss Innes?" |
13201 | But Ulick? |
13201 | But afterwards? |
13201 | But are you sure we''re going right?... Is this the way to the picture gallery?" |
13201 | But could she remain on the stage without a lover? |
13201 | But did Ulick really believe in Angus and Lir and the Great Mother Dana? |
13201 | But did she love Owen, or was she getting tired of him? |
13201 | But did she love him well enough to marry him? |
13201 | But had she a great voice? |
13201 | But had she really hoped to find him at St. Joseph''s, or had she used the pretext to deceive herself? |
13201 | But had she? |
13201 | But how can you think of such things?" |
13201 | But how could Ulick know? |
13201 | But how little, the author asked, do words help us to understand? |
13201 | But how often had she had to put it down and to walk to the window to hide her tears? |
13201 | But how was she to avoid meeting him? |
13201 | But how would she finally separate herself from him? |
13201 | But how? |
13201 | But if religion was not true, if she did not believe, how was it that she had always thought it wrong to live with a man to whom she was not married? |
13201 | But if she desired to reform her life, how was she to begin? |
13201 | But if she should learn from Sir Owen to forget him; if he were to lose her altogether; if she should never return? |
13201 | But if she went there, how would she explain her visit?... |
13201 | But of what was she thinking? |
13201 | But she could not discover the idea in the"Lohengrin"duet? |
13201 | But something has happened, something has forced you to this?" |
13201 | But tell me, did father come?" |
13201 | But tell me, is he very incensed? |
13201 | But then? |
13201 | But those stars-- could they tell her nothing? |
13201 | But was it possible that she was never going to join again in the tumult of the Valkyrie? |
13201 | But was not a portrayal of sexual passion such as she intended very sinful? |
13201 | But what are you thinking of? |
13201 | But what could she do? |
13201 | But what did this story mean, what meaning had it for her? |
13201 | But what end should she choose for herself if the choice were left to her-- to come back to Dulwich and live with her father? |
13201 | But what excuse would she give? |
13201 | But what should she do till two o''clock? |
13201 | But what then? |
13201 | But what then? |
13201 | But what was she to do? |
13201 | But where? |
13201 | But which opera? |
13201 | But why did he make himself offensive to many people by speaking against Christianity? |
13201 | But why did she not go to some quiet seaside place where she could enjoy the summer weather? |
13201 | But why do n''t you offer to help father instead?" |
13201 | But why do you make me say these things?" |
13201 | But why he? |
13201 | But why must n''t I?" |
13201 | But why not go straight to the house? |
13201 | But why seek mystery beyond this poor planet? |
13201 | But why should she retire from the stage? |
13201 | But would she go away with him? |
13201 | But would the Reverend Mother tolerate this friendship, or would it be promptly cut down to the root according to the advice of St. Teresa? |
13201 | But you know the Rue de la Paix?" |
13201 | But you said you were determined to tell me something-- what is it?" |
13201 | But you think it is?" |
13201 | But you think we shall?" |
13201 | But you''ll lead them?" |
13201 | But you''ll sing again before you leave?" |
13201 | But, Evelyn, what are you determined to tell me? |
13201 | But, Ulick, what were you saying when I came in?" |
13201 | But, if you can not bear the present, how will you bear the success that is to come?" |
13201 | Ca n''t we be friends?" |
13201 | Ca n''t you understand?" |
13201 | Can it be true? |
13201 | Can you let me have a room to dress in?" |
13201 | Could I have done less for my old convent? |
13201 | Could anyone tell her? |
13201 | Could anything be more grotesque? |
13201 | Could she follow it? |
13201 | Could she give up the stage? |
13201 | Could she go to Bayreuth by herself? |
13201 | Could she live without a lover? |
13201 | Could she renounce her art? |
13201 | Could she undertake it? |
13201 | Could you not go to your father''s for a time?" |
13201 | Did I sing as well as ever you heard me sing?" |
13201 | Did he really believe that lovers may tempt each other life after life, that a group of people may come together again? |
13201 | Did it look like that? |
13201 | Did she love Ulick Dean? |
13201 | Did she say that?" |
13201 | Did the Fairy Maiden mean death? |
13201 | Did the plains of the Ever Living, which the Fairy Maiden had promised Connla on the condition of his following her, lie behind those specks of light? |
13201 | Did you hear any reason given?" |
13201 | Did you look in the stalls?" |
13201 | Did you see any one as you came through the furze bushes?" |
13201 | Did you think of me? |
13201 | Do n''t you think so, Monsignor?" |
13201 | Do you know it?" |
13201 | Do you remember?" |
13201 | Do you think it worth it?" |
13201 | Do you think we shall?" |
13201 | Do you think you will sing at Benediction this afternoon for us? |
13201 | Do you think, darling, you can live all that time without me? |
13201 | Do you understand?" |
13201 | Do you want me to come?" |
13201 | Does he believed in astrology, the casting of horoscopes, or is it mere affectation?" |
13201 | Does he get cross with you like that, Miss Innes?" |
13201 | Does mademoiselle speak French?" |
13201 | Does not woman need the grosser aid of dogma to raise her sensual nature out of complete abjection? |
13201 | Each would find opportunities of development; they would struggle for mastery; which would succeed?... |
13201 | Elizabeth? |
13201 | Elsa? |
13201 | Evelyn, dear, is it not so? |
13201 | Every day?" |
13201 | Father, I can see that you pity him; you''re sorry for him, are n''t you?" |
13201 | Father, are you not going to speak to me? |
13201 | Father, ca n''t you see that that can never be? |
13201 | Father, you must keep your appointment with Monsignor, and you must say nothing to Owen if you should meet him; you promise me that? |
13201 | For how otherwise could that bottle have escaped her notice? |
13201 | For if her father were to refuse to see her, if he were to cast her off for good and all, what would she do? |
13201 | For my business is really with you, that is, if you can spare the time?" |
13201 | For what more valid argument in favour of a chaste life than that the instinct of chastity abides in us? |
13201 | Go back and bring disgrace upon herself and upon her father? |
13201 | Had Ulick suggested it to her? |
13201 | Had her moralising, then, ended in such miserable selfishness as this? |
13201 | Had her repentance there been a joy or a pain? |
13201 | Had she ever been unfaithful to him? |
13201 | Had she ever thought of being a nun? |
13201 | Had she not always known that her destiny was not with Owen, that he was but a passing, not the abiding event of her life? |
13201 | Has Father Gordon been here? |
13201 | Has mademoiselle studied music?" |
13201 | Have I already met him?" |
13201 | Have you entirely ceased to care?" |
13201 | Have you examined the evidence?" |
13201 | Have you forgotten how you went away leaving me to bear the shame, the disgrace?" |
13201 | Have you never sung Mozart?" |
13201 | Have you not thought of it?" |
13201 | He asked if the dark background in Cuyp''s picture,"The White Horse and the Riding School,"was not admirable? |
13201 | He did n''t wish to be cynical, but he did want to know whether he was going to fall in love?... |
13201 | He had begun to ask himself if he was mistaken-- if she had really this wonderful voice, or if it only existed in his imagination? |
13201 | He had heard all that sort of thing before.... What should he do? |
13201 | He helped you, did he not, in your musical education?" |
13201 | He is coming, I suppose?" |
13201 | He might not send for her when he was dying, and if she were dying he might not come to her; and after death, would she see him? |
13201 | He must forgive her, for how could he live without her? |
13201 | He put his arm round her and said--"I love to kiss you.... Why do you turn away your head?" |
13201 | He said--"Well Evelyn, when is all this nonsense going to cease?" |
13201 | He spoke of the sea, but who was to take her to Brighton or Margate? |
13201 | He was interested in her, he admired her, but did he love her? |
13201 | Her friends would follow her, lovers would follow her, temptations would begin again, would she have strength to resist? |
13201 | Her mother was a good woman.... What did she think of her daughter? |
13201 | Her sins interested her; she would not be herself without them, and this being so, how could she hope to conquer herself? |
13201 | His eye wandered, then returning to Harding, he said--"We can not worship and be worshipped; is that what you mean? |
13201 | How could she be otherwise than happy when she knew she was going to him?" |
13201 | How could she think that he would permit such a barbarism? |
13201 | How did I sing to- night?" |
13201 | How did you and father become acquainted?" |
13201 | How did you think of it?" |
13201 | How do you know that he is her lover? |
13201 | How do you know these things, Ulick?" |
13201 | How does he advise you?" |
13201 | How does it begin?" |
13201 | How had she come to repeat anything she had heard him say? |
13201 | How is my father looking, Agnes?" |
13201 | How often before had she not refused, and with his approbation? |
13201 | How was she to change her life? |
13201 | How was she to separate herself from her surroundings? |
13201 | How would it all come about? |
13201 | I admire your Margaret; it was a wonderful performance, but--""But what, father?" |
13201 | I do n''t think so.... You wo n''t tell my father I''m here when you let him in?... |
13201 | I do n''t want him to think me a brute, a villainous seducer, the man who ruined his daughter?" |
13201 | I hope I did not spoil it?" |
13201 | I hope all this is quite clear to you?" |
13201 | I hope you are n''t like that, miss?" |
13201 | I hope you do n''t mind, Miss Innes?" |
13201 | I hope you slept well last night, and did not find your bed too uncomfortable?" |
13201 | I suppose the doubts you entertain regarding the doctrine of the Church are the result of his teaching?" |
13201 | I suppose you expected me?" |
13201 | I suppose you''ll bring them back?" |
13201 | I thought you were going to Communion on Sunday?" |
13201 | I wonder for whom?" |
13201 | I wonder if any lover would have the courage to forswear these joys so that he might retain his mistress? |
13201 | I wonder if he cares for women?" |
13201 | I wonder if he will allow the Reproaches to be sung in Holy Week? |
13201 | I wonder if it is so? |
13201 | I wonder if we shall be as happy in married life? |
13201 | I''m as nice as you thought I''d be?" |
13201 | If I had n''t been, should I have rushed off in my old yacht for a tour round the world?" |
13201 | If I stay here, father, he must not come-- I''m ashamed to ask you this, but what am I to do? |
13201 | If he did not go away with her, what would happen? |
13201 | If he did? |
13201 | If it were, what would she say? |
13201 | If other proof were wanting, would not this fact be enough to convince me that my life has been all wrong? |
13201 | If she did n''t, he would suspect-- what would he suspect? |
13201 | If she had been more richly gifted by Nature, to what shameful usage had she put her body and her talents? |
13201 | If she were to go back to Owen, or to other lovers? |
13201 | If she were to pay the indemnity-- could she? |
13201 | If something were to happen? |
13201 | If that is not good enough for him-- by the way, have you looked through that sonata?" |
13201 | If there was no parody of the Mass, why should they say that they would not like to see the piece performed elsewhere? |
13201 | If they were to find Mr. Innes waiting at the door of the hotel? |
13201 | In a moment of unexpected courage, she said,"Do you know him, Monsignor?" |
13201 | In my room or in the restaurant?" |
13201 | In what part of the theatre were you?" |
13201 | Is a passion ever obliterated? |
13201 | Is it not admirable? |
13201 | Is it not rather transformed? |
13201 | Is it not true?" |
13201 | Is it on account of the name you want me to live there?" |
13201 | Is n''t it so?" |
13201 | Is n''t that so?" |
13201 | Is n''t that so?" |
13201 | Is n''t the racecourse like an English lawn, like an overgrown croquet ground? |
13201 | Is not our first duty towards ourselves? |
13201 | Is not that beautiful?" |
13201 | Is not the most mendacious mistress often taken with the desire of confession... the wish to reveal herself? |
13201 | Is not your offer mere chivalry? |
13201 | Is that the way you think I arrived at my Margaret? |
13201 | Is that what you were going to say?" |
13201 | Is that your idea of Elizabeth?" |
13201 | Is there a street called after him? |
13201 | It is not like the opera you showed me a year or two ago in which instead of motives certain instruments introduce the characters? |
13201 | It must mean something, just as those stars must mean something-- but what? |
13201 | It was beautiful music-- but what did it mean? |
13201 | It was quite unexpected?" |
13201 | Joseph''s?" |
13201 | Let me see-- this is it, is n''t it?" |
13201 | Margaret? |
13201 | Men have been known to regret the money they spent on themselves, but who has ever regretted the money he has spent in charity? |
13201 | Miss Innes, will you look at this composition? |
13201 | Mongan?" |
13201 | Moreover, could she sing florid music? |
13201 | Moreover, why had she said that she had not heard him say so? |
13201 | Mr. Hermann Goetze, what would he say? |
13201 | Neither spoke for a time, then Evelyn said,"Reverend Mother, is it not strange that I should have come back to this convent, my old convent? |
13201 | No, she would not seek him in the practising room-- then where-- Dulwich? |
13201 | Of course, it was very wrong, but has that changed anything? |
13201 | Of what value, I ask, can it be to suffering humanity to know that such and such a fact has been observed and described? |
13201 | Often he asked himself if he were capable of redeeming his promise to his dead wife, or if he shirked the uncongenial labour it entailed? |
13201 | Oh, Evelyn, is it-- are you married?" |
13201 | Only--""Only what, dear?" |
13201 | Or was it that slow, deliberate, persuasive manner? |
13201 | Our loves and our ambitions, what are they when we consider him? |
13201 | Owen''s influence had died in her; how did she know that Monsignor''s would continue even so long? |
13201 | Owen, dear, you do n''t hate me?" |
13201 | Perhaps you are tired after your journey?" |
13201 | Refuse Owen? |
13201 | Refused while looking into her dying eyes, or run out of the room? |
13201 | Rising from her chair, she said--"Will you hear my confession now, Monsignor?" |
13201 | Rosa Sucher had no doubt attained an extraordinary oneness of idea, but at what price? |
13201 | Shall I be happy?" |
13201 | Shall I meet a face of stone?" |
13201 | Shall we ever meet again?" |
13201 | She asked herself if she believed in a future life of any sort? |
13201 | She asked, What do we live for? |
13201 | She did not answer, and, frightened by her irresponsive eyes, he said--"But, Evelyn, you must love me, me-- only me; you will never see him again?" |
13201 | She drew him closer, and said--"What is the matter, dear? |
13201 | She had come back-- but what new pond would she plunge into? |
13201 | She had lived an evil life for six years; would she lead a good one for the same time? |
13201 | She had never heard any of his music; would Miss Innes lend her some? |
13201 | She loved him, but was her present love as intense as the love that had obsessed her whole nature in Paris six years ago? |
13201 | She might do that-- but when her father died? |
13201 | She might go for a walk, but where? |
13201 | She must send him away, but what reasons should she give? |
13201 | She remembered the moment with singular distinctness when she heard the voice crying within her? |
13201 | She walked up the room, and tried to understand herself-- what was she, bad or good, weak or strong? |
13201 | She was coldly received, was she?" |
13201 | She would easily resist him now; but in six months''time, in a year? |
13201 | She-- Evelyn Innes? |
13201 | Should she marry him and accept the Gods? |
13201 | Should she tell him that Ulick was her lover? |
13201 | So the question was, how far his personality accounted for the change that had come over her life? |
13201 | So you went after all? |
13201 | Suffice it to say that I have repented, and have come to ask you if you''ll have me back to live with you?" |
13201 | That she played the viola da gamba very well was true enough, but what sense was there in a girl like that playing an instrument? |
13201 | That she was in love with Ulick? |
13201 | That''s good enough for you, is n''t it? |
13201 | The Virgin might have interceded on her behalf, for is it not said that whoever wears the scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel can not lose his soul? |
13201 | The list would be lost to him for ever, no more lists for him; he would be known as the man who lived with-- lived with whom? |
13201 | The marvellous evocation of Arabia flashed upon him.... Would he ever hear her sing it?... |
13201 | The omnibuses in the road outside, the railways beyond the town, the ships upon the sea, what were these things to her-- or yet the singing of operas? |
13201 | The question now was, what was the next move? |
13201 | The question was, had she renounced the world, or had she refused the world? |
13201 | The walls covered with red pleated silk, the bracket- clocks, the brocade- covered chairs: where had she seen them? |
13201 | The_ Medusa_ is at Cowes; what do you say for a sail?" |
13201 | Then after a pause, she said,"Tell me, did he miss me very much?" |
13201 | Then he would say,"Dearest, there will be a carriage waiting at the corner of the road"--and then? |
13201 | Then like a flash the question came, was it Monsignor''s influence that had induced this desire of a pure life in her? |
13201 | Then she cried,"Is that you, Margaret?" |
13201 | Then what was her destiny? |
13201 | Then with what flames shall I surround you?" |
13201 | There is a Pari Mutuel a little way down the course; or shall we back the horse in the ring? |
13201 | There is nothing Gregorian about this new work, is there?" |
13201 | There was no hope for either of them? |
13201 | They lived for art and love, and what else was there in life? |
13201 | They will throw me bouquets, I suppose?" |
13201 | This fellow Ulick Dean or religious scruples?" |
13201 | This lady, graceful and idle, seemed to mean something, but what? |
13201 | Those women, however haughty they may look, what are they to me? |
13201 | True it was that everyone who had heard her sing thought the same; but the last time he had heard her, had not her voice sounded a little thin? |
13201 | Wagner I have never heard, but the Italian operas,''Lucia''and''Trovatore,''or Mozart? |
13201 | Wagner?" |
13201 | Was I so bad?" |
13201 | Was Mademoiselle Helbrun a success?" |
13201 | Was he going to renounce the list, or was he going to put all his eggs in one basket? |
13201 | Was her character essentially weak, and was she liable to all these influences, these facile assimilations? |
13201 | Was her piety so great that it absorbed every other inclination? |
13201 | Was it fated that she should marry him? |
13201 | Was it not better for her to leave at once? |
13201 | Was it not for another woman that you went away?" |
13201 | Was it possible that he believed that all the accidents, or what we suppose are accidents, have been earned in a preceding life? |
13201 | Was it the sweet, clear voice that lured the different minds and led them, as it were, in leash? |
13201 | Was my offence so deep in disgrace that thou dost plan so deep a disgrace for me? |
13201 | Was not that why he wished to go away with Evelyn? |
13201 | Was she going to take the three o''clock train to London, or to remain in Dulwich with her father? |
13201 | Was she not so still? |
13201 | Was she or was she not going away with Owen to Paris on Thursday night? |
13201 | Was she really going to leave the stage? |
13201 | Was that her story? |
13201 | Was there nothing of his that they could sing in the convent? |
13201 | Was there nothing within her, no abiding principle, nothing that she could call her own? |
13201 | Was this my crime so dark with dishonour that it henceforth robs me of all honour? |
13201 | Well, I hope you succeeded in inducing Mademoiselle Helbrun to play Brangäne?" |
13201 | Were they?" |
13201 | Were you her lover?" |
13201 | What are you thinking of?" |
13201 | What could she do to shake off this clammy and unhealthy depression which hung about her? |
13201 | What did he mean by saying he wished his two- year- olds had all broken their legs?" |
13201 | What did he say?" |
13201 | What did it mean? |
13201 | What did it mean? |
13201 | What did it mean? |
13201 | What disguise had fallen? |
13201 | What do you mean?" |
13201 | What does money matter to me? |
13201 | What else did he say?" |
13201 | What excuse will you give? |
13201 | What good would it do her to marry him? |
13201 | What has convinced you of the existence of a future life? |
13201 | What has happened now?" |
13201 | What instinct behind those brown eyes had led her to this sacrifice? |
13201 | What is he doing? |
13201 | What is human life but a longing for something beyond us, for something we shall not attain? |
13201 | What is the use of telling lies? |
13201 | What lives were lived yonder in that low grange, crouching under the five melancholy poplars? |
13201 | What matter, since it was happening? |
13201 | What meaning had this story for her? |
13201 | What reason could she give to her friends for refusing to see him? |
13201 | What shall I say? |
13201 | What should I do if it were to rain?" |
13201 | What should she have said if Lady Asher had not died before she arrived? |
13201 | What should she say to him? |
13201 | What should she say when he came? |
13201 | What was I saying last night?" |
13201 | What was she to do? |
13201 | What was the poor woman to do? |
13201 | What was the use of further argument? |
13201 | What was the use of it? |
13201 | What will people think?" |
13201 | What will you do if he asks you to play to him? |
13201 | What would become of her jewellery, of her house, of her fame, of everything? |
13201 | What would she have done? |
13201 | What?" |
13201 | When will mademoiselle begin? |
13201 | Whence did it proceed? |
13201 | Whence had it come, and what did it mean? |
13201 | Where is this convent?" |
13201 | Where should I find a sweetheart equal to you?" |
13201 | Where should I get the money? |
13201 | Where should I go if I did not come back?" |
13201 | Where should I go? |
13201 | Which was it to be? |
13201 | Which was that? |
13201 | Whither were their lives striving? |
13201 | Whose''Ave Maria''was it, Miss Innes?" |
13201 | Why Monsignor-- why not another priest? |
13201 | Why am I interested in you?" |
13201 | Why did he not say that he longed to take her in his arms and kiss her on the lips? |
13201 | Why did her father keep her waiting? |
13201 | Why did she fall in love with me?" |
13201 | Why did she get tired of you?" |
13201 | Why did she rise to seek things that made her unhappy? |
13201 | Why did you walk?" |
13201 | Why do n''t you answer? |
13201 | Why do you ask me? |
13201 | Why do you speak like that? |
13201 | Why does he not come to me?" |
13201 | Why had she told him about Ulick? |
13201 | Why had she two lovers? |
13201 | Why had the Church not placed stage life under the ban of mortal sin? |
13201 | Why is it wrong for me to go away with you? |
13201 | Why is this? |
13201 | Why make me miserable? |
13201 | Why should it not be hers? |
13201 | Why should n''t I pay you back? |
13201 | Why should one, the essential delight of whose life was music, choose a life in which music hardly appeared? |
13201 | Why should she have thought that something would happen to prevent Evelyn Innes from creating Grania? |
13201 | Why should she not? |
13201 | Why should she send him away? |
13201 | Why should such rare delight happen to him? |
13201 | Why was her life to be made so hard, so impossible for her to endure? |
13201 | Why was she in London at this time of year? |
13201 | Why was this new sacrifice demanded of her? |
13201 | Why? |
13201 | Will mademoiselle be so kind?" |
13201 | Will mademoiselle sing to me? |
13201 | Will mademoiselle sing to me? |
13201 | Will resignation, which is the highest comfort, come to us in time? |
13201 | Will that be soon enough?" |
13201 | Will that priest get hold of you? |
13201 | Will that suit you?" |
13201 | Will this go on for ever?" |
13201 | Will you come into the parlour?" |
13201 | Will you come this way, miss? |
13201 | Will you come to- morrow?" |
13201 | Will you give up the stage and be my wife? |
13201 | Wo n''t you look at this? |
13201 | Wotan had always been her father; Palestrina, Walhalla, and the stupid Jesuits, what were they? |
13201 | Would any mistress be worthy of the sacrifice? |
13201 | Would she make him a good wife? |
13201 | Would she wait in Sir Owen''s room, or would she like lunch to be served at once? |
13201 | Would they then be reconciled? |
13201 | Would you not like to have a Passy villa? |
13201 | Would you not like to live here?" |
13201 | Would you not require a cultivated West- end audience-- the Oratory or Farm Street?" |
13201 | You ca n''t put me out of doors, so what is the use in arguing about my faults? |
13201 | You can sing at sight-- in the key that it is written in?" |
13201 | You do n''t intend to tell him you are going away with me?" |
13201 | You do n''t know the Rue Montmartre? |
13201 | You do n''t regret?" |
13201 | You do n''t think that I shall be changed? |
13201 | You do n''t want any more, do you?" |
13201 | You do n''t want me to throw up my engagement at Covent Garden? |
13201 | You do not mind walking very slowly? |
13201 | You have, I perceive, escaped from the rank materialism of Sir Owen''s teaching, but whither are you drifting, my dear child? |
13201 | You know the_ Lied_ in the first act of the''Valkyrie''? |
13201 | You liked it better than my Margaret?" |
13201 | You love me as much as your father?" |
13201 | You promise me to get up?" |
13201 | You remember just now what I said of those villas? |
13201 | You said you experienced no dread, but when you met Sir Owen did you experience none?" |
13201 | You seem sorry for him, father, are you? |
13201 | You seemed unsettled, you seemed to wish to get out of your promise-- is not that so?" |
13201 | You suffer from your heart? |
13201 | You will come to see me all the same?" |
13201 | You would have hated me for that; but now, even if I should lose my voice between this and next Monday.... Did I sing well, Owen? |
13201 | You''re not afraid that I shall love you less?" |
13201 | You''re not disappointed in me? |
13201 | You''ve come back?" |
13201 | You''ve got no wine, I suppose?" |
13201 | _ Noblesse oblige_?" |
13201 | and how have you been getting on?" |
13201 | do tell me? |
13201 | if he did, what would happen afterwards? |
13201 | miss, did n''t half Dulwich go to hear you sing at the opera?" |
13201 | my heart cries from time to time;''may not some propitious storm blow us to the same anchorage again, into the same port?'' |
13201 | seriously?" |
13201 | she said, running her fingers through the first bars...."But perhaps you would like to accompany mademoiselle?" |
13201 | that I am an ungrateful girl? |
13201 | what would she have said? |
13201 | why had she been impelled to ask Ulick to tell her this story? |
13201 | why had she remembered the last phrase? |
13201 | why not the other? |
13201 | you''re going there?" |
37376 | ''What miscellaneous account of mine?'' 37376 ''Who''s a magician?'' |
37376 | All were killed-- none were left? |
37376 | And is there security here? |
37376 | And now-- where is the fighting now-- have all the devils been driven into the sea? |
37376 | And those shoes? |
37376 | And were you afraid? |
37376 | And what have you done in the way of work? |
37376 | And what is your purpose in journeying when all is unsettled? |
37376 | And you? |
37376 | But are you sure that you can keep it there for many days? |
37376 | But give me to eat? |
37376 | But the dead-- what of the dead? |
37376 | But the year of the test, may I not learn the year? |
37376 | But where-- in what direction? |
37376 | But would you not show fear? |
37376 | But your full name? |
37376 | Certain powers are given: otherwise how comes it that the sword draws no blood? |
37376 | Do you wish to fight? |
37376 | Has he been here long? |
37376 | How could we know? 37376 How has this happened?" |
37376 | How is it possible to talk of security, when we fear at any moment the resumption of fighting? 37376 How is it that you who lack food have money?" |
37376 | How is it? |
37376 | How many coins? 37376 In the city--""And what is your name?" |
37376 | Is not that what I declared? |
37376 | Is that supposition true, do you think? |
37376 | Just as he was speaking the chirping of a small bird was heard in a tree, so they all asked the priest:''Listen to the bird; what is he saying?'' |
37376 | Leave the boy alone-- go your way-- what have you to do with him? |
37376 | Tell me: was there not fighting here last month? 37376 That is all?" |
37376 | The city,he exclaimed in his rude, guttural voice,"would you see the city?" |
37376 | Then what will you do? |
37376 | Um,said the priest,"and how many such coins have you with you?" |
37376 | Up there was it that you saw it? |
37376 | Was that laughable or not? |
37376 | Well, is it good? |
37376 | Well, what do you say? |
37376 | Well-- what do you think of it? |
37376 | What can I do? |
37376 | What do you mean? |
37376 | What have you got to do with me and what have I to do with you? |
37376 | What is it-- what does the writing say? |
37376 | What is it? |
37376 | What is your Honourable intention? |
37376 | What is your name? |
37376 | What work? |
37376 | What would you? |
37376 | What''s a bad business? |
37376 | What''s the matter? |
37376 | What,cried the woman,"you would eat all our store for one small_ tiao_ of money?" |
37376 | Where are your relatives? |
37376 | Where do we go? |
37376 | Where do you come from? |
37376 | Where do you come from? |
37376 | Where is it? |
37376 | Where? |
37376 | Who gave you permission to go up there? 37376 Who is it that laughed?" |
37376 | Who is that? |
37376 | Who is your honourable Saint? |
37376 | Whose child is this? |
37376 | Whose money was it you carried? |
37376 | Whose money, I say? |
37376 | You would strike me with that? |
37376 | _ Lao- ho- shang_, have you noticed that an ear has dropped off? |
37376 | _ Shui_--(who is that)? |
37376 | ''What do they say this time?'' |
37376 | And should I give away from my small store when I may shortly be in need myself?" |
37376 | And the Sword Society, have we them also to expect?" |
37376 | And where is the money your mother gave you that I may feed you?" |
37376 | Are you ready?" |
37376 | As for renovation where shall I find funds? |
37376 | But almost at once she changed her mind and exclaimed irately:"What are you doing up there, ill- educated boy?" |
37376 | But is it not true that my gatekeeper was once a robber? |
37376 | But just then the girl asked:"Will you risk climbing up again?" |
37376 | But what do you do in the house?" |
37376 | But where was the foreign army-- where? |
37376 | But who was to do anything? |
37376 | But why did you wish to look over?" |
37376 | Do you understand?" |
37376 | Do you understand?" |
37376 | Do you understand?" |
37376 | Do you understand?" |
37376 | Had all been massacred? |
37376 | He tried again:"_ Yeh- yeh_( grandfather) can you not give me some comforting information about this neighbourhood?" |
37376 | He tried to calculate how many days had passed since he had left the capital-- was it six, seven or eight? |
37376 | How and when?" |
37376 | How could people travel when there were no conveyances for hire? |
37376 | How many times have you been warned that if you break orders you would be dismissed?" |
37376 | If I go who is there to insure safety?" |
37376 | If they did that to the men what would they not do to him? |
37376 | If you do n''t believe this what objection is there to your going and inquiring?'' |
37376 | In any case it is too late to turn back, for whither should we go?" |
37376 | In smuggling, the account of the smuggled goods is always carried like that--""But then it may be known to others?" |
37376 | It was so rumoured in our locality?" |
37376 | My grandfather is the steward-- has no one told you? |
37376 | Now he went to the nearest foreign gateway, and accosting a man there asked:"Is there no place where I can most easily see all the foreigners?" |
37376 | Now the hands?" |
37376 | One of the guests at the table said,''Do you hear this bird? |
37376 | Still there was no doubt or hesitation in his reply:"How can I forget that Your Honour''s house gave me employment and food when I was in want? |
37376 | The boy stammered:"My full name? |
37376 | The priest eyed him suspiciously for a long time and at last commenced this interrogatory:"How far have you journeyed?" |
37376 | The resentment within him had faded, for was this not his father? |
37376 | Then he asked:"And you, will you follow the example of the others?" |
37376 | There will be no soldiers about, for what would soldiers be doing in marshes? |
37376 | Two snakes-- what did two snakes mean? |
37376 | Well-- he had travelled far and braved many risks-- was that not enough? |
37376 | Were they barking at some person or merely baying an evening salute? |
37376 | What did it mean? |
37376 | What did this mean? |
37376 | What does he say?'' |
37376 | What is the nearest village?" |
37376 | What will be our lot then?" |
37376 | Where do you go?" |
37376 | Where have these eaters of foreign rice gone?" |
37376 | Where now were the watchers of crops? |
37376 | Whither should I flee even if there were the great danger since I am without parents?" |
37376 | Who will face danger willingly and not hesitate if by another way there is safety? |
37376 | Why had the others not done what they had undertaken to do? |
37376 | Why has it not come-- who is arresting its progress? |
37376 | Why indeed should any one mind? |
37376 | Why should n''t he run away, too? |
37376 | With trouble abroad how dare I venture out? |
37376 | Would they be allowed to proceed? |
39015 | Who shall find the earth? |
39015 | Are not Egyptian Serpents all purely Nilotic? |
39015 | But admitting this, may not the snake, after all, have been but a symbol of the phallus? |
39015 | Is not your serpent a"rattlesnake"and, ergo, purely American? |
39015 | Is this an argument? |
39015 | Looking at it, he asked,''What idol is that?'' |
39015 | May we regard them as allusive to the Serpent God and the Serpent Goddess of the Aztec mythology? |
39015 | The base still remains to give us its dimensions; but what was its original height? |
39015 | Was it the tomb of some mighty lord, or sovereign prince; or was it alone a place of sacrifice? |
39015 | Was the serpent in any way associated with the worship of the sun or the kindred worship of the Phallus?" |
39015 | and they desponded more than before, repeating,"Who shall find the earth?" |
39015 | exclaimed all those left on the raft,"now that the beaver and the otter are dead?" |
39015 | who can tell?" |
34325 | 18 As he described this koan in a letter to a laywoman:_ What is the Sound of the Single Hand? 34325 26 When a monk asked him,"What is the real significance of Bodhidharma''s coming from the west?" |
34325 | 6 Yet does it really matter whether the legend is meticulously faithful to the facts? 34325 And how,"shot back Ma- tsu,"do you go about tending it?" |
34325 | Are you tired? |
34325 | Are you your own master or not? |
34325 | Barring conscious intention,the disciple continued to inquire,"how can we attain to a knowledge of the Tao?" |
34325 | But it is impossible to do so? |
34325 | Does a dog have Buddha nature[ i.e., is a dog capable of being enlightened]? |
34325 | Have you finished your rice gruel? |
34325 | Have you seen the standing image of Buddha? |
34325 | How can I not be awed by a word that astounds people? |
34325 | How can you go where it is changeless? |
34325 | How do you see your real self subjectively? |
34325 | How do you teach a man who does not uphold either of these? |
34325 | I do n''t suppose your sect has miracles the way our sect does? |
34325 | If they neither read sutras nor learn meditation, what in the world are they doing? |
34325 | Is n''t it a clay statue that sits in the shrine? |
34325 | Is there any way to approach it? |
34325 | Since I have brought nothing with me, what can I lay down? |
34325 | Tell me,began Shih- t''ou,"how have you practiced Ch''an after coming here to this mountain?" |
34325 | The monk again questioned,If you met a man free from attachment to all things, what would you tell him?" |
34325 | Then do they learn meditation? |
34325 | Then who is the Buddha? |
34325 | Then why should you conduct the memorial service for him, if he did not instruct you? |
34325 | Well,spat out the_ yamabushi_,"How about you, Zen monk? |
34325 | What are you doing? |
34325 | What is that which is called foot travel? |
34325 | What is the meaning[ of your asking] at this moment? |
34325 | What is the most important principle of Buddhism? |
34325 | What? |
34325 | When there is neither going out nor remaining in, what way would you say this was? |
34325 | Where is my abiding place? |
34325 | Where is this master of yours? |
34325 | Where is your hoe? |
34325 | Who lost by a fluke? |
34325 | Why do n''t you speak of it? |
34325 | ''From whence come all the buddhas?'' |
34325 | 850? |
34325 | 866?) |
34325 | A monk asked,"What about the cardinal principle of the Buddha- dharma?" |
34325 | A monk asked,"What is my own self?" |
34325 | A perfumed breeze across my pillow; Am I asleep or awake? |
34325 | According to the story, P''ang asked Ma- tsu,"What kind of man is he who has no companion among all things?" |
34325 | After a short silence, he asked the Prime Minister,"Do you understand?" |
34325 | After a time Ma- tsu''s curiosity bested him and he inquired,"Why are you rubbing that brick on a stone?" |
34325 | After doing so, the supervisor asked,"Master, how can you let such a madman insult you like that?" |
34325 | And what have I got inside my house? |
34325 | And why have the insights of obscure rural teachers from the Chinese and Japanese Middle Ages remained pertinent to much of modern life in the West? |
34325 | Another anecdote recounts a similar incident:_ A monk said to Nan- ch''uan,"There is a jewel in the sky; how can we get hold of it?" |
34325 | Another monk asked:"What about the cardinal principle of the Buddha- dharma?" |
34325 | Another version of the story says Hui- k''o greeted Seng- ts''an with the words,"You are suffering from leprosy; why should you want to see me?" |
34325 | As a typical example, there is the story of a monk coming to him to ask,"What was the purpose of Bodhidharma''s coming from the West?" |
34325 | At that reckoning what would he give to return to the simple life, where there was poverty but also freedom? |
34325 | At this the Master again asked,"What way do you mean?" |
34325 | But how did Ma- tsu handle this question when it was presented to him? |
34325 | But how exactly can we say that all things are one? |
34325 | But if it''s miracles, why do n''t you show the sort of miracles that your people have?" |
34325 | But just what was this mind that was being transmitted? |
34325 | But the question those who relate this story never resolve is: Which of the four shouts was the shout he used on the student? |
34325 | But then, how do you test the ultimate realization that there is nothing to realize other than what you knew all along? |
34325 | But what about the Ch''an outside the monasteries? |
34325 | But what about the Rinzai Zen teaching that enlightenment is sudden and can not be induced by gradual practice? |
34325 | But what is the finger?" |
34325 | But what is the moon?" |
34325 | But what is this state called"no- thought"? |
34325 | But why would we want to do this in the first place? |
34325 | Chao- chou answered,_"Mu_[ a word whose strict meaning is"nothingness"]._"4 Quick, what does it mean? |
34325 | Chao- chou got up and went away.25 A monk asked,"When a beggar comes, what shall we give him?" |
34325 | Considering that you can use this treasure freely, why then do you persist in wandering abroad?" |
34325 | Conversely, if the Buddha nature must be acquired, how can it be inherent in all things, as was taught? |
34325 | Could it be that the fruit had been ready to fall from the tree, with this just the shake needed? |
34325 | Could it be that this was the moment he had been hoping for? |
34325 | Could it be that with this incident we have finally captured a wordless transmission? |
34325 | Creel, Herrlee G. What Is Taoism? |
34325 | Did I not open your eye after taking pains so much on my part?" |
34325 | Did Ma- tsu''s influence extend to the lay community? |
34325 | Did all of them practise_ Zazen_? |
34325 | Do you possess enough discernment to distinguish the guest from the host[ i.e., the unenlightened from the enlightened]? |
34325 | Does he forget about the money because all eyes are upon him? |
34325 | For example, if you are meditating and your mind wants to meander and look for something to dwell on, what should you do? |
34325 | For example, there is a story that a local governor asked Ma- tsu,"Master, should I eat meat and drink wine?" |
34325 | From day to day what is there to trouble me? |
34325 | He said,"Leaving alone the question of''different,''let me ask you what is''species''anyway?" |
34325 | He struck up a conversation with the master there, who suddenly asked him:_"Where are you going, sir?" |
34325 | He then demanded of the Master,"Besides saying that one line is long and the other three are short, what else could you say?" |
34325 | He was in a temple in Niigata prefecture, meditating on the"Mu"koan( Q:"Does a dog have Buddha- nature? |
34325 | Here in my school, to have no thoughts is sitting, and to see one''s original nature is_ dhyana_( Ch''an).15 What happened to Indian meditation? |
34325 | His very first question to the older master reportedly was"How did the early Ch''an masters guide their followers?" |
34325 | How are you going to deal with my miracle?" |
34325 | How did Zen finally emerge, after all the centuries and the convolutions? |
34325 | How do you expect to become enlightened?" |
34325 | How do you really know I''ve achieved enlightenment?" |
34325 | How do you understand this?" |
34325 | How is this done? |
34325 | How much of the story of Bodhidharma is legend? |
34325 | How so? |
34325 | How then can it be made the subject of discussion? |
34325 | How then could he be made the founder of the Ch''an schools blooming all over China? |
34325 | How will you govern the people?" |
34325 | However, Lin- chi seized the tool, lifted it up, and exclaimed,"How then could it be in my hands?" |
34325 | Huai- hai continued,"Have you seen any tigers?" |
34325 | I replied:"What sort of place does_ Mu_ have that one can attach arms and legs to it?" |
34325 | I want those blows again, but who can give them to me now?" |
34325 | If one exempts all nature-- including pigs-- from distinction, discrimination, and duality, why exclude them as drinking companions? |
34325 | If you can not recognize your real self objectively, how can you see your real self subjectively?" |
34325 | In a moment, ashamed and surprised at his remark, I said to him,"What are they?" |
34325 | In both of these anecdotes, Ma- tsu is asked,"What is Buddha?" |
34325 | Is there nothing more?" |
34325 | It recalls Keats''nightingale--"Fled is that music:--Do I wake or sleep?" |
34325 | Lao Tzu asks,"What is the difference between good and bad? |
34325 | Ma- tsu continued by asking him,"Is this all there is? |
34325 | Ma- tsu paused and then demanded of his pupil,"Where have they gone?" |
34325 | Ma- tsu posed a counterquestion:"What teachings do you maintain?" |
34325 | Ma- tsu retorted,"What way do you mean?" |
34325 | Ma- tsu turned to his pupil and asked,"What was that sound?" |
34325 | Monk:"How about yourself?" |
34325 | Monk:"When you happen to meet your parents, what should you do?" |
34325 | Monk:"Who is he in our country that holds a sword in his hand?" |
34325 | Monk:"Whom do you want to kill?" |
34325 | Monk:"Why should you not kill yourself, too?" |
34325 | Nan- ch''uan asked Huang- po,"Where are you going?" |
34325 | Nan- ch''uan opened with the standard question:_"Where have you just come from?" |
34325 | Nan- ch''uan went on,"What do you use to pick cabbage?" |
34325 | Now, can it be carved into the image of Buddha?" |
34325 | Of what use is it to read the scriptures and recite the_ nembutsu_? |
34325 | One of the best known is the following:_ A monk asked,"Since all things return to One, where does this One return to?" |
34325 | Pointing to an open- air pillar, he asked:"Is this secular or sacred?" |
34325 | Probing for a response, he asked,"Given all I have done, what Merit have I earned?" |
34325 | Seng- ts''an replied that he knew of the Sangha, but what was meant by the Buddha and the Dharma? |
34325 | Showing it to his disciple, he asked,"Is this not fire?" |
34325 | Since he did not want to break the bottle or kill the goose, how would he get it out?" |
34325 | Since these ancient sages were so diligent, how can present- day trainees do without the practice of_ zazen_? |
34325 | Since you do nothing more than sit cross- legged, how can this mere sitting be a means of gaining enlightenment? |
34325 | Tao- hsin reportedly inquired,"But do n''t you have a''family name''?" |
34325 | The Master exclaimed,"Are you not a lion?" |
34325 | The Master said,"Where is the finger that you do not ask about?" |
34325 | The Master said:"How do you understand Chao- chou''s_ Mu_?" |
34325 | The Master then asked:"What one is your real self?" |
34325 | The Master:"Who can do anything to me?" |
34325 | The Master:"Why should you have any choice?" |
34325 | The celebrated answer was:"How can you become enlightened by sitting in meditation?" |
34325 | The exchange began with a question by Tung- shan:_"What is your name?" |
34325 | The following anecdote suggests his idea of Buddhism had little to do with the Buddha:_ Master Chao- chou was asked by a monk,"Who is the Buddha?" |
34325 | The master asked,"How did you expose them?" |
34325 | The master greeted him with the puzzled observation:"Have n''t you come back a bit too soon? |
34325 | The monk asked,"What is that which was possessed by the ancients?" |
34325 | The monk challenged him,"I asked about the finger; why should you answer me,''the moon''?" |
34325 | The monk persisted,"When the crying has stopped, what is it then?" |
34325 | The monk said dubiously,"Master, why should you lie?" |
34325 | The monk said,"How can the ladder be put up in the sky?" |
34325 | The older master then inquired:_"Where are you going?" |
34325 | The questioner pressed,"If there is nothing and no mind, then how can it be transmitted?" |
34325 | The story goes as follows:_ A monk who lectured on Buddhism came to the Master and asked,"What is the teaching advocated by the Ch''an masters?" |
34325 | Then he asked another,"Have you been here before?" |
34325 | Then what is the Tao that is beyond things?" |
34325 | There are roads, but they do not reach the world; Since I am mindless, who can rouse my thoughts? |
34325 | They are all empty, no substantialities have they, and who knows what is and what is not? |
34325 | They are all phantom creations and not realities, and who knows who is right and who is wrong? |
34325 | This received the most attention from the Lin- chi sect-- whose masters would answer the question"What is the meaning of Ch''an?" |
34325 | To begin, they said that if there really is no duality in the world, then how can the mind be divided into"false"and"true"? |
34325 | To this Ma- tsu replied,"What can you expect to learn from me? |
34325 | Tung- shan demonstrated this when he was asked,"When a snake is swallowing a frog, should you save the frog''s life?" |
34325 | Two of the better- known follow:_ A monk asked Yun- men,"What is the teaching that transcends the Buddha and patriarchs?" |
34325 | Understandably puzzled, Huai- hai asked,"What is this treasure that I have been ignoring?" |
34325 | Was Shen- hui really the father of the new"meditationless"Ch''an of the mind? |
34325 | What are the four? |
34325 | What charge is there against woman? |
34325 | What do we get to know? |
34325 | What does self- deception mean? |
34325 | What eventually happened to this traveling Indian guru? |
34325 | What exactly is it that you understand on the other shore? |
34325 | What is it that one will hear constantly which one has never heard?" |
34325 | What is it that they transmit to one another?" |
34325 | What is it you just realized? |
34325 | What is the meaning of this?" |
34325 | What is the self that is known subjectively?" |
34325 | What is the use of working so hard as a tenzo monk?" |
34325 | What then did he teach, if there is nothing to be taught? |
34325 | What then was required? |
34325 | What virtue is there in man? |
34325 | What will you get by sleeping?" |
34325 | What, instead, should you call it?" |
34325 | When he met the Master in front of the Monks''Hall, he asked:"Do the monks of this monastery read the sutras?" |
34325 | Whereupon Tan- hsia scooped up and threw three handfuls of water on the Layman, saying:"What can you do now?" |
34325 | Which is"reality"? |
34325 | Whom did P''ang go to visit? |
34325 | Why do n''t you do_ zazen_[ Zen meditation] or study the koan of ancient masters? |
34325 | Why do you ignore the treasure in your own house and wander so far abroad?" |
34325 | Why? |
34325 | Why? |
34325 | You still are not free from''this''?" |
34325 | Yun- men said,"A sesame bun._"19_ A monk asked Yun- men,"What is Buddha?" |
34325 | Yun- men said,"What words are being offered at Hsi- ch''an these days?" |
34325 | _ A monk asked Yun- Men,"What is Buddha?" |
34325 | _ Another time a monk asked, what is the meaning of Bodhidharma coming from the West?" |
34325 | _ How is my hand like Mori''s hand? |
34325 | _ Monk:"With what man of Tao should one associate, so that one will hear constantly what one has never heard?" |
34325 | _ Once Huang- po was asked,"If you say that mind can be transmitted, then how can you say it is nothing?" |
34325 | _ One day Huai- hai asked Huang- po,"Where have you been?" |
34325 | _ One morning, as Chao- chou was receiving new arrivals, he asked one of them,"Have you been here before?" |
34325 | _ The Master asked a monk,"Where do you come from?" |
34325 | _ The Master asked a nun:"Well- come or ill- come?" |
34325 | _ What is meant by"How to requite hatred"? |
34325 | _ What is this true meditation? |
34325 | _ Yun- men[ 862/4- 949] asked a monk,"Where have you come here from?" |
34325 | _"Hey, Your Reverence, what sect are you?" |
34325 | asked Huang- po"I just started working; how can you say that I am tired?" |
34325 | what is this teaching that we call"sitting in meditation"? |
34325 | which is Ch''an parlance for"What is the basic principle of Zen?" |
30203 | A movement headed by Clarkson and Wilberforce,says Mr. Henson,"could be no other than Christian,"But why? |
30203 | Are there not impressions borne in upon the soul of man as he stands a spectator of the universe which religion alone attempts to formulate? 30203 Ha,"they exclaimed,"what do you Freethinkers say now?" |
30203 | How shall I write,I said,"who am not meet One word of that sweet speaking to repeat?" |
30203 | Is it according to the will of God? |
30203 | Oh yes,says the giddy fly,"it looks so nice, positively inviting?" |
30203 | Well, what do we learn from Scripture? |
30203 | What shall I write? |
30203 | What,asks Professor Stokes,"is man''s condition between death and the resurrection?" |
30203 | Which,he asks,"comes nearest to the truth about love-- poor Lombroso''s talk about pistil and stamen, or one of Shakespeare''s sonnets?" |
30203 | Why,asked a Unitarian of a Positivist,"why is not Christ in your Positivist calendar?" |
30203 | Will you walk into my parlor? |
30203 | _ Is there any thing whereof it may be said, See, this is new? 30203 ''He was mad,''they say; but what drove him mad? 30203 ''Tis a pity truly that the old fiddle should be broken at last; but then for how many years has it not been discoursing most excellent music? 30203 * ARE ATHEISTS CRUEL? 30203 * ARE ATHEISTS WICKED? 30203 * DID BRADLAUGH BACKSLIDE? 30203 A leading London newspaper, the_ Daily Chronicle_, has recently opened it columns to a discussion of the question,Is Christianity Played Out?" |
30203 | ARE ATHEISTS CRUEL? |
30203 | ARE ATHEISTS WICKED? |
30203 | After all, does not this objection come with an ill grace from a Christian Theist? |
30203 | Among the eminent sons of science who is greater than he? |
30203 | And am I not just and reasonable in declining to take the decision out of their hands? |
30203 | And are you quite sure you did not dream the whole business?" |
30203 | And how did Mrs. Besant dispose of these charges? |
30203 | And if not, do you think it kind or just to speak of him in this manner? |
30203 | And if the root is no explanation of the flower, what will happen if you are careless about the root and the soil in which it is planted? |
30203 | And is it conceivable that the soldiers would take money to say they had slept at their posts? |
30203 | And is it not weakest in the first and second childishness of youth and old age? |
30203 | And is_ this_ the supreme virtue of a great poet? |
30203 | And on what ground? |
30203 | And what is dogma? |
30203 | And what is it? |
30203 | And what is the"remark"which Mr. Bradlaugh"uttered"( what etymology!)? |
30203 | And what right, we ask, has a Christian minister to rail at duelling? |
30203 | And what, he asks, does thought depend on? |
30203 | And where is the evidence? |
30203 | And who is responsible for the rest? |
30203 | And why did the abolition movement in England wait until new ideas had leavened the public mind? |
30203 | And why from_ the French_? |
30203 | And why not? |
30203 | And why should not a Christian reverence the greatness of Marlowe? |
30203 | And why was Bruno allowed a week''s grace before his execution, except to give him the opportunity of recanting? |
30203 | And why_ solidarity_? |
30203 | And yet, after all, is there not something indecent in their talking about a"living wage"for the workers? |
30203 | Are Atheists conspicuous in the Divorce Court? |
30203 | Are not such scoundrels a thousand times worse than a passionate boy like George Mason? |
30203 | Are there not diseases of the brain that affect thought in a definite manner? |
30203 | Are they not parasites upon the said workers? |
30203 | Are we to conclude that an Atheist''s talking shows mistrust, and a Christian''s talking shows confidence? |
30203 | Are you not aware that the most risible imp could hardly laugh at_ all_ the contents of the Bible? |
30203 | As James Thomson said,"Do you dread that the Satyr will be preferred to Hyperion, when both stand imaged in clear light before us?" |
30203 | At last he asked a gaoler"What hour is it?" |
30203 | But did the Church think so when it imprisoned Galileo and made him swear that the earth did_ not_ go round the sun? |
30203 | But do they? |
30203 | But does nature act independently of God? |
30203 | But has not Christian Rome witnessed many a viler spectacle? |
30203 | But how am I to put Mr. Williams to the credit of Christianity, and Captain Gurney to the credit of something else? |
30203 | But how does this fit in with the teaching of Christ? |
30203 | But how far is this creditable to Mr. Brooke''s intelligence? |
30203 | But how is it we have not got them already? |
30203 | But how many Christians have been converted to Freethought? |
30203 | But how"coming"? |
30203 | But is it worth playing at all? |
30203 | But is our purpose a sound one? |
30203 | But is this any more than a verbal distinction? |
30203 | But suppose the question had been one of"a living wage"for the sky- pilots; would not a minimum figure have been speedily decided? |
30203 | But what are the facts? |
30203 | But what does Mr. Hughes mean by his"Christ- like purity"? |
30203 | But what has science to do with the origin of matter? |
30203 | But what if it does? |
30203 | But what is it that_ will_ rise from the dead, and get joined with some sort of inconceivable body? |
30203 | But what is the speciality of a literary man on this particular subject? |
30203 | But what was his crime? |
30203 | But where is the signature? |
30203 | But who caused the Terror? |
30203 | But who does_ not_ laugh at cock- and- bull stories like that of Jonah and the whale? |
30203 | But who doubts that, during a thousand years, a humane and even a noble heart often beat under a priest''s cassock? |
30203 | But who ever said it was? |
30203 | But who wrote the text? |
30203 | But why did Jacob weep? |
30203 | But why not? |
30203 | But will it ever have them? |
30203 | But, in that case, what becomes of the"literal"method of reading the"moral precepts"of Christ? |
30203 | But, in that case, why was Bruno burnt alive at the stake? |
30203 | But, on the other hand, who invented and who applied such instruments of cruelty as racks, wheels, and thumbscrews? |
30203 | But_ do_ they? |
30203 | By what superhuman power do they make up the deficiency? |
30203 | Can Dr. Hitchens produce two names among his"converts"of the same weight, or a half, a quarter, or a tithe of it? |
30203 | Can anyone imagine the seven- devilled Mary Magdalene conversing in this way? |
30203 | Can we ever be united on a question of personality? |
30203 | DID BRADLAUGH BACKSLIDE? |
30203 | Did Jesus teach in order that men might become insane? |
30203 | Did he not teach David''s fingers to fight? |
30203 | Did he say so to you, and where and when? |
30203 | Do men sell their honor for what they can never enjoy, and count their lives as a mere trifle in the bargain? |
30203 | Do the clergy think the Lord is growing deaf with old age? |
30203 | Do you really believe that an Atheist has a special proclivity to murder? |
30203 | Do you want to know what this positive suffering is? |
30203 | Does a gardener act in that way? |
30203 | Does he accept the New Testament miracles? |
30203 | Does he embrace the Incarnation and Resurrection? |
30203 | Does he mean to say that the author of the Mosaic Law was not the same God who speaks to us in the New Testament? |
30203 | Does he really imagine that the true character of any body of men and women is likely to be written out by a hostile partisan? |
30203 | Does he think there can be a Christianity_ without_"theology"? |
30203 | During all the centuries from Ignatius to Bossuet, what eminent Christian ever denounced Slavery as wicked? |
30203 | Even if they are right, he falls back upon his old exclamation,"What does it matter?" |
30203 | Exaggeration there must be in passion and imagination; it is the defect of their quality; but what are we without them? |
30203 | For instance, how does he know that the star of the Nativity was"a strange white star"? |
30203 | For their sakes, and not for our own satisfaction, we shall criticise her little volume on_ Death-- and After?_ just issued as No. |
30203 | Genesis is a little confused, indeed; and what scripture is not? |
30203 | George Griffiths committed a murder because he was a Christian? |
30203 | Had it been purely Christian, would it not have triumphed long before? |
30203 | Has Mr. Watkinson never read the answer to these questions? |
30203 | Has Sir G. G. Stokes never read St. Paul? |
30203 | Has he never heard of John Calvin and Martin Luther? |
30203 | Has he never read the Thirty- nine Articles of his own Church? |
30203 | Has it ever occurred to you that if Christ died, he died on a particular day; and that if he rose from the dead, he rose on a particular morning? |
30203 | Has it ever occurred to you to inquire how it is that the Bible is so easy to ridicule? |
30203 | Has it never struck you as strange, also, that the risen Christ never appeared to anyone but his disciples? |
30203 | Has it not seen hundreds of noble men burnt alive in the name of Christ? |
30203 | Has your lordship never heard of a Christian murderer? |
30203 | Have they a secret suspicion that praying for a change of weather is as useful as whistling for the wind? |
30203 | Have they not been in full operation for a lifetime? |
30203 | Have they not, also, had ever so many centuries of dominance? |
30203 | Have we not as much right to our own thoughts as they had to theirs? |
30203 | Have you ever heard of the text,"Physician heal thyself"? |
30203 | Have you ever reflected that what is laughed at is generally ridiculous? |
30203 | How did he discover that the Magi, or priests of the Zoroastrian religion, were really Buddhists and came from India? |
30203 | How is it that Milton beats the Mahatmas? |
30203 | How is it they had to wait for realisation until the advent of an age permeated with the spirit of scepticism and secular humanity? |
30203 | How is it your"Christian conceptions"took such a surprising time to be understood? |
30203 | How is this consistent with his saying,"call no man master"? |
30203 | How much attention, Mr. Blomfield asks, am I to give to this world and how much to another? |
30203 | How then can there be anything supernatural, supersensible, or"spiritual,", in their combination? |
30203 | How, I ask, did those Jewish priests know that Jesus had said"After three days I will rise again"? |
30203 | If I treat the Creation Story and the Deluge as legend and mythology, and smile at the feats of Samson, shall I therefore commit a burglary? |
30203 | If Secular principles tend to make parents hate their own children, why should their evil influence be confined to artisans? |
30203 | If he and his apostles did not believe in the"hereafter,"what_ did_ they believe in? |
30203 | If he be still living, have you taken the trouble to obtain_ his_ version of the matter? |
30203 | If man is purely material, and the law of causation is universal, where, he asks,"is the place for virtue, for praise, for blame?" |
30203 | If they can not, why should we pay them a heavenly water- rate? |
30203 | In the long run, it is knowledge and idea? |
30203 | Is a great name a substitute for argument? |
30203 | Is all this consistent with the doctrine of human equality? |
30203 | Is authority as good as evidence? |
30203 | Is he only responsible for_ some_ of the things that happen? |
30203 | Is it almost said when you have said it? |
30203 | Is it conceivable that the priests were so foolish as the story depicts them? |
30203 | Is it in our principles, in our objects, or in our policy? |
30203 | Is it logical to select all you admire in Christian countries and attribute it to Christianity? |
30203 | Is it not Christian reputations that are smirched in that Inquisition? |
30203 | Is it not a fact that Jesus Christ himself could not select his apostles without including a villain? |
30203 | Is it not a fact that their profession of Christianity is usually in proportion to the depth of their rascality? |
30203 | Is it not a special insult to the multitude of poor, struggling women, whose earnings are taxed to support the classes who lord it over them? |
30203 | Is it not disgraceful that, at this time of day, there should be any need to discuss a"living wage"for the workers in a_ Christian_ civilisation? |
30203 | Is it not enough, and more than enough, to perpetuate a system which is firmly founded, to begin with, on the education of little children? |
30203 | Is it not entirely suspended in healthy sleep? |
30203 | Is it not evident that Religion works, like everything else, upon common materials? |
30203 | Is it not generally found, in the case of great business collapses, that the responsible persons are Christians? |
30203 | Is it not high time for Jesus to run the job himself? |
30203 | Is it not the horticulture of Fleet- street sentimentalists? |
30203 | Is it not true, also, that the greatest swindlers of this age have been extremely pious? |
30203 | Is not one in twelve a large percentage? |
30203 | Is not that a domestic question for the Christians to settle among themselves? |
30203 | Is not the Bible God"the Lord of Hosts"and"a man of war"? |
30203 | Is not the writer too young to have had"much experience"? |
30203 | Is not this lavish generosity to a pair of royal and well- provided lovers an insult to the working people of England? |
30203 | Is not thought excited by stimulants, and deadened or even annihilated by narcotics? |
30203 | Is not thought most vigorous when the brain is mature? |
30203 | Is there a reference here to the twelfth verse of the nineteenth chapter of Matthew? |
30203 | Is there no medium? |
30203 | Is there not"a sort of a smack, a smell to"of them in your godly constitution? |
30203 | It is a"converted infidel"case, in the report of a recent sermon-- the last of a series on"Is Christianity Played Out?" |
30203 | It is dangerous to deny any"great truth,"but how many does evangelicalism possess? |
30203 | It is easy to ask"Is there a future life?" |
30203 | Le Gallienne''s reply to this objection is clear, sufficient, and well expressed:--"But how so? |
30203 | May it not be, therefore, that the difference between Agnosticism and Atheism is one of temperament? |
30203 | May it not have been red, yellow, blue, or green-- especially green? |
30203 | May it not have been, at least with respect to the cerebrum, quite infinitesimal? |
30203 | Might we not even reflect that he was graduating for a strait- waistcoat? |
30203 | Mrs. Bonner adds that her demerits are beside the point, which is,"Did Mr. Bradlaugh weaken in his Atheism?" |
30203 | Must the passions be kings or slaves, in prison or on the throne? |
30203 | No doubt he believes this statement, but is it true? |
30203 | No doubt the seat was rather incommodious, but why should a ghost sit at all? |
30203 | No one equals the Yankee at"tall talk,"and what Yankee equals Talmage in this species of composition? |
30203 | Now what is belief? |
30203 | Now what were the crimes of the three other members, who were completely and absolutely expelled? |
30203 | Now what_ is_ this humanitarian Christianity of Christ? |
30203 | Of what use then was the bribe? |
30203 | Or does he mean that the"sects"comprise all persons who have more theology than himself? |
30203 | Or has the spirit of this sceptical age invaded the clerical ranks so thoroughly as to make them ashamed of their printed doctrines? |
30203 | Or is the stomach of a ghost capable of digesting such victuals? |
30203 | Other writers then joined in the fray, and the result was the famous"Is Christianity Played Out?" |
30203 | Our theory is that the Whitechapel murderer is------"Whom?" |
30203 | Shall I hate my own boy because I disbelieve that Jesus Christ was born without a father? |
30203 | Shall I keep him without food and clothes because I see no proof of a special providence? |
30203 | Should he not rejoice in the next bloody cockpit of featherless bipeds? |
30203 | Should the jury decide according to the eminence of the pleader''s friends, or according to his facts and the force of his reasoning? |
30203 | Should we not look at him with curiosity and amusement? |
30203 | Sir G. G. Stokes begins by promising to confine himself to the question,"What is it that personal identity depends upon and consists in?" |
30203 | So are all principles in intricate cases; why else have Christian divines written so many tons of casuistry? |
30203 | Some of those Inquisition records he translates, apparently fancying he is making a revelation, though? |
30203 | Soon after the_ Daily Chronicle_ correspondence on"Is Christianity Played Out?" |
30203 | Still more ridiculous, if possible, is the Christian cry,"Where are your Freethought hospitals, almshouses, and orphanages?" |
30203 | Still more, why do you congratulate the survivors? |
30203 | Supposing all this to be true, what does it prove? |
30203 | The man, we repeat, was an open, nay a militant Atheist; and again we ask, What do the clergy make of this phenomenon? |
30203 | The only dispute was-- which were the heretics, and who should die? |
30203 | The point was this, Did the writing-- the_ last_ writing-- of Mr. Bradlaugh show the slightest change in his Atheism? |
30203 | The question is, How did he come to let these faculties play upon ghosts and gods? |
30203 | The question is, What is its explanation? |
30203 | The single query"Why should they trouble themselves?" |
30203 | The very publicans demand compensation, and could the sky- pilots do less? |
30203 | The villain of the"Promise of May"is certainly an Agnostic, but are not the villains of many other plays Christians? |
30203 | The whole mystery of life, he says, may be found in a curve: as thus, Why is n''t it straight? |
30203 | Then what becomes of your"purely_ Christian_ conception,"when"infidel France"outshines"Christian England"? |
30203 | Then why do you lament over them? |
30203 | They both speak to me as Christians; is it for me to say that the one is a Christian and the other is not? |
30203 | They solemnly inform us that Esau was a trickster, as though Jacob''s qualities were catching? |
30203 | They_ would_ be free, and who should say them nay? |
30203 | To say as Dr. Schmidt does that"Christian ideas filled the air"is easy enough, but where is the proof? |
30203 | To talk of a risen Christ was to invite the question"Where is he?" |
30203 | Turning to these Councils, then, what do we find? |
30203 | Very likely; but who could lose what he never possessed? |
30203 | Was it because the Northern and Western nations were cowardly and selfish? |
30203 | Was not the strength of Freethinkers, from Jeremy Bentham downwards, given to the abolition movement? |
30203 | We are not aware that men have souls, but if they have, why should any soul be_ lost_? |
30203 | We are not aware that there is a God, but if there is, why should he_ let_ any soul be lost? |
30203 | We may imagine a ghost going through a keyhole, but is it possible to imagine broiled fish and honeycomb going through the same aperture? |
30203 | We should be sorry to charge such a holy body of men with duplicity, but is there not"a sort of a smack, a smell to?" |
30203 | Well, and who made them lords over us? |
30203 | Well, as the old lady said, who would have thought it? |
30203 | Well, if this be the case, what is the use of Mr. Nix? |
30203 | Well, what of that? |
30203 | Were not Joshua and Jehu, the two greatest tigers in history, his chosen generals? |
30203 | Were not the Freethinkers all on one side, while the Christians were divided? |
30203 | Were not the slave- owners also Christians? |
30203 | Were not the"Liberator"victims fleeced and ruined by professed Christians? |
30203 | What Atheist fails to reverence the greatness of Milton? |
30203 | What are all the lying stories about Infidel Death- Beds but conversions of corpses? |
30203 | What are these to the men who built up the glory of ancient Rome? |
30203 | What becomes of it when violation takes the place of seduction, and a woman bears a child to a man she loathes and hates? |
30203 | What becomes of the"sacred mystery of motherhood"when a poor servant girl brings her child into the world unaided, and casts it into the Thames? |
30203 | What connection does he discover between Secularism and selfishness? |
30203 | What did Christ mean by promising that when he came into his kingdom his disciples should sit on twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel? |
30203 | What did Paul mean by ordering unlimited obedience to"the powers that be"? |
30203 | What did he and Peter mean by telling slaves to obey their owners? |
30203 | What difference is there between this and the passage in Mark? |
30203 | What do the clergy make of this phenomenon? |
30203 | What do you make of Messrs Hobbs and Wright? |
30203 | What do you think of Jabez Balfour? |
30203 | What does all this mean? |
30203 | What does it prove? |
30203 | What does the New Testament say? |
30203 | What does this show? |
30203 | What evidence has the ordinary Christian, and has he ever reflected on his creed for five minutes in the whole course of his life? |
30203 | What has she ever done? |
30203 | What have you to say about Mr. Hastings, Captain Verney, and Mr. De Cobain, who were all convicted of bad crimes and expelled from Parliament? |
30203 | What is it to"almost say"a thing? |
30203 | What is the greatest novel in the English language? |
30203 | What is the reason of this strange inconsistency? |
30203 | What is the use of God''s interference if he does not make people wiser and better? |
30203 | What is the use of Mr. Hughes? |
30203 | What is their city to the magnificent city of old, among whose ruins they walk like pigmies amid the relics of giants? |
30203 | What is there in Atheism to make men hate each other? |
30203 | What on earth, too, does he mean by Bruno''s"great obscurity"when he returned to Italy and fell into the jaws of the Inquisition? |
30203 | What other reason, indeed, could have inspired his selection? |
30203 | What possible effect could that have on the sensible part of the jury? |
30203 | What reader of the Gospes does not remember the exquisite English in which our translators have rendered the lament over Jerusalem? |
30203 | What real weakness is there in the Atheist''s seeking for sympathy and concurrence? |
30203 | What terror had death to Charles Bradlaugh? |
30203 | What terror had death to Mrs. Besant while she was an Atheist? |
30203 | What the clergy said about them was true, or why did n''t they get up and contradict? |
30203 | What then are we to conclude? |
30203 | What wonder, then, that the people fixed their gaze upon it on that ominous fourteenth of July, and attacked it as the very citadel of tyranny? |
30203 | What''s in a name? |
30203 | What, then, is the explanation? |
30203 | What_ is_ the evidence then? |
30203 | What_ is_ the something else? |
30203 | What_ is_ the spirit of Christianity? |
30203 | When they state an opinion in the pompous language of revelation, are they less fallible than the rest of us? |
30203 | Where are the evidences of Atheistic cruelty? |
30203 | Where are the statistics to justify your assertion? |
30203 | Who asserts that Atheists are absolutely free from the passions and frailties of human nature? |
30203 | Who brought forth cries of agony from honest men and women that rang to the tingling stars? |
30203 | Who built dungeons and filled them? |
30203 | Who burnt Bruno? |
30203 | Who burnt heretics? |
30203 | Who can doubt it? |
30203 | Who invented separate tortures for every part of the sensitive frame of man? |
30203 | Who is the Princess May? |
30203 | Who laughs at the horrid massacres of the Old Testament? |
30203 | Who laughs at the saying,"Blessed are the peacemakers"? |
30203 | Who really tries to carry out the Christianity of Christ? |
30203 | Who roasted or drowned millions of"witches"? |
30203 | Who spat filth over the graves of Paine and Voltaire? |
30203 | Why are they so fond of the ladies? |
30203 | Why did God write it so that thousands of gentlemen get a fine living by explaining it-- in all sorts of different ways? |
30203 | Why did he lay down slavery laws without hinting that they were provisional? |
30203 | Why do they choose to speak through a woman like Madame Blavatsky, or a popular lecturess like Mrs. Besant? |
30203 | Why do they neglect our Spencers and Huxleys? |
30203 | Why has it not been used? |
30203 | Why indeed do not the petitioners refute the apostles of the"New Criticism,"instead of appealing to the_ authority_ of Convocation? |
30203 | Why indeed should they? |
30203 | Why not three to- day and seven to- morrow? |
30203 | Why not try to establish a just harmony between them? |
30203 | Why should a man write impurely for writing much? |
30203 | Why should he control the obscure Mr. Reedman? |
30203 | Why should he go all the way to Birmingham instead of doing his first business in London? |
30203 | Why should he turn up at the house of Mr. Gray? |
30203 | Why should it be so hard then for a railway servant, a museum attendant, an art- gallery curator, or a librarian to work on Sunday? |
30203 | Why should it hesitate, then, to tell untruths about_ little_ ones? |
30203 | Why then all this chatter about Christ? |
30203 | Why then did it obtain so long in Christendom? |
30203 | Why then did they not marry? |
30203 | Why then does he talk about them so consumedly? |
30203 | Why then should he be averse to international butchery in Europe? |
30203 | Why then should we talk of"liberal theology"? |
30203 | Why then, in the ease of private correspondence, did he not hint that Slavery was only tolerated for the time and would eventually cease? |
30203 | Why was it not made plainer? |
30203 | Why, then, did God write it so that you could_ easily_ be facetious about it? |
30203 | Why, then, did he not leave it alone? |
30203 | Why, then, do you pretend that George Mason committed a murder because he or his father was an Atheist? |
30203 | Why_ always_ four? |
30203 | Will Count Tolstoi take the final step? |
30203 | Will Shakespeare''s_ Hamlet_ poison my mind because I think it finer than the gospels? |
30203 | Will he tell us if anything could amaze us_ without_ being unparalleled? |
30203 | Will not a man of genius become an imbecile if his brain softens? |
30203 | Will not a philosopher rave like a drunken fishfag if he suffers from brain inflammation? |
30203 | Would bribing the soldiers protect them against Christ? |
30203 | Would he not strike us as a silly fanatic? |
30203 | Would it not be well to give them a trial? |
30203 | Would not a man who violated the most sacred laws of friendship and hospitality be quite capable of telling a lie? |
30203 | Would not this have attracted general attention? |
30203 | Would they not have abandoned their projects against him, and sought his forgiveness? |
30203 | Yea, and echo answers, Why? |
30203 | _ Why_ is this? |
30203 | and where are the traces of the"long and ardent thought"? |
30203 | for who has ever_ seen_ any man read the Bible through? |
30203 | have you not one man''s share of those qualities yourself? |
30203 | is it not? |
38928 | And what are we to expect? |
38928 | And even, if that were the case, would not the space be quite colourless? |
38928 | But how have the particles been increased in size in the east? |
38928 | But turn up the surface next the earth, or the road, or the grass, and what do you see? |
38928 | But what is the practical benefit of this information? |
38928 | But whence comes the dust? |
38928 | CHAPTER II THE FORMATION OF DEW The writer of the Book of Job gravely asked the important question,"Who hath begotten the drops of dew?" |
38928 | CHAPTER XII HAZE What is haze? |
38928 | Can the varying condition of the sun exert any influences upon terrestrial affairs? |
38928 | Can these, then, be counted? |
38928 | Does it fall from the heavens above, or does it rise from the earth beneath?" |
38928 | For is not health the greatest of all possessions? |
38928 | Has the regular periodicity of eleven years in the sun- spots no effect upon climate and agricultural produce? |
38928 | How is it formed? |
38928 | Is it connected with the variation of rainfall, the temperature and pressure of the atmosphere, and the frequency of storms? |
38928 | Is there any audible accompaniment to the brilliant spectacle? |
38928 | Now why that brilliancy of the east, when the west was colourless? |
38928 | Now, what is this fog? |
38928 | The question has been frequently asked: Why are such aërial effects not more widely observed? |
38928 | Then what is it? |
38928 | We repeat the question in another form,"Whence comes the real dew? |
38928 | What if it were yet possible to predict the variations of prices in the coming sun- spot cycle? |
38928 | What is the cause of the spiral movement in storm- winds? |
38928 | What is the explanation? |
38928 | What, then, produces the blueness? |
38928 | Why so? |
38928 | Why was that? |
38928 | Why was the surface brighter than usual? |
38478 | The question now to be solved was,''Should I make the northern or the southern portion of the province the scenes of further exploration?'' 38478 ( seeáppa) who is he? 38478 A smooth tree you may climb, however tall it is; but how can you pass over the sea, glassy as it looks? 38478 Also whether the bark of a very young tree, e. g. four years old, contain thus early the active principle, genuine? 38478 And when thou dost traverse the spirit land, And its dwellers shall ask thee,What meaneth this?" |
38478 | Are the nights and forenoons, as in Java, usually clear until noon? |
38478 | But what have been the results directly springing from these high- handed acts, these political_ faits accomplis_? |
38478 | But what interest have these things for you? |
38478 | Can specimens of the soil be procured? |
38478 | Canst thou still the surf that breaks on the Shoal of Rongo- mai- ta- kupe? |
38478 | Does it affect rich black mould, in moist forcing soils, or rather dry, stony, barren soils? |
38478 | Does it grow on steep acclivities, or does it seem to prefer gentle slopes or level ground? |
38478 | Does it grow solitary, or is it found in groups or clusters, and are its special peculiarities in this respect observable in every forest? |
38478 | Does it rain for months at a time, and for how many, and during what months? |
38478 | For how many and during what months does it rain, and during what period of the day are the showers heaviest? |
38478 | He inquired of the physician in attendance how long they were likely to live? |
38478 | He issues from the press, presented to him at Vienna, stirring publications, comparing the Maories to Pharaoh(?) |
38478 | How did its members respond to the efforts made to provide them with every possible appliance that munificence could supply?" |
38478 | How many days of rain are there in the rainy season of that particular region of the tropical zone? |
38478 | Is it known whether observations have ever been made by the Spanish Creoles as to the amount and duration of the rain- fall? |
38478 | Is it the unlimited use of spirits, or is it not rather the ignorance begotten of fanaticism run mad, which disloyally put weapons into your hands? |
38478 | On what soil does it grow most abundantly and luxuriantly? |
38478 | Or does it not rain at all, in which case is its place supplied by regular afternoon storms? |
38478 | Say what has filled the graves of Mahaéna with human bones? |
38478 | Sin proteccion, pues, y sin estimulo, ni oficial, ni social, ¿ qué se podrá esperar de las letras Peruanas?" |
38478 | Such was the reasoning once avowed by a murderess of her child:--"Why should my child live? |
38478 | That thou mayst have a comely aspect, That when thou art bidden to a feast, They may not ask,"Whence cometh this_ red- lipped_ woman?" |
38478 | That when thou dost enter the circle of dancers, They may not ask,"Whence cometh this woman with the ugly lips?" |
38478 | That, when thou crossest the threshold of a strange house, They may not say,"Whence cometh this ugly woman?" |
38478 | The grasp of a chief''s red hand can not be loosened, but the grasp of a slave, what strength has it? |
38478 | To the question,"_ Eaha tera fenúa?_"( What is the name of this island?) |
38478 | To the question,"_ Eaha tera fenúa?_"( What is the name of this island?) |
38478 | What are the general meteorological conditions, and what is the annual amount of rain- fall? |
38478 | What are the highest and lowest limits of the_ Cinchona Calisaya_, or at all events, what is the altitude of the region in which it most abounds? |
38478 | What can I say more? |
38478 | What description of bark is the most prized, that from the young and slender, or that from the larger and older trees? |
38478 | What is independence or even affluence to the exile, if he has no one to care for, or think of, but himself? |
38478 | What is the description of the rock formation, trachytic, granitic, or gneiss, or are slate or sandstone the characteristic formations? |
38478 | What is the unvarying warmth of the soil, as observed at a depth of 5 feet below the surface? |
38478 | What objection could the Committee possibly have to a man whose name they had never heard before that moment? |
38478 | Where now? |
38478 | Where, O physicians, was the power of your remedies? |
38478 | erythroderma_ of Weddell, as would appear from an article by Howard in"the Pharmaceutical Journal for October, 1856?" |
38478 | which| itch|-- what? |
38478 | who''s there? |
38478 | | akéea? |
38478 | | go- leejáa? |
38478 | | idiatoom? |
38478 | | itch- kowa? |
38478 | | sapaée? |
38478 | | ta? |
38478 | | tchée? |
38478 | | togata mett? |
38478 | | táa- ban- pyn? |
38478 | | áya? |
38478 | |-- what does that cost? |
38478 | |-- who are you? |
38478 | |-- who? |
38478 | |--| sáya- táy? |
38478 | |--| sáya? |
38478 | |--| tchick- ahn? |
39414 | Is it strange,asks a lady writer,"that they regarded with reverence the great mystery of human birth? |
39414 | 16) without implying by some adjective, or some turn of language, that the word is a homonyme? |
39414 | 5, in that of cone? |
39414 | Is not this the doctrine of a trinity in unity?" |
39414 | Now if you transplant it or take a cutting off its branches for another plant, to what will you attribute what is produced by the propagation? |
39414 | Or, are we impure that we do_ not_ so regard it? |
39414 | So they gave it me: then I cast it into the fire, and there came out this calf"[ or cone?]. |
39414 | The question is, however, what was it that was really done? |
39414 | The question now arises, what was the origin or original meaning of these crosses? |
39414 | They then ask the deceased''s brother- in- law, or some other person able to give the proper answer,"Shall we present water?" |
39414 | They travel through the towns and villages, crying in the streets,"Who wants a good circumciser?" |
39414 | Were they impure thus to regard it? |
39414 | Will it not be to the grain, or the stone, or the kernel? |
29682 | = Can= one be divorced when two people have grown into each other and half the man must go, too? |
29682 | A revolution has broken out in Paris? |
29682 | Africa? |
29682 | Afterwards? |
29682 | Am I doing the coachman a favor when I ca n''t stand the stable- stench? |
29682 | Am I jealous of the child? |
29682 | Am I to risk the whole success of my patents falling into the water again after two years? |
29682 | Am I to wait yet longer before putting my pile in security? |
29682 | And afterwards? |
29682 | And if he did!--What are we two sitting here for? |
29682 | And in that costume--? |
29682 | And probably you do n''t have much opportunity to be so in Africa, either? |
29682 | And the fat- belly stands guard? |
29682 | And then when her husband died? |
29682 | And transparent stockings? |
29682 | And what kind of a beast? |
29682 | And what would you have had then? |
29682 | And when it has cracked? |
29682 | And you do n''t tell anyone about it? |
29682 | And your harmonica? |
29682 | Another way of naming? |
29682 | Anything else? |
29682 | Are n''t you cold at all? |
29682 | Are you alone? |
29682 | Are you getting-- dizzy? |
29682 | Are you mad? |
29682 | Are you sick? |
29682 | Are you so cold? |
29682 | Are you then, perhaps, something different to- day? |
29682 | At Peter''s? |
29682 | At twelve? |
29682 | At your orders? |
29682 | Because I''m not afraid of a street- girl? |
29682 | Before your bride? |
29682 | Better than with the old dancing- bear? |
29682 | But how can you feel that? |
29682 | But how did you make such a charming acquaintance? |
29682 | But what brings you here? |
29682 | But what difference could it make to you to see before you instead of this mob= one= spectator, specially elect? |
29682 | But what wind blows you here? |
29682 | But who gives you lessons then? |
29682 | But you will dance then? |
29682 | But your maid is n''t here? |
29682 | But= our= position? |
29682 | Can I go before the girl now, this way? |
29682 | Can you speak the truth? |
29682 | Can you swear on anything? |
29682 | Can you wish for a more brilliant triumph than when a respectable girl can hardly be kept in the box? |
29682 | Contempt? |
29682 | Could n''t you get away for this afternoon? |
29682 | Could n''t you get away, then? |
29682 | Did he really? |
29682 | Did n''t you do it to your mother? |
29682 | Did n''t you make me a dancer just so that someone might come and take me away with him? |
29682 | Did n''t you see him? |
29682 | Did n''t you, too, want to marry her originally? |
29682 | Did you come down the chimney? |
29682 | Did you let yourself be divorced? |
29682 | Did you see him? |
29682 | Do I look well? |
29682 | Do I see a- right? |
29682 | Do n''t you hear? |
29682 | Do n''t you think so, too? |
29682 | Do n''t you? |
29682 | Do you believe in a Creator? |
29682 | Do you consider the name so important? |
29682 | Do you expect Prince Escerny? |
29682 | Do you find that in it? |
29682 | Do you go much to balls? |
29682 | Do you have''em dance to- day in full costume? |
29682 | Do you imagine= you= stand in the way? |
29682 | Do you know her? |
29682 | Do you know what time it is? |
29682 | Do you love me-- Mignon? |
29682 | Do you love me? |
29682 | Do you perhaps accompany the doctor to his patients? |
29682 | Do you promise me that for always? |
29682 | Do you remember me when I entered your room the first time? |
29682 | Do you see your bed with the sacrifice-- the victim-- on it? |
29682 | Do you still remember how I tore you out of the clutches of the police? |
29682 | Do you think that becomes me? |
29682 | Do you think that can be forgotten? |
29682 | Do you think that makes it look more like her? |
29682 | Do you think that so easy? |
29682 | Do you think they could have forgotten you on the other side? |
29682 | Do you think, then, that_ I_ make no compromises? |
29682 | Do you understand? |
29682 | Do you= love= me then? |
29682 | Do you? |
29682 | Doctor Schön...? |
29682 | Does n''t he want to see me at all? |
29682 | Does n''t she respect me? |
29682 | Does n''t this moment touch you at all, then? |
29682 | Does she still look as innocently as ever at the world? |
29682 | Does that smell better than you? |
29682 | Doesn''t-- that-- disgust you, then? |
29682 | Down over the balcony? |
29682 | Dr. Schön is not in your box? |
29682 | Father? |
29682 | For heaven''s sake, what is wrong? |
29682 | From papa police- captain? |
29682 | Had I not better be silent to you on that point? |
29682 | Had you overrated your ennobling influence? |
29682 | Has the prince been here? |
29682 | Has the youngster left his heart behind him in the"Nightlight"café? |
29682 | Has your life any other aim? |
29682 | Have I ever called you anything else? |
29682 | Have a cigarette? |
29682 | Have n''t you brought an ax? |
29682 | Have something sweet? |
29682 | Have you a right to trouble yourself before whom? |
29682 | Have you a toothache? |
29682 | Have you an ax in the kitchen? |
29682 | Have you any notion what you do? |
29682 | Have you enough? |
29682 | Have you ever loved a woman in your life? |
29682 | Have you ever once loved--? |
29682 | Have you got her hidden somewhere round here? |
29682 | Have you got still more men hidden here? |
29682 | Have you locked up upstairs? |
29682 | Have you no mercy towards yourself? |
29682 | Have you no soul, then? |
29682 | Have you seen it all? |
29682 | Have you understood me? |
29682 | He comes to blows? |
29682 | He died in a madhouse--? |
29682 | He had taken her into the studio before though? |
29682 | He waked up to something, perhaps? |
29682 | He? |
29682 | Here-- in my house? |
29682 | Here? |
29682 | How are you getting along with your father? |
29682 | How can you beg from him, too? |
29682 | How can you get so suddenly frightened? |
29682 | How d''you feel? |
29682 | How did she get to know Dr. Goll then? |
29682 | How do you come to think on that so entirely differently from your father? |
29682 | How do you like me? |
29682 | How do you like me? |
29682 | How do you like my new gown? |
29682 | How does one get into it then? |
29682 | How does that alter anything? |
29682 | How much do you need? |
29682 | How much longer will the lady have to sit? |
29682 | How so?... |
29682 | How''s it going with you, then? |
29682 | I am quite ridiculous, you think? |
29682 | I let myself be divorced? |
29682 | I thought her name was Nellie? |
29682 | I yield me to this beast!--His name do ye know? |
29682 | I''ve forgotten-- what''s the name of your ballet? |
29682 | I-- on her? |
29682 | I? |
29682 | I? |
29682 | If I did n''t know more about acting than the people on the stage do, what might not have happened to me? |
29682 | If you''d like to see her--? |
29682 | In case the doctor is not at home? |
29682 | In tights? |
29682 | Is he going out of his head? |
29682 | Is he there? |
29682 | Is it by a local man? |
29682 | Is it gone? |
29682 | Is it possible? |
29682 | Is it really to go on this way? |
29682 | Is my father here then? |
29682 | Is n''t he at the stock- exchange? |
29682 | Is she really so solemn? |
29682 | Is that a way to jest? |
29682 | Is that you? |
29682 | Is that your affair? |
29682 | Is there no sort of possibility of a person like me smuggling in? |
29682 | Is yet another man calling on you? |
29682 | Just what did that Countess want? |
29682 | Just who does live here? |
29682 | Let''s finish this? |
29682 | Lulu, is n''t it? |
29682 | May one come in? |
29682 | Maybe you want her to throw you out of the door straight off? |
29682 | Me? |
29682 | No longer living? |
29682 | Oh, you''ll be in man''s costume, wo n''t you? |
29682 | Or are you, too, an acrobat? |
29682 | Or else you were afraid? |
29682 | Or to be perfect in body and mind, like this girl? |
29682 | Or? |
29682 | Paris in revolution--? |
29682 | Pretty fine? |
29682 | Say, what''s your little danseuse doing now? |
29682 | See whom? |
29682 | Shall I force it in? |
29682 | Shall I guide your hand for you? |
29682 | Shall I not rather shoot= myself= in the head? |
29682 | Shall we see each other afterwards? |
29682 | She has gone? |
29682 | She has two ballet- costumes, if I''m not mistaken? |
29682 | She keeps you company? |
29682 | She--? |
29682 | Should I read it to her first, maybe? |
29682 | Since when have you known her then? |
29682 | Since when, then? |
29682 | Since you have known her? |
29682 | So you know that? |
29682 | So you''re having work done here, too? |
29682 | So? |
29682 | So? |
29682 | Still not come to himself? |
29682 | Tell me, who of us two is more full of claims and demands, you or I? |
29682 | That does n''t help me-- Does he drink? |
29682 | That does n''t help me-- Does he drink? |
29682 | That does n''t help me-- Does he drink? |
29682 | That part of my life I have poured into you I am to see thrown before wild beasts? |
29682 | That you are secretly pained at the necessity of profaning your art before people of doubtful disinterestedness? |
29682 | That you feel in yourself enough dignity and high rank to fetter a man to your feet-- in order to enjoy his utter helplessness?... |
29682 | That you would gladly exchange at any moment the shimmer of publicity for a quiet, sunny happiness in distinguished seclusion? |
29682 | The toilet is n''t going so quickly, is it? |
29682 | The zenith of my hopes? |
29682 | Then she''s not your child? |
29682 | Then what did you come here for? |
29682 | Then what do you need the dresses for? |
29682 | Then why did n''t you let me fall quietly in a faint, and silently thank heaven for it? |
29682 | Then why talk about the child? |
29682 | Then wo n''t you at least-- get dressed? |
29682 | Third act? |
29682 | Thou? |
29682 | Thou? |
29682 | To an end-- already up and away? |
29682 | To be eccentric, like me? |
29682 | To put his kingdom up for auction? |
29682 | We''ll have lunch before we go, wo n''t we? |
29682 | Well, what''s hindering you? |
29682 | Well? |
29682 | Well? |
29682 | Well? |
29682 | Well? |
29682 | Well? |
29682 | Well? |
29682 | What I wanted to ask you-- have you seen the little Murphy girl yet as a Peruvian pearl- fisher? |
29682 | What am I to him? |
29682 | What are those you''ve got there? |
29682 | What are you doing here? |
29682 | What are you looking for? |
29682 | What are you now? |
29682 | What are you reading? |
29682 | What are you waiting for? |
29682 | What are= they= like? |
29682 | What brought you to that horrible suspicion? |
29682 | What can be in the way of his marriage? |
29682 | What damned skunk has waxed the stairs again? |
29682 | What did he make to her? |
29682 | What did you make to her? |
29682 | What do I mind about that? |
29682 | What do I mind about that? |
29682 | What do I mind? |
29682 | What do you believe in, then? |
29682 | What do you come as now? |
29682 | What do you find in it?... |
29682 | What do you find in it?... |
29682 | What do you find in it?... |
29682 | What do you find in it?... |
29682 | What do you know about it? |
29682 | What do you mind about that? |
29682 | What do you think of it? |
29682 | What do you want to know? |
29682 | What do you want? |
29682 | What do you want? |
29682 | What does he hunt? |
29682 | What does she do, then? |
29682 | What does she do? |
29682 | What flew out of here? |
29682 | What for? |
29682 | What good is it to me to be your married- man, when= you= can be seen going in and out of my house at every hour of the day? |
29682 | What good''ll that do? |
29682 | What have I never had? |
29682 | What have you two got against me? |
29682 | What is her father''s name then? |
29682 | What is her father''s name then? |
29682 | What is it now? |
29682 | What is it? |
29682 | What is it? |
29682 | What is that that you''re reading? |
29682 | What is that? |
29682 | What is to be aristocratic? |
29682 | What made you ask? |
29682 | What makes you imagine that? |
29682 | What makes you think that? |
29682 | What must I say to make you? |
29682 | What see you, whether in light or sombre plays? |
29682 | What shall I do? |
29682 | What shall I do? |
29682 | What should I have against your marriage? |
29682 | What sort of material is that? |
29682 | What sort of moments are those of which you spoke, where one expects to see his whole inner self tumble in? |
29682 | What the---- is that? |
29682 | What was it you dreamt all last night? |
29682 | What was that? |
29682 | What will you say to the police? |
29682 | What would you have? |
29682 | What would you say now, if you had to stand at attention for two hours? |
29682 | What''ll I do? |
29682 | What''s he mean? |
29682 | What''s he say? |
29682 | What''s that? |
29682 | What''s the matter here? |
29682 | What''s the matter with her? |
29682 | What''s the matter with you two? |
29682 | What''s the matter? |
29682 | What''s the matter? |
29682 | What''s the matter? |
29682 | What''s the matter? |
29682 | What''s the matter? |
29682 | What''s your father doing here? |
29682 | What? |
29682 | What? |
29682 | When does it begin? |
29682 | Where are his papers? |
29682 | Where are you going now? |
29682 | Where are you going? |
29682 | Where are you going? |
29682 | Where did you say Dr. Schön was sitting? |
29682 | Where is the dressing- room? |
29682 | Where is your energy? |
29682 | Where is your riding- whip? |
29682 | Where is= he= gone? |
29682 | Where to? |
29682 | Where? |
29682 | Where? |
29682 | Who are you speaking of? |
29682 | Who but you in the whole world has ever thought anything of me? |
29682 | Who does he hunt? |
29682 | Who else did I marry then? |
29682 | Who ever wants to judge of that beforehand? |
29682 | Who is it coming now? |
29682 | Who is the prince? |
29682 | Who is there that does not compromise? |
29682 | Who lets a dancer come on thru two acts in raincoats? |
29682 | Who says that? |
29682 | Who under the sun writes so absorbingly? |
29682 | Who was here? |
29682 | Who? |
29682 | Who? |
29682 | Who? |
29682 | Why are you still afraid, now that you''re at the zenith of your hopes? |
29682 | Why did n''t you tell me so yesterday, then? |
29682 | Why did you not bring me up better? |
29682 | Why do n''t you marry? |
29682 | Why do n''t you marry? |
29682 | Why do n''t you write your things at least as interesting as life is? |
29682 | Why do you flatter me so? |
29682 | Why do you want to put the blame on me? |
29682 | Why need that trouble us? |
29682 | Why not call her rather Mignon? |
29682 | Why not? |
29682 | Why so distant? |
29682 | Why, what can you do to help it? |
29682 | Why? |
29682 | Why? |
29682 | Will he see me to- day? |
29682 | Will the gentlemen smoke? |
29682 | Will you be willing to pose for it? |
29682 | Will you dance now? |
29682 | Will you let go of my legs? |
29682 | With his bride? |
29682 | With whom? |
29682 | With whom? |
29682 | Would n''t it go as well lying down? |
29682 | Would you hook me up here? |
29682 | Would you think it possible that at our first meeting I expected nothing more than to make the acquaintance of a young lady of the literary world?... |
29682 | Would you undo this knot for me? |
29682 | You and a danseuse? |
29682 | You are powdered? |
29682 | You could n''t bear it any longer out there? |
29682 | You dare suggest that? |
29682 | You find me ugly? |
29682 | You had a faint? |
29682 | You know her? |
29682 | You know where Dr. Bernstein lives? |
29682 | You mean--? |
29682 | You or I-- which is the weaker? |
29682 | You really dance? |
29682 | You still keep at the French? |
29682 | You wanted to marry her originally? |
29682 | You were afraid, though, that my legs might have been seriously injured? |
29682 | You wo n''t compel us to break off the performance? |
29682 | You yearn for the whip once more? |
29682 | You''re changing? |
29682 | You''re not going already? |
29682 | You''ve run? |
29682 | You? |
29682 | Your bride is here? |
29682 | Your pleasure? |
29682 | _ I_ make believe? |
39232 | Granting that, what is the process? |
39232 | HITA, GINÉS PEREZ DE( 1544?-1605? |
39232 | How, then, are we to account for the attribution? |
39232 | How, then, was the distribution of crafts and habitual occupations of all kinds brought about? |
39232 | In the light of facts such as these, who could venture to say what the future of Hinduism is likely to be? |
39232 | One of his successors, Arnaunta( late 13th century? |
39232 | The first mention of a special consecration of water for other ends than baptism is in the_ Acts of Thomas_(? |
39232 | The footprints were regarded as those of reptiles, amphibia and birds(?). |
39232 | Why does it so slowly reveal the Right of the middle ages( as in slavery for instance) to be the Wrong to- day? |
39232 | _ Andaval_ and_ Bor_; inscriptions incised on sculptured_ stelae_ of kings(? |
39232 | _ Ardistama_? |
39232 | breathed breathless by( or with) its_ svadha_(? |
39232 | is that, hearing the question asked"What is sense?" |
39353 | Is any one( there)? |
39353 | ''Et quid agam?'' |
39353 | ''Rogitas? |
39353 | 1- 3?). |
39353 | Again, was the size of the hide fixed at 120 acres to make the work of reckoning the amount of Danegeld, or hidage, a simple process? |
39353 | And he went on to enquire, What are these singular spots upon the sun? |
39353 | And if I am for myself alone, what then am I? |
39353 | And if not now, then when?" |
39353 | Do the stars also rotate on their axes? |
39353 | Hezekiah was imprisoned"like a bird in a cage"[4]--to quote Sennacherib, and the Urbi( Arabian?) |
39353 | In 1847 appeared, his novel_ Kto Vinovat?_( Whose Fault? |
39353 | In 1847 appeared, his novel_ Kto Vinovat?_( Whose Fault? |
39353 | Lastly, is the English hide derived from the German_ hufe_ or_ huba_? |
39353 | Primitively(?) |
39353 | The phrase_ koi hai_? |
39353 | What is the connexion, if any, between the hundred and a hundred hides? |
39353 | What is the origin of the five- hide unit? |
39353 | _ Kto Vinovat?_ has been translated into German under the title of_ Wer ist schuld?_ in Wolffsohn''s_ Russlands Novellendichter_, vol. |
39353 | _ Kto Vinovat?_ has been translated into German under the title of_ Wer ist schuld?_ in Wolffsohn''s_ Russlands Novellendichter_, vol. |
39353 | and have they any practical relation to the inhabitants of this planet? |
39353 | or are they sometimes partially eclipsed by the intervention of opaque bodies? |
39353 | | jana| jinha| jinh| jini| jenh|| WHO? |
39353 | | kasu, kaho| kih| kis| ka| ke|| WHO? |
39353 | |? |
39353 | |? |
39353 | |? |
39514 | Dr. Kerr, losing patience, said,"Can you not use the thermometer your Maker has put in your inside, and put on clothes when you are cold?" |
39514 | Jesus cometh unto him and saith,"Peter, what aileth thee?" |
39514 | May this narrow spot inurn Aught that could so beat and burn?" |
39514 | The doctor''s Shakespearian reply was,"Do you think I am such a fool as to take physic?" |
39514 | The traveller, as he paceth amazedly through those deserts, asketh of her, who builded them? |
39514 | What is more distressing, both to patient and nurse, than whooping cough, or king- cough, as it is sometimes called? |
39514 | What manner of man was this paragon of medical knowledge? |
39514 | Who can that be, said my father? |
39514 | Who cares that the author of that classic"Religio Medici"took his degrees at Leyden and at Oxford, and dispensed medicine to the end of his life? |
39514 | Who cares that the author of"The Borough,""Tales in Verse,"and"The Parish Register,"was apprenticed to a surgeon? |
39514 | Who cares that the writer of such dramas as"Virginius,""William Tell,"and"The Hunchback,"was trained for a physician? |
39514 | _ Macduff._ What''s the disease he means? |
39514 | and liest thou here? |
39514 | sigh for the toothache? |
39514 | sir, are we going to the bottom?" |
39839 | And what figure is so expressive of the Christian faith as the hallowed symbol of the Cross? |
39839 | CONCLUSION-- Popularity of Symbolism-- Totems-- Kobong-- Heraldic Symbols-- Symbol of the Cross: What it implies? |
39839 | Who can picture a sincerely Christian devotion hacking and hewing at the statue of the Redeemer? |
3660 | Adonde? |
3660 | Adonde? |
3660 | But what was it that I read in his face, as he looked down at me? |
3660 | Camest thou from her to me on that errand? |
3660 | Comale,said his mother,"what are you doing?" |
3660 | Did I not find him? |
3660 | Did he come to thee? |
3660 | Did not his Son say,''Him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out''? |
3660 | Did thy God deliver thee? |
3660 | Do n''t you ever stop off half an hour or so, when you''re on your rounds? |
3660 | Do n''t you hate this work? |
3660 | Do n''t you know what''l- e- s- t''means? |
3660 | Do n''t you want to walk back with me, and, get some of the fish for your mother? |
3660 | Do you suppose my baby''s at the River? |
3660 | Dost thou believe on the Son of God? |
3660 | Gave you a climb? |
3660 | Hast thou found Him-- the Christian''s God-- my mother? |
3660 | Have you been fishing? |
3660 | He has n''t forgot that verse after all these weeks? |
3660 | How art thou bound, my Timokles? |
3660 | How did Pentaur climb? |
3660 | How did he suppose I was going to find that paper up that tree? |
3660 | How knowest thou? |
3660 | How long did you stay? |
3660 | How much hast thou drank today? |
3660 | How wast thou where I saw thee? |
3660 | How wilt thou leave this, thy beautiful home? |
3660 | How you take it? |
3660 | I gave you one? |
3660 | I wonder if pa''s going to die? |
3660 | I wonder if pa''s ready? |
3660 | I wonder if teacher''ll ask me next Sunday whether I''ve read any? |
3660 | I wonder if this evening''s paper has n''t come, so we could look? |
3660 | I wonder who they are, and what they are traveling that way for? |
3660 | If he shall be beset in some other place by those who hate Christians, will he not abandon me again to my enemies? |
3660 | Is my mother here? |
3660 | Is there no place? |
3660 | Jesus said unto him, Dost thou believe on the Son of God? |
3660 | Knowest thou not that on this day I can not make a flame by which thou shouldest see? 3660 May I see the Zanjero?" |
3660 | No, I''m not fit for such folks, but would you mind doing one thing for me? 3660 O branded- cheeked cutter of dykes, art thou in very truth a Christian?" |
3660 | Saw me coming out of our house today, did n''t you? |
3660 | See here, Timoteo,burst out Herbert, stopping on top of the cliffs,"what''s the matter? |
3660 | Shall I speak to him? |
3660 | Shall we gather at the river, Where bright angel- feet have trod: With its crystal tide forever Flowing by the throne of God? |
3660 | Should a Christian have jewels, and I none? 3660 Tell me, O Christian,"she whispered in the tongue of Egypt,"art thou not he?" |
3660 | That you, Willis? |
3660 | This drawing? |
3660 | Was the line of flounders up? |
3660 | Wha''fo''you do that? |
3660 | What do you think of? |
3660 | What for you good to me? |
3660 | What has changed that boy? |
3660 | What is it, my mother? |
3660 | What is it, my mother? |
3660 | What is the writing, that he hideth it there? |
3660 | What makes this woman so much your friend that she comes and tells your grandmother about the key? |
3660 | What meaneth that large sign? 3660 What river?" |
3660 | What would they say at the store, if they knew? |
3660 | Where are the lentiles? |
3660 | Where art thou? |
3660 | Where is it? |
3660 | Where''ll I read? |
3660 | Where''s father? |
3660 | Where? |
3660 | Whither goest thou? |
3660 | Who art thou that thou shouldest own the Christian? |
3660 | Who brings it around? |
3660 | Who? |
3660 | Who? |
3660 | Why did n''t you come in and tell me, so I''d know where to look for it? |
3660 | Why should anybody learn for to- morrow? |
3660 | Why should n''t they be sleeping? |
3660 | Why shouldest thou be a Christian? |
3660 | Why shouldest thou risk death? |
3660 | Will the branch bear my weight? |
3660 | Will you forgive? |
3660 | Yet why hideth he here? |
3660 | You like buy Biblia Sagrada? |
3660 | You no talk to teacher any more about me? |
3660 | You no tell her my father lazy, we no-''count folks? |
3660 | You read Portuguese? |
3660 | You''bones bloke? |
3660 | ( Where?) |
3660 | A shudder ran through Pentaur, as Timokles continued:"Thinkest thou that what they suffered was nothing? |
3660 | Ai n''t you? |
3660 | Are you trying to get orders?" |
3660 | As soon as she could Addie began:"Shall we gather at the river?" |
3660 | Besides, the grandmother''s birthday was near, and where was money for a present? |
3660 | But how shall we cease to tell men of Christ? |
3660 | But now, what hope was there? |
3660 | But the six Christians answered steadily,"Why weepest thou, brother? |
3660 | Could she be speaking of the real God, not of Egypt''s idols? |
3660 | Customers became many and well- paying, and the old grandmother, happy in the prosperity, said to Rosa and to Joseph:"See you, my children? |
3660 | Dare he trust this woman, known to be a devout worshiper of Egypt''s gods? |
3660 | Did I not tell you that the Lord knew about the panaderia? |
3660 | Did a voice say it to Delpha? |
3660 | Did the palm branch hang low enough so that, if he jumped, he could grasp it? |
3660 | Didst thou hear the judge ask her,''Art thou then a Christian?'' |
3660 | Didst thou not hear what was done last year at Carthage? |
3660 | Didst thou not know of the Christian lady, Vivia Perpetua, and the Christian slave, Felicitas?" |
3660 | Didst thou see Vivia Perpetua''s old father press forward, carrying her babe in his arms, and beg her to recant for the child''s sake? |
3660 | Do n''t say one word about me, but when they get through singing some hymn, wo n''t you just start them singing,''Shall we gather at the River''? |
3660 | Do you hate me?" |
3660 | For what else but to hear had he this morning stolen down to the docks? |
3660 | Had he not often heard that he who would be a Christian must forgive others? |
3660 | Had not her grandmother said that the Lord cared about the panaderia? |
3660 | Had she indeed lost all love for him, since she had told him she wished he had died rather than become a Christian? |
3660 | Has not the Lord told us to care for the poor? |
3660 | He could only wait-- how long? |
3660 | He heard a voice like his mother''s say,"Is this my boy?" |
3660 | He knew the paper fell on the roof, but who would have supposed Mr. Landler was at the Strattons''? |
3660 | He remembered that the thought of the men at the wharves had been:"Who would know?" |
3660 | He thought of Pothinus, the ninety- years- old bishop of Lyons, who, in answer to the legate''s question,"Who is the God of the Christians?" |
3660 | He''s there, is n''t he?" |
3660 | Hearest thou not their voices?" |
3660 | Heaven would be sweet, but would his dear ones ever know the only way there? |
3660 | Heraklas murmured with a heavy sigh,"Timokles told me he had found''the truth''O Timokles, is thy''truth''sweet to thee now? |
3660 | Herbert called,"run for help, wo n''t you? |
3660 | How camest thou hither?" |
3660 | How can I bear it, to wait till I can go home to see if all is safe?" |
3660 | How can the store tell? |
3660 | How shall I live without thee?" |
3660 | How shall he cease to draw men to himself?" |
3660 | How should he, who rejoiced in the knowledge of sins forgiven, pray more to false gods? |
3660 | I wonder if they stayed up here all night? |
3660 | Is it the''tau''?" |
3660 | Knowest thou not how many Christians have fled, and what torments Christians who have been brought here from all Egypt have suffered? |
3660 | Not a jewel, not anything that savored of riches? |
3660 | Not a thin wedge of gold at the heart of this papyrus? |
3660 | Shall I not put as much trust in the delivering, protecting power of my God, as the idol- worshiper will put in this hippopotamus?" |
3660 | Should he, who had been blessed of the Lord, seem to accept the blessing of idols? |
3660 | The man whose eyes Christ had opened, answered and said,"Who is he, Lord, that I might believe on him?" |
3660 | Then the messenger saw in the mother''s eyes that she spoke truthfully, but he said,"How can I trust thee?" |
3660 | Thinkest thou I care nothing for my head? |
3660 | Thinkest thou the petty coin thou gavest me will pay me for my head? |
3660 | Timokles, if God had not driven me into the desert, would I ever have found him?" |
3660 | Was ever a paper boy so unfortunate? |
3660 | Was it right to steal an hour, or half an hour, of his employer''s time? |
3660 | Was it true that"never man spake as this man"? |
3660 | Was n''t that it?" |
3660 | Was the Christian God greater than Serapis, the great deity of Egypt? |
3660 | Was there no treasure? |
3660 | Were not those men employed to work as steadily as his father? |
3660 | Wert thou there, O Pentaur, when the governor examined the prisoners? |
3660 | What building was this? |
3660 | What else should have become of it? |
3660 | What good was cake? |
3660 | What had he to do with the Christians? |
3660 | What hope was there for Timokles? |
3660 | What if August never was found out? |
3660 | What if her sons were not there? |
3660 | What is my home to me without them? |
3660 | What should he buy? |
3660 | What should he say? |
3660 | What was this that he saw? |
3660 | When he next went to purchase anything, must he do reverence? |
3660 | When would he find other food? |
3660 | Where else had he not looked? |
3660 | Who knew if they should ever meet again? |
3660 | Who knew what jewels he might find? |
3660 | Who knew? |
3660 | Who would hinder so devout worshipers of the gods from taking a pleasure drive? |
3660 | Who''s going to know?" |
3660 | Why did n''t you come and tell me about things, long ago?" |
3660 | Why do n''t you go up and get some, too?" |
3660 | Why had he blindly followed his anger? |
3660 | Why had he done so wicked a thing? |
3660 | Why should the words of Jesus of Nazareth cling to one''s memory with so persistent a force? |
3660 | Will you give me a little bread? |
3660 | Will you manage it the way I want?" |
3660 | Will you remember that?" |
3660 | With awe- struck lips, Heraklas whispered, out of a heart that craved its answer,"Who is he, Lord, that I might believe on him?" |
3660 | Wo n''t you?" |
3660 | Would she not betray the fleeing Christians? |
3660 | Would the father or the son learn something about their captive? |
3660 | Would they ever accept Jesus Christ as their Savior? |
3660 | Wouldst thou thy two sons should suffer in like manner?" |
3660 | Yet what availed it that the feet of any of the Christians were free, if their bodies were securely bound? |
3660 | You and I wo n''t be that way, will we, father? |
3660 | You want to, do n''t you, my son?" |
3660 | and didst thou hear her answer,''I am''?" |
3660 | cried Pentaur into the depth of the building,"livest thou? |
33616 | All of what? |
33616 | Am I so dreadful? |
33616 | And as to letting him know that I love_ him_--"Yes? |
33616 | And fully dressed? |
33616 | And have you known many men? |
33616 | And he is not disgraced? 33616 And if the asking of these lips and hands and eyes and this voice, all that are permitted you, are not potent-- how shall I be? |
33616 | And is it that which has changed you? |
33616 | And she will grant other prayers of ours-- Isonna and me-- will she not, Isonna, you little beast? 33616 And that the wives really like it?" |
33616 | And there is danger? |
33616 | And who would you have me marry? |
33616 | And why should he ask that? |
33616 | And you will be as kind to him as you have been to me? |
33616 | And you? |
33616 | And, perchance, fall and never return? |
33616 | Are n''t they''people who read them''? |
33616 | Are not you? |
33616 | Ask a man to stay? |
33616 | But after you knew that you were not in a heaven? |
33616 | But he_ will_ go sometime-- we agree upon that? |
33616 | But how do you know? |
33616 | But if your husband should go there? |
33616 | But only to make him understand that he loves me-- now-- here-- to- day? 33616 But were you present when the gods obscured the picture?" |
33616 | But what can I do? |
33616 | But what did you do and what did I do? |
33616 | But you think it is China? |
33616 | But, how can they,argued Hoshiko,"if they are not taught? |
33616 | But, your father? |
33616 | By all the gods? |
33616 | Can you stop the beating of the heart? 33616 Did you know me? |
33616 | Did you wish it-- what I did-- said? |
33616 | Do They include the critics? |
33616 | Do they make people live together who do not wish to? |
33616 | Do what? |
33616 | Do you see my flag? |
33616 | Do you suppose his love for me--_you_ said it was love, I did not!--is greater than his love for the spirit of his father? |
33616 | Do you think that necessary? |
33616 | Do you wish him to think that you have been any one''s? 33616 Does it matter to the gods,"asked Kiomidzu,"how fealty to the heaven- born- one is augustly inculcated?" |
33616 | For a little while, lord? |
33616 | For a year, do n''t you know, or six months, or something like that? |
33616 | Has the clock struck? |
33616 | Have I touched a broken, perhaps often mended, place in your armor? |
33616 | Have_ you_ never seen it done? |
33616 | How can they? |
33616 | How did you escape, my pleasant daughter? |
33616 | How do you know? 33616 How shall that come to pass, augustness?" |
33616 | How will you assure me of this? |
33616 | How would the gods know? 33616 I do n''t think you understand me, since you answer only yes and no?" |
33616 | I trust,whined Kiomidzu,"that all is well between us?" |
33616 | If you should be killed, you will let me know at once? |
33616 | In what book did you learn that? |
33616 | Is it far to the emperor? |
33616 | Is it so? |
33616 | Is she industrious, Isonna? |
33616 | Is the day fixed? |
33616 | Look so into my eyes, touch so my hands, listen so to my miserable voice? |
33616 | May I ask a question? |
33616 | Might I touch you? |
33616 | Oh, have you forgotten-- have you forgotten? 33616 Oh, is it not all as it was, beloved? |
33616 | Or better? |
33616 | Perhaps, many many years? |
33616 | Say, do you know what causes that? |
33616 | Shall I tell you? |
33616 | So that you will be a widow with blackened teeth? |
33616 | So? |
33616 | Suppose They do not like it? |
33616 | Sure he''s dead? |
33616 | The waiting? |
33616 | Then I am not in a heaven,said he,"and--_you_ are not a heavenly person?" |
33616 | Then the question is,said the girl, with innocent mirth,"why, if I am not beautiful, if nothing about me is, why did you do so?" |
33616 | Then you have known no one-- no man but me? |
33616 | Then, if you should not be killed-- you will come back to be happy again? |
33616 | They do n''t lose caste after the-- er-- debt has been paid, but go back to their husbands? |
33616 | Until you are mi-- married? |
33616 | Was Isonna an eta, too? |
33616 | Well, well,comforted the maid,"why did you not inform him? |
33616 | Well, you suspicious little beast, what has that got to do with his wife? |
33616 | Well,ventured god, in doubt,"are novels literature?" |
33616 | Well? |
33616 | Well? |
33616 | What did I then, little beast? |
33616 | What did you do, what did I do? |
33616 | What does it matter, my dear child? |
33616 | What does it matter? |
33616 | What does this mean? |
33616 | What have I said to cause such sorrow? |
33616 | What have you been doing with me all the while I have been here? |
33616 | What is it? |
33616 | What is that, wise little beast? |
33616 | What is the use to take the trouble to tell him? 33616 What more, beloved one?" |
33616 | What would you, then, have him to call you on earth? |
33616 | What would you? |
33616 | What, after I have forgotten? |
33616 | What, then, will I do, lord? |
33616 | What? |
33616 | What? |
33616 | What? |
33616 | What? |
33616 | Where are your parents that I may ask their consent? |
33616 | Where is she? 33616 Where?" |
33616 | Who said I found any beauty there? |
33616 | Who taught you that? |
33616 | Who was Isonna? |
33616 | Who, pray, do you write books for? |
33616 | Why must you many? 33616 Why not?" |
33616 | Why should They not? |
33616 | Will a wounded one do? |
33616 | Will you take my hand? |
33616 | Will you walk with me as we used? 33616 You know? |
33616 | You love him too? 33616 You sing the Imperial Hymn with that light in your face who never sang it before-- whose face was never before so lighted? |
33616 | You think, then, that I_ have_ had-- twenty lovers? |
33616 | You understand your position the moment this becomes public? |
33616 | You will not? |
33616 | You wish me? |
33616 | You-- you-- What is the matter? |
33616 | ( Perhaps we had better call her Arisuga from this on? |
33616 | --what will the other gods think of me, saving Benten, if I stop here and forget to die because a woman has hands, a voice, and eyes?" |
33616 | Adopt another country? |
33616 | After the emperor has decorated you, touched you, you want-- actually_ want_--to go away from him? |
33616 | Am I permitted no ellipsis in so patent a matter as that?" |
33616 | Am I so hard to understand?" |
33616 | Am I to wait here because your eyes are not exactly a beast''s, while my father languishes in the Meido?" |
33616 | And for whom? |
33616 | And if one has all the bliss one can bear or understand here on earth, is that not a heaven? |
33616 | And one word? |
33616 | And that Arisuga- Sama left me to go to the emperor? |
33616 | And that during all that halcyon time she had had her way with her adoration of him-- and saw no reason in his returned consciousness for changing it? |
33616 | And that it was I came to him? |
33616 | And what should she do? |
33616 | And who will hold my hand?" |
33616 | And will you wait here for my spirit, as you do for my body?" |
33616 | And yet you will be kind? |
33616 | And, Isonna, have you noticed that exquisite habit he has of touching me, here, here, here?" |
33616 | And, Isonna, we never laughed-- really-- until he came, did we? |
33616 | And, how else could she have accomplished it? |
33616 | Are the yoshiwara and Geisha street empty?" |
33616 | Are their wives not properly forgotten? |
33616 | Are they not upon brass to- day, though a thousand years have passed? |
33616 | At last he spoke:--"Were you educated in Japan-- or China, angel of my earth- heaven?" |
33616 | BUT WHAT COULD HE DO? |
33616 | Beloved, you do not wish us-- No? |
33616 | But after that do you suppose he would ever let the flag go down? |
33616 | But could I tell him that I was busy falling in love with him?" |
33616 | But how could he-- now? |
33616 | But how would you like that in your judge? |
33616 | But how? |
33616 | But if you do not die? |
33616 | But there is no need of-- haste?" |
33616 | But was I not yours? |
33616 | But what comfort was that? |
33616 | But who was there to tell him that she had known him two weeks longer than he knew her? |
33616 | But who, then, will come with me here? |
33616 | But you will smoke a little? |
33616 | But, then, how do you suppose he learns it?" |
33616 | Can any one?" |
33616 | Can you see how a wound received in hot carnage and one slowly carved in one''s own flesh may differ? |
33616 | Could you? |
33616 | Did he tell you?" |
33616 | Did you know her? |
33616 | Did you know her?" |
33616 | Did you know my voice?" |
33616 | Did you know that? |
33616 | Do n''t you remember how your violence frightened me until you explained that it was love? |
33616 | Do n''t you think it will be all right?" |
33616 | Do you know that we were married away down there? |
33616 | Do you no more wish me? |
33616 | Do you not know it?" |
33616 | Do you not remember how beautiful and bloody he was? |
33616 | Do you not see that he was gone quite mad? |
33616 | Do you suppose that he could love anything more than his colors? |
33616 | Do you think he heard that?" |
33616 | Do you understand the difference? |
33616 | Do you want to be left behind-- come when it is won, and march in parade order over the field? |
33616 | Every one''s? |
33616 | For me?" |
33616 | For, who knows? |
33616 | Have I let you suppose that Hoshiko accepted all this perilous happiness without question? |
33616 | Have I made you happy?" |
33616 | Have I only dreamed that I was still leading them?" |
33616 | How can They differ from me? |
33616 | How can he if I do not teach him?" |
33616 | How could I listen to any one else? |
33616 | How could he know, under the circumstances? |
33616 | How could she do that? |
33616 | How do we know? |
33616 | How long have you been here?" |
33616 | How shall any one or anything be? |
33616 | I have not ruined him? |
33616 | I wonder if Eve could have been happy in Eden alone? |
33616 | ISONNA IX ISONNA On another day Hoshiko asked:--"Lord, must it be soon-- now-- that you die?" |
33616 | If one has none, how is one to get even one unless she pretends to have many? |
33616 | Is it a bargain?" |
33616 | Is it not all as it was? |
33616 | Is it the years? |
33616 | Is it true?" |
33616 | Is not once enough? |
33616 | Marry him?" |
33616 | Must I die, too? |
33616 | Namishima disliked a trifle the correction of his brother:--"Do not the gods so act upon the minds of their creatures that they remember or forget? |
33616 | No matter, the omen is the same, Ani- San; all is as it was, is it not?" |
33616 | Or it is a branch of the tree? |
33616 | Or that she had lived here untaught as a child? |
33616 | Or was it only terrible? |
33616 | Say this:''Beloved who loves me more than the rest in Buddha''s bosom, and whom I love as much--''That is true, is it not?" |
33616 | Shall I tell him?" |
33616 | Shall little_ you_ experience that arch esctasy: your death- wound spurting your own warm blood into your own face? |
33616 | Shall not we be?" |
33616 | Shall we go to the tomb of Lord Esas, beloved?" |
33616 | She chattered on:--"Also have you noticed how beautiful he is? |
33616 | Soon he will go and forget both us and that-- what is the use?" |
33616 | Suppose I should go to some place with him where there is no one who had ever known me? |
33616 | THE TASK OF JIZO X THE TASK OF JIZO"Why did n''t he take me?" |
33616 | That also? |
33616 | That she had an oath or two, that her voice was harsh, her words which once flowed like pleasant water few and terrible? |
33616 | That she was like the rest of them-- a ruffian? |
33616 | That to her, since she frankly adored him, there was only one reason why he might not as frankly know it-- the one she had decided never to tell? |
33616 | The adoring of the eyes? |
33616 | The flag-- my flag--?" |
33616 | The tea is very good, excellency?" |
33616 | Then out, out, out into the eternal solitude and silence of souls awaiting other reincarnations? |
33616 | Then she said wanly:--"What will you do with_ me_, Ani- San? |
33616 | Then she sat up and asked:"_ Now_ you do n''t blame me, do you?" |
33616 | Then she went on:--"--perhaps, to- night, you will be as sweet as you were on that other night-- when-- Do you remember?" |
33616 | They are a melancholy lot and have made you so, eh? |
33616 | To that place called Meido? |
33616 | Unless you still wish me? |
33616 | Was I ever so happy as I am now-- since he came?" |
33616 | Was it as glorious as he had thought it? |
33616 | Was not this a part of the way she had prayed to be shown? |
33616 | Was that harm? |
33616 | We will meet them at the Yalu-- do you hear? |
33616 | Well, you blind little beast, do you_ know_ what I_ have_ been doing?" |
33616 | Were they hate or love? |
33616 | Were they of me? |
33616 | What did she learn in that death- instant? |
33616 | What do you call time, you ignorant one? |
33616 | What do you do here? |
33616 | What gods are there? |
33616 | What is the matter with you now? |
33616 | What matter that? |
33616 | What other thought can They have than that John and Jane descended the stairway to reach the lower hall?" |
33616 | What then?" |
33616 | What? |
33616 | When all was well again she turned to Arisuga:--"Then you will need a servant-- and I am very industrious, am I not, Isonna?" |
33616 | When the maid was abject before her she said:--"Why do you stare?" |
33616 | Who called you? |
33616 | Who can vanquish them? |
33616 | Who has ever vanquished it? |
33616 | Who is sworn to decide upon the evidence adduced alone? |
33616 | Who knows? |
33616 | Why do not you?" |
33616 | Why do you not speak?" |
33616 | Why not?" |
33616 | Why should they see anything more? |
33616 | Why, was it not Akima Chinori who killed his child, which was too small to be left alone, so that he might obey the call? |
33616 | Will you not look, beloved? |
33616 | With the singing of the death- bird? |
33616 | Would not you have touched his shadow? |
33616 | Would you die with life all sweet again, as the morning glories in the morning? |
33616 | Would you like to go to America?" |
33616 | Would you wish me to marry you and at once go to the field?" |
33616 | XV BUT WHAT COULD HE DO? |
33616 | Yet I dare not-- will not you?" |
33616 | Yet-- who knows? |
33616 | You have not forgotten the Moon- and- the- Stork song?" |
33616 | You will go? |
33616 | _ His_ happiness, do you understand, dear Jizo?" |
33616 | all that had been the Lady Hoshi was no more? |
33616 | are there no more samurai in Japan?" |
33616 | he whispered hoarsely, in one of these,"am I going to the small white death of women and children? |
33616 | if the gods are not ready yet for you-- you will come?" |
33616 | it was not, eh? |
33616 | that is only because you have been ill and I have been kind to you?" |
38228 | A gun? |
38228 | And what did she say? 38228 And you will be very careful and let no one see you mail it,"he asked eagerly,"and never, never speak of it to anybody?" |
38228 | Another poem? |
38228 | Are we going to have a tea- party? |
38228 | Are you going back to France? |
38228 | Blockades? |
38228 | But who is Meester Carrà ©? |
38228 | But why do they put out fishes? |
38228 | Ca n''t I pin my flag on too? |
38228 | Can I go? |
38228 | Course not,said June stoutly,"that would n''t be like a soldier, would it? |
38228 | Did I save your life? |
38228 | Did n''t you never go to school? |
38228 | Do n''t the mothers ever kiss the children good- night? |
38228 | Do n''t you wish you were a little boy, Seki San? |
38228 | Do you s''pose my mother''ll know me now I''ve got so fat? 38228 Do you suppose it''s too late to make a prayer on them now?" |
38228 | Do you want me to help you? |
38228 | Does it spell anything? |
38228 | For me? |
38228 | How did you come here? |
38228 | I made up one coming,he announced,"do you want to hear it?" |
38228 | In the day- time? |
38228 | Is it like a story- book all the time? |
38228 | June,she said at last,"you are going to be a soldier like father, are n''t you?" |
38228 | Now,he said,"where''s the party?" |
38228 | Seki,he said persuasively,"Monsieur is sick in bed, do n''t you think it would be nice for me to take him a little cake?" |
38228 | Seki,said June,"I did n''t make any prayer on that paper that stuck on the old giant''s nose, do you think it too late?" |
38228 | The Sleeping Beauty, eh? |
38228 | The mouse traps, on horse- back? |
38228 | Tomi? |
38228 | Well, whom do you think I am now? |
38228 | What do you mean by falling over me like that? |
38228 | What is it? |
38228 | What is your name? |
38228 | What makes the pilgrims throw at them, then? |
38228 | What secret have you there? |
38228 | When? |
38228 | Where are the blossoms? |
38228 | Where he lives? |
38228 | Where''s Seki? |
38228 | Who did? |
38228 | Who is he? |
38228 | Who''s going away? |
38228 | Who''s waiting? |
38228 | Who? |
38228 | Why do n''t you go home? |
38228 | Why you want to write such big letter to your mother? 38228 Why, you know a lot about forts and mines and blockades and things, do n''t you?" |
38228 | Why? |
38228 | Will you write something for me now, at once? |
38228 | Yes, yes,cried Monsieur, now out of bed and on his knees before the child,"and you tore it up, you destroyed it?" |
38228 | You have not spoken to any one about the letter? |
38228 | _ Did_ he sell the papers, Seki? |
38228 | 37"''It''s a Matsuri-- a festival,''Seki explained"49"''Does it spell anything?'' |
38228 | After a while he turned to one of the men and said:"Do you know where Monsieur Carrà © lives?" |
38228 | And may I use this fat tablet?" |
38228 | Any plan unmade that might take me away from this hateful place? |
38228 | At this they both had a great laugh and the man said:"So I am the White Knight, am I?" |
38228 | But what would become of Monsieur? |
38228 | But when the man lifted one eyebrow and puckered his mouth into a funny shape, and said,"Why, Mr. Skeezicks, you have n''t forgotten your old Pard?" |
38228 | CHAPTER VII"SEKI SAN, have you got a big enderlope?" |
38228 | Capital M.""Do you like wiggles on your_ M''s?_"asked June, flattered by the request and anxious to please. |
38228 | Could those papers in the long envelope have anything to do with Monsieur''s present trouble? |
38228 | Do n''t you know where he lives?" |
38228 | Do n''t you remember just before she was going to be queen? |
38228 | Do you suppose I have left any stone unturned? |
38228 | Do you understand? |
38228 | Had his mistake about the"s''s"anything to do with it all? |
38228 | Has my father grown any since I saw him? |
38228 | Have you seen the Grand Monarch? |
38228 | Here is Marie Antoinette, is she not most beautiful?" |
38228 | I would n''t tell anything if I said I would n''t, would you?" |
38228 | Is it because my father is getting well?" |
38228 | It could n''t fall up, could it?" |
38228 | It was much as if a new bird had twittered a strange note, and one boy tried to imitate the sound and repeated"Carrà © lives?" |
38228 | Just a teeny weeny one?" |
38228 | Mon Dieu, do you suppose there is a waking hour that I am not thinking, longing, praying to be back in France? |
38228 | Monsieur turned on him fiercely:"Go home? |
38228 | Nobody must know, nobody must suspect, do you understand?" |
38228 | Seki, do you guess God would jes''as lieve for me to have a horn as a harp when I go to Heaven? |
38228 | Suppose I have to live here always and grow up to be a Japanese man, and never see the ranch in California nor my pony any more?" |
38228 | Then when he saw the man''s look of perplexity, he added incredulously,"Did n''t you_ never_ hear of''Alice in Wonderland''?" |
38228 | What are they ringing the bell for?" |
38228 | What became of Tiger Tooth and the little white child?" |
38228 | What do you s''pose they will bring me?" |
38228 | What have the little girls got flowers in their hair for? |
38228 | What if he should get lost and swallowed up for ever in this strange place where nobody knew him nor loved him nor spoke his language? |
38228 | What made them black? |
38228 | What must I do?" |
38228 | What''s your real name?" |
38228 | Where did you get these red cheeks and fat legs?" |
38228 | Where you been, where did you go?" |
38228 | Who did you think I was? |
38228 | Why had Monsieur not wanted him to tell? |
38228 | Will he carry a sword? |
38228 | Would you stay with her, June, while I go to father?" |
38228 | [ Illustration:"''Do you want me to help you?''"] |
38228 | [ Illustration:"''Does it spell anything?'' |
38228 | he demanded,"tell me quickly why did you come?" |
38228 | repeated Monsieur,"what kind of blockades?" |
38228 | said Seki San, looking very comical with one loop of black hair hanging over her eye,"from Meester Carrà ©? |
38228 | what''s that?" |
38228 | you could n''t tell me a story, could you? |
39642 | ***** Of what are these great peaks built up? |
39642 | And in the long centuries to come may we not develop a soul for beauties unthought of now? |
39642 | And is there any literature or history? |
39642 | And what more perfect spot for the purpose could be found? |
39642 | Are there no remains of buildings, roads, aqueducts, canals, statues, or any other such mark by which a people leaves its impress on a country? |
39642 | But why should the mountains thus depress? |
39642 | Has it ever made any such impression? |
39642 | How can we be certain that this is right? |
39642 | Should we not look confidently out into the future and nerve ourselves for bold, unfettered flight? |
39642 | Were they a purely indigenous race? |
39642 | What was their history? |
39642 | Who can but be impressed by such ages and such forces? |
39642 | Who could feel a care while he fished or hunted stag in a valley with more than the beauty and with all the freshness of his native land? |
39642 | Why should not their history bring us the more worthy thought of the mighty possibilities of the race? |
39511 | ''[ 1] What is this but once more the intellectualistic position? |
39511 | *****= What did Magic contribute to the making of Religion? |
39511 | And what does the ordinary person know, for instance, about electricity? |
39511 | Are they descended from ghosts, or are they nature- beings, or creators? |
39511 | But, is there no trace in animal life of the coercitive behaviour? |
39511 | But, it may be asked, would Religion have come into existence under these peaceful circumstances? |
39511 | Can it not be regarded as the prototype of most taboo customs? |
39511 | Does not the growling of Darwin''s dog indicate as much? |
39511 | How did they do it? |
39511 | In what chronological order did the three kinds of unseen beings appear? |
39511 | Is this magical behaviour? |
39511 | It is well known that long before a child asks''how?'' |
39511 | Shall we, then, admit the fear- origin of Religion? |
39511 | The words''matter''and''spirit''wield a very considerable influence among us; what do they mean to most of those who use them? |
39511 | Then he asks the woman,"Has the child come?" |
39511 | What are the Religions that dispense with a God? |
39511 | What has''the speculative faculty''to do with Religion? |
39511 | What in the mind of the gambler when he tries to coerce fate? |
39511 | What in the mind of the necromancer when he summons the shades of spirits? |
39511 | What is in the mind of the stoker when he thinks of the power of coal? |
39511 | What need is there in cases of this kind to introduce a middle term between the actions of the magician and their expected effect? |
39511 | Whence these ideas of unseen personal beings? |
39511 | Which was first: ghosts, nature- beings, or creator? |
39511 | Why should happy and self- sufficient men look to unseen, mysterious beings for an assistance not really required? |
39511 | Why should not the magical power take effect upon ghosts and gods as well as upon men? |
39511 | Why then should he not use both Magic and the offering of food? |
39511 | he wearies his guardians with the question,''what for? |
38569 | And you have heard of the Kaiser- i- Roum? |
38569 | But do n''t you have a headache? |
38569 | But you have sentiments? |
38569 | But,added Rupert,"I do n''t think that we have anything particular to say, have we?" |
38569 | But,returned the Teuton,"you are not Christians, so how can I provide you with a Christening ceremony?" |
38569 | Do n''t you know, Nicholas? |
38569 | Fit rosary for a queen in shape and hue When Contemplation tells her pensive beads Of mortal thoughts for ever old and new: Fit for a queen? 38569 If I see him once again Will he tell me of his pain? |
38569 | If Russia took India,he said,"what would you do if a Russian tried to confiscate your property?" |
38569 | Lot''s wife? |
38569 | Must I ask of the faith which to children and not to the wise is revealed? 38569 Quoi, Madame, vous avez fait la curieuse?" |
38569 | The moral? 38569 What did your uncle do at Waterloo?" |
38569 | What has happened? |
38569 | What is this child of man that can conquer Time and that is braver than Love? 38569 What object meets their straining eyes, From aid and rescue far? |
38569 | What will it do? |
38569 | Where do you act next? |
38569 | Will he wear a tall hat? |
38569 | Yes, sir; I percave you are Benadadda? |
38569 | You must feel unwell sometimes? |
38569 | ''Yes,''said the Chief;''are you Columbus?'' |
38569 | Acting on the advice which it contained, he said to the hawker,"By the head of your grandmother is this worth so much?" |
38569 | After dinner these gentlemen asked me in somewhat agitated tones,"Qui était cette dame qui était si forte dans la question de l''Afrique?" |
38569 | And tell me, Albert, can that shameless jest Compare with thy Victoria_ clothed and dressed_?" |
38569 | Are you to be congratulated or condoled with?..." |
38569 | Arrived on earth she went up to him and said,"Where is the man I saw from heaven wearing a fine lava- lava?" |
38569 | As the mountain bears a decided resemblance to an elephant, who will doubt the tale? |
38569 | Being informed that Lord Edward had been abroad in order to study German, he asked,"Eh bien, a- t- il eu de succès?" |
38569 | By it shall the mist be uplifted? |
38569 | By it shall the shrine be unsealed? |
38569 | Can you come then? |
38569 | Chamberlain?" |
38569 | Could this be allowed? |
38569 | Could we do otherwise? |
38569 | Did he shout or cry or call When he saw that he must fall? |
38569 | Does it pay to be a constitutional monarch turned wrong- side up?" |
38569 | Feel one pang of mortal fear When the fatal plunge was near? |
38569 | Haggard?" |
38569 | Has no one asked her? |
38569 | He landed in America and saw a Chief and a party of men and said to them,''Are you the savages?'' |
38569 | How can dealers remain honest with such inducements to"profiteering"? |
38569 | How is it that this lady has remained unmarried till her hair is growing grey? |
38569 | How would you have liked that?" |
38569 | I said to him one day,"I suppose that talk of republicanism was only your fun?" |
38569 | I said to him:"You know, Mr. Chamberlain, I am a Free Trader?" |
38569 | I ventured to suggest that he had written various books which I had read with pleasure-- why did he write them if such was his opinion? |
38569 | Indian men are allowed several wives-- why was she punished for having more than one husband? |
38569 | Is Fin at home?" |
38569 | Is God not afar from His creature-- the Law over- hard to obey? |
38569 | Is it an Englishwoman''s love of power and faculty for concentration on the object which she wishes to attain? |
38569 | Lord Strathnairn, with his mind still on"leprousy,"turned to me and in his usual courteous manner remarked,"It is not catching, I believe?" |
38569 | Many have made it their goal and object to Exceed; and who else has been so Excessive?... |
38569 | McCoul?" |
38569 | Mr. Fearn, Head of the Section, to receive the Princess on arrival? |
38569 | Mr.( afterwards Baron) Deichmann and his wife were undoubtedly friends( or henchmen?) |
38569 | Must I take it, the often- forgotten yet echoing answer of youth--''''Tis I,''saith the Word of the Father,''am the Way and the Life and the Truth''? |
38569 | One word was enough to enlighten my aunt, who then said,"May I tell my mother?" |
38569 | Or is my table to lose its pearl? |
38569 | Or to the last-- to fear a stranger-- Think to triumph over danger? |
38569 | Said one,"What shall we do for a fourth man?" |
38569 | So day by day the Chicago papers came out with:"Will H.[ I forget his exact name] cut his hair?" |
38569 | The sister countered an inquiry as to her continued widowhood with the question,"Why does not the Empress marry again?" |
38569 | Then he said,"If I go, will you come out and stay with me?" |
38569 | Thereupon the astonished family at the Abbey exclaimed,"Oh, Cousin Charles, are you a Puseyite?" |
38569 | They did not know we were coming by this ship, and neither Government House nor anything else was ready, so they cried,"Whatever shall we do? |
38569 | Towards the end of his life he developed a passion for guessing Vanity Fair acrostics, and when he saw you instead of"How d''ye do?" |
38569 | We asked how about the Darkness? |
38569 | What can one say to a friend who has met with reverses? |
38569 | What would he have said of the Irish of twenty years later? |
38569 | What would my mother, my aunt, or myself have said now? |
38569 | What would she have thought of the modern fashion of going in omnibuses? |
38569 | What would they do with the Duke? |
38569 | When I began it, however, he hastily cut me short, saying that he saw that I knew all about it-- how old was I? |
38569 | When I said that I was her granddaughter he asked,"Et êtes- vous toujours en relation avec elle?" |
38569 | When nature and life had caught the lyre from your burning hands who were we to affect a sterner independence?" |
38569 | When the Saint saw them looking so bad he asked,"What''s the matter?" |
38569 | Whence these judgments so malign? |
38569 | Wherein shall the Life be of profit to man seeing evil bear sway? |
38569 | Whereupon Mrs. Kemble demanded, with a tragical air worthy of her aunt Mrs. Siddons,"And are you very happy, young lady?" |
38569 | Whereupon said the ascetic, with evident emotion:"Why do n''t you come at once? |
38569 | Why should this be a characteristic of English governesses-- supposing his experience( borne out by my own) to be typical? |
38569 | Wo n''t ye take a cheer?" |
38569 | You have heard of the Kaiser- i- Hind?" |
38569 | he greeted you with"Can you remember what begins with D and ends with F?" |
38375 | Canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons? |
38375 | Suppose ye that I came to send peace on earth? 38375 * Why should not the Jews have one also? 38375 *Christos being strictly a Greek epithet, would the Jewish populace give a Greek name to a Jew by birth?" |
38375 | ** Did he not also spare the ten or more Christian soldiers of his own army, who were proved to have conspired against his life? |
38375 | ** Did not Cicero, when he travelled in Greece, find inscriptions on monuments to many Christs? |
38375 | ** How could Photius, in the 9th century, find that in Josephus which Origen, in the 3rd century, had declared was not in him? |
38375 | ; and why should not the Jews be armed with a god as well as their neighbors? |
38375 | And who is to blame for all this? |
38375 | But as it is only upon hearsay that I judge of your opinions, pray let me know from yourself your notions respecting the deity? |
38375 | Can anything match the stupidity and monstrous credulity of calling such a book the word of God? |
38375 | Can they make right wrong, or wrong right? |
38375 | Canst thou bring forth the twelve signs in the season?" |
38375 | Could this have been possible if these gospels had been written when these"authentic"writers lived? |
38375 | Did the Emperor Julian punish these Antiochians in any way whatever, when they heaped upon him every kind of abuse and indignity? |
38375 | Has any such thing happened in his own, his father''s, his grandfather''s, or his great grandfather''s time? |
38375 | Have the majority of mankind, who are thus victimised, no remedy against this horrid order of things? |
38375 | Hence the few who knew Aught worth recording, and were fools enough To vent their free opinions, what has been Their recompense and their reward? |
38375 | Here the difference is in distinction of terms:--"Reason and instinct, how can ye divide? |
38375 | How could Moses know anything of this? |
38375 | How could he speak of the sceptre of Judah? |
38375 | How does he incur the implacable vengeance of the theologians? |
38375 | If it is asked,"can not a law that is made by the Supreme Power be suspended by its author?" |
38375 | In Isaiah lxv., 16, is not the"God Ammon"mentioned in the original, and suppressed by the English translators? |
38375 | In Luke i, 85, is not this word pneuma translated"Ghost"? |
38375 | Infidelity-- we say; but to what? |
38375 | It is most true that the working man wants rest; but is not he the best judge when recreation or rest becomes necessary? |
38375 | MOD.--Are not the words creator and creation used in the Bible? |
38375 | MOD.--The absolute sway which Brahminism has over the mind of the Hindus, is perhaps attributable to its being the oldest of all known religions? |
38375 | MOD.--What proof have we that this globe has been in being longer than the period assigned for it by the Jewish and Christian priesthoods? |
38375 | Matthew and John were said to be present-- how came they to omit even the slightest notice of this vital root of Christianity? |
38375 | Neither Philo nor Josephus deny that the Jews borrowed circumcision from the Egyptians; why, then, might they not borrow a god also? |
38375 | Pray how does immateriality think?" |
38375 | Previous to what you call its creation by your immaterial artificer, was he a vacuum living in a vacuum? |
38375 | Priests, have these things taken place? |
38375 | Putting aside the monstrosity of this story, in relation to number, could this offence arise from looking into an_ empty_ box? |
38375 | So true is the Spanish proverb, that"Man is an ass that kicks those? |
38375 | Were not these holy ministers prompted by their superior learning and humanity, to endeavor to save people? |
38375 | What does the Atheist less? |
38375 | What does the pampered Oxonian professor of theology know more of it than the meanest cow- boy in England? |
38375 | What had become of them when Xenophon wrote of the eastern nations, which was only 150 years after their alleged return from Babylon? |
38375 | What is it that most generally sets the father''s heart against the son, and makes the son abhor the presence of his father? |
38375 | What then does the record of the past discover to have been the effects of Christianity upon men and nations? |
38375 | What was his fate afterwards? |
38375 | What was it that first occasioned the shedding of human blood, on account of supernatural speculations, and imaginary existence? |
38375 | Where is such a government to be found? |
38375 | Where is there another of all the New Testament predictions that has been so literally fulfilled? |
38375 | Where is this to be found in Jeremiah? |
38375 | Where then, O Rome, were your Brutus'', your Cincinnatus'', your Catos, your Marcus Aurelius'', your Julians? |
38375 | Why did not the Goshenites( who had their usual light) avail themselves of so good an opportunity to run away? |
38375 | Why did the Christians, in after times destroy the work above- mentioned, and leave his"Natural History?" |
38375 | Why do the aristocracy and the rich of the land persecute and pursue him to ruin? |
38375 | Why is the second crucifixion, as narrated by this tell- tale, John, said to have happened, not upon a mount, but in or near a garden? |
38375 | Why, then, should not similar means be used in the nineteenth century to answer the same purpose? |
38375 | Why? |
38375 | Why? |
38375 | Why? |
38375 | With these heavenly matters upon their hands, how could these holy men find time to resist the invasion of their country? |
38375 | Would the law relating to asses and he- goats have been made if the unnatural crime which it was intended to prevent had not been in practice? |
38375 | You ask, how came man into existence? |
38375 | are these merely chance coincidences? |
38375 | what do they mean? |
39219 | ''Changed your residence?'' |
39219 | ''To what do you ascribe your hale old age?'' |
39219 | ''What is wealth without health?'' |
39219 | = Consumption.=--"What Changes has the Acceptance of the Germ Theory made in Measures for the Prevention and Treatment of Consumption?" |
39219 | And there is a still more extensive love, urges Charles Mackay:--"You love your fellow- creatures? |
39219 | Are not the grass, the flowers, the trees, the birds, The faithful beasts, true- hearted, without words, Your fellows also, howsoever small? |
39219 | Are they not under pay to look the other way? |
39219 | Are we right? |
39219 | But can we be happy without the generous employment of_ all_ these virtues? |
39219 | But the question to cover our entire physical needs requires to be broadened into this: What combination of food will best nourish the body? |
39219 | But what does it all avail if it is wasted? |
39219 | Can there be any greater, any more capable benevolence, than that which gives this force its widest possible application? |
39219 | Can you enjoy this meat when you consider all this? |
39219 | Could one conceive of a wiser investment? |
39219 | Did you ever stop to think on what most_ swine_ live? |
39219 | Do you think_ filtering_ of reservoir or general city water is necessary? |
39219 | Dr. Maurice advances some staunch ideas on old age:--"Do poor people live longer than the affluent? |
39219 | Horner, I''d like to know What can have happened to change you so?'' |
39219 | How long shall a man live? |
39219 | How shall we reverse this tendency, and begin the construction of an American type of full, robust, conservative, and reserved energy? |
39219 | Mackay, 53 Heart''s Test, by Ella W. Wilcox, 51 Milton''s"Adam to Angel", 3"The Two Workers", 56"Where Do You Live?" |
39219 | Shall I conclude from this that chocolate would give everybody an appetite?'' |
39219 | Smoke yourself, do you? |
39219 | So do I,-- But underneath the wide paternal sky Are there no fellow- creatures in your ken That you can love except your fellow- men? |
39219 | The question arises, Was it beer or champagne that caused these diseases? |
39219 | The world is now discussing why marriage is a failure, if it is? |
39219 | This brings us to the point where every person is led to look to each of the four points of the compass and there exclaim,"Who or what is God?" |
39219 | This, then, is all that is necessary to get rid of this incurable(?) |
39219 | Well, what of it? |
39219 | What amount of companionship exists between the American woman and the man? |
39219 | What can we do about it? |
39219 | What logic and strength exist in a religion that does not countenance such philosophy? |
39219 | What remedy is there if it is not this of making the suggested possibility of the past the endeavor of the present and the achievement of the future? |
39219 | What will surely result? |
39219 | Why always seek a doctor when you seem to be somewhat off your physical equilibrium? |
39219 | Why should not my story, then, have a beneficial influence? |
39219 | Why should they not? |
39219 | Why this difference in longevity to so marked a degree? |
39219 | Will you lay that aside? |
39219 | With this as an incentive, why not strive to win the prize? |
39219 | _ Pasteur Recommends Camphor Smoking._--In an interview with M. Pasteur, he was asked whether he considered la grippe occasioned by bacteria? |
39219 | or is the Source of goodness at this time otherwise occupied? |
39219 | or may it not be that this for which I ask, I must seek by personal action?" |
39219 | what is to prevent it? |
19082 | 11Is not He who created man able to quicken the dead? |
19082 | 12The scoffers say,''Shall we be raised to life, and our forefathers too, after we have become dust and bones? |
19082 | 14What does Abraham to those circumcised who have sinned too much? |
19082 | 22 Does it not seem perfectly plain that John''s doctrine of the Christ is at bottom identical with Philo''s doctrine of the Logos? 19082 32 And again he writes,"If souls survive, how has ethereal space made room for them all from eternity? |
19082 | 34 Was Jesusfrom above,"while wicked men were"from beneath"? |
19082 | 7 Origen also and who, after the apostles themselves, knew their thoughts and their use of language better than he? 19082 All things remain as they were: where is the promise of his appearing?" |
19082 | But some one will say, How are the dead raised up? 19082 Can you cast a pair for me?" |
19082 | Else why stand we in jeopardy every hour? |
19082 | For what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
19082 | Hath the news of the overwhelming day of judgment reached thee? 19082 If souls be substances corporeal, Be they as big just as the body is? |
19082 | In this tabernacle we groan, being burdened,and,"Who shall deliver me from this body of death?" |
19082 | Is the law against the promises of God? 19082 Jesus said not unto him,''He shall not die;''but,''If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee?''" |
19082 | Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost? |
19082 | O Charidas, what are the things below? 19082 O eternity, what art thou? |
19082 | So, thou hast immortality in mind? 19082 That I can,"says the man:"will you have them large or small?" |
19082 | Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall be those things thou hast gathered? |
19082 | What aileth them, that they believe not the resurrection? 19082 What and if ye shall see the Son of Man ascend up where he was before?" |
19082 | What if some did not believe? 19082 When bodies are raised, will each soul spontaneously know its own and enter it? |
19082 | Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ, why are ye subject to worldly ordinances? 19082 Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ?" |
19082 | Why is God here? 19082 Why,"complainingly sighed the afflicted patriarch,"why died I not at my birth? |
19082 | Will all have one size and one sex? |
19082 | Will all rise of the same age? |
19082 | Will each one''s hairs and nails all be restored to him in the resurrection? |
19082 | Will the deformities and scars of our present bodies be retained in the resurrection? |
19082 | ''Then why was this cross put over you?'' |
19082 | 15. preservation of health because it can not be an everlasting possession? |
19082 | 22 The Resurrection of Spring, p. 26. just like them? |
19082 | 40 Tanslation by Dr. Stevenson, p. 23. the highest state of being? |
19082 | 6, 2. circumstances, than it is for him to go to heaven to such an experience as the faithful follower of Christ supposes is there awaiting him? |
19082 | 7 What debauched unbeliever ever inculcated a viler or a more fatal doctrine? |
19082 | 8 In seasons of imminent danger as in a shipwreck it was customary for a man to ask his companion, Hast thou been initiated? |
19082 | According to the Zoroastrian modes of thought, what would have been the fate of man had Ahriman not existed or not interfered? |
19082 | Accordingly, the question next arises, What is death when considered in this its true aspect? |
19082 | Admitting the truth of the common doctrine of the atonement, why did Christ die? |
19082 | And Pluto? |
19082 | And am I then revenged To take him in the purging of his soul, When he is fit and season''d for his passage? |
19082 | And can it be that every soul in the universe is better than the Maker and Father of the universe? |
19082 | And how will it be with us then? |
19082 | And is a common man better than Christ? |
19082 | And is it not an incredible blasphemy to deny to the deified Christ a magnanimity equal to that which any good man would exhibit? |
19082 | And is it not equally obvious, that it can lay no sort of claim to logical validity? |
19082 | And is man better than his Maker? |
19082 | And is not this a desertion of the orthodox doctrine of the Church? |
19082 | And is this blood, then, form''d but to be shed? |
19082 | And lives there a man of unperverted soul who would not decidedly prefer to have no God rather than to have such a one? |
19082 | And now, recalling the varied studies we have passed through, and seeking for the conclusion or root of the matter, what shall we say? |
19082 | And we find the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews thus replying to the question, Why did Christ die? |
19082 | And what do history and prophecy show more plainly than the tendency to a convergence of all humanity in every man? |
19082 | And what is that but the very consciousness, or the subject as its own object? |
19082 | And what method is there of crushing or evaporating these out of being? |
19082 | And what period can we imagine to terminate the unimpeded spirit''s abilities to learn, to enjoy, to expand? |
19082 | And what reception do the conclusions of those few meet at the hands of the public? |
19082 | And what the returns to earth? |
19082 | And whither do we go? |
19082 | And why should not the two shades be conceived, if either? |
19082 | And, however that Power be named, is it not God? |
19082 | Are not the poetic process and its sophistry clear? |
19082 | Are there not Those that fall down out of humanity Into the story where the four legg''d dwell?" |
19082 | Are there not souls"To whom dishonor''s shadow is a substance More terrible than death here and hereafter"? |
19082 | Are you a Gentile, an idolatrous member of the uncircumcision, or a scorner of the Levitic and Rabbinical customs? |
19082 | Are you afflicted? |
19082 | Are you blessed? |
19082 | Are you in danger? |
19082 | As long as you live, is it not glory and reward enough to have conquered the beasts at Ephesus? |
19082 | Because in death thou dost not know that thou art, therefore fearest thou that thou shalt be no more? |
19082 | Believing, as he certainly did, in a devil, the author and lord of darkness, falsehood, and death, would he not conceive a kingdom for him? |
19082 | Besides, had there been no sin, could not man have been drowned if he fell into the water without knowing how to swim? |
19082 | Besides, if they slept, how knew they what transpired in the mean time? |
19082 | Besides, there is a parallel fact of deep significance in our unquestionable experience;"For is not our first year forgot? |
19082 | But admitting the clauses apparently descriptive of the nature of this retribution to be metaphorical, yet what shall we think of its duration? |
19082 | But how did the Gentiles enter into belief and participation of the glad tidings? |
19082 | But how does such an antagonism arise? |
19082 | But if an indefinite number of impressions were superimposed on the same paper, could the fumes of mercury restore any one called for at random? |
19082 | But if such a world of fire, crowded with the writhing damned, ever existed at all, could it exist forever? |
19082 | But if the doctrine be true, and he is on probation under it, is it fair that he should be left honestly in ignorance or doubt about it? |
19082 | But if the souls live so long in heaven and hell without their flesh, why need they ever resume it? |
19082 | But some one may say,"If I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me if the dead rise not?" |
19082 | But that plausibility becomes an extreme probability nay, shall we not say certainty? |
19082 | But what are good and evil? |
19082 | But what else means the minute morbid anatomy of death beds, the prurient curiosity to know how the dying one bore himself in the solemn passage? |
19082 | But what is the prophecy, and how is it to be fulfilled? |
19082 | But what shall solace or end it if they know that hell''s borders are to be enlarged and to rage with avenging misery forever? |
19082 | But what was to become of the righteous and redeemed? |
19082 | But whence did we come? |
19082 | But, waiving that, what would the legitimate correspondence to it be for man? |
19082 | By what proofs is so tremendous a conclusion supported? |
19082 | Callimachus wrote the following couplet as an epitaph on the celebrated misanthrope:"Timon, hat''st thou the world or Hades worse? |
19082 | Can a breath move Mount Kaf? |
19082 | Can a ganglion solve a problem in Euclid or understand the Theodicee of Leibnitz? |
19082 | Can a mathematical number tell the difference between good and evil? |
19082 | Can air feel? |
19082 | Can air, earth, water, fire, live and we dead? |
19082 | Can an action love and hate, choose and resolve, rejoice and grieve, remember, repent, and pray? |
19082 | Can any defective technicality damn such a man? |
19082 | Can blood see? |
19082 | Can earth be jealous of a rival and loyal to a duty? |
19082 | Can egotistic folly any further go? |
19082 | Can every element our elements mar? |
19082 | Can fire think? |
19082 | Can human thought divine the answer? |
19082 | Can it be left there forever? |
19082 | Can it be that the roar of its furnace shall rage on, and the wail of the execrable anguish ascend, eternally? |
19082 | Can the fearful anguish of bereavement be gratuitous? |
19082 | Can water will? |
19082 | Can we imagine that we are the creators of God? |
19082 | Comes not death as a means to bear him thither? |
19082 | Compare the following text:"The baptism of John, whence was it, from Heaven, or of men?" |
19082 | Considering, then, that beatific experience of which heaven consists, under the metaphor of a city, what are its ways of entrance? |
19082 | Could Christ be satisfied? |
19082 | Could God suffer it? |
19082 | Could any conventional arrangement, or accident of locality, save such a man, while his character remained unchanged? |
19082 | Could the angels be contented when they contemplated the far off lurid orb and knew the agonies that fed its conscious conflagration? |
19082 | Could the saved be happy and passive in heaven when the muffled shrieks of their brethren, faint from the distance, fell on their ears? |
19082 | Could they have dreamed it? |
19082 | Cur? |
19082 | Destroy his organization, and what follows? |
19082 | Did Jesus perform miraculous works? |
19082 | Did they except none from the remediless doom of Hades? |
19082 | Do you belong to the chosen family of Abraham, and are you undefiled in relation to all the requirements of our code? |
19082 | Does a surprising piece of good fortune accrue to any one, splendid riches, a commanding position, a peerless friendship? |
19082 | Does it follow that at that time it was a common belief that the trees actually went forth occasionally to choose them a king? |
19082 | Does it not betoken a preserved epitome of the long history of slowly rising existence? |
19082 | Does justice heed the wrath of the offended, or the guilt of the offender? |
19082 | Does not the record plainly show this to an impartial reader? |
19082 | Does not the simple truth of love conquer and trample the world''s aggregated lie? |
19082 | Does not the whole idea appear rather like a rhetorical image than like a sober theological doctrine? |
19082 | Does the butterfly ever come back to put on the exuvia that have perished in the ground? |
19082 | Does the engineer die when the fire goes out and the locomotive stops? |
19082 | Dormant in the body, dead with the body, laid in the tomb? |
19082 | Doth it not seem the impression of a seal Can be no larger than the wax? |
19082 | Eliphaz the Temanite says,"Is not God in the height of heaven? |
19082 | Exhausted with wanderings, sated with experiments, will he not pray for the exempted lot of a contented fruition in repose? |
19082 | For a delegation was once sent to ask Jesus,"Art thou Elias? |
19082 | For example: what direct proof is there that Christ, when he vanished from the disciples, went to the presence of God in heaven, to die no more? |
19082 | For is it not one flexible instant of opportunity, and then an adamantine immortality of doom? |
19082 | For what purpose, then, was it thought that Jesus went to the imprisoned souls of the under world? |
19082 | For what were the most vivid of all the experiences men had among their fellows on earth? |
19082 | Fourthly, after the notion of a great, epochal resurrection, as a reply to the inquiry, What is to become of the soul? |
19082 | God asked Gabriel,"Whence comes that Amen?" |
19082 | Had Jesus an inspiration and a knowledge not vouchsafed to the princes of this world? |
19082 | Had it been all along credited in its literal sense, as a divine revelation, could this be so? |
19082 | Had not Plato that idea? |
19082 | Hast grounds that will not let thee doubt it? |
19082 | Have we not eternity in our thought, infinitude in our view, and God for our guide? |
19082 | He says, while answering the question, How are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come? |
19082 | He took my father grossly full of bread, With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May; And how his audit stands who knows save Heaven? |
19082 | He waits passively for the resistless round of fate to bear him away, ah, whither? |
19082 | Here we are, And there we go: but where? |
19082 | His disciples once asked him,"What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
19082 | How came the notions of punishment, fire, brimstone, and kindred imagery, to be connected with it? |
19082 | How can it be remedied? |
19082 | How can men be guilty of a sin committed thousands of years before they were born, and deserve to be sent to hopeless hell for it? |
19082 | How can we demonstrate that it does not fall within the same class on the laws of evidence?" |
19082 | How can we pass to its citizenship? |
19082 | How does any one know that the mind of Jesus dialectically grasped the metaphysical notion of eternity and deliberately intended to express it? |
19082 | How does it comport with the old traditions? |
19082 | How does that event, admitted as a fact, rest in the average personal experience of Christians now? |
19082 | How has the earth found room for all the bodies buried in it? |
19082 | How have these horrors obtained such a seated hold in the world? |
19082 | How is it possible for any one to doubt that the text under consideration teaches his subterranean mission during the period of his bodily burial? |
19082 | How is this to be done? |
19082 | How much of the current representations in relation to another life were held as strict verity? |
19082 | How much, now, does this second fact imply? |
19082 | How, then, can it be said that the doctrine of a future life for man is revealed by it or implicated in it? |
19082 | I a lost soul? |
19082 | I separated from hope and from peace forever? |
19082 | If Nirwana be simply annihilation, why is it not so stated? |
19082 | If a building tumbled upon him, would he not have been crushed? |
19082 | If a man believe in no future life, is he thereby absolved from the moral law? |
19082 | If by"the dead"was meant"the bodies,"why are we not told so? |
19082 | If death be absolute, is it not an evil? |
19082 | If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life?" |
19082 | If man be not destined for perennial life, why is this dread of non existence woven into the soul''s inmost fibres? |
19082 | If on the first day you should shatter it, and thus rob it of one day''s life, would you be guilty of murder? |
19082 | If the souls of men are ideas of God, must they not be as enduring as his mind? |
19082 | If there be no future for him, why is he tortured with the inspiring idea of the eternal pursuit of the still flying goal of perfection? |
19082 | In a little while, as the ravaging reaper sweeps on his way, who will not have still more there, or be there himself? |
19082 | In distinction, then, from the monstrous mass of mistakes denoted by it, what is the truth carried in the awful word, hell? |
19082 | In reference to the question, Can ephemera have a moral law? |
19082 | In reply to those who argue thus, it is obvious to ask, whence did they learn all this? |
19082 | In that case, would not his mind have dwelt upon the wonderful anticipated phenomenon? |
19082 | In the first place, what view of the Father himself, the absolute Deity, do these writings present? |
19082 | In the resurrection, whose shall it be? |
19082 | In what sense can the passing of Christ''s soul into heaven after death be said to have done away with sin? |
19082 | Into the transparent sphere of perfect intelligence? |
19082 | Into the vacant dark of nothingness? |
19082 | Introduction to Study of Natural History, p. 57. of man? |
19082 | Is a threat efficacious over men in proportion to its intrinsic terror, or in proportion as it is personally felt and feared by them? |
19082 | Is he merely taunted with the starry sky, and mocked with an infinite illusion of progress, suddenly barred with endless night and oblivion? |
19082 | Is he not in a competent hell? |
19082 | Is it absolutely unending? |
19082 | Is it not a gratuitous fiction of theologians? |
19082 | Is it not a peurility to suppose that God has such documents? |
19082 | Is it not an absurdity to affirm that nerves and blood, flesh and bones, are responsible, guilty, must be punished? |
19082 | Is it not astonishing how these theologians find out so much? |
19082 | Is it not fitter that he be welcomed by triumphant initiation into the family of the deathless Father? |
19082 | Is it not so in the usage of John? |
19082 | Is it not strictly true that the thought that even one should have endless woe"Would cast a shadow on the throne of God And darken heaven"? |
19082 | Is it not the same law, still expressing the same meaning? |
19082 | Is it possible that the hero and the martyr and the saint, whose experience is laden with painful sacrifices for humanity, are mistaken? |
19082 | Is it worse to have nothing than it is to have infinite torture? |
19082 | Is not an agent necessary for an action? |
19082 | Is not the truth of ignorance better than the falsity of superstition? |
19082 | Is not this notion of the judgment being delegated to Jesus plainly adopted from the political image of a deputy? |
19082 | Is not this paragraph a disgusting combination of ignorance and arrogance? |
19082 | Is the overthrow of a country foretold? |
19082 | Is the sin measured by the dignity of the lawgiver, or by the responsibility of the law breaker? |
19082 | Is there a contradiction, then, in Paul? |
19082 | Is there any more real reason for believing this doctrine than there is for believing the other kindred schemes? |
19082 | Is there leisure for sport and business, or room for science and literature, or mood for pleasures and amenities? |
19082 | Is there no mind behind it and above it, making use of it as a servant? |
19082 | Is there not just as much reason for holding to the literal accuracy and validity of the result in one case as in another? |
19082 | Is there not truth in the poet''s picture of the meeting of child and parent in heaven? |
19082 | Is this Christ''s Father? |
19082 | Is this revelation, science, logic, or is it mythology? |
19082 | It demands,"Who art thou, O, maiden, uglier and more detestable than I ever saw in the world?" |
19082 | It has been asked,"If the incendiary be, like the fire he kindles, a result of material combinations, shall he not be treated in the same way?" |
19082 | It is an arrant begging of the question; for the very problem is, Does not an invisible spiritual entity survive the visible material disintegration? |
19082 | It is said that Araf seems hell to the blessed but paradise to the damned; for does not every thing depend on the point of view? |
19082 | Jochanan was dying, his disciples asked him,''Light of Israel, main pillar of the right, thou strong hammer, why dost thou weep?'' |
19082 | Let one pass in absence from childhood to maturity, and who that had not seen him in the mean time could tell that it was he? |
19082 | Life crowd a grain, from air''s vast realms effaced? |
19082 | Lord?" |
19082 | Meanwhile, shall we not be magnanimous to forgive and help, diligent to study and achieve, trustful and content to abide the invisible issue? |
19082 | Milton asks,"For who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being?" |
19082 | Mohammed replied,"When day comes, where is night?" |
19082 | Moreover, what had occurred to effect the alleged new belief? |
19082 | Much is implied in this term and its accompaniments, and may be drawn out by answering the questions, What is heaven? |
19082 | Must not that be to the right port? |
19082 | Must not the pilgrim pine and tire for a goal of rest? |
19082 | Now, as a solitary exception to this, are minds absolutely destroyed? |
19082 | Now, does not the consciousness of infinity imply the infinity of consciousness? |
19082 | Now, if there be in man no personal entity, what is it that with so much joy attains Nirwana? |
19082 | Now, of what was it intended as the symbol? |
19082 | O Death, thou last enemy, where is thy sting? |
19082 | O Death, where is thy sting? |
19082 | O Hades, thou gloomy prison, where is thy victory?''" |
19082 | O Hades, where is thy victory?''" |
19082 | O blessed wealth and wretched freedom, how shall we perfect and reconcile them? |
19082 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
19082 | Oh, how shall I escape, and obtain eternal bliss?''" |
19082 | Oh, when shall we learn that a loving pity, a filial faith, a patient modesty, best become us and fit our state? |
19082 | On entering heaven, what magic shall work such a demoniacal change in him? |
19082 | On what grounds are we to believe them? |
19082 | On what principle is a part of the undivided apocalyptic portrayal rendered as emblem, the rest accepted as absolute verity? |
19082 | Or are they a direct vision and audience of it? |
19082 | Or shoot they out to the height ethereal? |
19082 | Or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood reveal''d, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind? |
19082 | Or, to go still further back, why did he not, foreseeing Adam''s fall, refrain from creating even him? |
19082 | Orphal, Sind die Thiere blos sinnliche Geschopfe? |
19082 | Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?" |
19082 | Peter Lombard says,"What did the Redeemer do to the despot who had us in his bonds? |
19082 | Plotinus said,"If God repents having made the world, why does he defer its destruction? |
19082 | Regarding the Hebrew narrative as an indigenous growth, then, how shall we explain its origin, purport, and authority? |
19082 | Schlegel has somewhere asked the question,"Is life in us, or are we in life?" |
19082 | Secondly, if the resurrection did not take place, what became of the Savior''s body? |
19082 | Secondly, when he exclaims,"Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?" |
19082 | Shall he deliver his spirit from the hand of Sheol?" |
19082 | Shall heaven be held before man simply as a piece of meat before a hungry dog to make him jump well? |
19082 | Shall not Heaven pluck and wear them on her bosom? |
19082 | Shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?" |
19082 | Shall"infants be not raised in the smallness of body in which they died, but increase by the wondrous and most swift work of God"? |
19082 | Should we not take a case in which God''s will is so far plainly fulfilled, in order to trace that will farther and even to its finality? |
19082 | Should you not think at least once a day of the fifty thousand who that day sink to the doom of the lost?" |
19082 | Since we can not eat sweet and wholesome food forever, shall we therefore at once saturate our stomachs with nauseating poisons? |
19082 | Studien and Kritiken, 1885, band i.,"Ist die Lehre von der Anferstehung des Leibes nicht ein alt Persische Lehre?" |
19082 | That is to say, was it of human or of Divine origin and authority? |
19082 | That is to say, whence originated the sentence of death upon man? |
19082 | The Persian poet, Buzurgi, says on this theme,"What is the soul? |
19082 | The Pharisee rejoins,"Can not God, then, who formed man of water,( gutta seminis humida,) much more re form him of clay?" |
19082 | The consequence has been that while elsewhere the ultimate standard by which to try a doctrine is, What do the most competent judges say? |
19082 | The deluge he certainly regarded as literal: was not, then, in his conception, the fire, too, literal? |
19082 | The dirge like burden of their poetry was literally these words:"What man is he that liveth and shall not see death? |
19082 | The essence of the controversy, then, is exactly this: Is the mind an entity? |
19082 | The ghost of miserable Patroclus calve to him and said,"Sleepest thou and art forgetful of me, O Achilles?" |
19082 | The ghost summoned from beneath by the witch of Endor said,"Why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up?" |
19082 | The important question here is, What did the Fathers suppose the essence of Christ''s redemptive work to be? |
19082 | The king accused them of theft; but they severally replied, the lame man, How could I reach it? |
19082 | The leaf a world, the firmament a waste?" |
19082 | The man that loves the Lord shall have length of days; the unjust, though for a moment he flourishes, yet the wind bloweth, and where is he? |
19082 | The only question is, what meaning was it intended to convey? |
19082 | The problem to be solved is, Does the man who is now a soul in a body remain a soul when the body dissolves? |
19082 | The question is,"What difference should it make to us whether we admit or deny the fact of a future life?" |
19082 | The question now arises, What did the Greeks think in relation to the ascent of human souls into heaven among the gods? |
19082 | The reply to the question, What is that relation? |
19082 | The second question that arises is, What was the significance of the funeral ceremonies celebrated by the Egyptians over their dead? |
19082 | The termination of all the functions he knows, what else can it be but his virtual annihilation? |
19082 | The theories in theological systems being but philosophy, why should they not be freely subjected to philosophical criticism? |
19082 | The unsatisfied and longing soul has created the doctrine of a future life, has it? |
19082 | The will is free now: what shall suddenly paralyze or annihilate that freedom when the soul leaves the body? |
19082 | The world reflecting from every corner the lurid glare of hell, who can do any thing else but shudder and pray? |
19082 | Then Jesus asked, But who think ye that I am? |
19082 | Then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written,''Death is swallowed up in victory?" |
19082 | Then the question arises, In what way is this done? |
19082 | There are invitations and opportunities to change from evil to good here: why not hereafter? |
19082 | Therefore does it not follow by all the necessities of logic? |
19082 | They once asked Jesus,"Who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?" |
19082 | This believing instinct, so deeply seated in our consciousness, natural, innocent, universal, whence came it, and why was it given? |
19082 | This, what is it but great Nature''s testimony, God''s silent avowal, that we are to meet in eternity? |
19082 | Thus to ignore the only solemn and worthy standard of judging an abstract doctrine, namely, Is it a truth or a falsehood? |
19082 | To be saved, and in paradise, what is it but to be a pure instrument to echo the music of divine things? |
19082 | Upon the mist veiled ocean launching then, he will sail where? |
19082 | Was Jesus sent among men with a special commission? |
19082 | Was Jesus the Son of God? |
19082 | Was Jesus the subject of a peculiar glory, bestowed upon him by the Father? |
19082 | Was there no path for the wisest and best souls to climb starry Olympus? |
19082 | We are met upon the threshold of our inquiry by the essential question, What, according to Paul, was the mission of Christ? |
19082 | We, whose minds comprehend all things? |
19082 | Well, is not the resurrection a pendant to the doctrine of Satan? |
19082 | Well, then, how does God treat offenders now? |
19082 | Were the angels who came down to the earth with Christ to the judgment never to return to their native seats? |
19082 | Were they not honest? |
19082 | Were they permanently to transfer their deathless citizenship from the sky to Judea? |
19082 | What animal can there be superior to me? |
19082 | What are presentiments but divine wings of the spirit fluttering toward our unseen goal? |
19082 | What are the results or penalties of it? |
19082 | What are they? |
19082 | What can be plainer than that? |
19082 | What can the everlasting deprivation of all good be called but an immense evil to its subject? |
19082 | What caused the snake to crawl on his belly in the dust, while other creatures walk on feet or fly with wings? |
19082 | What could be a more explicit declaration of this than the following? |
19082 | What crucible shall burn up the ultimate of force? |
19082 | What did he accomplish? |
19082 | What did he really mean to teach by it? |
19082 | What do they mean? |
19082 | What does Strauss mean by"the nerve spirit"? |
19082 | What does the great harmony of truth require? |
19082 | What does unprejudiced reason dictate? |
19082 | What fate has befallen him? |
19082 | What force is there to compel them into nothing? |
19082 | What good is there in the baseless conceit and gratuitous disgust of saying,"The next world is in the grave, betwixt the teeth of the worm"? |
19082 | What hems us in when we think, feel, and imagine? |
19082 | What in the hidden future portions of our destiny would be harmonic and complementary as related with the parts here experienced? |
19082 | What is death? |
19082 | What is it, expressed by the term"death,"which is found by the adherents of the devil distinctively? |
19082 | What is that common ground and element but the presence of a percipient volitional force, whether manifested or unmanifested, still there? |
19082 | What is the Brahmanic method of salvation, or secret of emancipation? |
19082 | What is the complete doctrine to which fragmentary references are here made? |
19082 | What is the real character of the retributions in the future state? |
19082 | What justice, what justice, is here in this? |
19082 | What material processes shall ever disintegrate the simplicity of spirit? |
19082 | What moral conditions alter the case then? |
19082 | What portions were regarded as fable or symbolism? |
19082 | What profiteth it? |
19082 | What profiteth it? |
19082 | What proof is there that the symbol denotes this? |
19082 | What shall, we add to man To bring him higher?" |
19082 | What sort of a figure would the segments which we now see, compose, if they were completed? |
19082 | What then? |
19082 | What though Decay''s shapeless hand extinguish us? |
19082 | What though the number of telescopic worlds were raised to the ten thousandth power, and each orb were as large as all of them combined would now be? |
19082 | What tree is man the seed of? |
19082 | What was the Jewish idea of salvation, or citizenship in the kingdom of God? |
19082 | What was the condition of acceptance in the Pharisaic church? |
19082 | What was the meaning of this ceremony? |
19082 | What was the meaning or aim of his death and resurrection? |
19082 | What, now, is the real meaning of these pregnant phrases? |
19082 | What, then, do they mean? |
19082 | What, then, does the phrase"redemption by the death of Christ"mean? |
19082 | What, then, is the meaning of the fear, suffering and horror, which so often accompany or follow sin? |
19082 | What, then, shall we say? |
19082 | What, then, were the essence and method of Christ''s redemptive mission according to the Fathers? |
19082 | When the engine madly plunges off the embankment or bridge of life, does the engineer perish in the ruin, or nimbly leap off and immortally escape? |
19082 | When the fireman risks his life to save a child from the flames of a tumbling house, is the hope of heaven his motive? |
19082 | When the soldier spurns an offered bribe and will not betray his comrades nor desert his post, is the fear of hell all that animates him? |
19082 | Whence and how arose this heterogeneous mass of notions? |
19082 | Where could man, scorched by the fires of the sun of this world, look for felicity, were it not for the shade afforded by the tree of emancipation? |
19082 | Where, then, did he suppose the soul of his crucified Master had been during the interval between his death and his resurrection? |
19082 | Whither has he gone? |
19082 | Whither? |
19082 | Who among us can dwell in everlasting burnings?" |
19082 | Who are citizens of, and who are aliens from, the kingdom of God? |
19082 | Who but must feel the pathos and admire the charity of these eloquent words of Henry Giles? |
19082 | Who can answer the question which rises to heaven from the abyss of the damned? |
19082 | Who can believe it, knowing what it is that he believes? |
19082 | Who can believe that it was for either of those purposes that they embalmed the multitudes of animals whose mummies the explorer is still turning up? |
19082 | Who can count the confessors who have thought it bliss and glory to be martyrs for truth and God? |
19082 | Who can linger there and listen, unmoved, to the sublime lament of things that die? |
19082 | Who could consent to that? |
19082 | Who has not endeared relatives, choice friends, freshly or long ago removed from this earth into the unknown clime? |
19082 | Who will save me?" |
19082 | Who would wish anything worse for him? |
19082 | Why do we not live immortally as we are? |
19082 | Why is he gifted with powers of reason and demands of love so far beyond his conditions? |
19082 | Why is it so calmly assumed that God can not pardon, and that therefore sinners must be given over to endless pains? |
19082 | Why may not pardon from unpurchased grace be vouchsafed as well after death as before? |
19082 | Why may not that untraceable something which has gone still exist? |
19082 | Why should recourse be had to a phrase partially descriptive of one feature, instead of comprehensively announcing or implying the whole case? |
19082 | Why should the power of hope, and joy, and faith, change into inanity and oblivion? |
19082 | Why should thy cruel arrow smite yon bird? |
19082 | Why should we shudder or grieve? |
19082 | Why then do we shun death with anxious strife? |
19082 | Why, or how, then, would a similar feat prove the opposite doctrine? |
19082 | Why, then, did he die? |
19082 | Why, then, has that of Christ alone made such a change in the faith of the world? |
19082 | Why, then, shall we select from the mass of metaphors a few of the most violent, and insist on rendering these as veritable statements of fact? |
19082 | Why, then, was he not left in peaceful nonentity? |
19082 | Why, then, we ask, is the faith in a future life for man suffering such a marked decay in the present generation of Christendom? |
19082 | Will Daniel Lambert, the mammoth of men, appear weighing half a ton? |
19082 | Will he do it? |
19082 | Will not the unimpeded Spirit of Christ lead all free minds and loving hearts to one conclusion? |
19082 | Will the King connive at this nefarious prowler and permit him to carry out his design? |
19082 | Will the Siamese twins then be again joined by the living ligament of their congenital band? |
19082 | Will the time ever come when that tortoise shall so rise up that its neck shall enter the hole of the yoke? |
19082 | Will you accept the horizon of your mind as the limit of the universe? |
19082 | Will you pass to meet them not having thought of them for years, having perhaps forgotten them? |
19082 | With which shall he be raised? |
19082 | World on world Are they forever heaping up, and still The mighty measure never, never full?" |
19082 | Would a designing knave voluntarily reveal to a suspicious scrutiny actions and traits naturally subversive of confidence in him? |
19082 | Would he not, then, in all probability, believe in a local hell? |
19082 | Would it not, moreover, be most marvellous if they were such heated fanatics, all of them, so many men? |
19082 | Would not his whole soul have been wrapped up in it, and his speech have been almost incessantly about it? |
19082 | Would they have done this save from simple hearted truthfulness? |
19082 | Yes; but if Paradise be above the heavens, and hell below the seventh earth, then how can Sirat be extended over hell for people to pass to Paradise? |
19082 | Yes; but the inquiry is, what is the mind itself? |
19082 | Yes; but what is it that presides over, takes up, and preserves this succession? |
19082 | Yet are not the principles of science as much glimpses of the mind of God as any sentences in the Bible are? |
19082 | Yet logically what separates it from the resurrection of Christ? |
19082 | a doctrine, or a coming event? |
19082 | a general truth to enlighten and guide uncertain men, or an approaching deliverance to console and encourage the desponding Jews? |
19082 | and how, in their estimation, did he achieve that work? |
19082 | and that the slattern and the voluptuary and the sluggard, whose course is one of base self indulgence, are correct? |
19082 | and what details are connected with them? |
19082 | and with what body do they come?" |
19082 | are will, conscience, thought, and love annihilated? |
19082 | art thou that prophet?" |
19082 | art thou the Messiah? |
19082 | blasphemy any further go? |
19082 | but it is wherever God''s approving presence extends: and is that not wherever the pure in heart are found? |
19082 | can the yearning prophecies of the smitten heart be all false? |
19082 | eternal pain for me? |
19082 | has old Adam snorted all this time Under some senselesse clod, with sleep ydead?" |
19082 | he who once was rich but for our sakes became poor? |
19082 | he who poured his blood on Judea''s awful summit, be satisfied? |
19082 | he whose loving soul breathed itself forth in the tender words,"Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest"? |
19082 | how can ye escape the condemnation of Gehenna?" |
19082 | in glory? |
19082 | in his life, and brought to a focus in his martyr death? |
19082 | in temptation? |
19082 | in theology it is, What do the committed priests say? |
19082 | is it not enough to have borne the wretchedness of this life, that we must also endure another?" |
19082 | must they not have considered him as a pledge that their sins were forgiven, their doom reversed, and heaven attainable? |
19082 | not, what are its acts? |
19082 | or is it a collection of functions? |
19082 | or the capacity of the higher? |
19082 | or the fifth? |
19082 | or the last? |
19082 | or will the power of God distribute them as they belong?" |
19082 | or with all? |
19082 | or, across that dark gulf, shall we be united again in purer bonds? |
19082 | somewhere in the ample creation and in the boundless ages, join, with the old familiar love, our long parted, fondly cherished, never forgotten dead?" |
19082 | that is, to bring Christ down; or,''Who shall descend into the under world?'' |
19082 | the blind man, How could I see it? |
19082 | the genius of a Shakspeare, whose imagination exhausted worlds and then invented new? |
19082 | the heart of a Borromeo, whose seraphic love expanded to the limits of sympathetic being? |
19082 | the soul of a Wycliffe, whose undaunted will, in faithful consecration to duty, faced the fires of martyrdom and never blenched? |
19082 | what difference would that make in the facts of human nature and destiny? |
19082 | what hadst thou to do in hell When thou didst bower the spirit of a fiend In mortal paradise of such sweet flesh?" |
19082 | what other definition and affirmation of salvation conceivable? |
19082 | what shall I do? |
19082 | will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?" |
19082 | with the first? |
39908 | ; the latter,How did the sensible world become what it is; of what nature was the motive force?" |
39908 | And, which after all is worst, to act and think as they did, or, like the moderns, with better principles, to act as ill? |
39908 | Are animals conceptually intelligent? |
39908 | But how are we to obtain and verify a standard? |
39908 | But is there a definite intensity which becomes more and more probable as n is increased without limit? |
39908 | Granting that they are intelligent in the broad acceptation of the word, are they only perceptually intelligent or also conceptually intelligent? |
39908 | Is it to be in or by the law of their homes, where they are normally, though not always necessarily, to be sued? |
39908 | Should the insured get any of his premium back? |
39908 | The former asked the question,"What is the substratum of the things we see? |
39908 | The present constitution also provides that the question,"Shall there be a convention to revise the constitution and amend the same?" |
39908 | The simple plan, That they should take who have the power And they should keep who can"? |
39908 | What does this imply from the standpoint of psychology? |
39908 | What is a civilized state? |
39908 | What then is the physical circumstance that determines the centre of the fringes? |
38907 | ''Would not genius be common as light if men trusted their higher selves?'' |
38907 | Does the body see,he asks,"and is the spirit blind? |
38907 | Shall we study the mathematics of the sphere,he says to the Cambridge scholars,"and not its causal essence also? |
38907 | What is the bad but lapse from good,--the good blindfolded? |
38907 | What is the use of telegraphy? 38907 What physical inquirer, since Euler, seeks anything in nature but forces and laws? |
38907 | And even molecules, the old atoms revived-- who defends them as anything but an hypothesis? |
38907 | And time and space, what are they? |
38907 | Are these opinions crude? |
38907 | But is not Jesus called in Scripture the Mediator? |
38907 | But, rejoined the friend, if abstinence from animal food leaves the animal out, does not partaking of vegetable food put the vegetable in? |
38907 | C. P. Cranch opens his lines to the ocean thus: Tell me, brothers, what are we? |
38907 | Can he believe that he was ever in the mood to write it? |
38907 | Can we be certain there was no mental hallucination? |
38907 | Do these proceedings threaten to sap the bulwarks on which men at present depend? |
38907 | Does he believe in personal immortality? |
38907 | Has he seen it these many years? |
38907 | Here it stands, generally accepted, under some form, by the Christian world, the undoubted occasion of much good; is it not better it should remain?" |
38907 | How came it, some will naturally ask, that such a man escaped the deadly consequences of such resolute introspection? |
38907 | How can it be proved that he said it? |
38907 | How could I be so captured and enthralled; so fascinated and bewitched? |
38907 | Is it a praiseworthy matter that I have spent five golden months in providing food for cows and horses? |
38907 | Is it not the highest duty that man should be honored in us?" |
38907 | Is it said that by men of old, bible men, God was seen, heard, clasped in human arms? |
38907 | Is it urged that the existence of an external world is a_ necessary_ postulate? |
38907 | Is not that the effect of the Lord''s Supper? |
38907 | Is not this to make vain the gift of God? |
38907 | Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial? |
38907 | Is the record of his saying it authentic? |
38907 | Is the soul reared on the primitive rock? |
38907 | Is this protest undiscriminating? |
38907 | Logic, mathematics, physics, are sciences: by virtue of what inherent peculiarity do they claim superior right to that high appellation? |
38907 | Might not the Being have made a false statement? |
38907 | Must not the man sink into a visionary, and waste his life in dream? |
38907 | Now what is there material in forces and laws? |
38907 | Prove its title? |
38907 | Shall we try and separate what God has joined? |
38907 | The outward world being removed, dissipated, resolved into impalpable thought, what substitute for it can be devised? |
38907 | The problem of modern philosophy may be thus stated:_ Have we or have we not ideas that are true of necessity, and absolutely? |
38907 | To the assertion that the Being announced himself as God,--the infinite, the eternal God,--the challenge straightway is given: To whom did he say it? |
38907 | Was not the calm equality they enjoyed well worth the honors of chivalry? |
38907 | Was this an echo from the German Jacobi, whose doctrine of Faith had been some time abroad in the intellectual world? |
38907 | What did it really signify? |
38907 | What harm doth it? |
38907 | What is beauty? |
38907 | What is force? |
38907 | What is life? |
38907 | What is matter? |
38907 | What is motion? |
38907 | What is this but Plato''s doctrine of innate, eternal and immutable ideas on the consideration of which all science is founded? |
38907 | What is this''Better,''this flying ideal but the perpetual promise of his Creator?" |
38907 | What led him to invest homely scenes and characters with sentiment, and what made this circumstance interesting to precisely that class of minds? |
38907 | What of newspapers? |
38907 | What recks such Traveller, if the bowers Which bloom and fade, like meadow flowers-- A bunch of fragrant lilies be, Or the stars of eternity? |
38907 | Where was there the indispensable basis for action and reaction? |
38907 | Wherefore now, asks Kant, are metaphysics so far behind logic, mathematics, and physics? |
38907 | Wherefore these futile lives of great men, these abortive flights of genius? |
38907 | Wherefore these heaps of conjecture, these vain attempts at solution? |
38907 | Who now speaks of atoms? |
38907 | Why not? |
38907 | Why? |
38907 | Would you stop the development of these notions? |
38907 | what is it to imperial Jove That this poor world refuses all his love? |
29155 | A white man''s tracks? 29155 Allowing that you are right, is n''t there something to be said for the steady plodder?" |
29155 | Am I allowed to remain? |
29155 | And so you trust Blake, in spite of his story? |
29155 | And the benefit to England? |
29155 | And the other side? 29155 And the remedy?" |
29155 | And you kept him waiting? 29155 Are n''t you and Benson taking what you mean by the truth too much for granted?" |
29155 | Are these animals yours? |
29155 | Are they not? |
29155 | Are you going home soon? |
29155 | Are you interested in my nephew? |
29155 | Are you making a bold guess, or have you any ground for what you''re saying? |
29155 | Are you very much disappointed that you did n''t meet us earlier? |
29155 | Are you? |
29155 | But after such a life as his daughter must have led, do you consider her a suitable person to take about with you? 29155 But are you content with your life in the North- West?" |
29155 | But can people live in a rugged land covered with snow that only melts for a month or two? |
29155 | But did you starve yourselves in Canada? |
29155 | But how did you come here? |
29155 | But how did you manage? |
29155 | But suppose you wished to marry? |
29155 | But the Arctic frost and snow? |
29155 | But the excuse? |
29155 | But was that long enough to learn much about him? 29155 But what did you do when you left England?" |
29155 | But what particular things were you referring to? |
29155 | But what was the story? 29155 But what would you have different? |
29155 | But what''s Clarke''s object? |
29155 | But what''s her object in buying these creatures? |
29155 | But who''ll look after Blake? 29155 But why? |
29155 | But why? |
29155 | But you believe this venture will pay you? |
29155 | But you have no family ties, have you? |
29155 | But, as they do n''t speak English, how does the fellow get on with them? |
29155 | But, my dear lady, would you prefer the latter; a coverer of canvases, a mere portrayer of action instead of a doer? 29155 Ca n''t you guess?" |
29155 | Ca n''t you say something for yourself? |
29155 | Clarke? 29155 Colonel Challoner, I presume?" |
29155 | Considering that you came across the man lying frozen after one of the worst storms you remember, what did you expect to find? |
29155 | Could you not have gone back when you were no longer needed? |
29155 | Did Ada air her views for the benefit of your friends? |
29155 | Did I hear aright? 29155 Did he ever speak of having malaria here? |
29155 | Did n''t you hear it? |
29155 | Did n''t you know these people were coming? |
29155 | Did n''t you tell me Captain Challoner was coming home? |
29155 | Did she? |
29155 | Did you ever see signs of oil? |
29155 | Did you find what you were looking for? |
29155 | Do you know anything about Captain Sedgwick, who brought you your letters? |
29155 | Do you know if she ever goes down to a little place in Shropshire? |
29155 | Do you know that I feel neglected? |
29155 | Do you know the bride? |
29155 | Do you know the people? |
29155 | Do you know these white men? |
29155 | Do you mean that Miss Graham informs her of what Mrs. Chudleigh says or does? |
29155 | Do you mean that? |
29155 | Do you seriously mean that you are going about selling these things? |
29155 | Do you suppose it''s likely after I''ve ridden all this way? |
29155 | Do you think I ca n''t see where I''m drifting? 29155 Do you think that fellow Clarke can hear? |
29155 | Do you? |
29155 | Does it matter? |
29155 | Does that mean that yours is not the same as mine? |
29155 | Does the fellow live at Sweetwater? |
29155 | Eustace Graham? 29155 Feel like getting down to business or shall we put it off again?" |
29155 | From the south? 29155 Guess you mean the secrets of their medicine- men? |
29155 | Had n''t you better go after him? |
29155 | Had you good sport? |
29155 | Had you much trouble? |
29155 | Has he anything of interest to say? |
29155 | Have I been remiss? 29155 Have I convinced you?" |
29155 | Have you done much prospecting? |
29155 | Have you got Benson here? |
29155 | Have you heard anything from Mr. Blake since he left Montreal? |
29155 | Have you met his companion? 29155 He was not a nervous man, was he?" |
29155 | Highly intelligent,Mrs. Keith remarked pointedly"Do you think she''s to be trusted?" |
29155 | How are they to be ascertained, unless you take the opinion of those who know him best? |
29155 | How are we to find you with our trail drifting up? 29155 How are you going to find the place?" |
29155 | How can I tell him? |
29155 | How can I tell? |
29155 | How did the thing get lighted? |
29155 | How did you get on at the Seymours''this afternoon? |
29155 | How far do you make it to the logging camp? |
29155 | How far does Colonel Challoner''s opinion go with you? |
29155 | How often must I tell you that the thing will wear off? |
29155 | How was it you did n''t go straight to Sandymere, where your uncle is eagerly waiting you? |
29155 | How would you define them? 29155 How would you prevent his doing so if she goes to the house?" |
29155 | I can imagine your making others easily, but have n''t you retained one or two? 29155 I certainly feel much better, but what prompted your remark?" |
29155 | I do n''t know that it was of much importance; speaking of degenerates, were n''t we? 29155 I do; do n''t you mean to come?" |
29155 | I guess you have seen nothing like this round here? |
29155 | I heard about his American companion; who was the other? |
29155 | I must know if what you have told me has any bearing on your request that I should recommend Captain Sedgwick''s appointment? |
29155 | I should have remembered,Mrs. Challoner[ Transcriber''s note: Chudleigh?] |
29155 | I should imagine you found it expensive, and are n''t some of the creatures savage? |
29155 | I suppose I need n''t consider you a friend of Clarke''s? |
29155 | I suppose it could be traversed by a properly equipped expedition? |
29155 | I suppose it struck you that he made no attempt to get your friend back? |
29155 | I suppose you mean she is too good for the post? |
29155 | I think I left my outdoor spectacles in my room; would you mind getting them? |
29155 | I want to know what really happened; wo n''t you tell me? 29155 I wonder what use you think I would be?" |
29155 | I''ve no doubt you were in some danger, but was it so serious? |
29155 | If you doubt my professional skill or good faith why do you put your partner in my charge? |
29155 | Is Captain Sedgwick a very old friend? |
29155 | Is it yours? |
29155 | Is n''t Arrowdale near your aunts''place in the North? |
29155 | Is n''t a low flash- point a disadvantage? |
29155 | Is n''t it curious that no news of it has reached the settlements? |
29155 | Is n''t that Mrs. Chudleigh he''s now talking to? |
29155 | Is n''t that bay Colonel Challoner''s? |
29155 | Is n''t that the usual thing with men? |
29155 | Is that all? |
29155 | Is the Cabinet ready to embark upon a bold course of Colonial expansion? |
29155 | Is there anything else you wish to know? |
29155 | Is your companion fond of attending to wild animals? |
29155 | It has n''t struck you that this was what he meant us to do? |
29155 | It was your soldiers''business to be made use of, was n''t it? |
29155 | It''s curious that I was n''t told Mrs. Chudleigh came here yesterday; had you anything to do with keeping the information from me? |
29155 | It''s possible, but what would you have me say? 29155 May I ask what leads you to plead his cause?" |
29155 | May one ask what disturbed you? |
29155 | Miss Graham? 29155 Must it always be a trick?" |
29155 | Not often so poetical, am I? 29155 Now you have come back, what do you mean to do?" |
29155 | Now,he concluded,"the question, Who gave the order to retreat? |
29155 | On the Indian frontier? |
29155 | On the choosing of a West African officer, for instance? |
29155 | Or the brass plate with the fantastic serpent pattern round the rim? |
29155 | Richard Blake? |
29155 | Sedgwick? 29155 Shall we slip out to the seat among the palms yonder for a quiet talk?" |
29155 | Since you surreptitiously said good- bye to me at Peshawur? 29155 Six of you?" |
29155 | Still you would not let a good officer suffer because of my tactlessness? |
29155 | Suppose I admit it? 29155 That Sedgwick is a dashing and intrepid soldier? |
29155 | That my son is a coward and gave the shameful order? |
29155 | That''s a charming picture, is n''t it? 29155 The Northern Stonies? |
29155 | The lady I saw at the_ Frontenac_ with the autocratic manners and a Roman nose? 29155 Then I suppose you do n''t know where he is?" |
29155 | Then how do you account for the fellow''s being there alone? |
29155 | Then if the post were at your disposal, you would not offer it to him? |
29155 | Then what about Benson? 29155 Then what did you say?" |
29155 | Then what was it that influenced you? |
29155 | Then who''s the doctor? |
29155 | Then why are n''t you fit? 29155 Then why do n''t you quit?" |
29155 | Then you are going back to Canada? |
29155 | Then you are not afraid? |
29155 | Then you came up after me, Tom? |
29155 | Then you do not believe it wiser to let a painful matter which is already almost forgotten rest? 29155 Then you get on with Indians?" |
29155 | Then you have given up all idea of clearing yourself? 29155 Then you have some plan?" |
29155 | Then you knew him? |
29155 | Then you know something about the matter? 29155 Then you know the Jack- pine?" |
29155 | Then you never mean to question the story of the Indian affair? |
29155 | Then you were not deterred by what you learned? |
29155 | Then you will do nothing? |
29155 | Then, if it''s not an impertinence, your means are small? |
29155 | Then,said Harding bluntly,"what brought you to Sweetwater?" |
29155 | This is to salve my feelings; to make the thing look like a business transaction? |
29155 | This sets you free, does n''t it? |
29155 | Tired? |
29155 | Truly sorry; you mean that? |
29155 | Was it not? |
29155 | Was n''t that rather hard for both of you? |
29155 | Well,said Benson,"what''s your opinion?" |
29155 | Well? |
29155 | Well? |
29155 | What are you doing up here? |
29155 | What are you going to do about the petroleum? |
29155 | What business have you gone into? |
29155 | What business is it of yours to preach to me? 29155 What did you do about Captain Sedgwick?" |
29155 | What do you call it then? |
29155 | What do you know about it? |
29155 | What do you mean by her game? |
29155 | What do you specialize in? |
29155 | What do you wish to suggest by that? |
29155 | What have you been saying to Walters? |
29155 | What have you got on? 29155 What have you to do?" |
29155 | What is it? |
29155 | What is this? |
29155 | What is your opinion of Bertram Challoner? 29155 What made you jump to the conclusion?" |
29155 | What should I fear? 29155 What was that?" |
29155 | What will you do if it comes up to your expectations? |
29155 | What will you do with Sedgwick? |
29155 | What would you call this? |
29155 | What would you do with gas in this wilderness? |
29155 | What would you think of it as a business proposition? |
29155 | What''s that? |
29155 | What''s that? |
29155 | What''s the matter with Captain Sedgwick? |
29155 | What''s your plan? |
29155 | When I joined it, I hated the army; that sounds like high treason, does n''t it? 29155 Where are the dogs?" |
29155 | Where are the rest? 29155 Where are those American azaleas you promised to show me?" |
29155 | Where are ye making for? |
29155 | Where could I go? 29155 Where did you find the breed?" |
29155 | Where did you get to, Dick? |
29155 | Where does all this lead? |
29155 | Where''s the key? |
29155 | Who saw him? |
29155 | Who you talking to? |
29155 | Who''s he? 29155 Who''s that? |
29155 | Whom are you looking at so hard? |
29155 | Why did n''t you send for Bertram? |
29155 | Why did you stay talking to that girl so long? |
29155 | Why do n''t you make your offer to some company floater or stockjobber? |
29155 | Why do you ask, when you mean to keep him? 29155 Why do you ask? |
29155 | Why do you give him the liquor? |
29155 | Why should I wish you to do an unwise thing? |
29155 | Why should there be a struggle? |
29155 | Why? |
29155 | Why? |
29155 | Why? |
29155 | Will these do? |
29155 | Will you give me the key of the Indian collection? |
29155 | With the axe? |
29155 | Yes,said Millicent;"we both knew him, but what has he been doing?" |
29155 | You are going now; by the Vancouver express? |
29155 | You are old friends then? |
29155 | You are willing to bear undeserved disgrace, to wander about Canada, an outcast from all society you could take pleasure in? 29155 You emptied the pockets?" |
29155 | You have brought me some news of my nephew, Richard Blake? |
29155 | You imagined that a dog- fancier would specialize in cats? |
29155 | You mean Captain Sedgwick? |
29155 | You mean me? |
29155 | You mean they have more money? 29155 You mean you will stake all you have on it?" |
29155 | You mean your life? |
29155 | You must see what it implies? |
29155 | You no doubt know that the order to retreat could only have been given by one of two officers? |
29155 | You suggest that this is what the fellow wished? |
29155 | You think this means a fresh attack upon my persecuted relative? |
29155 | You wish to appeal to my gratitude and not my fears? 29155 You would n''t have got much further with that team; but who sent you?" |
29155 | You''ll allow me to say that I find her charming? 29155 You''ll be wondering who we are?" |
29155 | You''re going to bring him here? 29155 You''re in lumber, are n''t you?" |
29155 | A looker, is n''t he?" |
29155 | Anyhow, as it looks as if Mrs. Chudleigh had him earmarked, why ca n''t he let the girl alone?" |
29155 | Are n''t you able to take care of me? |
29155 | Are n''t you sorry now?" |
29155 | Are you going to play a low- down game on him; to twist the truth so''s to give him a chance of deceiving himself?" |
29155 | Are you looking forward to the trip?" |
29155 | Are you satisfied with your lot? |
29155 | Are you staying here long?" |
29155 | Are you willing to leave him with us?" |
29155 | Are you willing to let Clarke get hold of you again?" |
29155 | As you do n''t speak of having been in India, who gave you the information?" |
29155 | Besides, how could you have had bad hours? |
29155 | But I''m only one of the party; what would he gain if you and Blake came to grief?" |
29155 | But am I boring you?" |
29155 | But are you content to quietly suffer injustice?" |
29155 | But did n''t she make up her mind rather suddenly?" |
29155 | But did n''t your fondness for sketching amuse the mess?" |
29155 | But does the absurd old woman hold you responsible for her ferocious pets?" |
29155 | But how long must you stay?" |
29155 | But if you liked a man who was far from rich, would you marry him?" |
29155 | But is n''t this a curious place to spend the evening?" |
29155 | But maybe ye''ll be wanting supper?" |
29155 | But was n''t there some scandal about a cousin?" |
29155 | But we''ll take it that the change in me is an improvement?" |
29155 | But what about Mrs. Chudleigh? |
29155 | But what about your collection of gum?" |
29155 | But what did the man say?" |
29155 | But what would you have done if you had n''t found the post?" |
29155 | But what''s she after? |
29155 | But why did you say you_ were_ sorry for him? |
29155 | But why do you recommend our taking him?" |
29155 | But why should it interest you?" |
29155 | But will you come to Montreal with me to- night?" |
29155 | But will you sit down? |
29155 | But will you walk as far as the wood?" |
29155 | But you wo n''t go away, Dick?" |
29155 | But, first of all, could you find Blake if it were necessary?" |
29155 | But, if I may ask, how was it he let you come to his flat?" |
29155 | By the way, how long is it since he left India?" |
29155 | Ca n''t I induce you to give us a trial? |
29155 | Ca n''t you see that he could n''t use his absurd story to bleed you unless I supported it?" |
29155 | Can you deny it?" |
29155 | Can you not imagine his resenting it and being so determined not to be influenced that he became hypercritical?" |
29155 | Can you wonder, my dear, that I was afraid? |
29155 | Can you?" |
29155 | Chudleigh?" |
29155 | Did you find them easy to get on with?" |
29155 | Did you get any information from the Hudson''s Bay man?" |
29155 | Did you give evidence?" |
29155 | Did you mean that you would n''t give me anything more enduring?" |
29155 | Do n''t you get the material you make good varnish of from the tropics?" |
29155 | Do you deny the stories these people have told me?" |
29155 | Do you know his history?" |
29155 | Do you make the stuff?" |
29155 | Do you suppose I''d pay five thousand pounds to see my nephew wronged?" |
29155 | Do you suppose I''m a fool and do n''t know what you think?" |
29155 | Had you any cause to doubt his courage?" |
29155 | Has it struck you that, if you are correct in your conclusions, by keeping silent you were wronging an innocent man?" |
29155 | Have n''t I marched and starved and shared my plans with you? |
29155 | Have n''t you the courage to insist upon being reinstated?" |
29155 | Have you been serenading somebody?" |
29155 | Have you gauged the consequences of your refusal?" |
29155 | Have you had enough of this trip yet, or are you going on?" |
29155 | Have you known him long?" |
29155 | Have you met Greythorpe? |
29155 | Have you met him?" |
29155 | Have you no friends and relatives in England you owe something to? |
29155 | Have you thought about your future?" |
29155 | He did not follow this lead, but asked:"Are you supposed to sit up all night and watch the animals for her?" |
29155 | He paused and resumed with a vacant air:"Getting off the subject, was n''t I? |
29155 | He was with Outram, was n''t he? |
29155 | His worn and ragged appearance bore this out, and Harding asked:"Are there minerals up yonder? |
29155 | How are you going to get the money?" |
29155 | How did he come to be here with only about three days''rations?" |
29155 | How did it come into your possession?" |
29155 | How else could Clarke have put the screw on him?" |
29155 | How is it that nobody else suspects the belt contains oil?" |
29155 | How will the fellows you left up yonder get on?" |
29155 | How would you say it had been treated?" |
29155 | How''s the leg this morning?" |
29155 | However, does Mrs. Chudleigh intend to remain long? |
29155 | I believe Benson spent some time with you this morning; are you taking him?" |
29155 | I imagine that reasons which would not be officially recognized led the court to take a lenient view; but what of that? |
29155 | I presume the man you favour is Captain Sedgwick?" |
29155 | I suppose Colonel Challoner really felt it a heavy blow?" |
29155 | I suppose he does n''t waste much pity on his unfortunate chief? |
29155 | I suppose she will take you?" |
29155 | I suppose that is genius; who is the painter?" |
29155 | I suppose you have read the newspaper account?" |
29155 | I suppose you have seen the Challoners? |
29155 | I take it that your uncle is a man who tries to do the square thing?" |
29155 | If he had done something to be ashamed of?" |
29155 | If there had been any meanness in you would n''t I have found it out? |
29155 | In fact, I was wondering----""Whether she''d stop if you pressed her? |
29155 | Is a career such as lies before him to be destroyed by one weak action which he has since well atoned for? |
29155 | Is he a good officer?" |
29155 | Is it a habit of yours?" |
29155 | Is it better to paint human passions and emotions than to control and direct your own and those of others?" |
29155 | Is it nothing to have gone where other men seldom venture?" |
29155 | Is she going?" |
29155 | Is the old set of Indian chessmen still in the drawer?" |
29155 | Is there any risk of Mrs. Chudleigh''s turning up at the cover?" |
29155 | Is there anything doing in my line there?" |
29155 | Is there no romance in this?" |
29155 | Is your life worth nothing, that you''re willing to throw it away?" |
29155 | Is your uncle going to the Croxleigh meet?" |
29155 | Keith?" |
29155 | Man, do n''t you realize that talking''s of no use? |
29155 | May I ask what you know about it?" |
29155 | Mrs. Keith felt angry with him for a marplot, but she said:"Would n''t it be better to wait until I''m here in the daylight? |
29155 | No doubt, you know something about his history?" |
29155 | Not flattering, is it? |
29155 | Now you know I''m ready to play it, do n''t you think it would be wiser to leave the Colonel alone?" |
29155 | Of late they had seemed heavier than formerly, for in tempting him Clarke had made a telling suggestion-- suppose he married? |
29155 | Onslow?" |
29155 | Petroleum''s a cheap product to handle when you''re a long way from a market, is n''t it?" |
29155 | Shall we go and look at them?" |
29155 | She understood that he wanted her to himself and thrilled at something in his voice, but instead of complying she asked:"Do n''t you wish me to?" |
29155 | So you consider this trip to the North- West your opportunity? |
29155 | Some time later Blake said to Millicent,"You heard what he told me, dear? |
29155 | Suppose he brings off some sensational coup in which you would have to support him at the expense of France?" |
29155 | Suppose the fellow goes to work without you? |
29155 | Surely you do n''t refuse your confidence to your friends?" |
29155 | The question is----""It strikes me it''s---- When are we going to have the house to ourselves? |
29155 | Then Blake asked him:"What about the petroleum?" |
29155 | Then he asked Millicent:"Did you see the Buddha?" |
29155 | Then he resumed:"You''re interested in Eastern brasswork, I think?" |
29155 | Then his face grew troubled as he asked Benson:"How long has he been like that?" |
29155 | Then she added sharply:"As you have torn it up, you do n''t mean to answer Sedgwick''s letter?" |
29155 | Then there was another point that struck me; why''s he going so far to stay with those Indians?" |
29155 | They talked a while about English friends and relatives; and then Blake said rather abruptly--"And the Colonel?" |
29155 | Those who do n''t fit in with your ideas of the normal?" |
29155 | Want to cut your old friendsh? |
29155 | Was n''t he in rather bad odour?--only tolerated on the fringe of society? |
29155 | Was the strain equally virile?" |
29155 | Were you long in India?" |
29155 | Were you not recommended to stay in Devonshire?" |
29155 | What are you going to do, now we do n''t seem able to find the gum?" |
29155 | What do you think, Blake?" |
29155 | What do you think?" |
29155 | What do your friends think? |
29155 | What good would it do? |
29155 | What had they to say that took so long, when there was a risk of Captain Challoner''s being discovered? |
29155 | What have you done about the African appointment you mentioned when last here? |
29155 | What have you to say?" |
29155 | What led him to talk of the thing to an outsider?" |
29155 | What made you get yourself up like an Italian opera villain and go round the town with a wild beast under your arm?" |
29155 | What opinion did you form?" |
29155 | What then?" |
29155 | What would have happened if we had n''t met the police?" |
29155 | What''s he like?" |
29155 | Whatsh you doing here?" |
29155 | Where are you staying? |
29155 | Where do ye hail from?" |
29155 | Where has your usual recklessness gone?" |
29155 | Who can he be?" |
29155 | Why did Blake make no defence, unless it was because he knew that to clear himself would throw the blame upon his friend?" |
29155 | Why did he, without permission and abusing his authority over the guard, spend two hours late at night with Blake who was under arrest? |
29155 | Why did n''t you tell me who you were?" |
29155 | Why did you go to the village?" |
29155 | Why do n''t you look after the fool? |
29155 | Why does he wish you to know?" |
29155 | Why have you let that fellow Clarke suck the life and energy out of you, as well as rob you of your money?" |
29155 | Why should his people think less of him because he likes to paint? |
29155 | Why should the woman force herself into Hazlehurst, unless it''s to be within striking distance of your uncle?" |
29155 | Why?" |
29155 | Will you come along?" |
29155 | Will you come up to the house?" |
29155 | Would you sooner have had him study his drill book or attend a kit inspection?" |
29155 | You believe Captain Sedgwick is such a man?" |
29155 | You considered it necessary to make friends with the French- Canadian taxidermist?" |
29155 | You do n''t mind her?" |
29155 | You found the muskeg too difficult to cross, and I suppose this fellow showed you the way here?" |
29155 | You have more complete information?" |
29155 | You know something about that material?" |
29155 | You know we may have to live in Canada?" |
29155 | You were on the North- West frontier, were you not?" |
29155 | You wo n''t mind if I confess that a view of this kind makes me long to paint?" |
29155 | You would rake it up, even if it brought trouble upon innocent people?" |
29155 | You would sooner have him a soldier?" |
29155 | You''re for Sweetwater?" |
29155 | You''re satisfied that this is a project I can recommend to my friends?" |
29155 | he said;"you hear somet''ing?" |
29155 | who are you? |
39911 | A retired tobacconist adopted for the motto of a fresh coat of arms to be emblazoned on his carriage panels:"_ Quid Rides?_"Why do you laugh? |
39911 | A retired tobacconist adopted for the motto of a fresh coat of arms to be emblazoned on his carriage panels:"_ Quid Rides?_"Why do you laugh? |
39911 | But as for the female line, who knows? |
39911 | Did not each base of our supplies rest on a waterway patrolled by gunboats? |
39911 | Do you laugh at him? |
39911 | Frederick the Great shouted to a fleeing battle- straggler,"Wretch, wouldst thou live forever?" |
39911 | If so, what conclusions will posterity deduce as to the anatomical development of the speechless inferior Mule? |
39911 | If so, who will begrudge? |
39911 | In short, is the horse to be thus dismissed into obliquity, so to speak? |
39911 | Is the war charger to be cut off thus with no extra allowance for training or pedigree? |
39911 | Oftenest perhaps he is an ex- captain, for does not every war evolve the greatest captain of the age as its ultimate hero? |
39911 | Were not all our armies named from streams along which their fraternal tin- clads trolleyed and thundered? |
39911 | When such things can be, and overcome us like a summer sunshade, why marvel that the navy had no Sutler? |
39911 | Where is the Sutler now? |
39911 | Where was the hilarious Sutler then with his bluegrass fertility of resource? |
39911 | Whether applied in honor and tenderness, or in derision and mockery, who can tell? |
39911 | Who hath hoarseness of voice? |
39911 | Who hath redness of eyes? |
39911 | Why should he? |
39911 | Why then differentiate? |
39911 | cried the tailor, bristling with defensive indignation,''what in the world have you been doing to that suit?'' |
39911 | pass muster? |
33501 | ''Very well,''said the artists,''will you conduct us to her home?'' 33501 A very interesting business you have,"commented Gud,"and pray, how came you to be in it?" |
33501 | And how about their rationality? |
33501 | And how did that happen? |
33501 | And how do you propose to divide the booty? 33501 And how would you like to know more quickly?" |
33501 | And if they are thieves, how can they be law- abiding citizens? |
33501 | And if you were in my book, would it not then contain something that no one could understand? |
33501 | And just when,I asked,"would you have him born?" |
33501 | And now please tell me who you are and why you are bound here? |
33501 | And now,I said,"who is going to write this tale of the adventures of the great god Gud?" |
33501 | And of what will you create a material being? |
33501 | And shall we be savage or civilized? |
33501 | And what about evidence of proprietorship? |
33501 | And what did she doubt? |
33501 | And what did you do to him? |
33501 | And what do they? |
33501 | And what is that war? |
33501 | And what is that? |
33501 | And what is this place? |
33501 | And who are you? |
33501 | And why did she doubt that? |
33501 | And why is this platter set before me? |
33501 | And yet, you are stocked with every sin in the calendar; where is the value to the righteous in such stock? |
33501 | And you weep? |
33501 | Believe me, your honor,said the poor mother,"it was no fault of mine, for I was blind and how could I tell which one was which? |
33501 | Both sexes,repeated Gud--"then you only have two sexes?" |
33501 | But how far is it by automobile? |
33501 | But is it not strange,asked Gud,"that you two, who held such opposite doctrines, should now suffer similar punishment? |
33501 | But surely? |
33501 | But what about the fishes? |
33501 | But what about those that pass over without hearing the revelation? |
33501 | But what did you say about it? |
33501 | But what do you with the words of Genius? |
33501 | But what have you in the package? |
33501 | But what is the remedy? |
33501 | But why do mermaids have fish tales to tell? |
33501 | But why do they say you are immodest? |
33501 | But why do you not say something original, since you are Gud? |
33501 | But why stand here babbling? 33501 But why,"I asked,"do you want to write a blasphemous book? |
33501 | But why,asked Gud,"do the words of the Genius make a stench in their burning?" |
33501 | But why,demanded the Devil,"did you not keep my private furnace fired? |
33501 | But, what is she doing with it? |
33501 | But,asked Fidu of Gud, as they again went on their journey,"how did you know which door to open-- did you smell the blood?" |
33501 | But,cried the generals,"you have stopped the war-- and now what shall we do? |
33501 | Ca n''t you read? |
33501 | Can you do that? |
33501 | Can you tell me how far it is to New York? |
33501 | Certainly, three characters of two sexes form the eternal triangle, any way you arrange them; is n''t that perfectly simple? |
33501 | Certainly,said Gud,"what more could you expect if you espouse an unpopular cause? |
33501 | Come, come,called Gud, shaking him by the shoulder,"you are babbling, speak up, what happened?" |
33501 | Could you really? 33501 Did the beans boil over?" |
33501 | Did you ever try interpreting dreams? |
33501 | Did you know,said Fidu,"that the Copycat had been visiting?" |
33501 | Did you say all of your citizens were thieves? |
33501 | Do n''t you know, Fidu,admonished Gud,"that I disapprove of eating pork?" |
33501 | Do you comprehend it? |
33501 | Do you do anything else besides keep bees? |
33501 | Do you find the bees profitable? |
33501 | Do you keep any other stock? |
33501 | Do you keep bees? |
33501 | Do you know why they call sleep innocent, considering the kind of dreams people have? 33501 Do you mean it?" |
33501 | Do you mean that I would inspire you? |
33501 | Do you remember,remarked Gud to the Underdog, as they sat munching their sandwiches,"the time I was on that little world back there--""Which one?" |
33501 | Do you sell for cash or credit? |
33501 | Do you understand it? |
33501 | First,began the Devil,"I would ask you if they had any souls?" |
33501 | For what reason did the mortals think your friend shook them up? |
33501 | For what? |
33501 | Free of what? |
33501 | Has any one ever understood you? |
33501 | Have you always been in the business of talking too much? |
33501 | Have you lost anything? |
33501 | How do you know they answered truthfully? |
33501 | How do you know they are writing it? |
33501 | How do you know they are? |
33501 | How far is it? |
33501 | How is that for a sphere? |
33501 | How much? |
33501 | I am Free Speech,said he,"and who are you?" |
33501 | I am eating leopard''s spots,replied Gud;"will you have some?" |
33501 | I do not know,said Gud,"do you?" |
33501 | I never heard of you and what is your business? |
33501 | I was just wondering, whether, if those unhappy people had a real god would they not quit all this war and devote their time to harmonious worship? |
33501 | I wonder,said Gud,"since I spoiled the war, if you would mind telling me what it was all about?" |
33501 | I''d like to know,the ancient said,"the candle- light-- When we have blown it out where does it go?" |
33501 | If he can not state his case,said Gud,"why should he expect me to free him?" |
33501 | If you are, why do you not inspire these men who are writing this book about you to put something into the book that no one can understand? 33501 Is a relative of yours buried there?" |
33501 | Is her mind dead? |
33501 | Is it necessary to burn human flesh in this modern age? 33501 Is not the Impossible Curve in the Nth dimension?" |
33501 | Is that all? |
33501 | Is the genius dead? |
33501 | It must be a nice one, but what do you wish that I should do for you? |
33501 | It sounds so original, and I am sure that no one can understand it-- what does it mean? |
33501 | Just what were you? |
33501 | May I join you? |
33501 | May I read it to you? 33501 Now are you satisfied?" |
33501 | Oh, bother,said Gud,"are you going to start that wailing again? |
33501 | Oh,cried the woman,"then you admit that you are what I said?" |
33501 | On which side were you? |
33501 | Only a little while ago you were searching for something that no one could understand-- have we not found it in yourself? |
33501 | Pardon me, madame,interrupted Gud,"but what was the sex of your own child that you left in the cow trough?" |
33501 | Pardon me,he said,"but is there a graveyard handy?" |
33501 | Pardon me,said Gud,"but why are you so blind that I could not see you?" |
33501 | Pedigreed? |
33501 | Shall I make the means or the end? |
33501 | Shelf- worn you say? 33501 Suppose,"said he,"that the boat should upset: neither of you can swim, and what would I do? |
33501 | Thanks, but my belly is white and I do not wish to have it sunburned-- but who do you suppose is coming in yonder boat? |
33501 | That I have,returned the Devil,"but first may I ask how you came to be out of employment?" |
33501 | That is very interesting,said Gud as he took another forkful of meat,"but why did you not ask the women themselves?" |
33501 | The physiology is destroyed by the anatomy.... How do you like my eyes? |
33501 | Then why are you weeping? |
33501 | Then why bother about it? |
33501 | Then why do you not quit retailing, and trade in wholesale murders? |
33501 | Then why does she not talk? |
33501 | Then why,I persisted,"do you want to write it?" |
33501 | Then you are weeping for the other man? |
33501 | Then, what do you want? |
33501 | Then, where are the masters? |
33501 | Then,asked Gud,"why quarrel you with this Statistician? |
33501 | Then,said Gud,"would you give me your torch, since you will not be needing it longer?" |
33501 | Then,said Gud,"you shall have it, for am I not Gud the Great?" |
33501 | Translated into what? |
33501 | Very well,said the skeptic,"how mad is a wet hen?" |
33501 | Well, what of it? |
33501 | What are these things? |
33501 | What are you going to do? |
33501 | What are you saying? |
33501 | What books have you had published? |
33501 | What can I do? |
33501 | What can you be doing on this Impossible Curve? |
33501 | What caused it? |
33501 | What did he call his book? |
33501 | What did they tell you to do? |
33501 | What did you do? |
33501 | What difference does it make? |
33501 | What do you offer? |
33501 | What do you write? |
33501 | What else would you suppose? 33501 What is it to you,"demanded the Critic,"if I spit into the brazier to make a stench to please the people?" |
33501 | What is that? |
33501 | What is the dispute about? |
33501 | What is the solution? |
33501 | What is the trouble? |
33501 | What kind of book is it? |
33501 | What makes you think so? |
33501 | What of it? |
33501 | What proof shall I offer you? |
33501 | What use is a false faith? |
33501 | What was it? |
33501 | What was that? |
33501 | What was the cause of your poverty? |
33501 | What was your profession? |
33501 | What were you doing? |
33501 | What''s this? |
33501 | What? |
33501 | What? |
33501 | When did all this happen? |
33501 | Where are you going? |
33501 | Where is the nearest gas station? |
33501 | Where is this village? |
33501 | Which one of them do you propose to have write me into the book? |
33501 | Which one would you prefer? |
33501 | Which one? |
33501 | Which universe? |
33501 | Which way, now? |
33501 | Who are the Russians? |
33501 | Who are you,demanded Gud,"and why are you chained up here in this brutal fashion?" |
33501 | Why are you drinking tea? |
33501 | Why are you weeping again? |
33501 | Why belaborest thou the camel? |
33501 | Why did he not speak? |
33501 | Why do you beg? |
33501 | Why do you laugh at our sufferings? |
33501 | Why do you live in this lonesome place? |
33501 | Why do you not dissect her unconscious mind and see of what her dreams are made? |
33501 | Why do you weep? |
33501 | Why do you wish to know? |
33501 | Why just three? |
33501 | Why not? 33501 Why?" |
33501 | Yes, I see,said Gud,"what is that one?" |
33501 | You mean that I should hire an assassin to kill me, so that my son should be the government? |
33501 | Your name? |
33501 | Your trade,he remarked,"is, I suppose, with the inhabitants of these neighboring hells, supplying them with new kinds of sins?" |
33501 | Again Gud asked:"Have you looked into the heart of woman?" |
33501 | Am I wrong?" |
33501 | And Fidu, the Underdog, followed after Gud, for why should n''t a mad dog follow a mad master? |
33501 | And Gud said to the ghosts:"Where is your king?" |
33501 | And Gud said:"Why do you watch the tape with eager eyes?" |
33501 | And did n''t he tear the great stone from the cliff that rolled down and killed the tiger? |
33501 | And the rich merchant hailed Gud and said:"Whither goest thou on this sleek, icy desert?" |
33501 | And who can hear the lattice open, the lattice open gently? |
33501 | And why not? |
33501 | As he entered, the proprietor, who looked both old and young, asked;"Comest thou to buy or to sell?" |
33501 | At least I feel so-- did you always wear your hair that way?" |
33501 | But first he would know who she was, and so he spoke to her again and said:"Of a truth, and who art thou?" |
33501 | But immortal souls-- how could pestilence have slain them? |
33501 | But what about these sexes?" |
33501 | But what does it mean?" |
33501 | But why is your eye so troubled?" |
33501 | But you are romantic, are n''t you, Gud?" |
33501 | Chapter LXIX And when Gud had finished reading the woman asked:"Is that all?" |
33501 | Chapter XIII"What are you eating?" |
33501 | Chapter XLIII Who shall say that his love was not good For the dummy of cloth and wax and wood? |
33501 | Chapter XXI"Who was that fellow,"asked Fidu,"who passed me just now with such a wild, wild look in his eye?" |
33501 | Curbing my annoyance I inquired:"How do I get out to a good automobile road?" |
33501 | Did I not once make good money auguring from the entrails of animals, till these scientists found that they were useful for sausage casings? |
33501 | Do you countenance such unmoral ways of dying?" |
33501 | Do you not remember that you arranged for them to be worked by the souls of scabs who were to be killed by strikers?" |
33501 | Do you think I am going to let this fool beast devour it?" |
33501 | Does that fix everything?" |
33501 | Five dollars please, and what did you come in here for? |
33501 | For instance, has a ghost a soul or is he a soul? |
33501 | Gud addressed her in telepathy, saying:"I wonder if you would make me a cake?" |
33501 | Gud approached them and asked:"Why are you two not being properly punished?" |
33501 | Gud asked,"Have you looked into the mind of man?" |
33501 | Gud asked:"What place is this?" |
33501 | Gud turned and spoke to the multitude and said:"Why stare ye at the doors in the wall and durst not enter?" |
33501 | Gud turned to the Statistician and demanded:"Is this fact that you have produced a true fact or is it only a statistical fact?" |
33501 | Have you heard Him amid the silence, Vast as a silken cloud, Lifting His arms with jewelled pendants, Cloaked in a heavy shroud? |
33501 | Have you heard Him, as walking through The valleys of the night He paces ever back and forth, Silent, old and white? |
33501 | Have you heard Him, as walking through The valleys of the night He paces ever back and forth, Silent, old and white? |
33501 | Have you seen Him amid the silence, Vast as a silken cloud, Lifting His arms with jeweled pendants Cloaked in a heavy shroud? |
33501 | How can she lay another?" |
33501 | How do you explain that?" |
33501 | How do you explain that?" |
33501 | How long will it take you to fix up your pace?" |
33501 | How much would it take?" |
33501 | I am ready to make them, only what kind do you want-- something like yourself?" |
33501 | I could not let my dear old mother drown and yet how could I let my beautiful wife drown? |
33501 | If I do so, will that stop your wailing?" |
33501 | If you do n''t care for pants, why wear anything?" |
33501 | If you try the last straw first and break the camel''s back, then how can the poor beast go through the eye of the needle?" |
33501 | Is that not simple?" |
33501 | Is there anything I can do to help you start it again?" |
33501 | Or what there is about a sphinx that makes people think it knows the answer to riddles? |
33501 | Or whether a man in hot water is more uncomfortable than a round peg in a square hole?" |
33501 | Or why a greased egg wo n''t hatch? |
33501 | Or why blood is thicker than water? |
33501 | Our world is full, and what good would it do to issue more birth permits when there is no more room to be born into?" |
33501 | President, which is your mother?'' |
33501 | She was forever asking her lovers,''How much do you love me?''" |
33501 | So Gud addressed the Statistician and said:"Why do you not let this man and his morals alone?" |
33501 | So Gud went to Hell, and reaching the gate thereof he knocked and cried:"Is this the place where one brings the words of Genius?" |
33501 | Staff in hand, hair like snow Does even He know where they go? |
33501 | The Just believed that the world was flat and the Unjust believed that the world was round--""Which was it?" |
33501 | Then after examining a few more, he asked:"What will you take for the lot?" |
33501 | Thereupon the demon looked more gracious and said:"Where are you going?" |
33501 | This pleased Gud, so he spoke in his dream to the woman of his dream and said:"Who art thou and what wouldst thou of me?" |
33501 | Was n''t he the first of all their idols, and the best of all them?" |
33501 | Was this triangle that seemed to have been the life of your business equilateral or isosceles?" |
33501 | What do you call it?" |
33501 | What do you propose to do about it?" |
33501 | What do you read?" |
33501 | What is the use of all our theological blue laws if the black heart of atheism continues to control our yellow press?" |
33501 | What is your business?" |
33501 | What pleasure could there be in hoping to go to an eternal sunparlor without knowing that one''s neighbor was going to hell?" |
33501 | What was it you said you wanted?" |
33501 | What''s the matter now?" |
33501 | When he found it, behold, it was a soul in pain, and Gud said:"What can I do to stop your wailing?" |
33501 | When the old man paused and stared up vacantly, Gud spoke to him and asked:"What are you writing?" |
33501 | Where is this property you speak of?" |
33501 | Why do n''t you commit suicide?" |
33501 | Why do you not hasten to join your colors?" |
33501 | Why do you not let him and his facts alone?" |
33501 | Why should a man do the work of a street cleaner on the salary of a critic?" |
33501 | Why, did n''t he heal my youngest child of that terrible fever when I prayed to him that fearful night? |
33501 | Would it not do quite as well to set fire to a cage of black cats? |
33501 | Would you be satisfied with predestination on a fifty- fifty split?" |
33501 | Would you like to see it?" |
33501 | You do n''t mean it?" |
33501 | asked Gud of a mermaid, who was sitting on one of the ship''s knees:"and what bold criminal with a blood- stained trail has entered here?" |
33501 | asked Gud,"and who is this Hersey creature?" |
33501 | demanded Gud,"hiding in that heap of discarded theories?" |
33501 | exclaimed the Devil, springing up angrily,"do you doubt my observation or my veracity?" |
27461 | ''Ow many? |
27461 | A soft black hat, a polo collar and a ready- for- use black tie? |
27461 | Am I frightfully extravagant? |
27461 | An accident? |
27461 | And because you admire it you do n''t dream of buying it? 27461 And how should you define this highroad?" |
27461 | And is Rome true to Rome, your Eminence? 27461 And it is?" |
27461 | And it was useless? |
27461 | And what is the nature of the reform you would suggest? |
27461 | And what is your opinion of his school? |
27461 | And what made you mistake me for him? |
27461 | And what particular offender has inspired this outburst? |
27461 | And you are sure that Paul has seen these photographs? |
27461 | And you regard inspiration as a spiritual journey? |
27461 | And your advice-- that I burn_ The Key_--is given sincerely? |
27461 | And your father had intended that you should become a painter? |
27461 | Are there some of my friends you do n''t think quite nice? |
27461 | Are you going to let me go? |
27461 | Are you little, dear? 27461 Are you quite sure, Captain Courtier, that the money from the War Office will be enough to pay for all this?" |
27461 | Are you really interested? |
27461 | Because he has seen the truth? |
27461 | But how is it? 27461 But is n''t it horrible? |
27461 | But what have they said? 27461 But what, Yvonne?" |
27461 | But why should she hate you? |
27461 | But why should you do so, Mr. Mario? 27461 But you are hotly intolerant of human hypocrisy? |
27461 | But you love the country? |
27461 | But you went to the theatre with him? |
27461 | But-- are you sure? |
27461 | Can you doubt it? |
27461 | Captain Courtier? |
27461 | Could you be ready to go on Thursday, Yvonne? |
27461 | Did I hear you swearing, dear? |
27461 | Did he also own the wood- nymphs? |
27461 | Did he wear whiskers? |
27461 | Did you get me in here to start the Bible- banging business? |
27461 | Did you hit him? |
27461 | Did you let them in? |
27461 | Did you love your husband? |
27461 | Did you not observe a certain nymph among the bluebells, Fawkes? |
27461 | Did you observe the drawings on the wall? |
27461 | Do I understand you to mean that you are about to set out upon a journey? |
27461 | Do n''t you? 27461 Do you ever dream of your husband?" |
27461 | Do you habitually think in Latin? |
27461 | Do you know that that is the first time you have kissed me since you returned? |
27461 | Do you refer to Orpheus? |
27461 | Do you think I do n''t know my mistakes? 27461 Do you think if that was true he would make so many mistakes about people?" |
27461 | Do you think the world will recognise it? |
27461 | Does Hammett still talk about''percepting the subject''and''emerging the high- lights''and''profunding the shadows''? |
27461 | Does he understand? |
27461 | Doing fine? |
27461 | Don knows this? |
27461 | Eh? 27461 Flamby-- who has done this?" |
27461 | For Paul? |
27461 | For the justified, but what of the sinner? |
27461 | For what or for whom has humanity proved too obstinate? |
27461 | Found me out? |
27461 | Got the ticket? |
27461 | Have n''t you seen my picture in the newspapers advertising somebody''s ointment? |
27461 | Have we no prayers for the dead? 27461 Have you considered, Thessaly, what appalling sins must have been committed by the present generation of women in some past phase of existence?" |
27461 | Have you denied the divinity of Christ or the existence of Almighty God? |
27461 | Have you denied the mission of the heir of St. Peter to preach the Word of the Messiah? |
27461 | Have you ever thought, Flamby, that I neglected you? |
27461 | Have you finished lunch? 27461 Have you seen Paul lately?" |
27461 | Have you seen anything of Orlando James recently? |
27461 | Have you tried hard not to care so much? |
27461 | Honey? 27461 How can I do that?" |
27461 | How could I tell you, Paul? 27461 How could anyone help loving her?" |
27461 | How do you know that I treat women kindly? |
27461 | How is old Odin? 27461 How is that?" |
27461 | How much is it please? |
27461 | How much is it? |
27461 | How much money, for goodness''sake, is the Government paying? |
27461 | I am your honour''s servant,she said;"what would you with me?" |
27461 | I would suggest that some specific''innocent''occurs to your mind? |
27461 | If I show you the canvas and you recognise the model will you promise not to tell anybody? 27461 In these days of air raids would it not be safer at Babylon Hall?" |
27461 | In what way? |
27461 | Is Chauvin expecting you this afternoon? |
27461 | Is Liberty''s dear? |
27461 | Is he dead? |
27461 | Is n''t it time we started? |
27461 | Is n''t that fine? |
27461 | Is our friendship staunch enough to sustain the shock of real candour, Mario? |
27461 | Is she-- well- known? |
27461 | Is that funny, Flamby? |
27461 | Is the Keats picture to be more important than_ The Circassian_? |
27461 | Is your model for_ The Circassian_ really very pretty? |
27461 | It is a ritual, then? |
27461 | It is that Eastern thing is it not?--the marble pool and a half veiled figure lying beside it with one hand in the water? |
27461 | It is then a dying request? |
27461 | It must be awful for a doctor who has specialised in some dreadful disease to find----"That he suffers from it? 27461 It was no more than a very remarkable coincidence after all?" |
27461 | Little chance acquaintance,he said,"was there never anyone in the world whom you loved?--never anyone who was good to you?" |
27461 | May I come in the morning? |
27461 | May I come in, or will the lateness of my visit excite comment among your neighbours? |
27461 | May I light a pipe before I go, Yvonne? |
27461 | May I really? |
27461 | May I see your drawing? |
27461 | Mr. Paul Mario? |
27461 | Mrs. Duveen, I believe? 27461 My darling Yvonne,"he whispered,"Do I sometimes forget to make love to you? |
27461 | My dear fellow, what are a hundred and twenty pounds in the scale against your life? 27461 My dear little girl, why are you so doubtful of my honesty?" |
27461 | Neglected me? 27461 Never seen him? |
27461 | No doubt I should have found the experience of great educational value,he said;"but did he often swear in Latin?" |
27461 | Not even in the case of an aged hypocrite who probably posed as the Platonic friend? |
27461 | Nothing about the aspect of the other rooms of the chateau had struck you as familiar? |
27461 | Now what can you do? |
27461 | Now,cried Don cheerily,"what about our baggage?" |
27461 | Of course, she knows of his death? |
27461 | Of what chateau do you speak? |
27461 | Of_ The Key_? |
27461 | Oh, Mr. Mario,she said,"please do n''t think me ungrateful and a little beast; but-- is it true?" |
27461 | Oh, but really-- may I? 27461 Oh,"whispered Flamby,"do you think it is very dear?" |
27461 | Pardon my abstraction; but what did you say? |
27461 | Paul has altered the lives of a lot of people, has n''t he? |
27461 | Please where do I live? |
27461 | Poachin'', eh? |
27461 | Quite probably; but does he know hers? |
27461 | Scared? 27461 Shall I really be able to pay it?" |
27461 | Shall I tell you what happened to the fox, sir? |
27461 | Shall we go out to tea and see if we can cheer ourselves up a bit? |
27461 | Shall you be long absent? |
27461 | So you were afraid,said Paul, smiling;"but not, on this occasion, of my late uncle, I hope?" |
27461 | Stopped the hounds, Fawkes? |
27461 | Sugar? |
27461 | Sure that he has found the truth? |
27461 | That makes people dislike you? |
27461 | That''s expensive is n''t it? |
27461 | That''s very unusual, is n''t it? |
27461 | The Aunt? 27461 The flaw?" |
27461 | Then this girl with the siren hair is she of whom you spoke? |
27461 | Then why did you admire a system diametrically opposed to that which you would set up? |
27461 | Then why do n''t you? |
27461 | Then why should you expect Rome to place its ban upon your book? |
27461 | Then you think the world ready for the truth? |
27461 | There are disadvantages attaching to your method after all? |
27461 | Those views do not apply to the Johnsons''spiritual father? |
27461 | To consider it, Mr. Mario? 27461 To get home leave after treatment at a base hospital? |
27461 | To see_ me_? |
27461 | To understand whom-- Sir Jacques or the girl? 27461 To whom do you refer?" |
27461 | Two years,echoed Paul;"is it really two years since we met?" |
27461 | Was she really an ideal model or did you induce her to pose just to please your colossal vanity? |
27461 | Was she very well off once? |
27461 | We are friends, are we not, little Flamby? |
27461 | Were you dreaming in the twilight? |
27461 | What can have happened thus suddenly to divert the current of your life and the tenor of your philosophy? |
27461 | What did I call her, Aunt? |
27461 | What did you say? |
27461 | What did you think? |
27461 | What did you want to see me about? |
27461 | What do you mean? |
27461 | What does he do anywhere? 27461 What does the Church offer,"said Paul,"that the human mind can grasp? |
27461 | What had I done to deserve it? 27461 What is funny?" |
27461 | What is holding you up? |
27461 | What kind of reputation, Paul? |
27461 | What makes you think so? |
27461 | What more admirable model? 27461 What of_ Madame Caligula_? |
27461 | What time shall you come on Tuesday? |
27461 | What was he doing in Bethune? |
27461 | What was his favourite tongue when he was merely moderately so? |
27461 | What was the end of the episode? |
27461 | What, Flamby? |
27461 | Whatever are you laughing about, dear? 27461 Whatever do you mean?" |
27461 | Whatever is the Aunt laughing about? |
27461 | When are they going to burn you? |
27461 | When are you going back? |
27461 | When do you have to go back, Don? |
27461 | Where do I go to try it on? |
27461 | Where does the vanity come in? |
27461 | Where is he? |
27461 | Which one? |
27461 | Who has been''going on''at you, little Flamby? |
27461 | Who is living in Dovelands Cottage now, Flamby? |
27461 | Who told me what? |
27461 | Who was that fair man who took you to the theatre last night, and brought you home in a lovely car? |
27461 | Why are you afraid now, Flamby? |
27461 | Why misguided? 27461 Why not?" |
27461 | Why not? |
27461 | Why should I mislead you in the matter, Flamby? |
27461 | Why should he care? |
27461 | Why so named? |
27461 | Why,he asked,"should you be so afraid of Sir Jacques?" |
27461 | Why? |
27461 | Why? |
27461 | Will you have a cigarette? |
27461 | Will you have a cigarette? |
27461 | With Flamby? 27461 Wo n''t you look at it first?" |
27461 | Would that be extra? |
27461 | Would you have me tell them that their faith, their churches, are to blame? |
27461 | Would you then revive the Eleusinian Mysteries? |
27461 | Would you trammel the soul with the shackles of the flesh? |
27461 | Yes, sir,responded Reuben;"and what time am I to expect the other things?" |
27461 | Yes, what is it-- knotty knees? 27461 Yes; you know its history?" |
27461 | You agree with me that the war, which was born of ignorance, will bear the fruit of truth? |
27461 | You are Luke Fawkes, are you not? |
27461 | You are not angry with me? |
27461 | You are pursuing your fancy about the nymph visible and invisible? |
27461 | You are really of opinion,asked Paul dreamily,"that I should be doing my utmost if I stuck to my last?" |
27461 | You are, then, a novel sort of conscientious objector? |
27461 | You call yourself a woman? 27461 You dear old sentimentalist,"he said;"do you really continue to believe in the faith of woman?" |
27461 | You do n''t want me to believe that some misguided married woman has been posing for_ The Circassian_? |
27461 | You do n''t_ want_ to leave me behind, do you? |
27461 | You find yourself at variance with the Church, Mr. Mario? 27461 You had n''t thought of that?" |
27461 | You have a number of visitors, Flamby? |
27461 | You have definitely set your hand to the plough? |
27461 | You have no sympathy for Sir Jacques''victims? |
27461 | You know them? |
27461 | You know who my model was for_ Eunice_, do n''t you? |
27461 | You mean that literature and art persistently look in the gutter for subjects when they would be more worthily employed in questioning the stars? |
27461 | You really consider that she has talent? |
27461 | You really do mean what you say, do n''t you? |
27461 | You remember what I said on the subject of misunderstanding? 27461 You think those higher powers are powers of good?" |
27461 | You will probably prefer to drive back? |
27461 | You will stay with me, dear, wo n''t you? |
27461 | You would allow instinct to go unfettered? |
27461 | You would trick your penitents into paradise? |
27461 | You''re nothing to do with the Salvation Army, are you? |
27461 | Yvonne told you I had called? |
27461 | ''And why was it closed, my friend?'' |
27461 | ''Have you been long in the service of the family?'' |
27461 | ''How can you know of the Duc''s door?'' |
27461 | ''How can_ you_ know of the Duc''s door, monsieur?'' |
27461 | ''Then perhaps you can tell me if there was ever a door opening on the right, yonder, beside that armchair?'' |
27461 | *****"You do n''t like James, do you?" |
27461 | And did you think your husband would ever forget?" |
27461 | And how had he acquitted himself of his stewardship? |
27461 | And surely grey is what is known as''half- mourning''too, is it not? |
27461 | And was the principal character always a girl?" |
27461 | Apollonius of Tyana cured the Cnidian youth, but what hope is there for Caspar? |
27461 | Are n''t we funny? |
27461 | Are you one of those fools who think all women like me only live the way we do because we ca n''t see where it will end? |
27461 | Are you sure that for you the veil is wholly lifted? |
27461 | Are you sure that you comprehend the meaning of your own tenet--''Perfect Love and Fulfilment''? |
27461 | Are you sure that you have no false friends? |
27461 | Are you sure, Mr. Mario, that you can recognise them when they pass you by? |
27461 | Are you thinking of taking up your residence at Hatton Towers?" |
27461 | Babylon Hall? |
27461 | Before the horrors of war the spirit stands aghast, but are the horrors perpetrated by Prussia reconcilable with the teachings of St. Peter? |
27461 | Besides-- why should I expect you to bother about me?" |
27461 | But have you no ambition to lead any different life?" |
27461 | But how many have responded to it? |
27461 | By the way, do you manage to do much work nowadays? |
27461 | Chumley?" |
27461 | Could n''t you dress in white, dear?" |
27461 | Did I show you that last sketch for the Keats picture?" |
27461 | Did she lose her money?" |
27461 | Did you get the letter?" |
27461 | Did you know that Chauvin got me a commission from the War Office propaganda people to do pictures of horses and mules and things?" |
27461 | Did you know that?" |
27461 | Did you observe an eagle- crowned helmet above Mrs. Duveen''s fireplace?" |
27461 | Did you remember to go to the Post Office?" |
27461 | Do n''t mention my name, you understand? |
27461 | Do n''t you think him handsome?" |
27461 | Do n''t you think it may be just as well, dear?" |
27461 | Do n''t you think men hate them, Don?" |
27461 | Do n''t you think you could cultivate_ hashish_, Mario? |
27461 | Do you believe in his New Gospel, dear?" |
27461 | Do you believe in mourning?" |
27461 | Do you believe there is such a word in the dictionary, dear?" |
27461 | Do you honestly believe, Orlando, that any woman in London would turn amateur model if you asked her?" |
27461 | Do you inhale it?" |
27461 | Do you know this war- writer?" |
27461 | Do you leave all your friends with equally slight regret?" |
27461 | Do you like Paul Mario, dear?" |
27461 | Do you mind?" |
27461 | Do you realise what it means to me?" |
27461 | Do you really mean to tell me that you did not know Paul was in France?" |
27461 | Do you remember those rooms, Paul?" |
27461 | Do you remember when I quoted Portia to you? |
27461 | Do you return to London to- night?" |
27461 | Do you smoke, Flamby?" |
27461 | Do you think black suits her?" |
27461 | Do you think preaching can do me any good? |
27461 | Do you want any more tea?" |
27461 | Do you write often to Don?" |
27461 | Does the idea of a cocktail appeal to you? |
27461 | For instance, where on earth did you get hold of that idea about the initiation of Christ by the Essenes at Lake Moeris in Egypt?" |
27461 | From the arid and dusty path below I observed the siphon on your table----""And you determined to become a trespasser?" |
27461 | Had his attitude toward Flamby changed? |
27461 | Had this discovery hurt him? |
27461 | Has Don been telling you one of his ridiculous stories?" |
27461 | Has n''t she beautiful hair, Don? |
27461 | Has your furniture arrived, dear?" |
27461 | Have we not a Purgatory?" |
27461 | Have you advocated the destruction of the Papal power?" |
27461 | Have you considered, Mr. Mario, that whatever a man''s belief may be, he can do no more than to be true to himself?" |
27461 | Have you room?" |
27461 | Have you_ no_ brains? |
27461 | Having proceeded to a discreet distance--"What is the price of the dress, please?" |
27461 | He has leave?" |
27461 | He just muddles me up with a lot of figures----""You have seen him, then?" |
27461 | How and why? |
27461 | How could you expect him to know?" |
27461 | How is Paul progressing with the book, Yvonne?" |
27461 | How many inches are you round the waist?" |
27461 | However did you manage it?" |
27461 | I believe I told you that Sergeant Duveen had been degraded, but had afterwards recovered his stripes?" |
27461 | I have spoken of this to you, Yvonne?" |
27461 | I suppose you recognise that you are now the outstanding figure of the War and consequently of the world? |
27461 | I wonder if the girl suspects that her father was not what he seemed? |
27461 | If no man be worthy of hell, why should his Holiness abandon sinful Germany? |
27461 | If nothing was hidden from this wonderful man, why did he omit to explain the mystery of unrequited love? |
27461 | If we confounded the errors of the follower with the message of the Master must not the Messianic tradition have died with Judas?" |
27461 | If we here in England are firm in our spiritual faith, why are the churches empty at such an hour as this and the salons of the crystal- gazers full?" |
27461 | If you are the mouthpiece of the White, who is the mouthpiece of the Black? |
27461 | In short, I have been wondering if, meeting him, one would recognise him? |
27461 | In what respect did it differ now? |
27461 | In what way were you afraid?" |
27461 | In which of your works have you expressed these dissensions?" |
27461 | Is Chauvin''s attachment to the French lady of a Platonic nature, Captain Courtier?" |
27461 | Is Rome open to consider such a claim?" |
27461 | Is it not strange that this scene should recur to me to- night?" |
27461 | Is n''t that good enough?" |
27461 | Is that old Odin I can hear barking?" |
27461 | Is this to be her reward for years of faithful love? |
27461 | It was, then, offended_ amour propre_ which had prompted him to hand over to Nevin, his solicitor, this sacred charge entrusted to him by Don? |
27461 | Loneliness must be very terrible, and there is really no such thing as a girl friend after school days, is there? |
27461 | Mario?" |
27461 | May I ask if you are one of my neighbours?" |
27461 | May I call you Flamby? |
27461 | May I count upon the pleasure of your company at dinner to- night?" |
27461 | May I hope that it is housed at Babylon Hall?" |
27461 | May I take your hat off, dear?" |
27461 | No cab?" |
27461 | No soul could sink thus low whilst another mourned it; and was there a man so vile that no woman loved him? |
27461 | Now I suppose you want to know what the special purpose was?" |
27461 | Now, how about the furniture of What''s- the- name Cottage?" |
27461 | Now, tell me frankly, have you any friends of whom Don would disapprove?" |
27461 | Of what?" |
27461 | Or are the gaudy hue of my hair and the yeoman proportions of my shape responsible for the idea?" |
27461 | Outside the sacred colleges of the Egyptian priesthood what was known in those days of the truth underlying the symbols, Isis, Osiris and Amen- Râ?" |
27461 | Presently:"I suppose you are sometimes hard up?" |
27461 | Really? |
27461 | See that? |
27461 | Shall I call here for you? |
27461 | Shall we go to- night? |
27461 | So I am worried about Paul, because if he is not a true initiate, where did he learn the things that are in_ The Gates_?" |
27461 | So you are out of it?" |
27461 | So your mother read these stories? |
27461 | Surely I replied?" |
27461 | Surely you love these nights of the early moon?" |
27461 | That his wife should die? |
27461 | The name of Babylon invariably conjures up strange pictures of pagan feasts, do n''t you find? |
27461 | The pension has been finally settled between Mr. Nevin and the Government people, and it dates from the time----""Of dad''s death? |
27461 | The point is, can you tell us why, and indicate a remedy?" |
27461 | The train arrived in due course; cameras and note- books appeared; and people inquired"Is it Sir Douglas Haig they are expecting?" |
27461 | Then she is in London?" |
27461 | Then:"Whose wife stole the key of the poor- box?" |
27461 | There are records? |
27461 | There is n''t any hurry, is there, Don?" |
27461 | There is no hurry to get your own place ready, is there? |
27461 | There is something wrong about it, surely, Don?" |
27461 | Thessaly?" |
27461 | Thessaly?" |
27461 | Thessaly?" |
27461 | They entered the cab, and as it moved off,"What is Liberty''s?" |
27461 | To every official he meets he says:"This train_ is_ the Folkestone train?" |
27461 | Was it all a great delusion?--or were our fathers wise in their simplicity? |
27461 | Was n''t that nice?" |
27461 | Was your mother pretty? |
27461 | Were there no stories?" |
27461 | What are you doing?" |
27461 | What did Lady James say to Flamby?" |
27461 | What did she care? |
27461 | What did she desire?--that Paul should love her? |
27461 | What did you call her, Don?" |
27461 | What do the Egyptologists know of the message of Egypt? |
27461 | What do you think of your new and wonderful neighbour?" |
27461 | What has led you to believe that Paul thinks ill of you, and why does it worry you that I think him incapable of such a thing?" |
27461 | What have you been reading?" |
27461 | What have_ I_ said?" |
27461 | What hope do you extend to the sorrowing widow of a man who has died unrepentant and full of sin? |
27461 | What if he should beckon men, like a vaporous will- o''-the- wisp, out into a morass of error wherein their souls should perish? |
27461 | What is his New Gospel, Don?" |
27461 | What man of honour would tear open a letter addressed to another, though he suspected it to contain his death- warrant? |
27461 | What was the explanation of this? |
27461 | What was the nature of the change? |
27461 | What woman, in like case, would hesitate to steam it? |
27461 | What would become of the poor churchman?" |
27461 | Whatever can have induced you to trust yourself in that ruffian''s studio?" |
27461 | Whatever did he mean by_ hahsma_?" |
27461 | When I have lighted my pipe may I go out?" |
27461 | When does he return?" |
27461 | When it leaked out that Lady James knew him well and that Sir Jacques frequently dined at Babylon Hall, Miss Kingsbury said,"Lady_ James_? |
27461 | Where can she have acquired her art?" |
27461 | Where does it begin and whither does it lead?" |
27461 | Where is the waiter?" |
27461 | Where is your evidence that this generation is ready for the''blinding light of truth''? |
27461 | Where last did we meet-- where first? |
27461 | Where''s the flaw, kid?" |
27461 | Wherein does your own reside? |
27461 | Who had spoken them-- now, and once before? |
27461 | Who has said such a thing? |
27461 | Who is she?" |
27461 | Who resides at that imposing mansion, Paul?" |
27461 | Why do n''t you get in a panic when Don comes alone? |
27461 | Why do n''t you go and fight like he did?" |
27461 | Why is it war? |
27461 | Why not? |
27461 | Why should an innocent baby be born with the diseases and deformities of it''s parents? |
27461 | Why should some be born blind?'' |
27461 | Why was he spared when others, seemingly more worthy, suffered? |
27461 | Why? |
27461 | Why?" |
27461 | Will that be enough?" |
27461 | Will you do that, Flamby? |
27461 | Will you find out all about her, Paul, and let me know if we can arrange for her to study properly?" |
27461 | Will you give the treatment a trial?" |
27461 | Will you help yourself or shall I pour out until you say''When''?" |
27461 | Will you promise?" |
27461 | Will you remember?" |
27461 | Would he attack you openly, or would he remain-- the Whisperer? |
27461 | Would you like a drink? |
27461 | You did not know I was away?" |
27461 | You do not feel that this task which I have taken up has made a gulf between us?" |
27461 | You enjoy the use of the telephone, which is in the reading- room over the main entrance-- and what more could one desire?" |
27461 | You have abandoned the idea of casting your book in the form of a romance?" |
27461 | You have got the affairs well in hand now?" |
27461 | You know, do n''t you? |
27461 | You look a bit cheap-- been gassed?" |
27461 | You never doubt me, do you?" |
27461 | You recognise that you are about to take up a mighty weapon?" |
27461 | You remember, no doubt?" |
27461 | You saw the set of drawings I did for_ The Courier_?" |
27461 | You seem... Who are you? |
27461 | You think it has succeeded?" |
27461 | You think that the churches have failed?" |
27461 | You think the churches will oppose me?" |
27461 | You understand? |
27461 | You understand?" |
27461 | You were also, I think, a friend of my late uncle?" |
27461 | You will wait here, then, Don? |
27461 | You would not have us treat our women as the Moslems do?" |
27461 | Your fire is laid, Flamby; may I light it?" |
27461 | cried Don, turning to her--"why not?" |
27461 | cried Don--"furniture? |
27461 | cried Don--"have you got old Crozier''s Lorenzo down here? |
27461 | cried Flamby--"what time will you come?" |
27461 | he cried--"is that Portia?" |
27461 | inquired the spirit voice, and finally:"When are they going to burn you?" |
27461 | she said wistfully,"or are you just trying to be kind?" |
27461 | who that has heard it can forget the call, soft and mournful, of the palm- groves of Mitrahîna? |
27461 | why not?" |
14145 | ''And did she carry out her intention, sir? 14145 ''Are all these places nearer to you than Alton?'' |
14145 | ''Are there chemists in the Garden House, in Tidborough, in Chovensbury?'' 14145 ''Are you known in Alton?'' |
14145 | ''Are you known in all these places I have mentioned?'' 14145 ''Do you see him in this court?'' |
14145 | ''Do you see, Hapgood? 14145 ''Do you shop there once in a month, once in six months?'' |
14145 | ''Flight-- flight-- Look here--''''Is it the fact?'' |
14145 | ''How''s the wife?'' 14145 ''Is it the fact that in these proceedings the deceased woman is named as corespondent?'' |
14145 | ''Look here--''''Was she dismissed because your wife suspected you of relations with her?'' |
14145 | ''Look here--''''Where then?'' |
14145 | ''Look_ here_--''All at sea again, d''you see? 14145 ''Not attending the office? |
14145 | ''Pray, where, then, is this straw hat to clean which you obtained the oxalic acid? 14145 ''Was he, indeed?'' |
14145 | ''What date did the deceased leave your wife''s employment?'' 14145 ''What do you think of that? |
14145 | ''What, not still laid up, is he?'' 14145 ''You do n''t appear to be wearing it?'' |
14145 | A holiday? 14145 Absolutely nothing wrong with you?" |
14145 | Again, have you, though? 14145 Ah, well, what does it matter? |
14145 | All wrong? 14145 Am I still to remember that you held out partnership to me?" |
14145 | An invitation? 14145 And Sabre,"said Lord Tybar,"what the devil does it matter what a bloated robber minds, anyway? |
14145 | And how''s Mabel? |
14145 | And what about you, Marko? 14145 And, of course,"said Nona,"you always remember you''re married, do n''t you?" |
14145 | Any complaints? |
14145 | Anything for me, Pirrip? |
14145 | Anything wrong about that? 14145 Anything you want me about?" |
14145 | Are you legally represented? |
14145 | Are you, Nona? |
14145 | Back goes the mane and in again like a flash:''Ah, you wanted to get out of it? 14145 Bagshaw''s late?" |
14145 | Been reading anything lately? 14145 Buddha to Sabre:''Have you a solicitor in the court, Sabre?'' |
14145 | Buddha, like a talking idol discovering an infidel in his temple,''Who are you, sir?'' 14145 But what did you say at the office? |
14145 | But whatever will Mr. Fortune think? |
14145 | But why call him_ anything_? |
14145 | But, Mabel-- what will her people think? |
14145 | But, Mark, what do you mean, you ca n''t stick''den''? |
14145 | But, Puggo, you do n''t know Sabre, do you? |
14145 | Ca n''t you imagine him, Marko? |
14145 | Characteristic, eh? 14145 Cigarette? |
14145 | Come to see it? 14145 D''you think it''s the same at Tidborough?" |
14145 | Dash it, does he suppose I''ve got designs on the girl? |
14145 | Dash it, that''s not quite playing the game, is it? |
14145 | Declared war? |
14145 | Did one entry reveal the fact that on one occasion this Sabre spent an entire night there? 14145 Did you happen to hear my sighs?" |
14145 | Did you see me go in? 14145 Do you dislike Twyning?" |
14145 | Do you, though? 14145 Effie has killed herself and her child-- now what?" |
14145 | Effie, do you love God? |
14145 | Eh, did n''t you read that? |
14145 | Eh, what in the kitchen, dear? |
14145 | Eh? 14145 Eh? |
14145 | Eh? 14145 Eh? |
14145 | Eh? 14145 Eh?" |
14145 | Eh?... 14145 For me? |
14145 | Found dead? 14145 Found dead? |
14145 | Get on? 14145 Had any illnesses?" |
14145 | Harold be working in your room, eh? |
14145 | Have you an account with us, sir? |
14145 | Have you forgotten something? |
14145 | Have you, Nona? |
14145 | He said''Things...? 14145 His wife said,''You''re determined?'' |
14145 | How came she first to leave his house? 14145 How ever did you know? |
14145 | How long is it since I have seen you, Nona? |
14145 | How many years were you thinking of? |
14145 | How old are you? |
14145 | How on earth could I have known it was coming? |
14145 | Hullo, old man, heard the latest? 14145 Hullo, sewing? |
14145 | Hullo? |
14145 | I asked him,''What reasons, Sabre?'' 14145 I said to him,''What''s the remedy, Sabre?'' |
14145 | I said, a tiny bit sharply-- I was getting a bit on edge, you know-- I said,''Well, who''s asked you to? 14145 I said,''Why the devil have n''t you, then?'' |
14145 | I say, Mabel, what''s the point of all this, exactly? |
14145 | I say, are n''t I the limit, gassing away like this? 14145 I say, are n''t you ever going to move?" |
14145 | I say, what''s happened to that small wood axe? 14145 I say, you wo n''t say anything to Jonah, of course?" |
14145 | I suppose we''re going to start some time? |
14145 | In the Bible? |
14145 | In the dark? |
14145 | Inquest? 14145 Inquest? |
14145 | Is it likely? 14145 Is n''t that terrific? |
14145 | Is she? |
14145 | Is the regiment going? |
14145 | Is the witness Sabre in attendance? |
14145 | Just off? 14145 Lunch... wash your hands, sir?" |
14145 | Name? |
14145 | No blight this year, eh? |
14145 | No corpses to- day? |
14145 | No; is there? |
14145 | Nona, you look ill. You sound ill. What''s up? 14145 Oh, what does it matter what he thinks? |
14145 | Oh, what is it you want to say, Marko? |
14145 | Oh, yes, waiting for your wife, were you? |
14145 | Perhaps you knew it was coming? |
14145 | Pretty fierce, eh? 14145 Pretty rotten of old Fortune, do n''t you think?" |
14145 | Really? 14145 Sabre, why the hell are n''t people here told that? |
14145 | Sabre,inquired Mr. Fortune,"you get on well with Twyning, I trust?" |
14145 | Satisfied? 14145 See that?" |
14145 | Shall you, by Jove? 14145 She''s seeing you off, I suppose?" |
14145 | Shortness of breath? |
14145 | Sorry, old girl, what was it? 14145 Splendid? |
14145 | Sure? 14145 Take it? |
14145 | That that book? |
14145 | That? 14145 The Garden Home? |
14145 | Thought of what? |
14145 | Tremendous, eh? |
14145 | War? |
14145 | Was it about this partnership business? |
14145 | Was it, really? 14145 We are rather beautiful up here, do n''t you think? |
14145 | Well, about my word''elegant'',Nona was going on,"and why it is mine-- weren''t you asking?" |
14145 | Well, he may as well get the hang of the whole business, may n''t he? 14145 Well, man alive, I''m bound to know, are n''t I?" |
14145 | Well, she was saying''Yes?'' 14145 Well, suppose they did?" |
14145 | Well, then? |
14145 | Well, then? |
14145 | Well, what about Scotland? |
14145 | Well, what do you expect? 14145 Well, why in heaven''s name should n''t High Jinks buy a trumpery, gee- gaw parasol?" |
14145 | Well, why not? |
14145 | What about having some tea somewhere? |
14145 | What are you going to do? |
14145 | What are you laughing at? |
14145 | What book? |
14145 | What did she tell me? 14145 What do you mean, Nona,''And then''?" |
14145 | What do you mean-- gaiters? |
14145 | What do you think of me above the line, my boy? |
14145 | What for? |
14145 | What is it you are saying? |
14145 | What kind of thing? |
14145 | What on earth''s the difference? |
14145 | What paper? |
14145 | What partnership business? |
14145 | What the devil''s that? |
14145 | What the devil''s that? |
14145 | What time''s lunch? 14145 What was he coming up to? |
14145 | What will all the bedrooms be used for then? |
14145 | What''s old Bright going to do with her? |
14145 | What''s the argument? 14145 What, Marko?" |
14145 | What, like hearing how unsatisfactory I am? |
14145 | What, sitting there with a knee like a muffin? 14145 What? |
14145 | Whatever do you want it for all of a sudden? |
14145 | Whatever for? |
14145 | Whatever had you been to see him about? |
14145 | Whatever''s the joke of it? 14145 Whatever''s the joke of it?" |
14145 | When is it likely to be? |
14145 | When will that be? |
14145 | Where do you live, Nona? |
14145 | Where_ is_ Papa? |
14145 | Who the dickens--? 14145 Whom do you think I met yesterday? |
14145 | Why call him_ anything_? |
14145 | Why did n''t he tell them so? |
14145 | Why do you? |
14145 | Why does she call you''Marko''? |
14145 | Why have n''t you been up? |
14145 | Why, are n''t you going to make them pay, Mabel? |
14145 | Whyeveragain!--"May I see it?" |
14145 | Will you come and sit here? |
14145 | Yes, did n''t he? 14145 Yes, it makes you think, does n''t it?" |
14145 | Yes, why yours? |
14145 | Yes? |
14145 | You did n''t expect me to give her a hard punch in the eye, did you? |
14145 | You got my letter? |
14145 | You have n''t given her a magazine, have you? |
14145 | You saw him, Nona? |
14145 | You''ll come up and see us often, now you know we''re back, wo n''t you? 14145 You''re pretty sure there''s going to be a war, are n''t you?" |
14145 | You''ve been paying their contribution? |
14145 | You_ want_ me to? |
14145 | Your hard- earned leave, eh? 14145 Your peg? |
14145 | _ Do n''t_ you? 14145 ''And you saw the deceased but not the man Sabre?'' 14145 ''Do you know what I am, Hapgood?'' 14145 ''Do you tell me holiday, sir? 14145 ''Fortune, East and Sabre''... Never heard of them? 14145 ''Hapgood, Hapgood, do you see this vile, obscene word here? 14145 ''I say,''old Sabre says,''Mistress not back yet, is she?'' 14145 ''Oh, it''s Mr. Hapgood, is n''t it? 14145 ''Sufficient,''says Humpo,''that it was legal business of a deeply grave nature implicating the deceased and the man Sabre?'' 14145 ''Then it_ was_ obtained for the purpose of your holiday?'' 14145 ''Was he, indeed? 14145 ''We may take that, may we, Doctor?'' 14145 ''What is it, Effie?'' 14145 ''Where''s that making to, Hapgood?'' 14145 ''You never forget you''re married, do you?'' 14145 ''You puzzle, do n''t you, Marko?'' 14145 ''You say this woman has a claim on us?'' 14145 ''You''ll stay to lunch? 14145 A final question:''Have you in your own mind suspicions of the identity of this unhappy woman''s betrayer?'' 14145 A rattle would not amuse him, and Mrs. Toller taking a house beyond her means did not amuse him; but why on earth should he--? 14145 A sort of companion, are n''t they called? 14145 A vile, hideous, sordid intrigue with a girl employed in his own house? 14145 About High Jinks and Low Jinks? 14145 After about two years, slaps in his tongue and demands,''Come, sir, for what purpose did you buy this oxalic acid?'' 14145 After all, telling me about his hat, what did it prove? 14145 After all, what did it really matter that he was not able to getin it"? |
14145 | After that big meeting in the Corn exchange the other day?" |
14145 | After this, after the war had done this, how was he to go on enduring the war and refused part in it? |
14145 | Ah, it struck him then as peculiar, this sitting down? |
14145 | Ah, sat down, did he? |
14145 | Air- raid bomb fallen on the house and everybody dead? |
14145 | All of you?" |
14145 | All right, eh?" |
14145 | All that chain of circumstances, eh? |
14145 | An unspeakable, beastly thing like that? |
14145 | And Mabel; was n''t she proud? |
14145 | And all your plans-- do you remember telling me all your plans? |
14145 | And her baby? |
14145 | And his wife said,''Mark, what_ can_ there be for Mr. Hapgood to see up there? |
14145 | And how the devil can she?--Nona, with Tybar, flotsam? |
14145 | And so do you, do n''t you, dear?" |
14145 | And some one would say,''Well, what does he mean, you ass?'' |
14145 | And that''s what they want to be given-- the chance to earn the right to things, see? |
14145 | And then he thought,"Why should she? |
14145 | And then saying,''How are you?'' |
14145 | And this looked like, when you told me-- well, like dissatisfaction since, see? |
14145 | And to what end? |
14145 | And when it is, how can you turn round and rage? |
14145 | And why not? |
14145 | And you''ve got no family, have you, old man?" |
14145 | Any particular occasion? |
14145 | Anything about the Pinks?" |
14145 | Anything odd about purchaser''s manner? |
14145 | Are n''t their wives young, strong, able to take care of themselves? |
14145 | Are n''t they a part of life? |
14145 | Are n''t you awfully sorry about it, Mabel?" |
14145 | Are they going to follow any of these politicians who will have betrayed them? |
14145 | Are they going to lynch these bloody politicians who have n''t told them they''ve got to fight for their lives? |
14145 | Are they going to turn around and say they never knew it so they''ll be damned if they''ll fight for their lives? |
14145 | Are you a friend of his?'' |
14145 | Are you content, Marko? |
14145 | Are you fit?" |
14145 | Are you going to this show to- morrow?" |
14145 | Are you still determined?'' |
14145 | As a matter of fact, I was making up my mind--""Whether to come in and see me?" |
14145 | As if perhaps the purchaser was under a strain? |
14145 | As they went down he asked her,"Who''s that with him in the car?" |
14145 | Avoid confusion, do n''t you agree, Sabre?" |
14145 | But a bit sudden, was n''t it? |
14145 | But after all, look at the thing, eh? |
14145 | But after all, what the dickens sort of woman would be? |
14145 | But are n''t lots happy? |
14145 | But are they?" |
14145 | But he thought,"Why should she be? |
14145 | But he thought,"Why should she?" |
14145 | But he was thinking,"That''s a fourth question: Why did you say,''Oh, Marko, do write to me''? |
14145 | But if she were never going to see any of these stupid little things that appealed to him--? |
14145 | But it''s rather wonderful, is n''t it? |
14145 | But love,_ love_, you know what love is, do n''t you? |
14145 | But what would the years bring...? |
14145 | But what? |
14145 | But why have you been having a frightful struggle over it with your mother if she''s taken to her so?" |
14145 | But why not?" |
14145 | But you, Nona? |
14145 | But-- dashed funny-- I mentioned something about that appalling speech that chap made in that blasphemy case yesterday.... Eh? |
14145 | CHAPTER III I One nature? |
14145 | CHAPTER V I Hapgood said:"Did I say to you last time, after that Brighton business, that the man had crashed, that the roof had fallen in on him? |
14145 | Ca n''t I get out of this?" |
14145 | Ca n''t you say anything except''Found dead''? |
14145 | Ca n''t you see they''re pressing us?" |
14145 | Ca n''t you tell me what you mean, found dead? |
14145 | Ca n''t you_ read_?... |
14145 | Ca n''t you_ see_ my hand?" |
14145 | Can he hear us? |
14145 | Can you get me a commission? |
14145 | Can you say things are n''t tightening up? |
14145 | Can you tell me, if you please, approximately the age of the child-- approximately, but as near as you possibly can, Doctor?'' |
14145 | Curse them, Sabre-- what do they know about it? |
14145 | D''you call that right?" |
14145 | D''you know what''s happening to me? |
14145 | D''you remember my telling you years-- oh, years ago-- that he looked like a chap who''d lost something and was wondering where he''d put it? |
14145 | Dashed funny that, do n''t you think?" |
14145 | Dead? |
14145 | Devilish graceful, are n''t I? |
14145 | Did I say that? |
14145 | Did it pause in its preparations to peer and peep and shudder? |
14145 | Did it shrink? |
14145 | Did she clean your straw hat for you?'' |
14145 | Did they give you a paper this time, old man?" |
14145 | Did they mean to say they could n''t see in her face what he saw in her face? |
14145 | Did you get my letter? |
14145 | Did you make any preparations for it, any little purchases?'' |
14145 | Did you recognize my voice calling my wife? |
14145 | Do n''t you agree, old man?" |
14145 | Do n''t you call that funny?" |
14145 | Do n''t you hate me for coming in here like this?" |
14145 | Do n''t you know what an ultimatum is?" |
14145 | Do n''t you really?" |
14145 | Do n''t you see? |
14145 | Do n''t you think she might have one of those magazines to read? |
14145 | Do you get me? |
14145 | Do you get my trouble? |
14145 | Do you hear? |
14145 | Do you know to whom it was addressed?" |
14145 | Do you know what I am, Hapgood--?'' |
14145 | Do you know what I did? |
14145 | Do you know what I''m going to do?" |
14145 | Do you mind?" |
14145 | Do you often go shopping in Alton?'' |
14145 | Do you read the articles in the reviews and the quarterlies? |
14145 | Do you remember what a jolly tea we had that day? |
14145 | Do you say it''s not absolutely astounding? |
14145 | Do you see what they call me, Hapgood? |
14145 | Do you see? |
14145 | Do you suppose I ca n''t see that?" |
14145 | Do you suppose a man who lives on meat is going to find sustenance in bread and milk? |
14145 | Do you suppose any man who''s been party to this betrayal is going to be found big enough to run a war? |
14145 | Do you suppose it does n''t seem funny to them that my husband is never to be seen, never comes near the place, never meets their husbands? |
14145 | Do you talk them out with Mabel?" |
14145 | Do you think he can get them put on? |
14145 | Does Mabel think you''re awful?" |
14145 | Does he see him in court? |
14145 | Does it seem terribly unconventional, improper, to you, shut up with me in your office?" |
14145 | Effie? |
14145 | Eh? |
14145 | Eh? |
14145 | Eh? |
14145 | Eh? |
14145 | Eh?" |
14145 | Eh?" |
14145 | Eh?... |
14145 | Embroidery?" |
14145 | Failure? |
14145 | Failure? |
14145 | For what purpose?'' |
14145 | Fortune?" |
14145 | Found dead? |
14145 | Found dead? |
14145 | Found dead? |
14145 | Found dead? |
14145 | Found dead? |
14145 | Found dead? |
14145 | Friday? |
14145 | From the door Sabre put a question in his turn:"When are you going to make this change with Twyning?" |
14145 | Funny chap... nice chap...."What did he say the blasphemy man meant? |
14145 | Fussing over me, d''you see? |
14145 | Goo''God, ca n''t you_ tell_ me something? |
14145 | Good God, man, was that to be refused? |
14145 | Good God, were we to say that?'' |
14145 | Got any kippers? |
14145 | Had anything happened? |
14145 | Had he been round the Garden Home since her return? |
14145 | Had he ever had occasion in the past, in earlier days, to remonstrate with Sabre concerning attitude towards girl? |
14145 | Had he forgotten? |
14145 | Had she gone out of her mind? |
14145 | Half- past one? |
14145 | Hapgood?'' |
14145 | Happiness? |
14145 | Harold smiled assent to this tribute, and Sabre said,"I suppose we shall go on much as before?" |
14145 | Has he gone away?'' |
14145 | Has old Bag-- has Boom Bagshaw told you people up at the church what absolutely magnificent reading the Psalms are just now, in this war?" |
14145 | Have a drink?" |
14145 | Have n''t you been making High and Low pay their share of the stamps all this time?" |
14145 | Have n''t you got one foot in the grave or something?" |
14145 | Have you any idea how this thing hooks on?" |
14145 | Have you brought an evening paper? |
14145 | Have you ever asked yourself why? |
14145 | Have you ever looked it up in the dictionary? |
14145 | Have you ever seen a woman unpicking a bit of sewing? |
14145 | Have you nothing better than,"Look here"? |
14145 | Have you seen to- day''s papers? |
14145 | Have you thought what it may develop into? |
14145 | He asked her,"What do you mean--''not that that matters''?" |
14145 | He asked them,''Did he say anything at the last? |
14145 | He capable of a beastly thing like that? |
14145 | He could be imagined assembling the parts, dragging them in, checking them over, slamming the door, and--"How on earth? |
14145 | He gazed at them sulkily, put them aside, drew another plate before him, and remarked to Mabel:"You know we are moving into the vicarage to- morrow? |
14145 | He glanced about"Who on earth''s left those fearful old slippers there?" |
14145 | He got up vigorously and strode into the morning room:"Well, how was the Garden Home looking?" |
14145 | He had not the remotest idea-- It was a jolly evening.... could Enamel be that word in e and l? |
14145 | He looked so genuinely rueful and abashed that Sabre laughed; and then said to Nona,"Why is elegant''yours'', Lady Tybar?" |
14145 | He said delightedly,"Pretty good, eh? |
14145 | He said flatly,"_ Why_ are you? |
14145 | He said in an odd, thick voice,"Oh, Sabre, Sabre, have you heard?" |
14145 | He said pleasedly,"Of course you can, ca n''t you? |
14145 | He said rather sharply,"Yes, but_ why_? |
14145 | He said"Who? |
14145 | He said,"Do you know what this seems to me? |
14145 | He said,"I got knocked out, did n''t I?" |
14145 | He said,"Represented? |
14145 | He said,"Shall I take them out of the basket?" |
14145 | He said,"To- morrow? |
14145 | He said,"What did some one say to me about it being good- by to the war for me?" |
14145 | He shot ahead and a line came into his mind:"_ Was this the face that launched a thousand ships_?" |
14145 | He thought,"But_ is_ she happy? |
14145 | He thought,"Damn it, why should n''t she? |
14145 | He thought,"How on earth did she know?" |
14145 | He thought,"I wonder if they''re all the same, those three-- belief, faith, hope? |
14145 | He thought,"Now what on earth is this leading up to?" |
14145 | He thought,"Smack in the eye for you, was it? |
14145 | He thought,"Well, what am I coming home to?" |
14145 | He thought,"Well, why is it that children''s faces are always happy? |
14145 | He thought,"Why should she love that sort of tripe-- gossip?" |
14145 | He thought,"Why should there be anything to make me feel depressed? |
14145 | He to be guilty of a thing like that? |
14145 | He tried to say,"What of it?" |
14145 | Heard from her?'' |
14145 | Her comment when, on the eve of his attempt, he rather diffidently acquainted her with his intention, was,"Do you really think you ought to?" |
14145 | Her measure of a man or of a woman was, Were they of her class? |
14145 | High Jinks and Low Jinks, what?" |
14145 | His first comment was,"They''ll want references, I suppose, sir?" |
14145 | His wife to believe that? |
14145 | His wife? |
14145 | How about that for an idea?" |
14145 | How are you, Mark? |
14145 | How are you? |
14145 | How are you? |
14145 | How can you be flotsam-- the life you''ve-- taken?" |
14145 | How can you expect to move, stooping like that?" |
14145 | How can you work out the solution when you do n''t know what the solution is?" |
14145 | How can you work towards a purpose if you do n''t know what it is?" |
14145 | How can you? |
14145 | How could it sting her? |
14145 | How could she mind? |
14145 | How do we keep behind? |
14145 | How ever can it? |
14145 | How goes it, old man? |
14145 | How goes it? |
14145 | How in pity was she to take this frightful step? |
14145 | How jolly fine, eh? |
14145 | How long had he been standing at the foot of the huge bed-- the biggest bed he had ever seen-- and what was there to watch? |
14145 | How long have you had this? |
14145 | How many do you suppose could hold them up? |
14145 | How old are you, Sabre?" |
14145 | How on earth could he go to bed, be hoggishly sleeping, while those chaps were marching out? |
14145 | How on earth did you get that armlet?" |
14145 | How was it?" |
14145 | How''re things with you?" |
14145 | How''s that for an effort, eh? |
14145 | How''s the old bike? |
14145 | However can it be? |
14145 | However did I manage to hurt Low Jinks''s knee?" |
14145 | Hullo, are you off?'' |
14145 | I always can see the other side of a case, and you know, that''s absolutely fatal--"She said gently,"Fatal to what, Marko?" |
14145 | I believe you''re asked''Ready?'' |
14145 | I do n''t think you saw me, did you, old man?" |
14145 | I got out of bed the wrong side this morning, did n''t I?" |
14145 | I guilty of that? |
14145 | I hardly ever get off nowadays and when I do!--Why do n''t you stop me?" |
14145 | I have n''t asked any questions, have I?'' |
14145 | I know he knew she was telling me, and his eyes-- you know that mocking kind of look they used to have? |
14145 | I mean to say-- What about Scotland?" |
14145 | I might almost have heard her choose''Marko or Tybar? |
14145 | I reminded him how he used to, and he laughed and said,''Yes; did I? |
14145 | I said to him, taking it as the easiest way of breaking my news, I said to him,''You know your wife''s divorced you, old man?'' |
14145 | I said''flotsam'', did n''t I? |
14145 | I said,''How can you be flotsam, the life you''ve-- taken?'' |
14145 | I said,''How can you be flotsam?'' |
14145 | I said,''I suppose she''s making no end of a fuss over you now, hero of the war, and all that sort of thing?'' |
14145 | I say, Hapgood, you will stay to lunch, wo n''t you?'' |
14145 | I say, Otway, do you remember predicting this nearly two years ago? |
14145 | I say, did you paint my peg? |
14145 | I say, is your father about? |
14145 | I say, you''re glad I''m in, are n''t you? |
14145 | I say_ if_ there is n''t.... Has he been through any trouble, any kind of strain? |
14145 | I tell you what, we must have a talk about reading one day, shall we? |
14145 | I think we decided to call him Harold, eh, Twyning? |
14145 | I thought you were in France?" |
14145 | I wish you''d like to see how the book''s getting on; would you?" |
14145 | I wonder-- are we? |
14145 | I''m a pestilent survivor of the feudal system, are n''t I, Nona?" |
14145 | I''ve been telling Harold what a frightfully smart man you are, have n''t I, Harold?" |
14145 | I--''"She said,''Do you want my answer to that? |
14145 | III"After lunch I said,''Well, now, old man, what about going up to this room of yours and having a look at this monumental history?'' |
14145 | In June,"Why are n''t you in khaki?" |
14145 | In its obvious aspect it was also related to the"Why are n''t you in khaki?" |
14145 | Inquest? |
14145 | Inquest?" |
14145 | Into what?" |
14145 | Is anything wrong?" |
14145 | Is it all what it appears between them? |
14145 | Is it at your house?'' |
14145 | Is it in here?" |
14145 | Is it something that religion ought to give, but does n''t? |
14145 | Is it that a child knows no limitation to hope? |
14145 | Is it the fact that these papers were served on you at Brighton on the occasion of your flight?'' |
14145 | Is it the fact that your wife has instituted divorce proceedings against you?'' |
14145 | Is n''t he about your age?" |
14145 | Is n''t it tremendous? |
14145 | Is n''t that any different?" |
14145 | Is n''t that so, Sabre? |
14145 | Is n''t that so? |
14145 | Is n''t there something about the poor being always with us?" |
14145 | Is n''t this fine and is n''t it like him? |
14145 | Is n''t this ripping? |
14145 | Is that right, sir?'' |
14145 | Is that the trouble? |
14145 | Is that what you refer to as''this partnership business''?" |
14145 | Is that where the old trout basks? |
14145 | Is that your cab, sir? |
14145 | Is your dance quite finished, Tony? |
14145 | It was forever,"Miss Bright, I think you ought to be in the morning room, ought n''t you?" |
14145 | It was his own life he was coming down, eagerly jumping down, into.--Well, here he was, passing those very steps, and whose life was he living? |
14145 | It was on the tip of his tongue to say,"Why niggle about the thing?" |
14145 | It''s pretty fierce, is n''t it? |
14145 | It''s terrible, is n''t it, both of them like that? |
14145 | Jinks, eh? |
14145 | Jolly funny, eh?" |
14145 | Just because he could not say,"Well, how was the Garden Home looking?" |
14145 | Keb, sir?" |
14145 | Keb, sir?" |
14145 | Keb? |
14145 | Keb? |
14145 | Keb? |
14145 | Keb? |
14145 | Let''s, shall we?" |
14145 | Light? |
14145 | Light?" |
14145 | Look here, how are you going to know when it comes? |
14145 | Look here--''"''Did she leave of her own wish or was she dismissed?'' |
14145 | Looking for what? |
14145 | Love? |
14145 | Mabel did what Sabre called"flew up"; and at the summit of her flight up inquired,"Suppose some one called?" |
14145 | Mabel would say,"Whyever should you?" |
14145 | Mabel''s? |
14145 | Mabel? |
14145 | Man,''he said,''what can you see already? |
14145 | Many in Great Britain tried to say,"What of it?" |
14145 | May I inquire why you should have supposed I had changed my mind?" |
14145 | Merely not beating your wife, and your wife not drinking or running up debts? |
14145 | Met me with, Had I lost anything? |
14145 | Might easily have overlaid the child? |
14145 | Must he really answer? |
14145 | Must you? |
14145 | My God, sure? |
14145 | My fault, was it?" |
14145 | My wife, Mabel, think me capable of that? |
14145 | Natural, eh? |
14145 | No purchases? |
14145 | No servants, d''you see? |
14145 | Nona likes seeing you, do n''t you, Nona?" |
14145 | Nona, you wo n''t mind getting back alone? |
14145 | Nona?" |
14145 | Not bad?" |
14145 | Not down yet? |
14145 | Not had tea, have you? |
14145 | Not ill, is he?'' |
14145 | Nothing--''"''Nothing to do with it? |
14145 | Now wherever''s your old handkerchief got to? |
14145 | Now you want a bath, do n''t you? |
14145 | Oh, my God, why the hell was n''t I there?" |
14145 | Oh, old Sabre has butter with his bread all right...."Married? |
14145 | Old Fortune''s? |
14145 | Old Sabre''ll love to see you.... His wife?... |
14145 | Old man, are you ill? |
14145 | On Tuesday I will write and ask you,''Shall I come up to you?'' |
14145 | One nature? |
14145 | Only if she regretted.--Is it_ likely_?" |
14145 | Only seven:"Well, how was the Garden Home looking?" |
14145 | Or as scholastic providers? |
14145 | Or do you think them out at home? |
14145 | Or hear him talk? |
14145 | Or mockery? |
14145 | Or was that the answer to the other questions, although I never asked them?" |
14145 | Or what was I going to do? |
14145 | Oxalic acid poisoning-- was it not the case that the girl would have died in great agony? |
14145 | Painted it white, have n''t you?" |
14145 | Perch?" |
14145 | Perfectly? |
14145 | Perhaps you''d like to see one of the partners?'' |
14145 | Perhaps you''ll tell me this-- would you have told me about the letter if I had n''t seen you get it?" |
14145 | Perhaps you''ve met him, have you?'' |
14145 | Poor old Marko.... Of course it does n''t matter a horse- radish what an old trout like that thinks about your work, but it does matter, does n''t it? |
14145 | Practically took up the axe when I could n''t say,''Well, how''s the Garden Home going on?'' |
14145 | Presently he said,"Where are we?" |
14145 | Purchases? |
14145 | Rather darlings? |
14145 | Real anxiety in his"See?" |
14145 | Really? |
14145 | Recovering consciousness, or recovering his scattered wits,"What''s happened?" |
14145 | Remember that, do n''t you?'' |
14145 | Remembering that, do you still say you made no purchases for your-- holiday?'' |
14145 | SIMONDS COMPANY BOSTON, MASS., U.S.A."... O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?" |
14145 | Sabre asked,"How do you mean-- knowing better than to steal the money out of their wages?" |
14145 | Sabre dying? |
14145 | Sabre said slowly,"What do you mean-- you''above the line''?" |
14145 | Sabre said,"Any one--?" |
14145 | Sabre said,"But we would n''t be paying him, would we? |
14145 | Sabre said,"Good Lord, are you, Perch? |
14145 | Sabre said,"Heard?" |
14145 | Sabre said,"News? |
14145 | Sabre said,"What did he say?" |
14145 | Sabre said,''Yes''and the chap said very civilly,''Might I speak to you a minute, sir?'' |
14145 | Sabre spoke a little of local businesses: had she seen the new railway? |
14145 | Sabre upstairs, eh?'' |
14145 | Sabre''s position in the office? |
14145 | Sabre?" |
14145 | Sabre?" |
14145 | Sabre?'' |
14145 | See it?" |
14145 | See what I mean? |
14145 | See?" |
14145 | Shall I come with you?'' |
14145 | Shall we?" |
14145 | She answered,"Do you think that''s what life is, Marko?" |
14145 | She asked him lightly,"Pray what can we provide for you, then?" |
14145 | She asked,"Well, what are you going to do?" |
14145 | She drew a breath, steadying herself,"Why not, Marko?" |
14145 | She just said it, did n''t she?" |
14145 | She knew he was at home to be with her and she had deliberately walked off and left him...."Well, how was the Garden Home looking?" |
14145 | She said something like,''Nor you, do you?'' |
14145 | She said very sleepily,"Mark, are you laughing? |
14145 | She said,"Are n''t you glad? |
14145 | She said,"Have you been thinking, in these weeks, while you''ve been coming on, what you are going to do?" |
14145 | She said,"Oh, how can you remember?" |
14145 | She said,"Shall I write to you, Marko?" |
14145 | She said,"Was that the reason? |
14145 | She said,"Yes-- but''Ride on''--of course you''re not going in the cavalry, are you?" |
14145 | She to believe,_ she_ to believe he was that? |
14145 | Simple, is n''t it? |
14145 | So- and- So.--"She used to wake up with a start and say,"Eh, Freddie? |
14145 | Some strange sound, or had he imagined it? |
14145 | Sound, do n''t you think, old man?" |
14145 | Staying to lunch, of course? |
14145 | Suppose your idea''s correct, who''s to say what a man''s purpose in life was, let alone whether he''d fulfilled it? |
14145 | Surely there''s no harm in that?" |
14145 | Terrific? |
14145 | Thankful-- good lord-- you do n''t know-- what do you mean, I ought to be thankful?" |
14145 | That Vandyke beard, what? |
14145 | That so?" |
14145 | That would be dramatic, eh?" |
14145 | That''s a nice thing, is n''t it?" |
14145 | That''s a series''The Shell,''eh? |
14145 | That''s mysterious, Nona?" |
14145 | That''s true, though there''re precious few would take it as moderately as you; but look here, where''s this going to end? |
14145 | That''s what they want to be shown, see? |
14145 | The cabman also stopped and tuned afresh his enticing and restful rhythm:"Keb, sir? |
14145 | The drama? |
14145 | The feeling nettled him and he thought,"Why''some one''? |
14145 | The house with its inmates was becoming insupportable to you?'' |
14145 | The maid departed with the orders and Sabre commented,"Sending them off? |
14145 | The thing lacking was something that would fix it, render it permanent, establish it in the being as the heart is rooted in the body.--Something? |
14145 | The third recruit went to an officer who dabbed chests with a stethoscope and said,"Had any illnesses?" |
14145 | Then comes along that_ Titanic_ business in April, and where the hell are you with your modern conditions? |
14145 | Then he said,''Did you go to the office for me, Hapgood?'' |
14145 | Then she asked him,"Was that Doctor Anderson''s gate you came out of just now?" |
14145 | There they were; and then Sabre said, turning the letter over in his hands,''Well, what are you going to do about it?'' |
14145 | There was not a sign; there was not a sound; and what should he be doing to be alone here, blind watcher of such a finality? |
14145 | There were perhaps great friends of his own standing there, one or two men chums, no doubt?'' |
14145 | There will be strength in it for me-- to help me hold on to the rest-- to believe it--''If Winter comes-- Can Spring be far behind?''" |
14145 | To believe yourself at any moment to be touched as by a finger and asked"Ready?" |
14145 | To- morrow? |
14145 | Truly? |
14145 | Twyning said,"Hullo, still interested in the fair Effie?" |
14145 | Twyning, do you hear that?" |
14145 | Twyning, who had been speaking with an emotion in consonance with the grip of his hand, said a little blankly,"Did he? |
14145 | Used to call him Puzzlehead, remember? |
14145 | V Whose life was Nona living? |
14145 | War? |
14145 | Was I going to get the case held up so as to keep him for that? |
14145 | Was all this really happening? |
14145 | Was any one so utterly removed from affairs as not to know them as ecclesiastical furnishers? |
14145 | Was every happy married couple just what they were? |
14145 | Was he awake now to the frightful places he kept getting into and wondering if this was another and where exactly it lay? |
14145 | Was he in touch with this that belonged to him here? |
14145 | Was he sitting in some fastness, dark and infinitely remote, and trying to rid himself of this that belonged to him here? |
14145 | Was he to resign because he was doing in common humanity what no one else had the common humanity to do? |
14145 | Was he trying to get back to it, to resume habitation and possession and command? |
14145 | Was his wife mad? |
14145 | Was it possible? |
14145 | Was it real? |
14145 | Was it usual for customers to sit down when making a trifling purchase? |
14145 | Was married happiness, then, merely the negation of violent unhappiness? |
14145 | Was n''t it now?" |
14145 | Was n''t that funny?" |
14145 | Was n''t that just exactly old Sabre at school puzzling up his old nut and saying,''Yes, but I see what he means''? |
14145 | Was she crazy? |
14145 | Was that to be denied? |
14145 | Watch her? |
14145 | We must n''t expect you to give it up to business, eh, Twyning?" |
14145 | We''ve declared war? |
14145 | Well, did it really matter? |
14145 | Well, how about that book? |
14145 | Well, look here, sir, it''s_ been_ a pretty good time, has n''t it? |
14145 | Well, man alive, where do you expect me to begin? |
14145 | Well, was it really necessary to go into that? |
14145 | Well, what had I as a child that I have not as a man? |
14145 | Well, why had he come up here? |
14145 | Well, you''ve only got to look at him, have n''t you? |
14145 | Well?" |
14145 | Were they never going to end? |
14145 | Were we going to repudiate that? |
14145 | Were you rejected? |
14145 | What I''m thinking is, does he know his wife? |
14145 | What about getting your bike and going for a bit of a run first?" |
14145 | What about painting it?" |
14145 | What about?" |
14145 | What are they going to do when the war comes? |
14145 | What are we arguing about it for?" |
14145 | What are we going to fight on the Continent for-- supposing we ever do have to fight anywhere?" |
14145 | What are you doing about it?'' |
14145 | What are you laughing at?" |
14145 | What can you call him but Hopscotch?" |
14145 | What could I say? |
14145 | What d''you mean, found dead?" |
14145 | What d''you think they were? |
14145 | What did I tell you? |
14145 | What did he say?" |
14145 | What did it matter? |
14145 | What did she mean when she said she had to come? |
14145 | What did she mean? |
14145 | What did she say? |
14145 | What do I mean? |
14145 | What do you mean''wrong''?" |
14145 | What do you say, Sabre?" |
14145 | What do you suppose your wife''s thinking all this time?'' |
14145 | What do you think of that? |
14145 | What does it matter?" |
14145 | What does it_ mean_?" |
14145 | What had that kind of thing to do with him? |
14145 | What had that to do with it? |
14145 | What is it I am, Nona?" |
14145 | What is it? |
14145 | What is there in it?" |
14145 | What lay before them? |
14145 | What mock could he have? |
14145 | What more was to be said? |
14145 | What on earth do you mean-- satisfied?" |
14145 | What on earth do you think I''m going to do about it?'' |
14145 | What on earth for? |
14145 | What on earth have I got to grouse about?" |
14145 | What on earth was I going to hear? |
14145 | What on earth was he doing down at Brighton, and how were things? |
14145 | What on earth?" |
14145 | What phenomenon had suddenly possessed him? |
14145 | What reason did you give?" |
14145 | What the devil did he mean? |
14145 | What the devil now?'' |
14145 | What the devil was he thinking of? |
14145 | What the dickens was it? |
14145 | What the dickens was up? |
14145 | What they call me by implication, what my wife, Mabel, thinks I am, what I am to be pointed at and called? |
14145 | What was I saying? |
14145 | What was he doing there? |
14145 | What was he doing up here? |
14145 | What was he seeing there? |
14145 | What was he thinking there? |
14145 | What was it?" |
14145 | What was the matter? |
14145 | What was the matter? |
14145 | What was there odd about it? |
14145 | What was this leading up to? |
14145 | What was up? |
14145 | What were they all doing? |
14145 | What were they looking at? |
14145 | What will happen first? |
14145 | What will have happened meanwhile? |
14145 | What would he remember? |
14145 | What''s he going to do about not wearing clerical dress when he has to wear gaiters?" |
14145 | What''s it going to be called?" |
14145 | What''s it got to do with the Scotch? |
14145 | What''s love got to do with God?" |
14145 | What''s the good of theories when you''ve got facts? |
14145 | What''s the harm in knocking the bottom out of-- this?" |
14145 | What''s the mystery? |
14145 | What''s the sense of it? |
14145 | What''s there rotten about that?" |
14145 | What''s this? |
14145 | What''s up? |
14145 | What, the office? |
14145 | What? |
14145 | What_ does_ this matter? |
14145 | Whatever about? |
14145 | Whatever do you mean?" |
14145 | Whatever for should I? |
14145 | Whatever for?" |
14145 | Whatever was she writing to you about?" |
14145 | Whatever will happen? |
14145 | When a chap suddenly rips a cry out of his heart like that, what the devil can you say if you weigh fourteen stone of solid contentment and look it? |
14145 | When are you coming up to the Mess again? |
14145 | When the dickens was this chap going? |
14145 | When was this? |
14145 | When? |
14145 | When? |
14145 | When? |
14145 | Whence had come this glory? |
14145 | Where is he?'' |
14145 | Where is this straw hat?'' |
14145 | Where on earth would you be if girls with babies could find homes as easily as girls without babies?" |
14145 | Where shall I put them?" |
14145 | Where the hell will I be?" |
14145 | Where was gone that mask? |
14145 | Where''s it going to land you? |
14145 | Where''s the Mistress? |
14145 | Where, then?'' |
14145 | Where? |
14145 | Where?" |
14145 | Who is that?'' |
14145 | Who on earth--?" |
14145 | Who was your letter from, Mark?" |
14145 | Who''d dare walk through a churchyard?" |
14145 | Who?" |
14145 | Why are they stuck up with this rot about defending their shores when they can see for themselves that only the Navy can defend their shores? |
14145 | Why are you unsatisfactory?" |
14145 | Why awaken her? |
14145 | Why could n''t he? |
14145 | Why did n''t some one tell me?" |
14145 | Why do n''t I get out of the room?" |
14145 | Why do n''t I? |
14145 | Why do we keep behind? |
14145 | Why does n''t she say who?" |
14145 | Why ever not?" |
14145 | Why had he returned? |
14145 | Why hush? |
14145 | Why must he go, Mr. Sabre? |
14145 | Why must he go? |
14145 | Why on earth could n''t I even not rustle the newspaper? |
14145 | Why on earth could n''t I say,''Good lord, is she?'' |
14145 | Why on earth did n''t they have tea with them, with himself and Mabel, in the garden? |
14145 | Why on earth should he resign? |
14145 | Why should I be represented?" |
14145 | Why should I call her the deceased? |
14145 | Why should I call her the deceased?'' |
14145 | Why should I get riled because she says that Mrs. Toller is going to take a house for eighty pounds a year? |
14145 | Why should I mind? |
14145 | Why should I rustle the newspaper? |
14145 | Why should I? |
14145 | Why should I? |
14145 | Why should she be? |
14145 | Why should things be the same as they used to be? |
14145 | Why"_ whatever_"? |
14145 | Why? |
14145 | Why?" |
14145 | Why_ should_ I?'' |
14145 | Whyever did n''t she write to me?" |
14145 | Whyever did you take it?" |
14145 | Whyever should she send for you of all people?" |
14145 | Wife dying? |
14145 | Will that satisfy you?" |
14145 | With what then? |
14145 | Wo n''t any one let me alone? |
14145 | Wo n''t it stay?" |
14145 | Worked off the police evidence and the doctor, d''you see? |
14145 | Would I mind leaving him up there? |
14145 | Would it be belief?" |
14145 | Would it be faith? |
14145 | Would it be hope? |
14145 | Writhed on the bed? |
14145 | Yes, and what was he coming up to? |
14145 | You do mean the Bible Psalms, do n''t you?" |
14145 | You do n''t know what it is and-- well, you wo n''t know, will you?" |
14145 | You do n''t mind, Nona?" |
14145 | You do n''t suppose Tony minds, do you?" |
14145 | You hear what I''m asking you, do n''t you?" |
14145 | You know why I got it, do n''t you? |
14145 | You puzzle, do n''t you, Marko? |
14145 | You read the first sentence?" |
14145 | You remember old Sabre at old Wickamote''s?... |
14145 | You remember when I increased my life insurance some time ago they said my heart was a bit groggy and made a bit of a fuss? |
14145 | You were at the school with him, Sabre, were n''t you? |
14145 | You''re going to work, are n''t you? |
14145 | You''re not getting an idler, are you? |
14145 | You''re not going to call the hall a lounge hall, are you?" |
14145 | You''ve been in Blade and Parson''s place, have n''t you?" |
14145 | Your mother, why, what on earth will she do without you? |
14145 | _ Ca n''t_ you? |
14145 | _ Ca n''t_ you?" |
14145 | _ Can_ you?" |
14145 | _ Do_ you know any one?" |
14145 | _ What''s_ the matter?" |
14145 | and when they told him No,''Well'', d''you think you''d like to get me upstairs on that infernal chair?'' |
14145 | he asks; or"Where am I?" |
14145 | like that when she gave me her hand when she first came in? |
14145 | like that--""Like what? |
14145 | or something like that? |
39421 | Suppose men do reach the top of Mount Everest, what then? |
39421 | Suppose we do establish the fact that man has the capacity to surmount the highest summit of his surroundings, of what good is that knowledge? |
39421 | What then? |
39421 | Why be so particular about the two? |
39421 | A disappointment? |
39421 | Allium Wallichii, Kunth Allium Govenianum, Wall.? |
39421 | And how long should we require for these operations in such weather? |
39421 | And if the snow has melted, where will ice be found? |
39421 | And presuming Wheeler were wrong? |
39421 | And was it not in any case an attractive summit? |
39421 | And what more were we likely to accomplish from a camp on Chang La? |
39421 | And what of the Sahibs? |
39421 | And what of the final arête? |
39421 | Are we seeing the true edge? |
39421 | But how, if this bay were of any importance, could the glacier stream be so small? |
39421 | But the puzzle is, how can that point be arrived at from below? |
39421 | But what lay ahead of us? |
39421 | Cl.? |
39421 | Could the North col be reached from the East and how could we attain this point? |
39421 | Could this glacier conceivably proceed in an almost level course up to Chang La, itself? |
39421 | Drum.? |
39421 | How could so little water drain so large an area of ice as must exist on this supposition? |
39421 | How could they be otherwise? |
39421 | How many days would he be absent before he came to tell his story, and what sort of story would it be? |
39421 | Is it not a first principle of mountaineering to be as comfortable as possible as long as one can? |
39421 | Is there an arête connecting this with the great rock peak South of Everest or is it joined up with the col we reached the day before yesterday? |
39421 | Might we not see it from the summit of our mountain? |
39421 | Or was it cut off much nearer to us by the high skyline which we saw beyond it? |
39421 | Or will black and white appear in altered proportions? |
39421 | The question is often asked,"Why twenty- nine thousand and two?" |
39421 | Was it all composed of pinnacles? |
39421 | Were they not to prove highways here? |
39421 | Were we fit to push the adventure further? |
39421 | What can be cut out next time? |
39421 | What is to be done for a man who is sick or abnormally exhausted at these high altitudes? |
39421 | What lay between them? |
39421 | What was the meaning of this? |
39421 | Where had we been? |
39421 | Where is the limit of this process? |
39421 | Where were we going and what should we find? |
39421 | Why not get to the col and find out what lay beyond it? |
39421 | Will the amount of snow on the mountain be the same in June, 1922, as twelve months before? |
39421 | Will the multiplication of red corpuscles continue so that men may become acclimatised much higher? |
39421 | Will the whole of the snow fallen during the monsoon of 1921 have melted before the next monsoon, and if so by what date? |
39421 | Would he know for certain that the way was found? |
39421 | Would it not be better to follow up this glacier from the Rongbuk Valley? |
39421 | Would they prove an insuperable obstacle? |
39421 | f.& T. Meconopsis grandis, Prain? |
39421 | f.? |
39421 | or how much longer would our doubts continue? |
39421 | var.? |
38508 | Are the Pekin sights worth seeing? |
38508 | Are the people agricultural, as here? |
38508 | By what route did you come out? |
38508 | Did you find the Siberian line comfortable? |
38508 | How is His Majesty, your benevolent sovereign? |
38508 | How long did the last part of your journey through Manchuria take, and what were your experiences like in Korea? |
38508 | How long have you been travelling? |
38508 | Is your capital a very fine one, and what is the Emperor''s palace like? 38508 Is your country a very hilly one?" |
38508 | What are their ambitions? |
38508 | What do the people do? |
38508 | What interested you most? |
38508 | What is the country like? |
38508 | When did you leave home? |
38508 | When did you leave home? |
38508 | Who is it? 38508 You must have been very glad on your arrival at Seoul to find that the finest building is your cathedral? |
38508 | ''What is the most beautiful thing on earth?'' |
38508 | ***** Will China, in case of need, unite with Japan to destroy the common enemy? |
38508 | Above all, what would happen if Japan, united with China, were to overrun the Russian dominions, and one day threaten Central Europe? |
38508 | And above all, who can at this moment explain or understand all the progress of modern Japan and fully realize all its future importance? |
38508 | And now you, a European, coming from the West, ask, with obvious irony,''What does this all mean?''" |
38508 | And yet, who does not know that this desire is the cornerstone on which moral structures of mighty dimensions can be reared? |
38508 | Another question which is constantly addressed to me is: Is not the journey very monotonous? |
38508 | Are not the natives of a very low type? |
38508 | But do you suppose our sense of justice was not outraged? |
38508 | But how was I to get there? |
38508 | But whose? |
38508 | But would it be to the interest of the yellow race to overrun Europe? |
38508 | By the same instinct, I suppose, Li- Hu awoke and I asked eagerly,"Mukden? |
38508 | Can it be a fact that this army is required to keep these little folk in order? |
38508 | Could my carriage be attached to it? |
38508 | Do they belong to the ghosts? |
38508 | Does Manchuria really belong to the Yellow Empire? |
38508 | For do we not consider that soldier most efficient who destroys the greatest number of lives? |
38508 | For who knows what future awaits her? |
38508 | For whom, and what for? |
38508 | Has the coronation not been postponed after all? |
38508 | How do they manage it? |
38508 | How long will it require to realize and acquire all the advantages of Western civilization and the elevating power of Christianity? |
38508 | How long will it take them to awaken? |
38508 | How long will they be able to guard them from corruption? |
38508 | How long will they be able to preserve them unspoilt? |
38508 | How much did it cost?" |
38508 | How rich is he?" |
38508 | I can not help asking,"Where?" |
38508 | II TO THE FAR EAST BY THE TRANS- SIBERIAN RAILWAY I FROM PETERSBURG TO MANCHURIA Is it really possible to get to the Far East by land? |
38508 | III MANCHURIA UNDER RUSSIAN RULE Am I on Chinese territory? |
38508 | III What are the most extraordinary things in this Hermit Country? |
38508 | If the Chinese have been at last compelled to relinquish their ancient views of life and to accept ours, can we blame them if they do it grudgingly? |
38508 | In replying I ventured to remark,"What could prevent the mighty Tsar of all the Russias carrying out his wishes?" |
38508 | Is it comfortable? |
38508 | Is it not a most uninteresting and flat country? |
38508 | Is it not the root of military and civic virtues? |
38508 | Is it to be wondered at that every means was employed to attain it? |
38508 | Is it to be wondered at that the people were reduced to poverty? |
38508 | Is it too bold to hint that the death of the first of the philosophers was partly suicidal? |
38508 | Is the Emperor at last inaugurating the long- awaited festivities? |
38508 | Is the Siberian Railway open to the public? |
38508 | It would be easier to give an answer if one were asked,"What is_ not_ worth seeing, and what can be omitted in Pekin?" |
38508 | Kharbin is supposed to have about fifteen thousand inhabitants, but where were they? |
38508 | May I not go even so far as to say that the gentlest and most peace- loving of religions endorses this aspiration? |
38508 | Mukden?" |
38508 | No guests were bidden to dinner, and when my host put the question to me,"What do you think about Seoul?" |
38508 | Or again, she might stimulate her son''s courage by saying:"What wilt thou say when in battle thou losest arm or leg?" |
38508 | Shall I really get across it in a comfortable railway carriage, as you would go on a trip into the country? |
38508 | The answer would be much easier to give if the question were, What are the least striking? |
38508 | The centre of trade is in the Chinese city; but how can I convey an idea of this to those who do not know this people and this part of the world? |
38508 | V How did Korea educate her sons that her rule, her justice, and her people sank so low? |
38508 | Was it calculated to impress us with a sense of the justice and fair play of the British nation? |
38508 | Was it meant to be a compliment or was it sarcasm? |
38508 | Was this an auspicious beginning? |
38508 | Were they dead, asleep, or hiding? |
38508 | What about her people, her life, physiology, and atmosphere? |
38508 | What can have happened that the home of silence should have been disturbed by such an awful uproar? |
38508 | What developments may not the future have in store? |
38508 | What do I really think about Seoul? |
38508 | What do you think of the young Emperor? |
38508 | What has happened? |
38508 | What has he got?" |
38508 | What is the Dowager Empress like? |
38508 | What was going to happen? |
38508 | What will it be there, at the Siberian terminus? |
38508 | What would happen if they conquered all Eastern Asia, and perhaps Siberia also? |
38508 | Where is he going? |
38508 | Which of her attachments has been the most sincere, who can say? |
38508 | Who could ever grasp the total effect in all its splendour? |
38508 | Who could ever understand it in all its mystery? |
38508 | Who is to secure her definite leadership-- Japan or Russia? |
38508 | Who was your architect? |
38508 | Will Manchuria be more prosperous under the new régime? |
38508 | Will the Chinese seek retaliation for what they consider to have been an injustice done to them, and which they evidently have not forgotten? |
38508 | Will the people be able to rise to a higher level? |
38508 | Would that interest them? |
38508 | Would they remain passive, or were they going to attack me? |
38508 | is not that the northern light breaking through the dark? |
38508 | or,"How wilt thou control thy face if the Emperor should bid thee to cut off thine ears or to perform the hara- kiri?" |
40096 | Where have we failed when we acted vigorously? |
40096 | ( 2) Have not inflectional languages passed from Europe to Asia rather than from Asia to Europe? |
40096 | ( 3) Are not the speakers of Celtic languages the descendants of the autochthonous peoples of Western Europe? |
40096 | But who are sapindas, sakulyas and samonadacas respectively, and of each class whose offering is most efficacious? |
40096 | How long would it have taken for the Indo- European stock to spread from its original home to its modern areas of occupation? |
40096 | In 1864 he brought three questions before the_ Société d''anthropologie_ of Paris:( 1) What are the proofs of the Asiatic origin of Europeans? |
40096 | The Eskimo_ Takusariartorumagaluarnerpâ?_("Do you think he really intends to go to look after it?") |
40096 | The Eskimo_ Takusariartorumagaluarnerpâ?_("Do you think he really intends to go to look after it?") |
40096 | What is the nature of the ownership in this case, and in whom is it vested? |
40096 | What is to be done when a break- up of the family is threatened by the death of the common ancestor? |
40096 | What of the trees known to primitive Indo- European man? |
40096 | [ 5](? |
40305 | What, then, can the Government do? 40305 But how to secure the safety of the workers? 40305 But is there any necessity to consider the United States and the British Empire as playing mutually hostile parts in the Pacific? 40305 Can not China follow the_ viam mediam_, and learn a lesson from Japan? 40305 Could a White Race be ousted from a land in the same way, presuming that the White Race is superior and not inferior? 40305 How could we oppose the desires of millions for the glory of one family? 40305 If she were to put aside dreams of conquest and Empire, has Japan a sound future in the Pacific as a thriving minor manufacturing and trading power? 40305 If the Almighty does not hear_ that_, will he hear us? |
40305 | If to the White Race, will it be under the British Flag, or the flag of the United States, or of some other nation? |
40305 | Shall it go to the White Race or the Yellow Race? |
40305 | The question was asked:"Presuming a Pacific war in which the United States was the enemy of Japan?" |
40305 | Under whose leadership will the change be made? |
40305 | Why wonder at her unrest? |
39612 | Supposing that on such principles King James was rejected, who would come next? 39612 Will you come with us?" |
39612 | [ 151] And had not the very gentlest of men, even the God- man, said,I am come to send fire on the earth?" |
39612 | 15_s._ Salvator Mundi; or, Is Christ the Saviour of all Men? |
39612 | 500,000(?) |
39612 | 5_s._ RICHARDSON, AUSTIN,''What are the Catholic Claims?'' |
39612 | And besides all this; if they complained of having been invited to hunt and hawk at Dunchurch on false pretences, who could blame them? |
39612 | And had he not already had most ample and most undeserved moderation shown to him? |
39612 | Can it be that some immense bribe was given, or promised, to Guy Fawkes for the excessively dangerous part which he was to play in the drama? |
39612 | Catesby answered,''Why were we commanded before to keep out one that was not a Catholic, and now may not exclude him?'' |
39612 | Catesby himself had certainly lost money, and a great deal of money; but how? |
39612 | Could he call himself a man if he trembled at the very thought of bloodshed? |
39612 | Could he have induced Manners to come to his rooms by no other attraction than a game of cards, which he had no intention of playing? |
39612 | Did he hesitate to go to Coughton through fear of Catesby, or was he afraid to trust himself in the presence of his wife? |
39612 | Does any such excuse exist for the Gunpowder Plot? |
39612 | Does... know him?" |
39612 | Had not Watson given King''s evidence? |
39612 | Had not foreign invasion been implored by Catholics? |
39612 | Had they not intended"the Lady Arabella"as a substitute for his own Royal Majesty upon the throne? |
39612 | Has he not played cards with my husband, and played well too, which is impossible for those not accustomed to the game? |
39612 | If he were really going to join the army in the Low Countries, why these long delays? |
39612 | If there be any matter in hand, doth Mr Walley know of it?" |
39612 | Let us hope that the game of cards diverted such thoughts; yet who could blame him if, with such matters on his mind, he forgot to follow suit? |
39612 | Need he have put himself to the trouble of apologising to Father Gerard for revealing that he was a Catholic? |
39612 | Or was the finding of a priest so difficult a thing just then as to make a wish to attempt it absurd? |
39612 | Was he alone, among the most zealous Catholic laymen of England, to show the white feather in a time of peril? |
39612 | Was it a violent attempt made on the spur of the moment, or was it the result of lengthy, deliberate, and anxious forethought? |
39612 | Was it necessary on his arrival there to ask him to await that of guests who were not coming, and had never been invited? |
39612 | Was it not sufficient consolation to him to reflect upon his good fortune in this respect? |
39612 | Was there not something biblical and appropriate, again, in destroying the enemies of the Lord with fire? |
39612 | Were the Catholics to rise and invade the houses of parliament with drawn sabres? |
39612 | What became of it? |
39612 | What did she? |
39612 | What had Lord Windsor done that his house should be pillaged? |
39612 | What is a good Catholic? |
39612 | What shall we do? |
39612 | What was the consequence? |
39612 | When they reflect upon all these things, can Catholics recall the memory of Sir Everard Digby with no other feelings than those of pity? |
39612 | When would he hear of the great event? |
39612 | Who were these princes and rulers? |
39612 | Who''s that which knocks? |
39612 | Why should his things be taken feloniously from his home during his absence? |
39612 | Would a Catholic have written such a passage as the following, which I take from the_ Dissuasive_? |
39612 | [ 35] Could it be that he thought her a silly woman, hurriedly contemplating a change of religion on too scanty consideration? |
39612 | [ 36]"How is it possible he can be a priest?" |
39612 | did he forget how he had said"that for the Catholick Cause he was content to neglect the ruine of himself, his Wife, his Estate, and all"? |
39612 | hast thou any hope, Robin? |
39612 | said he;"what then?" |
39612 | she asked,"has he not lived rather as a courtier? |
3630 | And how old are you? |
3630 | Are your parents alive? |
3630 | But what do you want? |
3630 | He repudiates science and art, he wants to send people back again into a savage state; so what is the use of listening to him and of talking to him? |
3630 | How is this? |
3630 | I will come; why should I not come? 3630 Is it hard?" |
3630 | Is that forbidden? |
3630 | Really? 3630 So they are to be allowed to die of hunger and cold?" |
3630 | Well, but if a place could be found somewhere as cook? |
3630 | Well, how did it turn out? 3630 Well, what then?" |
3630 | What are city life and city poverty? 3630 What do you live on?" |
3630 | What is he doing to the sidewalk? |
3630 | What is to be done? |
3630 | What is your business? |
3630 | What then? |
3630 | What to do? 3630 What, many of them?" |
3630 | Where am I to go? |
3630 | Who knows? |
3630 | Why am I going to gaze on the sufferings of people whom I can not help? |
3630 | Why are you taking care of it? |
3630 | Why is it forbidden here in Moscow to ask alms in Christ''s name? |
3630 | Why not? 3630 Why should they die? |
3630 | Why? |
3630 | --"Well, what of that? |
3630 | After a conflagration, one can warm one''s self, and light one''s pipe with a firebrand; but why declare that the conflagration is beneficial? |
3630 | And I began to reflect: why had this caused me such shame? |
3630 | And I, with the object of benefiting and reclaiming him, had taken him to my house, where he saw-- what? |
3630 | And how about Petersburg and the other cities?" |
3630 | And how about the division of labor?" |
3630 | And how many households are there in Russia alone, do you think? |
3630 | And if not we, who then? |
3630 | And so I have accumulated a great deal of money in that way, and what do I do with it? |
3630 | And such a man will never answer the question,"What is to be done?" |
3630 | And the people asked him, saying, What shall we do then? |
3630 | And this confession of a man''s obligation constitutes the gist of the third answer to the question,"What is to be done?" |
3630 | And what is it necessary for me to do, in order to comply with the requirements imposed upon me by the demands of individual and universal welfare? |
3630 | And what is to be done with the remaining eleven hours? |
3630 | And when the people asked him,"What are we to do?" |
3630 | And why should not this"some time"be now, and in Moscow? |
3630 | And why, above all, take away from the country that which dwellers in the country need,--flour, oats, horses, and cattle? |
3630 | And why, apparently, should art not be of service to the people? |
3630 | And, as we are indebted for all this marvellous progress to the division of labor, why not acknowledge it? |
3630 | And, in fact, how am I to answer the question,"What is to be done?" |
3630 | And, what then? |
3630 | Another man came up, and stumbled over the laundress, and said to the potter:"What drunken woman is this wallowing at your gate? |
3630 | Are not the changes which public opinion is now preparing clear? |
3630 | Are there a million?" |
3630 | Are there many of them there?" |
3630 | Are they to blame?" |
3630 | Are you a self- satisfied rich man who wants to enjoy our wretchedness, to get rid of his tedium, and to torment us still more? |
3630 | As a matter of fact, what is my money, and whence did it come into my possession? |
3630 | Before that time I had not been able to answer the question:"What is to be done?" |
3630 | But I am asked: What do you mean by_ working over them_? |
3630 | But how does this come about? |
3630 | But it has become the fashion with us to say, that"this is so in theory, but how about the practice?" |
3630 | But what can one man do amid a throng which does not agree with him? |
3630 | But what does it mean, that some people and their children toil, while other people and their children do not toil? |
3630 | But what facts? |
3630 | But what have we added to the popular_ bylini_[ the epic songs], legends, tales, songs? |
3630 | But what have we taught them, and what are we now teaching them? |
3630 | But what is it that you have given? |
3630 | But what is to be done? |
3630 | But who is the poor man? |
3630 | But who will make these boots and this calico? |
3630 | But why are some of them caught and locked up somewhere, while others are left alone? |
3630 | But why not hope that every thing will be accomplished? |
3630 | But why not think and hope that more and yet more will be done? |
3630 | But why should we dress ourselves, wash and comb our hair? |
3630 | Do you suppose I like to beg? |
3630 | Does not this peculiar good fortune arise from the fact that man can not and will not see his own hideousness? |
3630 | First of all, in answer to the question,"What is to be done?" |
3630 | For the uninitiated man the question immediately presents itself:"What are you talking about? |
3630 | Get along, what do you mean by it? |
3630 | Had the question then stood as it stands before me now, after I have repented,--"What am I, so corrupt a man, to do?" |
3630 | Have they arrested him?" |
3630 | He said, in a peculiar, scornful, hasty tone, such as is employed towards dogs:"What do you jabber in that careless way for? |
3630 | Hence I think, that the man who will honestly put to himself the question,"What is to be done?" |
3630 | How can a man think it necessary to do so and so, and then do the contrary? |
3630 | How can one help a man who does not disclose his whole condition? |
3630 | How can one take an interest in the proposition of a man, in regard to something absolutely impossible? |
3630 | How can we fail to accept so very beautiful a theory? |
3630 | How did this come to pass? |
3630 | How do the rich order their lives there? |
3630 | How has this happened? |
3630 | How is this to be effected? |
3630 | How, in this fashion, make recompense with that education and those talents, for what I have taken, and for what I still take, from the people?" |
3630 | How, then, can the necessity for burdensome, oppressive toil be more profitable for people? |
3630 | I already hear the customary remark:"All this is very fine, these are sounding phrases; but do you tell us what to do and how to do it?" |
3630 | I am always surprised by the oft- repeated words:"Yes, this is so in theory, but how is it in practice?" |
3630 | I ask him who is he, whence comes he? |
3630 | I asked her,--it puts me to shame, my hand refuses to write it,--I asked her whether it was true that she had nothing to eat? |
3630 | I asked him:"Is it true that the poor are forbidden to ask alms in Christ''s name?" |
3630 | I asked the boy:"And do you live here?" |
3630 | I came near breaking my head over her; take her away, wo n''t you?" |
3630 | I did not comprehend, and again I inquired:"What is your means of livelihood?" |
3630 | I force no one''s inclination: I hire, and what harm is there in that?" |
3630 | I halted and asked the police- officer,"What is it?" |
3630 | I inquired where he came from? |
3630 | I inquired:"For what was this peasant arrested?" |
3630 | I inquired:"Is this your child?" |
3630 | I inquired:"What for?" |
3630 | I inquired:"What is that for?" |
3630 | I often hear the questions of good young men who sympathize with the renunciatory part of my writings, and who ask,"Well, and what then shall I do? |
3630 | If I give to a man who steps in from the street one ruble or twenty kopeks, why should not I give her a ruble also? |
3630 | If the opinion of the revolutionists is correct, what must be done? |
3630 | In all eyes the question was expressed:"Why have you, a man from another world, halted here beside us? |
3630 | In answer to the question, Would not this unaccustomed toil ruin that health which is indispensable in order to render service to the people possible? |
3630 | Is it a bad thing, according to the Gospel, to clothe the naked, and feed the hungry?" |
3630 | Is it necessary to render assistance in that way? |
3630 | Is that alms? |
3630 | Is there not something re- assuring in this? |
3630 | It is very possible that this is so; but still the question remains, Of what nature is that division of labor which I behold in my human society? |
3630 | It was impossible, was it not, to take a child who had lived in a den of iniquity in among my own children? |
3630 | John the Baptist, in answer to the question of the people,--What were they to do? |
3630 | Money does represent labor; but whose? |
3630 | More profitable for whom? |
3630 | One of the boys clad in a great- coat and a visorless cap, heard her words and halted:"What are you scolding about?" |
3630 | Or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? |
3630 | Other people have begun it, and have wrought mischief; then why should not I take advantage of it? |
3630 | Our position is a very difficult one, but why not look at it squarely? |
3630 | Precisely what to do?" |
3630 | She laughed, and said:"And who would take me in with my yellow ticket?" |
3630 | Surely I can not say,"Why do not you eat hay, when it is the indispensable food?" |
3630 | Surely it is not we who have done this? |
3630 | The man with the sword and pistol gazed sternly at me, and said:"What business is it of yours?" |
3630 | The young man asked a woman"whether she had seen the census- takers?" |
3630 | Then how are our ladies to reform this woman and her daughter? |
3630 | Then how can this be more profitable for men? |
3630 | Then said I: Lord, how long? |
3630 | Then why should I deprive myself of velvet and confections and cigarettes and clean shirts, if things are definitively settled thus? |
3630 | Then, what is the outcome of this? |
3630 | Then, what is to be done? |
3630 | Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? |
3630 | These, then, are the answers which I have found for myself to the question,"What is to be done?" |
3630 | They can in no wise solve the problem,"What to do?" |
3630 | They, poor things, have done what is considered right by their elders; but how are their elders to explain away this their cruelty to the people? |
3630 | This assistance had been rendered before my advent, and rendered by whom? |
3630 | This is the lie of which we must not be guilty if we are to be in a position to answer the question:"What is to be done?" |
3630 | This was the case with me; and then another, arising from the first answer to the question:"What is to be done?" |
3630 | To the question,"What is it necessary to do?" |
3630 | To the question,"Who was she?" |
3630 | To the question,"Will it not seem strange to people if you do this?" |
3630 | To what do the conservatives point? |
3630 | To what do the revolutionists point? |
3630 | Transcribed from the 1887 Tomas Y. Crowell edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org WHAT TO DO? |
3630 | We have invented telegraphs, telephones, phonographs; but what advances have we effected in the life, in the labor, of the people? |
3630 | Well, and what of that? |
3630 | Well, what will happen if I wear a soiled shirt, and make my own cigarettes? |
3630 | What am I to do, now that I have finished my course in the university, or in some other institution, in order that I may be of use?" |
3630 | What are we to do? |
3630 | What did he really give, and what did I really give? |
3630 | What difference will it make if I wear one shirt a week, and make may own cigarettes, or do not smoke at all? |
3630 | What does property signify? |
3630 | What does that power which has created and which leads me, demand of me and of every man? |
3630 | What does this census, that is about to be made, mean for us people of Moscow, who are not men of science? |
3630 | What except shame could I feel, when I entered into communion with these people? |
3630 | What harm is there in that? |
3630 | What if the Moscow Zaccheuses were to do the same that he did? |
3630 | What is it that I wish in reality? |
3630 | What is the inference? |
3630 | What is the meaning of giving away one garment out of two, and half of one''s food? |
3630 | What is the meaning of this:_ to earn one''s livelihood in the city_? |
3630 | What is there wrong about that? |
3630 | What music, what pictures, have we given to the people? |
3630 | What must be done? |
3630 | What ought I to have given, in order to do what Semyon had done? |
3630 | What should I say when I was asked what I wanted there? |
3630 | What sort of shame was this? |
3630 | What was its nature? |
3630 | What would become of my old valet if I were to discharge him? |
3630 | What would he do if he were doing it for the sake of his own undoubted good and the good of others? |
3630 | What would it be if this labor were something really worth their while? |
3630 | What, in point of fact, is that money which I give to the poor, and which the cook''s wife thought I was giving to her? |
3630 | What, then, was I to do? |
3630 | Where are such people to be found? |
3630 | Where lies the root of all this? |
3630 | Which of us-- man or woman-- will correct her false view of life? |
3630 | Who are you? |
3630 | Who is she?" |
3630 | Who is there that does not know people, especially women, who reckon this cleanliness in themselves as a great virtue? |
3630 | Whom do I injure,--I, the most inoffensive and kindest of men? |
3630 | Why are they such fools as to give birth to children, when they know that there will be nothing for the children to eat? |
3630 | Why did these men toil, while those others begged? |
3630 | Why is it a stupid business to help thousands, at any rate hundreds, of unfortunate beings? |
3630 | Why is mankind an organism, or similar to an organism?" |
3630 | Why is there nothing left of those sciences, and sophists, and Cabalists, and Talmudists, but words, while we are so exceptionally happy? |
3630 | Why not hope that some the people will wake up, and will comprehend that every thing else is a delusion, but that this is the only work in life? |
3630 | Why not think that we shall at last come to apprehend this? |
3630 | Why precisely these facts, and no others? |
3630 | Why should we not think and expect that the cells of our society will acquire fresh life and re- invigorate the organism? |
3630 | Why were there so many of them here? |
3630 | Why, what degree of lunacy can be more frightful than this? |
3630 | Why, when I am living in the city, can not I help the city poor?" |
3630 | Will that make it easier for anybody else? |
3630 | With regard to the question,"Is it necessary to organize this physical labor, to institute an association in the country, on my land?" |
3630 | Yes, but of whose toil? |
3630 | [ Then what are we to do? |
3630 | [ What else could he see in me but one of those persons who have got possession of what belongs to him? |
3630 | and in what did their peculiarity, as opposed to the country poor, consist? |
3630 | and who is not acquainted with the devices of this cleanliness, which know no bounds, when it can command the labor of others? |
3630 | is it that division of labor which should exist? |
3630 | or are you that thing which does not and can not exist,--a man who pities us?" |
3630 | or, What shall we drink? |
3630 | we must all do every thing necessary,--make our clothes and hew wood? |
3630 | what is it?" |
3630 | whither? |
3630 | why do n''t you bring her in?" |
3630 | why should we hand chairs to ladies, to guests? |
3630 | why should we open and shut doors, hand ladies, into carriages, and do a hundred other things which serfs formerly did for us? |
3630 | { 122a} Who am I, that I should desire to help others? |
40206 | ** Journal, May 25, 1768, p. 308? 40206 * Why is the ass only mentioned besides man? 40206 And the king said unto Daniel, Wilt thou also say that this is of brass? 40206 How comes it, then, one may ask, that divination and sorcery are denounced in Deuteronomy xviii.? 40206 If the witch of Endor could raise spirits, why not Lottie Fowler or Mr. Eglinton? 40206 Its doing so will please the author, for every writer wishes to be read; why else, indeed, should he write? 40206 Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost? |
40206 | Micah argues against the barbarous practice:"Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" |
40206 | Moses indignantly asked, Have ye saved all the women alive? |
40206 | Samuel says:"Why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up?" |
40206 | Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? |
40206 | What is this, asks Emerson, but a prophecy of the progress of art? |
40206 | What, then, is the correct version of the origin of the Passover? |
40206 | Who can credit this monstrous libel on the character of God and on the intelligence of those to whom such a story is proffered? |
40206 | Why did the Lord employ such an agency? |
40206 | Why should the Church say of God:"His head is as the most fine gold, his locks are bushy and black as a raven"? |
40206 | Why this sudden change of conduct towards Moses, whose life Jehovah was apparently so anxious to save? |
40206 | or compare his legs to pillars of marble, or celebrate other parts of his divine person which are not usually mentioned in polite society? |
37703 | Again I ask: Is the New Testament true? |
37703 | And he saith unto them:"Whose is the image and the superscription?" |
37703 | Are we to win the happiness of heaven by deserting the ones we love? |
37703 | Can the authors of Job and the Psalms be compared with Shakespeare? |
37703 | Can we believe in the multiplication of the widow''s oil by Elisha, that an army was smitten with blindness, or that an axe floated in the water? |
37703 | Can we believe that Christ raised the dead? |
37703 | Can we believe that Elijah brought flames from heaven, or that he went at last to Paradise in a chariot of fire? |
37703 | Can we believe that the gods of Egypt worked miracles? |
37703 | Can we do this without being inspired ourselves? |
37703 | Can we get any good from Jonah and his gourd? |
37703 | Can we live without taking thought for the morrow? |
37703 | Can we now believe that water was changed into wine? |
37703 | Can we now say that Christ was the greatest of philosophers? |
37703 | Could a devil have done worse? |
37703 | Did Christ love his, when he denounced them as whited sepulchers, hypocrites and vipers? |
37703 | Did Christ think that the money belonged to Caesar because his image and superscription were stamped upon it? |
37703 | Did God use men as instruments? |
37703 | Did any human being ever love his enemies? |
37703 | Did he cause them to write his thoughts? |
37703 | Did he desert his father and mother? |
37703 | Did he express grander truths than Cicero? |
37703 | Did he know at the time that Joseph would use the information thus given to rob and enslave the people of Egypt? |
37703 | Did he take possession of their minds and destroy their wills? |
37703 | Did the author of Genesis know as much about nature as Humboldt, or Darwin, or Haeckel? |
37703 | Did the penny belong to Caesar or to the man who had earned it? |
37703 | Did these curses, these threats, come from the heart of love or from the mouth of savagery? |
37703 | Did they change water into blood, and sticks into serpents? |
37703 | Did we get from any of these books a hint of any science? |
37703 | Did we get our ideas of government, of religious freedom, of the liberty of thought, from the Old Testament? |
37703 | Does God take care of anybody? |
37703 | Does any intelligent man believe in the existence of devils? |
37703 | Does any natural man now believe that Christ cast out devils? |
37703 | Does anybody now believe that an angel went into the pool and troubled the waters? |
37703 | Does anybody now think that the poor wretch who got in first was healed? |
37703 | Does it appear from this conversation that Christ understood the real nature and use of money? |
37703 | Does it civilize us to read about the beheading of the seventy sons of Ahab, the putting out of the eyes of Zedekiah and the murder of his sons? |
37703 | Does not every chapter shock the heart of a good man? |
37703 | Does the Old Testament satisfy this standard? |
37703 | Had Caesar the right to demand it because it was adorned with his image? |
37703 | Has Exodus been a help or a hindrance to the human race? |
37703 | Has man in his ignorance and fear ever imagined a greater monster? |
37703 | Have the barbarians of any land, in any time, worshipped a more heartless god? |
37703 | Have these absurdities and cruelties-- these childish, savage superstitions-- helped to civilize the world? |
37703 | Have they taught us how to cultivate the earth, to build houses, to weave cloth, to prepare food? |
37703 | Have they taught us to paint pictures, to chisel statues, to build bridges, or ships, or anything of beauty or of use? |
37703 | Have we not the right to judge for ourselves? |
37703 | He said, speaking to his mother:"Woman, what have I to do with thee?" |
37703 | How are we bound by their opinion? |
37703 | How are we to separate the mistakes of man from the thoughts of God? |
37703 | How can an inspired man prove that he is inspired? |
37703 | How can he know himself that he is inspired? |
37703 | How can one man establish the inspiration of another? |
37703 | How can these miracles be established? |
37703 | How can we account for these pretended miracles? |
37703 | How can we know that the Devil tried to bribe Christ? |
37703 | How did the writer get his information? |
37703 | How had they offended King Darius, the believer in Jehovah? |
37703 | How is it possible for a human being to know that he is inspired by an infinite being? |
37703 | How is it possible to substantiate these miracles? |
37703 | IS CHRIST OUR EXAMPLE? |
37703 | IS THE OLD TESTAMENT INSPIRED? |
37703 | If Christ rose from the dead, why did he not appear to his enemies? |
37703 | If he really ascended, why did he not do so in public, in the presence of his persecutors? |
37703 | If the existence of God is admitted, how are we to prove that he inspired the writers of the books of the Bible? |
37703 | In what respect was he the superior of Zoroaster? |
37703 | Is Jeremiah or Habakuk equal to Dickens or Thackeray? |
37703 | Is a home to be ruined here for the sake of a mansion there? |
37703 | Is it a book to be read by children? |
37703 | Is it a fact that the Devil carried Christ to the top of the temple and tried to induce him to leap to the ground? |
37703 | Is it a fact that the Devil tried to bribe Christ? |
37703 | Is it just and reasonable? |
37703 | Is it merciful? |
37703 | Is it moral? |
37703 | Is it not strange that at the trial of Christ no one was found to say a word in his favor? |
37703 | Is it philosophical? |
37703 | Is it possible that Christ offered the bribe of eternal joy to those who would desert their fathers, their mothers, their wives and children? |
37703 | Is it possible that he who said,"Resist not evil,"came to bring a sword? |
37703 | Is it possible that it was right, just and merciful to kill fifty thousand men because they had looked into a box? |
37703 | Is it possible that this description was written by one who witnessed this miracle? |
37703 | Is it possible to extract from these extravagant sayings the smallest grain of common sense? |
37703 | Is the Bible any nearer right in its ideas of justice, of mercy, of morality or of religion than in its conception of the sciences? |
37703 | Is the Bible civilized? |
37703 | Is the story of the ark, its capture and return of importance to us? |
37703 | Is there a chapter worth reading? |
37703 | Is there a word calculated to develop the heart or brain? |
37703 | Is there an elevated thought-- any great principle-- anything poetic-- any word that bursts into blossom? |
37703 | Is there any absurdity beyond this? |
37703 | Is there any philosophy, any good sense, in that commandment? |
37703 | Is there any philosophy, any wisdom in this? |
37703 | Is there any wisdom in putting out your eyes or cutting off your hands? |
37703 | Is there anything except a dreary and detailed statement of things that never happened? |
37703 | Is there anything in Exodus calculated to make men generous, loving and noble? |
37703 | Is there anything in First and Second Kings that suggests the idea of inspiration? |
37703 | Is there anything in Leviticus of importance? |
37703 | Is there anything in the literature of the world more perfectly idiotic? |
37703 | Is there anything in these"inspired"books that has been of benefit to man? |
37703 | Is there anything of use in Joel, in Amos, in Obadiah? |
37703 | Is there anything to be learned from Hosea and his wife? |
37703 | Is there anything worth reading in the first and second books of Samuel? |
37703 | Is there in the whole world an intelligent man or woman who believes this impossible falsehood? |
37703 | Is there in the"sacred volume"a word, a line, that has added to the wealth, the intelligence and the happiness of mankind? |
37703 | Is there one of the books of the Old Testament as entertaining as Robinson Crusoe, the Travels of Gulliver, or Peter Wilkins and his Flying Wife? |
37703 | Is there one ray of light from any supernatural source? |
37703 | Is there one word in First and Second Kings calculated to make men better? |
37703 | Is there the least sense in that belief? |
37703 | Is this possible? |
37703 | Is what is called the Mosaic Code as wise or as merciful as the code of any civilized nation? |
37703 | Let me ask the ministers one question: How can you be wicked enough to defend this book? |
37703 | Of what use the cruel code, the frightful punishments, the curses, the falsehoods and the miracles of this ignorant and infamous book? |
37703 | Of what use to us are the wars of Saul and David, the stories of Goliath and the Witch of Endor? |
37703 | Ought a prophet of God to hew a captured king in pieces? |
37703 | THE NEW TESTAMENT WHO wrote the New Testament? |
37703 | Take from Exodus the laws common to all nations, and is there anything of value left? |
37703 | That he who said,"Love your enemies,"came to destroy the peace of the world? |
37703 | The Pharisees said unto Christ:"Is it lawful to pay tribute unto Caesar?" |
37703 | The question is, Were the authors of these four gospels inspired? |
37703 | Under the same circumstances, what would a devil have done? |
37703 | V. WAS JEHOVAH A GOD OF LOVE? |
37703 | WAS he kinder, more forgiving, more self- sacrificing than Buddha? |
37703 | WHAT IS IT ALL WORTH? |
37703 | WHY SHOULD WE PLACE CHRIST AT THE TOP AND SUMMIT OF THE HUMAN RACE? |
37703 | WILL some Christian scholar tell us the value of Genesis? |
37703 | Was Jehovah god or devil? |
37703 | Was he a greater philosopher, a deeper thinker, than Epicurus? |
37703 | Was he gentler than Laotse, more universal than Confucius? |
37703 | Was he grander in death-- a sublimer martyr than Bruno? |
37703 | Was he more patient, more charitable, than Epictetus? |
37703 | Was he wiser, did he meet death with more perfect calmness, than Socrates? |
37703 | Was his brain equal to Kepler''s or Newton''s? |
37703 | Was his mind subtler than Spinoza''s? |
37703 | Was it because the inhabitants were ignorant, cruel and superstitious? |
37703 | Were his ideas of human rights and duties superior to those of Zeno? |
37703 | Were its laws inspired? |
37703 | Were the men who through many centuries made the selections inspired? |
37703 | Were the writers of Kings and Chronicles as great historians, as great writers, as Gibbon and Draper? |
37703 | Were these writers only partly controlled, so that their mistakes, their ignorance and their prejudices were mingled with the wisdom of God? |
37703 | Were they ever performed? |
37703 | Were they-- ignorant, credulous, stupid and malicious-- as well qualified to judge of"inspiration"as the students of our time? |
37703 | What care we for the withering of Jereboam''s hand, the prophecy of Jehu, or the story of Elijah and the ravens? |
37703 | What had the wives and little children done? |
37703 | What is inspiration? |
37703 | What then is left in this inspired book of Genesis? |
37703 | What, then, can we say of Christ? |
37703 | Where did Christ think heaven was? |
37703 | Who enabled Joseph to interpret the dream of Pharaoh? |
37703 | Who failed to protect the innocent wives and children? |
37703 | Who produced the famine? |
37703 | Who protected Daniel? |
37703 | Who wrote the account? |
37703 | Why did he fail to speak? |
37703 | Why did he go dumbly to his death, leaving the world to misery and to doubt? |
37703 | Why did he leave his words to ignorance, hypocrisy and chance? |
37703 | Why did he not break the chains of slaves? |
37703 | Why did he not call on Caiphas, the high priest? |
37703 | Why did he not explain the Trinity? |
37703 | Why did he not make another triumphal entry into Jerusalem? |
37703 | Why did he not plainly say:"I am the Son of God,"or,"I am God?" |
37703 | Why did he not say something positive, definite and satisfactory about another world? |
37703 | Why did he not say that the Old Testament was or was not the inspired word of God? |
37703 | Why did he not tell the mode of baptism that was pleasing to him? |
37703 | Why did he not tell us something of the rights of man, of the liberty of hand and brain? |
37703 | Why did he not turn the tear- stained hope of heaven into the glad knowledge of another life? |
37703 | Why did he not write a creed? |
37703 | Why did he not write the New Testament himself? |
37703 | Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
37703 | Why should Jehovah have killed Uzzah for putting forth his hand to steady the ark, and forgiven David for murdering Uriah and stealing his wife? |
37703 | Why should this, the greatest of miracles, be done in secret in a corner? |
37703 | Why should we attribute the best to man and the worst to God? |
37703 | Why should we place Jehovah above all the gods? |
37703 | Why was Jerusalem a holy city? |
37703 | Why? |
37703 | Would a civilized God daub his altars with the blood of oxen, lambs and doves? |
37703 | Would he delight in the smell of burning flesh? |
37703 | Would he make all his priests butchers? |
4004 | Use every man after his deserts, and who shall scape whipping? |
4004 | Against this comes the protest of the Sunday School theorists"Why not distribute according to merit?" |
4004 | But how much? |
4004 | But you can not object to being asked how many minutes of a bookmaker''s time is worth two hours of an astronomer''s? |
4004 | He heard Jesus calling to him from the clouds,"Why persecute me?" |
4004 | His prolonged agony of thirst and pain on the cross at last breaks his spirit, and he dies with a cry of"My God: why hast Thou forsaken me?" |
4004 | Indeed, the Jews say of him"How knoweth this man letters, having never learnt?" |
4004 | It does not seem very sensible, does it? |
4004 | Later on John claims that Jesus said to Peter"If I will that John tarry til I come, what is that to thee? |
4004 | PREFACE TO ANDROCLES AND THE LION: ON THE PROSPECTS OF CHRISTIANITY By Bernard Shaw 1912 CONTENTS: Why not give Christianity a Trial? |
4004 | That question is, Why on earth did not Jesus defend himself, and make the people rescue him from the High Priest? |
4004 | The King of England is the defender of the faith; but what faith is now THE faith? |
4004 | This, fortunately, is only one side of marriage; and the question arises, can it not be eliminated? |
4004 | WAS JESUS A COWARD? |
4004 | WAS JESUS A MARTYR? |
4004 | WHY JESUS MORE THAN ANOTHER? |
4004 | Was Jesus a Coward? |
4004 | Was Jesus a Martyr? |
4004 | Was ever so idiotic a project mooted as the estimation of virtue in money? |
4004 | Well, never mind: I am willing to be hanged for it in your stead?" |
4004 | What do you give a man an income for? |
4004 | What would Jesus have said? |
4004 | When the Trinity was added to the faith the question arose, was the virgin the mother of God or only the mother of Jesus? |
4004 | Why Jesus more than Another? |
4004 | or What shall we drink? |
4004 | or Wherewithal shall we be clothed?" |
35179 | A German? |
35179 | According to your own statement, my dear government spy, you had the young lady in your hands here; did you find this apocryphal document? |
35179 | An offering of sweetmeats and silver? |
35179 | An owl, was n''t it? |
35179 | Ananda''s princess? 35179 And Ananda, not being able to have you removed, wanted to shatter your prestige?" |
35179 | And he gave you a rupee? |
35179 | And the girl, you think, vanished over the let- down bridge? |
35179 | And the leopard has not been seen to- day? |
35179 | And the sahib will not repeat what I tell? |
35179 | And went for a walk, eh? 35179 And what do we do now?" |
35179 | And will you tell them about the dog you shot? |
35179 | And you believe that story is true, Mahadua? |
35179 | And you went out? |
35179 | And you, baboo? |
35179 | At Oxford we often talked about the shooting you were to have here, did n''t we? |
35179 | Been long home, anxious guardian? |
35179 | But coming and going as he must, Mahadua, how know you it is the same one? |
35179 | But how came Moti to my place? 35179 But she did not see you nor the sahib?" |
35179 | But you? |
35179 | Come from Tibet way? |
35179 | Coming to dinner with us-- any ladies, prince? |
35179 | Cordite? 35179 Devilish serene sort of thing, do n''t you think?" |
35179 | Did master call? |
35179 | Did the man sleep at his post? |
35179 | Did you ever see a spirit, Mahadua? |
35179 | Did you tackle them alone, Lumbani? |
35179 | Do you believe in reincarnation, prince? |
35179 | Do you believe that? |
35179 | Do you know why I am here, major; that is, have you had advice? |
35179 | Do you think by any chance he had an inkling Lord Victor was going there, and did n''t want him to know we''d be there? |
35179 | Do you think it really was the prince''s beast? |
35179 | Does he never drop them, little man? |
35179 | Does it come up this path? |
35179 | Does the government think the maharajah is mixed up in this? |
35179 | Dot is a big sapphire, major,Boelke said;"vhere did you get it? |
35179 | Feel better now; that give you relief? |
35179 | For what purpose-- to meet some one? |
35179 | Gad, man, what''s happened? |
35179 | Go in and beat him out? |
35179 | Go up to see the prince? |
35179 | Haf you destroyed it? |
35179 | Has anybody ever tried to pull it up? |
35179 | Has the grey stallion that? |
35179 | Have they heard the gun? |
35179 | Have you a box of matches, Swinton? |
35179 | Have you dropped something, major? |
35179 | How big? |
35179 | How comes the lady to ride such an evil horse? |
35179 | How did the Banjara know? |
35179 | How do you happen to know this is a Cordite? |
35179 | How do you know he stole a sapphire? |
35179 | How far is Kohima? |
35179 | How far is Kohima? |
35179 | How knew Darna Singh this? |
35179 | How many Huns has Boelke got? |
35179 | How much will you take for him? |
35179 | I say, Prince Ananda,he suddenly asked,"did you hear that my mentor had been devoured by a tiger last night?" |
35179 | I say, Swinton,Lord Victor interposed,"these poor chaps''nerves seem pretty well shimmered, do n''t you think? |
35179 | I say, old chap, what''s the sequel to that moralising? |
35179 | I wonder why she risked her neck to avoid me, major? |
35179 | If the identity were destroyed, captain, how do you know an officer owned it? |
35179 | Is it good ground for elephants? |
35179 | Is it in the prince''s grounds? |
35179 | Is that all? |
35179 | Is that bounder pulling our legs? |
35179 | It is Moti''s bell? |
35179 | Like to go? |
35179 | Mahadua, which way has Moti gone? |
35179 | No; why-- weren''t you walking? |
35179 | Oh, I say, am I in the discard? |
35179 | Rather tallish order, old chap, do n''t you think? 35179 Really? |
35179 | Sahib knows the karait-- the snake with an eye that is all red? |
35179 | Sahib, how shall we fix the price of Banda, that is a Banjara? 35179 Sahib,"he begged,"what am I to do? |
35179 | See that? |
35179 | Shall we go back now? |
35179 | Shall we take a peep, old top? |
35179 | Shot him? |
35179 | Some companion she expects to meet here? |
35179 | Something to tack to, eh? |
35179 | Tell me why you left the main trail, and how Bahadar stepped into this pit? |
35179 | That Cabuli donkey thought the boulder a crouching wolf and shied, eh? 35179 That not one will be left alive in your house if you possess a horse with one white eye?" |
35179 | That''s when you made the fumble in the howdah, eh, major? 35179 The bobby is devilish considerate, Lord Gilly, in not naming you as the careless one, is n''t he? |
35179 | The sahib knows, and does the sahib remember the proverb? |
35179 | Then it was all a plot, the other bout furnishing Boelke a chance to taunt you? |
35179 | To bring her harm, even as Stoll Sahib came by it? |
35179 | Vell,the doctor asked innocently,"you vil prove I am wrong by wrestling der Punjabi, or are we to fight a duel?" |
35179 | Was it a tiger or a leopard? |
35179 | Was it''Spots''or a black leopard, Mahadua? |
35179 | Was that before you became drunk, or since? |
35179 | Was the prince anxious about me in particular? |
35179 | Was there-- anything-- in the report of-- a tiger trying to maul you? |
35179 | Well, Swinton, if you''ll ride back and get Gilfain-- what guns have you? |
35179 | Well, did you then know of one from people you believed in? |
35179 | Were there two tigers? |
35179 | What about that? 35179 What about the syce; perhaps the leopard nailed him?" |
35179 | What becomes of the goat? |
35179 | What chance have we got? |
35179 | What did the maharajah want of the three sapphires? |
35179 | What do you make of these two bounders? |
35179 | What do you really know about the Boelke girl, major? |
35179 | What do you want, Lumbani? |
35179 | What do you want? |
35179 | What happened? |
35179 | What has cotton to do with the one who rides? |
35179 | What is an attractive girl doing here so close to Prince Ananda? 35179 What is it you want?" |
35179 | What is it, major? |
35179 | What is it, then? 35179 What is the idea of this most extraordinarily clever thing?" |
35179 | What leopard? |
35179 | What luck? |
35179 | What of the slaying of that debased killer of my cow, O sahib? |
35179 | What saw he? |
35179 | What shall we do, captain? |
35179 | What the devil did the girl bolt for? |
35179 | What will happen if the paper does not come? |
35179 | What''s all the outcry about, baboo? |
35179 | What''s it attached to? |
35179 | What''s the devilish idea-- loot? |
35179 | What''s the horse doing on this road? |
35179 | What''s this station gossip about Ananda''s intentions? |
35179 | What, in the name of Heaven, are you saying, man? |
35179 | When do we start? |
35179 | Where are we stationed, major? |
35179 | Where did they come from? |
35179 | Where did you hear that rot? |
35179 | Where is Moti? |
35179 | Where is the Nawab caged? |
35179 | Where is the black leopard? |
35179 | Where is your country? |
35179 | Where the devil did you get that, captain? 35179 Where will the tiger break to, Lumbani?" |
35179 | Where? |
35179 | Which means that the mhowa is in bloom now? |
35179 | Who comes to the pool, Rada-- for there is the machan? |
35179 | Who meet there? |
35179 | Who tells them this? |
35179 | Who''s doing it-- servants? |
35179 | Who? |
35179 | Why did n''t he open the gate wide; had he orders not to do so? |
35179 | Why did n''t you come and ask for the sapphire? |
35179 | Why does n''t Prince Ananda sit on these bally fire- eating worshippers-- why do you have to keep them in hand, major? |
35179 | Why is Darna Singh caged? |
35179 | Why is he called Pundit? 35179 Why not? |
35179 | Why not? |
35179 | Why should he have sent you, knowing that a Banjara does not kiss the hand that has beaten him like a dog? |
35179 | Why, Rada? |
35179 | Why? 35179 Will Banda tackle a panther?" |
35179 | Will the_ Herr Kapitän_ give orders in English to these_ schweinehunds_ that if they do not obey they will be killed? |
35179 | Will you pay the beggar for that dog, major? 35179 With German help?" |
35179 | Worked beautifully to- day, did n''t it? |
35179 | You did n''t happen to meet fräulein, old boy, did you? |
35179 | You did n''t see my syce about, did you? |
35179 | You mean about the girl? 35179 You remember my tussle with the Punjabi wrestler?" |
35179 | You saved the tiger''s life, Lumbani? |
35179 | You''ll want Lord Victor to have a chance at this first tiger, I suppose, captain? |
35179 | Your sapphire? |
35179 | A gasp-- a cry of:"Gad, what is it?" |
35179 | A thoroughbred colt is n''t much benefit to the realm, but he generally develops into something worth while-- sabe?" |
35179 | After a time Rada said:"The Missie Baba will not ride the grey stallion to- day?" |
35179 | Almost too deuced human, what?" |
35179 | And always does not a leopard first tear open the stomach and eat the heart and the liver? |
35179 | And did an old, toothless tiger kill a buffalo of mine? |
35179 | And does it ride back to the hills in daylight?" |
35179 | And for vat is der hole on der other end from der inscription?" |
35179 | And mine are like that, Rada?" |
35179 | And now that you serve but one master what have you of service for him?" |
35179 | And was there a kill of tiger, or did the sahib also shoot somebody''s dog?" |
35179 | Are we going to accuse him of being at the pool?" |
35179 | Are you really going to do a book and were mugging up?" |
35179 | As they moved along, Finnerty chuckled:"What are we doing up here? |
35179 | As they reached the machan, Finnerty said:"As we are here to hear and see only, I suppose that even if Pundit Bagh comes we let him go free, eh?" |
35179 | As they sipped, the patient asked cautiously:"What did you and the major do in the evening?" |
35179 | As they went back Mahadua put his hand on Finnerty''s foot and asked:"Did you see the spectacles on Pundit Bagh?" |
35179 | At first flush he had thought of galloping after the girl, but even if he had succeeded in overtaking her what could he do? |
35179 | Back on the terrace, Prince Ananda asked:"Were you in the service out here, captain?" |
35179 | But if Ananda tries that game----You saw his brother- in- law, Darna Singh?" |
35179 | But the sahib"--and the Banjara nodded toward Swinton, his eyes coming back to Finnerty''s face--"is a man of discretion, is it not so, huzoor?" |
35179 | But"--and he cast a scornful glance at Lord Victor--"do you make the kill, major sahib?" |
35179 | Certainly the girl had passed that way-- was still up above them; why should they give up pursuit because the trail was momentarily broken? |
35179 | Did he tell you that I had the sapphire you lost?" |
35179 | Did not the sahib put down the rifle and take up the bird gun and shoot in the air over your head? |
35179 | Did not the sahib this day give you back your life? |
35179 | Did you get it, Swinton?" |
35179 | Did you see her?" |
35179 | Did_ your_ bearer tell you? |
35179 | Do you remember the time I saved you a jolly good hiding that was fair coming to you for one of your crazy tricks?" |
35179 | Do you think the earl would have countenanced my accepting the hospitality of a prince accompanied by a government spy?" |
35179 | Does a leopard break the neck of a bullock? |
35179 | Does he not slit the throat for the blood? |
35179 | Does n''t Boelke''s bungalow lie up in that direction?" |
35179 | Dropping the gun to his knee Swinton asked:"What was the end of the One Who Looks Up?" |
35179 | Finnerty received them in astonishment; then he asked:"Where are the doors?" |
35179 | Finnerty, peeping into the silver box that had been replaced by the servants on the table, asked:"Any of you chaps got that bell clapper? |
35179 | Foley in his cold, unimpassioned voice asked:"What do you want me to do?" |
35179 | For whose sin does he suffer?" |
35179 | God-- why should it be you again?" |
35179 | Have you any money?" |
35179 | He asked:"Was it the track of the white horse Gothya thought carried an evil spirit?" |
35179 | He glared about the room, and, crashing into his chair, asked gruffly:"Vhere is your fadder?" |
35179 | He now asked:"Do you suppose, major, it was just a bell that the thief wanted?" |
35179 | He turned to the native:"Was the lama of the temple killed?" |
35179 | Her voice had asked:"What illness troubles you, baboo?" |
35179 | His daughter Marie, eh? |
35179 | His hand caught the corner of the desk; his voice was husky, full of despair:"You don''t-- don''t-- I''m too late? |
35179 | How did the sahib get here-- has he keys for the door?" |
35179 | How will he disappear through the rock walls of a cave?" |
35179 | How''s your head?" |
35179 | I mean, tell me why you sent this thief, who is dead, to steal the sapphire?" |
35179 | If der paper is not here in five minutes do you know vat vill happen you?" |
35179 | Inside the bungalow, Swinton tossed his keys to the bearer, saying:"Bring----"He turned to Perreira:"What will you have, brandy or whisky?" |
35179 | Is Ramia still with the tiger?" |
35179 | Is he the ghost of a teacher?" |
35179 | Is that a bird?" |
35179 | Know you that, sage one?" |
35179 | May I close the door, sahib?" |
35179 | Mister Rajah, eh? |
35179 | Now what do you make of that, major? |
35179 | Piqued, his query of the night before,"Who was the woman?" |
35179 | Presently he asked:"Is the young sahib who shot my dog present?" |
35179 | Sabe, my dear major?" |
35179 | See that fellow?" |
35179 | Shall we take them over to our bungalow and give them a brandy?" |
35179 | Soft- nosed bullets?" |
35179 | Somewhat to Finnerty''s surprise, Swinton said:"Well, we''ve given our curiosity a good run for it; suppose we jog back? |
35179 | Swinton followed, and Lord Victor, muttering,"What the devil are you fellows up to?" |
35179 | Swinton shook hands with him, saying:"Duty is the best tutor, Lord Victor; it''s a steadier, eh?" |
35179 | The coachman drew the horses to a walk, and the baboo, keeping pace, asked:"Will you, kind gentlemans, if you see a vehicle, please send to meet me? |
35179 | The old gent would be tremendously shocked to know he was accused of flirting with a young girl, do n''t you think?" |
35179 | The sahib has seen in the flat rock the footprint of Prince Sakya Sinha where he stood and became Buddha?" |
35179 | Then how are you not worthy of the love of a man if he were a hundred times better than I am?" |
35179 | Then what think you, sahib, if after years of such living in peace, this depraved outcast, begotten of a hyena, makes the kill of a cow?" |
35179 | Think''st thou the sahib is afraid? |
35179 | This very get- up dinned familiarity into the major''s mind; he struggled with memory, mentally asking,"Where have I seen this chap?" |
35179 | Up this way-- to come in through Nepal?" |
35179 | Vell, vhere is der paper?" |
35179 | Vhere is it?" |
35179 | Was he capable of gigantic subtlety, such as his words would veil? |
35179 | Was n''t that what got him into this? |
35179 | What is Marie doing here in Darpore? |
35179 | What is she searching for in the hills? |
35179 | What luck?" |
35179 | What shall we do?" |
35179 | What was behind the prince''s pose in religion? |
35179 | What was it? |
35179 | What was it? |
35179 | What were the Prussians doing in the prince''s palace? |
35179 | What would she be doing out here at night?" |
35179 | What would the earl say? |
35179 | What would the fellows at the London clubs say? |
35179 | What''s Gilfain got?" |
35179 | What''s the bally shindy-- are they planting another brass god in the temple?" |
35179 | Where did you find your sapphire bell clapper?" |
35179 | Where did you go-- down to the bazaar?" |
35179 | Where is the sahib?" |
35179 | Where will be the place of the young sahib, that I may remain near in the way of advice lest he shoot one of my people, or even a buffalo?" |
35179 | Why did n''t you tell us that it was the girl who had stolen these state papers?" |
35179 | Why had Lord Victor given Mahadua a rupee to say nothing of this incident? |
35179 | Why had he given the shikari a rupee to say nothing of the meeting? |
35179 | Why had some one stolen the uncut sapphire? |
35179 | Why had the German drawn Finnerty into wrestling the Punjabi? |
35179 | Why had the youngster talked with the girl on the grey stallion-- why had he not let her pass? |
35179 | Why is she averse to being approached? |
35179 | Why is she here with a Prussian who is an enemy of the British Raj? |
35179 | Why should the young of the sahibs go forth to do a man''s work, huzoor?" |
35179 | Will the sircar pay me for the loss of my house, for surely it is a government elephant and we are poor people?" |
35179 | Will you writing book, too?" |
35179 | With a start, Finnerty asked:"And the stone pillar-- was it taken?" |
35179 | You did n''t happen to see a young lady on a grey stallion this morning, did you, old chap?" |
35179 | You do not fear for your own life-- I know dot-- but vill you trade dot paper for der life of der man you love-- Major Finnerty?" |
35179 | You know that dicky little chapel dedicated to the tiger god?" |
35179 | Your coat is ripped, captain; are you wounded?" |
35179 | _ You_ not worthy? |
39895 | Am I a believer in Spiritualism? |
39895 | Can we forget the power that gave us life? 39895 Do you look incredulous; do you smile with a tinge of pity?" |
39895 | What,he asks,"is this body that we see?" |
39895 | And was she then a truly"ignorant Eve,"without a fig- leaf of knowledge pertaining to mesmerism? |
39895 | And, at this point, where are we, if we pause and think? |
39895 | As such_ fact_, how can it be accounted for, when we know, at the same time, that the stone is nothing but a plexus of subjective states? |
39895 | But now, at once, the whole question at issue confronts us-- what is the true and full position and power_ of mind in therapeutics_? |
39895 | But these various"effects on various senses,"these merely subjective separates-- how do they_ get united_ into_ one thing_? |
39895 | But what_ is_ spirit? |
39895 | But why does the_ shape_ of a material body belong to"pure intuition,"and_ come from mind_? |
39895 | Dere she go now: do n''t I see her wi''dese very eyes?" |
39895 | Eddy?" |
39895 | Has it done no good in the world, then? |
39895 | Has the pulpit itself-- orthodox and not so orthodox-- contributed to the success of Eddy"Science"? |
39895 | Hence, too, what would become of the libel- suit? |
39895 | Her husband, Asa, was a witness for her, to prove the pecuniary value of her instruction, and was asked, among other questions,"What is Man?" |
39895 | How could a"loyal student,"young and wealthy, venture abroad without his"teacher?" |
39895 | How does the bunch of_ internal impressions_ get_ externalized_? |
39895 | Is there an"unknown and unknowable?" |
39895 | Is there no sincerity, then, in"Christian Science"? |
39895 | It is the custom; and, as Montaigne said,_ Que sais- je?_ I am not sure of much, and when I have"_ grippe_"I am quite certain of less than ever. |
39895 | Might they not better come unto St. Josephine Woodbury, and cast upon her the dross and sorrow of their material accumulations? |
39895 | Nay, as an idealist might say, even on the most popular grounds,_ must_ it not be so? |
39895 | Now what could a poor law- abiding citizen of New England, who had once been a mayor, do in such a case? |
39895 | Now what is the objective re- presentation, the rational conception of the totality of subjective conditions? |
39895 | Now what is to be done in such a dilemma? |
39895 | Shall we forget the wisdom of its way? |
39895 | Still, if already wealthy, as most of them were said to be, what was the use of it? |
39895 | Then, in such a shocking plight, what could an able Woodbury lawyer do but decline, with virtuous indignation, to go on further with the case? |
39895 | What are the constituents of it, to the extent that man may grasp them? |
39895 | What constitutes the unity of sensuous manifolds? |
39895 | What is an object of"imagination"in the meaning of fancy? |
39895 | What is the cause of this reflex, this"_ re_-presentation"? |
39895 | What is touch, but the simple awareness of feeling? |
39895 | What of it? |
39895 | What, for example, is seeing, but the simple awareness of sight? |
39895 | When reduced to elements, to principles, what is there of the universe-- the all of things? |
39895 | Why not? |
39895 | Wo n''t you write me if you will undertake for me if I can get to you?... |
39895 | [ 4]"Christian Science,""Mental Healing,""Metaphysical Treatment of Disease,"--where did these things come from, and how did they get here? |
39895 | _ Can_ any human being avoid it? |
39895 | _ Science and Health_, 25.--"Must Christian Science come through the Christian churches, as some insist? |
39895 | _ Science and Health_,_ Pref._ VIII.--"The question, What is Truth? |
39895 | _ Seeing_ things, and then_ thinking_ them, we always end by asking,"_ Why?_"They_ are_, each and all so and so; but what is the"_ reason_"for it? |
39895 | _ Seeing_ things, and then_ thinking_ them, we always end by asking,"_ Why?_"They_ are_, each and all so and so; but what is the"_ reason_"for it? |
36174 | And what of souls outworn, Of them whereon doth close The tomb''s mouth unawares? |
36174 | But do you not see,answered Martin,"that he likewise dislikes everything he possesses? |
36174 | But your excellency does not surely form the same opinion of Virgil? |
36174 | Does M. Racine, because he is a great poet, think that he knows every thing? |
36174 | I understand you,he replied,"you think I flag, do n''t you? |
36174 | May I take the liberty to ask if you do not receive great pleasure from reading Horace? |
36174 | My head, citizens? 36174 Now, what is this for?" |
36174 | O, Granny, Granny, did he speak? 36174 Pray,"said Candide,"by what master are the two first of these?" |
36174 | The vultures screaming,etc.? |
36174 | Well, my son? |
36174 | What preparations, then, are these? |
36174 | What the deuce is it to me whether he pleads for Rabirius or Cluentius? 36174 What think you I mean by my disobliging rat? |
36174 | Who are you? |
36174 | Who? |
36174 | Why not? |
36174 | _ Que sçai- je?_was his motto("What know I? |
36174 | _ Que sçai- je?_was his motto("What know I? |
36174 | _ Trajan, est- il content?_("Is Trajan satisfied?") |
36174 | _ Trajan, est- il content?_("Is Trajan satisfied?") |
36174 | (_ To Dorine, a maid- servant._) Has every thing gone on well these last two days? |
36174 | ***** Of what then complainest? |
36174 | ... Did you ever see a dog with a marrow- bone in his mouth? |
36174 | A monk? |
36174 | Am I to die by some sudden accident? |
36174 | Am I to suffer a thousand pains and torments that will make me die in a state of despair? |
36174 | Am I worthy of heaven? |
36174 | And did you then think that you were writing something so witty? |
36174 | And how did the libertine French monarch contrive to escape the force of truth like the following, with which the preacher immediately proceeds? |
36174 | And those airy- light pleasures which make life beloved, If thou never hadst wept, what worth to thee they? |
36174 | And, in fine, for what use of life could such a man be destined? |
36174 | Are events like these to be talked of? |
36174 | Are you not of the same opinion?" |
36174 | Arms he himself to have us overthrown? |
36174 | Arms he himself to save us, poor and weak? |
36174 | Art not young, art not happy, and everywhere hailed? |
36174 | As to the substance of what is said in the foregoing sentences? |
36174 | At what time? |
36174 | But did I speak the truth? |
36174 | But where could Jesus learn, among his compatriots, that pure and sublime morality of which he only has given us both precept and example? |
36174 | By what door? |
36174 | Can there be greater madness than to place our eternal salvation in uncertainty? |
36174 | Could I love thee thus wert thou but_ my_ son?" |
36174 | Did I dream it? |
36174 | Did ever you contemplate anything more wild and yet more full of life? |
36174 | Did he preach with professional, rather than with personal, zeal? |
36174 | Did his hearers feel themselves secretly acquitted by the man, at the self- same moment at which they were openly condemned by the preacher? |
36174 | Did you realize all it tells us? |
36174 | Do we find that he assumed the tone of an enthusiast or ambitious sectary? |
36174 | Do you at last acknowledge his rascality? |
36174 | Do you believe that things would even be equal? |
36174 | Do you hear the noise that rises and falls on every side? |
36174 | Do you remember, my son, what strict laws a king worthy of the crown ought to impose upon himself? |
36174 | Does this writer quiz his reader, or, in good faith, give him a needed hint? |
36174 | FROISSART( frwä- sar ´), Jean( 1337- 1410? |
36174 | Granny, Granny, there he sat? |
36174 | Granny, he sat there?" |
36174 | Have I read it? |
36174 | Have our princes ever had more faithful soldiers? |
36174 | Have they ever been seen rebellious? |
36174 | Hearken what wish for him she dying breathes-- Wish? |
36174 | How can a poor recluse To such a mission be of use? |
36174 | How can one love God if one never hears him properly spoken of? |
36174 | How can so much of wrath be found So much of love to enfold? |
36174 | How could any thing be more delectably conceived and described? |
36174 | How is every body? |
36174 | How shall I describe it? |
36174 | How shall I stand with God? |
36174 | How, in this case, ought I to behave to him? |
36174 | I was half frightened till he spoke;''My dear,''says he,''how do?''" |
36174 | I, sir? |
36174 | If you give any credit thereto, why do not you the same to these jovial new Chronicles of mine? |
36174 | In virile quality, Madame de Stael seemed_ rediviva_, or should we keep the more familiar masculine gender, and say_ redivivus_? |
36174 | In what disposition? |
36174 | In what manner? |
36174 | Is Art supposed to have higher powers than Nature? |
36174 | Is it my own idea? |
36174 | Is it not all pathetic? |
36174 | Is it possible that a book at once so simple and sublime should be merely the work of man? |
36174 | Is it possible that the Sacred Personage, whose history it contains, should be himself a mere man? |
36174 | Is it that, in a holocaust to be this day offered, I, like Jephtha''s daughter in other times, must pacify by my death the anger of the Lord? |
36174 | Is it verse you wish to write to her? |
36174 | Is not that finely said? |
36174 | Is the later literature of a certain softer fiber, a more yielding consistence, than characterizes the earlier? |
36174 | Is this heroic faith compatible with our actual knowledge of the laws of nature? |
36174 | Joinville( zhwaN- veel ´), Jean de( 1224?-1319? |
36174 | Jour._ And what have physics to say for themselves? |
36174 | Jour._ And what may this logic be? |
36174 | Jour._ And when we speak, what is that, then? |
36174 | Jour._ But of all these ways, which is the best? |
36174 | Jour._ Moral philosophy? |
36174 | Jour._ That will be gallant, will it not? |
36174 | Jour._ There is nothing but prose or verse? |
36174 | Jour._ What are they-- these three operations of the mind? |
36174 | Jour._ What does it say, this moral philosophy? |
36174 | Jour._ Why? |
36174 | Let childhood look forward, and age backward; is not this the signification of Janus''double face? |
36174 | Man, whom God made in his own image, is he but a shadow? |
36174 | Must I din it over and over into your ears, and shout as loud as half a dozen people? |
36174 | My master grew pale at these words, and said with a forced smile,"So, then, Mr. Gil Blas, this piece is not to your taste?" |
36174 | Nay, do you believe there would be found so many as the ten righteous men whom anciently the Lord could not find in five whole cities? |
36174 | Nay, he has just touchingly asked his foster- mother, observed by him to be in tears: What pity touches you? |
36174 | No; and why? |
36174 | Now, of what classes of persons do the professing Christians in this assembly consist? |
36174 | O when, cried Bourbon, ravished at the sight, In France shall peace and glory thus unite? |
36174 | On Felix''s final word,"Soldiers, execute the order that I have given,"Paulina exclaims,"Whither are you taking him?" |
36174 | Once more, Where is the wretch desperate enough to digest these propositions? |
36174 | Or have I deserved the torments of hell? |
36174 | Or is it the resemblance of meter that produces the impression? |
36174 | Or, to put it differently, is not mind the universal virtuality, the universe latent? |
36174 | Paulina is delighted; and Severus asks,"Who would not be touched by a spectacle so tender?" |
36174 | Phil._ Have you any principles, any rudiments, of science? |
36174 | Phil._ Will you learn moral philosophy? |
36174 | Phil._ With what would you like to begin? |
36174 | Phil._ Would you like to learn physics? |
36174 | Phil._ You only wish prose? |
36174 | Pray, how does he conclude?" |
36174 | Pray, where did this come from? |
36174 | RABELAIS( rä- bla), François( 1495?-1553? |
36174 | See you how carefully, because the Scripture condemns it, they guard against the intention of rendering evil for evil? |
36174 | Shall I have no other sentiment but that of fear? |
36174 | Shall I lose my senses? |
36174 | Shall I teach you logic? |
36174 | Shall we suppose the evangelic history a mere fiction? |
36174 | Since there must be chimeras, why is not perfection the chimera of all men? |
36174 | Some neglect, perhaps, in the style, or improper term?" |
36174 | Take him at his best, and what is there better? |
36174 | Take the following for an example on one side: Is not mind simply that which enables us to merge finite reality in the infinite possibility around it? |
36174 | Tell me ingenuously, my friend, have you found nothing that shocked you in writing it over? |
36174 | Ten months ago would she have believed it? |
36174 | The Lord hath deigned to speak, But what he to his prophet now hath shown-- Who unto us will make it clearly known? |
36174 | The author''s question with himself as he wrote seemed to have been, not, Is this valid, and necessary to the demonstration? |
36174 | The king, who found himself very disagreeably situated, turning to him, asked,"To whom shall I surrender myself? |
36174 | To paint a monk? |
36174 | Uneasy about what? |
36174 | V. LA ROCHEFOUCAULD: 1613- 1680; La Bruyère: 1646(? |
36174 | Villehardouin( vel- ar- doo- aN ´), Geoffroy( 1165?-1213? |
36174 | Was ever any thing so mad as I am, to be thus eternally pestering you with my rhapsodies? |
36174 | Was there fault in the preacher? |
36174 | Washing them, therefore, first at the fountain, the pilgrims said one to another, softly,"What shall we do? |
36174 | Wast not saying that thou of thy folly wast cured? |
36174 | We are almost drowned here amongst these lettuce: shall we speak? |
36174 | What can he do but pray That God will aid it on its way? |
36174 | What could surpass the adaptedness of such preaching as that to the need of the moment for which it was prepared? |
36174 | What do they complain of, then, if it is such that they could find it by seeking it? |
36174 | What harm had e''er my victims done? |
36174 | What has happened? |
36174 | What have I to hope? |
36174 | What is their resource? |
36174 | What is there wanting in such eloquence as the foregoing? |
36174 | What more could any rat desire? |
36174 | What other great nation is there that has continued great and spilled so often her own best blood? |
36174 | What shall I have to offer to him? |
36174 | What shall be said of a writer who thus plays with his reader? |
36174 | What spell enchains her to this gentle care? |
36174 | What think you, reader, is the service, For which I use this niggard rat? |
36174 | What was it changed this woman''s mood to serious? |
36174 | What woe, what weal, are each in turn foretold? |
36174 | Where is my cousin, the Prince of Wales? |
36174 | Where is the man, where the philosopher, who could so live and die, without weakness and without ostentation? |
36174 | Wherein lies its deficiency of power to penetrate and subdue? |
36174 | Whereunto( in your opinion) doth this little flourish of a preamble tend? |
36174 | Who among us would not at once recoil upon his conscience, to inquire whether his sins had not deserved that penalty? |
36174 | Who among us would not, seized with dismay, ask of Jesus Christ, as did once the apostles,"Lord, is it I?" |
36174 | Who are they? |
36174 | Who could suppose it a prelude to detailed reminiscence on the author''s part of sensual pleasures-- the basest-- enjoyed in the past? |
36174 | Who has not found pleasure on the sea- shore in viewing the distant rock whitened by the billows? |
36174 | Who has not spent whole hours seated on the bank of a river contemplating its passing waves? |
36174 | Who knows but we guess him too great? |
36174 | Who make up this assembly? |
36174 | Who shall decide? |
36174 | Who would desire to have for a friend a man who discourses in this manner? |
36174 | Who would have recourse to such a one in his afflictions? |
36174 | Who would select such a one for the confidant of his affairs? |
36174 | Why choose to abhor thy vanished young years, And an evil detest that thee better has made? |
36174 | Why? |
36174 | Will fear and necessity make my peace with him? |
36174 | Yet what is more natural, or can be more easily accounted for, than the foolish manner in which I have spent my life? |
36174 | You have it, Granny, yet?" |
36174 | You understand it now, I hope?" |
36174 | You want my head? |
36174 | You will ask me, then, if I would wish to live forever? |
36174 | _ Dor._ What is your name? |
36174 | _ Mar._ Who would have foretold it? |
36174 | _ Nam sine doctrina vita est quasi mortis imago._ You understand this, and you have, no doubt, a knowledge of Latin? |
36174 | _ Org._ And Tartuffe? |
36174 | _ Org._ And Tartuffe? |
36174 | _ Org._ And Tartuffe? |
36174 | _ Org._ And Tartuffe? |
36174 | _ Org._ But do you remember that my charitable hand, ungrateful scoundrel, raised you from a state of misery? |
36174 | _ Org._ But what has this to do with what has happened to- day? |
36174 | _ Org._ I ought to look upon his desire of seducing my wife as charitable? |
36174 | _ Org._ What do you mean, mother? |
36174 | _ Org._ What has this ill- will to do with what I have just told you? |
36174 | _ Org._ What? |
36174 | _ Phil._ But do you, like me, thoroughly understand the wit of it? |
36174 | _ Phil._(_ to Trissotin._) But when you wrote this charming_ whate''er men say_, did you yourself understand all its energy? |
36174 | _ Tar._ Who? |
36174 | _ Tar._ Why to prison? |
36174 | and what remains there for thy portion? |
36174 | but, Will this be interesting? |
36174 | cried he in a transport, when he had surveyed all the sheets of my copy,"was ever anything seen so correct? |
36174 | eat another''s grass? |
36174 | eating stupid sheep a crime? |
36174 | how could I be more sure? |
36174 | leave this place? |
36174 | replied he with astonishment,"has it met with any Aristarchus?" |
36174 | said he,"is this all?" |
36174 | speak to you?" |
36174 | till now? |
36174 | to whom? |
36174 | when I say,"Nicole, bring me my slippers, and give me my nightcap,"is that prose? |
36174 | where are thine elect? |
36174 | where are you? |
40001 | Is there really nothing else? |
40001 | Now,she continues,"what have you for soup?" |
40001 | Well,hopefully,"you must make a very nice little side dish( entrà © e), what can we have?" |
40001 | What would missis like then? |
40001 | Will it never end? |
40001 | And what appetites they had? |
40001 | At my prompt reply in the negative he seemed astonished, and asked, what then did I intend to do with my life? |
40001 | But surely Mrs. A. had heard that strange story about so and so''s behaviour towards somebody else? |
40001 | But what was that? |
40001 | Did dwellers in Remyo eat no cooked food; must I be satisfied with rice and fruits? |
40001 | Did you kill it yesterday?" |
40001 | Does the Indian Civilian, seated in his luxurious chamber in that awe- inspiring building of his, does he too spend his life in writing"chits"? |
40001 | Had the spirit, if spirit it were, some great truth to make known to me? |
40001 | I do n''t think the author of"From Greenland''s Icy Mountains"can ever have touched at Ceylon, or how could he have declared that"man is vile"? |
40001 | I felt that I positively dared not face that long, dark, ride back; but dare I face the python? |
40001 | I suppose pythons do sleep sometimes? |
40001 | In the matter of floor washing the Burman as a rule prefers to carry out the precepts stated in Mr. Chevallier''s song:"What''s the good of anything? |
40001 | Never by word or deed does he betray what thoughts occupy his mind on these ever recurring occasions, but someday, who knows? |
40001 | She begins cheerfully:"Well cook, what have we for dinner to- night?" |
40001 | So far so good, but what to write about? |
40001 | The python did not appear to have moved much, and had, apparently, as yet taken no notice of my appearance; could it be asleep? |
40001 | Then poor Mrs. A., deprived of her newspaper must needs seek another one, but alas? |
40001 | Was I one destined to learn deep secrets of the mystic world? |
40001 | Was I to ignore the lessons of my youth? |
40001 | Was it a wounded elephant? |
40001 | We modern Europeans may think we have a higher sense of humour than these simple folk; but who is to judge? |
40001 | What could it be? |
40001 | What was to be done? |
40001 | When my sister first showed me over her house, my heart sank in spite of my ostensible admiration, for where was the kitchen? |
40001 | he may be moved to speak, and then where will be the wisdom of the East and of the West, when compared with the wisdom of this contemplative nation? |
40001 | in a tone of stern reproach,"missis told you always to kill it the day before, why have you not done so?" |
39103 | Hither, page, and stand by me, See thou dost it telling Yonder peasant, who is he, Where and what his dwelling? |
39103 | How do you like the Royal Mail? |
39103 | I beg your pardon, Sir,said the hunted- looking man,"but can you tell me where I can find a parnbroker?" |
39103 | What, strip? |
39103 | A POLICEMAN is watching him._ TIME:_ Noon._ POLICEMAN What do you feed him? |
39103 | ASHMAN Huh? |
39103 | And is not this exactly what the circus does? |
39103 | And there is Zipp, the What- is- it? |
39103 | And what is the result? |
39103 | And what joyous satire here: And there is Zipp, the What- is- it? |
39103 | And what living poet could write a simpler and more moving study of the immemorial subject, death, than Mother Cuxsom''s brief elegy on Mrs. Henchard? |
39103 | And what would a railway journey be without these gay and civilizing reminders? |
39103 | And when will his wage come in?" |
39103 | And why are we to- day considering, in Swinburne and Francis Thompson, two Victorian poets? |
39103 | Are you mad? |
39103 | As a matter of fact, who is this big- necktied, long- haired person? |
39103 | Ashes? |
39103 | But does his curiosity urge him forth to long adventures? |
39103 | But then what else is he to do? |
39103 | But what phase of his dismal boyhood and wasted later years did he see in his homesick dreams? |
39103 | But when you see Mr. Clinton Scollard in his decorous cutaway drinking a milk shake in a drug store, how are you to guess his profession? |
39103 | But who would be clown-- now that John Bunny is dead? |
39103 | Calm, sad, secure; with faces worn and mild: Surely their choice of vigil is the best? |
39103 | Does a regular professional poet get a dollar a line for the work? |
39103 | Does he corner the wheat market or clean out waste baskets? |
39103 | He must have thought so, otherwise how could he have accounted for the existence of gold bricks? |
39103 | If Light can thus deceive, wherefore not Life? |
39103 | If Mr. Edmonds''s admirable prose translation be regarded in this light-- which surely is the light of nature-- what is there about it to perplex? |
39103 | Instead, what was Lionel Johnson? |
39103 | Is it because Hearn had a morbid fondness for the tragic, and loved to dwell on mental, physical and spiritual disease? |
39103 | Is it because Hearn''s style is too rich, exquisite and precious? |
39103 | Is it because of Hearn''s ridiculous religious prejudices-- his hatred for the Jesuits, for example? |
39103 | Is it possible that the importance of the human voice has been exaggerated? |
39103 | Is there now living a man who does nothing but write verse? |
39103 | It is a good rhythmical name, fitting excellently into the middle of a lesser Sapphic strophe; why should not Sappho use it? |
39103 | JAPANESE LACQUER What was the matter with Lafcadio Hearn? |
39103 | LITTLE GIRL What, Monmouth, best of horses, is he dead? |
39103 | LITTLE GIRL You stole the Mail? |
39103 | LITTLE GIRL(_ climbing up beside him_) No, Captain, I should know the Royal Mail, But when did you take up the coaching trade? |
39103 | My Lord of Bath and Wells-- LITTLE GIRL A Bishop, what? |
39103 | Not for me be the vaunt of woe; Was not I from a boy Vowed with the helmet and spear and spur To the blood- red banner of joy? |
39103 | Now, when a cough drop is to be made the subject of a sonnet- sequence what happens? |
39103 | O will you let us pass? |
39103 | PHILOSOPHICAL TENDENCIES IN ENGLISH LITERATURE Why do people write poems, stories and plays? |
39103 | POLICEMAN Kate? |
39103 | POLICEMAN(_ suddenly entering_) Hello there, Ashes, who you talking to? |
39103 | People do not specifically ask him to consult his watch, they ask,"What time is it?" |
39103 | Professor Ker continues:"In spite of Socrates and his logic we may venture to say, in answer to the question''What is a ballad?'' |
39103 | Thou char the wood ere thou canst limn with?" |
39103 | Was Pompilia among Browning''s acquaintances, or does E. A. Robinson write letters to Fleming Helphenstine and Minniver Cheevy? |
39103 | Was not Matthew Henchard''s rehabilitation to be complete, and the tale to end with a prosperous reunited family? |
39103 | What caused this man to carve, to chant, to express ideas so that they would be intelligible to his fellows? |
39103 | What does James think of them? |
39103 | What does he do in Wall Street? |
39103 | What episodes of his life in England did it give him pleasure to relive in memory? |
39103 | What is his name?" |
39103 | What is it that makes writers write? |
39103 | What is the ballad? |
39103 | What is the bond between these men? |
39103 | What is the climax of thought in his poem? |
39103 | What is the function of poetry? |
39103 | What is the remedy for this unfortunate condition? |
39103 | What is their occupation? |
39103 | What is this faded inscription? |
39103 | What is this influence? |
39103 | What of that? |
39103 | What, then, is a ballad? |
39103 | What, to his mind, was the use of writers, anyway? |
39103 | When will some wise playwright celebrate his urban prototype, the alarm clock? |
39103 | Where did_ you_ come from? |
39103 | Where had beauty flown? |
39103 | Which of the great old ballads is without at least one bloody murder? |
39103 | Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners?" |
39103 | Why Victorian? |
39103 | Why do we then shun Death with anxious strife? |
39103 | Why drag in the soldier? |
39103 | Why has no enterprising producer given us a real old English pantomime in the films, with all the conventional characters? |
39103 | Why is the Elizabethan era? |
39103 | Why is this? |
39103 | Why is this? |
39103 | Why should they be grouped together? |
39103 | Why should we believe that Sappho meant this poem as a personal message to a friend named Anactoria? |
39103 | Why then should he shudder when he sees a bright placard which shouts"18 Miles to the White Way Shoe Bazaar, Paterson''s Pride"? |
39103 | Why, it is respectfully asked, does it give"point to the piece"to imagine that Anactoria has fallen in love with a soldier? |
39103 | Would they be as interested in a poet who lived although his heart was broken? |
39103 | Would they be as interested in a poet who lived although his heart was broken? |
39103 | You answer, wildly striving to keep your reputation for omniscience:"That? |
39103 | and even"Have you the time?" |
39103 | who can help her, but in mercy He? |
38100 | Doctor,a man may say,"can I swallow this without being choked?" |
38100 | How,for example, we may ask,"can anything be recognized as divine, unless human judgment is passed upon it? |
38100 | I said,''then you consider that even a stone in the bladder is created by God?'' 38100 Well said wife; what though we are punished for the many? |
38100 | What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
38100 | Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord( Jehovah), or being his counsellor hath taught him? |
38100 | ** With this and the following saying we may compare the words of the Psalms--"Do not I hate those, O Lord, that hate thee? |
38100 | 11, a question,"why say the scribes that Elias must first come?" |
38100 | 13 is generally translated"ask,"as we should remark,"well, if he asks me what must I say?" |
38100 | 3, wherein we find certain disciples asking,"What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
38100 | 33), who hewed Agag into pieces? |
38100 | 55, where we find the people saying,"Is not this the carpenter''s son? |
38100 | 9) remarks--"Si adest dea Prema ut subacta se non commoveat quum prematur, dea Pertunda quid ea facit?" |
38100 | Against this, or side by side with it, what can Great Britain, or any other Christian country show? |
38100 | Amongst the questions which they provoke, the first is,"how far the accounts given to us are to be depended upon?" |
38100 | Amongst their prayers, or invocations, were the formulas,"Wilt Thou blot us out, O Lord, for ever? |
38100 | Are they honest? |
38100 | Are ye not much better than they?... |
38100 | Are you not offending Him in curing those whom He would kill?'' |
38100 | Are you not opposing God by so doing? |
38100 | Are"divines"honest? |
38100 | Because the Mizraim punished killing, were they taught of God? |
38100 | But in what consists the horror, unless in the fact that the sacrifice was seen by the worshippers? |
38100 | But king over whom? |
38100 | But why should we be surprised at the followers of"the Son"doing that which"the Father"ordained? |
38100 | Can a bigot be a liberal? |
38100 | Can a most virtuous life command for the individual who has practised it an eternity of bliss? |
38100 | Can civilization grow out of barbarism? |
38100 | Can the Christian adopt the belief that Mahometan and Mormon are both orthodox because they have faith? |
38100 | Can we believe him to be honest? |
38100 | Choice proposed-- faith or reason? |
38100 | Comes this spark from earth, Piercing and all- pervading, or from heaven? |
38100 | Did the Devil give to the heathen the knowledge of Satan''s origin and power? |
38100 | Do Papal authorities believe in the annual miracle at Naples? |
38100 | Does travel tell us of any set of teachers more self- denying than the individuals who devote themselves as religious Buddhists? |
38100 | During the talk, the woman, every time she uttered a sentence, said,"Am I right?" |
38100 | For the credulous, what fact could be more strongly attested than this? |
38100 | Had not He already made man out of dust and woman out of man? |
38100 | His argument is-- Can a man who hates the light be worthy to speak of the"Sun of Righteousness?" |
38100 | How far this is true has been repeatedly proved by those who have made the spirits say anything--"Where is my sister?" |
38100 | How should a doubt be tackled-- by inquiry, or by ignoring it? |
38100 | If Jesus was right, why not enforce his teaching? |
38100 | If compass wrong, why steer by it? |
38100 | If every one was to live from hand to mouth, who would keep a calf until it became a heifer, or a lamb to become a sheep? |
38100 | If so, why did the Jews, and why do Christians, adopt it? |
38100 | If this can not be done, how can the follower of Jesus hope to convert others to his belief, unless by the use of reason? |
38100 | If, for an example, the question were put to both"What is honesty?" |
38100 | If, then, the theologian uses reason as a weapon against heterodoxy, upon what ground can he object to its being employed by another? |
38100 | In other words, is there anything of the nature of absolute goodness in the attempt to make oneself miserable? |
38100 | In this hymn I have only omitted the repeated question-- Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
38100 | Is Bishop Browne honest in controversy? |
38100 | Is it honest in religion to promulgate that which we knew to be wrong, or which we dare not inquire into for fear of consequences? |
38100 | Is it possible that any minister in politics, or religion, can believe that"Honesty is the best policy,"and yet act with double- dealing? |
38100 | Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? |
38100 | Is the"firm"or"company"honest? |
38100 | Is this honest? |
38100 | Is this punishment intended, not for our reformation, but for our destruction?" |
38100 | Is, then, the sturdy English theologian to be content to leave the followers of Islam alone, because they have faith? |
38100 | It is true that the youth replied,"Wist ye not that I must be about my father''s business?" |
38100 | It will be seen that the question to which I refer is this--"Shall men and states be governed by faith?" |
38100 | L 7, 14,--"Who maketh his angels spirits;""Are they not all ministering spirits?" |
38100 | Lying miracles-- are they promulgated honestly? |
38100 | Now, if we require from ourselves a distinct answer to the question, what is prayer? |
38100 | One may now ask,"Why did people think that it was part of the Christian''s privileges or powers to speak with tongues?" |
38100 | Ought the divine to be less honest than the merchant? |
38100 | Pilate is reported to have said--"What is truth?" |
38100 | Prophet who says that he converses with an angel--is he to be credited? |
38100 | The Siamese author next discusses the question,"how shall a man select that religion which he can trust to for his future happiness?" |
38100 | The question has often suggested itself to my own mind,"How much has insanity of mind had to do with religion?" |
38100 | Then come the important questions--"What right has any religious bigot to profess himself a liberal?" |
38100 | Thence proceeded the earth,_ Ua, or Mot_( Sans);_ Math_( Sans) making fire by rubbing sticks( coitus?) |
38100 | Therefore take no thought, saying, what shall we eat, or what shall we drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed?... |
38100 | Upon this point the following passages will be found very significant:--''Who has seen the primeval being at the time of His being born? |
38100 | Was the Jewish ignorance the result of Divine"inspiration?" |
38100 | What does he find? |
38100 | What have we here? |
38100 | What is faith? |
38100 | What is that One alone, who has upheld these six spheres in the form of an unborn?''" |
38100 | What is the value of education unless it enables us, when necessary, to find whether we are in the right way or not? |
38100 | What though our bodies be disgracefully exposed on these crosses? |
38100 | What was the massacre at Cawnpore to that in Jericho and other Canaanite cities? |
38100 | What, let us ask, would the orthodox declare was amissing? |
38100 | When was India first known to Christians? |
38100 | When we find out that, what will be our opinion of the captain? |
38100 | Whence, whence this manifold creation sprang? |
38100 | Which must the faithful follow? |
38100 | Who can assert that Abraham and Jacob, Moses and Aaron, were taught of God, and that to the Hebrews alone has the Creator revealed His will? |
38100 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
38100 | Who knows from whence this great creation sprang? |
38100 | Who knows the secret? |
38100 | Who would believe the ravings of a lunatic, even though he told us that God had sent him with a message to man? |
38100 | Why do Christians, as a body, reject the revelation made to Mahomet, and the frequent inspirations which give laws to the latter- day saints? |
38100 | Why take ye thought for raiment, consider the lilies of the field... if God so clothe the grass... shall he not much more clothe you? |
38100 | Why, however, should any goal be undesirable which leads us nearer to truth? |
38100 | Why, then, do not men, like Mr Gladstone, join it? |
38100 | Without further preface, let us inquire"what Faith really is?" |
38100 | Would you behold his head and his fair face? |
38100 | Your soldiers subjugate gods and men, but not me, I shall crush them by wisdom, then what will you do?" |
38100 | am I justified in using my reason only in one direction? |
38100 | and am I not grieved with those that rise up against thee? |
38100 | and his brethren James, and Joses, and Simon, and Judas, and his sisters, are they not all with us?" |
38100 | and if we are to mete out degrees of culpability, to whom must the severest punishment be awarded? |
38100 | and if what has been given to me as sound meat, is rotten in reality, am I bound to eat it? |
38100 | and that the Jew must still be dear to Jehovah, inasmuch as he still clings closely by faith to the revelation given to Moses and the prophets? |
38100 | and, in the next place, whether we get that to which we are entitled? |
38100 | and,"Is it not right for us to risk our own souls in support of a faith which we do not, but which the people do, believe?" |
38100 | can it do me good in any way? |
38100 | from earth are the breath and blood, but where is the soul-- who may repair to the sage to ask this? |
38100 | if I profess to argue, am I not bound to be logical? |
38100 | if every one in new Jerusalem is a ruler, what is he a ruler of? |
38100 | if he was wrong, why not say so? |
38100 | ii.,--"Who now,"he makes Lucilius say,"believes in Hippocentaurs and Chimeras? |
38100 | in other words,"by the hierarchy of the most numerous section of the community-- or by reason-- i.e., by the good sense of the majority?" |
38100 | is not his mother called Mary? |
38100 | or over what? |
38100 | or what old woman is now to be found so weak and ignorant as to stand in fear of those infernal monsters which once so terrified mankind? |
38100 | or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
38100 | or, How can any revelation be accepted, unless the mind has examined the messenger and the message?" |
38100 | or, must he still endeavour to convert them by the use of reason? |
38100 | or,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
38100 | v. 6--"Neither say thou before the angel that it was an error; wherefore... should God destroy the works of thine hands?" |
38100 | was water the deep abyss, the chaos which swallowed up everything?" |
38100 | what is that endowed with substance that the unsubstantial sustains? |
38100 | what was the refuge of what? |
38100 | who proclaimed it here? |
40120 | And he, too, has watched the two nights past? |
40120 | And none roused? |
40120 | And those lost visits, when? |
40120 | But the cause of her turning? |
40120 | But the last two nights? |
40120 | But trembling or calm? |
40120 | Can anything soothe more than thy lips, More than the lips that love him? |
40120 | Do you remember? |
40120 | Dying? |
40120 | Feared she? |
40120 | For what? |
40120 | Ha!--And the spirit that visits me? |
40120 | How can I moan, being happy? |
40120 | How kept he awake? |
40120 | How so? |
40120 | I spoke to him asking,"Who art thou?" |
40120 | Is it the cat that crept upon us Whose shape still affrights you? |
40120 | It is grudged, Sir Priest? |
40120 | Moaning or was it singing? |
40120 | Not kiss him? |
40120 | Of what were these horrible dreams? |
40120 | Perhaps he is hungry for my kisses-- Shall I kiss him? |
40120 | Shall I touch him with my hands? |
40120 | Since many slept spell- bound How broke he the spell? |
40120 | Slept? |
40120 | So always the dream? |
40120 | Such a spirit there must be-- but what? |
40120 | The form? |
40120 | Turned she startled-- Turned she slowly-- Turned she wonderingly? |
40120 | What dream, my lady? |
40120 | What is good? |
40120 | What was their substance? |
40120 | When O Toyo rises to enter my chamber-- Your dirk is sharp, Ito Soda? |
40120 | Why clemency? |
40120 | Yet? |
40120 | [_ Puts one hand on_ RUITEN''S_ shoulder._] Priest, have not many Vampires bleeding them And dream it is another thing? |
40120 | [_ The singing stops abruptly._] Kashiku, is not that a cat Stealing stealthily there? |
38982 | But why,asks Kautsky,"did you not summon a new Constituent Assembly?" |
38982 | But, in that case, in what do your tactics differ from the tactics of Tsarism? |
38982 | Wherein, then, does your Socialism,Abramovich cries,"differ from Egyptian slavery? |
38982 | (_ What are the Bolshevists doing?_ Published by Dr. Nath. |
38982 | All this is splendid-- only why do not the Mensheviks offer us several hundred boards? |
38982 | And after all, how should he think of them? |
38982 | And at what moment? |
38982 | And why? |
38982 | And, first of all, whence does this come? |
38982 | And, if the collegiate principle is not a sacred gospel for the workshops, why is it compulsory for the factories? |
38982 | Are we depriving ourselves of Cadet and Menshevik criticisms of the corruption of the working class? |
38982 | Are we not dealing here with"shades of opinion"in the proletarian or the Socialist movement? |
38982 | But did we not hear exactly the same criticism, at bottom, when we had recourse to extensive mobilizations for military problems? |
38982 | But does this mean that Trotsky had to be rash enough to continue the war against Germany? |
38982 | But how are we to get at it? |
38982 | But in that case, what happens to the class struggle altogether? |
38982 | But in this connection there was always less thought"( amongst whom? |
38982 | But it is quite justifiable to ask: Did the latter correspond to the balance of power? |
38982 | But then, why have Soviets sprung up in Germany? |
38982 | But what does the art of exegesis exist for? |
38982 | But what then becomes of the sacredness of human life? |
38982 | But where is your guarantee, certain wise men ask us, that it is just your party that expresses the interests of historical development? |
38982 | But will the partners agree? |
38982 | But with what did we begin? |
38982 | But, perhaps, we are expected to consider them"intolerable"? |
38982 | By what other path then can it be attained? |
38982 | By whose decision? |
38982 | Can it be otherwise? |
38982 | Can it, without a fight, abandon its booty altogether? |
38982 | Did we, by our conduct, give the European workers even the shadow of a ground to place us in the same category as German imperialism? |
38982 | Do you grasp this... distinction? |
38982 | Does Kautsky desire to insist that we should allow the parties which support Denikin to come out into the open? |
38982 | Economic pressure or legal compulsion? |
38982 | Firstly: Why did we summon the Constituent Assembly when we had in view the dictatorship of the proletariat? |
38982 | How are we practically to begin the utilization of labor- power on the basis of compulsory military service? |
38982 | How are we productively to organize it? |
38982 | How are we to apply it? |
38982 | However, even here it is permissible to ask: Does the policy of Clemenceau himself really correspond to the balance of power? |
38982 | If collegiate administration is a"school,"why do we not require an elementary school? |
38982 | In what way? |
38982 | In what, however, lies the difference between them? |
38982 | Is an insurrection of oppressed slaves against their masters permissible? |
38982 | Is it permissible to purchase one''s freedom at the cost of the life of one''s jailers? |
38982 | Is it permissible to suppress newspapers? |
38982 | Is it still necessary to confute Kautsky theoretically? |
38982 | Is there still theoretical necessity to justify revolutionary terrorism? |
38982 | Is this true? |
38982 | It is true that compulsory labor is always unproductive? |
38982 | May one kill the murderer to save oneself? |
38982 | Or does he reduce the whole question to the_ degree_ of repression, and recommend in all circumstances imprisonment instead of execution? |
38982 | Ought one not absolutely to repudiate them in the Ebert Republic? |
38982 | Perhaps Kautsky has invented other methods? |
38982 | Since what time has this been admitted by our Kautskians? |
38982 | The whole question is, did we allow ourselves to be utilized? |
38982 | The whole question is: who applies the principle of compulsion, over whom, and for what purpose? |
38982 | The working class or the landlord class, Pharaohs or peasants, White Guards or the Petrograd proletariat? |
38982 | There is a difference, gentlemen, and it is defined by a fundamental test: who is in power? |
38982 | To dismiss them to the four corners of the earth, saying"seek for better conditions where you can find them, comrades"? |
38982 | We ask what does compulsory labor mean here, that is, to what kind of labor is it opposed? |
38982 | What State, what class, in what conditions, by what methods? |
38982 | What are the conclusions to be drawn from that experience? |
38982 | What are we to understand, in that case, by free labor? |
38982 | What did I say in reality? |
38982 | What does this mean? |
38982 | What happened in reality? |
38982 | What methods have we, then, for the re- education of the workers? |
38982 | What tasks? |
38982 | What thoughts have they in common with us? |
38982 | What would Kautsky say to this rank betrayal, Kautsky, the foremost disciple of Marx, Kautsky, the foremost theoretician of the Second International? |
38982 | What, however, will be the"constitutional"position of the Soviets in the republic of Zeiz, Renner and company? |
38982 | When a murderer raises his knife over a child, may one kill the murderer to save the child? |
38982 | When it came to a real struggle, and to the creation of a real army against the real enemies of the working class, what did you do then? |
38982 | When suggesting to us the election of a Constituent Assembly, does Kautsky propose the stopping of the civil war for the purpose of the elections? |
38982 | Whence have they appeared? |
38982 | Where is the difference? |
38982 | Why do we speak of_ militarization_? |
38982 | Why should we not introduce boards into the workshops? |
38982 | Why? |
38982 | Will he at least speak up? |
38982 | Will it come, the seeming inevitable? |
38982 | Will not thereby the principle of the"sacredness of human life"be infringed? |
38982 | Will there be any need of it then? |
38982 | Would it pay for itself? |
38982 | Would not the fate of the Russian Revolution long ago have been sealed? |
38982 | Would the Red soldiers work? |
38982 | Would their work be sufficiently productive? |
38982 | Yes? |
38982 | You do not understand this, holy men? |
38982 | _ How could their lives be spared any longer_ after the blood- bath with which MacMahon''s Pretorians celebrated their entry into Paris?" |
38730 | Then why did you call me wretch? 38730 Yes,"replies an ant,"but in what capacity are you admitted among all these great people? |
38730 | You do not wish to be sick? 38730 A cunning old mouse peeps over the edge of the shelf, and says:Aha, my good friend, are you there? |
38730 | Am I bound to make the attempt to draw it away from the track? |
38730 | And he looked into their eyes, and said:"Have you eaten of the fruit of which I told you not to eat?" |
38730 | And he said to them:"Why do you hide from me?" |
38730 | And how does Iphigenia heal him? |
38730 | And then, to- morrow evening he was to play for the dancers on the green, at the village feast: would not Cain join in the merry- making? |
38730 | And what are those traces? |
38730 | And what is the relation of moral instruction to the habits thus engendered? |
38730 | And why? |
38730 | And why? |
38730 | Are her own parents still living, and are they so situated that she is justified in leaving them? |
38730 | Are there other blood relations who have a prior claim on her? |
38730 | At what time does conscience enter on the scene? |
38730 | But he silenced it by saying to himself,"Am I my brother''s keeper? |
38730 | But how comes the parent''s word to produce belief? |
38730 | But how shall the sentiment of filial gratitude express itself? |
38730 | But how shall we handle these_ Märchen_ and what method shall we employ in putting them to account for our special purpose? |
38730 | But if you fix the time at all, is it not worth while to fix it with approximate exactness? |
38730 | But is it not a duty to denounce evil and evil- doers and to put the innocent on their guard against wolves in sheep''s clothing? |
38730 | But it may be asked: Are not moral principles really clothed with supreme authority? |
38730 | But of what nature shall these maxims be? |
38730 | But what, then, is it my business as a moral teacher to do? |
38730 | But when he asked for his reward, the wolf glared savagely upon him, and said:"Is it not enough that I refrained from biting off your head?" |
38730 | But why is knowledge so desirable? |
38730 | CHARITY.--How shall we distinguish charity from justice? |
38730 | CONTENTS: Happiness as an Immediate Aim.--Unguided Expediency.--The Moral- Sense Doctrine.--What is Morality?--The Evanescence[? |
38730 | Can we desire to inoculate the young with this spirit? |
38730 | David remarks:"If my own son seek my life, how shall I be angry with this Benjamite?" |
38730 | Did I not beg you to stop?" |
38730 | Does it make any difference whether I am single or the father of a family and have others dependent on me? |
38730 | Does the deed of charity react beneficially on the doer? |
38730 | Does this strike you as pedantic? |
38730 | Else how could it ever unfold into full- grown morality? |
38730 | For my part, I should suspect of quibbling and dishonest intention any boy or girl who would ask me, Why ought I not to lie? |
38730 | Have I ever broken any pots, or have I rubbed against the walls, or have I made the walks around the premises unclean?" |
38730 | Have you ever tried hard to solve a problem in algebra? |
38730 | How can I be sure that there is such a thing as eternal truth-- that the right will prevail in the end? |
38730 | How can such examples fail to inspire, to ennoble, to awaken emulation? |
38730 | How can we justify such a procedure? |
38730 | How do they manifest themselves? |
38730 | How do you characterize such a statement? |
38730 | How is this unique charm of the classical literature to be explained? |
38730 | How much of it can we hope to include in such a course of instruction as this? |
38730 | How to arrive at such a rule? |
38730 | How, then, shall we define equality in the moral sense? |
38730 | I like your industries and your factories and your wealth; but, tell me, do they turn out men down your way?" |
38730 | I would rather be killed than kill? |
38730 | In what does the falsehood of such statements consist? |
38730 | In what sense is it immoral? |
38730 | In what way will these types appeal to our pupils? |
38730 | Is he such a child that he can not take care of himself-- that he can not stand a blow?" |
38730 | Is it easy to see the good in others? |
38730 | Is it not a little astonishing that this fable should so often be related to children as if it contained a moral which they ought to take to heart? |
38730 | Is it not indispensable, from his point of view, that the figure of the Saviour shall stand in the foreground of moral inculcation and exhortation? |
38730 | Is it right to kill another in self- defense? |
38730 | Is not moral education conceded to be one of the most important, if not the most important, of all branches of education? |
38730 | Joseph is lost; shall Benjamin, too, perish? |
38730 | Must we forego the splendid opportunities afforded by the daily schools for this purpose? |
38730 | Must we, therefore, abandon altogether the hope of teaching the elements of morals? |
38730 | On what basis does it rest? |
38730 | Orestes is sick; and what is his malady? |
38730 | Ought we not, indeed, to keep the standard of righteousness constantly before our eyes; in brief, is it possible to be too moral? |
38730 | Parents and teachers should endeavor to answer such questions as these: When do the first stirrings of the moral sense appear in the child? |
38730 | Shall I always tell the truth-- that is to say, the whole truth, as I know it, and to everybody? |
38730 | Shall we then change the formula so as to read: Intend that thy words shall conform to the facts? |
38730 | Shall we then formulate the rule in this wise: Intend to make thy words correspond to the essential facts? |
38730 | Should we be justified in setting down the many excellent persons who made such statements as liars? |
38730 | That was right, children, was it not? |
38730 | The ethics of suicide resolves itself into the question, Is it justifiable under any circumstances to take one''s life? |
38730 | The fanatic of the first degree, to whom Emerson addresses the words,"What right have you, sir, to your one virtue?" |
38730 | The field being spread out before us, the question arises, At what point shall we enter it? |
38730 | The question is now raised, Why did Cleanthes work at night instead of seeking rest, and why did Hillel remain outside in the bitter cold and snow? |
38730 | The question is, would the merchant, would those others, be justified in committing suicide? |
38730 | The temptation begins when the snake says with characteristic exaggeration:"Is it true that of_ all_ the fruit you are forbidden to eat?" |
38730 | The words of Saul are very touching,"Is it thy voice I hear, my son David?" |
38730 | To what acts or omissions does the child apply the terms right and wrong? |
38730 | To which system shall we give the preference? |
38730 | Upon what moral considerations shall the right of property be based? |
38730 | Was there ever a more perfect embodiment of girlish grace and modesty, coupled with sweetest frankness, than Nausicaa? |
38730 | What are the emotional and the intellectual equipments of the child at different periods, and how do these correspond with its moral outfit? |
38730 | What better stimulation can we offer to growing children than this recital of Telemachus''s development from boyhood into manhood? |
38730 | What can be finer, e. g., than Nausicaa''s farewell to Ulysses? |
38730 | What is the good eye? |
38730 | What is the proper order? |
38730 | What is this principle? |
38730 | What makes the trees grow? |
38730 | What method shall we use for instilling these ideas? |
38730 | What motive can there be strong enough to support bravery in that moment? |
38730 | What need is there of specific moral instruction? |
38730 | What quality exists in Homer, in the Bible, enabling them, despite the changes of taste and fashion, to hold their own? |
38730 | What should be the rule of duty in such cases? |
38730 | What then? |
38730 | What topics shall we single out? |
38730 | What, after all, apart from artificial social convention, is the foundation of the right of property? |
38730 | When the Christian maintains that morality must be based on religion, does he not mean, above all, on the belief in Christ? |
38730 | Where in universal literature shall we find words more eloquent of tender devotion than these? |
38730 | Why not be content with still further confirming the force of good habits? |
38730 | Why not say a falsehood is like a pebble? |
38730 | Why not? |
38730 | Why should not these be permitted to put an end to their miseries? |
38730 | Why, then, may we not content ourselves with utilizing the ordinary studies of the school curriculum? |
38730 | Why, then, should not these habits suffice? |
38730 | Will you permit me to relate the story as I should tell it to little children? |
38730 | With what show of fairness, then, could the belief of any one of these sects be adopted by the state as a basis for the inculcation of moral truths? |
38730 | Wouldst thou be sure that there is such a thing as a divine Power? |
38730 | You do not wish to suffer? |
38730 | _ Is this civilization of ours turning out men_--manly men and womanly women? |
38730 | e., what is the cause of the trees growing and the stars shining? |
38730 | wherefore should my son have gone?'' |
38438 | How far can a Fairy see? 38438 How the leaves are scalloped out; Where''s the den of Dragon Fly? |
38438 | In its first radiance I have seen The sun!--why tarry then till comes the night? 38438 Nay!--You are wrong in your planting,"said he,"Have we not grass and the weeds and a tree? |
38438 | Pray are you within there? 38438 Pray, are you within there, Mistress Who- were- you?" |
38438 | What heart but fears a fragrance? |
38438 | What''s he look like, mother? |
38438 | Where have you been, you naughty child? |
38438 | ''Tis well for little buds to dream, Dream-- dream-- who knows-- Say, is it good to be a rose? |
38438 | ***** Love, need we more than our imagining To make the whole year May? |
38438 | -- I asked her--"In the fountain?" |
38438 | A garden full of fragrances, Of pauses and of cadences, Whence come they all? |
38438 | A seed''s so very small, And dirt all looks the same;-- How can they know at all The way they ought to aim? |
38438 | A sudden wind-- the pale rose- petals blow Hither and yon-- or are they flakes of snow? |
38438 | ADELAIDE CRAPSEY JEWEL- WEED Thou lonely, dew- wet mountain road, Traversed by toiling feet each day, What rare enchantment maketh thee Appear so gay? |
38438 | ARTHUR UPSON THE BLOOMING OF THE ROSE What is it like, to be a rose? |
38438 | Ah, who shall say What vast expansions shall be ours that day? |
38438 | Ah, who shall say? |
38438 | All perfect? |
38438 | And I whispered,"Alas, Little Brother, why must it befall That the passing of angels but cripples and leaves us to die? |
38438 | And I who gaze On the dark border here, Drawn like a ribbon round the pasture- ways, Embroidered with the glory of the year,-- Do I not like the wall? |
38438 | And I, how can I praise thee well and wide From where I dwell-- upon the hither side? |
38438 | And how shall the soul of a man Be larger than the life he has lived? |
38438 | And whence thy blue amid the corn, O Corn- flower? |
38438 | And whence thy red beside the stream, O Cardinal- flower? |
38438 | Are there not violets And gods-- To- day? |
38438 | BLANCHE SHOEMAKER WAGSTAFF COBWEBS Who would not praise thee, miracle of Frost? |
38438 | BLISS CARMAN THE TREES There''s something in a noble tree-- What shall I say? |
38438 | Beloved, who wert with me there, How came these shames to be?-- On what lost star are we? |
38438 | Brave little cuttings of laughter and light? |
38438 | Brother Bird: Why do you sing and sing? |
38438 | Brother Stream: Why do you run and run? |
38438 | But what new thing could you find to sing More rare than the same little rose? |
38438 | But would you guess that it was the tiny shadow of your little child? |
38438 | CATHERINE PARMENTER(_ Eleven years old_) SPRING PLANTING"What shall we plant for our Summer, my boy,-- Seeds of enchantment and seedlings of joy? |
38438 | Can I bear the beauty of this day, Or shall I be swept utterly away? |
38438 | Can ye-- if ye dwelt indeed Captives of a prison seed-- Like the Genie, once again Get you back into the grain? |
38438 | Charity, eglantine, and rue And love- in- a- mist are all in view, With coloured cousins; but where are you, Sweetwilliam? |
38438 | DOUGLAS MALLOCH IDEALISTS Brother Tree: Why do you reach and reach? |
38438 | Dere''s fina beeg wheel- barrow dere on da floor, But w''at do you s''pose? |
38438 | Did your gossips gold and blue, Sky and Sunshine, choose for you, Ere your triple forms were seen, Suited liveries of green? |
38438 | Do all the seeds make noises When they start to grow? |
38438 | Do n''t the buzzards ooze around up thare jest like they''ve allus done? |
38438 | Do n''t you know why they are in such a hurry? |
38438 | Do peonies blush as deep with pride, The larkspurs burn as bright a blue, And velvet pansies stare as wide I wonder, as they used to do? |
38438 | Do you dream some day to fill the sea? |
38438 | Do you dream some day to touch the sky? |
38438 | Do you know anything about the spring When it comes again? |
38438 | Do you remember? |
38438 | Does the medder- lark complain, as he swims high and dry Through the waves of the wind and the blue of the sky? |
38438 | Does the quail set up and whissel in a disappointed way, Er hang his head in silence, and sorrow all the day? |
38438 | EDGAR LEE MASTERS SEEDS What shall we be like when We cast this earthly body and attain To immortality? |
38438 | EDWIN MARKHAM CONSCIENCE Wisdom am I When thou art but a fool; My part the man, When thou hast played the clod; Hast lost thy garden? |
38438 | EDWIN MARKHAM THE SECRET O, little bird, you sing As if all months were June; Pray tell me ere you go The secret of your tune? |
38438 | ELSA BARKER A SONG IN A GARDEN Will the garden never forget That it whispers over and over,"Where is your lover, Nanette? |
38438 | FLORENCE EARLE COATES THE WALL"_ Something there is that does n''t like a wall._"( ROBERT FROST)"Not like a wall?" |
38438 | GERTRUDE HUNTINGTON MCGIFFERT SUN, CARDINAL, AND CORN FLOWERS Whence gets Earth her gold for thee, O Sunflower? |
38438 | HELEN HAY WHITNEY IF I COULD DIG LIKE A RABBIT If I could dig holes in the ground like a rabbit, D''you know what I''d do? |
38438 | Has Spring for you Wrought visions, As it did for her In a garden? |
38438 | Hath hellish Proserpine Her needs lent to arm thee That mischief- loving gods, Pricked sorely, may not harm thee? |
38438 | Have n''t you seen how eager they are to get there? |
38438 | Have you only this to say When I pray you for comforting? |
38438 | How are cobweb carpets made? |
38438 | I asked her--"In the tree?" |
38438 | I have mourned with you year and year, When the Autumn has left you bare, And now that my heart is sere Does not one of your roses care? |
38438 | I look at dees Tony an''say to heem:"Wal?" |
38438 | I say to heem:"Tony, why don''ta you gat Som''leetla wheel- barrow for halp you weeth dat?" |
38438 | I wonder if it_ is_ a bird That sings within the hidden tree, Or some shy angel calling me To follow far away? |
38438 | Is it a dream or ghost Of a dream that comes to me, Here in the twilight on the coast, Blue cinctured by the sea? |
38438 | Is it good? |
38438 | Is that the sting Masked in gay dress and whirring wing? |
38438 | Is the chipmuck''s health a- failin''?--Does he walk, er does he run? |
38438 | Is they anything the matter with the rooster''s lungs er voice? |
38438 | JOSEPHINE PRESTON PEABODY THE MESSAGE When one has heard the message of the Rose, For what faint other calling shall he care? |
38438 | LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE DAFFODILS There flames the first gay daffodil Where winter- long the snows have lain: Who buried Love, all spent and still? |
38438 | Little masters, may I stand In your presence, hat in hand, Waiting till you solve for me This your threefold mystery? |
38438 | MARJORIE L. C. PICKTHALL"WHAT HEART BUT FEARS A FRAGRANCE?" |
38438 | Mute, said I? |
38438 | Night, and a flame in the embers Where the seal of the years was set,-- When the almond- bough remembers How shall my heart forget? |
38438 | Now that I walk alone Here where our hands were met, Must you whisper me everyone,"Where is your lover, Nanette?" |
38438 | O Voice!--what is thy necromantic word That all Granada waits adown the years? |
38438 | O daisy mine, what will it be to look From God''s side even of such a simple thing? |
38438 | OLIVER HERFORD DA THIEF Eef poor man goes An''steals a rose Een Juna- time-- Wan leetla rose-- You gon''su''pose Dat dat''s a crime? |
38438 | Oh, help me forget-- forget, Nor question over and over,"Where is your lover, Nanette? |
38438 | Oh, roses I helped to grow, Oh, lily and mignonette, Must you always question me so,"Where is your lover, Nanette?" |
38438 | Or do they show a paler shade, And sigh a little in the wind For one whose sheltering presence made Their step- dame Nature less unkind? |
38438 | Or, was it the charm of remembered words, That set my heart singing through somber days? |
38438 | Ort a mortul be complainin''when dumb animals rejoice? |
38438 | Outside the great world comes and goes-- I think I doubt, to be a rose--_ Old Roses_,"Doubt? |
38438 | Quiet lane, and an irised meadow...(_ How many summers have died since then?_)... |
38438 | RABINDRANATH TAGORE IN AN EGYPTIAN GARDEN Can it be winter otherwhere? |
38438 | Said Tulip to the Lily white:"About the Rose-- what do you think?-- Her color? |
38438 | She-- has she quite forgotten? |
38438 | Should you say it''s quite-- Well, quite a natural shade of pink?" |
38438 | Since you looked on my joy one day, Is my grief then a lesser thing? |
38438 | The Rose into the Tulip''s ear Murmured:"The Lily is a sight; Do n''t you believe she_ powders_, dear, To make herself so saintly white? |
38438 | The tender things that would not blow Unless I coaxed them, do they raise Their petals in a sturdy row, Forgetful, to the stranger''s gaze? |
38438 | The world was gold and azure The air was sweet with birds; My garden laughed with rapture How could I hear her words? |
38438 | Thou little veil for so great mystery, When shall I penetrate all things and thee, And then look back? |
38438 | To Messrs. Duffield& Co. for"The sweet caresses that I gave to you,"Elsa Barker, from_ The Book of Love_; for"What heart but fears a fragrance?" |
38438 | Was it a bird? |
38438 | Was it all planned,--or just some lovely blunder? |
38438 | Was it the bloom of the laurel sprays, That wakened remembrance of singing birds? |
38438 | What can I say to make him listen? |
38438 | What do You s''pose about that? |
38438 | What do crickets chirp about? |
38438 | What do you know that we humans miss? |
38438 | What he may be, who knows? |
38438 | What heart but fears a fragrance? |
38438 | What need to sing? |
38438 | What of the soul of the rose? |
38438 | What sermon can you preach, Oh, mushroom-- mentor pert and new? |
38438 | What shall we be like then? |
38438 | What spirals of sharp perfume do they fling, To blur my page with swift remembering? |
38438 | What though The wind be Winter if the heart be Spring? |
38438 | What transformations of this house of clay, To fit the heavenly mansions and the light of day? |
38438 | What was thine answer, O thou brooding earth, What token of re- birth, Of tender vernal mirth, Thou the long- prisoned in the bonds of cold? |
38438 | What we may be, who knows? |
38438 | What? |
38438 | Where do flowers go when they die? |
38438 | Where is your lover-- your lover?" |
38438 | Where is your lover-- your lover?" |
38438 | Where shall we turn for joy when flowers are dead, When birds are silent, and the cold winds blow? |
38438 | Who but a God Could draw from light and moisture, heat and cold, And fashion in earth''s mold, A multitude of blooms to deck one sod? |
38438 | Who but a God? |
38438 | Who calls, little rover, Bird or fay? |
38438 | Who lives in the hollow tree? |
38438 | Who shall build bowers To keep these thine? |
38438 | Why are woodsy things afraid? |
38438 | Why do I seem to hear Cries as lovely as music? |
38438 | Why do I think of you? |
38438 | Why does my soul awaken and shudder? |
38438 | Why does your name remorselessly Strike through my heart? |
38438 | Why, scarce it seems an hour ago These branches clashed in bitter cold; What Power hath set their veins aglow? |
38438 | Wild and free as the wild thrush, and warier-- Was ever a bee merrier, airier? |
38438 | Wings folded so, a second or two-- Was ever a crow more solemn than you? |
38438 | Yet, where the moonlight makes Nebulous silver pools, A ghostly shape is cast-- Something unseen has stirred... Was it a breeze that passed? |
38438 | You would call,"Baby, where are you?" |
38438 | a soul? |
38438 | little brown brother, Are you awake in the dark? |
38438 | little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be? |
38438 | tell me whence do you come? |
38438 | w''at? |
38438 | w''at? |
38438 | you''re a sun- flower? |
32428 | ''Cheek?'' |
32428 | ''Now will you promise?'' 32428 ''Why?'' |
32428 | A Brightener? |
32428 | A man? |
32428 | A-- love affair? |
32428 | All I ask is, where''s the stuff? |
32428 | And Rosemary? |
32428 | And where used Joyce Arnold to sit and work? |
32428 | And why not to- day, while we''re close to Merriton? |
32428 | And you-- were you there? |
32428 | And you? |
32428 | And-- and June never----? |
32428 | Are n''t you frightened? |
32428 | Are n''t you going to invite us, too? |
32428 | Are you congratulating me? |
32428 | Are your parents at home? |
32428 | Back already, Princess? |
32428 | But I believe_ I''ve_ evolved something more practical, considering your name-- and your age--(twenty- one, is n''t it?) 32428 But before the subject is shelved,_ where_ is the''place''you speak of? |
32428 | But he told you, did n''t he, that he was going away? |
32428 | But if I let you off it? 32428 But no words? |
32428 | But the perfume of La France roses? 32428 But what about_ her_?" |
32428 | But where is the_ thing_? |
32428 | But you do suspect him? |
32428 | But you hesitate? |
32428 | Ca n''t anything be done? |
32428 | Ca n''t you manage to want something you might possibly get? |
32428 | Can those two have met before? |
32428 | Can we get it? |
32428 | Come into my study, wo n''t you? |
32428 | Could n''t she have kissed your feet for the blessed message of hope you gave her? |
32428 | Could you leave Miss Fawcett at once, and come to me? |
32428 | Darling one, what is it? 32428 Dearest, have you forgotten me so soon?" |
32428 | Did Opal Fawcett ever try to persuade you to-- to----? |
32428 | Did_ you_ lose the one thing you''d wanted in the world? 32428 Do n''t you approve of my wanting to meet her? |
32428 | Do n''t you guess yet who I am? |
32428 | Do n''t you know me intimately enough to be sure that once I''m on the warpath I stop at nothing? |
32428 | Do n''t you? |
32428 | Do n''t you_ see_--there''s someone there? |
32428 | Do you by chance mean marriage? |
32428 | Do you call yourself a''conclusion''? 32428 Do you like her?" |
32428 | Do you see light? |
32428 | Do you want me to live all my life alone, now that I''ve lost you, June? |
32428 | Do you wish him to fall in love with me? |
32428 | Does my name suggest nothing to you? |
32428 | Empty? |
32428 | Except the letter-- or was it a telegram? 32428 Face?" |
32428 | For a car? |
32428 | For me? 32428 Frightened?" |
32428 | Good heavens, what''s happened? |
32428 | Has n''t she confided in you at all? |
32428 | Have n''t you the wits to see I_ want_ to marry you? 32428 Have the police ever_ seen_ the little lamb? |
32428 | Have you? |
32428 | He can; but will he? |
32428 | How can I to talk to you every day? |
32428 | How can we be surer than we are? |
32428 | How can we see anything if the room''s pitch- black? |
32428 | How did you know, pray, which girl I was? |
32428 | How do you know he''ll be so quick? |
32428 | How would you like to stay with me,I wheedled,"until your mother is ready to crawl to get you back, cry and sob, and swear not to punish you?" |
32428 | How? |
32428 | I ca n''t tell you where he is,I said,"and even if I could, why should I? |
32428 | I hope poor Murray did n''t get the same impression you got? |
32428 | I suppose you asked them not to tell? |
32428 | I wonder how long it is since the pictures were valued? |
32428 | I wonder,I thought aloud,"if she could have meant to suggest some friendly compromise? |
32428 | If I do n''t care how much I spend, do n''t you think we can make an earthly paradise of the place in a week? |
32428 | If already you seem to me indispensable, how_ could_ Robert Lorillard have made up his mind to part with you, after_ months_? |
32428 | If you''re so well as that, you''ll be ready to let me go to India soon, wo n''t you, dear? |
32428 | Invented? 32428 Is it a coffin or a treasure chest?" |
32428 | Is it a good idea? |
32428 | Is it? |
32428 | Is n''t one firm of detectives enough at one time, on one job? |
32428 | Is that your_ real_ advice? |
32428 | It had better be historic, had n''t it? |
32428 | It''s to somebody else----"Oh, somebody you''ve been trying to''brighten,''I suppose? |
32428 | Lady Scarlett_ is_ a Boche, is n''t she? |
32428 | Let the place? 32428 Like to do?" |
32428 | Look here,I said,"would your mother mind if you came out with me? |
32428 | Mrs. Paul Jennings? 32428 No lunch? |
32428 | Now what is it? |
32428 | Now, do you still want to call the police and charge me with kidnapping? 32428 Of course, Murray decided at once to run the risk?" |
32428 | Oh, it''s_ you_, is it? |
32428 | On the contrary, why should n''t our brave Bart be suspected of precisely the same fraud, and more of it? |
32428 | Only----"Did n''t she make some threat to you? 32428 Or''friend,''if it pleases you better?" |
32428 | Ought n''t she to see a doctor? |
32428 | Ought we to speak to Murray-- just drop him a hint, and suggest his getting an expert to have a look round? |
32428 | Perhaps in that case you wo n''t care to explain how you came on board the_ Naiad_? |
32428 | Perhaps you''d rather not have me understand? 32428 Really?" |
32428 | Rosemary went to Italy? |
32428 | Shall Jim and I go away? |
32428 | She never even told you about our first engagement, eight years ago? |
32428 | So hearts can really be caught in the rebound? 32428 Supposing she wo n''t see you?" |
32428 | Tanks and motor cars that go? |
32428 | Tell me what it is you want to do? |
32428 | That makes you sit up, does n''t it? |
32428 | The cry? 32428 Then you wo n''t undertake the task?" |
32428 | Then-- doesn''t it seem that Fate bade you put it there? |
32428 | Then_ he''s_ what you want to break to me? |
32428 | Was she in the house? |
32428 | We both_ know_ what it is, without telling, do n''t we? |
32428 | We? |
32428 | Well, I''d like to tell you that, if the story wo n''t bore you? |
32428 | Well, I''ve sort of blackmailed you, have n''t I? |
32428 | Well, what is your impression of the famous collection? |
32428 | Well-- and then? |
32428 | What are you doing that for? |
32428 | What are you driving at? 32428 What are you hinting at?" |
32428 | What could happen in the middle of the night? 32428 What do you mean?" |
32428 | What do you mean? |
32428 | What do you mean? |
32428 | What do you think of everything? |
32428 | What do you want to do to them? |
32428 | What do you want? |
32428 | What else is there to say? 32428 What have the portraits to do with Doctor Jennings?" |
32428 | What if Rosemary is right? |
32428 | What if it_ would_ be best as she says, for both your sakes, to let her go? |
32428 | What is it you''re trying to break to me? |
32428 | What is it? |
32428 | What is it? |
32428 | What is the funny thing? |
32428 | What is this favour you speak of? |
32428 | What kind of toys? |
32428 | What mystery? |
32428 | What prayer do you say for yourself? 32428 What sort of house_ have_ we?" |
32428 | What stuff? |
32428 | What was it then, if not a meeting? |
32428 | What was your first impression? |
32428 | What will be the next thing? |
32428 | What would you give? |
32428 | What would you suggest? |
32428 | What''s the matter? |
32428 | What, if I may ask? |
32428 | What-- did she say? |
32428 | What_ do_ you think, then? 32428 What_ is_ it? |
32428 | Where is she? |
32428 | Where was Cecil before you went to live in the wing? |
32428 | Who can tell? 32428 Who is going to punish us?" |
32428 | Who said anything about my going without you? |
32428 | Who''s Terry Burns? |
32428 | Who_ was_ she before she married Lord Thingum- bob? |
32428 | Why did you have to insist on her coming back to America? |
32428 | Why do you think of_ me_? |
32428 | Why does your mother give Cecil a room whose window looks over the moat, if it''s so important she should hide? |
32428 | Why not? 32428 Why on earth did n''t you tell her yourself-- tell them both together?" |
32428 | Why on me? |
32428 | Why should he want to get rid of such a girl? |
32428 | Why should you want to know? |
32428 | Why snatched away? |
32428 | Why? |
32428 | Will he stick to his point about his own doctor? |
32428 | Will she be angry? 32428 Will what you have to tell help me to get Rosemary back?" |
32428 | Wo n''t you( to the girl)"take my chair and talk to your friend? |
32428 | Would Sir Beverley be offended if we asked him not to come, after all? 32428 Would n''t you like to go with me?" |
32428 | Would she be vexed? 32428 Would you do for me what your friend is doing for her husband?" |
32428 | Would you have something more to say if they did come? |
32428 | Would you like to be alone? |
32428 | Would you like to come with me now? |
32428 | Would you rather I''d go? |
32428 | Yes, I''ve got a plan-- already, if----"If what? |
32428 | Yet you think light_ could_ be got? 32428 You do n''t mean to insinuate that they''ll suspect me?" |
32428 | You do n''t_ love_ her? |
32428 | You have n''t heard anything? |
32428 | You know something, then? |
32428 | You mean to say you have_ not_ seen him? |
32428 | You mean, he might be entirely cured-- a well man again? |
32428 | You mean? |
32428 | You think June would be willing to have me marry another woman? |
32428 | You want the lady to believe that you have bought Dun Moat? |
32428 | You wo n''t? 32428 You''re a distant cousin, are n''t you?" |
32428 | You''re not surprised, are you? |
32428 | You''re not_ afraid_ of that wretched thing-- whatever it is? |
32428 | You''ve got a plan-- already? |
32428 | You''ve_ come_? |
32428 | You_ heard_? |
32428 | _ Dead!_ You killed her? |
32428 | _ Not_ the ex- cowboy? |
32428 | _ Something about the child?_"I might,I drawled,"rack my memory for the time when I saw him last." |
32428 | _ Think_, my child? |
32428 | _ What_ have you brought? |
32428 | _ You_ say that, at twenty- one? |
32428 | _ You_ say that? |
32428 | ''Have you forgotten me already?''... |
32428 | *****"Well, are you satisfied?" |
32428 | A voice inside me always used to say:''Why should June want to talk to you through Opal Fawcett? |
32428 | Above all, would she have offered the blood from her veins to save Ralston Murray if she had not wanted him to live? |
32428 | According to habit, therefore, my first thought was: What_ could_ be done for the man in the cushioned chair? |
32428 | After going so far, I was going to desert him in the midst of the woods? |
32428 | After to- day you will never see her again?" |
32428 | Ah, what_ had_ I brought? |
32428 | All the American specialists agreed that nothing on earth could change the course of events, so why fuss, as I''m more comfortable than I hoped to be? |
32428 | And I would not try to guess-- would you? |
32428 | And at that distance, behind window glass, and after all these years, how could I be sure? |
32428 | And if Doctor Jennings_ had_ brought it off, would he be a safe person to look after the health of the man he''d cheated?" |
32428 | And it is n''t our_ business_, is it?" |
32428 | And she? |
32428 | And so you do n''t think my theory of what''s going on at Dun Moat is too melodramatic?" |
32428 | And that is all?" |
32428 | And then----""Why waste time in accusations?" |
32428 | And what could intervene? |
32428 | And what do the brutes mean by a''double blow''?" |
32428 | And what good would it do me to be remembered by you at a distance, perhaps married to some beast or other?" |
32428 | And when I shrieked"Why?" |
32428 | And would she in the end speak, or decide to be silent? |
32428 | And-- I''ve never been there; but I suppose we must pass close to Robert Lorillard''s cottage? |
32428 | And-- Paolo?" |
32428 | As for--_the other_--the unknown one-- if the spirit can see, surely it would be glad to help in such a cause? |
32428 | As he had no invisible cloak, and could n''t crawl under a sofa, poor Robert was obliged to say pleasantly,"How do you do?" |
32428 | At last I asked her the question:"Can it be that we''ve met somewhere?" |
32428 | Besides, how_ could_ they, through any correspondence, have contrived the things that had happened? |
32428 | Brandreth?" |
32428 | But I argued that this could hardly be, because-- surely-- bodies buried at sea were not put into coffins, were they? |
32428 | But as it is, he''ll no doubt try to get an opinion from Beverley Drake?" |
32428 | But if you think that, what will--_others_ think?" |
32428 | But there''s_ no_ moated grange, and so----""Why should n''t there be one?" |
32428 | But this Terry Burns of yours-- what can I do for him?" |
32428 | But this is n''t what I was thinking about when I said,"Oh, that''s it?" |
32428 | But what I most want to know is, why have you unloved Princess Avalesco?" |
32428 | But what about the telegrams?" |
32428 | But what about those''exquisite oriels,''those famous fireplaces, those stairways, those celebrated ceilings, and corbels-- whatever they are? |
32428 | But what beats me is this: why did the fly walk into the spider- web? |
32428 | But what matter? |
32428 | But whenever there was an instant''s lull in the conversation, I felt that everyone was asking him or herself,"_ Where_ is the coffin?" |
32428 | But why be early Victorian and ignore the lovely, naked truth, instead of late Georgian and save beating round the bush for both of the lovers? |
32428 | But why stop the taxi to ask that?" |
32428 | But-- I beg your pardon if I''m rude-- could you-- er-- seem not to be there? |
32428 | CHAPTER IX THE RAT TRAP Did you ever see a wily gray rat caught in a trap? |
32428 | Ca n''t you open the door?" |
32428 | Can Joyce bear this? |
32428 | Captain Lorillard, will you switch off the lights as usual?" |
32428 | Could I bring the thing off? |
32428 | Could I say I''d lent the rooms to someone I did n''t like to turn out? |
32428 | Could Opal suspect, I wondered, the truth about the broken love story? |
32428 | Could it be that she did n''t truly care for Murray-- that if she married him in spite of the mysterious"obstacle,"it would be for what she could get? |
32428 | Could it be that she was ashamed of having been with Opal Fawcett, or-- was it something to do with the mention of June? |
32428 | Could it have to do with her husband? |
32428 | Could she have pretended well enough to deceive me in spite of my suspicions? |
32428 | Did she not_ want_ to give her husband a chance of life? |
32428 | Did_ you_ know that you were being forced to marry that poor young prince of yours?" |
32428 | Do Parisian women, especially actresses, marry obscure English doctors in country villages which are hardly on the map? |
32428 | Do n''t you think it would be fun to find out-- and reading the letters if there were any? |
32428 | Do those words convey any special impression to your mind, sir, or has this spirit mistaken you for someone else?" |
32428 | Do you think I''d have told you all this, if any one was likely to believe such a cock- and- bull story as the truth would sound to a jury? |
32428 | Do you think she would?" |
32428 | Do you think we''re fools enough to leave the place alone with only Kramm on guard, if we had someone concealed there?" |
32428 | Do you wonder? |
32428 | Do you?" |
32428 | Do_ you_ pray to forget?" |
32428 | Does he know yet?" |
32428 | Does what I''ve told help you at all to understand the condition she wants me to make about her name, in my will?" |
32428 | Even if the woman could have found out other things, how should she know about a small detail like June''s favourite flower? |
32428 | Fully armoured like Minerva it had leapt into my brain while I said to myself,"What_ if_----?" |
32428 | Guy Brandreth at nine o''clock next morning, and heard the rich contralto voice asking"_ Who_ is it?" |
32428 | Had they needed, for pressing reasons of their own, to possess that place on the coast? |
32428 | Has he been killed, or only wounded? |
32428 | Has n''t he been watching-- playing detective for you?" |
32428 | Has n''t she come?" |
32428 | Has she consciously or unconsciously given you some clue?" |
32428 | Has she done something that makes it wise to keep her out of sight? |
32428 | He and the aunt both stayed at Mrs. Hillier''s house in Surrey, and-- I suppose you can guess what happened?" |
32428 | He did n''t say to her,"What am I to do?" |
32428 | He was a West Point graduate, it seems; probably you know that West Point is the American Sandhurst? |
32428 | How can they all squeal and chatter so? |
32428 | How did Lord Glencathra account for that fact? |
32428 | How did he like being mewed up in one wing of his own home? |
32428 | How did you get hold of this information so soon?" |
32428 | How do_ you_ know about her hair and eyes? |
32428 | How''s that?" |
32428 | How, on the contrary, could he have helped wanting this noble, brave, sweet creature to warm his life for ever? |
32428 | I broke in, surprised,"I thought you''d told us that the''influence''was just as strong in light as darkness?" |
32428 | I could n''t help_ that_, could I? |
32428 | I could n''t resist asking the question,"Had you ever seen Mrs. Jennings before she was married?" |
32428 | I had no definite suspicion; but why had the Scarletts, poor as they were, determined to stick to the house? |
32428 | I hope you will let me introduce her to you, Lady Courtenaye?" |
32428 | I mean, where is the coffin to rest throughout the night?" |
32428 | I suppose it could n''t be a dead_ shark_?" |
32428 | I suppose you did n''t see him?" |
32428 | I suppose you would n''t sell it?" |
32428 | I''ll tell the truth, too-- for the more I say, and the more you''re shocked, the more helpless you are-- do you see?" |
32428 | If she can come back, why should n''t she speak with you direct, instead of through a third person?''" |
32428 | If so, what could be her part in it? |
32428 | If this was what the first three hours brought forth, how would the tide swell by the end of the day-- the end of the_ week_? |
32428 | If you do n''t care what you pay?" |
32428 | In fact, I_ did_ feel so; and though I was able to say"Yes"and"No"and"Oh, really?" |
32428 | Is he English or American or_ what_?" |
32428 | Is that it?" |
32428 | Is that you, Krammie?" |
32428 | Is-- is all_ safe_?" |
32428 | It just flashed through my subconscious mind, while I asked myself,"What has happened to Paolo? |
32428 | It was another door opening, and a child''s voice squeaked,"Who''s there? |
32428 | Let''s have the_ oldest_ bits earlier than Tudor-- what?" |
32428 | May she make some orange- flower tea for you to- night at bedtime?" |
32428 | Murray will have made a will in his wife''s favour?" |
32428 | Now you have heard all-- and you_ see_ all, do n''t you? |
32428 | Now, is it only a''silly- season''cry, this grievance about no houses, or is it true? |
32428 | Oh, Robert, in giving up my progression from plane to plane till you could join me, has the sacrifice been all in vain?" |
32428 | On the following Saturday, at luncheon, I suddenly said,"Look here, Miss Arnold, how would you like to live with me instead of in lodgings?" |
32428 | One heard all one''s friends talking about her, saying,"Have you ever been to Opal Fawcett? |
32428 | Only you was n''t quite smart enough-- savez? |
32428 | Or do n''t you think_ anything_?" |
32428 | Or is it_ they_ who do n''t wish her to be seen, for reasons of their own?" |
32428 | Or only just to London for a change? |
32428 | Or would you rather stay with her over Sunday?" |
32428 | Or, still more thrilling, a_ pair_ of wily gray rats? |
32428 | Or-- had the news of the_ other_ blow come while I was gone, and killed her? |
32428 | Say, Princess, do you think I''m going mad-- just when I hoped I was cured? |
32428 | Seems funny she_ could_ have been a baby, does n''t it? |
32428 | So what must Robert have felt? |
32428 | So what was I to do? |
32428 | So why should n''t I have_ your_ chair, wherever it is, and you keep mine? |
32428 | So why waste thrills upon a horror which had not time to materialize? |
32428 | Surely such circumstantial evidence against him weighs more heavily in the scales than a mere scrap of paper against me? |
32428 | Surely that exquisite face could n''t mask sordidness? |
32428 | Surely the duchess is n''t there at this time of the year?" |
32428 | The kind of light I want?" |
32428 | The question is,_ do_ you agree?" |
32428 | There was a slight pause; then the voice answered with a new vibration in it:"When can you come? |
32428 | They took the coffin to a nice convenient cave( that''s what made this house worth buying back, is n''t it?) |
32428 | Was I_ wrong_ in the judgment I''d impulsively formed? |
32428 | Was Opal Fawcett in the"story"which my imagination had begun to write around Miss Arnold and Robert Lorillard? |
32428 | Was he_ really_ going abroad? |
32428 | Was it probable that any one else-- except ourselves-- could be? |
32428 | Was it the spirit of Margaret Revell''s lost youth I saw, or-- or----""At which window was the-- er-- Being?" |
32428 | Was n''t it dull with no one to play with? |
32428 | We''ll never speak of this again, because we do n''t need to, do we?" |
32428 | What are detectives_ for_? |
32428 | What awful catastrophe has happened to you, Elizabeth, to make you want to see me?" |
32428 | What can it have to do with me?" |
32428 | What could it be? |
32428 | What could we say? |
32428 | What did he do to amuse himself? |
32428 | What did it mean? |
32428 | What do you say?" |
32428 | What if Rosemary or Murray himself should suggest Paul Jennings as the doctor understudy? |
32428 | What if the daughter came into money from sheep or mines, or something, and meant to propose living at Dun Moat with her uncle''s family? |
32428 | What if-- he_ had n''t_ helped it? |
32428 | What is she likely to know about Rosemary''s secrets that you do n''t know?" |
32428 | What relation is she to you?" |
32428 | What time to- morrow will you talk with me?" |
32428 | What will you call me, then?" |
32428 | What would he give for the honour of invitations to tea, with introductions and social advice, from the popular Princess di Miramare? |
32428 | What''s the matter with her?" |
32428 | What''s the matter?" |
32428 | What''s your answer?" |
32428 | What? |
32428 | What_ are_ we to do with her? |
32428 | What_ can_ you be meaning to do?" |
32428 | When Ralston implored desperately,"Do_ you_ believe this of Rosemary?" |
32428 | When can you have me call on you? |
32428 | When you are better, will you come on deck and talk to Ralston?" |
32428 | Where was Roger Fane? |
32428 | Who could have an object in parting Joyce and me? |
32428 | Who knows what might have happened? |
32428 | Why are the Scarletts hiding a girl? |
32428 | Why did the girl blush so? |
32428 | Why did you think I chose your cabin? |
32428 | Why look beyond seven perfectly good days? |
32428 | Why, for instance, the Parisian wife? |
32428 | Will she vanish?" |
32428 | Will you both consent to that? |
32428 | Will you come to my cabin and see what it was? |
32428 | Will you do that?" |
32428 | Would there be thousands or just a mere dribble, or none at all? |
32428 | Yet-- what could I do? |
32428 | You did n''t see her, did you? |
32428 | You know that soft amber light there is in the big_ foyer_ of the Savoy at tea- time, like the beautiful subdued light in dreams? |
32428 | You mean----?" |
32428 | You remember my telling you that Opal suggested this long ago, saying that June wanted to get in touch with me? |
32428 | You remember, my husband witnessed it, one day when Sir James Courtenaye had meant to come over, but could not? |
32428 | You wo n''t marry that girl?" |
32428 | You''d leave me here, and go across the Atlantic without me on a wild- goose chase?" |
32428 | _ Can you say the same of your own?_""Yes!" |
32428 | _ Had_ the boys"saved"money, or-- had they got it in a way less meritorious? |
32428 | _ How_ keep the secret when Gaby Jennings had known the real Rosemary Brandreth in Baltimore? |
32428 | _ Now_ do you understand?" |
32428 | _ Telegrams!_ Could it be possible that there would be telegrams? |
32428 | _ What_ about his nephews?" |
32428 | how could Robert Lorillard have sent her away? |
32428 | in her hand, do you? |
32428 | mean precisely?" |
32428 | what''s the matter with the man-- senile decay?" |
32428 | what''s the matter?" |
32428 | when there were those cablegrams from Baltimore and Washington? |
33985 | After all, what is the use of having lovely dressing gowns if no one ever sees them? |
33985 | Ah, you''ve tried? |
33985 | And Governor Albee? |
33985 | And a coat? |
33985 | And are you going? |
33985 | And during this little siesta, or holiday, you saw the defendant''s car going at forty- five miles an hour-- is that the idea? |
33985 | And exactly what did you say to Mr. O''Bannon in your recent interview? |
33985 | And he also thinks, I suppose,said O''Bannon,"that no jury will convict her?" |
33985 | And is that something you''re proud of, something it gives you satisfaction to remember? |
33985 | And the other thing? 33985 And what did you learn? |
33985 | And what do you feel for this little blond whippersnapper who is always under your feet? |
33985 | And what do you think? |
33985 | And what guaranty have I that if you do stay you can do anything about it? |
33985 | And what made you change your plans? |
33985 | And where were you at the time? |
33985 | And will you tell the jury how it was you were able to judge so exactly of the speed of a car approaching you head- on? |
33985 | And you can not explain why a traffic officer stopped you and let you go without even a warning? |
33985 | And you never ran faster than thirty- five miles an hour? |
33985 | And your veil? |
33985 | Are n''t lawyers terrible, Eleanor? 33985 Are n''t you going to tell me what you are?" |
33985 | Are they indeed? |
33985 | Are you able to come back into life again? 33985 Are you anxious about it?" |
33985 | Are you staying near here? |
33985 | Are you sure of that? |
33985 | Are you sure? |
33985 | As often as three or four times a week? |
33985 | At three o''clock in the afternoon-- during working hours? |
33985 | Bracelet? |
33985 | But do you know where I live? |
33985 | But now that we do know, is there anything we can do for the poor thing? |
33985 | But the Pulsifers? |
33985 | But we''d have to have his signature, would n''t we? |
33985 | Close? |
33985 | Could you stop his getting it, Stephen? |
33985 | Did he say:''What do you think this is-- a race track?'' |
33985 | Did he warn you that if you continued to drive so fast he would arrest you? |
33985 | Did n''t I tell you? |
33985 | Did n''t you enjoy your little visit to me in prison? |
33985 | Did she leave any message for me? |
33985 | Did she mention it on your arrival? |
33985 | Did you accept? |
33985 | Did you enjoy the evening? |
33985 | Did you tell them that you knew I did n''t mean a word I said? 33985 Do n''t drive yourself?" |
33985 | Do n''t you think it''s a pretty old doorway? |
33985 | Do n''t you understand me? |
33985 | Do you doubt it? |
33985 | Do you ever see him? |
33985 | Do you hate it? |
33985 | Do you know if she''s been arrested? |
33985 | Do you know the circumstances of her life? 33985 Do you really want me to give you a reason or are you only waiting to tear me to pieces, whatever I say?" |
33985 | Do you think I do n''t know? |
33985 | Do you think I have n''t been over that moment often enough to be sure of what happened? 33985 Do you think I shall allow myself to be driven out of my own home?" |
33985 | Do you think that sort of thing will amuse you? |
33985 | Do you think there''s anything really between him and Eleanor? 33985 Do you want to drive back with me, sheriff?" |
33985 | Does he know it yet? |
33985 | For Bobby? |
33985 | Get me a glass of water, will you, Frieda? |
33985 | Guilty or not guilty? |
33985 | Had your car been left standing at the door? |
33985 | Has anything happened? |
33985 | Have I seen her? |
33985 | Have you anything that I could write on Bobby-- a scrap of paper? |
33985 | Have you ever been arrested for speeding? |
33985 | Have you ever, before March eleventh, had an accident in which you injured yourself or anyone else? |
33985 | Have you lost a great deal of money? |
33985 | Have you seen Miss Thorne lately? |
33985 | Have you? |
33985 | He was married? |
33985 | Here, what do you think this is? 33985 Here?" |
33985 | Horrid that they''ll rob you, is n''t it? |
33985 | How are things, Alma? |
33985 | How are you? |
33985 | How can you be so sure? |
33985 | How long did you stay after that telephone? |
33985 | How long had you owned the car you were driving on March eleventh? |
33985 | How long were you with him? |
33985 | How say you? |
33985 | How? |
33985 | I mean, if you caught some friend smuggling-- me, for example-- would you be as implacable as if you caught my dressmaker? |
33985 | I? |
33985 | In fact there was a telephone call? |
33985 | In mauve_ maillots_ and chains? |
33985 | In other words, Miss Thorne, you must have waited not less than five minutes after the telephone call came? |
33985 | Intensely interesting, or absolutely worth while? |
33985 | Is he, really? |
33985 | Is n''t Eleanor absurd? |
33985 | Is n''t it to laugh? |
33985 | Is n''t she quick at it, Louisa? |
33985 | Is n''t this yours? |
33985 | Is she dead? |
33985 | Is that an insult or a tribute? |
33985 | Is that what he is looking for from me? |
33985 | Is that yours? |
33985 | Is there anything special you''d like to order? |
33985 | Is this it? |
33985 | It was during that telephone call that the engagement was made? |
33985 | It''s a queer light, is n''t it? |
33985 | Like asking the boa constrictor to be nice to a newborn lamb, is n''t it? |
33985 | Like it-- like this cramped little place? |
33985 | Lydia, I hope that you will come out all right, but you do n''t know Dan O''Bannon as I do, and----"You think he will want to convict me? |
33985 | Lydia, my dear, are you happy? 33985 Make up your mind, please, which shall it be?" |
33985 | Miss Thorne, at what hour did you leave Miss Bellington''s? |
33985 | Miss Thorne,said Wiley, very businesslike in manner,"for how many years have you driven a car?" |
33985 | Miss Wooley,said O''Bannon,"you were sent for to go to the hospital on the eleventh of this March, were you not?" |
33985 | Mr. O''Bannon? 33985 Mr. Ussolof, you have driven an automobile for some years?" |
33985 | Mrs. Galton,she said,"can you use me in this organization?" |
33985 | My dear Miss Thorne,he said,"when did you get out?" |
33985 | My dear mother, have n''t you yet grasped that there is a touch of the criminal in all criminal prosecutors? 33985 No one could blame you for being furious; but you''re not angry at her, are you, Eleanor?" |
33985 | Nothing? |
33985 | Now tell me what happened? |
33985 | Now,he said in his high- pitched voice,"could anything be more barbarous than that attack? |
33985 | Of Dan? |
33985 | Of Eleanor? |
33985 | Of whom are you speaking? |
33985 | Oh, Louisa, rich people do n''t know anything, do they? |
33985 | Oh, are n''t you going to wait to see him pull down the temple? 33985 Oh, are you?" |
33985 | Oh, dear heaven,thought Eleanor,"must he re- travel that road?" |
33985 | Oh, is it? |
33985 | Oh, it''s got as far as being''Dan''now, has it? |
33985 | Oh, what difference does it make? |
33985 | Oh,said Lydia,"you mean that you think he''s crazy about her?" |
33985 | On account of motors? |
33985 | Only you know it bores me, and it bores Bobby, too, does n''t it, Bobby? |
33985 | Really? |
33985 | Serious, Miss Bellington? |
33985 | Shall I let him have it, Lydia? |
33985 | She''s like a nice brown- eyed animal with gray fur, is n''t she? |
33985 | Should happen? |
33985 | Should n''t you think she''d wish me back at hard labor? |
33985 | Since when have I asked Dan O''Bannon for pity? 33985 Tell Morson to send for the motor, will you, Bobby? |
33985 | That you kissed a woman against her will? 33985 The district attorney says so?" |
33985 | The grand jury will indict her? |
33985 | Then may I ask why you came? |
33985 | There''s no harm in engaging a cabin, is there? |
33985 | Think what? |
33985 | This is rather extraordinary, is n''t it? |
33985 | To Long Island? |
33985 | To O''Bannon? |
33985 | To Washington? |
33985 | To kill a human being while violating the law? |
33985 | To me? 33985 Was Bobby too wonderful in his costume?" |
33985 | Was she called to the telephone during your visit? |
33985 | Well what? |
33985 | Well, O''Bannon,said the governor,"I have n''t seen you since-- let me see-- the 1916 convention, was n''t it?" |
33985 | Well? |
33985 | Well? |
33985 | Were you fined or imprisoned? |
33985 | What could happen? |
33985 | What did he come for then? |
33985 | What do you mean by calling Mr. O''Bannon a drunken attorney? |
33985 | What does a district attorney do, Bobby? |
33985 | What have you now to say why the judgment of the court should not be pronounced upon you? |
33985 | What is all this about? 33985 What is the distance from Miss Bellington''s to the scene of the accident?" |
33985 | What other stand could I take? |
33985 | What possible difference does it make? |
33985 | What the hell do you let her do such things for? |
33985 | What were you doing there? |
33985 | What would you give me for it? |
33985 | What''s the point of sitting in here when the act is on? |
33985 | When did she mention it? |
33985 | When have you ever seen me gentle and kind? |
33985 | When will he be here? |
33985 | Where is that man? |
33985 | Where''s Miss Thorne? |
33985 | Where? |
33985 | Whether I''m right or not, Tim? |
33985 | Who else has been here? |
33985 | Who has? |
33985 | Whose is it then? |
33985 | Why are you here yourself? |
33985 | Why do n''t you send it away,he went on very quietly,"and let me drive you home? |
33985 | Will you be civil, or shall I go? |
33985 | Will you join me there? |
33985 | Will you take that to O''Bannon and get an answer from him? |
33985 | Will you tell me why it has''State Asylum''on the horse block? |
33985 | Would it refresh your memory, Miss Thorne, to look at this bracelet which I hold in my hand? |
33985 | Would you think I was a barbarian? |
33985 | You are quite sure it was not later? |
33985 | You do n''t remember any of the conversation that took place between you? |
33985 | You had to wait while it was sent for? |
33985 | You have it? |
33985 | You have wondered why I sent for you? |
33985 | You know him? |
33985 | You mean I am? 33985 You mean there would be publicity, political advantage, in sending a person in my position to prison?" |
33985 | You mean you do n''t think he''s a worm? |
33985 | You put on your hat? |
33985 | You saw Drummond before he died? |
33985 | You''ve had good luck lately? |
33985 | Your bracelet, miss? |
33985 | A race track?" |
33985 | Albee? |
33985 | Alone? |
33985 | And Fanny-- was her Cleopatra as comic as it sounded?" |
33985 | And had n''t she changed? |
33985 | And he added less solemnly,"What are you young fellows thinking of to let an old man like me get ahead of you, eh?" |
33985 | And sewing? |
33985 | And the Piers-- had Lydia heard about them? |
33985 | And what harm did I do him anyway?" |
33985 | And what was its make?" |
33985 | And who are you, my dear, to demand perfection?" |
33985 | Answer:''I said,"Oh, Jack, darling, what did they do to you?" |
33985 | Anything to make her feel in special need of money just now?" |
33985 | Are n''t you just a little afraid of her yourself?" |
33985 | Are you"--he hesitated--"are you happy?" |
33985 | Baking? |
33985 | Bobby thought,"Can it be she really cares for that old war horse?" |
33985 | But then how could you get things done if you were soft? |
33985 | But what could she do to O''Bannon but kill him-- or make him love her? |
33985 | But what could they do to her? |
33985 | But what of it?" |
33985 | But why, according to your own limited views, are you here?" |
33985 | Can you beat it? |
33985 | Could even the idea of returning to the old life change her back into the old detestable thing? |
33985 | Could it be, she thought, that she had learned nothing after all? |
33985 | Could you marry a man for whom you felt an immovable physical coldness? |
33985 | Did Lydia know about this Western coal man that May Swayne was going to marry? |
33985 | Did all farmers own automobiles nowadays? |
33985 | Did any of them know the defendant or her counsel? |
33985 | Did he feel his prejudice was such as to prevent his rendering an impartial verdict in this case? |
33985 | Did he intend to keep her waiting? |
33985 | Did she call that fast? |
33985 | Did she know anything about baseball? |
33985 | Did she? |
33985 | Did you ever notice his eyes?" |
33985 | Did you expect to meet a barbarian at dinner-- especially a futile one?" |
33985 | Did you know that he came to prison to see me, to gloat over me? |
33985 | Do n''t you ever have them?" |
33985 | Do you know this girl?" |
33985 | Do you remember the biologist with the pearl buttons on his boots? |
33985 | Do you think prisons ought to be made too comfortable? |
33985 | Does n''t he know that it was my jewels that were stolen?" |
33985 | Eleanor went on:"Do you remember after dinner at the Piers''you told me about the policeman you had bribed? |
33985 | For how long had she maintained this high rate of speed? |
33985 | Go away? |
33985 | Had any of them ever been arrested for speeding? |
33985 | Had anyone of them ever injured anyone with an automobile? |
33985 | Have you been wondering all these years what was against you-- what held you back and poisoned everything you touched? |
33985 | Have you ever been stopped by a policeman?" |
33985 | Have you failed there?" |
33985 | He said to Miss Bennett after they had gone downstairs again:"Did n''t Miss Thorne suspect that something was going wrong with the girl?" |
33985 | Held her in your arms because you were physically stronger? |
33985 | How could she have contemplated it? |
33985 | How was she to explain? |
33985 | In peace? |
33985 | Is n''t that disgusting?" |
33985 | Is that right?" |
33985 | Is the fire lit in the drawing- room? |
33985 | Is this ten cents a point?" |
33985 | It must have been O''Bannon tried that case, was n''t it?" |
33985 | Leave her sitting waiting for him and never come at all? |
33985 | Love was out of the question? |
33985 | Lydia set her jaw, looking at him and thinking,"What business have you interfering in my fate?" |
33985 | Lydia, who had been bending over reorganizing the fire, suddenly straightened up with the poker in her hand and said quickly,"Where? |
33985 | Miss Bennett''s voice called,"Is somebody knocking?" |
33985 | Morson said timidly,"Who shall I say, sir?" |
33985 | Most people who ask you a question like that really mean to say,"Would there be anything interesting to me in the answer to this question? |
33985 | Now that''s interesting, is n''t it? |
33985 | O''Bannon?" |
33985 | O''Bannon?" |
33985 | O''Bannon?" |
33985 | O''Bannon?" |
33985 | O''Bannon?" |
33985 | Or should she forgive because she was obviously so much older and wiser than Lydia? |
33985 | People kept coming in with the same question-- when could they see the district attorney? |
33985 | Perhaps it was remembrance of them that made her add,"He wo n''t be too hard on the poor girl, will he?" |
33985 | Send for my car, will you? |
33985 | Shall I?" |
33985 | She almost expected to hear the familiar,"What will you wear, miss?" |
33985 | She did it now as she said with distaste,"But is this a question of politics?" |
33985 | She knew O''Bannon would come-- or did she? |
33985 | Should she be offended or should she be superior? |
33985 | So that vile, sleek old man was to have her? |
33985 | Steps overhead, the door opened, a voice called,"Sheriff, get your men up here, will you?" |
33985 | Taking place where?" |
33985 | That is success for him, getting people to prison, is n''t it?" |
33985 | The car was at the door now, and as he put her into it he asked,"Oh, do n''t you feel so sorry for her sometimes that you could almost weep over her?" |
33985 | The girl had said to her:"I suppose you ca n''t imagine killing anyone?" |
33985 | The judge said to O''Bannon,"What is the purpose of the question?" |
33985 | The older woman was silenced by the shrug-- not hurt, but disappointed-- and in the silence Bobby said:"Oh, what happened about Evans? |
33985 | The only question is, does the evidence show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the crime for which she has been indicted?" |
33985 | Then the door opened, someone came in, Bobby''s voice said,"Are you here, Lydia?" |
33985 | Then the younger man asked with great deliberation,"Just what is your interest in this case, Governor Albee?" |
33985 | There was a long pause, and then Morson said:"Shall I put out the lights, Miss?" |
33985 | They took her away?" |
33985 | This afternoon, for instance, was n''t it much better for us all to play outside instead of in that stuffy little room of Eleanor''s? |
33985 | To think he had allowed himself to be stirred by her beauty? |
33985 | Very high- minded, of course, and yet was n''t there a sort of weakness in not taking your chance and putting through a thing like that? |
33985 | Was Eleanor coming to town that night to see her? |
33985 | Was Number 6 hostile? |
33985 | Was O''Bannon now on his way to her? |
33985 | Was it more dignified to be angry because she really could not allow herself to be treated like that? |
33985 | Was it-- no-- yes? |
33985 | Was she a bully, as Ilseboro had said? |
33985 | Was she conscious of driving fast at any time? |
33985 | Was she, Lydia Thorne, expected to join joyfully in some such child- like discipline? |
33985 | Was that being a tyrant?" |
33985 | Was the man a little deaf? |
33985 | Was the train late? |
33985 | Were all these women cast off by their families? |
33985 | Were they laughing together over her note? |
33985 | What could she do? |
33985 | What could she do? |
33985 | What could she do? |
33985 | What difference did the Emmonses make in comparison with the jewels? |
33985 | What difference does it make? |
33985 | What have you done?" |
33985 | What kept him in this bondage to her? |
33985 | What might not"that man"do with the jury by means of his hypnotic sincerity? |
33985 | What must be done? |
33985 | What reason had she for living? |
33985 | What should she do if he had? |
33985 | What use could life be put to? |
33985 | What was happening? |
33985 | What was it Bobby had said about him in college-- a wild man? |
33985 | What was she? |
33985 | What was the emotion? |
33985 | What was the truth? |
33985 | What was the use of caring so much about the safety of the jewels if the owner cared so little? |
33985 | What would that be-- hard labor? |
33985 | What, she wondered, was left of that unjust and bitter hatred? |
33985 | Where else?" |
33985 | Where was Albee? |
33985 | Whereas I----""You do n''t want your own way, Lydia?" |
33985 | Who can be better than Wiley?" |
33985 | Why did n''t you do it then?" |
33985 | Why did she take the right- hand road, which was longer than the left? |
33985 | Why does he tell me all this? |
33985 | Why had n''t she? |
33985 | Why should n''t I go to prison? |
33985 | Why? |
33985 | Wiley?" |
33985 | Will she do, dear?" |
33985 | Will you accept it, Eleanor? |
33985 | Will you be at the opera Friday evening?" |
33985 | Will you come with me?" |
33985 | Will you meet me in the lobby on the Thirty- ninth Street side at the end of the performance and let me drive you home? |
33985 | Will you swear there was no telephone call to your knowledge?" |
33985 | Wo n''t you help me to save her?" |
33985 | Would Bobby be sure to be at the station? |
33985 | Would Lydia put her up for the night? |
33985 | Would Miss Thorne wait? |
33985 | Would he dare do that? |
33985 | Would he think her sending for him at such an hour had any flattering significance? |
33985 | Would n''t Benny be more a person from every point of view if she had decided to marry the old man for his money? |
33985 | Would that man have any such idea? |
33985 | Would you let a man like that go into a firm of your friends if you could stop it? |
33985 | You''re a judge or something like that, are n''t you?" |
33985 | exclaimed Eleanor, her first thought being,"Am I always talking of him?" |
14332 | A Russian? |
14332 | A little searching party of her own, eh? 14332 A man killed whilst another man held him-- held him in his arms-- and watched over him, and yet the other man saw nothing of the murderer? |
14332 | A misfortune, my friend? 14332 A slave to a Russian? |
14332 | Ah, do you? |
14332 | Ai n''t you found out even yet, you silly? 14332 All serene, Gov''nor?" |
14332 | An operation to be performed upon my baby boy? 14332 And Lady Wilding is, of course, the beneficiary?" |
14332 | And appearing very much like the inflammation resulting from the bite of a gnat or a spider, Captain? |
14332 | And did n''t? |
14332 | And did so? |
14332 | And do they say that? |
14332 | And he did hear of him, then? |
14332 | And so you are that great man Cleek, are you? |
14332 | And stop until you hear from me? |
14332 | And the horse? 14332 And the letter, monsieur-- the damning letter?" |
14332 | And then what, Captain? |
14332 | And were all the symptoms-- or, rather, the absence of symptoms-- the same? |
14332 | And what are you doing in here, anyhow? 14332 And when will he begin, Mr. Narkom? |
14332 | And who is not her brother, after all? |
14332 | And you found it out only through his telling you, did you not? 14332 And you think the little fellow is in peril?" |
14332 | And you took him in? |
14332 | And you want to find out if he really carried out that threat and did put an end to himself, I suppose? 14332 And you? |
14332 | Anybody a- comin''with him, sir? |
14332 | Anything to do with it? 14332 Are you fishing for a compliment? |
14332 | As for that other time... How could I have expected that you would take it in any other way, being what you are and I what I had been? 14332 As how?" |
14332 | At breakfast? |
14332 | Awful thing, was n''t it? 14332 Bad blood between you, then?" |
14332 | Baron de Carjorac? 14332 Because I did not write? |
14332 | Beer and skittles? 14332 Bimbi says maybe he''s going to be my daddy one day-- didn''t you, Bimbi?" |
14332 | But can you? 14332 But from the sewer?" |
14332 | But how, Mr. Cleek? 14332 But how? |
14332 | But how? |
14332 | But need you go so soon? |
14332 | But not at this late hour, surely? 14332 But to save Mauravania''s queen, monsieur? |
14332 | But what''s that got to do with drugging the whiskey? |
14332 | But why a feint? 14332 But why should we talk of unpleasant things when the future looks so bright? |
14332 | But why? 14332 But you''ll come, wo n''t you?" |
14332 | But, Mr. Cleek, how could it have decided it? 14332 But, my dear Mr. Narkom, would n''t it be better, or, at least, more hospitable if I went over to meet him, in case he does come earlier? |
14332 | Ca n''t you grasp the situation? 14332 Ca n''t you? |
14332 | Ca n''t you? |
14332 | Captain Hawksley? 14332 Cleek in France? |
14332 | Cleek? |
14332 | Clients? |
14332 | Clodoche-- and from the sewers? |
14332 | Collusion? |
14332 | Coriander? 14332 Cut him with a knife?" |
14332 | Did n''t you? 14332 Did you do that to- day at the matinee performance, chevalier?" |
14332 | Do it? 14332 Do n''t think, do you, that there can possibly be any connection between the two cases? |
14332 | Do n''t you? |
14332 | Do you know, you little monkey, that you''re the only soul in all God''s world that could ever muster up a tear for me? 14332 Do you make anything out of it?" |
14332 | Do you mean that? |
14332 | Do you mean to tell me that is what kept you at home? 14332 Do you remember what I said, madame? |
14332 | Do you think I could persuade anybody if a third man perished? |
14332 | Does Marise pay you to sit there like mourners? 14332 Does it?" |
14332 | Dollops, they broke into our holiday-- they did us out of a part of it, did n''t they, old chap? |
14332 | Even though that deceit is the only thing that could give you your heart''s desire? 14332 Even to putting your head in his mouth?" |
14332 | Facts? 14332 Father,"he said,"am I to do the trick to- night? |
14332 | Finch? |
14332 | Five? 14332 Five?" |
14332 | From what source? 14332 Furnace? |
14332 | Gave them up? 14332 Going back on you?" |
14332 | Good heaven, man, you-- you do n''t mean--? |
14332 | Got down to the last ditch-- down to the point of desperation, eh? |
14332 | Happy coincidence my motoring down here-- eh, what? 14332 Has anybody else entered or attempted to enter the house?" |
14332 | Has he not made it yet? |
14332 | Has he, this precious royal master of yours, this usurper-- has he parted with that thing-- the wondrous Rainbow Pearl? |
14332 | Has it ever done so? |
14332 | Has that been lost? |
14332 | He has a rich friend, then? |
14332 | He took the bait, then, Cleek? |
14332 | Helping you? 14332 Henry, will you never be warned, never take these awful lessons to heart? |
14332 | Her? 14332 Here,"tapping her bodice and laughing,"tenderly shielded,_ mon ami_, and why not? |
14332 | Here? |
14332 | His body? 14332 His royal master? |
14332 | How did it happen that she had n''t seen him in all that time? 14332 How did the Earl of Wynraven''s son come to meet this singularly fascinating lady, and where?" |
14332 | How do you know that? |
14332 | How killed, Sir Henry? 14332 Hullo, Smathers, you in this, too?" |
14332 | I wonder if I deserve that? 14332 I wonder if the chevalier himself would be as safe if he were to make a feint of doing that?" |
14332 | I wonder if you understand that I shall be kicking my heels on my bedside until it is ready?--that I sha n''t sleep a wink all night? |
14332 | I? 14332 I? |
14332 | In his hands? 14332 In the name of Heaven, man, who and what are you?" |
14332 | Indeed? 14332 Interfering with young ladies, eh? |
14332 | Is anybody interested in your not putting Black Riot into the field on Derby Day? 14332 Is it a panel? |
14332 | Is it the lion again? 14332 Is that a fact?" |
14332 | Is that a fact? |
14332 | Is that all, Miss Lorne, or am I right in supposing that there is even worse to come? |
14332 | It did come, then? |
14332 | It is an age- old maxim, is it not, Mr. Cleek, that two wrongs can not by any possibility constitute a right? 14332 It is known that I have been with them-- the Comstocks-- and it is all so mysterious and awful.... Oh, who can tell whose hand it may be? |
14332 | It is quite the size of a pigeon''s egg, I believe; is it not, Count? |
14332 | It was the French position that you chose, then? 14332 It will be the story of last night over again, of course? |
14332 | It''s a compact, then? |
14332 | Johnston, stop!--turn round!--are you out of your head? 14332 Just have a look at it, will you? |
14332 | Knew, Mr. Cleek? 14332 Know of it? |
14332 | Lady Wilding, will you oblige me by standing here? 14332 Left what? |
14332 | Little Lord Chepstow? |
14332 | Look here,he said laconically,"what do you think of this?" |
14332 | Look''ere, are n''t you a- goin''to do it quiet, or are you a- goin''to mike me tike the blessed thing from you? |
14332 | Make a feint of it? 14332 Mates, monsieur? |
14332 | Maurice Van Nant? 14332 May I ask who else is in the house besides the servants?" |
14332 | May I ask why? |
14332 | May I ask why? |
14332 | May I ask, Major, why you speak of the lady in the present tense and of the man in the past? 14332 May I say again, that I am not sorry I told you? |
14332 | May n''t be? 14332 Meaning Captain Morford?" |
14332 | Mind? 14332 Miriam, Flora, and... Miss Lorne, will you tell me please the name of the lady to whom Captain Morford is engaged?" |
14332 | Miss Lorne will hand you over to Nursie with orders to put you to bed if you do,_ I_ know-- won''t you, Miss Lorne? |
14332 | Miss Lorne, am I to understand that this Captain Morford is engaged to a girl who has_ brothers_? |
14332 | Miss Morrison,he inquired as Mary returned in company with the superintendent,"Miss Morrison, do you keep pigeons?" |
14332 | Monsieur knows of the gem, then? |
14332 | Monsieur, you then are the great, the astonishing Cleek? 14332 Monsieur,"cried out madame,"monsieur, what is the meaning of that? |
14332 | Mother and brothers?--_brothers_? |
14332 | Mr. Narkom, do me a favour, will you? 14332 Mr. Smeer does not approve of the race track, of course?" |
14332 | Murple is the groom who was paralysed, is he not? |
14332 | Must we disturb him? 14332 My dear Cleek, could n''t a parakeet be made to swallow a pearl?" |
14332 | My dear Cleek, did you find anything? |
14332 | My dear Miss Lorne, what are you saying? |
14332 | My dear chap, you ca n''t really place any credence in that absurd assertion regarding the blue belt? 14332 My things packed and ready?" |
14332 | New Zealand? |
14332 | Not secured? 14332 Not surely when you are so tired as you say?" |
14332 | Nothing worth looking into, superintendent? |
14332 | Now, what are you after, you goat? 14332 Of a what?" |
14332 | Of course, Carboys treated it as the veriest rubbish-- who would n''t? 14332 Oh, Mr. Cleek, have you any idea-- any clue?" |
14332 | Oh, Mr. Cleek, you think you can get the stolen paper back? 14332 Oh, Mr. Narkom, what was it-- that noise I heard?" |
14332 | Oh, he did that, did he? 14332 Oh, how could you know that, Mr. Cleek? |
14332 | Oh, it''s that kind of case, is it? |
14332 | Oh, that? |
14332 | Oh, then you do keep them? |
14332 | On your word of honour as a soldier and a gentleman, is that true? |
14332 | Or, at least, to have you point out the hiding- place of them? |
14332 | Others? 14332 Parakeets?" |
14332 | Procure you a position, Miss Lorne? 14332 Really? |
14332 | Remember it? 14332 Reward? |
14332 | Ripping day, is n''t it? 14332 Ripping, was n''t it, old chap?" |
14332 | Save the what? |
14332 | Shall I show you how much I do respect you, then? |
14332 | Shall I take off my hat and say''thank you, ma''am''; or just the hackneyed''Praise from Sir Hubert is praise indeed''? |
14332 | Shall we go on? 14332 She intends doing that, then? |
14332 | Shortly, the chemist? 14332 Sir Henry,"he said, after a moment,"may I ask how long it is since you were in South America?" |
14332 | Sir Horace came down to look at the furnace? 14332 Sir Horace came down?" |
14332 | Slipping off, sir? |
14332 | Smart capture, Bobby, was n''t it? |
14332 | So that he, naturally, would move heaven and earth to prevent his grandson and heir from marrying a young woman of that class? 14332 So the lady was of the careful and calculating kind? |
14332 | Something you want attended to on the quiet? |
14332 | Still, it will be one of the two certainly? |
14332 | Strangled? 14332 Suppose I do n''t''run you in,''as you put it? |
14332 | Surely, Miss Lorne, you-- are not afraid of me? |
14332 | Takes it hard, poor old chap, does n''t he? |
14332 | Tell me, if it is not an impertinent question, did you take out an insurance policy on Murple''s life and pay the premium on it yourself? 14332 That Patagonian plant, eh? |
14332 | That is your ladyship''s son, is it not? |
14332 | That? 14332 The Baron von Steinheid?" |
14332 | The Yard? |
14332 | The method of procedure? |
14332 | The trouble arises from someone or something in his own household? |
14332 | Then in the name of Heaven, Cleek, what has become of the money? |
14332 | Then it is fair,said Cleek,"to suppose, in that case, that you have taken out one on your own life?" |
14332 | Then it is only when they are dressed and made up for the performance, eh? 14332 Then it was you I heard behind me?" |
14332 | Then the blunderer shot the child instead of the native? |
14332 | Then who are you? 14332 Then why should you?" |
14332 | Then, monsieur, how are we to seize them? 14332 There was an estate, then?" |
14332 | There''s something you want to say to me, is n''t there? |
14332 | They are beautiful, are n''t they? |
14332 | To receive the jewel and the letter? |
14332 | Two hundred quid? 14332 Villa de Carjorac? |
14332 | Was it his hand that gave it up? |
14332 | Well, to get on: the Comstocks were down in the deeps, and no hope of hearing any more from Australia and Uncle Phil, eh? 14332 Well, what next? |
14332 | Well? |
14332 | What a trial he must have been to the glove trade, must n''t he? |
14332 | What could you have said if you had spoken? |
14332 | What do you make of it, Cleek? |
14332 | What do you mean by saying that Sir Horace came down? |
14332 | What do you mean by that? |
14332 | What do you mean by''that''s all''? 14332 What has happened? |
14332 | What is it? |
14332 | What monstrous juggle is this? 14332 What shall you mean by that''going back on you''--eh? |
14332 | What the dickens are you talking about, Cleek? 14332 What was the charge at the garage?" |
14332 | What''s a horse-- even the best-- beside the loss of an honest life like that? |
14332 | What''s that? 14332 What''s the matter? |
14332 | What''s your name? |
14332 | When you what? |
14332 | When? 14332 Where is it? |
14332 | Where is the fragment we already possess? |
14332 | Which, of course, he declined to do? |
14332 | Who and what was the man? 14332 Who in this house could? |
14332 | Who is responsible for that ridiculous assertion, I wonder? 14332 Who is there? |
14332 | Who the deuce asked you for your opinion? |
14332 | Who told him that it does better in the atmosphere of a stable? |
14332 | Who? |
14332 | Why Miriam Comstock, of course-- did I forget to mention it? |
14332 | Why did n''t you say it was you, sir? |
14332 | Why give it up then, Miss Lorne? |
14332 | Why not go on letting me be your last hope-- your only hope? |
14332 | Why not? |
14332 | Why should n''t I know when I''ve been after him ever since he left Scotland Yard half an hour ago? |
14332 | Why should n''t it? 14332 Why then did he not appeal to the police?" |
14332 | Why wait for written reports, Mr. Cleek? 14332 Why? |
14332 | Why? 14332 Why?" |
14332 | Will I? 14332 Will the boy do it to- night, then, chevalier?" |
14332 | Will you let me thank you? 14332 Wot''s it now, Gov''nor?--the railway station? |
14332 | Wot''s the lay now? 14332 Yes, Gov''nor?" |
14332 | Yes, I do see, chevalier; but I wonder if he would be willing to humour me in something? 14332 Yes, but why?" |
14332 | Yes, but why? |
14332 | Yes, but-- who knows? 14332 Yes, my friend, but''Margot''--how about her?" |
14332 | Yes, old chap? |
14332 | Yes, old chap? |
14332 | Yes, sir? |
14332 | Yes-- why not? |
14332 | Yes; why not? 14332 You are certain it is not a fancy, but an absolute fact?" |
14332 | You are travelling with a servant? |
14332 | You drugged me? |
14332 | You found them? 14332 You gave him a chance? |
14332 | You have brought your motor, of course? 14332 You have n''t brought them with you, I hope, Mr. Narkom? |
14332 | You hear that, Clopin? 14332 You looked into heaven, and-- well, what then? |
14332 | You think it was fired, then? |
14332 | You think they have to do with the hiding of the paper or the pearl, cher ami? 14332 You think, then, that the thing is genuine?" |
14332 | You what? |
14332 | You will let me have the privilege, the honour? 14332 You wot called, was it? |
14332 | You would not think of calling Paganini a''fiddler,''he wrote;"why, then, should you degrade me with the coarse term of''cracksman''? |
14332 | You''d have put a bullet through me at the first word, would n''t you, but for that little''bluff''of suspecting and arresting another man? 14332 You, Miss Lorne?" |
14332 | You, sir, are that great man? 14332 You-- I-- Look here, I say now, what does this mean? |
14332 | You-- you do n''t mean that she-- that Zuilika-- killed him? |
14332 | _ Dix mille pardons, M''sieur_, there is something amiss? |
14332 | ''Ere you are, Miss Lorne-- lay hold of his little lordship, will you? |
14332 | *****"How did I guess it?" |
14332 | *****"How did I know that the body was inside the statue?" |
14332 | *****"How did I know the man?" |
14332 | --holding up the package he was carrying--"or a chance for me to do some fly catchin''with me bloomin''tickle tootsies?" |
14332 | --the cold bore of a revolver barrel touched her temple and wrung a quaking gasp of terror from her--"Do you feel that? |
14332 | --to the chauffeur--"Lanisterre, do you hear?" |
14332 | A double- quick change? |
14332 | A man to get a magic belt, to put it on, and then to melt away? |
14332 | A position as what?" |
14332 | A woman of that class?" |
14332 | Admiring the view or taking stock of Mrs. Culpin''s roses?" |
14332 | After he had risked so much to get them? |
14332 | Ai n''t et summink wot''s disagreed with you, have you, sir?" |
14332 | Ai n''t got such a thing as a biscuit about yer, have you? |
14332 | All ready there, Marguerite? |
14332 | All ready, Mr. Narkom? |
14332 | All the soap dishes in the house left filled last night and found filled this morning, captain?" |
14332 | An absurd belief, to be sure, but who can argue with a superstitious people or hammer wisdom into the minds of babies? |
14332 | And Lady Wilding and Mr. Sharpless-- do they, too, disapprove of racing?" |
14332 | And after all,"Thou shalt not enter"was to be written over the gateway of his ambition? |
14332 | And do you see those serpentine tracks through the middle of it? |
14332 | And drop it I would not after_ you_ had asked me to accept it, and-- Pardon? |
14332 | And had it been on that of the mother''s as well?" |
14332 | And how, pray, should we live if that were to happen?" |
14332 | And in London? |
14332 | And what can that have to do with your impoverished state?" |
14332 | And what does all that gibberish and that word''Ayupee''mean?" |
14332 | And what''s a Brazilian doing in the army of the Kaiser? |
14332 | And when does it happen in their case-- during the course of the show, or when there is nobody about but those connected with it?" |
14332 | And where''s a cove goin''to_ find_ this''ere''honest work''you''re a- talkin''of? |
14332 | And who may he be, Mr. Van Nant?" |
14332 | And why not? |
14332 | And why should he include me?" |
14332 | And yet-- and yet-- Ah, monsieur, how can I fail to feel as I do when this change in the lion came with that man''s coming? |
14332 | And you mean to tell me--""That they employed one of these deadly reptiles in this case? |
14332 | And, having been in it, what''s he doing dropping into this line-- backing a circus, and travelling with it like a Bohemian?" |
14332 | And_ that_ has been lost-- that gem so dear to Mauravania''s people, so important to Mauravania''s crown?" |
14332 | Any idea of what-- and how?" |
14332 | Any light in the darkness, old chap? |
14332 | Are we to fly at once to the mill and join him? |
14332 | Are you here?" |
14332 | Are you?" |
14332 | Are your sympathies with the unfortunate so keen, monsieur, that even this stray cur may claim them?" |
14332 | As for his identification of the body-- well, if the widow herself could find points of undisputed resemblance, why not he? |
14332 | At once, at once, do you hear? |
14332 | Avenge his death? |
14332 | Bawdrey?" |
14332 | Better?" |
14332 | Bonny little specimen of a Britisher, is n''t he?" |
14332 | But about that letter? |
14332 | But if there''s any messidge-- I say, who wants him? |
14332 | But is there anybody who would have a particular interest in your failure?" |
14332 | But of a sudden:"Miss Lorne,"he said, in a curiously tense voice,"may I ask you something? |
14332 | But tell me, does she show no anxiety, no fear of a search?" |
14332 | But then I do not care to get on the back of one-- so why?" |
14332 | But what interest could she or any of her tribe have in the death of Lady Chepstow''s little son? |
14332 | But what of it? |
14332 | But why should you connect these two persons with this inexplicable thing? |
14332 | But yes, vat shall that mean-- eh?" |
14332 | But, enlighten me upon a puzzling point, Sir Henry: What do you use coriander and oil of sassafras for in a stable?" |
14332 | But, of a sudden:"You came here directly after the matinee, I suppose?" |
14332 | But, pardon me, have you met with an accident, Mr. Bawdrey? |
14332 | By any chance that Sir Henry Wilding whose mare, Black Riot, is the favourite for next Wednesday''s Derby?" |
14332 | By what means?" |
14332 | Ca n''t you do something? |
14332 | Ca n''t you do this? |
14332 | Ca n''t you see any glimmer of light at all?" |
14332 | Ca n''t you see how nervous, how frightened, I am? |
14332 | Ca n''t you suggest something? |
14332 | Call this sort of tomfoolery being protected by the police? |
14332 | Came in to put more of the cursed stuff on the ninth finger of the skeleton, so that it would be ready for the next time, did n''t he, Dollops?" |
14332 | Can you remember what he said when he did that? |
14332 | Can you, monsieur-- can you?" |
14332 | Can you?" |
14332 | Case?" |
14332 | Cleek? |
14332 | Cleek?" |
14332 | Cleek?" |
14332 | Cleek?" |
14332 | Cleek?" |
14332 | Cleek?" |
14332 | Cleek?" |
14332 | College man, are n''t you? |
14332 | Come, may we not give ourselves a pleasant evening? |
14332 | Could any man resist the temptation to use it when he was endowed by Nature with the power to do this?" |
14332 | Could any man''go straight''with a fateful gift like that if the laws of Nature said that he should not?" |
14332 | Could n''t manage to take me round behind the scenes, so to speak, if Mr. Narkom will lend us his motor to hurry us there? |
14332 | Could, eh? |
14332 | Dear God in heaven, Mr. Cleek, what are you hinting at?" |
14332 | Dear God, can this be true?" |
14332 | Did I carry it off all right, Gov''nor? |
14332 | Did I do it jist as you wanted of it done?" |
14332 | Did Ulchester take kindly to this housing of the mummy of his father- in- law and the eventual coffin of his wife? |
14332 | Did anybody get at that?" |
14332 | Did anything happen?" |
14332 | Did he come? |
14332 | Did the men on guard hear no cry?" |
14332 | Did you see him, sir? |
14332 | Do I puzzle you by that? |
14332 | Do it? |
14332 | Do me a favour, will you? |
14332 | Do n''t mind if I sit in that corner and draw the curtain a little, do you?" |
14332 | Do n''t you hear them?" |
14332 | Do n''t you hear, you idiot?" |
14332 | Do n''t you see the answers, the acknowledgments, in the''Personal''columns of the papers now and again? |
14332 | Do you grasp it?" |
14332 | Do you know me? |
14332 | Do you know that I have a natural predilection for such things? |
14332 | Do you know what''s going to happen to you? |
14332 | Do you know who you had in your hands? |
14332 | Do you know who you let go? |
14332 | Do you know? |
14332 | Do you mean that ripping old firebrand?" |
14332 | Do you mean to say--?" |
14332 | Do you mind?" |
14332 | Do you object to that, or may I go on?" |
14332 | Do you remember Hamilton, the medical student, in New Zealand, eight years ago? |
14332 | Do you remember what I said about hitting upon a theory and offering it to the medical fraternity, only to get laughed at for my pains? |
14332 | Do you see where I sifted it over this spot near the Patagonian plant? |
14332 | Do you think the riddle you have brought is beyond my powers?" |
14332 | Do you understand? |
14332 | Do you understand?" |
14332 | Do you want me?" |
14332 | Do you want to know how he killed his victims, and what he used? |
14332 | Do you? |
14332 | Does the lion never''smile''for any of those?" |
14332 | Does your father do so, too?" |
14332 | Doubtless you have heard of that?" |
14332 | Eh?" |
14332 | Eh?" |
14332 | Feel that you can rely on Logan, do you?" |
14332 | Filled up, eh?" |
14332 | Finch is the fellow''s name-- isn''t it, doctor, eh?" |
14332 | For what? |
14332 | For who can fight a thing unseen and unknown?" |
14332 | From now till Thursday with jist you-- jist_ you_, sir? |
14332 | From whose hand?" |
14332 | Gawd''s truth, sir, you are n''t never a- goin''to give me two sich treats as that? |
14332 | Gimme the tip wot kind of work I_ can_ do for you, Gov''nor, will you? |
14332 | Got any more amazing things-- gems, I mean-- like that wonderful scarab? |
14332 | Had you any old friend in your college days whom your father only knew by name and who is now too far off for the imposture to be discovered?" |
14332 | Has he been here? |
14332 | Has he expectations of any kind?" |
14332 | Has he succeeded? |
14332 | Has it anything to do with the case you have in hand?" |
14332 | Has she come out of her retirement yet?" |
14332 | Have Gaston and Serpice arrived yet with the rest of the document, Margot la reine?" |
14332 | Have you any idea? |
14332 | Have you caught him? |
14332 | Have you found such things here?" |
14332 | Have you lost your wits? |
14332 | He is closely spied upon, then?" |
14332 | He is good company-- he talks well, he sings well, he is very handsome and-- well, what difference can it make to you? |
14332 | He stood waiting until the motor was abreast of him-- had, in fact, come to a standstill-- then spoke in a guarded tone:"What is it, Lennard?" |
14332 | He''d not be expectin''a stable to be scented with eau de cologne, would he? |
14332 | Headland? |
14332 | Hear any more from Uncle Phil after that?" |
14332 | Heard of him, have n''t you? |
14332 | Heaven forbid it, of course, but if anything should happen to Logan to- night, whom would you put on guard over the horse to- morrow?" |
14332 | Heavens above, Marguerite, did n''t you tell him?" |
14332 | Hide the pearl in it? |
14332 | Hop into it, will you, and meet me at the Fiddle and Horseshoe, between Shepherd''s Bush and Acton? |
14332 | How are they managing it, those two? |
14332 | How could the tossing of that coin have decided the sex of the wearer of those garments?" |
14332 | How did you get them out of the house?" |
14332 | How does the lady take it? |
14332 | How get them into our possession, his Majesty and I?" |
14332 | How has it come about? |
14332 | How is the poor old dear this morning, darling? |
14332 | How much respect will you have for him if he never lives up to his promise; never goes to Clarges Street at all? |
14332 | How, then, could you guess?" |
14332 | I are n''t too young to be''ungry, am I? |
14332 | I confess I have n''t the ghost of an idea regarding the case, Captain; but if you do n''t mind letting your daughter show me the room--""Mind? |
14332 | I had hoped that that might tempt a clever detective to take up the case; but what is such a sum to such a man as you?" |
14332 | I may not care to take the case when I hear it, so what''s the use of letting everybody know who I am?" |
14332 | I said in the beginning that his was either a case of swindling or a case of murder, did I not? |
14332 | I said, did I not, that I wanted to win her, wanted to be worthy of her, wanted to climb up and stand with her in the light? |
14332 | I say, Gov''nor, take off his silver wristlets, will you, sir, and lemme have jist ten minutes with him on my own? |
14332 | I say, Mr. Narkom, do give me a cup of tea, will you? |
14332 | I say, sir,"agitatedly,"look wot''s wrote on the envellup, will yer? |
14332 | I say: you''re not going to stop now that the great race is over, are you? |
14332 | I shall be right, shall I not, in supposing that all this is merely the preface to something else?" |
14332 | I should have thought he could have managed that, should n''t you, Mr. Narkom, if he could have managed the business of making him melt into thin air? |
14332 | I should have thought you would have remembered that, Mr. Cleek, when-- But perhaps you have never heard? |
14332 | I suppose that fellow Merode, as he calls himself, is in his room, waiting?" |
14332 | I suppose, Mr. Headland, that Mr. Narkom has told you something about the case?" |
14332 | I take it there must have been some good reason, Captain?" |
14332 | I want to get into every man''s room here, and wherever I find poison-- well, you understand?" |
14332 | I wonder how much it will surprise you to learn that, at the present moment, I have just one hundred pounds in all the world?" |
14332 | If a message was sent him by a carrier pigeon, where must that pigeon have come from, since it was one of Miss Morrison''s?" |
14332 | In other words, that that fellow you suspected in New Zealand did n''t really die after all?" |
14332 | In that safe?" |
14332 | Intends to take no further step toward proving it?" |
14332 | Is he dead?" |
14332 | Is it done?" |
14332 | Is it possible that you can have blood in your veins and yet take wondrous things like this so calmly?" |
14332 | Is nothing else possible? |
14332 | Is she safe?" |
14332 | Is that agreeable, Mr. Van Nant?" |
14332 | Is that the letter in your hand? |
14332 | Is that what you said?" |
14332 | Is the boy killed? |
14332 | Is the chevalier well- to- do? |
14332 | Is there anything we can do to help?" |
14332 | Is there anything you will need before you leave?" |
14332 | Is this the door of the picture- gallery, Sir Horace?" |
14332 | Is this the way?" |
14332 | Is this the welcome you give the bringer of fortune, Margot?" |
14332 | It is fair to suppose, from your rushing out here in quest of me, that you''ve got something on hand, is n''t it?" |
14332 | It is you--_you_--that calls upon me?" |
14332 | It was a significant glance, and said as plainly as so many words:"What do you think of it? |
14332 | It was horribly disfigured-- by contact with the piers and passing vessels-- but she and Anita-- and-- and my son--""Your son, Major? |
14332 | It''s a bully old world after all, is n''t it, Major?" |
14332 | Just look at it, will you, old chap?" |
14332 | Know anything about Richmond?" |
14332 | Know it, do n''t you? |
14332 | Landlady, see that we are not disturbed, will you, and that nobody is admitted but the parties I mentioned?" |
14332 | Let Dollops go home by train, and you meet me as I''ve asked, will you?" |
14332 | Let''s have a game of''Slap Hand,''you and I-- what? |
14332 | Look here"--he put his hand into his pocket and pulled out a gold piece--"do you know what that is, Major?" |
14332 | Look here, Captain Travers: what do you think of this fellow''s little game? |
14332 | Look here, Mrs. Bawdrey; look here Captain Travers; what do you think of a little rat like this?" |
14332 | Look here, do you know who you''re dealing with now? |
14332 | Lost in speculation? |
14332 | Madame, do you like music? |
14332 | Mates? |
14332 | Mauravania''s heir and-- a Russian?" |
14332 | May I trouble you for a pin? |
14332 | May I? |
14332 | Mr. Cleek, are you here? |
14332 | Mr. Narkom promised to look out for that, and-- I beg pardon? |
14332 | Mr. Narkom--"he turned to the superintendent--"keep an eye on Dollops for me, will you? |
14332 | My God, what are they doing it with? |
14332 | My dear Cleek, you do n''t believe that the man has been murdered?" |
14332 | My dear Cleek, you were serious, then? |
14332 | My signal is already hung out; shall we agree to the conditions and give him yours?" |
14332 | Narkom?" |
14332 | Narkom?" |
14332 | Narkom?" |
14332 | Narkom?" |
14332 | Narkom?" |
14332 | Narkom?" |
14332 | No''smile''for your old Tom, is there, Nero, boy, eh? |
14332 | Nobody can go by his looks; so how do you know?" |
14332 | Not so much of a money grabber as that muff Headland wanted you to believe, is he-- eh? |
14332 | Now then, what is it? |
14332 | Now what do you make of it?" |
14332 | Now what''s the password that Clodoche must give to Margot to- night at''The Twisted Arm''? |
14332 | Now, if you know, tell me what did the chevalier mean, what did his wife mean, when they spoke of a dream that might have come true, but did n''t? |
14332 | Now, if you please, Mr. Sharpless, will you stand beside her ladyship while I take up my place here immediately behind you both? |
14332 | Now, please, may we not walk faster? |
14332 | Now, the wig and beard, and after that-- What''s that you say? |
14332 | Now?" |
14332 | Of course that particular window opened upon a balcony or something of that sort, did n''t it?" |
14332 | Oh, Mr. Cleek, can we? |
14332 | Oh, Mr. Headland, do you think it is anything in the nature of a clue?" |
14332 | Oh, Mr. Narkom, can this be true?" |
14332 | Oh, monsieur, wizard though you are, can you get them past her guards? |
14332 | Oh, please will you go to him? |
14332 | Oh, who could have the heart? |
14332 | Oil of sassafras? |
14332 | One of''nobbling''? |
14332 | Only''grateful,''I wonder? |
14332 | Or is that really natural modesty? |
14332 | Or not this week at all? |
14332 | Or perhaps it may really be said to begin again where Shorty, the chemist, died, and the celebrated Spofford mystery ended-- eh, doctor? |
14332 | Or was he willing to stand for anything so long as he got possession of the huge fortune the old man left?" |
14332 | Or would you prefer that I should remain in the background as before?" |
14332 | Or, if you have not, do you think your fiancà © e has?" |
14332 | Owe me? |
14332 | Oxon or Cantab?" |
14332 | Pardon, but surely I have had the pleasure of meeting monsieur before? |
14332 | Pardon? |
14332 | Quite settled, both of you? |
14332 | Ready with the motor, chauffeur? |
14332 | Rum, my turning up just after Miss Lorne had written you and at a time when we both are needed, was n''t it?" |
14332 | Seriously?" |
14332 | Shall I nip off ahead or keep with you till we get there?" |
14332 | Shall I secure your tickets? |
14332 | Shall we give him the pledge he asks, Sir Horace? |
14332 | She had died-- but from what? |
14332 | She returned, then?" |
14332 | Signalling? |
14332 | Sir Henry"--he turned again to the baronet--"do you trust everybody else connected with your establishment as much as you trust Logan?" |
14332 | Sir Horace, why did n''t you think to tell me of this thing before?" |
14332 | So that was how it was to end, was it? |
14332 | So there is money in the background, eh? |
14332 | So this dear, deluded old gentleman, having failed to secure a''rune''in Java, brought back something equally cryptic-- a woman? |
14332 | So, then, it was all to be in vain, was it, this long struggle with the Devil of Circumstances, this long striving for a Goal? |
14332 | Some four or five months ago, was n''t it?" |
14332 | Somebody trying to get at the mare?" |
14332 | Soon?" |
14332 | Speak up, speak up, you hear? |
14332 | Stabbed or shot?" |
14332 | Suppose I take a chance and lend you five shillings, will you do some work and pay it back to me in time?" |
14332 | Suppose we say to- morrow noon? |
14332 | Sure of it, Sir Henry?" |
14332 | Surely they have got the wretch at last?" |
14332 | Surely when you see it you will be able to satisfy any misgivings you may have?" |
14332 | Surely, monsieur, I have seen you there?" |
14332 | Tell me, how did this Russian get the jewel, and when?" |
14332 | Tell me-- I''ll respect it-- tell me, for God''s sake, man, who are you? |
14332 | That French lady, or the red- headed party in the grey suit?" |
14332 | That was what it meant, eh? |
14332 | That you have been reading about the preparations for the forthcoming coronation of King Ulric of Mauravania?" |
14332 | That''s the idea, is n''t it?" |
14332 | That''s the sculptor fellow you said in the beginning had gone through his money, is n''t it?" |
14332 | That''s what you might call''giving with both hands,''Major, eh?" |
14332 | That''s why you have come to me, eh? |
14332 | The beard is real? |
14332 | The cases were somewhat similar, judging from the scanty outline you have given me, and-- What''s that? |
14332 | The cops''ull know me; and when you''ve got the nime-- well, wot''s the odds? |
14332 | The hair is real? |
14332 | The man had touched you, spoken to you, even caught up your hand and put it to his lips? |
14332 | The matter could n''t possibly have ended there, or else why this appeal to me?" |
14332 | The next day? |
14332 | The only thing that could open the Gates of Heaven for you?" |
14332 | The paper, my friend; you have brought it? |
14332 | The question is, which? |
14332 | The soap? |
14332 | The son of the man who drove an Englishman''s wife and an Englishman''s children into exile-- poverty-- misery-- despair?" |
14332 | Them beauties? |
14332 | Then Mr. Sharpless has been to South America, has he?" |
14332 | Then he turned to the Captain''s daughter, and asked quietly:"Would you mind letting me see the room from which the young man disappeared? |
14332 | Then it-- it''s not a mistake? |
14332 | Then of course she had no opportunity of seeing her uncle until he came here?" |
14332 | Then the thing appeared, I suppose?" |
14332 | Then who connected with the hall has been?" |
14332 | Then:"Is that true, Count?" |
14332 | There is no clue to the actual person and he is so cunning, so crafty-- Oh, please, will you go? |
14332 | They will not come off? |
14332 | This is Tuesday evening, is n''t it? |
14332 | This woman and this one- eyed man appeared last week in Mauravania, you say?" |
14332 | Those must have been trying times, Lady Chepstow, for the commandant''s wife, the mother of the commandant''s only child?" |
14332 | Thought you could lead me by the nose, and push me into finding those phials just where you wanted them found, did n''t you? |
14332 | Thought you had a noodle to deal with, did n''t you, Mr. Philip Bawdrey? |
14332 | Three days, Count; three days, monsieur with the puppy dog; three days, and not an instant longer, do you hear?" |
14332 | To do a thing like that?" |
14332 | To him? |
14332 | To that boy? |
14332 | To whom did he part with this gem-- a woman?" |
14332 | To whom?" |
14332 | To- morrow? |
14332 | Two hun-- W- what are you talking about? |
14332 | Was even the fancied moment in Paradise to be denied him then? |
14332 | Was he living in the same house with his fiancà © e, then? |
14332 | Was n''t it a kinematograph picture, after all?" |
14332 | Was n''t it true? |
14332 | Was n''t too much, was it, sir?" |
14332 | Was that same minute swelling-- the mark like a gnat''s bite-- on the neck of the boy''s body, too? |
14332 | Was the lady of his choice a native or merely an inhabitant of the island?" |
14332 | Was the person you allude to as''Young Phil''one of the sons that was murdered?" |
14332 | Was the place his home, as well as Captain Morrison''s, then?" |
14332 | Was there any mark on the door of the steel stall?" |
14332 | Was there no struggle? |
14332 | Well, if he dies without one, who will inherit his money, as I am an only child?" |
14332 | What a detective he''d a made, would n''t he, if he''d only a- turned his attention that way, and been on the side of the law instead of against it? |
14332 | What about me, old chap? |
14332 | What are you doing? |
14332 | What are you doing?" |
14332 | What are you giving me, you josser?" |
14332 | What are you talking about?" |
14332 | What are you, Cleek? |
14332 | What are you? |
14332 | What can possibly have caused the good lady to do a thing like that?" |
14332 | What can the ruined Château Larouge possibly have to do with the affairs of the Baron de Carjorac, Miss Lorne, that you connect them like this?" |
14332 | What can you be hinting against that poor, dear boy? |
14332 | What could make you think otherwise?" |
14332 | What do you make of that?" |
14332 | What do you think, Henry? |
14332 | What do you want?" |
14332 | What do you want?" |
14332 | What for?" |
14332 | What furnace? |
14332 | What game, Mr. Bawdrey? |
14332 | What has happened?" |
14332 | What has he done? |
14332 | What has made a woman like this pick up a fellow of his stamp? |
14332 | What has the young beggar invented, then?" |
14332 | What is it that has happened to your countenance? |
14332 | What is it that she is doing?" |
14332 | What is it? |
14332 | What is it? |
14332 | What is it? |
14332 | What is it?" |
14332 | What is the password of the brotherhood to the cause of Germany, stupid? |
14332 | What is this incomprehensible thing of which both you and Baron de Carjorac have spoken-- this thing you allude to as''The Red Crawl''?" |
14332 | What lion-- Nero? |
14332 | What next? |
14332 | What next? |
14332 | What next?" |
14332 | What next?" |
14332 | What next?" |
14332 | What on earth are you doing?" |
14332 | What on earth can be his object? |
14332 | What on earth can soap dishes have to do with it, man?" |
14332 | What others? |
14332 | What paralysed him, do you think?" |
14332 | What poison, man, what poison-- what?" |
14332 | What sort of a case is it?" |
14332 | What steps have you taken, Count, to prevent this?" |
14332 | What the dickens are you talking about?" |
14332 | What the dickens did you mean just now when you spoke about''the lion''s change''and''the lion''s smile''? |
14332 | What the dickens is this? |
14332 | What then, Miss Lorne, what then?" |
14332 | What would I be doing reading matters of that kind? |
14332 | What''her''?" |
14332 | What''s driven you to a dog''s life like this?" |
14332 | What''s his little game, I wonder? |
14332 | What''s it all about?" |
14332 | What''s that, Mr. Van Nant? |
14332 | What''s that? |
14332 | What''s that? |
14332 | What''s that? |
14332 | What''s that? |
14332 | What''s that? |
14332 | What''s that? |
14332 | What''s the case? |
14332 | What''s un name, sir?" |
14332 | What''s wrong?" |
14332 | What_ is_ the use?" |
14332 | When Baron de Carjorac recovered his senses after his horrifying experience--""That document was gone?" |
14332 | When and how shall I expect to see you again? |
14332 | When can you take hold of the case? |
14332 | When did you learn of it?" |
14332 | When will you have your luggage ready? |
14332 | When, do you fancy? |
14332 | When, sir-- when?" |
14332 | When, where, and how did these mysterious murders begin, Captain, if you please?" |
14332 | When? |
14332 | Where and how does that come in?" |
14332 | Where are the jewels? |
14332 | Where did you come from?" |
14332 | Where is he? |
14332 | Where is it?" |
14332 | Where is the boy, now?" |
14332 | Where''s the narker-- where-- where?" |
14332 | Where, if you please, did you acquire yours?" |
14332 | Where, if you please, did you acquire yours?" |
14332 | Where?" |
14332 | Which way did he go? |
14332 | Who are you? |
14332 | Who are you?" |
14332 | Who does not? |
14332 | Who is Mr. Harmstead, Captain?" |
14332 | Who is he?" |
14332 | Who is he?" |
14332 | Who would be likely to connect him with the death of a beast- tamer in a circus, who had perished in what would appear an accident of his calling? |
14332 | Who would not mother a thing that is to bring one four hundred thousand francs?" |
14332 | Who would, after having been promised wealth, education, everything one had confessed that one most desired? |
14332 | Who''s to tell as he are n''t in with they devils as is after Black Riot? |
14332 | Who? |
14332 | Why a''misfortune,''pray? |
14332 | Why are you following me? |
14332 | Why could not fate have spared the Villa de Carjorac? |
14332 | Why did n''t you say so in the beginning? |
14332 | Why do you say that you do n''t like it?" |
14332 | Why does it''smile''for no others? |
14332 | Why does she curry favour of him and his rich friend?" |
14332 | Why have you arrested the Señor Sperati? |
14332 | Why in the world did n''t you tell me in the first place?" |
14332 | Why is it only they-- my father, my brother-- they alone?" |
14332 | Why not call in person and see?" |
14332 | Why not stop on a day or two and call and see her?" |
14332 | Why not tell me at once that you are a winkle stall- keeper and be done with it? |
14332 | Why not the actual thing?" |
14332 | Why, I wonder? |
14332 | Why, how could you?" |
14332 | Why? |
14332 | Why?" |
14332 | Wilder ones have come true for other people; why should they not for you?" |
14332 | Will not that hurry you,_ la reine_?" |
14332 | Will that do?" |
14332 | Will this way lead me out? |
14332 | Will you allow me to escort you across the heath and see you safely on your way home? |
14332 | Will you come to the rescue, for my sake? |
14332 | Will you come?" |
14332 | Will you do nothing for her?" |
14332 | Will you have the tea?" |
14332 | Will you play the part of friend and guide and see me safely across the Channel?" |
14332 | Will you, Mr. Narkom? |
14332 | Will you?" |
14332 | Wo n''t you and Mr. Narkom go up and search without me? |
14332 | Wonder if it''s yours, madam?" |
14332 | Wot price me for arnswerin''of you, eh?" |
14332 | Wot''s that? |
14332 | Wot? |
14332 | Wot? |
14332 | Wot? |
14332 | Would any man have failed to fly to face the author of a foul lie like that?" |
14332 | Would he be there? |
14332 | Would he ever be nearer to it than he was to- night? |
14332 | Would he ever get that reward? |
14332 | Would you like me to show you the way?" |
14332 | Would you mind letting him make the feint you yourself made a few minutes ago? |
14332 | Yet if he does live up to it, will he not be doubly worth the saving? |
14332 | You accuse Uncle Phil?" |
14332 | You ai n''t a- going to tell me that he''s been there? |
14332 | You are going for a ride with me; and if-- Oh, that''s your little game, is it?" |
14332 | You are not interested in_ me, amigo_?" |
14332 | You are still stopping in the house, you and your son, I think you remarked? |
14332 | You believe you can outwit those dreadful people and save the Baron de Carjorac''s honour and his life?" |
14332 | You ca n''t possibly think that Abdul ben Meerza really sent the thing?" |
14332 | You came in your limousine, of course? |
14332 | You can remember it, can you not?" |
14332 | You did? |
14332 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you had him-- had him in your hands-- and then let him go? |
14332 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you let them take you in like that-- those two? |
14332 | You do n''t never_ mean_ that, sir?" |
14332 | You got him, then-- got him after all?" |
14332 | You grabbed him, did n''t you-- eh?" |
14332 | You hear that, my good servitors? |
14332 | You heard his scream, heard his fall, but he was dead when you got to him-- dead-- and you found no one here?" |
14332 | You heard me signal you to head him off, did n''t you?" |
14332 | You held them? |
14332 | You helped him to redeem himself? |
14332 | You know that blessed room at the angle just opposite the library-- the one with the locked door?" |
14332 | You mean it-- mean it? |
14332 | You meant it? |
14332 | You really do?" |
14332 | You really hope to get the things? |
14332 | You remember when I excused myself and went back on the pretext of having forgotten my magnifying glass the other day? |
14332 | You saw her lift that trap; and-- what then?" |
14332 | You took possession of them last night? |
14332 | You wanted the murderer of Mrs. Comstock and her children, did n''t you? |
14332 | You''d think her heart was breaking, would n''t you? |
14332 | You''ll use an alias, of course?" |
14332 | You''re not going back on me, are you?" |
14332 | You''re not going to ruin the show, are you, and after all the money I''ve put into it? |
14332 | You''ve come for us, I suppose? |
14332 | You, is it, Mr. Narkom? |
14332 | You, monsieur? |
14332 | You-- you do not mean to tell me that he caused that? |
14332 | You-- you really believe that suspicion points to Sir Gilbert Morford?" |
14332 | Young or old?" |
14332 | Your men will not want to search me of course, when I am merely popping out and popping in again like that, I am sure?" |
14332 | Your son?" |
14332 | _ What_ are you, dear friend?" |
14332 | _ Wot?_ Oh, go throw summink at yourself! |
14332 | a secret door? |
14332 | and, also, why? |
14332 | de Carjorac must make her home at the Château until the necessary repairs could be completed; and, of course, the baron had to go with her?" |
14332 | do you see them-- do you, madame? |
14332 | exclaimed the Count,"monsieur, what juggle is this? |
14332 | he said, in a voice that shook with nervous catches and the emotion of a soul deeply stirred,"Cleek to take the case? |
14332 | or what? |
14332 | or what? |
14332 | then he is dead, eh? |
14332 | what are you saying?" |
14332 | what do you suppose that means?" |
14332 | what have you stumbled upon now?" |
14332 | what is it? |
14332 | what is it?" |
14332 | what is wrong?" |
14332 | what''s that?" |
14332 | what''s this thing?" |
14332 | when? |
14332 | where?" |
14332 | who can tell? |
14332 | who may be spying? |
14332 | why do n''t you answer me, instead of staring at me like this? |
14332 | will no one tell me what has happened?" |
14332 | with a sudden change from seriousness to gaiety,"if I am to be led into sermonizing, might I not know what it is all about? |
14332 | wo n''t your missis be proud when you take her to see that bloomin''film?" |
14332 | you never let him get away, did you? |
39973 | , what more natural than that he should look in the direction of the table, and perhaps even make a step toward it? 39973 (_ Goes over and takes sandwich._) By the way, Shropshire is your county, is it not? 39973 (_ Looking about her again in search of further conclusion._) I suppose you have n''t been here long? 39973 (_ She gets up._) Why should n''t you? 39973 Algernon then says:By the way, Shropshire is your county, is it not?" |
39973 | All four of us? |
39973 | And it is? |
39973 | And who are the people you amuse? |
39973 | And, speaking of the science of Life, have you got the cucumber sandwiches cut for Lady Bracknell? |
39973 | Any family? |
39973 | Are they expensive? |
39973 | Are you asleep? |
39973 | At my age? |
39973 | Because what? |
39973 | But Jack, too engrossed in the preparations, scarcely hears the other, and answers:"Eh? |
39973 | But where? |
39973 | But-- how?--Why? |
39973 | Did you hear what I was playing, Lane? |
39973 | Do n''t you think it''s jolly lucky I said what I did? |
39973 | Do you mean to say that you began practising on me? |
39973 | Do you see that dear soul opposite? |
39973 | Does Lane go out Right? |
39973 | Does he own that nice comfortable Bath chair? |
39973 | Eating as usual, I see, Algy? |
39973 | Eh? |
39973 | Either get thee from the door, or sit down at the hatch: Dost thou conjure for wenches, that thou call''st for such store, When one is one too many? |
39973 | George Nepean would have come in, you''d have plumped down on him with your lie, and what then? |
39973 | Got nice neighbors in your part of Shropshire? |
39973 | How are you, my dear Ernest? |
39973 | How can this simple incident be made to appear true and interesting? |
39973 | How much did that American_ Slight increase_{ family pay you? |
39973 | I--? |
39973 | If I had n''t asked her, what would have happened? |
39973 | If I were n''t alone? |
39973 | If I--? |
39973 | Is marriage so demoralizing as that? |
39973 | Is there anything else you would like to know? |
39973 | It is the only thing that never grows old: do you remember what genial sparkling eyes Joseph Jefferson and Mark Twain had? |
39973 | It''s true, then, if there were some way, you{ would--? |
39973 | Just a bit? |
39973 | Mademoiselle? |
39973 | Not the way I mentioned just now-- but{ another-- you would n''t leave, would you? |
39973 | Oh, will somebody tell me what to do? |
39973 | Only to read to you? |
39973 | Possibly; or is there another entrance Left, leading to the butler''s room? |
39973 | Really, do n''t you think so? |
39973 | Really, if the lower orders do n''t set us a good example, what on earth is the use of them? |
39973 | Should the coach be a professional manager or actor, or should he be an amateur? |
39973 | Shropshire? |
39973 | Shropshire? |
39973 | The foregoing remarks have been applied largely to romantic plays, but what is to be done in modern realistic pieces? |
39973 | What brings you up to town? |
39973 | What do I_ climax,_{ care if she is a watchmaker''s daughter? |
39973 | What does he do with them? |
39973 | What else should bring me anywhere? |
39973 | What for? |
39973 | What is"blocking out"? |
39973 | What on earth do you do there? |
39973 | When Algernon says:"And, speaking of the science of Life, have you got the cucumber sandwiches cut for Lady Bracknell? |
39973 | Where have you been since last Thursday? |
39973 | Where is the table? |
39973 | Who is coming to tea? |
39973 | Why all these cups? |
39973 | Why did n''t you let me give you gas? |
39973 | Why is it that at a bachelor''s establishment the servants invariably drink the champagne? |
39973 | Why out of the question--? |
39973 | Why such extravagance in one so young? |
39973 | You do n''t own the whole house, do you? |
39973 | You must be tired, Saint- Réault? |
39973 | You''d_ Quickly_{ stay here-- near me-- always-- and be happy? |
39973 | Your furniture is n''t quite the latest thing, is it? |
39973 | _ They all turn and look at Sir C. He sinks into a chair and shakes his head at them._"Into which chair does he sink? |
40375 | And did you ever tell him why you had ceased to love him? |
40375 | And so, you see, I had won and lost and won again, but how pathetically.... Am I such a bad woman, d''you think? |
40375 | But have n''t_ you_ ever been on your knees, Shelmerdene? |
40375 | But how have you ever done any work if you never stayed in one place, never settled down? |
40375 | But is a rose less beautiful because it is sure to die? |
40375 | Have you done anything? 40375 Then, of course, you will die?" |
40375 | ''My sweet, do you think anything real is fair in this world? |
40375 | ''To Paris?'' |
40375 | ''What is it?'' |
40375 | Accuse me? |
40375 | And do n''t you trust me? |
40375 | And do you need a setting for it? |
40375 | And his sort of"Oh, d''you think so?" |
40375 | And so on, and so on-- did you murmur_ dies iræ_, Dikran? |
40375 | And who, as he read it, has not been shocked by a total lack of that sweetness which must alloy all strength to make it acceptable? |
40375 | Besides, anyway, what was there to say? |
40375 | But it was exactly that rigidity of his which I wanted to see about; I wanted to find out things, and in my own way, do n''t you see? |
40375 | By what right? |
40375 | Dikran, how could I have done it? |
40375 | Do you remember that scene between her and Mirabell, when she attaches''provisos''to her consent to marry him? |
40375 | For an hour on end, until he turned to me and said,"Tea, Dikran?" |
40375 | I seemed to see a weal across his face, where my whip had struck him-- had I done that? |
40375 | I wrote to him only once, a wonderful letter, but I had n''t the energy to write again-- what was the good? |
40375 | Just like those two old people in the Breton château, who a thousand years ago may have been lovers or may have only loved one another.... Who knows? |
40375 | Pure beauty grows only where beauty already is...."But, wise as I was, I did n''t know what to say; what could I say? |
40375 | Raoul? |
40375 | Shall we dine together by the window?'' |
40375 | Well, perhaps, but who knows? |
40375 | What right had he to be closing the door, as he was doing now? |
40375 | What right had he to be standing there, ordering about my life and my young men? |
40375 | What right, what right? |
40375 | What''s it matter if your cuffs get dirty as long as your hands get hold of something?" |
40375 | Who has not read"Sons and Lovers,"and laid it down as the work of a strange and great man, of the company of Coleridge, Stendhal, and Balzac? |
40375 | and does it matter? |
39968 | ''But what dun yo''do?'' 39968 ''I clear up th''shippon, pills potatoes, or does oddin; and if I may be so bou''d, win yo''tell me what yo''do?'' |
39968 | An''will yo ha''wings too when yo get theer? |
39968 | And in going and coming you have, of course, seen men engaged in boring for coal? |
39968 | And you actually tell me that you have never seen workmen boring for coal in this field? |
39968 | And you are employed as a ganger on this section of the Canal? |
39968 | And you cross this field( again pointing to the map)"daily-- two or three times a day-- going to and coming from your work?" |
39968 | And you lodge over here? |
39968 | But what is it like? |
39968 | But why dun they co''it a sond brid? |
39968 | By whom was He conceived? |
39968 | Have you done what I recommended? |
39968 | Heaw long ar''t stayin''? |
39968 | How do you mean? |
39968 | How much does thae feyther want for it, my lad? |
39968 | Now, on your oath, be careful-- have you not seen men engaged in making borings in this field? |
39968 | Of whom was He born? |
39968 | Stranger, is he? |
39968 | Thae feyther has sent it, has he? 39968 Then what the d----l_ were_ they boring for?" |
39968 | There''s a lot of mad folk in it, I suppose? |
39968 | Under whom did He suffer? |
39968 | Well, and how do you happen to be here? |
39968 | Well, well, Sam, but what security can you give me if I lend you the money? |
39968 | Well, what was he like? |
39968 | What can you do, my man? |
39968 | What maun we do? 39968 What''s that?" |
39968 | What''s up wi''thee, Bob-- what ar''t''doin''wi''th''wheelbarrow, and on good Sunday too? |
39968 | Whatever dun yo want, chaps, at this time o''neet? |
39968 | Wheer ar''t beawn, Jack? |
39968 | Who are you voting for, Sam? |
39968 | Who''s touching th''moon? |
39968 | Why? |
39968 | Will they pay you for it? |
39968 | Would he, though? |
39968 | You have not seen men boring for coal in this particular field? |
39968 | You_ have_ seen them boring for coal, then? |
39968 | ***** Mother, to her hopeful son standing at the door one night:"Come in an''shut th''door, John, what ar''t doin''theer?" |
39968 | *****"What size was it?" |
39968 | A great thumping fellow like you, as strong as an elephant, to let a little woman like your wife thrash you?" |
39968 | An idea struck him and he enquired:"Will aw ha''wings, parson, when aw get to heaven?" |
39968 | And now, my boy, will you tell me what you do for a livelihood?'' |
39968 | Another of his confreres on the Council, thinking that a swan or other aquatic fowl was meant, responded:"What''s th''use o''having only one gondola? |
39968 | But when your father seals a letter what does he do it with? |
39968 | But where is the parson?" |
39968 | Collecting myself, and pushing my chair back a bit to put a little more distance between us, I resumed:"You''re one o''th''mad''uns, are you?" |
39968 | Counsel is questioning Jim after being sworn:"Your name is James Shackleton?" |
39968 | Forepenze, aw sed, what for? |
39968 | How comes it that your eggs are so small?" |
39968 | How mony mooar steps is there o''this mak?" |
39968 | I saw that my friends were enjoying it immensely; at length, nudging one of them, I inquired:"How do you like it, Jim?" |
39968 | Is it true?" |
39968 | Looking at the picture of an ancient mansion, he asked:"Is that a hold habbey?" |
39968 | Mr Brooks, rising, went to the door and accosted the youth:"What have you got there, my lad?" |
39968 | Now what use do you think I have for this ring? |
39968 | Now, what is it made of? |
39968 | One of them shouted back in reply:"What''s th''matter theer?" |
39968 | Th''owd chap drest knots off Boney, dident''e? |
39968 | Thae''s gettin thi oatcakes, has n''t thae?" |
39968 | Warn''t yo fley''d o''meetin''th''de''il this morning as yo coom across Langfield Moor?'' |
39968 | Was it a king? |
39968 | Was it a lord? |
39968 | Was it a squire? |
39968 | Waw, aw sed, did n''t theaw koe on me fur to get in? |
39968 | What did he think of it? |
39968 | What maun we do, George?" |
39968 | What was to be done? |
39968 | What was to be done? |
39968 | Who was it that found out the puffing- billy? |
39968 | Would it be wise or prudent for him to comply with the request? |
39968 | Yes, men, what could we do without colliers? |
39968 | _ By_ whom was he crucified?" |
39968 | _ H.M.I._ And this? |
39968 | _ H.M.I._ Quite right; and this? |
39968 | _ Under_ whom did He suffer? |
39968 | and money at eight per cent.? |
39968 | are yo here so soon, Betty? |
39968 | responded the master;"what do you mean, you lout? |
39968 | what does this mean? |
41264 | But how to educate men of affairs at a moment''s notice? |
41264 | Even for the worst miscreant there is hope-- for who can say but that God may yet think fit to convert him? |
41264 | How are we to account for this apparently rapid change of mood on the part of Hideyoshi? |
41264 | How then did they proceed? |
41264 | How to replace by a spirit of intelligent progress the ignorance and conservatism of the hitherto despised traders and artisans? |
41264 | Manerbi(? |
41264 | Were worldliness, tongue religion, moral indifference, the distinctive marks of the Jewish element? |
41264 | What a revelation it would be if we had the court life of Alfred''s or Canute''s reign depicted to us in a similar way?" |
41264 | What were they to do, when the outward church said one thing, and the inward voice said another? |
41264 | Why the vice- provincial allowed merchants of his nation to buy Japanese to make slaves of them in the Indies?" |
41264 | Why then did they close the country''s doors to the outside world and suspend a commerce once so much esteemed? |
41264 | Why they and other Portuguese ate animals useful to men, such as oxen and cows? |
41264 | Why they had induced their disciples and their sectaries to overthrow temples? |
41264 | Why they persecuted the bonzes? |
38289 | ''Have you a fast Camel?'' 38289 ''Will you send the Camel?'' |
38289 | All that appears reasonable; but, tell me, Brothers, why is Yellow Leopard so bright in his spots? 38289 Also, where the Men- kind are is the Animal they call Horse, who is a Grass- eater-- was there no grass?" |
38289 | Am I a Grass- feeder? 38289 Am I different from the others?" |
38289 | And did all this happen when you had your tail kinked in the air, that time you were a silly calf? |
38289 | And did he? |
38289 | And did they bring you here with the Calf? |
38289 | And is that all of the tale? |
38289 | And that was how you came to Lower Burma? |
38289 | And what I want to know is, do the Men eat the feathers they hunt for? |
38289 | And what chance has a village woman against a big- fanged Tiger? |
38289 | And what of Grizzy? |
38289 | And what of grass- eating for those cousins of mine, the Caribou-- what ate they? |
38289 | And who came? |
38289 | And you ate the poor little fellow? |
38289 | Are n''t they, Muskwa? |
38289 | Are not we, alone, of all Animals for this work? 38289 Are the stories of Python written in the Book, O Sa''-zada?" |
38289 | Are you listening, Jaruk? |
38289 | Became a killer of the Men- kind? 38289 Because I am a Wolf, is there a law in the Boundaries that I shall not eat? |
38289 | But did the Sahibs never spear any of your young Brothers? |
38289 | But did you not turn and trample him? |
38289 | But have you not said, Brother Wolf, that in the Northland Musk- Ox and Caribou eat moss because there is nothing else? 38289 But how are we to know that Mango- tree was not as others in the Jungle?" |
38289 | But how did they catch you? |
38289 | But how fared the others with no mothers? |
38289 | But what became of you, Unt? |
38289 | But what if we did eat a trifle of the grain; was that excuse for the Sahibs killing us? 38289 But what were you doing in the_ dol_ field, Grunter?" |
38289 | But what were you doing in the_ dol_ grass, you and your big Mother? |
38289 | But who is to talk? |
38289 | But why should the Men kill Birds for a few feathers? |
38289 | But why should we listen to Soor''s squeaky tales? |
38289 | By the little Gonds? |
38289 | Did a Man cut you open, Magar? |
38289 | Did he reach the shack alive, Oohoo? |
38289 | Did poor Lahbo ask you to swallow him to save his life? |
38289 | Did the Villagers catch you then? |
38289 | Did you kill Bagh, the Man- eater? |
38289 | Did you never meet with my family, Little Master? |
38289 | Do you eat moss, Oohoo, the Wolf? |
38289 | Do you mean to say, Bagh, that you could not see them in the trees? |
38289 | Does Coyote come from Burma, too, O Sa''-zada? |
38289 | Even so, though that were better otherwise, but do you not know of your own people that the Men- kind are not for Kill? 38289 Have any of you ever seen one of my kind run away?" |
38289 | Have not many people killed many of my kind-- are they not always killing us? |
38289 | Here I am dirty brown,resumed Oohoo, paying no attention to the taunt,"and what does that mean?" |
38289 | How came you to this place, Sher Abi? |
38289 | How did it end, Saver of Life? |
38289 | How did they catch you? |
38289 | How did you come to have bangles inside of you? |
38289 | How goes it? |
38289 | How were you caught? |
38289 | I, too, have killed Men,asserted Raj Bagh;"and why is it so evil, my big- nosed eater- of- grass? |
38289 | If I am on the ground, am I not the color of the ground? 38289 In what manner, O Benefactor of the Oppressed?" |
38289 | Is that all, Cobra? |
38289 | Is that all? |
38289 | Is this a true tale, O Sa''-zada? |
38289 | Just feeding, and nothing else? |
38289 | Kittens? |
38289 | Listen, Comrades, what is my name even? 38289 Of Nag, or Hamadryad''s family, perhaps, yes, for, know you, Comrades, what Nagina does with her eggs? |
38289 | Of a snow storm, Sher Abi? |
38289 | One of the Burmese jungle Spirits that live in the Leppan Tree? |
38289 | Only one? |
38289 | Stop the Bullet? |
38289 | Tell me,queried Magh, maliciously,"do your Young roost on your nose?" |
38289 | That stupid creature, who is too lazy to brace up and look spry, talk to us? 38289 That was the manner of your taking?" |
38289 | Then why should Soor waste our time? |
38289 | To kill him? |
38289 | True it grew close to a bungalow, but what of that? 38289 Was it a Naht?" |
38289 | Was it kind treatment cured him? |
38289 | Was that pig- sticking? |
38289 | Was that what made you friend to the Jungle Dwellers, Sa''-zada? |
38289 | Was there no evil with your own people? |
38289 | Were not you eating the grain of the poor villagers? 38289 Were there no Musk- Ox?" |
38289 | Were there no guns? |
38289 | Were you afraid, little Master? |
38289 | What chance have we against them up in a_ machan_? 38289 What did they do with you, Bagheela?" |
38289 | What did those of our kind eat? |
38289 | What difference does it make? |
38289 | What evil tricks are there left to teach the Bandar- log? |
38289 | What happened to the Men''s place, Dog- Wolf? |
38289 | What is a Mongoos? |
38289 | What is the tale to- night, Sa''-zada, loved Master? |
38289 | What say you, Sa''-zada? |
38289 | What says King Cobra, then-- Cobra and the others-- crawling destroyers? |
38289 | What''s the difference, anyway,objected Magh,"whether you are a Leopard or Panther-- you all belong to the family of Throat Cutters? |
38289 | What''s wire? |
38289 | Where do you sleep? |
38289 | Where had they come from so soon? |
38289 | Where was your Mother all this time? |
38289 | Who spoke of bangles? |
38289 | Why did n''t you bite him? |
38289 | Why did n''t you trumpet? |
38289 | Why did you not bite it off? |
38289 | Why do you toss it up first? |
38289 | Why should Men be so eager to see the blood of Forest Dwellers who have not harmed them? |
38289 | Why should he be likened to one of my kind? 38289 Will Deboia the Climber come also, Little Master?" |
38289 | You two Comrades fought over it? |
38289 | ''Is it the belling of a Nilgai?'' |
38289 | ''It is to do me harm,''I said,''for is not that my road? |
38289 | ''What is it?'' |
38289 | ''What is that?'' |
38289 | ''Why does he wish to battle?'' |
38289 | A Chicken twice a month-- what is that to one of my size? |
38289 | Am I broken- toothed, or full of a mange, or is Raj Bagh? |
38289 | And do we steal silently away as is your method? |
38289 | And have not the people of the land, the Black- kind, taken more from us in the way of food than we ever did from their fields? |
38289 | And if your black coat serves you so well, how does the other, who is white, manage?" |
38289 | And shall I not use these things that I have, as do the other Forest Dwellers when their desire is to live? |
38289 | And so, if I, being strong, fight for my life, it is temper, eh? |
38289 | And were not the Men- kind trying to do evil for me also, little nut- eater, Magh? |
38289 | And when I am curled up on the limb of a tree am I not like a knot on the tree trunk? |
38289 | And why not?" |
38289 | Bagh, and Pardus, and Python, and Sher Abi, they are the Blood Kind, and do they eat moss or grass? |
38289 | Brothers, know you aught of fear? |
38289 | But who can stand against the fire- stick? |
38289 | By a rare chance it seemed caught in a branch of the elephant creeper----""Elephant what?" |
38289 | Can one eat snow? |
38289 | Did I eat my straw bedding and become ill, like a wide- mouthed Monkey that I know of?" |
38289 | Eh, what?" |
38289 | Even Muskwa does not, do you, old Shaggy Sides?" |
38289 | Every day a young of the Men- kind----""I know,"interrupted Mooswa;"a Boy, eh?" |
38289 | Have I not said that he has the cunning of a great thief?" |
38289 | Have I not said that our life is one of danger? |
38289 | He knew I was away, for he has the cunning of Cobra, and how was the mother to know that any danger threatened? |
38289 | He laughed when he saw me, and called, as he clapped his little hands, and I would n''t have hurt him-- why should I? |
38289 | How did he know that, Brothers-- how did he know that I was not coming like one of his own kind to help him in his trouble? |
38289 | I am surely the oldest one here; shall I begin, O Sa''-zada?" |
38289 | I kill not Man; but if Caribou comes my way, and that which is inside of me says to make a kill, shall I do so, or lie down and die because of hunger? |
38289 | I wish he had beaten me off, even struck me with the thunder- stick, for, after all, what was the kill? |
38289 | If I am all bad, can anyone say why it is? |
38289 | If I am of a great strength why is that-- is it so that I may be killed easily? |
38289 | If we fail in a kill, do we go long hungered, turning from everything else until we have slain the one that has escaped us? |
38289 | Is that not so, Sher Abi?" |
38289 | Know you not that when going through the jungle we never look up?" |
38289 | Many times Baghni said,''Let us kill the Goru, for of what use is the good will of the Men- kind if we die?'' |
38289 | My Man may have been bad, too; but how was I to know, being only a Coyote? |
38289 | Now, the calf was tied to the foot of a toddy palm, and they looked at him as much as to say,''What are you doing here?''" |
38289 | Our food is of the Jungles, and how are we to know just what has been grown by the Men, and what has grown of itself? |
38289 | Sa''-zada, could you not pluck the chickens before you give them me to eat? |
38289 | Sa''-zada, our good Keeper, who''s to talk?" |
38289 | Surely the sweet Buffalo Grass does not grow there?" |
38289 | The Peacocks, and Monkeys, and Crows, even Panther-- what are they? |
38289 | The small Deer that bark, what were they? |
38289 | Then the young Sahib, speaking to me, said,''My heavy- eyed Friend, also one of much strength, can you go straight back the sixty miles?'' |
38289 | Then what manner of food do you find?" |
38289 | They are like Bison, or Arna, bunching up close in a pack with their big- horned heads all facing out; and even if the circle is broken, what then? |
38289 | This has been said by the Man, but are they not worse than we are? |
38289 | True, inside was a Goat, but what mattered that once the door was down? |
38289 | True, the Men killed for their own eating and the Dogs'', but what was that to a whole Pack? |
38289 | True, there was a Mahout once that went too far-- but what am I saying? |
38289 | Two Snakes can not eat one-- how else should we settle the question? |
38289 | Was it not Hathi said some wise animal arranged all these things for us?" |
38289 | Was it not a land of much good feeding?" |
38289 | Was there ever any good at their hands?" |
38289 | What do they eat, Oohoo? |
38289 | What is a Cockatoo? |
38289 | What think you of that, Sa''-zada-- killed just for our tusks-- for a pair of teeth?" |
38289 | When Cobra strikes, and fetches home, does not even Hathi, or Arna, or mighty Raj Bagh, die quickly? |
38289 | With their Horses did they not beat down and destroy more than we did? |
38289 | Would he tackle Me? |
38289 | You did n''t look in their eyes, Brother, did you?" |
38289 | [ Illustration:"BUT I COULD SEE THAT THERE WAS SOMETHING VERY WRONG..."]"They had killed your Mother, had they, Bagh?" |
38289 | as Myna, sticking his saucy yellow beak through the bars of his cage, called across to him,"Want a glass of grog, Polly?" |
38289 | but the juice of it is sweet when one is near dead-- puts the fat bacon behind log walls, what is one to do, eh? |
38289 | did he mean to have us all killed with his noise? |
38289 | exclaimed Magh,"where are we at? |
38289 | how would I look with my head stuck full of funny old feathers?" |
38289 | queried Magh;"did you catch this sickness and die?" |
38289 | what of that, Little Master?" |
38289 | what will_ She_ say if I do n''t pull you out of this? |
38289 | whimpered Jackal,"is Nag the Cobra to come here among us?" |
38289 | why should there be anything but jungle all over the world, it is so beautiful?" |
40710 | And-- and-- please tell me how long did you lie in the swoon? |
40710 | Oh, darling, what is it, what is it? |
40710 | She asked me to help''er; what could I do? 40710 What luck?" |
40710 | When I wrote you my long letter I was about to be married and was to call to see you on our way to Boston; am I not right? |
40710 | Where is Jack, Jim-- Oh where is my husband? |
40710 | You have been in the land of the Czar then, have you? |
40710 | Are the mighty snow and ice mountains of the far south growing, or are they melting and breaking away from their moorings? |
40710 | But who can prove it? |
40710 | By the way, why do the street car people not put in electrical motors in Chicago? |
40710 | Could I tell a lie? |
40710 | He grinned at me and asked,"how is_ de hole_?" |
40710 | How long will this thing last? |
40710 | I says to myself, I ca n''t prevent her, ai n''t it best for me to help her? |
40710 | I sprang to my feet, and in angry horrified tones demanded--"Jim, has Mrs. Felden drowned herself, and you have done nothing to prevent her mad act?" |
40710 | I turned to her and said:''Belle you have read my father''s letter, what do you suggest?'' |
40710 | I very naturally asked:"Are the matters you refer to, such that you can not speak of them?" |
40710 | If growing, when will they tumble through the crust of the earth, and send a raging sea over the habitable part of the globe? |
40710 | Is the question irreverent? |
40710 | May not the Eternal who started then and keeps all things moving and growing-- may not He grow in perfection? |
40710 | May not the Omnipotent become more potent, the Omniscient wiser? |
40710 | Oh, why am I not a man?" |
40710 | She clapped her hands, saying,"That''s capital, is it not, Rita? |
40710 | Tell me-- Jim, where is my husband?" |
40710 | That man took some sort''er tea"--"Was it hemlock?" |
40710 | The lady came forward, saying:"It is Mr. Jamison, Jack, is it not? |
40710 | To open up a light vein of conversation I asked:"What was that you said about Jim''s rheumatism?" |
40710 | Traveler?" |
40710 | Was it true-- could it be true, that after all, I was nothing to this woman who, I believed, was made for me? |
40710 | What other countries have you visited? |
40710 | When will the bars be thrown down so that the Canuck and the Yankee can trade as brothers and friends? |
40710 | Why should two people so closely united by every bond except that of so called nationality, submit to this hampering of their kindly relations? |
40710 | Will the country be able to support two big cities? |
40710 | Would it be a lie to excuse myself on the plea of having a slight acquaintance with the dead father? |
40710 | Would n''t you my Mogul?" |
40710 | Would you believe it, sir, I was there before day- light? |
40710 | he exclaimed,"have I done that?" |
40710 | what is it you say? |
41567 | ''At all events,''what was the purport of it but to make the tenant as liberal a fortune as the landlord? |
41567 | 8- 11, 36- 40), while another shows the supremacy of the Levites as a caste either over the rest of the people(? |
41567 | As for Baby Blake, is she not an Irish Di Vernon? |
41567 | Did it''consciously''think to do so; or did it''only unconsciously''practise towards that for property and interest? |
41567 | I beseech you, for the orders of men and ranks of men, did not that Levelling principle tend to the reducing of all to an equality? |
41567 | The''natural''magistracy of the nation, was it not almost trampled under foot, under despite and contempt, by men of Levelling principles? |
41567 | _ Physical optics_, on the other hand, has for its ultimate object the elucidation of the question: what is light? |
35862 | An''are you sorry for our agreement? |
35862 | An''what are you doing with that box and dice I see in your hand? |
35862 | An''where would I get em''but in the heads of your own sheep? 35862 And do you blame me, master?" |
35862 | And do you say no more nor that? |
35862 | And how did you know there were six, you poor innocent? |
35862 | And how did you like the sport? |
35862 | And where will I look for''em? |
35862 | And who else should I mean? 35862 And who wo n''t you have, may I be so bold as to ask?" |
35862 | And will you direct me to where she dwells? 35862 Are you doing any soothsaying?" |
35862 | Are you making game of me, man; what else have I to stake? |
35862 | Are you strong? |
35862 | Are you wishful to hang me a third time? |
35862 | Art thou shaved man? |
35862 | Blood and fury,he shouted;"how is this? |
35862 | Blur- an- agers, how came ye to know about my goose? |
35862 | But will you gi''e me all the ground the goose flew over? |
35862 | Call that a trick? |
35862 | Dear me,said Tom,"but is n''t it surprising to hear the stone- chatters singing so late in the season?" |
35862 | Devil a one of me knows,said Tom;"but of malt, I suppose, what else?" |
35862 | Did you ever see Fin? |
35862 | Do n''t you see her there away from you? |
35862 | Do you see that black thing at the end of the field? |
35862 | Have n''t you chariot and horses and hounds? |
35862 | Have you any more to stake? |
35862 | He''ll do well enough,said one;"but who''s to mind him whilst we''re away, who''ll turn the fire, who''ll see that he does n''t burn?" |
35862 | Heardst thou ever the like? |
35862 | How could I go? |
35862 | How could I kill you,asked the king''s son,"after what you have done for me?" |
35862 | How did you forget? |
35862 | How do you know that? |
35862 | I am King O''Toole,says he,"prince and plennypennytinchery of these parts,"says he;"but how came ye to know that?" |
35862 | I know that you are a great rascal; and where did you get the eyes? |
35862 | I suppose,said the Lepracaun, very civilly,"you have no further occasion for me?" |
35862 | I''ll give you whatever you ask,says the king"is n''t that fair?" |
35862 | I''m much obleeged to you: where is the baste and yourself going? |
35862 | I''m sure I beg your pardon,said my grandfather,"but might I ask you a question?" |
35862 | If thy father had that rod,says the giant,"what would he do with it?" |
35862 | Indeed it is, honest man,replied Oonagh;"God save you kindly-- won''t you be sitting?" |
35862 | Is it a story you want? |
35862 | Is it a tinker you are? |
35862 | Is it fearing I wo n''t pay you, you are? |
35862 | Is it fighting you''ve been? 35862 Is it me myself, you mean?" |
35862 | Is it you, Donald? |
35862 | Is it you,said she,"that were there?" |
35862 | Is that the way you''re leaving me? |
35862 | Is there any other young woman in the house? |
35862 | Is this the way you are mending the path, Jack? |
35862 | Is thy daughter mine now? |
35862 | It''s daybreak that''s the matter; do n''t you see light yonder? |
35862 | Jack, you anointed scoundrel, what do you mean? |
35862 | Jack, you vagabone, do you see what the cows are at? |
35862 | Jewels, do you say? 35862 May your hand turn into a pig''s foot with you when you think of tying the rope; why should you speak of hanging me?" |
35862 | Never welcome you in,cried the captain of the guard,"did n''t we hang you this minute, and what brings you here?" |
35862 | Now, O Conall,said the king,"were you ever in a harder place than to be seeing your lot of sons hanged to- morrow? |
35862 | Now,said he to the story- teller,"what kind of animal would you rather be, a deer, a fox, or a hare? |
35862 | Now,said the lank, grey beggarman,"has any one a mind to run after the dog and on the course?" |
35862 | Now,said the raven,"see you that house yonder? |
35862 | Now,says he,"she''ll be without talk any more; now, Guleesh, what good will she be to you when she''ll be dumb? |
35862 | O Guleesh, is n''t that a nice turn you did us, and we so kind to you? 35862 O musha, mother,"says Jack,"why do you ax me that question? |
35862 | Oonagh,said he,"can you do nothing for me? |
35862 | So the sea- maiden put up his head(_ Who do you mean? 35862 So,"says Tom to the king,"will you let me have the other half of the princess if I bring you the flail?" |
35862 | Sure, I''m looking for the heifers, poor things? |
35862 | Thank you ma''am,says he, sitting down;"you''re Mrs. M''Coul, I suppose?" |
35862 | The host,they cried;"what do you want with the host? |
35862 | There is gloom on your face, girl,said the youth;"what do you here?" |
35862 | This is the third time, and who knows what luck you may have? 35862 To be sure, you lazy sluggard, I do?" |
35862 | To whom art thou talking, my son? |
35862 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
35862 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
35862 | Was n''t that a fine haul we made at the Lord of Dunlavin''s? |
35862 | Well, honest man,says the king,"and how is it you make your money so aisy?" |
35862 | Well, maybe you''d be civil enough to tell_ us_ what you''ve got in the pitcher there? |
35862 | Well, well,cried them all, when he came within hearing,"any chance of our property?" |
35862 | Well, what about_ them_? |
35862 | Well, what of them? |
35862 | What are you doing there, you rascal? |
35862 | What are you doing, you contrary thief? |
35862 | What canst thou do? |
35862 | What colour do you want the mare to be? |
35862 | What could I do with the twelve iron ones for myself or my master? 35862 What gift,"said his wife,"would you give me that I could make you laugh?" |
35862 | What is the good of that? 35862 What is the reason of your journey?" |
35862 | What like are these men when seen, if we were to see them? |
35862 | What men are these you refer to? |
35862 | What news have you to- day? |
35862 | What news the day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What piercing, shrill cry is that-- the most melodious my ear ever heard, and the shrillest that ever struck my heart of all the cries I ever heard? |
35862 | What purse is that you are talking about? |
35862 | What reason had you to strike the man who won my daughter? |
35862 | What reward would you give me for sending plenty of fish to you? |
35862 | What robe will you wear? |
35862 | What scoundrel struck that blow? |
35862 | What suitor is that? |
35862 | What work can ye do? |
35862 | What would bring them there? |
35862 | What''ll you take for that hide? |
35862 | What''s the matter, friends? |
35862 | What''s the matter? 35862 What''s the matter?" |
35862 | What''s the reward for putting it back in the bundle as it was before? |
35862 | What''s the reward you would ask? |
35862 | When he felt the birds calling in the morning, and knew that the day was, he said--''Art thou sleeping? 35862 When will he be here?" |
35862 | Whence come you, and what is your craft? |
35862 | Whence comest thou, maiden? |
35862 | Where did I get it, is it? 35862 Where is the water, wife?" |
35862 | Where will I look for them? |
35862 | Where? 35862 Who are you, my good man?" |
35862 | Who deluded you? 35862 Who else took the head off the beast but you?" |
35862 | Who else? |
35862 | Who has dared to interfere with my fighting pet? |
35862 | Who is there? |
35862 | Who is this beauty, and where is she to be seen, when she was not seen before till you saw her, if you did see her? |
35862 | Who knows,they replied,"who committed the crime?" |
35862 | Who should take the heads off the knot but the man that put the heads on? |
35862 | Who then? |
35862 | Who then? |
35862 | Who then? |
35862 | Why do n''t you come to breakfast, my dear? |
35862 | Why should n''t I be satisfied? |
35862 | Why,said Conall,"should not I do the pleasure of the king, though there should be no souls of my sons in dread at all? |
35862 | Will you give a body a taste of your beer? |
35862 | Will you give me the first son you have? |
35862 | Will you not put out,said Silver- tree,"your little finger through the key- hole, so that your own mother may give a kiss to it?" |
35862 | Will you play again? |
35862 | Will you play again? |
35862 | Will you take a gold piece? |
35862 | Will you take me? |
35862 | Would you tell a body,says the cock that was perched on the ass''s head,"who was it that opened the door for the robbers the other night?" |
35862 | You home- spun shoe carle, do you think I am fit to be your thrall? |
35862 | You wo n''t go back o''your word? |
35862 | You would not cheat the poor man, would you? |
35862 | You, you poor creature what good would you do? |
35862 | ''Hast thou boiled that youngster for me?'' |
35862 | ''Play up with you, why should you be silent? |
35862 | ''Strike up with you,''said the head bard,''why should we be still? |
35862 | A Legend of Knockmany What Irish man, woman, or child has not heard of our renowned Hibernian Hercules, the great and glorious Fin M''Coul? |
35862 | A while after this he called again:"Are you asleep?" |
35862 | After some more talk the king says,"What are you?" |
35862 | After they had gone and were out of sight, the henwife came to the kitchen and said:"Well, my dear, are you for church to- day?" |
35862 | After they had gone, the henwife came in and asked:"Will you go to church to- day?" |
35862 | Ah, now, could n''t you take me with you?" |
35862 | Ah, will any of you pull a bed of dry grass for me? |
35862 | And again the mighty voice thundered:"Do you see this great chest of mine?" |
35862 | And if she asks you,''Were you at the battle of the birds?'' |
35862 | And now tell me what dress will you have?" |
35862 | And she said to me''What brought you here?'' |
35862 | And the giant asked him,"Where is thy father when he has that brave rod?" |
35862 | And the voice said:"Do you see this great head of mine?" |
35862 | And what do you think I made it of?" |
35862 | And when its neck was shown, the thundering voice came again and said:"Do you see this great neck of mine?" |
35862 | Are you in need of soothsaying?" |
35862 | Are you satisfied, Guleesh, and will you do what we''re telling you?" |
35862 | Are you sorry for hiring me, master?" |
35862 | Are you sorry for it?" |
35862 | Are you sorry for our agreement?" |
35862 | At last they stood still, and a man of them said to Guleesh:"Guleesh, do you know where you are now?" |
35862 | But about the time when he should drive the cattle homewards, who should he see coming but a great giant with a sword in his hand? |
35862 | But does that hare come here still?" |
35862 | But have you seen her, and are Deirdre''s hue and complexion as before?" |
35862 | Connachar came out in haste and cried with wrath;"Who is there on the floor of fight, slaughtering my men?" |
35862 | Deirdre heard the voice, and said to her foster- mother,"O foster- mother, what cry is that?" |
35862 | Did I not hear you speaking to the king''s son in the palace to- night? |
35862 | Did n''t you see the gold with your own two eyes?" |
35862 | Did you never hear tell of the Danes?" |
35862 | Do you blame me for what I have done?" |
35862 | Do you blame me, sir?" |
35862 | Do you think for all the money in Ireland I''d run the risk of seeing my lady tramp home on foot?" |
35862 | Fin, who was dressed for the occasion as much like a boy as possible, got up, and bringing Cuhullin out,"Are you strong?" |
35862 | For the comic relief of this volume I have therefore had to turn mainly to the Irish peasant of the Pale; and what richer source could I draw from? |
35862 | Guleesh, my boy, are you here with us again? |
35862 | Has n''t it kept me and mine for years?" |
35862 | He called to speak to the master in the haggard and said he,"What are servants asked to do in this country after aten their supper?" |
35862 | He came to the deer"What news to- day?" |
35862 | He gave a cross look to the visitors, and says he to Jack,"What do you want here, my fine fellow? |
35862 | He shouted,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
35862 | He sputtered it out, and cried,"Man o''the house, is n''t it a great shame for you to have any one in the room that would do such a nasty thing?" |
35862 | Her husband forgot, and touched her rather roughly on the shoulder, saying,"Is this a time for laughter?" |
35862 | Her husband tapped her on the shoulder, and asked her,"Why do you weep?" |
35862 | Here I am, and what do you want with me?" |
35862 | How are you getting on with your woman? |
35862 | I thought to myself that I was near my foe and far from my friends, and I called to the woman,''What are you doing here?'' |
35862 | I went in, and I said to her,''What was the matter that you were putting the knife on the neck of the child?'' |
35862 | In comes the giant, and he said:"Hast thou cleaned the byre, king''s son?" |
35862 | Is he at home?" |
35862 | Just then we could be hearing the footsteps of the giant,''What shall I do? |
35862 | Keep your toe in your pump, will you? |
35862 | May I be so bold as to ask where yez are all going?" |
35862 | May I make bold to ask how is your goose, King O''Toole?" |
35862 | Maybe I wo n''t remember your kindness if ever I find you in hardship; and where in the world are you all going?" |
35862 | Maybe you''re sorry for your bargain?" |
35862 | My wings, are they not withered stumps? |
35862 | Now, when they told Arthur how they had sped, Arthur said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek first?" |
35862 | On a day of days, while he was fishing, there rose a sea- maiden at the side of his boat, and she asked him,"Are you getting much fish?" |
35862 | Or has that devil made you really dumb, when he struck his nasty hand on your jaw?" |
35862 | Out came the cobbler:"How much for your hides, my men?" |
35862 | Out came the tanner:"How much for your hides, my good men?" |
35862 | Said Gwrhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
35862 | Said Silver- tree,"Troutie, bonny little fellow, am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
35862 | Said Yspathaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
35862 | Said a man of them to him:"Are you coming with us to- night, Guleesh?" |
35862 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon?" |
35862 | Seeing her so vexed and so changed in the face, the old woman asked:"What''s the trouble that''s on you now?" |
35862 | She asked the boy:"Did you tell the master what I told you to tell him?" |
35862 | She cried:"Naois, son of Uisnech, will you leave me?" |
35862 | She rose up before him, and said:"Did n''t I tell you not to leave a bone of my body without stepping on it? |
35862 | So Conn of the Hundred Fights said to him,"Is it to thy mind what the woman says, my son?" |
35862 | Suddenly she paused, and said aloud:"Where are the women? |
35862 | Thackeray?) |
35862 | That vagabond, bad luck to him----""You mean Donald O''Neary?" |
35862 | The eldest sister came home alone, and the husband asked,"Where is your sister?" |
35862 | The giant asked him--"If thy father had that rod what would he do with it?" |
35862 | The giant awoke and called,"Are you asleep?" |
35862 | The son asked his father one day,"Is any one troubling you?" |
35862 | The very letters that have spread through all Europe except Russia, are to be traced to the script of these Irish monks; why not certain folk- tales? |
35862 | The woman said:"Whose else should they be?" |
35862 | The wren threshed( what did he thresh with? |
35862 | Then he said,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
35862 | There was once a farmer who was seeking a servant, and the wren met him and said:"What are you seeking?" |
35862 | Well, the long and the short of it was that Donald let the hide go, and, that very evening, who but he should walk up to Hudden''s door? |
35862 | What dress would you like?" |
35862 | What good have we now out of our journey to France? |
35862 | What has happened to you, Gelban? |
35862 | What kind of soothsaying do you want?" |
35862 | What''s the matter?" |
35862 | What''s the matter?" |
35862 | When he said to me then,''Is the ring fitting thee?'' |
35862 | When she perceived that he was asleep, she set her mouth quietly to the hole that was in the lid, and she said to me''was I alive?'' |
35862 | When the giant came home, he said:"Hast thou thatched the byre, king''s son?" |
35862 | When the sisters came home, the henwife asked:"Have you any news from the church?" |
35862 | When the two sisters came home the henwife asked:"Have you any news to- day from the church?" |
35862 | Where are you going?" |
35862 | Where have you been so long?" |
35862 | Where''s all your invention? |
35862 | Which of the keys should I keep?" |
35862 | Who is she, or how did you get her?" |
35862 | Why did you play that trick on us?" |
35862 | Why say so when you were at home every Sunday?" |
35862 | Why should n''t I have them all to myself?" |
35862 | Why what has a poor old man like you to play for?" |
35862 | Will you begin, if you please, and put in the thatch again, just as if you were doing it for your mother''s cabin?" |
35862 | Will you lend me your best pair of scales?" |
35862 | Would n''t it be a fine thing for a farmer to be marrying a princess, all dressed in gold and jewels?" |
35862 | Would you have me meddle with the bastes of any neighbour, who might put me in the Stone Jug for it?" |
35862 | Would you not sooner stay with me than with them?" |
35862 | You would n''t wish to keep the luck all to yourself?" |
35862 | [ Illustration:]"''Why will you be silent? |
35862 | [ Illustration:]"And what do you say to me,"says Saint Kavin,"for making her the like?" |
35862 | an''who is it, avick? |
35862 | and what would you be taking their feet off for?" |
35862 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
35862 | or mayhap you met the police, ill luck to them?" |
35862 | said Fin again;"are you able to squeeze water out of that white stone?" |
35862 | said Tom, bursting out laughing;"sure you do n''t think me to be such a fool as to believe that?" |
35862 | said he, suddenly, as he looked again at the young girl,"in the name of God, who have you here? |
35862 | said he,''hast thou done this to me? |
35862 | said he;"is this where the great Fin M''Coul lives?" |
35862 | said the giant;"but were n''t you impudent to come to my land and trouble me in this way? |
35862 | says Ould Nick;"is that the way? |
35862 | then,"says the king,"who are you?" |
35862 | to take a woman with him that never said as much to him as,''How do you do?'' |
35862 | what for?" |
35862 | what made your sons go to spring on my sons till my big son was killed by your children? |
35862 | what shall I do?'' |
35862 | where did you get it?" |
35862 | where?" |
35862 | who was calling him, and not a soul in sight? |
39718 | A shark? |
39718 | Ah, yes, how did they know? |
39718 | At the time? |
39718 | But how could they know New Zealand was there? |
39718 | Can you tell me anything of the action? |
39718 | Do you believe it is true? |
39718 | Had they compasses? |
39718 | Have you noticed a tree covered in spider webs during a fog? 39718 Have you seen the devil?" |
39718 | Supernatural? |
39718 | Tell us, friend, did you find it on the other side as you had preached? |
39718 | The Maoris had a fair wind then? |
39718 | Well, did you perceive resemblance? |
39718 | Well, did you, for example, see Christ? |
39718 | What bird is it? |
39718 | What do you mean? |
39718 | What have we to do,they say,"with these old historical quarrels which are hardly intelligible to us? |
39718 | What is this ribald nonsense? |
39718 | What''s psychic? 39718 Where did it come from?" |
39718 | Who are you, friend? |
39718 | Why not? |
39718 | You mean fairies and things? |
39718 | You''re sure it was Sir Oliver? |
39718 | ''Who''s that?'' |
39718 | Above all, how did the birds get into the carefully- guarded seance room, especially as Bailey was put in a bag during the proceedings? |
39718 | After all, how much education had the apostles? |
39718 | After all, if enemies are given full play, why should not friends redress the balance? |
39718 | Among other remarkable advertisements was one"What has become of''Pelorus Jack''? |
39718 | And the others? |
39718 | Are they not the pools left behind by that terrible tide? |
39718 | But after all, what''s the odds? |
39718 | But how can anyone win through? |
39718 | But what has a materialist to say to the whole story? |
39718 | But what have Spiritualists had in the main save misrepresentation and persecution? |
39718 | But what of Silesia and of Poland now? |
39718 | But why should I abandon one faith in order to embrace another one? |
39718 | Can a man with a moderate capital get a share of these good things? |
39718 | Can any prophecy be more accurate or better authenticated than that? |
39718 | Can such phrases really mean anything to any thoughtful man? |
39718 | Can they not see that if they grant us one- tenth, they grant us our whole contention? |
39718 | Do they think what they are saying, or does Faith atrophy some part of the brain? |
39718 | Does anyone import Indian nests? |
39718 | Does anyone import queer little tortoises with long, thin necks? |
39718 | Granting that they are Jewish forgeries, how do they get into the country? |
39718 | Had Germany obeyed the moral law would she not now be great and flourishing, instead of the ruin which we see? |
39718 | Has France ever had the credit she deserves for the splendid faith with which she followed that great beneficent genius Lesseps in his wonderful work? |
39718 | Have you ever seen Olver Lodge, sir?" |
39718 | He answered,"Was it not in''_ Light_''office in London?" |
39718 | His words to the sick woman,"Who has touched me? |
39718 | How can a man fail to be earnest then? |
39718 | How can the bulk of the people ever get into touch with a good medium if they are debarred from doing so in the ordinary way of business? |
39718 | How can they hope with their feeble hands to clear the ground? |
39718 | How could the motor- car or the aeroplane have been developed if hundreds had not been ready to give their lives to pay the price? |
39718 | How long has the Aryan race to run? |
39718 | How many cases are on record of the strange changes and wild deeds of individuals? |
39718 | How many of us have, for example, seen the rings of Saturn? |
39718 | How then can any church progress when all its leaders are over that age? |
39718 | I ask again: What is this ribald nonsense?" |
39718 | I have seen three pictures of his,"The Goths,""Who Comes?" |
39718 | I suppose that on such a voyage one should rest and do nothing, but how difficult it is to do nothing, and can it be restful to do what is difficult? |
39718 | I wonder from what heights that old fellow had fallen before he brought up against the public house wall? |
39718 | If He be with us, who is against us? |
39718 | If here and there one had a new idea, how could it survive the pressure of the others? |
39718 | If not, why continue them? |
39718 | If so, what is your charges? |
39718 | If the whole transaction is normal, then where does he get them? |
39718 | If these articles can be got in any normal way, then what is the way? |
39718 | If they are not genuine, where do they come from? |
39718 | Is it possible that under some conditions a mineral may change into a metal? |
39718 | Is not valour the basis of all character, and where shall we find greater valour than theirs? |
39718 | Is there a depot for Turkish copper coins in Australia? |
39718 | Is there at the present moment one single bishop, or one head of a Free Church, who has the first idea of psychic truth? |
39718 | Is there such evidence? |
39718 | The man dies, and then where are these experiments? |
39718 | Then what about 100 Babylonian tablets, with legible inscriptions in Assyrian, some of them cylindrical, with long histories upon them? |
39718 | Then why were they playing tricks upon themselves? |
39718 | Was colonisation to be abandoned, or were these brave savages to be overcome? |
39718 | Was ever such an object lesson in sin and its consequence placed before the world? |
39718 | Was he a lost soul?" |
39718 | Was it fraud? |
39718 | Was it not spirituality? |
39718 | Well, who knows? |
39718 | What are these among so many? |
39718 | What are we to make of such a mixture? |
39718 | What are we to say to that? |
39718 | What did Hippocrates mean when he said,"The affections suffered by the body the soul sees with shut eyes?" |
39718 | What direct proof have we of most of the great facts of Science? |
39718 | What is he up to now?" |
39718 | What is it?" |
39718 | What right had such a man to die, he who had more vim and passion, and knowledge of varied life than the very best of us? |
39718 | What view will the coming Labour governments of Britain take of our Imperial commitments? |
39718 | What was wanting in you to bring you to such a pass? |
39718 | What would not Galileo and all the old untravelled astronomers have given to have one glimpse of this wondrous Southern display? |
39718 | When they speared the cattle of the settlers what were the settlers to do? |
39718 | Where''s that little boy?" |
39718 | Which is better-- that a race be free, immoral and incompetent, or that it be forced into morality and prosperity? |
39718 | Who else could have drawn such fine detail and yet so broad and philosophic a picture? |
39718 | Who loses except themselves? |
39718 | Why do I not see it all the time? |
39718 | Why should anyone invent such a thing, putting an actual name to the person? |
39718 | Why should quartz always be the matrix? |
39718 | Would a hundred million pounds cover the cost of that one? |
23445 | ''Kin I answer it?'' 23445 A duty? |
23445 | A home? |
23445 | A. Malfi,he painfully deciphered...."Say, Gramp'', what''s a Malfi?" |
23445 | About what? |
23445 | After all these years? 23445 Afterward?" |
23445 | Agitator? |
23445 | Ai n''t it there? |
23445 | Ai n''t she happy? |
23445 | Ai n''t that something huge? |
23445 | Ai n''t that something? |
23445 | Ai n''t we had that all out once? |
23445 | Ai n''t you kids got no_ spine_? 23445 Ai n''t you two women been at swords''points long enough?" |
23445 | All about it? |
23445 | All you''ve done for me? |
23445 | And do you not think so, mademoiselle? |
23445 | And do you think I was a nobody in Poland? |
23445 | And does love change, Tiburce? 23445 And how is Martha behavin'', now?" |
23445 | And how will wrecking the car make the road belong to you? |
23445 | And if those conditions were not fulfilled? |
23445 | And now that I am free to listen to your proposals, do you wish to marry me? |
23445 | And now what? |
23445 | And now you are very happy? |
23445 | And so Elmer Higgins has the cast- iron nerve to say that he laughed at me to my face, does he? |
23445 | And that you have been untrue to the eternal fidelity which you swore to me here by this very stream? 23445 And warn''t it-- warn''t it nice calculation?" |
23445 | And you think he will not? |
23445 | And you think he will not?.... |
23445 | Are n''t you going to tell us? |
23445 | Are you going back home? |
23445 | As near as they can get to the earth,he had said and was Freda angry? |
23445 | August, are you there? |
23445 | Benny Safron? 23445 Benny? |
23445 | Bertram? |
23445 | Burned to a cinder,I asked,"or dismembered by lions?" |
23445 | But do n''t any of you know what has become of Hartson? |
23445 | But have you no feelings for mother? |
23445 | But my land, at a time like that what is a body to think? |
23445 | But the spirit God of love, the foreign- born spirit God? |
23445 | But what''s so useful as mourning? |
23445 | But what''s the use of talking? 23445 But why do you honor me thus?" |
23445 | But, hey, young man, who are you that would seem to know my daughter so well? |
23445 | Ca n''t you even for a minute throw off the illusion of the flesh? |
23445 | Ca n''t you see me take a rest for a minute? |
23445 | Can you hear me? 23445 Can you loan me your wash- boiler for the clothes?" |
23445 | Can you? |
23445 | Compromise Henry? |
23445 | Could anybody keep that brat clean? 23445 D''ye mean that comical cage- like where they goin''to sleep outdoors?" |
23445 | D''you understand? 23445 Dame Melicent? |
23445 | Did I promise eternal fidelity? 23445 Did n''t he laugh as he says he did?" |
23445 | Did she love him? 23445 Did you note the omission?" |
23445 | Did you see her clearly while this was going on? |
23445 | Do I count for a person in this house? 23445 Do I hear that the President is coming to your play?" |
23445 | Do n''t she like rolling a hoop and playing with the other children? 23445 Do n''t, huh? |
23445 | Do you call me''mad,''and''creature''? 23445 Do you know what I heard downtown this morning?" |
23445 | Do you mean there''s someone you love better than you do me? |
23445 | Do you mean you ca n''t pay? |
23445 | Do you remember how you used to lick the fingers from them? |
23445 | Do you remember what Lizzie Tuoey thought about Jannie and Stepan? |
23445 | Do you think you''re doing right by that child? |
23445 | Does my lord wish for anything? |
23445 | Done? |
23445 | Ever hear of Hartson? 23445 Ever hear of Sanderson?" |
23445 | Ever hear of Wadlin or Jerry Donahue or Cartwright? |
23445 | Ever hear of-- of Galbraithe? |
23445 | Ey, ma-- back? |
23445 | Ey? |
23445 | Florian, do you really love Adelaide de Nointel? |
23445 | For what did I need yet the sixth one? |
23445 | Friends? |
23445 | From out there? |
23445 | Had I made any noise? |
23445 | Hartson? |
23445 | Has the master come? |
23445 | Have n''t got a card about your person, have you? |
23445 | Have you a quarter in your house? |
23445 | Have you another wife? |
23445 | Have you ever been jealous? |
23445 | Have you ever known mist on a moonlight night in a forest? 23445 Have you ever seen one? |
23445 | Haydon would probably remember him--"Haydon? |
23445 | He do n''t go so fur as to beat ye, does he, Nell? |
23445 | How about her losing this last ship? |
23445 | How can you deny that you''re sitting here with me in this restaurant? 23445 How come it they''scaped with a whole skin?" |
23445 | How did it make you? |
23445 | How did you know when to come? |
23445 | How did you know? |
23445 | How did you know? |
23445 | How many times will I have to speak of this matter? 23445 How many? |
23445 | How much chain have we got on that starboard anchor? 23445 How much is that?" |
23445 | How much is the price risen, you little robber? 23445 How much?" |
23445 | How should I know,she asked him,"as yet?" |
23445 | How''s your Everything? |
23445 | If looks could kill,Tyler said, thrusting his jaw out with hers,"there would n''t be a grease spot left of that shack, would there, Hat?" |
23445 | If you are so damned certain about the Tuoey woman,he cried,"what have you got to say about Mrs. Kraemer''s death? |
23445 | If you believed I knew as much of her as I said I did,cried the boy,"why do n''t you believe me when I assure you that she loved you? |
23445 | If you''ve never been there, why do you want so to go? 23445 In what way can I be of service?" |
23445 | Into the storm? 23445 Is he here?" |
23445 | Is it Mrs. Drainger, Fawcett? |
23445 | Is it permitted to a small wife to worship the foreign- born God? |
23445 | Is it walk off the duty, you mean? |
23445 | Is that your wife? |
23445 | Is the morning rice ready? |
23445 | Is this some jest to punish me, my dear? |
23445 | It''ly? 23445 Jim-- you''ll let me be, wo n''t you? |
23445 | Kin you answer it? |
23445 | Laugh? 23445 Left?" |
23445 | Little Jewel, wilt thou go with me to the priest of the foreign- born faith? 23445 Many gitten''em to- day?" |
23445 | Mother-- you feel chilly? 23445 My God, Tyler, ca n''t you see what''s taking place?" |
23445 | My friends,we heard,"how long are you going to remain blind to your condition? |
23445 | Myry,inquired Nell,"where''s that other glass that goes with George''s wife''s lemonade- set?" |
23445 | Not here? |
23445 | Nothin''but a shrimp.... Why in tarnation do n''t they have a key you can see?... 23445 Now I wonder"--thought Myra--"is she agrievin''or asulkin''? |
23445 | Now what am I to do? |
23445 | Now, Nell, I promised Myry--"What did you promise Myry? |
23445 | Now, how did you? |
23445 | Oh, Honorable One, shall I admit the flower- girl? 23445 Oh, most- beloved Master, is it also permitted to women, to a small wife, to believe the Jesus way?" |
23445 | Oh, my God, my God, my God,_ where are you_? |
23445 | Oh, will I ever get that laugh out of my ears if I live to be a hundred? 23445 Ornaments? |
23445 | Ornaments? |
23445 | Painted? |
23445 | Really, six Everythings? 23445 Remember where you were last night?" |
23445 | Say, Gramp'', kin''you answer it? |
23445 | Say, Green, any one here by the name of Bertram? |
23445 | Say, Ma,he said laughingly,"how would you like a real actor for a son- in- law?" |
23445 | Say, Sis,Benny called out sharply,"what sort of frame- up is this? |
23445 | Scared? 23445 Scold you, Mother? |
23445 | See_ what_? |
23445 | Shall I order for you? |
23445 | Shall we feast to him, too? |
23445 | Since she ca n''t take it out on us any more, what harm is it if she cusses the servants? |
23445 | So that''s your thanks for all we''ve done for you? |
23445 | So,she said, jumping out on me sudden,"what''s there strange about Moira feeling like she does when there''s rooms like this? |
23445 | Some one with a crown of thorns? |
23445 | Still and all,said Elmer,"would n''t it have been kind of too bad to put a young horse like that out of its misery? |
23445 | Tell me,said Florian then,"and is there no way in which we who are still alive may aid you to be happier yonder?" |
23445 | That man? 23445 That man? |
23445 | The bedrooms? |
23445 | The beyond, then, is n''t entirely the abode of righteousness? |
23445 | The boiler? 23445 The game was worth playing then-- eh, old man?" |
23445 | The lonely man? |
23445 | The-- er-- trees? 23445 The-- the women who go to Maurice''s are-- are-- of a-- certain_ kind_, are n''t they?" |
23445 | To whom can I open the wounds of my heart? |
23445 | Used to work on this sheet? |
23445 | Vanillas? |
23445 | Veiled lady? |
23445 | Want to try it on? |
23445 | Was n''t it enough five mouths to feed? 23445 We''ll drink to the old days, eh?" |
23445 | Well, Joe,says Joe Doane,"off again?" |
23445 | Well, ef they ai n''t crazy, why they goin''to have stone floors? 23445 Well, suppose they are? |
23445 | Well, why do n''t you kill your husband? |
23445 | Well,he said trying to read her,"And then?" |
23445 | Well-- Nell got ye in hand? |
23445 | Well? |
23445 | Were you alone? |
23445 | Wh--_who_ am I? |
23445 | What are you doing? 23445 What are you doing?" |
23445 | What are you dreaming about? |
23445 | What are you envying me? |
23445 | What are you tearing from me my flesh? 23445 What are you_ laughing_ at?" |
23445 | What can I do for you, old man? |
23445 | What can it be? |
23445 | What can the likes of him want with letter writing? |
23445 | What did I tell you? 23445 What did she want?" |
23445 | What difference does it make to_ you_ where I go? |
23445 | What do I care if it is? |
23445 | What do you find out there? |
23445 | What do you mean-- government goat? 23445 What do you mean?" |
23445 | What do you mean? |
23445 | What do you think about it? |
23445 | What do you think she means when she says''her good''? 23445 What do you want from the poor children? |
23445 | What do you want? |
23445 | What greater friend is there on earth than the dollar? |
23445 | What happened? |
23445 | What have I done? 23445 What have I from all my fine furs and feathers when my children are strangers to me? |
23445 | What have you done for me? 23445 What is it you want to look at the women in Maurice''s for?" |
23445 | What is that? |
23445 | What is the matter with you, Hanneh Breineh? |
23445 | What those kids up to? |
23445 | What was that story? |
23445 | What will you do with all those roses? |
23445 | What worth is an old mother to American children? 23445 What you kids rubberin''at?" |
23445 | What you out here for? 23445 What''d you come for? |
23445 | What''ll I say? |
23445 | What''s Nell awhisperin''to ye? |
23445 | What''s in the bottle, Hat? |
23445 | What''s the good,argued Marvin,"of having things too fine to use?" |
23445 | What''s the use Of givin''up your curios and souvenirs to folks like that? 23445 What''s wrong?" |
23445 | What, are you not going out again in the box car, young hobo? |
23445 | What? 23445 What?" |
23445 | When does the weddin''take place? |
23445 | Where are you staying now? |
23445 | Where did you lost yourself? 23445 Where do you get it from?" |
23445 | Where is Craney, who owns the car line? |
23445 | Where was you when she hit, Hat? |
23445 | Where you been,I said,"to have so much fun?" |
23445 | Where''s my pink gilt cup and saucer Aunt Em gimme one Christmas? |
23445 | Who are you and what are you? |
23445 | Who ever heard of such a thing? 23445 Who is my mother?" |
23445 | Who was that? |
23445 | Who''d a''thought, now, Myry had her little vanities? 23445 Who''s that?" |
23445 | Who-- what has done this? |
23445 | Why are you keeping Benny here so long? |
23445 | Why be such a fool as that? |
23445 | Why comes it to me so hard? |
23445 | Why did n''t you have her then, when you might have had her? |
23445 | Why do we always insist upon sitting in this confounded darkness? |
23445 | Why do you ask me? |
23445 | Why do you leave me this way? 23445 Why do you want to go there?" |
23445 | Why not after such a violent exercise? |
23445 | Why not? |
23445 | Why not? |
23445 | Why should I be afraid of you, Tiburce, who gave your life for mine? |
23445 | Why should I fool myself with the false shine of hope? 23445 Why should my children shame themselves from me? |
23445 | Why should n''t he come? |
23445 | Why, do n''t you know? |
23445 | Why, how do you mean? |
23445 | Why, what ails this room? |
23445 | Why, what''s the matter with that_ goat_? 23445 Why,_ why_ do you hate them like that?" |
23445 | Will you come, too? |
23445 | Will you help those crooks of Barlow against myself and all the good people of the town? 23445 Will?" |
23445 | Would n''t you like to know? |
23445 | Wun''t you need me about supper? |
23445 | Ye do n''t say? |
23445 | Yes,breathed Myrtie,"is n''t she_ wonderful_?" |
23445 | You ai n''t yet satisfied? |
23445 | You are a lawyer? |
23445 | You are making a will? 23445 You find much time to read, Myry?" |
23445 | You love things very much, do n''t you? |
23445 | You see the tragedy of my life? |
23445 | You see what she''s going to do, do n''t you? |
23445 | You see, dear lady, your welcome is to be of the people-- the_ forestiere_--I wonder if I can make you understand in so short a time as we have? 23445 You still think on Delancey Street? |
23445 | You want me to love you yet? |
23445 | You would not mind, perhaps,continued the captain,"if, after all, in spite of this long delay, we still found time for the lonely man? |
23445 | You''ll be tired- like, grampa, eh? |
23445 | You''re crazy-- you''re mad-- you mean-- you mean-- you love someone you''ve never met-- someone you_ ca n''t see_? |
23445 | You? 23445 Your small wife?" |
23445 | _ Hate_ me? |
23445 | _ Hell!_roared Joe Doane from the window,"do n''t you know a man''s_ dead_?" |
23445 | _ Meshugneh!_ what are you running around like a crazy, frightening the child? 23445 _ Now_ do you know why I hate you as no human thing can hate? |
23445 | _ Nu_, Mammeh,sallied Jake,"did you ever dream in Delancey Street that we should rub sleeves with the President?" |
23445 | _ Oi weh!_she burst out, wringing her hands in a new wave of woe,"where is Benny? |
23445 | _ Vanillas?_She lashed the white horse into a sprawling stagger as she snapped,"She do n''t know nothin''about vanillas!" |
23445 | _ Who_ are you? 23445 _ Yes!_""Wh--_what_ am I?" |
23445 | _ You_ were going to turn-- Mrs. Montagu''s picture to the wall? 23445 ''Ca n''t you lift me up, man?'' 23445 ''Can I not escape such things even here?'' 23445 ''Drowned, am I?'' 23445 ''N''a vanilla-- what call has Willum got to build a vanilla, his age? 23445 ''Tell me something I do n''t know, will you?'' 23445 ''Where''s Hat?'' 23445 (?) 23445 (_ See 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918._)(_ H._)Cab, Sir?". |
23445 | (_ See 1915, 1916, 1917, and 1918._)(_ H._) Afraid? |
23445 | (_ See 1915, 1916, 1917, and 1918._)(_ H._)"Could You Use Three?" |
23445 | * For Where Is Your Fortune Now? |
23445 | * What''s Your Hurry? |
23445 | * Which Was the Condemned? |
23445 | ** What Good Is an Imagination? |
23445 | *** For Where Is Your Fortune Now? |
23445 | *** Which Was the Condemned? |
23445 | A hundred? |
23445 | After I''ve slaved like a dog all my life and worse-- and what thanks do I get for it? |
23445 | Ai n''t I got enough worries on my head than to go around looking for you? |
23445 | Ai n''t it handsome?" |
23445 | Ai n''t she immense? |
23445 | Ai n''t this America? |
23445 | Ai n''t this a free country? |
23445 | Ai n''t you_ never_ coming to bed?" |
23445 | Am I telling the truth, then? |
23445 | An''the''bacca? |
23445 | And as Tim shakes his head:"What now, I ask you?" |
23445 | And if they were getting along all right, was it true they''d just as soon be without you? |
23445 | And mad, I? |
23445 | And suppose your leading man should ask to meet me?" |
23445 | And was it I you were seeking, sir?" |
23445 | And what is Sammy your baby doing?" |
23445 | And where do you come by this false notion of duty?" |
23445 | Are n''t they_ alive_ at Maurice''s?" |
23445 | Are you not yet swallowed up by the cursed Suburban?" |
23445 | Are you well?" |
23445 | Are_ you_, in dashing like a shot into my life and then leaving me without a word to explain it? |
23445 | As she took the boiler Mrs. Pelz said:"Do you know Mrs. Melker ordered fifty pounds of chicken for her daughter''s wedding? |
23445 | As the laughter died away, Jake went on:"Honor you are getting plenty; but how much_ mezummen_ does this play bring you? |
23445 | Bierce''s"Can Such Things Be?" |
23445 | But Silva had been saved-- and had_ his_ wife a fireless cooker? |
23445 | But are you not afraid of me who come from yonder?" |
23445 | But had Joe Cadara ever been able to give his wife a fireless cooker? |
23445 | But if everybody is itchin''to help, why do n''t they take up a nice collection er white door- knobs to trim up the garden paths?" |
23445 | But now, I wonder, does the will represent the old lady''s revenge, or her forgiveness?" |
23445 | But she said, quite simply and conversationally,"Do you want I should tell you about them dishes?" |
23445 | But suppose they were to lose the father and_ get_ no goat? |
23445 | But what hope for you is there_ now_? |
23445 | But what of this experience of passion and exploration lives in his books? |
23445 | But within-- within, where most he had dreamed mellowness-- where most he had desired the sense of ripe and harmonious surroundings? |
23445 | But-- what was the width of the harbor at this point? |
23445 | But--_why move?_ Perhaps this was as near as he could come to getting back to sea. |
23445 | Ca n''t I take up in my own house what I buy with my own money?" |
23445 | Ca n''t you see, Martha?" |
23445 | Can I introduce her to Mrs. Van Suyden? |
23445 | Can I invest any of it in real estate for you?" |
23445 | Could William Folsom and this Italian wife of his ever be made to see how unavoidable, inevitable it had all been? |
23445 | Could it be Jannie? |
23445 | Could they possibly understand? |
23445 | Could this be the queenly beauty of whom Fawcett had spoken? |
23445 | Could you be more of a_ goat_ than that? |
23445 | D''you remember, Deems, how he came and in no time I was his? |
23445 | Did ever you hear anything so hateful? |
23445 | Did ever you see anything purtier than this pink chiny piece, Myry? |
23445 | Did n''t I hear you call fourteen cents?" |
23445 | Did n''t I tell you my secret was more terrible than any living heart had ever held? |
23445 | Did n''t he come home yet from school?" |
23445 | Did n''t you say only yesterday her mischief would drive you out of your senses?" |
23445 | Did n''t you tell me you had it fixed already last week?" |
23445 | Did she ever wish he would come home? |
23445 | Did they get it from the air? |
23445 | Did they think a Doane could n''t take orders? |
23445 | Did they think because he had n''t made a trip for so long that he was n''t good for one? |
23445 | Did you get it that A. Malfi was his wife''s maiden name? |
23445 | Did you see me wince under it? |
23445 | Did you see the man stare as you reached out to take my check away from me? |
23445 | Do I interest you?" |
23445 | Do n''t I know it''s already my black luck not to have it good in this world? |
23445 | Do n''t it sound sorter like a actress to you? |
23445 | Do n''t ye know, boy, the fust thing ye do when ye set out to build a house is to lay all the trees low? |
23445 | Do n''t you know the tide''s comin''in? |
23445 | Do not be afraid----""What of?" |
23445 | Do you believe_ now_ that my history is more terrible, or not? |
23445 | Do you dare deny me, now, after all I''ve told you? |
23445 | Do you know how bandages feel after a time? |
23445 | Do you know?" |
23445 | Do you mean that the price would be-- my-- death?" |
23445 | Do you remember the portrait? |
23445 | Do you still believe I exist? |
23445 | Do you think American children will right away give everything they earn to their mother?" |
23445 | Do you think people ever recover themselves? |
23445 | Do you think that with all this around me I shall be staying to the_ salon_ remarking continuously upon the Jar of Everythings?" |
23445 | Do you think you''re a Russian policeman to boss me in my own house?" |
23445 | Do you?" |
23445 | EDGETT, EDWIN F. Bierce''s"Can Such Things Be?" |
23445 | Else, how can he press on? |
23445 | Es yur spavin not throublin''ye th''day, then? |
23445 | Even here, is it altogether safe?'' |
23445 | Even to know that he was below stairs-- Would other nights be like this? |
23445 | Ever hear of old Jim Hartson?" |
23445 | Finally Doane burst out,"What''s the matter with you all? |
23445 | For a moment he paused, and then:"''You are wounded?'' |
23445 | For what did I suffer and hope on my children? |
23445 | For_ my_ sake, then, for God''s sake and for your sake,_ wo n''t you go_?" |
23445 | From where did they get the stuff to work themselves up in the world? |
23445 | From where should I steal to give you more? |
23445 | Gillingham?" |
23445 | Had the government presented a goat to the Cadaras when Joe was there? |
23445 | Has thy wish changed?" |
23445 | Hast thou forgotten to- night is the Feast of the Lanterns, when all good Buddhists rejoice?" |
23445 | Have I eaten or drunk to- night? |
23445 | Have n''t you more high- class neighbors up- town here?" |
23445 | Have n''t you told mother that she was to go with us to- night?" |
23445 | He scratched a match on the seat of his overalls and lighted his pipe, answering between puffs:"I guess you''m new to the business, ai n''t ye? |
23445 | He turned to Mrs. Pawket:"What did I say about that new young feller that''s come to teach school? |
23445 | He wanted to reassure and comfort the wavering, sorrowful boy, but all he could stammer in apology for his shout was:"Wh-- where are you going?" |
23445 | He? |
23445 | His torture was a few hours-- for mine to- night, I''ve waited almost as many years as He did, and to what end? |
23445 | How Would Stella Take It? |
23445 | How can I so arrange that the directions I will leave must be carried out after my death?" |
23445 | How could it be great unto thy great faith? |
23445 | How did they get all their smartness to rise over the people around them? |
23445 | How did you know?" |
23445 | How do you expect to get home?" |
23445 | How do you know?" |
23445 | How old are you?" |
23445 | How, in truth, was I to ascertain whether the singular provision of Mrs. Drainger''s will had or had not been met? |
23445 | How, since all else moves so swiftly, can a just God afford any longer to be patient? |
23445 | I knew what had happened-- I knew what was wrong-- yet I could n''t help crying out:"What''s the matter?" |
23445 | I suppose you''ll be just contrary- minded enough now to say that she did n''t do it on purpose?" |
23445 | I tell you--""Wo n''t you accept this rose?" |
23445 | If I would have had a chance to go to school and learn the language, what could n''t I have been? |
23445 | If I''ll say something, will you even listen to me? |
23445 | If I''m goosefleshed now, what''ll I be when the Everything is finished?" |
23445 | In 1920? |
23445 | Instead he said,"My soul and body, what was that?" |
23445 | Is it forgiveness-- or justice, mercy or revenge?" |
23445 | Is it like feeling God''s near?" |
23445 | Is it reasonable, young hobo, as man to man, that you can jolly me along?" |
23445 | Is it their fault that their father makes small wages? |
23445 | Is the old rascal still living, and was it he that had the impudence to send you to me?" |
23445 | Is this belief of such light weight that you will toss it away for a sinful woman? |
23445 | Is this duty? |
23445 | It was a game between them, which was the shrewder, which would win out? |
23445 | It was watching her when she was little that taught me----""Taught you what?" |
23445 | It''ly?" |
23445 | It''s for your learnin'', ai n''t it? |
23445 | Jovially he would put the question,"Which would you rather have, a husband or a fireless cooker?" |
23445 | Just what are your personal preferences with regard to the construction of an Italian villa?" |
23445 | Left standing?" |
23445 | Let me see now, Sylvie, how old is your brother Richard? |
23445 | Look at you and you turn into stone-- hey?" |
23445 | McGeorge said that he heard the girl murmur something that sounded like,"Why should n''t I?" |
23445 | Merely a grunt of satisfaction; perhaps a brief,"Ey, ma-- back?" |
23445 | Merely-- shall I go on?" |
23445 | Mother,"observed the stout lady,"but are you certain it was the last of April? |
23445 | Must I always have the black shadow of my past trailing after me?" |
23445 | No matter_ what_ the crime you''ve done--""Crime?" |
23445 | No? |
23445 | Now ai n''t that what you would call a smart woman, laying all joking aside? |
23445 | Now the question is, who ye goin''to give it to?" |
23445 | Once Marvin, dangling from two spread fingers a tiny yoke, inquired doubtfully,"Do you think it''s big enough to go round his neck?" |
23445 | Or was it her passionate hatred of the prison that held her, the guardian that kept her helpless? |
23445 | Please allow him to mix the color''( ai n''t it awful?) |
23445 | Remember how she was when we found her at the door that night-- all mumbling and frightened so she could n''t talk? |
23445 | Reviews of"Can Such Things Be?" |
23445 | Satisfy her whim and where would he be? |
23445 | Say, you ever seen one of them there contraptions?" |
23445 | Shall we go?" |
23445 | She had chosen that whimsical hour of the night to take her first bath, and who should say the lady nay? |
23445 | She wished--"Dong- Yung, Flower in the House, where hast thou hidden the kitchen gods? |
23445 | Since when are you back in New York?" |
23445 | Snakes for hair-- hey? |
23445 | So why are n''t there creatures, all kind of''em, we can no more see than a fish can us?" |
23445 | Still, how else account for it? |
23445 | Such are the playthings of me; have you a game which can beat that? |
23445 | Suppose he were to take himself out of the way and then they did n''t_ get_ the things they thought they''d have in place of him? |
23445 | Tell me how began your luck?" |
23445 | Tell me this, I beg of you, I demand of you-- did you_ feel_ that I was in the hall to- night, before you opened the door?" |
23445 | Tell me true, Mr. Regan--''t will not be breaking the promise?" |
23445 | That was about it-- wasn''t it? |
23445 | That would n''t be such a bad addition to the family, would it?" |
23445 | The Rural lifted dramatic eyes, inquiring again,"Ai n''t that_ terrible_?" |
23445 | The eastern development, now; there may have been reason for the extreme slant toward the east-- it orients well, but with a certain shock....""Shock? |
23445 | The one who used to get lost from home all the time? |
23445 | The table plainly rocked and rose from the floor, and Jannie asked in the flat voice of the tranced:"Is Edwin there? |
23445 | Then he stood in front of her and said in a strange sort of a voice:"Moira, what are you doing?" |
23445 | There''s been a terrible accident, the bridge fell----?" |
23445 | There''s many things waiting for you at home, and when you''re through there why do n''t you come over to us?" |
23445 | There_ was_ a boy with me, was n''t there? |
23445 | They barely had enough covering for their one bed; how could they possibly lodge a visitor? |
23445 | They got a right to cry in their own house, ai n''t they? |
23445 | They got phonograph records of the rapping----""Did you hear them?" |
23445 | Think you can get back easy as you got_ out_?" |
23445 | Think you was a_ mountain_ goat? |
23445 | Think you''re going to interest those rich folks as much next year as you did this? |
23445 | Understand? |
23445 | Up here on business, or pleasure?" |
23445 | Was he a thing to be played with, debased into something better than he was, than he knew? |
23445 | Was it her mind, prodded by terror, that visualized it? |
23445 | Was it his wife, who, never having created a child for him, was forcing on him now a horrible companion? |
23445 | Was it love? |
23445 | Was n''t it her knowed all the time who sot Mullins''s barn afire? |
23445 | Was n''t there? |
23445 | We should try to evolve something absolutely American, do n''t you think? |
23445 | We''re your friends, are n''t we? |
23445 | Weh- h- h- h!_ what have I from my life? |
23445 | Well, after he had married her, what then? |
23445 | Well, do you see through me_ now_?" |
23445 | Well, say, ai n''t it pitiful, all that old, ancient furniture?" |
23445 | Were those live eyes of the dead creating his sense of an impending life in the house? |
23445 | What Do They Know? |
23445 | What are we to do with this resurrected old lover of mine?" |
23445 | What are you doing, man?" |
23445 | What are you?" |
23445 | What did it done you should hate it so?" |
23445 | What did you drive away?" |
23445 | What do they call you when you are at home?" |
23445 | What do they know of us and how can they imagine folks on legs walking around and breathing the air that makes''em die? |
23445 | What do you think we got this apartment for but to get rid of your fish smells and your brawls with the servants? |
23445 | What do you think? |
23445 | What do you_ want_ of me? |
23445 | What does she amount to, I''d like to know? |
23445 | What is it you want? |
23445 | What is there in me that can interest you? |
23445 | What is this, I ask of you, but duty? |
23445 | What is to me the grandest man that my daughter could pick out? |
23445 | What more could a woman ask? |
23445 | What more do you got to eat?" |
23445 | What more should_ you_ demand? |
23445 | What strength in heaven or earth could break a man''s will, provided that will had been sufficiently trained? |
23445 | What was it drew her eyes through the hallway and out into the open and brought her up suddenly? |
23445 | What''ll I do with it?" |
23445 | What''s the matter with yours again? |
23445 | What''s the use to clean up when everything only gets dirty again?" |
23445 | What''s there so curious I''d like to know, Jane McQuarry, about sensing the feelings of somebody else off to a distance? |
23445 | What-- what is_ your_ name?" |
23445 | Whatever can have become of them?" |
23445 | When did you come on?" |
23445 | When the old farmer went up to him with knockkneed, rheumatic tread, inquiring,"Well, how goes it?" |
23445 | When the precious thing in them, the spirit of them, has been overlaid and overlaid, covered deep with artificial layers? |
23445 | When will you ever stop disgracing us?" |
23445 | When you went away and did n''t come back home, was all they thought about how they''d get along? |
23445 | Where is my Benny? |
23445 | Where is my child?" |
23445 | Where you going to look to for a solider woman than Hat?" |
23445 | Where''s me pipe, d''ye hear, ey? |
23445 | Who cares who my father or grandfather was in Poland? |
23445 | Who will believe me here in America that in Poland I was a cook in a banker''s house? |
23445 | Who''d_ give_ them the fireless cooker? |
23445 | Whose head you cuttin''off?" |
23445 | Why ai n''t they all together?" |
23445 | Why ai n''t they goin''to have no stair carpets? |
23445 | Why ai n''t they goin''to have no window- curtings?" |
23445 | Why ca n''t we move into a hotel that will do away with the need of servants altogether?" |
23445 | Why did n''t he? |
23445 | Why did you tear up the world like a crazy?" |
23445 | Why do n''t the children of born American mothers write my Benny''s plays? |
23445 | Why do you let it all out on them?" |
23445 | Why they got them big old stone jars that come yesterday? |
23445 | Why was it the butler''s night out? |
23445 | Why, but what, he reflected, grimacing-- what if he had too hastily married somebody else? |
23445 | Why?" |
23445 | Will You Wait For Me? |
23445 | Will you cheat Craney of the price of his road in case he ever comes back? |
23445 | Will you explain-- it may be useful, if things are as you say-- how you fought the powers from beyond?" |
23445 | Will you imagine that?" |
23445 | Will you invite him to supper after the theater?" |
23445 | Willum with a wife? |
23445 | Wo n''t you accept a rose?" |
23445 | Wo n''t you two good friends take Mr. Badgely as a boarder, and do give him that stunning old room I used to have? |
23445 | Would it come into anybody''s head to give young Joe Doane a sail- boat just because his father was dead? |
23445 | Would she have looked at him when they met with a dagger in either eye and one between her teeth? |
23445 | Would she have tugged that rope girdle tighter about her hips and passed him, as she did, with only a resolute quiver of her person? |
23445 | Would she_ have_ any black to wear? |
23445 | Would yer teacher like me to answer it? |
23445 | Yes, see, there, is n''t he going for that door? |
23445 | You ask me who and what I am-- so long as she loved you, who are_ you_, and what are_ you_, to point a finger at her?" |
23445 | You heard that about the bedrooms, I presume?" |
23445 | You remember the fine old property my father owned, called Cedar Plains? |
23445 | You sicken me with a doubt about the wife I loved-- Who are you? |
23445 | You''ll let me be? |
23445 | You''ve changed the roaster, ai n''t you, Myry? |
23445 | _ And you''ll miss him yet._ Think this is going to keep up? |
23445 | _ Did_ she ever think about Joe Cadara? |
23445 | _ To nothing!_ God, God, do you see_ that_?" |
23445 | _ What_ are you?" |
23445 | _ You_?" |
23445 | ai n''t it awful, all them old, ancient things?" |
23445 | ai n''t it pritty? |
23445 | exclaimed Hanneh Breineh, irritated at her neighbor''s silence,"what are you tearing up the world with your cleaning? |
23445 | he returned passionately throwing up his arm,"what is there in this for you, what are you trying to do to me? |
23445 | said Mrs. Pelz"Why did you carry on so for nothing? |
23445 | that time I told how the rain loosened the stone? |
23445 | what do I care fer cost?" |
41579 | Could she not call back her boy for one brief minute only? |
41579 | It would trouble the little soul; but would he not gladly bear a moment''s pain for her dear sake? |
41579 | Then she thanked him, and asked:"Now will you say again for me the little word which I prayed you to tell your honored father?" |
41579 | Then tremblingly she questioned:"Why must I sorrow for my child? |
41579 | Uma ni yaru? |
41579 | Ushi ni yaru? |
41579 | What is the justice of the gods?" |
41579 | Will you give it to the cow? |
41579 | Will you give it to the horse? |
41579 | [ 10]"Thou?" |
41579 | [ 5] Nono- San,_ or__ O- Tsuki- San_ Ikutsu? |
41902 | LA CUEVA, JUAN DE( 1550?-1609? |
41902 | LA HOZ Y MOTA, JUAN CLAUDIO DE( 1630?-1710? |
41902 | LAEVIUS(? |
41902 | Pour faire un nombre de quarante Ne falloit il pas un zéro?" |
41902 | The saprophyte_ Diplophrys(?) |
41156 | Who then is this,they whispered with awe,"that even the wind and the sea obey Him?" |
41156 | 626- 586 B.C.? |
41156 | Again,"Can history produce an instance of rebellion so honorably conducted?... |
41156 | And what is the result of his expedition? |
41156 | But what is this new name which is placed side by side with the Divine Name--"in God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ"? |
41156 | Do Japanese understand Persians or even Indians better than English or French? |
41156 | God forbid that we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion.... What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? |
41156 | How can a man like Jeremiah have advocated any such panacea? |
41156 | How did the Lord Jesus speak and act? |
41156 | In Jeremiah, as in Isaiah, we must constantly ask to what age do the phraseology, the ideas and the implied circumstances most naturally point? |
41156 | In fulfilment of this promise, who is it that has come? |
41156 | JEROME, ST( HIERONYMUS, in full EUSEBIUS SOPHRONIUS HIERONYMUS)( c. 340- 420), was born at Strido( modern Strigau? |
41156 | Pilate''s question,"Art Thou the King of the Jews?" |
41156 | To what lengths would this liberty go? |
41156 | Up to this point what have we seen? |
41156 | Was Korea within safe range of such enterprises? |
41156 | What is to be done? |
41156 | Which may these be? |
41156 | Who, then, he might well ask is this Jesus Christ who is lifted to this unexampled height? |
41156 | [ 27]_ Wo lag das Paradies?_( 1881), pp. |
41156 | _ A Patriot?_--Was Jeremiah really a patriot? |
41156 | and why did He arouse such malignant enmity amongst His own people? |
40970 | Ah? |
40970 | And precipitate a crisis? |
40970 | And you did n''t report it? |
40970 | Anything wrong, Jake? |
40970 | Are we fools? |
40970 | But my_ cost_? |
40970 | Ca n''t you screen them any more? 40970 Carmody working overtime, I suppose?" |
40970 | Did you gentlemen ever try knocking? |
40970 | Do you want a shutdown? |
40970 | Do? |
40970 | For example? |
40970 | How about the Term festival tomorrow night? |
40970 | How was little old Earth? |
40970 | How''s Cost? |
40970 | Management_ sustains_ the grievance? |
40970 | None? |
40970 | See? |
40970 | Should I tell you, and disrupt the status quo? 40970 Since when do you go to Psych for a clearance?" |
40970 | To lose what we''ve gained? 40970 Went where?" |
40970 | What do you think, Jake? |
40970 | What_ do_ they want? |
40970 | Where was Carmody this morning? 40970 Who was the agent?" |
40970 | Why do you think we insist on basic English for all Terms? 40970 Why, he went-- oh, Jake, surely you do n''t think--?" |
40970 | Why? |
40970 | You heard it, Jake? |
40970 | You see? 40970 You think maybe I spent a few hours under a Guild mind- control? |
40970 | You would have destroyed the plant, would n''t you? 40970 Catch? |
40970 | Could n''t they indoctrinate a new man properly? |
40970 | Did n''t you note his stability index? |
40970 | Dinner?" |
40970 | Electricity, plumbing, luxuries they would n''t normally enjoy for the next million years--""Will they fire him?" |
40970 | How do you feel?" |
40970 | I finally said,"What are we going to_ do_?" |
40970 | Is that it?" |
40970 | Is this your altruism? |
40970 | Is this your vaunted justice?" |
40970 | Just before I reeled in?" |
40970 | Maybe I''ll fall in love with you again, who knows?" |
40970 | Starza said carefully,"What do you know about the Guild?" |
40970 | To be destroyed?" |
40970 | To return to our tribe? |
40970 | What happens when you strip a man of everything he believes in? |
40970 | What happens?" |
40970 | Where''s Carmody?" |
40970 | Why?" |
40970 | Would you mind if I spent an hour in Psych for reorientation? |
40970 | You still refuse to divulge the spy?" |
38103 | You have? |
38103 | _ Can the mind conceive of more horrid blasphemy?_Is not that true? |
38103 | _ Can the mind conceive of more horrid blasphemy?_Is not that true? |
38103 | _ Or the word of God,--_What is that? |
38103 | _ The bible- God says that his people made him jealous"Provoked him to anger._Is that true? |
38103 | All at once there arose a man called Martin Luther, and what did the dear old Catholics think? |
38103 | And are they the"merciful"who when some man endeavors to answer their argument, put him in the penitentiary? |
38103 | And do you know that we ought to feel under the greatest obligation to men who have fought the prevailing notions of their day? |
38103 | And has a man that right? |
38103 | And how are you going to keep from having more? |
38103 | And is it possible that a work written by an infinite being has to be protected by a legislature? |
38103 | And suppose he does not believe in any bible whatever? |
38103 | And what does that mean? |
38103 | And what else says the defendant? |
38103 | And what else? |
38103 | And what else? |
38103 | And what has been the result? |
38103 | And what is it to reap that field? |
38103 | And what of that? |
38103 | And wherever such laws have been enforced, have the people been friends? |
38103 | And why? |
38103 | And why? |
38103 | Any harm in saying that? |
38103 | Are they holy? |
38103 | Are we any nearer thinking alike to- day than we were then? |
38103 | Are we not all children of the same Mother? |
38103 | Are we not all compelled to think, whether we wish to or not? |
38103 | Can any man have the egotism to say that he has found it all out? |
38103 | Can anything be plainer-- anything more forcibly stated? |
38103 | Can you help thinking as you do? |
38103 | Can you imagine an infinitely good God sending a man to hell because he did not believe the bear story? |
38103 | Could it now, by any possibility, make a man a good father, a good husband, a good citizen? |
38103 | Could you pour contempt on Shakespeare by saying that his mother was a woman,--by saying that he was once a poor crying little helpless child? |
38103 | Did anybody ever dream of passing a law to protect Shakespeare from being laughed at? |
38103 | Did anybody ever think of such a thing? |
38103 | Did anybody ever want any legislative enactment to keep people from holding Robert Burns in contempt? |
38103 | Did he know he would drown them when he made them? |
38103 | Did he know they ought to be drowned when they were made? |
38103 | Did he not, if the bible is true, drown the people? |
38103 | Did the prosecution have the courage to attack his reputation? |
38103 | Did they succeed? |
38103 | Did you ever know of a more despicable fraud practiced by one brother on another than Jacob practiced on Esau? |
38103 | Do you believe that? |
38103 | Do you know that all the mechanics that ever lived-- take the best ones-- cannot make two clocks that will run exactly alike one hour, one minute? |
38103 | Do you not see what the effect will be? |
38103 | Does he help the poor? |
38103 | Does he like to lock somebody up in the penitentiary because he has the power of the moment? |
38103 | Does he need assistance from New Jersey? |
38103 | Does he pay his debts? |
38103 | Does he tell the truth? |
38103 | Does he want to crush his fellow citizens? |
38103 | Does he wish to use it as a despot, or as a philanthropist-- like a devil, or like a man? |
38103 | Does it make any difference whether you believe it or not? |
38103 | Does it, or does it not? |
38103 | Does that cast any scorn or contempt upon him? |
38103 | Does the bible describe God as having drowned the whole world with the exception of eight people? |
38103 | For what sum of money, for what amount of wealth, would the world have the science of Astronomy expunged from the brain of man? |
38103 | Gentlemen, does not that show the need of more missionaries? |
38103 | Had they the public weal at heart, or were they simply endeavoring to be revenged upon this defendant? |
38103 | Has he got a heart that melts when he hears grief''s story? |
38103 | Has he the right to be sincere? |
38103 | Has he the right to say it, if he believes it? |
38103 | Has he the right to show that Martin Luther said he did not believe there was one solitary word of gospel in the Epistle to the Romans? |
38103 | Has he the right to show that some of these books were not written till nearly two hundred years afterwards? |
38103 | Has he the right to show that the book of Revelation got into the canon by one vote, and one only? |
38103 | Has he the right to show that there were twenty- eight books called"The Books of the Hebrews?" |
38103 | Has he the right to show that they passed in convention upon what books they would put in and what they would not? |
38103 | Has he the right to show that? |
38103 | Have you a right to think about it at all? |
38103 | Have you not the right to read, to observe, to investigate-- and when you have so read and so investigated, have you not the right to reap that field? |
38103 | Have you produced a new argument? |
38103 | He goes so far as to say, that"_ He was found staring foolishly at his own little toes._"And why not? |
38103 | Honestly-- what do you think they would say? |
38103 | How are you going to judge him? |
38103 | How did they come to crucify him? |
38103 | How did they happen to have it, and how did you happen to be deprived of it? |
38103 | How do you know what such men are mentioned for? |
38103 | How does he use power? |
38103 | How else? |
38103 | How has the church in every age, when in authority, defended itself? |
38103 | I do not say whether this is true or not, but has a man the right to say it if he believes it? |
38103 | I have given you my definition of blasphemy, and now the question arises, what is worship? |
38103 | If God be infinitely good and wise and powerful, is it possible he is afraid of anything? |
38103 | If it is true, is it blasphemous? |
38103 | If others claim the right, where did they get it? |
38103 | If this statute is constitutional, why has it been allowed to sleep for all these years? |
38103 | If what the defendant has said is blasphemy under this statute then the question arises, is the statute in accordance with the Constitution? |
38103 | If you have the right to work with your hands and to gather the harvest for yourself and your children, have you not a right to cultivate your brain? |
38103 | Is a man to be sent to the penitentiary for that? |
38103 | Is any statute needed to keep Euclid from being laughed at in this neighborhood? |
38103 | Is he convinced? |
38103 | Is it any harm to speak of it? |
38103 | Is it blasphemous to deny that God commanded his children to murder each other? |
38103 | Is it blasphemous to say that he was benevolent, merciful and just? |
38103 | Is it blasphemy to ask that question? |
38103 | Is it blasphemy to deny that a God of infinite love gave such commandments? |
38103 | Is it blasphemy to quote from the"Sacred Scriptures?" |
38103 | Is it blasphemy to say that Solomon was not a virtuous man, or that David was an adulterer? |
38103 | Is it blasphemy to say that you do not like a hypocrite, a murderer, or a thief, because his name is in the bible? |
38103 | Is it blasphemy to tell the truth and to say exactly what David was? |
38103 | Is it likely that a being of infinite wisdom would deliberately do what he knew he must undo? |
38103 | Is it necessary to believe that? |
38103 | Is it possible that Christians will break the peace? |
38103 | Is it possible that a book can not be written by a God so that it will not excite the laughter of the human race? |
38103 | Is it possible that a good and wise God, knowing that he was going to drown them, made millions of people? |
38103 | Is it possible that they will violate the law? |
38103 | Is it probable that Christians will congregate together and make a mob, simply because a man has given an opinion against their religion? |
38103 | Is not that an absurd and foolish statute? |
38103 | Is such a denial calculated to pour contempt and scorn upon the God of the Orthodox? |
38103 | Is that of any importance? |
38103 | Is that the Christian religion? |
38103 | Is that the Christian religion? |
38103 | Is that the doctrine? |
38103 | Is that the law? |
38103 | Is the god dead? |
38103 | Is there any blasphemy about that? |
38103 | Is there any evidence-- has there been any-- to show that the defendant was not absolutely candid in the expression of his opinions? |
38103 | Is there anything blasphemous in that? |
38103 | Is there anything in this that is blasphemous? |
38103 | Is there one particle of evidence tending to show that he is not a perfectly honest and sincere man? |
38103 | Is this blasphemy? |
38103 | Is this law constitutional, or is it simply an old statute that fell asleep, that was forgotten, that people simply failed to repeal? |
38103 | Is this statute in harmony with that part of the Constitution of 1844 which says:"The liberty of speech shall not be abridged?" |
38103 | Must a man be honest? |
38103 | Now gentlemen, what is blasphemy? |
38103 | Now how should we treat a new thought? |
38103 | Now is it not a fact that the Old Testament does uphold polygamy? |
38103 | Now is there any blasphemy in saying that the bible is true? |
38103 | Now what has a man the right to say about that? |
38103 | Ought I to clap my hand over my mouth and start for another State, and the minute I got over the line say,"It is not true, It is not true?" |
38103 | Ought an honest man to be sent to the penitentiary for simply telling the truth? |
38103 | Should you express that thought? |
38103 | Suppose a man believes that, and practices it, does it make any difference whether he believes in the flood or not? |
38103 | Suppose the defendant in this case were guilty of something like that? |
38103 | The defendant is also charged with having said that"_ God cried and screamed._"Why not? |
38103 | The first question for you, gentlemen, to decide in this case is: Is this statute constitutional? |
38103 | The songs of Burns will be sung as long as there is love in the human heart Do we need to protect him from ridicule by a statute? |
38103 | Then what has happened? |
38103 | Then what have they cursed? |
38103 | Then what would the Turks do? |
38103 | Then what would the Turks say? |
38103 | They would put the Morristown missionary in jail, and he would send home word, and then what would the people of Morris- town say? |
38103 | Was he a good man? |
38103 | Was not the world exactly as God made it? |
38103 | Well what is it? |
38103 | Well, the great question about that is, is it true? |
38103 | Well, what is the Christian religion? |
38103 | Were most of them as guilty of blasphemy as is the defendant in this case? |
38103 | Were they actuated by good and noble motives? |
38103 | Were they willing to disgrace the State, in order that they might punish him? |
38103 | What did he make them for? |
38103 | What does it mean? |
38103 | What does it mean? |
38103 | What else did the savage suppose? |
38103 | What for? |
38103 | What harm can come from an honest interchange of thought? |
38103 | What if God did cry? |
38103 | What is blasphemy? |
38103 | What is holy? |
38103 | What is prayer? |
38103 | What is real blasphemy? |
38103 | What is real religion? |
38103 | What is sacred? |
38103 | What is the use of telling a falsehood about it? |
38103 | What is their religion? |
38103 | What of it? |
38103 | What right has he? |
38103 | What was the spirit of our government at that time? |
38103 | What were the reasons given? |
38103 | What were their opinions? |
38103 | What would I do? |
38103 | What would I not give for a picture of Shakespeare as a babe,--a picture that was a likeness,--rocked by his mother? |
38103 | When some poor mother is found wandering in the street with a babe at her breast, does he quote Scripture, or hunt for his pocket- book? |
38103 | Where did a church or a nation get that right? |
38103 | Where would we have been if authority had always triumphed? |
38103 | Where would we have been if such statutes had always been carried out? |
38103 | Where, then, is the blasphemy in saying so? |
38103 | Whether a man built an ark or not-- does that make the slightest difference? |
38103 | Who are the men who are leading the race upward and shedding light in the intellectual world? |
38103 | Who is a worshipper? |
38103 | Who is to blame? |
38103 | Who obtained this indictment? |
38103 | Who were they? |
38103 | Why did he make your brain so that you could not by any possibility be a Methodist? |
38103 | Why did he make yours so that you could not be a Catholic? |
38103 | Why did he not do so? |
38103 | Why has it been allowed to slumber? |
38103 | Why kick him? |
38103 | Why not? |
38103 | Why not? |
38103 | Why should not each human being have the right, so far as thought and its expression are concerned, of all the world? |
38103 | Why should we fear our fellow- men? |
38103 | Why, whoever did, since the poor man, or the poor God, was crucified? |
38103 | Why? |
38103 | Why? |
38103 | Why? |
38103 | Why? |
38103 | Why? |
38103 | Will they succeed? |
38103 | You can hardly imagine that there was a time when the same kind of men that made this law said to another man:"You say this world is round?" |
38103 | You may not agree with these men-- and what does that prove? |
38103 | You say:"Take a chair; are you thirsty, are you hungry, will you not break bread with me?" |
38103 | You will get your revenge on him through all eternity-- is not that enough? |
38284 | ''Do you think these fellows are all right?'' 38284 ''Every one hears such stories,''I answered;''but why do you ask?'' |
38284 | ''Have a whiskey first?'' 38284 ''Have you got a smoke?'' |
38284 | ''Still at the old game, Stevens? 38284 ''Very well,''I laughed,''I do n''t want to look back; but may I ask what is the entertainment this gentleman has provided for us?'' |
38284 | ''Wal, pard, will you jine?'' 38284 ''Wal, pard?'' |
38284 | ''What''s that got to do with buried treasure?'' 38284 ''When can we start?'' |
38284 | ''Why, what is the matter, Stevens? 38284 ''Why,''I said, putting my hand on his shoulder,''how has it come to this? |
38284 | A long one, sir? |
38284 | A matter of the dagger? |
38284 | Aho, Beeroo, is it you? 38284 All? |
38284 | And if I decline? |
38284 | And is there any news of the Huguenots moving now? |
38284 | And knew him? |
38284 | And we travel with her? 38284 And you will come back?" |
38284 | And you would do anything for Monsieur? |
38284 | Anything else, sir? |
38284 | Are none of ye men? 38284 But, monsieur, have you no proof-- nothing to bring forward?" |
38284 | Could anything be worse? |
38284 | Denise,he said,"the King goes to- morrow, and-- I-- do I go or stay?" |
38284 | Did you hear nothing? |
38284 | Did you hear the voice, Denise? |
38284 | Did you laugh, Simmonds? |
38284 | Got the pig, old man? 38284 Has M. De Bac gone?" |
38284 | Has he not himself admitted what I said, madame? 38284 Have you no voice?" |
38284 | Have you seen the Count and his daughter? |
38284 | Have you told me all-- have you withheld nothing? |
38284 | How did you get out? |
38284 | How is it that you have not been here before? |
38284 | How the demon did he get out? |
38284 | I sought you in your chamber, captain,he said in his biting voice,"and not finding you, came here----""And how did you know I would be here?" |
38284 | In Battersea, eh? |
38284 | Is heaven so far that our voices can not reach there? |
38284 | Is it a big tiger? |
38284 | Is it necessary to know? 38284 Is it really of importance?" |
38284 | Is not monsieur-- monsieur--? |
38284 | Is that all? |
38284 | Is this true, Blaise de Lorgnac? 38284 It is odd, Denise, but do you know that his lackeys have gone, too? |
38284 | M. De Bac? 38284 May I ask where you are going to take me, Monsieur de Lorgnac?" |
38284 | Monsieur de Norreys, will you see me in an hour? 38284 Monsieur le Chevalier, if you were to get the answer that you wanted, would you still adhere to your promise and never see me again?" |
38284 | Monsieur, how can I thank you? 38284 More than enough, sir,"he stammered; and then, with a rush,"I am grateful-- anything I can do for you?" |
38284 | Save me? |
38284 | See here, Paget: perhaps you''re wrong-- perhaps this story is n''t true? |
38284 | Shall I open it, sir? |
38284 | Shall I say you will see him, sir? |
38284 | So it is Monsieur de Clermont now, is it? 38284 So late as that? |
38284 | Tell me,she answered, not heeding his remark,"tell me exactly where you are going?" |
38284 | The manuscript, yes-- but if I refuse to give back the money? |
38284 | The town you mean, madame? |
38284 | Then what is it, monsieur? |
38284 | Then what is it? |
38284 | Then why does He not hear my prayers? |
38284 | This adventure of yours, monsieur-- is it so very dangerous? |
38284 | This place is safe-- no eavesdroppers? |
38284 | Well, would you prefer de Clermont? |
38284 | Well-- what is the business? |
38284 | What are they like? |
38284 | What has he killed but refuse? 38284 What is it? |
38284 | What is it? |
38284 | What is to be done? |
38284 | What time is it? |
38284 | When was it the Sahib slew his last tiger? |
38284 | Where am I? |
38284 | Where are we, Mousette? 38284 Where is Castel Lippo?" |
38284 | Who is your God, Brown? |
38284 | Who laughed then? |
38284 | Who makes her dresses? |
38284 | Who the devil are you to threaten_ me_--la Coquille-- with the_ carcan?_ Blood of a Jew! 38284 Why should the storm come on now? |
38284 | Wonder where she could have been, though? |
38284 | Yes-- it is my house-- hardly the house to which one would bring the heiress of Mieux-- but is that your answer to me? |
38284 | Your scientific people would call this an exhibition of odic force, Brown-- eh? |
38284 | Your word-- your word-- is that all you can say? |
38284 | _ Diavolo!_ Do n''t you hear, signore? |
38284 | ''Is he in?'' |
38284 | ''Who is he? |
38284 | A_ must_ elephant--_pah!_ What is it but an animal?" |
38284 | After a little he recovered himself, and said, with a shake of eagerness in his voice:"''Cayn''t this old cuss start fresh, an''give us another run?'' |
38284 | Aladin had not lied about the Shagul Tree; why should he lie about the power of the idol? |
38284 | And Rani-- would her word count against mine? |
38284 | And de Clermont? |
38284 | And now, your business?" |
38284 | And the horse, excellency?" |
38284 | And who are the kind people who saved us?" |
38284 | And will you not shake hands before you go?" |
38284 | Are you going to dig them all up?'' |
38284 | Are you none the worse for your adventure of last night?" |
38284 | Are you strong enough to do a brave thing?" |
38284 | Brown?" |
38284 | But if the beasts were wearied, how was it with myself and my maid? |
38284 | But suppose this offer was a blind? |
38284 | But the same feeling used to come over me whenever I saw de Lorgnac, and yet-- who was more base than he? |
38284 | But what is the matter, child? |
38284 | Ca n''t some of you fellows tell a story? |
38284 | Can you not be generous and pitiful? |
38284 | Could ambition want more? |
38284 | Could he have been the one to have so travelled with me? |
38284 | De Bac? |
38284 | Did I love him? |
38284 | Did Mary do this? |
38284 | Did you imagine I would allow this? |
38284 | Do you know the man has flung away all shame and has gone to live like a beastly Bhootea-- a hill man-- a savage on the mountain side?" |
38284 | Do you know what it means?" |
38284 | Do you mean your business here has nothing to do with me?" |
38284 | Do you stay long in Pieve, captain?" |
38284 | Does love resign its object as you do-- without a struggle? |
38284 | Fools,"and he turned to Lalande and Pierre,"do you wish to swing from the rafters here? |
38284 | Got his fall broken somehow by the branches of a tree, and the wild raspberry bushes, or he''d have been in Kingdom Come-- eh? |
38284 | Had I anything to do with the wreck of hers? |
38284 | Hast heard the tale?" |
38284 | Hast thou a mind to be struck blind?" |
38284 | Have you never been wronged by a woman? |
38284 | He had a very pretty vocabulary, for had he not been brought up under the tender care of the Sirkar? |
38284 | Here de Lorgnac turned to me, saying, almost in a whisper,"May I help you to mount?" |
38284 | How can I thank you? |
38284 | How did you come?" |
38284 | How did you get to know him?'' |
38284 | How many thousand Gautamas are there in Burma? |
38284 | How on earth was Shere Bahadur to know that his skull was so thin? |
38284 | I know, I know, Brown-- by the way, you do not object to smoke?" |
38284 | I love you-- do you hear? |
38284 | I might do something-- surely my woman''s wit could suggest some means of saving my husband? |
38284 | I said,''ca n''t you see that all this is only a conjurer''s trick? |
38284 | I shook my head, and she laughed again like the song of a bird, and asked in English, speaking slowly:"You want-- my-- man?" |
38284 | I well knew for what purpose, but kept silent on that point, saying,"And how far is Lorgnac from here?" |
38284 | I wonder if it affected him as it did me?" |
38284 | If he could but induce the man before him to undertake the task, what might not be? |
38284 | Is it you? |
38284 | Is not that the adage, monsieur?" |
38284 | Is the Sahib here?" |
38284 | Is the hunt to be to- morrow?" |
38284 | Is-- is it true?" |
38284 | It is agreed that we pay in advance-- eh, Tavannes? |
38284 | It is enough-- eh?" |
38284 | It is no longer of use to me-- Monsieur le Chevalier, will you not take it?" |
38284 | It is said that the first question he asked was,"When will it be daylight?" |
38284 | It was he who found you insensible, and he has been as good as any ten of us----""Paget-- Paget found me?" |
38284 | May I ask why?" |
38284 | Mustering up courage, however, I took the chair he offered, saying, as I did so,"Will you not be seated, monsieur?" |
38284 | My surprise overcame my resolve of silence, and I asked aloud,"Surely Madame de Termes is not leaving Paris?" |
38284 | Or is the child ill and raving? |
38284 | Or, stay-- are you the genius of this spot?" |
38284 | Perhaps he could get more out of De Bac? |
38284 | Remember him?" |
38284 | Ruined my life? |
38284 | Said I not he would do this, Purun Chand? |
38284 | Shall I tell you what has happened? |
38284 | She made only one reference to what had been:"And so, Dick, the past is all forgotten?" |
38284 | Suppose the man before him merely wanted to know where to get at him, to hand him over to the tender mercies of the thumbscrew and the rack? |
38284 | Surely some one called Dick? |
38284 | Take this port, will you?" |
38284 | The pile''s thar-- will you jine?'' |
38284 | Then with a voice as hard and stern as his look he turned to me, and pointing to the glove, said:"Is this true, madame?" |
38284 | Think you I am to stand here all night?" |
38284 | This little scientific discovery I have made is very convenient, is it not?" |
38284 | Was ever woman wooed and we d as I? |
38284 | Was there another man who would have acted as he did-- whose love was so generous and yet so strong? |
38284 | What can I do-- where shall I hide?" |
38284 | What could a woman do against these men? |
38284 | What demon put into your mouth the words you have just used? |
38284 | What did it matter to him what I did or said? |
38284 | What do you mean, child?" |
38284 | What does it matter to the moving wave of humanity if one little drop of spray from its crest is blown into nothing by the wind? |
38284 | What does this all mean? |
38284 | What else could have brought him to this out- of- the- way place? |
38284 | What had I not passed through within the last few hours? |
38284 | What has he to do with it?" |
38284 | What have I done to be forced into this? |
38284 | What if, after all, the stories of the idol''s power were true? |
38284 | What is to happen to de Lorgnac? |
38284 | What more? |
38284 | What news?" |
38284 | What object can you gain by carrying out your orders against a poor weak woman, whose only end is to hide herself from the world? |
38284 | What right had I to blame her? |
38284 | What right had de Lorgnac even to think of me? |
38284 | What shall I do?" |
38284 | What shall I say?" |
38284 | What was this love that I was in doubt about? |
38284 | What?" |
38284 | When did you last meet?" |
38284 | Where can I find you, in case you change your mind? |
38284 | Where in the world have you dropped from? |
38284 | Where was I? |
38284 | Who are you?" |
38284 | Who are you?" |
38284 | Who could remember wrongs at such a moment? |
38284 | Who is that horrible man? |
38284 | Who the devil are you?" |
38284 | Whose fault was it? |
38284 | Whose was the device? |
38284 | Why add a lie to what you have already done? |
38284 | Why did n''t you come to me?'' |
38284 | Why trouble at all about matters? |
38284 | Will madame rise or be served here?" |
38284 | Will you agree to all this? |
38284 | Will you gape all night there?" |
38284 | Will you not grant me this request? |
38284 | Will you risk it tonight?" |
38284 | Would I ever call him back? |
38284 | Would I go with a lie on my lips? |
38284 | You appear to be a man of courage-- will you undertake the matter?" |
38284 | You have noted all this down?" |
38284 | You must protect her with your life-- do you understand? |
38284 | You promised to tell me the story one day, you remember?" |
38284 | You were dreaming, Brown-- by the way, who is your God?" |
38284 | _ Wah!_"exclaimed the listeners, and Beeroo put in,"Lakhs of rupees didst thou say, Mahoutjee?" |
38284 | do you think I hesitate over a paltry hundred crowns? |
38284 | he said,"I suppose you would say the devil did that?" |
38284 | he said,"you understand, dear?" |
38284 | he swore,"are you going, signore? |
38284 | what shall I do? |
38446 | Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? 38446 If God be for us, who can be against us?" |
38446 | What, then,it will be said,"did not the Christ set His disciples free at the outset from all the errors and superstitions of the past? |
38446 | Where, O Lord, goes the earth through the heavens? |
38446 | Why do the righteous suffer? |
38446 | Why do the wicked prosper? |
38446 | And is not this the reason why science despairs of ever proving scientifically the existence of God? |
38446 | And is there some one at the helm? |
38446 | And since we have here the religion of the unknowable, is it not evident that religion is not necessarily knowledge? |
38446 | And then what becomes my knowledge save a melancholy feeling of ignorance that knows itself to be such? |
38446 | And what would be the doctrine of grace apart from the sacred obligation of the law but the theory of a mischievous indulgence or a Pagan mysticism? |
38446 | And whence spring these images but from the exaltation of the religious life of the prophet which spontaneously expresses itself without? |
38446 | And which of us is not more or less of a Pessimist nowadays? |
38446 | And who does not see the bearing of this revolution on our views of Scripture, on its cosmography in particular, and on many of its minor teachings? |
38446 | And why so much disdain? |
38446 | BOOK THIRD DOGMA CHAPTER I WHAT IS A DOGMA? |
38446 | But have you noticed that this idea of perfection is contradictory, and therefore chimerical? |
38446 | But how can the duty of personal assimilation be imposed without the right arising to critically interpret the transmitted forms? |
38446 | But how would this victory of the Messiah be realised? |
38446 | But is not this account of the genesis of religion too philosophic and too abstract to be capable of universal application? |
38446 | But what then? |
38446 | But what will this notion be? |
38446 | But who does not see that here is a new source of despair? |
38446 | But why should we retain dogmas which, in the nature of things, must always be imperfect? |
38446 | By what sign may we recognise the first and distinguish the second? |
38446 | Can Protestant communities maintain their unity by the same method? |
38446 | Can this strait be crossed? |
38446 | Conclusion BOOK III.--DOGMA CHAPTER I WHAT IS A DOGMA? |
38446 | Did He not at once give them perfect dogmas, a completed form of worship, an immutable and completed system of ethics?" |
38446 | Do they not see that the very idea of revelation soon becomes contradictory? |
38446 | Does He hesitate to declare that John at that very moment is"the Elias which was for to come"? |
38446 | Does He not love you better than you love yourselves? |
38446 | Does He not make all things work together for the good of His children? |
38446 | Does he doubt a single moment that they obey laws, unknown perhaps, but certain? |
38446 | Does not childhood run on into maturity and old age? |
38446 | Does not experience establish and piety confirm this? |
38446 | During this time, what did worship, adoration, religion, properly speaking, become? |
38446 | Examples? |
38446 | Has it a compass? |
38446 | Has life a meaning? |
38446 | Has life ever been seen apart from living beings or light apart from luminous vibrations? |
38446 | Have you ever been present in a crowd excited and exalted by religious enthusiasm? |
38446 | Have you felt the contagion? |
38446 | His power, is it not always exactly in proportion to his knowledge? |
38446 | How can a man jump off his own shadow, or stand on his own shoulders, to look over the impassable wall? |
38446 | How can it subsist if it obeys the formal and summary logic which summons us to choose between them? |
38446 | How can such a universe escape the teleological interpretation of religious faith? |
38446 | How can that which is historical be held to be ideal and eternal? |
38446 | How can that which is ideal and perfect be realised in history? |
38446 | How can they be unless the spirit of Christianity disengages itself without ceasing and floats above them as an ideal? |
38446 | How can we comprehend their co- existence and their union, and yet how can we doubt it? |
38446 | How can we forget that, so far from attenuating it, science in its progress aggravates and renders mortal the original condition of life? |
38446 | How could it ever seize in the course of these causes the immediate action of the First Cause? |
38446 | How could such a consciousness submit itself to the yoke again without denying itself? |
38446 | How do we know that the objects which they represent exist outside ourselves? |
38446 | How else will you explain the_ Pensées_ of Pascal or of Maine de Biran, or the_ Journal_ of Amiel? |
38446 | How explain, moreover, without this reality of science, the power that science gives to man over Nature? |
38446 | How is their evolution effected? |
38446 | How may we attain to peace of soul and to the assurance of pardon and of life eternal?" |
38446 | How must we understand this perfection? |
38446 | How shall I solve this contradiction of my being which makes me at the same time live and die? |
38446 | How then could it communicate to its definitions an infallibility that it did not itself possess? |
38446 | How to make them live together and unite them? |
38446 | How was this hostility to cease? |
38446 | How will it be made an educating, saving power? |
38446 | How will it become objective and concrete? |
38446 | If God wished to make us a gift that we could receive, must He not have suited the form of it to that of our mind? |
38446 | If trials come, or dangers threaten, what ought we to do? |
38446 | If, by a subtle theology, you succeed in rationalising dogma, do you not see that you destroy it in its very essence? |
38446 | In asking what is the principle of Christianity, what do we wish to know? |
38446 | In the consciousness of Christ, what did we find was the essence of the perfect and eternal piety? |
38446 | In what then does this objectivity of science consist if it is not founded on the pretended knowledge of the thing in itself? |
38446 | Is God a phenomenon that the eye of man can ever perceive in any phenomenal series? |
38446 | Is He not Almighty and all- good? |
38446 | Is Jesus offended by it? |
38446 | Is everything explained in religion, then, and nothing left obscure? |
38446 | Is it necessary to show how thoroughly this theory is contradicted by psychology and history? |
38446 | Is it not a psychological necessity for each believer to bring his inner religious consciousness into harmony with his general culture? |
38446 | Is it not remarkable that this very temptation returned to Him through the mouth of Peter? |
38446 | Is it not right and necessary to give the new principles of the Reformation a new theological expression? |
38446 | Is it not to this eternal gospel that we must always return? |
38446 | Is it still intellectual adhesion to dogmas or submission to an external authority? |
38446 | Is it worth living? |
38446 | Is the cult of a different order and the devotion of a higher quality? |
38446 | Is there a passage between Scylla and Charybdis? |
38446 | Is there in all the Bible a finer image containing a profounder thought? |
38446 | Is there need of many words for a child to make its father understand? |
38446 | Is there no issue to the dark and narrow valley which our anxious youth traverse? |
38446 | Is there then some chemistry by which we can separate that which God has joined so indissolubly? |
38446 | Lastly, what is the criterion by which you may recognise an authentic revelation of God in the books you read, in the things you are taught? |
38446 | Lastly, what place does the religion of Jesus occupy in the religious evolution of humanity? |
38446 | May we not here foresee the divine purpose of pain? |
38446 | May we, ought we in all fidelity to apply the distinction to the Gospel of Christ itself and to the primitive form in which it has come down to us? |
38446 | Must He not have availed Himself of our ideas and of our language in order to explain to us the nature of His benefits? |
38446 | Must one give up thinking then if he would retain the courage to live, and resign himself to death in order to preserve the right to think? |
38446 | Must we either continue to live a moral life belied by science, or set up a theory of things which our consciences condemn? |
38446 | Must we then choose between pious ignorance and bare knowledge? |
38446 | Must we therefore conclude that there is no more in the one than in the other, and that they are of equal value? |
38446 | Nature in its expansion and its evolution-- what is it but the very expression of the Will of the Father? |
38446 | Need I say that this is the very opposite of my thought? |
38446 | Need I speak of moral activity? |
38446 | Need we be surprised that the English thinker pronounces religion to be eternal? |
38446 | Now, what is moral knowledge but the theory of the conscious life of spirit? |
38446 | On the other hand, these two attributes, are they not equally necessary to it? |
38446 | Or shall we pass to the constitution of the Church? |
38446 | Or would you consider the moral life and the type of piety? |
38446 | Our efforts, have they an end? |
38446 | Our works and our thoughts, have they any permanent value to the universe? |
38446 | Shall it be another dogma? |
38446 | Shall we, with Rationalism, take a moral or philosophical axiom as the criterion? |
38446 | Should we go further still? |
38446 | Take the Ebionite Christianity of the first centuries: what is it but a mixture, a compromise between Jewish and Christian elements? |
38446 | That all which is intelligible to us is real, I grant; but is all that is real intelligible to us? |
38446 | The dogmas of the Councils and the theology of the Fathers, who does not see at the first glance their true character? |
38446 | The love of truth, is it not the principle of science? |
38446 | The monks, the anchorites and their theology of impotent celibates, did they save Egypt, Syria, and Byzantium? |
38446 | The point of departure, the inward beginning of a real righteousness, is not this repentance, that is to say the pain of not being righteous? |
38446 | The theory of the evolution of things and beings, does it not show Nature to us as in travail, and as if perpetually giving birth to marvels? |
38446 | This progress, is it not admirable? |
38446 | To finish its course and complete its work, will humanity ever discover another viaticum that will better renew its courage and its hope? |
38446 | To love truth above all things, is not that in some way to be already in the truth? |
38446 | To the question, Whence come the life and power of symbols? |
38446 | Under different names, do we not recognise the First Cause of the philosophers, and the image, half- effaced, of the God of believers? |
38446 | Was He ignorant of the fact that in order to have bread we must sow wheat? |
38446 | Was a god supposed to have been offended? |
38446 | Was not this the piety of Jesus when He taught us to pray:"Our Father which art in Heaven: Thy will be done: Give us our daily bread"? |
38446 | What are our most abstract ideas but primitive metaphors which have been worn and thinned by usage and reflection? |
38446 | What do the facts prove? |
38446 | What does Christian law become without the sentiment of love, without the impulse of mercy, but a sort of moral Stoicism, rigid and severe? |
38446 | What if these syntheses and conciliations are necessarily unstable and precarious because of the constant development of life and knowledge? |
38446 | What if we were to press the idea of miracle itself which is in process of vanishing in proportion as the idea of Nature is transformed? |
38446 | What is Nature? |
38446 | What is a symbol? |
38446 | What is at once the basis and the sign of the objectivity of the natural sciences? |
38446 | What is it, according to science, to know a phenomenon? |
38446 | What is its principle or essence? |
38446 | What is such prayer as His but the defeat of egoism and the perfect liberation of the individual spirit in the feeling of its plenary union with God? |
38446 | What is the cause of the universality and perpetuity of religion? |
38446 | What is the relation of the word of God to the Bible? |
38446 | What is this supreme revelation of the God of Israel but an apparition by anticipation of the God of the Gospel? |
38446 | What savant will forbid me to thank my heavenly Father? |
38446 | What shall we say of the Catholic Church after Constantine? |
38446 | What then does historical criticism, with all its rigour, do? |
38446 | What then is faith? |
38446 | What then is the hidden mystery which ferments in the bosom of this painful nature and endeavours to expand? |
38446 | What was there then that was so new and potent in the least of His discourses? |
38446 | What would happen if we listened to this cry for pure unmixed religion? |
38446 | What, then, do they affirm who say with so much assurance that Christianity is the perfect religion? |
38446 | When I hear it said,"Priests made religion,"I simply ask,"And who, pray, made the priests?" |
38446 | Whence comes this indestructible vitality? |
38446 | Whence shall deliverance come? |
38446 | Where but in a renovated conception of religion will this needed reconciliation be found? |
38446 | Which of these two elements is primitive and generative? |
38446 | Which of us can escape this feeling of absolute dependence? |
38446 | While developing themselves on parallel lines, can science and faith remain isolated? |
38446 | Who does not complain of"the weary weight of all this unintelligible world"? |
38446 | Who does not feel his weakness and the pressure of external things? |
38446 | Who does not see that neither in His language nor in His thought is there anything absolute? |
38446 | Who does not see that the material is Greek in form, in colour, in every fibre of its tissue? |
38446 | Who does not see that to represent things otherwise is to remain in the crudest and least religious of anthropomorphisms? |
38446 | Who has ever seen life apart from living matter? |
38446 | Who has not felt within himself a veiled presence and a force much greater than his own? |
38446 | Who has not marked that union now become almost habitual of frivolity of character and intellectual culture the most perfect and refined? |
38446 | Who knows its secrets and its limits? |
38446 | Why do certain things appear absurd or grotesque in the imaginations of the past? |
38446 | Why had they left all and followed Him but because He had appeared to them to be the bearer and the depository of the divine promises? |
38446 | Why may not these divers tendencies of soul, coexisting always and everywhere, manifest themselves simultaneously and on parallel lines? |
38446 | Why not have religion pure and simple without dogmas? |
38446 | Will it be anything more than a speculative philosophy if cut off from its historic tradition? |
38446 | Will it continue to inspire me with confidence, will it place me in security, if it ceases to appear to me to be the perfect and definitive religion? |
38446 | Will this be because my thanksgiving will be a denial of the science of the physician? |
38446 | With what materials, with what concepts, will the religious man construct it? |
38446 | With what then, or in the name of what, shall dogma be criticised? |
38446 | With what, moreover, and how could it be proved that light shines except by forcing those who are asleep to awake and open their eyes? |
38446 | Would it be the work of Divine power, flashing forth and executing its pitiless reprisals? |
38446 | _ First Critical Reflections_ Why am I religious? |
38446 | _ Initial Contradiction of the Psychological Consciousness_ What is man? |
40812 | Owl- faced(?) |
40812 | ( 2) Was it a charm or amulet to be used by anyone which derived its value from the signification given to it? |
40812 | ( 3) What lesson can be gathered from it concerning the early migrations of the races of man? |
40812 | ), and heads of four ivory- billed woodpeckers(?) |
40812 | ), and the heads of four ivory- billed woodpeckers(?) |
40812 | 230 shows an ancient( Hindu?) |
40812 | BOBBIN OR SPOOL FOR WINDING THREAD(?). |
40812 | BOBBIN(?) |
40812 | BOBBIN(?) |
40812 | BOBBIN(?) |
40812 | Bobbin or spool for winding thread(?). |
40812 | Bobbin(?). |
40812 | Bobbin(?). |
40812 | Bobbin(?). |
40812 | Bobbin(?). |
40812 | By what people were these made? |
40812 | Chariot of Apollo- Resef with sun symbol(?) |
40812 | Cross, circle, sun''s rays(? |
40812 | DETAIL OF ATTIC VASE WITH FIGURE OF ANTELOPE(?) |
40812 | Detail of Attic vase with antelope(?) |
40812 | ENGRAVED FULGUR(?) |
40812 | Engraved Fulgur(?) |
40812 | For what purpose? |
40812 | In theory of physics, Agni, who was the fire residing within the"onction,"(?) |
40812 | In what epoch? |
40812 | Is it not equally strong evidence of contact to find the same sign used in both countries as a charm, with the same significance in both countries? |
40812 | MALTESE CROSS(?) |
40812 | Maltese cross with sun symbol(?). |
40812 | Maltese cross with sun symbol(?). |
40812 | Maltese cross(? |
40812 | Professor Goodyear[165] says: The earliest dated Swastikas are of the third millenium B. C., and occur on the foreign Cyprian and Carian(?) |
40812 | SPINDLE- WHORL WITH FIGURE-8 SWASTIKA(?) |
40812 | Second(?) |
40812 | Shell gorget, cross, circle, sun rays(? |
40812 | Spindle- whorl, figure-8 Swastika(?) |
40812 | Sun symbol(?) |
40812 | Sun symbols(?). |
40812 | Sun symbols(?). |
40812 | Swastika in Mycenæ and Sabraso.--Are they of the same antiquity?, p. 293. |
40812 | Swastika(?) |
40812 | TERRA- COTTA BOBBIN OR SPOOL FOR WINDING THREAD(?). |
40812 | Terra- cotta bobbin or spool for winding thread(?). |
40812 | The shell objects( in addition to the disks and gorgets mentioned) were pins made from the columellæ of Fulgur(_ Busycon perversum_?) |
40812 | VIEW SHOWING BOTH ENDS OF A BOBBIN(?) |
40812 | Was bronze discovered in eastern Asia and was its migration westward through Europe, or was it discovered on the Mediterranean, and its spread thence? |
40812 | What did they represent? |
40812 | Why should not the circle represent other things than the sun? |
40812 | _ Punch marks on Corinthian coins mistaken for Swastikas._--But is the Swastika really found on ancient coins? |
40812 | || Do| LV( Nasik 21)| 5(?) |
40812 | || Do| LV( Nasik 24)| 8(?) |
40812 | || Do| XLIX| 11(?) |
40812 | || Do| XLIX| 13(?) |
40812 | || Do| XLIX| 13(?) |
20117 | Why Should We Wait Till To- morrow? |
20117 | ''A good idea, my boy, but do you think that you could carry it out? |
20117 | ''A stranger here?'' |
20117 | ''Ah, a grand age, is n''t it?'' |
20117 | ''Ah, now, which way?'' |
20117 | ''Ah, you think so, do you? |
20117 | ''All that is stolen property, I suppose?'' |
20117 | ''All what?'' |
20117 | ''Am I free? |
20117 | ''Am I speaking to Mistress Millicent Basset?'' |
20117 | ''And Captain Knowlton was your guardian?'' |
20117 | ''And like it?'' |
20117 | ''And none of these have been traced?'' |
20117 | ''And now you get on very well?'' |
20117 | ''And the coins-- were they also your father''s?'' |
20117 | ''And the pay which you owe me?'' |
20117 | ''And then they will not be able to refuse to take me because I am no good, will they?'' |
20117 | ''And what can you do, play football and cricket?'' |
20117 | ''And what does the Duke say to that?'' |
20117 | ''And what for, young stranger, may I ask?'' |
20117 | ''And what? |
20117 | ''And who can tell where the others may be?'' |
20117 | ''And who is Dicky?'' |
20117 | ''And you have no money left?'' |
20117 | ''And you think that Chin Choo can not discover that the idol contains precious stones?'' |
20117 | ''Are the Boxers coming quickly to kill the foreigners?'' |
20117 | ''Are they good?'' |
20117 | ''Are they human heads?'' |
20117 | ''Are they on their way, then?'' |
20117 | ''Are they taking those things to give to their ancestors''ghosts?'' |
20117 | ''Are you a Grimsby man?'' |
20117 | ''Are you certain you remember where we buried the rest of the collection?'' |
20117 | ''Are you going back to- night?'' |
20117 | ''Are you going straight on?'' |
20117 | ''Are you ready?'' |
20117 | ''Are you sure, though, that they are all there?'' |
20117 | ''Are you walking to Hazleton?'' |
20117 | ''Are you young Everard?'' |
20117 | ''Are you, who have faced death so often, afraid of an operation of a few minutes?'' |
20117 | ''Aunt Marion?'' |
20117 | ''Barton? |
20117 | ''Better?'' |
20117 | ''Better?'' |
20117 | ''But I mean, were you ever in a shipwreck?'' |
20117 | ''But I thought you said you were going to London?'' |
20117 | ''But do you know what was on that poster?'' |
20117 | ''But do you mean to say that he can prevent my leaving the ship at Grimsby?'' |
20117 | ''But do you think it possible to get into Chin Choo''s house and remove the idol without being discovered?'' |
20117 | ''But how about your sou''-wester last night? |
20117 | ''But how about your studies?'' |
20117 | ''But how are we going to sew the pigtail to the cap?'' |
20117 | ''But how do they fix it to their head? |
20117 | ''But how do you know that Chin Choo still possesses the idol with the secret drawer?'' |
20117 | ''But it is left to some one else, is it not?'' |
20117 | ''But suppose somebody speaks to us?'' |
20117 | ''But suppose war were to break out-- would you be a soldier again?'' |
20117 | ''But what about provisions?'' |
20117 | ''But what are we going to do now? |
20117 | ''But where are we to swim to? |
20117 | ''But,''I asked,''how about the school?'' |
20117 | ''But,''I asked,''what shall I do in the holidays?'' |
20117 | ''But,''I continued,''why did Captain Knowlton call father"poor Frank Everard?" |
20117 | ''But-- but,''I suggested with an effort,''wo n''t you want them?'' |
20117 | ''By- the- bye, I suppose you know several boatmen who work up the river?'' |
20117 | ''By- the- bye, do your colleagues know how to handle their rifles?'' |
20117 | ''Ca n''t I get a job on her?'' |
20117 | ''Ca n''t you find any work to do? |
20117 | ''Ca n''t you find out?'' |
20117 | ''Cab, Madam?'' |
20117 | ''Can I bring you anything more, Sir?'' |
20117 | ''Can I have a candle?'' |
20117 | ''Can he do this?'' |
20117 | ''Can tellee me how lightee fire?'' |
20117 | ''Can you read it?'' |
20117 | ''Can you speak Chinese?'' |
20117 | ''Can you tell me how far it is to Hazleton?'' |
20117 | ''Can you tell me which is the road?'' |
20117 | ''Cook,''I said,''where do you keep the boot- brushes?'' |
20117 | ''Could n''t I bribe one of them to stay away, and let me go aboard in his place?'' |
20117 | ''Could n''t I take out a broom and sweep a crossing?'' |
20117 | ''Could n''t we buy something there?'' |
20117 | ''Could you save yourself if I let go?'' |
20117 | ''Cut?'' |
20117 | ''Dick,''suggested Jacintha,''do n''t you think we ought to go in to tea?'' |
20117 | ''Did Captain Knowlton tell you the news?'' |
20117 | ''Did ever you set eyes on a nicer, genteeler- looking lad? |
20117 | ''Did n''t you hear anything?'' |
20117 | ''Did not my honourable brothers steal a horse that belonged to the foreigners?'' |
20117 | ''Did she not call herself Mah Kloo, and had not Maung thought she was a Karen woman?'' |
20117 | ''Did you ever see a shipwreck?'' |
20117 | ''Did you get the twenty- five shillings?'' |
20117 | ''Did you know my father?'' |
20117 | ''Did you not tell me that one must do something for a living?'' |
20117 | ''Did you really paint it yourself?'' |
20117 | ''Did you see Hugo yesterday?'' |
20117 | ''Did you see his hair?'' |
20117 | ''Did you think she was a revenue cutter?'' |
20117 | ''Do n''t see much sign of it, do you?'' |
20117 | ''Do n''t want it, eh? |
20117 | ''Do n''t you think so, Ping Wang?'' |
20117 | ''Do n''t you think,''said Charlie,''that we ought to hurry back to warn Barton and his friends of the threatened rising?'' |
20117 | ''Do n''t you think,''suggested Jacintha,''it would be best to try to get as far as the farrier''s we passed opposite the footpath to Barton?'' |
20117 | ''Do n''t you understand?'' |
20117 | ''Do the fellows ever want pudding?'' |
20117 | ''Do you doubt my word?'' |
20117 | ''Do you know what this ship is?'' |
20117 | ''Do you like a fisherman''s life?'' |
20117 | ''Do you live at Barton?'' |
20117 | ''Do you live in London?'' |
20117 | ''Do you live near here?'' |
20117 | ''Do you mean it?'' |
20117 | ''Do you really mean it?'' |
20117 | ''Do you see that soldier''s steel helmet on yonder wall?'' |
20117 | ''Do you think I am going to pick up these pieces? |
20117 | ''Do you think they will take you in?'' |
20117 | ''Do you think work is disgraceful to you?'' |
20117 | ''Do you think you could give me something to eat?'' |
20117 | ''Do you think, ma''am, we might use that beautiful ribbon for our garland? |
20117 | ''Do you think,''suggested Jacintha,''that Father will bring Mr. Turton with him?'' |
20117 | ''Do you want a berth?'' |
20117 | ''Do you, my lad?'' |
20117 | ''Does Miss Everard live here?'' |
20117 | ''Does he think Captain Knowlton is dead?'' |
20117 | ''Does he think that the rising will spread?'' |
20117 | ''Dog?'' |
20117 | ''Ever ridden on a step?'' |
20117 | ''Father,''here broke in George,''I thought_ you_ were to have Vale Place when old Mr. Pelham died?'' |
20117 | ''Feel better?'' |
20117 | ''Five miles, is n''t it, Uncle?'' |
20117 | ''For yourself?'' |
20117 | ''From school?'' |
20117 | ''Got any money to pay for it?'' |
20117 | ''Hail a craft like that?'' |
20117 | ''Hallo, youngster, have you caught your swallow- tail yet?'' |
20117 | ''Hardy,''said Nelson,''how goes the day?'' |
20117 | ''Has he a living?'' |
20117 | ''Has he got astray?'' |
20117 | ''Has he run away from school?'' |
20117 | ''Has he, though?'' |
20117 | ''Has n''t Captain Knowlton any money either?'' |
20117 | ''Has n''t the wretched man got any weapons aboard?'' |
20117 | ''Has the motor- car gone?'' |
20117 | ''Have I not promised you?'' |
20117 | ''Have n''t you got any smaller change?'' |
20117 | ''Have n''t you got anything smaller?'' |
20117 | ''Have some more tea?'' |
20117 | ''Have you a knife?'' |
20117 | ''Have you any English friends living in China?'' |
20117 | ''Have you brought us the clothes which we left on the_ Sparrow- hawk_?'' |
20117 | ''Have you come out of your way just because you thought it was mine?'' |
20117 | ''Have you given the skipper any?'' |
20117 | ''Have you got a handkerchief?'' |
20117 | ''Have you got the chocolates, Dick?'' |
20117 | ''Have you no people of your own, my dear?'' |
20117 | ''Have you received your medal?'' |
20117 | ''Have you told him, then?'' |
20117 | ''He can tell me where he comes from, anyhow-- can''t you, new kid?'' |
20117 | ''He may have sold it?'' |
20117 | ''He said that, did he?'' |
20117 | ''How about_ me_, though?'' |
20117 | ''How am I to reward you for your goodness?'' |
20117 | ''How came you to be so careless, May?'' |
20117 | ''How can I take you back if you do n''t tell me where you have come from? |
20117 | ''How can it be if I did n''t bring one?'' |
20117 | ''How can they have got money since last night?'' |
20117 | ''How can you hope to keep your friends if you bring disgrace on them?'' |
20117 | ''How can you tell?'' |
20117 | ''How could I do it?'' |
20117 | ''How could the Bà © bà © Ingalay have got into the jungle?'' |
20117 | ''How did you get in this fix?'' |
20117 | ''How did you manage to catch the coper?'' |
20117 | ''How did you manage when you first came here?'' |
20117 | ''How do you know that I am wrong, Monsieur le Duc?'' |
20117 | ''How do you know that, you foolish fellow?'' |
20117 | ''How do you know?'' |
20117 | ''How far are you going?'' |
20117 | ''How far is it to Hazleton?'' |
20117 | ''How far shall we have to walk before we reach the first village?'' |
20117 | ''How long ago did it start?'' |
20117 | ''How long for?'' |
20117 | ''How long will they keep us in these things?'' |
20117 | ''How many European men have you, and what weapons?'' |
20117 | ''How many acres?'' |
20117 | ''How much are eggs?'' |
20117 | ''How much do you think I shall get?'' |
20117 | ''How much do you want for it?'' |
20117 | ''How much has he taken?'' |
20117 | ''How now, my friend?'' |
20117 | ''How was it?'' |
20117 | ''How would you spend it?'' |
20117 | ''How you savvy we Englisheeman?'' |
20117 | ''How''s that?'' |
20117 | ''How?'' |
20117 | ''Hullo,''said he,''You think to play your tricks on me? |
20117 | ''Hungry, eh?'' |
20117 | ''I am as English as you are; how dare you call me that name?'' |
20117 | ''I do n''t find Captain Knowlton-- didn''t you say that was the name?'' |
20117 | ''I hope,''said Nelson,''none of our ships have struck?'' |
20117 | ''I say, Everard,''he exclaimed as soon as he reached me,''how much do you think?'' |
20117 | ''I say, where are you going to sleep to- night?'' |
20117 | ''I say,''I exclaimed,''do you know where I could get a lodging?'' |
20117 | ''I say,''said Dick, presently, for his manner had now become all that I could desire,''how much money have you got left?'' |
20117 | ''I suppose that they did not offer so much for her as you are asking from me?'' |
20117 | ''I suppose there is n''t a book I could have?'' |
20117 | ''I suppose you can make the boy up a bed somewhere?'' |
20117 | ''I suppose you have n''t succeeded in getting that treasure?'' |
20117 | ''I suppose,''I cried a little angrily,''he would think I was begging?'' |
20117 | ''I wonder if we have taken a wrong track?'' |
20117 | ''I wonder if you would mind,''said he, growing very red,''if we looked into that case of yours?'' |
20117 | ''I wonder now if you would be allowed to come along with me in my little sailing- boat?'' |
20117 | ''I wonder what made you do it?'' |
20117 | ''I wonder,''I said, a little hesitatingly,''whether you could tell me where to find a lodging?'' |
20117 | ''I wonder,''he suggested, soon after the train had restarted,''whether you would object to changing sides with me?'' |
20117 | ''I_ must_ descend sooner or later,''thought the aeronaut,''so why not now?'' |
20117 | ''If he does n''t spoil my floor,''she answered, and as I took Patch up in my arms she added,''What is it you want?'' |
20117 | ''If he had been rescued,''I asked,''do n''t you think we should have heard news of him before now?'' |
20117 | ''If we can not dig now, what are we to do?'' |
20117 | ''In which direction do you intend to travel when we reach Tien- tsin?'' |
20117 | ''Is Major Ruston here?'' |
20117 | ''Is it, indeed?'' |
20117 | ''Is it, then, such a wonderful story?'' |
20117 | ''Is n''t it a dear little boat? |
20117 | ''Is n''t it really yours, then?'' |
20117 | ''Is that his name?'' |
20117 | ''Is the trawler a sound boat?'' |
20117 | ''It is a curious name for your dog,''said the Doctor;''how do you spell it, B- e- a- u?'' |
20117 | ''It''s about six feet,''I said,''I suppose one could fly it-- both feet together, eh?'' |
20117 | ''It''s all very well, but what are we going to do?'' |
20117 | ''It''s no good talking about Uncle Harry,''said Geoff;''the question is, Can_ we_ help Father?'' |
20117 | ''It''s splendid,''Charlie declared, as he surveyed himself in the glass;''do n''t you think so, Fred?'' |
20117 | ''Jacky, my lad, you have n''t forgotten the story I told you about the boy who was too clever?'' |
20117 | ''Katie, Katie, have n''t you got a kiss for your own Clare?'' |
20117 | ''Like a lift, doggie?'' |
20117 | ''May I inquire how much money you possess?'' |
20117 | ''May I offer you one?'' |
20117 | ''May I send it home?'' |
20117 | ''My locket?'' |
20117 | ''Nice sort of place if one had skated up to it at dusk, eh?'' |
20117 | ''No one can come near us without our seeing him,''Ping Wang said, and continued at once:''Could you swim a mile in a sea like this?'' |
20117 | ''Not about Captain Knowlton?'' |
20117 | ''Not more?'' |
20117 | ''Not so bad,''he continued,''is it? |
20117 | ''Now where did you think of sleeping to- night?'' |
20117 | ''Now, I wonder,''he said, when we were on the way again,''if you are able to oblige me?'' |
20117 | ''Now,''he continued,''how did you get yourself into such a state, and how is it you are wandering about the country alone?'' |
20117 | ''Now,''he said,''the question is what''s to be done with the youngster?'' |
20117 | ''Oh, Mother, need I go? |
20117 | ''Oh, Rudel,''said Grandmother, sobbing,''will you always be a good boy? |
20117 | ''Oh, sir,''said the invalid, looking up, his face lit up with hope and expectation,''are you the captain, and will you take me? |
20117 | ''Oh, what shall I do-- what shall I do?'' |
20117 | ''Oh, you do, do you, Jacky?'' |
20117 | ''Oh, you do, do you?'' |
20117 | ''On a barge, eh? |
20117 | ''On the tramp?'' |
20117 | ''Once more-- will you tell?'' |
20117 | ''Pay for it, will you? |
20117 | ''Perhaps you studied hard-- read a good deal?'' |
20117 | ''Poached or boiled?'' |
20117 | ''Pretending that you are he?'' |
20117 | ''Shall I bring him up?'' |
20117 | ''Shall I cut your hair?'' |
20117 | ''Shall I cut your hair?'' |
20117 | ''Shall I go to Grimsby and discover the truth?'' |
20117 | ''Shall I run and take it, auntie?'' |
20117 | ''Shall I see you again?'' |
20117 | ''Shall we carry him down the garden, and pitch him in the duck- pond?'' |
20117 | ''Shall we go out and hurry off to Barton?'' |
20117 | ''Shall we have another race?'' |
20117 | ''Shall we open the gate?'' |
20117 | ''Shall we?'' |
20117 | ''Should you mind if I were to sleep in one of those barns?'' |
20117 | ''So do I,''Charlie replied;''but how can I prove it? |
20117 | ''So soon? |
20117 | ''So you have come to London to try your fortune?'' |
20117 | ''Still,''said Mr. Baker,''you have not done much good for yourself to- day now, have you?'' |
20117 | ''Suppose I do n''t want him to pay me back?'' |
20117 | ''Suppose I were to give you the medal now?'' |
20117 | ''Suppose the skipper thinks we have fallen overboard and sends a boat to rescue us?'' |
20117 | ''Suppose you do n''t return, sir? |
20117 | ''Supposing you got to London,''she suggested, turning to me,''what did you think of doing?'' |
20117 | ''Tea and bread and butter?'' |
20117 | ''Tea or coffee?'' |
20117 | ''Tell me all about it, and what you are going to do with the money?'' |
20117 | ''Tell me, then,''cried the aeronaut at last, in fun,''what the inhabitants of these stars are like?'' |
20117 | ''That''s good,''the skipper replied,''but why did n''t you tip me the wink that you were coming over to us? |
20117 | ''The question is,''he said slowly,''where did you get him?'' |
20117 | ''Then may I, Grandfather?'' |
20117 | ''Then suppose we try Oxford Street?'' |
20117 | ''Then the skipper intends to swindle the man over the sale of her?'' |
20117 | ''Then we shall be there to- morrow night, I suppose?'' |
20117 | ''Then what is this?'' |
20117 | ''Then who has Vale Place now?'' |
20117 | ''Then why are you aboard this ship?'' |
20117 | ''Then why are you sticking here? |
20117 | ''Then why did you not accept one of the offers?'' |
20117 | ''Then why did you not tell me so? |
20117 | ''Then why do n''t you guard what you have captured?'' |
20117 | ''Then why do n''t you jump overboard and save it? |
20117 | ''Then why do you stand staring there? |
20117 | ''Then why give him an opportunity?'' |
20117 | ''Then will no one ever come up it in future?'' |
20117 | ''Then-- then, what am I to do?'' |
20117 | ''There is not room,''she said at last;''where is my desk to go with that great plant blocking up everything? |
20117 | ''Think my hayrick is a proper place to sleep on?'' |
20117 | ''Think that''s all right?'' |
20117 | ''Think you could wear that?'' |
20117 | ''This grand road to be left to decay? |
20117 | ''Till Monday morning, you say? |
20117 | ''To settle there?'' |
20117 | ''Venerable uncle,''Ping Wang exclaimed as soon as the old man reached them,''why are your dogs of servants placed in the wooden collars?'' |
20117 | ''We must n''t walk three abreast, I suppose?'' |
20117 | ''We shall have to eat our food with chop- sticks I suppose?'' |
20117 | ''Well, Everard, what is it now?'' |
20117 | ''Well, Jack, are you ready?'' |
20117 | ''Well, Lucy, how have you been getting on since I saw you last?'' |
20117 | ''Well, boys, how are you getting on?'' |
20117 | ''Well, have you found it?'' |
20117 | ''Well, how are you feeling now?'' |
20117 | ''Well, lad, have you done aught before?'' |
20117 | ''Well, my boy,''Charlie''s father said to him, after Ping Wang had been introduced,''have you had a good time?'' |
20117 | ''Well, my man, where are you going?'' |
20117 | ''Well, tell me now, what can you do?'' |
20117 | ''Well, who am I to believe?'' |
20117 | ''Well,''Charlie said, when they were alone,''what do you think of my rig- out?'' |
20117 | ''Well,''Charlie said,''has the skipper said anything more to you?'' |
20117 | ''Well,''I answered,''who wants to stay? |
20117 | ''Well,''Williams exclaimed, cheerfully, as he shook hands with Charlie,''do you still wish to come with us?'' |
20117 | ''Well,''asked Mr. Westlake,''what is it?'' |
20117 | ''Well?'' |
20117 | ''Were you the only one saved?'' |
20117 | ''What about getting home?'' |
20117 | ''What about it?'' |
20117 | ''What are they?'' |
20117 | ''What are you doing here?'' |
20117 | ''What are you going to do?'' |
20117 | ''What brings you here, Mark? |
20117 | ''What did it matter whether I cleaned the boots or not?'' |
20117 | ''What do you mean? |
20117 | ''What do you mean?'' |
20117 | ''What do you think is in the chest?'' |
20117 | ''What do you think of their disguise?'' |
20117 | ''What do you want, Everard?'' |
20117 | ''What does he do with himself all day? |
20117 | ''What else do you think I can do with you?'' |
20117 | ''What for wantee catchee us?'' |
20117 | ''What harm is there in sneezing?'' |
20117 | ''What if I am?'' |
20117 | ''What is her name?'' |
20117 | ''What is it, Father?'' |
20117 | ''What is it?'' |
20117 | ''What is our next move?'' |
20117 | ''What is that?'' |
20117 | ''What is that?'' |
20117 | ''What is the good of my having a pigtail?'' |
20117 | ''What is the matter with him?'' |
20117 | ''What is the matter? |
20117 | ''What is the use of fagging like that on a hot day?'' |
20117 | ''What is the use of wasting paint over an old thing like that, Grandfather? |
20117 | ''What is your pleasure, little Milord?'' |
20117 | ''What kind of beds do they have here?'' |
20117 | ''What made you run away?'' |
20117 | ''What on earth has happened to you?'' |
20117 | ''What shall we do?'' |
20117 | ''What sort of work can you do?'' |
20117 | ''What was he like?'' |
20117 | ''What was the name of his vessel?'' |
20117 | ''What was your reason for attacking my son?'' |
20117 | ''What were you doing there?'' |
20117 | ''What''s amiss? |
20117 | ''What''s he got so carefully wrapped up? |
20117 | ''What''s that?'' |
20117 | ''What''s the matter, old boy?'' |
20117 | ''What''s the matter, skipper?'' |
20117 | ''What''s the meaning of that?'' |
20117 | ''What''s the row?'' |
20117 | ''What''s up? |
20117 | ''What''s your name, old chap?'' |
20117 | ''What?'' |
20117 | ''What?'' |
20117 | ''What?'' |
20117 | ''When do you mean to start?'' |
20117 | ''When does the_ Sparrow- hawk_ sail?'' |
20117 | ''When you reach London,''he asked after I had become silent,''what are you going to do?'' |
20117 | ''Where am I to go?'' |
20117 | ''Where are the fish?'' |
20117 | ''Where are we going?'' |
20117 | ''Where are you bound for?'' |
20117 | ''Where are you going to take us?'' |
20117 | ''Where are you going?'' |
20117 | ''Where are you going?'' |
20117 | ''Where are you going?'' |
20117 | ''Where are you?'' |
20117 | ''Where did he expect to be? |
20117 | ''Where did you row?'' |
20117 | ''Where do your people live in London?'' |
20117 | ''Where from?'' |
20117 | ''Where is it? |
20117 | ''Where is that?'' |
20117 | ''Where is that?'' |
20117 | ''Where is the ammunition?'' |
20117 | ''Where is the chest, father?'' |
20117 | ''Where is the mate?'' |
20117 | ''Where to?'' |
20117 | ''Where to?'' |
20117 | ''Where were you wounded?'' |
20117 | ''Where''s your father, boy?'' |
20117 | ''Where, my lad?'' |
20117 | ''Where?'' |
20117 | ''Which is the cook''s bunk?'' |
20117 | ''Which is the way?'' |
20117 | ''Which shall we take this time? |
20117 | ''Which way are we going?'' |
20117 | ''Who are you?'' |
20117 | ''Who are you?'' |
20117 | ''Who broke her brother''s boat?'' |
20117 | ''Who is Dick?'' |
20117 | ''Who is Fo?'' |
20117 | ''Who is it from?'' |
20117 | ''Who is that?'' |
20117 | ''Who is there?'' |
20117 | ''Who would have thought it indeed?'' |
20117 | ''Who would have thought it? |
20117 | ''Who''s the kid?'' |
20117 | ''Who''s there?'' |
20117 | ''Whom are you going to shoot?'' |
20117 | ''Why am I an ass?'' |
20117 | ''Why did n''t one of you go in after him? |
20117 | ''Why did n''t you take the train?'' |
20117 | ''Why did n''t you tell me you had the revolver?'' |
20117 | ''Why do n''t you drive on to Barton?'' |
20117 | ''Why have you come?'' |
20117 | ''Why is that?'' |
20117 | ''Why not try kicking me instead?'' |
20117 | ''Why not, my lad?'' |
20117 | ''Why not? |
20117 | ''Why not?'' |
20117 | ''Why not?'' |
20117 | ''Why, what do you think?'' |
20117 | ''Why?'' |
20117 | ''Why?'' |
20117 | ''Will half- past three be early enough?'' |
20117 | ''Will he come aboard to- morrow do you think?'' |
20117 | ''Will it matter if I nurse him?'' |
20117 | ''Will there be any difficulty about getting into the town?'' |
20117 | ''Will they keep it?'' |
20117 | ''Will this make good the mischief I have done?'' |
20117 | ''Will you kindly tell us which is the better animal?'' |
20117 | ''Will you pay in advance?'' |
20117 | ''Will you tell me your name?'' |
20117 | ''Wo n''t he do beautiful?'' |
20117 | ''Wo n''t the skipper discover me before we get out of the river?'' |
20117 | ''Would it not be a good idea if we went for a short stroll?'' |
20117 | ''Would my honourable brother rob his slave?'' |
20117 | ''Would not little Milord like to fish?'' |
20117 | ''Would some gentleman kindly call me a cab?'' |
20117 | ''Would you like some flying fish for breakfast, gentlemen?'' |
20117 | ''Would you not like to go in your native dress?'' |
20117 | ''Would you take a message of importance for me?'' |
20117 | ''Yes, that was so, but Bà © bà © could not have been her child; had she not said he was Ingalay?'' |
20117 | ''You can not see any one moving the stool; is it not alive?'' |
20117 | ''You dear child, have you come all alone? |
20117 | ''You did n''t mind my bringing Dick?'' |
20117 | ''You do believe it, then?'' |
20117 | ''You have n''t another aunt, have you?'' |
20117 | ''You looked about you, then?'' |
20117 | ''You mean Etons?'' |
20117 | ''You thought she was a mission ship, did you?'' |
20117 | ''You''re-- you are not going to take him back?'' |
20117 | ''Your luggage is in the van?'' |
20117 | ''_ Dare_ you?'' |
20117 | ( How had he forgotten the secret chamber? |
20117 | (_ Continued from page 79._)''Hullo, new kid, what''s your name?'' |
20117 | (_ Continued on page 12._)[ Illustration:"''Does Miss Everard live here?'' |
20117 | (_ Continued on page 138._)[ Illustration:"''May I offer you a lozenge?''"] |
20117 | ),''or are they alive and laugh? |
20117 | 165''How it tasted-- well, I''ve never heard''204''How would you like to earn twenty pounds reward?'' |
20117 | 208''Wootton stood quite upright on the pinnacle of the steeple''73''Would you take a message of importance for me?'' |
20117 | 236''Who''ll buy?'' |
20117 | 3) and millipede come to be examined? |
20117 | A great fear entered his mind, and, as his mother turned and looked at him, all he could say was''Father?'' |
20117 | ANSWER TO''WHAT AM I?'' |
20117 | About 11 a.m. he was again on deck, and turning to Captain Blackwood he asked him''if there was not still a signal wanting?'' |
20117 | After all, what was to prevent him? |
20117 | An order to kill all foreigners, was it not?'' |
20117 | And Mary, what was she doing? |
20117 | And he? |
20117 | And how did you get him out?'' |
20117 | And if I could prove it, what good would it be while we are on his ship? |
20117 | And who would begrudge such protection to our fishermen? |
20117 | Antony here, and did not tell me?'' |
20117 | Are you a journalist?'' |
20117 | Are you any good with them?'' |
20117 | Are you hurt, dear?'' |
20117 | Are you ready? |
20117 | As a matter of fact, I have, but how did you know it?'' |
20117 | As for the Government, how should I know anything about it, since I can neither read nor write? |
20117 | As the men sprang over the gunwale on to the deck, the skipper greeted each with a hearty''What cheer, sonny?'' |
20117 | Barton was about to send him back to the kitchen when Charlie suddenly exclaimed,''What''s that, just over there?'' |
20117 | Brethren of Mbamba, how are ye without a hen to buy stamps?'' |
20117 | But how could I obtain a bed without money? |
20117 | But how does a bee sting? |
20117 | But look here, if you are tee- totalers, what did you come aboard the_ Lily_ for?'' |
20117 | But was he powerless? |
20117 | But what bird or animal could have wondered if, after that 19th of September, they had quacked, and crowed, and bleated with more pride than before? |
20117 | But what is this? |
20117 | But what''s all this,''he asked,''about twenty pounds reward? |
20117 | But what, he thought, were the summer holidays without cricket? |
20117 | But, I hope,''he continued,''you have not suffered from the wooden collars?'' |
20117 | By- the- bye, do you feel hungry?'' |
20117 | By- the- bye, how do you pass the time away before hauling the trawl?'' |
20117 | By- the- bye,''demanded Captain Knowlton,''I should like to hear just why you did run away?'' |
20117 | Can I go home?'' |
20117 | Can you show us the right way to Schustadt? |
20117 | Chase that wretched horse all the way to Kwang- ngan?'' |
20117 | Could he not by its means purchase safety for his city? |
20117 | Could he not pray? |
20117 | Could we have it to go for a row?'' |
20117 | Did not this sensible fellow''s mouth become a splendid makeshift hand, and his glance an excellent speech? |
20117 | Did you see a boy, Jacintha?'' |
20117 | Do any of the other fellows want to come aboard?'' |
20117 | Do n''t he take the cake?'' |
20117 | Do pigeons carry watches? |
20117 | Do the police want you?'' |
20117 | Do you accept my conditions?'' |
20117 | Do you accuse me of robbing you?'' |
20117 | Do you care about draughts?'' |
20117 | Do you recognise that?'' |
20117 | Down this they called,''Jenny, are you living?'' |
20117 | E. D. WHAT AM I? |
20117 | For who amid their chatter Could understand such patter? |
20117 | Going to try another midnight swim?'' |
20117 | Got a bit of grub to give me?'' |
20117 | Got a mug of tea handy?'' |
20117 | Had I succeeded or not? |
20117 | Had the clock lost five minutes, or not? |
20117 | Had they not tied round its neck the metal charm, and it had worked no cure yet? |
20117 | Hallo, what''s Ping Wang saying to the old man?'' |
20117 | Has aught befallen Antony?'' |
20117 | Has he business here? |
20117 | Has the invalid any representatives here? |
20117 | Have I not also the coins of invulnerability bound in the flesh and blood of my arm?'' |
20117 | Have you anything that you wish to say in your defence, or will you go at once?'' |
20117 | Have you ever heard of a white negro? |
20117 | He added:''If you have little faith, what will you do then?'' |
20117 | He glared at Charlie for a moment as if he had committed some terrible offence, and then shouted fiercely''What did you do that for, you idiot?'' |
20117 | He opened the window gently, and was about to speak when he heard the clockmaker''s voice saying cautiously,''Is that you, Captain?'' |
20117 | He thought it had, but could he trust his eyes in such a terrible situation? |
20117 | He whispered to his bedfellow( for all schoolboys slept at least two in a bed in those days),''Master George, can you put on your shirt? |
20117 | He''s in the dining- room now, with Father, and----''''Oh, is he?'' |
20117 | Here I''m waiting; is it any use? |
20117 | His answer came without anger, and as brave as true,''_ Yes, and did I not do it well?_''THE BOY TRAMP. |
20117 | How did you get your medal back?'' |
20117 | How do London pigeons, for instance, tell the hour, and turn up punctually at the feeding- places? |
20117 | How far is that?'' |
20117 | How is it with the little people of the insect world in this matter? |
20117 | How long have you been up?'' |
20117 | How many can tell how an insect smells, and where its organs of taste and hearing lie? |
20117 | How old are you?'' |
20117 | How were the little cubs to be secured? |
20117 | I asked, ignoring the rest of his speech;''and what made you bring it?'' |
20117 | I felt that I had fallen among thieves-- if these people were not thieves, what could they be? |
20117 | I remember your face now; are n''t you the grandson of old Peter Klinger, who holds yonder farm? |
20117 | I should answer''Speak in English,''would n''t you? |
20117 | I suppose it''s some joke of yours, young gentlemen?'' |
20117 | I suppose you know it?'' |
20117 | I thought that regiment prided itself on never being ill?'' |
20117 | I will just have done with brush and comb, soap and water, and go in rags, and will leave it for the young folks to be smart and tidy?"'' |
20117 | I will speak to her, and arrange that you shall have some supper and a bed and breakfast, and then I think we can cry quits, eh-- what do you say?'' |
20117 | I wonder what this useful purchase will be?'' |
20117 | I. I wonder if you who read this are a Londoner, and, if so, whether you have ever sailed paper boats on the Serpentine? |
20117 | If I were to take the locket----''''What would you say when he asked you where you got it?'' |
20117 | If the second was,''What is its place amongst the rocks of our earth?'' |
20117 | If they were to take that path do n''t you think they would get to Barton more quickly?'' |
20117 | If you got washed overboard, should I lose my three pounds?'' |
20117 | In a few minutes the tea was ready, and as soon as the skipper tasted it he made a grimace, and exclaimed,''Beastly wash!--Do you hear?'' |
20117 | In its dark shadows who could say what dangers lurked? |
20117 | In jail?'' |
20117 | In some land of faery where fires never die, And wind always freezes? |
20117 | In the meanwhile, are either of you hungry?'' |
20117 | Invent more cyphers?'' |
20117 | Is he going to pay me double wages?'' |
20117 | Is he thinking of the family cares of the last season, or considering where the next meal is to come from? |
20117 | Is it right? |
20117 | Is it to be the Tower of London, or the river, or the Monument? |
20117 | Is n''t that better than being dragged through a dark tunnel, boxed up in a stuffy train?'' |
20117 | Is that right?'' |
20117 | It''s cruel, is it not, sir?'' |
20117 | Know we not well that he will come again and reign over us? |
20117 | Locked in the drawing- room, were you, Sam, old chap? |
20117 | M. H.[ Illustration:"''Who''ll buy?''"] |
20117 | May I call Boh now?'' |
20117 | Nelson, however, was confident of success, and asked Captain Blackwood''what he should consider as a victory?'' |
20117 | Nicolo asks the most awkward questions, such as:''Who stole his sister''s sweets last week?'' |
20117 | Now what was I to do? |
20117 | Now, will you grant me my favour?'' |
20117 | Of course, Patch must on no account be left behind; but, on the other hand, how was I to get him along? |
20117 | Of what use, it may be asked, are the three little eyes in the middle of the head of insects which have these wonderfully complex eyes? |
20117 | Oh, ruddy flames leaping, Say, where were you sleeping? |
20117 | On Sunday afternoon we again see the young curate; we hear his stern voice as he asks a group of six stalwart men,''What are you doing here, men? |
20117 | One of the passengers asked him afterwards,''How could you stop at such a moment to light a cigar?'' |
20117 | Or have you seen your toy ships driven by fierce winds on to a lee shore bristling with cruel crags and yawning clefts? |
20117 | Or heard you the breezes That fanned our sweet roses through June and July? |
20117 | Ping Wang, shall we have any difficulty in obtaining food to- morrow?'' |
20117 | Possibly you can save us the trouble of hunting for his liquor and tobacco?'' |
20117 | SPY OR GUIDE? |
20117 | See, Jacky?'' |
20117 | Shall we escape?'' |
20117 | Shall we jump overboard, and swim to the nearest ship making for the Humber?'' |
20117 | She is in India, I believe?'' |
20117 | So you''re his substitute? |
20117 | Something greater? |
20117 | Stick it on to their bald pates with gum?'' |
20117 | Supposing the first question put to us was,''What is slate?'' |
20117 | Surely Chinamen do n''t wear false pigtails?'' |
20117 | Surely we have no such people about now?'' |
20117 | Take your hands off those lads at once; what right have you to drag them away?'' |
20117 | The doctor had said he needed change of air and nourishing food; but how could the doctor''s orders be obeyed when money was so scarce? |
20117 | The master starter yielded to the request,''May we have our caps off?'' |
20117 | The master, no less a person than the great Sir Christopher himself, now came up, and catching sight of the lad, said sternly:''Who is that youth? |
20117 | The question is, how am I to get out?'' |
20117 | The question is, how are we to carry our treasure?'' |
20117 | Then off with a rush went brave Tom, His heart beating loud with dismay; While Charlie, and Peter, and Fred Cried,''Is n''t Tom valiant to- day?'' |
20117 | Then, plucking up her courage, she added,''How did you come here, and what right have you to take the panel out of the wall?'' |
20117 | Then, with a little laugh, she said,''Ah, M. Montgolfier, why do you not tie the fire to the bag?'' |
20117 | There was n''t a moment for shelter, And what could we possibly do? |
20117 | There will be no objection to that, I suppose?'' |
20117 | These are troublous times, but if I live I will see you again some time, and meanwhile, as a remembrance, may I have these?'' |
20117 | Tiger found him out-- didn''t you, Tiger?'' |
20117 | To- day was his fifteenth birthday, and were not boys of fifteen allowed to take their places in the council? |
20117 | Turton?'' |
20117 | Turton?'' |
20117 | Understand, Jack?'' |
20117 | Unless somebody had been shut in by mistake, how had he or she obtained admission? |
20117 | Was Duck Lane, Smithfield, damp enough to be attractive to ducks? |
20117 | Was I not Theebaw''s chief"Boh"?'' |
20117 | Was he really poor?'' |
20117 | Was it not a dreadful state of affairs for a small girl at the beginning of her first visit? |
20117 | Was it the cry, perchance, of some robber luring him to destruction, or was it really a fellow- creature''s cry for help? |
20117 | Was not the bell of the Cathedral the loudest in the town, and was it not used as an alarm in cases of fire? |
20117 | Well, Polly, and where do you come from?'' |
20117 | Well, if it isn''t----Why, what does it all mean?'' |
20117 | Were they a party of skaters? |
20117 | Were you molested by the brigands?'' |
20117 | Westrop?'' |
20117 | What are you going to drink?'' |
20117 | What are you thinking of? |
20117 | What can be the use of such a large mouth and tongue, and such large bars of whalebone to a creature which has so small a throat? |
20117 | What could have put such a ridiculous idea into your head?'' |
20117 | What could he do? |
20117 | What did he want? |
20117 | What do you think about it, Sam, old chap?'' |
20117 | What does that matter? |
20117 | What has he done to be so happy, or I to be so unhappy?'' |
20117 | What if Oscar heard him? |
20117 | What is a coper?'' |
20117 | What is it?--a fire? |
20117 | What is that?'' |
20117 | What is the Teal? |
20117 | What must we do this afternoon? |
20117 | What shall it be?'' |
20117 | What shall you do?'' |
20117 | What should he do? |
20117 | What sort of a world is it that they look on? |
20117 | What time to- morrow shall I have to be aboard?'' |
20117 | What time will they come aboard? |
20117 | What was the best thing to do? |
20117 | What was the last thing you carved?'' |
20117 | What was to be done? |
20117 | What''s that Chinee doing here?'' |
20117 | When birds and bees and blossoms Invite us out to play, Oh, who could well refuse them Upon so bright a day? |
20117 | When do we return to Grimsby?'' |
20117 | When he returned to his seat on the coil of rope, Ping Wang said to him suddenly,''Have you any Chinese friends?'' |
20117 | When shall we start?'' |
20117 | When you have a oven each side of you----''''Are you a cook, then?'' |
20117 | Where did you find him? |
20117 | Where else could I go unless I returned to Mr. Turton? |
20117 | Where shall I meet you to- morrow afternoon?'' |
20117 | Where''s the ladder?'' |
20117 | Which way did he go, Dan, when he left you?'' |
20117 | Who among us does not love the hum of the bee? |
20117 | Who can help admiring the beautiful Lady Fern, which seems to be most at home when growing near a streamlet or pond? |
20117 | Who could it be? |
20117 | Who do you think turned up ten minutes ago? |
20117 | Who does not know the Street Toy- man? |
20117 | Who is my friend? |
20117 | Who is my friend? |
20117 | Who is my friend? |
20117 | Who is your skipper?'' |
20117 | Who was to be obeyed, the people or the King? |
20117 | Who''ll buy?'' |
20117 | Why did you? |
20117 | Why do n''t you pretend that you are ill? |
20117 | Why is it to be given up? |
20117 | Why not ask him to return the idol to you?'' |
20117 | Why should I go to bed at eight, If I desire to sit up late?'' |
20117 | Why should Mr. Turton want me back at Castlemore, unless, indeed, for the sake of taking revenge for my flight? |
20117 | Why''s Aunt Christy got a new pail? |
20117 | Will you come out and choose a place for them?'' |
20117 | Will you have Vale Place after all?'' |
20117 | Will you object to that?'' |
20117 | Wonder what''s in it? |
20117 | Would Antony have seen him in London? |
20117 | Would he remember? |
20117 | Would you like to have it?'' |
20117 | Would you like to serve your country now?'' |
20117 | You agree, do n''t you?'' |
20117 | You are not frightened, old chap, are you?'' |
20117 | You are very thin; do they give you enough to eat?'' |
20117 | You do n''t complain that he treated you brutally?'' |
20117 | You do n''t mean that she has been wrecked?'' |
20117 | You start, Captain Ferrers?'' |
20117 | You will not be wanting a boy to help on your farm, will you, sir?'' |
20117 | [ Illustration:"''Can he do this?'' |
20117 | [ Illustration:"''How dare you strike me when you know God can see you?''"] |
20117 | [ Illustration:"''How would you like to earn twenty pounds reward?''"] |
20117 | [ Illustration:"''The question is, where did you get the dog?''"] |
20117 | [ Illustration:"''What is it?--a fire? |
20117 | [ Illustration:"''Would you take a message of importance for me?''"] |
20117 | all the people who knew us, have they finished to die''( that is, are they all dead? |
20117 | and what could they want at that hour? |
20117 | and what is the sting like? |
20117 | asked one;''was there a river?'' |
20117 | can you give me a lift down to the quay?'' |
20117 | changed to''You looked about you, then?'' |
20117 | cried Jane,''do you know if your aunt has come down yet?'' |
20117 | do you want to earn a copper?" |
20117 | exclaimed Nell;''but_ how_ are we to earn it?'' |
20117 | exclaimed poor, weak- witted Hetty, as soon as they had attended to the sufferer,''Father went for scalps himself, and now where is his own? |
20117 | exclaimed the philosopher; and now turning to the other pupil, he said,''Well, friend, and what have you bought?'' |
20117 | he cried, as soon as he saw me,''do you want a job?'' |
20117 | he exclaimed, suddenly,''what''s this I see? |
20117 | is n''t it nice? |
20117 | repeated Millicent in surprise;''is there then another?--where is he?'' |
20117 | said he,''what''s wrong?'' |
20117 | the master would like to secure the little ones alive; but how? |
20117 | what became of them?'' |
20117 | what have you done to- day, Except to romp and run and play?'' |
20117 | what''s that I see Hanging asleep upon the old ash- tree? |
20117 | what?'' |
20117 | who could give them wings?'' |
38940 | ''Raphael,''cried I, and extended both hands toward him,''do you recognize me?'' 38940 Are you ready, sir?" |
38940 | Brother,said he,"why do you grieve thus; do you see anything in my life or death which can cause you to feel any shame? |
38940 | I am just going; have me decently buried, and do not let my body be put into the vault until three days after I am dead-- do you understand me? |
38940 | Impossible,said he, lifting his arm:"how could I move my fingers so, if the pulse were gone?" |
38940 | Is there anything else? |
38940 | Say not, alas; but how do you know? |
38940 | Sir,said she,"will you not take your tea?" |
38940 | Too late,he said;"is this your fidelity?" |
38940 | What am I better than my fathers? 38940 What have you to do with that?" |
38940 | When a sick man is given over, and he suffers frightful pains, can a friendly physician refuse to give him opium? |
38940 | Why weep ye? 38940 _ Are the doctors here?_"to his wife who had just asked him if he wanted anything. |
38940 | _ Are we not children, all of us?_TAYLOR( Jeremy, distinguished bishop in the English Church, and author of"Holy Living and Dying." |
38940 | _ Brother Ranney, will you bury me? 38940 _ Can this be considered a calamity? |
38940 | _ Can this last long?_to his physician. |
38940 | _ Did you know Burke?_He referred to Edmund Burke, the celebrated orator, statesman and philosopher. |
38940 | _ Do you hear the music? 38940 _ Earth, dost thou demand me? |
38940 | _ Give me back my youth_,to Taylor who had asked him"Is there anything I can do for you?" |
38940 | _ I am not well, and should like to lie down-- will you call me in ten minutes? 38940 _ I do_,"in response to his sister''s question,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?" |
38940 | _ I have known thee all the time_,to his niece in response to her question,"Do you know me?" |
38940 | _ I must sleep now._It has been asserted, upon what authority the compiler does not know, that the last words of Byron were,"Shall I sue for mercy?" |
38940 | _ I pray you all pray for me._Some authorities give his last words thus:"And must I then die? |
38940 | _ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?" |
38940 | _ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?" |
38940 | _ Is this death?_RABELAIS( François), about 1483- 1553. |
38940 | _ Is this death?_to his physician. |
38940 | _ Know Him? 38940 _ Mais quel diable de mal veux- te que cela me fosse?_"he said, and ate the apricot. |
38940 | _ Must I leave it unfinished?_He referred to his"History of Poland." |
38940 | _ My Lord, why do you not go on? 38940 _ O Florence, what hast thou done to- day?_"He was strangled and burnt by the commissioners of the Pope, May 23, 1498. |
38940 | _ O my poor soul, whither art thou going?_Adrian wrote both in Greek and Latin. |
38940 | _ O, better_,in response to his wife''s question,"How do you feel now?" |
38940 | _ O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee? 38940 _ Oh death, why art thou so long in coming?_"The punishment inflicted upon Damiens for his attack upon the king was horrible. |
38940 | _ Oh, Lord, shall I die at all? 38940 _ Wally, what is this? |
38940 | _ Were you at Sedan?_He asked the question of Dr. Conneau. |
38940 | _ What can it signify?_Said to Miss Perowne, one of his attendants, who offered him some refreshments. |
38940 | _ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?" |
38940 | _ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?" |
38940 | _ Who is near me?_he was told Gutman-- his favorite pupil. |
38940 | _ Whose house is this? 38940 ''Now?'' 38940 ''Whence comes the sunshine?'' 38940 ( Quoi, déjà?) 38940 --And when?" |
38940 | 106 Is not this dying with courage and true greatness? |
38940 | 114 Murder of the Queen had been represented to me, The, 19 Must I leave it unfinished? |
38940 | 123 Are the French beaten? |
38940 | 153 But the consummate and perfect knowledge--, 249 Can this be considered a calamity? |
38940 | 165 Is this death? |
38940 | 189 Deep dream of peace, 142 Did I not say I was writing the Requiem for myself? |
38940 | 189 O, my poor soul, whither art thou going? |
38940 | 199 Are we not children, all of us? |
38940 | 201 Well, my God, I consent with all my heart, 171 Were the Church of Christ what she should be, 53 Were you at Sedan? |
38940 | 202 Did you know Burke? |
38940 | 229 O Florence, what hast thou done to- day? |
38940 | 233 Is this dying? |
38940 | 233 Why weep ye? |
38940 | 25 Anderson, you know that I always wished to die, 199 Are the doctors here? |
38940 | 254 Joy, 200"Justum et tenacem propositi virum,"82 King should die standing, A, 177 Kiss me, Hardy, 207 Know Him? |
38940 | 256 Did you think I should live forever? |
38940 | 270 Do you hear the music? |
38940 | 271 Will no one have pity on me? |
38940 | 274 Why dost thou not strike? |
38940 | 28 Is Lawrence come?--Is Lawrence come? |
38940 | 288 Will you tell the archdeacon? |
38940 | 31 Is there no priest at the château? |
38940 | 39 Very little meat for the mustard, 134 Vex me not with this thing, but give me a simple cross, 55 Vos plaudite, 19 Wally, what is this? |
38940 | 47 Observe how they are swelled, 13 Oh, the insufferable pangs of hell and damnation, 209 Oh death, why art thou so long in coming? |
38940 | 52 What can it signify? |
38940 | 70 What I can not utter with my mouth, 232 What is that? |
38940 | 9 With all my heart: I would fain be reconciled to my stomach, 98 Whose house is this? |
38940 | 92 Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all? |
38940 | 97 Is this death? |
38940 | 98 Dream has been short, The, 247 Dying, dying, 134 Dying man can do nothing easy, A, 102 Earth, dost thou demand me? |
38940 | A certain priest, named Nerotto, asked him,"in what spirit dost thou bear martyrdom?" |
38940 | After standing on the plank for a few seconds the executioner said:"Are you ready, sir?" |
38940 | Alive again? |
38940 | And dost thou prune thy trembling wing, To take thy flight thou know''st not whither? |
38940 | But what are the facts? |
38940 | Can I make men live, whether they will or no? |
38940 | Did you think I should live forever?" |
38940 | Did you think that I could live forever? |
38940 | Died he not in his bed? |
38940 | Do I tremble like a criminal or boast like an Atheist? |
38940 | He arose, turned to the soldiers, and said, his face wearing an expression of superhuman courage:--"Will no one have pity on me? |
38940 | He frequently asked,"Are the French beaten?" |
38940 | He knows best, 289 Well, ladies, if I were one hour in heaven, 186 Well, my friend, what news from the Great Mogul? |
38940 | He started, and said,"Know Him? |
38940 | He whispered as I placed the water to his lips,''Do n''t you remember that passage I once quoted to you from"King John?" |
38940 | Here is the package,"continued Mr. Coyle, producing a letter envelope from his pocket;"what shall I do with it?" |
38940 | His sister, Catherine of Schwartzburg, asked,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?" |
38940 | How long, O Lord, how long?_"NEWPORT( Francis, once famous as an opponent of Christianity). |
38940 | I am having Paul''s understanding, 237 Amen, 48 An Emperor ought to die standing, 289 And must I then die? |
38940 | I quote Prior''s version:"Poor little, quivering, fluttering thing, Must we no longer live together? |
38940 | I taste death; and who will support my dearest Constanze if you do not stay with her?" |
38940 | Is that you, Dora? |
38940 | Is that your heaven?'' |
38940 | Is this all that I feared when I prayed against a hard death? |
38940 | Is this all that I feared? |
38940 | Is this all? |
38940 | Is this all? |
38940 | Just before this he exclaimed:"Is this dying? |
38940 | Later his father said,"Dudley, do you know the Lord Jesus Christ?" |
38940 | O Lord, be merciful, 122 Oh, Lord, shall I die at all? |
38940 | Others say that his last words were these addressed to the hesitating headsman,"Why dost thou not strike? |
38940 | Peters?" |
38940 | Shall I die at all? |
38940 | Some authorities give his last words thus:"Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all?" |
38940 | The watcher is with me; why tarry the wheels of his chariot?" |
38940 | Then she kneeled down, saying,"Will you take it off before I lay me down?" |
38940 | Then she tied the handkerchief about her eyes, and, feeling for the block, she said,"What shall I do? |
38940 | Thinking that he saw paper lying on the floor, he said:"Why is Schiller''s correspondence permitted to lie here?" |
38940 | Thou and this body were house- mates together; Wilt thou begone now, and whither? |
38940 | To test his consciousness, the Pastor asked,"Who prayed thus?" |
38940 | Well, they can, 318 Can this last long? |
38940 | What company has that, I pray? |
38940 | What doth all my glory profit, but that I have so much the more torment in my death?_"PIUS IX. |
38940 | What street are we in? |
38940 | What street are we in? |
38940 | When he was dying his father said to him,"Dudley, your mother has your hand in hers, can you press it a little that she may know you recognize her?" |
38940 | When this was done, he said:"Now, is my finger upon them?" |
38940 | Where is it? |
38940 | Where is it?" |
38940 | Whither wilt thou go?_"MAZARIN( Hortense Mancini, sister of the celebrated cardinal), 1647- 1699. |
38940 | Why do you thus look at me? |
38940 | Why, then, oh, Lord, if ever, why not now?_"His mother, Monica, was a woman of the most devoted piety. |
38940 | Will not all my riches save me? |
38940 | Will not all my riches save me? |
38940 | Wilt thou break a bruised reed? |
38940 | Wilt thou break a bruised reed?_"So great was his cruelty and so oppressive his tyranny, that his own subjects rose in desperation and slew him. |
38940 | Yet more trouble?" |
38940 | Yet more trouble?_"These words he is reported to have spoken after the executioner had opened his body to extract his heart. |
38940 | [ 4][ 4]_ Enter the KING, SALISBURY, WARWICK, to the CARDINAL in bed.__ King._ How fares my lord? |
38940 | away!--why thus do ye look at me?" |
38940 | bury me? |
38940 | enquired one,"are you not afraid of becoming food for birds of prey and wild beasts?" |
38940 | how deep will be thy sorrow at the news, 68 O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee? |
38940 | is there no bribing death? |
38940 | lower your arms, otherwise you will miss me or only wound me._"Some say his last words were:"Is there no priest at the château?--is there no priest?" |
38940 | said she,"I dare not, lest--""Emma, will you? |
38940 | she exclaimed,"is_ must_ a word to be addressed to princes? |
38940 | where should he die? |
39754 | ''Has he written for the piano, too?'' 39754 ''Now what is the second part of the first allegro like?'' |
39754 | ''What''s that? 39754 ''Where did you get such a ghastly idea?'' |
39754 | ''Where does Mr. Liszt live?'' 39754 Am I a piano teacher?" |
39754 | And Joseffy? |
39754 | And what soul thus cruelly bruised, when the tempest rolls away, seeks not to rest its memories in the pleasant calm of rural life? |
39754 | Before we had a chance to hint of one hope long deferred, that of hearing Liszt play, he asked,''Have you heard Bülow?'' 39754 Do we experience this exaltation nowadays? |
39754 | How is it, my esteemed and beloved friend, you have never forgiven? |
39754 | Is it possible, I ask, to make a more difficult avowal with more delicacy or greater frankness? 39754 Liszt smote his breast thrice, and continued:''I know a man( or is it indeed a human being?) |
39754 | The bit stuck in my mouth, and, trembling with indignation, I said sharply:''My prince, am I not your guest, too? |
39754 | What is life but a series of preludes to that unknown song whose initial solemn note is tolled by Death? 39754 What response did Liszt make to these rude words? |
39754 | You ask how he played? 39754 You would like to hear something about Liszt? |
39754 | _ Wer aber wird nun Liszt helfen?_This half humorous, half pathetic cry of his had its tragic significance. |
39754 | ''Well, what did you think of him?'' |
39754 | ''What are you doing, my dear friend?'' |
39754 | ''Will you play?'' |
39754 | ( Query: What is the symphonic archetype?) |
39754 | ( Which should you prefer hearing, the Norma of Thalberg or the Lucia of Liszt? |
39754 | ("O Lord, how long? |
39754 | A LISZT SON? |
39754 | A grim smile passed over the face of the great composer as he replied:"O Herr, wie lang?" |
39754 | Aloud, and in a tone of astonishment, Liszt repeated the words,''Received for my playing?'' |
39754 | Already on the way to Kalkbrenner( who plays a note of his now? |
39754 | Am I dreaming, or under a spell? |
39754 | And can not Weimar lay claim to a Tannhäuser performance as early as 1849, the Lohengrin production in 1850, and the Flying Dutchman in 1853? |
39754 | And do not I play in Ratibor, and with a Nachtigall? |
39754 | And how many more? |
39754 | And the public? |
39754 | And the third Mephisto Waltz for piano? |
39754 | And then were there not Liszt and his Princess Wittgenstein at Weimar, and the crew of pupils, courtiers and bohemians who collected at the Altenburg? |
39754 | And what soul thus cruelly bruised, when the tempest rolls away, seeks not to rest its memories in the calm of rural life? |
39754 | And when was there ever such a friend? |
39754 | Angelo consented willingly to pose for the piper, but all questions as to his family extraction were answered with a laconic Chi lo sa? |
39754 | Architecture is nearest allied to music in its fundamental principles-- can a formless house or church or any other building be imagined? |
39754 | Are there no more enchanters like Liszt? |
39754 | As a man or as an artist? |
39754 | At last she asked him in a cool and off- hand manner:"''Did you do a good stroke of business at the concert you gave in Italy?'' |
39754 | Brahms or Reger? |
39754 | But an apostate? |
39754 | But could she have foreseen that Richard Strauss, Parsifal- like, had caught the whizzing lance of the Klingsor of Weimar, what would she have said? |
39754 | But for what instrument were the sonatas of Beethoven composed? |
39754 | But seeing that Chopin evolved so much, why should he not also have evolved this? |
39754 | But what boots leading motives-- as old as the hills and Johann Sebastian Bach-- or symphonic poems nowadays? |
39754 | But what was it that happened? |
39754 | But what was to be done? |
39754 | But why did you talk about Kalkbrenner, and a sonata by him for the left hand? |
39754 | But, my dear friend, how was it two months ago at the Conservatory that with the same piece you produced such a wonderful effect? |
39754 | Did Liszt ever love? |
39754 | Did Wagner mean it all? |
39754 | Do his hands only attend to the office of a double winch on a street organ? |
39754 | Do we know many of the great artists capable of writing''the defective side of my talent''? |
39754 | Do you know the Polonaise, by Tschaïkowsky, transcribed by him? |
39754 | Do you not hear the croaking of Poe''s raven? |
39754 | Does not invention belong to such characteristic variation? |
39754 | Had she not been nicknamed"Fürstin Hinter- Liszt"because of the way she followed him from town to town when he was giving concerts? |
39754 | Has he to dispense with his brain and with his feelings in his mechanical execution of the prescribed performance? |
39754 | Has he to supply the ear only with a photograph of the object before him? |
39754 | Has n''t some one said,"See Naples and die-- of its smells?" |
39754 | Have I indeed heard Liszt? |
39754 | Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven had never written anything else; who would have dared to do other than they? |
39754 | He asks, is he never to be taken more seriously than as a pianist, is he not worthy of recognition as a musician, a composer? |
39754 | How can any one_ recite_ upon the pianoforte?" |
39754 | How did Liszt bear the disappointment? |
39754 | How does he accomplish this? |
39754 | How far will the pursuit of technic go, and what will be the effect upon the mechanical future of the instrument? |
39754 | How he treated the clarinet solo in the trio of the menuetto, and the winding of the rondo? |
39754 | How many to- day know the name of Anton Rubinstein''s master? |
39754 | How shall I describe what Liszt made of these genial movements on a first acquaintance? |
39754 | How shall I say it? |
39754 | I wonder what the mothers of these young Lisztians thought of their sons''tact and delicacy? |
39754 | I''ll be no longer a play actor; henceforth I''ll be a tragic poet''?" |
39754 | Is any man ever a hero to his biographer? |
39754 | Is he really a mere spiritless machine? |
39754 | Is it not a remarkable effort for an old gentleman of seventy- two? |
39754 | Is it not related that Pio Nono bestowed upon the great pianist the honour of hearing his confession at the time he became an abbé? |
39754 | Is not the shape exact?'' |
39754 | Is the latter not exquisitely idyllic? |
39754 | Is the music, in itself, good or bad? |
39754 | Is there a composer who paints the infernal, the macabre, with more suggestive realism than Liszt? |
39754 | Is this the art of a hypnotiser? |
39754 | It was merely a friendly recognition tempered by humility, as if he meant to ask:--"Why do you need my blessing, friend?" |
39754 | LISZT''S CONVERSION"Have you read the story of Liszt''s conversion as told by Emile Bergerat in Le Livre de Caliban?" |
39754 | Liszt wrote to Wagner, June 2, 1855:"Then you are reading Dante? |
39754 | Now, would not one do it better_ pp._ and staccato? |
39754 | Of what use indeed would such information be to you? |
39754 | Of whom? |
39754 | Otherwise how explain that yawning chasm between Lohengrin and Tristan? |
39754 | Rubinstein, who happened to be there, said to her:''You are not going to be so crazy as to play this concerto? |
39754 | Shall I often meet him? |
39754 | Stumble and trip like a vulgar pianist, or pretend to be stopped by a defective memory? |
39754 | Suddenly turning to the young Bizet, whose fine memory and ability he well knew, he said:"''Did you notice that passage?'' |
39754 | The fact is that out of the known 1,300 compositions, only 400 are original and of these latter how many are worth remembering? |
39754 | There is inspiration in it, but it does not reach(?!). |
39754 | This is C. A. Barry''s answer to the question, Why was Liszt obliged to invent the term symphonic poem? |
39754 | This now commonly accepted term had never previously been used, and people asked,"What does he mean? |
39754 | To him the Psalmist''s words,''How long shall they that hate me, be exalted against me?'' |
39754 | Was I wrong to say my_ Anch''io_ in this land of improvisation?'' |
39754 | Was the Church after all a disappointment to him? |
39754 | Wear evening dress? |
39754 | Were the piano to be abolished how could you have the exquisite joy of hearing Faure in your own chamber? |
39754 | What could he do in such a perplexing cause? |
39754 | What is it that brings into our dwellings an echo of the Conservatory concerts? |
39754 | What is it that gives us the opera at our own firesides? |
39754 | What is that? |
39754 | What was the matter? |
39754 | What wonder? |
39754 | Whenever did they present an Englishman with a_ silver breakfast service_ for gratuitous performances?'' |
39754 | Where am I? |
39754 | Wherefore two servants before the cell of a monk; or if attendant spirits, why were they not, according to monastic rules, simply lay brothers? |
39754 | Who remembers the Warsaw of 1831 except Chopin lovers? |
39754 | Who was the lady in the case? |
39754 | Who, before Franz Liszt, would have dreamed of employing cymbal- effects in legitimate piano playing? |
39754 | Why did not Scheffer paint him thus, instead of representing him as one of the three Magi? |
39754 | Why, then, the inevitable wail from the Lisztians that the Liszt music is not heard? |
39754 | Would n''t his Holiness dissolve the original chains so that she could marry the man of her election? |
39754 | and why this half failure? |
39754 | and, rising with that peculiar aristocratic grace, he says in a mild, condescending tone:''For my playing-- am I to sign this document? |
41563 | If,they ask,"an animal sacrificed reaches heaven, why does the sacrificer not rather offer his own father?" |
41563 | The bird, however, without paying any attention to him, continually said to the monkeys,''Ho, why this vain endeavour?'' 41563 And did the gods appear with its production? 41563 But then who knows from whence it has arisen? 41563 But who spoke it there? 41563 By whom directed? 41563 How is the origin of the momentous doctrine which produced this change to be accounted for? 41563 Mathava the Videgha then said to Agni,Where am I to abide?" |
41563 | Rich, like Vedas murmured flowing, At once destroying all my grief? |
41563 | Since not by speech and not by thought, Not by the eye can it be reached: How else may it be understood But only when one says"it is"? |
41563 | The earth he has supported and this heaven: What god shall we with sacrifices worship? |
41563 | The first- born order- loving friend of waters, Where, pray, was he born? |
41563 | The second question is, How does the supreme soul become the individual soul( bhutatman)? |
41563 | The text of the Rigveda has come down to us in a single recension only; but is there any evidence that other recensions of it existed in former times? |
41563 | The third question is, How is deliverance from this state of misery possible? |
41563 | Thereupon an old monkey among them said,''Ho, what business of yours is this? |
41563 | This, for instance, is from the Panchatantra:-- Who is not made a better man By contact with a noble friend? |
41563 | Three of the seven stanzas of the first deserve to be quoted:-- What was the place on which he gained a footing? |
41563 | Was water there, and fathomless abysses? |
41563 | What evidence have we as to when the Mahabharata attained to the form in which we possess it? |
41563 | What motion was there? |
41563 | What was the wood, and what the tree, pray tell us, From which they fashioned forth the earth and heaven? |
41563 | Whence was it born? |
41563 | Where found he anything, or how, to hold by, What time, the earth creating, Viçvakarman, All- seeing, with his might disclosed the heavens? |
41563 | Where? |
41563 | Who knows it truly? |
41563 | Why, therefore, this vain endeavour? |
41563 | Ye sages, in your mind, pray make inquiry, Whereon he stood, when he the worlds supported? |
41563 | say, whence came he hither? |
41563 | whence issued this creation? |
41563 | who can here declare it? |
41722 | ''Where are the bears?'' 41722 And why have you come here to Oshima?" |
41722 | Do you enjoy flowers? |
41722 | Do you not find it very cold in Japan? |
41722 | Have you heard the news? |
41722 | So lovely in its cry-- What were the cuckoo if it laughed? |
41722 | Who are you? |
41722 | Why, no-- what is it? |
41722 | ***** THE SOUL''S QUEST OF GOD Oft have I asked the question, O God, who art Thou? |
41722 | And each time the answer comes in softest voice, Who art thou that askest Who I am? |
41722 | And where art thou that askest where I am? |
41722 | Are you troubled because you are about to die, leaving so many things unfinished? |
41722 | But one may ask, what is the connection between the New Year and the coming of spring? |
41722 | I wonder-- does he care?" |
41722 | If the lotus springs from mud, why should n''t a frog become a man? |
41722 | Is your best- beloved dead? |
41722 | Jealousy is the theme of many of the verses:"Where many a tree Crowns Takasu Hill, Does my wife see My vanishing sleeve And so take leave?" |
41722 | Lafcadio Hearn says,"I asked a charming Japanese girl:''How can a doll live?'' |
41722 | Moon is it? |
41722 | Shall I bring you pearls from the deep sea, or golden scales from the dolphins on Nagoya Castle? |
41722 | The Japanese love to decorate their houses with flowers, but we might say on entering, Where are they? |
41722 | Undiscouraged, the student tries again:''Do you eat_ meshi_?'' |
41722 | Where art Thou? |
41722 | answered one shaven- pate, laughing;"What think you?" |
41722 | or is it the firefly insect? |
41722 | or star? |
41722 | the babies of frogs will become but frogs, hey? |
41722 | the blush upon my cheek, Conceal it as I may, Proclaims to all that I''m in love, Till people smile and say-- Where are thy thoughts to- day?" |
41878 | Who,said he,"could but approve of such a scheme?" |
41878 | 325 APPENDIX WILL RUSSIA BE REPRESENTED ON THE MISSION FIELD? |
41878 | 337{ 3} CHINA IN TRANSITION CHAPTER I WHAT HAS AWAKENED CHINA? |
41878 | A foreigner, talking about Esperanto, remarked:"What would be the use of making an universal language? |
41878 | After we had talked some time the question was put plainly to them:"Would they support such a University?" |
41878 | At last he was asked,"Have you never allowed you were wrong in your whole life?" |
41878 | But why not accept the Chinese architecture as eminently fitted for the climate? |
41878 | Could any Western power hope to accomplish such a feat? |
41878 | Could any form of architecture be less suited to a country like China, where the sun is frequently oppressively hot, than Gothic architecture? |
41878 | Do they forbid both vices equally? |
41878 | He inquired,"If a University is started in China on such lines as you propose, will you guarantee that the teachers are efficient?" |
41878 | How can spiritual ministrations be performed by aliens, supported by alien money collected from a possibly hostile race? |
41878 | How is it possible that a mission like this can really solve the problem of making Christianity a national religion? |
41878 | Is it likely that they will be either able or willing to send into other countries efficient teachers of Western education? |
41878 | Is there any monument in the whole world that has more feeling of beauty about it? |
41878 | One may well ask what has accomplished this change, what has awakened China? |
41878 | The question is,"Will you become a materialist or a Christian?" |
41878 | The question put to the Chinaman is not,"Will you be Roman or Protestant?" |
41878 | They have intimate contact with the Chinese; they know both the recent origin of this vice and its terrible ravages; and what do they do? |
41878 | Those who have not realised the size of China will be perhaps inclined to ask why not unite the two schemes? |
41878 | WHAT HAS AWAKENED CHINA? |
41878 | We then changed the conversation to the question of"whether Confucius believed in God or not?" |
41878 | What will Chinese Christianity be? |
41878 | Who{ 24} can tell how we shall speak of China a few years hence? |
41878 | Why should there be any difference when another Oriental race comes in close proximity with Europe? |
41878 | Would any English parish like as its Rector a Chinaman, even if he were saintly and went so far as to cut off his queue? |
41878 | { 329} APPENDIX WILL RUSSIA BE REPRESENTED ON THE MISSION FIELD? |
41508 | All well? |
41508 | Am I engaged to marry a kangaroo? |
41508 | Are there any automobiles in South Africa? |
41508 | Are there lions knocking around here? |
41508 | Bubonic plague? |
41508 | By the way,said the"Yank,"perking up,"may I ask what your business is?" |
41508 | Coolie, Sahib? |
41508 | Did you attend the funeral yesterday? |
41508 | Did you fear for the ship? |
41508 | Did you get enough to eat? |
41508 | Do you see that low, white cloud to the right? |
41508 | Do you think the game will be close enough to see from the train? |
41508 | Do you think we''ll have a good voyage through the Bight, captain? |
41508 | Have you been in South Africa long? |
41508 | Have you been out to Wonderboom? |
41508 | Have you seen John Smith knocking around? |
41508 | How long are you going to stay in the country? |
41508 | How much are you going to pay this man? |
41508 | How much-- how much-- how much? |
41508 | Is it an uninterrupted waterfall? |
41508 | Is that Rottnest Light ahead, captain? |
41508 | Is there a boat knocking around? |
41508 | Is there much money in it? |
41508 | Is there much money in it? |
41508 | Sweet? |
41508 | They''re on the veld all the time-- see the zebra to the right? |
41508 | What is your business, may I ask? |
41508 | What''s your business? |
41508 | When do we scoff? |
41508 | Where do you come from? |
41508 | Where''s the fire? |
41508 | Will there be any more funerals today? |
41508 | Will you have some shiverin''jimmy? |
41508 | Will you please look at the fireless stove? |
41508 | You found her all right? |
41508 | You have n''t been in town long? |
41508 | How many cities are there in the United States, the size of Ballarat, having an art gallery, a museum and creditable botanical garden? |
41508 | How many persons have had the rare privilege of looking into an active volcano? |
41508 | How many poor, fatherless boys in other countries have several hundred dollars handed them at 21 years of age? |
41508 | Into what outlet does it empty? |
41508 | Meeting one alone, the questions he asks in quick succession--"What''s your name?" |
41508 | O''Gorman?" |
41508 | See the ostrich?" |
41508 | Soon the tunes of"Shall We Gather at the River?" |
41508 | The exports from Australia now are very large, but what will they be when the country becomes even one quarter settled? |
41508 | Where does the lava stream come from? |
41508 | or"Coolie, Memsahib?" |
41508 | whipped back the old Roman, as water dripped from the tear- ducts of his eyes and fire snapped from the corners--"Sweet? |
39474 | But at least you gave them food? |
39474 | But how did they live? |
39474 | But suppose they failed to bring food, what became of the workmen? |
39474 | But surely you paid them wages? |
39474 | Do missionaries do any good? |
39474 | Do you really mean to say,I asked,"that there are tigers here in this valley?" |
39474 | Do you see that strip of woods yonder? |
39474 | Do you see yonder small mountain? |
39474 | Half? |
39474 | Have the English any right in India? |
39474 | Is it not all a farce? |
39474 | Of the first dynasty? |
39474 | You are going to Lucknow? |
39474 | ( Did not this suggest to later Roman mythologists the river Styx, and the boatman Charon who conveyed departed souls to the gloomy shades of Pluto?) |
39474 | ( Was it here that Pythagoras, who studied in Egypt, obtained his doctrine of the transmigration of souls?) |
39474 | An American poet sings:"What is so rare as a day in June?" |
39474 | And are we not all pilgrims? |
39474 | And how has England used her power? |
39474 | And now of all this magnificence and glory of the ancient capital of Egypt, what remains? |
39474 | And when their working days are over, can they not be cared for as well as the Hindoos care for old horses and camels? |
39474 | And why? |
39474 | Are they like English or American Christians? |
39474 | Are they loyal? |
39474 | As I ride about I ask myself, Am I on the earth, or in the moon? |
39474 | Besides the temptation of such trinkets, who could resist the insinuating manner of the women who brought them? |
39474 | But for young men who are already educated in the government colleges, is there any way of reaching_ them_? |
39474 | But how came all this blood to be shed? |
39474 | But how can I convey to others what is but a picture in my memory? |
39474 | But how could the Khedive propose a change which was a virtual surrender of his own absolute power? |
39474 | But how were we to get back to Saharanpur? |
39474 | But if the fortune of war be against him, who so well as the devout Mussulman knows how to suffer and to die? |
39474 | But is it not practically impossible? |
39474 | But is there any hope of seeing Hindooism destroyed? |
39474 | But may there not have been a secret passage to the top? |
39474 | But what can one say of the desert? |
39474 | But what could it do so long as foreigners were selling opium in Canton, right before its eyes? |
39474 | But what if a wild elephant should come out upon us? |
39474 | But what signifies destroying slavery in the interior of Africa, when a system still more intolerable exists in Egypt itself? |
39474 | But what sort of Christians are they? |
39474 | But what were the gods they adored, and what sort of worship did they render, and how did all this act on the life and character of the people? |
39474 | But when and how? |
39474 | But when was English courage known to fail? |
39474 | But who would have sunshine_ forever_? |
39474 | Can any one estimate the influence of such a man, with his gentle wife at his side, who is also active both in teaching and in every form of charity? |
39474 | Can these things be, and we look on unmoved? |
39474 | Can we wonder that they hesitate to be sacrificed, and beg their government to move slowly? |
39474 | Do we need any other argument for Christian missions? |
39474 | Do we not all belong to that slow moving caravan, that marches steadily across the waste and disappears in the horizon? |
39474 | Does it make men better or worse-- happy or unhappy? |
39474 | Does not this simple statement furnish a perfect defence, and even an imperative demand for their establishment? |
39474 | Does this seem very hard? |
39474 | Egypt is a country with a long past, as we found in going up the Nile; may we not hope, also, with a not inglorious future? |
39474 | Has he also the gift of political wisdom? |
39474 | Has not England something to answer for? |
39474 | Has there been any change for the better since the great impeacher of Warren Hastings went to his grave? |
39474 | Have I not a right to say that to know men is to love them, not to hate them nor despise them? |
39474 | Help, if it come at all, must come from without, and where else can it come from, but from lands beyond the sea? |
39474 | How are they affected towards the English government? |
39474 | How came they to the happy seats Of everlasting day? |
39474 | How can a people be pure, when their very religion is a fountain of pollution? |
39474 | How has England governed India since that day? |
39474 | How much progress have the Egyptians made in four thousand years? |
39474 | How then are they to be reached? |
39474 | How then could a Mohammedan ruler establish his throne without exterminating the inhabitants? |
39474 | I ask, What idea do the Hindoos attach to bathing in the Ganges? |
39474 | I asked him what was the best guide- book to Egypt? |
39474 | I can not go down the steps without a dozen rushing toward me, calling out"Doctor, want a donkey?" |
39474 | I had read much of"the mild Hindoo"and"the learned Brahmin,"and I asked myself, May not their religion have some elements of good? |
39474 | I have asked many times, What gave the name to the Red Sea? |
39474 | I heard a noise overhead, and asked,''What is that?'' |
39474 | I know not what sudden freak of fancy took me just then, perhaps I thought, How would it seem to be a king even in his tomb? |
39474 | I stand on the bank of the Great River, and ask if it brings not some secret out of the heart of Africa? |
39474 | If England by her own wicked policy provoked the Mutiny, is she not guilty of the blood of her children? |
39474 | If God be for us, who can be against us? |
39474 | If she has suffered terribly, did she not pay the penalty of her own grasping ambition? |
39474 | If such be the heat in January, what must it be in July? |
39474 | If they may fight this battle in England, may we not fight the battle of truth with error and ignorance in Hindostan? |
39474 | If with all these things against them, English skill and courage and discipline triumphed at last, can it ever be put to such a test again? |
39474 | In that day will not nature share in the joy of man''s deliverance? |
39474 | Is it a good or bad faith? |
39474 | Is it not better at least than no religion? |
39474 | Is it not often so in life? |
39474 | Is it purification or expiation, or both? |
39474 | Is it something in the air, that quickens the blood, and reacts upon the brain? |
39474 | Is it strange that God should choose such a vast and silent temple as this for the education of those whom He would set apart for his own service? |
39474 | Is it the putting away of sin by the washing of water; the cleansing of the body for the sins of the soul? |
39474 | Is it too much to believe that there is a great future in store for South Eastern Asia? |
39474 | Is not life a desert, where, as on the sea, all paths are lost, and the traveller can only keep his course by observations on the stars? |
39474 | Is not this a sign of progress, of an era of peace and good will? |
39474 | Is there then any good reason-- any_ raison d''être_--for the establishment of missions in India? |
39474 | It has been one of the problems of physical geographers: What was the_ use_ of deserts in the economy of nature? |
39474 | It has been well said,"We are told that knowledge is power, but who has considered the power of ignorance?" |
39474 | It was very tempting, but what could we do without guides or interpreters? |
39474 | MISSIONS IN INDIA-- DO MISSIONARIES DO ANY GOOD? |
39474 | MISSIONS IN INDIA-- DO MISSIONARIES DO ANY GOOD? |
39474 | May we not get a hint from this for our instruction in America, where some of our best men are making earnest efforts for civil service reform? |
39474 | May we not take this as a sign of the way in which the Christian faith will stand against all the false religions of India? |
39474 | Might he not have risen in wrath out of his sarcophagus to see these frivolous moderns thus making merry in the place of his sepulture? |
39474 | Needs it any argument to show how impossible is good government under a creed in which there is no recognition of justice and equality? |
39474 | Or is it the sensation of rising into a higher atmosphere, of"going up into heaven?" |
39474 | Or is there in it some idea of atonement? |
39474 | Pursuing my inquiry into the character of her neighbors, I asked,"Have you any snakes about here?" |
39474 | Shall she be left to herself, shut up between her seas and her mountains? |
39474 | THE TEMPLES OF EGYPT-- DID MOSES GET HIS LAW FROM THE EGYPTIANS? |
39474 | THE TEMPLES OF EGYPT-- DID MOSES GET HIS LAW FROM THE EGYPTIANS? |
39474 | Take it all in all, would you make the exchange? |
39474 | Taking it as an emblem of Christian truth, where is the chief corner- stone? |
39474 | The mountains smoke, and why not the Dutch? |
39474 | The same question has been raised in regard to the sea: Why is it that three- fourths of the globe are covered by water? |
39474 | This is certainly a curious coincidence, but may it not prove simply that the latter was derived from the former? |
39474 | Thus moving on in these slow and endless marches, what so natural as that the camel- riders should beguile their solitude with song? |
39474 | To add to the weirdness of the scene, the Arabs asked if we would like to see them perform one of their native dances? |
39474 | Was it not too bad that he could not be allowed to go to heaven in his own way? |
39474 | Was there ever a more complete and utter desolation? |
39474 | Was there ever a more touching inscription? |
39474 | Was there ever such a scene-- men, women, and children, by tens of thousands, in all stages of nakedness, pressing towards the sacred river? |
39474 | We asked why the Regent did not go abroad to see the world? |
39474 | We can only answer these questions by asking another: Who are meant by the people of India? |
39474 | What answer can be made to it? |
39474 | What are all the observatories of Greenwich, and Paris and Pulkowa, to such a rock- built citadel as the Great Pyramid? |
39474 | What can man do in the Arctic circle against the cold that locks up whole continents in ice? |
39474 | What does it all mean? |
39474 | What impression then could he make outside of the circle of his court? |
39474 | What is the fascination of this religious observance? |
39474 | What is the magic of a name? |
39474 | What is the secret of its power, by which it lives on from century to century, and seems as if it could not but by annihilating die? |
39474 | What must be the effect on the Hindoo mind of such a system, founded in justice, and enforced by a power which they can not resist? |
39474 | What painter that has visited Egypt has not tried to put on canvas that after- glow on the Nile, which is alike his wonder and his despair? |
39474 | What right have a handful of Englishmen, so far from their native island, in another hemisphere, to claim dominion over two hundred millions of men? |
39474 | What right have we to pronounce on his opinions and conduct any more than he upon ours? |
39474 | What would be thought of an avenue nearly two miles long, lined with over twelve hundred colossal sphinxes? |
39474 | What would he have said to see such a party disturbing the place of his rest at such an hour as this? |
39474 | When I asked,"Have you many leopards about here?" |
39474 | Who can but respect a people that honor their fathers and mothers in a way to furnish an example to the whole Christian world? |
39474 | Who can put bounds to such a race, that not content with a quarter of Asia, overflows so much of the remaining parts of the Eastern hemisphere? |
39474 | Who can understand Hindooism-- where it begins and where it ends? |
39474 | Who shall deliver them from the body of this death? |
39474 | Why is it that we feel such exhilaration in climbing mountains? |
39474 | Why should not man smoke, when even the earth itself respires through smoke and flame? |
39474 | Will anybody tell me that the people of India, if left alone, would have built their own railways? |
39474 | Will it be content with what it has gained, or will it press still further, and force China to the wall? |
39474 | Will the people of India wish to rise? |
39474 | With his Republican ideas of the right of every nation to govern itself, he can not help asking: What business have the English in India? |
39474 | With such a consciousness of duty done, who could fear to die? |
39474 | With such an advance in less than one generation, what may we not hope in the generation to come? |
39474 | With such results of English rule, who would not wish that it might continue? |
39474 | With such support to his physical weakness, who could not listen patiently to a man who was on his knees before him pleading for his life? |
39474 | Yet what do they all teach the anxious and troubled heart of man? |
39474 | _ Life_ in the desert? |
39474 | do you keep a family snake?'' |
39474 | who indeed exaggerate their reverence to such a degree that they even worship their ancestors? |
42736 | ( Midland dialect, about 1410- 1420? |
42736 | 1264- 1340? |
42736 | Can its chief features be traced in Roman institutions? |
42736 | Did this suggest to de Bourgogne the_ alias_"à le Barbe,"or was that only a Liége nickname? |
42736 | Does the manor date from the Roman Empire, or not? |
42736 | MANRIQUE, GÓMEZ( 1412?-1490? |
42736 | MANUEL DE MELLO, DOM FRANCISCO(? |
42736 | Naturally the question arose, had the existing Prayer of Manasses any direct connexion with the prayer referred to by the chronicler? |
42736 | Nitrogen, then, being so all- important, the question is, where is it to come from? |
42736 | One of them is the British Museum MS. Egerton 1982( Northern dialect, about 1410- 1420? |
42736 | The numerous niches, generally containing sacrificial(?) |
42736 | _ Sodium Permanganate_, NaMnO4.3H2O(? |
42736 | _ The Secret of Manichaeism._--How are we to explain the rapid spread of Manichaeism, and the fact that it really became one of the great religions? |
40565 | ''Do you mean to tell me,''I asked that dentist,''that I''ve got to go through life with that in my mouth?'' 40565 And your name is?" |
40565 | Business bum,''Missouri''? |
40565 | Did this man assault you? |
40565 | Do you mind walking? |
40565 | Had any rides on these Shanghai wheelbarrows? |
40565 | How are the Japanese on dentistry, Mr. Allen? 40565 How do you like Shanghai,''Missouri''?" |
40565 | How many children, Yamamoto? |
40565 | How much do you want for your day''s services? |
40565 | I called him up and asked him would he go to his office? 40565 Just what sort of a calling would fit that kind of a man? |
40565 | Oh, from Canada? |
40565 | So? |
40565 | That''s all right,''Missouri'',I said,"but,"waving his letter at him,"what the devil do you mean by handing me such a story as this?" |
40565 | Ushi, what for you mope? 40565 What have you to say for yourself?" |
40565 | What institution? |
40565 | What''s the matter,''Missouri''? |
40565 | What? 40565 Why in blazes did n''t you tell me that before we closed for$ 1.50?" |
40565 | Why not thirteen pounds? |
40565 | Why,she said,"you do n''t expect us to eat our meals off such dirty dishes, do you?" |
40565 | Wong,I said,"how fashion you talkee so? |
40565 | Yamamoto, I''ll hire you for the day,and Yamamoto fixed the seat and asked:"Where go?" |
40565 | Yamamoto, you got wife and children? |
40565 | Yes,a man from Massachusetts plaintively wailed,"it_ is_ hard when they loiter, is n''t it?" |
40565 | Your false teeth are n''t aching are they? 40565 --_The Author._] I asked a Japanese passenger who sat next to me and who was not one of the dissenters:What did the umpire say?" |
40565 | After you''ve helped all the rest, all that''s left for you is the neck, do n''t you know?" |
40565 | Allen?" |
40565 | Allen?" |
40565 | And could n''t we have ice water to drink? |
40565 | And the rubbish in the streets? |
40565 | Anything gone wrong since I saw you last? |
40565 | Back in the old district school days in one of McGuffey''s readers( was it the Fifth?) |
40565 | Bad news from home? |
40565 | Can slmoke stlate loom easy, see?" |
40565 | Can slmoke stlate loom easy, see?" |
40565 | Can slmoke stlate loom easy, see?"] |
40565 | China a republic? |
40565 | Did n''t I make a deal with you last night to be my rikisha boy today? |
40565 | Did n''t I make a deal with you last night to be my rikisha boy today? |
40565 | Did n''t I make a deal with you last night to be my rikisha boy today? |
40565 | Did you tell him about the funnel and anà ¦ sthetic?" |
40565 | Do you suppose I could get fixed up over there?" |
40565 | Ever been in London, dear old"Lunnun"? |
40565 | Fishing enough nuggets from the lot to pack the glass full of ice, I ordered it filled with water-- looked up at the boy and said:"Savvy? |
40565 | Get that? |
40565 | Get that? |
40565 | Had n''t he taken a chance in having the ship''s doctor play dentist? |
40565 | Has the treasurer of the Epworth League at home run off with the funds, or has your bank cashier run off with your safe?" |
40565 | He looked at me and said:"You''re from the United States, are n''t you?" |
40565 | He stops for an instant with a startled look-- surprise, and hurt wonderment, and"what for?" |
40565 | Hitch on behind and push, Ushi-- what difference if you pull or push? |
40565 | I exclaimed with admiration:"And she is going to be five stories high, is n''t she?" |
40565 | I said,"Ushi, you got a family?" |
40565 | I stepped up to one who looked the best to me and said:"What is your name?" |
40565 | I stopped, saluted, and said to him:"Did you wish to speak to me?" |
40565 | I''ll do the sacred bull business around this neck of the woods"199 Get that? |
40565 | I''m umpiring these bouts, and my decisions go, see?" |
40565 | I''ve mentioned that the straits are peaceful, have n''t I? |
40565 | Indignant? |
40565 | Long on mules and the bottom dropped out of the market? |
40565 | No wife, no children?" |
40565 | Not dress for dinner the next four days on the P.& O. with my English friends? |
40565 | Royalty, do n''t you know? |
40565 | Shake that bunch? |
40565 | The purser, on that peaceful Sabbath day, put this question to the passengers:"Do you want to sail on this ship or go ashore?" |
40565 | Was it really necessary to have them out? |
40565 | What did he say?" |
40565 | What do you want for your day''s services? |
40565 | Where is the scribe-- the boy, oh where is he? |
40565 | With Ushi duly coupled on behind--"Where go?" |
40565 | Wo n''t someone make a speech for these white Filipinos? |
40565 | You want rikisha?" |
40565 | [ Illustration: Get that? |
40565 | [ Illustration:"It_ is_ hard when they loiter, is n''t it?"] |
40565 | [ Illustration:"Ushi, what for you mope? |
40565 | [ Illustration:"Wong,"I said,"how fashion you talkee so? |
40565 | there was a very eloquent speech by some statesman( name has slipped my memory), entitled:"Whither Are the Cherokees to Go?" |
41959 | They let him ransom himself within seven days, demanding 400 measures( cavanes?) 41959 ), Culion(? 41959 ), Tablas, Panay, Busuanga(? 41959 ), and Pa- ki- nung( Busuanga?). 41959 ), having its own(?) 41959 );(?) 41959 1) The San hsü of Chao Ju- kua were Kia- ma- yen( Calamian), Pa- lao- yu( Palawan? 41959 And since this is so, what can your Majesty expect will happen if this continues? 41959 And who shall say it was not so? 41959 Between 627 and 649 envoys to China accompanied the tribute bearers from Dva- ha- la and Dva- pa- tan( Dapitan? 41959 Buhuanos, Bujuanos.--A heathen folk related to the Igorots( head- hunters? 41959 Bulalacaunos.--A wild people of Malay race( without Negrito mixture? 41959 Bungananes.--A warlike, head- hunting(?) 41959 Humanchi.--Heathen people of central Luzon(? 41959 Might this captain, who was greatly feared by all his foes, have been the Rajah Matanda whom the Spaniards afterwards encountered in Tondo in 1570? 41959 The people inhabit the larger part of Pangasinan and various localities of Zambales, Nueva Ecija, Benguet, and Porac(?). 41959 Tinivayanes.--Moros(?) 41959 What were the causes that led to the ill success of the Royal Company? 41959 Where will you find even the trace of so many millions of cane and nipa houses which have absorbed the money earned by past generations? 41959 Why is it that writers attribute great significance to the coming of the foreign business men, especially the American and British? 41959 Witness the story of the surprise of the Spaniards who heard slaves saying to their masters,What is there in it for me in this? |
41959 | [ 124] Effects of the galleon trade What were the effects of the Manila- Acapulco trade upon the economic growth of the Philippines? |
41959 | [ 163] Why was it that the opening of the ports, and the coming of the foreigners, resulted in the material progress of the country? |
41959 | [ 71] What were the causes that led to the decay of these old industries? |
41959 | or heathen(?). |
42747 | 31:34)? |
42747 | But how can the Christian religion, with its monotheistic worship, adjust itself without antagonism to the ancestor worship of Japan? |
42747 | But is there no element of truth in Animism? |
42747 | But may we not approach the devotees of such a faith with the words of the old Hebrew prophet:"Have we not all one father? |
42747 | Hath not one God created us?" |
42747 | Have these broader lands and more numerous peoples sprung from other and greater gods than yours? |
42747 | IS SHINTO A RELIGION? |
42747 | May it not rather be that, as there is only one sun to shine on all this habitable world, so there is one Heavenly Father of us all? |
42747 | What mean the hundreds of thousands of white- robed pilgrims who annually visit the numerous sacred shrines? |
37332 | A black frock? |
37332 | A_ black_ one? |
37332 | Ai n''t I jist? |
37332 | Ai n''t yer goin''to tell the missus? |
37332 | Ain''t-- ain''t yer angry, miss? |
37332 | And then she came in and got the buns, and gave them to you, did she? |
37332 | And will you tell me all about it? |
37332 | Any diamond- mines? |
37332 | Are there_ rats_ there? |
37332 | Are you absolutely hardened? |
37332 | Are you as poor as a beggar? |
37332 | Are you going to let him in, miss? |
37332 | Are you hungry yet? |
37332 | Are you hungry? |
37332 | Are you making something up in your head, miss? |
37332 | Are you so stupid that you can not understand? 37332 Are you very poor now, Sara?" |
37332 | Are you-- are you very unhappy? |
37332 | Are you_ sure_ the child was left at a school in Paris? 37332 Becky,"she said,"were n''t you listening to that story?" |
37332 | But what am I to do? |
37332 | But why do solemn things make you laugh so? |
37332 | But you are not one of her pupils? |
37332 | But you had reason to think the school_ was_ in Paris? |
37332 | Can I work? |
37332 | Can she-- walk? |
37332 | Can you do it, miss? |
37332 | Can you do that-- as well as speak French? 37332 Can you get across?" |
37332 | Could it be-- robbers? |
37332 | Could n''t you go to school, too? 37332 Could n''t you go to that place with me, papa?" |
37332 | Could you suppose and pretend if you were a beggar and lived in a garret? |
37332 | Dare you stay here a few minutes? |
37332 | Did Ram Dass bring the things? |
37332 | Did n''t you think you heard something? |
37332 | Did they, miss? |
37332 | Did you expect me to keep it hot for you? |
37332 | Did you find it? |
37332 | Did you see her? 37332 Did you see,"said Janet to Nora, as they went back to the room--"the little- girl- who- is- not- a- beggar was passing? |
37332 | Did you tell Mr. Carrisford,Donald shouted again,"about the little- girl- who- isn''t- a- beggar? |
37332 | Did you? |
37332 | Do n''t you intend to thank me? |
37332 | Do n''t you remember? |
37332 | Do yer like it, Miss Sara? |
37332 | Do yer? |
37332 | Do you always pretend it is the Bastille? |
37332 | Do you know where she is? |
37332 | Do you like it? |
37332 | Do you think I am very happy? |
37332 | Do you think he is a Chinee? 37332 Do you think she_ does n''t_ know things?" |
37332 | Do you think you can? |
37332 | Do you think,Becky faltered once, in a whisper--"do you think it could melt away, miss? |
37332 | Do you think-- you_ could_? |
37332 | Do you want to buy something? |
37332 | Does n''t it_ look_ real? |
37332 | Does your papa send you books for a birthday present? |
37332 | Found out what? |
37332 | Has she a black frock in her sumptuous wardrobe? |
37332 | Have n''t you had any dinner? |
37332 | Have you a-- a pain? |
37332 | Have you any new suggestion to make-- any whatsoever? |
37332 | Have you done your work? |
37332 | Have you forgotten? 37332 Have you never tried?" |
37332 | Have_ you_, Miss Minchin? |
37332 | He always says,''Tom, old man-- Tom-- where is the Little Missus?'' |
37332 | He-- he wo n''t run out quickly and jump on the bed, will he? |
37332 | He_ is_ plain- looking, miss, ai n''t he? |
37332 | Here, miss? 37332 How are you getting on with your French lessons?" |
37332 | How are you? |
37332 | How dare you think? 37332 How did your father lose his money?" |
37332 | How do I know? |
37332 | How do you know he is a Lascar? |
37332 | How many? |
37332 | How-- how are you? |
37332 | I like it, do n''t you? |
37332 | I? |
37332 | If she was turned out where would she go? |
37332 | If she''s so fond of her, why does n''t she keep her in her own room? 37332 If you please, Miss Minchin,"said Sara, suddenly,"may n''t Becky stay?" |
37332 | If you please,said Sara,"have you lost fourpence-- a silver fourpence?" |
37332 | Is it a nice one? |
37332 | Is it anything to do with the row that has been going on? |
37332 | Is it the Bastille yet? |
37332 | Is it true,Ermengarde whispered, as they went through the hall--"is it true that you have a play- room all to yourself?" |
37332 | Is it, papa? |
37332 | Is it-- something that will frighten me? |
37332 | Is it? |
37332 | Is n''t it nice? |
37332 | Is n''t it? |
37332 | Is that there your best? |
37332 | Is this a new pupil for me, madame? |
37332 | Is this the place? |
37332 | Jist ai n''t I? |
37332 | Lavinia,--with a new giggle,--"what do you think Gertrude says?" |
37332 | Like it? |
37332 | Listen; the two knocks meant,''Prisoner, are you there?'' |
37332 | M- must I go and tell her now? |
37332 | May I creep up here at night, whenever it is safe, and hear the things you have made up in the day? 37332 May I have something to eat?" |
37332 | May I, really? 37332 May I?" |
37332 | May we talk about the lost little girl? |
37332 | Me hear it? |
37332 | Might I-- would you allow me-- jest to come in? |
37332 | Miss Amelia,she said in a low voice,"Miss Minchin says I may try to make her stop-- may I?" |
37332 | Not go in? |
37332 | Now wo n''t you tell your part of it, Uncle Tom? |
37332 | Of what? |
37332 | Oh, Donald( this was Guy Clarence''s name), Janet exclaimed alarmedly,"why did you offer that little girl your sixpence? |
37332 | Oh, have you seen her since then? |
37332 | Oh, may I? |
37332 | Oh,she exclaimed,"why did I not think of that before?" |
37332 | Oh,_ do_ you think you can? |
37332 | Sara,she said in a timid, almost awe- stricken voice,"are-- are-- you never told me-- I do n''t want to be rude, but-- are_ you_ ever hungry?" |
37332 | Sara,she said,"do you think you can bear living here?" |
37332 | Set the table, miss? |
37332 | Shall I give him to the Lascar? |
37332 | Shall she? |
37332 | Shall you drive in a drosky? |
37332 | Shall you see the Czar? |
37332 | Since when? |
37332 | So you are Miss Minchin? |
37332 | That I did not know what I was doing? |
37332 | That what? |
37332 | The child the Russian people adopted? |
37332 | The diamond- mines? |
37332 | Things that''s good to eat? |
37332 | This''ere,she suggested, with a glance round the attic--"is it the Bastille now-- or has it turned into somethin''different?" |
37332 | To eat, miss? |
37332 | To you? |
37332 | Was he,she said, with a glance toward the closed door of the library--"was_ he_ the wicked friend? |
37332 | Was it-- a ghost? |
37332 | Was that a rat? |
37332 | What am I to do? |
37332 | What are they now, miss? |
37332 | What are you crying for, Ermengarde? |
37332 | What are you doing? |
37332 | What are you going to tell your father? |
37332 | What are you laughing at, you bold, impudent child? |
37332 | What are you staring at? |
37332 | What are you thinking of? |
37332 | What are you''supposing,''Sara? |
37332 | What child am I? |
37332 | What could it be? |
37332 | What did she say? |
37332 | What did you say? |
37332 | What do you mean by bringing her here? |
37332 | What do you mean by such conduct? 37332 What do you mean by''At first,''my child?" |
37332 | What do you mean? |
37332 | What do you mean? |
37332 | What do you think? |
37332 | What for? |
37332 | What is Sara thinking of? |
37332 | What is her name? |
37332 | What is in them? |
37332 | What is it, darling? |
37332 | What is that? |
37332 | What is the matter, Becky? |
37332 | What is your name? |
37332 | What news? |
37332 | What next, now? |
37332 | What shall I do when I have no one to say solemn things to me? 37332 What shall you do with him?" |
37332 | What sort of things? |
37332 | What was it? 37332 What was it?" |
37332 | What was your father''s name? |
37332 | What were they doing when Miss Minchin caught them? |
37332 | What were you thinking? |
37332 | What were you wondering? |
37332 | What''ll we set it with? |
37332 | What-- sort of thing? |
37332 | What? |
37332 | What? |
37332 | What_ is_ she crying for? |
37332 | What_ is_ the matter, sister? |
37332 | What_ is_ the matter? |
37332 | What_ were_ his business troubles? |
37332 | What_ were_ they? |
37332 | Where do you live? |
37332 | Where does it all come from? |
37332 | Where have you wasted your time? |
37332 | Where is my room? |
37332 | Where is she? |
37332 | Where is your papa? |
37332 | Where? 37332 Which hungry day was it?" |
37332 | Who gave you those buns? |
37332 | Who is Emily? |
37332 | Who is Emily? |
37332 | Who is she? |
37332 | Who is that little girl who makes the fires? |
37332 | Who planned it? |
37332 | Who was he? |
37332 | Who-- who_ are_ you talking to, Sara? |
37332 | Why did n''t you stay all night? |
37332 | Why do you look at me like that? |
37332 | Why is n''t it, Sara? |
37332 | Why not? |
37332 | Why should n''t she? |
37332 | Why was I not man enough to stand my ground when things looked black? |
37332 | Why? |
37332 | Why? |
37332 | Will Moscow be covered with snow? |
37332 | Will he come? 37332 Will he let me catch him?" |
37332 | Will she come in here? |
37332 | Will there be ice everywhere? |
37332 | Will you-- tell me-- about the diamond- mines? |
37332 | Will you? |
37332 | Would you like to see Emily? |
37332 | You can speak French, ca n''t you? |
37332 | You live next door? |
37332 | You sent the things to me,she said, in a joyful emotional little voice--"the beautiful, beautiful things? |
37332 | You think that it can be done while she sleeps? 37332 You were born in India,"he exclaimed,"were you? |
37332 | ''I beg your pardon, cook;''''May I trouble you, cook?'' |
37332 | ''If you please, cook;''''Will you be so kind, cook?'' |
37332 | All about the Prince-- and the little white Merbabies swimming about laughing-- with stars in their hair?" |
37332 | Am I the same cold, ragged, damp Sara? |
37332 | And oh, wo n''t you invite the prisoner in the next cell?" |
37332 | Are n''t you hungry?" |
37332 | Are you sure it was Paris?" |
37332 | Are you too frightened to want to see him?" |
37332 | But what did it all matter while she was living in this wonderful mysterious story? |
37332 | Can you guess what he says, Carmichael?" |
37332 | Carrisford?" |
37332 | Carrisford?" |
37332 | Could I do that?" |
37332 | Did you see how queer she looked?" |
37332 | Did you tell him she has new nice clothes? |
37332 | Do n''t you know that Sara is your mamma? |
37332 | Do n''t you think so?" |
37332 | Do n''t you want Sara for your mamma?" |
37332 | Do you hear-- papa is dead? |
37332 | Do you hear? |
37332 | Do you hear?" |
37332 | Do you think he ever_ would_ jump?" |
37332 | Do you wonder that she felt sure she had not come back to earth? |
37332 | Does Miss Minchin know? |
37332 | Had n''t we better be quick?" |
37332 | Has she a black one?" |
37332 | Has she been sent away? |
37332 | Have you never pretended things?" |
37332 | How can she know things?" |
37332 | How did you find it out?" |
37332 | How do we know he does n''t think things, just as we do? |
37332 | How do you know mine are fairy stories? |
37332 | How is a man to get back his nerve with a thing like that on his mind? |
37332 | If-- if, oh please, would you let me wait on her after I''ve done my pots an''kettles? |
37332 | Is this my garret? |
37332 | May I try, Miss Minchin?" |
37332 | Me?" |
37332 | Miss Minchin''s voice was almost fierce when she answered:"Where is Sara Crewe?" |
37332 | Monkey, my love, have you a mind?" |
37332 | Nobody said,''Would n''t you rather be a sparrow?''" |
37332 | She paused a moment, and then added with a touch of awe in her voice:"You are_ clever_, are n''t you?" |
37332 | That she is left on my hands a little pauper instead of an heiress?" |
37332 | That there does seem real now, does n''t it? |
37332 | That was about it, was n''t it?" |
37332 | The card, miss,"rather doubtfully;"''t warn''t wrong of me to pick it up out o''the dust- bin, was it? |
37332 | Was the row about that? |
37332 | What are you now?" |
37332 | What can I do?" |
37332 | What can I do?" |
37332 | What could such a thing mean? |
37332 | What did she say that for?" |
37332 | What does this mean?" |
37332 | What steps shall I take next?" |
37332 | What was the child made of? |
37332 | What were you thinking?" |
37332 | What would happen now? |
37332 | What would_ he_ say if he knew where you are to- night?" |
37332 | What_ can_ have happened?" |
37332 | What_ do_ you think of them?" |
37332 | What_ is_ the matter? |
37332 | What_ shall_ I do?" |
37332 | When a letter is written, how often one remembers things omitted and says,"Ah, why did I not tell them that?" |
37332 | Where? |
37332 | Why ca n''t you tell your father_ I_ read them?" |
37332 | Why did she write? |
37332 | Why do n''t you like me any more?" |
37332 | Will he come?" |
37332 | Will you not do your duty to your poor papa and come home with me?" |
37332 | Would he let her catch him, or would he be naughty and refuse to be caught, and perhaps get away and run off over the roofs and be lost? |
37332 | Would you have me for yours? |
37332 | Would you like to hear the rest?" |
37332 | Would you like to hold her?" |
37332 | You should n''t eat sweets,''and my uncle is always asking me things like,''When did Edward the Third ascend the throne?'' |
37332 | You would, would n''t you, little missus?" |
37332 | _ Can_ you?" |
37332 | and,''Who died of a surfeit of lampreys?''" |
37332 | is that you?" |
37332 | she cried out;"did he tell Ram Dass to do it? |
37332 | who does it, miss?" |
41888 | ***** By what amount was the Estate Duty increased or decreased? |
41888 | ***** How was the Judge''s property divided? |
41888 | ***** How was this divided? |
41888 | ***** What Legacy and Succession Duty was payable on behalf of Mrs. Tulip, and by Mr. Hunter? |
41888 | ***** What amount was eventually received by each Legatee? |
41888 | ***** What amount was paid to Mrs. Huggins on the 30th June, 1914? |
41888 | ***** What did he do? |
41888 | ***** What happened to the £ 1,200 of which he died possessed? |
41888 | ***** What was it? |
41888 | ***** What was the value of the Net Legacy received by each Beneficiary? |
41888 | An mea interest? |
41888 | An mea interest? |
41888 | At si nulla bona reliquit? |
41888 | At si nulla bona reliquit? |
41888 | But does it concern me? |
41888 | But what if he did n''t do any(thing) good? |
41888 | But what if he left no goods? |
41888 | De mortuo illo quid dicam? |
41888 | De mortuo illo quid dicam? |
41888 | F. An sic habet? |
41888 | F. An sic habet? |
41888 | F. Quid tibi nunc est? |
41888 | F. Quid tibi nunc est? |
41888 | How are you, my esteemed friend? |
41888 | How much did each receive? |
41888 | How should the property of the late Septimus Hawkins be distributed, and how much did the respective beneficiaries receive? |
41888 | If that''s how it is, how much? |
41888 | Is that how it is? |
41888 | Mea uxor dixit te venturum; My wife said you were coming; nonne ob testamentum amitae ejus? |
41888 | Mea uxor dixit te venturum; nonne ob testamentum amitae ejus? |
41888 | Num quid novi est? |
41888 | Num quid novi est? |
41888 | O fool, many things can come"between the mouth and the morsel"[ Latin idiom, like"many a slip between cup and lip"?] |
41888 | Quem heredem instituit? |
41888 | Quem heredem instituit? |
41888 | Quid agis vir doctissime? |
41888 | Quid agis vir doctissime? |
41888 | Sed quid si nil boni fecit? |
41888 | Sed quid si nil boni fecit? |
41888 | Si sic habet, quanti? |
41888 | Si sic habet, quanti? |
41888 | Suave est ex magno tollere acervo; It''s pleasant to receive a big heap; ejus pecunia quid non facere possim? |
41888 | Suave est ex magno tollere acervo; ejus pecunia quid non facere possim? |
41888 | What did the Rooker Family receive, and what duties were payable by them? |
41888 | What shall I say about the deceased? |
41888 | What''s happening? |
41888 | What''s the matter with you? |
41888 | Whom did he name as heir? |
41888 | is it about the will of her aunt? |
41888 | with his money, what could n''t I do? |
3808 | And Frycollin? |
3808 | And I shall tell him--"What? |
3808 | And by what right, Messieurs Balloonists, did you insult and threaten me in your club in such a way that I am astonished I came out of it alive? |
3808 | And for how long, citizen engineer,asked Uncle Prudent, who was nearly exploding,"for how long do you intend to exercise that right?" |
3808 | And how long will that last? |
3808 | And if this voyage does not suit us? |
3808 | And if we have done it? |
3808 | And made the conquest of the air? |
3808 | And shall we last long like that? |
3808 | And then? |
3808 | And what would you have done, if you had had the honor? |
3808 | And when will he come back? |
3808 | And who knows that they do n''t watch us at night? |
3808 | And why, Fry, why? 3808 And will you tell us where we are going?" |
3808 | And will you tell us where we are? |
3808 | And your servant? |
3808 | Are there any weapons on board? |
3808 | Are we going round the world? |
3808 | But whence comes this never- ending rustling? |
3808 | But where to? |
3808 | But who is this man? 3808 But,"asked Evans,"how are we to get out?" |
3808 | By what right did you attack us in Philadelphia in Fairmount Park? 3808 Could n''t we get up to the window and see where we are?" |
3808 | Did this thing ever smash? |
3808 | Did you do that? |
3808 | Do n''t you see any roofs of houses or monuments? |
3808 | Do n''t you smell something? 3808 Do you recognize it?" |
3808 | Do you think our prison has been moved at all? |
3808 | Do you think so? |
3808 | Do you think they would complain if they became colonists of X Island? |
3808 | Do you wish to know? |
3808 | Does n''t it cut? |
3808 | Escape? |
3808 | Has the fellow got the start of us? |
3808 | Have you all you want? |
3808 | How can you? |
3808 | How far off are we? |
3808 | If you have done it-- you deserve--"What, sir? |
3808 | Is it of ironwood? |
3808 | Is the wall made of sheet iron? |
3808 | It is not as good as Peking? |
3808 | Long? 3808 Montreal? |
3808 | Mr. Robur,said Tom"What is to be done with those two gentlemen and their servant?" |
3808 | Not even the top branches? |
3808 | Nothing broken on board? |
3808 | Phil Evans,said Uncle Prudent,"you have resolved, as I have, to sacrifice your life?" |
3808 | Phil Evans? |
3808 | Phil,said he one day,"is it quite certain that escape is impossible?" |
3808 | Shall we see Mr. Robur to- day? |
3808 | Shall we try, sir? |
3808 | Shipwrecked? |
3808 | So you are not crying any more? 3808 Suppose we say it was''Rule Doodle''and''Yankee Britannia''and adjourn to breakfast?" |
3808 | That wretched nigger will not be quiet, then? |
3808 | Then we are not in the clearing? |
3808 | Then what is the use of a dispute? |
3808 | To ask is not to answer,said Phil Evans,"and I repeat, by what right?" |
3808 | To eat me? |
3808 | Uncle Prudent? |
3808 | Was it so difficult when we were crossing the inhabited part of Europe to drop a letter overboard? |
3808 | Well? |
3808 | What do you see? |
3808 | What does the barometer say? |
3808 | What is it then? |
3808 | What is that, Uncle Prudent? |
3808 | What is that? |
3808 | What is the matter with you? |
3808 | What is the matter? |
3808 | What is the matter? |
3808 | What is the name of this singular personage? |
3808 | What? 3808 Where are we?" |
3808 | Who are you? |
3808 | Why should not this be the body in question? |
3808 | Why? 3808 Why?" |
3808 | Yes, the very cabin--"Have those scoundrels set it on fire? |
3808 | A plunge would give them their liberty; and once they had reached the river, how could Robur get them back again? |
3808 | A signal, doubtless? |
3808 | And Frycollin? |
3808 | And above all, what was Robur going to do with them? |
3808 | And during this extraordinary flight what was Frycollin doing? |
3808 | And how about the match that was burning in the deserted cabin? |
3808 | And how? |
3808 | And if the"Go- Ahead"was flying the American colors, did not the"Albatross"display the stars and golden sun of Robur the Conqueror? |
3808 | And if your search is in vain, do you not leave your house and take up your quarters in another? |
3808 | And is not that rather a difficult operation for an artificial machine? |
3808 | And now, who is this Robur? |
3808 | And the spark that was creeping along to the dynamite? |
3808 | And was she not a vessel launched into the aerial sea? |
3808 | And what are we to do then? |
3808 | And what did they see? |
3808 | And what was the engineer going to do with his prisoners? |
3808 | And what was this telegram? |
3808 | And why had not Phil Evans been elected president of the club? |
3808 | At this moment the voice of Phil Evans was heard shouting,"Engineer Robur, will you give us your word of honor to leave us free on this island?" |
3808 | Aviator,"he said"you who talk so much of the benefits of aviation, have you ever aviated?" |
3808 | Besides, what is this mechanical movement in the flight of birds, whose action is so complex? |
3808 | But could they get at the magazines? |
3808 | But had the flying machine sufficient power to tow them through the water? |
3808 | But how? |
3808 | But if it is n''t the wind, what can it be?" |
3808 | But if the"Albatross"could not get out of the cyclone vertically could she not do something else? |
3808 | But if they had escaped asphyxia, how had they escaped being drowned in the Pacific? |
3808 | But on what parallel was it situated? |
3808 | But we are becalmed, and--?" |
3808 | But were there any parachutes in case of accident? |
3808 | But what could happen? |
3808 | But what could this thing be? |
3808 | But what was the good of such useless massacre? |
3808 | But where was this X? |
3808 | But which island was it of the thousands that dot the Pacific? |
3808 | But whither went the"Albatross?" |
3808 | But why was there no wind to assist at this magnificent experiment? |
3808 | But would she attempt it in the middle of the polar night, in an atmosphere of sixty below freezing? |
3808 | But would she stop? |
3808 | But, finally, who was this Robur? |
3808 | By what chain of accidents had he become one of the crew of the"Albatross?" |
3808 | By what meridian would she come out-- if she ever came out? |
3808 | By what right did you shut us up in that prison? |
3808 | By what right have you brought us against our will on board this flying machine?" |
3808 | By what strange whim was it that she was stopped over the city of Paris? |
3808 | Can not we do something now?" |
3808 | Chapter VII ON BOARD THE ALBATROSS"When will man cease to crawl in the depths to live in the azure and quiet of the sky?" |
3808 | Chapter X WESTWARD-- BUT WHITHER? |
3808 | Communicate? |
3808 | Could he there find a new crew? |
3808 | Could she not gain the center, where it was comparatively calm, and where they would have more control over her? |
3808 | Did he ever see an omelette made of bat''s eggs?" |
3808 | Did he pass his life in the air? |
3808 | Did his aeronef never rest? |
3808 | Did it not come to them appropriately to rise in person to protest against any apparatus that was heavier than air? |
3808 | Did they not merit such an honor? |
3808 | Does the"Albatross"still cruise in the atmosphere in the realm that none can take from her? |
3808 | From what country did this remarkable specimen come? |
3808 | Get into the Pacific, or go to the continent at the South Pole? |
3808 | Had he not some retreat in some inaccessible spot in which, if he had need of repose or revictualing, he could betake himself? |
3808 | Had he, like Icarus, fallen a victim to his own temerity? |
3808 | Had it sunk in the depths of the Atlantic, the Pacific, or the Indian Ocean? |
3808 | Had not the sons of Amerigo been called the sons of Cabot? |
3808 | Had not the time arrived for them to end the voyage by blowing up the ship? |
3808 | Had she sufficient mechanical power to escape through them? |
3808 | Had they become as deaf as they were patient? |
3808 | Has not Doctor Marcy suspected that the feathers open during the return of the wings so as to let the air through them? |
3808 | How could he make up his stock of provisions and the materials required for working his machines? |
3808 | How could such a thing be done in Philadelphia, and so secretly, too? |
3808 | How could the"Albatross"have been beached in Fairmount Park without its appearance having been signaled all over Pennsylvania? |
3808 | How did this Francois Tapage find himself in the service of the engineer? |
3808 | How had the engineer come to choose it? |
3808 | How large was John Wise''s balloon? |
3808 | How large was Nadar''s Géant? |
3808 | How large was the Giffard balloon at the 1878 Exhibition? |
3808 | How would the business end? |
3808 | If an observatory could not give a satisfactory answer what was the use of observatories? |
3808 | If we have to stop a day or two on the island--""We''ll stop, and if we have to fight an army of natives?" |
3808 | If you hear in your house strange and inexplicable noises, do you not at once endeavor to discover the cause? |
3808 | In what adventure had they embarked? |
3808 | Is it necessary to say so? |
3808 | Is n''t it burning powder?" |
3808 | Is the axis horizontal? |
3808 | Is the axis vertical? |
3808 | Is the domain of the southern pole a continent or an archipelago? |
3808 | Is the gentleman unaware that this flyer is a mammal? |
3808 | It may be interesting to know what had happened to the famous snuff- box after its fall? |
3808 | Need we say that the majority of the crowd had come from afar not so much to see the"Go- Ahead"as to gaze on these extraordinary men? |
3808 | Not a flagstaff, nor a church tower, nor a chimney?" |
3808 | Not any trees?" |
3808 | Now could Robur get back to the island for three or four hours if his screws were out of gear? |
3808 | Now he had recaptured them, would he carry them off into space, where it was impossible to follow him? |
3808 | Of what were their positive and negative plates? |
3808 | Or is it a palaeocrystic sea, whose ice melts not even during the long summer? |
3808 | Or were they reserving themselves to see how far this audacious contradictor would dare to go? |
3808 | Perhaps he would today have a chance of speaking to Robur? |
3808 | Perhaps it hurt you too much? |
3808 | Perhaps you think I am talking too much about myself? |
3808 | Perhaps you would like to stay there for a day or two?" |
3808 | Robur continued:"What? |
3808 | Shall we ever know? |
3808 | Should they follow the example of sailors in distress and enclose in a bottle a document giving the place of shipwreck and throw it into the sea? |
3808 | That being the case, where was this point? |
3808 | That is not a rock?" |
3808 | That two hours hanging cured you of it? |
3808 | The head of what animal did it resemble from the point of view of passional analogy? |
3808 | The match of which more than a third was now consumed? |
3808 | This aerolite could not be the object in question, for how could an aerolite blow a trumpet? |
3808 | To what series of experiments had they been invited? |
3808 | Under such circumstances, how could they distinguish the shape of the ground, the extent of the seas, the position of the islands? |
3808 | Was Robur thinking of going back? |
3808 | Was he expected by a little colony of which he was the chief? |
3808 | Was he going to keep them in his power and condemn them to perpetual aviation? |
3808 | Was it a bird beating with its wings the higher zones of space? |
3808 | Was it a flour mill that had anchored on it during the night? |
3808 | Was it an aerolite shooting obliquely through the atmosphere? |
3808 | Was it an island in the Pacific, in Australasia, or in the Indian Ocean? |
3808 | Was it by chance only that they were absent? |
3808 | Was it not necessary that he should again become absolute master of his invention? |
3808 | Was it some exuberant aeronaut rejoicing on that sonorous instrument of which the Renommée makes such obstreperous use? |
3808 | Was it, then, for the sole pleasure of his guests that he had brought the aeronef above the national domain? |
3808 | Was not that a much more suitable place for you than this of Uncle Prudent''s, where danger was daily welcomed? |
3808 | Was not that an insult as unpardonable as it happened to be just-- historically? |
3808 | Was not this a stirring up of strife between''the lighter''and''the heavier''than air? |
3808 | Was not this hurling a declaration of war into the very camp of the balloonists? |
3808 | Was she going more than round the world as Robur had said? |
3808 | Was she in mid- winter bound for the southern seas or continents round the Pole? |
3808 | Was the"Albatross"seen by the Arabs, the Mozabites, and the Negroes who share amongst them the town of Wargla? |
3808 | Was the"Albatross"to be shriveled up in their flames like a gigantic butterfly? |
3808 | Was there any chance of collision with another such machine? |
3808 | Was this fellow a madman or a hoaxer? |
3808 | What balloon, perfect as it might be, would be able to perform such a service? |
3808 | What could it be? |
3808 | What could they think except that they had fallen into the hands of people who intended to rob them? |
3808 | What does fog matter to her? |
3808 | What had been his history? |
3808 | What means had he that he should be able to build so costly a vessel as the"Albatross"and keep her building secret? |
3808 | What meridian ran through it? |
3808 | What was the cause of the stoppage? |
3808 | What was this intractable Robur going to do? |
3808 | What was this material, so hard that the bowie- knife of Phil Evans could not scratch it, and Uncle Prudent could not explain its nature? |
3808 | What was to be said in this matter? |
3808 | Where can he be?" |
3808 | Where did he come from? |
3808 | Where does he come from? |
3808 | Where is the"Albatross"going? |
3808 | Which was right; the Englishman or the American? |
3808 | Whither was the"Albatross"bound? |
3808 | Who are you?" |
3808 | Who was this Robur, of whom up to the present we know nothing but the name? |
3808 | Who were these two gentlemen? |
3808 | Why not Frycollin? |
3808 | Why two and not three? |
3808 | Why was there a look- out? |
3808 | Why, oh why, Frycollin, did you not remain at Boston with the Sneffels, and not have given them up when they talked of going to Switzerland? |
3808 | Why?" |
3808 | Will Robur, the Conqueror, appear one day as he said? |
3808 | Without these attempts, these experiments of his predecessors, how could the inquirer have conceived so perfect an apparatus? |
3808 | Would Robur destroy her? |
3808 | Would Uncle Prudent and Phil Evans refuse to be saved by him? |
3808 | Would it not take him much longer than he thought to get back to his old anchorage? |
3808 | asked Phil Evans,"have we the right to dispose of his life?" |
3808 | but how about the trumpet? |
3808 | said Robur, ironically,"how can you ask me such a question when you have only to cast down your eyes to enjoy a spectacle unparalleled in the world?" |
42854 | --vain to ask"Wherein shall we return?" |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | ? |
42854 | It was in vain to complain, saying,"Every one that doeth evil is good in the eyes of Yahweh,"or"Where is the God of judgment?" |
42854 | MALLET( or MALLOCH), DAVID(? 1705- 1765), Scottish poet and dramatist, the son of a Perthshire farmer, was born in that county, probably in 1705. |
42854 | See_ Who was Sir Thomas Malory?_ G. L. Kittredge(_ Harvard Studies and Notes_, vol. |
42854 | Wives_:--*_Khadija_( Children:--Qasim;? |
42854 | _ Chronological Table of Chief Events in the Life of Mahomet._[2]? |
42854 | ` Affan, d. A.H. 9;*_ Fatimah_, m.` Ali, d. A.H. 11):*_ Saudah bint Zam`ah_,? |
37330 | A what? |
37330 | And do you enjoy yourself at a show? |
37330 | And now, then, what do you think made Jeannie such a bright, loving, and intelligent animal? 37330 And now,"said my wife,"what about the story?" |
37330 | And what is a dog- show like? |
37330 | And would n''t you like to have a nice long coat like mine? |
37330 | And you''re a great beauty, Bit- o''-Fun,I said;"but are n''t your legs rather long for your body?" |
37330 | But supposing,I asked,"you took no prize?" |
37330 | But supposing? |
37330 | But was n''t he a happy dog when he got me up and out again? 37330 But why,"said I,"did n''t you tell him to put his nasty old basket on his back and take it off with him?" |
37330 | But wo n''t you be tired, dear? |
37330 | But would it be believed that this boy, this London boy, did n''t know where chickens came from? 37330 By the way, did ever you hear of, or read the account of, poor young Gough and his dog? |
37330 | Ca n''t you kill it, sir? 37330 Dawson,"I said,"what have you done with her?" |
37330 | Did I ever know what it was to be hungry? 37330 Did ever I see such a parcel of numskulls?" |
37330 | Did you commence the study of natural history at an early age, Gordon? |
37330 | Do I come of a high family, now? |
37330 | Do I think that Master Nero knows we are talking about him? 37330 Do n''t you think, dear, that Ida had better go in?" |
37330 | Do they give you beef- steak for prizes, then? |
37330 | Do you know,I replied,"that the starling is the best of all talking pets? |
37330 | Doctor,he would commence,"_ is_ it, is it a nate Irish pet?" |
37330 | Eh? 37330 Eh?" |
37330 | Eh? |
37330 | Fun and romps did I say, Aileen? 37330 How about the dewy freshness?" |
37330 | I have often heard you speak of your dog Tyro, Gordon,said Frank;"ca n''t you tell us his history?" |
37330 | I thought you said a while ago I was a high- bred mongrel? |
37330 | Is it a thremendeous big brute''av a black dog you''ve come to meet, sorr? |
37330 | Is it likely I would be singing so blithely if there were? |
37330 | Is that possible? |
37330 | Is that something very nice? |
37330 | Is that the reason,asked Ida,"why you sometimes say eight o''clock to him when you want him to go and lie down?" |
37330 | Is the bird alive then? |
37330 | Is the extra glass for yourself or for me? |
37330 | Is what, Dick? |
37330 | Is,he would repeat--"Is the darling starling a pretty pet?" |
37330 | Is? |
37330 | Need I tell of the grief of that dog''s master? 37330 Not seeing me make any purchase, Nero had evidently said to himself--`Why, nothing to carry? |
37330 | Now tell me this, what do they mean by judging by points? |
37330 | Object? |
37330 | Old dog, you are dead-- we must all of us die-- You are gone, and gone whither? 37330 Poor master loves me very much, and I love master too; But if anything came over me, whatever_ could_ he do? |
37330 | Pray how many prizes have you taken? |
37330 | Pretty fellow you are, ai n''t ye? |
37330 | Some one, more seriously and thoughtfully:` No; but would n''t you like to be a farmer?'' 37330 Steward,"I cried, as we were just under weigh,"did a boy bring a white pigeon for me?" |
37330 | Stuffed, is n''t it? |
37330 | Tell you a few? 37330 That is quite a child''s story, is n''t it?" |
37330 | There, you know what I mean, do n''t you, when I fondle your ear, and smooth it and spread it over my note- book? 37330 They are difficult to rear, are they not?" |
37330 | To be sure, you blockhead,said I;"how can I make feather- flowers from a live pigeon?" |
37330 | Used to you? |
37330 | Was Eenie pretty, did you ask? 37330 We will,"said Frank;"wo n''t we, Ida?" |
37330 | Well, Dickie, what is it now? |
37330 | Well, my love? |
37330 | Well, puss,says Man,"and what can you To benefit the public do?" |
37330 | Were you never afraid of losing poor Nero? |
37330 | What breed do you think I am? |
37330 | What did you do? |
37330 | What do you think they are saying? |
37330 | What had it been doing? 37330 What is it now?" |
37330 | What is it, then, my dear? |
37330 | What is it? 37330 What is it?" |
37330 | What is that you are writing? |
37330 | What say you, then, to the Highlands? |
37330 | What says Tupper about Sandy, birdie? 37330 What was Jeannie like, did you ask? |
37330 | What,he wanted to know,"did she mean by going on shore without leave?" |
37330 | What? |
37330 | What_ are_ you going to do? |
37330 | Whatever is it, Tip? |
37330 | Who is your fat friend? |
37330 | Whom is it from, I wonder, Ida,I said;"so late in the evening, too?" |
37330 | Why do I not come and romp and play? 37330 Why is it we all love the robin so? |
37330 | Why should that be so, I wonder? |
37330 | Why? |
37330 | Wo n''t you tell us something,said Ida,"about the blackbird and thrush? |
37330 | Wo n''t_ you_ take me out of here? |
37330 | Would a human friend have been as careful? 37330 Would you like to try him?" |
37330 | Yes,I replied;"but do n''t you like it?" |
37330 | You always seem to be well and happy, Nero,I said to him one day;"how do you manage it?" |
37330 | You do n''t love that dog, mouse? |
37330 | _ Is_,he asked one day,"the darling doctor a rascal?" |
37330 | _ What_ is it? 37330 ` Am I?'' |
37330 | ` And please, my lord,''continued Peggy,` may-- may--''` Well? |
37330 | ` Are n''t we having a splendid time, master?'' 37330 ` But,''you will say,` is"Fredabel"Spanish too, because I never heard of such a name before?'' |
37330 | ` Did n''t I take a cup at the Crystal Palace?'' 37330 ` Do you take me for a dog?'' |
37330 | ` How ever shall I manage?'' 37330 ` I did n''t stop long,_ did_ I, master?'' |
37330 | ` I suppose,''he seemed to say,` you wo n''t object to a little music, will you?'' 37330 ` Intrude? |
37330 | ` Objection to your dog on board?'' 37330 ` Please, my lord,''said Peggy, modestly,` may I have a divorce?'' |
37330 | ` Send him away?'' 37330 ` That fright your father?'' |
37330 | ` They wo n''t bite or anything, will they?'' 37330 ` What shall it be-- Dibdin?'' |
37330 | ` What''s the correct way to eat it?'' 37330 ` Where is Potassium Pompey?'' |
37330 | ` Where is Potassium Pompey?'' 37330 ` Where is me chee-- ild?'' |
37330 | ` Who is afraid?'' 37330 ` Who is there?'' |
37330 | ` Will you indeed?'' 37330 ` Will you turn him out and send him away?'' |
37330 | ` Wo n''t he be a bit tough?'' 37330 ` You ugly, deformed little thing,''I cried,` what do you want in my lady''s room?'' |
37330 | ` You''re after the fruit, are n''t you?'' 37330 A fellow does want to go on the tiles now and then, does n''t he? 37330 A lament for brighter skies born of memories of glad Italy? 37330 Affianced? 37330 Afraid of thieves? 37330 Aileen''s master(_ speaks_):And so you have come and laid yourself down beside me, Aileen, and left your playmates every one? |
37330 | Aileen, Nero, Bob, Gipsy, Eily, Broom, Gael, Coronach? |
37330 | Am I not perfection itself?'' |
37330 | And I do wonder why people do n''t keep them more often than they do?" |
37330 | And every day when I went down to see him Annie would innocently ask me--"See any odds on him this morning, doctor?" |
37330 | And the question comes to be, what shall I do with the body? |
37330 | And were n''t the big lemon- tinted gooseberries bearing the bushes groundwards with the weight of their sweetness, and praying to be pulled? |
37330 | And were n''t there trees laden with crimson and yellow raspberries? |
37330 | And what do you think my mistress did? |
37330 | Answering each other all the livelong night, bursting into song at intervals all the day, when, we wondered, did they sleep? |
37330 | But where or whither? |
37330 | But whither wilt thou go? |
37330 | But wo n''t we have a day of it, just?" |
37330 | But, doctor, what''s the good of my objecting? |
37330 | Call me Mirram, please, wo n''t you?'' |
37330 | Can any one say? |
37330 | Can you fight? |
37330 | Come on, dogs; where are you all? |
37330 | Could any one ever be half so kind or careful of me as she is? |
37330 | Could that wild, attenuated image in the mirror be my reflection? |
37330 | Dead? |
37330 | Derogatory, is it? |
37330 | Dickie would say, and continue,"Doctor, will you go a- clinking?" |
37330 | Did I actually make use of those words? |
37330 | Did ever dogs deserve supper more? |
37330 | Did n''t you?" |
37330 | Did the reader ever hear of the sailor who tamed a cockroach? |
37330 | Did they take it in turns to make night and day melodious, keeping watches like the sailors at sea? |
37330 | Do n''t you feel all over joyful? |
37330 | Do n''t you think so, birdie?" |
37330 | Do parrots know what they say? |
37330 | Do you think now, Bit- o''-Fun, I would have any chance?" |
37330 | Do you understand?" |
37330 | Does she ever forget to give me milk of a morning or to share with me her own dinner and tea? |
37330 | Does she not always have my saucer filled with the purest, freshest water? |
37330 | Eh?'' |
37330 | Eh?'' |
37330 | Funny, was n''t it? |
37330 | Got on shore, have you? |
37330 | Have n''t you taught me to look upon the flowers as living things? |
37330 | He looked up anxiously in my face, as much as to say,` Do you think the poor thing can live?'' |
37330 | He would trot into a kitchen with a friendly wag or two of his little tail, which said, plainly enough,"Is n''t it wet, though?" |
37330 | How beautiful is night?" |
37330 | How dared you, when you knew I was coming home to supper, and there was n''t a morsel in the larder?'' |
37330 | How ever should I be able to face my mistress again? |
37330 | How goes it this morning, master?" |
37330 | I cried, getting up to greet him,"what wind blew you all the way here?" |
37330 | I daresay you think yourself a pretty fellow now? |
37330 | I exclaimed,` what can have sent you out of the house so early? |
37330 | I exclaimed;"from that impudent bird? |
37330 | I often come to the door of my garden study and say to myself,"Where can the bird be to- night?" |
37330 | I would steal myself if I were used like that, would n''t you, madam? |
37330 | I''m only two years old and little over, and is n''t a second prize at a Crystal Palace show a great honour for a youngster like myself?'' |
37330 | I''m talking Greek again, am I? |
37330 | I''ve a very good mind to--""To what, Master Bill?" |
37330 | If two people were talking together underneath his cage, he would cock his head, lengthen his neck, and looking down quizzingly, say:"Eh? |
37330 | Intellect? |
37330 | Is it any wonder, then, that I soon turned as reckless as any of them? |
37330 | Is it not cruelty on my part, you may inquire, to counsel the robbery of a rook''s nest? |
37330 | Is it of that he is so proud? |
37330 | Is that thy lesson in the limes?" |
37330 | Is this better? |
37330 | It was very amusing to see how Dick jumped, and his look of astonishment as he said:"Eh? |
37330 | Joy, did I say? |
37330 | Keeping the master company, eh? |
37330 | Let me see, what shall I do? |
37330 | Might it not have been more merciful to have done so? |
37330 | My niece put her soft little hand in mine, as she said--"You have n''t forgotten the manuscript, have you?" |
37330 | Need I speak of the sorrow of the villagers? |
37330 | Nice evening, is n''t it?" |
37330 | No, you would n''t mind the heat; were n''t there strawberries as large as eggs and as cold as ice? |
37330 | No? |
37330 | Now is n''t Don Pedro a dear, good fellow? |
37330 | Now is the time to start up, and batter the bulkheads with your slipper; you are sure of half an hour''s good sport; but what then? |
37330 | Now, did you ever see such beautiful eggs?" |
37330 | Out for a_ walk_ did I say? |
37330 | Poor Grey, did we say? |
37330 | Privacy? |
37330 | So it was you who loved my silly wife?'' |
37330 | So the question came to be asked--"Maggie, dear, what_ shall_ we do with Pepsy?" |
37330 | So without looking up I said--"By the way, birdie, did ever I tell you Nero''s story?" |
37330 | Steward,"I continued,"your fingers ai n''t itching, are they, to kill that lovely creature?" |
37330 | Tell you the story? |
37330 | The author:"Yes, puss; did n''t you order me to write you a tale with tiny, tiny, tiny people in it? |
37330 | The conversation between them seemed to be something like the following--"_ Nero_:` You''re drowning, are n''t you? |
37330 | The lifeboat, sir? |
37330 | Then, if I did n''t answer--"_ Is_ it sugar-- snails-- sugar, snails, and brandy?" |
37330 | This is all Greek to you, is it? |
37330 | Try to bite, would you? |
37330 | Vixen, did I say? |
37330 | Was he an artist? |
37330 | Welcome? |
37330 | Were they not pets of your boyhood?" |
37330 | Wha''ll gie an auld sang for him? |
37330 | What are those slow and mournful notes ringing out from the grove in the stillness of night? |
37330 | What breed is he? |
37330 | What can he know?'' |
37330 | What can you want with a muffler? |
37330 | What do we speak about? |
37330 | What do ye come pottering around here at midnight for?" |
37330 | What do you think of that for architecture? |
37330 | What do you think of yourself, eh? |
37330 | What more could I wish?" |
37330 | What sweet little voice is that repeating the same soft song over and over again, and dwelling on the last syllable with long- drawn cadence? |
37330 | What was up, I wondered? |
37330 | What would you think of my honest dog there if he told you the electric telegraph was an impossibility, simply because_ he_ could n''t understand it? |
37330 | What_ is_ it, eh?" |
37330 | What_ is_ it?" |
37330 | Whatever have you been telling that little fool of a Fiddler?" |
37330 | Whatever is up with you to- day that you are barred and bolted like this? |
37330 | Where could he be, what would become of him, my only friend, my gentle, loving, noble dog, the only creature that cared for me? |
37330 | Where were we seated? |
37330 | Where, they wondered, did he come from? |
37330 | Who indeed? |
37330 | Who ran through the yard yesterday and scared the senses out of half my harem? |
37330 | Who would leave the glorious land?" |
37330 | Whoever will sing?'' |
37330 | Why did n''t he give his name, and tell his story? |
37330 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
37330 | Why does the swallow sing in so low a voice? |
37330 | Why have you changed your mind?" |
37330 | Will that do? |
37330 | Would n''t you wag a tail if you had one? |
37330 | Would you like to know what her name was? |
37330 | Ye''ll no be waur than me?" |
37330 | You know those circular sweeping- machines with which they clean the mud off the country roads? |
37330 | You''re Nero, are n''t you?'' |
37330 | _ Ca n''t_ you leave a poor fellow alone? |
37330 | _ What_ d''ye say? |
37330 | _ What_ d''ye say?" |
37330 | _ What_ do you say?" |
37330 | _ What_ is it? |
37330 | _ you''re_ there, are you?" |
37330 | ` Could n''t you,''the dog would seem to ask--`couldn''t you get on your coat a little-- oh,_ ever_ so little-- faster? |
37330 | ` Give me back me chee-- ild?'' |
37330 | ` No, dear; you would n''t, would you, if you thought he was weary, hungry, and in sorrow for his lost mistress? |
37330 | ` Will you indeed?'' |
37330 | and do n''t I feel them to be so when I stoop to kiss the roses? |
37330 | and does she forget that I need a comfortable bed at night? |
37330 | and repeat the last note once or twice, as much as to say:"What comes after that?" |
37330 | but,"I reply,"I feel sure there is, else why are you dressed so gaily? |
37330 | cried Mr Polypus, fairly aghast with astonishment;` does-- she-- actually-- dare-- to-- defy me?'' |
37330 | cried another; and--"` To be sure, where is Potassium Pompey?'' |
37330 | dogs in a garden?'' |
37330 | he continued, talking to the little dog himself,"who let you out like that?" |
37330 | he said,"what''s that?" |
37330 | he seems to say,"nor you, nor you? |
37330 | he would cry,` do n''t I look lovely, and do n''t you look dowdy beside_ me_? |
37330 | he would say, talking with eyes and tail,"you''re here, are you, old girl? |
37330 | is it because of that that there comes ever and anon in his short and simple song a kind of half- hysterical note of joy? |
37330 | it''s chained ye are, is it? |
37330 | left your playmates roaming about among the trees, while you stay here by me? |
37330 | my Peggy, my loved, my lost, my half- digested Peggy, shall we never meet again?'' |
37330 | please, Peterie,''said poor little Mrs Polypus, beginning to cry,` I really did n''t mean to; but I was_ so_ hungry, and--''"` Hungry?'' |
37330 | roared the husband;` how dared you to be hungry?--how dared you be anything at all, in fact? |
37330 | robin would say;"do you know you''re wanted?" |
37330 | said Hurricane Robert,` you''ve come to raise the rent, have ye? |
37330 | said Jack--"an evil spirit?" |
37330 | said Pompey;` and does she agree any better with you now?'' |
37330 | she cried;"you''re never out of mischief; did Tip bite you?" |
37330 | sighed Peggy, and--"` When shall we we d?'' |
37330 | well?'' |
37330 | what is that? |
37330 | what trickery is this? |
37330 | what was I born for? |
37330 | whatever shall I do?'' |
37330 | where is Potassium Pompey?'' |
37330 | why have you cast aside your sombre hues and donned that crimson vest?" |
37330 | with strong emphasis on the`_ aik_,''and which in English means,` How dare you stand and stare at_ me_?'' |
37330 | wo n''t you be sorry to descend your bean- stalk and re- enter Sheerness once again? |
37330 | you''re there, are you?" |
43495 | But who can fail to remember the pleasant acquaintances made, even if we go around the world? |
43495 | The Chinese gentleman spoke to us in excellent English, and said:"Do you think so? |
43495 | What was my profession? |
43495 | and What was I in Jeypore for? |
41500 | But where? |
41500 | But who do you say that I am? |
41500 | Did I not tell thee,said the Master,"that if thou wouldst believe, thou shouldst see the glory of God?" |
41500 | Do you ask that of yourself,said the persecuted but heroic prisoner,"or did others tell it of me?" |
41500 | Galilee? |
41500 | I have done many good works,He continued,"for which of those works do you stone me?" |
41500 | If they do these things in the green tree, what shall be done in the dry? |
41500 | Then what is Truth? |
41500 | What does He look like? |
41500 | What is the charge against Him? 41500 What shall I ask of him?" |
41500 | What shall we do? |
41500 | When does He come, and from whence? |
41500 | Where is He now? |
41500 | Why do the people shout? |
41500 | Why,--they stoned you and you had to fly just now,--will you risk going back? |
41500 | Will He be welcomed or stoned? |
41500 | Again:"If I do not care for my soul, who will do it for me?" |
41500 | And what did He say to the people standing on the shore? |
41500 | And who is this wonderful Hillel of whom Testament writers and teachers say almost nothing at all? |
41500 | Believest thou this? |
41500 | But were these things miracles? |
41500 | By a miracle could He not have destroyed all His enemies at a single blow? |
41500 | Could He not have prevented it? |
41500 | Do we know what a Miracle is? |
41500 | Do we know what a Miracle is? |
41500 | Do we know what a miracle is? |
41500 | Do you believe me?" |
41500 | Does he dream that this youth in Galilee is possibly the child the shepherds told of that wonderful night? |
41500 | Does he wonder if they are somewhere in hiding yet? |
41500 | Does not this tradition and Pilate''s alarm add strength to the supposition that years of His life had passed in the secret of the desert? |
41500 | Had His origin, His identity been kept a secret? |
41500 | Hast thou faith?" |
41500 | If He was not much in the desert in these unknown years, where then was He, that no one tells of Him? |
41500 | In a tone of overwhelming sadness He asked His twelve apostles"if they too would leave Him"? |
41500 | Is He again in His hermit cave now beyond the Jordan? |
41500 | Is it doing it to- day? |
41500 | Is it not altogether possible, almost certain, that these long absences were in the wilderness of the desert? |
41500 | Is the Child''s escape at Bethlehem still a secret? |
41500 | Is the Child''s escape at Bethlehem still a secret? |
41500 | John has heard anew of the Master''s triumphs, and two friends are sent to Him to ask if He is indeed the Christ--"or, do we look for another?" |
41500 | Now he is astounded, and alarmed, for where had Jesus been all these years? |
41500 | One day walking on a country road He asked His disciples who the people really said He was? |
41500 | Then He said something harder still,"If this about the flesh and blood startles you, what would you say to see me ascending up where I was?" |
41500 | To- morrow this young carpenter, this village doctor, will again disappear in the wilderness of the desert; who knows how long? |
41500 | Two of these men followed the mysterious stranger, saying,"Master, where dwellest Thou?" |
41500 | Was it all a blank these long years? |
41500 | Was there indeed nothing for Matthew, nor Mark, nor Luke, nor John, nor Josephus, nor anybody else to write about Him? |
41500 | What care the great religious doctors at the Sacred City? |
41500 | What has this man done?" |
41500 | What shall they do? |
41500 | Where was Jesus in these silent years? |
41500 | Where was Jesus in these silent years? |
41500 | Who ever heard of this Galilean carpenter anyway, or of His reforms? |
41500 | Who knows? |
41500 | Why not Jesus? |
41500 | Why not? |
41500 | Why should He not have been absent in some desert solitude, some wilderness, preparing for immortal deeds, immortal words? |
41500 | Would not the day soon be at hand when God himself, through some vicegerent, would come to the world and rule in pity? |
41500 | Would not the people rise, moved by His wonderful miracles, and at last put an end to all their religious pretenses? |
42666 | Can he stay? |
42666 | Has he got him, though? |
42666 | Have you got anything to eat? |
42666 | How far have we still to go? |
42666 | Meanwhile I am going to fill the kettle; would you like tea or coffee? |
42666 | The fire is burning, is it? |
42666 | What can be the attraction? |
42666 | What on earth makes you choose such an outlandish part of the world to go to? |
42666 | Where is Pucho? |
42666 | But what''s this? |
42666 | Could it be that another outbreak had occurred, and that these men were escaping to the pampas? |
42666 | Did n''t you know that?" |
42666 | IX= A Vagabond Heroine.= By ANNIE EDWARDES, Author of''Ought We to Visit Her?'' |
42666 | May I urge in its palliation that my weakness scarcely lasted longer than it has taken me to write this? |
42666 | Occasionally Mr. B. would be asked, at first in tones of implied cheerful unconcern,"How far is it to the camp?" |
42666 | Then, with another look at us, which said as plainly as words could,"Well, that''s a guanaco, no doubt, but what then?" |
42666 | What could have happened? |
42666 | What could it be? |
42666 | What was the attraction in going to an outlandish place so many miles away? |
42666 | What was the cause of this stampede? |
42666 | Which was the right one? |
42666 | have n''t you?" |
42666 | or was he in a worse plight than ourselves,--supperless as well as companionless? |
42666 | was he at that very moment perhaps roasting its head in the ashes? |
42666 | who was right about the rain? |
42666 | who would ever think of going to such a place?" |
43427 | A_ living_ body? |
43427 | Are_ you_ a body? |
43427 | Is a stone possessed of life? |
43427 | ( 1785- 1795? |
43427 | Again:"Is_ every_ body possessed of life?" |
43427 | But who is a good teacher of such a science? |
43427 | Napoleon was even reported to have said:"Qui m''empêche de laisser fusiller ce prince?" |
43427 | What is truth, and who are the right teachers of it? |
43427 | that of Homer and Hesiod) is included, and the question is asked, why the hearers of such stories are amused by them? |
43427 | that of a system of laws which governs the many things? |
36733 | A young doctor? |
36733 | Ai n''t Molly the broad- minded guy, though? 36733 Ai n''t it too bad he''s got a tail?" |
36733 | Ai n''t no husbands come along wantin''you? |
36733 | Ai n''t we your little comforts, Muvver? |
36733 | And Margaret? 36733 And Miss Nelson did n''t?" |
36733 | And ai n''t she the cutey? |
36733 | And how about you? |
36733 | And now? |
36733 | And phwat Haythen is this? |
36733 | And speaking of bungling,--why did you go and leave the house with no one in it? 36733 And what does my Mildred think when I tell her her daddy is going to be a soldier?" |
36733 | And you say she was busy with her husband? |
36733 | And you-- do you hate him? |
36733 | And your aunt''s name? |
36733 | Andy McLean, how can you say such a thing? |
36733 | Are our new friends, the Misels, hungry? |
36733 | Are the girls losing their hearts to him? |
36733 | Are you going to have them all stay here? |
36733 | Are you sure? |
36733 | Are you sure? |
36733 | Are you tired, honey? 36733 Are you willing to undertake it?" |
36733 | But how about the letters you wrote Miss Polly Nelson? 36733 But what are you to do?" |
36733 | But what do you want me to do, Molly? 36733 But you wo n''t do it any more, will you, Mildred?" |
36733 | But, Judy, are you sure it was he? |
36733 | Ca n''t I go up to see him? |
36733 | Call me? 36733 Can you find your collar buttons and is your tie all right?" |
36733 | Could n''t we sit down and let me tell you? |
36733 | Dialogue,--how about it? |
36733 | Did I hear an aye from the eminent educator? |
36733 | Did n''t you know my name, either? 36733 Did she?" |
36733 | Did you bring it? |
36733 | Did you mean to make Polly so silly? |
36733 | Did you put anything on the wound? |
36733 | Did you say nothing to him but nice things? |
36733 | Did you tell your Fairy Godmother that? |
36733 | Did your mother not know of your engagement to Andy? |
36733 | Do I? 36733 Do I?" |
36733 | Do n''t you know Edith is too stuffy to do such a thing? 36733 Do n''t you know?" |
36733 | Do n''t you? 36733 Do you know Masefield''s''Everlasting Mercy,''Billie? |
36733 | Do you mind? |
36733 | Do you realize we have run against a tremendous thing? |
36733 | Do you realize, Molly, that I wo n''t have to spend a summer in Newport, after all? 36733 Do you really think you girls could run this farm without the help of a man?" |
36733 | Do you think so? 36733 Do you think writing should stop as well as dressing?" |
36733 | Dr. Flint did want to marry me; I guess he still does, but-- but----"But what, lassie? |
36733 | Edwin, dearest, what is it? |
36733 | For me? 36733 Had n''t we better take the kids along so their noise wo n''t disturb poor dear Brother Edwin?" |
36733 | Has he been hurt? |
36733 | Have you mixed them with the others? |
36733 | He will come see you before he sails, will he not? |
36733 | Her mother dead? 36733 How about literature?" |
36733 | How about the plot, now? |
36733 | How about your doing some light housekeeping on your own hook and not trying to board with the college? |
36733 | How could she? 36733 How did they know about Nance?" |
36733 | How do you reckon we feel then? |
36733 | How long is it? |
36733 | How should I know? |
36733 | How, may I ask? |
36733 | I know you want to hear about him,--eh? |
36733 | I think we ought to rent the Orchard Home for the summer, do n''t you? |
36733 | I-- think-- it-- would be-- advisable to-- apply-- iodine to the wound-- is it-- not so, Madame Brown? 36733 If not Flint, who?" |
36733 | If their friends rally around them so for an imaginary disease, what would they do if something were really the matter? |
36733 | Is Nance not married? |
36733 | Is he very ill? |
36733 | Is not the spirit of the German women quite as courageous as ours? |
36733 | Is that all they mean to you? |
36733 | Is you the Andy what talked so crule to my Aunt Nance? 36733 It is up to me to stop them-- but how? |
36733 | Jes''''cause they loved you so much? |
36733 | Making up what? 36733 May I tell Andy all about it?" |
36733 | Molly, do you know what was the matter with that interesting looking red- headed girl? |
36733 | Molly, how can you resist her? |
36733 | My darling, what is it? |
36733 | Nance, how can you say so? |
36733 | No? |
36733 | Now do n''t you hate and despise me for telling you what I did just now? 36733 Now, what is it?" |
36733 | Of course not, but begin, please, and say-- couldn''t you manage with one hand? |
36733 | Oh, Molly, what do you think of me for taking out the children and almost drowning Mildred? 36733 Oh, Nance, would you go with me?" |
36733 | Oh, then you know of her trouble? |
36733 | Perhaps you are right, but the point is: did I get my idea over? |
36733 | Pretty good general houseworker, eh? |
36733 | Shall I chase them? |
36733 | Shall I take Andy up to see him? |
36733 | Shall we take Dodo out in his carriage? |
36733 | Sho nuf? |
36733 | Tell me, Molly, have you packed all the dressings that that Misel woman has made? |
36733 | The hash? 36733 The one you put on for Great- aunt Gertrude? |
36733 | Then how about Mary Roberts Rinehart and Booth Tarkington and lots of others? 36733 They say it is because nobody ever believes he is their father and so they want to know:''Who is the father of Zebedee''s children?'' |
36733 | Was he-- was he-- attentive? |
36733 | Well, I had to express my feelings somehow, and how did I know that you and Andy were going to tell your secret this very evening? 36733 Well, you know that everything is going up?" |
36733 | Were the things he said worse than the things you said? |
36733 | What about them? |
36733 | What about you and Nance? |
36733 | What about you? |
36733 | What are they making up? 36733 What are you doing in the back? |
36733 | What are you planning, Judy honey? |
36733 | What are you smiling over? 36733 What did he say?" |
36733 | What do you say to taking a little walk? |
36733 | What do you usually have when you have anything? |
36733 | What do you want with me, honey? 36733 What does this mean?" |
36733 | What have you in your hand, darling? |
36733 | What is it? |
36733 | What is the matter with him, Andy? |
36733 | What is your trouble? |
36733 | What next? |
36733 | What now? |
36733 | What things? |
36733 | What under Heaven is the matter? |
36733 | What will your mother think? |
36733 | What would Bobby do in this case? |
36733 | What? |
36733 | When did you come? 36733 Where is Edwin?" |
36733 | Where is Molly? |
36733 | Where must I cut it? |
36733 | Where shall we walk? |
36733 | Where was this interesting couple going? |
36733 | Which hat? |
36733 | Who among you is young enough to go hunt adventure? |
36733 | Who is giving the game away now? |
36733 | Who is his surgeon? |
36733 | Who is it? |
36733 | Who is that? |
36733 | Who is there? |
36733 | Who? |
36733 | Why I tote my dolly-- an''Mr. Murphy totes the coal-- an''--an''Daddy totes his books to lexures-- an''--an''--"May I tote something, also? |
36733 | Why afraid? |
36733 | Why all of this mystery? |
36733 | Why did n''t you let him come? 36733 Why did you and Andy quarrel?" |
36733 | Why do n''t you just suppose you had never been born? |
36733 | Why does n''t she come on to the wedding? |
36733 | Why is she weeping? |
36733 | Why not? |
36733 | Why, darling, what have you done? |
36733 | Will you be one of that committee that must take hold of this thing? |
36733 | Wo n''t Aunt Nance be''stonished? |
36733 | Wo n''t you? |
36733 | Wonder what about them? |
36733 | Would n''t it be better to bring one criminal to justice than to kill thousands of poor wounded men by dressing their wounds with tetanus germs? |
36733 | Would you girls mind if I ask my husband to come in and talk it over with you? |
36733 | You do care then? |
36733 | You mean the scars? |
36733 | You would n''t have treated yo''dear little children so mean, would you, Granny? |
36733 | Zebedee? 36733 _ Narr!_ What can_ narr_ mean?" |
36733 | After the singing was finished and every one drunk down, the words that were used most often were:"Do you remember?" |
36733 | Ai n''t you knowed about him?" |
36733 | And could n''t you do it with one hand and let me hold the other?" |
36733 | And how did you know she was-- I was her father?" |
36733 | And who may you be?" |
36733 | And your husband aided and abetted you in jumping on the back of fast trains, did he?" |
36733 | Are n''t we, Mildred? |
36733 | Are n''t you coming, Nance?" |
36733 | Are n''t you even going to peek at the comply, as Mildred says?" |
36733 | Are they just letters to her and nothing more? |
36733 | Are they love letters?" |
36733 | Are you cold? |
36733 | Are you middle- aged and sedate and do you smoke a corn- cob pipe? |
36733 | Are you one of those awful persons that uses what our darkeys call"eatin''tobacco"? |
36733 | Are you young and giddy and do you live on cigarettes? |
36733 | But did this other one despise him? |
36733 | But do n''t you want to hear what my scheme is?" |
36733 | But how should you know? |
36733 | But what makes your curls so wet?" |
36733 | But where is the-- the-- cad?" |
36733 | But whose familiar figure was that seen through the scullery door? |
36733 | But why''Bully for Nance''?" |
36733 | CHAPTER VI"I HAD A LITTLE HUSBAND NO BIGGER THAN MY THUMB""Aunt Nance, what''s the use you ai n''t got no husband an''baby children?" |
36733 | Ca n''t you forgive me?" |
36733 | Ca n''t you forgive me?" |
36733 | Ca n''t you see that is imprudent?" |
36733 | Can you forgive me?" |
36733 | Can you?" |
36733 | Could he be their father? |
36733 | Did Aunt Nance get wet? |
36733 | Did n''t I tell you your own dying sister would not know you?" |
36733 | Did n''t you know she was crazy about you?" |
36733 | Did you know Nance Oldham is with me?" |
36733 | Did you open it?" |
36733 | Do I look all right?" |
36733 | Do n''t you know that I know that Andy and I have not fooled you one moment? |
36733 | Do n''t you know you might break in just at the wrong moment and Andy may get off to France without their making it up?" |
36733 | Do n''t you love it, Katy?" |
36733 | Do n''t you think that is a nice letter?" |
36733 | Do you know, you hurt my feelings terribly when you said my fist was rotten?" |
36733 | Do you like chocolate drops and poetry? |
36733 | Do you remember the old yellow one with the lame horses?" |
36733 | Do you remember when poor Judy turned up with her hair dyed a blue black?" |
36733 | Do you think I am just a silly goose to think so?" |
36733 | Do you think so? |
36733 | Do you want to go off on a trip somewhere and let us try to run it without you?" |
36733 | Does Madame Misel still work on the surgical dressings?" |
36733 | Had she and her countrymen not been under German rule long enough to consider the kaiser as their rightful ruler? |
36733 | Had she not been on the outskirts of war in 1914 when she was stranded in Paris? |
36733 | Had she not seen the soldiers marching off bidding farewell to their nearest and dearest,--sometimes a final farewell? |
36733 | Has he been to Exmoor?" |
36733 | Have you forgotten?" |
36733 | Have you met their father?" |
36733 | Have you seen her?" |
36733 | How about the early English novelists?" |
36733 | How could I know the child was playing a game with you? |
36733 | How could I tell that Mother would want to come live with me when poor Father was gone? |
36733 | How could a heart get so big all of a sudden? |
36733 | How could nice men like Andy and Kent think such things about a poor defenseless woman? |
36733 | How could you be so polite to him?" |
36733 | How is a fellow''s pulse to remain normal when you put your dear little fingers on his wrist? |
36733 | How on earth did they happen to do it?" |
36733 | How was she to let these women know that the shipment must be held up? |
36733 | I wonder how you like belonging to me? |
36733 | I''m gonter ask her kin she shrink you up no bigger''n Dodo an''then wo n''t you be cunning? |
36733 | Is anything the matter?" |
36733 | Is it Flint?" |
36733 | Is n''t it delicious?" |
36733 | Is n''t it fun to see Judy again? |
36733 | Is n''t it lovely? |
36733 | Is n''t that fruit cake I smell, that you know perfectly well you made and put away for next Christmas so it would be ripe and get better and better?" |
36733 | Is not Judy encouraging Kent? |
36733 | Is not Nance not only sending Andy but going with him? |
36733 | Is not my mother giving God- speed to her sons? |
36733 | Is that straight?" |
36733 | Is you heard''bout me an''the blue boat?" |
36733 | It was nothing but a scratch, and do n''t you remember Aunt Judy bound it up so tight it only bled a moment?" |
36733 | Just suppose I were a designing female who was going to hold you up and drag you through the wounded- affections court? |
36733 | Let it be-- what shall it be?" |
36733 | Must I use the same sister?" |
36733 | Nance, do you hate me as much as you did that terrible day two years ago?" |
36733 | Not really?" |
36733 | Not really?" |
36733 | Now what do you think of that?" |
36733 | Now what do you think of that?''" |
36733 | Now, most wise of all female detectives, what do you advise? |
36733 | Oh, Molly, how could you be so untruthful, blaming things on poor Kizzie, too? |
36733 | Opposite Judy''s chair was a young man,( or was he a young man?) |
36733 | She may have helped this Madame Misel some, who knows? |
36733 | Six months of training should make me fit, do n''t you think? |
36733 | Sometimes I wish I did n''t have a sou-- at least I have felt that way-- but now----""But now what?" |
36733 | Suppose the Allies conducted their warfare under those principles, what would become of us? |
36733 | Sure these are not love letters?" |
36733 | The blue boat might be the same one in which Judy Kean had her memorable midnight jaunt, or was it a canoe? |
36733 | There had never been a moment since he and Nance had parted that he had not regretted his hasty words; but what good were regrets? |
36733 | There would be work to do, but what was her share to be? |
36733 | Was not that natural? |
36733 | Was not this the most momentous day in the life of every true American? |
36733 | We were n''t expecting you until Saturday----""And do n''t want me now?" |
36733 | What am I to do with you?" |
36733 | What am I to do with you?" |
36733 | What did it all mean? |
36733 | What does Nance say to it?" |
36733 | What has happened to her?" |
36733 | What hash?" |
36733 | What have you done to this angel?" |
36733 | What is the matter with my little husband?" |
36733 | What is the matter?" |
36733 | What is tote?" |
36733 | What is your reason?" |
36733 | What must I do? |
36733 | What time is it, honey?" |
36733 | What was coming over her Miss Molly,"fergittin''of the boss and then a- larfin''about it?" |
36733 | What was she to do with her life? |
36733 | What will the girls think when we tell them of what has happened to us?" |
36733 | What would that have looked like on your head?" |
36733 | Where are they?" |
36733 | Where have you been?" |
36733 | Where is Dodo?" |
36733 | Where is Katy?" |
36733 | Where on earth did you come from?" |
36733 | Where under Heaven had she seen just that chin and nose? |
36733 | Where were his crutch and cane and his lame back? |
36733 | Where you Mi-- ldred baby?'' |
36733 | Who am I that I should say you shall and you sha n''t do things for your country?" |
36733 | Who has forgiven you?" |
36733 | Who is he?" |
36733 | Who knows?" |
36733 | Who making up: the Allies and the central powers?" |
36733 | Why do n''t you do as I told you and dry that shirt sleeve? |
36733 | Why do n''t you spank your kid? |
36733 | Why do you suppose they teach us such formal French at school? |
36733 | Why had his mother not warned him that Nance Oldham was in Wellington? |
36733 | Why not? |
36733 | Why should Andy McLean come back on her horizon at that moment when she was neglecting her duty? |
36733 | Why should Fate be so cruel to her? |
36733 | Why should Misel have pretended to be lame? |
36733 | Why should a man who is in the paint business write a letter with no address and sign his name so illegibly that no one could make it out? |
36733 | Why should pro- Germans and spies choose this particular spot, anyhow?" |
36733 | Why should that calm- looking, slow- speaking woman call her poor lame husband a fool? |
36733 | Why should they come to live at Wellington? |
36733 | Why two lies when one will suffice?" |
36733 | Why, oh why, do n''t we hurry up and get in the game?" |
36733 | Why, what can you do? |
36733 | Why?" |
36733 | Why?" |
36733 | Will you listen to me?" |
36733 | Will you read it to me?" |
36733 | Wo n''t he be here to tea? |
36733 | Wo n''t you please, ma''m, punch it open wif the button hook so''s I kin poke some breafkast down him?" |
36733 | Would not that be as gruesomely as a mathematicktack? |
36733 | Would she despise him, too, like this other girl? |
36733 | Would she ever listen to him? |
36733 | Would they have had the courage to wish their friend God- speed so cheerily? |
36733 | Would you mind just dropping a hint as to what kind of presents would be most acceptable? |
36733 | Ye Gods, how many does she want?" |
36733 | You are made that way, eh, Mother?" |
36733 | You are sure it is not tiring you too much?" |
36733 | You do n''t mind, do you, honey?" |
36733 | thought Molly as she followed them with Nance,"what on earth is the matter with Mildred''s hair?" |
39790 | And what do you think of Scotland noo? |
39790 | But do you ken Burns? |
39790 | But what about a woman? |
39790 | By the way, has Black ever written any other story quite so good as that? 39790 Call this a river?" |
39790 | Do you really think you could go all the way to Inverness? |
39790 | Does Herbert Spencer write so clearly and simply as that upon such subjects? |
39790 | Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale? |
39790 | Has she children? |
39790 | Have you the revised edition here yet? |
39790 | This is all very well, my friend, but where are the other five volumes? |
39790 | Well, I do n''t believe it would do him any good to shoot him, do you, madam? |
39790 | What do you think of Scotland noo? |
39790 | What do you think of Scotland noo? |
39790 | What is it then, Andrea? |
39790 | What is that up there? |
39790 | What is the matter? 39790 What is wrong?" |
39790 | What on earth,I said to him,"has a small English hotel to do with a pea- sheller? |
39790 | What would you do, Tom, if you should receive a message commanding you to offer up your son upon the altar? |
39790 | Why have you done this? |
39790 | You did not know I was George Eliot, but you were drawn to plain me all for my own self, a woman? 39790 ''Didna ye hear? 39790 ''Wilt thou dare?'' 39790 And now I remember Shakespeare has his say too about the lark-- what is it in England he has not his say about? 39790 And was there ever a band of Gypsies happier than we, or freer from care? 39790 Are you ill? 39790 Are you less a man? 39790 But if stern justice urge rebuke And warmth from memory borrow, When shall we chide, if chide we must? 39790 But is there not a little ambiguity in thetoo long should grow?" |
39790 | But should she frown with face of care, And speak of coming sorrow, When shall we grieve, if grieve we must? |
39790 | But what kind of fruit could be expected from the tree of privilege? |
39790 | But where will imperialism get such another leader, after all? |
39790 | Can any one picture a resting- place so full of peace and beauty as the old Izaak Walton Inn? |
39790 | Can civilized man find nothing better to furnish needful recreation after useful toil? |
39790 | Can they be brought back once more? |
39790 | Can you not understand? |
39790 | Could any one suggest a better for our purpose? |
39790 | Could he inform him? |
39790 | Did any one take you, Thomas Carlyle, for a fine, symmetrical sycamore, or a graceful clinging vine? |
39790 | Did you not give us a lively description the other evening of your riding after the hounds? |
39790 | Didna ye hear?'' |
39790 | Do any people love their country as passionately as the Scotch? |
39790 | Do you know any work so hard as this? |
39790 | Do you know why the American worships the starry banner with a more intense passion than even the Briton does his flag? |
39790 | Do you see rugged Ben Alder yonder, the highest of the group that looks down into the still waters of the lake? |
39790 | Do you see that eminence a mile away yonder, on the north, whose sides slope down into the plain? |
39790 | Does not Holy Writ declare that the diligent man shall stand_ before_ Kings? |
39790 | Does she learn their lesson with their odor( which her dog scents as well as she)? |
39790 | Eh, Baradas? |
39790 | Fight for it? |
39790 | For what sum, think you, can be had a man capable of controlling the ponderous machinery of the Servia? |
39790 | Go there? |
39790 | Goee Bishopee? |
39790 | Goee Hopper? |
39790 | Happiness is known to be a great beautifier-- but is it not also a great doer of good to others? |
39790 | Has the amount and depth of affection which a woman can waste on a collie dog ever been justly fathomed? |
39790 | Have not you had as honest parents and a better grandfather? |
39790 | Have you never had your friend praise his wife to you in moments of confidence, when you have been fishing for a week together? |
39790 | He sang a beautiful Scotch song to- day,"Cowden Knowes,"and when he was done Andrew immediately asked:"Whaur did ye get that? |
39790 | He then gave us the second verse:"If those who''ve wronged us own their faults And kindly pity pray, When shall we listen and forgive? |
39790 | His eyes twinkled as he replied:"Where goee, eh? |
39790 | How can people be got to live such terrible lives as they seem condemned to here? |
39790 | How could we give such a woman children and look you in the face? |
39790 | How shall I render the unanimous verdict of the company upon the life we had led? |
39790 | I won the good man''s heart at once by saying that small though it was in size( and what has either he or I to boast of in that line, I wonder?) |
39790 | I''ve read some of yer books; they''re vera amusin''; ye ken Scotch scenery well; but when are yer goin''to do some_ wark_, man?" |
39790 | In due time came a return missive from the proud City of the River:"Will I go to Paradise for three months on a coach? |
39790 | Is it not cheering to find poor women getting an advance? |
39790 | Is it not strange that no one has ever imitated this man''s unique style? |
39790 | Is it the opera? |
39790 | Is n''t it glorious to make one''s friends so happy? |
39790 | Is not that capital? |
39790 | Is not that to the purpose? |
39790 | It consists of 148 pages, mostly given up to notices of the titled people who visited the old town long ago; but who cares about them? |
39790 | It runs thus:"Who lyeth heare? |
39790 | Let other nations ask themselves where are_ our_ Lincolns and Garfields? |
39790 | Many times to- day, in the exhilaration of the moment, one or another enthusiastic member called out,"What do ye think o''Scotland noo?" |
39790 | Mr. Duncan, has in savings- banks? |
39790 | O ye self- constituted rulers of men in Europe, know you not that the knell of dynasties and of rank is sounding? |
39790 | Of what other human being could these two things be truly said? |
39790 | Off for Keswick, only twelve miles distant; but who wants to hurry away from scenes like these? |
39790 | Shall we go by Compton Verney( there is a pretty English name for you), Wellesbourn, and Hastings? |
39790 | Shall we not take our ease in our inn? |
39790 | The question came up to- day at luncheon, would one ever tire of this gypsy life? |
39790 | There are whispering sounds in the glen:"Shades of the dead, have I not heard your voices Rise on the night- rolling breath of the gale? |
39790 | To be sure, why not? |
39790 | True, but what are kings and princes for? |
39790 | Was it any wonder that we attracted attention during our progress northward? |
39790 | Was it not Johnson''s idea of happiness to drive in a gig with a pretty woman? |
39790 | Were we really at the opera, then? |
39790 | What I do''ee? |
39790 | What are the Charioteers, after all, in their happiest dream, but aristocratic gypsies? |
39790 | What could you add that would not weaken that? |
39790 | What did such people expect, I wonder? |
39790 | What is the use of"argie bargieing"about it? |
39790 | What matters it what she was? |
39790 | What says Annie''s song? |
39790 | What was to be done? |
39790 | What worm gnaws at her heart and makes her life so petty? |
39790 | When shall we look upon its like again?" |
39790 | Where is another trio that could do that, think you? |
39790 | Where met he the genius of tragedy, think you? |
39790 | Who cares what the Reverend Mr. Froth preaches nowadays, when he ventures beyond the homilies? |
39790 | Who ever learnt a Scotch song out of books? |
39790 | Who owns the treasures of the Sunderland or Hamilton libraries? |
39790 | Who owns your favorite horse? |
39790 | Why ca n''t we recognize the fact that all races indulge in stimulants and will continue to do so? |
39790 | Why do they not all run away to the green fields just beyond? |
39790 | Why do you stand this injustice? |
39790 | Why does n''t Mr. Gladstone suggest this to him? |
39790 | Why mopes she, looking so haggard, with features expressionless and inane? |
39790 | Why not? |
39790 | Why not? |
39790 | Will a second coaching trip do it? |
39790 | Will you lay"violent hands upon the Lord''s anointed?" |
39790 | Would you, my gentle reader, like also to know it? |
39790 | _ To waiter_:"What time do we start in the morning?" |
39790 | and shall not mine host of The Garter, ay and mine hostess too, prove the most obliging of people? |
39790 | half, 7_d._"The long and the half we could understand, but how could they manage the short? |
39790 | no; evolved? |
39790 | or shall we take our way through Broughton Castle, Tadmarton, Scoalcliffe, Compton Wynyate, and Oxhill? |
39790 | said the cynic,"is that it, Miss? |
39790 | she said,''Put by our sacred books, dethrone our gods, Unpeople all the temples, shaking down That law which feeds the priests and props the realm?'' |
39790 | what''s that, and where? |
39790 | why left I my hame?" |
40960 | Was it for an old sin, Varuna,we read in a prayer,"that thou wishest to destroy thy friend, who praises thee? |
40960 | [ 794] Tradition tells us that at this synod the question was put to every Bhikshu:What is the doctrine of Buddha?" |
40960 | And of consciousness, what? |
40960 | Are the judges in any matter of law between rich and poor raised above the desire of gain? |
40960 | Are the plans formed in the councils of other princes known to thee and thy counsellors? |
40960 | Are there no limits to this accumulation of sorrows?" |
40960 | Are thy fortresses well provided with corn, water, weapons, and archers? |
40960 | Are thy resolutions kept secret? |
40960 | Art thou acquainted with that which they would undertake? |
40960 | Art thou certain that thy officers are on thy side, if sent into foreign lands, and if none knows the commission given to another? |
40960 | Art thou well equipped with horses and female elephants? |
40960 | But why should the elder branch make way for the younger? |
40960 | By whom and in what way was the Veda revealed? |
40960 | Can we fix the time at which the Aryas immigrated into India and occupied the valley of the Indus? |
40960 | Canst thou overcome sleep? |
40960 | Could he who had reached the summit of wisdom and virtue have been without supernatural powers? |
40960 | Could it excite any great shock when these playthings were set aside? |
40960 | Did it not deny, in the Sankhya doctrine, the authority of the Veda, the existence of the gods, and the Brahmanic world- soul? |
40960 | Did not a man by these means approach the holy nature of Brahman-- did he not thus draw into himself Brahman and its power? |
40960 | Did not the ethical aim of the Brahmans consist in the elevation of the_ Ego_ by meditation, in the annihilation of the body by asceticism? |
40960 | Do other princes know thy aims? |
40960 | Do thy servants and troops receive pay at the proper time? |
40960 | Does he employ distinguished servants in great matters, men of lower degree in smaller affairs, and the lowest in the least important? |
40960 | Dost thou bestow thy wealth on Brahmans, Kshatriyas, needy strangers? |
40960 | Dost thou despise the counsel of women, and conceal from them thy secrets? |
40960 | Dost thou divide thy time properly between recreation, state business, and religious duties? |
40960 | Dost thou honour those who are bold and skilful? |
40960 | Dost thou sacrifice wealth to virtue, or virtue to wealth, or both to favouritism, covetousness, and sensuality? |
40960 | Dost thou seek to obtain land and wealth by all honest means? |
40960 | Dost thou take counsel with thyself and with others also? |
40960 | Dost thou think at the end of the night on the way to become prosperous? |
40960 | Dost thou think lightly of enemies who, though weak and expelled from their country, may easily return? |
40960 | Dost thou wake at the right time? |
40960 | Had not the Sankhya, the doctrine of Kapila, called in question the merit of the sacrifice and the customs of purification? |
40960 | Had not the philosophy of the Brahmans already passed from scholasticism to heterodoxy? |
40960 | Hast thou store of young milch- cows? |
40960 | He asked himself what was the value of pleasure, youth, and joy if they were subject to sickness, age, and death? |
40960 | How can the soul, the intellectual capacity, be checked in this? |
40960 | How could it be a pure act to shed blood?--how could sacrifices and ceremonies be of sufficient force? |
40960 | How could the conquerors mix with the conquered?--how could their pride stoop to any union with the despised servants? |
40960 | How could the traditional punishments of transgressions and offences continue in existence? |
40960 | How could these contradictions be removed? |
40960 | How were the undeniable contradictions, the opposition between various passages, to be removed? |
40960 | Is an accused chief set at liberty through bribery? |
40960 | Is he a man of judgment who knows how to deliver a message in the words in which it is given to him? |
40960 | Is the forest, where the royal elephants are kept, well chosen? |
40960 | Is there then no means of escaping this world, which is born, changes, and dies, and again grows up? |
40960 | Is thine envoy a well- instructed, active man, able to answer any question on the moment? |
40960 | Is thy expenditure less than thy income? |
40960 | Of sensation what is the cause? |
40960 | On what, then, were the Brahman householders to live, who possessed nothing, and were without land sufficient for their support? |
40960 | Or do thine own counsellors contemn thee, and the people, oppressed by excessive punishments? |
40960 | Or need the Brahmans write the history of their own order? |
40960 | Ought the Brahmans to inquire into the laws of nature? |
40960 | The gods said: How can we form creatures? |
40960 | The nucleus of his argument is: Whence do men come? |
40960 | Was it not this devotion, this mortification, this concentration, which annihilated the unholy part in men? |
40960 | Was the nucleus of the system, the doctrine of the world- soul, so firmly established as the Brahmans maintained? |
40960 | Was there really no mercy on earth or in heaven, no grace, no means of release from these never- ending torments? |
40960 | Was this arrangement of castes and the observance of their duties absolutely irrevocable? |
40960 | Were the words or the sense of the poems decisive? |
40960 | What is the cause of birth? |
40960 | What is the cause of desire? |
40960 | What is the cause of existence? |
40960 | What is the cause of the senses? |
40960 | What is the cause of this attachment? |
40960 | What is the cause of this? |
40960 | What saint was qualified to decide? |
40960 | What was the element of existence and continuance in this alternation of growth and decay? |
40960 | Where do men go in death? |
40960 | Which school taught the correct doctrine? |
40960 | Which was the true ritual, the form pleasing to the gods and therefore efficacious? |
40960 | Which were the decisive passages in the Veda, and what was their true explanation? |
40960 | Who knows, who can declare, whence has sprung this creation?--the gods are subsequent to this, who then knows whence it arose? |
40960 | Who of the seers of old has seen the limits of his power? |
40960 | Who would not look up with reverence to the purer incarnation of the world- soul, the holier spirit, which dwelt in the Brahmans? |
40960 | Who would venture to injure a Brahman, by whose sacrifice the gods live and the world exists? |
40960 | Who, then, was the author and lord of these mighty pulses of life, and this order, which seemed to exist of themselves? |
40960 | Why should the Brahmans trouble themselves with the deeds of ancient kings and heroes? |
40960 | Would ye rather end life on a sick- bed in pain? |
40960 | [ 132] Can we ascend beyond this point? |
40960 | [ 445] What is the cause of contact? |
40960 | as M. Müller supposes, write sutras to facilitate the understanding of the Brahmanas, if the latter were not in existence in writing? |
40960 | or lavish it on thy friends? |
43618 | ''What will you have?'' |
43618 | And can the slaughter of an innocent victim take away the sins of mankind? |
43618 | And yet how important some of the even trivial ones really are? |
43618 | Can a new wrong expiate old wrongs? |
43618 | How few of these vital conditions, from a physical standpoint, are under our control? |
43618 | We have looked at a few of the phases of human existence; what shall be said of the value of life? |
43618 | What love can a man possess who believes that the destruction of life will atone for evil deeds? |
43618 | What then is the meaning of this-- is humanity traveling in cycles? |
41140 | ( Arrest?) |
41140 | ),_ Harran_ G-20 Hara,_ Zarnath_ M-32 Haran(? |
41140 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1089(?) |
41140 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1290(?) |
41140 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2280(?) |
41140 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2454(?) |
41140 | --Hammurabi( Amraphel(?)) |
41140 | --Hammurabi( Amraphel(?)) |
41140 | 1100[ E] 1089(?) |
41140 | 1170(?) |
41140 | 1200------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1180(?) |
41140 | 1210(?) |
41140 | 1300(?) |
41140 | 1300------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1250 1250(?) |
41140 | 1300[ F] 1290(?) |
41140 | 1400------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1359(?) |
41140 | 1400[ E] 1359(?) |
41140 | 1570- 1320(?) |
41140 | 2000------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1993(?) |
41140 | 2000[ D] 1993(?) |
41140 | 2045(?) |
41140 | 2045(?) |
41140 | 2060(?) |
41140 | 2060(?) |
41140 | 2073(?) |
41140 | 2073(?) |
41140 | 2084(?) |
41140 | 2084(?) |
41140 | 2103(?) |
41140 | 2103(?) |
41140 | 2120(?) |
41140 | 2120(?) |
41140 | 2180(?) |
41140 | 2180(?) |
41140 | 2232(?) |
41140 | 2232(?) |
41140 | 2270(?) |
41140 | 2270(?) |
41140 | 2280(?) |
41140 | 2280(?) |
41140 | 2300------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2150(?) |
41140 | 2900(?) |
41140 | 300------------------------------------------------------------------------ 275(?) |
41140 | 3500(?) |
41140 | 3900(?) |
41140 | 400 400(?) |
41140 | 4000(?) |
41140 | 4700(?) |
41140 | 900(?) |
41140 | = At Jerusalem=(?). |
41140 | About the same time 1330(?) |
41140 | About the same time 1330(?) |
41140 | Babylon, beginning with Egyptian invasion of Syria Gandish, reigning 1782- 1767. about 1490(?) |
41140 | Battle of Beth- horon, 1210(?). |
41140 | Battle of Beth- horon, 1210(?). |
41140 | Desert of Sin|El Murkîyeh(?) |
41140 | Dophkah|Ain Markhâ(?) |
41140 | Egyptian invasion of Syria about 1490(?) |
41140 | Eleven kings reigning 2454 to 2151(?). |
41140 | Eleven kings reigning 2454 to 2151(?). |
41140 | Fords of Jordan( Beth- barah?). |
41140 | Jotbathah|Emshâsh(?) |
41140 | Kadesh- barnea|Ain el Weibeh(?) |
41140 | Merenepthah,"Pharaoh of the Exodus"(?). |
41140 | Merenepthah,"Pharaoh of the Exodus"(?). |
41140 | Mount Shapher|Jebel Araif(?) |
41140 | Mount of the Amorites|Jebel Magrah(?) |
41140 | O-11 Chaldea Q-32 Charran(? |
41140 | Ramah.(?) |
41140 | Rameses II.,"Pharaoh of the Oppression"(?). |
41140 | Rameses II.,"Pharaoh of the Oppression"(?). |
41140 | T-10 Ham, Land of U-3 Hamath K-15 Hamath,_ Hamah_ J-15 Hara(? |
41140 | Taberah|Wady Sâal(?) |
41140 | They ruled Egypt until about 1570 B.C.(? |
41140 | They ruled Egypt until about 1570 B.C.(? |
41140 | Zalmonah|Wady Amran(?) |
41140 | [ A] 587 B.C.-(?) |
41140 | [ B] 1180- 1020--Rule of the Judges[ D] 1180(?) |
41140 | [ D] 1170(?) |
41140 | [ D] 1210(?) |
41140 | [ D] 1250(?) |
41140 | [ D] 275(?) |
41140 | [ D] 400(?) |
41140 | [ D] About 1330(?) |
41140 | [ E] 1570- 1320(?) |
41140 | [ E] 2900(?) |
41140 | [ E] 3500(?) |
41140 | [ E] 4700(?) |
41140 | [ E] 900(?) |
41140 | [ F] 1300(?) |
41140 | [ F] 2454(?) |
41140 | [ F] 3900(?) |
41140 | [ G] 2280- 1120--EARLY BABLYLONIAN EMPIRE[ F] 2280(?) |
41140 | [ H] 2000--Aryan migration to India(?). |
41140 | [ H] 2205--Chinese History Begins 2200[ C] 2195--Jacob[ F] 2150(?) |
41140 | _ Jerusalem(? |
43682 | For what, I pray thee? |
43682 | ''If we drive you out of Bâpu, will you come out?'' |
43682 | But what can atone for this man''s sin?''" |
43682 | How can the evil- doer eat the flesh of cows, that are the object of veneration to the three worlds?'' |
43682 | May I use spells for them or not?" |
43682 | The officiant, holding the axe by the point, asked:"Shall I strike?" |
43682 | The people say,''How can we put him?'' |
43682 | The people then say,''Will you never come back?'' |
43682 | The seer asks him,''Are you going or not?'' |
43682 | The spirit sees the articles, and says,''Where is the cocoanut?'' |
43682 | Then Vindumatî, hearing that, said to her husband:''The wickedness of this act is inconceivable; what can we say in palliation of it? |
43682 | Then they say,''What is to be done?'' |
43682 | They add what he says, and ask,''Is it right?'' |
43682 | Who brought thee into the ark?" |
43682 | or,''Where is the rice?'' |
43681 | Which is greater,says the proverb,"Râma or Gûga?" |
43681 | ''What for,''said he, in great wrath--''what for speak so loud? |
43681 | A chicken? |
43681 | A cocoanut? |
43681 | A goat?" |
43681 | A pig? |
43681 | Are not these villages upside down yet?" |
43681 | Dost thou not mark how my son has sneezed a blessing on all my words?''" |
43681 | How many cubits long is the trench which thou hast dug? |
43681 | How many maunds of butter hast thou poured upon it that the fire billows rise in the air? |
43681 | O Vasudeva, have mercy? |
43681 | The question naturally arises-- Are all these Ojhas and Baigas conscious hypocrites and swindlers? |
43681 | Then a woman in one of the Râja''s villages said--"Who is fighting without his head?" |
43681 | Then in the same way he asks--"What is the propitiation offering to be? |
43681 | What can a poor man, such as I am, do?" |
43681 | Which poison will they devour? |
43681 | Who can bind her? |
43681 | Will you profane the abode of the gods?''" |
43681 | and fell down dead, calling out--"What? |
43681 | and the reply is,"Be who may the greater, shall I get myself bitten by a snake?" |
41115 | He said to them, Wherein have I sinned that I should go and be baptized by him? |
41115 | How say you, We are wise, and the law of the Lord is with us? 41115 If ye have not been faithful in the little who will give you the great?" |
41115 | Thy counsel who hath known except thou give Wisdom, and send thy Holy Spirit from above? |
41115 | What is the profit if a man gain the entire world, and lose his life? |
41115 | What is thy beloved more than another beloved? |
41115 | Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness Leaning on her beloved? |
41115 | Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness leaning on her beloved? |
41115 | Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness like pillars of smoke? |
41115 | Why will ye look upon Shulamith as upon the dance of Mahanaim? |
41115 | Wisdom hid, and treasure hoarded, what value is in either? |
41115 | ..."Have I desired with desire to eat this flesh, the passover with you?" |
41115 | 16, 17:"Whether of the twain will ye that I release unto you? |
41115 | 17),"O Lord, why dost Thou make us to err from Thy ways, and hardenest our heart from Thy fear?" |
41115 | 23, where, on seeing demons mastered, they cry,"Is this the Son of David?" |
41115 | 39, 40, it is said:"O Maker, how do the souls of the dead, the Fravashis of the holy Ones, manifest themselves?" |
41115 | 48); the infirm man at Bethesda is healed only after a sham question,"Wouldest thou be made whole?" |
41115 | 6:"When of old bringing the first- born into the inhabited earth( oikoumenên) he saith, And pay homage to him all angels of God?" |
41115 | 7, where Jahveh- Elohim breathes into man, who becomes a"living soul,"--a being within the domain of the god of life, not subject to the god of death? |
41115 | 9), Agur, the"Hebrew Voltaire,"as Professor Dillon aptly styles him, asks:"Who has ascended into heaven and come down again? |
41115 | 9, we have the words,"Who can say,''I have made my heart clean, I am pure from sin?''" |
41115 | 9- 26, who almost repeats the points made by the above three remonstrants, and asks Jahveh,"Why sleepest thou?") |
41115 | After his baptism, Jesus repudiates his human parentage("who is my mother?" |
41115 | Agur''s question had remained unanswered--"Who has ascended into heaven and come down again? |
41115 | And I said,''Who art thou, Lord?''" |
41115 | And all the multitudes were amazed and said, Is this the Son of David? |
41115 | And he answered, Think ye these Galileans were sinners rather than all other Galileans because they suffered these things? |
41115 | And he sighed deeply in his spirit, and saith, Why does this people seek a sign? |
41115 | And may we not ascribe to a chorus the questions,"Who is this that cometh up out of the wilderness?" |
41115 | And what rest? |
41115 | And what the name of his sons, if thou knowest?''" |
41115 | And when John saw it he saith to him,''Who art thou, Lord?''" |
41115 | And when we were all fallen to the earth, I heard a voice saying to me in the Hebrew language,''Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
41115 | And whose spirit came forth from thee? |
41115 | As it is said thus:''Which is created before, the soul( nismô) or the body? |
41115 | But he said to them,''Wherein have I sinned that I should go and be baptized by him? |
41115 | But what country is indicated by Sheba( the Seven)? |
41115 | But which is the earlier? |
41115 | But why, it may be asked, were not these tributes suppressed? |
41115 | Did he eat with sinners only to call them to repentance? |
41115 | Did he never laugh? |
41115 | Did he pray,"Father forgive them, they know not what they do"? |
41115 | For what purpose? |
41115 | For who, while tears are falling, will pause to handle the wreaths, and find whether they are genuine? |
41115 | How could he give the heavy laden rest? |
41115 | How then was this mythical being formed? |
41115 | If there is a Heart up there why are we tortured? |
41115 | In a Gnostic legend Solomon was summoned from his tomb and asked,"Who first named the name of God?" |
41115 | Is it necessary to point out to any man of literary instinct the interpolation bracketed in the following verses? |
41115 | Is it not his rûbân that is the image of nismô? |
41115 | Is this couplet related to Nathan''s parable of the rich man taking away the poor man''s one little ewe lamb which smote the conscience of David? |
41115 | Is this quite reasonable? |
41115 | It was necessary that Koheleth should be answered, but who was competent for this? |
41115 | Jesus Bar Abbas, or Jesus that is called the Christ?" |
41115 | Job asks: To whom hast thou uttered words? |
41115 | John the Baptist is here the shepherd: seeing the light, he asks,"Who art thou, Lord?" |
41115 | Lo, is it not written in the book of Jasher?" |
41115 | Mighty is the word of the monarch: Who dares ask him,''What dost thou?''" |
41115 | Now he said to them, Whose son is Messiah? |
41115 | Or if such a poet could have existed in the later Jahvist times, would his songs have found their place in the Jewish canon? |
41115 | Such an one I would question about God:''What is his name? |
41115 | The dramatis personæ are certainly present: but is there any drama? |
41115 | The son of Judah is alleged to have been called Er; why? |
41115 | The''Canaanite''--namely, whom Judah marries[?] |
41115 | Then"--what? |
41115 | These are probably the origin of the Solomonic similitude of reason,"The spirit( nishma) of man is the lamp of----?" |
41115 | They are such as those who led astonished Jeremiah to ask"what kind of wisdom is in them?" |
41115 | Through what ages has that declaration, not to be denied, ascended to cold and cruel skies? |
41115 | Was he"The faultless monster whom the world ne''er saw"? |
41115 | Was it because of any popular interest in the legendary throne or house of David? |
41115 | Was that because of David himself? |
41115 | Was that prediction ascribed to Nathan, of their defilement, without any corresponding narrative? |
41115 | What became of the eight wives of David? |
41115 | What is brighter than the sun? |
41115 | What motive could she have? |
41115 | What shelter now in the divine fig- tree, which could bear nothing but legendary or predictive leaves? |
41115 | What then can they say of our contemporary betrayers of justice, the national lynchers, who are crucifying humanity throughout the world? |
41115 | What then could Jahvism say when a time arrived wherein it must defend itself against a Jahveh- created world? |
41115 | Who can bind the seas in a garment? |
41115 | Who can describe him as he is? |
41115 | Who can gather the wind in his fists? |
41115 | Who can grasp all the ends of the earth? |
41115 | Who can suppose that this violence, which were as if one assaulted those who sell holy candles and pictures in a church vestibule, really occurred? |
41115 | Who hath seen him that he can tell us? |
41115 | Who, in the second century, could have invented these anecdotes about Jesus? |
41115 | Why not advertise the divinations as"angelic"instead of satanic? |
41115 | Why should omnipotence create a race requiring worse than inquisitorial tortures for its discipline? |
41115 | Why should the false mother, who had so desired the child, consent to have it cut in two? |
41115 | Would Adonijah have requested, or Bathsheba asked as a"small"thing, a favor touching the king''s tenure? |
41115 | [ 25] This was evidently in the mind of the writer of Sophia Solomontos in the following verses: Wisdom is a loving Spirit, and will not( can not?) |
41115 | or as Marlowe and Goethe used the mediæval legend of Faustus? |
41115 | that is, is this Solomon, the famous enslaver of demons? |
41115 | v. 7) may be connected with the legend of his expiring cry,"My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" |
41115 | what yoke? |
41115 | which seem misplaced and unfulfilled? |
39769 | ''Are we not children born of the one Father?'' 39769 ''But,''I said at last,''are n''t you going to tell me what has so unnerved you?'' |
39769 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
39769 | Are n''t you well? |
39769 | At last I said,''Do n''t you think we had better leave to- day? 39769 But surely you heard the piano being played?" |
39769 | But what sort of ghosts haunt it? |
39769 | Do we need anything else, Phædrus? 39769 Have many people seen him? |
39769 | Have you known any one who has ever seen anything? |
39769 | How is it done? |
39769 | Is it always the same figure? |
39769 | It is a very large house, I suppose? |
39769 | Seen things? 39769 Then what did you see?" |
39769 | Then you all heard it? |
39769 | Well, what of it? 39769 What did she think of the bathroom?" |
39769 | What sort of figures? |
39769 | What the devil is he to do? |
39769 | Who was the man who killed himself in this room? |
39769 | You also? |
39769 | ''What was it he had to do? |
39769 | A day or two afterwards I said suddenly to the old family lawyer,"Was there ever a question of Uncle William leaving his money to me?" |
39769 | After a few minutes of friendly conversation, which had taken an amusingly domestic turn, he said to me,"Now, how much has your husband got a year?" |
39769 | After a little trivial conversation I said,"By the way, who is that brown man, dressed like a Satyr, who has been with you lately?" |
39769 | Again, why did not Mrs. Sinclair see this ghost when her mother so plainly saw it? |
39769 | Are burglars ever as rash as that? |
39769 | Are the ghosts who haunt a dwelling indifferent to, or hostile to, the presence of their companions in the flesh? |
39769 | As the horses were starting I called out to Miss Bates--"Tell me what''s going to win''The Cambridgeshire?''" |
39769 | As the housemaid prepared to follow her I said,"Am I the only person sleeping on this floor?" |
39769 | But was every one in the house clairaudient? |
39769 | But where? |
39769 | CHAPTER IX POMPEY AND THE DUCHESS Have animals souls? |
39769 | CHAPTER XVIII HAUNTED ROOMS How is it that one can"feel"a room is haunted? |
39769 | Could anything be more banal, more commonplace? |
39769 | Did he contrive to drop the"tip"into my mind, open at that moment and eager to catch the response? |
39769 | Did not the Christ warn his followers that the Path must be trodden more or less alone? |
39769 | Do pictures originate the artist? |
39769 | Do you wish to see me or my husband?" |
39769 | Every one is interested in getting rid of this weird disturbance, but how to do it? |
39769 | For what, after all, is a mystic, but one who enters into possession of the inner life? |
39769 | Had I not heard them stealthily beginning the ascent of the stairs, and grow louder the nearer they approached me? |
39769 | He sat up in bed and called out,"Who is it?" |
39769 | How do ghosts contrive to make such a noise? |
39769 | How few people realize that they have never seen themselves? |
39769 | How many can tell what they really look like? |
39769 | How often one is asked the question:"What is a medium?" |
39769 | How shall I describe the sight? |
39769 | How treat, as having right to equal power, the wise and the ignorant, the criminal and the saint? |
39769 | How well I know the look and the words accompanying it:"Are you Violet Tweedale, the novelist? |
39769 | How would she deal with the next story I am going to relate? |
39769 | How would this lady treat the"Castel a Mare"scream? |
39769 | How, she asked, could a firm social foundation ever be built up on this utter disregard of nature? |
39769 | Human beings having a rag and trying to scare the neighborhood? |
39769 | I sat down again and began to wonder if Lord Colin was ill, or was he dead, and why was he carrying lilacs? |
39769 | I was alone, but for how long would I remain alone? |
39769 | I wonder why? |
39769 | I would have laid hold of them and said,"Do you hear that knocking? |
39769 | If God be just and good, then what is the explanation of this hideous discrepancy in human lives? |
39769 | If God is love, who could reconcile with any comprehensive idea of justice and law in the world the lives and experiences of common humanity? |
39769 | If I had the courage to destroy them, what sort of condition would the bed be in after? |
39769 | If the whole household was in the room what could they do? |
39769 | In spite of this long friendship they were not the sort of people to whom I could have said,"Would you mind giving me another room? |
39769 | Is he always there?" |
39769 | Is it logical to suppose that there is no scheme of evolution for the immortal soul, in which it can preserve its individuality through the ages? |
39769 | Lady Sykes laughed and replied,"Which are they?" |
39769 | May it not be that this disembodied entity attached itself to my brother whilst he was out, and like a lost dog followed him home? |
39769 | My father had put his invariable question to the old woman,"Have you seen her again?" |
39769 | Nothing to be frightened of in that, is there?'' |
39769 | Now what does the subconsciousness contain? |
39769 | Now will you give me your promise never to mention this subject to me again? |
39769 | On the spur of the moment I said to my host,"Would n''t it be uncanny if we were to see a strange face looking down on us?" |
39769 | Only then will come the perplexed question: Where can I see in all this overwhelming misery the Divine hand of love and justice? |
39769 | Rats? |
39769 | She paused, and I ventured to ask,"But what sort of shock?" |
39769 | She set the tea down on a table and turned to me a scared face, as she answered by another question:"How ever did you find out that?" |
39769 | Should I let go? |
39769 | Supposing I did fall asleep, what would happen? |
39769 | That was so, responded the ladies, and the burly Duchess inquired if Madame ever gave racing tips, or lucky numbers for Monte Carlo? |
39769 | The hallucinations of a tired woman? |
39769 | The question seems to me to hang more on the query-- do such creatures actually exist, than on the argument did I, or did I not see them? |
39769 | Then I rang the bell, and when the butler entered the following dialogue took place:----"Who was the caller who has just been?" |
39769 | There are people to- day who ask,"Is this the end of the world?" |
39769 | Was murder taking place out there? |
39769 | Was some spirit interested in racing hovering near? |
39769 | Was this the real man and dog at last? |
39769 | Were my nerves playing tricks with me? |
39769 | What am I? |
39769 | What are those entities working for? |
39769 | What better shroud could any man ask for? |
39769 | What brought about the decline of those mighty civilizations whose monuments of antiquity seem to mock our pride? |
39769 | What can one do when paying a visit if one is ushered into a bedroom by one''s hostess which one instantly knows to be"unhealthful"? |
39769 | What could I make of the affair? |
39769 | What could Wynford have to say to any servant of Lord Strathmore? |
39769 | What do you make of it?" |
39769 | What explanation have I to offer? |
39769 | What had I better do-- nothing? |
39769 | What had prompted me to put that sudden question to the chambermaid? |
39769 | What have we achieved? |
39769 | What insidious disease brought about the fall of Rome? |
39769 | What is an aura? |
39769 | What is an elemental? |
39769 | What is the Divine Law lying behind this seeming hideous injustice? |
39769 | What is the grand apotheosis of each human life? |
39769 | What is this astral counterpart of man? |
39769 | What is this mysterious ego that thinks and acts? |
39769 | What of our records? |
39769 | What possible excuse could I make for cutting short my visit? |
39769 | What should suddenly change a man''s whole disposition the moment he"shuffles off this mortal coil"? |
39769 | What species of moth would he have declared them to be? |
39769 | What then will be termed the severance we now call death? |
39769 | What theory will explain this species of haunting which is quite common? |
39769 | What was I to do? |
39769 | What was I to do? |
39769 | What was about to follow? |
39769 | What was the power in you, Prince Charles Edward Stuart, that drew from countless women and men that wild unswerving devotion? |
39769 | What was the secret of Helena Petrovski Blavatsky''s instant success? |
39769 | What will become of all those grand old places in the future? |
39769 | What would our grandparents have thought of this means of turning an honest penny? |
39769 | What, I wonder, would he have made of that fat, gray flock sprinkling the bed? |
39769 | What, it may be asked, is the value to a woman of psychic experiences, whose reality may be convincing to herself, but never to others? |
39769 | When Christ asked,"Who has touched Me? |
39769 | When I was once more alone with Madame Blavatsky, she turned to me with a wry smile and said,"Would you have me throw pearls before swine?" |
39769 | When a break comes, perhaps through third- party treachery, there may come the sense of eternal severance, but is it eternal? |
39769 | When were you last in Sicily?" |
39769 | Where am I going? |
39769 | Where are they now? |
39769 | Where could they all have vanished to? |
39769 | Where did that answer come from? |
39769 | Where did you see him?" |
39769 | Where had I seen this man before? |
39769 | Where have I come from? |
39769 | Where have they been lying hidden during all those flying years? |
39769 | Where was she going? |
39769 | Where was that stealthy watcher, whose baleful eyes I felt were fixed upon me? |
39769 | Where will you be led: supposing you yield your will, would it ever be yours again?" |
39769 | Where? |
39769 | Which has the best chance of enduring in the future? |
39769 | Which made light of terrible hardships, which followed you faithfully through glen and corrie? |
39769 | Which? |
39769 | Who and what are they, and for what distant shores are they bound? |
39769 | Who can the"joker"be who is demoralizing his household, who has even dared to lock him into his own room? |
39769 | Who on earth could she be? |
39769 | Who was the player, and what was his instrument? |
39769 | Why could we not leave to- day?'' |
39769 | Why did she come to that house, with which, it is certain, she had no connection? |
39769 | Why did she only appear twice, and both times on the same date? |
39769 | Why do ghosts suddenly take possession of a house with which, in their incarnate days, they have had no connection? |
39769 | Why not? |
39769 | Why should n''t you see a ghost?" |
39769 | Will a member of the Psychical Society not try his luck? |
39769 | Will these ancient civilizations be remembered when the fame of modern nations has vanished utterly? |
39769 | Would I go and make inquiries? |
39769 | Would I suddenly awake to the fact that some one unseen was pulling off the bedclothes? |
39769 | Would one of the ladies suggest something she would like done? |
39769 | Would some one come and try to strangle me in the night? |
39769 | been on the Astral Plane lately?" |
39769 | do books originate the author? |
39769 | do n''t you know what that is?'' |
39769 | exclaimed Prince Arthur,"that letter is written by''The Pretender,''is n''t it?" |
39769 | heard things?" |
39769 | how do you think I am looking?'' |
39769 | who''d have thought it? |
39760 | ''But who have they got away with lately?--where are they now?'' 39760 ''Ear- mark?'' |
39760 | ''Nobody been joshing[6] you, I suppose?'' 39760 ''Why not?'' |
39760 | And he came for you? |
39760 | And perhaps you wo n''t mind telling us where we come in, in all this? 39760 Any Indian news?" |
39760 | Are you a good shot, Squito? |
39760 | At what time does the stage start for Magdalena? |
39760 | Azucar? 39760 Bat Hogan? |
39760 | Beyond the pail or the cask, Dick? |
39760 | Can he? 39760 Can you make a duck stew, Colonel?" |
39760 | Coon? |
39760 | Could n''t you swing him around by the heels some-- dust the side- walk, and knock a few flies off the wall with him? |
39760 | Did Joe say he_ remembered_ that, or invented it? 39760 Do n''t you feel, Joe, like getting down and beating him up a little, eh?" |
39760 | Do you want to play monte? |
39760 | Eh? 39760 Has the old pillar of salt started after us?" |
39760 | Have you been feeding them grain lately? |
39760 | Have you caught anything? |
39760 | Have you shown them all how you can pack? |
39760 | He''s another of them_ I_-talians, ai n''t he? |
39760 | He''s taking big chances if he only knew it, ai n''t he? |
39760 | How are you, Squito?--how''s your health? |
39760 | How did it all end? |
39760 | How did it happen? |
39760 | How do you know that? |
39760 | How do you want these potatoes cut up? |
39760 | How far off were you from him? |
39760 | How was he making it? |
39760 | How''s that for high, boys? |
39760 | Is Mr. Maroney in? |
39760 | Is he down, Dick? |
39760 | Is that so? 39760 Is that so? |
39760 | Laid over at the Sherlock boys''last night? |
39760 | Magdalena? |
39760 | Navajo Willy? |
39760 | Navajo, can you make corn bread? |
39760 | Sam? 39760 Sam?--Sam Rider? |
39760 | Shin? 39760 So the bull chased you too, Texas, did he?" |
39760 | Take a drink? |
39760 | The boys say that you''re going down into Mexico-- Chihuahua and there? |
39760 | Then we''re where we were before, I guess-- ready to start again, eh? |
39760 | Three cows and two calves, eh? 39760 To Mexico?" |
39760 | To blow in? 39760 Wal, ca n''t yer find no waggons?" |
39760 | We have_ got_ to go to the Double Adobes anyhow, so why not go to- day? |
39760 | Well, Piscator, what luck? |
39760 | Well, Tom came down just in the middle of that business, and told us all that they were going to have a game with-- what was his name, anyhow? |
39760 | Well, how are they going to be cooked? |
39760 | Well, what is it? |
39760 | Well, where was it? 39760 Were you there, Colonel, the night that the fellows put that job up on Mills''partner?" |
39760 | What are you doing now? |
39760 | What manner of fool is this that waits on time? |
39760 | What news? |
39760 | What was it? |
39760 | What''s the matter, then? 39760 Where are we going to?" |
39760 | Where did you kill the antelope, Squito? |
39760 | Where''re yer from? |
39760 | Where''s your father? |
39760 | Where? |
39760 | Which of you boys shot this antelope? |
39760 | Why not? |
39760 | Why not? |
39760 | Will you do me a favour, then? |
39760 | Wo n''t you give him a message for me? |
39760 | You can, eh? 39760 You got the stock, though?" |
39760 | You know dat gal? |
39760 | You want a boss cook and a beauty, Don Cabeza, eh? 39760 ''But you ai n''t going to sell it to him?'' 39760 ''Have you boys seen any Indians round?'' 39760 ''How do you come on?'' 39760 ''What are you now?'' 39760 ''What''s on?'' 39760 ''What''s the matter with your getting me now?'' 39760 ''What, sell another chap my bill?'' 39760 ''Why not?'' 39760 ''Why should n''t I,''said I,''if I can get half the total for it?'' 39760 (_ Par parenthèse_, may I inquire if you ever hush, when told to do so? 39760 And what''s the matter with our stopping here, and living comfortably, until you get back? |
39760 | And who is B.? |
39760 | Anything else?" |
39760 | Are there any meetings that leave such soothing impressions and recollections? |
39760 | Are we going to''make a killing,''or to buy a ranch, or only to steal some cattle? |
39760 | By the way, Colonel, did you see Sam around Deming?" |
39760 | Can it have been that formerly the climate was not what it is at present, and that the scarcity of rain is a deprivation of recent date? |
39760 | Castellano?" |
39760 | Did I never tell you that? |
39760 | Did he ever tell you about his playing''seven- up''with the old Scotchman?" |
39760 | Did n''t Tom Templeton come down to the''Depôt''to tell us about it? |
39760 | Do you think he quit? |
39760 | Does the difference in the style of these buildings indicate any parallel change in the character of the race that raised them? |
39760 | Eh? |
39760 | Eh? |
39760 | FOOTNOTES:[ 35] Why is this? |
39760 | For what, indeed, is the detecter of a new planet, the finder or conqueror of a new continent, beside the great discoverer of the truffle? |
39760 | Francis?" |
39760 | Graded cattle are more valuable, ai n''t they? |
39760 | Has Piggy been too''fresh''? |
39760 | Have another biscuit, Colonel?" |
39760 | Have we cherished him, and encouraged his investigations? |
39760 | Have you caught a sucker too?'' |
39760 | He could not even ask:"Did I ever abandon you when you were sick?" |
39760 | How did you get the jack?" |
39760 | How many are the sacred contracts that the Washington Government has entered into, to respect the reservations of the Indians? |
39760 | How much of what was once Mexican soil lies now within the borders of the United States? |
39760 | I got no tollars-- von''t you lent me a feefty- tollar pill?'' |
39760 | I know? |
39760 | If his vocabulary were limited to"Porque?" |
39760 | Is it not all photographed and laid aside to beguile us of idle hours hereafter? |
39760 | Is n''t he in the valley?" |
39760 | Is that an Indian over there, or is it only a soap- weed?" |
39760 | Is there any gossip in the world more delightful than that which takes place round a camp- fire? |
39760 | It is no longer customary, when you hire or borrow a horse, to ask its nominal owner before setting out,"which way it is_ good_?" |
39760 | Laugh? |
39760 | Lazy? |
39760 | No? |
39760 | Pretty soon they began:"''Well, what d''ye know, anyhow?--what''s the Indian news?'' |
39760 | Py golly, ven I start out anyvers, I alvays go repairet"( prepared?). |
39760 | Rough? |
39760 | The Itchen and its trout are at hand, the rod is ready, and the momentous question is:"The fly?" |
39760 | Then he said:"Hess, I never hurt you any, did I?" |
39760 | There are probably people who have become so thoroughly accustomed to ask, what_ is_ interesting? |
39760 | Those silver candlesticks look gorgeous, do n''t they?" |
39760 | Vat? |
39760 | Well, that''s pretty good for those greasers, is n''t it?" |
39760 | What can I tell him for you?" |
39760 | What do I know?" |
39760 | What for?" |
39760 | What for?'' |
39760 | What is going to happen to us?" |
39760 | What lake is here alluded to? |
39760 | What shall I tell your gal when we get down Ogden?" |
39760 | What were once California, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas? |
39760 | What''ll you give me to come out to the mine and cook?" |
39760 | What''s the matter with you anyhow? |
39760 | What_ do_ you want, then?'' |
39760 | Whence comes the courtly courtesy and dignity displayed by some of the owners of little insignificant shops in Mexican towns? |
39760 | Where did her actions begin-- where end? |
39760 | Where were we, though? |
39760 | Where were we? |
39760 | Which ear_ do_ you crop, anyhow?'' |
39760 | Who but a Mexican, when earnestly besought for sugar, could placidly answer that he had none, but had"plenty of beans"? |
39760 | Who is Sam?" |
39760 | Who was Navajo? |
39760 | Why, I remember----Are you acquainted in''Frisco, sir?" |
39760 | Yet, how have we treated its inspired inventor? |
39760 | You never shot any Mexicans, did you?" |
39760 | You wo n''t mind if we kill one of your fat steers now and then to feast them with, I suppose?" |
39760 | ai n''t we just eternally heeled?'' |
39760 | and what does the_ burro_ say, Tommy?" |
39760 | d''ye hear?" |
39760 | do you suppose that you have a monopoly of early hours?" |
39760 | or''steers,''as the case may be,''ai n''t we struck it big, eh? |
39760 | said old Joshua;''ear- mark? |
39760 | so entirely unused to ask themselves, what_ they_ really enjoy? |
39760 | what does Joe say? |
39760 | who"Mac"? |
39760 | who"Texas"? |
36439 | A what? |
36439 | Ah, Donald, say you will grant it before I tell you? |
36439 | Am I bitter or acid? |
36439 | And gone without you? 36439 And have you found it so?" |
36439 | And if one fails to win it? |
36439 | And is Mr. Whitely an honest man? |
36439 | And is your work congenial? |
36439 | And not yourself? |
36439 | And that is? |
36439 | And therefore you do n''t love me as much? |
36439 | And this is why you have resigned reputation for money- making? 36439 And what are your royalties?" |
36439 | And what do you plan to do with yourself? |
36439 | And why fortunately? |
36439 | And you can get along without it? |
36439 | And you do n''t know by whom? |
36439 | And you have to come to America for material? |
36439 | And you will not say why? |
36439 | Any business? |
36439 | Are there not some things that can not be put into words, Miss Walton? 36439 Are you a Jew or a Mohammedan?" |
36439 | Are you popular up there? 36439 Are you serious?" |
36439 | Are you trying to bribe me into giving you a rest from my presence for a time? |
36439 | Are you waiting to see how much I''ll give? |
36439 | Books? |
36439 | But if one can not love, how can one believe in it? |
36439 | But if you are n''t a Jew or a Mohammedan, what are you? |
36439 | But not now? |
36439 | But suppose one incapable of the ailment? 36439 But why should the abler men not belong?" |
36439 | But you will not work for me? |
36439 | But, Miss Walton,questioned Mr. Whitely,"does not the woman ask too much nowadays? |
36439 | Can I do anything for you? |
36439 | Can nothing make you stay at home? |
36439 | Come,he continued,"are you standing out in hopes I will offer you something?" |
36439 | Did I not? 36439 Did you ever get any as cheap as that?" |
36439 | Did you never read Æsop''s fable of the jackdaw? |
36439 | Do you appreciate the subtilty of the compliment? 36439 Do you know what Maizie is talking about?" |
36439 | Do you know why she has done so? |
36439 | Do you remember,you asked me,"our conversation in Mr. Whitely''s study, when I spoke of how little people really knew one another? |
36439 | Do you think I have n''t seen that? 36439 Do you value courage so highly?" |
36439 | Do you want me in the club or not? |
36439 | Do_ you_ think so, Miss Walton? |
36439 | Does one desire what one despises? |
36439 | Does that mean that you do not choose to do it? |
36439 | Does that prove or disprove their intellect? |
36439 | Dr. Hartzmann, what is the matter at the Philomathean? |
36439 | Dr. Hartzmann,you asked,"will you repeat what you said last night to me?" |
36439 | For what do you suppose I helped you, then? |
36439 | For what kindness am I indebted now? |
36439 | For what? |
36439 | From whereabouts? |
36439 | Has she made no attempt to find out? |
36439 | Has she money? |
36439 | Have n''t you changed your idea of me, Maizie? |
36439 | Have n''t you learned yet that the man would n''t part with you for anything? 36439 Have you forgotten it?" |
36439 | How can I do that? |
36439 | How could you say it? 36439 How did you happen to come?" |
36439 | How do you know that I can read Latin? |
36439 | How much did my father-- How much did Miss Walton lose? |
36439 | How much do you want? |
36439 | How much is it now? |
36439 | How much property have you? |
36439 | How much? |
36439 | How much? |
36439 | How so? |
36439 | How? |
36439 | How? |
36439 | How? |
36439 | I can not tell you,she replied; adding,"How do you like your own medicine?" |
36439 | I did not think, Miss Walton,I replied, steadying my voice as best I could,"that you saw my face clearly enough that evening, to recollect it?" |
36439 | I do not see why an address composed in the Astor Library should not be entirely satisfactory? |
36439 | I hope she is worthy of such a love? |
36439 | I hope you have succeeded to your own satisfaction? |
36439 | I hope you know what you''re talking about? |
36439 | I hope you wo n''t show the white feather by doing anything desperate? |
36439 | I hoped, after the trust of the other day-- You do not want to tell me your story? |
36439 | I presume the story has some connection in your mind with the subject in hand, but I am unable to see the appositeness? |
36439 | I suppose it''s only a question of amount? |
36439 | I think I shall disobey Polonius by trying to be a borrower,you announced, and turning to Mr. Whitely, you asked,"Do you ever loan your books?" |
36439 | I was for the time an Arab, and I was last from the Altai Mountains,I explained, and smilingly added,"Is my explanation satisfactory?" |
36439 | I wish, Blodgett,inquired Mr. Whitely,"you would tell me why I have been kept waiting so long?" |
36439 | I wonder if there ever was a husband who did not love to tease his wife? |
36439 | I? 36439 If this money were a trust in my hands, it would not be honest to use it in speculation, would it?" |
36439 | If we come in, will you give us some tea? |
36439 | If you are a trustee of Miss Walton,I said, growing cool in my agony of shame,"can you spare me five minutes and answer some questions?" |
36439 | If you rate love so low, why did you make your heroine crave it? |
36439 | In monopolizing this club? |
36439 | In what respect? |
36439 | In what respect? |
36439 | In what respect? |
36439 | Indeed, Mrs. Blodgett,you observed,"has not the day gone by for thinking dullness a sign of honesty? |
36439 | Is he as interesting to talk with as he makes himself in his book? |
36439 | Is it necessary to say? |
36439 | Is it no loss that of all the men I know, there is not one of whom I can say with certainty,''He is a brave man''? |
36439 | Is it so much consciousness of a past, Miss Walton,I suggested,"as prescience of the future? |
36439 | Is my English so unmistakable? |
36439 | Is n''t that Miss Walton? |
36439 | Is that all you want of me? |
36439 | Is that the way it affects you? |
36439 | Is this a riddle? |
36439 | Left a defenseless prey to the first comer? |
36439 | Matter? |
36439 | May I sit down? |
36439 | Mr. Whitely,you asked huskily,"how did you get this book?" |
36439 | Mr. Whitely,you cried,"can not you force him to speak?" |
36439 | Mrs. Graham has rejected it? |
36439 | Never been in America? |
36439 | Never heard of them,he announced;"or is it your Choctaw for those?" |
36439 | Not even to please mamma and me? |
36439 | Not write it? 36439 Now, Mr. Altai,"your companion remarked,"where shall we take you?" |
36439 | Of me, Miss Walton? |
36439 | Oh, you''re one of the wise men, are you? |
36439 | Perhaps you remember reading, last August, of an outbreak of some tribes in the Hindoo Kush? 36439 Please, Don, try?" |
36439 | Rather goes against the grain, eh? |
36439 | Really? |
36439 | Relatives, I suppose? 36439 She has told you so?" |
36439 | She of course knows nothing of my position? |
36439 | So the boss was wrong? 36439 So you''ll make money out of me, but think your club too good?" |
36439 | Something wrong, after all? 36439 Surely, Mrs. Blodgett, you do not mean that an uncultivated woman makes the best wife?" |
36439 | That''s it, is it? 36439 The debt really is being paid?" |
36439 | The work is easy,I assented,"but is it honest?" |
36439 | Then in 1879 the amount due Miss Walton was one hundred and four thousand dollars? |
36439 | Then the Levantine does not entirely disapprove of our Hesperian city? |
36439 | Then what have they against me? |
36439 | Then why did Blodgett predict that I would surely be rejected? 36439 Then you are sure my heroine did wrong?" |
36439 | Then you do n''t think it a duty to crush it out? |
36439 | Then you have met before? |
36439 | Then you wo n''t earn your pay? |
36439 | They get to know too much, eh? |
36439 | Was that amount net? |
36439 | Was that what you envied them? |
36439 | Well? |
36439 | Well? |
36439 | Well? |
36439 | Well? |
36439 | Were there no natural barriers to a friendship between a struggling writer and Miss Walton? |
36439 | What are you envying them? |
36439 | What are you usually doing? |
36439 | What did she do? |
36439 | What do you know? |
36439 | What for? |
36439 | What happiness is that? |
36439 | What is the labor worth? |
36439 | What is your objection to doing it, though? |
36439 | What will your library bring? |
36439 | What would they probably pay you for it? |
36439 | What''s that for? |
36439 | What''s the complaint? |
36439 | What''s the matter? |
36439 | What? |
36439 | Where are you bound for? |
36439 | Where can you get the balance? |
36439 | Where do those men hide themselves, Whitely? |
36439 | Which is better, Mrs. Polhemus,I asked, with a calmness I marveled at afterwards,"to love dishonesty or to dishonestly love?" |
36439 | Which is? |
36439 | Who was uncannily mind- reading then? |
36439 | Why ask forgiveness of me? 36439 Why did you ask that question?" |
36439 | Why did you call yourself Dr. Rudolph Hartzmann, of Leipzig, if you were an American? |
36439 | Why do n''t you go to your mother? |
36439 | Why do n''t you insist, too, that Mrs. Blodgett, who intends that I shall inform her nightly of everything I know, sha''n''t be told? |
36439 | Why do you suppose he''s unhappy? |
36439 | Why have n''t you told me of it? |
36439 | Why make the rest of his life unhappy? |
36439 | Why not suggest, Miss Walton,I replied, smiling,"that as an Orientalist I must think the seraglio woman''s proper sphere?" |
36439 | Why not? |
36439 | Why not? |
36439 | Why not? |
36439 | Why not? |
36439 | Why not? |
36439 | Why was that? |
36439 | Why? |
36439 | Why? |
36439 | Will you never get over the idea that you are weak? |
36439 | Will you tell me what it is? |
36439 | Wo n''t it do to add just a paragraph, saying that our fairy godmamma found and gave you the journal, and that then we''lived happily ever after''? |
36439 | Would El Mahdi ever have spoken for other races? |
36439 | Yet surely they must need a club, and what one so appropriate as this? |
36439 | Yet you wo n''t help me into the Philomathean? |
36439 | You are ignorant of the fact that your father embezzled a part of Miss Walton''s fortune, and that you and he have since lived upon it? |
36439 | You are not in earnest? |
36439 | You can tell your secrets? |
36439 | You did n''t tell them? |
36439 | You do not believe me? |
36439 | You gave Miss Walton my card? |
36439 | You love me? |
36439 | You mean that the Philomathean refuses to admit such men as Mr. Whitely named? |
36439 | You mean to say you do not intend to do it? |
36439 | You think it injudicious to have it done by Mather? |
36439 | You were n''t living in Tangier under the name of Hartzmann? |
36439 | You will write it to please me, Donald? |
36439 | You would limit a woman''s arithmetic to the solution of how to make one and one, one? |
36439 | You''ll make it nice, like the rest, wo n''t you? |
36439 | Your name, please? |
36439 | After a short pause you went on:"I hope that a day''s thought has convinced you that common justice requires you to say more than you did last night?" |
36439 | Am I to blame for reading in this the story of Mr. Whitely''s courtship of you? |
36439 | And I still think"-- Just then Mrs. Blodgett joined us, and inquired,"Have you told Rudolph, Maizie?" |
36439 | And now, Dr. Hartzmann, you''ll try to like Maizie, wo n''t you? |
36439 | And yet, how dare I claim to be free from sordidness, when all my thoughts and hopes and daily life are now bent on winning money? |
36439 | And you are opposing my election?" |
36439 | And you''d have sold all that for two thousand a year?" |
36439 | As I made no reply, she demanded impatiently,"What makes you behave so abominably?" |
36439 | As I reached it a new thought occurred to me, and, turning, I asked,"What has the legal rate of interest been since 1879?" |
36439 | At the stoop, however, Agnes asked,"Will you go with me to call on Maizie, some afternoon?" |
36439 | But I reply, If it was not for love, how could the world go on?" |
36439 | But if not an intuition, I ask what could it be? |
36439 | But if one must earn money?" |
36439 | But of what avail is a brain if it has never been trained, or has been trained to know only one thing?" |
36439 | But who has n''t heard of Thackeray and Hawthorne, Macaulay and Motley? |
36439 | But why did she stop there in her recollections?" |
36439 | But wo n''t you let me acknowledge the pleasure of yesterday by sending you a ticket? |
36439 | Can you forgive me?" |
36439 | Can you not see that his kindness, his patience, and his care of us were his endeavored atonement?" |
36439 | Can you tell me why?" |
36439 | Can you, Maizie, in the tide and triumph of your beauty and wealth, hide any such death- wound to all true happiness? |
36439 | Can you, despite all that has intervened, still feel any tenderness and love for my father and me? |
36439 | Could you tell me your story?" |
36439 | Did my face so betray me that you knew I needed help?" |
36439 | Did you-- were you the man who coined the phrase that my eyes were too dressy for the daytime?" |
36439 | Do all the people about me, who seem to be equally prosperous, bury away from sight some grief like mine that beggars joy? |
36439 | Do n''t you see I''m doing my level best for Agnes, and making a regular Jew bargain?" |
36439 | Do you know him?" |
36439 | Do you not remember how, aside from our companionship, his books were his one great pleasure? |
36439 | Do you not remember the sadness in his face in those later years, and his tenderness to both of us? |
36439 | Do you recollect Madame Vanott''s clasping us both in her arms and filling our hands with bonbons, when the time of parting came? |
36439 | Do you remember their friendly advances, met only by rebuffs? |
36439 | Do you remember, Maizie, how my father taught us to give him and each other a parting word? |
36439 | Do you wonder that, not foreseeing what was to come, I stood there as if turned to stone? |
36439 | Do you, as your speech to- night implied, think it right to go on loving baseness?" |
36439 | Do you?" |
36439 | Does your landlady give you blankets enough? |
36439 | Finally, in her irritation, she demanded,"What have you bothered me for, then?" |
36439 | For what reason had I never called on Maizie? |
36439 | Hartzmann?" |
36439 | Hartzmann?" |
36439 | Have n''t you any gratitude about you?" |
36439 | Have you ever tried to find a pearl, Miss Walton?" |
36439 | Having to speak, I asked,"You are sure of what you say?" |
36439 | He did not give me time for thought, but interrogated,"Well?" |
36439 | He jingled his coins, and asked,"Anything to be done for them?" |
36439 | He looked at me with a slightly quizzical expression and asked,"How?" |
36439 | He sat thus for a moment, and then, facing me, he questioned, with a sudden curtness of voice and manner,"What is your business with me?" |
36439 | He was too good a business man to look as skeptical as he probably felt, and merely asked,"What is your real name, then?" |
36439 | Hope you found them well?" |
36439 | How could I dream that you, with beauty, social position, and wealth, would make a loveless marriage? |
36439 | How much do you want?" |
36439 | How nearly completed is it?" |
36439 | I caught my breath in anguish at the thought, and then, fearing that my courage would fail me, I spoke hastily:"What do you offer me?" |
36439 | I do n''t think you dislike Agnes, do you?" |
36439 | I felt my cheeks burn, but I gripped the arm of my chair and waited till I could speak coolly; then I asked,"For what?" |
36439 | I have always thought-- or rather hoped-- that you cared for Agnes? |
36439 | I knew I had no right to continue this subject, but I could not help asking,"You liked it?" |
36439 | I stood silent, so he tapped me on the shoulder and asked,"Are you one of the palace guards?" |
36439 | I wonder if you ever think of him, and what your thought is? |
36439 | I wonder if you have seen this new book of travel, The Debatable Lands between the East and West?" |
36439 | I wonder what you would have done had you been in my position? |
36439 | I wonder what your thoughts were as you read the unsigned and typewritten note? |
36439 | I''m a big fellow down in Wall Street, and even on the Royal Exchange, but do you think I do n''t know my position? |
36439 | If I had taken what you offered? |
36439 | If she dropped her handkerchief to- morrow, fifty men would be scrambling for it, eh?" |
36439 | If this is so, why should not I salve my grief in any way that lessens it? |
36439 | Is it fair, then, to expect that he shall be as cultivated as she can make herself?" |
36439 | Is it no gain that courage has become moral rather than physical?" |
36439 | Is not a crust with independence and a chance to make a name better than such work?" |
36439 | Is there no escape? |
36439 | It''s only friendship, not love?" |
36439 | Just to please your own wife, you will, Donald, wo n''t you?" |
36439 | Nay, more, when that harsh, strident, American voice demanded,"There, is n''t that great?" |
36439 | Nothing is to be told that-- There again we lack a definition, do we not? |
36439 | Nothing more was said then, but later that evening, when we rose from our work, he asked,"She never replied?" |
36439 | Now, do you want to be extra good?" |
36439 | Oh, were n''t they lovely, Donald?" |
36439 | Or am I only magnifying my own sufferings, and diminishing those of my fellow mortals? |
36439 | Perhaps you know too what I want?" |
36439 | Seems like Tangier, does n''t it?" |
36439 | Should one be blamed if no pearl forms?" |
36439 | Some one with a fine natural voice sang presently an Arabic love- song:--"My love, so lovely yet so cruel, Why came you so to torture me? |
36439 | Startled, I demanded,"What is this?" |
36439 | Tell me what you think of it?" |
36439 | The man on the stage is instinct with emotion and feeling, but does he express more of his true individuality than the man in real life? |
36439 | The most successful of men; the most intellectually brilliant, may be-- By what can we to- day test courage and honor?" |
36439 | The subject was changed at once, but when we were smoking, Mr. Walton asked,"Blodgett, do you know anything about that Maitland affair?" |
36439 | Then she turned to Mr. Whitely, and with her usual directness remarked,"So they''ve let you in? |
36439 | Then the lowest and sweetest of voices said,"Wo n''t you tell us what you mean?" |
36439 | Then why were you masquerading in Arab dress and with a brown face in Tangier, and why did you say you came from some mountains in Asia?" |
36439 | Then, after he had turned the matter over to a clerk, he asked,"What does your publisher offer?" |
36439 | There was a pause before you asked,"Donald, do you remember our talk here last autumn?" |
36439 | This evening the dearest woman in the world came to me, as I sat at my desk in the old library, and asked,"Are you busy, Donald?" |
36439 | Unsuppressed by my monosyllabic"No,"he persisted by saying,"What''s your business, then?" |
36439 | Was it a chance or a purposed diversion? |
36439 | Was it the strong connection of contrast, or was it a quirk of my brain? |
36439 | Was n''t he an old love? |
36439 | Was the omission due to too much feeling or too little? |
36439 | Was there an instinct of natural sympathy, or was it merely pity for me in the loving heart you masked behind that subtle face? |
36439 | Well, ca n''t you say something? |
36439 | What do you suppose Paul said, Whitely?" |
36439 | What do you suppose she has got into her head?" |
36439 | What favor do you want me to do?" |
36439 | What feelings had that scrap of writing stirred in you? |
36439 | What have I to give in return for all this?" |
36439 | What have you been doing?" |
36439 | What have you thought of me?" |
36439 | What is it?" |
36439 | What is the reason they do n''t elect me?" |
36439 | What is your objection to me?" |
36439 | What more do they want?" |
36439 | What was it we broke?" |
36439 | What was there in me that won for me what you gave so rarely? |
36439 | Which love is the higher?" |
36439 | Whitely?" |
36439 | Whitely?" |
36439 | Whitely?" |
36439 | Whitely?" |
36439 | Who invented the mot that a woman''s intuitions were what she had when she was wrong?" |
36439 | Who knows but a change of circumstances might have made me the fearless one, and you the timorous? |
36439 | Who were the bankers and rich men fifty years ago? |
36439 | Why did n''t you?" |
36439 | Why do n''t you like her?" |
36439 | Why do you do it?" |
36439 | Why had I behaved so? |
36439 | Why not?" |
36439 | Why, Rudolph, you are not going without kissing me good- night?" |
36439 | Will you come in?" |
36439 | Will you let me see what you have of Saadi, so that I may take my choice?" |
36439 | Will you see that the boss and Agnes get cards?" |
36439 | Wo n''t you pay me now, dear?" |
36439 | Wo n''t you slip out quietly?" |
36439 | Yet still each night you come in dreams For me to ask, Who sent you? |
36439 | You admire the book?" |
36439 | You had started to go, but again you turned, and asked with interest,"What_ do_ I mean?" |
36439 | You knew her in Germany?" |
36439 | You looked at me in silence for a moment, and then asked,"Is love so much to you?" |
36439 | You really care for such valueless and indefinable things as feelings?" |
36439 | You turned and said to Mr. Whitely,"You will play, I hope?" |
36439 | You wo n''t mind staying here alone, will you?" |
36439 | asked Agnes, as she shook hands with you,--"that they were monopolizing you? |
36439 | what''s the name of that point out there?" |
36439 | whereupon Agnes cried,"Did n''t I ever tell you, Maizie, the compliment the doctor paid you last winter?" |
3737 | A man like you, Hugh? |
3737 | Alf,demanded the Colonel,"what do you know of this fellow Krebs?" |
3737 | All right, it''s talk, then? 3737 Always?" |
3737 | And Adolf? |
3737 | And do you think that she-- that Nancy found out--? |
3737 | And is he any worse,she asked slowly,"than many others who might be mentioned?" |
3737 | And then? |
3737 | And then? |
3737 | And when you get married, Hugh? |
3737 | And why did n''t Varney get hold of him and make him listen to reason? |
3737 | And you stayed,I went on,"when all the others ran away? |
3737 | And you? |
3737 | And you? |
3737 | And-- what makes you think that I''m not content? |
3737 | Are n''t you afraid of ghosts? |
3737 | Are n''t you glad to be home? |
3737 | Are you going to speak in the tows hall to- night? |
3737 | Are you going to the meeting? |
3737 | Are you sure you can afford them, Hugh? |
3737 | Are you tired of the trip? |
3737 | But Mr. Krebs? 3737 But if the mill people wanted him, George, how could it be prevented?" |
3737 | But is n''t Tom your best friend? |
3737 | But surely you did not think, in those days, that he would be as big as he has become? 3737 But why have you waited all these years if you did not mean to marry a man of ability, a man who has made something of himself?" |
3737 | But-- do you think we can afford it?... |
3737 | But-- do you want me to bury myself in domesticity? |
3737 | Ca n''t you see what such a decision lets them in for? |
3737 | Convert him to the saintly life I lead? |
3737 | Could n''t you see-- can''t you see now what you did? 3737 Did I ever deny you that, Hugh?" |
3737 | Did n''t he just naturally lambaste''em? |
3737 | Did you notice that fellow who went up to the desk a moment ago? |
3737 | Did you think I should be jealous? |
3737 | Did you think that I''d be jealous? |
3737 | Did you think you''d married just a dry old lawyer? |
3737 | Do I look it? |
3737 | Do n''t you see,she continued pleadingly,"do n''t you see that we are growing apart? |
3737 | Do n''t you take rather a-- prejudiced view of this, Krebs? |
3737 | Do you know a man named Krebs in the House? |
3737 | Do you know him? |
3737 | Do you know him? |
3737 | Do you know what I told him when he married me? 3737 Do you know what I''ve been wondering all evening?" |
3737 | Do you mean,I managed to say,"that after all these months you do n''t like me a little?" |
3737 | Does n''t he look pleased with himself? |
3737 | Does the penalty,he inquired,"seem to you a little severe?" |
3737 | Ever been in Elkington before? |
3737 | Everything went through according to schedule, eh? 3737 For an old woman? |
3737 | From Elkington? 3737 Has he come here to practice?" |
3737 | Have I received much encouragement to do so? |
3737 | Have you been interested in what I thought about you? |
3737 | Have you been working to- day, Hugh? |
3737 | Have you changed them? |
3737 | Have you-- have you accepted him? |
3737 | He''s had to talk about it once or twice in court-- eh, Hugh? 3737 He''s made a killing of some sort,--haven''t you, Hugh?"... |
3737 | How about the thousands of families who do n''t earn enough to live decently even in times of prosperity? |
3737 | How are you going to get your folks out there? |
3737 | How are you? |
3737 | How can you say that? 3737 How did you hear that?" |
3737 | How is this thing going, Paret? |
3737 | How shall I get along, I wonder, with that simple and unsophisticated lady when she appears? |
3737 | How would nine o''clock do? 3737 How?" |
3737 | Hugh, you will always love me-- to the very end, wo n''t you? |
3737 | Hugh,she said at length,"how could you be so cruel? |
3737 | I believe you''re a partner of Theodore Watling''s now are n''t you? 3737 If I love you, Maude?" |
3737 | If you had made up your mind to do it, why did you tell me? |
3737 | Is he thinking of doing all that? |
3737 | Is it? |
3737 | Is n''t that a rather one- sided view, too? |
3737 | Is that all he objects to? |
3737 | Is that you, Mr. Paret? 3737 It is n''t pleasant to think that there are such people as the politicians, is it?" |
3737 | It''s Grierson, ai n''t it? |
3737 | Jim voted for Bill 709 all right-- didn''t he? |
3737 | Jim,asked the Colonel, gently,"did n''t I always take care of you?" |
3737 | Mrs. Durrett is an old friend of yours? |
3737 | No-- no flaw in his-- record? |
3737 | Pay for what? |
3737 | Say, Colonel, ai n''t we always treated the Railroad on the level? |
3737 | Say, Colonel,he demanded,"what''s this bill that went into the judiciary this morning?" |
3737 | Say, you would n''t take me for a sentimental man, now, would you? |
3737 | She is pretty, that Mrs. Durrett, and clever,--is it not so? |
3737 | So you are Mrs. Hambleton Durrett? |
3737 | So you think I ai n''t on? |
3737 | That''s all very well, Fred,Dickinson objected presently,"but how are your prospective householders going to get out there?" |
3737 | The young fellow in the grey suit? 3737 Then why, in heaven''s name, are you going to marry him?" |
3737 | They talk about monopoly, those Populist senators, but I ask you what is a man in my place to do? 3737 This city?" |
3737 | Tractable? |
3737 | Want me, Colonel? |
3737 | Was Krebs here? |
3737 | Watling send you over here? |
3737 | Well, Hugh, were you dreaming? |
3737 | Well, Mr. Paret,he asked softly,"what''s up?" |
3737 | Well, has he taken a pass as a member of the legislature? |
3737 | Well, how did you get along with Hilda? |
3737 | Well, what about Bill 709? |
3737 | Well, what can you do? |
3737 | Well, you did n''t get square, did you? |
3737 | What I did? |
3737 | What are the facts? 3737 What are you thinking about?" |
3737 | What are you working for? |
3737 | What bill? |
3737 | What did you think of me, when you first knew me? |
3737 | What difference does it make what they say? |
3737 | What do you hear from the Senator? |
3737 | What do you mean? |
3737 | What do you think of this, Colonel? |
3737 | What do you think the property holders on Maplewood Avenue would say? 3737 What do you think?" |
3737 | What do you want me to do with him? |
3737 | What does Watling think? |
3737 | What does he want? |
3737 | What is he, a Socialist? |
3737 | What is it you object to about the Maplewood franchise? |
3737 | What is? |
3737 | What makes him think he ai n''t going to get it? |
3737 | What things? |
3737 | What''s going to defeat him? |
3737 | What''s he up to? |
3737 | What''s that, Governor? |
3737 | What''s the matter? |
3737 | What''s to prevent us-- Maude? |
3737 | Where did you get that disreputable sheet? |
3737 | Where have you been, Jim? |
3737 | Who is this man Krebs? |
3737 | Who was he? |
3737 | Who was the lawyer? |
3737 | Why could n''t you have held fast to your faith? 3737 Why did n''t Miller Gorse let me know about it, instead of licking up a fuss after it''s all over?"... |
3737 | Why did n''t somebody tell me? |
3737 | Why did n''t you let me see that you still cared? |
3737 | Why did n''t you tell me about it before? |
3737 | Why do you say that? |
3737 | Why not Paret? |
3737 | Why not judge this bill by its face, without heeding a cock and bull story as to how it may have originated? 3737 Why not?" |
3737 | Why not? |
3737 | Why should any sensible man, a member of the legislature, take stock in that kind of gossip? |
3737 | Why should n''t I marry him? |
3737 | Why should n''t she let you? |
3737 | Why should n''t you tell me, Hugh, if it''s so? |
3737 | Why should you be-- even if there were anything to be jealous about? 3737 Why the deuce should she marry Ham? |
3737 | Why, where''s Tom? |
3737 | Wo n''t he-- listen to reason? |
3737 | Would n''t you be accomplishing more,I inquired,"if you had n''t antagonized the Hutchinses?" |
3737 | You are getting what you have always wanted, are n''t you? |
3737 | You are right to come back to business, and after awhile you can have another honeymoon, eh? 3737 You did n''t see in the papers that he was nominated,--did you, Paret?" |
3737 | You do like her? |
3737 | You do n''t want to take it back? |
3737 | You here? |
3737 | You mean that he''s in the employ of the Ribblevale people? |
3737 | You see what I have let you in for? |
3737 | You think he''ll get elected-- do you? |
3737 | You were going into the law, were n''t you? |
3737 | You''d never guess what the inside was like, would you, Hugh? |
3737 | You''ll forgive me for talking about it, wo n''t you? 3737 You''re acquainted with Colonel Varney?" |
3737 | You''ve never regretted going into law? |
3737 | You-- you love him? |
3737 | ''By what means?''" |
3737 | A man would lose his self- respect if he did n''t let out his mind at them hoss thieves, would n''t he? |
3737 | After all, what could they prove? |
3737 | And after all this time would n''t it seem like an intrusion?" |
3737 | And after all, when we have good appetites and are fairly happy, why should we complain?" |
3737 | And do you remember the time when you made the boat, and we went to Logan''s Pond, and you sank in her?" |
3737 | And how long do you think was my first? |
3737 | And was it not just this sustenance she could give that I needed? |
3737 | And what was to be done about it? |
3737 | And while I do not expect to be able to delay its passage much longer than the time I shall be on my feet--""Then why not sit down?" |
3737 | And you''ll forgive me, wo n''t you, for being so horrid to- day, of all days? |
3737 | And, since the Almighty did not limit the latter, why should man attempt to limit the former? |
3737 | Are you going to the Club?" |
3737 | But I''m not that any more,--I''m simply recalling that, do n''t you see? |
3737 | But father could n''t run the mills at a loss-- could he?" |
3737 | But for me? |
3737 | But was I? |
3737 | But what is it they do for me? |
3737 | But what is the use of regrets?" |
3737 | But why blame me for getting a franchise for a company in the only manner in which, under present conditions, a franchise can be got? |
3737 | But why not? |
3737 | But would she remain docile? |
3737 | But-- did not he in his own person represent the triumph of that American creed of opportunity? |
3737 | Ca n''t you see that she does n''t care for the things that amuse me, that make my life?" |
3737 | Could I rise now to the ideal that had once been mine, thrust henceforth evil out of my life? |
3737 | Could it be that she were enjoying my discomfiture? |
3737 | Did I feel that loyalty towards a single human being? |
3737 | Did I really care for her? |
3737 | Did I really want her? |
3737 | Did Nancy still care for me? |
3737 | Did he inquire what the party worker thought of Mr. Watling for the Senate? |
3737 | Did you like him?" |
3737 | Did you notice how some of them stared at us, as though they were but half awake in the heat, with that glow on their faces? |
3737 | Do they invite me to their houses, to their parties?" |
3737 | Do you follow me?" |
3737 | Do you see that fellow gettin''up to talk now? |
3737 | Do you suppose it mattered to me whether you went to Harvard with the others? |
3737 | Do you think Nancy would like them?" |
3737 | Do you think the day will come when statesmanship will recognize this need?" |
3737 | Do you think they would undermine you, and to me, behind your back?" |
3737 | Do you want me to invite him to dinner?" |
3737 | Do you want the city to stand still? |
3737 | Five thousand dollars? |
3737 | Good God, have n''t you got enough, Hugh,--enough success and enough money, without going into a thing like this Riverside scheme?" |
3737 | Gorse gave you a letter to the Governor, did n''t he?" |
3737 | Guess you had more to do with that bill than came out in the newspapers-- eh?" |
3737 | Had he no memories of the terrors of that struggle?... |
3737 | Had not the honest Americans and Germans become foremen and even presidents of corporations? |
3737 | Has he accepted a pass from the Railroad?" |
3737 | Has he ever made a study of the other side of the question-- the competition side? |
3737 | He was in my class at Harvard.... Is he still here?" |
3737 | Honeymoons can wait-- eh?" |
3737 | How about a thousand apiece for five of us boys?" |
3737 | How about it, Jim?" |
3737 | How can you doubt their loyalty, and mine? |
3737 | How did He, or It, like to be trifled with in this way? |
3737 | How did it happen?" |
3737 | How long is it, Billy?" |
3737 | How much was it you paid Dr. Stickney, in New York, Adolf? |
3737 | How was the Governor, Trulease?" |
3737 | Hugh, was there anything the matter? |
3737 | I believe in the young men, and I have already seen something of you-- so?"... |
3737 | I did not pause to reflect that the Colonel''s attitude, from his point of view( yes, and from mine,--had I not adopted it?) |
3737 | I never leave my good Democratic friends on the outside, do I?" |
3737 | I reckon he is useful down there in Washington, but say, do you know what he always reminded me of? |
3737 | If I were an enigma to them, what must they have thought of him? |
3737 | If Nancy Durrett symbolized aristocracy, established order and prestige, what did Mrs. Scherer represent? |
3737 | If you do n''t eat, somebody eats you-- is it not so? |
3737 | In the absence of these, who were the opposition? |
3737 | Is he in trouble?" |
3737 | Is there a man so dead as not to feel a thrill at this achievement? |
3737 | It is a good bill, or a bad bill? |
3737 | It is not like it was but where is it all leading, my friend? |
3737 | It may be asked why the Railroad should bother itself by lending its political organization to private corporations? |
3737 | Just as soon as this is introduced we''ll have Gates and Armstrong down here-- they''re the Ribblevale attorneys, are n''t they? |
3737 | Love forever, live always in this sanctuary she had made for me? |
3737 | Now, provided the conditions are not as good as they might be, how are you going to improve them if you find yourself isolated here, as you say?" |
3737 | Oh, why did you change?" |
3737 | Only-- don''t you think you are a little too sensitive about yourself, when you are teased?" |
3737 | Paret?" |
3737 | Perhaps Mr. Paret would like to look about the grounds?" |
3737 | Scherer?" |
3737 | Shall I tell you the smartest thing you ever did?" |
3737 | She lives in that place you''ve been going to so much, lately,--doesn''t she?" |
3737 | She was not made for poverty-- and who so well as she was fitted for the social leadership of our community? |
3737 | Sit down, wo n''t you?" |
3737 | Suddenly, from the back of the hall, a voice called out:--"How about House Bill 709?" |
3737 | Suppose there were a God after all? |
3737 | Was I sure that I wanted her-- for life? |
3737 | Was it not what I had desired? |
3737 | Was it possible that she had felt nothing and I all? |
3737 | Was it?" |
3737 | Was n''t it understood, when that avenue was laid out, that it was to form part of the system of boulevards?" |
3737 | Watling?" |
3737 | What chance had a poor man against such a moloch as the railroad, even with a lawyer of such ability as had been exhibited by Hermann Krebs? |
3737 | What do you know about him?" |
3737 | What greater vindication for their philosophy could be desired? |
3737 | What had I done? |
3737 | What has got into the politicians, that they are indulging in such foolishness?" |
3737 | What is left for us, Paret?" |
3737 | What is left? |
3737 | What is that but enterprise, and business foresight, and taking risks? |
3737 | What other career is open to a woman? |
3737 | What right had he to be contented with life? |
3737 | What should I say? |
3737 | What was Maude Hutchins to me? |
3737 | What was the situation in this county and in that? |
3737 | What''s that fellow''s name?" |
3737 | When do you wish to have them for dinner?" |
3737 | Who is he? |
3737 | Why could n''t he have remained in Elkington? |
3737 | Why did he have to follow me here, to make capital out of a case that might never have been heard of except for him?... |
3737 | Why wo n''t you tell me more of what you are doing? |
3737 | Why, indeed, was I not mad about all three of them? |
3737 | Why, pray, should the people complain, when they had everything done for them? |
3737 | Would I be happy with Nancy, after all? |
3737 | Would Maude have relapsed into this senseless fit if she had realized how fortunate she was? |
3737 | Would the public feel like that, if they only knew?... |
3737 | Would the time come when I should feel a sense of bondage?... |
3737 | You ought to know her well enough to understand how she''d feel if she discovered some of McAlery''s financial coups? |
3737 | You understand?" |
3737 | You want to be somebody,--isn''t that it? |
3737 | You will forgive me for saying what I think to young men?" |
3737 | You''ll have some tea, wo n''t you?" |
3737 | and was it in her nature to take ultimately the position that was desirable for my wife? |
3737 | or even towards Nancy? |
3737 | or to cooperate with England in some undertaking for the world''s benefit because we contended that she ruled India with an iron hand? |
3737 | or was it that my marriage had failed to satisfy and absorb me? |
3737 | the national situation? |
3737 | towards Maude herself-- my wife? |
37293 | ''And what prophet will you be, and what is your prophecy?'' 37293 ''And who will you be, and forgive the saying?'' |
37293 | ''Saw me first, Marsail?'' 37293 ''Then be telling me this now at least,''I asked:''is there danger for him or me in this island?'' |
37293 | ''Then what more is there, Marsail Macrae?'' 37293 ''What will it be now, Marsail?'' |
37293 | ''When and where was this sight upon you?'' 37293 ''Who are you?'' |
37293 | ''Who are you?'' 37293 A breath?" |
37293 | A new environment for its need? 37293 Ah, is it so with you? |
37293 | And at the worst? |
37293 | And did you sleep or wake, comforted? |
37293 | And is death above her now? |
37293 | And is it peace? |
37293 | And is_ your_ father living? |
37293 | And the Body? |
37293 | And then, when you had heard that song? |
37293 | And we? |
37293 | And what are the things of Eternity? |
37293 | And what do_ you_ say, Giorsal? |
37293 | And what is dust? |
37293 | And when I come again, there will be clappings of hands, and hymns, and many rejoicings? |
37293 | And when I kissed you, did I whisper any word? |
37293 | And when was that? |
37293 | And where would you be spending it? |
37293 | And who will he be? |
37293 | And why will that be, O Colum Cille? |
37293 | And with that thick Gaelic that you have, it will be out of the north isles you come? |
37293 | And you have no fear? |
37293 | Are you restless? 37293 Ay, sure: and now,"said the saint,"O Ardan the wise, is my God thy God?" |
37293 | Black Judas, Murtagh? |
37293 | But can mortal sin live as long as that? |
37293 | But tell me, Morag, who is the Herdsman of whom you speak? |
37293 | But unfriendly at what? |
37293 | But we-- we shall be formless: inchoate? |
37293 | But you are you? |
37293 | But_ you_ do not go into dust? |
37293 | Can it be the better part to prefer the things of the moment of those of Eternity? |
37293 | Can the woman put swimming upon you? |
37293 | Can you show me the way? |
37293 | Create what? |
37293 | Did he give you no name? |
37293 | Did you not hear what Necta sang? 37293 Did you not say there would be no more tears? |
37293 | Do you know much about them old Iona monks? |
37293 | Do you know of Mary, and God, and the Son, and the Spirit? |
37293 | Do you know where Alastair Rua and his daughters are? |
37293 | Does God whisper beneath the Tomb? |
37293 | Does dissolution mean nothing to you? |
37293 | For me? |
37293 | Friends? |
37293 | Giorsal,said Ian, turning in despair to his sister,"is it madness that you have?" |
37293 | Gone? 37293 Hail,"said Mochaoi,"and for why that, O bird that is an angel?" |
37293 | Have we dreamed? |
37293 | Have you ever heard of_ am Buachaill Bàn-- am Buachaill Buidhe?_He looked at her in amaze. |
37293 | He dwells everywhere? |
37293 | How am I for knowing, Alan mac Ailean? 37293 How can I save you, how can I help you, dear friend?" |
37293 | How can I tell what I can not even surmise? |
37293 | How long have they been in Iona, White- Robe? |
37293 | How? |
37293 | I hear there are fifty and nine men of these Culdees yonder under the sword- priest, Maoliosa? |
37293 | I mean, do you-- do you see any likeness in them to any you know? |
37293 | Ian, have you seen my friends before? |
37293 | Ian, what is this mystery? |
37293 | Ian,I exclaimed to the old man, who stared wonderingly at us;"Ian tell me this: what like are my companions; how do they seem to you?" |
37293 | If in truth, the Mind be an indivisible essence? |
37293 | If you''re not anxious to live,he said,"will you give me what money you have? |
37293 | In any case nothing but a change, a swift and absolute change, from what was to what is? |
37293 | In the love of God? |
37293 | Is it a dream wherein we have shared? |
37293 | Is it an ancient_ sgeul_, Ivor? |
37293 | Is it likely that God would come here in a coracle? |
37293 | Is it madness that is upon you, old man? 37293 Is it no knowledge you have of him at all, Alan MacAilean?" |
37293 | Is it worth it? |
37293 | Is not the Grave on the hither side of Eternity? |
37293 | Is she married... had she a lover... or... or... do you mean that she... that you... have lost her? |
37293 | Is that an amulet? |
37293 | Is that the John Macdonald who is marrying Elsie Cameron? |
37293 | Is the worm also the Son of God? |
37293 | It is a man you were once, O Ròn? |
37293 | It may be I shall know,said one? |
37293 | Little black beast,said Colum, with the frown coming down into his eyes,"is it for peace you are here, or for sin? |
37293 | So says the Soul-- but what do_ you_ say, O Will? |
37293 | Tell me, Alan- a- ghaoil, what is this thing that you are thinking you will hear or see? |
37293 | Tell me, Ian, do you see any difference in me? |
37293 | Tell me, Morag MacNeill, what is the meaning of this strangeness that is upon you? 37293 Tell me, are you insubstantial? |
37293 | Tell me, my heart,Ian urged again,"who is it you expect to see or hear?" |
37293 | Tell me, tell me this: if I am so wedded to the Body that, if he perish, I perish also, what resurrection can there be for me? |
37293 | Tell me,asked the Soul,"why is it better than death?" |
37293 | Tell me,he said,"how far north has the Cross of Christ come?" |
37293 | Tell me,resumed the Will,"what is Dissolution?" |
37293 | Tell me,whispered Ian,"tell me Marsail, what thought it is that is in your own mind?" |
37293 | Tell me: can the immortal we d the mortal? |
37293 | Tell me; do you recognise them? |
37293 | The Three Companions of Night? 37293 Then is it only a warrant against Death?" |
37293 | Then it is not dead? |
37293 | Then it may be with you as with us? |
37293 | Then it''s not the same as the old story that is in the Bible? |
37293 | Then what is Eternity? |
37293 | Then what need for us who are mortal to occupy ourselves with what must be for ever beyond us? |
37293 | Then why was Black Angus for the seeking her here and the seeking her there? |
37293 | There is no other lesson for you in the worm, and in the dust? |
37293 | To see the world? |
37293 | Well,said Olaus the White grimly,"well, how did the Raven fly?" |
37293 | What art thou, O Spirit? |
37293 | What do you hope for to- night? |
37293 | What do you mean, brother? |
37293 | What for? |
37293 | What is Eternity? |
37293 | What is dissolution? |
37293 | What is it called? |
37293 | What is it to you? |
37293 | What is it, Alan- mo- ghray; what is the trouble that is upon you? |
37293 | What is it, Tormaid- a- ghaolach? |
37293 | What is it? |
37293 | What is that for? |
37293 | What is that? |
37293 | What is the meaning of this thing? 37293 What made you think of that?" |
37293 | What meaning does that have? |
37293 | What meaning? 37293 What name will you have?" |
37293 | What old monks? |
37293 | What then do you wish for, Coll mac Coll? |
37293 | What think ye of that, brother Oran, brother Keir? |
37293 | What was the song? |
37293 | What would you, viking? |
37293 | What wouldst thou? |
37293 | What? 37293 When-- where?" |
37293 | Where did he come from? 37293 Where did you leave him last night?" |
37293 | Where is Elsie? |
37293 | Where is the woman Brenda that you took? |
37293 | Where-- when? |
37293 | Who are you? |
37293 | Who is Kirsteen M''Vurich, Murtagh? |
37293 | Who is the Herdsman of whom you speak, Morag? |
37293 | Who pulled him into the sea? |
37293 | Who wants not to want? |
37293 | Who were those with you? |
37293 | Why are you asking that thing? |
37293 | Why are you breathing? |
37293 | Why do you ask? |
37293 | Why do you come here among us, you that are Maoliosa? |
37293 | Why do you laugh? |
37293 | Why do you laugh? |
37293 | Why do you not come into the boat? |
37293 | Why do you sing that lament, Silis, sister of my father? |
37293 | Why is it that a man like yourself, young and strong, should be doing this work, which is for broken men? |
37293 | Why is the laughter upon you, Man- Seal? |
37293 | Why should I, woman? 37293 Why should you not?" |
37293 | Why to you more than to me, or to the Body? |
37293 | Why? 37293 Why?" |
37293 | Why? |
37293 | Will God be coming to Iona when I am away? |
37293 | Yet you shall be you? |
37293 | You are sure, Ian? |
37293 | You ask me what is dissolution? 37293 You believe in the immortal life?--You believe in Eternity?" |
37293 | You believe it so? |
37293 | You heard my playing-- you here, I there? |
37293 | You remember what he said about the Three Companions of Night: Laughter, and Wine, and Love? 37293 You whispered:''_ I am the Following Love._''""And you knew then that it was the Breath of God, and you had deep peace, and slept?" |
37293 | You will not be putting evil upon me because that you saw me here by the pool before I saw you? |
37293 | You will tell me now, Ivor? |
37293 | _ Ailean mo caraid, Ailean- aghray_, what is it? 37293 And I-- do I believe in that? 37293 And One said:Do you not know me, brother?" |
37293 | And can it be that to you, to whom the healing dew was vouchsafed, shall be denied the water- springs?" |
37293 | And for why? |
37293 | And so you can not be for telling me where my woman is?" |
37293 | And these are her words to me, and mine to her-- and the first speaking was mine, for the silence wore me: Am bheil thu''falbh, O mo ghraidh? |
37293 | And what sin is it that lies between me and another of which you know?" |
37293 | And why not?" |
37293 | Another name of the Mother of all Gods is_ Aine( Anu?)_. |
37293 | At last the Soul spoke:"Why should I not? |
37293 | Ay? |
37293 | BY SUNDOWN SHORES"_ Cette âme qui se lamente En cette plaine dormante C''est la nôtre n''est- ce pas? |
37293 | Besides, what had he to do with the culdee''s hell or heaven? |
37293 | But as for the story, what is it but the universal Gaelic legend of Diarmid and Grania? |
37293 | But even in what may more fairly be called superstitious, have we surety that we have done well in our exchange? |
37293 | But the saint forbade him, saying,''Let him alone? |
37293 | But what... how... where... am I to choose? |
37293 | But who could he be? |
37293 | But why seek riddles in flowing water? |
37293 | But will you ever have heard of the MacOdrums of Uist?" |
37293 | But would that sea- change leave the mind the same or another?" |
37293 | But, now, give me the word: Are you for having seen or heard of a woman called Kirsteen M''Vurich?" |
37293 | But----""But what?" |
37293 | Can she not say, when we would forget, forget; when we would remember, remember? |
37293 | Can she not whisper the white secrecies which words discolour? |
37293 | Can you not sleep?" |
37293 | Can you think what it is to break a hope in your heart each time you crack a stone on the roadside? |
37293 | Do you not understand what death means to_ me_?" |
37293 | Hast thou come to pray?" |
37293 | Hath not God Himself said it, through the mouth of His prophet?" |
37293 | Have I not ever told you that Love would save?" |
37293 | Have you money?" |
37293 | How am I to know that_ all_, that everything, is not but an idle noise in my ears? |
37293 | How can we? |
37293 | How could one better be blessed, on coming into life, than to have the kiss of that ancient Mother of whom we are all children? |
37293 | How shall I go?" |
37293 | I cried,''what''s the meanin''o''roses in January?'' |
37293 | I wondered; or were the men and women in the ferry hurrying across to the Ross of Mull to look for them among the inland hills? |
37293 | Ian stared, with moving lips: then in a whisper he spoke--"Would you be for following a herdsman who could lead you to no fold? |
37293 | If so, what was the lesson of life? |
37293 | If the Body should die, would he not then become as a breath in frost? |
37293 | Is it not poetry? |
37293 | Is it not she also who says, Come unto me all ye who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest? |
37293 | Is it not she who has a lute into which all loveliness of sound has passed, so that when she breathes upon it life is audible? |
37293 | Is it so great an effort of the imagination to conceive of the Mind and Soul actual as the Body is actual? |
37293 | Is then this wildering sea- song but a part Of the old song of the mystery of the years-- Or only the echo of the tired Heart And of Tears? |
37293 | It is suggestive that_ Ana_ is a Phoenician word: that people had a( virgin?) |
37293 | It will be a great joy for you to die like that, Artân, my son?" |
37293 | Listen,_ mo ghaoil_; do you not know me-- do you not know who I am? |
37293 | Mary Macleod said little; what, indeed, was there to say? |
37293 | May it not be that the Mind may have an undreamed- of shaping power, whereby it can instantly create?" |
37293 | May it not be that you and I and the Body go down unto one end?" |
37293 | May it not be that you, O Soul, are but a spiritual nerve in the dark, confused, brooding mind of Humanity? |
37293 | Must he not be divine, who is worshipped of all men? |
37293 | None believed him; but what could any do? |
37293 | Of all the saints of the west, from St. Molios or Molossius( Maol- Iosa? |
37293 | Only, if this were so, why should he call himself the Herdsman? |
37293 | Or could he? |
37293 | Or had he been startled by some wild fantasy, and imagined a likeness where none had been? |
37293 | Or had he sight of the shadow? |
37293 | Or was Alan the vain dreamer? |
37293 | Or was it that he knew the Gael were coming in force, and that the vikings were caught in a trap? |
37293 | Or whence are they, and what air is upon their shadowy wings? |
37293 | Prayer, and Hope, and Peace; Dream, and Rest, and Longing; Laughter, and Wine, and Love: were these analogues of the Heart''s Desire? |
37293 | Rob, do you see who''s here?" |
37293 | She turned upon him her white face, with her great, brooding, dusky eyes:"Will He give me back Angus?" |
37293 | Tell me, have you ever heard of The Three Companions of Night?" |
37293 | That third one, is he a Spirit, alone, uncompanioned? |
37293 | That voice, was it not his own? |
37293 | The Fèinn leaned on their elbows, and Fionn said,"Is the end come?" |
37293 | The kelp- burner: who was he but the Gael of the Isles? |
37293 | Then Colum cried,"O fishes of the deep, who is your king?" |
37293 | Then, too, if this man were indeed herdsman, where was his_ iomair- ionailtair_, his browsing tract? |
37293 | This was how the woman Morag had spoken; did she indeed mean this very man? |
37293 | Was he himself, Alan Carmichael, indeed_ Am Fàidh_, the predestined Prophet of the isles? |
37293 | Was he indeed at the extreme of life? |
37293 | Was his soul amid shallows, already a rock upon a blank, inhospitable shore? |
37293 | Was it Colum himself come again? |
37293 | Was it a dream, he wondered? |
37293 | Was it a forewarning? |
37293 | Was it all lost... the long endurance of pain, the pangs of sorrow? |
37293 | Was it possible that Mind could have a life apart from mortal substances? |
37293 | Was it possible? |
37293 | Was the island haunted? |
37293 | Was the preacher still talking of the Divine Forges? |
37293 | Was this, then, the reason of what had been his inexplicable gloom? |
37293 | Were these symbols of the end-- the red flame and the white... the Body and the Soul? |
37293 | Were we really three personalities, without as well as within? |
37293 | Were your three gods in the coracle with Colum? |
37293 | What could she mean? |
37293 | What gives you dread? |
37293 | What had been, was not: could any words, could any solace, better that? |
37293 | What if both at times were wrought too deeply by this beautiful dream? |
37293 | What is Eternity to_ us_?" |
37293 | What is Eternity?" |
37293 | What is Eternity?" |
37293 | What is all this madness that you say? |
37293 | What is the wind That I hear calling By day and by night, The crying of wind? |
37293 | What life could there be for him if the Body perished? |
37293 | What made him sing that song, in that hour, on this day of all days? |
37293 | What man has ever dared to say that Alan MacAilean of Rona is an outcast? |
37293 | What then? |
37293 | What was it that he played? |
37293 | What will it be like on the day she asks for it again?" |
37293 | What wonder, he thought, that deep gloom had been upon him that day? |
37293 | What word have you to say to_ that_, to_ me_ who likewise am already perishing? |
37293 | When have I foretold evil upon you or yours, or upon the isles beyond? |
37293 | When have I spoken of having any mission, or of being other than I am? |
37293 | When the day darkens, When dusk grows light, When the dew is falling? |
37293 | Where did he go to?" |
37293 | Where has she gone to?" |
37293 | Which shall I choose? |
37293 | Who art thou?" |
37293 | Who but the Gael in his old- world sorrow? |
37293 | Who else is there?" |
37293 | Who is the Herdsman?" |
37293 | Who knows where its tributaries are? |
37293 | Who now would go up to the hill- pastures singing the Beannachadh Buachailleag, the Herding Blessing? |
37293 | Who was this man, with the sea- poppy in his hair, who, unknown, knew him by name? |
37293 | Why do you and these men look at me askance?" |
37293 | Why do you not speak? |
37293 | Why do you think that I have the power of the evil eye? |
37293 | Why do you turn away your head?" |
37293 | Why had he come so far southward, and why were oars so swift and the stained sails distended before the wind? |
37293 | Why should I?" |
37293 | Why that absolute stillness, that strange, listless indifference? |
37293 | Why was it that this strange, potent, inscrutable being, whom both loved, should be so foreign to each? |
37293 | Why was it, he wondered, that he felt less alien from the Body? |
37293 | Yes, you know that, you say, and also that he was called Donnacha Bàn? |
37293 | Yet what joyousness like hers, when she wills: because of her unwavering hope, her inexhaustible fount of love? |
37293 | You are for knowing, sure, that long ago Uilleam, brother of him who was father to the lad up at the castle yonder, had a son? |
37293 | You are one of the race of Odrum the Pagan?" |
37293 | You know old Marsail Macrae? |
37293 | You, yourself, below this accident of mortality?" |
37293 | _ B''idh mi falbh, Mùirnean!_ C''uin a thilleas tu, O mo ghraidh? |
37293 | _ Thig an so, Mùirnean- mo, Thig an so!_ Are you going, My dear one? |
37293 | _ Yea, now I am going, Dearest._ When will you come again, My dear one? |
37293 | and if so, what lay in her words? |
37293 | he mused: or that white angel with whom the Saint was wo nt to discourse, and who brought him intimacies of God? |
37293 | that tone, was it not familiar in his ears? |
37293 | the servant by Jesus?) |
424 | She gave consent,you say? |
424 | ( Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?) |
424 | ( Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?) |
424 | ( Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?) |
424 | ( Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?) |
424 | A Prayer to All the Dead Among Mine Own People Are these your presences, my clan from Heaven? |
424 | And must he be belauded by the smirched, The sleek, uncanny chiefs in lies grown old? |
424 | And what if my body die Before I meet the truth? |
424 | Are these your hands upon my wounded soul? |
424 | Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb? |
424 | Big- voiced lasses made their banjos bang, Tranced, fanatical they shrieked and sang:--"Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?" |
424 | Booth led boldly with his big bass drum--( Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?) |
424 | But must the Senator from Illinois Be vindicated by fat kings of gold? |
424 | Can murmurs of the worms arise To higher hearts than mine? |
424 | Did you dare to make the songs Vanquished workmen need? |
424 | Did you waste much money To deck a leper''s feast? |
424 | Do you say"She gave consent: Life drunk, she was content With beasts that her fire could please?" |
424 | Eyes so strained and eager To see what you might see? |
424 | Ghosts in Love"Tell me, where do ghosts in love Find their bridal veils?" |
424 | Good tailors, can you dress a doll for me With silks that whisper of the sounding sea? |
424 | Heart of God O great heart of God, Once vague and lost to me, Why do I throb with your throb to- night, In this land, eternity? |
424 | How did I reach your feet? |
424 | I asked her,"Is Aladdin''s lamp Hidden anywhere?" |
424 | I asked,"How came this place Of antique Asian grace Amid our callow race In Illinois?" |
424 | I wonder if that gardener hears Who made the mold all fine And packed each gentle seedling down So carefully in line? |
424 | I wonder if the gardener heard The rose that told him so? |
424 | Is this Sir Philip Sidney, this loud clown, The darling of the glad and gaping town? |
424 | Love the truth, defy the crowd Scandalize the priest? |
424 | Mystic, ardent, dowered with beauty, Singing where still waters dwell? |
424 | Of banks where hell''s money is paid And Pharisees all afraid Of pandars that help them sin? |
424 | Of sellers of drink who play The game for the extra pay? |
424 | Of statesmen in league with all Who hope for the girl- child''s fall? |
424 | On the Road to Nowhere On the road to nowhere What wild oats did you sow When you left your father''s house With your cheeks aglow? |
424 | On the road to nowhere What wild oats did you sow? |
424 | Say, is my prophecy too fair and far? |
424 | The Empty Boats Why do I see these empty boats, sailing on airy seas? |
424 | The Queen of Bubbles[ Written for a picture] The Youth speaks:--"Why do you seek the sun In your bubble- crown ascending? |
424 | The issue, can we know? |
424 | This brazen gutter idol, reared to power Upon a leering pyramid of lies? |
424 | To the United States Senate[ Revelation 16: Verses 16- 19] And must the Senator from Illinois Be this squat thing, with blinking, half- closed eyes? |
424 | Were the tramp- days knightly, True sowing of wild seed? |
424 | Were you thief or were you fool Or most nobly free? |
424 | What did it mean? |
424 | What is the final ending? |
424 | What of the rose''s prayer? |
424 | What right have you to call them yours, And in brute lust of riches burn Without some radiant penance wrought, Some beautiful, devout return? |
424 | What shall be said of a state Where traps for the white brides wait? |
424 | When will our wrath begin? |
424 | When will they make a path of beauty clear Between our riches and our liberty? |
424 | When will they make our dusty streets their goal, Within our attics hide their sacred tears? |
424 | When will they start our vulgar blood athrill With living language, words that set us free? |
424 | Where are those lovers of yours, on what name do they call The lost, that in armies wept over your funeral pall? |
424 | Where is David, ruddy shepherd, God''s boy- king for Israel? |
424 | Where is David, the Next King of Israel? |
424 | Where is David? |
424 | Who can pass a village church By night in these clean prairie lands Without a touch of Spirit- power? |
424 | Why are they not inspired, aflame? |
424 | Why should I feel the sobbing, the secrecy, the glory, This comforter, this fitful wind divine? |
424 | Why should I-- at the end Hold out half- frozen hands Dumbly to you my friend? |
424 | Will Christ outlive Mohammed? |
424 | Will Kali''s altar go? |
43666 | And why not send him? 43666 What have we to do with sullenness? |
43666 | What more can I do,he asked,"than I have done? |
43666 | And to what end is this power used? |
43666 | And what shall our wives learn from the Queen? |
43666 | And, indeed, how could it be otherwise? |
43666 | At the beginning of the last century what was the position of our army? |
43666 | But how does art stand in the world to- day? |
43666 | But how is this to be possible, and who is to help you? |
43666 | But why did all this glory come to naught? |
43666 | Dost ask who that may be? |
43666 | For what has become of the so- called world- empires? |
43666 | If he succeeded in anything, then all the world asked:"Who advised him?" |
43666 | What can there now be, after what we have lived through, which shall interest or elevate or inspire us?" |
43666 | What did he mean? |
43666 | What did they want? |
43666 | What does the noble figure of Queen Louise teach us? |
43666 | What is discipline? |
43666 | What is discipline? |
43666 | What shall be the end, and where lies the responsibility? |
43666 | What was my reply? |
43666 | What will these tasks be? |
43666 | Wherein lies the secret of the fact that we have often overcome our adversary with lesser numbers? |
43666 | Who can foresee what may take place in the Pacific in the days to come?" |
43666 | Who was it that began this shameful attack upon our friend? |
43666 | Who would not be deeply moved on such historic ground as that of Aix by the breath and murmur of the past and of the present? |
43666 | Why did the German Empire dwindle away? |
40315 | ... by the German botantist, Hildebrand,...Page 642:''is''corrected to''Is''"... in bonds and debentures? |
40315 | Was nothing else,he may ask,"proposed in the Disraelian system for the cure of popular evils?" |
40315 | Ye have wearied the Lord with your words,( yes, and some of His people, too, in your time):"yet ye say, Wherein have we wearied Him? |
40315 | All that we have done has told in her favour,--surely we are at one with her? |
40315 | And if it had been found, what possible help could it have brought to a single agriculturist? |
40315 | And is not life one of the most important elements of reality? |
40315 | And now let us face the question, simply, What is rent? |
40315 | And since motion is a breach of the law of inertia, what is it that first excited motion in this dead matter? |
40315 | And what are the precise character and functions of a Jina? |
40315 | And what must be said of the ugly word, monopoly, which is so freely flung against the owners of rent? |
40315 | And yet, which succeeds the better? |
40315 | Are the men and nations who reap the splendid fruit of such a superiority to be stigmatized as despoilers of their fellow- citizens? |
40315 | Are there final causes as well as material causes, or are there material causes only? |
40315 | Are you not bid to go into_ all_ the world and preach it to every creature? |
40315 | But how comes it to pass that an ordinary manufacture does not yield or pay any such third income? |
40315 | But how has this change in his position been worked? |
40315 | But is all rent the child of monopoly? |
40315 | But on what grounds? |
40315 | But what causes contraction of the muscles? |
40315 | But what follows? |
40315 | But what sends that influence? |
40315 | But what system will clear away superior produce and increased price? |
40315 | By J. Boyd Kinnear 617 What is Rent? |
40315 | By way of preliminary, I may ask whether his past antecedents show him to be a statesman of this hobgoblin type? |
40315 | By what means, then, does man bring one property, or law, into play instead of, or against, another? |
40315 | Can we call it an offence against law if it acts on matter elsewhere than in that mass of organized pulp which we call brains? |
40315 | Did Masaccio go to a school of design, or Giotto learn"free- hand"manipulation? |
40315 | Do not most look on it merely in the light of the Statute of Swearing? |
40315 | Do the facts justify us in concluding that insect fertilization is more beneficial to the plant than fertilization by the wind or any other agency? |
40315 | Do they afford any sufficient cause for that change from the one mode of fertilization to the other which has been suggested? |
40315 | Does it give any testimony to that_ becoming_ beautiful of the flowers of plants to which Mr. Darwin refers? |
40315 | For example, what is fine weather? |
40315 | Has the Ministry been weakened or strengthened by the toils of the Parliamentary recess? |
40315 | He that formed the eye to see beauty, shall He not see it? |
40315 | He that gave the human hand its cunning to work for beauty, shall His hand never work for it? |
40315 | How has the recent foreign policy turned out with respect to her? |
40315 | How is such a reproach to be repelled? |
40315 | How was it, then, that he succeeded in toppling over the great Minister? |
40315 | How, then, did Lord Lytton act? |
40315 | Is it any otherwise with the Third Commandment? |
40315 | Is it likely that this universal aim and purpose of the mind of man should be wholly without relation to the aims and purposes of his Creator? |
40315 | Is it possible to conceive the Madonna di San Sisto painted under such conditions? |
40315 | Is not every one of its petitions for a perfect state? |
40315 | Is not part of the profit realized legitimately due to them, as profit accomplished by a commercial enterprise? |
40315 | Is not this passing strange? |
40315 | Is not this the first of all questions which a Clerical Council has to answer in open terms? |
40315 | Is rent, the offspring of a like advantage, to be painted as a tribute exacted from fellow- countrymen compelled to buy food? |
40315 | Is the system of the universe intellectual, or is it purely material? |
40315 | Is there an ordering mind, or is there merely blind and struggling matter? |
40315 | Justice 574 Where are we in Art? |
40315 | My first letter contained a Layman''s plea for a clear answer to the question,"What is a clergyman of the Church of England?" |
40315 | Namely: as clergymen of the Church of England, do they consider themselves to be so called merely as the attached servants of a particular state? |
40315 | On the other hand, can anything be more tremendous than the words themselves-- double- negatived:"[ Greek: ou gar mê katharisêi... kyrios]"? |
40315 | Or can they be reconciled so that both are credible? |
40315 | Or what is disease? |
40315 | Suppose, again, we answer that both are modes of motion, we only come to the further question, what causes motion? |
40315 | Supposing that the Radicals had not had penetration enough to comprehend the position he took up, who would have been to blame for that? |
40315 | Surely nobody can have forgotten the"fancy franchises?" |
40315 | The flora, like the fauna, of the world has changed: how has it changed as regards the beauty of the flowers? |
40315 | The inquiry thus becomes, What are the thoughts, and what the feelings consequent on those thoughts, which traverse the mind of the farmer? |
40315 | The next question is only, what causes electricity and what causes vibration? |
40315 | The question for the tenant becomes, Can the farm afford such a rent? |
40315 | Then, as to the people at large, how are they to be made loyal and religious, since it seems that they are neither of these now? |
40315 | WHAT IS RENT? |
40315 | WHERE ARE WE IN ART? |
40315 | Was he not studiously audacious? |
40315 | Was there then any breach of natural laws( beyond that of inertia) in causing such winds to blow? |
40315 | What are the results fairly deducible from these observations? |
40315 | What causes affinity, what causes gravity? |
40315 | What does the recent flourish of telegrams really amount to? |
40315 | What facility for calculation could such a parish furnish to a farmer in Middlesex or Lancashire? |
40315 | What moves the hand? |
40315 | What then is rent? |
40315 | What was the remedy for this state of society into which England had fallen? |
40315 | What, then, became of the atheistical philosophy and agnostic materialism of the Buddhistic creed? |
40315 | What, then, was the secret of its permanence and diffusion? |
40315 | When ye say, Every one that doeth evil is good in the sight of the Lord, and He delighteth in them; or, Where is the God of judgment?" |
40315 | Where do we find evidence in Nature that matter can not be moved by the Divine mind? |
40315 | Which of these revelations shall they believe? |
40315 | While in the House, who was there with steel of any temper that he did not try its edge? |
40315 | Who has not heard of their courageous pilgrimage to the Manchester Athenæum to explain to Cottonopolis how they proposed to re- make the nation? |
40315 | Why should they not? |
40315 | Will he need four horses or two only for each of his ploughs? |
40315 | Will his farm be amongst the light and sunny hills of Surrey; or will it be embedded in the stubborn clay of the Sussex weald? |
40315 | Will it be capable of creating water- meadows, which have such a lifting power for rent in many parts of England? |
40315 | Will the lime and the marl be close to his borders, or must he send his carts long distances to the pit or the railway? |
40315 | Will there be an opportunity of bringing it before the Chambers? |
40315 | Would any man, I ask, address these insults and menaces to one whose friendship and confidence he was desirous to gain? |
40315 | [ 4] Here, then, we are brought face to face with the special subject of our present paper: What are the peculiar characteristics of the Jaina creed? |
40315 | _ Query_: Is not this the case with the_ Tacsonia_ of our greenhouses?] |
40315 | and, instead of a Holy Ghost the Lord and Giver of Life, do you only believe in an unholy mammon, Lord and Giver of Death?" |
40315 | must ultimately be always the greater spiritual one:"Children, have ye here any Holy Spirit?" |
40315 | or in bringing up thunder- clouds? |
40315 | or in causing an arid season? |
40315 | or,"Have ye not heard yet whether there_ be_ any? |
40315 | which produces the more seed? |
38477 | A disappointment then to the Thanefords? |
38477 | A week? |
38477 | About what time of the day was that? |
38477 | About what? |
38477 | Am I to pass or not? |
38477 | An accident? |
38477 | An assailant then? |
38477 | And that is your last word? |
38477 | And then? |
38477 | And was the second will, the one in my favor, also kept in this box? |
38477 | And when you again came to the library door Miss Trevor was standing there and Effingham was gone? |
38477 | And yet the cypher had certainly started to uncode; what could have thrown me off the track? 38477 Any marks of violence?" |
38477 | Any particular questions? |
38477 | Are you going to be at home within an hour or so? 38477 At Miss Trevor''s request?" |
38477 | At my return, or because I am seeking you out at the''Hundred?'' 38477 Brief?" |
38477 | But about the arrest? |
38477 | But afterwards? |
38477 | But how and why? |
38477 | But there is a door from the pantry into the short passage that leads to the library, is n''t there? |
38477 | But without the key- word where would you get off? |
38477 | But you would n''t put her down-- I mean on the strength of your general observation-- as predisposed to that sort of thing? |
38477 | By the way, have you dined? |
38477 | By whom? |
38477 | Can you assign a cause? |
38477 | Can you spare me a few moments? |
38477 | Can you walk? |
38477 | Cocaine powder? |
38477 | Could you tell how long? |
38477 | Did Eunice offer any objection to the change? |
38477 | Did anyone, besides Mr. Eldon, know that a later will-- the one in my favor-- had been made? |
38477 | Did he give you any reason to think that he did n''t know his own mind, or that the time would ever come when he would n''t know it? |
38477 | Did she ask you for anything? |
38477 | Did you ever hear,he asked,"that in his younger days Fielding Thaneford was considered to be an expert in the science of optics? |
38477 | Did you know of the master- key? |
38477 | Did you notice that no allusion was made, on either side, to that singular metal rest? |
38477 | Did you see him? |
38477 | Do n''t you see it in his face? |
38477 | Do you happen to recall the medical testimony given at the coroner''s inquest by Doctor Williams of John Hopkins? 38477 Do you make anything of it?" |
38477 | Do you mean for a visit? |
38477 | Do you mind opening up the room? |
38477 | Do you notice anything peculiar about those dates? |
38477 | Do you remember the story of Christian and his fellow pilgrim, Hopeful, imprisoned in Giant Despair''s stronghold of Doubting Castle? 38477 Do you remember,"she asked,"a series of numbers that I got from Mr. Thaneford the day he died?" |
38477 | Do you suppose that anyone else-- especially among the other servants-- knew about the master- key and where it was kept? |
38477 | Do you think I ought to go to the hearing and testify? |
38477 | Do you want to tell me what the numbers were? |
38477 | Five minutes perhaps? |
38477 | For example? |
38477 | For how long? |
38477 | For what purpose? |
38477 | Granting all your premises-- why? |
38477 | Had you ever noticed any premonitory signs-- you know what I am trying to say? |
38477 | Had you not been warned by Mr. Francis Graeme not to trespass upon his property? |
38477 | Has Mr. Eldon been acquainting you with the particulars of the family history? |
38477 | Have you any theory about the Sigma ray itself? |
38477 | He bought some article, or articles, from you? |
38477 | He wants to say something? |
38477 | His tardiness then excited no surprise? |
38477 | How about Effingham''s master- key; did you ever hear of it? |
38477 | How about Thaneford himself? |
38477 | How about it, Jem? |
38477 | How about the pridellas in the windows-- the little ventilating apertures? |
38477 | How about you? |
38477 | How can anyone say? 38477 How did Mr. Graeme''s matchbox come into your possession?" |
38477 | How do you know? 38477 How do you translate the cypher?" |
38477 | How does it strike you? |
38477 | How long have the Hildebrands been at the''Hundred''? |
38477 | How long were you away? |
38477 | How long were you in the house? |
38477 | How so? |
38477 | How so? |
38477 | How would_ you_ like it settled? |
38477 | I ca n''t read a word of it; what does it mean? |
38477 | I do n''t want to run any risk,I said,"How about coming back to- morrow to make a thorough job of it?" |
38477 | I found it in the road nearly opposite S. Saviour''s Church? |
38477 | I wonder how much he really knew about the whole affair? |
38477 | I wonder if you would mind spending a few days here at the''Hundred?'' |
38477 | I''m John Thaneford-- what then? |
38477 | Indenting? |
38477 | Is it John? |
38477 | Is that it? |
38477 | Is there any use in going on with the inquiry? |
38477 | Just what are the conditions under which exposures to the rays of the sun may be dangerous? 38477 Just what do you want?" |
38477 | Mis''Eunice, she done tole me to- gib''er----"The master- key? |
38477 | Mr. Graeme''s funeral? |
38477 | My dear Cousin Hugh, are you oblivious of the fact that this is the South, and that we are kin? |
38477 | Not necessarily caused by the blow on the temple? |
38477 | Nothing has been heard of John Thaneford, I suppose? |
38477 | Now tell me, you black scoundrel, where the secret door is? |
38477 | Now then, Hugh, do you see? |
38477 | Oh, then it was not in his immediate possession after all? |
38477 | On your second visit to the room? |
38477 | Or anybody else? |
38477 | Or perhaps you would prefer rye or bourbon? |
38477 | Or rather its effect upon the physical organism? |
38477 | Or would you be willing that Little Hugh should enter upon his inheritance with this cloud hanging over it? |
38477 | Possibly, you have forgotten that Betty is now my wife? |
38477 | Rather fortuitous, do n''t you think? 38477 Ready?" |
38477 | Remember that? |
38477 | Shall I have your traps sent over to the''Court?'' |
38477 | So that is what killed him? |
38477 | The making of the first will, or the fact that he had determined to alter it? |
38477 | The series of numbers, you mean? 38477 Then I''ll have to take the risk?" |
38477 | Then it did n''t occur to you that you might use the master- key? |
38477 | Then it is a perfectly plain case? |
38477 | Then it was no particular secret, the master- key and its hiding place? |
38477 | Then you did give it to Miss Eunice? |
38477 | Then you were in the house? |
38477 | Then, according to your theory, it is the Sigma ray which is the active lethal agent in sunlight? |
38477 | To whom? |
38477 | Was Eunice persistent in her endeavor to change Mr. Graeme''s resolution? |
38477 | Was Mr. John Thaneford aware that there had been a will drawn in his favor? |
38477 | Was there an autopsy? |
38477 | Well, how is this for an hypothesis? |
38477 | Well? |
38477 | Well? |
38477 | Well? |
38477 | Were you with Campion all the time he was in the house? |
38477 | What are you doing on this property? |
38477 | What did he mean then by stupefying you with whiskey, and placing you, bound and helpless, in the big swivel- chair? |
38477 | What did you buy of him? |
38477 | What did you do then? |
38477 | What do you say to our walking over there and making a reconnaissance? |
38477 | What do you suppose is the meaning of that contraption? |
38477 | What is the answer? |
38477 | What man? |
38477 | What more do you want of me? |
38477 | What new evidence? |
38477 | What next? |
38477 | What proof can you give that the article in question was lost and a reward offered for its return? |
38477 | What right had you to force such an issue? |
38477 | What sort of business? |
38477 | What then? |
38477 | What then? |
38477 | What time was that? |
38477 | What was it that killed all the Hildebrands throughout two generations? |
38477 | What was the ninth letter, the alphabetical rock upon which my fine theory had gone to pieces? 38477 What was there to say?" |
38477 | When Miss Eunice sent you up stairs to get the ammonia was she wearing any kind of a wrap? |
38477 | When and where? |
38477 | When did all this happen? |
38477 | When did that particular conversation take place? |
38477 | When? |
38477 | Where are you going? |
38477 | Where did Miss Trevor go? |
38477 | Where is he? |
38477 | Where is it? |
38477 | Where was Effingham? |
38477 | Where was I? 38477 Where was that box when you first came in the room and knelt by my-- my father?" |
38477 | Which implies that she must have paid a previous visit to the room and carried the box away? |
38477 | Which is it to be? |
38477 | Who is it then? |
38477 | Who is the man, and what were the circumstances of his arrest? |
38477 | Who knows? 38477 Who unlocked the library door when Doctor Marcy returned with my Cousin Betty?" |
38477 | Who was it that gave the alarm? |
38477 | Whuffer you pick on ole Effingham? |
38477 | Why did you disregard that injunction? |
38477 | Why not? |
38477 | Why should I be? |
38477 | Why should it be any more than with our own class? |
38477 | Why should n''t it have been the very combination we are looking for? |
38477 | Why the right- of- way? |
38477 | Why? |
38477 | Will you go on and tell me, Betty? |
38477 | Will you_ tell_ me? |
38477 | Would n''t they knock off for dinner at noon? 38477 Yardley and Randall and Horace and Richard, and Francis Graeme? |
38477 | Yes, and then? |
38477 | Yes, the Terror had entered the room; do n''t you recall how close I kept to the wall when I was trying to reach you? 38477 Yet you summoned enough courage to knock?" |
38477 | You are quite sure that Mr. Thaneford does n''t object? |
38477 | You don''t-- you do n''t mean? |
38477 | You got no reply to your knock? |
38477 | You knew that you were breaking the law? |
38477 | You mean about cutting out John and putting in Mr. Hugh Hildebrand? |
38477 | You mean that I must accept, or let everything go to the younger Thaneford? |
38477 | You mean that her death recalls the mystery of Francis Graeme''s taking off? |
38477 | You mean that you wo n''t keep your promise? |
38477 | You mean that you''ve had the funeral? |
38477 | You mean whiskey? |
38477 | You remember the day Marse Francis died? |
38477 | You say that you left Effingham to guard the library door while you went to meet my Cousin Betty? |
38477 | You wo n''t tell me? |
38477 | A pretty girl? |
38477 | Admitting the possibility that the ghost has not been truly laid, would you still insist upon remaining master of''Hildebrand Hundred''?" |
38477 | An atmosphere of heavenly peace and quiet that I must needs disturb with the blunt question:"And now what was it that killed John Thaneford?" |
38477 | And now he was lingering for that maddening hundredth part of a second over Betty''s hand; I heard him whisper:"The supper waltz then?" |
38477 | And what then?" |
38477 | And yet I knew that I had found a real clue; how in the world had I lost it again? |
38477 | And yet he was of her class; they must have been playmates from childhood, the Thaneford acres marched with the Hildebrand holdings-- why not? |
38477 | Are there any traps leading to the cellar, any scuttle- panels in the dome?" |
38477 | Are you ready, Eunice?" |
38477 | But I suppose that hypothesis is open to the same objection-- the continued presence of the two men who were mowing the lawn?" |
38477 | But how to find the key to the mystery? |
38477 | But surely if someone took the lead-- well, why not yourself?" |
38477 | But what sort of a purpose? |
38477 | By the way, you never received Betty''s telegram?" |
38477 | Cynical? |
38477 | Did you receive it?" |
38477 | Do you carry a watch?" |
38477 | Do you realize, by the way, that we are now on Thaneford property?" |
38477 | Do you recall how I kept close to the wall, so as to avoid getting in the path of the direct sunlight? |
38477 | Do you remember my speaking of the supreme distinction of her handclasp; how it seemed to fit so perfectly? |
38477 | Do you remember?" |
38477 | Do you understand?" |
38477 | Do you?" |
38477 | Eldon?" |
38477 | Exactly when?" |
38477 | Except one thing: Would it be a cloudy day? |
38477 | For perhaps half an hour we sat quietly thinking and smoking; then----"There is nothing I can say or do; understand?" |
38477 | For what could any sensible person make of THANECOUICDD- FKL? |
38477 | Graeme?" |
38477 | Has it ever been intimated to you that there was anything peculiar about the death of your cousin?" |
38477 | Have you ever suffered the unutterable pangs of jealousy, you who read these words? |
38477 | Honestly now, Hugh, do you think you would have been clever enough to have figured it out?" |
38477 | How could the Terror be always ready to strike, and yet, in one case at least, wait half a century for the opportunity? |
38477 | How do I know? |
38477 | How much did she know concerning the mystery of Francis Graeme''s death? |
38477 | I admit the justice of your censure, dear reader, but have you ever endured even the smallest pang of the jealous man''s agony? |
38477 | I do n''t suppose, Hugh, that I need to particularize any further in this direction?" |
38477 | I followed the direction of his glance, and read the initials in one corner--"J. T.""What do you make of it?" |
38477 | I murmured an unintelligible assent; what was coming now? |
38477 | Is n''t that so, doctor?" |
38477 | Is that true?" |
38477 | Is that what you had in mind?" |
38477 | Lovely view, is n''t it?" |
38477 | Miss Trevor had fainted----""When? |
38477 | Of course he must be speaking to somebody; who could it be? |
38477 | Only it''s curious----""Yes?" |
38477 | Or was he dead at that particular moment? |
38477 | Or was it that neither fact had any real relation to the death of Francis Graeme? |
38477 | Poor Eunice, you say, died here?" |
38477 | So the old man died?" |
38477 | Thaneford?" |
38477 | That is your idea?" |
38477 | The florists call it----""Yes?" |
38477 | Then came the reactionary thought:"But what can she be thinking of me?" |
38477 | Then she took the master- key from him----""Why did she wait so long?" |
38477 | Then, as though a bit ashamed of his boorishness, he added:"You will have no objection, I suppose, to my coming over to the''Hundred''to see him?" |
38477 | To what extent was she an accessory to the crime, if crime it could be proved? |
38477 | Understand?" |
38477 | Was it the accident of his falling and striking his head on that same iron box, or was he attacked from behind? |
38477 | Was the postern- door closed?" |
38477 | Well what was I to do? |
38477 | Well, what would have been the use? |
38477 | What had happened? |
38477 | What if five men had died, under unexplained circumstances, in that particular room? |
38477 | What more could the heart of man desire? |
38477 | What more do you want to know?" |
38477 | What particular article did you sell to Zack Cameron?" |
38477 | What possible hypothesis can we establish to account for Richard Hildebrand''s half century of immunity? |
38477 | What put you back on the track?" |
38477 | What sort of flowers did you cut on your visit to the garden?" |
38477 | What was I to do? |
38477 | What was the impression that was being made upon me? |
38477 | What word could it be but''Thane Court,''the ancestral home of the Thanefords? |
38477 | What would have been the use, since the line of communication had been broken? |
38477 | What''s the answer?" |
38477 | When was it that he hunted you up in Philadelphia?" |
38477 | Where is it?" |
38477 | Where on earth does the company procure such tasteless provender? |
38477 | Where was that iron despatch- box when you first entered the room, and saw-- well, what you saw?" |
38477 | Which was the predetermining cause, and which was the final effect? |
38477 | Who is the coroner, Doctor Marcy?" |
38477 | Who knows....""What?" |
38477 | Why had I never realized before that, in spite of my urban upbringing, I was a born countryman? |
38477 | Why is it that smiles and tears lie so close together in the lilt and swing of a fine waltz tune? |
38477 | Why? |
38477 | Why? |
38477 | Why?" |
38477 | Will you come back to dinner this evening?" |
38477 | Yes, and I would have accepted it like everyone else-- only for one thing----""Yes?" |
38477 | Yet why should I feel any particular degree of surprise? |
38477 | You are willing?" |
38477 | You have heard of''coke''?" |
38477 | _ Where was that despatch- box when I first entered the room and found Francis Graeme lying dead upon the floor?_ I do n''t know, do you?" |
38477 | _ Where was that despatch- box when I first entered the room and found Francis Graeme lying dead upon the floor?_ I do n''t know, do you?" |
38477 | a telegram? |
38477 | what''s that?" |
41437 | And may I ask what your business with him is? |
41437 | And why, may I ask, do you come to this island? |
41437 | Are you calling me? |
41437 | Do you know that I have a spite against you? |
41437 | Have you not heard of Kidomaru, the notorious robber? |
41437 | How can I obey the old man? |
41437 | How dare he haunt my dominions and lay hands on my people in the very precincts of my Palace? |
41437 | I am sorry for you,said Tokiyori;"but why have n''t you brought a lawsuit against your relation? |
41437 | I owe her my life; how can I disobey her bidding? 41437 I will in very truth be your retainer, but may I know who you are?" |
41437 | Indeed? 41437 Is it true,"and the Emperor smiled as he spoke,"that you love the Lady Ayame?" |
41437 | Now if I give you a piece of ground, will you till it and grow your own rice and vegetables? 41437 Now tell me what do you do to earn a living?" |
41437 | O mother, why must I live on in the world with this ugly bowl on my head? 41437 Oh,"said the knight,"why need you hurry so? |
41437 | Tell me the truth,said Lord Yamakage to the girl;"who or what are you?" |
41437 | What are you doing? |
41437 | What do I hear? |
41437 | Where are you going to spend to- night? |
41437 | Who in the world can you be? 41437 Will you from henceforth be my retainer?" |
41437 | You are surely,said Sano after a pause,"the travelling priest who passed that night of the great snowstorm under my roof last year, are you not?" |
41437 | And yet how can I refuse to do as the old wood- cutter asks, for he has been as a parent to me these last three years? |
41437 | And you have risen from the ocean- bed to haunt us, and to impede our progress, and to inflict evil upon us? |
41437 | Are you Sano Genzaemon Tsuneyo? |
41437 | Are you a god or a_ tengu_? |
41437 | Are you in truth a son of the Lord Yoshitomo of the Minamoto clan? |
41437 | Are you safe and well?" |
41437 | As soon as Ayame appeared, His Majesty said:"Lady Ayame, is it true that you have received many letters from the knight Yorimasa? |
41437 | Benkei started with surprise when he heard these words and said:"What is this I hear? |
41437 | But now that I am ruined and living in this miserable condition, of what use are such trees to me, pray tell me?" |
41437 | But tell me, how is it that you are now in such reduced circumstances?" |
41437 | But when I saw the fate of my friends, how could I hope to live? |
41437 | Do n''t you know me?" |
41437 | Do n''t you see? |
41437 | Do you hear? |
41437 | Do you know?" |
41437 | Do you remember what you said to me that night when the snowstorm took me to your house? |
41437 | Drawing near the great roofed gate, Yoshitomo called aloud to Tametomo and said:"Is that you, Tametomo, on guard there? |
41437 | Filled with wonder, Tametomo walked to the edge of the sand, and as the little creature floated nearer on an incoming wave he said:"Who are you?" |
41437 | Had she come to a house where she might possibly hear tidings of her father? |
41437 | Has n''t she a wicked heart?" |
41437 | Have you forgotten how I drove you before me as dust before the wind when you were alive? |
41437 | How could Saisho fall in love with a girl with a bowl on her head? |
41437 | How could he help the poor Bowl- Wearer? |
41437 | How dared such a creature aspire to become their sister? |
41437 | How do you call plum- blossoms[ ume- no- hana] there?" |
41437 | How is it that you have managed to get here?" |
41437 | How was this to be done? |
41437 | How would it do for you to go round and fight there? |
41437 | Is it so?" |
41437 | Is there nothing else you will give me to do instead of this? |
41437 | It is you, is it?" |
41437 | Should I ever see them again? |
41437 | Since this is my daily occupation, how is it possible that I should even know how to write a poem, much less compose one?" |
41437 | So in an evil hour he summoned his daughter and said:"What is this I hear, wicked daughter? |
41437 | Tell me who was your father? |
41437 | The bowl had been put on most simply; why could it not be as easily taken off? |
41437 | The question was, who was brave enough to undertake the task? |
41437 | The young General bowed to the knight in answer to his prostrations and said:"Are you the knight Sano Genzaemon Tsuneyo?" |
41437 | Then a voice said:"Oh, Sano Genzaemon-- is it you? |
41437 | Then he turned to the girl and said:"How would you like to come home with me for the present, Bowl- Wearer?" |
41437 | To whom could she go but to her own mother? |
41437 | Ushiwaka laughed and said:"Are you afraid for the first time, then?" |
41437 | Was the Lady Ayame one of them? |
41437 | Were they alive or were they dead? |
41437 | Were they waking or were they dreaming? |
41437 | What a wicked deed you commit to fight against your elder brother? |
41437 | What do you say to that?" |
41437 | What do you think of that? |
41437 | What had happened to him in these past years? |
41437 | What shall I do? |
41437 | What should he do? |
41437 | What was she to do in her trouble? |
41437 | What was to be done? |
41437 | Whatever wrong you have suffered, why hide your parentage any longer?" |
41437 | Who can describe her anxiety? |
41437 | Who can have been so wicked as to forsake such a lovely child? |
41437 | Who could it be studying in so remote a place at that hour of the night? |
41437 | Who ever heard of such ridiculous nonsense? |
41437 | Who knows but this may prove the turning- point in his life? |
41437 | Who were they? |
41437 | Who would have dreamt that this rustic would turn out to be such a jewel of a servant? |
41437 | Why had she never thought of this before? |
41437 | Why should I when I can get people to give me just enough to live upon? |
41437 | Will you add one more favour to the rest you have shown me this night and tell me your real name?" |
41437 | Will you be so kind as to give me the shelter of your roof this night?" |
41437 | Will you not tell me who your father is? |
41437 | Without moving a muscle of his face he gripped his sword more tightly and simply asked:"Who are you, sirrah?" |
41437 | Would it not be better to die and so join her mother than wander about like a beggar from place to place begging her rice? |
41437 | [ What shall I do?] |
41437 | cried Akihide and Shiragiku together,"is it really you? |
41437 | cried the astonished father,"have I found you at last?" |
41437 | do you see this queer creature with the bowl coming down from the mountains? |
41437 | exclaimed Benkei;"are you indeed the young knight Minamoto Ushiwaka of whom I have heard so much? |
41437 | from to- day] Waga nagusami ni[ For my amusement] Nani ka sen? |
41437 | he shouted,"will no one do what I ask? |
41437 | shouted Benkei, pretending to be overcome with laughter at the idea,"this coolie resembles Lord Yoshitsune? |
41437 | what shall I do?" |
41437 | what shall I do?" |
39848 | And thou? |
39848 | By what means can I lead my people into the path of peace? |
39848 | Fire that thing out of the window, will you? |
39848 | How can I strike one who is no better than a dead man? |
39848 | How can the dignity of the sovereign be preserved who employs his power in exacting heavy tribute from a people thus miserably reduced?... 39848 How comes it,"he asks,"that a promise of money from the Nawâb_ entirely negotiated by me_ can be deemed by you a matter of right and property?... |
39848 | If they had come so far, why should they shrink from adding further lands to their Empire of Macedonia? 39848 Who goes there?" |
39848 | Will Lucknow hold out ere we can relieve it? |
39848 | Yet once again, oh boy, tell me how my lord bore himself? |
39848 | ''Only one?'' |
39848 | 231] Who are they all? |
39848 | 320"Some talk of Alexander...."Who does not know the context? |
39848 | 57 was celebrated by the introduction of the Samvat era, which dates from that year? |
39848 | 57? |
39848 | An excessive land- tax? |
39848 | And before that? |
39848 | And below this again? |
39848 | And for what did he pay English soldiers, except to use force? |
39848 | And how of defence? |
39848 | And how? |
39848 | And the question naturally came swiftly--"Why should we remain inactive? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And then? |
39848 | And what more? |
39848 | And what of Vikramadîtya? |
39848 | And wherefore not, since sons had been born to his empire? |
39848 | And yet without the woman where is man? |
39848 | Are they not monuments of my dear, dead father?" |
39848 | Astrologers can calculate from books The courses of the stars, but who is he Can read the pages of a woman''s heart? |
39848 | Be that as it may, in reading the account of his exploits, one is tempted to rub one''s eyes and ask,"Is this Mahmûd of Ghuzni, or Mahomed of Ghori?" |
39848 | Before us lie two thousand five hundred years; and behind us? |
39848 | But was Omichand"the greatest villain upon earth"that Clive held him to be? |
39848 | But was this always so? |
39848 | But what of Afghanistan? |
39848 | But when I asked:"In my friend''s household here Hath any, peradventure, ever died? |
39848 | Clive was born-- but what does it matter when, where, and how, a man of deeds comes into the world? |
39848 | Could Oscar Wilde have done more? |
39848 | Could animosity, pitiful squabbling, disreputable intrigue, further go? |
39848 | Could mismanagement further go? |
39848 | Could she by chance have had the secret of youth like Ninon d''Enclos? |
39848 | Did I not cherish thee from childhood? |
39848 | Did Râzia Begum really favour the Abyssinian slave whom she allowed--_horribile dictum!_--to"lift her on her horse by raising her up under the arms"? |
39848 | Did he ever, we wonder, look at his own face in the glass, and see written there his failure? |
39848 | Does he in truth belong to the Mongolian princes, with their strange uncouth names? |
39848 | Does not the scorch of Delhi bring to his mind Bitter bite of frost in Ghuzni of old?" |
39848 | FREEDOM AND FRONTIERS A.D. 1834 TO A.D. 1850 What was the cause which led England to refuse a continuance of its charter to the East India Company? |
39848 | Had Buddhism, then, gone by the board? |
39848 | Had dentistry got as far in the West, I wonder? |
39848 | Had he been over- hasty? |
39848 | Had you, indeed, as your name implies, the Gift of Life? |
39848 | Have I not held thee dearer than mine own sons?" |
39848 | How about the child? |
39848 | How came these kings by their name Ses, or Shesh- nâga? |
39848 | How came this about? |
39848 | How had he affected India? |
39848 | How indeed? |
39848 | How many governor- generals have not sailed out to India, loudly protesting peace, prepared at all points to uphold the non- interference clause? |
39848 | How many men''s dust is mingled with the soil of Pâniput? |
39848 | How many men''s life- blood was spilt thereinafter in trying to open them as wide again? |
39848 | How many thousand pagans"went below?" |
39848 | How much of India is built into this watch tower of her gods? |
39848 | How much of the dirt flung at it in the next ten years or so deserves to stick? |
39848 | How much, again, of this Vikramadîtya''s fame belongs by right to that other mythical Vikramadîtya of before- Christ days? |
39848 | How often do those inconsistencies proceed from causes very different from those suspected by us? |
39848 | How often from our own ignorance and impatience? |
39848 | How often from simplicity, fear, embarrassment in the witness? |
39848 | How?'' |
39848 | Husband or wife or child or slave?" |
39848 | Indeed, how should they do otherwise when they have not spared one another? |
39848 | Into the camp they came; and then? |
39848 | Is it true? |
39848 | Is not that enough for the imagination? |
39848 | Is not this sufficient to make us at any rate date the beginning of the Renaissance from the days of Samûdra- gupta? |
39848 | It was Shâhjahân who first thought of it; but who designed, who built it? |
39848 | Mankind makes but small advance with the years in metaphysics, and it needed a Schopenhauer to reinvent the Over- soul-- after how many generations? |
39848 | No hurry there, no stress of circumstances surely, to make the immediate use of a revolver necessary? |
39848 | Now who was Gondophares? |
39848 | Of how many reputations has not India unjustly been the grave? |
39848 | Of what were they thinking, those poor Delhi folk who had suffered so often at the hands of so many men? |
39848 | Once again the question arises,"How much further have we gone towards solution?" |
39848 | Or had she really forgotten the petticoat in the trews? |
39848 | Or how are we to reconcile the inconsistency of the queen of so vast a territory fixing her affections on so unworthy an object?" |
39848 | Surely fatuousness could no farther go? |
39848 | Surely no land on the globe has suffered so much from invasion as Hindustan? |
39848 | Tell me once more ere I go how bore himself my lord?" |
39848 | That nameless king who flits like a Will- o''-the- Wisp through the mists of early Indian history? |
39848 | That smile was worn outside; but within? |
39848 | The cry which rises in the Rig- Veda is the cry of to- day:--"From earth is the breath and the blood; but whence is the soul? |
39848 | The question arises, how much of this admirable effusion is strictly true? |
39848 | The question naturally presents itself-- was it tuberculosis or some other toxin? |
39848 | The question rises insistently:"How came the Emperor of India by such enormous wealth?" |
39848 | Then the three royal brothers made friends, Humâyon, as ever, eager to clasp hands with those of whom he used to say:"How can I quarrel with them? |
39848 | Then, throwing the little king''s rich coverlet over her own child, she sat down to wait-- for what? |
39848 | Then? |
39848 | There answer was amusing"(?) |
39848 | They say it is"Jahângir"--Or is it"Nurjahân"? |
39848 | Timur had conquered it; why should not he? |
39848 | Vikramadîtya the hero, the demigod, the king_ par excellence_ of the Indian populace of to- day? |
39848 | Was he really next- of- kin, as it were, to the Great Moghuls? |
39848 | Was his enemy within call already? |
39848 | Was it Jainism( amongst the tenets of which this takes first place) which influenced Asôka most, or was it Buddhism? |
39848 | Was it disappointment which made Mahmûd strike at it with his mace? |
39848 | Was it the extreme nervous, tension acting on a constitution weakened by fever, by hardships of every kind, which made his prayer effectual? |
39848 | Was it, indeed, zeal for Souls? |
39848 | Was the tale true or untrue? |
39848 | Were they of Scythic origin? |
39848 | Were they really his sons, these hard- drinking, hard- living young princes, who had no thought beyond the princelings of their age? |
39848 | Were they so sold? |
39848 | Were they still faithful to the memory of the Moghuls, or did their eyes seek wistfully in the faces of the newcomers for a new master? |
39848 | What dictionary did Burke use, one wonders, and how comes it that his cheap rhodomontade passes for eloquence? |
39848 | What did he do with all the vast wealth which in the course of his missionary work he managed to annex? |
39848 | What did it mean? |
39848 | What did it mean? |
39848 | What did she say to him? |
39848 | What does it matter whether he was Vikramadîtya or another? |
39848 | What does it mean? |
39848 | What if this were a trick to decoy him and his handful of followers to their death? |
39848 | What is this? |
39848 | What or Who is that One who is ever alone; who forms the six spheres; who holds the unborn in His Hand?" |
39848 | What scheme lay hidden in his brain? |
39848 | What tempted these hardy northern folk into the wide plains of India? |
39848 | What then? |
39848 | What then? |
39848 | What use was there in the whole army, down to the very dregs, giving me their stupid, uninformed opinions?" |
39848 | What was a Brahmin that he should not do what he was told to do, even though the order involved his being yoked cart- fellow with a sweeper? |
39848 | What was it? |
39848 | What was now to be done? |
39848 | What was the cause which led the Emperor of India, in his luxurious autocracy, to join himself to this Search? |
39848 | What was this? |
39848 | What were the floating gardens of the Dhal Lake, the Grove of Sweet Breezes, or the Festival of Roses to a monarch who could not draw his breath? |
39848 | What, for instance, was even Clive''s asserted £ 300,000 of plunder beside the £ 400,000 of yearly tribute to the English Exchequer? |
39848 | What, then, were the salient points of this beloved control? |
39848 | When to a man who understands, the Self has become all things, what sorrow, what trouble can there be to him who has once beheld that unity? |
39848 | When? |
39848 | Whence came this hesitation, this desire for divine guidance? |
39848 | Wherefore? |
39848 | Wherein lies the charm? |
39848 | Who also does not think that he knows who Alexander was, who could not, if necessary, reel off a succinct account of his character, his conquests? |
39848 | Who art thou, witch?" |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can say? |
39848 | Who can tell? |
39848 | Who has drunk so deep Of glory and of pleasure as my lord? |
39848 | Who knows? |
39848 | Who knows? |
39848 | Who knows? |
39848 | Who, then, were these people? |
39848 | Why is this? |
39848 | Why should we not extend our sphere of influence by giving, perhaps even_ selling_, our aid?" |
39848 | Why was this? |
39848 | Why? |
39848 | Why? |
39848 | Will it do so in the future? |
39848 | Will the years, as they bring new discoveries, bring you back from the realms of myth? |
39848 | Without Clive''s help, how could he hope to keep the constant encroachments of the Company''s servants within bounds? |
39848 | on peaceful plains"(?). |
39848 | or sold at a price which would have brought wealth to the miserably poor Indian craftsman? |
39848 | said the tremulous old voice, as the tremulous old hand patted the villain''s cheek,"how couldst thou fear me, Allah- hu? |
39848 | what is this you ask? |
39848 | your path is unending; Dead are the first who have watched; when shall our waking be done? |
44681 | Are you tired? |
44681 | How many days out? |
44681 | And where the native worker gets such poor results, will the European miner get better? |
44681 | Of kingfishers I saw two distinct forms-- the smaller one(? |
44681 | There is no hurry; if going down stream, they take it easy enough; and if going up, why overwork? |
44681 | Where could this notion have come from, so singularly like our own stories? |
44681 | Yet greet them with the usual questions:"Where are you bound for?" |
44681 | or"Where are you come from?" |
43908 | Are n''t they lovely? |
43908 | Did you ever see a cobra yourself, father? |
43908 | Do I have to walk around the altar three times, holding a wax candle in my hand? |
43908 | Do you see him there under the canopy, with his children around him? |
43908 | Father, will you tell us the story of Rosy Dawn? |
43908 | How did he do it, father? |
43908 | Is n''t the canopy over the king the loveliest thing you ever saw? |
43908 | Is n''t this pickled turnip fine? |
43908 | Look, look,said Chin,"is n''t that grand?" |
43908 | Were n''t you afraid when you crossed the river on the elephant''s back, Chin? 43908 What else did you see, Chin?" |
43908 | What kind were they, Chin? |
43908 | A Chinaman who was once asked why he had the eye there, answered,"If no have eye, how can see?" |
43908 | Are n''t they beautiful?" |
43908 | As for Chie Lo, what would she do when Chin went away from home? |
43908 | As his feet were always bare, why should n''t he make them useful in other ways than walking and running, swimming and playing games? |
43908 | Did they fear? |
43908 | Do n''t you love to go about in the woods, Chin?" |
43908 | Do you suppose she tried to scream, or that she lost her senses from fright? |
43908 | Do you think those men were n''t scared? |
43908 | Does n''t it ever slip on the elephant''s back, Chin?" |
43908 | How do they make their gums such a fiery red? |
43908 | How do they manage to sleep when the air around them is filled with the buzzing, troublesome creatures? |
43908 | How else do they keep together? |
43908 | How should the roof be protected from the heavy rains that fell during a portion of the year? |
43908 | How was Chie Lo getting along with her load of fruit this morning? |
43908 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
43908 | It startled Chie Lo, and she exclaimed:"What is it, Chin? |
43908 | Other people have strange fashions, do n''t they?" |
43908 | That is what we all do, is it not? |
43908 | Was n''t he the least bit afraid?" |
43908 | Was n''t that wonderful, Chin?" |
43908 | We love kites, do n''t we?" |
43908 | Were they doing it for their own pleasure? |
43908 | What could she mean by these words? |
43908 | What did he care if he was brought up on the street, as one might say? |
43908 | What had caused her boat to upset? |
43908 | What is it?" |
43908 | Why should it mean so much? |
4507 | Who does not love a tranquil heart, a sweet- tempered, balanced life? 4507 In the light of this truth, what, then, is the meaning offighting against circumstances?" |
4507 | Shall man''s basest desires receive the fullest measure of gratification, and his purest aspirations starve for lack of sustenance? |
43833 | How about punishment in the Japanese school? |
43833 | And where is all the cooking done? |
43833 | And will he prepare medicine marked in some such way as this:''One teaspoonful to be taken each hour?''" |
43833 | And, after all, is n''t one reason why we live in this big world and are so different one from another, that we may learn from each other? |
43833 | As Lotus Blossom and Toyo draw near, the man ends his song and calls out,"Now who wants me to blow him a candy dog? |
43833 | But is n''t it a strange idea to have dancing, praying, and feasting in the same place? |
43833 | But suppose that the tea or rice should be spilled on the beautiful table? |
43833 | But what can be the use of such big sleeves? |
43833 | But where are the stoves? |
43833 | But why is it? |
43833 | But, after all, is n''t it nice, too, to act kindly toward every one and everything in the world? |
43833 | Do n''t you think so? |
43833 | Do n''t you think that is a very nice and cleanly custom? |
43833 | Do you call those sounds music? |
43833 | Do you sigh now, and wish you could get your education in that far- away land where long division is not a daily trial? |
43833 | Give him a slap and say,"Oh, you bad, bad boy?" |
43833 | He may boast of six pockets, but what of that? |
43833 | How can they do it so well as by having out- door picnics in the plum orchards? |
43833 | How do the people keep warm in the cold winter days? |
43833 | How many holidays have we in a whole year? |
43833 | How were they to get there? |
43833 | I believe you would not object to a party like that yourself, would you? |
43833 | I''m glad we do n''t have this custom in our country, are n''t you? |
43833 | If her little brother should step on Lotus Blossom''s doll and break its arm, what would she do? |
43833 | In steam or electric cars? |
43833 | In the picture do you see a little box with smoke rising from it? |
43833 | Is he crazy? |
43833 | Is n''t it a shame? |
43833 | Is n''t it funny? |
43833 | Lotus Blossom ran to her mother, just as her American cousins might do, and cried,"Oh, mamma, my precious, honourable mother, what shall I wear? |
43833 | Or shall it be a monkey eating a nut? |
43833 | Pout, or exclaim, as you sometimes do,"I do n''t care, that is n''t fair?" |
43833 | That little girl, nine years old, drinking tea? |
43833 | Toyo lost his the other day, and what do you think he did? |
43833 | Was there ever a lovelier sight? |
43833 | What can you be thinking of to ask such questions? |
43833 | What do you suppose she carries in the bag? |
43833 | What do you think was served in them? |
43833 | What wonderful dolls they have in Japan, do n''t they? |
43833 | When school is done, what will the children do throughout the long afternoon? |
43833 | Where does our little Japanese cousin sleep in this funny house? |
43833 | Why should she cry? |
43833 | Would you believe it? |
43833 | You know the punk that you use on the Fourth of July to light your firecrackers and fireworks? |
43833 | You say at once,"Is the priest in Japan a doctor? |
38106 | And you deserted them? |
38106 | Did you believe that rib story? |
38106 | Did you belong to any church? |
38106 | Did you ever run off with any of the money? |
38106 | Did you have a wife and children of your own? |
38106 | Did you take anything else along with you? |
38106 | Do you belong to any church? |
38106 | Do you think anybody is ever prejudiced in their sleep? |
38106 | Have you heard of them since? |
38106 | How much did you run off with? |
38106 | Well, did you believe that rib story? |
38106 | What is Infidelity? |
38106 | What is your business? |
38106 | What kind of a bank did you have? |
38106 | What rib story? 38106 What?" |
38106 | You believed it, did you? |
38106 | ''Well,''said I,''What would you advise me to do under similar circumstances?'' |
38106 | ( 1776?) |
38106 | 372. Who is the Blasphemer? |
38106 | 399. Who is the True Nobleman? |
38106 | 443. Who Designed the Designer? |
38106 | 95. Who Shall Rule the Country? |
38106 | A Little Too Late Is it not a little late in the day to object to people because they sacrifice meat and other eatables to their god? |
38106 | After all, is it not possible to live honest and courageous lives without believing these fables? |
38106 | And suppose that he also knew that only by betraying Christ could he save either himself or others; what ought Judas to have done? |
38106 | And why did they do this? |
38106 | Are all the investigators in perdition? |
38106 | Are the Christian nations patterns of charity and forbearance? |
38106 | Are you not glad that our flag is covered all over with financial honors? |
38106 | Are you not glad? |
38106 | Are you willing to rely upon an argument that justifies the treachery of that wretch? |
38106 | Believe, or Beware And what does a trial for heresy mean? |
38106 | But how do we know that the disciples of Christ wrote a word of the gospels? |
38106 | But where is the legislation? |
38106 | But where is the new Eden? |
38106 | By what right does a man, or an organization of men, or a god, claim to hold a brain in bondage? |
38106 | Can God be Improved? |
38106 | Can God, then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two men? |
38106 | Can I assist Him? |
38106 | Can a Sane Man Believe in Inspiration? |
38106 | Can it be possible that any punishment can endure forever? |
38106 | Can it be pretended that the witnesses could not have been mistaken about the relation the Holy Ghost is alleged to have sustained to Jesus Christ? |
38106 | Can the conduct of infinite wisdom, power and love ever change? |
38106 | Can there ever be any progress in this world to amount to anything until we have liberty? |
38106 | Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a legal tender for labor performed? |
38106 | Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the sun? |
38106 | Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man to be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? |
38106 | Creation the Decomposition of the Infinite Admitting that a god did create the universe, the question then arises, of what did he create it? |
38106 | Did Franklin and Jefferson Die in Fear? |
38106 | Did God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how? |
38106 | Did all the ministers of Scotland add as much to the sum of human knowledge as David Hume? |
38106 | Did all the priests of France do as great a work for the civilization of the world as Diderot and Voltaire? |
38106 | Did all the priests of Rome increase the mental wealth of man as much as Bruno? |
38106 | Did he know of the one hundred and four planets belonging to our solar system, all children of the sun? |
38106 | Did he know that the volume of the Earth is less than one- millionth of that of the sun? |
38106 | Did it ever occur to them that a cancer is as beautiful in its development as is the reddest rose? |
38106 | Did the writers of the four gospels have"the sensible and true avouch of their own eyes and ears"in that behalf? |
38106 | Did they wish to save his life? |
38106 | Do the angels all discuss questions on the same side? |
38106 | Do they benefit mankind? |
38106 | Do you know I dislike this man? |
38106 | Do you know that there is only a little zig- zag strip around the world within which have been produced all men of genius? |
38106 | Do you mean that Adam and Eve business? |
38106 | Do you then believe that the Bible is a different book to every human being that receives it? |
38106 | Does God Uphold Slavery? |
38106 | Does He believe in some being superior to himself? |
38106 | Does Mr. Black pretend that such statements would be admitted as evidence in any court? |
38106 | Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? |
38106 | For more than a thousand years the Church had, to a great extent, the control of the civilized world, and what has been the result? |
38106 | For what purpose do you get up? |
38106 | From Whence Come Wars? |
38106 | Give the Devil His Due If the account given in Genesis is really true, ought we not, after all, to thank this serpent? |
38106 | Had I not better say so? |
38106 | Has the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of a sin? |
38106 | Has there been found upon the records of the savage world anything more perfectly fiendish than this commandment of Jehovah? |
38106 | How Did Water run up Hill? |
38106 | How can I assist God? |
38106 | How could language be confounded? |
38106 | How did it happen that Christ wrote nothing? |
38106 | How did the animals get back to their respective countries? |
38106 | How did these waters happen to run up hill? |
38106 | How did they get there? |
38106 | How did they know the way to go? |
38106 | How do we know that the writers of the gospels"were men of unimpeachable character?" |
38106 | How long will they grovel in the dust before the ignorant legends of the barbaric past? |
38106 | How long, O how long will mankind worship a book? |
38106 | How long, O how long will they pursue phantoms in a darkness deeper than death? |
38106 | How much are they worth? |
38106 | How much is a ton of iron worth in the ground? |
38106 | How was it Done? |
38106 | How was it possible for any one of the four Evangelists to know that Christ was the Son of God, or that he was God? |
38106 | How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? |
38106 | How were the animals watered? |
38106 | How would you go to work to prove that the devil entered into a drove of swine? |
38106 | I appeal to every laboring man, and I ask him,"Is there another country on this globe where you can have your equal rights with others?" |
38106 | I asked:"What are they?" |
38106 | I have read this book, and what shall I say of it? |
38106 | I wrote the article that appeared in the August number, and by me it was entitled"Is All of the Bible Inspired?" |
38106 | If I rob Mr. Smith, and God forgive me, how does that help Smith? |
38106 | If it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? |
38106 | If the Bible is Not Verbally Inspired, What Then? |
38106 | If the government can make money, what on earth does it collect taxes for you and me for? |
38106 | If the words are not inspired, what is? |
38106 | If this doctrine be true, how can God be just or virtuous? |
38106 | In mercy? |
38106 | In order that they may be prepared to investigate the phenomena by which we are surrounded? |
38106 | In the eyes of intelligent men of Greece and Rome, were all deeds, whether good or evil, morally alike? |
38106 | Infinite Impudence of the Church Who can imagine the infinite impudence of a Church assuming to think for the human race? |
38106 | Is a god who will burn a soul forever in another world, better than a christian who burns the body for a few hours in this? |
38106 | Is all that Succeeds Inspired? |
38106 | Is he in want? |
38106 | Is it Possible? |
38106 | Is it necessary to believe in the existence of an infinite intelligence before you can have any standard of right and wrong? |
38106 | Is it nothing to civilize mankind? |
38106 | Is it nothing to dignify man and exalt the intellect? |
38106 | Is it nothing to fill the world with light, with discovery, with science? |
38106 | Is it nothing to free the mind? |
38106 | Is it nothing to make men wipe the dust from their swollen knees, the tears from their blanched and furrowed cheeks? |
38106 | Is it nothing to relieve the heavens of an insatiate monster, and write upon the eternal dome, glittering with stars, the grand word-- Liberty? |
38106 | Is it possible that God would make a successful rival? |
38106 | Is it possible that a being can not be just or virtuous unless he believes in some being infinitely superior to himself? |
38106 | Is it possible that a designer exists from all eternity without design? |
38106 | Is it possible that a few Chinese can bring"our holy religion"into disgust and contempt? |
38106 | Is it possible that an infinite God created this world simply to be the dwelling- place of slaves and serfs? |
38106 | Is it possible that only those who believe in the God who persecuted for opinion''s sake have any standard of right and wrong? |
38106 | Is it possible the devil was such an idiot? |
38106 | Is the infinite capable of any improvement whatever? |
38106 | Is there a Democrat now who wishes we had taken the advice of Bayard to scale the bonds? |
38106 | Is there a Greenbacker here who is not glad we did n''t do it? |
38106 | Is there an American, a Democrat here, who is not glad we escaped the stench and shame of repudiation, and did not take Democratic advice? |
38106 | Is there any such thing as Methodist mathematics, Presbyterian botany, Catholic astronomy or Baptist biology? |
38106 | Is there no intellectual liberty in heaven? |
38106 | Is there no possibility of delusion about a circumstance of that kind? |
38106 | Is there, in the civilized world, to- day, a clergyman who believes in the divinity of slavery? |
38106 | It takes no more ink and no more paper-- why not make$ 1000 bills? |
38106 | Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama, who knows nothing of the impersonation of passion; what does he get from him? |
38106 | Money by Work How do you get your money? |
38106 | Mr. Greenbacker, suppose the government issued$ 1,000,000,000 to- morrow, how would you get any of it? |
38106 | Must We Believe Fables to be Good and True? |
38106 | Must one be versed in Latin before he is entitled to express his opinion as to the genuineness of a pretended revelation from God? |
38106 | Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of others? |
38106 | Must we regard the auction block as an altar? |
38106 | Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe that the creation of woman was a second thought? |
38106 | Of what use are all the improvements in farming? |
38106 | Of what use is all the improved machinery unless it tends to give the farmer a little more leisure? |
38106 | On which of the six days was he created? |
38106 | Paring Nails Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? |
38106 | Questions About the Ark How was the ark kept clean? |
38106 | Religion and Facts What has religion to do with facts? |
38106 | Says he,"Do n''t you think he could put in another day to advantage right around here?" |
38106 | Seven long years of war-- fighting for what? |
38106 | Shakespeare''s Plays v. Sermons What would the church people think if the theatrical people should attempt to suppress the churches? |
38106 | Shall the men that said, This is not a nation, have charge of the nation? |
38106 | Shall the men who saved the old flag hold it? |
38106 | Shall the men who saved the ship of state sail it? |
38106 | Shall the people that saved this country rule it? |
38106 | Shall we pay our debts? |
38106 | Should any great credit be given to this deity for not being caught with such chaff? |
38106 | Some tell me that it is the desire of God that I should worship Him? |
38106 | Standing here amid the sacred memories of the first, on the golden threshold of the second, I ask, Will the second century be as good as the first? |
38106 | That I should sacrifice something to Him? |
38106 | That Jehovah really endeavored to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an helpmeet for him? |
38106 | That what they are pleased to call the adaptation of means to ends, is as apparent in the cancer as in the April rain? |
38106 | The Bible a Poor Product Admitting that the Bible is the Book of God, is that his only good job? |
38106 | The Devil and the Swine How are you going to prove a miracle? |
38106 | The Old Idea What was the old idea? |
38106 | The South and the Tariff Where did this doctrine of a tariff for revenue only come from? |
38106 | The World in Debt to Infidels What would the world be if infidels had never been? |
38106 | The question is, Shall the men who endeavored to destroy this country rule it? |
38106 | Then who shall say what shall be done with what is produced except the producer? |
38106 | There is still another question:"Will all the wounds of the war be healed?" |
38106 | There they were of every sort, and color, and kind, and how was it that they came together? |
38106 | They said:"We saved the nation''s life, and what is life without honor?" |
38106 | To feed the cattle? |
38106 | Was it under these pontiffs that the"church penetrated the moral darkness like a new sun,"and covered the globe with institutions of mercy? |
38106 | Was the Devil an Idiot? |
38106 | Was the slave- pen a temple? |
38106 | Was there no design in having an infinite designer? |
38106 | We are the greatest and wisest and most virtuous of mankind? |
38106 | We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how was this done? |
38106 | We care nothing for the rich, except what will they do with their money? |
38106 | We know how it was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? |
38106 | Well, if it is, what''s the use of wasting it making one dollar bills? |
38106 | Were blood hounds, apostles? |
38106 | Were the greatest men of all antiquity without this standard? |
38106 | Were the stealers and whippers of babes and women the justified children of God? |
38106 | What Were We Fighting For? |
38106 | What did Moses know about the Sun? |
38106 | What do I get out of him? |
38106 | What else were they fighting for? |
38106 | What else were they fighting for? |
38106 | What for? |
38106 | What for? |
38106 | What for? |
38106 | What harm would it do to have an opera here tonight? |
38106 | What has any form of superstition or religion to do with a fact or with any science? |
38106 | What if Death Does End All? |
38106 | What is Christianity? |
38106 | What is Conscience? |
38106 | What is conscience? |
38106 | What is harvesting now, compared with what it was in the old time? |
38106 | What is the talk? |
38106 | What kind of a man were you?" |
38106 | What kind of a man were you?" |
38106 | What man who ever thinks, can believe that blood can appease God? |
38106 | What right has he to assassinate the joy of life? |
38106 | What right has he to murder the sunshine of the day? |
38106 | What shall these men do? |
38106 | What wrong would there be to see one of those grand plays on Sunday? |
38106 | When the man is called up by the recording secretary, or whoever does the cross- examining, he says to his soul:"Where are you from?" |
38106 | When you rise at four and work till dark what is life worth? |
38106 | Whence Came the Gospels? |
38106 | Where Did the Serpent Come From? |
38106 | Where are you from?" |
38106 | Where did the serpent come from? |
38106 | Where from? |
38106 | Where is the New Eden? |
38106 | Who is the blasphemer; the man who denies the existence of God, or he who covers the robes of the infinite with innocent blood? |
38106 | Who made him? |
38106 | Who on earth at this day would pretend to settle any scientific question by a text from the Bible? |
38106 | Who saw it, and who would know a devil if he did see him? |
38106 | Who selected these? |
38106 | Whom can I assist? |
38106 | Why Did Not God Kill the Serpent? |
38106 | Why Hate an Atheist? |
38106 | Why Should Infidels Die in Fear? |
38106 | Why Should the Church be Merciful? |
38106 | Why did he fail to speak? |
38106 | Why did he go dumbly to his death, leaving the world to misery and to doubt? |
38106 | Why did he not cry, You shall not persecute in my name; you shall not burn and torment those who differ from you in creed? |
38106 | Why did he not defend his children? |
38106 | Why did he not explain the doctrine of the trinity? |
38106 | Why did he not plainly say, I am the Son of God? |
38106 | Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this serpent? |
38106 | Why did he not say something positive, definite, and satisfactory about another world? |
38106 | Why did he not tell his disciples, and through them the world, that man should not persecute, for opinion''s sake, his fellow- man? |
38106 | Why did he not tell the manner of baptism that was pleasing to him? |
38106 | Why did he not turn the tear- stained hope of heaven to the glad knowledge of another life? |
38106 | Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap his head off? |
38106 | Why do n''t it make what money it wants, take the taxes out, and give the balance to us? |
38106 | Why do you shock these people? |
38106 | Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
38106 | Why investigate when you know? |
38106 | Why not feed them more the night before? |
38106 | Why not make$ 100,000,000 and all be billionaires? |
38106 | Why not say, God has intelligence, therefore there must be an intelligence greater than his? |
38106 | Why pursue that which you have? |
38106 | Why should God hate to see a man happy? |
38106 | Why should a believer in God hate an atheist? |
38106 | Why should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand years ago, control the living world? |
38106 | Why should it excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream, talking, laughing and loving? |
38106 | Why should she show mercy to a kind and noble heretic whom her God will burn in eternal fire? |
38106 | Why should that day be filled with gloom instead of joy? |
38106 | Why should the Church pity a man whom her God hates? |
38106 | Why should these gentlemen object to a god with big fiery eyeballs, when their own Deity has eyes like a flame of fire? |
38106 | Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his foxes, while others, holding the Nebular Hypothesis in utter contempt, go straight to heaven? |
38106 | Why should we look sad, and think about death, and hear about- hell? |
38106 | Why should we send missionaries to China, if we can not convert the heathen when they come here? |
38106 | Why should you object to these people on account of their religion? |
38106 | Why was Christ so Silent? |
38106 | Why was not the serpent kept out of the garden? |
38106 | Why? |
38106 | Will God have more power? |
38106 | Will There Be an Eternal Auto da Fe? |
38106 | Will he become more merciful? |
38106 | Will he not be damned as quick for denying geology as for denying the scheme of salvation? |
38106 | Will his love for his poor creatures increase? |
38106 | Will not a man be damned as quick for denying the equator as denying the Bible? |
38106 | Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the miraculous, tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind? |
38106 | Will the Second Century of America be as good as the First? |
38106 | Will the Wounds of the War be Healed? |
38106 | Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease the happiness of God? |
38106 | Will the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the honest folks in hell? |
38106 | Will there be, in the universe, an eternal_ auto da fe_? |
38106 | Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep are? |
38106 | Would God Kill a Man for Making Ointment? |
38106 | Would God give a bird wings and make it a crime to fly? |
38106 | Would a Real God Uphold Slavery? |
38106 | Would he give me brains and make it a crime to think? |
38106 | Would it not be far better to treat this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us? |
38106 | Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? |
38106 | or shall the rebels walk her quarter- deck, give the orders and sink it? |
38106 | simply for the purpose of raising orthodox Christians? |
28780 | ''Sthat you, Sparks? |
28780 | A part of what? |
28780 | Aerial do n''t leak, does it? |
28780 | Ah-- do you mind if I ask a few questions? 28780 All what?" |
28780 | Am I? |
28780 | And does the brave one admire my sarong? |
28780 | And how much do I owe you, small one? |
28780 | And leave you behind? 28780 And they have taken her to Len Yang?" |
28780 | And what has become of your prudence? 28780 And you imagine you''re running no risk with the two golden- haired maids in tow?" |
28780 | And you''ll get that silly old notion of a bungalow for two out of your head? |
28780 | And you? 28780 Are n''t you connected with my good friend, the man with the sea- lion mustaches, in Len Yang?" |
28780 | Are n''t you glad-- aren''t you a little bit glad-- to see me-- me? |
28780 | Are n''t you going to explain-- anything? 28780 Are you armed?" |
28780 | Are you awake? |
28780 | Are you going on to Len Yang this time, Peter? |
28780 | Are you grateful to me, you two? 28780 Are you rested? |
28780 | Are you-- Peter Moore, known in some parts of China as-- Peter the Brazen? |
28780 | Are-- you are not joking, are you, Miss Borria? 28780 Are-- you-- Peter-- Moore?" |
28780 | Because I love you so? |
28780 | Because of me? |
28780 | Because you loved me so? |
28780 | But how did you know? |
28780 | But what does this mean-- this? |
28780 | But why all the hubbub about Peter Moore? |
28780 | But why are you telling such things to me, my brave one? |
28780 | But why did you send for them? 28780 But why does he want beautiful young girls for his mine, my son?" |
28780 | But why the Jap-- disguise? 28780 But why,_ bi_--my brave one?" |
28780 | But why-- why does he beat you? 28780 But you''re not sure-- now?" |
28780 | But, Miss Borria,writhed Peter,"why, with all this knowledge, has n''t he done away with me? |
28780 | Ca n''t we break away from this mob and have a little chin- chin by ourselves? |
28780 | Can a man live with a bullet in his heart? |
28780 | Can do? |
28780 | Can it be possible----? |
28780 | Can it interest you? 28780 Can we see them?" |
28780 | Can you forgive me for this-- way I have acted, my-- my ingratitude? |
28780 | Can you swim-- at all? |
28780 | Chinamen? 28780 Chinks?" |
28780 | Cinnabar from his mine is brought down the Yangtze on junks and transferred at Soo- chow? |
28780 | Complete our plans? |
28780 | Dead or alive, Peter? |
28780 | Did n''t tamper with the bullets, eh? |
28780 | Did they harm you? |
28780 | Did you ever put your arm around another woman before? |
28780 | Do n''t I act like an amateur? |
28780 | Do n''t you know it breaks a government rule when that room''s empty-- at sea? |
28780 | Do n''t you suppose a woman would do almost as well? |
28780 | Do n''t you suppose my curiosity was aroused when you threw the coolie overboard? 28780 Do n''t_ you_ ever feel lonely-- like this?" |
28780 | Do you hear, Naradia? |
28780 | Do you mean, how does one reach Len Yang? |
28780 | Do you mean-- static? 28780 Do you remember those wonderful days and evenings we spent together on the Java Sea, on the old_ Persian Gulf_? |
28780 | Do you? |
28780 | Do-- do you l- love her as much as th- this? |
28780 | Do-- do you mind very-- much? |
28780 | Does your heart ache, too, Peter? |
28780 | Drugs? |
28780 | Eh? 28780 Election bet?" |
28780 | Empty? |
28780 | Feel the motion? |
28780 | Follow_ lan- sà ®_ veil-- savvy? |
28780 | Foolish? |
28780 | For these few minutes, when we were to chatter, and make love, and be happy? |
28780 | Forty? |
28780 | Fourteen days from Shanghai to Len Yang? |
28780 | From where? |
28780 | From_ him_? |
28780 | Good God, who said anything about being a watchdog? |
28780 | Good enough; but will they be careful afterward? |
28780 | Has China got the best of you, Peter? |
28780 | Has the lookout reported any ship in the past hour excepting the_ Rover_? |
28780 | Has your grandmother a sampan, a trustworthy coolie? |
28780 | Have I been interfering with the lawful pursuits of the Chinese Empire? |
28780 | Have you a costume? |
28780 | Have you good hearing? |
28780 | Have you seen Miss Vost? |
28780 | Have you stopped them? |
28780 | He pays well, my son? |
28780 | He-- is dead? |
28780 | How did you get here alive? |
28780 | How did you guess? |
28780 | How is Peggy? |
28780 | I am quite powerless? |
28780 | I need no guide, then? 28780 I? |
28780 | I? 28780 I?" |
28780 | If I decide yes-- or if I decide no-- how can I defend myself? |
28780 | If the_ fokie_ returns with that message, you will write a short note----"To one you love? |
28780 | If your hero resents my robbing him of one stingy, little kiss---- Band? 28780 In search of more adventure and romance? |
28780 | Is that Peter Moore? 28780 Is that all?" |
28780 | Is that the_ Rover_ on our port quarter? |
28780 | Is that why you are growing a beard-- to surprise--_him_? |
28780 | Is-- he-- on-- board? |
28780 | Is-- is my end so close? |
28780 | It says that? |
28780 | Keep away-- ai? |
28780 | Last night''s affair,_ desu- ka_? |
28780 | Licksha? |
28780 | Lo Ong,stated Moore,"my wanchee you keep mouth shut-- allatime shut-- you savvy?" |
28780 | Lookin''for information? |
28780 | MacLaurin? 28780 May I ask: Who are you?" |
28780 | May I see her-- once-- before I die? |
28780 | Meaning-- me? |
28780 | Mr. Minion, what is Len Yang? 28780 Mynheer,"he began in a somewhat constrained voice, low and richly guttural,"it iss known to you vat took place on der ship some dam during der nacht? |
28780 | Naradia,he continued, lowering his voice gently,"now that Peter Moore and I are at last together, will you excuse us? |
28780 | No come buy? |
28780 | No escape? |
28780 | No go Hong Kong way? |
28780 | Noticed anything else? |
28780 | Now, where, oh where, do I fit in this scheme? |
28780 | Of course you refused? 28780 Of that?" |
28780 | Once-- means''yes?'' 28780 Perhaps you can tell me what became of the man who opened my door?" |
28780 | Peter, ca n''t you realize what a dreary life I''ve led since that night you ran away from me in Hong Kong? 28780 Peter, is that cork_ awfully_ obstinate?" |
28780 | Peter, tell me, why is it? 28780 Peter, tell me----""Yes, Romola?" |
28780 | Quite sure he imports them to work in the mines? |
28780 | River boat-- for Ching- Fu? |
28780 | Romola, will you answer a question? |
28780 | Say, you young prize- fighter,he sputtered,"you drunk? |
28780 | Shall we take a car- ride? |
28780 | Should n''t you have an operating- room? |
28780 | Since you do know that somebody is being kidnapped on this ship----"What in hell do you mean? |
28780 | So this is love? |
28780 | So, after all, you refuse to take my counsel, my advice, seriously? |
28780 | Speak English, eh? |
28780 | Speak God''s language, eh? |
28780 | Stag what? |
28780 | Stay allatime on_ King Asia_? |
28780 | That was why you happened along the bund about the time the boat came up- river? |
28780 | That will be safe, that sampan? |
28780 | The doctor? 28780 The red note?" |
28780 | The up- river trip? |
28780 | The wireless operator? 28780 Then you did n''t know I was on my way to China?" |
28780 | Then you will go up- river with me? |
28780 | Then you will stay in this room until we leave? |
28780 | Then, why,demanded Eileen, giving him a hungry little look,"did n''t you let me stay in Shanghai?" |
28780 | They are still anxious for you to come with them? |
28780 | This is your first trip? |
28780 | This-- is_ adieu_--or_ au revoir_? |
28780 | To Canton, too? |
28780 | To permit me to live and love until one to- morrow morning? |
28780 | To you? |
28780 | To-- Bobbie? |
28780 | Unless what? |
28780 | V-- V-- V-- V---- What station is that? 28780 Wanchee money-- cumshaw?" |
28780 | Wanchee my? |
28780 | Wanchee tea now? |
28780 | Wanchee you come help; savvy? |
28780 | Want a shore station for a while? |
28780 | Want me to finish your trick? |
28780 | We are safe, brave one? |
28780 | Well, could n''t you stir up something? 28780 Well, what of it?" |
28780 | Well? |
28780 | Well? |
28780 | Were you in the loft above Ah Sih King''s? |
28780 | What am I doing here? 28780 What am I forgetting?" |
28780 | What are we going to do? |
28780 | What are you prowlin''around ship this time o''night for, eh? 28780 What can I do? |
28780 | What did I say? |
28780 | What do you mean by that? 28780 What do you mean?" |
28780 | What do you mean? |
28780 | What does he want? |
28780 | What does this little girl mean to you? |
28780 | What does_ he_ care about the mines? 28780 What happened? |
28780 | What have I that this maiden desires? |
28780 | What have you done with her? |
28780 | What have you to say now? |
28780 | What if I am? |
28780 | What is a thousand taels to him? 28780 What is it?" |
28780 | What is my task? |
28780 | What is the matter? |
28780 | What is to become of us? |
28780 | What shall I say? |
28780 | What the hell do you want? |
28780 | What under the seven suns are you doing in Ching- Fu-- and Kialang-- and China? 28780 What was I about to say? |
28780 | What will become of you? |
28780 | What''s botherin''you? 28780 What''s new? |
28780 | What''s next? |
28780 | What''s on your mind, Jen? |
28780 | What''s that? |
28780 | What''s this? |
28780 | What''s to become of you? 28780 What''s''at?" |
28780 | What-- what for? |
28780 | What? |
28780 | When did you see Miss Vost? |
28780 | Where are they? |
28780 | Where are you? 28780 Where did you find it?" |
28780 | Where do I eat? 28780 Where do you want me to t- take you?" |
28780 | Where does your aged grandmother live, small one? |
28780 | Where is Len Yang? |
28780 | Where now, Peter? |
28780 | Where? |
28780 | Who are the occupants of stateroom forty- four? |
28780 | Who are you? |
28780 | Who is on watch? 28780 Who is there?" |
28780 | Who, my son? |
28780 | Why are beautiful women-- girls-- from all parts of the world stolen-- to work in that mine? |
28780 | Why are you dressed as a Jap? |
28780 | Why are you following me? |
28780 | Why are you in Ching- Fu? 28780 Why did n''t you ask me?" |
28780 | Why did n''t you tell me you were in danger? 28780 Why did you do that?" |
28780 | Why did you do that? |
28780 | Why do n''t you join them? 28780 Why is Miss Vost making the trip to Ching- Fu?" |
28780 | Why is he drunk? |
28780 | Why not? |
28780 | Why should I go to Liauchow? |
28780 | Why should I? 28780 Why should he stab me?" |
28780 | Why speak of death on a day like this? |
28780 | Why you up so early-- or so late? 28780 Why?" |
28780 | Will there be a row? |
28780 | Will there be another time, Peter? |
28780 | Will we let husband go along? |
28780 | Will you help me-- now? |
28780 | With me? |
28780 | Wo n''t I see you again? 28780 Wo n''t you take me?" |
28780 | Would you mind sort of summing up what you''ve just said? |
28780 | You Wanchee cumshaw? |
28780 | You allatime go Hong Kong way? |
28780 | You and I? |
28780 | You are not married-- to Eileen? |
28780 | You are safe? 28780 You came for me, Peter?" |
28780 | You did try? |
28780 | You do n''t care about this Professor Hodgson, do you? |
28780 | You do n''t happen to know,put in Peter ironically,"what Miss Lorimer had for breakfast this morning, by any chance?" |
28780 | You do n''t mind? |
28780 | You have asked him questions? |
28780 | You have decided nothing, then? |
28780 | You have not forgotten-- Kowloon,_ busar satu_? |
28780 | You have some knowledge of my encounters with-- dragons? |
28780 | You keep away-- ai? |
28780 | You know nodding of dot business, young man? |
28780 | You like dis ship, eh? |
28780 | You made this-- for me? |
28780 | You see? |
28780 | You stay with me, do you hear? |
28780 | You tell man- man, eh? |
28780 | You used a coil? |
28780 | You wanchee my? |
28780 | You wanted to find out if I still cared enough for you to----"Follow me? 28780 You will not leave this ship? |
28780 | You''re not anxious, Peter? |
28780 | You''re not hurt-- either of you? 28780 You''re taking the_ Hankow_ up- river to- morrow?" |
28780 | You-- what was that? |
28780 | You-- who are so thirsty for the gold of romance? |
28780 | You-- you wo n''t bring that dreadful automatic revolver of yours loaded-- will you? |
28780 | Young girls? |
28780 | Your husband''s nationality? |
28780 | Your son? 28780 _ Birahi_,"she said in her tinkling voice, and with gravity far in advance of her summers,"we must part now-- forever?" |
28780 | _ Ja_? 28780 _ Ta dzoh sh[=e]n m[=o] szi_?" |
28780 | _ Why_ should_ I_ go to Liauchow? |
28780 | ... Do you imagine I ever cared for that puppy? |
28780 | A day? |
28780 | A half million gold a year? |
28780 | A life? |
28780 | An end of the glorious adventures whose trail he had followed now for well upon ten years? |
28780 | An hour of life? |
28780 | An hour? |
28780 | And I rather liked the two little girls-- twins, are n''t they?" |
28780 | And he will carry on your work?" |
28780 | And how? |
28780 | And then-- death? |
28780 | And then-- what? |
28780 | And where is it?" |
28780 | And who is Len Yang?" |
28780 | And wiser men than Peter have answered: What can be so harmful? |
28780 | And, Eileen----""Yes, Peter?" |
28780 | Answer: What am I?" |
28780 | Any one back there?" |
28780 | Anything wrong?" |
28780 | Are n''t you running some risk, though? |
28780 | Are we in a trap?" |
28780 | Are you Peter Moore?" |
28780 | Are you armed?" |
28780 | At heart, do you really hate him, as you pretend, or are you simply bowing down to your vanity, to the pride you seem to take in these quixotic deeds? |
28780 | At one---- A fighting chance? |
28780 | At present will you trust me as I trust you?" |
28780 | B. Whalen, the Marconi supervisor?" |
28780 | Bellowing inquiry came down to them:"Who is that? |
28780 | Both girls safe?" |
28780 | But I could have defended myself easily enough if it had not been for----""Your clip of cartridges? |
28780 | But are you acquainted with that man''s methods? |
28780 | But how-- what?" |
28780 | But the others, the black- coated one-- what of them? |
28780 | But there is no danger-- is there?" |
28780 | But what is there left in my life? |
28780 | But what was happening? |
28780 | But where was the crew of the_ Vandalia_? |
28780 | But why, Peter, did you attack poor Kahn Meng? |
28780 | But why----""Peter, I''ve gone to more trouble to- night than you realize, perhaps----""What do you want me to do?" |
28780 | But why? |
28780 | But why? |
28780 | But, Mr. Moore, do you believe in love at first sight?" |
28780 | But-- what difference? |
28780 | By dawn, if I am not there, it will mean----""Death?" |
28780 | Ca n''t you and I have tea to- morrow afternoon?" |
28780 | Ca n''t you, Peter? |
28780 | Call it infatuation, call it a rush of blood to my foolish young head, call it anything you like----""Why do n''t you stop all this?" |
28780 | Can I have her?" |
28780 | Can you believe I have lied?" |
28780 | Can you ever forgive me for taking them out? |
28780 | Can you forgive me? |
28780 | Can you understand me? |
28780 | Crazy? |
28780 | Death? |
28780 | Death? |
28780 | Did he possess good papers? |
28780 | Did n''t I try? |
28780 | Did n''t you say that to yourself, Peter?" |
28780 | Did she have some message to convey to him that she could not trust to the openness of the bund at the jetty? |
28780 | Did that fellow get you?" |
28780 | Did they harm you? |
28780 | Did you enjoy-- the game? |
28780 | Did you ever see a hero wearing a plain black four- in- hand? |
28780 | Did you ever see a hero wearing nice tan oxfords without a spot of mud on them? |
28780 | Did you ever see such a Chinaman?" |
28780 | Did you succeed? |
28780 | Do I speak the truth?" |
28780 | Do n''t you realize it? |
28780 | Do n''t you think you are exposing those two nice girls unnecessarily to danger?" |
28780 | Do n''t you understand? |
28780 | Do n''t you?" |
28780 | Do you hear me? |
28780 | Do you imagine my men were not in his camp? |
28780 | Do you know that his corrupt influence has extended into every nation of Asia? |
28780 | Do you know what happens to white women when they are stranded, penniless, friendless, in this country?" |
28780 | Do you know where Bobbie MacLaurin is?" |
28780 | Do you mean what I said about Liauchow?" |
28780 | Do you mind if I tell you, Eileen, that it broke my heart when I realized that we would n''t see one another for goodness knows how long a time?" |
28780 | Do you remember those evenings, Peter, under the moon and the Southern Cross?" |
28780 | Do you still love her?" |
28780 | Do you understand that, Peter Moore?" |
28780 | Do you understand? |
28780 | Do-- do you think I would make you unhappy?" |
28780 | Does it hum-- or what?" |
28780 | Does n''t it-- appeal to you-- just a little-- to be all alone with me for nearly a hundred miles?" |
28780 | Does not that appeal to you?" |
28780 | Does that sound like heroics? |
28780 | Eh, Peter?" |
28780 | Eh?" |
28780 | Emiguel Borria, ardent tool of the Gray Dragon? |
28780 | Emiguel Borria, husband of the girl Romola? |
28780 | Ever hear of one?" |
28780 | Ever?" |
28780 | Expect me to believe that, too, eh?" |
28780 | Get that-- you yellow weasel?" |
28780 | Going to make a break for it, too?" |
28780 | Had Captain Jones consented to and perhaps aided in this mid- river tryst? |
28780 | Had he been observing perhaps the word but not the letter of his self- assumed oath? |
28780 | Had his red- faced pursuer caught up in time? |
28780 | Had it been possible for the Mongolian to signal his master in Len Yang and receive an answer while the_ Hankow_ lay at Ichang? |
28780 | Had she been staring, not at him, but beyond him, over the miles to a detestable scene, a view of horror? |
28780 | Had that noble soul been snatched down by the River of Golden Sands? |
28780 | Had this stuttering static anything in kind with those other formless events? |
28780 | Have I said that this was St. Valentine''s Day? |
28780 | Have I seen him to ask questions?" |
28780 | Have I talked to you in vain? |
28780 | Have one of my ropes?" |
28780 | Have you heard a broken down auxiliary asking for help? |
28780 | Have you listened in?" |
28780 | Have you such a knife?" |
28780 | Have you them?" |
28780 | Have you told him help is coming?" |
28780 | He owns other mines?" |
28780 | How could Peter say no? |
28780 | How could he, alone, armed only with an automatic revolver, hope to overpower professional riflemen who numbered at the least forty? |
28780 | How did I get in? |
28780 | How does that appeal to you?" |
28780 | How had the Gray Dragon brought pressure upon the American ambassador, a man of the highest repute, of sterling and patriotic qualities? |
28780 | How long have I waited for such an opportunity? |
28780 | How long? |
28780 | How long? |
28780 | How will you explain?" |
28780 | How would the spirit of that mob react to the announcement? |
28780 | How''s the air? |
28780 | Huh?" |
28780 | I beg pardon?" |
28780 | I have come back to China, not to start trouble, but simply because-- well, why are you in China?" |
28780 | I thought-- but what does it matter what I thought?" |
28780 | I trust----""Why?" |
28780 | I-- I''d like----""Then why do n''t you?" |
28780 | I-- I----""What have you done to these people? |
28780 | I? |
28780 | I_ am_ sure''""There''s little more to say, then, is there?" |
28780 | If he desired to run away from this very actual danger in which direction could he run? |
28780 | If it is written that I am to die, why give Death cause to be angry? |
28780 | If not, what terrified creature was invoking his aid in this blundering fashion? |
28780 | Is any one proof against it but me? |
28780 | Is any one? |
28780 | Is it twenty years-- or forty-- or a thousand-- since that night in the bazaar at Mangalore?" |
28780 | Is n''t my gun loaded with bullets? |
28780 | Is n''t that the truth?" |
28780 | Is that not true?" |
28780 | Is that why you''ve come back?" |
28780 | Is this-- is this all?" |
28780 | It gave you confidence in yourself, did it not?" |
28780 | It is a terrible habit, is n''t it?" |
28780 | It is my life to bring a little hope, a little gladness into the hearts----""You stand there and tell me that you know the code?" |
28780 | Ja?" |
28780 | Ja?" |
28780 | Kidnapped? |
28780 | Love? |
28780 | Mandarin?" |
28780 | May I say-- I am very grateful?" |
28780 | Miss Vost-- do I pronounce it correctly? |
28780 | Moore?" |
28780 | Moore?" |
28780 | Moore?" |
28780 | Moore?" |
28780 | My duty? |
28780 | My other question is this: Why does that beast search the world for beautiful women-- and consign them to the mines?" |
28780 | Naradia, how many?" |
28780 | Now savvy?" |
28780 | Now-- ready?" |
28780 | Now----""Did you lick him?" |
28780 | Of course, the first thing I want to make sure of is, am I stepping on anybody''s toes? |
28780 | Oh, I''m so glad----""You knew? |
28780 | Oh, wo n''t you understand? |
28780 | On the other hand, might n''t it be possible that Eileen Lorimer had ceased to care for him? |
28780 | Once or twice he''s tried to make love, and you could see, could n''t you, how furious he was when we left him?" |
28780 | Or just temporarily off your nut? |
28780 | Or was he hungry for that glimpse? |
28780 | Or, are you leavin''the radio unwatched?" |
28780 | Or-- is it India-- or Afghanistan?" |
28780 | Or-- less? |
28780 | Perhaps you are the best operator on the whole Pacific Ocean; you''ve had that reputation now-- how long-- five years? |
28780 | Perhaps-- perhaps a girl who is not so silly as I have been? |
28780 | Peter-- can you understand? |
28780 | Proud? |
28780 | Remember? |
28780 | Savvy? |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Savvy?" |
28780 | Say-- say, Moore, when does the fight start? |
28780 | See? |
28780 | Shall I tell you how many men she has put out of the way at my bidding before and after she met you? |
28780 | Shall we consider ourselves properly introduced?" |
28780 | Shall we turn in now?" |
28780 | She was beckoning? |
28780 | Should he heed it? |
28780 | Spanish_ señorita_?" |
28780 | Stabbed? |
28780 | Still want to go to Japan with me, my dear?" |
28780 | Surely you were not planning to enter Len Yang again alone?" |
28780 | Tell him, or shall I?" |
28780 | Tell me first, what was your power over Romola Borria?" |
28780 | That you, Johnny Driggs?" |
28780 | The Gray Dragon of Len Yang? |
28780 | The man with a legion of a thousand loyal men at his back?" |
28780 | The moon is so impersonal, is n''t it? |
28780 | The_ King of Asia_? |
28780 | The_ Persian Gulf_? |
28780 | Then what of the little golden- haired girl-- the two little golden- haired girls-- you left this afternoon on the bund?" |
28780 | Then, too, there are some papers of mine----""Romola, will this give you the contentment you desire?" |
28780 | Then:"Why did you leave the_ Vandalia_ at Shanghai?" |
28780 | This one shot back the following greeting:"Who are you? |
28780 | To Peter he said:"You recognize your companion of last night? |
28780 | Twice-- means''no?''" |
28780 | Two years, is n''t it, since we were chased out of Panama City by the_ spigotties_?" |
28780 | Understand?" |
28780 | Was he playing quite squarely with Eileen Lorimer? |
28780 | Was he willing to assume the tremendous responsibility? |
28780 | Was n''t it to- day that I was to become immortal, with a knife through my floating ribs, or a bullet in my heart? |
28780 | Was she flirting with him? |
28780 | Was this girl flirting with him, or was hers a deeper interest? |
28780 | Was this killing a part of an elaborate plan? |
28780 | Weeks? |
28780 | Well, what do_ you_ want? |
28780 | Were these the sounds which had unnerved Dale? |
28780 | What Chinamen?" |
28780 | What agony are you talking about? |
28780 | What are they for? |
28780 | What are you doing up at this time of night playing with a baby coil?" |
28780 | What band?" |
28780 | What becomes of them?" |
28780 | What brings you here? |
28780 | What can I do?" |
28780 | What can be so deliciously harmless as a kiss? |
28780 | What did that one have in store for him now? |
28780 | What difference does time make? |
28780 | What difference what she said? |
28780 | What do you say? |
28780 | What do you suppose has become of that other one whom you met at the_ weng_ into the hills? |
28780 | What do you want?" |
28780 | What does become of the stolen lives?" |
28780 | What follows? |
28780 | What for? |
28780 | What had become of Bobbie MacLaurin? |
28780 | What had become of that dashing British lieutenant, Milton Raynard? |
28780 | What had he made up his mind to do? |
28780 | What happened to that scoundrel, Kahn Meng? |
28780 | What have you ever done? |
28780 | What have you to say?" |
28780 | What is Len Yang?" |
28780 | What is it? |
28780 | What is the news from home?" |
28780 | What is the news from outside? |
28780 | What is this place?" |
28780 | What more can any man say?" |
28780 | What should a young lover have done? |
28780 | What was the fellow doing? |
28780 | What was this girl doing in Shanghai? |
28780 | What will become of you as the years pass? |
28780 | What would you have done, Peter Moore-- you who know so well the heart of woman? |
28780 | What''s happened to him?" |
28780 | What''s on your mind? |
28780 | What''s the meaning?" |
28780 | What''s your game, eh? |
28780 | When does the_ Vandalia_ clear for China?" |
28780 | When would he again penetrate the stronghold of that unhappy red city? |
28780 | When would he do this? |
28780 | When would he meet the Gray Dragon face to face? |
28780 | Where are the girls?" |
28780 | Where are we? |
28780 | Where are you drifting? |
28780 | Where are you?" |
28780 | Where could he seek refuge? |
28780 | Where have I seen that face before? |
28780 | Where have they taken her?" |
28780 | Where is Bobbie?" |
28780 | Where is Jen?" |
28780 | Where is she? |
28780 | Where was Kahn Meng? |
28780 | Where were the Whipple girls and Anthony? |
28780 | Where were the girls, Anthony, the young lieutenant from the_ Madrusa_? |
28780 | Where were the servants, the caravan boys, the muleteers, the traders and merchants? |
28780 | Where''s everybody?" |
28780 | Where''s she from? |
28780 | Where''s she going? |
28780 | Where, then, were Jen and his Chinese? |
28780 | Which one? |
28780 | Who can see into any man''s heart?" |
28780 | Who could say? |
28780 | Who in thunder said anything about prolonging the agony? |
28780 | Who is outside?" |
28780 | Who is she? |
28780 | Who will not dare? |
28780 | Who''s the girl?" |
28780 | Who''s with her? |
28780 | Whose toes do you think you''re stepping on?" |
28780 | Why are you so far from Ching- Fu? |
28780 | Why did they bring you here? |
28780 | Why did you do that? |
28780 | Why did you t''row him over der side, eh?" |
28780 | Why do you stare at me so? |
28780 | Why does your little mind single out such simple punishment-- you-- lovers? |
28780 | Why enter the lion''s den? |
28780 | Why had no shots been fired at them as they climbed the silver road? |
28780 | Why had she come into his room? |
28780 | Why had she not gone aboard the_ Manchuria_, as she had promised? |
28780 | Why had the girl ignored him? |
28780 | Why had two notes been thrown? |
28780 | Why have n''t Jen and his gang broken in here? |
28780 | Why is he waiting? |
28780 | Why prolong the agony? |
28780 | Why should he care?" |
28780 | Why should you pick me for such a thing when you never saw me? |
28780 | Why the devil''ve you been dodging me all over South China to- day? |
28780 | Why, Peter-- why did n''t you wait? |
28780 | Why, what is there left in yours? |
28780 | Why-- why do you hesitate?" |
28780 | Why-- why is it?" |
28780 | Why?" |
28780 | Will I break into the house and help you rob?" |
28780 | Will you accompany us, Peter Moore-- Naradia and I and our followers? |
28780 | Will you do that?" |
28780 | Will you find out, if you can, if he is going to be sober enough to make the trip-- and let me know?" |
28780 | Will you handle an M- S- G for me?" |
28780 | Will you retire? |
28780 | Will you try to find him for me? |
28780 | Will you-- help me?" |
28780 | Will you? |
28780 | With the crew? |
28780 | Wo n''t that suffice until the morning? |
28780 | Wo n''t you do-- that-- for me?" |
28780 | Wo n''t you get your feet wet? |
28780 | Wo n''t you please tell me just what you do know about my activities in this neighborhood?" |
28780 | Wo n''t you say-- yes?" |
28780 | Wo n''t you stop and consider? |
28780 | Wo n''t you? |
28780 | Would he shoot through the pane? |
28780 | Would the jovial little captain be quite so jovial viewing these incriminating circumstances? |
28780 | Would the lights be Hi- Tai- Sha-- Tsung- min?--port or starboard? |
28780 | Would the one be waiting? |
28780 | Would the sampan be waiting? |
28780 | Would you do that?" |
28780 | Would you like to gaze upon that which can never be yours?" |
28780 | Years?" |
28780 | Yet the devils of darkness-- where were they? |
28780 | You are feeling stronger?" |
28780 | You are one of the ship''s officers, are you not?" |
28780 | You did n''t know that?" |
28780 | You do not mind if I call you_ birahi_ in our last moment together?" |
28780 | You have never gone up the river with us to load at Soo- chow?" |
28780 | You have not by any chance, in another of those careless moods of yours, happened to tamper with the bullets, have you?" |
28780 | You heard my call?" |
28780 | You knew that?" |
28780 | You know the name-- the City of Stolen Lives? |
28780 | You savvy, Chink- a- link?" |
28780 | You thought I was just an innocent, helpless little thing, now did n''t you? |
28780 | You were stunned, perhaps?" |
28780 | You will excuse me, wo n''t you, until to- night?" |
28780 | You will promise me that?" |
28780 | You will wear it, great one, around thy middle?" |
28780 | You will-- or wo n''t you?" |
28780 | You''ll be there, without fail?" |
28780 | You''ll go, wo n''t you?" |
28780 | You''re both all right?" |
28780 | You''re not hurt, are you? |
28780 | You''re----""Well?" |
28780 | _ Nidzen yang gïang_?" |
28780 | _ P''êng- yu_ Moore, we wo n''t bother the servants; wo n''t you help me?" |
28780 | observed Blanchard in the crisp, brittle accents of senility;"so you''re back again, eh? |
44194 | But, my child, why do you want to calm me? 44194 How is it possible that in Europe, in a civilised country, mutual interests should not be reconciled without killing?" |
44194 | Is it not strange that it should have stopped before I? 44194 What good can it do man to have a notion of the weight and dimensions of the planet Mars?" |
44194 | What is the good? |
44194 | And as he protested, he added,"You remember your promise? |
44194 | And what road should we take when we left it? |
44194 | Avdotia Maximovna would then rush to soothe him and soundly rate the servant girl,"Are you not ashamed to leave a noble child all alone?" |
44194 | But did I ever tell you that they had the same for me? |
44194 | But directly after he was gone Elie turned to me with an anxious look and said,"Well, what do you think of my idea?" |
44194 | But how is the fear of death to be explained, since it is a general and inevitable phenomenon? |
44194 | But why had he given his words that jesting form which must have misled M. Roux? |
44194 | Could it have been otherwise? |
44194 | Elie said to him:"Salimbeni, you are a friend; tell me, is it the end?" |
44194 | He said to himself:"Why live? |
44194 | How can I describe those last three days? |
44194 | How could life be possible there? |
44194 | How could that unforeseen result be explained? |
44194 | How is it that we have no_ natural instinct_ for death? |
44194 | How long should we remain? |
44194 | How many times have I not availed myself of it? |
44194 | If I really am reasonable, why fear a blind impulse? |
44194 | Is this a life? |
44194 | More even than your science, your kindliness attracts; who amongst us has not experienced it? |
44194 | My heart breaking, I asked him why he said that; was he feeling very weak? |
44194 | My private life is ended; my eyes are going; when I am blind I can no longer work, then why live?" |
44194 | She has faults which must seem graver to me than to you, but what is to be done? |
44194 | The lively Emilia Lvovna often said to him,"But why do you never talk, Mitienka?" |
44194 | We were already very good friends, and have now drawn nearer together; who knows? |
44194 | What is it that provokes it? |
44194 | What is the good of making me last? |
44194 | What is to be done to avoid it? |
44194 | What was happening? |
44194 | What, then, is the mechanism of phagocytic digestion? |
44194 | When his condition grew worse and he felt no hope whatever of his recovery, he often used to say,"What is to be done? |
44194 | You will do my post- mortem? |
44194 | You will hold my hand, will you not?" |
44194 | after a terrible night, saying to me afterwards in explanation,"Why grieve them, since it can not be helped?" |
44194 | or suffering very much? |
44194 | what are you thinking of? |
42041 | Brian, my brother,said the King, in a tone of scornful wonder,"Why dost thou come in beggar- guise our palace portals under? |
42041 | Why did you crack them, grandpapa? |
42041 | _ You say that''s so?_My American friend of the rue de la Paix? |
42041 | _ You say that''s so?_My American friend of the rue de la Paix? |
42041 | ( Will you not play? |
42041 | ..... Weavers, weaving solemn and still, Why do you weave in the moonlight chill?... |
42041 | A head''s breadth? |
42041 | Am I grown grey And learnt no wisdom? |
42041 | Am_ I_ wronged by it? |
42041 | And Certainty? |
42041 | And after, ere the night is born, Do hares come out about the corn? |
42041 | And dare we wish that our poor dust should mar The wonder of such immortality? |
42041 | And is there honey still for tea? |
42041 | And laughs the immortal river still Under the mill, under the mill? |
42041 | And sunset still a golden sea From Haslingfield to Madingley? |
42041 | And what are thy shrine, and kine and kindred, what are thy gods to me? |
42041 | And what can any old man do with shillings, With no one but himself to spend them on-- An idle, good- for- nothing, lone old man? |
42041 | And when you are asked,"Did you see an old woman?" |
42041 | Are you afraid of his arrows, O beautiful dreaming boy?) |
42041 | Are you still asleep? |
42041 | Broken and tarnished too? |
42041 | But is it more than an appearance? |
42041 | But is the specific quality of these delicate creations really epigrammatic? |
42041 | But the Sage corrects him:... Poor fool, And didst thou think this present sensible world Was God?... |
42041 | But we who sojourn yet in earthly ways; How shall we sing, now Helen lieth dead? |
42041 | But what are we to say about the spirit of it-- the philosophy which is implicit in it? |
42041 | Can death haunt silence with a silver sound? |
42041 | Could a great conception be stated in a simpler phrase than that of the two first lines? |
42041 | Deep meadows yet, for to forget The lies, and truths, and pain?... |
42041 | Did you see aught? |
42041 | Do they not shoot up radiant, A splendour of snowy vans, swimming the air Just ere the rush of rapture? |
42041 | Do you dare face the wind now? |
42041 | Goblin, why do you love them so? |
42041 | Has anybody heard of a Saxon who could fit names like these to his sweetheart-- Little Joy, Sweet Laughter, Shy Little Gay Sprite? |
42041 | His dust to- day lies with you, Italy; Where lie his words? |
42041 | How can one describe this poem? |
42041 | How much of this apparent paradox is due to knowledge derived from the author''s astounding autobiography? |
42041 | I laughed at her over the sticky larch fence, And said,"Who''s down- hearted, Dolly?" |
42041 | If I should find_ Her_ name among the friends of Cassius? |
42041 | If it''s so fine and brave, the Old Kent Road, How is it you came to leave it? |
42041 | Is dawn a secret shy and cold Anadyomene, silver- gold? |
42041 | Is he not holy, like you? |
42041 | Is it known to the Wind that takes Advantage at once and comes right in? |
42041 | Is it known to the babe that he shouts? |
42041 | Is it known to the cock in the yard, That crows-- the cause of that merry din? |
42041 | Is it known to the dog, that he barks For joy-- what Mary and Maud laugh at? |
42041 | Is it known to the old, purring cat? |
42041 | Is it known to themselves? |
42041 | Is not the balm of Africa yet clinging About the bones of Livingstone? |
42041 | Mary and Maud have met at the door, Oh, now for a din; I told you so: They''re laughing at once with sweet, round mouths, Laughing for what? |
42041 | May I not do as gods do? |
42041 | Might you be looking for a job, my lad? |
42041 | Misery? |
42041 | Mother? |
42041 | Nay, let me hear What is it that my sister Princess wills Out of the largeness of her heart for me? |
42041 | Nay, would you have me weep? |
42041 | Not yet the happy moment? |
42041 | Nymph, nymph, what are your beads? |
42041 | Of that rhapsody what can one say? |
42041 | Oh to whom shall a song of battle be chanted? |
42041 | Oh, is the water sweet and cool, Gentle and brown, above the pool? |
42041 | One who might on a starvèd body take Strong flights beyond the fiery larks in song, With awful music, passionate with hate? |
42041 | Say, Leonora, Where are my wings? |
42041 | Say, do the elm- clumps greatly stand Still guardians of that holy land? |
42041 | Say, is there Beauty yet to find? |
42041 | The chestnuts shade, in reverend dream, The yet unacademic stream? |
42041 | The lover replies: What are the sins of my race, Beloved, what are my people to thee? |
42041 | Then thou art God? |
42041 | Then truly, who art thou? |
42041 | Then was I not in the midst of thee Lord God? |
42041 | They can not both be-- Owain, where are they? |
42041 | Though it should be so-- Though yet it can not be-- what''s that to me? |
42041 | To pity me Makes me a beggar-- dare you pity me? |
42041 | To what God Shall we chant Our songs of Battle? |
42041 | Twice the traveller knocks, crying:"Is there anybody there?" |
42041 | Unconcerned I sat and heard Little things, Ivy tendrils, a bird''s wings, A frightened bird-- Or faint hands at the window- pane? |
42041 | Weavers, weaving at break of day, Why do you weave a garment so gay?... |
42041 | What are words? |
42041 | What can these builders Be doing here at this hour? |
42041 | What does it matter? |
42041 | What news of our dear cousin? |
42041 | What scent will greet you in an hour? |
42041 | What shall I read therein? |
42041 | What thing am I That three soft words should drive the tear drops forth Like floods in winter? |
42041 | When, with a bee''s mouth closed, she hums Sounds not to wake, but soft and deep, To make her pretty charges sleep? |
42041 | Where are my children, if they are not there? |
42041 | Where hast thou wandered since yester year, on what venture of love hast thou tarried? |
42041 | Where shall I be when Summer comes? |
42041 | Who wants to win''em? |
42041 | Why be glum? |
42041 | Why do n''t you come on? |
42041 | Why do you stare at them? |
42041 | Why dost thou creep so pale, like one afraid? |
42041 | Why, mother, who should know as well as you How soon a riveter is done? |
42041 | Will you go with me? |
42041 | Will you pay me the price?" |
42041 | Wilt thou not come again, thou godly sword, Into the Spirit''s hands? |
42041 | You, who bled With Garibaldi, and the thousand more? |
42041 | and Quiet kind? |
42041 | does anyone know? |
42041 | what should we have, He and I? |
42041 | yet Stands the Church clock at ten to three? |
45040 | ''What did he say? |
45040 | Does it lessen the individuality of the gardener to weed his soil? |
45040 | Does it militate against the power of a cause, to rid it of its faults? |
45040 | Does it weaken the individuality of a patient to cut out the root of his cancer? |
45040 | Is it not selfish not to worry for one''s friend, even if self- worry is eliminated?_""Emphatically, no! |
45040 | May we not learn a lesson from the newly discovered film? |
45040 | SLAVES OR FREEMEN-- WHICH? |
45040 | Should not the chemical condition of selection be more difficult than a similar voluntary mental accomplishment? |
45040 | Suppose his friend need aid or sympathy; will worry furnish either? |
45040 | These are strong statements, but they are indisputable; and if they are true, what then, is the remedy? |
45040 | Which shall we choose to become: the keystone of the arch, or some of the dirt of the earth beneath it? |
45040 | Which shall we choose: happiness, health, growth, usefulness, rest, and a fitting relationship to the Divine, or the reverse? |
45040 | Why are the divine right of kings, and the assumption that the sovereign can do no wrong, possibilities of the present? |
45040 | Why should not mental weeds be pulled up by the roots also, and the mind cleared for growth? |
45040 | Why was human slavery believed to be a divine institution by the majority of the world''s inhabitants as late as fifty years ago? |
45040 | Why were a personal devil and witches and filmy ghosts considered possibilities as late as the beginning of this century? |
45040 | Will not the great educators whom the world respects so highly, and in whom it has so much faith, try the experiment? |
45040 | Will the runner run less swiftly, or the jumper jump less far, if they remove the handicap? |
45040 | [ Sidenote: Emancipation not Selfish]"_ Is not the condition of Emancipation selfish? |
45040 | _ You must first get rid of anger and worry._""But,"said I,"is that possible?" |
4032 | ''What is its name?'' 4032 And what was that poem about, Critias?" |
4032 | He who gives life; He who gives strength; whose command all the bright gods( the stars?) |
4032 | The gods Citlallinicué and Citlalatonac, instantly looking down said:''Divine Lord, what is that fire that is making there? 4032 ''From what wilt thou save me?'' 4032 ''How shall I protect thee?'' 4032 ( Europe, Africa, and America?) 4032 A black cloud assails their country, from which proceeds a terrible hurricane( the water- spout?) 4032 And from these came the thousands of tons of copper and tin that must, during the Bronze Age, have been introduced into Europe? 4032 And how could he have known that the Mediterranean was only a harbor compared with the magnitude of the great ocean surrounding Atlantis? 4032 And if this be not its origin, how comes it that we find it in the most north- western corner of Africa? 4032 And why should the veteran Roman troops have been so terrified and panic- stricken by a lot of cattle with firebrands on their horns? 4032 And why, in both countries, should they stand with their sides square to the four cardinal points of the compass? 4032 And, on the other hand, how can we account for the representations of negroes on the monuments of Central America? 4032 Are not these hundred arms the oars of the galleys, and the frightful crashing of the waves their movements in the water? 4032 Are these another set of coincidences? 4032 Are they in this, too, a reminiscence of the Cross, and of the four rivers of Atlantis that ran to the north, south, east, and west? 4032 Are we to find the original of these legends in the following passage from Plato''s history of Atlantis? 4032 As Maginn well asks, how could Hannibal be in danger of starvation when he had two thousand oxen to spare for such an experiment? 4032 Associated with this event was a divine personage called Niu- va( Noah?). 4032 By what process of development did it reach it? 4032 Can all these precise coincidences be the result of accident? 4032 Can all these things be the result of accident? 4032 Can all this be accident? 4032 Can any one doubt that these two legends must have sprung in some way from one another, or from some common source? 4032 Can any theory of accidental coincidences account for all this? 4032 Can anything be more significant than to find the serpent the sign for n in Central America, and in all these Old World languages? 4032 Can we doubt the reality of events which we thus find confirmed by religious ceremonies at Athens, in Syria, and on the shores of Central America? 4032 Can we not suppose that those three sons represent three great races in the order of their precedence? 4032 Could Plato have guessed all this? 4032 Could anything be more evident than the connection of these ceremonies with the destruction of Atlantis? 4032 Could they have done this without the magnetic compass? 4032 Did it have relation to the mounds and pyramids? 4032 Did these references grow out of vague traditions linking their race withislands in the sea?" |
4032 | Did these three letters include the d and r, which they did not receive from the Atlantean alphabet, as represented to us by the Maya alphabet? |
4032 | Do not these words picture the explosion of a mine with a"force equal to the shock of an earthquake?" |
4032 | Does Plato, in speaking of"the fruits having a hard rind, affording drinks and meats and ointments,"refer to the cocoa nut? |
4032 | Does history or tradition make mention of any such? |
4032 | Does it mean that by means of the magnet he sailed, after the Flood, to the European colonies of Atlantis, already thickly inhabited? |
4032 | Does not all this accord with"that dreadful day and night"described by Plato? |
4032 | Does not this describe the fate of Atlantis? |
4032 | He began to chide, saying,''Who has made this fire here?'' |
4032 | How are we to explain the existence of the Semitic race in Europe without Atlantis? |
4032 | How comes it that all the civilizations of the Old World radiate from the shores of the Mediterranean? |
4032 | How could the beardless American Indians have imagined a bearded race? |
4032 | How did he come to hit upon the hot springs if he was drawing a picture from his imagination? |
4032 | How did the human mind hit upon this singular edifice-- the pyramid? |
4032 | How did the red men of Central America know anything about"black men and white men?" |
4032 | How did the wild horse pass from America to Europe and Asia if there was not continuous land communication between the two continents? |
4032 | How many centuries elapsed ere man thought of cultivating Indian corn? |
4032 | How many more ere it had spread over nearly a hundred degrees of latitude and lost all resemblance to its original form?'' |
4032 | I then asked,''Do the people cross this river in boats?'' |
4032 | In another fragment, at the origin of the human race we see in succession the fraternal couples of Autochthon and Technites( Adam and Quen-- Cain? |
4032 | In what have we added to the civilization of this ancient people? |
4032 | Is Maya? |
4032 | Is it in the barbaric depths of that Asia out of whose uncivilized tribes all civilization is said to have issued? |
4032 | Is it not another remarkable coincidence that the p, in both Maya and Phoenician, should contain this singular sign? |
4032 | Is it not probable that we have here another reference to the great record preserved in the land of the Deluge? |
4032 | Is it possible that a plant of this kind could have been cultivated for this immense period of time in both Asia and America? |
4032 | Is it possible to account for this singular custom, reaching through a belt of nations, and completely around the habitable world, without Atlantis? |
4032 | Is it possible to explain this except by supposing that it originated from some common centre? |
4032 | Is it possible to suppose all these extraordinary coincidences to be the result of accident? |
4032 | Is there any other country to which we can turn which possessed a phonetic alphabet in any respect kindred to this Phoenician alphabet? |
4032 | Is there any proof that civilized man existed at the North Pole when it possessed the climate of Africa? |
4032 | Is this curious design a reminiscence of Atlantis and the three- pronged trident of Poseidon? |
4032 | May not the so- called"Phoenician coins"found on Corvo, one of the Azores, be of Atlantean origin? |
4032 | May not this town of Erythia have given its name to the adjacent sea? |
4032 | May there not be a boiling lake on the unapproachable summit of Roairama? |
4032 | Might not the building of such a gigantic edifice have given rise to the legends existing on both continents in regard to a Tower of Babel? |
4032 | Must not demons and heroes and men come next?... |
4032 | Now what is the peculiarity of this hieroglyph? |
4032 | Now where did the Phoenicians get it? |
4032 | Now, what means, this number? |
4032 | One may well pause, after reading this catalogue, and ask himself, wherein do these peoples differ? |
4032 | Poole says,"How then can we account for this strong conviction? |
4032 | Professor Desor says:"We are asked if the preparation of bronze was not an indigenous invention which had originated on the slopes of the Alps?... |
4032 | Professor Kuntze asks,"In what way was this plant, which can not stand a voyage through the temperate zone, carried to America?" |
4032 | Solon, bearing this, said,''What do you mean?'' |
4032 | The Egyptians regarded Taut( At?) |
4032 | The dictionaries tell us that the ocean is named after the mountains of Atlas; but whence did the Atlas mountains get their name? |
4032 | The first was an age of giants( the great mammalia?) |
4032 | The legends of the Iranian race commence with the reign of ten Peisdadien( Poseidon?) |
4032 | The m here is certainly indicated by the central part of this combination, the figure###; where does that come from? |
4032 | The son of the Creator was called Szeu- kha( Ze- us?). |
4032 | WAS SUCH A CATASTROPHE POSSIBLE? |
4032 | WAS SUCH A CATASTROPHE POSSIBLE? |
4032 | Was not the Nubian"Island of Merou,"with its pyramids built by"red men,"a similar transplantation? |
4032 | Was this done in the past on the island of Atlantis? |
4032 | We come now to another question:"Did the Aryan or Japhetic race come from Atlantis?" |
4032 | Were not the pyramids of Egypt and America imitations of similar structures in Atlantis? |
4032 | What does this prove? |
4032 | What had an inland people, like the Jews, to do with seas and islands? |
4032 | What has become of them? |
4032 | What is the Phoenician form for g as found on the Moab stone? |
4032 | What is the distinctive mark about this figure? |
4032 | What numberless ages does this suggest? |
4032 | What proofs have we that the Egyptians were a colony from Atlantis? |
4032 | Whence comes the word Atlantic? |
4032 | Whence this name Atlas, if it be not from the name of the great king of Atlantis? |
4032 | Where are its Old World affinities? |
4032 | Where are the traces of their civilization? |
4032 | Where are the two nations, agricultural and highly civilized, on those continents by whom it was so cultivated? |
4032 | Where did the Greek, Plato, get these names if the story is a fable? |
4032 | Where did they get the name from? |
4032 | Where on the face of the earth are we to find a Copper Age? |
4032 | Where was Olympus? |
4032 | Who brought the dialect of Homer to America? |
4032 | Who can doubt that it represents the history of a real people? |
4032 | Who is the god to whom we shall offer sacrifice? |
4032 | Why do they thus smoke the sky?'' |
4032 | Why should these extraordinary structures crop out on the banks of the Nile, and amid the forests and plains of America? |
4032 | Why would any people have altogether left such a home? |
4032 | Why, when their civilization had spread to the ends of the earth, did it cease to exist in the peaceful region where it originated? |
4032 | Without Atlantis, how can we explain the fact that the early Egyptians were depicted by themselves as red men on their own monuments? |
4032 | kings,''men of the ancient law, who lived on pure Homa( water of life)''( nectar? |
4032 | or are they coeval?... |
4032 | or who took to Greece that of the Mayas? |
4032 | xi., 4, 5),"Who shall give us flesh to eat? |
38690 | And how old are you? |
38690 | And the people asked him, saying, What shall we do then? 38690 But how can a man be locked up,"I said,"for begging in the name of Christ?" |
38690 | But why will nothing come of it? 38690 But,"said I,"if it were possible to find you a situation as a cook or something else?" |
38690 | Do you think there is any pleasure in knocking about, begging, if I can work? |
38690 | Have you parents? |
38690 | Have you parents? |
38690 | He repudiates science and art; he wishes to turn men back again to the savage state; why, then, should we listen to him, or argue with him? |
38690 | How many? |
38690 | How then? 38690 I have a mother,"she said at last;"but what''s that to you?" |
38690 | Is begging forbidden in Moscow, then? |
38690 | Is begging, then, forbidden? |
38690 | Is it hard work? |
38690 | Is this child yours? |
38690 | Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? 38690 Well; but what of that?" |
38690 | What difference does that make? |
38690 | What do you do for your living? |
38690 | What good will it do me? |
38690 | What is he doing with the pavement? |
38690 | What is your occupation? |
38690 | What of that? |
38690 | Where did it come from? |
38690 | Where did it come from? |
38690 | Where did it come from? |
38690 | Where shall I go? |
38690 | Why do you nurse him? |
38690 | Why left to die? 38690 Why should you go to look at the suffering of human beings whom you can not help?" |
38690 | Why? |
38690 | With what purpose? |
38690 | With what will only inquire,What Spirit?" |
38690 | A true mother will never say this:"You can not keep yourself from the desire to give them sweets, toys, to take them to the circus?" |
38690 | Adam? |
38690 | Advantageous for whom? |
38690 | All this comes simply from the strange idea about the"division of labour?" |
38690 | An engineer, a surgeon, a teacher, an artist, an author, seem by their very professions to be obliged to serve the people, but what do we see? |
38690 | And I began to reflect: Why is it that I felt so? |
38690 | And again I asked myself,"Why are there so many here, and in what do they differ from the country poor?" |
38690 | And as all this is rendered possible only by division of labour, how can we avoid countenancing it? |
38690 | And how about division of labour? |
38690 | And how many households are there in Russia alone? |
38690 | And if not we, who did? |
38690 | And industry and social undertakings?" |
38690 | And no given, to Catherine the Empress, or to the rebel Pugatchof? |
38690 | And now that I have gathered much of such money what am I to do with it? |
38690 | And this acknowledgment of men''s duty forms the essence of the third answer to the question,"What is to be done?" |
38690 | And what am I to do in order to satisfy the craving ingrafted in me for a personal and a common welfare? |
38690 | And what did he see there? |
38690 | And why should not men of art serve the people? |
38690 | And why should people carry away from the country into the towns the things that are necessary for country people,--flour, oats, horses, and cattle? |
38690 | And why, while living in town, am I unable to help the town poor?" |
38690 | And, indeed, what is my money, and how did I come by it? |
38690 | Are not these men compelled to do the will of their commanders under the threat of torture and death,--a threat often carried out? |
38690 | Are you a self- satisfied man of wealth, desiring to be gladdened by the sight of our need, to divert yourself in your idleness, and to mock at us? |
38690 | Before I repented, I had put the question thus:"What activity should I choose, I, the man with the education and talents I have acquired? |
38690 | Before this I was not able to answer the question,"What is to be done?" |
38690 | But by whom? |
38690 | But of the two who is the poorer? |
38690 | But surely you do n''t give them poisonous berries to eat, you do not let them go out alone in a boat, you do not take them to a café chantant? |
38690 | But the question is always put thus:"How can I, who have acquired so much fine information, how can I be useful to men with this my information?" |
38690 | But the question still remains, To whom is the power given, to Catherine the Empress, or to the rebel Pugatchof? |
38690 | But what are we to understand by the expression,"getting a living in town"? |
38690 | But what facts? |
38690 | But what mania could be more horrible than this? |
38690 | But what means the fact that some men and their children work, and other men and their children do not work? |
38690 | But who will make these boots and cotton- prints? |
38690 | But why are some caught and locked up, while others are let alone? |
38690 | But why do we dress, wash, and comb our hair ourselves? |
38690 | But why has it so happened? |
38690 | But with us it has come into fashion to say,"It is all very well in theory, but how would it be in practice?" |
38690 | By Pushkin, Dostoyevsky, Turgenief, L. Tolstoy? |
38690 | CHAPTER XII What did it all mean? |
38690 | CHAPTER XVIII What is the origin of money? |
38690 | CHAPTER XXII I always wonder at the often repeated words,"Yes, it is all true in theory, but how is it in practice?" |
38690 | CHAPTER XXV But what is to be done, then? |
38690 | CHAPTER XXXVIII What is to be done? |
38690 | Can coercing these men to join in the labour make them consider that the sacrifices are enforced for their own good? |
38690 | Can compelling these men to labour make it of advantage to them? |
38690 | Can we not see the changes which public opinion is now preparing? |
38690 | Could I possibly bring a lousy boy out of a den of depravity to my children? |
38690 | Do they, I ask, recognize the usefulness of this activity? |
38690 | Do you spend much of your time during the day with your children? |
38690 | Does not this good fortune come from the fact that man can not and will not see his own deformities? |
38690 | First of all, to the question,"What is to be done?" |
38690 | First, is it true that in every production only three agencies operate? |
38690 | Give me bodily food, and in return I will give you the forced to keep up these schools? |
38690 | He has money, and he pays it away for this work: what harm is there in it? |
38690 | He will only inquire,"What Spirit?" |
38690 | How can I compensate by this education and these talents for what I have been taking away from the people?" |
38690 | How can a man think that he ought to act in one way, and then do quite the reverse? |
38690 | How can a supposition about something quite impossible awaken an interest in any one? |
38690 | How can one help a man who does not tell all his circumstances? |
38690 | How could men have fallen into such astounding error? |
38690 | How could they have come to such a state that they can neither see nor hear nor understand with their heart what is so clear, obvious, and certain? |
38690 | How did this happen? |
38690 | How do these elders explain their cruelty? |
38690 | How is it, then, that all these acts of violence secure my liberty, and all this evil procures good?" |
38690 | How many are there of them?" |
38690 | How should we satisfy their artistic wants? |
38690 | How should we satisfy these claims? |
38690 | How then explain this? |
38690 | How would this young man call another who out of whim, changes his clean shirt and sends it to be washed by a woman old enough to be his mother? |
38690 | How, then, are our ladies to reform this woman and her daughter? |
38690 | How, then, can it be more advantageous for people? |
38690 | How, then, can the necessity of painful, oppressing work be advantageous for men? |
38690 | How, then, do rich people order their lives here in the country? |
38690 | I can not say, Why do you not eat hay when it is your necessary food? |
38690 | I compel none; I hire; what wrong is there in that?" |
38690 | I did not understand her, and asked again,--"What are your means of living?" |
38690 | I said to him,--"Is it really true that poor people are not allowed to ask for alms in Christ''s name?" |
38690 | I said to myself over and over again,"What is this town life and town misery? |
38690 | I stopped and asked him,--"What is the matter?" |
38690 | I wished to find out whether begging was really forbidden, and if so, why? |
38690 | If I gave a stranger in the street a ruble or twenty kopeks, why should I not give her also a ruble? |
38690 | If any man labour mentally five hours a day, he will do a vast amount of business; what do we, then, do during the remaining eleven hours? |
38690 | If it were not so, why, then, has the issue of this means of exchange always been the prerogative of the government? |
38690 | If the object were to make as many cotton- prints and pins as possible, it would be so; but the question is, how to make people happy? |
38690 | If the question had been put thus, after I had repented,"What can I, so ruined a man, do?" |
38690 | If they asked me what I had come for, what should I say? |
38690 | If we were to apply the second test and to ask, What is the chief motive of the activity of business- men? |
38690 | If, therefore, the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is your darkness? |
38690 | In answer to the question,"Is it necessary to organize this physical labour, to establish a society in a village upon this basis?" |
38690 | In answer to the question,"Would not this unusual labour be hurtful to health, which is necessary in order that I may serve men?" |
38690 | In what, then, does it consist? |
38690 | Indeed, what is that money which I give to the poor, and which the cook''s wife thought I was giving her? |
38690 | Is it a bad thing, according to the gospel, to clothe the naked, or to feed the hungry?" |
38690 | Is it more advantageous to make with all speed as many boots and cotton- prints as possible? |
38690 | Is it not, then, the same thing? |
38690 | Is it possible to help thus? |
38690 | Is it their fault?" |
38690 | Is not deprivation of land and tools enforced slavery? |
38690 | Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?" |
38690 | Is that charity? |
38690 | Is the utility of the arts and sciences recognized by all, or even by the majority, of working- people? |
38690 | Is this really so? |
38690 | It might be asked by some,"What is there so peculiarly important in abstractly discussing the meaning of money?" |
38690 | John the Baptist, in answer to men''s question"What shall we do then?" |
38690 | Make his coat as well as hew his wood? |
38690 | Men who from generation to generation have been making only pin- heads? |
38690 | Of what is this production composed? |
38690 | Of what, then, does this slavery consist? |
38690 | On what grounds do they believe this? |
38690 | On what grounds do they believe this? |
38690 | On what is this assurance based? |
38690 | Others have already begun, have done a little mischief; why should n''t I, too, do the same? |
38690 | Our position is a very difficult one, but why should we not look it in the face? |
38690 | Revised and Corrected Translation WHAT SHALL WE DO? |
38690 | Same prices as_ What is Religion?_"= On Life.="By LEO TOLSTOY. |
38690 | Science must answer the question, Why are some men deprived of land and tools while others possess both? |
38690 | She got up and slowly walked on.... Where? |
38690 | She looked fixedly beyond us, tried to snatch up her jacket behind her in order to cover her bony chest, and growled out like a dog,"What? |
38690 | She smiled and said,--"Who would take me with a yellow ticket? |
38690 | So it was with me; and therefore the second answer to the question,"What is to be done?" |
38690 | That may be so; but the given, to Catharine the Empress, or to the rebel Pugatchof? |
38690 | The ball goes on very merrily, may be, but how did it come to do so? |
38690 | The falseness and foolishness of our enterprise was now more apparent to me in looking at them; but were we not all in the same ridiculous position? |
38690 | The man looked up at me sharply, and said,"What business is that of yours?" |
38690 | Then said I, Lord, how long? |
38690 | Then said I, Lord, how long? |
38690 | Then what is money? |
38690 | There are so many things to be done, that one requires to know what is to be done in particular? |
38690 | Therefore, I think that every one who sincerely puts to himself the question,"What is to be done?" |
38690 | Therefore, a man can never answer the question,"What is to be done?" |
38690 | These are, then, the answers to the question,"What shall we do?" |
38690 | They they will be still poorer, and forced to keep up these schools? |
38690 | This means is that which John the Baptist recommended when he answered the question,"What shall we do then?" |
38690 | To an impartial man the question at once arises, What are you speaking about, then? |
38690 | To the CHAPTER XXII CHAPTER XXIX will only inquire,"What Spirit?" |
38690 | To the question, By whom is the usefulness of their activity recognized? |
38690 | To the question,"What have we to do?" |
38690 | To the question,"Would not this seem strange to those who had been accustomed to do all this for me?" |
38690 | Very often good young people, who sympathise with the negative part of my writings, put to me the question,"What must I do then? |
38690 | WHAT SHALL WE DO? |
38690 | WHAT SHALL WE DO? |
38690 | We ask: Why do persons who possess land and capital oppress those who possess neither? |
38690 | We did not do it, did we? |
38690 | We have invented telegraphs, telephones, phonographs, but what improvements have we made in the life of the people? |
38690 | What are the conditions under which nations always have money, and under what circumstances need nations not use money? |
38690 | What atonement? |
38690 | What can he see in me but one of those persons who have become possessed of something which should belong to him? |
38690 | What can it possibly signify if I wear a dirty shirt and make my cigarettes myself? |
38690 | What difference would it be if I should wear my shirt a week instead of a day, and make my cigarettes myself, or leave off smoking altogether? |
38690 | What does property mean? |
38690 | What does that Power, which created me, require from me and from each man? |
38690 | What does this really mean? |
38690 | What for? |
38690 | What have I, who have finished my study in the university or in some other high establishment,--what have I to do in order to be useful?" |
38690 | What if the working- people should speak thus? |
38690 | What is all this to me?" |
38690 | What is it that I really want? |
38690 | What is it, then, that confirms the theory that state activity is useful for humanity? |
38690 | What is there exactly to be done? |
38690 | What is to be done then? |
38690 | What is to be done? |
38690 | What is wrong in this? |
38690 | What must we do? |
38690 | What shall we do then? |
38690 | What should I have given in order to do as he had done? |
38690 | What then, do the words,"getting a living in town,"mean? |
38690 | What was this feeling, then? |
38690 | What was, then, the difference in our gifts? |
38690 | What would be the result? |
38690 | What, then, have we been teaching them? |
38690 | What, then, is property? |
38690 | What, then, should we intellectual labourers answer, if such simple and lawful claims were made upon us? |
38690 | What, then, will come out of this? |
38690 | What_ could_ I experience in my intercourse with these people but shame? |
38690 | Whence comes the great power of money, which strikes us all with a sense of its injustice and cruelty? |
38690 | Where should my old footman go, if I were to discharge him?" |
38690 | Wherein lies this power of threat? |
38690 | While of the sciences of theologians, and that of cabalists, nothing is left but empty words, why should we be so particularly fortunate? |
38690 | Who am I, I thought, that desire to better men''s condition? |
38690 | Who are you? |
38690 | Who cooks their dinner and what from? |
38690 | Who does not know human beings, especially women, who make a great virtue of cleanliness? |
38690 | Who does not know the various phrases of this cleanliness, which have no limit whatever when it is procured by the labour of others? |
38690 | Who instills moral principles into them? |
38690 | Who is she?" |
38690 | Who of us men and women will cure her of this false view of life? |
38690 | Who washes them? |
38690 | Whom do I harm? |
38690 | Why do I say"almost agreeable?" |
38690 | Why go to towns, then, to get what is to be had in the country? |
38690 | Why is it a useless business, if we help thousands, or even hundreds, of unhappy ones? |
38690 | Why is mankind an organism or something similar? |
38690 | Why is one man, by the means of money, to have dominion over others? |
38690 | Why not count claims on the rain and the rays of the sun? |
38690 | Why some facts and not others? |
38690 | Why then can you restrain yourselves in this case and not in that? |
38690 | Why, then, are three only to be chosen, and laid as a foundation for the science of political economy? |
38690 | Why, then, is the sun not included among the factors of production? |
38690 | Wo n''t you take her away?" |
38690 | Would they amount to a million?" |
38690 | Yes, but of whose labour? |
38690 | Yes; money represents labour, but whose labour? |
38690 | Yet what are these millions of soldiers but the personal slaves of those who rule them? |
38690 | You do Do you spend much of your time during the day with your children? |
38690 | began the woman, who was evidently not averse to his attentions; but, having caught sight of me, she exclaimed angrily,"Who are you looking for?" |
38690 | could that help any one? |
38690 | every one must do everything for himself? |
38690 | have they locked him up?" |
38690 | must they be left to die of starvation and cold?" |
38690 | or are you that which does not and can not exist,--a man who pities us?" |
38690 | or, What shall we drink? |
38690 | or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? |
38690 | or, Why is it that lands and tools are taken from the people who labour on the land and work with the tools? |
38690 | perish in the struggle? |
38690 | raiment? |
38690 | raiment?" |
38690 | what can I do, who have passed the best years of my life in idle occupations, depraving the soul? |
38690 | what is all my personal physical labour in comparison with the sea of labour which I swallow up?" |
38690 | what pictures, what music, have we created for the people? |
38690 | what?" |
40711 | ''Ear that, Emmer? |
40711 | ''What do you mean?'' 40711 Africa, eh? |
40711 | An''baby Desmond? |
40711 | An''dada? |
40711 | An''the dog? |
40711 | And a golden guinea to put in the bank till you are a man? |
40711 | And how do you think we can carry a bed along? 40711 And what have you arranged?" |
40711 | Any luck, pard? |
40711 | Any what, Stan? |
40711 | Anything more, Bobbie? |
40711 | Are there no English people here? |
40711 | Are you sure of that? |
40711 | Are you taking it? |
40711 | But how did you come? |
40711 | But how in the world can she be harmed here in London? |
40711 | But how, man? |
40711 | But how,he muttered,"how is it to be done?" |
40711 | But of the lady with her? |
40711 | But the question is, will you help me? |
40711 | But you kept the stone? |
40711 | Can it be possible you are on the other side-- on Baby- face''s side? |
40711 | Dark, and with a scar on one cheek? |
40711 | Dead? 40711 Desmond, an''a packet of sherbet, an''my toy engine, an''a chair to sit on, an''the kitchen lamp, an''our bed, an''a few other fings to eat?" |
40711 | Did you get the change all right? |
40711 | Do you know, Nancy,he began( he had never called her Nancy before),"before you came away I think your mother took a dislike to me?" |
40711 | Does my lord command it? |
40711 | Ever been to Singapore? |
40711 | Forgive me, Winn,he said, quietly,"I am not asking out of sheer curiosity, but the''something''--is it a question of marriage?" |
40711 | Give_''oo_ air? 40711 Had it been there all the while? |
40711 | Had n''t we better tell dad we''re going, an''get a penny to spend? |
40711 | Has there been a murder? 40711 Have n''t I told you all about it?" |
40711 | Have you noticed, Bobbie, that a man never prizes that which he can have for the asking? |
40711 | Help whom, man? |
40711 | How are we to get in? |
40711 | How did you come by it? |
40711 | I could not believe it-- that you were going away,he said, in quick, eager tones;"why did you not tell me?" |
40711 | I wonder what was the reason? |
40711 | Is Count Heindrich to receive no order, or is this some ill- timed pleasantry on your part? |
40711 | Is all the credit mine, Mrs. Bladon? 40711 Is it weal gold?" |
40711 | Is it well? |
40711 | Is that how it is? 40711 Is the octopussy like other cats?" |
40711 | It is my business to know things,he said, impatiently;"but will you help her?" |
40711 | Luck-- I mean have you found anything? |
40711 | Miss Grahame,he said, with a smile,"will you please accept my congratulations? |
40711 | My dear Mr. Lumsden,she said, airily, as he opened the door of her carriage,"am I answerable to you for my doings? |
40711 | My lord commands? |
40711 | Nice place? |
40711 | Now then, where yer shovin''? |
40711 | Off to what? |
40711 | Oh, no-- how could she? |
40711 | Perhaps I was injured by one of the fine horses you were going to buy? |
40711 | Really? 40711 See that stone? |
40711 | Shall I see him,he gasped,"the man who has turned this big patch red?" |
40711 | Shall we take Desmond in the mail cart? |
40711 | Shovin''yerself,was the reply;"do n''t other people want to see same as what you do?" |
40711 | So you really think the scheme has a good chance? |
40711 | Stand back, ca n''t you? |
40711 | That is all? |
40711 | That would be rather bizarre for a man, would it not? |
40711 | The lady with her? |
40711 | The poor gal''s been lyin''in that empty''ouse for three weeks; ai n''t it a shime? |
40711 | The wallet? |
40711 | Was there a accident? |
40711 | Well, Jim, my lad,began Lord Bobbie, cheerfully,"what has Miss Grahame been driving into your precious young head this morning?" |
40711 | Well, but are n''t you going to bring the girl out? |
40711 | Well, my little man, what can I do for you? |
40711 | Well, shall I tell you how Nancy found her fate-- and I mine? 40711 Well,"asked Winn, with a smile, as he noticed the pleading glance,"what is it?" |
40711 | Well? |
40711 | Well? |
40711 | What about washin''our faces an''bweakfast? |
40711 | What do you mean, little one? 40711 What is all this about, boys?" |
40711 | What is it, dearest? |
40711 | What sense is there in paddling before we''ve found a single ha''porth of gold? 40711 What''s a miner, an''who''s a pile?" |
40711 | What''s matter? |
40711 | What''s the matter? |
40711 | What''s the use of explaining things to a fellow like you? |
40711 | What? |
40711 | What_ is_ the good of making such a mystery of it? |
40711 | Where am I? |
40711 | Where can we spend it? |
40711 | Where''s Klondyke? |
40711 | Where''s the camp? |
40711 | Which? |
40711 | Who is he, and how on earth did he get into Kenwell''s house? |
40711 | Who''ll I shoot? |
40711 | Who''s Stanley? |
40711 | Why do n''t they send for the ambulance? 40711 Why not a policeman and his wife?" |
40711 | Why not tell me? |
40711 | Why should I? |
40711 | Why, it''s a girl, is n''t it? 40711 Why_ do_ people push so? |
40711 | Will there be anything to eat an''dwink? |
40711 | Will you give that----? |
40711 | Would you like a thousand pounds to spend on caramels and chocolate? |
40711 | Yes? |
40711 | You do n''t mind us coming in just for a minute, Miss Grahame? |
40711 | You know that lady? |
40711 | You say you will be returning to Kafanga in September? |
40711 | You were hardly in time, were you? 40711 _ Now_ what are you going to do?" |
40711 | _ What_ is? |
40711 | ''Are you her servant?'' |
40711 | And why on earth do n''t they keep the crowd away? |
40711 | And you wo n''t turn nasty and spank us after we''ve made you laugh so?" |
40711 | By the way, old man, you remember my preference for Turkish?" |
40711 | By the way, where can he be? |
40711 | Ca n''t you see the''orspital nurse stoopin''down over''er? |
40711 | Can I give you a lift? |
40711 | Can you use a sword?" |
40711 | DOES ANYONE KNOW?'' |
40711 | Did n''t Dolly look fine as she snubbed him? |
40711 | Do any of you ever go to smoking concerts? |
40711 | Do n''t you know what an idea is?" |
40711 | Do n''t you see that things might have hung fire if it had n''t been for that trip abroad?" |
40711 | Does anyone know?" |
40711 | Have you?" |
40711 | How could anyone have trusted such a face as this? |
40711 | How long had she been there? |
40711 | I found mine long ago, but somehow I never quite realised it till----""Yes?" |
40711 | I never knew till then how much you were to me; and now can you trust me more and love me a little? |
40711 | I''m quite ready now, are you?" |
40711 | If this sudden voyage had not taken place, who knows but that we might still have been in the throes of uncertainty?" |
40711 | If you''re afraid of a worm, what are you going to do when conger eels, sea serpents, and octopussys attack us?" |
40711 | It''s a splendid life, is n''t it, Lessels?" |
40711 | Jim hesitated shyly for a moment, then burst out in his childish treble--"I want to know how you did it?" |
40711 | May I?" |
40711 | My dearest, you----?" |
40711 | No? |
40711 | Now that I_ am_ here, you will not send me away?" |
40711 | Remember, I am only a gov----""You are the woman I love,"he interrupted;"and do you think I can let you go-- after this? |
40711 | Rum-- tum-- tiddley-- um, Who''ll have a drink with me?" |
40711 | S''pose the tide comes up an''drownds us, what''ll mamma say?" |
40711 | See?" |
40711 | See?" |
40711 | Shall we be going to bed?" |
40711 | Shall we have a dwop?" |
40711 | The chorus started again--"Then-- I-- say-- boys, Who''s for a jolly spree? |
40711 | Then I noticed a shade cross the Duchess''s face, and--"How is this, sir?" |
40711 | Then the inevitable question arose-- what would Lady Forsyth say? |
40711 | Then we''ll go home to bweakfast, wo n''t we?" |
40711 | Then, in a voice so calm that it astonished me, he said--"You are not Flower of the Cinnamon?" |
40711 | Think she''s dead?" |
40711 | What a good job we live close to Southend, is n''t it?" |
40711 | What do you say to our visiting the kennels in the meantime?" |
40711 | What do you think of that?" |
40711 | What does it all mean?" |
40711 | What had she heard? |
40711 | What shall I do, my love, my love? |
40711 | What station?" |
40711 | What''s the use of crowding round?" |
40711 | What_ is_ the good of the police if they can''t----""Now then, what''s all this? |
40711 | Where are you going to take it to?" |
40711 | Where''s your money?" |
40711 | Where_ are_ the police? |
40711 | Who told you that?" |
40711 | Why should she run away from Fate in the shape of Lumsden? |
40711 | Why was I not told of it?" |
40711 | Winn?" |
40711 | Yes? |
40711 | You are n''t very cross because we have lost your umberellar, and have n''t got any nuggets, are you? |
40711 | You talk in riddles, man; I----""Is it possible you do not know who she is?" |
40711 | [ Illustration: LUMSDEN COULD ONLY SAY,"WHY DID YOU NOT TELL ME YOU WERE GOING AWAY?" |
40711 | [ Illustration:"''HAS THERE BEEN A MURDER? |
40711 | and are not the people of Great Britain and India and Ceylon one, under one Sovereign? |
40711 | and further, what about Mrs. Bladon? |
40711 | he gasped,"is it really you, my darling?" |
40711 | he interrupted eagerly,"the lady who met her in the street, and accompanied her in the hansom-- was she there all the time?" |
44261 | Are you satisfied with this proposal or not?" |
44261 | But do we not every where see government placards inviting us to submit, why do we not then send somebody to make the offer? |
44261 | Can the bird remain quiet with strong wings, or will the fish not move in deep water? |
44261 | Every man will charge me with the wanton murder of a commander, after he had been vanquished and his ships taken? |
44261 | Fung yung fa said:"How then if government should not trust our word?" |
44261 | He met him at Neaou chow, and asked him:"Why did you not come to my assistance?" |
44261 | How can we, under such circumstances, be confident and rely on our own strength?" |
44261 | How could these extraordinary engines have escaped the discriminating genius of Marco Polo, had they existed in China? |
44261 | How shall I alone be able to fight the government forces? |
44261 | If O po tae could before vanquish you quite alone, how much more can he now when he is united with government? |
44261 | If they pursue us in the different windings and bays of the sea-- they have maps of them[47]--should we not get plenty to do? |
44261 | If they should make extortions a second time, when should we get money to comply with their demands? |
44261 | Is_ Lang lae_ a mistake for_ L[)u]h lae_, which is mentioned in the_ Hae kw[)o] hëen këen_, p. 214? |
44261 | It is said that the_ Kaou chun peih mow_(?) |
44261 | Paou addressed himself in an angry tone to Neaou sh[)i]h url, and said:"I advise you to submit, will you not follow my advice, what have you to say?" |
44261 | Paou became enraged and said:"How is this, will you then separate from us?" |
44261 | Paou then asked the Doctor:"Have you any commission about this matter, or not?" |
44261 | Paou.--"Thou hast committed some crime and comest to me for protection?" |
44261 | Paou.--"You will then know, how it stands concerning the report about our submission, if it is true or false?" |
44261 | Paou.--[sd:( 16 r.)]"Who is bold enough to compare me with O po tae?" |
44261 | Paou:"Why then do you not obey the orders of the wife of Ching y[)i]h and my own? |
44261 | The lists of population gave last October( 1830) 23,000,000(?) |
44261 | The use of_ tsew_ in the place of_ tseu_( 10,826) is confirmed by the authorities in Kang he; but does Leu song really mean Spain? |
44261 | There is certainly some mistake in the Chinese Itinerary; how could Canton be only 6,835, and Chow king foo 7420 le? |
44261 | They are assembled together and stay in_ Leu song_( Spain? |
44261 | What is this else than separation, that you do not come to assist me, when I am surrounded by the enemy? |
44261 | What is to be done under these circumstances?" |
44261 | When Fei hëung chow came to Paou, he said:"Friend Paou, do you know why I come to you?" |
44261 | Who opposed the enemy in time? |
44261 | Who will believe that it happened not by my command, and that I am innocent of the death of this officer? |
44261 | Who would dare to publish or recommend any thing under his own name, which could displease any of the officers of the Chinese government? |
44261 | Why should we not rather spend the two thousand pieces of money to encourage government officers and the people? |
44261 | Why should we not therefore come to a determination to that effect?" |
44261 | Would I not be treated according to the supposed cruel death of Kw[)o] lang?" |
44261 | [ 100] This is my opinion; if you think otherwise, let us retire; but let me hear your opinion?" |
44261 | [ 38] The town_ Sin hwy_ is south- west from Canton 230 le; its area is 138 le(?) |
44261 | [ 48][ sd:( 9 r.)] If I am charged with the murder of this officer, how could I venture, if I should wish in future times, to submit myself? |
44261 | [ 87] And now concerning this business-- to give or not give assistance-- am I bound to come and join your forces?" |
44261 | [ 99] What are you in comparison with O po tae?" |
44261 | _ Lin yin_, perhaps, may mean the island_ Rugen_? |
44261 | _ flavam Cæsariem_, et madido torquentem cornua cirro? |
44261 | v. 164, Cærula quis stupuit Germani lumina? |
41360 | There they lay lamenting their loss, saying, for instance,''Why did you leave us?'' 41360 [ 639] Is this not the same notion of an anonymous and diffused force, the germs of which we recently found in the totemism of Australia? |
41360 | An idea is in reality only a part of ourselves; then how could it confer upon us powers superior to those which we have of our own nature? |
41360 | Are these not the names he gives to the beings of the totemic species? |
41360 | But does not this genesis of the idea of the soul misunderstand its essential characteristic? |
41360 | But how are they to be explained? |
41360 | But how does it happen that, instead of remaining outside of the organized society, they have become regular members of it? |
41360 | But how has this apotheosis been possible, and how did it happen to take place in this fashion? |
41360 | But how have they been able to arrive at this conception? |
41360 | But then, does it ever attain any that are definite, and is it not always necessary to reconsider them? |
41360 | But we know that there are spirits of every sort; how does it happen that the soul of the dead man is necessarily an evil spirit? |
41360 | But what is a ratapa? |
41360 | But whence come these divisions which are so essential? |
41360 | But whence comes the religious character of the totemic beliefs and practices? |
41360 | But whence comes the virtue which they attribute to this? |
41360 | But which are these sensations which give birth to religious thought? |
41360 | But why give them a sort of prerogative? |
41360 | But why should he think it safer in the body of an animal than in his own? |
41360 | But, it is said, what society is it that has thus made the basis of religion? |
41360 | Do they say that the physical forces with which we come in contact exceed our own? |
41360 | Does a man appear inspired, does he speak with energy, is it as though he were lifted outside himself and above the ordinary level of men? |
41360 | Does a mind ostensibly free itself from these forms of thought? |
41360 | Does a misfortune which menaces the group appear imminent? |
41360 | Does an individual come in contact with them without having taken proper precautions? |
41360 | Does he receive good news? |
41360 | Does it not happen to- day that two distinct families have the same name? |
41360 | Does not every consecration by means of anointing or washing consist in transferring into a profane object the sanctifying virtues of a sacred one? |
41360 | Does someone prefer to regard them from the point of view of the understanding? |
41360 | Does something inspire a reverential fear in him? |
41360 | During all this time, what has become of the soul which it sheltered and the individual whose life depended on this soul? |
41360 | Even for the Christian, is not God the Father the guardian of the physical order as well as the legislator and the judge of human conduct? |
41360 | For example, why should the sleeper not imagine that while asleep he is able to see things at a distance? |
41360 | For what could have a greater interest than it in the effects which its own death has on the living? |
41360 | Has he eaten the totemic animal? |
41360 | Has some one committed a fault for which he wishes to atone? |
41360 | How can this immutability give rise to this incessant variability? |
41360 | How could a vain fantasy have been able to fashion the human consciousness so strongly and so durably? |
41360 | How could he imagine that during his sleep he lived a life which he knows has long since gone by? |
41360 | How could he surpass himself merely by his own forces? |
41360 | How could science deny this reality? |
41360 | How could the mere act of representing the movements of an animal bring about the certitude that this animal will be born, and born in abundance? |
41360 | How could they give rise to this confidence if they had had their origin in a sensation of feebleness and impotency? |
41360 | How could this image, repeated everywhere and in all sorts of forms, fail to stand out with exceptional relief in his mind? |
41360 | How is it possible to pick them out? |
41360 | How many instincts have we not lost? |
41360 | III But if the fundamental notions of science are of a religious origin, how has religion been able to bring them forth? |
41360 | IV But if this contagiousness of sacredness helps to explain the system of interdicts, how is it to be explained itself? |
41360 | If particular ideas have nothing logical about them, why should it be different with general ones? |
41360 | In other words, how does it happen that they, too, are of a religious nature? |
41360 | Is he overtaken by an attack or seized by madness? |
41360 | Is it a physical result which they wish to obtain? |
41360 | Is it necessary to repeat that worshippers are generally ignorant of the real reasons for their practices? |
41360 | Is one man more successful than his companions in the hunt or at war? |
41360 | Is one man pursued by another? |
41360 | Is that not as much as to say that the first is a more recent form of the second, which excludes it by replacing it? |
41360 | Is the empirical thesis the one adopted? |
41360 | Is their effect not to mix and confuse beings, in spite of their natural differences? |
41360 | Is this because the woman is profane or because the sexual act is dreaded? |
41360 | Is this not merely a symbolic way of saying that they are parts of the totemic divinity? |
41360 | Must we see a trace of sexual totemism in the following custom of the Warramunga? |
41360 | Now how could he add to the energies which he possesses without going outside himself? |
41360 | Now how could the spectacle of nature give rise to the idea of this duality? |
41360 | Now is it not evident that this double can only be the soul, since the soul is, of itself, already a double of the subject whom it animates? |
41360 | Now is that idea not the one at the basis of the teaching of Christ? |
41360 | Now what does he see about him? |
41360 | Now what is the origin of this differentiation? |
41360 | Now when could they have gotten such a property? |
41360 | Now where does this singular privilege come from? |
41360 | Now, what were these ancestors? |
41360 | So if it is at once the symbol of the god and of the society, is that not because the god and the society are only one? |
41360 | The idea of a divinity in itself, of a transcendental power upon which man depends and upon which he supports himself? |
41360 | Then how is it that they have taken from society the models upon which they have been constructed? |
41360 | Then why have the living considered this uprooted and vagabond double of their former companion as anything more than an equal? |
41360 | Then why should he believe them more infallible at night than during the day? |
41360 | This is a double question and may be subdivided as follows: What has led the clan to choose an emblem? |
41360 | Under these circumstances, is it not surprising that their real function should be to serve moral ends? |
41360 | V But how does it come that men have believed that the soul survives the body and is even able to do so for an indefinite length of time? |
41360 | Vegetation dies every year; will it be reborn? |
41360 | What does the dream amount to in our lives? |
41360 | What reason has the dead man for imposing such torments upon them? |
41360 | What should we be without fire even now? |
41360 | What sort of a science is it whose principal discovery is that the subject of which it treats does not exist? |
41360 | Whence come these successive transfers? |
41360 | Whence comes this differentiation? |
41360 | Where could he have gotten the idea that by imitating an animal, one causes it to reproduce? |
41360 | Which of us knows all the words of the language he speaks and the entire signification of each? |
41360 | Why should they have need of his aid in order to deduct beforehand their just share of the things which he receives from their hands? |
41360 | [ 1264] Whence comes this obligation? |
41360 | [ 1307] But if religion is the product of social causes, how can we explain the individual cult and the universalistic character of certain religions? |
41360 | [ 168] Now if all that which appertains to the notion of gods conceived as cosmic agents is blotted out of the religions of the past, what remains? |
41360 | [ 258] Are these animals not totems? |
41360 | [ 341] Its religious nature comes to it, then, from some other source, and whence could it come, if not from the totemic stamp which it bears? |
41360 | [ 409] Does one man loan another one of his churinga? |
41360 | [ 610] Then where do they come from? |
41360 | [ 677] But of what? |
41360 | [ 70] Does this not prove that between the profane being which he was and the religious being which he becomes, there is a break of continuity? |
41360 | [ 736] Is not the statement that a man is a kangaroo or the sun a bird, equal to identifying the two with each other? |
41360 | and why have these emblems been borrowed from the animal and vegetable worlds, and particularly from the former? |
41360 | for weeks, fail to leave in him the conviction that there really exist two heterogeneous and mutually incomparable worlds? |
43951 | An aim? 43951 And pray what may be the value of that?" |
43951 | Do you mean to say that''s what you did this time? |
43951 | Eat arsenic? 43951 First thoughts are best"? |
43951 | Indifferent? |
43951 | Lunarian: Precedent? 43951 Now, why is yer wife called a helpmate, Pat?" |
43951 | What''s that you say? |
43951 | Who am I? |
43951 | Who art thou? |
43951 | Who art thou? |
43951 | ''T is the answer to What? |
43951 | A simpler plan for saving man( But, first, is he worth saving?) |
43951 | And Whence? |
43951 | And who, perspiring friend, art thou?" |
43951 | And why does not the apparition of a suit of clothes sometimes walk abroad without a ghost in it? |
43951 | Are not their houses as likely as mine to burn before they have paid you as much as you must pay them? |
43951 | But why, O why, has ne''er an eye Seen her of winsome manner And youthful grace and pretty face Flaunting the White Cross banner? |
43951 | CUI BQNO? |
43951 | Content? |
43951 | Do your policemen also have to approve the local ordinances that they enforce? |
43951 | Have you no aim in life?" |
43951 | His belly? |
43951 | House Owner: And virtually, then, do n''t I help to pay their losses? |
43951 | House Owner: How, then, can I afford that? |
43951 | I a Christian? |
43951 | If I could afford that, how could you? |
43951 | Is public worship, then, a sin, That for devotions paid to Bacchus The lictors dare to run us in, And resolutely thump and whack us? |
43951 | Is that< i> all father dear? |
43951 | Its nature? |
43951 | Now where''s the need of speech and screed To better our behaving? |
43951 | Pray reflect: How, if one- tenth we must resign, Can we exist on t''other nine?" |
43951 | Revenge, at the best, is the act of a Siou, But for trifles-- Pray what did bad Mendicant do? |
43951 | So how can any one know?" |
43951 | Supposing the products of the loom to have this ability, what object would they have in exercising it? |
43951 | The case stands this way: You expect to take more money from your clients than you pay to them, do you not? |
43951 | The monarch asked them in reply:"Has it occurred to you to try The advantage of economy?" |
43951 | The question,"Is life worth living?" |
43951 | What is that? |
43951 | What should they do? |
43951 | What''s the matter with pie? |
43951 | Who cares What face he carries or what form he wears? |
43951 | Who is that, father? |
43951 | Who''d think this gorgeous hero''s only virtue Is that in battle he will never hurt you? |
43951 | Why did n''t he work? |
43951 | Why did they put him there, father? |
43951 | Will you not be more likely to squander them? |
43951 | You ask me how this miracle is done? |
43951 | [ Latin] What good would that do me? |
43951 | and How? |
43951 | and Why? |
43951 | cried one,"are you not amazed At what our friend has told?" |
43951 | interrupted Rochebriant;"eating dinner in a drawing- room?" |
43951 | said one of his disciples,"you weep at the death of an enemy?" |
43951 | said the Prior,"would your master stay our benefactor''s soul in Purgatory?" |
43951 | what is that?" |
42970 | On Tubaran,says Idrisi,"are dependent Mahyak, Kir Kaian, Sura"(? |
42970 | Rudhan(? Rudbar) is a small town south of the Helmund. |
42970 | ), 66 Carpet- making industry of, 18 Destruction of, date of, 16 Minab river, 166 Minagar, Binagar(? |
42970 | ..."From there(? |
42970 | After Alexander''s time many centuries elapsed before we get another clear historic view into Makran, and then what do we find? |
42970 | Again, who is going to make friends with the Amir of Afghanistan and try his luck? |
42970 | And where on the southern slopes of the Hindu Kush do the small affluents of the Alingar and Alishang have their beginning? |
42970 | And who has the best of it? |
42970 | Bampur or Pahra),"Kashran"(? |
42970 | But what should we expect even in present times if we proceeded to compile a geographical treatise from the works of Milton and Shakespere? |
42970 | But where does it rise? |
42970 | But where was Patala? |
42970 | But who were the Nysæans, and what became of them? |
42970 | Can we reconcile these discrepancies with the text of history? |
42970 | Dahertan), 236, 237 Dehgans, 269 Dehi(? |
42970 | Dashtak), 304 Dames, Longworth, cited, 201 Damizar(? |
42970 | Dehi), 483 Dehertan(? |
42970 | Did the Arabs descend through any of the well- known passes of the frontier-- the Mulla, Bolan, Saki- Sarwar, or Gomul-- into the plains of India? |
42970 | Did they spread northward from India through the rugged passes of Northern Kashmir, taking with them the faith of their ancestors? |
42970 | Does not Nonnus tell us that it was a stone city near a lake? |
42970 | From here they retraced their steps and crossed the Helmund at Ghoweh Kol(? |
42970 | Gulran), 235 Kir( Kiz) Kaian, 313- 17 Kirghiz(? |
42970 | It is therefore clear that he did not rejoin them at Kabul, nor could they have gone there; and the question arises-- Where is Kie- sha? |
42970 | It runs to Balangur(? |
42970 | Jil district, 278 Jilgu river, 475 Jirena( Behvana), 245 Jirghan(? |
42970 | Journal_ cited, 123;_ Proceedings_ cited, 241 Rozabagh, 229_ n._ Rozanak, 233 Ruby mines of Oxus valley, 428 Rudbar(? |
42970 | Jurkan, Gurkan, Juzjan, Guzwan), 250, 251, 255; range, 249 Jirift, 201 Jirm(? |
42970 | Kilrin), 235 Gurkhas in Nepal, 188 Guzwan(? |
42970 | Kolwah), 304 Kaman- i- Bihist, 232, 236 Kamard, Tajik chief of, 383, 384, 421 Kamard valley, 260, 261, 437 Kambali(? |
42970 | O mad one, whither goest thou? |
42970 | Parsi( Tarsi), 489 Parwan(? |
42970 | Parwan), 276- 7 Karza(? |
42970 | Rudhan), 207, 496 Rue Khaf(? |
42970 | Sanji from the heights you see; Sanji you consult? |
42970 | Sar- i- ab), 468 Shah, 251, 255 Shah Kot( Mahaban), 108, 110- 11, 113, 117- 21 Shaharak, 486 Shahar- i- Babar, 257, 267 Shahar- i- Wairan(? |
42970 | Say, Sanji, why dost thou go forth? |
42970 | Since Egyptology has become a recognized science, who will lay the foundations of such a science for Southern Arabia and Makran? |
42970 | Subzawar), 229- 30 Asmar Boundary Commission( 1894), 123 Asoka, 129 Aspardeh, 250 Aspasians, 96, 100, 103, 104 Aspurkan(? |
42970 | Suza), 317 Surkh Kila pass, 418 Survey methods, perfecting of, 500 Suza(? |
42970 | Suza),"Fardan"(? |
42970 | The aspect of the Koh- i- Baba(? |
42970 | The two provinces which are found immediately beyond the Oxus( under one government) are Djil and Waksh, which lie between the Khariab(? |
42970 | To reach Shibar he made a long day''s march from Ser- ab(? |
42970 | Was it also a commercial route? |
42970 | We may well ask have we any explorers like them in these days? |
42970 | What indeed would be the result of a careful analysis of parliamentary utterances on geographical subjects within, say, the last half century? |
42970 | What lies behind Wood''s Khoja range, between it and the main divide? |
42970 | What more natural than that he should draft some of his captives eastward to the land of promise? |
42970 | What, then, became of all these first Arab conquerors of Western India? |
42970 | Where did they drift to, these ten despairing tribes? |
42970 | Who is going to complete the map and solve the question? |
42970 | Who were they? |
42970 | Who will unravel the secrets of this inhabited outland, which appears at present to be more impracticable to the explorer than either of the poles? |
42970 | Why do our frontier generals always burden themselves with cavalry on these frontier expeditions? |
42970 | Why, then, did Alexander take cavalry? |
42970 | _ See also_ Herat Artobaizanes, 68 Asfaka, 312, 314 Asfaran(? |
42970 | _ See_ Haibak Semiramis, 147 Senacherib, King of Assyria, 52 Senart, M., cited, 130 Seneca, cited, 21 Ser- ab(? |
42970 | _ See_ Kabul river Naisan, 225 Najil, 327, 356, 396- 7 Najirman(? |
42970 | and yet who is it who knows Persia who will say even now that they are undeserved? |
38812 | ''A delegate: Who is to be judge of that? 38812 ''What have we to do with those things? |
38812 | Oh, but,they say,"is it moral?" |
38812 | Who wrote that? |
38812 | ***** ARE Men''s characters fully determined at the age of thirty? |
38812 | ***** WHAT do I think of the lynchings in Georgia? |
38812 | ***** WHY SHOULD THE INDIAN SUMMER of a life be lost-- the long, serene, and tender days when earth and sky are friends? |
38812 | After all, is Nature, taken together, any better than the Bible? |
38812 | After all, why should we believe the unreasonable? |
38812 | Afterward, the astronomer with his telescope looked, and asked the priests: Where is the world of which you speak? |
38812 | And how can we, in the next resolution, say those laws ought all to be repealed? |
38812 | And so I want to say to- night, because I want to be consistent, Richard Wagner was not a German, and his music is not German; and why? |
38812 | And the question, and the only question, as to whether they are amenable to the law, in my mind, is, Were they honest? |
38812 | And then was asked the question:"Will a free, people tax themselves to pay a Nation''s debt?" |
38812 | And what has been our history? |
38812 | And what is the great thing that the stage does? |
38812 | And what makes the nightingale sing until the air is faint with melody? |
38812 | And why did they begin to think? |
38812 | And why should the French mother teach her son, that it will be his duty sometime to kill the child of the German mother?" |
38812 | And will there, sometime, be another world? |
38812 | And yet, after all, what would this world be without death? |
38812 | And, then, why does not justice always triumph? |
38812 | Are certain physical conditions necessary to the production of what we call virtuous actions? |
38812 | Are the effects of climate upon man necessary effects? |
38812 | Are the white people insane? |
38812 | Are we ready to say that the Federal courts shall be denied jurisdiction in any case arising about the mails? |
38812 | Before whom shall we try the robber? |
38812 | Between the Christian and the Agnostic there is the difference of assertion and question-- between"There is a God"and"Is there a God?" |
38812 | But what good has the killing done? |
38812 | Can a man think one way and believe another? |
38812 | Can all men be honest? |
38812 | Can all men be kind? |
38812 | Can man choose without reference to any quality in the thing chosen? |
38812 | Can not the reward and the threat be in the nature of things? |
38812 | Can they not rest in consequences perceived by the intellect? |
38812 | Can we not truthfully say that absolute candor is the beginning of wisdom? |
38812 | Can you not attack any superstition in the world in perfectly pure language? |
38812 | Can you not attack anything you please in perfectly pure language? |
38812 | Clarke: What are you talking about, anyway? |
38812 | Could he use what we call the faculties of the mind? |
38812 | Could not infinite wisdom and goodness just as easily command crime as to permit it? |
38812 | Could we not dispense with the gourd, the worm and the east wind? |
38812 | Did Jehovah furnish anybody with a list of books he had inspired? |
38812 | Did any writer of any part of the Pentateuch make the claim? |
38812 | Did anyone ever hear him say that he believed in the ascension of Jesus Christ? |
38812 | Did it ever occur to any Liberal that he wished to express any thought honestly, truly, and legally that he considered immoral? |
38812 | Did the authors of Joshua, Judges, Kings or Chronicles pretend that they had obtained their facts from Jehovah? |
38812 | Did the writer of Genesis claim that he was inspired? |
38812 | Do not most people mistake for freedom the right to examine their own chains? |
38812 | Do you not love your enemies? |
38812 | Does a man who denies the truth of this childish absurdity weaken the foundation of virtue? |
38812 | Does any man with sense enough to eat and breathe believe this idiotic lie? |
38812 | Does anybody know that he ever said that he had inspired anybody? |
38812 | Does anybody testify that Lincoln believed in the miraculous birth of Jesus Christ, that the Holy Ghost was the father or that Christ was or is God? |
38812 | Does he discourage truth- telling by denouncing lies? |
38812 | Does he guard his copyright with the fires of hell? |
38812 | Does he say what he thinks? |
38812 | Does it act without cause? |
38812 | Does it exist independently of the brain? |
38812 | Does the author of Job or of the Psalms pretend to have received assistance from God? |
38812 | Does the mind think apart from the brain, and then express its thought through the instrumentality of the brain? |
38812 | Elizur Wright said to himself, why should we take chains from bodies and enslave minds-- why fight to free the cage and leave the bird a prisoner? |
38812 | Every cradle asks us"Whence?" |
38812 | From princes and lords and dukes? |
38812 | HOW far should a husband or wife go in defending the sanctity of home? |
38812 | Has anybody said that he was heard to say that he so believed? |
38812 | Has anybody testified that Lincoln believed that Christ was raised from the dead? |
38812 | Has mercy fled to beasts? |
38812 | Has the Government a right to say what shall go into the mails? |
38812 | Has the United States no power to protect a citizen? |
38812 | He being the only existence, what knowledge could he gain by experience? |
38812 | How can any man be wicked enough to doubt its truth? |
38812 | How can the existence or non- existence of a deity change my obligation to keep my hands out of the fire? |
38812 | How can the fact of inspiration be established? |
38812 | How can they love and worship this monster who murders, his children? |
38812 | How could flesh, bones and blood be changed to salt? |
38812 | How could he know that he existed? |
38812 | How could he use force? |
38812 | How could water that rose over the mountains remain local? |
38812 | How do we know that he betrayed the woman? |
38812 | How do we know that it was not the husband''s fault? |
38812 | How does it happen that_ we_ have any interest in what is known as immoral literature? |
38812 | How does she know whose fault it was? |
38812 | How is it possible to prove that the Holy Ghost was the father of Christ? |
38812 | I have asked,"Why should God help us to whip Spain?" |
38812 | I have often heard him repeat the words of Epicurus:"Why should I fear death? |
38812 | IS IT EVER RIGHT FOR HUSBAND OR WIFE TO KILL RIVAL? |
38812 | If an innocent man is convicted of larceny, should we repeal all the laws on the subject? |
38812 | If happiness is the only good in heaven, why should it not be considered the only good here? |
38812 | If it is immoral for a woman to marry a man without loving him, is it moral for her to live as the wife of a man whom she has ceased to love? |
38812 | If it should be demonstrated that the book of Joshua is all false, what harm could follow? |
38812 | If morality depends upon conditions, should it not be the task of the great and good to discover such conditions? |
38812 | If reason is not the standard, what is? |
38812 | If the mind depends upon certain organs for the expression of its thought, does it have thought independently of those organs? |
38812 | If the poor beast could speak what would he say? |
38812 | If there be a God can we please him by believing that he acted like a fiend? |
38812 | If this be true, how can the superior be virtuous? |
38812 | If you kill a man for one wrong, why not for another? |
38812 | In a half- insulted tone, he replied,"Of course I have, why do you ask me such a question?" |
38812 | In the first place, how can she be sure of the facts? |
38812 | In which of these states was she responsible? |
38812 | Is every thought a necessity? |
38812 | Is he guided by reason? |
38812 | Is he responsible for what he does as a consequence of his surroundings? |
38812 | Is he the friend of the right?--the champion of the truth? |
38812 | Is it better to believe without thinking than to think without believing? |
38812 | Is it impossible for morality to exist where the brain and heart are in partnership? |
38812 | Is it improper in a secular government to endeavor to prevent the spread of obscene literature? |
38812 | Is it merely a looker- on? |
38812 | Is it not possible that a certain genius is required to be what is called"good"? |
38812 | Is it not possible that each brain is a field where all the senses sow the seeds of thought? |
38812 | Is it not reasonable to say that they would act in some way? |
38812 | Is it not strange that Christians speak of their God as an assassin? |
38812 | Is it not wonderful that the passengers on that train really enjoy themselves? |
38812 | Is it possible for anything to be produced without what we call cause, and, if the cause was sufficient, was it not necessarily produced? |
38812 | Is it possible for man to escape them? |
38812 | Is it possible that Freethought can be charged with being obscene? |
38812 | Is it possible that God will not protect his friends? |
38812 | Is it possible that Jehovah is proud of having written this book? |
38812 | Is it possible that, if the charge is made, it can be substantiated? |
38812 | Is it really any worse to order the strong to slay the weak, than to stand by and refuse to protect the weak? |
38812 | Is it really important to believe that the book of Esther is inspired? |
38812 | Is it right for the husband to kill the paramour of his wife? |
38812 | Is it right for the wife to kill the paramour of her husband? |
38812 | Is it something with which intelligence has nothing to do? |
38812 | Is it time now that we should throw into the scale, against all these splendid purposes, an effort to repeal some postal laws against obscenity? |
38812 | Is it to obey without question, or is it to act in accordance with perceived obligation? |
38812 | Is it wise for congregations to ask their ministers to believe this story? |
38812 | Is it wise for ministers to ask their congregations to believe this story? |
38812 | Is she bound by the words, by the ceremony, after the real marriage is dead? |
38812 | Is she so bound that the man she hates has the right to be the father of her babes? |
38812 | Is the mind dependent upon causes? |
38812 | Is the soul responsible for the defects of the brain? |
38812 | Is the spiritual man honest, kind, candid?--or dishonest, cruel and hypocritical? |
38812 | Is the theatre moral? |
38812 | Is there a sensible man in the wide world who really believes in the flood? |
38812 | Is there any harm in that? |
38812 | Is there any mind without brain? |
38812 | Is there no foundation for morality except punishment threatened or reward promised by a superior to an inferior? |
38812 | Is this fine quality of the mind destroyed by the development of the brain? |
38812 | Leland: What is the question? |
38812 | Like morality, is it only found in the company of ignorance and superstition? |
38812 | Lot turned to salt for? |
38812 | May it not be possible so to understand the brain that we can stop producing criminals? |
38812 | Must the ignorant child carry out the command of the wise father-- the rude peasant rush to death at the request of the prince? |
38812 | Must this splendid quality called spirituality be retained through the loss of candor? |
38812 | Must we be foolish to be virtuous? |
38812 | Must we waste one day in seven; must we make ourselves unhappy or melancholy one- seventh of the time? |
38812 | Now, if A falls in love with the wife of B, and she returns his love, has B the right to kill him? |
38812 | Now, if there can be no real marriage without mutual love, does the marriage outlast the love? |
38812 | Now, is anybody in favor of modifying that sentiment? |
38812 | Now, is it possible that a God in his right mind would waste all that force? |
38812 | Now, is there the slightest evidence to show that Lincoln believed in the inspiration of the Old and New Testaments? |
38812 | Now, then, what is religion? |
38812 | Now, what is a Christian? |
38812 | Now, what is the testimony that you present that Lincoln was a Christian? |
38812 | Now, why not be honest about it? |
38812 | Of what possible use is it to know just how long an animal can live without water-- at what time he becomes insane from thirst, or blind or deaf? |
38812 | One day I heard it, and I said,"What music is that?" |
38812 | Or if A falls in love with the husband of B, and he returns her love, has B the right to kill her? |
38812 | Ought this man to be killed? |
38812 | Ourselves we do not know-- how then Can we find out our fellow- men? |
38812 | Should a man be true to himself? |
38812 | Should he ask himself whether Jehovah in his efforts to induce the Egyptian King to free the Hebrews acted like a sensible God? |
38812 | Should he ask himself whether a good God would kill the babes of the people on account of the sins of the king? |
38812 | Should he be blamed for this? |
38812 | Should he take into consideration the fact that like stories have been told and believed by savages for thousands of years? |
38812 | Should they be blamed for not acting like Christ? |
38812 | So I congratulate you all that you were born in a great nation, born rich; and why do I say rich? |
38812 | So, if a young man is engaged and finds that he has made a mistake, is it honorable for him to keep his contract? |
38812 | Suppose Spain had whipped us; would the Christians then say that God did it? |
38812 | Suppose somebody robs the mails? |
38812 | The gamekeeper was first at the target, and the lord cried out:"Did I miss it?" |
38812 | The less a man knows, the more positive, a? |
38812 | The question arises, Is the world growing less generous, less heroic, less chivalric? |
38812 | The question arises: Can an infinite being want anything? |
38812 | The question is: Are they true? |
38812 | The question was presented: Shall the Republic be slave or free? |
38812 | Then why did not God help the Cubans long before? |
38812 | There are many other witnesses upon this question whose testimony can be found in a book entitled"Abraham Lincoln, was he a Christian?" |
38812 | There is another question still:--Will all the wounds of war be healed? |
38812 | They did, but are we ready now to decide in a moment what courts shall have jurisdiction? |
38812 | They said:"We saved the Nation''s life, and what is life without honor?" |
38812 | This leads me to another question: What is marriage? |
38812 | Under such circumstances, may we not safely infer that, in a little while, if the statistics were properly taken, a law of average would appear? |
38812 | Was that their intention? |
38812 | Was their effort to benefit mankind? |
38812 | Were her thoughts and actions as free in one as in the other? |
38812 | Were the angels perfected through misfortune? |
38812 | What can we say of death? |
38812 | What can we say of the dead? |
38812 | What can we say? |
38812 | What could a man do who speaks a poor language, a language of a few words that you could almost count on your fingers? |
38812 | What could he do? |
38812 | What difference does it make whether the story of Ruth is fact or fiction; history or poetry? |
38812 | What do we want? |
38812 | What excuse have they for having existence and for having lived on the bread earned by honest men? |
38812 | What good was achieved? |
38812 | What have the great conquerors to show in this great exhibition? |
38812 | What is beauty? |
38812 | What is it to be spiritual? |
38812 | What is it? |
38812 | What is morality? |
38812 | What is reverence? |
38812 | What is the meaning of this? |
38812 | What is the opinion of society?--What is the result? |
38812 | What makes the river run? |
38812 | What makes the star shine? |
38812 | What makes the sun rise? |
38812 | What makes the tree grow? |
38812 | What man with a head fertile enough to raise one hair can believe a story like this? |
38812 | What more can we ask? |
38812 | What more do we need? |
38812 | What shall we get from popes and cardinals? |
38812 | What shall we get from the Caesars and the Napoleons? |
38812 | What shall we get from the nobility? |
38812 | What useful lesson taught? |
38812 | What will that committee do with him then? |
38812 | What words can solve the mystery of life, the mystery of death? |
38812 | What words will do that life the justice that we know and feel? |
38812 | What would Daniel Webster have been, by God, if he had settled in Pinkneyville?" |
38812 | What would Shakespeare have been, if he had been born in Labrador? |
38812 | What would have become of Grant? |
38812 | What would have become of Lincoln, a lawyer in a country town? |
38812 | What would you think of a man who built a railroad, knowing that every passenger was to be killed-- knowing that there was no escape? |
38812 | What would you think of such a man? |
38812 | When a truth- loving man reads about the plagues of Egypt, should he reason as he reads? |
38812 | When was it established? |
38812 | Where would have been the heroes whose brows we have crowned with laurel had there been no Civil war? |
38812 | Where, then, is the evidence that he was a Christian? |
38812 | Whether he would torture, mangle and kill innocent cattle to get even with a monarch? |
38812 | Who are the friends of the human race? |
38812 | Who cares whether Hamlet or Lear lived? |
38812 | Who cares whether Imogen and Perdita were real women or the creation of Shakespeare''s imagination? |
38812 | Why is not innocence a perfect shield? |
38812 | Why not just say we will stand by freedom of thought and its expression? |
38812 | Why not say so? |
38812 | Why not say that we are in favor of amending any law that is wrong? |
38812 | Why should I fear that which can not exist when I do?" |
38812 | Why should monarchy be in love with republicanism, with democracy? |
38812 | Why should the facts be kept from the people? |
38812 | Why should theologians say that those books were inspired? |
38812 | Why should we expect mercy from a God who drowned millions of men, women and babes? |
38812 | Why should we fear that which will come to all that is? |
38812 | Why should we suspect the motives of this man who has given his life for the good of others? |
38812 | Why? |
38812 | Will it rise again upon some other stage? |
38812 | Will the curtain fall at last? |
38812 | Will this great drama have an end? |
38812 | Would it annihilate the disgrace or the memory of the shame? |
38812 | Would it bring back her love? |
38812 | Would it lessen the husband''s loss? |
38812 | Would it not be far nobler for him to tell her the truth? |
38812 | Would it reunite the family? |
38812 | Would not this story be just as beautiful with the storm and fish left out? |
38812 | Would the killing do any good? |
38812 | You might as well pile all the Alps on one unfortunate ant, and then say,"Why do n''t you play? |
38812 | and every coffin"Whither?" |
44349 | ''Look; what is the matter with him?'' 44349 ''What is the meaning of this?'' |
44349 | Are you confident that the knots are securely tied? |
44349 | But if we are to reject this idea, which is the first which ordinary analogies would suggest, what are we to put in its place? 44349 Can he have forgotten me?" |
44349 | Can you perform such a miracle? |
44349 | Do you feel the table raising? |
44349 | Do you know the medium Slade? |
44349 | Have you prepared any slips with the names of friends, relatives, or others, who have passed into spirit life, with questions for them to answer? |
44349 | How did you do it? |
44349 | If a man die, shall he live again? |
44349 | My fate? |
44349 | What do you think of Dr. Slade''s slate tests? |
44349 | What is his name? |
44349 | What is the matter? |
44349 | ''You recognize that name, do you not?'' |
44349 | ( You may call him a_ wizard_, what does it matter to him?) |
44349 | Are we to regard the Creator''s work as like that of a child, who builds houses out of blocks, just for the pleasure of knocking them down? |
44349 | B.-- When and where did you die? |
44349 | Blavatsky, where was Mrs. Tingley? |
44349 | But how is the writing done on the slate in the second test? |
44349 | But how? |
44349 | But in this test the slate was not in his possession; how then could the writing be accomplished? |
44349 | But is this so? |
44349 | But suppose the medium relates facts that were never in the possession of the sitter, what are we to say then? |
44349 | But why go to science for such a demonstration? |
44349 | Can telepathy account for C''s knowledge? |
44349 | Can words describe it? |
44349 | He and his wife thought a great deal of my mother, and frequently stopped me on the street to inquire,"How is Mary?" |
44349 | He asked himself the question:"''Why was the sound of the silver bell not heard at once, but only after she had left the room and come back again?''" |
44349 | He looks at you and calls"Mary,--how is Mary?" |
44349 | He says:"Is this telepathic action an ordinary case of action from a center of disturbance? |
44349 | How did you get hold of it?'' |
44349 | How is it done? |
44349 | I replied,"but how are they done?" |
44349 | I sat down, whereupon he seated himself opposite me, remarking as he did so,"Have you brought slates with you?" |
44349 | If I should move my feet ever so little, you would know it, would you not?" |
44349 | If telepathy does not enter into these cases, what does? |
44349 | If this be so, why the attempts at_ disguise_, and bungling attempts at that? |
44349 | Is it equally diffused in all directions? |
44349 | Is it like the light of a candle or the light of the sun which radiates equally into space in every direction at the same time? |
44349 | Is there any such material guide in the case of telepathy? |
44349 | J.-- Where did you die, and from what disease? |
44349 | Now, tell me, is it an easy task for an amateur to tie a man up off- hand with a rope three yards long, in a very secure way? |
44349 | Sealed letters? |
44349 | The surprising feature about the above case was the alleged spirit communication,"Mary-- how is Mary?" |
44349 | Then how is it done? |
44349 | To B. G.-- Can you recall any of the conversations we had together on the B. and P. R. R. cars? |
44349 | To Len-- Tell me the cause of your death, and the circumstances surrounding it? |
44349 | To Mamie:-- Tell me the name of your dead brother? |
44349 | What is Theosophy?_ 237_ III. |
44349 | When I finished it I went to her and said:''Where in the world did you get that quotation?'' |
44349 | Will you help me? |
44349 | said C--,"is there a spirit present?" |
22342 | A Piper Cub? |
22342 | A drink? |
22342 | A military secret? |
22342 | A note? |
22342 | A secret? |
22342 | About their rights? |
22342 | After all, what could happen to me in a ladies''room? |
22342 | After all,Malone offered,"the White House is white, is n''t it?" |
22342 | Against my record? |
22342 | Ah? |
22342 | Ah? |
22342 | Ah? |
22342 | All ready to go? |
22342 | All right? |
22342 | Am I correct? |
22342 | And has n''t the FBI anything better to do? 22342 And how about the Russians?" |
22342 | And how about the plane itself? |
22342 | And how are all our little Slavic brothers? |
22342 | And how are_ you_? |
22342 | And how could we go about that? 22342 And how did you come to this startling conclusion?" |
22342 | And if they all do have names,he went on,"what is it called when a large group of people are forced to act in a certain manner?" |
22342 | And if they do n''t take her seriously? |
22342 | And moving yourself? |
22342 | And the others? |
22342 | And then what? |
22342 | And they are spies? |
22342 | And they''ve all gone? |
22342 | And unofficially? |
22342 | And what I want to know is: how''s business? |
22342 | And what were your activities? |
22342 | And what_ is_ it all about? |
22342 | And where does that get us? |
22342 | And why should that be? |
22342 | And why,he said,"did you feel that such elaborate precautions were necessary in returning these men to us?" |
22342 | And you ca n''t tell me? 22342 And you do n''t know what''s causing it?" |
22342 | And you feel, Mr. Malone, that a telepathic command is the cause of this confusion? |
22342 | And you tell me it''s not the FBI? |
22342 | And, after all,Malone added,"why not? |
22342 | And--"And how are the others? |
22342 | Any more what? |
22342 | Any reasons? |
22342 | Anyhow, if it''s sabotage, who else would be interested in sabotaging the United States? 22342 Anything else?" |
22342 | Are n''t they always? |
22342 | Are you still worried about them? |
22342 | Are you sure,Malone asked slowly,"that anybody with a name like Luba Garbitsch could plausibly need a chaperone? |
22342 | Are you two talking about something? 22342 Arrogance?" |
22342 | Because it is not painted in capitalistic and obvious colors, it bores you? |
22342 | Better? |
22342 | Book? |
22342 | Borbitsch and Garbitsch, they tell you about a murder? 22342 Bourbon and soda, is n''t it?" |
22342 | Bring along a soapbox? |
22342 | Brubitsch and Borbitsch? |
22342 | Burris? |
22342 | But how about several people? |
22342 | But if you did n''t commit any murders, just what_ have_ you been doing since you''ve been in this country as a Soviet agent? |
22342 | But that kind of thing,Malone said,"it takes a tremendous amount of power, does n''t it?" |
22342 | But there could be that kind of shield? |
22342 | But what about Mike Sand? 22342 But what about them?" |
22342 | But what are you doing? |
22342 | But what exactly was it all about? |
22342 | But what was his real name? |
22342 | But what''s going on in Miami? |
22342 | But who''s doing it? |
22342 | But who''s the organization? |
22342 | But who? |
22342 | But why me? 22342 But why?" |
22342 | But you have got some information? |
22342 | But you''re sure you feel fine? |
22342 | But, as one colleague to another, tell me: how much longer do you think it will be before the proletarian uprising in your country? |
22342 | But, meanwhile, who is doing all this? 22342 But--""What I want to know,"Burris said,"is why you came here, to my home? |
22342 | By plane? |
22342 | Ca n''t you hurry? |
22342 | Can I come to the party? |
22342 | Can I get on board now? |
22342 | Can I go on your next adventure, or is it only for accredited Rover Boys? |
22342 | Can I help you? |
22342 | Can we set it up? |
22342 | Can you cut out that''almost''? |
22342 | Can you give me a condensed report on what is known-- and I mean_ known_--on telepathy and teleportation? |
22342 | Can you give me any help? |
22342 | Check and repair them? |
22342 | Crime on ice? |
22342 | Damn it,Boyd exploded,"let me find out for myself, will you? |
22342 | Days? |
22342 | Did anybody notice anything in that pile of stuff that might conceivably have any bearing whatever on our problems? |
22342 | Did you see them, Malone? |
22342 | Did you think my father would really be a spy? 22342 Did you want to say something?" |
22342 | Did your orders on that job come from Moscow, or did you mastermind it all by yourself? |
22342 | Different? |
22342 | Do n''t worry about it? |
22342 | Do n''t you read the papers? |
22342 | Do n''t you? |
22342 | Do things? |
22342 | Do you always do that to strangers? 22342 Do you own it? |
22342 | Do you really? |
22342 | Do you think there are some American spies working here? |
22342 | Do you think they''ll let us take off? |
22342 | Do you think you ought to get up? |
22342 | Do you-- do you think they''ll do anything to Dad? |
22342 | Does Mr. Manelli know you? |
22342 | Does he say which is which? |
22342 | Does it happen at regular intervals? |
22342 | Does it matter? |
22342 | Does it mean these mind- changers I''ve been thinking about ca n''t get through to me? |
22342 | Does that make sense? |
22342 | Does that mean anything? |
22342 | Does this have anything to do with the hypothesis you presented to me some time ago? 22342 Dossiers?" |
22342 | Dr. O''Connor,he said,"you know what I mean, do n''t you?" |
22342 | Everything? |
22342 | Experience? |
22342 | FBI? |
22342 | For hospital? |
22342 | For what time? |
22342 | Forced? |
22342 | Fred? |
22342 | Friends? |
22342 | Funny? |
22342 | Garbitsch''s wife? |
22342 | Ghosts got loose? 22342 Hanky- panky?" |
22342 | Have you been taking lessons? |
22342 | Have you got any hints, then? 22342 Have you got any more data on telepathic projection?" |
22342 | Have you had many instances of a single man, or a small group of men, controlling the actions of a much larger group? 22342 Have you no culture? |
22342 | Have you tried it, and made it work? |
22342 | Having sneezed twice at me,the girl said,"do you feel satisfied? |
22342 | He certainly does n''t_ look_ like the head of a spy ring, does he? |
22342 | He is? |
22342 | Hint? |
22342 | His big job? |
22342 | How about Rose Thompson? |
22342 | How about me? |
22342 | How about outer space? |
22342 | How about proving it? |
22342 | How about that crisis, by the way? 22342 How about the ghosts?" |
22342 | How about the killer? |
22342 | How about the spies? |
22342 | How about the static explosions? |
22342 | How about you having a drink while we talk? 22342 How about yours?" |
22342 | How about... oh, Leningrad? |
22342 | How are the saboteurs doing all this? |
22342 | How are things, anyhow, Ken? |
22342 | How are you? |
22342 | How can you manage the proletariat,Petkoff asked,"if you do not keep them confused?" |
22342 | How could I do all that without knowing it? 22342 How could I know?" |
22342 | How could you be Malone? |
22342 | How did he react? |
22342 | How did you know? |
22342 | How do you feel? |
22342 | How do you know I''m not a spy, too? |
22342 | How do you know? |
22342 | How do you know? |
22342 | How do you think I found you? 22342 How have you tried it?" |
22342 | How is she? |
22342 | How long ago did we leave Moscow? |
22342 | How long have you been experiencing this disturbance? |
22342 | How long? |
22342 | How long? |
22342 | How many so far? |
22342 | How should I know? |
22342 | How would I know? |
22342 | How would you go about that? |
22342 | How? |
22342 | How? |
22342 | How? |
22342 | I assume,O''Connor said frostily,"that you are speaking of telepathic messages?" |
22342 | I do n''t suppose,he said cautiously,"that we could take a look around inside the Kremlin, could we?" |
22342 | I do? |
22342 | I do? |
22342 | I have? |
22342 | I mean, back to New York? |
22342 | I mean, who''s doing it? |
22342 | I shot people? 22342 I speak English good, no?" |
22342 | I suppose it''s some kind of a joke, is n''t it? |
22342 | I''ll tell you what: is there a restaurant around here where we could get something to eat? |
22342 | I''ve been thinking: while we were about it, why did n''t we just teleport all the way back home? |
22342 | I? |
22342 | If there are n''t so many spies, then how is all this getting done? |
22342 | Incognito? |
22342 | Is everybody dead? |
22342 | Is it the fastest? |
22342 | Is n''t it, though? |
22342 | Is n''t the information any good? |
22342 | Is that all? |
22342 | Is that bad? |
22342 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
22342 | Is-- is that all it is? |
22342 | It does n''t have one what? |
22342 | It does n''t? |
22342 | It does n''t? |
22342 | It is n''t? |
22342 | It is n''t? |
22342 | It is? |
22342 | It is? |
22342 | It''s a nice, friendly conversation, and what have we got on our minds? |
22342 | Joke? |
22342 | Just what do you think this is? 22342 Just what happens during those crazy bursts of static?" |
22342 | Ken,he said,"do you mind if I smoke? |
22342 | Ken,she said,"the doctor said I was fine, so what are you worrying about? |
22342 | Lady? |
22342 | Let you know? |
22342 | Like now? |
22342 | Like what? |
22342 | Literally? |
22342 | Lou, where are you going from here? |
22342 | Lou? |
22342 | Luck? |
22342 | Lying, Fred? |
22342 | Magic? |
22342 | Malone,he said in a quiet, patient voice,"why do n''t you wait for me to finish? |
22342 | Malone,he said,"what does pig- Latin have to do with anything?" |
22342 | Manelli? |
22342 | Mark? |
22342 | May I come in? |
22342 | May I remind you that this is Yucca Flats? 22342 Me?" |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Me? |
22342 | Meanwhile, what was San Francisco doing? |
22342 | Mind shield? |
22342 | Mind? |
22342 | More what? |
22342 | Mr. Malone,he said,"are you ill?" |
22342 | Mr. Malone,the pilot said at last,"how_ did_ you get aboard this aircraft?" |
22342 | My mission? |
22342 | Naturally,he said,"we will begin with vodka,_ nyet_?" |
22342 | Next question? |
22342 | No matter how long it takes? |
22342 | Nor what the purpose of it is? |
22342 | Not enough information? |
22342 | Not even one of them? |
22342 | Not exactly? |
22342 | Not with any of the computers? |
22342 | Nothing at all wrong? |
22342 | Notion? |
22342 | Now what the hell would you disguise yourself as? |
22342 | Now what''s wrong? |
22342 | Now, Sirrah, where does all this leave us? 22342 Now, about those spies--""See what I mean?" |
22342 | Now, this writer-- what''s his name? |
22342 | Now, wait a minute--"You do n''t think I picked you for our first psionics case out of thin air, do you? |
22342 | Oh, and about leaving--"Yes? |
22342 | Oh, have you? |
22342 | Oh? |
22342 | On Fifth Avenue? |
22342 | One does? |
22342 | Only two? |
22342 | Only two? |
22342 | Or someplace else? 22342 Or was n''t the disguise big enough for three?" |
22342 | Others? |
22342 | Out of kilter? |
22342 | Paranoid? |
22342 | Partners? |
22342 | Pick up any more? |
22342 | Plate number? |
22342 | Pleasure? |
22342 | Potter? |
22342 | React? |
22342 | Real spies? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Really? |
22342 | Rome? |
22342 | Same pattern? |
22342 | Score? |
22342 | See it? |
22342 | See? |
22342 | Seriously, what are you doing out here? |
22342 | Shall we get back to the business at hand? |
22342 | Since our proletariat,he said,"have shown no sign of wanting any rebellion at all, how can I predict when they''re going to rebel?" |
22342 | Sir Kenneth,she said softly,"do you realize that this place is full of MVD men? |
22342 | Sir Lewis? |
22342 | Sir Thomas--"Yes, Sir Kenneth? |
22342 | Sleuth,she said,"do n''t you ever follow up a hint?" |
22342 | So what''s so hot? |
22342 | So what? |
22342 | Somewhere? |
22342 | Sorry? |
22342 | Specialized investigation? |
22342 | Spirit control? |
22342 | Spirits, Malone? |
22342 | Static? |
22342 | Strange? |
22342 | Stupidity? |
22342 | Stutter? |
22342 | Suppose they''re doing it in such a way that the larger group does n''t even suspect that manipulation is going on? |
22342 | Telepathic projection? |
22342 | Telepathic projection? |
22342 | Tell me, Mr. Malone, have you been toilet- trained, too? |
22342 | Tell me, colleague,Petkoff said as be spooned up some more caviar,"how are things in the United States?" |
22342 | Tell me,he said,"were you receiving my broadcast on the way here?" |
22342 | Tell me,she said,"is it fun?" |
22342 | That boy was really going, was n''t he? |
22342 | That right? |
22342 | That_ was_ exciting, was n''t it? |
22342 | The flashes? |
22342 | The luminous gauze, for instance, that passes for ectoplasm; the various methods of table- lifting; control of the Ouija board-- things like that? |
22342 | The machines? |
22342 | The next one,Malone said grimly,"is, what''s behind the flashes? |
22342 | The only steps? |
22342 | The question is: how? |
22342 | The tricks of the trade, so to speak? |
22342 | The what? |
22342 | Then I can drive on? |
22342 | Then how can you have an alibi? |
22342 | Then the operators of this force, whatever it may be, have some interest in allowing these spies to confess? |
22342 | Then who drugged it? |
22342 | Then would n''t Her Majesty know about them? 22342 There is another reason?" |
22342 | There is? |
22342 | There is? |
22342 | There what? |
22342 | They do n''t? |
22342 | They''re all gone? |
22342 | They? |
22342 | Think he was telling the truth? |
22342 | This is going to explain a wrecked club? |
22342 | This is the one who wo n''t talk, eh? |
22342 | Through channels? |
22342 | To eat? |
22342 | To where, and why? 22342 Wait?" |
22342 | Want a driver? |
22342 | Want me to tell Burris you called? |
22342 | Want them to bring in the next one? |
22342 | Want to bet? |
22342 | We do? |
22342 | We must have patience, eh, colleague? |
22342 | We wait outside one revolution--"One what? |
22342 | Well, then, what? |
22342 | Well, then,Malone said,"how do you know when the murders were done? |
22342 | Well, then,the general said,"why do n''t you blast him out of there?" |
22342 | Well, was Brubitsch telling the truth? |
22342 | Well, we could n''t have them just running around all over the world, could we? |
22342 | Well,Malone said,"I mean-- well, he is n''t the sort of man who''d fire somebody, because of-- because of something like this?" |
22342 | Well,Manelli said slowly,"you heard about this wrecked night- club in Florida? |
22342 | Well,he said,"you know this California thing?" |
22342 | Well? |
22342 | Well? |
22342 | Well? |
22342 | Were you kidding about that drink in Moscow? |
22342 | What about Tom Boyd? 22342 What about the rest?" |
22342 | What am I supposed to have done? |
22342 | What area is that? |
22342 | What color, for example, is the Golden Gate Bridge? |
22342 | What did Garbitsch do with the information? |
22342 | What did I do? |
22342 | What did you do with your information? |
22342 | What do you call the others? |
22342 | What do you mean, bad? |
22342 | What do you mean, it''s not right? |
22342 | What do you mean, you did n''t believe it? |
22342 | What do you mean? |
22342 | What do you mean? |
22342 | What do you think I''m going to do? |
22342 | What do you think would be a good name for her to travel under? |
22342 | What do you want? |
22342 | What does it sound like? 22342 What does luck have to do with roulette? |
22342 | What does n''t? |
22342 | What else did you do? |
22342 | What else? |
22342 | What else? |
22342 | What for? |
22342 | What happened then? |
22342 | What happened? |
22342 | What have we got to lose but our minds? 22342 What have you heard?" |
22342 | What is it being done for? 22342 What is it?" |
22342 | What is that supposed to mean? |
22342 | What is there you would like to see? |
22342 | What is? |
22342 | What it says here? |
22342 | What made you decide to come here? |
22342 | What mind- changers? |
22342 | What now? |
22342 | What seems to be such great hurry,_ Tovarishch_? |
22342 | What sort of theoretical story are you going to tell me? |
22342 | What story? |
22342 | What the hell do hands have to do with it? |
22342 | What was it about? |
22342 | What was the Federation of Professional Musicians doing in your lap? |
22342 | What were you supposed to look for? |
22342 | What what is? |
22342 | What would I be doing,Malone snapped,"with a beautiful blonde heiress?" |
22342 | What''s after 1903? |
22342 | What''s causing these disturbances? |
22342 | What''s going on here? |
22342 | What''s like the Bluebird of Happiness? |
22342 | What''s more what? |
22342 | What''s strange about it? 22342 What''s that supposed to mean?" |
22342 | What''s the matter? |
22342 | What''s the trouble, Tom? 22342 What''s this business about a static explosion?" |
22342 | What''s this? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What? |
22342 | What_ is_ he thinking? |
22342 | Whattakid, huh? 22342 When does your plane leave?" |
22342 | Where are they? |
22342 | Where are you going? |
22342 | Where is the girl? |
22342 | Which Greek letter? |
22342 | Which ones? |
22342 | Who is calling, please? |
22342 | Who is causing these telepathic flashes? |
22342 | Who is n''t? 22342 Who is she? |
22342 | Who is? |
22342 | Who is? |
22342 | Who knows? |
22342 | Who knows? |
22342 | Who knows? |
22342 | Who was that you were talking to? |
22342 | Who was your contact in Russia? |
22342 | Who''d ever think,Malone said,"that he plotted those killings in Redstone-- all three of them?" |
22342 | Who''s dead? 22342 Who''ve you got in the observation room?" |
22342 | Who? |
22342 | Why a Buick? |
22342 | Why did n''t you bring one with you? |
22342 | Why not let''s try him and see? |
22342 | Why not? |
22342 | Why not? |
22342 | Why not? |
22342 | Why not? |
22342 | Why not? |
22342 | Why throw things? |
22342 | Why? |
22342 | Why? |
22342 | Why? |
22342 | Why? |
22342 | Why_ did n''t_ they notify me? |
22342 | Will I be in the book when it''s published? |
22342 | Would he do? |
22342 | Would it help if I went up and told Sir Lewis that there''s no mark against your record? |
22342 | Would you mind terribly if I climbed over your head? 22342 Yes or no what?" |
22342 | Yes or no? |
22342 | Yes, Ch-- Yes? |
22342 | Yes, sir? |
22342 | Yes, sir? |
22342 | Yes, sir? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | Yes? |
22342 | You are American? |
22342 | You are Mr. Malone, right? |
22342 | You can? |
22342 | You do n''t know where any of them went? 22342 You do n''t?" |
22342 | You do? |
22342 | You do? |
22342 | You do? |
22342 | You do? |
22342 | You expect, perhaps, that we recruit our glorious Red Army from American Indian tribes? |
22342 | You mean because I know an FBI man? |
22342 | You mean that Vasili Garbitsch is a PSR member? |
22342 | You mean the_ Meeneestyerstvoh Vnootrenikh Dyehl_? |
22342 | You mean you did n''t know we were? |
22342 | You realize, of course, that they are criminals? 22342 You refer, no doubt,"Boyd said,"to the_ Meeneestyerstvoh Vnootrenikh Dyehl_?" |
22342 | You say these people would have to be telepaths? |
22342 | You see? 22342 You see?" |
22342 | You sore or something? |
22342 | You want them right away? |
22342 | You wish to eat? |
22342 | You''ll call me, though, about tonight? |
22342 | You''re going to take them off when they get to Russia? |
22342 | You''re kidding? |
22342 | You''re looking into the resignation out there, are n''t you? |
22342 | You''re not? |
22342 | You''ve got a twenty- four- hour watch on Luba Garbitsch, have n''t you? |
22342 | You''ve tried it? |
22342 | Your Majesty,he said,"would you mind terribly if I asked you questions before you answered them? |
22342 | Your agent? 22342 Your usual table, Major?" |
22342 | 11"Boyd?" |
22342 | After all, he''d gotten the investigation started, had n''t he? |
22342 | After all, what could be anybody''s purpose in goofing up a bunch of calculators the way they had? |
22342 | After all, what did he have to work with, as far as his job was concerned? |
22342 | All right?" |
22342 | Am I a telepath, or am I not?" |
22342 | Am I telepathic? |
22342 | And doing it in such a way that the larger group does n''t even know it is being manipulated?" |
22342 | And how do we know that all the deduction, all the careful case- building we have done, has n''t been influenced by this group? |
22342 | And how much time do I have for an answer?" |
22342 | And then what happened?" |
22342 | And what is it supposed to mean?" |
22342 | And where, by the way, is the girl?" |
22342 | And who is the next one?" |
22342 | And why not?" |
22342 | And yet it takes more power than any of these?" |
22342 | And you can do that by fouling up the more intelligent people._"Intelligent people?" |
22342 | And you want to talk to me a little bit, right?" |
22342 | And you, Luba, my child?" |
22342 | And your friends?" |
22342 | And, after all, it was the proper way to treat a Queen, was n''t it? |
22342 | And-- by the way, what are you doing now?" |
22342 | Any ideas at all?" |
22342 | Any information?" |
22342 | Any more questions?" |
22342 | Anything else?" |
22342 | Aoud?" |
22342 | Are they blue?" |
22342 | Are you flying it away?" |
22342 | Are you going to have to leave suddenly again?" |
22342 | Because if I do, you''ll have a mad pilot on your hands, and you would n''t like that, would you?" |
22342 | But did he want it to? |
22342 | But then, how was he supposed to feel? |
22342 | But what do you want me to do about that?" |
22342 | But what else did he know about it? |
22342 | But what else is there to go on?" |
22342 | But what was all the static about? |
22342 | But what was the right way? |
22342 | But what would you pick to go with Garbitsch?" |
22342 | But where was the here? |
22342 | But whoever heard of a scientist falling in love with a guinea pig? |
22342 | But you can do that after you make the report to me, ca n''t you?" |
22342 | But-- well, Sir Kenneth, have you ever seen disturbance on a TV screen, when there''s some powerful electric output nearby? |
22342 | Ca n''t you do the job any faster?" |
22342 | Come to think of it, why the gangs? |
22342 | Did I say that?" |
22342 | Did he have any message for me, by the way?" |
22342 | Did n''t convictions ever stand up, anyhow, or lie down? |
22342 | Did the Psychical Research Society give you the day off, or are you here to see about a misplaced broom?" |
22342 | Do I have feathers in my hair?" |
22342 | Do I have strange powers?" |
22342 | Do I look like an Indian? |
22342 | Do we write nasty letters to the editor?" |
22342 | Do you mean that_ I''m_ the one causing all this mental static?" |
22342 | Do you remember that?" |
22342 | Do you take something for it?" |
22342 | Does a small child commit a murder? |
22342 | Does it perform helpful tasks? |
22342 | Even in a den of vice? |
22342 | GOVERNMENT TO SAVE$ 1 BILLION ANNUALLY? |
22342 | Goodbye, Mr.--Malone, is n''t it?" |
22342 | Got a messenger?" |
22342 | Had he been manipulated as easily as they had manipulated so many others? |
22342 | Has somebody assassinated the entire senate? |
22342 | Have n''t we been through all this before?" |
22342 | He came back to his chair, sat down, and said,"What''s our next step, Ken?" |
22342 | He did n''t deal with crackpot notions, did he?__ No, the Society did. |
22342 | He paused and then added,"But what happened?" |
22342 | How about that doctor?" |
22342 | How about you doing some remembering?" |
22342 | How come, Mr. Malone? |
22342 | How come?" |
22342 | How would you feel if you were being sent to jail?" |
22342 | Hypnotism? |
22342 | I had nothing to do with this, Mr. Malone; you understand that? |
22342 | I mean, ca n''t you go and sneeze at counterfeiters in their lairs, or wherever they might be?" |
22342 | I mean, do you mind the smell of cigars?" |
22342 | I mean, is it larger than a breadbox? |
22342 | I mean-- well, what are you going to do?" |
22342 | If it''s not being too banal, where am I?" |
22342 | If something is static, it does n''t move-- whoever heard of a motionless explosion?" |
22342 | If they''re telepaths? |
22342 | Is it self- employed?" |
22342 | Is it some new sort of perversion?" |
22342 | Is that correct?" |
22342 | Is that what happened?" |
22342 | It happened maybe a month ago, in Miami?" |
22342 | It is rather late here, as you must realize--""Yes?" |
22342 | Just fun?" |
22342 | Louie? |
22342 | Louise? |
22342 | Luke? |
22342 | Malone blew out some more smoke, thought wistfully about cigars, and said:"What? |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Malone?" |
22342 | Maloney?" |
22342 | Manelli was a gangster, and who cared how he looked? |
22342 | Manelli?" |
22342 | Martians? |
22342 | Meantime, Thomas, did you get the stuff we talked about?" |
22342 | Now, all of that looks pretty horrible in the papers, but do you know something? |
22342 | Now, he asked himself, how did the assassination of Governor Nemours P. Flarion fit in with anything? |
22342 | Now, what''s on your mind?" |
22342 | Of course the British PRS had n''t gone underground; why should they? |
22342 | Okay?" |
22342 | Only what kind of force was being used? |
22342 | Or do n''t you care?" |
22342 | Or do you want some help with a beautiful blonde heiress?" |
22342 | Or do you want to sneeze at somebody else?" |
22342 | Or had he been led astray by them? |
22342 | Or had n''t you noticed?" |
22342 | Or had that been"Sir Kenneth"? |
22342 | Or has your mission been accomplished?" |
22342 | Or is that last one Venusians?" |
22342 | Or is there some kind of a mind shield or something that a telepath could work out?" |
22342 | Or is this another secret? |
22342 | Or the president and his cabinet? |
22342 | Rebecca?" |
22342 | Remember why it did detect when a person''s mind was being read?" |
22342 | Remember?" |
22342 | Remember?" |
22342 | Remember?" |
22342 | Right, Your Majesty?" |
22342 | Right?" |
22342 | Right?" |
22342 | Right?" |
22342 | Right?" |
22342 | Right?" |
22342 | See?" |
22342 | See?" |
22342 | Shoptalk?" |
22342 | Starting with a couple of years ago, when we first found Her Majesty, remember?" |
22342 | Suppose they''re not?" |
22342 | Tell me, is there anything I can do for you? |
22342 | That I, myself, have top- security clearance for many special projects? |
22342 | That the security checks here are as careful as anywhere in the world? |
22342 | The McCarthy era? |
22342 | The bright, senseless snowstorms, the meaningless hash?" |
22342 | The difference between what''s happening in Russia and what''s happening here--""What difference?" |
22342 | The stretcher- bearer said,"Vot?" |
22342 | The universities are going to be freer and better places to work in; they wo n''t be monopolies any more._"Monopolies?" |
22342 | Then they would hold him prisoner while they devised ways to... To what? |
22342 | There was no point, really, in putting them in prison-- what for? |
22342 | Understand?" |
22342 | Understand?" |
22342 | Venerians? |
22342 | Want me to exorcise''em for you?" |
22342 | Was he related to the girl? |
22342 | Was he right? |
22342 | Was it your father?" |
22342 | We do n''t want any international incidents, understand?" |
22342 | We have had the orderly presentation of the case; where, Sirrah, is your summation?" |
22342 | Were the PRS people really here? |
22342 | What are we doing, deporting the entire family?" |
22342 | What can I do for you?" |
22342 | What crime is this?" |
22342 | What did they plan to do? |
22342 | What did they tell him? |
22342 | What do you do?" |
22342 | What good could it do us?" |
22342 | What is it?" |
22342 | What kind of psionic force would it take to make so many people in the United States goof up the way they were doing? |
22342 | What murder? |
22342 | What was going on? |
22342 | What was his next move? |
22342 | What was the clue? |
22342 | What was waiting for him inside? |
22342 | What were they doing now? |
22342 | What will the boys back at Headquarters think now?" |
22342 | What would spies be doing in the Mafia?" |
22342 | What''s on your mind?" |
22342 | What''s up now?" |
22342 | When he finally came up for air, he said:"Lou...""Yes, Ken?" |
22342 | Where did he go from here? |
22342 | Where do you want the material sent? |
22342 | Where had they gone? |
22342 | Where was the Mongol? |
22342 | Where were they? |
22342 | Where, he wondered, did he go from here? |
22342 | Who did he know, he thought, who was large, old, disguised and efficient? |
22342 | Who''s been killed?" |
22342 | Who''s having the terrible time?__ All of them?__ Nope. |
22342 | Who''s having the terrible time?__ All of them?__ Nope. |
22342 | Why bother me with it?" |
22342 | Why bother? |
22342 | Why do n''t you go and sneeze at somebody else? |
22342 | Why do n''t you think so?" |
22342 | Why do n''t you try and find one somewhere? |
22342 | Why not let''s put the gun away and be friends?" |
22342 | Why not you?" |
22342 | Why not, oh, Wolfe Wolf? |
22342 | Why was it not done?" |
22342 | Why you run across floor in such impolite manner?" |
22342 | Why_ did_ you make it? |
22342 | Will you vanish softly and silently away? |
22342 | Willcoe?" |
22342 | Would it do any good to tell you that the fascination with this form of greeting is not universal? |
22342 | Would you prefer Evil Beings from the Planet Ploor?" |
22342 | You do n''t have any address?" |
22342 | You have n''t done anything-- why should I treat you as if you have?" |
22342 | You know what to dig for?" |
22342 | You know? |
22342 | You know?" |
22342 | You mean you had Governor Flarion killed?" |
22342 | You tuned in on my mind right away, did n''t you?" |
22342 | You want me with you?" |
22342 | You were tuned in then, were n''t you?__ And I do n''t mean just Lou. |
22342 | You would n''t expect Things from Ploor to come right out and_ tell_ us what they want, would you? |
22342 | You''re a civilian, and I''m a colonel in the United States Air Force, and you ca n''t tell me a military secret?" |
22342 | You''re alive, are n''t you?" |
22342 | _ Am I being interfered with?_ He did n''t feel any different. |
22342 | _ Brubitsch?_ Malone thought. |
22342 | _ Is my mind acting up again?_ he thought, knowing she would pick it up. |
22342 | _ Me?_ Malone thought. |
22342 | _ Now what is that supposed to mean?_"I do n''t know, Sir Kenneth,"Her Majesty said. |
22342 | _ You do know how I spotted you, do n''t you? |
22342 | he said in a calm, patient voice,"was the message about?" |
22342 | job?" |
22342 | phenomenon?" |
39163 | And leave the noble Nicholas to go to the world of spirits alone? 39163 And thy reward, prince?" |
39163 | Are my friends unjust that they will not listen to an injured man, whose injuries may be their own to- morrow? |
39163 | Are the words of the Emperor dirt, that they should have escaped the ears of so small a dog? |
39163 | Are then the special secrets of my noble parent of so little value that they may be wafted about the very air of this vile city of Pekin? |
39163 | Are we birds, that we can fly? |
39163 | Art thou also a traitor, O Yang? |
39163 | Art thou an idiot, that after the exhibition at the monastery, the folly of these toy gods of the bonzes is not imprinted upon thine eyeballs? |
39163 | Art thou foolish, O Chow, to believe that this eclipse was caused by the effort of a monster dragon to swallow the heavenly luminaries? |
39163 | Art thou then a disciple of the Saviour of mankind, O Ki? |
39163 | But the red- haired barbarians of Formosa, from whom my father has just returned, are they of the same race? |
39163 | By what means, O foolish man, can these bonzes save thy child''s life? 39163 Can it be under heaven that Yong Li has forgotten the great services of his most illustrious general?" |
39163 | Can it be under heaven,said he,"that so holy a body should contain so vile a heart? |
39163 | Can the worthy woman aid us? |
39163 | Can these words be true, O Woo? 39163 Cans''t thou be honest and silent as to my visit?" |
39163 | Canst thou swim, O Chow? 39163 Dared the dog say this? |
39163 | Dares the dog so far? |
39163 | Didst thou hear the name, surname, and title of the villain lord, O Chow? |
39163 | Do not the people fear the vengeance of the gods, that they behave thus? |
39163 | Emperor!--what Emperor, thou ox? |
39163 | Even if so much treason existed in my heart, how could so mean a person serve so great a prince? |
39163 | Has the noble mandarin suffered, O worthy man? |
39163 | Has the safety of the pearl of my life been endangered? |
39163 | Has the vile deed been performed? |
39163 | Has the wretched woman no friend who will purchase her? |
39163 | Have we not honored these priests, even to making their chief the president of our high board of mathematics? |
39163 | How came it, O thou great rogue, that the soldiers should repay thy great services with so much ingratitude? |
39163 | How is it possible, O noble Nicholas, that we can pass through the roaring rebels, who are, doubtless, without? |
39163 | How is this possible, thou rogue? |
39163 | How is this? 39163 How is this? |
39163 | How,--what words are these? 39163 If it is adverse?" |
39163 | Is he not the son of the great merchant of the south, who rules the four seas? |
39163 | Is it not a maxim that no effort is hopeless to the brave? |
39163 | Is it not a maxim that wickedness defeats its own ends? |
39163 | Is it possible for a son to forget the slayer of his parent, even if the wound in his face would not betray him? |
39163 | Is it under heaven that thou couldst save the life of the slayer of thy parent? |
39163 | Is my son blind, that he can not see that his parent is a prisoner to these Tartar dogs? |
39163 | Is the boy pirate mad that he dares so insolently presume upon his small services, as to interrupt the course of justice? |
39163 | Is the slave mad, that he dares intrude in this our highest council- chamber? |
39163 | Is the youth bereft of his senses? 39163 Is this treble sore fresh, that it should now so rankle the heart and cloud the brow of my venerable parent?" |
39163 | It is a common one,replied the merchant; adding,"but what brings the son of the great merchant to Pekin? |
39163 | It is a pagan doctrine, Chow; but how came you upon yonder perch? |
39163 | It is not under heaven, O princess, that thy slave can have given thee pain? |
39163 | Know any of you the residence of the colao Ki? |
39163 | Knows not the youth that I can slay him as if he were a venomous rat? |
39163 | Let the mean rat rise upon his bamboo legs,said Nicholas; adding,"What has the dog learned of his guests''affairs?" |
39163 | Let the youths follow,said the good- natured Woman; adding,"Whither would they be taken?" |
39163 | May then the illustrious Prince Woo- san- Kwei be found within the palace? |
39163 | May this not be a trap, O my prince, to beguile thy person within reach of the assassin''s dagger? |
39163 | May thy servant inquire the amount of this innkeeper''s debt; for it is fitting that the taxes should be paid? |
39163 | My own seeking, O mighty son of Ming? 39163 Of what enemies does my honorable father speak? |
39163 | See,he added, as Nicholas came by his side,"he is sniffing something good; what can it be?" |
39163 | Shall it go down to posterity that the noble Woo- san- Kwei was the assassin of his parent? |
39163 | Shall we not kill the traitor, who has stolen my beloved mother and the princess? |
39163 | So far thy words are truth,said the mandarin, to the astonishment of Nicholas;"but what answer can the youth make to the charge of this man?" |
39163 | Surely my prince lifted his voice in council? |
39163 | Surely the fleet of my father can exterminate these wasps? |
39163 | Surely this is not well, for why need the brave stoop to such villainy? |
39163 | Surely thy servant, who has but just entered the town, can be guilty of no crime? |
39163 | The kingdom- soothing general speaks well, for who is this turbulent lord, and what the value of his services, that he dares be so rebellious? |
39163 | The noble Nicholas has a father? |
39163 | The rich need be cautious, for is it not a maxim, that a successful rebel is more to be feared than a dead Emperor, O noble Nicholas? |
39163 | Then how, thou trembling rogue, couldst thou know it was a princess who spoke? |
39163 | Then the sacrifice was not thine own seeking, my poor fellow? |
39163 | Then why, O my father, were such pauper barbarians permitted to place the soles of their feet on the land of Formosa? |
39163 | Then will not the worthy Sing seek a temple at once? |
39163 | There can be no doubt it is the villain, for saw you not the wound upon his cheek? 39163 These are wild words, O youth; for know you not that it was the duty of our chief colao to receive thy letter?" |
39163 | Thou art fond of Pekin, Chow? |
39163 | Thou art the son of the good merchant, my correspondent? |
39163 | Thou rascal,said Nicholas; but adding, more prudently,"Canst thou be honest, and serve us?" |
39163 | Thou, then, art the servant of this dog who has profaned the imperial gardens? |
39163 | Thy name, surname, and rank? |
39163 | Truly so; for whose ears could be so dull as not to have drunk in his fame as a wise minister of state? |
39163 | Truly the noble youth does not doubt that the words of his servant are straight? |
39163 | Truly we will do better-- make him useful,said Nicholas; adding,"Is the rogue certain that these soldiers have proceeded to Lao- yang?" |
39163 | Upon what has their wisdom determined, O prince? |
39163 | What answer didst thou make, O Chow? |
39163 | What answer made my honorable father? |
39163 | What are these sad words, O my princess? 39163 What didst thou hear, dog?" |
39163 | What dog''s words are these? 39163 What has the dog of a eunuch to say for intruding in our presence with such matters?" |
39163 | What has the priest of Fo to say to this disgraceful charge? 39163 What mean the dogs? |
39163 | What means the slave? 39163 What means the youth; is he a robber?" |
39163 | What meant the rat by those words? |
39163 | What purchase is this, thou rogue? |
39163 | What rogue is this who dares disturb the quiet of the noble Ki? |
39163 | What sayest the innkeeper? 39163 What says the accuser to these words?" |
39163 | What shall thy servant discover, O brave youth? |
39163 | What useless words are these, for where in this city is such a dog to be found, since they were hunted down by the illustrious governor? 39163 What words are these, Candida? |
39163 | What words are these, Chow? |
39163 | What words are these, O Candida? 39163 What words are these, O Chow?" |
39163 | What words are these, O prince? |
39163 | What words are these, O worthy friend? |
39163 | What words are these, my noble parent? 39163 What words are these, thou dog of a bonze?'' |
39163 | What words are these? 39163 What words are these? |
39163 | What words are these? 39163 What words are these? |
39163 | What words are these? |
39163 | What words are these? |
39163 | What would Chow do to obtain the punishment of his enemies? 39163 What would the General Li- Kong with Woo- san- Kwei, that he thus humbles him?" |
39163 | What would the Tartar dogs? |
39163 | What would the nameless night prowlers with the priest of Buddha? |
39163 | When is the next festival, O worthy innkeeper? |
39163 | Where are our wings, O, my master? 39163 Where are we, O Chow?" |
39163 | Who are the dogs? 39163 Who are these vile dogs that are so openly seeking their death?" |
39163 | Who art thou boy; thy name, surname, and from what province? |
39163 | Who cries for help? |
39163 | Who is the vile slave, that he dares disobey the commands of the great Emperor? |
39163 | Who is this dog, that speaks without prostrating his mean person at the feet of justice? |
39163 | Who is thy servant, O noble Nicholas, that he should doubt, when learned mandarins believe? |
39163 | Who, O my brother, is this bold, brave man that thus shakes the world by his power? |
39163 | Why, in the name of the social relations, art thou as dull as a tailless peacock? |
39163 | Why, what words are these? 39163 Will the magnificent fountain of justice give his unworthy servant a private hearing?" |
39163 | Will the ungrateful villains let me die the dog''s death for the want of a cup of water? |
39163 | Will the worthy innkeeper relate the ill- doings that could have brought this good magistrate to misfortune? |
39163 | ''Begone, dog, what wouldst thou do?'' |
39163 | Alone? |
39163 | Are not the physicians of Hang- tcheou famous for their skill?" |
39163 | Are such things possible? |
39163 | Are the dogs tired of their lives, that they venture to make this unseemly uproar within the very hearing of the Son of Heaven himself?" |
39163 | At any? |
39163 | At which the bonze said,"Can not the heavenly eyes of the great prince see that the poor creature is suffering from such violent language? |
39163 | But how wouldst thou know this vile rogue again?" |
39163 | But then the princess could not travel without a female attendant,--and whom could they trust? |
39163 | But who art thou, O my poor youth, who thus seekest certain death by thy presence here?" |
39163 | But why had they not killed him at once? |
39163 | But why then,"she added, bitterly,"has the worthless life of a daughter of his own blood been saved?" |
39163 | Can it be that one so brave on land should be so great a coward upon water?" |
39163 | Can, or can he not, aid me to gain admittance within the palace? |
39163 | Canst thou answer, thou villainous old man?" |
39163 | Do my brothers seek the presence of the great Woo- san- Kwei?" |
39163 | Do the Tartars confer kingdoms upon their prisoners?" |
39163 | Dost thou not know that these are the symbols of the Lord of heaven''s religion?" |
39163 | For fear that my reader may think this episode exaggerated, I must assure him that similar scenes are even now of frequent occurrence-- and why not? |
39163 | Has he no respect for his parents, who will assuredly be punished for their neglect?" |
39163 | Has such villainy taken place in the land?" |
39163 | He grasped his sabre, saying,"What says the slave?" |
39163 | However, the innkeeper addressing him, rudely said,"How is this, that a mere boy should be without the walls at this hour? |
39163 | Is it possible that the Emperor Yong- Li can have left the earth?" |
39163 | Is the Emperor a slave that thou darest so far?'' |
39163 | Like magic they kept my sword suspended midway, and I said,''What words are these, thou dog?'' |
39163 | Need I tell you that the stranger was no other than Chow? |
39163 | Neither could Nicholas get rid of his puzzle, till Ki said,"Has the name of the colao Ki ever fallen into the ears of the honorable youth?" |
39163 | O master, what would become of us all; what would become of day and night without the sun and moon?" |
39163 | Should he comply? |
39163 | Should he give it to Chow? |
39163 | Should he not appear to them in the despicable light of an eaves- dropper? |
39163 | Surely it must be the cabin of a junk-- but what?--whose? |
39163 | Surely the noble Woo presumes upon his age, for has it not been wisely said that the will of the Emperor is omnipotent?" |
39163 | The stanching of the blood, the cold water, and the movement, revived her, when she exclaimed,"This terrible dream-- where am I? |
39163 | Then bitter were the feelings of Nicholas-- for himself? |
39163 | Thou art indeed laughing at thy mistress, for didst thou not say the traitor was in open rebellion?" |
39163 | What could it mean? |
39163 | What could it mean? |
39163 | What could that mean? |
39163 | What grief can come in such a place of repose? |
39163 | What has this most wise maxim to do with thy case, fellow?" |
39163 | What should he do? |
39163 | What was to be done? |
39163 | What was to be done? |
39163 | What words are these?" |
39163 | Where could he be? |
39163 | Who art thou, thou empty rice tub?" |
39163 | Who is this woman?" |
39163 | Why should one complain that he is not more fortunate than the rest?" |
39163 | Why this clatter at our gates when the tribunal is closed?" |
39163 | Will he aid me?" |
39163 | Will their god aid him in the hour of his troubles?" |
39163 | Would he faithfully serve the stranger who has saved his life?" |
39163 | Would the honorable gaolers get some? |
39163 | Yet surely this is not without cause, for hath it not been asked,''Why hath Heaven placed the Emperor upon the throne, if not to be our parent?'' |
39163 | _ Innkeeper._--"Is it not true, O tribute- collecting lord, that but little may be gleaned from an empty purse?" |
39163 | _ Mandarin, angrily._--"Would the vile innkeeper laugh in our face?" |
39163 | _ Mandarin._--"Thou incorrigible dog, where hath been thy industry, that thou hast not sufficient even to pay thy taxes?" |
39163 | did the slave pirate dare to overcome our sea tigers?" |
39163 | does he not know that it is certain death to pass the prohibited wall of the inner palace?" |
39163 | for if thou art not a receiver of stolen things, how camest thou by this kingdom of Fokien? |
39163 | for what reason had they brought him there? |
39163 | of what crime speaks the youth?" |
39163 | of what use is a friend if he will not be serviceable in the hour of need?" |
39163 | replied Nicholas, impatiently; adding,"Hast thou bought the robe?" |
39163 | said Chow, who gazing earnestly in the face of Nicholas, added,"Art thou really a boy or a man of short measure?" |
39163 | said Nicholas; adding,"Is it the will of the princess, to proceed upon her journey?" |
39163 | surely they were not pursued? |
39163 | surely thou art not a Christian, my poor friend, that they should bring thee here?" |
39163 | we are betrayed; what rogue is this?" |
39163 | what dog''s words are these, thou ignorant slave? |
39163 | what means this? |
39163 | what rascality is this? |
39163 | what their names, surnames, and rank?" |
39163 | who art thou, thou terrible man?" |
39163 | would you molest the son of your Emperor, the good prince Yong- Li?" |
4018 | All you say is very reasonable,said the old man,"but what kind of men will you consent to see? |
4018 | And after the bear? |
4018 | And what is it you have to ask of me? |
4018 | Are you going to take this bird with you also? |
4018 | Are you indeed Hohodemi, the grandson of Amaterasu, the Sun Goddess? |
4018 | Are you indeed Ryn Jin, the King of the Sea, of whom I have so often heard? |
4018 | Are you indeed the daughters of Ryn Jin, the King of the Sea? 4018 Are you ready?" |
4018 | But how am I to get the monkey here? 4018 But next to you then, who is the strongest?" |
4018 | But why? |
4018 | But,said Urashima,"how is it possible for me to ride on your small back?" |
4018 | By the bye,said the jelly fish,"have you ever seen the Palace of the Dragon King of the Sea where I live?" |
4018 | Can you not see that for yourself? 4018 Can you still lie? |
4018 | Can you tell me,asked Sentaro,"where the hermits live who have the Elixir of Life?" |
4018 | Dare you answer me thus? 4018 Do you find it so disagreeable,"he asked,"in my house, that you can stay no longer?" |
4018 | Do you mean to tell me that you ca n''t get the medicine here? |
4018 | Do you really wish to go to the Island of Devils and fight with me? |
4018 | Does n''t it lie by the door in the morning when your mistress begins the work of the day? 4018 Has anything happened while I have been away?" |
4018 | Have you left your liver behind you? |
4018 | How can I play a trick on a monkey? 4018 How can any of my people capture a monkey?" |
4018 | How could she,they asked each other,"inflict such a heavy punishment for such a trifling offense as that of eating some rice- paste by mistake?" |
4018 | How could you be so cruel? 4018 I do not understand how you can meet the soul of your lost mother by looking in this mirror?" |
4018 | I will take this,said Watanabe,"and put it on the Gate of Rashomon, so to- morrow morning will you all go and look at it? |
4018 | If it is in my power to do so I will,answered Hidesato,"but first tell me who you are?" |
4018 | If only you could capture one of these monkeys? |
4018 | Is it so beautiful as all that? |
4018 | Is that really so? 4018 It is not like you, big devil, to beg for mercy, is it? |
4018 | Mr. Monkey, tell me, have you such a thing as a liver with you? |
4018 | Now tell me who is the strongest of all? |
4018 | Now what is the best thing he can leave with us as a pledge? |
4018 | Oh, mother,said Kintaro,"do n''t you know that I am the strongest? |
4018 | Oh, why,said the Princess in distress,"must I do this? |
4018 | Shall I go and dance before these demons and let them see what a human being can do? 4018 Tell me what it is you want for the Queen?" |
4018 | That is the most important thing of all,said the stupid jelly fish,"so as soon as I recollected it, I asked you if you had yours with you?" |
4018 | Then do you disbelieve what I say, and think that I am telling you a falsehood? |
4018 | Then what can I do? |
4018 | Then why are you always alone in your room these days? 4018 Then will you come again to- morrow, old man?" |
4018 | Then you-- are-- my-- enemy? |
4018 | There,said Kintaro,"what do you think of my bridge? |
4018 | Well, Mr. Tortoise,said Urashima,"was it you who called my name just now?" |
4018 | What are these creatures doing? |
4018 | What are you doing alone in such a place? |
4018 | What awful den have I come to in my travels? 4018 What do I hear? |
4018 | What do you know about it? |
4018 | What do you mean? |
4018 | What do you say? 4018 What is it like? |
4018 | What is the matter? 4018 What is the matter?--what have you done?" |
4018 | What then? |
4018 | Where are you going? |
4018 | Where have you been all this time? |
4018 | Where is your proof? |
4018 | Who are you? |
4018 | Who are you? |
4018 | Why do you ask such an unnecessary question? 4018 Why do you come back so late?" |
4018 | Why do you mock me? |
4018 | Why is my liver so important to you? |
4018 | Why should I pause, thou villain? |
4018 | Why should we? 4018 Wo n''t he be very heavy?" |
4018 | Yes, indeed,answered the tortoise,"and do n''t you think we have come very quickly?" |
4018 | You are Hohodemi, the Augustness, sometimes called the Happy Hunter, are you not? |
4018 | You silly old man,said she,"Why did you not bring the large box? |
4018 | ''Crack, crack''?" |
4018 | A very bewildered expression came over the face of the man, and, still gazing intently on Urashima''s face, he said:"What? |
4018 | And do you think he will see me?" |
4018 | And now will you add one more favor to the rest and tell me what these jewels are and what I am to do with them?" |
4018 | And so you have kept it all this time? |
4018 | And then turning to her younger sister, she said:"Do you not think so, Tamayori?" |
4018 | And what did he find? |
4018 | And what is that that you have hidden in your sleeve?" |
4018 | Are you Urashima Taro?" |
4018 | Are you afraid of the sea? |
4018 | Are you indeed Momotaro? |
4018 | Are you indeed on your way to invade the Island of Devils? |
4018 | As you have never seen the Palace of the Dragon King, wo n''t you avail yourself of this splendid opportunity by coming with me? |
4018 | But what is the strange fear that seizes Urashima as he stands and looks about him? |
4018 | But where are we most likely to find a monkey?" |
4018 | But which was the way? |
4018 | But who are you?" |
4018 | But who was to lead the men? |
4018 | Did n''t you hear what I said? |
4018 | Did they not know that by doing so they plunged the world and all its people into uttermost darkness both day and night? |
4018 | Did you ever see so many crocodiles?" |
4018 | Did you ever see such a large peach in all your life?" |
4018 | Do you dare to stop me?" |
4018 | Do you know how hard a hermit''s life is? |
4018 | Do you know who I am? |
4018 | Do you think that you would ever have the patience or the endurance to live a hermit''s life?" |
4018 | Do you think you can grant it to me?" |
4018 | Do you wish to leave your old father and mother and go away from your old home?" |
4018 | Has he now some disciples?" |
4018 | Have you forgotten what I told you, that although she is your step- mother you must be obedient and loyal to her? |
4018 | He stopped and spoke to them:"Who are you, and why do you weep?" |
4018 | He thought for a little while and then said:"Has n''t your master a baby?" |
4018 | Her father noting her confusion, and her act of hiding something, said in a severe manner:"Daughter, what are you doing here? |
4018 | Horrid little bird, why did it eat all my starch?" |
4018 | How is your life in danger here?" |
4018 | How were they to cross the water and get to the Island of Devils? |
4018 | However long he lived here, life would always be the same, so was it not foolish and wearisome to stay on here forever? |
4018 | In answer to the old man''s inquiry, the wicked neighbor answered haughtily:"Have you come to ask me for your mortar? |
4018 | Is it possible that that kind old woman is really the cannibal goblin? |
4018 | Is it really true, what every one says, that you cut off one of the ogre''s arms? |
4018 | Is n''t it a lovely day?" |
4018 | Is n''t there any one amongst you all who can dance better than this fellow?" |
4018 | Is not this the story of a great hero? |
4018 | Is there nothing to be done?" |
4018 | May I ask you to be so kind as to inquire of all your subjects if any of them have seen a fishing hook lost in the sea?" |
4018 | Momotaro only laughed scornfully:"What is that you are saying? |
4018 | Momotaro soon saw that they were daunted by the sight of the sea, and to try them he spoke loudly and roughly:"Why do you hesitate? |
4018 | Mr. Tortoise, can you tell what that place is we can now see?" |
4018 | Now wo n''t you give me the tortoise? |
4018 | Now, why do you spend so much of your time before this mirror?" |
4018 | Of what use is a monkey like you in battle? |
4018 | One of the older boys answered:"Who cares whether it lives or dies? |
4018 | Or had it transformed itself into this man, and what did the whole thing mean? |
4018 | Perhaps you are his spirit come to revisit your old home?" |
4018 | Please tell me who you are?" |
4018 | She pointed to the reflection seriously:"Do you doubt me still?" |
4018 | Since no one knows, what is the use of shutting myself up and brooding over the matter? |
4018 | So he called her and said anxiously:"Where is Suzume San( Miss Sparrow) today?" |
4018 | So with a loud voice he called to the crocodile, and said:"Oh, Mr. Crocodile, is n''t it a lovely day?" |
4018 | Surely you are more than mortal?" |
4018 | Tell me, do you think the number of your company is greater than mine?" |
4018 | The Skillful Fisher listened in silence to his brother, and for a moment was thoughtful, but at last he answered:"O yes, why not? |
4018 | The badger, hearing the crackle of the burning grass, asked,"What is that?" |
4018 | The brigand raised himself fearfully and said:"Tell me from whence you come, and whom I have the honor of addressing? |
4018 | The name of Momotaro? |
4018 | The old woman pretended not to know at first, and answered:"Your sparrow? |
4018 | The rabbit called out:"Why are you not out on such a beautiful day? |
4018 | The wife was very bewildered and asked her husband:"Why do you wish me to send for the butcher?" |
4018 | Then Otohime Sama began to weep, and said softly and sadly:"Is it not well with you here, Urashima, that you wish to leave me so soon? |
4018 | Then the old woman said:"Do you suspect me of being a spy sent by the ogre?" |
4018 | Then the woodcutter laughed and said:"It does not matter who I am yet, but let us see who has the strongest arm-- this boy or myself?" |
4018 | Was it possible for the monkey to bear the weight of the mortar falling on him from the top of the gate? |
4018 | Was it you, Mr. Hare? |
4018 | What can have happened to them all this time? |
4018 | What do you advise me to do? |
4018 | What do you all say to a wrestling match?" |
4018 | What do you say to this?" |
4018 | What evil spirit has taken possession of your heart that you should be so wicked? |
4018 | What has made you so disobedient and unfaithful?" |
4018 | What hidden thing could be in that room that she did not wish him to see? |
4018 | What is it that you have given me?" |
4018 | What more can you demand?" |
4018 | When he got to the pine- tree he raised his voice and said:"How do you do, Mr. Monkey? |
4018 | Where are they? |
4018 | Where had the dragon gone in such a short space of time? |
4018 | Where has she come from?" |
4018 | Where have my parents gone whom I left here?" |
4018 | Where have you been all the time?" |
4018 | Where have you come from and what is your name?" |
4018 | Where is the haste? |
4018 | Where is the tongue- cut sparrow''s house?" |
4018 | Where? |
4018 | Where?" |
4018 | Wherever did you buy it?" |
4018 | While I am alive it is right for you to remain as you are if you wish to do so, but some day I shall cease to be and who will take care of you then? |
4018 | While these thoughts passed through his mind he had come up to the man on the bridge and now addressed him:"Was it you that called me just now?" |
4018 | Who can have treated you so cruelly?" |
4018 | Who could resist the pleading of so wise and compassionate a judge? |
4018 | Who has ever heard of such a marvelous place? |
4018 | Who is there to tell that I am the murderer? |
4018 | Whose son can he be? |
4018 | Why are you so impatient?" |
4018 | Why do you men want so many boats? |
4018 | Why does he gaze so fixedly at the people that pass him by, and why do they in turn stand and look at him? |
4018 | Why does n''t he come?" |
4018 | Will you allow me to go with you?" |
4018 | Will you be so kind as to take me to your father? |
4018 | Will you give me one of the cakes you are carrying?" |
4018 | Will you not help me and kill my enemy the centipede?" |
4018 | Will you not honor us by telling us who you are?" |
4018 | Will you please pardon my rudeness? |
4018 | Will you refuse to do as I wish?" |
4018 | Will you try hunting in the mountains and I will go and fish in the sea?" |
4018 | Wo n''t that do for you, my boys?" |
4018 | Wo n''t you let me do that for you? |
4018 | Wo n''t you stop and play with me a little while?" |
4018 | Would it not be wise for us to make a change? |
4018 | You have never seen the Sea King''s Palace? |
4018 | You know monkeys do n''t swim?" |
4018 | are you ready?" |
4018 | asked Momotaro; and pushing aside the dog, he spoke to the monkey:"Who are you?" |
4018 | cried the Sea King,"why did you not come in answer to my summons today?" |
4018 | how could you so cruel?" |
4018 | stop, you wicked man, why did you look into the forbidden room?" |
45915 | Why then,I asked,"did you say the earth was round and went round the sun?" |
45915 | Could he bring any influence to bear on the people at large to induce them to submit peacefully to our rule? |
45915 | For what is the good of land without men to live on it? |
45915 | I said:"Now, you know what the Pongyis teach, which do you believe-- what you have learnt here, or in the monastery?" |
45915 | If the old chief chose to hide himself and let the case go against him by default, who was to be appointed in his room? |
45915 | Is not the King''s revenue assessed at so much to the house? |
45915 | It was asked where were our responsibilities to end? |
45915 | The first question is, who is the great man of this village: who has influence, who knows the villagers, their characters and so on? |
45915 | What was the first use made of his new power by Sawlawi? |
45915 | Who were the real chiefs? |
45915 | Why was nothing done? |
45915 | Will they return as abstemious and as temperate as they came? |
43224 | Bad,you say: well, who is not? |
43224 | Verily thy words are rich with song,said the king;"but thou shalt die, and who will utter them? |
43224 | What is it about Whitman that Europe finds so inspiriting? 43224 When will ye cast out hate? |
43224 | Where is Owen Griffiths? |
43224 | ( Winter- star, I think, that is); And who can tell the lovely curve By which you seem to come, then swerve Before you reach the middle- earth? |
43224 | ***** Dear Lady of the lily hand, Do then our stars so clearly shine That we, who do not understand, May mock Pierrot and Columbine? |
43224 | And the wise men and warriors laid hands upon him, and said,"Who art thou, that thou shouldst go in ahead of us to him who sitteth in darkness?" |
43224 | And then these sketches in the mood of Greece? |
43224 | And though my neighbor may deny That faith could be so slight, May call me wrong, yet who am I To think my neighbor right? |
43224 | And what should God Himself acquire From all the aeons''blood and fire? |
43224 | And what''s that clamor at the outer door? |
43224 | And where I found them? |
43224 | And who is there can hold your wing, Or bind you in your mirth, Or win you with a least caress, Or tear, or kiss, or anything-- Insensate happiness? |
43224 | And"Fear we to die, craven, think ye?" |
43224 | But does the morning play Whatever they demand-- Or amber- barred bourrée Or silver saraband? |
43224 | But now that thy praise is caroled aloud by a thousand throats awake, Shall I watch from afar and silently, as under the moon, for thy sake? |
43224 | But, timid child, how could you come alone Across the pathless woods? |
43224 | Did Damascus at her best Hide such beauty in her breast? |
43224 | Did they number my daughters and sons? |
43224 | Et jam summa procul villarum culmina fumant Majoresque cadunt altis de montibus umbrae?" |
43224 | Hark, doth she mourn for thee? |
43224 | Hast thou not sung and said:"Save its own light, none leads the mortal spirit, None ever led"? |
43224 | Have we no true perspective that we applaud mediocrity at home, and look abroad for genius, only to find that it is of American origin? |
43224 | Have_ I_ betrayed her from her home? |
43224 | How did you know the sorrow I was in? |
43224 | How fares the house upon the hill? |
43224 | I have no time for gloom, For gloom what time have I? |
43224 | In A major_ Allegro con brio_ Moon that shone on Babylon, Searching out the gardens there, Could you find a fairer one Than this garden, anywhere? |
43224 | Is it any wonder"the public is indifferent to poetry?" |
43224 | Is it you? |
43224 | Is it you? |
43224 | Let me have faith, is what I pray, And let my faith be strong!-- But who am I, is what I say, To think my neighbor wrong? |
43224 | Must we always accept American genius in this round- about fashion? |
43224 | Nay, what hath she of grief? |
43224 | Never a hope? |
43224 | O strange ecstatic Pool, What unknown country art thou dreaming of, Or temple than this garden lovelier? |
43224 | Oh, who but these, since Adam ceased to be, Have kept their ancient guard about the Tree? |
43224 | Or forms of the mind, an old despair, That there into semblance grew Out of the grief I knew? |
43224 | Profit? |
43224 | See you not the guest? |
43224 | Shall ever any scheme, Her silence, or alarm of written word, Or voiced asseveration, shake my dream? |
43224 | Shall one of us one day the other hail, And no reply be borne upon the air? |
43224 | Shall the blossom wake, the star look down, all night and have naught to see? |
43224 | Shall the reeds that sing by the wind- brushed pool say nothing of thee and me? |
43224 | So how can I but go? |
43224 | So how can I but heed? |
43224 | Some twilight- footed thrush Or finch intent on small adventurings? |
43224 | TO MOZART_ What junipers are these, inlaid With flame of the pomegranate tree? |
43224 | That such devotion is easy of attainment in this clamorous age who can believe? |
43224 | That those forgetful purples keep No veiled, contentious greens and golds? |
43224 | The forest whispers of its shades; of haunts where we have been,-- And where may friends be better made than under God''s green inn? |
43224 | The long, slow rapture and patient anguish of life, Or art thou minded a swifter way? |
43224 | Think ye the Tyrian distance holds The crystal of unquestioned sleep? |
43224 | Though the heart beseech her, And the soul implore, Who is it may reach her-- Safe behind the door Of all woodland lore? |
43224 | Tragedy? |
43224 | Tranced, fanatical, they shrieked and sang,_ Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_ Hallelujah! |
43224 | Was ever dawn so sweet before? |
43224 | Weaponless, smiling he stands( Coward or brave?) |
43224 | Were they a part of the grim death there-- Ragweed, fennel, and rue? |
43224 | What did they profit me, say you, These distant bloodless things I knew? |
43224 | What need that you should dread The monstrous crying of wind? |
43224 | What profit hath the sea Of her deep- throated threnody? |
43224 | What profit hath the sun, who stands Staring on space with idle hands? |
43224 | What was the power that made me open out into this vast mystery like a bud in the forest at midnight? |
43224 | What winged mere delight There hides as in a nest And fashions of its flame Music without a name? |
43224 | When will the master- poet Rise, with vision strong, To mold her manifold music Into a living song? |
43224 | Who else unseen goes by Quick- pattering through the hush? |
43224 | Who hears afar the break of day Before the silvered air Reveals her hooded presence gray, And she, herself, is there? |
43224 | Who may I be? |
43224 | Who was it kept the sword of vision bright? |
43224 | Who was it put the crown upon the dove? |
43224 | Why are the moonlit roses So sweet beyond compare? |
43224 | Why stand you gaping? |
43224 | Yes: who of us shall say When you will come, or where? |
43224 | _ Alice Corbin_ SYMBOLS Who was it built the cradle of wrought gold? |
43224 | _ Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_ Oh, shout Salvation! |
43224 | _ David._ And are you deaf? |
43224 | _ Edith Wyatt_ A SONG OF HAPPINESS Ah Happiness: Who called you"Earandel"? |
43224 | _ Fannie Stearns Davis_ DIRGE FOR A DEAD ADMIRAL What woman but would be Rid of thy mastery, Thou bully of the sea? |
43224 | _ William Butler Yeats_ TO A CHILD DANCING UPON THE SHORE Dance there upon the shore; What need have you to care For wind or water''s roar? |
43224 | _''Tis not more wondrous than the fluff Within the milkweed''s autumn boll._ Earth, shall my sacred essences But sink into thy senseless dust? |
43224 | cried the leaning Sisters, pointing, doing me wrong,"Do you see?" |
43224 | howls one rank,"Think ye"The Hun be our brother?" |
43224 | shall not I find thee soon?" |
43224 | shall not I find thee soon?" |
43224 | the land so fair as now? |
43224 | you said,--"Was that a bell Or a bubbling spring we heard?" |
37257 | All of them? |
37257 | And a lady, good God!--I mean it is unbelievable; but where is your driver? 37257 And can you tell me you have never heard its music-- on the banks of a river under the stars?" |
37257 | And have you settled on a place yet? 37257 And what is to come of all these fine compacts, may one ask?" |
37257 | And you are still Miss Saurin? 37257 And you think it insolence on my part to ask so much?" |
37257 | And you will take me away from Africa? |
37257 | Are n''t we going to get a word with Major Kinsella? |
37257 | Are n''t you going to get up? |
37257 | Are n''t you staying with the Salisbury ladies? |
37257 | Are we likely to be here long? |
37257 | Are we or are we not going to eat anything to- night? |
37257 | Are you not coming on too? |
37257 | Books and sculpture-- they are good, but` has life nothing better to give than these''? |
37257 | But have they gone alone? |
37257 | But the little tin-- the hotel--? |
37257 | But was n''t that a very long time ago? |
37257 | But what about that wonderful secret you were going to tell me, Makupi? |
37257 | But what are you going to do? |
37257 | But what are_ you_ going to do? |
37257 | But what is there_ I_ can do, Judy? 37257 But where can she be gone to?" |
37257 | But why does he wear turquoise ear- rings? |
37257 | But why not do it yourself, Judy? |
37257 | But why so early? |
37257 | But you surely wo n''t try to stop him, Judy? 37257 But-- can''t it be patched up? |
37257 | But-- what have-- what could you have done to offend her? |
37257 | Can the man be an Indian-- or a Hindoo? |
37257 | Deirdre, you would not leave me? |
37257 | Do the Fort George men spend their evenings talking scandal also? |
37257 | Do we think Victory great? 37257 Do you grudge me this work to do for you?" |
37257 | Do you hear? 37257 Do you mean she is married to him?" |
37257 | Do you not know your_ Bones and I_? 37257 Do you not think you should tell the Company and have an expedition sent?" |
37257 | Do you see that big fair man with her? 37257 Do you think it quite fair to discuss other people''s private and rather sacred affairs, Mrs Valetta?" |
37257 | Earn your living, Deirdre? 37257 Even if you had to take his past with it?" |
37257 | Every one in this country is kind, do n''t you think? |
37257 | Has she committed suicide? |
37257 | Have n''t I told you that my heart is buried with Dick? 37257 Have n''t you felt my kisses on your eyelids whenever I looked at you, Deirdre?" |
37257 | Have n''t you observed that there''s no wool on his head where the wool ought to grow? |
37257 | Have you no rooms to let? |
37257 | He is a splendid fellow-- any girl would be proud and happy to get him; but is n''t he--? 37257 How can you say such things?" |
37257 | How can you say that? |
37257 | How dared you ask me to take a name you did not mean to do something with? |
37257 | I should think we had better begin to collect our things and make arrangements, should n''t you, Miss Saurin? |
37257 | I suppose you know you have come to this part of Africa at a very bad time? |
37257 | If I once get out of it, will I ever come back again? 37257 In your what days?" |
37257 | Into the storm? |
37257 | Is Dick all right? |
37257 | Is it not all settled? 37257 Is it that you have changed your mind again-- after all our plans?" |
37257 | Is it true? 37257 Is it true?--do you mean it?" |
37257 | Is n''t it awful? |
37257 | Is she so ill? |
37257 | Is that Mrs Stair, Claude? |
37257 | Is that you, Miss Saurin? 37257 Is this a game, Deirdre?" |
37257 | It is a truly awful country, is n''t it, Constance? |
37257 | Jack up five hundred a year and go and look for a chance living in some new country where I do n''t know the ropes? 37257 Leave it?" |
37257 | Long? 37257 Maurice,"I cried out,"where is Snowie?" |
37257 | My chicks are fast asleep already, and now that we''ve got that curtain up do n''t you think it would be as well if we all went off to bed? |
37257 | My wife? 37257 Nina, was it for this I came down through deadly danger to mind you, instead of going off with all the fellows to have a good time at the front?" |
37257 | Now,said he,"have you got anything to eat or drink? |
37257 | O loved ones lying far away, What word of love can dead lips send? 37257 Of course she always has a dozen men round her,"Judy supplemented in a low voice;"they do so love a_ declassee_ woman, do n''t they?" |
37257 | Oh, and Mrs Grant have you got those biscuits for your little Allie? |
37257 | Oh, do you live in a hut, Judy? 37257 Oh, fair? |
37257 | Oh, very well, since you are so very insistent,she said crossly, and turning to me added sweetly,"Dear Miss Saurin, how is your poor nose? |
37257 | Oh, why? |
37257 | Oh, will it be necessary? |
37257 | Oh, would n''t I? 37257 Oh,_ every_ one? |
37257 | Really? |
37257 | Shall I go now? |
37257 | Snowie? |
37257 | So I hear-- and I want to know how you dare be happy-- you whom Tony loved-- with a knave like Maurice Stair? |
37257 | So white-- like a snowdrop? 37257 That person?" |
37257 | The` gold for silver''creed? |
37257 | To- night? |
37257 | We ca n''t possibly lose sight of them now, can we? |
37257 | Well, but-- forgive me for asking-- what could you have done? |
37257 | Well, let me help, wo n''t you? |
37257 | Well, let''s beat it out together, shall we? 37257 Well? |
37257 | Were n''t you out seeing the patrol go off to- night? |
37257 | What are you doing, driver? |
37257 | What are you going to do, Miss Saurin? |
37257 | What can she expect? |
37257 | What can you know that is not known to every one? 37257 What detained you, Maurice? |
37257 | What do you know? |
37257 | What do you mean, Judy? 37257 What do you mean, Judy?" |
37257 | What do you want-- murderer? |
37257 | What does it depend upon? |
37257 | What has it to do with you or me? 37257 What has made him change his mind about helping you into the Consular service, Maurice?" |
37257 | What has she done? |
37257 | What have you locked yourself in for? 37257 What is it?" |
37257 | What is it? |
37257 | What is the good of pretending to me, Deirdre? 37257 What is the matter?" |
37257 | What is there I can do? |
37257 | What is there I can do? |
37257 | What made her cry out last night-- in your hut?--"Last night?--in my hut? 37257 What now?" |
37257 | What place is that on the right, opposite the the hill? |
37257 | What was it you wanted to say to me? |
37257 | What''s the good, my dear girl? 37257 What?" |
37257 | What? |
37257 | When shall the swan her death- song singing Sleep with wings in darkness furled? 37257 Where are the other ladies?" |
37257 | Where did you leave them, Sergeant? |
37257 | Where is Judy? |
37257 | Where is Miss Saurin? |
37257 | Where is the poor little woman? |
37257 | Where is your passenger, Hendricks-- Miss Saurin? 37257 Where to?" |
37257 | Who ever means those tom- fool things? |
37257 | Who says tinned pineapples? |
37257 | Why are you so white? |
37257 | Why did n''t some one save him from the rocks, I wonder? 37257 Why did you ever wear them?" |
37257 | Why did you marry Maurice Stair? |
37257 | Why did you take his charm, Maurice? |
37257 | Why do you wear them? |
37257 | Why not have them roasted whole in their jackets? |
37257 | Why not? 37257 Why not? |
37257 | Why should I bother about a career, since I am never to have any children to pass my glories on to? |
37257 | Why should I make you uncomfortable? |
37257 | Why should I mind that he loved you best? 37257 Why should I?" |
37257 | Why, have n''t you seen her around the place this morning? 37257 Why, what is likely to happen to them?" |
37257 | Will it really be necessary if I thank you_ now_ for-- for the services you have been so extremely kind as to render me? |
37257 | Will you be good enough to answer my question definitely? 37257 Will you come to my room then?" |
37257 | Will you come? |
37257 | Will you come? |
37257 | Will you get ready, Deirdre? |
37257 | Will you let me? |
37257 | Will you mind if I call at the post- office? |
37257 | Will you tell me that he never asked you to marry him? |
37257 | Would you like to go up into the watch- tower to wait? |
37257 | Yes, and what about that Bass''s ale you and Hunloke keep all to your own cheek? |
37257 | Yes, but if Anthony Kinsella had not given him his chance he would never have broken away from-- Don''t I know? 37257 Yes, but why have you got on your best stars and stripes this afternoon?" |
37257 | Yes-- my kitten? |
37257 | Yes--"When I come back? |
37257 | You are a Catholic? |
37257 | You detest your uncle, why take his money under such an ignominious condition? 37257 You did not many Herriott after all? |
37257 | You know my name? |
37257 | You meant to die--_you_? 37257 You say there is a good hotel here, Hendricks?" |
37257 | You still hold to that plan? |
37257 | You surely do not include me in your hateful scheme to forget Dick-- to disgrace his memory? |
37257 | You think it would have been more pardonable if I had done it secretly? |
37257 | You''ll find them all there-- and Mr Stair, bring my dressing- case will you? 37257 _ Do you think Maurice Stair also croons over dream children?--does he give them the eyes of his love?--have they little hands that fondle him_?" |
37257 | _ Words_!--what do they do for you? 37257 _ You have tried beguiling, and flattering, and scorn, and hate-- is there nothing else left to try_?" |
37257 | ***** Glory of youth glowed in his veins Where is that glory now?" |
37257 | A mother would come to our post- office den and say:"Oh, Miss Saurin, would you come and speak to Jimmy?" |
37257 | After saying"De do?" |
37257 | And I would answer:"Darling, what look? |
37257 | And I would be obliged to confront the criminal wearing the air of a Caesar reproaching his Brutus with a last"_ Et tu_?" |
37257 | And Mrs Valetta said in a curious voice:"Can you possibly mean the Latin Quarter of Paris?" |
37257 | And how to do that? |
37257 | And what good in all my fine resolutions if they so quickly dissolved in the face of disaster? |
37257 | Are you going to get down here, or let Hendricks drive you to my hut?" |
37257 | Besides, what is there to keep one in a place like this?" |
37257 | But I think it would be easier to fall in love with Tony Kinsella than out of it, do n''t you?" |
37257 | But before I went I said to the husband of Nonie Valetta:"Is it true that she is so near death?" |
37257 | But could I help it? |
37257 | But do their impressions matter?" |
37257 | But do you think he would change it? |
37257 | But do you think that crushed him? |
37257 | But look here, Makupi, will you go with me to the Matoppoe and show me the way to the cave of the_ Umlimo_?" |
37257 | But was it possible that I had ever worn silk ones? |
37257 | But what did that matter after all? |
37257 | But what for, good Lord? |
37257 | But what good in that? |
37257 | But what kind of life is this for a woman? |
37257 | But where did you get your experience of lions?" |
37257 | But who ever heard of an Indian or a Hindoo having blue eyes? |
37257 | But why are we going to war with Lobengula?" |
37257 | But why did Maurice stay so long? |
37257 | But why were these men standing out in the inhospitable night? |
37257 | But yet-- but yet, why should he seem so alive to me still in my dreams, and my thoughts? |
37257 | Ca n''t you overlook her offences? |
37257 | Can I or can I not engage a room in this hotel-- and have my meals served to me there?" |
37257 | Colonel, will you have the kit from her horse sent in, please?" |
37257 | Could I after all bear to meet him there, casually, under all those women''s eyes-- Anna Cleeve''s searching glance, Nonie Valetta''s ice- cold stare? |
37257 | Could it be true? |
37257 | Could n''t I do that?" |
37257 | Deaf as I had tried to be, had I not heard everywhere round me hints of his intimacies with women? |
37257 | Dear girl that I love, why will you not let me try and make you happy? |
37257 | Deirdre, have I brought you to such a pass? |
37257 | Did any one ever taste such stuff as these boys make?" |
37257 | Did he speak to you?" |
37257 | Did n''t she come?" |
37257 | Did n''t you speak to your chief about it on the wire this morning as you said you would?" |
37257 | Did not I pray and watch and fight for him?--and afterwards_ watch him drop back_? |
37257 | Did the Irish gift of foresight descend for a moment upon that one of Ireland''s sons, I wonder? |
37257 | Did you buy the whole four quarters in the name of God?" |
37257 | Did you ever hear of anything so horrible? |
37257 | Do n''t you realise yet that I have never for one moment believed those lies about Anthony, that nothing can shake my belief in his honour? |
37257 | Do n''t you think it is time you made up your quarrel with her? |
37257 | Do n''t you think so, Mrs Shand?" |
37257 | Do n''t you understand that it is sacred; that the memory of that man is the only thing I have left? |
37257 | Do n''t_ we_ need defending, I''d like to know?" |
37257 | Do you know that tag of verse--"` In the mud and scum of things Something, something always sings?'' |
37257 | Do you mean it? |
37257 | Do you mean to say, Madam, that you have been here alone in that cart all the evening?" |
37257 | Do you remember what he said to the soldier he found sleeping at his post? |
37257 | Do you think I ca n''t manage two old Mashonaland nags?" |
37257 | Do you think I could ever forget your face?" |
37257 | Do you think you ought to see a doctor, Deirdre? |
37257 | Do you understand that, Maurice? |
37257 | Does n''t the place agree with you? |
37257 | Evidently the idea is to get revenge on all women for his own wife''s infidelities, but it seems incredibly brutal, does n''t it?" |
37257 | God knows if she too read his look aright, but she was the first to speak:"What news of my husband, Mr Burney?" |
37257 | Had Stair''s arm miraculously recovered? |
37257 | Had he not said to me with exceeding bitterness:"You will hear my name blown back upon the breeze of fame-- of a kind"? |
37257 | Handsome, is n''t he? |
37257 | Have n''t you eyes to see and ears to hear anything else but gossip? |
37257 | He merely replied:"I drive Zeederberg''s mules, do n''t I? |
37257 | Her voice came floating back to me:"Do n''t go in without me, will you? |
37257 | How am I to sleep out in this infernal yard?" |
37257 | How can I earn a living?" |
37257 | How can you ask me that? |
37257 | How could Africa keep me? |
37257 | How_ can_ you?" |
37257 | I am glad Tony Kinsella can not see you to- night looking like a white flame among red roses-- What are all those red roses? |
37257 | I asked, and almost choked on the words remembering what Mrs Valetta had said,"Is it true that some woman put them there?" |
37257 | I said at last:"What is there to prevent you from leaving Africa without your uncle''s consent? |
37257 | I said to myself-- why, being so wretched, make another equally so? |
37257 | I suppose you''ll give us some tea, Nonie?" |
37257 | I think you must remember?" |
37257 | I wonder if-- couldn''t we ask her to come in with us?" |
37257 | I''ll go and ask her-- shall I?" |
37257 | I''m so dead tired, are n''t you? |
37257 | I--""How dared you keep it secret? |
37257 | If I were alone-- married and yet alone-- and he should come for me, would I refuse to go? |
37257 | If his wife could be up there, why could n''t I? |
37257 | If the mules were unharnessed how could we reach that most desirable little tin hotel? |
37257 | If we have no_ laager_, What will Col. Blow do? |
37257 | If we learn to tolerate and help and comfort each other-- will not that be something? |
37257 | Instantly the window was opened, and the divine performer upon banjos put out his blond rumpled head:"Wire come, Bleksley?" |
37257 | Is he in the town to- night? |
37257 | Is n''t it awful? |
37257 | Is n''t it insolent of her to come here amongst_ us_?" |
37257 | Is this the end? |
37257 | Is this the end? |
37257 | It is such a trying colour for any one but the very blond, and you are so very brown, are n''t you? |
37257 | It is the Matabele whom we have to fear-- cruel, ferocious brutes--""Did Judy leave no message for me?" |
37257 | Leave our beds?" |
37257 | Lord Gerald Deshon said to me boyishly:"May I sit next to you, Miss Saurin? |
37257 | May I, Deirdre?" |
37257 | My dear girl, what on earth are you talking about? |
37257 | My poor child, how can you delude yourself so?" |
37257 | Now let us get our mattresses and rugs, shall we?" |
37257 | Of course they were still noisy and often naughty-- what child worth its salt is not? |
37257 | Of course you must eat-- what''s the matter? |
37257 | On the third day he wrote a note and sent it to my hut by Sixpence: Would I be so extremely kind and condescending as to grace his table that evening? |
37257 | Say, can that lad be I? |
37257 | See dat place over dere?" |
37257 | See the lights? |
37257 | Shall I come with you?" |
37257 | She would say:"Oh, Deirdre, what puts that look into the back of your eyes?" |
37257 | Some one had the fearful courage to stammer from twisted lips a question:"Who were they? |
37257 | The grey- eyed kitten again addressed me:"Dear Miss Saurin, have you brought any_ poudre de riz_ with you? |
37257 | Then how could Maurice have received a message from Ringe? |
37257 | Then what of Anna Cleeve? |
37257 | They had not lost any Matabele, neither any small- pox; why should they seek for these things? |
37257 | This is all wrong-- what has happened? |
37257 | Very clearly I heard Mrs Valetta''s question, though it was in a soft and entreating voice I had never heard her use before:"Why are you going, Kim? |
37257 | Was Bleksley an open rebel? |
37257 | Was he dreaming, or was he infatuated with one of the women, and simply drivelling about her? |
37257 | Was it possible that Clinton( the man most unwillingly left in charge of our guns) was breaking away after all? |
37257 | Was it these thatched huts that held me-- because we had made them so charming and homelike without and within? |
37257 | Was n''t it horrid of him, Colonel? |
37257 | Was n''t it sweet of him? |
37257 | Was the lure of Africa on me too? |
37257 | Was there a curious inflection on the word_ everyone_, or did I only imagine it? |
37257 | Was this strange brown land of golden days, and crimson and orange eventides, and purple nights, calling to me? |
37257 | Were these the claw- marks that the witch Africa put upon those who dwelt in her bosom? |
37257 | Were these the scars of her fierce embrace? |
37257 | Were they preparing to spring upon me? |
37257 | What are you worrying about, my dear girl? |
37257 | What business could he possibly have on the other side of the river, unless it was to skin the lion? |
37257 | What can I do to earn my living here?" |
37257 | What could I say? |
37257 | What could I say? |
37257 | What could be happening? |
37257 | What could be keeping him? |
37257 | What could have happened? |
37257 | What did anything matter? |
37257 | What did it matter about the country being unsettled if one had a revolver and was an excellent shot? |
37257 | What did it matter what unjust, cruel words she spoke? |
37257 | What did it matter? |
37257 | What did it matter? |
37257 | What did you fall out about, by the way?" |
37257 | What do you mean?" |
37257 | What do you think of that?" |
37257 | What do_ you_ think, Fan?" |
37257 | What does one do in_ laager_?" |
37257 | What excuse had I to knock at his door in the middle of the night? |
37257 | What if I am ginning against him? |
37257 | What if in my selfishness and pride I am wickedly unjust to him? |
37257 | What is the use of worrying about the menu? |
37257 | What makes you think you will be amused up here?" |
37257 | What on earth is the matter?" |
37257 | What right had I to hate them if, hearing that I was a traitor to their cause, they looked sideways at me? |
37257 | What subtle note of regret had my ears caught in the low spoken words? |
37257 | What was Africa to me or I to Africa? |
37257 | What was I waiting for so passionately? |
37257 | What was going on in the silent brilliantly lighted huts? |
37257 | What was it? |
37257 | What was it? |
37257 | What was the use of struggling against the witch who had me in her toils and never meant to let me go? |
37257 | What was the use, I demanded, of sticking in Johannesburg and all the other stupid imitation towns and imagining we were seeing_ real_ Africa? |
37257 | What was to save their own husbands from my lures and wiles when they came back? |
37257 | What will be the use of the Victoria Cross to me, I''d like to know, if I lose him?" |
37257 | What you asking me about the scarlet mail- bag for? |
37257 | What''s a chipped arm and a game leg if they''re not the honours of war? |
37257 | What''s the use of rushing? |
37257 | What?" |
37257 | When will Heaven its sweet bell ringing Call my spirit from this stormy world?" |
37257 | Where did I get them? |
37257 | Where do these things go? |
37257 | Where is our English chivalry? |
37257 | Where is the box of sharks you had, Mrs Marriott?" |
37257 | Where was it? |
37257 | Who is he, Mrs Marriott?" |
37257 | Why could n''t you have found a moment to come and see Anna and me?" |
37257 | Why did I understand? |
37257 | Why do n''t you take it off?" |
37257 | Why do you say that to me?" |
37257 | Why had he got up so early and finished his breakfast before-- What was that scratch? |
37257 | Why had he let my hands fall so quickly? |
37257 | Why had nothing been found to identify him? |
37257 | Why not become an authority on them, a master of the native tongue as no other man in this country is? |
37257 | Why not, indeed?" |
37257 | Why was I not glad to be escaping at last from the claw of the witch? |
37257 | Will you come in? |
37257 | Will you come with me to search?" |
37257 | Will you let me write it for you and send it in while you''re away?" |
37257 | Wo n''t you come in with Mrs Grant and Mrs Shannon and me? |
37257 | Would it be troubling you too much to ask for an explanation of your charming behaviour?" |
37257 | Would it keep me as he had said it always kept people who felt the lure and heard the call? |
37257 | Would she pretend to be shocked? |
37257 | Wretched, is n''t it?" |
37257 | Yet why should dust and fatigue and a stubbly beard so terribly alter a man as he was altered? |
37257 | You are a great friend of Miss Saurin''s brother, are n''t you, Gerry?" |
37257 | You are going to give yourself to me at last-- at last?" |
37257 | You have said so yourself now, have n''t you?" |
37257 | You have shown yourself worthy of any woman''s love, Maurice, and who am I--?" |
37257 | You surely can not_ love_ him?" |
37257 | You think that is what a man marries a beautiful girl like you for? |
37257 | You were a good deal together this evening, were n''t you? |
37257 | _ Deirdre Saurin_?" |
37257 | _ He_ had not lost any Matabele_ impis_, so why should he go and search for them? |
37257 | _ Now_, are you sorry you''ve come?" |
37257 | and Mrs Valetta? |
37257 | how can you? |
37257 | how could you come? |
37257 | how dared you? |
37257 | if you_ must_ marry again choose some one else; there are lots of nice men here; why should you take one who is not even a gentleman? |
37257 | is this goat going to last for ever?" |
37257 | perhaps you can understand?" |
37257 | was it all true? |
37257 | well, what was the use of trying to make her feel what she could never feel? |
37257 | what kind of behaviour is this? |
37257 | what on earth are you doing?" |
37257 | what time have I for teaching a child? |
37257 | why had I not embraced my fate before this hour in which I knew that Anthony still dreamed of me behind the hills? |
37257 | will some of you fellows kill those dogs?--choke''em-- feed''em do anything, only let me sleep..._ How_ many do you say? |
37257 | you surely would n''t sell the Matabeleland property that Dick practically paid for with his life?" |
44208 | Anything more? |
44208 | Are n''t they splendid together-- the big boys and girls of California?... 44208 But will He come to them at the last, Lange?... |
44208 | Did he fight it out with himself? |
44208 | Did you ever feel that you could live as long as you pleased? |
44208 | Do you fear anything? |
44208 | Do you think she would want to see you now?... 44208 Does he mind strangers?" |
44208 | Does she love me? |
44208 | Going back? |
44208 | Halt----I yelled to the faces of the slipping lines...."Halt-- and do n''t you see you''re running from your own Comrades?... |
44208 | Has nothing come? |
44208 | Have you been thinking about it? |
44208 | His friend? |
44208 | How does he look? |
44208 | I wanted nothing for me-- nothing but----"But what? |
44208 | It''s a kind of challenge to a war- stricken world, is n''t it? |
44208 | Not yet?... 44208 Nothing more?" |
44208 | That path is not interesting, is it? |
44208 | Was there more? |
44208 | What am I? |
44208 | What did he say? |
44208 | What did she say to that? |
44208 | What do you do when your soul leaves you? |
44208 | What does it feel like, Tom? |
44208 | What has he done now? |
44208 | What helped him? |
44208 | Will she see me? |
44208 | You came from him? |
44208 | ***** LETTER TO THE ABBOT( from California) DEAR OLD WIFE: How are you coming? |
44208 | A composite? |
44208 | An abstraction? |
44208 | And I saw, too, the white look of one who has conquered fear, but the weariness of her eyes was like the presence of death...."Where is he?" |
44208 | And Steve? |
44208 | And friends? |
44208 | At last I asked,"Tom, what did you find so interesting in that cheap business?" |
44208 | Can we, who realise this as a conscious and direct principle, do any less? |
44208 | Did you ever see a slaughter of drones? |
44208 | Do n''t it sound good? |
44208 | Do n''t you see the joy, the peace, the grandeur in owning a scar, in being bled white? |
44208 | Do you know that Masefield was a bartender? |
44208 | Do you want love? |
44208 | Does it not awaken in you something of the old days we spent so close to the soil? |
44208 | Dreve only gives two or three days a week to business affairs, though he has been a great worker----""He''s up there now?" |
44208 | Have you ever asked yourself what physical passion is? |
44208 | He caught my hands, whispering:"You have it, too?" |
44208 | He seemed to ask if I had not done this already-- had not yet put all boyish and merely temporal things away? |
44208 | Hear the noise?" |
44208 | Her face was calm as if she had gazed from a porch...."Did you feel any fear?" |
44208 | How could one hold a mad destroying passion for one in whom the parent child and master are equally dominant? |
44208 | How is wounderful Mary? |
44208 | How is your Sisity- list coming? |
44208 | How is your type mill pumping these days? |
44208 | How much is revealed in that? |
44208 | How was your morning? |
44208 | I thanked him, and added,"Tell me-- he means a lot to you, does n''t he?" |
44208 | I wonder if you can understand? |
44208 | Listen deep-- do you fear anything?... |
44208 | Not yet?" |
44208 | Radiant dusk? |
44208 | She said this was but a last ordeal, hardest of all for Builders, who have ceased to kill....""Where did you see her?" |
44208 | Suppose I am a madman----?" |
44208 | The Master smiled and said:"Why do you not sleep?" |
44208 | The age of the apprentices will come back-- with a new dimension added----""Switzerland or dream?" |
44208 | The publisher wrote,"Yes, but what is the New Race?" |
44208 | The war teaches this lesson well, but wo n''t it be great when everybody is singing over his golden shuttle and laughing? |
44208 | Then what should happen? |
44208 | There''s a big wooden Cross in the room where they sleep-- the child led me to it-- a mat of grass before it,_ kusa_ grass, who knows?... |
44208 | These will not draw forth your best and greatest.... You pass a thousand faces in the town, and are suddenly torn by one? |
44208 | To- day holy hot sunlight and lilac bloom-- could there be a more wonderful day than that? |
44208 | What would happen if you carried me other than my will? |
44208 | What''s the brand of smoke it gives up-- poetry, action, lumps of granite or ladles of ocean? |
44208 | When they feel their death- wounds-- the blood sliding out, warm and silent-- the cold coming in-- will they hold to what I said? |
44208 | When will you be out here? |
44208 | Why should anything hurt him?... |
44208 | Will He be there for them?" |
44208 | Will He show His face-- so they will believe?... |
44208 | Will you go to her for me?" |
44208 | Wo n''t it be great when the chastened New Race springs up, like green shoots at the passing of winter? |
44208 | You would let us fail and dribble away and slink into the Marshes-- you, her lover, whom she calls Boy and Strongheart----"*****"What did she say?" |
40435 | Disgraced in the opinion of every one,replies Sokrates? |
40435 | Scais- tu au moins ce que c''est que la matière? 40435 What are the conditions under which subordinates will cheerfully obey their commanders?" |
40435 | Wheat is the Holy, what is the Unholy? 40435 Why are you so curious to know what_ I myself_ have determined on the point? |
40435 | ( said he) have none of us before your time talked about the Good and the Just? |
40435 | 38- 39:--"The question is often asked, and properly so, in regard to any supposed moral standard, What is its sanction? |
40435 | After the decease of these last- mentioned authors, who can say what became of their MSS.? |
40435 | Again, as to predicates-- when you say,_ The man runs_, or_ The man is good_, what do you mean by the predicate_ runs_, or is_ good_? |
40435 | And if, adopting any one of them, we reject the others, upon what grounds are we to justify our preference? |
40435 | Another argument of Zeno is to the following effect:--"Does a grain of millet, when dropped upon the floor, make sound? |
40435 | Are not you aware that the hemlock of Sokrates is in store for_ you_ also?" |
40435 | Are there no limits( as Hobbes is so much denounced for maintaining)? |
40435 | Are these virtues teachable? |
40435 | Are three grains few, and four_ many_?--or, where will you draw the line between Few and Many? |
40435 | As we know little about Plato except from his works, the first question to be decided is, Which_ are_ his real works? |
40435 | But can we do this with our present scanty information? |
40435 | But if no portion of its continuity can be thus present, how can Time possibly be present, to which such continuity is essential?" |
40435 | But is all that is just necessarily holy? |
40435 | But the question asked was-- What is Holiness generally? |
40435 | But what are those great works which the Gods bring about by our agency? |
40435 | But what is this_ true determinately_, but true_ upon our knowledge_ or_ evidently true_? |
40435 | But what other name was so natural or likely for Anaxagoras himself to choose?] |
40435 | But what part? |
40435 | Did he publish any of them during the lifetime of Sokrates? |
40435 | Do you imagine, that the Good is one thing, and the Beautiful another? |
40435 | Do you not know that all things are good and beautiful in relation to the same purpose? |
40435 | Eh bien( dit le Sirien), cette chose qui te paroît être divisible, pésante, et grise, me dirois tu bien ce que c''est? |
40435 | Erdmann,"Comment seroit il possible qu''aucune chose existât, si l''être même, ipsum Esse, n''avoit l''existence? |
40435 | He may have done this: but how are we to prove it? |
40435 | How can you properly say( he argues) that you_ know_ the compound AB, when you know neither A nor B separately? |
40435 | How did he get his reputation?] |
40435 | How happens it that no despot has ever yet done this? |
40435 | How much does it attenuate the value of his intentions, as proofs of an internal philosophical sequence? |
40435 | How therefore can it be present at all in any of them? |
40435 | How? |
40435 | How? |
40435 | If that were so( Ast argues), how can we explain the fact, that in most of the dialogues there is no philosophical result at all? |
40435 | If you speak of Man in general( he said), what, or whom, do you mean? |
40435 | In appreciating a philosopher, it is usual to ask, What authoritative creed has he proclaimed, for disciples to swear allegiance to? |
40435 | In other words, how can the One be Many, and how can the Many be One? |
40435 | In regard to the question, Which were Plato''s genuine works? |
40435 | In what manner does ministration, called_ holiness_, benefit or improve the Gods? |
40435 | In what then does its essence consist? |
40435 | In what then does its essence consist? |
40435 | Is it possible that any one can have preferred an indictment against you? |
40435 | Is the proceeding recommended just or unjust? |
40435 | Is the proceeding recommended just or unjust? |
40435 | It is that branch which concerns ministration by men to the Gods 447 Ministration to the Gods? |
40435 | Krobylus, one of the accusers, said to him,"Are_ you_ come to plead on behalf of another? |
40435 | Mais qu''est ce donc_ qu''une pleurésie_? |
40435 | Moreover, at the very outset of the enquiry, we have to ask, At what period of life did Plato begin to publish his dialogues? |
40435 | Next, by what arguments has he enforced or made them good? |
40435 | No.--Does a bushel of millet make sound under the same circumstances? |
40435 | O(/ti e)kei= noi me\n ta\ sapra\ tau= ta a)po\ dogma/ tôn lalou= sin? |
40435 | Or do you suppose that we can not follow out what each of them is, and that we pronounce the words as empty and unmeaning sounds? |
40435 | Or does the earliest of them date from a time after the death of Sokrates? |
40435 | Or is it holy for this reason, because they do love it? |
40435 | Ou)dei\s ê(mô= n pro\ sou= e)/legen a)gatho\n ê)\ di/ kaion? |
40435 | Qu''est- ce que la loi de la pesanteur? |
40435 | Quanti Platonis vel libros novêre vel nomen? |
40435 | Qui a démontré qu''il sera demain jour, et que nous mourrons-- et qu''y a- t- il de plus cru? |
40435 | Quid ergo? |
40435 | Quotusquisque nunc Aristotelem legit? |
40435 | Si singulas disciplinas percipere magnum est, quanto majus omnes? |
40435 | Sokrates asks him-- What is Holiness? |
40435 | Sokrates asks him-- What is Holiness?] |
40435 | Tell me what is the general constituent feature of_ Holiness_? |
40435 | Tell me-- to what end does the work conduce? |
40435 | That we are gainers by what they give, is clear enough; but what do they gain on their side? |
40435 | The first of the two is an obscure and imperfect reply to the great Sokratic problem-- What is Justice? |
40435 | The latter asked Sokrates,"Do you know anything good?" |
40435 | The like question about the hairs on a man''s head-- How many must he lose before he can be said to have only a few, or to be bald?] |
40435 | The question asked was, not What are the antecedent conditions or causes of rain, thunder, or earthquakes, but Who rains and thunders? |
40435 | The questions about which you and I and other men quarrel are, What is just or unjust, honourable or base, good or evil? |
40435 | This antithesis appears as an answer when we put the question-- What is the ultimate authority? |
40435 | This is what gives rise to the question-- What is the essential scheme for the Individual? |
40435 | Ti/ ga\r le/ gei? |
40435 | To the Sokratic question, What is the Bonum? |
40435 | To what did the dialogues composed by the first Aristippus refer? |
40435 | To what ought he to conform-- what shall he aim at? |
40435 | To what purpose? |
40435 | To what purpose? |
40435 | To\ poi= on dê/? |
40435 | Tu vois quelques attributs: mais le fond de la chose, le connois tu? |
40435 | Ubi apud antiquiores latuit amor iste investigandæ veritatis?" |
40435 | Was he right in disobeying? |
40435 | Were they not also in the library at the time when Kallimachus compiled his tables? |
40435 | What are the motives to obey it? |
40435 | What brings you here, Sokrates( asks Euthyphron), away from your usual haunts? |
40435 | What is Injustice? |
40435 | What is a law? |
40435 | What is justice? |
40435 | What is that common essence, or same character, which belongs to and distinguishes all holy or pious acts? |
40435 | What is that end which the Gods accomplish, through our agency as workmen? |
40435 | What is that specific property, by the common possession of which all holy things are entitled to be called holy? |
40435 | What is the Honourable and the Base? |
40435 | What is the Just and the Unjust? |
40435 | What number of grains make a heap-- or are many? |
40435 | What positive system, or positive truths previously unknown or unproved, has he established? |
40435 | Whence does it derive its binding force? |
40435 | Where are we to find a trustworthy Platonic Canon? |
40435 | Where was any certain permanent custody provided for them? |
40435 | Where, however, is the security that the undertaking would produce three oboli a day to each subscriber?" |
40435 | Which was in the right here? |
40435 | Who produces earthquakes? |
40435 | Why then should any one wish to read written reports of his conversations? |
40435 | Xenophon accordingly went to Delphi: but instead of asking the question broadly--"Shall I go, or shall I decline to go?" |
40435 | Yes.--Is there not a determinate proportion between the bushel and the grain? |
40435 | [ 119] Which of them are we to follow? |
40435 | [ 133] How can the Form( Man, White, Good,& c.) be present at one and the same time in many distinct individuals? |
40435 | [ 149]--Which of the two do you consider to live most pleasantly, the rulers or the ruled? |
40435 | [ 41] Otherwise, why do you not throw up your sceptre? |
40435 | [ 44] What is that something-- the common essence or idea? |
40435 | [ 49] Tell me, what is the characteristic essence of piety as well as impiety?" |
40435 | [ Footnote 2: Aristophanes, Nubes, 368,[ Greek: A)lla\ ti/ s u(/ei?] |
40435 | [ Footnote 70: Plato, Parmenidês, p. 156 D- E.[ Greek: Po/ t''ou)=n, metaba/ llei? |
40435 | [ Greek: A)=r''ou)=n e)sti/ to\ a)/topon tou= to, e)n ô)=| to/ t''a)\n ei)/ê o(/te metaba/ llei? |
40435 | [ Greek: Dia\ ti/ ou)=n e)kei= noi( oi( polloi\, oi( i)diô= tai) u(mô= n( tôn philoso/ phôn) i)schuro/ teroi? |
40435 | [ Greek: Po/ te ga\r e)n ê(mi= n au)toi= s ou)k e)/stin o( tha/ natos? |
40435 | [ Greek: Pô= s ô)= Zê/ nôn, tou= to le/ geis? |
40435 | [ Greek: Ti/ de\ oi( polue/ laioi? |
40435 | [ Greek: Ti/ ou)=n? |
40435 | [ Greek: Ti/ s ou)=n pot''e)sti\ te/ chnê tê= s paraskeuê= s tou= mêde\n a)dikei= sthai ê)\ ô(s o)li/ gista? |
40435 | [ Greek: a)/xion ga\r pa= n tô= n o)/ntôn pou= ei)=nai; ei) de\ o( to/ pos tô= n o)/ntôn, pou= a)\n ei)/ê?]] |
40435 | [ Greek: kai\ tou= to pô= s ou)k a)mathi/ a e)sti\n au)tê\ ê( e)ponei/ distos, ê( tou= oi)/esthai ei)de/ nai a(\ ou)k oi)=den?]] |
40435 | [ Greek: tau= ta ga\r e)gô\ a)kou/ sas e)nethumou/ mên ou(tôsi/, Ti/ pote le/ gei o( theo\s kai\ ti/ pote ai)ni/ ttetai? |
40435 | [ Greek: ti/ ga\r kai\ phê/ somen, oi(/ ge kai\ au)toi\ o(mologou= men peri\ au)tô= n mêde\n ei)de/ nai?]] |
40435 | [ Greek: to\ o)rtha\ doxa/ zein kai\ a)/neu tou= e)/chein lo/ gon dou= nai, ou)k oi)=sth''o(/ti ou)/te e)pi/ stasthai e)stin? |
40435 | [ Greek: tou/ tôn tô= n pollô= n kalô= n mô= n ti e)/stin, o( ou)k ai)schro\n phanê/ setai? |
40435 | [ Greek: ê)\ a)rkei= u(mi= n to\ ê(de/ ôs katabiô= nai to\n bi/ on a)/neu lupô= n? |
40435 | [ Side- note: Ministration to the Gods? |
40435 | [ Side- note: When did Plato begin to compose? |
40435 | ]\_ Sokr._--What sort of ministration? |
40435 | _ Sokr._--Do the Gods love the holy, because it_ is_ holy? |
40435 | _ Sokr._--Then it appears that the holy is what the Gods love? |
40435 | _ Which_ Dionysius is meant?--the elder or the younger? |
40435 | _ istius vitii num nostra culpa est_? |
40435 | a)/logon ga\r pra= gma pô= s a)\n ei)/ê e)pistê/ mê?] |
40435 | and if so, which? |
40435 | c. 14, p. 26 D.[ Greek: ô)= thauma/ sie Me/ lête, i(na ti/ tau= ta le/ geis? |
40435 | c. 4, p. 20 B- C.[ Greek: ti/ s tê= s toiau/ tês a)retê= s, tê= s a)nthrôpi/ nês te kai\ politikê= s, e)pistê/ môn e)sti/ n? |
40435 | e)/ti de\ e(/na e)o/ nta to\n Ê(rakle/ a, kai\ e)/ti a)/nthrôpon, ô(s dê/ phasi, kô= s phu/ sin e)/chei polla\s muria/ das phoneu= sai? |
40435 | e)gô\ ga\r dê\ ou)/te me/ ga ou)/te smikro\n xu/ noida e)mautô=| sopho\s ô)/n; ti/ ou)=n pote le/ gei pha/ skôn e)me\ sophô/ taton ei)=nai? |
40435 | kai\ nê\ Di/ a pa/ lin le/ ontos kai\ kuno\s to\ tre/ chein, katêgorou= men? |
40435 | kai\ tô= n dikai/ ôn, o(\ ou)k a)/dikon? |
40435 | kai\ tô= n o(si/ ôn, o(\ ou)k a)no/ sion?] |
40435 | or how is it to be distinguished from other parts or branches of the just? |
40435 | or more specifically, What is the source of its obligation? |
40435 | or that Sokrates in the Philêbus and Republic is older than in the Kratylus or Gorgias? |
40435 | ou)de\ ê(/lion ou)de\ selê/ nên a)/ra nomi/ zô theou\s ei)=nai, ô(/sper oi( a)/lloi a)/nthrôpoi?]] |
40435 | the four obedient citizens, or the one disobedient? |
40435 | ti/ de\ oi( gnô/ mê| kai\ a)rguri/ ô| duna/ menoi chrêmati/ zesthai? |
40435 | ti/ de\ oi( polupro/ batoi? |
40435 | what are temperance and courage? |
40435 | what are the limits of obedience to the laws? |
40435 | what is injustice? |
40435 | what is law, lawlessness, democracy, aristocracy? |
40435 | what is the government of mankind, and the attributes which qualify any one for exercising such government? |
40435 | what number are few? |
40435 | where does the right of final decision reside, on problems and disputes ethical, political, æsthetical? |
40435 | ê)\ mê\ parakolouthou= ntes ti/ e)sti tou/ tôn e(/kaston, a)sê/ môs kai\ kenô= s e)phtheggo/ metha ta\s phôna/ s?] |
42105 | ''"And on Mondays?" |
42105 | ''"On Fridays?" |
42105 | ''After all,''the American demanded,''what is it but a ditch compared with the Missouri or the Mississippi?'' |
42105 | ''And what on earth is the good of an antimacassar, I should like to know?'' |
42105 | ''And what was this for?'' |
42105 | ''Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?'' |
42105 | ''Hullo, sonny,''I exclaimed,''what''s the matter?'' |
42105 | ''Then what on earth are you crying for?'' |
42105 | ''Well, strawberries and cream, then?'' |
42105 | ''What have you to do, Wroxie?'' |
42105 | ''What is it all about, my boy?'' |
42105 | ''What is it,''he asked,''which is present in Dante''s face and absent from Goethe''s?'' |
42105 | ''What on earth was the minister talking about?'' |
42105 | ''Whatever are you making now, dear?'' |
42105 | ''Why, an antimacassar, George, to be sure; ca n''t you see?'' |
42105 | ''Why, whatever''s the matter, Jack? |
42105 | ''Will it really, dad; honour bright?'' |
42105 | A couple of sailors, whose ship had struck the cruel reefs out yonder, and whose bodies were tossed up here by the pitiless waves? |
42105 | A pair of lovers trapped by the treacherous tide? |
42105 | Am I sorry? |
42105 | Am I therefore to be angry when the postman enters the gate, and accept his letters with a grunt? |
42105 | Am not I too a manuscript, and shall I not also fall into the Editor''s hands? |
42105 | An illogical lady is a very lovable affair; but who ever fell in love with a syllogism? |
42105 | And does not Job tell us that Nothing is the foundation of everything? |
42105 | And if clouds and darkness are round about Him, is it any wonder that His vision is obscure? |
42105 | And if this be so with other words, how could the greatest, grandest, holiest word of all have been expressed except in the very selfsame way? |
42105 | And in answer to that''What then?'' |
42105 | And is it not illumined by the Sun of Righteousness--''Who leads all wanderers safe through every way''? |
42105 | And is it not true that the temptations that work havoc in later life are as a rule unalluring, hideous, and difficult to understand? |
42105 | And no other house is possible for a creature of the woods but a cabin, is it? |
42105 | And the other question is this: What shall we do when our illusions leave us? |
42105 | And what do you say to Mr. Franklin answering, from the Italian point of view,"_ We have got three things left, sir-- Love, Music, and Salad_"''? |
42105 | And what does that mean? |
42105 | And why not? |
42105 | And why were we so eager to stay until the second tree was down? |
42105 | And yet, and yet; what if the darkness that envelops Him be the darkness of the camera- obscura? |
42105 | And, if so, I wonder if I can find it? |
42105 | At the same instant Varney called in at the window,''Is the bird caught? |
42105 | Bubbles; bubbles; bubbles; and yet what would the world be without bubbles? |
42105 | But did He design to destroy her faith? |
42105 | But my dream or dreams; when did they come? |
42105 | But one day the manager said,''Would you care to see the power- house?'' |
42105 | But what can he make of even such small words? |
42105 | But who would dare to take the sonnet to pieces and say how much is Dorothy''s, and how much is William''s? |
42105 | By what magic have those tiny tin campaigners the power to exorcise the agonies of toothache? |
42105 | Can good Master Gurnall, with all his hundred and fifty closely printed pages on the subject, help us to understand what Paul and Bunyan meant? |
42105 | Could anything be more repelling? |
42105 | Could he not have bequeathed to me the fruits of his patient and hard- won victories? |
42105 | Did Dante intend to set forth no subtle secret by placing the three beasts in that order? |
42105 | Did God mean women to come into the world, to feel as I have felt, to long as I have longed, and then, after all, to die as I must die? |
42105 | Did the great trees know that, as the white men exterminated the black men, so the white men would exterminate_ them_? |
42105 | Did these men mean to be drunkards when first they entered the gaily lit bar- room? |
42105 | Did they feel that the coming of those strange vessels up the bay sealed their own doom? |
42105 | Did they mean that in Him the sunshine of all the ages will again salute us? |
42105 | Did they mean that, when we see Him as He is, all the holiest and sweetest and most precious treasure of the Past will be more our own? |
42105 | First of all, what is a vacuum? |
42105 | For, after all, of what earthly use are Love and Music unless they lead to Salad? |
42105 | Had all his knowledge perished with him? |
42105 | Has it nothing to teach me? |
42105 | Have men or women done most for the world? |
42105 | Have they no history, these shoes of mine? |
42105 | How can I reconcile hearts that are alienated if, between either of those hearts and mine, there exists some embarrassing estrangement? |
42105 | How could he bring himself to offend people from whom he had received nothing but kindness? |
42105 | How could she produce an expression adequate to that wonderful impression? |
42105 | How could they believe in the love of God after this? |
42105 | How long had these trees stood here, these two giants that had been in a few moments reduced to humiliating horizontality? |
42105 | How was it done? |
42105 | I am often asked, What is the unpardonable sin? |
42105 | I spoke a moment ago of the child- manuscript and the snake- manuscript; but what about myself? |
42105 | I wonder if I can trace it in my journal? |
42105 | I wonder if I entered it in my journal? |
42105 | I wonder if I shall ever dream of my bridegroom again? |
42105 | If all the bubbles that had ever been blown were with us still, who to- day would want to blow bubbles? |
42105 | If clouds and darkness are round about Him, is it any wonder that He acts so strangely? |
42105 | If clouds and darkness are round about Him, is it any wonder that He rejects the child- manuscript and accepts the snake- manuscript? |
42105 | If illusions are so good, why do they fail us? |
42105 | In a way, it is pleasant and exhilarating, or why was Mr. Gladstone so fond of the exercise? |
42105 | Is it enough for a preacher to preach the truth? |
42105 | Is it that rivers have, in a greater degree than almost any other inanimate object, the appearance of animation, and something resembling character? |
42105 | Is n''t it silly? |
42105 | Is song or speech the most effective evangelistic agency? |
42105 | Is the deed done?'' |
42105 | Is the husband or is the wife most essential to the home? |
42105 | It is easy enough to destroy these monarchs of the bush, but who can restore them to their former grandeur? |
42105 | Jane Barlow, in her_ Bogland Studies_, makes one of her characters say: What use is one''s life widout chances? |
42105 | Jane Champion asks Garth Dalmain why he does not marry? |
42105 | Love is a lovely thing, or why should we be so fond of love- stories? |
42105 | Now how did that divine element come into Dante''s life? |
42105 | Now what is this horror of the darkness? |
42105 | Now what was that divine note? |
42105 | Now, when I come to think of it, is it any wonder that the days of auld lang syne, and the old familiar faces, should all come back in the flames? |
42105 | Plays-- but at what? |
42105 | Said I not truly that love is never utilitarian? |
42105 | Shall I be told that this is high doctrine, and hard to bear, this doctrine of the lovableness of irregularity? |
42105 | She went to bed singing; why not get up singing? |
42105 | The child- manuscript is rejected; it is thrown away; have we not seen it, like a crumpled poem, in the editor''s waste- paper basket? |
42105 | The linoleum is both pretty and useful; what more can I want? |
42105 | The truth was that I was thinking about him, yet how could I tell them? |
42105 | Then who is so happy as the rose- grower with the new catalogues before him?'' |
42105 | Two Maoris finishing, among the lonely dunes, their last fierce fatal feud? |
42105 | Two travellers, hopelessly lost, who threw themselves down here to die? |
42105 | V A PHILOSOPHY OF FANCY- WORK''"What course of lectures are you attending now, ma''am?" |
42105 | V And what about Love? |
42105 | Was he alive or was he dead? |
42105 | Was he waking or was he dreaming? |
42105 | Was it not for this reason that the fire came to be regarded for centuries as the natural emblem of domestic felicity? |
42105 | Was it one dream, or was it several? |
42105 | Was that, consciously or subconsciously, at the back of Mr. Franklin''s mind when he put Music next to Love? |
42105 | What about Brother Lawrence, whose_ Practice of the Presence of God_ has become one of the Church''s classics? |
42105 | What about all the blots, and the smudges, and the erasures, and the alterations? |
42105 | What are the shoes that never wear out? |
42105 | What are you crying for?'' |
42105 | What did they mean, those dreams that came to me so long ago? |
42105 | What do the feet here mentioned import? |
42105 | What girl now studies the words with which she shall address her lover, or seeks to charm him with grace of diction?'' |
42105 | What grace is intended by that''preparation of the gospel of peace''which is here compared to a shoe and fitted to these feet? |
42105 | What is Nothing? |
42105 | What is it to have your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace? |
42105 | What is meant by peace? |
42105 | What is meant by the gospel? |
42105 | What is more exhilarating or satisfying than an evening spent round a good fire with a few kindred spirits in whose company one is perfectly at home? |
42105 | What is this but the editor''s sanctum? |
42105 | What more, I wondered, could any woman want to fill her cup up to the brim? |
42105 | What secret instinct is it that makes the delivery of a blow with axe or hammer so exhilarating?'' |
42105 | What then? |
42105 | What was it that gave up the life so dear to it that I might be softly and comfortably shod? |
42105 | What was it that kept him from bounding off into the forest and shaking the dust of civilization from his paws for ever? |
42105 | When Jack cures his toothache with a box of soldiers, who knows what world- shaking evolutions are afoot? |
42105 | When the doll turns out to be sawdust and rag, when the youthful oracle speaks falsely, when the bubble bursts, what then? |
42105 | Whence came they? |
42105 | Where, oh, where is the River?'' |
42105 | Where, oh, where is the River?'' |
42105 | Wherein does it differ from blindness? |
42105 | Which do you prefer-- summer or winter? |
42105 | Who can forget the old lama and his long, long search for the River? |
42105 | Who could help recalling the adventure of Coleridge''s''Ancient Mariner''? |
42105 | Who could suppose that the prison doors had been opened by angel''s hands, only that the prisoner might be caught like a rat in a trap outside? |
42105 | Who has intellect sufficiently clear, and fingers sufficiently deft, to essay the untying of the Gordian knot? |
42105 | Who were they, I wonder, these two bony companions of mine? |
42105 | Why are our bubbles permitted to burst? |
42105 | Why did insanity overtake these solitary men? |
42105 | Why do our yesterdays all spring to new and glorious life when the flickering flames are lighting up our faces? |
42105 | Why does it alone, among my household goods and chattels, kindle no warmth within my soul? |
42105 | Why is it so pleasant to strike? |
42105 | Why is it? |
42105 | Why is peace attributed to the gospel? |
42105 | Why is there music in the grove and the forest? |
42105 | Why should he, in his pilgrim progress, be so storm- beaten and persecuted, whilst the people who abandoned themselves to folly enjoyed unbroken ease? |
42105 | Why was it wild and trackless? |
42105 | Will they all be seen when I appear,_ when I appear_? |
42105 | Without doubt it is safe, for no one beyond ourselves can decipher it; but shall_ we_ always be able to decipher it-- or, I ought to say,_ will she_?" |
42105 | Worldly Wiseman knew a short cut, why not take it? |
42105 | Yes, to these, and to how much else? |
42105 | Yet why? |
42105 | or"Where''s the old place I loved?" |
42105 | or"Who''s been building here?" |
46330 | 500,000(?) |
46330 | 5[ Greek: g.] Is Scientific Treatment_ appropriate_ to Art? |
46330 | 83([ Greek: g]) Some Arts can not be called Imitative 85(_ b_)_ Humani nihii_--? |
46330 | 87(_ c_) Mitigation of the Passions? |
46330 | But when in place of the abstract,"Is man free?" |
46330 | Crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._= Salvator Mundi=; or, Is Christ the Saviour of all Men? |
46330 | Does Art_ merit_ Scientific Treatment? |
46330 | He never asks,"Is it?" |
46330 | In presence of such a demand we are at once met by the question,"Whence do we get this conception?" |
46330 | Is it visible and tangible, like the unity of a human body? |
46330 | Was he insensible to sound in poetry? |
46330 | What even of an army? |
46330 | What is man''s need to produce works of art? |
46330 | What is this unity? |
46330 | Work of Art as addressed to Man''s Sense 60- 78[(_ a_) Object of Art-- Pleasant Feeling? |
46330 | [ The Interest or End of Art( 79- 106)(_ a_) Imitation of Nature? |
46330 | _ Cf._:--"''Tell me, good Brutus, can you see your face?'' |
46330 | but always"What is it?" |
46330 | retains the accessory meaning of the question,"What is the_ use_?". |
38803 | Have you thought there could be but a single supreme? 38803 If I''m design''d yon lordling''s slave, By nature''s law design''d, Why was an independent wish E''er planted in my mind? |
38803 | Is he intemperate, does he abuse the children and beat you? |
38803 | Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? 38803 O dear Juliet, why art thou yet so fair? |
38803 | That sacred hour can I forget? 38803 They talk religion in their mouth; They talk o''mercy, grace, an''truth, For what? |
38803 | What book is it? |
38803 | What was I, or my generation, That I should get sic exaltation? 38803 Why has a religious turn of mind always a tendency to narrow and harden the heart?" |
38803 | Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars? 38803 AS he kinder, more forgiving, more self- sacrificing than Buddha? 38803 Again I ask: Is the New Testament true? 38803 And he saith unto them:Whose is the image and the superscription?" |
38803 | And is this all? |
38803 | And stainless_ Imogen_--who cried:"What is it to be false?" |
38803 | Are the motives high and noble, or low and infamous? |
38803 | Are we to win the happiness of heaven by deserting the ones we love? |
38803 | Burns wrote short poems, and why? |
38803 | But after all, is our God superior to the gods of the heathen? |
38803 | But how can a miracle be established? |
38803 | But in what way can the absurdity of the"real presence"be answered, except by banter, by raillery, by ridicule, by persiflage? |
38803 | Can I forget the hallow''d grove Where, by the winding Ayr, we met, To live one day of parting love? |
38803 | Can the authors of Job and the Psalms be compared with Shakespeare? |
38803 | Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws among friends?" |
38803 | Can we believe in the multiplication of the widow''s oil by Elisha, that an army was smitten with blindness, or that an axe floated in the water? |
38803 | Can we believe that Christ raised the dead? |
38803 | Can we believe that Elijah brought flames from heaven, or that he went at last to Paradise in a chariot of fire? |
38803 | Can we believe that the gods of Egypt worked miracles? |
38803 | Can we do this without being inspired ourselves? |
38803 | Can we get any good from Jonah and his gourd? |
38803 | Can we live without taking thought for the morrow? |
38803 | Can we now believe that water was changed into wine? |
38803 | Can we now say that Christ was the greatest of philosophers? |
38803 | Could a devil have done worse? |
38803 | Dark mother always gliding near with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
38803 | Did Christ love his, when he denounced them as whited sepulchers, hypocrites and vipers? |
38803 | Did Christ think that the money belonged to Cæsar because his image and superscription were stamped upon it? |
38803 | Did God use men as instruments? |
38803 | Did all the ministers of Scotland add as much to the sum of human knowledge as David Hume? |
38803 | Did all the ministers of Scotland add as much to the sum of human knowledge as David Hume? |
38803 | Did all the priests of France do as great a work for the civilization of the world as Diderot and Voltaire? |
38803 | Did all the priests of France do as great a work for the civilization of the world as Voltaire or Diderot? |
38803 | Did all the priests of Rome increase the mental wealth of man as much as Bruno? |
38803 | Did all the priests of Rome increase the mental wealth of man as much as Bruno? |
38803 | Did any human being ever love his enemies? |
38803 | Did he cause them to write his thoughts? |
38803 | Did he desert his father and mother? |
38803 | Did he express grander truths than Cicero? |
38803 | Did he know at the time that Joseph would use the information thus given to rob and enslave the people of Egypt? |
38803 | Did he take possession of their minds and destroy their wills? |
38803 | Did the author of Genesis know as much about nature as Humboldt, or Darwin, or Haeckel? |
38803 | Did the penny belong to Cæsar or to the man who had earned it? |
38803 | Did these curses, these threats, come from the heart of love or from the mouth of savagery? |
38803 | Did they change water into blood, and sticks into serpents? |
38803 | Did we get from any of these books a hint of any science? |
38803 | Did we get our ideas of government, of religious freedom, of the liberty of thought, from the Old Testament? |
38803 | Did you ever see as little a nubbin with as much shuck?" |
38803 | Do you fancy I will grant you a lease for so long a time? |
38803 | Do you know what it is? |
38803 | Do you understand it? |
38803 | Does God take care of anybody? |
38803 | Does any intelligent man believe in the existence of devils? |
38803 | Does any natural man now believe that Christ cast out devils? |
38803 | Does anybody now believe that an angel went into the pool and troubled the waters? |
38803 | Does anybody now think that the poor wretch who got in first was healed? |
38803 | Does it appear from this conversation that Christ understood the real nature and use of money? |
38803 | Does it civilize us to read about the beheading of the seventy sons of Ahab, the putting out of the eyes of Zedekiah and the murder of his sons? |
38803 | Does not every chapter shock the heart of a good man? |
38803 | Does the Old Testament satisfy this standard? |
38803 | Had Cæsar the right to demand it because it was adorned with his image? |
38803 | Hamlet having killed Polonius is asked:"Where''s Polonius?" |
38803 | Has Exodus been a help or a hindrance to the human race? |
38803 | Has man in his ignorance and fear ever imagined a greater monster? |
38803 | Have the barbarians of any land, in any time, worshiped a more heartless god? |
38803 | Have these absurdities and cruelties-- these childish, savage superstitions-- helped to civilize the world? |
38803 | Have they taught us how to cultivate the earth, to build houses, to weave cloth, to prepare food? |
38803 | Have they taught us to paint pictures, to chisel statues, to build bridges, or ships, or anything of beauty or of use? |
38803 | Have we not the right to judge for ourselves? |
38803 | Have you ever read the account of the stage- driver''s funeral? |
38803 | He describes the ideal American citizen-- the one who"_ Says indifferently and alike''How are you, friend?'' |
38803 | He is one of"Those that look carelessly in the faces of Presidents and Governors, as to say''Who are you?''" |
38803 | He said, speaking to his mother:"Woman, what have I to do with, thee?" |
38803 | He was the poet of friendship:"Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to min''? |
38803 | Hear''st thou the groans that rend his breast? |
38803 | Hear''st thou the groans that rend his breast?" |
38803 | His cruelty, or scorn? |
38803 | How are such people to be answered? |
38803 | How are we bound by their opinion? |
38803 | How are we to separate the mistakes of man from the thoughts of God? |
38803 | How can an inspired man prove that he is inspired? |
38803 | How can he know himself that he is inspired? |
38803 | How can one man establish the inspiration of another? |
38803 | How can these miracles be established? |
38803 | How can they be brought to a sense of their absurdity? |
38803 | How can we account for these pretended miracles? |
38803 | How can we know that the Devil tried to bribe Christ? |
38803 | How could it have entered his mind to have put a warning, a threat and a blessing, upon his grave? |
38803 | How could you prove the resurrection of Lazarus? |
38803 | How could you substantiate, today, the ascension of Jesus Christ? |
38803 | How did the writer get his information? |
38803 | How do I know but what you''ll give further orders to- morrow?" |
38803 | How does a country become great? |
38803 | How had they offended King Darius, the believer in Jehovah? |
38803 | How is it possible for a human being to know that he is inspired by an infinite being? |
38803 | How is it possible now to establish the fact that the fires of a furnace refused to burn three men? |
38803 | How is it possible to substantiate these miracles? |
38803 | I''the dark, to be his paramour?" |
38803 | I, wha deserve sic just damnation, For broken laws, Five thousand years''fore my creation, Thro''Adam''s cause? |
38803 | IS CHRIST OUR EXAMPLE? |
38803 | If Christ rose from the dead, why did he not appear to his enemies? |
38803 | If earthquake there must be, why did it not occur in some uninhabited desert, on some wide waste of sea? |
38803 | If he really ascended, why did he not do so in public, in the presence of his persecutors? |
38803 | If our colors are struck and the fighting done? |
38803 | If the existence of God is admitted, how are we to prove that he inspired the writers of the books of the Bible? |
38803 | If thy right hand offend thee, cut it off._ Why? |
38803 | In France who are and were the friends of freedom-- the Catholic priests, or Renan? |
38803 | In what respect was he the superior of Zoroaster? |
38803 | In what way could you prove that the river Jordan was divided upon being struck by the coat of a prophet? |
38803 | Is Jeremiah, or Habakkuk equal to Dickens or Thackeray? |
38803 | Is Protestantism willing to rest its claims upon the"great man"argument? |
38803 | Is a home to be ruined here for the sake of a mansion there? |
38803 | Is death the end? |
38803 | Is it a book to be read by children? |
38803 | Is it a fact that the Devil carried Christ to the top of the temple and tried to induce him to leap to the ground? |
38803 | Is it a fact that the Devil tried to bribe Christ? |
38803 | Is it for good or evil? |
38803 | Is it just and reasonable? |
38803 | Is it merciful? |
38803 | Is it moral? |
38803 | Is it necessary that Heaven should borrow its light from the glare of Hell? |
38803 | Is it not strange that at the trial of Christ no one was found to say a word in his favor? |
38803 | Is it not wonderful that no fragment of any scene-- no line-- no word-- has been found? |
38803 | Is it philosophical? |
38803 | Is it possible that Bacon left the wondrous children of his brain on the door- step of Shakespeare, and kept the deformed ones at home? |
38803 | Is it possible that Christ offered the bribe of eternal joy to those who would desert their fathers, their mothers, their wives and children? |
38803 | Is it possible that he fathered the failures and deserted the perfect? |
38803 | Is it possible that he who said,"Resist not evil,"came to bring a sword? |
38803 | Is it possible that it was right, just and merciful to kill fifty thousand men because they had looked into a box? |
38803 | Is it possible that our God was intelligent and good? |
38803 | Is it possible that this description was written by one who witnessed this miracle? |
38803 | Is it possible to extract from these extravagant sayings the smallest grain of common sense? |
38803 | Is rhyme a necessary part of poetry? |
38803 | Is the Bible any nearer right in its ideas of justice, of mercy, of morality or of religion than in its conception of the sciences? |
38803 | Is the Bible civilized? |
38803 | Is the story of the ark, its capture and return of importance to us? |
38803 | Is there a chapter worth reading? |
38803 | Is there a tomb holding the ashes of a saint from which emerges one ray of light? |
38803 | Is there a word calculated to develop the heart or brain? |
38803 | Is there an elevated thought-- any great principle-- anything poetic-- any word that bursts into blossom? |
38803 | Is there an intellectual man in the world who will not agree with this? |
38803 | Is there any absurdity beyond this? |
38803 | Is there any philosophy, any good sense, in that commandment? |
38803 | Is there any philosophy, any wisdom in this? |
38803 | Is there any wisdom in putting out your eyes or cutting off your hands? |
38803 | Is there anything except a dreary and detailed statement of things that never happened? |
38803 | Is there anything in Exodus calculated to make men generous, loving and noble? |
38803 | Is there anything in First and Second Kings that suggests the idea of inspiration? |
38803 | Is there anything in Leviticus of importance? |
38803 | Is there anything in the literature of the world more perfectly idiotic? |
38803 | Is there anything in the wide universe more wonderful than this? |
38803 | Is there anything in these"inspired"books that has been of benefit to man? |
38803 | Is there anything more intense than these words of Cleopatra? |
38803 | Is there anything of use in Joel, in Amos, in Obadiah? |
38803 | Is there anything to be learned from Hosea and his wife? |
38803 | Is there anything worth reading in the first and second books of Samuel? |
38803 | Is there in the whole world an intelligent man or woman who believes this impossible falsehood? |
38803 | Is there in the"sacred volume"a word, a line, that has added to the wealth, the intelligence and the happiness of mankind? |
38803 | Is there one of the books of the Old Testament as entertaining as"Robinson Crusoe,""The Travels of Gulliver,"or"Peter Wilkins and his Flying Wife"? |
38803 | Is there one ray of light from any supernatural source? |
38803 | Is there one word in First and Second Kings calculated to make men better? |
38803 | Is there the grave of a priest in France on which a lover of liberty would now drop a flower or a tear? |
38803 | Is there the least sense in that belief? |
38803 | Is this possible? |
38803 | Is what is called the Mosaic Code as wise or as merciful as the code of any civilized nation? |
38803 | It may be well enough at the beginning to inquire, What is a poet? |
38803 | It may be well enough here to ask the question: What is greatness? |
38803 | Let me ask the ministers one question: How can you be wicked enough to defend this book? |
38803 | Looking up from the page, the President said:"Chase, did you ever read this book?" |
38803 | Of what use the cruel code, the frightful punishments, the curses, the falsehoods and the miracles of this ignorant and infamous book? |
38803 | Of what use to us are the wars of Saul and David, the stories of Goliath and the Witch of Endor? |
38803 | Or of the widow''s son? |
38803 | Or why has man the will and pow''r To make his fellow mourn?" |
38803 | Ought a prophet of God to hew a captured king in pieces? |
38803 | Our frigate takes fire, The other asks if we demand quarter? |
38803 | Seest thou thy lover lowly laid? |
38803 | Seest thou thy lover lowly laid? |
38803 | She exclaims:"Who was it that thus cried? |
38803 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''auld lang syne?" |
38803 | Should we hand back the slave to his master, when the master was using his slave to destroy the Union? |
38803 | So the words of Cleopatra, when Charmain speaks:"Peace, peace: Dost thou not see my baby at my breast That sucks the nurse asleep?" |
38803 | Take any miracle recorded in the Bible, and how could it be established now? |
38803 | Take from Exodus the laws common to all nations, and is there anything of value left? |
38803 | That he who said,"Love your enemies,"came to destroy the peace of the world? |
38803 | The Pharisees said unto Christ:"Is it lawful to pay tribute unto Cæsar?" |
38803 | The optimist was compelled to ask,"What was my God doing? |
38803 | The question is not: Who furnished the stone, or who owned the quarry, but who chiseled the statue? |
38803 | The question is, Were the authors of these four gospels inspired? |
38803 | The respectable prudes and pedagogues sound the alarm, and cry, or rather screech:"Is this a book for a young person?" |
38803 | The young man dismounted and made himself known, and the old monk cried:"Where hast thou been? |
38803 | They said, if God will inflict such frightful torments upon us here, simply for allowing a few heretics to live, what will he do with the heretics? |
38803 | This is called sublime, but what does it mean? |
38803 | This situation and its consequences he pointed out to absolute perfection in these words:"Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws? |
38803 | Under the same circumstances, what would a devil have done? |
38803 | V. WAS JEHOVAH A GOD OF LOVE? |
38803 | WHAT IS IT ALL WORTH? |
38803 | WHAT IS POETRY? |
38803 | WHICH WAY? |
38803 | WHICH WAY? |
38803 | WHO wrote the New Testament? |
38803 | WHY SHOULD WE PLACE CHRIST AT THE TOP AND SUMMIT OF THE HUMAN RACE? |
38803 | WILL some Christian scholar tell us the value of Genesis? |
38803 | Was Jehovah god or devil? |
38803 | Was he a greater philosopher, a deeper thinker, than Epicurus? |
38803 | Was he gentler than Lao- tsze, more universal than Confucius? |
38803 | Was he grander in death-- a sublimer martyr than Bruno? |
38803 | Was he more patient, more charitable, than Epictetus? |
38803 | Was he wiser, did he meet death with more perfect calmness, than Socrates? |
38803 | Was his brain equal to Kepler''s or Newton''s? |
38803 | Was his mind subtler than Spinoza''s? |
38803 | Was it because the inhabitants were ignorant, cruel and superstitious? |
38803 | Was there ever a sweeter song than"Bonnie Doon"? |
38803 | Was there in the eighteenth century, a man wearing the vestments of the church, the equal of Voltaire? |
38803 | Were his ideas of human rights and duties superior to those of Zeno? |
38803 | Were its laws inspired? |
38803 | Were the men who through many centuries made the selections inspired? |
38803 | Were the writers of Kings and Chronicles as great historians, as great writers, as Gibbon and Draper? |
38803 | Were these writers only partly controlled, so that their mistakes, their ignorance and their prejudices were mingled with the wisdom of God? |
38803 | Were they ever performed? |
38803 | Were they-- ignorant, credulous, stupid and malicious-- as well qualified to judge of"inspiration"as the students of our time? |
38803 | What bishop pitied the victims of the rack? |
38803 | What cardinal, what bishop, what priest in France raised his voice for the rights of men? |
38803 | What care we for the withering of Jereboam''s hand, the prophecy of Jehu, or the story of Elijah and the ravens? |
38803 | What could be done with this horror? |
38803 | What did he mock? |
38803 | What does Lady Macbeth then say? |
38803 | What ecclesiastic, what nobleman, took the side of the oppressed-- of the peasant? |
38803 | What had the wives and little children done? |
38803 | What is inspiration? |
38803 | What is poetry? |
38803 | What is this dust-- this womb? |
38803 | What priest pleaded for the liberty of the citizen? |
38803 | What then is left in this inspired book of Genesis? |
38803 | What would the world be if infidels had never been? |
38803 | What would the world be if infidels had never been? |
38803 | What would they have done if their hearts had not been softened by the glad tidings of great joy-- peace on earth and good will to men? |
38803 | What, then, can we say of Christ? |
38803 | When Macbeth has reaped the harvest, the seeds of which were sown by his murderous hand, he exclaims,--and what could be more pitiful? |
38803 | Where are the witnesses? |
38803 | Where did Christ think heaven was? |
38803 | Where is thy blissful place of rest? |
38803 | Where is thy place of blissful rest? |
38803 | Which way does the great stream tend? |
38803 | Who denounced the frightful criminal code-- the torture of suspected persons? |
38803 | Who enabled Joseph to interpret the dream of Pharaoh? |
38803 | Who failed to protect the innocent wives and children? |
38803 | Who has accomplished the most in this direction-- the church, or the unbelievers? |
38803 | Who has made Germany famous-- her priests, or her scientists? |
38803 | Who produced the famine? |
38803 | Who protected Daniel? |
38803 | Who were they? |
38803 | Who wrote the account? |
38803 | Who, upon the whole earth, has the slightest knowledge upon this subject? |
38803 | Why did he cover the world with men, women and children knowing that he would destroy them? |
38803 | Why did he fail to speak? |
38803 | Why did he go dumbly to his death, leaving the world to misery and to doubt? |
38803 | Why did he leave his words to ignorance, hypocrisy and chance? |
38803 | Why did he not break the chains of slaves? |
38803 | Why did he not call on Caiaphas, the high priest? |
38803 | Why did he not explain the Trinity? |
38803 | Why did he not make another triumphal entry into Jerusalem? |
38803 | Why did he not plainly say:"I am the Son of God,"or,"I am God"? |
38803 | Why did he not say something positive, definite and satisfactory about another world? |
38803 | Why did he not say that the Old Testament was or was not the inspired word of God? |
38803 | Why did he not tell the mode of baptism that was pleasing to him? |
38803 | Why did he not tell us something of the rights of man, of the liberty of hand and brain? |
38803 | Why did he not try to reform them? |
38803 | Why did he not turn the tear- stained hope of heaven into the glad knowledge of another life? |
38803 | Why did he not write a creed? |
38803 | Why did he not write the New Testament himself? |
38803 | Why did you bring the daggers from the place?" |
38803 | Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
38803 | Why is it that Scotland, when the roll of nations is called, can stand up and proudly answer"here"? |
38803 | Why is it that millions and millions of men and women love this man? |
38803 | Why should Jehovah have killed Uzzah for putting forth his hand to steady the ark, and forgiven David for murdering Uriah and stealing his wife? |
38803 | Why should the worshipers of God hate the lovers of men? |
38803 | Why should they do anything for us if we will do nothing for them? |
38803 | Why should this, the greatest of miracles, be done in secret, in a corner? |
38803 | Why should we attribute the best to man and the worst to God? |
38803 | Why should we place Jehovah above all the gods? |
38803 | Why was Jerusalem a holy city? |
38803 | Why would he create people, knowing that they could not be reformed? |
38803 | Will the forthgoer be lost, and forever? |
38803 | Would a civilized God daub his altars with the blood of oxen, lambs and doves? |
38803 | Would a good God appeal to prejudice, the armor, fortress, sword and shield of ignorance? |
38803 | Would a good God appeal to reason or ignorance, to justice or selfishness, to liberty or the lash? |
38803 | Would a good God frighten or enlighten his children? |
38803 | Would he delight in the smell of burning flesh? |
38803 | Would he make all his priests butchers? |
38803 | Would you hear of an old- time sea- fight? |
38803 | must all then amount to but this? |
38803 | the bishops, or Gambetta?--Dupanloup, or Victor Hugo? |
38803 | to credulity, the ring in the priest- led nose of stupidity? |
38803 | to fear, the capital stock of imposture, the lever of hypocrisy? |
38803 | where?" |
45701 | Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? 45701 Who of you, if he wishes to build a tower, does not first sit down and count the costs to see whether he has money to complete it? |
45701 | And they reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say, From heaven; he will say unto us, Why then did ye not believe him? |
45701 | Are not ye of much more value than they?" |
45701 | Are the proposals of Secretary Hughes in this spirit? |
45701 | Can the New Testament help on these? |
45701 | Christ spoke no more incisive word than this:"Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me?" |
45701 | Did he have a social plan, and was it adapted to the needs of the twentieth as well as to those of the first Christian century? |
45701 | How can there be any joy in the heart when there is this suspicion of one''s fellow? |
45701 | Is it any wonder that church life is stagnant? |
45701 | Is it any wonder that they brooded over it until even the translations themselves seemed to be the very breath of the Almighty? |
45701 | Is it not possible that his idea of the fraternal community is the only satisfactory solution of our international problems? |
45701 | Is not this true? |
45701 | Is the situation really"well"? |
45701 | Is, then, the seat of authority for religion in the claims of Holy Scripture? |
45701 | No doubt the human heart is swayed by sympathy and benevolence; but are these the qualities of the natural man? |
45701 | OUR GOVERNMENT IN THE CONFERENCE What is the position that our government should take in the conference? |
45701 | Or should he realize his plan by compromise? |
45701 | Shall we say that these words were spoken in ignorance or jest or mockery? |
45701 | That is a pretty faith; but is it true? |
45701 | The baptism of John, whence was it? |
45701 | Then again:"What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" |
45701 | What Cause was it which made of these plain disciples literary and religious figures of incomparable power and dignity? |
45701 | What equal counterpoise will you set against that instinct of_ pleonexia_ which reaches out for ever more and more? |
45701 | What limitations did Jesus place upon the principle? |
45701 | What shall be said of these contrasted views? |
45701 | Who of mortals can have taught the writer of the Fourth Gospel the interpretation that he has to hand on to us? |
45701 | Why should it be otherwise if such conceptions virtually rule? |
45701 | Will you, Capernaum, be exalted to the sky? |
45701 | from heaven or from men? |
47040 | Father,said his little boy one day,"what do you mean by a connoisseur?" |
47040 | Among the street cries of London one of the oldest was:"Any pots or pans to mend?" |
47040 | Reader, have you ever spent a day away from public clocks in the country when the sky was overcast_ without a watch in your pocket_? |
47040 | We are to some extent able from these antiquities to connect the links in the chain of nations, and from the characteristics of their art(?) |
47040 | Whence come they? |
4020 | A splendid group of men, are they not? |
4020 | A successor? |
4020 | Abominable, is it not? |
4020 | Across the dinner table? |
4020 | After all, what inducement have they? |
4020 | All of it? |
4020 | And I presume,said the rector, taking a devout sip of the unfinished soda,"that he is a man of immense wealth?" |
4020 | And are they ferocious? |
4020 | And could you not get three or four men to come and address it so as to stir us up? |
4020 | And half a million last week, was n''t it? |
4020 | And he has accepted the call? |
4020 | And is there game there? |
4020 | And of great philanthropy? |
4020 | And the salary? |
4020 | And what did she say to that? |
4020 | And what do you define as_ pure_ doctrine? |
4020 | And what does Dr. Dumfarthing himself say to it? |
4020 | And who''s that tall chap standing beside her? |
4020 | And you would not say that the percentage of sodium bicarbonate was too great for the ordinary taste? |
4020 | And-- quite frankly-- not too much hydrogen? |
4020 | Are they deastralized? |
4020 | Are they old criminals? |
4020 | Are you coming to the Browning Club this morning? 4020 Badly made up?" |
4020 | But what about the question of doctrine, of belief? |
4020 | But what were you going to say? |
4020 | But when? 4020 By Jove,"said the Duke, turning to tap the leaf of a rubber tree with his finger,"that fellow''s a Nigerian, is n''t he?" |
4020 | Can we meet them? |
4020 | Can you rely on his word? |
4020 | Could he have any, do you suppose? |
4020 | Could n''t you try to reastralize them? |
4020 | Dear little fellow, is n''t he? |
4020 | Did he hear? |
4020 | Did n''t you find him pretty solemn? |
4020 | Did you blow them up yourself? |
4020 | Did you get any? |
4020 | Do n''t you really? |
4020 | Do n''t you think,said Mr. Newberry,"I speak as a practical man, that we ought to do something to get the newspapers with us?" |
4020 | Do what? |
4020 | Do you mean to say,said Mr. Fyshe, speaking very slowly,"that there is no dinner?" |
4020 | Do you not think perhaps that some of the shortcoming lies with yourself? |
4020 | Do you really not know? |
4020 | Do you suppose I could get them to get any? |
4020 | Do you think it necessary to_ write_ it? |
4020 | Does he make any conditions? |
4020 | Does he stay long? |
4020 | Does n''t it? |
4020 | Eh? 4020 Eh?" |
4020 | For after all,she said,"if it was not Buddha, who was it?" |
4020 | For camping? |
4020 | For what time shall I order dinner? |
4020 | Gentlemen,he said,"will you accept this as a compromise? |
4020 | Good evening, Mr. Mayor,echoed Mr. Dick Overend, also rubbing his hands;"warm evening, is it not?" |
4020 | Good? |
4020 | Has he got the financial basis arranged then? |
4020 | Has it ever been done before? |
4020 | He ca n''t, eh? |
4020 | His financial position? |
4020 | How did it happen? |
4020 | How do you manage to get people to talk about it? 4020 How far will he go with us?" |
4020 | How_ does_ he do it? |
4020 | I hardly know,said Mr. Fyshe,"I imagine so"; and he added,"You''ve been in Nigeria, Duke?" |
4020 | I say,he said,"are you going away?" |
4020 | I say,said Mr. Spillikins, straining his short sight to the uttermost,"what perfectly wonderful golden hair, eh?" |
4020 | I shall be delighted,said Miss Snagg,"but I''m afraid there''s hardly time to write them before we begin, is there?" |
4020 | I wonder,called Mrs. Buncomhearst from the chair,"if some lady would be good enough to write minutes? |
4020 | I''ve been thinking of it,said Mr. Furlong senior,"I suppose it''s feasible?" |
4020 | In fact, Newberry, to speak very frankly, I begin to ask myself, Is Furlong the man for the post? |
4020 | Inefficient? |
4020 | Is Rasselyer- Brown with us? |
4020 | Is he Scotch? |
4020 | Is he better? |
4020 | Is he dead? |
4020 | Is he here for pleasure? |
4020 | Is he married? |
4020 | Is his power of speech gone? |
4020 | Is it necessary to go into that? |
4020 | Is it not possible that as a preacher you fail somewhat, do not, as it were, deal sufficiently with fundamental things as others do? 4020 Is it not?" |
4020 | Is n''t it? |
4020 | Is that carried? |
4020 | Is that in Maine? |
4020 | Is there any more of that jelly? |
4020 | Just what does that mean? |
4020 | Might it not be better simply to buy up the editorial staff? |
4020 | Now tell me very truthfully,he said,"is there too much carbon in it?" |
4020 | Now what special objects or purposes shall I indicate? |
4020 | Oh, you mean commercially? 4020 Ought n''t we to go up to the house?" |
4020 | Perfectly plain, is n''t it? |
4020 | Personally a charming fellow,went on Mr. Fyshe;"but is he, all said and done, quite the man to conduct a church? |
4020 | Say, dad,drawls Bob,"could n''t we all go to the ball game?" |
4020 | Says his father is buried there, eh? 4020 Take it out? |
4020 | The Duke arrived this morning, did he not? |
4020 | The difference between a council and a board? |
4020 | Think so? |
4020 | Very sorry, sir,said the waiter,"shall I take it out?" |
4020 | Well, well,said Mr. Newberry,"and will Dr. McTeague also resume his philosophical lectures at the university?" |
4020 | Well, what''s wrong with him? |
4020 | Well,said Mr. Newberry,"what about organization and officers?" |
4020 | Well,said the wife of the Wizard as her husband finished looking through the reports,"how are things this morning? |
4020 | Were you at St. Osoph''s Church on Sunday morning? 4020 What does the doctor say is wrong with Fred?" |
4020 | What does wah mean? |
4020 | What happened to those first samples? 4020 What is Mr. Dumfarthing getting where he is?" |
4020 | What is it? |
4020 | What is the stuff, anyway? |
4020 | What the devil do you mean,he said,"by serving asparagus half- cold?" |
4020 | What will he do now? |
4020 | What''s that after his name? |
4020 | What''s wrong with him? |
4020 | What''s wrong with_ him_? |
4020 | What? |
4020 | What_ would_ you have done? |
4020 | Where does it get its authority? |
4020 | Who would these be? |
4020 | Who? |
4020 | Whose funeral is that? |
4020 | Why do n''t you go down to Nagahakett on the Atlantic? |
4020 | Why last night? |
4020 | Why not? |
4020 | Why, do n''t you see what''s happened? |
4020 | Will it hold water? |
4020 | Would it be all right to telephone down to the office, or do you think it would be better to ring? |
4020 | Yes, did n''t you know? |
4020 | You and Philippa used to have it at half- past seven, did you not? 4020 You are agreed, then, on the Reverend Uttermust Dumfarthing?" |
4020 | You are quite sure,persisted Mr. Newberry,"about the governor and the others you mentioned?" |
4020 | You are sure of this, are you? |
4020 | You do n''t mind my telling you all about this Miss Philippa? |
4020 | You do n''t,said Tomlinson the Wizard in a hesitating tone as he looked at the smooth grass of the campus,"I suppose, raise anything on it?" |
4020 | You had thought, had you not, of offering it to the city? |
4020 | You have actually seen the members of the legislature? |
4020 | You have heard nothing? |
4020 | You have heard our sad news, I suppose? |
4020 | You would hardly, I think,said Mr. Furlong, with a quiet smile,"compare the Standard Oil Company to a church?" |
4020 | _ Salted_ them on me? |
4020 | ''No,''I answered,''but will you at five?'' |
4020 | ''Take your own case,''I said to him,''how is it that you, a coal man, are not helping the city in this matter? |
4020 | *****"Are you inviting anyone else tonight?" |
4020 | *****"Do you think they''ll go into it?" |
4020 | *****"How''s Fred?" |
4020 | *****"Is no one else coming then?" |
4020 | *****"Is that legal, do you suppose?" |
4020 | *****"Well,"said Dr. Boomer, after Tomlinson had left the university,"what do you make of him?" |
4020 | *****"What is he doing?" |
4020 | A day or two later Mr. Spillikins was saying,"I think Mrs. Everleigh must have had great sorrow, do n''t you? |
4020 | After all, thirty cents is n''t much, eh what? |
4020 | And at this tea Captain Cormorant said, among other things,"Did he kick up rough at all when you told him about the money?" |
4020 | And here again it appeared that the crying need of the moment was for someone to come to the university and say,"Gentlemen, what can I do for you?" |
4020 | And then, a voice called from the drawing- room within, in a measured and assured tone,"Peter, darling, where are you?" |
4020 | And when presently a tall waiter in dress- clothes appeared, and said,"Jelly? |
4020 | Are these powers conferred on you by the state legislature or by some higher authority?" |
4020 | Are they any better?" |
4020 | Are you aware, Edward, that you are losing money on your Foreign Missions Account?" |
4020 | Belstairs?" |
4020 | Boomer?" |
4020 | But how? |
4020 | But stop a bit,"he continued, checking himself;"what''s this? |
4020 | But suppose we go and dress? |
4020 | But what can I do? |
4020 | But what is the difference between a council and a board?" |
4020 | But when a girl can work out trigonometry at sight, what use can she possibly have for marriage? |
4020 | But why should you? |
4020 | Could it be that by some neglect in the preparations, the substitution perhaps of the wrong brandy, the astralization could not be effected? |
4020 | Could n''t we hold a meeting of our own, all our own, to help the league along?" |
4020 | Could you?" |
4020 | Do n''t you see, my boy, that these things are debits? |
4020 | Do n''t you see? |
4020 | Do n''t you think that rather too late?" |
4020 | Doc.?" |
4020 | Dumfarthing?" |
4020 | Had Mr. Fyshe, who knew nothing of art, expressed his real thought, he would have said,"Show me your which?" |
4020 | Has anybody anything to say?" |
4020 | He followed it usually just before breakfast with a bracer-- and what wiser precaution can a businessman take than to brace his breakfast? |
4020 | How much do you want?" |
4020 | I am only asking you, is it worth it? |
4020 | I merely wish to show you certain-- shall I say certain opportunities that present themselves for the disposal of our funds? |
4020 | I think she must have guessed, in a way, do n''t you, what I was going to say? |
4020 | I thought that a pretty good sign, was n''t it? |
4020 | If a man with a broad basis of popular support like that was proposing to entertain a duke, surely there could be no doubt about his motives? |
4020 | If anyone were to come to me and say,''Boomer, can you put your hand for me on a first- class botanist?'' |
4020 | In short, when crystallized in dodecahedrons--""Is it any good?" |
4020 | Is it a single corporate body?" |
4020 | Is it worth it?" |
4020 | Is that agreed?" |
4020 | Is that agreed?" |
4020 | Is that all you have with you?" |
4020 | Is that carried? |
4020 | It printed a coupon which said,"Are you out for a clean city? |
4020 | May I just run in and use your telephone? |
4020 | McSkwirt?" |
4020 | Miss Snagg, I wonder if you would be kind enough to write minutes? |
4020 | Mr. Rasselyer- Brown, of course, began the day with an eye- opener-- and after all, what alert man does not wish his eyes well open in the morning? |
4020 | No doubt you felt this yourself?" |
4020 | Now why do n''t you go for a month or two to some quiet place, where you will simply_ do nothing?_"( She never, as he knew, did anything, anyway.) |
4020 | Now,''I said, for I wanted to test the fellow,''tell me what that means?'' |
4020 | Of course his game is clear enough?" |
4020 | Osoph''s?" |
4020 | Pretty big sale, eh, for a beginner like me? |
4020 | Prunes? |
4020 | Put him, for instance, beside Mr. Sikleigh Snoop, the sex- poet, and where was he? |
4020 | So I think that looks pretty good, do n''t you?" |
4020 | So what better man to meet a duke than an archaeological president? |
4020 | Spiff?" |
4020 | That is what you''ve come for, is it not?" |
4020 | The other day, or at least about two months ago, at one of the Yahi- Bahi meetings-- you were not in that, were you?" |
4020 | The question arises, what disposition are we to make of our accumulating funds?" |
4020 | The_ Plutorian Times_ printed a dotted coupon on the corner of its front sheet with the words,"Are you in favour of Clean Government? |
4020 | Tomlinson, tell me what all that means?'' |
4020 | Tomlinson?" |
4020 | Two minutes later Mr. Fyshe was saying into the telephone,"Oh, is that you, Boulder? |
4020 | Uttermust Dumfarthing"Well, then, gentlemen, I think we have all agreed upon our man?" |
4020 | What did it bring them? |
4020 | What do you think he wants to do?" |
4020 | What do you think?" |
4020 | What is it? |
4020 | What more natural, therefore, than that Mr. Lucullus Fyshe, before serving the soda to the Duke, should try it on somebody else? |
4020 | What visions, they asked, could one but read them, must lie behind the quiet, dreaming eyes of that inscrutable face? |
4020 | When that bunch got interested and planned to float the company? |
4020 | Who did they know that would take it? |
4020 | Why do n''t you supply the city?'' |
4020 | Why not go to those lawyers that manage things for the company and get them to arrange it all for you with the college?" |
4020 | Why? |
4020 | Yahi- Bahi?" |
4020 | Yes, sir, immediately, sir; would you like, sir, Maraschino, sir, or Portovino, sir?" |
4020 | You ca n''t run a church that way, can you?" |
4020 | You have n''t? |
4020 | You would n''t let a chap carry round your slippers unless you knew him pretty well, would you, Miss Philippa?" |
4020 | _ Nihil humunum alienum_, eh?" |
4020 | and appealed to Mr. Tomlinson as to whether any rational man nowadays cared what Ammianus thought? |
4020 | asked Mr. Fyshe of the university president,"will the newspapers be with us?" |
4020 | be better? |
4020 | but we shall see you at the musicale this afternoon, shall we not?" |
4020 | but,"Have you seen his daughter? |
4020 | eh? |
4020 | he said a day later,"Mrs. Everleigh''s an awfully fine woman, is n''t she? |
4020 | or at the opera,"Old man, do n''t let her see you looking, but do you see that lovely girl in the box opposite?" |
4020 | repeated Tomlinson,"I suppose he ai n''t quite up to the mark in some ways, eh?" |
4020 | said Mr. Fyshe,"do you think that quite fair to the bondholders? |
4020 | said Mr. Spillikins;"it must be dangerous work eh? |
4020 | said the Wizard;"is he sick?" |
4020 | said the rector''s sister, as they moved off again,"did n''t you know? |
4020 | what a fine- looking little chap, eh? |
4020 | what?" |
4020 | who''s that awfully good- looking woman getting out of the motor?" |
4020 | you want a lot, do n''t you? |
46235 | Are you a Christian? |
46235 | Would His Excellency give me that gracious permission in writing? 46235 Again, there were Christians fighting, in the ranks only, side by side with Moslems-- how could this be? 46235 Are matters very different now? 46235 Are those who live on the flanks of the impending movement prepared to hold their own? 46235 Are we efficient? 46235 Does the spirit of obedience still form one of the many good qualities of the Turkish soldier? 46235 Has the thirst for riches seduced you from the blessings of peace? 46235 How many of those overseas possessions now owe allegiance to the Porte? 46235 How many of those who read their daily paper realize the work done by the Servian Army? 46235 If not, who are our friends and what their worth should heavy troubles come upon us by our own fault? 46235 Is not war a religious commandment, a sacred matter in which infidels can have no part? 46235 Is there not some analogy between our rule in India and that of the Osmanli in Europe? 46235 Some were even lax in matters of religious observance, and how could a war prove victorious when all due glory was not given to the God of battles? 46235 Victory? 46235 Victory? 46235 What is Great Britain, the vast Empire encircling the moving forces from west to east, doing towards her own safety? 46235 What matter that there are numbers of Christians in the ranks of the Ottoman Army? 46235 What of those mangled and maimed by shrapnel and splinters of shell, mortally wounded by bullet and bayonet? 46235 What of those who have been stricken down by cholera on the road? 46235 What traveller along the lower reaches of the Danube has not listened to those bands of wandering Tsigani? 46235 When asked, Who are the Greeks? 46235 When they meet, what then? 46235 Where are those who were dangerously wounded? 46235 With no adequate preparations for the sick and wounded here at the base of operations, is it likely that the field hospitals were adequately supplied? 46235 Would it not be as well for us Britons to look at home? 43770 But what shall we do about the Islands of the Blest?" |
43770 | Can it be that we have been dreaming, that it was never there? |
43770 | Do you mean to infer, my dear, that if we women in America had equal suffrage, you men would stay at home and wait for the money we earn? 43770 Do you need to ask? |
43770 | So you have never gone down at sea, Rudolph? 43770 Turkey? |
43770 | What are these? |
43770 | What did she have to say? |
43770 | What did you order? |
43770 | Who are the coolies? |
43770 | Why does n''t it know enough to shine on sailing day? 43770 Would they be sent?" |
43770 | Ah, my friends of the feather toques and the winged head- gear, what have we to answer for? |
43770 | And why should not Columbus have made his ships thus fast? |
43770 | Appreciate? |
43770 | But after all these snake stories you would rather not join us in our morning walk? |
43770 | But now we may go on, and would you mind if we did n''t try to learn one bit of anything more for the rest of this beautiful evening? |
43770 | But then there''s nothing much else to do in Haïti, and why not be willing to wait for dinner? |
43770 | But there will come other days in Martinique-- there must come other days, for is not this_ Le Pays des Revenants_? |
43770 | But these dark things in the water-- where do they belong? |
43770 | But we were not to be discomfited by a rain- shower, for were we not prepared? |
43770 | But what is the use in going to a market unless we can buy something? |
43770 | But what will they see here to admire? |
43770 | But who could decide in such a mob? |
43770 | But, what could one do but look and marvel, when the sea about us was swarming with tiny boats, laden with treasures of the deep and of the forest? |
43770 | Ca n''t you see it''s the sun- dial?" |
43770 | Can it be that the plume- hunters for our Northern milliners have ranged through all these sunny islands? |
43770 | Can it be that, with these few crude tools, he can fashion so wonderfully? |
43770 | Could it be more lovely, more enchanting, more mysterious under a white sun shining from out a motionless blue heaven? |
43770 | Do n''t you know they carry down the mountainside and into the city the finest water of the West Indies? |
43770 | Do you recall the warnings of our black- coated friend of last evening-- warnings against"_ les serpents_,"as he called them? |
43770 | Do you remember a game we children used to play, which had this little refrain? |
43770 | Do you remember about the children who followed us so silently on our long walk? |
43770 | Do you think we noticed the red oilcloth table cover, the dingy lamp, and the rock- bottom sofa? |
43770 | Does a naked negro baby ever look as bare to you as a naked white baby? |
43770 | Every one must have gone down into every one''s trunk this morning; was there ever such a change? |
43770 | For nothing is it, dear one, to forget the stress of living for awhile, and let one''s spirit drop into the peace of a sleeping bell? |
43770 | For who else do you think could have cut down the trees? |
43770 | Go and see the captain? |
43770 | Go to bed, we''re all right; the sea is n''t as bad as it was before midnight, and what''s the use of worrying anyway? |
43770 | Has it ever impressed you how rarely nature appeals to one''s sense of humour? |
43770 | Has the American dentist yet untrodden fields? |
43770 | Have you heard of the feats of endurance which these young girls perform? |
43770 | How can I bring again the witchery of that vision? |
43770 | How can a civilised people be willing to turn the civic house- cleaning over to a lot of vultures? |
43770 | How far are we from the voodoo and all the savagery of Africa? |
43770 | How they will carry upon their heads, over one hundred pounds out from St. Pierre across the mountains, a distance of fifty miles in one day? |
43770 | I called to Daddy:"What''s the use going any further? |
43770 | I simply lay there wondering why, why, why, I had ever come? |
43770 | I wonder how the bride feels by this time? |
43770 | I wondered when the final smash would come and our big toy no longer swing back on its round legs? |
43770 | If we did n''t find the gutter agreeable to our over- refined sensibilities why not go where it was"Belle"? |
43770 | Is it possible that the writer of those lines had forgotten the Lady Proserpine? |
43770 | Is it possible that there are no song- birds here, and in fact no birds of plumage left about the settlements? |
43770 | It was so like the statue on the square without that the one at my side gasps,"It is he, Mother, what shall we do?" |
43770 | Let me see-- how many meals is this so far? |
43770 | Oh, I am so glad, for then you would n''t be here, would you?" |
43770 | One was Guadeloupe, the other-- what shall we call her; Florentine? |
43770 | Proserpine? |
43770 | Shall we not see you in the morning? |
43770 | So now the question is, how shall he get rid of the mongoose? |
43770 | Something was continually hammering into my ears:"Why do n''t you tell about the aqueducts? |
43770 | Tell me, what would you have said? |
43770 | The Kaiser''s subjects talk fair enough, but they unquestionably want St. Thomas-- and who knows? |
43770 | The señor''s first question was:"Have you seen the Cathedral?" |
43770 | There, now, may I go on, and may I say just what I wish of the señor without offence? |
43770 | These swarms of men and boys had come out to dive for coins-- silver preferred-- and how had they come? |
43770 | Was it upon such wrecks of life that the gentle_ Saviour_ gazed in pitying love? |
43770 | Was n''t that enough to establish a lasting bond of interest between Martinique and the wanderer from the North? |
43770 | Was n''t there just cause that I should wake him up? |
43770 | What can be keeping the shoppers so long? |
43770 | What can he be saying? |
43770 | What can the señor do without his best umbrella? |
43770 | What could I do but go? |
43770 | What does it matter? |
43770 | What good can I do by holding my breath and bracing back in this way? |
43770 | What mattered a short delay? |
43770 | Where are our monuments, our squares, our well- watered streets? |
43770 | Who knows but some of her charms might miraculously sift in through a rent in my package and breathe a spell upon my words? |
43770 | Who knows but that it is even older? |
43770 | Who says that all the true Santo Domingo mahogany was cut generations ago? |
43770 | Who shall say? |
43770 | Why are we so dumbly indifferent to that craving? |
43770 | Why did they ever have a mother who would be so unconventional? |
43770 | Why do n''t you give more information?" |
43770 | Why not leave them in the box at the consulate? |
43770 | Why, why are we of the North so blind to the soul''s necessity for beauty? |
43770 | Will he take the black umbrella of his wife''s aunt? |
43770 | Will the Germans try to block our acquisition of this group? |
43770 | Would he forswear the friendship? |
43770 | You remember it was a great ceiba to which Columbus made fast his ships on the bank of the Ozama River in Santo Domingo? |
43770 | You''re not nervous? |
43770 | were we never to begin our search? |
43770 | what is it you''re drawing?" |
43770 | what would the señor think if he should ever read these words? |
43770 | yes, he responds with great ardour, but with what result? |
40402 | ''And did she furnish thee with knowledge and courage, and yet send thee forth with no sort of talisman?'' 40402 ''And of what nature were the signs, then?'' |
40402 | ''And wherefore have ye been kept in durance all through the night?'' 40402 ''She gave me nothing but this jewel,''replied the minister;''and of what use can that be?'' |
40402 | And how shall this rusty iron hammer and this dirty sack give thee wealth? |
40402 | And the minister''s wife made answer,--''How can we tell thee this thing, seeing we have been kept in durance all through the night?'' |
40402 | And what is the one only way by which they could prevail against us? |
40402 | And what may that way be? |
40402 | And what use would the cap be to you? 40402 And why do they celebrate the rites of the burial of the Khan?" |
40402 | And why should he put so many men to death? |
40402 | And why should there be more food to- morrow than to- day? |
40402 | And you are their daughter? |
40402 | But Naran Gerel answered,''Am I not then the King''s daughter? 40402 But Naran Gerel stood forward, saying,''Whereon shall I take this oath? |
40402 | But his wife answered him,''When a King''s daughter calls, can fear stand in the way? 40402 But the captain of the guard said,''For observing the King''s decree am I to be put to death? |
40402 | Have your affairs succeeded? |
40402 | How can a child live thus in a wolf''s den? |
40402 | How canst thou, a child of men, live thus in common with a wolf''s cubs? |
40402 | How is this? |
40402 | How madest thou then the garuda- bird obedient to thy word to bring thee hither? |
40402 | How now, evil man? |
40402 | How shall we find water? 40402 How shall we kill him?" |
40402 | How then came the words back to me unless it be that thou hast spoken them, seeing that none other knows the thing save thee? |
40402 | If thou wilt not have him, what manner of man wouldst thou marry? |
40402 | In what shall we match our strength? |
40402 | It were better we stayed here,replied the lamb trembling;"for if we meet the wolf in the open country, how shall we escape him?" |
40402 | Knowest thou then really not that thy mother killed his mother? |
40402 | Now,thought the Minister to himself,"wherefore goes the Khan''s wife every third day to this palace, softly and unattended? |
40402 | O Divine Timour, when will thy great soul revive? 40402 Say now therefore, O Naran- Dâkinî, I charge thee, in favour of which of these four was the King bound to decide that he had invented woman?" |
40402 | The King then spoke to the captain of the guard, saying,''Shall not a man pass the day in a garden with his wife? 40402 To whom does all this magnificence belong?" |
40402 | Was this woman to be counted a good woman or a bad? |
40402 | What can I do now? |
40402 | What does it mean, then? |
40402 | What is your bag good for? |
40402 | What is your hammer good for? |
40402 | What is your stick good for that you brandish it so proudly? |
40402 | What mark shall we set upon him? |
40402 | What seekest thou of me? |
40402 | When the King saw the minister and his wife standing before him, he asked them in a voice of thunder,--''Where is Naran Gerel?'' |
40402 | Whence comest thou, fleeing as from an evil conscience? |
40402 | Where is our meal? |
40402 | Where is the butter you were to have made, and the meat you were to have cooked? |
40402 | Where is the horse and the arms? |
40402 | Who should it be but this calf? 40402 Who sounded the bugle?" |
40402 | Who then, pray, is this mine enemy? |
40402 | You got back sooner than I, then? |
40402 | ''What have I spoilt of yours?'' |
40402 | And Massang said,"Whither goest thou? |
40402 | And Schalû made answer,"To have saved the lives of five hundred men twice over, shall it not bring me good fortune?" |
40402 | And Shanggasba made answer,"Wherein shall I show my might in hunting?" |
40402 | And how didst thou leave my father''All- knowing''the Khan?" |
40402 | And in this strait who could doubt, but that it is the life of the Khanin that must be spared by me? |
40402 | And the fox told him, saying,"Who should it be other than the lion- cub in the forest on the other side the mountain? |
40402 | And thus she said to Shanggasba,"Wilt thou also give proof of thy might in hunting?" |
40402 | And to whom should woman belong if not to her husband?" |
40402 | And was it not even by my advice that he took this wife who has borne him a son? |
40402 | And what will be thought of a Khan''s son who has no uncles?" |
40402 | And when he asked,"How knowest thou this of a certainty?" |
40402 | And when he weakly asked her in return,"Wherein shall I seek to eke it out?" |
40402 | And when she asked him,"By what token shall I know you?" |
40402 | And when she heard that, she wept sore, and besought him, saying,"Is there no means of restoration? |
40402 | And while the Wood- carver said within himself,"Have I not smelt thee out, thou crafty one?" |
40402 | Are you mad?'' |
40402 | As soon as the Khan saw him he cried out,--"How art thou returned from the gods''kingdom? |
40402 | As the King found himself similarly embarrassed he sent and called all the relations; and to the mother he said,"Which of these two is your son?" |
40402 | At last one of them said to her,--"Whence comest thou, beautiful maiden?" |
40402 | At last the Khan said,"What eatest thou?" |
40402 | Behold, are we six unarmed men able to have laid siege to the Khan''s palace? |
40402 | But Dante said,''And thou; what hast thou done?'' |
40402 | But he who gave a soul that could be loved, was it not he alone who made woman? |
40402 | But his brother''s wife said to her husband,--"How can thine elder brother have come by all this wealth unless he hath stolen of our riches?" |
40402 | But his ministers interceded with him and said,"Nay, shall the son of the King and the heir to his royal throne be slain? |
40402 | But how? |
40402 | But others said,"How shall we know which of these two is the Khan?" |
40402 | But she answered,"Tell me, O beloved, what can I do to deliver thee from this bondage?" |
40402 | But the Khanin said,"Nay, but shall a child that came of the hermit''s blessing be slain?" |
40402 | But the Sûta proceeded,--"Art thou such a king as the great Vikramâditja? |
40402 | But the calf inquired, saying,"Who then could this enemy possibly be?" |
40402 | But the fox, putting on a doleful tone, answered him,"How should I, thine uncle, take pleasure in eating flesh when thou hast an enemy? |
40402 | But the hare answered,"Must not a lamb live in a flock? |
40402 | But the hare said,"What good will it do you to tear the woman in pieces? |
40402 | But the maiden answered,"How can I be thy wife, seeing thou art a bird? |
40402 | But to the Prince and his follower they said,"Whence are ye? |
40402 | But when they saw how big the rock was, they said,"Who shall suffice to remove the rock and uncover the body of our companion?" |
40402 | Do I not scent here some craft of Kun- dgah the painter? |
40402 | Do dead men gnash their teeth and bite the living? |
40402 | Do you promise to abide by my decision?" |
40402 | Do you promise to abide by my decision?" |
40402 | For this, my gratitude will not be withheld; but what shall all this be to me if you now talk of tearing her from mine arms again?" |
40402 | Have we not all our lives through offered sacrifice at the shrine of the Chongschim Bodhisattva? |
40402 | Have we not laboured over the journey these three days, and found none; neither shall we find it now? |
40402 | He who gave wit and understanding, is not he the Lama? |
40402 | He who painted it with tints fair to behold, did not he stand in place of the mother? |
40402 | How are they composed? |
40402 | How shall a lamb live in a hole all alone? |
40402 | How should I live alone here, without thee, my brother?" |
40402 | How should I, then, make the trial of barley- corns like one of the common herd of the people? |
40402 | How then darest thou to appear before me having only snared me one?" |
40402 | How then hast thou gone and spoken it abroad?" |
40402 | How then shall they reign over us?" |
40402 | How then venture ye, unsouled objects, to expound the matter when I, a reasonable being, scarcely dare pronounce upon the question? |
40402 | How then wilt thou ever arrive, or escape their wiles?" |
40402 | I have not to consider''Shall the life of the Prince be spared or not?'' |
40402 | Is he not rather one of the heroes making trial of his prowess who has assumed this outward form?" |
40402 | Is not my strength great? |
40402 | Is not the way long, and beset with evil men, who are so many and so bold? |
40402 | It is clear not even the man''s nearest relations can tell which of these two is the right man; how then can I, who never saw either of them before? |
40402 | It was well that they should find thee, and deliver thee from under the rock; but what would it have availed had not my potion restored thee to life? |
40402 | It will not bring the other parrots back-- and, indeed, what grudge hast thou against me? |
40402 | Neither will the land receive harm by my death; is not my mother yet alive? |
40402 | Never was such an ugly monster seen, and when the poor man considered it he said,"What shall I now do with this monster? |
40402 | Nevertheless, shall I not find a means to provide against his mischievous intent?" |
40402 | Of a truth she must have been a veritable schimnu, and if she took the sick man with her, was it not only that she might devour him at leisure?" |
40402 | Of what good shall it be to thee to keep the secret if, after all, thou diest?" |
40402 | Of what have my thoughts been filled all through these days of absence, but of thee only, and for whom else do I live?" |
40402 | Or shall it be that there lies hidden therein some jewel( 4), gifted to impart wisdom to mortals? |
40402 | Or shall it be that there lies hidden therein some treasure gifted to impart wisdom to mortals? |
40402 | Other grudge against me hast thou none; then why shouldst thou seek to maim and injure me? |
40402 | Seeing him, Massang said,"Who and whence art thou?" |
40402 | Seeing him, Massang said,"Who and whence art thou?" |
40402 | Seeing him, Massang said,"Who and whence art thou?" |
40402 | Shall a hollow tree reign over us?" |
40402 | Shall a princess now marry a beggar?" |
40402 | Shall not she be the Khan''s wife?" |
40402 | Shall not that suffice for the King''s daughter?'' |
40402 | Shall we not rather take him to some solitary place and leave him to his fate in a thick wood?" |
40402 | Shall we not rather take the path which leads over the mountain, where the trees will hide us, and pass the night under cover of the wood?" |
40402 | Shall we not stop and find him out?''" |
40402 | She only asks to taste it; but if I do her bidding, who knows what may follow?" |
40402 | Stopping therefore in the midst of the stream, he said,"Is it not my back which has carried ye all-- ape, mouse, and talisman-- over all this ground? |
40402 | Tell me now, art thou in very truth the son of the Hermit?" |
40402 | The bird espying the maiden, said to her,"Maiden, how camest thou hither?" |
40402 | The neighbours, however, laid their heads together and said,--"How comes it that this fellow has thus suddenly come into such easy circumstances?" |
40402 | The tamer asked of him,"What was thy son like?" |
40402 | Then King Ardschi- Bordschi thought within himself,"How shall I do to bring this matter to an end? |
40402 | Then Shanggasba made answer,"Wherein shall I show my power over the spirits?" |
40402 | Then answered the Khanin,"Wouldst thou in very truth prepare for me a sport at which I would surely laugh?" |
40402 | Then came the mouse, the ape, and the bear to him, saying--"What misfortune is this that hath happened to thee this second time?" |
40402 | Then he exclaimed,"Knowest thou what thou hast done? |
40402 | Then he raised his voice, and spoke thus aloud to the Khan:--"Tell me, O Khan, how shall I a poor Wood- carver attain to the gods''kingdom?" |
40402 | Then inquired he further,"Where is my perch and cage?" |
40402 | Then inquired she,"To what end is this shouting and this music?" |
40402 | Then said Vikramâditja,--"Why do you mourn so bitterly, good people?" |
40402 | Then said he aloud,"By what manner of means does the calf purpose to kill me? |
40402 | Then said he aloud,"If thy warning be so true, tell me further, I pray thee, by what manner of means doth he design to put me to death?" |
40402 | Then said the Khan''s son,"Who art thou, beautiful maiden?" |
40402 | Then said the ancient woman,"And why shouldst thou not have such a man for thy husband?" |
40402 | Then said the hare to a tiger who lay near him,"What was that?" |
40402 | Then she had the man called into her, and inquired of him thus,--"Upon what terms comest thou hither to sue for the hand of my daughter? |
40402 | Then spoke the great Master and Teacher, Nâgârg''una,"Wherefore, O dove, flutterest thou so full of terror, and what are these seven hawks to thee?" |
40402 | Then the King took up his parable and poured forth one of the sagas of old after this manner, saying,-- WHO INVENTED WOMAN? |
40402 | Then the merchants asked Schalû, saying,"What do the wolves say?" |
40402 | Then thought the husband within himself,"Who is there in heaven or earth who would have brought me this butter- paunch but my very wife? |
40402 | Therefore he stood still, and said to the hare,"Who and whence art thou?" |
40402 | Therefore, the merchants asked Schalû in sport,"What are the wolves saying?" |
40402 | They determine, therefore, the ox must be killed; but how are they to kill so disproportioned a victim? |
40402 | This means, O Khan, is manifestly not available, for how should it be done to take the life of Prince Sunshine? |
40402 | To me, then, it seems that the answer is clear, for by whom could the figure be said to be invented saving by the youth who first fashioned it? |
40402 | To whom, therefore, else should she have belonged by right of invention? |
40402 | Vikramâditja makes the Silent speak 294 Who invented Woman? |
40402 | Was it like men to let yourselves be overmatched by a little old wife? |
40402 | Was it not by my father''s aid that he attained the throne? |
40402 | What are you quarrelling about?" |
40402 | What better can befall me than that I should marry her and live here the rest of my days in her company?" |
40402 | What could all these have done for thee without the aid of mine arm? |
40402 | What could all these have done without the aid of my knowledge? |
40402 | What could these have done for thee without the aid of my reckoning? |
40402 | What is it good for?" |
40402 | What is thy grief wherewith thou art so terribly oppressed?" |
40402 | What is thy name?" |
40402 | What will it have been?" |
40402 | What would my father have said had he seen his subjects made by hundreds at a time food for the Schimnus? |
40402 | What would the garuda- bird have availed had I not painted it divinely? |
40402 | When he had thus flung many tools into the road, the blacksmith turned round with a brutal air, crying out,''Che diavol''fate voi? |
40402 | When his companions saw him they were filled with compassion and cried aloud,"Who shall give back to us our friend, the companion of our youth?" |
40402 | When his son would have gone in his stead, he answered him,"What is it to me if the Serpents devour me, so that thou, my son, reignest in peace?" |
40402 | When the Hermit had heard their embassage, he answered them,"How should a Hermit have a son with him out here in the desert?" |
40402 | When the Khan heard that, he said within himself,"How shall I put this youth to death, seeing he and I have both partaken of one mother''s milk? |
40402 | When the King read the letter, he exclaimed,"What manner of boy is this who writes thus to the King? |
40402 | When the King read the letter, he exclaimed,"What manner of boy is this, who writes thus to the King? |
40402 | When the meat of this cow had come to an end, he said within himself again,"What does it matter whether there are seven cows or six?" |
40402 | When the meat of this cow was all at an end, he said to himself,"What does it matter whether there are eight cows or seven?" |
40402 | When the wife saw him, she cried,"Wherefore camest thou hither? |
40402 | When they were gone, the wife said to him,"Why should not you also go forth and trade even as these merchants trade?" |
40402 | Wherefore should they be put in prison? |
40402 | Why canst thou not come back and stay with us altogether, without going away any more?" |
40402 | Why should we add to this death of thirst the pangs of useless fatigue also?" |
40402 | Will you change your hammer against my goblet?" |
40402 | Will you exchange your bag against my goblet?" |
40402 | Will you exchange your stick against my goblet?" |
40402 | Without thee, what shall all my royal power and state, what shall all my hundred cities, profit me?" |
40402 | Ye, therefore, who are also learned in cunning arts ought to be able to tell the interpretation of the same, but if not, then of what use are ye? |
40402 | and are not my services more than all of yours?" |
40402 | and how came ye in the hollow tree?" |
40402 | and to the children,"Which of these two is your father?" |
40402 | and to the wife,"Which of these two is your husband?" |
40402 | but,''Which shall be spared, the life of the Prince, or the life of the Khanin?'' |
40402 | exclaimed the wife,"what hast thou to do to hinder my taking a little pleasure?" |
40402 | have we not promoted his worship, and spread his renown? |
40402 | it is not in earnest that thou art minded to ascend the steps of this sacred throne?" |
40402 | let it now be made known to us, whether is better, that we choose for our daughter the secular or religious condition of life? |
40402 | my brother, how shall I live without thee, my brother?" |
40402 | retorted the Samanaer;"what sort of a thing is that, pray?" |
40402 | shall he not therefore direct us aright in our doings? |
40402 | what aileth thee?" |
40402 | what are you disputing about?" |
40402 | what grief or what necessity brings thee hither to this kaitja thus devoutly?" |
40402 | what hath befallen thee? |
40402 | what is it that pains thee, and with what manner of ailment art thou stricken?" |
40402 | wherefore comest thou hither, and whence comest thou?" |
45849 | And what is that? |
45849 | How high? |
45849 | How high? |
45849 | What can he be about? 45849 ''Bout Butter Nut and Beach, A whole week I could preach; But what the plague''s the use of that? 45849 --''Doth Mr. Rushworth know it?'' 45849 A few years ago, a Chinese father said to his wife,What shall we do with our young son? |
45849 | Affecting an air of surprise, I expressed myself at the instant as being one very anxious to know what a_ seventh_ son could do? |
45849 | And how do they treat a head when they get it? |
45849 | And what were some of the normal results of such appalling statistics? |
45849 | Are we not light- hearted in the sunshine, and depressed in a heavy atmosphere? |
45849 | Are you not a pretty circumcised little scoundrel to impose upon us in this manner?" |
45849 | Ben Jonson also in the_ Fox_, has,--"Were you enamoured on his copper rings, His saffron jewel, with the loadstone in''t?" |
45849 | Can the press enjoy greater liberty? |
45849 | Did you ever observe such a singular knot-- so regular, too, in its formation? |
45849 | Did you ever witness such a sight in your life? |
45849 | How little could Scott foresee the sudden failure of male issue? |
45849 | IMPUDENCE OR CANDOUR, WHICH IS IT? |
45849 | Now, taking these legends for as much as they are worth, and no more; what do they prove? |
45849 | Some suppose it to proceed from the swim- bladder; but if that be the drum, what is the drumstick that beats upon it? |
45849 | The son then asked,"Who is Mafuie, that I should be afraid of him?" |
45849 | This fusel oil distilled with sulphuric acid and acetate of potass, gives the oil of pears(?). |
45849 | We need not speak of the plane- trees of Plato-- Shakspeare''s mulberry- tree-- Pope''s willow-- Byron''s elm? |
45849 | What tho''I am a London dame, And lofty looks I bear, a? |
45849 | What tho''I to assemblies go, And at the Opera''s shine, a? |
45849 | What tho''my cloaths are rich brocades? |
45849 | What would be thought now- a- days of judges who went to a public ball room on commission day, and played at whist in their robes? |
45849 | When she had finished eating, the Lord of Fayel said--"Lady, was the meat you eat good?" |
45849 | Whence is this extraordinary power? |
45849 | Which is it? |
45849 | Why describe Cicero at his Tusculum-- Evelyn at Wotton-- Pitt at Ham Common-- Walpole at Houghton-- Grenville at Dropmere? |
45849 | Why dwell on Bacon''s"little tufts of thyme,"or Fox''s geraniums? |
45849 | Why should not these animals experience the same atmospheric influences as man? |
45849 | said the astonished_ Lord Townley_,"my_ Prince_, is it you? |
45849 | then, why didst thou make so free with my pocket? |
43549 | And how long will he remain there? |
43549 | Are you all Ladakis? |
43549 | But is it not possible that the prisoner may speak to the monk who pushes the_ tsamba_ dish into the loophole? 43549 But what happens if he is ill? |
43549 | But who are you? |
43549 | But why? 43549 Did I not tell you that I was not going to Khotan by the ordinary route, but by roundabout ways which would demand at least two months?" |
43549 | Did you not promise to give me the black horse in exchange for butter? 43549 Does the Sahib remember me?" |
43549 | Does the road cross over high passes? |
43549 | Has he relations? |
43549 | Has that ever happened? |
43549 | How long has he lived in the darkness? |
43549 | How old is he? |
43549 | Is it not beautiful? |
43549 | Is it not just as wrong to kill sheep and eat their flesh? |
43549 | Is not our country hard and terrible to live in? 43549 May he never come out again into the daylight before his death?" |
43549 | Tell us, Bombo Chimbo, is it you, with your glass and measuring instruments, that is keeping back the rain this year? 43549 Then he must have enough light to read by?" |
43549 | What are the names of the others? |
43549 | What colour is he? |
43549 | What does Lobsang think? |
43549 | What horse is that? |
43549 | What if we have to stay here till the lake freezes over, four months hence? |
43549 | What is it? |
43549 | What is the name of the lama who is now walled up in this cell? |
43549 | What is to be done? 43549 What is to be done?" |
43549 | What man is that? |
43549 | What would you do if I quietly disappeared one night? 43549 Whence have you come?" |
43549 | Where does the lake lie? |
43549 | Where has he come from? |
43549 | Where have you come from? |
43549 | Which of you is my cook? |
43549 | Who is the caravan bashi? |
43549 | Why do you weep? |
43549 | You are then eleven men altogether-- three Lamaists and eight Mohammedans? |
43549 | You never know, then, how he is? |
43549 | You will perhaps allow two of my own servants to carry a letter from me to Gyangtse? |
43549 | And he thinks:"What is a short earthly life in darkness compared to the glorious light of eternity?" |
43549 | And if we tried to slink through to Rudok and thence make eastwards? |
43549 | And then? |
43549 | Are you mad? |
43549 | Are you well armed?" |
43549 | But does he clearly conceive what this means? |
43549 | But how much water flows to the lake by underground passages which we could not measure? |
43549 | But how would that be possible? |
43549 | But tell me why you have come back again? |
43549 | But would it be prudent to advance further into Nepal? |
43549 | Can not he get help?" |
43549 | Did I not tell you expressly to take barley for 2½ months?" |
43549 | Did it actually exist? |
43549 | Did you not obey my orders? |
43549 | Does he not hear what we are saying, or, at least, that some one is talking outside his den?" |
43549 | Every time I write in my diary"the first,"I wonder what the new month holds in its lap-- new discoveries or new disappointments? |
43549 | Had I not already brought about Hlaje Tsering''s fall, and would I cause the new Governor of Naktsang to meet the same fate? |
43549 | Had he gone quite off his head? |
43549 | Had he got lost, or was he a scout sent out to see if the ice were broken up on the lakes to the north? |
43549 | Had you not enough last year, when you were obliged to leave the country by the road to Ladak? |
43549 | Had, perchance, the horses strayed away? |
43549 | Has the Gossul monastery been changed by some whim of the gods into an air- ship which is bearing us away to another planet? |
43549 | Have you brought me a message?" |
43549 | He had 2500 rupees with him; had he decamped, or had he been robbed? |
43549 | He said himself that he would crawl to Shyok, but how was he to get across the river? |
43549 | Here you have me again; what do you mean to do with me?" |
43549 | How far would this snow extend? |
43549 | How has it been produced, since the lake is quite peaceful? |
43549 | How have you found the way? |
43549 | How is that possible, and why are you come?" |
43549 | How seldom are all these conditions fulfilled? |
43549 | How was this to be done? |
43549 | How would it all end? |
43549 | I clapped him on the shoulder, saying,"Do you know me again, Pemba Tsering?" |
43549 | I could not avoid Rawling''s and Deasy''s country, but what did it matter? |
43549 | In Turkestan one simply encamps when a storm comes on, but what is the use of encamping to await the end of a storm which lasts thirty days? |
43549 | In a corner surely waves a Swedish flag? |
43549 | Is June to be reckoned among the winter months? |
43549 | Is not the Bombo Chimbo''s country( India) better?" |
43549 | It is very kind of you to say so, but would it not be better if you were to love your own country a little more? |
43549 | Late at night two horsemen rode past our camp; the watchmen called out"Who''s there?" |
43549 | May I hear which way you really wish to take?" |
43549 | Mundang is marked on the English maps of Nepal, but who was Lo Gapu,"the King of the Southern Land"? |
43549 | Nothing could be done with the leather waistcoat and the fur coat; they would not be dry by night, but what did it matter? |
43549 | On the morning of May 27 the weather was really fine after a minimum of only 23 °; had the spring come at last? |
43549 | Or what did I mean? |
43549 | Shall we leave it on the right or left? |
43549 | Shall we turn back? |
43549 | Should I never cross the Trans- Himalaya again? |
43549 | Should we be able to cross it with our little caravan? |
43549 | Should we be successful, and be able to complete this exceedingly important meridional traverse through an unknown part of Tibet? |
43549 | Should we succeed, or should we be forced back when we had traversed only half the distance across the blank space? |
43549 | Should we try to make a road along which the animals could be helped over the blocks by the united strength of the men? |
43549 | Should we venture in our little canvas boat on the lake, exposed to all the winds? |
43549 | Should we venture to creep along the shore southwards so as to reach a point opposite the camp? |
43549 | Stags''horns are set up on a_ mani_ heap; where do they come from? |
43549 | Then the thought shot through my mind:"Is the boat moored securely? |
43549 | Was it now the turn of the men after half the caravan had been lost? |
43549 | Was it one of the men who had been drowned in the winter? |
43549 | We are a little beyond the promontory; would it not be better to turn back? |
43549 | We are certainly past the early days of August, but is it possible that autumn is already beginning? |
43549 | We see the boat filling slowly-- shall we reach the bank before it sinks? |
43549 | Were the dogs keeping together, or were they seeking us along different paths, having lost each other? |
43549 | Were they afraid of us or were they suspicious? |
43549 | Were they spies? |
43549 | Were we hurt at all, and would we come up into the monastery and spend the night in their warm rooms? |
43549 | What could the Tibetans be thinking of? |
43549 | What did they want? |
43549 | What do you mean to do then?" |
43549 | What has become of the earth, if all is sky and clouds? |
43549 | What if I went down into Nepal and came back again into Tibet by unguarded roads? |
43549 | What if we went through the Chang- chenmo valley to Pamzal and the Lanak- la? |
43549 | What in the world did this mean? |
43549 | What is the use of looking forward to spring when the days are darker as time goes on? |
43549 | What is your occupation?" |
43549 | What news?" |
43549 | What shall we do then? |
43549 | What would she do when night came down with its dreadful darkness and its prowling wolves? |
43549 | What would they say, what would they do, if we were drowned like cats in this raging lake? |
43549 | Where are the others?" |
43549 | Where was she? |
43549 | Which was more expedient-- to travel north- east or south- west? |
43549 | Who was he? |
43549 | Why do you ask the names of the valleys?" |
43549 | Why had we not started an hour earlier, instead of watching the religious ablutions of the Hindus? |
43549 | Why have you come back again?" |
43549 | Why have you travelled in winter? |
43549 | Why is the beautiful view concealed and the daylight excluded? |
43549 | Why then do you travel by this dangerous side route? |
43549 | Will you agree to accompany me to Kamba Tsenam''s tent, four days''journey from here? |
43549 | Will you instead have the kindness to follow us to Semoku by the Tsango, on the_ tasam_, which is only two days''journey to the south- west? |
43549 | Would he keep his word? |
43549 | what was she doing at this moment? |
27339 | A book? 27339 A gunman, eh? |
27339 | A hundred Mex? |
27339 | A lady? |
27339 | A ship is going to pick you up to- morrow? |
27339 | A yacht? 27339 About what?" |
27339 | After I am dead? 27339 All this-- and what will be the end?" |
27339 | Alone? |
27339 | An adventure? 27339 An order?" |
27339 | And I''m to crease him if he pokes his noodle down the stairs? |
27339 | And for helping me into Singapore I''m to agree not to hand such men as you leave me over to the British authorities? |
27339 | And how are you going to refuse it? 27339 And if I do n''t?" |
27339 | And if worse comes to worse, will-- will you save one for me? 27339 And that I shall go to the nearest authorities and report this action?" |
27339 | And that if I humanly can I''ll keep my word? |
27339 | And that is not to attempt to mix it with the scoundrel? |
27339 | And that, I suppose, will be my job? |
27339 | And what is that? |
27339 | And what will become of me-- if anything happens to you, or anything happens to him? 27339 And what would you do if you had riches?" |
27339 | And who is this man? |
27339 | And you expected him to fall on your shoulder and ask your pardon after that? 27339 And you want me to call you that?" |
27339 | Any funds? |
27339 | Any kind of a reparation? |
27339 | Any ridin''? |
27339 | Are n''t you glad now,said Jane,"that you let him go?" |
27339 | Are they so precious? 27339 Are you a poet?" |
27339 | Are you all right? |
27339 | Are you calling me a tomfool? |
27339 | Are you comfortable, sir? |
27339 | Are you comfortable? |
27339 | Are you going to maroon us there? |
27339 | Are you going to start something? |
27339 | Are you going to take Miss Norman along? |
27339 | Are you going to take Mr. Cleigh''s paintings when you leave us? |
27339 | Are you out for Cunningham''s hide? |
27339 | Are you really my father? |
27339 | At any rate, enough to make you accept a bad situation with good grace? |
27339 | Bad as that, huh? 27339 Because he happens to be handsome?" |
27339 | Benson, where the devil is the claw hammer? |
27339 | But how will he get them off the yacht-- transship them? |
27339 | But how? 27339 But if she should happen to take a fancy to me, who shall say no?" |
27339 | But if the men should break in? 27339 But supposing your father does n''t give you one?" |
27339 | But why commit piracy? 27339 But you do n''t buy them just because you are rich enough to outbid somebody else?" |
27339 | But you do n''t hate women? |
27339 | But you got over it? |
27339 | But you, have you never caught some of the passion for possessing rare paintings, rugs, manuscripts? |
27339 | But your father? |
27339 | Ca n''t you understand? 27339 Can you shoot?" |
27339 | Can you tell me you''re not excited? |
27339 | Cases? 27339 Cases?" |
27339 | Cleigh has n''t injured you in any way, has he? |
27339 | Cleve,said Cleigh, solemnly,"you appreciate the risks you are running?" |
27339 | Cunningham? |
27339 | Denny, I''ve never asked before; I''ve been a little afraid to, but did you see Flint when the crew left? |
27339 | Denny? 27339 Denny?" |
27339 | Denny? |
27339 | Devil beads, eh? |
27339 | Did he say anything about being picked up by another boat? |
27339 | Did they kick you out of the Navy? |
27339 | Did they steal anything? |
27339 | Did you call, sir? |
27339 | Did you ever hear Mephisto laugh in Faust? 27339 Did you examine the clip this morning? |
27339 | Did you expect to see him over here? |
27339 | Do the ropes hurt? |
27339 | Do you begin to understand? |
27339 | Do you believe I''ve put my cards on the table? |
27339 | Do you believe that? 27339 Do you believe that?" |
27339 | Do you hear me? 27339 Do you intend to take the oils and the rug and later return them?" |
27339 | Do you keep it? |
27339 | Do you know the Cleighs well? |
27339 | Do you know what Ishmael means? |
27339 | Do you know what? |
27339 | Do you know where those beads are? |
27339 | Do you know why your father kidnaped me so easily? 27339 Do your guardians know where you are?" |
27339 | Do? 27339 Dodge, where the devil are you?" |
27339 | Does any of us know what God wants of us? |
27339 | Does n''t happen to be what? |
27339 | Does n''t hurt to talk about her? |
27339 | Ever read''Phra the Phoenician''? |
27339 | Fate? 27339 Father,"she said,"you will do me a favour?" |
27339 | Find me in what? |
27339 | Fired? 27339 Flint? |
27339 | For having lost so nice a husband? |
27339 | For how much? |
27339 | For me? |
27339 | For what reason? |
27339 | For what? |
27339 | Funny old world, is n''t it? |
27339 | Game? |
27339 | Glass beads? 27339 Glass beads?" |
27339 | Good Lord, will you listen to that? |
27339 | Had n''t we better go into the parlour? |
27339 | Has Miss Norman been in here? |
27339 | Has there never been----"A woman? 27339 Hate yourself, eh? |
27339 | Have I any choice? 27339 Have a peg?" |
27339 | Have they quizzed you? |
27339 | Have you any idea what estranged them? |
27339 | Have you any jade? 27339 Have you calculated that some day you will have to let me go?" |
27339 | Have you ever hunted pearls? |
27339 | Have you ever killed a man? |
27339 | Have you ever played it? |
27339 | Have you got the beads? |
27339 | Have you never considered what mental anguish must be the portion of a man whose body is twisted as his is? 27339 Have you never loved anybody?" |
27339 | Have you notified the police? |
27339 | Have you? |
27339 | He is n''t contemplating making a fool of himself, is he? 27339 He is n''t, eh? |
27339 | Heaven on earth, why did n''t you accept his offer? |
27339 | How dare you use that tone to me? 27339 How do you purpose to get the beads?" |
27339 | How do you want me to act? |
27339 | How far is the Catwick? |
27339 | How is she taking it? |
27339 | How is that done? |
27339 | How long since you kissed any one? |
27339 | How long was she here? |
27339 | How much do you want? |
27339 | How much gold would that be? |
27339 | How much is this corner worth? |
27339 | How much? |
27339 | How much? |
27339 | How the deuce did the beads happen to turn up here in Shanghai? |
27339 | How would you go about to steal a yacht like this? |
27339 | How? |
27339 | Hungry? |
27339 | I mean appertainin''to me? |
27339 | I say, any you chaps got an extra suit of twill? 27339 I wonder,"he said,"are we two awake, or are we having the same nightmare?" |
27339 | I''ll write it, but how will I get it to you? 27339 In Shanghai? |
27339 | In that case,said Cleigh,"I lose?" |
27339 | In the leg? 27339 Indeed?" |
27339 | Injured me? 27339 Is it the rug?" |
27339 | Is n''t he dining to- night? |
27339 | Is n''t love rank nonsense? |
27339 | Is n''t she glorious? |
27339 | Is there any fire in you, I wonder? |
27339 | It was n''t there, was it? |
27339 | Jane-- all right? |
27339 | Jane? |
27339 | Kill any o''them Bolsheviks? |
27339 | Let''s see; did n''t you work on a sugar plantation somewhere? |
27339 | Like what? |
27339 | Ling Foo? 27339 Mine?" |
27339 | Miss Norman? 27339 Miss Norman?" |
27339 | Miss Norman? |
27339 | Miss Norman? |
27339 | Money? 27339 Mr. Cleigh, what is it that makes art treasures so priceless?" |
27339 | Mr. Cleigh, when you spoke of reparation last night, you were n''t thinking in monetary terms, were you? |
27339 | My word? |
27339 | Napoleon? |
27339 | No? |
27339 | No? |
27339 | Nobody and nothing? |
27339 | Nothing disturbed you through the night? |
27339 | Oh, that? 27339 On the way back to the States?" |
27339 | On which side of the mouth? |
27339 | Only to God? |
27339 | Pain? |
27339 | Pardon me, but may I ask you a question? |
27339 | Plenty of coal? |
27339 | Ransom? 27339 Romance?" |
27339 | Run into the old boy? |
27339 | Say, are you asking me to do it? |
27339 | Say, do n''t I know this Sulu game? 27339 Say, what''s your old man''s idea hog- tyin''you that- a- way?" |
27339 | Shall a man give it where it is not wanted? 27339 She went out alone?" |
27339 | Smoking, with my hands tied behind my back? 27339 So that''s where I saw you?" |
27339 | So you carry a Texas gunman round with you now? 27339 So you went into town for her luggage? |
27339 | So? |
27339 | Sounds almost too good to be true, does n''t it? 27339 Suppose I find my pearls-- and then come back for you? |
27339 | Supposing I had come to you and you had advanced the money? |
27339 | Supposing,said Cleigh, trickling the beads from palm to palm--"supposing I offered you the equivalent in cash?" |
27339 | Surprises you, eh? 27339 That handsome man who limped?" |
27339 | That is to say, priceless? |
27339 | That''s your word? |
27339 | That? |
27339 | The beads? |
27339 | The good- looking chap that limped? |
27339 | The old boy? 27339 Then my mind is sick?" |
27339 | Then you have some doubts? |
27339 | There have been other women-- besides the one who laughed? |
27339 | There was a woman? |
27339 | They ca n''t keep away from him, can they? |
27339 | They returned the yacht in perfect condition? |
27339 | To last? 27339 To whom did you sell it, and where can I find the buyer?" |
27339 | Trade them? 27339 Understand what?" |
27339 | Well, what''s it to be? |
27339 | Well, why do you want to marry me? |
27339 | Well? |
27339 | Well? |
27339 | Well? |
27339 | Well? |
27339 | Were you hurt in the struggle? |
27339 | Were you mad to try a game like that? 27339 What about these glass beads?" |
27339 | What are those? |
27339 | What are you doing here? |
27339 | What are you going to do? |
27339 | What are you through with? |
27339 | What can they be after? 27339 What can you do?" |
27339 | What do you know about these glass beads? |
27339 | What do you make of the beads? |
27339 | What do you mean by that? |
27339 | What do you mean by that? |
27339 | What do you think? |
27339 | What do you want-- a million? 27339 What happened to me?" |
27339 | What happened to them? |
27339 | What happened? |
27339 | What in heaven''s name has happened? |
27339 | What in the world do you suppose is going on? |
27339 | What is it you wish to ask of me? |
27339 | What is it? |
27339 | What is it? |
27339 | What is it? |
27339 | What is the joke? |
27339 | What is there about this string of beads that makes it worth a hundred gold-- and life worth nothing? |
27339 | What makes the sea so yellow? |
27339 | What makes you believe so? |
27339 | What next, sir? |
27339 | What the devil are you doing on board? |
27339 | What the devil are you up to there? |
27339 | What the devil do you want of a job? |
27339 | What was? |
27339 | What would you do in my place? |
27339 | What would you, when a comrade attempts to deceive you? |
27339 | What you got to say about it? |
27339 | What''s it good for, anyhow? |
27339 | What''s that to you? |
27339 | What''s that, sir? |
27339 | What''s that? |
27339 | What''s that? |
27339 | What''s the game-- if it''s beyond ransom? |
27339 | What''s the game? |
27339 | What''s the matter, Flint? |
27339 | What''s this Catwick Island? |
27339 | What''s this-- a clinic? |
27339 | What''s your idea of hell, Newton? |
27339 | What, set her ashore to sic the British Navy on us? 27339 What, you ran all this risk and had n''t the nerve to search her? |
27339 | What? 27339 What?" |
27339 | What? |
27339 | What? |
27339 | What? |
27339 | What? |
27339 | Whatever shall I do with the jade? |
27339 | When and where are you going to get married? |
27339 | When did the man upstairs leave the beads with you? |
27339 | Where are they? |
27339 | Where are you going? |
27339 | Where are you going? |
27339 | Where have you been? |
27339 | Where is it? |
27339 | Where is the man who sent you? |
27339 | Where is the man who stumbled in here last night? |
27339 | Where is what? |
27339 | Where''s Dodge? |
27339 | Where? |
27339 | Who can say? |
27339 | Who drew the plans for this yacht? |
27339 | Who knows? |
27339 | Why did he run away? |
27339 | Why did n''t you admit me last night? |
27339 | Why did n''t you put up here? |
27339 | Why did n''t you tell me that in the first place? 27339 Why did you maltreat him?" |
27339 | Why did you select that? |
27339 | Why do n''t you try it? |
27339 | Why do n''t you write a book about these adventures? |
27339 | Why do you wait? |
27339 | Why not? 27339 Why not? |
27339 | Why not? |
27339 | Why not? |
27339 | Why should I be afraid, and why should n''t I be curious? |
27339 | Why the devil did you sign on, then? |
27339 | Why these seven years-- if you cared? 27339 Why, where''s your uniform?" |
27339 | Why? |
27339 | Why? |
27339 | Will you answer me a question? |
27339 | Will you come to your chair soon? 27339 Will you do me the favour of taking out the hairpins and loosing it?" |
27339 | Will you leave these objects to the legal owners? |
27339 | Will you open the door? |
27339 | Will you promise me one thing, Denny? |
27339 | Will you promise me one thing? |
27339 | Will you take it, Father? 27339 Will you tell me what it is about these beads that makes you offer ten thousand for them? |
27339 | Will you tell me what those beads are? |
27339 | Will you? 27339 Will you?" |
27339 | Williams, do you believe in God? |
27339 | With the handsome face? 27339 With what?" |
27339 | Wo n''t you come in? |
27339 | Wo n''t you tell me what the cause was? |
27339 | Would ten thousand dollars interest you? |
27339 | Would the lady like to see some things? |
27339 | Would you like a cup of coffee? |
27339 | Would you like me to read a while to you? |
27339 | Yes, what has happened? |
27339 | Yes? |
27339 | You are honestly leaving us at that island? |
27339 | You believe that? |
27339 | You bid me blow it? |
27339 | You demand that? |
27339 | You get all the angles? |
27339 | You have n''t got an extra gun anywhere, have you? |
27339 | You have n''t got it? |
27339 | You mean,said Cleigh, gravely,"that Dodge may be only the beginning?" |
27339 | You refuse? |
27339 | You refuse? |
27339 | You refuse? |
27339 | You remember that fellow who was here night before last? |
27339 | You struck him? |
27339 | You think so? |
27339 | You trust that scoundrel? |
27339 | You went up there alone? |
27339 | You went up there? |
27339 | You wish to know about those beads? 27339 You''re not thinking that I''m going back on an allowance? |
27339 | You''re quitting the big game? |
27339 | You? |
27339 | Your word? |
27339 | _ Cherchez la femme!_"You believe that was it? |
27339 | *****"Miss Norman?" |
27339 | *****"Where''s the captain?" |
27339 | A fairy story? |
27339 | A real tragedy or some absurd trifle? |
27339 | After all, why not? |
27339 | And now will you answer a question of mine? |
27339 | And swiftly upon this desire came the thought that if she appealed to him so strongly, might she not appeal quite as strongly to the rogue? |
27339 | And what could possibly happen between now and the arrival of the_ Haarlem_? |
27339 | And what the deuce was the colour of her eyes? |
27339 | And when he found them, what then? |
27339 | And where did the glass beads come in? |
27339 | And where had she met the man? |
27339 | And where will you get five hundred gold? |
27339 | And which of two things should she demand? |
27339 | And why should he lie to me? |
27339 | And yet what hope was there of making a real living? |
27339 | And yet?" |
27339 | And you?" |
27339 | Another point to consider: Foot- loose for seven years, could he stand the shackles of office work, routine, the sameness day in and day out? |
27339 | Any orders, sir?" |
27339 | Any trouble picking up the crew?" |
27339 | Anything else?" |
27339 | Anything you need?" |
27339 | Are you any better than he? |
27339 | Are you smoking?" |
27339 | Benson, did you say-- cases?" |
27339 | Benson, what did these men look like? |
27339 | But are you sure you can get the beads back?" |
27339 | But do you care for the boy?" |
27339 | But had it been love? |
27339 | But if a ship was to pick him up, why had n''t she made Shanghai and picked him up there? |
27339 | But if pearls are his game, why commit piracy when he could have chartered a tramp to carry his crew? |
27339 | But if you had ten or twelve millions, what would you do?" |
27339 | But supposing Cleigh had wished really to quiz Jane? |
27339 | But was any grudge worth this risk? |
27339 | But what about the woman?" |
27339 | But what is what?" |
27339 | But what made you think of the yacht?" |
27339 | But what was it she saw-- a twinkle or a sparkle? |
27339 | But what was the row between Cleigh and his son? |
27339 | But where''s the drunken man with caution? |
27339 | But who is the man with him? |
27339 | But why call in the undertaker to help us out? |
27339 | But why do n''t you take the sixty thousand?" |
27339 | But why do you carry them about like this?" |
27339 | But why go on? |
27339 | But why the devil do you carry that rug abroad?" |
27339 | But why?" |
27339 | But would she? |
27339 | CHAPTER XII"How are you making out, Newton?" |
27339 | Ca n''t you break a piece of glass and saw your way out?" |
27339 | Ca n''t you see the sport of it?" |
27339 | Can you hear me distinctly?" |
27339 | Clean shaven, bronzed, tall, and solidly built, clear- eyed, not exactly handsome but engaging-- what lay back of the man''s peculiar reticence? |
27339 | Cleigh went on:"Where will it go when I have done my little span? |
27339 | Clever idea of me, eh?" |
27339 | Cook''s or the American Express?" |
27339 | Could a strong man like you exist in an atmosphere of suppressed chuckles? |
27339 | Could a venture like this have happened in 1913? |
27339 | Could he swallow his pride? |
27339 | Could you pick up the old life, the clubs? |
27339 | Dare you hang that Da Vinci, that Dolci, that Holbein in your gallery home? |
27339 | Dear God, what had happened? |
27339 | Denny?" |
27339 | Did he ever break his word to you?" |
27339 | Did he kill the ruffian?" |
27339 | Did he threaten you?" |
27339 | Did n''t it strike you odd to land a crew who talked more or less grammatically, who were clean bodily, who were n''t boozers?" |
27339 | Did she want it to last? |
27339 | Did she want romance all the rest of her days? |
27339 | Did you bring some aboard?" |
27339 | Did you ever kill a man?" |
27339 | Did you ever tell him a fairy story?" |
27339 | Did you find the beads?" |
27339 | Did you pick up that light?" |
27339 | Did you search her?" |
27339 | Do you expect me to lie down when this play is over? |
27339 | Do you get a glimmer of the truth now?" |
27339 | Do you know what I was going to demand of your father as a reparation for bringing me on board? |
27339 | Do you know what? |
27339 | Do you understand? |
27339 | Do you want the truth? |
27339 | Does it amuse you to hear me talk of the Bible?--an unregenerate scalawag? |
27339 | Does n''t that tingle you when you hear people whisper it as you pass? |
27339 | For what was she hunting? |
27339 | Had he been a professional sailor prior to the war? |
27339 | Had he been overhasty in ridding himself of the beads? |
27339 | Had his father ever really been afraid of anything? |
27339 | Had n''t Cunningham himself confessed that the whole affair was a joke? |
27339 | Had n''t she more cause to worry than any one else? |
27339 | Had n''t they behaved like little Fauntleroys for weeks? |
27339 | Had she fallen upon an adventure? |
27339 | Hang it, passions are the very devil, are n''t they? |
27339 | Has he a sense of humour?" |
27339 | Has he told you what makes those infernal beads so precious?" |
27339 | Has it ever occurred to you that the mirage is the one lie Nature utters?" |
27339 | Have I kept you waiting?" |
27339 | Have I not just said there is always a woman?" |
27339 | Have you any right to tell me what I shall and shall not do?" |
27339 | Have you ever asked Him for anything?" |
27339 | Have you ever been in love?" |
27339 | Have you kept in mind the sums I have given you?" |
27339 | Have you those infernal beads?" |
27339 | Having loaded it once upon a time, you believed that was sufficient, eh? |
27339 | He heard his father speaking again:"Since you will have it so, you will go to Hong- Kong?" |
27339 | He wondered-- had he made his word a law simply to meet and conquer a situation such as this? |
27339 | Hobnobbing together for days, how was I to know they were a bunch of pirates? |
27339 | Honestly?" |
27339 | How about you?" |
27339 | How are you going to prove that I''ve borrowed the rug and the paintings? |
27339 | How could a yacht live through a hurricane? |
27339 | How do you feel?" |
27339 | How in the world was he to know what your thoughts were?" |
27339 | How in the world was she to be made to understand that they were riding a deep- sea volcano? |
27339 | How much is it worth?" |
27339 | How much is that Chinese jacket?" |
27339 | How should I smell anythin''? |
27339 | How to secrete this note without being observed by either the manager or the Chinaman? |
27339 | How was I to know unless you told me? |
27339 | How will you go about it? |
27339 | How''d you find that out?" |
27339 | How''s your dad?" |
27339 | I just told you about passions, did n''t I? |
27339 | I suppose you''ll be going home on her?" |
27339 | I wonder if you realize it? |
27339 | I''ll see you in the morning?" |
27339 | If she balked him, how would the father act? |
27339 | If she were in love with Denny, why did n''t she thrill when he approached? |
27339 | If so, where was the fire that should attend? |
27339 | If the episode of the morning had not convinced Jane, what would? |
27339 | If the glass beads were worth five hundred, was n''t it likely they would be worth a thousand? |
27339 | If you want to moralize, where''s the line between the thief and the receiver? |
27339 | Immediately Dodge began to talk:"So you nearly throttled that ornery coyote, huh? |
27339 | Instantly the thought leaped into the girl''s mind: Supposing such an event lay back of this strange silence about his home and his people? |
27339 | Is Cunningham secretly letting them into the dry- stores?" |
27339 | Is n''t it glorious, captain?" |
27339 | Is n''t there something providential in that?" |
27339 | Is that it?" |
27339 | Is there any desperate plunge we would n''t take if we thought we could leave the Old Man of the Sea behind? |
27339 | Is your old man sore?" |
27339 | Know what I think? |
27339 | Know what my first move''ll be?" |
27339 | Lord love you, if that is n''t pure pagan, what is? |
27339 | Love? |
27339 | MISS NORMAN: Will you do me the honour to meet me at the bridgehead at half- past nine-- practically at once? |
27339 | Mad? |
27339 | Maybe these sailors had n''t gone pop- eyed when they saw him pumping lead into the bull''s- eye six times running? |
27339 | Navy stores?" |
27339 | Never know when you''re well off-- huh? |
27339 | No message?" |
27339 | Notice her hair? |
27339 | Now suppose you come below with me and take a look at the paintings? |
27339 | Of whom and of what did she remind him? |
27339 | Off the Catwick? |
27339 | One of them limp?" |
27339 | Or had Cunningham spoken the truth-- a lure? |
27339 | Or was he just trying Anthony Cleigh''s nerves to see whether they were sound or raw? |
27339 | Or was his hesitance due to the fear of her hate? |
27339 | Or was this an interlude-- a mocking interlude, and would to- morrow see his conscience relegated to the dustbin out of which it had so oddly emerged? |
27339 | Ordinarily so full of common sense, what had happened to her that her vision should become so obscured as not to recognize the danger of the man? |
27339 | Out of spite, will you inform the British, the French, the Italian governments that you had these objects and that I relieved you of them? |
27339 | Outside of books, what was it save a legal contract to cook and bear children in exchange for food and clothes? |
27339 | Pioneers, explorers, adventurers-- what else do they seek? |
27339 | Piracy? |
27339 | Piracy? |
27339 | Queer twist in events, eh?" |
27339 | Rather had it not been a series of false dawns? |
27339 | Remember? |
27339 | Say, Denny, was there a wireless man in the crew?" |
27339 | Say, what did the Lord make all that stuff for?" |
27339 | Shall we have breakfast together?" |
27339 | She deceived you?" |
27339 | She wondered if these poor yellow people had ever known what it was to play? |
27339 | Should he utter his suspicion to this American officer? |
27339 | Smooth?--is that what you mean?" |
27339 | So Cleigh and the boy do n''t speak?" |
27339 | So Cleigh was right? |
27339 | So she called him Denny? |
27339 | Some hidden magnetism? |
27339 | Some private war? |
27339 | Somebody he had seen, somebody he had read about? |
27339 | Still hanging on? |
27339 | Still looking at the business romantically?" |
27339 | Sunken treasure?" |
27339 | Suppose we go on deck? |
27339 | Supposing he had killed someone? |
27339 | Supposing he put up a fight and called in the British to help him? |
27339 | Supposing the old man''s desire for vengeance was stronger than his love for his art objects? |
27339 | Supposing the rogue had his eye on that rug? |
27339 | Supposing they had wanted to fling themselves into each other''s arms and had n''t known how? |
27339 | Supposing they were just stupid rather than vengeful? |
27339 | Surely it must be a joke?" |
27339 | Surely you do n''t hate your father?" |
27339 | Take that royal Persian there-- the second- best animal rug on earth-- is there no murder behind the woof and warp of it? |
27339 | That would be a joke, would n''t it? |
27339 | The Orient of the novels she had read-- where was it? |
27339 | The pioneer-- after all, what was it he was truly seeking? |
27339 | The singular beauty of the man''s face, his amazing career, and his pathetic deformity-- was that it? |
27339 | The zest that had been his ten days gone, where was it? |
27339 | Then those devil beads had some worth outside a jeweller''s computations? |
27339 | Then what? |
27339 | They do n''t speak?" |
27339 | They quit?" |
27339 | This side of the passage or the other? |
27339 | To find out something about these seven years, lean and hard, with stretches of idleness and stretches of furious labour, loneliness? |
27339 | To press back the old brooding thought he said with cheerful brusqueness:"Suppose we celebrate? |
27339 | To what lengths might he not go to possess it? |
27339 | To you?" |
27339 | Too haughty to be a good fellow, huh?" |
27339 | Turn them into money he no longer cared to spend? |
27339 | Vedder did great work on that, did n''t he? |
27339 | Want to call it off?" |
27339 | Was Cunningham paying off an old grudge? |
27339 | Was Dennison''s theory correct regarding the beads? |
27339 | Was he growing old, drying up? |
27339 | Was it Denny-- or yonder riddle? |
27339 | Was it his dark, fiery eye which was always reversing what his glib tongue said? |
27339 | Was it the face of him, too strong and vital for a woman''s, too handsome for a man''s? |
27339 | Was she handsome? |
27339 | Was she in love? |
27339 | Was that madness hidden away in her somewhere? |
27339 | Was there a bit of black sheep in her, and was the man calling to it? |
27339 | Was there a bit of gold somewhere in his grotesque make- up? |
27339 | Was there a nugget of forgotten gold in his cosmos, and had she discovered it? |
27339 | Was there ever a rough- and- tumble that anybody could explain lucidly the morning after? |
27339 | Was there fire in her? |
27339 | Well, what were they if not that? |
27339 | Well?" |
27339 | Well?" |
27339 | Were those treasures honourably yours? |
27339 | What about himself? |
27339 | What about it?" |
27339 | What about the crew if he is n''t on hand to hold them?" |
27339 | What are they?" |
27339 | What are you going to demand of him-- supposing we come through safely?" |
27339 | What could be more humorous than tying me up in this fashion and putting me in the cabin that used to be mine? |
27339 | What do you say, Denny?" |
27339 | What do you want to talk to him for, anyhow?" |
27339 | What does Cleigh call them?" |
27339 | What does the sense of possession amount to beside the sense of seeking and finding? |
27339 | What dramatic event had created such a condition? |
27339 | What earthly chance have you got? |
27339 | What floor is her room on?" |
27339 | What fool had swung that bottle? |
27339 | What had caused his exuberance to die away, his enthusiasm to grow dim? |
27339 | What had happened? |
27339 | What had happened? |
27339 | What had he done with them? |
27339 | What had held him back? |
27339 | What had inspired him to hold always to that? |
27339 | What had she said?--reknead his soul so that it would fit his face? |
27339 | What had the son done so to enrage the father? |
27339 | What had they done with the body? |
27339 | What if he waked? |
27339 | What if he was worried? |
27339 | What imp of Satan would n''t have been amiable? |
27339 | What is it you wish to know?" |
27339 | What is the book?" |
27339 | What lay back of this sudden desire to make good in the world? |
27339 | What makes them as valuable as pearls?" |
27339 | What makes them precious?" |
27339 | What new adventures lie in store for it? |
27339 | What the devil can he mean by that?" |
27339 | What the devil did he do-- murder someone, rob the office safe, or marry Tottie Lightfoot? |
27339 | What the devil do you care how it was got, so long as it eventually becomes yours? |
27339 | What the devil got into me?" |
27339 | What the devil possessed you? |
27339 | What then? |
27339 | What time shall I call?" |
27339 | What to do? |
27339 | What to say? |
27339 | What was it all about? |
27339 | What was it? |
27339 | What was more human than to forgive-- a father to forgive a son? |
27339 | What was she after? |
27339 | What was she going to ask of his father when the time came for reparation? |
27339 | What was she like?" |
27339 | What was the basis of this trust? |
27339 | What was the matter with Jane Norman? |
27339 | What was this thing within her that was striving for expression? |
27339 | What was this unusual young woman going to ask of him? |
27339 | What were they, to have brought his father across the Pacific-- if indeed they had? |
27339 | What would she be demanding of him as a reparation? |
27339 | What''s a wood fire to you but a shin warmer? |
27339 | What''s his game? |
27339 | What''s it about? |
27339 | What''s the answer?" |
27339 | What''s the dope?" |
27339 | What''s the feminine?" |
27339 | What''s the game?" |
27339 | What''s the idea?" |
27339 | What''s two months in our young lives?" |
27339 | What? |
27339 | What?" |
27339 | What?" |
27339 | Whata you know about that? |
27339 | Whata you know about this round- up? |
27339 | When you were a little girl did n''t you dream of a wonderful doll that could walk and make almost human noises? |
27339 | Where did you get this?" |
27339 | Where do you think you are-- raiding the Spanish Main? |
27339 | Where do you want me to hang out?" |
27339 | Where had she seen him before, and under what circumstance? |
27339 | Where have you hidden them?" |
27339 | Where is that to be? |
27339 | Where was Denny, if this picture was n''t nightmare? |
27339 | Where was Denny? |
27339 | Where was it? |
27339 | Where was she? |
27339 | Where was the harm? |
27339 | Where we bound for?" |
27339 | Where were the cutlasses, the fierce moustaches, the red bandannas, the rattle of dice, and the drunken songs?--the piracy of tradition? |
27339 | Where you been?" |
27339 | Where''s that man Flint? |
27339 | Who but a fool would plan and execute a game such as this? |
27339 | Who cares?" |
27339 | Who could say that it was n''t Cunningham''s game to take Jane along with him in the end? |
27339 | Who in America had not? |
27339 | Who is he?" |
27339 | Who knows? |
27339 | Who took care of you-- bound you up?" |
27339 | Why bother about the absolute, the inevitable? |
27339 | Why ca n''t you take it sensibly, like your father?" |
27339 | Why did n''t you come to me for that?" |
27339 | Why did n''t you hire a steamer?" |
27339 | Why did n''t you leave the job to someone who knew how? |
27339 | Why did n''t you offer some other bits of jade? |
27339 | Why did she wish to be beautiful? |
27339 | Why had he laid down for himself this law? |
27339 | Why had he struck Denny on the mouth? |
27339 | Why had n''t he told her that last night on the British transport? |
27339 | Why had n''t they beat a retreat? |
27339 | Why had n''t they retreated with good sense at the start? |
27339 | Why had the limping man returned and demanded entrance? |
27339 | Why had the mutinous six offered battle? |
27339 | Why not give it a whirl? |
27339 | Why not try to make over your soul to match it?" |
27339 | Why not? |
27339 | Why should I, since He gave me this withered leg? |
27339 | Why should he wish to protect his father? |
27339 | Why should it matter to him whether they believed in the honour of his word or not, when he held the whip hand and could act as he pleased? |
27339 | Why should n''t he be, knowing that he held their lives in the hollow of his hand? |
27339 | Why should she trust Cunningham? |
27339 | Why should that be? |
27339 | Why stop to fight when the wine was theirs? |
27339 | Why the devil should I care what you think of me? |
27339 | Why? |
27339 | Why? |
27339 | Why? |
27339 | Why? |
27339 | Why?" |
27339 | Will you be my guest, or will you be my prisoner?" |
27339 | Will you be sensible, or shall I have to lock you up like your two- gun man from Texas?" |
27339 | Will you forgive me?" |
27339 | Will you forgive me?" |
27339 | Will you marry me, Jane? |
27339 | Will you open it and let me chuck the stuff overboard?" |
27339 | Will you promise?" |
27339 | Worth a bold stroke, eh?" |
27339 | Would I enter the launch peacefully, or would he have to carry me? |
27339 | Would a break come, or would the affair go on eternally? |
27339 | Would he be here at one of the tables? |
27339 | Would n''t it be fun to have a thousand dollars to fling away on the shops? |
27339 | Would she ever see a continuous stretch of sunshine again? |
27339 | Would they see him again? |
27339 | Would you send the British piling on top of me, or would you make it a private war? |
27339 | Would you sit tight under such an outrage, or would your want of revenge ride you? |
27339 | You are still tied?" |
27339 | You brought the gold?" |
27339 | You came in search of me?" |
27339 | You have those glass beads I sold you this morning?" |
27339 | You know what happened in town? |
27339 | You remember, Cleigh, the one that hangs in the Pitti Galleria in Florence-- Allori''s?" |
27339 | You understand that, boys?" |
27339 | You understand? |
27339 | You understand?" |
27339 | Your father has made a prisoner of you? |
27339 | Your girl?" |
27339 | why had she accepted the situation so docilely? |
23634 | A long one and a short one, Do you wish me to tell you a long one? 23634 A turkey? |
23634 | Ah, are you there? 23634 Ah, is that he?" |
23634 | Ah, my old man, why should I tell you? |
23634 | Ah, you are all fast, are you? 23634 Am I doing it all right thus?" |
23634 | And are you annoyed about that? 23634 And can not I see my other two sisters?" |
23634 | And how can you sing? |
23634 | And me, too? |
23634 | And that other at the head of the table? |
23634 | And the one near your father? |
23634 | And this? |
23634 | And what about this parrot? |
23634 | And what would you do,said the physician,"if you had her now in your hands?" |
23634 | And where do you keep your son? |
23634 | And where have you put your child? |
23634 | Are they playing a joke on us? |
23634 | Are you afraid that your farms in the Plain( of Catania) are badly tilled? 23634 Are you going to carry off the princess, now?" |
23634 | Are you here again, you ungrateful beast? |
23634 | Are you satisfied now? 23634 Are you telling the truth? |
23634 | As long as I have been stairs, when did you ever deign to sweep me? 23634 As long as we have been giants, when did you ever deign to clean our food for us? |
23634 | Because my son will be back in a few days, and how have we taken care of the doll? |
23634 | Better? 23634 But how can we manage it?" |
23634 | But tell me, good man, have you no other daughters? 23634 But tell me,"said the princess,"what way is there to free you?" |
23634 | But what is it? 23634 But what shall we do?" |
23634 | But where are you fast? |
23634 | But you would not do anything to him, truly? |
23634 | But, gentlemen,said the old man,"did you beat it?" |
23634 | But, mistress, will you not take something this evening? 23634 Can she have robbed me?" |
23634 | Can you not guess what has happened to me? 23634 Catherine,"said she,"when would you rather enjoy your life, in youth or in old age?" |
23634 | Cecino, where are you? |
23634 | Cecino, where are you? |
23634 | Dear son, where have you left her? |
23634 | Did you break the pot? |
23634 | Did you leave me to follow the ungrateful Angiola? |
23634 | Did you not promise me not to tell it until you had seen my face a hundred times? |
23634 | Do n''t you see? 23634 Do you hear her?" |
23634 | Do you hear, Giufà? |
23634 | Do you hear? 23634 Do you know what we must do?" |
23634 | Do you know what you must do to make him let you come? 23634 Do you know what you must tell her? |
23634 | Do you know? 23634 Do you live here all alone?" |
23634 | Do you not know what the trouble is? |
23634 | Do you promise never to molest her? |
23634 | Do you remember the imprecation she pronounced on you,--that you could not marry until you found Snow- white- fire- red? |
23634 | Do you remember the old woman whose pitcher of oil you broke? 23634 Do you see this great palace? |
23634 | Do you see yonder high mountain? |
23634 | Do you see, you simpleton? 23634 Do you think I want to speak? |
23634 | Do you want coals? 23634 Do you want me, Little Cat?" |
23634 | Do you want the calico dress or the silk one? |
23634 | Do you wish a brass thimble, or a silver one? |
23634 | Do you wish the brass or silver thimble? |
23634 | Do you wish,he replied,"to go to your death? |
23634 | Excuse me, Lord, what is my name? |
23634 | Friend? 23634 Godmother,"said the man, astonished at seeing all the lights,"what are all these lights?" |
23634 | Good man,said they to Lionbruno,"how did you happen here?" |
23634 | Good woman, will you give me a drink of water? |
23634 | Have you a daughter? |
23634 | Have you done what I told you? |
23634 | Have you found an egg? |
23634 | Have you not found a cord and bucket? |
23634 | Have you not found a cord and bucket? |
23634 | Have you not found a cord and bucket? |
23634 | Have you not found a cord and bucket? |
23634 | Have you not found a cord and bucket? |
23634 | Have you not found a cord and bucket? |
23634 | He has fallen ill? 23634 Herdsman, whose is this farm of cattle?" |
23634 | How are the calves? |
23634 | How are the calves? |
23634 | How are you, tired? |
23634 | How can I serve you, gentlemen? |
23634 | How can I serve you? |
23634 | How can I take you when you have no clothes fit to wear? 23634 How can I, your Majesty?" |
23634 | How can that be, your Majesty, for my wife is deaf? |
23634 | How can that be; did we not throw him into the sea, and is he there now? |
23634 | How could I hear it shut up? |
23634 | How did the matter go? |
23634 | How did we know,said the father,"that this was Your Excellency''s house? |
23634 | How did you break them? |
23634 | How do I know? 23634 How do I know?" |
23634 | How do you come to have this girl? |
23634 | How does that concern you? |
23634 | How happens it,asked his new friend, who was vastly entertained by Beppo''s conversation,"that you, a soldier, carry no knapsack?" |
23634 | How is it that you are thus dressed in wood, and come floating on the water without drowning? |
23634 | How is the bull? |
23634 | How is the bull? |
23634 | How is this? |
23634 | How many daughters have you? |
23634 | How many years shall I yet live? |
23634 | How old are you, then? |
23634 | How, my daughter, will you then leave me thus? |
23634 | How? |
23634 | I have this doll, and the king''s son has fallen in love with it, and is ill. What shall I do? 23634 I? |
23634 | If he is not here, where is he? |
23634 | In short, how many are they? |
23634 | In what way? |
23634 | Is it nothing but that, dear mother? |
23634 | Is this the cargo you have brought? |
23634 | Is this, then, your first bride? |
23634 | Lionbruno mine, is it you? |
23634 | Lord, what is my name? |
23634 | Majesty, are you perplexed? 23634 Margerita, have you gone to sleep? |
23634 | Margerita, where are you? |
23634 | Master,he said,"how am I going to eat?" |
23634 | Master,said Occasion,"do you want me to let Death out? |
23634 | Master- smith, how much do you want to hammer this pouch eight days and nights? |
23634 | May I not creak? |
23634 | Me, too? |
23634 | Me, too? |
23634 | Must I tell you what the matter is? |
23634 | My mother in the tread- mill? |
23634 | My son, have you lost your senses? |
23634 | Now do you see me? |
23634 | Now, what else do you want? |
23634 | Now,said Vincenzo,"how shall I find my way back? |
23634 | Oh, if Cinderella were only here, who knows what might not have happened to her? |
23634 | Oh, mamma, what is there to eat to- night? 23634 Oil- cruet, why did you hurt the lamp? |
23634 | Oil- cruet, why have you hurt the lamp? 23634 Professor,"said the Lord,"will you be so good as to permit me to do a little work at your forge?" |
23634 | Rosella, do you really want to know my name? |
23634 | Rosella, do you really want to know my name? |
23634 | Scissors, do you say? |
23634 | Shall I throw you down first? |
23634 | Sir, have you forgotten anything; for the steamer can not move? |
23634 | Sir,he cried,"what have you done? |
23634 | So? |
23634 | Tell me, my granddaughter, you are always shut up, but do n''t you hear mass Sundays? |
23634 | Then it is not true, my Lionbruno, that you have forgotten me? |
23634 | Then tell me, father ogre, how tall is he? |
23634 | Truly? 23634 Very well,"said the king,"and when you have found it, what reward must I give you?" |
23634 | Very well; but what objects are you talking of? |
23634 | Was I not the parrot? |
23634 | Well,said her mistress,"preserve it; who knows of what use it may be?" |
23634 | What are you concerned about? |
23634 | What are you doing here? |
23634 | What are you doing, Turk? |
23634 | What are you doing, sir, that you are so covered with water and in such a sweat? |
23634 | What are you drawing the water in? |
23634 | What are you thinking about, to draw water in that sieve? 23634 What can you do?" |
23634 | What did you do it with? |
23634 | What did you do it with? |
23634 | What did you do it with? |
23634 | What do you do with them? |
23634 | What do you mean by calling me mad? 23634 What do you mean by saying''how do I know?'' |
23634 | What do you mean? 23634 What do you mean?" |
23634 | What do you take me for, that, not satisfied with duping me twice, you wish to dupe me a third time? |
23634 | What do you think of these boots? |
23634 | What do you think, pretty mamma, of this story? |
23634 | What do you want of me? |
23634 | What do you want? |
23634 | What do you wish to make? |
23634 | What does she want? |
23634 | What does that matter to you? 23634 What have you done with all the things I gave you?" |
23634 | What have you done, Firrazzanu? 23634 What help do you want?" |
23634 | What is it? |
23634 | What is that? |
23634 | What is the matter with you, that you are weeping? |
23634 | What is the matter with you? |
23634 | What is the matter, mariner, that you are so angry? |
23634 | What is the matter, my daughter? |
23634 | What is the matter,said the door,"that you are scratching yourself so and tearing out your hair?" |
23634 | What is the matter? |
23634 | What is the matter? |
23634 | What is the matter? |
23634 | What is the matter? |
23634 | What is the meaning of this, after the good I have done you, miserable fellow? |
23634 | What is the use of keeping him here? |
23634 | What is this? 23634 What is this? |
23634 | What is your cargo? |
23634 | What kind of a hearth did you have, high or low? |
23634 | What news, son? 23634 What shall I do now? |
23634 | What shall I do? 23634 What shall we do?" |
23634 | What shall we do? |
23634 | What should the matter be? 23634 What wages do you want?" |
23634 | What was it? 23634 What was that, my sons?" |
23634 | What will you give me? |
23634 | What''s the matter? 23634 What, are you Death?" |
23634 | What,said he,"have you got back already?" |
23634 | What? 23634 What?" |
23634 | When will they give you the money? |
23634 | Where did you get this silk? |
23634 | Where have we been to in order to return? |
23634 | Where is it, then? |
23634 | Where is the winner? |
23634 | Where is your daughter? |
23634 | Where must I go, then? |
23634 | Where must I go, then? |
23634 | Where the deuce have they hidden? |
23634 | Where,they exclaimed,"is he who has spoiled our chorus? |
23634 | Who are you looking for? |
23634 | Who are you? |
23634 | Who broke them? 23634 Who gave me that?" |
23634 | Who is he? |
23634 | Who is knocking? |
23634 | Who is there? |
23634 | Who is there? |
23634 | Who is there? |
23634 | Who is this ugly creature? |
23634 | Who is this who has harmonized with our choir? |
23634 | Who knew it was you? 23634 Who lives there?" |
23634 | Who wishes to descend into this hole? |
23634 | Who''s there? |
23634 | Why did she deceive me? 23634 Why do n''t you eat then?" |
23634 | Why not? 23634 Will you bring me back a whistle?" |
23634 | Will you lend me your goats this evening? |
23634 | Will you take me with you? |
23634 | Will you take me with you? |
23634 | Will you take me with you? |
23634 | Will you take me? |
23634 | Will you take me? |
23634 | Will you take me? |
23634 | With the scissors? |
23634 | Wretches, you are nothing else,he said,"were you afraid of not being rewarded? |
23634 | You say he is dead? 23634 [ N] The dog answered:"Do you want a hair? |
23634 | ''Good women, are you washing?'' |
23634 | ( Do you not know what the guillotine is? |
23634 | ( Do you understand? |
23634 | *****"Has this story pleased you, pretty mamma?" |
23634 | *****"What did you think of the story, pretty mamma?" |
23634 | A bird happened to alight in this tree, and said:"Tree, why did you throw yourself down?" |
23634 | A calf passed and said:"Little Cat, will you take me?" |
23634 | A cuckoo went to drink at the fountain, and asked:"Fountain, why have you dried up?" |
23634 | A dead woman?" |
23634 | A dog passed by and said:"Do you want me?" |
23634 | A doll? |
23634 | A little coffee, or chocolate, or broth?" |
23634 | A little while after, the gosling said to the wolf:"Would you like to try a bit of macaroni to see whether it is well cooked?" |
23634 | A monk of St. Nicholas passed by, and said:"Cuckoo, why is your tail in the fire?" |
23634 | A mouse passed by:"Little Cat, what are you doing?" |
23634 | A year after, the same man, whom Dante had not seen meanwhile, approached and asked:"With what?" |
23634 | After a time she said:"What is the matter?" |
23634 | After a time, when her sisters saw that she was always shut up in her room, the oldest said:"Why does she shut herself up in her room all the time?" |
23634 | After a while he came to a plain where he saw a number of men, and asked:"Whose cattle are these?" |
23634 | After she had shaken it this cripple said to her companions:"Do you want me to tell you something? |
23634 | After the king had heard all the music, the bird said:"What does your Majesty think of it?" |
23634 | Afterwards he saw a flock of sheep, and asked:"Whose are these sheep?" |
23634 | Afterwards one of the maids said to the fairy:"My mistress, how do you feel now? |
23634 | Am I perchance like my brothers who never can find a hiding- place? |
23634 | Among others the mouse went and said to the little fox:"What are you crying about?" |
23634 | And the king said:"Will you be satisfied with my daughter, or with two measures, of gold?" |
23634 | And then the door asked:"Why are you screaming, flea?" |
23634 | And what could he do? |
23634 | And what else did you see, my son?" |
23634 | And who are you, gentlemen?" |
23634 | And you can imagine that, all in love as he was, he said to her:"Will you really be my wife?" |
23634 | Another said:"What would be necessary?" |
23634 | Another said:"You cursed cripple, where have you been?" |
23634 | Another witch asked:"Is there nothing that can cure him?" |
23634 | Another witch said:"What is the matter with him?" |
23634 | Are not the cups still here with the coffee and the chocolate? |
23634 | Are you fast at this time? |
23634 | Are you perfectly happy? |
23634 | Are you willing?" |
23634 | As he was driving them home he met a butcher and said to him:"Would you like to buy these swine? |
23634 | As she was leaving the palace, she met the king, who said:"Pretty girl, you are our porter''s wife, are you not?" |
23634 | As she was passing through the streets, another lady, standing by the window, asked her:"Where are you going, all alone, pretty maiden?" |
23634 | As they were passing an inn, the prince said:"I am hungry: shall we not have something to eat?" |
23634 | At last a little mouse passes by, and says:"Old Aunt, what are you doing there?" |
23634 | At last the poor tailor succeeded in obtaining an explanation; and when he asked Nedui:"When did you know me to be insane?" |
23634 | Attentive?" |
23634 | Before leaving St. Thomas said:"Occasion, why do n''t you ask a favor of the Master?" |
23634 | Behold, the Enemy comes to take him, and says to him:"What are you doing, boy?" |
23634 | Beppo opened it and asked:"Who are you?" |
23634 | Brother Giovannone asked:"What are you going to do with these instruments?" |
23634 | Brother Giovannone said:"Ah, what is that you say? |
23634 | Buchettino answered:"Do you really want to know? |
23634 | But Thirteenth caught her meaning; and when he approached the oven, he said:"Ah, mother ogress, what is that black thing in the corner of the oven?" |
23634 | But do you know what is necessary to make you really happy? |
23634 | But do you know what you want now? |
23634 | But do you still love me?" |
23634 | But this time what does the crafty king do? |
23634 | Can you not find use for me?" |
23634 | Can you not find use for me?" |
23634 | Can you not make use of me?" |
23634 | Cat?" |
23634 | Comasche_, Vienna, 1866, Note 9:--"La storia de Sior Intento, Che dura molto tempo, Che mai no se destriga; Volè che ve la diga?" |
23634 | Cos''è dentro? |
23634 | Cosa g''àlo in panza? |
23634 | Could it not have been some one else?" |
23634 | Did you not promise me that you would not eat me?" |
23634 | Did you not tell me to take from your house the thing I liked best? |
23634 | Do you expect to find fish in the square?" |
23634 | Do you know him?" |
23634 | Do you know what you must do? |
23634 | Do you know what you must do? |
23634 | Do you not feel a little better?" |
23634 | Do you not hear the horses neighing? |
23634 | Do you not know that I am a poor man? |
23634 | Do you not know that money that is found must be delivered up to the court?" |
23634 | Do you not know that this house in the midst of these precipices is the house of the winds? |
23634 | Do you not see that the pears have been picked? |
23634 | Do you not see the dust in the air? |
23634 | Do you say any longer that it was with the scissors?" |
23634 | Do you see it, my son? |
23634 | Do you see them? |
23634 | Do you see these little ones? |
23634 | Do you see those horsemen? |
23634 | Do you think you can escape me?" |
23634 | Do you want me to divide her in two?" |
23634 | Do you wish me to tell you a short one? |
23634 | Do you wish not to return, too? |
23634 | Do you wish us to make peace? |
23634 | Does he mean that I am no longer your master?" |
23634 | Does not the food please you?" |
23634 | Does the house not please you? |
23634 | Don Joseph answered:"And where shall I see you again? |
23634 | Finally she questioned her youngest son:"And you, Sirocco, do you not know anything about it?" |
23634 | Finally the king asked:"What am I thinking of?" |
23634 | Finally, what do you suppose Uncle Capriano tried to do? |
23634 | Giufà said to it:"Do you want to buy the cloth?" |
23634 | Giufà took the money and went to each widow and said:"What will you give me if I will procure you an annuity from the bishop?" |
23634 | Godmother Fox began to lament, when along came a dog, barking, that said to her:"What are you crying about?" |
23634 | Had I no eyes last night?" |
23634 | Have I not nursed you when you were a baby?" |
23634 | Have you been deceived?" |
23634 | Have you been sleeping? |
23634 | Have you collected all the rents?" |
23634 | Have you nothing else to think of? |
23634 | Have you wished to disturb the dead, also? |
23634 | He accepted and they showed him into a room, and one of the ladies asked:"Would you like to play a game of chess?" |
23634 | He also created the ass, which said:"Lord, what is my name?" |
23634 | He asked the hostess:"Tell me, good woman, is there a cave near by, to which you alone know the entrance?" |
23634 | He asked:"Could I, too, go there?" |
23634 | He asked:"How was it made?" |
23634 | He asked:"How were they broken?" |
23634 | He asked:"What is the matter here, that there are so many people?" |
23634 | He began to play the violin, and the fairy and all her twelve damsels appeared and said:"What do you want that you call us?" |
23634 | He departed, and when he had passed through the mist he met an old man who said to him:"Where are you going? |
23634 | He did so and a princess appeared:"What has brought you here?" |
23634 | He did so, and while he was going along, all confused, he met an old man who asked him:"Merchant, what are you doing?" |
23634 | He fell asleep, however, and the next morning the second brother came and said:"What have you done, my brother? |
23634 | He fixed his shirt and then asked:"How long have you been here?" |
23634 | He found the cook asleep again, and said:"Cook, good cook, what is the matter with you that you sleep?" |
23634 | He found the garden and the bird, which, as soon as it saw him, exclaimed:"What is the matter, noble sir; have you come for me? |
23634 | He gave it a kick, and then he went up to it and said to it in jest:"You, too, will come, will you not, to my banquet to- night?" |
23634 | He hastened and stopped the cask, and then asked:"What is the matter, that you are all weeping, and have let the wine run all over the cellar?" |
23634 | He kept on buttoning it and asked again:"Now do you see me?" |
23634 | He knocked at hell and Lucifer asked:"Who is there?" |
23634 | He knocked at the door and the gosling said:"Who is knocking at the door?" |
23634 | He knocked, and some one within asked:"Who is there?" |
23634 | He met the cavalier:"Do you know,"said this one,"that the poor lady''s husband is dead? |
23634 | He returned to his place at Parma, and when the other humpback saw him he exclaimed:"Does not that look just like my friend? |
23634 | He said to his servants:"Who has been taking the money?" |
23634 | He said to the Turk:"What do these persons want?" |
23634 | He said to the youngest:"And you, Cinderella, what do you want?" |
23634 | He said to them:"Whence do you come?" |
23634 | He said:"Good old man, will you take me to fish with you?" |
23634 | He said:"What shall we do here? |
23634 | He saw a woman combing her hair, and said:"Will you give me a drink of water? |
23634 | He took all these things and shut himself up in the room, and said to the child:"Do you want to see something, my child? |
23634 | He took the apple and said:"Who gave me this?" |
23634 | He turned to the left, the same; he went forward, the same; he turned once more and when he opened the door what did he see? |
23634 | He was once ordered to go away to work, and said to them:"Since I am about making a journey, what do you want me to bring you when I return?" |
23634 | He went home and said:"What do you think, girls? |
23634 | His daughter came out to meet him, and when she learned why he was weeping, said:"Is that all you are weeping for? |
23634 | His daughter had recognized him, and asked:"Friend, do you not know me?" |
23634 | His daughter said:"Royal Majesty, why do you not eat? |
23634 | His mother began to laugh, and withdrew to her own room( what could she do, poor mother?). |
23634 | His mother then said:"Did you not ask her who she was and where she came from?" |
23634 | His wife said:"What is the matter; what has the king said to you at the palace, to make you weep?" |
23634 | How are the calves? |
23634 | How are the cows? |
23634 | How are the cows?" |
23634 | How are the cows?" |
23634 | How can I get away from him?" |
23634 | How did you manage to escape? |
23634 | How have you been tempted to come and ruin yourself in this remote place?" |
23634 | How is the bull? |
23634 | How shall I call you?" |
23634 | How shall we find out who it is?" |
23634 | I am in the handle of the pitcher; tell me: has papa gone?" |
23634 | I have carried my master so many years, and what have I gained? |
23634 | I must go to the palace of the fairy Colina; perhaps one of you can tell me where it is?" |
23634 | I ought not to make you more homely, but..."and she became homely and the bird continued:"What are you going to do now? |
23634 | If he left it to the gentlemen, what would the nobility do? |
23634 | If you did not observe these conditions, what fault is it of mine?" |
23634 | In the Florentine version a cock gives a peck at a mouse''s head and the mouse cries out:"Where must I go to be cured?" |
23634 | In the door was a window, which said:"What''s the matter, door, that you are slamming?" |
23634 | In the evening Giufà returned and asked his mother:"Did you sell the meat?" |
23634 | In the window was a tree, that said:"Window, why do you open and shut?" |
23634 | Is he then richer than I?" |
23634 | Is there not that young girl who found the King of Spain''s daughter, and cured the other princess? |
23634 | It was in January, and she had the roof of the house uncovered and it snowed on the prince, who awoke and called his servants:"What do you wish?" |
23634 | Just then the magician arose and said:"What are you here for?" |
23634 | Let us hide in the well, shall we not?" |
23634 | Listen,"he said,"are you not my friend?" |
23634 | Master Francis, who was of incomparable courage, went up to him and said:"Who are you?" |
23634 | Meanwhile the girl entered:"What is the matter, your Majesty? |
23634 | Meanwhile the prince reached his mother''s house, and she said to him:"Dear son, where have you been? |
23634 | Not long after, another youth joined him and asked:"Handsome young man, where are you going?" |
23634 | Not long after, the Lord said to him:"Peter, open the gate of heaven to- day a little way, but a very little,--do you hear?" |
23634 | Now when the Speaking Bird saw the youth appear in the garden it said to him:"What has become of your brother? |
23634 | On his way he met a hermit, who asked him,"Where are you going, cavalier?" |
23634 | On the way some children met him, who asked:"Where are you going, Giufà?" |
23634 | One day Catherine came again to a city and saw a lady standing at a window, who asked her:"Where are you going, all alone, pretty girl?" |
23634 | One day St. Peter said to the Master:"Why do no more souls enter?" |
23634 | One day he saw an inn and entered it, and said to the innkeeper:"Do you want me for a servant? |
23634 | One day her mistress said to her:"Catherine, why do you weep so much?" |
23634 | One day his father became aware of this, and said to him:"What are you doing? |
23634 | One day his mother said to him:"Giufà, we have nothing to eat to- day; what shall we do?" |
23634 | One day she said to her mother:"What is the matter with you, mother, that I always see you crying?" |
23634 | One day she said to him:"Gossip, shall we go and see my husband?" |
23634 | One day she saw him a little annoyed, and said:"What makes you feel so?" |
23634 | One day the largest said to the other two:"Do you know what I think? |
23634 | One day the mouse said to the cock:"Friend Cock, shall we go and eat some nuts on yonder tree?" |
23634 | One day the prince said to her:"Mother, why do you sigh all day?" |
23634 | One day there came by a large eagle, and said to her:"What are you doing here?" |
23634 | One day when she was calling him, the king happened to pass by, and hearing her call him thus, asked her:"Why do you call him Truthful Joseph?" |
23634 | One day while visiting a patient, the doctor said:"Why do you not listen to my orders that you are not to eat anything?" |
23634 | One day, however, he saw a youth coming along the road who joined him and asked:"Where are you going, handsome youth?" |
23634 | One evening, when her mistress was out, her Fate appeared again and addressed her harshly:"So, here you are now? |
23634 | One morning his mamma called him and said:"Buchettino, will you do me a favor? |
23634 | One morning, while he was breakfasting with his sweetheart, his wife called a servant:"Come here; is the prince at table?" |
23634 | One night he dreamed that some one appeared to him and said:"Do you wish to find your Fate? |
23634 | One of them asked:"Why are these birds singing so joyfully?" |
23634 | Salvatore said:"Grandfather, why are you so disturbed?" |
23634 | Salvatore"( for she knew who he was),"what have you come for?" |
23634 | Scarcely had the bishop seen it when he cried out:"What are you thinking of, to bring me such a monster? |
23634 | Scarcely had they entered when they began to say:"What smell of human flesh is here? |
23634 | Shall I buy fish? |
23634 | Shall I buy meat? |
23634 | Shall we not give him something?" |
23634 | Shall we not?" |
23634 | She answered:"My dear son, how will you go and find the Love of the three Oranges?" |
23634 | She answers:"I am sure I do n''t know; can it be Massariol?" |
23634 | She entered and said:"What is the matter, my daughter; how do you do? |
23634 | She replied:"Ah, my son, are you mad? |
23634 | She replied:"What shall we do for a frying- pan?" |
23634 | She said to herself:"How can it be that one dead should kill three?" |
23634 | She said to him:"Do you know what you must do? |
23634 | She said:"Here is nothing but dead and killed; what shall I do?" |
23634 | She said:"If I go home now without the bucket, who knows what my mother will do to me?" |
23634 | She walked and walked, and at last met a little old man, who said to her:"Where are you going at this time of the night?" |
23634 | Should I not know something about it? |
23634 | So Mr. Cock and Mrs. Hen continued their journey and met a cat, who said:"Mr. Cock and Mrs. Hen, where are you going?" |
23634 | So he tied a rope around her and began to lower her into the well, saying:"Come, how did you break them? |
23634 | So he went to Uncle Capriano and said:"What is the matter with you?" |
23634 | So many have lost their lives, do you, also, wish to lose yours?" |
23634 | So she stood on a corner, and every one who passed by said:"Little Cat, what''s the matter?" |
23634 | So they went there and looked for him and called:"Cecino, where are you?" |
23634 | St. Peter did so and wondered:"Who is coming to- day?" |
23634 | St. Peter said to him:"Why do you not ask pardon for your soul, like the others?" |
23634 | St. Peter said:"Nothing? |
23634 | St. Peter said:"What do you want?" |
23634 | Suppose my wife should have no children during these thirteen years?" |
23634 | Tell me, should you really see a man now, what would you do to him?" |
23634 | That evening the notary said to the lady:"Now tell me, who killed your husband?" |
23634 | The Lord answered:"Am I wrong then, when I punish men likewise? |
23634 | The Lord said:"Am I a physician? |
23634 | The Lord thought:"What shall I do? |
23634 | The baker said:"Do you want bread? |
23634 | The beautiful lady again asked:"Catherine, when would you rather enjoy your life, in youth or in old age?" |
23634 | The bird went and alighted on a fountain, which said:"Bird, why are you plucking out your feathers so?" |
23634 | The boy''s heart was saddened by this and he went to his foster- parents and said:"Dear parents, tell me, am I truly not your son?" |
23634 | The cat said:"What is the matter? |
23634 | The cavalcade passed by, and the king asked the boy:"Whose is this sheep- farm?" |
23634 | The cock sees him and goes to meet him and says:"Good day, friend, are you still afraid of me? |
23634 | The cock started on his journey, and after a time met the hen:"Where are you going, Friend Cock?" |
23634 | The daughter saw a fine radish, and began to pull it up, when suddenly a Turk appeared, and said:"Why have you opened my master''s door? |
23634 | The deaf man asked:"How are you?" |
23634 | The dog said:"Shall we eat half of it?" |
23634 | The doll said:"Mamma, how do you do?" |
23634 | The father returned home with his bag full of money, and his wife asked in terror:"Who gave you this money?" |
23634 | The first time he sat at table with her, the princess called another servant:"Servant, where are you going?" |
23634 | The fish appeared:"What do you want?" |
23634 | The fisherman''s wife said:"How should you not be my son? |
23634 | The fox kept about ten paces before Don Joseph, and the latter did nothing but say in a low tone:"Where are you taking me, fox? |
23634 | The fox now went to an ogress and said:"Friend, friend, have we not to divide the gold and silver?" |
23634 | The hen met him, and asked:"Mr. Cock, where are you going?" |
23634 | The herdsman said:"I will take her, for I am single; but how can we arrange it?" |
23634 | The horse neighed on seeing him, but he offered it a cake, saying:"Do you see how sweet it is? |
23634 | The horsemen said in terror:"What must we do, then?" |
23634 | The host said to his wife:"What do you say, Rosella? |
23634 | The hunter then said:"If you have no right to eat me, will you do it?" |
23634 | The husband asks in amazement:"What can it mean?" |
23634 | The judge said to Giufà:"Where did you put the body?" |
23634 | The king answered:"How can she be in love with me when she has never seen or known me?" |
23634 | The king asked:"Where is your brother?" |
23634 | The king burst out laughing, and asked:"Are you married or single?" |
23634 | The king came and found her daughter in bed weeping, and said to her:"Why are you weeping?" |
23634 | The king cried at once:"Go call the butcher to kill the calf?" |
23634 | The king heard her with amazement:"Do you value me like water and salt? |
23634 | The king replied:"What do you want of me, my good old man?" |
23634 | The king was astonished at hearing the Speaking Bird, and answered:"What should I think? |
23634 | The lady was so desperately sorry, that her husband kept saying to her:"Come, will you make yourself ill too? |
23634 | The man who had questioned him the year before passed by again and said:"Peter, with what?" |
23634 | The master said:"I? |
23634 | The merchant went to the palace, and asked:"Majesty, what do you wish?" |
23634 | The neighbor exclaimed:"Thou liar, how can a falcon carry away a boy?" |
23634 | The next day they said to the princess:"Will you come with us?" |
23634 | The next morning the youngest went there and saw more of the pears picked, and said:"Were you the one that was going to keep a good watch? |
23634 | The next morning, when the prince awoke, he asked:"Where is my friend?" |
23634 | The ogre awoke and cried:"What is that?" |
23634 | The ogress heard it, and asked:"What is that noise?" |
23634 | The old man asked:"But where did you strike it, on the right or on the left haunch?" |
23634 | The old man asked:"Why, my dear son?" |
23634 | The old woman kept looking at her rejuvenated sister, and asked:"What did you do to become so young and lovely? |
23634 | The old woman said:"Come, my daughter, are you going to mass?" |
23634 | The people who were escorting Elisetta asked the horsemen:"Whose knights are you,"and"whose are so many fine flocks?" |
23634 | The physician answered:"How did your Majesty come to have this slight trouble?" |
23634 | The pig does nothing but grunt, and the woman in anger cries:"Well, you wo n''t pick it up? |
23634 | The pilot said:"Sir, have you forgotten anything?" |
23634 | The poor father in confusion called his council together, and said:"Gentlemen, my daughter is losing ground every day; what advice do you give me?" |
23634 | The poor fellow said:"Brothers, what would you have me give you? |
23634 | The poor old man said:"You want me to go, but what shall I do; I have never been there?" |
23634 | The prince did so, and the old man asked:"Where are you going, my son, in this direction?" |
23634 | The prince entered, saw the tower, went up and met an old woman who said to him:"Dear son, where are you going? |
23634 | The prince was very sorrowful and said:"How can I take you home to my parents? |
23634 | The queen said:"Are you married, or single?" |
23634 | The queen, who saw that her son was ill, asked:"My son, what is the matter with you? |
23634 | The servant heard everything; and one day, when he was very ill, what did she think of? |
23634 | The servant went out on to the balcony and saw a great company of people in the street, and she called out:"Who''s there?" |
23634 | The servants answered:"It is not possible, your Majesty; for who comes here; where could they get in? |
23634 | The sick man replied at once:"Do you take me for an ass like yourself?" |
23634 | The sisters say:"Will you come this evening, Cinderella?" |
23634 | The smith said:"Do you want a mattock? |
23634 | The snake said to him:"Is it right for me to eat this man who has saved my life?" |
23634 | The steward answered:"Why not? |
23634 | The story of Mr. Attentive, which lasts a long time, which is never explained, do you wish me to tell it? |
23634 | The traveller went there and asked:"Why do you keep this dead man here? |
23634 | The viceroy looked around and said:"Where?" |
23634 | The water carried her a long way, when she saw on the bank a gentleman, and began to cry:"Who wants the fair Maria Wood?" |
23634 | The wife could not speak any more, for she was under the water; but what did she do? |
23634 | The wife said to her husband:"What is the matter with the fox, to speak thus?" |
23634 | The wife throws the bone away; but when the magician returns he calls out:"Bone, where are you?" |
23634 | The woodman said:"Do you want wood? |
23634 | The youth said to the owners of the bark:"How much do you want to set me down on the other bank?" |
23634 | Then Catherine went home and said to her mistress:"My Fate has given me a little skein of silk; what shall I do with it? |
23634 | Then Lionbruno took off his cloak, came out from under the bed, and said:"My bride, do you know me?" |
23634 | Then a sheep passed by and said to the little fox:"What are you crying about?" |
23634 | Then he felt four feet and asked:"How many feet did your father have?" |
23634 | Then he felt the head and said:"Did your father have horns?" |
23634 | Then he said to himself:"What shall I do with this penny? |
23634 | Then he said to his brother:"Salvatore, would you like to descend into this cistern, for there is a treasure in it?" |
23634 | Then he said to his son:"Do you hear what I tell you, my son? |
23634 | Then he took his legs and put them in the breeches, and after he had put them on, he said:"Is that right?" |
23634 | Then he touched the tail:"Did your father have a tail?" |
23634 | Then he went to his wife''s bed and asked:"Mother ogress, do you want to dine?" |
23634 | Then she said to her, loudly:"Good day, my friend; how do you do?" |
23634 | Then she said:"I wish to know where I am?" |
23634 | Then she said:"My mother, what must I do to get away from here? |
23634 | Then the cook went to the king, who said to him:"Well, how many stars are there in heaven?" |
23634 | Then the door opened, and she saw a holy hermit, who said:"Blessed one, how did you get here? |
23634 | Then the fairy who had given them the deer came and said:"Now that you have grown up, how can you stay here any longer?" |
23634 | Then the king sprang up and said:"And I ask what shall be done to a mother who did so and so to her son''s wife?" |
23634 | Then the sausage went to a smith and had the door broken in, and called again:"Mouse, where are you?" |
23634 | Then the son who had escaped said:"Mamma, has papa gone?" |
23634 | Then the two started off, and soon met the goose, who said:"Where are you going, Friend Cock and Friend Hen?" |
23634 | Then they went to him and said:"How is this, Uncle Capriano, did n''t we throw you in the sea?" |
23634 | There she saw a little house, with a little bit of a door, at which she knocked, and heard a voice saying,"Are you Christians?" |
23634 | There was once a king who, while hunting, saw a peasant working in the fields and asked him:"How much do you earn in a day?" |
23634 | There was once an ant who, while sweeping her house one day, found three_ quattrini_, and began to say:"What shall I buy? |
23634 | There were a hundred peas, and the carpenter''s wife said:"How can a hundred peas become a hundred sons?" |
23634 | Thereupon the door began to creak as if it were in pain, and a broom, which stood in the corner, asked:"What are you creaking for, door?" |
23634 | Thereupon they picked up the nuts and went to get the hare, which meanwhile was cooked, and said:"What shall we do with so much stuff?" |
23634 | They answered:"As long as we have been razor, scissors, and knife, when did you ever deign to polish us? |
23634 | They brought Thirteenth, who said:"Majesty, how is it possible to steal the ogre''s coverlet? |
23634 | They called the nurse and said to her:"Nurse, what does this mean? |
23634 | They replied:"Why, Highness?" |
23634 | They urged her to tell them, and the next day she took them out on a terrace, and said:"Do you see that mountain far off there? |
23634 | They went there, and put the stone on the serpent, and the fox asked:"Is that the way you were?" |
23634 | Thirteenth said:"Majesty, how is that possible? |
23634 | This husband, then, unhappy, without wife, without a trade, alone in that house, what could he do? |
23634 | This is undoubtedly true of many stories; but may not two versions of a given story, a popular and a literary one, have had a source common to both? |
23634 | This, now, is certainly your first bride, is she not, Lionbruno?" |
23634 | To- day or to- morrow we die, and you reign; and if you take an illness and die, who will reign?" |
23634 | Tradition says that an unknown person once accosted Dante seated in his favorite place, and asked:"What is the best mouthful?" |
23634 | We have no children; shall we take this lad?" |
23634 | Were you not a humpback?" |
23634 | What are you afraid of? |
23634 | What are you saying? |
23634 | What can I do for you?" |
23634 | What can we do? |
23634 | What could he do? |
23634 | What could the man do? |
23634 | What could the poor husband do? |
23634 | What did Giufà do then? |
23634 | What did he do then? |
23634 | What did he do? |
23634 | What did he do? |
23634 | What did he do? |
23634 | What did he do? |
23634 | What did poor Vincenzo do? |
23634 | What did she do? |
23634 | What did she see? |
23634 | What did the witch do? |
23634 | What did this wretch of an old woman then do? |
23634 | What do you suppose he did? |
23634 | What do you suppose the princess forgot? |
23634 | What do you want of me?" |
23634 | What does he do then? |
23634 | What does it mean? |
23634 | What else did you see the third day?" |
23634 | What else did you see?" |
23634 | What happened?" |
23634 | What has become of the pieces, if they were cut?" |
23634 | What has he in his belly? |
23634 | What has he in his hand? |
23634 | What has he on his back? |
23634 | What has he on his feet? |
23634 | What has he on his head? |
23634 | What has the king to do with you? |
23634 | What have you come here for? |
23634 | What is in it? |
23634 | What is that?" |
23634 | What lands do I possess that you can make me believed to be rich? |
23634 | What means your return so soon?" |
23634 | What merchandise of women have you made?" |
23634 | What more could the poor man say? |
23634 | What more could you expect? |
23634 | What must the Master do? |
23634 | What shall I buy, then? |
23634 | What shall I buy? |
23634 | What shall I do now? |
23634 | What shall we do now that my sons are coming home? |
23634 | What shall we do when the mistress comes home? |
23634 | When he came to a town, he began to cry:"Who wants cloth?" |
23634 | When he heard these words he came to himself and said:"Are you the doll''s mistress?" |
23634 | When he reached the bottom he began to feel around and touched wool, and cried out to the son of the murdered man:"Did your father have wool?" |
23634 | When he reached the bottom, he found three handsome rooms and an old woman, who said to him:"What are you doing here?" |
23634 | When he received the invitation he said:"And how can I go with this love for my daughter?" |
23634 | When he saw her he said:"How much do you want for her?" |
23634 | When he saw some countrymen he asked:"Have you anything to mend?" |
23634 | When his companions aroused him he asked in amazement:"Who are those calling me?" |
23634 | When his money was gone he said to his son:"Shall we go to the country- house?" |
23634 | When it saw that there was no hope of getting there, it said:"Friend Mouse, do you know what I want you to do? |
23634 | When she could not find Angiola, she asked the tables and chairs and cupboards:"Where has she fled?" |
23634 | When she saw the youth she asked:"And what are you here for?" |
23634 | When the Madonna came back, she asked:"Have you done all I told you to do?" |
23634 | When the banquet was finished and the guests had departed, the king called Stella and asked:"What news have you, my child?" |
23634 | When the bread had disappeared, the lady said to Vincenzo:"Did you see nothing on your way?" |
23634 | When the carpenter came the thieves said to him:"Good man, where does that voice come from?" |
23634 | When the child was three days old it spoke, and said:"Have you made me a cloak? |
23634 | When the fox turned around, Joseph said:"Where are you taking me, fox? |
23634 | When the girl heard how it was, what did she do? |
23634 | When the hunter had set the serpent at liberty, the latter wanted to devour him, but the hunter said:"What are you doing? |
23634 | When the king saw the abbot, he saluted him, and then said:"Have you fulfilled my command?" |
23634 | When the ogress heard this she unclasped her hands, saying,"How did my son die?" |
23634 | When the peasant saw that his light was about to expire, he said:"And when the oil is all consumed, godmother?" |
23634 | When the prince saw her so amazed, he said:"What is the matter? |
23634 | When the prince saw the net, he said:"What are you doing, you fool? |
23634 | When the soldiers saw him they cried:"Friend, are you selling that wine?" |
23634 | When the thieves saw this they looked at each other and said:"Shall we ask him to give us this little rabbit?" |
23634 | When they arrived they always saluted him with:"Good day, Uncle Capriano,"and he answered:"Your servant, gentlemen; what are your worships doing?" |
23634 | When they had seated themselves at the table, the king said:"Come, bird, you promised me you would speak; have you nothing to say?" |
23634 | Where are we going?" |
23634 | Where are you?" |
23634 | Where are your father and mother?" |
23634 | Where do you think he happened to go? |
23634 | Where do you want to seek it?" |
23634 | Where has that cursed cripple gone?" |
23634 | Where have you been?" |
23634 | Where is my share? |
23634 | Where is the cat? |
23634 | Where is the fire? |
23634 | Where is the ox? |
23634 | Where is the stick? |
23634 | Where is the water? |
23634 | Where is there any smell of human flesh here? |
23634 | While at the table the lady appeared under it, and pulled the first wife''s dress, and said:"Will you tell what you saw?" |
23634 | While he was doing so he asked the robbers:"Do you see me now?" |
23634 | While there a friend passed, who asked:"What are you doing here?" |
23634 | Who broke them?" |
23634 | Who do you think would risk their lives by coming here?" |
23634 | Who happened to pass at that moment? |
23634 | Who is behind there? |
23634 | Who knows who she is? |
23634 | Who put that thing on your forehead?" |
23634 | Who will pay us for it now?" |
23634 | Why do you say I am mad?" |
23634 | Will she take it into her head to have another just now when I make this agreement with the Enemy? |
23634 | Will you be my wife?" |
23634 | Will you be satisfied with three admonitions, or with the three hundred ounces?" |
23634 | Will you come with us?" |
23634 | Will you do it?" |
23634 | Would you like a dress of calico, or one of silk?" |
23634 | Would you like to see, friend? |
23634 | You are not my friend so and so, are you?" |
23634 | You are tired, are you not? |
23634 | You did not observe the conditions and broke the pot; what fault is that of mine?" |
23634 | You disappeared from me in a golden basin, And who will shelter to- night This poor unfortunate one?" |
23634 | You knew I was coming and got fast? |
23634 | You will not refuse me your permission, will you?" |
23634 | You will see that the prince will say to you:''The mortar is fine and good, but, peasant, where is the pestle?''" |
23634 | [ 13]( Do you know who Borea is? |
23634 | [ E]"Will you do me a favor?" |
23634 | _ Don Firriulieddu_ asked his sister:"Where is the ogre?" |
23634 | and do you think now that I am going to leave you in peace?" |
23634 | and is she to be our princess? |
23634 | and one of the fairies said:"What present shall we make these children?" |
23634 | are our nephews and niece alive?" |
23634 | are you still lean? |
23634 | are you weeping at this, and letting all the wine run into the cellar? |
23634 | cit._ p. 139, which begins:--"Cos''è questo? |
23634 | cried Lionbruno, then, all trembling;"who, my aunt, are these sons of yours who so devour Christians?" |
23634 | did I kill them all, or are there any left?" |
23634 | did he not see that it was a doll?" |
23634 | did you take the bread to the baker''s?" |
23634 | do you know that I have found my daughter, and she is the king''s wife, and filled this bag with money?" |
23634 | do you know what you must do? |
23634 | do you remember?" |
23634 | do you want me for your husband?" |
23634 | do you want me for your husband?" |
23634 | g._:--"Cosa g''àlo in schena? |
23634 | he cried;"what shall I do?" |
23634 | he exclaimed,"shall I, who have so much to do, loiter my time away here?" |
23634 | he said,"what is this person?" |
23634 | he said;"has anything wrong happened to you?" |
23634 | how did he manage to get that water?" |
23634 | how did you escape my blows?" |
23634 | how have you spent all this time?" |
23634 | if to the nobility, what would become of the gentry, and the workmen, and the peasants? |
23634 | is not that my friend? |
23634 | is that not Uncle Capriano?" |
23634 | is that so?" |
23634 | it is his Majesty''s carriage; what does it mean?" |
23634 | my brother, why did you carry a little stone? |
23634 | said Adam in anguish,"what will become of them?" |
23634 | said the father,"do you hear her? |
23634 | said the king,"has this Don Joseph Pear such great riches? |
23634 | said the princess,"did it need so much to say a word?" |
23634 | she cried,"are you here, Catherine? |
23634 | she cried,"what shall I do?" |
23634 | she has brought you the box; why do you want to eat her?" |
23634 | the latter responded:"When did you know me not to eat honey?" |
23634 | was it not enough for you to profane everything? |
23634 | what do you mean? |
23634 | what have you done? |
23634 | what have you done?" |
23634 | what is the matter?" |
23634 | what shall we do, for our pears have been picked?" |
23634 | where does that voice come from?" |
23634 | where the deuce are you fastened?" |
23634 | who taught you not to open to one of my rank? |
23634 | whom do you want to take?" |
23634 | why are you sifting the meal?" |
23634 | wretch, how dare you go about seeking my nephew?" |
23634 | you here, too? |
36281 | A temple girl? |
36281 | A temple- girl at Yian? |
36281 | A theatrical man? 36281 About my family? |
36281 | All these tenements are connected by human rat- holes and hidden runways leading from one house to another.... How many men do you want? |
36281 | Anarchy? |
36281 | And Erlik? 36281 And for your own?" |
36281 | And if I die? |
36281 | And if there is none? |
36281 | And me? |
36281 | And that, through the capture of men''s minds and souls the destruction of civilisation is being planned? |
36281 | And the city? |
36281 | And then? |
36281 | And to- morrow what do you mean to do? |
36281 | And you believe you can slay him? 36281 And you lived there?" |
36281 | And-- Sanang? |
36281 | And-- Sanang? |
36281 | Are n''t you a trifle morbid? |
36281 | Are n''t you lonely? |
36281 | Are not those things yours? 36281 Are their bodies here?" |
36281 | Are we really going away together? |
36281 | Are you a professional? |
36281 | Are you all right? |
36281 | Are you all right? |
36281 | Are you going to keep Miss Norne here with you for the present? |
36281 | Are you going to marry me? |
36281 | Are you ill, Miss Norne? |
36281 | Are you perfectly sure, Miss Norne? |
36281 | Are you quite fit? |
36281 | Are you really quite comfortable, dear? |
36281 | Are you? |
36281 | Are_ you_ planning to sit up in order to protect_ me_? |
36281 | Bullets? |
36281 | But could anything render the threat less awful? 36281 But-- if our pistols can not kill this sorcerer, how are you going to deal with him?" |
36281 | But-- was God there-- at the Lake of the Ghosts? |
36281 | By what pledge? |
36281 | Ca n''t you seem to sleep, Victor? |
36281 | Can I prevail against the Tchor- Dagh? |
36281 | Can we have a fire? |
36281 | Can you do anything? |
36281 | Can you find this devil? |
36281 | Can you see me? 36281 Can you tear his claws from the vitals of the world, and free the sick brains of a million people from the slavery of this monster''s mind?" |
36281 | Can you tell us what it signifies? |
36281 | Come_ here_? |
36281 | Could Benton hear her speak? |
36281 | Could he see her just as she is? 36281 Could you and Victor come at once?" |
36281 | Could you sleep if it burns? |
36281 | Death to the body? 36281 Did I not tell my lord truths?" |
36281 | Did Sansa say to you what she said to me? |
36281 | Did n''t she? |
36281 | Did the trip South do Mrs. Cleves any good? |
36281 | Did you get their conversation? |
36281 | Did you notice about him anything to disturb you, Tressa? |
36281 | Did you really know Sir Robert Hart? |
36281 | Did you see anybody in my car? |
36281 | Did you think so? |
36281 | Did you_ hear_ nothing? |
36281 | Did-- did you learn anything while-- while you were-- away? |
36281 | Do n''t you think he ought to know? |
36281 | Do n''t you think we might risk the chance and use our rifles? |
36281 | Do you actually believe in soul- snatchers and life- stealers? |
36281 | Do you also refuse to name the ten Imaums in your prayers? 36281 Do you believe there are sorcerers in Asia?" |
36281 | Do you care for anybody in that way? |
36281 | Do you care to say anything further? |
36281 | Do you imagine I''d leave you for a second? 36281 Do you know these places?" |
36281 | Do you know who the other man was? |
36281 | Do you mean that the rest of her-- whatever it is-- could come here? |
36281 | Do you mean to arrest her? |
36281 | Do you mean use hypnosis-- the power of suggestion-- on me? |
36281 | Do you mean you have trouble in securing theatrical engagements? |
36281 | Do you mind if I sleep on the couch, Tressa? |
36281 | Do you mind? |
36281 | Do you need any Marines, Mr. Recklow? 36281 Do you not believe that to have been instructed in such unlawful knowledge is damning? |
36281 | Do you really want me? |
36281 | Do you really wish to entertain me? |
36281 | Do you see what lies twisting there in his hands? |
36281 | Do you suppose anybody is hidden behind that curtain in the passageway? |
36281 | Do you think I am afraid of you, Sanang? |
36281 | Do you think your magic Yezidees are responsible? |
36281 | Do you think_ you_ are old enough to take my job and avoid scandal? |
36281 | Do_ you_, also, conclude that the psychic factor is actually part of this damned problem of Bolshevism? |
36281 | Does Keuke Mongol die or live? 36281 Does he know thou art damned, heart of gold?" |
36281 | Does he love thee, rose- bud of Yian? |
36281 | Does n''t it come from the French''_ jaser_''? |
36281 | During the great war,he remarked,"you were in China?" |
36281 | For what does it profit a girl if her soul be lost to a lover and her body be saved for her husband? |
36281 | For what purpose? |
36281 | Good God,whispered Recklow,"what do you mean? |
36281 | Gossip? 36281 Had n''t you better call me Victor-- under the circumstances?" |
36281 | Had you rather I did? |
36281 | Has Sanang gone out? |
36281 | Has she a servant? 36281 Have n''t you any idea to suggest?" |
36281 | Have you any family? |
36281 | Have you come to show us how to conclude this murderous business? |
36281 | Have you never heard of The Old Man of Mount Alamout? |
36281 | Have you the strength? |
36281 | Have-- have you been amused? |
36281 | Her chance? |
36281 | How are young men entertained in the Orient? |
36281 | How could it get here when my door is locked and bolted? 36281 How did you learn it, Tressa?" |
36281 | How do you know? |
36281 | How old do I seem? |
36281 | How? |
36281 | I am not afraid.... Where is it? |
36281 | I do n''t dare----"Why? |
36281 | I do n''t remember seeing him before,said Cleves...."Shall we start back?" |
36281 | I do n''t see anything about Black Magic in this? |
36281 | I thought they''d brought our breakfast,he said,"--hearing your voice.... Did you sleep well?" |
36281 | I''m not ill, you understand----"What''s the matter, Tressa? |
36281 | If I had not loved her better than life had I dared go that day to the temple to take her for my own? |
36281 | In-- in China? |
36281 | Is Sanang one of these eight? |
36281 | Is Victor still out? |
36281 | Is it old? |
36281 | Is it written? |
36281 | Is it you-- I mean your real self-- your own body? |
36281 | Is n''t it odd that she should have become so enamoured of Mr. Benton-- just seeing him there in the moonlight that night at Orchid Lodge? |
36281 | Is n''t there some woman in the Service who could help out? 36281 Is not that event already in God''s hands, darling?" |
36281 | Is that the beast of a Mongol who did this murder? |
36281 | Is that the reason you gave the fellow a chance? |
36281 | Is that what you learned in your captivity, Miss Norne? |
36281 | Is that what you think Sanang is about? |
36281 | Is that your answer? |
36281 | Is there any need to tell her, Recklow? |
36281 | Is there some hostile psychic influence threatening you? |
36281 | Is this dull for you? |
36281 | Is this the girl you were talking with just now? 36281 Is-- is this what you call-- what you believe to be magic?" |
36281 | It seems incredible, does n''t it? 36281 It''s a rotten day, is n''t it?" |
36281 | Jazz,said Cleves, glancing across his dinner- card at Tressa Norne--"what''s the meaning of the word? |
36281 | Keuke Mongol-- Heavenly Azure,he whispered close to her crimsoned cheek,"do you know how I have loved you-- always-- always?" |
36281 | Like tuning up a huge machine? |
36281 | May I talk with you for a moment, Miss Norne? |
36281 | Miss Norne? |
36281 | No longer afraid to slay him? |
36281 | Nor the-- the destruction of human souls,she persisted;"you do not believe it is being accomplished to- day?" |
36281 | Not unhappy? |
36281 | Now? |
36281 | Of what? |
36281 | Oh, is that what it''s called? |
36281 | Oh-- as for that----"Do n''t you need it? |
36281 | On my account? |
36281 | Prince Sanang, tell me, what man or what devil in all the chronicles of the past has ever tamed a Snow- Leopard? |
36281 | Sanang, too? |
36281 | Seen the new show? |
36281 | Shall I bring my body with me, one day, my lord? |
36281 | Shall I come into your room? |
36281 | Shall I help you? |
36281 | Shall I? |
36281 | So that Benton could see her? |
36281 | Suppose I advance you a month''s salary? |
36281 | Suppose he waits for a west wind and squirts his gas in this direction? |
36281 | Suppose she does n''t mind the unconventionality of it? |
36281 | Talk to her? |
36281 | That it is the price one pays to Satan for occult power over people''s minds? |
36281 | The Yezidees are becoming mountebanks.... Where is the knife? |
36281 | Then if you have n''t anything to offer me, what is it you wish? |
36281 | Then why do you not explain to these gentlemen? |
36281 | Then you do not care for anybody else? |
36281 | Then, if it would please you to go South for a few weeks''rest----"Would it inconvenience you? |
36281 | This is Doctor Norne''s daughter, is it not? |
36281 | Tressa? |
36281 | Tressa? |
36281 | Try to face death for your country''s honour? |
36281 | Used it how? |
36281 | Victor,she said in a low voice,"were you afraid to tell me that your man had been murdered?" |
36281 | W- what fight? |
36281 | Was there any ante- mortem statement? |
36281 | Well, do you want to find her in some hotel or apartment with her throat cut? |
36281 | Well, hang it, what do you think I ought to do? |
36281 | Well, how could I? 36281 Well, then? |
36281 | Well,he said harshly to Recklow,"where is this damned Yezidee hidden?" |
36281 | Well,she said,"now that you''ve picked me up, what do you really want of me?" |
36281 | Well? |
36281 | Wh- what? |
36281 | What about snakes? |
36281 | What am I to do for it? |
36281 | What are you doing here? |
36281 | What are you doing to me that I can not go back? 36281 What are you going to do?" |
36281 | What are you talking about? |
36281 | What did she do? |
36281 | What did you mean? |
36281 | What did you see? |
36281 | What do others do? |
36281 | What do these Mongol Sorcerers expect to gain by making little live things out of lumps of garden dirt? |
36281 | What do we know about the human mind? 36281 What do you wish me to do?" |
36281 | What do you wish? |
36281 | What else is there to do? |
36281 | What happened? |
36281 | What have you been, Tressa Norne? |
36281 | What is it? |
36281 | What is the Tchordagh? |
36281 | What is the matter? |
36281 | What is their purpose? |
36281 | What is there to do? 36281 What is_ he_?" |
36281 | What makes him so late? |
36281 | What of it? |
36281 | What salary have you been getting? |
36281 | What shall I do about Yulun? |
36281 | What sort do you suppose me to be? |
36281 | What sort of hellish things has the Old World been dumping into America for the last fifty years? 36281 What thing, Sanang?" |
36281 | What was it? |
36281 | What was the Yezidee Togrul Kahn doing in it? |
36281 | What was the Yezidee doing? |
36281 | What would happen to us if these Yezidees should murder her? |
36281 | What would he be doing in there? |
36281 | What would_ you_ do? |
36281 | What''s all this? |
36281 | What''s it about? |
36281 | What''s this damned foolery, anyway? |
36281 | What-- do you wish to know? |
36281 | What? 36281 What?" |
36281 | When are we to start? 36281 When did she come in?" |
36281 | When did you learn it? |
36281 | When, then? |
36281 | When? |
36281 | When? |
36281 | When? |
36281 | Where are you going now? |
36281 | Where did that thing come from? |
36281 | Where does she live? |
36281 | Where have you cornered Sanang? |
36281 | Where have you ever heard of the Scarlet Lake and the Xin? |
36281 | Where is it, Victor? |
36281 | Where is she? |
36281 | Where is that coupà ©? 36281 Where then?" |
36281 | Where was that battle? |
36281 | Where were you born? |
36281 | Where, dear? |
36281 | Where, in China, did you learn such amazing magic? |
36281 | Where? 36281 Where?" |
36281 | Where? |
36281 | Where? |
36281 | Who else is there to discover and overcome Sanang? |
36281 | Who is Erlik but the servant of Satan who was stoned? |
36281 | Who is this Sanang? |
36281 | Who on earth are you talking to? |
36281 | Who the dickens is Sansa? |
36281 | Who was it? |
36281 | Who-- who is he? |
36281 | Who? |
36281 | Whose gift? |
36281 | Whose limousine was that which you entered and then left so abruptly? |
36281 | Why are you troubled? |
36281 | Why did I not know you there on the golf links, Assassin of the Seventh Tower? 36281 Why did n''t you let me shoot him when I had the chance?" |
36281 | Why did n''t you tell Benton when the thing occurred down there at Orchid Lodge, the night we called to say good- bye? |
36281 | Why did they spare you? |
36281 | Why did you do that? |
36281 | Why did you not complain of us to your Master, the Old Man of the Mountain? |
36281 | Why did you send for me? 36281 Why do n''t you take her away for a month?" |
36281 | Why do you ask such things? 36281 Why do you do that?" |
36281 | Why do you say that Sanang slew your soul? |
36281 | Why do you think I''m bored, Tressa? 36281 Why do you think so?" |
36281 | Why do you think so? |
36281 | Why have you come secretly into my rooms to search-- and clasping in your hand a loaded pistol deep within your pocket? |
36281 | Why have you hidden yourself until now? |
36281 | Why not put her aboard our new dreadnought? |
36281 | Why not? 36281 Why not?" |
36281 | Why not? |
36281 | Why should that man in white have followed us, keeping out of sight in the woods? |
36281 | Why? 36281 Why? |
36281 | Why? |
36281 | Why? |
36281 | Why? |
36281 | Will you call me when you are ready? |
36281 | Will you help your country? |
36281 | Will you indicate your preferences? |
36281 | Will you offer your country your soul and body? |
36281 | Will you take three times that amount and work with me? |
36281 | Will you try once more, Tressa? |
36281 | Wilt thou listen, Heavenly Eyes? |
36281 | With a pistol? |
36281 | With what? |
36281 | With whom? |
36281 | Would she seem real or like a ghost-- spirit-- whatever you choose to call such things? |
36281 | Would you care to see Yulun? |
36281 | Would you mind looking at my card? |
36281 | Yes--_what_? |
36281 | Yes.... Are you ready to leave this place? 36281 Yes.... You will not hold me in-- in horror-- will you?" |
36281 | Yes? |
36281 | Yes? |
36281 | Yes? |
36281 | You are loyal to your country? |
36281 | You deliver me to this government agent? |
36281 | You do n''t really believe that even in unexplored China there exists such a creature as a real sorcerer, do you? |
36281 | You feel all right, do n''t you? |
36281 | You learned to do such things there? |
36281 | You lived there? |
36281 | You mean a Johnny? |
36281 | You mean you looked into our rooms from_ here_? |
36281 | You promise to slay this young snow- leopardess? |
36281 | You still care for him a little? |
36281 | You think I might dare try to find a room somewhere else for her and let her take her chances? 36281 You think my soul was lost there in the temple, Yarghouz?" |
36281 | You will slay this man? |
36281 | You would not betray her? |
36281 | You_ know_ it? |
36281 | _ Are_ we? |
36281 | _ Must_ you do this thing, Tressa? |
36281 | _ Sanang, also?_"I leave him to God. 36281 _ What_ is that man doing?" |
36281 | *****"What on earth are you saying there, all to yourself?" |
36281 | After a silence:"Are you worried about your husband?" |
36281 | After a silence:"But-- where do I come in?" |
36281 | Albert Feke? |
36281 | All the same----""All the same--_what_?" |
36281 | An Urdu- envoy of Prince Erlik?'' |
36281 | And I lay down by the pool and_ made the effort_--you understand?" |
36281 | And that it shall yet win through to safety?" |
36281 | And to Yulun:"Have I not told you that nothing can harm our souls?" |
36281 | And what can I do? |
36281 | And what shall I pack in my trunk?" |
36281 | And why do you come here with your shroud over your arm and hidden under it, in your right hand, a flask full of death?" |
36281 | And, to Yulun:"Where do you come from?" |
36281 | And,''What is this child''s name?'' |
36281 | Are you going to tell your wife?" |
36281 | Are you ready?" |
36281 | Are you?" |
36281 | As he made no reply:"May I have a cocktail?" |
36281 | As they paused before his door in the dim corridor:"Are you afraid?" |
36281 | But ca n''t you tell me what I ought to do?" |
36281 | But how about what I am doing to your reputation?" |
36281 | But the Slayer of Souls----""Who?" |
36281 | But-- can''t you understand that it is not in me to wish him harm?... |
36281 | Ca n''t you hear me?" |
36281 | Can you hear? |
36281 | Cleves came nearer:"Do you think the Yezidee is in the woods watching us, Tressa?" |
36281 | Cleves said with a smile,"Who is Erlik?" |
36281 | Cleves was silent for a moment, then he burst out:"Well, what am I to do? |
36281 | Cleves?" |
36281 | Cleves?" |
36281 | Cleves?" |
36281 | Cleves?" |
36281 | Cleves?" |
36281 | Cleves?" |
36281 | Dexterity? |
36281 | Did it return?" |
36281 | Did n''t you?" |
36281 | Did you ever hear of a rottener deal, Cleves?" |
36281 | Did you ever hear of anything as shameless-- as outrageous-- in this Republic?" |
36281 | Did you know it?" |
36281 | Ding- dong!_""What are you singing?" |
36281 | Do n''t you know that I am already part of you?" |
36281 | Do n''t you remember; I was lying in the hammock in the moonlight, and Victor told you I was asleep?" |
36281 | Do n''t you think so, Tressa?" |
36281 | Do n''t you think so?" |
36281 | Do n''t you think you might venture a day''s real shooting?" |
36281 | Do you happen to know?" |
36281 | Do you not believe that ability to employ unknown forces is forbidden of God, and that to disobey His law means death to the soul?" |
36281 | Do you not know it, dog of a Yezidee? |
36281 | Do you realise that?" |
36281 | Do you think to frighten me with your sorcery by showing me the Moons of Yu- lao?--by opening a bolted door? |
36281 | Do you understand the terrible power of a million minds all_ willing_, in unison, the destruction of good and the triumph of evil? |
36281 | Do you understand? |
36281 | Do you?" |
36281 | Do you?" |
36281 | Do you?" |
36281 | Does your head feel confused?" |
36281 | Good God,"he added in a strangled voice,"is n''t there any way I can kill this wild beast? |
36281 | Has he never heard of the Slayer of Souls?" |
36281 | Have you any idea how she must suffer by being forced to employ such terrific knowledge? |
36281 | Have you any solution for this problem that confronts you?" |
36281 | Have you caught a glimpse of anything white in the woods?" |
36281 | Have you the master- key?" |
36281 | He said:"Is n''t that absurd notion out of your head yet?" |
36281 | He took his_ congà ©_ with unhurried amiability; had already turned away when she said:"Please... what do you desire to say to me?" |
36281 | He watched her in silence for a moment; then, leaning a little way across the table:"Where are you going when the show here closes?" |
36281 | Her eyes became slightly hostile:"What kind of job do you mean?" |
36281 | Her face and figure-- clothes and everything?" |
36281 | Her power of speech came back to her presently-- only a broken whisper at first:"Do you think I am afraid of your accursed magic?" |
36281 | How can any man fall in love with such a girl?" |
36281 | I said:''Is this a Yaçaoul? |
36281 | I wonder whether I should have tried to amuse you this morning----""You do n''t think you''ve stirred up any of those Yezidee beasts, do you?" |
36281 | If a young man should please us....""Free?" |
36281 | If one is already damned, what difference does anything else make?" |
36281 | In my garden; what care I Who is dead and who shall die? |
36281 | In-- in_ this_ room?" |
36281 | Is M. H. 2479 there?" |
36281 | Is all well with you?" |
36281 | Is he nothing, then?" |
36281 | Is it a province?" |
36281 | Is it not true?" |
36281 | Is n''t it safer to go back there, where your people are always watching the street and house day and night?" |
36281 | Is n''t that true?" |
36281 | Is n''t this heavenly? |
36281 | Is she prepared for the consequences?" |
36281 | Is the entire world becoming a little crazy? |
36281 | Is there any surer salvation for the soul than to die in Christ''s service?" |
36281 | It was shameful, was n''t it?" |
36281 | It''s my soul that''s gone.... Do you know I was very hungry when you spoke to me? |
36281 | It''s up to me to stand by you now, is n''t it?" |
36281 | May I not say it? |
36281 | May we step into the house?" |
36281 | Norne?" |
36281 | Now, then, are we comrades under the United States Government?" |
36281 | Now, who was that young woman in chinchilla furs to whom you gave her door key a moment ago?" |
36281 | Oh, can you hear?" |
36281 | Or friends with her?" |
36281 | Outside the door?" |
36281 | Recklow broke the momentary silence, bluntly:"Have you anything to report, Cleves?" |
36281 | Recklow''s cool eyes measured him:"Do_ you_?" |
36281 | Recklow?" |
36281 | Recklow?" |
36281 | Recklow?" |
36281 | Shall I fire?" |
36281 | Shall I truly be one with you, my lord?" |
36281 | Shall we go to the station in a sleigh? |
36281 | Shall we_ make the effort_ together?" |
36281 | She came nearer, laid a hand on his arm:"Are_ you_ afraid?" |
36281 | She heard him:"Not very much more-- in years,"she said...."Does Scripture tell us how old Our Lord was when He descended into Hell?" |
36281 | She spoke again in the same uneasy voice:"Then you do not believe that either God or Satan is involved?" |
36281 | Slander?" |
36281 | So I stepped in to see----""You say that Mrs. Cleves went out of the house we entered, got into the coupà ©, and told the driver to go to the Ritz?" |
36281 | Sorcery?" |
36281 | Suddenly he spoke distinctly:"Is there anything outside that door on the landing?" |
36281 | That is the truth, is n''t it?" |
36281 | That is your belief, is n''t it?" |
36281 | That sleek young thing belongs to Togrul Kahn? |
36281 | The whole horrible situation is breaking my nerve, I guess.... With whom were you talking before I came in?" |
36281 | Then, looking up:"Do you still care for this fellow?" |
36281 | There ensued a silence, broken presently by Benton; and:"Where do I appear in this?" |
36281 | They shall not steal life from me, whatever they have done to my soul----""What in heaven''s name are you talking about?" |
36281 | To- day?... |
36281 | WHAT do you think of such a courtship?" |
36281 | Was a night wind rising? |
36281 | Was it a passing breeze? |
36281 | Was it warm in Yian, where you lived so many years?" |
36281 | Was the chauffeur trying to pull out?" |
36281 | Was you ever up there?" |
36281 | We find each other interesting, do n''t we?" |
36281 | Were they not already here in your baggage?" |
36281 | What are these mischievous things you have told to my lord?" |
36281 | What are you going to do?" |
36281 | What are you holding up this car for?" |
36281 | What did he say-- that monkey?" |
36281 | What do we know about thought?" |
36281 | What else can I do?" |
36281 | What is it?" |
36281 | What is she doing? |
36281 | What is that instrument?" |
36281 | What is there left for me to do except to watch over her and see her through this devilish business? |
36281 | What is your opinion? |
36281 | What mad nonsense have the Yezidees made you believe? |
36281 | What other way have I to protect her, Recklow?" |
36281 | What was in your baggage?" |
36281 | What-- what, are you doing to me?" |
36281 | What?... |
36281 | When he had refilled it:"How did you get away from Yian?" |
36281 | When?... |
36281 | Where did she go?" |
36281 | Where is that yellow maid of the Baroulass?... |
36281 | Where is your luggage, Victor?" |
36281 | Where?" |
36281 | Where?" |
36281 | Wherein, then, lies this peril in being alone together?" |
36281 | Who is this?" |
36281 | Who?... |
36281 | Why did you come down here, Recklow?" |
36281 | Why not ask your Government for a few?" |
36281 | Why, Recklow, I have n''t known a dull moment-- though I fear she has known many----""Why?" |
36281 | Will my lord be seated-- at his new servant''s feet?" |
36281 | Will you come in with me?" |
36281 | Will you come over to my table and talk it over?" |
36281 | Will you come to me, beloved?'' |
36281 | Will you enlist for service?" |
36281 | Will you help us?" |
36281 | Will you trust Him?" |
36281 | Will you try, always?" |
36281 | Will you_ make the effort_ and come to me if I_ make the effort_? |
36281 | With my naked hands----?" |
36281 | Would n''t it appeal to you?" |
36281 | Would n''t you call it-- friendship?" |
36281 | Yes or no?" |
36281 | Yes, what is it?" |
36281 | You are alive and real----"He looked at Tressa:"She is real, is n''t she?" |
36281 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
36281 | You mean one of the Eight Assassins?" |
36281 | You mean-- marry her?" |
36281 | You need warmth and sunshine, do n''t you? |
36281 | You say he was one of the Germans who escaped from Shantung four years ago?... |
36281 | You wish to learn what is this monstrous evil that threatens the world with destruction-- what you call anarchy and Bolshevism? |
36281 | You wo n''t step out? |
36281 | _ Can_ you?" |
36281 | _ Do_ you?" |
36281 | _ Do_ you?" |
36281 | by being driven to use it to combat this menace of hell? |
36281 | he asked--"this sheet and knife here on the floor outside your door?" |
36281 | he exclaimed...."But who is this young creature lying dead beside him?" |
36281 | said the latter when he saw Cleves,--"what''s the matter here? |
32977 | ''But_ is_ it you, Ben?'' 32977 ''Save anythin''?" |
32977 | A fool also is full of words: a man can not tell what shall be; and what shall be after him who can tell? |
32977 | A good deal of your life on the Mississippi is autobiographical, is n''t it? |
32977 | All right,I said,"I''ve never heard a real American say''I guess''; but what about the balance of your extraordinary tongue? |
32977 | Am I travelling round the world to discover_ these_ people? |
32977 | And did I drop her from the list of my friends? 32977 And did they let him remain left- handed after he had painted that thing?" |
32977 | And have you noticed, wherever we go there''s always some man who knows how to carry my kit? 32977 And he knows all this by night as well as by day?" |
32977 | And how are the stables managed? 32977 And how did the latest persecution affect you?" |
32977 | And how do things go? |
32977 | And is this all you do? |
32977 | And the Irish vote included? |
32977 | And then what do you expect? |
32977 | And then? |
32977 | And what did you think of Indiana when you came through? |
32977 | And what do you make in Udaipur? |
32977 | And what does the fat Briton know or care about Boh Hla- Oo? |
32977 | And what happened? |
32977 | And when did you leave England? |
32977 | And where did you shoot it, Maharaja Sahib? |
32977 | And who should know better than an American? |
32977 | And why did you''list? |
32977 | And you? 32977 And your partner?" |
32977 | And-- ah--_did_ you? |
32977 | Are n''t these things well managed? |
32977 | Are these-- um-- persons here any sort of persons in their own places? |
32977 | Are we going to hold these dismal levees all through the night? |
32977 | Are you describing Japan or America? 32977 Are you going to inflict all that nonsense on them at home?" |
32977 | Are you going to see my faver and the horses? |
32977 | As how? |
32977 | But about the fortifications, General? 32977 But have you a Constitution in India?" |
32977 | But how can the prevalent offence be house- breaking in a place like this? |
32977 | But suppose they engaged in the open? |
32977 | But what man knows his mind? |
32977 | But what will your God say? |
32977 | But who am I that I should strike the corners of such as you name? 32977 But who made it?" |
32977 | But why? 32977 But why? |
32977 | But,I ventured,"is n''t it the theory that any organised expedition ought to be stopped by our fleet before it got here? |
32977 | But,said I,"what is there so awful in a naked Indian-- or two hundred naked Indians for that matter?" |
32977 | Ca n''t you raise one within your own borders? |
32977 | Captain''s name? |
32977 | Cholera? |
32977 | Did it hurt his feelings very much to wear our clothes? 32977 Did the people grow more crops thereby?" |
32977 | Do you believe that, then? |
32977 | Do you ever intend to write an autobiography? |
32977 | Do you expect then that the societies will collapse by proclamation? |
32977 | Do you know, it seems to me you have a very queer sense of proportion? |
32977 | Do you mean to say that you can from this absurd pigeon- loft locate the wards in the night- time? |
32977 | Do you see where that trolly is standing, behind the big P. and O. berth? 32977 Do you think of carrying one?" |
32977 | Do you want any? 32977 Does he go away and start newspapers to prove that?" |
32977 | Does the noise of traffic go on all through the hot weather? |
32977 | Does this always happen? |
32977 | Has he any people here? |
32977 | Has the Sahib never seen a tonga- iron break before? 32977 Have got how?" |
32977 | Have got one piecee soul-- allee same spilit? 32977 Have they come to book passages for home?" |
32977 | Have you got any folks at home? 32977 Have you got reporters anything like our reporters on Indian news papers?" |
32977 | Have you seen any horses hereabouts? |
32977 | Have you seen_ my_ horses? |
32977 | Have you,said he,"seen the Constitution of Japan? |
32977 | He said:''Suppose a man has written a book that will live for ever?'' 32977 Horses? |
32977 | How can you Police have faith in humanity? |
32977 | How do the heavy four- horse coaches take it, Tom? |
32977 | How long does it take to know it then? |
32977 | How long does that take? |
32977 | How many people do you suppose the land supports to the square mile? |
32977 | How many? |
32977 | How much do you think the Government takes in revenue from vegetable gardens of that kind? |
32977 | How much has the head of a ward to know? |
32977 | How much more crops? |
32977 | How much? |
32977 | How would you like to be hot- potted there? |
32977 | I say, Doctor, did you ever know Cora Pearl? |
32977 | I say, Doctor, what are the symptoms of cholera? 32977 I walked in the lonesome even, And who so sad as I, As I saw the young men and maidens Merrily passing by?" |
32977 | If we''ave our own institutions, that ai n''t no reason why people should come''ere and stare at us, his it? |
32977 | Is it_ very_ bad? |
32977 | Is n''t it Théophile Gautier who says that the only differences between country and country lie in the slang and the uniform of the police? |
32977 | Is n''t it good enough? 32977 Is n''t this a sweet place? |
32977 | Is nobody going to do or bring anything? |
32977 | Is she going to roll any more? |
32977 | Is that all? |
32977 | It''s a new world to you; is n''t it? |
32977 | May I sit up here with you, great chief and man with a golden tongue? 32977 Nice sort of place, is n''t it?" |
32977 | Now it''s the what? |
32977 | Now where did you go and what did you see? |
32977 | Now, do you believe? |
32977 | Once and again the priest he prays here-- for those who are dead, you understand? |
32977 | Poor? |
32977 | Robert? |
32977 | Say, Johnny Bull, does n''t all this make you feel lonesome? |
32977 | Shall I mark out the bull- board? |
32977 | Then how the---- can any---- like you---- say what it---- well was? |
32977 | Then you like the State? |
32977 | This evening we shall do the grand cañon of the Yellowstone? |
32977 | Those men? 32977 Till you die?" |
32977 | Together? |
32977 | Trust''em? 32977 Wanchee buy?" |
32977 | Well, and after? |
32977 | Well, what do you expect? |
32977 | Well, what''s the matter? |
32977 | Were things like this,demanded Diana,"in the big world outside, whence I had come?" |
32977 | What are these? |
32977 | What are they sitting on? |
32977 | What are we going to see? |
32977 | What can I do? |
32977 | What did you drink our President''s health for? 32977 What do you think?" |
32977 | What does it matter? |
32977 | What does it matter? |
32977 | What happens then? |
32977 | What happens when these pigsties catch fire? |
32977 | What happens? |
32977 | What have you done? 32977 What in hell are you doing here, then? |
32977 | What is it? |
32977 | What means this eager, anxious throng? |
32977 | What must the heat be in May? |
32977 | What row? 32977 What sort of Queen''s Birthday do you call this?" |
32977 | What sort of mental impression do you carry away? |
32977 | What was your last ship? |
32977 | What will it be in America itself? |
32977 | What would be the good of a look- out if the man could n''t tell where the fire was? |
32977 | What would happen if you threw an engine off the line? |
32977 | What''s going to be done? |
32977 | What''s her name? |
32977 | What''s on? |
32977 | What''s the matter with you? |
32977 | What''s the matter? |
32977 | What''s your last ship? |
32977 | What,said he, scornfully,"are tables and chairs to this Raj? |
32977 | When did she sail? |
32977 | Where are the_ old_ dead? |
32977 | Where are we now? |
32977 | Where did he come from? |
32977 | Where did you pick up your Constitution, then? |
32977 | Where else would you have it? |
32977 | Where have you come from? |
32977 | Who has to make the last cut that breaks a leg through? |
32977 | Who is the best artist in Japan now? |
32977 | Who knew how many gardens, such as the Rang Bilas, were to be found in the Palace? |
32977 | Who knows? 32977 Who knows? |
32977 | Who wants to? 32977 Who''s complaining? |
32977 | Who''s that? |
32977 | Who''s us? |
32977 | Who''s your financial friend with the figures at his fingers''ends? |
32977 | Who''s_ that_? |
32977 | Whose son is that student? |
32977 | Why are n''t you at the Mikado''s garden party? |
32977 | Why are they so quiet? 32977 Why on earth ca n''t you look at the lions and enjoy yourself, and leave politics to the men who pretend to understand''em?" |
32977 | Why should they, poor devils? |
32977 | Why? 32977 Why?" |
32977 | Why? |
32977 | Will the Government give me_ pensin_? 32977 Ye- es-- unless--""Unless what? |
32977 | You are not making fun? 32977 You can trust your native buyers then?" |
32977 | You come to see? |
32977 | You must give security, you mean? |
32977 | You see that cat? |
32977 | You take_ afim_? |
32977 | You think so? 32977 You wanchee buy? |
32977 | You want go Park Street? 32977 You want to go to the Palace Hotel?" |
32977 | _ Daniel, how many socks master got?_The unfinished peg fell from my fist. |
32977 | _ Fairy Queen._"When did you leave her? |
32977 | _ Ferdinand._"No, after that? |
32977 | _ Haidée._"You deserted from her? |
32977 | _ Is n''t_ a pilot a man who always wears a pea- jacket and shouts through a speaking- trumpet? |
32977 | _ Why_ have n''t you? |
32977 | ***** Is there really such a place as Hong- Kong? |
32977 | --_The Palace of Art._"And where next? |
32977 | A dry, red- haired man gives her exact position in the river--(How in the world can he know?) |
32977 | A sweet view, is n''t it? |
32977 | After some days, the latter turned and said:"_ Why_ are you so keen, Sahib, upon getting my old bones up to the Fort?" |
32977 | All India knows of the Calcutta Municipality; but has any one thoroughly investigated the Big Calcutta Stink? |
32977 | All he wanted to know was:"Will somebody have the goodness to tell a respectable old gentleman what in the world, or out of it, has occurred?" |
32977 | An intelligent and responsible financier, discussing the Empire, said:"But why do we want so large an army in India? |
32977 | And do you know what these children of nature did? |
32977 | And how shall I finish the tale? |
32977 | And if the miracle does n''t work?" |
32977 | And in another man''s house-- anyhow, what had I come to do or say? |
32977 | And now that the train has reached Ajmir, the Crewe of Rajputana, whither shall a tramp turn his feet? |
32977 | And the others, who wait and swear and spit and exchange anecdotes-- what are they? |
32977 | And what more remains to tell? |
32977 | And what shall be said of Amber, Queen of the Pass-- the city that Jey Singh bade his people slough as snakes cast their skins? |
32977 | And who will find security for me? |
32977 | And you would know where the gain comes in? |
32977 | And, after all, what is the use of Royalty in these days if a man may not take delight in the pride of the eye? |
32977 | And, indeed, why should they? |
32977 | Are n''t you one of''em?" |
32977 | Are you going? |
32977 | Are you quite well? |
32977 | Are you the Station- master?" |
32977 | At any rate, it was an Irishman who said to the Barrack- master Sahib:"Fwhat about that loafer?" |
32977 | At first, when a stranger enters this life, he is inclined to scoff and ask, in his ignorance,"_ What_ is this Company that you talk so much about?" |
32977 | Borrer money? |
32977 | But I suppose you''ve seen much better things in India, have n''t you? |
32977 | But what had he who sat in judgment upon him gained? |
32977 | But what skipper will take some of these battered, shattered wrecks whose hands shake and whose eyes are red? |
32977 | But what will you actually do with it? |
32977 | But what would you have done if you had seen what I saw when I went round the temple verandah to what we must call a vestry at the back? |
32977 | But what''s the good of writing impressions? |
32977 | But wherein lies the beauty of this form of mental suppleness? |
32977 | But you was talking about your horse guards now?" |
32977 | But you were saying--?" |
32977 | By the way, how is it that a Highland regiment-- the Argyll and Southerlandshire for instance-- get such good recruits? |
32977 | By the way, under what-- h''m, arrangements with the Government is a Japanese paper published? |
32977 | Ca n''t you feel the air getting brisker? |
32977 | Can I have leave from two o''clock to go and look for that man and hit him again?" |
32977 | Can I? |
32977 | Can any Constitution make up for the wearing of Europe clothes? |
32977 | Can the people help laughing? |
32977 | Can you believe it?" |
32977 | Can you imagine a more pleasant life than his wanderings over the earth, with untold special knowledge to back each signature of his cheque- book? |
32977 | Can you pay me five rupees?'' |
32977 | Can you wonder that he talks? |
32977 | Can you wonder, then, that a guide of long- standing should in time grow to be an accomplished liar? |
32977 | Could a man desire three more inauspicious signs for a night''s travel? |
32977 | Curious, is n''t it?" |
32977 | D''you know our steamer goes at four? |
32977 | D''you think I''ve stolen them?" |
32977 | D----?" |
32977 | Did I ever dream of a place like this?" |
32977 | Did I know Jandiala? |
32977 | Did I not? |
32977 | Did he know anything about drapery or colour or the shape of a woman? |
32977 | Did n''t he rebel when he put on a pair of trousers for the first time? |
32977 | Did they ever leave me without a hundred or a hundred and fifty rupees put by-- and never touched? |
32977 | Did you ever hear an English minister lecture for half an hour on the freight- traffic receipts and general working of, let us say, the Midland? |
32977 | Did you ever hear how the people of Carmel lynched Edward M. Petree for preaching the gospel without making a collection at the end of the service? |
32977 | Did you ever hear of anything so absurd?" |
32977 | Did you ever see my shoulder-- these two marks on it? |
32977 | Did you never hear of a boiler bursting? |
32977 | Do n''t you ever play whist occasionally?" |
32977 | Do the kilt and sporran bring in brawny youngsters of five- foot nine, and thirty- nine inch round the chest? |
32977 | Do you ever know a native that did n''t say_ Garib admi_( I''m a poor man)? |
32977 | Do you expect people will give you money without you ask''em? |
32977 | Do you know anything about cholera?" |
32977 | Do you know it''s a solemn fact that if you drop a Davy lamp or snatch it quickly you can blow a whole English pit inside out with all the miners? |
32977 | Do you know the Bohemian Club of San Francisco? |
32977 | Do you know the Strid near Bolton-- that spot where the full force of the river is pent up in two yards''breadth? |
32977 | Do you know those horrible sponges full of worms that grow in warm seas? |
32977 | Do you mean to say that it has anything in common with ours except the auxiliary verbs, the name of the Creator, and Damn? |
32977 | Do you mind my giving you a little advice? |
32977 | Do you recollect Besant''s description of Palmiste Island in_ My Little Girl_ and_ So They Were Married_? |
32977 | Do you recollect Mrs. Molesworth''s_ Cuckoo Clock_, and the big cabinet that Griselda entered with the cuckoo? |
32977 | Do you remember the story of the Bad People of Iquique? |
32977 | Do you see?" |
32977 | Do you seriously believe all that?" |
32977 | Do you understand anything about revolvers?" |
32977 | Do you understand?" |
32977 | Do you wonder that in the old days the Indians were careful to avoid the Yellowstone? |
32977 | Doctor, what are the symptoms of cholera?" |
32977 | Does any black man who had been in Guv''ment service go away without hundreds an''hundreds put by, and never touched? |
32977 | Edward M. Petree was--""_ Are_ you going to see Japan or are you not?" |
32977 | Even_ you_ have heard of Hokusai, have n''t you?" |
32977 | Followest thou? |
32977 | For pleasure? |
32977 | French- looking sort of thing, is n''t she? |
32977 | From a bush by the roadside sprang up a fat man who cried aloud in English:"How does Your Honour do? |
32977 | Gentlemen, the officers, have you ever seriously considered the existence on earth of a cavalry who by preference would fight in timber? |
32977 | Has not Monghyr a haunted house in which tradition says sceptics have seen much more than they could account for? |
32977 | Have I managed to convey the impression that April is fine in Japan? |
32977 | Have I told you that he is an Engineer General, specially sent out to attend to the fortifications? |
32977 | Have got soul, you?" |
32977 | Have you ever come across one of K----''s crows? |
32977 | Have you ever seen a crowd at our famine relief distributions? |
32977 | Have you ever seen an untouched land-- the face of virgin Nature? |
32977 | Have you ever studied Pathetic Politics? |
32977 | Have you ever"extracted"lacquer from wood? |
32977 | Have you ever, encumbered with great- coat and valise, tried to dodge diversely- minded locomotives when the sun was shining in your eyes? |
32977 | Have you seen our cracker- factories and the new offices of the_ Examiner_?" |
32977 | Have you seen the later Japanese art-- the pictures on the fans and in the shop windows? |
32977 | He demanded that I should admire; and the utmost that I could say was:"Are these things so? |
32977 | He did:--"Sherry and sandwiches? |
32977 | He snapped his joints more excruciatingly than ever:"For pleasure? |
32977 | He was an old man and..."Who put the present Raja on the throne?" |
32977 | Hereon the gentleman with the white cloth:"Then the complaint is that influential voters will not take the trouble to vote? |
32977 | Hev you seen the plates?" |
32977 | His first flush of professional enthusiasm abated, he took stock of the Englishman and said calmly:"What do_ you_ want with a sword?" |
32977 | Horrible idea, is it not, to go down and down with each tide into the foul Hugli mud? |
32977 | Horses? |
32977 | How can I sit down and write to you of the mere joy of being alive? |
32977 | How can a big, strong steamer have her three masts razed to deck level? |
32977 | How can a heavy, country boat be pitched on to the poop of a high- walled liner? |
32977 | How can a man full of Pilsener beer reach that keen- set state of quiescence needful for ordering his dinner liquor? |
32977 | How did that conversation begin-- why did it end, and what is the use of meeting eccentricities who never explained themselves? |
32977 | How do I know you do n''t belong to the_ Jackson''s_ crew? |
32977 | How do I know? |
32977 | How do these things happen? |
32977 | How do they do it?" |
32977 | How do they invest their savings? |
32977 | How do we manage to keep the horses so quiet? |
32977 | How do you intend to describe it?" |
32977 | How does the iron taste?" |
32977 | How does this strange thing come about? |
32977 | How in the world can a white man, a Sahib of Our blood, stand up and plaster praise on his own country? |
32977 | How in the world could the owner of such a place as Jodhpur Palace be in any way like an English country- gentleman? |
32977 | How in the world do they get a living?" |
32977 | How in the world was it possible to take in even one- thousandth of this huge, roaring, many- sided continent? |
32977 | How is it that Our infantry regiments fare so badly? |
32977 | How is it that every one smells of money; whence come your municipal improvements; and why are the White Men so restless?" |
32977 | How is that for feeling?" |
32977 | How many men follow this double, deleterious sort of life? |
32977 | How many sections of the complex society of the place do the carts carry? |
32977 | How many times have I had to record such an opinion as the foregoing? |
32977 | How many votes does three hundred rupees''worth of landed property carry? |
32977 | How much the more could a cultivated observer from, let us say, an English constituency, blunder and pervert and mangle? |
32977 | How on earth did this man drag Western education into this discussion? |
32977 | How shall I tell the glories of that day so that you may be interested? |
32977 | How was it done? |
32977 | How would you and your friends get to work? |
32977 | How you think now the American Revision Treaty?" |
32977 | How''d you like us act?" |
32977 | I asked,"What regiment?" |
32977 | I ca n''t get it, can I? |
32977 | I found him dancing on the fore- deck shouting,"Is n''t she a daisy? |
32977 | I gave them both my blessing, because"When shall I see you again?" |
32977 | I mean, must you pay anything before starting a press?" |
32977 | I wonder what would have happened if a Gatling had been used when the West End riots were in full swing?" |
32977 | I''m wearing a made tie and a breastpin under my blouse? |
32977 | If he''s caught visiting any of the others-- do you see that cool and restful brown stone building way over there against the hillside? |
32977 | If they treat each other like dogs, why should we regard''em as human beings? |
32977 | In jewellery? |
32977 | In the meantime, what have the rest of the dead man''s gang been doing? |
32977 | In''Frisco-- Lone Mountain''Frisco-- you hear, Doctor?" |
32977 | Is he then like the rest? |
32977 | Is he trying to run a motion through under cover of a cloud of words, essaying the well- known"cuttle- fish trick"of the West? |
32977 | Is it better to kiss a post or throw it in the fire? |
32977 | Is it true that etc., etc.?" |
32977 | Is n''t he a devil? |
32977 | Is n''t it a desolate place?" |
32977 | Is n''t it beautiful? |
32977 | Is n''t it degrading? |
32977 | Is n''t it touching? |
32977 | Is n''t it what you call Kismet?" |
32977 | Is n''t she a darling?" |
32977 | Is n''t that a European woman at that door?" |
32977 | Is section 10 to be omitted, and is one man to be allowed one vote and no more? |
32977 | Is that administration? |
32977 | Is that all it can do?" |
32977 | Is the pest ever out of it? |
32977 | Is there a more than usually revolting lynching? |
32977 | Is there a shooting- scrape between prominent citizens? |
32977 | Is there any one who could teach him more if he were alive to- day?" |
32977 | Is there not at Pir Bahar a lonely house on a bluff, the grave of a young lady, who, thirty years ago, rode her horse down the cliff and perished? |
32977 | Is there one of those that you would n''t be glad to take for a hack, and look well after too? |
32977 | Is this a little matter to you who can count upon him daily? |
32977 | Is this budget of news sufficiently exciting, or must I in strict confidence tell you the story of the Professor and the compass? |
32977 | Is this sedition? |
32977 | Is_ A_ to be allowed to give two votes in one ward and one in another? |
32977 | It must be interesting-- more interesting than the colourless Anglo- Indian article; but who has treated of it? |
32977 | It never attacks people twice, does it? |
32977 | Jack in the sailors''coffee- shop is singing joyously:"Shall we gather at the River-- the beautiful, the beautiful, the River?" |
32977 | Joss houses? |
32977 | Like the native of India you say? |
32977 | Lucid, is it not? |
32977 | Makes a man jump rather, does n''t it? |
32977 | Money? |
32977 | More interesting is the question, For how long can the vitality of a people whose life was arms be suspended? |
32977 | Moreover, where is the criminal, and what is all this talk about abstractions? |
32977 | Need I say that he was an Irishman? |
32977 | No savvy? |
32977 | No? |
32977 | Not good for me? |
32977 | Now do you see? |
32977 | Now if they do this in the capital, what damage must they not do to the crops in the district? |
32977 | Now this was rude, because the ordinary form of salutation on the Road is usually"And what are you for?" |
32977 | Of all the disgusting, inaccessible dens-- Holy Cupid, what''s this?" |
32977 | Once more, can anything be done to a people without nerves as without digestion, and, if reports speak truly, without morals? |
32977 | Or did she, with the others of the batch, give a spinsters''ball as a last trial-- following the custom of the country? |
32977 | Or if you claim from him overtime service as a right, will he work zealously? |
32977 | Other men have told you that, have they? |
32977 | Our punishments? |
32977 | Politics in America? |
32977 | S''pose I write fifteen hundred?" |
32977 | Savvy these things? |
32977 | Sha n''t I, Blake?" |
32977 | Shameful extravagance? |
32977 | Somebody opened a door with a crash, and a man cried out:"Who is there?" |
32977 | Sounds funny, does n''t it? |
32977 | Suppose I give an itinerary of what we saw?" |
32977 | Suppose the drawing- room should be full of people,--suppose a baby were sick, how was I to explain that I only wanted to shake hands with him? |
32977 | That goes well, even after all these years, does it not? |
32977 | The first question that a Japanese on the railway asks an Englishman is:"Have you got the English translation of our Constitution?" |
32977 | Their hands are full of work; so full that, when the incult wanderer said:"What do you find to do?" |
32977 | Then I am compelled to believe that the public educate the paper? |
32977 | Then said he:"Are you going to get out your letters,--your letters of naturalisation?" |
32977 | Then the burly Superintendent brings his hand down on his thigh with a crack like a pistol- shot and shouts:"How do, John?" |
32977 | Then turning upon the Englishman, he said fiercely:"What have you come here for?" |
32977 | There is a certain amount of personal violence in and about the State, or else where would be the good of the weapons? |
32977 | This morning she advanced to me and said, as though it were the most natural thing in the world:"Shall I take away your tea- cup, sir?" |
32977 | This sounds mad, does n''t it? |
32977 | This, by the way, demoralises the Globe- trotter, whose first cry is,"Where can we get horses? |
32977 | Under what new god, thought I, are we irrepressible English sitting now? |
32977 | Was I a fool? |
32977 | Was it not De Quincey that had a horror of the Chinese-- of their inhumaneness and their inscrutability? |
32977 | Was n''t that the place where I got the good cigars?" |
32977 | Was the city grateful? |
32977 | We could turn out more? |
32977 | We stumbled upon a young couple saying good- by in the twilight, and"When shall I see you again?" |
32977 | Were canals made only to wash in?" |
32977 | Were their forest officers trained at Nancy, or are they local products? |
32977 | What am I now? |
32977 | What am I to do with a people like this?" |
32977 | What are their pleasures and diversions? |
32977 | What can be extracted from a people who call four miles variously_ do kosh_,_ do kush_,_ dhi hkas_,_ doo- a koth_, and_ diakast_ all one word? |
32977 | What can one do? |
32977 | What can we do?" |
32977 | What comes to them in the end? |
32977 | What could the Englishman do? |
32977 | What country is such a fool? |
32977 | What d''you think of that?" |
32977 | What did tables and chairs and eggs and fowls and very bright lamps matter to the Raj? |
32977 | What do you choose to do with my gift?" |
32977 | What do you make it by Indian standards? |
32977 | What do you think of him?" |
32977 | What do_ you_ think? |
32977 | What does it matter to the Down- Easter who Wrap- up- his- Tail was?" |
32977 | What happens, I wonder, when the pick strikes the liquid, and the miner has to run or be parboiled? |
32977 | What have you seen?" |
32977 | What is a wheel?" |
32977 | What is it?" |
32977 | What made this yellow image of a shopman here take delight in a dwarf orange tree in a turquoise blue pot?" |
32977 | What man do you think would dare to use a pistol at even thirty yards, if his life depended oh it? |
32977 | What may these things mean? |
32977 | What shall we say to such a_ bunnia_? |
32977 | What should we do without the cowboy?" |
32977 | What the Devil have I to do with your horses? |
32977 | What then?'' |
32977 | What was that now?" |
32977 | What was the use? |
32977 | What were they going to do with the Chinese decoration all over Penang? |
32977 | What will the American do with the negro? |
32977 | What would happen if one spoke to this Bobby? |
32977 | What would happen if the train went off the line? |
32977 | What would you have? |
32977 | What''s here?" |
32977 | What''s that you say about polygamy? |
32977 | What''s the President to you on this day of all others? |
32977 | What''s the best with you?" |
32977 | What''s the use of talking?" |
32977 | What''s the use?" |
32977 | Where are the men who used''em? |
32977 | Where can a man get food? |
32977 | Where can we get elephants? |
32977 | Where is his_ pensin_? |
32977 | Where is the fowl- man from whom you got the eggs?" |
32977 | Where would_ you_ be?" |
32977 | Where''s that Emporium? |
32977 | Where, oh where, in all this wilderness of life shall a man go? |
32977 | Where_ is_ the Park Street Cemetery? |
32977 | Whereunto all this lecture? |
32977 | Who are you, and what are you in for?" |
32977 | Who is the man to write to for all these things?" |
32977 | Who knows her?" |
32977 | Who knows? |
32977 | Who takes count of the prejudices which we absorb through the skin by way of our surroundings? |
32977 | Why did n''t they call her Mechlin lace Falls at fifty dollars a yard while they were at it?" |
32977 | Why do n''t they make a row and sing and shout, and so on?" |
32977 | Why does the Westerner spit? |
32977 | Why is it that when one views for the first time any of the wonders of the earth a bystander always strikes in with,"You should see it, etc."? |
32977 | Why not, the trams aiding, go to the Old Park Street Cemetery? |
32977 | Why should he trouble to climb up the bank and bring down the eave of the cave? |
32977 | Why should n''t he?" |
32977 | Why should not a baby enjoy himself if he liked? |
32977 | Why would n''t the scheme work? |
32977 | Why, asks a savage, let them vote at all? |
32977 | Why- for are you such a horrible contradiction?" |
32977 | Why? |
32977 | Will a North countryman give you anything but warm hospitality for nothing? |
32977 | Will any one take the contract? |
32977 | Wo n''t he grow sensible some day and drop foreign habits?" |
32977 | Would I play? |
32977 | Would he be offended? |
32977 | Would they try to wisely obliterate that? |
32977 | Would we be pleased to inspect the manufactory? |
32977 | Would you not rather take a cheroot and loaf about the streets seeing what was to be seen? |
32977 | Would you taste one of the real pleasures of Life? |
32977 | Would_ you_ have bothered your head about politics or temples? |
32977 | You are very much in earnest about yours, are you not?" |
32977 | You do n''t carry a pistol, Doctor? |
32977 | You do n''t say so? |
32977 | You have a Parliament, have you not?" |
32977 | You have heaps of''em in India, have n''t you?" |
32977 | You know how in Bengal to this day the child- wife is taught to curse her possible co- wife, ere yet she has gone to her husband''s house? |
32977 | You never saw it in India?" |
32977 | You onderstandt? |
32977 | You see all those men turning brass and looking after the machinery? |
32977 | You see? |
32977 | You see?" |
32977 | You trafel for pleasure? |
32977 | You understand how very unpleasant it must have been, do you not?" |
32977 | You understand that? |
32977 | You would eat thatch, would you? |
32977 | You''re looking at all those chopped rails? |
32977 | You''ve never heard of the rice- Christians, have you? |
32977 | You''ve read the_ Vicar of Wakefield_?" |
32977 | Young man, whurr are those beavers? |
32977 | Your Honour remembers me? |
32977 | Your command here is for five years, is n''t it?" |
32977 | _ Bus!_[17] Will the Sirdar take the tale of clay? |
32977 | _ Does_ Calcutta smell so pestiferously after all? |
32977 | _ Why_ is he like the Jap?" |
32977 | and how can the side be bodily torn out of a ship? |
32977 | at thirty- second intervals, and at the end of five minutes call one to another:"Sa- ay, do n''t you think it''s vurry much the same all along?" |
32977 | how do you make room for the fresh stock?" |
32977 | indeed that''s very sad; but look here, where do you say my rooms are?" |
32977 | last? |
32977 | meaning"what house do you represent?" |
32977 | said I,"is it possible that you-- you-- speak that disgusting pidgin- talk to your_ nauker_? |
32977 | what air you doing?''" |
32977 | what sort of a row?" |
45540 | And if only it was able to give us an answer to the chief question: Who was Jesus? |
45540 | We learn from him that a man(?) 45540 Who would have invented this story?" |
45540 | ( Why callest thou me good? |
45540 | 1,"Have I not seen our Lord Jesus?" |
45540 | 18) he explains the horns of the"unicorn"( ox?) |
45540 | 18, 19) about Peter''s possession of the keys; how, then, should this not be the oldest? |
45540 | 24( My God, why has thou forsaken me? |
45540 | And how then does the Logos bring about redemption? |
45540 | And now, who is this Joseph, as son of whom the Messiah was to be a suffering and dying creature like any ordinary man? |
45540 | Bousset, indeed, in his work,"Was wissen wir von Jesus?" |
45540 | But how else could he have been born? |
45540 | But is that distinction"grasped in all its purity"in Judaism with its ritualistic legality? |
45540 | But perhaps those sayings and sermons of Jesus are of such a nature that they could only arise from the"historical Jesus"? |
45540 | But what is now being done? |
45540 | Do you then want to know why he is so grim? |
45540 | Does any connection between the two exist? |
45540 | Does this mean that they were directly"revealed"to him by the transfigured Jesus? |
45540 | For what does Lessing say? |
45540 | He shall see of the travail of his soul[? |
45540 | How then does it fare with the new"bases"of Schmiedel? |
45540 | If thou followest it and wilt be baptized, then undertake to purify thyself, for who can seize a burning fire with his hands? |
45540 | In the Acts we read only of an apparition of light which Paul saw, and of a voice which called to him,"Saul, why persecutest thou me?" |
45540 | Indeed, has it come to a really pure realisation even in Christianity, in which piety and attachment to the Church so often pass as identical ideas? |
45540 | Is no other course open to us but a complete break with the Christian doctrine of redemption? |
45540 | Is the supposition referred to necessary to account for the fact that Paul, the persecutor of Jesus, referred the voice and the vision to Jesus? |
45540 | Is there not at the same time in this a concealed reference to Adonis? |
45540 | Its followers called themselves Adonæi, after the name of its supposed founder, Ado(? |
45540 | John''s question to Jesus,"Art thou he that cometh, or look we for another?" |
45540 | May they not be based on events which are very far from being necessarily experiences of the liberal theology''s historical Jesus? |
45540 | On what then does the opinion rest that the cross is the gibbet? |
45540 | Or did Paul, as historical theology says, reveal more of Jesus in his sermons than he did in the epistles? |
45540 | Or where else is a sect named after the birthplace of its founder? |
45540 | R. H. Grützmacher:"Ist das liberale Christusbild modern? |
45540 | What answer did he give to the questions: What matters in the eyes of God? |
45540 | What does this prove? |
45540 | What is the rightly constituted, good and high- minded soul, but a God living as a guest in a human body? |
45540 | What then is proved by the letter of Pliny as to the historical nature of Jesus? |
45540 | What then is this soul? |
45540 | Why art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring? |
45540 | Why may not also the founder of the new covenant as an historical person belong entirely to pious legend? |
45540 | Will you not say that here is something too great and grand to be regarded as of the same nature as the trivial body in which it dwells? |
45540 | [ 310] A. Kalthoff,"Was wissen wir von Jesus? |
45540 | [ 31] Of what nature were the secret traditions upon which these sects rested? |
45540 | [ 374] The objection will be raised: what about the Gospels? |
45540 | [ 407] If v. Soden("Hat Jesus gelebt?" |
45540 | [ 413] V. Soden proves the contrary in his work,"Hat Jesus gelebt?" |
45540 | [ 468] Bousset agrees with this in his work"Was wissen wir von Jesus?" |
45540 | also his work"Was wissen wir von Jesus? |
45540 | and What is religion? |
45540 | we read the words:"I came to cast fire upon the earth: and what will I, if it is already kindled? |
39957 | A dream? |
39957 | Ai n''t it rediculous? |
39957 | But Paul-- what-- what does it_ mean?_"Just what you have guessed. 39957 But if your father says no?" |
39957 | But you,he asked eagerly,"did none of you see Him?" |
39957 | Can you tell me where the nearest recruiting station is located? |
39957 | Come from? |
39957 | Dick? 39957 Did her father come up with her?" |
39957 | Do I? 39957 Do n''t you think It will be easier after a while?" |
39957 | Do n''t you think he looks-- nice in that new suit? |
39957 | Do you mean to say you want to be ill? |
39957 | Excuse me,she faltered,"but, do you know-- you look ever- so- much like a little niece of mine back-- home?" |
39957 | Father,said the old wife,"do you mean to tell me you are going to pay a hundred dollars jest for a picture of me?" |
39957 | Happy, Yuki, happy? 39957 Has this stranger made you forget your father? |
39957 | Have they not? |
39957 | Have you not remembered His face? |
39957 | He finishes this year, does n''t he? |
39957 | His wonderful look-- just for you? |
39957 | Homesick business, is n''t it? |
39957 | How can they desire to destroy it? |
39957 | How could Conrad know that I had grown disloyal? 39957 How did it happen? |
39957 | How did the mission get her? 39957 How do you like me?" |
39957 | How soon will I be sick? |
39957 | How soon? |
39957 | I presume I am to paint you, madam? |
39957 | If that''s the way you did with the money, how about the four- ball trick? |
39957 | Indian? |
39957 | Is it the water ye are smellin''? 39957 Is n''t he?" |
39957 | Is n''t it beautiful? 39957 Is that all you can do?" |
39957 | Marg''ret,called a thin, querulous, broken voice from within the house;"ai n''t it time you was gettin''supper?" |
39957 | May I come in? |
39957 | May I look? |
39957 | May I speak with Nemuel? |
39957 | Morris, my Dana San? |
39957 | My lord, how can I? 39957 My sweetheart, what is it? |
39957 | Oh, is that the new baby? |
39957 | Oh, it is of my honorable father you speak? |
39957 | See''er? |
39957 | Tell me,she broke off,"is that all you came here for?" |
39957 | Want a bite to eat? |
39957 | Well, has it turned out as they predicted? |
39957 | What has she been doing? |
39957 | What is it, ol''fellers? |
39957 | What makes you think so? |
39957 | What makes_ you_ think so? |
39957 | What was it? |
39957 | What will become of me hereafter? 39957 What''s cane?" |
39957 | What''s sorghum? |
39957 | What''s the matter? |
39957 | When will you take me home, Daddy? |
39957 | When? |
39957 | Where did you hear that? |
39957 | Who said I thought anything? |
39957 | Who''s Dick? |
39957 | Why should I not ache? |
39957 | Why,I asked,"ca n''t you grow pumpkins?" |
39957 | Why? |
39957 | Will he wake if I kiss him? |
39957 | Wo n''t I ever shet up? 39957 Wo n''t I ever shet up? |
39957 | Wo n''t you come in,she called to them,"and talk to me a minute?" |
39957 | You did not see Him, then? |
39957 | You knew another of those He blessed? 39957 You know how He blessed a company of little children? |
39957 | You will tell her father to send for her, wo n''t you? |
39957 | You wonder why I come to you to- night? |
39957 | _ My_ hands? 39957 (_ Happily._) Will he cover my head with a pretty birdie''s wing? 39957 (_ He caresses the mignonettes tenderly._)_ Hal._ Dear daddy-- dear flowers-- aren''t they lovely, mother? 39957 (_ Mother is silent trying to keep back the tears and Hal notices it._) Papa is coming home soon, is n''t he, mother? 39957 (_ Pointing to box of mignonettes._) How much is it? 39957 (_ She awaits answer-- silence-- then takes box of mignonettes._) Whose favorite flower is the mignonette? 39957 (_ She turns to the minister._) Where d''you want to sit? 39957 (_ Turns and puts arms around Mrs. Hamilton._) Are n''t you, Sissy? 39957 (_ Turns toward husband._) You want to stay here with me and our boy-- don''t you, John? 39957 )._ You surely remember these-- your own mignonettes-- your prize? 39957 A single, half- blown rose--? |
39957 | After a silence Yuki stammered:"You-- killed him?" |
39957 | After a silence, he inquired lightly:"What about supper, Yuki?" |
39957 | Ai n''t I a- tellin''you you ca n''t always size''em by the screech?" |
39957 | Ai n''t it so?" |
39957 | Am I to lose thee too?" |
39957 | An''thet time the Injuns was after ye, did n''t I stand atween ye an''the redskins and pertect ye? |
39957 | And did I not spend almost my entire summer within sight of my home, and in a field of a few acres dimension? |
39957 | And how was Ruth to perceive my change of heart? |
39957 | And now you ask me to hurt him?" |
39957 | And what of the young crows in the nest? |
39957 | And who cares to read a sex novel now? |
39957 | Are these Americans? |
39957 | Are ye worth the name on a tomb? |
39957 | Are ye worth the price of your grave- clothes? |
39957 | Are you a king and must you be a slave too? |
39957 | Are you deaf to the call?" |
39957 | Are you not a Japanese? |
39957 | As they stood thus Conrad approached and said:"What does it matter? |
39957 | Britling Sees It Through''? |
39957 | Buggy- whip-- sound queer now? |
39957 | But did I not see a glow of passion on that bronze face-- a passion for the Liberty of the World? |
39957 | But they do n''t know what it is to need each other? |
39957 | But was it the spray from the fountain alone that made my cheeks wet? |
39957 | But what of that? |
39957 | Can we stop the grains of sand in the hour- glass? |
39957 | Can you tell whether your pianoler plays that, Murphy? |
39957 | Changed? |
39957 | Confound it, why need I be harking back to it? |
39957 | Could n''t such a fellah give the heavenly gates a jar? |
39957 | D''ye hear?" |
39957 | Did he gain goods and store?" |
39957 | Did he wait long? |
39957 | Did n''t I keep ye from gittin''drownded when ye crossed thet river whar the current swep''the beasteses offen their feet? |
39957 | Did n''t I watch over ye and shield ye from the sun when ye lay sick of the fever and had n''t nary wife to look after ye? |
39957 | Did the blessing tarry so long in the fulfilment as with me?" |
39957 | Did you ever drive in from an Iowa farm to a Fourth of July celebration? |
39957 | Do I iver grumble and snarl when ye treat me right? |
39957 | Do n''t you know sorghum? |
39957 | Do n''t you think they''re pretty? |
39957 | Do we know Jesus? |
39957 | Do we not need our wild crab apple just as it is, as much as we need more kinds of orchard trees? |
39957 | Do you say it is not our war? |
39957 | Do you see that picture under the photograph of the cross?" |
39957 | Do you think that because of his repeated scented baths he sedulously keeps to the middle of the narrow way? |
39957 | Do you think that he turns up his delicate nose at the luscious smells there encountered? |
39957 | Do you want the music to be half done before you find your partners? |
39957 | Dream? |
39957 | Duty? |
39957 | Five dollars''worth of futurity? |
39957 | Five-- five and a half? |
39957 | For Gawd''s sake, ca n''t you clear the floor? |
39957 | For Gawd''s sake, ca n''t you stop it? |
39957 | For whom? |
39957 | For whut''s the us''t o''goin''on like this? |
39957 | Gates?" |
39957 | Hain''t I been faithful to ye through thick an''thin? |
39957 | Hain''t I kep''the rain offen ye at night? |
39957 | Hain''t I looked after yer grub and yer blankets and done ever''thin''I could to make ye comfortable? |
39957 | Hain''t I made a home fer ye all this hull endurin''trip? |
39957 | Hamilton( kissing his hands tenderly and giving him all signs of love and affection)._ Does n''t it seem good to be with us again? |
39957 | Hamilton._ Hal Boy-- what''s the trouble? |
39957 | Hamilton._ No, my boy-- daddy did n''t want to fight----_ Hal._ Then why did he go? |
39957 | Hamilton._ What for? |
39957 | Hamilton._ What have you, Hal? |
39957 | Hamilton._ Whose birthday is it to- day? |
39957 | Harshly he broke forth:"What has come to thee, Roger Barnes, that thee has broken all the rules of the Discipline relative to burial? |
39957 | Have not the hours been counted out for us from the beginning of the world? |
39957 | Have you forgotten why your father is now in the Land of Shadows?" |
39957 | Have you forgotten your oath,_ your_ oath? |
39957 | Have you opened it; do you offer the daily incense; or is it simply an article of furniture for your foreign husband to admire?" |
39957 | He said he''d save me, if he had to chase me to hell and back, did he? |
39957 | He''ll sing from overflowin''heart-- his music will be free-- Would you take up a subscription fer a robin in a tree? |
39957 | Hearing all the other birds singing their love and seeing them winning favor with their brilliant colors, does he envy them? |
39957 | How He put His hands upon them?" |
39957 | How about you females, Bett? |
39957 | How could that be? |
39957 | How much for this? |
39957 | How much? |
39957 | I like you, and I''m most sure Daddy and Dick and the boys would like you, but then you have n''t got lots of money, have you? |
39957 | I suppose if you had a little sister her name would be Guinevere?" |
39957 | I was deeply touched when one of them said,"Ai n''t''e a plucky little chap, singin''right in front of Fritzie''s trenches fer us English blokes?" |
39957 | I wonder, did he ever know love''s dream? |
39957 | I''member how he''d smile and say,"Well, what did Sonny do to- day?" |
39957 | Impotence is the name of such kingship, and why should I care to be a queen when my king can not make me queenly? |
39957 | In succession the small boys and girls of her own began coming to the kitchen door pleading,"Ma, may I have a piece of bread an''butter?" |
39957 | Is it more wicked to have a marble portrait than an ambrotype? |
39957 | Is n''t it, after all, a gratuitous office? |
39957 | It has been my duty to slave and starve-- my husband has done his duty-- he volunteered his services-- I willingly let him go-- for what? |
39957 | It is finished,"and turning to Ruth,"What do you think of it?" |
39957 | May not the king ask of his subjects what he will? |
39957 | Mollie? |
39957 | My gran''son nigh sixteen, Do n''t boys know nothin''nowadays? |
39957 | Nell? |
39957 | No-- his name is_ not_ engraved on it-- so much the better-- what do I hear?" |
39957 | Not receiving an answer the man continued:"The foreigner is kind to you?" |
39957 | Nothing wrong, is there?" |
39957 | Now may I ask you something? |
39957 | Now, I ask you a question: Is that a square deal to a man on a business proposition?" |
39957 | Now, do you understand?" |
39957 | Of the lonely phoebe, calling in plaintive, mysterious tones to a mate unresponsive to his sorrowful beseechings? |
39957 | Of the robin, who makes of the grove a sanctuary? |
39957 | Oh, by the way, did you ever see any sleight of hand or legerdemain tricks?" |
39957 | Oh, did you bring your tools with you?" |
39957 | One after another delivers himself of a harangue, then the whole assemblage joins in noisy applause-- or is it disapproval? |
39957 | Peace and Then--? |
39957 | Ready? |
39957 | Remember how the two blocks of Main Street were draped with bunting and flags, and the courthouse lawn was dotted with white dresses? |
39957 | Rising to his feet he violently exclaimed:"By what right will thee so act? |
39957 | Rosie? |
39957 | S.?" |
39957 | Shall I ever forget that night getting back to my ship?" |
39957 | She becomes calm and goes toward husband with out- stretched arms._) Do n''t you know me? |
39957 | She''s from Texas, is n''t she?" |
39957 | Suppose we throw these peaches in-- awfully pretty thing for dining room-- and this flower piece-- shall we group these three?--now, how much for all? |
39957 | THE SONS OF MEN HEARKEN Are ye worth the kiss of a woman? |
39957 | Tell me, did he have great wealth, palaces, honors? |
39957 | Tell me-- have I made you happy?" |
39957 | The Old Cane Mill_ By Nellie Gregg Tomlinson_"What''s sorghum?" |
39957 | The perturbed shopper turned reluctantly away, hesitated, and then asked:"But the roses? |
39957 | The words sprang joyous and clear as a bobolink''s note--"What''s this dull town to me? |
39957 | The younger man looked after the fast disappearing jinrickshaw and asked after a moment''s hesitation:"He''s married a Jap, has n''t he? |
39957 | Thee knew her loveliness? |
39957 | Then he burst out with:"Say, you''re about the slickest thing I ever saw in my life, ai n''t you? |
39957 | Then one asked:"What was it like-- the blessing He gave your teacher? |
39957 | Then you say: How can this be truth if it creates disaster? |
39957 | There is no question of society or dinners, but just us two alone, you and me-- and,"turning up her face,"you are happy with me, my Yuki San? |
39957 | Up there by Mollie? |
39957 | Was God a dream too? |
39957 | Was it sparkle of winter days? |
39957 | Was it stately march of moon? |
39957 | Was it the presence of dear friends? |
39957 | Was it you got the revivalist to come up from the Gulch? |
39957 | Was there any_ You_ in all the empty worlds? |
39957 | Well, what do you think of that? |
39957 | Were ye worth the roof of a womb? |
39957 | What can I do?" |
39957 | What devil''s spirit has seized upon thee?" |
39957 | What did mother tell you a few moments ago? |
39957 | What do the little bedroom scandals of the flimsy novels matter when the womanhood of Belgium has been despoiled? |
39957 | What do you mean, my honorable Uncle?" |
39957 | What does he want it for though? |
39957 | What has happened?" |
39957 | What is Paris? |
39957 | What is it to be king? |
39957 | What is the bill of fare? |
39957 | What of the redwings building their nests among the reeds in the midst of the marsh-- so low as almost to touch the water? |
39957 | What of the unpretentious home-- a mere hollow in the ground-- where the care- free pair go to housekeeping? |
39957 | What warrant of Being had that soul which could not touch in all the blank, black spaces of the void another soul to give it assurance of itself? |
39957 | What was it? |
39957 | What would it be every morning to take the saddle and follow a new road ahead of the sun? |
39957 | What would it be to wake up every morning with a fresh wonder, not knowing what the day would bring? |
39957 | What you waiting for, Murph? |
39957 | When suddenly, dubious and still unconvinced, he turned to me and asked:"Well, how in time did you find the razor?" |
39957 | When, at length, shy Bird of Fortune, shall my snare thy wings enfold?" |
39957 | Which is which?" |
39957 | Who can say that they have not chosen the better part? |
39957 | Who of all this gathering was more welcome than"John, the Fiddler"? |
39957 | Who will care for my little son?" |
39957 | Why did he_ marry_ her?" |
39957 | Why did you leave your little Rosie? |
39957 | Why should I care for bowing? |
39957 | Why should I not think of my own desires before my dust, too, flies forgotten before the passing caravans? |
39957 | Why should she add even the weight of her preference to that child in whose favor the dice were already so heavily loaded? |
39957 | Why?" |
39957 | Will someone pray? |
39957 | Will thee urge disrespect to the whole Society? |
39957 | Will you find the minister a seat? |
39957 | Wo n''t ye ever shet up?" |
39957 | Would it be hard?" |
39957 | Would it be of any use to go in? |
39957 | You girls never turn down free liquor, do you? |
39957 | You love me?" |
39957 | You may be sure I got there in a hurry, almost as quickly as Jennie, who was but a few steps away, calling as I ran:"Did he step on him?" |
39957 | You noticed her work in this room, ai n''t you-- on the table and chair and organ-- art needlework? |
39957 | You travelin''fellers allus know somethin''new, and are up to whatever is goin''on over the country, ai n''t ye?" |
39957 | Your kid is-- d- e- a- d. Do you get me? |
39957 | Yuki looked at the tragic face before her a moment, then she said:"At last, at last you know?" |
39957 | _ King Nasrulla._ And these are the stories that you have heard, stories about Paris and London and the cities across the water? |
39957 | _ Mehrab._ Does he not mean to make you queen whether you wish to be or not? |
39957 | _ Mehrab._ He threatened you, did he? |
39957 | _ Murphy( looking across at the loafers and speaking half as an invitation, half as a command)._ Are you staying, boys? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal( passionately)._ But what shall we ever choose again-- and get what we choose? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal( rising in agitation)._ When I am your queen, will you follow the voices of other nightingales? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal._ And I shall not be your only queen? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal._ But I shall not ride with you into the distance and leave the kings''daughters behind? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal._ It has not been so in Saranazett, but does nothing change? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal._ Stories? |
39957 | _ Nourmahal._ Why should anyone bow to me? |
39957 | _ One of the Men( doggedly, as they look at one another sheepishly and no one moves to go)._ Ai n''t we always stayin''till closin''time? |
39957 | _ Rosie Phelan( reaching over and pulling Long''s sleeve)._ Did you hear that, Dick? |
39957 | _ Rosie( lifting her arms to fasten the beads)._ Not takin''an active part? |
39957 | _ Second Painted Lady( patronizingly)._ How would you expect Murphy to know what is stored in that machine? |
39957 | is hypocrisy always so cruelly punished? |
465 | Algernon,said we,"just push on and get ahead of that mare, will you?" |
465 | But if you wanted to get to Monache, why did n''t you go around to the eastward through that pass, there, and save yourself all the climb? 465 Can we camp here?" |
465 | Do n''t you? |
465 | Do you mean to tell me that there is any one chump enough to do that for a dollar a hide? |
465 | Fish in that pond, son? 465 How are you?" |
465 | How long is it going to take us? |
465 | I suppose there are tracks on the trail ahead of you? |
465 | Is it any hotter than this on the desert? |
465 | Me? |
465 | My dear fellow,you remark,"did you not see that the thing for you to do was to head them down by the bottom of that little gulch there? |
465 | NOW what are you talking about? |
465 | Oh, did n''t I mention it? |
465 | Say, son,he drawled,"if you want to say something big, why do n''t you say''elephant''?" |
465 | See that speck there? |
465 | Tobacco does n''t agree with you any more? |
465 | Well, son,said he,"what they doing now, KISSING OR KILLING?" |
465 | Well, what did you do? |
465 | Well, why did n''t you shoot her? |
465 | Were you going to ride ahead until dark in the childlike faith that that mare might show up somewhere? 465 What ARE you talking about?" |
465 | What is it, Wes? |
465 | What is it? |
465 | What is this? |
465 | When? |
465 | Which way did you come? |
465 | Why not travel at night? |
465 | Berlin? |
465 | But in the course of that morning we descended straight down a drop of, is it four thousand feet? |
465 | Could any verb be more expressive? |
465 | Did any one help him? |
465 | Did you find her?" |
465 | Do n''t you really think ANYBODY would have seen it? |
465 | Do you know what that means? |
465 | Do you know where we can get another pack- mule?" |
465 | Do you realize how far that is? |
465 | Do you think I want to get him lame''way up here in the hills? |
465 | Does not it convey exactly the lazy, careless, out- at- heels shuffling gait of the hobo? |
465 | Done already?" |
465 | I wonder what there is about the traveling public that seems so to set it apart, to make of it at least a sub- species of mankind? |
465 | If you made a wide enough circle you would inevitably cross that track, would n''t you? |
465 | Is this Algernon''s procedure? |
465 | Or again, in answer to my inquiry as to a mutual acquaintance,"Jim? |
465 | Petersburg?" |
465 | That would be business enough for most people, would n''t it? |
465 | The first thing anybody asks you when it is discovered that you know a little something of pack- trains is,"Do you throw the Diamond Hitch?" |
465 | They begin, when? |
465 | This last has not terrified you; how about the next? |
465 | To do all these things well keys your nerves to a high tension, does n''t it? |
465 | What did we-- or the horses for that matter-- care for trifling discomforts of the body? |
465 | What in hades do you think I wanted to run my horse all through those boulders for? |
465 | What would you do about it? |
465 | When you can migrate adequately in a single day, why spend a month at it? |
465 | Why do n''t you step out?" |
465 | Why was this? |
465 | You would naturally walk in a circle around the bunch until you crossed the track of the truant leading away from it, would n''t you? |
465 | or the next? |
465 | or the one after that? |
47649 | A lesson? |
47649 | Am I never to be rid of that stupid thing? |
47649 | How did it happen? |
47649 | I brought the first sticks, my dear,he answered mildly,"and did n''t I do all the house hunting? |
47649 | Of course, of course,assented her mate,"whoever heard of a Wren raising a second brood in the same nest? |
47649 | What is so rare as a day in June? 47649 You naughty boy,"exclaimed Mrs. Wren, turning to the crest- fallen Pierre,"did I not tell you to take care of your brothers and little sister? |
47649 | ---- Another Woodpecker? |
47649 | And is May much better? |
47649 | And why should they not be? |
47649 | But, still, what are perfect days? |
47649 | Can I drum? |
47649 | Can you repeat it?" |
47649 | Do you ask what his name is? |
47649 | Have you observed the Robin in the early spring? |
47649 | His wife is a beauty, he''s fond of her, too; He calls her his"Judy;"I like it, do n''t you? |
47649 | How many days,"so calm, so sweet, so bright, the bridal of the earth and sky,"come in May? |
47649 | Is the love of a bonnet supreme over all, In a lady so faultlessly fair? |
47649 | Mr. E. P. Jaques, asks, in_ Field and Stream_,"What has become of our Waterfowl?" |
47649 | The Father takes heed when the Sparrows fall, He hears when the starving nestlings call-- Can a tender woman_ not care_? |
47649 | he flung across to the blushing Woodpecker,''stay away the next time, if you do n''t fancy being converted into a beast of burden?''" |
44632 | ''Ow''d you''appen to miss c''nections? |
44632 | Am I really willing to marry her? |
44632 | And you say that you understand why she did it?--that you believe she was justified? |
44632 | Can I get you to take me off to the_ Mambare_? |
44632 | Could you beat that for cheek? 44632 Depends upon me?" |
44632 | Did you heah the band play on the Luneta in the evenin''? |
44632 | Did you speak, Whitney? |
44632 | Do n''t you twig me, old cock? 44632 Do you mean that all you told me about your-- your having nothing to do with Bell''s death was not true?" |
44632 | Do you mean to send the launch all the way round from here? |
44632 | Have n''t you an expression in the States to the effect that it''s''three generations from shirt- sleeves to shirt- sleeves''? 44632 How was that? |
44632 | Man- man; my word, what name this fella thing you do? |
44632 | May not those-- those things you mention have been caused by physical rather than mental agony? |
44632 | Not I, Chief,I replied jauntily;"but ca n''t you guess? |
44632 | Not ke- el Bel- la? 44632 So I''ve sort o''dropped out o''sight to''em?" |
44632 | So it''s come to that? |
44632 | So that''s what upset the appl''-ca''t? |
44632 | So that_ Allensis_ stands for you, does it? |
44632 | So ye didna find the outlook ashore to yer likin''lad? |
44632 | So you were expecting me? |
44632 | That means that the game''s up and you''re sending me back because there''s no hope of doing anything? |
44632 | That was n''t the big''three- times- three''at the end, was it, Jack? |
44632 | Then what about the finish? 44632 Then why did you let the girl go?" |
44632 | Was that the toy you used the day you put a bullet hole through the crown of my new hundred- dollar Payta hat? |
44632 | What do you mean by that? 44632 What do you think of it?" |
44632 | What if he did drink some of it? 44632 What was it?" |
44632 | Who killed this hound? |
44632 | Why do n''t you ford here,I said,"and push straight across the plantation to the end of the big loop the stream makes round the nigger village? |
44632 | You do n''t mean the big Malay? |
44632 | You had something more to tell me, had n''t you? 44632 You mean the man who pulled off that coup when Wood was cleaning up the crater of Bud Dajo? |
44632 | _ What name you b''longa? 44632 ''Drunk Mate of a soba Skippah''--do you get that? |
44632 | ''W''at''s the matter wiv W''itney?'' |
44632 | ''_""And what might they be?" |
44632 | ( One of Bell''s expressions, that, was n''t it?) |
44632 | ( of which Rona appeared to be so terrified), and how did it act? |
44632 | An''did you know the Ahmy an''Navy Club-- not the new one... the ol''one ovah cross the moat inside the wall?" |
44632 | And what do you think of a man who would tumble for it, especially after the way she had made me jump through and roll over at Kai? |
44632 | And yet, do n''t her actions prove that she even did that? |
44632 | Any word of the girl? |
44632 | As for Rona-- well, if he was also ready to play straight with her( and he had just about convinced me on that point, too), what was it to me? |
44632 | But how could she have induced him to go off to the schooner, and how had they gone? |
44632 | But if she was still devoted to Bell''s memory, why would n''t she speak of him?--and why the plan to go off to the Islands with Allen? |
44632 | But that gal-- s''y, did y''u ever tyke a squint at''er taloons? |
44632 | But what to do when we had caught her up? |
44632 | But why not take in the Exhibition? |
44632 | But why were Rawdon''s"nigger- chasers"running at that hour, and into the teeth of a rising hurricane? |
44632 | Ca n''t accelerate that''long, long pull''of yours, can you? |
44632 | Ca n''t be a pirate stunt, can it? |
44632 | Can I lend you my binoculars?" |
44632 | Did I think he would wangle an entry? |
44632 | Did n''t I continue to see them after I had bitten my finger? |
44632 | Did n''t I see them with my own eyes? |
44632 | Did you ever read Henry Lawson''s lines to''Sydney- Side,''written from somewhere in the West, I believe? |
44632 | Do ye ken noo wha''I''m drivin''at?" |
44632 | Do you know of more than one man in these parts capable of snapping a bloodhound''s spine between his thumb and forefinger?" |
44632 | Do you reckon you an''Ranga-- good man, Ranga-- do you reckon you an''he ah up to pullin''it off alone? |
44632 | Do you think he would? |
44632 | Do you think she would do it? |
44632 | Doan you see I''m in command of this heah ship?" |
44632 | Even if the launch stands up against the gale outside, are n''t you done for if they come off from town and make a search of the steamer?" |
44632 | Going up the hill now, are you? |
44632 | Had I heard that"Squid"Saunders had left his steamer at Cairns and was believed to have sailed south in a stolen fishing- boat? |
44632 | Had me covered from there all the time, did n''t you?" |
44632 | Had the_ kor- klee_, working with a recurrent effect, finally proved fatal? |
44632 | Had there been some inward change in the man to dry up the fount of contempt from which that ironic smirk rose to his lips? |
44632 | He grinned appreciatively at the sight of the gun, and then, with a perfunctory"You do n''t mind, do you?" |
44632 | How do I know? |
44632 | I demanded in astonishment;"and then to keep him aboard here in the harbour for ten or twelve hours before you sail? |
44632 | I did n''t mind a bit of slap- banging off the point, did I? |
44632 | I had n''t painted my hopes and ambitions into the pictures, so how was Sir Joseph Preston, more than anybody else, to see what I was driving at? |
44632 | I was thinking of that, and"Why''Slant''? |
44632 | I would n''t? |
44632 | If I was to have an exhibition of paintings in Sydney, then why was I stopping off in Townsville? |
44632 | If he had come to talk about revolvers-- well, who in Australia knew more about them than I did? |
44632 | If he had n''t been pretty drunk( much the furthest along I ever saw him-- probably on account of the beastly heat-- you remember it?) |
44632 | Is he already under the wire?" |
44632 | Is n''t that asking for trouble both ways? |
44632 | It goes:''How long does it take for an arrow to become a boomerang?'' |
44632 | More or less ingenious theories as to"Why''Slant''?" |
44632 | Nothing more that I could have_ said_ would have changed the situation; but was there nothing more that I could have_ done_? |
44632 | Now as to Bell...."Who is that tall, square- jawed chap who looks as though he was not quite sober?" |
44632 | On the contrary, what greater tribute was there I could pay to his memory? |
44632 | One was:"Did''e fetch a''awse?" |
44632 | Or had Allen, perhaps, administered a second and stronger dose? |
44632 | Scared some Jolo Dato into giving up a bunch of our men he already had lined up against a wall to_ bolo_, did n''t he? |
44632 | She coolly replied that this was n''t the place she had had in mind for it, and would I mind coming aft to the cockpit? |
44632 | Some Yankee expression about keeping strict teetotal, was n''t it? |
44632 | Some kind of a bluff on his own with one of the little old gunboats Dewey captured after the Battle of Manila Bay, was n''t it? |
44632 | Suddenly he turned to me with:"Whitney, what do you say to a bit of a turn in the fresh air? |
44632 | That was--""But could n''t she see_ why_ you offered him the whisky?" |
44632 | The only--""The girl gave you the slip?" |
44632 | Then, as an apparent afterthought:"You''re sailing with us, are n''t you? |
44632 | Then, with serious interest:"But the girl-- how did she manage to get clear?" |
44632 | Was it a drug with a delayed action, following a preliminary stupefaction of comparative mildness? |
44632 | Was it possible that Ranga had made his escape after coasting right down into the crushing gear? |
44632 | Was there any chance of these or any other of the Yank jockeys coming to Australia? |
44632 | Were Tod Sloan and Skeets Martin still piling up wins in England? |
44632 | What boy had not dreamed of growing up in his image? |
44632 | What did I care for Sydney, anyhow? |
44632 | What if he did get dead drunk? |
44632 | What man in all the Antipodes had not envied Allen, the supremely successful owner, rider and sportsman? |
44632 | What name you b''longa? |
44632 | What name you b''longa? |
44632 | What was it you wanted me to do just now?" |
44632 | What was the secret of their success? |
44632 | What was_ kor- klee_? |
44632 | What were the real facts behind the breakdown of the Colchester filly after she had won the Victoria National so handily? |
44632 | What woman had not been intrigued by the romantic dash of him? |
44632 | Why had I? |
44632 | Why should not I? |
44632 | Why worry about a few cases of a disease that might not kill him even if he did get it? |
44632 | Will you do it, Whitney? |
44632 | Would I come down and have lunch with him at the hotel, or would he drive up to me? |
44632 | Would I mind-- ahem-- hiking home with him and lubricating my tonsils with a drop of"J. Walkah"? |
44632 | Would Kai furnish that officer? |
44632 | Would n''t be possible to drop a petrol engine into her, block up the hole and get off to the Islands on the quiet? |
44632 | You wo n''t mind handing me one of those guns, will you? |
44632 | You wo n''t turn it down, Whitney?" |
44632 | You''ve heard all of these, have n''t you?" |
44632 | and the other-- even more laconic-- was:"Gin, Kanak, Jap or Chinee this croose?" |
47506 | Are there real fairies to be met with there? |
47506 | Did you see them come? |
47506 | Do you think shadows, etc., can explain it? 47506 Now, what_ are_ the fairies? |
47506 | What can we make of it all? 47506 And the girl''s hand? 47506 And who were you speaking to just now in the yard?'' 47506 Apropos, would a faker, clever enough to produce such a photograph, commit the elementary blunder of not posing his subject? |
47506 | But if pipes, why not everything else? |
47506 | But supposing that they actually do exist, what_ are_ these creatures? |
47506 | But why does he believe it? |
47506 | By kind permission I reproduce the article: DO FAIRIES EXIST? |
47506 | Can these be thought- forms? |
47506 | Does it not suggest a complete range of utensils and instruments for their own life? |
47506 | How can you be sure that yours are not so also?" |
47506 | I glanced at Turvey to see if he saw anything, and whispered,''Do you see them?'' |
47506 | If horses, why not dogs? |
47506 | It told of a curious sequence of events in Yorkshire, and ran as follows:"Are there real fairies in the land to- day? |
47506 | One may well ask what connection has this fairy- lore with the general scheme of psychic philosophy? |
47506 | What are they? |
47506 | What do you think of this? |
47506 | What have you seen? |
47506 | What is the mirage of the desert? |
47506 | When Columbus knelt in prayer upon the edge of America, what prophetic eye saw all that a new continent might do to affect the destinies of the world? |
47506 | Wherever did it come from?" |
47506 | Which is the harder of belief, the faking of a photograph or the objective existence of winged beings eighteen inches high? |
47506 | Will you please excuse my mentioning a few domestic details connected with the story? |
47506 | Would it be too long to wait until then, when we could explain what we know about it? |
47506 | what is this?'' |
38409 | A little girl whom I saw in the church- yard yonder, weeping very bitterly-- is she a relation of yours? 38409 A separation?" |
38409 | Again, I ask you why you come here? 38409 Ah, my father, did I not say so?" |
38409 | Ah, there he is; well, Monsieur Tiernay, do you think General Moreau''s people turned out better than that after the retreat from Donaueschingen? |
38409 | Ah,_ can_ you wonder at noblemen and gentlemen laying out their twenty and thirty thousand a year on them? |
38409 | Ah,_ que voulez vous_? |
38409 | Am I not so still? 38409 And do you mean to say, that the men who gave that advice were serious, or capable of adopting it themselves?" |
38409 | And have you any idea of leaving this country? |
38409 | And it is not a very handsome city either, you say? |
38409 | And now, Mr. Filbert, one delicate question-- What security is there against these horses being drugged, so that they may lose a race? |
38409 | And so this London is really very vast?--VERY? |
38409 | And the gurnet? |
38409 | And why for his sake? |
38409 | And why not, ma belle? |
38409 | And why should we go abroad on that account? |
38409 | And you have not secured a partner? 38409 And you will not tell me where that exile is, or if his daughter still lives?" |
38409 | Are there many jockeys so young as Tommy? |
38409 | Ay, and what? |
38409 | Blame me for sympathizing with an early friend, whose life, like my own, had been blasted to the root? 38409 Blame me?" |
38409 | But do you not think when Bonaparte crosses the Alps he will hasten to our relief? |
38409 | But granted that it is as you say, how can that mend the business? 38409 But his little girl surely remembers the name that he did not finish?" |
38409 | But how does mynheer find his way? |
38409 | But there must be parts that are prettier than others? 38409 But what can you do in Lunnon-- such a big place, Lenny?" |
38409 | But why do you thus put me on the rack? 38409 But why must we fail?" |
38409 | But you have not taken your degree, I think? 38409 But, what is your life, Harley?--the saucer without the storm?" |
38409 | By the way, is not this the regiment that boasts the pretty vivandiere? 38409 Can I have accommodation for the night?" |
38409 | Did he always pay you for what he bought? |
38409 | Do many of these boys become jockeys? |
38409 | Do you drink tea? |
38409 | Do you eat your prepared butter upon bread? |
38409 | Do you not hear the roaring and crackling of the flames? 38409 Do you remember a boy by the name of Bonaparte,"inquired Napoleon,"who formerly attended this school?" |
38409 | Does he mean to marry again? |
38409 | Does one satisfy you? |
38409 | Failed? 38409 For good?" |
38409 | Forget them? |
38409 | Go away-- why do you disturb me? 38409 Have I not occupation? |
38409 | How do you cook it? |
38409 | How do you know that, Lela? 38409 How do you manage?" |
38409 | How do you prepare it? |
38409 | How do_ you_ manage? |
38409 | How long is it since I saw you? |
38409 | How long? 38409 How should they be dressed?" |
38409 | I suppose you often have an omelet? |
38409 | If there be such a deity as Pele, is she worthy of your adoration? 38409 In the next room? |
38409 | In what manner? |
38409 | Is he not cool to talk thus to a general at the head of his staff? |
38409 | Is it over? |
38409 | Is this an inference of your own, drawn from your knowledge of his character, or has he confided his intentions to you? |
38409 | Is this the reason why Mr. Egerton so insultingly warns me against counting on his fortune? |
38409 | Is your redemption, by the strength of your own efforts, so sure, then? 38409 Let''s see, Tommy; what stakes did you win last?" |
38409 | M. Folitton? 38409 Madame Folitton?" |
38409 | Madame di Negra? 38409 Madame is very polite; she has no doubt been in France?" |
38409 | My dear, do you mean still to say that you do n''t know where your husband spends his evenings? |
38409 | Mynheer travels, then, for his own pleasure? |
38409 | Neither could you collect from their conversation any thing which bore upon the number of the Austrian advance guard, or their state of preparation? |
38409 | No brandy, Lela? |
38409 | No relatives? |
38409 | Not for a liberal present, Giorgio: not if I filled that leather pouch of yours with five- franc pieces, man? |
38409 | O, I beg your pardon for not asking before,he says,"but-- how does Mrs. Filbert find herself?" |
38409 | Our''esprit Tapageur,''eh? |
38409 | Pray, Madame Miau, what is the use of that odd- looking iron stand? |
38409 | Pray, what may be your name? |
38409 | Shall we be as happy when we are_ great_? |
38409 | Shall you? |
38409 | So much? |
38409 | Surely,I replied,"there are no thieves in this little village?" |
38409 | Then the boys are never heavily bribed? |
38409 | Then you would not have me call on him, sir? 38409 Then, why--?" |
38409 | There, did you hear that? |
38409 | To what is this intended to lead? |
38409 | To- day is Friday: can you return on Monday? 38409 Traitor,"he cried,"would you persuade us to disown our gods, while we stand gazing on their terrible abode? |
38409 | Well, Tommy, how are you, Tommy? |
38409 | Well, have you ever seen the place? |
38409 | Well-- But you will write to Mr. Dale, or to me? 38409 What do you mean?" |
38409 | What do you mean? |
38409 | What do you want? |
38409 | What hast in the''tonnelet,''Lela? |
38409 | What other Doctor? |
38409 | What signifies that,was Napoleon''s characteristic remark,"if the burning was necessary to the object he had in view? |
38409 | What''s that, sir? |
38409 | What''s the matter? 38409 What? |
38409 | When do the students find time to study? |
38409 | Where is our pleasant friend, who talked to us of the Black Forest last night? |
38409 | Which way-- which way is he gone? |
38409 | Who are you? |
38409 | Who is that very handsome woman? |
38409 | Who is that young man who thus suddenly has gathered such a group around him? |
38409 | Who? |
38409 | Why did I advise the attack? |
38409 | Why do I come here? 38409 Why do I follow you? |
38409 | Why do you follow me thus? |
38409 | Why do you think the poor woman came here? |
38409 | Why have there been secrets between us? 38409 Why not pass the skirmishers out by the embrasures, to the left yonder?" |
38409 | Why not? |
38409 | Why should you? 38409 Why, if this be so, did your mother permit you to join the lawless desperadoes to whom you owe your present unhappy and degraded position?" |
38409 | Why, what answer should I give, but that I knew you would spurn it? |
38409 | Why? |
38409 | Why? |
38409 | Will Mr. Egerton pay the young gentleman''s debts? 38409 With whom should I sympathize-- the wronged, or the wrong- doer?" |
38409 | Wrong? 38409 You ca n''t mean Mrs. Warner''s letter?" |
38409 | You can not understand, eh? 38409 You have not told her?" |
38409 | You think so? |
38409 | You will not leave the room? 38409 (Can I pass the night here?") |
38409 | ... Last night, after seeking unto this saint and that, methought"why not applie unto y^e fountain head? |
38409 | After all, what does it come to?" |
38409 | Am I not attending you every where? |
38409 | And I said,''your little girl, sir?'' |
38409 | And Leonardo heart rushed to his lips, and he answered to the action, as he bent down and kissed her cheek,"Orphan, will you go with me? |
38409 | And had her father no money with him?" |
38409 | And have I not done so alreadie? |
38409 | And if he had_ not_ discovered it, how could he, Jennings, get at the drawers to examine them? |
38409 | And in what light should I deserve to be regarded if I accepted it?" |
38409 | And the poor little girl seems to have no relations-- and where is she to go? |
38409 | And this warning-- upon which we seem to put very different valuations-- is the result of your friendly interference?" |
38409 | And what of the old one? |
38409 | And what was the host to do with her? |
38409 | And what would he say of her, if he could see her in heaven? |
38409 | And what''s that? |
38409 | And why not? |
38409 | And why? |
38409 | And you? |
38409 | Are they gone?" |
38409 | Are they not cruel gods, who even require human sacrifices? |
38409 | Are we deceived? |
38409 | As I jogged along, the cry of a child, the crowing of a cock, the bark of a dog, floated across the ocean of mist, but whence came they? |
38409 | Astrà ¦ a looked at me, and asked me what I thought of it? |
38409 | At last he said:"I shall take a longer journey to- morrow, Caleb-- much longer: let me see-- where did I say? |
38409 | At last she asked me,''Who is at this moment the first woman in the world?'' |
38409 | BLANCHE.--"What is that legend? |
38409 | Before long, however, one of them began again by asking,"What has mynheer to sell?" |
38409 | Bless him?" |
38409 | Born at the top of the social ladder, why should he put himself voluntarily at the last step, for the sake of climbing up again? |
38409 | But he has left the questions unanswered: Will such a faith produce results on the generality of men-- will it_ stand_? |
38409 | But he left some of the tiniest little balls you ever see, sir, to give the child; but, bless you, they did her no good-- how should they?" |
38409 | But if I was not your mother after all, Lenny, and cost you all this-- oh, what would you say of me then?" |
38409 | But was it love that you felt for her? |
38409 | But what had become all this time of the vengeance of the dwarf? |
38409 | But where were the poor Singalese villagers, their families, and their goods, amidst all this wreck? |
38409 | But while we are talking of him, allow me to ask if your friend, Lord L''Estrange, is indeed still so bitter against that poor brother of mine?" |
38409 | By Jove, Randal, how pleasant a thing is life in London? |
38409 | Can we not be superior to Fate? |
38409 | Can you not understand how a man whose life you have laid waste may haunt you with his curse? |
38409 | Can your business be postponed, my child?" |
38409 | Cloud say you?" |
38409 | Cloud that you are forever with Marie Colonne? |
38409 | Cloud?" |
38409 | Could I-- the only light of his eyes-- the last flower left to gladden the winter of his life-- could I leave his old age desolate?" |
38409 | Could he bear to witness it? |
38409 | Could such beings have created that bright pure sky over our heads, or that glorious sun which sends light and heat to ripen our corn and our fruit? |
38409 | Did I not tell you the story of Fortunio? |
38409 | Did her father leave no directions, or was he in possession of his faculties?" |
38409 | Did she comprehend_ them_? |
38409 | Did you suppose he could escape me? |
38409 | Do n''t you find it rather expensive in the Guards? |
38409 | Do you go to Almack''s to- night?" |
38409 | Do you mean to make this young man your heir?" |
38409 | Does the proud man not err? |
38409 | Does this look like a failure of friendship? |
38409 | Each one laid down his spoon, and stared at me vigorously, and for some time my question--"Kan ik hier overnachten?" |
38409 | Enviable man, have you ever loved?" |
38409 | Every year does not some lad leave our village, and go and seek his fortune, taking with him but health and strong hands? |
38409 | Filbert?" |
38409 | Fly from this demon, who first tempted me, and who now wants to triumph over my ruin?" |
38409 | For where is it that we can say London_ bursts_ on the sight? |
38409 | For, after all, what good are academical honors but as the entrance to life? |
38409 | HARLEY( recovering himself with an effort).--"Is it true kindness to bid him exchange manly independence, for the protection of an official patron?" |
38409 | HARLEY( with great gravity).--"Do you believe in Mesmerism?" |
38409 | Had I really won fame without knowing it? |
38409 | Had he abandoned his great plan of revenge? |
38409 | Had he thought better of it, and, finding that Astrà ¦ a was immovable, addressed himself to some more sensible pursuit than that of plaguing us? |
38409 | Has not a mother a right to her child?" |
38409 | Have I not enough to do in waiting upon you from place to place?" |
38409 | Have we ever met before?" |
38409 | Have we not proved it? |
38409 | Have you not shaken them off like dust from your feet? |
38409 | Have you told this youth plainly that he may look to you for influence, but not for wealth?" |
38409 | Have you written to him?" |
38409 | He escaped; and how did he escape? |
38409 | He is on the stairs!--will you not give me your promise? |
38409 | He listened yet more intently, and caught, soft and low, the words,"Father-- father-- do you hear me_ now_?" |
38409 | He made no reply; and on her repeating the question, said angrily-- how should he know? |
38409 | He watch over her? |
38409 | How did you act, then? |
38409 | How? |
38409 | Hush, what''s that? |
38409 | I ask you, in what light must he regard me who could presume to make such a proposition? |
38409 | I exclaimed, as the momently- arrested blood again shot through my heart with reactive violence,"can this be true?" |
38409 | I exclaimed,"surely you are joking-- a great stout fellow like you ca n''t be wanting bheek?" |
38409 | I exclaimed,"what do you do here? |
38409 | I inquired why he also did not fear the wrath of the formidable goddess? |
38409 | I was somewhat surprised on asking,"_ Hoe veel betalen?_"( How much to pay?) |
38409 | I was somewhat surprised on asking,"_ Hoe veel betalen?_"( How much to pay?) |
38409 | I wonder if that makes me an Honorable too? |
38409 | IS THERE ANY THING ELSE YOU HAVE TO SAY, BEFORE I GO?" |
38409 | If a frail tendency, running across my being, has damaged me, what is to become of one whose name is Frailty?" |
38409 | If you are a- going back, sir, would you kindly mention it?" |
38409 | In the name of Heaven, what can have been the cause of your silence?" |
38409 | Is a pick- pocket detected, a thimble- rigger caught, a policeman assaulted? |
38409 | Is it not so?" |
38409 | Is she not ever busy in works of mischief-- destroying the people, devastating our hills, and filling up our fruitful valleys with floods of lava? |
38409 | Is that all? |
38409 | Is that all? |
38409 | Is that batter- pudding you have arranged for frying?" |
38409 | Is that like a man of sense? |
38409 | Is_ this_ a creature to make himself a crown of glory? |
38409 | It was late; but what were hours to us? |
38409 | It would be happier for you?" |
38409 | Keep still, ca n''t you?" |
38409 | LEONARD.--"To the perch, sir?" |
38409 | Laryer Jones says we must pass her to Marybone parish, where her father lived last; and what''s to become of her then? |
38409 | Lazare?" |
38409 | Leslie?" |
38409 | London is to us what the river is to the flowers-- very vast-- very strong;"and she added, after a pause,"very cruel?" |
38409 | Must THEY bear the whole blame? |
38409 | Must not a large portion of it accrue to the age in which they lived, and to that public opinion which they breathed like an atmosphere? |
38409 | Napoleon affected anger, and said,"Yes, you were my writing- master, were you? |
38409 | No fear of Pele; even were there any such, what could that cruel goddess do to one who trusted in Jesus? |
38409 | On what common ground( unless it be a negative one, and that is worth nothing), can the evangelical party and the rationalists take their stand? |
38409 | Revenge? |
38409 | Save us, O Pele?" |
38409 | Shall I find you one? |
38409 | She did not understand its meaning, and went to Talleyrand, inquiring,"What does that mean, Monsieur,_ an old granny_, what does it mean?" |
38409 | Soon I founde him, sitting in a muse; and said,"Will, deare Will?" |
38409 | Staying in town, Randal?" |
38409 | Surelie, this hath some truth if we spirituallize it? |
38409 | The heart of the town, or the suburbs? |
38409 | The old man looked toward her wistfully, and then, as if interpreting her thoughts, asked the somnambule,"Can you read the contents of the billet?" |
38409 | The other things I have got; and you, I suppose, will let me have the drawers for-- say a pound profit on your bargain?" |
38409 | Then releasing herself from me, she grasped my arm, and looking earnestly into my face, she demanded,"And what answer did you give to this proposal?" |
38409 | Then, as to shape and symmetry, is there any thing like them?" |
38409 | There can be no particular objection to that; but she lives further on at Weston, does she not?" |
38409 | They have come up from Ronco, then?" |
38409 | This conflict made her temper unequal and sometimes unreasonable; but in such a situation, what else could be expected? |
38409 | This was all very well so far as the lady herself was concerned; but how could we answer for the view her husband might take of the matter? |
38409 | Time enough for that-- eh? |
38409 | Toleho eagerly inquired if any misfortune had occurred? |
38409 | Was her father ill? |
38409 | Well, and what said Frank?" |
38409 | Well, why not?" |
38409 | What am I? |
38409 | What are the builders of the Pyramids to them? |
38409 | What brings me here? |
38409 | What brings me here? |
38409 | What could public life give to one who needs nothing? |
38409 | What coulde I doe, even in my dreame, but fall at his feet? |
38409 | What coulde I doe, waking, but the same? |
38409 | What day will you fix?" |
38409 | What did she there? |
38409 | What did the writers of the"Arabian Nights"imagine equal to their more magical achievements? |
38409 | What do you imagine I can possibly have to fear from him?" |
38409 | What do you think of that pretty girl in pink?" |
38409 | What do you think of your counsel now?" |
38409 | What do you want? |
38409 | What does he say? |
38409 | What does mynheer do then?" |
38409 | What has alarmed you?" |
38409 | What has all this to do with the matter that has brought us together?" |
38409 | What have I to live for? |
38409 | What have we to fear? |
38409 | What is it you want?" |
38409 | What is it? |
38409 | What is the new one?" |
38409 | What matters it that Fate would seem to demand our eternal separation? |
38409 | What should I do else?" |
38409 | What should you have thought of my friendship if I had done that? |
38409 | What would Moreau''s fellows say of us? |
38409 | What would the Army of the Meuse think? |
38409 | What would you have me do?" |
38409 | What would_ then_ have been thought of the"making of many books,"of which"there is no end"in these our days? |
38409 | What young man could come into life with brighter auspices? |
38409 | What''s that? |
38409 | What''s that? |
38409 | What''s the matter? |
38409 | What''s the matter? |
38409 | What''s the matter? |
38409 | What''s the use of a hundred- pound note to a child of ten or twelve years old? |
38409 | What''s this her name is?" |
38409 | What, we ask, would philosophy do for him? |
38409 | When does he come?" |
38409 | When he acts, is he never tempted by pleasures? |
38409 | When he lives, is he free from pain? |
38409 | When he reasons, is he never stopped by difficulties? |
38409 | Where are the holiday roses now-- the exulting lover-- the secret blisses?" |
38409 | Where are the traces of it now? |
38409 | Where shall I find a model? |
38409 | Where? |
38409 | Where? |
38409 | Who are you? |
38409 | Who can imagine the visions which in those hours arose before the expanding energies of that wonderful mind? |
38409 | Who could Lela be? |
38409 | Who is? |
38409 | Who knoweth at sunrise what will chance before sunsett? |
38409 | Who knows the Chiavari road?" |
38409 | Who says so? |
38409 | Why did he do it? |
38409 | Why did you leave to me the pain of carrying home such ill news?" |
38409 | Why did you not communicate this to Astrà ¦ a yourself? |
38409 | Why did you not forsake him, and trust to my generosity? |
38409 | Why do you not die? |
38409 | Why do you talk of suffering? |
38409 | Why have we sought to conceal any thing from each other? |
38409 | Why should I dwell any longer on these painful events? |
38409 | Why, indeed, should I have borne him any ill- will?" |
38409 | Why? |
38409 | Why? |
38409 | You call yourself his wife? |
38409 | You do n''t say so? |
38409 | You know him?" |
38409 | You know the Chiavari road-- what is''t like?" |
38409 | You say there are parks; why should not we lodge near them, and look upon the green trees?" |
38409 | You were then, Forrester, the friend of both?" |
38409 | You will give me a chance for mother''s sake, wo n''t you?" |
38409 | You''ve been dreaming, have n''t you, Rachel?'' |
38409 | [ 13] Every man''s brain must be a world in itself, eh? |
38409 | [ Illustration:_ First Old Foozle._--"WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE THE PAPER, SIR? |
38409 | _ Gentleman._--"THERE, LOVE; DO YOU SEE THAT STEAMER?" |
38409 | _ Guest_--"IS THAT YOUR NOTION OF SOMETHING AMUSING?"] |
38409 | _ His_ vengeance? |
38409 | _ Mother._--"AND-- PRAY, DOCTOR, WHAT ARE YOUR TERMS FOR HEDUCATING LITTLE BOYS?" |
38409 | _ Second Old Foozle._--"THEN WHAT THE DEUCE DID YOU KEEP IT SO LONG FOR?"] |
38409 | am I awake, or dreaming still? |
38409 | and did my comrades indeed speak of me with honor? |
38409 | and there lay the lonely dead-- who could dare to say in unconsecrated ground? |
38409 | and what were these reports about me? |
38409 | and who was her father? |
38409 | are you intimately acquainted with this stream, sir?" |
38409 | but when the whitecoats manoeuvre, they write to Vienna to ask,''What''s to be done next?''" |
38409 | cried the general,"are you here again?" |
38409 | cries y^e Duke, as they walk home together,"my Lord Chancellor playing the parish clerk? |
38409 | do n''t you think they bite? |
38409 | do you not really hear me? |
38409 | does he not die? |
38409 | does he not suffer? |
38409 | exclaimed the lad with a renewed burst of passionate grief;"and surely you would not kill_ her_?" |
38409 | exclaimed the old man, as if just awakened to full presence of mind;"you wish to see her? |
38409 | he echoed, and his face grew ghastly pale; but, forcibly controlling his agitation, he went on, in a low voice:"Have you not forgotten them already? |
38409 | he is not here?" |
38409 | said I;"is it over?" |
38409 | said he;"surely the child must have some kinsfolk in London? |
38409 | said her friend,"that''ere''s the move, is it? |
38409 | the 22d, are they? |
38409 | to mock at his fellows, sprung from the dust to which they must alike return? |
38409 | to see her miserable? |
38409 | what have I done that this bitterness should come upon me?" |
38409 | when he dies can he escape the common grave? |
38409 | where shall we look for her equal? |
34860 | A. T. fellow, when he go? |
34860 | After all, what can he do? |
34860 | Again, Henry? |
34860 | Am I being very vulgar? |
34860 | And Harry? |
34860 | And a look of peace came on your face as if you were in heaven and you said-- do you know what you said? |
34860 | And break his heart? |
34860 | And if in our hearts we despise and detest what you have to teach us? |
34860 | And is she in love with you? |
34860 | And what will become of your superiority when the yellow man can make as good guns as the white and fire them as straight? |
34860 | And whose fault is it? |
34860 | Are n''t you going to kiss me? |
34860 | Are the Fergusons waiting outside? |
34860 | Are the ladies of Peking giving her the cold shoulder? |
34860 | Are you going on the loose again to- night? |
34860 | Are you sure he''s alive? |
34860 | Are you sure this admiration of yours for all her admirable qualities isn''t-- love? |
34860 | Are you sure you do n''t say that on my account? |
34860 | Are you sure you know how to behave? |
34860 | Are you trying to shield her? |
34860 | Are your passions the weak and vacillating passions of the white man? |
34860 | At what time does the train from Kalgan get in? |
34860 | Because she was divorced on his account, you mean? |
34860 | But do you keep them here? |
34860 | But if I do n''t mind why should you? |
34860 | But what do I care as long as he comes? |
34860 | But wo n''t you find it rather a nuisance to have those old monks on the top of you all the time? |
34860 | But you do like him, do n''t you? |
34860 | By George, is n''t it stunning? |
34860 | By God, what''s this? |
34860 | Can she read English? |
34860 | Could you_ allow_ him to do that? |
34860 | D''you mind if I leave you? |
34860 | Daisy cry velly much if he die? |
34860 | Daisy, how can you be so superstitious? |
34860 | Daisy, what''s the matter? |
34860 | Daisy, what''s the matter? |
34860 | Did I not tell you that the white man''s love was weak and vacillating? |
34860 | Did Mr. Conway tell you? |
34860 | Did he advise you to go? |
34860 | Did n''t you hear anything, Daisy? |
34860 | Did you break with me yesterday so that you might be free to propose to her? |
34860 | Did you give them to Lee Tai to send? |
34860 | Did you see Freddy Baker by any chance? |
34860 | Did you tell him it was very important? |
34860 | Did you think I was going to run away? |
34860 | Did you trip? |
34860 | Do I bore you so much as all that? |
34860 | Do I look jaded? |
34860 | Do n''t you know that I loathe you? |
34860 | Do n''t you know what I shall be? |
34860 | Do n''t you like it? |
34860 | Do n''t you love me any more? |
34860 | Do n''t you remember how, late in the night, we went outside the temple and looked at the moonlight on the walls of the Forbidden City? |
34860 | Do n''t you remember when I first came to Chung- king? |
34860 | Do n''t you see what that means to me? |
34860 | Do n''t you think she''s pretty? |
34860 | Do n''t you think that everyone is the best judge of his own happiness? |
34860 | Do n''t you want to amuse yourself? |
34860 | Do n''t you wish with all your heart that you had n''t married him? |
34860 | Do you call that you, a few conventional prejudices? |
34860 | Do you hear? |
34860 | Do you know her? |
34860 | Do you know it? |
34860 | Do you know that we tried an experiment which is unique in the world? |
34860 | Do you know what I felt for her? |
34860 | Do you know what he wants? |
34860 | Do you know what you said in your delirium? |
34860 | Do you know why I would n''t have a professional nurse and when you were unconscious for two days refused to leave you for a minute? |
34860 | Do you know why, afterwards, at night when you grew delirious I would n''t let Harry watch you? |
34860 | Do you mean to say it''s going to handicap a man in a shipping firm because he''s married a woman who''s partly Chinese? |
34860 | Do you not know that there are in this country four hundred millions of the most practical and industrious people in the world? |
34860 | Do you not know that we have a genius for mechanics? |
34860 | Do you think I am a child to have everything arranged for me without a word? |
34860 | Do you think I can cry now? |
34860 | Do you think I do n''t know you? |
34860 | Do you think I''m a child? |
34860 | Do you think I''m crazy? |
34860 | Do you think I''m going to let you go now? |
34860 | Do you think I''ve done all I have to let you marry that silly little English girl? |
34860 | Do you think a woman cares twopence for a man''s love when she does n''t love him? |
34860 | Do you think he can forget me in four months? |
34860 | Do you think it really is injustice? |
34860 | Do you think it will take us long to learn? |
34860 | Do you think it would have seemed wrong and hateful if it had n''t been for Sylvia? |
34860 | Do you think it''s finished? |
34860 | Do you think my reputation is such a sensitive flower? |
34860 | Do you think that frightens me? |
34860 | Do you think the postmaster in a small Chinese city is a very lucrative position? |
34860 | Do you think there''s much happiness for you there? |
34860 | Do you think they can look at you and forget? |
34860 | Do you think you know me yet? |
34860 | Do you want to go to Europe? |
34860 | Does he know that...? |
34860 | Does that really matter to you very much? |
34860 | Even at night? |
34860 | For me? |
34860 | For what reason are you so confident that you are so superior to us that it behooves us to sit humbly at your feet? |
34860 | Frills? |
34860 | George did n''t come in till late, I suppose? |
34860 | George, George, say that you do n''t mean that? |
34860 | George, what is to become of me if you desert me? |
34860 | George, you wo n''t let it make any difference, will you? |
34860 | Good heavens, no, what do I care about the past? |
34860 | Goodness? |
34860 | Harry spoils me, does n''t he? |
34860 | Harry, Harry, what do I care for Harry? |
34860 | Harry, my poor friend, is it possible that you have an assignation? |
34860 | Has he gone? |
34860 | Has it never occurred to you that she was in love with you? |
34860 | Has it never struck you how you came to be wounded that night? |
34860 | Has it occurred to you that the white ladies wo n''t be very nice? |
34860 | Has it struck you that the distance from the verandah to the street is very considerable? |
34860 | Has our civilization been less elaborate, less complicated, less refined than yours? |
34860 | Have I complained? |
34860 | Have n''t you ever seen the Chinese do it? |
34860 | Have n''t you heard? |
34860 | Have n''t you made me unhappy enough? |
34860 | Have n''t you? |
34860 | Have our thinkers been less profound than yours? |
34860 | Have we? |
34860 | Have you any right to make use of information you''ve acquired officially? |
34860 | Have you been listening? |
34860 | Have you ever given me anything but a beating? |
34860 | Have you ever known a half- caste that was? |
34860 | Have you ever smoked opium? |
34860 | Have you excelled us in arts or letters? |
34860 | Have you got a letter for me? |
34860 | Have you got any money on you? |
34860 | Have you got opium? |
34860 | Have you never regretted anything? |
34860 | Have you told him about the house? |
34860 | Have you...? |
34860 | He is fearfully agitated._] Oh, my darling, what is it? |
34860 | He''s in Jardine''s, is n''t he? |
34860 | How can I help it? |
34860 | How can I let you go? |
34860 | How can I tell? |
34860 | How can a marriage be happy that''s founded on a tissue of lies? |
34860 | How can you be so cruel? |
34860 | How can you be so unkind to me? |
34860 | How can you be so weak? |
34860 | How d''you do? |
34860 | How dare you hide it? |
34860 | How dare you? |
34860 | How dare you? |
34860 | How dare you? |
34860 | How did he know Harry was in Kalgan? |
34860 | How did he know you kept my letters there? |
34860 | How do I know, Daisy? |
34860 | How do you do? |
34860 | How do you expect me to guess what is at the back of a Chinese brain? |
34860 | How do you know Harry received the letters this morning? |
34860 | How do you know he''s at the Carmichaels''? |
34860 | How do you know that Lee Tai sent those wretched letters to Harry? |
34860 | How do you suppose Lee Tai found out something that Harry had particularly told you to keep quiet about? |
34860 | How fashion you sabe what he said? |
34860 | How long have I got to wait? |
34860 | How long is it going on? |
34860 | How long will it take? |
34860 | How many children you got? |
34860 | How many friends have you got? |
34860 | How many white women do you know? |
34860 | How much do they want for it? |
34860 | How old are you? |
34860 | How old is she? |
34860 | How on earth did you hear about that? |
34860 | How would you like to leave Peking? |
34860 | How_ can_ you be so obstinate? |
34860 | How_ can_ you say anything so unkind? |
34860 | Hulloa, what are you doing here? |
34860 | Hulloa, what''s that? |
34860 | Hulloa, who''s this? |
34860 | Hulloa, who''s this? |
34860 | I ca n''t bring myself to tell him and yet how can I let him marry you in absolute ignorance? |
34860 | I say, Harry no good, what for you wanchee marry? |
34860 | I say, have they caught any of those blighters who tried to kill you? |
34860 | I say, who was Rathbone, Daisy''s first husband, do you know? |
34860 | I say, wo n''t you have a cigar? |
34860 | I shall see you later on in the club, sha''n''t I? |
34860 | I suppose there was a Mr. Rathbone? |
34860 | I suppose you have n''t an idea who I''m talking about? |
34860 | I suppose you''ve absolutely made up your mind? |
34860 | I wait.... What have you to do with white men? |
34860 | I wonder if he can live one day without seeing you? |
34860 | I wonder what you take me for? |
34860 | I''ll come and help you mount, shall I? |
34860 | I''ve touched you at last, have I? |
34860 | I? |
34860 | I? |
34860 | If there''s anything I do that you do n''t like, wo n''t you tell me? |
34860 | If they take to one another, you wo n''t try to crab it, will you? |
34860 | In Kalgan? |
34860 | In fairness to me or in fairness to her? |
34860 | Is he dead? |
34860 | Is he related to them? |
34860 | Is he? |
34860 | Is it hanging up in the cupboard? |
34860 | Is it the past that you ca n''t forget? |
34860 | Is it wrong to love? |
34860 | Is n''t that ripping? |
34860 | Is she American? |
34860 | Is she a widow? |
34860 | Is she alone? |
34860 | Is that all? |
34860 | Is that girl in love with you? |
34860 | Is there anyone who has a grudge against him? |
34860 | Is this the face that launched a thousand ships? |
34860 | It does need an explanation, does n''t it? |
34860 | It was rather a narrow escape, was n''t it? |
34860 | It was rather a risk, was n''t it? |
34860 | It''s an awful long time ago, is n''t it? |
34860 | It''s not for to- night? |
34860 | It''s rather attractive, is n''t it? |
34860 | It''s too bad of me to tease you, is n''t it? |
34860 | Like it? |
34860 | Liu? |
34860 | May I come in? |
34860 | May we come in? |
34860 | My dear Daisy, what are you talking about? |
34860 | My dear, what are you talking about? |
34860 | No-- oh, what am I talking about? |
34860 | No? |
34860 | Oh, Daisy, what''s the good of tormenting yourself and tormenting me? |
34860 | Oh, George, how can you be so cruel? |
34860 | Oh, George, is n''t it possible for a woman to turn over a new leaf? |
34860 | Oh, God, what shall I do? |
34860 | Oh, Harry, George is n''t going to die, is he? |
34860 | Oh, Harry, how can you say anything so cruel? |
34860 | Oh, damn, why ca n''t you leave me alone? |
34860 | Oh, how? |
34860 | Oh, my God, do n''t you understand? |
34860 | Oh, my God, what''s happened? |
34860 | Oh, velly ill, velly ill. What''s the matter with me? |
34860 | Oh, what have I done? |
34860 | Oh, what have I done? |
34860 | Oh, what shall I do? |
34860 | Oh, what shall I do? |
34860 | Oh? |
34860 | Sabe? |
34860 | Sabe? |
34860 | Shall I come? |
34860 | Shall I tell you? |
34860 | Shall we sit down? |
34860 | She is n''t with you now, is she? |
34860 | She was with you when you were in Singapore? |
34860 | Something, he knows not what, comes over him and he feels helpless and strangely weak._] Daisy, what does it mean? |
34860 | Supposing he''s gone? |
34860 | Supposing they meet? |
34860 | Surely you had n''t told her? |
34860 | That''s his business, is n''t it? |
34860 | The little lady ought to be here, ought n''t she? |
34860 | The whisky''s in the dining- room, is n''t it? |
34860 | Then why do you blush to the roots of your hair? |
34860 | Then why do you treat me as an outcast? |
34860 | Then why does the white man despise the yellow? |
34860 | Velly good amah-- yes? |
34860 | Velly well, thank you... You Mr. Knox sister? |
34860 | Was it amah that you wanted to talk to me about? |
34860 | Was that why you sent for me? |
34860 | Well, what was the message? |
34860 | Well, you can smile, so it''s not very serious, is it? |
34860 | What Harry do now? |
34860 | What about? |
34860 | What are they? |
34860 | What are we going to do? |
34860 | What are you defending her for? |
34860 | What are you going to do? |
34860 | What are you waiting for? |
34860 | What can you do? |
34860 | What did he say? |
34860 | What difference will that make? |
34860 | What do I care about Harry? |
34860 | What do I care if Harry comes? |
34860 | What do I care so long as you love? |
34860 | What do I care? |
34860 | What do I care? |
34860 | What do I care? |
34860 | What do I care? |
34860 | What do we matter now, you and I? |
34860 | What do you mean by that? |
34860 | What do you mean, George? |
34860 | What do you mean? |
34860 | What do you mean? |
34860 | What do you suppose I care if people gossip? |
34860 | What do you think of my patient? |
34860 | What do you think our life can be together? |
34860 | What do you want? |
34860 | What does it matter? |
34860 | What does money matter? |
34860 | What does she want, Wu? |
34860 | What does the past matter? |
34860 | What for I listen? |
34860 | What for I want let him go? |
34860 | What for he go so soon? |
34860 | What for he tell me no listen? |
34860 | What for you come China then? |
34860 | What for you hate me? |
34860 | What for you make mistake? |
34860 | What for you no married if you twenty- two? |
34860 | What for you no talkee true? |
34860 | What for you send me to prison? |
34860 | What has changed you? |
34860 | What has marriage done for you? |
34860 | What have I done to him? |
34860 | What have I done to turn you against me? |
34860 | What have you and George been talking about? |
34860 | What have you brought this junk for? |
34860 | What have you come here for to- day? |
34860 | What have you done? |
34860 | What have you done? |
34860 | What have you done? |
34860 | What he say? |
34860 | What in God''s Name is amah doing? |
34860 | What in God''s name are you doing? |
34860 | What in heaven''s name made you think that? |
34860 | What is he to you? |
34860 | What is it? |
34860 | What is it? |
34860 | What is the good of making pretences? |
34860 | What is the idea? |
34860 | What is the matter with my pletty one? |
34860 | What is the mystery? |
34860 | What is the result? |
34860 | What is this? |
34860 | What is this? |
34860 | What is your name? |
34860 | What of it? |
34860 | What on earth is this? |
34860 | What power have you to swim against that mighty current? |
34860 | What procession? |
34860 | What put that idea in your head? |
34860 | What question? |
34860 | What shall I do? |
34860 | What should I do with it? |
34860 | What should be the matter? |
34860 | What side you go? |
34860 | What the devil do you want? |
34860 | What the devil is he doing here? |
34860 | What thing he talkee my poor little flower? |
34860 | What thing you do my Daisy? |
34860 | What thing you wantchee? |
34860 | What time is it now? |
34860 | What will you say to Harry? |
34860 | What would my little Daisy do without old amah, hi, hi? |
34860 | What you do, Daisy? |
34860 | What you flightened for? |
34860 | What you mean, Daisy? |
34860 | What you talk about? |
34860 | What you want now? |
34860 | What you want to see her for, Daisy? |
34860 | What''s happened? |
34860 | What''s that in your pocket? |
34860 | What''s that? |
34860 | What''s that? |
34860 | What''s that? |
34860 | What''s the good of a watch that does n''t go? |
34860 | What''s the good of offering me the moon if I have a nail in my shoe and you wo n''t take it out? |
34860 | What''s the good of that? |
34860 | What''s the idea? |
34860 | What''s the joke? |
34860 | What''s the matter? |
34860 | What''s the matter? |
34860 | What''s the time? |
34860 | What? |
34860 | When does Harry come back? |
34860 | When she sees she has been noticed she smiles obsequiously._] Well, fair charmer, what can we do for you? |
34860 | When you go to Chung- king? |
34860 | Where is he? |
34860 | Where is your husband? |
34860 | Where''s Missy? |
34860 | Where''s my bag? |
34860 | Who baptized you? |
34860 | Who did cry for help? |
34860 | Who is Mrs. Rathbone? |
34860 | Who is it from? |
34860 | Who is that? |
34860 | Who is the third? |
34860 | Who killed cock- robin? |
34860 | Who was her father? |
34860 | Who was this fellow Rathbone? |
34860 | Who''s that, I wonder? |
34860 | Who''s there? |
34860 | Who''s this? |
34860 | Why are you so emphatic? |
34860 | Why did he bring me up like a lady? |
34860 | Why did n''t you say you were expecting a girl? |
34860 | Why did n''t you take the message? |
34860 | Why did n''t you warn me that it was you I was going to meet? |
34860 | Why did n''t you? |
34860 | Why did you say that? |
34860 | Why did you stop me? |
34860 | Why did you tell Harry that you were twenty- two? |
34860 | Why do n''t you call him by it? |
34860 | Why do n''t you have it mended? |
34860 | Why do n''t you lie down? |
34860 | Why do n''t you marry her? |
34860 | Why do you bother about him? |
34860 | Why do you cross- examine me? |
34860 | Why do you lie to me? |
34860 | Why do you pretend to me, Daisy? |
34860 | Why do you smoke your pipe here? |
34860 | Why do you suppose I''ve said all these things? |
34860 | Why do you torture me? |
34860 | Why does he avoid me? |
34860 | Why does n''t George come? |
34860 | Why does your brother chaff you then? |
34860 | Why have you kept it so dark? |
34860 | Why have you taken it off? |
34860 | Why not? |
34860 | Why on earth not? |
34860 | Why on earth should I bother about Lee Tai? |
34860 | Why on earth should I do that? |
34860 | Why should I bury myself in a hole two thousand miles up the river? |
34860 | Why should his advice make the difference? |
34860 | Why should n''t a man marry a half- caste if he wants to? |
34860 | Why should n''t you be in love with him? |
34860 | Why should she have told Lee Tai? |
34860 | Why should she try and kill you? |
34860 | Why were you angry with her, Daisy? |
34860 | Why wo n''t you tell me? |
34860 | Why you no sit still? |
34860 | Why you no take? |
34860 | Why you no talkee old amah? |
34860 | Why you not happy? |
34860 | Why you want me tell you again? |
34860 | Why, what''s wrong with it? |
34860 | Why? |
34860 | Why? |
34860 | Why? |
34860 | Why? |
34860 | Why? |
34860 | Why? |
34860 | Will you come and look at the temple now while they''re bringing tea? |
34860 | Will you dine here to- night? |
34860 | Will you do something for me? |
34860 | Will you have a whisky and soda? |
34860 | Will you love me any the less? |
34860 | Will you swear that''s true? |
34860 | Will you take white? |
34860 | Wo n''t you give up this idea of leaving Peking? |
34860 | Would n''t you like to be free now? |
34860 | Would you be very sorry if an accident happened to your excellent husband? |
34860 | Would you give yourself the trouble of walking through it? |
34860 | Would you like to have a game of chess? |
34860 | Would you marry him if he asked you? |
34860 | Would you much care for your sister to be very pally with a half- caste? |
34860 | Would you think it funny if I sat on my hat? |
34860 | You Christian? |
34860 | You are expecting someone? |
34860 | You call me, Daisy? |
34860 | You come China catchee husband? |
34860 | You do love me a little, do n''t you? |
34860 | You do n''t care if I drink myself to death, Wu-- do you? |
34860 | You gave him the note yourself? |
34860 | You give me policeman? |
34860 | You got key that desk? |
34860 | You have n''t passed your hundredth birthday yet, have you? |
34860 | You keep missy Daisy old amah-- yes? |
34860 | You know Knox, do n''t you? |
34860 | You know Seventh Day Adventists? |
34860 | You look at yourself in looking- glass? |
34860 | You love him very much, George Conway? |
34860 | You missionary lady? |
34860 | You only baptized once? |
34860 | You say, I wanchee marry, I wanchee marry? |
34860 | You think old amah no got eyes? |
34860 | You wanchee go prison? |
34860 | You wanchee? |
34860 | You wantchee buy Manchu dress, Daisy? |
34860 | You wanted to get on, and you have, have n''t you? |
34860 | You''re by way of being rather eligible, are n''t you? |
34860 | You''ve just been down to Fuchow, have n''t you? |
34860 | You''ve never seen me in it? |
34860 | [ DAISY_ takes the_ AMAH''S_ long pipe in her hands._] Who does that belong to? |
34860 | [_ A little surprised, but quite good- humoured._] You''re getting rather excited, are n''t you? |
34860 | [_ After a moment''s pause._] What were you going to say to me? |
34860 | [_ After a moment''s thought._] And what will you do for me if I do this for you? |
34860 | [_ As though asking a casual question._] You do n''t care for me any more? |
34860 | [_ Coldly, but still smiling._] Ca n''t she? |
34860 | [_ Coming in._] What thing? |
34860 | [_ Distracted._] Oh, what shall I do? |
34860 | [_ Distressed._] Wo n''t your people be rather upset? |
34860 | [_ Dumbfounded._] What you mean, Daisy? |
34860 | [_ Fiercely._] What do you want? |
34860 | [_ Frightened._] What for? |
34860 | [_ Frigidly._] Ought n''t you to be going? |
34860 | [_ Good- naturedly._] What experiment is that? |
34860 | [_ Gravely._] Do you never have any feeling that we''ve behaved rottenly to Harry? |
34860 | [_ He seizes her wrists and draws her violently to him._] Daisy, did you send those letters to Harry yourself? |
34860 | [_ Impatiently._] What for you tell me lies? |
34860 | [_ In a low quivering voice._] Why do you say things like that? |
34860 | [_ In a low voice, hardly her own._] Why, Harry, what are you talking about? |
34860 | [_ In the adjoining room._] Are you getting impatient? |
34860 | [_ Interrupting._] Are you really going to- morrow? |
34860 | [_ Jumping up._] How can I sit still? |
34860 | [_ Listening._] What on earth is Harry doing? |
34860 | [_ Looking at her sternly._] How do you think he could get at a knife with his hands tied behind his back? |
34860 | [_ Looking at him._] Why should you do that? |
34860 | [_ Looking at it quickly._] What? |
34860 | [_ Looking at the children._] Are n''t they sweet? |
34860 | [_ Looking at the necklace._] What shall I do with this? |
34860 | [_ Not without irritation._] How did he know you were here? |
34860 | [_ Noticing the orchids._] Someone been sending you flowers? |
34860 | [_ Passionately._] If he was going to leave me like that why did n''t he let me stay with my Chinese mother? |
34860 | [_ Persistently._] How did Lee Tai know that Harry was in Kalgan? |
34860 | [_ Pointing._] What''s that knife doing there? |
34860 | [_ Quickly._] How d''you know? |
34860 | [_ Quickly._] What do you mean? |
34860 | [_ Sarcastically._] Had you left the key of the box on the table? |
34860 | [_ Scornfully._] And do you think I''d let poor Harry be murdered so that I might be free to listen to your generous proposals? |
34860 | [_ Scornfully._] Do you think I''d have gone then? |
34860 | [_ Shaking hands._] How do you do? |
34860 | [_ Sharply._] What d''you want? |
34860 | [_ She beats violently on the door._] Oh, what shall I do? |
34860 | [_ She gives her a kiss on both cheeks._] What are they making such a row about next door? |
34860 | [_ Smiling._] How did your bridge party go off last night? |
34860 | [_ Springing to her feet._] Did you know George was coming? |
34860 | [_ Startled._] You? |
34860 | [_ Suddenly distraught._] You do n''t mean that you''re going to leave me? |
34860 | [_ Sulkily._] Where do you want to go? |
34860 | [_ Sullenly._] How long are you going for? |
34860 | [_ Surprised at her tone and manner._] Is anything the matter, Daisy? |
34860 | [_ Surprised._] Your what? |
34860 | [_ Taking out his watch._] D''you mind if I look at the time? |
34860 | [_ Taking up an opium pipe that is on the table._] Shall Amah make her little Daisy a pipe? |
34860 | [_ Tenderly._] Oh, darling, why do you make yourself unhappy when happiness lies in the hollow of your hand? |
34860 | [_ There is a loud knocking at the door._] Hulloa, who''s that? |
34860 | [_ Thunderstruck._] You? |
34860 | [_ To the old man._] Wu? |
34860 | [_ To the old man._] You sabe? |
34860 | [_ Violently._] Do you think I''m going to let you go so easily? |
34860 | [_ Violently._] How dare you say that? |
34860 | [_ With a chuckle._] How can you talk such nonsense? |
34860 | [_ With a chuckle._] What will you tell him? |
34860 | [_ With a little friendly nod._] How do you do? |
34860 | [_ With a little smile._] What are you locking the door for, George? |
34860 | [_ With a puzzled look at him._] What is the matter? |
34860 | [_ With a roguish look._] Well then, I have n''t been happily married, have I? |
34860 | [_ With a shadow of a smile._] How should I know? |
34860 | [_ With a smile._] Shall I? |
34860 | [_ With a sudden change of tone._] Why not? |
34860 | [_ With a sudden suspicion._] Did you know this was going to happen? |
34860 | [_ With a twinkle in his eyes._] Are you a little frightened? |
34860 | [_ With an effort at ease of manner._] My dear child, what are you talking about? |
34860 | [_ With anguish._] Oh, Daisy, how could you? |
34860 | [_ With great satisfaction._] Paralytic.... Hulloa, who''s this? |
34860 | [_ With increasing violence._] Do you think I can ever look at you again without horror? |
34860 | [_ With scornful rage._] Do you think I''m frightened of Harry? |
34860 | [_ With sudden eager interest._] Are you Mrs. Rathbone''s amah? |
34860 | [_ With sudden indignation._] Without saying a word to me? |
45376 | But does this signify that Bryan will abstain from collecting data for future use? 45376 Is there anyone in the congregation who has ever seen a perfect person?" |
45376 | What is truth? |
45376 | Why do these simple people salute us? 45376 ( Could it have suggested the idea of a pyramid for a tomb?) 45376 After all, the test question is, have wefaith in the wisdom of doing right?" |
45376 | And had they not also given me, in spite of my protests, such a view of the people of Tokyo as I could have obtained in no other way? |
45376 | And how can Japan do it without developing an educated class which will finally challenge her authority? |
45376 | And what shall we say of the Damascus dog? |
45376 | And when, after dinner, dancing began, they asked:"Do the women dance with their own husbands only?" |
45376 | And why? |
45376 | Are we willing to trust the conscience and moral sense of those whom we desire to aid? |
45376 | At another time someone asked Confucius,"What do you say concerning the principle that injury should be recompensed with kindness?" |
45376 | But what is justice? |
45376 | But what is justice? |
45376 | But what nation has ever exercised power in this way? |
45376 | But what would be the effect upon our civilization of such a stratification of society? |
45376 | But why is there a lack of intelligence among the Indians? |
45376 | Can we afford to subject the morals of our young men to such severe tests unless there is some national gain commensurate with the loss? |
45376 | Continuing his inquiry, he asked,"Is there anyone here who has ever heard of a perfect person?" |
45376 | Could anything more clearly prove the frail hold of the government upon the people? |
45376 | Could there be a harder situation? |
45376 | Do they desire self government and independence? |
45376 | Do they treat the Americans here this way? |
45376 | Do you draw a line between the use of force to protect a right and the use of force to create a right? |
45376 | Does the government rely upon the army? |
45376 | Has any better solution been proposed? |
45376 | Have the Filipinos a right to self government? |
45376 | Have they not had the blessings of British rule for several generations? |
45376 | Have they the capacity for self government? |
45376 | He asked his congregation:"Is there anyone here who is perfect?" |
45376 | He replied to Mr. Chamberlain''s challenge,"Will you take it lying down?" |
45376 | He replied,"With what then will you recompense kindness? |
45376 | He thought that the mice were inexcusable, but, as if the question disposed of the matter, asked:"The worm was dead, was n''t it?" |
45376 | He was answered,"Is not reciprocity such a word?" |
45376 | How long will it take to fit the Indians for self- government when they are denied the benefits of experience? |
45376 | If an individual refuses to assist in the improvement of others until he has himself reached perfection, who will be able to aid others? |
45376 | If justice can not be found in the court, where shall she be sought? |
45376 | If our occupation is to be temporary, why should our legislation be permanent? |
45376 | If the Oriental is happy in his idolatry or in his worship of God through other religious forms, why disturb him? |
45376 | If this is not a promise of ultimate independence, what possible meaning can the language have? |
45376 | In what words can I adequately describe the hospitality of the Japanese? |
45376 | Is English rule in India just, as we find it to- day? |
45376 | Is it blind chance that gives these glimpses of the sublime? |
45376 | Is it not an opportune time for our nation to make the trial? |
45376 | Is it possible that they can be different in sentiment from their fathers and brothers? |
45376 | Is it possible to dream of competition? |
45376 | May we not expect a similar reward if we choose the better part and put the welfare of the natives above our own gain? |
45376 | Or will they substitute the cab for the''rikisha? |
45376 | Possibly future excavations may settle the question by determining the exact location of the wall in the time of Christ; but what matter? |
45376 | Shall we refuse to ride upon the railroad or cross the waters in an ocean greyhound for fear of employing the conception of another? |
45376 | The duma is ready to do its part; will the government rise to the occasion? |
45376 | The third question, are the Filipinos competent to govern themselves? |
45376 | The tints are laid on as if with a brush and yet no painter could imitate these-- shall we call them"pictures in water color?" |
45376 | The whole question of socialism hangs upon the question: Is competition an evil or a good? |
45376 | They failed to stay the onward march of Xerxes, but who can measure the value of their example? |
45376 | Was there not an anti- foreign sentiment in Japan forty years ago? |
45376 | What can he do? |
45376 | What defense can be made for the expenditure of more than thirteen times as much for the army as for education? |
45376 | What if the compass was known to the Chinese before it was to Europe? |
45376 | What is justice? |
45376 | What nation could stand such a drain without impoverishment? |
45376 | What will be the effect of the change upon the world? |
45376 | What will be the outcome in Russia? |
45376 | When the ladies appeared in evening dress they, remembering the veiled ladies of their own land, asked:"Do your women always dress this way?" |
45376 | When wine was brought on, they asked:"Do all of your people drink wine?" |
45376 | Which course will she pursue? |
45376 | Who can know how much I work? |
45376 | Who is wise enough to peer into the future and outline the record of the next century? |
45376 | Who will answer the argument presented by this Indian editor? |
45376 | Who will measure the effect upon coming generations of these multiplying agencies for the training of the boys and girls of the Philippines? |
45376 | Why bind the ward in perpetuity so that he can not control his own affairs when he reaches years of maturity? |
45376 | Why have they not been fitted for self- government? |
45376 | Why spend money on foreign missions? |
45376 | Why? |
45376 | Will their learning make them unwilling to do hard work? |
45376 | Will they be content to return to the paddy fields when they have finished their education? |
45376 | Without an army to rely upon, what answer can the bureaucracy make to the legislature? |
45376 | Would it not be wiser to so attach the Indian people to the British government that they would themselves resist annexation to Russia? |
45376 | with the question,"Will you hide behind a wall?" |
2226 | O driver,said he,"what will you sell those little donkeys for?"'' |
2226 | Trea- son most base... but you do not understand? |
2226 | ''"The Friend of the Stars, who is the Friend of all the World--"''''What is this?'' |
2226 | ''''Ow near? |
2226 | ''A Red Bull on a green field, was it?'' |
2226 | ''A barrack- school?'' |
2226 | ''A fat man?'' |
2226 | ''A thief talking English, is it? |
2226 | ''About the Five Kings? |
2226 | ''All one-- but if it were not the boy how did he come to speak so continually of thee?'' |
2226 | ''Am I thy chela, or am I not? |
2226 | ''Am I to be beaten before the police?'' |
2226 | ''An''how do you like it, my son, as far as you''ve gone? |
2226 | ''And after?'' |
2226 | ''And after?'' |
2226 | ''And at the last what wilt thou do?'' |
2226 | ''And by what sign didst thou know that we would beg from thee, O Mali?'' |
2226 | ''And for food?'' |
2226 | ''And he was all those things?'' |
2226 | ''And his disciple is like him?'' |
2226 | ''And his name?'' |
2226 | ''And how wilt thou go? |
2226 | ''And if thou runnest away who will say it is not my fault?'' |
2226 | ''And is there a price upon his head too-- as upon Mah-- all the others?'' |
2226 | ''And now you are not afraid-- eh?'' |
2226 | ''And now, whither go we?'' |
2226 | ''And seeing these things, what tale didst thou fashion to thyself, Well of the Truth?'' |
2226 | ''And then what did you do? |
2226 | ''And thou art sure of thy road?'' |
2226 | ''And thou wilt return in this very same shape? |
2226 | ''And thou?'' |
2226 | ''And was it all worthless?'' |
2226 | ''And wast thou?'' |
2226 | ''And what did he?'' |
2226 | ''And what dost thou do?'' |
2226 | ''And what like of man was thy disciple?'' |
2226 | ''And what said he?'' |
2226 | ''And what said she?'' |
2226 | ''And what was the end of the Search? |
2226 | ''And when dost thou go?'' |
2226 | ''And whether he will kill this other boy?'' |
2226 | ''And whither goest thou?'' |
2226 | ''And who are thy people, Friend of all the World?'' |
2226 | ''And who is that?'' |
2226 | ''And who was he? |
2226 | ''And whom didst thou worship within?'' |
2226 | ''And why? |
2226 | ''And will she forget how to make stews with saffron upon that road?'' |
2226 | ''And, O imp?'' |
2226 | ''And-- the more money is paid the better learning is given?'' |
2226 | ''And?'' |
2226 | ''And?'' |
2226 | ''Are not the police enough to destroy evil- doers?'' |
2226 | ''Are the bears only bad on thy holding? |
2226 | ''Are there many more like you in India?'' |
2226 | ''Are they in thy hands?'' |
2226 | ''Art thou anything of a healer? |
2226 | ''Art thou freed from the schools? |
2226 | ''Art thou only a beginner?'' |
2226 | ''As it were a novice?'' |
2226 | ''Ask them for how much money do they give a wise and suitable teaching? |
2226 | ''Ay, Umballa was it? |
2226 | ''Ay, there is a recompense when the madness is over, surely?'' |
2226 | ''Besides, hast thou ever helped to paint a Sahib thus before?'' |
2226 | ''But afterwards-- we may talk?'' |
2226 | ''But can not the Government protect?'' |
2226 | ''But for whom dost thou work? |
2226 | ''But have we any right to open it? |
2226 | ''But he is so young, Mahbub-- not more than sixteen-- is he?'' |
2226 | ''But how canst thou understand the talk? |
2226 | ''But how, Holy One?'' |
2226 | ''But how?'' |
2226 | ''But if he offer a rudeness? |
2226 | ''But my River-- the River of my healing?'' |
2226 | ''But the River-- the River of the Arrow?'' |
2226 | ''But the Sahibs did not know thee, Holy One?'' |
2226 | ''But thou hast a Search of thine own?'' |
2226 | ''But was there not also an Englishman with a white beard holy among images-- who himself made more sure my assurance of the River of the Arrow?'' |
2226 | ''But what about caste?'' |
2226 | ''But what am I to do?'' |
2226 | ''But what does the Colonel Sahib say? |
2226 | ''But what dost thou know of the Hills?'' |
2226 | ''But what harm? |
2226 | ''But what is the game?'' |
2226 | ''But what is this tale of the thief and the search?'' |
2226 | ''But what is to pay me for this coming and re- coming?'' |
2226 | ''But where shall I sleep?'' |
2226 | ''But whither goest thou?'' |
2226 | ''But whither shall I send my letters?'' |
2226 | ''But who is to pay me for this? |
2226 | ''But why come here, Babuji?'' |
2226 | ''But why didst thou not stay with the Kulu woman, O Holy One? |
2226 | ''But why not ask the Colonel in the Sahibs''tongue?'' |
2226 | ''But why not sit and rest?'' |
2226 | ''But why? |
2226 | ''But-- but what manner of white man''s son art thou to need a bazar letter- writer? |
2226 | ''But-- whither went the Mahratta? |
2226 | ''By what road?'' |
2226 | ''By which road?'' |
2226 | ''Called the Maharanee a Breaker of Hearts and a Dispenser of Delights?'' |
2226 | ''Can I tell you?'' |
2226 | ''Can buts eat?'' |
2226 | ''Chela, hast thou never a wish to leave me?'' |
2226 | ''Did they wound thee, chela?'' |
2226 | ''Didst thou see them? |
2226 | ''Didst thou tell him of thy Search?'' |
2226 | ''Do the very snakes understand thy talk?'' |
2226 | ''Do they give or sell learning among the Sahibs? |
2226 | ''Do we eat publicly like dogs?'' |
2226 | ''Do we not all work for gain?'' |
2226 | ''Do ye both dream dreams? |
2226 | ''Do you know him?'' |
2226 | ''Do you know what Hurree Babu really wants? |
2226 | ''Do you know what these things are?'' |
2226 | ''Do you want drink?'' |
2226 | ''Does all go well in Hind?'' |
2226 | ''Does the holy man come from the North?'' |
2226 | ''Dost thou give news for love, or dost thou sell it?'' |
2226 | ''Dost thou know who He is, then, that gives the order?'' |
2226 | ''Dost thou not know the meaning of the walnut-- priest?'' |
2226 | ''Dost thou remember when I leapt off the carriage the first day I went to--''''The Gates of Learning? |
2226 | ''Eh?'' |
2226 | ''First to Kashi[ Benares]: where else? |
2226 | ''For?'' |
2226 | ''Good,''said he,''and who is Lurgan Sahib? |
2226 | ''Good- bye, and-- and''--she was remembering her English words one by one--''you will come back again? |
2226 | ''Had the Holy One come alone, I should have received him otherwise; but with this rogue, who can be too careful?'' |
2226 | ''Has lived where?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou a charm to change my shape? |
2226 | ''Hast thou a little wax to close them on this letter?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou been robbed?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou eaten?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou heard? |
2226 | ''Hast thou knowledge, by chance, of my River?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou met-- a physician of sick pearls?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou never desired any other thing?'' |
2226 | ''Hast thou no charity?'' |
2226 | ''Have I been such a hindrance till now?'' |
2226 | ''Have I failed to oversee thy comforts, Holy One?'' |
2226 | ''Have I not said an hundred times that the South is a good land? |
2226 | ''Have they hurt him to the death?'' |
2226 | ''Have ye any tricks to pass the time? |
2226 | ''Have ye room within for two?'' |
2226 | ''Have you no consideration for our loss? |
2226 | ''He is not here, then?'' |
2226 | ''He joined himself to the idolaters? |
2226 | ''He says he will give me three hundred rupees a year? |
2226 | ''He says,"What are you going to do?"'' |
2226 | ''He wants to know how much?'' |
2226 | ''Hearest thou?'' |
2226 | ''Her tongue grows no shorter with the years, then?'' |
2226 | ''His country-- his race-- his village? |
2226 | ''Ho, there, Friend of all the World,''he cried across the sharp- smelling smoke,''what art thou?'' |
2226 | ''Holy One, hast thou ever taken the Road alone?'' |
2226 | ''How am I to fear the absolutely non- existent?'' |
2226 | ''How can I be sick if I see Freedom?'' |
2226 | ''How can I tell? |
2226 | ''How can I tell?'' |
2226 | ''How can a man follow the Way or the Great Game when he is so-- always pestered by women? |
2226 | ''How comes it that this man is one of us?'' |
2226 | ''How didst thou follow us?'' |
2226 | ''How does the spirit move thy master? |
2226 | ''How great an army?'' |
2226 | ''How if I guess, though?'' |
2226 | ''How is that known to thee?'' |
2226 | ''How many?'' |
2226 | ''How near can we go?'' |
2226 | ''How readest thou this talk?'' |
2226 | ''How should I know? |
2226 | ''How should he know? |
2226 | ''How should they? |
2226 | ''How soon can we get the colt from the stable?'' |
2226 | ''How thinkest thou of this one?'' |
2226 | ''Hurree thinks well of the boy, does n''t he?'' |
2226 | ''I came by Kulu-- from beyond the Kailas-- but what know you? |
2226 | ''I have heard''--this was a bow drawn at a venture--''I have heard--''''What hast thou heard?'' |
2226 | ''I-- I apprehend it is not at all malignant in its operation?'' |
2226 | ''If I do not see him, and if he is taken from me, I will go out of that madrissah in Nucklao and, and-- once gone, who is to find me again?'' |
2226 | ''If I eat thy bread,''cried Kim passionately,''how shall I ever forget thee?'' |
2226 | ''If I knew, think you I would not cry it aloud?'' |
2226 | ''If it was,''said Kim''do you think I should let it again? |
2226 | ''If we go North,''--Kim put the question to the waking sunrise--''would not much mid- day heat be avoided by walking among the lower hills at least? |
2226 | ''In the crystal-- in the ink- pool?'' |
2226 | ''Is he afraid? |
2226 | ''Is he also one of Us?'' |
2226 | ''Is he not quite mad?'' |
2226 | ''Is he not wise and holy? |
2226 | ''Is he thy master?'' |
2226 | ''Is his Search, then, truth or a cloak to other ends? |
2226 | ''Is it not enough I have saved thy neck?'' |
2226 | ''Is it permitted to ask whither the Heaven- born''s thought might have led?'' |
2226 | ''Is it the habit of the place to pester honoured guests? |
2226 | ''Is it true that there are many images in the Wonder House of Lahore?'' |
2226 | ''Is one skinful enough for such a pair? |
2226 | ''Is that all thy trouble?'' |
2226 | ''Is that the new stuff, Mahbub?'' |
2226 | ''Is the boy mad? |
2226 | ''Is there any reason against? |
2226 | ''Is there money to be paid that witch?'' |
2226 | ''Is there no priest, then, in the village? |
2226 | ''Is this a face to tempt virtue aside?'' |
2226 | ''Is this also thy work?'' |
2226 | ''Is this the Hand of Friendship to avert the Whip of Calamity?'' |
2226 | ''Is this yet another Sending?'' |
2226 | ''Is-- is there any need of a son in thy family? |
2226 | ''It was a bull-- a Red Bull that shall come and help thee and carry thee-- whither? |
2226 | ''It''s a weight off my mind, but-- this thing here?'' |
2226 | ''It''s clear to you, is it? |
2226 | ''It-- it is not likely that she has killed the boy? |
2226 | ''Jandiala-- Jullundur? |
2226 | ''Jugglers belike?'' |
2226 | ''Know ye not that there is a takkus of two annas a head, which is four annas, on those who enter the Road from this side- road? |
2226 | ''Little Friend of all the World,''said he,''what is this?'' |
2226 | ''Low- caste I did not say, for how can that be which is not? |
2226 | ''Mahbub Ali to rob the Sahiba''s house? |
2226 | ''Maybe-- but the boy?'' |
2226 | ''My son, said he,''what need of words between us? |
2226 | ''Nay, what is it?'' |
2226 | ''Not when I brought thee''--Kim actually dared to use the turn of equals--''a white stallion''s pedigree that night?'' |
2226 | ''Now I have told you,''said the boy,''will you let me go back to my old man? |
2226 | ''Now it is understood that the boy is a Sahib?'' |
2226 | ''Now, how wilt thou know thy River?'' |
2226 | ''Now,''--his tone altered as he turned to Kim,--''what will they do with thee? |
2226 | ''Now?'' |
2226 | ''O Children, what is that big house?'' |
2226 | ''O Friend of all the World, what does he say?'' |
2226 | ''O fool, have I not told it a hundred times? |
2226 | ''O mother,''he cried,''do they do this in the zenanas? |
2226 | ''Of the Ethnological Survey?'' |
2226 | ''Of what sort? |
2226 | ''Of what year?'' |
2226 | ''Of whose service art thou?'' |
2226 | ''Oh, Mahbub Ali, but am I a Hindu?'' |
2226 | ''Oh, she? |
2226 | ''Oh, that''s the way you look at it, is it?'' |
2226 | ''Oh, the Russians? |
2226 | ''Oho, hast thou turned yogi with thy begging- bowl?'' |
2226 | ''One said to the other,"What manner of fakir art thou, to shiver at a little watching?"'' |
2226 | ''Or Kimball?'' |
2226 | ''Or sell it?'' |
2226 | ''Priest praising priest? |
2226 | ''Redcoats or our own regiments?'' |
2226 | ''Rememberest thou the Kashmir Serai?'' |
2226 | ''Rememberest thou the little business of the thieves in the dark, down yonder at Umballa?'' |
2226 | ''Said I not-- said I not he was from the other world?'' |
2226 | ''Seekest thou the River also?'' |
2226 | ''Seest thou my chela?'' |
2226 | ''Shall I meet my Holy One there?'' |
2226 | ''Shall we at least wait for the hakim?'' |
2226 | ''Since when have the hill- asses owned all Hindustan?'' |
2226 | ''So be it; but what dost thou do now?'' |
2226 | ''So soon, my chela? |
2226 | ''So their villages were burnt and their little children made homeless?'' |
2226 | ''So then we go with her, Holy One?'' |
2226 | ''So they turned against women and children? |
2226 | ''So? |
2226 | ''So? |
2226 | ''So? |
2226 | ''Son of an owl, where dost thou go?'' |
2226 | ''Still? |
2226 | ''Such an one as those I saw this evening, men wearing swords and stamping heavily?'' |
2226 | ''Tadoo? |
2226 | ''That is well for thee, but what will our Rajah say?'' |
2226 | ''The Babu is the very hakim( thou hast heard of him?) |
2226 | ''The River of the Arrow?'' |
2226 | ''The deuce you did? |
2226 | ''Then all Doing is evil?'' |
2226 | ''Then he is not dead, think you?'' |
2226 | ''Then it means war?'' |
2226 | ''Then one day the young elephant saw the half- buried iron, and turning to the elder said:"What is this?" |
2226 | ''Then thou goest forth to follow the strangers?'' |
2226 | ''Then what is the Babu''s pay if so much is put upon his head?'' |
2226 | ''Then what is the plan?'' |
2226 | ''Then what is to fear from them?'' |
2226 | ''Then where is the pistol that I may wear it?'' |
2226 | ''Then why hast thou left out my name in writing to that Holy One?'' |
2226 | ''Then why talk like an ape in a tree? |
2226 | ''Then why--?'' |
2226 | ''Then you think I had better go?'' |
2226 | ''They say that money is paid to the teacher-- but that money the Regiment will give... What need? |
2226 | ''Thine own mother has no nose? |
2226 | ''Think you our Lord came so far North?'' |
2226 | ''Thinkest thou it will betray us?'' |
2226 | ''Thinkest thou? |
2226 | ''Thou art from the North?'' |
2226 | ''Thou didst not say I was a Sahib?'' |
2226 | ''Thou must have? |
2226 | ''Thou wilt return? |
2226 | ''Thy Gods useless, heh? |
2226 | ''To be written in Hindi?'' |
2226 | ''To know again?'' |
2226 | ''To what, child?'' |
2226 | ''To whom else should I come? |
2226 | ''Tum mut? |
2226 | ''Very good, Mahbub Ali, but what is the use of telling me all those stories about the pony? |
2226 | ''Was I born yesterday?'' |
2226 | ''Was not the River near Benares? |
2226 | ''Was one dressed belike as a fakir?'' |
2226 | ''Was that Lurgan Sahib?'' |
2226 | ''Was that more magic?'' |
2226 | ''Was there ever such a chela? |
2226 | ''Was there ever such a disciple as I?'' |
2226 | ''Was there nothing?'' |
2226 | ''We take the Road, then?'' |
2226 | ''Well done, indeed? |
2226 | ''Well, art tired of the Road, or wilt thou come on to Umballa with me and work back with the horses?'' |
2226 | ''Were it not better to walk?'' |
2226 | ''What about artillery, sir?'' |
2226 | ''What am I? |
2226 | ''What are a few rupees''--the Pathan threw out his open hand carelessly--''to the Colonel Sahib? |
2226 | ''What are the letters that the fat priest is waving before the Colonel? |
2226 | ''What are you doing here? |
2226 | ''What are you saying?'' |
2226 | ''What can he want now?'' |
2226 | ''What city do ye hail from not to know a canal- cut? |
2226 | ''What do they prepare?'' |
2226 | ''What do you think he will do?'' |
2226 | ''What dost thou do now, then?'' |
2226 | ''What dost thou not know of this world?'' |
2226 | ''What dost thou?'' |
2226 | ''What else?'' |
2226 | ''What evil? |
2226 | ''What good is all this to me?'' |
2226 | ''What hakim, mother?'' |
2226 | ''What if I do not give it thee? |
2226 | ''What is caste to a cut throat?'' |
2226 | ''What is he doing? |
2226 | ''What is his business?'' |
2226 | ''What is it then?'' |
2226 | ''What is it to fear? |
2226 | ''What is it to thee, woman of ill- omen, where he goes?'' |
2226 | ''What is it? |
2226 | ''What is it?'' |
2226 | ''What is now?'' |
2226 | ''What is that--"Rishti"?'' |
2226 | ''What is that?'' |
2226 | ''What is thatt?'' |
2226 | ''What is the name?'' |
2226 | ''What is the prayer?'' |
2226 | ''What is the talk?'' |
2226 | ''What is there to eat? |
2226 | ''What is this?'' |
2226 | ''What is this?'' |
2226 | ''What is this?'' |
2226 | ''What is thy scheme?'' |
2226 | ''What is to do now?'' |
2226 | ''What is your caste? |
2226 | ''What knowledge hast thou of thy birth- hour?'' |
2226 | ''What like of folk are they within?'' |
2226 | ''What madness was that, then?'' |
2226 | ''What manner of life hast thou led, not to know The Year? |
2226 | ''What matter under all the Heavens? |
2226 | ''What matter? |
2226 | ''What matters, Friend of all the World? |
2226 | ''What need of a river save to water at before sundown? |
2226 | ''What need? |
2226 | ''What need?'' |
2226 | ''What new devilry?'' |
2226 | ''What new trick is this?'' |
2226 | ''What other than Gunga?'' |
2226 | ''What others?'' |
2226 | ''What profit to kill men?'' |
2226 | ''What proof is there?'' |
2226 | ''What rivers have ye by Benares?'' |
2226 | ''What said the Sahiba?'' |
2226 | ''What talk is this of us, Sahib?'' |
2226 | ''What was you bukkin''to that nigger about?'' |
2226 | ''What-- what is this?'' |
2226 | ''What-- what is thy God?'' |
2226 | ''What?'' |
2226 | ''When will that be?'' |
2226 | ''Whence hadst thou that song, despiser of this world?'' |
2226 | ''Where goest thou?'' |
2226 | ''Where in Tibet?'' |
2226 | ''Where is Mr Lurgan''s house?'' |
2226 | ''Where is he? |
2226 | ''Where is my Holy One?'' |
2226 | ''Where is that River? |
2226 | ''Where is the house?'' |
2226 | ''Where is the money?'' |
2226 | ''Where is this new haste born from? |
2226 | ''Where is your master''s house?'' |
2226 | ''Whither does it lead?'' |
2226 | ''Whither go we?'' |
2226 | ''Whither goes he?'' |
2226 | ''Whither went those who lay here last even-- the lama and the boy? |
2226 | ''Who am I to dispute an order?'' |
2226 | ''Who bears arms against the law?'' |
2226 | ''Who cares to tell truth to a letter- writer?'' |
2226 | ''Who cooked it?'' |
2226 | ''Who else watched over thee since our wonderful journey began?'' |
2226 | ''Who else? |
2226 | ''Who expects any colt to carry heavy weight at first? |
2226 | ''Who has died in thy house?'' |
2226 | ''Who is Kim-- Kim-- Kim?'' |
2226 | ''Who is at Shamlegh this summer?'' |
2226 | ''Who is she? |
2226 | ''Who is that?'' |
2226 | ''Who is the hakim, Maharanee?'' |
2226 | ''Who is thy woman in the Plains? |
2226 | ''Who is to tell him? |
2226 | ''Who is with them?'' |
2226 | ''Who knows?'' |
2226 | ''Who makes the boy a soldier?'' |
2226 | ''Who told?'' |
2226 | ''Who watches us across the street?'' |
2226 | ''Who will receive us this evening?'' |
2226 | ''Whom dost thou serve?'' |
2226 | ''Why could not I take away the little book and be done with it?'' |
2226 | ''Why did he not slay thee out of hand?'' |
2226 | ''Why didst thou not tell before?'' |
2226 | ''Why not follow the Way thyself, and so accompany the boy?'' |
2226 | ''Why should I ask? |
2226 | ''Why should I fear?'' |
2226 | ''Why should I lie to thee, Hajji?'' |
2226 | ''Why should I regard? |
2226 | ''Why? |
2226 | ''Why? |
2226 | ''Why? |
2226 | ''Why?'' |
2226 | ''Will he draw pay?'' |
2226 | ''Will he pay?'' |
2226 | ''Will it travel to Benares?'' |
2226 | ''Will they kill thee?'' |
2226 | ''Will thy son be a priest, then? |
2226 | ''Wilt thou some day sell my head for a few sweetmeats if the fit takes thee?'' |
2226 | ''Without payment?'' |
2226 | ''Ye did; but, Powers o''Darkness, how did ye know?'' |
2226 | ''Ye go to the Hills? |
2226 | ''You come-- eh? |
2226 | ''You have been in Be-- England?'' |
2226 | ''You talk the same as a nigger, do n''t you?'' |
2226 | ''You''re fond of him then?'' |
2226 | ''Your mother?'' |
2226 | ... Is it finished, Holy One?'' |
2226 | ... Is the charm made, Holy One?'' |
2226 | A Cause was put out into the world, and, old or young, sick or sound, knowing or unknowing, who can rein in the effect of that Cause? |
2226 | A Red Bull on a green field, that shall carry thee to the heavens or what? |
2226 | A Red Bull on a green field, was it not?'' |
2226 | A broken wheel? |
2226 | A gun, sayest thou? |
2226 | A locked box in which to keep holy books? |
2226 | A rupee to the temple? |
2226 | A servant to set you forth upon your journey? |
2226 | A tall man with black hair, walking thus?'' |
2226 | All men come by this way...''''Son of a swine, is the soft part of the road meant for thee to scratch thy back upon? |
2226 | All this disguise for one evening? |
2226 | And His life is known?'' |
2226 | And by Kulu road? |
2226 | And for how long might such a boy live after the news was told?'' |
2226 | And how long have you two been looking for it?'' |
2226 | And how old is she?'' |
2226 | And in what city is that teaching given?'' |
2226 | And is all well?'' |
2226 | And the Sahiba fed thee well? |
2226 | And then?'' |
2226 | And then?'' |
2226 | And thou art a Sahib? |
2226 | And thou-- the English know of these things? |
2226 | And thou?'' |
2226 | And what is Kim?'' |
2226 | And where hast thou been?'' |
2226 | And where is he?'' |
2226 | And why?'' |
2226 | And you did n''t bother your head about it? |
2226 | Are thy brothers''regiments also under orders?'' |
2226 | Are you a Mason, by any chance?'' |
2226 | Are you very sick?'' |
2226 | Art thou the only beggar in the city? |
2226 | At what hour runs the te- rain?'' |
2226 | At which school?'' |
2226 | Belly- speak-- eh?'' |
2226 | Below, in coarse verse:''O Allah, who sufferest lice to live on the coat of a Kabuli, why hast thou allowed this louse Lutuf to live so long?'' |
2226 | But I will see these strangers with their levels and chains...''''What was the upshot of last night''s babble?'' |
2226 | But afterwards, old man-- afterwards?'' |
2226 | But for one little moment-- thou canst overtake the dooli in ten strides-- if thou wast a Sahib, shall I show thee what thou wouldst do?'' |
2226 | But had it not been proven at Umballa that his sign in the high heavens portended War and armed men? |
2226 | But how could I know that the Red Bull would bring me to this business?'' |
2226 | But how is it done?'' |
2226 | But how thinkest thou, chela, to recompense these people, and especially the priest, for their great kindness? |
2226 | But how? |
2226 | But is not the little gun a delight? |
2226 | But now, Red Hat, what is to be done?'' |
2226 | But what does He when He is about to give an order?'' |
2226 | But what dost thou do?'' |
2226 | But what said he of the meaning of the stars, Friend of all the World?'' |
2226 | But where is the River?'' |
2226 | But who art thou, dressed in that fashion, to speak in this fashion?'' |
2226 | But who will be his sponsor?'' |
2226 | But why should one whose Star leads him to war follow a holy man?'' |
2226 | But why the sword?'' |
2226 | By this time all the villages know what has befallen the Sahibs-- eh?'' |
2226 | Can any enter?'' |
2226 | Can you quite see? |
2226 | Can you tell me anything about him?'' |
2226 | Chapter 12 Who hath desired the Sea-- the sight of salt- water unbounded? |
2226 | Chapter 13 Who hath desired the Sea-- the immense and contemptuous surges? |
2226 | Chapter 7 Unto whose use the pregnant suns are poised With idiot moons and stars retracing stars? |
2226 | Charms are better, eh? |
2226 | Choor? |
2226 | Come and see?'' |
2226 | Could anyone take them out without the Railway''s knowledge?'' |
2226 | Curse me? |
2226 | Curses? |
2226 | D''ye see my dilemma? |
2226 | D''you add prophecy to your other gifts? |
2226 | D''you know anything about his money affairs?'' |
2226 | Did never the healer of sick pearls tell thee so? |
2226 | Did one make a prophecy? |
2226 | Did ye ever hear the like?'' |
2226 | Didst hear of Bhotiyal[ Tibet]? |
2226 | Do I not safeguard thy old feet about the ways? |
2226 | Do children drop from Heaven in thy country? |
2226 | Do n''t you''ate it?'' |
2226 | Do underlings order the goings of eight thousand redcoats-- with guns?'' |
2226 | Do ye think Yankling Sahib will permit down- country police to wander all over the hills, disturbing his game? |
2226 | Do you know what that means? |
2226 | Do you mind?'' |
2226 | Do you understand?'' |
2226 | Does he go afoot, for the sake of past sins?'' |
2226 | Does the Wheel hang still if a child spin it-- or a drunkard? |
2226 | Does this make all clear?'' |
2226 | Dost know it?'' |
2226 | Dost thou grudge me that? |
2226 | Dost thou know his touch, then? |
2226 | Dost thou know what manner of women we be in this quarter? |
2226 | Dost thou not know?'' |
2226 | Dost thou remember our first day under Zam- Zammah?'' |
2226 | Eh, Prince?'' |
2226 | Eh? |
2226 | Eh?'' |
2226 | Eh?'' |
2226 | Else what was the use of the Gods? |
2226 | Else why did he prick with an iron between the soles of thy slippers?'' |
2226 | Else why did the fat padre seem so impressed, and why the glass of hot yellow drink from the lean one? |
2226 | Else why should we come? |
2226 | Fair or black? |
2226 | Five-- ten minutes alone, if I had not been so pressed, and I might--''''Is he cured yet, miracle- worker?'' |
2226 | For sale, I suppose?'' |
2226 | Fountain of Wisdom, where fell the arrow?'' |
2226 | Four flawed emeralds there are, but one is drilled in two places, and one is a little carven-''''Their weights?'' |
2226 | Grogan''s dining here to- night, is n''t he?'' |
2226 | Had any one knowledge of such a stream? |
2226 | Has anyone ever done that same sort of magic to you before?'' |
2226 | Has the Sahiba made a young man of thee by her cookery?'' |
2226 | Hast thou dared to look even thus far?'' |
2226 | Hast thou eaten? |
2226 | Hast thou ever heard the name of thy brother?'' |
2226 | Hast thou heard?'' |
2226 | Hast thou money for the road?'' |
2226 | Hast thou not told me that some day a Red Bull will come out of a field to help thee? |
2226 | Hast thou said that I take thee to Lucknow?'' |
2226 | Have I shifted thee and lifted thee and slapped and twisted thy ten toes to find texts flung at my head? |
2226 | Have I slept? |
2226 | Have I thy leave-- Prince?'' |
2226 | Have they any knowledge of Hindi, such as had the Keeper of Images?'' |
2226 | Have they made thee a healer? |
2226 | Have they marked out for the baggage- wagons behind?'' |
2226 | Have they no disciples? |
2226 | Have we not walked enough for a little? |
2226 | Have ye parted?'' |
2226 | Have you come far?'' |
2226 | Having found the Way, seest thou, that shall free me from the Wheel, need I trouble to find a way about the mere fields of earth-- which are illusion? |
2226 | He asked neither pension nor retaining fee, but, if they deemed him worthy, would they write him a testimonial? |
2226 | He ca n''t write English, can he?'' |
2226 | He comes up with his men and he consorts with the lama, and then he calls me a fool, and is very rude--''''But wherefore-- wherefore?'' |
2226 | He has not yet heard the Great Queen''s order that--''''Order? |
2226 | He lent thee his strength? |
2226 | He raised his voice, and the horse- dealer came out from under the shadow of the tree,''Well, what is it?'' |
2226 | He rose to go, and as an afterthought asked:''Who is that angry- faced Sahib who lost the cheroot- case?'' |
2226 | He says, Why have you no disciples, and stop bothering him? |
2226 | He will then say"What proof hast thou?" |
2226 | He''s in yarak Plumed to the very point-- so manned, so weathered... Give him the firmament God made him for, And what shall take the air of him? |
2226 | His Sea in no showing the same-- his Sea and the same''neath all showing-- His Sea that his being fulfils? |
2226 | His Sea in no wonder the same-- his Sea and the same in each wonder-- His Sea that his being fulfils? |
2226 | Holy One, hast thou been here long? |
2226 | Holy One, whence came--?'' |
2226 | How can I do anything if you bukh[ babble] all round the shop?'' |
2226 | How can I take thee away, or account for thy disappearing if I set thee down and let thee run off into the crops? |
2226 | How can I, whelmed by a flux of talk, meditate upon the Way?'' |
2226 | How can they make trouble? |
2226 | How canst thou receive instruction all jostled of crowds? |
2226 | How comes it this is true?'' |
2226 | How didst thou do it? |
2226 | How do I know, having written the letter, that thou wilt not run away?'' |
2226 | How does that strike you, Mahbub? |
2226 | How far came we today in the flesh?'' |
2226 | How long have you had these things, boy?'' |
2226 | How long were they with thee?'' |
2226 | How many maids, and whose wives, hang upon thine eyelashes? |
2226 | How many more mixed friends do you keep in Asia?'' |
2226 | How much did you bet-- eh?'' |
2226 | How runs thy prophecy?'' |
2226 | How shall I find my River? |
2226 | How shall I make thanks? |
2226 | How soon can he become approximately effeecient chain- man? |
2226 | How the Divil-- yes, he''s the man I mean-- can a street- beggar raise money to educate white boys?'' |
2226 | How thinkest thou? |
2226 | How wilt thou ever make a soldier, Princeling?'' |
2226 | I am a Sufi[ free- thinker], but when one can get blind- sides of a woman, a stallion, or a devil, why go round to invite a kick? |
2226 | I come as Ladakhi trader-- oh, anything-- and I say to you:"You want to buy precious stones?" |
2226 | I could praise thee, but what need? |
2226 | I mean, how did you think?'' |
2226 | I order a Holy One-- a Teacher of the Law-- to come and speak to a woman? |
2226 | I was a child... Oh, why was I not a man? |
2226 | I will have Justice--''''Am I to be blocked by a shouting ape who upsets ten thousand sacks under a young horse''s nose? |
2226 | I''ll worm them out of the boy later on and-- you see?'' |
2226 | If I die today, who shall bring the news-- and to whom? |
2226 | If I withdraw him by order now-- what will he do, think you? |
2226 | If he is my chela-- does-- will-- can anyone take him from me? |
2226 | If so, I decline to be witness at the trial..... What was the last hypothetical devil mentioned?'' |
2226 | If there is money to be paid--''''Oh, be silent,''whispered Kim;''are we Rajahs to throw away good silver when the world is so charitable?'' |
2226 | If you were Asiatic of birth you might be employed right off; but this half- year of leave is to make you de- Englishized, you see? |
2226 | In silence, as we do of Tibet, or speaking aloud?'' |
2226 | In what way didst thou get to Benares? |
2226 | Indeed, thy hold is surer even than mine; for who would miss a boy beaten to death, or, it may be, thrown into a well by the roadside? |
2226 | Is aught missing?'' |
2226 | Is he a Buddhist?'' |
2226 | Is he by chance-- he lowered his voice--''one of us?'' |
2226 | Is he not my disciple?'' |
2226 | Is he not wise? |
2226 | Is he well? |
2226 | Is it an order that thy servant does not speak to me?'' |
2226 | Is it another healing?'' |
2226 | Is it any lust of thine to be re- born as a rat, or a snake under the eaves-- a worm in the belly of the most mean beast? |
2226 | Is it coming into shape?'' |
2226 | Is it likely that he will understand our talk? |
2226 | Is it lost? |
2226 | Is it much to ask?'' |
2226 | Is it necessary to the comfort of thy heart to see that lama?'' |
2226 | Is it permitted to ask a question?'' |
2226 | Is it plain, chela?'' |
2226 | Is it the Way to sing them songs?'' |
2226 | Is it too late to look tonight for the River?'' |
2226 | Is it true by any chance?'' |
2226 | Is it unbelievable stupidity?'' |
2226 | Is old Red Hat of that sort? |
2226 | Is that down?'' |
2226 | Is the boy mad?'' |
2226 | Is the father of my son a well of charity to give to all who ask?'' |
2226 | Is the virtuous woman still bent upon a new one?'' |
2226 | Is there a film before them already? |
2226 | Is there not a schoolmaster in the barracks?'' |
2226 | Is this Amritzar?'' |
2226 | Is this the way to lie to a Sahib?'' |
2226 | Is thy mind still set on following old Red Hat?'' |
2226 | It is a holy man, see''st thou?'' |
2226 | It is indeed all finished, O my father?'' |
2226 | Kimball, I suppose you''d like to be a soldier?'' |
2226 | Kismet, mallum? |
2226 | Know what?'' |
2226 | Laughest thou? |
2226 | Let him be a teacher; let him be a scribe-- what matter? |
2226 | Let me see thee go... Dost thou love me? |
2226 | Let the boy stop eating mangoes... but who can argue with a grandmother?'' |
2226 | Look, Hajji, is yonder the city of Simla? |
2226 | Mallum?'' |
2226 | Might I ask you to send my mare round under cover?'' |
2226 | Most people here and in Simla and across the passes behind the Hills would, on the other hand, say:"What has come to Mahbub Ali?" |
2226 | Mussalman, Hindu, Jain, or Buddhist? |
2226 | Mussalman-- Sikh Hindu-- Jain-- low caste or high?'' |
2226 | My father, he got these papers from the Jadoo- Gher what do you call that?'' |
2226 | Neglect me? |
2226 | No matter, I saved the life of one... Where is the Kamboh gone, Holy One?'' |
2226 | Nor ever harmed a man?'' |
2226 | Not much, eh? |
2226 | Now how the deuce am I to tell Hurree Babu, and whatt the deuce am I to do? |
2226 | Now if it were stored up for my grandson--''''He that had the belly- pain?'' |
2226 | Now what in the world does that mean?'' |
2226 | Now what is to do, Kim? |
2226 | Now, is that ravin''lunacy or a business proposition? |
2226 | Now, which of the barracks is thine?'' |
2226 | O charitable ones, if I am left here, who shall tend that old man?'' |
2226 | Of six hundred and eighty sabres stood fast to their salt-- how many, think you? |
2226 | Of what faith art thou?'' |
2226 | Of what known faith art thou?'' |
2226 | Of what use is a gun unfed?'' |
2226 | Oh, do not cry... What is the sense of curing a child one day and killing him with fright the next?'' |
2226 | Old Mahbub here still?'' |
2226 | Old bag of bones making curries for men who do not ask"Who cooked this?" |
2226 | Old man, have I spoken truth?'' |
2226 | Once gone, who shall find me? |
2226 | Once more, what manner of white boy art thou?'' |
2226 | One skinny brown finger heavy with rings lay on the edge of the cart, and the talk went this way:''Who is that one?'' |
2226 | Our work is like polishing jewels to be thrown to a dance- girl-- eh?'' |
2226 | Remember him who came only last, month-- the fakir with the tortoise?'' |
2226 | Said the Sahiba cheerily from an upper window, after compliments:''What is the good of an old woman''s advice to an old man? |
2226 | Said the hakim, hardly more than shaping the words with his lips:''How do you do, Mister O''Hara? |
2226 | Selling weeds-- eh?'' |
2226 | Shall I show thee how the Sahibs render thanks?'' |
2226 | Shall I take it away?'' |
2226 | Shall we say that, Tuesday next, you''ll hand him over to me at the night train south? |
2226 | Shall we stay there? |
2226 | Shall we wait awhile at Shamlegh, then?'' |
2226 | Since when have men and women been other than men and women?'' |
2226 | So I am a doctor, and-- you hear my talk? |
2226 | So the lama also loved the Friend of all the World?'' |
2226 | Some little stream, maybe-- dried in the heats? |
2226 | Stark calm on the lap of the Line-- or the crazy- eyed hurricane blowing? |
2226 | Such an one as this or that man?'' |
2226 | Suppose an Englishman came by and saw that thou hast no nose?'' |
2226 | Suppose she had stole them? |
2226 | Surely it was a little to see me that thou didst come?'' |
2226 | Surely thou hast made the old man rich?'' |
2226 | Surely thou must know? |
2226 | Tell me if she recover?'' |
2226 | Tell me, did you see the shape of the pot?'' |
2226 | That''s your abrupt way of putting it, is it?'' |
2226 | Thatt is Huneefa''s look- out, you see? |
2226 | The Lord-- the Excellent One-- He has honour here too? |
2226 | The end of the tale, I think, is true; but what of the fore- part?'' |
2226 | The heave and the halt and the hurl and the crash of the comber wind- hounded? |
2226 | The sleek- barrelled swell before storm-- grey, foamless, enormous, and growing? |
2226 | Then a voice cried:"What shall come to the boy if thou art dead?" |
2226 | Then in Hindi:''But what does he gain? |
2226 | Then it would not be wrong to shoot them with their own guns, heh?'' |
2226 | Then someone beat him on the back, crying:''Tell us how ye knew, ye little limb of Satan? |
2226 | Then who is to catch him? |
2226 | There is one brotherhood of the caste, but beyond that again''--she looked round timidly--''the bond of the Pulton-- the Regiment-- eh?'' |
2226 | Therefore, what make we here?'' |
2226 | They be Hindus in Tibet, then?'' |
2226 | They fell upon two men sitting under this truck-- Hajji, what shall I do with this lump of tobacco? |
2226 | They will make a Sahib of my disciple? |
2226 | They''ll cure all that nonsense at St Xavier''s, eh?'' |
2226 | Think you she will ask another charm for her grandsons? |
2226 | Think you that we who serve Creighton Sahib need strange scullions to help us through a big dinner?'' |
2226 | Think you we came from the nearest pond like the frog, thy father- in- law? |
2226 | Those Sahibs, who can not speak our talk, or the Babu, who for his own ends gave us money? |
2226 | Thou art not drunk?'' |
2226 | Thou dost not, then, know the River?'' |
2226 | Thou hast never lied?'' |
2226 | Thou knowest?'' |
2226 | Thou knowest?'' |
2226 | Thou wilt keep it for me?'' |
2226 | Thou wilt surely return?'' |
2226 | Three years I travelled through Hind, but-- can earth be stronger than Mother Earth? |
2226 | Thy sister-- What Owl''s folly told thee to draw thy carts across the road? |
2226 | Thy work?'' |
2226 | Two men-- thou sayest? |
2226 | Two old men and a boy? |
2226 | Very foolish it is to use the wrong word to a stranger; for though the heart may be clean of offence, how is the stranger to know that? |
2226 | Was Kim going to school? |
2226 | Was he not the Friend of the Stars as well as of all the World, crammed to the teeth with dreadful secrets? |
2226 | Was it a vision? |
2226 | Was it some matter of a bay mare that Peters Sahib wished the pedigree of?'' |
2226 | Was it your box?'' |
2226 | Was there raw turmeric among thy foodstuffs?'' |
2226 | Wast thou very wet?'' |
2226 | Well, that''s settled, is n''t it? |
2226 | What can I do for you, please?'' |
2226 | What can a hakim do?'' |
2226 | What can old eyes see except a full begging- bowl?'' |
2226 | What colour ash is there in thy pipe- bowl? |
2226 | What concern hast thou with war?'' |
2226 | What did ye say about the war?'' |
2226 | What didst thou later?'' |
2226 | What do you call that?'' |
2226 | What dost thou do here?'' |
2226 | What else? |
2226 | What else?'' |
2226 | What evidence will remain? |
2226 | What gift has the Red Bull brought?'' |
2226 | What harm do thy Gods suffer from play with a babe? |
2226 | What has a bay mare to do... Is it Mahbub Ali, the great dealer?'' |
2226 | What hast thou done?'' |
2226 | What in the world do you make of that?'' |
2226 | What is a beating when the very head is loose on the shoulders?'' |
2226 | What is an old man to do?'' |
2226 | What is it? |
2226 | What is the custom of charity in this town? |
2226 | What is the device on the flag?'' |
2226 | What is the good of stale food in the room, O woman of ill- omen?'' |
2226 | What is this?'' |
2226 | What like of Gods were they?'' |
2226 | What manner of fakir art thou, to shiver at a little watching?'' |
2226 | What of the hakim?'' |
2226 | What of the kilta?'' |
2226 | What of the old clothes?'' |
2226 | What of the weaknesses-- the belly and the neck, and the beating in the ears?'' |
2226 | What orders? |
2226 | What said the priest? |
2226 | What says Mahbub Ali?'' |
2226 | What shall the third incarnation be?'' |
2226 | What shall we do now?'' |
2226 | What shame?'' |
2226 | What should I care for mere words?'' |
2226 | What the deuce have you got there?'' |
2226 | What then?'' |
2226 | What used thou to her-- son?'' |
2226 | What were they like, eh?'' |
2226 | What will the healer of turquoises say to this? |
2226 | What will they give thee for blood- money?'' |
2226 | What''s your name?'' |
2226 | What? |
2226 | When didst thou steal the milkwoman''s slippers, Dunnoo?'' |
2226 | When do you come along? |
2226 | When the Hills give thee back thy strength day by day? |
2226 | Where are you goin''?'' |
2226 | Where are your horse- trucks?'' |
2226 | Where else?'' |
2226 | Where has he to run to?'' |
2226 | Where is my bed?'' |
2226 | Where is the Saddhu?'' |
2226 | Where is the boy? |
2226 | Where is your house? |
2226 | Where was the Sahiba?'' |
2226 | Where, then, is the River? |
2226 | Where--? |
2226 | Whither goest thou?'' |
2226 | Whither would old bones go?'' |
2226 | Who am I that thou shouldst fling beggar- endearments at me?'' |
2226 | Who art thou?'' |
2226 | Who begs for thee, these days?'' |
2226 | Who but I saw that prophecy accomplished? |
2226 | Who but I?'' |
2226 | Who is Kim?'' |
2226 | Who is the one- eyed and luckless son of shame that has not yet prepared my pipe?'' |
2226 | Who knows where we dropped the baggage? |
2226 | Who looks for a rat in a frog- pond? |
2226 | Who says the age of miracles is gone by? |
2226 | Who shall say she does not acquire merit?'' |
2226 | Who shampooed thy legs? |
2226 | Who should know but I? |
2226 | Who speaks against her?'' |
2226 | Who suckled thee?'' |
2226 | Who, then, made Gunga in the beginning?'' |
2226 | Why art thou here? |
2226 | Why come to me?'' |
2226 | Why did he want to poison you?'' |
2226 | Why does he not leave them?'' |
2226 | Why does not that yellow man answer?'' |
2226 | Why does this make one feel that we are so young a people?'' |
2226 | Why hinder him now? |
2226 | Why is that beggar- brat not well beaten?'' |
2226 | Why not bid him sit on my knee, Shameless? |
2226 | Why plague me with this talk, Holy One? |
2226 | Why say so, then, on the open road?'' |
2226 | Why should I not run away when the school was shut? |
2226 | Why-- why, do you speak English? |
2226 | Why? |
2226 | Why?'' |
2226 | Will he lead an army against us? |
2226 | Will you hurt him, if I call him a shout now? |
2226 | Will you let me go away?'' |
2226 | Will-- will he give me a blessing?'' |
2226 | Wilt thou carry him on thy shoulders?'' |
2226 | Wilt thou slay him or drown him in that wonderful river from which the Babu dragged thee?'' |
2226 | Would it be safe to return the Colonel''s lead? |
2226 | Wrap it in paper and put it under the salt- bag? |
2226 | Ye believe in Providence, Bennett?'' |
2226 | Ye hail from Benares? |
2226 | You are not pleased, eh?'' |
2226 | You do not know the Hills?'' |
2226 | You drunk? |
2226 | You have been shooting, eh? |
2226 | You have got everything?'' |
2226 | You know that?'' |
2226 | You say:"Do I look like a man who buys precious stones?" |
2226 | You see? |
2226 | You was brought up in the gutter, was n''t you?'' |
2226 | [ Do you understand?]'' |
2226 | and to whom else should I talk? |
2226 | he said, as he drew his prize under the light of the tent- pole lantern, then shaking him severely cried:''What were you doing? |
2226 | said Father Victor,''or are you by way o''being a lusus naturae?'' |
48012 | But, said he,"do yow pretend to comence any processe against them?" |
48012 | But, said they,"are not the Jesuists and fryres Christians two?" |
48012 | But,said he,"what is the occation they take men as well as goods?" |
48012 | Whie,said he,"is he not gon? |
48012 | Adams, Isaac,[? |
48012 | Camps hath donne?" |
48012 | Soe I then demanded of Andrea whoe disburced this plate, he or I? |
48012 | Syen Dono, governor[ of Firando?]. |
48012 | The singing man and Sugien Donos brother came to vizet me, and brought a barken[ baken?] |
48012 | [ 134]? |
48012 | _ November 25._--We dyned at Arra,[70] and paid 1_ ichebo_ and 1[ hundred?] |
39092 | ''Sun and night serve mortals,''says Euripides-- but why us more than the ants or the flies? 39092 And who tells you this-- that you have equal power with Zeus? |
39092 | Are not all things ruled according to the will of God? 39092 But are leaves and our bodies so bound up and united with the whole, and are not our souls much more? |
39092 | But whence am I to get a fine cloak? 39092 But you do not believe,"he said,"that souls are allotted to one body after another, and that what we call death is transmigration? |
39092 | But,asks Tatian( c. 16),"why should they get_ drastikôteras dynameôs_ after death?" |
39092 | Could he have done anything else? |
39092 | Did you see Socrates and Plato? |
39092 | Do n''t you see, my dear sir? |
39092 | Do you think,said Epictetus,"that all things are a unity?" |
39092 | GODS OR ATOMS? |
39092 | How did Christianity rise and spread among men? |
39092 | How_ can_ you escape from the judgment of hell? |
39092 | If the dead have consciousness, would she wish you to be so overcome of sorrow? |
39092 | To whom then shall I recite prayers? 39092 Well then, do you not think that things earthly are in sympathy(_ sympathein_) with things heavenly?" |
39092 | What are we to do? |
39092 | What says Zeus? 39092 What sea- captain is there that does not carry his mirth even to the point of shame? |
39092 | When the day was over and Sextius had gone to his night''s rest, he used to ask his mind(_ animum_):''what bad habit of yours have you cured to- day? 39092 Where is the wonder?" |
39092 | Which is ampler? |
39092 | Who among men had any knowledge of what God was, before he came? 39092 Who shall change one of their dogmata[ the regular word of Epictetus]? |
39092 | Why am I wasted for desire of him, who is either happy or non- existent? 39092 Why should it be lawful( for a Christian),"he asked,"to see what it is sin to do? |
39092 | Why was he not sent to the sinless as well as to sinners? 39092 With what right(_ iure_) Marcion, do you cut down my wood? |
39092 | [ 108] This isa peace not of Cæsar''s proclamation( for whence could he proclaim it?) |
39092 | [ 126]What do you want with prayers?" |
39092 | [ 136] Does Homer''s poetry do honour to the gods( c. 14)--do the actors on the stage( c. 15)? 39092 [ 147] Marcion, for instance, is"sick( like so many nowadays and, most of all, the heretics) with the question of evil, whence is evil? |
39092 | [ 151]Why do you,"he asks,"act the part of a Jew, when you are a Greek? |
39092 | [ 153] But have the churches been faithful in the transmission of this body of doctrine? 39092 [ 157] And then he rejoins, Do you think nativity impossible-- or unsuitable-- for God? |
39092 | [ 32] Besides would God need to descend in order to{ 248} learn what was going on among men? 39092 [ 34] Then why not long before? |
39092 | [ 36]Ye see what is the pattern that has been given us; what should we do who by him have come under the yoke of his grace? |
39092 | [ 40]If he had wished to send down a spirit from himself, why did he need to breathe it into the womb of a woman? |
39092 | [ 66] When a man boasts of moral progress, of his freedom from avarice, what, asks Horace, of other like matters? 39092 [ 72] And again:"Why debate? |
39092 | [ 76] When they all say''Believe, if you wish to be saved, or else depart''; what are those to do who really wish to be saved? |
39092 | [ 80] Again, the body is the prison of the soul; should there not then be warders of it-- dæmons in fact? 39092 [ 84]"Where then are we to track out God, Plato? |
39092 | [ 90] How are we to meet at all, asks the anxious Christian, unless we buy off the soldiers? 39092 [ 90] Is it not likely that these"satraps and ministers of air and earth"could do you harm, if you did them despite? |
39092 | [ 96]Must my leg then be lamed? |
39092 | how many of those who crowd around and gape for Christian blood? |
39092 | ... What else can I do, a lame old man, but hymn God? |
39092 | .... What thinkest thou? |
39092 | After all nearly every religion has, somewhere or other, what are called"good ethics,"but the vital question is,"What else?" |
39092 | Again do not our resolves also find their way to God, uttering a voice of their own? |
39092 | Again, when Sodom is destroyed why does the holy text say"The Lord rained upon Sodom and Gomorrha sulphur and fire from the Lord from heaven"? |
39092 | And are not some things also wafted heavenward by the conscience? |
39092 | And how could all this be, if his body were not true? |
39092 | And is there none to teach them stealth and sin? |
39092 | And meanwhile, what was the audience doing, while he stood there tied,{ 326} waiting interminably for the lion? |
39092 | And the gladiatorial shows? |
39092 | And then the dog- faced Egyptian in linen-- who is he to bark at the gods? |
39092 | And then who are those who practise abortion? |
39092 | And where are truth and experience? |
39092 | And who among{ 223} men could set this forth in words? |
39092 | And who is he? |
39092 | And who told thee that the gods do not help us even to what is in our own power? |
39092 | And without a change of dogmata, what is there but the slavery of men groaning and pretending to obey? |
39092 | Animæ_, 2,_ unde igitur naturalis timor animæ in deum, si deus nan novit irasci? |
39092 | Are not the pagans guilty of Atheism, at once in not worshipping the true God and in persecuting those who do? |
39092 | Are we not content with the unanimous authority of mankind? |
39092 | Are we to bid a man to lend a hand to the shipwrecked, point the way to the wanderer, share bread with the hungry? |
39092 | Are words and acts holy as religious symbols which in a society are obviously vicious? |
39092 | Are you surprised a man should go to the gods? |
39092 | As to the Christian story, what could have attracted the attention of God to her? |
39092 | As to the idea that Christians eat children to gain eternal life-- who would think it worth the price? |
39092 | At what cost were they written? |
39092 | Below, is it not the same for them as for you? |
39092 | Both handle the same questions:"Whence is evil, and why? |
39092 | But does not this vapour theory do away with the other theory that divination is mediated to us by the gods through the dæmons? |
39092 | But if a disembodied soul can foresee the future, why should not a soul in a body also be able? |
39092 | But might not one study pagan literature? |
39092 | But what of the man of genius who wrote them? |
39092 | But whither? |
39092 | By what licence, Valentinus, do you divert my springs? |
39092 | Can I have done anything like a free man, or a noble- minded? |
39092 | Children ask father and mother for bread-- will they receive a stone? |
39092 | Could anything be more beautiful than this habit of examining the whole day? |
39092 | Could the church do with them? |
39092 | Did Abraham keep the Sabbath, or any of the patriarchs down to Moses? |
39092 | Did Jove forget Crete for Rome''s sake-- Crete, where he was born, where he lies buried? |
39092 | Do you recognize them, Trypho? |
39092 | Do you see, then, the abyss of atheism that lies at our feet, if we resolve each of the gods into a passion or a force or a virtue? |
39092 | Does Superstition ne''er your heart assail Nor bid your soul with fancied horrors quail? |
39092 | Does a varied diet or a single dish help the digestion more? |
39092 | Elsewhere he gives us a parody of self- examination-- the reflections of one who would prosper in the world--"Where have I failed in flattery? |
39092 | Fool, have you not hands, did not God make them for you? |
39092 | For to what better and more careful watch(_ phylaki_) could He have entrusted each of us? |
39092 | For what soul of a man would any longer wish for a body that{ 253} had rotted? |
39092 | For who is not stirred up by the contemplation of it to find out what there is in the thing within? |
39092 | Good-- but prithee say, Is every vice with avarice flown away? |
39092 | Had the Christian any law? |
39092 | Has some comparative fallen out, or does_ his_ conceal another name? |
39092 | He can not bear a dirty man,--"who does not get out of his way?" |
39092 | He who fears"the gods of his fathers and his race, saviours, friends and givers of good"--whom will he not fear? |
39092 | Hermogenes denies God''s title in this case; which then of the other means does he prefer? |
39092 | His admirers to- day speak of him as one whose question was always"Is it true?" |
39092 | How can I blaspheme my King who saved me? |
39092 | How could men have spat in a face radiant with"celestial grandeur"? |
39092 | How could the Telearch of Chæronea under the Roman Empire understand Pericles? |
39092 | How did God come to use matter? |
39092 | How long would it seem? |
39092 | How long would it take to bring and to let loose the lion? |
39092 | I do not deny it; who is not? |
39092 | If Typhons and Giants were to drive out the gods and become our rulers, what worse could they ask? |
39092 | If one looked from heaven, would there be any marked difference between the procedures of men and of ants? |
39092 | If the one, why not hunt them down? |
39092 | If the other, why punish? |
39092 | If they have not, why pray? |
39092 | In his name why? |
39092 | In the last resort is ecstasy, independently of morality, the main thing? |
39092 | Is it a little thing with you to strive with men? |
39092 | Is it unworthy of God? |
39092 | Is it_ ihs_, in fact,--a reference to Jesus analogous to the suggestion of Celsus that he too was a magician? |
39092 | Is not all the philosophers''talk about God? |
39092 | Is there not a hint of the school about this? |
39092 | Is there not for them the same descent, wherever it lead? |
39092 | It is the setting in which God has placed"the shadow of his own soul, the breath of his own spirit"--can it really be so vile? |
39092 | It was believed by Christians that in baptism the sins of the earlier life were washed away; but what of sins after baptism? |
39092 | Larentina? |
39092 | Let us assume for purposes of discussion that there could be a"descent of God"--would it be what the Christians say it was? |
39092 | Man, what then? |
39092 | Mankind are apt to look twice at the piety of a ruler, and the old question of Satan comes easily,"Doth Job serve God for naught?" |
39092 | Nero should ask himself"Am I the elected of the gods to be their vice- gerent on earth? |
39092 | No,"where is the likeness between the philosopher and the Christian? |
39092 | None the less the centre of interest was the same for them as for us-- what_ is_ the significance of Jesus of Nazareth? |
39092 | Now whom do you mean by the sinner but the wicked, thief, house- breaker, poisoner, temple- robber, grave- robber? |
39092 | Ought we not, in digging or ploughing or eating, to sing this hymn to God? |
39092 | Plants and trees and grass and thorns-- do they grow for man a whit more than for the wildest animals? |
39092 | Quis enim bib contemplatione eius concutitur ad requirendum quid intus in re sit? |
39092 | Quorsum ista retulimus? |
39092 | Shall I swear''by Jove the stone''(_ per Iovem lapidem_) after the most ancient manner of Rome? |
39092 | Should they throw the dice to find out to whom to turn? |
39092 | Silk and purple and pearls are next dealt with-- and earrings,"an outrage on nature"--if you pierce the ear, why not the nose too? |
39092 | Sterculus? |
39092 | Tertullian had to face a similar criticism of Christian life-- was Abraham_ baptized_? |
39092 | That curious story, too, of the boy falling down in his presence? |
39092 | The Christian must not philosophize, they said-- Tertullian said it too; but how could they know they must not philosophize unless they philosophized? |
39092 | The Jew is referred back to the righteous men of early days-- Was Adam circumcised, or did he keep the Sabbath? |
39092 | The arbiter of life and death to the nations?" |
39092 | The gods were part of the past of the ancient world, and if Reason took them away, what was left? |
39092 | The other sort perplexed him--"Why can you not judge for yourselves?" |
39092 | The worn- out frame dragged the spirit with it, and he died with the cry--"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
39092 | Then is it not better to use what is in thine own power and be free, than to be set on what is not in thy power-- a slave and contemptible? |
39092 | Then shall I no longer be? |
39092 | Then those mysterious"somethings"which Apuleius keeps{ 230} wrapped up in a napkin? |
39092 | They demanded to know how they stood with the gods-- were the gods many or one? |
39092 | This is what men were doing and saying around him-- but why? |
39092 | This work has many names; it is called gift[ or grace,_ chárisma_], enlightenment, perfection, baptism.... What is wanting for him who knows God? |
39092 | To lie against God as if He forbade us to do good on the Sabbath day, is not that impiety? |
39092 | Was it by accident that Joseph the carpenter gave all his five sons names that stood for something in Hebrew history? |
39092 | Was it not in my power to lie? |
39092 | Was it true-- this story of the ass? |
39092 | Was she pretty? |
39092 | Was the hen or the egg first? |
39092 | What cause is there that the gods should do good? |
39092 | What done or left undone? |
39092 | What father was ever so unnatural(_ anósios_)? |
39092 | What gods? |
39092 | What harm is there in not having sinned? |
39092 | What have I to do with circumcision, who have the testimony of God? |
39092 | What if laws do forbid Christians to be? |
39092 | What in all this could tempt a man to face the lions? |
39092 | What is its destiny? |
39092 | What need of that baptism to me, baptized with the holy spirit? |
39092 | What of sky, earth and sea? |
39092 | What propellent power lies behind the morals? |
39092 | What then does Lucian make of human life? |
39092 | What then indeed is Being? |
39092 | What then is to be said of Plutarch''s religion? |
39092 | What then was the knowledge given unto him? |
39092 | What then? |
39092 | What too(_ ib._ 6) of barbarians and their souls, who have no"prison of Socrates,"etc? |
39092 | What was it that had made the"ancient character"? |
39092 | What was new in the new religion, in this"third race"of men? |
39092 | What was the origin of evil? |
39092 | What was the real disease? |
39092 | What was the ultimate difference between the old Roman and the Roman of the days of Antony and Octavian? |
39092 | What would Socrates do? |
39092 | What, asks the prosecution, is the meaning of this curious interest Apuleius has in fish? |
39092 | Where are those laws now? |
39092 | Which gods? |
39092 | Which is more perfect, to forbid adultery or to bid refrain from a single lustful look? |
39092 | Which of Aphrodite''s hands did Diomed wound? |
39092 | Who saw the dove, or heard the voice from heaven, at the baptism? |
39092 | Who talks in a finished style unless he wishes to be affected? |
39092 | Who wished this end for his soldier-- who but he who sealed him with such an oath of enlistment? |
39092 | Who would choose such a change? |
39092 | Whole burnt offerings and your sacrifices and the fat of goats and the blood of bulls I will not... Who has sought these from your hands? |
39092 | Whom else would a brigand invite to join him? |
39092 | Why could they not philosophize and say nothing? |
39092 | Why did I say that? |
39092 | Why does an Emperor wish to be called"the eldest son of the church?" |
39092 | Why he rather than any of the"ten thousand others"who might much more plausibly be called the Messiah? |
39092 | Why is fresh water better than salt for{ 85} washing clothes? |
39092 | Why should not we too live after the model of Socrates, studying philosophy and obeying our dæmon? |
39092 | Why should the innocent age hasten to the remission of sins? |
39092 | Why should the things, which''coming out of the mouth defile a man,''seem not to defile a man when he takes them in through eyes and ears? |
39092 | Why should there be? |
39092 | Why, but from vanity and folly? |
39092 | Why? |
39092 | Why? |
39092 | Will you not willingly surrender it for the whole? |
39092 | With ribbons is it adorned-- or with graves? |
39092 | Would not the play have been better named_ Brutus_? |
39092 | Would not the son of Moses have been strangled, had not his mother circumcised him? |
39092 | Would you call him Nature? |
39092 | Would you call him Providence? |
39092 | Would you call him Universe? |
39092 | Would you call him fate? |
39092 | Would you propitiate the gods? |
39092 | You do n''t believe that in beasts and fishes dwells the mind(_ animum_) that was once a man''s? |
39092 | Zeno and Isis each had something to say, but who had such a message of forgiveness and reconciliation and of the love of God? |
39092 | [ 123] How can the maker of idols, the temple- painter, etc., be said to have renounced the devil and his angels, if they make their living by them? |
39092 | [ 131] If the legend is mere fable, he asks,_ cur rapitur sacerdos Cereris, si non tale Ceres passet est? |
39092 | [ 136]"When a man is hardened like a stone(_ apolithôthê_), how shall we be able to deal with him by argument?" |
39092 | [ 159]_ de carne Christi_, 5,_ prorsus credibile est quia ineptum est,... certum est quia impossibile.... Quid dimidias mendacio Christum? |
39092 | [ 167]"Who are the two or three gathering in the name of Christ, among whom the Lord is in the midst? |
39092 | [ 19] Many animals can make the same claim--"what could one call more divine than to foreknow and foretell the future? |
39092 | [ 30]"But,"rejoins the Jew,"was not Abraham circumcised? |
39092 | [ 33] Or was he dissatisfied with the attention he received, and did he really come down to show off like a_ nouveau riche_(_ oi neóploutoi_)? |
39092 | [ 34]"What can we give him in return? |
39092 | [ 48] For himself, he holds with Paul("doth not Nature teach you?") |
39092 | [ 53] And again in the_ Psalms_( 110) what is meant by"The Lord said unto my Lord"? |
39092 | [ 54] and by"Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever... therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows? |
39092 | [ 60]"Are we to wait till beasts speak? |
39092 | [ 78] What does this organ, this new song, tell us? |
39092 | [ 80] So Tertullian lays down the law for others; what for himself? |
39092 | [ 81] Then"will not a man, who worships God, be justified in serving him who has his power from God? |
39092 | [ 92] Why should not the Christians worship them, dæmons and Emperors? |
39092 | [ 94] In any case,"if idols are nothing, what harm is there in taking part in the festival? |
39092 | [ 98] Can any triumph over fortune unless helped by him? |
39092 | [ Sidenote: Apology or truth?] |
39092 | [ Sidenote: Immortality] But is it clear that it is eternity after all? |
39092 | _ Annon et alias sine ullo Sacramento immundi spiritus aquis incubant, adfectantes illam in primordio divini spiritus gestationem? |
39092 | _ Isaiah_ 1, 11: Wherefore to me the multitude of your sacrifices? |
39092 | _ Quid revolvis? |
39092 | _ Usque adeone mori miserum est?_ he asks of the Christian who hesitates to be martyred;[11]"a hint from the world"he says. |
39092 | _ Vivere ergo habes?_[75]_ Must_ you live? |
39092 | and how will ye strive with the Lord? |
39092 | and what are you to do with it now? |
39092 | and whence is God? |
39092 | and whence is man and how? |
39092 | and, if so, why not teach it? |
39092 | asked{ 95} Plutarch; why not in each universe a guide and ruler with mind and reason, such as he who in our universe is called lord and father of all? |
39092 | asks Carlyle,"was it by institutions, and establishments, and well arranged systems of mechanism? |
39092 | asks Epictetus, arguing against the Academics, who"opposed evident truths"--what are we to do with necrosis of the soul? |
39092 | asks Tertullian,"to say, Thou shalt not kill; or to teach, Be not even angry? |
39092 | could they be restored? |
39092 | cur Saturno alieni liberi immolantur... cur Idæae masculus amputatur_? |
39092 | did they care for mankind? |
39092 | do you then on account of one wretched leg find fault with the cosmos? |
39092 | does their hunger lead to any other place? |
39092 | for the individual man? |
39092 | had he any oracles, apart from the unintelligible glossolalies of men possessed(_ enthousiôntes_)? |
39092 | he cries, pretty to look at, but full of what? |
39092 | how shall I not be anxious?'' |
39092 | how was it that men could see and yet not see? |
39092 | if eternal salvation had been for sale? |
39092 | if such things_ are_ done, by whom are they done? |
39092 | in what respect are you better?'' |
39092 | is it the Christians who frequent them? |
39092 | is not all Providence from him? |
39092 | on whom shall I call, to{ 232} help the wretched, to favour the good, to counter the evil? |
39092 | once more to establish effective gods to do the work of police? |
39092 | or Abel, or Noah, or Enoch, or Melchizedek? |
39092 | quis non ubi requisivit accedit? |
39092 | revelations from sacrifices and victims, and other miraculous tokens? |
39092 | that saw the simple- minded taking their baskets to gather the grape- harvest from bramble- bushes? |
39092 | the disciple of Greece and of heaven? |
39092 | the friend and the foe of error?" |
39092 | the marvels heard from shrines? |
39092 | the trafficker in fame and in life? |
39092 | to whom slay victim? |
39092 | to whom tender vows? |
39092 | was the question that men asked; where was the root of all the evil? |
39092 | were they persons or natural laws[165] or even natural objects? |
39092 | what vice have you resisted? |
39092 | who was he? |
39092 | who, when he has found out, does not draw near? |
39092 | why was it that in old days men were honest, governed themselves firmly, knew how to obey, and served the State? |
39092 | will you ever love? |
39092 | { 165}"Away with the atheists-- where is Polycarp?" |
39092 | { 18} Or can you smile at magic''s strange alarms, Dreams, witchcraft, ghosts, Thessalian spells and charms? |
39092 | { 196} CHAPTER VII"GODS OR ATOMS?" |
39092 | { 88}"Then Plutarch, slowly and gently"asked what signs of anger he showed in voice or colour or word? |
43497 | Am I, then, to travel through the air, or sink down to the lower regions? |
43497 | And how old is the monastery? |
43497 | And west of that? |
43497 | And west of the Caspian Sea? |
43497 | And what is there to the west of this ocean? |
43497 | And where do you come to when you continue to travel westwards? |
43497 | And you will send my letter to Gyangtse? |
43497 | Are they civil to you? |
43497 | Are they in fairly good condition? |
43497 | Can you depend on your wife''s faithfulness for so long a time? |
43497 | Can you find your way, and are you sure that your supplies will last out? |
43497 | Certainly; but which way do you think of taking? 43497 Do you know the way to the south?" |
43497 | Do you see the small white swirls in the south- west? 43497 Does not the Sahib hear something?" |
43497 | Does not the Sahib think it dangerous to go further when the lake is bottomless? |
43497 | Does the Bombo Chimbo remember that I tried to detain him five and a half years ago with a large levy? |
43497 | Does the Devashung know that I am here? |
43497 | Has, then, Rabsang played a trick on me and the Babu Sahib? |
43497 | Have you any fresh information? |
43497 | Have you any horses you can sell us? |
43497 | Have you any yaks for sale? |
43497 | Have you heard anything more of the Governor? |
43497 | Have you heard that Hedin is in Srinagar? |
43497 | How are the hired horses? |
43497 | How can the Sahib regain his strength if he eats so little? |
43497 | How can you remember all that? |
43497 | How do you know that? |
43497 | How goes it with the animals? |
43497 | How is Hlaje Tsering getting on? |
43497 | How long can the animals hold out, if we find no pasture? |
43497 | How long is it by the nearest way to Shigatse?'''' 43497 How long will it take a messenger to reach him?" |
43497 | How many do you want to manage the caravan? |
43497 | How many more animals have we? |
43497 | How much do you want? |
43497 | How much longer will the storm last? |
43497 | In which direction have the robbers retired with their booty? |
43497 | Is Hlaje Tsering still ruler of Naktsang? |
43497 | Is he bringing with him as large a following as last time? |
43497 | Is there nothing here, then, that we can burn? 43497 It was agreed that you should accompany us as far as the Yeshil- kul; do you mean to break your word?" |
43497 | Master,suggested Robert, who always addressed me thus,"would it not be more prudent to land again before the storm reaches its height? |
43497 | May it not be Changpas? |
43497 | No, really? 43497 Now you see that I was right; how often have I told you that we should be ordered to halt at the Bogtsang- tsangpo?" |
43497 | Ordered to halt? |
43497 | Shall you have more of such lake voyages, Master? |
43497 | Tell me, Hlaje Tsering, do you think that I shall be stopped in the territory of the Labrang? |
43497 | Tell me, Ma Daloi, do you think that the Tashi Lama will receive me? |
43497 | That is all very fine, but have you any proof that the Tashi Lama will assume the responsibility of forwarding your letters? 43497 The road to the east is also barred?" |
43497 | WHERE ARE YOU GOING? |
43497 | We are, then, in the province of Tang- yung? |
43497 | We shall, then, have more losses soon? |
43497 | What are you afraid of? |
43497 | What are you talking about? 43497 What are your terms?" |
43497 | What do they say to my remaining away so long? |
43497 | What happens if she misconducts herself with another man? |
43497 | What is it? |
43497 | What is the matter? |
43497 | What is the news? |
43497 | What is their intention, do you think, Muhamed Isa? |
43497 | What lies to the west of Yarkand? |
43497 | What time is it, Master? |
43497 | What, in your opinion, do they mean to do with us? |
43497 | When? |
43497 | Where are you going? |
43497 | Where do you come from? |
43497 | Where do you think that the soldiers are waiting for us? |
43497 | Where is he? 43497 Where is the Governor of Naktsang?" |
43497 | Where? |
43497 | Which way will they ask us to take this time? |
43497 | Whither are you travelling? |
43497 | Who founded it, then? |
43497 | Who has brought the mail? |
43497 | Why did you not close the way to me? 43497 Why do you put these questions?" |
43497 | Why have you come to my tent, Karma Tamding? 43497 Why is it that it has just been so dark?" |
43497 | Why, then, have we not seen the fire before? 43497 Why,"they then both asked,"did you not show us this paper at once? |
43497 | Will it, then, be still colder than now? |
43497 | Will you be so good as to sell us yaks, Karma Tamding? |
43497 | Will you give us some of your sheep? |
43497 | Will you go on a long journey with me? |
43497 | Will you guide us? |
43497 | Will you procure us guides? |
43497 | Will you sell me some horses for them? |
43497 | You have not heard, then, that any messenger from Shigatse has been inquiring about us? |
43497 | A coarse fellow asked shortly and boldly( Illustration 89):"What are you?" |
43497 | A curious feeling of awe took possession of me; had I insulted them through some want of delicacy? |
43497 | A thought occurs to me: shall we travel on to the mouth of the Ki- chu and thence go up to Lhasa on foot? |
43497 | After all the severe trials and adventures we had experienced should we succeed in reaching our goal? |
43497 | Ah, where would my dreams again be shattered and my aspirations cease to pulsate? |
43497 | And why should they not be endowed with intelligence? |
43497 | And why? |
43497 | And with what object? |
43497 | And, besides, how long do you expect to have to wait here for the answer? |
43497 | Are they walls erected across my path by hostile spirits, or do they await my coming? |
43497 | Are you disposed to accompany me on a journey of two years through the high mountains?" |
43497 | But could we carry ourselves enough provisions to last us through this uninhabited country? |
43497 | But he must know something about me, or how could Ngurbu Tundup''s arrival at Ngangtse- tso with the letters be explained? |
43497 | But tell me, are you not the_ Peling_ who came five years ago with two companions to Nakchu, and was compelled by the Governor to turn back?" |
43497 | But what is that? |
43497 | But where are our men? |
43497 | But why is this?" |
43497 | But why was he so late? |
43497 | But, tell me, how have you got on since we last saw one another?" |
43497 | Can I have the kidneys for dinner to- morrow?" |
43497 | Can he be Amitabha himself? |
43497 | Could I not buy some of these charming figures? |
43497 | Could the boat provide us with shelter? |
43497 | Could we keep alive till the sun rose? |
43497 | Did spring set in so early in these more southern regions? |
43497 | Does the Maharaja of Kashmir lay claim to it, or the Dalai- Lama, or is it a part of Chinese Turkestan? |
43497 | Each community remains together on the journey, but how do they choose a leader? |
43497 | Had Ganpat Sing lost the letters, or had they never reached Leh? |
43497 | Had Hlaje Tsering received secret orders from Lhasa? |
43497 | Had I not here a task before me much more profitable than following in the steps of Tommy Atkins to Lhasa? |
43497 | Had he been informed that the Tashi Lama was really expecting me? |
43497 | Had it, perchance, tributaries deriving their water from the heart of the mysterious country to the north? |
43497 | Had the wolves torn him in pieces? |
43497 | Has anything happened to him? |
43497 | Has one of your superiors sent you?" |
43497 | Have they not come this very day to stop our further progress?" |
43497 | Have you one from the Tashi Lama? |
43497 | He was given the particulars he wanted, and then he asked:"Will the Bombo Chimbo be so kind as to wait here until the answer comes back?" |
43497 | Hlaje Tsering bristled up at once and exclaimed:"To the Dangra- yum- tso? |
43497 | How can they love a wife whom they possess in common with others, so that there is no room for the idea of faithfulness in marriage? |
43497 | How could I foresee that I should one day reckon him among my best friends, and think of him with warm respect and admiration? |
43497 | How is the caravan?" |
43497 | How long is it to the dawn? |
43497 | How long would it be before the boat would ground on the hard, salt bottom, if it found itself in a trough between two waves? |
43497 | How should we prosper? |
43497 | How were we to pass the night with 29 degrees of frost, and wet clothes already stiffened into cuirasses of ice? |
43497 | I look in vain for the beacon of my servants; have they not obeyed my orders, or are they so far from the shore that the fire is invisible? |
43497 | If I let you go, which road will you take?" |
43497 | Is it to be wondered at that a stranger feels happy in this house, where he is surrounded daily with kindness and hospitality? |
43497 | Is not the following menu tempting? |
43497 | Is the river one of the forbidden paths of Tibet? |
43497 | Is there a lake in the neighbourhood? |
43497 | It is evident that we must leave Shigatse, but by which route? |
43497 | It is well and naturally executed--_pia fraus!_"When was the monastery founded?" |
43497 | Might it not be better to make for the unknown country west of the Dangra- yum- tso, which after all was the main object of my journey? |
43497 | Nay, should I ever have enough of it? |
43497 | Now all the militia must stand under arms to----""You surely do not intend to detain me again?" |
43497 | Now the only question was: should we be able to drag ourselves along to inhabited districts? |
43497 | On October 1 I wrote in my diary:"What will be our experiences in this new month? |
43497 | Or should we seek out the nearest nomads at once, and beg them for assistance? |
43497 | Or tell me to what Power this land belongs? |
43497 | Robert and I rolled ourselves together in a bunch, but of what use was it? |
43497 | Several months?" |
43497 | Shall we remain together so long? |
43497 | Should I be tired of it? |
43497 | Should we all remain together till we fell in with the first nomads? |
43497 | Should we be received as open enemies, and after all wish ourselves back with the wolves on the banks of Yeshil- kul? |
43497 | Should we perish one after another in these icy deserts of the Tibetan Alps? |
43497 | The post? |
43497 | Three antelope tracks we crossed were regarded as a good sign; there must be pasturage somewhere about, but where? |
43497 | Twilight falls; I feel my heart beating; shall we succeed? |
43497 | Was it another traveller, or had hunters wandered thus far? |
43497 | Was it certain where the source of the Brahmaputra lay? |
43497 | Was it possible? |
43497 | Was it, perhaps, impossible, for political reasons, to send me my letters from India? |
43497 | Was the spring coming? |
43497 | Was, perhaps, the Raga- tsangpo the main stream? |
43497 | Were there warm springs at the bottom which prevented the lake from freezing over in parts? |
43497 | What are you gazing at?" |
43497 | What did it matter what time it was? |
43497 | What did it matter whether the Tibetans would be friendly or hostile? |
43497 | What did this most unexpected change of front mean? |
43497 | What did we care if the air was raw and cold? |
43497 | What did we talk about? |
43497 | What do you think of doing now?" |
43497 | What is to happen then?" |
43497 | What on earth can he have to tell them that they have not heard already twenty times over? |
43497 | What would become of the re- incarnation when no one knew where the two popes were dwelling? |
43497 | What would it have profited me to have made them anxious by anticipating troubles? |
43497 | What would the next year bring? |
43497 | When and where would these leaves come to rest after flying over endless stretches of unknown country? |
43497 | When did he come?" |
43497 | Where have you been yourself?" |
43497 | Where would our grand progress come to a standstill, checked by a peremptory"Thus far and no farther,"backed up by muzzle- loaders and sabres? |
43497 | Who would have looked for a true prairie up here in North Tibet? |
43497 | Why did I not understand him when he so plainly said a last good- bye? |
43497 | Why did they not signal by lighting a fire? |
43497 | Why should they speed away at random like soulless flying- machines? |
43497 | Why? |
43497 | Would it be granted me to find once more my home unchanged? |
43497 | Would it not be better to land and wait for the day? |
43497 | Would opposition still continue, or would the Tibetans prove more friendly than Europeans? |
43497 | Would the 13th be unfortunate for us also? |
43497 | Would the lama monasteries of Tibet give us such a friendly welcome? |
43497 | the culminating point of my career or a retrogression? |
37215 | A Yankee? |
37215 | A sailor? |
37215 | About Paddy? |
37215 | Against the fevers that killed de Jonge, eh? |
37215 | Ah Sing has attacked? |
37215 | Ah Sing? 37215 Ah Sing? |
37215 | Ah Sing? |
37215 | Ah? 37215 Am I always complaining,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | Am I not here to do justice? |
37215 | Am I to be used as a decoy and denied a voice on what shall be done with my prisoner? |
37215 | And Cho Seng? |
37215 | And what have you whites given us in return for your protection? |
37215 | And what is my reward,_ kapitein_? 37215 And your message, I understand, is for Mynheer Muller, the_ controlleur_?" |
37215 | Are these the things you seek forgiveness for? |
37215 | Are they worth anything? |
37215 | Are we going ashore this afternoon? |
37215 | Are ye hit? |
37215 | Are you absolutely sure? |
37215 | Are you hurt? |
37215 | Are you mad, my children of Bulungan? |
37215 | Are your dispositions made? |
37215 | At last, when I could say no more, he asked me:''_ Mynheer_, how did Mynheer de Jonge die?'' 37215 Ay, why does n''t she?" |
37215 | Behind this,_ mynheer_? 37215 But did n''t you fix our appointment for to- night?" |
37215 | But it will not convince you, eh,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | But the wild beasts, the tigers, and the leopards, and the orang- utans in the hill districts, and the snakes? |
37215 | But the_ bruinevels_,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | But where do you sleep? |
37215 | But who would be the man? |
37215 | But, Mynheer Gross, what can twenty- five do? 37215 By the way,"Peter Gross observed, stretching his long legs out to the limit of their reach,"you have n''t seen any of my men, have you? |
37215 | By torture? |
37215 | Can it be--? |
37215 | Can we catch them before they sail? |
37215 | Can you recommend any one, captain? |
37215 | Chi Wung, you peerless, priceless servant, how did you guess our needs? |
37215 | Convince''em-- what? |
37215 | Could n''t you arrange to have the meeting here, away from all that mob? 37215 Devil take the man, why does n''t he hurry?" |
37215 | Devil take you, is this the way you keep guard? |
37215 | Did I not tell you the first day we met, when I told you I asked no favors of you, and would accept none? 37215 Did I tell you about the letter I got from him? |
37215 | Did he try to make love to you? |
37215 | Did that bring a message from Ah Sing? |
37215 | Did you get anything else from him, any real evidence? |
37215 | Did you hear something like a muffled motor exhaust a little while ago? |
37215 | Did you think Koyala was so blind that she did not see the gun- boat in Bulungan harbor a week ago to- day? |
37215 | Do the Sadong Dyaks use the sumpitan? |
37215 | Do the coast Dyaks ever make trouble? |
37215 | Do you find it so, too? |
37215 | Do you know why you failed? 37215 Do you know why?" |
37215 | Do you remember what happened to Gogolu of Lombock the time he captured Lieutenant de Koren and his commando? |
37215 | Do you remember,_ mynheer_, when we first met? |
37215 | Do you? |
37215 | Does he ever mention me? |
37215 | Does that swine think he can make a Van Slyck skip like a butcher''s boy? 37215 Does twenty- five hundred a year appeal to you?" |
37215 | Eavesdropping,_ kapitein_? 37215 Eh? |
37215 | Forget you? 37215 Forgive you for cozening me with sweet words of_ our_ work, and_ our_ mission when you despised me for the blood of my mother that is in me? |
37215 | Forgive you for what? 37215 Forgive you?" |
37215 | From Ah Sing? |
37215 | Has my time come, too? |
37215 | Have you any one dependent on you? |
37215 | Have you brought servants? 37215 Have you done that?" |
37215 | Have you ever loved a woman, Pieter? |
37215 | Have you explained the matter I came here to discuss? |
37215 | Have you found a place where guilders grow on trees? |
37215 | Have you lost your senses? 37215 He does n''t speak of me at all?" |
37215 | He told you to build some huts? |
37215 | He turned state''s evidence? |
37215 | He''s coming here? |
37215 | Here is my arm, where are your manacles,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | How about Kapitein Van Slyck? 37215 How about Van Slyck?" |
37215 | How an American sailor and ten of his crew surprised Gogolu''s band, killed a great many of them, and took their prisoners away from them? 37215 How are the natives? |
37215 | How did Muller come to his death? |
37215 | How did they know it was Jahi who was responsible? |
37215 | How did you get here so soon? |
37215 | How did you hear of it? |
37215 | How did you hear of it? |
37215 | How do you know this? |
37215 | How far are we from the seacoast? |
37215 | How far from Lkath''s village? |
37215 | How far is it? |
37215 | How long have you owned that land? |
37215 | How much a head? |
37215 | How old are you, Vrind Pieter? |
37215 | How old are you? |
37215 | How shall I tell this light- hearted lad what is before us? |
37215 | How the devil did she do it? |
37215 | How the devil should I know? |
37215 | How the dickens do you expect to clean out that hell- hole with twenty- five men? 37215 I have a plan in mind-- if your excellency desires to hear it?" |
37215 | I have not heard of him before, have you,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | I laughed at you? |
37215 | I suppose you will be going back to Java soon again,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | I suppose you will enter the fort with your men? |
37215 | I was told you were going to marry-- naturally I believed-- but of course as you say it''s impossible--"I to marry? |
37215 | I,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | I,_ mynheer_? 37215 I?" |
37215 | If I do, who is going to deny me? |
37215 | If I should send him to Bulungan, would that she- devil, Koyala, make the same fool of him that she has of Muller? |
37215 | If he knows,_ mynheer kapitein_? 37215 If you believe that, why are you here?" |
37215 | In Ah Sing''s hands? |
37215 | In the heart of every man there''s something that responds to simple justice and fair dealing-- What''s that? |
37215 | In what way? |
37215 | In which it was stated that he killed himself because he felt he had lost your excellency''s confidence? |
37215 | Is a woman so necessary? |
37215 | Is he still alive? |
37215 | Is it thus you observe our laws, Ah Sing? |
37215 | Is the fool going to pieces? |
37215 | Is there any need to ask? |
37215 | Is this my reward? |
37215 | Is this the return I get for all I have done to drive the_ orang blanda_ out of Bulungan? 37215 It compromises Van Slyck?" |
37215 | It was at the mouth of the Abbas River, was it not? 37215 Jahi''s here?" |
37215 | Just send one of your boys for my salts, will you? |
37215 | Just what kind of a man do you want? |
37215 | Koyala bimeby mally him-- Mynheer Muller, go hide in bush? |
37215 | Koyala,he said, his voice vibrant with the gratitude he felt,"how can we repay you?" |
37215 | Koyala,he said, suddenly,"why do you hate us whites so?" |
37215 | Leveque''s daughter, Chawatangi''s grandchild? |
37215 | May I speak for a few moments,_ juffrouw_? |
37215 | Mebbe you comee Ah Sing''s house for two- three men? |
37215 | Mebbe you show Ah Sing one damn''fine ring Mauritius? |
37215 | Might I suggest that you let him go to the village right away, and keep away from you altogether? |
37215 | More time for what? 37215 Muller?" |
37215 | My place is with my people-- if you do not want me as hostage,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | My prisoner? |
37215 | Mynheer Gross, do you understand me correctly? |
37215 | Not for a resident''s post? 37215 Now this Koyala,"he asked,"where is she?" |
37215 | Now, Sachsen, answer me truthfully, has this Peter Gross an eye for women? |
37215 | Now, by the beard of Nassau, what joke is Chanticleer playing us now? |
37215 | Of de Jonge-- your predecessor? |
37215 | Oh,_ kapitein_,he exclaimed with relief,"is it you?" |
37215 | Paddy? |
37215 | Possibly you have served as_ controlleur_? |
37215 | Rajah, can we catch those China boys before they reach their proas? |
37215 | Sachsen,the governor demanded, the eagle gleaming in his lean, Cæsarian face,"where can I find a man that will bring peace to Bulungan?" |
37215 | See that ring, Ah Sing? |
37215 | Send a new resident? |
37215 | Shall I ask the lady to come in? |
37215 | Shall I get a light, sir? |
37215 | She is beautiful? |
37215 | She is n''t a pirate, is she? |
37215 | Since you say that you love no woman, let me ask you this-- have you ever seen Koyala? |
37215 | Sit here like turtles on a mud- bank while this Yankee lords it over us and ruins our business? 37215 So it is Mynheer Gross already with you, eh, Muller?" |
37215 | So, Mynheer Gross, the woman deceived you? |
37215 | So? |
37215 | Something''s happened since to cause you to lose confidence in her? |
37215 | Speak, Wong Ling Lo, you sailed with me on the_ Daisy Deane_, is it not so? |
37215 | Surely not at night? |
37215 | Surely you do not expect me to believe all this on your unsupported word,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | Tell me, Mynheer Gross, do you love my country? |
37215 | Tell me, does your_ baas_, the_ mynheer_, ever mention me? |
37215 | Tell me,_ kapitein_, what makes you think so? |
37215 | The fevers? |
37215 | The lad''s come to no harm? |
37215 | The new resident? |
37215 | The question is, what is he going to do? |
37215 | The work is a little new to me-- I presume you know that? |
37215 | Then he''s one of us? |
37215 | Then to- night you will forgive old Sachsen if he speaks plainly to you, more plainly than you would let other men talk? 37215 Then we''ll have to fight for it?" |
37215 | Then what in blazes are you goin''there for? |
37215 | Then you would rather die? |
37215 | They got us, did they? |
37215 | They say that in Batavia? |
37215 | They will kill him? |
37215 | To what province would you appoint me? |
37215 | Violent? |
37215 | Waking up, governor? |
37215 | Was he alone? 37215 We have n''t landed yet?" |
37215 | We need handsome men in Bulungan, do n''t we, captain? 37215 We''re going to fight?" |
37215 | Well, Mynheer Gross, how large a force will you need? |
37215 | Well, Peter, is your head clear enough to talk business? |
37215 | Well,_ generaal_? |
37215 | Well,_ juffrouw_, which of my_ controlleurs_ is in mischief now? |
37215 | What ails the doddering old fool now? |
37215 | What are we going to do,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | What are we going to do? |
37215 | What are you going to do when I present my claim? |
37215 | What are you going to do with him, Datu? |
37215 | What are you going to do with him? |
37215 | What are you going to do? |
37215 | What are your plans? |
37215 | What did he say? |
37215 | What did they tell you in Batavia? |
37215 | What did you wish to see me about? |
37215 | What do you know about Captain Van Slyck''s dealings with this gang? |
37215 | What do you mean, Sachsen? |
37215 | What do you mean? |
37215 | What do you say, Mynheer Gross? |
37215 | What do you think of the situation? |
37215 | What folly,_ mynheer kapitein_? |
37215 | What for um you wantee me? |
37215 | What for um you wantee me? |
37215 | What for um? |
37215 | What has that to do with Bulungan? |
37215 | What in the devil are you driving at, Sachsen? |
37215 | What is it, voice of Djath? |
37215 | What is it? |
37215 | What is it? |
37215 | What is that condition? |
37215 | What is that? |
37215 | What is that? |
37215 | What is there to harm me? |
37215 | What is this I hear? |
37215 | What is your name, sailor, and your ship? |
37215 | What message did it bring, Cho Seng? |
37215 | What new resident? |
37215 | What of Mynheer Muller? |
37215 | What possible reason could any of our crew have to leave? |
37215 | What proofs have you? |
37215 | What shall I do? |
37215 | What ship? |
37215 | What the devil is he driving at? |
37215 | What was your object,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | What will be my reward if I bring him back to you? |
37215 | What''s stirring now? |
37215 | What''s this? |
37215 | What-- what do you mean,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | What? 37215 When did she go?" |
37215 | When do you begin the census? |
37215 | When does he come here? |
37215 | When does your new resident arrive? |
37215 | When will you be able to take over the administration of Bulungan,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | When? |
37215 | Where are you going, Koyala? |
37215 | Where have I heard that name before? |
37215 | Where is Inchi? |
37215 | Where is the resident? |
37215 | Where shall I find this Peter Gross, Sachsen? |
37215 | Where will they be quartered? |
37215 | Where will you find them,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | Where''s Paddy? |
37215 | Who else would it be? |
37215 | Who else? |
37215 | Who found the body of the slain man? |
37215 | Who is it, Koyala? |
37215 | Who is it? |
37215 | Who is she? |
37215 | Who is that? |
37215 | Who mentioned Ah Sing? 37215 Who shall be the first to make blood- brother of this white man?" |
37215 | Who? 37215 Who? |
37215 | Who? |
37215 | Who? |
37215 | Whom were you planning on taking? |
37215 | Why are n''t you with Koyala? |
37215 | Why did you do this,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | Why did you laugh at me then? |
37215 | Why do you ask,_ juffrouw_? |
37215 | Why do you want to go there? |
37215 | Why does n''t she come out where she can get the breeze? |
37215 | Why not? |
37215 | Why should I believe you? |
37215 | Why should I trust you? |
37215 | Why you do n''t speak, Mynheer Gross? |
37215 | Will you go with us? |
37215 | Will you listen with an open mind? 37215 Will you pledge, brother?" |
37215 | Wo n''t you be seated? |
37215 | Ye do n''t want nothin'', do ye? 37215 You accept this post?" |
37215 | You are a teetotaler? |
37215 | You are ready enough to scheme murders if there is a_ gulden_ in it for you, but you have no counsel for a friend, eh? |
37215 | You are sure that you will not sell me to him,_ mynheer kapitein_? |
37215 | You can prove that? |
37215 | You can think of no reason why his excellency should be offended with us,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | You desire him? |
37215 | You got enough to clear up this mess? |
37215 | You have a message for us? |
37215 | You have found it difficult, then, I presume, to keep up with all your work? |
37215 | You have heard from Ah Sing? |
37215 | You have n''t told me where you found Paddy? |
37215 | You have seen her, Sachsen? |
37215 | You have seen her? |
37215 | You know that, too? |
37215 | You makee long trip? |
37215 | You refuse? |
37215 | You refuse? |
37215 | You say he is of Batavia, Koyala? |
37215 | You stole''em, I s''pose? |
37215 | You think twenty- five men can do all that? |
37215 | You think-- she-- sometimes thinks of me? |
37215 | You understand accounts, of course? |
37215 | You were looking for some one,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | You will forgive me, will you not,_ mynheer_, for taking such liberties in your house? |
37215 | You will have an establishment,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | You will stay here? |
37215 | You will take your people with you? |
37215 | You''ll be back by sundown? |
37215 | You''ll-- desert-- will you? |
37215 | You''re going to arrest them? |
37215 | You''re going to trust it to Muller? |
37215 | You''re going to use the fort garrison, too, are n''t you? |
37215 | You''re not hurt? |
37215 | You''re sure it was Ah Sing''s voice you heard? |
37215 | You''ve known me since I was a lad, Sachsen; you''ve known all my comings and goings; why do you ask me such-- rot? |
37215 | You,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | You- you will not do anything violent,_ kapitein_? |
37215 | Your excellency is in earnest? |
37215 | Your refusal is final? |
37215 | Your servant has been with you a long time,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | _ Donder en bliksem_, does Ah Sing know this? |
37215 | _ Hanu Token, Hanu Token_, spirits of the highlands, whither are you taking me? |
37215 | _ Ja, mynheer._"You understand you''ll get a bullet through the head at the first sign of treachery? |
37215 | _ Kapitein_--you mean he might come to an unhappy end on the way? |
37215 | _ Nu_, Mynheer Gross, what troops will you need? |
37215 | _ Wat de drommel_,he roared,"do you expect me to pay all,_ kapitein_, all? |
37215 | ''What''s this?'' |
37215 | ''_ You_ think you can buy our women, too?'' |
37215 | Abruptly dropping the topic, Carver asked:"At what hour does the council meet?" |
37215 | Absent- mindedly he mused:"I wonder if Captain Van Slyck is there?" |
37215 | Ah Sing pretty near got ye, eh, Peter?" |
37215 | Am I so ugly that you can not bear to see me?" |
37215 | And a land grant in Java that will make you rich for life if you make those hill tribes stick to their plantations? |
37215 | And did they not find a strip of red calico from a hillman''s chawat in the bush?" |
37215 | And eight thousand guilders a year? |
37215 | And there have been raids--""So you assume it''s Koyala?" |
37215 | And you,_ juffrouw_?" |
37215 | Answer, Lkath, whose voice is heard before yours in Sadong?" |
37215 | Are there any children?" |
37215 | At Wolang''s village?" |
37215 | At last she asked in a low voice, that sounded strange and harsh even to her:"Why do you hold me,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | At what hour will you want them?" |
37215 | B. the_ Coryander_ and no extra charges?" |
37215 | But in the night I went to him and said:''Shall the vulture rest in the eagle''s nest?'' |
37215 | But seeing his chief so concerned, he suggested soberly:"Ca n''t we beat out to sea and lose them during the night?" |
37215 | But tell me what your master has been doing?" |
37215 | But what the deuce do they want with Rouse, if they have n''t killed him?" |
37215 | CHAPTER XIII A FEVER ANTIDOTE"You have found Bulungan a difficult province to govern,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | Ca n''t you see why I want him? |
37215 | Can you go back next week?" |
37215 | Choose ye, what shall it be?" |
37215 | Did n''t I tell you to be careful at night? |
37215 | Did not the feathers on the arrow show that it came from Jahi''s tribe? |
37215 | Did they use the sumpitan? |
37215 | Did you hear it?" |
37215 | Do n''t you recall?" |
37215 | Do n''t you see my Dyaks fitting arrows in their blow- pipes?'' |
37215 | Do you believe that, Vrind Pieter?" |
37215 | Do you believe that?" |
37215 | Do you believe that?" |
37215 | Do you have much difficulty?" |
37215 | Do you remember?" |
37215 | Do you think you can find them?" |
37215 | Does it concern the new resident we are to have?" |
37215 | Forgive you for leading me around like a pet parrot to say your words to my people and delude them? |
37215 | Forgive you for the ignominy you have heaped upon me, the shame you have brought to me, the loss of friendships and the laughter of my enemies?" |
37215 | Gross?" |
37215 | Gross?" |
37215 | Gross?" |
37215 | Had Carver found him? |
37215 | Had he been mistaken, after all, in his estimate of the man? |
37215 | Handsome white men?" |
37215 | Has he missed me?" |
37215 | Has he not a spy in the_ paleis_ itself?" |
37215 | Has he not_ agenten_ in every corner of this archipelago? |
37215 | Has there been a month without a raid? |
37215 | Have I your excellency''s permission?" |
37215 | Have n''t I, avunculus?" |
37215 | Have they fed you?" |
37215 | Have y''got three good hands that know one rope from another?" |
37215 | Have you grown a conscience?" |
37215 | Have you spent a whole month in the stockade without being called to beat back some of these thieving plunderers and drive them into their hills?" |
37215 | He asked Paddy:"How long have we been here?" |
37215 | He cocked an eye at the vessel himself and remarked:"Is that soap- dish faster than ours, or are we gaining?" |
37215 | He merely remarked:"Of course I''ll go?" |
37215 | He was of no further use to us, why should he live?" |
37215 | His face was imperturbable as he repeated in the same mild, disarming accents:"What for um you wantee me?" |
37215 | His thought was:"Good God, what am I going to do with this lump of jelly- fish?" |
37215 | His tone was a trifle less gruff as he asked:"Can you handle a gun?" |
37215 | How far from the stream?" |
37215 | How much longer must we possess our souls in patience while these things go on?" |
37215 | How so,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | I ask you again, what can twenty- five do against so many?" |
37215 | I do n''t see how I am ever going to straighten things out-- then there are those other things-- what will he say?" |
37215 | I suppose his excellency told you that?" |
37215 | I trust I will have your coöperation,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | I wonder why they did n''t sink with their ship?" |
37215 | If he, who so fondly dreamed that his heart was marble, could fall so quickly and so fatally, could he censure her? |
37215 | Instantly controlling herself, she said in carefully modulated tones:"You sent for me,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | Is it admiration for Koyala''s beauty or your keen sense of justice that leads you to so warm a defense?" |
37215 | Is it good, Lkath?" |
37215 | Is it not because she was young and comely, a woman unafraid, that you remember her?" |
37215 | Is that satisfactory?" |
37215 | Is there anything else you need, besides the usual stores?" |
37215 | Jahi comes to- morrow afternoon, you say?" |
37215 | Koyala?" |
37215 | Leave Bulungan? |
37215 | May I have your pledge for that?" |
37215 | My lover? |
37215 | Now you come to me, after all that has happened, and say:''Koyala, will you forget and help me make Bulungan happy?'' |
37215 | Or was the resident''s sudden assumption of dignity a petty vanity finding vent in the display of newly acquired powers? |
37215 | Oracularly he suggested:"Would it not be wise, your excellency, to give Mynheer Muller, the_ controlleur_, more time? |
37215 | Pander to this Yankee deck- scrubber until he comes?" |
37215 | Presently he said:"If it is not too much trouble,_ mynheer_, could you show me my house?" |
37215 | She walked up to me-- I could see a hurricane was threatening-- and she said:"''You are English? |
37215 | So?" |
37215 | Suddenly he said:"And what if I should appoint you a resident, sailor?" |
37215 | Swallowing his disappointment, he asked in mock dismay:"Another complaint,_ juffrouw_?" |
37215 | Talk English-- no China talk, savvy?" |
37215 | The governor leaned aggressively across the table and asked the one- word pointed question:"How?" |
37215 | The words you did not say, just now,_ orang blanda_, when you held these two hands?" |
37215 | The_ orang kayas_ sent their runners to me and said:''Shall we give the_ controlleur_ the count of our people?'' |
37215 | Then you accept?" |
37215 | There are two civilians at the forward rail-- come,_ kapitein_, do you think one of them is he?" |
37215 | There will be plenty for him to do in the bush, eh,_ mynheer_? |
37215 | This is your first post as resident?" |
37215 | Time for breakfast?" |
37215 | Turning to the_ controlleur_, he asked in a voice of unruffled calm:"May I speak to you privately,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | Van Slyck smiled cynically and observed:"Am I in the way, Mynheer Gross?" |
37215 | Was it not exclusively a weapon of the hill Dyaks? |
37215 | Was it possible that he had misjudged his man? |
37215 | Was there something back of it? |
37215 | Was this apparent guilelessness and simplicity a mask? |
37215 | Watching Muller closely, he inquired:"Then I can expect you to spread the net,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | Were Koyala and Muller right? |
37215 | Were there any of Lkath''s people with him?" |
37215 | Were these Dyaks friends or enemies? |
37215 | What are they for?" |
37215 | What d''ye say?" |
37215 | What d''ye think it''s worth?" |
37215 | What do you advise?" |
37215 | What do you say, Vrind Pieter?" |
37215 | What do you say?" |
37215 | What do you think of the plan, my dear Koyala?" |
37215 | What does Ah Sing expect us to do? |
37215 | What has Peter Gross, freeholder of Batavia, done to merit such an appointment at our hands, Sachsen?" |
37215 | What has happened at the residency during the past week?" |
37215 | What have you and your race brought to my people and to me but misery, and more misery? |
37215 | What is my reward? |
37215 | What is your answer?" |
37215 | What is your answer?" |
37215 | What say you to this, Mynheer Gross?" |
37215 | What say you to three hundred of our best colonials,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | What shall I answer,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | What should he say if he ever saw Carver again? |
37215 | What would happen then? |
37215 | What''s there about Cho Seng to be afraid of?" |
37215 | What?" |
37215 | When they were alone Lkath asked:"How did you know, O wise one?" |
37215 | Where did you get the news, Koyala?" |
37215 | Where was the body? |
37215 | Who did you say it is,_ mynheer_?" |
37215 | Who does n''t?" |
37215 | Who is it from, Koyala?" |
37215 | Whom must I serve, my brothers, the thief who takes and gives or the thief who takes all and gives nothing?" |
37215 | Why not order a copy to- day? |
37215 | Why? |
37215 | Why? |
37215 | Why?" |
37215 | Will you listen?" |
37215 | Will you pledge us this?" |
37215 | With whom I ask you, princes of Bulungan, shall I chew the betel of friendship?" |
37215 | Would five hundred men be enough, Mynheer Gross? |
37215 | Would he land this way, like a pedler with his pack, if he did? |
37215 | Would the taking of this one white life compensate for the misery you would bring on our people?" |
37215 | Would you care to read it?" |
37215 | You are not telling me an untruth, are you, Cho Seng?" |
37215 | You came with fair promises, how have you fulfilled them? |
37215 | You will be ready to go the first of June, then?" |
37215 | You will be true to him, Cho Seng?" |
37215 | You will listen, and take his words to heart, and consider them well, Pieter?" |
37215 | You''re sure you have n''t overlooked them? |
37215 | You, Koyala? |
37215 | _ Kapitein_, get your wits to work; what is the best way to get rid of this Yankee?" |
37215 | _ generaal_, what do you say?" |
43186 | ''Is there nobody but yourself on my side?'' 43186 ''The captain went white as a ghost, and shouted out something in German, like as if he was calling"Who''s there?" |
43186 | ''What else could I say, Otto, to save the diamonds, and my life, and perhaps yours? 43186 ''Where are the other men?'' |
43186 | A woman, is n''t it? |
43186 | About what? |
43186 | And listen, Julius, you''ll be able to help Roy just a little, too, wo n''t you? |
43186 | And that? |
43186 | And then? |
43186 | And there''s your third chapter; and your fourth, too, Roy-- a dramatic situation, heh? |
43186 | And they could n''t? |
43186 | And what do you suppose he did when he saw who it was? |
43186 | And what does''_ meat_''mean? |
43186 | And why should they not all be satisfied-- except the captain, who is perhaps only pretending to be satisfied? 43186 And you love him, Mimika?" |
43186 | And you mean to say that a man like that is going about in the United States now? |
43186 | And''_ colossal_''? |
43186 | And, Burgess? |
43186 | Are the papers in your cabin? |
43186 | Are ve torpedoed? |
43186 | Are you all right? |
43186 | Are you aware that you endanger your life by this language? 43186 Are you galling me?" |
43186 | Are you sure? |
43186 | Been finding it stormy in the canal, cap? |
43186 | But what does it mean? 43186 Curious, is n''t it?" |
43186 | Did n''t you say there was a log you wanted to show me? |
43186 | Did n''t you send a wireless the other day, Mr. Neilsen, to somebody by the name of Hyacinth? |
43186 | Did you find it too cold? |
43186 | Do most of the men feel like that? |
43186 | Do you know what I''ve got in this? |
43186 | Do you know what he was calling out in his nightmare? |
43186 | Do you mind giving me that little shoe at your feet there? |
43186 | Do you suppose, Captain Kendrick, that they ever caught that submarine? |
43186 | Do you think so? |
43186 | Does nobody know what became of him? 43186 Even if I were to pay?" |
43186 | Ever seen that flag before? |
43186 | Glorious, are n''t they? |
43186 | Got any kids, cap? 43186 Had you known him for long?" |
43186 | Have you got the letter? |
43186 | Have you heard,said Davidson reflectively,"they''re wanting more trawler skippers down at the base?" |
43186 | Have you read Anatole France? |
43186 | Have you really an uncle named Hyacinth? 43186 How beautifully we compose this tale together, heh? |
43186 | How did you escape from the submarine? |
43186 | How long will it take us to drift into the right position? |
43186 | I wonder what they are up to now? |
43186 | Is that a man or a woman? |
43186 | Is that so? |
43186 | Is this Mr. Harvey? 43186 Is this an American ship? |
43186 | It''s not a pleasant sight, is it? |
43186 | Like the_ Deutschland_, you mean? |
43186 | May I look at the photograph, sir? 43186 Mimika, child, what do you mean? |
43186 | Mr. Grant, of the_ Tribune_, was n''t it, sir? |
43186 | Now, Roy, you know what the conning tower of a submarine is like inside? 43186 Tell me,"said Mr. Neilsen,"is there any possibility of our-- of our meeting a ship-- er-- bound the other way?" |
43186 | That''s his dressing gown you''re wearing, is n''t it? |
43186 | Then they would open the lower lid, heh? |
43186 | Very well, Roy, there is at least four chapters to be made from that, heh? 43186 Was that why you wanted to get off and go back?" |
43186 | Were any of the boats missing? |
43186 | What are you doing here? |
43186 | What do they think about things in England, sir? |
43186 | What do you mean, Mimika, by help? |
43186 | What do you mean? 43186 What do you mean?" |
43186 | What does this mean? 43186 What follows?" |
43186 | What sort of a man was Burgess? |
43186 | What the devil is it? |
43186 | What the hell are they shouting about? |
43186 | What''s the translation of''_ onions_''? |
43186 | When do they think it will be over? |
43186 | Where are the clam- fishers? |
43186 | Where do you keep your confidential papers? |
43186 | Who knows? |
43186 | Whose appetite did you say? |
43186 | Why, I''m not too old for a trawler, am I? |
43186 | Will it be possible for me to be taken off and return? 43186 Would you like thum tea?" |
43186 | Yes, but what did Harper mean by saying he heard Mrs. Burgess singing in the cabin that night? |
43186 | You heard him, Roy? |
43186 | You remember no ship coming to this island? |
43186 | You''re not a relative of his, are you? |
43186 | You''ve never been in London, Miss Depew? |
43186 | _ Appendix?_ H''m; let me see. 43186 _ Tonsils? |
43186 | ''Captain,''he says,''did you mean your words to those men?'' |
43186 | ''Did you hear it?'' |
43186 | ''Have you ever considered,''he says,''how one little clump of wild thyme will go on pouring its heart out on the wind? |
43186 | ''Ow''s this? |
43186 | ''Why should they wish to kill me, Otto?'' |
43186 | ( Do not mathematicians declare that if you could throw a stone into infinity, it would return to your hand?) |
43186 | And she will have to tell him all about her honeymoon, heh?" |
43186 | And what d''you make of this message''e''s just''anded in?" |
43186 | And what''s more_,''he says,''_I seen''em!_''"''Seen what?'' |
43186 | And, look''ere, steward; not a word about this to any one, you understand?" |
43186 | Are we downhearted, Tommy?'' |
43186 | Are you crazy?" |
43186 | Are you not trying to save them?" |
43186 | Besides, where had they gone, and how? |
43186 | But do n''t it prove that there''s no use for Christianity? |
43186 | But do you think a few hundred shining pebbles will make any odds? |
43186 | But he would buy Liberty Bonds, heh?" |
43186 | But what else can you do if you have n''t any other way of signaling? |
43186 | But where was the Captain? |
43186 | But you know the meaning of this? |
43186 | Can you get as far as that rock under water?" |
43186 | Do n''t you think so?" |
43186 | Do you hear that?" |
43186 | Do you see those guns?" |
43186 | Do you see those little smudges of smoke out yonder? |
43186 | Does n''t that kindle your imagination?" |
43186 | Eh, what?" |
43186 | Even if he received an assurance that the_ Hispaniola_ would be spared, how could he know that he was being told the truth? |
43186 | Ever hear of Senator Martin? |
43186 | Ever hear of our senator, cap, who wanted to know why the women and kids on the_ Lusitania_ were n''t put into the water- tight compartments? |
43186 | Ever played with the ouija board? |
43186 | Follow me? |
43186 | Funny idea, is n''t it, a man ghosting himself like that?" |
43186 | Funny that it should have made such an impression, is n''t it?" |
43186 | Had he evolved these phrases of the code out of some subconscious memory and formed them into an intelligible sentence? |
43186 | Have I the might to do it, Otto? |
43186 | He had no will to power, heh? |
43186 | Hear that?" |
43186 | His face is as white and smooth as Mimika''s shoulders-- but there is no powder on it, heh? |
43186 | How can I find out?" |
43186 | How did I come to know it? |
43186 | How do you translate that?" |
43186 | How far can you swim under water?" |
43186 | I am glad you see the advantage in being too proud to fight, my friend, eh?" |
43186 | If what they say is true, why in the hell do they want the war ever to stop at all? |
43186 | In six months I had found the queen, Mimika, heh?" |
43186 | Is it not so, Captain Crump?" |
43186 | It''s curious, Mr. Neilsen, how quickly we''ve changed all our ideas about the value of human life, is n''t it? |
43186 | Like to hear it? |
43186 | Los Angeles-- what a name, heh? |
43186 | Mr. Harper, is my husband sane?'' |
43186 | Neilsen?" |
43186 | Neilsen?" |
43186 | Neilsen?" |
43186 | Not at the British front?... |
43186 | Now I have chosen seas of peach blossom; and no danger of shipwreck, heh? |
43186 | Now what is his next thought, Mimika?" |
43186 | Now, what do you think of this for a scheme?" |
43186 | Now, what does he say in''Fishers of Men''?" |
43186 | Now, what does''_ tonsils_''mean?" |
43186 | Of course, it''s war- time; but the German Government wants to be honorable, do n''t it-- like any other government?" |
43186 | Such a pretty name for an elderly gentleman, is n''t it? |
43186 | That is good, heh? |
43186 | That will make the second chapter, heh? |
43186 | The little sister will have much to tell her brother when she sees him for the first time after-- how long has he been in Europe? |
43186 | The ship is not damaged in any vay?" |
43186 | Then he asked the skipper a mysterious question:"Is it impossible?" |
43186 | There is your first chapter, heh? |
43186 | This is Mrs. Davidson,--Margaret Grant-- you remember, do n''t you? |
43186 | This is where he lives, see?" |
43186 | Tonsils?_ Oh, yes; here we are. |
43186 | Two years? |
43186 | Vat is the rest of i d?" |
43186 | Was it Tennyson or Milton who had written it? |
43186 | Was it possible that in his agitation he had unconsciously written this thing down? |
43186 | Was this His high intent, After two thousand years Of blood and tears?__ God help us, if we fight For right and not for might. |
43186 | Well, I''ve got to arrange it somehow.... Wo n''t you come and see me and talk it over?... |
43186 | What are we to do when they come round in a boat?" |
43186 | What became of the little Bavarian?" |
43186 | What can you make of it?" |
43186 | What d''you think?" |
43186 | What did it mean? |
43186 | What does anything matter when one looks up there? |
43186 | What shall we do to''i m next?" |
43186 | What was she like?" |
43186 | What would be yours, Roy, in that position?" |
43186 | What would you do in that position, Roy? |
43186 | What''s the next move?" |
43186 | When are they going to do it?'' |
43186 | When it was decided to send him to the United States on a merchant submarine, what was his first thought? |
43186 | When you''ve got them, how am I to know that you wo n''t shoot, anyway, and-- what''s the latest language of your diplomacy?--''leave no traces''? |
43186 | Where are they? |
43186 | Where does it all come from?'' |
43186 | Why should we return? |
43186 | Why the devil have they left everything open to the first- comer?" |
43186 | Why? |
43186 | Will you come-- to- morrow afternoon? |
43186 | Yes, as a woman correspondent.... Oh, they do n''t allow it? |
43186 | You are sending people out to the front all the time, are n''t you, in connection with your newspapers? |
43186 | You do n''t happen to have a lasso in your pocket, do you? |
43186 | You do n''t think he could have seen anything to set him off like, sir? |
43186 | You know the song,''Down the World with Marna,''do n''t you? |
43186 | You mean they could n''t close the upper lid again?" |
43186 | You see? |
43186 | You want his autograph, do n''t you?" |
43186 | You want to pass a night in the trenches, do n''t you? |
43186 | You wo n''t come down with me to meet Roy?" |
43186 | You''d use your trousers, would n''t you, if you had n''t anything else? |
43186 | You''re a correspondent, sir, are n''t you? |
43186 | is n''t he splendid?" |
43186 | muttered the owner of the banjo,"where did the old witch learn to do that?" |
47148 | Am I a genius? |
47148 | Boy WantedAre you the boy? |
47148 | How old is the child? |
47148 | How shall I win success in life? |
47148 | What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
47148 | When shall I begin to train my child? |
47148 | A sorry picture, is n''t it? |
47148 | All such reasoning is very, very foolish, is n''t it? |
47148 | And can we all be geniuses? |
47148 | And what does it profit him if he shall become a multi- millionaire and lose his health of mind or body? |
47148 | And what is a wasted hour? |
47148 | And why not? |
47148 | And you know one of them, I guess, because I see you smile; And is he little Johnnie"Now"or Jimmie"Waitawhile"? |
47148 | Are you cultivating the habit of sticking to it? |
47148 | Are you going to win the admiration of the world, by and by? |
47148 | Brother-- you with growl and frown-- Why do n''t you move from Grumbletown, Where everything is tumbled down And skies are dark and dreary? |
47148 | But what is a fair opportunity? |
47148 | But where does he eat his lunch at noon? |
47148 | Could you, If you could n''t determine you''d try? |
47148 | Do we not mark in a book passages which seem to have a direct reference to ourselves? |
47148 | Do you like the boy who in a game of ball is whining all the time because he can not be constantly at the bat? |
47148 | Does the mother, or father, or sister, or brother, who knows you best, hold you in the highest esteem? |
47148 | Has it ever occurred to you that the world entertains the same thought regarding yourself? |
47148 | Have n''t you the time? |
47148 | Have you a cheerful member in your circle of friends, a cheerful neighbor in the vicinity of your home? |
47148 | Have you already won the admiration of that little, all- important world that now lies just about you? |
47148 | Have you patience and determination? |
47148 | How much time are you going to waste to- day? |
47148 | How much time did you waste yesterday? |
47148 | II"AM I A GENIUS?" |
47148 | III OPPORTUNITY 35 What is a fair chance? |
47148 | If my days are fully occupied, what has he to set against them? |
47148 | If you just get a chance? |
47148 | Is it to be a good, firm, durable foundation that will stand through all the years to come? |
47148 | Is n''t it the disposition to make the most of your opportunities that is lacking? |
47148 | Is n''t the real manly boy the one who can lose cheerfully when he has played the game the best he possibly could and has been honestly defeated? |
47148 | Now that you have asked the question, why not carefully think it over and determine what the answer should be? |
47148 | Of what value is this book to you? |
47148 | On another occasion when asked:"Mr. Edison, do n''t you believe that genius is inspiration?" |
47148 | That you''re"stuck on"your task--(is that slang?) |
47148 | The thoughtful boy will ever feel called upon to ask his highest understanding:"Which is the right road for me to take?" |
47148 | What does he do after supper? |
47148 | What is there for you to do? |
47148 | What others may say of us is not of so much moment; the important question is,"Is it true?" |
47148 | When are you to begin? |
47148 | Where does he go when he leaves his boarding- house at night? |
47148 | Where does he spend his Sundays and holidays? |
47148 | Where shall he tarry and whom shall he harry At morning and night with his burden of cares? |
47148 | Who is that, sir? |
47148 | Who wants you? |
47148 | Who will partake of his worrisome wares? |
47148 | X REAL SUCCESS 129 Are you the boy wanted? |
47148 | [ Illustration: PATRICK HENRY DELIVERING HIS CELEBRATED SPEECH] CHAPTER II"AM I A GENIUS?" |
47148 | [ Sidenote: Dost thou love life? |
47148 | [ Sidenote: Impossible? |
47148 | [ Sidenote: My young friend, do you know that there is but one person who can recommend you? |
47148 | [ Sidenote: The artist who can realize his ideal has missed the true gain of art, as"a man''s reach should exceed his grasp, or what''s heaven for?" |
47148 | [ Sidenote: What is a gentleman? |
48141 | A kindergarten,echoed Jim,"what''s that?" |
48141 | Have you heard that Mr. Grizzle Prairie Dog has been found? |
48141 | Have you told Mrs. Grizzle the sad news? |
48141 | No, where? |
48141 | O, where have you been all night, Wish- ton- wish? |
48141 | Where can my birdie be? |
48141 | Where can she be? |
48141 | Where do you suppose we are? |
48141 | A good husband? |
48141 | All one family? |
48141 | Are there to be no more of them?" |
48141 | Do n''t you think so, too? |
48141 | For are they not a symbol of our own death and resurrection when we shall awake in His glorious likeness?" |
48141 | Presently he called out again and this time with greater tact:"How are your charming daughters this morning?" |
48141 | Since the different teas are all from the same species of plant why should there be such a difference in price? |
48141 | Sorry? |
48141 | What should I do? |
48141 | Would n''t the little readers of BIRDS AND ALL NATURE enjoy a talk with a mother- bird? |
48141 | Yet still there must be Some sweet mission for me, For have I not warmed you and cheered you to- night?" |
45504 | A good land here; but what is there to come, where Art begins? |
45504 | A tailor? |
45504 | Ah, when will the power of it cease? |
45504 | And how should we know what ought to be, and what ought not to be, in our model, if we are ignorant of his or her construction? |
45504 | And why not? |
45504 | And yet, what does it matter in the end what we have to do in order to keep up the life, if the life is devoted to the thought? |
45504 | And, after all, what does it matter whether people say we are like So- and- so or not, if we are doing our very best? |
45504 | Are those eyes exactly like the eyes of the one you love or mourn for? |
45504 | Are you a gardener? |
45504 | As for the other class, do they help the work done, or that has to be done? |
45504 | But to believers, what is it but a continuation of everlasting joy? |
45504 | But to the hopeless, or spirits who can not rest upon a hope, what are the pleasures of time but days spent in a condemned cell to the doomed? |
45504 | But what made critics of this class? |
45504 | But what of all that? |
45504 | But who can grow affectionate over''plates of iron''? |
45504 | Can the painter do any better than imitate the street showman with the three colours? |
45504 | Can the_ wish_ engender power? |
45504 | Could any man want to paint better? |
45504 | Did Milton look the poet to Cromwell that he is to us? |
45504 | Did they look like mice peeping in and out as she tripped( limped) along according to the poet? |
45504 | Did they not comfort you more then than now when you know what they really are, as you watched them grow moist with their great sympathy? |
45504 | Did you ever see the like of that?'' |
45504 | Do moths add to the value of clothes? |
45504 | Do the waves and the winds claim a unity with the ship now as they did then? |
45504 | Do you want the cold clay that is lying under the senseless stones, or the spirit which is hovering about you still? |
45504 | Does not the painter paint his picture to be seen, and can anyone admire the modesty that will not hold it up to the passer- by? |
45504 | For instance, if we are eating something nice, is it no longer nice if our neighbour says it is not? |
45504 | For what? |
45504 | From what? |
45504 | Has the painter, in letting go the exact facsimile, not given you something beyond and better-- the motion and soul of that cornfield? |
45504 | Have I made it? |
45504 | Have I made it? |
45504 | How, then, ought we to do it? |
45504 | If it was delicate, refined, bold, masterly before, how could it be vulgar, coarse, or commonplace afterwards? |
45504 | In summer, ay, or in winter either, are we warmer gloved or ungloved on a winter day? |
45504 | Is Whistler wrong in his mode of expressing himself? |
45504 | Is it a sign of ignorance to frankly confess that this sort of thing is beyond you? |
45504 | Is it a_ dead_ or a_ living_ portrait of the corn- ears? |
45504 | Is it not a good land to poet, painter, utilitarian, agnostic, and devotionalist? |
45504 | Is it not all equally pitiful in its progression as we watch the stages? |
45504 | Is it red, blue, green, orange, purple, yellow, or gems and sparkles of fire? |
45504 | Is it subtlety to mask over your meaning with words? |
45504 | Is it the heat fumes which are growing denser as the day advances? |
45504 | Is it the sound of the instruments we are listening to? |
45504 | Is the painted cornfield exactly like the cornfields you have seen? |
45504 | Is this not a better picture than their-- consumptive saints?'' |
45504 | It seems perfect, can I wonder that it is not understood? |
45504 | Shall we alter what nature has done so well, introduce our poor little rules, and tailorise the picture until it stands reproachless? |
45504 | Take what you please, as an example,--a street scene crowded with people,--what is it to the looker out of a window? |
45504 | The noble path of honour is pointed out, and we glow as we read, with the desire to follow: what sermon could teach us more? |
45504 | They may be the exact shape and size and shade, but are they the eyes you used to look into and let out your soul after? |
45504 | Through dark hours of cold affliction, from sharp thorns we pulled the rose; Marvel you at our assurance, at the pride of our repose? |
45504 | Walk hard, because fatigue ought to be a pleasure? |
45504 | Were they not happy times when Jack the Giant- Killer was the veritable history of a brave boy? |
45504 | What about? |
45504 | What are rags and empty purses when to heights like these they rise? |
45504 | What difference did that signature make in the merit of the picture? |
45504 | What does this suggest, if not the grand cathedrals with their pillars and arched domes? |
45504 | What had their battles done but for his pen? |
45504 | What is glazing and scumbling? |
45504 | What is our pain or our pleasure to the partner of it all? |
45504 | What is that which we have given it? |
45504 | What sailor of the grand old school can take a pride in cold iron or cast steel? |
45504 | What so unlike this idea as the fashionable votary, while she strangles and strains to get out of the superfine, creaseless kid cages? |
45504 | Where is the mock modesty that dares to blush before these perfections? |
45504 | Which feels the cold most, the Highlander with his kilt and bare legs, or the Sassenach with his drawers and breeches? |
45504 | Which protects the nose most in a frost, a veil or a handful of snow rubbed briskly over that organ? |
45504 | While, as for the next great naval engagement, when ironclad faces ironclad, what chance will they have for their lives? |
45504 | Who is it by? |
45504 | Who wants to see mice under petticoats? |
45504 | Who, with poetry or taste, cares to see feet that can be compared to mice? |
45504 | Why ca n''t you do it like this, now?'' |
45504 | Why not save our precious time for something so much more worthy of it-- the picture? |
45504 | Why should we not correct our sketches-- done for the sake of the colour and feeling, and not for the form-- from faithful photographs? |
45504 | Why? |
45504 | Will my pain give me yours? |
45504 | Would he be charmed with the colour of a mashed- up bit of flesh? |
45504 | Would this man care to have a wife without a nose or with indefinite features? |
45504 | Yet in the hands which have made it what it is, what may we, the lookers- on, not make out of it? |
45504 | _ BEAUTY_ What is Beauty? |
45504 | _"What is that horrid thing?" |
45504 | do they add to the pleasure of the spectator, or instruct the worker by their pertness or sneers? |
45504 | does mildew improve walls? |
45504 | does rust assist the brightness of polished steel? |
45504 | or do white ants strengthen the rafters they bed in? |
45504 | the tinkle of the silver ornaments round the ankles of the dancers? |
45504 | the voices of the singers? |
45504 | what? |
48111 | Are you a slave or a fugitive? |
48111 | Are you free from consumption, fits, leprosy, or any contagious disease? |
48111 | Are you in debt? |
48111 | Are you in the full possession of all your mental faculties? |
48111 | Are you of the male sex? |
48111 | Are you over twenty years of age? |
48111 | Do your parents give their consent to the step you are now about to take? |
48111 | Have you ever been bewitched or in the power of the magicians? |
48111 | Have you the requisite utensils and garments? |
48111 | Why do you wish to know? |
48111 | A remark once made by a Siamese to an English resident is only too true--"What good are your Consuls and Ministers to you? |
48111 | And the king, doubting his meaning, said,''What do you mean by the endurance of a vulture?'' |
48111 | Are they such as are suitable to each other?" |
48111 | As they lay in wait, they said one to another,"Why does our king never go to sleep now? |
48111 | At last he remarked,"Well, what do you want me to do for you?" |
48111 | But how is it with regard to the ages and the birthdays of the parties? |
48111 | By way of recapitulation at the close of his lesson he asked one who had shown intense incredulity,"What shape is the world?" |
48111 | Many people saw them frequently groping about in these unhealthy, unfrequented localities, and asked them wonderingly,"What are you doing there? |
48111 | On pointing out one person to another and asking"Who is that?" |
48111 | Quite recently a debate was held at the Bangkok Literary Institute on"What is the shape of the world?" |
48111 | Says the Chinese maritime philosopher,"No have got eye; how can see?" |
48111 | What are you looking for?" |
48111 | What do the parents say?" |
48111 | What of a garment of skins? |
48111 | Why these sleepless hours?" |
48111 | [ Illustration:"CAN I GIVE YOU A LIFT, REVEREND FATHERS?"] |
42923 | Ah yes, but in the old story when St. Nicholas arrived, an angel came with him: are you right sure there''s not an angel in the room with you now? |
42923 | Alone? 42923 And after the third Father-- who gets me next? |
42923 | And have n''t you any cousins who give picnics? |
42923 | And how many do_ you_ send? |
42923 | And what about a girl with your cousins? |
42923 | And what are_ you_ going to do? |
42923 | And what can you possibly be going to do at the circus? 42923 Another for you, Downs?" |
42923 | Anyhow, I have learned that cows have the new American way of chewing; so they never get indigestion, do they? |
42923 | Are n''t you their doctor? |
42923 | As it is or as it might be? |
42923 | Ask her_ what_? |
42923 | Before you are grown? |
42923 | Bring a chair, Downs, will you? |
42923 | But forever while you live-- do you love as long as that? |
42923 | But who got all the things? |
42923 | Ca n''t you find enough in the world to fight without going away back to fight William the Conqueror? 42923 Could I speak to the doctor a moment? |
42923 | Did you find the key? |
42923 | Do I cast a light on him? 42923 Do n''t they ever get sick there?" |
42923 | Do n''t they look as though they liked to dance and to eat and to manage everything and everybody? |
42923 | Do you ever send yours? |
42923 | How could they feed five thousand people on five loaves and two fishes? 42923 How do you do, Downs?" |
42923 | How is the children''s epidemic to- day? |
42923 | I ca n''t stop thinking, can I? 42923 I think candy eggs would make a very good lining, better than real eggs; and about half the time you''re trying to line me with them, are n''t you? |
42923 | If I went into the army, would n''t I have to leave the farm here? |
42923 | Is n''t there a single minute when everybody is well everywhere? |
42923 | Is not that a strange question? |
42923 | Is somebody very sick? |
42923 | Is yours sour enough, Aleck? |
42923 | Is yours sweet enough, Downs? |
42923 | It sounds like nonsense: what''s the matter with_ your_ mind''s eye, I beg to inquire? |
42923 | It''s sad being a doctor, is n''t it? |
42923 | More lemonade, Aleck? |
42923 | Not all over the world? |
42923 | Not all the time? |
42923 | Now then, while I wait, what shall we do? |
42923 | Now, what are you trying to talk about? |
42923 | Oh, then our family did n''t want any rest,exclaimed Harold;"for grandfather had a child when he was ninety- one: is n''t that so, Elizabeth?" |
42923 | On_ both_ arms, did you say? |
42923 | Oratory-- where would I get my gas? |
42923 | Suppose I studied law and then some day I were called to the Supreme Bench: would n''t that take me away? |
42923 | Tell me about the professions in the War: what did they do about it; how did they act? |
42923 | Texas would hold them, would n''t it? 42923 Then do you or do n''t you?" |
42923 | Then, how old must he be? |
42923 | Well, after the animals bellow and roar and make all kinds of noise, then what? |
42923 | Well, then, if you love, do you love forever? |
42923 | Well, while you''re talking, what about your sons and their cousins? 42923 What about going into the army?" |
42923 | What do_ you_ know about sad? 42923 What else is there to do?" |
42923 | What right have you to defraud a girl out of all that happiness? |
42923 | Where could I fight if I did n''t fight in my own house? |
42923 | Where did you pick it up when you were a boy? |
42923 | Where did you pick up that notion? |
42923 | Where is Fred Ousley? |
42923 | Where was I? |
42923 | Which? |
42923 | Who won the last race? |
42923 | Why did n''t you go to the picnic? |
42923 | Why do n''t you doctors send your patients to that country? |
42923 | Why ninety? |
42923 | Will you come with us, Downs? |
42923 | Yes; but when are you going to have a Christmas Tree of our own? |
42923 | You do n''t have to confess what you''d like to do, do you? 42923 You mean_ tell_ her, do n''t you? |
42923 | _ Which mint?_said the minister, who kept his worldly wits about him. |
42923 | Æsculapius-- who was he? 42923 A bolder voice broke in:--You''re a very mysterious person, are you not?" |
42923 | A tender voice put forth an unexpected question:--"Are you sure that there is not some one with you?" |
42923 | All alone? |
42923 | And then what?" |
42923 | And then? |
42923 | And what woman fails to espouse any wife''s dignity except the woman who supplants the wife? |
42923 | Are n''t there questions a boy ca n''t ask his father? |
42923 | As he sees into me, does what he sees strengthen? |
42923 | As soon as you begin to talk, do n''t you get into trouble-- with somebody? |
42923 | As the vehicles drew alongside, he looked at them rather absent- mindedly:--"Where are you running off to?" |
42923 | At the gate it was barely heard and then it was not heard: was it gone or was it waiting there? |
42923 | At this point the uncle turned unexpectedly toward his nephew:--"Does this bore you, Downs?" |
42923 | Birney?" |
42923 | But he was n''t a better doctor than_ you_ are, was he? |
42923 | But then is not the natural in such a case miraculous enough? |
42923 | But wait-- lemonade?" |
42923 | But what effect have years upon the master passions? |
42923 | But what were the students up to among themselves at nights? |
42923 | But where were the gifts? |
42923 | But would n''t salve be better-- salve for old wounds?" |
42923 | Ca n''t we make anything in our country that we want?" |
42923 | Cake_ is_ a kind of sacred thing at home even yet, is n''t it? |
42923 | Can you understand that?" |
42923 | Children_ do_ dwindle nowadays, do n''t they?" |
42923 | Could n''t we have them if we wanted them? |
42923 | Did you ever think of that?" |
42923 | Do I cast a shadow? |
42923 | Do children contrive their picture- frames by glueing October acorns and pine- cones to ovals of boards and giving the mass a thick coat of varnish? |
42923 | Do country children do such things and have such notions now? |
42923 | Do country children in that part of the world make such playthings now? |
42923 | Do n''t you know that a child as instinctively imitates its grandmother?" |
42923 | Do n''t you know that a child as instinctively imitates its stepmother-- if it loves her? |
42923 | Do n''t you know that a foundling in a foundling asylum as instinctively imitates its nurse? |
42923 | Do n''t you suppose there''ll be any supper?" |
42923 | Do n''t you think Texas could contain them all and contain them forever?" |
42923 | Do n''t you_ know_, Aleck, that the disobedience of children may be one of their natural rights?" |
42923 | Do they slit the stems and cast them into the near brook and watch them form into ringlets and floating hair-- as of a water spirit? |
42923 | Do they still look to wild life and not wholly to the shops of cities for the satisfying of their instincts for toys and games and fancies? |
42923 | Do you love a girl longer if you tell her or if you do n''t tell her?" |
42923 | Do you notice any dwindling anywhere about me? |
42923 | Do you see any angel?" |
42923 | Do you suppose I try to keep one of my cows from kicking over the bucket of milk by tying her hind legs? |
42923 | Does any little rustic instrument- maker now draw melodies from a homegrown corn- stalk? |
42923 | Does my presence here by him bring tranquillity, rest, sound sleep? |
42923 | Does n''t it? |
42923 | Does that sound hard?" |
42923 | Every summer do n''t you disguise yourself and drive over the same track in an old cart and gather them up again? |
42923 | Far back when his character was being moulded, had not Nature seen to it that wrong suggestions were sown in him? |
42923 | Gratitude rendered him ill at ease: who can thank Science? |
42923 | Had not all his trouble started there? |
42923 | Has not that hour always been the natural locality and resort for the supernatural? |
42923 | Have n''t they always said that a house with a secret in it was n''t a good home for children? |
42923 | Have n''t they always taught us not to have secrets? |
42923 | Have n''t they always told us never to pretend? |
42923 | Herbert and Elizabeth will have to be looked out for in the future: Elizabeth may refuse to leave the neighborhood, who knows?" |
42923 | How could Shakespeare have written certain dramas without the mere aid of twelve o''clock? |
42923 | How do you straighten that out?_""_ I ca n''t straighten that out._""_ Then I ca n''t straighten it out, either._"*****"So young-- so young!" |
42923 | How is that? |
42923 | How many great men in history have begun their growth by attaching themselves to the great traits of their mothers? |
42923 | How_ could_ they? |
42923 | How_ did_ you ever get to be a member of_ this_ dull family?" |
42923 | I should like to have his private ear professionally: could you pass one of his ears out?" |
42923 | If he''d come into this neighborhood and tried to practise, you''d soon have ousted him, would n''t you, with your doses and soups and jellies?" |
42923 | If people must hunt for miracles and must have them, can they not find all they want in the natural? |
42923 | Is n''t that the United States? |
42923 | Is n''t that what they call being American-- to be as open as all out of doors? |
42923 | Is that it?" |
42923 | Is there any wonder that, nobody though he insisted upon being, his appearance in public always attracted a crowd? |
42923 | Is there anything more mysterious than one of you children?" |
42923 | It will be a long time before I see you again; have you thought of that?" |
42923 | Little children of the Dark Ages!--does any one now ever try to enter into their terrors and troubles and warped souls? |
42923 | Not all alone?" |
42923 | Now does n''t it?" |
42923 | Now what will I give her?" |
42923 | Now, Melissa, make me one, will you?" |
42923 | PART II PART II I TWO OTHER WINTER SNOWBIRDS AT A WINDOW"Do you see them coming, Elizabeth?" |
42923 | She spoke caustically:--"No intimate sacred bond between mother and child which guides it to imitate her?" |
42923 | That would be at least a million to every hair on my head: do n''t you think that would make any head a little heavy? |
42923 | The chill in the house all these years-- had that been vital warmth to him?" |
42923 | The old question now rang out:"What do_ you_ think of the immigrants?" |
42923 | Then he inquired:--"How old must a boy be to ask a girl?" |
42923 | Then in the same spirit in which the group of them had carried on their drama of the night they now asked him:--"Where will_ you_ be?" |
42923 | There were poker chips, showing that the doctor had poker neighbors( where else if not there? |
42923 | They do n''t have to do_ that_, do they?" |
42923 | Trotter, runner, or pacer?" |
42923 | Was his chastisement that morning a sunbeam? |
42923 | Was n''t it a woman in the Old Testament-- Sarah-- or Hagar-- or maybe Rebecca?" |
42923 | Was n''t that Kentucky country school- house the United States? |
42923 | Was not_ he_ harvesting what he had not scattered? |
42923 | Well, after the darling has had her fatal supper? |
42923 | Well, then? |
42923 | Were not children heard whispering on the other side of a door, and was not the door unlocked and thrown open? |
42923 | What are five years to a master Hatred? |
42923 | What are immigrants to me? |
42923 | What are ten years to Revenge? |
42923 | What are twenty to Malice? |
42923 | What are you going to do at the party?" |
42923 | What else are you going to do over there? |
42923 | What is it? |
42923 | What next?" |
42923 | What then?" |
42923 | What things merry or sorry could ever have come to pass but for the stroke of midnight? |
42923 | When He is done with me, then what?" |
42923 | Where did you get that idea-- if sanity can call it an idea?" |
42923 | Where were we?" |
42923 | Where will all the children of the earth be then?" |
42923 | Who can thank a man for doing his duty and his best? |
42923 | Who told_ you_ anything about sad?" |
42923 | Why awaken? |
42923 | Why ca n''t Christmas be as open as all out of doors? |
42923 | Why he should come near midnight-- who ever asked such a question? |
42923 | Why should not wives be commanded not to covet their neighbors''husbands? |
42923 | Why was the other half of the Commandment suppressed? |
42923 | Will you come to him...?" |
42923 | Will you sit down, please? |
42923 | With bread for thousands everywhere, why pick up crumbs?" |
42923 | Would you have told your father?" |
42923 | You ca n''t say that I did n''t take your nasty old doses, can you?" |
42923 | You do n''t expect me to stop thinking, do you, when I''m just beginning really to think?" |
42923 | the long expected Devil come at last( as a pumpkin carved and candle- lighted) for his own particular urchin? |
47952 | And where is Mr. Britisher? 47952 Highty, tighty, that''s it, is it? |
47952 | Oh, you do? |
47952 | Say, was thy little mate unkind, And heard thee as the careless wind? 47952 What is that, uncle?" |
47952 | Whatever_ is_ the matter with you, and what has brought you here this time of day? |
47952 | Worse? 47952 96, 98, 99 Count, Can Animals? 47952 Do you believe it?_Ah! |
47952 | Do you believe it?_"Over and over in a swift repeat. |
47952 | Do you believe it?_"Would that apostleship so sweet were mine! |
47952 | Do you hear me? |
47952 | Do you hear me? |
47952 | Do you hear me? |
47952 | Do you hear me? |
47952 | Now, what is an egg to this egg collector? |
47952 | Shall the law allow these nest- robbers to go on summer after summer taking hundreds of thousands of settings? |
47952 | What better proof could be asked that THE BARN OWL IS NOT A POULTRY DESTROYER? |
47952 | What shall I do? |
47952 | What shall I do? |
47952 | Who shall decide where all pretend to know? |
47952 | Will this man, if he may be called a man, look into his long drawers filled with eggs, and his extra settings for sale and trade? |
47952 | You do n''t mean he has deserted you?" |
47952 | v. 161 Feathers or Flowers? |
48261 | Contrary minded? |
48261 | Did you ever happen to see one of the homeless creatures seeking somebody else''s nest in which to lay her egg? |
48261 | Martha, where have you been? 48261 What do you suppose they were doing?" |
48261 | Where did the cat come from? |
48261 | Ah,"he broke off, pointing in a certain direction,"is not that a sad sight for an affectionate husband to see?" |
48261 | And what was this thing that the kitten accomplished? |
48261 | And why did Martha need taming? |
48261 | Chairman?" |
48261 | Had she run away or was it a case of kidnapping? |
48261 | Has the child been fighting? |
48261 | Have you hurt your hand? |
48261 | His praise they fain would win; How could they bring to Jesus An offering marred and thin? |
48261 | How many different varieties of wood are there in your own town? |
48261 | Martha, are you going to answer?" |
48261 | Now I flatter myself in selecting this large gull with spreading wings for my hat, that I attained all three of these effects, do n''t you?" |
48261 | Well, what did you do then?" |
48261 | What have you been doing? |
48261 | What is the matter with your dress? |
48261 | Who has not tried carrying a horse chestnut in his pocket to prevent rheumatism? |
48261 | iii, 96,= 98=, 99 Count, Can Animals? |
48261 | v, 161 Feathers or Flowers? |
48261 | v, 185 Count, Can? |
48261 | v, 216 What Is an? |
48466 | How many of your customers know anything about what they eat? |
48466 | Of course they know what they eat, but who of them know anything about the stuff? 48466 And what could be more tranquillizing than the ever- changing beauty of a sunset? 48466 But one can not often be in these places, while one might spare ten or fifteen minutes to stand by the window at sunset? 48466 Do they get homesick after they have gone some distance, and return once more to look upon the familiar scenes? 48466 How is it possible that we can pass such beauty by unnoticed, or be indifferent to it because it is common? 48466 How many of you, I wonder, have a west window? 48466 If so, then the grub must also become a butterfly, or what becomes of the species? 48466 Shall I deny its quest, Refuse a welcome to the homeless guest? 48466 These and the woods''low breath of song Just now across the way; To- morrow?... 48466 Vol iv, 182 are Protected? 48466 Vol v, 161 or Flowers? 48466 Vol vi, 26 Count? 48466 Vol vii, 53 Count, Can Animals? 48466 What, then, are the marked differences between them? 48466 Who can look without admiration upon them? 48466 Who could the rigor of such night endure? 48466 Who could wish to destroy them? 40686 ''But how shall I contend with man, to whom thou hast granted two guardian angels, and who has received thy revelation? 40686 ''But how would that have been possible? 40686 ''But sawest thou no hell? 40686 ''But what are the Little Horn''s Eyes? 40686 ''But who were those glorious ones thou sawest in Paradise? 40686 ''Can he delight himself in the Almighty?'' 40686 ''Can this be true? 40686 ''Do you regret my victory?'' 40686 ''Hast thou ever deigned to cast a glance at the oppressed, who, sighing under his burden, consoles himself with the hope of an hereafter? 40686 ''He that''Shall there be evil in a city committeth sin is of the devil; and the Lord hath not done it?'' 40686 ''How can I be happy in heaven,''said a tender- hearted lady to her clerical adviser,''when I must see others in hell?'' 40686 ''How can thy kingdom ever come, While the fair angels howl below? 40686 ''How do you know he has got a long nose?'' 40686 ''How shall I quench my thirst? 40686 ''If the bottled moonshine beactually substance? 40686 ''Mary Walcot, have you seen a white man? 40686 ''Sawest thou the fairest of earth- born ladies-- Beatrice? 40686 ''Tell me, holy father,''said Evervinus to St. Bernard, concerning the Albigenses,''how is this? 40686 ''The Devil: Does he Exist, and what does he Do?'' 40686 ''Thinkest thou, then, thy own compassion deeper than the mercy of Ormuzd? 40686 ''Thou shalt not Ahab?... 40686 ''What are you going to do when you get to the top?'' 40686 ''What do they all do?'' 40686 ''What do you take this lady to be?'' 40686 ''What is my watchword? 40686 ''What shall be my food? 40686 ''What shall occupy my leisure hours? 40686 ''Who among us shall dwell with the Devouring Fire?'' 40686 ''Who among us shall dwell with the Everlasting Burnings? 40686 ''Who but regrets a check in rivalry of wit?'' 40686 ''Why hard? 40686 ''Why is it,''pleads the worshipper,''that you wish to destroy one who always praises you? 40686 ''Why not God kill Debbil?'' 40686 ''Why shall I toil?'' 40686 ''Why,''was the reply,''go to Ghilghit, unless it be to work in the gardens?'' 40686 ( A truly Elihuic or''contemptible''answer to Job''s sensible words,''Why is light given to a man whose way is hid?'' 40686 ( Why seekest thou thus) to irritate me with blasphemies? 40686 ); and Agnes Sampson called the Devil to her in the shape of a dog by saying,''Elva( Elf? 40686 ); another raised a tempest to impede the king''s voyage to Denmark by casting into the sea a cat, and crying Hola( Hela? 40686 15,''What concord hath Christ with Belial?'' 40686 Abigail Williams, also one of the accusers of Goody, was asked,''Does she bring the book to you? 40686 All these shall say unto thee, Art thou also become weak as we? 40686 Am I a sea- monster-- and we imagine Job looking at his wasted limbs-- that the Almighty must take precautions and send spies against me? 40686 Amid his heartbroken people-- who cry,''Where are the gods? 40686 And Jehovah said, Wherewith? 40686 And does she not propound her riddles to us? 40686 And here we may consult the holy Tree of Travancore again? 40686 And now learned travellers go about in many lands saying,''Saw ye my beloved?'' 40686 And what can be Zeus''doom but everlasting rule? 40686 And what hast thou seen there? 40686 Are the Shah and his happy fellow- inspectors of tortures really fiends? 40686 Art thou become like unto us? 40686 Azru, in deep grief at the separation, cried,''Why remain at Doyur, unless it be to grind corn?'' 40686 Beautifully bedecked they approached him, and Raka said,''Lord, fearest thou not death?'' 40686 But how am I to get it? 40686 But how could the Devil, having no trace of perfection in him, exist at all? 40686 But how did these mighty princes and warriors become demon huntsmen? 40686 But how much wiser are we of Christendom than the Hindus? 40686 But the thunder of his power who can understand? 40686 But what could Darius have done''by the grace of Ahriman''? 40686 But what else does he receive? 40686 But what if we were all to become like that? 40686 But what is the Holy Ghost-- what is its office? 40686 But what moral force preserved them? 40686 But what shall be said of the educated who profess to believe it? 40686 But who is the leaf- crowned figure, without mask, on the right hand? 40686 But who may these be? 40686 But why not? 40686 But, Hodge, had he no horns to push? 40686 Can they tolerate this?'' 40686 Can this be thy lady Beatrice? 40686 Child- eyes beheld all that the Erl- king promised, in Goethe''s ballad-- Wilt thou go, bonny boy? 40686 Children dear, was it yesterday? 40686 Cyprian having argued the existence and supremacy of God, the Devil says,''How can I impugn so clear a consequence?'' 40686 Death? 40686 Demonology would ask, Why dogs? 40686 Did he who made the lamb make thee? 40686 Did not Milton describe Freedom as''a mountain nymph?'' 40686 Did you ever know a man with a long nose who was good?'' 40686 Do they think there are no more dragons to be slain? 40686 Does he not bend himself up and down to the right hand and to the left, like unto the serpent? 40686 Dost thou know thyself? 40686 Eh? 40686 Eliphaz repeats the question put by the Accuser in heaven--''Was not thy fear of God thy hope?'' 40686 Fear not these ferocious beasts; why should he whom Ormuzd preserves fear the enmity of the whole world?'' 40686 First of all Job( the Troubled) asks-- Why? 40686 For me this mountain mass rests nobly dumb; I ask not whence it is, nor why''tis come? 40686 God said unto him( Iblis), What hindered thee from worshipping Adam, since I commanded thee? 40686 Had it not crawled previously? 40686 Had those''gods''up there never struck children? 40686 Harischandra, what is this? 40686 Hast thou compared the wants and the vices of his nature with those which he owes to society and prevailing corruption? 40686 Hast thou distinguished between that which is offspring of the pure impulses of his heart, and that which flows from an imagination corrupted by art? 40686 Hast thou ever Lightened the sorrows of the heavy laden? 40686 Hast thou ever considered his nature? 40686 Hast thou ever examined it, and separated from it its foreign elements? 40686 Hast thou observed him in his natural state, where each of his undisguised expressions mirrors forth his inmost soul? 40686 Have we not priests in England still fostering the belief that the baptized child goes attended by a white spirit, the unbaptized by a dark one? 40686 How and when? 40686 How are we to understand this dance of Death, and the further legend of her tossing dead bodies into the air for amusement? 40686 How couldst thou, the most corrupt of thy race, have discovered the pure one, since thou hadst not even the capacity to suspect his existence? 40686 How did he do it? 40686 How did these fleecy white cloud- phantoms become demonised? 40686 How many poor peasant girls must have had such dreams as they looked up from their drudgery to the brilliant chateaux? 40686 How much of the theosophic speculation of our time is the mere artificial conservation of that darkness? 40686 How passed this( mental) cave- dweller even amid the upper splendours and vastnesses of his unlit world? 40686 How shall he advance if he know not the Spirit of discontent? 40686 How shall man learn truth if he know not the Spirit that denies? 40686 How would a Parsi explain the curse on a snake which condemned it to crawl? 40686 I asked,''Who, then, made the world?'' 40686 I near him came, and spoke--''Art thou,''I said,''indeed the Evil One? 40686 I reverence thee? 40686 I said that I was very sorry to hear it;''but what had her death to do with the spears being stuck around so?'' 40686 I then said,''Jemmy, what is the meaning of your spears being stuck in a circle round you?'' 40686 I''ll levy thine attendance: Why waste so vainly thy resplendence? 40686 If God were only a man, things might be different; but as it is,''what he desireth that he doeth,''and''who can turn him?'' 40686 If this was true before the word Christianity had been formed, or the system it names, what was the case afterwards? 40686 In what distant deeps or skies Burned that fire within thine eyes? 40686 Is Zeus, then, less powerful than they? 40686 Is it because God was afraid of your greatness? 40686 Is it derived by inheritance from its fierce ancestors of the jungle? 40686 Is it indeed so that all the sages and poets of the world are now in equal rank whether or not they have been sealed as members of Christ? 40686 Is it the sunbeam that defines to the strongest creature its habitat? 40686 It asked, If the Lord be not in the hurricane, the earthquake, the volcanic flame, who is therein? 40686 It was a tremendous statement of the question-- If a man die, shall he live again? 40686 Jehovah answered,''Have you done the same that Abraham did, who recognised me from his childhood and went into Chaldean fire for love of me? 40686 Of each man she asks daily, in mild voice, yet with a terrible significance,''Knowest thou the meaning of this Day? 40686 On her he turned and said,''Who art thou, that ever movest beside me, thou that art monstrous beyond all that I have seen on earth?'' 40686 On what wings dared he aspire? 40686 Only a penny? 40686 Pins are the last offerings at the Worm''s Well;''wishes''its last prayers; but where go now the coins and the prayers? 40686 Remember ye not that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things? 40686 Saw ye never fryer Rushe Painted on cloth, with a side long cowe''s tayle And crooked cloven feet, and many a hooked nayle? 40686 Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate enterprise I will? 40686 She refused, and said,''In the name of God, what art thou?'' 40686 Such is the seeming situation, but is it the reality? 40686 Tell me, if we still are standing, Or if further we''re ascending? 40686 That very good? 40686 The fine chain that binds ferocity,--is it the love that can tame all creatures? 40686 The natives bore his rule with resignation, for what could they effect against a monarch at whose command even magic aids were placed? 40686 The rose and poppy are her flowers; for where Is he not found, O Lilith, whom shed scent And soft- shed kisses and soft sleep shall snare? 40686 The woman, having finished her bath, cried out in great anger,''What thief has been here in broad day? 40686 Their Allah or Elohim they heard say,--''Why howlest thou to me? 40686 Then Mara challenged him,''Tell me now, where is the man that can bear witness for thee?'' 40686 They would be shocked if told that they had burned great men, and would surely answer,''Men? 40686 This World means something to the capable; Why needs he through Eternity to wend? 40686 This that is glorious in his apparel, Travelling in the greatness of his strength? 40686 Thou ever stretch thy hand to still the tears Of the perplexed in spirit? 40686 Thus we read:--''Abigail Williams, did you see a company at Mr. Parris''s house eat and drink? 40686 To her child''s inquiry,''What sort of beetle is this I found wriggling in the sand?'' 40686 To her he said,''Who art thou, so fair beyond all whom I have seen in the land of the living?'' 40686 To what will they aspire, those students moving so light- hearted amid the dead dragons and satans of an extinct world? 40686 Was anything seen? 40686 Was it an old sin?'' 40686 Was it first suggested by its horrible human- like sleep- murdering caterwaulings at night? 40686 Was it for me, Satan, to whom thou hast chosen to become a mentor, to point them out to thee? 40686 Was it not Almighty Time, and ever- during Fate-- My lords and thine-- that shaped and fashioned me Into the MAN I am? 40686 What advocate can he command? 40686 What can a man do but pray and acknowledge his sinfulness? 40686 What chief of mortals is there who has never told a lie-- who has never swerved from the course of justice?'' 40686 What did these good fairies do? 40686 What explanation can be given of the evil repute of our household friend the Cat? 40686 What has become of that one? 40686 What if he had seen death as an eternal sleep? 40686 What is created still must fall, And fairest still we frailest call; Will not Christ''s blood avail for all? 40686 What is the difference between St. Wolfram''s God and King Radbot''s Devil? 40686 What is the meaning of the curse on the Serpent that it should for ever crawl thereafter? 40686 What is the remedy? 40686 What is, your theory? 40686 What matters it when death comes? 40686 What news? 40686 What sort of man was he? 40686 What the hand dared seize the fire? 40686 What then controls human passion and selfishness? 40686 What was it? 40686 What was seen on this strongly- authenticated occasion? 40686 What will she say if she sees him promoted a step higher,--nay, perhaps, meets him in heaven?'' 40686 What would she have you do with it? 40686 When the stars threw down their spears And water heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see? 40686 When will they see in any stone mirror the real shape of a double- tongued Culture-- one fork intoning litanies, another whispering contempt of them? 40686 Where is Michael, the special advocate of Israel? 40686 Where, O Rudra, is that gracious hand of thine, which is healing and comforting? 40686 Where? 40686 Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel, And thy garments like him that treadeth the wine- vat? 40686 Wherefore, like a coward, dost thou for ever pip and whimper, and go cowering and trembling? 40686 Wherefore? 40686 Who art thou? 40686 Who baptized them? 40686 Who built it? 40686 Who can carve there the wrongs that await their powers of redress? 40686 Who can face them? 40686 Who can set before them, with all its baseness, the true emblem of pious fraud? 40686 Who gave me succour Against the Titans in their tyrannous might? 40686 Who go to Paradise? 40686 Who is this that cometh from Edom, In dyed garments from Bozrah? 40686 Who rescued me from death-- from slavery? 40686 Who, then, is the guide of Necessity? 40686 Whose mind is not led astray by the thickly clustering moonbeams?'' 40686 Why administer the rod which enlightens as to the anger but not its cause, or as to the way of amend?) 40686 Why are you afflicted? 40686 Why can not this one and all others be cast out? 40686 Why did they starve and scourge their bodies, and roll them in thorns? 40686 Why did we pass by the mansions of the good and the just? 40686 Why not punish the Devil instead of threatening poor wretches whom he deceives?'' 40686 Why shall I for his favour serve, Bend to him in such vassalage? 40686 Why should mankind make thee a jest, When thou canst show a face like this? 40686 Why should that particular Tree-- of a species common in the district and not usually very large-- have grown so huge? 40686 Why shouldst thou regard the seed of Abraham before us?'' 40686 Why slay the slain? 40686 Why then need we apologise for the Fijians? 40686 Why twelve? 40686 Why was the Living banished thither, companionless, conscious? 40686 Why was the Serpent slipped into the Ark or coffer and hid behind veils? 40686 Why was the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil forbidden? 40686 Why, if there is no Devil; nay, unless the Devil is your God?'' 40686 Why, when its fruit was tasted, should the Tree of Life have been for the first time forbidden and jealously guarded? 40686 Why? 40686 Will you not deliver the Bráhman? 40686 [ 45] Is this a survival? 40686 [ 88] But what shall be said of the Goat? 40686 burning bright In the forests of the night; What immortal hand or eye Framed thy fearful symmetry? 40686 dare you disobey me? 40686 do I see thee again? 40686 dost thou remember When we in early days Blended our blood together? 40686 gargouille, dragon), anything but carved imprecations? 40686 he cried,''is it thus you repay my benefits? 40686 intrude ye thus into my presence? 40686 knowest thou that none of these save that last holy one-- whom methinks thou namest too lightly among men-- were baptized? 40686 no dire punishments? 40686 or has it simply suffered from a theological curse on the cats said to draw the chariots of the goddesses of Beauty? 40686 or was it merely demonised because of its uncanny and shaggy appearance? 40686 they asked,''Have you ever seen him?'' 40686 what has led thee to depart from the Prince of thy gods? 40686 what is the sum- total of the worst that lies before thee? 40686 what, are you going to slaughter this poor woman? 40686 whence comest, and with what message freighted? 40686 why not bulls? 40686 wilt thou go with me? 4597 ''Are you sure?'' |
4597 | ''Do you think he is alive?'' 4597 ''In this village?'' |
4597 | ''Where do you think Livingstone is?'' 4597 ''Who are you?'' |
4597 | And who are you? |
4597 | Bless me, what does the child mean? |
4597 | But how shall I know the place? |
4597 | But the sun and moon are round,replies Columbus,"why not the earth?" |
4597 | But where shall I go? |
4597 | Daniel, Daniel,he said sorrowfully,"do n''t you mean to take that office?" |
4597 | How can trees grow with their roots in the air? |
4597 | How much does he ask for it? |
4597 | If the earth is a ball, what holds it up? |
4597 | My lord,cries the agonized parent;"what horrible command is this you lay upon me? |
4597 | W----? |
4597 | What didst thou intend to do with it? |
4597 | What do you, who already have so much to be grateful for, want with diamonds? |
4597 | What holds the sun and moon up? |
4597 | What if the earth is round? |
4597 | What is the lowest price you can take for this book, sir? |
4597 | What shall I do? |
4597 | What will He do,asked the boy one day,"when we do n''t do the best we can?" |
4597 | Who did you say is waiting for me? |
4597 | Who is the sculptor of this group? |
4597 | Why dost thou hesitate? |
4597 | Why, what do you want to be now? |
4597 | Why,thought he,"ca n''t I gather and sell enough to buy my dictionary?" |
4597 | You''d make a pretty president, with all your tricks and jokes, now would n''t you? |
4597 | ''That''s my fate, is it? |
4597 | ''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks to the steamer?'' |
4597 | A learned doctor asks,"How can men walk with their heads hanging down, and their feet up, like flies on a ceiling?" |
4597 | And little Pierre? |
4597 | And the story of William Tell,--is it not dear to every heart that loves liberty? |
4597 | And the words, too?" |
4597 | And what were the experiences that led to it? |
4597 | And where is that band, who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
4597 | And who was this young man who was chosen to undertake a work which required the highest qualities of manhood to carry it to success? |
4597 | Angel or demon? |
4597 | But if a fellow has to grub away ten or twelve hours out of the twenty- four, what time is left to do anything for one''s self?" |
4597 | But stay, what is this? |
4597 | But why is this master artist at work, in secret, in a cellar where the sun never shone, the daylight never entered? |
4597 | Can ships sail up hill?" |
4597 | Did he get the dictionary? |
4597 | Did he give up his dreams of being a great man? |
4597 | Did influence, a"pull,"or financial considerations have anything to do with the merchant''s choice of a partner? |
4597 | Do n''t you remember young W----?" |
4597 | Do you mean me to go to Central Africa?'' |
4597 | FRANKLIN''S LESSON ON TIME VALUE Dost thou love life? |
4597 | Gessler cries in a loud authoritative voice:"Wherefore is this assembly of people? |
4597 | Has Ali Hafed returned?" |
4597 | He was starving and almost naked, and the diamonds-- which had lured him away from all that made life dear-- where were they? |
4597 | Heralds, in thunder tones, repeat,"Who is the sculptor of this group?" |
4597 | Is Dr. Livingstone here?'' |
4597 | Is it the work of the gods? |
4597 | Is there in all the length and breadth of the United States to- day a boy so poor as to envy Abraham Lincoln the chances of his boyhood? |
4597 | It lies, like a block of pure, uncut Parian marble, ready to be fashioned into-- what? |
4597 | It was hard, was n''t it, for a little fellow only eight years old to have to leave off going to school and settle down to work on a farm? |
4597 | Now, of all things in the world; of what use was a cow to an ambitious boy who wanted to go to college? |
4597 | Perhaps-- But what is this? |
4597 | Shall it be one of beauty, or of deformity; an angel, or a devil? |
4597 | Tell me how and where you found it?" |
4597 | The latter wrote back without delay:"What has poor Horatio done, who is so weak, that he, above all the rest, should be sent to rough it out at sea? |
4597 | Then a light broke in upon them, and they cried out,"Is it possible that you had the valedictory in mind when you put that''V''over your door?" |
4597 | Then, turning toward him, she asked, in amazement:"Did you compose it? |
4597 | To what purpose didst thou destine the second arrow?" |
4597 | WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH IT? |
4597 | Was it any wonder that he was popular with all kinds of people? |
4597 | Was it any wonder that his"middies"almost worshiped him? |
4597 | What change has come o''er the spirit of his dreams? |
4597 | What does all this mean? |
4597 | What has happened to check the laughter on their lips, and dim their bright eyes with tears? |
4597 | What is it?" |
4597 | What schoolboy or schoolgirl is not familiar with those stirring lines from"William Tell''s Address to His Native Mountains,"by J. M. Knowles? |
4597 | What was to be done? |
4597 | What will you do with it?" |
4597 | Which will you call into life? |
4597 | Who art thou, and why dost thou hold that man a prisoner?" |
4597 | Who called for help? |
4597 | Who could his benefactor be? |
4597 | Who did it?" |
4597 | Whom do you mean?" |
4597 | Why did she do it? |
4597 | Will you shape it into a statue of beauty which will enchant the world, or will you call out a hideous image which will demoralize every beholder? |
4597 | With his arm linked in that of the philosopher, we see-- but why prolong the list? |
4597 | Without waiting for a reply, she added quickly,"Would you like to come to my concert this evening?" |
4597 | You will lose your place; or, supposing you to retain it, what are you but a clerk for life? |
4597 | aim at a mark placed on the head of my dear child? |
4597 | could it be possible that the great artist who had been so kind to him would sing his little song before this brilliant audience? |
4597 | groans the stricken youth,"why have ye deserted me, now, when my task is almost completed? |
4597 | or-- and, with bated breath, the question passes from lip to lip,"Can it have been fashioned by the hand of a slave?" |
4597 | said I,''do you really think I can find Dr. Livingstone? |
4597 | say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming? |
4597 | say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
4597 | they said,"and you sail down the other side, how can you get back again? |
41716 | Any missionaries on board? |
41716 | Did you hear those mad Maories? |
41716 | Do n''t you go out, too? |
41716 | Has he had a look round? |
41716 | Has that always been the way? |
41716 | How''d ye like it? |
41716 | Is this a preliminary uprising? |
41716 | Now, what difference does it make to you? |
41716 | Strange, is n''t it,he said without any preamble,"how money goes from one man to another, from here to Auckland and to Sydney? |
41716 | Want a ride? |
41716 | What can she do? 41716 What is America going to do about it?" |
41716 | What''s the trouble? |
41716 | Where are the people? |
41716 | Where are you from? |
41716 | Where did they learn to sail? |
41716 | Where were you when you saw this man kiss your wife? |
41716 | Who are you? |
41716 | Why should n''t he? |
41716 | You''re always asking why this, why that? |
41716 | ''s now? |
41716 | 2 In Fiji one is not yet compelled to ask,"Where are the Fijians?" |
41716 | 3 Does Japan make the naturalization of aliens easy? |
41716 | 4 How would these things work out with the new British arrangement as to the control of the Dominions? |
41716 | 5 Who, then, does the work of the island? |
41716 | A further problem is, what will happen when the policy applied to island possessions conflicts with the course permitted by the law of the mandate? |
41716 | After that visit, so cordial was the attitude of Australians that everywhere they talked of floating the Stars and Stripes in the event of-- what? |
41716 | All of us bring back accounts of what we''ve seen, but which of us can answer why we went? |
41716 | American strikes are regarded as importations, but what about the strikes in Australia? |
41716 | An amazed member of the Japanese Government( it was a government subsidized vessel) said, with semi- scorn:"Kore wa? |
41716 | And after all, is it any reflection upon any race that it has been assimilated by its conquerors? |
41716 | And have not the more mighty and the more venturesome come over the pass, or over the crest and invaded and conquered and changed? |
41716 | And is not_ kuli_ the word with which he calls his dog? |
41716 | And we? |
41716 | And what, still, is there awaiting the world as they fulfil that destiny? |
41716 | And when I mounted, he asked:"Seeing our little country, are you? |
41716 | Are we to navalize the Pacific or to civilize it? |
41716 | As for the dancers,--what to them were half- expressed notes? |
41716 | Beside this I have thirty acres of orange orchard( four years old) all is my own, and my wife''s now which brought me four( boxes- horses)(?) |
41716 | Better yet, where in all Fiji was fraternization more simple? |
41716 | But has Japan actually never broken her word? |
41716 | But have we not the same difficulty even among a given number of white men, where some are ready to undersell others? |
41716 | But how far is Japan ready and willing to go in this denationalization of herself? |
41716 | But if it did boil over, was it far from the city? |
41716 | But if these loans are recognized, what guarantee is there that even under the nose of the consortium further"loans"will not be made? |
41716 | But if they have forgotten the vision for the appearance of the catch, what about the East? |
41716 | But is Japan giving it? |
41716 | But is that to be her sole contribution? |
41716 | But is there any parallel whatsoever? |
41716 | But what are centuries, when waking is so simple and is always possible? |
41716 | But what are these few assets compared with the greatly extended line of defense now left to the Dominion to keep up? |
41716 | But what beauties or treasures were they meant to guard? |
41716 | But what has that to do with Japanese atrocities in Korea? |
41716 | But what have our Government and our diplomacy done to counteract the American influence? |
41716 | But what have we in Japan? |
41716 | But what is the sea? |
41716 | But what to? |
41716 | But what was the result of that"understanding"? |
41716 | But whence did the woman come who was Cain''s wife?... |
41716 | But where do the Hawaiians come in? |
41716 | But where do we come in and where the peace of the Pacific? |
41716 | But where should I go? |
41716 | But where was man? |
41716 | Came? |
41716 | Can I mistake?" |
41716 | Can it be that Darwin was right? |
41716 | Can not coöperation among nations replace intriguing misalliances, with their vicious secret diplomacy? |
41716 | Can not the sympathy and the emulation of races supplant their enmity and jealousy? |
41716 | Could the coolie possibly abscond with a bag of mail under the very eyes of an officer? |
41716 | Do n''t you know the Bible says,''Be prepared to meet thy Maker?'' |
41716 | Does Japan make the naturalization of aliens easy? |
41716 | Does Japan permit the denaturalization of its people abroad? |
41716 | Does Japan permit the ready purchase by aliens of agricultural land? |
41716 | Does the Fijian not hear the white man-- whom he respects, after a fashion-- call his slim competitor"coolie?" |
41716 | Does the woman''s father make witchcraft? |
41716 | Ever been to a sheep auction? |
41716 | First of all, then, is it really any of our business what Japan does in Asia? |
41716 | From loss of reputation? |
41716 | Had n''t"my boss"given me a lifetime''s vacation? |
41716 | Has not every nation gloated over its antiquity and its security? |
41716 | Have we approached the spot whereon man made his first appearance on the earth? |
41716 | He is less able to feel at home there than the Oriental on the main street; but why does n''t the Oriental build for himself a main street? |
41716 | He proceeds to give his own observations of life, and asks:"Is this true, reverend sirs? |
41716 | He will ask you bluntly:"Are you what you say you are?" |
41716 | How can a labor government be so utterly opposed to the extension of ideal opportunities to laborers from other lands seeking to enjoy them? |
41716 | How can she be so utterly capitalistic on a national scale when nearly everything within her own ken is laboristic? |
41716 | How can we know the sea? |
41716 | How do you know but what any moment you may be called?" |
41716 | How have these things worked out? |
41716 | How have they affected the relations of New Zealand and the Commonwealth of Australia with Great Britain? |
41716 | How is it that being, as it seems, people of extraction similar to that of Europeans, they have remained in such a state of arrested development? |
41716 | How is it that they became cannibals, eaters of men''s flesh? |
41716 | How is so sweeping a clause going to be kept within bonds? |
41716 | How is that to be? |
41716 | How long would it take us? |
41716 | How many thousands of years of natural selection went into the making of those little feet? |
41716 | How much of it would hold them? |
41716 | How much of this splendor is Japan''s? |
41716 | How should I have been received had Stevenson come up those steps that day? |
41716 | How will she tackle the problem of poverty? |
41716 | How? |
41716 | I was inclined to dub him"Dr. Bunk,"but why arouse animosity in the tropics? |
41716 | If Korean laborers are efficient in Korea, why not in Japan? |
41716 | If his father could"raise"a family of ten on"nothing"and then just let them die off,--why not he? |
41716 | In the event of that plea failing, what could Japan do, he asked, other than proceed to fortify the Marshall Islands? |
41716 | Is America going to set out to make the world safe for democracy in Europe and then withdraw just when Europe needs her help most? |
41716 | Is Fijian medicine more absurd than our patent medicines, or as expensive?" |
41716 | Is it any of Japan''s business what interest we take in Asia? |
41716 | Is it anything to be proud of? |
41716 | Is it by the power of the devil that such wonders are wrought? |
41716 | Is it going to take such a war to accomplish this in Japan? |
41716 | Is it likely that Japan will relinquish her hold on the South Manchurian Railroad, which in her opinion is of strategic importance? |
41716 | Is it water, space, depth? |
41716 | Is it, then, so hard to remove troops? |
41716 | Is n''t it only the conceit of the white man that makes him regard himself as superior to the Japanese? |
41716 | Is n''t it true that the Japanese have n''t any room for their surplus population? |
41716 | Is not this the history of every race on earth? |
41716 | Is she, then, to be made an exception in the White- Australia policy? |
41716 | Is that to justify her place as leader of Asia? |
41716 | Is there a Romain Rolland or a Shaw, or an Emerson to whom he could bow in that reverence which invites the soul rather than bends the knee? |
41716 | Is there not every reason to believe that permitted to take up quarters in the open spaces of the white man''s world, they will do the same? |
41716 | Is there not something which can be substituted for them? |
41716 | Is this China? |
41716 | May not this vast, generous ocean become the great experiment station for human commonalty, for distinction without extinction? |
41716 | May not time and patience remold antiquity, absorb its bad blood and rejuvenate it? |
41716 | Not content with whisperings, I had sought definition, asked for distance,--Where? |
41716 | Now the problem is, what is going to be done with it? |
41716 | Now what would the world have thought if a Salvation Army man had picked up a strange young woman on a steamer and haled her into a strange house? |
41716 | O Maker of lands''ends, O Sea, when will man be formed? |
41716 | One can not live on sentiment, and when Japanese goods are the nearest and cheapest at hand, what could China do? |
41716 | Or are others right whose soundings divulge a hidden course that gives these people a birthplace ten thousand miles away, in central Asia? |
41716 | Or are the further calculations more accurate,--that there have been constant migrations of people from Asia? |
41716 | Or what do you think in the matter? |
41716 | Or what, sir, is your conclusion? |
41716 | Pictures of the kaiser, pretty scenes along the Rhine, German castles,--what had they to do with Stevenson? |
41716 | Protection from what could they need? |
41716 | Seriousness and earnestness marked the features of these women, and who can say their faith was ignored? |
41716 | So why fear?" |
41716 | Tell me, Greenbie, have you seen any here you''d care to mess about with? |
41716 | The bird sings to his mate, but what mate would listen to such tin- canning and howling, and not die? |
41716 | The millennium? |
41716 | The questions are generally these: What business is it of ours, after all, what Japan does in Asia? |
41716 | The questions in the order of their importance then are: Does Japan permit the free entrance of alien labor? |
41716 | Their speed was that of the comet''s, and what was a plodding little planet like myself to do trying to move into their orbit? |
41716 | They may not become young bones, but may we not hope they will at least be clean? |
41716 | This is my joy and my pride too, is it not? |
41716 | This led to questions from me: Why were they turning Mormon? |
41716 | This plastic people,--what is their destiny? |
41716 | To change the subject, which was bordering on a fight, I asked:"Why do the palms bend out toward the sea?" |
41716 | To protect themselves against Chinese pirates? |
41716 | To- morrow? |
41716 | Two weeks? |
41716 | Two worlds? |
41716 | Upon their"reservations"like our own Amerinds, or lost to their own costumes and even to their own blood and color? |
41716 | Want to come along?" |
41716 | Was n''t he passing reflections on the tribe of his wife? |
41716 | Was not permanence a surety, and pride the father of ease? |
41716 | Well, now, who in thunder was I, anyway? |
41716 | What for? |
41716 | What has happened since peace was declared? |
41716 | What have they done with them? |
41716 | What if America did so? |
41716 | What if Great Britain now decided to annex Belgium? |
41716 | What if the Fijian passes, or gives way to the Indian? |
41716 | What in all the world is more wonderful than frailty imbued with passion mothering achievement? |
41716 | What is Japan going to say about it all? |
41716 | What is Shintoism? |
41716 | What is that to the great problem of how to develop the native races? |
41716 | What is there, then, for him to do? |
41716 | What made them what they are? |
41716 | What need for means of going farther? |
41716 | What of Japan? |
41716 | What ogre dwelt within? |
41716 | What purpose could it possibly have served? |
41716 | What should we do? |
41716 | What should we see en route? |
41716 | What then? |
41716 | What though the prejudiced assure you that, however far the mixture may have gone, it reveals itself in a tendency to squat when least expected? |
41716 | What was it that Balboa took possession of in the name of his Castilian kings? |
41716 | What was there that I was not to see? |
41716 | What, socially and individually, then, is the contribution of Australia to the civilization of the Pacific? |
41716 | What, you are going to create a democratic sore right in my neighborhood? |
41716 | When will the conflicts among men cease? |
41716 | Whence? |
41716 | Where are the Maories? |
41716 | Where can one draw the line between experience past and present? |
41716 | Where do they lead to? |
41716 | Where is Bushido in Japan, that it does not rise in indignation at these atrocities? |
41716 | Where, then, is the argument? |
41716 | Wherefore? |
41716 | Which sect did they prefer? |
41716 | Who could stop her? |
41716 | Who is to begin, and whom shall we trust? |
41716 | Who were these minds? |
41716 | Who will ever know the difference? |
41716 | Who would dare ignore his arm and hand as he directs the passing vehicle? |
41716 | Whom shall he try to see? |
41716 | Why a special room for so simple a service-- and why men only? |
41716 | Why are they not withdrawn? |
41716 | Why bother? |
41716 | Why did I have so much worldly goods to worry about? |
41716 | Why has China remained dormant so long? |
41716 | Why is she now waking? |
41716 | Why not? |
41716 | Why such timidity in the pursuance of direction and desire? |
41716 | Why then does the child die thus? |
41716 | Will he drink? |
41716 | Yet one question preceded all others: whence came these Pacific peoples and when? |
41716 | Yet what is New Zealand doing and what has it done in seventy- five years to approximate Utopia? |
41716 | [ Illustration: ONE OF THE MOST GIFTED OF FIJIAN CHIEFS But who said that the wearing of hats causes baldness(?)] |
41716 | _ Boat._[ This? |
41716 | has this chief been indolent? |
41716 | what with Colonel Logan and British occupation? |
34813 | A purpose? |
34813 | A sort of birthright- for- a- mess- of- pottage affair, is n''t it? |
34813 | Almighty God, why detach a perfectly good doctor, when they have a whole list of Secret Service men? |
34813 | Alone? |
34813 | Alone? |
34813 | Am I late? |
34813 | Am I so dull that I do not understand when I find a pool of wine under a divan? 34813 Am I to accept that as flattery?" |
34813 | Am I to be forced to submit to the indignity of being searched? |
34813 | Am I to carry these? |
34813 | And Na- chung? |
34813 | And if I agree? |
34813 | And if I say,''It is a wise man who holds his tongue in the presence of knaves,''pursued the mandarin,"what would be your comment?" |
34813 | And there has n''t been a girl, Alan? |
34813 | And this is the one you added? |
34813 | And you have n''t seen Sarojini? |
34813 | And you let him get away? |
34813 | And you really have n''t any business engagements? |
34813 | And you returned it that night? |
34813 | And you still have the copy of the Pearl Scarf? |
34813 | And you''re called the Swaying Cobra,he mused, more to himself than to the woman,"or did another write that note?" |
34813 | Anything new about the jewels? |
34813 | Are n''t they? |
34813 | Are they? |
34813 | Are you accusing us as a nation of polygamous practices? |
34813 | Are you alone? |
34813 | Are you making me father- confessor, after all? |
34813 | Are you-- making an offer? |
34813 | Art thou a celibate that thou hast no wife? |
34813 | As whom does the Falcon know me? |
34813 | Been reading the papers lately? |
34813 | But do you want to save me? 34813 But first-- what''s this?" |
34813 | But how will we get out of the city? |
34813 | But if Chavigny was put out of the way, as you say, how do you account for this? |
34813 | But if I was expected before this, then why are n''t they ready? |
34813 | But if you wish it, then how_ do_ you know it? |
34813 | But is it right to keep it? |
34813 | But surely I can leave the compound? |
34813 | But surely,Trent parleyed,"in return for the service I can render, you will find it convenient to spare time enough to repay me?" |
34813 | But the train? |
34813 | But why did you send him to my room in the first place-- or follow me to Benares? |
34813 | But why not forget that we ever knew each other-- and did we ever really know each other? 34813 But why,"she queried,"did not you tell me of this before?" |
34813 | But you do_ not_ feel so disposed, for what would it gain you? |
34813 | But you were at Gaya? |
34813 | But,_ Tajen_,objected Kee Meng,"do you go alone?" |
34813 | Ca n''t you feel the night singing in your veins? 34813 Ca n''t you hear me?" |
34813 | Can my muleteers leave Shingtse- lunpo without passports? |
34813 | Canst thou tell me where I will find a bed for to- night? |
34813 | Captain Manlove? |
34813 | Care to ride up with me? |
34813 | Chavigny? |
34813 | Chavigny? |
34813 | Come, Sir Francis, what are you losing in this venture? 34813 Could you make another copy, using stones like this?" |
34813 | Could you? |
34813 | Crazy? |
34813 | D''ye think Sarojini knows of her presence? |
34813 | D''ye want to see me? |
34813 | D''you think,he began at length,"if the Government knew I was going into Tibet, it would approve?" |
34813 | Dare one threaten the Intelligence Department? |
34813 | Did I say that? |
34813 | Did I say that? |
34813 | Did I say there was a road? |
34813 | Did n''t a lady call a few minutes ago? |
34813 | Did not his Excellency Li Kwai Kung speak of certain terraces, each a step toward enlightenment? |
34813 | Did not you find Tambusami an excellent bearer? |
34813 | Did you call, O Presence? |
34813 | Did you give her the medicine I left? |
34813 | Did you notice the color of her hair? |
34813 | Do n''t object if I get comfortable, do you? |
34813 | Do n''t you think it wise,she resumed, looking up,"that we discontinue our association-- not our friendship-- now, to- night? |
34813 | Do not they look well about my neck? |
34813 | Do you call that logic? 34813 Do you deny that?" |
34813 | Do you have jade? |
34813 | Do you have pearls, too-- imitation pearls? |
34813 | Do you know what occurred at Gaya? |
34813 | Do you realize that was disobeying me? |
34813 | Do you suppose he had a hand in the jewel affair? |
34813 | Do you think,interrogated Kerth,"you could find her lair without a guide?" |
34813 | Do you wish to see me? 34813 Dost thou not see, O fool, that I have left my clothes and my pack? |
34813 | Enlightening, is n''t it? |
34813 | Even Euan Kerth? |
34813 | Ever heard of this woman who styles herself the Swaying Cobra? |
34813 | Furthermore,Kerth drawled,"why does n''t she want you to read those instructions until to- morrow? |
34813 | Ganeesh,he said, as his servant reappeared,"has anyone been here this afternoon?" |
34813 | Give me a lift, will you? |
34813 | Has Manlove Sahib come in, Ganeesh? |
34813 | Has anybody ever caught Chavigny? 34813 Has he been here long, robbing you of your trade?" |
34813 | Has the heat gone to their heads at Delhi? |
34813 | Have a smoke? 34813 Have you a light, major?" |
34813 | Have you approximated the value of the stolen gems? |
34813 | He is tied, Presence, to a-- what do you call them? |
34813 | He-- took it--"What, Alan, dear? |
34813 | Here permanently? |
34813 | Here--"Wo n''t you keep it? |
34813 | Hmm,he thought,"if she wo n''t be able to see me in Calcutta, where the deuce will she see me?" |
34813 | How can I be sure of that? |
34813 | How could I forget, Heavenborn? |
34813 | How did you know? |
34813 | How do I know that thou hast not summoned_ Nats_ to beset my shop and drive away those who might buy? |
34813 | How do I know you will come back? |
34813 | How do I know you''re telling the truth? |
34813 | How do I know? |
34813 | How does one account for the sun, the moon, the stars? |
34813 | How should I know? 34813 How''d you get in?" |
34813 | How''d you suspect the wine? |
34813 | How? |
34813 | I do n''t suppose,Trent questioned,"he told who had him arrested?" |
34813 | I feel no rancour, you understand, only an ache-- a very great ache-- over this colossal misunderstanding.... You must go? 34813 I hope you were n''t ill last night?" |
34813 | I mean, is there any one in the back of the shop? |
34813 | I wonder, man of wits, how many bearers would think to do what your Rawul Din did, that night at my house? |
34813 | I''m to infer, then, that in your opinion Chavigny had nothing whatever to do with the robberies? |
34813 | I''ve a uniform I want to rid myself of temporarily; do n''t object if I send it around for you to keep?... 34813 I_ should_ be angry-- for why did you spy upon me?" |
34813 | If I give my word,Hsien Sgam pursued,"that I am unarmed, will not that be sufficient?" |
34813 | If I refuse? |
34813 | If it is so great a city, then why do not the English, who sent an army to Lhassa and routed the Dalai Lama, know of it? 34813 If she discovers you''re not Rawul Din, the Rajput, what then?" |
34813 | If you do n''t want a Secret Service man, whom_ do_ you want? |
34813 | In India? 34813 In your back mainly?" |
34813 | Including the name of the order? |
34813 | Is it customary to have the name engraved-- like this? |
34813 | Is it indiscreet,she countered,"to recover the jewels?" |
34813 | Is it quite serious, Major Trent? 34813 Is it?" |
34813 | Is n''t it glorious? |
34813 | Is n''t that diplomacy? |
34813 | Is that keeping faith with her? |
34813 | Is that strange-- er-- Mr. Tavernake? 34813 Is the City of the Falcon the next?" |
34813 | Is the_ Huzoor_ ready? |
34813 | Is-- is it-- that bad? |
34813 | It really would n''t be stealing your time? 34813 Just how did you do this?" |
34813 | Kane? |
34813 | Know you those who are in that boat? |
34813 | Last-- When was it? 34813 Leroux Sahib?" |
34813 | Major Trent Sahib? |
34813 | Major Trent Sahib? |
34813 | Major Trent? |
34813 | Miss Charteris? 34813 Must you leave? |
34813 | Namely? |
34813 | No weapon of any sort? |
34813 | No? |
34813 | Now, major, do you approve of my plan? |
34813 | Of course you''ve heard of Chavigny? |
34813 | Oh, you''re leaving Calcutta then? |
34813 | Or curious? 34813 Or-- Chavigny?" |
34813 | Perhaps thy wife? |
34813 | Really, wo n''t you throw a little more light on the subject? |
34813 | Really, would you be satisfied in a prosaic English or American city-- after-- all this? |
34813 | Really? 34813 Really?" |
34813 | Really? |
34813 | Regarding the trivial matter of your-- er-- incidentals, I presume you have been told to keep an account and submit it at the proper time?... 34813 Sarojini?" |
34813 | See? 34813 Shall I be presuming if I suggest that you give into my keeping that which you have under your robe?" |
34813 | Shall we sit down? |
34813 | Shall we walk? |
34813 | She has n''t arms or ammunition or organization-- and, furthermore, what good would a revolution do? |
34813 | She who passed on the night of the new moon? |
34813 | Sit down, wo n''t you? |
34813 | Siva-- who the deuce is the other chap? |
34813 | So what shall I do, Sahib? |
34813 | Stationed? 34813 Suppose I am killed in Tibet?" |
34813 | Suppose I give you-- the third? |
34813 | Suppose she objects? |
34813 | Suppose we move to the dining- hall? |
34813 | Suppose--this suavely from the Mongol--"we declare an armistice, as it were, until to- night? |
34813 | Suppose,the Mongol resumed,"I were to say that plans for such a-- you recall what we discussed the other evening? |
34813 | Surely this is n''t all? |
34813 | Tambusami, what have you to say? |
34813 | Tambusami? |
34813 | That all? |
34813 | That means you accept? |
34813 | That was how I became a-- what is the word?--messiah? |
34813 | The Church dominates Mongolia,the quiet voice went on,"and the Dalai Lama is its-- how do you say it, Pope? |
34813 | The boatmen are no friends of thine? |
34813 | The brother-- how could I refuse when he told me to go with him to...? 34813 The diamonds alone are worth ten thousand pounds, and-- but you do n''t want me to go into detail, do you? |
34813 | The lama sent no other message? |
34813 | The price? |
34813 | Then I shall see you there? |
34813 | Then I''m to deliver myself blindfolded? |
34813 | Then it is n''t? |
34813 | Then the''Delhi Post''did not tell the truth this morning,ventured the woman,"when it said,''the Intelligence Department has a valuable clue''?" |
34813 | Then they_ will_? |
34813 | Then thy children? |
34813 | Then you have not seen him? |
34813 | Then you think it the work of some sort of organized band? |
34813 | There was nobody else here when you first came? |
34813 | There''s to be a dance to- night-- you knew it? |
34813 | They paid well, did they? 34813 To Bombay?" |
34813 | Unconditionally? |
34813 | Was the Presence beginning to believe I had been swallowed up by this strange city? |
34813 | Well, what are your terms? |
34813 | Well? |
34813 | Well? |
34813 | Well? |
34813 | Well? |
34813 | Were you well informed as to the terms of the agreement? |
34813 | What about this? |
34813 | What are you going to do with me? |
34813 | What could I do, Presence? 34813 What did you learn about the design?" |
34813 | What do they contain? |
34813 | What do you know of this city, this Shingtse- lunpo? |
34813 | What do you mean? |
34813 | What happened on the night of June fourteenth? |
34813 | What harm in taking him to Bombay? |
34813 | What is impossible? |
34813 | What is it to thee, O scarred one, if I have a wife or not? |
34813 | What is it? |
34813 | What is your first question? |
34813 | What of Chavigny? |
34813 | What of my muleteers? |
34813 | What of my muleteers? |
34813 | What of the Allied Consortium? |
34813 | What question did you ask that caused him to tell that? |
34813 | What were you saying, major? |
34813 | What_ did_ happen on that night? 34813 When did it happen, Ranjeet Singh?" |
34813 | When do I start-- or do_ we_? |
34813 | Where are your porters? 34813 Where did you get this?" |
34813 | Where is he? 34813 Where is he?" |
34813 | Where is my brother? |
34813 | Where is the pain? |
34813 | Where''s Ganeesh? |
34813 | Where''s everybody? 34813 Where? |
34813 | Where? |
34813 | Which seems the most likely? 34813 Who did this?" |
34813 | Who is she? 34813 Who is this, Sahib?" |
34813 | Who put you up to this? |
34813 | Who? 34813 Who?" |
34813 | Whose orders? |
34813 | Why did n''t you bring him here? |
34813 | Why did not you tell me? |
34813 | Why did you disobey me by bringing this man? |
34813 | Why did you drug him? |
34813 | Why did you follow me? |
34813 | Why did you run away, like this? |
34813 | Why do rivers run down to the sea, thou dolt? |
34813 | Why dost thou swear by the Lord Gaudama? |
34813 | Why must a woman have such narrow man- made boundaries? 34813 Why not inquire?" |
34813 | Why not? 34813 Why should I?" |
34813 | Why should you think that? |
34813 | Why? |
34813 | Will you call the captain? 34813 Will you close the door, please?" |
34813 | Will you tell me who gave you that--? 34813 With a lord who deals in magic medicines, why should not I watch over him, as a keeper over his cheetah?" |
34813 | Wo n''t you accept it? |
34813 | Wonder if she''s anything like her lair? |
34813 | Wonder where Granville got that? |
34813 | Would you like to become father- confessor? |
34813 | Yes, Presence, but not--"It was n''t familiar? |
34813 | Yes? |
34813 | Yes? |
34813 | Yet you can tell me now,he suggested,"how far this Falcon''s nest is?" |
34813 | You accuse me of crude tactics,she said; then switched off with:"But tell me, what have you learned since your arrival?" |
34813 | You are Tavernake Sahib? |
34813 | You are surprised to see me-- like this? |
34813 | You are surprised? |
34813 | You believe I lie? 34813 You caught him?" |
34813 | You caught him? |
34813 | You heard the Memsahib''s voice? |
34813 | You insist, then, that you did n''t drop-- something-- into my cabin? |
34813 | You mean the jewels passed through Myitkyina? |
34813 | You mean,Trent interrogated,"there''s a lama here who''s supposed to be a reincarnation of Buddha?" |
34813 | You question my loyalty? |
34813 | You re- set several necklaces, and... you made a copy of the Pearl Scarf... for, well, for state purposes-- didn''t you? |
34813 | You recall what happened in the affair of Amar Singh, when your men investigated? 34813 You refer, I presume, to the incident at Rangoon-- when I came near committing a grave error? |
34813 | You remember the place-- the room? |
34813 | You remember,began Sarojini,"that you were told you would reach enlightenment by gradations?... |
34813 | You say you suspected the monks? |
34813 | You see, the fact that you do not speak our language, and that my people are unfortunately suspicious, might prove... you understand? 34813 You think,"said Hsien Sgam,"it will be easy to leave the city?" |
34813 | You took the coral pendant from my room-- there at Benares? |
34813 | You understand? 34813 You will do me the honor to be seated?" |
34813 | You wish to see me? |
34813 | You would rather be put in irons than tell who your master is? |
34813 | You''ll need it if you''re going in the morning-- and you_ are_ going? 34813 You''re Muhafiz Ali, the lapidary?" |
34813 | You''ve heard of him, have n''t you? 34813 You''ve learned nothing?" |
34813 | You''ve not been disillusioned? |
34813 | You''ve notified the police that-- Chavigny, is n''t it?--is in the city? |
34813 | You, of course, suspected Myitkyina was not the end of your journey? |
34813 | You-- you believe me-- don''t you? |
34813 | Your brother''s in the city? |
34813 | Your men have left the city? |
34813 | Your name is Tavernake,_ thakin_? |
34813 | _ Quo vadis_, you old mummy? |
34813 | ''Bout time, is n''t it?" |
34813 | A pause before she pursued:"But why, even then, did you suspect them? |
34813 | Adventure? |
34813 | After all these prosaic years was he to be drawn out of his cocoon of medicines and gauze bandages and have his adventure? |
34813 | After all, was not it possible that he had placed the necklaces in the wrong tray? |
34813 | Am I a dog that I should run behind until my tongue drips and I drop dead of heat? |
34813 | Am I an animal that I should lie upon the ground when I sleep? |
34813 | And answer me, impossible one, who_ are_ the''ruling powers''of Tibet, as you choose to call them? |
34813 | And do you think she was telling the truth when she said Chavigny has nothing to do with this Order of the Falcon?" |
34813 | And have you wondered how the devil they''re going to hide the loot, or get it out of India? |
34813 | And he repeated,"Sarojini Nanjee, the Swaying Cobra?" |
34813 | And his heart beat swifter as she whipped back:"Who told you that?" |
34813 | And how can that be done?" |
34813 | And if he was still a prisoner then? |
34813 | And perhaps you even think Chavigny the leader, yes?" |
34813 | And that reminds me, is it safe to go to a native theater? |
34813 | And the Falcon? |
34813 | And the brother-- what of the brother,_ Tajen_?" |
34813 | And the wearer.... Why had she lowered her veil-- why had she denied that she came from his compound? |
34813 | And then? |
34813 | And was not that it? |
34813 | And what day was Captain Manlove murdered?... |
34813 | Another pause before he ventured:"I suppose you''re not at liberty to tell me how you came into possession of that?" |
34813 | Another pause, and he repeated:"You see?" |
34813 | Are they not fine muleteers?" |
34813 | At Tali- fang I learned you had n''t passed and I left a message-- you received it?... |
34813 | Bribe the soldiers? |
34813 | But I have a dream-- an ultimate-- do you say Utopia? |
34813 | But Mongolia-- you asked about Mongolia?... |
34813 | But come, shall we take a walk?" |
34813 | But had a thief disturbed the beads? |
34813 | But how could it be stopped? |
34813 | But in these waters.... Is there anything else I can do for you?" |
34813 | But the body, what of that? |
34813 | But what of the Buddhist priest? |
34813 | But what power could it be? |
34813 | But why Burma? |
34813 | But why did blood affect him? |
34813 | But why in Tophet was he thinking of this Buddha- faced heathen? |
34813 | But why move the body-- unless to hide it? |
34813 | Canst thou suggest what it shall be?" |
34813 | Could Tibet explain satisfactorily; or would there be a British expedition, resulting in death for hundreds, because of one indiscreet Englishman?" |
34813 | Could a woman do that? |
34813 | Could it be that Venekiah, that mountain of corruption, had spied upon him?... |
34813 | D''ye suppose Chavigny made a mistake-- thought Manlove you? |
34813 | D''ye suppose he''s one of the Order? |
34813 | Did Guru Singh''s presence mean that the woman of the cobra- bracelet was in Myitkyina? |
34813 | Did I say so?" |
34813 | Did a smile flicker across her eyes, he wondered, or was it only his fancy? |
34813 | Did n''t you know better than to let some filthy, stinking_ hakim_ burn her stomach with a hot iron?" |
34813 | Did not duty toward flesh transcend duty toward the inanimate?... |
34813 | Do n''t you see what people will say when they learn of it? |
34813 | Do n''t you think so?" |
34813 | Do you know?" |
34813 | Do you know?" |
34813 | Do you wonder, then,"resumed the voice with the alien note,"that we resent the intrusion of missionaries? |
34813 | Does it mean there''s a band of thieves at work, with Chavigny at the head? |
34813 | Does man know?" |
34813 | Eckard and Gerrish will remain to--""Sleep?" |
34813 | Europe is dipping; next America-- and after that?" |
34813 | Finally:"What reason has he to wish to prevent me from leaving to- night?" |
34813 | For an extra gift of thirty rupees?" |
34813 | For did not I travel it? |
34813 | For why should Chavigny wish to return the oval to him? |
34813 | From where had the native come? |
34813 | Had Chatterjee gone to the bungalow that night, grief- crazed and believing Trent responsible for his child''s death, to administer primitive justice? |
34813 | Had he been a fool? |
34813 | Had he ever been a doctor? |
34813 | Had he witnessed the crime and fled? |
34813 | Has that any significance to you?... |
34813 | Hast thou no room? |
34813 | Have you a match?" |
34813 | He deliberately chose--"Beyond the Brahmaputra?" |
34813 | He did not waste words, but asked:"Why do you tell me this?" |
34813 | He got the pearls and--""And you took them to Gaya, to the lamas?" |
34813 | He queried:"What if I prefer to do otherwise than as you suggest?" |
34813 | He read the notes he had made: Who the deuce would want the pendant? |
34813 | He recovered enough to ask:"His Holiness-- what have you done to him? |
34813 | He was innocent, but how could he explain? |
34813 | How could he get word to him? |
34813 | How could she?" |
34813 | How could this thing be accomplished by two people? |
34813 | How did this happen?" |
34813 | How were they taken there? |
34813 | However, Colonel Urqhart''s telegram stated that the woman had made inquiries about him-- and what other woman was interested? |
34813 | I should n''t be at all surprised, either, to learn that you think Indian and Chinese religions superior to ours?" |
34813 | I suppose you''re going back to England?" |
34813 | I suppose you''re going to the lawn party?" |
34813 | I trust no trouble brings you?" |
34813 | I was walking along the deck and--""Whose servant are you?" |
34813 | I wonder if you''d care to go with me? |
34813 | I wonder"--he leaned across the table toward Trent--"I wonder if you can understand my feelings there, a boy, in an alien land? |
34813 | I''d worry about you every moment, yet with something to distract me... do n''t you see?" |
34813 | If I give you my word that what I did last night is of no consequence to you, will you spare me the embarrassment of explaining? |
34813 | If it was a shot--? |
34813 | If not, why were the gems brought to Shingtse- lunpo? |
34813 | If the manifestation is n''t wholesome, how can the inner conception be? |
34813 | If there is such a city, why has no one heard of it?" |
34813 | In Lhakang- gompa? |
34813 | In the East, quizzed the Mongol? |
34813 | In the course of bargaining, he said:"Tell me, O wise one, is there in the bazaar a merchant who bears the name of Da- yak?" |
34813 | In the infantry, Hsien Sgam assumed? |
34813 | In the pause that followed Trent inserted:"What of the jewels?" |
34813 | In the quadrangle?" |
34813 | In which of the three regions would the Falcon''s nest be in less danger of discovery by blundering British agents?" |
34813 | Is he listening to me?" |
34813 | Is it not likely that he deserted?" |
34813 | Is n''t it frightful about the gems that were stolen?" |
34813 | Is n''t the very name magic? |
34813 | Is that a-- er-- threat?" |
34813 | It was with difficulty that the Director of Central Intelligence smothered an impulse to smile and suggested soberly:"Wo n''t you be more explicit? |
34813 | It was-- do you say,_ droll_? |
34813 | It''s a frightful confession to make, is n''t it?" |
34813 | It''s evident that Chavigny has the alliance of the lamas, but how did he get it? |
34813 | It''s so easy to drift, is n''t it?" |
34813 | May I have him?" |
34813 | May I inquire what you lost?" |
34813 | Monday-- the twentieth? |
34813 | Murdered? |
34813 | Neat way of beating the devil around the bush, is n''t it?" |
34813 | No, do n''t go.... About Chavigny: why should she say he is n''t, if he is?" |
34813 | No?" |
34813 | No?... |
34813 | Not transferred?" |
34813 | Of course you think he''s involved in this affair?" |
34813 | On the morrow would the police come and ask him all manner of confusing questions? |
34813 | Or had Manlove been mortally wounded at the house and gone of his own volition to the ruins before his death? |
34813 | Or had he taken his own life-- in remorse? |
34813 | Or had the hurricane spent itself? |
34813 | Or the British Raj? |
34813 | Or the white throat, full with young maturity? |
34813 | Organization? |
34813 | Perhaps you will do me the honor of calling at my residence to- morrow night?... |
34813 | Perhaps, were you to see me in a few months, you would be shocked, for I shall be a''barbarian''.... What? |
34813 | Presently he asked:"I''ve had no message from the lama?" |
34813 | Provided Chavigny was the murderer, would it not be natural for him to take steps to recover the pendant, once he discovered its loss? |
34813 | Remember the chap at Meera, Chatterjee? |
34813 | S.?" |
34813 | Said I not that I am the Swaying Cobra, that I dance for those I love, but have only venom for those I hate? |
34813 | Sarojini Nanjee? |
34813 | Satisfied on that score, Trent went on:"But what of my muleteers? |
34813 | Satisfied? |
34813 | Seest thou this?" |
34813 | Settled? |
34813 | Shall we adjourn?" |
34813 | Shall we go in here?" |
34813 | She had nerve, all right; how many women would have dared to do that? |
34813 | She of the cobra- bracelet? |
34813 | She opened her lips; closed them; and after a space said quite calmly:"Why did Hsien Sgam tell you that?" |
34813 | She paused and he said:"Well?" |
34813 | She replied:"Did I say so, O wise one? |
34813 | She resumed:"And you will do as I direct?" |
34813 | Skin of old ivory hue, he mused, and hair-- now, just what color was it? |
34813 | So what am I to do?" |
34813 | So why be uneasy? |
34813 | So wo n''t you keep it, as Humayun, the Great Mogul, kept the bracelet of Kurnavati, the Rani of Chitor?" |
34813 | Suppose the copy was found in his possession, and the police, who had strange ways, connected him with the robbery? |
34813 | Surely you''re not booked on the_ Manchester_?" |
34813 | Sâkya- mûni? |
34813 | That explained the theft of the pendant on the_ Manchester_( thus Trent to himself), but who took it the first time, in Benares? |
34813 | The Dalai Lama? |
34813 | The bungalow? |
34813 | The man inquired:"How long will it take?" |
34813 | The sahib had said the scarf was for the Raj, and was not that assurance enough? |
34813 | Then he suggested:"Are n''t all cards to go on the table?" |
34813 | Then politely, if not a little curiously,"Was it of-- er-- particular value?" |
34813 | Then, after a pause,"I trust you find your quarters comfortable?" |
34813 | Then:"Didst thou say, O traveller, that thou wouldst take the turban cloth for six rupees and two annas?" |
34813 | Then:"Is it ready?" |
34813 | Then:"Whose servant are you-- mine or hers?" |
34813 | There hurry to the bungalow of Colonel Warburton Sahib-- you know where it is? |
34813 | There is no road there--""Then where_ is_ the road, indeed, if thou dost know?" |
34813 | There was a street fight between some Chinese and Brahmins-- Chinese and Brahmins_ do_ fight, do n''t they? |
34813 | They could n''t understand, damn them; rather, they_ would n''t_.... You see?" |
34813 | Thieves? |
34813 | Think you I would have let him go after he called me_ that_, could I have prevented it?" |
34813 | This City of the Falcon: in Burma? |
34813 | Tiger?" |
34813 | To be sure, Sarojini Nanjee knew he was Arnold Trent-- but did Tambusami? |
34813 | Trent replied that none of the four assigned to him at Tali- fang spoke Tibetan-- and how could he travel in Tibet without an interpreter? |
34813 | Trent said, without surprise:"You heard?" |
34813 | Trent took that as his cue and asked:"Who_ is_ the Falcon?" |
34813 | Trent was staring up through the branches at the stars, but as Kerth stopped he looked down and asked:"Did n''t you say you had an audience with him?" |
34813 | Trent was struggling with insurgent thoughts.... Sarojini Nanjee-- eleven o''clock.... Kerth.... Where was he-- and Dana Charteris?... |
34813 | Two days, an interlude; then the Bay, Rangoon and-- But would he see_ her_ before he left? |
34813 | Voyages are rather monotonous when one is alone, do n''t you think?" |
34813 | Was it possible--? |
34813 | Was it the hair, in whose bronzen waves a slantwise ray of sunlight ignited little glints of red- gold? |
34813 | Was she playing with him? |
34813 | Was that really a custom-- the part about the bracelet- brother?" |
34813 | Was the attempt to kill him at the House of the Golden Joss the work of Chavigny? |
34813 | Was this another demonstration of the power whose hand he felt at Benares and Calcutta? |
34813 | Was this the flannel- clad fellow- passenger of the_ Manchester_, he who had talked of revolutions, of Western vices and morals?... |
34813 | Was this the hand of that mysterious power he had felt in Benares when he awakened to discover an intruder in his room? |
34813 | Was this the last he would ever see of the yellow- haired Sahib or the Punjabi? |
34813 | Was--? |
34813 | Well, why should they not? |
34813 | Were the jewels in Burma? |
34813 | Were they hidden somewhere in the hills? |
34813 | What about quarters?" |
34813 | What are her secret strings that give her so much power? |
34813 | What assurance have I?" |
34813 | What can she expect to do alone? |
34813 | What did he want with a copy of the Pearl Scarf? |
34813 | What did this foreigner want? |
34813 | What did those wretches know? |
34813 | What does Sir Francis think?" |
34813 | What does it matter if Deity is symbolized by Buddah, Mohammed or a Nazarene? |
34813 | What in flaming hades was the matter with him? |
34813 | What is it this time-- more plots against the Sirkar?" |
34813 | What of his brood? |
34813 | What other conclusions have you drawn?" |
34813 | What substantial reason had he to suspect that her interest in him was other than personal? |
34813 | What then?" |
34813 | What was afoot? |
34813 | What was his object in catechizing him? |
34813 | What was it, a footfall? |
34813 | What was it? |
34813 | What was she carrying that she did not want him to see? |
34813 | What was the Mongol''s part in the jewel mystery? |
34813 | What would he look like? |
34813 | What would the Mongol demand? |
34813 | What would you think? |
34813 | What''s his object in attempting to murder you? |
34813 | What''s the hour, major?" |
34813 | What? |
34813 | When Trent had retold his story, the Head of the Police enquired:"Where''s the telephone? |
34813 | When a moment had passed, she announced:"You would like to know how I know what I know about the jewels; is it not so?" |
34813 | When did I track him to the native_ serai_ in Delhi?" |
34813 | When he had instructed the_ gharry- wallah_, she asked:"You do n''t live in Calcutta?" |
34813 | When she could no longer endure it, she said:"Now that you are here, have you no thought of what you are to do?" |
34813 | When the meal was finished, Li Kwai Kung asked:"Will you join me with a pipe?... |
34813 | When the smokes were lighted, he asked:"Just how much do you know of this little party we''re about to start, major?" |
34813 | Where are they?" |
34813 | Where can we go to talk-- the garden? |
34813 | Where else? |
34813 | Where was Kerth now? |
34813 | Which is it: north, east or west?" |
34813 | White or Oriental?... |
34813 | Whither goes the elephant when his time is come? |
34813 | Whither had they gone, this Leroux Sahib and the blue- eyed Punjabi? |
34813 | Who had entered his shop, and why? |
34813 | Who was he? |
34813 | Who was she, anyway? |
34813 | Who was telling the truth, Sarojini Nanjee or Hsien Sgam?... |
34813 | Who''s with you? |
34813 | Who?... |
34813 | Why did he want a copy? |
34813 | Why did n''t he move or say something, she wondered? |
34813 | Why did you follow?" |
34813 | Why had he not thought to barricade that also against thieves? |
34813 | Why had n''t he married? |
34813 | Why had not this occurred to him before? |
34813 | Why had she falsified? |
34813 | Why in thundering hades had n''t he looked inside before he went on deck? |
34813 | Why not go ahead and meet Sarojini Nanjee? |
34813 | Why not read me your files?" |
34813 | Why not regard this as an impersonal affair? |
34813 | Why not? |
34813 | Why? |
34813 | Why?" |
34813 | Will Japan-- or your Allied Consortium? |
34813 | Will not I return for them?" |
34813 | Will you leave him to die?" |
34813 | Will you sit down? |
34813 | Will you tell me what you threw overboard last night?" |
34813 | Will you? |
34813 | Would n''t it be marvelous if--""If what?" |
34813 | Would you call it fair competition?" |
34813 | Yet I think I must have been a little mad to have attempted it-- but we all are, are n''t we? |
34813 | Yet why the deuce should he want to put you out of the way?" |
34813 | You arrived this afternoon?" |
34813 | You do not question my loyalty, you say; then what reason for refusal have you? |
34813 | You mean in the interest of your firm-- or were you in the Army then, like your brother?" |
34813 | You see, then, that Chavigny would have had time to reach Gaya; but how in flaming Tophet did he get out of Delhi? |
34813 | You will forgive me for assuming the rôle of instructor?" |
34813 | You wo n''t go, will you?" |
34813 | You would n''t fill an unclean vessel with holy water, would you? |
34813 | You''re not here alone, are you?" |
34813 | You''ve heard of him, have n''t you?" |
34813 | he wondered-- part of a necklace, an ornament? |
34813 | pressed the sahib,"or, rather,_ would_ you? |
34813 | wondered the surprised officer,"or am I?" |
42886 | Am I not a representative of one of the greatest mandarins of the empire? |
42886 | Are n''t you almost certain to be killed if you are found in company with a foreigner whom you are aiding to escape? |
42886 | Are they armed? |
42886 | Are you going to accept that proposition? |
42886 | Are you hurt, Rob? |
42886 | Are you really my father? |
42886 | Are you sick, or wounded, or what? 42886 Are you the American minister?" |
42886 | But how about the message to Pao- Ting? |
42886 | But what were you doing all this time? |
42886 | But who are you, sir? 42886 But why do you wear your finger- nails so long?" |
42886 | But, Rob, what do you suppose he wants all this white stuff worked into it for? |
42886 | Ca n''t something be done for them? |
42886 | Can you possibly be the Rob Hinckley who crossed the Pacific to Manila in the transport_ Logan_ last March? |
42886 | Can you tell how he was dressed? |
42886 | Can you tell me how soon I can get a train for New York? |
42886 | Can you tell me, sir,asked our lad, addressing this officer,"what American ship that is out there, and how she got wrecked?" |
42886 | Chinee, is he? |
42886 | Closed, pig? 42886 Did I not tell you that we are the servants of Yu- Hsien? |
42886 | Did n''t you know who I was until we stood together on the watch- tower? |
42886 | Did they know we were coming? |
42886 | Did you see any of the other boys throw anything at him? |
42886 | Do you mean the''Hi- ho''call? |
42886 | Fable? |
42886 | Garnet? |
42886 | Have n''t you just told me all about yourself? |
42886 | Have we? |
42886 | How can you identify them? |
42886 | How did he do that? |
42886 | How did you know? 42886 How did you know? |
42886 | How far is it from Pao- Ting- Fu to Pekin? |
42886 | How far is the line open? |
42886 | How long have you been in this country? |
42886 | How were they killed? 42886 I am told that you speak English; who are you, and why do you come here?" |
42886 | I wonder what Corregidor means? |
42886 | Including members of the legations? |
42886 | Is it possible that you are my own little Rob? |
42886 | Is not the man with the black face, standing by your side at this moment, a foreign devil? |
42886 | Is she pretty? |
42886 | Is there a gentleman by the name of Wang stopping here? |
42886 | Is there any answer, sir? |
42886 | Is this terrible thing the work of the great Boxer? |
42886 | Is this your man, deputy? |
42886 | Is your first name Robert? |
42886 | Like this? |
42886 | Like this? |
42886 | Native of China? |
42886 | Never lived in S----? |
42886 | Not a son of Dr. Mason Hinckley? |
42886 | Not as my guest? |
42886 | Now tell me, Miss Lorimer, what the Chinese boy did all this time? 42886 Oh, he carn''t, carn''t he? |
42886 | Oh, would he? |
42886 | Oh, you''re not going to wait any longer, are n''t you? 42886 Pretty tough- looking characters, are n''t they?" |
42886 | Speaking of the Fourth of July,said Rob,"do you remember that to- morrow is the Fourth?" |
42886 | That well- dressed young fellow? |
42886 | That''s the worst place between here and Pekin, is n''t it? |
42886 | Then what do you say? 42886 Then you are pretty certain that we will go sooner or later?" |
42886 | Then you really are going to Manila? |
42886 | Um,said the other, meditatively;"changed his description, have they? |
42886 | Was it any one you knew? |
42886 | Was that China boy mixed up in it? 42886 Well, my friends, what is it? |
42886 | What could they mean? 42886 What do we care fer him or fer his talk?" |
42886 | What do you fellows want here? |
42886 | What do you mean by abusing him? 42886 What do you mean by wrecked? |
42886 | What do you mean? 42886 What do you mean? |
42886 | What do you mean? |
42886 | What do you propose to do now? |
42886 | What do you want now? |
42886 | What has all this to do with us? |
42886 | What have you been doing there? |
42886 | What is going on here, Constable Jones? 42886 What is it, old man?" |
42886 | What is the meaning of this disgraceful exhibition, Robert? |
42886 | What is the use of running any farther? |
42886 | What is your name? |
42886 | What kind of boys were they? |
42886 | What means of transportation should we have if you did decide to leave, now that the railway is no longer in operation? |
42886 | What name was it? |
42886 | What other damage has been done? |
42886 | What was his crime? |
42886 | What''s the matter with walking around an end of it? |
42886 | What, for instance? |
42886 | What_ do_ you mean? 42886 When will it get me to New York?" |
42886 | Where is his excellency, Yu- Hsien? |
42886 | Where? |
42886 | Who are you? |
42886 | Who is the most popular fellow in Hatton? |
42886 | Who would have thought of his playing into our hands by doing such a fool thing? |
42886 | Who? |
42886 | Why did you not come forward sooner to testify in this case, Miss Lorimer, since you seem so greatly interested in it? |
42886 | Why? |
42886 | Wo n''t you step inside for a cup of tea? |
42886 | Would n''t it just be pie for them to get hold of him, blue dress, pig- tail, and all? |
42886 | Would n''t you rather remain in here and live than go out and meet a certain death? |
42886 | Would you know any of those boys again if you should see them? |
42886 | Yes,chimed in Constable Jones, wrathfully,"what does it mean? |
42886 | Yes; and is n''t it queer that it should be the same as the first two names of the I- Ho- Chuan? |
42886 | You are alive and not harmed? |
42886 | You are sure? |
42886 | You do n''t mean the place where the missionaries were killed the other day? |
42886 | You have n''t seen any missionaries killed, have you? |
42886 | After all, was the city of Pekin a good place for a young American and a Chinese who had befriended him to enter at that moment? |
42886 | Are troops on the way?" |
42886 | Are you all mad or drunk with the juice of poppies? |
42886 | Are you going to take her with us to Pekin? |
42886 | Are you willing to return to the mission with an order for its inmates to set out for this place within half an hour?" |
42886 | Are you?" |
42886 | At length he began to grow uneasy; and, walking over to the officer who guarded the door, he asked:"Is the commissioner very busy this morning?" |
42886 | But is it any more dreadful than certain things done at fashion''s decree in your own country? |
42886 | But what''s the matter with riding? |
42886 | But wo n''t both of you come to our house for luncheon? |
42886 | But would you dare travel another thousand miles through China, alone, and in view of the rumors of trouble that we have been hearing lately?" |
42886 | But, before I forget to mention it, how would you like to go along with us?" |
42886 | CHAPTER XI ACCEPT A KINDNESS AND PASS IT ALONG"Is it as bad as all that, my boy?" |
42886 | Can not I meditate in peace without being disturbed by the howlings of you swine? |
42886 | Can you let me have one of your men to identify me at the Italian barricade across Legation Street? |
42886 | Can you take them and see that they go light away quick?" |
42886 | Can you tell me by what fluid it has been saturated? |
42886 | Could Rob have reached there in time to become involved in the trouble? |
42886 | Did he not, even when we were strangers, fight to save me from abuse? |
42886 | Did it really occur?" |
42886 | Did you get through to Tien- Tsin? |
42886 | Do n''t yer dare let him out, for fear he''ll get hurted? |
42886 | Do n''t you remember crawling into it last night? |
42886 | Do n''t you remember that I was telling them what Yu- Hsien would do if they interfered with his plans? |
42886 | Do you believe it can be as bad as that, Uncle Will?" |
42886 | Do you happen to know of any one who could give me a job?" |
42886 | Do you hear me, Chink? |
42886 | Do you know what I think? |
42886 | Do you need an introduction?" |
42886 | Do you remember the date, sir, on which you saw them in Hong- Kong?" |
42886 | Do you want the job?" |
42886 | Foreigners expelled Chinese from their countries, so why should not his people in turn expel foreigners from China? |
42886 | Had he enlisted in the army? |
42886 | Has it not already been told to your dull ears that upon his reaching the imperial city within two days depends the very life of the Son of Heaven?" |
42886 | Have I your permission to question him?" |
42886 | Have n''t you been employed in Charley Wing''s laundry in S----?" |
42886 | How can it be that the gate is closed without orders from me, the keeper of the gate? |
42886 | How dare you come up here without orders? |
42886 | How did you get here? |
42886 | How in the name of--? |
42886 | How in the world did he happen to be on board a transport? |
42886 | How many? |
42886 | I am a student, and--""This is n''t your picture, then?" |
42886 | I wonder if it has become known that we communicated with your mother? |
42886 | If so, was he alive or dead? |
42886 | If you did n''t know that about your family, would n''t you want to go where you could find out?" |
42886 | Instead of shaking each other''s hand and saying"How do you do, Mr. Wang? |
42886 | Is anything the matter with the old packet?" |
42886 | Is it a go, and may we count on you as a fellow- passenger aboard the good old_ Logan_?" |
42886 | Is it not? |
42886 | Is it, by any chance, blood from the veins of this Joseph Lee, and caused to flow by the ill treatment he is alleged to have suffered?" |
42886 | Is n''t it the greatest bit of luck in the world? |
42886 | Is she a monitor?" |
42886 | Is she alive or dead?" |
42886 | Is the track- repairing car ready, as the governor requested? |
42886 | May I ask where you were born?" |
42886 | May I ask your name?" |
42886 | Run away? |
42886 | Savvy?" |
42886 | Shall we take advantage of the confusion to light out? |
42886 | Should you have known him, papa?" |
42886 | Their names? |
42886 | Then he said:"Did you not know that his excellency Li Ching Cheng had been given a position on the Board of Punishment? |
42886 | Then, again speaking to Jo, he said:"Ask your friend what''s wrong with the road beyond Pao- Ting- Fu?" |
42886 | Was he very fierce, and did he strike at his assailants as if he were trying to kill them?" |
42886 | Was n''t he perfectly splendid? |
42886 | Was n''t she awfully glad to see you when you got back from America?" |
42886 | We certainly have got the old wagon to ourselves now, and the question is, what shall we do with it?" |
42886 | Were the muckers fighting among themselves?" |
42886 | What could it mean? |
42886 | What did they do?" |
42886 | What do you say? |
42886 | What do you say? |
42886 | What do you think? |
42886 | What do you want?" |
42886 | What has happened?" |
42886 | What is your own name?" |
42886 | What time do we start?" |
42886 | What were their names?" |
42886 | What''s the matter? |
42886 | When do you think I can start, Uncle Will? |
42886 | When they reached the parsonage, and Mrs. Hinckley, in the back of the house, heard their voices, she called out:"Is that you, Rob? |
42886 | Where are you staying?" |
42886 | Where is father? |
42886 | Where is she? |
42886 | Where was he now? |
42886 | Where would he go from there? |
42886 | Who are these people, and what do they want?" |
42886 | Who are you? |
42886 | Why do n''t you rush into each other''s arms? |
42886 | Why had their boy gone to Manila? |
42886 | Will you accept the position? |
42886 | Will you and your friend sit down and kindly tell us everything that you know concerning the situation?" |
42886 | Would he find himself fatherless?--or would the dear face still be there with its smiling welcome? |
42886 | Would n''t you like to go aboard and take a look at her?" |
42886 | Yes, is n''t she fine? |
42886 | You wanchee catch one talkee man-- sabe?" |
42886 | You wanchee catchee one piecee dollar? |
42886 | and can I do less for him now that we are friends? |
42886 | and do you think he would harm his own?" |
42886 | and is n''t it fun running off with a locomotive? |
42886 | asked the lieutenant of marines;"and were you ever on board the United States monitor_ Monterey_?" |
42886 | cried Rob;"what shall I do? |
42886 | demanded Jo, fiercely,"and am I not come to prepare the way for him? |
42886 | demanded the startled minister,"and what proof can you give that your astounding statements are true?" |
42886 | exclaimed Rob,"to have them here? |
42886 | gasped Rob, as the friends of our lads gathered about them with congratulations at this happy ending of their troubles;"does he really mean it?" |
42886 | he reflected;"and would n''t he think he''d run up against a war party of American Indians, ready to scalp him? |
42886 | it''s already in the paper, is it? |
42886 | persisted the other, curiously,"and are you very fond of her?" |
42886 | suggested the captain, gravely;"and ca n''t I read''honesty''written on every feature of your face? |
42886 | where are you?" |
33400 | ''In Vishnu- land what Avatar?'' |
33400 | ''You do n''t suppose, do you, I sit here like an old- fashioned editor, reading voluntary contributions? 33400 ''You know Mr. Hunt awfully well, do n''t you?'' |
33400 | A boy? 33400 A liqueur?" |
33400 | After all, you''ll be down soon-- won''t you? 33400 Ah, M''sieu, one sees, is American; he has perhaps lost his way?" |
33400 | Ah,chanted Doctor Askew-- always to the hand--"it was an accident, was it? |
33400 | All right? 33400 Ambo,"said Susan, putting her hand in mine,"do you know at all how terribly I''ve missed you?" |
33400 | Ambo,she asked presently, in a thread of voice that I had to lean down to her to hear,"have they told you I can never have a baby now?... |
33400 | Ambo,she demanded unexpectedly,"does Sister know?" |
33400 | Ambo,she said,"I''ve been blind as blind, have n''t I?" |
33400 | Ambo-- what is to become of poor Tumps? 33400 Ambo? |
33400 | Ambo? |
33400 | An excuse, you mean? 33400 And are n''t you,"she murmured,"forgetting the last straw?" |
33400 | And how long have_ you_ known? |
33400 | And if it does n''t agree? |
33400 | And now, sergeant, what has happened here? 33400 And the second question, Ambrose?" |
33400 | And then? |
33400 | And then? |
33400 | And what do we see? |
33400 | And you? |
33400 | And you? |
33400 | And-- forgive me, dear-- after your decision, is it necessary for you to know? |
33400 | Anything more, sir? |
33400 | Are you Bob''s youngster? |
33400 | Are you willing to take her on, Phil? |
33400 | At full length? |
33400 | At this hour, m''sieu? |
33400 | But Ambo-- what shall I say to Jimmy? 33400 But Susan likes her, does n''t she, Miss Goucher? |
33400 | But may I ask on what grounds you suspect Sonia? |
33400 | But next time, Susan, as a concession to good manners, you might let us know you''re in the neighborhood--? |
33400 | But one supposes it depends a little on what you''re expecting-- from her? |
33400 | But surely,I protested,"it might have come to me from Miss Blake, as you suggest, without our having to descend to a belief in spirit communication? |
33400 | But-- oh, Mrs. Heinze-- gone_ where_? |
33400 | But_ does_ love have to be like an earthquake? 33400 By the way,"he added, as we turned once more into the dignified breadth of Hillhouse Avenue,"what''ll you do with the homely little brat? |
33400 | Ca n''t you hear him, Ambo-- and her? 33400 Can we turn back?" |
33400 | Claim me? |
33400 | Dey lifs alvays togedder-- like man unt vife-- nod? 33400 Did he give in gracefully?" |
33400 | Did n''t you_ know_? |
33400 | Did you make the apology? |
33400 | Do I address the Widow Guyot? |
33400 | Do n''t you mean talk_ her_ over? |
33400 | Do n''t you truly think, Ambo,suggested Susan,"that Jimmy ought to have a better chance? |
33400 | Do you know what I think Phil has done? |
33400 | Do you mean to say, Hunt, you''ve been caught by all this sentimental parson''s palaver? 33400 Do you mean to tell me Maltby confirmed it?" |
33400 | Excuse me, Mr. Hunt; but books, somehow-- just now-- they do n''t seem so important as--_see_? |
33400 | Fact is, old man, that night-- the night Phil Farmer said Susan wanted to see you-- was waiting for you in your study-- remember? 33400 For what?" |
33400 | Gone? |
33400 | Got the pad? |
33400 | Granting your universe, who gives a negligible damn for a little discomfort more or less? |
33400 | Had Mrs. Hunt''s body been moved when you arrived? 33400 Had n''t you noticed it?" |
33400 | Have I said something awful again? |
33400 | Have n''t I always told you and Ambo that Jimmy would be like this? |
33400 | Have you any relatives who will try to claim you? |
33400 | Have you been listening? |
33400 | Have you ever,he then asked me,"seen Miss Blake like this before?" |
33400 | Have you? |
33400 | His book''s finished? |
33400 | How are you, Mr. Farmer? 33400 How could it? |
33400 | How could she? |
33400 | How do you account for the position? |
33400 | How goes it, canary bird? |
33400 | How is she now? |
33400 | Hunt''s mistress, you mean? |
33400 | I d iss you-- nod? 33400 I suppose it''s absurd to think he looks like Jimmy? |
33400 | I thought we were going to forget the damns and hells, Susan? |
33400 | I wonder,he asked,"if anyone reads Wordsworth now-- except Susan?" |
33400 | I''m not, am I, in a position to judge? |
33400 | I''ve been appropriated, is that it? |
33400 | I? 33400 If by taking a merely conventional attitude,"he murmured,"you defeat the natural flowering of two lives----? |
33400 | If you would n''t mind,she suggested,"leaving her with me?" |
33400 | Is it a New York custom for police to enter a house of mourning? |
33400 | Is it a party in a parlor,she murmured wistfully to the flames,"all silent and all-- damned?" |
33400 | Is it kind to ask? |
33400 | Is my room--_her_ room? 33400 Is n''t that rather surprising?" |
33400 | Is n''t that-- what you called her headache? |
33400 | Is she coming back to you, Ambo? |
33400 | Is that saying much? |
33400 | Is that_ all_ she said? |
33400 | Is there anything really wrong? |
33400 | Jimmy? |
33400 | Jimmy? |
33400 | Left you? |
33400 | Like Tilly Jaretski? |
33400 | Maltby? |
33400 | May I ask why? |
33400 | May I ask you a few questions? |
33400 | May I offer you a chair? 33400 May I tell you? |
33400 | Mebbe I live lika you-- eh? 33400 Miss Goucher,"I managed to begin,"shut the door, please.... You see this poor child----?" |
33400 | Mr. Hunt,she began,"have I your permission to discharge Sonia?" |
33400 | Must n''t I listen? |
33400 | My God,came from Conlon in a husky whisper,"is she dyin''--or what?" |
33400 | My theory? |
33400 | Not much like the old town we knew once, eh, Hunt? |
33400 | Now see here, Boz,he began,"ca n''t we talk this over without quarreling? |
33400 | Oh, Ambo,she wailed,"do you think I shall ever learn to be a little like either of you? |
33400 | Oh, you''re_ on_ then? 33400 Oh,"she wailed,"unkind? |
33400 | Oh-- what will she say when she comes home and finds_ me_ here? 33400 Phil''s going?" |
33400 | Phil? |
33400 | Poetry? |
33400 | Police? |
33400 | Razor? 33400 Really,"answered Lucette, with a little worried frown, as if anxiously balancing alternatives,"I''m not, am I, in a position to judge?" |
33400 | Say, mister, please,said the small being,"if I was to put this down, would you mind telling him his dinner''s come?" |
33400 | Shall I say to Mrs. Hunt that you are coming down? |
33400 | She''ll be quite safe alone? |
33400 | Sorry, Mr. Hunt-- but you remember, perhaps-- when you first came in-- I had half a mind to try something-- an experiment? |
33400 | Sort of foolish? |
33400 | Still, you must have met with similar cases? |
33400 | Stuffiness? |
33400 | Suppose,I kept thinking,"suppose something should unexpectedly make it possible for Ambo to ask me to be his wife? |
33400 | Susan, what do you mean? |
33400 | Susan,I said gravely,"does Miss Goucher know about Sonia?" |
33400 | That does n''t help us much, does it? |
33400 | That''s all, I think, Ambrose? |
33400 | The body was lying face down, you say? |
33400 | The press? 33400 The time I laid out Joe Gonfarone? |
33400 | Then the headache is-- hypothetical? |
33400 | Then you''d be satisfied to have her throw herself away? |
33400 | They have n''t lost us, then? |
33400 | Tragedy? |
33400 | Well, Conlon,he grinned,"we''re making a night of it, eh? |
33400 | Well, I mean-- you spoke of vague rumors, did n''t you? 33400 Well,"I flashed,"if you were in my shoes-- would_ you_?" |
33400 | Well? |
33400 | Well? |
33400 | What I want to know, doc,demanded Conlon,"is why you''ve changed your mind?" |
33400 | What are you up to, Mr. Hunt? 33400 What could bring you at such an hour?" |
33400 | What do_ you_ propose to do, Hunt? |
33400 | What does he think of Mrs. Arthur''s nonsensical theory? |
33400 | What does that matter? |
33400 | What does? |
33400 | What happened in Mrs. Hunt''s room to- night? |
33400 | What is it? 33400 What is the trouble?" |
33400 | What is the world, may I ask? 33400 What the_ hell_?" |
33400 | What''s bitin''you? |
33400 | What''s her name? |
33400 | What''s the idea, doc? |
33400 | What''s the idea? |
33400 | What''s the idea? |
33400 | What''s the maid''s story? |
33400 | What''s wrong, dear? |
33400 | What, for instance? |
33400 | What, precisely, does Gertrude want from me? |
33400 | What? |
33400 | When I''m down already? 33400 When you ask me to give up even the mere material protection of my family? |
33400 | Where are you taking me? |
33400 | Where do you live, Susan? 33400 Where is Doctor Askew? |
33400 | Where''s Miss Blake now? |
33400 | Where''s Susan? |
33400 | Who are you? |
33400 | Who did, then? |
33400 | Who is ut? |
33400 | Who''s as good as me? |
33400 | Why could n''t she live with you, Ambo? |
33400 | Why did n''t I stay with her, Ambo? 33400 Why did you wait for my permission?" |
33400 | Why do n''t you look gladder, Ambo? 33400 Why do n''t you wait and see your father?" |
33400 | Why is it,she demanded, turning suddenly on Susan,"that I do n''t see you round more with the college boys? |
33400 | Why is n''t she with me then? 33400 Why not? |
33400 | Why not? |
33400 | Why these tragic accents? |
33400 | Why, Mrs. Arthur, do you assume that Susan is safe with Boz? |
33400 | Why? 33400 Why? |
33400 | Why? 33400 Why? |
33400 | Why? 33400 Why?" |
33400 | Why? |
33400 | Why? |
33400 | Why? |
33400 | With the result, Gertrude? |
33400 | Wo n''t they? 33400 Worrying?" |
33400 | Would n''t it be funny,said Susan,"if I did mean that without knowing it?" |
33400 | Would you like to stay here with me? |
33400 | Yes, dear? |
33400 | Yes; but if she had n''t been? |
33400 | Yes? |
33400 | Yes? |
33400 | You believe that_ because_ she affirmed it? |
33400 | You do n''t know? |
33400 | You find it less difficult here? |
33400 | You have, Ambo? 33400 You knew from the first how to chasten my stuck- up name, did n''t you? |
33400 | You mean it, Susan-- literally? 33400 You mean-- immoral?" |
33400 | You never guessed I could look so-- presentable, did you? |
33400 | You think it in character? |
33400 | You think? |
33400 | You want to go because you''re not sure? |
33400 | You''re Susan Blake, are n''t you? |
33400 | You''re certain she said''accident''? |
33400 | You''ve some writing you want to do-- a book, maybe? 33400 You''ve turned_ Red_, Susan? |
33400 | _ Aber_--with a slow, wide smile--"vere iss der diffurunz, Mrs. Shay? |
33400 | _ Her?_Joe''s lips curled back. |
33400 | _ Plaît- il?_politely murmured the harassed- looking little French captain, my vis- à- vis. |
33400 | _ Should?_ Why_ should_? |
33400 | _ Should?_ Why_ should_? |
33400 | _ Were n''t_ you good to her, Ambo? 33400 ''No,''I says,''he was a Demycrat-- and what''s ut to you? 33400 *****Am I in love with Ambo, or am I just trying to be for his sake? |
33400 | After all, the real struggle''s always between ideas, is n''t it? |
33400 | After years of silence? |
33400 | All clear so far?... |
33400 | Alone with her? |
33400 | Am I too late for the bust- up?" |
33400 | Am I wrong?" |
33400 | Ambo, dear, do you see at all what I''m driving at?" |
33400 | An echo, from days long past returned to me, Phil''s quiet, firm voice demanding-- of Maltby, was n''t it? |
33400 | And I ask myself wherein lies its throat- tightening quality, its irresistible appeal? |
33400 | And a maid? |
33400 | And had she no heart? |
33400 | And if he did? |
33400 | And in heaven''s name-- why the dinner pail? |
33400 | And my cigarettes are gone.... How about yours----?" |
33400 | And my vision at Evian----? |
33400 | And she seems efficient?" |
33400 | And then some day, when you least expected it and were thinking of something else, that forgotten something has popped into your mind again-- eh? |
33400 | And what is Susan?" |
33400 | And what is Susan?_"Doctor Askew cross- questioned me closely as we sat there, a little off from Susan, our eyes seldom leaving her face. |
33400 | And what is to come to her,"demanded Mrs. Parrot,"if she stays on in this house, without a God- fearing woman, and one you ca n''t fool most days? |
33400 | And what_ there_ do you find? |
33400 | And where do you go-- you romantic idealists? |
33400 | And where, meanwhile, was one Ambrose Hunt, sometime_ dilettante_ at large? |
33400 | And why were her eyes making fun of him-- or were n''t they? |
33400 | And yet----""And yet----? |
33400 | And you think that would be best?" |
33400 | Any real difference, I mean? |
33400 | Any truth in it? |
33400 | Anything wrong with that point of view, old man? |
33400 | Are n''t her children his pride? |
33400 | Are n''t we, Jimmy?" |
33400 | Are n''t you, Conlon?" |
33400 | Are you cross, Ambo?" |
33400 | Are you listening? |
33400 | Are you lonely?" |
33400 | Are you_ Susan''s_ Jimmy?" |
33400 | As her guardian you must have some slight feeling of responsibility?" |
33400 | At least you''d know then, would n''t you, that simply being yours meant more to me than anything else in life? |
33400 | At least you''re safe there,"she hastily added;"are n''t you?" |
33400 | Been there? |
33400 | Before I could check him,"Why?" |
33400 | Besides which, was n''t marriage a sacrament, and was n''t M''sieu Jee- mee a good Catholic? |
33400 | Better still-- why not come to the study? |
33400 | Bob told me that.... Eh? |
33400 | Brotherhood, peace on earth, all the rest of it?" |
33400 | But I hope to God you''ve hit somewhere near it?" |
33400 | But do we do it? |
33400 | But do you never talk of anything but books and art and ideas? |
33400 | But how was I to let fall this one blow more, this heaviest blow of all, upon Susan? |
33400 | But if I do n''t know what it''s wisest and best to buy in this case, who,"she had demanded of heaven,"does?" |
33400 | But if she leaped to her feet in terror-- what? |
33400 | But in God''s name what then was the meaning of my vision back there in the hotel room at Evian? |
33400 | But is n''t God just a short solemn name for things in general? |
33400 | But is she here because of anything you may have telephoned her-- after your call last night?" |
33400 | But perhaps I ought to tell you first what happened between us?" |
33400 | But such are the facts as science reveals them-- are they not? |
33400 | But surely the union of two vain hopes in a single disappointment can never mean joy? |
33400 | But surely there, in that magic circle, one might press closer, draw oneself nearer, catch at the faintest hint toward a possible clue? |
33400 | But we''ll hear from Mr. Hunt first, see? |
33400 | But what has happiness to do with love? |
33400 | But what other explanation can be given for the success of Susan''s play, both here and in England, than its sheer_ beauty_? |
33400 | But what''s your second guess?" |
33400 | But while we last, why must we add imaginary evils to our real ones, and torment ourselves with false hopes and ridiculous fears? |
33400 | But who knows? |
33400 | But why could n''t you have laid her down on the floor? |
33400 | But why handicap yourself so cruelly at the start?" |
33400 | But-- when may I return?" |
33400 | Can I earn my living as a writer? |
33400 | Can you be"going on"--twenty? |
33400 | Can you hear me when I cry? |
33400 | Can you make a martyr of yourself for his surly sake? |
33400 | Can you, dear?" |
33400 | Can you? |
33400 | Corsets? |
33400 | Did n''t I bring that banjo with me?" |
33400 | Did n''t you like her?" |
33400 | Did the woman want me to stop her breath with bare hands? |
33400 | Did you send for her?" |
33400 | Do n''t you like pretty- pie fairy tales when they happen to be true?" |
33400 | Do n''t you remember Bob Blake''s kid on Birch Street?" |
33400 | Do n''t you see how I need you? |
33400 | Do n''t you see how your inbred worship of class and family would become in the end an intenser form of worshipping yourself? |
33400 | Do n''t you see, Ambo, the very moment things grow difficult for us you forget to believe in me-- begin to act as if I were a common or garden fool? |
33400 | Do n''t you see?" |
33400 | Do n''t you see?" |
33400 | Do n''t you? |
33400 | Do n''t you?" |
33400 | Do n''t you?" |
33400 | Do you believe me when I say, with all the sincerity I''m capable of, that Susan is slandered by these suspicions?" |
33400 | Do you mean---- But you ca n''t mean that you imagine Susan to be in love with-- her grandfather?" |
33400 | Do you remember how I used to shock you, Ambo, when I first came here-- saying somebody or other was no damn good? |
33400 | Do you see?" |
33400 | Do you?" |
33400 | Do you?" |
33400 | Does n''t it all, way down in your tummy somewhere, give you a good honest griping pain?" |
33400 | Does n''t it seem improbable, then, to say the least of it, that my vision could have come from that direction?" |
33400 | Dust and shadow.... Was there anything real there, anything worth the pain of spiritual salvage? |
33400 | Eternal forces, or creatures of an hour? |
33400 | Even if they exist-- outside of_ maisons de santé_--what good are they? |
33400 | Feel your pins under you?... |
33400 | Followed a knock at my door that I answered calmly:"Who is it? |
33400 | For was it not hers? |
33400 | From whose mind was this exact vision of the accident to Mrs. Hunt transferred to yours? |
33400 | Had n''t something happened-- once-- something rather sad-- and rather horrible? |
33400 | Had something of Bob''s granitic harshness entered into this uncanny, this unnatural child? |
33400 | Has it, Ambo? |
33400 | Has n''t she made her husband happy? |
33400 | Have n''t I ever told you about him?" |
33400 | Have we got all of Sister that clean fire could n''t take, shut up in that tiny vase?" |
33400 | Have you been able to form any reasonable notion of how such an accident could have occurred?" |
33400 | He had n''t been round since.... His kid, eh? |
33400 | Heaven knows there''s enough!--but I mean between_ us_? |
33400 | Her age?... |
33400 | Her?" |
33400 | Here it is:"''We know that life is a dream, and how should thinking be more?'' |
33400 | How about breakfast?" |
33400 | How about you, sir?" |
33400 | How can I help it? |
33400 | How can anything so sad be so funny, Ambo? |
33400 | How can it be? |
33400 | How could a child, a charming and too daring child-- however gifted-- be expected to deal with these creatures? |
33400 | How could she? |
33400 | How could the mere fact of it-- clearing, as it did, at least, all perplexities from my own mind-- have occurred? |
33400 | How could you imagine that would please me?" |
33400 | How did it happen? |
33400 | How did you ever find strength to resist it, Ambo? |
33400 | How does it strike you, old man? |
33400 | How is she?" |
33400 | How long since? |
33400 | How then to account for this astounding clairvoyance? |
33400 | How''s the great experiment-- eh? |
33400 | However inept the work which we force ourselves or are prevailed upon to destroy, the unhappy doubt always lingers:"If I had only saved it? |
33400 | Hunt?" |
33400 | Hunt?" |
33400 | Hunt?" |
33400 | I am inclined to agree, and yet-- am I? |
33400 | I broke through her dusty web of words with an impatient,"What on earth are you talking about, Miss O''Neill?" |
33400 | I do n''t say that she is n''t entirely equal to meeting it; but I dread the nervous strain for her-- if you understand?" |
33400 | I got to the''phone all right, did n''t I? |
33400 | I guess they''ve come, damn them, eh?" |
33400 | I hope you do n''t frighten them off, my dear, by mentioning Wordsworth? |
33400 | I hope you wo n''t shudder over mine?" |
33400 | I hurried down in response to a telegram saying my wife.... You know we''ve lived apart for years?" |
33400 | I leaf i d to you?" |
33400 | I mean, from the very spot where it fell?" |
33400 | I often say it still...._ Dearest, dearest Far- Away, Can you hear me when I pray? |
33400 | I should have to rent a place somewhere, that was certain; but where? |
33400 | I think you understand me?" |
33400 | I wonder if anyone ever has or can? |
33400 | I''m not a critic, but am I wrong in thinking it would have been a pity to burn them? |
33400 | I''m starved, too, Ambo-- aren''t you? |
33400 | I''ve a mind to try something here-- if you''ve no objection to an experiment?" |
33400 | In this, may I not feel without offense that we are of one mind? |
33400 | Inexperienced? |
33400 | Is Mr. Phar still about?" |
33400 | Is her cold worse?" |
33400 | Is it passion? |
33400 | Is it really all that''s holding you from me? |
33400 | Is it yet known when this poor Lieutenant Kane will arrive in Paris?" |
33400 | Is it?" |
33400 | Is n''t it strange that I ca n''t feel this about Wordsworth? |
33400 | Is n''t it? |
33400 | Is n''t that so?" |
33400 | Is n''t that true? |
33400 | Is she?" |
33400 | Is that all? |
33400 | Is that it?" |
33400 | Is that plain?" |
33400 | Is that what she called to tell you?" |
33400 | Is there a_ there_?... |
33400 | Is there any reason why you should n''t accept?" |
33400 | Is wanting to make believe for another''s sake enough? |
33400 | It ca n''t be sworn to on the Book, that''s certain-- eh? |
33400 | It seems you did battle for her once, down at the bottom of the Birch Street incline?" |
33400 | It was unmistakably dainty Alma with her white forehead star-- but where was her mistress? |
33400 | It''s rather awful, is n''t it?" |
33400 | It''s_ too_ nice, is n''t it-- for every day?" |
33400 | Just to see, I mean, that he gets his milk every day and fish heads on Friday? |
33400 | Let me first ask you a question, sergeant: Who sent for Doctor Askew?" |
33400 | Life is n''t,"asked Miss Disbrow,"all money- grubbing and selfishness, is it?" |
33400 | May I? |
33400 | Me, I mean? |
33400 | Might it not conceivably be true? |
33400 | Miss Goucher told me all about it, and she would n''t have done it, would she, if she had n''t hoped I''d bring it straight back to you? |
33400 | More and more deliberately the hand moved; then it paused...."What happened in Mrs. Hunt''s room to- night?" |
33400 | Must I? |
33400 | My dear Ambrose, why on earth should I do a thing like that?" |
33400 | Need a maid? |
33400 | Nice, then-- or Mentone? |
33400 | No harm, though, if it pleases Susan, in looking him over?" |
33400 | No?... |
33400 | Nobody could call you handsome, could they? |
33400 | Now let''s lay all our cards face up on the table?" |
33400 | Now-- who did it-- and why? |
33400 | One ca n''t be sure? |
33400 | Or clubs? |
33400 | Or had she merely mentioned at lunch that there was a public lecture on Masefield? |
33400 | Or suppose I could n''t bring myself to ask it, but could n''t face life without you? |
33400 | Or suppose she should die? |
33400 | Overnight?" |
33400 | Parrot?" |
33400 | Perhaps posterity----?" |
33400 | Perhaps they are?" |
33400 | Perhaps to- morrow? |
33400 | Phar?" |
33400 | Phil? |
33400 | Please, please-- will_ you_? |
33400 | Put her in some kind of awful institution?" |
33400 | SUSAN: Jimmy? |
33400 | SUSAN: What illusions? |
33400 | Seeing me-- might bring back things?" |
33400 | Shall it be swords or pistols this time? |
33400 | Shay?" |
33400 | She paused, but added:"Why ca n''t you consider divorcing Mrs. Hunt, Ambo? |
33400 | Should I have the moral courage to send him away? |
33400 | Should I live to regret my decision to care for her, to educate her? |
33400 | So far as it went this was unquestionably true; but it went-- just how far? |
33400 | Somebody''s going to get it if you and I do n''t, eh? |
33400 | Something sensible and decisive-- but what? |
33400 | Stars-- are they not matter, merely? |
33400 | Suppose Gertrude should fall in love herself and insist on divorce? |
33400 | Suppose I should ask you now-- meaning every word of it-- to divorce Mrs. Hunt so you could marry me? |
33400 | Surely you can see, Miss Goucher, that I''ve touched the bottom?" |
33400 | Take the matter of that dog now-- his broken leg, eh? |
33400 | Tell us what happened in Mrs. Hunt''s room to- night.... What happened in Mrs. Hunt''s room to- night?" |
33400 | That proves something, does n''t it-- about you and me? |
33400 | That was foolish, of course-- but does n''t it make you like her, and_ see_ her-- mustache and all? |
33400 | That''s different-- isn''t it, Ambo?" |
33400 | That''s plain enough, is n''t it? |
33400 | That''s what you meant by his not standing up for Susan, is n''t it, Jimmy?" |
33400 | The apple trees must be in full bloom.... Well then, confound it, why had Susan gone to a public lecture on Masefield? |
33400 | The child''s bruised face... something she had said about a razor----? |
33400 | The kind of man you''ve turned to for strength? |
33400 | The point is, did you?" |
33400 | Then what fatuous devil-- was it my old familiar demon?--put it into my heart to say:"So you have n''t been worrying, dear, about me?" |
33400 | Then, too, she had vanished; or had I really seen her in the flesh at all? |
33400 | There is neither right nor wrong.... Of what consequence is it to Virtue or how is she at all concerned?... |
33400 | There was a new life, was there not? |
33400 | There''s a big war on, yes; but that''s nothing new, is it? |
33400 | There-- isn''t that a nice story, Ambo? |
33400 | They do not seem to me quite the Susan I love, but then, I am not a clever person; and it is undeniable that"Who is Dax?" |
33400 | To defend herself-- or try to escape? |
33400 | To plumb the depths for me-- to protect me? |
33400 | To whom could I appeal? |
33400 | Unkind?" |
33400 | Unless"--she teased me--"you really_ are_ afraid, Ambo?" |
33400 | Want to take care of you?" |
33400 | Was he going back on his faith-- or asking her to trifle with hers? |
33400 | Was it true? |
33400 | Was n''t it lucky if that had to happen to some woman-- it happened to me?" |
33400 | Was n''t she with her? |
33400 | Was n''t she with her? |
33400 | Was the hospital room that I had seen in Dunkirk, or in Nice, or at some point between-- perhaps at Paris? |
33400 | Was this man''s condition or state after death? |
33400 | Well, Susan?" |
33400 | Well, and then?" |
33400 | Well, bless her, so she had-- and why should n''t she? |
33400 | Well, then, if you had-- what follows?" |
33400 | Well-- how about it, sir?" |
33400 | Were there any indications of such binding?" |
33400 | What are they?" |
33400 | What are you to make of that? |
33400 | What could be a happier arrangement-- now? |
33400 | What do you mean?" |
33400 | What do you mean?" |
33400 | What do you say?" |
33400 | What do you want me to do?" |
33400 | What do you want?" |
33400 | What does being in love mean? |
33400 | What does that prove?" |
33400 | What follows?" |
33400 | What had happened? |
33400 | What happened in Mrs. Hunt''s room to- night?" |
33400 | What happened when Mrs. Hunt came to see you here? |
33400 | What harm could slander or scandal possibly do me, dear? |
33400 | What is it, Phil? |
33400 | What is it?" |
33400 | What man has n''t? |
33400 | What possible motive could be strong enough to drive such a girl to such a deed?" |
33400 | What shall we do about it?" |
33400 | What supreme, whimsical artistry brought them to being there, in that lonely spot; and for whose joy? |
33400 | What to him, in those days, was one young life more or less? |
33400 | What was its source? |
33400 | What was she doing alone, anyway, this society girl-- in a students''rooming house-- at Prof. Farmer''s door? |
33400 | What was she up to, lying there on the ribbed concrete at this time of night? |
33400 | What were we, we men and women? |
33400 | What would you say, offhand, without weighing the matter?" |
33400 | What''s the good of bein''so mean? |
33400 | What''s the matter with us? |
33400 | What''s your theory?" |
33400 | When she arrived,"Mrs. Parrot,"I suggested,"please make Susan comfortable for the night, will you? |
33400 | When was it? |
33400 | Whence had this vision, this psychic reel come to me? |
33400 | Where does it come from? |
33400 | Where had she found her precocious brains? |
33400 | Where is she?" |
33400 | Where was I? |
33400 | Where was it in the meantime, when you could n''t put your finger on it? |
33400 | Where was it most likely that Susan would be? |
33400 | Where was she? |
33400 | Where''s Miss Susan?" |
33400 | Where_ can_ you go? |
33400 | Where_ did_ I go, Ambo?" |
33400 | Which of these incredible sources of information do you prefer? |
33400 | Who are you to decide that the voice of Nature is not also the voice of God? |
33400 | Who was I to follow those footsteps? |
33400 | Who''s givin''it? |
33400 | Who''s pushin''that hand?" |
33400 | Why are n''t tombstones a good test for poetry-- some poetry? |
33400 | Why are we what we are? |
33400 | Why attempt the impossible? |
33400 | Why could n''t she tell him? |
33400 | Why did n''t you tell me Mr. Sampson has a democratic prejudice against aristocratic dogs? |
33400 | Why do n''t you ask questions? |
33400 | Why had I never appreciated him at his true worth? |
33400 | Why had n''t I thought of him before? |
33400 | Why is Gertrude here at all? |
33400 | Why not think better of returning here? |
33400 | Why not--_soon_?" |
33400 | Why not? |
33400 | Why of course, there was always Phil? |
33400 | Why should n''t he have been a little happy, if he could manage it, throughout those interminable weeks of physical pain? |
33400 | Why should n''t she? |
33400 | Why should she narrow her sympathies like that? |
33400 | Why, dear? |
33400 | Why, dear? |
33400 | Why, yes; why not? |
33400 | Why? |
33400 | Why? |
33400 | Why_ did_ she leave you? |
33400 | Will he ever forgive me for not having been able to make friends, first, with Jeanne- Marie? |
33400 | Will it_ there_, Ambo? |
33400 | Will you understand me at all if I say that Susan is homesick-- for a home she has never known and may never be privileged to know? |
33400 | With a vague wonder, he addressed us both:"You think a lot of her, do n''t you?" |
33400 | Wo n''t it be better, all round, if I simply say again that I love_ you_, not Jimmy, with all my heart? |
33400 | Would it also in another manner, in a deeper and-- I can think of no homelier word-- more cosmic sense, prove to be Susan''s? |
33400 | Would you care if I should die? |
33400 | Would you really like to know what all my days and nights of intense study have come to? |
33400 | Yes, yes, of course-- demanding of Maltby:"_ What is the world, may I ask? |
33400 | You believe they still live--_out there_?" |
33400 | You can put that in your next article, Ambrose?" |
33400 | You do n''t want Sonia to be like Tilly Jaretski, do you?" |
33400 | You do n''t want to go home?" |
33400 | You knew Gertrude was beyond helping, did n''t you?" |
33400 | You said to yourself, did n''t you? |
33400 | You think, possibly, Miss Disbrow might get round me, eh?" |
33400 | You were jealous of him, were n''t you? |
33400 | You would try to do that in any case, would n''t you? |
33400 | You''re afraid the review will interfere?" |
33400 | You''re all so terribly intellectual, are n''t you? |
33400 | _ Alone_ with her? |
33400 | _ Cowed?_ Then it''s still as wild as ever underneath? |
33400 | _ Cowed?_ Then it''s still as wild as ever underneath? |
33400 | _ How?_""There''s a''phone in Mrs. Hunt''s sittin''room. |
33400 | _ Pouf!_... And then? |
33400 | _ We must know_.... How did the accident happen in Mrs. Hunt''s room to- night?" |
33400 | _ Who_ did?" |
470 | What are those two beautiful and industrious beings,I can imagine him murmuring to himself,"whom I see everywhere, serving me I know not why? |
470 | What man of you having a hundred sheep, and losing one, would not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness, and go after that which was lost? |
470 | And on which the sincerity? |
470 | And what have they done? |
470 | But is there any one so darkly read in stars and oracles that he will dare to predict what Mr. Asquith will be saying thirty years hence? |
470 | But let us ask ourselves( in a spirit of love, as Mr. Chadband would say), what are the ballets of the Alhambra? |
470 | But poor women in the Battersea High Road do say,"Do you think I will sell my own child?" |
470 | But when we ask,"But what have these nails held together? |
470 | Did Raleigh think it sensible to answer the Spanish guns only, as Stevenson says, with a flourish of insulting trumpets? |
470 | Did Sydney ever miss an opportunity of making a theatrical remark in the whole course of his life and death? |
470 | Does Mr. Henry James infect us with the spirit of a schoolboy? |
470 | For if we admit that there must be varieties in art or opinion what sense is there in thinking there will not be varieties in government? |
470 | How can it have come about that a man as intelligent as Mr. McCabe can think that paradox and jesting stop the way? |
470 | How do you know a camel when you see one?" |
470 | How, then, can he recognize its aspects? |
470 | I replied with a natural simplicity and wonder,"About what other subjects can one make jokes except serious subjects?" |
470 | If so, where is the sense of all their dreams of festive traditions? |
470 | If the Superman is better than we, of course we need not fight him; but in that case, why not call him the Saint? |
470 | If the two moralities are entirely different, why do you call them both moralities? |
470 | If we do not expect the unexpected, why do we go there at all? |
470 | If we expect the expected, why do we not sit at home and expect it by ourselves? |
470 | In a purely democratic state it would be always saying,"What laws can we obey?" |
470 | Is literature better, is politics better, for having discarded the moralist and the philosopher?" |
470 | Is the art of Whistler a brave, barbaric art, happy and headlong? |
470 | Is the man who shoots angels and carves beasts into men humble? |
470 | Is the prophet of the future of all men humble? |
470 | It is a far deeper and sharper question to ask,"What can they know of England who know only the world?" |
470 | It is as if a man were asked,"What is the use of a hammer?" |
470 | It is very banal and very inartistic when a poor woman at the Adelphi says,"Do you think I will sell my own child?" |
470 | On which side would be the solemnity? |
470 | Or, again,"What man of you if his son ask for bread will he give him a stone, or if he ask for a fish will he give him a serpent?" |
470 | The Man- God of old answers from his awful hill,"Was ever sorrow like unto my sorrow?" |
470 | The ordinary man of sense would reply,"Then what makes you call them all camels? |
470 | The question is not whether we go up or down stairs, but where we are going to, and what we are going, for? |
470 | To use a fine phrase for emotional sanity, was his heart in the right place? |
470 | Unfortunately, the philosopher who talks about aspects of truth generally also asks,"What is truth?" |
470 | Was Essex restraining his excitement when he threw his hat into the sea? |
470 | Was Grenville concealing his emotions when he broke wine- glasses to pieces with his teeth and bit them till the blood poured down? |
470 | Was he fond of children-- or fond of them only in a dark and sinister sense? |
470 | We were inclined to ask,"Who wants to gather moss, except silly old ladies?" |
470 | Were all the Elizabethan palladins and pirates like that? |
470 | Were any of them like that? |
470 | Were even the Puritans Stoics? |
470 | What do you mean by a camel? |
470 | What fairy godmother bade them come trotting out of elfland when I was born? |
470 | What god of the borderland, what barbaric god of legs, must I propitiate with fire and wine, lest they run away with me?" |
470 | What has health to do with care? |
470 | What have your nails done?" |
470 | What is the good of begetting a man until we have settled what is the good of being a man? |
470 | What is the good of telling a community that it has every liberty except the liberty to make laws? |
470 | What were the giant''s religious views; what his views on politics and the duties of the citizen? |
470 | Where are your contented Outlanders? |
470 | Where is your British prestige? |
470 | Where is your carpentry? |
470 | Where is your free South Africa? |
470 | Who are the Irish? |
470 | Who were the Celts? |
470 | Why should Mr. McCabe be so eloquent about the danger arising from fantastic and paradoxical writers? |
470 | Why should he be so ardent in desiring grave and verbose writers? |
470 | With us the governing class is always saying to itself,"What laws shall we make?" |
470 | and answered,"To make hammers"; and when asked,"And of those hammers, what is the use?" |
470 | then what answer is there? |
38853 | Bestowed herself on_ me?_exclaimed Sampei, round- eyed, and feeling guilty. |
38853 | By hara- kiri? |
38853 | Can this be indeed the successful soldier? |
38853 | Cruel? 38853 Did O''Tei know even how to hold a lance?" |
38853 | Did they pay a long farewell to wives and little ones? |
38853 | Dost think that because my hair is white my heart is frozen? 38853 Have not I, the shrewd and the astute, considered these matters? |
38853 | I was on my way to pray at Isé,remarked the demure damsel;"sure you would not balk so pious an intent?" |
38853 | Maybe you are strong enough to carry out your resolve unflinchingly; but what of her? 38853 Murderer?" |
38853 | My brother is unduly harsh,he stammered,--"perchance is ignorant--""What of the elders, then, and their petition?" |
38853 | Sent for by her? |
38853 | What do you want? |
38853 | What else did they expect? |
38853 | What hast thou to say-- what excuse to make? |
38853 | What have Hojos to do with truth? |
38853 | What if he were prevailed upon to intercede for us? |
38853 | What is this? |
38853 | What of these? |
38853 | What wanton? |
38853 | What? |
38853 | When my lady goes forth, in what direction do the bearers carry her? 38853 Where in broad Japan do you propose to seek these paragons? |
38853 | Who dares at this hour,she inquired angrily,"to intrude upon my lady''s privacy? |
38853 | Why is it? 38853 Why, of what parentage art thou?" |
38853 | Will none make a lid for this rascal? |
38853 | Would the chief of our clan commit harakiri without a second? 38853 You will be my kaishaku?" |
38853 | You, then, an honest man,sneered the Daimio,"are prepared to stand by and see your flesh and blood perform the work of fiends? |
38853 | A siege in immediate prospect, and after that-- what? |
38853 | And Sampei, what of him, under the new_ régime_, inaugurated so unexpectedly? |
38853 | And again the question would assert itself-- Was the new element for harmony or discord? |
38853 | And if he did, would his mandate be obeyed, or was No- Kami still strong enough to do battle for his siren? |
38853 | And in them was she not herself smitten-- ay, so crushed and beaten that naught could hurt her more? |
38853 | And languishing O''Tei, what of her, whom he had secretly sworn to guard and cherish? |
38853 | And was she not right to do so-- fully justified? |
38853 | And what answer made she? |
38853 | And what more tough than they? |
38853 | And what was to be the end? |
38853 | And when he was weary of her? |
38853 | And why was this? |
38853 | And yet how was she benefited by his staying, since he dared not approach without compromising her? |
38853 | And yet what recked the selfish creature of his wishes, of his terrors, his requirements? |
38853 | And yet, what if she were right? |
38853 | And yet, why not? |
38853 | As to the other, who might tell where it wandered? |
38853 | At any moment he, the father, might be taken, and what then would happen to his boy? |
38853 | Befall what might as to the rest, he and his must not be taken alive, for who might tell what ignominy was prepared for the fallen Hojos? |
38853 | Both Fountain and attendant kugés were never weary now of discussing"what then?" |
38853 | Buddha is always on his lotus, calm and cross- legged, and to him, in matter of favours asked, all times are one, for is he not eternal? |
38853 | But cold prudence is a mistake sometimes, as who should know better than a soldier? |
38853 | But did he hate her? |
38853 | But had he? |
38853 | But how was this to be accomplished? |
38853 | But was that any reason why he should not look at her? |
38853 | But what if another urgent duty had been imposed by his heart-- an imperative duty, clashing with the first? |
38853 | But what if the travelling geisha were a light- o''-love to be picked up too easily to- day and cast forth to- morrow? |
38853 | But what of his wife and family without the breadwinner? |
38853 | But what of their petition? |
38853 | But what was to be the upshot of it all? |
38853 | But when is a vulgar- minded, low- born woman happy who is consumed in the ratio of pampering by ambition and greed and caprice? |
38853 | But why Sampei? |
38853 | By whom? |
38853 | Can it be that you enjoy the grievous plight of those to whose class, as you say, you partially belong? |
38853 | Can this grovelling thing, like a slave in the dust, be Hojo''s wife, child of the Daimio of Nara? |
38853 | Catch a Hojo like a rat in a trap? |
38853 | Could No- Kami ever lavish sufficient gratitude for so signal a service rendered in the nick of time? |
38853 | Could No- Kami, careless of the treasure he possessed, have done her some grievous wrong? |
38853 | Could any one who loved Japan be Hojo''s friend? |
38853 | Could he be excused were he to look on and refrain from action while the soul of his love was tortured? |
38853 | Could he hear her now, her father? |
38853 | Could he not appropriate at will, with the strong hand of might, any stronghold that should take his fancy? |
38853 | Could it be jealousy? |
38853 | Could it be that his fiery nature was consuming, torn by the pincers of remorse? |
38853 | Could it be true, this dreadful thing? |
38853 | Could it be? |
38853 | Could it have been of his own accord, so speedily to go away, with no result from his advent? |
38853 | Could it indeed be? |
38853 | Could it, oh could it be, that he could have ever loved that woman? |
38853 | Could this brilliant fellow be destitute of personal ambition? |
38853 | Dare you deny that it is so?" |
38853 | Despite his wadding and his charcoal he was chilly; but what matters that when the heart is warm, the spirits high? |
38853 | Did everybody unite to beard him? |
38853 | Did he believe in the threats of the martyr? |
38853 | Did he really believe her guilty of such a foolish prank, of such a stupid blunder? |
38853 | Did she not know how much he feared the darkness, and how necessary it was on many counts to conceal his condition from his warriors? |
38853 | Did the tiny pins at last lacerate her skin? |
38853 | Do you remember Koshiu, the farmer?" |
38853 | Does not that tell its tale? |
38853 | Doth not the ratcatcher''s cat hide her claws?--to serve her end perform miracles? |
38853 | Events rolling onward with the turbid tide, would it be possible to wait? |
38853 | For the honour of the name which they both bore, must the cord of an unworthy career be severed, and by him? |
38853 | Had Sampei, pursuing a tortuous game of his own, summoned Nara to council? |
38853 | Had he not been right-- he, the hoary one, the sage, the experienced, the prudent? |
38853 | Had he not been wrong, when he might have taken the maid himself, to leave her for another? |
38853 | Had he not deigned to forgive their unpardonable sin, and set them free unhurt? |
38853 | Had he not heard the woman herself urging the servant to speed? |
38853 | Had he not intervened already for the behoof of the unlucky elders? |
38853 | Had he not raised her up to be partner of his bed, giving her all she desired, gratifying her every whim? |
38853 | Had he not seen the betto ride off with the missive of O''Kikú? |
38853 | Had he not succeeded in communicating with the Sublime One? |
38853 | Had he not warned her of his undying hatred of Hojos, of all connected with bloodthirsty brutal tyrants? |
38853 | Had he, disgusted with his brother, deserted him? |
38853 | Had he, the chief, not seemed to detect something like commiseration on the bronzed features of his warriors? |
38853 | Had his mother concealed aught? |
38853 | Had not his father done the same? |
38853 | Had she betrayed his secret? |
38853 | Had she divulged the nameless horror, and the cowardice which unnerved his arm, unsettled his reason, and undermined his strength? |
38853 | Had she summoned her father to rescue her from a position that was unbearable? |
38853 | Had she the courage to face that sin- stained man? |
38853 | Had the chatelaine been goaded at last out of her silence? |
38853 | Had the gods no pity for such frail things as she? |
38853 | Had the lawless libertine dared to aspire to the legitimate wife of his lord? |
38853 | Hark''What was that? |
38853 | Have you any manhood left, degenerate spawn of tyrants? |
38853 | He is my vassal and my chattel: where is he?" |
38853 | He? |
38853 | Her bearers, where were they? |
38853 | Herself as grey as a corpse, she bent down and kissed the writhing woman, and without a word( how could she console her? |
38853 | How could he have been such a fool as to forget that the patient was herself a Hojo, and that fevered sleep is treacherous? |
38853 | How could he wait and practise patience, seeing her he loved so outraged? |
38853 | How could she do it now? |
38853 | How could she ever have summoned sufficient moral courage? |
38853 | How dared she defile the holy word with such foul lips as hers? |
38853 | How long was it ago that she had disdainfully given up all hope of influencing him? |
38853 | How long? |
38853 | How long? |
38853 | How may we, however watchful, guard against presumption-- against pitting our puny sagacity against the Infinite? |
38853 | How much would she be worth? |
38853 | How should he act? |
38853 | How was an end to be put to this nightmare? |
38853 | If any of the bold samurai had seen you but now, what would they have thought of me?--of you? |
38853 | If he chose to immolate himself, why not? |
38853 | If he had been gracious, why was the victim brought to his home with sinister pomp and circumstance? |
38853 | If his was decreed to be the avenging sword, was he not a helpless infant in the grip of destiny? |
38853 | If not, what mattered it? |
38853 | If she pined for male society, was not the temple full of holy bonzes? |
38853 | If we arrange a sequence of events for ourselves, does not something always intervene to mar and derange the scheme? |
38853 | If, as was growing every moment plainer, the prophecy of the farmer was to be fulfilled to the minutest detail, what was to be gained by struggling? |
38853 | In case of personal peril, to whom might O''Kikú turn for succour? |
38853 | In crime an appreciative partner-- perhaps even my lord Hojo''s willing executioner?" |
38853 | In this life are not many punished for their virtues, as a set- off to the manner in which others are rewarded for their vices? |
38853 | Is a faithful clansman and an honest man ever justified in turning on his chief? |
38853 | Is it not always so? |
38853 | Is it not the greatest joy that may be tasted by mortals-- the permission to intervene in the house of discord, and bring to it peace and happiness? |
38853 | Is it over- anxiety that blinds them? |
38853 | Is not death the last resource, when all else has failed, for escaping from earthly woe? |
38853 | Is not time the healer of all wounds? |
38853 | Like a faithful spouse, she had borne many children; how now was she to fill their mouths? |
38853 | Look in his face, man; is it not eloquent enough?" |
38853 | May a brother ever be pardoned for taking his brother''s life? |
38853 | Moreover, is not the putting aside of what is past and unpleasant a principle approved of by sages? |
38853 | My state litter is ready, you say? |
38853 | No doubt the chatelaine ought to do something-- what? |
38853 | No- Kami raised his brows slightly, and with stiff politeness said,--"Since when may peasants enter where knights and samurai may not? |
38853 | Not an accident to the fair O''Kikú? |
38853 | Now, what of me? |
38853 | O''Kikú''s tardy feet? |
38853 | Of what use was it for a girl to struggle against destiny? |
38853 | Oh, what if, Heaven relenting, the separation might become final-- No- Kami himself reformed? |
38853 | On which side lay his duty? |
38853 | On-- on, away to the left-- whither? |
38853 | Or shall I, since you have called me to your side, undertake to relieve you of the task? |
38853 | Ought they not to follow, and claim participation in the rites? |
38853 | Perchance it would be well to betray him at once to my lord No- Kami, and thereby earn their pardon? |
38853 | Poor little I?" |
38853 | Poor soul, had she not been herself a concubine, and debased by pernicious surroundings? |
38853 | Rapid and dreadfully familiar? |
38853 | Return with all speed to Tsu, and place that impregnable stronghold in a condition to endure a siege? |
38853 | Sampei is her son-- nay, I will speak-- and who should know a son better than his mother? |
38853 | Sampei, why do you look confused? |
38853 | Shall it be said that the last Hojo passed away without befitting rites? |
38853 | Should No- Kami elect to take the new- comer to himself, as folk already whispered, what of it? |
38853 | Should she fling herself at his feet, and, baring her white bosom, implore the mercy of his dirk? |
38853 | Should she presume to know more than he who held in his hand Mikado, nobles, people?--whose nod was law in the land beloved of Buddha? |
38853 | Since men may relieve themselves with the dirk of a too heavy existence, might not women seek relief in the embrace of the blessed sea? |
38853 | So long as the tyrant lived against whom it was hopeless to struggle, he would mask his game; but after his death, what then? |
38853 | So you deem me a silly old woman, too partial to her featherpated son? |
38853 | Somewhat vexed and annoyed by the ill- timed gurgles of the scum( yet what can you expect of low people but vulgarity? |
38853 | Suddenly dropping the tone of banter, the Daimio strode nearer to his master, and sternly said,--"May I know why I was summoned? |
38853 | Sure his surprise on the arrival of the cavalcade was not feigned? |
38853 | Sure so fragile an atomy would melt away in the fervour of a hot embrace? |
38853 | The Daimio of Nara, with care upon his brow-- in haste-- unattended-- alone? |
38853 | The girl-- what is her name? |
38853 | The girls? |
38853 | The landlord and his daughter; what of them? |
38853 | The other one? |
38853 | The petition? |
38853 | The soughing of the wind? |
38853 | The twee- twee of the shrill cicada? |
38853 | The voice of Futen, the wind imp? |
38853 | The wife of which was the patrician lady? |
38853 | Then the bonze had no idea, he said, who had been the butcher? |
38853 | They had observed, had they, in my lord''s visage, how desperately he had become enamoured? |
38853 | They were certain that his sudden passion would insist on being gratified? |
38853 | This pink of perfect daimios, and his yet more model child?" |
38853 | To save her fair fame ought he indeed to go? |
38853 | Treachery? |
38853 | WILL BUDDHA SPEAK? |
38853 | Was Masago so ill, and she not told of it? |
38853 | Was ever such a lady-- so restless, so domineering, so devoted to pleasure-- always seeking new excitement in the dreary absence of my lord? |
38853 | Was he bound blindly to follow the head of his clan in his mad recklessness, lead where he would? |
38853 | Was he not his father''s ally,--the man specially picked out for the guidance of the Hojo''s sons? |
38853 | Was he not lord of other castles? |
38853 | Was he reserved for something yet more infamous? |
38853 | Was he to be held up by wife and brother as a laughing- stock in the eyes of his assembled warriors? |
38853 | Was he to be taken in so easily? |
38853 | Was he, the head of the Hojos, as infatuated as others? |
38853 | Was her own brave boy, innocent of all wrong, to be involved with the rest, simply because his name was Hojo-- the guiltless suffering for the guilty? |
38853 | Was it destined that he might never afford her help? |
38853 | Was it her task to show him the right path?--to wean him to better things by gentle influence? |
38853 | Was it his bounden duty to interfere between the tyrant and his victims? |
38853 | Was it indeed the duty of his elder brother to stand forward and attempt to stay his junior''s downward course? |
38853 | Was it indeed written that the last of the Hojos was to perish by a fraternal hand? |
38853 | Was it not craven idly to mark her growing misery? |
38853 | Was it possible that in a revulsion of feeling he had actually come to detest the enchanting siren who so easily had won him? |
38853 | Was it so patent, then?--he the last to know it? |
38853 | Was it some ghost she saw that caused that look of awe? |
38853 | Was it the water that summoned him? |
38853 | Was it written so plainly on his face that all who ran might read? |
38853 | Was it_ murderess?_ And what a look accompanied the word. |
38853 | Was not every noble damsel taught how to defend her home? |
38853 | Was not the castle large enough for its debauched inmates that this retired eyrie might not be treated with respect?" |
38853 | Was not this grand news, well worth a little waiting-- a little suffering? |
38853 | Was she asleep already, the sad recluse? |
38853 | Was she ill? |
38853 | Was she to be forced, by the whim of a madman, to give the sanction of her gracious presence to the deed which all deplored? |
38853 | Was she to undermine with her pink little fingers the great dynasty of Hojo? |
38853 | Was she, O''Tei, to be left friendless? |
38853 | Was the appalling prophecy to be accomplished to the letter? |
38853 | Was the doomed No- Kami indeed to fall by the treacherous hand of him who should be the first to help? |
38853 | Was the gulf that yawned in front as dark as the path already trodden? |
38853 | Was the journey to go for nothing? |
38853 | Was the lady O''Tei even more mean- spirited and craven than her rival had supposed? |
38853 | Was the old man right? |
38853 | Was the report a false one? |
38853 | Was there any future except a yawning, bottomless gulf down which he and his were sliding? |
38853 | Was there ever anything so disgusting as these rustics? |
38853 | Was there ever anything so unreasonable, and yet fraught with graver peril? |
38853 | Was this man a friend, or the worst of enemies, one who wears disguise? |
38853 | Was this one of the ways in which he was to be stricken? |
38853 | Was this the reply of Buddha? |
38853 | Was this their final parting from the bravest of the brave? |
38853 | Was this young man to be left to steer the bark without a pilot? |
38853 | Were they newly married? |
38853 | Were they samurai-- faithful and obedient henchmen-- or ronins-- bandits? |
38853 | Were they to return like beaten dogs, without even seeing my lord? |
38853 | Were they worth saving, at the risk of his own life? |
38853 | What ailed his mother, that her features were grey- green? |
38853 | What awful vision was this? |
38853 | What better guide than a prudent father- in- law? |
38853 | What business had she with Sanjo, the common armourer? |
38853 | What can we do but die?" |
38853 | What canst thou know of him? |
38853 | What cared she, a stranger from afar, for a farmer of Tsu or his family? |
38853 | What could he say to her that would not increase her sorrow? |
38853 | What could his object be in swooping down on Tsu? |
38853 | What could she do? |
38853 | What could she do? |
38853 | What could she do? |
38853 | What could she have done in a previous phase of existence to make the present one so exceedingly painful? |
38853 | What could this mean? |
38853 | What could those two have had to say to each other? |
38853 | What did this portend? |
38853 | What evil hath he done to thee?" |
38853 | What good then was to be gained by lingering at Tsu? |
38853 | What good would come of interference? |
38853 | What had chanced? |
38853 | What had she done to deserve the ban? |
38853 | What had she gained by it? |
38853 | What happier method of getting through the cycle than to muse away the years, till called to go, with gentle O''Tei, and the forest, and the animals? |
38853 | What have I to do with vermin?" |
38853 | What hideous din was that in the outer chamber? |
38853 | What if he could be cajoled or goaded to take arms against him? |
38853 | What if she, less prudent and more weak, were to bestow her heart on you? |
38853 | What if the man be tortured? |
38853 | What is my treachery to yours? |
38853 | What is the subject of offence?--is it with China or Corea?" |
38853 | What mattered it what they did, or how frequently they met? |
38853 | What object could she have had in insisting on the bodies being given up, except to ingratiate herself with the lower lieges? |
38853 | What of the Corean army once commanded by Sampei? |
38853 | What of the other-- no less than he a Hojo-- the idol of the army, bravest of the brave? |
38853 | What of the thousands of disbanded ronins? |
38853 | What of this new element introduced into the castle-- of discord surely? |
38853 | What other reason could there be for so sudden a summons to Ki[^y]oto? |
38853 | What punishment was severe enough for such a caitiff? |
38853 | What should the lady O''Tei care? |
38853 | What sinister new noise was that? |
38853 | What sort of existence could she hope for in the future? |
38853 | What subversive doctrines were these uttered by a presuming pigmy? |
38853 | What surer loadstone to lure an embryo debauchee from the muddy byways of low company than a beautiful patrician bride? |
38853 | What then? |
38853 | What then? |
38853 | What thunderous clouds were gathering? |
38853 | What to her were the puny arts of O''Kikú the second wife? |
38853 | What was he doing with that sash?--he, the proud No- Kami? |
38853 | What was he here for, this inconvenient guest? |
38853 | What was her own petty pride to the people''s good? |
38853 | What was she to do? |
38853 | What was she to do? |
38853 | What was that? |
38853 | What was that? |
38853 | What was the grand secret that was to be the harbinger of doubly- concentrated bliss? |
38853 | What was the meaning of this? |
38853 | What was the precise article that would suit No- Kami? |
38853 | What was this coil that was winding slowly but surely round the son of him who had been her husband? |
38853 | What was this new factor in the embroglio? |
38853 | What was to be done? |
38853 | What wonder if people fall under burthens too heavy for their backs? |
38853 | What words would next drop from his lips? |
38853 | What would be said to him when the end came, and accounts were totted up upon the abacus, if he had rebelled? |
38853 | What would happen to the Japanese if the lotus were banished from their midst? |
38853 | What would her end be? |
38853 | What, after all, if the concubine were right, and Sampei''s air of offended dignity a piece of clever masquerading? |
38853 | What? |
38853 | When a chatelaine is called on to sympathise and exult with her lord, why does she show disgust? |
38853 | When he returned? |
38853 | When they hear of it, what will my people say, seeing me that monster''s puppet?" |
38853 | Where is he-- he who presumed to present to you a paper? |
38853 | Where is he? |
38853 | Where was Sampei, her childhood''s friend? |
38853 | Where was her pure soul hovering? |
38853 | Wherever my lord could go, the damsel argued, so could she, for was she not young and active? |
38853 | Which is the Daimio, I wonder? |
38853 | Whither was he to proceed? |
38853 | Who could have foreseen that on this quiet track assassins were in ambush? |
38853 | Who had planned her murder? |
38853 | Who may presume to gauge the designs of the Eternal? |
38853 | Who might tell how near the peril was? |
38853 | Who was she to presume to combat Destiny?--to raise her weak hand in feeble protest against the finger of Buddha, the all- seeing? |
38853 | Who was this bewitching creature? |
38853 | Who was this forward wench? |
38853 | Who will believe me if I say that one who was the soul of caution came and smote me like a rat? |
38853 | Who would have thought that a delicate and tender girl, so little used to suffering, could bear such pain and live? |
38853 | Who? |
38853 | Why did he feel so lonely? |
38853 | Why did he shudder at the shadows whose chills encompassed him about? |
38853 | Why had they tied him to O''Tei? |
38853 | Why should he ever return? |
38853 | Why should my lord exercise his shattered nerves, and pace like a caged bear? |
38853 | Why should she not open the postern, let in the foe, who in gratitude would spare her life-- maybe applaud and treat her with homage as a heroine? |
38853 | Why should these two, mixed up in this horror, without overt act of theirs, be marched as victims to the sacrifice? |
38853 | Why should they pity him? |
38853 | Why shun it now? |
38853 | Why the fair and good O''Tei, a symbol of all that was pure? |
38853 | Why then was he come? |
38853 | Why this display of trouble so deep that it racked her frame? |
38853 | Why was Tomoyé dead? |
38853 | Why was he so quiet in his distant castle? |
38853 | Why was that? |
38853 | Why, as he stood there, did none of you rid me of him?" |
38853 | Why, then, a stir of arms,--a movement of troops,--marching, countermarching in the night? |
38853 | Why? |
38853 | Why? |
38853 | Why? |
38853 | Will Buddha Speak? |
38853 | Would Nara, interfering on his child''s behalf, insist upon the prompt suppression of the second wife? |
38853 | Would it be possible to go on to the end pretending to sympathise with that which in her heart she loathed? |
38853 | Would she set herself up to auction? |
38853 | Would the dear and noble lady vouchsafe to lend a hand, and implore her husband''s clemency? |
38853 | Would the nightmare crush him again-- numbing his limbs, breaking his spirit? |
38853 | Would the self- indulgent No- Kami be prepared with vigorous promptitude to avenge the slain, and, seizing the dropped reins, pursue his policy? |
38853 | Would they side with the despot, or unite for the saving of their Emperor? |
38853 | Would those without linger inactive till the besieged were dead to a man, then march in over the corpses? |
38853 | Would you dare to refuse the last service to your departing lord?" |
38853 | Wouldst be a Hojo''s concubine? |
38853 | Yet how would that be possible, she in this desperate quandary? |
38853 | Yet if the pair were so estranged, would she not be laying herself open uselessly to some insult, some rebuff? |
38853 | Yet were they? |
38853 | Yet who could there be who wished to kill her, unless it were O''Tei or Masago? |
38853 | Yet who was she, the warrior wife reflected in her humility, to set up puny instincts against the ripened statecraft of my lord? |
38853 | You''d have me go hence and prison myself for the behoof of the pale idiot yonder? |
38853 | and with her? |
38853 | and, if so, how? |
38853 | had not the farmer said that the river should ebb away? |
38853 | he grumbled,"some wretched coolie sick? |
38853 | how could they respect their lady? |
38853 | inquired the farmer--"to be feasted in the room of honour? |
38853 | must we always throw over romance for the better filling of our pockets? |
38853 | or Raiden, king of thunder, beating upon his drums? |
38853 | or would they in a more martial spirit wait only till the braves were weak, and then take the place by escalade? |
38853 | what for? |
38853 | what hast thou to do with him or his? |
38853 | what shameful folly''s this? |
38853 | what sound was that? |
38853 | what spell was this?--what disgraceful, infatuated weakness? |
38853 | what was that, another batch of waterfowl? |
38853 | what was that? |
38853 | who had preserved it from contamination from without? |
38853 | why, what was this? |
4902 | And do n''t you know that I am the Rothschild of chess? |
4902 | Of what? |
4902 | ? |
4902 | An Irishman addressing the cook instead of the mate once on board of a vessel, said,"Are you the mate?" |
4902 | Can it be possible that he has received his information from the sages of Hind? |
4902 | Can the Reviewer have forgotten that Staunton and Lowenthal were contemporary; if not, what can be the explanation of such an omission? |
4902 | How many K''s in occur? |
4902 | Linde says Adam was the first chess player(??) |
4902 | Linde says Adam was the first chess player(??) |
4902 | Or is it really the result of his own penetrating research, guided by the acuteness of his unaided judgment? |
4902 | Taking up a chess book lying by my side which happened to be a gilt copy of Chess Masterpieces, just out, he said,"How much might that book be?" |
4902 | The King called after him, saying, Ulfr, thou coward, dost thou thus flee? |
4902 | Where is the incomparable Schallopp, the present Prussian champion? |
4902 | Why so merry, cousin? |
4902 | and is there more than one H in editor?" |
48431 | Do you know anything higher than death?... 48431 What impels the Macedonian hero... to seek foreign lands? |
48431 | Above all, what would he have thought of Nietzsche, his own wild disciple? |
48431 | After the realisation of his Idea, what was there greater for him to do than to die?" |
48431 | Call spirits from the vasty deep: if they do not come, what of it? |
48431 | Christians, too, might say they had their heroes, their saints; but what sort of eminence was that? |
48431 | Did he think that such companionship and co- operation would go without gregarious feelings and ideal interests? |
48431 | For the theatre- goer, the function of scenery and actors is that they should please and impress him: but what, in the end, impresses and pleases him? |
48431 | Hence we find Nietzsche asking himself plaintively,"Why are the feeble victorious?" |
48431 | How can he persuade himself of something so evidently false? |
48431 | How much harm must I do to attain this good?" |
48431 | How should the truth, actual, natural, or divine, be an expression of the living will that attempts, or in their case despairs, to discover it? |
48431 | If I am nothing but the will to grow, how can I ever will to shrink? |
48431 | If other people are put thereby at a disadvantage, why should they not learn their lesson and adopt in their turn the methods of the superman? |
48431 | In the hope of sparing some obscure person a few groans or tears, would you deprive the romantic hero of so sublime a death? |
48431 | Is it absurdly arrogant? |
48431 | Is it wonderfully true? |
48431 | Is such transcendentalism impossibly sceptical? |
48431 | Is this mere fortune? |
48431 | It forbids him to ask,"At what price do I pursue this ideal? |
48431 | The world is my idea, new every day: what can I have to do with truth? |
48431 | What can lead serious thinkers, we may ask, into such pitfalls and shams? |
48431 | What chains victory to his footsteps and scatters before him in terror the countless hordes of his enemies? |
48431 | What is more patent than that a man may learn something by experience and may be trained? |
48431 | Who could be more intensely unintelligent than Luther or Rousseau? |
48431 | Who has a right to stand in the way of an enterprise begun in the face of this peril?" |
48431 | Why should these fruits of the spirit be uncongenial to it? |
48431 | Why should they not dote on blood and iron? |
48431 | Why should they not sink fondly into the manipulation of philological details or chemical elements, or over- ingenious commerce and intrigue? |
48431 | Would he not have judged Schopenhauer more kindly? |
48431 | Would he not impose a rather painful strain upon himself at times for the sake of that"spook,"victory? |
48431 | Would not a player wish his side to win? |
48431 | [ Pg 139] How could so fantastic an ideal impose on a keen satirist like Nietzsche and a sincere lover of excellence? |
48431 | [ Pg 84] CHAPTER VIII THE EGOTISM OF IDEAS When we are discussing egotism need we speak of Hegel? |
45122 | A_ mere_ man? |
45122 | And how can we love what is totally different from ourselves? |
45122 | And if a name was wanted for that intimate relation between God and man, what better name was there than Father and Son? |
45122 | And if so, why should that love ever cease? |
45122 | And shall we find them again such as they left us? |
45122 | And where can we study the science of thought, that most wonderful instance of development, except in the languages and literatures of the past? |
45122 | And why should it be so different when the door opens, and we step out of this dark life into the bright room? |
45122 | And yet who will say that true Christianity, Christianity which is known by its fruits, is less vigorous now than it has ever been before? |
45122 | Are they not human too? |
45122 | Are we not altogether at the mercy of God? |
45122 | But can we prevent the light of the sun and the noises of the street from waking the happy child from his heavenly dreams? |
45122 | But how can we speak of these things except in metaphors? |
45122 | But what did he mean by soul? |
45122 | But what is the reason of this? |
45122 | Can we imagine a more powerful revelation? |
45122 | Can we say that of God''s love? |
45122 | Can we wish for more than what we are, lookers- on-- resisting what tries to crush us, call it force, or evil, or anything else? |
45122 | Does the Self take possession of a body because it lives, or does the body live because the Self has taken possession of it? |
45122 | Has our prosperity taught us to meet adversity when it comes? |
45122 | Has the Self which for a time dwells in a living body anything to do with what we call the life of that body? |
45122 | How are we to do justice to our ancestors except by letting them plead their own case in their own language? |
45122 | How it is in that larger world, who can say? |
45122 | How much more in the real presence of a real and really beloved God, as felt by the true mystic, not merely as a phrase, but as a fact? |
45122 | How then can we rely on it as an accurate picture of the thoughts of Moses and his contemporaries? |
45122 | How, where, when? |
45122 | If God is called holy, again we have to say No, for what can our conception of holiness be compared with the holiness of God? |
45122 | If people talk of the miseries of life, are they not all man''s work? |
45122 | If so, does the body die because the Self leaves it, or does the Self leave the body because it dies? |
45122 | If there is continuity in the world everywhere, why should there be a wrench and annihilation only with us? |
45122 | Is any kind of religion possible without an unquestioning trust in truth? |
45122 | Is it not all one? |
45122 | Is it not the same with the Beautiful? |
45122 | Is it nothing to know that there is a solid rock on which all religion, call it natural or supernatural, is founded? |
45122 | Is not a real fact that happened, in a world in which nothing can happen against the will of God, better than any miracle? |
45122 | Is not that also God''s will? |
45122 | Is that better than Christ''s own simple human language, I go to my Father? |
45122 | Is that nothing? |
45122 | Is there any one who loves us more than God? |
45122 | Is there anything among the works of God, anything next to God, more wonderful, more awful, more holy than man? |
45122 | It is all God''s work, and where is there a flaw in that wonder of all wonders, God''s ever- working work? |
45122 | It is true our hopes are human, but what are the doubts and difficulties? |
45122 | Look at the miserable conceptions which man made to himself as long as he spoke of gods beside God? |
45122 | Much rather should we ask, Was then Jesus a mere God? |
45122 | Nay, is it not our duty to wake the child, when the time has come that he must be up and doing, and take his share in the toils of the day? |
45122 | Need we wonder, therefore, that just those who wish to transfer only their highest to the Godhead begin to shrink from speaking of a personal God? |
45122 | Or again, Are we to make ourselves gods? |
45122 | Shall we meet again as we left? |
45122 | Should we then attach our hearts to nothing, and pass quietly and unsympathetically through this world, as if we had nothing to do with it? |
45122 | Shut our eyes and be silent? |
45122 | Surely this was not so in the early centuries, nor again at the time of the Reformation? |
45122 | Then what can we do? |
45122 | To live means to be able to absorb, but who or what is able? |
45122 | Was not Christ, who died for us, more than we ourselves? |
45122 | We are in a dark prison here; let us believe that outside it there is no darkness, but light-- but what light, who knows? |
45122 | We believe what we desire-- true-- but why do we desire? |
45122 | We do not know_ how_ it will be so, but who has a right to say it_ can not_ be so? |
45122 | We love the fair appearance too, how could it be otherwise? |
45122 | We seem to love the fleeting forms of life, and yet how can we truly love what is so faithless? |
45122 | What can we do? |
45122 | What do we ourselves mean by soul? |
45122 | What does that mean? |
45122 | What does that mean? |
45122 | What ground have we, then, to doubt that it was even before that moment? |
45122 | What has life to do with the Self? |
45122 | What led to such expressions as''God is Love''but a feeling of reverence, which shrank from speaking of God as loving as we love? |
45122 | What should we be without it? |
45122 | What should we learn from these prophets who from distant countries and bygone ages all bear the same witness to the same truth? |
45122 | What would become of the world if all our prayers were granted? |
45122 | What, then, is that something which, added to the good, makes it beautiful? |
45122 | What, then, is the touchstone by which we assay the Beautiful? |
45122 | Whence all these limits? |
45122 | Whence comes melody? |
45122 | Where is the temple of God, or the true kingdom of God? |
45122 | Where is there a flaw or a fault? |
45122 | Wherever and whenever it was, we feel that we have made ourselves what we are; is not that a useful article of faith? |
45122 | Who would blame them or disturb them? |
45122 | Why do we so seldom face the great problem? |
45122 | Why not? |
45122 | Why not? |
45122 | Why should all be different? |
45122 | Why should we look for God and listen for His voice outside us only, and not within us? |
45122 | Why should we protest against a similar unknown quantity before the beginning of our life on earth? |
45122 | Why should we try to know more than we can know, if only we firmly believe that Christ''s immortal spirit ascended to the Father? |
45122 | Why was the past often so beautiful? |
45122 | Would it not be fearful to live for one day unless we knew, and saw, and felt His Presence and Wisdom and Love encompassing us on all sides? |
45122 | _ Chips._ Can not a concept exist without a word? |
45122 | _ Chips._ What author has ever said the last word he wanted to say, and who has not had to close his eyes before he could write_ Finis_ to his work? |
45122 | _ Gifford Lectures, II._ Can there be anything higher and better than truth? |
45122 | _ Gifford Lectures, II._ What can a study of Natural Religion teach us? |
45122 | _ Gifford Lectures, III._ We have toiled for many years and been troubled with many questionings, but what is the end of it all? |
45122 | _ Life._ Do we really lose those who are called before us? |
45122 | _ Life._ Does love pass away( with death)? |
45122 | _ Life._ What can we call ours if God did not vouchsafe it to us from day to day? |
45122 | _ Life._ What is more natural in life than death? |
45122 | _ Life._ Why do we love so deeply? |
45122 | _ Life._ Would that loving Father begin such a work in us as is now going on, and then destroy it, leave it unfinished? |
45122 | _ MS._ How is it that we know so little of life after death? |
45122 | _ MS._ If Jesus was not God, was He, they ask, a mere man? |
45122 | _ MS._ Is there such a thing as a Lost Love? |
45122 | _ MS._ THE BEAUTIFUL Is the Beautiful without us, or is it not rather within us? |
45122 | _ MS._ Then it is said, Is not Christ God? |
45122 | _ MS._ There is the old riddle always before me, why was... taken from me? |
45122 | _ MS._ What can we pray for? |
45122 | _ MS._ What is past, present, future? |
45122 | _ MS._ What is the tenure of all our happiness? |
45122 | _ MS._ What, then, is that which we call Death? |
45122 | _ MS._ Why is there so much suffering in this world? |
45122 | _ Science of Religion._ Do you still wonder at polytheism or at mythology? |
45122 | _ Science of Thought._ Every language has to be learnt, but who made the language that was to be learnt? |
45122 | _ Silesian Horseherd._ Why should the belief in the Son give everlasting life? |
45122 | any one who knows better what is for our real good than God? |
45122 | if the souls are without all this, without age, and sex, and national character, without even their native language, what will they be to us?'' |
45122 | or insist on defining the word''personal''so that it should exclude all that is incompatible with a perfect, unlimited, unchanging Being? |
45122 | perceive the whole universe, and turn it into his object? |
45122 | that we can hardly imagine anything without feeling that it is all human poetry? |
45122 | whence all those desires in us that can not be fulfilled? |
42534 | A benighted old spinster, eh? |
42534 | About what? |
42534 | All worn out, eh? |
42534 | Am I so unreasonable? 42534 Am I? |
42534 | And what are you? |
42534 | And where did the woman go? |
42534 | And you''ll be glad to see me well again? |
42534 | Angry with you? 42534 Are n''t you feeling well, Mother?" |
42534 | Are n''t you going to the train, Laurie? |
42534 | Are you calm now? |
42534 | Are you glad I was happy yesterday? |
42534 | Are you still angry with me, Laurie? |
42534 | Are you sure you''re all right, Winnie? |
42534 | Are you unhappy? 42534 As well as you love papa?" |
42534 | Bobby is n''t awake? |
42534 | Ca n''t I get a taxicab for you? |
42534 | Can I help you? |
42534 | Can you undo your own dress? |
42534 | Coming in? |
42534 | Could n''t you let her rest for a week, Alice? 42534 Did I ever hurt you? |
42534 | Did Papa Farley and the woman have the child, Papa? |
42534 | Did the baby drink his milk? |
42534 | Did you get your deal through, Father? |
42534 | Do n''t dare? 42534 Do n''t you think I care?" |
42534 | Do n''t you think the family will be happier if I am not there to spoil the rapport of departure? |
42534 | Do n''t you want the shades up? 42534 Do we need to talk about it, dear?" |
42534 | Do you believe that? 42534 Do you feel well enough to dress for dinner?" |
42534 | Do you know what Mamma thinks, Papa? 42534 Do you think Laurence really loves me? |
42534 | Do you think this operation Winnie has to go through with is serious? |
42534 | Do you want to take one of my bundles? |
42534 | Does the doctor think his eyes will get well? |
42534 | Feeling pretty badly, dear? |
42534 | Glad of what, dear girl? |
42534 | Has Mr. Ridge decided when he will leave for Europe, Alice? |
42534 | Have you talked to the doctor, Winnie? |
42534 | Have your beef rare, Laurence? |
42534 | Have, eh? 42534 He did, eh? |
42534 | He''ll probably be in later, wo n''t he, dear? |
42534 | How can you bear to touch it, Grandma? |
42534 | How do you do, Mrs. Farley? 42534 How do you know Aunt Alice talks to herself?" |
42534 | How do you regard the prospect of becoming a proud father a third time, Laurence? |
42534 | How- d''ye- do, Farley? 42534 How- d''ye- do, Mrs. Price? |
42534 | How- do,***** Farley? |
42534 | I suppose that''s why Winnie''s always in hysterics lately? |
42534 | I suppose you think I''m an interfering old maid? |
42534 | I want a piece of-- can you give me a nice rib roast today--? 42534 Into mischief as usual, eh?" |
42534 | Is Laurie upstairs, Mamma Farley? |
42534 | Is anything the matter? |
42534 | Is n''t it raining? |
42534 | Is n''t your mother well, Alice? |
42534 | Is she lying down? |
42534 | Is she? |
42534 | Is-- is anybody sick, Grandmother? 42534 Keeping house for you and your father----""Why do you do it, then? |
42534 | Kiss you? |
42534 | Laurie? 42534 Laurie?" |
42534 | Like what? |
42534 | Mamma? |
42534 | New? |
42534 | Not even when you loved that Mrs. Wilson, eh? |
42534 | Now what shall I do? |
42534 | Now you''re angry with me? |
42534 | Now, Perry, dear, please? 42534 Now, Perry-- please?" |
42534 | Off? |
42534 | Oh, Winnie, what shall I do for you? |
42534 | Shall I go after her? |
42534 | Shall I tell Mamma Farley you are ready for your breakfast? |
42534 | So you do n''t want to accept anything from Mamma even if she is willing to give? |
42534 | Stupid? 42534 Tact, eh?" |
42534 | Tan I go? |
42534 | Then you love Papa best? 42534 Then you will let me go away with Mother? |
42534 | To please me? |
42534 | Walk? |
42534 | Want me to see if he''s awake? |
42534 | Was your egg fried enough? |
42534 | Well, Winifred, how are you, my dear little girl? |
42534 | Well, Winifred, you''re ready? |
42534 | Well, Winnie, you''re back, are you? 42534 Well, what if you did see that Papa had a telegram from Mrs. Wilson? |
42534 | Well, what of it? |
42534 | Well? |
42534 | Well? |
42534 | What I want to know is whether that-- whether he refused to meet us or not? |
42534 | What am I to do, Winnie? |
42534 | What are you crying for? 42534 What are you trying to do, Mamma?" |
42534 | What did I tell you about sucking your thumb? |
42534 | What do you mean, Winnie? 42534 What do you mean?" |
42534 | What do you mean? |
42534 | What makes you act as though I were an ogress, May? |
42534 | What must I do, Mamma Farley? 42534 What shall I do? |
42534 | What would Mamma do if we forgot for one day to object to her working so hard? |
42534 | What''s that, Grandmother? |
42534 | What''s that? |
42534 | What''s the matter with you? |
42534 | What''s the matter, Alice? |
42534 | What''s the matter, Grandma Farley? |
42534 | What''s the matter, Laurie? |
42534 | What''s the matter? |
42534 | Where are you going? |
42534 | Where did she get it? 42534 Where did you leave Bobby?" |
42534 | Where is May? |
42534 | Where shall I send them? |
42534 | Where''s Mamma, May? |
42534 | Whom do you do it for? 42534 Whom was she ever just to? |
42534 | Whose is it? 42534 Why did n''t you go out and make the boy give it back?" |
42534 | Why did n''t you tell me this sooner, Winnie? 42534 Why do n''t you quit this thing if you do n''t like it?" |
42534 | Why is it nonsense? 42534 Why should n''t I be?" |
42534 | Why think about something so improbable as dying? |
42534 | Why, Winnie? 42534 Winnie has n''t had twins, has she?" |
42534 | Winnie, are you sure of this? |
42534 | Winnie, please? 42534 Winnie?" |
42534 | Wo n''t you kiss me, Laurie? |
42534 | Yes, Laurie-- I''ll feel all right if----"If what? |
42534 | Yes? 42534 Yes?" |
42534 | You did go to see Mrs. Wilson tonight, did n''t you? |
42534 | You did n''t think your husband was going to refuse to shake hands with me, I hope? |
42534 | You do love me then? 42534 You do n''t hate me because I''m like this, do you, Laurie?" |
42534 | You do n''t know? |
42534 | You have n''t? 42534 You like it, eh?" |
42534 | You like your old grandad, eh? 42534 You love Mamma anyway, do n''t you?" |
42534 | You love me, May? |
42534 | You still here, are you? 42534 You wo n''t forget Mamma? |
42534 | You wo n''t talk to Papa that way again? |
42534 | You''ll always love Mother, wo n''t you? |
42534 | You''ll let us take you and Winnie home in the carriage? |
42534 | _ You_ do n''t think I''m selfish, May? |
42534 | *****"I''m wearing you out?" |
42534 | Ai n''t you an atheist? |
42534 | Alice has n''t come home, has she?" |
42534 | Are n''t we doing everything on earth to make you live? |
42534 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
42534 | Are you in pain? |
42534 | Can I help you up?" |
42534 | Can I touch it?" |
42534 | Could your mother have written the note she did if she intended to reproach you?" |
42534 | Did I wake you?" |
42534 | Did that child wake you up after all?" |
42534 | Does my life really indicate that to you?" |
42534 | Father not going to raise you up to be a prizefighter, is he? |
42534 | Had n''t I better call Mother and tell her to help you to get to bed?" |
42534 | Has he come to his senses since you married him, Winnie?" |
42534 | Has something happened between you and your husband, my child? |
42534 | How are the children?" |
42534 | How can Laurence leave me like this?" |
42534 | How can you tell?" |
42534 | How could Laurence give her over simply because her heart would not let her refuse her mother any longer? |
42534 | How is she, Vivien? |
42534 | How is your mother? |
42534 | How- d''ye- do?" |
42534 | If Winnie died----How did these things happen? |
42534 | Is Laurence home yet?" |
42534 | Is Mamma worse?" |
42534 | Is it Mamma''s?" |
42534 | Is it anything new?" |
42534 | Is it time for the baby''s bottle, Mamma?" |
42534 | Is that all right?" |
42534 | Is that you?" |
42534 | It has n''t been my fault, has it, Mamma Farley?" |
42534 | Last time I talked with you, did n''t you tell me you were an atheist?" |
42534 | Mr. Price, gruff and uncomfortable, his face unmoved, said,"Where do I come in?" |
42534 | Mrs. Farley was afraid of showing how relieved she was; so she asked,"Do your father and Alice know that dinner is nearly ready?" |
42534 | Oh, do you suppose Laurence will do like that?" |
42534 | Please? |
42534 | Price?" |
42534 | Price?" |
42534 | Shall I call the doctor again? |
42534 | Shall I go to the door?" |
42534 | Shall I send her to you when she comes?" |
42534 | The years have n''t taught you respect for the opinions of your betters, then?" |
42534 | Then she said,"Are you sure you feel well enough to work?" |
42534 | Then what? |
42534 | Two-- two"--murmuring--"what did I say?" |
42534 | Was I angry with you?" |
42534 | What about being just to yourself?" |
42534 | What did it matter to the rocking dark that the child was born? |
42534 | What did she want? |
42534 | What did she want? |
42534 | What do you ask for those hens?" |
42534 | What do you mean by being so late?" |
42534 | What does it come to? |
42534 | What have we to do with them? |
42534 | What of it? |
42534 | What other reason did she have for coming to me about it? |
42534 | What shall I do? |
42534 | What shall I do?" |
42534 | What should they want of her? |
42534 | What was it, Mamma?" |
42534 | What was passion? |
42534 | What was wrong between them? |
42534 | What would be the use? |
42534 | When does the boat sail?" |
42534 | When would her mother let her stop crying? |
42534 | Where to go to? |
42534 | Where will my light go to? |
42534 | Who was this man? |
42534 | Who''s been talking to Winnie? |
42534 | Why could they never touch? |
42534 | Why did I not tell him that I loved him? |
42534 | Why did it hurt her to see her breast? |
42534 | Why do I go? |
42534 | Why do n''t you find somebody with some self- respect who means something to you, and go off and be happy? |
42534 | Why do n''t you kick out of this? |
42534 | Why does she twitch her face? |
42534 | Why had Laurie never told her all of this? |
42534 | Why should I feel responsible for Bobby and May? |
42534 | Why should n''t you dare?" |
42534 | You do love me?" |
42534 | You know how you can print-- nice printing with pictures? |
42534 | You know when you''re in the wrong, do you?" |
42534 | You like your old grandad?" |
42534 | You wo n''t hate me for going away with her? |
42534 | You wo n''t stop loving me, Laurie?" |
43794 | And do you remember the words,''If thine enemy hunger, feed him...''? |
43794 | And the military regulation, do you know anything about that? |
43794 | Have you read the New Testament? |
43794 | Is it a sin to punish a criminal with death according to the law, or to kill an enemy in war? 43794 No,"he replied,"there is nothing like it; but tell me, do the Christians obey this law?" |
43794 | What does God forbid by this commandment? 43794 What would become of commerce?" |
43794 | Why, then, do they print untrue explanations contrary to the law? |
43794 | Yes; why do you ask? |
43794 | _ For which of you intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first, and counteth the cost whether he have sufficient to finish it? 43794 _ Judge not_;"does not this mean, Institute no tribunals for the judgment of your neighbor? |
43794 | _ Question._--Is all manslaughter a transgression of the law? 43794 _ Question._--What does the sixth commandment forbid? |
43794 | _ What doth it profit, my brethren, if a man believe he hath faith, but hath not works? 43794 _ Which of you convicteth me of sin? |
43794 | ( If no one but the boy had brought anything, how could so much have been left after so many were fed?) |
43794 | 29),"_ And who is my neighbor?_"it is plain that he did not regard the Samaritan as such. |
43794 | After this clear interpretation, what was I to understand by the comment,"be reconciled in idea"? |
43794 | Ah, yes; but did not Jesus and his disciples practise just such fanaticism as this? |
43794 | All the theologians discuss the commandments of Jesus; but what are these commandments? |
43794 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
43794 | And now is not the question settled as to whether a Christian may or may not go to war? |
43794 | And what if these others were themselves wicked and cast the innocent into prison? |
43794 | And which of you with taking thought can add to his stature one cubit? |
43794 | And yet did this same Jesus formally teach men not to be angry"without a cause,"and thereby sanction anger for a cause? |
43794 | As the words came to be understood exclusively in this sense, a difficulty arose,--How to refrain from judgment? |
43794 | Asked,"Who is this son of man?" |
43794 | Be not angry without cause? |
43794 | But God said unto him, Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things be, which thou hast provided? |
43794 | But in what way? |
43794 | But is it so in reality? |
43794 | But is the disciple of the world in a more desirable situation? |
43794 | But perhaps these two words are used as synonyms in the Gospels? |
43794 | But possibly this existence is in itself attractive? |
43794 | But was his teaching in this respect true? |
43794 | But what is the condition of those men who live according to the doctrine of the world? |
43794 | But where were the righteous? |
43794 | But who is to decide when anger is expedient and when it is not expedient? |
43794 | But who will give me the strength to practise it, to follow it without ceasing, and never to fail? |
43794 | But why is life so full of evil? |
43794 | But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith without works is dead? |
43794 | Could anything be more clear, more definite, more intelligible than that? |
43794 | Could the idea be expressed in terms more clear and precise? |
43794 | Did Jesus sanction courts of justice, or did he not? |
43794 | Do they turn the other cheek?" |
43794 | Do you say that the doctrine of Jesus,"_ Resist not evil_,"is vain? |
43794 | Does it not forbid us to take the oath indispensable to the assembling of men into political groups and the formation of a military caste? |
43794 | Even a dog, if he be useful, is fed and cared for; and shall not a man be fed and cared for whose service is necessary to the whole world? |
43794 | Fanaticism, do you say? |
43794 | For a solution of the questions, What am I? |
43794 | For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? |
43794 | For what, according to the general estimate, are the principal conditions of earthly happiness? |
43794 | Further on we read:--"_ Question._--With regard to manslaughter, when is the law transgressed? |
43794 | Have we never heard that it is far more to our advantage to endure difficulties and privations than to satisfy all our desires? |
43794 | He asked his disciples whom men said that he was-- the son of man? |
43794 | How could Jesus avoid denouncing that law? |
43794 | How could it be said that Jesus did not perceive this evil when he forbade it in clear, direct, and circumstantial terms? |
43794 | How could we express more clearly the saying of Jesus and his apostle? |
43794 | How is it possible that the law of Jesus should harmonize with the law of Moses? |
43794 | How shall I persuade a man to toil in return for food and clothing if this man is persuaded that he already possesses great riches? |
43794 | How then shall I, who can not save, become a judge and punish? |
43794 | How was it then, that believing or trying to believe these to be the words of God, I still maintained the impossibility of obeying them? |
43794 | How, then, can we object to the doctrine of Jesus, that those who practise it by working for others will perish for want of food? |
43794 | How, then, can we understand the doctrine of Jesus? |
43794 | How, then, could a man judge and condemn when his religion commanded him to forgive all trespasses, without limit? |
43794 | I knew all that from my childhood; but why had I failed to understand aright these simple words? |
43794 | If Chrysostom had understood the law of Jesus, he would have said, Who is it that strikes out another''s eyes? |
43794 | If I say truth, why do ye not believe me?_"( John viii. |
43794 | If ye then be not able to do that thing which is least, why take ye thought for the rest? |
43794 | In what, then, does the rest of Jesus''doctrine consist? |
43794 | Is it impossible to lighten this heavy load that weighs me down? |
43794 | Is it not the act of a madman to labor at what, under any circumstances, one can never finish? |
43794 | Is it possible that there was not one such? |
43794 | Is my conclusion a foolish one? |
43794 | Is not the whole system like a great prison where each inmate is restricted to association with a few fellow- convicts? |
43794 | It being impossible not to condemn evil, all the commentators discussed the question, What is blamable and what is not blamable? |
43794 | It seemed to me that there must be a defect in the translation, and an erroneous exegesis; but where was the source of the error? |
43794 | Let each man endowed with reason ask himself, What is life? |
43794 | May I not abstain from taking part therein? |
43794 | No civilized man in the vanguard of progress is able to give any reply now to the direct questions,"Why do you lead the life that you do lead? |
43794 | On page 163 of this book I read:--"What is the sixth commandment of God? |
43794 | Or is it to be certain that my piece of bread only belongs to me when I know that every one else has a share, and that no one starves while I eat? |
43794 | Or those eighteen upon whom the tower in Siloam fell, and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in Jerusalem? |
43794 | Recall to mind the rich men and women whom you have known; are not most of them invalids? |
43794 | Shall not men care for those whose labor they find necessary? |
43794 | Should I die in following the doctrine of Jesus? |
43794 | Should I say this without having made the slightest effort of my own to obey? |
43794 | Should I then say of God''s commandment that I could not obey it without the aid of a supernatural power? |
43794 | Since life is given to me, why should I deprive myself of it? |
43794 | The Church retains its dogmas, but what are its dogmas worth? |
43794 | The Jews said to Jesus:"_ What signs shewest thou then, that we may see, and believe thee? |
43794 | The Pharisees, we are told, constituted a sect; where, then, were the righteous? |
43794 | There remained one more resource-- was the word to be found in all the manuscripts? |
43794 | This method was many times referred to by Jesus; thus he said,"_ What is written in the law? |
43794 | Thus, the question, What must I do to believe? |
43794 | To Peter''s question,"_ What shall we receive?_"Jesus replies with the parable of the laborers in the vineyard( Matt. |
43794 | To be able to reply to the question, Which of these two conditions is the happier? |
43794 | Up to this time( I said), what have been the practical results of the doctrine of Jesus as I understand it? |
43794 | Upon what, then, is based the opinion that divorce is permissible in case of infidelity on the part of the woman? |
43794 | Was Nicodemus the only one? |
43794 | Was it possible that the doctrine of Jesus admitted of such contradiction? |
43794 | Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son upon the altar? |
43794 | Was not this fire kindled that men might have the felicity of salvation? |
43794 | Was the revelation from God really so simple-- nothing but that? |
43794 | Was this the intention of Jesus? |
43794 | We are moving onward, but to what goal? |
43794 | We know how to interpret the signs of the weather; why, then, do we not see what is before us? |
43794 | We read, and are thrilled with a divine emotion; but which of us is willing to accept the truth here unfolded as the veritable secret of life? |
43794 | What does it all mean? |
43794 | What is the law of nature? |
43794 | What is the meaning of this? |
43794 | What ought I to do, to live like the rest of the world, or to live according to the doctrine of Jesus? |
43794 | What ought I to do? |
43794 | What would be the result if the faith of men in these commandments were as strong as their faith in the requirements of the Church? |
43794 | What, then, are we to do? |
43794 | What, then, are we to say to all this? |
43794 | What, then, is the purport of this phrase? |
43794 | What, then, must I do if I alone understand the doctrine of Jesus, and I alone have trust in it among a people who neither understand it nor obey it? |
43794 | Who were they that rejected the doctrine of Jesus and, their High Priests at their head, crucified him? |
43794 | Why do you abandon agriculture, which you love, for work in factories and mills, which you despise? |
43794 | Why do you bring up your children in a way that will force them to lead an existence which you find worthless? |
43794 | Why do you do this?" |
43794 | Why do you establish the conditions that you do establish?" |
43794 | Why had I always sought for some ulterior meaning? |
43794 | Why have you expended, and why do you still expend, an enormous sum of human energy in the construction of useless and unhealthful cities? |
43794 | Why should I toil for bread when I can be rich without labor? |
43794 | Why should I trouble myself to live this life according to the will of God when I am sure of a personal life for all eternity? |
43794 | Why should not a doctrine seem impracticable, when we have suppressed its fundamental proposition? |
43794 | Why so much wrong- doing? |
43794 | Why so? |
43794 | Why so? |
43794 | Why? |
43794 | Will any one, then, be offended if I tell the story of how all this came about? |
43794 | Would there be great trials to endure? |
43794 | Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky and of the earth; but how is it that ye do not discern this time? |
43794 | Yea, and why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?_"( Luke xii. |
43794 | [ 14] Is it not folly to trouble ourselves about a thing that we can not possibly accomplish? |
43794 | and What is death? |
43794 | and what degree of mischief would not then come revelling upon the whole of human life? |
43794 | can that faith save him? |
43794 | do not even the publicans so? |
43794 | do not even the publicans the same? |
43794 | how readest thou?_"( Luke x. |
43794 | is his demand if he be a merchant;"What of civilization, if I cease to work for it, and seek only to better my own condition?" |
43794 | what dost thou work?_"( John vi. |
43794 | what ought I to do? |
43794 | who is it that casts men into prison? |
43794 | would not cities, market- places and houses, sea and land, and the whole world have been filled with unnumbered pollutions and murders? |
48589 | ***** Does it not hurt the innocent lamb when you cut its little throat? |
48589 | 65: 4), but what care the pharisee so long as he intends pleasing the palate rather than obey the law of his God and conscience? |
48589 | A DEVOUT(?) |
48589 | Are you not a little bit radical on the subject of Humanitarianism? |
48589 | Do I not work hard and do I not know that I need meat to sustain me in my manual labor? |
48589 | Do church people get angry at your philosophy? |
48589 | Do not some people believe it is right to slay and eat lower animals? |
48589 | Do not the lower animals prey upon one another, and do not the big fish eat the little fish? |
48589 | Do you actually consider flesh eating the most abominable of sins? |
48589 | Do you not kill insects when you drink water; and do you not cripple and trample harmless bugs to death with every step you take? |
48589 | Do you object to the infidel eating flesh food? |
48589 | Do you really think carnivorous churchites are not of God? |
48589 | Does it not hurt the cow when you wield the axe with tremendous force against its forehead? |
48589 | Does it not hurt the little calf when you take its tender life? |
48589 | Does it not hurt the sheep when in the agonies of death? |
48589 | Does it not hurt when the goat pitifully gurgles the sound"Oh Lord,"as its life- blood is passing the butcher''s knife? |
48589 | Has not environment throughout one''s life something to do with our eating of flesh? |
48589 | Have not vegetables life? |
48589 | If the Bible teaches me to slay and eat have I not a right to eat flesh? |
48589 | If there is no personal God, who created this world? |
48589 | Is not that a miserable symbolization of"Divine Love"and"Peace?" |
48589 | Is not the devil in your philosophy? |
48589 | Is not the survival of the fittest a natural law; consequently being superior I may slay and eat? |
48589 | Is not your feeling toward animals mawkish sentimentality? |
48589 | Is that why you eat flesh? |
48589 | Q. I know animals have fear and pain, but supposing God did place them on earth for man to slay and eat, what then? |
48589 | Suppose man lives in a country where he can not find vegetarian food? |
48589 | The Bible says: Who knoweth that the spirit of man goeth upward and the spirit of the beast goeth downward? |
48589 | To the slaughter? |
48589 | We carry ourselves aloof from these awful(?) |
48589 | We hear many testimonies from the lips of these people praising this wonderful(?) |
48589 | What do you think of religious emotionalism and ecstasy? |
48589 | What is your conception of God? |
48589 | What right have twelve jurors to virtually cancel the life of a murderer? |
48589 | What shall we do with all the animals if we do not kill them? |
48589 | What were YOU created for? |
48589 | What were animals created for? |
48589 | Where would medical research be were it not for vivisection( torture) and killing animals for experiment in the interest of science? |
48589 | Whither? |
48589 | Why are all Vegetarians lank, lean and skinny? |
48589 | Would you"swat"a fly or kill a flea or a snake? |
29877 | ''S all''ite,he repeated with a falling inflection this time, and finished placidly,"You want know''bout lady?" |
29877 | ''S all''ite? |
29877 | A bar? |
29877 | A gambler''s chance at stolen money-- is that what you figure on buying, sir? 29877 A-- a stunt?" |
29877 | About a lady who came to see Mr. Gilbert last night,I explained shortly; then,"Who was she, Chung?" |
29877 | About one o''clock, you say? |
29877 | Account books? |
29877 | Action? |
29877 | Ah-- Boyne-- isn''t it? |
29877 | All the rest of the facts there ever will be about Edward Clayte are in that room-- aren''t they? |
29877 | And Worth Gilbert can hang and be damned to him-- is that it? |
29877 | And if she had n''t, do you think she''d let you touch her, Bowman? 29877 And if you had that-- some one?" |
29877 | And is it nothing that this man became a teller in a bank without infringing at all on the circle of his nothingness? 29877 And no one-- not one of all these people could differentiate him?" |
29877 | And now could you tell me what action you took, on this state of affairs? |
29877 | And still you''ve charged Worth Gilbert? 29877 And tell me, girl, how did you get the idea of walking up to the desk at the Gold Nugget and demanding Steve Skeels from the Kite?" |
29877 | And that was the last time you saw Thomas Gilbert alive? |
29877 | And that''s your alibi? |
29877 | And the shot? |
29877 | And they went in on the first of June, 1916? |
29877 | And what in the world are you doing to Barbara? |
29877 | And when did the last''frequent''happen? |
29877 | And you connect Jim Edwards with this crime? |
29877 | And you did n''t go to your father for it last night? |
29877 | And you think half truths are dangerous? |
29877 | And you''ll burn anything, I suppose, that a match''ll set fire to? |
29877 | And you, Edwards? |
29877 | Anything about money? |
29877 | Anything in what Boyne says, Cummings? |
29877 | Anything wrong with Eddie Hughes? |
29877 | Are you the coward to take advantage of his sense of honor?--to let his generosity cost him his life? |
29877 | Ask for me? |
29877 | At the Thornhills''? |
29877 | Barbara, I did n''t mean-- you do n''t understand--But without turning her head, she spoke to me:"Mr. Boyne, will you take Laura and me home?" |
29877 | Barbara,I broke in across their talk,"who was the woman who came here to this place last night?" |
29877 | Barbara,I said,"will you accept my apologies?" |
29877 | Been stepping on tacks, Mister? |
29877 | Been waiting for me long, angel? |
29877 | Better come along? |
29877 | Bill still keeps the old place? |
29877 | Blue eyes you say? |
29877 | Bonding company will hound him, wo n''t they? |
29877 | Boyne,he said impatiently,"what''s the matter with you? |
29877 | Boyne,the president turned quickly to me,"would you mind going over for Captain Gilbert''s benefit what you''ve just said?" |
29877 | Brass rings and lock, I suppose? |
29877 | Break? |
29877 | Bulls after him? |
29877 | But can you--? |
29877 | But did n''t it ever belong here? |
29877 | But the hole in the sash? |
29877 | But this quarrel was more bitter than usual? |
29877 | But what the deuce, Boyne? |
29877 | But where is he now? 29877 But you''ll be back by dinner time?" |
29877 | By Golly-- you see it now yourself, do n''t you, Jerry? |
29877 | By elimination? |
29877 | Ca n''t I help with that? |
29877 | Ca n''t you see? 29877 Can you take dictation?" |
29877 | Corrections? |
29877 | Could he-- the man I''ve described-- come through here-- through this office and neither you nor Louie see him? |
29877 | Cummings, Worth inherits everything under his father''s will; what''s the difference about a small irregularity in taking possession? 29877 Cummings? |
29877 | Dang it all, Mr. Vandeman, if you did n''t want to get mussed up, what made you fight like that? |
29877 | Dark girl? |
29877 | Deduce it? |
29877 | Description? |
29877 | Did I-- do that? |
29877 | Did I? |
29877 | Did she come here-- to the study? |
29877 | Did something happen to you back there, girl? 29877 Did you wire him when you were coming back?" |
29877 | Do I need to? |
29877 | Do n''t you notice that a girl always says a blue- eyed man or a brown- eyed man? 29877 Do n''t you see that does n''t do any good, Ina? |
29877 | Do we go now? |
29877 | Do you need to? |
29877 | Do you think I''d have let you on the inside of this case if I''d known it was a pipe line direct to Dykeman? |
29877 | Do you think Worth Gilbert would put me on the track of a man he did n''t want found? |
29877 | Do you think it will? |
29877 | Do you think the little girl will really be of any use? |
29877 | Do you? 29877 Do-- do you deduce that, Barbara?" |
29877 | Does he hang around here much? |
29877 | Does it matter? |
29877 | Does it matter? |
29877 | Does it? 29877 Does n''t either of you want to hear the answer?" |
29877 | Does n''t it look like Van, Barbie? |
29877 | Does n''t she look the vamp? |
29877 | Does that mean you forbid me, in so many words, to proceed against Hughes on what I''ve got? |
29877 | Edwards,I called to the brown friar,"can you keep these fellows off me for a minute?" |
29877 | Eh? 29877 Eh?" |
29877 | Eight minutes to ten? 29877 Ends?" |
29877 | Every word and part of a word-- every letter? |
29877 | Father still kept Eddie? |
29877 | Fight? |
29877 | Find out here-- right now,and I turned to the man in overalls with,"How about it?" |
29877 | Find that all out to- day in San Francisco? |
29877 | Fired Hughes? 29877 Forced?" |
29877 | Friends of yours? |
29877 | Friends? 29877 From you?" |
29877 | Get it over, ca n''t you? |
29877 | Get the idea, do you, Boyne? |
29877 | Girls? 29877 Gone-- stolen?" |
29877 | Got the key? |
29877 | Guessed at it? |
29877 | Had n''t heard? |
29877 | Has he had it for as long as four years? |
29877 | He did follow me, then? 29877 He let himself go to Steve Skeels-- won''t that do you?" |
29877 | He lived here-- years, you say? |
29877 | He married our Sarah, you know-- was that before you went away? 29877 He must have friends?" |
29877 | Heh? |
29877 | Hello-- what''s this? |
29877 | House mousy, or field mousy? |
29877 | How about publicity, if this goes? |
29877 | How about this one? 29877 How big a guy?" |
29877 | How could I? |
29877 | How could she grow up to be like this-- a child that was n''t allowed any childhood? 29877 How did he brush his hair?" |
29877 | How did you know it was_ this_ window? |
29877 | How did you know this was the room? |
29877 | How do you get the date so pat? |
29877 | How do you get the exact minute Clayte arrived? |
29877 | How do you know all this? |
29877 | How do you know? |
29877 | How does it look for recovering the money, Boyne? |
29877 | How is she? 29877 How long ago was this building reroofed?" |
29877 | How long ahead should you say he planned it? |
29877 | How long do you think it might have been planned or prepared for? 29877 How long you work this place?" |
29877 | How many shots? |
29877 | How many times is''frequent,''Pete? |
29877 | How much of this are these ladies to stand for? |
29877 | How much--? |
29877 | How much? |
29877 | How should I know? |
29877 | How was he tucked up? |
29877 | How was that? |
29877 | Huh? 29877 Huh?" |
29877 | I look like hell-- what? |
29877 | I suppose Clayte was bonded-- for what that''s worth? |
29877 | I understand that Captain Gilbert met his engagement with you; was he short of the sum agreed? |
29877 | I work for Dykeman? |
29877 | If a man shoots himself, he''s been shot, has n''t he? 29877 If you think there is anything we should do--?" |
29877 | If-- if you fail you lose a lot of money; was n''t that what you said? |
29877 | In Flanders? |
29877 | In spite of the fact that she was engaged to Worth Gilbert? |
29877 | Information? |
29877 | Is n''t it an exquisite thing, Worth? |
29877 | Is n''t it, Knapp? |
29877 | Is that all Skeet said? 29877 Is that all? |
29877 | Is that usual? |
29877 | Is that what they gave you at the St. Dunstan-- what he was wearing when he came in? |
29877 | Is that-- that stuff in those damnable books? |
29877 | Is-- is Mr. Boyne interested in stunts-- such as I used to do? |
29877 | Just back from the south yourself, are n''t you? |
29877 | Know what time to- day he left here? |
29877 | Ladies? |
29877 | Left last night, you think? |
29877 | Made all the observations you want to, Bobs? |
29877 | Maybe you think Worth Gilbert will sleep well to- night-- in jail? |
29877 | Me? 29877 Me?" |
29877 | Meaning? |
29877 | Midnight? |
29877 | Might be Tim Foley? |
29877 | Miss Wallace,I said sharply,"what''s this Steve Skeels stuff? |
29877 | Mistake? 29877 More?" |
29877 | Mr. Boyne--Vandeman missed the sarcasm--"when I got back to this town to- day, what do you suppose I found? |
29877 | Mr. Boyne,the black eyes came around to me with a flash,"do you suspect me of trying to pay off a spite on Ina Vandeman?" |
29877 | Mr. Boyne-- Mr. Cummings-- who had that done? |
29877 | Mr. Boyne-- are you in there? 29877 Murder?" |
29877 | My sister? |
29877 | Need it? |
29877 | Never saw the man in my life,and again he asked,"What''s the idea?" |
29877 | No associates-- no girl? 29877 No mannerisms? |
29877 | No movement of the sort yet? |
29877 | No stops anywhere? |
29877 | No, but she imitated the voice of a woman who came weeping to get those pages from the diary; and who else would that be? 29877 No?" |
29877 | Not in four years? 29877 Not interested?" |
29877 | Nothing proved? |
29877 | Now why did you run to them? 29877 Now, Mrs. Thornhill,"I said,"aside from those two visits to your daughter''s room, where were you that evening?" |
29877 | Occasionally he did,contradicted Knapp, and the pause continued till I asked,"Any peculiarities of clothing?" |
29877 | Of whom? |
29877 | Oh, Mr. Cummings, did they send you for me? 29877 Oh, does it?" |
29877 | Oh, it was the Brundage clew that took you south? |
29877 | Oh, might he? |
29877 | Oh, that''s where, is it? |
29877 | Oh, the money? 29877 Oh, they accepted his money?" |
29877 | Oh, they knew you there? 29877 Oh, well then, what color was it? |
29877 | Oh, will you? |
29877 | Oh, you threaten me, do you? |
29877 | Only now? |
29877 | Or rather, where have you been? |
29877 | Or would the bank prefer to have them turned over in their present form? |
29877 | Out of the door? 29877 Relatives?" |
29877 | Reroofed? |
29877 | Say,I leaned over toward him,"would n''t it have saved wear and tear if you''d told me at the first that you knew Skeels could n''t be Clayte?" |
29877 | Seat for me? |
29877 | Securities? |
29877 | See here, Bobs; you and I used to be pals, did n''t we? |
29877 | See? 29877 See? |
29877 | Sell you-- the suitcase-- Clayte''s suitcase? |
29877 | So he went back to what he had known of Eddie when he hired him? 29877 So soon?" |
29877 | So the way into the study is through the skylight, Hughes? |
29877 | So you found the body? |
29877 | Some one in there? 29877 Steve?" |
29877 | Suppose a State bank examiner walks in on you Monday? |
29877 | Take dictation:''We offer five hundred dollars--''You authorize that, Worth?" |
29877 | Take_ you_ there? 29877 That''s what you want, is n''t it?" |
29877 | The lady changed her mind while you were across? |
29877 | The last quarrel would seem the bitterest, would n''t it, Jerry? |
29877 | The quarrel between Captain Gilbert and his father d''ye mean? |
29877 | The rest of the bunch? |
29877 | Then he''s been with you a long time? |
29877 | Then it leaks-- we have a run-- and where are you? |
29877 | Then it''s not just a stunt? |
29877 | Then you hated the man? |
29877 | Think he stayed up here till dark? |
29877 | This other woman,I argued, not any too keen on such a job myself,"has n''t she got some man to speak for her?" |
29877 | To be converted--? 29877 Trying''em on?" |
29877 | Two and two are making about three and a half this afternoon, are they? |
29877 | Vandeman, where''s the money? |
29877 | Vandeman-- Bronse-- Vannie-- Who let this fool in here?--Do we throw him out? |
29877 | Want to go along and see me use it? |
29877 | Wanted in, did ya? 29877 Was he always a gambler?" |
29877 | Was it supposed to be a description? |
29877 | Was n''t it cute of him? |
29877 | Was n''t that enough to call you names for? |
29877 | Was that Cummings? |
29877 | Was that it all the time? |
29877 | Was the Saturday suitcase a regular thing? |
29877 | Well, at least you can tell me who are his friends-- his intimates? |
29877 | Well, is n''t it? |
29877 | Well, why not? |
29877 | Well,I grunted,"Barbara deduced the slipping of some bolts to please you once-- why ca n''t she again?" |
29877 | Well-- wasn''t it his? |
29877 | Well? |
29877 | Well? |
29877 | Well? |
29877 | What I want to know is-- how much have you raised? |
29877 | What about this Vandeman chink? |
29877 | What about those library books he carried in the suitcase? |
29877 | What besides this meeting? |
29877 | What d''you mean, strange way? 29877 What did you want?" |
29877 | What do we do now? |
29877 | What do you mean, hounds? |
29877 | What do you say, Gilbert? |
29877 | What do you think''s wrong? |
29877 | What for? |
29877 | What have your own detectives-- those you hired on the side-- to say about it? |
29877 | What if I told you Cummings''engagement was with our friend Dykeman-- only Dykeman does n''t know it yet? |
29877 | What in God''s name for? |
29877 | What is the situation? |
29877 | What kind of a car? 29877 What more do you want?" |
29877 | What of it? |
29877 | What the hell do you want in my room for? |
29877 | What time is it? |
29877 | What was her father? 29877 What was there to do? |
29877 | What would some leaves gone from Mr. Gilbert''s diary four years ago have to do with us here to- day-- or even with his recent death? |
29877 | What would you call this, Worth? 29877 What you got, Cummings?" |
29877 | What you got? 29877 What you talking, Cummings-- an extension?" |
29877 | What''s all this? |
29877 | What''s down there? |
29877 | What''s the big idea? |
29877 | What''s this? 29877 What, then?" |
29877 | What? 29877 What? |
29877 | What? 29877 What?" |
29877 | When did you see him last? |
29877 | When? |
29877 | When? |
29877 | Where are you, Jerry? |
29877 | Where did he spend his time when he was n''t in the bank? |
29877 | Where did you go? |
29877 | Where did you go? |
29877 | Where was your wife from seven to half past nine on the evening of Gilbert''s murder? |
29877 | Where you been all day? |
29877 | Where''d he go? |
29877 | Where''s Foster? |
29877 | Where''s Roberts? |
29877 | Where? |
29877 | Who bought your house, Barbara? |
29877 | Who gave you this description of Steve Skeels? 29877 Who is this-- lady?" |
29877 | Who the devil is it? |
29877 | Who then? |
29877 | Who told them I was here? |
29877 | Who told you? |
29877 | Who would n''t? 29877 Who''s dared to lisp a word like that? |
29877 | Who''s down there? |
29877 | Who''s in there? |
29877 | Whose? |
29877 | Why ca n''t some one go up to my place and get me a decent suit of clothes? 29877 Why did he unmask, then?" |
29877 | Why did n''t the shot bring Chung on the run? |
29877 | Why do n''t you? |
29877 | Why not because of this? |
29877 | Why not? 29877 Why not? |
29877 | Why not? |
29877 | Why should I? |
29877 | Why should n''t I? 29877 Why the devil could n''t you keep me advised of your movements?" |
29877 | Will the Clearing House help you out? |
29877 | Will you open this window for me, please? |
29877 | Will you read me that? |
29877 | Wo n''t you-- this one time-- take orders? |
29877 | Worth--I put it quietly--"what say I go to Santa Ysobel with you? |
29877 | Worth, did you do this? |
29877 | Worth,I asked,"did you see that 1920 volume when you were here last night?" |
29877 | Worth,--had you thought that it might have been happening down here, right at the time we all sat at Tait''s together? |
29877 | Worth? |
29877 | Would he have a big scar on his left cheek? |
29877 | Would n''t help me? |
29877 | Would you like to talk to her? |
29877 | Years? 29877 Yeh,"he assented absently,"she''s good looking-- but where did she learn to dress like that-- and play the game?" |
29877 | Yes,she said softly, with a smile that set two dimples deep in the pink of her cheeks,"was n''t it strange our meeting this way?" |
29877 | You are positive it could n''t be this morning? |
29877 | You been getting a place for Bowman, Cummings? |
29877 | You do n''t recognize him? |
29877 | You failed to locate? 29877 You heard what she said?" |
29877 | You know what''s holding Mr. Cummings here, do n''t you? |
29877 | You mean he''s not in his room? |
29877 | You mean the diaries? |
29877 | You must have seen somebody who could identify or remember you? |
29877 | You people ai n''t classing me with this crook Vandeman, are you? 29877 You quarreled?" |
29877 | You read them and burned them? |
29877 | You say my father removed something he had written? |
29877 | You think I will? 29877 You think so?" |
29877 | You took it south with you-- on your wedding trip? |
29877 | You wanted the Chink, did n''t you, Bill? |
29877 | You''d recognize a picture of Clayte? |
29877 | You''ll do that, wo n''t you, Barbara? |
29877 | You''ll go with us to- morrow morning? |
29877 | You''ve read this all-- carefully? |
29877 | You''ve seen them-- all? |
29877 | You? 29877 Your case?" |
29877 | Your friend calling for you again, Bobs-- by appointment? |
29877 | _ What do you know?_The big voice had come down to a mere whisper. |
29877 | A description of Edward Clayte? |
29877 | A gambler at night, a bank employee by day? |
29877 | A hint of it was in Whipple''s voice as he asked, gravely:"Do you bind yourself to pursue Clayte and bring him, if possible, to justice?" |
29877 | A pause, then, looking around at the four of us,"I get dinner?" |
29877 | A pause, then,"''Skeels arrived here from''Frisco this morning shall I arrest?''" |
29877 | A queer, toneless voice asked,"Worth sent you to me-- a detective-- with this?" |
29877 | After a stunned silence, I asked,"Whose? |
29877 | After profiting by it for five years, he was going to rake that up?" |
29877 | Ai n''t I your husband?" |
29877 | Ai n''t you wise to where Captain Gilbert is? |
29877 | An accomplice? |
29877 | An indecisive slackening of the machine, and Little Pete asked,"Where now, sir?" |
29877 | And I asked uncomfortably,"What''s Barbie done? |
29877 | And I demanded of Ina Vandeman,"You tell us your husband''s present-- in this room? |
29877 | And Skeet drawled innocently,"That it hit too near the truth to be funny-- wasn''t that it?" |
29877 | And heavy- faced Anson asked bluntly,"Who''s to set the price on it? |
29877 | And now, honest to goodness, has n''t Barbie with the plum- blossoms got Ina and her artificial flowers skun a mile?" |
29877 | And the man strolling beside her-- had he come with her from the house, or joined her on the cross- cut path?--could that be Worth Gilbert? |
29877 | And then,"Did you say one lump or two?" |
29877 | And when I continued to stare silently at him, he writhed a shoulder with,"What''s doing? |
29877 | And when there was no reply but a surprised look,"How do you stand now?" |
29877 | And you do n''t want to tip him off-- see?" |
29877 | Anson stopped me at this point,"and the positive knowledge that he had the suitcase with him?" |
29877 | Any word, Worth?" |
29877 | Are you quitting on me? |
29877 | As I plunged for the door I was conscious of his hoarse whisper following me,"What''s Steve done, Jerry? |
29877 | As though her words had suggested it, Worth spoke again,"Where did you meet Cummings? |
29877 | As we began to worm a slow way toward my office, I suggested,"You''ll come upstairs with me, and-- er-- sort of outline a policy? |
29877 | As we headed away for the other end of town, he spoke again, half interrogatively,"Vandeman shot her?" |
29877 | At her protesting expression, he finished,"Or do I call you Ina, still?" |
29877 | At that, what was the best he could do-- or any of them? |
29877 | Barbara, are you just plain perverse?" |
29877 | Before I could connect him with it, he broke in on me,"Is Worth suspected?" |
29877 | Bowman and his wife-- and that man who was just in here-- Jim Edwards?" |
29877 | Bowman came running with the girl''s hat, and,"What about me, Mr. Boyne? |
29877 | Bowman that we met last night at Tait''s-- she was a special friend of your mother''s?" |
29877 | Bowman''s-- as proving an alibi for Worth Gilbert? |
29877 | Bowman-- any connection with him?" |
29877 | Boyne?" |
29877 | Boyne?" |
29877 | Boyne?" |
29877 | Boyne?" |
29877 | Boyne?" |
29877 | Boyne?" |
29877 | Bron told you my experience-- the one that made me break with Worth?" |
29877 | But Clayte, slipping in here to do this murder-- and why? |
29877 | But she was plainly holding back for a further development, her eyes on the entrances; and what the devil was my next move? |
29877 | But suppose there was n''t, how would you find any wonderfulness in a creature as near nothing as this Clayte?" |
29877 | But what if the thing worked another way? |
29877 | But whether she went or not-- Mr. Boyne, you do n''t want us to tell you our speculations and guesses? |
29877 | But would Edwards go in with him-- or was he only along to drive the machine? |
29877 | But you will come over to our table-- for a minute anyhow? |
29877 | Ca n''t you see, Mr. Boyne? |
29877 | Can I take you back in the limousine?" |
29877 | Can he make it? |
29877 | Can you declare to me as executor, where it is? |
29877 | Come on-- what color are his eyes?" |
29877 | Could it be that Barbara had dragged Mrs. Thornhill from her bed? |
29877 | Could that be worked? |
29877 | Covering the transmitter with my hand, I told Worth the situation and asked,"Any suggestions?" |
29877 | Crank on education?" |
29877 | Cummings passed them back with an indifferent,"What''s the idea?" |
29877 | Did Captain Gilbert fail to meet his engagement with you Monday morning?" |
29877 | Did he answer you in person-- from out there?" |
29877 | Did he drop it?" |
29877 | Did he supply an alibi so neatly because of that shadowy head on the door panel? |
29877 | Did he think Mr. Gilbert ought to have left it to him? |
29877 | Did it mean that he''d seen his father and got a calling down? |
29877 | Did n''t he have a girl?" |
29877 | Did she say so?" |
29877 | Did you find that Skeels was Clayte?" |
29877 | Did you phone ahead to see how things was out to the house?" |
29877 | Do n''t you think it''s a good idea?" |
29877 | Do you know what you''re telling me?" |
29877 | Do you think he can make it?" |
29877 | Do you think she was in the room all the time? |
29877 | Doctor Bowman swears--""He?" |
29877 | Does nine o''clock suit you?" |
29877 | Down? |
29877 | Drifters-- you see so many of the sort in a restaurant-- why would n''t they hanker after the strength and ruthlessness of a man like Worth? |
29877 | Dykeman wanted to know about the one hundred and eighty seven thousand odd dollars not covered by Worth''s offer-- did they lose that? |
29877 | Eddie Hughes ought to be on the job out there-- but would he?" |
29877 | Exactly, understand?" |
29877 | Feint? |
29877 | Folks you know well?" |
29877 | Footwork? |
29877 | For the love of Mike, what could such a man intend to do with all that money?" |
29877 | Friends?--could a man have friends who regarded humanity through such unkindly, wide open, all- seeing eyes? |
29877 | From the top of a stepladder, Skeet Thornhill yelled to us,"Where you two going? |
29877 | Get it, Roberts? |
29877 | Get me?" |
29877 | Gilbert?" |
29877 | Got a costume here, have n''t you?" |
29877 | Has Murray got in touch with Foster?" |
29877 | Has n''t he been with you ever since the place was rebuilt after the earthquake?" |
29877 | Has the man you''re trying here to describe anything to do with money-- in large amounts-- financial affairs of importance?" |
29877 | Have n''t I made you understand what happened there at the study? |
29877 | Have you got it? |
29877 | He came straight from there? |
29877 | He caught sight of me, hailed, and when I joined them, asked quickly, glancing toward the drugstore entrance,"Worth come with you?" |
29877 | He did all that? |
29877 | He finished with the abrupt question,"Were you at Santa Ysobel last night?" |
29877 | He fumbled in his pocket with an interrogative look at Whipple, and,"May I smoke in here?" |
29877 | He had made the latter into a separate package, and now looked up at me with,"Want this in here, too, Jerry?" |
29877 | He looked a little startled, and I prompted,"Were you too excited to have noticed a detail like that?" |
29877 | He sat silent, thoughtful, and I added,"Where did you go from Tait''s, Worth?" |
29877 | He stood now, not really grinning at me, but with an amused look under that bristly mustache, and suggested,"So you have n''t seen young Gilbert?" |
29877 | He stopped there, and was so long about getting anything else out that Worth finally suggested,"The money?" |
29877 | He took that with astonishing quietness, and,"Suppose you were shown that she was n''t out of her mother''s house?" |
29877 | He_ did_--or was that yesterday? |
29877 | Her voice was musing; she looked straight ahead of her as she finished softly,"What time do we go?" |
29877 | Hired it for when?" |
29877 | How did you find it?" |
29877 | How did you get here? |
29877 | How did you get wise?" |
29877 | How long is it going to take him?" |
29877 | How long will it take you to get here?" |
29877 | How long would that coroner''s verdict of suicide satisfy the public? |
29877 | How many times did I fire?" |
29877 | How many times had this lad been jilted? |
29877 | How many?" |
29877 | How much time do you want to give to it?" |
29877 | How much?" |
29877 | How soon would some seepage of fact indicate that the death was murder and set the whole town to looking for a murderer? |
29877 | How the hell could I? |
29877 | How would you like that?" |
29877 | How''d you come here?" |
29877 | How''s my friend Steve?" |
29877 | I added, a bit sarcastically,"Or you, Miss Wallace?" |
29877 | I answered a doubtful look,"Did you see his face there in the ball room as he looked up at Barbara Wallace? |
29877 | I answered that question with another,"When did you see or hear from Worth Gilbert last?" |
29877 | I began in exasperation-- hadn''t I just shown the impractical little creature that those locks could n''t be manipulated from outside? |
29877 | I could not deny it when Dykeman yipped at me,"Ai n''t that true? |
29877 | I did n''t share his confidence, but I rather admired it as he finished, poising the tongs,"One lump, or two?" |
29877 | I feel--""Mr. Dykeman,"Barbara turned quietly to her employer,"could we pass out through your room?" |
29877 | I had n''t meant to be offensive with that last, but her firm little chin was in the air as she countered,"Is it a stairway? |
29877 | I had n''t meant to; but after all, what matter? |
29877 | I heard her catch her breath, and Worth scowled at me,"Trance? |
29877 | I jumped to my feet with a brisk,"Girl, where''s your hat? |
29877 | I mean, how many people''s observation of the man does this represent?" |
29877 | I put my back against the door and asked,"Is Bronson Vandeman a fatuous fool; or does he take me for one?" |
29877 | I returned to Miss Wallace, with,"Ready, Barbara?" |
29877 | I skirted the machine and came round to him, demanding,"With whom do you suppose Cummings''engagement was?" |
29877 | I stepped to the door, with,"Fixed the radiator, did you?" |
29877 | I stood there at a loss, and finally said aimlessly,"Your sister thinks it''s all right?" |
29877 | I suppose Captain Gilbert has told you that I phoned him, when I failed to connect with you, that I was coming here-- and what I was coming for?" |
29877 | I suppose it is a question of time when it will be known that Worth came here last night; and when it is known, do you realize what it will mean?" |
29877 | I suppose you raised that money for Worth-- the seventy- two thousand that was lacking, I mean?" |
29877 | I suppose,"stretching up his head to see across his noisy associates,"I suppose, Captain Gilbert, you''ll be retaining Boyne''s agency? |
29877 | I tried every way in the world to get him to be specific about this voice; did it sound like that of a young lady? |
29877 | I turned the situation over and over in my mind, and at last asked cautiously,"Worth did get the money to make up the full amount, did n''t he?" |
29877 | I turned to Worth and asked,"When will Edwards be here?" |
29877 | I turned to congratulate her and at the same instant Worth cried,"What''s the matter, Bobs?" |
29877 | I''ll be at the Little Italy restaurant-- you know, do n''t you? |
29877 | If he did n''t take it, do n''t you think he counted it?" |
29877 | If it was anybody else, would n''t you see the connection? |
29877 | If it''s never recovered?" |
29877 | If more than one woman spoke in that voice-- where would it take me? |
29877 | If she could slip away for it, why not Ina Vandeman? |
29877 | If so, where''d they take him? |
29877 | In a flash, I remembered his words,"putting every damn''word of our row into it,"and I shot straight at him,"Did you take that book, Worth?" |
29877 | In that case, do you give him the publicity he wants?" |
29877 | In the Gold Nugget, Clayte was a very average Gold Nugget guest-- don''t you see? |
29877 | Instead,"Who was it, Worth?" |
29877 | Is it all right to let him know?" |
29877 | Is it gone-- are you sure it is gone?" |
29877 | Is n''t there something I can do?" |
29877 | Is that it?" |
29877 | Is that the idea?" |
29877 | Is that the way you saw it?" |
29877 | Is that what you''ve been wasting your time over, Boyne? |
29877 | Is there a stenographer about?" |
29877 | It was? |
29877 | Just looking at him, old Dykeman rasped, without further provocation,"What''s Captain Gilbert got to do with the private concerns of this bank?" |
29877 | Ladder? |
29877 | Light it, ca n''t you? |
29877 | Make that''arrest or detention,''Got it?" |
29877 | May I go now, Worth?" |
29877 | May I speak to you, please?" |
29877 | Miss Wallace, why do you think a description like that could be shouted on the street without any one being the wiser?" |
29877 | Motive? |
29877 | Mr. Boyne, do you call that a paradox?" |
29877 | Mr. Boyne,"a break in her voice,"am I going to be able to take Ina back with me? |
29877 | No flicker of response from the man, but the Empress of China dragged down her mask, crying,"Heard what she said? |
29877 | No little tricks, such as a twist of the mouth, a mincing step, or a head carried on one side?" |
29877 | No moles, scars or visible marks?" |
29877 | No?" |
29877 | Not the kind of a scrap I care for; in a half light you ca n''t tell friend from foe; but Worth went to it-- and what was there to do but follow? |
29877 | Now yer in, what about it?" |
29877 | Now, d''ye mean?" |
29877 | Now, what do you know about that? |
29877 | Now-- what is it you want to know?" |
29877 | Now?" |
29877 | Oh-- you want Ernestine and Cora? |
29877 | On account of Worth''s engagement with them to- morrow morning? |
29877 | Or did you just faint?" |
29877 | Or have you any recollection?" |
29877 | Or is she-- do they--?" |
29877 | Or would you rather go up to the house?" |
29877 | Orientals are superstitious; but what could the fellow be afraid of in the beautiful young thing, Buddha posed, blossoms in her hair? |
29877 | Parry? |
29877 | Promised Worth, had I? |
29877 | Quarrel? |
29877 | Ready to jump into your car and go around with me to see Dykeman?" |
29877 | Remained so shadowy that neither the president nor cashier can, after eight years''association, tell the color of his hair and eyes? |
29877 | Said Worth got a lot of money when his father died, and I flared up and said what of it? |
29877 | Say I went to him with the story-- and took the cat- hauling he''ll give me-- should I be much better off?" |
29877 | Shall I tell him that in my note, Mr. Boyne? |
29877 | Shall we go there?" |
29877 | She looked around at the four of us, wondering at her, and finished,"Ca n''t they take me home now, doctor?" |
29877 | She was concentrating now; could she stand the strain of it, with its weakening of the heart action, its pumping all the blood to the brain? |
29877 | She''d landed him once; what was to hinder her being successful with the same tactics-- whatever they''d been-- a second time? |
29877 | Should that clue have been followed up before I moved on Eddie Hughes? |
29877 | Skeet regarded the manifestation askance, asking jealously,"When did you see Worth last, Barbie? |
29877 | So he could have sent Eddie to the pen,--eh? |
29877 | Suppose I meet you, say, at ten o''clock to- night?" |
29877 | Take a chance? |
29877 | Talk to you?" |
29877 | That hound Cummings-- chasing around Santa Ysobel with Bowman-- is that where it comes from? |
29877 | That is Worth, ai n''t it? |
29877 | That would n''t be fair, would it?" |
29877 | The bride glanced from one to the other of them, and spoke sharply,"What''s the matter with you two? |
29877 | The light had come from there, but how? |
29877 | The man at the desk looked at me, calling a quick,"Hello, Jerry-- what''s up?" |
29877 | The study''s separate from the house?" |
29877 | Then suddenly,"And why do I tell you that? |
29877 | Then they took the words from Edwards; the tune changed to grumblings of,"What''s the matter with Van? |
29877 | Then, after a long pause,"Oh-- I say-- pardon me, but-- but ought that to have been done? |
29877 | Then, giving his full attention to Worth,"Did you see your father last night?" |
29877 | They were mistrustful enough as Whipple finally questioned,"Is this a bona- fide offer, Captain Gilbert?" |
29877 | They--""Is Bronse Vandeman here?" |
29877 | Things that have happened since the boy''s gone? |
29877 | Told you of it at the time, did n''t I, Jerry?" |
29877 | Vandeman began anxiously, and Skeet took a look around at our faces and fairly wailed,"What is it? |
29877 | Vandeman, you''ve told your wife that Cummings swore to the complaint?" |
29877 | Was n''t that exceeding your orders? |
29877 | Was n''t that queer? |
29877 | Was this one of the things Barbara Wallace had let out to her employer? |
29877 | Was this some more of her deductive reasoning, or had Cummings dropped a hint? |
29877 | We lingered a moment chatting, then,"Shall we go and look at the artists working?" |
29877 | We stood silent a moment, then she looked round at me brightly with,"You''re coming to dinner to- morrow night? |
29877 | We were getting in toward the noise and the light when I felt her shiver, and stopped to say,"Did I forget your coat? |
29877 | We--""Oh, that was why you wanted me to come back with you?" |
29877 | Well, Jerry?" |
29877 | Well, please ma''am, who locked the window after him?" |
29877 | Well, that was reasonable-- simple enough, too; but,"This room? |
29877 | Well-- if this is all, then?" |
29877 | Were those pages stolen?" |
29877 | Whaddye think?" |
29877 | What about him?" |
29877 | What about it, indeed? |
29877 | What are you smiling at, Bobs?" |
29877 | What can I do for you?" |
29877 | What could she have done with a young outlaw like Worth? |
29877 | What d''ye want him for?" |
29877 | What d''yuh want of me?" |
29877 | What did it mean? |
29877 | What do the police say of it?" |
29877 | What do you mean, Boyne? |
29877 | What do you mean, failed to locate?" |
29877 | What do you think they''re doing to Worth in there, Barbie?" |
29877 | What do you think you''re hinting at?" |
29877 | What had she told Cummings? |
29877 | What happened?" |
29877 | What is your idea? |
29877 | What mixed him up with affairs here? |
29877 | What result did you get?" |
29877 | What she wants?" |
29877 | What up to? |
29877 | What was on his chest? |
29877 | What you doin''there?" |
29877 | What you getting at?" |
29877 | What you got?" |
29877 | What you got?" |
29877 | What you trying to put over?" |
29877 | What you up to in here?" |
29877 | What''d you do down south?" |
29877 | What''d you say, Knapp?" |
29877 | What''s it for?" |
29877 | What''s that?" |
29877 | What''s the dope you think you have, and you think I have n''t? |
29877 | What''s the excitement?" |
29877 | What''s the matter? |
29877 | What''s the rush with Dykeman?" |
29877 | What''s the use of whipping the devil round the stump that way? |
29877 | What''s their idea?" |
29877 | What''s this reroofing stuff? |
29877 | What''s this?" |
29877 | What, exactly, had the Van Ness Avenue Bank lost? |
29877 | When it came, it was another startling question,"Did n''t find Skeels in the south, eh?" |
29877 | When?" |
29877 | Where are the others?" |
29877 | Where do you think you are?" |
29877 | Where is it? |
29877 | Where is she?" |
29877 | Where is she?" |
29877 | Where was he? |
29877 | Where''s he? |
29877 | Where''s th''other man? |
29877 | Where? |
29877 | Who else would want them?" |
29877 | Who makes that statement?" |
29877 | Who was she?" |
29877 | Who were his associates?" |
29877 | Who would n''t shadow that crook? |
29877 | Who''s the dark girl? |
29877 | Whose tool was he? |
29877 | Why could n''t he have spoken that way to the girl herself? |
29877 | Why did n''t he? |
29877 | Why did you risk sitting up in that strained pose, wounded as you were, to concentrate?" |
29877 | Why does n''t he settle it one way or another, and be done?" |
29877 | Why had Worth gone to the shed hunting a crowbar to open the door? |
29877 | Why had n''t I remembered then? |
29877 | Why had n''t he taken her home, instead of leaving it to Edwards? |
29877 | Why has n''t he told you so?" |
29877 | Why in blazes did he run so?" |
29877 | Why not Bowman himself? |
29877 | Why not? |
29877 | Why should he phone for you?" |
29877 | Why was n''t he in that office to defend himself against what they''re hinting?" |
29877 | Why was n''t this shift of the enemy a blessing in disguise? |
29877 | Why, where''s your hat?" |
29877 | Why?" |
29877 | Will you hear one now? |
29877 | Will you please see for me?" |
29877 | Worth cut in with,"Do you consider the roof another fact, Bobs?" |
29877 | Worth glanced up from where he was jotting down telephone numbers to drawl,"You know who you''re describing there?" |
29877 | Worth spoke again in a sort of dragging voice,"What do you want to look at them for, Jerry?" |
29877 | Worth''s head poked from his upstairs window as he shouted,"What''s the excitement down there?" |
29877 | Would he miss his appointment? |
29877 | Would it bring Clayte up before any one who had never seen him? |
29877 | Would you say he had it in his head right then to murder you-- or Barbara-- if you came too hot on his trail?" |
29877 | Years?" |
29877 | Yet-- after all, he might have been a member of the gang, though somehow I do n''t get the hunch--""What sort of looking person was this man Skeels?" |
29877 | You could n''t get much idea of the lay of the land when you were down there Wednesday, could you?" |
29877 | You do n''t even know that he did raise it? |
29877 | You do n''t want to play with me-- is that it?" |
29877 | You get me and this medicine up home-- or shall I go around to Capehart''s and have Barbie drive me?" |
29877 | You or us? |
29877 | You saw it when I was showing you the latch, did you?" |
29877 | You see what that means?" |
29877 | You went straight from the restaurant to your room at the Palace and to bed there?" |
29877 | You were n''t still living in Santa Ysobel when he left, were you?" |
29877 | You''re not uneasy about Worth''s callers, are you?" |
29877 | You''re so clear headed about everything else-- don''t you see that that would be impossible?" |
29877 | You''re sure?" |
29877 | You''ve not come through? |
29877 | You''ve not dug up what I sent you after?" |
29877 | Your father''s way of making corrections?" |
29877 | Yuh got to let me--""But if it does n''t work?" |
29877 | airplane or submarine?" |
29877 | an old lady? |
29877 | did he think it was some one he knew well, or only a little? |
29877 | had he been hearing it much lately? |
51137 | Have you ever felt the terror of suddenly waking with a face-- a face of eyes-- staring into your unguarded and bewildered first glance? |
51137 | One man did say once,"What the hell are you talking about?" |
51137 | Reaching the ultimate secret was no problem... but could I follow it up with an encore? |
51137 | See how they keep me swathed in these cloths and how the darkened room hides my eyes? |
51137 | The nurses would laugh and say to each other,"Have you heard what the one in 408 wanted in his case history?" |
51137 | What had happened to me? |
41128 | Foolish girl,replied Kadambari, with a smile,"how should my adamantine heart break if it has not broken at this sight? |
41128 | Surely,I reflected,"Kama himself teaches this play of the eye, though generally after a long happy love, else whence comes this ascetic''s gaze? |
41128 | What more,said she,"can this unhappy man tell me? |
41128 | ''"''"How can he have forms?" |
41128 | ''"''Impelled by these thoughts I advanced, and bowing to the second young ascetic, his companion, I asked:"What is the name of his Reverence? |
41128 | ''"''Or what could there be harder to tell than this very thing, which is supposed to be impossible to hear or say? |
41128 | ''"''To these words he replied, with some shame:"Dear Kapiñjala, why dost thou thus misunderstand me? |
41128 | ''"''With a slight smile, he replied:"Maiden, what needs this question? |
41128 | ''"What shall I say?" |
41128 | ''Am I dear to thee?'' |
41128 | ''But the hermits, looking on me, asked him as he rested:"Whence was this little parrot brought?" |
41128 | ''How could she be here, my beloved?'' |
41128 | ''How has my lord reached this place? |
41128 | ''Sire,''replied he,''what have I not eaten? |
41128 | ''Where a man hath known his greatest happiness, there is his home, even if it be the forest.1( 642) And where else have I known such joy as here? |
41128 | ''Why,''thought he,''did not the Creator make all my senses into sight, or what noble deed has my eye done that it may look on her unchecked? |
41128 | ( 111) Why should I say more? |
41128 | ( 128) And how in thy presence could any of thy followers, or anyone else, offend? |
41128 | ( 235) What fortresses untaken, for thee to take? |
41128 | ( 291) When he had thus spoken, Pundarika said to me with a slight smile:"Ah, curious maiden, why didst thou take the trouble to ask this? |
41128 | ( 294)''"''And entering the maidens''dwelling, I began straightway to ask myself in my grief at his loss:"Am I really back, or still there? |
41128 | ( 307) I will only ask this question: Is this course you have begun taught by your gurus, or read in the holy books? |
41128 | ( 308) Who, forsooth, is this Love- god? |
41128 | ( 323) Cruel demon Love, evil and pitiless, what shameful deed hast thou brought to pass? |
41128 | ( 328) Fearest thou not the reproach of men in that thou goest, deserting me, thy handmaid, without cause? |
41128 | ( 337) Why should one so noble as thou deign to look on or speak with me, the doer of that monstrous crime, the slaughter of a Brahman?'' |
41128 | ( 349)''"When she had finished her prayers, Mahaçveta asked Taralika,''Didst thou see my dear Kadambari well? |
41128 | ( 350) How should I fulfil the desire of Love, poisonous, pitiless, unkind, who has brought my dear friend to so sad a plight? |
41128 | ( 38) But what need of further words? |
41128 | ( 430) And are all her retinue well, with Tamalika and Keyuraka?'' |
41128 | ( 478) Else where was my approach to the land of the immortals, in my vain hunt for the Kinnaras? |
41128 | ( 479) Then in the evening he asked Keyuraka,"What thinkest thou? |
41128 | ( 480) Or shall I again behold her face, with its eyes like a timid fawn''s?" |
41128 | ( 508)''Do I not know well''said he,''all that you urge for my departure? |
41128 | ( 567) For him I neglected all other ties; and now, when he is dead, how canst thou ask me to live? |
41128 | ( 592) Have ye seen him?" |
41128 | ( 94) But what need of more? |
41128 | Ah, wicked, evil, wanton Mahaçveta, how had he harmed thee? |
41128 | Alas, to what refuge shall I flee? |
41128 | Am I alone, or with my maidens? |
41128 | Am I awake or asleep? |
41128 | Am I silent, or beginning to speak? |
41128 | And if this be so, what must I do, and what must I say in his presence?" |
41128 | And is the world of mortals pleasant?'' |
41128 | And so, when I asked her,"Princess, what means this?" |
41128 | And was there any talk about me?'' |
41128 | And what has Indra gained by his lordship of the three worlds if he did not mount this back, broad as Mount Meru? |
41128 | And what union could there be between the dead and the living? |
41128 | And when the king had said this, Kumarapalita, with a slight smile, replied:''Where is the wonder? |
41128 | And whence in the world of men could there arise such harmonies of heavenly minstrelsy? |
41128 | And whereby hath thy body, though formed of the five gross elements, put on this pure whiteness? |
41128 | And wherefore in thy fresh youth, tender as a flower, has this vow been taken? |
41128 | And whither goes she?'' |
41128 | And why are thy jewelled anklets, with their murmur like teals on the lake of love, not graced with the touch of thy lotus- feet? |
41128 | And why dost thou, erst so gay, wear in vain a face whose adornment is washed away with flowing tears? |
41128 | And why is there no device painted on thy breast like the deer on the moon? |
41128 | And why is this hand, with its petal- like cluster of soft fingers, exalted into an ear- jewel, as though it were a rosy lotus? |
41128 | And why is this waist of thine bereft of the music of the girdle thou hast laid aside? |
41128 | And why, too, is she brought to suspense by these too flattering speeches?'' |
41128 | Angrily the maina began:''Princess Kadambari, why dost thou not restrain this wretched, ill- mannered, conceited bird from following me? |
41128 | Are these things pleasures or pains?" |
41128 | At my words Kapiñjala replied:"Princess, what can I say? |
41128 | At these words, in a voice choked by wrath, I exclaimed:''Wretch, how has a thunderbolt failed to strike thy head in the utterance of these thy words? |
41128 | Bewildered what to do, I cried to Taralika:"Knowest thou not? |
41128 | Bid her enter?'' |
41128 | Bright in strength, why so confused? |
41128 | Bright with youth, why rest thy weight against us? |
41128 | But again I thought,''What avails dwelling on this useless thought? |
41128 | But how could a woman, tender of nature as a young çirisha- blossom, show such boldness, especially one so young as I? |
41128 | But is it fitting in the Princess not to restrain her giddy slave? |
41128 | But thou who hast done all rightly, what duty of love hast thou left undone, that thou weepest? |
41128 | But weeping women replied:"Why ask? |
41128 | But what can I do towards Brahma, from whom there is no appeal? |
41128 | By my life I swear to thee I am put to shame by even my own heart''s knowledge of my story; how much more by another''s? |
41128 | By what discourtesy has he vexed that lotus- soft heart of thine, that none should vex? |
41128 | By whom have the raised hands of salutation, soft as young lotuses, not been placed on the head? |
41128 | By whose brows, encircled with golden bands, have the floors of his halls not been polished? |
41128 | Can it be ascertained as presented by his beauty, or by my own mind, or by love, or by youth or affection, or by any other causes? |
41128 | Citraratha, however, said:''Why, when we have palaces of our own, do we feast in the forest? |
41128 | Courteously raising my hands, I reverently replied:( 297)''Wherefore say this? |
41128 | Devoid of self- control, why run before thine elders? |
41128 | Divided between joy and grief, she paid homage to his feet, and replied:"Blessed Kapiñjala, am I so devoid of virtue that I could forget thee? |
41128 | Do I weep or hold back my tears? |
41128 | Does a fire not burn when fed on sandal- wood? |
41128 | Envious girl, why block up the window? |
41128 | Filled with amazement, Candrapida replied:''What means this, Madalekha? |
41128 | For Modesty censured her:''Light one, what hast thou begun?'' |
41128 | For by thy present grief, what is effected or what won? |
41128 | For how else could such a storehouse of learning become straightway unavailing? |
41128 | For in a heart worn by a friend''s sorrow, what hope is there of joy, what contentment, what pleasures or what mirth? |
41128 | For to one so adamantine as to have seen love in all his power, and yet to have lived through this, what can mere speaking of it matter? |
41128 | For what has this bright home of glory and penance to do with the stirrings of love that meaner men welcome? |
41128 | For what is hard for the pitiless? |
41128 | For what is thy hope of happiness in such things as are honoured by the base, but blamed by the good? |
41128 | For what will not hope achieve? |
41128 | For when was the moon ever beheld by any without moonlight, or a lotus- pool without a lotus, or a garden without creeper? |
41128 | For where is thy age? |
41128 | For who will ever, even in a dream, behold again this place haunted by the gods?'' |
41128 | For why speak of beings endowed with sense when, if it so please him, he can bring together even things without sense? |
41128 | For why? |
41128 | Friend, where is thine old love to me? |
41128 | From what tree is this garland woven? |
41128 | Has any wrong been done by me, or by any in thy service? |
41128 | Has anything been said that could hurt him by my father or Çukanasa?" |
41128 | He, however, started up hastily without replying, and with the cry,"Monster, whither goest thou with my friend?" |
41128 | How came thine attainment of the Vedas, and thine acquaintance with the Çastras, and thy skill in the fine arts? |
41128 | How can I cover this error? |
41128 | How canst thou now suddenly leave me, and go thy way like a stranger on whom my eyes had never rested? |
41128 | How didst thou endure the tedious restraint of thy gurus? |
41128 | How do I even breathe but by strong effort? |
41128 | How far did he follow us?" |
41128 | How far off is he?'' |
41128 | How is he named? |
41128 | How long didst thou see him? |
41128 | How long wert thou there? |
41128 | How many days wert thou there? |
41128 | How old art thou, and how came this bondage of a cage, and the falling into the hands of a Candala maiden, and thy coming hither?'' |
41128 | How otherwise could there be such grace in one who lives in weary penance, beauty''s destroyer?" |
41128 | How should he be here?" |
41128 | How should so great a happiness fall to our lot? |
41128 | How were you and the retinue employed? |
41128 | How wert thou not ashamed to send so cruel a message? |
41128 | I knew not what to do, and asked Taralika,"Seest thou not, Taralika, how confused is my mind? |
41128 | If caught, what is the good? |
41128 | If from a search for reason, how many things rest only on tradition, and are yet seen to be true? |
41128 | Ill- behaved girl, why thus weary thyself? |
41128 | In what occupation has the Gandharva princess spent the time? |
41128 | Insatiable, how long wilt thou look? |
41128 | Is not the submarine fire the fiercer in the water that is wo nt to quench fire? |
41128 | Is the race honoured by thy birth, lady, that of the Maruts, or Rishis, or Gandharvas, or Guhyakas, or Apsarases? |
41128 | Is this fitting for thee even to imagine, much less to see or tell? |
41128 | Is this joy or sorrow, longing or despair, misfortune or gladness, day or night? |
41128 | Is this the fruit of our meeting, that my heart, tender as a lotus filament, is now crushed? |
41128 | Is this, I pray, the conduct of noble men? |
41128 | It may be asked What is the value of''Kadambari''for European readers? |
41128 | Madalekha therefore replied:''Prince, what shall I say? |
41128 | Moreover, in one of so delicate a nature what does not tend to pain? |
41128 | Moreover, what is he laughing at as he talks to Vaiçampayana, so that the circle of space is whitened with his bright teeth? |
41128 | Nay, more, thou hast conquered our hearts; what is left for us to give thee? |
41128 | Night, showest thou no mercy? |
41128 | Now, all auspicious omens which come to us foretell the near approach of joy; and what other cause of joy can there be than this? |
41128 | Of what ascetic is he the son? |
41128 | Or by what skill, or device, or means, or support, or thought, or solace, may he yet live?'' |
41128 | Or dost thou dwell in disguise, wearing the form only of a bird, and where didst thou formerly dwell? |
41128 | Say, whither, without thee, shall I go? |
41128 | Seest thou not the pain produced in her mind by the breezes of the fans? |
41128 | Self- respect reproached her:''Gandharva Princess, how is this fitting for thee?'' |
41128 | Simplicity mocked her:''Where has thy childhood gone before its day was over?'' |
41128 | So saying, she ceased; and, with a long and passionate sigh, the king spoke thus:''"''My queen, what can be done in a matter decreed by fate? |
41128 | Steadfastness cried shame on her:''Whence comes thine unsteadiness of nature?'' |
41128 | Tell us from the very beginning the whole history of thy birth-- in what country, and how wert thou born, and by whom was thy name given? |
41128 | Tell us, therefore, what he has done, who was he, and who will he be in another birth?" |
41128 | The king, whose curiosity was aroused, looked at the chiefs around him, and with the words''Why not? |
41128 | The likeness of spirit between these two leads to the question, Had Bana, like Spenser, any purpose, ethical or political, underlying his story? |
41128 | Then I rebuked that string of pearls, saying:"Ah, wicked one, couldst not even thou have preserved his life till my coming?" |
41128 | Then her betel- nut bearer, Makarika, who was always near her, said to the king:''My lord, how could any fault, however slight, be committed by thee? |
41128 | Then she tenderly touched Kadambari, saying"Be comforted, my mother,[ 350] for without thee, who could have preserved the body of my son Candrapida? |
41128 | Then the latter at last spoke falteringly:"What can one so wretched tell thee? |
41128 | Thou art lord of our life; what can we offer thee? |
41128 | Thou art one with my own heart, and I ask thee to tell me what I should now do? |
41128 | Thou by thy sight hast made our life worth having; how can we reward thy coming? |
41128 | Thou hast already bestowed the great favour of thy presence; what return could we make? |
41128 | Thou who feignest coyness, what mean thy crafty glances? |
41128 | Thou whose eyes art filled with love, seest thou not thy friends? |
41128 | Thou, erst so soft of speech, from whom hast thou learnt to speak unkindness and utter reproach? |
41128 | Thus speaking, he retired, and the king asked Vaiçampayana:''Hast thou in the interval eaten food sufficient and to thy taste?'' |
41128 | To this speech I replied:"Mad girl, what is love to me? |
41128 | To whom but thee should I listen? |
41128 | To whom can I tell this folly of my undisciplined senses,( 378) and where shall I go, consumed by Kama, the five- arrowed god? |
41128 | To whom else can I complain, or tell my humiliation, or give a share in my woe? |
41128 | Was it a special boon given thee? |
41128 | What ails me that I can not restrain myself? |
41128 | What bright deed of merit was done by Earth that she has won thee as lord? |
41128 | What can I do? |
41128 | What can she do now? |
41128 | What caused thy remembrance of a former birth? |
41128 | What continents unappropriated, for thee to appropriate? |
41128 | What did he say to thee? |
41128 | What did he say, and what didst thou reply? |
41128 | What does the moon want with Pundarika? |
41128 | What else can be done? |
41128 | What favour did the princess show thee? |
41128 | What has fate begun? |
41128 | What has happened? |
41128 | What is Ujjayini like, and how far off is it? |
41128 | What is her name? |
41128 | What is the land of Bharata? |
41128 | What is this that has befallen me? |
41128 | What kings have not been humbled? |
41128 | What matters it whether I catch the pair of Kinnaras or not? |
41128 | What need of words? |
41128 | What offence has been committed? |
41128 | What other course is there? |
41128 | What refuge shall I seek? |
41128 | What regions unsubdued, for thee to subdue? |
41128 | What remedy is there? |
41128 | What talk was there, and what conversation arose? |
41128 | What talk was there? |
41128 | What to me were home, mother, father, kinsfolk, followers? |
41128 | What treasures ungained, for thee to gain? |
41128 | What was I to do? |
41128 | What were Mahaçveta and Madalekha doing? |
41128 | What will my father and mother and the Gandharvas say when they hear this tale? |
41128 | What, indeed, could I say? |
41128 | What, then, shall I do? |
41128 | Whence comes this exceeding skill that tells the heart''s longing wordlessly by a glance alone?" |
41128 | Whence comes this hitherto unknown assault of the senses, which so transforms thee? |
41128 | Whence comes this thy great hardness? |
41128 | Whence could one so hard- hearted feel grief? |
41128 | Whence have the parts of this exceeding beauty been gathered? |
41128 | Where is his former penance, and where his present state? |
41128 | Where is thine old firmness? |
41128 | Where that smiling welcome that never failed me?" |
41128 | Where thy calm of mind, thine inherited holiness, thy carelessness of earthly things? |
41128 | Where thy conquest of the senses? |
41128 | Where thy self- control? |
41128 | Wherefore hast thou not returned? |
41128 | Whither goest thou, pitilessly leaving me alone and protectorless? |
41128 | Who am I? |
41128 | Who but thee could give advice at this time, or could attempt to restrain my wandering? |
41128 | Who have not accepted his staff of office? |
41128 | Who have not drunk in with the crocodiles of their crests, the radiance of his feet, like pure streams? |
41128 | Who have not raised the cry of"Hail!"? |
41128 | Who have not waved his cowries? |
41128 | Who in his senses would, even if happy, make up his mind to undertake even a slight matter that would end in pain? |
41128 | Who is there in this world who is not changed by youth? |
41128 | Who is there that fears him not? |
41128 | Who is there that fears not the wicked, pitiless in causeless enmity; in whose mouth calumny hard to bear is always ready as the poison of a serpent? |
41128 | Who most remembers us, and whose affection is greatest?'' |
41128 | Who was he in a former birth, and how was he born in the form of a bird? |
41128 | Who were thy father and mother? |
41128 | Who will speak to her or look at her again, and who will mention her name?'' |
41128 | Whom shall I implore? |
41128 | Whose crest- jewels have not scraped his footstool? |
41128 | Whose daughter is she? |
41128 | Why dost thou, like a man of low caste, fail to restrain the turmoil of thy soul? |
41128 | Why has so long a time passed since we have seen thee? |
41128 | Why have I been so mad as to leave my followers behind and come so far? |
41128 | Why should I tell thee of those who have themselves chosen their lords? |
41128 | Why showest thou no pity? |
41128 | Why speakest thou thus? |
41128 | Why tell thy parents? |
41128 | Why then doubt concerning this? |
41128 | Why this needless talk of death as a necessary condition? |
41128 | Why toilest thou thus, like perverse fate, in so unmeet an employment, in that thou wastest in stern penance a body tender as a garland? |
41128 | Why wert thou not born as a parrot? |
41128 | Why, slender one, art thou unadorned? |
41128 | Why, then, this ceremony?'' |
41128 | Why, then,''thought he again,''should I thus weary my mind in vain? |
41128 | Will Kadambari support life till we arrive? |
41128 | With mingled scorn and pity he replied:''Wilt thou not even now restrain thine old impatience? |
41128 | With whom shall I wander, to whom speak, with whom hold converse? |
41128 | Yet if I could not be united to those I loved in past lives why should I yet live? |
41128 | Yet think not, my son, that I will live without thee, for how could I thus even face thy father? |
41128 | [ 283] Thou wilt not therefore surely place on the fire of grief that life so precious and so hardly preserved?'' |
41128 | [ 334] In his utter love madness, he says:''Tell me, Patralekha, how a madman can be rejected?'' |
41128 | [ 97] Does this refer to the reflection of the sky in its clear water? |
41128 | and my mother and all the zenana?'' |
41128 | and then, waiting a short time, she began afresh:''How is King Tarapida, how Queen Vilasavati, how the noble Çukanasa? |
41128 | and where thy superhuman power and thy capacity of reaching boundless knowledge? |
41128 | and why has not the stream of lac fallen on thy feet like early sunlight on rosy lotus- buds? |
41128 | and why is he coming hither?'' |
41128 | and why is that slender neck of thine, fair- limbed queen, not adorned with a rope of pearls as the crescent on Çiva''s brow by the heavenly stream? |
41128 | and will she do as I said?'' |
41128 | how has he become so close a friend to Mahaçveta? |
41128 | how much less one like me, whose heart is struck down by deep grief? |
41128 | if missed, what is the harm? |
41128 | or how bring an ill- omened mourning to his departure to heaven? |
41128 | or how weep at the joyous moment when, like the dust of his feet, I may follow him? |
41128 | or who else in the world is a friend like thee? |
38702 | A bribe to a servant? |
38702 | A duty? |
38702 | All the world loves a lover-- even I----"Yes-- yes----"If I could be sure that you loved----"You? |
38702 | Am I late? |
38702 | Am I right, Aurora? |
38702 | Am I? 38702 An artist? |
38702 | And Aurora? |
38702 | And Louis? |
38702 | And do n''t you ever go to the Club? |
38702 | And do you always smudge your face? |
38702 | And had Arnim know what we were driving for? 38702 And have Geltman putting you in jail?" |
38702 | And if I do n''t forgive you? |
38702 | And that? |
38702 | And the letters-- you never even read them? |
38702 | And then? |
38702 | And what shall I write? |
38702 | And who''ll pay for the lost balls? |
38702 | And you? |
38702 | Are n''t you getting a little tired of putting the world in order? |
38702 | Are n''t you happy, Mort? |
38702 | Are n''t you tired of making opportunities for other people? |
38702 | Are they? 38702 Are you happy, Patty?" |
38702 | Are you happy? |
38702 | Are you hungry? |
38702 | Are you ill? |
38702 | Are you really? |
38702 | Are you sure? |
38702 | Are you sure? |
38702 | Are you the owner of this yacht? |
38702 | Bored as ever, Crabb? |
38702 | But how about the Cross- Country Cup? |
38702 | But how can you do such a thing,she cried,"without a reason-- without any excuse? |
38702 | But how could such a thing happen? 38702 But who----? |
38702 | But your future? |
38702 | But your service? |
38702 | Ca n''t a fellow ever get any higher? |
38702 | Ca n''t you forgive? |
38702 | Can I get you anything, sir? |
38702 | Can you blame me? 38702 Can you ever forgive me, Mort?" |
38702 | Can you get me--? |
38702 | Candidly, do you feel in any better position to judge me now than you did before----"Before the Assembly? |
38702 | Could you not learn to care a little? |
38702 | Did I? |
38702 | Did n''t what? |
38702 | Did n''t you? 38702 Did you ever happen to drink any of Geltman''s beer?" |
38702 | Did you get it, Mort? |
38702 | Did you ring, sir? |
38702 | Did you see''em? 38702 Do I win the Cup?" |
38702 | Do n''t boast, worse vagabonds than you have been tamed-- come now, what shall she be-- blonde or brunette? |
38702 | Do n''t you understand? 38702 Do we?" |
38702 | Do you know,he said, calmly,"that you''ve been out there since ten? |
38702 | Do you really mean it, Patty? |
38702 | Do you think it kind-- wise to speak of this now? |
38702 | Do you think, if by some chance you were enabled to give the Secretary of State this information, you''d better your condition? |
38702 | Does it? |
38702 | Fire Island,he cried,"and this--"as memory came back with a horrible rush--"what day is this?" |
38702 | For long? |
38702 | H-- m. Why all the mystery? 38702 Have n''t you ever wondered how the world would get on without you?" |
38702 | Have you met him? |
38702 | Have you not heard? |
38702 | Have you thought I might take that with me, too? |
38702 | He''s a very, very old friend of yours, is n''t he, Patty? |
38702 | Heard what, Madame? |
38702 | Here? 38702 How about----?" |
38702 | How can I be sure? |
38702 | How can you know? |
38702 | How could I have done so? |
38702 | How could I know you did? |
38702 | How could you be so hard-- so-- so cruel? |
38702 | How did you know, Patty, it was to be Steve? |
38702 | How do you do? |
38702 | How do you know this? |
38702 | How do you know? |
38702 | How do you like it, Steve? |
38702 | How much of a run is it to the coast? |
38702 | How much-- three thousand? |
38702 | How shocking, and Miss Wharton is not dreadful? |
38702 | How? |
38702 | I beg pardon,he repeated,"but is n''t this yours?" |
38702 | I beg pardon,he was saying quizzically,"but is n''t this yours?" |
38702 | I know I ought to be called a beggar on horseback, because I really have ridden rather-- rather fast this winter----"Two thousand? |
38702 | I say, my man,began the brewer again,"did you ever drink any of Geltman''s beer?" |
38702 | I say, my man,he said,"are you from New York?" |
38702 | I say, old man,he said, smiling,"had n''t you better get into some clothes?" |
38702 | I should n''t say that-- only----"What? |
38702 | I was thinking that perhaps if he''d had a little luck----"He might have come back to you? |
38702 | I wonder,slowly,"why you speak of my_ beaux yeux_?" |
38702 | I''ll do whatever you ask me----"Will you marry me next month? |
38702 | I''m John Doe-- what can I do for you? |
38702 | I''m sure of that, but----"But what? |
38702 | I? 38702 I? |
38702 | If I''m Otto Fehrenbach how is it that the letters C. G. are marked in my hand? |
38702 | In pajamas, sir? |
38702 | In the meantime----"Wo n''t you give me an answer? |
38702 | Is he apt to be there all day? |
38702 | Is it true you''re going to marry McLemore? |
38702 | Is n''t Nick Hollingsworth an intimate friend of yours? |
38702 | Is n''t he splendid? |
38702 | Is n''t it punishment enough for it all to end like this,he went on,"without making it seem as though I were worse than I am? |
38702 | Is n''t my word enough? |
38702 | Is n''t she? 38702 Is n''t there any other way?" |
38702 | Is n''t there any way, Crowthers? |
38702 | Is n''t there anything a fellow-- even a consular clerk-- could do to win promotion in this service? |
38702 | Is there anything you_ ca n''t_ get me? 38702 It looks so, does n''t it?" |
38702 | It''s Crabb, is n''t it? 38702 It''s quite sad, is n''t it? |
38702 | It''s really not Victorian, is it? |
38702 | It''s very inconsiderate of her, is n''t it? |
38702 | It''s very-- un-- er-- unprofessional-- isn''t it? |
38702 | Like a husband? |
38702 | Madame-- what do you mean? |
38702 | Me? |
38702 | Miss Darrow,he asked,"you know Mr. Crabb? |
38702 | Monsieur,she asked,"what will you say to her?" |
38702 | Must one always pay such a price to inspiration? |
38702 | Must you go, Monsieur? 38702 My dear Miss Wharton,"he smiled,"how could I know what you were like-- er-- if I''d never seen you?" |
38702 | Not in the least-- can she, Louis? |
38702 | Oh, is that all? |
38702 | Only do n''t you think-- isn''t that really what I''m here for? |
38702 | Or Napoleon? |
38702 | Patricia, you mean? 38702 Patty,"he was saying,"do n''t you know me? |
38702 | Philip Burnett, I wonder if you''re good? 38702 Really,"she answered sweetly,"how so?" |
38702 | Really? 38702 Sandy Hook, sir?" |
38702 | Shall I be getting you something, sir? |
38702 | She did not know? |
38702 | She_ is_ pretty, is n''t she? |
38702 | So you''ve been out and doing in the world, after all? |
38702 | So you_ did_ mean it? |
38702 | Steve!--how could you? |
38702 | Stranded, Crabb? 38702 That I am ill-- that I----""How will that help either you or her?" |
38702 | That will do, Dick, you may go inside,and then rather quizzically:"You wished to see Mr.--er-- Mr.--Doe? |
38702 | That''s your decision-- your final decision? |
38702 | Then I ca n''t dismay you-- either of you? |
38702 | Then why do we rest so often? 38702 Then you do hope?" |
38702 | Then you really did n''t wish to meet me? 38702 Then,"eagerly,"you are n''t?" |
38702 | There wo n''t be any more Bachelors''Cups, then? |
38702 | To- night? |
38702 | Um-- er-- how much, Patty? 38702 W- who?" |
38702 | Well, why not go to Tiffany''s? 38702 Well-- what?" |
38702 | Well? |
38702 | What are your plans, Ross? 38702 What can I do? |
38702 | What can he think of me? 38702 What do you care, Steve, as long as you''re making history?" |
38702 | What do you mean? |
38702 | What do you say if we begin making opportunities for each other? |
38702 | What does that matter? |
38702 | What does this outrage mean? |
38702 | What is it, Patty? 38702 What is it?" |
38702 | What is it? |
38702 | What is the meaning of this outrage? |
38702 | What is the use, Crabb? |
38702 | What kind of a tramp would I be if I was n''t hungry? |
38702 | What on earth are you talking about? |
38702 | What on earth is there to prevent my sailing off and leaving you? |
38702 | What proofs have you? |
38702 | What should it look like? |
38702 | What then, Madame? |
38702 | What was it? |
38702 | What''s up now? 38702 What, please?" |
38702 | What? |
38702 | What? |
38702 | When shall we start? |
38702 | Where to now, sir? |
38702 | Who ever heard of a printer being adorable? 38702 Who is Agatha?" |
38702 | Who is he? |
38702 | Who? 38702 Why do you ask?" |
38702 | Why do you marry Aurora then? |
38702 | Why do you say that? |
38702 | Why is it then that I find you so very much more attractive now that I''ve found the_ Blue Wing_? |
38702 | Why is it,she asked, after her first enthusiasm,"that the work of the artist so seldom suggests its creator''s personality?" |
38702 | Why not? |
38702 | Why not? |
38702 | Why not? |
38702 | Why not? |
38702 | Why should n''t I be honest with you? 38702 Why should n''t I?" |
38702 | Why? 38702 Will I do?" |
38702 | Will you behave yourself? |
38702 | Will you coach me? |
38702 | Will you forgive me? |
38702 | Will you give me your word? |
38702 | Will you let me pass? |
38702 | Will you please tell me your name? |
38702 | Will you pour it? 38702 Will you tell me,"he asked,"who-- no, do n''t look now-- the girl in the black spangly dress is?" |
38702 | With an anise- seed bag? |
38702 | Wo n''t you answer me, Aurora? |
38702 | Wo n''t you answer me? |
38702 | Wo n''t you come over? |
38702 | Wo n''t you forgive me and take me in? |
38702 | Wo n''t you prove it? |
38702 | Wo n''t you tell me,said the girl at last,"about that dinner? |
38702 | Wo n''t you-- won''t you, Millicent, dear? |
38702 | Would I not have heard this dreadful thing, Madame? 38702 Would you have it otherwise?" |
38702 | Would you mind,said the brewer,"telling me how I came aboard your boat?" |
38702 | Yes, but I fail to see----"Will you deny it? |
38702 | You always get your way in the end, do n''t you? |
38702 | You are not cold? |
38702 | You found out these things to- day? |
38702 | You hardly look the poet, Mr. Burnett-- you do n''t mind my saying so? |
38702 | You mean-- did I arrange it? |
38702 | You think I would have married you for your money? |
38702 | You will permit me? |
38702 | You''ll be out on Saturday as usual, wo n''t you, Steve? |
38702 | You''ll let me go here, wo n''t you? 38702 You''ll write him, Patty, wo n''t you?" |
38702 | You''re everything I can hope for-- and yet----"And yet? |
38702 | You''re going? |
38702 | A hat bill or an opera cloak? |
38702 | A thousand? |
38702 | About the parasol last summer-- did you forget it, really-- or-- or-- just leave it?" |
38702 | And after that"--Mortimer Crabb stopped again and blinked quizzically at the fire--"hadn''t we better keep your engagement-- with Madame Jacquard?" |
38702 | And if so, did the soul of Fehrenbach occupy_ his_ body? |
38702 | And the yacht, too? |
38702 | And then with a sudden and mystifying change of manner,"Do you know why he always wears a crimson vest?" |
38702 | And then, after a pause, with all the seriousness in the world:"And are n''t you going to?" |
38702 | And then, with the suspicion of a smile,"Shall I make a check to your order?" |
38702 | And then:"The face is of the East-- the Slav-- did you choose her for that character?" |
38702 | And who was that with him-- Mortimer Crabb? |
38702 | And yet why should he have? |
38702 | Are you going to the Inghams? |
38702 | At the breakfast table? |
38702 | Besides, what can I do with that girl for three hours?" |
38702 | Burnett?" |
38702 | But how can I?" |
38702 | But is n''t it anything to take your place in the world? |
38702 | But whom? |
38702 | Ca n''t you remember coming up the gangway with Captain Weckerly?" |
38702 | Ca n''t you see? |
38702 | Ca n''t you tell a fellow?" |
38702 | Ca n''t you tell a fellow?" |
38702 | Ca n''t you understand that?" |
38702 | Can you doubt me? |
38702 | Can you forgive me?" |
38702 | Can you not see that the whole thing is a terrible mistake? |
38702 | Can you walk? |
38702 | Could he be young and handsome as well as gifted? |
38702 | Could he have been mistaken? |
38702 | Could she never be free from this inevitable man? |
38702 | Crabb felt the color rise to his temples and heard the young bud at his side saying:"What is it, Mr. Crabb? |
38702 | Crabb?" |
38702 | Crabb?" |
38702 | Crabb?" |
38702 | Did n''t you really ask Mrs. Hollingsworth to send you in with me?" |
38702 | Did you ever see fish take the bait better? |
38702 | Did you see''em?" |
38702 | Do n''t you know that if this was to get abroad, it would hurt your business?" |
38702 | Do n''t you understand?" |
38702 | Do you think you could trust me?" |
38702 | Doe?" |
38702 | Does four years make such a difference?" |
38702 | Had he been married, and was this--? |
38702 | Had she really forgotten the parasol after all? |
38702 | Had she really forgotten the parasol? |
38702 | Has it occurred to you that perhaps she may hope for a somewhat different relation between you?" |
38702 | Have n''t you met her?" |
38702 | Have you a week to spare? |
38702 | Have you dropped from heaven, man?" |
38702 | Have you ever posed, Miss Darrow?" |
38702 | Have you stopped seeking opportunities?" |
38702 | He''s a very nice fellow but-- but I''ll be very unhappy----""Will you? |
38702 | He''s neglecting Aurora shamefully----""It_ is_ careless of him, is n''t it?" |
38702 | Her letters? |
38702 | Honestly? |
38702 | How about a cruise on the_ Blue Wing_? |
38702 | How can I be-- now? |
38702 | How can I expiate?" |
38702 | How could he expect her? |
38702 | How could one ever be tired making adagios in color? |
38702 | How could these letters have fallen into the hands of a stranger? |
38702 | How could this villainous Doe have guessed her identity? |
38702 | How did you know I did n''t wish to meet you?" |
38702 | How had it all happened? |
38702 | How had this odious Doe----? |
38702 | How long had he been lying in the bunk? |
38702 | I''m not going to let you marry that fellow or anybody else-- do you understand?" |
38702 | I''ve skinned the one and been skinned by the other-- to what end?" |
38702 | If I''m respectable why should n''t you have cared to meet me?" |
38702 | If not, what wild plan had entered his head? |
38702 | Is Frederick here?" |
38702 | Is it not so? |
38702 | Is it to chance that I''m indebted for the-- the-- honor of your society?" |
38702 | Is n''t it restful here?" |
38702 | Is n''t that enough?" |
38702 | Is n''t there any chance?" |
38702 | It will be dark and you''re going to lose your way----""How do you know I am?" |
38702 | It''s only your husband----""Oh, how could you, Mort?" |
38702 | Look in my clothes, my handkerchiefs, my linen, you will see the monogram or initials C. G. Will not that be enough to satisfy you?" |
38702 | Meetings in the Park? |
38702 | Mort, could n''t you have dropped a little sand in his bearings?" |
38702 | Mr. John Doe? |
38702 | Mrs. Crabb? |
38702 | No-- what is it?" |
38702 | Now?" |
38702 | Of course you know that, do n''t you? |
38702 | Oh, we''ve planned that already, have n''t we, Louis?" |
38702 | Or had she-- not forgotten it? |
38702 | Or were they all mad together? |
38702 | Or were they? |
38702 | Politics?" |
38702 | Rather a nice balance, do n''t you think?" |
38702 | She arose and breathlessly asked,"What_ can_ I do? |
38702 | She felt tempted to throw all else to the winds and make a full confession-- of what? |
38702 | She paused a moment, then broke in,"Forgive me, wo n''t you? |
38702 | Soon?" |
38702 | Tell me, wo n''t you? |
38702 | That a blow he had received in falling had turned his mind, and that his soul had migrated to the body of the hated Fehrenbach? |
38702 | The fine frenzy is lacking, Mr. Burnett-- isn''t it so?" |
38702 | Then, how did we happen to meet?" |
38702 | This time the man questioned:"There is another thing-- won''t you tell me? |
38702 | To Heywood Pennington? |
38702 | Truly?" |
38702 | Trusting husband-- hey? |
38702 | Was he mad? |
38702 | Was it mock virtue? |
38702 | Was it nothing to have hungered and thirsted and sweated that the honor of these people and that of others like them might be preserved? |
38702 | Was it only a little pleasantry of Crabb''s? |
38702 | Was it possible that after all some dreadful misfortune had happened to him, Geltman? |
38702 | Was it real or was that, too, some fantasy of a diseased imagination? |
38702 | Was their sparkle quizzical or intrusive? |
38702 | Was there not another life? |
38702 | Was this the value of her reputation? |
38702 | Was this to be indeed a setting for Machiavellian conspiracy? |
38702 | Well,"he muttered brutally,"did you bring the money?" |
38702 | Were the eyes smiling_ at_, or_ with_ her? |
38702 | Were they, too, in the same state as the others? |
38702 | What am I doing here?" |
38702 | What boat is this? |
38702 | What can he think?" |
38702 | What could it mean? |
38702 | What did Patricia mean, for instance, by the absurd lines at the bottom of his invitation? |
38702 | What do you say?" |
38702 | What does it mean?" |
38702 | What earthly use did you make of all of my training?" |
38702 | What had she said? |
38702 | What had she to confess? |
38702 | What had this insolent person said to make it possible for her to forget herself for so long? |
38702 | What has poor Aurora ever done to you?" |
38702 | What if some day he should meet Baron Arnim or Baron Arnim''s man and be recognized? |
38702 | What is to be feared? |
38702 | What value could she set upon the honor of one she knew not? |
38702 | What was Philip Burnett like? |
38702 | What was the use spending one''s life in bringing an art to the perfection Patricia had attained and then suddenly forswearing it? |
38702 | What will you wear? |
38702 | What would be the_ use_ of a way, if one did n''t_ have_ it?" |
38702 | What''s in a name, after all? |
38702 | What''s the game now? |
38702 | What''s the use? |
38702 | Where am I? |
38702 | Where are we?" |
38702 | Where shall I go?" |
38702 | Where?" |
38702 | Who are you? |
38702 | Why ca n''t you leave these young people alone? |
38702 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
38702 | Why had he returned? |
38702 | Why had n''t Heywood burned them? |
38702 | Why have n''t you played more with me this summer?" |
38702 | Why not give it a trial? |
38702 | Why should n''t I believe them?" |
38702 | Why wo n''t you be frank? |
38702 | Why, how can you pause?" |
38702 | Why, otherwise, should I wish to marry her?" |
38702 | Will the wonders never cease?" |
38702 | Will you finish it-- as you please?" |
38702 | Wo n''t that do?" |
38702 | Wo n''t you come in to- morrow at five? |
38702 | Wo n''t you forgive me?" |
38702 | Wo n''t you go?" |
38702 | Wo n''t you let me come in to see you before then?" |
38702 | Wo n''t you let me? |
38702 | Wo n''t you open the door?" |
38702 | Wo n''t you really like to see us married?" |
38702 | Wo n''t you, Mort? |
38702 | Wonderful color, is n''t it? |
38702 | Would n''t it be better after all to throw herself upon Mort''s mercy? |
38702 | Would n''t it be good to be young forever?" |
38702 | Would she care? |
38702 | Would she not tarnish her soul still more by paying the wretched money-- Mort''s money-- in forfeit of her disobedience to him? |
38702 | Would there not be some way-- an unguarded moment-- a faithless servant-- to give the thing the aspect of possible achievement? |
38702 | Would you mind if I went in town to my hotel----""To- night?" |
38702 | Would you really like to paint me?" |
38702 | Yet how could she escape? |
38702 | You can climb?" |
38702 | You do n''t regret?" |
38702 | You have awakened her,"she went on,"to what?" |
38702 | You see? |
38702 | You wo n''t mind not looking, will you?" |
38702 | You''d say we were mistaken, would n''t you? |
38702 | You''ll not follow me or try to find out anything, will you? |
38702 | You''re not very angry?" |
38702 | You''ve worked long?" |
38702 | [ Illustration:"''I beg pardon,''he repeated,''but is n''t this yours?''"] |
38702 | _ C''est si bourgeois-- n''est- ce- pas, Baron?_ Things are arranged better in France?" |
38702 | _ C''est si bourgeois-- n''est- ce- pas, Baron?_ Things are arranged better in France?" |
38702 | _ Frontispiece_"''I beg pardon,''he repeated,''but is n''t this yours?''" |
38702 | _ Must_ you squint?" |
38702 | _ Splendid._ I sure glitter in this bunch, do n''t I?" |
44129 | Also? |
44129 | And do n''t you know what X---- is? |
44129 | And her husband? |
44129 | And how is the old father? |
44129 | And mean to leave me here? |
44129 | And of opening a prayer- house, perhaps? |
44129 | And she wanted to leave her child? |
44129 | And so things came to a crisis? |
44129 | And what are you thinking of doing now? |
44129 | And you dare to? |
44129 | And you? |
44129 | And your sister? |
44129 | Angry? 44129 Are you awake?" |
44129 | Are you going out? |
44129 | Are you going to try once more? |
44129 | Are you longing to go down_ there_ again? |
44129 | Are you well? |
44129 | But why could they not keep their faith and vows? 44129 But why did they run away? |
44129 | But you no longer think the pietists are humbugs? |
44129 | Can you imagine yourself leading a lonely life after this? |
44129 | Can you suffer-- you? |
44129 | Did she love him? 44129 Did they venture to say anything unpleasant?" |
44129 | Divorced then? |
44129 | Do you know I am so happy that I am afraid? |
44129 | Do you know what that costs? |
44129 | Do you know, all this is very fine, but I am becoming an idiot? |
44129 | Do you think of the child? |
44129 | Do you think we shall both get a whipping? |
44129 | Do you trust me? |
44129 | Do you? 44129 Does not reason feel its helplessness before such riddles, riddles of every day?" |
44129 | Good evening,she said;"are you sitting here alone, my son?" |
44129 | Have I come here for the fulfilment of all my bad dreams? |
44129 | Have n''t you gone yet? |
44129 | Have they, indeed? 44129 Have you a sure income?" |
44129 | Have you already been to the judge? |
44129 | Have you ever fished for perch? |
44129 | Have you ever seen a man in such a position as mine? |
44129 | Have you seen any human beings corresponding to doves? |
44129 | Have you sent for the doctor? |
44129 | He hates me then also? |
44129 | He loved you? 44129 How could one bear the miseries of life, if one did not treat them as unrealities? |
44129 | How do you know that I want to have her again? 44129 How long?" |
44129 | I? 44129 Into which faith has the child been baptised?" |
44129 | Is he here? |
44129 | Is my wife at home? |
44129 | Is n''t the story over? 44129 Is she then so far away?" |
44129 | Is she? |
44129 | It was tedious, was n''t it? |
44129 | Married? |
44129 | Meanwhile, after you have said all, there is not much to add: I will only ask myself, you, and everyone a general question:''What is love?'' |
44129 | No, why should I allow it? |
44129 | Shall I translate_ you_? |
44129 | Shall we go to London? |
44129 | Shall we not go and write now? |
44129 | Shall we wager a barrel of punch? |
44129 | So quiet? |
44129 | Still? |
44129 | That''s a nice business, is n''t it? |
44129 | The first? |
44129 | Was n''t it over then, with their love at any rate? |
44129 | Well, how did they go on afterwards? |
44129 | Well, what did they say? |
44129 | Well? |
44129 | What are you doing? 44129 What are you doing?" |
44129 | What are you most afraid of? |
44129 | What are you reading? |
44129 | What can one say about it, except what you yourself have said in it? 44129 What do I care for that?" |
44129 | What do you think of a shoemaker like that? |
44129 | What harm have they done you? 44129 What have I done to her? |
44129 | What have I done? |
44129 | What idiot told you that? |
44129 | What is love? 44129 What is she to believe? |
44129 | What is that steamer? |
44129 | What is that? |
44129 | When are you thinking of going? |
44129 | When then is it rightly bestowed? 44129 Where?" |
44129 | Where? |
44129 | Where? |
44129 | Who is in jail, you or I? |
44129 | Who is it? 44129 Who never pecked each other?" |
44129 | Why do n''t you go to the judge? |
44129 | Why do n''t you write? |
44129 | Why do people avoid us? |
44129 | Why do you ask that? |
44129 | Why have n''t you shot yourself? |
44129 | Why not Hven? |
44129 | Why not? |
44129 | Why should one not strike a woman, when one strikes children? |
44129 | Why the deuce do you hate the pietists? |
44129 | Why will you not rather translate me than your rubbishy authors? |
44129 | Why? |
44129 | Will you marry now? |
44129 | Wo n''t you eat? |
44129 | Yes it is; but how long will it last? |
44129 | Yes, and how does it look afterwards? 44129 You also?" |
44129 | You are preparing for a journey? |
44129 | You did not sleep? |
44129 | You do n''t want to put me out on the high road to- night? |
44129 | You know that then? |
44129 | You mean I have no self? |
44129 | You think of deserting us? |
44129 | ''I wanted water for my flowers, which you allowed to be dried up, while I was ill.''"''Are n''t you ashamed to say you did?'' |
44129 | ("What sort of a woman is that? |
44129 | After dinner he took the host aside and asked:"Is the Swede angry with me?" |
44129 | After half an hour he said to himself:"Is the greatest problem of modern times solved?" |
44129 | After that what shall he trust, what shall he value, at what shall he not make a grimace? |
44129 | And do you know what I begin to suspect? |
44129 | And he answered:"What indeed have you to do anywhere?" |
44129 | And what was the result in this case? |
44129 | And when he saw that it was she whom he loved who was the cause of his misfortune he felt resentment in his heart against her, but he loved her still? |
44129 | And why not? |
44129 | But do you think, generally speaking, that marriage will continue to exist?" |
44129 | But do you want to hear the continuation?" |
44129 | But have you ever been there?" |
44129 | But tell me, what have you been doing for a whole hour in the wood?" |
44129 | But why do n''t you have your stories printed?" |
44129 | But why had it to be precisely the one in which Lais''s friends and relations lived and dominated the social circle in which he must move? |
44129 | Did these two love each other now? |
44129 | Do n''t you know what kind of a reputation you will give me, and by what a hateful name this waiter may call me?" |
44129 | Do you like me to storm? |
44129 | Do you not now believe in the power of love over our evil wills?'' |
44129 | Do you remember the case of the child murderess here ten years ago?" |
44129 | For three days he asked himself:"What have you to do in life?" |
44129 | For three days long he asked himself:"What have I got to do here?" |
44129 | HERR BENGT''S WIFE"What is love? |
44129 | Had he been enticed into a trap? |
44129 | Had his wife written complaints against him from England? |
44129 | Have you read it?" |
44129 | Have you their portraits with you? |
44129 | He paused for a while and continued:"Can you imagine it? |
44129 | He put his arm round her:"Have you ever seen a destiny like mine? |
44129 | How could one bring it into order? |
44129 | How did he receive you?" |
44129 | How was he to explain this strange parting from his bride after only eight weeks of marriage? |
44129 | How was he to interpret the situation? |
44129 | I opened it at random and-- can you imagine it? |
44129 | In that moment he had said to himself:"Explanations, reproaches, accusations-- how can I answer such things?" |
44129 | Is it dangerous?" |
44129 | Is n''t that enough?" |
44129 | Is n''t that logic?" |
44129 | Now wo n''t you congratulate me?" |
44129 | On the visiting- card which he sent he only wrote:"A somewhat strange question: where is my wife?" |
44129 | One can not get at the stronger, and one must not strike the weaker: Whom shall one strike then?" |
44129 | Or was it an expression of feminine independence demanding to be treated exactly like a man in spite of propriety and prejudice? |
44129 | Shall I relate it?" |
44129 | She had not, however, really gone to sleep, but in the darkness he heard her voice as before:"Are you asleep?" |
44129 | She spoke not a word of reproach, inquiry, or explanation, but only this:"Have you much money or little?" |
44129 | Suppose she agreed to a divorce, how could the family- tie which had just been formed be broken in a moment? |
44129 | That is not desire, but love, and if this charming feeling can exist among soulless creatures, why can it not among men?" |
44129 | That is to say-- one never knows, for it comes over one, or does not-- it all depends on----""On what?" |
44129 | The Norwegian inquired no further, but he asked himself:"Have they enticed me into a trap in order to watch me?" |
44129 | The doctor came at once and explained the situation:"Are you thinking of drawing back?" |
44129 | The question sounded strangely, and might mean:"Are you so confused that you have lost consciousness?" |
44129 | The theatre? |
44129 | The wife was beside herself:"Now you have ruined my career; I shall sink down to the level of a nurse and how shall we support ourselves?" |
44129 | Thus they were never clear about each other, and in really serious moments they would exclaim simultaneously:"Who are you? |
44129 | What about the old man?" |
44129 | What are you doing?" |
44129 | What are you really?" |
44129 | What does she mean to do?" |
44129 | What happens in war? |
44129 | What has happened then, to make you change your behaviour?'' |
44129 | What is one to say to that? |
44129 | What is the great news?" |
44129 | What is the matter? |
44129 | What was the meaning of it? |
44129 | What will be the end of it?" |
44129 | What would he be then, who had just entered into the family and received their confidence? |
44129 | What would the old people think? |
44129 | When after a while they were walking past Skeppsholm, bright with their recovered happiness, he asked:"What happened to us yesterday?" |
44129 | When he asked his friend about it, the latter answered:"Do n''t you know where you are?" |
44129 | When they came out she asked, somewhat out of humour at being disappointed of a pleasure,"Are you vexed with me?" |
44129 | Who had sent them? |
44129 | Who is this third? |
44129 | Why did he not carry out this intention? |
44129 | Why did she spy on him except that she feared the silent workings of his mind? |
44129 | Why should women mix in business? |
44129 | You have been married?" |
44129 | You think that strange? |
44129 | You will go? |
44129 | and you?" |
44129 | he asked himself, and was a court martial about to be held here? |
44129 | shall I blow at it?" |
34250 | All that sounds very romantic; and yet young men do win wealth and fame right here-- and why not you? |
34250 | Always? |
34250 | Am I dreaming? |
34250 | Am I to be a son of my mother? 34250 And leave Lucy unguarded?" |
34250 | And she would n''t do it? |
34250 | And the letter-- have you forgotten that? |
34250 | And yet how can I defend her? |
34250 | And you accept that? |
34250 | And you had a message from_ Altair_? |
34250 | And you took all that in? |
34250 | Are we starting back? 34250 Are we starting now?" |
34250 | Are you prepared now-- to- night? |
34250 | Are you related to this woman? |
34250 | Are you still out of the body, Lucy? |
34250 | Are you sure? |
34250 | Are you there, Lucy? |
34250 | Are you there, Margaret? |
34250 | Boy, am I? |
34250 | But did you? 34250 But have I prospered from these advices?" |
34250 | But how can they? |
34250 | But suppose you find my powers real? |
34250 | But what becomes of the infallible Voices? |
34250 | But what exactly do you intend to do with my mother? |
34250 | But you heard the whisper, did you not? |
34250 | By the way, who is Miss Wood? |
34250 | Ca n''t we go now? |
34250 | Ca n''t we sell something? |
34250 | Ca n''t you go on with your studies here and pass your examination? |
34250 | Ca n''t you see it? |
34250 | Can any one accuse me of getting rich out of my''work''? 34250 Can it be that yesterday I was behind the bat?" |
34250 | Can you ride a horse? |
34250 | Can you, my own son, accuse me of trickery? |
34250 | Can you? 34250 Could n''t you_ learn_ to love me?" |
34250 | Could you see her? |
34250 | Dark blue or light blue? |
34250 | Did The Voices tell you that I was turned down everywhere on account of my mother''s reputation as a medium? |
34250 | Did he know you had The Voices when he married you? |
34250 | Did n''t you visit her during vacations? |
34250 | Did n''t you? |
34250 | Did she give her name? |
34250 | Did some one drive up? |
34250 | Did that man Pettus call just now? |
34250 | Did you do that? |
34250 | Did you fold her hands and put her in the position she occupies? |
34250 | Did you formerly? |
34250 | Did you see how that man produced that message? |
34250 | Do many go to her for help of this kind? |
34250 | Do n''t you see how intolerable all that is going to be for me? |
34250 | Do n''t you? 34250 Do you call yourself an unprejudiced person?" |
34250 | Do you expect me to call this place home? 34250 Do you mean that you quarreled?" |
34250 | Do you mean the maid led you from the room? |
34250 | Do you mean to say that the dead speak in voices audible to others than yourself? |
34250 | Do you mean to tell me that_ you_ advise her how to invest her money? |
34250 | Do you read Italian? |
34250 | Do you realize that this failure means almost as much of a loss to you as it does to Louise? |
34250 | Do you really believe that the dead speak to us? |
34250 | Do you really hold stock in my mother''s Voices? |
34250 | Do you think it possible? |
34250 | Do you want to go to your room? |
34250 | Do you wish to be tried here and now on this charge? |
34250 | Does that shake your faith in the medium? |
34250 | Father, are you here? 34250 From whom?" |
34250 | Ghost- room? |
34250 | Have the controls consented? |
34250 | Have you any idea what the tests are to be? |
34250 | Have you been here all day? |
34250 | Have you called a doctor? |
34250 | Have you read this thing, Frens? |
34250 | Have you seen her? |
34250 | Have you? 34250 He did n''t warn you of the coming of the reporter, did he?" |
34250 | He said so much-- Where is mother? |
34250 | He''s a ripping good fellow and a wonder at the bat, but what can we do? 34250 Heavenly is the word; but who did it? |
34250 | Home? 34250 How about it, Vic?" |
34250 | How are you? |
34250 | How came the rose here? 34250 How can I go about this town seeking work to- morrow? |
34250 | How can we do that? 34250 How can you believe that? |
34250 | How can you help it? |
34250 | How can you tell? |
34250 | How could he help knowing it? 34250 How could we do that?" |
34250 | How could you? 34250 How did you learn that?" |
34250 | How do I get there? |
34250 | How do they punish you? |
34250 | How do you know? |
34250 | How is she, Doctor? |
34250 | How is she? |
34250 | How is that? 34250 How is your mother?" |
34250 | How much do you suppose you can borrow on it? |
34250 | How still it all is? |
34250 | How_ do_ you work that? |
34250 | Husky chap, ai n''t he? |
34250 | I am hoping she''s right, but I''m afraid that the doctors--"Is there anything I can do? |
34250 | I do n''t see why? 34250 I hope you are not going to be angry with me?" |
34250 | I hope you have n''t put your money into anything Pettus has control of? |
34250 | I suppose people_ do_ go to St. Joe for other purposes than marriage? |
34250 | I thought you were n''t going to discuss these subjects? |
34250 | I wonder if that_ is_ a fly? |
34250 | I wonder what is coming next? |
34250 | I''m crazy to know what he did last night, and what he really thinks of us? |
34250 | If I had ten dollars I''d ask you''why not?'' |
34250 | If mother still lives,he said to the nurse,"where is she? |
34250 | In what way? |
34250 | Is any one with your mother? |
34250 | Is it Altair? |
34250 | Is it Walter Bartol? |
34250 | Is it Watts? |
34250 | Is it as physical as that? |
34250 | Is it smoke? 34250 Is n''t it horrible that I should be here without a dollar and without a single relative? |
34250 | Is n''t that little man magnificent? 34250 Is n''t that smooth?" |
34250 | Is she more cunning than I thought? 34250 Is that his picture up there on the wall? |
34250 | Is that true? |
34250 | Is the electric out, Ferguson? |
34250 | Is this true? |
34250 | Is this your son? |
34250 | Is your curiosity satisfied? |
34250 | Just what does he want to do, Victor? |
34250 | Lucy, are you present? 34250 May I flashlight now?" |
34250 | May I not sit for Louise? |
34250 | May I sit? |
34250 | May I take your name? |
34250 | May I touch her? |
34250 | Mother, are you going to sit for Pettus to- night? |
34250 | Mother, are you sick? |
34250 | Mother, did you speak? |
34250 | Mother, how could you let me in for all of this? 34250 Mother, tell me this-- haven''t you noticed that your controls generally advise the things you believe in?" |
34250 | Mother, what do you suppose he wants of me? |
34250 | Mother, what is the matter? 34250 Mother,"he said, earnestly,"if Mr. Bartol gets us out of this scrape will you go away with me into some new country and give up this business?" |
34250 | Mrs. Joyce, you are a believer in Mrs. Ollnee''s powers? |
34250 | My niece, Leo, will be there-- surely you will respond to that lure? |
34250 | No relation to Mrs. Ollnee, the medium? |
34250 | No; who is_ Altair_ supposed to be? |
34250 | Now who is doing that? |
34250 | Now, what does that mean? |
34250 | Now? |
34250 | Of course not-- but--"What? |
34250 | Oh, I am a brute now, am I? 34250 Oh, my boy, do you doubt me? |
34250 | Oh, the suggestion came from The Voices, did it? |
34250 | Oh, why ca n''t she quit this business? 34250 One of the servants may have dropped it there,"he now admitted;"and yet how could that be? |
34250 | Really now, what can I do? 34250 Red ones, blue ones, brown ones-- which shall we begin on?" |
34250 | See here, Gil,called Macey, holding up an illustrated page,"do you suppose this woman is any relation to Vic?" |
34250 | Shall I fire? |
34250 | Shall I flashlight that? |
34250 | Shall we clasp hands, Lucy? |
34250 | Shall we go home? |
34250 | Shall we try another set? |
34250 | She said danger threatened-- did she tell you what the danger was? |
34250 | She was subject to trances, then? |
34250 | She_ was_ beautiful, was n''t she? 34250 Since I have been grown up?" |
34250 | So you are the son they spoke of? |
34250 | Suppose mother should be recognized as we enter? 34250 Suppose you should advise buying the wrong thing?" |
34250 | Taken? 34250 The bailiff?" |
34250 | Then did you take to making a living out of the ghost- room? |
34250 | Then you went to the library and read for a long time? |
34250 | There''s a paper at the foot of the stairs; is that yours? |
34250 | To be some man''s household drudge or pet? |
34250 | To me? |
34250 | Vic, what do you know of this business? |
34250 | Was I calm and efficient? 34250 Was n''t it beautiful? |
34250 | Well then-- will you remain here with me? |
34250 | Well, just how did your separation come about? |
34250 | Well, now, suppose these voices should turn out to be real? 34250 Well, why did n''t you sense the cause?" |
34250 | Well, why do n''t you experiment with her? 34250 What about Pettus?" |
34250 | What about the figure of your grandsire? |
34250 | What am I fitted for? 34250 What are you going to do?" |
34250 | What can I do? |
34250 | What can we do? |
34250 | What can we do? |
34250 | What did he say to you? 34250 What did he say?" |
34250 | What did she do? |
34250 | What did you think your mother would do? |
34250 | What do you expect me to do? |
34250 | What do you expect to do? |
34250 | What do you intend to do to- day? |
34250 | What do you know of your mother''s power as a medium? 34250 What do you mean by courage?" |
34250 | What do you mean by that? |
34250 | What do you mean by''controls''? |
34250 | What do you mean? |
34250 | What do you mean? |
34250 | What do you mean? |
34250 | What do you suppose came to him? |
34250 | What do you think ailed her? |
34250 | What do you want with her? |
34250 | What does he say? |
34250 | What does it explain? |
34250 | What does it say? |
34250 | What does she want of me? |
34250 | What has happened? |
34250 | What have you been doing this morning? |
34250 | What is his explanation? |
34250 | What is it all about? |
34250 | What is my strong point? |
34250 | What is your reason for asking? |
34250 | What is your will with me? |
34250 | What kind of a den was this ghost- room? |
34250 | What luck? |
34250 | What makes you think that? |
34250 | What powers? |
34250 | What right have you to pass judgment on your mother without examining her? 34250 What sort of fiction do you read?" |
34250 | What was the use? 34250 What will she say to me when we meet?" |
34250 | What will you do with her Voices? |
34250 | What''s that for? |
34250 | What''s that? |
34250 | What''s the excitement? |
34250 | What''s the matter between you and Victor? |
34250 | What''s the use of going to books? 34250 What''s the use?" |
34250 | What? 34250 When did Altair first come?" |
34250 | When did she die? |
34250 | When did you discover your mother''s present condition? |
34250 | When do we try? |
34250 | When will you try this again? |
34250 | Where are you now? |
34250 | Where did that come from? |
34250 | Where did they take her? |
34250 | Where do you expect to find so much money? |
34250 | Where does the form seem to be? |
34250 | Where is the nearest''phone? |
34250 | Where_ shall_ we go? |
34250 | Who are here? |
34250 | Who are you? 34250 Who are you?" |
34250 | Who are you? |
34250 | Who are you? |
34250 | Who are you? |
34250 | Who came for you? 34250 Who gets breakfast, you or I?" |
34250 | Who is it? |
34250 | Who told you anything was the matter? |
34250 | Who touched me? |
34250 | Whose fault is it? |
34250 | Why are n''t you youngsters out on the lawn? |
34250 | Why did n''t he tell us the truth before we voted him in here? |
34250 | Why did n''t you make me a medium? |
34250 | Why did you send me away from it all? |
34250 | Why did you stay? 34250 Why do n''t we go back to La Crescent? |
34250 | Why do n''t we have a sitting now? |
34250 | Why do n''t you go to bed? |
34250 | Why do you keep this rickety old thing? |
34250 | Why does this vivid and cultured woman seek my mother''s society? 34250 Why not drive an automobile? |
34250 | Why not join the league? |
34250 | Why not? |
34250 | Why not? |
34250 | Why should I be disciplined? 34250 Why should they? |
34250 | Why should you hate it? 34250 Why should you offer to do all that for us?" |
34250 | Why should''they''know anything about business? |
34250 | Why so, Victor? |
34250 | Why? |
34250 | Why? |
34250 | Will you let me see her? |
34250 | Will you wait till to- morrow before reporting? |
34250 | Would you experiment with your own mother? |
34250 | Would you mind taking my car and going to my home to tell Leonora where I am? 34250 Yes, do n''t you?" |
34250 | You accept money for your services, do you not? |
34250 | You believe in this woman''s Voices? |
34250 | You distinguish between the Voices of your friend and her own personality, do you? |
34250 | You do n''t intend to go out and nurse among strangers? |
34250 | You do n''t mean to read books,protested Mrs. Joyce, energetically,"when you''ve the very source of all knowledge right here in your own house? |
34250 | You do n''t seem to mind my loss of a degree? |
34250 | You have a conviction? 34250 You mean Mr. Bartol has asked you?" |
34250 | You mean a dead financier? |
34250 | You mean everybody that went to my mother for advice? |
34250 | You mean she has done this as-- as a medium? |
34250 | You must have noticed how much like my mother she was? 34250 You will lose heavily in this traction swindle, if it is a swindle, will you not?" |
34250 | You will not deny that you advised these investments? |
34250 | You would not? 34250 You''ll surely come after dinner, Victor?" |
34250 | You''re sure he wanted me? 34250 You''ve had no reason to doubt the genuineness of these messages?" |
34250 | You? 34250 You_ think_ you''re honest, mother-- but do n''t you see you''ve become an_ unconscious hypnotist_? |
34250 | Young people,he called, in a voice that somehow voiced a deep emotion,"do you realize that it is midnight?" |
34250 | _ Do n''t you know me? 34250 _ Does this not prove the medium innocent of ventriloquism?_""Stinchfield-- what about this?" |
34250 | _ Does this not prove the medium innocent of ventriloquism?_"Stinchfield-- what about this? |
34250 | _ Father._"Who is speaking? |
34250 | _ Grandfather?_"_ No._He hesitated before asking the next question. |
34250 | _ Is this sufficient?_asked the unseen. |
34250 | _ Mamma is here-- and Walter._"Can they speak? |
34250 | _ Margaret._"Margaret? 34250 _ Matter, the strongest steel, is but a form of motion._""What is all that to me?" |
34250 | _ Mysterious Psychic Forces._ Know this tome? |
34250 | _ Victor_; what are you doing? |
34250 | _ Wait._"Is there anything you want to say to Victor? |
34250 | _ Will you swear the psychic did not do it?_asked the Voice. |
34250 | _ Yes, I have come to speak to my grandson._"Do n''t you see him now? |
34250 | _ Yes, yes, yes!_"Do you wish to speak to me? |
34250 | _ Yes._"About your father? |
34250 | _ Yes._"Through my mother? |
34250 | _ Yes._"What shall we do? |
34250 | _ Your father._"What have you to say to me? |
34250 | A boy''s voice answered,"What ye want, maw?" |
34250 | A policeman?" |
34250 | A sibilant whisper replied,"_ Yes, soon._"A moment later, another and distinctly different voice called softly,"_ My son._""Who is it?" |
34250 | After looking down into the silent face for a long time he asked, in stately fashion,"May I make momentary examination of the body?" |
34250 | Aiken?" |
34250 | Aiken?" |
34250 | Altair._""I wonder who Altair is,"he mused, staring at the bit of paper,"and what is the danger that threatens?" |
34250 | Am I not an inmate here?" |
34250 | Am I right?" |
34250 | Am I to hear voices and see visions?" |
34250 | And finally, why should he employ"foreigners"? |
34250 | And now may I see her?" |
34250 | And yet all this seemed so difficult to believe-- and besides, if the girl came in her sleep, did it not prove her love quite as conclusively? |
34250 | And, most important of all, why do''they''permit you to be hounded this way? |
34250 | Are we to see Altair?" |
34250 | Are you comfortable, mother?" |
34250 | At last she said,"I''m hungry, are n''t you?" |
34250 | At last she said:"Where is the morning_ Star_? |
34250 | At length he asked,"Who is it-- Father?" |
34250 | At seven o''clock she was forced to interrupt:"What_ are_ you children up to?" |
34250 | Bartol said to Mrs. Ollnee:"Would you mind dressing for the performance? |
34250 | Bartol?" |
34250 | Bartol?" |
34250 | Blodgett?" |
34250 | But never mind-- where will I find your mother?" |
34250 | Ca n''t I head him off somehow?" |
34250 | Ca n''t you come over at once? |
34250 | Ca n''t you persuade him to go back? |
34250 | Can it be possible that I took it from her room?" |
34250 | Can you prove your identity?" |
34250 | Can you see me?" |
34250 | Come, Victor, why do you shrink? |
34250 | Come, what do you say?" |
34250 | Could it be his mother''s breath? |
34250 | Could it be that Leo had been his visitor? |
34250 | Could it interpenetrate matter? |
34250 | Could it project an etheric double of itself? |
34250 | Could n''t you think of a newer one?" |
34250 | Did Paul, or any one, advise you last night?" |
34250 | Did he advise your uncle to go into this same transportation company?" |
34250 | Did he believe in this thing?" |
34250 | Did he ever study a wonderful psychic like your mother? |
34250 | Did n''t he mean my mother?" |
34250 | Did she long for human companionship? |
34250 | Did she really exist, or was it merely some sort of hallucination?" |
34250 | Did you catch it?" |
34250 | Did you ever plague an ant or a bug by putting something in its way, checking its advance, no matter in which direction it went?" |
34250 | Did you know that?" |
34250 | Did you notice it?" |
34250 | Did you, the night after our walk on the drive in the moonlight-- did you dream of me?" |
34250 | Do n''t the belief in these things wipe out everything you have been taught at school? |
34250 | Do n''t you feel it?" |
34250 | Do n''t you hear me?" |
34250 | Do n''t you hear them? |
34250 | Do n''t you see I ca n''t take another cent of my mother''s money now that I know how it''s earned?" |
34250 | Do n''t you see it?" |
34250 | Do n''t you see that makes it impossible for either of us to remain here another day?" |
34250 | Do n''t you think we''d better go in? |
34250 | Do not touch her._""Mother, do n''t you know me? |
34250 | Do you believe that story?" |
34250 | Do you believe what they say against me?" |
34250 | Do you believe what you saw and heard last night?" |
34250 | Do you doubt?" |
34250 | Do you expect me to hang about this scrubby hole to be disciplined by your Voices?" |
34250 | Do you hear me? |
34250 | Do you know that these Voices will not permit her to retain more than a scanty living out of all the wealth she makes for others? |
34250 | Do you know what I think she was?" |
34250 | Do you realize that?" |
34250 | Do you share her faith?" |
34250 | Do you suppose I''m going back there where all the fellows are laughing at me? |
34250 | Do you think my mother unconsciously cheats?" |
34250 | Does it explain Altair to you?" |
34250 | Does n''t it show that there is no peace or security for either of us so long as we remain here? |
34250 | Does she believe in your-- your Voices?" |
34250 | For what reason does she lavish money upon her? |
34250 | Has he candidly examined these phenomena? |
34250 | Has she done so?" |
34250 | Have n''t we had a heavenly day?" |
34250 | Have you called a doctor?" |
34250 | Have you had breakfast?" |
34250 | Have you seen her slate- writing''stunt''?" |
34250 | Have you seen it?" |
34250 | Have you seen your mother this morning?" |
34250 | Have you talked with your mother about our sitting?" |
34250 | Have you thought of that, Doctor?" |
34250 | He did not reply for a moment, and Mrs. Joyce eagerly called,"Did you hear that whisper, Victor?" |
34250 | He hesitated a moment, then answered:"I''ve been mending that old table-- I suppose you heard about my smashing it?" |
34250 | He laid his own vital, magnetic palm upon her arm, and finding it still cold and pulseless, called out:"Mother, do you hear me? |
34250 | He sat in silence for a few moments, then burst out wildly:"Are we all going crazy together? |
34250 | He went to her then, still in a daze, and to her question,"Did your father come?" |
34250 | He will raise you high!_''""What do you mean by that?" |
34250 | Her sudden return proved this-- and his hair rose at the thought of her clairvoyancy, and in answer to Mrs. Joyce''s question,"Why did you do it?" |
34250 | Her voice was deep and full of dramatic fervor as she said:"You are Victor Ollnee?" |
34250 | His mother was waiting for him on the porch, and as he came up, asked with shining face:"Is n''t this heavenly, Victor?" |
34250 | How am I to pay my way? |
34250 | How came she there? |
34250 | How can I?" |
34250 | How can they be anything but a delusion?" |
34250 | How can they direct me in what I am to do?" |
34250 | How could I convince them that I was not sharing in the profits of my mother''s business? |
34250 | How could he continue to brood over his future with a lovely girl by his side and a sweet and tender spring landscape unrolling before him? |
34250 | How could he refuse it? |
34250 | How did he find you?" |
34250 | How did that come about?" |
34250 | How did you sleep?" |
34250 | How do I know who is speaking to me? |
34250 | How do they do that?" |
34250 | How does Lucy take the promise of a test?" |
34250 | How else can you explain these Voices?" |
34250 | How was it possible for such service to go on during the master''s absence with apparently the same unerring precision of detail? |
34250 | How was that bit of pencil moved? |
34250 | How''s that?" |
34250 | I have a reason for asking-- did you?" |
34250 | I live._""Who are you?" |
34250 | I suppose he gave me a bad name? |
34250 | I suppose it is too much to expect that they will come up to- day?" |
34250 | I think all that should be counted in on her side, do n''t you? |
34250 | I wonder how many more such visitors we are to have? |
34250 | I wonder if it emits heat?" |
34250 | If I bring back a belief in immortality do I not make fullest recompense to my host? |
34250 | If he knows so much about the future why did n''t he warn my mother against that reporter that came in the other day to do her up? |
34250 | Is it Margaret?" |
34250 | Is it because of her personal charm? |
34250 | Is n''t it heavenly out here?" |
34250 | Is n''t that true?" |
34250 | Is she an aunt or a sister?" |
34250 | Is she playing a more complex game than appears?" |
34250 | Is she rich also?" |
34250 | Is that right, Paul?" |
34250 | Is that true?" |
34250 | Is this the usual method of your communications?" |
34250 | It humbled him, made him wonder if he were worth the risk she had run? |
34250 | It''s too disturbing for them-- don''t you think so?" |
34250 | Joe?" |
34250 | Joyce?" |
34250 | Leo, breathing a sigh of sad ecstasy, exclaimed:"Is she not beautiful? |
34250 | Leo, will you stretch out, too?" |
34250 | Let me take it?" |
34250 | Let me tell you? |
34250 | May I see them?" |
34250 | Mrs. Joyce exclaimed,"You do not intend to cage her in that?" |
34250 | Mrs. Ollnee and Mrs. Joyce came in as he was speaking, and Mrs. Joyce, after disposing herself comfortably, said,"Well, what is your report?" |
34250 | Mrs. Ollnee, how will you have us sit?" |
34250 | Of what avail to call it"material"? |
34250 | Oh, Victor, you must promise me that should I pass out suddenly you will try to keep the spirit- way open between us-- will you promise this?" |
34250 | Ollnee?" |
34250 | Ollnee?" |
34250 | Ollnee?" |
34250 | Oppressed by the silence, Victor called out,"Mother, are you here?" |
34250 | Or do I imagine it?" |
34250 | Ought I to step in and stop it?" |
34250 | Science?" |
34250 | Shall I bring him in and give her over to all?" |
34250 | Shall I flash my camera?" |
34250 | She has sacrificed herself to keep me at school-- why should she deceive me?" |
34250 | She knew enough of baseball slang to catch his meaning and she smiled as she asked,"Why do n''t you go back?" |
34250 | She read an unmitigable opposition in his eyes and sadly said,"You''ll come here to sleep, wo n''t you?" |
34250 | She turned her face upward, and, listening intently, asked,"What is the reason, father?" |
34250 | Stinchfield?" |
34250 | Suppose these messages have been from the dead?" |
34250 | The man at the door wore an expression of well- governed concern, which led Leo to sharply ask:"What is it, Ferguson? |
34250 | The question was simple: Could the human organism put forth from itself a supernumerary hand or arm? |
34250 | The renowned lawyer gazed at the medium with eyes that burned deep, and presently he asked,"What have you to say to me?" |
34250 | The tick counted one, two, three--"_Yes._""Some one to speak to me?" |
34250 | Their minds are just the same as they were, are n''t they?" |
34250 | Then his filial self answered:"But what has she to gain? |
34250 | There was a little silence before Victor was able to ask,"Where did he go?" |
34250 | They were both a little dashed by Victor''s appearance as he queried, with scowling brow,"What do you want?" |
34250 | They''ve made Louise and Leo rich-- I suppose you know that?" |
34250 | To test it, he asked,"Are you a spirit?" |
34250 | Victor called out to his mother:"Can you hear The Voices, mother? |
34250 | Victor sat down beside his mother, whispering,"What is it all about?" |
34250 | Wait._""Who spoke?" |
34250 | Was Altair but a transitory flower of the dark-- aloof, intangible, and sad? |
34250 | Was ever such a week of trial and perplexity thrust upon a youth? |
34250 | Was it possible that thought could be precipitated like dew upon a sheet of paper? |
34250 | Was it you, Lucy?" |
34250 | Was she unhappy in the icy realms from which she came? |
34250 | We are agreed that she is not_ consciously_ deceptive?" |
34250 | We ca n''t exhibit her in a trance?" |
34250 | Well, and you believe''the great commodore''comes to our little hole of a home to advise us? |
34250 | What I can not understand is this-- Why did your father and his band permit these treacherous personalities to intervene? |
34250 | What Margaret?" |
34250 | What about Miss Wood? |
34250 | What can you know of me in so short a time?" |
34250 | What caused it?" |
34250 | What claim have we on this big, busy man? |
34250 | What did The Voices give you?" |
34250 | What did he do for a living?" |
34250 | What did he think?" |
34250 | What did they advise you to do?" |
34250 | What do I care? |
34250 | What do they know of this great city? |
34250 | What do you want here?" |
34250 | What does he know about it? |
34250 | What does it all mean? |
34250 | What form has she taken?" |
34250 | What has happened to you?" |
34250 | What has happened?" |
34250 | What has she done to make you bitter?" |
34250 | What have I done?" |
34250 | What have we who are young and vigorous to do with the dead, anyway? |
34250 | What have you been doing?" |
34250 | What have you to say to that?" |
34250 | What is it all about?" |
34250 | What is it?" |
34250 | What kind of a session did you have? |
34250 | What meant the wistful sweetness of her smile? |
34250 | What right have we to sit here?" |
34250 | What shall I do?" |
34250 | What the youth was really saying to the maid was this:"What did you get out of it all? |
34250 | What time do you suppose it is?" |
34250 | What time is it?" |
34250 | What was he? |
34250 | What were ghosts, inventions, theories, compared to the satin- smooth curve of the maiden''s cheek or the delicate flutter of her lashes? |
34250 | What were these invisible, intangible barriers which confined him? |
34250 | What will he find?" |
34250 | What will you do, boy?" |
34250 | What would you do in my place? |
34250 | What? |
34250 | When will my mother''s case come up?" |
34250 | Where are Aunt Louise and your mother? |
34250 | Where are you going to have this performance?" |
34250 | Where is Leo?" |
34250 | Who brought it?" |
34250 | Who had planned and organized this wide- walled, low- toned room, this marvelously effective cuisine? |
34250 | Who have taken her?" |
34250 | Who is this great financier who is so willing to help you decide what to do with other people''s money?" |
34250 | Who organized it?" |
34250 | Who was my father? |
34250 | Who was she? |
34250 | Who? |
34250 | Why did his mother''s left hand quiver-- and how could that writing shape itself? |
34250 | Why did n''t he permit me to stay on at Winona and get my degree?" |
34250 | Why did n''t you go before?" |
34250 | Why did n''t you go in for civil engineering or chemistry?" |
34250 | Why did n''t you tell me?" |
34250 | Why did n''t''they''warn you? |
34250 | Why did they not defend her from these demons?" |
34250 | Why did you send me to college, knowing that sooner or later exposure must come?" |
34250 | Why do n''t you go for a ride in the park? |
34250 | Why do n''t you go in for that?" |
34250 | Why do n''t''they''help me?" |
34250 | Why do you look so sad?" |
34250 | Why does fire burn and water run? |
34250 | Why had he bought the place? |
34250 | Why is her work less honorable than singing, for example? |
34250 | Why not find out something about it? |
34250 | Why not?" |
34250 | Why should a poor farmer like my grandfather by just merely dying become a great financier?" |
34250 | Why should a woman''s career mean only marriage?" |
34250 | Why should father or grandfather know any more about stocks now than he did before he died?" |
34250 | Why should his life be thrown into the midst of such cheap and ill- odored drama? |
34250 | Why should it? |
34250 | Why should she attract and hold a lady like Mrs. Joyce? |
34250 | Why should you?" |
34250 | Why slam into Vic?" |
34250 | Why, after it was bought, should he spend so much money on it? |
34250 | Why?" |
34250 | Will you help me?" |
34250 | Will you listen to me? |
34250 | Will you make this synopsis to- day?" |
34250 | Will you permit this?" |
34250 | Will you promise that?" |
34250 | Will you wear it for me?" |
34250 | Would anything so beautiful ever come again? |
34250 | Would her interest be the same if The Voices had not enriched her? |
34250 | Would she come again? |
34250 | Would the_ Star_ forego its malignant assault upon her character now that she was gone beyond its reach? |
34250 | Would those who threatened her with arrest be remorseful? |
34250 | Would we not all go back again to this sweet land of love and longing-- if we could? |
34250 | Would you have your mother seek him out to convince him? |
34250 | Would you marry a man like Stainton Moses or David Home?" |
34250 | You mended it, did n''t you?" |
34250 | You''re her son, eh?" |
34250 | You''ve seen him? |
34250 | _ Will_ you come again?" |
34250 | _ mother!_ Are you ill?" |
34250 | called Mrs. Joyce; and then with true motor spirit, addressed the driver:"What''s the time, Denis?" |
47747 | 3)? |
47747 | 6_s._= WAS ISRAEL EVER IN EGYPT? |
47747 | Are we willing to take up the cross of sacrifice and suffer gladly with and in the passion of Incarnate Love? |
47747 | But is this really the case? |
47747 | But, it will be asked, how does this view of life eliminate suffering as an evil from the world? |
47747 | Can endorsement of this supposition be drawn from the realm of Natural Science? |
47747 | Can it truly be the Will of God that the innocent shall suffer for the guilty, the pure for the impure, the just for the unjust? |
47747 | Did not Christ thus challenge the criticism of the future? |
47747 | Do not the joys of love in its human relations between friends, husband and wife, parents and children, rest on a mutual surrender of self- interest? |
47747 | How can we expect to train our children in the ways of Truth if we give them no consistent standard for estimating what is true? |
47747 | How has His appeal to posterity been answered? |
47747 | How has His recommendation to test His words by the Spirit of Truth been obeyed? |
47747 | How then, can the destiny of man be said to be superior to that of the beasts? |
47747 | If so, for what end are these things ordained? |
47747 | If the light of God be in men, shall they not by that light perceive His glory? |
47747 | In short, is a belief in the immortal soul of man compatible with the evolutionary theory of his physical descent? |
47747 | Is not his body an artistic expression of the divine Spirit of Life, in whose likeness he is made? |
47747 | Is not man a dual creature? |
47747 | Is not the one an expression of the other, as Nature-- the vesture of God-- is the expression of the Spirit of Life? |
47747 | Is the authority claimed and exercised by the Church over the souls and minds of men to be unquestioned? |
47747 | Is the training of spiritual consciousness less important than the education and nourishment of the body? |
47747 | Is there not in reality fundamental unity between the secular and sacred aspects of all natural phenomena? |
47747 | Is there really such a thing as the soul? |
47747 | Meanwhile, can we not watch one hour? |
47747 | Or shall we resent the sacrifice of ourselves in the forwarding of His Will? |
47747 | Shall we give ourselves to God in willing co- operation with the divine regenerating purpose of life? |
47747 | Was not the Feast of the Passover, which He was then keeping with His apostles, a sacrifice of blood? |
47747 | What are its distinctive qualities, and how is its presence in personality to be recognised? |
47747 | What is? |
47747 | What kingdom divided against itself can stand? |
47747 | What more fitting material for His purpose than the common daily food and drink of people of all classes? |
47747 | What reasonable evidence is forthcoming in support of the conjecture? |
47747 | Whither are we tending? |
47747 | Without the hunger of mind and body, how could the nourishment necessary for the continuity of mental and physical life be obtained? |
46983 | ''I?--Sell an elephant sent to me by the Gods... who perhaps is a God himself?... 46983 And I-- poor Mahout-- what am I without the noble elephant whom I attend? |
46983 | And then,inquired Alemguir,"who rescued her?" |
46983 | Crawfish,replied the Crane,"what makes you think that there is another Lake? |
46983 | Friend,said the Crawfish,"it was with me that you had your first friendly conversation-- why do you leave me behind, and take the others? |
46983 | Has anything happened? 46983 How did you learn this?" |
46983 | King- Magnanimous,said he,"ought we to rejoice-- or ought we to weep? |
46983 | Oh, Holy Man,said Parvati,"the history of Harisarman is not finished; and who knows what may have happened to him afterwards? |
46983 | Oh, Holy Man,said she,"is it possible that you live all alone in the depths of this forest? |
46983 | Oh, Holy Man,said she:"why do you despise life? |
46983 | So much for the punishment of the Guilty; but how to recompense worthily the Rescuer? |
46983 | The Prince has never seen me, and I am not acquainted with him; how can there be anything like friendship between us? 46983 What are you doing? |
46983 | What have you to say, Milord? 46983 What is there extraordinary about us? |
46983 | What is this? 46983 Which of you has been good?" |
46983 | Why is it that they consider us so important? |
46983 | You think it is too much? |
46983 | _ Iravata, did you really do it?_I replied by winking my eyes and flapping my ears. |
46983 | _ Is it true? 46983 ( For, what says the Sage? 46983 Alone as I was against twenty Elephants-- what could I do?... 46983 And what is your Majesty without me? 46983 And where is the Crane? 46983 And, had I not been indeed ungrateful, to leave her as I did, because of a wicked jealousy?... 46983 Are you not fatigued by my weight? |
46983 | As I was never to see Parvati again-- never return to my lost paradise-- why should I prolong my sufferings? |
46983 | At some distance it stopped, and a feeble, and somewhat tremulous voice called:"Who is it that is moaning? |
46983 | But after all, was it not men who had set me the example of ferocity? |
46983 | But how could I eat when he was suffering the pangs of hunger? |
46983 | But is it then on account of envy that the gray elephants dislike us?" |
46983 | But why rebel? |
46983 | But, tell me, is there not one of your gods whom you represent with the head of an elephant?" |
46983 | Can it be he who has waked me up, poking me with his trunk?--does he mean to hurt me, I wonder?" |
46983 | Can it be this elephant? |
46983 | Deliver my Master? |
46983 | Did she ever remember me?... |
46983 | Elephant?" |
46983 | Had I then sunk to the level of a selfish brute-- a being without reflection-- a mere elephant? |
46983 | Had she forgotten me? |
46983 | How can such learning be possessed by one who has never studied the holy texts? |
46983 | How happens it that his cries are like those of a man?" |
46983 | How is it that you are free?" |
46983 | How shall I endure the continual anguish of knowing you exposed to wounds and death? |
46983 | How then would it be with strangers? |
46983 | How to seize them without their being able to give the alarm?... |
46983 | How was I to obtain succour for the Princess, whom I could now barely see, as she lay motionless on the ground? |
46983 | How would it do to engage both the elephant and his master?" |
46983 | I could see him off there, at Bangok, saying so gravely to me,"Ought we to rejoice, or weep?" |
46983 | I gathered here and there a few half- dead leaves, or a bunch of thin grass-- but what could they do to sustain me? |
46983 | I had been so long unused to being alone that I could not endure it.... A companionship here offered itself.... What would it be like?... |
46983 | I thought constantly of my old life, wondering what had become of the lovely Parvati; did the Prince love her?... |
46983 | I thought,"What would Parvati say if she could see me? |
46983 | I went near, and looking closely, I saw that it was a man.... Was he dead?--or only asleep?... |
46983 | Is a new life for us a good, or an evil thing? |
46983 | Is it true?_"cried she. |
46983 | Kill these two men? |
46983 | King- Magnanimous,_ ought we to weep or rejoice_?" |
46983 | My play seemed to interest him, and he called one of the workmen on the wharf, and inquired:"Do you know who is the owner of that elephant?" |
46983 | Oldham?" |
46983 | Once thou wert free and happy, but now, how wilt thou escape?'' |
46983 | Or was he grieving silently over the loss of his liberty, and his life? |
46983 | Or, if she thought of me, must she not accuse me of ingratitude? |
46983 | She recognized them as the remains of the Fishes, and asked the Crane:"Friend, how much further is this Lake? |
46983 | Should one dread change, or should one welcome it? |
46983 | Sthuladatta sent for Harisarman, and said:"''Canst thou tell me where to look for the lost horse?'' |
46983 | The five minutes being ended, Mr. Hardwick turned to me and asked:"''Will you agree to form, with your elephant, a part of our Troupe?'' |
46983 | They all gathered around the Crane and cried:"Friend, is there no way of saving our lives?" |
46983 | Was he sleeping, the dear Prince, worn out with fatigue? |
46983 | Was she happy?... |
46983 | We must lose no time; do you not see that a storm is impending? |
46983 | What was to be done? |
46983 | What was to become of me? |
46983 | What''s that?" |
46983 | When she was married she would have a Court of her own, and a whole Palace to organize and direct-- and what would become of me? |
46983 | When the Crawfish heard this she said:"Friend, what is the reason for this renunciation of all appetite?" |
46983 | Who is it that disturbs the quiet of the forest by these cries? |
46983 | Whose elephant is this? |
46983 | Why did I not think of returning to the Palace of Golconda, where very likely my absence had not yet been discovered? |
46983 | Why did they not call her back? |
46983 | Why do you not inquire of him?'' |
46983 | Why has not she returned? |
46983 | Why have you come back?" |
46983 | Why should we allow him to come among us?" |
46983 | Why were all these honours showered upon me? |
46983 | Why were they so glad to see me? |
46983 | Will you not save my life along with the rest?" |
46983 | Would such a thing be possible?... |
46983 | You are the owner of that intelligent beast? |
46983 | You will not pay me?" |
46983 | You, who are one of the most learned men in England?" |
46983 | [ Illustration:"WHICH OF YOU HAS BEEN GOOD?" |
46983 | _ Who_ should be punished? |
46983 | _ Who_ was the guilty one? |
46983 | accustomed as I had been for so long to living among men-- petted and cherished by all? |
46983 | and escape with him? |
46983 | cried Baladji, laughing still louder:"Must I really be jealous of a great beast like that?"... |
46983 | cried she,"what will become of me, separated from you? |
46983 | even if less savage than those I had just left? |
46983 | my name of happiness? |
46983 | said she in a low voice, close to my ear:"Thou couldst leave me at such a trying time in my life?... |
46983 | what was I about to hear?) |
46983 | why could she not have remained a child, over whom I was permitted to watch?... |
46983 | why did no wise suggestion now come to me? |
46983 | would become of Parvati, left alone in the wood, if I should be strangled by this monster? |
5144 | ''Is she seriously ill?'' |
5144 | ''What is to become of my poor wife and children,''he wrote,''if that is really the case?'' |
5144 | As I had not looked after my best friends, such as M. Lucy, was not the ill- success of that evening to be ascribed to my own conduct? |
5144 | I could not help wondering whether I should have to give up my Penzing establishment, but, on the other hand, what alternative was open to me? |
5144 | The young man, completely unabashed, answered,''Que voulez- vous? |
5144 | Wagner?'' |
5144 | le Pape ne vient pas en scene? |
47644 | ''Ye''ll be tryin''anither kirk the morn?'' 47644 I suppose you repeated the remark you made at luncheon, that the ladies you had seen in Princes Street were excessively plain?" |
47644 | Is that Christianity? |
47644 | Sound your own soul,was his reply;"are you prepared to be chased into exile with your children, and to see your husband hunted to the death? |
47644 | Then,continues the Inquisitive Person,"Peter was married?" |
47644 | What did he say to that? |
47644 | What note? |
47644 | What, then,some one may ask,"do the good people in that church think of all the immoralities and frauds that it has condoned and fostered?" |
47644 | You naturally inveighed against the Scotch climate? |
47644 | ''Wha did he hear the Sawbath that''s bye? |
47644 | ''Worships the sun?'' |
47644 | *****[ Sidenote: Do American Roman Catholics Believe in the Relics?] |
47644 | And do you know who it was that won the day for William on the banks of the Boyne? |
47644 | And has not his action, like Dean Sprat''s, defeated itself? |
47644 | And while we are discussing these matters,''he went on,''how is your American dyspepsia these days-- have you decided what is the cause of it?''" |
47644 | But are not their seniors equally indifferent about having Bibles in the regular service? |
47644 | But can it maintain itself against the priests? |
47644 | But what of all this? |
47644 | C.?'' |
47644 | Div ye ken the new asseestant? |
47644 | Do we owe the Huguenots anything? |
47644 | Does this mean that he jilted the girl, or that she discarded him for losing her ring? |
47644 | Dr. A.? |
47644 | F.? |
47644 | Giles? |
47644 | Has this improvement come about because the church is really growing better? |
47644 | Hear ye him?" |
47644 | How can a man without Greek master the New Testament in the original? |
47644 | I. P.:"Do the Popes still marry?" |
47644 | IS THE SCOTTISH CHARACTER DEGENERATING? |
47644 | IS THE SCOTTISH CHARACTER DEGENERATING? |
47644 | If so, for what purpose? |
47644 | In like manner the London newsboys say,"Pipers, sir?" |
47644 | Is it not clear that no man can be a thoroughly furnished minister who has not studied Greek? |
47644 | Mr. D.? |
47644 | Reluctant, did I say? |
47644 | She returned from the dinner, at which she had met him, all out of sorts:"How did you get on with your delightful minister?" |
47644 | Some years ago a child was asked,"Who is the Prime Minister of England?" |
47644 | The brotherhood of man-- how else shall it ever be fully and permanently brought about, except through men''s knowledge of the Fatherhood of God? |
47644 | The first speaker was somewhat taken aback, but recovered himself sufficiently to say,"Well, my lord, can you tell me the way to heaven?" |
47644 | The fleeing apostle exclaimed in amazement,"_ Domine, quo vadis?_"( Lord, whither goest thou? |
47644 | The fleeing apostle exclaimed in amazement,"_ Domine, quo vadis?_"( Lord, whither goest thou? |
47644 | Was there ever such turf in the whole world? |
47644 | Was''n''t that unendurable? |
47644 | We have not purchased any yet-- but who can tell? |
47644 | Were they placed here by the Druids? |
47644 | What is it that has given this venerable Presbyterian city this proud position, next to London? |
47644 | When we inquired at Oxford for a Presbyterian church, the maid- servant said,"That is Protestant, is n''t it?" |
47644 | Where could be found people so eager to listen to the preaching of the gospel, and to have their children taught its lessons? |
47644 | Where in the whole world could be found so promising a mission field-- one ready to yield such rich returns? |
47644 | Why should there be such a plague spot in the heart of Edinburgh? |
47644 | Why should there not be at least as good a supply of Bibles in a church as of hymn- books? |
47644 | Why should there not be street scavengers like those who keep even the small towns in France and Germany quite free from that kind of litter? |
47644 | Why? |
47644 | Will it endure? |
47644 | Will this unification continue? |
47644 | [ Sidenote: Are Virginia Episcopalians Becoming Less Liberal?] |
47644 | inquired Salemina...."He was quite the handsomest man in the room; who is he?" |
47644 | institutions? |
47644 | yet?'' |
49121 | Do you think it will be pretty? 49121 If he is a man of letters,"they ask,"why is he dressed like a colonel?" |
49121 | Well,he questioned,"how did it go? |
49121 | And the women, wo n''t they freeze in their evening gowns? |
49121 | Are there hidden princesses and treasures here? |
49121 | Barbarians have been this way,--but which? |
49121 | Do you think it will be a little unusual? |
49121 | Had they been abandoned? |
49121 | Has some one lived here in our time or was it in the distant past? |
49121 | Her body? |
49121 | How could one fancy oneself in China, in Pekin itself, so near to mysterious enclosures, to palaces so full of wonders? |
49121 | How many hours-- or how many centuries-- has he been gone, and who could he have been, the occupant of the abandoned room? |
49121 | How to get them away without looking like pillagers in the eyes of the servants and guards we meet on the way back is the question? |
49121 | In this dry, powdery soil how can the new wheat grow, which here and there makes squares of really fresh green in the midst of the infinite grays? |
49121 | In what far- away forest did the trees grow that permitted such groves to be created out of one single piece? |
49121 | Is it a fortress, a prison, or something more lugubrious still? |
49121 | Jumping Jacks? |
49121 | Monkeys? |
49121 | Possibly they will again destroy my churches; who knows? |
49121 | The air is soft and moist.--Is it the summer of the North, or the winter of a warm climate? |
49121 | To be a soldier such as he was, to make yourself loved like a little child, could there be anything more beautiful?" |
49121 | What are we to do? |
49121 | What can it be that keeps itself rolled up like a ball, and has such a long tail? |
49121 | What can they be? |
49121 | What could I do, with my borrowed"mafou"and my revolver, if my appearance did not happen to please them? |
49121 | What distorted views of life had been bequeathed to him of the things of this world and of the world beyond? |
49121 | What do all these gruesome symbols signify to him? |
49121 | What do their Asiatic brains make of all this French gaiety? |
49121 | What of the illuminations, of the awnings? |
49121 | What shall we do, since it is to take place in the open air on the terraces of the palace, if the north wind should blow? |
49121 | What sort of a reception shall we have in this mysterious enclosure? |
49121 | What was the real character of this dreamer, who shall ever say? |
49121 | What will be their fate? |
49121 | What, then, was Europe doing? |
49121 | Where are we to lay our heads? |
49121 | Where are we, then, in what obscure, closed, clandestine dwelling? |
49121 | Who knows what has been done with the body? |
49121 | Who lived here, then, sequestered behind so many walls,--walls more terrible by far than those of our western prisons? |
49121 | Why should there be three of them? |
49121 | Why should this desert be enclosed by the city''s walls? |
49121 | Would not a supreme attack against them be attempted, an effort be made to destroy them before the allied troops could enter? |
49121 | what was your impression of it all?" |
51621 | ( May I come?). |
51621 | Q.--Badêinne mokada-- What is at your stomach? |
51621 | Q.--Dehikatuvada batukatuvada-- Is it a lime- thorn or a brinjal- thorn? |
51621 | Q.--Elwaturen hêduvâda-- Did you wash it in cold water? |
51621 | Q.--Enda hondê? |
51621 | Q.--Eyi andannê-- why is it crying? |
51621 | Q.--Giyâda-- Did it come off? |
51621 | Q.--Giyâda-- Did it come off? |
51621 | Q.--Kiren hêduvâda-- Did you wash it in milk? |
51621 | Q.--Kô alu-- Where are the ashes? |
51621 | Q.--Kô ballayi belali-- Where is the dog and the cat? |
51621 | Q.--Kô goda-- Where is the spot? |
51621 | Q.--Kô linda-- Where is the well? |
51621 | Q.--Kô man dunna kiri batuyi-- Where is the milk and rice I gave? |
51621 | Q.--Kô ândiyâ pela-- Where are the ândiyâ plants? |
51621 | Q.--Man endada umba enavada-- should I come or would you come? |
48495 | ( Noon; the moment of the shortest shadow; end of the longest error; climax of mankind;_ Incipit Zarathustra!_)The reader will ask,"What next?" |
48495 | Do I counsel you to love your neighbor? 48495 Thy self laugheth at thine''I''and its prancings: What are these boundings and flights of thought? |
48495 | What difference does it make,said he,"if you pass badly, if only you pass at all? |
48495 | What happened, brethren? 48495 What is the greatest thing ye can experience? |
48495 | What with man is the ape? 48495 ''What did I hear just now? 48495 ''What?'' 48495 And who can know why thy body needeth thy beat wisdom? 48495 Are not meters and foot- measures definite magnitudes, whether or not they be long for one purpose and short for another? 48495 Are there not different solutions possible of the same example and has not every one to regard his own solution as the right solution? 48495 But must we for that reason give up all hope of describing facts in objective terms? 48495 But that which the much- too- many call marriage, those superfluous-- alas, what call I that? 48495 But what is spirit? 48495 But what to me is the right of society, the right of all? 48495 Consequently also neither comforting, saving nor obligatory: what obligation could anything unknown lay upon us? 48495 Could egoism go further than this? 48495 Did Stirner live up to his principle of ego sovereignty? 48495 Do things, or do they not, possess an independence of their own? 48495 Had he read everything, and not read Stirner? 48495 He is a man who understands that the problem of all problems is the question, Is there an authority higher than myself? 48495 He meets a saint who loves God, and Zarathustra leaving him says:Is it possible? |
48495 | Here is Zarathustra''s condemnation of man''s search for truth:"''Will unto truth''ye call, ye wisest men, what inspireth you and maketh you ardent? |
48495 | How can the teacher claim that he is the standard of truth? |
48495 | How did Nietzsche develop into an unmoralist? |
48495 | Is there truth which we must heed, or is truth a fiction and is the self not bound to respect anything? |
48495 | It is characteristic of him that he said,"If there were a God, how should I endure not to be God?" |
48495 | The question arises, What are things in themselves? |
48495 | The question is only, What is the overman and how can we make this ideal of a higher development actual? |
48495 | The true world-- unattainable? |
48495 | We have done away with the true world: what world is left? |
48495 | What do I care for equality of right, for the struggle for right, for inalienable rights? |
48495 | What does it matter if we endure a little more or less pain, or of what use are the pleasures in which we might indulge? |
48495 | What have ye done to surpass him? |
48495 | What is the overman? |
48495 | What is the secret of Nietzsche''s success? |
48495 | What right has he, then, to judge the sovereign self of to- day and to announce the coming of another self in the overman? |
48495 | What saith the midnight deep and drear? |
48495 | What then remains but the concrete bodily personality of every man of which every one is the ultimate standard of right and wrong? |
48495 | Who ever imagined such an unnatural conjuncture as an eagle''toting''a serpent in friendship? |
48495 | Whom do they hate most? |
48495 | Why dost thou not give him thy flesh and thy bones? |
48495 | Why should Nietzsche give credit to the author from whom he drew his inspiration if neither acknowledges any rule which he feels obliged to observe? |
48495 | Why should we submit to the tyranny of a rule which after all proves to be a relic of barbarism? |
48495 | Will it not be better to go on improving than to revert to the primitive state of savagery? |
48495 | Would he not be ridiculous in his impotence to actualize his dream? |
48495 | how could I fail to be eager for eternity, and for the marriage- ring of rings, the ring of recurrence? |
48495 | perhaps the seeming?... |
45933 | And they parted from you when you were two years of age, and you were brought up by your grandmother? |
45933 | Are you Hikoroku? 45933 Are you really brother and sister?" |
45933 | Are you still alive? |
45933 | Can it be your real intention to betray them to Tokihira? |
45933 | Did you hear what the master said? 45933 Did you say Tokushima? |
45933 | Do you wish to make me weep with your sad words? |
45933 | Does the priest of the temple live here? |
45933 | Does your heart know no sympathy-- no mercy? 45933 Father, will you not say farewell and call me your good boy for the last time?" |
45933 | Has she come back? |
45933 | Have I to go now? |
45933 | How can I kill him? |
45933 | How dare you enter my house without my permission? |
45933 | How dare you release that woman without my permission? |
45933 | How is it that the place is deserted? 45933 How was she clothed? |
45933 | I fear my naughty boy must be giving you a great deal of trouble,said the new- comer, as Takebe let her in,"but what has become of him now?" |
45933 | Is it possible that you are a_ samurai_? |
45933 | Is this all you have, child? |
45933 | Let me see how much you have? |
45933 | May I inquire who are you? |
45933 | Midori is always with you,said Kambei--"and she must know,"and turning to Midori he struck her, saying:"Now confess-- where is Tokijiro hiding now?" |
45933 | Midori, tell me, are you sure no one saw my letter to Toki Sama yesterday? |
45933 | O Kaya San,said Urasato,"what is the matter? |
45933 | Oh, Sawaichi San, what are you doing? |
45933 | Oh, indeed, so you have many_ koban_? |
45933 | Oh, my lord, do you really forgive me? 45933 Oh, no,"replied Tama, looking at him strangely,"do you think that I could ever forget you? |
45933 | Oh, oh, O Sato, do I look as if I were playing the_ samisen_ for amusement? 45933 Oh, you are my wife, are you? |
45933 | Oh, you obstinate woman-- will nothing make you confess? 45933 Oh,"said Urasato, scarcely able to make herself heard,"how did you get here, Tokijiro?" |
45933 | Pardon me,he cried,"but can this be the lost ring?" |
45933 | Takao Sama, whatever has happened? 45933 Tell me,"he said anxiously,"What is the matter? |
45933 | Tell me,he said, turning to the mother,"have you not some relatives in Tokyo? |
45933 | Then you are not married yet? |
45933 | Was it you, her father, who killed her? |
45933 | Was my boy considered worthy to take the place of our young lord or not? |
45933 | What are you saying? 45933 What are you saying?" |
45933 | What does this mean? |
45933 | What is the matter? 45933 What is the matter?" |
45933 | What shall I do? |
45933 | What wrong have I done you that you should wish to kill me? |
45933 | What? 45933 What? |
45933 | What? |
45933 | Who is it? |
45933 | Whose wife are you? |
45933 | Why do n''t you catch me? |
45933 | Why do you say such sad things? |
45933 | Why does she refuse to marry? |
45933 | Ya, Jurobei, have your powers of persuasion induced your sister to consent to my proposals? |
45933 | Yes, it is better that no time should be lost,responded the latter,"but as my duty is now finished, may I request to be discharged on sick leave?" |
45933 | After a few moment''s silence he inquired of the little messenger,"Who is your mistress?" |
45933 | And so you are making a pilgrimage with your parents?" |
45933 | Are we already there?" |
45933 | Are you Hikoroku?" |
45933 | Are you a devil or a dragon? |
45933 | Are you also on Shusen''s side?" |
45933 | Are you not happy with me?" |
45933 | Are you quarrelling again? |
45933 | Are you safe?" |
45933 | Are you still there, mother?" |
45933 | As soon as I could do so I left and came to you... but, Urasato Sama, what is the matter? |
45933 | At last she said, hesitatingly:"Whatever is the matter with you to- day, Sawaichi San? |
45933 | Blind man as you are, who can not see in this world, how will you travel alone amidst the dark shadows down the road of Death? |
45933 | But how could I know? |
45933 | But though I am a great sinner... who knows? |
45933 | But you, Kotaro, are the favourite of your father-- perhaps you would like to remain behind in this world with him?" |
45933 | Can this be all? |
45933 | Can you not reach me this time?" |
45933 | Did Midori know that Urasato was her mother, or on returning to consciousness was it instinct or affection that made her use the tender name? |
45933 | Did he not say that he would not entrust this to anyone else but_ me_--only to me-- Hikoroku-- don''t you see what a fine fellow I am? |
45933 | Does not that suffice?" |
45933 | Drawing near the little pilgrim and scanning her features eagerly, she asked:"Why do you go on this pilgrimage to seek your parents? |
45933 | Has that young rascal Tokijiro asked you for anything out of this house-- tell me at once-- is such the case? |
45933 | Has there been a fight? |
45933 | Have you come to kill my lord?" |
45933 | He had asked for her, and she had been promised to him before Wataru thought of her; what right had her mother to give her to Wataru? |
45933 | He looked at her in great distress as he asked:"Why must we part? |
45933 | He pushed her roughly to one side:"You scorn my love then? |
45933 | Here, Midori-- where is Tokijiro? |
45933 | His wife approached him and anxiously inquired:"What is the matter? |
45933 | How can I look her in the face after this? |
45933 | How can you be faithful to such a ghost of a rascal as Tokijiro? |
45933 | How could I know what was in your heart?" |
45933 | How could he be deceived?" |
45933 | How could he solve the enigmatic message it surely bore for him? |
45933 | How would it be possible for me to do as you wish?" |
45933 | However low and mean I may be, do you think that I am the kind of woman to leave you for another man? |
45933 | If she should come back before this can be achieved, what course of action can we decide on?" |
45933 | In my service Plum blossom has fled The Cherry has withered How then can the Pine be Heartless to me? |
45933 | In that poem he asks,''How can the pine be heartless towards me?'' |
45933 | Is it not marvellous that you should have found me?" |
45933 | Is it you? |
45933 | Is n''t the picture hanging there in my room? |
45933 | Is not this an affinity of a previous existence that my child should be saved by you who loved the first Tama?" |
45933 | Is not this the way between husband and wife?" |
45933 | Is there no way by which I can get free? |
45933 | Is this the boy you wish us to take charge of? |
45933 | It is''Yes,''is it not?" |
45933 | Noticing his avoidance of the proffered refreshment, the prettiest of them artlessly inquired:"Why do n''t you take some sake?" |
45933 | Perhaps in the next world? |
45933 | She now came up and said, as she shrugged her shoulders from side to side:"Now Hikoroku Sama-- what are you doing? |
45933 | Tell me that first?" |
45933 | Tell me their names?" |
45933 | Tell me what province you came from?" |
45933 | Tell me why you speak of parting?" |
45933 | Tell me, have you much money with you?" |
45933 | Then looking at his wife, he asked:"But who are you?" |
45933 | Then noticing the two lifeless bodies lying across the path, he sharply interrogated,"What does this mean? |
45933 | Therefore, at such a time, how would it be for you to sing some song to cheer yourself?" |
45933 | Urasato, I am sure Tokijiro asked you to get him that-- come-- speak the truth now?" |
45933 | Was it all a delusion? |
45933 | Was it possible that the enemy he was seeking to destroy had unexpectedly become a friend? |
45933 | What are you making such a fuss about? |
45933 | What are you saying? |
45933 | What are you talking about? |
45933 | What brings you here at this hour?" |
45933 | What can be the reason for this? |
45933 | What did it portend? |
45933 | What do you want with me now?" |
45933 | What has become of the owner of that extra desk?" |
45933 | What is his name?" |
45933 | What is the matter?" |
45933 | What is the meaning of it all?" |
45933 | What is the use of living any longer? |
45933 | What kind of dress did she wear?" |
45933 | What proof could you possibly have for such base allegations?" |
45933 | What steps shall we take?" |
45933 | What was the cause of the quarrel?" |
45933 | Where can O Yumi have gone to at this hour?" |
45933 | Where can your ladyship have taken refuge all this time?" |
45933 | Where is my reward?" |
45933 | Who can realize the tension of those last minutes, stretched to eternity by the agony of suspense? |
45933 | Who can say what drew us together? |
45933 | Who knows?" |
45933 | Who will lead you by the hand now? |
45933 | Why are you treated like this?" |
45933 | Why did you kill two of my men three months ago-- tell me that?" |
45933 | Why do you hide your secret from me so long? |
45933 | Why do you touch my sword?" |
45933 | Why not tell me your secret frankly?" |
45933 | Will you indeed spare a life forfeited by many errors committed in your service?" |
45933 | Will you not take a bride? |
45933 | Will you not take me to your house and show me where you live?" |
45933 | Wo n''t you let me share the secret?" |
45933 | You have a very troubled face and your eyes are wet with tears... are you ill? |
45933 | Your father is Jurobei and your mother O Yumi?" |
45933 | _ What matter that a hermit''s hut__ Is all our shelter from the blast_? |
45933 | he stammered,"Did you understand and anticipate all this?" |
45933 | said Urasato, sadly,"what can I have done in a former life that this should be insupportable without the sight of you? |
45933 | what am I to do?" |
45933 | what are you saying?" |
45933 | what shall I do? |
45933 | what will become of me, now that you have left me alone? |
43738 | Ah, Glengall is coming home soon? |
43738 | And how did you get into my garden? |
43738 | And how do you do that? |
43738 | And stay all night? 43738 And the dogs?" |
43738 | And the next thing she said,went on Sylvia, taking up the tale,"was,''Where''s that cat?'' |
43738 | And what of that, Squire Leigh? |
43738 | And when you want to go anywhere? |
43738 | And when you want to see the picture galleries? |
43738 | Are you saved? |
43738 | Are you sure you took the medicine I gave you? |
43738 | Are you? |
43738 | As the calendar counts; but we--''we count time by heart- throbs''--doesn''t somebody say that? |
43738 | But am I to be chaperon? |
43738 | But do I look up to him? 43738 But how did they get damp?" |
43738 | But perhaps you have forgotten so long as-- what is it?--ten-- no, five years ago? |
43738 | But that would n''t be fair, would it? |
43738 | But what has happened? 43738 Charity, may I take her away for a few minutes, presently? |
43738 | Did n''t you know? 43738 Did you ever see anything more beautiful than the rose- light on that mountain, Sir Anthony?" |
43738 | Do you like her because she is mine, Pam? 43738 Do you mean the privilege of being called by his name?" |
43738 | Do you remember how you used to come round and climb into my study window for your lessons, when the boys began to go to school? 43738 Do you want me to go, mother?" |
43738 | Do you-- love-- me still? |
43738 | Does Roger Pettingdale think so? 43738 Does that mean that you are not a bad boy, or that you do not sometimes disobey your grandparents?" |
43738 | Drink from what, Miss Pamela? |
43738 | Even when they are grubby? |
43738 | Had you not the time? |
43738 | Happy, mother? 43738 Have you any gods around here?" |
43738 | Have you been out? |
43738 | Have you never imagined, never thought about love? |
43738 | Have you? |
43738 | He is your sister''s lover, then? |
43738 | How did you take it? |
43738 | How do you do, Miss Spencer? |
43738 | How does it come that I have n''t seen Miss Spencer? |
43738 | How long have you been highwaymen? |
43738 | How much? |
43738 | How should I know? |
43738 | How? |
43738 | I beg your pardon, Squire Leigh? |
43738 | I do n''t know-- I did n''t think-- how can I leave-- everybody? |
43738 | I have something I must say to you,she said tremulously;"will you come-- just this once?" |
43738 | I? 43738 If that precious son of yours has gone stark mad over my daughter, what of that?" |
43738 | Indeed? |
43738 | Is it the middle of the night? |
43738 | Is there a house there, then? |
43738 | Kathleen,he breathed,"you are sure?" |
43738 | Kitty? |
43738 | Looking at_ la belle Philomèle_? |
43738 | May I come with you? |
43738 | Mother? 43738 My way?" |
43738 | No? 43738 Not content yet?" |
43738 | Now what''s to be done? |
43738 | Now, what do you mean by that? |
43738 | Sae ye hae been engagit ta look after ta cuddies, eh? |
43738 | Seen Hugh Hawksleigh? |
43738 | Shall you go? |
43738 | She''s quite safe for your sister to be with? |
43738 | Should we take Barbe with us? |
43738 | So you have come, my lad, to see her Majesty about the position of donkey- boy? |
43738 | The river runs quite close to the house? |
43738 | Then why did you not do as you were wished? |
43738 | Then would you mind_ not_? |
43738 | Then you have been in mischief? |
43738 | Then you will one day, Miss Pamela? 43738 Very well, why do n''t you stop it?" |
43738 | Well, Marjorie, do n''t you realise that the facts are all about you, that I----Whatever''s the matter? |
43738 | Well? |
43738 | What are you made of? 43738 What happened then?" |
43738 | What is it, Sandy? 43738 What prince? |
43738 | What will he do with it then? 43738 When you----"she began;"I thought it was for you-- I had heard you say----""Are you going back five years?" |
43738 | Where is the midst? |
43738 | Who could help it? 43738 Who''s''we''?" |
43738 | Whom did you say? |
43738 | Why did you do it? 43738 Why did you not attend to the advice?" |
43738 | Why do n''t you hunt, sir? |
43738 | Why do you want me? |
43738 | Why is it strange, Pam? 43738 Why is n''t Mr. Warde here?" |
43738 | Why keep up the pretence? |
43738 | Why should I reveal our secrets to the enemy? |
43738 | Why should n''t I take you? |
43738 | Why, Pam? |
43738 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
43738 | Wo n''t you try, then? |
43738 | You like her, Pam? |
43738 | You want to be a soldier? |
43738 | You were n''t hunting to- day? |
43738 | You will begin your travels now? |
43738 | You wo n''t go, shall you? |
43738 | You''ll ride her for me, when I am away at Christmas, to get her mouth in? |
43738 | You_ have_ travelled? |
43738 | Your-- book? |
43738 | ''What is it, Mick?'' |
43738 | --the magnitude of the misfortune coming full upon her--"you''re not surely going to miss the Vandaleur dinner?" |
43738 | A pretty plot, do n''t you call it, for a man who poses as a Christian?" |
43738 | An''so ye want shavin''water, do ye? |
43738 | And I repeat-- Why do n''t you stop it?" |
43738 | And how could you get on without me?" |
43738 | And now, Miss Pamela, what have we been quarrelling about?" |
43738 | And then?" |
43738 | And were you not advised to improve your reading and writing?" |
43738 | And where are you going to settle?" |
43738 | And where''s David now?" |
43738 | And who shall blame them? |
43738 | Are you blind? |
43738 | As he moved amongst the crowd I have heard men say,"Who is that?" |
43738 | But he had to face the storm, and it came in this way:"Were not books and paper and ink put before you? |
43738 | But what about Molly?" |
43738 | Can I get you a little sticking- plaster?'' |
43738 | Could he, after all, disturb this serenity by the suggestion of love and marriage? |
43738 | Could n''t you go, mother, in your chair?" |
43738 | Do the girls know you are going? |
43738 | Do you think I would have you go without me?" |
43738 | Do you understand? |
43738 | Do you want me to show you all my degradation? |
43738 | Do you wish to be ignorant all your life, when the time and the means for improvement are placed at your command? |
43738 | Do you, just a little because of that? |
43738 | Ever heard her sing? |
43738 | From what circumstance should we gather that Nathanael was a diligent student of the Old Testament? |
43738 | Glengall ca n''t be old, of course, and any day people may return-- mayn''t they?" |
43738 | Have we been quarrelling?" |
43738 | Hearts and homes gone, what shall we have left?" |
43738 | How did they receive Him? |
43738 | How do you do it?" |
43738 | How long ago is that?" |
43738 | How long?" |
43738 | How many days must go by first? |
43738 | How was the tradition to be broken, and yet broken by one who really belonged to the race? |
43738 | Hugh, how could you travel into those wild countries with me? |
43738 | I knew you would give it up, and how could I bear that? |
43738 | I suppose we''d better be making for home?" |
43738 | I wonder why the mater regards him with so deadly a hatred, though?" |
43738 | If they were so dirty, where else could they be? |
43738 | In what way did St. John the Baptist point out to his disciples that Jesus was the Messiah? |
43738 | In what way does the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews contrast the revelation of God to mankind under the old dispensation with that of the new? |
43738 | In what way was Zedekiah punished? |
43738 | In what words did our Lord show forth His divinity in speaking to Nathanael? |
43738 | Is it''cos you ca n''t walk?" |
43738 | Is n''t it so, Pam?" |
43738 | Is something troubling you?" |
43738 | Is there not another whom you can rescue from sin and bring to the life of God? |
43738 | Margie? |
43738 | Marjorie, glancing at her, asked softly--"Was that too sad? |
43738 | Miss Pamela, would you let me drink from your hands? |
43738 | Oh, well, of course you''ll go to St. James''s Hall to- morrow? |
43738 | See?" |
43738 | Shall I interfere?" |
43738 | Shall I try something else?" |
43738 | Shall we be friends for a little while longer, Pamela darling?" |
43738 | Shall we go now, and talk no more about love to- day?" |
43738 | Shall we, girls? |
43738 | She shook her head, and her heart cried in agony,"How long? |
43738 | That reminds me: what are you going to wear, minx?" |
43738 | The travels are all right, but where''s the book?" |
43738 | Then why do you ask me to come and see you?" |
43738 | They wo n''t like it, eh? |
43738 | Was I mistaken then? |
43738 | What are you going to do this afternoon?" |
43738 | What did this signify? |
43738 | What do you propose to do?" |
43738 | What do you say, Pam? |
43738 | What has that got to do with your clothes and the Bishop?" |
43738 | What have you been doing?" |
43738 | What is the secret of his widely attractive power? |
43738 | What is the special characteristic of the Gospel of St. John? |
43738 | What may be expected when medical and women''s missions are combined? |
43738 | What prophecy was thereby fulfilled? |
43738 | What reference to St. John the Baptist was made by the last of the Old Testament prophets? |
43738 | What should I do next door? |
43738 | What was the great sin of which Zedekiah, king of Judah, was guilty and for which he was punished? |
43738 | What''s the matter, Pam? |
43738 | What''s there to put on? |
43738 | Where is he?" |
43738 | Who do you go to when you want to know anything that father ca n''t teach you?" |
43738 | Who would hold out the longest? |
43738 | Whose did you suppose he was?" |
43738 | Why are you in such a mess?" |
43738 | Why did they follow? |
43738 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
43738 | Why do you deny it now?" |
43738 | Why does God''s loving purpose in sending His Son seem still to suffer so wide defeat? |
43738 | Why does sin still cast its shadow on earth and heaven alike? |
43738 | Why is this? |
43738 | Why''lately''?" |
43738 | Why, Sylvia, what are you doing there, child? |
43738 | Why, surely everybody knows_ him_? |
43738 | Why, then, has the angels''song not been fulfilled? |
43738 | Why, who is going to take you?" |
43738 | Why? |
43738 | Will you go with me, dear, if I go?" |
43738 | Will you send me just a little line of hope and forgiveness? |
43738 | Will you take a wreck?" |
43738 | Will you wait, Kitty?" |
43738 | Would you like her,_ then_?" |
43738 | Yetta was busy stirring the matutinal porridge when he walked into the ben and said:"How do I look, granny?" |
43738 | You are not angry with me?" |
43738 | You are not angry, Miss Pamela?" |
43738 | You have ruined my life-- doesn''t that content you? |
43738 | You will trust me, wo n''t you?" |
43738 | You would n''t care for the admiration of other men, Pam?" |
43738 | You''re only just back from the wilds, are n''t you? |
43738 | [ Illustration:"Oh, can not you help me? |
43738 | [ Illustration:"Tell me what you wished for?"] |
43738 | _ Followed Him._ Who were they? |
43738 | and others answer,"Do n''t you know him? |
43738 | can not you help me? |
43738 | he exclaimed,"how did you get here?" |
43738 | mother, what must I do?" |
43738 | she asked, looking at him-- then speaking out suddenly the pity her thoughts had called up:"Wo n''t it be very lonely?" |
43738 | she said, staring at me,''You have n''t been pullin''that old bell that''s never rung in the memory of man?'' |
43738 | what should I do if you did not come back?" |
43738 | what''s the matter? |
43738 | where are her own clothes?" |
43738 | why did you bring me to the Wishing Well?" |
43738 | you must n''t tell your mother what odd people you''ve found among the wild Irish-- will you?" |
30434 | A humorist, sir? |
30434 | A nice easy job like arresting all the suspected nose- pickers in Mobile, Alabama? |
30434 | A note? |
30434 | A room in the Tower, sir? |
30434 | A secret? |
30434 | A what? |
30434 | A what? |
30434 | About their rights? |
30434 | About what? |
30434 | About what? |
30434 | After all,he finished,"why not?" |
30434 | Ah? |
30434 | Ah? |
30434 | Ah? |
30434 | All right with you? |
30434 | All right? |
30434 | Am I correct? |
30434 | Analysis report? |
30434 | And did he? |
30434 | And has n''t the FBI anything better to do? 30434 And if he does?" |
30434 | And if they all do have names,he went on,"what is it called, when a large group of people are forced to act in a certain manner?" |
30434 | And in the water cooler? |
30434 | And just where,Luba said,"will you be before nine? |
30434 | And moving oneself? |
30434 | And suppose I like planes and trains? |
30434 | And the lying? |
30434 | And the peyotl buttons? |
30434 | And the roadblock? |
30434 | And they are spies? |
30434 | And what did he say? |
30434 | And what is it supposed to mean? |
30434 | And what were your activities? |
30434 | And when they do n''t? |
30434 | And where? 30434 And who''s Shellenberger? |
30434 | And why else? |
30434 | And you do n''t know what''s causing it? |
30434 | Any change? |
30434 | Any more what? |
30434 | Any reasons? |
30434 | Anyhow, if it''s sabotage, who else would be interested in sabotaging the United States? 30434 Anyhow,"he said after a pause,"what was the argument about?" |
30434 | Anything else? |
30434 | Are n''t they always? |
30434 | Are you following me so far? |
30434 | Are you there, anybody? |
30434 | Are you two talking about something? 30434 As a what?" |
30434 | Ask for bright boys and what do you get? 30434 Asked me what?" |
30434 | Asked me, sir? |
30434 | Back at work? |
30434 | Beat your head against a stone wall? |
30434 | Better? |
30434 | Bob? |
30434 | Book? |
30434 | Borbitsch and Garbitsch, they tell you about a murder? 30434 But I did,"Malone said,"And what does that make me?" |
30434 | But how did you know you''d find us_ here_, Malone? |
30434 | But how''s money going to make things any better? |
30434 | But if you did n''t commit any murders, just what_ have_ you been doing since you''ve been in this country as a Soviet agent? |
30434 | But is n''t it just barely possible that these three spies are n''t the real criminals? 30434 But it comes out about right, does n''t it?" |
30434 | But not quite? |
30434 | But the hour; what does that have to do with anything? |
30434 | But the roadblock-- what_ was_ it for, anyhow? |
30434 | But what about them? |
30434 | But what do you mean about your men? |
30434 | But what do you think was in that water cooler, Malone? |
30434 | But what do you want to know about the stuff? 30434 But what was his real name?" |
30434 | But who''s the organization? |
30434 | But why Miami? |
30434 | But why do I always get the real nuts? |
30434 | But why? |
30434 | But wrecking the world because of a man with a mind- shield-- why not just work things so his underlings would n''t obey him? |
30434 | But you did n''t? |
30434 | But you do see what this little argument means, do n''t you? 30434 But you have got some information?" |
30434 | But you''re working things out? |
30434 | But-- how about several people? |
30434 | But--"Three enlisted men carrying M-1 rifles? |
30434 | Ca n''t get rid of it? |
30434 | Can I come to the party? |
30434 | Can I help you? |
30434 | Can Sir Lewis get me all the data on that tonight? |
30434 | Can we go over it again, just the tune this time and leave out the harmony? |
30434 | Can you get hold of Sir Lewis at this time of night? |
30434 | Can you give me a condensed report on what is known-- and I mean_ known_--on telepathy and teleportation? |
30434 | Can you give me any help? |
30434 | Chance? |
30434 | Change? |
30434 | Check and repair them? |
30434 | Checking? |
30434 | Confused how? |
30434 | Contacts? |
30434 | Cops? |
30434 | Days? |
30434 | Dead how? |
30434 | Dead? |
30434 | Dead? |
30434 | Did anybody notice anything in that pile of stuff that might conceivably have any bearing whatever on our problems? |
30434 | Did n''t get it? |
30434 | Did n''t what? |
30434 | Did n''t you hear me say I got the first shipment right where I can put my finger on it? |
30434 | Different? |
30434 | Do n''t you ever get uneasy about the fact that Her Majesty can look into your mind? 30434 Do n''t you hear about anything any more?" |
30434 | Do n''t you? 30434 Do n''t you?" |
30434 | Do that many people get lost in here? |
30434 | Do you always do that to strangers? 30434 Do you ever see either of these boys before?" |
30434 | Do you know what a janitor is? |
30434 | Do you mean nontelepaths receiving some sort of... communication from telepaths? |
30434 | Do you mean to stand there and tell me,Burris went on inexorably,"that you take the word of spies when they tell you about their own activities?" |
30434 | Do you mind waiting that long? |
30434 | Do you really believe that the Russians would send over a bunch of operatives as clodheaded as these are pretending to be? |
30434 | Do you really think, then,Burris said instantly,"that a spy ring could be as utterly inefficient as the one described in those confessions?" |
30434 | Do you still pick them up occasionally? |
30434 | Do you think this... barrier of mine will keep out those little bursts of mental energy? |
30434 | Does he say which is which? |
30434 | Does it happen at regular intervals? |
30434 | Dr. O''Connor,he said,"you know what I mean, do n''t you?" |
30434 | Driver,Malone said in a conversational voice,"can you handle a gun?" |
30434 | Everything? |
30434 | Experience? |
30434 | FBI? |
30434 | FBI? |
30434 | Fake shipment? |
30434 | For me? |
30434 | For what time? |
30434 | Forced? |
30434 | Fred? |
30434 | Friends? |
30434 | Funny? |
30434 | Got it? |
30434 | Hallucinating me? |
30434 | Hanky- panky? |
30434 | Has he come up with any new theories yet? |
30434 | Have you got any hints, then? 30434 Have you tried it, and made it work?" |
30434 | Having sneezed twice at me,the girl said,"do you now feel satisfied? |
30434 | He certainly does n''t_ look_ like the head of a spy ring, does he? |
30434 | He is? |
30434 | He thinks I''d cheat him? |
30434 | He thinks I''d dress up for him or drag down? 30434 Help?" |
30434 | How about Burris? |
30434 | How about a song, baby? 30434 How about court dress? |
30434 | How about me? |
30434 | How about the FBI? |
30434 | How about the ghosts? |
30434 | How about the killer? |
30434 | How about the spies? |
30434 | How about the static explosions? |
30434 | How are the saboteurs doing all this? |
30434 | How are things in good old Las Vegas? |
30434 | How are things, anyhow, Ken? |
30434 | How can we be sure? |
30434 | How come everybody knows about me being on vacation? |
30434 | How come? |
30434 | How could I be doing anything like that without knowing anything about it? |
30434 | How did he react? |
30434 | How did you know? |
30434 | How do you know? |
30434 | How do you mean? |
30434 | How do you think I found you? 30434 How have you tried it?" |
30434 | How long do they think it''s going to last? |
30434 | How long have you been experiencing this disturbance? |
30434 | How long? |
30434 | How long? |
30434 | How many so far? |
30434 | How should I know? |
30434 | How to beat the tables, you mean? |
30434 | How would you go about that? |
30434 | How''d you know I was there? |
30434 | How? |
30434 | How? |
30434 | I can go on? |
30434 | I can? |
30434 | I do? |
30434 | I have? |
30434 | I mean, do I? 30434 I mean, why should all those requirements be necessary?" |
30434 | I mean, would you just go on with the same crimes? |
30434 | I mean: who''s doing it? |
30434 | I shot people? 30434 I suppose it''s some kind of a joke, is n''t it?" |
30434 | I''m on vacation, remember? |
30434 | If I slip on a banana peel, do I blame psionics? 30434 If any of the spies drank the water-- their judgment would be warped, too, would n''t it?" |
30434 | If the errors were just ordinary accidental errors, then how were the spies responsible? 30434 If there are n''t so many spies, then how is all this getting done?" |
30434 | If you''re on special assignment why not tell the rest of us? |
30434 | In Her Majesty? 30434 In the morning?" |
30434 | Is everybody dead? |
30434 | Is it fun? |
30434 | Is it the fastest? |
30434 | Is that bad? |
30434 | Is that necessary? |
30434 | Is that proof? |
30434 | Is that where a person projects a thought into somebody else''s mind? |
30434 | Is... is that all it is? |
30434 | It does n''t have one what? |
30434 | It does n''t? |
30434 | It is n''t? |
30434 | It is silly to be formal now, is n''t it? |
30434 | It is? |
30434 | It is? |
30434 | It''s happening all over? |
30434 | Joke? |
30434 | Just what happens during those crazy bursts of static? |
30434 | Ken,he said,"do you mind if I smoke? |
30434 | Let you know? |
30434 | Like now? |
30434 | Like what? |
30434 | Lou, how long are you going to be here? 30434 Magic?" |
30434 | Make that fast, will you? |
30434 | Malone,Boyd said in a depressed tone,"you can spoil more ideas--""Well,"Malone said,"would you go out with her again?" |
30434 | Malone,Burris said slowly,"just what''s bothering you? |
30434 | Malone,Sir Lewis said,"do you think you''re the only one with a mental shield?" |
30434 | Malone,he asked gently,"how did you know we would be here?" |
30434 | Malone,he said,"what does pig- Latin have to do with anything?" |
30434 | May I come in? |
30434 | May I remind you that this is Yucca Flats? 30434 Maybe you want something a little out of the ordinary-- get what I mean?" |
30434 | Me? |
30434 | Me? |
30434 | Me? |
30434 | Me? |
30434 | Mind if I get it out? |
30434 | Mind? |
30434 | Money? |
30434 | Mr. Malone,he said,"are you ill?" |
30434 | Much less who I was? |
30434 | My mission? |
30434 | New theories? |
30434 | Next question? |
30434 | No matter how long it takes? |
30434 | No? |
30434 | Nor what the purpose of it is? |
30434 | Not even one of them? |
30434 | Not thinking at all? |
30434 | Not with any of the computers? |
30434 | Nothing at all wrong? |
30434 | Now that the contacts are gone and everybody''s dead or resigned or being investigated,Palveri said,"what do you think''s happened to all that? |
30434 | Now, about those spies--"See what I mean? |
30434 | Now, this writer... what''s his name? |
30434 | O.K.? |
30434 | Of course? |
30434 | Oh, have you? |
30434 | Oh? |
30434 | On strike? 30434 On the other hand, why not buy your own? |
30434 | One:Malone said,"How come Her Majesty and the other nutty telepaths did n''t spot you? |
30434 | Only two? |
30434 | Our song? |
30434 | Out of kilter? |
30434 | Paranoid? |
30434 | Peaceful? 30434 Pick up any more?" |
30434 | Protection from what? |
30434 | Protection? |
30434 | React? |
30434 | Ready for a vast feast? |
30434 | Real spies? |
30434 | Really? |
30434 | Really? |
30434 | Really? |
30434 | Reserved here? |
30434 | Right? |
30434 | Right? |
30434 | Roadblock? |
30434 | Rome? |
30434 | Room forty? |
30434 | Several people? |
30434 | Sex? |
30434 | Shall we get back to the business at hand? |
30434 | Sir Lewis Carter? |
30434 | Sir Lewis? |
30434 | Sir Thomas--"Yes, Sir Kenneth? |
30434 | Sleuth,she said,"do n''t you ever take a chance?" |
30434 | So we had to confiscate the cargo, did n''t we? |
30434 | So who''s the girl? |
30434 | So you''re not in the market for any more buttons? |
30434 | So? |
30434 | So? |
30434 | Specialized investigation? |
30434 | Spies? |
30434 | Spies? |
30434 | Spirit control? |
30434 | Spirits, Malone? |
30434 | Static? |
30434 | Still conjuring up ghosts? |
30434 | Stutter? |
30434 | Such as? |
30434 | Suppose they''re doing it in such a way that the larger group does n''t even suspect that manipulation is going on? |
30434 | Tell me, Sir Lewis,he said,"have you had many instances of a single man, or a small group of men, controlling the actions of a much larger group? |
30434 | Tell me, have you figured out what they might be, yet? |
30434 | That would have been Miss Luba Ardanko''s room, sir? |
30434 | The chief wo n''t like--"Can you send me the dossiers? |
30434 | The doll? |
30434 | The luminous gauze, for instance, that passes for ectoplasm; the various methods of table- lifting; control of the ouija board-- things like that? |
30434 | The machines? |
30434 | The mayor''s resigned, remember? |
30434 | The only leave not canceled? |
30434 | The question is: How? |
30434 | The rest of the water,Malone hazarded,"was warm?" |
30434 | The same as ever? |
30434 | The sheriff''s office is the worst, though? |
30434 | The stuff from out on the desert? |
30434 | The tricks of the trade, so to speak? |
30434 | The what? |
30434 | The what? |
30434 | Then how can you have an alibi? |
30434 | Then the operators of this strange force, whatever it may prove to be, must have some interest in allowing the spies''confession? |
30434 | Then why,Burris said with great patience,"did you arrest them?" |
30434 | There are a lot more guides than you''d expect, are n''t there? |
30434 | There''s a lot of strange things happening lately, are n''t there? |
30434 | There, what? |
30434 | They do n''t? |
30434 | They''re all gone? |
30434 | They? |
30434 | Things are tough, huh? |
30434 | Tonight? |
30434 | Trouble? |
30434 | Want a driver? |
30434 | Want me to tell Burris you called? |
30434 | Want them to bring in the next one? |
30434 | Want them to come in and help? |
30434 | Was he thinking about things or were things thinking about him? |
30434 | Was n''t that fun? |
30434 | We do? |
30434 | We got to stop scab trucking, do n''t we? 30434 Well, then, what?" |
30434 | Well, then,Lou said in a suspiciously sweet voice,"suppose I talk to Sir Lewis Carter, and tell him to keep you in New York? |
30434 | Well, then,Malone said,"how do you know when the murders were done? |
30434 | Well, then,he said,"can I see Her Majesty?" |
30434 | Well, then,the general said,"why do n''t you blast him out of there?" |
30434 | Well, was Brubitsch telling the truth? |
30434 | Well,he said,"you know this California thing?" |
30434 | Well? |
30434 | Well? |
30434 | What about? |
30434 | What am I going to get? |
30434 | What are they like? |
30434 | What are you doing here? |
30434 | What are you doing in Las Vegas? |
30434 | What are you talking about, Malone? |
30434 | What are you trying to do? |
30434 | What did Garbitsch do with the information? |
30434 | What did you do with your information? |
30434 | What do I want with a new load? 30434 What do you mean, Malone?" |
30434 | What do you mean, bad? |
30434 | What do you mean, it''s not right? |
30434 | What do you mean? |
30434 | What do you mean? |
30434 | What do you think? |
30434 | What does that have to do with it? |
30434 | What else did you do? |
30434 | What else do you do, Sweetheart? |
30434 | What else? |
30434 | What evidence is there that they''re guilty? |
30434 | What fight? |
30434 | What for? |
30434 | What happened then? |
30434 | What happened? |
30434 | What have we got to lose but our minds? 30434 What is it being done for? |
30434 | What is it, ghosts? |
30434 | What is it? |
30434 | What is that supposed to mean? |
30434 | What is your business with us? |
30434 | What sort of logic,Sir Lewis was saying,"led you to the belief that we would all be here, in Andrew''s house?" |
30434 | What story? |
30434 | What time? |
30434 | What time_ is_ it? |
30434 | What was it about? |
30434 | What was? |
30434 | What were you supposed to look for? |
30434 | What what is? |
30434 | What''re you doing out here? |
30434 | What''s causing these disturbances? |
30434 | What''s going on? |
30434 | What''s happening? |
30434 | What''s surprising about it? |
30434 | What''s the matter? |
30434 | What''s this about? |
30434 | What''s this business about a static explosion? |
30434 | What''s this, the trunk again? |
30434 | What,he said,"will they think of next?" |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What? |
30434 | What_ about_ Martinis? |
30434 | What_ is_ he thinking? |
30434 | When do the men in the white coats arrive? |
30434 | When nobody knows what''s going to happen tomorrow? 30434 When the M-1''s out of date? |
30434 | Where are they? |
30434 | Where to, Mac? |
30434 | Where was I? |
30434 | Where? |
30434 | Which Greek letter? |
30434 | Which ones? |
30434 | White coats? |
30434 | Who is causing these telepathic flashes? |
30434 | Who is? |
30434 | Who knows? |
30434 | Who knows? |
30434 | Who knows? |
30434 | Who knows? |
30434 | Who knows? |
30434 | Who wants to talk to him? |
30434 | Who was your contact in Russia? |
30434 | Who''d ever think,Malone said,"that he plotted those killings in Redstone-- all three of them?" |
30434 | Who''s dead? 30434 Who''s the passenger?" |
30434 | Who''ve you got in the Observation Room? |
30434 | Who? |
30434 | Why are you doing this? |
30434 | Why do we have to be? |
30434 | Why not? |
30434 | Why not? |
30434 | Why not? |
30434 | Why not? |
30434 | Why would anybody put it there otherwise? |
30434 | Why? |
30434 | Why? |
30434 | Why? |
30434 | Will I be in the book when it''s published? |
30434 | Will there be anything else? |
30434 | Willie Logan-- who used to be a spy for the Russians, just because he did n''t know any better, poor boy? |
30434 | With dough,Malone said,"you could fix up what''s been happening?" |
30434 | With the checking we do? 30434 Without what?" |
30434 | Would n''t a State''s attorney live in Carson City? |
30434 | Yes or no what? |
30434 | Yes or no? |
30434 | Yes, Ch-- Yes? |
30434 | Yes, Sir Kenneth? |
30434 | Yes, sir? |
30434 | Yes, sir? |
30434 | Yes, sir? |
30434 | Yes? |
30434 | Yes? |
30434 | Yes? |
30434 | Yes? |
30434 | You Malone? |
30434 | You a tourist? |
30434 | You can read me? |
30434 | You can? |
30434 | You did n''t know I was answering you? |
30434 | You did n''t know I was around, did you? 30434 You do?" |
30434 | You do? |
30434 | You kidding? |
30434 | You know about the shipments? |
30434 | You know,he said,"every time I say that name I have to reassure myself that we''re not all walking around in the world of Florenz Ziegfeld?" |
30434 | You mean I''m a telepath? |
30434 | You mean you did n''t know? |
30434 | You remember Willie, do n''t you? |
30434 | You remember me-- hey? |
30434 | You see? |
30434 | You still here? |
30434 | You think maybe I''m smuggling in showgirls from the edge of town? |
30434 | You throwing names around to impress me? |
30434 | You want me to take loyalty oaths from people? |
30434 | You want proof? |
30434 | You want them right away? |
30434 | You want to hear trouble? 30434 You want to ruin my business? |
30434 | You''re back on duty, Malone? |
30434 | You''re looking into the resignation out there, are n''t you? |
30434 | You''re not? |
30434 | You''re sure? |
30434 | You''ve been talking to my Royal Psychiatrist again, have n''t you? |
30434 | You''ve tried it? |
30434 | You? |
30434 | Your Majesty,he said,"would you mind terribly if I asked you questions before you answered them? |
30434 | _ Sir_ Kenneth? |
30434 | ''Is this what the common folk call telepathy, Lord Bromley?'' |
30434 | ''Much too good for them, is n''t it?'' |
30434 | *****"The next one,"Malone said grimly,"is: what''s behind the flashes? |
30434 | *****"Think he was telling the truth?" |
30434 | *****"This is the one who wo n''t talk, eh?" |
30434 | *****"Well?" |
30434 | A couple of weeks ago the Golden Palace guy knocked himself off, and where does that leave me? |
30434 | A hand over her mouth? |
30434 | A pause, and then another voice, this one female:"Is this all right, Mr. Palveri? |
30434 | A sudden stream of unstoppable words? |
30434 | After all, he''d gotten the investigation started, had n''t he? |
30434 | After all, what could be anybody''s purpose in goofing up a bunch of calculators the way they had? |
30434 | After all, what did he have to work with, as far as his job was concerned? |
30434 | After all, what evidence_ did_ he have for his psionic theory? |
30434 | All right?" |
30434 | Am I telepathic? |
30434 | And Shellenberger got in the middle of it, see? |
30434 | And a captain with his bars on sideways? |
30434 | And doing it in such a way that the larger group does n''t even know it is being manipulated?" |
30434 | And guess what?" |
30434 | And how did he get in the way?" |
30434 | And so what?" |
30434 | And there was n''t any other theory, was there? |
30434 | And three: What was it that was so safe about busting up civilization? |
30434 | And what other information have you got?" |
30434 | And when you said that about going where I want to go--""An old song with avacados in it?" |
30434 | And who are you, anyhow?" |
30434 | And who is the next one?" |
30434 | And why did they stop after the spies were arrested? |
30434 | And why had they started the whole row in the first place? |
30434 | And yet it take more power than any of these?" |
30434 | And you feel, Sirrah, that a telepathic command is the cause of this confusion?" |
30434 | And, after all, it was the proper way to treat a Queen, was n''t it? |
30434 | And, come to think of it, was n''t it possible that Her Majesty had slipped just a little off the trolley of her one- track psychosis? |
30434 | Any ideas at all?" |
30434 | At dinner, say... around nine?" |
30434 | Believe me?" |
30434 | Boyd exploded,"Let me find out for myself, will you? |
30434 | But can you give me as much as you think I can digest?" |
30434 | But did he want it to? |
30434 | But how about changes? |
30434 | But how come he sends you down without telling me?" |
30434 | But it was strictly a legitimate proposition, understand?" |
30434 | But then, how was he supposed to feel? |
30434 | But what do you want me to do about that?" |
30434 | But what else did he know about it? |
30434 | But what else is there to go on?" |
30434 | But what was all the static about? |
30434 | But what''s causing it? |
30434 | But where was the here? |
30434 | But who? |
30434 | But whoever heard of a scien-- psiontist-- falling in love with an amoeba? |
30434 | But why Sand? |
30434 | But you can do that_ after_ you make the report to me, ca n''t you?" |
30434 | But... well, Sir Kenneth, have you ever seen disturbance on a TV screen, when there''s some powerful electric output nearby? |
30434 | CK: Is Russia having trble? |
30434 | CK: Is Russia having trble?" |
30434 | Ca n''t you do the job any faster?" |
30434 | Come to think of it, why the gangs? |
30434 | Could a sane telepath do what an insane one couldn''t-- and project thoughts, or at least mental bursts? |
30434 | Could she get worse or better? |
30434 | Could she start lying to people-- for the fun of it, or for reasons of her own?" |
30434 | Did n''t convictions ever stand up, anyhow, or lie down? |
30434 | Do I even blame the United Fruit Growers? |
30434 | Do I have feathers in my hair?" |
30434 | Do I have strange powers?" |
30434 | Do I look like an Indian? |
30434 | Do n''t you ever sleep?" |
30434 | Do n''t you think those men_ are_ spies? |
30434 | Do you mean that_ I''m_ the one causing all this... mental static?" |
30434 | Does a small child commit a murder? |
30434 | Does it perform helpful tasks? |
30434 | Does n''t that make sense?" |
30434 | Fair?" |
30434 | Garage made me a price, you know, I had to be an idiot to turn it down? |
30434 | Get it?" |
30434 | Get what I mean?" |
30434 | Get what I mean?" |
30434 | Good- by, Mr.... Malone, is n''t it?" |
30434 | Got a messenger?" |
30434 | Got anything here that might fit me?" |
30434 | Got it?" |
30434 | Had he been manipulated, in spite of his shield, as easily as they had manipulated so many others? |
30434 | Has somebody assassinated the entire Senate? |
30434 | He asked the question anyhow, just for the record:"What particular psychodrug was this one?" |
30434 | He came back to his chair, sat down, and said:"What''s our next step, Ken?" |
30434 | He could just picture Burris looking blankly at an FBI roster and saying:"Malone? |
30434 | Her name begins with L?" |
30434 | How about it, doctor? |
30434 | How about that? |
30434 | How did that save us from the Last War?" |
30434 | How did the technicians feed the wrong data into the machines?" |
30434 | Hypnotism? |
30434 | I got a passenger, how do I know who he is? |
30434 | I mean, ca n''t you go and sneeze at counterfeiters in their lairs, or wherever they might be?" |
30434 | I mean, do you mind the smell of cigars?" |
30434 | I mean, is it larger than a breadbox? |
30434 | I''m a cookie manufacturer, remember?" |
30434 | If he could make himself telepathically"invisible,"why could n''t someone else? |
30434 | If his mind could be changed by a burst of wild mental power-- and why not? |
30434 | If something is static, it does n''t move-- and whoever heard of a motionless explosion?" |
30434 | Interested?" |
30434 | Is it possible, Malone asked himself, that_ I_ am the one who is as a little child? |
30434 | Is it possible?" |
30434 | Is it self- employed?" |
30434 | Is it some new sort of perversion?" |
30434 | Is it still Brubitsch, Borbitsch and Garbitsch putting psychodrugs in water- coolers, or has something new been added?" |
30434 | Is that correct?" |
30434 | Is that it?" |
30434 | Is there a package for me?" |
30434 | It figures we can take them, right?" |
30434 | It is important, is n''t it?" |
30434 | It was kind of a joke, see? |
30434 | It''s possible, is n''t it?" |
30434 | Just a gag, see? |
30434 | Just fun?" |
30434 | Just quit all this amoebing around, O.K.?" |
30434 | Ken, are you working on something psionic?" |
30434 | Knock- out pills in her drink? |
30434 | Know anything about that?" |
30434 | Like, maybe, she''s ninety years old?" |
30434 | Little green men?" |
30434 | Look for psionic people? |
30434 | Look for psionic people?" |
30434 | Lord?" |
30434 | Louie? |
30434 | Louise? |
30434 | Lovely? |
30434 | Luke? |
30434 | Making improper advances to the local contingent of chorines?" |
30434 | Malone nearly asked:"Where?" |
30434 | Malone opened his mouth, shut it again and finally managed to say:"Me?" |
30434 | Malone, why do n''t you... well, go home and get some rest? |
30434 | Malone?" |
30434 | Malone?" |
30434 | Malone?" |
30434 | Malone?" |
30434 | Martians? |
30434 | Martians? |
30434 | Mingling with the Las Vegas crowds might give him some sort of a lead-- and, besides, he had to act like a man on vacation, did n''t he? |
30434 | My account books are in duplicate-- you know? |
30434 | Now--"he puffed at his pipe--"can you give me a logical reason for arriving at the decision you made a few hours ago?" |
30434 | O.K.?" |
30434 | O.K.?" |
30434 | Of course, I''m not an expert--""Who is?" |
30434 | Only what kind of force was being used? |
30434 | Or do n''t you care?" |
30434 | Or do you want to sneeze at somebody else?" |
30434 | Or had he been led astray by them? |
30434 | Or has your mission been accomplished?" |
30434 | Or in New York? |
30434 | Or the President and his Cabinet? |
30434 | Palveri?" |
30434 | Palveri?" |
30434 | Problem: how do you go about latching on to anything as downright nonexistent as all that? |
30434 | Psionics never did make you very happy, did it?" |
30434 | Remember? |
30434 | Remember?" |
30434 | Remember?" |
30434 | Right, Malone?" |
30434 | Right, Your Majesty?" |
30434 | Right?" |
30434 | Russians? |
30434 | Russians? |
30434 | See?" |
30434 | See?" |
30434 | Set US up for invasion? |
30434 | Set US up for invasion? |
30434 | She was part of the Psychical Research Society, why had n''t he thought to wonder why she was connected with it? |
30434 | So what?" |
30434 | So when I was in town I talked around with Si Deeds... you know Si? |
30434 | So with this doll--""How long ago did all this happen?" |
30434 | Somewhere very far away?" |
30434 | Such as, for instance, covering up their methods of doing damage? |
30434 | Sunspots? |
30434 | Suppose they''re not?" |
30434 | Tell me, is there anything I can do for you? |
30434 | That I, myself, have top- security clearance for my special projects? |
30434 | That the security checks here are as careful as anywhere in the world? |
30434 | That true?" |
30434 | That was all very well and good, but just what was the handbasket made of? |
30434 | The big question was: where were all the facts he needed? |
30434 | The bright, senseless snowstorms, the meaningless hash?" |
30434 | Then there was the Reformation, and the Prussians in 1870, and the Spanish in 1898, and--""And?" |
30434 | Then they would hold him prisoner while they devised ways to.... To what? |
30434 | There was this fight, see? |
30434 | This here is Q- Yellow-- see the yellow stripe on the wall?" |
30434 | Two: How come you sent me out on these jobs when you were afraid I was dangerous? |
30434 | Understand?" |
30434 | Very well, then: Malone, what more proof do you want?" |
30434 | Want me to exorcise''em for you?" |
30434 | Was he related to the girl? |
30434 | Was he right? |
30434 | We had to stop them; it was a service to the Brotherhood, understand?" |
30434 | Well, George Lamel who owns the place, he''s an old friend, you know? |
30434 | Well, this new cab--""Can we get back to the present for a little while?" |
30434 | Were the people he''d been beaming to really here? |
30434 | What are you doing calling up the FBI, or do you just want to feel superior to us poor working slobs?" |
30434 | What can I do for you?" |
30434 | What crime is this?" |
30434 | What did they plan to do? |
30434 | What did they plan to do? |
30434 | What did they tell him? |
30434 | What do you do?" |
30434 | What do you know about telepathic projection?" |
30434 | What is it?" |
30434 | What kind of psionic force would it take to make so many people in the United States goof up the way they were doing? |
30434 | What murder?" |
30434 | What real evidence is there, Malone, that these three spies... these three comic- opera spies-- are innocent?" |
30434 | What was going on? |
30434 | What was his next move? |
30434 | What was waiting for him inside? |
30434 | What were they doing now? |
30434 | What were they doing now? |
30434 | What would spies be doing in the Mafia?" |
30434 | What''s happening here, officer?" |
30434 | What''s up now?" |
30434 | When he finally came up for air, he said:"Lou--""Yes, Ken?" |
30434 | When you slip on a banana peel, does it matter whether or not the United Fruit Growers are out on strike?" |
30434 | Where did he go from here? |
30434 | Where do you want the material sent? |
30434 | Where does our course point from that agreement, Sirrah?" |
30434 | Where else could I be appointed Royal Psychiatrist, Advisor to the Crown, and Earl Marshal?" |
30434 | Where had they gone? |
30434 | Where was the PRS? |
30434 | Where were they? |
30434 | Where, he asked himself, was he going? |
30434 | Where, he wondered, did he go from here? |
30434 | Who did he know, he thought, who was large, old, disguised and efficient? |
30434 | Who else would be in Miami Beach, far away from his home state, while the President was declaring nationwide martial law? |
30434 | Who else would you be?" |
30434 | Who knows cause? |
30434 | Who knows cause?" |
30434 | Who''d ever said that_ all_ the telepaths were in Yucca Flats? |
30434 | Who''s been killed?" |
30434 | Who''s he?" |
30434 | Why bother me with it?" |
30434 | Why do n''t you go and sneeze at somebody else? |
30434 | Why do n''t you think so?" |
30434 | Why do n''t you try and find one somewhere? |
30434 | Why had n''t he wondered whether other telepaths might not have the same shield? |
30434 | Why hide your light under an alibi?" |
30434 | Will you vanish softly and silently away? |
30434 | With the way I''ve known some of these guys from childhood? |
30434 | Wonderful? |
30434 | Would have been?" |
30434 | Would it do any good to tell you that the fascination with this form of greeting is not universal? |
30434 | Would something like that be possible?" |
30434 | You believe that, do n''t you?" |
30434 | You do n''t have any idea where any of them went?" |
30434 | You know? |
30434 | You know? |
30434 | You know?" |
30434 | You mind singing without a piano?" |
30434 | You see that?" |
30434 | You want me to go and get it?" |
30434 | You want me to show you something else?" |
30434 | You want to be a friend of mine?" |
30434 | [ Illustration]"Nice?" |
30434 | _ Am I being interfered with?_ He did n''t feel any different. |
30434 | _ Brubitsch?_ Malone thought. |
30434 | _ Is my mind acting up again?_ he thought, knowing she would pick it up. |
30434 | _ Now what is that supposed to mean?_"I do n''t know, Sir Kenneth,"Her Majesty said. |
30434 | _ Opportunity_? |
30434 | because what does he care? |
30434 | phenomenon?" |
30434 | trouble?" |
20447 | But you believe in eternal damnation, do you not? |
20447 | Did you deliver it? |
20447 | Do you believe in eternal punishment, as set forth in the confession of faith? |
20447 | Has anyone seen a map of the land of Nod? |
20447 | Have you preached on that subject lately? |
20447 | Is the keen logic and broad humanity of Ingersoll converting the brain and heart of Christendom? |
20447 | Well, what was the matter--did you drink, or cheat your employer, or were you idle? |
20447 | What was the trouble? |
20447 | Where are the four rivers that ran murmuring through the groves of Paradise? |
20447 | Where do you come from? |
20447 | Who was Cain''s wife? |
20447 | Who was the snake? 20447 A gentleman passing, stopped for a moment and said to the little girl:What relation is the little boy to you?" |
20447 | About how many have taken part in the recent nominations? |
20447 | About what age were you when you began this investigation which led to your present convictions? |
20447 | Above the grave what can the honest minister say? |
20447 | According to your views, what disposition is made of man after death? |
20447 | After all, has he not pursued the same method with me that he blames me for pursuing in regard to the Bible? |
20447 | Although you are not in favor of taking the Philippines by force, how do you regard the administration in its conduct of the war? |
20447 | And are they not, in spite of their professions to the contrary, enemies to republican liberty? |
20447 | And if she is granted one, is virtue in danger, and shall we lose the high ideal of home life? |
20447 | And in what way has not Spiritualism done good? |
20447 | And is it desirable that this relation should be rendered sacred by a church? |
20447 | And is there a woman so heartless and so immoral that she would force another to bear what she would shudderingly avoid? |
20447 | And the same old question is upon us now: What shall be done with the victims of drink? |
20447 | And what did you think of it? |
20447 | And what do you think of the modern development of metaphysics-- as expressed outside of the emotional and semi- ecclesiastical schools? |
20447 | And what shall I say of Sidney Carton? |
20447 | And why should we take so much pains to free the body, and then enslave the mind? |
20447 | And, after all, is not a noble man, is not a pure woman, the finest revelation we have of God-- if there be one? |
20447 | Are all mediums impostors? |
20447 | Are not parallel railroads an evil? |
20447 | Are not persons allowed to testify in the United States whether they believe in future rewards and punishments or not? |
20447 | Are not religion and morals inseparable? |
20447 | Are not the Catholics the least progressive? |
20447 | Are our workingmen to wear wooden shoes? |
20447 | Are the doctrines of Agnosticism gaining ground, and what, in your opinion, will be the future of the church? |
20447 | Are the fathers and brothers blameless who allow young girls to make coats, cloaks and vests in an atmosphere poisoned by the ignorant and low- bred? |
20447 | Are the millions of Spiritualists deluded? |
20447 | Are there not some human natures so morally weak or diseased that they can not keep from sin without the aid of some sort of religion? |
20447 | Are they in any sense correct? |
20447 | Are they rectifying the error now? |
20447 | Are they sincere-- have they any real basis for their psychological theories? |
20447 | Are we not entering upon the era of our greatest prosperity? |
20447 | Are we really in need of the children born of such parents? |
20447 | Are women becoming freed from the bonds of sectarianism? |
20447 | Are you aware that it has been attempted to show that some money loaned or given him by yourself was really what he purchased the pistol with? |
20447 | Are you getting nearer to or farther away from God, Christianity and the Bible? |
20447 | Are you going to make a formal reply to their sermons? |
20447 | Are you going to take any part in the campaign? |
20447 | Are you in favor of expansion? |
20447 | Are you in favor of the A. P. A.? |
20447 | Are you in favor of the annexation of Canada? |
20447 | Are you in sympathy with the workingmen and their objects? |
20447 | Are you seeking to quit public lecturing on religious questions? |
20447 | Are you still a Republican in political belief? |
20447 | Are you to go on the lecture platform again? |
20447 | Are you willing to give your opinion of the Pope? |
20447 | As Truth can brook no compromises, has it not the same limitations that surround social and domestic hospitality? |
20447 | As a lawyer, will you express an opinion as to the moral and legal responsibility of a victim of alcoholism? |
20447 | Ball and Burchard? |
20447 | Besides, if this woman of whom he speaks was a lady, how did she happen to stay where obscene language was being used? |
20447 | But do n''t you think, Colonel, that the materialistic philosophy, even in the light of your own interpretation, is essentially pessimistic? |
20447 | But do you not think the Greenback movement will help the Democracy to success in 1880? |
20447 | But has the Republican party all the good and the Democratic all the bad? |
20447 | But if it clings to soft money? |
20447 | But if they will not disband? |
20447 | But suppose that the Chinese came to look upon wheat in the same light that other people look upon wheat and its product, bread? |
20447 | But suppose they give the same receptions in the South? |
20447 | But the question arises, What is Christianity? |
20447 | But unless it can be shown that Atheism interferes with the sight, the hearing, or the memory, why should justice shut the door to truth? |
20447 | But what about the Prohibitionists? |
20447 | But what about there being"belief"in Matthew? |
20447 | But what can we say of a marriage where the parties hate each other? |
20447 | But what is the simple assertion of Thomas Carlyle worth? |
20447 | But what would you do if they should make an attempt to arrest you? |
20447 | But who will win? |
20447 | But would n''t it be better for the people if the railroads were managed by the Government as is the Post- Office? |
20447 | But, Colonel, is there no danger of greatly interfering with a woman''s duties as wife and mother? |
20447 | Can any one, by studying geology, find the locality of the great white throne? |
20447 | Can anyone imagine that such a course would add to the joy of Paradise, or even tend to keep one harp in tune? |
20447 | Can anything be more infamous than to endeavor to make a woman, under such circumstances, remain with such a man? |
20447 | Can it be said that a State is"free"that is absolutely governed by the Nation? |
20447 | Can she never sit by her own hearth, with the arms of her children about her neck, and by her side a husband who loves and protects her? |
20447 | Can the good of society require the woman to remain? |
20447 | Can the virtue of others be preserved only by the destruction of her happiness, and by what might be called her perpetual imprisonment? |
20447 | Can these phenomena be considered aside from any connection with, or form of, superstition? |
20447 | Can they do this as long as the Government collects ninety million dollars per annum from that one source? |
20447 | Can you find in the graveyard of nations this epitaph:"Died of a Surplus"? |
20447 | Can you guess as to what the platform in going to contain? |
20447 | Can you offer any explanation of the extraordinary phenomena such as Henry J. Newton has had produced at his own house under his own supervision? |
20447 | Can, or ought, the Liberals and Spiritualists to unite? |
20447 | Christianity certainly fosters charity? |
20447 | Colonel Ingersoll, are you a Socialist? |
20447 | Colonel, are your views of religion based upon the Bible? |
20447 | Colonel, crossing the Atlantic back to America, what do you think of the Greenback movement? |
20447 | Colonel, did you ever kill any game? |
20447 | Colonel, have you read the revised Testament? |
20447 | Colonel, to start with, what do you think of the solid South? |
20447 | Colonel, what do you think about Mr. Cleveland''s Hawaiian policy? |
20447 | Colonel, what do you think of the course the Mayor has pursued toward you in attempting to stop your lecture? |
20447 | Colonel, what is your opinion of Secularism? |
20447 | Did God know how Herod would use his freedom? |
20447 | Did God know what Herod would do? |
20447 | Did God write it? |
20447 | Did he ever mention the quarto in any letter, essay, or in any way? |
20447 | Did he have a copy? |
20447 | Did he know that he would become the villain in the drama of Christ? |
20447 | Did he know that he would cause the children to be slaughtered in his vain efforts to kill the infant Christ? |
20447 | Did he mention the copy in his will? |
20447 | Did the hand that was stretched out to him on the stage of the Academy reach across the chasm which separates orthodoxy from infidelity? |
20447 | Did they write exactly what the Holy Spirit wanted them to write? |
20447 | Did you anticipate a verdict? |
20447 | Did you discuss the matter with him? |
20447 | Did you make this remark as a Christian, or as a lady? |
20447 | Did you read Mr. Courtney''s answer? |
20447 | Did you say these words to illustrate in some faint degree the refining influence upon women of the religion you preach? |
20447 | Do I understand you to imply that there will be a neutral policy, as it were, towards the South? |
20447 | Do liberal books, such as the works of Paine and Infidel scientists sell well? |
20447 | Do many people write to you upon this subject; and what spirit do they manifest? |
20447 | Do n''t you think that some good has been accomplished, some valuable information obtained, by vivisection? |
20447 | Do n''t you think that the pass system is an injustice--that is, that ordinary travelers are taxed for the man who rides on a pass? |
20447 | Do n''t you think the belief of the Agnostic is more satisfactory to the believer than that of the Atheist? |
20447 | Do newspapers to- day exercise as much influence as they did twenty- five years ago? |
20447 | Do not its facts and conclusions prove, if not immortality, at least the continuity of life beyond the grave? |
20447 | Do not the evidences of design in the universe prove a Creator? |
20447 | Do these things really happen? |
20447 | Do they believe that by forcing people to remain together who despise each other they are adding to the purity of the marriage relation? |
20447 | Do they deserve any credit for the course they have taken? |
20447 | Do they forget that people have a choice? |
20447 | Do they not know that all marriage is an outward act, testifying to that which has happened in the heart? |
20447 | Do they not understand something of the human heart, and that true love has always been as pure as the morning star? |
20447 | Do they not, as a rule, give something to deaden pain? |
20447 | Do they sustain any relation except that of hunter and hunted-- that is, of tyrant and victim? |
20447 | Do they, so far as you know, justify his charge? |
20447 | Do you agree with George''s principles? |
20447 | Do you agree with Mr. Carnegie that a college education is of little or no practical value to a man? |
20447 | Do you agree with the Pope in attacking the present governments of Europe and the memories of Mazzini and Saffi? |
20447 | Do you agree with the Pope that:"Sound rules of life must be founded on religion"? |
20447 | Do you apprehend any trouble from the Southern leaders in this closing session of Congress, in attempts to force pernicious legislation? |
20447 | Do you believe Madame Blavatsky does or has done the wonderful things related of her? |
20447 | Do you believe in a God; and, if so, what kind of a God? |
20447 | Do you believe in free text- books in the public schools? |
20447 | Do you believe in socialism? |
20447 | Do you believe in spirit entities, whether manifestible or not? |
20447 | Do you believe in the existence of a Supreme Being? |
20447 | Do you believe in the resurrection of the body? |
20447 | Do you believe that any sane man ever had a vision? |
20447 | Do you believe that the Democratic success was due to the possession of reverse principles? |
20447 | Do you believe that the divorced should be allowed to marry again? |
20447 | Do you believe that the race is growing moral or immoral? |
20447 | Do you believe that the spirit lives as an individual after the body is dead? |
20447 | Do you believe that the world, and all that is in it came by chance? |
20447 | Do you believe that there is such a thing as a miracle, or that there has ever been? |
20447 | Do you believe the people can be made to do without a stimulant? |
20447 | Do you believe the spirits of the dead come back to earth? |
20447 | Do you believe there will ever be a millennium, and if so how will it come about? |
20447 | Do you believe, or disbelieve, in the immortality of the soul? |
20447 | Do you care to say who your choice is for Republican nominee for President in 1888? |
20447 | Do you consider any religion adequate? |
20447 | Do you consider inebriety a disease, or the result of diseased conditions? |
20447 | Do you consider marriage a contract or a sacrament? |
20447 | Do you consider that churches are injurious to the community? |
20447 | Do you consider that society in general has been made better by religious influences? |
20447 | Do you consider the new ballot- law adapted to the needs of our system of elections? |
20447 | Do you consider the religion of Bhagavat Purana of the East as good as the Christian? |
20447 | Do you deny the immortality of the soul? |
20447 | Do you enjoy Shakespeare more in the library than Shakespeare interpreted by actors now on the boards? |
20447 | Do you enjoy lecturing? |
20447 | Do you foresee any danger of centralization in the full enfranchisement of the citizens of Washington? |
20447 | Do you imagine she would condemn Burns or Shelley for that reason? |
20447 | Do you intend making any reply to what she says? |
20447 | Do you know her personally? |
20447 | Do you know that you have been greatly criticized for what you have said on this subject? |
20447 | Do you know the reason she applied the epithet? |
20447 | Do you know this from experience? |
20447 | Do you not believe that such a man as Robert Dale Owen was sincere? |
20447 | Do you not think Arthur has grown and is a greater man than when he was elected? |
20447 | Do you not think that capital is entitled to protection? |
20447 | Do you not think that the Bible has consolation for those who have lost their friends? |
20447 | Do you not think that these men had a fair trial? |
20447 | Do you not think there are some dangerous tendencies in Liberalism? |
20447 | Do you really think that the church is losing ground? |
20447 | Do you really think, Colonel, that the country has just passed through a crisis? |
20447 | Do you regard him as more popular now than ever before? |
20447 | Do you regard it as a religion? |
20447 | Do you regard the Briggs trial as any evidence of the growth of Liberalism in the church itself? |
20447 | Do you say this because your reason is convinced that it is? |
20447 | Do you still believe that suicide is justifiable? |
20447 | Do you sympathize with the Socialists, or do you think that the success of George would promote socialism? |
20447 | Do you take much interest in politics, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | Do you think Cleveland will put any Southern men in his Cabinet? |
20447 | Do you think mankind is drifting away from the supernatural? |
20447 | Do you think resumption will work out all right? |
20447 | Do you think so? |
20447 | Do you think that Cleveland''s course as to appointments has strengthened him with the people? |
20447 | Do you think that Liberals should undertake a reform in the marriage and divorce laws and relations? |
20447 | Do you think that Mr. George would make a good mayor? |
20447 | Do you think that Senator Logan will be able to deliver this State to the Grant movement according to the understood plan? |
20447 | Do you think that bigotry would persecute now for religious opinion''s sake, if it were not for the law and the press? |
20447 | Do you think that eloquence is potent in a convention to set aside the practical work of politics and politicians? |
20447 | Do you think that evolution and revealed religion are compatible-- that is to say, can a man be an evolutionist and a Christian? |
20447 | Do you think that is so, Mr. Ingersoll? |
20447 | Do you think that men are naturally criminals and naturally virtuous? |
20447 | Do you think that the American people are seeking after truth, or do they want to be amused? |
20447 | Do you think that the Knights of Labor will cut any material figure in this election? |
20447 | Do you think that the era of good feeling between the North and the South has set in with the appointment of ex- rebels to the Cabinet? |
20447 | Do you think that the friends of Gresham would support Blaine if he should be nominated? |
20447 | Do you think that the marriage institution is held in less respect by Infidels than by Christians? |
20447 | Do you think that the moral atmosphere will improve with the political atmosphere? |
20447 | Do you think that the nominations have been well received throughout the United States? |
20447 | Do you think that the old parties are about to die? |
20447 | Do you think that the orthodox church gets its ideas of the Sabbath from the teachings of Christ? |
20447 | Do you think that the political features of the incoming administration will differ from the present? |
20447 | Do you think that the vivisectionists do their work without anesthetics? |
20447 | Do you think that there is any danger of war? |
20447 | Do you think the Christian religion has made the world better? |
20447 | Do you think the President should have stated his policy in Boston the other day? |
20447 | Do you think the Republican party should take a decided stand on the temperance issue? |
20447 | Do you think the South will ever equal or surpass the West in point of prosperity? |
20447 | Do you think the election has brought about any particular change in the issues that will be involved in the campaign of 1880? |
20447 | Do you think the investigations of the Republicans of the Danville and Copiah massacres will benefit them? |
20447 | Do you think the law in the next decade will permit the affirmative oath? |
20447 | Do you think the laws governing divorce ought to be changed? |
20447 | Do you think the people lead the newspapers, or do the newspapers lead them? |
20447 | Do you think the use of the word sheol will make any difference to the preachers? |
20447 | Do you think there will be a second coming? |
20447 | Do you think we are going to have war with Spain? |
20447 | Do you think young men need a college education to get along? |
20447 | Do you uphold the Anarchists? |
20447 | Do you wish to say anything as to the reasoning of Justice Harlan on the rights of colored people on railways, in inns and theatres? |
20447 | Do you, in any way, see any reason or foundation for the severe and bitter criticisms made against the Stalwart leaders in connection with this crime? |
20447 | Does Christianity advance or retard civilization? |
20447 | Does exposure do any good? |
20447 | Does he compare any other Infidels with Christians? |
20447 | Does it point with pride to the Mexican fiasco, or does it rely entirely upon the great fishery triumph? |
20447 | Does not a Creator need a Creator as much as the thing we think has been created? |
20447 | Does not a designer need a design as much as a design needs a designer? |
20447 | Does not the Government feed the mob spirit-- the lynch spirit? |
20447 | Does not the mob follow the example set by the Government? |
20447 | Does the protective tariff cheapen the prices of commodities to the laboring man? |
20447 | Does the question of the inspiration of Scriptures affect the beauty and benefits of Christianity here and hereafter? |
20447 | Dr. Abbott, will tend to soften the sentiment of the orthodox churches against the stage? |
20447 | Dr. Banks stand against a circus? |
20447 | Dr. Fulton? |
20447 | Dr. Jewett before the Methodist ministers''meeting? |
20447 | Dr. Parkhurst, of New York, justifiable, and do you think that it had a tendency to help morality? |
20447 | During the recent presidential campaign did any clergymen denounce you for your teachings, that you are aware of? |
20447 | Father Lambert''s"Notes on Ingersoll,"and if so, what have you to say of them or in reply to them? |
20447 | From your knowledge of the religious tendency in the United States, how long will orthodox religion be popular? |
20447 | Had she then good cause for divorce? |
20447 | Had they been in that country, with their present ideas, what would they have said? |
20447 | Has Spiritualism, through its mediums, ever told the world anything useful, or added to the store of the world''s knowledge, or relieved its burdens? |
20447 | Has any church succeeded as well as the Catholic? |
20447 | Has any orthodox minister in the year 1898 given just one paragraph to literature? |
20447 | Has not Spiritualism added to the world''s stock of hope? |
20447 | Has not the Democracy injured itself irretrievably by permitting the free trade element to rule it? |
20447 | Has not the Republican party trouble enough with the spirituous to let the spiritual alone? |
20447 | Has not the married woman the right of self- defence? |
20447 | Has society any interest in forcing women to live with men they hate? |
20447 | Has the Christian religion changed in theory of late years, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | Has the woman whose rights have been outraged no right to build another home? |
20447 | Has there ever been found a line from any play or sonnet in his handwriting? |
20447 | Have n''t you just the faintest glimmer of a hope that in some future state you will meet and be reunited to those who are dear to you in this? |
20447 | Have you any decided opinions on that subject? |
20447 | Have you any objection to being interviewed as to your ideas of Grant, and his position before the people? |
20447 | Have you any objection to stating your real opinion in regard to the matter? |
20447 | Have you any objections to giving your present views of the question? |
20447 | Have you been invited to lecture in Europe? |
20447 | Have you ever been interfered with before in delivering Sunday lectures? |
20447 | Have you ever been misrepresented in interviews? |
20447 | Have you ever had any similar experiences before? |
20447 | Have you found any other work, sacred or profane, which you regard as more reliable? |
20447 | Have you given them reason to believe so? |
20447 | Have you had any experience with spirit photography, spirit physicians, or spirit lawyers? |
20447 | Have you investigated Spiritualism, and what has been your experience? |
20447 | Have you noticed a great change in public sentiment in the last three or four years? |
20447 | Have you read Miss Cleveland''s book? |
20447 | Have you read Nordau''s"Degeneracy"? |
20447 | Have you read the replies of the clergy to your recent lecture in this city on"What Must we do to be Saved?" |
20447 | Have you seen him? |
20447 | Have you seen or known of any Theosophical or esoteric marvels? |
20447 | Have you seen the attacks made upon you by certain ministers of New York, published in the_ Herald_ last Sunday? |
20447 | Have you seen the published report that Dorsey claims to have paid you one hundred thousand dollars for your services in the Star Route Cases? |
20447 | Have you seen the recent clerical strictures upon your doctrines? |
20447 | He did not say: Why have you called me from another world? |
20447 | He left a library, was there a copy of the plays in it? |
20447 | He would ask himself the question:"Is it possible that this is a divine institution? |
20447 | How about Illinois? |
20447 | How about lying, Colonel? |
20447 | How about that"personal and confidential letter"? |
20447 | How are they to be prevented? |
20447 | How are we to do away with crime? |
20447 | How are we to do away with pauperism? |
20447 | How are we to do away with want and misery in every civilized country? |
20447 | How are you getting along with Delaware? |
20447 | How are you on the arbitration treaty? |
20447 | How can any one come to the conclusion that the Catholic Church has been a source of truth, a source of intellectual light? |
20447 | How can anyone believe that the church of John Calvin has been a source of truth? |
20447 | How can the coffin or the grave be purchased? |
20447 | How could the church live a minute unless somebody attended to the affairs of this world? |
20447 | How could there be a disaster with a vast surplus in the treasury? |
20447 | How did Guiteau impress you and what have you remembered, Colonel, of his efforts to reply to your lectures? |
20447 | How did he walk? |
20447 | How did taxation become necessary? |
20447 | How did the card of Dr. Thomas strike you? |
20447 | How do I account for the defeat of Mr. Blaine? |
20447 | How do the clergy generally treat you? |
20447 | How do we do away with larceny? |
20447 | How do you account for Mr. Blaine''s action in allowing his name to go before the convention at Minneapolis in 1892? |
20447 | How do you account for the defeat of Mr. Blaine? |
20447 | How do you account for the results of the recent elections? |
20447 | How do you account for these attacks? |
20447 | How do you answer the argument, or the fact, that the church is constantly increasing, and that there are now four hundred millions of Christians? |
20447 | How do you enjoy staying in Chicago? |
20447 | How do you explain the figure:"His soul, like Mazeppa, was lashed naked to the wild horse of every fear and love and hate"? |
20447 | How do you like the administration of President Hayes? |
20447 | How do you regard the action of Bismarck in returning the Lasker resolutions? |
20447 | How do you regard the opposition of the local clergy and of the Bourbon Democracy to enfranchising the citizens of the District? |
20447 | How do you regard the present political situation? |
20447 | How do you regard the religious question in politics? |
20447 | How do you regard the situation in Ohio? |
20447 | How do you stand on the money question? |
20447 | How do you stand with the clergymen, and what is their opinion of you and of your views? |
20447 | How do you think he will treat the South? |
20447 | How does the literature of to- day compare with that of the first half of the century, in your opinion? |
20447 | How does the next campaign look? |
20447 | How does the religious state of California compare with the rest of the Union? |
20447 | How does this happen in a Government where church and state are not united? |
20447 | How good does a father have to be, in order to put his son under obligation to defend his blunders? |
20447 | How has the Democratic party"averted disaster"? |
20447 | How have the recently expressed opinions of our local clergy impressed you? |
20447 | How have you acquired the art of growing old gracefully? |
20447 | How is it possible for the virtues to grow in the damp and darkened basements? |
20447 | How is this? |
20447 | How many clergymen would it take to command, at regular prices, the audiences that attend the presentation of Wagner''s operas? |
20447 | How many in England? |
20447 | How much importance do you attach to the present prohibition movement? |
20447 | How should the dispute be settled? |
20447 | How soon do you think we would have the millennium if every person attended strictly to his own business? |
20447 | How then can she hope to conquer this country? |
20447 | How were you pleased with the Paine meeting here, and its results? |
20447 | How will the Democratic victory affect the colored people in the South? |
20447 | How would an honest Christian minister console the widow and the fatherless children? |
20447 | How would he dare to tell what he claims to be truth in the presence of the living? |
20447 | I agree with the Presbyterian General Assembly, if the creed is true, why should anyone try to amuse himself? |
20447 | I believe it was Confucius who said:"How should I know anything about another world when I know so little of this?" |
20447 | I said to him:"Is that honest?" |
20447 | I see that Mr. Beecher is coming round to your views on theology? |
20447 | I see that some one has been charging that Judge Gresham is an Infidel? |
20447 | I see that some people are objecting to your taking any part in politics, on account of your religious opinion? |
20447 | I see that you are frequently charged with disrespect toward your parents-- with lack of reverence for the opinions of your father? |
20447 | I see that you say that one of the great issues in the coming campaign will be civil rights; what do you mean by that? |
20447 | I should be glad if you would tell me what you think the differences are between English and American oratory? |
20447 | I understand that there was some trouble in connection with your lecture in Victoria, B. C. What are the facts? |
20447 | I was told that you came to St. Louis on your wedding trip some thirty years ago and went to Shaw''s Garden? |
20447 | I would like to ask him if the Old Testament is in favor of religious toleration? |
20447 | I would like to ask if there is a Christian in the world who would not be overjoyed to find that every one of these passages was an interpolation? |
20447 | I would like to ask you why, in your opinion as a student of history, has the Protestant Church always been so bitterly opposed to the theatre? |
20447 | I would like to have a positive expression of your views as to a future state? |
20447 | I would like to know if that is so? |
20447 | I would like to know something of the history of your religious views? |
20447 | I would rather be deceived than killed, would n''t you? |
20447 | If Blaine had been nominated at Cincinnati in 1876 would he have made a stronger candidate than Hayes did? |
20447 | If English actors are so much better than American, how is it that an American star is supported by the English? |
20447 | If God allows injustice to triumph here, why not there? |
20447 | If I asked for proofs for your theory, what would you furnish? |
20447 | If Mr. Mills has given a true statement with regard to the measure proposed by him, what relation does that measure bear to the President''s message? |
20447 | If Robert Elsmere''s views were commonly adopted what would be the effect? |
20447 | If a community violates that law, why should not the individual? |
20447 | If a man is rich why should he have any pension? |
20447 | If at that time there was nothing in existence but himself, how could he have exerted any force? |
20447 | If free trade will not reduce wages what will? |
20447 | If he allows rascality to succeed in this world, why not in the next? |
20447 | If he allows the innocent to suffer here, why not there? |
20447 | If he can stand it, I can; and why should there be any malice on the subject? |
20447 | If it is called upon for counsel and advice, how can it give advice without knowing the facts and circumstances? |
20447 | If its creed is not true, if its doctrines are mistakes, if its dogmas are monstrous delusions, how can it be said to have been a source of truth? |
20447 | If not, in what particulars does it require amendment? |
20447 | If she has the right to leave, has she the right to get a new house? |
20447 | If she owes no duty to her husband; if it is impossible for her to feel toward him any thrill of affection, what is there of marriage left? |
20447 | If so do you intend to accept the"call"? |
20447 | If so, what do you think of it? |
20447 | If the Democratic party makes anti- imperialism the prominent plank in its platform, what effect will it have on the party''s chance for success? |
20447 | If the Jews did not believe in immortality, how do you account for the allusions made to witches and wizards and things of that nature? |
20447 | If the President feels that he is bound to carry out the civil- service law, ought not the Senate to feel in the same way? |
20447 | If the colored people have to depend upon the State for protection, and the Federal Government can not interfere, why say any more about it? |
20447 | If the dead were not a Christian, what then? |
20447 | If the man is sick, if one of the children dies, how can doctors and medicines be paid for? |
20447 | If the man was in the army a day or a month, and was uninjured, and can make his own living, or has enough, why should he have a pension? |
20447 | If the ordinance exempts scientific, literary and historical lectures, as it is said it does, will not that exempt you? |
20447 | If the woman is not in fault, does society insist that her life should be wrecked? |
20447 | If there is anything whatever in this argument, is it not that the traffic pays a bribe of ninety million dollars a year for its life? |
20447 | If there is no beatitude, or heaven, how do you account for the continual struggle in every natural heart for its own betterment? |
20447 | If there is only punishment in this world, will not some escape punishment? |
20447 | If they are higher here than in foreign countries, the question arises, why are they higher? |
20447 | If they have done good, could they not have done just as much if they had used anesthetics? |
20447 | If they have the right to compel the President to choose from four, why not from three, or two? |
20447 | If this man has a wife and a couple of children how can the family live? |
20447 | If we should agree to- morrow to put God in the Constitution, the question would then be: Which God? |
20447 | If you should write your last sentence on religious topics what would be your closing? |
20447 | If you take away the idea of eternal punishment, how do you propose to restrain men; in what way will you influence conduct for good? |
20447 | If you were to compare individual English and American orators-- recent or living orators in particular-- what would you say? |
20447 | If you were to witness phenomena that seemed inexplicable by natural laws, would you be inclined to favor Spiritualism? |
20447 | If, again, you say the church is a source of authority, why do you say so? |
20447 | In other words, is not this simply a circle of human ignorance? |
20447 | In other words, who has been idle? |
20447 | In the next presidential contest what will be the main issue? |
20447 | In this connection there has been so much said about the art of acting-- what is your idea as to that art? |
20447 | In view of all this, where do you think the presidential candidate will come from? |
20447 | In what estimation do you hold Charles Watts and Samuel Putnam, and what do you think of their labors in the cause of Freethought? |
20447 | In what geologic period was the great white throne formed? |
20447 | In what light do you regard the Chinaman? |
20447 | In what light do you regard the Philippines as an addition to the territory of the United States? |
20447 | In what section of the country do you find the most liberality? |
20447 | In your experience as a lawyer what was the most unique case in which you were ever engaged? |
20447 | In your opinion, what relation do Liberalism and Prohibition bear to each other? |
20447 | Is Agnosticism gaining ground in the United States? |
20447 | Is Chicago as liberal, intellectually, as New York? |
20447 | Is Christianity really gaining a strong hold on the masses? |
20447 | Is England expected to give us another Shakespeare? |
20447 | Is Judge Hoadly to be attacked because he exercises the liberty that he gives to others? |
20447 | Is Spiritualism a religion or a truth? |
20447 | Is a State free that can make no treaty with any other State or country-- that is not permitted to coin money or to declare war? |
20447 | Is he to rely for meat, on poaching, and then is he to be transported to some far colony for the crime of catching a rabbit? |
20447 | Is his influence upon the world good or otherwise? |
20447 | Is it a fact that there are thousands of clergymen in the country whom you would fear to meet in fair debate? |
20447 | Is it because we lack men of genius or because our life is too material that no truly great American plays have been written? |
20447 | Is it consistent to say that a design can not exist without a designer, but that a designer can? |
20447 | Is it desirable to have families raised under such circumstances? |
20447 | Is it ever right to lie? |
20447 | Is it necessary to lose your freedom in order to retain your character, in order to be womanly or manly? |
20447 | Is it not a Republican administration that is at present investigating the alleged evils of trusts? |
20447 | Is it not a fact that you possess the confidence and friendship of some of the most respected leaders of that party? |
20447 | Is it not strange that, with one exception, the most notable operas written since Wagner are by Italian composers instead of German? |
20447 | Is it not the duty of society to protect her from her husband? |
20447 | Is it not the duty of the Senate to see to it that the President does not, with its advice and consent, violate the civil service law? |
20447 | Is it not the fact that punishments have grown less and less severe for many years past? |
20447 | Is it possible for impudence to go further? |
20447 | Is it possible that God has so made the world that the threat of eternal punishment is necessary for the preservation of society? |
20447 | Is it possible that God''s last witness died with Cicero? |
20447 | Is it possible that an infinitely wise and good God would insist on this poor, helpless woman remaining with the wild beast, her husband? |
20447 | Is it possible that he is a kind of vulture that sees only the carrion of another? |
20447 | Is it possible that his companions would object to his being paid for honest work in the penitentiary? |
20447 | Is it possible that human nature stands on such slippery ground? |
20447 | Is it possible that logic stands paralyzed in the presence of paternal absurdity? |
20447 | Is it possible that the superior support the inferior? |
20447 | Is it possible that, after preachers have had the field for eighteen hundred years, the way to make money is to attack the clergy? |
20447 | Is it to the interest of a husband and wife to live together after love has perished and when they hate each other? |
20447 | Is it true that you were once threatened with a criminal prosecution for libel on religion? |
20447 | Is it true, as rumored, that you intend to leave Washington and reside in New York? |
20447 | Is it true? |
20447 | Is it your experience that public men usually ride on passes? |
20447 | Is not Christianity and the belief in God a check upon mankind in general and thus a good thing in itself? |
20447 | Is not a pleasant illusion preferable to a dreary truth-- a future life being in question? |
20447 | Is not the ballot an assurance to the laboring man that he can get fair treatment from his employer? |
20447 | Is not the"lake of fire and brimstone"an obsolete issue? |
20447 | Is not this definition-- a definition given in hatred-- a perfect definition of every monarchy and of nearly every government in the world? |
20447 | Is she entitled to a divorce now? |
20447 | Is such a man seeking the good of his fellow- men? |
20447 | Is that true which succeeds to- day, or next year, or in the next century? |
20447 | Is the Age of Chivalry dead? |
20447 | Is the Republican party dead? |
20447 | Is the consent of the Senate a mere matter of form? |
20447 | Is the noun"United States"singular or plural, as you use English? |
20447 | Is the religious movement of which you are the chief exponent spreading? |
20447 | Is the spirit of patriotism declining in America? |
20447 | Is the woman still bound? |
20447 | Is there a more wonderful character in all the realm of fiction? |
20447 | Is there a probability that Mr. Sherman will be retained in the Cabinet? |
20447 | Is there a woman in the world who would not shrink from this herself? |
20447 | Is there any better Mrs. Malaprop than Mrs. Drew, and better Sir Anthony than John Gilbert? |
20447 | Is there any better or more ennobling belief than Christianity; if so, what is it? |
20447 | Is there any morality in this-- any virtue? |
20447 | Is there any possibility of your coming to England, and, I need hardly add, of your coming to speak? |
20447 | Is there any remedy? |
20447 | Is there any split in the solid South? |
20447 | Is there any such thing as mind- reading or thought- transference? |
20447 | Is there any such thing as telepathy? |
20447 | Is there anything else bearing upon the question at issue or that would make good reading, that I have forgotten, that you would like to say? |
20447 | Is there anything in the charge that the Republican party seeks to change our form of government by gradual centralization? |
20447 | Is there anything new about religion since you were last here? |
20447 | Is there no future for her? |
20447 | Is there no mutuality? |
20447 | Is there no other applicable to this case? |
20447 | Is there no truth in the statement, then? |
20447 | Is this all that man can do with the assistance of God? |
20447 | Is this because priests instinctively know priests? |
20447 | Is this because you regard Washington as the pleasantest and most advantageous city for a residence? |
20447 | Is this intended as a slander against me or the ministers? |
20447 | Is this the best?" |
20447 | Is this trifling experiment of any importance? |
20447 | Is this true? |
20447 | Is what we call civilization a sham? |
20447 | Is your objection based on any religious grounds, or on any prejudice against the ceremony because of its religious origin; or what is your objection? |
20447 | Is your theory, Colonel, the result of investigation of the subject? |
20447 | It is claimed that an amendment to the law, such as is desired, will interfere with the growth of art? |
20447 | It is possible that our civilization to- day rests upon the price of alcohol, and that, should the price be reduced, we would all go down together? |
20447 | It is reported that you are the son of a Presbyterian minister? |
20447 | It is said that in the past four or five years you have changed or modified your views upon the subject of religion; is this so? |
20447 | It is said, Colonel Ingersoll, that you are for Henry George? |
20447 | It seems to me that reason should come first, because if you say the Bible is a source of authority, why do you say it? |
20447 | Judging by your criticism of mankind, Colonel, in your recent lecture, you have not found his condition very satisfactory? |
20447 | Judging from what has been told you of his utterances and actions, what kind of a man would you take him to be? |
20447 | MUST RELIGION GO? |
20447 | Might not the rich do much? |
20447 | Mr. Banks, and what do you think of what he said? |
20447 | Mr. Crafts stated that you were in the habit of swearing in company and before your family? |
20447 | Mr. Ingersoll, do you think that Mr. Blaine wanted the nomination in 1884, when he got it? |
20447 | Mr. Ingersoll, what do you think defeated Blaine for the nomination in 1876? |
20447 | Mr. Lansing? |
20447 | Mr. Sherman expresses the opinion that if he had had the"moral strength"of the Ohio delegation in his support he would have been nominated? |
20447 | Must he be reduced to the diet of the old country? |
20447 | Must he sell his birthright for the sake of being a doorkeeper? |
20447 | Must he stand upon an exact par with the laborers of Belgium and England and Germany, not only, but with the slaves and serfs of other countries? |
20447 | Must she be an outcast forever? |
20447 | Must they be preserved to please God? |
20447 | Must this woman, full of kindness, affection and health, be chained until death releases her? |
20447 | Must we depend on police or statesmen? |
20447 | Must we wait for mobs to inaugurate reform? |
20447 | Not even in the case of a Democratic victory? |
20447 | Now that a lull has come in politics, I thought I would come and see what is going on in the religious world? |
20447 | Now, as to the other part of the question,"Is not a belief in God a check upon mankind in general?" |
20447 | Now, if a State refuses to do anything upon the subject, what is the citizen to do? |
20447 | Now, if the man turns out to be a wild beast, if he destroys the happiness of the wife, why should she remain his victim? |
20447 | Now, is it possible that he gets additional rights by immigration? |
20447 | Now, is there not some better organization of society that will help in this trouble? |
20447 | Now, let me ask, what consolation could a Christian minister have given to his family? |
20447 | Now, the question arises, what is humane about this society? |
20447 | Now, what is morality? |
20447 | Of course men may conspire to quit work, but how is it to be proved? |
20447 | Of his last ride, holding the poor girl by the hand? |
20447 | Of his last walk? |
20447 | Of what possible use is it to know how long a dog or horse can live without food? |
20447 | Of what use can it be to take a dog, tie him down and cut out one of his kidneys to see if he can live with the other? |
20447 | Of what use is it to be false to ourselves? |
20447 | Of what use is it to give a man two or three dollars a month? |
20447 | Perhaps you will tell me your methods as a speaker, for I''m sure it would be interesting to know them? |
20447 | R. Heber Newton? |
20447 | Samuel Jones? |
20447 | Samuel did not pretend that he had been living, or that he was alive, but asked:"Why hast thou disquieted me?" |
20447 | Shall you attend the Albany Freethought Convention? |
20447 | Shall you sue the Opera House management for breach of contract? |
20447 | Should Liberals vote on Liberal issues? |
20447 | Should a woman be compelled to remain the wife of a man who hates and abuses her, and whom she loathes? |
20447 | Should a woman be punished for having married? |
20447 | Should not the museums and art galleries be thrown open to the workingmen free on Sunday? |
20447 | Should the drama teach lessons and discuss social problems, or should it give simply intellectual pleasure and furnish amusement? |
20447 | Should we not have other bills to colonize the Germans, the Swedes, the Irish, and then, may be, another bill to drive the Chinese into the sea? |
20447 | Should we wait and crush by brute force or should we prevent? |
20447 | Since you expounded your justification of suicide, Colonel, I believe you have had some cases of suicide laid at your door? |
20447 | So the first question is, What is a miracle? |
20447 | Somebody asked Confucius about another world, and his reply was:"How should I know anything about another world when I know so little of this?" |
20447 | Still, I suppose we can count on you as a Republican? |
20447 | Suppose God should answer the prayers and convert me, how would he bring the conversion about? |
20447 | Suppose a man has a bad father; is he bound by the bad father''s opinion, when he is satisfied that the opinion is wrong? |
20447 | Suppose the dog can live a week or a month or a year, what then? |
20447 | Suppose the father changes his opinion; what then? |
20447 | Suppose the father thinks one way, and the mother the other; what are the children to do? |
20447 | Suppose they arrest you what will you do? |
20447 | Suppose we had free trade to- day, what would become of the manufacturing interests to- morrow? |
20447 | Suppose, as a matter of fact, the Devil did get hold of it; what part of the Bible would Mr. Beecher pick out as having been written by the Devil? |
20447 | Supposing this to have been accomplished, what effect is it likely to have on the future of creeds? |
20447 | Surely, there is no need for the Legislature of Pennsylvania to protect an infinite God, and why should the Bible be protected by law? |
20447 | Swing? |
20447 | That is a perfectly reasonable question, is it not, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | That is no explanation, and, after admitting that we do not know and that we can not explain, why should we proceed to explain? |
20447 | The Republicans are making all the mistakes they can, and the only question now is, Can the Democrats make more? |
20447 | The Senate is almost tied; do you think that any Republicans are likely to vote in the interest of the President''s policy at this session? |
20447 | The great objection to your teaching urged by your enemies is that you constantly tear down, and never build up? |
20447 | The great questions are: Will man ever be sufficiently civilized to be honest? |
20447 | The idea expressed is: I was asleep, why did you disturb that repose which should be eternal? |
20447 | The issue is fairly made-- shall American labor be protected, or must the American laborer take his chances with the labor market of the world? |
20447 | The minister asks:"What right have you to hope? |
20447 | The ministers are always talking about worldly people, and yet, were it not for worldly people, who would pay the salary? |
20447 | The other part is how cheaply can we manufacture it? |
20447 | The people shouted:"If all is illusion, what made you run away?" |
20447 | The question arises, What is Christianity? |
20447 | The question is, is it correct? |
20447 | The question ought not to be,"Has this been sworn to?" |
20447 | The real question is, what do they stand for? |
20447 | Then I assume that you and Mr. Beecher have made up? |
20447 | Then you do not deny that you received such an enormous fee? |
20447 | Then you only consider the Greenback movement a temporary thing? |
20447 | Then you would not undertake to say what becomes of man after death? |
20447 | Then your present convictions began to form themselves while you were listening to the teachings of religion as taught by your father? |
20447 | Then, if there is no objection to a third term, what about a fourth? |
20447 | They intended to do what they did, and why should the South not be recognized? |
20447 | Thousands of mistakes are made-- are these mistakes sacred? |
20447 | Tilden? |
20447 | To what extent does it harden the community for the Government to take life? |
20447 | To what stratum does it belong? |
20447 | Under a Federal Constitution guaranteeing civil and religious liberty, are the so- called"Blue Laws"constitutional? |
20447 | Upon this question what does our party say? |
20447 | Was Lincoln an orthodox Christian? |
20447 | Was it extemporaneous? |
20447 | Was it the result of his hatred of the Jews? |
20447 | Was not Mr. Jarvis right in standing by the law? |
20447 | Was the tragedy of the Garden of Eden a success? |
20447 | Was there any ground to expect aid or any different action on Arthur''s part? |
20447 | Well, Colonel, is the world growing better or worse? |
20447 | Well, Colonel, what are you up to? |
20447 | Well, what do you think of the religious revival system generally? |
20447 | Well, what does inspiration mean? |
20447 | Were the abolitionists all believers in the inspiration of the Bible? |
20447 | Were the founders of the party-- the men who gave it heart and brain-- conspicuous for piety? |
20447 | Were you an admirer of Lord Beaconsfield? |
20447 | What God are we to have in the Constitution? |
20447 | What about Bayard and Hancock as candidates? |
20447 | What about Beecher''s sermons on"Evolution"? |
20447 | What about Henry George''s books? |
20447 | What about Indiana? |
20447 | What about Zola''s trial and conviction? |
20447 | What about the other ministers? |
20447 | What advice would you give to a young man who was ambitious to become a successful public speaker or orator? |
20447 | What are Mr. Blaine''s chances for the presidency? |
20447 | What are such lives worth? |
20447 | What are the chances for the Republican party in 1888? |
20447 | What are the consolations of the Church of England? |
20447 | What are the most glaring mistakes of Cleveland''s administration? |
20447 | What are the reasons for and against the adoption of the policy they propose? |
20447 | What are you going to do to be saved? |
20447 | What are your conclusions as to the future of the Democratic party? |
20447 | What are your feelings in reference to idealism on the stage? |
20447 | What are your opinions on the woman''s suffrage question? |
20447 | What are your present views on theology? |
20447 | What are your views as to a third term? |
20447 | What are your views, generally expressed, on the tariff? |
20447 | What assurance has the American laborer that he will not be ultimately swamped by foreign immigration? |
20447 | What attributes should an actor have to be really great? |
20447 | What business is it of theirs who believes or disbelieves in the religion of the day? |
20447 | What causes operated for the Republican success in Iowa? |
20447 | What comfort can the orthodox clergyman give to the widow of an honest unbeliever? |
20447 | What could be more idiotic, absurd, childish, than the duel between Boulanger and Floquet? |
20447 | What could by any possibility be done? |
20447 | What did God mean when he said, If a man strike his servant so he dies, he should not be punished, because his servant was his money? |
20447 | What did you do on your European trip, Colonel? |
20447 | What did you think of the American display? |
20447 | What did you think of the late Joseph Medill? |
20447 | What did you think of them, Colonel? |
20447 | What do recent exhibitions in this city, of scenes from the life of Christ, indicate with regard to the tendencies of modern art? |
20447 | What do they care about the coachman''s soul? |
20447 | What do they care for the souls of cooks? |
20447 | What do they say of natural modesty? |
20447 | What do you base your views upon? |
20447 | What do you believe about the immortality of the soul? |
20447 | What do you believe to be his position in regard to the presidency? |
20447 | What do you mean by this? |
20447 | What do you regard as the greatest of all themes in poetry and song? |
20447 | What do you regard as the result of your lectures? |
20447 | What do you say to that? |
20447 | What do you say? |
20447 | What do you think Cleveland''s chances are in New York? |
20447 | What do you think about prize- fighting anyway? |
20447 | What do you think about the recent election, and what will be its effect upon political matters and the issues and candidates of 1880? |
20447 | What do you think as to the presidential race? |
20447 | What do you think defeated Mr. Blaine at the polls in 1884? |
20447 | What do you think generally of the revival of the bloody shirt? |
20447 | What do you think of Atkinson''s speech? |
20447 | What do you think of Beecher? |
20447 | What do you think of Bellamy? |
20447 | What do you think of Bishop Doane''s advocacy of free rum as a solution of the liquor problem? |
20447 | What do you think of Cleveland''s message? |
20447 | What do you think of England''s Poet Laureate, Alfred Austin? |
20447 | What do you think of General Washington? |
20447 | What do you think of Governor Roosevelt''s decision in the case of Mrs. Place? |
20447 | What do you think of Hall Caine''s recent efforts to bring about a closer union between the stage and pulpit? |
20447 | What do you think of Henry George for mayor? |
20447 | What do you think of Justice Harlan''s dissenting opinion in the Civil Rights case? |
20447 | What do you think of Madame Blavatsky and her school of Theosophists? |
20447 | What do you think of McKinley''s inaugural? |
20447 | What do you think of Mr. Cleveland''s Cabinet? |
20447 | What do you think of Mr. Conkling''s course? |
20447 | What do you think of Mr. Mills''Fourth of July speech on his bill? |
20447 | What do you think of Niagara Falls? |
20447 | What do you think of Pope? |
20447 | What do you think of Senator Sherman''s book-- especially the part about Garfield? |
20447 | What do you think of Wendell Phillips as an orator? |
20447 | What do you think of civil service reform? |
20447 | What do you think of him as an author? |
20447 | What do you think of international marriages, as between titled foreigners and American heiresses? |
20447 | What do you think of newspaper interviewing? |
20447 | What do you think of political parties, Colonel? |
20447 | What do you think of prohibition, and what do you think of its success in this State? |
20447 | What do you think of the Buckner Bill for the colonization of the negroes in Mexico? |
20447 | What do you think of the Chilian insult to the United States flag? |
20447 | What do you think of the Congress of Religions, to be held in Chicago during the World''s Fair? |
20447 | What do you think of the Democratic nominations? |
20447 | What do you think of the Democratic platform? |
20447 | What do you think of the French drama as compared with the English, morally and artistically considered? |
20447 | What do you think of the Mormon question? |
20447 | What do you think of the Pre- Millennial Conference that was held in New York City recently? |
20447 | What do you think of the Theosophists? |
20447 | What do you think of the action of Congress on Fitz John Porter? |
20447 | What do you think of the action of the Presbyterian General Assembly at Detroit, and what effect do you think it will have on religious growth? |
20447 | What do you think of the administration of President Cleveland? |
20447 | What do you think of the efficacy or the propriety of punishing criminals by solitary confinement? |
20447 | What do you think of the income tax as a step toward the accomplishment of what you desire? |
20447 | What do you think of the influence of the press on religion? |
20447 | What do you think of the influence of women in politics? |
20447 | What do you think of the investigation of the Department of Justice now going on? |
20447 | What do you think of the law of 1860? |
20447 | What do you think of the new legislation in the State changing the death penalty to death by electricity? |
20447 | What do you think of the new woman? |
20447 | What do you think of the policy of nominating Blaine in 1888, as has been proposed? |
20447 | What do you think of the political outlook? |
20447 | What do you think of the prohibitory movement on general principles? |
20447 | What do you think of the prospects of Liberalism in this country? |
20447 | What do you think of the recent opinion of the Supreme Court touching the rights of the colored man? |
20447 | What do you think of the result in Ohio? |
20447 | What do you think of the revision of the Westminster creed? |
20447 | What do you think of the sacredness of the Sabbath? |
20447 | What do you think of the service pension movement? |
20447 | What do you think of the signs of the times so far as the campaign has progressed? |
20447 | What do you think of the tendency of newspapers is at present? |
20447 | What do you think of the treatment of the actor by society in his social relations? |
20447 | What do you think of the trial of the Chicago Anarchists and their chances for a new trial? |
20447 | What do you think of the use he has made of the Dred Scott decision? |
20447 | What do you think of this? |
20447 | What do you think of"Spiritualism,"as it is popularly termed? |
20447 | What do you think was the main cause of the Republican sweep? |
20447 | What do you think will be the particular issue of the coming campaign? |
20447 | What do you think, Colonel, of the Cuban question? |
20447 | What does our party say? |
20447 | What does the Republican party propose? |
20447 | What does the word"extended"mean? |
20447 | What does this mean? |
20447 | What effect has the protective tariff on the condition of labor in this country? |
20447 | What effect has the woman''s suffrage movement had on the breadwinners of the country? |
20447 | What effect has unlimited immigration on the wages of women? |
20447 | What effect, if any, would the complete franchise to our citizens have upon real estate and business in Washington? |
20447 | What essentially American idea does he stand for? |
20447 | What figure will Butler cut in the campaign? |
20447 | What gave rise to the report that you had been converted--did you go to church somewhere? |
20447 | What good can it do God to keep people married who hate each other? |
20447 | What good can it do the community to keep such people together? |
20447 | What good can it, by any possibility, do? |
20447 | What had the Knights of Labor to do with a question of religion? |
20447 | What has been the attitude of President Arthur? |
20447 | What has it to do with the Democratic platform? |
20447 | What has the administration done-- what has it accomplished in the field of diplomacy? |
20447 | What has the press generally said with regard to the action of Judge Comegys? |
20447 | What have you to say about his having died with sealed lips? |
20447 | What have you to say about tariff reform? |
20447 | What have you to say about the attack of Dr. Buckley on you, and your lecture? |
20447 | What have you to say about the claim that Mr. Cleveland does not propose free trade? |
20447 | What have you to say concerning the operations of the Society for Psychical Research? |
20447 | What have you to say in regard to the decision of Judge Billings in New Orleans, that strikes which interfere with interstate commerce, are illegal? |
20447 | What have you to say in reply to the letter in to- day''s_ Times_ signed R. H. S.? |
20447 | What have you to say on the Mormon question? |
20447 | What have you to say to that? |
20447 | What have you to say to that? |
20447 | What have you to say to the assertion of Dr. Deems that there were never so many Christians as now? |
20447 | What have you to say with reference to the respective attitudes of the President and Senate? |
20447 | What have you to say? |
20447 | What is Mr. Conkling''s place in the political history of the United States? |
20447 | What is a contract? |
20447 | What is causing the development of this country? |
20447 | What is education worth? |
20447 | What is going to take the place of the pulpit? |
20447 | What is his forte? |
20447 | What is most needed in our public men? |
20447 | What is the best philosophy of summer recreation? |
20447 | What is the explanation of the stories of mental impressions received at long distances? |
20447 | What is the history of the speech delivered here in 1876? |
20447 | What is the reason for so much intemperance? |
20447 | What is the use of wasting money for food? |
20447 | What is true temperance, Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | What is worse than death? |
20447 | What is your conception of true intellectual hospitality? |
20447 | What is your estimate of Susan B. Anthony? |
20447 | What is your explanation of the Republican disaster last Tuesday? |
20447 | What is your explanation of the miracles referred to in the Old and New Testaments? |
20447 | What is your idea as to the difference between honest belief, as held by honest religious thinkers, and heterodoxy? |
20447 | What is your idea in regard to it? |
20447 | What is your idea of Christian Science? |
20447 | What is your idea with regard to divorce? |
20447 | What is your opinion as to the action of the President on the Venezuelan matter? |
20447 | What is your opinion as to the effect of praying for the recovery of the President, and have you any confidence that prayers are answered? |
20447 | What is your opinion concerning women as conductors of these revivals? |
20447 | What is your opinion of American writers? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Brewster''s administration? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Colonel Ingersoll? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Count Leo Tolstoy? |
20447 | What is your opinion of General Grant as he stands before the people to- day? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Ignatius Donnelly as a literary man irrespective of his Baconian theory? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Matthew Arnold? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Mr. Beecher? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Mr. Gladstone as a controversialist? |
20447 | What is your opinion of Spiritualism and Spiritualists? |
20447 | What is your opinion of charity organizations? |
20447 | What is your opinion of foreign missions? |
20447 | What is your opinion of making ex- Presidents Senators for life? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the Christian religion and the Christian Church? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the Gerry Whipping Post bill? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the effect of the multiplicity of women''s clubs as regards the intellectual, moral and domestic status of their members? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the incoming administration, and how will it affect the country? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the peculiar institution of American journalism known as interviewing? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the position taken by the United States in the Venezuelan dispute? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the relative merits of the pulpit and the stage, preachers and actors? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the religious tendency of the people of this country? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the result of the election? |
20447 | What is your opinion of the work undertaken by the_ World_ in behalf of the city slave girl? |
20447 | What is your opinion of"Christian charity"and the"fatherhood of God"as an economic polity for abolishing poverty and misery? |
20447 | What is your opinion regarding the Republican nomination for President? |
20447 | What is your opinion? |
20447 | What is your opinion? |
20447 | What is your remedy, Colonel, for the labor troubles of the day? |
20447 | What is your reply to such assertions? |
20447 | What kind of a President will Garfield make? |
20447 | What kind of a person will do the whipping? |
20447 | What language did he speak?" |
20447 | What led you to begin lecturing on your present subject, and what was your first lecture? |
20447 | What matters it that we differ? |
20447 | What moral quality is there in theological pretence? |
20447 | What must be the life of a man who can earn only one dollar or two dollars a day? |
20447 | What must other nations think when they read the two letters and mentally exclaim,"Look upon this and then upon that?" |
20447 | What must the real character of the scientific wretch be who would try an experiment like this? |
20447 | What must they eat? |
20447 | What must they wear? |
20447 | What must"the great and good"Dole think of our great and good President? |
20447 | What on earth has geology to do with the throne of God? |
20447 | What ought to be done, or what is to be the end? |
20447 | What part of the contract remains in force? |
20447 | What part should you take if not that of the weak? |
20447 | What phases will the Southern question assume in the next four years? |
20447 | What place does the theatre hold among the arts? |
20447 | What policy do they advocate? |
20447 | What possible good did it do the world for Christ to go without food for forty days? |
20447 | What punishment is there for physical crime? |
20447 | What punishment, then, is inflicted upon man for his crimes and wrongs committed in this life? |
20447 | What remains to be done now, and who is going to do it? |
20447 | What section of the United States, East, West, North, or South, is the most advanced in liberal religious ideas? |
20447 | What shall we say of a Bible that we dare not read to a Mormon as an argument against legalized lust, or as an argument against illegal lust? |
20447 | What shall we say of the moral force of Christianity, when it utterly fails in the presence of Mormonism? |
20447 | What should be done with the surplus revenue? |
20447 | What should be the attitude of the church toward the stage? |
20447 | What steps could be taken in any State of this Union? |
20447 | What suggestion would you make for the improvement of the newspapers of this country? |
20447 | What was settled? |
20447 | What was the real difficulty between you and Moses, Colonel, a man who has been dead for thousands of years? |
20447 | What was the real state of mind of the author of"Footfalls on the Boundaries of Another World"? |
20447 | What will be the effect of the enthusiastic receptions that are being given to General Grant? |
20447 | What will be the effect on labor of a departure in American policy in the direction of free trade? |
20447 | What will be the fate of the Mills Bill in the Senate? |
20447 | What will be the main issues in the next presidential campaign? |
20447 | What will be the political effect of the Greenback movement? |
20447 | What would be the effect on farms in that neighborhood? |
20447 | What would be the effect on railroads, on freights, on business-- what upon the towns through which they passed? |
20447 | What would be your advice to an intelligent young man just starting out in life? |
20447 | What would have been his fate a few years ago? |
20447 | What would have happened to him in Spain, in Portugal, in Italy-- in any other country that was Catholic-- only a few years ago? |
20447 | What would the city that had been built up by the factories be worth? |
20447 | What would the clergy of Washington think should the miracle of Cana be repeated in their day? |
20447 | What would they have done had the vaults been empty? |
20447 | What would you define public opinion to be? |
20447 | What would you think of me if I should retort, using your language, changing only the sex of the last word? |
20447 | What, in your estimation, is the value of the drama as a factor in our social life at the present time? |
20447 | What, in your judgment, is necessary to be done to insure Republican success this fall? |
20447 | What, in your judgment, is the source of the greatest trouble among men? |
20447 | What, in your judgment, is to be the outcome of the present agitation in religious circles? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, are the best possible means to spread this gospel or religion of Secularism? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, is the condition of labor in this country as compared with that abroad? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, is the condition of the Democratic party at present? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, is the significance of the vote on the Mills Bill recently passed in the House? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, were the causes for Blaine''s defeat? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, were the causes which led to the Democratic defeat? |
20447 | What, in your opinion, will be Browning''s position in the literature of the future? |
20447 | What, on the whole, is your judgment of the book? |
20447 | What, then, are their relations? |
20447 | When I watch them on the avenue I, too, fall to quoting Scripture, and say,"Can these dry bones live?" |
20447 | When Saul visited the Witch of Endor, and she, by some magic spell, called up Samuel, the prophet said:"Why hast thou disquieted me, to call me up?" |
20447 | When we come to civil service, about how many Federal officials were at the St. Louis convention? |
20447 | Where are the four hundred millions found? |
20447 | Where are the most Liberals, and in what section of the country is the best work for Liberalism being done? |
20447 | Where do we get the right to say that the negroes must emigrate? |
20447 | Where do you meet with the bitterest opposition? |
20447 | Where do you think it is necessary the Republican candidate should come from to insure success? |
20447 | Where does Mr. Buckner propose to colonize the white people, and what right has he to propose the colonization of six millions of people? |
20447 | Where is an actress on the English stage the superior of Julia Marlowe in genius, in originality, in naturalness? |
20447 | Where is the great white throne? |
20447 | Where rests the responsibility for the Armenian atrocities? |
20447 | Which did more for his country, George Washington or Abraham Lincoln? |
20447 | Which do you regard as the better, Catholicism or Protestantism? |
20447 | Which in your opinion is the greatest English novel? |
20447 | Which is the more dangerous to American institutions--the National Reform Association( God- in- the- Constitution party) or the Roman Catholic Church? |
20447 | Which would you say are the better orators, speaking generally, the American people or the English people? |
20447 | Who brought about"a critical period of our financial affairs"? |
20447 | Who created the vast debt that American labor must pay? |
20447 | Who do you think ought to be nominated at Chicago? |
20447 | Who do you think will be nominated at Chicago? |
20447 | Who made Herod? |
20447 | Who made this taxation of thousands of millions necessary? |
20447 | Who succeeded there? |
20447 | Who wants it inflicted? |
20447 | Who will be the Republican nominee for President? |
20447 | Who, in your judgment, would be the strongest man the Republicans could put up? |
20447 | Who, in your opinion, is the greatest leader of the"opposition"yclept the Christian religion? |
20447 | Who, in your opinion, is the greatest novelist who has written in the English language? |
20447 | Who, then, is really responsible for the acts of Herod? |
20447 | Whose God? |
20447 | Why are you so utterly opposed to vivisection? |
20447 | Why did he want to pick out my bad things? |
20447 | Why did not Brewster speak? |
20447 | Why did you not take part in the campaign? |
20447 | Why do people read a book like"Robert Elsmere,"and why do they take any interest in it? |
20447 | Why do the theological seminaries find it difficult to get students? |
20447 | Why do you make such a distinction between the rights of man and the rights of women? |
20447 | Why do you not meet these men, and why do you not answer these attacks? |
20447 | Why do you not respond to the occasional clergyman who replies to your lectures? |
20447 | Why give us corn, and Egypt cholera? |
20447 | Why inflict pain? |
20447 | Why is it the Presbyterians are so opposed to music in the world, and yet expect to have so much in heaven? |
20447 | Why not have the courage to say that if there be a God, all I know about him I know by knowing myself and my friends-- by knowing others? |
20447 | Why not name the one, and have done with it? |
20447 | Why not say that the universe has existed from eternity, as well as to say that a Creator has existed from eternity? |
20447 | Why not take the middle ground? |
20447 | Why not work with the great and enlightened majority? |
20447 | Why rush to the extreme for the purpose not only of making yourself useless but hurtful? |
20447 | Why should Christians refuse to persecute in this world, when their God is going to in the next? |
20447 | Why should God treat us any better than he does the rest of his children? |
20447 | Why should I say that he has the assistance of spirits? |
20447 | Why should Sunday be observed otherwise than as a day of recreation? |
20447 | Why should a barbarian boy cast reproach upon his parents? |
20447 | Why should a man say that he loves God better than he does his wife or his children or his brother or his sister or his warm, true friend? |
20447 | Why should a member of Parliament or of Congress swear to maintain the Constitution? |
20447 | Why should an infinite God allow some of his children to enslave others? |
20447 | Why should any one, when convinced that Christianity is a superstition, have or feel a sense of loss? |
20447 | Why should ex- Presidents be taken care of? |
20447 | Why should he allow a child of his to burn another child of his, under the impression that such a sacrifice was pleasing to him? |
20447 | Why should he annihilate his mistakes? |
20447 | Why should he make mistakes that need annihilation? |
20447 | Why should he send pestilence and famine to China, and health and plenty to us? |
20447 | Why should such a State be called free? |
20447 | Why should the Democratic party lay claim to any anti- trust glory? |
20447 | Why should the Republican party be so particular about religious belief? |
20447 | Why should the reputations of the dead, and the feelings of those who live, be placed at the mercy of the ministers? |
20447 | Why should they be compelled to license that which they are not permitted to enjoy? |
20447 | Why should they care for what the animals suffer? |
20447 | Why should we expect an infinite Being to do better in another world than he has done and is doing in this? |
20447 | Why should we follow such an example? |
20447 | Why should we not protect, by the same means, the actor? |
20447 | Why should we postpone our joy to another world? |
20447 | Why should we worship in God what we detest in man? |
20447 | Why should you love the memory of one whom God hates?" |
20447 | Why so? |
20447 | Why was the word sheol introduced in place of hell, and how do you like the substitute? |
20447 | Why was this? |
20447 | Why were the bonds sold? |
20447 | Why were the greenbacks issued? |
20447 | Why, I ask, should God give life to men whom he knows are unworthy of life? |
20447 | Why, then, resort to the duel? |
20447 | Will Dr. Banks in his fifty- two sermons of next year show that his God is not responsible for the crimes of Herod? |
20447 | Will Liberalism ever organize in America? |
20447 | Will Mr. Cleveland, in your opinion, carry out the civil service reform he professes to favor? |
20447 | Will a time ever come when political campaigns will be conducted independently of religious prejudice? |
20447 | Will he listen to or grant any demands made of him by the alleged Independent Republicans of New York, either in his appointments or policies? |
20447 | Will it necessitate the nomination of an Ohio Republican next year? |
20447 | Will the Democratic party have a strong issue in its anti- trust cry? |
20447 | Will the Supreme Court take cognizance of this case and prevent the execution of the judgment? |
20447 | Will the church and the stage ever work together for the betterment of the world, and what is the province of each? |
20447 | Will the instructions given to delegates be final? |
20447 | Will the negro continue to be the balance of power, and if so, will it inure to his benefit? |
20447 | Will the religion of humanity be the religion of the future? |
20447 | Will the time ever come when it can truthfully be said that right is might? |
20447 | Will there be other trials? |
20447 | Will these two considerations cut any figure in the presidential campaign of 1884? |
20447 | Will this add to their happiness? |
20447 | Will this reverse seriously affect Republican chances next year? |
20447 | Will you give your reasons? |
20447 | Will you lecture the coming winter? |
20447 | Will you state your reasons for your belief? |
20447 | Will you take any notice of Mr. Magrath''s challenge? |
20447 | With a solid South do you not think the Democratic nominee will stand a good chance? |
20447 | With all your experiences, the trials, the responsibilities, the disappointments, the heartburnings, Colonel, is life worth living? |
20447 | With the introduction of the Democracy into power, what radical changes will take place in the Government, and what will be the result? |
20447 | Wo n''t you give us, then, Colonel, your analysis of this act, and the motives leading to it? |
20447 | Would he want a divorce? |
20447 | Would it not be better to teach that he who does wrong must suffer the consequences, whether God forgives him or not? |
20447 | Would people be any more moral solely because of a disbelief in orthodox teaching and in the Bible as an inspired book, in your opinion? |
20447 | Would the Catholicism of General Sherman''s family affect his chances for the presidency? |
20447 | Would the Democracy of New York unite on Seymour? |
20447 | Would you again refuse to take the stump for Mr. Blaine if he should be renominated, and if so, why? |
20447 | Would you consent to live in any but a Christian community? |
20447 | Would you have Government clerks and officials appointed to office here given the franchise in the District? |
20447 | Would you have us discard it altogether? |
20447 | Would you mind telling me how it was you came to be a public speaker, a lecturer, an orator? |
20447 | Yet the sacred volume, no matter who wrote it, is a mine of wealth to the student and the philosopher, is it not? |
20447 | You consider Greenbackers inflationists, do you not? |
20447 | You do not deny that a religious belief is a comfort? |
20447 | You do not seem to think that Arthur has a chance? |
20447 | You have studied the Bible attentively, have you not? |
20447 | You knew John Russell Young, Colonel? |
20447 | You seem to agree with all that Justice Harlan has said, and to have the greatest admiration for his opinion? |
20447 | You think, then, that there is no great principle involved? |
20447 | Your objective point is to destroy the doctrine of hell, is it? |
20447 | Your views of the country''s future and prospects must naturally be rose colored? |
20447 | and if so what do you think of them? |
20447 | and should this, if given, include the women clerks? |
20447 | as expressed in_ The Herald_ of last week? |
20447 | but,"Is this true?" |
20447 | of the people to even call themselves Presbyterians, about how long will it take, at this rate, to convert mankind? |
52550 | Do not the foreigners[ ta ethne,"the gentiles"] do the same? |
52550 | For the Jews, too, he had to raise the"widow''s son"as did Elijah and Elisha in the Old Testament story-- a Hebrew variant of the( pictured?) |
52550 | R. P. A., 1907) and Was wissen wir von Jesus? |
52550 | about 100), which, whether genuine or not, is ancient, and in the older form of the epistles ascribed to the Martyr Ignatius( d. about 115?) |
52550 | and again:"Do not even the foreigners( ethnikoi) the same?" |
52550 | if he were a God, why weep for his sufferings? |
52550 | text) we have:"Do not even the tax- gatherers the same?" |
45483 | Are you Moslems or Christians? |
45483 | Where is he? |
45483 | Why do you demand the freedom of the slaves? |
45483 | *** If a revelation can not civilize a barbarian, what is its value? |
45483 | A doll may amuse a baby, but is a grown- up man miserable because he can not play with a toy? |
45483 | Am I asked what good these religions have done? |
45483 | And if he can save all, but will not, does he not become as dangerous as the robbers? |
45483 | And is this a puppet world which he rules? |
45483 | And of what help was God to us, if, in real peril, we had to resort to fighting or falsehood for self- protection? |
45483 | And what about the animals? |
45483 | And what is Browning''s authority that the earth was nearer Heaven once than it is now? |
45483 | And whose sins was God punishing by the Galveston disaster or the Armenian massacres? |
45483 | And why is the god of the Negro black? |
45483 | Are a few floating aphorisms ascribed to Jesus enough to justify his beatification? |
45483 | Are not those who prevent the healthy development of the limbs to enhance the sale of crutches even more cruel than those who despise their use? |
45483 | Are the spirits who manifest themselves in the Old and New Testaments, impostors, while those who appear to Mrs. Piper in Brooklyn are genuine? |
45483 | Are we, then, but his puppets''? |
45483 | But if God had to descend to the plane of man and become brutal and bigoted like him, how was man benefited by his intercourse with the divine? |
45483 | But if it is in harmony with the facts, what do we gain by rejecting it in preference to the"moral evolutionary view"? |
45483 | But if this voice is not the inherited instincts of the race, what is it? |
45483 | But if we ourselves are not inspired, how are we to tell which teacher is telling the truth? |
45483 | But is it nice to criticise? |
45483 | But is not immortality as inconceivable as the Trinity? |
45483 | But is not that begging the question? |
45483 | But what is the difference between the scientific evolutionary view and the moral evolutionary view? |
45483 | But why did I not pray? |
45483 | But why not let the Hindoo have his lotus prayer and the Christian his hymn? |
45483 | But would such a compromise, though baptised with the high- sounding name of unity, help the cause of progress? |
45483 | But, at any rate, is it not cruel to knock an old man''s crutches from under him? |
45483 | Can such a hope make for optimism? |
45483 | Can such a prospect brace up humanity at large? |
45483 | Did I bring them out of the Presbyterian church to make"infidels"and"blasphemers"of them? |
45483 | Did he cause the accident? |
45483 | Did he choose that special way of teaching us a lesson? |
45483 | Did he confuse the people and throw them into a panic purposely? |
45483 | Did he fold his hands and stand aside to see the burning? |
45483 | Did he mean it was good of the Deity to visit us, now and then, with such catastrophes as the Iroquois theatre fire? |
45483 | Did he put it into someone''s mind to be careless? |
45483 | Did he regret his inability to prevent the horror? |
45483 | Did he try to prevent anybody from being rescued? |
45483 | Did he try to save anybody? |
45483 | Did he wish to help but could not for any moral reasons? |
45483 | Did not Catholics take away from the pagan Romans the religion of their mothers? |
45483 | Did not Protestantism take away from the Catholics the religion of their mothers? |
45483 | Did not the Ethical platform answer the purposes which the proposed society wished to serve? |
45483 | Does he believe that the state of barbarism is nearer heaven than that of civilization? |
45483 | For, we ask again, if the Lord can save one, why not all? |
45483 | Furthermore, if the mental and moral limitations of a people determine the character of revelation, what advantage is there in having a revelation? |
45483 | God, or chance? |
45483 | Has it ever been all right in Turkey? |
45483 | Have the different revelations of the world done this? |
45483 | Have they not, on the contrary, added to the perplexities of the mind? |
45483 | How can the Ethical Societies afford to ignore so fundamental an untruth? |
45483 | How can the character of a man be known whose life is unknown to us? |
45483 | How can we desire, or despise the inconceivable? |
45483 | How many have come and gone to whom pain was simply pain, and who derived no benefit from it whatever? |
45483 | However, this"hand"which we are told"is heavy upon our shoulders as Atlas,"is not infallible, what is its worth? |
45483 | If I could subscribe to one dogma, why not to all? |
45483 | If I could"settle down"in Unitarianism, why did I leave the Presbyterian church? |
45483 | If Jesus was not morally perfect, or the wisest and best teacher, why does he monopolize the Unitarian pulpit? |
45483 | If faith can make Jesus divine, why not Mohammed? |
45483 | If he can raise the dead, can he not lift the human mind out of error without the aid of extraordinary phenomena? |
45483 | If it be argued that we should have faith, I answer in which one of the prophets? |
45483 | If it can believe in parts of the Bible, as"inspired"or if it can accept, the unity of God, or"the Lordship of Jesus,"why not believe a little more? |
45483 | If on the other hand the"moral evolutionary view"is not scientific, what is its value? |
45483 | If one miracle, why not a million? |
45483 | If the scientific explanation of the origin of the moral sense is a"flat failure,"quoting from the professor again, what is_ his_ explanation? |
45483 | If we are to use our own reason to decide this momentous question, why, then, do we need a revelation? |
45483 | If we can not answer any of these questions, why do we connect God with the affair? |
45483 | If we can not predict what will happen in the next hour, how can we talk with assurance of the secrets of the unending future? |
45483 | If we can not say just what God did or did not do in the theatre fire, why talk about it? |
45483 | If we may discard our mother''s hut or the rag she clothed herself with at one time, why not also her religion? |
45483 | In Browning''s opinion, was there a country in Europe-- the Europe of his day-- of which he could truthfully say that_ all_ was right there? |
45483 | In what sense is it a compliment to the moral law to say that it can not be"explained in terms of sensible experience"? |
45483 | In what way would the world have been worse off without a"Heavenly Father?" |
45483 | Is God a puppet showman? |
45483 | Is it honest with history? |
45483 | Is it honest with the Bible? |
45483 | Is it not a welcome relief that the Rationalist can bear his great sorrow without resorting to commonplace sophistries of this nature? |
45483 | Is it not absurd for a potter to worship his own pot? |
45483 | Is it not equally superfluous to accept one miracle in the Bible, and deny the rest? |
45483 | Is it not more generous and aesthetic to be on good terms with everybody? |
45483 | Is it only taking away the religion of_ our_ mothers that is not"nice"? |
45483 | Is it right to criticise or condemn the evil practices of a church that has done so much good for civilization? |
45483 | Is it right to sacrifice speech to silence, for the sake of harmony? |
45483 | Is it true of Poland, bleeding from a thousand wounds? |
45483 | Is it worth while to sacrifice the most sacred privileges of men in order to bring priest and rabbi together? |
45483 | Is it, for example, true of Russia to- day that"all''s right"there? |
45483 | Is not freedom more precious than peace? |
45483 | Is not progress a dearer word than unity? |
45483 | Is not this an attempt to make ethics as mystifying as theology? |
45483 | Is that a work that can be dispensed with? |
45483 | Is the church honest with science? |
45483 | Is the evidence furnished by modern mediums more convincing than that furnished by the mediums in the Bible? |
45483 | Is the good doctor trying to exonerate God by laying the entire blame upon us"common sinners"? |
45483 | Matters came to a crisis when I delivered a lecture on"Was Jesus God?" |
45483 | Moreover, because a child can not comprehend algebra, is it right to teach him that one and one make three? |
45483 | Moreover, if a teacher has power to stop the sun, has he not the power to make people see the truth without a miracle? |
45483 | Moreover, if faith can make one prophet inspired, why not another? |
45483 | Must all the generations of the future limp and hobble, to support the crutch industry? |
45483 | Must not their lives be"balanced"''in some way too? |
45483 | Or does he believe that man began life as an angel, and later became a man-- a fallen man? |
45483 | Or will Mr. Orlando Smith answer with St. Paul,"Does God care for the oxen"? |
45483 | Shall we sell the truth that we may have money to be charitable with? |
45483 | The beast tears its victims to death, the tree feeds the worms; is not a tree, therefore, purer than a beast? |
45483 | The important question is not,"Is life worth living?" |
45483 | There would, indeed, be harmony under these conditions, in any camp, but what would it be worth? |
45483 | Was I now going to shut my eyes again? |
45483 | Was it not more cruel to teach them to depend upon crutches? |
45483 | Was man meant to be an invalid all his life? |
45483 | Was not one liberal society enough in Chicago? |
45483 | What about taking away the religion of heathen mothers? |
45483 | What are these curtains? |
45483 | What do these words mean? |
45483 | What does it mean, for instance, to be"Nearer and still nearer, to God"? |
45483 | What is gained by putting a dead wall or"curtains"between the intelligence of man and his conscience? |
45483 | What is the defense of Ethical Culture against this charge? |
45483 | What is the educational value to God of presiding over a race of puppets? |
45483 | What is the teaching which makes of Buddhism a distinctive religion? |
45483 | What need has a religion which can change men miraculously,--and which makes faith the sole condition of salvation,--for Ethical Culture? |
45483 | What part, according to the doctor, did the Deity play in the Iroquois fire? |
45483 | What would be the probable course he would pursue? |
45483 | When the turbaned Oriental, standing in his mosque, pronounces the name of_ Allah_ with such awe and joy, what is it he means? |
45483 | Who created the Sultan or the Czar? |
45483 | Who put them there to hide such"augustness"? |
45483 | Why bring the Deity into the affair? |
45483 | Why did I not fall upon my knees to commit myself to God''s keeping? |
45483 | Why did a"Heavenly Father"deliver us to the brigands? |
45483 | Why is not Calvin''s word as good as mine, if an assertion may pass for an argument? |
45483 | Why is the incoherent, instinctive exclamations of childhood, of bird and beast, sweeter than the ripened, rational, progressive, word of man? |
45483 | Why should a man object to the Baptist or the Unitarian immortality, if he can accept the immortality of the Spiritualists? |
45483 | Why, then, should Moses or Mohammed or Jesus stand in the way of the science of the twentieth century? |
45483 | Will they have to look forward to another world for justice? |
45483 | Would I not be dividing and thereby weakening the cause by engaging a new lecture hall? |
45483 | Would he reveal himself to us as he is, or only as much of himself as we needed to know or could comprehend? |
45483 | Would it not be wasteful to argue that St. Denis took the first step, but no more? |
45483 | and of beasts-- but words, our words? |
45483 | but"How can life be made worth living, since live we must?" |
45483 | or was he glad it happened because it would teach us a lesson? |
45483 | or, did he mean that it was quite considerate of him to make us feel the horror of that event sufficiently as to bring tears from our eyes? |
41422 | Above your own, Joel? |
41422 | Age should bring wisdom, should it not? |
41422 | Alone? |
41422 | An age for sowing wild oats, and gathering apples off other folks trees, eh? 41422 And Lucy-- is she as pretty as ever? |
41422 | And how are all my friends, Mally? |
41422 | And how fend tha noo, Master Joel? |
41422 | And how''s your bonny wife, school- master? |
41422 | And where is she now? |
41422 | And you seek her happiness? |
41422 | And you''ll think over what I''ve been saying? |
41422 | Are we alone? |
41422 | Are you afraid I''ll vanish? |
41422 | Are you frightened, Lucy? |
41422 | Are you tired? |
41422 | At nine o''clock? |
41422 | But why did n''t you go? |
41422 | By telling you my troubles? |
41422 | Ca n''t you reflect upon life without burying yourself first? |
41422 | Did n''t you want to come back, Peter? |
41422 | Did you expect me before? |
41422 | Did you speak, great- granny? |
41422 | Didst ever have weather like this before? |
41422 | Didst think to find me asleep? |
41422 | Didst think to pluck the bonny golden apples out o''my hand? 41422 Do n''t I do well? |
41422 | Do you ever waken o''nights? |
41422 | Do you know what they are? |
41422 | Do you know what you are asking me to do? |
41422 | Do you know when Peter will be back? |
41422 | Do you never dream? |
41422 | Do you think that''s the reason we have so much to bear? 41422 Do''ee now?" |
41422 | Does anyone understand what life is? |
41422 | Dost need me, great- granny? |
41422 | Eyes? 41422 Go away?" |
41422 | Handsome-- eh? |
41422 | Has my sister been here? |
41422 | Has the butter come yet, Lucy? |
41422 | Hast ever thought, Lucy,she said at last,"how strange it is that we should die like sheep and sheep like us?" |
41422 | Have n''t you a reason to give for coming to see me? 41422 Have you any o''that elder- flower water, Master Timothy, what makes your cheeks soft?" |
41422 | Have you heard,he asked,"that a murrain has broken out among the cattle further south?" |
41422 | Have you read the book I sent you? |
41422 | Have you seen her? |
41422 | Her or her great- granddaughters? |
41422 | Ho, my good fellow,said Fleming,"are you going to fight me for him? |
41422 | How are you, Joel? |
41422 | How do you know I came early? 41422 How goes the studying, Barbara?" |
41422 | How goes the world? |
41422 | How''s thy wind? |
41422 | Hulloa, what have you there? |
41422 | Hum... a man''s foes.... And if you return home now, what will you do eventually? 41422 Hungry, eh?" |
41422 | I feed you well and clothe you warm-- what more dost need? |
41422 | I shall have sorrow, Timothy? |
41422 | I should n''t wonder if he paid me a visit before long-- eh? |
41422 | I''m sorry, Mistress Lynn,he began,"I never meant, I did n''t mean----""Well,"she gasped,"is that all; you did n''t mean-- what?" |
41422 | I''m well,he replied;"and you? |
41422 | If you could have a wish just now, that would come true,she said,"what would you wish for most in the world?" |
41422 | Is it a song, Peter? |
41422 | Is it yours or mine, master? |
41422 | Is it? |
41422 | Is n''t it too cold for you out here? |
41422 | Is that so? |
41422 | It wo n''t sweep away the house, will it? |
41422 | It''s late,he said,"had n''t we better wait for a more seasonable opportunity to have a crack?" |
41422 | It''s nearly morning, is n''t it? |
41422 | Joel Hart,she said,"is your love a true love?" |
41422 | Life is n''t such a joyous game, is it, Mally, that you''d like to play it for ever? |
41422 | Lucy,he said,"why did n''t you wait for me?" |
41422 | Man, will you not try another fall with me? |
41422 | Nay? 41422 Oh, Barbara, do you want to see spooks?" |
41422 | On beastly days like this, when no one is likely to pay us a visit, it passes the time-- eh? |
41422 | Portly, eh? |
41422 | Really? |
41422 | Run away from Jake, have you? |
41422 | Shall we go away, Lucy? |
41422 | Shall we have a game at chess? |
41422 | Shall we never be married? |
41422 | Shall we shut up this house, and leave High Fold? |
41422 | She was sharp, was n''t she, when we hinted we''d like to have some of her money to spend now? 41422 She''s rich-- is she?" |
41422 | Speak the truth, Lucy, do you love Peter or me best? |
41422 | There''s many a tall hill between us and it,continued the hind,"but what''s a hill to the murrain? |
41422 | Too old, art tha? |
41422 | Up to Greystones? |
41422 | Was it a good way? |
41422 | We''ll have tea; you''d like tea, Peter? 41422 Well, what''s been adoing down- by?" |
41422 | Well,she inquired at last,"am I like it or have I changed?" |
41422 | What about, Peter? |
41422 | What ails thee at a shilling? 41422 What am I doing? |
41422 | What are the wisps for? |
41422 | What didst say? |
41422 | What do you mean, Joel? 41422 What do you mean?" |
41422 | What do you want the bear for, master? |
41422 | What dost mean, Timothy? |
41422 | What good did it do? |
41422 | What is wrong with Joel? |
41422 | What shall I read? |
41422 | What the devil are you doing here? |
41422 | What''s Barbara complaining about? |
41422 | What''s that to do with it? |
41422 | What''s that to you? |
41422 | When did you get home? |
41422 | When you''ve made your fortune, you''ll come back, Joel? |
41422 | Where are you going? |
41422 | Where didst get it? |
41422 | Where didst get it? |
41422 | Where hast been? |
41422 | Where shall we go, Lucy,he said,"there''s all the world to choose from?" |
41422 | Where''s Barbara? |
41422 | Which of us do you love best? |
41422 | Who are you? |
41422 | Who talks of marrying? |
41422 | Who told you? |
41422 | Who''s yon sitting by the fire? |
41422 | Who, Jan? |
41422 | Who? |
41422 | Why do we sup it so eagerly? |
41422 | Why do you keep Barbara and me penniless? |
41422 | Why do you stand there as if you had n''t heard? 41422 Why has Barbara gone home?" |
41422 | Why not, Joel? 41422 Why shouldsta? |
41422 | Why? 41422 Why?" |
41422 | Wo n''t you go away home now? |
41422 | Would you like to live in a palace, mother? |
41422 | Wouldst like to see me play ducks and drakes with it in the beck? |
41422 | You could n''t find him? |
41422 | You did n''t see anyone coming down the fellside, did you, when you were gathering the kye? |
41422 | You feel a magic in the woods which only comes from the communion of souls? 41422 You feel it, then?" |
41422 | You know I''m going to keep school? |
41422 | You''ll come and stay with me next summer, old fellow? |
41422 | You''re heir to a considerable patrimony, are n''t you, Fleming? |
41422 | You''re not thinking of marrying her-- are you? |
41422 | You''ve got a sovereign,she said coldly;"how many more do you want?" |
41422 | Young man, do you know why of all the leaves in the forest not two are alike? 41422 Your wife, Jan?" |
41422 | And have you come to set me free? |
41422 | And how goes the world with all of you?" |
41422 | And this night-- wouldst like to know where I''ve been-- eh?" |
41422 | And what did he propose to do with it? |
41422 | And what do you expect me to do with it?" |
41422 | And what had she in common with the men but her height and strength? |
41422 | And what trap could be worse than one made out of family pride, poverty, and lack of education? |
41422 | And what would I do there?" |
41422 | Are n''t the people savages, heathen, Goths? |
41422 | Are you going to succeed?" |
41422 | Are you sure you do n''t care to come? |
41422 | At last he asked in a voice that trembled away into silence:"Will it waken her?" |
41422 | Barbara, I suppose, still manages the farm?" |
41422 | But as he had gone, why had he not been kinder? |
41422 | But if she went to the door and knocked, what could she say? |
41422 | But seriously, why did n''t you accept that post in India? |
41422 | But tell me this-- there''s a good heart-- does Lucy ever ask after me?" |
41422 | But we''ll have another wrestling yet, eh? |
41422 | But which was right and which wrong? |
41422 | But you''re not as badly off as you say, eh, Joel?" |
41422 | CHAPTER XXII THE TRYST AT GIRDLESTONE PASS"Shall we go to the Shepherd''s Rest?" |
41422 | Ca n''t you give all your love to him? |
41422 | Could he not have it now? |
41422 | Could he not, by some means, anticipate the old woman''s decree concerning the disposal of her money? |
41422 | Could her soul grow like that? |
41422 | Could the pack- horse track be so near, and was some one passing along it with a lantern? |
41422 | Could this last scene be the outcome of such an one as that of the morning? |
41422 | Did he care for her still? |
41422 | Did he think that he had been tricked? |
41422 | Did it live or die?" |
41422 | Did n''t you once speak of a giantess, a sort of Polyphemus''s mamma, that lived in a cave and herded sheep?" |
41422 | Did the god not deal a mingled lot to most of his creatures, but gave them an enduring soul to bear it? |
41422 | Do n''t you think he''s failing, Lucy? |
41422 | Do n''t you want to marry me? |
41422 | Do you feel better?" |
41422 | Does Lucy know the place?" |
41422 | Does n''t it make you feel rich? |
41422 | Does n''t she ken the lift like the palm of her hand, and the dales and fells better than her ten toes?" |
41422 | For what had she in common with any woman in the dale but her sex? |
41422 | For who else should he come to but his grandfather''s old friend? |
41422 | Go off with Joel? |
41422 | Had he not, while pretending to be his friend, lured Lucy from him? |
41422 | Had she not lived there for more than seventy years? |
41422 | Had she not said all that was possible for a woman? |
41422 | Had she not said that she loved him? |
41422 | Has n''t she enough learning for any lass, and more than most? |
41422 | Have I done aught amiss?" |
41422 | Have n''t you a word to say?" |
41422 | Have n''t you told me so many a time?" |
41422 | Have you seen Lucy?" |
41422 | He did not reply for a moment, then said:"Are you sure you have n''t passed her?" |
41422 | He felt sure that he was wrestling for more than the barren triumph of muscle over muscle, but for what? |
41422 | He would write to her to- night-- a clean confession of all that he had done amiss, before he disappeared into the wilderness for-- how long? |
41422 | Here, you fellow, why do n''t you feed him better?" |
41422 | How could she ever have distrusted him? |
41422 | How long are you home for?" |
41422 | How long had he been lying on the settle? |
41422 | How much was that, Barbara? |
41422 | How old art thou? |
41422 | How was it that she had eluded him so quickly? |
41422 | If Joel were to call her now would she spring to meet him, and claim him as her soul''s true mate? |
41422 | If she retreated, would she regret her action when she got back again into the safe harbour? |
41422 | Is it not because there is a spirit of freedom in life however lowly?" |
41422 | Is it the old woman?" |
41422 | Is n''t Barbara going?" |
41422 | Is your mind quite made up?" |
41422 | It gets close to me-- ugh!--and whispers and whispers----""Well, what does it whisper?" |
41422 | It''s a bonny sight, a bonny sight, lass, and worth an old woman''s gathering, eh? |
41422 | Lost thy tongue, hasta? |
41422 | May I put Big Ben-- such is his name, I''m told-- into one of them?" |
41422 | Maybe you''d better hook it, master; seems as though he''d got a memory, eh?" |
41422 | Must he? |
41422 | Must she not keep silent now unless he spoke? |
41422 | Now, Master Camomile, what kind o''fate would you foretell for the three lad bairns, born at a birth? |
41422 | Or could it be the inflowing of some holy element, that would mingle with his thoughts and purify them? |
41422 | Or have you come to see me hanging On the gallows tree?" |
41422 | Or was it paralysis of the living soul, which had felt so much that it could feel no more? |
41422 | Peter, back again?" |
41422 | She considered Joel''s departure and the possibility of his ever returning; would she not be grey- haired by then? |
41422 | She did look up, but to ask in a cold voice:"How much money have you, Joel?" |
41422 | She had promised Peter that she would go, yet why should she? |
41422 | She knows us better than we know ourselves-- do we know ourselves at all? |
41422 | She liked Peter very much; she felt safe with him; she meant to marry him if it lay in her power to do so; but did she love him? |
41422 | Should she call? |
41422 | Should she go? |
41422 | Should she keep it? |
41422 | Six years ago they had had a great time-- did they remember? |
41422 | Still, I''ll go----""Has he sent for you?" |
41422 | That bit of gold-- have you got it?" |
41422 | The kye got into the barley- field-- do you mind?" |
41422 | There were the cows to milk, the sheep to herd, hoeing and weeding and seed- sowing to do; what time had she for such fanglements? |
41422 | To gossip with Jake, the rat- catcher; to make a pet of a dancing bear; to wrestle on the green-- were these things not low? |
41422 | Turning to Lucy, he said:"Must it be good- bye?" |
41422 | Was he out in the cold? |
41422 | Was her placid life upon the mountains going to end? |
41422 | Was it a question worth asking, when no heart was pure? |
41422 | Was it but the exhaustion of passion, the sinking down of a stormy sea, as waves sink, when the tempest is over? |
41422 | Was it not her due, considering the way she worked and yet received no recompense? |
41422 | Was it not true? |
41422 | Was it of this she felt apprehensive-- the coming of a call-- and that she would not be strong enough to resist? |
41422 | Was it true? |
41422 | Was it, then, he who desired to be free? |
41422 | Was not Peter his supplanter? |
41422 | Was she acting a part? |
41422 | Was she dreaming? |
41422 | Was she not still in love with Joel? |
41422 | Was the scene a painting of her own imagination or was it real life? |
41422 | Was there nothing? |
41422 | Was this girl proposing to settle his plans for him? |
41422 | Was this the crown that Timothy Hadwin had promised she should wear? |
41422 | Were not those white vapours its thoughts going up to the Eternal Being who gave them? |
41422 | Were you watching for me?" |
41422 | What are you saying? |
41422 | What could a lass like you do when the beck''s in spate? |
41422 | What could he suspect? |
41422 | What did she see? |
41422 | What has happened? |
41422 | What has he ever had in life to make him want to live?" |
41422 | What in the world is he doing here still? |
41422 | What or who has been frightening you, Lucy? |
41422 | What right had anyone so old to be still among the living? |
41422 | What right had he to send her a letter now, after so long a silence? |
41422 | What right had he to suspect anything? |
41422 | What shall I play?" |
41422 | What should she do? |
41422 | What sort of a man is Peter?" |
41422 | What the deuce are you growling at?" |
41422 | What time is it?" |
41422 | What upon?" |
41422 | What use was his wealth to him if he must live alone, deprived of the one thing he most wanted to have? |
41422 | What was peace? |
41422 | What was the meaning of the light in his eyes? |
41422 | What was there to fear? |
41422 | What was wrong with Joel to- night? |
41422 | What would Peter make of the little green- bowered cot in Cringel Forest? |
41422 | What''ll you sell him for, you fellow?" |
41422 | Whatever was their mother thinking o''to lay such a saddle on the lad- bairns''s backs?" |
41422 | Where could he hope to get the money if not here? |
41422 | Where could she turn for safety? |
41422 | Where was happiness, that she might snatch at it? |
41422 | Where was he? |
41422 | Where was peace, that she might find it? |
41422 | Where''s Barbara?" |
41422 | Wherein lay the unwisdom? |
41422 | Who can tell, for he said nothing? |
41422 | Who knows whether we''ll see the wakes together again?" |
41422 | Who knows?" |
41422 | Whose married? |
41422 | Why could she not love him best? |
41422 | Why did n''t you-- eh?" |
41422 | Why do you ask?" |
41422 | Why had she not gone? |
41422 | Why should Lucy not do the same? |
41422 | Why should he hesitate to meet her? |
41422 | Why should it live in icy silence? |
41422 | Why should it not give and receive as others gave and received? |
41422 | Why should she not go? |
41422 | Why should you be afraid to trust yourself to me? |
41422 | Why was anything? |
41422 | Why?" |
41422 | Will Peter think I have not improved?" |
41422 | Will you go up to Greystones?" |
41422 | Wilta gie me a fleece?" |
41422 | With your honours it''s monstrous, that you should turn school- master to your native vale, content with-- how much?" |
41422 | Wo n''t you come? |
41422 | Would he stay now he had come back? |
41422 | Would it be wise to go? |
41422 | Would not the four grey walls of a cottage choke her? |
41422 | Would she be happier if her lot brought her down from the clouds to the earth? |
41422 | Would she be like a shepherd, who had gone out one wild night to bring the ewes to a more sheltered spot, and who was blown over a precipice? |
41422 | Would she fall into a drift when helping to dig out the sheep, and perish of the suffocating snow in which a sheep may live, but not a human being? |
41422 | Would she grow dizzy when climbing some steep ascent, and fall down to be dashed on the rocks below? |
41422 | Would you like to see me put my head in its mouth?" |
41422 | Yet what had she to fear? |
41422 | Yet why should she not stay? |
41422 | You do n''t want to work, I bet; had enough of that sort of thing down yonder-- eh? |
41422 | You feel that other minds are reaching out to touch you, as you are reaching out to touch them? |
41422 | You have in your own mind this vision of the truth-- the kinship of the living world?" |
41422 | You remember it, do n''t you?" |
41422 | You''re not going blind, Barbara?" |
41422 | You''ve got an empty shed, have n''t you?" |
41422 | _ The mind_"he said,"_ approaching the eternal, has attained to the extinction of all desires?_"She mused for a moment upon the words. |
41422 | and whose dead down- by?" |
41422 | and why did he not meet her as he had promised? |
41422 | do you expect to see me in that Hyperborean inaccessible, out- of- the- world vale of yours? |
41422 | do you want me to take the bear?" |
41422 | exclaimed her sister;"have n''t I plenty to do already?" |
41422 | have you found my golden ball? |
41422 | he said to Joel,"writing to your sweetheart? |
41422 | how goes thyself? |
41422 | lead it away, fix it where you like; but I say, Peter, you do n''t expect me to look after it, do you?" |
41422 | like her great- grandmother''s? |
41422 | or would they find him gone again some fine morning? |
41422 | she asked;"to Ketel''s Parlour?" |
41422 | we''ll have some fishing and wrestling-- eh? |
41422 | when? |
41422 | whose been kirsened? |
52706 | Beautiful? |
52706 | Ca n''t even you see that? |
52706 | Do you get much inspiration here? |
52706 | How''s art? |
52706 | Then if you were to put the blue and white jar on the right of the Buddha, instead of on the left,I asked,"the whole room would feel the shock?" |
52706 | You have nothing to do to- night, then? |
52706 | Ah, yes, with whom? |
52706 | As long as the question asked is"Is it art?" |
52706 | Is that all?" |
52706 | It is true the seats were filled, but with whom? |
52706 | That''s pretty good for my first two years abroad, is n''t it?" |
52706 | That''s pretty good for my first year, is it not? |
52706 | When did you come?" |
52706 | and not"Will it sell?" |
52706 | and"Is it popular?" |
4363 | And the praise of the self- sacrificer? |
4363 | Are not our ears already full of bad sounds? |
4363 | HOW COULD anything originate out of its opposite? 4363 How are synthetic judgments a priori POSSIBLE?" |
4363 | How many centuries does a mind require to be understood? |
4363 | Is it not sufficient if the criminal be rendered HARMLESS? 4363 Miracle"only an error of interpretation? |
4363 | Sir,the philosopher will perhaps give him to understand,"it is improbable that you are not mistaken, but why should it be the truth?" |
4363 | To refresh me? 4363 What? |
4363 | You want to prepossess him in your favour? 4363 ( Is not a moralist the opposite of a Puritan? 4363 --Stronger, more evil, and more profound?" |
4363 | --And Socrates?--And the"scientific man"? |
4363 | --Did any one ever answer so? |
4363 | --even such a virtuous and sincere ass would learn in a short time to have recourse to the FURCA of Horace, NATURAM EXPELLERE: with what results? |
4363 | --is it not so? |
4363 | --might it not be bluntly replied: WHY? |
4363 | 278.--Wanderer, who art thou? |
4363 | 281.--"Will people believe it of me? |
4363 | 282.--"But what has happened to you?" |
4363 | 92. Who has not, at one time or another-- sacrificed himself for the sake of his good name? |
4363 | A great man? |
4363 | A lack of philology? |
4363 | A wrestler, by himself too oft self- wrung? |
4363 | All respect to governesses, but is it not time that philosophy should renounce governess- faith? |
4363 | Am I an other? |
4363 | An evil huntsman was I? |
4363 | An explanation? |
4363 | And after all, what do we know of ourselves? |
4363 | And all that is now to be at an end? |
4363 | And even if they were right-- have not all Gods hitherto been such sanctified, re- baptized devils? |
4363 | And granted that your imperative,"living according to Nature,"means actually the same as"living according to life"--how could you do DIFFERENTLY? |
4363 | And how many spirits we harbour? |
4363 | And is there anything finer than to SEARCH for one''s own virtues? |
4363 | And others say even that the external world is the work of our organs? |
4363 | And perhaps also the arrow, the duty, and, who knows? |
4363 | And perhaps ye are also something of the same kind, ye coming ones? |
4363 | And that the"tropical man"must be discredited at all costs, whether as disease and deterioration of mankind, or as his own hell and self- torture? |
4363 | And the DISENCHANTMENT of woman is in progress? |
4363 | And this would not be-- circulus vitiosus deus? |
4363 | And to any one who suggested:"But to a fiction belongs an originator?" |
4363 | And to ask once more the question: Is greatness POSSIBLE-- nowadays? |
4363 | And uncertainty? |
4363 | And was it ever otherwise? |
4363 | And what I am, to you my friends, now am I not? |
4363 | And what the spirit that leads us wants TO BE CALLED? |
4363 | And whoever thou art, what is it that now pleases thee? |
4363 | And why? |
4363 | And, in so far as we now comprehend this, is it not-- thereby already past? |
4363 | Are you absolutely obliged to straighten at once what is crooked? |
4363 | Around the hero everything becomes a tragedy; around the demigod everything becomes a satyr- play; and around God everything becomes-- what? |
4363 | Became a ghost haunting the glaciers bare? |
4363 | But give me, I pray thee---"What? |
4363 | But she does not want truth-- what does woman care for truth? |
4363 | But such replies belong to the realm of comedy, and it is high time to replace the Kantian question,"How are synthetic judgments a PRIORI possible?" |
4363 | But who would attempt to express accurately what all these masters of new modes of speech could not express distinctly? |
4363 | But, is that-- an answer? |
4363 | COMMENT NE PAS SUPPOSER QUE C''EST DANS CES MOMENTS- LA, QUE L''HOMME VOIT LE MIEUX?"... |
4363 | Consequently, the external world is NOT the work of our organs--? |
4363 | Did he perhaps deserve to be laughed at when he thus exhorted systems of morals to practise morality? |
4363 | Did she ever find out? |
4363 | Does he not-- go back?" |
4363 | Does it not seem that there is a hatred of the virgin forest and of the tropics among moralists? |
4363 | Does not that mean in popular language: God is disproved, but not the devil?" |
4363 | Even an action for love''s sake shall be"unegoistic"? |
4363 | Even ignorance? |
4363 | FROM THE HEIGHTS( POEM TRANSLATED BY L.A. MAGNUS) PREFACE SUPPOSING that Truth is a woman-- what then? |
4363 | Finally, I ask the question: Did a woman herself ever acknowledge profundity in a woman''s mind, or justice in a woman''s heart? |
4363 | Finally, what still remained to be sacrificed? |
4363 | For example, truth out of error? |
4363 | From German body, this self- lacerating? |
4363 | Granted that we want the truth: WHY NOT RATHER untruth? |
4363 | Had the wicked Socrates really corrupted him? |
4363 | Hand, gait, face, changed? |
4363 | Has not the time leisure? |
4363 | Have I forgotten myself so far that I have not even told you his name? |
4363 | Have not we ourselves been-- that"noble posterity"? |
4363 | Have there ever been such philosophers? |
4363 | He who has such sentiments, he who has such KNOWLEDGE about love-- SEEKS for death!--But why should one deal with such painful matters? |
4363 | Hindering too oft my own self''s potency, Wounded and hampered by self- victory? |
4363 | How could he fail-- to long DIFFERENTLY for happiness? |
4363 | How does opium induce sleep? |
4363 | How is the negation of will POSSIBLE? |
4363 | I am not I? |
4363 | In favour of the temperate men? |
4363 | In favour of the"temperate zones"? |
4363 | Indeed, what is it that forces us in general to the supposition that there is an essential opposition of"true"and"false"? |
4363 | Indeed, who could doubt that it is a useful thing for SUCH minds to have the ascendancy for a time? |
4363 | Is it any wonder if we at last grow distrustful, lose patience, and turn impatiently away? |
4363 | Is it necessary that you should so salt your truth that it will no longer-- quench thirst? |
4363 | Is it not almost to BELIEVE in one''s own virtues? |
4363 | Is it not at length permitted to be a little ironical towards the subject, just as towards the predicate and object? |
4363 | Is it not in the very worst taste that woman thus sets herself up to be scientific? |
4363 | Is moralizing not- immoral?) |
4363 | Is not life a hundred times too short for us-- to bore ourselves? |
4363 | Is not living valuing, preferring, being unjust, being limited, endeavouring to be different? |
4363 | Is not the glacier''s grey today for you Rose- garlanded? |
4363 | Is ours this faltering, falling, shambling, This quite uncertain ding- dong- dangling? |
4363 | Is ours this priestly hand- dilation, This incense- fuming exaltation? |
4363 | Is that really-- a pessimist? |
4363 | Is there not time enough for that? |
4363 | It IS characteristic of the Germans that the question:"What is German?" |
4363 | It is not enough to possess a talent: one must also have your permission to possess it;--eh, my friends? |
4363 | It may happen, too, that in the frankness of my story I must go further than is agreeable to the strict usages of your ears? |
4363 | Kant asks himself-- and what is really his answer? |
4363 | Let us examine more closely: what is the scientific man? |
4363 | MUST there not be such philosophers some day? |
4363 | May not this"belong"also belong to the fiction? |
4363 | Might not the philosopher elevate himself above faith in grammar? |
4363 | My honey-- who hath sipped its fragrancy? |
4363 | My table was spread out for you on high-- Who dwelleth so Star- near, so near the grisly pit below?-- My realm-- what realm hath wider boundary? |
4363 | Not long ago you were so variegated, young and malicious, so full of thorns and secret spices, that you made me sneeze and laugh-- and now? |
4363 | Of whom am I talking to you? |
4363 | Oh, ye demons, can ye not at all WAIT? |
4363 | One MUST repay good and ill; but why just to the person who did us good or ill? |
4363 | Or is it not rather merely a repetition of the question? |
4363 | Or stupid enough? |
4363 | Or, to put the question differently:"Why knowledge at all?" |
4363 | Or:"Even if the door were open, why should I enter immediately?" |
4363 | Or:"What is the use of any hasty hypotheses? |
4363 | She is modest enough to love even you? |
4363 | Should not the CONTRARY only be the right disguise for the shame of a God to go about in? |
4363 | Strange am I to Me? |
4363 | THE DANGER IN HAPPINESS.--"Everything now turns out best for me, I now love every fate:--who would like to be my fate?" |
4363 | That is to say, as a thinker who regards morality as questionable, as worthy of interrogation, in short, as a problem? |
4363 | That this Sphinx teaches us at last to ask questions ourselves? |
4363 | The image of such leaders hovers before OUR eyes:--is it lawful for me to say it aloud, ye free spirits? |
4363 | The problem of the value of truth presented itself before us-- or was it we who presented ourselves before the problem? |
4363 | The tediousness of woman is slowly evolving? |
4363 | The"moral"? |
4363 | Their"knowing"is CREATING, their creating is a law- giving, their will to truth is-- WILL TO POWER.--Are there at present such philosophers? |
4363 | There I learned to dwell Where no man dwells, on lonesome ice- lorn fell, And unlearned Man and God and curse and prayer? |
4363 | There must be a sort of repugnance in me to BELIEVE anything definite about myself.--Is there perhaps some enigma therein? |
4363 | There, however, he deceived himself; but who would not have deceived himself in his place? |
4363 | They will smile, those rigorous spirits, when any one says in their presence"That thought elevates me, why should it not be true?" |
4363 | To famish apart? |
4363 | To live-- is not that just endeavouring to be otherwise than this Nature? |
4363 | To love one''s enemies? |
4363 | To refresh me? |
4363 | Uneaseful joy to look, to lurk, to hark-- I peer for friends, am ready day and night,-- Where linger ye, my friends? |
4363 | Unless it be that you have already divined of your own accord who this questionable God and spirit is, that wishes to be PRAISED in such a manner? |
4363 | WHAT IS NOBLE? |
4363 | WHAT really is this"Will to Truth"in us? |
4363 | WHO is it really that puts questions to us here? |
4363 | Was Socrates after all a corrupter of youths, and deserved his hemlock?" |
4363 | Was he wrong? |
4363 | Was it not necessary to sacrifice God himself, and out of cruelty to themselves to worship stone, stupidity, gravity, fate, nothingness? |
4363 | Was that a work for your hands? |
4363 | What avail is it? |
4363 | What does all modern philosophy mainly do? |
4363 | What does the word"noble"still mean for us nowadays? |
4363 | What gives me the right to speak of an''ego,''and even of an''ego''as cause, and finally of an''ego''as cause of thought?" |
4363 | What is clear, what is"explained"? |
4363 | What is noble? |
4363 | What linked us once together, one hope''s tie--( Who now doth con Those lines, now fading, Love once wrote thereon?) |
4363 | What will serve to refresh thee? |
4363 | What will the moral philosophers who appear at this time have to preach? |
4363 | What wonder that we"free spirits"are not exactly the most communicative spirits? |
4363 | What, then, is the attitude of the two greatest religions above- mentioned to the SURPLUS of failures in life? |
4363 | What? |
4363 | What? |
4363 | What? |
4363 | What? |
4363 | Which of us is the Oedipus here? |
4363 | Which the Sphinx? |
4363 | Whom I thank when in my bliss? |
4363 | Why Atheism nowadays? |
4363 | Why NOT? |
4363 | Why did we choose it, this foolish task? |
4363 | Why do I believe in cause and effect? |
4363 | Why might not the world WHICH CONCERNS US-- be a fiction? |
4363 | Why should we still punish? |
4363 | Why should you make a principle out of what you yourselves are, and must be? |
4363 | Will they be new friends of"truth,"these coming philosophers? |
4363 | Woe me,--yet I am not He whom ye seek? |
4363 | Yet from Me sprung? |
4363 | You desire to LIVE"according to Nature"? |
4363 | and what guarantee would it give that it would not continue to do what it has always been doing? |
4363 | by another question,"Why is belief in such judgments necessary?" |
4363 | for what purpose? |
4363 | into a new light? |
4363 | or the Will to Truth out of the will to deception? |
4363 | or the generous deed out of selfishness? |
4363 | or the pure sun- bright vision of the wise man out of covetousness? |
4363 | or"That artist enlarges me, why should he not be great?" |
4363 | or"That work enchants me, why should it not be beautiful?" |
4363 | perhaps a"world"? |
4363 | that we do not wish to betray in every respect WHAT a spirit can free itself from, and WHERE perhaps it will then be driven? |
4363 | to stuff every hole with some kind of oakum? |
4363 | towards a new sun? |
4363 | what hast thou done? |
4363 | what? |
4363 | ye NEW philosophers? |
44621 | A CASE OF INSUBORDINATION? |
44621 | A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?) |
44621 | A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?) |
44621 | A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE? |
44621 | A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE? |
44621 | AGAIN? |
44621 | ARE OUR SCHOOLS UP- TO- DATE? |
44621 | ARE POETS PEOPLE? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU LISTENING? |
44621 | ARE YOU LISTENING? |
44621 | ARE YOU THE ONE? |
44621 | ARE YOU THE ONE? |
44621 | ART: WHAT IS IT? |
44621 | ASSIGNMENT K. Mea Productions, Inc. WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | American Diabetes Assn., Inc. HOW SURE ARE YOU? |
44621 | CAN YOU HEAR ME? |
44621 | CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | French, Warren G. ARE POETS PEOPLE? |
44621 | Georgia Textile Manufacturers Assn., Inc. WHERE''S THE SAFETY CATCH? |
44621 | Gibraltar Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | HALT, WHO GROWS THERE? |
44621 | HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT? |
44621 | HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT? |
44621 | HOW BIG? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DOES A GARDEN GROW? |
44621 | HOW DOES MY CHILD LEARN TO READ? |
44621 | HOW GOOD IS A GOOD GUY? |
44621 | HOW MANY 1/2''S IS 3/2? |
44621 | HOW MUCH HOMEWORK IS ENOUGH? |
44621 | HOW MUCH LOVING DOES A NORMAL COUPLE NEED? |
44621 | HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD? |
44621 | HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD? |
44621 | HOW SOLID IS ROCK? |
44621 | HOW SOLID IS ROCK? |
44621 | HOW SURE ARE YOU? |
44621 | HOW VAST IS SPACE? |
44621 | HOW VAST IS SPACE? |
44621 | HOW WAS THAT AGAIN? |
44621 | HOW WAS THAT AGAIN? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS SMOKING WORTH IT? |
44621 | IS SMOKING WORTH IT? |
44621 | IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JUSTICE FOR ALL? |
44621 | LONELY, OR A LONER? |
44621 | LONELY, OR A LONER? |
44621 | LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE? |
44621 | LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE? |
44621 | Lance Productions, Inc. WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? |
44621 | Laurel Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | MARRIAGE: WHAT KIND FOR YOU? |
44621 | ME IN MEDIA? |
44621 | ME IN MEDIA? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | MY LIFE TO LIVE? |
44621 | Marianne Productions, S.A. IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | Menninger Foundation, Topeka, Kan. WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE? |
44621 | NARCOTICS-- WHY NOT? |
44621 | Nonnenmacher, Nicholas T. PEACE OR COMMUNISM? |
44621 | OR? |
44621 | OR? |
44621 | PEACE OR COMMUNISM? |
44621 | Peeler, Richard E. CERAMICS, WHAT, WHY, HOW? |
44621 | Phillips, Roger M. HOW WAS YOUR EVENING? |
44621 | REDWOODS-- SAVED? |
44621 | REDWOODS-- SAVED? |
44621 | REMEMBER EDDIE SIMPSON? |
44621 | SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE? |
44621 | SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE? |
44621 | SHOULD I KNOW MY CHILD''S IQ? |
44621 | SILENT NIGHTS? |
44621 | SILENT NIGHTS? |
44621 | SMOKE, ANYONE? |
44621 | SMOKE, ANYONE? |
44621 | Sib Tower 12, Inc. IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE? |
44621 | THE MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT, 1960. WHO IN''68? |
44621 | Transcontinental Films, Inc. IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | WATCHA WATCHIN''? |
44621 | WATCHA WATCHIN''? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT SEX? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT SEX? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S? |
44621 | WHAT ARE FOSSILS? |
44621 | WHAT ARE FOSSILS? |
44621 | WHAT ARE STARS MADE OF? |
44621 | WHAT ARE TEACHING MACHINES? |
44621 | WHAT ARE THINGS MADE OF? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT COLOR ARE YOU? |
44621 | WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY? |
44621 | WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY? |
44621 | WHAT DIRECTION? |
44621 | WHAT DIRECTION? |
44621 | WHAT DOES HUCKLEBERRY FINN SAY? |
44621 | WHAT DOES OUR FLAG MEAN? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT FINER PURPOSE? |
44621 | WHAT FINER PURPOSE? |
44621 | WHAT FIRST? |
44621 | WHAT FIRST? |
44621 | WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? |
44621 | WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT? |
44621 | WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT? |
44621 | WHAT IS A BIRD? |
44621 | WHAT IS A FISH? |
44621 | WHAT IS A FORCE? |
44621 | WHAT IS A GLACIER? |
44621 | WHAT IS A GLACIER? |
44621 | WHAT IS A MAMMAL? |
44621 | WHAT IS A NEIGHBORHOOD? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A REPTILE? |
44621 | WHAT IS A VOLCANO? |
44621 | WHAT IS A VOLCANO? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS AN AMPHIBIAN? |
44621 | WHAT IS AN ECLIPSE? |
44621 | WHAT IS AUTOMATION? |
44621 | WHAT IS ECOLOGY? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ELECTRIC CURRENT? |
44621 | WHAT IS EROSION? |
44621 | WHAT IS EROSION? |
44621 | WHAT IS MEANING? |
44621 | WHAT IS POETRY? |
44621 | WHAT IS RHYTHM? |
44621 | WHAT IS SCIENCE? |
44621 | WHAT IS SPACE? |
44621 | WHAT IS UNIFORM MOTION? |
44621 | WHAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT HAVE WE? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES CLOUDS? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES CLOUDS? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES WEATHER? |
44621 | WHAT ON EARTH? |
44621 | WHAT''S IMPORTANT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IMPORTANT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN A STORY? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN SIGHT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN SIGHT? |
44621 | WHAT''S INSIDE THE EARTH? |
44621 | WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU? |
44621 | WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU? |
44621 | WHAT''S LEFT? |
44621 | WHAT''S LEFT? |
44621 | WHAT''S MY LION? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE BIG ATTRACTION? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE DIFFERENCE? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER? |
44621 | WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER? |
44621 | WHERE DOES OUR MEAT COME FROM? |
44621 | WHICH IS WITCH? |
44621 | WHICH IS WITCH? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS NORTH? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS PARADISE? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS PARADISE? |
44621 | WHICH WAY? |
44621 | WHICH WAY? |
44621 | WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE? |
44621 | WHO DO VOODOO? |
44621 | WHO IN''68? |
44621 | WHO IS DRIVING? |
44621 | WHO IS DRIVING? |
44621 | WHO KILLED ROY BROWN? |
44621 | WHO KILLED ROY BROWN? |
44621 | WHO SCENT YOU? |
44621 | WHO SHALL LIVE? |
44621 | WHO SHALL LIVE? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? |
44621 | WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, WHY? |
44621 | WHOM SHALL WE FEAR? |
44621 | WHY BRACEROS? |
44621 | WHY BRACEROS? |
44621 | WHY COMMUNICATION SATELLITES? |
44621 | WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS? |
44621 | WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS? |
44621 | WHY EAT OUR VEGETABLES? |
44621 | WHY IS IT? |
44621 | WILL WE HAVE YEAR''ROUND SCHOOLS? |
44621 | Whirlpool Corp. HOW MANY MEALS TO THE MOON? |
44621 | YOU CHALLENGE ME TO A WHAT? |
44621 | YOU SAW A WHAT? |
44621 | YOU WANNA KNOW WHAT REALLY GOES ON IN A HOSPITAL? |
44621 | YOU''RE WHAT? |
44621 | YUGOSLAVIA: BRIDGE OR TIGHTROPE? |
47080 | ''Who is there?'' 47080 A charade? |
47080 | And does not that exasperate him? |
47080 | And what is there so attractive about it? |
47080 | Are these thine eyes? |
47080 | At what hour? |
47080 | But how is he able to maintain order and harmony in his harem, and to keep down jealousy and rivalry? |
47080 | But the King, what does the King say? |
47080 | Did he speak in the name of his Master? |
47080 | Do you know how we were occupied when you arrived? |
47080 | Do you know who she was? |
47080 | Do you not see that she is fainting? |
47080 | Do you recall that sentence of_ King Lear_,he asked me,"''The worst is not yet,''when they had said:''this is the worst''? |
47080 | Dost thou still belong to me? |
47080 | How can I, in the open streets? 47080 How,"said I,"could you believe that I would bring such a rabble here?" |
47080 | In what way, and why? |
47080 | Is he asleep? |
47080 | Is this thy mouth? |
47080 | It is incredible, is it not? 47080 Madeira at his age?" |
47080 | May we have supper? |
47080 | My beloved? |
47080 | My darling, art thou truly mine? |
47080 | My friends,I said to them,"in the face of a delicate situation do you feel the moral force to do something unusual, grand, heroic?" |
47080 | Not in the service of the Master? |
47080 | Oh, did you see? |
47080 | Then Master, what will you be able to do here before Thursday? |
47080 | Then there is a connection between you? |
47080 | Then there was an original? |
47080 | Thy heart? |
47080 | True enough, but what? |
47080 | What can such a word mean? |
47080 | What dost thou seek, thou who comest up from below? |
47080 | What is the matter? 47080 What on earth is that extraordinary word,''Dampfschifffahrtgesellschaft?''" |
47080 | What people? |
47080 | What time is it? |
47080 | What will become of this precious paper, then? |
47080 | What, do you imagine that I am intoxicated? 47080 Where do these beings come from?" |
47080 | Where is the Alte Pferdestrasse? |
47080 | Who is that young man? |
47080 | Who is that? |
47080 | Who is this Scheffer, then? |
47080 | Will you come to see my gallery? |
47080 | Would you like it? |
47080 | ''[ 2] The melancholy of the hour, the clear evening, the shining star and the pastoral life, it is all there; why seek for anything further?" |
47080 | ("Fidi, how big are you?") |
47080 | ******** De quel mica de neige vierge, De quelle moelle de roseau, De quelle hostie et de quel cierge A- t- on fait le blanc de sa peau?..." |
47080 | A mystification? |
47080 | A wager? |
47080 | Adhere can I get the information necessary in order not to be misleading?" |
47080 | Before Wagner, we two alone?" |
47080 | But can I not persuade you to prolong your stay in Lucerne for a little, in order that the pleasure you grant me may not be too soon over? |
47080 | But how can I feel any ill- will toward the King for his impatience? |
47080 | But how should I be received? |
47080 | But how? |
47080 | But what architect would be capable of constructing this monument according to the ideas of the Master? |
47080 | But what serious thing can have happened to bring you to my house so late?" |
47080 | But why should we cause such a commotion amid the placid population of Lucerne? |
47080 | But, all the same, we must not arrive too soon at Tribschen, and how should we pass the time until the fitting moment arrived? |
47080 | By the lake? |
47080 | Can you imagine my emotion in listening to them? |
47080 | Could anything be going wrong? |
47080 | Could it be possible that a tenor acclaimed by all should have so little vanity and be so nobly conscious of his artistic mission? |
47080 | Could it be that he was a saint? |
47080 | Could it be that we were surrounded by a luminous mist, visible to less fortunate mortals? |
47080 | Could we be dreaming? |
47080 | Did that ill- omened ship come to roam by night upon this impassable stream? |
47080 | Do you love the Florentine style? |
47080 | Do you not understand? |
47080 | Does not his habit make a difference to them?" |
47080 | Does not the staff still burden our hands? |
47080 | For what purpose? |
47080 | Greatly surprised and relieved I cried out, impulsively--"Will you authorise me to write that to Cosima?" |
47080 | How could he foresee that this little slip of paper marked the end of all his troubles, and that happiness was in store for him? |
47080 | How did they know?... |
47080 | I demanded,"and whither do they go?" |
47080 | I find that he has the very suave manners of a priest-- but how can he be a priest, and why are all these women so taken with him? |
47080 | I have composed one myself, very absurd, but who could find a rhyme to add to it? |
47080 | I was evidently out of the running, I was ignorant of everything: why that long black cassock? |
47080 | I was greatly moved, troubled, even frightened, for was it not a presumption, almost a sacrilege, to surprise in this way the sacred mystery? |
47080 | In fact, as soon as we were alone, he said to me in a low voice:--"You have seen Cosima?" |
47080 | In whom could I confide? |
47080 | Is n''t that magnificent? |
47080 | Is not the drinking horn of the pilgrim still hanging from our shoulders? |
47080 | Is that in the play? |
47080 | Is that why he grew so pale?" |
47080 | Of this character one did not ask,"Who is he?" |
47080 | Poet, musician, philosopher-- what, indeed, was he not? |
47080 | Shall I let him go? |
47080 | So the barbers of Lucerne were Wagnerians? |
47080 | The first telegram which arrived the next day was for Richter:"Will they really offer me such an insult as to give my work to- morrow?" |
47080 | The lady starts:"Who can be ringing at my house at such an hour?" |
47080 | The management was stubborn: nevertheless it would have to concede one point; who would conduct the orchestra, if not Richter? |
47080 | They ask him:"Fidi, wie gross bist du?" |
47080 | To be sure, we had never before seen him, but how could anyone fail to recognise him? |
47080 | Toward him who has endeavoured in every way to put through the theatre project which would have permitted the bringing out of my work as a whole? |
47080 | Truly it was very terrifying; what would come of all this mystery? |
47080 | Was he a priest? |
47080 | Was it because he had an intimation of some change, or had they sent him to bear us a last salute? |
47080 | Was it because they knew us to be friends of Richard Wagner, and because the jealously- guarded retreat in which he lived was open for us? |
47080 | Were his enemies still so implacable, and what could they do? |
47080 | What can I say? |
47080 | What can he mean? |
47080 | What can that word mean?" |
47080 | What could be happening? |
47080 | What could he wish to say? |
47080 | What could one add to that? |
47080 | What could result from all these artful under- hand dealings? |
47080 | What had he to fear? |
47080 | What has happened? |
47080 | What has she done to you?" |
47080 | What in the world could it be? |
47080 | What is happening? |
47080 | What plans of future glory have they already formed for him?" |
47080 | What would it be in French? |
47080 | What would they say, and what attitude of mind would they reveal?" |
47080 | Where is he going?" |
47080 | Who would not feel the fascination and submit joyfully to the supremacy of such a genius? |
47080 | Why are you so late? |
47080 | With that smooth- shaven face, had he also a tonsure in the locks that fell long and straight to his shoulders? |
47080 | Would attention be paid to the author''s suggestions? |
47080 | Would everything be ready? |
47080 | Would there still be boats at that hour? |
47080 | You could find time for that?" |
47080 | You will come presently to''Tribschen,''will you not, as soon as you have rested a little? |
47080 | [ 3] But since there are no airs? |
47080 | and did they really imagine that we would proceed to play at charades in the city? |
47080 | asked Villiers,"always so silent and buried in his beard? |
47080 | cried I,"have you not sent it yet? |
47080 | do they really believe so? |
47080 | he said,"are you there? |
47080 | was he already so far advanced in that tremendous work?" |
47080 | what does it matter? |
47080 | where have you been? |
47080 | without seeing even one rehearsal of your work?" |
52414 | And then there would be no more Redeemer; for, from whom or what could that Redeemer redeem us? |
52414 | But then, who will look for logic in the dogmas of Christianity? |
52414 | But whence this unanimity? |
52414 | But why ask these questions? |
52414 | But yit I say, Mary whoos childe is this? |
52414 | Can any rational mind believe that these numerous, varied and even antagonistic petitions will be answered? |
52414 | For what could be the offer of the kingdoms of this world to him who made the world, and was already in possession of it?" |
52414 | His peasant blood rose to the surface and in his fear he cried,"Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
52414 | I pry the telle me, and that anon? |
52414 | If the prophecy referred to the Christ, how could it have any influence on Ahaz? |
52414 | Is it not absurd of the church to preach the immutable justice of God, and at the same time declare that sinners may escape punishment by prayer? |
52414 | Say me, Mary, this childys fadyr who is? |
52414 | Such phrases as"Why callest thou me good? |
52414 | Then whither did these adored beings ascend? |
52414 | Very good, but how can educated Catholics of today reconcile such truths with their actual scientific knowledge? |
52414 | xii, 9), and when at the time of the crucifixion, Jerusalem was in the hands of the Romans? |
52414 | xiii, 11)? |
52414 | xvii, 20; xxi, 21; Mark xi, 23; Luke xvii, 6)? |
37234 | A new birth unto righteousness? |
37234 | All hope? |
37234 | All inspiration? |
37234 | All warmth? |
37234 | Before all things? |
37234 | Dost thou not think that thou art bound to believe, and to do as they have promised for thee? |
37234 | How many parts are there in a sacrament? 37234 How many sacraments hath Christ ordained in his Church?" |
37234 | How,he asks,"can thought be conveyed to a man''s mind except through words?" |
37234 | I love and forgive, weak as I am; what must be the depth of the love and forgiveness of God? |
37234 | If there be a Godall the rest follows, but_ is there a God at all_ in the sense in which the word is generally used? |
37234 | Is not reciprocity such a word? |
37234 | Lord God of Sabaoth,or of"Hosts;"is this a reasonable name for one supposed to be a"God of peace?" |
37234 | None other? |
37234 | Send his grace to me and to all people? |
37234 | Then why appeal to it at all? |
37234 | They might have stood:nay; for was not"the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world?" |
37234 | What doth the Lord require of thee,is the reproving answer,"but to do justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" |
37234 | What if the sin perpetuates itself, if the prolonged misery may be the offspring of the prolonged guilt? |
37234 | What is required of persons to be baptised? 37234 What is required of them who come to the Lord''s supper? |
37234 | What is the inward and spiritual grace? 37234 What is the outward visible sign, or form, in baptism? |
37234 | What is to be our conception of morality, is it to base itself on obedience to God, or is it to be sought for itself and its effects? |
37234 | What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
37234 | What word will serve as a rule for the whole life? |
37234 | Where is God? |
37234 | Why was the Sacrament of the Lord''s Supper ordained? 37234 Your creed may do well enough to live by,"say- objectors,"but is it good to die by?" |
37234 | _ Is our mental attitude to be kneeling or standing?_When we admit that the Deity is veiled from us, how can we pray? |
37234 | _ Is our mental attitude to be kneeling or standing?_When we admit that the Deity is veiled from us, how can we pray? |
37234 | can people think of nothing except when they do n''t think at all? |
37234 | ''_ If he is not always this miserable sinner, then why is he always forced to say he is? |
37234 | *"Is there in man any such Instinct? |
37234 | 12--18) intended for the guidance of slave- holders to- day? |
37234 | 18. many wonderful works?" |
37234 | 19, 20:"Yet say ye, why? |
37234 | 2--7) binding to- day? |
37234 | 27) binding to- day? |
37234 | A child is told not to put his hand into the fire, he does so, and is burnt; the burning is a punishment, he is told; for what? |
37234 | After all, what does Prayer mean, boldly stated? |
37234 | Again, how can a"spirit"conceive a material body? |
37234 | Again, if we allow design we must ask,"how far does design extend?" |
37234 | Again, the first question is, what do we mean by intelligence? |
37234 | All beauty from life? |
37234 | Allowing to the full the honour due to the heroism of the nurse, what are we to say to the patient who accepts the sacrifice? |
37234 | Always ready to fall; but is God, then, always lying in wait to catch us tripping, and crush us with his judgments? |
37234 | And how far is it true that sickness is, in any sense, the visitation of God for moral delinquencies? |
37234 | And if not all, on what principle can we separate that which is designed from that which is not? |
37234 | And in the first place, the Devil himself-- of whom so decided and familiar a mention, as of one whom everybody knows, is made-- where lives he? |
37234 | And is the idea of God a reverent one? |
37234 | And is this the life which we are to regard as the model of heavenly beauty? |
37234 | And surely such power is not to be wasted? |
37234 | And the ear of man can not hear, and the eye of man can not see; But if we could see and hear, this Vision-- were it not He? |
37234 | And those which are not baptized? |
37234 | And what has constructive Rationalism to say to us, when we stand face to face with the mighty destroyer of all living things? |
37234 | And what is this"Faith"which we must keep whole and undefiled if we would save our souls alive? |
37234 | And what of the poor wounded, groaning below in the cockpit, whose heads the Lord hath not covered? |
37234 | And where is"the right hand"of Almighty God? |
37234 | And who is this who thus dethrones our heavenly Father? |
37234 | And who made the sinners? |
37234 | And who shall venture to say that he knows the mind of the Spirit better than the Spirit Himself?" |
37234 | And why will the laity not give utterance to their thoughts on these and all such objectionable parts of the Service? |
37234 | Are Jehu''s lying and slaughter right, because right in the eyes of Jehovah? |
37234 | Are heaven and hell both all round the world, and if so, why is one"up"and the other"down"? |
37234 | Are our eyes to be fixed on heaven or on earth? |
37234 | Are our senses deceived? |
37234 | Are the fetters which we are breaking for ourselves to be welded together again for the young limbs of our children? |
37234 | Are the old cruel laws of witchcraft right, because Jehovah doomed the witch to death? |
37234 | Are the ordeals of the Middle Ages right, because derived from the laws of Jehovah? |
37234 | At this point we are commonly overwhelmed with Paul''s notable argument--"Nay, but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God?" |
37234 | Belief in hell takes all beauty from virtue; who cares for obedience only rendered through fear? |
37234 | Besides, how can the child be taught to believe in one God if he finds three different gods all doing different things for him? |
37234 | Besides, what certainty can there be that the Holy Ghost is given at all? |
37234 | But can we think of power of choice in connection with God? |
37234 | But has the nurse a right to sacrifice her own life-- and an injury to health is a sacrifice of life-- for an obviously unequivalent advantage? |
37234 | But how do they nourish the soul? |
37234 | But how is it possible for us to distinguish whence these thoughts come? |
37234 | But if he be most merciful, whence all this need of weeping and wailing? |
37234 | But may he have respect to the acts and the sufferings of his sinless son? |
37234 | But persevere:"As explained by whom? |
37234 | But suppose the enemy is in the right, what then? |
37234 | But supposing there were a devil, and supposing he had works, how could the child renounce him? |
37234 | But taking the Bible as a rule of life, are we to copy its saints and its laws? |
37234 | But was it loving to create those who would only suffer for his glory? |
37234 | But we knew before that God was perfect: an example? |
37234 | But what does this Absolute imply? |
37234 | But what have all these in common with the demands of the Eternal Righteousness, and how can pain atone for sin? |
37234 | But what is the propitiatory element in the Christian Atonement? |
37234 | But why should the grace be"inward,"and why is the soul thought of as_ inside_ the body, instead of all through and over it? |
37234 | But, hanging on the cross, he said to the penitent thief:"_ To- day_ shalt thou be with me in Paradise:"is Paradise the same hell? |
37234 | By any one, to whom for the purpose of the inquiry the child has access, was he ever seen? |
37234 | By what marks and symptoms is he to know whether it really is or is not going on within him, as he is forced to> say it is? |
37234 | Can His knowledge be imperfect, His mercy increased? |
37234 | Can His sentence be swayed by prejudice, or made harsh by over- severity? |
37234 | Can a more ludicrous position be imagined; and Adam? |
37234 | Can any teaching be more utterly unwholesome? |
37234 | Can any woman be more degraded than she who only values her womanhood as a means of gain, who drinks, fights, and steals? |
37234 | Can any words be too strong whereby to denounce a doctrine so shameful, an injustice so glaring? |
37234 | Can anything be more unreal? |
37234 | Can not Christ"inherit the kingdom of God"? |
37234 | Can the one living and true God die to reconcile himself to himself, and to offer himself up a sacrifice to himself to appease his own wrath? |
37234 | Children are asked:"How will your body be when the devil has been striking it every moment for a hundred million years without stopping?" |
37234 | Could He, the impassive, suffer? |
37234 | Did not God, according to orthodoxy, plan all things with an infallible perception that the events foreseen must occur? |
37234 | Did not the old Fathers do well in making the awful ransom a matter between Jesus and the devil? |
37234 | Do people ever try to carry the mind back to the time before this"making,"and realise the period when nothing existed? |
37234 | Do they expect God to believe them, or to be deceived by such hypocrisy? |
37234 | Does God perceive what he did not know before? |
37234 | Does He accept sacrifice? |
37234 | Does he compare one fact with another? |
37234 | Does he draw conclusions from this correlation of perceptions, and thus judge what is best? |
37234 | Does he punish gladly, and keep his blow suspended, to fall at the first chance our weakness gives him? |
37234 | Does he remember, as we remember, long past events? |
37234 | Does not their own Bible tell them that the"potter hath power over the clay,"and, further, that"we are the clay and thou art the potter?" |
37234 | Does prayer make bad ships more seaworthy, or supply the place of stout iron and sound wood? |
37234 | Does the All- strong require to stir up his strength before he can crush a few men? |
37234 | Does the sentimental weakness of our age shrink from this doctrine, and whimper out that it is cold and stern? |
37234 | Duty is colder than"filial obedience?" |
37234 | Either the patient or the nurse must commit an heroic suicide for the sake of the other-- which shall it be? |
37234 | First,"to believe in him;"but how can the child believe in him until evidence be offered of his existence? |
37234 | For in answer to the question,"What is thy duty towards God?" |
37234 | For the Mighty, for the Incomprehensible, what can we do? |
37234 | For what does the prayer imply? |
37234 | For what has been the result of theology upon the whole? |
37234 | Four different things the child is to love God with: What does each mean? |
37234 | God makes man imperfect, frail, sinful, utterly unable to keep perfectly a perfect law: he therefore fails, and is-- what? |
37234 | Had they not God''s Own account of His creation, and did he pretend to know more about the matter than God Himself? |
37234 | Has he at least borne the pangs of remorse for us, the stings of conscience? |
37234 | Has he borne the physical consequences of sin, such as the loss of health caused by intemperance of all kinds? |
37234 | Has he borne the social consequences, shame, loss of credit, and so on? |
37234 | Having recited this, to him( as to everyone else) unintelligible creed, he is asked,"What dost thou chiefly learn in these articles of thy belief?" |
37234 | His passion arouses your sympathies, but you see no pathos in the passion of the poor? |
37234 | Hitherto the supernatural has always been the makeweight of human ignorance; is it, in truth, this and nothing else? |
37234 | How can that be a visitation of God for moral transgressions, which can be prevented by man if he attends to physical laws? |
37234 | How can we be sure that the Bishop is not an impostor, going through a conjuror''s gestures and mutterings, and no magic results accruing? |
37234 | How could our blessed Redeemer, after accomplishing the work of our salvation, ascend from a revolving earth? |
37234 | How does God protect"the persons of us, thy servants, and the fleet in which we serve?" |
37234 | How does he feel, now that the Holy Ghost is_ sanctifying_ him? |
37234 | How is heart to be distinguished from mind, soul, and strength? |
37234 | How is it that he would feel, if no such operation were going on within him? |
37234 | How is this to end? |
37234 | How many Prayers have gone up to the Father in heaven from his children overwhelmed in the sea, and drowning in floods, and encircled by fire? |
37234 | How many believe in the"everlasting damnation,"of the same verse, or really consider themselves in the smallest danger of it? |
37234 | How many cries of anguish from beside the beds of the dying, and the fresh graves of the newly- dead? |
37234 | How many passionate appeals of patriots and martyrs, of exiles and of slaves? |
37234 | How many really care to be delivered"from the crafts and assaults of the devil,"or believe in the existence of the devil at all? |
37234 | How, then, can the babe_ deserve_ God''s wrath and damnation? |
37234 | How_ can_ sin be forgiven? |
37234 | Humane child of human parents, or divine Son of the Almighty God? |
37234 | If God, being righteous, as we believe Him to be, regarded man with anger because of man''s sinfulness, what is obviously the required propitiation? |
37234 | If he be most merciful, what danger can there be of the bitter pains of eternal death? |
37234 | If he, who is God, is content to pardon and embrace, what further do sinners require? |
37234 | If his hearers regarded_ them_ as divine, what could he say to exalt_ him_ except that he was ever with God, nay, was himself God? |
37234 | If intellect and love reveal a design, what is revealed by brutality and hate? |
37234 | If man''s mind imply a master- mind, how much more that of God? |
37234 | If my thought is not mine, but God''s, how am I to know this? |
37234 | If not, then to what purpose is this_ renouncement?_ and, once more, what is it that is meant by it?" |
37234 | If not, then to what purpose is this_ renouncement?_ and, once more, what is it that is meant by it?" |
37234 | If not, what is the use of praying over it? |
37234 | If prayer be so efficacious, would it not be cheaper to use less wood and more prayer? |
37234 | If some phenomena are designed, why not all? |
37234 | If the answer be, that all this refers to the manhood of Jesus, then we inquire,"Is Christ divided?" |
37234 | If the latter are not the result of design, how did they become introduced into the universe? |
37234 | If the ship is not safe without prayer, will prayer make it so? |
37234 | If the whole affair be miraculous, why try to compromise matters with nature, by making this kind of pseudo- father? |
37234 | If they are vile, why do n''t they mend, instead of saying the same thing every year? |
37234 | If this be so, is it more reasonable to pray about things in the future than things in the past? |
37234 | If this be so, what becomes of the"resurrection of the flesh,"spoken of in the Baptismal and Visitation Offices? |
37234 | If we come to assumptions, have not I as much right to my assumption as my neighbour has to his? |
37234 | In our fear we long to escape from Him altogether and ask if this be possible? |
37234 | In the name of common sense, why? |
37234 | Inexorable law in the place of God? |
37234 | Instead of the encouragement we had found, what does Christianity offer us?--a perfect life? |
37234 | Is God supposed to rejoice over the sufferings of the defeated? |
37234 | Is God thus at the mercy of man? |
37234 | Is He Almighty? |
37234 | Is He impartial? |
37234 | Is He just? |
37234 | Is He loving? |
37234 | Is He truthful? |
37234 | Is Hosea''s marriage commendable, because commanded by Jehovah? |
37234 | Is Jesus sitting at the right hand of a pure spirit, who has neither body nor parts? |
37234 | Is Prayer approved by experience? |
37234 | Is Prayer consistent with the_ foreknowledge_ of God? |
37234 | Is Prayer consistent with the_ wisdom_ of God? |
37234 | Is Prayer consistent with_ trust in the goodness_ of God? |
37234 | Is a supreme selfishness to crown unselfishness at last? |
37234 | Is any dogmatic teaching to be a part of their moral training, and is the dogmatism against which we have rebelled to be revived in a new form? |
37234 | Is he easily pacified when offended? |
37234 | Is he everything or nothing? |
37234 | Is he to be thanked for slaying his creatures? |
37234 | Is it considered necessary to press God vehemently to hurry himself? |
37234 | Is it consistent to ask Christ to deliver us from His wrath? |
37234 | Is it in any such danger as that of having, at any time, to his knowledge, any sort of dealings with him? |
37234 | Is it more noble to relieve the sufferings of strangers, than to relieve the sufferings of his family? |
37234 | Is it possible to imagine things coming into existence,"something"emerging from where before"nothing"was? |
37234 | Is it quite honest to say in God''s praise a thing which we know to be untrue, and must we be unscientific because we are devotional? |
37234 | Is it supposed to train a child in the habit of truthfulness to make him recite as a religious lesson what is utterly and thoroughly untrue? |
37234 | Is it well to look to the purity of another as a makewight for our personal shortcomings? |
37234 | Is man''s power greater than God''s, and can he thus play with the thunderbolts of the divine displeasure? |
37234 | Is not sickness likely rather to bring out and strengthen mental faults than to weaken them? |
37234 | Is not this idea also the product of ignorance? |
37234 | Is not this the prayer of utter ignorance, the prayer of an unscientific age? |
37234 | Is our mental attitude to be that of kneeling or standing? |
37234 | Is prayer to God reasonable and helpful, the natural cry of a child for help from a Father in Heaven? |
37234 | Is the future to be like the past, and is science finally to obliterate the conception of a personal God? |
37234 | Is the man after God''s own heart a worthy model for imitation? |
37234 | Is the power to lead this life for ever to be our reward for self- devotion and self- sacrifice here on earth? |
37234 | Is the robbery of the Egyptians right, because commanded by Jehovah? |
37234 | Is there any impertinence so extreme as the prayer which"pleads"with the Deity? |
37234 | Is there one father, however brutalized, who would deliberately keep his child in sin because of a childish fault? |
37234 | Is this a wholesome sentiment, either as regards our feelings towards God or our efforts towards holiness? |
37234 | Is this addressed to God, or is it not? |
37234 | It lands them, it is true, in the most extreme Pantheism, but what of that? |
37234 | It was just before this was written that I read Charles Bradlaugh''s"Plea for Atheism"and his"Is there a God?". |
37234 | Jesus answered them,"Is it not written in your law, I said, ye are gods? |
37234 | John Wesley said that belief in witchcraft was incumbent on all those who believed the Bible, and if witchcraft was possible then, why not now? |
37234 | Just try asking your mentor,"_ whose_ Christianity am I to accept?" |
37234 | Life would be impossible were all this really believed; what priest could live in reasonable comfort if this were true and were realised? |
37234 | Love, Ruler of the world permeated through and through with pain, and sorrow, and sin? |
37234 | Love, mainspring of a nature whose cruelty is sometimes appalling? |
37234 | Love? |
37234 | Love? |
37234 | Love? |
37234 | Love? |
37234 | Marvels? |
37234 | May it not justly be said that belief in the Trinity in Unity is the negation of thought, and that faith is only possible where reason ends? |
37234 | May we hope to see Him in this world? |
37234 | Moses and Elijah, Isaiah and all the prophets? |
37234 | North, south, east, or west? |
37234 | Now in all sober seriousness what does this mean? |
37234 | Now, how far is all this consistent with justice? |
37234 | ON THE DEITY OF JESUS OF NAZARETH"WHAT think ye of Christ, whose son is he?" |
37234 | Obedience to your ideal of goodness and love, is it not so? |
37234 | Of course, the majority of English clergymen believe nothing of this kind; but then why do they read a service which implies it? |
37234 | Of what feelings is it productive? |
37234 | Or is it, on the other hand, a useless appeal to an unknown and irresponsible force? |
37234 | Perhaps he has struck at the root of evil, and has put away sin itself out of a redeemed world? |
37234 | Powers? |
37234 | Prayer? |
37234 | Redemption? |
37234 | Salvation? |
37234 | Shall the life be sacrificed, which is torture to its possessor, useless to society, and whose bounds are already clearly marked? |
37234 | Sin injures man already, why should he be further injured by endless agony? |
37234 | Surely all who are redeemed must also be sanctified, and should not the two passages touch only the same people? |
37234 | Surely this is not the spirit which breathed in,"If ye love them which love you, what thanks have ye?... |
37234 | Tell me how many there be? |
37234 | That there is no inspiration in the Bible? |
37234 | The Christian name of the child being given in answer to the first question of the Catechism, the second inquiry proceeds:"Who gave you this name?" |
37234 | The Nature of God, what is it? |
37234 | The belief was vowed before he had examined it; why should he profess it? |
37234 | The body and blood must be somehow in the bread and wine, and how is it managed that one part shall nourish the soul while the rest goes to the body? |
37234 | The child itself, did it ever see him? |
37234 | The child, has it ever happened to it to have any dealings with him? |
37234 | The commandments recited, the child is asked--"What dost thou chiefly learn by these commandments?" |
37234 | The idea, however, of"ransom"is connected with the work of Jesus, and the question arose,"to whom is this ransom paid?" |
37234 | The old wine is being poured into new bottles; what will be the result? |
37234 | The ordinary man or woman, on hearing this assertion, would probably answer--"Life sacred? |
37234 | The promises were made without his consent; why should he keep them? |
37234 | The question is rather this:"What are the limits of the religious education which it is wise to impose on the young? |
37234 | The questions, so familiar to every mother,"Can God see me?" |
37234 | The sick man might be blamed for falling because he did not lean on a stronger arm, but suppose he was too weak to grasp it? |
37234 | The unreality deepens in the next answer which is put into his mouth--"What did your godfathers and god- mothers then for you?" |
37234 | The whole office for infants reads like a play: the clergyman asks that the infant"may receive remission of his sins;"what sins? |
37234 | Then how is duty cold? |
37234 | Then why should God be wrath with him because he hath not? |
37234 | Then, in the name of candour and common sense, why call that just in God which we see would be so unjust and immoral in man? |
37234 | There can not be perception, memory, comparison, or judgment; but may there not be a perfect mind, unchanging, calm, and still? |
37234 | There is no warmth in brightening the lot of the sad, in reforming abuses, in establishing equal justice for rich and poor? |
37234 | This process, then, what is it? |
37234 | To be strengthened? |
37234 | To such-- and I meet many such-- I would suggest one very simple thought: does"Christianity"give any more certainty than rationalism? |
37234 | To which is he to bend his ear? |
37234 | Two armies ask for victory; which is to be crowned? |
37234 | Two people pray for exactly opposite things; whose Prayers are to be answered? |
37234 | Warmth in imagining the cloud- glories of heaven, but none in creating substantial glories on earth? |
37234 | Was Jesus inspired when he taught that the whole law was comprehended in one saying, namely,"Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself?" |
37234 | Was he present when God created the world, that he spoke so positively about its shape? |
37234 | Was it not rather a gigantic, an inconceivable selfishness? |
37234 | Was it probable, further, that God would have become incarnate for the sake of a world that was only one out of many revolving round the sun? |
37234 | Was not this accurate prescience based upon the inflexibility of God''s Eternal purposes? |
37234 | Was not this rendering evil for evil, railing for railing? |
37234 | Was this love? |
37234 | We are told that Christ took away the sins of the world; we have a right to ask,"how?" |
37234 | What God could do is no measure of man''s powers: what have we in common with this"God- man?" |
37234 | What became of his internal economy? |
37234 | What binding force can such promises as these have upon the conscience of anyone when he grows up? |
37234 | What common factor is there between a lie, and the"lake of fire in which all liars shall have their part?" |
37234 | What could reason, with all its vaunted powers, tell us of the long- past creation of the world? |
37234 | What could this pseudo- science give them in exchange for such a revelation as that? |
37234 | What do they all prove? |
37234 | What do we mean by"will?" |
37234 | What do you mean by filial obedience? |
37234 | What does this pleading of the Son on behalf of sinners imply? |
37234 | What easier pillow to rest the dying head on than the memory of a useful life? |
37234 | What freedom had Adam and Eve in Paradise? |
37234 | What has become of the"flesh and bones"which Christ had after his resurrection and with which, according to the 4th Article, he has gone into heaven? |
37234 | What has he then borne for us? |
37234 | What idea can a child have of conception by the Holy Ghost and being born of the Virgin Mary, in both which recondite mysteries he avows his belief? |
37234 | What is all this? |
37234 | What is he? |
37234 | What is the image of God? |
37234 | What is the inward and spiritual grace given unto the baby in baptism? |
37234 | What is the sentiment with which Canon Liddon closes a sermon on the death of Christ? |
37234 | What is thy duty toward thy neighbour? |
37234 | What is your hope? |
37234 | What kind of God is this who is to"come again"to a place where He is not now? |
37234 | What matter? |
37234 | What more do they want than an almighty reinforcement? |
37234 | What should we think of an earthly father who tortured one of his children in order to teach the others how to bear pain? |
37234 | What sins can a baby a week old have committed? |
37234 | What was the general aspect of affairs when there was"nothing?" |
37234 | What would happen if some consecrated bread and wine chanced to be left by mistake, and a stray comer into the vestry eat it unknowingly? |
37234 | What would he have said of the whitewash of unimputed righteousness? |
37234 | What, all? |
37234 | What, then, becomes of man''s boasted free will? |
37234 | What? |
37234 | When we see that that law is inexorable, of what use to protest against its absolute sway? |
37234 | When will men learn to stand upright on their feet, instead of thus crouching on their knees? |
37234 | When will they learn to strive to live nobly, and then to fear no celestial anger, either in life or in death? |
37234 | Where is"under the earth"? |
37234 | Where, too, is that Right Hand of God to which He went, in this new universe without top or bottom? |
37234 | Which be they? |
37234 | Which is right, the wrath or the love? |
37234 | Whither did He go? |
37234 | Who called them into the world without their own consent? |
37234 | Who could honour such a king as George IV.? |
37234 | Who is he? |
37234 | Who made it impossible for them to go to Jesus unless he drew them, and then did not draw them? |
37234 | Who made them with an evil nature? |
37234 | Who moulded them as the potter the clay? |
37234 | Who then will dare to push himself in between man and a God like this? |
37234 | Why do they put off their honesty when they put on their surplices? |
37234 | Why do they use words in a non- natural sense? |
37234 | Why in arguing from the evidences of adaptation should we assume that they are planned by a mind? |
37234 | Why may he predicate creation of one half of the universe, and I not predicate it of the other half? |
37234 | Why should I be called on to escape like a criminal from that which I do not deserve? |
37234 | Why should I be logical in one argument and illogical in another? |
37234 | Why should illness of the body correct illness of the mind; does pain cure fretfulness, or fever increase truthfulness? |
37234 | Why should one sinner die unshriven, when such death may be prevented by the diligence of the priest? |
37234 | Why should people thus play a farce beside the grave? |
37234 | Why should the child trust God''s mercy and goodness to protect him? |
37234 | Why should we pretend to God that we are Jews, when both He and we know perfectly well that we are nothing of the kind? |
37234 | Why should women be taught thus to abase themselves? |
37234 | Why then are infants baptised when by reason of their tender age they can not perform them? |
37234 | Why, am I not equally justified in assuming, if I please, that matter created spirit? |
37234 | Why, because I lie and forget God, should I be punished with fire and brimstone? |
37234 | Why? |
37234 | Why? |
37234 | Will not God, of his own accord, do things at the best possible time? |
37234 | Will the orthodox accept this position? |
37234 | Wilt thou delight thyself to think that God will invent torments for thee, sinner?" |
37234 | Wisdom and understanding are easily perceptible: are they wiser after Confirmation than they were before? |
37234 | Would it not be well if the Church would publish an"Explanation of the Catechism,"so that the children may know what they have renounced? |
37234 | Yet surely no one will contend that all these are"Prayer- hearing and Prayer- answering"Gods? |
37234 | Yet, is it more rational to ask him to change the things that are coming, and to alter the already- written chart of the future? |
37234 | You find warmth in the church, but none in the home? |
37234 | You"have tears to shed for him,"but none for the sufferer at your doors? |
37234 | _ Down_ into hell; which way is down from a round globe? |
37234 | a baby die unto sin? |
37234 | and further, is it possible for a Divine Being to make haste? |
37234 | and how many"former sins"are they as continually repenting of? |
37234 | and is heaven identical with both? |
37234 | and on what principle of selection shall I choose the one I am to curve? |
37234 | and yet was Confucius uninspired when, in answer to the question,"What one word would serve as a rule to one''s whole life?" |
37234 | and, since He is one with God, is He sitting at his own right hand? |
37234 | before doing that which is lawful and right? |
37234 | before repentance? |
37234 | before turning away from our wickedness? |
37234 | but it is only just born, surely there can be no need that it should be born over again so soon? |
37234 | can a past act be undone, or the hands go back on the sun- dial of Time? |
37234 | could He, the immortal, die? |
37234 | could He, the intangible, be crucified? |
37234 | could He, the omnipresent, be buried in one spot of earth, rise from it, and ascend to some place where he was not the moment before? |
37234 | do they know more? |
37234 | do they understand more rapidly? |
37234 | does it tend to the promotion of human happiness?" |
37234 | doth not the son bear the iniquity of the father? |
37234 | flesh and bones among pure spirits? |
37234 | for what sins can he ask forgiveness? |
37234 | from what sins can he need release? |
37234 | heart to pulse where no oxygen can purify the blood? |
37234 | how can it, when it is unconscious of sin, and therefore can not sin? |
37234 | how did something emerge where"nothing"was before? |
37234 | if God filled all space, was he"nothing?" |
37234 | if all are redeemed, what is the meaning of the phrase that"all the elect people of God"are sanctified by the Holy Ghost? |
37234 | if all are redeemed, why should he specially thank God that he himself is called and saved? |
37234 | if of no use, why make all this parade about giving a thing whose gift makes the recipient no richer than he was before? |
37234 | if of none effect can his presence be of any use, of the very smallest advantage? |
37234 | if there be no perceptible difference is the presence of the Holy Spirit of none effect? |
37234 | if we should condemn the earthly father as wickedly cruel, why should the same action be righteous when done by the Father in heaven? |
37234 | is the existence of nothing a conceivable idea? |
37234 | it starts from a different level: a Saviour? |
37234 | lungs to breathe where no air is? |
37234 | not a syllable conveying any such meaning:"that we may worship him, serve him, and obey him"? |
37234 | one mother who would aimlessly torture her son, keeping him alive but to torment? |
37234 | one or many? |
37234 | or are the signs of Jeremiah and Ezekiel the less childish and indecent because they are prefaced with,"thus saith Jehovah?" |
37234 | or has God changed his mind as to the proper method of dealing with such persons? |
37234 | or is it more heroic to die of voluntarily- contracted fever, than of voluntarily- taken chloroform? |
37234 | that it is of primary importance to the welfare of mankind that a false theory on this point should be destroyed and a more reasonable faith accepted? |
37234 | the form of man sitting on the throne of God? |
37234 | was he made originally with a rib too much, to provide against the emergency, or did he go, for the rest of his life, with a rib too little? |
37234 | we can not be safer than we are with God: an Advocate? |
37234 | we need none with our Father: a Substitute to endure God''s wrath for us? |
37234 | we urge;"why talk of justice in the matter if we are totally unable to judge as to the rights and wrongs of the case?" |
37234 | what terrible heresy have we been unwittingly committing ourselves to? |
37234 | which Prayer is he to answer? |
50837 | Could not,he suggested,"a European louse( a Hungarian one in this case) be brought into contact with my Tartar? |
50837 | How can I believe my ministers? |
50837 | A Jew, a plebeian by birth, how could he be admitted into the diplomatic service? |
50837 | A certain Professor William Davies(?) |
50837 | And how could it be otherwise? |
50837 | But whence can I procure other and better people in a society which for centuries has wallowed in this pool of slander? |
50837 | Can anything be more awful? |
50837 | Can one be surprised that I brought no rosy reminiscences from the Oriental courts? |
50837 | Could I inform them of the hour of my birth, in order to account for my adventurous career? |
50837 | I have a house with two doors; what does it matter to anybody if I choose to close the one and open the other?" |
50837 | I have often been asked why I did not from a patriotic point of view join the national political endeavours, and take part in the movement of 1867? |
50837 | I thought to myself, the father professor of the gymnasium at St. Georghen was wrong after all when he said,"Moshele, why dost thou study? |
50837 | My father, generally so sweet- tempered, became angry and said:''Do you know who this gentleman is? |
50837 | Referring to the riskiness of this step, the king remarked,"What were we to do? |
50837 | Where is the Semitic sharpness, the Semitic energy and perseverance, which the European puts down and fears as dangerous racial characteristics? |
50837 | Who knows but what he might have made a better sovereign on the throne of the Osmanlis? |
50837 | Who told them to keep their eyes and ears shut?''" |
50837 | Why deny it? |
50837 | do you think I shall give up for a price the land which my forefathers conquered with the sword?" |
51743 | And who would now be so simple as to think of spirits when the medium was not searched? |
51743 | Are there not certain conditions for the appearance of all scientific phenomena, they ask us? |
51743 | Are we to see no spots on the egregious"Dr."Monck, who pretended that he was taken from his bed in Bristol and put to bed in Swindon by spirit hands? |
51743 | Are we to take it that Summerland is really a material universe, not an ether world? |
51743 | Blavatsky? |
51743 | Blavatsky? |
51743 | But does Sir Arthur never read the_ Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research_? |
51743 | But how could it be done if the plate was never in the hands of the photographer? |
51743 | But what would you? |
51743 | But why puzzle over details where all is a challenge to common human reason? |
51743 | Did not a Serbian diplomatist talk to the spirit in Serb, which Mrs. Wriedt did not know, and answer for the genuineness of the phenomena? |
51743 | Do they not know the features of their dead son or daughter or wife? |
51743 | Does Sir A. C. Doyle want us to go back to the pure early days of the movement? |
51743 | Does any man think it is a matter of indifference whether this ministry of consolation is based on fraud and inspired by greed? |
51743 | Does he not warn us in a footnote that he has"not yet traced the source of all this supposed information"? |
51743 | Does it matter? |
51743 | Has Sir A. C. Doyle never heard of Browning''s"Sludge"? |
51743 | Has your child been torn from you? |
51743 | How had he smuggled them into the room? |
51743 | How is it possible, he will ask, that so many distinguished men have given their names to the movement if it is all fraudulent? |
51743 | IS SPIRITUALISM BASED ON FRAUD? |
51743 | Is not darkness a condition of certain scientific processes? |
51743 | Is there any need to settle whether we shall live after death? |
51743 | Must we forfeit this new hope that we may see them again? |
51743 | Now, which of these were ever"white"? |
51743 | Was Charles Williams white? |
51743 | Was Colchester, who was detected and exposed, white? |
51743 | Was Florence Cook, the pupil of Herne( the transporter of Mrs. Guppy at sixty miles an hour) and bewitcher of Sir W. Crookes, white? |
51743 | Was Foster white? |
51743 | Was her friend and contemporary ghost- producer, Miss Showers, never exposed? |
51743 | Was she ruined? |
51743 | Well, who are they? |
51743 | Were Bastian and Taylor white? |
51743 | What can be said for Sir W. Crookes? |
51743 | What chance has the ordinary inquirer, much less the eager Spiritualist, against guile of this description? |
51743 | What chance have you in a poor light? |
51743 | What chance have you, then, against a man or woman who has been conjuring for twenty years? |
51743 | What earthly chance have you in the dark? |
51743 | What is the evidence which Sir W. Barrett, knowing that the general public has no leisure to investigate these things, endorses as satisfactory? |
51743 | What is the value of such conversions? |
51743 | Where, then, are the snow- whites? |
51743 | Who are the"distinguished"Spiritualists_ to- day_? |
51743 | Who could doubt either the word or the competence of the Chief Judge of the Supreme Consular Court of China and Japan? |
51743 | Who in England knew anything about Piet Botha and his death? |
51743 | Who is this mysterious lady? |
51743 | Why not simply_ imagine_ that the dead still live, and save the guinea? |
51743 | Will he ask why? |
51080 | But why--some will ask"is it necessary to employ these native cooks, washermen, etc.? |
51080 | How could it be sin when nobody knew anything about it? |
51080 | Sammy, where is the pudding? |
51080 | Then you do this because there is no hope for you, whether you take animal life or not? |
51080 | Waiting for what? |
51080 | Were you not afraid your heathen neighbours would make trouble? |
51080 | What shall I pay for them? |
51080 | What trouble could they make, teacher? 51080 What''s the matter with_ this_ pony?" |
51080 | ''So you fear the future,--what is your notion of hell?'' |
51080 | A grown- up daughter sitting on the stairs, modestly inquired"Where is_ our_ pony?" |
51080 | A ship''s captain once asked an out- going missionary to China:"Do you think you can make any impression on the four hundred millions of China?" |
51080 | After the battle of Lookout Mountain a dying soldier, roused by a sound of shouting, said to a comrade who was supporting him--"What was that?" |
51080 | And where shall I find the money to pay for the other pony, if not recovered,--which is an even chance? |
51080 | And yet, I thought, is it such a mistake? |
51080 | Are they praying? |
51080 | Are they praying? |
51080 | At last he summed it all up in the self- satisfied expression--"About as big as Burma, is n''t it?" |
51080 | Buddhism a"Beautiful Religion"? |
51080 | But what of the character of native converts? |
51080 | Can Jesus Christ save you?" |
51080 | Can such an education as our eastern converts require be communicated to them through their vernacular languages? |
51080 | Did he not by this enlightenment become something more than man? |
51080 | Did that Word make_ me_? |
51080 | Did they minister consolation to the sorrowing ones? |
51080 | Do you think that after all I have done I must still go to hell?'' |
51080 | From what? |
51080 | Had he now become a God? |
51080 | Had they been present at the bedside to minister some hope to the dying man who was about to pass out into the awful dark? |
51080 | Have the backward tribes sufficient intelligence and stamina to make trustworthy Christians? |
51080 | Have we made a mistake in displaying the cross in the first proclamation of the gospel in these villages? |
51080 | He can point to his god in that idol- house on the hilltop, but where is the Christian''s god? |
51080 | Her wrinkled face brightened with hope as she exclaimed,''If I do as you have said, and believe on Jesus Christ,_ will_ He save me?'' |
51080 | Home, did I say? |
51080 | How can they be praying, inasmuch as Buddhism knows no God,--does not claim to have a God? |
51080 | How do they reconcile this with the teachings of their law? |
51080 | How shall a stronger force be provided? |
51080 | I said to him,"Well, Ko Ngi, how did you find out that he was a humbug?" |
51080 | If little children are included in the saving work of Christ, are they not so included the world over? |
51080 | If little children in Christian lands are immortal, why are not little children in pagan lands also immortal? |
51080 | If this is not the pony I borrowed, then where is he? |
51080 | Is the Burman lazy? |
51080 | It is said that when a Chin wife is asked"Where is your husband?" |
51080 | Next, where should they be buried? |
51080 | Now what are you doing to escape such an awful fate?'' |
51080 | One day when"Missis"was giving directions about the dinner she called Sammy and said,"Sammy, how many eggs have you?" |
51080 | Pointing to me he said:"Is this your Christ?" |
51080 | The disciples asked--"Who sinned, this man or his parents, that he should be born blind?" |
51080 | The old question"Is it lawful to give tribute to CÃ ¦ sar?" |
51080 | Then I say-- Your Saya( missionary) how many chillen? |
51080 | Then the following conversation took place:"Are you not afraid of punishment in hell for killing these creatures?" |
51080 | Then what are these worshippers doing here on their knees before images which represent no existing being? |
51080 | Then, how should the two coffins be conveyed to their last resting place? |
51080 | Thoughts were going back to the time when we heard the call,"Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?" |
51080 | What then is Neikban? |
51080 | What, then, are they doing? |
51080 | When I had finished I approached her saying:''Why do you worship so devoutly?'' |
51080 | When a young man or woman has once settled the burning question: Is it my duty and privilege to go as a missionary? |
51080 | Why trouble about it? |
51080 | With each blow they reviled him saying,"Can Jesus save you? |
51080 | Without any show of compassion he unknowingly repeated the old- time question--"Because of whose sin was she born in that condition?" |
51080 | Would n''t the teacher please give the baby a name? |
51080 | and not only me, but everybody and everything in all this great world? |
51080 | and whose pony have I stolen? |
51080 | how shall I explain being in possession of this one, if called to account? |
52896 | But,said I,"the stone lions have n''t taken cold too?" |
52896 | Do you love her less for that? |
52896 | Dying? 52896 Is she not beautiful? |
52896 | Return? 52896 What am I good for,"said he, striking an attitude and looking queerer than ever,"but to cook you a grand dinner and be your slave for ever?" |
52896 | What are my sufferings and death, that you should create so much disturbance about them? |
52896 | You may not speak of it, lady, and no one, no one may know it, but how can I conceal the fact from myself? |
52896 | A Brahman is a Brahman indeed, but are Christians always the followers of Jesus? |
52896 | Beaten low lies Tippoo Sultan; With England who dare fight?") |
52896 | Even Brahm does not recognize himself in the second person:"I know when I am I, but who am I when I am thou?" |
52896 | How many English or American boys would behave so well? |
52896 | How old are you? |
52896 | How shall I discover the one to whom alone I have pledged my undying love?" |
52896 | Then,"What does your husband look like? |
52896 | What reason have you for daring to give my son medicine? |
52896 | Where do you live?" |
52896 | Where is now the commerce of the world? |
52896 | Why, what is to prevent us from remaining just where we are until the master comes home?" |
52896 | how darest thou turn thy feet toward the house of Allah?" |
40999 | A man? |
40999 | A police agent? |
40999 | A year ago? |
40999 | Afraid? |
40999 | Ah, Paul? |
40999 | And have you never met Fedor Nikiforovitch; has he never addressed you by your proper name, Sonia Ostroff? |
40999 | And how did that affect me? |
40999 | And how was I rescued? |
40999 | And if he did? |
40999 | And leave me? |
40999 | And she still loves you-- eh? |
40999 | And the others-- where are they? |
40999 | And what of Kobita? |
40999 | And what was the result of your interview? |
40999 | And when shall we resume our chat? |
40999 | And where is Oranmore? |
40999 | And who is forcing thee into this hateful union? 40999 And why, pray?" |
40999 | And will they arrest Prascovie? |
40999 | And you come here for pleasure-- just for a little holiday? |
40999 | And you have never visited West Hill, Sydenham, mademoiselle? |
40999 | And you will risk your life and liberty by endeavouring to strike this murderous blow, of which you do not feel yourself physically capable? 40999 And you, Nihilist and assassin, eh?" |
40999 | And your lover? 40999 And your name?" |
40999 | And-- you still love me? |
40999 | Are n''t you going to exchange tokens of friendship? |
40999 | Are there any in the Alps? |
40999 | Are they-- er-- friends of yours? |
40999 | Are you not happy now? |
40999 | Are you positive? |
40999 | Are-- are you really Jean Montbazon? |
40999 | Art thou a dweller in the house of grief? |
40999 | As enemies? |
40999 | At Paris, yes-- by Rene Delbet; everybody knows that-- but at Scheveningen--? |
40999 | But how camest thou here? |
40999 | But how can I save her? 40999 But how can we?" |
40999 | But how do you know all this? |
40999 | But now I have gained my promotion, will you become my wife? |
40999 | But tell me, who gave it to you? |
40999 | But you mentioned something of dispatches, and a plan of the country? |
40999 | But your husband, does he not try and make you happy? |
40999 | But-- he shrugged his shoulders--"the prejudices of the world count for-- what? |
40999 | But, Paul, why can not you remain? 40999 But-- but who are you, m''sieur, that you should know so much about the Narodnaya Volya? |
40999 | But-- but your husband? |
40999 | Can not you guess? 40999 Can you believe that I have fallen so low as to accept money as the price of the lives of poor wretches who are drawn into your merciless clutches? |
40999 | Can you tell me whence you obtained it? |
40999 | Dare not? |
40999 | Dead? |
40999 | Did n''t you see an officer? |
40999 | Did not the sons of offal stop thee? |
40999 | Didst thou not see the red- legged French dogs? |
40999 | Died? |
40999 | Do n''t you recognise me-- Lena, your wife? |
40999 | Do they know his name? |
40999 | Do you assert that he was murdered? |
40999 | Do you believe the police will ever find the murderer? |
40999 | Do you know her brother''s address? |
40999 | Do you mean to kill me? |
40999 | Do you remember when last we met? |
40999 | Do you think that I, a Russian, am afraid of a cold sleigh journey? |
40999 | Do you want to know all this for ten lire? |
40999 | Does he come from the valley? |
40999 | Does she know? |
40999 | Dost thou desire to save him, even though he would force upon thee this odious marriage? |
40999 | Eh? 40999 Escape? |
40999 | For what crime do you lay your hands upon me? |
40999 | For what reason is it imperative? |
40999 | For whom? |
40999 | Happy? |
40999 | Has a new Ministry been formed? |
40999 | Has a woman passed you? |
40999 | Has anything been ascertained regarding it? |
40999 | Have you come to offer me yet another insult, Colonel Solovieff? |
40999 | Have you discovered who murdered him? |
40999 | Have you never tried to unburden yourself by confiding your secret to some friend? |
40999 | Have-- have they discovered anything? |
40999 | How are you this evening? |
40999 | How can I, when I am not a member of the organisation? |
40999 | How did you know? |
40999 | How did you obtain it? |
40999 | How didst thou know I was an officer? |
40999 | How do you account for it? |
40999 | How is it that you''re not dressed? 40999 I''m sure the dress is very becoming-- isn''t it?" |
40999 | I-- I thought this cottage was your aunt''s; that you kept house for her? |
40999 | If my husband should find you here, would it not compromise me? |
40999 | If she does not call? |
40999 | Impossible? 40999 In Cape Town? |
40999 | Is it a serious affair? |
40999 | Is that true? |
40999 | Is this your first visit to London? |
40999 | Is your crime of such a flagitious character, then? |
40999 | It is M''sieur Wentworth that I address, is it not? |
40999 | It is permissible, I suppose, to have a last meal? |
40999 | Knowest thou the punishment of traitors? |
40999 | Loosen thy tongue''s strings? |
40999 | Louis Henault, do n''t you know me? 40999 Love you?" |
40999 | Love? 40999 Married?" |
40999 | May I not accompany you towards your home? |
40999 | May I not know the reason? |
40999 | Me? |
40999 | Mine? |
40999 | Murdered? |
40999 | Must you go? |
40999 | My crime? |
40999 | My husband? |
40999 | My wife-- where is my wife? |
40999 | My wife? |
40999 | Not to- night? |
40999 | Of what are you afraid? |
40999 | Plots for novels, eh? |
40999 | Prascovie was very fascinating, was n''t she? |
40999 | Pray, why? |
40999 | Princess? |
40999 | Refused? 40999 Shall we allow our brothers and our sisters to be snatched from us without raising a hand to save them?" |
40999 | She is worthless and vain; why make yourself miserable? |
40999 | She seemed so ingenuous and charming, that I suspected nothing-- until--"Until she attempted to murder you-- eh? |
40999 | So soon? |
40999 | Still thinking of her? |
40999 | Stolen? |
40999 | Suppose I told him? 40999 Surely you know Griffiths, sir? |
40999 | Suspect? |
40999 | Tell me, Santina, do you still love me? |
40999 | Tell me, what am I to do? |
40999 | Tell me, where shall I find these conspirators? |
40999 | Tell me, who brought me here? 40999 The Sultan?" |
40999 | The Tzarevitch? 40999 The advertisement?" |
40999 | The attempt? 40999 The cave is now deserted, I suppose?" |
40999 | The cave? 40999 The woman has enmeshed you, eh?" |
40999 | Their trial? |
40999 | Then dare you-- dare you, for my sake, Andrew-- dare you_ throw the bomb_? |
40999 | Then the Count is not living? |
40999 | Then the crisis is ended? |
40999 | Then you are not Madame Delbet? |
40999 | They tell me I have altered, yet-- why, do n''t you know Mariette? |
40999 | They were Piedmontese brigands, then? |
40999 | Think, are not the risks too great? |
40999 | This surely is not the road to Lanslebourg? |
40999 | Thou art from Afo, the City in the Sky, and thou hast gained knowledge of our intended attack? |
40999 | Thou sayest the French, the accursed offspring of Eblis, are numerous? 40999 To Siberia? |
40999 | To see me? 40999 To what do I owe the honour of this visit?" |
40999 | To what do I owe the sudden interest that the daughter of the Sheikh hath taken in my welfare? |
40999 | To whom art thou betrothed? |
40999 | Was Valerie ever serious? |
40999 | Was it during the time I knew her? |
40999 | Was it? |
40999 | Wax? |
40999 | Well, old fellow,he exclaimed familiarly,"and what means all this confounded mystery?" |
40999 | Well, what is it? |
40999 | Well,he said,"you have seen our stronghold, and recognise the impossibility of any one escaping from here, eh?" |
40999 | Were their operations on the Bourse successful? |
40999 | Were they both tried? |
40999 | Were you surprised at my curt note? |
40999 | What am I now? |
40999 | What am I to do with it? |
40999 | What brings you here, so far from Petersburg? |
40999 | What can I do? |
40999 | What can have been the motive for all this? |
40999 | What character do you think would best suit me? |
40999 | What do you mean? 40999 What do you mean? |
40999 | What do you mean? |
40999 | What do you mean? |
40999 | What do you mean? |
40999 | What for? |
40999 | What has become of Prascovie''s father? |
40999 | What is the service? |
40999 | What revenge? 40999 What was that?" |
40999 | What''s the matter? 40999 What-- what do you know of my crime? |
40999 | What-- what do you mean? |
40999 | What? 40999 What?" |
40999 | What? |
40999 | When a woman is forsaken by the man she loves, who can blame her for a hasty, loveless marriage? |
40999 | Where and when did you marry me, pray? |
40999 | Where are mine? |
40999 | Where has she gone? |
40999 | Where is Souvaroff now? |
40999 | Where is your licence? 40999 Where?" |
40999 | Who are you? 40999 Who are you?" |
40999 | Who is the man condemned to death? |
40999 | Who is the woman whose blackness and deceit hath captivated thee? |
40999 | Who told you I was going? |
40999 | Why are you disguised as a French workman? 40999 Why are you here?" |
40999 | Why are you leaving so suddenly? |
40999 | Why art thou here, and alone, so far from thine home on the crest of yonder peak? |
40999 | Why do you intrude here, at this hour? |
40999 | Why have you come here, Gasparo? 40999 Why not abandon this attempt?" |
40999 | Why should I, when you roundly accuse me of possessing stolen property? 40999 Why stay and be brutally ill- used in this manner?" |
40999 | Why, my dear, whatever have you been saying to Norton? 40999 Why, what ails you?" |
40999 | Why? |
40999 | Will he be alone? |
40999 | You are going to Pavlova, in Vologda? |
40999 | You are satisfied that we are brigands? |
40999 | You confess to the quarrel? 40999 You do love me, then, Santina?" |
40999 | You do n''t know Dr. Beale? 40999 You have at last returned?" |
40999 | You have been commissioned to deliver something to me, have you not? |
40999 | You have not failed, then? |
40999 | You know many Belgians in London, I suppose? |
40999 | You know the Bolshaia Ssattovaia? |
40999 | You love Paul Denissoff; surely you will save him from Siberia? |
40999 | You mean Clementine Sucaret? 40999 You recognise me, then?" |
40999 | You wish me to deliver it? |
40999 | You wish to go to Lanslebourg, over the Cenis? |
40999 | You, Princess? |
40999 | You, Sonia? 40999 You?" |
40999 | You? |
40999 | _ A scar_? |
40999 | _ Qui est la_? |
40999 | ` The Golden Hand''? |
40999 | Am I dreaming? |
40999 | And how could I? |
40999 | And how? |
40999 | And the box of bullion-- where was that? |
40999 | And where are we now?" |
40999 | And you intend to murder him?" |
40999 | And you? |
40999 | And, after all, is life worth living?" |
40999 | Are you a regular guide?" |
40999 | As it is, Doroteita-- as it is, may I not entertain hope?" |
40999 | Besides, what have you to fear?" |
40999 | Besides, why should I waste time over her? |
40999 | But do you intend to leave Italy-- to leave me alone-- now?" |
40999 | But if there should not be rest beyond the grave? |
40999 | But of course you were in England at that time; possibly you heard nothing about it?" |
40999 | But what of your husband? |
40999 | But,_ mon cher_, you have never doubted me, have you?" |
40999 | But-- why-- what''s the matter, Theophile? |
40999 | Can not I now make amends?" |
40999 | Can you believe that I have forgotten the insult you offered me when we last met? |
40999 | Come, now, what''s the matter?" |
40999 | Confessed? |
40999 | Cool, audacious impudence, was n''t it?" |
40999 | Could she really have murdered her brother? |
40999 | Did she add you to her list of victims?" |
40999 | Do n''t you hear me?" |
40999 | Do you agree?" |
40999 | Do you consent?" |
40999 | Do you recollect that soon after you consented to assist us, you gave me some information regarding a conspiracy at Moscow?" |
40999 | Do you remember,"I added,"that it is a year to- night since we first met?" |
40999 | Finally I said to her--"Tell me, what can I do for you?" |
40999 | For of the three roads that spread out before me, why should I have chosen that one? |
40999 | Had it not been a labour of love, when I adored-- nay, worshipped her; and she, in her turn, had bestowed smiles and kisses upon me? |
40999 | Has she a cavalier here? |
40999 | Has the cross- examination concluded?" |
40999 | Have you so soon forgotten your fellow- student, Paul Olbrich?" |
40999 | He took from an ancient oak coffer a small sealed packet, and added,"We desire this taken to Briancon; will you undertake to do so?" |
40999 | How, I wondered, was she faring? |
40999 | I thought the Count died in Buenos Ayres two years ago, and that you were free?" |
40999 | I-- I was happy then, was n''t I?" |
40999 | If she were innocent, why should she hide herself? |
40999 | Is it not written in the Book of Everlasting Will that mercy should be shown unto the weak?" |
40999 | Is it not written that the One Worthy of Praise showeth mercy only to the merciful?" |
40999 | Is that the way a woman shows her affection?" |
40999 | Is there anything else you desire to know?" |
40999 | Is there no assistance I can render?" |
40999 | It hardly does her justice-- does it?" |
40999 | Need I say that it was a woman''s? |
40999 | Or am I really growing young again? |
40999 | Presently her French maid entered noiselessly, and asked--"Will mademoiselle require anything more?" |
40999 | Shall I bring him to you?" |
40999 | She was in desperation when, two years ago, Kobita arrived in London--""Was that on the night I called upon them?" |
40999 | Surely you are joking?" |
40999 | The note Santina had sent me had been filched from a murdered man? |
40999 | Then I asked,"Why is it imperative that the packet should be conveyed to you in this manner?" |
40999 | Then he looked into my eyes, and asked, with an insolent air,"Do n''t you believe me?" |
40999 | Then what year of grace is this?" |
40999 | Then, as she steadied herself and strolled slowly by my side, she suddenly asked earnestly--"Do you really love me, Andrew?" |
40999 | Then, seriously, she asked,"Is every one present prepared to sacrifice his or her life in this attempt?" |
40999 | This puzzled him, for had not Kheira said that the city was totally undefended? |
40999 | Thou speakest French, then?" |
40999 | Was I dreaming? |
40999 | Was I still myself, or was it all a delusion? |
40999 | Was he faithless? |
40999 | Was it Halima herself? |
40999 | Was it Santina or her husband who had admitted their guilt? |
40999 | Was it mine, or that of the unknown victim? |
40999 | Was not my presence there, and the discovery of a revolver bearing my name, direct circumstantial evidence against me? |
40999 | Was there, I wondered, some mysterious affinity between us? |
40999 | We go by the Sud Express at eleven- fifteen, why not remain and see us off?" |
40999 | What can I do-- how can I act to save my father?" |
40999 | What can have happened to you? |
40999 | What could I say? |
40999 | What could it all mean? |
40999 | What could it denote? |
40999 | What do you insinuate?" |
40999 | What do you mean?" |
40999 | What do you mean?" |
40999 | What do you want?" |
40999 | What for?" |
40999 | What grounds have you for saying the note does not belong to me?" |
40999 | What has happened?" |
40999 | What have I done that you should treat me so?" |
40999 | What is it?" |
40999 | What of him?" |
40999 | What was he like?" |
40999 | What would he think of you?" |
40999 | What''s that?" |
40999 | What''s the matter?" |
40999 | What, you ask, has become of_ her_? |
40999 | Where didst thou see them?" |
40999 | Where is he?" |
40999 | Where is the box-- the box that was with me in the train?" |
40999 | Where was I? |
40999 | Where was Rose? |
40999 | Where was Santina? |
40999 | Which was I, the murderer or the murdered? |
40999 | Who are you, pray?" |
40999 | Who-- who?" |
40999 | Whose house is this?" |
40999 | Why not?" |
40999 | Why not?" |
40999 | Why should I not do so to- night? |
40999 | Why was I certain in all my life never to know a like moment? |
40999 | Why?" |
40999 | Will you not call here to wish me farewell; or shall we never meet again? |
40999 | Wilt thou not release him, and lift from my heart the weight which oppresseth it?" |
40999 | Wilt thou not remain here with my tribesmen and escape?" |
40999 | Yet where did I live? |
40999 | You desire to hear the_ denouement_? |
40999 | You still have that little souvenir I gave you, I suppose? |
40999 | You still love me, do you not?" |
40999 | You understand?" |
40999 | You will not object to wait, will you?" |
40999 | You, Gasparo-- you_ here_?" |
40999 | You?" |
40999 | You?" |
40999 | You?" |
40999 | are you unaware?" |
40999 | then you do not forget the facts? |
51793 | How,he asks,"did the Athenian audience, who vehemently attacked the poet for divulging the mysteries, tolerate such a drama? |
51793 | If,he says,"we only do good to them that do good to us, what reward have we?" |
51793 | Where are all those Doctors and Masters whom thou didst well know whilst they lived and flourished in learning? 51793 And if God is not, whence come good things? |
51793 | And still more, how did Æschylus, a pious and serious thinker, venture to bring such a subject on the stage with a moral purpose?" |
51793 | And, indeed, how should liberty anywhere flourish when knowledge is trodden under foot? |
51793 | But did he ever do it? |
51793 | First came the Portuguese Francisco Sanchez( 1552- 1623? |
51793 | Had they had no part in truth and salvation?" |
51793 | How can we have the right to say that no Babylonians had a scientific interest in the data? |
51793 | How did the Hellenes relate to the older polities and cultures which they found there? |
51793 | If Milton lent dignity to Satan in Puritan England, was Euripides to do less for Dionysos in Macedonia? |
51793 | If religion, why not religious speculation, leading to philosophy and science? |
51793 | If the early philosophers"had nothing but theology behind them"( p. 138), why not infer theologies for the old- established deities of Mesopotamia? |
51793 | If the most obvious necessity is to be urged, why not all the less obvious? |
51793 | In conclusion we may ask, How could he be? |
51793 | In the second dialogue figure Rhetulus(= Lutherus) and Cubercus(= Bucerus? |
51793 | Is it not then probable that astronomical knowledge was so ordered by Easterns, and passed on to Hellenes? |
51793 | It is something of a marvel, further, that it spared Rabelais(? |
51793 | It is to be noted that the refrain"Who is the God whom we should worship?" |
51793 | It may more fitly be read[ 459] as an echo of the saying of Herakleitos that"the Wise[= the Logos?] |
51793 | Letronne, Mélanges d''Érudition, 1860(? |
51793 | Of a very different type from Wiclif is the remarkable personality of the Welshman Reginald( or Reynold) Pecock( 1395?-1460? |
51793 | Sometimes the Jew''s case is shrewdly put, as when he asks,[ 956]"Did Jesus come into the world for this purpose, that we should not believe him?" |
51793 | Surely they must have been"known"to some adepts long before: how else came they to be accepted? |
51793 | The same account holds good of the best of the so- called Sophists, as Gorgias the Sicilian(? |
51793 | Then there sounds from the Rig- Veda( x, 121) the wistful question: Who is the God whom we should worship?" |
51793 | There is indeed no more remarkable figure in the Middle Ages than Roger Bacon(? |
51793 | This is said to occur in thousands of cases in Christian countries: why not also among savages? |
51793 | We are left asking, how came an early Ionian Greek to think thus, outgoing the assimilative power of the later age of Aristotle? |
51793 | What, in sooth, would the real words of a raving Bacchante be like? |
51793 | Who has seen him? |
51793 | Whom shall we praise?" |
51793 | Why affirm always that"the"Greeks did whatever great Greeks achieved? |
51793 | Why not? |
51793 | Xenophanes of Kolophon(? |
51793 | [ 1116]"Dost thou desire to taste eternal bliss? |
51793 | how long shall this superstitious sect of Christians and this upstart invention endure? |
51793 | p. 384) that in Akhunaton''s heresy"we see... the highest attitude[? |
39987 | ''And the boy?'' 39987 ''Ca n''t?'' |
39987 | ''Damn it all,''continued the doctor fiercely,''is n''t that sight enough to haunt a man if he does n''t try? 39987 ''Hollo,''asked Taylor, with a quick professional glance,''what have you done to your ankle? |
39987 | ''What is-- the Presence-- going-- to do?'' 39987 ''Who said he was to be left?'' |
39987 | ''Why cow- skin?'' 39987 ''Wilt remove yonder drunken fanatic, or shall the worship of the Shining Ones be profaned?'' |
39987 | ''You told him the_ sahib_ was dead, I suppose?'' 39987 A wife should love her husband, surely? |
39987 | About what,_ Huzoor?_"About the vegetables, and Dhropudi, and the_ sootullians_, and the blisters on the back of his head! 39987 After the harvest?" |
39987 | And Kirpo herself? |
39987 | And did no one tell about it all? |
39987 | And doth not the_ Guru_ say,''Fight with no weapon but the sword of the Spirit''? 39987 And for thee also, Gopâl; surely''tis best for thee-- if as thou sayest I am dear unto thee?" |
39987 | And how is Heera Nund? |
39987 | And the jewels? |
39987 | And the other people who ate of the field of Lâl? |
39987 | And what are you doing? |
39987 | And what is he saying now? |
39987 | And what will your team do without their best forward? |
39987 | And where is the baby? |
39987 | And why do you say I am a friend of Râm''s? |
39987 | And why? |
39987 | And you will say that I did my best, my very best, for my lord''s interest? |
39987 | Are you? 39987 But are you sure, dear, that he wanted you to learn?" |
39987 | But the echo? |
39987 | But the reward is two thousand; why do you ask less? |
39987 | But what of the new one,_ baba- ji?_--the cash lent on permission to foreclose the mortgages? |
39987 | But where are the tickets? 39987 But where is he?" |
39987 | By the by,I interrupted,"can you tell me what that boy is singing? |
39987 | Can I not close an eye but thou must bring iniquity to respectable houses? 39987 Dhurm Singh?" |
39987 | Dhurm Singh? |
39987 | Did I do well, O my father? |
39987 | Did she ever tell you the story herself? |
39987 | Did you tell him the General was greatly displeased? 39987 Do I not say it right? |
39987 | Do n''t you wish you may get him to do it? |
39987 | Do they generally come back? |
39987 | Do you think that Heera knew? |
39987 | Does he eat them too? |
39987 | Dost wish to cast thy evil eye on my heart''s delight? 39987 Hast had enough for this time, O Haiyat?" |
39987 | Have you a case in my Court? |
39987 | He must if he is a hindrance to the work--"And if your work is a hindrance to him? 39987 He will think himself back amongst the_ mems!_ wo n''t he?" |
39987 | How about the seeds I sent you? |
39987 | How do you know? 39987 How long have you been here?" |
39987 | I do n''t know about that; was n''t there some one who smote off some one else''s ear? 39987 I must find out--""If he is a noodle?" |
39987 | I suppose the Meer is really an enlightened man? |
39987 | If she came, Gopâl, wouldst thou tell her the truth? |
39987 | Is Lâl here? |
39987 | Is it Sonny_ baba?_he asked. |
39987 | Is that all? |
39987 | Is the man mad? 39987 Is the permission of the Presence bestowed?" |
39987 | Medical missions,_ et cetera_; so it has come to that already, has it, old chap? |
39987 | My dear fellow, is n''t there a story somewhere about the Emperor of China''s clothes? 39987 Not come yet,_ fakeer- ji?_"I would call as I trotted past after a few days''absence. |
39987 | Now, what can he want? |
39987 | Of what hath she to complain? |
39987 | Opium? 39987 Or shall I catch thee peeping through the door at the men- folk again like a cat after a mouse? |
39987 | She has gone away? |
39987 | She has no heirs of any kind? |
39987 | So fine as what? |
39987 | So thou thinkest to learn all the Meer has learnt? |
39987 | So you call it a blessed medicine now, Dhurm Singh? |
39987 | So you did not get the land after all? 39987 Still thinking of thy letter, Feroz? |
39987 | Surely this is very rare? |
39987 | The Presence hath said it, shall it not be true? |
39987 | The Presence says it; shall it not be true? |
39987 | The Presence will not think it so fine as''_ Ide Park_, doubtless? |
39987 | The boy? 39987 The_ mâlin!_ What on earth do you mean?" |
39987 | Then why do they make for the village now they hear the roll beginning? |
39987 | Then you did not succeed? |
39987 | Then you recognise footsteps? |
39987 | Thou wouldst deny it? 39987 Understand what?" |
39987 | Wait the harvest and lose the auspicious time the_ purohit_[7] hath found written in the stars? 39987 Waiting for what?" |
39987 | Was it so hard to learn? |
39987 | What are hands, and feet, or brain,he answered calmly to all objections,"if they have not eyes to guide them? |
39987 | What are you carrying her about for? |
39987 | What are you doing, Dhurm Singh? |
39987 | What can Kirpo do with a baby? 39987 What do you want, my son?" |
39987 | What does it give? |
39987 | What else canst thou expect from a Belooch of Birokzai? 39987 What flood? |
39987 | What good to sue ere harvest? 39987 What good, O_ baba- ji?_ Why, the land will be mine, and I can take, not what you give me, but what I choose. |
39987 | What have we done? 39987 What have you been singing?" |
39987 | What is it he wants to know? |
39987 | What is it, Feroza? 39987 What is it?" |
39987 | What is it? |
39987 | What is this? 39987 What is your price for a song, Singing- Rose?" |
39987 | What matters a kiss at one? |
39987 | What more would you give to a slave? |
39987 | What then,_ bunniah- ji?_he asked haughtily. |
39987 | What three years? |
39987 | What vexed question? |
39987 | What will you sing? |
39987 | What would you have done,_ Huzoor_, in my place? 39987 Where is Feroza?" |
39987 | Where''s the mother? |
39987 | Wherefore no stranger, Gopâl? 39987 Wherefore not, since the master is better?" |
39987 | Wherefore not,_ Huzoor_? 39987 Wherefore not,_ Huzoor_? |
39987 | Which of you two pointed out that_ jelaibee?_I asked. |
39987 | Who told thee so, Kareem? 39987 Who?" |
39987 | Whwhat the divvle are ye laughing at-- me? |
39987 | Why Bengal more than other places? |
39987 | Why should I not sing,_ Huzoor_, seeing I am of a family of bards? 39987 Why the devil did you stop his opium, you young fool? |
39987 | Why wilt be so foolish, Feroza? |
39987 | Why? 39987 Would you like to keep it, dear?" |
39987 | You do n''t mean to say you eat lizards? |
39987 | You lose custom, surely, by seeking the shade? |
39987 | You mean that those little pots contain your dead ancestors? |
39987 | You will write and tell the Light- bringer? |
39987 | Your wife is dead, I suppose? |
39987 | _ Allah akhbâr wa Mohammed rasul!_[19] Hast forgotten the faith, Feroza Begum, Moguli? 39987 _ Sarishtadar!_"[ clerk of the Court] I began in English,"what, the devil?" |
39987 | _ Wah illah!_ What? 39987 _ Wah!_ How canst tell? |
39987 | ''How can I tell?'' |
39987 | ''Twas easy to sneer at henna- dyed hands; but was that worse than using scented soaps like a bad one, and living luxurious? |
39987 | ''When was an outcast vowed to pilgrimage? |
39987 | ''Would Sukya come between his brethren and the Shining Ones? |
39987 | ***** Did I wake with the cry? |
39987 | A minute more, and my pony''s nose was well down on the wet, sweet tufts of vetch, and I was asking for the first time,"Who is Lâl?" |
39987 | A seal-- what is a seal or two more against the son of thy son''s marriage?" |
39987 | A white figure on a white horse like death; or was the avenger behind beneath the lank folds of drapery which fluttered round the walker? |
39987 | After all, what did it matter to her? |
39987 | After all, what did she know of this absent husband, save that dear Mrs. Cranston had met him at a conversazione? |
39987 | Again, who knows? |
39987 | Ah, it''s after having dill- water ye are now, is it? |
39987 | Am I a pig of_ baniah_ to fill my stomach with rupees I can not digest? |
39987 | Am I to sit in the dust like a lone widow because thou art lazy? |
39987 | And Feroza and I are going out to be admired like the_ mems_, are n''t we, Feroza?" |
39987 | And I? |
39987 | And as for Dhurm Singh? |
39987 | And as for command? |
39987 | And now? |
39987 | And oh, Feroza,"she added, her sympathy overborne by curiosity,"think you he will wear the strange dress of the Miss_ sahib''s_ sun- pictures? |
39987 | And still the river dimpled and gurgled with inward mirth; for if it gave the vetch, had it not taken the wheat? |
39987 | And what would Kishnu say-- after all these years, these long years of content? |
39987 | Anger and reproach were desirable, doubtless, but what if they left her helpless? |
39987 | Are we not all maimed, halt, blind, yet entering into life?" |
39987 | As for the harvests of such sowings? |
39987 | As for the pills, where would the old sinner be but for the quinine contained therein? |
39987 | As for the reason-- can you not guess?" |
39987 | Besides, I may find that precious flower,--who knows?'' |
39987 | But for them, or their like, would she not have been well content at home? |
39987 | But what did that matter? |
39987 | But what if it was a devil sucking his heart''s blood because of his beauty? |
39987 | But what was that to one side of him? |
39987 | But when? |
39987 | Can a_ bunniah_ plough?" |
39987 | Captain Smith, is it half- past eleven or twelve?" |
39987 | Could I forget the child''s face in the light? |
39987 | Could_ she_ have compressed the desire and love of her heart into a few well- turned sentences? |
39987 | Did I dream that night, or did the Footstep of Death bring revenge when it came over the bridge at last? |
39987 | Did I not marry thee, O Haiyat, Marrow of my Bones, because of thy fair face? |
39987 | Did I stop to ask which? |
39987 | Did I? |
39987 | Did no one say the man was mad?" |
39987 | Did the Presence observe how neatly? |
39987 | Do I sneer at thy Meer amusing himself over the black water amongst the_ mems?_""The Meer is not amusing himself. |
39987 | Does he still come back to his field under the broad harvest moon, to glean his scanty share after the other people have had their fill? |
39987 | Does he still slip silently into the stream, knife in hand? |
39987 | Does not the price of the calf buy the cow also? |
39987 | Down on the hard white threshing- floor-- was that a branch or a fragment of rope? |
39987 | Durga was his dead brother''s widow, but what right had she to more consideration than any other woman who had yielded to a man''s promise? |
39987 | Euclidus and Algebra, Political Economy and Justinian?" |
39987 | For the rest, if I killed the child, what then? |
39987 | For what is a dead man''s kiss to lips that are like the rose? |
39987 | Found the same thought in each heart: was it to be death, or death in life for one, or for all? |
39987 | From the very beginning had it not been so? |
39987 | Had the Presence never heard that the poor ate crocodile flesh? |
39987 | Hai!_ But what is a snake to a rose when the gold sun may kiss her? |
39987 | Has the_ Huzoor_ never heard how the squirrel people come to have four black marks on their golden backs? |
39987 | Hast no decency?" |
39987 | Hath she not waited long enough for the promised kiss? |
39987 | Have I not fought wire- worms since the beginning of all things, I and my fathers? |
39987 | Have you ever watched the face of a general servant when she takes the covers off the Christmas dinner? |
39987 | Have you no son?" |
39987 | He and his forbears had made much out of Jaimul and his fellows; but was that any reason against making more, if more was to be made? |
39987 | He had counted on this marriage for years; the blue sky itself had fought for him so far, and now-- what if the coming harvest were a bumper? |
39987 | Heart of my heart? |
39987 | How am I to know which is which?" |
39987 | How can this Truth be told, save by doing the will of the Lord?" |
39987 | How could he? |
39987 | How was that?" |
39987 | I cried,"how on earth did you manage to get here, Mungal?" |
39987 | I have learnt all,--except--""Except what?" |
39987 | I presume the_ gosain_--Victor Emanuel, I think you called him-- sent the plant; he knew of the doctor''s desire?" |
39987 | I put her there-- where is Sirdar Begum?" |
39987 | I wonder what Exeter Hall would say to getting drunk for purposes of devotion?'' |
39987 | If I bring him dead, can this slave follow him and find speech in the silence of the grave? |
39987 | If it were he? |
39987 | If the Presence had thought as I did, as I_ knew_, what would he have done?" |
39987 | If the Presence''s great- grandfather--""What do you know about my great- grandfather?" |
39987 | If the curse had been hers, would she not gladly have given a handmaiden to her lord? |
39987 | If we can prevent our subjects from growing poppy except under supervision, why ca n''t he? |
39987 | Is it my fault if they possess slate- pencils, and ink- pots, and First- Lesson books?" |
39987 | Is it not fit? |
39987 | Is it not so, comrades? |
39987 | Is it not so?" |
39987 | Is it the one they are leaving, or the one to which they seek return? |
39987 | Is it true that he who brings Faizullah captive will receive two thousand rupees reward?" |
39987 | Is it true that the armies of the Lord of the Universe march against the village of one Faizullah of Birokzai?" |
39987 | Is not that the course of the sun? |
39987 | Is not this the field of Lâl?" |
39987 | Is the world changed because it reads books and washes? |
39987 | It is a queer story anyhow-- is it not?" |
39987 | It was dry? |
39987 | Know you that He never made an ugly one yet?" |
39987 | Knowest thou, Gopâl, why my heart sinks now as it never did when first I yielded to thy plan for peace? |
39987 | Leaving the cast with a smile; leaving the rose and the nightingale? |
39987 | Mistletoe,--yes, that might account for the kiss; but what about the perfume of roses? |
39987 | Nay, who can say what ails the heart when it ceases to beat? |
39987 | Now she is gone, wherefore should Gulâbi wait longer? |
39987 | Now, my dear boy, can you tell me why that unfortunate viscera, the liver, has got into such disrepute? |
39987 | Of course I will pay in due time; hath not great Râm sent me rain to wash out the old writing?" |
39987 | One of those two, of course; who else could it have been? |
39987 | One, two, three years ago? |
39987 | Or was that Lâl yonder where the vultures ringed a sand- bank far on the western side? |
39987 | Ought I not to learn it?" |
39987 | Parbutti would not be back till all hours, and Gopâl-- what of Gopâl? |
39987 | Perhaps that is it, who knows? |
39987 | Poor wretches, who could blame them with their crops withering in the June sun and the sluice- doors within reach? |
39987 | Say, heart''s desire, what said he when I saw thee--?" |
39987 | Seeta? |
39987 | Shall I not have honour for saving him? |
39987 | Since when has the wife a right to claim all? |
39987 | Since when hast thou become a_ mem?_"The girl glared at her with wild passion, and Kareema gave a whimper as the grip bit into her tender wrists. |
39987 | So I get no help in trying to decide the question,--"Who was Râmchunderji?" |
39987 | So he-- that liar riding ahead-- was to have the land, was he? |
39987 | So it was with a prescience of what would follow that I put the least formidable question--"Which of you replaced the quail?" |
39987 | Something had frightened them-- but what? |
39987 | Sure I love thee, else wherefore should I have sought thee?" |
39987 | Surely Parbutti should know such things without being told them; if not, what right had she to be house- mother, ousting those who did? |
39987 | The hand of Shiva is not to be turned aside, and am I not his sworn servant? |
39987 | The question remains-- which? |
39987 | The question was-- which? |
39987 | The question was-- which? |
39987 | The very uniform worn by the score or so of men drawn up on the deck was strange; and what did that squad of_ mem sahibs_ mean? |
39987 | The woman was a vagrant, a loose walker, a--""Is the order, written? |
39987 | The_ mems_ must protect her; for were they not the cause of her venturing forth at all? |
39987 | Then came word that the armies of the Lord of the Universe were to march on this slave''s village, and I said,''What is life to me? |
39987 | Then what good wouldst thou be to me without a nose? |
39987 | Then why had they prated of higher things? |
39987 | There was so much deplorable ignorance amongst the uneducated classes, and did the Presence look with favour on the proposal for reducing the rewards? |
39987 | They did such work at Delhi; why not here? |
39987 | Thine? |
39987 | Thou knowest that I love thee; were it not so why should I have sought thee?" |
39987 | Was it a crocodile, after all; or was it a man, stealthy, swift, and silent? |
39987 | Was it a faint chuckle he heard, as he lay prone on his back, or only a louder gurgle of those ceaseless doves in the_ jhand_ tree? |
39987 | Was it fair, he asked, that such a total of munificent charity should not have a single orphan to show the Commissioner-_sahib_ when he came on tour? |
39987 | Was it jewels or gold he was seeking? |
39987 | Was it not more honourable than the parrot people and the squirrel people, and the pig people who battened on the field of Lâl? |
39987 | Was it true? |
39987 | Was it, briefly, God''s judgment, or man''s? |
39987 | Was not Kareema''s beauty odds enough, that she must fight also against this undreamed- of comfort? |
39987 | Was not a_ dewarani_--the husband''s younger brother''s wife-- bound by every principle of religion and decency to obey? |
39987 | Was that the Meer?" |
39987 | Was that the prick of the goad? |
39987 | Was their boasted influence all words? |
39987 | Was this really the explanation? |
39987 | What ails me? |
39987 | What are these fool''s words? |
39987 | What are words in exchange for the jewels she gave as a bride? |
39987 | What are you all frightened of? |
39987 | What did they do to her while I lay crushed among the crushed flowers? |
39987 | What did they do to her? |
39987 | What do I know of accounts who can neither read nor write? |
39987 | What does it matter? |
39987 | What else could I do? |
39987 | What good then would the money be to me if I were dead?" |
39987 | What good were crocodiles to him when they were slain? |
39987 | What hath she to do with them?" |
39987 | What have you all been keeping from me? |
39987 | What if the low levels between that rising ground and the high bank were to flood? |
39987 | What if the old_ nullah_ between the reed huts and the rising ground were to fill? |
39987 | What induced you to give it such an odd name?" |
39987 | What is a Sudra or two more or less to the Brahman? |
39987 | What is singing when I am sad? |
39987 | What matter? |
39987 | What money have I? |
39987 | What more do I want?" |
39987 | What shall I give to stay the burning in his throat and keep the sickness from him? |
39987 | What then? |
39987 | What then? |
39987 | What thinkest thou, my son? |
39987 | What tyrant kills the bulbul in his garden? |
39987 | What was he? |
39987 | What was that? |
39987 | What was that? |
39987 | What was this wisdom which inspired so many well- turned periods in the Meer''s somewhat prosy letters? |
39987 | What was to be done? |
39987 | What would you have done?" |
39987 | When do we start?" |
39987 | Who are you?" |
39987 | Who could say? |
39987 | Who could tell where Lâl was? |
39987 | Who could tell, when there was nothing but a shadow, a slip, and then a few air bubbles on the sliding river? |
39987 | Who kills the bulbul in the rose? |
39987 | Who knows? |
39987 | Who was Lâl? |
39987 | Why didst turn her brain with books? |
39987 | Why had she been lured from the old life in some ways and not in all? |
39987 | Why had they_ lied_ to her? |
39987 | Why is that?" |
39987 | Why not? |
39987 | Why not? |
39987 | Why should he not choose? |
39987 | Why should he? |
39987 | Why should not Inaiyut be a man? |
39987 | Why should not the pony of the Protector of the Poor have a bellyful? |
39987 | Why should she be, seeing that she was a paper- pupil and the prize giving was over? |
39987 | Why will''st not be decent like little Feroz yonder?" |
39987 | Why wilt thou not come with me to the mountains, O Haiyat?" |
39987 | Why, I asked, should Lâl run such risks? |
39987 | Will not the Protector of the Poor step in and see? |
39987 | Would he? |
39987 | Would it be there at harvest- time? |
39987 | Would you kindly jog memory, sir, by suggesting if it is under judicial or administrative heads? |
39987 | Wouldst steal the corn of others, when thy master is a_ missen sahib_, and thy tender a devotee? |
39987 | Yes or no?" |
39987 | Yet who kills his own pleasure? |
39987 | You do n''t suppose that you''re fit to be trusted alone with a medicine chest, do you? |
39987 | You remember Taylor, surgeon of the 101st, who died of pyæmia contracted in some of his cholera experiments? |
39987 | You see, to enter into details, I could n''t exactly give up-- a-- a night shirt, or that sort of thing, you know-- now could I? |
39987 | _ Huzoor!_ was there any wonder the flowers fell all crushed and broken? |
39987 | am I not three times as near the grave as the_ Baba- sahib_?" |
39987 | and thou causing my liver to melt with fear? |
39987 | are you old Munnoo or Bunnoo? |
39987 | are you sure you have made them right?" |
39987 | art thou hungry, wife?" |
39987 | but the anemone? |
39987 | deny thy brother''s child? |
39987 | did the Rose deserve the kiss which never came? |
39987 | do I not worship thee? |
39987 | do n''t ye think it''s time you stepped in as ripresentative of the_ Kaiser- i- Hind_, and took things in hand a bit? |
39987 | do you eat lizards?" |
39987 | he muttered; adding aloud, as if to change the subject,"And who are you, mother?" |
39987 | is it a bargain? |
39987 | is it a wicked game? |
39987 | is it that? |
39987 | look after my traps, will you?" |
39987 | or whether the wise woman sent by_ Mai_ Râdha was right in hinting at the evil eye? |
39987 | the wretched boy?'' |
39987 | was she to save Parbutti from the consequences of her own ignorance and negligence? |
39987 | what are words and tears to a snake? |
39987 | what did Dhurm Singh say?" |
39987 | what did anything matter if only Gopâl could be kept content-- if only Gopâl could be kept to his promise? |
39987 | what is it?" |
39987 | what the deuce do you know of Hyde Park?" |
39987 | what''s that?" |
39987 | what''s that?" |
39987 | which boy?" |
39987 | who are you?" |
39987 | who bade thee interfere?'' |
39987 | who grieves when a snake is dead? |
39987 | who were''we''?" |
39987 | why did n''t you tell us before?" |
39987 | you were telling me just now--""What does a sweeper know of princesses, my lord? |
39987 | you will put it all down to your ardent affection for your fellow- man; but what the devil have you done with your muscle, my dear fellow? |
48788 | A foreigner? |
48788 | Are there other foreigners here? |
48788 | Are you speaking of Pragmatism? 48788 At billiards?" |
48788 | But I thought you had one year''s furlough every seven? |
48788 | But do n''t you want to see your daughter? |
48788 | But if it is so easy to write a play why do dramatists take so long about it? |
48788 | But what is your explanation? |
48788 | But what on earth makes you stay with the man? |
48788 | But what''s the grave for? |
48788 | But you, do you know what you are doing? |
48788 | Do n''t you think we might leave it till after luncheon? |
48788 | Do they know you''ve come here? |
48788 | Do you believe in fate? |
48788 | Do you care for a game of billiards? |
48788 | Do you know it was found within thirty miles of here, on this side of the Tibetan frontier? |
48788 | Do you know who that is? |
48788 | Do you like them better than paintings? |
48788 | Do you think so? 48788 Do you think so?" |
48788 | Do you think that is why I wear it? |
48788 | Do you? |
48788 | Does it require no more than that to write a play? |
48788 | Everything go off all right? |
48788 | For me? |
48788 | Found where? |
48788 | Have you not noticed that Ibsen uses the same plot over and over again? 48788 Have you read_ Les Avarià © s_?" |
48788 | Have you studied the modern developments of philosophy in America? |
48788 | He had lodgings with you? |
48788 | He''s priceless, is n''t he? |
48788 | Hulloa,he said,"where have you sprung from?" |
48788 | Hume and Berkeley? 48788 Is it not strange,"he said, with his charming smile,"that we Chinese wear this gown because three hundred years ago the Manchus were horsemen?" |
48788 | Nerve, eh? |
48788 | Nice looking fellow, eh? |
48788 | Roads to Freedom? 48788 Shall we say apartments then?" |
48788 | Tell me,I said,"do you believe God will condemn the Chinese to eternal punishment if they do n''t accept Christianity?" |
48788 | They do not go so far as to get out and let the nuns ride in their stead? |
48788 | Well,they said,"did you see the blighter shot?" |
48788 | Well? |
48788 | What are you having a grave dug for? |
48788 | What do you mean? |
48788 | What do you mean? |
48788 | What have you written? |
48788 | What is socialism? |
48788 | What is the reason for which you deem yourselves our betters? 48788 What is your name?" |
48788 | What the devil do you mean by that? 48788 What''s the good of going back to England?" |
48788 | What''s the young man like? |
48788 | When are you going home? |
48788 | When are you going on leave? |
48788 | Who the devil''s that for? |
48788 | Who was this anyway? |
48788 | Why,she asked,"do you English write such silly books about Russia?" |
48788 | Will these American students ever produce anything like this? |
48788 | Wo n''t you also give me a translation? |
48788 | Would you like that? |
48788 | _ Moi?_ Oh, in a day or two. |
48788 | ''But what about the sick?'' |
48788 | ''What is the name of the doctor in charge?'' |
48788 | ''When do they take their holidays then?'' |
48788 | Am I right or am I wrong?" |
48788 | And the string? |
48788 | And what will become of your superiority when the yellow man can make as good guns as the white and fire them as straight? |
48788 | But how can I analyse the subtle quality which distinguished this old man? |
48788 | Do you call yourself a Christian?" |
48788 | Do you know that we tried an experiment which is unique in the history of the world? |
48788 | Do you know what I did?" |
48788 | Do you not know that there are in this country four hundred millions of the most practical and industrious people in the world? |
48788 | Do you not know that we have a genius for mechanics? |
48788 | Do you think it will take us long to learn? |
48788 | England? |
48788 | Has our civilisation been less elaborate, less complicated, less refined than yours? |
48788 | Have our thinkers been less profound than yours? |
48788 | Have you excelled us in arts or letters? |
48788 | Have you seen the last one?" |
48788 | He was always ready to have a drink with you and no sooner was your glass empty than he was prompt with the China phrase:"Ready for the other half?" |
48788 | How long had the kingdom lasted and what tragedy marked its fall? |
48788 | I knew he was drunk, but I did not think he was very drunk, till he asked me suddenly:"What is democracy?" |
48788 | Shall I tell you? |
48788 | Shall we go into the drawing- room?" |
48788 | The moment he got back to his office he called to his number two:"I say, Peters, who''s dead, d''you know?" |
48788 | Then why does the white man despise the yellow? |
48788 | What bold adventurer was he who had penetrated so far towards the East to found a kingdom? |
48788 | What did he care about Shanghai? |
48788 | What did it matter what people thought? |
48788 | What did it mean? |
48788 | What in heaven''s name was to be done? |
48788 | When they had met that afternoon Dr. Saunders had exclaimed:"What on earth has brought you to the city at this time of year?" |
48788 | Why had he ever come? |
48788 | Why should he unless he were a missionary or a Chinese Secretary at the Legation? |
48788 | You could n''t have an hallucination twice, could you? |
48788 | Yü?" |
46635 | And after that? |
46635 | And after that? |
46635 | But,says our objector,"is not this the doctrine held by the various sects and taught by the various commentators?" |
46635 | Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
46635 | The generation to come of your children and the stranger from a far land shall say, Wherefore hath the Lord done thus to this land? 46635 Where will it go last of all? |
46635 | Where, O, where will it go last of all? |
46635 | And what has religion done? |
46635 | And what was{ 86} the consequence? |
46635 | And why was this? |
46635 | Are Saturn''s rings solid or liquid? |
46635 | Are the atmospheres of the planets like ours? |
46635 | Are they all eternal in their present combinations, or is it only the simple elements that are eternal? |
46635 | Are they built of the same materials as our planet? |
46635 | But how came they to have this"belief, purity and zeal?" |
46635 | But how can we prove that mud was deposited at the same rate then as now? |
46635 | But how does our infidel geologist set about his work of proving that the earth has any given age, say a thousand million years? |
46635 | But how is such an enormous heat kept up? |
46635 | But how much of it is really science to you? |
46635 | But then comes the great question: if granite is the lowest layer in the strata, what is below the{ 48} granite? |
46635 | But what are the pyramids to the Alps, which have been lifted by some power to an altitude thirty- three times the hight of the largest pyramid? |
46635 | But what is gravity? |
46635 | But what of this? |
46635 | But where did the mist come from? |
46635 | But, supposing that matter is eternal, how does that account for the formation of this beautiful world? |
46635 | Can these philosophers tell us what they mean by physical force? |
46635 | Could all the wise men of Rome have explained to Julius Caesar the following dispatch, if given in prophetic vision? |
46635 | Could you truthfully say one- half, one- fourth, or even one- tenth? |
46635 | DID THE WORLD MAKE ITSELF? |
46635 | Did a mass of iron, for example, becoming discontented with its condition, suddenly change itself into a cloud of gas or a pail of water? |
46635 | Did it kindle of its own accord? |
46635 | Did the mist make itself? |
46635 | Do they show us a single reason why some parts of matter become organized and others do not? |
46635 | For what cause is the fortune of these countries so strikingly changed? |
46635 | For who can better direct me when I hesitate, or instruct me when I am ignorant? |
46635 | Had the world a Creator, or did it make itself? |
46635 | Has the moon an atmosphere? |
46635 | Has this earth existed as it is from eternity? |
46635 | Have we fifty- eight eternal substances? |
46635 | Have we not here one of the plainest admissions of the total apostasy of the so- called Christian church? |
46635 | Have you personally measured the diameter of the earth, observed the transit of Venus, or calculated the distance of the moon? |
46635 | He saith unto them,''Have ye here any meat?'' |
46635 | He would say,"In the year of Christ-- what does that mean? |
46635 | How far is the sun from the earth? |
46635 | How high above the earth is the Aurora Borealis, or Northern Light? |
46635 | How many colors in a ray of sun- light? |
46635 | How many of the most important affairs of life can be demonstrated by means of the multiplication table? |
46635 | How then is the nerve to be protected, and yet the sight not obstructed? |
46635 | How then shall we comprehend its distance from{ 56} us? |
46635 | If it could be proven that some stars shine, while others are dark; then why this difference? |
46635 | If it existed as a red hot fire- mist from eternity, why should it ever begin to cool at all? |
46635 | If it is any one of them, where did the others come from? |
46635 | If it required design to{ 58} fashion a metal type, did it not require a still greater design to form the hand that manipulates that type? |
46635 | If it required intelligence to make a pen, did it not require still greater intelligence to make the hand that wields the pen? |
46635 | If men should be convinced that they are only animals, and that God takes no notice of them, whose property would be safe? |
46635 | If such are the uncertainties of science to the actual investigators, what shall we say to him who has learned his science at school? |
46635 | If there is no authoritative revelation from God, what better are we than the brute creation? |
46635 | If this is not the teachings of idolatry, what is it? |
46635 | In other words,"Is it possible for vile Mahometans to understand and teach such a truth when it is not yet known to the assumed church of God?" |
46635 | Is it iron, or sulphur, or carbon, or oxygen? |
46635 | Is it matter; or is it a creative power, or energy added to matter?" |
46635 | It is, therefore, worth while to enquire, is science really so positive as these persons pretend? |
46635 | It may be asked, what is the use of so many lenses in the eye? |
46635 | It was asked,"Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?" |
46635 | Lactantius asks,"Is there any one so senseless, as to believe that there are men whose footsteps are higher than their heads? |
46635 | Let the honest skeptic inquire,"How do these theories explain the cause of life? |
46635 | Now we are tempted to ask, who are these wonderful prodigies, so incapable of receiving instruction from anybody? |
46635 | Now what does science say on this subject? |
46635 | Now which of these is the eternal matter referred to? |
46635 | Now you have means, why do you not pay me the remainder? |
46635 | Now, says the skeptic, is it not possible that reptiles and birds lived upon the earth previous to the creation of beasts? |
46635 | Now, what is this power that has formed these glorious suns and sent them whirling onward through the cycles of the ages? |
46635 | Now, what was it that this heathen governor called a"superstition?" |
46635 | Of the nine hundred and forty- two substances mentioned in Turner''s Chemistry, how many have you analyzed? |
46635 | Or are all the elements eternal? |
46635 | Or, is it true that the students of the physical sciences have no certain knowledge of their theories? |
46635 | So we are landed back at the sublime question,_ did the paving stones make themselves_? |
46635 | Still, as might be expected, thinking men kept asking:"Where did the sun come from? |
46635 | Take away the persons and of what value are the things? |
46635 | That in some cases it is difficult to determine which predominated to the greatest extent, the characteristics of the reptile, the bat or the bird? |
46635 | That the crops and trees grow downwards? |
46635 | That the rains, snow and hail fall upward to the earth?" |
46635 | The United States may mean the states of Greece; but on what shore of the Mediterranean can Mexico and California be found?" |
46635 | The fleet put to sea at noon in the face of a full gale from the south- west?" |
46635 | The question therefore returns with double force,_ had the world a creator or did it make itself_? |
46635 | Then why is it any cooler now? |
46635 | Then, by what human sagacity was it predicted that the war must commence in South Carolina? |
46635 | Unpopular and penniless, if the gospel story were not true, how could it have had preachers? |
46635 | Was it red hot enough from all eternity to melt granite? |
46635 | Was not this a sufficient supply for dinner and supper? |
46635 | Was there a rebellion in Spain? |
46635 | Was there an obscure philosopher in Germany writing down the results of his investigations? |
46635 | We presume there are few persons as ignorant as an infidel lecturer we once heard, who, when asked,"Who compiled the scriptures?" |
46635 | We reply by asking,_ Where does the Bible say so_? |
46635 | What can be more wretched than such a life, and what than such a death, when they could not be buried by their friends and relatives? |
46635 | What has become of those ages of abundance and of life? |
46635 | What implanted the belief of a judgment to come in the minds of{ 94} these heathen scoffers? |
46635 | What information could Aristotle gather from the fact that the electric telegraph was invented in 1844? |
46635 | What is the cause of the light and heat of the sun? |
46635 | What meaneth the heat of this great anger?" |
46635 | What melted it down into a fluid state fit to be splashed about? |
46635 | What shall we say of a space so vast, that this light must travel a year, a hundred, aye, even a thousand years before it reaches its destination? |
46635 | What then is the tendency of their teachings? |
46635 | What was it that enabled the early Saints of all ranks and all ages, of both sexes likewise, to joyfully meet death in its most horrid forms? |
46635 | What was it that made large numbers of the best men in Europe hate both the Catholic and Protestant religions? |
46635 | When Christ, as a Divine Being, or as a man divinely commissioned, dies out of the popular faith, what then? |
46635 | When Peter asked the manner of John''s death, the Savior replied,"''If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee?'' |
46635 | Whence proceeds that mighty force which men call by that name? |
46635 | Where did the comet come from? |
46635 | Where did the fire come from? |
46635 | Where is the greatness of Egypt, Nineveh, Babylon and Petra? |
46635 | Who has not dropped a tear over the dying words of Socrates? |
46635 | Who knows that fact? |
46635 | Who put the fire and the mist together? |
46635 | Who shall assure us that virtue has a reward, or that there is any such thing as virtue? |
46635 | Who shall comfort the hearts that mourn? |
46635 | Who shall stimulate the love of brotherhood, and move men to works of benevolence? |
46635 | Who then would strive to raise the world out of its beastly degradation? |
46635 | Who would be secure from the unrestrained ravages of every base passion that finds its home in the human heart? |
46635 | Whose life would be sacred? |
46635 | Why are so many cities destroyed? |
46635 | Why did Ricetto, Bruno and Servetus in the hour of martyrdom turn with loathing from that sacred emblem, the crucifix? |
46635 | Why is not that ancient population reproduced and perpetuated? |
46635 | Why, then, it may be asked, did they not all become Christians? |
46635 | Why? |
46635 | and thy own mighty transcendent, god- like soul, dost thou not call that a revelation?" |
46635 | from whence proceed such melancholy revolutions? |
46635 | { 36} And what has been the result of all this? |
4927 | Am I on earth,he exclaimed,"or am I in Paradise? |
4927 | Am I, then,said Sacripant,"of so little esteem with you that you doubt my power to defend you? |
4927 | And what has Gan been plotting with Marsilius? |
4927 | And what weapon hast thou,said he,"if thy lance fail thee?" |
4927 | Did you hear the horn as I heard it? |
4927 | Do you hear that? |
4927 | How can a fool have such strength? |
4927 | How know you that? |
4927 | How now, cousin,cried Orlando,"have you too gone over to the enemy?" |
4927 | How shall I need them,said Rinaldo,"since I have lost my horse?" |
4927 | Is that the horse they presume to match with Marchevallee, the best steed that ever fed in the vales of Mount Atlas? |
4927 | Is this, then,she said,"the fruit of all my labors? |
4927 | O Bujaforte,said he,"I loved him indeed; but what does his son do here fighting against his friends?" |
4927 | O my friend,said he,"must then the body of our prince be the prey of wolves and ravens? |
4927 | Shall I not believe my own eyes and ears? |
4927 | Suppose they will not trust themselves with me? |
4927 | Tell me, I pray you,he said,"what benefit will accrue to him who shall get the better in this contest? |
4927 | They are already united by mutual vows,she said,"and in the sight of Heaven what more is necessary?" |
4927 | Well,cried the hero,"what news?" |
4927 | What are we to do,said he,"now that daylight has left us?" |
4927 | What is the meaning of this? |
4927 | Who is the loser now? |
4927 | ''What hope for us,''resumed the king,''if he brings with him a greater host than that?'' |
4927 | A prince of the house of Guienne, must he not blush at the cowardly abandonment of the faith of his fathers?" |
4927 | Ah, noble sir,"he added,"tell me, I beseech you, of what country and race you come?" |
4927 | And what is it, pray, that brings you into these parts? |
4927 | And, by the way, pray tell me, are you not that Orlando who makes such a noise in the world? |
4927 | Bradamante, addressing the host, said,"Could you furnish me a guide to conduct me to the castle of this enchanter?" |
4927 | But Alardo said,"Brother, let Bayard live a little longer; who knows what God may do for us?" |
4927 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4927 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4927 | But tell me, pilgrim, who is that man who stands beside you?" |
4927 | Crying out,"What are the emperor''s engagements to me?" |
4927 | Death seems his only remedy; but how to die? |
4927 | Do I indeed behold a chevalier of my own country, after fifteen years passed in this desert without seeing the face of a fellow- countryman?" |
4927 | Do you forget the battle of Albracca, and how, in your defence, I fought single- handed against Agrican and all his knights?" |
4927 | Do you prefer to rob me of my ring rather than receive it as a gift? |
4927 | Had I imagined that this hard bark covered a being possessed of feeling, could I have exposed such a beautiful myrtle to the insults of this steed? |
4927 | How could he suspect that falsehood and treason veiled themselves under smiles and the ingenuous air of truth? |
4927 | How could you fly from a single arm and think to escape?" |
4927 | I am a poor man, have you not something to give me?" |
4927 | I value not life compared with honor, and if I did, do you suppose, dear friend, that I could live without you? |
4927 | If you can not defend them against me, how pray will you do so when Orlando challenges them?" |
4927 | Is it treachery to punish affronts like these? |
4927 | Just then came along some country people, who said to one another,"Look, is not that the great horse Bayard that Rinaldo rides? |
4927 | Rinaldo replied,"Are you making sport of me? |
4927 | Rogero exclaimed as he came near,"What cruel hands, what barbarous soul, what fatal chance can have loaded thee with those chains?" |
4927 | Seeing the prince Orlando, one said to the rest,"What bird is this we have caught, without even setting a snare for him?" |
4927 | Shall I for the horse''s life provoke the anger of the king again?" |
4927 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4927 | So desperate was he that he took off his armor and his spurs, saying,"What need have I of these, since Bayard is lost?" |
4927 | Struck with the ingratitude which could thus recompense his services, he exclaimed:"Thankless beauty, is this then the reward you make me? |
4927 | The dwarf, approaching Huon, said, in a sweet voice, and in Huon''s own language,"Duke of Guienne, why do you shun me? |
4927 | The king said to Malagigi,"Friend, where did you get that beautiful cup?" |
4927 | The old man took the spurs, and put them into his sack, and said,"Noble sir, have you nothing else you can give me?" |
4927 | The traitor smiled at seeing her thus suspended, and, asking her in mockery,"Are you a good leaper?" |
4927 | Then a third time he said to Rinaldo,"Sir, have you nothing left to give me that I may remember you in my prayers?" |
4927 | Think not to avoid it by shutting your eyes, for how then will you be able to avoid his blows, and make him feel your own? |
4927 | To what new miseries do you doom me? |
4927 | Was it not clear that Providence led him on, and cleared the way for his happy success? |
4927 | Were you ever in love? |
4927 | What advantage have you derived from all your high deserts? |
4927 | What is the good of a gentleman''s poring all day over a book? |
4927 | Who could have believed that you would become the slave of a base enchantress? |
4927 | Why have you thought evil of me? |
4927 | Why tarry the horses of Rinaldo and Ricciardetto? |
4927 | Why, therefore, should either of us perish? |
4927 | Yet what could be done against foes without number? |
4927 | You surround him, and who receives tribute then?" |
4927 | darest thou maintain in arms the lie thou hast uttered?" |
4927 | exclaimed Bradamante,"what can be the cause of this sudden alarm?" |
4927 | exclaimed Rinaldo,"do you make me your sport?" |
4927 | exclaimed he,"how could I, dear Medoro, so forget myself as to consult my own safety without heeding yours?" |
4927 | he exclaimed,"do you dare to insult me at my own table? |
4927 | he exclaimed,"was there ever such a resemblance? |
4927 | how can you foresee his fate when you could not foresee your own? |
4927 | inquired Malagigi;"and what is to come of it?" |
4927 | master, how can I do that? |
4927 | my dear nephew,"exclaimed the Holy Father,"what harder penance could I impose than the Emperor has already done? |
4927 | said the Abbot of Cluny;"slaughter a Saracen prince without first offering him baptism?" |
4927 | said the pilgrim;"is Bayard there?" |
4927 | was this the end to which old quarrels were made up?" |
4927 | what availed it you to possess so many virtues and such fame? |
4927 | why should I fear his rage? |
50004 | ), just when does it so appear and whence comes its life? |
50004 | About which of the poisoned cells does the flame of life still flicker? |
50004 | An old campaigner inquired,"Can those fellows get well?" |
50004 | And if so, in what does it consist? |
50004 | And is then death a matter of hours? |
50004 | And what must become of the simple credulous faith of the zealot who believes in the actual and absolute resurrection, at some later date? |
50004 | And where may he find one in which incentives are so small? |
50004 | And who shall say that it does not suffer when rudely handled? |
50004 | Are the lessons of the South African, the Spanish- American and the Russo- Japanese wars to be forgotten almost before they have been recited? |
50004 | Are we prepared to- day to give adequate care and attention to our soldiers and sailors were war in sight? |
50004 | At what instant did the floral murder occur? |
50004 | But if protoplasm be alive in any proper sense, as it would appear( else where draw the line? |
50004 | But then, is not every disturbance of relations"ruthless,"because it follows inexorable habits of Nature? |
50004 | But what is it that suddenly checks all concerted and interdependent activity? |
50004 | But when non- existent, then what? |
50004 | By the way, I wonder how many of you recall, or are familiar with, the beginnings of the Red Cross movement? |
50004 | Can such a concept prevail among physicists? |
50004 | Can we consent even to entertain in this direction the notion of what is so vaguely called"the soul?" |
50004 | Could anyone more worthily win a Victorian Cross, or any other emblem of courage and heroism? |
50004 | Do not the dead deserve all praise and respect, and the survivors all commendation? |
50004 | Do these then constitute life, and their suppression or abolition death? |
50004 | Do you suppose that if Napoleon had saved as many lives as he lost he would have figured in history with his present lustre? |
50004 | Does life inhere in any particular cell? |
50004 | Does not the sensitive plant evince a contact sensibility almost equal to that of the conjunctiva? |
50004 | Does this complicate the study of death? |
50004 | During the South African campaign the papers recorded( but how few read of it?) |
50004 | During the interval is he alive or dead, or is there an intermediate period of absolutely suspended animation? |
50004 | Have we yet that absolute knowledge of right and wrong which can enable us to pass final judgment on men of the past, their motives and actions? |
50004 | Here is raised the great question,--Did Bruno adopt Calvinism? |
50004 | How many of us could resist the persuasiveness of the rack when it came to modifying our beliefs? |
50004 | How then shall I do it justice? |
50004 | If so what about the condition of trance, or of absolute imbecility, congenital or induced? |
50004 | If so what is it? |
50004 | If so, does the dead come to life? |
50004 | If so, then why may we not believe, with Binet, in the psychic life of micro- organisms? |
50004 | In the leukocytes? |
50004 | In the neurons? |
50004 | In what do its life and its death consist? |
50004 | Is protoplasm alive? |
50004 | Is such a thing conceivable? |
50004 | Is there a vital principle? |
50004 | Is there inspiration in the pagan emperor''s address to his soul-- those Latin verses which Pope has so beautifully translated? |
50004 | Its actual life is apparently aroused by purely thermic and chemical( electrionic?) |
50004 | Moreover, in what way shall we regard the division of one ameboid cell into two, equally alive and complete? |
50004 | One may ask just here, how is this matter concerned with thanatology? |
50004 | Only if one of these really were, as it still claims to be,_ infallible_, then what has become of its infallibility? |
50004 | Or are_ we_ impure that we do_ not_ so regard it?" |
50004 | Or does something or some controlling agency suddenly leave the body? |
50004 | Or if heresy be held still a crime then what shall we say of the Church''s ethics? |
50004 | Or is it inherent in the ion, and was Bion correct when he said"electricity is life?" |
50004 | Or, again, how can a decapitated frog go on living for hours? |
50004 | The Jewish accounts of creation stated that God walked the earth, and why not in human form? |
50004 | The passage need not be quoted here, but deserves to be read by everyone interested in the subject, as who should not be? |
50004 | Then what extracts or extractives might be prepared from other parts of the body, pituitary, adrenals, bone- marrow, etc.? |
50004 | This being the case, where shall we, where can_ we_ stop? |
50004 | To what distance does the influence of the jettatore extend, and whether it operates more to the side, front or back? |
50004 | Was not this equal to any instance of valor under the excitement or the stress of battle and cannonade? |
50004 | Were atoms alive they would suffer with every fresh chemical change, and who knows but that they do? |
50004 | Were they impure thus to regard it? |
50004 | What is death? |
50004 | What shall be said of Bruno as a philosopher? |
50004 | What shall be said of his persecutors and prosecutors? |
50004 | What shall we see next?" |
50004 | What wonder that the marvels revealed in one department should have incited work along parallel lines in the other? |
50004 | What words in general ought one to repeat to escape the evil eye?" |
50004 | When dies the flower? |
50004 | When does it actually occur? |
50004 | When the floral stem was snapped what else snapped with it? |
50004 | Where may one look for a profession which shall afford greater opportunities? |
50004 | Where then, again, is the vital principle? |
50004 | Whether monks are more powerful than others? |
50004 | Who built those pyramids, and why? |
50004 | Who originated the system of pictorial writing which we call the hieroglyphic? |
50004 | Who planned those wonderful temples now either in ruins, as in upper Egypt, or buried beneath the desert sands, as in lower Egypt? |
50004 | Why also should not the founder of a religion be the son of God and of a virgin? |
50004 | Yet, what is the result? |
50004 | how should the mitral valves prevent the regurgitation of air and not of blood?" |
44450 | And what next--so the listeners ask--"what was the next step made?" |
44450 | And you, O disciple dearly loved, what of you and your brethren? |
44450 | Do ye now believe? 44450 How much is that man worth?" |
44450 | Master, where dwellest thou? |
44450 | What think ye of the Christ? |
44450 | Whom seek ye? |
44450 | ''Have I not chosen you twelve, and yet one of you is a devil?'' |
44450 | ''Will ye also go away?'' |
44450 | A man may disrobe; what more can be done? |
44450 | A really earnest, humble consecration to God? |
44450 | Alexander, CÃ ¦ sar, Charlemagne, and myself founded great empires; but upon what did the creations of our genius depend? |
44450 | And Charles Wesley''s melancholy is the most attractive in the world-- Oh, when shall we sweetly move? |
44450 | And do you really think that the world will ever be converted in that way? |
44450 | And he saith,"But who say ye that I am?" |
44450 | And once again, in the haste of the resurrection morning, what was the moment and what was the scene which turned his despair into belief? |
44450 | And so what is faith? |
44450 | And they say, What have we got to do now? |
44450 | And they-- they hardly knew what to say-- only they must see Him, must go with Him; and they stammered out:"Rabbi, where dwellest thou?" |
44450 | And what are the rest of us doing? |
44450 | And what did our Lord Himself say to St. Peter about his fall? |
44450 | And what does all this teach us? |
44450 | And what is the meaning of that sacrifice, if it be not to teach us that God counts no price too great to pay for the redemption of the human soul? |
44450 | And what next did they learn? |
44450 | And what, oh, what shall I do?" |
44450 | And yet what has it done but make known to us a universe infinitely more wonderful and sublime than men had ever dreamed of? |
44450 | And, then, how shall it be restored? |
44450 | Are we not under the strongest possible obligations to account for Jesus Christ? |
44450 | Are you musing in your heart which of them may be your guide and master, which is the Christ? |
44450 | Are you not of more value than many sparrows?" |
44450 | Are you yet at the beginning, looking wistfully, with hungry eyes, after a hundred gallant human heroes who point you this way and that? |
44450 | But have we gotten rid entirely of the premise on which it rested? |
44450 | But how can we account for the perfection of His humanity, if we deny the reality of His divinity? |
44450 | But is not this far too often accompanied by a revolt from all dogmatic truth? |
44450 | But what does follow? |
44450 | But what is evangelization? |
44450 | But what is it to"believe in Christ?" |
44450 | But, dear friends, am I right in saying that this frame is a Christian frame? |
44450 | Can He whose life they tell be Himself no more than a mere man?... |
44450 | Can he be a man capable, not only of acting for himself, but capable, by that subtle and magical influence, of arousing the activity of others? |
44450 | Can it be that writings at once so sublime and so simple are the work of men? |
44450 | Can we demand a fairer world than God will make? |
44450 | Can we do that? |
44450 | Can we imagine better than God can do? |
44450 | Can we then wonder at all forms of opposition meeting us? |
44450 | Certainly, but which is the fact, that or this? |
44450 | Christ came to cast fire on earth, and what does He desire but that it be kindled? |
44450 | David fell-- deep as man can fall; but what does he say in that great fifty- first Psalm, in which he confesses his sin? |
44450 | Did the medieval Church never regret the act by which it drove forth the Waldenses into schism? |
44450 | Did you ever hear a satisfactory definition of laughter? |
44450 | Do they wear too dark a hue at times? |
44450 | Do you believe it? |
44450 | Do you believe it?" |
44450 | Do you know what the word"bless"means, what it was derived from? |
44450 | Do you remember the story of the portrait of Dante which is painted upon the walls of Bargello, at Florence? |
44450 | Do you say, What can I do, because the light round me is like unto darkness? |
44450 | Do you say, What is the use of fighting, for where I stand we have barely held our own? |
44450 | Do you think walking up to the cannon''s mouth would have been difficult to that man? |
44450 | Does he possess the third? |
44450 | Does it seem that the perfect life for the individual, and for the race, is too sublime, that it is a distant and unattainable ideal? |
44450 | Does not the Scripture itself go even further? |
44450 | Does not the commercial view of life still prevail in civilized society? |
44450 | Does the difficulty lie in the event or in the method of approaching it? |
44450 | Does the religion of Christ, the absolute and abiding faith, need the defense of concealment, or of sophistical apology, or of lies? |
44450 | Does there not come a time when we feel that the power, as it were, of things has forsaken us? |
44450 | Facts? |
44450 | God made His minister a flame of fire in the dark and cold, else could Christ have conquered? |
44450 | Has He not been working in the saints who have reminded the world of God? |
44450 | Has a man faith in the Lord Jesus Christ who simply does not disbelieve in him? |
44450 | Has it slipt into the water? |
44450 | Has our Church never regretted the day when it looked askance at the work of John Wesley? |
44450 | Has the ax- head gone? |
44450 | Has the splendid hope of Christ been falsified? |
44450 | Have there been no grounds for optimism? |
44450 | Have ye each made this yet sufficiently a matter of prayer, of self- denial, of deep, faithful trusting all to God? |
44450 | Have you any right to expect that it should be converted in that way? |
44450 | Have you ever thought how St. Paul was actually driven to use the awful language of the passion when he described his own life? |
44450 | Have you met your tempter yet? |
44450 | Have you never seen a group of evil- doers deliberately set themselves to ruin a newcomer, scoffing at his innocence and enticing him to their orgies? |
44450 | Have you never seen it? |
44450 | Have you read the memoir of Brainerd? |
44450 | He claimed to be God, and if His claim be not true, how can he be good? |
44450 | He knows his malady; now how shall he be cured of it? |
44450 | He said,"Was Paul crucified for you?" |
44450 | How came He to be the contemporary of all the ages? |
44450 | How came He to emancipate Himself from the sectarianism and sectionalism of His country and century? |
44450 | How can it be restored? |
44450 | How did such ideas come into the human mind? |
44450 | How do young people begin, most of them? |
44450 | How does the Gethsemane come? |
44450 | How far have you come in this pathway of faith? |
44450 | How have our liberties been secured? |
44450 | How long shall there be this suspense, as that of early dawn ere the sunshine fills the twilight? |
44450 | How much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | How shall we account for the height to which that stream rose? |
44450 | How, then, can you explain faith? |
44450 | How, then, will it be received by those into whose hand is placed the responsibility of its guidance? |
44450 | I may not deny that what the gospel says is true, but is that believing? |
44450 | I put then the question with the_ utmost_ directness,"What think ye of Christ?" |
44450 | I think an hour is the longest that anybody could bear it--"Could ye not watch with me one hour?" |
44450 | If that source were simply human, how can we account for the superhuman height which it reached? |
44450 | If we could ascend to heaven to- day and scan the ranks of the blest, should we not find multitudes among them who were once sunk low as man can fall? |
44450 | If we have no great masters, how shall we hope to have eager and loving disciples? |
44450 | If we leave half the race in ignorance, how shall we hope to lift the other half into the light of truth and love? |
44450 | If you wanted to make a man laugh, would you attempt to define laughter to him? |
44450 | If, then, we accept this view of life, what answer can we give to the question, how much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | In the event, or, perhaps, in the mental or moral constitution of the people who contemplate it? |
44450 | Invest it, and then what do you do? |
44450 | Is he a man, in fact, who can make his influence felt among the men of his day? |
44450 | Is he in touch with his time? |
44450 | Is it advancement? |
44450 | Is it conceivable that human error shall prevail against God''s truth? |
44450 | Is it long to wait, hard to fight, difficult to keep up the spirit during the discouragements that beset all missionary life? |
44450 | Is it merely the pursuit of happiness? |
44450 | Is it not rather a book of life, of literature, full of symbols and metaphors and poetry? |
44450 | Is it possible to look on the great, eager, yearning, doubting, and suffering life of man, and not to feel infinite desire to be of help? |
44450 | Is it promotion? |
44450 | Is not He the standard of humanity now, and is not He its Redeemer? |
44450 | Is not that conceivable? |
44450 | Is not that possible? |
44450 | Is not theology, like the other sciences, bound to accept facts? |
44450 | Is the Bible itself written with the rigid exactness of a mathematical treatise? |
44450 | Is this wise, and is it well? |
44450 | It appeared so, but was it so? |
44450 | Left? |
44450 | Mark how towers herald the approach to the towns and cities, and ask what they stand there for? |
44450 | My brethren, where do you stand? |
44450 | My brothers, if a few men can honestly say this to us in the future, will it not be better than Greek and Roman fame? |
44450 | My friend, what sort of a life are you living? |
44450 | Nay, Lord, to whom shall we go? |
44450 | Nevertheless, to the unsaved no question is more bewildering than this:"What shall I do that I may inherit eternal life?" |
44450 | Not only cunning casts in clay: Let science prove we are, and then What matters science unto men, At least to me? |
44450 | Now do you not think you can see how it is that the eternal Son shed His blood in Gethsemane, and offered Himself immaculate to God on Calvary? |
44450 | Now, as they journeyed southward through CÃ ¦ sarea Philippi, He asked them,"Who do men say that I am?" |
44450 | Now, what is it that should follow when we have parted with our life and lived our Gethsemane; what should be the effect upon our lives? |
44450 | O death, where is thy sting?" |
44450 | O loving and divine John, the Evangelist, what thinkest thou of the Christ? |
44450 | Oh, when shall our souls be at rest? |
44450 | Or had each its own due place at least in hastening the coming of the kingdom, and in determining when the fulness of time had arrived? |
44450 | Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
44450 | Shall we dread the results of historical research? |
44450 | So soon made happy? |
44450 | Suppose, then, that we come to Him with this question: How much is a man better than a sheep? |
44450 | The fiery moment arrives; do we stand; do we fall? |
44450 | The people who looked at the mob of Jerusalem, or the man who saw the coming generations? |
44450 | There is more of courage and manhood needed for them than for walking up to the cannon''s mouth? |
44450 | This brings us to the matter in hand: What shall I do to be saved? |
44450 | Tho all men forsake thee yet will not I; and in spite of all, I believe, and am sure that thou art the Christ, the holy one of God?" |
44450 | To die? |
44450 | To send Bibles, to deliver the message to everybody? |
44450 | To suffer? |
44450 | To the jailer of Philippi who, in sudden conviction, was moved to cry,"What shall I do?" |
44450 | To whom can I go? |
44450 | Was he not right? |
44450 | Was it the reaction of detecting the quiet tokens of deliberate purpose there, where all had seemed to him a very chaos of confusion? |
44450 | Was it the sudden sense that struck him of order and seemliness as of a thing premeditated, intended? |
44450 | We must learn to look upon ourselves and our fellow men purely from a business point of view and to ask only: What can this man make? |
44450 | Were not the Greek philosophers right in thinking that our ideals are eternal, and are kept with God? |
44450 | Were they then never to rise into the joy of clear and entire belief? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What are you going to do with it? |
44450 | What book has been so misunderstood, and misinterpreted, even by honest and enlightened minds, even by theologians themselves? |
44450 | What did He mean by that? |
44450 | What did he mean by that? |
44450 | What did he notice? |
44450 | What does Paul mean when he talks about being justified? |
44450 | What hope is there of genuine progress, in the religious life especially, if we leave her uneducated? |
44450 | What is faith? |
44450 | What is faith? |
44450 | What is love? |
44450 | What is the purpose of life? |
44450 | What is there to fear? |
44450 | What is thy testimony? |
44450 | What is thy testimony? |
44450 | What more have I got left? |
44450 | What other answer can be given by one who judges everything by a money standard? |
44450 | What sayst Thou of Thyself? |
44450 | What shall be done about it? |
44450 | What shall we say of him who opens a haunt of temptation, sets out his snares and deliberately deals out death by the dram? |
44450 | What thinkest thou, O Channing, of Jesus Christ? |
44450 | What thinkest thou, O Herder, illustrious German thinker, broad scholar, and exquisite genius, of Jesus, the Christ? |
44450 | What was it that he saw and felt? |
44450 | What was it that so startled him? |
44450 | What was there in the peasant conditions of His family life to produce the uniqueness of His manhood? |
44450 | When men ask us, Are the doctrines of Christianity dead; are they played out? |
44450 | Whence do all light and all love come? |
44450 | Where did the imagination of the prophets and apostles catch fire? |
44450 | Where do you go to find the origin of the great principle of civil liberty? |
44450 | Where is the spring of the prayers and aspirations of the saints? |
44450 | Which is nearer to the truth, the Christ of the sorrowful way or the Christ at God''s right hand? |
44450 | Who can say? |
44450 | Who is He? |
44450 | Who is right? |
44450 | Who is there that has ever been brave enough to accept such a salutation without a whisper of protest, without a shadow of a scruple? |
44450 | Who is this strange visitant-- so quiet, so silent, so unobserved? |
44450 | Who shall deliver us from this spirit of bitterness? |
44450 | Who shall lead us out of this heavy, fetid air of the lazar- house and the morgue? |
44450 | Who shall separate us from Christ''s love? |
44450 | Who will have it? |
44450 | Who would not court a new- made grave rather than risk the perils of survivorship? |
44450 | Why could that little jet of blood and water never pass out of his sight? |
44450 | Why credible to the one, but incredible to the other? |
44450 | Why need you and I seek to disprove what no man has ever yet proved or will prove? |
44450 | Why not again with Christ as Captain? |
44450 | Why not always, why not everywhere? |
44450 | Why pay so great a price? |
44450 | Why pay so great a price? |
44450 | Why should it haunt him sixty years after, as still his heart wonders over the mysterious witness of the water and the blood? |
44450 | Why? |
44450 | Will He not continue to work till all men come to the stature of perfection? |
44450 | Will it be said to any of you? |
44450 | Will you fail as others failed me?" |
44450 | Yet had prayer no part in the plan of the Incarnation? |
44450 | You remember, in the story of the Garden of Eden, where the tree which represented temptation stood? |
44450 | and he begins to raise the question- the only question he thinks of after that-- What shall I do for them? |
44450 | could, I ask, all these be fruitless and in vain? |
44450 | how much can I get out of this man''s labor? |
44450 | how much has that man made? |
44450 | how much will that man pay for my services? |
44450 | is there anything which a man can fear ten times more than the fire that never shall be quenched? |
44450 | or How shall I become a Christian? |
44450 | why not? |
474 | A bargain is a bargain,said the Piper;"for the last time,--will you give me my thousand guineas?" |
474 | Alas,said Arthur,"mine own dear father and brother, why kneel ye to me?" |
474 | Are you my brother? |
474 | Are you my brother? |
474 | Are you my brother? |
474 | Are you ready? |
474 | Are you wanting a boy? |
474 | Beautiful birch- tree,he said,"will you let me live in your warm branches until the springtime comes?" |
474 | But how, at the end of a hard morning''s work, can I be interested in a story I have told twenty times before? |
474 | But may I stay all winter? |
474 | But who told you you were King? |
474 | But,said the prince,"do you not look when you wake up in the morning?" |
474 | Dear Prince,she said,"is that the sun?" |
474 | Do n''t you know this is Hamelin town? |
474 | Fight-- did you say fight? |
474 | Ha, ha,laughed Schwartz,"do you suppose I brought the water up here for you?" |
474 | Hole? 474 How can I tell that?" |
474 | How dare I speak to you? |
474 | How do you do? |
474 | How? 474 I am faint with thirst,"said the old man;"will you give me some of that water?" |
474 | I''ll have you, my fine boy,cries he;"how will you die, then?" |
474 | Is it you who made the tracks in my trail? |
474 | It''s certainly very queer,said the old gentleman;"did you see nothing in the pasture, Billy?" |
474 | Just how did the little pig get into his house? |
474 | Little girl, little girl, what gave she you? |
474 | May I touch every leaf? |
474 | No, but truly,said the Angel,"who is it?" |
474 | Now, where shall we have little Red Riding Hood''s house? 474 O beautiful willow- tree,"said the little bird,"will you let me live in your warm branches until the springtime comes?" |
474 | O big oak- tree,said the little bird,"will you let me live in your warm branches until the springtime comes?" |
474 | O little girl,said the child,"wo n''t you give me your dress? |
474 | Oh yes,said the pig,"I will go; what time?" |
474 | Oh, poor mother,said the prince,"what is the matter?" |
474 | Was he as big as that? |
474 | Was he bigger than that? |
474 | Was n''t it wonderful? |
474 | What are the wages? |
474 | What are you doitherin''about? |
474 | What do you want, little brother? |
474 | What do you want, little brother? |
474 | What do you want, little brother? |
474 | What have you got? |
474 | What is fire? |
474 | What is that? |
474 | What is wonderful about that? |
474 | What makes you so kind to me, little Mouse? |
474 | What of that? |
474 | What shall we do? |
474 | What time do you mean to go? |
474 | What was it the little crocodile said? |
474 | What was that link in the chain of circumstances which brought the wily fox to confusion? |
474 | What will it be? |
474 | What will you give me,said the Hen- Wife,"and I''ll very soon part them?" |
474 | What''s the good of it? |
474 | What''s ti- ly- ta- lies? |
474 | What,said she,"shall I do with this little sixpence? |
474 | What_ right_? |
474 | Where? |
474 | Where? |
474 | Wherefore I? |
474 | Who are you? |
474 | Who ever heard of a lion fighting a gnat? 474 Who is this that you are beating?" |
474 | Who is this,he cried,"that goes before me to the hunting, and makes so great a stride? |
474 | Who told ME? |
474 | Who will be the wolf? |
474 | Why, Hamelin town is where the Pied Piper came,they told us;"surely you know about the Pied Piper?" |
474 | Why, everyone acknowledges it-- don''t I tell you that everyone is afraid of me? |
474 | Why, you tiny, little, mean, insignificant creature you, how DARE you speak to ME? |
474 | Why,said the parrot,"here are my two cakes, if you want them?" |
474 | Why? |
474 | Will you change clothes with me, and I''ll give you boot? |
474 | Will you lend me that Little Mill? |
474 | Will you lend me the Little Mill? |
474 | Will your reverence tell me the baby''s name again? |
474 | Wo n''t you give me your little hood, to keep my head warm? |
474 | Would you like to get rid of them? 474 You agree to the conditions, then? |
474 | You can? |
474 | You-- you-- YOU deny my right as King? |
474 | _ What do_ you_ think it was?... 474 _ What_ about the Pied Piper?" |
474 | ''Over in that corner,''Katie? |
474 | ( You remember, two cakes were all he wanted?) |
474 | ),"See here, what do we pay you your salary for? |
474 | *****"Little girl, little girl, where have you been?" |
474 | A strong Lion-- and what overcame him? |
474 | And in the same way the people asked the little lame child,"What made you follow the music?" |
474 | And that youthful audience? |
474 | And then the Chief Man, who was the worst of all, would come and say,"Eh, how do you feel now? |
474 | And what, of this, is best accomplished by this means and no other? |
474 | And when they came to the mountain top, and saw the beautiful rice- crop all in flames, beyond help, they cried bitterly,"Who has done this thing? |
474 | And where shall the grandmother''s cottage be?" |
474 | Are their images simple without being humdrum? |
474 | Are they nice apples?" |
474 | Are they repetitive? |
474 | Are you good?" |
474 | At a later stage, varying with the standard of capacity of different classes, we find the temper of mind which asks continually,"Is that true?" |
474 | But the little yellow man said,"Gluck, do you know who I am? |
474 | But when they came fiercely round the old man, with"Why? |
474 | By a cut with the sword, a blow with the fist, or a swing by the back?" |
474 | Can you imagine what a queer household it would be, where the baby laughed and crowed all night, and slept all day? |
474 | Did you see nothing in the pasture?" |
474 | Does he think to put me to shame?" |
474 | He ate all the four hundred and ninety- eight cakes, and then he looked round and said:--"I''m hungry; have n''t you anything to eat?" |
474 | He looked at the piece of bread in her hand, and said,"Will you give me your bread, little girl? |
474 | He stared so hard that the little white rosebud did not know what to do; so she looked up at him and said,"Why are you looking at me so hard?" |
474 | How could the imagination create new worlds, save out of the material of the old? |
474 | How did it happen?" |
474 | How do you feel now?" |
474 | How do you feel now?" |
474 | How good? |
474 | How much of the text is pure description? |
474 | How? |
474 | I wonder why we so often use a preposterous voice,--a super- sweetened whine, in talking to children? |
474 | Is it a text- book of science, an appendix to the geography, an introduction to the primer of history? |
474 | Is it that the effort to realise an ideal of gentleness and affectionateness overreaches itself in this form of the grotesque? |
474 | Is she a proper person to introduce here, and what are her titles to merit? |
474 | Is there one of us who has not laughed himself out of some absurd complexity of over- anxiety with a sudden recollection of"clever Alice"and her fate? |
474 | Is this, as some would have us believe, a bad habit of an ignorant old world? |
474 | Now, will you go with the Pig Brother, or will you come back with me, and be a tidy child?" |
474 | One asks oneself, What is the story? |
474 | Or can the Fairy Tale justify her popularity with truly edifying and educational results? |
474 | Presently the spruce- tree saw him, and said,"Where are you going, little bird?" |
474 | Said he,"DEAR ME, WHERE IS MY TOADSTOOL?" |
474 | Small as he was, little Franz had seen enough to make him think,"What_ now_, I wonder?" |
474 | So the little pig got up at five, and got the turnips before the wolf came crying:--"Little pig, are you ready?" |
474 | So they all came together and went to the town hall, and they said to the Mayor( you know what a mayor is? |
474 | The cat ate up the two cakes, and then he licked his chops and said,"I am beginning to get an appetite; have you anything to eat?" |
474 | The mouse ran up, looked him over, and soliloquised in precise language,--evidently remembered,"What is the matter with the lion? |
474 | The next day the wolf came again, and said to the little pig:--"Little pig, there is a fair in town this afternoon; will you go?" |
474 | The one who conquers shall be King?" |
474 | The town was so far away-- if they ran for help it would be too late; what should he do? |
474 | This one shivered with the cold, and she said to the little girl,"Wo n''t you give me your jacket, little girl?" |
474 | To give joy; in and through the joy to stir and feed the life of the spirit: is not this the legitimate function of the story in education? |
474 | Was n''t it wise of the dear little dog to go and work for other people when her own work was taken away? |
474 | Was n''t that a lovely trimming? |
474 | We were so surprised that after a while,"Why do you have rats in your shops?" |
474 | What are you good for, if you ca n''t do a little thing like getting rid of these rats? |
474 | What are you making that horrible noise about?" |
474 | What are you, a little child, that you try to keep me out? |
474 | What can ail them, at all?" |
474 | What can be left out? |
474 | What can we reasonably expect to accomplish? |
474 | What can you do? |
474 | What could be the matter? |
474 | What could it be that came so smoothly,--rustle-- rustle-- without any feet? |
474 | What could it be? |
474 | What could the Christ- child do? |
474 | What have you been doing in the meantime?" |
474 | What is a story, essentially? |
474 | What keener teacher is there than the kindly satire? |
474 | What more penetrating and suggestive than the humour of exaggerated statement of familiar tendency? |
474 | What right have you to be here, disturbing folks at this time of night?" |
474 | What shall we attempt to accomplish by stories in the schoolroom? |
474 | What will you give me if I rid your town of rats?" |
474 | What would mother say if his nice furry coat got wet and draggled? |
474 | Where in the world did Wylie go? |
474 | Where?" |
474 | Which events are necessary links in the chain? |
474 | Who are you?" |
474 | Why do n''t you keep to your own part of the forest? |
474 | Why do you insult me by asking such a question?" |
474 | Why?" |
474 | Will no one fight the dragon for me?" |
474 | Will you die by a cut of the sword, or a swing by the back?" |
474 | Will you tell me what the sun looks like?" |
474 | With a caress rare to her habit she spoke my name, slowly and tentatively,"An- ty Sai- ry?" |
474 | Would they never come? |
474 | You call yourselves French, and can not even read and write the French language? |
474 | [ Illustration: THE FOX AND THE GRAPES][ Illustration:"THERE WAS AN OLD WOMAN WHO LIVED IN A SHOE"]"Who would like to be Red Riding Hood?" |
474 | _ A Gnat._ A clever Gnat-- and what overcame him? |
474 | are you here before me? |
474 | my fine fellow,"says he to Billy,"you are too big for one swallow and not big enough for two; how would you like to die, then? |
474 | screamed the little boy,"what are you doing?" |
50189 | ''And if he stopped dreaming about you, where do you suppose you''d be?'' |
50189 | ''If I am not for myself,''said the great Hillel,''who is for me? |
50189 | ''Is the person an original undetermined cause of the determination of his will? |
50189 | --can only be answered by this other question,''What has it done or got done?'' |
50189 | Alice has been taken to see the Red King as he lies snoring; and Tweedledee asks,''Do you know what he is dreaming about?'' |
50189 | And as for his knowledge, was he not a man miraculous with powers more than man''s? |
50189 | And if I am only for myself, where is the use of me? |
50189 | And if not now, when?'' |
50189 | And the question which our conscience is always asking about that which we are tempted to believe is not,''Is it comfortable and pleasant?'' |
50189 | And this leads very naturally to putting the question in another form, namely,''What is taste good for? |
50189 | Are we then bound to believe that nature is absolutely and universally uniform? |
50189 | Are we to doubt the word of a man so great and so good? |
50189 | But are we not trusting our spectroscope too much? |
50189 | But are we to attribute this to the individual insight of the Stoic philosophers? |
50189 | But in regard to the doctrine itself, we can only ask,''Is it true?'' |
50189 | But is this a true belief, of the existence of hydrogen in the sun? |
50189 | But it may be further asked''What is generally thought right?'' |
50189 | But our special inquiry is, what account can be given of these facts by the scientific method? |
50189 | But the doctors discussed the case in which one of these idolaters owes you a bill; are you to let him pay it during that week or not? |
50189 | But the school of Hillel said,''Yes, let him pay it; for how can he enjoy his feast while his bills are unpaid?'' |
50189 | Can it help in the right guidance of human action? |
50189 | Can my sense of hearing assure me that nothing inaudible is going on? |
50189 | Can the favor of the Czar make guiltless the murderer of old men and women and children in Circassian valleys? |
50189 | Can the pardon of the Sultan make clean the bloody hands of a Pasha? |
50189 | Can we suppose that this magnificent genius, this splendid moral hero, has lied to us about the most solemn and sacred matters? |
50189 | Could such a man speak falsely about solemn things? |
50189 | Did Zeus commit this crime, or did he not? |
50189 | First of all, then, what are the facts? |
50189 | Given an absolutely dark room, can my sense of sight assure me that there is no one but myself in it? |
50189 | He who, wearied or stricken in the fight with the powers of darkness, asks himself in a solitary place,''Is it all for nothing? |
50189 | His people have tied up hatchets so for ages: who is he that he should set himself up against their wisdom? |
50189 | How does a dream differ from waking life? |
50189 | How much light can be got for this end from the historical records we possess? |
50189 | I may ask,''How shall I train myself? |
50189 | If the action does not depend on the character, what is the use of trying to alter the character? |
50189 | If we ask,''What makes it to be that action and no other?'' |
50189 | In what cases, then, let us ask in the first place, is the testimony of a man unworthy of belief? |
50189 | Is it possible to believe that a system which has succeeded so well is really founded upon a delusion? |
50189 | Is it possible to doubt and to test it? |
50189 | Is not his word to be believed in when he testifies of heavenly things? |
50189 | Is there any reason why we should not go on to a motive of the third order, and the fourth, and so on? |
50189 | Is this a merely theoretical discussion about far- away things? |
50189 | May we not say in the present sense of the word that the external circumstances are responsible for the restriction on his choice? |
50189 | May we not say that the punch is responsible for the shape of the hole, but not for the position of it? |
50189 | Now is this the same assumption as before, a mere assumption of the uniformity of nature? |
50189 | Of the two questions, equally important to the trustworthiness of a witness,''Is he dishonest?'' |
50189 | Shall we listen to Mr. Mivart, who''execrates without reserve Marian persecutions, the Massacre of St. Bartholomew, and all similar acts''? |
50189 | Shall we steal and tell lies because we have had no personal experience wide enough to justify the belief that it is wrong to do so? |
50189 | The Categorical Imperative.--May we now say that the maxims of Ethic are hypothetical maxims? |
50189 | The first half is the question: what relation holds good between these quantities? |
50189 | The question is not, therefore,''May we believe what goes beyond experience?'' |
50189 | The question which we want to ask ourselves--''Is it right to support this or that priesthood?'' |
50189 | Thus we can not help asking whether there is any reason for preferring one moral sense to another; whether the question,''What is right to do?'' |
50189 | To the question''What is right?'' |
50189 | We also say sometimes, in answer to the question,''How do you know that this is right or wrong?'' |
50189 | What is the best taste?'' |
50189 | What is the purpose or function of taste?'' |
50189 | What ought I to feel to be right?'' |
50189 | What shall we say of him? |
50189 | What shall we say of that authority, more venerable and august than any individual witness, the time- honored tradition of the human race? |
50189 | What should we answer to this Mussulman? |
50189 | What, then, hinders us from saying that life is all a dream? |
50189 | When we ask the practical question,''Who is responsible for so- and- so?'' |
50189 | When, therefore, we ask,''What is the physical link between the ingoing message from chilled skin and the outgoing message which moves the leg?'' |
50189 | Who can tell whether a given act of punishment was done from a private or from a public motive? |
50189 | Who shall dare to say which? |
50189 | Why, for example, do we not regard a lunatic as responsible? |
50189 | Will he not learn to cry,''Peace,''to me, when there is no peace? |
50189 | Will that diminish the guilt of her owner? |
50189 | Would this make any difference in the guilt of the accusers? |
50189 | and how can we justify ourselves in believing that the other was not also deluded? |
50189 | and if possible, is it right? |
50189 | and''May he be mistaken?'' |
50189 | but,''Is it true?'' |
50189 | for this is involved in the very nature of belief; but''How far and in what manner may we add to our experience in forming our beliefs?'' |
50189 | or what ought I to think right?'' |
50189 | shall we indeed be overthrown?'' |
50189 | what is the best conscience?'' |
50189 | what kind of conscience shall we try to get? |
5596 | Where will you get the uniform, if your father wo n''t help you, and you want to join the black Jagers? |
5596 | Need I say that it was my intercourse with this man which implanted in my heart the love of ancient days that has accompanied me throughout my life? |
5596 | Was it the voice of the angels which appeared to the shepherds? |
5596 | What marvel that Froebel made every effort to win this rare power for the young institute? |
5596 | What was that? |
5596 | why do ye sleep so long? |
36772 | And for others,he said,"is there not ample evidence? |
36772 | Can not I be left alone? |
36772 | Do you infer,it will be asked,"that religion is in inverse ratio to reason? |
36772 | Patriotism,he said,"can you defend such a feeling? |
36772 | Take care,they whispered;"why trouble? |
36772 | What have I gained? 36772 Which body,"he asks,"for I have had so many?" |
36772 | Who made the world, and why? |
36772 | Will the doctrine of eternal punishment be preached there? |
36772 | You say religions are founded on errors, on what are your reasonings founded? 36772 ***** And the irreligious, those who say openly that they have no religion, amongst whom are they to be found? 36772 And I----What do_ I_ mean? 36772 And are not these all of the body? 36772 And are these to be mute in your heavens? 36772 And as to this feast of communion with their divinity, what are the facts? 36772 And can such a thing proceed from a false theology? 36772 And do you think that there are not some natures who revolt from this? 36772 And has not He manifested Himself in His prophets? 36772 And how many are like him? 36772 And if He be bound, is not His free will, His omnipotence limited? 36772 And if a man''s, how much less a woman''s? 36772 And if he fall in love, can you cure him of it by argument? 36772 And if one say that force is God, what then? 36772 And if so, what is that? 36772 And if the love be a disappointment, a tragedy, then what help is there anywhere? 36772 And if they do, if necessity drive them forth, are they ever happy, ever at rest till they can see their way to return? 36772 And if you continue and say to him,How do you know it is true?" |
36772 | And if you have not, who shall prove it to you? |
36772 | And in the self- sacrifice at the car of Juggernauth? |
36772 | And is it very different when we grow up? |
36772 | And is there any guide to life that can be followed in sincerity and truth? |
36772 | And now are we not finding that sanction we were searching for? |
36772 | And so also with heaven and hell, man has but imagined them to suit his needs: and if so, what needs? |
36772 | And so when the slaves were sacrificed beneath the oaks, was it gratitude to the slaves that was evoked? |
36772 | And that clerk who gave me money in the bank, why has he those other marks? |
36772 | And that money- lender seems to have rubbed his forehead with ashes? |
36772 | And the Buddhist? |
36772 | And the Hindu, how will he answer? |
36772 | And the facts? |
36772 | And the lives of philosophers, what do they gain from the reason alone? |
36772 | And the religions of Greece and Rome, of Egypt, of Chaldea, of many an ancient people, out of what instincts did these people form their creeds? |
36772 | And the women, the girls, the children, are their lives for us nothing? |
36772 | And then ask them,''Is patriotism a mean and debasing passion?'' |
36772 | And this people whose genius made Christianity, whose genius still rules the greater part of it, what are their conceptions of Christ? |
36772 | And to them the Emperor, pointing to the stars above him, replied,"It is all very well, gentlemen, but who made all those?" |
36772 | And what have you gained? |
36772 | And what is it like when you have got it? |
36772 | And what was it a few hundred years ago? |
36772 | And whence comes this custom of prayer? |
36772 | And which is true? |
36772 | And which is true? |
36772 | And why is it that she appeals not at all to the Teutonic people? |
36772 | And why not? |
36772 | And why? |
36772 | And why? |
36772 | And why? |
36772 | And yet consider, does truth always lie in the mean? |
36772 | Are any of them true? |
36772 | Are not a woman''s ideas of conduct the same as a man''s? |
36772 | Are not almost all the great heroisms outcomes of religion? |
36772 | Are not artistic people notoriously irreligious? |
36772 | Are not mercy and fatherly care, forgiveness and love, beautiful things? |
36772 | Are not the Venus de Milo, the statue of Athena, and all the famous Greek sculptures those of gods? |
36772 | Are our loves, our hopes, our fears but evil? |
36772 | Are sceptics more criminal than religious people? |
36772 | Are the English Roman Catholics less honest than Protestants in the same class? |
36772 | Are the great religions utterly at variance about this First Cause, or can they agree? |
36772 | Are the more deeply religious those whom the world at large most deeply respects? |
36772 | Are there not also St. Paul and the Apostles, the Early Fathers? |
36772 | Are these answers true? |
36772 | Are these creeds older than prayer, or maybe is it not that prayer is older than the creeds? |
36772 | Are they all true? |
36772 | Are they not all religious? |
36772 | Are they of a world that we must abjure? |
36772 | Are they such as the world admires? |
36772 | Are they the less children of the Great Father for that? |
36772 | Are they then untrue, useless, valueless guides to conduct? |
36772 | Are they, as they claim to be, the cream of mankind, those who have the pure reason? |
36772 | Are we to fall to lesser notes of eternal praise, of eternal thanksgiving? |
36772 | As to addition, is it maintained anywhere that the teaching and example are inadequate? |
36772 | As to the teaching of Christ, of what use is a teaching that is suitable only to an ideal state of things? |
36772 | Births and deaths, suicides and murders, are they too not all under Law? |
36772 | But argument, reason? |
36772 | But consider, has joy been the most beautiful thing in your life, is it joy that sounded the deepest harmonies? |
36772 | But did I believe this former life, or has any European ever been convinced by that evidence? |
36772 | But did he ever apply this acumen to religion? |
36772 | But do the voices of conscience and of God, as stated in the sacred books, agree? |
36772 | But do you not know that the greater beauties can only be seen through tears, which are their dew? |
36772 | But granted, people may say, that religion is what you say, a cult of the emotions, of what use is it? |
36772 | But how about false gods-- the savage praying to a mountain, the Hindu to an image or a stone, representing who knows what? |
36772 | But how can that be? |
36772 | But how much? |
36772 | But how? |
36772 | But if he, too, be in heaven and not there at all? |
36772 | But if not? |
36772 | But if religion has its failures, has it not its successes? |
36772 | But if theology will bear the light of reason, why ask us to accept it blindly? |
36772 | But if this be so, then where is the need of any knowledge beyond the knowledge of law? |
36772 | But if you suppose a God burnt you without telling you why, without giving you a chance, what then? |
36772 | But in fact, for ordinary life, is there any difference between the code of a Latin, a Teuton, or a Buddhist? |
36772 | But in secret, in their own hearts, before the world, in the action of their own hands, have they ever acknowledged these beliefs?" |
36772 | But in these drab Utopias of the reason, what is there? |
36772 | But is there any clear conception of the Holy Ghost as a distinct personality? |
36772 | But on others? |
36772 | But surely the essence of Christianity must be the teaching and example of Christ? |
36772 | But tell me, is there a woman who has lost those she loves to whom such prayers would not come home? |
36772 | But what can this object be? |
36772 | But what is truth? |
36772 | But what of that? |
36772 | But what they have not got is sympathy, and without this of what use are the rest? |
36772 | But what will the Buddhist answer? |
36772 | But what would you have? |
36772 | But when we turn to Pagan nations, what do we see? |
36772 | But wherein lies the spell that religion has cast upon the souls of men? |
36772 | But who ever realised either? |
36772 | But why is this, if they have no concern one with another? |
36772 | But you will object that was amongst Burmese; and I reply, Wherein is there any difference? |
36772 | But you? |
36772 | But_ do_ we? |
36772 | But_ is_ it free? |
36772 | Can He be influenced? |
36772 | Can anyone imagine Joanna Southcote in India or in the further East? |
36772 | Can anyone possibly say that the men responsible for these were shams? |
36772 | Can anyone see aught but horror in this Almighty demanding the sacrifice of His Son? |
36772 | Can it be explained by arguing from the creed down? |
36772 | Can it be possible, he thought, that there is an explanation, that religion can justify itself, that it may still have reason? |
36772 | Can it be that all men have a like need and that all religions have a common quality which serves that need? |
36772 | Can it be that there is some secret common to all religions, some belief, some doctrine that is the cause of this? |
36772 | Can not you imagine the intense oppression, the irritation and revulsion, such a doctrine may occasion? |
36772 | Can not you manage otherwise than by causing so much pain to me and all the world? |
36772 | Can not you thus understand the manifold nature of God? |
36772 | Can this ever be heaven? |
36772 | Can we not, too, be as the scientist, denying nothing, but searching only for that which we can know and which will be useful to us? |
36772 | Can you imagine this theologian''s prayer? |
36772 | Can you in the East find one man? |
36772 | Can you trace here any cause and effect? |
36772 | Can you understand your own? |
36772 | Christ the teacher, Christ the preacher, the restorer of the dead to life, the feeder of the hungry, the newly arisen from the grave, where is He? |
36772 | Consider, what do you see when you land anywhere in the East, what strikes you most, what is most prominent, not in the landscape, but in the people? |
36772 | Declare that God requires neither ears to hear nor eyes to see, nor legs to walk with, nor a body, and what is left? |
36772 | Deduct from your idea of God all human passions, love and forgiveness, and mercy, and revenge, and punishment, and what is left? |
36772 | Did any man in health, and strength, and sanity ever yearn to die in order to reach this Heaven they tell us of? |
36772 | Did each man act up to this teaching, to this example, would it not be a perfect world? |
36772 | Did not Ajax defy the lightning? |
36772 | Did not blood- thirstiness and religion go together? |
36772 | Did not the German Emperor in one breath tell his army that their model was Christ, and then in the next to show no quarter in China? |
36772 | Did not the forest people speak of a god in the great bare rock behind him? |
36772 | Did these creeds exist in men''s minds first or did the necessity for prayer exist first? |
36772 | Did they throw any light into the darkness of his doubts? |
36772 | Did you ever see Englishmen praying in the streets? |
36772 | Did, then, the Greeks see that behind all their personification of forces Law ruled? |
36772 | Do any of the definitions given at the beginning explain what it really is? |
36772 | Do keen thinkers in Europe accept any of this evidence? |
36772 | Do the Buddhists accept it? |
36772 | Do the preachers tell of her, the picture makers paint her, the people pray to her? |
36772 | Do they never enjoy themselves? |
36772 | Do they then go without? |
36772 | Do we not believe in the West? |
36772 | Do we think of them as superior to us? |
36772 | Do you ever hear of her there? |
36772 | Do you know what I exclaimed?" |
36772 | Do you know what I meant?" |
36772 | Do you know whence came these emotions that have risen and made your faith? |
36772 | Do you remember Napoleon the Great and the idealogues on the voyage to Egypt? |
36772 | Do you think I can watch the sun rise, the daily marvel which is beyond words, and hate the world? |
36772 | Do you think he was able to accept them as real? |
36772 | Do you think his inarticulate cry for help was not involuntary? |
36772 | Do you think one who felt so could be argued out of his horror or a Christian out of his devotion? |
36772 | Do you think such a system of religion would be bearable to a Burman? |
36772 | Do you think that each man holds one wonderful conception of God? |
36772 | Do you think that he who thinks Law to be freedom will ever be argued or converted into Theism? |
36772 | Do you think that such feelings can be changed? |
36772 | Do you think they helped him at all? |
36772 | Do you think"Christian Science"would gain any foothold in the East? |
36772 | Does an Englishman ever swear by his mother, does he yearn after her as the Latins do from a far country? |
36772 | Does the fear of separation keep our young men at home? |
36772 | Does their religion cause them to live more worthy lives? |
36772 | Even if it be not so, that the early chapters still seem to be hard, is it not better to hear such things from a friend than from an enemy? |
36772 | Even if this were true, what would be the use? |
36772 | Even in literature, is there anything secular to compare with the sacred books of the world? |
36772 | Even of the men that are there, how many go there from other motives than personal desire to hear the service? |
36772 | Even your Utopias, from Plato''s to Bellamy''s, who would desire them? |
36772 | For consider, Why do you ever change your acts, your attitudes? |
36772 | For he says,"If the professional men do n''t know what their own faith is, who does?" |
36772 | For what do men imagine God to be? |
36772 | For what do we strive all our days but for happiness, for truth, for joy, for the beauty of life? |
36772 | For what object does man exist? |
36772 | For what reason has the Jewish Sabbath appealed more nearly to the Scotch than the Christian Sunday? |
36772 | For why do we refuse to accept the sea serpent? |
36772 | Forms of motion? |
36772 | From disease? |
36772 | Further, I thought if this is true with the Burman, is it not likely to be true of all people? |
36772 | Go to any pagoda and see the women there praying to Someone-- Someone, they know not whom-- and ask if Buddhists know not prayer? |
36772 | Had they no need of confession? |
36772 | Has He any special characteristics? |
36772 | Has any God taught any believer a perfect code of life, has any Buddhist searcher discovered the natural Law of life? |
36772 | Has any faith such a guide? |
36772 | Has any religion a working code of life that is true, that is adapted to us as we are, that is not in conflict with facts and common sense? |
36772 | Has it any? |
36772 | Has it been all for evil? |
36772 | Has it outgrown the instincts that are the root of religion? |
36772 | Has, then, a force, or a teaching that is capable of excess, no use? |
36772 | Have Christians it? |
36772 | Have I found that they give what they declare? |
36772 | Have I gained anything to help me in life? |
36772 | Have I learnt nothing? |
36772 | Have men no eyes, no ears, no understanding? |
36772 | Have not great and beautiful things been done in its name? |
36772 | Have there ever been witch trials in the East, have there ever been ordeals, or casting lots"for God to decide"? |
36772 | Have they a common truth? |
36772 | Have they no bodies? |
36772 | Have they, then, no idea of pleasure? |
36772 | Have we not in the Scripture a full account of how it was made out of chaos? |
36772 | Have we not religion, nay religions, in the North? |
36772 | Have we reduced truth to measure? |
36772 | Have you any reasoning to support it? |
36772 | Have you ever seen people in deadly fear, how they will babble for help, crying unto the unknown? |
36772 | Have you not seen how, when good news comes to a man, he loves to rush forth and tell it? |
36772 | Have you pointed to us what we really would have? |
36772 | Have you wondered how that came into the creed? |
36772 | He did not mean what is the end of man, but what is the object of man, of life? |
36772 | He does not ask"Who am I?" |
36772 | He feels fairly well, and the other boys are going skating or boating, why should he not do so? |
36772 | He may seem to you so, but are you sure you can judge rightly? |
36772 | He who sees knows; but if a man be blind, how can it be explained to him? |
36772 | He would cry to God, Why do you hurt me? |
36772 | His example? |
36772 | How am I to know that this impression of mercy is not an error? |
36772 | How can anyone, even God, be judged except in His acts? |
36772 | How can it be defended? |
36772 | How can miracle be the proof of supernatural knowledge? |
36772 | How can you prove that?" |
36772 | How could it be that this disproved Jewish fable still held together? |
36772 | How do I know? |
36772 | How do you account for the world unless God made it? |
36772 | How do you explain this from religion? |
36772 | How is the heaven held up, the great heavy dome as he imagines it? |
36772 | How is this? |
36772 | How is this? |
36772 | How many millions in Europe, even in England, have no religious usages? |
36772 | How much fervency will there be in a request you know will not be granted or attended to? |
36772 | How much subjective action will follow that prayer? |
36772 | How often are not these written in large words on nursery walls? |
36772 | How shall a man so form himself here that if indeed there be a life hereafter he may enter it without fear? |
36772 | How was all this possible? |
36772 | How will you comfort your heart when it is sore if you have not God? |
36772 | How, in fact, am I to know that anything exists at all? |
36772 | How, then, am I to judge which are wrong and which are right impressions? |
36772 | I have found the Burmese beliefs; who has found the others? |
36772 | I have learnt nothing? |
36772 | I nearly called the book,"What is the Meaning of Religion?" |
36772 | If God knows best what is good for us, why pray to Him? |
36772 | If His acts are revengeful, is not He revengeful? |
36772 | If crime and ignorance, if mistake and waywardness brought always inevitably their due punishment and correction, where is a ruler needed? |
36772 | If grammarians are hide- bound, are we to refuse to talk? |
36772 | If he be far away in happiness, why go to his grave? |
36772 | If in a shipwreck many are drowned and few, bereft of all but life, are hardly saved, what must they do? |
36772 | If it be indeed eternal, as the Buddhists say, what need for more? |
36772 | If it be, as the Burmans say, but the empty shell that lies there? |
36772 | If it is not founded on evidence that all can accept, on what is it founded? |
36772 | If it were, would not all Christian nations believe much the same, have the same ideals, the same outcome of their beliefs? |
36772 | If not, to whom? |
36772 | If philosophy be pessimism, what then is religion? |
36772 | If so, what is it? |
36772 | If so, what is it? |
36772 | If so, what is it? |
36772 | If so, what is this necessity which religion alone can fill, what is this succour that religion alone can give? |
36772 | If that is so, why does not everyone believe in ghosts? |
36772 | If the Madonna, the type of motherhood, appeals to all the people, men and women, is there not a reason? |
36772 | If there is in the heaven they promise us such a fulfilment of glory, such an appeal to our hearts that they can not but answer, what matter the rest? |
36772 | If there is such a common secret, why is it so hidden? |
36772 | If you have no emotions, no sympathies, how can you get on? |
36772 | If you have the instinct of God, then is evidence unnecessary; and if you have not, of what use is the evidence brought forward? |
36772 | If you know not of Him, only of Law, have you not lost out of your life some of the greatest thoughts? |
36772 | If, then, his soul, if_ he_ be with God, what are you come to see? |
36772 | If, therefore, this which is an exaggeration now was then a necessary revivifying truth may there not be others like it? |
36772 | In Europe, what difference does a man''s faith make? |
36772 | In fact, is not God Himself merely an impression and He does not exist? |
36772 | In the battle of life is not this enough? |
36772 | In the science of man, who is but part of nature, why should we do so? |
36772 | Is He ever cited separately from the others? |
36772 | Is it a theory of the universe, is it morality, is it future rewards and punishments? |
36772 | Is it any attribute of the heavens of the religions? |
36772 | Is it any use to me to tell me that if everyone agreed at once to follow this teaching the world would be perfect? |
36772 | Is it beautiful or no? |
36772 | Is it beautiful or no? |
36772 | Is it because it will not bear scrutiny? |
36772 | Is it creeds, dogmas, speculations, or theories of any kind? |
36772 | Is it disgust, weariness, pessimism? |
36772 | Is it envy that they have reached everlasting happiness? |
36772 | Is it gladness to reflect that they are no longer with us? |
36772 | Is it indeed always so? |
36772 | Is it not a maxim that a fanatic in any religion is simply blind, not only to his own code, but to all morality? |
36772 | Is it not as well to know them? |
36772 | Is it not courage and a strange triumph that marks his way in life? |
36772 | Is it not in prayer? |
36772 | Is it not the same answer in each case? |
36772 | Is it not the wickedness of man that prevents it? |
36772 | Is it otherwise with our children? |
36772 | Is it sunshine, happiness, gaiety? |
36772 | Is it that there are facets of some great truth behind which we can never know?" |
36772 | Is it the Buddhist word- refiner speculating on Karma? |
36772 | Is it the Hindu sophist making theories of Brahm? |
36772 | Is it the scientific theologian with his word- confusion about homoiousios? |
36772 | Is life to them a sorry march to be made with downcast eyes of thought, to be trod with weary steps, to be regarded with contempt? |
36772 | Is not a woman''s Christianity the same as a man''s Christianity, if both be Christianity? |
36772 | Is not the cause of our country always a good cause? |
36772 | Is not the very idea of atonement expressed by Christ''s life? |
36772 | Is not this so? |
36772 | Is not truth also to be judged by its results? |
36772 | Is prayer nothing? |
36772 | Is that dependent upon any religious theory? |
36772 | Is the Boer religion sham? |
36772 | Is the answer difficult? |
36772 | Is the explanation difficult? |
36772 | Is the inference that the Latin peoples were wickeder than others? |
36772 | Is the influence all for good? |
36772 | Is the necessity a common necessity? |
36772 | Is the wealth that comes of the keen brain, the strong will, a calamity? |
36772 | Is there any escape from this? |
36772 | Is there any explanation of this? |
36772 | Is there any secret truth? |
36772 | Is there anywhere any belief of the First Cause that is true, that is the whole truth? |
36772 | Is there in them anything to draw our hearts? |
36772 | Is there no religious feeling in the North of America? |
36772 | Is there such a thing? |
36772 | Is this hard to understand? |
36772 | Is, then, the Burman impatient of suffering? |
36772 | Is, then, the help of confession denied to the multitude? |
36772 | It does not occur to them to say,"Why should I want a religion at all? |
36772 | It is an instinct of the heart that comes who can tell whence, that means who can tell what? |
36772 | It is no longer which is true, the Christian Triune God, the Hindu million of Gods, the Mahommedan one God, the Buddhist Law? |
36772 | It is not what code is the true code of life, the Jewish code, the Christian, the Buddhist, but why are these Codes at all? |
36772 | It is very simple, is it not? |
36772 | It seemed to the man lying on his hillside easy to follow how it all arose; for, indeed, was it not going on about him? |
36772 | May be; but whence the motion? |
36772 | May not what is an untruth now have been a living truth then? |
36772 | Mistake? |
36772 | More than enough to set off the evil? |
36772 | Nearly all men are satisfied with their religion, can not I find one that satisfies me? |
36772 | Never to do wrong? |
36772 | No matter who your philosopher is-- Horace or Omar Khayyam, or Carlyle or Nietsche:--where is the difference? |
36772 | No one believes? |
36772 | Nor,"What is it that causes my dislike and contempt of my teachers? |
36772 | Notwithstanding their common hate, have all religions a common secret? |
36772 | Now as every European nation has the same holy book, the same Teacher, the same Example, how is this? |
36772 | Now should man so order his life as to live righteously here, and to be of good repute before man and his own conscience? |
36772 | Now what is Art? |
36772 | OF WHAT USE IS RELIGION? |
36772 | OF WHAT USE IS RELIGION? |
36772 | Of what sort are these philosophers? |
36772 | Of what use are they? |
36772 | Of what use is patriotism? |
36772 | Of what use is religion? |
36772 | Of what use is religion? |
36772 | Only that I have a truth, which I can not understand, which gives me no help, or but little? |
36772 | Out of what necessity, to justify what feeling, does the Christian require a Triune God, the Hindu many Gods, and the Buddhist no God but Law? |
36772 | Philosophies may not be very cheerful, but what are religions? |
36772 | Prophets of the faiths, what are these heavens of yours? |
36772 | Pure Buddhism knows not prayer, but does not the Buddhist know it? |
36772 | Raphael painted the most wonderful religious paintings the world has seen-- how much religion had Raphael? |
36772 | Remember how you have stood upon that faraway hillside and laid to rest your comrade beneath the forest shadows? |
36772 | Shall I say all religion is but windy theory and no one cares for it? |
36772 | Shortly there will be a funeral, and what will it be called? |
36772 | Sometimes he would revolt and say,"Ca n''t you leave me alone?" |
36772 | Striking an average, which is best-- secular or religious literature, art, music, and architecture? |
36772 | Suppose, too, that the old school scientists are stubborn and refuse to meet these new thoughts? |
36772 | Surely God can not transgress His own laws of righteousness; is there not"necessity"to Him too? |
36772 | That if he had not first reasoned out the God he would not so cry? |
36772 | That they are separable and separate? |
36772 | The Hindu has perhaps the keenest mind in religious matters the world knows; does he accept it? |
36772 | The Theist says:"How can you answer the questions of who made the world other than by God?" |
36772 | The body is to rise, and if we burn it, what then? |
36772 | The disembodied soul? |
36772 | The first part was false, and if so, must not the sequence be false also? |
36772 | The morality of Christ? |
36772 | The question is what_ does_ happen? |
36772 | The question is, What are the reasons, and are they the same in each case? |
36772 | The sacrifice of a man( remember, I say sacrifice, not execution), would be absolutely abhorrent to them, how much more so that of a God? |
36772 | The teaching of Christ? |
36772 | Then does the Burman not follow his instinct? |
36772 | Then how about the Buddhists? |
36772 | Then how about the boy told of in the earlier chapters? |
36772 | Then what effect has it had? |
36772 | Then who has the conception? |
36772 | Then why can they not understand resurrection of the soul without also the resurrection of the body? |
36772 | There are, for instance, many pictures of God, and many more of Christ-- are there any of the Holy Ghost? |
36772 | There is force, there is life, whence come these forces? |
36772 | There is grand religious literature, but what of the bulk of it? |
36772 | Therefore, given a great architect, what could he design that would give him scope, and freedom, and fame like a cathedral? |
36772 | They do not ask,"Of what use is any religion?" |
36772 | They start from different beginnings, they work towards perhaps different ends; but in the methods, in the rules of life, what difference is there? |
36772 | They went in double file, thickly packed between barriers of rails on either side the hall, and between where everyone looked there lay-- what? |
36772 | They will require no comfort from you in heaven, and how much will you lose? |
36772 | This is true, but is it an explanation? |
36772 | To God-- if there be a God? |
36772 | To ask"Who made the world?" |
36772 | To remember but the corruption that lies beneath? |
36772 | To the believer in God or in gods, what is the world and what is man? |
36772 | To understand well the faith you must have in you all the chords that these faiths draw music from, and how many have that? |
36772 | To what end? |
36772 | To which it would be replied: And religion, what has that to offer either here or in the next world? |
36772 | To which there is the reply:--Many of the greatest Greek statues were of gods truly, but was it a religious age that produced them? |
36772 | To whom is it a benefit that man exists? |
36772 | To whom, then, does religion appeal most, and to what side of their nature does it appeal? |
36772 | To whom? |
36772 | To whom? |
36772 | Turn the other cheek? |
36772 | WAS IT REASON? |
36772 | WAS IT REASON? |
36772 | WHAT IS EVIDENCE? |
36772 | WHAT IS EVIDENCE? |
36772 | Was Cortez a sham, was Cromwell, were all the Catholics in France shams? |
36772 | Was a philosopher ever a happy man? |
36772 | Was anyone ever converted by reasoning? |
36772 | Was he insincere or mistaken? |
36772 | Was he not right? |
36772 | Was it a similar cause that occasioned such similar effects? |
36772 | Was it not beautiful what your heart sang to you while you said"Farewell,"and tears came to your eyes? |
36772 | Was it the Jewess of Galilee over a thousand years before or the ripe warm beauty of the Florentine girls he knew? |
36772 | Was no one ever reasoned out of a faith? |
36772 | Was not His life the perfect life, His teaching the perfect teaching? |
36772 | Was the boy glad or sorry? |
36772 | Was the thirteenth century which saw the building of most of the best cathedrals, a religious age? |
36772 | Was there any doubt about the truth of their religion then? |
36772 | Was there ever a subject on which there was more evidence than in the existence of ghosts? |
36772 | Was, indeed, prayer born of their beliefs? |
36772 | Was, then, the attempt to realise the precepts of Christ in daily life either a folly or an hypocrisy? |
36772 | We ought? |
36772 | We would ask how and from what has the world evolved, and under what cause? |
36772 | Were Phidias and Zeuxis religious or moral men? |
36772 | Were not the Puritans religious? |
36772 | Were the Crusaders, who celebrated the victory that gave back the city of the Prince of Peace to His believers by an indiscriminate massacre, shams? |
36772 | Were the painters of great pictures religious or moral? |
36772 | Were there not gods in the ravines, gods in the hidden places of the hills? |
36772 | What answers are these? |
36772 | What are the codes? |
36772 | What are the real beliefs of these people? |
36772 | What are their real beliefs? |
36772 | What are these codes? |
36772 | What can be made of them? |
36772 | What can be more certain than that only religion gives the necessary stimulus to art and furnishes the most inspiring subjects? |
36772 | What connection has art with religion? |
36772 | What did his unaided reason give him? |
36772 | What did it mean, and why did everyone profess it and no one believe it? |
36772 | What do religions say about this First Cause? |
36772 | What do these poor know of thought and speculation? |
36772 | What do these unconscious words, these acts, tell us of the belief about the soul and body? |
36772 | What do they mean? |
36772 | What does Scientific Theology say? |
36772 | What does conduct arise from? |
36772 | What does life mean? |
36772 | What effect does this difference make on the lives of the peoples? |
36772 | What effect has religion upon them, and how are they ordinarily regarded in the world? |
36772 | What feelings were those that caused this? |
36772 | What greater treat can you offer a boy than to see a pig killed? |
36772 | What has he lost? |
36772 | What has philosophy given the world but unending words? |
36772 | What has reason to offer me? |
36772 | What has secular art to show to compare with these? |
36772 | What have been the greatest emotions of our lives? |
36772 | What have they to say? |
36772 | What impressions can any candid mind have of the scientific theologian? |
36772 | What is it he finds? |
36772 | What is it in religion that we see and love and feel is true? |
36772 | What is it that sounds the deeper notes of our lives? |
36772 | What is it that they know? |
36772 | What is it we teach them above all else? |
36772 | What is it you recall and long for and miss so bitterly? |
36772 | What is it? |
36772 | What is proof? |
36772 | What is soul? |
36772 | What is that? |
36772 | What is the First Cause? |
36772 | What is the answer that to- day gives to that question? |
36772 | What is the difficulty?" |
36772 | What is the effect of their religion in their lives? |
36772 | What is the emotion to which the Madonna appeals? |
36772 | What is the explanation of this? |
36772 | What is the god who entered into the priest? |
36772 | What is the good of trying without any hope of success? |
36772 | What is the instinct that requires her, that pictures her on the street corners, that makes her worship a living worship to- day? |
36772 | What is the keynote of the life of him who truly believes? |
36772 | What is the meaning of all this? |
36772 | What is the most famous painting in the world? |
36772 | What is the most general, the most conspicuous form in which religion expresses itself? |
36772 | What is the reason of it? |
36772 | What is the result in their lives? |
36772 | What is the secret of it all? |
36772 | What is the secret of it? |
36772 | What is the truth of things-- what do you mean? |
36772 | What is the truth? |
36772 | What is the use of religion? |
36772 | What is the value of it? |
36772 | What is there most striking to us when we study them? |
36772 | What is this great common need and yearning that all men have, and which, to men in sympathy with it, every religion fulfils? |
36772 | What is this heaven? |
36772 | What is this world to the Buddhist? |
36772 | What is to arise? |
36772 | What is to arise? |
36772 | What is to be gained by all this? |
36772 | What is your feeling towards the dead? |
36772 | What matters its name or its supposed origin? |
36772 | What motive power have you? |
36772 | What necessities do they serve? |
36772 | What people ever personified gravity? |
36772 | What should reason say in the face of this? |
36772 | What those of the Puritans towards any art? |
36772 | What thought the boy of these explanations? |
36772 | What use have I ever had from this religion that has been dinned into me? |
36772 | What virtue did Odin teach? |
36772 | What was Raphael, the free- liver, thinking of when he drew his Madonnas? |
36772 | What was it that galled him till he revolted? |
36772 | What was it, then, that drove the boy from his faith? |
36772 | What was to be gained by creating man at all? |
36772 | What were his instincts that remained unfulfilled, roused against his religion till they drove him to find reasons for leaving it? |
36772 | What were his peculiarities? |
36772 | What were the Burman''s instincts, not only as referred to religion; but generally? |
36772 | What were the feelings of the early Christians towards Greek art? |
36772 | What will the sensible man do? |
36772 | What will there be to rise? |
36772 | What will they be in heaven? |
36772 | What, then, is religion? |
36772 | What, then, is religious proof? |
36772 | What, then, is the inference? |
36772 | What_ is_ Truth and Untruth? |
36772 | When I revolted against it as a boy as but a kindergarten, without even the distraction of being put in the corner, was I wrong?" |
36772 | When a man is honest and honourable and true, and rises to great position, to be spoken well of by all men, is that an evil thing? |
36772 | When troubles fall upon the man, what is his first impulse? |
36772 | When we think of heaven, when with our eyes shut we try to recall all they have taught us of the Christian heaven, what are the images that come up? |
36772 | When you read books written by men who are really religious, what is their tone? |
36772 | Whence came all the faiths but from that inexplicable feeling of the heart, that surge and swell arising we know not whence? |
36772 | Whence do they come? |
36772 | Where are her pictures in Protestant Germany, in England, in Scotland, in America? |
36772 | Where are you going to stop? |
36772 | Where can you find stronger warrior spirit than has always existed in Japan? |
36772 | Where has reason alone ever led anyone save into the dreariest, driest pessimism? |
36772 | Where is it man''s thoughts are deepest and strongest, where is it that his heart responds to the heart of the world until they beat throb for throb? |
36772 | Where is its religious art? |
36772 | Where is the art of the Reformation? |
36772 | Where is the connection, we would ask? |
36772 | Where is the highest birth rate to- day in Europe? |
36772 | Where is the need of God?" |
36772 | Where is the proof of God or of Law? |
36772 | Where is the religion that is without prayer? |
36772 | Where will reason alone take you? |
36772 | Where, then, is the difficulty with God? |
36772 | Which is nearer to man? |
36772 | Which is the more perfect conception? |
36772 | Which is true? |
36772 | Which of the emotions of which Puritanism is composed could be expressed in art? |
36772 | Which would he choose? |
36772 | Who are the happy men and women in this world? |
36772 | Who are the most kind- hearted, even soft- hearted, of men? |
36772 | Who are the people that we would be like? |
36772 | Who are they who call out for stringent measures, for much shooting, for plenty of hanging? |
36772 | Who can doubt it? |
36772 | Who can tell what"should"and what"ought"to happen? |
36772 | Who discovered it to be false until the catastrophe? |
36772 | Who lights the candles at the pagoda, who contribute the daily food to the monks, who attend the Sunday meetings in the rest houses? |
36772 | Who shall provide you with the facts on which to reason, who shall open your eyes? |
36772 | Who shall say if there was any mistake at all, unless great affection be a mistake? |
36772 | Who shall say where the mistake lay? |
36772 | Who were the most ruthless suppressers of the Mutiny? |
36772 | Who will help you if not God? |
36772 | Who wrote"The Drums of the Fore and Aft,""La Debâcle,""The Red Badge of Courage,"with their delight in blood? |
36772 | Whom did the Greeks put above all the gods? |
36772 | Whom have you persuaded? |
36772 | Why am I to be left out? |
36772 | Why are all peoples, all men religious? |
36772 | Why are all philosophers so bitter, so hard to bear with, so useless? |
36772 | Why are the Maories and many other people disappearing? |
36772 | Why are we here? |
36772 | Why did God allow man to crucify Himself in order to atone to Himself for a former sin of man, and what is the meaning of all this? |
36772 | Why do men believe their own religion and accept the evidence of it as irrefragable, while scornfully rejecting that in favour of other religions? |
36772 | Why do she and her Child thus live in Latin thought? |
36772 | Why do they shrink from cremation if reason is to be the only guide? |
36772 | Why does a man fall in love? |
36772 | Why does each reject the conception of the other? |
36772 | Why does one form of religion appeal to one people and another to another people, while remaining hateful to all the rest? |
36772 | Why does she alone survive? |
36772 | Why fight, why not exist together? |
36772 | Why go further? |
36772 | Why had the Jews their ruthless code? |
36772 | Why have the Christians and Buddhists adopted codes they can not act up to? |
36772 | Why is it that of the life of Christ this end of His is considered the most worthy to be in continual remembrance? |
36772 | Why not go without?" |
36772 | Why should not man''s soul be so too? |
36772 | Why should these emotions be cultivated at all? |
36772 | Why should we visit graves if the soul be indeed separate from the body? |
36772 | Why was there this reversion? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | Why? |
36772 | With later gods is it different? |
36772 | Would his"truth"have freed the slaves, have burst their chains; have restored sunlight to a continent, as the exaggeration did? |
36772 | Would it be any use to say to him? |
36772 | Would not the early Christians have considered Raphael''s Madonna profane, considering who he was, and what probably his models were? |
36772 | Would that be reason? |
36772 | Would that be sense? |
36772 | Would you do away with it? |
36772 | Yes, but what is force-- what are any of the forces that exist: gravity, and electricity, and heat, and life? |
36772 | Yet if God''s laws are perfect, is not He, too, bound by them? |
36772 | Yet they must be written, for only by knowing the thoughts of the boy can the later thoughts of the man be understood? |
36772 | You do not understand that? |
36772 | You may never agree with what is urged in them, but can you assert that they are pessimistic? |
36772 | You watch the people in the streets and you ask, Why has the merchant in that shop trident marks on his forehead? |
36772 | _ Prayer._--How can this be necessary? |
36772 | but from what facts did these arise, and why do they persist to- day? |
36772 | or spiritualism or a hundred forms of superstition that cling to the civilised people of the West? |
36772 | the Buddhist woman praying by the pagoda? |
32946 | ''In''t y''got no more credit with Bendemeer? |
32946 | ''Rings on his fingers--?'' |
32946 | A Canaque? |
32946 | A chap in a book? 32946 A diver, d''you see? |
32946 | A doubloon-- don''t you know? 32946 A drink? |
32946 | A drink? |
32946 | A finish? |
32946 | A man so influential-- so experienced as yourself--"Could help, hey? 32946 Agent?" |
32946 | Ah, you know my name? |
32946 | Ah-- Captain Wetherbee? |
32946 | Ah? 32946 Ah? |
32946 | Ah? 32946 Alive?" |
32946 | All ze same, hey? |
32946 | Alone? |
32946 | Am I a scientist? |
32946 | Among my people? |
32946 | And M. de Nou--? |
32946 | And a blasted poor specimen at that, I''d say.... Now which tribe would you take him to be, just as he stands? |
32946 | And again, how with the short gun I slew a pigeon on a housetop and tore the head from its body? |
32946 | And another? 32946 And can I not wrest the answer I need from nature herself?" |
32946 | And he will do it? |
32946 | And if he did? |
32946 | And now? |
32946 | And what are you doing here? |
32946 | And what do you propose to do about it? |
32946 | And where-- where the devil is Fufuti? |
32946 | And you mean we got to leave him after all-- leave the ol''chief to rot where he lays? |
32946 | And you never caught them yet at their slave trade planted right in the heart of your people? |
32946 | And you-- y''big Dutchman--''in''t you swilled enough beer in your time to judge? 32946 Anything worth seeing?" |
32946 | Are we all to die that he may sleep? |
32946 | Are you going to be afraid again? |
32946 | Are you sure it was him? 32946 Art mad?" |
32946 | As how? |
32946 | Aye, it''s a grand book, nae doot, but wad ye listen? 32946 Balbi all some home b''long you?" |
32946 | Bibi-- what have you done? 32946 Billiar''? |
32946 | Brought to exposure, his course run out: what do you suppose he did? 32946 But how about this lascar of a captain that lets us put to sea unprovided? |
32946 | But how you know you got five quarts and a half? |
32946 | But how? |
32946 | But it is true? |
32946 | But ought n''t there be an odor-- a perfume? |
32946 | But still, the gentlemen are dead--"What is zat to me? 32946 But still-- to kill a man in a shrine, eh?" |
32946 | But the others-- them white fella? |
32946 | But what if these jokers only mock themselves of you? 32946 But where is any river now? |
32946 | But why should it be thus? |
32946 | But why should they be so eager after one doubloon? |
32946 | But why-- what was he after? |
32946 | But-- but why does n''t he take off the helmet? |
32946 | By the ravine? |
32946 | By whose fault? |
32946 | Ca n''t it? 32946 Ca n''t read?" |
32946 | Can such things be? |
32946 | Can you hold him to it? |
32946 | Captain Wetherbee, do you remember when we last met? |
32946 | Chief, d''you hear me? 32946 Coincidence-- what?" |
32946 | Come right along, then, you beauty-- and gie''s a kiss, wo n''t you? |
32946 | Could n''t get_ out_? |
32946 | D''you-- d''you come seeking me, m''dear? |
32946 | Did I fight? 32946 Did he launch the scheme then? |
32946 | Did he say he''s gaun ashore the nicht? |
32946 | Did you ever see the damn''stuff? 32946 Did you?" |
32946 | Do I get the job? |
32946 | Do I''ire you to stand zere and cry about ze luck? 32946 Do I_ look_ like I''ad a flask?" |
32946 | Do they ask more than thee for a daughter? 32946 Do you believe me now?" |
32946 | Do you chance to have the loan of a match about you?... |
32946 | Do you find yourself in need of a fire? |
32946 | Do you realize what this means? |
32946 | Do you see me? |
32946 | Do you think I''m trying to mystify you? |
32946 | Do you work for it? |
32946 | Do you? |
32946 | Doctor,he said at last, in awed huskiness,"is this a man or a fiend?" |
32946 | Does he figger we ca n''t get no police? |
32946 | Does he say that? |
32946 | Does your blessed executioner have power to pick his own victims?... 32946 Drink? |
32946 | Eh, and why not, fool? 32946 Eh, my zig? |
32946 | Eh-- what? 32946 Eh? |
32946 | Eh? 32946 Eh? |
32946 | Eh? 32946 Eh?" |
32946 | Feeling better, chief? |
32946 | Fetch him here to me, will ye now? |
32946 | For why have you lose z''wicks? 32946 Friend of yours?" |
32946 | Gamble? 32946 Ginger?" |
32946 | Gracious me!--have you been sleeping out there? |
32946 | Gregson--? |
32946 | Hast been looking for me, Moung Poh Sin? |
32946 | Hast been waiting for me, then? |
32946 | Have you any notion what became of the murderer? |
32946 | Have you been making yourself tiresome again with the visitors, Maman? 32946 Have you chanced to examine the coin yourself?" |
32946 | Have you got zose passengers yet,_ enfant de salaud_? |
32946 | Have you killed any one? |
32946 | Have you not paid your exit, to the customs? |
32946 | Have you seen the guidebook they sell about the streets here,he asked--"the English Guide to Madeira?" |
32946 | Hello,he said-- and then, by natural sequence:"say, you do n''t happen to have a flask anywhere handy about you-- what?" |
32946 | Hey? |
32946 | Hey? |
32946 | Hey? |
32946 | Him and her, what do they care? 32946 Hokoolele-- what of the golden chain of love between us? |
32946 | How are you going to get one? |
32946 | How can I say? |
32946 | How could I know a wretched exile had returned to contaminate the soil with foreign vulgarity? |
32946 | How could it end there? 32946 How did you thrive in the mountains?" |
32946 | How do you mean-- he could n''t? |
32946 | How does he do it, doctor? 32946 How long has he been dead?" |
32946 | How long have you been here? |
32946 | How many men have held this job? |
32946 | How much money have you? |
32946 | How the devil can I keep those footy little lights going for a month without no wicks? |
32946 | How? |
32946 | How? |
32946 | Huh-- nothing small about you, is there? 32946 Hy, you, Karaki, what name you no laugh all same me? |
32946 | Hy, you,he said;"what name you make so much bobeley''long that fella mahster? |
32946 | I minded what you said about new lamps being wanted, d''y''see? 32946 I''ll say you lie, and I''ll demonstrate:"You see my schooner out there? |
32946 | I''ve a mind to show you, deacon-- shall I-- how far I_ have_ come and how cleverly I_ have_ covered my tracks?... 32946 I''ve a notion I might be of some service to the cause, d''y see?" |
32946 | Instantaneous? |
32946 | Is he incapable of treachery? |
32946 | Is it true? |
32946 | Is it your fancy,he inquired,"that the niggers run much to writin''epitaphs? |
32946 | Is not our doctor a wonder? |
32946 | Is such your opinion? |
32946 | Is that how you make it? |
32946 | Is there another sentence hanging over you? 32946 Is there any way he could steal our supplies?" |
32946 | Is this a holdup or only the request of a loan? |
32946 | Is this more of your wonderful notions? |
32946 | Is this true? 32946 Is this true?" |
32946 | It amounts to the same thing, does n''t it? |
32946 | It figures out to fifteen generations, does n''t it? |
32946 | It''s got to be the-- the hospital, then? |
32946 | Just what have I got? |
32946 | Locked up?... |
32946 | Loze z''wicks? |
32946 | Me? 32946 Me?" |
32946 | Meaning Mah Soung, thy daughter? |
32946 | Meaning thy daughter, Moung Poh Sin? |
32946 | My which? |
32946 | Name of God-- where do you think you are? 32946 News?" |
32946 | No theory yet? |
32946 | No? 32946 No? |
32946 | No? |
32946 | No? |
32946 | No? |
32946 | Not Father Anselm?... 32946 Now w''ere,"he inquired--"w''ere are that damn doubloon?" |
32946 | Oh, he does, hey? 32946 On the shell bank?" |
32946 | On what? |
32946 | Or to make sure he wo n''t come back? |
32946 | Peabody-- is it? |
32946 | Pieces of eight-- what? 32946 Pieces of eight-- what? |
32946 | Play with''em? 32946 Read it, ca n''t you?" |
32946 | Saved anybody yet? |
32946 | See that eye? |
32946 | Seldom? |
32946 | Shall I begin? |
32946 | Shall we be stuck by such naturalistic obstacles? |
32946 | Share? |
32946 | Silva? |
32946 | Sir, why you should demand so peevish to be sorry? 32946 So much for my plan.... And the sisters?... |
32946 | So that is the way you talk now? |
32946 | So you can pickle yourself before burial? |
32946 | So,he nodded, with an amazing grin,"you are not a daid? |
32946 | Spice? |
32946 | Starving? |
32946 | Such cleverness-- eh? 32946 Suppose I should tell ye now I canna read the heid o''one printed word frae the hurdies o''it?" |
32946 | Take on hands at Madeira? 32946 Tell me,"said Angus Jones--"tell me what was that word with which they harried us a while back? |
32946 | That is true, is n''t it? 32946 That sweep? |
32946 | The man is white and the girl is a native, and you would marry them so readily? |
32946 | The trader? |
32946 | Then what are we doing here? |
32946 | Then you must be Pedro Morales? |
32946 | Then, name of God, why did n''t you tell us so? 32946 Then, name of a dog, what if he has supplies of his own hidden about?" |
32946 | There was a chap in a book I read, d''y''see? 32946 Therefore you prepared for this?" |
32946 | This is the end? |
32946 | To ask him? 32946 To go away--?" |
32946 | To what end? |
32946 | To whom? |
32946 | Up the river-- what? 32946 Visitors?" |
32946 | Was it also written that I had become any safe or easy game to track into a corner? |
32946 | Was it you that''s been hanging around that white fella girl b''long missionary-- that''s dared lift your dog''s eyes to her? |
32946 | Was it? |
32946 | Was it_ this_ they robbed you of? |
32946 | Was n''t it the same winter he did a quick dash to the tin mines for his health? 32946 Was that your signal?" |
32946 | Watch? |
32946 | Well, I paid for it, did n''t I? |
32946 | Well, how did you like the flavor? |
32946 | Well, if it seems so queer as all that why not blow yourself? |
32946 | Well, sacred name, what do you want? |
32946 | Well, those who carry fleas--"No, but why should they tremble? |
32946 | Well, what do they call you nowadays-- deacon? |
32946 | Well, where is he? 32946 Well,"said Pellett cheerfully,"what d''you want, old chappie?" |
32946 | Well-- idiot?... 32946 Well--?" |
32946 | Well? |
32946 | What about it? |
32946 | What am I going to do now? 32946 What are we going to do with him?" |
32946 | What are you after? |
32946 | What are you going to do? |
32946 | What are you trying to say? 32946 What babble is this, Moung Poh Sin?" |
32946 | What can he want? |
32946 | What can you do or say to prevent? |
32946 | What did you sing me there? 32946 What did you want of that boat?" |
32946 | What do I care for your taboo? 32946 What do we want?" |
32946 | What do we want? |
32946 | What do you care? |
32946 | What do you mean? |
32946 | What do you say? |
32946 | What do you sing me there? 32946 What does he say himself? |
32946 | What does it matter? 32946 What does that matter?... |
32946 | What does this mean? |
32946 | What else should I think of? |
32946 | What else?... 32946 What fella ship?" |
32946 | What for? 32946 What have I got?" |
32946 | What if I could? |
32946 | What if you could? 32946 What if you could?" |
32946 | What in Hull t''Halifax are you talkin''about? |
32946 | What is going on in his brain? 32946 What is that to me, old man? |
32946 | What is the fellow talking about? 32946 What is this unlucky tax?" |
32946 | What jobe? |
32946 | What kind of secret? |
32946 | What name you come so far? |
32946 | What name you give that fella mahster all them fella pearl? |
32946 | What name? |
32946 | What should you fear? 32946 What side you take''m this fella canoe?" |
32946 | What t''Sam Hill you take me for? 32946 What theory can there be? |
32946 | What two? |
32946 | What was his little affair? |
32946 | What was that for? |
32946 | What would they be doing here? |
32946 | What would you have me do, my dear? |
32946 | What would you have? |
32946 | What''s all about him? 32946 What''s it to you how I spend it afterward? |
32946 | What''s the gyme now? |
32946 | What''s the lowest vermin on earth?... 32946 What''s the row, Zimballo?" |
32946 | What''s there? |
32946 | What''s your notion? 32946 What''s your notion?" |
32946 | What-- complain? |
32946 | What-- what if that there diver_ did_ happen to be overboard at the minute the rush came? |
32946 | What? 32946 What? |
32946 | What? 32946 What? |
32946 | Whaur''s that pipe? 32946 Whaur''s the mate?" |
32946 | Where did you snaffle it? |
32946 | Where ha''ye been the day-- ashore again? 32946 Where is that cursed ship that was to meet us here?" |
32946 | Where is that flask? |
32946 | Where is the price? |
32946 | Where''s a nail? 32946 Where''s the sense of it? |
32946 | Where''s your police? |
32946 | Where? |
32946 | Which Number One? |
32946 | Who are those? |
32946 | Who d''y''say? 32946 Who did it? |
32946 | Who is that man, and what the devil did he mean by blowing down the back of my neck? |
32946 | Who then-- vaurien? |
32946 | Who wants the thing so badly? |
32946 | Who wants to prove it? 32946 Who was she?" |
32946 | Who was that? |
32946 | Who''s after it? |
32946 | Who? 32946 Who?" |
32946 | Whom have you wronged? |
32946 | Why are you and I chumming here together on this hole- in- a- corner of an island, for instance, with no end of a silly yarn between us? 32946 Why did n''t you care?" |
32946 | Why do n''t they do something? |
32946 | Why do you tell me this? |
32946 | Why does Jeremiah''s Loo need ribbons? |
32946 | Why not, indeed? |
32946 | Why not? |
32946 | Why should he lie? |
32946 | Why should we look and look? 32946 Why should you and I fight? |
32946 | Why should you think so? |
32946 | Why, they''re only natives, are n''t they? |
32946 | Why-- why-- why did n''t you come that night? 32946 Wickwire?" |
32946 | Will you believe me now? |
32946 | Will you keep a customer waiting? |
32946 | Will you mind your business? |
32946 | Will you we d with me, Zelie? |
32946 | Would a captain''s cabin at forty pounds suit you? |
32946 | Would it occur to you we might have any chance of salvage on those pearls? |
32946 | Would the gentlemen kindly to step down? |
32946 | Would you call that suspended animation, now-- or what? |
32946 | Would you-- Miss Matilda? |
32946 | Wrecked? |
32946 | Yes? |
32946 | You ain''t-- you ai n''t scared now? |
32946 | You are wise, eh? 32946 You ask what he was like?" |
32946 | You ca n''t read? 32946 You didn''know that, eh?" |
32946 | You do not know how long? 32946 You found the doubloon?" |
32946 | You gave him permission? |
32946 | You got it back from them-- yourself? |
32946 | You have perceived it? |
32946 | You knew this chap? |
32946 | You laugh? 32946 You los''somebody? |
32946 | You mean to blow, you wasp? |
32946 | You mean you do not want me any more? |
32946 | You recall that tale I started for your benefit? 32946 You say? |
32946 | You see that fella white man? 32946 You spoke?" |
32946 | You talked with him? |
32946 | You tell me you los''your frien''at Lol Raman''s? 32946 You think he''s alive?" |
32946 | You think not; you wilful imp? |
32946 | You want an abstract of title? |
32946 | You want money to tell? 32946 You won''be nize with me?" |
32946 | Your fren''was come alone? |
32946 | Zelie,he offered,"will you marry me?" |
32946 | Zose passengers for us, hey? 32946 _ Pedro, my glasses!_ Billiar''? |
32946 | _ Va- se''mbora?_I said, fidgeting. |
32946 | _ Zat_ iss awright, but my God why did you not show your light till midnight? |
32946 | _''Would not the beggar then forget himself? 32946 ''In''t I been pallin''along of you? 32946 ''Not come again?'' 32946 ''Ow_ can_ I help? |
32946 | ''The wickedest man''--do you see? |
32946 | *****"Do you happen to carry any good, live, working superstitions about you?" |
32946 | ... What is here?" |
32946 | A fancy for blood? |
32946 | A fancy for young and innocent flesh-- a solace to his old age?... |
32946 | A fancy of pride? |
32946 | A lip like a drop of blood--"What did you want that boat for?" |
32946 | A streak of fatalism, hey? |
32946 | A wise infant-- eh? |
32946 | Admirable-- eh?... |
32946 | Adventure-- romance? |
32946 | Affection? |
32946 | Afraid the''_ Klistian_''folk would see their bad brother outside? |
32946 | After staying away so long?... |
32946 | Ai n''t it''ell? |
32946 | Always, always it is known-- only where? |
32946 | Am I a village- dweller to need steps to my feet? |
32946 | An inheritance-- what? |
32946 | And after that what''s to be trusted?" |
32946 | And any''ow, what else could it be--''ey?" |
32946 | And here? |
32946 | And how could I believe''em?" |
32946 | And how do you think you can privent?" |
32946 | And in the meantime, what? |
32946 | And in truth what was hindering him? |
32946 | And proud? |
32946 | And that''s a mighty healthy thing for you, my boy, d''y''see? |
32946 | And the plaint began again, monotonous, muffled:"Whaur''s that pipe o''mine?"... |
32946 | And then--"Whaur''s that pipe?" |
32946 | And us? |
32946 | And was he rich? |
32946 | And what are you going to do about it?" |
32946 | And what are you now-- that''s been out in the night--?" |
32946 | And what do you sink? |
32946 | And what else is to come, thinkest thou?" |
32946 | And what for, do you think? |
32946 | And what''s the reason? |
32946 | And where was the_ Witch of Dundee_ now, and where all the hearty men which sailed with her? |
32946 | And who so surprised as Captain Wetherbee, that hardworking man? |
32946 | And who to blame?... |
32946 | And with whom? |
32946 | And you, Bibi- Ri-- you grin in that sickly fashion? |
32946 | And zen--?" |
32946 | Are you coming, old 50 per cent? |
32946 | Are you subject to measles, dropsy, pyromania, or falling arch?" |
32946 | As for scare-- what d''y''suppose he must ha''seen to scare him so?" |
32946 | Aye, there''s a catch to snap it home.... And where is that catch? |
32946 | Be quiet-- comprendo so much? |
32946 | Because you prefer the excuse of a coward to that of a traitor-- Monsieur-- is that it?" |
32946 | Behind the beauty and wonder of it, beyond those bright shores and the first low foot- hills of the range-- what? |
32946 | Boy, you smoke wallah, whaur''s that pipe?" |
32946 | But I have a certain deftness of my fingers and perhaps also-- well, a certain polish-- what?... |
32946 | But I''m asking-- did you take it away from those two cutthroats alone, without any help?" |
32946 | But are n''t you forgetting this witness?" |
32946 | But at Thursday he was almost an institution...."''I m? |
32946 | But could I get it? |
32946 | But how does he manage to call for''em? |
32946 | But how of Robert Matcham? |
32946 | But in the meanwhile--""Have you paid the Government tax?" |
32946 | But inquire only this: Did they slay him? |
32946 | But it''s all right now, ai n''t it? |
32946 | But straightway: instead: what did you do?... |
32946 | But suppose I do it?" |
32946 | But suppose, now-- suppose that light were moved, either way?" |
32946 | But then, you''re one of these independent lads, ai n''t you? |
32946 | But these stains of the trade-- what do they matter? |
32946 | But to- night-- what? |
32946 | But what I dinna just ken is this: are ye a''thegither past the reach o''good words for remedy? |
32946 | But what can we do? |
32946 | But what kind of a Buddhist was he, giving himself to the frozen Buddhist hell by taking a life?" |
32946 | But what of that? |
32946 | But what of that? |
32946 | But what would you? |
32946 | But who opened that prospect? |
32946 | By way of a text-- Brother Seldom-- and a point of departure: did you ever hear of the_ Volga_? |
32946 | Ca n''t I read your soul? |
32946 | Ca n''t you look what''s come of''em? |
32946 | Can he talk anything human, at least?" |
32946 | Can this be an omen?" |
32946 | Can you answer for their trade up and down and about-- transporting commodities to supply the gangs?" |
32946 | Can you picture to yourself the home- coming at that menage after a day''s honest labor? |
32946 | Can you prove it? |
32946 | Come now-- what do you want?" |
32946 | Come now; are you going to turn me loose on my own or will you steer me up to the local tropic drink, at least?" |
32946 | Could anybody win on that percentage without dissipating? |
32946 | Could anything be more just and reasonable?" |
32946 | Could n''t we make him, just as they did with the Johnny here?" |
32946 | Could_ you_ see anything in that blind- like look sideways-- and hair so smooth over the ear? |
32946 | D''y''hear?" |
32946 | D''y''mind that, before I screw the thumbs off you to make you talk?" |
32946 | D''you know I had to take what was left of my pants to patch up the wicks that night?" |
32946 | D''you suppose they were at it when the niggers jumped''em?" |
32946 | D''you think I could n''t smell it out? |
32946 | Dead?... |
32946 | Did I tell you he called himself a Pole? |
32946 | Did I tell you he was a fine, big man? |
32946 | Did I tell you he''s settled the difficulty with Jeremiah''s Loo offhand? |
32946 | Did I?" |
32946 | Did n''t you just say you found him again?" |
32946 | Did n''t you pass up the swim?" |
32946 | Did they give him his deserts?... |
32946 | Did you ever happen to hear yourself, chief?" |
32946 | Did you feel so?... |
32946 | Did you find zem again?" |
32946 | Did you go to Palembang?" |
32946 | Did you picture me sticking up the consignors as they walk aboard the plank and passing you your share in a little hand bag?" |
32946 | Do I look like a fall guy?... |
32946 | Do n''t I know your little methods? |
32946 | Do n''t I_ know_? |
32946 | Do you change vice to virtue by transporting it half a world away and bottling it up? |
32946 | Do you get that?" |
32946 | Do you imagine he would be balked of that? |
32946 | Do you know if you had n''t come to- night in answer to my message I would have had you haled by the leg?... |
32946 | Do you know that the ship could have missed us? |
32946 | Do you know what level eyebrows and a fullish underlip mean-- hey? |
32946 | Do you mean a convent?" |
32946 | Do you note the scars on his poor ribs? |
32946 | Do you remember that cry of his when he spoke of his coming release? |
32946 | Do you remember when I began I said I had evened the score against M. de Nou? |
32946 | Do you remember, Hokoolele? |
32946 | Do you see a fool, a weakling or an imbecile? |
32946 | Do you see him-- by Joe!--do you see him twistin''and writhin''and fightin''for his life in there--_with one good arm_?" |
32946 | Do you see my cat? |
32946 | Do you sneeze, palpitate, or feel pain in sinciput or occiput, tibia, diaphragm or appendix? |
32946 | Do you suppose I would n''t go to the municipal library and see? |
32946 | Do you suppose we want the port closed to us for shipping monarchist suspects? |
32946 | Do you understand?" |
32946 | Do you watch them?" |
32946 | Do you? |
32946 | Does he go about cropping heads, for example, like a man in a flower garden? |
32946 | Does he joke about that?" |
32946 | Dumail, will you believe this? |
32946 | Eh-- what?" |
32946 | Evened it for always until that fiend shall be dragged to the nethermost level of hell and earn his reward? |
32946 | Evened it the only way it could be evened on this side of the grave?... |
32946 | Ever hear of the_ Quetta_ or the_ Mecca_; or a dozen of other ships lost one time or another between here and Cape Flattery? |
32946 | Fight it out with me-- what? |
32946 | For casting about, perplexed as I was, of a sudden I recognized-- can you guess? |
32946 | For the church--?" |
32946 | For who am I to chase any maid so unwilling? |
32946 | Friendship? |
32946 | From Ile de Nou?... |
32946 | Fry here in the sacred heat with our tongues hanging out while you deal us drop by drop-- hein?" |
32946 | Go fish? |
32946 | Had any seen such a wonder? |
32946 | Had he anything or any need to forget? |
32946 | Had he fallen enamored of the sphinx, and had she drawn the veil for him? |
32946 | Had he forgotten? |
32946 | Had he had a glimpse into the meaning of Papua that struck fire to his roving and restless soul? |
32946 | Had she been thinking of anything else these past feverish weeks? |
32946 | Had she not? |
32946 | Haf you been to look?" |
32946 | Has he no feeling?" |
32946 | Have I fooled you at last?" |
32946 | Have I got to drynurse every glorified pup of a globe- trotter that takes a sanctified notion to soak hisself?" |
32946 | Have n''t I_ reason_ to know? |
32946 | Have you boils, fever, gangrene, distemper? |
32946 | Have you ever thought of the question in that light? |
32946 | Have you had yours yet?" |
32946 | Have you some stain on your prison record?" |
32946 | He come after drink, and you know what he brings along with him-- to buy off me? |
32946 | He comes begging-- doesn''t he? |
32946 | He shipped as a sort of supercargo-- didn''t he, Cap''n Bartlet?" |
32946 | He thinks of everything, does he? |
32946 | He wakes up-- wouldn''t he think the whole mess had been a dream?... |
32946 | He wanted ze heads for souvenirs, you see?" |
32946 | He was n''t commanding the_ Timothy S._?" |
32946 | Hell-- what kind of an adversary do you call yourself? |
32946 | Here''s the place ready marked, d''y''see?" |
32946 | Here? |
32946 | Here?" |
32946 | Him? |
32946 | His home island lay across Bougainville Strait, the stretch of water just beyond...."Balbi over there?" |
32946 | How else account for the populations that live by the sale and the manufacture of assorted relics? |
32946 | How is your sacred ambition now? |
32946 | How many months is it since you saw another white woman here in Wailoa, for instance? |
32946 | How the devil am I-- are we-- to nab''em? |
32946 | How will you like that? |
32946 | How, then, explain the loving devotion lavished upon Christopher Alexander Pellett by Karaki, the company boat boy? |
32946 | Hya, you fella boy-- that fella boat all ready? |
32946 | I believe you must know my daughter-- Matilda?" |
32946 | I could never look to marry outside-- could I?... |
32946 | I echoed that glorious old word:"A doubloon?" |
32946 | I figgered he''d be slid quite neat into the shore boat waiting below, d''y''see? |
32946 | I got the tip from the very book I gammoned him with, from the very passage he must have marked himself at random-- d''y''see? |
32946 | I remembered the quaint phrase of the chronicle:"Great fighting pilot of Spain"--pilot? |
32946 | I said to myself-- where''s the use of being strangers, hey? |
32946 | I say-- we''ve been less than just to Captain Gregson, do n''t you think? |
32946 | I take it you mean such deviltry as grows where foreigners have rotted a native country?" |
32946 | I told you my sister knew all the story of''the wickedest man''? |
32946 | I will stop back in a month to see if zis iss z''truth?" |
32946 | I''ll do a bit of instructing myself, d''y''see?... |
32946 | I''ve got the price and, believe me, chief, I''ve got the appetite.... What port is this?" |
32946 | I-- I did n''t care to disturb him--""How''s that?" |
32946 | In a set trial of fitness, of wits, of resource, is he to win? |
32946 | In truth? |
32946 | In zat case a crocodile may not like your flavior, you zink? |
32946 | In''ell? |
32946 | Inspector, I''m not a fanciful man, would you say? |
32946 | Is it believable, after my stay of a month, I have yet to meet the famous wine of the name on its native heath?" |
32946 | Is that right?" |
32946 | Is there any manhood to you? |
32946 | Is there anything-- you know-- anything specially worth seeing hereabouts?" |
32946 | Is this all you have to offer?" |
32946 | It has n''t been delivered, has it? |
32946 | It was here, under my hand...."Where did you get this?" |
32946 | Just because you expect to cash your millions and swim in champagne at last?... |
32946 | La Foa?" |
32946 | Laddie, do ye never tak thocht for your immortal speerit, which canna hide under lasceevious trickeries nor yet cover its waeful''nakedness? |
32946 | Life in a gondola, do you see? |
32946 | Longchamp, Enghien, Monte Carlo-- you follow my course? |
32946 | Look at these slits-- would you?" |
32946 | Look here-- d''y''know a diver''s outfit? |
32946 | Maybe he iss just come to a finish, you know?" |
32946 | Maybe you''re not so chipper now, my boy-- hein? |
32946 | Me one big fella friend''long you: savee? |
32946 | Merry resumed breathing with a conscious effort and loosed his clutch of the balcony rail...."What-- was that?" |
32946 | Monsieur agrees? |
32946 | My dear fallow, do you sink you are in Calcutta or Kowloon? |
32946 | My word-- is that a friend of yours?" |
32946 | No?... |
32946 | Not back yet, d''y''say? |
32946 | Not one little minute too soon did you show z''light? |
32946 | Not so easily-- eh? |
32946 | Now do n''t you think you still have need of us? |
32946 | Now where is the good of that? |
32946 | Now why? |
32946 | Now will you try to throw us over? |
32946 | Or any mouth? |
32946 | Or books--?" |
32946 | Our hearts stood still...."Whaur''s that blisterin''pipe?" |
32946 | Passige? |
32946 | Pilot? |
32946 | Pilot? |
32946 | Plenty bold, bad fella you-- hey?" |
32946 | Puttin''aside the false glitter, could ever ye cast the beam from yer eye an''listen how hell gapes for ye?" |
32946 | Quite a gap to bridge-- what?... |
32946 | Regeneration, eh? |
32946 | Rigolo-- what?" |
32946 | Robert Matcham, the descendant of uncounted Robert Matchams-- d''ye see? |
32946 | Since when has this front room been free to any greasy lascar that comes along?" |
32946 | So you are a natural''istory? |
32946 | Tell me, how does a lad like you or me set about getting away from Madeira?" |
32946 | Tell me-- from the day you discovered your heritage have you ever been back to persuade her?" |
32946 | That path-- pretty tough on a chap who''s used-- ship''s deck as much as I have, d''y''see? |
32946 | That''s a mean sort of place, do n''t you think?... |
32946 | The black? |
32946 | The captain-- don''t you know?" |
32946 | The executioner''s assistant?... |
32946 | The executioner? |
32946 | The gambler answered with a negligence that struck me in my condition of mind like an affront:"Well, the lad''s of no importance-- don''t you see? |
32946 | The one word they had for us alike?" |
32946 | The runner who brought word is not quite sure, but he thinks--""Eh?" |
32946 | The trader?" |
32946 | Then what?" |
32946 | Then where''s your sanguinary prestige gone?" |
32946 | Then you can wager it was so, my boy.... And at that time did you or did you not strike a solemn bargain with me?" |
32946 | They made him think he was a duke or something, d''y''see? |
32946 | They must be: why else should the sphinx smile?... |
32946 | Thomas? |
32946 | To decamp with the prize I taught you to use: and pay nothing for it?" |
32946 | To run away from your chief witness?... |
32946 | To what end, hey? |
32946 | To- day I also went to St. Gregory''s: do you hear? |
32946 | Understood?" |
32946 | Until the depositions are made, at least?... |
32946 | Verily, no man shall escape it: do you mark? |
32946 | Was he dreaming even then of empire? |
32946 | Was he the discoverer of this wonderful virgin shell bed they were going to strip?" |
32946 | Was it possible, in spite of all assurance, was it possible that he knew, had heard or guessed-- about Motauri? |
32946 | Was it there-- is it possible it was there you found the coin?" |
32946 | Was n''t I here? |
32946 | Was there or was there not the beginning of a twinkle in the gray depths? |
32946 | We proceeded along the rua to the sign of the Elder- Dempsters...."To ship?" |
32946 | Well, here it is: Why ca n''t we strike out these seven weeks and three days from his memory-- as if they never had been? |
32946 | Well, what''s that to me? |
32946 | What am I going to do?" |
32946 | What are y''doin''here?" |
32946 | What are you up to, hey? |
32946 | What can he make to you? |
32946 | What chance for a secret?" |
32946 | What could it profit thee? |
32946 | What did I say? |
32946 | What did I tell you? |
32946 | What did it mean? |
32946 | What did you bring that man here for?" |
32946 | What do you suppose he must have been tasting at this crisis? |
32946 | What do you think of that? |
32946 | What does he dream of there? |
32946 | What does it make to you? |
32946 | What else was there to do? |
32946 | What for?" |
32946 | What for?" |
32946 | What game has he started now? |
32946 | What happened to him? |
32946 | What has the trader to do with you?" |
32946 | What have you done? |
32946 | What have you got to do with heaven? |
32946 | What if they have counted it good riddance to let you rot here? |
32946 | What in Hull t''Halifax is the boy talkin''about?" |
32946 | What is a steamship agent?... |
32946 | What is it?" |
32946 | What is that for, comrade?" |
32946 | What kind of a social formula have you left for the second generation, reared in an out- door jail? |
32946 | What next?" |
32946 | What other exile could have taught any secrets of monotony or dreariness to the daughter of a lone missionary? |
32946 | What other?" |
32946 | What pidgin belong you? |
32946 | What shall we do with him?" |
32946 | What then? |
32946 | What were you going to do about it?" |
32946 | What will you have, Martini Angostura de Souse?" |
32946 | What you zink, my gar?" |
32946 | What''d he have to say?" |
32946 | What''s a matter of three thousand years? |
32946 | What''s it about? |
32946 | What''s it damn well for? |
32946 | What''s up now?" |
32946 | What''s your famous Albro like?" |
32946 | What? |
32946 | What? |
32946 | What? |
32946 | What? |
32946 | What? |
32946 | What? |
32946 | What?" |
32946 | What?" |
32946 | Whatever you''re holdin''back you_ show_--savee? |
32946 | Whaur''s that pipe? |
32946 | When I peeped through the window and you were afraid the folk would see me? |
32946 | Where are you?" |
32946 | Where did you get the courage to try that?" |
32946 | Where do you draw the line? |
32946 | Where else should they take Robert Matcham, whose five centuries looked down on him this night? |
32946 | Where else? |
32946 | Where is he?" |
32946 | Where is that treasure now?" |
32946 | Where is that water?" |
32946 | Where you hail from, anyway?" |
32946 | Where''s your friend Albro?" |
32946 | Who but I? |
32946 | Who but he had seen her die? |
32946 | Who could plumb such a depth? |
32946 | Who deciphered the miniature? |
32946 | Who did that?" |
32946 | Who knows?.... |
32946 | Who shall deny that he does the Lord''s work toward unifying the island type?" |
32946 | Who shall say? |
32946 | Who sold it you? |
32946 | Whose-- my head?" |
32946 | Why again should it be eastward? |
32946 | Why ai n''t he here?" |
32946 | Why did you keep on playing out the farce?" |
32946 | Why iss zis?" |
32946 | Why not, hey--?" |
32946 | Why should he? |
32946 | Why, in that case-- I could read to you,"he cried--"couldn''t I? |
32946 | Why-- what kind of a man are you? |
32946 | Why? |
32946 | Why?--?" |
32946 | Why[ do?] |
32946 | Will you have beer or wheesky- sod''?" |
32946 | Will you wake at least before I smash your ribs? |
32946 | With an entirely friendly purpose?" |
32946 | Wonderful what? |
32946 | Would n''t he? |
32946 | Would you mind putting it out of sight?" |
32946 | Yes, and I feel the need of the church myself, and a chance to visit a fine respectable home like this.... Why should n''t I have it?" |
32946 | Yes? |
32946 | You dare to make me ridicule like that? |
32946 | You did?" |
32946 | You have heard that he used to live with a native girl on Napuka?" |
32946 | You hear that-- you others?... |
32946 | You heard him? |
32946 | You know so much? |
32946 | You know?... |
32946 | You like''m rum? |
32946 | You must have read his clever bits in the"Bulletin"--those little running paragraphs that snap and fume like a pack of Chinese crackers? |
32946 | You not know that divine_ ballerina_, that dancer so sublime, that singer so sweet?" |
32946 | You one big fella friend''long me: savee? |
32946 | You recollect? |
32946 | You savee?" |
32946 | You say he is a man? |
32946 | You say sleight o''hand is your line? |
32946 | You say you saw me there? |
32946 | You say you''ve had no luck? |
32946 | You see, sir, you''re pretty far East--""Too far for a''sailor''s rest''?" |
32946 | You see? |
32946 | You see?" |
32946 | You see?... |
32946 | You take yourself for a walk by the beach and, very first thing-- what? |
32946 | You think to employ your sneaking pickpocket tricks on me? |
32946 | You too much fright''long that fella stuff you steal? |
32946 | You wish--? |
32946 | You would n''t blame him for wanting to get out of this trap, would you? |
32946 | You''d hardly believe that now, would you--?" |
32946 | Your bridal trip should carry her away to France.... Are these your words?" |
32946 | Zelie? |
32946 | _ Pedro, my glasses!_ Is it a Castle Liner you arrive by, mos''honorable? |
32946 | _ Were_ you scared?" |
32946 | continued Bendemeer:"Why should you trouble about dollars-- mere tokens? |
32946 | he asked, and added quickly:"Did he go ashore?" |
32946 | he would yell, meaning why the devil do n''t you trim your wicks? |
32946 | people always lie about niggers? |
49435 | Do you know why I like you better than the others? |
49435 | Then what am I still searching for? 49435 We must not go in search of one another, but we must all seek God.... You say:''Together it is easier.''--What? |
49435 | Where are you, Pain? 49435 Where shall I go to be safe?" |
49435 | [ 10] Perhaps; but to what point was this isolated faith able to assure Tolstoy of happiness? 49435 [ 10] Who can fail to understand the influence, in the shaping of Tolstoy, of all these humble souls? |
49435 | [ 12] Had he still doubts-- he, so full of faith? 49435 [ 14] What time does he choose, this seer and prophet, for his announcement of the new era of love and happiness? |
49435 | [ 14] Which of us would not endorse these generous words? 49435 [ 20] Why did he not realise this agreement? |
49435 | [ 7] This appeal of a voice of supplication, which still has hope-- will it not be heard? 49435 [ 9] How many have found themselves together under the ray which falls from the dome? |
49435 | (_ Confessions._)[ 16]"''You are always talking of energy? |
49435 | (_ What shall we do?_) In the same book Tolstoy gives us a portrait of Sutayev, and records a conversation with him. |
49435 | (_ What shall we do?_)[ 2] Tolstoy has many times expressed his antipathy for the"ascetics, who live for themselves only, apart from their fellows." |
49435 | (_ What shall we do?_)[ 7] For that matter, he wished to leave before the end of the first act. |
49435 | (_ What shall we do?_)[ 8] The peasant- revolutionist Bondarev would have had this law recognised as a universal obligation. |
49435 | And love itself: how was he to behave with regard to love? |
49435 | And who can fail to see that Tolstoy''s conception is fundamentally fruitful and vital, in spite of its Utopianism and a touch of puerility? |
49435 | Are we to take no account of this, and plunge them implacably into the truth that kills them? |
49435 | As early as April, 1879, he wrote to Fet:"_ The Decembrists_? |
49435 | As if our coteries could be the measure of a genius? |
49435 | Beside this superhuman sensation, what were his losses at play and his word of honour?... |
49435 | But how become a part of the people and share its faith? |
49435 | But how could he? |
49435 | But in what God? |
49435 | But in what? |
49435 | But what need to think at all? |
49435 | But when, then, will they begin to live? |
49435 | But why waste time in speaking of that which he can not understand? |
49435 | Critics have not sufficiently remarked the moving appeal to women which terminates_ What shall we do?_ Tolstoy had no sympathy for modern feminism. |
49435 | Did Tolstoy still condemn them? |
49435 | Did he not modify his opinion of revolutionaries? |
49435 | Does Tolstoy believe in the divinity of Christ? |
49435 | Does it not profess to be founded upon some sort of economic science, whose laws absolutely rule the progress of the world? |
49435 | Does this mean the abdication of the Russian people? |
49435 | Had he done wrong to speak? |
49435 | He recalls their days of honest labour, healthy and fatiguing...."''It is beautiful,''he murmurs.... Why am I not one of these? |
49435 | Here.... Well, you have only to persist.--And Death, where is Death? |
49435 | His logic was heroic:"I am always astonished by these words, so often repeated:''Yes, it is well enough in theory, but how would it be in practice?'' |
49435 | Ho-- o-- o? |
49435 | How distinguish between its many aspects, its contradictory orders? |
49435 | How is a man to oppose this army of evil? |
49435 | How is it they are able, here, to retain their feelings of hostility and vengeance, and the lust of destroying their fellows? |
49435 | How then should the object of labour be an object of suffering for the labourer? |
49435 | I felt the desire of something very great, very beautiful.... What? |
49435 | If I know the road to my house, and if I stagger along it like a drunken man, does that show that the road is bad? |
49435 | If so, when is the expression of evil to be avoided? |
49435 | In what quality does he invoke him? |
49435 | In_ What shall we do?_ he did not as yet dare to lay hands on Beethoven or on Shakespeare. |
49435 | Is it enough, then, to be acquainted with those formulæ of wisdom recorded in the volume of religion? |
49435 | Is there not above all a truth which, as Tolstoy says,"is open to love"? |
49435 | It is higher than art: for who, in reading it, thinks of literature? |
49435 | Let us see if she is going to reach that B?... |
49435 | Need we say that he rejected one and all? |
49435 | Now you have faith: why then are you so unhappy?" |
49435 | Or is the artist to soothe mankind with consoling lies, as Peer Gynt, with his tales, soothes his old dying mother? |
49435 | Setting aside his literary studies, what could he well know of contemporary art? |
49435 | Shall I ask of what party Shakespeare was, or Dante, before I breathe the atmosphere of his magic or steep myself in its light? |
49435 | The word of the humble peasant, whose heart was his only guide, had led him back to God.... To what God? |
49435 | Then what is the visible life, our individual existence? |
49435 | Was he not capable of sacrificing his affections to his God? |
49435 | Was he not strong enough? |
49435 | Was love of family, to come first, or love of all humanity? |
49435 | Were they lasting, this peace and joy that he then boasted of possessing? |
49435 | What do they know of the people? |
49435 | What does Tolstoy complain of in Beethoven? |
49435 | What does it mean? |
49435 | What does it signify to him that he should sacrifice himself to the future-- and that nothing of his work should remain? |
49435 | What is it to me if Tolstoy is or is not of my party? |
49435 | What is the artistic significance of the religious ideal which he proposes? |
49435 | What is the worth of judgments upon a world which is closed to the judge? |
49435 | What is there perverse in all this? |
49435 | What was the solution? |
49435 | What was this faith which knew nothing of reason? |
49435 | When is the expression of goodness to be imitated? |
49435 | Where does not good co- exist with evil? |
49435 | Where shall He be found? |
49435 | Who are the People? |
49435 | Who can even say that his faith in non- resistance to evil was not at length a little shaken? |
49435 | Who is the malefactor and who is the hero? |
49435 | Who knows? |
49435 | Who was brave, and whom did he love? |
49435 | Who will define them for me-- liberty, despotism, civilisation, barbarism? |
49435 | Why must Russia play the part of the chosen people? |
49435 | Why? |
49435 | Would that be life?" |
49435 | Yet who more than Tolstoy distrusts"abstract love"? |
49435 | [ 12] What, then, does he really intend? |
49435 | [ 17] How then could he constrain her, not believing, to modify her life, to sacrifice her fortune and that of her children? |
49435 | [ 1]_ What shall we do?_ p. 378- 9. |
49435 | [ 3] A daguerreotype of 1885, reproduced in_ What shall we do?_ in the complete French edition. |
49435 | [ 4]_ What shall we do?_[ 5] All the first part of the book( the first fifteen chapters). |
49435 | [ 7] These are the last lines of_ What shall we do?_ They are dated the 14th of February, 1886. |
49435 | [ 8]_ By what do Men live?_( 1881);_ The Three Old Men_( 1884);_ The Godchild_( 1886). |
49435 | [ 9] This tale bears the sub- title,_ Does a Man need much Soil?_( 1886). |
49435 | _ What is Art?_ appeared in 1897- 98; but Tolstoy had been pondering the matter for more than fourteen years. |
49435 | _ What shall we do?_( 1884- 86) is the expression of this second crisis; a crisis far more tragic than the first, and far richer in consequences. |
49435 | he was saying to himself;"it was not like this when I was running by and shouting.... How was it I did not notice it before, this illimitable depth? |
49435 | was such a thing possible? |
5425 | Ah, what man can tell The shapeless fancies that unwelcome dwell Within thy brain, the spectres, dark and wild That haunt the spirit of a child? |
5425 | And can you find a way Where They will not come after? |
5425 | But who is this so broken with distress That steals like mist into my loneliness? |
5425 | Clear notes like water falling in a well, Can you not hear?" |
5425 | Come, I will take your hand,--this little glade Of stunted trees,--do you remember that? |
5425 | Did I call you, little Vigilant One, under the waning sun? |
5425 | Did you come barefooted through the dew, Through the fine dew- drenched grass when the colours faded Out of the sky? |
5425 | Hark, do you hear it wailing against the hollow rocks of the hill, As it takes its lonely outgoing towards the sea? |
5425 | He stoops and drinks; a moment the cool bell Pauses its ringing in the well: A mist flies up against the dawn; the young winds weep; Is it too late? |
5425 | Mayhap thou weepest for the embattled lands, The bloody ruin of decaying realms That a war overwhelms And buries deep in the dust of history? |
5425 | O Someone fled From an April tryst, Were your lips fed In the Eucharist? |
5425 | PARIS, 1919 IV- A LETTER Dear boy, what can this stranger mean to you, Blown to your country by unbridled chance? |
5425 | Paris, 1919 IV You seek to hurt me, foolish child, and why? |
5425 | Paris, 1919 XII Bring hemlock, black as Cretan cheese, And mix a sacramental brew; A worthy drink for Socrates, Why not for you? |
5425 | The lowering imminence-- the bloody eyed? |
5425 | The time of play has been, of wisdom, is; Yet who can say which is the truly wise? |
5425 | Think you that I forget One syllable of all your loveliness? |
5425 | This I remember, standing by the sea, But where was that dark land, and who were we? |
5425 | Was the eucharist so sweet? |
5425 | Were they right, Piero di Cosimo? |
5425 | What have I done to hurt you? |
5425 | What is this crime that shall not be forgiven? |
5425 | What is thy sorrow? |
5425 | When have I sinned against you? |
5425 | Whence did she sail? |
5425 | Where are the stars? |
5425 | Where is the nightmare now? |
5425 | Who art thou, haunting boy, nocturnal elf? |
5425 | Who is that shadow holding over you a veil of tempest woven, Shaded with streaks of cloud and lightning on the edges? |
5425 | Who stands behind you so impassively? |
5425 | Who was he? |
5425 | Why art thou weeping there, disconsolate child? |
5425 | happy, elusive One? |
5425 | or Death? |
5425 | or forsaken Our secret vow? |
5425 | surely no comrade of the dawn, No lover from an earthly town, Was he then Love? |
5425 | the angry- browed? |
5425 | was the vinegar and bile So bitter? |
46063 | Am I now free? |
46063 | Art thou Siegmund? |
46063 | But at the cost of love? |
46063 | But should suspense permit the foe to cry,''Behold they tremble!--haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die''? 46063 But who will guide us?" |
46063 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
46063 | Dost thou come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold thee after such perils past? |
46063 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for thee worthy of thy praise? |
46063 | Know ye the weight of my hammer''s blow? |
46063 | Knowest thou what''tis to me? 46063 Milk the ewe that thou hast; why pursue the thing that shuns thee? |
46063 | O, Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
46063 | Oh, Cyclops, Cyclops, whither are thy wits wandering? 46063 The Ring?" |
46063 | The world''s wealth,he mutters;"might I win that by the spell of the gold? |
46063 | Then takest thou from Siegmund thy shield? |
46063 | Thy name and fortune? |
46063 | What is it, ye sleek ones, That there doth gleam and glow? 46063 What meaneth the name, then?" |
46063 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
46063 | What seek ye here? |
46063 | What woman warneth me thus? |
46063 | What''s he whose arms lie scattered on the plain? 46063 What, then, aileth the immortals?" |
46063 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Balder?" |
46063 | Who pursues thee? |
46063 | Who was it,she asks,"that brought him his conquering sword? |
46063 | Why do you refuse me water? |
46063 | [ 374] Has he never heard of the Rhine- gold? 46063 ''Comfort my heart, mayhap, with the loyal love of my husband?'' 46063 ''Haste to the Gnossian hills?'' 46063 ),_ 34, 83_; The Cuckow and Nightingale, or Boke of Cupid(? 46063 ),_ 38_( 1); The Romaunt of the Rose(? 46063 ***** Lovely world, where art thou? 46063 ***** Oh, whence has silence stolen on all things here, Where every sight makes music to the eye? 46063 =_ Poems._= Chaucer, The Cuckow and Nightingale, or Boke of Cupid(? 46063 A voice followed her,Why flyest thou, Arethusa? |
46063 | Again-- thou hearest? |
46063 | And Hermod gazed into the night, and said:"Who is it utters through the dark his hest So quickly, and will wait for no reply? |
46063 | And all who saw them trembled, And pale grew every cheek; And Aulus the Dictator Scarce gathered voice to speak:"Say by what name men call you? |
46063 | And before my time If I shall die, I reckon this a gain; For whoso lives, as I, in many woes, How can it be but he shall gain by death? |
46063 | And shall I let thee go into such danger alone? |
46063 | And were they ever believed? |
46063 | And wherefore ride ye in such guise Before the ranks of Rome?" |
46063 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
46063 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
46063 | Because he wears his years so lightly must he seem to thee ever to be a child? |
46063 | Both are goddesses of the moon(? |
46063 | But Brünnhilde? |
46063 | But what are the characteristics of the mental state of our contemporary savages? |
46063 | But what has become of my glove?" |
46063 | But why this mortal guise, Wooing as if he were a milk- faced boy? |
46063 | Chaucer, Legende of Good Women, 208_ et seq._; Court of Love(? |
46063 | Couldst thou keep thy course while the sphere revolved beneath thee? |
46063 | Demeter(?) |
46063 | Deserv''d they death because thy grace appear''d In ever modest motion? |
46063 | Did I lack lovers? |
46063 | Did marigolds bright as these, gilding the mist, Drop from her maiden zone? |
46063 | Die Edda, 458_ n_ Lydgate, John, 1370(?)-1451(?). |
46063 | Dost thou again peruse, With hot cheeks and sear''d eyes, The too clear web, and thy dumb sister''s shame? |
46063 | Dost thou not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
46063 | Dost thou to- night behold, Here, through the moonlight on this English grass, The unfriendly palace in the Thracian wild? |
46063 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied:"Wouldst thou then, Nisus, refuse to share thy enterprise with me? |
46063 | For why, ah, overbold, didst thou follow the chase, and being so fair, why wert thou thus overhardy to fight with beasts?" |
46063 | Forlorn, what succor rely on? |
46063 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
46063 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
46063 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
46063 | He spake; and the fleet Hermod thus replied:--"Brother, what seats are these, what happier day? |
46063 | He was loath to surrender his sweetheart to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a heifer? |
46063 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixed his eyes on the virgin and said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
46063 | How dost thou fare on thy feet through the path of the sea beasts, nor fearest the sea? |
46063 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
46063 | How, then, did the senseless and cruel stories come into existence? |
46063 | I have done and I may not undo, I have given and I take not again; Art thou other than I, Allfather, wilt thou gather my glory in vain?" |
46063 | I, what were I, when these can nought avail? |
46063 | If strength might save them, could not Odin save, My father, and his pride, the warrior Thor, Vidar the silent, the impetuous Tyr? |
46063 | Knowest thou not that he is now of age? |
46063 | Max Müller derives Athene from the root_ ah_, which yields the Sanskrit Ahanâ and the Greek Daphne, the Dawn(?). |
46063 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
46063 | Might Hela perchance surrender Balder if Höder himself should take his place among the shades? |
46063 | NEREÏDS ON SEA BEASTS]"Whither bearest thou me, bull god? |
46063 | Never a pity entreat thy bosom for shelter?... |
46063 | Never, could never a plea forfend thy cruelly minded Counsel? |
46063 | Nisus said to his friend:"Dost thou perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
46063 | Of the wondrous star whose glory lightens the waves? |
46063 | On the authorship of the Younger Edda, 459 Johnston, T. C. Did the Ph[oe]nicians discover America? |
46063 | Or shall I offer to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
46063 | Or what pale promise make? |
46063 | Say, does the seed scorn earth and seek the sun? |
46063 | See Byron, Don Juan, 3, 86,"You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
46063 | Shall I trust Æneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
46063 | Shall it, then, be unavailing, All this toil for human culture? |
46063 | She brushes aside the plea of Wotan and his subterfuge,--who has ever heard that heroes can accomplish what the gods can not? |
46063 | She would have wept to see her father weep; But some God pitied her, and purple wings( What God''s were they?) |
46063 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Freyr exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
46063 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out:"What''s the matter? |
46063 | So having paus''d awhile, at last she said,"Who taught thee rhetoric to deceive a maid? |
46063 | Starting from his sleep, the old man cried out,"My daughters, would you kill your father?" |
46063 | THE THREE FATES From the painting by Michelangelo(?)] |
46063 | That I should die I knew( how should I not? |
46063 | That friend looked rough with fighting: had he strained Worst brute to breast was ever strangled yet? |
46063 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is it that in the morning goes on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
46063 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
46063 | The day will come, when fall shall Asgard''s towers, And Odin, and his sons, the seed of Heaven; But what were I, to save them in that hour? |
46063 | The death of= Creüsa=, also called Glauce, suggests that of Hercules( in the flaming sunset?). |
46063 | The deathless longings tamed, that I should seethe My soul in love like any shepherd girl? |
46063 | The gods pretend dismay:--he can make himself great; can he make himself small, likewise? |
46063 | Then Idas, humbly,--"After such argument what can I plead? |
46063 | Then one cried,"Lo now, Shall not the Arcadian shoot out lips at us, Saying all we were despoiled by this one girl?" |
46063 | Then, with a louder laugh, the hag replied:"Is Balder dead? |
46063 | There are certain questions that nearly every child and every savage asks: What is the world and what is man? |
46063 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
46063 | They seize Freia, and bear her away as pledge till that ransom be paid...."Alack, what aileth the gods?" |
46063 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
46063 | Through the cloud- rack, dark and trailing, Must they see above them sailing O''er life''s barren crags the vulture? |
46063 | Thus is it thou dost flout our vow, dost flout the Immortals,-- Carelessly homeward bearest, with baleful ballast of curses? |
46063 | True, I did boldly say they might compare Even with thyself in virgin purity: May not a mother in her pride repeat What every mortal said? |
46063 | Was my beauty dulled, The golden hair turned dross, the lithe limbs shrunk? |
46063 | Wert thou last kissed, Pale hyacinth, last seen, before his face? |
46063 | What art thou? |
46063 | What cared I for their dances and their feasts, Whose heart awaited an immortal doom? |
46063 | What chant, what wailing, move the Powers of Hell? |
46063 | What city is your home? |
46063 | What could the king of gods and men do? |
46063 | What drink is sweet to thee, what food shalt thou find from the deep? |
46063 | What else did the maker do? |
46063 | What favor have you to ask of us?" |
46063 | What folk inhabit?--cruel unto strangers, Or hospitable? |
46063 | What form is this of more than mortal height? |
46063 | What if I the fact confess? |
46063 | What is death, and what becomes of us after death? |
46063 | What king ruleth here? |
46063 | What other outcome can be expected when mere physical or brute force joins issue with the enlightened and embattled hosts of heaven? |
46063 | What romance would be left?--who can flatter or kiss trees? |
46063 | What should he do; how extricate the youth; or would it be better to die with him? |
46063 | What should he do?--go home to the palace or lie hid in the woods? |
46063 | When-- but can it be? |
46063 | Whence came the commodities of life? |
46063 | Where both deliberate, the love is slight: Who ever lov''d, that lov''d not at first sight? |
46063 | Who art thou, then, that here withstandest?" |
46063 | Who made them? |
46063 | Who of Thessalians, more than this man, loves The stranger? |
46063 | Who that now inhabits Greece? |
46063 | Why do we celebrate certain festivals, practice certain ceremonials, observe solemnities, and partake of sacraments, and bow to this or the other god? |
46063 | Why not confer upon them human and superhuman passions and powers? |
46063 | Why slay each other? |
46063 | Why wilt them ever scare me with thy tears, And make me tremble lest a saying learnt In days far- off, on that dark earth, be true? |
46063 | Why, then, should not the savage believe, of beings worthy of worship and fear and gratitude, all and more than all that is accredited to man? |
46063 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
46063 | Wouldst thou stay me? |
46063 | Yea, but where shall I turn? |
46063 | Yet hold me not forever in thine East: How can my nature longer mix with thine? |
46063 | Yet where is thy triumph? |
46063 | You will be free? |
46063 | [ 392] See T. C. Johnston''s Did the Ph[oe]nicians Discover America? |
46063 | and do ye come for tears? |
46063 | and what the first men? |
46063 | and whose shield is ordained to cover him in the fight?" |
46063 | and will ye stop your ears, In vain desire to do aught, And wish to live''mid cares and fears, Until the last fear makes you nought? |
46063 | art thou forever blind? |
46063 | become of mee? |
46063 | cries he,"free in sooth? |
46063 | has shee done this to thee? |
46063 | my soul''s far better part, Why with untimely sorrows heaves thy heart? |
46063 | p. 226, in text; Heracles in the eastern pediment of the Parthenon(? |
46063 | said Æneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
46063 | the cause? |
46063 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise, What was thy pity''s recompense? |
46063 | was then the rumor true that thou hadst perished? |
46063 | what desolate cavern? |
46063 | what land? |
46063 | what lioness whelped thee? |
46063 | whither go? |
46063 | who was the alien woman that I beheld in my sleep? |
46063 | within the heart of this great flight, Whose ivory arms hold up the golden lyre? |
46063 | Æneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
53887 | And how are the people going? 53887 What do you expect this Conference to give the Armenian people as their adequate reparation and just rights?" |
53887 | What was the meaning of all this? 53887 Where do you get your war news from?" |
53887 | ''How,''he had answered,''can I abandon the Christ whom I have preached for twenty- years?''" |
53887 | Besides, what is the object or the necessity of a"dividing zone"between the Turkish and Russian Armenians? |
53887 | But why, in Heaven''s name, is it not proclaimed to the world that the culprits may know and tremble and stay their hand? |
53887 | Could a more dreadful confession have been made in respect to the conduct and policy of any Christian Government? |
53887 | Could there be a better proof of intellectual rectitude and the sincerity of sentiment? |
53887 | Could there be a more crushing condemnation of the judgment of the statesmen responsible for that treaty in regard to the Turk? |
53887 | Do the Johanniter Knights, of whom the Kaiser is himself Grand Master, approve of these proceedings? |
53887 | Do they think that He who said"inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of these little ones, ye have done it unto Me"knows of any distinction of race? |
53887 | He replied:''Why, do n''t you understand, we do n''t want to have to repeat this thing again after a few years? |
53887 | How can I love a man who comes from a nation that has so recently killed my friends? |
53887 | How could it be otherwise? |
53887 | How is this fact to be explained? |
53887 | I spoke again to the captain:''Why are you taking such brutal measures to accomplish your aim? |
53887 | Is it because the victims are Armenians, mere Armenians so used to massacre, so long abandoned by Europe to the lust and pleasure of"the Gentle Turk"? |
53887 | Is it seriously claimed that the Turk has proved himself, under the test of war, superior in morals and chivalry to all the nations of Europe? |
53887 | Is sympathy won by tyranny, or loyalty bred by massacre? |
53887 | It''s hot down in the deserts of Arabia, and there is no water, and these people ca n''t stand a hot climate, do n''t you see?'' |
53887 | Surely we might have asked ourselves, What had we been doing all these years to fulfil those duties? |
53887 | The German officer confessed that what he had seen was horrible, more horrible than anything he had ever seen before;"but,"he added,"what could we do? |
53887 | Under these circumstances what better service could the Armenian render his religion than die for it? |
53887 | Were they also in the way of their military aims? |
53887 | What are these services? |
53887 | What can we do? |
53887 | What chance would the bravest people in the world have under such circumstances? |
53887 | What claim had the Turks upon the sympathy and support of their Armenian subjects? |
53887 | What has Turkish domination been to its subject races? |
53887 | What has become of the Armenians, one of the most virile and prolific races of the world living in a healthy country? |
53887 | What have Christian Germans to say to all this? |
53887 | Why? |
53887 | [ 12] He might treat General Townshend well; but how was he treating the thousands of Indians and Englishmen in his hands? |
505 | How came the diversity of language? |
505 | Were beasts of prey and venomous animals created before, or after, the fall of Adam? 505 What aroused the vengeance of Jehovah or of Allah to work these miracles of desolation?" |
505 | Whence these pillars of salt? |
505 | Which was the first language? |
505 | Why did the Creator not say,''Be fruitful and multiply,''to plants as well as to animals? 505 Why is this region thus blasted?" |
505 | Why were only beasts and birds brought before Adam to be named, and not fishes and marine animals? |
505 | ( Domine quo vadis? |
505 | Among the foremost of these questions were three:"Whence came language?" |
505 | Among the many questions he then raised and discussed may be mentioned such as these:"What caused the creation of the stars on the fourth day?" |
505 | And again, in an agony of supplication, he cries out:"Do we see the sword blazing over us? |
505 | And for what were the youth of Oxford led into such bottomless depths of disbelief as to any real existence of truth or any real foundation for it? |
505 | As we discussed one after another of the candidates, he suddenly said:"Who is to be your Professor of Moral Philosophy? |
505 | But DID he ever do it? |
505 | But verses quite as good appeared on the other side, one of them being as follows:"Is this, then, the great Colenso, Who all the bishops offends so? |
505 | For the account of the Dead Sea serpent"Tyrus,"etc., see La Grande Voyage de Hierusalem, Paris( 1517? |
505 | He also asked,"If the primeval language existed even up to the time of Moses, whence came the Egyptian language?" |
505 | He says:"My heart answered in the words of the prophet,''Shall a man speak lies in the name of the Lord?'' |
505 | He then asks,"Why should our age be so completely destitute of them?" |
505 | How can they have been redeemed by the Saviour?" |
505 | How can they trace back their origin to Noah''s ark? |
505 | How can we determine which of these opposite statements is the very truth till we know what motion is? |
505 | If it be urged that birds could reach America by flying and fishes by swimming, he asks,"What of the beasts which neither fly nor swim?" |
505 | If there are other planets, since God makes nothing in vain, they must be inhabited; but how can their inhabitants be descended from Adam? |
505 | In a medieval text- book, giving science the form of a dialogue, occur the following question and answer:"Why is the sun so red in the evening?" |
505 | Let it put us upon crying to God, that the judgment be diverted and not return upon us again so speedily.... Doth God threaten our very heavens? |
505 | Might not the Almighty himself be willing to employ the malice of these powers of the air against those who had offended him? |
505 | New epoch in chemistry begun by Boyle Attitude of the mob toward science Effect on science of the reaction following the French Revolution:{?} |
505 | On the first page of the introduction the author, after stating the two theories, asks,"Which is right?" |
505 | On the other hand, what had science done for religion? |
505 | On the other hand, what was gained by the warriors of science for religion? |
505 | St. Chrysostom says:"What can be more unreasonable than to sow without land, without rain, without ploughs? |
505 | The Dominican Father Caccini preached a sermon from the text,"Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?" |
505 | The belief was strongly held that the writers of the Bible were merely pens in the hand of God( Dei calami.{;?} |
505 | This being the case, who could care to waste time on the study of material things and give thought to the structure of the world? |
505 | W. E. Adams, article in the Lutheran Quarterly, April, 1879, on Evolution: Shall it be Atheistic? |
505 | What are comets? |
505 | What do they indicate? |
505 | What have we to do with their significance? |
505 | What matters it that the inculcation of high duty in the childhood of the world is embodied in such quaint stories as those of Jonah and Balaam? |
505 | What was his influence on religion? |
505 | Which is more consistent with a great religion, the cosmography of Cosmas or that of Isaac Newton? |
505 | Which presents a nobler field for religious thought, the diatribes of Lactantius or the calm statements of Humboldt? |
505 | Who does not see that great confusion would result from this motion?" |
505 | Who woulde likewise say that they have carried Tygers and Lyons? |
505 | Why study the old heavens and the old earth, when they were so soon to be replaced with something infinitely better? |
505 | Why, indeed, give a thought to it? |
505 | Why, then, should it be studied? |
505 | and who would wish to plant colonies of such creatures in new, desirable lands?" |
505 | and, thirdly,"DOES THAT STATUE STILL EXIST?" |
505 | or"Whence these blocks of granite?" |
505 | secondly,"WHERE was she thus transformed?" |
505 | that the crops and trees grow downward?... |
505 | that the rains and snow and hail fall upward toward the earth?... |
505 | what have you done with the Son of God?" |
505 | who would trust himself with them? |
505 | why do you stop and hold back, when you know that your strength is lost on Christ? |
45991 | A general alarm? |
45991 | Ah get de money an''de canoe as well? |
45991 | Ah,he said viciously,"I touched you there, eh?" |
45991 | Ahoy there,hailed the lieutenant through a megaphone,"who are you?" |
45991 | And what do you think, Frank? |
45991 | And what is that funny pot with a pipe on the top of it over there? |
45991 | And who may Black Bart be? |
45991 | And you told him--? |
45991 | Are they going to kill him? |
45991 | Are they more dangerous than alligators? |
45991 | Are they still here? |
45991 | Are we all ready, Harry? |
45991 | Are you all ready? |
45991 | Are you ready, Adams? |
45991 | As if I''d leave you,said Frank, indignantly,"ca n''t you run another foot, old boy?" |
45991 | But how did they trace us to Miami? |
45991 | But what can have happened to her? |
45991 | But why are you so anxious to keep us out? |
45991 | But you said your tribe was opposed to them? |
45991 | By jacklight? |
45991 | Can we do nothing? |
45991 | Can we make it? |
45991 | Can you handle your revolver, Harry? |
45991 | Certainly,said Lathrop,"what''s that got to do with it?" |
45991 | Comment, vee fight lek ze tiger- r- r n''c''est pas? |
45991 | Confound it, what''s that? |
45991 | Could you guide us to this place, Quatty? |
45991 | Did you come on this train? |
45991 | Did you think it was''nuffin''but a panfer''ten minutes ago? |
45991 | Disappeared? |
45991 | Do n''t you''uns see that they''uns is Black Bart''s friends? |
45991 | Do you think it''s Indians? |
45991 | Do you think that will be all right? |
45991 | Do you think that''s the boys snoring? |
45991 | Do you think they could have weathered the squall in her? |
45991 | Do you think they have the machine finished yet? |
45991 | Don''you see smoke ober dere? |
45991 | Driven out by the government? |
45991 | Dry- shod? |
45991 | From a tramp? |
45991 | Give me the story then, will you? |
45991 | Go back? |
45991 | Gone? |
45991 | Good gracious, was that an earthquake? |
45991 | Have you seen him before? |
45991 | He is a pretty sizeable reptile and that''s a fact,remarked Frank,"But what would you say to a serpent twenty feet long?" |
45991 | He''s not a beauty,remarked Harry in the same low tone;"what about him, Billy?" |
45991 | How about that, Quatty? |
45991 | How came you by this, master? |
45991 | How did he induce him to visit him? |
45991 | How did these men ever find their way to the interior? |
45991 | How did you get here? |
45991 | How do you know that there were two others? |
45991 | How do you make that out? |
45991 | How far is the river mouth from here? |
45991 | How on earth did you know that? |
45991 | How would you like to help us build the_ Golden Eagle II_? |
45991 | Hullo, there, my hearty,cried Ben Stubbs, for he was the vocalist, as his eyes took in the situation,"what''s all this?" |
45991 | I beg your pardon, Lathrop,apologized Frank,"wo n''t you come over to the house and sit down awhile?" |
45991 | I ca n''t guess,he said;"bought a farm?" |
45991 | I do n''t know,stammered Billy wiping his brow,"there does n''t seem to be anything doing, does there?" |
45991 | I do n''t think there''s much doubt of that, Ben,replied Frank,"the thing is how did they get here?" |
45991 | I say, Frank,whispered the young reporter,"have you noticed that fellow at the next table?" |
45991 | I say, look out where you are coming, ca n''t you? |
45991 | I suppose that the Walrus was some sort of a pirate ship? |
45991 | If I give you that Buddha will you unlock these stocks and these handcuffs before you go? |
45991 | If I would care to come? |
45991 | If only the boys were here we could make it in the canoes in a short time,sighed Billy,"but what are we to do? |
45991 | Is dat so, Massa Harry, fo''a fac''? |
45991 | Look here,exclaimed Frank,"what do you make of this?" |
45991 | Me? 45991 Now where''s de poles?" |
45991 | Oh, Billy, what are we going to do? |
45991 | Oh, Billy, what has happened? |
45991 | Oh, anywhere-- what''s the matter with Africa? |
45991 | Oh, by the way,asked Billy,"did you have any more manifestations from our dark- skinned friend on your way to New York?" |
45991 | Oh, is that so? |
45991 | Oh, so you''re afraid to let me see your aeroplane are you? 45991 Poles? |
45991 | Pretty good for a week''s work, eh? |
45991 | Remarkable? 45991 Run for it?" |
45991 | Say, Frank, could n''t you take me along? |
45991 | See that leg o''mutton? |
45991 | Sofkee? |
45991 | Some white men that came into the''glades? |
45991 | Supper? |
45991 | Suppose the_ Golden Eagle II_ is gone? |
45991 | Sure,replied the other unblushingly,"ai n''t it worth something to you''uns for we''uns to hev fetched it to you?" |
45991 | Ten thousand dollars? |
45991 | The islands round Cape Sable? |
45991 | The thing is now, how long will it take you to build this craft? |
45991 | Then Seminoles do n''t use nothing like this that ever I heard of.--What''s that? |
45991 | Then you are an officer? |
45991 | Then you think they secured guides from some other tribe? |
45991 | W- w- w- what,stuttered Quatty,"yo''goin''on, Marse Frank?" |
45991 | Was this all you found? |
45991 | We wo n''t let him know,said Frank with emphasis,"but how do we know that you will keep your word?" |
45991 | Well, Lathrop, what on earth are you doing here? |
45991 | Well, Pinckney? |
45991 | Well, Quatty, what do you think of it as far as you''ve gone? |
45991 | Well, is he to come? |
45991 | Well, what are you doing here, then? |
45991 | Well, what do you think of it? |
45991 | Well? |
45991 | Well? |
45991 | Well? |
45991 | Were you ever a moonshiner, Ben? |
45991 | What about the other side of the island? 45991 What are we making, Frank, do you estimate?" |
45991 | What are you going to do? |
45991 | What are you putting those on for? |
45991 | What are you squatting on the floor for? |
45991 | What are you thinking of, Frank, old boy? |
45991 | What are your plans? |
45991 | What are your plans? |
45991 | What can be the matter? |
45991 | What can it mean? |
45991 | What d''ye want y''ar, strangers? |
45991 | What did that there poor fellow that''s drownded say to you he done with Pork Chops? |
45991 | What did you say it was, Pork Chops, you inky pirate? |
45991 | What do you know about this, Quatty? |
45991 | What do you make of it, Ben? |
45991 | What do you mean? |
45991 | What do you mean? |
45991 | What do you mean? |
45991 | What do you propose to do now? |
45991 | What do you suppose he did with the money after he had sold the ruby for twelve thousand dollars? |
45991 | What do you suppose is the significance of it? |
45991 | What do you suppose it is, Frank? |
45991 | What if I should refuse to tell you? |
45991 | What if the two men had visited the sloop and scuttled her or destroyed the_ Golden Eagle II_? |
45991 | What if they should take it into their heads to attack us? |
45991 | What is it, Harry? |
45991 | What is it? |
45991 | What is it? |
45991 | What is the last trace you have of the plotters? |
45991 | What is your latitude and longitude? |
45991 | What on earth are you doing here? |
45991 | What on earth are you talking about, Billy? |
45991 | What on earth is it? |
45991 | What palaces have you ever seen? |
45991 | What were we to do? |
45991 | What were you doing up there in the woods while we were talking? |
45991 | What you all mean, Marse Lathrop, by saying dose unkindnesses''bout dis yar ship of mine? |
45991 | What''s that dangling at her stern, Bagsby? |
45991 | What''s the matter? |
45991 | What''s the matter? |
45991 | What''s the matter? |
45991 | What''s the matter? |
45991 | What''s the trouble? |
45991 | What''s this here buccaneer bein''a''doing of now? |
45991 | What? |
45991 | What? |
45991 | Whatever is that, Quatty? |
45991 | Where are these white men? |
45991 | Where could they get such a guide? |
45991 | Where do you coal her? |
45991 | Where was this yere communication found? |
45991 | Where? |
45991 | Who are you to be giving orders? |
45991 | Who are you? |
45991 | Who are you? |
45991 | Who do you suppose could have built it? |
45991 | Who do you suppose took it? |
45991 | Who ever heard of an owl that knocked about in the sunlight before? |
45991 | Who is that? |
45991 | Who''s there? |
45991 | Why do n''t you steal it from us; we ca n''t prevent you? |
45991 | Why do you wish to know? |
45991 | Why, Quatty, you''re not going to back out now, are you? |
45991 | Wid de greates''of ease,replied the negro, quite proud of the impression he had produced,"but what fo''yo wan''to go dere?" |
45991 | Will you accept the assignment? |
45991 | Wo n''t you stop and have lunch with me? |
45991 | Yes, but the two canoes that followed the one they put him in? |
45991 | Yes, but who are these people? |
45991 | Yes, but why did they carry off Pork Chops? |
45991 | Yes? |
45991 | You are leaving here to- night in canoes for the coast? |
45991 | You are the Boy Aviators we have all heard so much of? |
45991 | You mean to strike right back into the wilderness? |
45991 | You''re a rough fellow, my dear Scudder,another voice commented,"are you never in a softer mood?" |
45991 | At the same moment Pork Chops''yells awakened the others and Ben Stubbs roared out with stentorian lungs:"Ahoy, there aboard the sloop-- What''s up?" |
45991 | But were they going ahead? |
45991 | By the way,"he broke off suddenly,"where is good old Ben Stubbs?" |
45991 | Can you fellows keep a secret?" |
45991 | Can you understand us?" |
45991 | Different from old Camp Plateau in Nicaragua, eh?" |
45991 | Do n''t you think we might head them off without destroying the aerodrome? |
45991 | Do you know anything about it?" |
45991 | Even if they could weather the flames, could they get through such smoke alive? |
45991 | Good time plenty, how?" |
45991 | Hark, what is that they are shouting upstairs? |
45991 | Harry, where are you?" |
45991 | Has the wave struck her?" |
45991 | He resisted the temptation, however, and simply asked eagerly:"When do you start?" |
45991 | How much shall you require do you suppose?" |
45991 | How on earth can you--?" |
45991 | I wonder?" |
45991 | In this lonely untraveled spot who could it be? |
45991 | It flashed across his mind that the cloth covering the planes might catch and then? |
45991 | More for the sake of creating a diversion than anything else, Ben said:"Wonder what''s become of that floating pumpkin- seed the Squeegee?" |
45991 | Only once, however, he irrelevantly remarked:"Keelhaul that Pork Chops, where is he?" |
45991 | Or had the same mysterious forces that held the Boy Aviators captive wrecked their ship, too? |
45991 | Pork Chops?" |
45991 | Say,"he added suddenly,"could ye jes''wait a while till I paddle home an''say goo''-bye to my wife?" |
45991 | The question was,--had a poisonous reptile bitten him? |
45991 | They remained silently gazing before them for several minutes-- it was Ben who broke the silence:"What about the_ Carrier Dove_? |
45991 | Time and again Harry, whose voice was growing momentarily fainter, had murmured to Frank:"You do n''t think he will fail us, Frank?" |
45991 | Upsetting me overboard and trying to drown me, eh? |
45991 | Was it the end? |
45991 | Was the expedition well advised? |
45991 | What are you so secretive for?" |
45991 | What boat''s that?" |
45991 | What can be the matter?" |
45991 | What could be the matter? |
45991 | What could have happened? |
45991 | What do you want?" |
45991 | What does it all mean do you suppose?" |
45991 | What for? |
45991 | What have you done with the colored man you took from the sloop last night?" |
45991 | What is more delightful than a re- union of college girls after the summer vacation? |
45991 | What would they find when they got there? |
45991 | What would you say if we could tell you your errand here?" |
45991 | When would the persons who had crackled the broken branch on the hillside recover their courage enough to make a further advance? |
45991 | Where do you intend to build the ship?" |
45991 | Where is this air- ship of yours and where are the canoes in which you brought it here?" |
45991 | Who are you and what do you want around our camp?" |
45991 | Who could it be? |
45991 | Who says-- yes?" |
45991 | Who the dickens are you?" |
45991 | Why for do n''t you alls bring they''uns into camp?" |
45991 | Why not manufacture it out and out in the country you have mentioned?" |
45991 | Would it never come? |
45991 | Would the aeroplane be there? |
45991 | asked Harry, laughing,"do n''t you want to see the scenery?" |
45991 | exclaimed Frank,"what on earth is that, Ben?" |
45991 | exclaimed Scudder,"ai n''t you afraid of the United States government being suspicious?" |
45991 | exclaimed his listener enthusiastically,"then you will accept the commission?" |
45991 | questioned Frank,"are there any smooth spots clear of trees in the swamp?" |
45991 | said the elder brother,"what was it?" |
43466 | ''A live mouse? 43466 ''Have you many mice?'' |
43466 | But does not the free will come in when I decide whether to do good or bad things? |
43466 | But,the penal moralist will demand,"if you propose to abolish blame and punishment, what do you propose to put in their place?" |
43466 | Do you mean to say that tramp could not help doing that? 43466 Do you understand it? |
43466 | I know--how do I know anything? |
43466 | What? 43466 A Mrs. Manningdying game"--alas, is not that the foiled potentiality of a kind of heroine too? |
43466 | A genius is a"sport"; and the question we are to answer here is: How does heredity account for genius? |
43466 | All his family for a hundred generations back certified as having united"the manners of a marquis and the morals of a Methodist"? |
43466 | And God is"The First Great Cause,"and how then can God justly punish any of His creatures for being as He created them? |
43466 | And how can we expect the badly bred, badly trained, badly taught degenerate to succeed like the well- bred, well- trained, and well- taught hero? |
43466 | And how can we say of John Smith that he is"good"or"bad"? |
43466 | And how should they know, when their teachers in the church do not know? |
43466 | And if a child gets bad training, how can free will save it? |
43466 | And if he only bears prickles or poison, who is to blame? |
43466 | And if men are"persuaded"to try, and succeed, to whom is the victory due? |
43466 | And is it not clear that they are held to be good because they are felt to be unselfish? |
43466 | And now what do we mean by the words"good"and"bad,""moral"and"immoral"? |
43466 | And we? |
43466 | And what is that persuasion, but a part of their environment? |
43466 | And what is this charge of audacity which Dr. Aked brings against me for denying sin? |
43466 | And what makes one man a sportsman and another a humanitarian? |
43466 | And what pleasures have these people: what culture and beauty in their lives? |
43466 | And when the doctrine of hell- fire was first assailed, what did the Dr. Akeds of the time declare? |
43466 | And which is the better, to go back for a dozen generations blaming parents, or to begin now and teach and save the children? |
43466 | And who in a game of whist would blame his partner for holding no trumps in his hand? |
43466 | And why did he want to be safe? |
43466 | And would he have been to blame? |
43466 | And, when the change came, what was it that brought that change about? |
43466 | Are facts true? |
43466 | Are the wise men of all ages agreed that the possession of great wealth is a good environment? |
43466 | Are we never to deviate from the beliefs of our forefathers, be the evidence against those beliefs never so strong? |
43466 | Are you men? |
43466 | As for the children-- why do not their parents take care of them? |
43466 | As we do not blame a man for being born with red or black hair, why should we blame him for being born with strong passions or base desires? |
43466 | Because it can not Why does a French peasant never speak English? |
43466 | But are we to suppose that the first speech would discourage a boy who wanted to be a painter? |
43466 | But did he? |
43466 | But do we take any the less trouble to fight against diphtheria? |
43466 | But he would have a conscience? |
43466 | But is it any use? |
43466 | But to drive our fellow- creatures into disgrace and crime beyond redemption, and then to hate them or to hang them; is that just? |
43466 | But what causes him to wish? |
43466 | But what had free will to do with it? |
43466 | But what of Dick, the healthy baby? |
43466 | But what of the other victims of heredity: the criminal, or immoral"degenerate"? |
43466 | But what of the variation amongst brothers and sisters? |
43466 | But what settles the choice? |
43466 | But who did say anything so silly? |
43466 | But, it may be asked, how do you account for a man doing the thing he does not wish to do? |
43466 | But, my Christian friends, how do you find your system work? |
43466 | But, someone asks,"where was his pride; where was his sense of duty; where was his manhood?" |
43466 | CHAPTER FOUR-- THE BEGINNINGS OF MORALS WHAT do we mean by the words"sin"and"vice,"and"crime"? |
43466 | CHAPTER SIX-- ENVIRONMENT WHAT is environment? |
43466 | CHAPTER THIRTEEN-- THE FAILURE OF PUNISHMENT DOES it do a man any good to hang him? |
43466 | CHAPTER THREE-- WHERE DO OUR NATURES COME FROM? |
43466 | CHAPTER TWELVE-- GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY? |
43466 | Can He not give man the power to create actions as God creates stars? |
43466 | Can He, in short, create a kind of little God-- an"imago Dei?" |
43466 | Can he bear wheat or roses? |
43466 | Can not I please myself whether I drink or refrain from drinking?" |
43466 | Can not a man be honest if he choose?" |
43466 | Can social systems sin against man?" |
43466 | Can we blame it for having no purple nor white beads in its composition? |
43466 | Can we blame this"child"bottle for being made up of red, blue, black, and yellow? |
43466 | Deprive virtue of its"dare nots,"and how many"would nots"and"should nots"might survive? |
43466 | Did he ever do any work? |
43466 | Did he make no dangerous friendships? |
43466 | Did he read no bad books? |
43466 | Did his father watch over him, or let him run wild? |
43466 | Did his mother nurse him, or neglect him? |
43466 | Do I speak truth, or falsehood? |
43466 | Do we blame"the vegetable bacillus"? |
43466 | Do you know Thomas Carlyle''s burning words concerning these tragic fates? |
43466 | Do you mean to say I can not be good if I try?" |
43466 | Do you mean to say he is not to be punished?" |
43466 | Do you mean to say he is not to blame? |
43466 | Does John deserve censure, and do his brothers deserve praise? |
43466 | Does it do us any good to hang him? |
43466 | Does it ever set him wheeling clay up a plank? |
43466 | Does it tend to the moral elevation of a man to be like the"Chough"in Shakespeare,"spacious in the possession of dirt"? |
43466 | Does not common experience support the charge? |
43466 | Does not that show free will?" |
43466 | Dr. Lydston, in_ The Diseases of Society_, says: The prospective criminal once born, what does society do to prevent his becoming a criminal? |
43466 | GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY? |
43466 | Gentlemen of the jury, is it nothing to you? |
43466 | Has it not been often so? |
43466 | Has it not been often so? |
43466 | Has society not injured him? |
43466 | Have law and morality not injured him? |
43466 | He can give His force; can He give a little of his sovereignty? |
43466 | Here is a rough sketch of the women in the East End slums: WOMEN IN THE METROPOLIS OF THE WORLD"Have you any reverence for womanhood? |
43466 | Here is one reply given by an angry witness: Do you think it womanly work to push with a twenty- foot pole a boat laden with 30 tons of coal? |
43466 | Hitherto all the love, all the honours, all the applause of this? |
43466 | How Does Heredity Make Genius? |
43466 | How can God blame man for the effects of which God is the cause? |
43466 | How could there be white or purple beads in this bottle, when there were no white nor purple beads in the bottles from which it was filled? |
43466 | How do cattle- breeders improve their stock? |
43466 | How does he know that whisky is dangerous? |
43466 | How is he to"overcome his environment and become good"? |
43466 | How is it mediocrity does sometimes beget genius? |
43466 | How is it that genius does not always beget genius? |
43466 | How is it that genius does not always beget genius? |
43466 | How is it that mediocrity breeds genius? |
43466 | How many men have been hanged or sent to prison who ought to have been sent to lunatic asylums? |
43466 | How was it that his will to fish changed to his will not to fish? |
43466 | How was it that same manhood now served to raise him above the environment? |
43466 | How was that theory met by the Dr. Akeds of the time? |
43466 | How will he decide? |
43466 | How, then, came he to reform his life, and to write his wonderful book? |
43466 | How, then, can God justly blame man for the acts that reason or power"creates"? |
43466 | How, then, can he be blamed if his ancestors give to him a bad heredity, or if his fellow- creatures give to him a bad environment? |
43466 | How, then, can it be just to blame him for being that which he_ must_ be? |
43466 | How, then, can we believe that free will is outside and superior to heredity and environment? |
43466 | How, then, can we believe that man is to blame for being that which he is? |
43466 | How, then, shall knowledge increase or progress be possible? |
43466 | I appeal to your justice, to your pity--( A voice: How much pity had he for the child?) |
43466 | If God can do all things, can He not make man free? |
43466 | If environment can not permanently improve the breed, is that any reason for making the worst, instead of the best, of the breed we now possess? |
43466 | If the will is free, how can we be sure, before a test arises, how the will must act? |
43466 | If you sow hate can you reap love? |
43466 | If you sow tares, can you reap wheat? |
43466 | If you sow wrong can you reap right? |
43466 | If you teach and practise knavery, can you ask for purity and virtue? |
43466 | In how many cases are the poor features battered, and the poor skins bruised? |
43466 | Is Dulcett''s fine musical ear due to any merit of Dulcett''s? |
43466 | Is Mr. Chesterton in a position to inform us that his bold bad peer is not a degenerate? |
43466 | Is Mr. Chesterton sure that he has not inherited a degenerate nature from diseased or vicious ancestors? |
43466 | Is any human being in the wide world edified or bettered when a man is hanged? |
43466 | Is it Jarman''s fault that he has no gift? |
43466 | Is it any answer to tell me that I am presumptuous in opposing the beliefs of great men past and present? |
43466 | Is it any wonder that such men, to repeat Mr. Chesterton''s poetical simile,"put forth sins like scarlet flowers in summer"? |
43466 | Is it any_ use_ hanging men? |
43466 | Is it because he would like another cigarette, but would not like another glass of whisky? |
43466 | Is it necessary for me to answer the charge of presumption brought against me by Dr. Aked? |
43466 | Is it not better to teach and to train each generation well, than to teach and train them ill? |
43466 | Is it not clear that these acts are approved and held good? |
43466 | Is it not due to the"persuasion"? |
43466 | Is it not evident that you must have some good in you if you wish to try? |
43466 | Is it not so, men and women? |
43466 | Is it not so? |
43466 | Is it not the same with personal as with racial traits? |
43466 | Is it reasonable to blame the one for not being like the other? |
43466 | Is it strange that some of our descendants should have what Winwood Reade called"tailed minds"? |
43466 | Is logic true? |
43466 | Is not that so? |
43466 | Is not this, to our own knowledge, the kind of thing that happens to us all, in all kinds of self- training, whether it be muscular, mental, or moral? |
43466 | Is the bundle of God''s making responsible for the failure of the power God made and sent to manage it? |
43466 | Is the skinful of propensities created and put together by God responsible for the proportion of good and evil powers it comprises? |
43466 | Is there a man in court can deny one statement I have made? |
43466 | Is there a man in court can impeach my reasoning, or disprove my facts? |
43466 | Is there any proof that Handel''s mother had not a good musical ear? |
43466 | Is there any proof that she had not, lying dormant, some special gift for music, inherited from some ancestor? |
43466 | Is there any quality of body or of mind that has not been_ inevitably_ evolved in man by the working of God''s laws? |
43466 | Is there anything illogical in that? |
43466 | Is there no sympathy with this unhappy victim of atavism, or of society? |
43466 | It is a pretty picture, is it not? |
43466 | It is the soul, then, that is responsible, is it? |
43466 | Men and women, is it not true? |
43466 | Men and women, is it not true? |
43466 | Mr. Blatchford, being anxious to fight against the doctrine of sin, builds a fatalist rampart, looks over the top, and says:"Can man sin against God? |
43466 | NOW, WHAT DO WE MEAN BY"HEREDITY"? |
43466 | No consumption? |
43466 | No diseases contracted through immorality or vice? |
43466 | No drunkenness? |
43466 | No gout? |
43466 | No insanity in the family? |
43466 | Now, how does the man decide whether or not he shall fire? |
43466 | Now, what does all this show? |
43466 | O, what say we, Cholera Doctors? |
43466 | Of how many towns and villages in Europe and America might the same be said? |
43466 | Of how many women are these terrible descriptions true? |
43466 | On what does his decision depend? |
43466 | Or do they not rather teach that luxury and wealth are dangerous to their possessor? |
43466 | Or how can it be blamed for being bad? |
43466 | Or should we take the sailor''s success as a matter of course, and give our pity to the landsman? |
43466 | Ought we to be surprised that the continual struggle for the mastery amongst so many alien natures leads to unlooked- for and unwished- for results? |
43466 | Practically nothing.... What is the remedy at present in vogue? |
43466 | Presumptuous to deny what great men in the past believed? |
43466 | Prove it? |
43466 | Shall we blame a mongrel born of curs of low degree''because he is not a bulldog? |
43466 | Should we blame a bramble for yielding no strawberries, or a privet bush for bearing no chrysanthemums? |
43466 | Should we blame a rose tree for running wild in a jungle, or for languishing in the shadow of great elms? |
43466 | THE BEGINNINGS OF MORALS In the Buddhist"Kathâ Sarit Sâgara"it is written:"Why should we cling to this perishable body? |
43466 | TO WHAT DOES ALL THIS EVIDENCE TEND? |
43466 | Take the case of a council, a cabinet, a regiment, composed of antagonistic natures; what happens? |
43466 | Talk about the trouble of bringing up children: what is that to the trouble of educating one''s ancestors? |
43466 | The kleptomaniac may be the most troublesome to the community; but is he more wicked than the others? |
43466 | Then how is it his brothers do not drink? |
43466 | There remains unaccounted for-- what? |
43466 | They have no taste for anything higher? |
43466 | This being so-- and we all know that it is so-- what becomes of the sovereignty of the will? |
43466 | This:"Were they ever so anxious to''improve their minds,''what leisure have they, what opportunity? |
43466 | To loathe and punish the victims of society, and never lift a hand against the wrongs that are their ruin, is that reasonable? |
43466 | To what extent was he free? |
43466 | WHAT HAD FREE WILL TO DO WITH IT? |
43466 | WHERE DID MORALS COME FROM? |
43466 | WHERE DO OUR NATURES COME FROM? |
43466 | Was Lady Macbeth free to choose? |
43466 | Was Macbeth free to choose? |
43466 | We can tame wild beasts, and why not wild men? |
43466 | We have hundreds of religions in the world; but how many teachers of true morality? |
43466 | We walk round behind him and say:"Can man sin against man? |
43466 | Well, my friends, how do we feel about a shark? |
43466 | Were his companions all men and women of virtue and good sense? |
43466 | What are the qualities that go to the making of a great composer? |
43466 | What are"morals"? |
43466 | What causes me to try? |
43466 | What causes the fluctuations? |
43466 | What causes these two free wills to will so differently? |
43466 | What do these gibes mean? |
43466 | What follows? |
43466 | What for?'' |
43466 | What goes on in his mind? |
43466 | What had changed the free will of Hicks from a will to work to a will to loaf? |
43466 | What has changed this man''s free will to work into a free will to avoid work? |
43466 | What is conscience? |
43466 | What is his defence? |
43466 | What is it most men strive for? |
43466 | What is it tells him he did wrong? |
43466 | What is it? |
43466 | What is reflex action? |
43466 | What is the cause of crime? |
43466 | What is the cause of ignorance? |
43466 | What is the cause of poverty? |
43466 | What is the common assay for moral gold? |
43466 | What is the lesson of Buddha, and of the Indian, Persian, and Greek moralists? |
43466 | What is there in that paragraph that is inconsistent with my belief? |
43466 | What is this"mysterious"double- self? |
43466 | What is"psychic atavism"? |
43466 | What kind of environment, what land of stamina can they give their children? |
43466 | What kind of reasoning can we expect from men who have been taught that it is wicked to think? |
43466 | What knowledge? |
43466 | What made one do what the other refused to do? |
43466 | What makes me wish? |
43466 | What manner of man would he have been? |
43466 | What says the man in the street? |
43466 | What were his parents like? |
43466 | What would they do, these women, were it not for the Devil''s usury of peace-- the gin? |
43466 | Whence did he derive that defect of ear? |
43466 | Whence, then, did Handel get his musical genius? |
43466 | Where was the"still small voice,"the"divine guide to right conduct"? |
43466 | Which is the more rational? |
43466 | Which of us can assess his debt to such men as Shakespeare, Dante, Shelley, Dickens, and Carlyle? |
43466 | Which of us does not admire and honour an innocent, graceful, and charming girl? |
43466 | Which of you has spoken a word or lifted a hand to prevent this wholesale wrong? |
43466 | Who amongst us has not fought with wild beasts-- not at Ephesus, but in his own heart? |
43466 | Who amongst us is so pure and exalted that he has never been conscious of the bestial taint? |
43466 | Who is answerable for a thing that is caused: he who causes it, or he who does not cause it? |
43466 | Who shall be punished for the crimes of the law and of society against him? |
43466 | Who would be readier to stab a rival, an English curate, or a Spanish smuggler? |
43466 | Who would more willingly return a blow, an Irish soldier, or an English Quaker? |
43466 | Who, then, is responsible for good and evil? |
43466 | Why did he work? |
43466 | Why does Dulcett play the violin so well? |
43466 | Why does Jarman play the violin so evilly? |
43466 | Why does an apple tree never bear bananas? |
43466 | Why does he succeed? |
43466 | Why does not Jones the engineer write poetry? |
43466 | Why does not Robinson the musical composer invent a flying machine? |
43466 | Why does not Smith of the Stock Exchange paint pictures? |
43466 | Why has conscience thus changed its tone with me? |
43466 | Why is John a drunkard? |
43466 | Why is an English labourer deficient in the manners of polite society? |
43466 | Why not? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Why? |
43466 | Will He punish or reward us, then, for the acts of His agents: the agents He made and controlled? |
43466 | Will any man on the jury say me nay? |
43466 | Would he grow up with the ideas of to- day, or with the ideas of those who taught and trained him? |
43466 | Would it have been his fault that he had never heard good counsel, but had been drilled and trained to evil? |
43466 | Would it have been his fault that he was born amongst thieves? |
43466 | Would not the effects be very different? |
43466 | Would proper teaching have made a Jarman a proper player? |
43466 | Would such books, so read, make no impression upon his impressionable mind? |
43466 | Would that affect him naught? |
43466 | Would the fierce religious atmosphere of Cromwellian camps have no effect upon his sensitive and imaginative nature? |
43466 | You are not going to tell me that I am answerable or blame- able for the nature of matter and force, nor for the operations of God''s laws, are you? |
43466 | You who are so anxious to punish crime, what are you doing to prevent it? |
43466 | _ But what causes him to choose?_ That is the pivot upon which the whole discussion turns. |
43466 | _ Quite_ sure that his failure was not due to bad environment instead of to bad heredity? |
43466 | _ Quite_ sure the noble was_ not_ a degenerate? |
43466 | _ Why?_ Because it is_ poison_. |
43466 | and the tramp, and the harlot, and the sot; how were_ they_ brought up, and had they anything to love? |
43466 | do you mean to say-?" |
43466 | this suggest the wonderful possibilities of variation and atavism? |
51310 | Coffee? |
51310 | Do n''t you know you ca n''t hurt a wipe by hitting him on the head, Boss? |
51310 | Do n''t you see, Mr. Sauer, you''re playing into their hands? 51310 Does it make any difference?" |
51310 | Everybody is somebody else''s outgroup and maybe it''s a bad thing, but did you ever stop to realize that we do n''t have wars any more? 51310 Fixed? |
51310 | Guard, do you think you can prevent me from healing a sufferer? |
51310 | How long are we going to hang around here, waiting for the guards to get organized and pick us all off one at a time? |
51310 | I mean, after all,''Specialization is the goal of civilization,''right? |
51310 | I''m going to give you five minutes, Warden, you hear? 51310 Lafon? |
51310 | O''Leary, you''re a guard captain, right? 51310 Oh, you think so?" |
51310 | Say, you want to take a turn in here for a while? |
51310 | Take good care of''em, will you? 51310 The score? |
51310 | The tangler field, eh? 51310 Trouble? |
51310 | Trouble? 51310 Turn--?" |
51310 | Warden,he said,"do n''t you see how this thing is building up? |
51310 | What about you? 51310 What do you want, Sauer?" |
51310 | What in God''s name is the use of a club? 51310 What in the world are they_ doing_?" |
51310 | What the devil do you want? 51310 What the devil do you want?" |
51310 | What''s a Jew? |
51310 | What''s happening? |
51310 | What''s this talk about the_ two_ of you? 51310 Why do n''t they break down the gate?" |
51310 | You Captain O''Leary? |
51310 | You did n''t know, Cap''n? |
51310 | You got a cup for me? |
51310 | You him? |
51310 | You will_ not_,he said; and:"Now which way did they go?" |
51310 | _ Everybody''s_ job is just as important as everybody else''s, right? 51310 Across the hall, the guard was saying irritably:What the hell''s the matter with you?" |
51310 | And I had a call from Senator Bradley a short time ago--""Senator Bradley?" |
51310 | And what was the use, he demanded of himself contemptuously, of trying to argue with a bunch of lousy wipes and greasers? |
51310 | Are you in on this?" |
51310 | As we politicians say, any questions?" |
51310 | But is n''t it terrible, the way these Jews stick together?''" |
51310 | But what about Honor Block A? |
51310 | But what? |
51310 | Can you get me in there or ca n''t you?" |
51310 | Cap''n, you know what''s funny about this? |
51310 | Captain O''Leary said, face furrowed:"What about the warden, Governor? |
51310 | Could n''t it? |
51310 | Did it fit together? |
51310 | Do n''t you know I''m-- What? |
51310 | Do you know what he''s been up to?" |
51310 | Do you want some coffee?" |
51310 | Does it make a difference? |
51310 | Enough said? |
51310 | Finally:"Do I_ look_ as if I am?" |
51310 | He demanded:"Why would n''t you mop out your cell?" |
51310 | He rattled the cell door again and called:"Chief, can you come here a minute, please?" |
51310 | How could you explain to the warden that it did n''t_ smell_ right? |
51310 | How does it hurt a man to feed and clothe and house him, with the bills paid by the state? |
51310 | How? |
51310 | I did n''t want to--"O''Leary pressed:"Who did the signal come from?" |
51310 | I had it all planned, do you hear me? |
51310 | I''m going to slice off an ear and throw it out the window, you hear me? |
51310 | It was_ good_ that Sauer and Flock still had enough spirit to struggle against the vicious system-- But did they have to scream so? |
51310 | Laborers and clerks join together in a breakout? |
51310 | Lafon said ingratiatingly:"What''s going on, Chief?" |
51310 | Maybe she had got off to a wrong start, but the question was, would putting her in the disciplinary block help straighten her out? |
51310 | O''Leary said suspiciously:"You belonged to that Double- A- C, did n''t you? |
51310 | Rehabilitation for what? |
51310 | Rehabilitation? |
51310 | Right?" |
51310 | Sauer said coaxingly:"Wilmer, wo n''t you leave me have O''Leary for a while? |
51310 | Sauer, you wipe clown, do you think it took_ brains_ to file down a shiv and start things rolling? |
51310 | So get a medic in here quick, you hear?" |
51310 | So where do we put him?" |
51310 | So why did n''t this girl, this Sue- Ann Bradley, know hers? |
51310 | Sodaro yelled:"Did n''t you hear me? |
51310 | Sue- Ann Bradley asked shakily:"Is anything the matter?" |
51310 | Tell the gentlemen-- how long you been taking these correspondence courses in architecture? |
51310 | That''s one way to protect them, is n''t it? |
51310 | The Negro?" |
51310 | The warden asked faintly:"What''s he saying?" |
51310 | The warden gazed at him for a blank moment"Squad? |
51310 | The warden, faintly relieved, faintly annoyed, scolded:"O''Leary, what did you want to worry me for? |
51310 | They''ll have the freedom of the yard, and who knows what comes next?" |
51310 | To what? |
51310 | Trouble?" |
51310 | Unless the other screw makes trouble, you wo n''t get hurt, so tell him not to, you hear?" |
51310 | Warden, who''s going to fix it? |
51310 | Was it all part of a plan? |
51310 | We''ve got Schluckebier on our hands, see? |
51310 | What about it?" |
51310 | What could I do, Cap''n? |
51310 | What do you say, Wilmer? |
51310 | What else? |
51310 | What got into a girl to get her mixed up with that kind of dirty business? |
51310 | What the devil way was that for the warden to talk to him? |
51310 | What''s Lafon doing?" |
51310 | What''s she in for?" |
51310 | What''s the score?" |
51310 | What''s the use of a squad? |
51310 | What''s the use of giving them two more?" |
51310 | Where''s the coffee?" |
51310 | Who could blame a wipe for trying to"pass"if he thought he could get away with it? |
51310 | Who is to say that that''s a bad thing?" |
51310 | Why burn the laundry? |
51310 | Why was the quiet little Chinese clerk in Cell Six setting fire to his bed? |
51310 | Why would a Wilmer Lafon-- a certified public architect, a Professional by category-- do his own car repairs and get himself jugged for malpractice? |
51310 | Why would a dental nurse sneak back into the laboratory at night and cast an upper plate for her mother? |
51310 | Why? |
51310 | You did_ what_? |
51310 | You hear? |
51310 | You know Lafon, from Block A? |
51310 | You know what that means? |
51310 | You see?" |
51310 | You''re going to WHAT?" |
51310 | _ Race riot!_ But how could you tell that to a girl like this Bradley? |
51310 | _ What_ trouble?" |
51310 | _ Why do n''t they crush out?_"Mumble- mumble from the Governor. |
48909 | Am I dreaming, or can it actually be, that this is my old master, King Ruru, in the semblance of an elephant? |
48909 | Am I to stand idly by, like a spectator, and watch the river of my happiness flow by me, in the form of thy decaying charm? |
48909 | And I ejaculated: O lady, art thou dreaming, or what is this delusion? |
48909 | And I exclaimed: Nay, nay, dare not to dream of fire, for how knowest thou he is dead? |
48909 | And I leaped at him and struck him to the ground, exclaiming furiously: Dog of a_ wita_, dost thou dare? |
48909 | And I said to myself, with hesitation: But if she will not come, as only too much I fear, what then? |
48909 | And I said to myself: She has caught herself in the trap; and who will be her husband but myself? |
48909 | And I said: How shouldst know me, who am but just arrived in the city, having fled here by reason of trouble in my own? |
48909 | And after a while she said: Surely these pearls are very large? |
48909 | And after a while, she sighed and said again: How can I believe thee, who hast lied to me so often, and whose purpose only too well I understand? |
48909 | And after all, was not my_ wita_ right? |
48909 | And after all, what is this husband? |
48909 | And all at once she said: Say, Maharáj, what was thy object in originally pursuing me? |
48909 | And as for clothing, what do I want but my own hair? |
48909 | And as soon as he entered, he exclaimed: O punisher of Páka,[15] and the rest, what are you all about? |
48909 | And at that very moment, a bird of the race of hawks pounced suddenly upon it, and carried it away, attracted by its glitter, or who knows? |
48909 | And can not others do what he did, by the very selfsame means, provided only that their resolution is thorough and complete? |
48909 | And did not Coriolanus find in this the thing to thwart him, the obstacle that stood between his resolution and the overthrow of Rome? |
48909 | And hast thou then no pity or compassion? |
48909 | And he said: Wilt thou come and be of mine? |
48909 | And he whispered: Maharáj, shall I give it? |
48909 | And how, then, should the empty body overhear us, in the absence of its soul? |
48909 | And if so, I myself shall miserably perish, unable to endure my life without her; and what is to be done? |
48909 | And if thy beauty will not come, what matter? |
48909 | And is it true? |
48909 | And it said, softly, like a sigh: O king of elephants, and art thou then the elephant at last, appointed me to meet? |
48909 | And presently she said again: Why art thou silent? |
48909 | And presently she said: Where then is the necklace? |
48909 | And she said quietly: What is the matter? |
48909 | And she said with a smile: Who then is the fish; is it I, or is it he? |
48909 | And surely the bird which filched it from me to carry it to thee was some deity in disguise; for how could a mere bird know, for whom it was designed? |
48909 | And tell me, what hast thou done with my husband? |
48909 | And what does it matter what they say in the bazaar, for the world is but a straw to me, in comparison with thee? |
48909 | And what if I refuse to come? |
48909 | And what shall be the end? |
48909 | And what then is to be the price of my assistance, and if I am successful, what is to be my appropriate reward? |
48909 | And whence arises the envelope of body, but from works? |
48909 | And whence comes the trouble of the young but from women? |
48909 | Are you asleep, or have you actually abandoned all care whether of your own pre- eminence or the established order of the world? |
48909 | Art thou hurt? |
48909 | Art thou meditating in what manner to appropriate me? |
48909 | Art thou not a king, with agents about thee for any base design? |
48909 | But was it Heaven they found, or was it Hell? |
48909 | But what could be the services of such a thing as me, where even heavenly maidens fail? |
48909 | But what then, if he never should return? |
48909 | Callest thou love, such a union with the dead? |
48909 | Can he be thy owner, of whom it is not even certain that he lives? |
48909 | Can it be, and have I found thee? |
48909 | Death is preceded by a sigh; did ever anybody die, who had absolutely nothing to regret? |
48909 | Did he not prove, by his own example, that nothing is impossible to perfect asceticism? |
48909 | Did not Wishwamitra, when he found this world not according to his taste, create another of his own? |
48909 | Didst thou not say, I was a robber, endeavouring to steal the thing I could not buy? |
48909 | Dost thou not know, what fate awaits thee here? |
48909 | Dost thou not remember what one of thy own philosophers has said:[ Greek: Theòs anaítios, aitía d heloménou]? |
48909 | For my husband having gone away, no matter how or where, what is it thy intention to do now? |
48909 | For what if I asked for a crore of crystal jars, filled to the very brim with_ amrita_, which, never having tasted, I am curious to taste? |
48909 | For what was I doing, but endeavouring to persuade her? |
48909 | Hast thou allowed thyself to be outwitted even by the blind? |
48909 | Hast thou murdered him, or stolen him away, or what? |
48909 | Hast thou murdered the husband, as a stepping- stone to the embraces of the wife? |
48909 | Is it for such a thing as thou art to lay hands on her, or shall she be profaned by the grasp of such a monster as thyself? |
48909 | Is it my love that thou aimest at possessing? |
48909 | Is it not my love that thou wouldst have? |
48909 | Is it really possible that with such weapons in their hands, they could not so much as make the shadow of an impression on this Brahman? |
48909 | Moreover, being blind, how can she tell who seizes her, seeing that she knows me by nothing but my voice? |
48909 | Must I not have recourse to violence? |
48909 | O pippala, what is this mystery of love, and who is there who can sound it? |
48909 | O thou matchless, intoxicating beauty, now that I have found thee, dost thou bid me go away, and leave thee as soon as found? |
48909 | Or being blind thyself, dost thou imagine all others also blind? |
48909 | Or how can thy family contend in excellence with mine, which is in the_ gotra_ of Agastya? |
48909 | Or what can be the value of a body, dead and without a soul? |
48909 | Or why didst thou not try to buy me from him? |
48909 | So then tell me, was it thy wish to punish thy devotees, or was it by thy negligence they fell? |
48909 | Surely it was a blunder; and why, then, do the rulers of the world allow it to continue? |
48909 | Then I said: Dost thou know where he is gone? |
48909 | Then how will it advantage thee to take by force, what has value only when it is given of its own accord? |
48909 | Then said Kalánidhi: What is the use of elephants, even black as ink with golden tusks, at the very bottom of the sea? |
48909 | Then said Párwati: And what then was this old endeavour, the very recollection of whose contrast with his brag so moved thy laughter? |
48909 | Then said Párwati: At what then didst thou laugh? |
48909 | Then said that crafty_ wita_: Did I not say that my assistance would avail thee? |
48909 | Then she said: Dost thou see it lying? |
48909 | Then what art thou but a thief, seeking underhand to rob him of the thing he would not sell? |
48909 | Then why didst thou endeavour to hide from me thy rank? |
48909 | Trishodadhi? |
48909 | Truly have the sages said: What is the cause of the misery of soul, if not the envelope of body? |
48909 | Was it not Swift, among whose papers, after his death, was found a packet, labelled in his own handwriting:_ Only a woman''s hair_? |
48909 | Was it that it was only too well known to thee, he would not sell me, even for a very mountain of pure gold? |
48909 | Was she then, after all, not guilty, but as he says virtuous? |
48909 | What does it matter? |
48909 | What if I should say, that I long for a single blossom of Wishnu''s_ párijáta_ tree? |
48909 | What matter a little violence, to be utterly forgotten as soon as she awakes? |
48909 | Who but a blind man argues as to the shining of the sun at noon? |
48909 | Why didst thou not rather endeavour to persuade me, he had deserted me in favour of thyself? |
48909 | Will thou swear to me, thou wilt take me to my husband? |
48909 | Wilt thou love a corpse, or will a corpse relove thee? |
48909 | Would you blame him for choosing rather to err with Kálidás and Walmiki, than go right with some elementary manual of geography? |
48909 | Yet how can I resist one who can so easily effect by violence the end at which he aims, if I refuse? |
48909 | art thou actually grieving for the loss of a woman? |
48909 | art thou dumb at last, and has thy voluble eloquence deserted thee, when truth was wanted rather than a lie? |
48909 | can it be that this delicious beauty resembles all her far inferior sisters, and is tempted by the pearls she can not see? |
48909 | can it be? |
48909 | dost thou call me_ pashu_? |
48909 | dost thou not know, that he who loses one, can find without any difficulty a hundred other women, just as good or better than herself? |
48909 | have I regained thee also, in addition to my life? |
48909 | is it right of thee to occupy my heart, and yet bar me from thy own? |
48909 | night- walker, who art thou? |
48909 | shall I share her with this_ wita_, and shall the lotus of her body be defiled by his handling, even in a dream? |
48909 | the wife of Trishodadhi? |
48909 | then art thou not ashamed? |
48909 | thou that callest others monsters, what of thyself? |
48909 | what defilement was there in the touch of thy filthy_ wita_, that was not doubled by the profanation in thy own? |
48909 | what is this wonder, that an elephant should speak with an intelligible voice, and that I should understand him? |
48909 | why did I not meet thee first, before he ever saw thee? |
48909 | wouldst thou then redream the love of yore? |
55539 | Are you such a stranger, that you do n''t know the news? 55539 But how will you transport such an enormous quantity of rice?" |
55539 | But what good is that going to do? |
55539 | Did your uncle whip you? |
55539 | How can I promise such a princely offering? |
55539 | How old are you? |
55539 | I hear,says he,"that the new Magistrate is about to marry the gee sang, Chun Yang Ye; is it true?" |
55539 | Is he just or oppressive, drunken or sober? 55539 Is he such a fearful- looking man as to frighten one by his aspect alone?" |
55539 | Is it possible? |
55539 | Kil Tong, did you say? |
55539 | Never mind who told him; if you did not want him to know you, then why did you swing so publicly? 55539 Oh,"she says,"but how can I live here alone, with you in Seoul? |
55539 | Well, what is this that you say about my not being permanently blind? |
55539 | What does your conduct mean? |
55539 | What have you done? 55539 What is the matter with her?" |
55539 | What is your name? |
55539 | What shall I do? |
55539 | When is your birthday? |
55539 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
55539 | Who is that calls me? |
55539 | Who told Ye Toh Ryung my name? |
55539 | Why did you not tell this to your mother before? 55539 Why have you not presented yourself at this office with the other gee sang?" |
55539 | Why, who are you that you know so much about me? |
55539 | Why? |
55539 | As she saw his face and garb, she moaned:"Oh, what have we done to be so afflicted? |
55539 | As the procession drew nearer the dreamer exclaimed:"Who are you, my beautiful child?" |
55539 | At length he said:"Do n''t you have any difficulty in the water? |
55539 | Because the sun shines to- day are we assured that to- morrow it will shine? |
55539 | But what did you do that the stars should banish you from their midst?" |
55539 | But who are you, and why do you live in this lone spot? |
55539 | Can I foretell the future? |
55539 | Did you go so far away that it has required all this time to retrace your steps?" |
55539 | Do n''t you know me? |
55539 | Does he devote himself to his duties, or give himself up to riotous living?" |
55539 | Does n''t it get into your eyes and mouth?" |
55539 | Have the rivers been so deep and rapid that you dared not cross them? |
55539 | Have you been so busy in official life? |
55539 | I can not know of you, for who will tell me, and how am I to endure it?" |
55539 | I hear your voice; I feel your form; but how can I know it is you, for I have no eyes? |
55539 | Is it victory, or is it death? |
55539 | Our house is so weak it may fall down, and then what will the poor birds do?" |
55539 | Perceiving the turtle, he went over and accosted him with,"What are you doing away up here, sir?" |
55539 | Repeatedly, since returning to the United States, people have asked me,"Why do n''t you write a book on Korea?" |
55539 | Stung by the pain and the calmness of her lover''s voice, she sarcastically asked:"Why have you not come to me? |
55539 | Suppose this matter should reach your father''s ears, what would you do?" |
55539 | The man gruffly demanded,"who are you?" |
55539 | Then why am I addressed thus by such a miserable looking stripling?" |
55539 | This strange garment is never worn, but is always used as a covering for the fair(?) |
55539 | What do you mean by setting such rice before a gentleman?" |
55539 | What more will you have?" |
55539 | What will become of my poor father? |
55539 | What will eyes be to me if I can no longer look upon your lovely face?" |
55539 | Will you show me the place?" |
55539 | Would you ask one woman to marry two men? |
55539 | Would you rob me of this? |
55539 | my child, can the dead come back to us? |
55539 | who will care for him? |
4925 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
4925 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
4925 | Cruel wall,they said,"why do you keep two lovers apart? |
4925 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for you worthy of your praise? |
4925 | Have you come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold you after such perils past? |
4925 | Have you heard anything of Arion? |
4925 | How now, Thor? |
4925 | Is it thus I find you restored to me? |
4925 | Most undutiful and faithless of servants,said she,"do you at last remember that you really have a mistress? |
4925 | O Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
4925 | Shall such wickedness triumph? |
4925 | Then Bacchus( for it was indeed he), as if shaking off his drowsiness, exclaimed,''What are you doing with me? 4925 What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turned your affection from me? |
4925 | What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? 4925 What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? |
4925 | What herb has such a power? |
4925 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
4925 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Baldur?" |
4925 | Whence came these stories? 4925 Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the goddess? |
4925 | Why should you wish to behold me? |
4925 | Will nothing satisfy you but my life? |
4925 | ''Why do you refuse me water?'' |
4925 | Aeneas, horror- struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose punishments produced the sounds he heard? |
4925 | Aeneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
4925 | After having disobeyed my mother''s commands and made you my wife, will you think me a monster and cut off my head? |
4925 | Alcinous says to Ulysses:"Say from what city, from what regions tossed, And what inhabitants those regions boast? |
4925 | And can any other woman dare more than I? |
4925 | And is Lorenzo''s salamander- heart Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?" |
4925 | And shall I let you go into such danger alone? |
4925 | And share with him-- the unforgiven-- His vulture and his rock?" |
4925 | And what cowardice makes thee sink under this last danger who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy former?" |
4925 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
4925 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
4925 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
4925 | But Psyche said,"Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? |
4925 | But a voice from the tower said to her,"Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy days in so dreadful a manner? |
4925 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4925 | But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? |
4925 | But how? |
4925 | But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to deserve such a fate? |
4925 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4925 | But shall he then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? |
4925 | But what has become of my glove?" |
4925 | But what if I offer him to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
4925 | But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feast? |
4925 | But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster? |
4925 | But why ask the gods to do it? |
4925 | Byron also employs the same allusion, in his"Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte":"Or, like the thief of fire from heaven, Wilt thou withstand the shock? |
4925 | Can they be mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse of silent forms be living beings? |
4925 | Could you keep your course while the sphere was revolving under you? |
4925 | Cupid, beholding her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and said,"O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? |
4925 | Did he fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? |
4925 | Do you ask me for a proof that you are sprung from my blood? |
4925 | Do you ask me why?" |
4925 | Do you not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
4925 | Dying now a second time, she yet can not reproach her husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her? |
4925 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied,"Would you, then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? |
4925 | For how could Achilles require the aid of celestial armor if be were invulnerable?] |
4925 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
4925 | Has earth no more Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?" |
4925 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
4925 | Have I not cause for pride? |
4925 | Have they a foundation in truth or are they simply dreams of the imagination?" |
4925 | Have you learned to feel easy in the absence of Halcyone? |
4925 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
4925 | He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said,"If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" |
4925 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
4925 | He was loath to give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a simple heifer? |
4925 | He, starting from his sleep, cried out,"My daughters, what are you doing? |
4925 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
4925 | His father cried,"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?" |
4925 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
4925 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
4925 | I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life? |
4925 | I think we shall be conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war? |
4925 | Is it for this that I have supplied herbage for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars? |
4925 | Is this the reward of my fertility, of my obedient service? |
4925 | Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said,"Do you recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? |
4925 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
4925 | Nisus said to his friend,"Do you perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
4925 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
4925 | Or have you rather come to see your sick husband, yet laid up of the wound given him by his loving wife? |
4925 | Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to discover himself and make his wants known? |
4925 | Shaking her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed,"Am I then to be eclipsed in my honors by a mortal girl? |
4925 | Shall I trust Aeneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
4925 | Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son, while the house of Thestius is desolate? |
4925 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4925 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
4925 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out,"What''s the matter? |
4925 | Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she exclaims,"O dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?" |
4925 | Suppose I should lend you the chariot, what would you do? |
4925 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is that which in the morning gees on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
4925 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
4925 | The parents consent( how could they hesitate?) |
4925 | The voice said,''Why do you fly, Arethusa? |
4925 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
4925 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
4925 | This is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:"You have the letters Cadmus gave, Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
4925 | To which question the river- god replied as follows:"Who likes to tell of his defeats? |
4925 | What could Jupiter do? |
4925 | What has become of them?" |
4925 | What have I done that you should treat me so? |
4925 | What have the cranes to do with him?" |
4925 | What is this fighting about? |
4925 | What shall he do? |
4925 | What shall he do?--go home to seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? |
4925 | What should he do? |
4925 | Where are you going to carry me?'' |
4925 | Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? |
4925 | Where is that love of me that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? |
4925 | While they hesitate, Laocoon, the priest of Neptune exclaims,"What madness, citizens, is this? |
4925 | Who brought me here? |
4925 | Who lived when thou wast such? |
4925 | Why do you hang round my neck and still entreat me? |
4925 | Why should Latona be honored with worship, and none be paid to me? |
4925 | Why should any one hereafter tremble at the thought of offending Juno, when such rewards are the consequence of my displeasure? |
4925 | Why should he alone escape? |
4925 | Why will you not take a lesson from the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one? |
4925 | Will any one deny this? |
4925 | Will you kill your father?" |
4925 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
4925 | Would you rather have me away?" |
4925 | Yet can ye relieve my grief? |
4925 | Yet where is your triumph? |
4925 | could not verse immortal save That breast imbued with such immortal fire? |
4925 | did he say?" |
4925 | haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die?" |
4925 | have you any wish ungratified? |
4925 | he said;"have you any doubt of my love? |
4925 | said Aeneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
4925 | she cried;"whither do you fly? |
4925 | the cause? |
4925 | through a marble wilderness? |
4925 | to what deed am I borne along? |
4925 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise; What was thy pity''s recompense? |
4925 | was then the rumor true that you had perished? |
39984 | A caretaker? |
39984 | About me? |
39984 | About me? |
39984 | About? |
39984 | Ah? |
39984 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
39984 | Ai n''t you ever played as an amateur? |
39984 | All this is a surprise to you, then? |
39984 | Am I really to carry all these things away, sir? |
39984 | Am I-- er-- a lord? |
39984 | And do you think I should be able to get on without much more teaching from a real expert? |
39984 | And has been a successful novelist and playwright for three years? 39984 And now-- and now are your ideas changing? |
39984 | And you do promise, do n''t you-- and that you wo n''t say a word to a living soul, if I tell you a thing in strict confidence? |
39984 | And your family? |
39984 | Any beautiful ones richer? |
39984 | Anyone in particular, at the moment? |
39984 | Are n''t you excited? |
39984 | Are these to be our last words together, then? |
39984 | Are they doing that for me? |
39984 | Are you an average American? |
39984 | Are you an average Englishman? |
39984 | Are you cold? |
39984 | Are you going to try for the engagement? |
39984 | Are you sure you deserve kindness? |
39984 | Are you the manager of this hotel? |
39984 | As the villain? |
39984 | Bill Willing!--a friend of_ yours_? |
39984 | Boss sick, is he? |
39984 | But I was wondering if you''d had good news, because----"Because of something in your telegram? |
39984 | But ca n''t you leave me to watch that winder, while you see after Izzie? 39984 But perhaps it''s only circumstances?" |
39984 | But we were talking about you, were n''t we? 39984 But what are you working up to so elaborately, Mater?" |
39984 | But why did you slap him in the face? |
39984 | But why not be published frankly on the passenger list? 39984 But why?" |
39984 | But, do_ you_ mean that you read nothing, heard nothing, of what they were saying about you in New York? |
39984 | But-- what? 39984 But-- why should you say it to me?" |
39984 | Ca n''t we get at them and punish them somehow? |
39984 | Can Cadwallader Hunter have told them all some lie to set them against me? |
39984 | Can we run to it? |
39984 | Confound you, do you think I''ll set the place on fire the minute your back is turned? |
39984 | Dearest-- is it as bad as that? |
39984 | Did I? |
39984 | Did Miss Milton say in the telegram that New York had discovered its mistake about me? |
39984 | Did you ever get a chance to speak to one? |
39984 | Did you mind when I cried? |
39984 | Do I know him? 39984 Do n''t you know a joke from an insult in your part of the country? |
39984 | Do n''t you remember my telling you his name was the same as yours? |
39984 | Do n''t you see? 39984 Do n''t you? |
39984 | Do n''t_ you_ feel that way, too, about love? |
39984 | Do with them? |
39984 | Do you deny the newspaper accusations, then? |
39984 | Do you despise me, after all? |
39984 | Do you know a Mrs. Loveland on the ship? |
39984 | Do you know many Americans, Val? |
39984 | Do you know the names of the people at the table where I stopped? |
39984 | Do you mean, am I a deserter? |
39984 | Do you mean, that if I want to cross in the_ Mauretania_, I must pass under your friend''s name? |
39984 | Do you really want to know? |
39984 | Do you think old Alexander would advance me anything if I told him my whole story? |
39984 | Do you tink because I got a black face, I take suffin''off''n you? 39984 Do you?" |
39984 | English army, of course? |
39984 | Forgotten him? 39984 Friends on the ship-- and now he knocks down the husband and father in the street, because----""Ah, yes, because of what?" |
39984 | From Miss Milton or me? |
39984 | From Miss Milton, then? |
39984 | Gordon''s only guying, ai n''t you, Gordon? 39984 Great Scott, ai n''t it the grandest ever?" |
39984 | Had you_ eat_ it? |
39984 | Have n''t you? 39984 Have the others finished and gone already?" |
39984 | Have you read the beastly newspaper article about me? |
39984 | He''s coming, then? |
39984 | History, then? 39984 How are you going to do that, my guardian angel?" |
39984 | How can a man play that he''s himself? |
39984 | How d''you do? |
39984 | How do you know I''m not? 39984 How much is it for a room?" |
39984 | How often must I tell you, Bill, not to call me''Miss Izzie''? 39984 How you have always got what you wanted in your life, have n''t you-- one way or another?" |
39984 | I do think stories ought all to end well, do n''t you? |
39984 | I have n''t offended you, have I? |
39984 | I hope that does n''t disgust you? |
39984 | I hope you agreed with her? |
39984 | I know I have n''t any right to ask it, but-- were you engaged to Cremer when we crossed together on the_ Mauretania_? |
39984 | I know I ought n''t to be talking to you when you''re at work, and I do n''t often, do I? |
39984 | I said, what am I to do if Mr. James R. Smythe comes along and orders me out? |
39984 | I say, are you going to forget me as soon as we''re parted? |
39984 | I say, you do n''t suppose he''s married her since? |
39984 | I suppose the ladies wo n''t be wanting this for a few minutes yet? |
39984 | I suppose there are sure to be a lot of millionaires on board? |
39984 | I suppose there''ll be no red tape about my getting twenty pounds? 39984 I suppose you_ do_ remember that you''re a young English Lord?" |
39984 | I thought you said this was my room? |
39984 | I told you I wrote stories, did n''t I? 39984 I was thinking,"said Isidora,"that-- I might tease Pa to take you in-- in Dutchy''s place, if-- you''d care about it?" |
39984 | I was wondering if he would advance me anything, enough to get back to England with-- on my letter of credit? |
39984 | I wonder if you remember him? 39984 I wonder why? |
39984 | I wonder, too? 39984 I wonder?" |
39984 | I? |
39984 | If I knew a way in which you could help your actor friends to escape from here and go-- wherever they want to go, would you take it, I wonder? |
39984 | If only it_ was_ my company, really,sighed the poor little Star,"would n''t I just send for Bill to come out? |
39984 | Is he engaged already? |
39984 | Is he someone of importance? |
39984 | Is it about my knocking a man down? |
39984 | Is it fair to answer one question with another? |
39984 | Is it real love-- tell me? |
39984 | Is it true-- do you mean it? |
39984 | Is n''t that rather hard- hearted of you? |
39984 | Is that a pun? |
39984 | Is that much of a place? |
39984 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
39984 | Is there something about him in the paper? |
39984 | Is_ that_ what you''re going to do? |
39984 | It seems to me that all the girls I know would be pretty well satisfied with the right to walk into a dining- room behind a Duchess, and----"Do you? 39984 It''s quite settled, then?" |
39984 | Just a poor little humble story writer-- and you would really like to marry It? |
39984 | Knows what? |
39984 | Let things alone, ca n''t you? |
39984 | Loveland? |
39984 | Marquis or Valet? |
39984 | May I ask what they are? |
39984 | May n''t I go with you to the train? |
39984 | Me? 39984 Miss Mecklenburg?" |
39984 | Mr. Gordon, I believe? |
39984 | Mr. Harborough would, I suppose, give you letters of introduction to the Right People over there? |
39984 | My dear fellow, what has happened to upset you? |
39984 | My part? |
39984 | No trunks? |
39984 | Not likely that you''ll hold yourself too cheap, eh? |
39984 | Not me? 39984 Of course the story was yours?" |
39984 | Oh, I suppose men of your position have some right to enjoy their lives? 39984 Oh, Lesley, you''re not playing with me, are you? |
39984 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
39984 | Oh, the girl you used to be in love with at the theatre? |
39984 | Oh, you ai n''t leavin''me forever? |
39984 | Oh, you do, do you? 39984 Oh, you know her-- daughter of the white- faced woman, pretty, blushy little thing who sits at my table?" |
39984 | On a letter of credit? |
39984 | Or ought I to speak of you as Captain Loveland? |
39984 | Over and above what anyone else may have? |
39984 | Perhaps you wo n''t be satisfied with me? |
39984 | Say, you''re mighty thoughtful, ai n''t you? 39984 Say, you''re the manager of this show, ai n''t you?" |
39984 | See here, are you sick, or what''s the matter? |
39984 | Shall I drive this morning, Miss Dearmer, or will you? |
39984 | Shall I tell you, really? |
39984 | Shall we have him turned out? |
39984 | Shall you be married soon? |
39984 | Sidney Cremer? |
39984 | So you came over here to get out of''em? |
39984 | So you''ve been making a study of other Englishmen? 39984 Someone_ will_ have you-- shall we say, as secretary? |
39984 | Something still worse? |
39984 | Suppose I refuse to go? |
39984 | Sure you_ can_ get it? |
39984 | That means you are making up your mind to go? |
39984 | That''s a little too steep, is n''t it? |
39984 | The heavy line? |
39984 | The newspapers accused me-- what do you mean? |
39984 | The_ Mauretania_? |
39984 | Then I''m to consider myself one of your experiments? |
39984 | Then how can we be married? |
39984 | Then it was n''t a dream? |
39984 | Then you admit that you deserve to be punished? |
39984 | Then, this notice is actually intended for me? |
39984 | Then, what do you mean? |
39984 | Things will come right only in_ one_ way, for you? |
39984 | Think so? 39984 This is pretty complete, ai n''t it?" |
39984 | To keep me from being bored? |
39984 | Unlock the door, will you? |
39984 | Upset me? |
39984 | Used to be? 39984 We both fell into the pit together, did n''t we?" |
39984 | We-- ell, you know I''m soft, do n''t you? 39984 Welcome the coming, speed the parting guest, eh? |
39984 | Well, supposing I were forced to marry money, for the sake of-- of-- my estates and all that, is there anyone on board you''d recommend? |
39984 | Well, then what are you so excited about? |
39984 | Well, what do you decide? |
39984 | Well-- has it struck you dumb? |
39984 | Were they very haughty? |
39984 | What about food? |
39984 | What about the old family home that''s tumbling to ruin? |
39984 | What accusations? 39984 What am I to do if Mr. James R. Smythe comes along and orders me out?" |
39984 | What are they? |
39984 | What can you do, if your affairs are in such a muddle as you say? |
39984 | What could you expect? |
39984 | What did Miss Milton say about me? |
39984 | What do you mean? |
39984 | What do you think of it? |
39984 | What else did Miss Milton say about me? |
39984 | What for should he read newspaper advertisements? 39984 What has that got to do with it?" |
39984 | What have you thought of for me to do? |
39984 | What have you told Mrs. Loveland, then? |
39984 | What is there,--on that side? |
39984 | What is''infra dig''? 39984 What makes you say that?" |
39984 | What makes you think so? |
39984 | What must Mrs. Milton and Fanny be feeling? |
39984 | What one? |
39984 | What other things? 39984 What shall I do with the things, sir?" |
39984 | What ways? |
39984 | What were they-- exactly? |
39984 | What would a few pounds matter-- or a few hundreds even, if you''d won them? 39984 What''s Pa been up to now, I say?" |
39984 | What''s Pa been up to now? |
39984 | What''s it about? |
39984 | What, you did n''t? |
39984 | What-- dinner at half- past twelve? |
39984 | What-- no wardrobe? |
39984 | What-- you call me a liar? 39984 What-- you-- you-- don''t believe in me?" |
39984 | What? |
39984 | What?--he''s younger than I am? |
39984 | When is a Marquis not a Marquis? |
39984 | When will Mr. Cremer arrive? |
39984 | Where is Lord Loveland? |
39984 | Which one? |
39984 | Who are you, I wonder, and where did you spring from? |
39984 | Who are you? 39984 Who is that man walking with the tall girl in grey?" |
39984 | Who says he is n''t a Marquis? |
39984 | Who told you anything about me? |
39984 | Why Shakespeare? |
39984 | Why do n''t you say,''in the world''? |
39984 | Why do n''t you send that man Gordon away, too? |
39984 | Why do n''t you write, and say you''d like to have this engagement? |
39984 | Why do you insinuate that I only want to do things that pay? |
39984 | Why go there for them? 39984 Why not?" |
39984 | Why should I be excited? |
39984 | Why should I deny it-- to you? 39984 Why should she or anyone have reasons for not wanting to know me? |
39984 | Why should_ I_ believe, more than anyone else? |
39984 | Why this fondness for my society? |
39984 | Why were the rooms let to me this morning if they were wanted tonight? |
39984 | Why, she sails tomorrow, does n''t she? |
39984 | Why-- did you suspect at all? |
39984 | Why? 39984 Why?" |
39984 | Why? |
39984 | Why? |
39984 | Why_ did_ you knock him down? |
39984 | With pretty daughters? |
39984 | Wo n''t there be money enough from these three performances of''Lord Bob''to pay their railway fares somewhere? |
39984 | Wo n''t we? |
39984 | Would you be more comfortable if I laid your head on the ground? |
39984 | Would you go away and leave them here, in trouble? |
39984 | Would you like me to use my influence with her? |
39984 | Wrong luggage, sir? |
39984 | Yes, it was kind of me, was n''t it? 39984 You admit that you knew, and yet you produced and played in the piece?" |
39984 | You do n''t savvy? 39984 You have n''t forgiven me that? |
39984 | You have no instructions? |
39984 | You have so many? |
39984 | You know who I am? |
39984 | You mean, men like you? 39984 You mean, they-- you-- are stranded here?" |
39984 | You mean, you''re going to send Miss de Lisle away? |
39984 | You mean-- Lord Loveland''s? |
39984 | You want me to believe my gal asked you to marry her? |
39984 | You will no doubt be willing to pay for the message in advance? |
39984 | You wo n''t be mad if I tell you? |
39984 | You''d like to know whether the candle''s worth the game, eh? 39984 You''ll go?" |
39984 | You''re in pain, are n''t you? |
39984 | You''re not going to assure me that you are the real Lord Loveland? |
39984 | You''re not going to desert them? |
39984 | You''ve heard nothing from your people yet? |
39984 | You''ve tried hard to keep me from saying it, have n''t you? 39984 You-- you are Sidney Cremer?" |
39984 | You-- you''re not much hurt? |
39984 | You_ are_ English, are n''t you? |
39984 | Your luggage, too? |
39984 | _ Do_ you care for me a little? |
39984 | _ I_--see to things? |
39984 | _ You?_Apparently she was untouched by the reproach, the actual consternation in his voice. |
39984 | _ You_ offer? |
39984 | Afterwards-- but then, why begin now to think of an afterwards? |
39984 | Already she had a dim yet intoxicating vision of herself a bride in white silk( or should it be cream satin?) |
39984 | And as for the wardrobe-- my goodness, lad, what do you want more than those swell tweeds of yours, and the dress suit you''ve got on? |
39984 | And dat ai n''t what you want, huh?" |
39984 | And five hundred more----""What do you want me to do?" |
39984 | And had you?" |
39984 | And if she did, would it be for or against the man who was down? |
39984 | And why should she try to keep it back, she asked herself, since her love must be considered an honour by this unsuccessful foreign adventurer? |
39984 | And yet-- and yet-- I wonder if all that you''ve gone through is_ entirely_ a matter for regret?" |
39984 | And you''re not a poet or a novelist?" |
39984 | Anything else?" |
39984 | Are n''t you proud of your pupil?" |
39984 | Are there many other girls in the States as beautiful as she?" |
39984 | Are these American manners with foreigners?" |
39984 | Are you anything of a linguist?" |
39984 | Are you good at mathematics?" |
39984 | Are you so surprised that I''m clever enough to make a success with my brain and my pen? |
39984 | As the Major had"got hold of"the Coolidges, the Miltons and Beverlys, why not go and throw himself on the mercy of some of Jim Harborough''s friends? |
39984 | At first her beautiful brown eyes flashed a laughing challenge at him, as if they said,"Would n''t you like to make me think you really care? |
39984 | Be a waiter?" |
39984 | Besides, what''s the odds? |
39984 | Bill Willing?" |
39984 | But I should think the call to a matrimonial sortie----""On an empty purse?" |
39984 | But I_ did_ like him, and I wo n''t say I did n''t now, just because he''s down in the world.... Lucky not to go to prison? |
39984 | But about the hotel?" |
39984 | But are you dead sure you are sick of it?" |
39984 | But could n''t we be frank-- and friends? |
39984 | But could n''t you write them in New York?" |
39984 | But could you be valuable to me?" |
39984 | But how would he have felt, the minute the words were out of his mouth? |
39984 | But instead he stammered,"Am I never to see you again? |
39984 | But perhaps you disapprove of international marriages?" |
39984 | But say, do you want anything out o''me? |
39984 | But see here, shall we come to terms over a drink? |
39984 | But the others?" |
39984 | But what are we to do?" |
39984 | But what can they do to us?" |
39984 | But who cared for a love that ran smooth? |
39984 | But why should you be absent- minded, when so soon you''ll have the person you care for most sitting beside you, where I sit now? |
39984 | But with Fanny Milton, if he should marry her? |
39984 | But you_ was_ there?" |
39984 | But, Lesley-- what about Sidney Cremer? |
39984 | But, by the way, this is n''t ordinary conversation, is it? |
39984 | But, what if he had n''t? |
39984 | But-- were American tailors and bootmakers of a trusting nature? |
39984 | But----""There''s often a''_ but_''in such cases, is n''t there? |
39984 | CHAPTER SEVEN Guide, Philosopher and Friend"Well,"said the girl,"what do you think of things?" |
39984 | CHAPTER TWENTY- TWO News From the Great World"Lesley, was n''t Loveland the name of that Lord you knew on the boat?" |
39984 | Ca n''t you stop in New York for a few days, and let me call on-- on you and your aunt-- just to break the blow of parting?" |
39984 | Can there be a secret?" |
39984 | Can you now?" |
39984 | Could he waltz? |
39984 | Could you help a friend of mine who''s writing a novel on the fifteenth century?" |
39984 | Dear me, Mr. Gordon, do n''t you think you went round that corner too fast?" |
39984 | Did n''t Jacobus tell you? |
39984 | Did n''t you know that?" |
39984 | Did this man look like a gentleman?" |
39984 | Did you get your photo stuck in any of the theatrical papers, since you landed?" |
39984 | Do n''t she know by dis dat I''ve got just twenty minutes for dinner? |
39984 | Do n''t they have shows of our sort in your country?" |
39984 | Do you accept the situation I offer you?" |
39984 | Do you begin to feel just a tiny bit, that''rank''s but the guinea stamp,''and''a man''s a man for a''that''? |
39984 | Do you care enough for me-- a man you say you''re''taking on faith''--to give up all Cremer''s money and to throw him over for my sake?" |
39984 | Do you despise writers?" |
39984 | Do you know Miss Coolidge?" |
39984 | Do you know typewriting or shorthand?" |
39984 | Do you think I stand a good chance of bringing it off?" |
39984 | Do you understand the mechanism of cars?" |
39984 | Does heavies, do n''t you know? |
39984 | Eh? |
39984 | Elinor Coolidge, perhaps? |
39984 | For who ever heard of an American heiress marrying an American man?" |
39984 | Good motto in this life, eh? |
39984 | Gordon?" |
39984 | Gordon?" |
39984 | Gordon?" |
39984 | Got the checks handy for your big baggage?" |
39984 | Great stunt, is n''t it?" |
39984 | Great, ai n''t it?" |
39984 | Had Foxham gone mad? |
39984 | Had she found him out? |
39984 | Had to take what I could get on the way along: supin'', sandwichin'', barkin''----""Eh, what?" |
39984 | Has the man Milton set the police on me?" |
39984 | Have n''t I told you that before?" |
39984 | Have you changed your mind lately?" |
39984 | Have you raised me up only to let me fall deeper into the pit than ever?" |
39984 | He was at Mrs. VanderPot''s dinner first?... |
39984 | He''d think he was doin''a favour-- see? |
39984 | Hope you do n''t mind goin''on Shanks''s Mare? |
39984 | How are you going to play a new part every night of the week, some of''em costoom ones, all out of a grip no bigger than your pocket? |
39984 | How are you?" |
39984 | How could they? |
39984 | How in the world did you meet him?" |
39984 | I do n''t think you spoke of him more than once, did you?" |
39984 | I guess I have a right to my say in this show, have n''t I?" |
39984 | I guess a thousand dollars would come handy to you, would n''t it, especially if you could see half in hard cash tonight?" |
39984 | I hope you did n''t leave the army-- er-- on short notice, eh? |
39984 | I hope_ you_ ai n''t one of the Puritans, are you? |
39984 | I know a newspaper man myself.... What? |
39984 | I only asked you once, why I should have more faith in you than others had? |
39984 | I only meant that if there could be millions in a town with such a name, what must there be in others more important and easier to get at?" |
39984 | I say only, why should_ I_ believe in you, when other people do n''t?" |
39984 | I suppose I have a right to do as I choose with my own? |
39984 | I suppose he_ knows_?" |
39984 | I suppose you do n''t grudge me a bit of fun? |
39984 | I suppose you''ve seen some?" |
39984 | I wonder if it will be the survival of the prettiest; Miss Coolidge-- or if you''ll be knocked down-- on your knees-- to a higher bid?" |
39984 | I would, if I had been in his place.... Not money enough to go away anywhere? |
39984 | I''m delighted you should have it----""Your chair?" |
39984 | If it were n''t, you would n''t have expected to find it waiting for you in this particular place?" |
39984 | If you''re not kiddin''--playin''some game-- if you''re here because you''re stumped, why maybe I might put you up to somethin''--see? |
39984 | In the paper? |
39984 | Is n''t that enough for you?" |
39984 | Is that true or is n''t it?" |
39984 | It was the very next day, I believe.... Who says Papa''s back in New York?... |
39984 | It will seem afterwards to justify our temporary partnership, in case I ever ask myself-- Why?" |
39984 | Meanwhile, you wo n''t mind driving the car for me, will you?" |
39984 | My own, or yours?" |
39984 | No wonder, if you thought that I-- but even then, you could n''t have dreamed I''d take it on purpose?" |
39984 | Not to be despised by_ débutantes_, eh? |
39984 | Now you get out of my house, quick-- see? |
39984 | Now, you see how things stand, do n''t you?" |
39984 | Oh, Jiminy, am_ I_ a good looker, am_ I_ under thirty with a fashionable wardrobe on and off? |
39984 | Oh, but-- now can you drive a motor- car?" |
39984 | On the very day when these cablegrams were received-- Tony Kidd went on to state-- there arrived by a strange(?) |
39984 | Other girls, I suppose?" |
39984 | Otherwise why should he waste good money on a cablegram, and without a code, too? |
39984 | Perhaps you''d rather watch Jack Jacobus''s big scene than talk to me? |
39984 | Perhaps you''ll be good enough to explain the mystery-- if you can? |
39984 | Sandwichin''--why, you know what that is, sure? |
39984 | Say, Gordon, you would n''t like the job, would you? |
39984 | Say, would it be offensive if I asked why they-- er----""Turned me out? |
39984 | Says she suspected from the first, and was always trying to pump him and find out things.... Oh, that horrid affair about him and Papa? |
39984 | Shall I say''Thine own wish, wish I thee''?" |
39984 | She pitied Mrs. Loveland and Mrs. Loveland''s niece because they were so--"so_ unnecessarily_ American, do n''t you know?" |
39984 | She''s never out till eleven.... Who? |
39984 | Should he attempt to excuse himself, to disclaim responsibility, or would that only seem cowardly in her eyes? |
39984 | So how was a man to judge which were_ the_ ones, and which the other ones? |
39984 | So that''s it? |
39984 | So you have a friend in New York?" |
39984 | Still-- who would have expected such depravity? |
39984 | Surely you''re not going to believe any idiotic tale that tuft- hunting ass may have trumped up about me?" |
39984 | That''s so, is n''t it?" |
39984 | That''s what you were layin''for, eh?" |
39984 | The Bowery? |
39984 | The Comte de Rocheverte?... |
39984 | The question is, could we put the play on, and could we get the Opera House for any nights this week? |
39984 | Then, calling jocularly across the room,"Say Alexander, got any mock turtle soup tonight?" |
39984 | There was no difference-- was there?" |
39984 | This is an exciting play, ai n''t it? |
39984 | This is the last straw, is n''t it?" |
39984 | Took you in?... |
39984 | Was n''t there a verse in the Bible about a lion and a mouse?" |
39984 | Was there any depth of wretchedness or of humiliation which the thirteenth Marquis of Loveland had not plumbed at last? |
39984 | Well, now you are being still franker, are n''t you?" |
39984 | Well, supposing I do try, what''s your opinion? |
39984 | Well, what do you say?" |
39984 | Were they searching for the Englishman, and if so, had they got upon his track? |
39984 | What can we do more? |
39984 | What did Bill know of uptown, and the ways of swells? |
39984 | What did you think of us?" |
39984 | What do I care whether or not I know my part, or what they think of me?" |
39984 | What do you think of''em, chum?" |
39984 | What do you want my advice about? |
39984 | What does he want?" |
39984 | What good would it do him, she thought, for her to confess who had proposed a runaway marriage? |
39984 | What has Major Cadwallader Hunter been doing to put all New York against me?" |
39984 | What if it''s true about that restaurant-- if he were starving? |
39984 | What shall I do if you''re injured?" |
39984 | What was Bill that he should give advice? |
39984 | What were the hotel people going to do? |
39984 | What were you-- sergeant?" |
39984 | What would she think of that prophecy if she were even to dream of this humiliated figure, creeping out of night to a new day? |
39984 | What?... |
39984 | What?... |
39984 | Why for? |
39984 | Why not run over and see what there is?" |
39984 | Why should she say so, indeed, when she believed him to be no better than an adventurer, punished for a mean attempt at deceiving? |
39984 | Why should she worry to make herself agreeable? |
39984 | Why should you care?" |
39984 | Why should you think so?" |
39984 | Why, in the name of all that''s decent?" |
39984 | Will the police do anything on their own responsibility, do you think?" |
39984 | Willing,"you''re afraid some o''your swell friends may spot you?" |
39984 | Would n''t you?" |
39984 | Would she do anything odd and original if she were here now? |
39984 | Would you care to come?" |
39984 | Would you care to meet them?" |
39984 | Would you like to join?" |
39984 | Would''birds of prey''make successful miners?" |
39984 | You ai n''t a New Yorker, are you?" |
39984 | You had a little trouble with them at the hotel, did n''t you?" |
39984 | You identify yourself with these people-- these poor little stranded actors?" |
39984 | You know we''re pirates-- regular play- snatchers, do n''t you?" |
39984 | You know what I mean?" |
39984 | You know, I told you I had a telegram this morning?" |
39984 | You must remember pretty Lady Betty Bulkeley who took us all by storm a year or two ago-- sister of the Duke of Stanforth? |
39984 | You understand?" |
39984 | You were on pretty friendly terms with Mrs. Milton on board ship?" |
39984 | You wo n''t take a good thing when it''s offered you?" |
39984 | You would n''t think how you get the cramps shut up between the boards? |
39984 | You''ve got your''family traditions''to keep up, I suppose?" |
39984 | You_ will_ be careful, wo n''t you-- if it''s only to please me?" |
39984 | Your castle across the pond ai n''t got a finer park, I bet?" |
39984 | Your manner and appearance are_ quite_ nice; and besides----""Besides-- what?" |
39984 | _ The pink pearls!_""The pink what?" |
39984 | _ Why do n''t you go to America?_""To try ranching?" |
39984 | _ Why do n''t you go to America?_""To try ranching?" |
39984 | desert valuable friends whom it''s your duty to cultivate-- if you''re to have flowers in the garden of your future?" |
39984 | of$ 25 a week and your board and lodging besides?" |
39984 | thought he could not act well enough, and that he must expect his discharge? |
57253 | Have I not told you that we must part from all we hold most dear and pleasant? |
57253 | If you were to pronounce the last word in the wrong tone, it might mean,"Can I walk across your_ face_?" |
57253 | You might wish to say to a farmer,"Can I walk across your_ field_?" |
57153 | A doctor? 57153 Ah, your Kali, then?" |
57153 | And how many die every day? |
57153 | And is that all? |
57153 | And is there no doctor? |
57153 | And no medicine? |
57153 | Could you design another tomb as beautiful as this? |
57153 | How do you expect to pay? |
57153 | Kali? |
57153 | No; Kali is a cruel, bloodthirsty goddess, while the Virgin----He interrupted me:"She is the mother of Christ, you say? |
57153 | Then twenty- eight? |
57153 | What is the Virgin Mary? |
57153 | You know it is_ pashmina_? |
57153 | But how much is this?" |
57153 | How much?" |
57153 | The bargaining was interminable, something in this manner:--"How much for this stuff?" |
57153 | What could they do to a sahib like me? |
57153 | Where would the prestige of the uniform be? |
57153 | Would I not come? |
47374 | ''Is he any better? 47374 ''Next Tuesday, eh?'' |
47374 | ''Please sir,''I said,''have you a knife?'' 47374 ''Then there is no hope?'' |
47374 | ''What is that, sir? 47374 ''What''s that you are painting?'' |
47374 | ''What''s the price?'' 47374 ''Where do you live, please, sir?'' |
47374 | ''Yes, my lad-- what do you want it for?'' 47374 A spent match, of course?" |
47374 | A-- what? 47374 And have you had that hallucination again?" |
47374 | And how did you deceive the undertaker''s men? |
47374 | And the window? |
47374 | And this: lentil soup? |
47374 | And what did your mother say when you proposed to see him? |
47374 | Any news from Kent? |
47374 | Anything else? |
47374 | Bear,he asked,"what were you before you got yourself transformed into your present shape?" |
47374 | But you can at least tell me if he were tall or short, dark or fair, old or young? |
47374 | Could you have a more superb bed to sleep in? |
47374 | Devour whom? |
47374 | Did you see the body after death? |
47374 | Do n''t you understand that he has been in his grave for six months?--That I practically saw him die?--That I attended his funeral? 47374 Do you mind my smoking?" |
47374 | Do you remember anything out of the common happening-- anything whatever, no matter how trivial-- on the day Mrs. Heath lost her bracelet? |
47374 | Do you wish to sup, gentlemen? |
47374 | Does n''t it seem rather like bad taste to give away things which Providence has presented to us? 47374 Eh? |
47374 | Excuse me,replied the cat,"is it a horse, a serpent, a donkey, a man, or a woman to whom I have the honour of speaking? |
47374 | Had any of your servants left you between the time the brooch was lost and the date of the pawnticket? |
47374 | Had the key been left in? |
47374 | Has not your family physician seen Miss Heathcote? |
47374 | Have you any reason to suppose that Heathcote was heavily insured? |
47374 | Have you seen your father again? |
47374 | He does n''t seem to think it nonsense himself, does he? |
47374 | He is not very heavy, is he? 47374 How can we get it through?" |
47374 | How can you possibly know it? |
47374 | How did he come to be in this palace? 47374 How do you do?" |
47374 | How old is Miss Gabrielle? |
47374 | I do n''t know whether you call those suspicious movements? |
47374 | I suppose,said Melissa,"that my bonnet looks all right? |
47374 | Is it long since you asked this favour? |
47374 | Is it shut? |
47374 | Is there nothing you can tell me to give me a clue to your daughter''s condition? 47374 Is this Hewitt''s Detective Agency Office?" |
47374 | Is this palace shunned by travellers? 47374 Lloyd makes himself pretty comfortable, eh?" |
47374 | Lloyd? 47374 My dear sir, have n''t I said that I do n''t suspect a soul? |
47374 | My sister- in- law? 47374 Nor yesterday?" |
47374 | Nothing else was even moved? |
47374 | Now, will you co- operate with me in this matter, or not? |
47374 | Now-- where can he be? |
47374 | Oh, yes, yes; but how can you possibly know? |
47374 | Perhaps you want to say something? 47374 Poor woman!--how do you account for this sudden illness, Mackenzie?" |
47374 | Really dead? |
47374 | Sir? |
47374 | The key? 47374 The queen of this mansion, the Princess Vanita, is not here at present, is she?" |
47374 | Then money troubles can not explain the mystery? |
47374 | Then this is the used match,he observed,"exactly where it was found?" |
47374 | Then, as to getting in at the window, would it have been easy? |
47374 | They_ must_ shine? |
47374 | This, I take it,inquired Hewitt,"is exactly as it was at the time the brooch was missed?" |
47374 | This,asked Hewitt,"was not in the room that Mrs. Heath had occupied, I take it?" |
47374 | Two pounds? |
47374 | Was the room disturbed? |
47374 | Well, how do you like your big skin? |
47374 | Well, then, have you nothing to desire, that you do not enter this palace? |
47374 | Well, was anything done? |
47374 | Were all your servants at home on the day the brooch was pawned? |
47374 | What aged man was he? |
47374 | What are your daughter''s symptoms? |
47374 | What do you mean? |
47374 | What do you mean? |
47374 | What do you think of sheets embroidered with gold spangles? |
47374 | What is it, Gabrielle? 47374 What is the matter with you, puss?" |
47374 | What is this? |
47374 | What, Lloyd? |
47374 | When did that take place? |
47374 | Where is Miss Gabrielle? |
47374 | Where was the brooch? |
47374 | Who are these great personages? |
47374 | Who are you, old fellow? |
47374 | Who can have asked to be turned into an elephant? 47374 Why do you think that?" |
47374 | Why should we fly? |
47374 | Why, Sidney,he cried,"are you the slate? |
47374 | Will you bring the coffin in here, please, into this room? 47374 Would you have thought it necessary to do so?" |
47374 | Would you like to see the beautiful woman, gentlemen? |
47374 | Yes, yes,said Melissa,"but how can we wear it? |
47374 | Yes; but may I come out again? |
47374 | Yes; will you ask him anything? |
47374 | You are blind? |
47374 | You are quite sure there were no money troubles anywhere? |
47374 | You called the police, of course? |
47374 | You do n''t suppose, you undertaker''s men, that I''m going to tell you what we did it for? 47374 You found Mrs. Armitage''s door locked, I believe,"asked Hewitt,"when you tried it, on the afternoon when she lost her brooch?" |
47374 | You have seen your father!--but he died six months ago? |
47374 | You know that I do n''t sleep at night? |
47374 | You think me very nervous? |
47374 | You think so? |
47374 | You will be sure to tell me the exact truth? |
47374 | You will come, too? 47374 ''Make a temporary arrangement of it''? |
47374 | ''_ Remember my heir?_''I_ am_ remembering my heir, sir! |
47374 | *****"System?" |
47374 | A lump of sugar and a walnut?" |
47374 | And as cold? |
47374 | And yesterday-- was she out then?" |
47374 | Are you going by that train yourself?" |
47374 | As to the door?" |
47374 | As to the family and visitors-- why, you do n''t suspect any of them, do you?" |
47374 | But at that moment the official to whom the German had been speaking came up to them and said, in very fair English,"The ladies are fond of lace?" |
47374 | But it is so good a clue that I should like to know now whether you are determined to prosecute, when you have the criminal?" |
47374 | But what puzzles me,"he continued,"is the motive-- what_ can_ the motive be?" |
47374 | But why should a bird carry a match in its beak? |
47374 | By what possible chance can the man be alive?" |
47374 | By- the- bye, were you thinking of having any alterations or additions made to your house?" |
47374 | Can he have burned it, without opening it? |
47374 | Can he have given it away? |
47374 | Can you do me the inestimable favour of remaining here until a nurse arrives?" |
47374 | Can you forgive me?" |
47374 | Can you go by the next train? |
47374 | Can you put me in a room?" |
47374 | Cooper?'' |
47374 | Could anybody go?" |
47374 | Could you hear it struck?" |
47374 | Do n''t you think so? |
47374 | Do you know anything of the business?" |
47374 | Do you mind describing him to me?" |
47374 | Do you think that emerald eyes go well with my face?" |
47374 | Do you want to ask her anything? |
47374 | Does it? |
47374 | Does it? |
47374 | Does that matter?" |
47374 | Eh, Polly?" |
47374 | Eh? |
47374 | Have they not lustres and candelabra? |
47374 | Have you a clue? |
47374 | Hewitt stepped aside to let her pass, and afterwards said, interrogatively:"Miss Norris-- your daughter, Sir John?" |
47374 | How comes it that not one enters it?" |
47374 | How much?" |
47374 | How much?'' |
47374 | I believe time and tune were not much regarded, but what mattered that? |
47374 | I mean, there was no chance of Mrs. Armitage having mislaid it?" |
47374 | I suppose the brooch was really gone? |
47374 | I suppose, by- the- bye, that there is no getting at the matches left behind on the first and second occasions?" |
47374 | I think that acquits_ him_, eh?" |
47374 | I think, if there is no objection, I will look first at the room that the lady-- Mrs.----?" |
47374 | In the name of Heaven, what has become of him? |
47374 | Is he as pale as most dead people? |
47374 | Is it clear?" |
47374 | Is that your gardener-- the man who left the ladder by the lawn on the first occasion you spoke of?" |
47374 | Is there any blood on my hands?'' |
47374 | Is there any hope at all?'' |
47374 | Is there anything else you would care to see here?" |
47374 | Is there anything, for instance, preying on her mind?" |
47374 | It does not strike the eyes as being too much trimmed, eh, Annora?" |
47374 | It was your niece, I think, who found that Mrs. Armitage''s door was locked-- this door in fact-- on the day she lost her brooch?" |
47374 | Lloyd''s?" |
47374 | My God, what is the matter with me? |
47374 | Now, may I confide in you?" |
47374 | Of course, there will be a female searcher at the Twyford police- station? |
47374 | Perhaps the spell is broken-- by the-- the death of that unfortunate John Puddifoot--""_ The spell?_"repeated the solicitor, staring dubiously at him. |
47374 | Perhaps you do n''t know how to read?" |
47374 | Shall we go outside now?" |
47374 | The lady bowed slightly, and said in a plaintive drawl:"I, uncle? |
47374 | Then I take it you will go, Mr. Hewitt? |
47374 | Then looking up at the window again, he said:"That is Mr. Lloyd, is n''t it, coming back in a fly?" |
47374 | Then they realized their position; how about the lace? |
47374 | Then why was the mother so nervous? |
47374 | Was I, too, the victim of illusion? |
47374 | Was anybody, to your knowledge--_anybody_, mind-- in the house on all three occasions?" |
47374 | Was there any visitor here each time-- or even on the first and last occasions only?" |
47374 | Well, then, there is no doubt Heathcote is really dead?" |
47374 | Well?" |
47374 | What about mine?" |
47374 | What does the future hold in store for her? |
47374 | What is the meaning of it? |
47374 | What made you connect these two robberies together?" |
47374 | What makes you ask?" |
47374 | What next?" |
47374 | What next?" |
47374 | What readier or more probably effectual way than, while teaching it to carry without dropping, to teach it also to keep quiet while carrying? |
47374 | What reason can you possibly give to the authorities for such an action?" |
47374 | What rooms do they light?" |
47374 | What vanity has pushed him into the bear profession? |
47374 | Where is he? |
47374 | Where is she?" |
47374 | Where is the match- stand?" |
47374 | Where were you at these times?" |
47374 | Where will you go? |
47374 | Who can eat grapes with such a head? |
47374 | Who do you think? |
47374 | Who was he? |
47374 | Who would buy?" |
47374 | Why can he see no middle course between an aspect of warlike grimness and a self- conscious grin? |
47374 | Why is it no part of our English boy''s education to know what a naturally pleasant expression of countenance is? |
47374 | Why trouble themselves about the sun, then? |
47374 | Will she ever get over the severe shock to which she was subjected? |
47374 | Will you be so kind as to tell me what is your impression on the subject? |
47374 | Will you oblige me by describing Heathcote''s death as faithfully as you can?" |
47374 | Will you oblige me by ordering us out?" |
47374 | Would n''t it be taken as a sort of slight? |
47374 | Would you under the circumstances have considered it necessary to refuse to give a certificate without seeing the body?" |
47374 | You accept?" |
47374 | You are a great doctor, are you not?" |
47374 | You are aware, of course, that the existing owner has the power to do this? |
47374 | You did not know of the existence of a talisman-- a charm-- call it what you will-- in my family? |
47374 | You do n''t really say so? |
47374 | You have n''t told any of them about this business?" |
47374 | You have sinned?" |
47374 | You spoke of Heathcote as a solicitor: has he left his family well off?" |
47374 | You will make it your business to find out the truth now, wo n''t you?" |
47374 | You wo n''t let the servants know, will you? |
47374 | Your niece, now?" |
47374 | [ Illustration: REALLY?] |
47374 | [ Illustration: YES?] |
47374 | [ Illustration:"IS THERE ANY BLOOD ON MY HANDS?"] |
47374 | are you taking lessons?'' |
47374 | asked the old man--"rabbit?" |
47374 | cried the beggar, angrily,"why did you leave the calling you were in? |
47374 | exclaimed the old beggar,"why did you get yourself turned into a vulture? |
47374 | he asked:"are you not happy here?" |
47374 | he exclaimed,"button broken, eh?" |
47374 | where''s the screwdriver? |
56840 | Are you hurt? |
56840 | Can I have this piece? |
56840 | Did it touch you? |
56840 | Do n''t you s''pose you could get''em to leave that show an''come with ours? |
56840 | Do you think I''m goin''to ride him? |
56840 | How are we going to get him? |
56840 | How do you mean? |
56840 | How do you sell it? |
56840 | How long before he''ll get over bein''tickled? |
56840 | Is it to be half and half? |
56840 | Kicks, do n''t he? |
56840 | Tom,he cried,"can you hold on for half a minute longer?" |
56840 | What is it good for? |
56840 | What shall I do? |
56840 | Where does it come from? |
56840 | ***** Which little girl will read these stanzas, and see her own portrait? |
56840 | Another time he had been unusually trying all day long, and mamma was quite out of patience, and asked,"Carlie, why do n''t you be good? |
56840 | But the question is, how did he get in the moon, and what is he doing there? |
56840 | But what was to be done? |
56840 | Do n''t you think so? |
56840 | Do you make pretty bouquets for the breakfast table? |
56840 | Do you think this is good enough to put in your paper? |
56840 | HARRY W. C. What is a bucking bronco? |
56840 | He looked up from his play, and said very seriously,"_ What_ makes you tell him, then?" |
56840 | He rose rubbing his back, and looking very earnestly at his aunt, said,"Aunt Lydia, does it hurt your back when you turn summersaults?" |
56840 | He said,"Please kiss me, wo n''t you, mamma?" |
56840 | Is not an orchestra a confusing sight in one way? |
56840 | May I come in? |
56840 | May she come in? |
56840 | This word, however, proved too much for the old lady, and so I had to come down to the commonplace inquiry,"Madam, what is this?" |
56840 | To which of you must I give the money?" |
56840 | What else do you learn besides riding and shooting? |
56840 | What have we here? |
56840 | Who does not know the Mother Goose jingle of"The man in the moon Came down too soon To ask his way to Norwich"? |
56840 | Will they send us the author''s name, as we should be glad to give our little friend the information he desires? |
56840 | You know how to scotch''em, do n''t you?" |
56840 | You shall see his wife, an''old Ben, an''Ella, an''--""But wo n''t you be afraid of Job Lord?" |
56840 | You would have assisted her, would you not, had it been your grandmother, and given her your arm, and carried her bundles? |
56840 | [ Illustration] MAY I COME IN? |
57292 | And the same author, using the_ Disciple''s Catechism_, writes:"What is it that ever is? |
57292 | How could man leave any trace at a stage when he could not press himself into the clay or be caught by soft lava or masses of volcanic dust? |
57292 | It is a group of psychic energies, and heaven must have something in common with these, or why should it gravitate there? |
57292 | Such questions as,"Where have I come from?" |
57292 | Then there are three eternals? |
57292 | What is it that ever was? |
57292 | What is it that is ever coming and going? |
57292 | and,"What shall be my condition after death?" |
51830 | And all the while his influence has increased? |
51830 | And big_ sucuria_, too? |
51830 | And did you meet his friend, Barma Shah? |
51830 | And he may have a message for us? |
51830 | And how,queried Mike,"do you tell the grunts apart?" |
51830 | And what are those? |
51830 | And what makes it so important,demanded Li,"if you do n''t know the difference?" |
51830 | And where will I find my father now? |
51830 | And why? |
51830 | And you followed us from then on? |
51830 | Are n''t tigers usually hunted in the daytime? |
51830 | Are you sure? |
51830 | Because it watches you,Biff said,"not because it hears the music? |
51830 | But all that was stopped a hundred years ago--"You mean the time when British Raj said there should be no more_ thugee_? 51830 But are they all stamped out? |
51830 | But are you sure we have n''t met? 51830 But do n''t you just stake out some animal?" |
51830 | But how can music make snakes dance? |
51830 | But how can the monkeys live with the snakes? |
51830 | But how did we happen to come along just when you were here for a tiger hunt and the villagers were so terribly excited over it? |
51830 | But how do you come to be in India? 51830 But how,"queried Biff,"did you know that we were coming that way?" |
51830 | But in that case,Biff asked frankly,"why are you giving it to me? |
51830 | But where did they all go, Chandra? |
51830 | But where did you go, Chandra? |
51830 | But where did you learn it? |
51830 | But where is Muscles? |
51830 | But who brought the message? |
51830 | But why are they covered over? |
51830 | But why do they want the ruby for Kali? |
51830 | But why,asked Chuba,"should yaks feel both good and bad?" |
51830 | Can somebody bring me a rope? |
51830 | Could you post me on a platform or somewhere, sir? |
51830 | Did Jinnah Jad teach you that, too? |
51830 | Did n''t we? |
51830 | Does it matter? |
51830 | Dumb of me, was n''t it? |
51830 | He put it in our pockets, remember? 51830 How are we going to find Chonsi?" |
51830 | How did Jinnah Jad work that part of it? 51830 How else could I get here so quick?" |
51830 | How many thugs do you think were on the train with us, Chandra? |
51830 | How? |
51830 | I saw other people camping in a mango grove, so why ca n''t we? |
51830 | Is the altimeter right? |
51830 | May I ask your name, sir? |
51830 | Maybe we better call others? |
51830 | Not-- not a Yeti? |
51830 | Or is it? |
51830 | Remember that Sikh in the bus? |
51830 | Remember when I went through the crowd, tapping people''s pockets, asking for rupees, like this? |
51830 | Remember, Biff? |
51830 | See where the path takes a short cut over the little hump of ground? |
51830 | Short on porters? |
51830 | Sir-- what have you heard from my father? 51830 So it was through Jinnah Jad,"inquired Biff,"that my father''s message reached me?" |
51830 | So the tiger will think it is loose? |
51830 | So your people still kept on jumping down wells? |
51830 | That he will be there, too, when we deliver the ruby? |
51830 | The one with the false beard? 51830 The time the big jaguar jumped at you?" |
51830 | Then the Lama is keeping my father in Chonsi? |
51830 | These thugs,questioned Biff,"do they want the ruby because of its value?" |
51830 | Thugs? 51830 Until he gets the ruby-- like a ransom?" |
51830 | We tried to take a short cut and whom did we run into? |
51830 | Well, Kamuka,commented Li in an indulgent tone,"now that you''re high in the Himalayas, how do the Andes stack up?" |
51830 | Well, what did you think of it? |
51830 | What about_ Macu_? |
51830 | What are we waiting for? |
51830 | What is it? |
51830 | What is that? |
51830 | What makes you think that, Chandra? |
51830 | What then? |
51830 | When does the train reach our station? |
51830 | When will we hear from the Grand Lama, the wisest man in the East? |
51830 | Where are we? |
51830 | Where did he go, Kamuka? |
51830 | Why must I take this ruby to my father? |
51830 | You are going to the old game preserve? |
51830 | You are n''t coming with us, Colonel Gorak? |
51830 | You go for it, Biff? |
51830 | You heard shooting? |
51830 | You mean he may walk right into it? |
51830 | You mean like they stop thugee? |
51830 | You mean that I''m to go with Barma Shah? |
51830 | You remember my uncle, the judge in Mexico City? |
51830 | You see? 51830 You''re telling me?" |
51830 | Your father is still in Chonsi, yes--"Because they wo n''t let him go? |
51830 | Any more questions?" |
51830 | As Biff climbed out, Chandra called to him from the pool:"Maybe you go back to your American clothes, hey? |
51830 | As Colonel Gorak paused, Biff asked,"By outsiders, do you mean the Kali cult, sir?" |
51830 | As a sudden thought struck him, he asked,"Just what did that list say, Chandra?" |
51830 | Biff and the other boys wanted to hear more on that intriguing subject, but Barma Shah asked:"Will anyone block us between Leh and Chonsi?" |
51830 | Biff asked Chandra,"Any idea where this path may take us?" |
51830 | Biff stopped the recorder as Li asked, in a puzzled tone,"Is this a joke, Biff?" |
51830 | But are you sure?" |
51830 | But would you recognize Bela Kron if you saw him?" |
51830 | Ca n''t you understand?" |
51830 | Can any of you chaps drive a jeep?" |
51830 | Chand?" |
51830 | Do they have them here?" |
51830 | Do you think they will catch up with us?" |
51830 | Have you any reports on him?" |
51830 | Have you ever run across him here in India?" |
51830 | He mentioned this fact to Hurdu, who interpreted it to the Changpas thus:"You see what fools the Ladakhi are? |
51830 | How did that happen?" |
51830 | How did you learn to charm snakes, Chandra?" |
51830 | How do you know about all this?" |
51830 | I do n''t see him?" |
51830 | Kamuka, looking back at the train, put the next query:"But why did we get off here?" |
51830 | Maybe we should go up and drop down with it, no?" |
51830 | Mike paused a moment, then asked:"Do you have the ruby?" |
51830 | No, some have gone under-- how do you say it?" |
51830 | On the road? |
51830 | On the way down from the throne room, Biff said to Muscles,"So you do n''t believe there are such things as Yetis?" |
51830 | One asked in a droning tone,"You have brought the Light of the Lama?" |
51830 | Or do n''t you know?" |
51830 | Other countries have gangsters, why not India?" |
51830 | Pausing, he looked toward the porters and asked,"Any of these?" |
51830 | See that hand, Biff, the one like a cup? |
51830 | Seriously, he added,"That was while you were hunting for Biff''s Uncle Charlie?" |
51830 | Should n''t you keep it for yourself?" |
51830 | So I look at the list, and what do you think is next? |
51830 | So actually, you do n''t need the flute, do you?" |
51830 | Tell me, Chandra, did you ever meet my father?" |
51830 | The creature they call the Abominable Snowman? |
51830 | The first words he put were:"Where''s Muscles? |
51830 | The other thought was-- what was happening in Darjeeling? |
51830 | Then Chandra reached Biff and asked politely,"You have rupees, maybe, sahib?" |
51830 | Then he inquired:"You have the ruby Diwan Chand gave you?" |
51830 | Was n''t he along with you?" |
51830 | What about the Chonsi Lama? |
51830 | What are they?" |
51830 | What''s stopping us?" |
51830 | Where is he?" |
51830 | Why was n''t Tikse in favor of that?" |
51830 | Would we, Kamuka?" |
51830 | You have heard of the giant ape- man of the Himalayas, have n''t you? |
51830 | and Kamuka added,"But where is he? |
35093 | A real Denby digger-- eh? |
35093 | A wedding? |
35093 | A woman? 35093 Afraid?" |
35093 | Ah, Burke, how are you? 35093 An account? |
35093 | An''ter think of you comin''back an''workin''fur yer father like this, an''--"My--_what_? |
35093 | An''yer workin''fur Burke Denby on the hill, ai n''t ye? |
35093 | And Burke does n''t know yet where she is? |
35093 | And I wo n''t have to ask him for any money? |
35093 | And can I get those canned peaches and pears and plums, and the grape jelly that I first looked at? |
35093 | And do you live-- here? |
35093 | And do you see how perfectly devoted Burke is to Paul and Percy? |
35093 | And does she like Dalton, too? 35093 And he pays it? |
35093 | And he''s a doctor? |
35093 | And how are you getting along with those? |
35093 | And leave you? |
35093 | And now what do you propose to do? |
35093 | And there was nothing to show_ when_ she left? |
35093 | And why, pray, do you single him out? |
35093 | And you like him-- so well? |
35093 | And you saw-- them? 35093 And you wo n''t mind it, for a little, while we''re planning, will you, darling? |
35093 | And-- I? |
35093 | Antiquarian? 35093 Are n''t we getting a little-- theatrical, my child?" |
35093 | Are you sure? |
35093 | Are you-- all alone, then? 35093 Are you-- like her?" |
35093 | Are you? 35093 As beautiful as-- Betty, say?" |
35093 | Because what? |
35093 | Betty, I-- I-- Where is she? 35093 Betty, dear, he means-- we''ve forgiven each other, and-- if_ I_ am happy, ca n''t you be?" |
35093 | Betty, really? |
35093 | Building bridges for the Hottentots again? |
35093 | Burke, why in the world do n''t you answer me? |
35093 | Burke,_ why_ has your father objected so to-- to me? |
35093 | But I told you then that I was-- was learning-- was trying to learn-- Oh, why do you make me say it? |
35093 | But are you sure-- do you know it''s true? |
35093 | But did n''t Mr. Denby say-- anything? |
35093 | But do you think that is-- right? |
35093 | But does it mean so much to you that I-- that I-- that he-- likes me? |
35093 | But he learned-- something? |
35093 | But he''s a-- a real gentleman, the kind that my husband would like? |
35093 | But how-- how long is this going to take you? |
35093 | But is n''t he frightened, or worried? |
35093 | But she''s_ not_--all right? |
35093 | But what about-- him? |
35093 | But what did you do? 35093 But what did you sing? |
35093 | But what does this mean? 35093 But what does this mean?" |
35093 | But what makes you think he has? |
35093 | But what shall you-- tell her? |
35093 | But what was it Betty said to her? |
35093 | But what_ did_ they say? |
35093 | But where does she think he is? 35093 But who is he?" |
35093 | But why am I going to work? |
35093 | But why not? |
35093 | But you are n''t getting tired of it? |
35093 | But you-- you''re coming to dinner with us-- to- morrow night, are n''t you? |
35093 | But, Burke, you''ve got_ some_ money, have n''t you? 35093 But, Helen, how? |
35093 | But, are n''t they frightened-- anxious-- anything? 35093 But, listen, do n''t you want me to go on with my story?" |
35093 | But, mother, what_ was_ it? |
35093 | But, say, hain''t I seen you before somewheres? |
35093 | But, why-- how do you know-- what made you think he has-- left you? |
35093 | But, you didn''t-- you_ did n''t_ tell them I was here? |
35093 | But-- my money-- can''t I pay-- money? |
35093 | But-- your father? |
35093 | Ca n''t you? 35093 Care? |
35093 | Careful? 35093 Careful? |
35093 | Come? 35093 Crying? |
35093 | Dad, what is it? 35093 Dad, who in Heaven''s name is she?" |
35093 | Dad-- would you mind-- my sleeping here to- night? 35093 Did I do anything but put on my hat?" |
35093 | Did I? 35093 Did n''t I stand as still as a mouse while he was sitting there with his beetling brows bent in solemn thought? |
35093 | Did n''t I tell you she was n''t ready to go back? |
35093 | Did n''t you tell her Mrs. Thayer was gone? |
35093 | Did you have a pleasant Christmas, Miss Darling? |
35093 | Did you see''em-- when they come back? |
35093 | Did you see-- your father? |
35093 | Did you think he was-- giving in? |
35093 | Do n''t I? 35093 Do n''t they ever give you any time to yourself?" |
35093 | Do n''t you know him? |
35093 | Do n''t you know? 35093 Do n''t you see? |
35093 | Do n''t you suppose I know_ now_? 35093 Do n''t you_ care_ at all?" |
35093 | Do they want to know? |
35093 | Do you like it here? |
35093 | Do you mean to say you do n''t know Burke Denby is your father? |
35093 | Do you mean-- they are n''t so big as your allowance? |
35093 | Do you really_ care_ so much? |
35093 | Do you suppose I''m going to have one of your swell friends come here, and then have you ashamed of me? 35093 Do you think he really will?" |
35093 | Do you think he_ was_ giving in? |
35093 | Do? 35093 Doctor, why ca n''t you be straight with me?" |
35093 | Does Mrs. Reynolds know who you really are? |
35093 | Does he really act so unhappy, then? |
35093 | Does it? 35093 Does n''t he? |
35093 | Edith, what of the Denbys? 35093 Eh? |
35093 | Eh? 35093 For it''s just what we want, is n''t it, dearie?" |
35093 | G- girl? |
35093 | Given up? 35093 Got a raise?" |
35093 | H- m; like him? |
35093 | Happen to come up-- here? |
35093 | Hard? 35093 Have I?" |
35093 | Have n''t you noticed-- suspected? |
35093 | Have you lived in Dalton long? |
35093 | He? 35093 Helen Barnet, will you-- marry me?" |
35093 | Helen, what in Heaven''s name is the meaning of these bills? |
35093 | Helen, why not? |
35093 | Helen, you will stay, and be my wife? |
35093 | Helen, you-- will? |
35093 | Help you? 35093 Here--_still_?" |
35093 | His father, then? |
35093 | His own daughter writing his letters for him, and living with him day by day, and he not to know it? 35093 His wife ran away, did n''t she, years ago? |
35093 | How about Betty? 35093 How can we?" |
35093 | How could you let me go there? 35093 How is she doing, really, about-- well, er-- this private self- improvement association of hers?" |
35093 | How long you goin''ter be gone? |
35093 | How old did you say he was? |
35093 | How old is he? |
35093 | How''d she ever manage to clean it up? |
35093 | How''s the baby? |
35093 | I did, sir, and--"Well? |
35093 | I''ve been away so much, and I''ve seen so little of her for months past-- how_ is_ she doing? |
35093 | If all your swell friends were--"Helen, for Heaven''s sake,_ is n''t_ there any word but that abominable''swell''that you can use? |
35093 | If he did know of such a thing, do you think he ought to tell you, or anybody else? |
35093 | If it''s just a playday, why did n''t he give it to you ter take it_ tergether_, then? 35093 If you do n''t, then wo n''t you let me_ make_ you care?" |
35093 | In the library? 35093 In what way?" |
35093 | Is he married? |
35093 | Is he so very important, then? |
35093 | Is it because you do n''t_ want_ to? |
35093 | Is she agreeable-- personally? |
35093 | Is your father so awfully angry, then? |
35093 | It_ might_ mean he was giving in, could n''t it? |
35093 | Keep her? 35093 Look a- here, child, do you think I''m blind? |
35093 | Look_ down_ on you? |
35093 | May I ask why--_that_? |
35093 | May I ask why? |
35093 | Me? 35093 Me?" |
35093 | Mind? 35093 Miss Darling, what do you mean?" |
35093 | Miss Darling, why would n''t you be happy here? |
35093 | Mistaken? 35093 Mother, have we very much-- money?" |
35093 | Mother, how did we happen to come up here, to Dalton? |
35093 | Mother, why did n''t you tell me? |
35093 | Mr. Denby''s son? |
35093 | Mrs. Denby, do n''t you think-- Wo n''t you let me tell them where you are? |
35093 | My dear lady, ca n''t you see that now-- right_ now_ is just the time for you to go back to your husband? |
35093 | Nice restful place for a tired man to come to, is n''t it? 35093 No?" |
35093 | Not love-- my wife? |
35093 | Oh, I hope-- I did n''t, did I? 35093 Oh, Mr. Estey, please, what sort of a girl would be the right one-- for you?" |
35093 | Oh, ai n''t he goin'', too? |
35093 | Oh, come, Hawkins, this is some colossal mistake, or a fool hoax, or-- What kind of looking specimen is she? |
35093 | Oh, come, come, Burke, are n''t you just a little bit-- harsh? |
35093 | Oh, come, come, my dear child--"Will you promise? |
35093 | Oh, it''s so exciting, is n''t it? |
35093 | Oh, yes; I did n''t tell you, did I? 35093 Oh-- Helen? |
35093 | Old? 35093 Older than the Mayflower, then?" |
35093 | Really? |
35093 | Sing? 35093 So he''s happy--_now_, eh?" |
35093 | So soon? 35093 So? |
35093 | So? 35093 Some one_ else_?" |
35093 | Surely, did n''t your sister-- tell you? 35093 That so?" |
35093 | The afternoon, then? |
35093 | The cuneiform writing? 35093 Then Mr. Denby seems happier?" |
35093 | Then she knew about the ten- thousand- dollar check? |
35093 | Then they are more than-- er-- potatoes to her? 35093 Then what is it?" |
35093 | Then what was the matter? |
35093 | Then you will make good? |
35093 | Then you''ve been here before? |
35093 | Then you''ve seen-- I mean, you think he''s-- ashamed of me? |
35093 | Then you_ did n''t_ know-- that? |
35093 | Then you_ planned_ this? |
35093 | Then, if--she spoke hurriedly, and with evident embarrassment--"if you wo n''t tell me that way, wo n''t you please tell me another? |
35093 | Then? |
35093 | There, what did I tell you? |
35093 | They do n''t know, of course, that she''s here? |
35093 | They_ sent_ it? |
35093 | To thank me? |
35093 | Trained? |
35093 | Was n''t I nice to him? 35093 Well, Burke, my boy, how are you?" |
35093 | Well, Miss Betty? |
35093 | Well, and-- did she? |
35093 | Well, do n''t you come here often, to the station, or somethin''? |
35093 | Well, wa''n''t you there with yer mother? |
35093 | Well, where was I? 35093 Well?" |
35093 | Well? |
35093 | Were there-- really? |
35093 | What did you tell him? |
35093 | What did you tell him? |
35093 | What do you mean by that? |
35093 | What do you mean? 35093 What do you mean? |
35093 | What do you mean? |
35093 | What do you mean? |
35093 | What do you mean? |
35093 | What do you mean? |
35093 | What do you suppose, when he''s coming here to- night? 35093 What friends has she in Boston?" |
35093 | What have you done? 35093 What in thunder can a woman with a baby want of me at this time of-- What''s her name?" |
35093 | What is it, then? |
35093 | What is the meaning of all this? |
35093 | What''s a little salt or baking powder? 35093 What''s the difference-- if it goes?" |
35093 | What''s the matter? |
35093 | What''s the trouble? 35093 What-- do you mean?" |
35093 | What_ did_ he say? |
35093 | What_ did_ she say? 35093 Where did you find this?" |
35093 | Where do you come in? 35093 Where''s Burke?" |
35093 | Who did, indeed? |
35093 | Who said so? |
35093 | Who''s Gleason? |
35093 | Who''s he? 35093 Who''s he?" |
35093 | Who''s interested_ now_ in Mr. Burke Denby''s love- story? |
35093 | Why are you so glum? |
35093 | Why did n''t you play some of your good music, dear? |
35093 | Why did you let me come here and go to that house day after day and not know-- anything? |
35093 | Why not, pray? |
35093 | Why not? 35093 Why not?" |
35093 | Why not? |
35093 | Why not? |
35093 | Why not? |
35093 | Why should I? 35093 Why, Betty, from this window we can see--""See what?" |
35093 | Why, Betty, what do you mean? |
35093 | Why, Betty, what''s the matter? 35093 Why, Betty, what-- what do you mean?" |
35093 | Why, Burke, what do you mean? |
35093 | Why, Burke, what''s the matter? 35093 Why, Burke, what_ is_ the matter?" |
35093 | Why, Denby, you do n''t mean she_ is n''t_ all right? 35093 Why, Frank, so soon as this?" |
35093 | Why, Frank--_outdoors_? 35093 Why, I had n''t noticed it at all before, but we''re on a hill ourselves, are n''t we?" |
35093 | Why, dearie,_ do n''t_ you like it? |
35093 | Why, er-- er--"I mean, would you-- could you marry--_me_? |
35093 | Why, mother-- that is-- I mean-- she never said-- What do you mean? 35093 Why, what do you think? |
35093 | Why, what-- what do you mean? |
35093 | Why-- would daddy-- be sorry? |
35093 | Why? |
35093 | Will I-- what? |
35093 | Will you come here to live-- as my daughter? |
35093 | Without-- your dinner? |
35093 | Y- yes; but--"Why, Burke, do n''t you like it? 35093 Yes, she''s been talking to me, and-- Oh, mother, mother,_ why_ did you come here--_now_?" |
35093 | Yes, yes, I know-- that was dreadful, was n''t it, dearie? |
35093 | Yes; and when our trunks come, and we get our photographs and things out, it will be lovely, wo n''t it? |
35093 | Yes; but what is it? |
35093 | Yes; but what is this, Benton? |
35093 | You aren''t-- promised to any one else? |
35093 | You do n''t mean that you''ve-- Who is she? |
35093 | You do n''t mean they_ do_ know where I am? |
35093 | You do think she''s beautiful, do n''t you? |
35093 | You do think she''s lovely? |
35093 | You have-- what? |
35093 | You have? 35093 You like it, then?" |
35093 | You mean you were using_ me_ as an-- er-- understudy? |
35093 | You mean, what_ he_ likes, Burke likes? |
35093 | You mean-- that you cared for some one else? |
35093 | You say Mr. Donald Estey will be-- here, to- morrow? |
35093 | You think she was angry, then, at your letter? |
35093 | You wo n''t give your consent? |
35093 | You''ll come? |
35093 | You''ve got another guess coming if you think I''m going to hold Doc Gleason off at the end of a''Who is it?'' 35093 You''ve seen him, have n''t you?" |
35093 | You-- know-- my--_name_? |
35093 | You_ do_ think she''ll-- she''ll be everything he could wish? 35093 _ Ca n''t_ you see anything, or talk anything, but our going up there to live? |
35093 | _ Drag him down!_Had she dragged him down? |
35093 | _ I go up there?_Helen''s voice was full of dismayed protest. |
35093 | _ Not been there_-- What do you mean? 35093 _ She?_""That exquisitely beautiful girl in the library. |
35093 | _ You?_ Oh, in the library--"Yes; an hour ago. 35093 ''Do ladies do that?'' 35093 ''Do ladies do this?'' 35093 ( Was he not to train her himself?) 35093 ( Why_ could_ not he keep those abominable portions of his anatomy from being so wretchedly telltale?) 35093 --can I? 35093 After all this time? |
35093 | After all, had not Brett said that this illness of dad''s was nothing serious? |
35093 | After all, might he not be making a serious mistake if he did not accede to his father''s wishes? |
35093 | Afterwards-- Do you know what a brick dad was afterwards? |
35093 | Ai n''t you Dorothy Elizabeth?" |
35093 | Aloud he resumed:"And were you, too, ever here?" |
35093 | Always, therefore, after callers had been there, his first eager question was:"How did you like them, dear?" |
35093 | And Burke Denby himself-- did he know? |
35093 | And I should n''t have asked it, should I?" |
35093 | And I-- Oh, what have I said? |
35093 | And do n''t you see? |
35093 | And does your mother like it-- here?" |
35093 | And had not Helen, his dear wife, said that she would aid him? |
35093 | And had they not provided for her? |
35093 | And if you ca n''t make_ me_ so, you will Baby, wo n''t you? |
35093 | And might it not be, after all, that she had been chasing a will- o''-the- wisp of fancied"culture"all these years? |
35093 | And must they_ always_ choose four o''clock in the morning for a fit of the colic? |
35093 | And never would one have imagined that behind the quiet words was a wild clamor of"Oh, what shall I do-- what shall I do-- what_ shall_ I do?" |
35093 | And now-- won''t you help me, please? |
35093 | And say, dearie,_ do_ you suppose--_could_ we have him to dinner, or something? |
35093 | And tell me-- what was he-- he like?" |
35093 | And the grief and the hurt and the mortification-- where did they come in? |
35093 | And was n''t he always telling her she did not manage right? |
35093 | And were you-- frightened, dear?" |
35093 | And what would the outcome be? |
35093 | And yet--"Am I, Mr. Estey? |
35093 | And you-- are you well?" |
35093 | And, after all, might it not be the wisest thing, to be away from each other for a time? |
35093 | And, oh, wo n''t you, please?" |
35093 | And, pray, what''s he chasin''off to a heathen country like that for?" |
35093 | And_ is_ ten thousand dollars enough to pay-- for learning all that?" |
35093 | Apologize? |
35093 | Are you faint? |
35093 | Are you ill?" |
35093 | Are you ill?" |
35093 | Are you really, really-- my little Betty?" |
35093 | Besides, did n''t he say himself that we_ needed_ to have a vacation from each other? |
35093 | Besides, does n''t somebody say somewhere that confession is good for the soul?" |
35093 | Besides, is n''t she starting for America about as soon as she can? |
35093 | Besides, was she, after all, really in love with him? |
35093 | Betty, she hasn''t-- has she been-- talking-- to you?" |
35093 | Burke and his father?" |
35093 | Burke looked into the beaming old face and shining eyes-- and swallowed hard before he could utter an unsteady"How are you, Benton?" |
35093 | But I-- I-- doctor, you went to-- to Dalton?" |
35093 | But are n''t we getting a little melodramatic? |
35093 | But could it be? |
35093 | But did he not think she was-- well, a little peculiar? |
35093 | But did they never do anything but cry? |
35093 | But has n''t he some beautiful things?" |
35093 | But how about the man? |
35093 | But how_ could_ she answer? |
35093 | But if they find me-- what then? |
35093 | But is that any reason for inflicting it on other people by reflection?" |
35093 | But what did he do? |
35093 | But what does he do-- collect things?" |
35093 | But what had led to it? |
35093 | But what of it? |
35093 | But what was taking place-- over there? |
35093 | But what would he say? |
35093 | But what would her mother say? |
35093 | But where could she go? |
35093 | But where''s your bag? |
35093 | But who supposed it was going to prolong itself away into January like this?" |
35093 | But why had she put her there-- in that man''s house? |
35093 | But why this sudden right- about- face? |
35093 | But why,_ why_ had she come back here and put her into that man''s home? |
35093 | But would Gleason lend himself to such a wild scheme? |
35093 | But would he be really kind and lovable like this all the time? |
35093 | But would they be happy there? |
35093 | But you do n''t mean you''re goin''away ter_ live_?" |
35093 | But you said you was a friend of his, did n''t ye?" |
35093 | But you seem to-- Do you know them?" |
35093 | But, by the way, how did you happen to come to me?" |
35093 | But, do you know? |
35093 | But, say, did n''t you know any of this I''m tellin''ye? |
35093 | But, tell me-- does she help you any, in any way? |
35093 | But, terrified at the long silence that followed, he finally ventured unsteadily:--"But why-- this sudden change, Burke?" |
35093 | But-- you do n''t know of such a person, do you?" |
35093 | Can she act her part in this remarkable scheme?" |
35093 | Can''t-- you?" |
35093 | Child, what have you done now?" |
35093 | Cobb?" |
35093 | Cobb?" |
35093 | Come to the fun''ral, did n''t ye?" |
35093 | Come, we do n''t want the rest to be like that, do we? |
35093 | Come, wo n''t you shake hands with me?" |
35093 | Come,_ wo n''t_ you stop?" |
35093 | Could it be that he was sorry he had married her? |
35093 | Could it be? |
35093 | Could n''t she come? |
35093 | Could n''t she read? |
35093 | Could n''t they be taught that nights were for sleep, and that other people in the house had some rights besides themselves? |
35093 | Could they be happy with a man like Mr. Denby? |
35093 | Could you manage it? |
35093 | Darling that he had met six years before, and that had-- But was she the same, really the same? |
35093 | Darling''?" |
35093 | Darling, what is the matter? |
35093 | Darling, will you marry me?" |
35093 | Darling?" |
35093 | Dearest,_ when_ will you marry me?" |
35093 | Denby?" |
35093 | Denby?" |
35093 | Denby?" |
35093 | Denby?" |
35093 | Denby?" |
35093 | Did babies always take so long to grow up? |
35093 | Did he suspect that she was his daughter? |
35093 | Did he want this child of his, this beautiful daughter, to grow up in such an atmosphere? |
35093 | Did n''t I live right on the same floor with her fur months? |
35093 | Did n''t I promise you I would n''t?" |
35093 | Did n''t I talk to him, and just lay myself out to entertain him? |
35093 | Did n''t he do-- anything?" |
35093 | Did n''t he suppose it took_ some_ money to stock up with things, when one had n''t a thing to begin with? |
35093 | Did n''t she purposely mislead us by that note she left on my chiffonier? |
35093 | Did she say that-- all that?" |
35093 | Did she stuff ye ter that, too? |
35093 | Did they think, then, that she was going back there among her old friends to be laughed at, and gibed at? |
35093 | Did this mean the beginning of the end? |
35093 | Did you know it? |
35093 | Did you mean"--with white lips she asked the question--"Mr. John Denby?" |
35093 | Do n''t they_ care_ where she is?" |
35093 | Do n''t ye s''pose I know how he acts as if you was n''t the same breed o''cats with him?" |
35093 | Do n''t ye s''pose I know how you folks have been gettin''along tergether?--or, rather,_ not_ gettin''along tergether? |
35093 | Do n''t you see? |
35093 | Do n''t you see? |
35093 | Do n''t you see?" |
35093 | Do n''t you suppose I know? |
35093 | Do n''t you suppose I want to know what my baby has been doing all the long day away from me? |
35093 | Do n''t you suppose he''d tell us of it, if she''d gone to him?" |
35093 | Do n''t you_ like_ it that I like him? |
35093 | Do you hear me, Burke?" |
35093 | Do you hear? |
35093 | Do you hear? |
35093 | Do you know what time it is, dad?" |
35093 | Do you know? |
35093 | Do you mean you do n''t_ care_?" |
35093 | Do you suppose I''d turn that child adrift now? |
35093 | Do you think he minded it-- your father?" |
35093 | Do you think you can-- keep her, for a while?" |
35093 | Do you think_ now_, without a sign or a word from him, that I am going creeping back to him and ask him to take me back?" |
35093 | Do you understand? |
35093 | Do you-- forgive me, but do you really-- have to?" |
35093 | Doctor, you_ will_ help me?" |
35093 | Does Burke-- want me?" |
35093 | Does that look as if she were losing much time?" |
35093 | Dr. Gleason, did Mr. Denby ever love somebody once, and do I look like her?" |
35093 | Dr. Gleason, do n''t you think I have any pride, any self- respect, even? |
35093 | Estey?" |
35093 | Estey?" |
35093 | For how was Dorothy Elizabeth to know that the spasmodic pressure that so hurt her was really only a ten- thousand- dollar hug of joy? |
35093 | Girl? |
35093 | Gleason?" |
35093 | Good Heavens, Edith, what do you mean?" |
35093 | Had dad invited him to dinner next Sunday? |
35093 | Had dad''s heart got the better of his pride? |
35093 | Had he decided that quarreling did not pay? |
35093 | Had he done it purposely? |
35093 | Had he no pride-- no proper sense of simple right and justice? |
35093 | Had he not, in the hollow of his hand, a precious young life to train? |
35093 | Had she been an inspiration, and a guide, and a counselor, and a friend? |
35093 | Had she helped him? |
35093 | Had she not lisped its praises in odes to the moon in her high- school days? |
35093 | Hain''t yer mother ever told ye she lived here long ago?" |
35093 | Has n''t he got a right to go with his father, if he wants to? |
35093 | Has n''t that-- er-- fool- improvement business worked out? |
35093 | Have n''t you any-- people?" |
35093 | He_ paid_ her?" |
35093 | Helen, why do you torture me like this? |
35093 | How can I get one?" |
35093 | How can he? |
35093 | How could she have done it? |
35093 | How did you do it? |
35093 | How do you know?" |
35093 | How do you suppose I happened to have this Alaska trip all cut and dried even down to the train and boat schedules, if I had n''t done some thinking? |
35093 | How doth the happy bridegroom?" |
35093 | How far do you suppose that would go toward furnishing a home? |
35093 | How many times a day do we snap and snarl at each other? |
35093 | How would Betty do, anyway, in such a position? |
35093 | How would Betty like him? |
35093 | How would he act? |
35093 | How would he act? |
35093 | How would he like-- Betty? |
35093 | How would his father take it-- this proposition to stay all night? |
35093 | How would she take it? |
35093 | How''s business?" |
35093 | How, pray, in the face of that, are we going to keep Helen from running off to London?" |
35093 | How? |
35093 | I did n''t exactly what you call''break it gently,''did I? |
35093 | I feel just like a little girl with a new doll- house, do n''t you?" |
35093 | I jumped up and down and clapped my hands, and--""You did_ what_?" |
35093 | I need-- But what''s the use?" |
35093 | I suppose that will be-- the''curtain,''wo n''t it? |
35093 | I told him--""Oh, Betty, Betty, what are you saying?" |
35093 | I wonder if you think I''d have that man come here to dinner, or come here ever again to hear you-- Oh, hang it all, what am I saying?" |
35093 | I''ve been''tried as by fire''--eh? |
35093 | I_ tried_ to be''specially nice to him, did n''t I?" |
35093 | If Burke did not want_ her_, was it likely she was going to cry and whine, and let him know that she_ did_ want him? |
35093 | If she did not like-- but what was happening over there? |
35093 | In the hall she met Burke Denby; but she only shook her head in answer to his low"Helen, when may I see you?" |
35093 | Is Dalton a large town, mother?" |
35093 | Is n''t Alaska up north-- to the pole,''most? |
35093 | Is n''t she capable?--or do n''t you like her ways?" |
35093 | Is n''t that it?" |
35093 | Is she there-- at home-- now? |
35093 | It was when the woman of whom he bought his morning paper at the station newsstand, accosted him--"Stranger in these parts, ai n''t ye? |
35093 | Just what did he know about this young woman? |
35093 | Just what does Betty know of her father?" |
35093 | Keeping what from me? |
35093 | Let''s see, you say you do know her family?" |
35093 | Me? |
35093 | Meanwhile, when might they expect her in Boston? |
35093 | Meanwhile-- But just exactly what type of woman was she, anyway? |
35093 | Mrs. Thayer,_ why_ ca n''t I learn to stop using it? |
35093 | My father was good and true and noble and-- you--""And your mother_ told_ you that?" |
35093 | No self- respect, even? |
35093 | Not go to my father?" |
35093 | Not-- sick?" |
35093 | Now, I''m sure-- isn''t all that quite-- easy?" |
35093 | Now, is n''t your heart softening just a wee bit? |
35093 | Now, what is it I_ am_ to do?" |
35093 | Now, what is it?" |
35093 | Now, will you go, please?" |
35093 | Now, wo n''t you promise, please?" |
35093 | Of course she had money-- that is, I suppose she cashed it-- that check?" |
35093 | Oh, Betty, Betty, is it true? |
35093 | Oh, you-- you did n''t sing any of those foolish, nonsensical songs, did you?" |
35093 | On the old porch back home-- what was it that long- haired boy used to read to her? |
35093 | Only to dinner?" |
35093 | Or do you think I could-- learn?" |
35093 | Perhaps you--_ Can_ you tell me anything about these things?" |
35093 | Pleasant, is n''t it? |
35093 | Please, do you know when she went?'' |
35093 | Please, wo n''t you tell me?" |
35093 | See? |
35093 | See? |
35093 | See? |
35093 | See?" |
35093 | See?" |
35093 | See?" |
35093 | See?" |
35093 | See?" |
35093 | Shall I bring him in?" |
35093 | She asked Mrs. Reynolds one day:''Did you ever know my father?'' |
35093 | She had one in that old ship-- Mayflower, was n''t it?" |
35093 | She hesitated, then asked abruptly,"Who is Mr. Donald Estey, please?" |
35093 | She''d be apt to go to him, would n''t she, if she were running away from me? |
35093 | Should the father then offer again the once- scorned love and companionship? |
35093 | Sitting up, are you, chicken?" |
35093 | So what''s the difference?" |
35093 | So what''s the use? |
35093 | Somebody you know?" |
35093 | Stifling an almost uncontrollable impulse to query,"Is it to please_ him_, then, that you must learn archà ¦ ology?" |
35093 | That would n''t make me have any more money, would it? |
35093 | The baby? |
35093 | The only question was, what would it be? |
35093 | Then, as he still frowned perplexedly, she explained:"Do n''t ye remember? |
35093 | Then, as her mother fell back dismayed, she cried:"Did you suppose I''d risk singing solemn things to a man who had just learned to laugh?" |
35093 | Then, in her sweet, high- pitched treble, came the somewhat disconcerting question:--"Is you-- daddy?" |
35093 | There was the briefest of pauses; then, with disconcerting abruptness, came the question:"Where''d you get that girl, Gleason?" |
35093 | They played it all over Pike''s Hill and the Durgin pasture in Old Dalton; and they got my grandson to be a-- a--""Caddie?" |
35093 | To Gleason her manner said:"You see now why Burke fell in love with me, do n''t you?" |
35093 | To walk? |
35093 | To work? |
35093 | To- morrow, then, in the morning?" |
35093 | True, she no longer said"swell"and"grand,"and she knew how to eat her soup quietly; but was that going to make Burke-- love her? |
35093 | Wa''n''t you down ter Martin''s grocery last Sat''day night at nine o''clock?" |
35093 | Was a child made to set the type of a primer before he could be taught his letters? |
35093 | Was an engineer, then, made to_ build_ an engine before he could be taught to handle the throttle? |
35093 | Was dad to-- die, and never to know, never to read his boy''s heart? |
35093 | Was he not a father? |
35093 | Was he not, indeed, to be pitied? |
35093 | Was he ready to take his son back into his heart? |
35093 | Was he? |
35093 | Was it true? |
35093 | Was it_ possible_? |
35093 | Was she not each night the loving, daintily gowned wife welcoming her husband to a well- ordered, attractive home? |
35093 | Was she not ever going to talk about anything but the silly little everyday happenings of her work? |
35093 | Was she to fail now at this, her first real test? |
35093 | Was there a hidden meaning back of it? |
35093 | Was there a possible chance that Burke would question, suspect, discover-- anything? |
35093 | Was this the end of all hopes of some day seeing the old look of love and pride in his father''s eyes? |
35093 | Was this to be the end, then? |
35093 | Was_ that_ the way he thought he could pay her mother back for all those years? |
35093 | What are these things?" |
35093 | What are ye goin''ter do?" |
35093 | What are you so short about? |
35093 | What are you talking about?" |
35093 | What could he be thinking of to consider it for a moment? |
35093 | What could n''t they get with ten thousand dollars? |
35093 | What did I tell ye? |
35093 | What did he find?" |
35093 | What did he say? |
35093 | What do I care for that? |
35093 | What do you mean?" |
35093 | What do you suppose made him say that? |
35093 | What do you think I would n''t give if I could blot out the memory of the anguish my marriage brought to dad? |
35093 | What do you think of that?" |
35093 | What does she want?--to be presented at court? |
35093 | What guaranty had they that he would not again, at the first provocation, fall back into his old glum unbearableness? |
35093 | What had happened? |
35093 | What had he not given up? |
35093 | What if she did have ten thousand dollars to spend on frills and finery to dazzle their eyes? |
35093 | What if, after all, it were Dorothy Elizabeth? |
35093 | What is an account? |
35093 | What is the matter?" |
35093 | What is this-- some college tomfoolery? |
35093 | What made us come here?" |
35093 | What mattered it if he were disillusioned and heartsick? |
35093 | What more can you expect-- in my position?" |
35093 | What part have you in this-- play?" |
35093 | What salary does she want?" |
35093 | What shall I do, what_ shall_ I do?" |
35093 | What was happening over there? |
35093 | What were those papers?" |
35093 | What would Gleason say? |
35093 | What would he himself say? |
35093 | What would her mother say? |
35093 | What''s her name? |
35093 | What''s that? |
35093 | What''s the trouble? |
35093 | What?" |
35093 | What_ am_ I to do?" |
35093 | What_ could_ he say? |
35093 | When before had his father mentioned Helen, save to speak of her casually in connection with the baby? |
35093 | When can she come? |
35093 | When does she go?" |
35093 | When is she going back?" |
35093 | Where are our clothes and coal and-- and doctor''s bills, and I don''t- know- what- all coming from? |
35093 | Where did you get that?" |
35093 | Where does he live?" |
35093 | Where does she live?" |
35093 | Where have you been keeping yourself all these two weeks?" |
35093 | Where is Helen? |
35093 | Where were her old- time sparkle and radiance? |
35093 | Where''s your mother? |
35093 | Where?" |
35093 | Who is she?" |
35093 | Who said you could do that?" |
35093 | Who?" |
35093 | Why ca n''t you be happy here? |
35093 | Why did n''t he let you know before?" |
35093 | Why do you always evade any questions about her?" |
35093 | Why not?" |
35093 | Why, Betty, what do you mean?" |
35093 | Why, Burke, are n''t we going home-- to_ your_ home?" |
35093 | Why, Frank Gleason, do n''t you suppose I''d do anything,_ everything_, to help that child keep her baby? |
35093 | Why, Mr. Denby, what makes you look so-- queer?" |
35093 | Why, is n''t she all right?" |
35093 | Why--""Betty_ is_ a dear, is n''t she?" |
35093 | Will you come and-- er-- train me, Betty? |
35093 | Will you come? |
35093 | Will you go?" |
35093 | Will you marry me?" |
35093 | Will you?" |
35093 | Will you?" |
35093 | Wo n''t you come?" |
35093 | Wo n''t you help me-- please? |
35093 | Wo n''t you please take us in?'' |
35093 | Wo n''t you put the boys into fresh suits? |
35093 | Wo n''t you-- come to me?" |
35093 | Would Helen do such a fantastic thing-- send him his own daughter like this? |
35093 | Would he say in actions, if not in words, that dreaded"I told you so"? |
35093 | Would it unseal his lips on a subject so long tabooed, and set him into a lengthy dissertation on the foolishness of his son''s marriage? |
35093 | Would n''t she have left some trace in that station if she''d been frightened and uncertain where to go? |
35093 | Would she consent even to go to luncheon-- she who so seldom went anywhere? |
35093 | Would she consent? |
35093 | Yes, so you can, ca n''t you?" |
35093 | You are n''t going to wear that horrid veil to- day, are you?" |
35093 | You borrowed money-- of that woman?" |
35093 | You ca n''t mean-- you_ ca n''t_ mean-- you won''t-- marry me?" |
35093 | You come two years ago to the Denby fun''ral, now, did n''t ye? |
35093 | You do n''t know him, do you?" |
35093 | You do n''t mean to say that you_ do_ know about them-- that you bought all this stuff?" |
35093 | You do n''t suppose she''s going to delay any longer now, do you? |
35093 | You mean he wrote her to-- go-- away? |
35093 | You never did-- exactly this sort of work before, did you?" |
35093 | You said he wanted a-- a sort of private secretary or stenographer, did n''t you?" |
35093 | You see?" |
35093 | You think I made Burke real happy, do n''t you?" |
35093 | You will, wo n''t you? |
35093 | You''re a Denby, an''ought ter have some spunk; an''if I was you I''d brace right up an''-- Here, do n''t ye want yer magazine? |
35093 | You_ are_ better, are n''t you? |
35093 | _ And with Helen?_ What had happened? |
35093 | _ And with Helen?_ What had happened? |
35093 | _ Ca n''t_ you see how I want to stay here? |
35093 | _ Did_ I wake-- the baby up?" |
35093 | _ Hard?_ Then if it''s hard, it means you_ do_ love me. |
35093 | _ Now_ what nonsense are you talking?" |
35093 | _ Wo n''t_ you come?" |
35093 | _ Wo n''t_ you help me? |
35093 | they_ are_ more than potatoes to you, are n''t they?'' |
28264 | ''The Red Crawl''? 28264 A Russian?" |
28264 | A little searching party of her own, eh? 28264 A misfortune, my friend? |
28264 | A slave to a Russian? 28264 Ah, do you?" |
28264 | Ai n''t you found out even yet, you silly? 28264 All serene, guv''ner?" |
28264 | An operation to be performed upon my baby boy? 28264 And Lady Wilding is, of course, the beneficiary?" |
28264 | And did n''t? |
28264 | And do they say that? |
28264 | And he did hear of him, then? |
28264 | And no other jewels besides? |
28264 | And so these remarkable diamonds have been stolen after all, have they? |
28264 | And so you are that great man Cleek, are you? |
28264 | And stop until you hear from me? |
28264 | And the horse? 28264 And the letter, monsieur, the damning letter?" |
28264 | And they said that no mystery was too great for you to get at the bottom of it, no riddle too complex for you to find the answer? 28264 And what are you doing in here, anyhow? |
28264 | And what became of the other chap, the lover she wanted to marry and who was out in India at the time all this happened? |
28264 | And when will he begin, Mr. Narkom? 28264 And who is not her brother, after all?" |
28264 | And who might that be? |
28264 | And you think the little fellow is in peril? |
28264 | And you want to find out if he really carried out that threat and did put an end to himself, I suppose? 28264 And you? |
28264 | Another? 28264 Any ideas, old chap?" |
28264 | Anybody a- comin''with him, sir? |
28264 | Anything to do with it? 28264 Awful thing, was n''t it? |
28264 | Awful, is n''t it, doctor? 28264 Bad blood between you, then?" |
28264 | Baron de Carjorac? 28264 Bimbi says maybe he''s going to be my daddy one day-- didn''t you, Bimbi?" |
28264 | But can you? 28264 But from the sewer?" |
28264 | But how, Mr. Cleek? 28264 But how? |
28264 | But how? |
28264 | But to save Mauravania''s queen, monsieur? 28264 But what''s that got to do with drugging the whisky?" |
28264 | But why a feint? 28264 But why should we talk of unpleasant things when the future looks so bright? |
28264 | But you''ll come, wo n''t you? |
28264 | But, man alive, what can that have to do with it? |
28264 | But, my dear Mr. Narkom, would n''t it be better, or, at least, more hospitable if I went over to meet him, in case he does come earlier? 28264 By gums, guv''ner,"Dollops added as he looked down on the whirling waters,"what an egg- beater it would make, would n''t it, sir? |
28264 | By the Lord Harry, do you dare to assert that I-- I sir-- killed the man? |
28264 | Ca n''t you grasp the situation? 28264 Ca n''t you? |
28264 | Ca n''t you? |
28264 | Can I help you? 28264 Captain Hawksley? |
28264 | Catch on to that, Suburbs? |
28264 | Chap with the small dark moustache? 28264 Circumstances? |
28264 | Cleek in France? 28264 Cleek? |
28264 | Cleek? |
28264 | Clients? |
28264 | Clodoche-- and from the sewers? |
28264 | Clodoche? 28264 Collusion?" |
28264 | Colonel Goshen, eh? |
28264 | Competent surgeon, do you think? |
28264 | Coriander? 28264 Cut him with a knife?" |
28264 | Dad? 28264 Did n''t you? |
28264 | Did you do that to- day at the matinee performance, chevalier? |
28264 | Did you? |
28264 | Do n''t you? |
28264 | Do you happen to know where they come from? |
28264 | Do you make anything out of it? |
28264 | Do you mean to tell me that is what kept you at home? 28264 Do you not remember what I said, madame? |
28264 | Do you think I could persuade anybody if a third man perished? |
28264 | Does Marise pay you to sit there like mourners? 28264 Does it lead into a passage or a room?" |
28264 | Does it? |
28264 | Eating him? |
28264 | Even to putting your head in his mouth? |
28264 | Even to the point of putting up a friend of yours for a couple of days? |
28264 | Facts? 28264 Father,"he said,"am I to do the trick to- night? |
28264 | Five? 28264 Five?" |
28264 | From what source? 28264 Furnace? |
28264 | Gave them up? 28264 Going back on you?" |
28264 | Good heaven, man, you-- you do n''t mean----? |
28264 | Happen by any chance that he''s related to Glossop, the big company promoter who floated''Sapavo''and made''Oxine''a household word three years ago? |
28264 | Has anybody else entered or attempted to enter the house? |
28264 | Has he not made it yet? |
28264 | Has he, this precious royal master of yours, this usurper-- has he parted with that thing; the wondrous Rainbow Pearl? |
28264 | Has it ever done so? |
28264 | Has that been lost? |
28264 | He has a rich friend, then? |
28264 | He took the bait, then, Cleek? |
28264 | Helping you? 28264 Henry, will you never be warned; never take these awful lessons to heart? |
28264 | Her what? 28264 Her? |
28264 | Here,tapping her bodice and laughing,"tenderly shielded, mon ami; and why not? |
28264 | Here? |
28264 | His body? 28264 His royal master? |
28264 | Hopes? 28264 How did I suspect it? |
28264 | How did it all start? 28264 How did the Earl of Wynraven''s son come to meet this singularly fascinating lady, and where?" |
28264 | How do you know that? |
28264 | How do you make that out? |
28264 | How killed, Sir Henry? 28264 How should we have known?" |
28264 | Hullo, Smathers, you in this, too? |
28264 | Hungry, sir? 28264 I have seen you often in London; and to find you here, like this? |
28264 | I said the assassin was a fool; I said the blunders made it possible for the case to be concluded to- night, did I not? 28264 I wonder if the chevalier himself would be as safe if he were to make a feint of doing that?" |
28264 | I? 28264 I? |
28264 | In the name of Heaven, man, who and what are you? |
28264 | In what particular way? |
28264 | In what way, Cleek? |
28264 | Indeed? 28264 Is anybody interested in your not putting Black Riot into the field on Derby Day? |
28264 | Is it a panel? 28264 Is it the lion again? |
28264 | Is that a fact? |
28264 | Is that a fact? |
28264 | Is that all, Miss Lorne, or am I right in supposing that there is even worse to come? |
28264 | It did come, then? |
28264 | It is quite the size of a pigeon''s egg, I believe; is it not, count? |
28264 | It will be the story of last night over again, of course? 28264 It''s a compact, then?" |
28264 | Johnston, stop!--turn round!--are you out of your head? 28264 Just have a look at it, will you? |
28264 | Knew, Mr. Cleek? 28264 Know of it? |
28264 | Lady Wilding, will you oblige me by standing here? 28264 Left what? |
28264 | Let me see it? 28264 Little Lord Chepstow?" |
28264 | Look here,he said laconically,"what do you think of this?" |
28264 | Make a feint of it? 28264 Mates, monsieur? |
28264 | Maurice Van Nant? 28264 May I ask who else is in the house besides the servants?" |
28264 | May I ask why? |
28264 | May I ask why? |
28264 | May I ask, Major, why you speak of the lady in the present tense and of the man in the past? 28264 Mind? |
28264 | Miss Morrison,he inquired as Mary returned in company with the superintendent,"Miss Morrison, do you keep pigeons?" |
28264 | Monsieur knows of the gem then? |
28264 | Monsieur, you then are the great, the astonishing Cleek? 28264 Monsieur,"cried out madame,"monsieur, what is the meaning of that? |
28264 | Mr. Narkom, do me a favour, will you? 28264 Mr. Smeer does not approve of the race track, of course?" |
28264 | Murple is the groom who was paralysed, is he not? |
28264 | Must be rather interesting work, this looking into criminal matters on your own initiative, Mr. Headwood-- pardon, Headland, is it? 28264 My dear Cleek, could n''t a parakeet be made to swallow a pearl?" |
28264 | My dear Cleek, did you find anything? |
28264 | My dear Cleek,said Narkom, looking at him with positive bewilderment,"is there anything you do not know? |
28264 | My dear Miss Lorne, what are you saying? |
28264 | My dear Mr. Cleek, how could it have decided it? 28264 My dear chap, you ca n''t really place any credence in that absurd assertion regarding the blue belt? |
28264 | My things packed and ready? |
28264 | Never existed? 28264 Not secured? |
28264 | Nothing worth looking into, superintendent? |
28264 | Now, what are you after, you goat? 28264 Of a what?" |
28264 | Of course, Carboys treated it as the veriest rubbish-- who would n''t? 28264 Oh, Mr. Cleek, have you any idea, any clue?" |
28264 | Oh, Mr. Cleek, you think you can get the stolen paper back? 28264 Oh, Mr. Narkom, what was it-- that noise I heard?" |
28264 | Oh, he did that, did he? 28264 Oh, he had a wife, then?" |
28264 | Oh, how could you know that, Mr. Cleek? 28264 Oh, it''s that kind of case, is it?" |
28264 | Oh, that? |
28264 | Oh, then you do keep them? |
28264 | On your word of honour as a soldier and a gentleman, is that true? |
28264 | Or, at least to have you point out the hiding- place of them? |
28264 | Others? 28264 Parakeets?" |
28264 | Red Hamish? 28264 Related, by any chance, to that''Colonel Goshen''who testified on behalf of the claimant in the great Tackbun case?" |
28264 | Reward? 28264 Ripping day, is n''t it? |
28264 | Rum sort of a thief, was n''t it, to cut off with only half the booty? 28264 Save the what?" |
28264 | Searched the room, have they, in quest of the diamonds? 28264 She did so against her will?" |
28264 | She intends doing that, then? 28264 Sir Henry,"he said, after a moment,"may I ask how long it is since you were in South America?" |
28264 | Sir Horace came down to look at the furnace? 28264 Sir Horace came down?" |
28264 | Slipping off, sir? |
28264 | Smart capture, Bobby, was n''t it? |
28264 | So the lady was of the careful and calculating kind? 28264 Speaking to me, sir? |
28264 | Surely you have heard what Mrs. Brinkworth has said about seeing him in town to- day? |
28264 | Tell me, if it is not an impertinent question, did you take out an insurance policy on Murple''s life and pay the premium on it yourself? 28264 That Patagonian plant, eh? |
28264 | That is your ladyship''s son, is it not? |
28264 | That? 28264 The Baron von Steinheid?" |
28264 | The Cordovas? 28264 The trouble arises from some one or something in his own household?" |
28264 | Then Fifi''s husband is n''t the only man with a grievance and a cause? 28264 Then her husband?" |
28264 | Then in the name of Heaven, Cleek, what has become of the money? |
28264 | Then it is fair,said Cleek,"to suppose, in that case, that you have taken out one on your own life?" |
28264 | Then it is only when they are dressed and made up for the performance, eh? 28264 Then the blunderer shot the child instead of the native?" |
28264 | Then why should you? |
28264 | Then, monsieur, how are we to seize them? 28264 There is a mausoleum being built, is there not?" |
28264 | There was an estate, then? |
28264 | These Cordovas-- what reason have you for suspecting them? |
28264 | To business? |
28264 | To receive the jewel and the letter? |
28264 | Two hundred quid? 28264 Villa de Carjorac? |
28264 | W- w- what crazy nonsense is this, sir? 28264 Was it his hand that gave it up?" |
28264 | We shall find your master in his sitting- room, I suppose, my embryo Vidocq? |
28264 | Well, what next? 28264 Well?" |
28264 | Well? |
28264 | Well? |
28264 | Were you? |
28264 | What a trial he must have been to the glove trade, must n''t he? |
28264 | What could you have said if you had spoken? |
28264 | What do you make of it, Cleek? |
28264 | What do you mean by saying that Sir Horace came down? |
28264 | What do you mean by that? |
28264 | What do you mean by''eating''him, Mr. Bridewell? 28264 What do you mean by''that''s all''? |
28264 | What do you mean? 28264 What has happened? |
28264 | What is the difficulty? 28264 What kept you so long? |
28264 | What monstrous juggle is this? 28264 What shall you mean by that''going back on you'', eh? |
28264 | What the dickens are you talking about, Cleek? 28264 What''s a horse, even the best, beside the loss of an honest life like that?" |
28264 | What''s on the other side of this? |
28264 | What''s that? 28264 What''s that?" |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s the matter? 28264 What?" |
28264 | What? |
28264 | Whatever in the world brings you here? |
28264 | When you what? |
28264 | When? 28264 Where is it? |
28264 | Where is the fragment we already possess? |
28264 | Which means? |
28264 | Which, of course, he declined to do? |
28264 | Who and what was the man? 28264 Who did it and why? |
28264 | Who in this house could? 28264 Who is responsible for that ridiculous assertion, I wonder? |
28264 | Who the deuce asked you for your opinion? |
28264 | Who told him that it does better in the atmosphere of a stable? |
28264 | Who-- Fordyce? 28264 Who?" |
28264 | Why did n''t you say it was you, sir? |
28264 | Why give it up then, Miss Lorne? |
28264 | Why not go on letting me be your last hope-- your only hope? |
28264 | Why not? |
28264 | Why should n''t I know when I''ve been after him ever since he left Scotland Yard half an hour ago? |
28264 | Why should n''t it? 28264 Why''hopelessly,''Mr. Narkom? |
28264 | Why, then, did he not appeal to the police? |
28264 | Why? 28264 Why?" |
28264 | Why? |
28264 | Will I? 28264 Will the boy do it to- night, then, chevalier?" |
28264 | Wire through to the Low Level station at Crystal Palace, will you? 28264 Working out a problem, old chap?" |
28264 | Wot''s the lay now? 28264 Yes, I do see, chevalier; but I wonder if he would be willing to humour me in something? |
28264 | Yes, but why? |
28264 | Yes, but why? |
28264 | Yes, guv''ner? |
28264 | Yes, is n''t it? 28264 Yes, my friend, but''Margot''?" |
28264 | Yes, old chap? |
28264 | Yes, old chap? |
28264 | Yes, old chap? |
28264 | Yes, old chap? |
28264 | Yes, sir? |
28264 | Yes-- why not? |
28264 | Yes; but, man alive, how did he get out? 28264 Yes; why not? |
28264 | Yes? |
28264 | Yes? |
28264 | Yes? |
28264 | You are certain it is not a fancy, but an absolute fact? |
28264 | You are looking at the tattooing near my shoulder, are you? 28264 You drugged me?" |
28264 | You feel satisfied of that, do you not, my dear fellow? |
28264 | You found out? 28264 You found them? |
28264 | You have brought your motor, of course? 28264 You have n''t brought them with you, I hope, Mr. Narkom? |
28264 | You hear that, Clopin? 28264 You know me, then? |
28264 | You looked into heaven, and-- well, what then? 28264 You say that all connected with the circus have so little fear of the beast that even attendants sometimes do this foolhardy trick? |
28264 | You think it was fired, then? |
28264 | You think they have to do with the hiding of the paper or the pearl,_ cher ami_? 28264 You think, then, that the thing is genuine?" |
28264 | You what? |
28264 | You, Miss Lorne? |
28264 | You, sir, are that great man? 28264 You-- you do n''t mean that she-- that Zuilika-- killed him?" |
28264 | _ Dios!_ what is it? 28264 _ Dix mille pardons_, m''sieur, there is something amiss?" |
28264 | ''Ere you are, Miss Lorne-- lay hold of his little lordship, will you? |
28264 | *****"How did I find it out?" |
28264 | *****"How did I guess it?" |
28264 | *****"How did I know that the body was inside the statue?" |
28264 | *****"How was the escape from the compartment managed after the murder was accomplished?" |
28264 | *****"The method of procedure?" |
28264 | --holding up the package he was carrying--"or a chance for me to do some fly catchin''with me bloomin''tickle tootsies?" |
28264 | --the cold bore of a revolver barrel touched her temple and wrung a quaking gasp of terror from her--"Do you feel that? |
28264 | --to the chauffeur--"Lanisterre, do you hear?" |
28264 | A double quick change? |
28264 | A great hurry, eh? |
28264 | A man to get a magic belt; to put it on, and then to melt away? |
28264 | A woman of that class?" |
28264 | After he had risked so much to get them? |
28264 | Ai n''t et summink wot''s disagreed with you, have you, sir?" |
28264 | Ai n''t got such a thing as a biscuit about yer, have you? |
28264 | All ready there, Marguerite? |
28264 | All ready, Mr. Narkom? |
28264 | An absurd belief, to be sure, but who can argue with a superstitious people or hammer wisdom into the minds of babies? |
28264 | And Lady Wilding and Mr. Sharpless, do they, too, disapprove of racing?" |
28264 | And do you see those serpentine tracks through the middle of it? |
28264 | And even if I had I could n''t have bolted it on the inside after I''d left it, could I? |
28264 | And how, pray, should we live if that were to happen?" |
28264 | And in London? |
28264 | And she-- ah, monsieur, why is she always with him? |
28264 | And the noosed rope that was about the neck of the murdered woman; what was that like? |
28264 | And what can that have to do with your impoverished state?" |
28264 | And what does all that gibberish and that word''Ayupee''mean?" |
28264 | And what''s a Brazilian doing in the army of the Kaiser? |
28264 | And when does it happen in their case, during the course of the show, or when there is nobody about but those connected with it?" |
28264 | And who may he be, Mr. Van Nant?" |
28264 | And who so likely to be the guardian of these as the Baron de Carjorac? |
28264 | And why not? |
28264 | And why should he include me?" |
28264 | And yet-- and yet---- Ah, monsieur, how can I fail to feel as I do when this change in the lion came with that man''s coming? |
28264 | And you mean to tell me----""That they employed one of those deadly reptiles in this case? |
28264 | And you will, Mr. Cleek, and you will, wo n''t you? |
28264 | And your Aunt Ruth; what of her?" |
28264 | And, having been in it, what''s he doing dropping into this line; backing a circus, and travelling with it like a Bohemian?" |
28264 | And, oh, I say, guv''ner?" |
28264 | And_ that_ has been lost, that gem so dear to Mauravania''s people, so important to Mauravania''s crown?" |
28264 | Any idea, Cleek?" |
28264 | Any other jewels stolen at the same time?" |
28264 | Anything else?" |
28264 | Are we to fly at once to the mill and join him? |
28264 | Are you here?" |
28264 | Are your sympathies with the unfortunate so keen, monsieur, that even this stray cur may claim them?" |
28264 | As a matter of fact, it was through him that Fordyce got to know the dad and became interested in his case, and---- What''s that? |
28264 | As for his identification of the body-- well, if the widow herself could find points of undisputed resemblance, why not he? |
28264 | At once, at once, do you hear? |
28264 | Avenge his death? |
28264 | Bawdrey?" |
28264 | Better?" |
28264 | Better?" |
28264 | Bonny little specimen of a Britisher, is n''t he?" |
28264 | But about this letter? |
28264 | But enlighten me upon a puzzling point, Sir Henry: What do you use coriander and oil of sassafras for in a stable?" |
28264 | But how? |
28264 | But is there anybody who would have a particular interest in your failure?" |
28264 | But tell me, does she show no anxiety, no fear of a search?" |
28264 | But the question is,_ when_ did he get in and_ how_ did he get out? |
28264 | But then I do not care to get on the back of one, so why?" |
28264 | But what interest could she or any of her tribe have in the death of Lady Chepstow''s little son? |
28264 | But what of it? |
28264 | But what of that? |
28264 | But what to use to overcome the danger of that horrible suction?" |
28264 | But what? |
28264 | But yes, vat shall that mean-- eh?" |
28264 | But, of a sudden:"You came here directly after the matinee, I suppose?" |
28264 | But, pardon me, have you met with an accident, Mr. Bawdrey? |
28264 | By any chance that Sir Henry Wilding whose mare, Black Riot, is the favourite for next Wednesday''s Derby?" |
28264 | By what means? |
28264 | By what means?" |
28264 | Ca n''t you do something? |
28264 | Ca n''t you do this? |
28264 | Ca n''t you see any glimmer of light at all?" |
28264 | Ca n''t you see how nervous, how frightened I am? |
28264 | Ca n''t you suggest something? |
28264 | Call this sort of tomfoolery being protected by the police? |
28264 | Came in to put more of the cursed stuff on the ninth finger of the skeleton, so that it would be ready for the next time, did n''t he, Dollops?" |
28264 | Can you take me there?" |
28264 | Can you, monsieur, can you?" |
28264 | Canoe or ironing- board?" |
28264 | Captain and Mrs. Glossop were giving a reception, and Her Grace of Heatherlands was there?" |
28264 | Case?" |
28264 | Cleek? |
28264 | Cleek?" |
28264 | Cleek?" |
28264 | Cleek?" |
28264 | Cleek?" |
28264 | Cleek?" |
28264 | Cleek?" |
28264 | College man, are n''t you? |
28264 | Come, may we not give ourselves a pleasant evening? |
28264 | Could any man resist the temptation to use it when he was endowed by Nature with the power to do this?" |
28264 | Could any man''go straight''with a fateful gift like that if the laws of Nature said that he should not?" |
28264 | Could n''t manage to take me round behind the scenes, so to speak, if Mr. Narkom will lend us his motor to hurry us there? |
28264 | Could, eh? |
28264 | Dear God in heaven, Mr. Cleek, what are you hinting at?" |
28264 | Dear God, can this be true?" |
28264 | Did Ulchester take kindly to this housing of the mummy of his father- in- law and the eventual coffin of his wife? |
28264 | Did anybody get at that?" |
28264 | Did he come? |
28264 | Did she?" |
28264 | Did the men on guard hear no cry?" |
28264 | Do I puzzle you by that? |
28264 | Do it? |
28264 | Do look at it, will you? |
28264 | Do me a favour, will you? |
28264 | Do n''t mind if I sit in that corner and draw the curtain a little, do you?" |
28264 | Do n''t think it''s smallpox, or something of that sort, do you?" |
28264 | Do n''t you hear them?" |
28264 | Do n''t you hear, you idiot?" |
28264 | Do n''t you see the answers, the acknowledgments, in the''Personal''columns of the papers now and again? |
28264 | Do you grasp it?" |
28264 | Do you know me? |
28264 | Do you know what''s going to happen to you? |
28264 | Do you know who you had in your hands? |
28264 | Do you know who you let go? |
28264 | Do you know? |
28264 | Do you mean that ripping old firebrand?" |
28264 | Do you mean to say----?" |
28264 | Do you mind?" |
28264 | Do you realize to whom you are speaking? |
28264 | Do you see where I sifted it over this spot near the Patagonian plant? |
28264 | Do you think I could get to see it some time without either?" |
28264 | Do you think the riddle you have brought is beyond my powers?" |
28264 | Do you understand? |
28264 | Do you understand?" |
28264 | Do, pray, tell me what it all means, what you make of this amazing case?" |
28264 | Does the lion never''smile''for any of those?" |
28264 | Does your father do so, too?" |
28264 | Dol---- Oh, there you are at last, eh? |
28264 | Dollops?" |
28264 | Doubtless you have heard of that?" |
28264 | Eh?" |
28264 | Feel that you can rely on Logan, do you?" |
28264 | For what? |
28264 | Fordyce, who and what is this infernally impudent puppy?" |
28264 | Friends or relatives?" |
28264 | From whose hand?" |
28264 | Get back to the others, and look for me again in two hours''time; and Scarmelli?" |
28264 | Good heavens, who was Red Hamish?" |
28264 | Got any more amazing things, gems, I mean, like that wonderful scarab? |
28264 | Had you any old friend in your college days whom your father knew only by name and who is now too far off for the imposture to be discovered?" |
28264 | Has he been here? |
28264 | Has he expectations of any kind?" |
28264 | Has he succeeded? |
28264 | Has it anything to do with the case you have in hand?" |
28264 | Has she come out of her retirement yet?" |
28264 | Have Gaston and Serpice arrived yet with the rest of the document, Margot la reine?" |
28264 | Have n''t you ever noticed it before?" |
28264 | Have we by any chance met before-- in society or elsewhere? |
28264 | Have you any idea? |
28264 | Have you caught him? |
28264 | Have you found such things here?" |
28264 | Have you lost your wits? |
28264 | He is closely spied upon, then?" |
28264 | He talks well, he sings well, he is very handsome and-- well, what difference can it make to you? |
28264 | He''d not be expectin''a stable to be scented with eau de cologne, would he? |
28264 | Headland? |
28264 | Heaven forbid it, of course, but if anything should happen to Logan to- night, who would you put on guard over the horse to- morrow?" |
28264 | Heavens above, Marguerite, did n''t you tell him?" |
28264 | Hide the pearl in it? |
28264 | Hopes of what?" |
28264 | How are they managing it, those two? |
28264 | How can you? |
28264 | How could the tossing of that coin have settled the sex of the wearer of those garments?" |
28264 | How did the duchess come to have the Siva stones in her personal possession at that time? |
28264 | How did you get them out of the house?" |
28264 | How does the lady take it? |
28264 | How get them into our possession, his Majesty and I?" |
28264 | How has it come about? |
28264 | How is the poor old dear this morning, darling? |
28264 | How, then, could you guess?" |
28264 | Hungry still, Dollops?" |
28264 | I confess I have n''t the ghost of an idea regarding the case, captain; but if you do n''t mind letting your daughter show me the room----""Mind? |
28264 | I could n''t sell them, could I, marked things that every diamond dealer in the world knows? |
28264 | I had hoped that that might tempt a clever detective to take up the case; but what is such a sum to such a man as you?" |
28264 | I may not care to take the case when I hear it, so what''s the use of letting everybody know who I am?" |
28264 | I said in the beginning that this was either a case of swindling or a case of murder, did I not? |
28264 | I said, did I not, that I wanted to win her, wanted to be worthy of her, wanted to climb up and stand with her in the light? |
28264 | I say, Mr. Narkom, do give me a cup of tea, will you? |
28264 | I say, guv''ner, take off his silver wristlets, will you, sir, and lemme have jist ten minutes with him on my own? |
28264 | I say, sir,"agitatedly,"look wot''s wrote on the envellup, will yer? |
28264 | I should have thought he could have managed that, should n''t you, Mr. Narkom, if he could have managed the business of making him melt into thin air? |
28264 | I should have thought you would have remembered that, Mr. Cleek, when---- But perhaps you have never heard? |
28264 | I suppose that fellow Merode, as he calls himself, is in his room, waiting?" |
28264 | I suppose you know that my uncle, Sir Horace Wyvern, married again last spring? |
28264 | I suppose, Mr. Headland, that Mr. Narkom has told you something about the case?" |
28264 | I want to get into every man''s room here, and wherever I find poison-- well, you understand?" |
28264 | I wonder how much it will surprise you to learn that, at the present moment, I have just one hundred pounds in all the world?" |
28264 | I wonder why?" |
28264 | If a message was sent him by a carrier pigeon, where must that pigeon have come from, since it was one of Miss Morrison''s?" |
28264 | If they are---- Well, I shall either have the Siva stones in my hand before eight o''clock to- night, or----""Yes, old chap? |
28264 | In that safe?" |
28264 | Intends to take no further step toward proving it?" |
28264 | Is he dead?" |
28264 | Is it done?" |
28264 | Is n''t he about?" |
28264 | Is nothing else possible? |
28264 | Is she safe?" |
28264 | Is that agreeable, Mr. Van Nant?" |
28264 | Is that the letter in your hand? |
28264 | Is the boy killed? |
28264 | Is the chevalier well- to- do? |
28264 | Is the old captain''s malady a natural one, in spite of all these suspicions? |
28264 | Is there anything we can do to help?" |
28264 | Is this the door of the picture gallery, Sir Horace?" |
28264 | Is this the way?" |
28264 | Is this the welcome you give the bringer of fortune, Margot?" |
28264 | It may be that he will stumble upon something of importance-- who knows? |
28264 | It was a significant glance, and said as plainly as so many words:"What do you think of it? |
28264 | It was horribly disfigured by contact with the piers and passing vessels, but she and Anita-- and-- and my son----""Your son, Major? |
28264 | Just a natural dislike? |
28264 | Just look at it, will you, old chap?" |
28264 | Know it, do n''t you? |
28264 | Landlady, see that we are not disturbed, will you, and that nobody is admitted but the parties I mentioned?" |
28264 | Let me put it on your shoulder, will you? |
28264 | Let''s have a game of''Slap Hand,''you and I-- what? |
28264 | Look here"--he put his hand into his pocket and pulled out a gold piece--"do you know what that is, Major?" |
28264 | Look here, Captain Travers; what do you think of this fellow''s little game? |
28264 | Look here, Mrs. Bawdrey; look here, Captain Travers; what do you think of a little rat like this?" |
28264 | Look here, do you know who you''re dealing with now? |
28264 | Lost in speculation? |
28264 | Madame, do you like music? |
28264 | Mates? |
28264 | Mauravania''s heir and a Russian?" |
28264 | May I trouble you for a pin? |
28264 | Mr. Cleek, are you here? |
28264 | Mr. Narkom"--he turned to the superintendent--"keep an eye on Dollops for me, will you? |
28264 | Mr. Narkom, is your motor ready? |
28264 | My God, what are they doing it with? |
28264 | My dear Cleek, you do n''t believe that the man has been murdered?" |
28264 | My dear chap, are you sure, are you really_ sure_, that it is n''t a case of suicide after all?" |
28264 | My signal is already hung out; shall we agree to the conditions and give him yours?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | Narkom?" |
28264 | No''smile''for your old Tom, is there, Nero, boy, eh? |
28264 | Nobody can go by his looks; so how do you know?" |
28264 | Not so much of a money grabber as that muff Headland wanted you to believe, is he-- eh? |
28264 | Nothing more than that, eh? |
28264 | Now then, what is it? |
28264 | Now what do you make of it?" |
28264 | Now what''s the password that Clodoche must give to Margot to- night at''The Twisted Arm''? |
28264 | Now, if you know, tell me what did the chevalier mean, what did his wife mean, when they spoke of a dream that might have come true but did n''t? |
28264 | Now, if you please, Mr. Sharpless, will you stand beside her ladyship while I take up my place here immediately behind you both? |
28264 | Now, the wig and beard, and after that---- What''s that you say? |
28264 | Now?" |
28264 | Of course I agreed-- who would n''t for a mate at a time like that? |
28264 | Oh, Mr. Cleek, can we? |
28264 | Oh, Mr. Headland, do you think it is anything in the nature of a clue?" |
28264 | Oh, Mr. Narkom, can this be true?" |
28264 | Oh, monsieur, wizard though you are, can you get them past her guards? |
28264 | Oh, who could have the heart? |
28264 | Oil of sassafras? |
28264 | One of''nobbling''? |
28264 | Only''grateful,''I wonder? |
28264 | Or is there really any case at all? |
28264 | Or not this week at all? |
28264 | Or was he willing to stand for anything so long as he got possession of the huge fortune the old man left?" |
28264 | Or what?" |
28264 | Or, if you have not, do you think your fiancà © e has?" |
28264 | Owe me? |
28264 | Oxon or Cantab?" |
28264 | Pardon, but surely I have had the pleasure of meeting monsieur before? |
28264 | Quite settled, both of you? |
28264 | Ready with the motor, chauffeur? |
28264 | Remember me to Colonel Goshen when you go back to your rooms, will you? |
28264 | Ripping of him, was n''t it?" |
28264 | Ripping, was n''t it? |
28264 | Seriously?" |
28264 | Shall I tell the ladies and gentlemen of your promise? |
28264 | Shall we give him the pledge he asks, Sir Horace? |
28264 | She is so satisfied of her husband''s death that she deems no further question necessary? |
28264 | She loves her husband-- that''s certain-- and she''s a good little woman; and, Scarmelli?" |
28264 | She returned then?" |
28264 | Signalling? |
28264 | Sir Henry"--he turned again to the baronet--"do you trust everybody else connected with your establishment as much as you trust Logan?" |
28264 | Sir Horace, why did n''t you think to tell me of this thing before?" |
28264 | So there''s a Hindu in the affair, is there?" |
28264 | So this dear, deluded old gentleman, having failed to secure a''rune''in Java brought back something equally cryptic-- a woman? |
28264 | Somebody trying to get at the mare?" |
28264 | Something that had been brought from outside the house or something that could be picked up within it?" |
28264 | Speak up, speak up, you hear? |
28264 | Stabbed or shot?" |
28264 | Suppose we say to- morrow noon? |
28264 | Suppose you could get your father not to sleep here to- night for a change?" |
28264 | Sure of it, Sir Henry?" |
28264 | Surely she was not insane enough to keep the gems in the house with her?" |
28264 | Surely they have got the wretch at last?" |
28264 | Surely when you see it you will be able to satisfy any misgivings you may have?" |
28264 | Surely, monsieur, I have seen you there?" |
28264 | Surely, you whose knowledge seems unlimited"--noting the blank look on Cleek''s face--"must have heard of those divine gems?" |
28264 | Tackbun Claimant? |
28264 | Tell me how did this Russian get the jewel, and when?" |
28264 | Tell me what it is; if you want your life, tell me what it is?" |
28264 | Tell me-- I''ll respect it-- tell me, for God''s sake, man, who are you? |
28264 | That French lady, or the red- headed party in the gray suit?" |
28264 | That you have been reading about the preparations for the forthcoming coronation of King Ulric of Mauravania?" |
28264 | That''s the idea, is n''t it?" |
28264 | That''s the sculptor fellow you said in the beginning had gone through his money, is n''t it?" |
28264 | That''s what you might call''giving with both hands,''Major, eh?" |
28264 | That''s why you have come to me, eh? |
28264 | The beard is real? |
28264 | The hair is real? |
28264 | The legend runs, does it not? |
28264 | The matter could n''t possibly have ended there, or else why this appeal to me?" |
28264 | The necessary sections to construct a sort of bridge could be packed in either?" |
28264 | The next day? |
28264 | The paper, my friend; you have brought the paper? |
28264 | The question is, which? |
28264 | The son of the man who drove an Englishman''s wife and an Englishman''s children into exile-- poverty-- misery-- despair?" |
28264 | Them beauties? |
28264 | Then Mr. Sharpless has been to South America, has he?" |
28264 | Then he turned to the captain''s daughter, and asked quietly:"Would you mind letting me see the room from which the young man disappeared? |
28264 | Then the thing appeared, I suppose?" |
28264 | Then where could he a- went to-- and how?" |
28264 | Then who connected with the hall has been?" |
28264 | Then, lowering his voice to a shrill whisper,"That you, Mr. Narkom? |
28264 | Then:"Is that true, count?" |
28264 | There''s another, eh?" |
28264 | They are not yours, surely?" |
28264 | They produced a sensation, of course?" |
28264 | They will not come off? |
28264 | This is Tuesday evening, is n''t it? |
28264 | This woman and this one- eyed man appeared last week in Mauravania, you say?" |
28264 | Those must have been trying times, Lady Chepstow, for the commandant''s wife, the mother of the commandant''s only child?" |
28264 | Thought you could lead me by the nose, and push me into finding those phials just where you wanted them found, did n''t you? |
28264 | Thought you had a noodle to deal with, did n''t you, Mr. Philip Bawdrey? |
28264 | Three days, count; three days, monsieur with the puppy dog; three days, and not an instant longer, do you hear?" |
28264 | To do a thing like that?" |
28264 | To whom did he part with this gem, a woman?" |
28264 | To whom?" |
28264 | To- morrow? |
28264 | Two hun---- W-- what are you talking about? |
28264 | Was he living in the same house with his fiancà © e, then? |
28264 | Was n''t it a kinematograph picture, after all?" |
28264 | Was n''t it true? |
28264 | Was the duchess giving an entertainment last night?" |
28264 | Was the lady of his choice a native or merely an inhabitant of the island?" |
28264 | Was the place his home as well as Captain Morrison''s, then?" |
28264 | Was there any mark on the door of the steel stall?" |
28264 | Was there no struggle? |
28264 | Well, Captain, and how are we to- day, eh? |
28264 | Well, Mr. Crime Investigator, found out who did it yet, eh?" |
28264 | Well, go on, please; what followed?" |
28264 | Well, if he dies without one, who will inherit his money, as I am an only child?" |
28264 | Well, whatever other amazing thing have you''unearthed''? |
28264 | What a detective he''d''a''made, would n''t he, if he''d only a- turned his attention that way, and been on the side of the law instead of against it? |
28264 | What about me, old chap? |
28264 | What are you doing, admiring the view or taking stock of Mrs. Culpin''s roses?" |
28264 | What are you doing?" |
28264 | What are you giving me, you josser?" |
28264 | What are you talking about? |
28264 | What are you talking about?" |
28264 | What are you, dear friend?" |
28264 | What are you? |
28264 | What can possibly have caused the good lady to do a thing like that?" |
28264 | What can the ruined Château Larouge possibly have to do with the affairs of the Baron de Carjorac, Miss Lorne, that you connect them like this?" |
28264 | What circumstances?" |
28264 | What could I want with the Siva stones? |
28264 | What could make you think otherwise?" |
28264 | What do you make of that?" |
28264 | What do you think, Henry? |
28264 | What for?" |
28264 | What for?" |
28264 | What furnace? |
28264 | What game, Mr. Bawdrey? |
28264 | What has happened?" |
28264 | What has he done? |
28264 | What has made a woman like this pick up with a fellow of his stamp? |
28264 | What is it that has happened to your countenance? |
28264 | What is it that she is doing?" |
28264 | What is it? |
28264 | What is it? |
28264 | What is it? |
28264 | What is it?" |
28264 | What is the password of the brotherhood to the cause of Germany, stupid? |
28264 | What is this incomprehensible thing of which both you and Baron de Carjorac have spoken, this thing you allude to as''The Red Crawl''?" |
28264 | What lion-- Nero? |
28264 | What next, I wonder?" |
28264 | What next? |
28264 | What next?" |
28264 | What of him?" |
28264 | What on earth are you doing?" |
28264 | What on earth can be his object? |
28264 | What others? |
28264 | What paralysed him, do you think?" |
28264 | What poison, man, what poison?" |
28264 | What steps have you taken, count, to prevent this?" |
28264 | What the dickens did I do with my key? |
28264 | What the dickens did you mean just now when you spoke about''the lion''s change''and''the lion''s smile''? |
28264 | What the dickens is this? |
28264 | What then, Miss Lorne, what then?" |
28264 | What''her''?" |
28264 | What''s driven you to a dog''s life like this?" |
28264 | What''s his little game, I wonder? |
28264 | What''s it all about?" |
28264 | What''s next-- eh?" |
28264 | What''s that, Mr. Van Nant? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s that? |
28264 | What''s the case? |
28264 | What''s un name, sir?" |
28264 | What''s wrong?" |
28264 | What? |
28264 | When Baron de Carjorac recovered his senses after his horrifying experience----""That document was gone?" |
28264 | When and how did it all begin?" |
28264 | When and how shall I expect to see you again? |
28264 | When can you take hold of the case? |
28264 | When did you learn of it?" |
28264 | When, sir-- when?" |
28264 | When? |
28264 | Where and how does that come in?" |
28264 | Where are the jewels? |
28264 | Where are they? |
28264 | Where did he go after that, and what became of the brown leather portmanteau?" |
28264 | Where is he? |
28264 | Where is it?" |
28264 | Where is the boy now?" |
28264 | Where''s the narker-- where-- where?" |
28264 | Where?" |
28264 | Which way did he go? |
28264 | Who are they? |
28264 | Who are you? |
28264 | Who are you?" |
28264 | Who do you mean by that?" |
28264 | Who does not? |
28264 | Who is he?" |
28264 | Who is he?" |
28264 | Who is it as wants him? |
28264 | Who would be likely to connect him with the death of a beast- tamer in a circus, who had perished in what would appear an accident of his calling? |
28264 | Who would not mother a thing that is to bring one four hundred thousand francs?" |
28264 | Who would, after having been promised wealth, education, everything one had confessed that one most desired? |
28264 | Who''s the Tackbun Claimant? |
28264 | Who''s to tell as he are n''t in with they devils as is after Black Riot? |
28264 | Who, then, is in it? |
28264 | Whose life, may I ask? |
28264 | Why a''misfortune,''pray? |
28264 | Why could not fate have spared the Villa de Carjorac? |
28264 | Why did n''t you say so in the beginning? |
28264 | Why do you say that you do n''t like it?" |
28264 | Why does it''smile''for no others? |
28264 | Why does she curry favour of him and his rich friend?" |
28264 | Why have you arrested the Señor Sperati? |
28264 | Why in the world did n''t you tell me in the first place?" |
28264 | Why is it only they, my father, my brother, they alone?" |
28264 | Why not the actual thing?" |
28264 | Why, how could you?" |
28264 | Why, oh, why were we ever driven to that horrible Château Larouge? |
28264 | Why, then, should the assassin have brought the chain back after that operation and laid it upon the body of the victim? |
28264 | Why, then, was he being done to death?--and how? |
28264 | Why? |
28264 | Why? |
28264 | Why?" |
28264 | Why?" |
28264 | Wilder ones have come true for other people; why should they not for you?" |
28264 | Will that do?" |
28264 | Will this way lead me out? |
28264 | Will you do nothing for her?" |
28264 | Will you have the tea?" |
28264 | Will you, Mr. Narkom? |
28264 | Will you, therefore, be at 17 Sunnington Crescent, Wandsworth, this afternoon between the hours of three and four? |
28264 | Will you?" |
28264 | Wo n''t you and Mr. Narkom go up and search without me? |
28264 | Wo n''t you, Miss Lorne?" |
28264 | Wonder if it''s yours, madam?" |
28264 | Wonder if there is any connection between the two?" |
28264 | Wot''s the rumpus?" |
28264 | Wot? |
28264 | Wot? |
28264 | Would any man have failed to fly to face the author of a foul lie like that?" |
28264 | Would you mind letting him make the feint you yourself made a few minutes ago? |
28264 | You ai n''t a- going to tell me that he''s been there? |
28264 | You are going for a ride with me; and if---- Oh, that''s your little game, is it?" |
28264 | You are still stopping in the house, you and your son, I think you remarked? |
28264 | You believe you can outwit those dreadful people and save the Baron de Carjorac''s honour and his life?" |
28264 | You ca n''t possibly think that Abdul ben Meerza really did send the thing?" |
28264 | You came in your limousine, of course? |
28264 | You did? |
28264 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you had him, had him in your hands, and then let him go? |
28264 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you let them take you in like that-- those two? |
28264 | You got him then, got him after all?" |
28264 | You grabbed him, did n''t you-- eh?" |
28264 | You hear that, my good servitors? |
28264 | You heard his scream, heard his fall, but he was dead when you got to him-- dead-- and you found no one here?" |
28264 | You heard me signal you to head him off, did n''t you?" |
28264 | You held them? |
28264 | You know that blessed room at the angle just opposite the library, the one with the locked door?" |
28264 | You learned something, then?" |
28264 | You really do?" |
28264 | You really hope to get the things? |
28264 | You remember when I excused myself and went back on the pretext of having forgotten my magnifying glass the other day? |
28264 | You saw her lift that trap; and what then?" |
28264 | You took possession of them last night? |
28264 | You''d think her heart was breaking, would n''t you? |
28264 | You''ll use an alias, of course?" |
28264 | You''re not going back on me, are you?" |
28264 | You''re not going to ruin the show, are you, and after all the money I''ve put into it? |
28264 | You''ve come for us, I suppose? |
28264 | You, monsieur? |
28264 | You-- you do not mean to tell me that he caused that? |
28264 | Young or old?" |
28264 | Your men will not want to search me, of course, when I am merely popping out and popping in again like that, I am sure?" |
28264 | Your son?" |
28264 | Yours?" |
28264 | a secret door? |
28264 | and, also, why? |
28264 | do you see them, do you, Madame?" |
28264 | do you think that you can find it in your heart to give it?" |
28264 | exclaimed the count,"monsieur, what juggle is this? |
28264 | he said, in a voice that shook with nervous catches and the emotion of a soul deeply stirred,"Cleek to take the case? |
28264 | or what? |
28264 | then he is dead, eh? |
28264 | there''s a lotion, is there?" |
28264 | what are you saying?" |
28264 | what do you suppose that means?" |
28264 | what have you stumbled upon now?" |
28264 | what is it?" |
28264 | what is wrong?" |
28264 | what''s that?" |
28264 | when? |
28264 | where?" |
28264 | who? |
28264 | why do n''t you answer me, instead of staring at me like this? |
28264 | will no one tell me what has happened?" |
28264 | will not that hurry you, la reine?" |
28264 | wo n''t your missis be proud when you take her to see that bloomin''film?" |
28264 | you never let him get away, did you? |
55718 | Did you see so- and- so in the morning papers? 55718 How are you to- day?" |
55718 | What means this wondrous change? 55718 Would the Vision there remain? |
55718 | _ The sun set, but not his hope; Stars rose; his faith was earlier up._"_ What''s life to me? 55718 And could one safely leave this most marvellous scene of all while he should bestow himself in his rooms? 55718 And what do you think about it? 55718 But what would you,--in an Enchanted Country? 55718 But where was thePetrified Forest"? |
55718 | Can he safely turn away from the heavens when a young moon at night is winging her way down the sky and expect to find her midway in the heavens? |
55718 | Can one safely leave a sunset which is all a miracle of splendor while he goes in to dine? |
55718 | Did the"Lady of the Rosary"shield and strengthen him? |
55718 | Has one, then, at last arrived at the Land that is the forge of the gods who create it? |
55718 | Has the consumer benefited by reciprocity with Cuba? |
55718 | He can not repose in two at the same time; and as for neighbors and news,--has he not the stars and the sunsets? |
55718 | His eye has caught the Vision,--a"celestial Inferno bathed in soft fires?" |
55718 | How can such a shifting, animated glory be called''a thing''? |
55718 | How can the scene be pictured? |
55718 | In dinted armor dight, What growths of purple amaranth Shall crown thy brow of might?" |
55718 | In this desert plateau of dull red sandstone worn by the erosion and the storms of untold ages, does there indeed lie a submerged star? |
55718 | Is it not a land of enchantment and dreams, not a place for living men and women, Indians though they be?" |
55718 | Is not the life more than meat, and the spirit than fine raiment? |
55718 | May not the fruition of mankind seek the same conditions amid which it was born? |
55718 | May one here surprise the very secrets of the Universe? |
55718 | Of all this traditionary history who shall say? |
55718 | One is hardly conscious as to the special ways and means by which he finds himself in an enchanted world,--"From the shore of souls arrived?" |
55718 | Or had there never been any reality in life before? |
55718 | Or was this scene of Titanic grandeur the abode of Wagner''s gods and heroes? |
55718 | To what use could we ever hope to put these great deserts, or these endless mountain ranges, impregnable and covered to their base with eternal snow? |
55718 | Was the past( whose running series of incident and event and circumstance already seemed vague) a dream, and was this the reality? |
55718 | Was this a dream, wrought under some untold spell of enchantment? |
55718 | What are the people of this lovely young city of two hundred thousand inhabitants doing and thinking? |
55718 | What has happened, in all the phenomena of nature, to produce this incredible spectacle? |
55718 | What have thy servants for their pains?" |
55718 | What is the world that shall be in this mystic Arizona? |
55718 | What use have we for such a country? |
55718 | What, indeed, was the world that has been there? |
55718 | Where are the many gathered sheaves Thy hope should bring again?" |
55718 | Where grow the garlands of thy chiefs In blood and sorrow dyed? |
55718 | Wherein lies this secret of the great cañon? |
55718 | Who shall venture to deny it? |
55718 | Who would n''t be a Rhine maiden under the midsummer moon in the heart of the Rocky Mountains? |
55718 | Why should one be ridden by things? |
55718 | Would one hear the water nixies chanting their refrain if he listened? |
55718 | Would such a picture remain? |
55718 | Would the Vision come again?" |
55718 | Would the consumer here be benefited? |
55718 | Yet who shall dare think of their brilliant, consecrated lives as wasted? |
55718 | [ Illustration: WILLIAMS CAÑON, NEAR MANITOU, COLORADO] Of the"Garden of the Gods"who can analyze the curious, mystic spell of the place? |
55718 | and at one will you lunch with Mrs.----? |
55718 | and can you be ready at eleven to go to hear Mrs.---- lecture? |
55718 | and could you go at about four this afternoon to a tea to meet an Oriental Princess who will discuss the laws of reincarnation? |
55718 | and will you also dine with us at seven, and go later to the Woman''s Municipal Club that holds a conference to- night?" |
55718 | or the mystical vision that John saw on the Island of Patmos? |
55718 | or the"Promised Land?" |
55718 | the entire conversation to be in Italian? |
55718 | who dost abide? |
56112 | And you want me to tell the story? |
56112 | Anton,I said,"how would you like to take a steamer and go on the lake with me to see the World''s Fair from the water?" |
56112 | But what of yourself? |
56112 | Did you ever make a full statement in court? |
56112 | Do you know Wilson? |
56112 | Do_ you_ know Wilson? |
56112 | Have any of your''habituals''permanently reformed? |
56112 | Shall I ever forget Jean Valjean, the galley slave; or Cosette? 56112 So the straight story never came out at any of the trials?" |
56112 | Tell me,I said,"what is your thought of heaven, now that it is so near? |
56112 | When I read that,said Alfred,"I stopped and asked myself:''Have I been living for the good of all?'' |
56112 | Will the governor grant or refuse my petition? |
56112 | With the last line of your letter I close,''write soon, will you not?'' |
56112 | ''Learnin''and educatin''? |
56112 | (?) |
56112 | And in answer to his question,"What shall I do?" |
56112 | And what of Dick Mallory''s own life after his release from prison? |
56112 | And what of the women sent to prison in this State? |
56112 | Are our church memberships altogether free from these defects? |
56112 | As the man was leaving he asked:"Could you give me one or two newspapers?" |
56112 | But was not Robert Louis Stevenson right in his belief that all our moral failures do not lessen the value of our good qualities and our good deeds? |
56112 | Ca n''t he see what_ I_ am? |
56112 | Ca n''t he_ see_ what he''ll come to if he does n''t brace up? |
56112 | Do we ever realize our ideals?" |
56112 | Do we not love that which seems to us good and hate the apparent evil? |
56112 | He was all animation for the rest of the time, eagerly drinking in the joy of sympathetic companionship.--What greater joy does life give? |
56112 | If God knew or cared, how could he have let it all happen? |
56112 | Is n''t there something in the Bible to the effect that"spirit beareth witness unto spirit"? |
56112 | My cousin would say,''It''s schoolin''ye want is it? |
56112 | My father said:"Yes, but what would you have to say to a prisoner?" |
56112 | Now, as to the results of those severe punishments and rigid repressive methods: were the criminals reformed? |
56112 | Shall I succeed in my dream? |
56112 | Shall we never escape from that terrible idea of the moral necessity of expiation, even at the cost of another? |
56112 | Something struck me when I saw him; I said to myself,''I am crippled but I might be like this poor dog some day; who can tell? |
56112 | Then he turned his great black velvet eyes upon me and said only:"You mean to do me some harm?" |
56112 | Two questions arose in my mind: Was it only"the fool"who had made a clean breast of the case? |
56112 | Very quietly our visit began; but when Johnson was quite at his ease, I asked:"Has anything been done about your case since I saw you last?" |
56112 | Was society protected? |
56112 | Was the man dying of homesickness for the lost plane of life? |
56112 | What do you expect?" |
56112 | What were the fruits of our prisons and reformatories? |
56112 | What would you like me to do for these boys?" |
56112 | When I told her all of my past she said,''And so you were afraid I would think the less of you? |
56112 | Who can fathom the heights and depths, the mysterious complexities of Rossman''s nature? |
56112 | With all our imperfections, is not human nature sound at heart? |
56112 | _ August 6, 1914._ THE MAN BEHIND THE BARS CHAPTER I I have often been asked:"How did you come to be interested in prisoners in the first place?" |
39572 | A teacher, was n''t he? |
39572 | Abandoned fires? 39572 Abara''s good?" |
39572 | Ah? |
39572 | Ah? |
39572 | Ai n''t he though? |
39572 | All right,she said, glancing from Wright to Spearman, silently begging to know:_ Who is leader?_"Slightly slap- happy, Doc." |
39572 | All that inside, and they can dance? |
39572 | And before the beginning of life? |
39572 | And five riders-- you ride''em, do n''t you, Paul? |
39572 | And my smallest woman? |
39572 | And not of Ed Spearman? |
39572 | And those tough babies in the south-- anything new? |
39572 | And what happened? |
39572 | And-- Pakriaa? |
39572 | Anything here that could interfere with the ship if we leave it unguarded? |
39572 | As you say....Elis was with him, waiting under the trees, and Nisana, who said,"No gods? |
39572 | Been a good girl, hey? |
39572 | But Paul-- their grounds are mostly north of here-- there now, Mister Smith, you old bastard-- so why did n''t they travel away from the sound? 39572 But what, Ed?" |
39572 | But you did n''t see----"_ What?_Spearman believed now that he had seen the full end of that war. |
39572 | Can I get you anything? |
39572 | Can you hear? |
39572 | Did I...? 39572 Did anyone bring a flashlight?" |
39572 | Did you see-- him? |
39572 | Do these live on the mainland? |
39572 | Do we try for a foot in both camps? |
39572 | Do we, Doc? |
39572 | Do we, Ed? |
39572 | Do what? |
39572 | Doc, why did you do that, out there in the meadow? |
39572 | Doc-- can you estimate what distance we''ve made since we caught up with you? |
39572 | Doc-- how many have we lost here? |
39572 | Doc-- still got your flashlight? |
39572 | Dorothy? |
39572 | Dr. Christopher Wright, I presume? |
39572 | Ed, can you hear me? 39572 Eh? |
39572 | Friends? 39572 Goddamn it, why do you think I''ve gone away alone so often? |
39572 | Good trip? |
39572 | Got anything for the local news- paper? |
39572 | Got anything new in the''scope? |
39572 | Happy? |
39572 | Hear what it says? 39572 High oxygen?" |
39572 | How can anything be so small? |
39572 | How close are we to the nearest of those parallel lines? |
39572 | How d''you feel? |
39572 | How human? |
39572 | How if I climb on one of those? |
39572 | How long since our last trip over? |
39572 | How many in your party, Captain? |
39572 | How many of these critters have you tamed? |
39572 | How many, Doc? |
39572 | How would you like to bathe again in our lake? 39572 Human mourning, is n''t it? |
39572 | Hungry? |
39572 | I fell asleep-- took a tumble? |
39572 | I forget, sugar-- you were n''t around in the Jurassic, were you? |
39572 | I must have been thinking in terms of_ Argo_, which is-- history.... You know, I believe the artificial gravity was stronger than we thought? 39572 I thought so too.... Paul, I wonder if Sears can do any testing of the air from the lifeboat? |
39572 | I''m afraid to ask-- the others? 39572 I''m boss, remember? |
39572 | I''m going to head for----_Ah!_ Can you see the ship? |
39572 | I''m not, Paul? |
39572 | In a way it was.... Penny for''em, Dorothy? |
39572 | Industries? |
39572 | Is_ he_ going there? |
39572 | It seems Spearman told her to say that he is under the-- the climate? 39572 It so happens what, dear?" |
39572 | It''s history,said Dorothy, and Paul wondered:_ How does she do it? |
39572 | It''s the drums-- don''t you think? |
39572 | Learned any more of Mijok''s words? |
39572 | M- make it voice vote,Dorothy whispered, and her face was begging:_ Is it too much? |
39572 | Man? 39572 Mark-- our two boats could fly them all there with us, could n''t they? |
39572 | May I come in? |
39572 | May we call this planet Lucifer, son of the morning? 39572 Maybe it does n''t matter too much, Paul? |
39572 | Maybe,Dunin said,"with a few more like this the first explorations could be around the coast instead of overland? |
39572 | Mijok rides, does n''t he? |
39572 | Mijok, do you remember? 39572 Mijok- man.... Mijok, why did n''t I have you in Anthropology IA fifteen years ago? |
39572 | Miracles? |
39572 | My impatient eldest wanted to see if he could handle Betsy''s oars, remember? |
39572 | Nan,Paul said,"how did you like Mijok''s humming when you were singing for us yesterday evening?" |
39572 | Nisana and I? 39572 No? |
39572 | Not even one measly robin? |
39572 | Not moving, are they? |
39572 | Oh...? 39572 Oh...? |
39572 | Parallel lines, in jungle? 39572 Paul, what do you really think? |
39572 | Paul, why did you leave Earth? |
39572 | Paul-- isn''t it? |
39572 | Paul? |
39572 | Please, Doc? 39572 Pop, huh? |
39572 | Princess? |
39572 | Radio kaput, huh? |
39572 | Remember that great mess of''em fifty or sixty miles south of here? 39572 Remember when Arek noticed he was gone? |
39572 | Sears.... What am I made of? 39572 See it?" |
39572 | She is nothing to you, Pakriaa? 39572 She--""Why do n''t you speak up, man?" |
39572 | So I must be sure to pack my microscope in one of the lifeboats-- hey? |
39572 | So far, nothing basically different from what you''d find in lake water on Earth-- except for the trifle that every species is unknown, hey? 39572 So there''s never an end of mystery?" |
39572 | So you were conscious all the time? 39572 So?" |
39572 | Something? |
39572 | Susie, want to dig some vines? |
39572 | Taught you that myself, did n''t I, son...? 39572 Ten thousand-- ten thousand-- What can you_ do_?" |
39572 | The others-- Dorothy? 39572 The red- green_ is_ vegetation?" |
39572 | These would be survivors? 39572 They pull vines at command? |
39572 | They quit, Paul? |
39572 | This country-- all forest? 39572 Tired or lazy?" |
39572 | To drive us into the kaksma hills? |
39572 | To thank me? |
39572 | To-- stay? |
39572 | Tocwright-- I must speak to the Vestoian kaksma? 39572 We are in atmosphere,"said the earphones...._ Time: a cerebral invention? |
39572 | We got out, did n''t we? |
39572 | We had to come as soon as we knew you were alive.... Are your other children well, Ed? 39572 We made it, did n''t we, boy?" |
39572 | We must go on all night, Paul-- right? 39572 What I did...? |
39572 | What I really want to know-- Oh...? |
39572 | What are those? |
39572 | What did I miss? |
39572 | What do we know? |
39572 | What do you do when I turn housewife and instruct you to get that awful mess the hell off my nice clean floor? |
39572 | What do you mean? |
39572 | What do you mean? |
39572 | What happened, do you think? |
39572 | What is the nature of courage? |
39572 | What''s the matter, Pakriaa? 39572 What''s wrong with being lazy?" |
39572 | What''ve they_ got_? |
39572 | What? |
39572 | What? |
39572 | What_ is_ he thinking? |
39572 | When did he see that? 39572 Whenever men put their chips on the other thing they always lost, did n''t they? |
39572 | While the boys and I were out having a hell of a time, what''s with local industries? 39572 Who''re you? |
39572 | Why are we most strong in the west? 39572 Why bring that up now? |
39572 | Why not? 39572 Why?" |
39572 | Will you lift me a little? |
39572 | Will you not sleep tonight, Paul, before we go? |
39572 | Would they follow Abara? |
39572 | Would you and she and the others accept direction from one of us? |
39572 | Yes.... Want to start back tomorrow? |
39572 | Yes.... Would you say it was a place where Ann might-- oh, how shall I say it?--might attain tranquillity? 39572 You almost wanted it like this, did n''t you? |
39572 | You are from the north? |
39572 | You found something for sugar? |
39572 | You had thought once of going to Vestoia----Spearman turned on her with an anger partly cynical humor:"They hurt us, did n''t they? |
39572 | You liked looking in the microscope, did n''t you? |
39572 | You picked a tougher subject, did n''t you, Chris? 39572 You think we should have abandoned the giants?" |
39572 | You''d have us join forces with Lantis? |
39572 | You''re proposing,Dorothy said,"to take a chance on love?" |
39572 | You''re sold too? 39572 ''I-- will-- try-- aga- a- ain....''Why must the others wait to come here? |
39572 | ("Are there rivers here? |
39572 | A drug...? |
39572 | A gleaming disturbance in the air"down"yonder-- something streaking away from the dot that was a dying ship? |
39572 | A litter? |
39572 | A mathematical absurdity.... Are n''t you tired? |
39572 | A mistake at this point could go on burning for a thousand years.... Why do you think he broke out into worship when he did? |
39572 | A waterfall? |
39572 | AREK: But what actually was this theory-- this communism? |
39572 | Ah.... Now, why none in the open ground?" |
39572 | Aloud he suggested:"Doc, ca n''t we make a start without them and just keep the door open? |
39572 | Am I flushed? |
39572 | And Doc-- let me do this, will you? |
39572 | And Paul wondered:_ Should I tell Kajana what Doc said when it was all over? |
39572 | And does it work?" |
39572 | And if we land and found a city( or am I being ridiculous?) |
39572 | And the other one the East Atlantic? |
39572 | And they could have been-- people like these?" |
39572 | And we go and listen-- Tocwright is talking about the stars-- the world-- I think, maybe, we tell her what he says? |
39572 | And-- how could they communicate with us? |
39572 | Ann muttered,"Paul, don''t----""What?" |
39572 | Ann said politely,"Why the hell ca n''t I be handsome too?" |
39572 | Ann said,"Then you already see it as a retreat?" |
39572 | Are they here?" |
39572 | Arek asked evenly,"You''ve come to stay, I hope?" |
39572 | Arek asked,"Have you had anything to eat?" |
39572 | Arek said,"What-- Oh Paul, what will they be like?" |
39572 | At least one more, Pakriaa? |
39572 | Beating my brains out to win a little advance-- you people ca n''t see--""What do_ you_ think we should do? |
39572 | Behind him Paul heard Nisana''s miserable whisper:"What is it? |
39572 | Believe me? |
39572 | Besides-- don''t you think Spearman may have unloaded some things for us before he took off?" |
39572 | Better to have kept the army in one unit? |
39572 | Bring them in when we''re stronger ourselves?" |
39572 | But Paul had to wonder:_ Was he ever with us?_ There were six giants in the party: Mijok, Arek, Muson, Elis, Sears- Danik, Dunin. |
39572 | But in a primitive economy how else could you get the work done? |
39572 | But maybe here----""Are_ we_ big enough?" |
39572 | But our pride now is that no one is afraid of us.... You came to my house in the old old days, remember? |
39572 | But who will be the leader?" |
39572 | But you? |
39572 | By God I''ve found''em too, have n''t I? |
39572 | Ca n''t have furry birds, you know, with a taxonomist in the family, hey?" |
39572 | Ca n''t someone talk to her?" |
39572 | Can we make a fire? |
39572 | Can you hear me? |
39572 | Can you stand it? |
39572 | Captain Jensen? |
39572 | Certainly to you, Abara.... What''s the profit of any effort if the result is thrown away in a time of weakness? |
39572 | Come on-- let me tuck you in and fuss at you.... STERN: She''s been ill? |
39572 | Could that be, Elis?" |
39572 | Could that lump in the cord be the hind brain? |
39572 | Cruelly high, would you say? |
39572 | DOROTHY: Need has arisen for the Dope? |
39572 | Danik?" |
39572 | Democracy by what means, within what limits, toward what end? |
39572 | Did n''t you know? |
39572 | Did they ever create anything good except in a milieu of co- operation, friendship, forbearance? |
39572 | Do I possess the wind because I like to run against the touch of it...?") |
39572 | Do n''t mind, do you, Pop?" |
39572 | Do n''t you remember how Mijok held out his arm for me to grab when it got tough? |
39572 | Do they?" |
39572 | Do you remember a desert plateau the map shows in the southern hemisphere? |
39572 | Doc said so-- didn''t he, Paul?" |
39572 | Dorothy wo n''t fuss, will she, son?" |
39572 | Dot, you''re sure Ed understood that we have a friend there?" |
39572 | Dr. Oliphant? |
39572 | Dr. Stern said,"And you call this planet Lucifer?" |
39572 | Dunin asked,"He is older than you?" |
39572 | Dunin muttered to Paul,"Bullies-- what word is that?" |
39572 | Dunin said,"Please? |
39572 | Elastic branches? |
39572 | Elis grumbled,"What''s up there to burn? |
39572 | Everything quiet?" |
39572 | Feel not so good, Ann?" |
39572 | Fight? |
39572 | Fighting back a retching, Ann muttered,"Paul, when can we get out of here?" |
39572 | Find it? |
39572 | Firing at the camp? |
39572 | Firing? |
39572 | For the look of the thing, you reckon? |
39572 | For what''s the profit if I rattle on about freedom in a semantic vacuum? |
39572 | Freedom from what, for what? |
39572 | Get something to eat, why do n''t you? |
39572 | Good- sized head.... Ah-- hear that?" |
39572 | Had n''t you thought of that at all? |
39572 | Hah-- two pairs of kidneys?" |
39572 | Half an hour, huh? |
39572 | Have we drunk to everybody? |
39572 | He asked nothing about Ann?" |
39572 | He gasped,"Wha''s matter?" |
39572 | He read Paul''s thought:"The rest tonight, huh? |
39572 | He said doubtfully,"Other nominations...? |
39572 | He was as tall as me? |
39572 | He was on A- flat below the bass clef and no fooling...._ Why_ have n''t we seen other giants?" |
39572 | Hey, Paul?" |
39572 | How can the laws govern us unless all obey them?" |
39572 | How could one''possess''a woman? |
39572 | How could they be panicked by a silly pop and a spark? |
39572 | How else would you have it?" |
39572 | How high are we?" |
39572 | How in hell do you get down out of it?" |
39572 | How long have I sleep?" |
39572 | How long is a May fly''s life to a May fly...?_"Braking starts in forty- five seconds. |
39572 | How much damage, Paul?" |
39572 | How''d''at happen? |
39572 | I ca n''t tell you-- I do n''t know what to say.... Good trip?" |
39572 | I even noticed it on a space ship with the five persons I love best.... No artifacts, huh?" |
39572 | I even thought: is he going to crash it_ here_? |
39572 | I expect you''ve given your friends here a pretty good account of Earth history? |
39572 | I had almost-- Oh, Mijok, what''ve you got there...? |
39572 | I mean, to land and not return?" |
39572 | I suppose that''s why they heaved a taxonomist into space, to see what the poor cluck would do, hey? |
39572 | If Paul and I and the two strongest giants were trying that, what''s left? |
39572 | If no men get to the island, how do two women and a girl child increase and multiply, or should n''t I ask?" |
39572 | If we had two or three more ships when Kris- Mijok is old enough to go?" |
39572 | If you will bring her-- and Tejron too? |
39572 | Ignorance is poor insulating material, do n''t you think? |
39572 | In either case he''s never quite grotesque._ Wright''s too- soft voice insisted:"It_ is_, of course?" |
39572 | Instinct, huh? |
39572 | Is it what I ought to do..._? |
39572 | Is it?" |
39572 | Is that an army? |
39572 | Is there nothing we can do for him?" |
39572 | Is this meaningful?" |
39572 | It seems that now, under Spearman- abron- Ismar, they indicate-- what word do I want?--social-- social levels----""Castes?" |
39572 | J- E- N- S- E- N.""So?" |
39572 | Kamon turned with gentle deference to one authority she felt to be stronger than her own under the laws:"Doc?" |
39572 | Lantis of Vestoia, the Queen of the World herself? |
39572 | Live in this part of the jungle maybe? |
39572 | Living, did she mean? |
39572 | Mijok and the boys?" |
39572 | Mijok broke in, utterly bewildered:"What are you saying?" |
39572 | Mild hills of dark red- green, in the-- west? |
39572 | Mister? |
39572 | Must you always be sitting in judgment on your own mind?" |
39572 | My blue house, and I thinking I would be Queen of the World? |
39572 | NISANA: Could n''t have been me.... STERN: Are there any important physiological differences? |
39572 | NISANA: Who, me? |
39572 | Nisana asked,"What is next to do?" |
39572 | Nisana whispered,"I will talk to the Vestoian-- yes?" |
39572 | No harm? |
39572 | Not a bad life, or so he said.... Jocko, will Pakriaa come back?" |
39572 | Not cry too much for the moon?" |
39572 | Not strange, is it...? |
39572 | Notice a big ciliated schlemihl blundering around? |
39572 | Now, where was the trail? |
39572 | Oh, if one of you had been there she would have answered it.... Would n''t the island be better without them? |
39572 | Oh, the beautiful--""A boat out already?" |
39572 | One balanced against how many that I destroyed...? |
39572 | One woman said to me,''One fella goddamn skirt belong you what name?'' |
39572 | Only Nisana thought to ask,"Good voyage today, Paul?" |
39572 | Other voices, true on pitch, followed his solo:"_ Away-- we''re bound away...._"Paul asked,"How many, Nan?" |
39572 | Our superior achievements-- lifeboat, guns, the rescue from that reptile? |
39572 | PAKRIAA: Why do n''t you wait till Muson comes back...? |
39572 | PAUL: How is-- SPEARMAN: How is she? |
39572 | PAUL: Until, sometime, a strong man takes over and makes an empire out of it...? |
39572 | Pakriaa murmured absently,"Did I give you leave to speak?" |
39572 | Pakriaa wailed:"What is he saying? |
39572 | Paul asked him,"How long?" |
39572 | Paul asked,"Where''s Ed? |
39572 | Paul petted her trunk to soothe her; Sears''voice came down to him:"Paul? |
39572 | Paul saw them now, lying on beds of the gray-- moss? |
39572 | Paul suggested:"Pygmies?" |
39572 | Paul was striding for the woods when Pakriaa met him and murmured in contempt,"We hide too, Commander?" |
39572 | Paul wondered what member of his race could stand for an hour in contemplation like a thinking tree, not shifting a foot nor raising an arm...? |
39572 | Paul, how do you make one of these ten- foot roller coasters kneel down?" |
39572 | Paul, how many trips will that take?" |
39572 | Paul, how much_ do_ they know of our language?" |
39572 | Paul, is it possible, what he said about charlesite?" |
39572 | Paul, is it weakness in me to ask that when we find Ed Spearman, you do most of the talking? |
39572 | Paul, why do n''t you sleep awhile? |
39572 | Paul-- is it happening, Paul?" |
39572 | Paul-- think we should try to reach them this evening?" |
39572 | Paul?" |
39572 | Rak asked in solemn curiosity,"For what is it good?" |
39572 | Remaining uneasily close to Wright, as he did whenever the pygmies appeared, Mijok had said carefully,"Telephone?" |
39572 | Remember how angry_ I_ was-- only a year ago? |
39572 | Remember, Dunin?" |
39572 | Repeatedly, for twenty or thirty thousand years? |
39572 | Right, Chris? |
39572 | SALLY MARINO: Do n''t you-- now, maybe this is a foolish question-- don''t you have to work awfully hard-- I mean, with so few technical aids? |
39572 | SLADE: And when there are fifteen or twenty such communities? |
39572 | SLADE: Canada? |
39572 | SLADE: Well, he told me-- DOROTHY: Will it be all right if I reach over this daughter of mine and kiss you? |
39572 | Sears asked quickly,"Bring back specimens?" |
39572 | Sears did pack his microscope, did n''t he?" |
39572 | Sears whispered in his beard,"Less homesick?" |
39572 | Sears?" |
39572 | See anything in the woods?" |
39572 | See the smallness of the north polar ice cap? |
39572 | Shading closed lids, Spearman said with harshness,"Myth?" |
39572 | Shall I carry you? |
39572 | She came from Earth with us.... You''re with us, are n''t you?" |
39572 | She said,"May I carry you, Spearman? |
39572 | She said,"Not that Lucifer cares, Doc, but what time is it?" |
39572 | She said,"Tocwright, is Abara not to vote?" |
39572 | She was saying with acid sweetness,"Abroshin Nisana, perhaps you wish to remain here?" |
39572 | Should the red moon be shining now? |
39572 | Slade, you said? |
39572 | Sleepy, baby? |
39572 | Sorry, Doctor, I''ve got no damned use for your abstraction Man, and why? |
39572 | Spearman asked evenly,"Paul, how''s the charlesite?" |
39572 | Spearman groaned:"Ann, what-- Use your head...."But Mijok knelt at once to make a cradle of his arms, and Christopher Wright said,"Why not? |
39572 | Spearman grunted,"Why? |
39572 | Spearman said almost absently,"Are they?" |
39572 | Spearman said,"Are you crazy?" |
39572 | Spearman wondered:"Will the pygmies have a season too?" |
39572 | Spearman?) |
39572 | State Orphanage children like Ann and me, growing up in a tiny world within a big one, we were n''t quite human ever, were we? |
39572 | Still with closed eyes, he asked,"What''s the point, Ed? |
39572 | Stone Age-- but that''s partly an accident of ecology, is n''t it? |
39572 | TEJRON: I knew-- I knew-- WRIGHT: What, my dear? |
39572 | Take this, will you?" |
39572 | Tame it?" |
39572 | Tentatively she groaned:"How''m I doing?" |
39572 | That ended; there was more thick jungle whipping his back for-- five minutes?--an hour...? |
39572 | That what you came for?" |
39572 | The boy in New Hampshire, after sprawling on his lazy back and discovering the miracle of sky-- hadn''t he tried to paint it, even then? |
39572 | The fact that I was n''t afraid of a poor pygmy''s bones? |
39572 | The island, gentlemen?" |
39572 | The lifeboat? |
39572 | The other lifeboat? |
39572 | The red- green below-- anything real about it? |
39572 | The tree- frog voice, with no sternness, but a hint of friendliness:"Tor- o- thee...?" |
39572 | The weather? |
39572 | The-- the little girls? |
39572 | There may still be war back on Earth, but after all--""Better to murder in groups of a thousand at long distance? |
39572 | There now, sweetie pie, please take it, huh?" |
39572 | These animals?" |
39572 | They killed Doc, did n''t they? |
39572 | They know they must not charge till they have the order from you?" |
39572 | They might as well chance it with us.... Where do you people live? |
39572 | They were going south, away from here? |
39572 | They''ve got a woman leading''em, so-- wouldn''t she be less afraid of another woman? |
39572 | This is Dr. Nora Stern.... Sir, I-- you are well? |
39572 | Thought of that? |
39572 | Time? |
39572 | To wait in the forest for news of Abro Samiraa''s thrust in the northeast? |
39572 | Twenty- nine-- late middle age for her people.... Helen''s going to make a better med student than ever I was-- don''t you think, Paul? |
39572 | Two species?" |
39572 | Under his breath Wright asked,"Feel all right, Paul?" |
39572 | Understand? |
39572 | Unless----""Unless what, Doctor?" |
39572 | Voice vote?" |
39572 | Was he unaware of the broken arrow shaft below his ribs, deeply bedded, with dark blood oozing around the wood? |
39572 | Was it long ago you told me that, Paul?" |
39572 | Was it saved? |
39572 | Was it? |
39572 | We look like the last days of a Turkish bath, hey?" |
39572 | We must be-- mm-- seventy miles from the smallest of the two oceans-- oh, let''s call it the Atlantic, huh? |
39572 | We saw a-- settlement? |
39572 | We''re already exposed to the air, but----""What? |
39572 | We''re here, are n''t we...?_ Through hours when spoken words were few, inner words riotous, Lucifer turned an evening face. |
39572 | Were there prisoners?" |
39572 | What I''m trying to say, does n''t mere survival take up so much time and effort that it-- well, wears you down? |
39572 | What became of your-- prisoner?" |
39572 | What did you learn?" |
39572 | What do you call it?" |
39572 | What do you mean, human? |
39572 | What do you suggest?" |
39572 | What else could he do?_) Well, it was right too that the hills should be nearer: the edge of the forest slanted northwest, narrowing the meadow. |
39572 | What goes on more or less? |
39572 | What if my dreams for Lucifer are-- not shared?" |
39572 | What is it?" |
39572 | What is man?" |
39572 | What is this-- burial, Paul- Mason?" |
39572 | What sickness could make such a change?" |
39572 | What to say? |
39572 | What was Wright''s comment eleven years later? |
39572 | What was that, Dunin? |
39572 | What''re those?" |
39572 | What''s news?" |
39572 | What''s the damned point?" |
39572 | What''s the matter? |
39572 | What''s the time?" |
39572 | What''ve we got, right here?" |
39572 | What-- sixteen of us now...? |
39572 | What? |
39572 | When did he turn gray, and we never noticing it...?_"For now,"Wright said,"let''s not be official about it, huh? |
39572 | When did he turn gray, and we never noticing it...?_"For now,"Wright said,"let''s not be official about it, huh? |
39572 | When the time comes, will it be something like a sleep?" |
39572 | When you go there alone-- or when you tame the olifants for that matter-- are you sort of grasping the nettle? |
39572 | Where are you?" |
39572 | Where is Mijok?" |
39572 | Where is she?" |
39572 | Where is today?''" |
39572 | Which way was the swarm going?" |
39572 | Why can Ed Spearman never sit still in the sun? |
39572 | Why did n''t you say so? |
39572 | Why should n''t we need each other?" |
39572 | Why should we leave you behind?" |
39572 | Why, that amiable thud of a heart in a firm, familiar body( his own, surely? |
39572 | Will they come?" |
39572 | Will you carry me?" |
39572 | Will you come with me, Nisana?" |
39572 | Will you go?" |
39572 | Will you put it away?" |
39572 | Wind in upper branches? |
39572 | With a doctor''s intentness he added:"How d''you feel?" |
39572 | Would you be willing, Ed, to ask them whether they want to go to Adelphi and see their mother again?" |
39572 | Would you say that is old enough to make certain decisions? |
39572 | Wright asked gently,"But you can remember good and pleasant things of the old city, the way it was when you were young there?" |
39572 | Wright asked,"How long have you been out in the air?" |
39572 | Wright asked,"Will you abide by a vote when Ed gets back?" |
39572 | Wright chattered:"Have we anything, anything white? |
39572 | Wright said,"Who''s John and who''s David?" |
39572 | Wright snarled;"Suppose you know that damn bowman had an arrow trained on you the whole time?" |
39572 | Wright whispered,"Have we anything that would make a respectable gift?" |
39572 | Wrong?" |
39572 | You can steer''em?" |
39572 | You did n''t see the letters? |
39572 | You know that, do n''t you?" |
39572 | You know-- the nurse? |
39572 | You know? |
39572 | You remember? |
39572 | You say that now?" |
39572 | You see what I meant, Paul? |
39572 | You there?" |
39572 | You want that, do n''t you?" |
39572 | You want to go with us, do n''t you?" |
39572 | You''re elected, soldier.... Can you open the door, Paul?" |
39572 | Your altitude? |
39572 | _ Did anyone suppose the First Interstellar would just turn around and go home? |
39572 | _ How did this happen? |
39572 | _ Is that us?_ They built them solid.... |
39572 | _ Leave him, with Sears''inner torments and Ed''s arrogance?_"No, Doc." |
39572 | _ We start with a division on this first morning of the world...?_ Paul hugged his own rifle and followed Wright into the long whisper of the grass. |
39572 | _ What is love?_ The greater spaceport had been twelve years in building. |
39572 | _ Would it be so if I were fighting only for myself...?_ He held the spot in focus; he said,"Your soldiers are prepared for the fire stick? |
39572 | _ Would it be so if I were fighting only for myself...?_ He held the spot in focus; he said,"Your soldiers are prepared for the fire stick? |
53616 | If we deny all authenticity to Jesus''s teaching,we are asked,"what of Solon''s traditional lore?" |
53616 | Scores of such tombs remain,cries the critic:"were they all Mithraic?" |
53616 | What is there,he asks,"that can be compared with this in the religious literature of any other people?" |
53616 | Among the Fathers? |
53616 | Among the Popes? |
53616 | Among the apostles? |
53616 | Among the bishops? |
53616 | And every apostle who cometh to you, let him be received as[ the] Lord; but he shall not remain[ except for?] |
53616 | And if they were, was it in their power to effect this falsification with so great success?" |
53616 | And why do other utterances of the doctrines not"warm the heart"? |
53616 | Answerest thou nothing? |
53616 | Apostles to teach-- what? |
53616 | But Michael is a wholly post- exilic figure: was there no Hebrew prototype? |
53616 | But do none of the admitted inventions[ 399] in the gospels stultify the position of the believers? |
53616 | But when John is put as the Forerunner, acclaiming the Messiah, where is the subordination? |
53616 | But why should invention take this peculiar form? |
53616 | Disciples to learn-- what? |
53616 | Do not foreigners[ 477] do the same? |
53616 | Does he impute"wickedness"to the author of the fourth gospel, whom he represents as inventing discourses and episodes systematically? |
53616 | Every apostle is to be received"as the Lord; but he shall not remain[ except for?] |
53616 | For other purposes, he resorts( p. 16) to the test,"How do you know?" |
53616 | Had not Peter, in the legend, denied his Lord with curses, and Paul persecuted the Church to the death? |
53616 | How could the priests be more effectively impeached than by exhibiting them as producing plainly suborned evidence to convict Jesus? |
53616 | How many Maries, then, were mothers of James and Joses? |
53616 | How or when had the Nazaræans transcended that standpoint? |
53616 | How then did the organization begin and grow? |
53616 | If a strong impression of a personality be a certificate of historicity, what of Zeus and Hêrê, Athênê and Achilles, Ulysses and Nestor? |
53616 | If it be claimed as a result of the teaching of Jesus, what becomes of the other teaching as to the love of enemies? |
53616 | If it is not, upon what does the biographical theory found? |
53616 | If so, is it further contended that there must have been a historical Jehovah, a Jove, a Cybelê, a Juno, a Venus? |
53616 | If so, when did the change begin? |
53616 | If that be so, what amount of profundity goes to the whole construction of the faith? |
53616 | If the Father- Gods and Mother- Gods could be evolved by protracted mythopoeia, why not the Son- Gods? |
53616 | If the one set of passages are borrowed, why not the other? |
53616 | If the record admittedly invented utterances for the Teacher on the cross, why should not the whole be an invention? |
53616 | If there really occurred such a manipulation of the death- scene of an adored Teacher, how could the narrators possibly fail to say as much? |
53616 | If to quote"he is beside himself"is to prove historicity, why not quote the taunts to Jesus in the fourth gospel, nay, the crucifixion itself? |
53616 | In a curious passage of the fourth gospel( viii, 48) the Jews say to Jesus,"Say we not well that thou art a Samaritan, and hast a daimon? |
53616 | In particular, why should not the trial before Pilate and the inscription on the cross be inventions? |
53616 | In what respect, then, are we to suppose Jesuist monotheism to have been an innovation? |
53616 | Is it claimed that there"must"have been a historical Herakles, or Dionysos, or Adonis? |
53616 | Is it pretended that claims to be the Son of God were normal in later Jewry? |
53616 | Is it then contended that a Sacred Book must represent the originative teaching of a real person and his disciples? |
53616 | Is it then in respect of mutual love and the forgiveness of enemies? |
53616 | Is it to be authenticated by the threat that it must go if we deny that the Sermon on the Mount is a sermon at all? |
53616 | Is not this another echo from the obscure tragedy of the sacrificial victim, who was anointed for his doom? |
53616 | Is not this the strict critical verdict, apart from any other issue? |
53616 | Is the motive of the story nothing better than the desire to record that Jesus was richly buried? |
53616 | M. Loisy, indeed, claims the pro- Samaritan passage as genuine: does he then admit the anti- Samaritan to be spurious? |
53616 | On the other hand, who were"we"for"Isaiah"if not Israel itself? |
53616 | The details of"mending their nets"and"in the boat with the hired servants"? |
53616 | The fragments of Solon''s verse purport to have been written by him: have we anything purporting to have been written by Jesus? |
53616 | The problem"What really happened?" |
53616 | The question,"What do you put in its place?" |
53616 | The scientific question is, Upon what grounds can he demur to the extension of a myth- theory to which he thus contributes? |
53616 | Then, still more abruptly than in the synoptics, we have the completion( vi, 70):--"Did not I choose you the twelve, and one of you is a devil?" |
53616 | Was it because of Christian goodness that the decline of Rome was accelerated instead of being checked? |
53616 | Well, what of it? |
53616 | Were they really men of such wickedness that they sought to bring the true humanity of Jesus into acceptance by falsifying the Gospels? |
53616 | What doctrines then are meant, and what effects are posited? |
53616 | What idea, what teaching, had Jesus left them? |
53616 | Where is the difficulty? |
53616 | Which species of teaching is supposed to have represented the"personality"? |
53616 | Who or what then was Joshua? |
53616 | Who then produced the literature? |
53616 | XPS., DEI FILIUS= Dominus Noster Jesu(?) |
53616 | [ 154] But what does the biographical theory make of such a conclusion? |
53616 | [ 380] Is one realistic detail to pass for personal knowledge when the other is sheer typology? |
53616 | [ 405] Why then should an allegory of casting out polytheism have been framed concerning Galilee? |
53616 | [ 414] If the matter of the myth was ancient for Syria, why should not the names of the mother and the child be so? |
53616 | [ 464] Why then does it not warm the heart of Professor Schmiedel equally with the doctrine of the gospels? |
53616 | and are not his sisters with us?" |
53616 | the Professor''s work on The Johannine Writings, p. 90, where the same query:"Who could have invented them?" |
55284 | ''It is impossible,''he says,''to live looking at horrible ghosts,''but how does_ he_ know whether it''s horrible or not? 55284 And Béranger?" |
55284 | And Garibaldi? |
55284 | And Hugo? |
55284 | Are you very interested to know? |
55284 | But how would you reconcile Flerovsky''s theory, say, with the part played by the Normans in the history of Europe? |
55284 | But you are neither a drunkard nor dissolute-- how do you come to have such dreams? |
55284 | Did you know him? |
55284 | Everyone? |
55284 | How do you do? |
55284 | How will you get out of that contradiction, inventor? 55284 Hugo? |
55284 | I am told that you are very well read; is that true? 55284 In what?" |
55284 | Is everyone like that? |
55284 | Is n''t he a good writer, clever, exact, and with no exaggeration? 55284 The Normans? |
55284 | What about sayings and proverbs? |
55284 | What''s the matter? 55284 Why?" |
55284 | You do n''t know? 55284 You do n''t love me?" |
55284 | A long novel, written concisely, do you see? |
55284 | All his life he feared and hated death, all his life there throbbed in his soul the"Arsamaxian terror"--must he die? |
55284 | And at the same time peering at Death with his keen little eyes:"What art thou like? |
55284 | And suddenly he asked me, exactly as if he were dealing me a blow:"Why do n''t you believe in God?" |
55284 | And suddenly he got angry, and said, irritably, sternly, rapping his knee with his finger:"But you''re not a drinking man? |
55284 | And the other dream?" |
55284 | And what is beauty? |
55284 | And what truths can there be, if there is death?" |
55284 | But Daudet agrees, you know, you remember his Paul Astier?" |
55284 | But yet why not write about it? |
55284 | Did you really dream that, you did n''t invent it? |
55284 | Do n''t you like it?" |
55284 | Do you like his stories?" |
55284 | Do you love your wife? |
55284 | Do you think my son, Leo, has talent? |
55284 | Have you known many of them?" |
55284 | Have you read Weltmann?" |
55284 | He laughed, and then, probably noticing that I was a little hurt by his distrust of me:"Are you hurt because I thought your dreams bookish? |
55284 | He looked straight into my eyes and smiling repeated:"Why?" |
55284 | He used to ask:"You do n''t like me?" |
55284 | How do you like Sophie Andreyevna? |
55284 | I always translated these words into:"How do you do? |
55284 | I asked him:''But how then? |
55284 | I do not know whether I loved him; but does it matter, love of him or hatred? |
55284 | If you attained your freedom, what do you imagine would happen? |
55284 | If you were free in your sense, what would bind you to life or to people? |
55284 | Is Korolenko a musician?" |
55284 | It''s a pity people do n''t read Lieskov, he''s a real writer-- have you read him?" |
55284 | Leo Nicolayevitch asked with interest:"Tell me, what is he like?" |
55284 | Lord, thou creator of beauty, how art thou not ashamed? |
55284 | Man has a thousand songs in his heart and is yet blamed for jealousy; is it fair?" |
55284 | No? |
55284 | Now he says:''Truth is not wanted''; quite true, what should he want truth for? |
55284 | Old Romans, eh, Liovushka? |
55284 | On the bottom with the shovel, eh? |
55284 | Perhaps jealousy comes from the fear of degrading one''s soul, of being humiliated and ridiculous? |
55284 | Someone, always stolidly stupid as a flat- iron, asked:"What do you say?" |
55284 | That is the obvious conclusion....""Why coiffeur?" |
55284 | The groom is there, is n''t he? |
55284 | The questions:"Do you know him? |
55284 | Then he smoothed his beard with the knotted fingers of his strong peasant''s hand, and repeated gently:"Yes, for what sin?"] |
55284 | There''s pleasure for me, and for you there''s not much sense in it-- but still, how do you do?" |
55284 | They pray to Him from habit, and in their secret soul they hate Him-- why does He drive them over the earth from one end to the other? |
55284 | This evening, during our walk, he took my arm and said:"The boots are marching-- terrible, eh? |
55284 | To- day in the Almond Park he asked Anton Tchekhov:"You whored a great deal when you were young?" |
55284 | VIa"You like Andersen''s Tales?" |
55284 | Was it a broad shovel?" |
55284 | We carry it in ourselves as an inevitable punishment-- a punishment for what sin?" |
55284 | Well, you may say beauty? |
55284 | What bird is it?" |
55284 | What follows thee hereafter? |
55284 | What for? |
55284 | What good is that to anyone, how I see that tower or sea or Tartar-- what interest or use is there in it?" |
55284 | What is he like? |
55284 | What kind of language does he use? |
55284 | What will he do to- morrow? |
55284 | What''s there in common between the French and us? |
55284 | When I answered that Kuvalda had been drawn from life, he said:"Tell me, where did you see him?" |
55284 | When I said that Gogol was probably influenced by Hoffmann, Stern, and perhaps Dickens, he glanced at me and asked:"Have you read that somewhere? |
55284 | Where was he born?" |
55284 | Who could desire her as she is?" |
55284 | Why did n''t he sin with a beautiful, healthy woman?" |
55284 | Why should not Nature make an exception to her law, give to one man physical immortality-- why not? |
55284 | Wilt thou destroy me altogether, or will something in me go on living?" |
55284 | Would not martyrdom probably in some measure justify death, make her more understandable, acceptable from the external, from the formal point of view? |
55284 | XXVII He likes putting difficult and malicious questions: What do you think of yourself? |
55284 | XXXIII I read him some scenes from my play,_ The Lower Depths;_ he listened attentively and then asked:"Why do you write that?" |
55284 | XXXIV"What is the most terrible dream you have ever had?" |
55284 | You hammer away like a parrot at one word, freedom, freedom; but what is the sense of it? |
55284 | You know_ Fruits of Enlightenment_? |
55284 | You understood that she wanted you?" |
55284 | You''ve seen many drunken women? |
55284 | You, of course, do n''t agree with this? |
55284 | [ 1] Once he asked:"Are you fond of me, Alexey Maximovitch?" |
53059 | Alone? |
53059 | And not go back to Earth? |
53059 | And they''ll return here with our race, or what''s left of it, in twelve years? |
53059 | And you, Kelly? |
53059 | And you? |
53059 | And your wife, Fox? |
53059 | Are you crazy, Captain? |
53059 | But the others-- the ones who stoned the rocket-- would they have let you keep that promise? |
53059 | Can you astrogate a rocket, Captain? 53059 Captain, is everything all right?" |
53059 | Captain,the small- boned, brown- bearded radarman said solemnly,"can we take a look before we belt down?" |
53059 | Did you and Van Gundy fight? |
53059 | Did you do it, Garcia? |
53059 | Did you kill Van Gundy? |
53059 | Did you try to smash the ports? 53059 Do n''t you remember anything?" |
53059 | Do n''t you remember? |
53059 | Do you want her to die? |
53059 | Each of you would like one of our daughters to stay with you during your visit here? |
53059 | Garcia, were the Sirians here? 53059 Heaven?" |
53059 | How about Van Gundy, Captain? 53059 How about it, Kelly?" |
53059 | How about tonight? 53059 How do you feel about this? |
53059 | Hummm? |
53059 | I mean, these Sirians will be heroes to humanity, wo n''t they? |
53059 | I''m going to stay here,declared Fox,"but we never thought of that week, did we? |
53059 | Kelly, Kelly--"Where, Kelly? 53059 Kelly?" |
53059 | Me? 53059 More?" |
53059 | Remember? |
53059 | See it? |
53059 | That Sirian sounded like he meant what he said, did n''t he? |
53059 | The point is--Fox broke in:"What do_ you_ remember, Captain?" |
53059 | The rest of us can go, ca n''t we? |
53059 | Then what will our people think of_ us_? 53059 They''re leaving_ now_?" |
53059 | What do you mean? |
53059 | What kind of a name would_ that_ be? |
53059 | What''s the idea of that? |
53059 | What? |
53059 | Who cares? |
53059 | Why ca n''t they? 53059 Why did you get the pistol?" |
53059 | Why do n''t we decide this later? 53059 Why not let Kelly go?" |
53059 | Why not? |
53059 | Why? |
53059 | Yes, what do you remember? |
53059 | Yes? |
53059 | You are pleased with the daughters of our village? |
53059 | You know what to do? |
53059 | You like the wine? |
53059 | You relish our food? |
53059 | You''d go to the village with Van Gundy''s grave- dirt still on your hands? |
53059 | _ Why?_asked the stern- faced lieutenant. |
53059 | _ You_ remember faces, do n''t you, Fox? |
53059 | And_ that_ shows they''re intelligent, does n''t it?" |
53059 | Are all Earthmen like us?" |
53059 | Are we still going to see our companions?" |
53059 | But--""Yes?" |
53059 | Ca n''t we relax for a few hours, Captain?" |
53059 | Ca n''t you see what the Sirians are trying to do? |
53059 | Ca n''t you see what these people are trying to do? |
53059 | Ca n''t you still see their faces in your mind?" |
53059 | Can we go out now-- please?" |
53059 | Can we go outside without our suits? |
53059 | Can you find your way back to Earth alone? |
53059 | Can you keep those engines going without Garcia or dodge those meteors without Fox? |
53059 | Captain Torkel asked,"Would n''t you like to see Broadway again, Fox? |
53059 | Could that be?" |
53059 | Did Van Gundy try to stop you? |
53059 | Did you hear that? |
53059 | Did_ they_ kill Van Gundy?" |
53059 | Do we go with them?" |
53059 | Does n''t that indicate an extremely high intelligence?" |
53059 | Fox said anxiously,"How about it, Captain? |
53059 | Fox whispered,"Captain, shall we let Kelly test the food first? |
53059 | How about it, Captain? |
53059 | How about it, Captain?" |
53059 | How about it, Fox?" |
53059 | How could they get it that close? |
53059 | How did we become so detestable? |
53059 | How do you plead?" |
53059 | How do you speak our language?" |
53059 | How strong was the Sirian telepathic sense? |
53059 | Is that right, Captain? |
53059 | Is that what happened? |
53059 | Is that why you killed him?" |
53059 | Is there any difference?" |
53059 | Is there anything else to do?" |
53059 | Oh God, why must I keep forgetting?_"Tell me what you think, Captain,"said a balding, dark- skinned man clad in khakis. |
53059 | Ready?" |
53059 | Should we go without weapons?" |
53059 | Strong enough to send to the village for help? |
53059 | Taaleeb?" |
53059 | That does n''t mean we ca n''t name a world after him, does it?" |
53059 | The lieutenant grumbled,"What did the people of Earth ever do for us?" |
53059 | Then why would they kill Van Gundy?" |
53059 | To the village or to Earth? |
53059 | Van Gundy whispered to him, very softly,"Did you bring weapons, Captain? |
53059 | What do you do all the time?" |
53059 | What will they_ do_ to us?" |
53059 | What''s happened to you?" |
53059 | When had_ that_ happened? |
53059 | Where is your star?" |
53059 | Where was he? |
53059 | Which one do you want?" |
53059 | Who killed Van Gundy?" |
53059 | Who''ll volunteer?" |
53059 | Why did he do it, Captain? |
53059 | Why did he throw every piece of transmitting equipment over- board?" |
53059 | Why not bathe and shave and smell of lotion and put on a clean white dress uniform? |
53059 | Why not forget about an insignificant planet fifty trillion miles away? |
53059 | Why not join the men? |
53059 | Why would they be so nice to us in the village?" |
53059 | Why?" |
53059 | Will you tell these promises to your Garcia and your Van Gundy?" |
53059 | Would n''t you, Fox?" |
53059 | Would you care?" |
53059 | You are the leader of your people?" |
53059 | You do n''t want a murderer with you, do you?" |
53059 | You leave in one day, yes? |
53059 | You want to come along or stay here alone?" |
53059 | You would n''t want the Sirians_ not_ to go, would you?" |
53059 | You''re not married, are you, Captain?" |
53059 | Your world is soon to be destroyed, yes?" |
54652 | What medicine was given the horse? |
54652 | ''How would you like to leave it? |
54652 | ( A.D. 349- 369[? |
54652 | ( A.D. 349- 369[? |
54652 | ( By him) worshipping the god in faith, before the world of the gods and the world of Brahma, for the purpose(?) |
54652 | ( Gupta 190?). |
54652 | ), Al Bailáimán( Bhinmál? |
54652 | ), Bárus, Uzain, Máliba, Baharimad( Mevad? |
54652 | ), Dimuri, Megari, Ardabæ, Mesæ( Matsya of Jaipur? |
54652 | ), Kathia( Multân? |
54652 | -miti|| mamgalam sadâ srîh||( sûtradhâréna?) |
54652 | -na su di 14 Sômê| adyêha Srî Srîmâlê Mahârâjakula Srî Ca(?) |
54652 | -râpaddha- mahâgacchê punya- punya- svabhâvinâ(?) |
54652 | -vadi 6 dinê balinibamdhê(?) |
54652 | ..... day... to be given regularly 2 two lô °(?). |
54652 | 1/4 dramma+ 2, Bhata lô(? |
54652 | 100- 300?) |
54652 | 12 Akálavarsha(?) |
54652 | 12 dvâdasa- drammâ âcamdrârkam prativarsham dêvêna kârâpa 10. nîyâ|| tathâ srêyârtham Madrakêna(?) |
54652 | 1232?) |
54652 | 130-A.D. 300?) |
54652 | 15, fifteen drammas deposited in the treasury of the god by Madraka(?) |
54652 | 150(?) |
54652 | 2(? |
54652 | 2(?) |
54652 | 319- 322(?).] |
54652 | 322- 349(?).] |
54652 | 349- 369(?).] |
54652 | 509- 520? |
54652 | 509- 520?) |
54652 | 713? |
54652 | 720- 780? |
54652 | 720- 780?) |
54652 | 74) as one of the places of the eighth section describing the coast of India, but is mentioned along with Nahrwára, Kandhár, and Kalbata(?). |
54652 | 800- 1200?) |
54652 | 87) has: Bargant( Wangam in Jodhpur?) |
54652 | ?) |
54652 | And he serves( propitiates?) |
54652 | Both, with the twenty- seventh upakopa(? |
54652 | By Manasiha(?) |
54652 | By these four and by the Vânî(?) |
54652 | Coins with the legend Lichchhaveyah, a coin abbreviation for Lichchhavidauhitra Daughter''s son of Lichchhavi(? |
54652 | Does any trace of the original Báhikas or Outsiders survive? |
54652 | G.1- 12(?)--A.D.319- 322(?) |
54652 | G.12- 29(?)--A.D.332- 349(?) |
54652 | G.29- 49(?)--A.D.349- 369(?) |
54652 | Hearing that Bhíma had come against him as far as Bhímapura(?) |
54652 | How not? |
54652 | In the Bali endowment wheat 1 1/2 seers, ghî 6 karshas, in the naivêdya 1 measure, mung 3/4 measure, ghî 1/2 karsha, Âbôti(?) |
54652 | Inland from these he names the Monædes( Munda of Singbhúm) and Suari( Savaras of Central India) among whom is Mount Maleus( Mahendra Male?). |
54652 | Interruption(?) |
54652 | It is worthy of note, as stated in the A.D. 535 grant, that his niece Duddá( or Lulá?) |
54652 | Kharaosti is the dynastic name of the prince, his personal name appears later in the inscription as Talama( Ptolemy?). |
54652 | Kleisobora= Krishnapura?) |
54652 | Mahâvîra........ bhayatrâtâ(?) |
54652 | Manasihêna(?) |
54652 | Mehmúd said to Krishna:"Can you find me two horses and show me the way to Gujarát that I may get aid from Sultán Muzaffar to punish these rascals? |
54652 | Naigamânvaya- kâyastha- mahattama- Subhatêna tathâ(ve?) |
54652 | Next follows Tiripangalida( Tîkota in the Kurundwâd State?) |
54652 | Sat Âsvina mâsê yâtr(ôtsavê?) |
54652 | Skanda----? |
54652 | Surely you obtained me the gift of that boy to live and not to die? |
54652 | The Ajmir king in consternation asked''Are you Múlarája?'' |
54652 | The Saint asked his son''Are you prepared to die for the boy?'' |
54652 | The author of the Prabandhachintámani says that Durlabha gave up the kingdom to his son(?) |
54652 | The grant gives the name of Prachanda''s family as Bráhma- vaka(?) |
54652 | The imports of Barygaza were wine, bronze, tin and lead, coral and gold stone( topaz? |
54652 | These references suggest that the Bálas or Válas are the Válhikas and that the Bálhikas of the Harivamsa( A.D. 350- 500?) |
54652 | This I suppose is how you will keep your promise of mediating for our sinful souls before Alláh also?'' |
54652 | This grant was written by that wise one... at the time..... in the term of office of the Abbot Mahêndra and the committeeman Âcamdra(?) |
54652 | This prasasti was spoken( composed) by the Maha-(ttara?) |
54652 | This which has been made as a religious endowment is to be maintained by the pamca and by the Sêlahatha(?) |
54652 | To complete Ptolemy''s account of this coast it is only necessary to mention the islands of Heptanêsia( Burnt Islands?) |
54652 | Vana? |
54652 | What sense have these tales? |
54652 | What then was the initial date of the Traikútakas? |
54652 | Why then ask me to leave my home?'' |
54652 | Written by Dêdâka son of Nâgula the dhruva.... the letter less or the letter more-- all is of( no?) |
54652 | [ 390][ Buddhavarmman, A.D. 713(?).] |
54652 | [ 508][ Vanarája, A.D. 720- 780(?).] |
54652 | [ Senápati Bhatárka, A.D. 509- 520?] |
54652 | ]); Ghatotkacha( A.D. 322- 349[? |
54652 | the Sinhalas bring vaidúryas( rubies?) |
54652 | | Chámunda or Bhúyada(? |
56089 | But would the American Government assist China in bearing the responsibilities of such a step? |
56089 | Could the Allies, even with the assistance of the United States, win a decisive victory? |
56089 | Do you not think that General Tuan should leave Peking? |
56089 | Have you not,the Premier asked me,"found me always candid and true?" |
56089 | What form,I asked,"has the Chinese answer taken?" |
56089 | What is the present state of the war, and what the relative strength or degree of exhaustion of the belligerent parties? |
56089 | What is the purpose of your government? |
56089 | What substitute for this protection do you suggest? |
56089 | What, then, will happen at the conclusion of the war? |
56089 | What,the Premier asked,"may be expected of America by way of direct military action? |
56089 | Will you remove the American marines,he queried,"from the Chienmen Tower?" |
56089 | --"If you try to punish us, we shall all go away; and then what will become of the orphan asylum?" |
56089 | A New World War Coming? |
56089 | But the Premier met all my explanations with:"What can we do? |
56089 | But when the minister I saw most frequently would ask:"But what will you do to maintain these rights you have so often asserted?" |
56089 | CHAPTER XXVIII A NEW WORLD WAR COMING? |
56089 | Could foreign financial action and influence in China be gathered up into a unit? |
56089 | Could it be made to build for the whole of China, not tear it down in its several parts? |
56089 | Did he not remember the Treaty of 1903 and America''s long- continued interest in Chinese currency betterment? |
56089 | Do you not know that Japanese engineers were formerly employed there?" |
56089 | Do you suppose that some of our friends in China would wish to contribute?" |
56089 | England and her European allies, it was determined, had"gone broke"; if there was to be a Consortium of lenders to China, would America lead the way? |
56089 | I could not explain its purposes; but when my visitor asked:"Does this paper recognize the paramount position of Japan in China?" |
56089 | If not, will she not lead in a reorganization loan joined by several powers?" |
56089 | Not perceiving anything unusual to which his expression of horror could refer, I asked,"What?" |
56089 | Now what shall we do?" |
56089 | Now will not the United States independently finance China? |
56089 | Or again:"Are you not weary of the domineering attitude of the foreign ministers in Peking? |
56089 | Questions came from all directions:"Is this action to be immediate?" |
56089 | Should they await its delivery, or try to placate the Japanese by further concessions? |
56089 | Should we stand together, who could close the door in our face?" |
56089 | The Premier asked:"Why not go ahead with the development of mining and iron manufacture? |
56089 | The chauffeur had said:"Is your old man going to sign up? |
56089 | The present American administration might withdraw its"pretensions"; but what if they should be resumed in future? |
56089 | Then also our people, having grown wise, will be sure to shout:"Why was not this stopped while there was yet time?" |
56089 | Two days later the representative of the London_ Times_, who had been out of town, asked me casually:"Has anything happened?" |
56089 | Was a new one looming? |
56089 | Was not here a vindication of distinct priority enjoyed by Japan in China? |
56089 | Was not this the entering wedge for a complete control of Chinese military affairs by Japan? |
56089 | Was she to get the rest? |
56089 | What exceptions would be made? |
56089 | What matters the woe of the whole nation by the side of the joy and happiness of our own families?" |
56089 | What should she do? |
56089 | Why are they so slow to come in?" |
56089 | Why may she not have the raw materials for them?" |
56089 | Why not hold her in a prison somewhere in Germany until the war is over?" |
56089 | With eyes of real sadness he looked me full in the face, saying:"What shall we do? |
56089 | With whom would he ally himself? |
56089 | Would China longer freely coöperate with the other Allies? |
56089 | Would it also mean the end of sinister intrigue in China? |
56089 | Would it not be useful if the American Government would confirm Mr. Bryan''s statement? |
56089 | Would not Chinese militarism be strengthened and made obedient to Japanese policy? |
56089 | Would not this alone be ample security for a large conservancy loan? |
56089 | Would she not be under Japan''s strict leadership? |
56089 | Would the neutral ministers view the Allied ministers as guests of honour on this occasion? |
56089 | Would those in control be real republicans, or would they be merely politicians? |
48429 | And can you ever know anything that is not experience? |
48429 | Do you admit,he begins by asking,"that nothing can be more real than experience?" |
48429 | 46 EMPIRICISM Experience is a fine word, but what does it mean? |
48429 | 9 THE BRITISH CHARACTER What is it that governs the Englishman? |
48429 | A man in his own country will talk like the laconic tourist abroad; his whole vocabulary will be_ Où? |
48429 | Am I not entertaining this Idea? |
48429 | And do I do nothing that the light may come? |
48429 | And must not all ideas be bred in the mind according to its own free principles of life and effort? |
48429 | And what illegitimate ghost is this_ something else_ that experience should be_ of_? |
48429 | And what liberty does even the latest radicalism offer to the heart? |
48429 | And what metaphysics? |
48429 | And why should they not be erotic? |
48429 | Are not all facts mere ideas? |
48429 | Are there not several impulses in us at every moment? |
48429 | Are there not several sides to every question? |
48429 | Are these moralists in fact only envious and sulky? |
48429 | Are these moralists really overcome by a sense of the vanity of human wishes? |
48429 | Are they ever compelled to fight except by their own impulse and in their private interest? |
48429 | Are they not actually, when enjoyed, very comforting and delightful things in their way? |
48429 | Are they not ruled wholly from within? |
48429 | Are you impatient with the lark because he sings rather than talks? |
48429 | But can he actually see anything except colours, or touch anything except resistances? |
48429 | But how could any one attribute such a view to me? |
48429 | But how could the spirit, if it had been free originally, ever have attached its fortunes to any lump of clay? |
48429 | But how dose are these analogies? |
48429 | But in what direction? |
48429 | But of freeing the people from what? |
48429 | But what is abstraction? |
48429 | But why should any one wish to adopt them? |
48429 | But why should the other supporter of the British arms be the Unicorn? |
48429 | Can I suppress an irresistible sense of seeing things clearly, and a keen delight in so seeing them? |
48429 | Can attention ever render things more discrete than they are in their own nature? |
48429 | Can he feel anything except his own sensations? |
48429 | Combien? |
48429 | Did Spanish life afford fewer contrasts, less individuality of character and idiom, than did the England of Shakespeare? |
48429 | Do I not practise it for their benefit as best I can? |
48429 | Do they not dazzle the innocent and unsophisticated with a distant image of happiness? |
48429 | Do they not enjoy complete freedom of conscience and of expression? |
48429 | Does Mrs. Grundy interfere with their spontaneous actions? |
48429 | Does not this universal mutation pay loud homage to eternal law? |
48429 | Every one grumbles at his lot and at his profession; but what is man that he should ask for more? |
48429 | Experience is everything; and when you have experience of experience what more could you ask for, even if you were Doctor Faustus in person? |
48429 | For what do they reveal to him? |
48429 | For what do they reveal to him? |
48429 | Had it been less malodorous at court? |
48429 | Has it all been, perhaps, for his sake, that he might live and sing and be happy? |
48429 | Has not a maniac probably more and more vivid experience than a man of the world? |
48429 | Has not every party caught sight of something veritably right and good? |
48429 | Have birth, money, and fashion no value whatever? |
48429 | How could he possibly fail to covet a way of life which, in the eyes of liberals, was so obviously the best? |
48429 | How could they mistake it for a Christian or for a spiritual philosophy? |
48429 | How should anything exist so unlike home, so out of scale with their affairs, so little watery, and so little human? |
48429 | How should life be possible in a world of uncertain dimensions, where incalculable blows might fall upon us at any time from any quarter? |
48429 | How should they live in arid tablelands, or at merciless altitudes, where there is nothing but scorching heat or a freezing blizzard? |
48429 | How then should the whole of it follow upon any part? |
48429 | I am quite happy in this human ignorance mitigated by pictures, for it yields practical security and poetic beauty: what more can a sane man want? |
48429 | I congratulate them on their true loves: but how should I be able to speed them on their course? |
48429 | If God or nature had used Occam''s razor and had hesitated to multiply beings without necessity, where should_ we_ be? |
48429 | If theory was not useful, what was the use of it? |
48429 | If they did, what would they see? |
48429 | Is it I who am indifferent to the being of light? |
48429 | Is it I who tremble lest at its coming it should dissolve the creatures begotten in darkness? |
48429 | Is it external things? |
48429 | Is it not notorious that causation is nothing but the habit which some parts of experience have of following upon others? |
48429 | Is it sour grapes? |
48429 | Is it such contact with events as nobody can avoid, shocks and pressure endured from circumstances and from the routine of the world? |
48429 | Is it that hell is still felt to lie, for the vast majority, immediately behind the curtain? |
48429 | Is not all this semblance of externality in things a blessed foil to spiritual activity? |
48429 | Is not the greatest practicable harmony, or the least dissension, the highest good? |
48429 | Is the proportion of dull matter in their bodies, I wonder, really less than in ours? |
48429 | It is a hard fate; but can this world promise anybody anything better? |
48429 | It is totally incredible that a thinking spirit should exist in the seed, and should plan and carry out( by what instruments?) |
48429 | Might it not just as well be rice, or polenta, or even beef and bacon? |
48429 | Must they not find food and rear their young? |
48429 | Must they not in their measure work, watch, and tremble? |
48429 | Need human nature''s daily food be exclusively the Spanish pea? |
48429 | Now that I show less sympathy with it, will they be better satisfied? |
48429 | Now what is the direction of change which seems progress to liberals? |
48429 | Or is it simply that death is too painful, too sacred, or too unseemly for polite ears? |
48429 | Perhaps not; and yet would experience be very distinct or very significant if it was experience of nothing? |
48429 | Sense is like a lively child always at our elbow, saying, Look, look, what is that? |
48429 | Spiritual minds in the church-- of which there are many-- suffer under this heredity incubus of worldliness; but what can they avail? |
48429 | That I am conceited, it would be folly to deny: what artist, what thinker, what parent does not overestimate his own offspring? |
48429 | The aims she is so faithfully but blindly pursuing? |
48429 | The reformer must give him up; but why should one wish to reform a person so much better than oneself? |
48429 | The reproach which Virgil addresses to his Juno,"Such malignity in minds celestial?" |
48429 | The secret springs of her life? |
48429 | Under these circumstances, what is the part of wisdom? |
48429 | Was it not violence, she said to herself, to exist on earth at all? |
48429 | Was she so much a goddess that they thought her a statue? |
48429 | Was there not more freedom, more laughter, and greater plenty here? |
48429 | What about liberty in love? |
48429 | What are the mystic implications of having a single horn? |
48429 | What cares he what curious eye may note their deformity? |
48429 | What could England have been but for the triumph of Protestantism there? |
48429 | What could be more unseemly than a fault in grammar, or in many a case more laughable and disconcerting? |
48429 | What difference does it make in reality whether the suffering and ignominy of life fall to what I call myself or to what I call another man? |
48429 | What do you care what words he uses? |
48429 | What does the cross signify? |
48429 | What does this word mean? |
48429 | What dreams occupy that fat man in the street, toddling by under his shabby hat and bedraggled rain- coat? |
48429 | What ferocious Anglophobe, whether a white man or a black man, is not immensely flattered if you pretend to have mistaken him for an Englishman? |
48429 | What indeed could be more exhilarating than such a rout, if only we are not too exacting, and do not demand of it irrelevant perfections? |
48429 | What is Protestantism? |
48429 | What is the good of all her labour? |
48429 | What mattered a shade more or less of violence? |
48429 | What reserve, what tenderness, what inward springs of happiness could they treasure amid those gross harlot- like flowers? |
48429 | What space could they find for solitude and freedom in the tangle of tropical forests, amongst the monkeys and parrots? |
48429 | What spurious little non- empirical particle is this_ of_ of yours? |
48429 | What verbal mirage is this, to see happiness in fixity? |
48429 | What were those miscellaneous follies to him but an offence or a danger? |
48429 | What, then, is there left, if Dickens has all these limitations? |
48429 | When I reach Dover on a rough day, I wait there until the Channel is smoother; am I not travelling for pleasure? |
48429 | When in this little glow- worm which we call man there is so much going on, what must not all nature contain in its immensity? |
48429 | When in this little glow- worm which we call man there is so much going on, what must not all nature contain in its immensity? |
48429 | When was a coward at peace? |
48429 | Who could not be happy in his world? |
48429 | Who knows? |
48429 | Who loves it more, or basks in it more joyfully? |
48429 | Why not be what you are? |
48429 | Why not kiss our successive pleasures good- bye, simply and without marking our preferences, as we do our children when they file to bed? |
48429 | Why should he be troubled about the dreams of the Unicorn, more than about those of the nightingale or the spider? |
48429 | Why should he entertain his leisure in depicting or idealizing them? |
48429 | Why should it be the sport of time and change and the vicissitudes of affairs? |
48429 | Why should knowledge of the world make people worldly? |
48429 | Why should n''t the intellect be vague while the heart is comfortable? |
48429 | Why should not the development of material arts be the next phase in their career? |
48429 | Why should one art be contemptuous of the figurative language of another? |
48429 | Why should one be angry with dreams, with myth, with allegory, with madness? |
48429 | Why should she be forbidden to exhibit any other essences than those authorized by this metaphysical Solon? |
48429 | Why should spirit have fallen in the first instance, or made any beginning in sin and illusion? |
48429 | Why should there be stars at all, and why so many of them? |
48429 | Why should we be jealous, if we were simply merry? |
48429 | Why should we quarrel with human nature, with metaphor, with myth, with impersonation? |
48429 | Why should we willingly miss anything, or precipitate anything, or be angry with folly, or in despair at any misadventure? |
48429 | Why such bitterness about the harmless absurdities that may fringe this national discipline? |
48429 | Why then this abuse of language? |
48429 | Why this exclusive hostility to the vanities dear to the snob? |
48429 | Why this mania for naming and measuring and mastering what is carrying us so merrily along? |
48429 | Why this monotony? |
48429 | Wiping her prospective tears he would have said,"What is Romeo''s body to me? |
48429 | Would he be happier with no masters at all? |
48429 | Would she be borne away by the victors like an inert Palladium, to be set up elsewhere on a new pedestal? |
48429 | Would the demagogues give him better prospects, or prove better masters? |
48429 | Yet if we said that experience arose by the operation of mind, would not all the operations of mind be equally experience? |
48429 | Yet what is the harm, if only we move and change inwardly in harmony with the ambient flux? |
48429 | Yet why seek to interpret the parable? |
48429 | Yet why should experience arise at all if there is no occasion for it? |
48429 | Yet why, we may ask, should happiness be found exclusively in this ideal society where none intrudes? |
48429 | and he will reply,"Is n''t it?" |
48429 | and if he could talk, would you be irritated by his curious opinions? |
49937 | Am I not to be allowed to leave this ship? |
49937 | And if he do n''t get them,queried Matt,"what then?" |
49937 | And why? |
49937 | And you can send in the Spanish so that the trick could not be detected? |
49937 | Any one else below with you? |
49937 | Any other orders, Captain Ichi? |
49937 | Anything yet, Kaneko? |
49937 | Are you sure, matey,went on Dick,"that that was the Jap steamer our lookout raised from the headland?" |
49937 | Are you telling me the truth, Captain Sandoval? |
49937 | But what''s the reason the war ship is coming for us, and acting so peaceably? |
49937 | But when did it rise? |
49937 | But you believed it? |
49937 | By the way, Carl,and he turned his eyes on his Dutch pard,"how did you get those ropes off your hands down there in the torpedo room?" |
49937 | Ca n''t you see them? 49937 Can I pelieve vat I hear? |
49937 | Can you raise Cape Virgins? |
49937 | Did all this water come down the hatchway? |
49937 | Did that bullet do you any damage, Matt? |
49937 | Do you know anything about surgery? |
49937 | Do you know good luck when you see it, Carl? |
49937 | Do you want to see the_ Grampus_ held up for a week in this blooming place at the south end of Nowhere? |
49937 | Don''d I say dot? 49937 Ed, will you get those staybolts and chuck them into the baggage car for me when Two pulls in? |
49937 | English? |
49937 | Explain how? |
49937 | From that,spoke up Clackett,"I should infer that the Jap boat has had time to get somewhere near the end of the strait and lay for us?" |
49937 | Getting anything important, Kaneko? |
49937 | Harikari? 49937 Have n''t you got any one aboard who can talk English?" |
49937 | Healey,said Bucks,"I do n''t need to tell you what I think of it, do I? |
49937 | Here iss a fine keddle oof fish? |
49937 | How about that story Garcia told you about me? |
49937 | How about the submarine? |
49937 | How can we do it if the anchors hang to the bottom? |
49937 | How did it happen? |
49937 | How did you find that out? |
49937 | How did you happen to be at Sandy Point? |
49937 | How did you know, captain,returned Matt,"that I did not answer that second call as you accused me of answering that other one?" |
49937 | How do you suppose they ever managed to get that canoe and pass through the circle of Fuegans? |
49937 | How is everything, matey? |
49937 | How long does it take a good fast steamer to sail around the Horn? |
49937 | How long will that take? |
49937 | How''s your head? |
49937 | How? |
49937 | If we were trying to keep the convicts out of your hands, why should we turn them over to you, here in the strait? |
49937 | Is Glennie or Carl down there? |
49937 | Is it-- what? |
49937 | Is it? |
49937 | Is that a government vessel? |
49937 | It was the Jap steamer, eh? |
49937 | Not the-- the Jap boat? |
49937 | Our spark wo n''t carry to the land station? |
49937 | Positive of that? |
49937 | Prisoners? |
49937 | She is below the cape? |
49937 | The supposed war ship answers,said Glennie,"''All right; anything else?''" |
49937 | Then why did n''t you say so? |
49937 | Then, after that, how did you happen to get wrecked? |
49937 | Vat dit he mean by sooch grazy talk as dot? |
49937 | Vat i d iss, Matt? |
49937 | Vat in der vorld,chimed in Carl,"dit dose fellers shpeak to you like you vas a tog for? |
49937 | Vat it iss? |
49937 | Vat''s dot? |
49937 | Vell, he owes you some abologies, too, don''d he? |
49937 | Vell, vat oof der tiving gear don''d vas got retty in time, Matt? |
49937 | Vere iss it for me to go? |
49937 | Vy nod led me haf a handt in der scrimmage? 49937 We are friends, captain?" |
49937 | Well, was meeting those convicts good luck or bad for Motor Matt and the rest of the motor boys? |
49937 | Were any of the port plates sprung by that collision with the wreck, Carl? |
49937 | What are we to do now? |
49937 | What are you thinking about? |
49937 | What do they care for any flag? |
49937 | What do you think of that, Glennie, you and Carl? |
49937 | What does he say? |
49937 | What does that mean? |
49937 | What does this mean, Captain Sandoval? |
49937 | What flag shall we fly? |
49937 | What has become of the other two? |
49937 | What is it you wish, señor? |
49937 | What is it? |
49937 | What is it? |
49937 | What is it? |
49937 | What is she? |
49937 | What is your business? |
49937 | What of it? |
49937 | What ship is that? |
49937 | What was that? |
49937 | What was the mistake? |
49937 | What''re you going to try to do? |
49937 | What''s all the excitement about? |
49937 | What''s been going on overhead, matey? |
49937 | What''s going on? |
49937 | What''s that for? |
49937 | What''s the matter, Clackett? |
49937 | What''s the matter? |
49937 | What''s the next move, matey? |
49937 | What''s the situation up there? |
49937 | What''s your plan? |
49937 | Where are we? |
49937 | Where is the submarine now? |
49937 | Where you going? |
49937 | Where''s our next port of call, matey? |
49937 | Where''s our skipper? |
49937 | Where''s the danger? |
49937 | Where''s your flag? |
49937 | Who are you? |
49937 | Who did you say had the key? |
49937 | Who owns that submarine? |
49937 | Who vas i d got loose mit himseluf in der beriscope room und got pack der_ Grampus_ from der gonficts? 49937 Who was in the periscope room?" |
49937 | Why do n''t they want to go to Punta Arenas? |
49937 | Why do you do that, captain? |
49937 | Why do you wish to know that? |
49937 | Why have you a wireless machine on your boat? |
49937 | Why? |
49937 | Will it work, matey? |
49937 | Will you take me to jail in Punta Arenas? |
49937 | Will you tell me your name, sir? |
49937 | You are not out of patience with us for what my friends did in helping me escape from you? |
49937 | You did n''t think I stayed off that war ship because I was_ afraid_, did you? |
49937 | You dispute the word of Captain Enrique Sandoval? |
49937 | You do n''t know anything about Glennie or Clackett? |
49937 | You do n''t mean to say that this Captain Sandoval believed that? |
49937 | You know what Brigham said we were to do when we mentioned any place where we were to put in with the_ Grampus_? |
49937 | You t''ought you hat got der pest oof Modor Matt, hey? |
49937 | You think me afraid? 49937 You vant dose tagos to t''ink Modor Madd''s friendts vas a punch oof yaps? |
49937 | You will not allow me to return to the submarine? |
49937 | Your instrument is perfectly tuned with the one at Punta Arenas, Kaneko? |
49937 | _ Que quiere?_cried Matt, as he struggled. |
49937 | ''This is the Chilian war ship_ Salvadore_,''ran the message;''what do you want?'' |
49937 | A hundred thousand dollars is trembling in the balance, and ought we to take chances with it? |
49937 | And where were their friends? |
49937 | And, if he promised anything, why is n''t he along with you to do something? |
49937 | Anything else?" |
49937 | Are you with me? |
49937 | But what of it?" |
49937 | Captain, may I be one of those who visit the_ Grampus_?" |
49937 | Ditn''t Modor Matt, und you, und Tick come pooty near going off der poat drying to ged dose fellers? |
49937 | Ditn''t ve got der poat pack from dem confict fellers? |
49937 | Do you recollect the time he came aboard the_ Grampus_, Carl? |
49937 | Ed Peeto broke out first:"Did you hear that?" |
49937 | Five minutes, ten minutes, passed; then came the question:"Is that the Chilian gunboat_ Salvadore_?" |
49937 | For vy?" |
49937 | Hey, Matt?" |
49937 | How far down are we going?" |
49937 | How he laid it down that we were all to''mister''him?" |
49937 | How long would the_ Grampus_ be delayed? |
49937 | How would I have felt had I been compelled to face you in your prison room at the harbor master''s house, and admitted that I had made a mistake? |
49937 | I have your pardon, señor?" |
49937 | I wonder if those two fellows went into the country together?" |
49937 | I wonder if you can imagine how I felt, lying there on the cot, bound and gagged, and able to look through the door and see what was going on?" |
49937 | I wonder,"he added, as a startling thought flashed through his mind,"if the Sons of the Rising Sun had anything to do with this?" |
49937 | If----""Do you threaten me?" |
49937 | In other words, John Henry Glennie, are you a man or just an imitation of one with a uniform and a commission in the United States Navy?" |
49937 | Matt, old ship, what do you think of this?" |
49937 | Now, if you please, have you a wireless telegraph instrument aboard the submarine?" |
49937 | Page 17, corrected typo"arested"in"Why had Matt been arrested?" |
49937 | Shall we put in there?" |
49937 | Some shtar blays, eh?" |
49937 | Suppose the news is flashed out that the submarine_ Grampus_ is in the harbor? |
49937 | Thereupon the following passed between the ensign and the spokesman for the five, all being translated as the conversation proceeded:"Who are you?" |
49937 | Und arrest you und keep you apoardt der var ship? |
49937 | Vas dot goot luck?" |
49937 | Vy don''d you fall mit yourseluf? |
49937 | Vy nod take dem oop to dot shdeel shamper, Matt?" |
49937 | Well, we did, did n''t we? |
49937 | What I mean is, what suggested such an audacious proceeding?" |
49937 | What I''d like to know is where have those other Chilians gone?" |
49937 | What better proof could you want?" |
49937 | What could I have said to his excellency, the American consul? |
49937 | What did the consul promise to do? |
49937 | What did you let Matt go for, when you could have gone just as well?" |
49937 | What is it to me? |
49937 | What of that?" |
49937 | What was to be done with him there? |
49937 | What''s to prevent the Japs from picking it up?" |
49937 | When he had been safely lifted over the war ship''s rail, the captain leaned over and called down:"Where are the other two? |
49937 | Where are you, Gaines?" |
49937 | Where is she?" |
49937 | Who is this Garcia?" |
49937 | Who''s your captain?" |
49937 | Why did n''t he put in his oar, while that cock of the walk up there was ordering Matt around?" |
49937 | Why did n''t these Chilians explain about the revolution business at the first? |
49937 | Why do n''t you wait for Four to- night?" |
49937 | Why do you talk to me like that?" |
49937 | Why had Matt been arrested? |
49937 | Why was he being taken to Punta Arenas? |
49937 | Why? |
49937 | Would the Japanese steamer have time to round the Horn and reach the other end of the strait before the submarine pushed her nose into the Pacific? |
49937 | You do n''t mean to say, matey, that you''re expecting to meet the Young Samurai somewhere up the coast?" |
49937 | You do n''t want to have Matt spend the night in the war ship''s bally old brig, do you?" |
49937 | You found those five rascals, did you?" |
49937 | You had defied Sandoval, so why could n''t the three of us defy all the Chilians in the town? |
49937 | You see? |
49937 | _ Nicht wahr?_"Dick remained silent. |
57382 | Chopsticks? |
57382 | Did-- you----? |
57382 | Do you mean it, Margaret? |
57382 | Do you see the one with very black hair, his face turned away a little-- the one in the grey suit, Margaret? 57382 Feel as comfortable as you look?" |
57382 | How could I come back to you-- and to your loyalty and trust-- with the shadow of that deception between us? 57382 How is your august mother, my lord?" |
57382 | Missee- sabe- master- have- got- one mother? |
57382 | Much better way, do n''t you think, than taking great meals many hours apart? |
57382 | Queer? 57382 Shoes, Chan- King?" |
57382 | The little bird- lady out there-- mother of Li- Ying? |
57382 | What do you say? |
57382 | What if they should fall in love-- marry? |
57382 | Where could death take one of us that the other could not follow? |
57382 | Where is Li- Ying, then? |
57382 | Which one? |
57382 | Why do you wish to end our friendship? |
57382 | You like it better than you like American clothes? |
57382 | And before I left, she said to me,''If she is all you tell me she is, why do you not bring her here?'' |
57382 | Are n''t you afraid to go to China? |
57382 | Are you glad?" |
57382 | Are you really going? |
57382 | As I could read the foreign titles, would I kindly arrange the pictures in proper sequence? |
57382 | But how can I know?" |
57382 | But they can make no difference with us-- you understand that, Margaret, dear?" |
57382 | But which one could we leave to enjoy those advantages? |
57382 | Chan- King looked at me long in silence and then, sighing humorously, he asked,"What of their father''s example my dear?" |
57382 | How can they do it?" |
57382 | How can you give up beautiful America? |
57382 | How can you leave your mother? |
57382 | How, then, could our child be so? |
57382 | On the way home Chan- King said,"Will this be difficult for you, Margaret?" |
57382 | Once when I confessed this fact to him, he said,"Do you love me only because I am Chinese?" |
57382 | Should you like to go, my dearest?" |
57382 | That is to say, none but practical reasons, and what have they to do with young people in love? |
57382 | Then he said, in his abrupt manner,"You are happy in that dress?" |
57382 | What could destroy our happiness now?" |
57382 | What have I to fear?" |
57382 | When are you going?" |
56536 | How does your Satan get work to do,the latter would ask,"if God doeth all?" |
56536 | So you like it, do you? |
56536 | Tri- InsulaOriginally: of a new island republic of New York? |
56536 | Who learns my lesson complete? |
56536 | 6d._= Zimmern( Antonia).= WHAT DO WE KNOW CONCERNING ELECTRICITY? |
56536 | And if there is a purpose, and if there is a God, what is it all for? |
56536 | And what possible value has all her material development unless it be accompanied by a corresponding development of soul? |
56536 | Are all nations communing? |
56536 | Are they then to lose individual identity? |
56536 | Are we to dismiss it as the shallow utterance of a callous- hearted, healthy- bodied, complacent American, deliberately blind to the world''s tragedy? |
56536 | But if this woman loved him to the uttermost, why did he leave her? |
56536 | But who emancipated him? |
56536 | But, it may be asked, did he aim at"saving souls for Christ"? |
56536 | Can I not know, identify thee? |
56536 | Can there possibly be any connection between this style of composition and the larger consciousness of which he had experience? |
56536 | Do they bring us material for some new law of rhythm or metre? |
56536 | Do they give us a new art- form? |
56536 | Do you see death, and the approach of death? |
56536 | Do you see that lost character?--Do you see decay, consumption, rum- drinking, dropsy, fever, mortal cancer or inflammation? |
56536 | Does_ Leaves of Grass_ awake some quality of the Soul which answers neither to the words of Tennyson nor Browning, Emerson nor Carlyle? |
56536 | Except upon the field of politics, what single thing of moral value has she originated? |
56536 | For who will willingly begin over again the task of self- discovery? |
56536 | Had he caused a letter to be sent them since he got here in Washington? |
56536 | Hast thou no soul? |
56536 | He turned to Ingersoll, demanding,"Unless there is a definite object for it all, what, in God''s name, is it all for?" |
56536 | How are we to sum up these pages, and figure out what it is they come to? |
56536 | Is humanity forming en- masse? |
56536 | Is not he himself the fellow and equal of the supreme Beings, of the Night, the Earth, and the Sea? |
56536 | Is then America also a symbol? |
56536 | Is there going to be but one heart to the globe? |
56536 | Law''s, all Astronomy''s last refinement? |
56536 | May not the former be the natural rhythm for wit and the latter for imagination? |
56536 | May we not suppose it was a passionate and noble woman who opened the gates for him and showed him himself in the divine mirror of her love? |
56536 | Must we nourish this giant, whose unruly strength is for ever threatening to tear in pieces the unity of the self? |
56536 | Of what then was the Earth a symbol to Whitman''s sight? |
56536 | On these things we are at one; but how are we most wisely and surely to direct others on the road to self- realisation? |
56536 | Or shall we say he saw the Madonna in Venus, as Botticelli did? |
56536 | Poetry is the utterance of an inspired emotion; but an emotion inspired by what? |
56536 | The attack roused Whitman to snap out,"Is n''t he the damnedest simulacrum?" |
56536 | The future shall be his proof: will his song remain at her heart? |
56536 | The question obtrudes, was Walt becoming"respectable"? |
56536 | Thought you, greatness was to ripen for you like a pear? |
56536 | Traubel is a first draft for a novel(?) |
56536 | What are we to say of these? |
56536 | What party is there to- day, either in England or America, which dares to hold up for achievement any programme of heroism? |
56536 | What record has he left of those women and their children, whose relation to himself must have bulked so largely in the world of his soul? |
56536 | What then is this emotion which Whitman alone, or in special measure, evokes? |
56536 | Where now was the old exaltation of spirit; where the eager longing for Divine adventure with which hitherto he had always contemplated death? |
56536 | Who has not felt the liberating joy of the autumn gales? |
56536 | Why did he allow the foulest of reproaches to blacken that whitest of all reputations, a Southern lady''s virtue? |
56536 | Why had he not been here these months past, nursing and caring for one who had been dearer to him than his father? |
56536 | Will it awaken, century after century, the divine unrest, and as it were, create new souls forever? |
56536 | With grave emphasis he pronounced his text:"What is the chief end of man?" |
56536 | [ 302] Is this another of those places where the moralist begs to take his leave of the mystic? |
56536 | [ 416] Where others gave their lives, who was he to hold back anything of his? |
56536 | [ said Whitman]...."I was informed in Camden that there were_ two_ Southern(?) |
56536 | or of all Divine personality? |
56536 | or, if you will, a new kind of poetry? |
56536 | oy?" |
60129 | On each side stand_ Shagdur( Shagiur? |
60129 | [ Where lay this mysterious Tangutá or Seche- Hache, and how have these so dissimilar tribes become one Yögur race?] |
51002 | But what''s his real name? |
51002 | Catch one? |
51002 | Did the Governor call you, father? |
51002 | Even though you did give it, do you mean to say that for one roll of silk you will carry away this box? 51002 How is it that your Excellency finds yourself in this box in this unaccountable way?" |
51002 | However did that happen? |
51002 | If this does not mean your Excellency,said they,"whom can it mean?" |
51002 | Oh, my mother, why had you the heart to do so cruelly? |
51002 | She laughed and said,''Is this not within the three days of your public celebration, and according to the agreement by which we parted?'' 51002 Then,"said he,"you did not know of the official order issued?" |
51002 | Very well,said the magistrate;"but can you really make good, and do you truly know how to call back departed spirits?" |
51002 | What do you propose? |
51002 | What would you do with it? |
51002 | Where is she? |
51002 | Who are you? |
51002 | Who is there,he asked,"that would bother himself about me? |
51002 | Whose house is this, anyway? |
51002 | Whose house is this,thought Yoo,"with its beautiful garden?" |
51002 | Why did you not think it out better than that, father? 51002 Why not catch one of them?" |
51002 | Your Excellency is a noble, and I am a low- class woman; how can you think of such a thing? 51002 ''How do you come here?'' 51002 A little later there came a rap at the door, when Kwon awakened and asked,Who is there?" |
51002 | After ten years a guest called one day, and saluting him asked,"Is that grave yonder, beyond the stream, yours?" |
51002 | Are you a genii or are you a Buddhist, so marvellously to bring back the dead to life? |
51002 | As I am not skilled in any handicraft, and do not know Chinese letters, what else can I do?" |
51002 | Astonished, I asked, saying,''How is it, old man, that you have lost your legs?'' |
51002 | At last he turned to the old man, and said,"Well, grand- dad, do you know the flavour of verses like these?" |
51002 | But I m asked,"Who was the man, and where did he live?" |
51002 | But how can I get hold of the books I need?" |
51002 | But since you so command, how can I do but accede gladly?" |
51002 | But the host smiled upon him, raised his hands and asked,"Do you not know me? |
51002 | By what law do creatures like foxes and wild cats so change? |
51002 | Chang replied,"Both are changed, for how could the body change without the soul?" |
51002 | Chang, sometimes, without even inclining his head, would say,"Well, how goes it with you, eh?" |
51002 | Could my heart be other than broken?" |
51002 | Could you not come to me to live here? |
51002 | Could you not have thought, mother, of these things and given him at least some kindly welcome? |
51002 | Do you mean it as a joke?" |
51002 | Do you not know me?" |
51002 | Do you understand?" |
51002 | Even of the faithful among the ancients was there ever a better than Mo?" |
51002 | False mutangs ought to be killed, but you would not kill an honest mutang, would you? |
51002 | From that time on the people of Seoul began faithful offerings to the God of War, for had he not saved the city? |
51002 | Han was astonished beyond measure, and asked,"May I not also come into possession of this wonderful gift?" |
51002 | Have you had something to eat?" |
51002 | He also asked that if one be truly transformed will the soul change as well as the body, or the body only? |
51002 | He at once dismounted, bowed, and said,"Why do you come thus, mother, not in a chair, but on foot?" |
51002 | He gave a start, and asked,"How did you come here?" |
51002 | He sent a yamen- runner to have her arrested, and when she was brought before him he asked,"Are you a mutang?" |
51002 | He then asked,"Are you not afraid to die, that you stay here in this county?" |
51002 | He thought to himself,"I have done no wrong, therefore why need I fear the lightning?" |
51002 | His Majesty asked,"Who are you, and how did you get in here?" |
51002 | His associates replied in wonder,"Your Excellency is still strong and hearty, and able for many years of work; why do you speak so?" |
51002 | Hong replied,"What do you mean by''great man,''you impudent brat? |
51002 | How can you tolerate them in your presence?" |
51002 | How could I do such things?" |
51002 | How could he ever have come so far for one so low and vile? |
51002 | How old are you? |
51002 | I am an expert in reading the hills, and I''ll tell you of a site; would you care to see it?" |
51002 | I did not know what he meant, and so asked,''What beautiful person?'' |
51002 | I m asked,"What is this you have; do you intend to kill me?" |
51002 | I said,''Yes, but how do you know me?'' |
51002 | If Se- jong had not been a great and enlightened king, how could it have happened? |
51002 | In a little a secretary came forward, stood in front of the raised dais to transmit commands, and the King asked,"Where do you come from? |
51002 | Is he not here? |
51002 | Is that true?" |
51002 | It is difficult to have one''s gifts known in high places; how much more difficult before a king? |
51002 | Kwon asked,"How can I save you?" |
51002 | Might I accompany you some day when you take your turn?" |
51002 | Now what have you to say? |
51002 | On his arrival his Majesty asked,"When all have gone off for a gay time, why is it that you remain alone?" |
51002 | One day his wife said to him,"Would you like to enter into the inner enclosure and see as the fairies see?" |
51002 | One day this parent, thus beaten, screamed out,"Oh, God, why do you not strike dead this wicked man who beats his mother?" |
51002 | One guest remarked,"But he, too, is human; why can not he be moved?" |
51002 | One of the two said,"What possible proof can you have?" |
51002 | Please save me, wo n''t you?" |
51002 | Puk- chang replied,"Shall I tell you how it goes with him, and how far he has come on the way?" |
51002 | Said he,"How is it that you, a slave, dare to marry with a man of the aristocracy?" |
51002 | Said he,"The barbarians will not touch this town; why do you run so?" |
51002 | Shall I roast these and bring them to you?" |
51002 | She added also,"Did you get into trouble with a yangban there when you came by?" |
51002 | She alighted just in front of me, and to my surprise, taking my hand, said,''Are you not Sim Heui- su?'' |
51002 | She answered,"Are you not Chol- lo( Brass Tiger), and have we not separated for good, years ago? |
51002 | She brought the light, and then he said,"Sit down too, and smoke a little, wo n''t you?" |
51002 | She laughed, saying,"Do you mean to joke about it?" |
51002 | She replied,"How could I dare do such a thing?" |
51002 | She said,"We have been separated three years already; what reason have you to come now and make such a disturbance?" |
51002 | She said,''Did you not on such and such a day go to such and such a Minister''s house and look on at the gathering?'' |
51002 | So great a loss, what could equal it? |
51002 | Some say that the fox carries a magic charm by which it does these magic things, but can this account for the wild cat? |
51002 | Such being the case, should I not bow before him and show him reverence?" |
51002 | Sympathetically he asked,"Why did n''t you tell me before?" |
51002 | Take this place, then, off my hands, will you, and the woman too?" |
51002 | The Deputy, alarmed, said,"How can your Excellency say that your servant''s contemptible daughter is beautiful? |
51002 | The Governor clapped her shoulder, and said,"Well, really now, how is it that you know of this? |
51002 | The Governor was greatly delighted, and said,"How is it that you can plan so wonderfully? |
51002 | The Governor''s son looked in surprise and displeasure, and asked,"Why do you cry?" |
51002 | The King asked again,"You know the classics so well, do you know something also of the Book of Changes?" |
51002 | The King laughed, and said,"This is a simple matter to settle; why should my little sister make so great an affair of it, and bow before me? |
51002 | The King was greatly pleased with this reply, and asked again,"Do you know how to write verses?" |
51002 | The Minister said,"Indeed, that''s wonderful; but if it were not for men like yourself how should I ever come to know these things?" |
51002 | The aunt laughed, and asked,"Why should he be beaten; what''s the reason, pray?" |
51002 | The famous Minister, pretending ignorance, arose and said,"An old countryman like myself, could you expect him to know? |
51002 | The magistrate asked,"How do you know that there are honest mutangs?" |
51002 | The mysterious stranger said,"Why should you die? |
51002 | The one whose right hand he held, said,"Why do you hold me so? |
51002 | The scholar replied,"That will be satisfactory, but again, how shall I do in case they make the new coat?" |
51002 | The secretary asked,"Where are you going, please?" |
51002 | The servant gave a startled look, and asked,"How do you know?" |
51002 | The two also looked back and forth in alarm, saying,"What''s this that''s happened? |
51002 | The voice replied,"Do n''t you know my voice? |
51002 | The wife laughed, and said,"Would you really like to see her? |
51002 | The woman went out then and answered, saying,"Who comes thus at midnight to make such a disturbance?" |
51002 | The woodman asked,"Why can you not? |
51002 | The woodman spoke roughly to her, saying,"Do you not know that you, a wicked woman, have caused the death of a great man?" |
51002 | Then addressing me he asked,''How is it that you have come here? |
51002 | Then he lifted his glass and inquired,''Would you like to meet a very beautiful person?'' |
51002 | Then he said,"Who are you, anyhow; what kind of devil, pray, that you dare to push towards me so in my office? |
51002 | There was a fellow- servant there who asked him,"Have you had something to drink?" |
51002 | They asked,"Who are you, anyway?" |
51002 | They said to one another,"Who is that mourner that goes riding by without dismounting? |
51002 | They sent an attendant to arrest and bring his servant, whom they asked,"Who is your master?" |
51002 | This is the whole group, the dog behind, the falcon just above, and the cat in front, how then can the pheasant fly? |
51002 | True, I''ll give it just as you have commanded, but what about it if they refuse to listen? |
51002 | Was this not strange?" |
51002 | We can not live here all our lives, neither can we return home; what do you think we ought to do?" |
51002 | What do you do for a living? |
51002 | What do you say?" |
51002 | What do you think of it?'' |
51002 | What is fear?" |
51002 | What is your Majesty''s reason, please, for this action?" |
51002 | What is your name? |
51002 | What ought we to do? |
51002 | What shall I do?" |
51002 | What shall I do?" |
51002 | What shall we do about it?" |
51002 | What shall we do?" |
51002 | What shall we do?" |
51002 | When evening began to fall a young woman came to Chon''s house, a very beautiful woman too, and asked,"Is the master Chon at home?" |
51002 | When that comes to pass please call me, wo n''t you? |
51002 | When they separated the King said,"You have all this knowledge and yet have never been made use of? |
51002 | Who are you?" |
51002 | Why am I wholly useless?" |
51002 | Why do n''t you open the door?" |
51002 | Why do you go to a servant''s house and not to mine?" |
51002 | Why do you object? |
51002 | Why have you come?" |
51002 | Why is it that though a spiritual being he is unable to do what beasts do? |
51002 | Why should I not know? |
51002 | Why should a grown man lose his life for the sake of a girl? |
51002 | Will any say that the hills do not move? |
51002 | Will that do?" |
51002 | Will you come with me and not be afraid?" |
51002 | Will you consent?" |
51002 | Will you consent?" |
51002 | XLIX WHO DECIDES, GOD OR THE KING? |
51002 | Yee answered,"Hungry, are you? |
51002 | Yi asked of the guest,"Why did you tell the master to change the site?" |
51002 | You are not a common scholar, why, therefore, should you be so proud to begin with and so humble now?" |
51002 | You became my son in order to kill me, your father; why, therefore, should I not in my turn kill you? |
51002 | and why are you so frightened? |
51002 | asked she;"and why are you so anxious? |
526 | ''Do you understand this?'' 526 I was on the point of crying at her,''Do n''t you hear them?'' |
526 | ''After all,''said the boiler- maker in a reasonable tone,''why should n''t we get the rivets?'' |
526 | ''And when they come back, too?'' |
526 | ''And with that?'' |
526 | ''And, ever since, you have been with him, of course?'' |
526 | ''Anything since then?'' |
526 | ''Are we in time?'' |
526 | ''Are you an alienist?'' |
526 | ''Are you?'' |
526 | ''Been living there?'' |
526 | ''But quiet-- eh?'' |
526 | ''Can you steer?'' |
526 | ''Did they want to kill you?'' |
526 | ''Did you ever see anything like it-- eh? |
526 | ''Do I not?'' |
526 | ''Do n''t they?'' |
526 | ''Do n''t you?'' |
526 | ''Do you know what you are doing?'' |
526 | ''Do you read the Company''s confidential correspondence?'' |
526 | ''Do you,''said I, looking at the shore,''call it"unsound method"?'' |
526 | ''Ever any madness in your family?'' |
526 | ''Fine lot these government chaps-- are they not?'' |
526 | ''How did that ivory come all this way?'' |
526 | ''Is that question in the interests of science too?'' |
526 | ''Kurtz got the tribe to follow him, did he?'' |
526 | ''No, no; how can you? |
526 | ''To you, eh?'' |
526 | ''We have done all we could for him-- haven''t we? |
526 | ''Well, and you?'' |
526 | ''What can you expect?'' |
526 | ''What for?'' |
526 | ''What party?'' |
526 | ''What was he doing? |
526 | ''What''s this?'' |
526 | ''Who knows? |
526 | ''Who says that?'' |
526 | ''Who? |
526 | ''Why did they attack us?'' |
526 | ''Why ought I to know?'' |
526 | ''Will they attack, do you think?'' |
526 | ''Will they attack?'' |
526 | ''You English?'' |
526 | ''You have been well since you came out this time?'' |
526 | ''You made notes in Russian?'' |
526 | .?'' |
526 | Absurd? |
526 | Am I the manager-- or am I not? |
526 | An appeal to me in this fiendish row-- is there? |
526 | And indeed what does the price matter, if the trick be well done? |
526 | And there, do n''t you see? |
526 | And why not? |
526 | And why? |
526 | Another snag? |
526 | As I maneuvered to get alongside, I was asking myself,''What does this fellow look like?'' |
526 | At the door of the pilot- house he turned round--''I say, have n''t you a pair of shoes you could spare?'' |
526 | Below me there was a great scuffle of feet on the iron deck; confused exclamations; a voice screamed,''Can you turn back?'' |
526 | But what of that? |
526 | But what-- and how much? |
526 | Could we handle that dumb thing, or would it handle us? |
526 | Could you give me a few Martini- Henry cartridges?'' |
526 | Curiosity? |
526 | Dead?'' |
526 | Did I know, he asked, with a sudden flash of curiosity,''what it was that had induced him to go out there?'' |
526 | Did I mention a girl? |
526 | Did I not think so? |
526 | Did I see it? |
526 | Did he live his life again in every detail of desire, temptation, and surrender during that supreme moment of complete knowledge? |
526 | Did you see?'' |
526 | Do n''t you know the devilry of lingering starvation, its exasperating torment, its black thoughts, its somber and brooding ferocity? |
526 | Do you see anything? |
526 | Do you see him? |
526 | Do you see the story? |
526 | Do you understand? |
526 | Eh? |
526 | Eh? |
526 | Fine sentiments, you say? |
526 | Four boxes did you say? |
526 | Had n''t he said he wanted only justice? |
526 | He forgot I had n''t heard any of these splendid monologues on, what was it? |
526 | He had tied a bit of white worsted round his neck-- Why? |
526 | His position had come to him-- why? |
526 | How do you English say, eh? |
526 | How long would it last? |
526 | I asked;''what would you do with them?'' |
526 | I wonder what becomes of that kind when it goes up country?'' |
526 | I''ve been telling you what we said-- repeating the phrases we pronounced,--but what''s the good? |
526 | I? |
526 | Is he alone there?'' |
526 | Is it not frightful?'' |
526 | Ivory? |
526 | Keep a look- out? |
526 | Kurtz-- Kurtz-- that means short in German-- don''t it? |
526 | Kurtz?'' |
526 | Kurtz?'' |
526 | Light came out of this river since-- you say Knights? |
526 | No one may know of it, but you never forget the thump-- eh? |
526 | Principles? |
526 | Say?'' |
526 | Smoke? |
526 | Suppose he began to shout? |
526 | The prehistoric man was cursing us, praying to us, welcoming us-- who could tell? |
526 | Up the river? |
526 | Was he rehearsing some speech in his sleep, or was it a fragment of a phrase from some newspaper article? |
526 | Was it a badge-- an ornament-- a charm-- a propitiatory act? |
526 | Was it superstition, disgust, patience, fear-- or some kind of primitive honor? |
526 | Was it?'' |
526 | Was there any idea at all connected with it? |
526 | We must save it, at all events-- but look how precarious the position is-- and why? |
526 | What did it matter what anyone knew or ignored? |
526 | What did it matter who was manager? |
526 | What do you think I ought to do-- resist? |
526 | What do you think? |
526 | What do you think?'' |
526 | What else had been there? |
526 | What is the meaning--?'' |
526 | What more did I want? |
526 | What possible restraint? |
526 | What was in there? |
526 | What was there after all? |
526 | What were we who had strayed in here? |
526 | What would be the next definition I was to hear? |
526 | What''s to stop them? |
526 | What, how, why? |
526 | What? |
526 | What? |
526 | What? |
526 | Where did he get it? |
526 | Where''s a sailor that does not smoke?'' |
526 | Where? |
526 | Who was it they were talking about now? |
526 | Who was not his friend who had heard him speak once?'' |
526 | Who''s that grunting? |
526 | Why do you sigh in this beastly way, somebody? |
526 | Why not? |
526 | Why should n''t I try to get charge of one? |
526 | Why, in God''s name?'' |
526 | Would they have fallen, I wonder, if I had rendered Kurtz that justice which was his due? |
526 | You were with him-- to the last? |
526 | You wonder I did n''t go ashore for a howl and a dance? |
526 | eh?'' |
526 | exploring or what?'' |
54627 | Ah, but_ where_ is it? 54627 And poor spirits?" |
54627 | And what did it all amount to? |
54627 | And you believe that Christ and the apostles were honest, do n''t you? |
54627 | Are we only to be taught, and never to learn, then? |
54627 | Brother Prymm, will you open the discussion of this beatitude? |
54627 | Brother Prymm? |
54627 | Captain Maile? |
54627 | Did you ever hear of_ me_ shouting or exhorting? |
54627 | Do n''t you think you''d get at the model sooner, if some of you were n''t pig- headed about your own, and too fond of abusing each other''s? |
54627 | Do_ you_ not know,said Mr. Alleman,"that by that assertion you impugn the wisdom of the Almighty?" |
54627 | Does n''t Herbert Spencer say something about morality being at the top of everything? |
54627 | Getting into trouble is an excuse for not trying to do right, is it? |
54627 | I should like also to ask if the gentleman considers the servant above his master, and free from responsibility for his conduct? |
54627 | I should like to ask Brother Humbletop if personal salvation is the highest motive with which we should study the Bible? |
54627 | I should like to ask the gentleman if Christ, the apostles, and prophets never got into trouble? |
54627 | I wonder if that''s exactly straight? |
54627 | Is nothing to be done_ here_ for God-- and man? 54627 Mr. Leader,"said he,"everybody has spoken, but nobody has settled the main question, which is, where is the''kingdom of heaven?'' |
54627 | No light upon the lesson? |
54627 | Nothing settled by the meeting? |
54627 | Now,_ was n''t_ that just like Alleman? |
54627 | Now_ was n''t_ that just like Alleman? |
54627 | Only hope of what? |
54627 | Seriously, Whilcher,said the president, leading his antagonist to a_ tête- à- tête_,"do you realize what comes of all this nonsense? |
54627 | Shall we continue our consideration of last Sunday''s lesson? |
54627 | Suppose we do right always,said he,"what does it amount to? |
54627 | Taking pains to tell him why you were trying to do it? |
54627 | That''s only business; is n''t it, Lottson? |
54627 | The rest of you did n''t act a bit as if you''d ruined yourselves, did you? |
54627 | Then how did he come to call a lot of good church members vipers? |
54627 | Then the atonement is an excuse for rascality, is it? |
54627 | Then the passage does n''t command anything that''s really essential to salvation? |
54627 | Then why not believe them as well as your scientific teachers? |
54627 | Then, what about the world? |
54627 | Then,asked the Captain,"what''s the moral difference between you and a rascal?" |
54627 | Well,said the president,"that''s true, but what do they amount to in a question of risk?" |
54627 | What becomes, then, of the doctrine of justification by faith-- the corner- stone of all Protestantism? |
54627 | What earth are they to inherit? 54627 What''s Sunday good for, if you ca n''t in it get away from these enraging affairs of the week? |
54627 | Whereabouts? |
54627 | Why, are_ you_ going over to the defense of faith against works? 54627 Why, how?" |
54627 | Why, what is the Bible for, if not to inform us of our destiny? 54627 Works include faith?" |
54627 | You believe in geography, do n''t you? |
54627 | You did n''t have an opportunity to express your opinions last Sunday? |
54627 | You do n''t ever let any of the theories of your new- fashioned philosophy stand in the way of your making a good trade, do you? |
54627 | You never carried back the unfair gains, though, when you saw what you''d done, did you? |
54627 | You want me to be a religionist, do you? |
54627 | And how can Mr. Waggett sustain his position that there is_ any_ eternal truth that is not necessary to salvation?" |
54627 | And how can we prepare ourselves unless we know what our future place and duty is to be?" |
54627 | And if they do, what inducement is there for sinners to come into the Church?" |
54627 | And that brings us back to the question, What sort of a land are we going to inherit? |
54627 | Could it be possible that among these he passed not only for a business man of ordinary morality, but as a hypocrite too? |
54627 | Could it be possible that the world saw something more in the Bible than church members like himself did? |
54627 | Did any mere law- giver ever enjoin unselfishness? |
54627 | Did we come into the world for no purpose but to get out of it in the best shape we can? |
54627 | Do you imagine I look over your policies any less carefully than I do those of Bennett, who do n''t believe in God, devil, or anybody else? |
54627 | Do you not know that the law alone was found to be insufficient?" |
54627 | Do you suppose I think any more of men because they belong to the church? |
54627 | Do you suppose I''ll take Whilcher''s word a minute quicker when he gets into the church than I do now? |
54627 | Filled? |
54627 | Has n''t the blood of the martyrs been the seed of the Church? |
54627 | Have n''t the disciples of Christ inherited the earth? |
54627 | How could the world do anything of the sort? |
54627 | How did you like the way the lesson went yesterday?" |
54627 | How much righteousness had the crucified thief who rebuked his fellow for reviling Christ? |
54627 | Is unselfishness natural? |
54627 | Is virtue and good business always to be found with those who sit under the words of Jesus?" |
54627 | It_ do n''t_ sound well either, does it?" |
54627 | Its name is Love-- will the gentleman remember that the assertion is Christ''s, and not mine? |
54627 | Mr. Buffle had approached the couple as they conversed, and said:"Gentlemen, what do you think of yesterday''s exercises?" |
54627 | Mr. Lottson,"continued Deacon Bates, addressing the insurance president,"whom do you suppose Jesus referred to as''the poor in spirit''?" |
54627 | Mr. Stott started, and Squire Woodhouse exclaimed,"Why do n''t you keep him?" |
54627 | Now, I want to know if I''m not right and Alleman wrong?" |
54627 | Of what consequence is it to true righteousness if men will or will not reconcile scriptural injunctions with business desires? |
54627 | So the meekness that_ we_ think about is evidently not the thing for the earth that''s to be inherited, and the question is, what is? |
54627 | Still, how am I going to solemnly declare before a body of people that I believe things which I really do n''t believe at all?" |
54627 | The Sermon on the Mount begins with the Beatitudes; which of us really_ believes_ in them as we do in Paul''s argument to the Romans? |
54627 | There are men here, members of our Church, that''ll be as likely as not to swallow all that he said, and then what''ll their faith amount to? |
54627 | Therefore, why not accept a belief that leaves you as free to believe in the law, to admire its wisdom and beauty, as you are now? |
54627 | They knew, in general, that he believed nothing that they themselves did; how then could his own ideas be anything but dreadful? |
54627 | Was he not really honest in his beliefs? |
54627 | What did Buddha and Brahma? |
54627 | What did he mean when he said,''Come, ye blessed of my Father, and inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world''? |
54627 | What is this world but a place of preparation for another? |
54627 | What must Christ, remembering the intensity and agony of his earthly efforts, think of the Church?" |
54627 | What sensible man imagines that the kingdom he spoke of meant any such place as Christians talk about, or even the place where the Lord himself is? |
54627 | What thought he, what thinks any philosopher, of how his theories may affect the world? |
54627 | What will restrain depraved humanity from neglecting the offer of salvation by faith in Christ, and devote itself to working out its own salvation? |
54627 | Where else can we turn for true comfort when in trouble? |
54627 | Why do n''t you be consistent? |
54627 | Why, gentlemen, what''s the good of Christ having lived and died at all, if we''re still in bondage under the law? |
54627 | Why, then, should he be considered hypocritical? |
54627 | You do n''t find any nonsense of that kind in St. Paul''s Epistles, do you? |
54627 | You do n''t pretend that in your darling scientific hobbies it''s anything else, do you? |
54627 | You do n''t suppose that what theologians have been squabbling over for two thousand years can be settled in a day, do you? |
54627 | You know the little company there is in the city that insures against accidents? |
54627 | You, who have always been preaching up good works as the whole end of life? |
54627 | _ This_ earth? |
54627 | asked the president,"and in history, astronomy, chemistry, zoölogy-- all the sciences, in fact? |
54627 | exclaimed Mr. Jodderel,"and turn a religious organization into a society for the encouragement of mere morality? |
54627 | exclaimed the broker;"but say, Lottson, do you get a commission on church members as you do on insurance risks? |
42427 | A motor car? |
42427 | Afraid? |
42427 | After the melodrama? |
42427 | And he? |
42427 | And if-- I agree? |
42427 | And so Miss Fairfax has met her fate in Japan? |
42427 | And then--? |
42427 | And was my mother with you when he fell in love with her? |
42427 | And who lives there with you? |
42427 | And will you tell me what you are doing, Ishikichi? |
42427 | Are all the gods with Bersonin-_San_? |
42427 | Are girls who have been properly brought up ever''practically''engaged, and not fully so? 42427 Are not its hands degradedly well- formed?" |
42427 | Are you tired? |
42427 | Arthur,he said,"do n''t you know me?" |
42427 | As you settled with your brother? |
42427 | At the Foreign Minister''s ball to- morrow night? 42427 But suppose one has n''t the''wherewithal''you talk of? |
42427 | But when do the troops come? |
42427 | But why,_ Okka- San_? |
42427 | By what interesting method, I wonder? |
42427 | Can a horse get through? |
42427 | Can human ingenuity go much further, then? 42427 Can you read it?" |
42427 | Can you take me there? |
42427 | Did you tell her anything? |
42427 | Do all Japanese feel so, Haru? |
42427 | Do n''t you think a woman_ knows_ about these things? |
42427 | Do you hear some one talking? 42427 Do you know her address?" |
42427 | Do you know him? |
42427 | Do you like it, ever so little? |
42427 | Do you live here? |
42427 | Do you look like him? |
42427 | Do you realize,she said,"that we have transgressed the most sacred tenet of Ben- ten by coming here together? |
42427 | Do you remember, dearest,he said,"that I once told you of an old envelope in the Chancery safe bearing the name of Aloysius Thorn?" |
42427 | Do you take me for a fool not to guess? 42427 Even a wild- goose chase?" |
42427 | Funny!--_né_? |
42427 | Had you many rehearsals? |
42427 | Has not Japan toiled and borne enough, that this shame must come to her? |
42427 | Has there been one already? |
42427 | Have you lost one? |
42427 | Have you quite forgiven me for breaking in? |
42427 | Have you really, Haru? |
42427 | Have you so much about you? |
42427 | Have_ you_ discovered that too? |
42427 | He came to your study, did n''t he, after the ball? 42427 He-- died here?" |
42427 | How dare you stop without my orders? |
42427 | How did he look? |
42427 | How do they come to be here? |
42427 | How do they ever keep on those little thonged sandals? |
42427 | How do you come to be in Tokyo? 42427 How do you do?" |
42427 | How does it seem, Barbara, to see_ kimono_ all around you? |
42427 | I do n''t know-- do you? |
42427 | I only thought--"Well? |
42427 | I say, Miss Fairfax seems to be making a tremendous walkover, eh? |
42427 | I wonder why she ordered his cabin door kept locked? |
42427 | I-- in so short a time, how could I? 42427 I?" |
42427 | I? |
42427 | In view of what we know, can I lend myself to the dedication of this house of our Lord to a memory that may be infamous? 42427 Is Ishikichi in straitened circumstances? |
42427 | Is he at the hotel there? |
42427 | Is he going? |
42427 | Is he young? |
42427 | Is it destined to revolutionize warfare, do you think? |
42427 | Is n''t it glorious? |
42427 | Is our new image of Kwan- on peerlessly all but done, perhaps? |
42427 | Is that the latest sleeve, and is everything going to be slinky? 42427 It does n''t take long, then, you think?" |
42427 | It''s written in_ kana_, the sound- alphabet, is n''t it? |
42427 | Look here, little Haru,he said,"you and I are going to be great friends, are n''t we?" |
42427 | Madame wishes a guide? |
42427 | Married? |
42427 | May I ask what inspired to- day''s suicidal mood? |
42427 | May I-- some time? |
42427 | No brother? |
42427 | No wonder what? |
42427 | On your Glider? |
42427 | Pulling both ways, eh? |
42427 | She has never known? |
42427 | So far in? |
42427 | So that was the''Restoration,''the beginning of_ Meiji_, whatever that may mean? |
42427 | So you are a mind- reader, too? |
42427 | So you''ll train with me, eh? 42427 That would be difficult, would n''t it?" |
42427 | The Bon? |
42427 | The little Toru, who was run over? |
42427 | The_ samisen_ concert to- night? |
42427 | Then you are not afraid? 42427 This house you speak of-- whose is it?" |
42427 | To- morrow, sweetheart? 42427 Tokyo as a gentle sedative, eh? |
42427 | Was he still looking at those spooky curios? 42427 We insist on looking through a tinted film that makes everything iridescent?" |
42427 | Well, what more do you want? |
42427 | Well,he asked,"did you feel the earthquake?" |
42427 | Well,he went on,"how are your affairs? |
42427 | Well? |
42427 | Well? |
42427 | What are the use of to be good? 42427 What are you going to do with that man?" |
42427 | What are you working at so industriously, Ishida? |
42427 | What business is it of his,Phil added,"if I choose to stay out here in the East?" |
42427 | What can it be? |
42427 | What can one do with a man when he is ten thousand miles away? |
42427 | What did you think,she asked, as they rounded the corner,"when you found I had vanished into thin air?" |
42427 | What do you know about Haru? |
42427 | What do you suppose she will answer? |
42427 | What do you think of that? |
42427 | What do you want me to do? |
42427 | What do you-- want me to do? |
42427 | What does it mean? |
42427 | What has happened--_who_ has happened, Barbara? |
42427 | What has that to do with it? |
42427 | What have I said? |
42427 | What if there are? |
42427 | What is he? 42427 What is it?" |
42427 | What is it? |
42427 | What is it? |
42427 | What is that I knocked over? 42427 What is that writing?" |
42427 | What is that? |
42427 | What is that? |
42427 | What is that? |
42427 | What is that? |
42427 | What is the address? |
42427 | What is to be done? 42427 What is your name?" |
42427 | What then? |
42427 | What was in this, I wonder? |
42427 | What was the song you were humming? |
42427 | What_ I_ am thinking? |
42427 | When can I see you again, eh? |
42427 | When our ancestors, Martha, were painting themselves up in yellow ochre and carrying clubs-- what was the row about, then? |
42427 | Where do they all come from? |
42427 | Where is Patsy? |
42427 | Where is he? |
42427 | Where is she? |
42427 | Where is your house, Haru? 42427 Who are the people there at the side, under the awning?" |
42427 | Who is Haru? |
42427 | Why are you so afraid of me? 42427 Why did n''t you tell me? |
42427 | Why do n''t people like lizards? |
42427 | Why have we no more money? |
42427 | Why must we give up the shop, honorable mother? |
42427 | Why not come up to Tokyo for a while? 42427 Why not walk a little?" |
42427 | Why not? 42427 Why on earth would Ishida touch you? |
42427 | Why should n''t I stay abroad if I can have more fun here than I can at home? |
42427 | Why should n''t I? |
42427 | Why will you persist in eating_ amé_, when I have taught you the classics and the true divinity of the universe? 42427 Why you talk with me?" |
42427 | Why? 42427 Why?" |
42427 | Will the thrice- eminent guest deign to partake of a little worthless tobacco? |
42427 | Will you do it again? |
42427 | Will you tell me that little? |
42427 | Will you wait a moment, Barbara? |
42427 | With what man? |
42427 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
42427 | Would every father be glad to give his son''s life for Japan? |
42427 | Would you like to see her? |
42427 | Yes? |
42427 | You ca n''t guess what me and Martha are up to, can you? |
42427 | You have n''t given up your bungalow on the Bluff? |
42427 | You know Japanese gardens? |
42427 | You mean-- you say-- that you have been living in it? |
42427 | You not know my_ mus''_ come... after... after those kiss? 42427 You were very fond of father, were n''t you?" |
42427 | You-- are a Buddhist, are you not? |
42427 | Your_ last_? |
42427 | _ Abroad?_he said shrewdly. |
42427 | A weapon? |
42427 | A_ ménage de garçon_, eh?" |
42427 | After a time age catches us, and what are luxuries then? |
42427 | Aka- San des''ka?_ So this is Miss Baby! |
42427 | And Barbara has told you, has n''t she?" |
42427 | And did any one ever see such colors?" |
42427 | And how about the telegram? |
42427 | And the big_ daimyos_ came into line on the proposition?" |
42427 | And what do you think? |
42427 | And what then? |
42427 | And when will you let me take you for a''fly?''" |
42427 | And why should she care so fiercely? |
42427 | And, anyway, what''s dinner to a pretty woman?" |
42427 | And_ where had the hound gone_? |
42427 | Angry? |
42427 | Are you going to shrive me?" |
42427 | Are you near, Barbara? |
42427 | Are you sure she''ll want to?" |
42427 | Arrived the same day as her ship, eh? |
42427 | At length the bishop spoke again at her elbow, now in his usual voice:"What are you going to do with that man, Barbara?" |
42427 | Barbara,_ there_? |
42427 | Bombarded''em, did n''t he?" |
42427 | But is n''t your idea rather prosaic in this age of flying- machines? |
42427 | But where is my thief? |
42427 | Butterfly hair, butterfly gown-- and butterfly heart? |
42427 | By the way, Patsy, who_ does_ that boy remind me of? |
42427 | By what strange chance had it been sent to her here? |
42427 | CHAPTER XVIII IN THE BAMBOO LANE_ What did Bersonin mean?_ Phil replenished his glass, feeling a tense, nervous excitement. |
42427 | CHAPTER XXXII THE WOMAN OF SOREK"And as to the foreigner named Philip Ware, that is all you know?" |
42427 | Ca n''t you see I mean you to stay?" |
42427 | Ca n''t you stop it, Barbara? |
42427 | Can I not to come in, Phil- lip?" |
42427 | Can you make out something like a wide, brown ribbon stretched all around the field?" |
42427 | Could anything have happened in that one day''s interval so utterly to change her? |
42427 | Could he do it? |
42427 | Could he win with such a terrible handicap? |
42427 | Could it be Bersonin? |
42427 | Could she ever really know it, understand it? |
42427 | Could such plots be and their God--_her_ God now-- not blast them with His thunder? |
42427 | Dark? |
42427 | Daunt''s house? |
42427 | Daunt? |
42427 | Did I tell you I was there that day, Barbara-- behind the_ shikiri_, when you followed the Japanese girl into the house? |
42427 | Did she-- did my wife never tell you?" |
42427 | Do n''t you know the legend? |
42427 | Do n''t you love me?" |
42427 | Do n''t you... think it was cruel, Arthur?" |
42427 | Do you suppose I do n''t know what you are thinking?" |
42427 | Do you think so?" |
42427 | Do you think-- perhaps-- he sees the Chapel?" |
42427 | Do you understand? |
42427 | Does any one live in the temples? |
42427 | Does he have to be tied up?" |
42427 | Does it surprise you to hear that I have known poverty?" |
42427 | Does n''t that sound like Broadway? |
42427 | Does that sound very childish and fanciful?" |
42427 | European?" |
42427 | Forgetting-- and remembering no more-- would that be a soul- task too hard for her? |
42427 | From whence would come the gifts which must be sent before the bride, to the husband''s house? |
42427 | Had Haru seen her and was she hiding from her? |
42427 | Had anything gone wrong? |
42427 | Had he failed? |
42427 | Had it even come to clandestine_ rendezvous_? |
42427 | Had not that been proven? |
42427 | Had she been only playing with him, then? |
42427 | Had she stumbled on this in the throes of some festival? |
42427 | Had there been suspicions before? |
42427 | Had this no outlet save the gate at which she had entered? |
42427 | Haru gone? |
42427 | Has the stern brother appeared yet?" |
42427 | Have you met him?" |
42427 | Have you seen him?" |
42427 | He came in this direction!--Can''t you understand? |
42427 | He has just propounded a question that Confucius was too wise to answer:''Why is poverty?'' |
42427 | He saw Phil waking at last from his drunken slumber-- to what shame and penalty? |
42427 | He thought of"Big"Murray and his letter, at which he had bridled-- how long ago? |
42427 | How could I help it, when you plan things like this for me?" |
42427 | How could she still feel love for the man who had caused his death? |
42427 | How does he strike you?" |
42427 | How long have you known her, by the way? |
42427 | How would you like to have plenty of money, Haru-- as much as you can count on a_ soroban_? |
42427 | I withdraw the motion-- but what is this coming?" |
42427 | I wonder who this new friend is?" |
42427 | I would be so glad to-- do you think I could give them something?" |
42427 | If in two days Japan offered such passionate variety, such undreamed contrasts and subtleties, what would it eventually show to her? |
42427 | If she did this thing-- would it not be for Japan? |
42427 | If she did, would it avail? |
42427 | If so, how is he living-- in what way?" |
42427 | In this interminable city, with its labyrinthine mazes, who could tell what this or that gray roof might shelter? |
42427 | In what words could she tell him? |
42427 | Increase that generous stipend of yours? |
42427 | Is it really you, little girl?" |
42427 | Is n''t it absurd?" |
42427 | Is that building away over there where you keep your Glider?"'' |
42427 | Is the stake big enough to play for?" |
42427 | It reminded me--""Yes--?" |
42427 | It was rather effective, do n''t you think?" |
42427 | It''s a clammy idea, is n''t it?" |
42427 | It''s buzzing and wheels are turning in it-- or is it the pain? |
42427 | It_ is_ a chase, eh?" |
42427 | Japan is full of such contrasts, is n''t it? |
42427 | May I compliment you on the way you handle your chopsticks? |
42427 | Might it be that in spite of all, such a black design could succeed? |
42427 | My think you mos''bes''clever man in these whole worl'', to goin''find so much money--_né?_"With a savage elation he drew her close in his arms. |
42427 | Near by?" |
42427 | Nothing? |
42427 | Now what do you suppose I''m going to do with the record? |
42427 | On a foreign ship? |
42427 | One, a girl of Haru''s own age, called smilingly after her:"_ Komban Mukojima de sho?_"Phil understood the query. |
42427 | Or is his bent political economy?" |
42427 | Or vanish like snow in sun? |
42427 | Perhaps we''d better just tell her it was an accident, and let it go at that? |
42427 | Renew in him, most loving Father.... Impute not unto him his former sins...._"*****"Are you still there, Barbara?" |
42427 | Shall her daughter be sent to a husband with a chest of rags? |
42427 | She had accepted his own advances, beckoned him half around the world-- for what? |
42427 | She lifted her face, swollen with crying, to him:"You-- nod know me-- Haru?" |
42427 | She never told any one why she left him?" |
42427 | She, a_ samurai''s_ daughter? |
42427 | Should he be in time? |
42427 | Talk--''bout my_ papa- San_--please, so they will to think he have know you,_ né_?" |
42427 | Tell me, Patsy-- how long did it take you to learn?" |
42427 | The father is still exaltedly ill?" |
42427 | The man who knew the secret would be too dangerous to be at large!_"But with wealth-- wealth enough to buy men and privilege-- what might he not do? |
42427 | The old courtesy, the old faith, the old kindliness-- will they weather it? |
42427 | The sky-- would it ever again seem the same violet arch that had bent over a Tokyo garden of musk flowers and moonlight? |
42427 | Then the other said:"You have heard nothing of Fairfax all these years?" |
42427 | Then--"Is it your... arms I feel, Barbara? |
42427 | They chose a new Emperor, did n''t they?" |
42427 | They may find the machine, but what can they_ prove_? |
42427 | This is the field where you practise, too, is n''t it? |
42427 | To use that for her purpose? |
42427 | To what did that white, female figure beckon? |
42427 | To- day, for instance--""Well?" |
42427 | Tokyo was talking of it-- of_ him_!--making a jest of that sweet, dead thing in his heart? |
42427 | Two days? |
42427 | Very funny--_né?_""It is very pretty,"said Barbara. |
42427 | War? |
42427 | Ware?" |
42427 | Was all that had been instinct with wonder and joy to be henceforth but emptiness and desolation-- because an ideal had gone from her for ever? |
42427 | Was he not brave, too? |
42427 | Was he to tell her the truth-- and lose her? |
42427 | Was it another_ rendezvous_, then? |
42427 | Was it_ Phil_? |
42427 | Was she making game of him? |
42427 | Was this a nook enisled, for pretty Japanese romances"under the rose"? |
42427 | Was this the resurrection of an old"affair"that he had never guessed? |
42427 | Was this what she really was, his"Lady of the Many- Colored Fires?" |
42427 | Well, what of it?" |
42427 | Well, why not? |
42427 | What are his present duties? |
42427 | What can they do to us? |
42427 | What did it mean? |
42427 | What did one-- any one-- count against so much? |
42427 | What do you think he did?" |
42427 | What do you think?" |
42427 | What do you think?" |
42427 | What does he care for your private tastes? |
42427 | What engaged girl likes to have the fact paraded-- especially when she''s practising on another man? |
42427 | What good would it do now? |
42427 | What had come over her? |
42427 | What had he to do with Daunt, or with her belief in him? |
42427 | What had she done that she regretted? |
42427 | What had there been between them, after all, save a light camaraderie into which a man was an insufferable cad to read more? |
42427 | What has that to do with it? |
42427 | What if he were detained? |
42427 | What if one of those Dreadnaughts by whatever accident should go down in this friendly harbor? |
42427 | What if she herself-- what if here, in this land, that baleful wisdom were to strike home to_ her_? |
42427 | What is it to be?" |
42427 | What is that pink thing?" |
42427 | What man who owned a steam yacht, knowing her, would not wish to name it the_ Barbara_? |
42427 | What matter that he lost the game? |
42427 | What mattered it whether there were evidence on which a court would condemn him? |
42427 | What may not be accomplishment Rising- Sun? |
42427 | What message would come to them that morning? |
42427 | What possible connection can there be between that and a confidence in some near event which will lower Japan''s credit in the eyes of the world?" |
42427 | What right had he to feel that hot sting in his heart? |
42427 | What was Daunt doing there? |
42427 | What was he thinking of her? |
42427 | What was it Bersonin had taken from his pocket? |
42427 | What was it she had wished to"confess?" |
42427 | What was it? |
42427 | What was she thinking? |
42427 | What was the matter? |
42427 | What was the meaning of the high palisades?--the narrow gate with its stolid policemen?--the barred house fronts? |
42427 | What was this place into which she had strayed? |
42427 | What was under those ruins? |
42427 | What will he do when he hears of the_ geisha_ suppers and the bar- chits at the Club and the roulette table at the bungalow? |
42427 | What''s the fun without money, even when you''re young? |
42427 | What, in your opinion, will be the fighting engine of the future?" |
42427 | What? |
42427 | When did you arrive, and are you at this hotel?" |
42427 | When she had lain panting in his arms in Ben- ten''s cave-- when her lips had quivered to his kisses-- had it all been acting? |
42427 | When they took his father away to the_ byo- in_, the sick- house, what would he and his mother and the baby-_San_ do? |
42427 | When will you take me to see your Japanese house?" |
42427 | Where was there any refuge? |
42427 | Who could have foreseen the death of the King? |
42427 | Who could have sent it here? |
42427 | Who could show that he had made it? |
42427 | Who was the man? |
42427 | Who would want them changed? |
42427 | Who''s the young fellow with him, Daunt?" |
42427 | Who, then, would believe the girl''s wild story? |
42427 | Whose house was this? |
42427 | Why could n''t I have found it instead of Phil?... |
42427 | Why did I happen to be there in the garden that night, at that particular moment? |
42427 | Why did not the gods grant me a son?--me, who wearied them with my sacrifices?" |
42427 | Why does the gloomy hole illustriously elect to remain in its wall?" |
42427 | Why had he listened so intently-- made_ him_ listen-- to what the men in the next room were saying? |
42427 | Why is that, I wonder?" |
42427 | Why not say it? |
42427 | Why should I have been in Japan and not in Persia when you came? |
42427 | Why should he come at such an hour-- and to her? |
42427 | Why should he maintain this native house in another quarter of Tokyo? |
42427 | Why should he say them over and over? |
42427 | Why was she no longer able to warm to all this beauty and meaning? |
42427 | Why were there no women on the pavements? |
42427 | Why?" |
42427 | Will you come and help me down, Honorable Fly- man?" |
42427 | Will you give me my answer then?" |
42427 | Will you marry me?" |
42427 | Wo n''t you stand there in the light? |
42427 | Wo n''t you?" |
42427 | Would Daunt ever forgive? |
42427 | Would he want her-- now? |
42427 | Would the world never seem beautiful to her again? |
42427 | Would they stand, like the_ kadots''ke_, playing a_ samisen_ at people''s doors? |
42427 | Would you think a lot more of me if I got it for you?" |
42427 | Yet to- night he had dreamed-- what had he been dreaming? |
42427 | Yokohama harbor but a handful of miles away, and cut off utterly? |
42427 | You are, are n''t you?" |
42427 | You come make visiting--_né_? |
42427 | You know it?" |
42427 | You remember Jean Valjean and the silver candle- sticks? |
42427 | You remember her? |
42427 | You were n''t there then?" |
42427 | You''d not be tempted to join us, I suppose?" |
42427 | You''re not going?" |
42427 | Yó- eeya-- kó-- ra!_"_ What do you want me to do?..._ The words wove oddly with the refrain. |
42427 | _ Né?_""You''re right, little girl! |
42427 | _ né_? |
42427 | living?" |
42427 | only--""Only what?" |
42427 | she faltered,"_ né_? |
5960 | And you think him more better for me? |
5960 | Do I know God? |
5960 | Some long time you come back? |
5960 | You know what make her heart so red? 5960 You ve''y lazy, Mister Sun, this morning,"she said, shaking a finger at him in reproof;"where you the have been? |
5960 | You want to see other side? |
5960 | You''ll be good, wo n''t you? |
5960 | But what about breakfast? |
5960 | But what silence could hide from this frail woman any mood of the man she had served with mind and body and soul these many years? |
5960 | Could your father manage to accommodate me for a couple of months, if I promise to be very good and take up as little room as possible? |
5960 | I say,"What is world? |
5960 | It was something every little girl must know, and if Yuki Chan''s honorable ears refused to open, how would she learn? |
5960 | Merrit San go inside and look long long time at Buddha, then he say:"Yuki San, what will this old gentleman do to you if you disobey him?" |
5960 | Or was it-- and Yuki Chan grew grave-- that the last_ go rin_ had been spent for the new dress she was to wear that day? |
5960 | She quickly straightened her back, and with a smile of bewilderment, exclaimed:"Me croquette? |
5960 | The cat had an inning too, did n''t she? |
5960 | The happy days are pass away, and the flowers are bloom and birds will return to me again, but where can I find Merrit San? |
5960 | Then, lowering her voice in earnest inquiry, she went on:"You believe that Christians''God more better for Japanese girl than Buddha?" |
5960 | Was it not time they were receiving a visit? |
5960 | What is content? |
5960 | What_ is_ my soul? |
5960 | Where''s your mama, or your papa, or your nurse, to give you a spanking and keep you off the street?" |
5960 | Why do n''t you give it to me? |
5960 | Why you not come the more early and make light for my busy?" |
5960 | Wonder if girl with laugh in her eyes have the content? |
5960 | You know, Merrit San?" |
5960 | Yuki San paused in the filling of the rice- bowl and looked at him gravely:"Merrit San, do you know God?" |
5960 | _ Fourth Entry_ Ah, Merrit San, what you suppose I have dream last night? |
5960 | _ Third Entry_ What shall I do to less my anxious? |
5960 | he said, picking up a long- stemmed rose,"where did you find this beauty?" |
5960 | he went on coaxingly,"not drown any more cats and things?" |
54426 | How now, ye secret black and midnight hags; what is''t ye do? |
54426 | If Tristan is under any obligation to you, how can he discharge it better than by making you Mark''s queen? 54426 Unloved by the lordliest man, yet always near him, how could I bear that anguish?" |
54426 | Will the gold make pretty ornaments for women? |
54426 | A backward gaze on earth they fix, And ask,"Where doth dear Music go? |
54426 | A harmony? |
54426 | AUX ITALIENS I.--ITALIAN OPERA OF TO- DAY What do ye singing? |
54426 | And Loge? |
54426 | And then we wonder if the musically unprogressive will still be clinging to their jingling classic,"Lucia di Lammermoor"? |
54426 | Are not those, with the matchless comedy of manners,"Die Meistersinger,"enough for one mind to have created? |
54426 | Are these things beautiful? |
54426 | Are they sincere, or does Wagner shadow forth just a suspicion of the dishonesty which lurks in the utterance? |
54426 | Are we afraid of it? |
54426 | Brünnhilde complains:"Why are you angry at me, father?" |
54426 | But does it tell all? |
54426 | But if he failed( and who can doubt that he did after studying the bloodless philosophy of the last product of his genius? |
54426 | But what can we ask? |
54426 | But what do we find in"Parsifal"? |
54426 | But who ever expected to find a consistent logic in the mind of fair woman, even a resident of high Olympus? |
54426 | But who thinks of all this while the performance is in progress? |
54426 | But why go farther with this catalogue? |
54426 | Call ye this a hero of all the world? |
54426 | Can any one show that it has a direct connection with the development of the story? |
54426 | Did Joseph of Arimathea catch the precious drops in it; and was it really the vessel used at the Last Supper of Jesus and his apostles? |
54426 | Did Wagner realize the fathomless depths of his own sarcasm here? |
54426 | Did he see the ridiculous aspect of it? |
54426 | Did the blood of Christ ever sanctify it? |
54426 | Did you ever chance to hear his"Chansons de Miarka,"settings of texts of Jean Richepin''s"Miarka, the Bear''s Foundling"? |
54426 | Do they need a model? |
54426 | Even if he himself did the wooing for his uncle, why should you object? |
54426 | From this Wagner could not escape, even in his"Parsifal,"for Kundry, in the final scene, dies of what? |
54426 | Having turned upon the hand that sought to benefit her, what does she? |
54426 | How came Wagner not to remember the law of operatic tradition? |
54426 | How came Wagner to fail in his puerile attempt to make a drama out of a supposed incident in the life of Christ? |
54426 | How can the dotard Wotan sit by the hearthstone playing at riddles with Mime and not feel the breath of Loge on his neck? |
54426 | How did Siegfried learn his own musical theme? |
54426 | How long did it take the musician to discover that the Virgin was not such inspiring musical material as Mary Magdalen? |
54426 | How long was it before the musicians ceased to content themselves with their tone pictures of ocean waves and murmuring streams? |
54426 | How many of our ultra- refined orchestral studies in logic will stand examination in the searching light of that proclamation? |
54426 | How many viewless ages yet shall run before the process be complete? |
54426 | How much introspection is there in Wotan''s interesting interview with the unseen Fafner? |
54426 | How much more necessary is it to read Maeterlinck''s"Death of Tintagiles"in order to understand Charles Martin Loeffler? |
54426 | How much more of German mystic philosophy, of mediævalism, of the teachings of Siddartha, and lastly of pure paganism? |
54426 | How much of all this did Wagner perceive when he was constructing his extraordinary drama in four plays? |
54426 | How often shall we who are treading the downward slopes of life croon that old couplet and yearn for the cradle songs of Schubert and Beethoven? |
54426 | Howsoever these things be, the ultimate question remains: Will the compositions of Mr. Strauss and his kind stand the test of Ambros? |
54426 | II.--THE CLASSIC OF THE UNPROGRESSIVE But how may he find Arcady Who hath nor youth nor melody? |
54426 | III.--WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? |
54426 | If the lovers of"Lucia"are unprogressive, is, then, a great singer who still sings this part their leader? |
54426 | If we may go so far, how are we to be estopped from prying further into the mysteries of musical depiction? |
54426 | Is Kundry to be explained? |
54426 | Is Parsifal to be analyzed? |
54426 | Is Strauss not a maker, but a product? |
54426 | Is he not only a musical Rabelais, but also that malodorous jest of a Rabelaisian brain, Gargantua himself? |
54426 | Is it art? |
54426 | Is it not a purely Wagnerian touch? |
54426 | Is that a heroic act? |
54426 | Is the embodiment of craft absent? |
54426 | Is the embodiment of subtle psychologic problems in tone hostile to unaffected beauty? |
54426 | Is the green glass chalice which now reposes peacefully in Genoa a holy vessel? |
54426 | Is their æsthetic basis lofty and wholesome? |
54426 | Is their æsthetic centre of gravity within themselves? |
54426 | It is Loge''s triumph, is it not? |
54426 | It was a long way round, was it not? |
54426 | More bitter wars than that have been waged for the sake of acquiring wealth and power, and to what end? |
54426 | Must husbands have had outings in the elemental days even as now? |
54426 | Must the lyric drama follow the march of symphonic music into the screaming regions of the Strauss soul analysis? |
54426 | Now what happens? |
54426 | Now, what has Edward Elgar accomplished, and what does the character of his work indicate as the present tendency of oratorio? |
54426 | Oh, Siegfried and Fafner, Fafner and Siegfried, which of ye is the more comic? |
54426 | Or is it all a beautiful chance? |
54426 | Or is it all, this music of Strauss, a monstrous joke, and does the man laugh in his sleeve at the troubled world? |
54426 | Or is it simply that certain good people to whom the theatre is a place accursed must have their dramatic excitements in some other form? |
54426 | Or was the curse imposed solely that this theatrical picture might be introduced? |
54426 | Shall we say that therefore Beethoven''s psychometry was saner and more artistic than that of Strauss and his few brothers in art? |
54426 | She cries:"The drink, for whom? |
54426 | So he turns to Loge, who comes waving and caracoling upon the scene-- to what theme? |
54426 | The only question that remained to be solved after this was, How far would the musician go? |
54426 | The wound certainly existed; but who can vouch for the preservation of the spear as an object of reverence? |
54426 | These songs have atmosphere, and if it is painted in familiar and safe tints, who shall blame a man for assuring himself of correct methods? |
54426 | Tristan? |
54426 | WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? |
54426 | Was it strange that the primitive mind could not conceive a god who was himself the law? |
54426 | Was the epic man inconstant of soul? |
54426 | Was there any touch of Schopenhauer or Buddha in this? |
54426 | Was there ever a Holy Grail? |
54426 | We are driven inward upon the central and all- important question, How far can music go in the direction of depicting things which lie outside itself? |
54426 | What does all this mean? |
54426 | What does the man mean? |
54426 | What effect has the disappearance of the futile gods upon the dramatic development of the story? |
54426 | What evidence is there that Wagner perceived the full significance of the final triumph of Loge over the erring Wotan? |
54426 | What had the Greek? |
54426 | What has Strauss done in these works to"so get the start of the majestic world"? |
54426 | What has become of the enlightenment by pity? |
54426 | What has so got the start of the majestic art of music as to lead it to the grave? |
54426 | What is it? |
54426 | What is the real truth about this huge ragoût of mysticism and orchestration which in the looming shadows of the Festspielhaus is called"sacred"? |
54426 | What is the result? |
54426 | What is this work, after all, but a summary of the blind gropings of the imaginative Wagner after a philosophy beyond his reach? |
54426 | What is this ye sing? |
54426 | What kind of impression did this drama make upon the unprejudiced and equipoised mind? |
54426 | What majestic development of the Erda theme is this we hear in the Dusk of the Gods motive? |
54426 | What more can one say to recommend it to the general reader? |
54426 | What music has Wagner evolved to body forth the traits and accessories of this godless deity? |
54426 | What was a god to do who was short of power? |
54426 | What was really in Wagner''s mind when he wrote that extraordinarily beautiful passage of song for Loge in the first scene of"Das Rheingold"? |
54426 | What was to be done? |
54426 | What will he do with her? |
54426 | What, then, becomes of this manifestation of Wagnerian philosophy, this joyous tempter of wooden gods? |
54426 | When she has tacitly consented to the theft of the gold, what does she? |
54426 | Where are Brangäne''s heroics in the drama? |
54426 | Where is Italian opera? |
54426 | Which is the truer tale, the more convincing art? |
54426 | Whither is it going? |
54426 | Who are we, to make final conclusions and splutter our puny"Quod erat demonstrandum"? |
54426 | Who was it said recently that the good Mr. Loeffler of Boston thought music in a scale of his own? |
54426 | Who writes now an"overture, scherzo, and finale"? |
54426 | Whoever before heard the lascivious harmony of the third made to chant a psalm of mischief? |
54426 | Why all this pother about the sacrilege of putting the Holy Grail on the stage? |
54426 | Why enact"Parsifal"and not this? |
54426 | Why should it? |
54426 | Why should we believe it incumbent upon us to uphold all that Wagner did? |
54426 | With what heroine is she to be compared? |
54426 | Would not a heroic nature have grasped the significance of the moment, and, foreseeing the approaching shame, have acquiesced in Isolde''s decision? |
54426 | Yet how far beyond Liszt has the psychologic composition of to- day advanced? |
54426 | Yet shall not Idea, subtle, crafty, remorseless, triumph at last? |
523 | ''And are they taught the same branches of study as the boys?'' 523 ''And do you mourn over your dead father more than you rejoice over being in the presence of your living ruler?'' |
523 | ''But, Yin- ma, did you ever see any of these paper images transformed into soldiers?'' 523 ''But, Yin- ma, you do not believe those superstitions, do you?'' |
523 | ''Quite right,''she replied,''but what consolation is there in that? 523 ''Why do you wear blue shoes?'' |
523 | According to international law has any one a right to interfere with the internal affairs of any foreign country? |
523 | And are you sure she had not swooned? |
523 | And did he use it? |
523 | And did she go to Li Hung- chang''s home? |
523 | And did you believe they could? |
523 | And did you go into the palace every day? |
523 | And do you settle up all your debts as we do here? |
523 | And how will you undertake to secure a concubine for such an old man? |
523 | And now,she continued,"we have these patriotic braves who claim to be impervious to swords and bullets; what shall we do? |
523 | And these are really the work of Her Majesty? |
523 | And they have done all this embroidery and painting in that time? |
523 | And what are those conditions? |
523 | And what are those ends? |
523 | And what do you propose to do? |
523 | And what does she do? |
523 | And what has become of your sister? 523 And what is she doing?" |
523 | And what is that? |
523 | And where is it now? |
523 | And why do not her friends call her attention to this fact? |
523 | And why not? |
523 | But could you not sit down? |
523 | But how do you consider it better than our method? |
523 | But how would they know that your slave was a Christian? |
523 | But what is this all about? |
523 | Can it be removed? |
523 | Could you come to- morrow morning? |
523 | Do n''t you think it is cruel for parents to sell their daughters in this way? |
523 | Do the Manchus consider themselves superior to the Chinese? |
523 | Do you fire off crackers? |
523 | Do you happen to have any from the brush of the Lady Miao, her painting teacher? |
523 | Do you know anything about the early life of the Empress Dowager? |
523 | Do you suppose he ever sees the edicts issued in his name? |
523 | Does n''t it cause trouble in a family for a man to have so many women about? 523 Does the Emperor know anything about this?" |
523 | Everybody knows it, why not he? |
523 | How did you do it? |
523 | How did you obtain your education? |
523 | How do you ride it? |
523 | How does he know that? |
523 | How does she employ herself? |
523 | How is that? |
523 | How is your sister? |
523 | How long has the school been in session? |
523 | How many concubines has he? |
523 | How many servants do you use ordinarily? |
523 | How many sisters are there in your family-- eight, are there not? |
523 | How old is he? |
523 | Indeed? |
523 | Indeed? |
523 | Is not the Empress Dowager very much opposed to foot- binding? 523 Is the Princess very ill?" |
523 | May I ask if you would be willing to undertake the development of such a system? |
523 | No, I was not aware of the fact; and were they married? |
523 | Of course, I know you could not sit down in the presence of Her Majesty, but could you not withdraw and rest a while? |
523 | Of what does their course of study consist? |
523 | Of what importance is the study of chemistry to the agriculturist? |
523 | Oh, you are from the palace near the west gate? |
523 | That would be very kind of you,I answered,"but how would you undertake to get them?" |
523 | The young lady demurred until finally the Empress Dowager said:''Do you not realize that a request coming from me is the same as a command?'' |
523 | There is general alarm in the city that the Emperor himself will be disposed of; what do you think about it? |
523 | This is a new move in Peking, is it not? |
523 | What Princess? |
523 | What are the Western sources of economic prosperity, and as China is now so poor, what should she do? |
523 | What did Your Highness think of the relative characteristics of the Germans and the French, as you saw them? |
523 | What do you think of that? |
523 | What do you think of your bullet- proof Boxers now? |
523 | What do you want to join the church for? |
523 | What is his given name? |
523 | What is the matter? |
523 | What is the matter? |
523 | What is to prevent our putting into operation such a system throughout this province? |
523 | What kind of a night did she have? |
523 | When does she want me to go? |
523 | When is she to appear? |
523 | When may I do so? |
523 | Where is your slave girl now? 523 Who can tell? |
523 | Who would do it? |
523 | Who,he asked,"are these Boxers? |
523 | Why return so soon? |
523 | Why? |
523 | With pleasure; at what time? |
523 | Would you not like to come and visit our girls''high school? |
523 | Yes,he said,"that is true; but does n''t it make you awfully mad if you ask a lady to marry you and she refuses?" |
523 | You are a Chinese, are you not, Lady Miao? |
523 | After they had gone I asked:"Why is it that the Manchu and Chinese ladies do not intermingle in a social way?" |
523 | And for what? |
523 | And what shall we say of her compared with the great women of other races? |
523 | But how was this to be done? |
523 | But it would be a delight to call in this nephew- in- law, and have him sit or kneel, and may we not believe she allowed him to sit? |
523 | But then, what if she did? |
523 | But what would you have done? |
523 | But who did it? |
523 | Can they be depended upon as pillars of state?" |
523 | DOES ANY ONE THINK THAT OUR TROOPS ARE AS WELL DRILLED OR AS WELL LED AS THOSE OF THE FOREIGN ARMIES? |
523 | Did not the thirteen colonies throw down the gauntlet to England for less cause? |
523 | Do you celebrate the New Year in your honourable country?" |
523 | During this time were the Emperor and his young"Confucius"idle? |
523 | Had you or I been ill would we have allowed the man who was the cause of our fall to select our physician? |
523 | Have you been out of the city?" |
523 | Have you never noticed that in his edicts the Emperor speaks of his Manchu slaves and his Chinese subjects?" |
523 | Have you noticed how ready we are to forgive those on our side for doing that for which we would bitterly condemn our opponents? |
523 | How can they, a mere rabble, hope to vanquish the armies of foreign nations?" |
523 | How could I send her out to death when she had been so kind and faithful to me? |
523 | How is it that I have never seen her?" |
523 | I believe it is customary in calling on a foreign gentleman to see his lady, is it not?" |
523 | I said to him:"The Prince has a good many children, has he not?" |
523 | Is it too much to say that she was the greatest woman of the last half century? |
523 | Is that true?" |
523 | Need we ask the reason why? |
523 | OR THAT WE CAN SUCCESSFULLY STAND AGAINST THEM? |
523 | One day the eunuch saw my wife''s bicycle standing on the veranda and said:"What kind of a cart is that?" |
523 | One of her critics, referring to the last sentence of the above edict, asks:"Do not these words throw down the gauntlet?" |
523 | Shall we cast in our lot with their millions and drive all these foreigners out of China or not?" |
523 | Shall we go with this busy little princess to another festal occasion? |
523 | That the Emperor was poisoned? |
523 | They are very intelligent, and after I had become well acquainted with them I said to them one day:"How is it that you have done such wide reading?" |
523 | They usually followed this with another question:"What would happen if the Empress Dowager should die?" |
523 | We expressed our surprise that he was still in Peking, and asked:"Has the Empress Dowager ceased prosecuting her search for you reformers?" |
523 | What about your old conservative friends? |
523 | What now were the results? |
523 | What now were these wonderful gifts before which these men and women of rank and noble birth were falling upon their faces? |
523 | What shall we say of his Chinese relations? |
523 | What then are we to infer? |
523 | What then is the explanation? |
523 | What then shall we say when people of an alien race come seeking admission? |
523 | Who are their leaders? |
523 | Why did she not stretch forth her hand and prevent them? |
523 | Why has she not forbidden it?" |
523 | Why then should Yuan Shih- kai have been made the scapegoat of the court and the officials, and branded as a murderer in the face of the whole world? |
523 | Will the curious world ever know? |
523 | You say she was anti- foreign-- would you have been very much in love with Germany, Russia, France and England under those circumstances? |
523 | said I;"what makes you think so?" |
5812 | He did, did he? |
5812 | How do you mean? |
5812 | I know; but how did you get the name? |
5812 | I mane, why wudn''t he put his naime to ut? |
5812 | Is this all? |
5812 | Is ut his own handwrite? |
5812 | Master? |
5812 | Oh, he did, did he? |
5812 | Oh, he does, does he? |
5812 | Oh, ye have, have ye? |
5812 | Well, you''ll never get in"Why? |
5812 | Well-- then-- how-- did-- your-- father-- get-- his name? |
5812 | What business? |
5812 | What does he want to see ye about? |
5812 | What is it, Satan? |
5812 | Who? |
5812 | Why, what is the trouble? |
5812 | Ye are? 5812 And not with marked courtesy of tone:Well, sor, what will you have?" |
5812 | And what is it?" |
5812 | And when a mad elephant goes raging through, belting right and left with his trunk, how do these swarms of people get out of the way? |
5812 | Are ye in the business?" |
5812 | Are ye in the show business yerself?" |
5812 | But a native official, who had a green flag in his hand, saw me, and said politely:"Do n''t you belong in the train, sir?" |
5812 | But how is it you are here? |
5812 | Dear me, ca n''t you explain? |
5812 | Did they purpose training them up as Thugs? |
5812 | He said:"It''s not an aisy one to spell; how do you pronounce ut?" |
5812 | How could they take care of such little creatures on a march which stretched over several months? |
5812 | How did people come to drift into such a strange custom? |
5812 | How did you get by that Irishman? |
5812 | How did you get your English; is it an acquirement, or just a gift of God?" |
5812 | How do you think Satan would do?" |
5812 | How is that?" |
5812 | I show him up, master?" |
5812 | Is that a slur? |
5812 | One more thing: Why was such a cruel death chosen-- why would n''t a gentle one have answered? |
5812 | That is your secret? |
5812 | The hundredth can keep it-- how long? |
5812 | These silent crowds sat there with their humble bundles and baskets and small household gear about them, and patiently waited-- for what? |
5812 | They had n''t timed themselves well, but that was no matter-- the thing had been so ordered from on high, therefore why worry? |
5812 | Was n''t it curious-- and amazing, and tremendous, and all that? |
5812 | Was that it? |
5812 | Was that proposition the equivalent of inviting European ladies to assemble scantily and scandalously clothed in the seclusion of a private park? |
5812 | Well, then, why ud he write it like that?" |
5812 | What are you doing here? |
5812 | What did they do with those poor little fellows? |
5812 | What is it ye want to see him about?" |
5812 | What is your name?" |
5812 | What was the fascination, what was the impulse? |
5812 | What was the origin of the idea? |
5812 | What was their subsequent history? |
5812 | When he rose to say good- bye, the door swung open and I caught the flash of a red fez, and heard these words, reverently said--"Satan see God out?" |
5812 | Would you have been? |
5812 | Would you mind giving a guess, if ye''ll be so good?" |
5812 | and what is it that can not happen in India? |
5812 | but is this for all certainty, is this the sentence of death? |
52225 | And before that? 52225 And those white hairs?" |
52225 | And ye go?... |
52225 | At the contact of the woman who had an issue of blood, Jesus turned and said,''Who hath touched my garments?'' 52225 But Substance being unique, wherefore should forms be varied? |
52225 | But art thou sure thou dost see?--art thou even sure thou dost live? 52225 But of whom art thou speaking?" |
52225 | But what has come upon me? 52225 But who may he be?" |
52225 | Can the desire of thy mind create the law of the universe? 52225 Can there be such things in the world?" |
52225 | Could it be possible? |
52225 | Did he not seek to kill Moses, to deceive his own prophets, to seduce nations?--did he not sow falsehood and idolatry broadcast? |
52225 | Do ye not hear me? 52225 Dost thou desire them?" |
52225 | Dost thou not think that they... sometimes... bear much resemblance to the TRUE? |
52225 | Dost thou wish me to make him appear, thy Jesus? |
52225 | Eagle of apotheoses, what wind from Erebus has wafted thee to me? 52225 Eh? |
52225 | Hast ever pressed to thy bosom a virgin who loved thee? 52225 How can martyrdom prove the excellence of the doctrine, inasmuch as it bears equal witness for error?" |
52225 | How can that be? 52225 How just a man? |
52225 | In truth? |
52225 | Is it possible? |
52225 | Is it through impotence that he endures it, or through cruelty that he maintains it? 52225 Is the fault mine? |
52225 | It is thy fault, Amphytrionad;--wherefore didst thou descend into my empire? 52225 May not Form be, perhaps, an error of thy senses,--Substance a figment of thy imagination?" |
52225 | Of what art thou dreaming, that thou dost not speak? |
52225 | Shall I tell thee where grows the plant Balis, that resurrects the dead? |
52225 | Then it is needless for thee to serve God? |
52225 | Then the Scriptures are useless? |
52225 | Then what is the Word?... 52225 Then ye come?..." |
52225 | Thou canst even now imagine thyself walking with her-- canst thou not?--in the wood by the light of the moon? 52225 Thou wilt not deny that he sought to corrupt Eustates, the treasurer of largesses?" |
52225 | What can be their motive? |
52225 | What do they desire? |
52225 | What goddess? |
52225 | What is thy desire? 52225 What joy is there for me? |
52225 | What makes thee sorrowful? |
52225 | What matters it? 52225 What signifies the hierarchy of turpitudes? |
52225 | What signifies this?... |
52225 | What then?... |
52225 | What tradition? |
52225 | What, then, were those of Babylon? |
52225 | What? 52225 What? |
52225 | Wherefore absurd? |
52225 | Wherefore? |
52225 | Whither do I go? 52225 Why did he receive the Holy Spirit, being himself Son of the Holy Spirit? |
52225 | Why dost thou utter exorcisms? |
52225 | Why not? 52225 Why? |
52225 | Will she not have cursed me for having abandoned her?--will she not have plucked out her white hair by handfuls in the despair of her grief? 52225 Wouldst thou have done so much?--thou?" |
52225 | Yet for what purpose?... 52225 Yet whither goest thou, that thou shouldst run so fast?" |
52225 | Yet why?... 52225 Yet would they have made any? |
52225 | ''_[ 1]"Then the Lord desired that his apostle should eat of all things?... |
52225 | ''_[ 5]"How did she hope to tempt him? |
52225 | (_ After a long silence_):"How can that be?" |
52225 | (_ After long searching, he picks up a crust not so large as an egg._)"What? |
52225 | (_ And all of a sudden he hears a whisper:--"Poor Anthony"!_)"Who is there? |
52225 | (_ Anthony looks at him, and an interior voice whispers hi his heart:--"Why not? |
52225 | (_ Anthony remains motionless, more rigid than a stake, more pallid than a corpse._)"Thou hast a sad look-- is it because of leaving thy hermitage? |
52225 | (_ Drawing lines upon the ground, with his stick_:)"Like that, seest thou? |
52225 | (_ Footsteps are heard approaching._)"What is that?" |
52225 | (_ He asks aloud_:--)"Was it not Petrus of Alexandria who laid down the rule concerning what should be done by those who have yielded to torture?" |
52225 | (_ He enters the cabin, and gropes at random in the dark._)"The ground is wet; can it have been raining? |
52225 | (_ He trembles in every limb._)"Am I, then, accursed? |
52225 | (_ Nevertheless, nothing yet appears._)"Why? |
52225 | (_ She half opens her mantle._)"Dost thou desire it?" |
52225 | ANTHONY(_ slowly_):"Matter..., then,... must be a part of God?" |
52225 | And when shall be the nuptials?'' |
52225 | Besides, do I not know all his artifices? |
52225 | But the goatskin?" |
52225 | But the others... those of loathsome or terrible aspect... how can men believe in them?..." |
52225 | But what matter? |
52225 | But why should_ He_ come? |
52225 | But... what ails thee?--of what art thou dreaming?" |
52225 | Canst thou know the end of God?" |
52225 | DAMIS(_ in an undertone, to Anthony_:--)"Is it possible? |
52225 | Does he drive away pestilence?" |
52225 | Dost hear it?" |
52225 | Dost remember the surrenders of her modesty,--the passing away of her remorse in a sweet flow of tears? |
52225 | Dost thou desire to know the hierarchy of the Angels, the virtue of the Numbers, the reason of germs and of metamorphoses?" |
52225 | Dost thou imagine that thou dost hold all wisdom in the hollow of thy hand?" |
52225 | HILARION(_ fixing his eyes upon him_:)"Wouldst thou behold him?" |
52225 | Has not Pope Clement written how she was imprisoned in a tower? |
52225 | Have the jackals taken it? |
52225 | Have these thoughts never occurred to thee?" |
52225 | He did not know, then, who had touched him? |
52225 | He dreams that he is a Solitary of Egypt.__ Then he awakes with a start._)"Did I dream? |
52225 | He turned and, knitting his brows, demanded:''How comes it that thou dost not fear me?'' |
52225 | His navy brought him elephants''teeth and apes.... Where is that passage?" |
52225 | How came this to pass?..." |
52225 | How could God have a purpose? |
52225 | How could the Devil have tempted him, inasmuch as he was God? |
52225 | How? |
52225 | I even feel myself able to.... What is this? |
52225 | Is he not?" |
52225 | Is it because thy faith might vacillate in the presence of lies? |
52225 | Is it the love of thy flesh that restrains thee, hypocrite?" |
52225 | Is it the pain that thou fearest, coward? |
52225 | Is that possible?" |
52225 | Is the fault mine? |
52225 | It is science which enables us to know the natural loves and natural repulsions of all things, and to play upon them?... |
52225 | None but a lascivious woman, with a hoarse voice and lusty person, with fire- colored hair and superabundant flesh? |
52225 | Nothing? |
52225 | O charms of prayer, felicities of ecstasy, gifts of heaven,--what have become of you? |
52225 | She approaches him again, and exclaims in a tone of vexation_:--)"How? |
52225 | She is illuminated by the white light emanating from a disk of silver, round as the full moon, placed behind her head._)"Where is my temple? |
52225 | The light of the moon passing through a cloud falls upon him._) ANTHONY(_ watches him from a distance, and is afraid of him._)"Who art thou?" |
52225 | The martyrs have endured far worse; have they not, Ammonaria?" |
52225 | Therefore, it is really possible to modify what appears to be the immutable order of the universe?" |
52225 | They are low, insinuating, hissing._)_ The First_:"Dost thou desire women?" |
52225 | Thou must be fatigued by the monotony of the same actions, the length of the days, the hideousness of the world, the stupidity of the sun?" |
52225 | Thou wouldst know who I am, what I have done, and what I think,--is it not so, child?" |
52225 | Unless, indeed, they are impelled by pride alone?... |
52225 | Was Jesus sad? |
52225 | Was not his mother, the seller of perfumes, seduced by a Roman soldier, one Pantherus?.......................... |
52225 | We are going to eat it together as in other days, are we not?" |
52225 | What aileth him?" |
52225 | What do they seek?" |
52225 | What dost thou desire? |
52225 | What experience could have instructed him?--what reflection determined him? |
52225 | What fearest thou?" |
52225 | What had reputable American citizens to do with such as these jades? |
52225 | What hinders thee?" |
52225 | What is the matter with me? |
52225 | What is thy dream? |
52225 | What must we do?" |
52225 | What need had he of baptism if he was the Word? |
52225 | What right have I to curse them-- I, who stumble so often in mine own path? |
52225 | What shall I do?'' |
52225 | What then is a miracle? |
52225 | What was Jesus?" |
52225 | What was his face like?" |
52225 | What was it that happened? |
52225 | What? |
52225 | Whence the bewitchment of courtesans, the extravagance of dreams, the immensity of my sadness?" |
52225 | Where are my Amazons? |
52225 | Where are they?" |
52225 | Where is he now? |
52225 | Where is she now,--Ammonaria? |
52225 | Where was I? |
52225 | Wherefore my obstinacy in continuing to live such a life as this? |
52225 | Why am I not of those whose souls are ever intrepid, whose minds are always firm,--for example, the great Athanasius?" |
52225 | Why dost thou call me good? |
52225 | Why should I lose any of it? |
52225 | Why these things? |
52225 | Why?" |
52225 | Wilt thou drink wine?--wilt thou lie in our beds?--dost wish to eat the honeycakes which have the form of little birds? |
52225 | Yet surely I ought to have a little money to obtain the tools indispensable to my work? |
52225 | [ Illustration: Anthony: What is the purpose of all that? |
52225 | _ The Third_:"A glittering sword?" |
52225 | and the cross?" |
52225 | did I not tell thee? |
52225 | does he also cast out devils?" |
52225 | gold? |
52225 | neither the rich, nor the coquettish, nor the amorous woman can charm thee: is it so? |
52225 | or, fleeing from the Campus Martins, dost thou bear me the soul of the last of the Emperors? |
52225 | what can that be?" |
52225 | what is this to me?..." |
52225 | wherefore argue further?'' |
52225 | why not? |
52225 | will this never end? |
5979 | He asked,says Adams,"whether our countrey had warres? |
5979 | Why must there always, remain the width of a world between us? |
5979 | *** What then will become of the ancient morality?--the ancient cult? |
5979 | Are we to understand Hirata literally? |
5979 | Are you, then, responsible for the faults of another person? |
5979 | Beauty, according to our Western standards, can scarcely be said to exist in this race,--or, shall we say that it has never yet been developed? |
5979 | But even in that case what are we to think of his ascription of divinity to the race, in view of the moral and physical feebleness of human nature? |
5979 | But is she not, then, one may ask, an artificial product,--a forced growth of Oriental civilization? |
5979 | Does this signify incapacity for independent work[ 440] upon Occidental lines? |
5979 | Further he asked me in what I did beleeue? |
5979 | Had not the Gods and the Buddhas been called devils by these missionaries from Portugal and Spain? |
5979 | He asked me diverse other questions of things of religion, and many other things: As, what way we came to the country? |
5979 | How would it be, think you, if we were to demolish Nambanji[ The"Temple of the Southern Savages"--so the Portuguese church was called]?'' |
5979 | If this error[ or deception?] |
5979 | Is not this to forget the origin of one''s being?" |
5979 | It will perhaps be asked, What becomes of the cult in such cases? |
5979 | One will naturally ask how can such a doctrine exert any moral influence whatever? |
5979 | Though it be an ancient custom, why follow it, if it is bad? |
5979 | Well may we pity the victims of this pitiless faith, and justly admire their useless courage: yet who can regret that their cause was lost? |
5979 | Why didst thou not observe that which I charged thee?... |
5979 | disinclination or indifference? |
5979 | incapacity for creative thought? |
5979 | lack of constructive imagination? |
60948 | Would he be there first? |
60948 | Could a man in action support life in that rarified air? |
60948 | Could human beings survive at an altitude of 29,000 feet-- human beings who were forced to carry loads and to move their limbs? |
60948 | Could the North Col be reached from the east, and how could we attain this point?" |
60948 | Did the Tsangpo ultimately become the Brahmaputra, or did it flow into the Irrawadi, or even into the Yang- tse Kiang? |
60948 | How in the name of all their Buddhas were they to stop such a man?" |
60948 | IV What were the results of the expedition? |
60948 | No wonder he asks,"Can this forest, with its horrible monotony and impregnability, be equalled by any other in the world?" |
60948 | Were they not both good men? |
60948 | What is to be done for a man who is sick or abnormally exhausted at these high altitudes? |
60948 | What might the climber expect 20,000 feet up in the sky, with nothing between him and the North Pole? |
60948 | What would happen, however, at the higher altitudes? |
60948 | Who can blame them for taking the risks that were involved in their determination to continue the march? |
60948 | Why could we not have left at least one city out of bounds?" |
35555 | O driver,said he,"what will you sell those little donkeys for?"'' |
35555 | ''"The Friend of the Stars, who is the Friend of all the World--"''''What is this?'' |
35555 | ''''Ow near? |
35555 | ''A Red Bull on a green field, was it?'' |
35555 | ''A barrack- school?'' |
35555 | ''A fat man?'' |
35555 | ''A thief talking English is it? |
35555 | ''About the Five Kings? |
35555 | ''All one-- but if it were not the boy how did he come to speak so continually of thee?'' |
35555 | ''Am I thy chela, or am I not? |
35555 | ''Am I to be beaten before the police?'' |
35555 | ''An''how do you like it, my son, as far as you''ve gone? |
35555 | ''And after?'' |
35555 | ''And after?'' |
35555 | ''And at the last what wilt thou do?'' |
35555 | ''And by what sign didst thou know that we would beg from thee, O Mali?'' |
35555 | ''And for food?'' |
35555 | ''And he was all those things?'' |
35555 | ''And his disciple is like him?'' |
35555 | ''And his name?'' |
35555 | ''And how wilt thou go? |
35555 | ''And if thou runnest away who will say it is not my fault?'' |
35555 | ''And is there a price upon his head too-- as upon Mah-- all the others?'' |
35555 | ''And now you are not afraid-- eh?'' |
35555 | ''And now, whither go we?'' |
35555 | ''And seeing these things, what tale didst thou fashion to thyself, Well of the Truth?'' |
35555 | ''And then what did you do? |
35555 | ''And thou art sure of thy road?'' |
35555 | ''And thou wilt return in this very same shape? |
35555 | ''And thou?'' |
35555 | ''And was it all worthless?'' |
35555 | ''And wast thou?'' |
35555 | ''And what did he?'' |
35555 | ''And what dost thou do?'' |
35555 | ''And what like of man was thy disciple?'' |
35555 | ''And what said he?'' |
35555 | ''And what said she?'' |
35555 | ''And what was the end of the search? |
35555 | ''And when dost thou go?'' |
35555 | ''And whether he will kill this other boy?'' |
35555 | ''And whither goest thou?'' |
35555 | ''And who are thy People, Friend of all the World?'' |
35555 | ''And who is that?'' |
35555 | ''And who was he? |
35555 | ''And whom didst thou worship within?'' |
35555 | ''And why? |
35555 | ''And will she forget how to make stews with saffron upon that road?'' |
35555 | ''And, O imp?'' |
35555 | ''And-- the more money is paid the better learning is given?'' |
35555 | ''And?'' |
35555 | ''And?'' |
35555 | ''Are the bears only bad on thy holding?'' |
35555 | ''Are there many more like you in India?'' |
35555 | ''Are they in thy hands?'' |
35555 | ''Art thou anything of a healer? |
35555 | ''Art thou freed from the schools? |
35555 | ''Art thou only a beginner?'' |
35555 | ''As it were a novice?'' |
35555 | ''Ask them for how much money do they give a wise and suitable teaching? |
35555 | ''Ay, Umballa was it? |
35555 | ''Ay, there is a recompense when the madness is over, surely?'' |
35555 | ''Besides, hast thou ever helped to paint a Sahib thus before?'' |
35555 | ''But afterwards-- we may talk?'' |
35555 | ''But can not the Government protect?'' |
35555 | ''But for whom, dost thou work? |
35555 | ''But have we any right to open it? |
35555 | ''But he is so young, Mahbub-- not more than sixteen-- is he?'' |
35555 | ''But how canst thou understand the talk? |
35555 | ''But how, Holy One?'' |
35555 | ''But how?'' |
35555 | ''But if he offer a rudeness? |
35555 | ''But my River-- the River of my healing?'' |
35555 | ''But the River-- the River of the Arrow?'' |
35555 | ''But the Sahibs did not know thee, Holy One?'' |
35555 | ''But thou hast a Search of thine own?'' |
35555 | ''But was there not also an Englishman with a white beard-- holy-- among images-- who himself made more sure my assurance of the River of the Arrow?'' |
35555 | ''But what about caste?'' |
35555 | ''But what am I to do?'' |
35555 | ''But what does the Colonel Sahib say? |
35555 | ''But what dost thou know of the Hills?'' |
35555 | ''But what harm? |
35555 | ''But what is the game?'' |
35555 | ''But what is this tale of the thief and the search?'' |
35555 | ''But what is to pay me for this coming and recoming?'' |
35555 | ''But where shall I sleep?'' |
35555 | ''But whither goest thou?'' |
35555 | ''But whither shall I send my letters?'' |
35555 | ''But who is to pay me for this? |
35555 | ''But why come here, Babuji?'' |
35555 | ''But why didst thou not stay with the Kulu woman, O Holy One? |
35555 | ''But why not ask the Colonel in the Sahib''s tongue?'' |
35555 | ''But why not sit and rest?'' |
35555 | ''But why? |
35555 | ''But-- but what manner of white man''s son art thou, to need a bazar letter- writer? |
35555 | ''But-- whither went the Mahratta? |
35555 | ''By what road?'' |
35555 | ''By which road?'' |
35555 | ''Called the Maharanee a Breaker of Hearts and a Dispenser of Delights?'' |
35555 | ''Can I tell you?'' |
35555 | ''Can buts eat?'' |
35555 | ''Chela, hast thou never a wish to leave me?'' |
35555 | ''Did they wound thee, chela?'' |
35555 | ''Didst thou see them? |
35555 | ''Didst thou tell him of thy Search?'' |
35555 | ''Do the very snakes understand thy talk?'' |
35555 | ''Do they give or sell learning among the Sahibs? |
35555 | ''Do we eat publicly like dogs?'' |
35555 | ''Do we not all work for gain?'' |
35555 | ''Do ye both dream dreams? |
35555 | ''Do you know him?'' |
35555 | ''Do you know what Hurree Babu really wants? |
35555 | ''Do you know what these things are?'' |
35555 | ''Do you want drink?'' |
35555 | ''Does all go well in Hind?'' |
35555 | ''Does the holy man come from the North?'' |
35555 | ''Dost thou give news for love, or dost thou sell it?'' |
35555 | ''Dost thou know who He is then that gives the order?'' |
35555 | ''Dost thou not know the meaning of the walnut-- priest?'' |
35555 | ''Dost thou remember when I leapt off the carriage the first day I went to--''''The Gates of Learning? |
35555 | ''Eh?'' |
35555 | ''First to Kashi( Benares): where else? |
35555 | ''For?'' |
35555 | ''Good,''said he,''and who is Lurgan Sahib? |
35555 | ''Good- bye, and-- and''--she was remembering her English words one by one--''you will come back again? |
35555 | ''Had the Holy One come alone, I should have received him otherwise; but with this rogue, who can be too careful?'' |
35555 | ''Hai mai? |
35555 | ''Has lived where?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou a charm to change my shape? |
35555 | ''Hast thou a little wax to close them on this letter?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou been robbed?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou eaten?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou heard? |
35555 | ''Hast thou knowledge, by chance, of my River?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou met-- a physician of sick pearls?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou never desired any other thing?'' |
35555 | ''Hast thou no charity?'' |
35555 | ''Have I been such a hindrance till now?'' |
35555 | ''Have I failed to oversee thy comforts, Holy One?'' |
35555 | ''Have I not said an hundred times that the South is a good land? |
35555 | ''Have they hurt him to the death?'' |
35555 | ''Have ye any tricks to pass the time? |
35555 | ''Have ye room within for two?'' |
35555 | ''Have you no consideration for our loss? |
35555 | ''He is not here then?'' |
35555 | ''He joined himself to the idolaters? |
35555 | ''He says,"What are you going to do?"'' |
35555 | ''He walk? |
35555 | ''He wants to know how much?'' |
35555 | ''Hearest thou?'' |
35555 | ''Her tongue grows no shorter with the years, then?'' |
35555 | ''His country-- his race-- his village? |
35555 | ''Ho there, Friend of all the World,''he cried across the sharp- smelling smoke,''what art thou?'' |
35555 | ''Holy One, hast thou ever taken the road alone?'' |
35555 | ''How am I to fear the absolutely non- existent?'' |
35555 | ''How can I be sick if I see Freedom?'' |
35555 | ''How can I tell? |
35555 | ''How can I tell?'' |
35555 | ''How can a man follow the Way or the Great Game when he is eternally pestered by women? |
35555 | ''How comes it that this man is one of us?'' |
35555 | ''How didst thou follow us?'' |
35555 | ''How does the spirit move thy master? |
35555 | ''How great an army?'' |
35555 | ''How if I guess, though?'' |
35555 | ''How is that known to thee?'' |
35555 | ''How many?'' |
35555 | ''How near can we go?'' |
35555 | ''How readest thou this talk?'' |
35555 | ''How should I know? |
35555 | ''How should he know? |
35555 | ''How should they? |
35555 | ''How soon can we get the colt from the stable?'' |
35555 | ''How thinkest thou of this one?'' |
35555 | ''I came by Kulu-- from beyond the Kailas-- but what know you? |
35555 | ''I have heard''--this was a bow drawn at a venture--''I have heard--''''What hast thou heard?'' |
35555 | ''I-- I apprehend it is not at all malignant in its operation?'' |
35555 | ''If I do not see him, and if he is taken from me, I will go out of that madrissah in Nucklao and, and-- once gone, who is to find me again?'' |
35555 | ''If I eat thy bread,''cried Kim passionately,''how shall I ever forget thee?'' |
35555 | ''If I knew, think you I would not cry it aloud?'' |
35555 | ''If it was,''said Kim,''do you think I should let it again? |
35555 | ''If we go north,''--Kim put the question to the waking sunrise,--''would not much mid- day heat be avoided by walking among the lower hills at least? |
35555 | ''In the crystal-- in the ink- pool?'' |
35555 | ''Is he afraid? |
35555 | ''Is he also one of Us?'' |
35555 | ''Is he not quite mad?'' |
35555 | ''Is he not wise and holy? |
35555 | ''Is he thy master?'' |
35555 | ''Is his Search, then, truth or a cloak to other ends? |
35555 | ''Is it not enough I have saved thy neck?'' |
35555 | ''Is it permitted to ask whither the Heaven- born''s thought might have led?'' |
35555 | ''Is it the habit of the place to pester honoured guests? |
35555 | ''Is it true that there are many images in the Wonder House of Lahore?'' |
35555 | ''Is one skinful enough for such a pair? |
35555 | ''Is that all thy trouble?'' |
35555 | ''Is that the new stuff, Mahbub?'' |
35555 | ''Is the boy mad? |
35555 | ''Is there any reason against? |
35555 | ''Is there money to be paid that witch?'' |
35555 | ''Is there no priest then in the village? |
35555 | ''Is this a face to tempt virtue aside?'' |
35555 | ''Is this also thy work?'' |
35555 | ''Is this the Hand of Friendship to avert the Whip of Calamity?'' |
35555 | ''Is this yet another Sending?'' |
35555 | ''Is-- is there any need of a son in thy family? |
35555 | ''It was a Bull-- a Red Bull that shall come and help thee-- and carry thee-- whither? |
35555 | ''It''s a weight off my mind, but-- this thing here?'' |
35555 | ''It''s clear to you, is it? |
35555 | ''It-- it is not likely that she has killed the boy? |
35555 | ''Jadoo?'' |
35555 | ''Jandiala-- Jullundur? |
35555 | ''Jugglers belike?'' |
35555 | ''Little Friend of all the World,''said he,''what is this?'' |
35555 | ''Low caste I did not say, for how can that be which is not? |
35555 | ''Mahbub Ali to rob the Sahiba''s house? |
35555 | ''Maybe-- but the boy?'' |
35555 | ''My son,''said he,''what need of words between us? |
35555 | ''Nay, then would only evil people be left on the earth, and who would give us meat and shelter?'' |
35555 | ''Nay, what is it?'' |
35555 | ''Not when I brought thee''--Kim actually dared to use the tum of equals--''a white stallion''s pedigree that night?'' |
35555 | ''Now I have told you,''said the boy,''will you let me go back to my old man? |
35555 | ''Now it is understood that the boy is a Sahib?'' |
35555 | ''Now, how wilt thou know thy River?'' |
35555 | ''Now,''--his tone altered as he turned to Kim,--''what will they do with thee? |
35555 | ''Now?'' |
35555 | ''O Children, what is that big house?'' |
35555 | ''O mother,''he cried,''do they do this in the zenanas? |
35555 | ''Of the Ethnological Survey?'' |
35555 | ''Of what sort? |
35555 | ''Of what year?'' |
35555 | ''Of whose service art thou?'' |
35555 | ''Oh, Friend of all the World, what does he say?'' |
35555 | ''Oh, Mahbub Ali, but am I a Hindu?'' |
35555 | ''Oh, she? |
35555 | ''Oh, that''s the way you look at it, is it?'' |
35555 | ''Oh, the Russians? |
35555 | ''Oho, hast thou turned yogi with thy begging- bowl?'' |
35555 | ''One said to the other,"What manner of a faquir art thou, to shiver at a little watching?"'' |
35555 | ''Or Kimball?'' |
35555 | ''Or sell it?'' |
35555 | ''Ow far, you mean? |
35555 | ''Pahari?'' |
35555 | ''Priest praising priest? |
35555 | ''Redcoats or our own regiments?'' |
35555 | ''Rememberest thou the Kashmir Serai?'' |
35555 | ''Rememberest thou the little business of the thieves in the dark, down yonder at Umballa?'' |
35555 | ''Said I not-- said I not he was from the other world?'' |
35555 | ''Seekest thou the River also?'' |
35555 | ''Seest thou my chela?'' |
35555 | ''Shall I meet my Holy One there?'' |
35555 | ''Shall we at least wait for the hakim?'' |
35555 | ''Since when have the hill- asses owned all Hindustan?'' |
35555 | ''So be it; but what dost thou do now?'' |
35555 | ''So soon, my chela? |
35555 | ''So their villages were burnt and their little children made homeless?'' |
35555 | ''So then we go with her, Holy One?'' |
35555 | ''So they turned against women and children? |
35555 | ''So; and then?'' |
35555 | ''So? |
35555 | ''So? |
35555 | ''Son of a swine, is the soft part of the road meant for thee to scratch thy back upon? |
35555 | ''Son of an owl, where dost thou go?'' |
35555 | ''Still? |
35555 | ''Such an one as those I saw this evening-- men wearing swords and stamping heavily?'' |
35555 | ''That is a courtesy to be remembered, O man of good will; but why the sword?'' |
35555 | ''That is well for thee, but what will our Rajah say?'' |
35555 | ''The Babu is the very hakim( thou hast heard of him?) |
35555 | ''The River of the Arrow?'' |
35555 | ''The deuce you did? |
35555 | ''Then all Doing is evil?'' |
35555 | ''Then he is not dead, think you?'' |
35555 | ''Then it means war?'' |
35555 | ''Then one day the young elephant saw the half- buried iron, and turning to the elder said:"What is this?" |
35555 | ''Then thou goest forth to follow the strangers?'' |
35555 | ''Then what is the Babu''s pay if so much is put upon his head?'' |
35555 | ''Then what is the plan?'' |
35555 | ''Then what is to fear from them?'' |
35555 | ''Then where is the pistol that I may wear it?'' |
35555 | ''Then why hast thou left out my name in writing to that Holy One?'' |
35555 | ''Then why talk like an ape up in a tree? |
35555 | ''Then why--?'' |
35555 | ''Then you think I had better go?'' |
35555 | ''Thinkest thou it will betray us?'' |
35555 | ''Thinkest thou? |
35555 | ''Thou art from the North?'' |
35555 | ''Thou didst not say I was a Sahib?'' |
35555 | ''Thou must have? |
35555 | ''Thou wilt return? |
35555 | ''Thy Gods useless, heh? |
35555 | ''Thy own mother has no nose? |
35555 | ''To be written in Hindi?'' |
35555 | ''To know again?'' |
35555 | ''To what, child?'' |
35555 | ''To whom else should I come? |
35555 | ''Tum- mut? |
35555 | ''Was I born yesterday?'' |
35555 | ''Was not the River near Benares? |
35555 | ''Was one dressed belike as a faquir?'' |
35555 | ''Was that Lurgan Sahib?'' |
35555 | ''Was that more magic?'' |
35555 | ''Was there ever such a chela? |
35555 | ''Was there ever such a disciple as I?'' |
35555 | ''Was there nothing?'' |
35555 | ''We take the Road, then?'' |
35555 | ''Well done, indeed? |
35555 | ''Well, art tired of the Road, or wilt thou come on to Umballa with me and work back with the horses?'' |
35555 | ''Well, what is it?'' |
35555 | ''Were it not better to walk?'' |
35555 | ''What about artillery, sir?'' |
35555 | ''What am I? |
35555 | ''What are a few rupees''--the Pathan threw out his open hand carelessly--''to the Colonel Sahib? |
35555 | ''What are the letters that the fat priest is waving before the Colonel? |
35555 | ''What are you doing here? |
35555 | ''What are you saying?'' |
35555 | ''What can he want now?'' |
35555 | ''What city do ye hail from not to know a canal- cut? |
35555 | ''What do they prepare?'' |
35555 | ''What do you think he will do?'' |
35555 | ''What dost thou do now, then?'' |
35555 | ''What dost thou not know of this world?'' |
35555 | ''What dost thou?'' |
35555 | ''What else?'' |
35555 | ''What evil? |
35555 | ''What good is all this to me?'' |
35555 | ''What hakim, mother?'' |
35555 | ''What if I do not give it thee? |
35555 | ''What is caste to a cut throat?'' |
35555 | ''What is he doing? |
35555 | ''What is his business?'' |
35555 | ''What is it then?'' |
35555 | ''What is it to fear? |
35555 | ''What is it to thee, woman of ill- omen, where he goes?'' |
35555 | ''What is it? |
35555 | ''What is it?'' |
35555 | ''What is now?'' |
35555 | ''What is that--"Rishti"?'' |
35555 | ''What is that?'' |
35555 | ''What is thatt?'' |
35555 | ''What is the name?'' |
35555 | ''What is the prayer?'' |
35555 | ''What is the talk?'' |
35555 | ''What is there to eat? |
35555 | ''What is this?'' |
35555 | ''What is this?'' |
35555 | ''What is this?'' |
35555 | ''What is thy scheme?'' |
35555 | ''What is to do now?'' |
35555 | ''What is your caste? |
35555 | ''What knowledge hast thou of thy birth- hour?'' |
35555 | ''What like of folk are they within?'' |
35555 | ''What madness was that, then?'' |
35555 | ''What manner of life hast thou led, not to know The Year? |
35555 | ''What matter under all the heavens? |
35555 | ''What matter? |
35555 | ''What matters, Friend of all the World? |
35555 | ''What need of a river save to water at before sundown? |
35555 | ''What need? |
35555 | ''What need?'' |
35555 | ''What new devilry?'' |
35555 | ''What new trick is this?'' |
35555 | ''What other than Gunga?'' |
35555 | ''What others?'' |
35555 | ''What profit to kill men?'' |
35555 | ''What proof is there?'' |
35555 | ''What rivers have ye by Benares?'' |
35555 | ''What said the Sahiba?'' |
35555 | ''What talk is this of us, Sahib?'' |
35555 | ''What was the upshot of last night''s babble?'' |
35555 | ''What was you bukkin''to that nigger about?'' |
35555 | ''What-- what is this?'' |
35555 | ''What-- what is thy God?'' |
35555 | ''What?'' |
35555 | ''When will that be?'' |
35555 | ''Whence had thou that song, despiser of this world?'' |
35555 | ''Where goest thou?'' |
35555 | ''Where in Tibet?'' |
35555 | ''Where is Mr. Lurgan''s house?'' |
35555 | ''Where is he? |
35555 | ''Where is my Holy One?'' |
35555 | ''Where is that River? |
35555 | ''Where is the house?'' |
35555 | ''Where is the money?'' |
35555 | ''Where is this new haste born from? |
35555 | ''Where is your master''s house?'' |
35555 | ''Whither does it lead?'' |
35555 | ''Whither go we?'' |
35555 | ''Whither goes he?'' |
35555 | ''Whither went those who lay here last even-- the lama and the boy? |
35555 | ''Who am I to dispute an order?'' |
35555 | ''Who bears arms against the law?'' |
35555 | ''Who cares to tell truth to a letter- writer?'' |
35555 | ''Who cooked it?'' |
35555 | ''Who else watched over thee since our wonderful journey began?'' |
35555 | ''Who else? |
35555 | ''Who expects any colt to carry heavy weight at first? |
35555 | ''Who has died in thy house?'' |
35555 | ''Who is Kim-- Kim-- Kim?'' |
35555 | ''Who is at Shamlegh this summer?'' |
35555 | ''Who is she? |
35555 | ''Who is that?'' |
35555 | ''Who is the hakim, Maharanee?'' |
35555 | ''Who is thy woman in the Plains? |
35555 | ''Who is to tell him? |
35555 | ''Who is with them?'' |
35555 | ''Who knows?''. |
35555 | ''Who makes the boy a soldier?'' |
35555 | ''Who told?'' |
35555 | ''Who watches us across the street?'' |
35555 | ''Who will receive us this evening?'' |
35555 | ''Whom dost thou serve?'' |
35555 | ''Why could not I take away the little book and be done with it?'' |
35555 | ''Why did he not slay thee out of hand?'' |
35555 | ''Why didst thou not tell before?'' |
35555 | ''Why not follow the Way thyself, and so accompany the boy?'' |
35555 | ''Why should I ask? |
35555 | ''Why should I fear?'' |
35555 | ''Why should I lie to thee, Hajji?'' |
35555 | ''Why should I regard? |
35555 | ''Why? |
35555 | ''Why? |
35555 | ''Why? |
35555 | ''Why?'' |
35555 | ''Will he draw pay?'' |
35555 | ''Will he pay?'' |
35555 | ''Will it travel to Benares?'' |
35555 | ''Will they kill thee?'' |
35555 | ''Will thy son be a priest, then? |
35555 | ''Wilt thou some day sell my head for a few sweetmeats if the fit takes thee?'' |
35555 | ''Without payment?'' |
35555 | ''Ye did; but, Powers o''Darkness, how did ye know?'' |
35555 | ''You come-- eh? |
35555 | ''You have been in Be-- England?'' |
35555 | ''You talk the same as a nigger, do n''t you?'' |
35555 | ''You''re fond of him then?'' |
35555 | ''Your mother?'' |
35555 | A Cause was put out into the world, and, old or young, sick or sound, knowing or unknowing, who can rein in the effect of that Cause? |
35555 | A Red Bull on a green field, that shall carry thee to the Heavens-- or what? |
35555 | A Red Bull on a green field, was it not?'' |
35555 | A broken wheel? |
35555 | A gun sayest thou? |
35555 | A locked box in which to keep holy books? |
35555 | A rupee to the temple? |
35555 | A servant to set you forth upon your journey? |
35555 | A tall man with black hair, walking thus?'' |
35555 | All this disguise for one evening? |
35555 | And His life is known?'' |
35555 | And by Kulu- road? |
35555 | And how long have you two been looking for it?'' |
35555 | And how long might such a boy live after the news was told?'' |
35555 | And how old is she?'' |
35555 | And is all well?'' |
35555 | And the Sahiba fed thee well? |
35555 | And then?'' |
35555 | And thou art a Sahib? |
35555 | And thou-- the English know of these things? |
35555 | And thou?'' |
35555 | And what is Kim?'' |
35555 | And where hast thou been?'' |
35555 | And where is he?'' |
35555 | And why?'' |
35555 | And you did n''t bother your head about it? |
35555 | Are thy brothers''regiments also under orders?'' |
35555 | Are you a Mason, by any chance?'' |
35555 | Are you very sick?'' |
35555 | Art thou the only beggar in the city? |
35555 | At what hour runs the te- rain?'' |
35555 | At which school?'' |
35555 | Belly- speak-- eh?'' |
35555 | Below, in coarse verse:''O Allah, who sufferest lice to live on the coat of a Kabuli, why hast thou allowed this louse Lutuf to live so long?'' |
35555 | But afterwards, old man-- afterwards?'' |
35555 | But for one little moment-- thou canst overtake the dooli in ten strides-- if thou wast a Sahib, shall I show thee what thou wouldst do?'' |
35555 | But had it not been proven at Umballa that his sign in the high heavens portended war and armed men? |
35555 | But how could I know that the Red Bull would bring me to this business?'' |
35555 | But how if we insult the Sahibs''Gods thereby? |
35555 | But how is it done?'' |
35555 | But how thinkest thou, chela, to recompense these people, and especially the priest, for their great kindness? |
35555 | But how? |
35555 | But is not the little gun a delight? |
35555 | But now, Red Hat, what is to be done?'' |
35555 | But what does He when He is about to give an order?'' |
35555 | But what dost thou do?'' |
35555 | But what said he of the meaning of the stars, Friend of all the World?'' |
35555 | But where is the River?'' |
35555 | But who art thou, dressed in that fashion, to speak in this fashion?'' |
35555 | But why should one whose Star leads him to war follow a holy man?'' |
35555 | By this time all the villages know what has befallen the Sahibs-- eh?'' |
35555 | CHAPTER VII Unto whose use the pregnant suns are poised With idiot moons and stars retracting stars? |
35555 | CHAPTER XII''Who hath desired the Sea-- the sight of salt- water unbounded? |
35555 | CHAPTER XIII''Who hath desired the Sea-- the immense and contemptuous surges? |
35555 | Can any enter?'' |
35555 | Can you quite see? |
35555 | Can you tell me anything about him?'' |
35555 | Charms are better, eh? |
35555 | Choor? |
35555 | Come and see?'' |
35555 | Could any one take them out without the Railway''s knowledge?'' |
35555 | Curse me? |
35555 | Curses? |
35555 | D''ye see my dilemma?'' |
35555 | D''you add prophecy to your other gifts? |
35555 | D''you know anything about his money affairs?'' |
35555 | Did never the healer of sick pearls tell thee so? |
35555 | Did one make a prophecy? |
35555 | Did ye ever hear the like?'' |
35555 | Didst hear of Bhotiyal( Tibet)? |
35555 | Do I not safeguard thy old feet about the ways? |
35555 | Do children drop from heaven in thy country? |
35555 | Do n''t you''ate it?'' |
35555 | Do underlings order the goings of eight thousand redcoats-- with guns?'' |
35555 | Do ye think Yankling Sahib will permit down- country police to wander all over the hills, disturbing his game? |
35555 | Do you know what that means? |
35555 | Do you mind?'' |
35555 | Do you understand?'' |
35555 | Do you understand?) |
35555 | Does he go afoot, for the sake of past sins?'' |
35555 | Does the Wheel hang still if a child spin it-- or a drunkard? |
35555 | Does this make all clear?'' |
35555 | Dost know it?'' |
35555 | Dost thou grudge me that? |
35555 | Dost thou know his touch, then? |
35555 | Dost thou know what manner of women we be in this quarter? |
35555 | Dost thou love me? |
35555 | Dost thou not know?'' |
35555 | Dost thou remember our first day under Zam- Zammah?'' |
35555 | Eh, Prince?'' |
35555 | Eh? |
35555 | Eh?'' |
35555 | Eh?'' |
35555 | Else what was the use of the Gods? |
35555 | Else why did he prick with an iron between the soles of thy slippers?'' |
35555 | Else why did the fat padre seem so impressed, and why the glass of hot yellow wine from the lean one? |
35555 | Else why should we come? |
35555 | Fair or black? |
35555 | Five-- ten minutes alone, if I had not been so pressed, and I might--''''Is he cured yet, miracle- worker?'' |
35555 | For sale, I suppose?'' |
35555 | For six months he shall run at his choice: but who will be his sponsor?'' |
35555 | Fountain of Wisdom, where fell the arrow?'' |
35555 | Four flawed emeralds there are, but one is drilled in two places, and one is a little carven--''''Their weights?'' |
35555 | Give him the firmament God made him for, And what shall take the air of him? |
35555 | Grogan''s dining here to- night, is n''t he?'' |
35555 | Had any one knowledge of such a stream? |
35555 | Has any one ever done that same sort of magic to you before?'' |
35555 | Has the Sahiba made a young man of thee by her cookery?'' |
35555 | Hast thou dared to look even thus far?'' |
35555 | Hast thou eaten? |
35555 | Hast thou ever heard the name of thy brother?'' |
35555 | Hast thou heard?'' |
35555 | Hast thou money for the road?'' |
35555 | Hast thou not told me that some day a Red Bull will come out of a field to help thee? |
35555 | Hast thou said that I take thee to Lucknow?'' |
35555 | Have I shifted thee and lifted thee and slapped and twisted thy ten toes to find texts flung at my head? |
35555 | Have I slept? |
35555 | Have I thy leave-- Prince?'' |
35555 | Have they any knowledge of Hindi, such as had the Keeper of Images?'' |
35555 | Have they made thee a healer? |
35555 | Have they marked out for the baggage- waggons behind?'' |
35555 | Have they no disciples? |
35555 | Have we not walked enough for a little? |
35555 | Have ye parted?'' |
35555 | Have you come far?'' |
35555 | Having found the Way, seest thou, that shall free me from the Wheel, need I trouble to find a way about the mere fields of earth-- which are illusion? |
35555 | He asked neither pension nor retaining fee, but, if they deemed him worthy, would they write him a testimonial? |
35555 | He ca n''t write English, can he?'' |
35555 | He comes up with his men and he consorts with the lama, and then he calls me a fool, and is very rude--''''But wherefore-- wherefore?'' |
35555 | He has not yet heard the Great Queen''s order that--''''Order? |
35555 | He lent thee his strength? |
35555 | He rose to go, and as an afterthought asked,''Who is that angry- faced Sahib who lost the cheroot- case?'' |
35555 | He says, Why have you no disciples, and stop bothering him? |
35555 | He will then say"What proof hast thou?" |
35555 | His Sea in no showing the same-- his Sea and the same''neath all showing-- His Sea that his being fulfils? |
35555 | His Sea in no wonder the same-- his Sea and the same in each wonder-- His Sea that his being fulfils? |
35555 | Holy One, hast thou been here long? |
35555 | Holy One, whence came--?'' |
35555 | How can I take thee away, or account for thy disappearing if I set thee down and let thee run off into the crops? |
35555 | How can I, whelmed by a flux of talk, meditate upon the Way?'' |
35555 | How can they make trouble? |
35555 | How canst thou receive instruction all jostled of crowds? |
35555 | How comes it this is true?'' |
35555 | How didst thou do it? |
35555 | How do I know, having written the letter, that thou wilt not run away?'' |
35555 | How does that strike you, Mahbub? |
35555 | How far came we to- day in the flesh?'' |
35555 | How long have you had these things, boy?'' |
35555 | How long were they with thee?'' |
35555 | How many maids, and whose wives, hang upon thy eyelashes? |
35555 | How many more mixed friends do you keep in Asia?'' |
35555 | How much did you bet-- eh?'' |
35555 | How runs thy prophecy?'' |
35555 | How shall I make thanks? |
35555 | How soon can he become approximately effeecient chain- man? |
35555 | How the Divil-- yes, He''s the man I mean-- can a street- beggar raise money to educate white boys?'' |
35555 | How thinkest thou? |
35555 | How wilt thou ever make a soldier, Princeling?'' |
35555 | I am a sufi( free- thinker), but when one can get blind- sides of a woman, a stallion, or a devil, why go round to invite a kick? |
35555 | I come as Ladakhi trader-- oh anything-- and I say to you:"You want to buy precious stones?" |
35555 | I could praise thee, but what need? |
35555 | I mean, how did you think?'' |
35555 | I order a Holy One-- a Teacher of the Law-- to come and speak to a woman? |
35555 | I will have Justice--''''Am I to be blocked by a shouting ape who upsets ten thousand sacks under a young horse''s nose? |
35555 | I''ll worm them out of the boy later on and-- you see?'' |
35555 | If I die to- day, who shall bring the news-- and to whom? |
35555 | If I withdraw him by order now-- what will he do, think you? |
35555 | If he is my chela-- does-- will-- can any one take him from me? |
35555 | If there is money to be paid--''''Oh, be silent,''whispered Kim;''are we Rajahs to throw away good silver when the world is so charitable?'' |
35555 | If you were Asiatic of birth you might be employed right off; but this half- year of leave is to make you de- Englishised, you see? |
35555 | In silence, as we do of Tibet, or speaking aloud?'' |
35555 | In what way didst thou get to Benares? |
35555 | Indeed thy hold is surer even than mine; for who would miss a boy beaten to death, or, it may be, thrown into a well by the roadside? |
35555 | Is aught missing?'' |
35555 | Is he a Buddhist?'' |
35555 | Is he by chance''--he lowered his voice--''one of us?'' |
35555 | Is he not my disciple?'' |
35555 | Is he not wise? |
35555 | Is he well? |
35555 | Is it Mahbub Ali the great dealer?'' |
35555 | Is it an order that thy servant does not speak to me?'' |
35555 | Is it another healing?'' |
35555 | Is it any lust of thine to be re- born as a rat, or a snake under the eaves-- a worm in the belly of the most mean beast? |
35555 | Is it coming into shape?'' |
35555 | Is it finished, Holy One?'' |
35555 | Is it indeed all finished, O my father?'' |
35555 | Is it likely that he will understand our talk? |
35555 | Is it lost? |
35555 | Is it much to ask?'' |
35555 | Is it necessary to the comfort of thy heart to see that lama?'' |
35555 | Is it permitted to ask a question?'' |
35555 | Is it plain, chela?'' |
35555 | Is it the Way to sing them songs?'' |
35555 | Is it too late to look to- night for the River?'' |
35555 | Is it true by any chance?'' |
35555 | Is it unbelievable stupidity?'' |
35555 | Is old Red Hat of that sort? |
35555 | Is that down?'' |
35555 | Is the boy mad?'' |
35555 | Is the charm made, Holy One?'' |
35555 | Is the father of my son a well of charity to give to all who ask?'' |
35555 | Is the virtuous woman still bent upon a new one?'' |
35555 | Is there a film before them already? |
35555 | Is there not a schoolmaster in the barracks?'' |
35555 | Is this Amritzar?'' |
35555 | Is this the way to lie to a Sahib?'' |
35555 | Is thy mind still set on following old Red Hat?'' |
35555 | It is a holy man, see''st thou?'' |
35555 | Kim replied therefore:''Bay mare? |
35555 | Kimball, I suppose you''d like to be a soldier?'' |
35555 | Kismet, mallum?'' |
35555 | Know what?'' |
35555 | Laughest thou? |
35555 | Let him be a teacher; let him be a scribe-- what matter? |
35555 | Look, Hajji, is yonder the city of Simla? |
35555 | Mallum?'' |
35555 | Might I ask you to send my mare round under cover?'' |
35555 | Mussalman, Hindu, Jain, or Buddhist? |
35555 | Mussalman-- Sikh-- Hindu-- Jain-- low caste or high?'' |
35555 | My father, he got these papers from the Jadoo- Gher-- what do you call that?'' |
35555 | Neglect me? |
35555 | Nor ever harmed a man?'' |
35555 | Not much, eh? |
35555 | Now how the deuce am I to tell Hurree Babu, and whatt the deuce am I to do? |
35555 | Now if it were stored up for my grandson--''''He that had the belly- pain?'' |
35555 | Now what in the world does that mean?'' |
35555 | Now what is to do, Kim? |
35555 | Now which of the barracks is thine?'' |
35555 | Now, is that ravin''lunacy or a business proposition? |
35555 | Of six hundred and eighty sabres stood fast to their salt-- how many think you? |
35555 | Of what faith art thou?'' |
35555 | Of what known faith art thou?'' |
35555 | Of what use is a gun unfed?'' |
35555 | Oh, charitable ones, if I am left here, who shall tend that old man?'' |
35555 | Old Mahbub here still?'' |
35555 | Old bag of bones making curries for men who do not ask"Who cooked this?" |
35555 | Old man, have I spoken truth?'' |
35555 | Once gone, who shall find me? |
35555 | Once more, what manner of white boy art thou?'' |
35555 | One skinny brown finger heavy with rings lay on the edge of the cart, and the talk went this way:''Who is that one?'' |
35555 | Our work is like polishing jewels to be thrown to a dance- girl-- eh?'' |
35555 | Remember him who came only last month-- the faquir with the tortoise?'' |
35555 | Said the Sahiba cheerily from an upper window, after compliments:''What is the good of an old woman''s advice to an old man? |
35555 | Said the hakim, hardly more than shaping the words with his lips:''How do you do, Mr. O''Hara? |
35555 | Selling weeds-- eh?'' |
35555 | Shall I show thee how the Sahibs render thanks?'' |
35555 | Shall I take it away?'' |
35555 | Shall we say that, Tuesday next, you''ll hand him over to me at the night train south? |
35555 | Shall we stay there? |
35555 | Shall we wait awhile at Shamlegh, then?'' |
35555 | Since when have men and women been other than men and women?'' |
35555 | So I am a doctor, and-- you hear my talk? |
35555 | So the lama also loved the Friend of all the World?'' |
35555 | Some little stream, may be-- dried in the heats? |
35555 | Stark calm on the lap of the Line-- or the crazy- eyed hurricane blowing? |
35555 | Such an one as this or that man?'' |
35555 | Suppose an Englishman came by and saw that thou hadst no nose?'' |
35555 | Suppose she had stole them? |
35555 | Surely it was a little to see me that thou didst come?'' |
35555 | Surely thou hast made the old man rich?'' |
35555 | Surely thou must know? |
35555 | Tell me if she recover?'' |
35555 | Tell me, did you see the shape of the pot?'' |
35555 | That''s your abrupt way of putting it, is it?'' |
35555 | Thatt is Huneefa''s look- out, you see? |
35555 | The Lord-- the Excellent One-- He has honour here too? |
35555 | The end of the tale, I think, is true; but what of the fore- part?'' |
35555 | The heave and the halt and the hurl and the crash of the comber wind- hounded? |
35555 | The sleek- barrelled swell before storm-- gray, foamless, enormous, and growing? |
35555 | Then a voice cried:"What shall come to the boy if thou art dead?" |
35555 | Then in Hindi:''But what does he gain? |
35555 | Then it would not be wrong to shoot them with their own guns, heh?'' |
35555 | Then some one beat him on the back, crying:''Tell us how ye knew, ye little limb of Satan? |
35555 | Then who is to catch him? |
35555 | There is one brotherhood of the caste, but beyond that again''--she looked round timidly--''the bond of the Pulton-- the Regiment-- eh?'' |
35555 | Therefore, what make we here?'' |
35555 | They be Hindus in Tibet, then?'' |
35555 | They fell upon two men sitting under this truck-- Hajji, what shall I do with this lump of tobacco? |
35555 | They will make a Sahib of my disciple? |
35555 | They''ll cure all that nonsense at St. Xavier''s, eh?'' |
35555 | Think you our Lord came so far north?'' |
35555 | Think you she will ask another charm for her grandsons? |
35555 | Think you that we who serve Creighton Sahib need strange scullions to help us through a big dinner?'' |
35555 | Those Sahibs, who can not speak our talk, or the Babu, who for his own ends gave us money? |
35555 | Thou art not drunk?'' |
35555 | Thou dost not, then, know of the River?'' |
35555 | Thou hast never lied?'' |
35555 | Thou knowest?'' |
35555 | Thou knowest?'' |
35555 | Thou wilt keep it for me?'' |
35555 | Thou wilt surely return?'' |
35555 | Three years I travelled through Hind, but-- can earth be stronger than Mother Earth? |
35555 | Thy sister-- What owl''s folly told thee to draw thy carts across the road? |
35555 | Thy work?'' |
35555 | Two men-- thou sayest? |
35555 | Two old men and a boy? |
35555 | Very foolish it is to use the wrong word to a stranger; for though the heart may be clean of offence, how is the stranger to know that? |
35555 | Was Kim going to school? |
35555 | Was he not the Friend of the Stars as well as of all the world, crammed to the teeth with dreadful secrets? |
35555 | Was it a vision? |
35555 | Was it some matter of a bay mare that Peters Sahib wished the pedigree of?'' |
35555 | Was it your box?'' |
35555 | Was there raw turmeric among thy food- stuffs?'' |
35555 | Wast thou very wet?'' |
35555 | Well, that''s settled, is n''t it? |
35555 | What can I do for you, please?'' |
35555 | What can a hakim do?'' |
35555 | What can old eyes see except a full begging- bowl?'' |
35555 | What colour ash is there in thy pipe- bowl? |
35555 | What concern hast thou with war?'' |
35555 | What did ye say about the war?'' |
35555 | What didst thou later?'' |
35555 | What do you call that?'' |
35555 | What dost thou do here?'' |
35555 | What else? |
35555 | What else?'' |
35555 | What evidence will remain? |
35555 | What gift has the Red Bull brought?'' |
35555 | What harm do thy Gods suffer from play with a babe? |
35555 | What hast thou done?'' |
35555 | What in the world do you make of that?'' |
35555 | What is a beating when the very head is loose on the shoulders?'' |
35555 | What is an old man to do?'' |
35555 | What is it? |
35555 | What is the custom of charity in this town? |
35555 | What is the device on the flag?'' |
35555 | What is the good of stale food in the room, oh woman of ill- omen?'' |
35555 | What is the sense of curing a child one day and killing him with fright the next?'' |
35555 | What is this?'' |
35555 | What like of Gods were they?'' |
35555 | What manner of faquir art thou to shiver at a little watching?'' |
35555 | What need? |
35555 | What of the hakim?'' |
35555 | What of the kilta?'' |
35555 | What of the old clothes?'' |
35555 | What of the weaknesses-- the belly and the neck, and the beating in the ears?'' |
35555 | What orders? |
35555 | What said the priest? |
35555 | What says Mahbub Ali?'' |
35555 | What shall the third incarnation be?'' |
35555 | What shall we do now?'' |
35555 | What shame?'' |
35555 | What should I care for mere words?'' |
35555 | What the deuce have you got there?'' |
35555 | What then?'' |
35555 | What used thou to her-- son?'' |
35555 | What was the last hypothetical devil mentioned?'' |
35555 | What were they like, eh?'' |
35555 | What will the healer of turquoises say to this? |
35555 | What will they give thee for blood- money?'' |
35555 | What''s your name?'' |
35555 | What? |
35555 | When didst thou steal the milk- woman''s slippers, Dunnoo?'' |
35555 | When do you come along? |
35555 | When the Hills give thee back thy strength day by day? |
35555 | Where are you goin''?'' |
35555 | Where are your horse- trucks?'' |
35555 | Where else?'' |
35555 | Where has he to run to?'' |
35555 | Where is my bed?'' |
35555 | Where is the Kamboh gone, Holy One?'' |
35555 | Where is the Saddhu?'' |
35555 | Where is the boy? |
35555 | Where is your house? |
35555 | Where was the Sahiba?'' |
35555 | Where, then, is the River? |
35555 | Where--? |
35555 | Whither goest thou?'' |
35555 | Whither would old bones go?'' |
35555 | Who am I that thou shouldst fling beggar- endearments at me?'' |
35555 | Who art thou?'' |
35555 | Who begs for thee, these days?'' |
35555 | Who but I saw that prophecy accomplished? |
35555 | Who but I?'' |
35555 | Who is Kim?'' |
35555 | Who is the one- eyed and luckless son of shame that has not yet prepared my pipe?'' |
35555 | Who knows where we dropped the baggage? |
35555 | Who looks for a rat in a frog- pond? |
35555 | Who says the age of miracles is gone by? |
35555 | Who shall say she does not acquire merit?'' |
35555 | Who shampooed thy legs? |
35555 | Who should know but I? |
35555 | Who speaks against her?'' |
35555 | Who suckled thee?'' |
35555 | Who, then, made Gunga in the beginning?'' |
35555 | Why art thou here? |
35555 | Why come to me?'' |
35555 | Why did he want to poison you?'' |
35555 | Why does he not leave them?'' |
35555 | Why does not that yellow man answer?'' |
35555 | Why does this make one feel that we are so young a people?'' |
35555 | Why hinder him now? |
35555 | Why is that beggar- brat not well beaten?'' |
35555 | Why not bid him sit on my knee, Shameless? |
35555 | Why plague me with this talk, Holy One? |
35555 | Why say so, then, on the open road?'' |
35555 | Why should I not run away when the school was shut? |
35555 | Why-- why, do you speak English? |
35555 | Why? |
35555 | Why?'' |
35555 | Will he lead an army against us? |
35555 | Will you hurt him, if I call him a shout now? |
35555 | Will you let me go away?'' |
35555 | Will-- will he give me a blessing?'' |
35555 | Wilt thou carry him on thy shoulders?'' |
35555 | Wilt thou slay him or drown him in that wonderful river from which the Babu dragged thee?'' |
35555 | Woe to me, how shall I find my River? |
35555 | Would it be safe to return the Colonel''s lead? |
35555 | Wrap it in paper and put it under the salt- bag? |
35555 | Ye believe in Providence, Bennett?'' |
35555 | Ye hail from Benares? |
35555 | Yes, he wants to be an F. R. S.''''Hurree thinks well of the boy, does n''t he?'' |
35555 | You are not pleased, eh?'' |
35555 | You do not know the Hills?'' |
35555 | You drunk? |
35555 | You have been shooting, eh? |
35555 | You have got everything?'' |
35555 | You know that?'' |
35555 | You say:"Do I look like a man who buys precious stones?" |
35555 | You see? |
35555 | You was brought up in the gutter, was n''t you?'' |
35555 | a constable called out laughingly, as he caught sight of the soldier''s sword,''Are not the police enough to destroy evil- doers?'' |
35555 | and in what city is that teaching given?'' |
35555 | and to whom else should I talk? |
35555 | but who can argue with a grandmother?'' |
35555 | but you do not understand? |
35555 | he said, as he drew his prize under the light of the tent- pole lantern, then shaking him severely cried:''What were you doing? |
35555 | said Father Victor,''or are you by way o''being a lusus naturà ¦?'' |
5724 | A chaconne? |
5724 | A spatula on the right elbow? |
5724 | But why go on? 5724 Did n''t they?" |
5724 | Everybody says what? |
5724 | Hast thou,quoth Mephistopheles,"sworn thyself an enemy to God and to all creatures? |
5724 | How in the name of all the gods are you going to make of it an opera for Italian singers, as B. tells me you are? 5724 How likest thou thy wedding?" |
5724 | Knowest thou Faust? |
5724 | What if he should have talent for music? |
5724 | What shall I do with the song? |
5724 | What,she asks,"must I do to learn so sweet and gentle an idiom?" |
5724 | When did the Greeks ever dance a chaconne? |
5724 | White or black? |
5724 | A cavalier?" |
5724 | And had he not composed a canzonetta for her? |
5724 | And how long has he been imprisoned? |
5724 | And how long has he been imprisoned? |
5724 | And if so, will he speak a cruel farewell and doom her to death within the waters of the river? |
5724 | And the Lord said unto Satan, Whence comest thou? |
5724 | And the reason? |
5724 | Are you, too, a traitor, Kurwenal? |
5724 | But in"Oper und Drama"he says:"Is it possible to find anything more perfect than every piece in''Don Juan''? |
5724 | But the letter giving word of the assignation? |
5724 | But there is a fly in the ointment, Why has Figaro been so busily measuring the room? |
5724 | But whence the money? |
5724 | Can any one say, after hearing this"Canzonetta sull''aria,"that it is unnatural to melodize conversation? |
5724 | Did Figaro imagine it was because of his own pretty face that the Count had promised her so handsome a dowry? |
5724 | Does Pamina live? |
5724 | Ein fahrender Scolast? |
5724 | Friend or foe? |
5724 | Gretel sings an old German folk- song, beginning thus:--[ Musical excerpt--"Suse liebe suse was raschelt i m stroh?"] |
5724 | Had he not often told her to ask him what she pleased, when kissing her in secret? |
5724 | Has he not been making love violently to her for a space, sending Don Basilio to give her singing lessons and to urge her to accept his suit? |
5724 | He hears Isolde''s voice, and his wandering fancy transforms it into the torch whose extinction once summoned him to her side:"Do I hear the light?" |
5724 | He rails against the whole sex in the air, beginning:"Aprite un po''quegl''occhi?" |
5724 | He thanked her gallantly and queried: Was the pretty sight a May Day celebration? |
5724 | How about that letter? |
5724 | How do such notions get into the minds of the people? |
5724 | If there was no such future, was the fact not proof of the failure of the Wagnerian movement as a creative force? |
5724 | Is that your game, my lord? |
5724 | Is there a purposed resemblance here to the words of consecration in the mass? |
5724 | It rings out fortissimo when the mystic chorus, which stands for the Divine Voice, puts the question,"Knowest thou Faust?" |
5724 | Kurwenal, have you no eyes? |
5724 | Melot''s accomplice? |
5724 | Now, why was the questioning of Lohengrin forbidden? |
5724 | Shall she never see them more? |
5724 | Shall we call this Death? |
5724 | She has been stricken, but what is that to his danger of everlasting damnation? |
5724 | Then Satan answered the Lord, and said, Doth Job fear God for nought? |
5724 | Then he had heard all that the Count had said to Susanna? |
5724 | Was the fault mine or the singers''? |
5724 | Was there ever such exquisite dictation and transcription? |
5724 | What does it mean? |
5724 | What flag flies at the peak? |
5724 | What if he should be the leader singled out to crush the rebellion, and be received in triumph on his return? |
5724 | What saith the Scripture? |
5724 | What would prayer avail him? |
5724 | What, asks the Black Huntsman, is the proffered victim''s desire? |
5724 | When shall night vanish and the light appear? |
5724 | When will European writers on music begin to realize that musical culture in America is not just now in its beginnings? |
5724 | Where? |
5724 | Who is at the helm? |
5724 | Who is the little man?" |
5724 | Why else does he devour her with his eyes when serving her at table? |
5724 | Why should Boito have made his Rhinelanders dance a step which is characteristically that of the Poles? |
5724 | Why? |
5724 | Will he come? |
5724 | Will she aid in the deliverance? |
5724 | Will she come? |
5724 | Will she never come? |
5724 | Will the shepherd never change his doleful strain? |
5724 | Would it bring back youth and love and faith? |
5724 | Would she sing? |
5724 | Would they rob his soul of its eternal welfare? |
5724 | Would you connoisseurs in music like counterpoint? |
5724 | Yet could she wish for the defeat and the death of the man she loves? |
5724 | [ Musical excerpt-- Susanna:"sotto i pini?" |
5724 | but"What ails thee, uncle?" |
5724 | morir so giovane"? |
5724 | wo eilst du hin?") |
61453 | Another question is,"Should a book be remaindered, and if so, under what conditions?" |
61453 | Can a bookseller be expected to keep a stock of all these editions? |
61453 | If the world could not have contained them 2,000 years ago, what would have been the condition of affairs since the introduction of printing? |
61453 | Is not the time ripe for more organization, without oppression, to be adopted by the trade? |
61453 | It is, however, a fair question to ask,"Why should part of the legitimate profit of the bookseller be taken by the school representatives?" |
56985 | ''Where away?'' 56985 And did n''t ye jest tell me,"Kathleen replied,"that Japan is an island in the Pacific Oshin? |
56985 | And is it really the case,said Frank,"that a Japanese baby never cries?" |
56985 | And so these things come here in cans, do they? |
56985 | And were lost in it, I suppose? |
56985 | And what are norimons and cangos? |
56985 | And what is sa- kee, please? |
56985 | And what is the difference between Buddhism and Shintoism? |
56985 | And what was the edict? |
56985 | And you''ll let me go with them, wo n''t you, father? |
56985 | Another thing,said Fred--"why is it that the grooms are covered with tattoo- marks, and wear so little clothing?" |
56985 | Anything else? |
56985 | But does every Chinese who goes to a foreign country understand how to talk pidgin English? |
56985 | But you wo n''t let him go all alone, father, now, will you? |
56985 | Ca n''t we go first to Yeddo? |
56985 | Can I get any kind of money with this letter, father? |
56985 | Can it be? 56985 Did n''t you find that an orange would buy more cherries or apples at one time than at another?" |
56985 | Did they destroy the cities that we see in ruins? |
56985 | Do my eyes deceive me? 56985 Do you mean the island of Pappenberg?" |
56985 | Doctor Bronson has been there before, has n''t he, father? |
56985 | How can I tell? |
56985 | How do you know which way to turn? |
56985 | How long shall we be on the voyage, Doctor? |
56985 | How was that? |
56985 | How was that? |
56985 | I ca n''t think of it,replied Frank;"what is it?" |
56985 | If they did no work,said Frank,"how did they manage to live?" |
56985 | Is there any law about it? |
56985 | Now,continued Frank,"there are thirty- two points of the compass; do you know them?" |
56985 | Please, Doctor,said Frank,"what is the nature of the notices they put on the sign- board?" |
56985 | Please, Doctor,said Mary,"what do you mean by legal tender?" |
56985 | Something Japanese? |
56985 | Then the emperor is called the Mikado, is he not? |
56985 | Well, how did he live all that time? |
56985 | Well, then, as they are both women, or girls, as you may choose to call them, why do n''t you take up the subject of women in Japan? 56985 Well, what did you expect to find?" |
56985 | Well, what is it? |
56985 | Well, what is it? |
56985 | Were you ever sea- sick, Doctor? |
56985 | What did you do then, Doctor? |
56985 | What do they use for the burning? |
56985 | What do you suppose it was? 56985 What is it?" |
56985 | What is it? |
56985 | What is that? |
56985 | What is the jin- riki- sha? |
56985 | What is the reason they do n''t strike the hours here as they do on land? |
56985 | What is the use of writing up our Canton experiences,said Frank,"till we know what we are to do? |
56985 | What puts that into your head, Kathleen? |
56985 | What time in the evening must we go,said Fred,"so as to be there in season for the beginning of the performance?" |
56985 | What was that? |
56985 | What''s that to do with the crow? |
56985 | Where are we going, please? |
56985 | Where away? |
56985 | Why are we like that chambermaid over there? |
56985 | Why do n''t they work on the ground instead of climbing up there? |
56985 | Why do they call that the Golden Gate? |
56985 | Why is that network we have just been looking at like a crow calling to his mates? |
56985 | Why so? |
56985 | Why so? |
56985 | Why, everything,Frank answered;"the crow makes ye- caw- go, does n''t it?" |
56985 | Why, what could pirates have to do with this boat, I wonder? |
56985 | Why? 56985 Will we stop anywhere on the way?" |
56985 | Would n''t it be well to go the day before? |
56985 | Would the money be lost altogether? |
56985 | You mean those little things the Japanese sleep on? |
56985 | But then what could you expect of a lot of heathens like the Japanese? |
56985 | Could anything be more fortunate? |
56985 | Curious custom, is n''t it, according to our notions?" |
56985 | Do n''t you see that Bishop Berkeley wrote before railways were invented, and before people could travel as they do nowadays? |
56985 | Do you observe that one side of the island is like a precipice?" |
56985 | Do you see that little hollow down there?" |
56985 | Do you see that low bank there, in front of a mud- wall to the left of the fort?" |
56985 | Do you think my old drawing- master at home could do the same thing? |
56985 | Frank inquired,"or must I take it in pounds sterling? |
56985 | He had just strength enough to say, in a troubled voice, to the man nearest him,"Say, stranger, how far does this thing fly before it lights?" |
56985 | I wonder if they make much money out of the music they are playing? |
56985 | Is n''t it a grand idea?" |
56985 | Perhaps you have seen New York Bay on a pleasant afternoon in summer when every boat that could hoist a sail was out for an airing? |
56985 | Then the question naturally arose,"How is the operation performed?" |
56985 | Then the question very naturally arose,"What is pidgin English?" |
56985 | Thus:''Can do walkee?'' |
56985 | Very kind, is n''t it? |
56985 | Very sensible advice, I think-- don''t you? |
56985 | What do you mean?" |
56985 | What is the meaning of this?" |
56985 | What was it?" |
56985 | Why should we be in a hurry to write up our account, when, in any case, we shall have the time to do so while we are at sea?" |
56985 | Wo n''t that be nice?" |
56985 | You know we expect every kitten in America to play with her tail, and what can she do when she has no tail to play with? |
56985 | You remember the pocket pin- cushion you made for me? |
56985 | [ Illustration]"''"Man- man,"one girlee talkee he:"What for you go top- side look- see?" |
56985 | an American leader for Chinese?" |
56985 | means''Are you able to walk?'' |
56985 | said he;"what are those beautiful white birds?" |
58378 | And do many pilgrims every year climb the long way up its steep sides to the top? |
58378 | And must I also climb to the top some day, if I wish to please the gods? |
58378 | Are they not beautiful? |
58378 | Better than your father and mother? |
58378 | But how could you? |
58378 | But, Mother San, with whom did I ride then? |
58378 | Did he walk upon his august head? |
58378 | Did you ever do anything disobedient, Tei? |
58378 | Did you ever hear of Princess Splendor? |
58378 | Have I your noble permission to go to Asakusa Temple and pray to the good Kwannon that my mother may become well? |
58378 | Have you ever asked the generous mother for it? |
58378 | How could you do it? |
58378 | How do you know? |
58378 | How does the earth get back on the mountain-- the earth that the pilgrims bring down every day on their sandals? |
58378 | How many dolls are there on the shelves? |
58378 | How many paragons were there? |
58378 | In what way? |
58378 | Is everyone in the whole world going to Ueno Park? |
58378 | Is it to help the fisher boys on sea, as well as unworthy little girls on land, that she has so many arms? |
58378 | Is my admirable mother better? |
58378 | Is there something you very much desire, Umé- ko? |
58378 | Just as we put away the dolls in the godown after the Dolls''Festival is over, Umé? |
58378 | May I not go to her and give her many thanks truly? |
58378 | May I write a prayer to the goddess Kwannon? |
58378 | O Haha San,she said,"may I have your honorable permission to go to cousin Tei''s house?" |
58378 | Oh, Tei, why did you speak of that? 58378 Then what do they do?" |
58378 | Was Tara taken to the temple when he was thirty days old? |
58378 | Was one of them a little girl, and did she give up her red shoes? |
58378 | Were you afraid she would not hear you anywhere but in her own temple? |
58378 | What did you see at Nikko? |
58378 | What do you love best in the world? |
58378 | What do you mean, Umé- ko? |
58378 | What do you mean? |
58378 | What do you think Tara is doing in his school this minute? |
58378 | What good dog Shiro? |
58378 | What is it? |
58378 | What is that in your other hand? |
58378 | What is that? |
58378 | What is that? |
58378 | What name was given to the baby on the seventh day? |
58378 | What shall you buy, then? |
58378 | What unhappy thought clouds your face, Umé- ko? |
58378 | What was of no use? |
58378 | What will you give the Emperor? |
58378 | Who killed them all? |
58378 | Why have you not asked your insignificant father? |
58378 | Why, honorable mother? |
58378 | Why? |
58378 | Will you not come home early from the honorable business and tell us stories of the old war heroes? |
58378 | Would you like to stay shut up in a dark room as long as that, the way the dolls do? |
58378 | Your festival,said Umé,"and pray what may your honorable festival be?" |
58378 | CHAPTER III TEI BUYS A DOLL"A whole year of months is a very long time, is it not, Umé?" |
58378 | CHAPTER XI A DAY IN SCHOOL What country is it that starts its children off to school very early in the morning? |
58378 | Did I not say that the fifth day of the fifth month would be filled with gladness?" |
58378 | May I go to see him and bid him honorable welcome?" |
58378 | She heard Tara ask,"Why are they used in the gateway arch?" |
58378 | Then he asked,"Was there not some gift you have asked from the gods in the year that has passed?" |
58378 | Then to her father she said,"O Chichi San, have I your generous permission to open the packages?" |
58378 | what favor did you ask of the dear goddess?" |
58608 | And I suppose its chief use is to produce cocoa- nuts? |
58608 | At every few steps the leader called out,''Does any one speak Burmese?'' 58608 But do they live here all the time?" |
58608 | But is there such a thing as a sea- serpent? |
58608 | But what are they doing here on this island? |
58608 | Can we go there? |
58608 | Did they approve of one of their nation becoming an Eastern prince? |
58608 | Do all the kinds of rice yield the same? |
58608 | Do n''t they fall on the earth sometimes? |
58608 | Do they know how high it was in the sky when it blew up? |
58608 | Have n''t I read somewhere,said Fred,"that there was a skeleton of a large sea- serpent in a museum in Germany?" |
58608 | Have n''t I read somewhere,said one of the boys,"that the severest earthquakes are near the sea?" |
58608 | How can that be,queried Frank,"when she''s so narrow?" |
58608 | How did the English Government like this? |
58608 | How does the iron get up in the atmosphere to form these aerolites? |
58608 | How far off was that meteor we just saw? |
58608 | How is that? |
58608 | How much? |
58608 | How often do you have the locusts? |
58608 | How was he killed? |
58608 | If such things have lived, why is it impossible for some members of the family to be prowling around to- day in the depths of the ocean? 58608 Is it beyond this lake?" |
58608 | Now, who will have the next? |
58608 | That man was Lord Clive, was he not? |
58608 | That was what you call''a stampede,''was it not? |
58608 | What is that? |
58608 | What is the trade of Sarawak? |
58608 | Where shall we go next? |
58608 | Why do n''t they put two boats together, and make a double one? |
58608 | Why is it called the Peak of Adam? |
58608 | Why not? |
58608 | Why so? |
58608 | Wonder what Miss Effie and Mary will say to that? 58608 Yes,"replied Frank,"but how shall we divide a pair of tusks? |
58608 | ''Where did you get your eggs? |
58608 | All the morning they had been asking from the Residency,''Has Kavanagh arrived?'' |
58608 | Are not these aerolites parts of shooting- stars?" |
58608 | Dinna ye hear it? |
58608 | Fred asked, in astonishment;"I thought it was one of our rules never to forget anything?" |
58608 | How do you suppose they did it? |
58608 | How many do you suppose there are?" |
58608 | I said;''have you real marmalade?'' |
58608 | Now, if each tree makes forty nuts a year, they have 800,000,000 nuts, and I wonder what they do with them?" |
58608 | Now, tell me, please, which is the larger island of the two?" |
58608 | Perhaps they had a hint from Doctor Bronson, and possibly they did the whole work without assistance;_ quien sabe?_ CHAPTER XXI. |
58608 | The boys and men were similarly adorned, and Frank thought he had found a partial solution of the question,"What becomes of all the brass pins?" |
58608 | The pipes o''Havelock sound?" |
58608 | WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON? |
58608 | Was it something to eat or wear, or was it a weapon to be used in killing the game? |
58608 | We wonder if our foreign trade will ever revive so that our ships will be as abundant in Eastern waters as we are told they were before our civil war? |
58608 | What are the populations of the islands?" |
58608 | What do you suppose a Penang lawyer is? |
58608 | What is it?" |
58608 | What is that?" |
58608 | how could you do so? |
58608 | said Fred,"and how is it carried on?" |
58608 | screamed the woman,''why did n''t you pull my baby out of the fire?'' |
43098 | ''Tis funny, ai nt it? 43098 Ai nt it terrible?" |
43098 | And each one of those children has an equal right to life and liberty? |
43098 | Do you believe him to be omnipotent, omniscient, and all- just? |
43098 | Do you think all people alike? |
43098 | Does he ever speak of it? |
43098 | Have you lived here long? |
43098 | How are vacancies to be obtained? 43098 How do you propose to get all this?" |
43098 | How much rent do you pay? |
43098 | Like it? |
43098 | Mrs. Bossert,I cried out,"are n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
43098 | My clothes,I reiterated;"are they here or upstairs?" |
43098 | No,he said shortly, and then with a sudden look at her,"Effie, what do you think love is?" |
43098 | One over the other? |
43098 | Shall I help you over? |
43098 | The criminal slew,says Tolstoy:"are you better, then, when you slay? |
43098 | The result? 43098 Then you believe he has the power to order all things as he wills, and being all- just he wills all things according to justice?" |
43098 | Then you believe him to be the impartially- loving father of all his created children? |
43098 | Three rooms? |
43098 | What do you mean? 43098 What was it blew? |
43098 | Where is our bridge? |
43098 | Which is? |
43098 | Will you kiss me once? 43098 Will you let me off at Ninth and Race?" |
43098 | Would you like to hear that they,--one,--the worst of them, was dead? |
43098 | ***** What have you done, O Church, That the weary should bless your name? |
43098 | = Why? |
43098 | A dream? |
43098 | A sharp contraction went across the strong bent face:"No? |
43098 | A vision? |
43098 | AVE ET VALE Comrades, what matter the watch- night tells That a New Year comes or goes? |
43098 | Abraham, David, Solomon,--could any respectable member of society admit that he had done the things they did? |
43098 | After a little silence she asked without looking at him:"What are you thinking of, Bernard?" |
43098 | After all, who are the really old? |
43098 | Ah, know we not in their feasting halls Where the loud laugh echoes again, That brick and stone in the mortared walls Are the bones of murdered men? |
43098 | Am I blasphemous? |
43098 | Am I blasphemous? |
43098 | Am I not as the rest of you, With a hope to reach, and a dream to live? |
43098 | Am I not the breath of life that pants and struggles for relief?" |
43098 | Am I repentant because I saved its starving body from Famine''s teeth? |
43098 | Am I repentant for that, you ask? |
43098 | Am I repentant for the act, the last on earth in my power, to save From the long- drawn misery of life, in the early death and the painless grave? |
43098 | An hour later she was back at the old question,"Was it my fault?" |
43098 | And begin to quest the libraries for literary justifications of their preference? |
43098 | And does not all the audience go home in love with her? |
43098 | And for one''s ideal dream of a fat meal? |
43098 | And have we not Zaza, who is worth a thousand of her respectable lover and his respectable wife? |
43098 | And if you have not yourself, are you able to delegate to any judge the power which you have not? |
43098 | And is the action of the man who takes the necessities which have been denied to him really criminal? |
43098 | And leap in again? |
43098 | And meanwhile? |
43098 | And pray, what idea of life should a people have whose means of life in their own way have been taken from them? |
43098 | And she thought on,"Why does he want to live at all, why does any one want to live, why do I want to live myself?" |
43098 | And suddenly the question came into my head:''If you had the power would you save Nathaniel''s life or bring back the water to the glen?'' |
43098 | And tear back? |
43098 | And that other men, with guns upon their shoulders, ride beside them-- with orders to kill if the living links break? |
43098 | And the earth is gray; A bitter wind is driving from the north; The stone is cold, and strange cold whispers say:"What do ye here with Death? |
43098 | And was I less Than you? |
43098 | And what help is there? |
43098 | And what hope is there? |
43098 | And what is the result of it? |
43098 | And what of the dream that turned to madness and destroyed the thing it loved the best? |
43098 | And when you have done all this, what then do you do to them, these creatures of your own making? |
43098 | And why defense at all? |
43098 | And why punishment? |
43098 | And why shall they not become thieves? |
43098 | And why? |
43098 | Are these all the aims of Anarchism? |
43098 | Are we not they who delve and blast And hammer and build and burn? |
43098 | Are you feeble and timid of spirit? |
43098 | Are you in a hurry?" |
43098 | Are you strong and courageous? |
43098 | As a prominent lawyer, Mr. Thomas Earle White, of Philadelphia, himself an Anarchist, said to me not long since:"What are you going to do about it? |
43098 | Ask a method? |
43098 | At Macon, in the sixth century, says August Bebel, the fathers of the Church met and proposed the decision of the question,"Has woman a soul?" |
43098 | At what moment will the fierce impurities borne from its somber and tenebrous past be hurled up in you? |
43098 | BASTARD BORN Why do you clothe me with scarlet of shame? |
43098 | Because I hastened what time would do, to spare it pain and relieve its death? |
43098 | Bred for the shambles, with curses begotten, Useless to all save the rotting grave- worm? |
43098 | But do you think it''s love that makes David act as he does to you? |
43098 | But meanwhile must we not punish to protect ourselves? |
43098 | But what, say you, had it to do with his instinctive modesty? |
43098 | But whatever you think of Morral, pray why was Ferrer arrested and the Modern School of Barcelona closed? |
43098 | But who can know them all? |
43098 | But"Oh, how, how was the miracle accomplished? |
43098 | But, do you know what I am thinking?" |
43098 | Can they lay aught on thee with"Be alone,"That hast conquered breath? |
43098 | Can they weight thee now with the heaviest stone? |
43098 | Can this be done in a city? |
43098 | Could they who had seen these things"forgive and forget"? |
43098 | Dare you say that? |
43098 | Defense of what? |
43098 | Defense to whom? |
43098 | Did Ferrer know this? |
43098 | Did I accuse you?" |
43098 | Did I not love it? |
43098 | Did they shrink from the stab of the dressmaker''s needle? |
43098 | Did they sleep, I wonder, on the night before the 20th of May, when that dark thunder of vengeance was gathering to break? |
43098 | Did you ever see a dead vine bloom? |
43098 | Did you not know it all long ago?" |
43098 | Do I have time to waste on this disgusting scene? |
43098 | Do I not also live where you have sought to pierce in vain? |
43098 | Do I not fear for the judgment hour? |
43098 | Do I repent that I killed the babe? |
43098 | Do I repent? |
43098 | Do n''t they look beautiful?" |
43098 | Do they mean anything at all by it? |
43098 | Do they not know how all this traffic would crumble like the ash of a burnt- out fire, once the blaze of science were to flame through Spain? |
43098 | Do we forget them, these broken ones, That our watch to- night is set? |
43098 | Do we not appear therein as curious little dwarfs who have somehow gotten"big heads"? |
43098 | Do we not know that our brothers die In the cold and the dark to- night? |
43098 | Do you ask Spring her method? |
43098 | Do you ask whence the perfume that round you creeps When your soul is wrought to the quick with pain? |
43098 | Do you curse the bloom of the heather wild? |
43098 | Do you expect healthy morals out of all these poisoned bodies? |
43098 | Do you keep to the law of the just, And hold to the changeless true? |
43098 | Do you know that every day men run in long procession, upon the road they build for others''safe and easy going, bound to a chain? |
43098 | Do you know what it is they see up there above you, they whose eyes look through the mist of gray and the shroud of darkness? |
43098 | Do you know what it is? |
43098 | Do you know,"turning suddenly to him with a sharp change in face and voice,"what I would be wicked enough to do, if I could?" |
43098 | Do you punish them for their idiocy or for their unfortunate physical condition? |
43098 | Do you question the sun that it gives its gold? |
43098 | Do you remember when Nathaniel died? |
43098 | Do you scowl at the cloud when it pours its rain Till the fields that were withered and burnt and old Are fresh and tender and young again? |
43098 | Do you search the source of the breeze that sweeps The rush of the fever from tortured brain? |
43098 | Do you shun the bird- songs''silver shower? |
43098 | Do you still expect the due of youth and beauty? |
43098 | Do you think people come out of a place like that better? |
43098 | Do you trample the flowers and cry"impure"? |
43098 | Does any one want to shake his hand, the hand that kills for pay? |
43098 | Does it mean that in our day there is nothing interesting in good health, in well- ordered lives? |
43098 | Does not each bosom shelter me that beats with honor''s generous tide? |
43098 | Does their music arouse your curling scorn That none but God blessed them? |
43098 | For what is it to be legitimate, born"according to law"? |
43098 | For who are we to be bound and drowned In this river of human blood? |
43098 | Go into the courts, and fight for your legal rights? |
43098 | Going to see Chinatown?" |
43098 | Had the hammers been beating on that fair young face? |
43098 | Hanging? |
43098 | Has not one of our latter- day martyrs said,"Men die, but principles live"? |
43098 | Have I not promised you a sweet release when your dark pilgrimage on earth is o''er? |
43098 | Have I wronged any? |
43098 | Have we not the"Second Mrs. Tanqueray"who comes to grief through an endeavor to conform to a moral standard that does not fit? |
43098 | Have we not the_ Philistine_ and its witty editor, boldly proclaiming in Anarchistic spelling,"I am an Anarkist?" |
43098 | Have you blown out the breath of their sighs? |
43098 | Have you ever watched it coming in,--the sea? |
43098 | Have you ever wondered in the midst of it all_ which particular drops of water_ would strike the wall? |
43098 | Have you heard the children''s moan, By the light of the skies denied? |
43098 | Have you heard the cry in the night Going up from the outraged heart, Masked from the social sight By the cloak that but angered the smart? |
43098 | Have you no such thing as a slave? |
43098 | Have you strengthened the weak, the ill? |
43098 | Have you touched, have you known, have you felt, Have you bent and softly smiled In the face of the woman, who dwelt In lewdness-- to feed her child? |
43098 | Have you wiped the dark tears from their eyes, And bade their sobbings be still? |
43098 | He entered with a smile:"Can I do anything for you this morning?" |
43098 | He glanced at the crowd with a thin smile:"Do? |
43098 | He smiled tolerantly:"You, wicked? |
43098 | He took another''s liberty; and is it the right way, therefore, for you to take his? |
43098 | He went on:"You love the child, do n''t you? |
43098 | How and when were these schools founded? |
43098 | How are gardens possible in a city? |
43098 | How could it be anything else? |
43098 | How did they know it would come? |
43098 | How do you guard the trust That the people repose in you? |
43098 | How free are your people, pray? |
43098 | How hast Thou heard their prayers Smoking up from the bleeding sod, Who, crushed by their weight of cares, Cried up to Thee, Most High God? |
43098 | How to explain it? |
43098 | How will the chains be broken? |
43098 | However, Madero and his aids are in, as was expected; the question is, how will they stay in? |
43098 | I conceive the poor wretch might reply as follows:) To say in my defense? |
43098 | I shall smile when I die"? |
43098 | If he is so bad a man, why in the name of wonder did he ever get in the penitentiary? |
43098 | If he is so_ great_ a criminal, why is he not with the rest of the spawn of crime, dining at Delmonico''s or enjoying a trip to Europe? |
43098 | If he loved you, would he let you work as you work? |
43098 | Ignorant, mean and soulless was he? |
43098 | In Defense of Emma Goldman and the Right of Expropriation The light is pleasant, is it not, my friends? |
43098 | In the end I swallowed it as I did a lot of other"pre- digested"knowledge(?) |
43098 | Is Bella ready to go?" |
43098 | Is he morally worse than the man who crawls in a cellar and dies of starvation? |
43098 | Is he to be let go, as he is now, until he does some violent deed and then be judged more hardly because of his natural defect? |
43098 | Is it a wonder that most of them came out Anarchists? |
43098 | Is it any wonder that the law of compulsory education is a mockery? |
43098 | Is it life to creep and crawl and beg, And slink for shelter where rats congregate? |
43098 | Is it not enough that"things are cruel and blind"? |
43098 | Is it that you are weary of the yoke of love I lay on you? |
43098 | Is it, then, life, to wait another''s nod, For leave to turn yourself to gold for him? |
43098 | Is there aught in them you can see To merit this hemlock you make me drink? |
43098 | Is there nothing more divine Than the patched up broils of Congress,--venal, full of meat and wine? |
43098 | Is there, say you, nothing higher-- naught, God save us, that transcends Laws of cotton texture wove by vulgar men for vulgar ends? |
43098 | Is this the way to the kitchen? |
43098 | Is this thy word, O Mother, with stern eyes, Crowning thy dead with stone- caressing touch? |
43098 | Is this your Divine Justice? |
43098 | Is this your faith? |
43098 | It does not occur to them that the child''s question,"What do I have to learn that for?" |
43098 | It says,"Do you believe in God?" |
43098 | Know ye the Law, that ye dare to blast The bell of gold with your clanging brass? |
43098 | Know ye the harvest the reapers reap Who drop in the furrow the seed of scorn? |
43098 | LOVE''S COMPENSATION I went before God, and he said,"What fruit of the life I gave?" |
43098 | Let woman ask herself,"Why am I the slave of Man? |
43098 | Love them and help them, to teach them to be better? |
43098 | May we not linger till the day is broad? |
43098 | May we not weep o''er him that martyred lies, Slain in our name, for that he loved us much? |
43098 | Me, who knew That the gentlest soul in the world looked there, Out of the gray eyes that pitied you E''en while you cursed her? |
43098 | Moreover, who is to say how they may develop their methods once they have a free opportunity to do so? |
43098 | Mourn ye the prisoner from his chains let free? |
43098 | Must we also be cruel and blind? |
43098 | Must we forever thus worthlessly perish, Burned in the desert and lost in the snow? |
43098 | My own fingers were curiously numb and inert; had I, too, become a shadow? |
43098 | Nay, none are stirring in this stinging dawn-- None but poor wretches that make no moan to God: What use are these, O thou with dagger drawn? |
43098 | No longer than a week since an Anarchist(?) |
43098 | No, you have never felt it? |
43098 | Not every brow that boldly thinks erect with manhood''s honest pride? |
43098 | Not every workshop brooding woe, not every hut that harbors grief? |
43098 | Not strange if some should pause and shudder and cry out,"Is it worth the sacrifice?" |
43098 | Now do we see that all men eat,--eat well? |
43098 | Now what in all conscience would any one with decent human feeling expect a Yaqui to do? |
43098 | Now, is it reasonable to suppose that the individuals who are thriving upon these sales, want a condition of popular enlightenment? |
43098 | Now_ will_ somebody tell me why either sex should hold a corner on athletic sports? |
43098 | OUT OF THE DARKNESS Who am I? |
43098 | Oh, in the mass of sunshine must they still cry for light? |
43098 | Oh, is there no one to find or to speak a meaning to_ me_, To me as I am,--the hard, the ignorant, withered- souled worker? |
43098 | Oh, that my god will none of me? |
43098 | Only a little, only so much as to give you health again; is that too much? |
43098 | Only one of the commonest common people, Only a worked- out body, a shriveled and withered soul, What right have I to sing then? |
43098 | Or bow to the chalice that holds The wine of your Sacred Feast? |
43098 | Or did they dread some stronger weapon? |
43098 | Or does it mean simply that the most powerful writers are themselves diseased, and can only paint disease? |
43098 | Or does it mean that the rarest thing in all the world is the so- called normal man, whom tacit consent assumes to be the commonest? |
43098 | Or rather what does Government do with them? |
43098 | Or remembering Say that her love had bloomed from Hell? |
43098 | Regard it a proof that the people were appeased? |
43098 | Rests not a nook for me to dwell in every heart, in every brain? |
43098 | Shall the fruitless root not burn, And be wasted utterly?" |
43098 | Shall you go to the picnic? |
43098 | Shall you then cry out for punishment if they are hurled up in another? |
43098 | She had not expected such an one; how could she? |
43098 | She looked at him once as she said,"What do you think the people will do about it?" |
43098 | She walked away and sat down in a corner alone; what could she do, what could any one do? |
43098 | Should I say that I blush for this face of Man? |
43098 | Should come with faith''s holy torch To light up your altar''d fane? |
43098 | Should they be so mighty anxious to convert their strength into wealth for some other man to loll in? |
43098 | Should we call it a condition of peace? |
43098 | So if it was justice to Effie, what is it to that other woman? |
43098 | So there is enough, who cares? |
43098 | So unrepentant, so hard and cold? |
43098 | Such is the test we are to apply to the present inquiry, What is wrong with our present method of Child Education? |
43098 | Sun for the road, sun for the stones, sun for the red clay-- and no light for this dark living clay? |
43098 | THE GODS AND THE PEOPLE What have you done, O skies, That the millions should kneel to you? |
43098 | THE ROAD BUILDERS("Who built the beautiful roads?" |
43098 | That it''s all good and settled? |
43098 | That the Mexican people are satisfied? |
43098 | The elephant calmly upraised his trunk, And said,"Did I hear a green chipmunk?" |
43098 | The glitter and blare in the laughing press, And din of the merry street? |
43098 | The indifferentist shrugs his shoulders and remarks to the conservative:"What have I to do with it? |
43098 | The problem then becomes, Is it possible to stir men from their indifference? |
43098 | The question naturally intrudes, How does the Church, how do the religious orders manage to accumulate such wealth? |
43098 | The rest? |
43098 | The sources of wealth remain indivisible forever; who cares if one has a little more or less, so all have enough? |
43098 | The very best answer a child ever gets to its legitimate inquiry,"Why do I have to learn such and such a thing?" |
43098 | The whirl of the dancing feet? |
43098 | Then her mouth settled in a quiet sneer and she murmured:"How long is''forever''? |
43098 | Then why create a second class of parasites worse than the first? |
43098 | There are thousands of such, why then commemorate this one? |
43098 | They who had seen ten year old children lashed to make them tell where their fathers were? |
43098 | Things change, seasons change, you, I, all change; what''s the use of saying''Never-- forever, forever-- never,''like the old clock on the stairs? |
43098 | Those who, by the essence of their belief, are committed to Direct Action only are-- just who? |
43098 | To preserve your cruel, vicious, indecent standard of purity(?) |
43098 | To the question"What have you to say in your defense?" |
43098 | To what end are they produced? |
43098 | Trampled, forsaken, foredoomed, and forgotten,-- Helplessly tossed like the leaf in the storm? |
43098 | Was I not born with hopes and dreams And pains and passions even as were you? |
43098 | Was it he I loved? |
43098 | We had thrust the roses through with our forbidding quills,--what matter that a barbarian nail crucified this last one? |
43098 | We know it now, and we care no more; What matters life or death? |
43098 | We may inquire, Is he to be exterminated at birth because of certain physical indications of his criminality? |
43098 | Well, what is this, This crime I commit, being"bastard born"? |
43098 | Were they not common men, subject to the operation of common law? |
43098 | What are the lauded"rights,"Broad- sealed, by your Sovereign Grace? |
43098 | What are the love- feeding sights You yield to your subject race? |
43098 | What are we to conclude from all these reports? |
43098 | What beast of all the beasts is not prouder and freer than we?" |
43098 | What could be added to this splendid tribute by Jay Fox to the memory of= Voltairine de Cleyre=? |
43098 | What country can preserve its liberties if its rulers are not warned from time to time that the people preserve the spirit of resistance? |
43098 | What do you know about Mexicans? |
43098 | What do you mean when you say"The home of the free and brave"? |
43098 | What do you see?" |
43098 | What does Society do? |
43098 | What else could you expect from the Crusader, the Reformationist, the Revolutionist? |
43098 | What good does it do?" |
43098 | What had I done? |
43098 | What had been his mental evolution during those 24 years? |
43098 | What have those mercies been, O thou, who art called the Good, Who trod through a world of sin, And stood where the felon stood? |
43098 | What have you done to preserve the conditions of freedom to the people? |
43098 | What have you done-- you the keepers of the Declaration and the Constitution-- what have you done about all this? |
43098 | What help is there? |
43098 | What hope is there? |
43098 | What is it to be illegitimate? |
43098 | What is really necessary for a child to know which he is not taught now? |
43098 | What is that wondrous peace Vouchsafed to the child of dust, For whom all doubt shall cease In the light of thy perfect trust? |
43098 | What is the crime that you hissingly name When you sneer in my ears,"Thou bastard born?" |
43098 | What is the meaning of it? |
43098 | What is to be done in the way of altering or abolishing it? |
43098 | What is_ a_ revolution? |
43098 | What of purity can ye know, Ye ten- fold children of Hell and Sin? |
43098 | What rashness is it that you meditate? |
43098 | What then will become of the surplus product when the manufacturer shall have no foreign market? |
43098 | What then? |
43098 | What then? |
43098 | What to thee is the island grave? |
43098 | What to us are the crashing bells That clang out the Century''s close? |
43098 | What to us is the gala dress? |
43098 | What waits them? |
43098 | What waits? |
43098 | What was that spirit? |
43098 | What was the plantation owning of our southern states in chattel slavery days, compared with this? |
43098 | What was the use? |
43098 | What was this opportunity for which the Jesuitry of Spain waited with such terrible security? |
43098 | What would you think of the meanness of a man who would put a skirt upon his horse and compel it to walk or run with such a thing impeding its limbs? |
43098 | What, now, can we offer in the way of suggestions for reform? |
43098 | What, then, would I have? |
43098 | When the wind comes roaring out of the mist and a great bellowing thunders up from the water? |
43098 | Where are they?" |
43098 | Where was the loving hand that had nursed them to bloom in this hard, unwonted weather; loved and nursed and--_sold_ them? |
43098 | Which is more necessary, the sunshine or the rain? |
43098 | Which is the real Christianity, the simple doctrine attributed to Christ or the practical preaching and realizing of organized Christianity? |
43098 | Which is the real Commune,--the thing that was, or the thing our orators have painted it? |
43098 | Which will be the influencing power in the days that are to come? |
43098 | Who are we to lie in a swound, Half sunk in the river mud? |
43098 | Who are your accomplices?'' |
43098 | Who cares if something goes to waste? |
43098 | Who read it? |
43098 | Who thinks a dog is impure or obscene because its body is not covered with suffocating and annoying clothes? |
43098 | Who was he, that drunken sot, with his smirching, wabbling hand, that I should fear to take the roses from him? |
43098 | Who would?" |
43098 | Whom should I accuse since all are innocent? |
43098 | Why any child should not have free use of its limbs? |
43098 | Why are you not as I, who in one moment fly to the utterest universe? |
43098 | Why do n''t you cry out when a gag is on your lips? |
43098 | Why do n''t you go to the seashore or the mountains, you fools scorching with city heat? |
43098 | Why do n''t you raise your hands above your head when they are pinned fast to your sides? |
43098 | Why do n''t you run, when your feet are chained together? |
43098 | Why do n''t you spend thousands of dollars when you have n''t a cent in your pocket? |
43098 | Why do we have to keep still so long? |
43098 | Why do you point with your finger of scorn? |
43098 | Why is intelligence dealt thus harshly with? |
43098 | Why is my brain said not to be the equal of his brain? |
43098 | Why is my work not paid equally with his? |
43098 | Why may he take my children from me? |
43098 | Why may he take my labor in the household, giving me in exchange what he deems fit? |
43098 | Why murmur since I am I? |
43098 | Why must I grind my teeth and sit there helpless, while those beautiful things were crushed and blasted and torn in living fragments? |
43098 | Why must it all die?" |
43098 | Why must my body be controlled by my husband? |
43098 | Why not put up with the original one? |
43098 | Why not to the other, equally a helpless victim of an evil inheritance? |
43098 | Why ruin the rhythm and rhyme of the great world''s songs with moaning? |
43098 | Why should a fraction be made to stand on its head? |
43098 | Why should they clasp their hands, And bow at thy shrines, O heaven, Thanking thy high commands For the mercies that thou hast given? |
43098 | Why should they kiss the folds Of the garment of your High Priest? |
43098 | Why should they lift wet eyes, Grateful with human dew? |
43098 | Why so much fear? |
43098 | Why was he thrown in prison and kept there for more than a year? |
43098 | Why was it sought to railroad him before a Court Martial, and that attempt failing, the civil trial postponed for all that time? |
43098 | Why, now, have we such a continually increasing percentage of stealing? |
43098 | Why? |
43098 | Why? |
43098 | Why? |
43098 | Will it be said that Circumstances aided them? |
43098 | Will it cease? |
43098 | Will it freeze? |
43098 | Will them away while yet unborn?" |
43098 | Will there not be atrocious crimes? |
43098 | Will you forever shame me with your beastliness?" |
43098 | Will you look at these, the under- stratum of your social earth, and tell them they are free? |
43098 | Will you persistently hide your heads in the sand and say it is because men grow worse as they grow wiser? |
43098 | Will you tell me where they will go and what they shall do? |
43098 | Will you tell them ignorance is their greatest curse and education their only remedy? |
43098 | Will you tell these people there is a good, kind, merciful God who loves them, meting out justice to them from the skies? |
43098 | Will you touch my hand? |
43098 | With a soul to suffer, a heart to know The pangs that the thrusts of the heartless give? |
43098 | With desert wind and desolate wave Will they silence Death? |
43098 | Would I have you forget that the wine in the glasses was your children''s blood? |
43098 | Would he live off you? |
43098 | Would it be life to you? |
43098 | Would n''t he wear the flesh off his fingers instead of yours? |
43098 | Would you be always young? |
43098 | Would you have me forget? |
43098 | Would you have me hate her? |
43098 | Would you have me question her whence and how The love- light streamed from her heart''s deep ray? |
43098 | Would you say,"We are rid of this obscenist"? |
43098 | Would you smile to see him dead? |
43098 | Wroth was the Lord and stern:"Hadst thou not to answer me? |
43098 | Ye idle mourners, crying in your grief, The souls ye weep have found the long relief: Why grieve for those who fold their hands in peace? |
43098 | You are just the bubble on its crest; where will the current fling you ere you die? |
43098 | You do n''t understand that I love you, and I ca n''t see it? |
43098 | You do n''t understand what you are doing with yourself? |
43098 | You know those problems in geometry of the hare and the hounds-- they never run straight, but always in a curve, so, see? |
43098 | You surely will keep our foundation- day picnic?" |
43098 | You, tyrant radicals(? |
43098 | You, who have set them the example in every villainy? |
43098 | _ She was my mother-- I her child!_ Could ten thousand priests have made us more? |
43098 | _ Why_ might I not take them? |
43098 | and bow my neck to serve to keep up the gaudy show? |
43098 | and how did that change a division suddenly into a multiplication?" |
43098 | and what is taught that is unnecessary? |
43098 | and what is_ this_ revolution? |
43098 | electrocution? |
43098 | if we read that in the state of Illinois the farmers had driven off the tax collector? |
43098 | if, flung against the merciless rocks of the channel, while you swim easily in the midstream, they fall back and hurt other bubbles? |
43098 | that individual wickedness is the result of all our marvelous labors to compass sea and land, and make the earth yield up her wealth to us? |
43098 | that the coast states were talking of secession and forming an independent combination? |
43098 | that the prison doors of Maryland, within hailing distance of Washington City, were being thrown open by armed revoltees? |
43098 | that to conceive a higher thing than oneself and live toward that is the only way of living worthily? |
43098 | went up to a deaf sky, did you presage this desolate appeal coming to you out of the unlived depths of nineteen hundred years? |
43098 | with more regard for the rights of their fellow men? |
43098 | with more respect for society? |
47730 | Know ye not that we walk by faith and not by sight? |
47730 | Shall we understand,writes with some feeling one objector,"that Urim and Thummim are not what they hitherto purported to be?" |
47730 | There is a Jewish population of about 500 in Salt Lake City,said Rabbi Reynolds? |
47730 | They were prophets of whom the world was not worthy? |
47730 | What did Congress require by the Enabling act? 47730 What,"said the aged patriarch,"shall I and thy mother and thy brethren indeed come to bow down ourselves to thee to the earth?" |
47730 | _ That is more definite, is it not? 47730 ''Have you ever felt the need of a revolver?'' 47730 ''If Senator Smoot is unseated, would the influence of the Mormons in the state and the nation be diminished?'' 47730 A compact or a contract? 47730 After eliminating these, what method has he left for crushing Mormonism? 47730 After these remarks I can hear some in their hearts ask,How, then, shall we attain to certainty? |
47730 | And inasmuch as there is a gathering, must there not also be made some provision to care for the people who come to us? |
47730 | And is he not infallible? |
47730 | And now I submit to you the question: Where is the evidence of the fulfilment of these great promises of God to Joseph? |
47730 | And who is held responsible for that violation? |
47730 | And who is responsible for its palpable errors? |
47730 | And why should the gentleman remain in cog? |
47730 | And why? |
47730 | Are these flagrant errors in grammar chargeable to the Lord? |
47730 | Are these important truths we have been considering this evening, wherein the welfare of half the world is concerned, gold or dross? |
47730 | Are they not interested in vindicating that description? |
47730 | Are we to infer from this that"M"thinks Shakespeare had no English Bible from which to paraphrase this passage? |
47730 | Are we to suppose that they were without God while all the rest of mankind found him? |
47730 | Based on polygamy, how could the system be otherwise than rotten? |
47730 | Based on polygamy, how could the system be otherwise than rotten? |
47730 | But how do you suppose the crushing is to be accomplished? |
47730 | But is it an oral''understanding''that exists between the States and the general government by reason of this''general welfare''power? |
47730 | But is it worth while? |
47730 | But the question is asked,"Why bring these matters up at all?" |
47730 | But under such methods of proving things how would the immaculate life and character of the Son of God himself stand before the world? |
47730 | But what boots it? |
47730 | But what is the matter with the Journal''s representative? |
47730 | But what of the effect on Mormonism? |
47730 | But what of the truth? |
47730 | But what of those for whom it is not enough? |
47730 | But what''s to be done? |
47730 | Can any of you recognize President Joseph F. Smith in that description? |
47730 | Can it be that those special blessings pronounced upon the head of Joseph by the Lord have failed? |
47730 | Can it be that we are living in an age that boasts of its Christian civilization? |
47730 | Can straight- out lying or any other description of lying whatsoever beat this? |
47730 | Can you think of this beautiful arrangement for the foreign ministry as having its origin in the alleged epileptic hallucinations of a man? |
47730 | Could absurdity go farther?" |
47730 | Defense of the Mormon People against"M''s"Attack V. WHICH OF THE SECTS HAS PERSECUTED MORMONISM MOST? |
47730 | Did Joseph copy it from the Bible, or did the Lord adopt this identical language in revealing it to Joseph? |
47730 | Did it bring back the gift of faith, of knowledge, of wisdom, of discernment of spirits? |
47730 | Did it bring back the gift of prophecy, and of revelation; of speaking in tongues, and interpreting them? |
47730 | Did it bring back the power to heal the sick by the laying on of hands and the anointing with oil? |
47730 | Did it bring it back in any other respect? |
47730 | Did it restore the primitive organization of the church? |
47730 | Did it restore the spiritual gifts so characteristic of primitive Christianity? |
47730 | Did the"octopus"die? |
47730 | Did they make of the church a means, a channel of divine communication between the church and her Lord? |
47730 | Do n''t you think that is better? |
47730 | Do not these facts throw some light upon our knowledge of Christian truth? |
47730 | Do the chiefs of the Church desire to precipitate this state of affairs?" |
47730 | Does III Nephi add anything worth while to the picture? |
47730 | Does any Protestant minister or layman doubt this? |
47730 | Does he not hold the keys of the kingdom of heaven? |
47730 | Does it go for nothing?" |
47730 | Does it make the truth any more real or forcible to use grammatical terms in which to express it? |
47730 | Does that add anything to the picture in the career of Messiah? |
47730 | Filled with what? |
47730 | For what is the chaff to the wheat?" |
47730 | Have not the Mormons as well as other citizens a right to such assistance? |
47730 | Have the promises of Jehovah gone for naught? |
47730 | Have you not read the golden words,"We can do nothing against the truth, but for the truth?" |
47730 | He said the question is not where do men say they got it, but, is it gold? |
47730 | He told the dream to his brethren, and they said:"Shalt thou indeed reign over us?" |
47730 | His relationship to God and to the Savior having been fixed by the first revelation, what next? |
47730 | How are we to know when men speak and act under divine inspiration, and when by their own unaided human intelligence? |
47730 | How does it come that this so- called fifth gospel gives us no new parables? |
47730 | How will this august decision handed down from the Vatican affect the ministry of the Protestant churches? |
47730 | If the Book of Mormon, as Elder Roberts claims, is a revelation from God, what moral or religious truth does it reveal which we did not know before? |
47730 | In concluding his utterance the editorial writer in question closed the passage I quoted with the question,"Could absurdity go further?" |
47730 | In other states are not the laws violated? |
47730 | In the presence of these considerations, it is but natural to ask,"Is there no way by which such a conclusion may be avoided?" |
47730 | Intensely interested; and hence my text of one word,"How?" |
47730 | Is he ashamed to be known as engaging in such a discussion? |
47730 | Is he not the successor of St. Peter-- Christ''s vicegerent on earth? |
47730 | Is it anti- American to have priesthood rule in an ecclesiastical institution-- in a Church? |
47730 | Is it gold? |
47730 | Is it indeed desirable? |
47730 | Is it more remarkable that the Lord should reveal to Lehi what the voice in the wilderness should cry than that he should reveal it to Isaiah? |
47730 | Is it not demonstrated that Utah is an abnormal State? |
47730 | Is it not impossible for him to make a mistake? |
47730 | Is it not in part the meaning of life that we are here under just such conditions as prevail in order that we may learn the value of better things? |
47730 | Is it oral? |
47730 | Is it unreasonable to think that among these was the transition from the Jewish Sabbath to the Lord''s Day? |
47730 | Is its organization competent to attain those two mighty ends? |
47730 | Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?" |
47730 | Is not this very doubt of ours concerning the finality of things-- finality which ever seems to elude our grasp-- the means of our education? |
47730 | Is our Christian knowledge increased by it? |
47730 | Is that true? |
47730 | Is the light which it throws upon the word of God contained in the Four Gospels, of importance? |
47730 | Is the solemn warning to the Gentile nations inhabiting the western world worth while considering? |
47730 | Is there any such case? |
47730 | Is there anything in the Mormon doctrine that makes it necessary to believe that of men, even of high officials in the Church? |
47730 | Is there menace in this system? |
47730 | It consists of one word only, and that one word is,"How?" |
47730 | It does not hurt the truth, to so change the expression of it, does it? |
47730 | It having been determined, then, that the translation of the Book of Mormon is in English idiom, the question remains, Whose is it? |
47730 | It is asked, however,"Shall we understand that Urim and Thummim are not what they have hitherto purported to be?" |
47730 | Its central idea of government being that of priesthood rule, how could it be otherwise than anti- American? |
47730 | Its central idea of government being that of priesthood rule, how could it be otherwise than anti- American? |
47730 | Marvelous, is it not? |
47730 | May it not be golden, especially if heeded? |
47730 | Must we not provide some way for them to gain a foothold in the land if they are to become inhabitants of Zion? |
47730 | Now then, suppose these conditions, and suppose further that Jesus came here, what would be the nature of his mission? |
47730 | Now what authority have they for doing this? |
47730 | Now, what do you think of this effort of philosophy, as set forth by Mr. Riley, to account for Mormonism? |
47730 | Or"whoredoms_ are_ an abomination to the Lord?" |
47730 | Other men saw the famous Kinderhook plates, but what of it? |
47730 | REFORMATION OR REVOLUTION? |
47730 | Reformation or Revolution? |
47730 | Suppose the act of 1892 were valid? |
47730 | That being the demand, what was the response to it on the part of the people of Utah, speaking through the Constitutional convention? |
47730 | That is, how is the"Crushing of Mormonism"to be effected? |
47730 | The Lord, or man? |
47730 | The Urim and Thummim''s, the Lord''s, or is it Joseph Smith''s? |
47730 | The gentleman will agree with me that your[ his] amendment will repeal the other kindred offenses in that statute?" |
47730 | The question is then asked,"What remains?" |
47730 | The question submitted to me was,"Is the Catholic church the church here referred to-- the church of the devil?" |
47730 | The whole community who are not parties to the violation''of the law? |
47730 | Then after that, what would be the next most important thing? |
47730 | Then how will he proceed? |
47730 | Then tell me why they spare it? |
47730 | Then this question was asked:"Suppose a revelation is given to the Church, and the Church in conference assembled rejects it by vote, what remains? |
47730 | Then whence the source of their power and their intelligence? |
47730 | They were not inspired in those instances, were they? |
47730 | This gospel, then, is proclaimed to all the nations of the earth, and what happens? |
47730 | Thus limited, that doctrine is all right, is it not? |
47730 | To answer the matter in the above quotation, it is necessary to ask: What is the Manual theory of translating the Nephite record? |
47730 | Turn now for a moment to the home ministry of the Church, and what have you? |
47730 | WHAT IS NEW IN IT? |
47730 | Well, is there any proper complaint to be made against that? |
47730 | Well, what is the essential thing in a revelation? |
47730 | Well, what of it? |
47730 | What acquaintances and neighbors? |
47730 | What does Nephi add which deserves to be classed with such revelations? |
47730 | What does he mean? |
47730 | What does the world care about that in the last analysis of it? |
47730 | What effect did that illegal act of Congress have on Mormonism? |
47730 | What has been the effect of coercion? |
47730 | What if there were imperfect, or ungrammatical sentences in it? |
47730 | What is it indicated by? |
47730 | What is the chaff to the wheat? |
47730 | What kind of rule would he have but that of a priesthood rule in such organizations? |
47730 | What land so well corresponds to that described both by Jacob and Moses as the inheritance of Joseph? |
47730 | What means are to be invoked? |
47730 | What moral law may not men in their individual capacity reject? |
47730 | What prevented him from putting in his own views? |
47730 | What prevented him from putting into the Book of Mormon the peculiar and well- known views of Sidney Rigdon, with which the book is saturated? |
47730 | What process followed? |
47730 | What provision has God made for that? |
47730 | What shall the Americans of that Commonwealth do if the people of the United States do not heed their cry? |
47730 | What should he first do? |
47730 | What truth do these Christian critics hold to be the most important truth to mankind? |
47730 | What would be gained by the adoption of this cumbersome and, pardon me, I think, untenable theory? |
47730 | What would be your thought of such an one? |
47730 | When men came to the Son of God anciently and demanded to know"Art thou the Messiah, or must we look for another?" |
47730 | Whence did the two witnesses in question obtain such knowledge as they had about the manner of translation? |
47730 | Where does it exist? |
47730 | Where in the history of the world is the account of the fulfilment of the blessings pronounced upon Joseph by his father? |
47730 | Where would human agency or human intelligence exist in the one case or be developed in the other under such circumstances? |
47730 | Where? |
47730 | Whoredoms_ are_ an abomination to the Lord? |
47730 | Why does there exist a Roman Catholic church and numerous Protestant churches? |
47730 | Why humiliate these innocent victims by persecuting them unnecessarily when they show an inclination to rid themselves and the county of the blot? |
47730 | Why incredible is it judged by you if God dead raises? |
47730 | Why is it that the atheists or the infidels do not obey the gospel? |
47730 | Why is the unity of the Christian churches broken? |
47730 | Why, then, does he talk about committing the crime of polygamy"in good faith?" |
47730 | Will Congress allow this awful calamity to continue? |
47730 | Will Congress allow this awful calamity to continue?" |
47730 | Will you tell me how a monarchy can exist in the face of these fundamental truths? |
47730 | With the precious fruits brought forth by the sun and the precious things of the everlasting hills, and with the precious things of the deep? |
47730 | Would he solicit Church influence? |
47730 | Would it hurt the truth, the expression of it, to say"the spirit and the body_ are_ the soul of man?" |
47730 | Would it not be to teach man his moral duty? |
47730 | Would not such a representation of the orchard be an untruth, notwithstanding his blighted specimens were gathered from its trees? |
47730 | Would not that be the most important thing to have declared? |
47730 | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?" |
47730 | You are not in doubt about that, are you? |
47730 | You corrected the grammar of the Almighty, did you?" |
47730 | You will observe that the primary consideration in the reverend gentleman''s discourse is, Does III Nephi add anything to the picture of Christ? |
47730 | _ Salt Lake City, Utah, Sept. 26, 1903._ V. WHICH OF THE SECTS HAS OPPOSED MORMONISM MOST? |
47730 | _"Elder_--As to the testimony I should give here? |
47730 | _"Senator_--And when it was handed to you it was an inspiration, as you understand, from on high, was it not? |
47730 | _"Senator_--But you changed the phraseology? |
47730 | _"Senator_--Do you mean to say that the Spirit of the Lord directs you in your answers here? |
47730 | _"Senator_--That is your understanding of it? |
47730 | _"Senator_--Then in your belief, did the Spirit of the Lord direct you to make the answer which you just took back and said was a mistake? |
47730 | _"Senator_--There is no inspiration of that or any part of it? |
47730 | _"Senator_--What business had you to change it? |
47730 | _"Senator_--You believe so? |
47730 | an''understanding''which is based on-- what? |
47730 | p. 357)] Will men call this merely coincidence? |
47730 | the influence of the President of the Church, for his re- election? |
47730 | what is the matter? |
58369 | ''But the picture Maou- yen- show brought to me?'' 58369 Adopt Tuen?" |
58369 | And what is it? |
58369 | Beautiful, did you say? |
58369 | But what god is this that he worships? |
58369 | But who is Jesus? |
58369 | Can no one help me out of this unfortunate difficulty? |
58369 | Can you do anything? |
58369 | Can you tell me nothing that will interest me? 58369 Did you ever dream there were so many boats and so many people in the world, Wang?" |
58369 | Did you, father? |
58369 | Do I no longer please you, that you want to get rid of me? |
58369 | Do you dare to question the accounts of our great historians-- you, a foolish girl? 58369 Do you not see that this is the procession of the Rain Dragons? |
58369 | How can I ever repay you, dear Wang,Tuen cried,"for teaching me to do this? |
58369 | How can there be anything to tell after she was married? |
58369 | I know that,she said, impatiently,"but what I mean is, could it ever happen again?" |
58369 | If she were very wise, could she have power, even in the Forbidden City? |
58369 | Is it that you are angry with me? |
58369 | Is there a God of Love? |
58369 | Is there no danger that where there are so many crafts some may be run into and sunk? |
58369 | Is there no rice, father? |
58369 | Must I go so soon? |
58369 | Seeing that she did not speak, but only blushed the more, he asked:''What is your name?'' |
58369 | Sell who again? |
58369 | Taught to read? |
58369 | The truth? |
58369 | Then it would be a great favor to you if I went and looked happy? |
58369 | Well, first, why do you wish to learn to read? |
58369 | Were the gods deaf to their prayers, that they should thus destroy them? |
58369 | Were you glad? |
58369 | What matters a girl? |
58369 | What? |
58369 | Where did he get her? |
58369 | Who ever heard of a woman who could read, or who even wanted to? 58369 Who is this creature?" |
58369 | Why should you, when you have food and clothes here? 58369 Why?" |
58369 | Will the dragons let it rain now, father? |
58369 | Yes, why not? |
58369 | You mean my son has bought, do you not? 58369 After a while, Tuen came back and, squatting down on a silken cushion beside Szu, said:Could a woman have done what that Woo How did?" |
58369 | And how dare you speak of selling her? |
58369 | Do n''t you say so, Wang?" |
58369 | Have you not some news of what goes on in the city?" |
58369 | Is not that enough?" |
58369 | Is not that true, O Wise ruler of the province of Kiangsi?" |
58369 | Just when she was so happy must it all come to an end? |
58369 | May I ask whither you are bound, that you traverse this bleak plain?" |
58369 | Now tell me what gods are the most to be feared?" |
58369 | Of all living creatures which would you like to be?" |
58369 | One day when the sun was hot and she was tired, Tuen said to Szu impatiently:"Do n''t you know anything except about the old kings and their wars?" |
58369 | Perhaps it was the admiration she read in his face, perhaps but an impulse that caused Tuen to ask abruptly:"What is your name?" |
58369 | Seeing that no one moved she cried, angrily:"What, is the reward not great enough? |
58369 | She was satisfied, why not let her stay where she was? |
58369 | The music sinks to a low, reverberating wail as the Princess tragically exclaims:"What place is this?" |
58369 | The old story- teller turned his face toward her, and asked, scornfully:"Who would listen to the babble of a woman? |
58369 | Was she again to be sent forth, alone and friendless, among strangers? |
58369 | What can the people hope when they have such rulers? |
58369 | What did he mean? |
58369 | What is it?" |
58369 | When the rescuer stood before her, Tuen said, reprovingly:"You have done well, but why must you be bought before you would help the drowning man?" |
58369 | Who first made porcelain? |
58369 | Who made paper first? |
58369 | Who was it that discovered the compass? |
58369 | Why did you not ask him for a silk dress, or for a pair of gold ear- rings? |
58369 | Why might not their souls, wandering in the unknown, look back to earth and listen to the prayers of mortals? |
58369 | Why should you make sport of me?" |
58369 | Will you not accept it, and thereby lighten a traveller''s load?" |
58369 | Wo Ting made a sign of assent, and someone else remarked:"Why not? |
58369 | Would he be pleased? |
58369 | Would he speak to her? |
58369 | Would he wear it there? |
58369 | Would you like to hear of her?" |
58369 | cried the astonished Emperor;''not Woo How, the daughter of one Tai- ting?'' |
4926 | Ah, Tristram''far away from me, Art thou from restless anguish free? 4926 Ah, lady,"said Geraint,"what hath befallen thee?" |
4926 | And art thou certain that if that knight knew all this, he would come to thy rescue? |
4926 | And how can I do that? |
4926 | And is it thus they have done with a maiden such as she, and moreover my sister, bestowing her without my consent? 4926 And what dost thou here?" |
4926 | And what may that be? |
4926 | And who is he? |
4926 | And who was it that slew them? |
4926 | And you, wherefore come you? |
4926 | By what means will that be? |
4926 | Damsel,said Sir Perceval,"who hath disinherited you? |
4926 | Did he meet with thee? |
4926 | Didst thou hear what Llywarch sung, The intrepid and brave old man? 4926 Didst thou inquire of them if they possessed any art?" |
4926 | Do you do this as one of the best knights? |
4926 | Dost thou know him? |
4926 | Dost thou know how much I owe thee? |
4926 | Fair brother, when came ye hither? |
4926 | Fair damsel,said Sir Launcelot,"know ye in this country any adventures?" |
4926 | Fair knight,said he,"how is it with you?" |
4926 | Geraint,said Guenever,"knowest thou the name of that tall knight yonder?" |
4926 | Has he not given it before the presence of these nobles? |
4926 | Hast thou heard what Avaon sung, The son of Taliesin, of the recording verse? 4926 Hast thou heard what Garselit sung, The Irishman whom it is safe to follow? |
4926 | Hast thou heard what Llenleawg sung, The noble chief wearing the golden torques? 4926 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
4926 | Hast thou not received all thou didst ask? |
4926 | Have you any tidings? |
4926 | Heaven prosper thee, Geraint,said she;"and why didst thou not go with thy lord to hunt?" |
4926 | I come, lord, from singing in England; and wherefore dost thou inquire? |
4926 | I put the case,said Palamedes,"that you were well armed, and I naked as ye be; what would you do to me now, by your true knighthood?" |
4926 | I stand in need of counsel,he answered,"and what may that counsel be?" |
4926 | I will gladly,said he;"and in which direction dost thou intend to go?" |
4926 | In the name of Heaven,said Manawyddan,"where are they of the court, and all my host beside? |
4926 | Is it known,said Arthur,"where she is?" |
4926 | Is it time for us to go to meat? |
4926 | Is not that a mouse that I see in thy hand? |
4926 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair? 4926 Know ye,"said Arthur,"who is the knight with the long spear that stands by the brook up yonder?" |
4926 | Knowest thou his name? |
4926 | Lady,he said,"wilt thou tell me aught concerning thy purpose?" |
4926 | Lady,said he,"knowest thou where our horses are?" |
4926 | Lady,said they,"what thinkest thou that this is?" |
4926 | Lord,said Kicva,"wherefore should this be borne from these boors?" |
4926 | Lord,said she,"didst thou hear the words of those men concerning thee?" |
4926 | Lord,said she,"what craft wilt thou follow? |
4926 | My men,said Pwyll,"is there any among you who knows yonder lady?" |
4926 | My son,said she,"desirest thou to ride forth?" |
4926 | My soul,said Gawl,"will thy bag ever be full?" |
4926 | My soul,said Pwyll,"what is the boon thou askest?" |
4926 | Now where did he overtake thee? |
4926 | Now, fellow,said King Arthur,"canst thou bring me there where this giant haunteth?" |
4926 | Now,quoth Owain,"would it not be well to go and endeavor to discover that place?" |
4926 | Now,said Arthur,"where is the maiden for whom I heard thou didst give challenge?" |
4926 | O my lord,said she,"what dost thou here?" |
4926 | Say ye so? |
4926 | Seest thou yonder red tilled ground? |
4926 | Sir knight,said Arthur,"for what cause abidest thou here?" |
4926 | Sir, what penance shall I do? |
4926 | Sir,said Geraint,"what is thy counsel to me concerning this knight, on account of the insult which the maiden of Guenever received from the dwarf?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Bedivere,"what man is there buried that ye pray so near unto?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Bohort,"but how know ye that I shall sit there?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Galahad,"can you tell me the marvel of the shield?" |
4926 | Sir,said she,"when thinkest thou that Geraint will be here?" |
4926 | Sir,said the king,"is it your will to alight and partake of our cheer?" |
4926 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure brought you hither?" |
4926 | Tell me, good lad,said one of them,"sawest thou a knight pass this way either today or yesterday?" |
4926 | Tell me, tall man,said Perceval,"is that Arthur yonder?" |
4926 | Tell me,said Sir Bohort,"knowest thou of any adventure?" |
4926 | Tell me,said the knight,"didst thou see any one coming after me from the court?" |
4926 | That will I not, by Heaven,she said;"yonder man was the first to whom my faith was ever pledged; and shall I prove inconstant to him?" |
4926 | Then Perceval told him his name, and said,Who art thou?" |
4926 | There is; wherefore dost thou call? |
4926 | This is indeed a marvel,said he;"saw you aught else?" |
4926 | This will I do gladly; and who art thou? |
4926 | Traitor knight,said Queen Guenever,"what wilt thou do? |
4926 | Truly,said Pwyll,"this is to me the most pleasing quest on which thou couldst have come; and wilt thou tell me who thou art?" |
4926 | Verily,said she,"what thinkest thou to do?" |
4926 | What are ye? |
4926 | What discourse,said Guenever,"do I hear between you? |
4926 | What doth my knight the while? 4926 What harm is there in that, lady?" |
4926 | What has become,said they,"of Caradoc, the son of Bran, and the seven men who were left with him in this island?" |
4926 | What hast thou there, lord? |
4926 | What have ye seen? |
4926 | What is the forest that is seen upon the sea? |
4926 | What is the lofty ridge, with the lake on each side thereof? |
4926 | What is there about him,asked Arthur,"that thou never yet didst see his like?" |
4926 | What is this? |
4926 | What is thy craft? |
4926 | What is your lord''s name? |
4926 | What is your name? |
4926 | What is your name? |
4926 | What kind of a thief may it be, lord, that thou couldst put into thy glove? |
4926 | What knight is he that thou hatest so above others? |
4926 | What manner of thief is that? |
4926 | What manner of thief, lord? |
4926 | What sawest thou there? |
4926 | What sawest thou there? |
4926 | What say ye to this adventure,said Sir Gawain,"that one spear hath felled us all four?" |
4926 | What saying was that? |
4926 | What sort of meal? |
4926 | What then wouldst thou? |
4926 | What thinkest thou that we should do concerning this? |
4926 | What treatment is there for guests and strangers that alight in that castle? |
4926 | What was that? |
4926 | What wight art thou,the lady said,"that will not speak to me? |
4926 | What wilt thou more? |
4926 | What work art thou upon? |
4926 | What wouldst thou with Arthur? |
4926 | Where are my pages and my servants? 4926 Where is Cuchulain?" |
4926 | Where is he that seeks my daughter? 4926 Where is the Earl Ynywl,"said Geraint,"and his wife and his daughter?" |
4926 | Where,said she,"are thy companion and thy dogs?" |
4926 | Wherefore came she to me? |
4926 | Wherefore comes he? |
4926 | Wherefore not? |
4926 | Wherefore not? |
4926 | Wherefore wilt thou not? |
4926 | Wherefore,said Evnissyen,"comes not my nephew, the son of my sister, unto me? |
4926 | Which way went they hence? |
4926 | Who may he be? |
4926 | Whose are the sheep that thou dost keep, and to whom does yonder castle belong? |
4926 | Why dost thou ask my name? |
4926 | Why should I not prove adventures? |
4926 | Why withdrawest thou, false traitor? |
4926 | Why, who is he? |
4926 | Why,said Sir Lionel,"will ye stay me? |
4926 | Why? |
4926 | Will she come here if she is sent to? |
4926 | Will this please thee? |
4926 | Willest thou this, lord? |
4926 | Wilt thou follow my counsel,said the youth,"and take thy meal from me?" |
4926 | Wilt thou follow the counsel of another? |
4926 | Yes, in truth,said she;"and who art thou?" |
4926 | And Arthur said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4926 | And Gawain was much grieved to see Arthur in his state, and he questioned him, saying,"O my lord, what has befallen thee?" |
4926 | And Gwernach said to him,"O man, is it true that is reported of thee, that thou knowest how to burnish swords?" |
4926 | And Kilwich said to Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is thy daughter mine now?" |
4926 | And Sir Launcelot heard him say,"O sweet Lord, when shall this sorrow leave me, and when shall the holy vessel come by me whereby I shall be healed?" |
4926 | And after twenty- four days he opened his eyes; and when he saw folk he made great sorrow, and said,"Why have ye wakened me? |
4926 | And as they came in, every one of Pwyll''s knights struck a blow upon the bag, and asked,"What is here?" |
4926 | And his father inquired of him,"What has come over thee, my son, and what aileth thee?" |
4926 | And now, wilt thou come to guide me out of the town?" |
4926 | And the earl said to Enid,"Alas, lady, what hath befallen thee?" |
4926 | And the maiden bent down towards her, and said,"What aileth thee, that thou answereth no one to- day?" |
4926 | And the queen said,"Ah, dear brother, why have ye tarried so long? |
4926 | And the woman asked them,"Upon what errand come you here?" |
4926 | And then he said to the man,"Canst thou tell me the way to some chapel, where I may bury this body?" |
4926 | And they spoke unto him, and said,"O man, whose castle is that?" |
4926 | And they went up to the mound whereon the herdsman was, and they said to him,"How dost thou fare, herdsman?" |
4926 | And thinking that he knew him, he inquired of him,"Art thou Edeyrn, the son of Nudd?" |
4926 | And what work art thou upon, lord?" |
4926 | And what, lord, art thou doing?" |
4926 | And when meat was ended, Pwyll said,"Where are the hosts that went yesterday to the top of the mound?" |
4926 | And whence dost thou come, scholar?" |
4926 | And who will proceed with thee, since thou art not strong enough to traverse the land of Loegyr alone?" |
4926 | And with this they put questions one to another, Who had braver men? |
4926 | And ye also, who are ye?" |
4926 | Asked Gwyddno,"Art thou able to speak, and thou so little?" |
4926 | Bethink thee how thou art a king''s son, and a knight of the Table Round, and how thou art about to dishonor all knighthood and thyself?" |
4926 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4926 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4926 | But, O fair nephew, what be these ladies that hither be come with you?" |
4926 | Does she ever come hither, so that she may be seen?" |
4926 | Dost thou bring any new tidings?" |
4926 | Dost thou not know that the shower to- day has left in my dominions neither man nor beast alive that was exposed to it?'' |
4926 | He said to his mother,"Mother, what are those yonder?" |
4926 | How can we describe the conflict that agitated the heart of Tristram? |
4926 | Is it of those who are to conduct Geraint to his country?" |
4926 | Is it well for thee to mourn after that good man, or for anything else that thou canst not have?" |
4926 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair?" |
4926 | My lord,"he added,"will it be displeasing to thee if I ask whence thou comest also?" |
4926 | Next follow some moral triads:"Hast thou heard what Dremhidydd sung, An ancient watchman on the castle walls? |
4926 | Out upon the wharfs they came, Knight and burgher, lord and dame, And round the prow they read her name,''The Lady of Shalott''"Who is this? |
4926 | Said Gurhyr Gwalstat,"Is there a porter?" |
4926 | Said Gurhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
4926 | Said Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
4926 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon, the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
4926 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4926 | So the porter went in, and Gwernach said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4926 | Spoke the youth:"Is there a porter?" |
4926 | Then Guenever said to Arthur,"Wilt thou permit me, lord, to go to- morrow to see and hear the hunt of the stag of which the young man spoke?" |
4926 | Then Sir Tristram cried out and said,"Thou coward knight, why wilt thou not do battle with me? |
4926 | Then at noon came a damsel unto him with his dinner, and asked him,"What cheer?" |
4926 | Then cried Sir Colgrevance,"Ah, Sir Bohort, why come ye not to bring me out of peril of death, wherein I have put me to succor you?" |
4926 | Then he asked of Geraint,"Have I thy permission to go and converse with yonder maiden, for I see that she is apart from thee?" |
4926 | Then he cried:"Ah, my lord Arthur, will ye leave me here alone among mine enemies?" |
4926 | Then he overtook a man clothed in a religious clothing, who said,"Sir Knight, what seek ye?" |
4926 | Then he said to the other,"And what is the cause of thy grief?" |
4926 | Then said Arthur,"Which of the marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4926 | Then said Perceval,"Tell me, is Sir Kay in Arthur''s court?" |
4926 | Then said the good man,"Now wottest thou who I am?" |
4926 | Then said the steward of the household,"Whither is it right, lord, to order the maiden?" |
4926 | Then the hoary- headed man said to him,"Young man, wherefore art thou thoughtful?" |
4926 | Then they took counsel, and said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4926 | To whom do these ships belong, and who is the chief amongst you?" |
4926 | Tristram believed it was certain death for him to return to Ireland; and how could he act as ambassador for his uncle in such a cause? |
4926 | What evil have I done to thee that thou shouldst act towards me and my possessions as thou hast this day? |
4926 | When Enid saw this, she cried out, saying,"O chieftain, whoever thou art, what renown wilt thou gain by slaying a dead man?" |
4926 | When wilt thou that I should present to thee the chieftain who has come with me hither?" |
4926 | Where are my attendants? |
4926 | Who had fairer or swifter horses or greyhounds? |
4926 | Who had more skilful or wiser bards than Maelgan? |
4926 | Why hast thou murdered this Duchess? |
4926 | Why hidest thou thyself within holes and walls like a coward? |
4926 | Will you insure me this, as ye be a true knight?" |
4926 | Will you now turn back, now you are so far advanced upon your journey? |
4926 | Wilt thou shame thyself? |
4926 | a chiding voice was heard of one approaching me and saying:''O knight, what has brought thee hither? |
4926 | and what is here? |
4926 | asked the king,"and will he come to the land?" |
4926 | couldst thou so one moment be, From her who so much loveth thee?" |
4926 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
4926 | hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts?" |
4926 | said Arthur,"what hast thou done, Merlin? |
4926 | said Arthur;"and whence do you come?" |
4926 | said Geraint,"how is it that thou hast lost them now?" |
4926 | said Geraint;"and whence dost thou come?" |
4926 | said Rhiannon,"wherefore didst thou give that answer?" |
4926 | said Sir Launcelot,"why have ye betrayed me?" |
4926 | said Sir Tristram,"what have I done? |
4926 | said Sir Tristram;"art thou not Sir Palamedes?" |
4926 | said he,"is it Geraint?" |
4926 | said he;"have you any news?" |
4926 | said they;"what is the mountain that is seen by the side of the ships?" |
4926 | what will he profit thee?" |
4926 | who hath proven him King Uther''s son? |
4926 | why hast thou slain my husband?" |
57473 | Are_ you_ going, Theodore? |
57473 | But on the placard it is spelled p- e- r- i- l. What does it mean? |
57473 | Can not she be satisfied to go out every day with us in the automobile? 57473 Did you notice that China silk she had on at dinner?" |
57473 | Do we go to church to look sweet? |
57473 | Does God require us to wear such fashionable clothes to worship Him? |
57473 | Does it fasten in the front or back? 57473 Have the Chinese done anything disgraceful?" |
57473 | Have you heard any of their poetry, Miss Pearl? |
57473 | His tooth not bother him there? |
57473 | How can we ever hope to do anything with her when she is being poisoned by such stuff as is in those books? 57473 How can we lay the shortcoming at the door of Fate?" |
57473 | How does that little minx know that she is the yellow peril? |
57473 | I suppose you do not love Americans since we beat your country at the battle of Manila? |
57473 | Is America being built up by a larger type of manhood, grandmother? |
57473 | My dear child,said grandmother in alarm,"why do you make such a wild request as that?" |
57473 | My dear child,she cried,"what was your father thinking about? |
57473 | Oh, dear, no,she answered impatiently,"but there is nothing gained in being a fright-- were there no Christians in your country to hold meetings?" |
57473 | Oh, yes,said my aunt curtly,"but what has he accomplished in all that time? |
57473 | Shall_ I_ have to submit to that when I come_ out_? 57473 Strikers?" |
57473 | What are Christians, grandmother? |
57473 | What do we go to church for? |
57473 | What does the yellow peril mean, grandmother? |
57473 | What gown shall I wear to- night at the party? |
57473 | What''s this? 57473 Who are they?" |
57473 | Why are you going to China? |
57473 | Why do not the American missionaries who are crossing oceans to find heathen, look for them at their own doorstep? |
57473 | Why does God leave them here? |
57473 | Will Chinese babies be there? 57473 Yes, miss, ai n''t it awful?" |
57473 | Yes, yes,I said;"what can save me from coming_ out_?" |
57473 | You mean the_ artificial_ tone? |
57473 | And how do they catch them? |
57473 | And why have its men such pushing, hurrying, knock- you- down- if- you- stand- in- my- way faces? |
57473 | But this was spelled p- e- r- i- l instead of P- e- a- r- l. What could it mean? |
57473 | Can he guess? |
57473 | Can not I always stay_ in_?" |
57473 | Dear grandmother''s cheeks flushed, and she said,"My dear child, why bother yourself about that?" |
57473 | Did you ever really see a drunken man?" |
57473 | Do you know where you are-- what risk you are running? |
57473 | Does he know that I am not Spanish?--that I am the Yellow Pearl? |
57473 | Does it not mean something that China is at the centre of the world-- the kernel? |
57473 | Does n''t that make her Spanish through and through?" |
57473 | Does not that show what the people of our country care most for? |
57473 | Happy? |
57473 | Have I got to live up to_ that_? |
57473 | How can we expect them to think much of our religion when they see it has done so little for_ us_? |
57473 | How could I tell on poor Yick, and bring down such an awful storm on his head as would result? |
57473 | How does that compare with our country which makes more of the destroyer than of any other citizen? |
57473 | I cried, as soon as I had greeted Mrs. Paton,"shall I_ have_ to come_ out_? |
57473 | I cried, entering her room,"what is the yellow peril?" |
57473 | I cried,"does n''t that make the little creatures suffer?" |
57473 | I wonder do all those foreign creatures feel something calling them back, back to their own country? |
57473 | I wonder is that an American or a Chinese act? |
57473 | I, almost in tears, whispered into her ear, so the attendant would not hear me,"I shall not have to wear them where any one can see me, shall I?" |
57473 | Is yellow badness any worse than white badness? |
57473 | Oh, why can not I always stay_ in_?" |
57473 | Then he said,"Have you disinfectants? |
57473 | Was He there? |
57473 | Was it such a very wicked thing he had done? |
57473 | Was it the soft mattress that did it? |
57473 | What can my duty be? |
57473 | What did He think of it all? |
57473 | What did he mean? |
57473 | What did it mean? |
57473 | What did that smile mean? |
57473 | What was I to put on? |
57473 | What were four hundred millions of us born into the world for? |
57473 | What''s this?" |
57473 | When we were again in the automobile Aunt Gwendolin said:"Did n''t the church look well this morning? |
57473 | Where did I learn how to wash and dress a baby? |
57473 | Where do they get them? |
57473 | Which is right? |
57473 | Who could help falling in love with my dear, yellow, winsome, little mother? |
57473 | Why am I here? |
57473 | Why did he so neglect your religious education?" |
57473 | Why did not Yao and Shun get a"_ call_"as Abraham did? |
57473 | Why must every rose have a thorn? |
57473 | Why not? |
57473 | You do not want to go there in Chinese dress to be the subject of curiosity, and newspaper remark?" |
57473 | You would like always to stay in domestic retirement?" |
57473 | _ Drunk!_--what does it mean?" |
57473 | again retorted Aunt Gwendolin,"and let Professor Ballington see her? |
57473 | exclaimed my uncle,"why did n''t he do something for some poor wretches who need it, in memory of his wife?" |
57473 | she said when I put it on,"is n''t that simply perfect? |
57473 | would you could come over here and see how America treats her''weak and wounded, sick and sore?'' |
53390 | ''How do you account for it all?'' 53390 Able to make repairs, and to navigate, but plumb locoed for all that, eh?" |
53390 | Am I still under the influence of those glass balls? |
53390 | An invitation to death? |
53390 | And Pryne-- what''s become of him? |
53390 | And got away? |
53390 | And not do anything about that paper you got out of the sailor''s hat? |
53390 | And then lost your nerve and ducked while Motor Matt and his chum were looking at you? 53390 Are we halfway to the old sugar camp, Pryne?" |
53390 | Are you hurt, Joe? |
53390 | Better what? |
53390 | Brought in? 53390 Bullet?" |
53390 | But suppose Tsan Ti is working some game of his own? 53390 But why should they, pard? |
53390 | But, if the mandarin is so hungry to have us help him, what''s the reason he''s making himself absent? 53390 But, illustrious sirs, shall we return to the hotel on the mountain top? |
53390 | Ca n''t you read it? |
53390 | Ca n''t you see he thinks we''re crazy? |
53390 | Did any one come with Motor Matt, Pryne? |
53390 | Did n''t you bring enough to pay a good price for the ruby? |
53390 | Did you find the Eye of Buddha? |
53390 | Did you think,went on Grattan,"that you could, single- handed, take the ruby from me by force?" |
53390 | Do n''t you_ sabe_ that? |
53390 | Follow them? 53390 Goldstein and Bunce with you?" |
53390 | Goldstein,said he sternly,"how much money have you in that satchel?" |
53390 | Had n''t I better drive? |
53390 | Had we better? |
53390 | Hard to cut what up? |
53390 | Have I the understanding,he asked,"that you will be of help to my distress?" |
53390 | Have n''t Grattan and I taken chances, Goldstein? |
53390 | Have you any notion that the chink we''re looking for has lammed into us in this violent fashion, right here on the mountainside? |
53390 | How big is der Eye? |
53390 | How did those fellows manage to find their way here? |
53390 | How did we get here? |
53390 | How did you come to pick_ me_ out for an assistant? |
53390 | How do you account for it? |
53390 | How do you feel about now? |
53390 | How do you know those outside are your friends? |
53390 | How long have you known Grattan, Pryne? |
53390 | How much did he have to put up for that wrecked motor car, Sam? |
53390 | How was I to know vat der ruby was worth? 53390 Hurt?" |
53390 | I beg your pardon, sir,said Matt, halting beside the chair,"but have you been here long?" |
53390 | I have lost much money by der decline in----"How much have you in the satchel? |
53390 | I thought you knew how to drive a car? |
53390 | I wonder if you know what you''re up against? |
53390 | Is that one of the two men who stole the ruby? |
53390 | Is that you? |
53390 | Is the sugar camp a safe place? |
53390 | Is-- is that a fact? |
53390 | No matter whether the mandarin shows up or not? |
53390 | Of what use is money, interesting youth, to a mandarin who has received the yellow cord? 53390 Oh, ho,"roared the other,"so that''s yer lay, my hearty? |
53390 | Or did you think you could talk me out of it? |
53390 | Pigeon''s blood, yes? |
53390 | Remember how the Eye of Buddha was stolen? 53390 Say, pard, is that red thing the Eye of Buddha?" |
53390 | Seen anythin''of a bit of headgear hereabouts? |
53390 | Shall we turn the trick for him, pard? |
53390 | She is a true Oriental, eh? |
53390 | Suppose we get our wheels, go back to Catskill, and then take the next boat down the river? 53390 Suppose you never find it?" |
53390 | Surprised, are you? |
53390 | Then Tsan Ti is n''t here? |
53390 | Then what makes you think Bunce and Grattan will get away? |
53390 | Then who was he? |
53390 | This is the Mountain House, is it? |
53390 | Tsan Ti? |
53390 | Waal, now, ai n''t I tickled? 53390 Warning?" |
53390 | Well, what''s the next move, pard? 53390 Well, yes,"admitted the cowboy, going blank again,"Are you and I locoed, Matt, or what?" |
53390 | What appears to be the trouble? |
53390 | What are the circumstances? |
53390 | What are the prospects for capturing Bunce and Grattan, officer? |
53390 | What became of Grattan and Bunce? |
53390 | What became of that satchel, Joe? |
53390 | What do you know about the Eye of Buddha? |
53390 | What do you make out of it, Matt? |
53390 | What do you make out, pard? |
53390 | What do you suppose it can be? |
53390 | What is he talking about? 53390 What is it?" |
53390 | What sort of a dream was it? |
53390 | What was that name? |
53390 | What you going to do when you reach where you''re going, with all that gang against you? |
53390 | What''re we going to do when we overhaul him? 53390 What''s become of the chink that hired this car? |
53390 | What''s come over you, anyhow? 53390 What''s der matter?" |
53390 | What''s that for? |
53390 | What''s that to do with a breakneck stop like we just made? |
53390 | What''s that? |
53390 | What''s the layout? |
53390 | What''s to pay, pard? |
53390 | What? |
53390 | What_ ails_ you? 53390 Where are we?" |
53390 | Where could that other one have come from? |
53390 | Where did you learn to drive an automobile, Tsan Ti? |
53390 | Where else? |
53390 | Where is Grattan? |
53390 | Where is der feller that wanted to steal my money? |
53390 | Where is the other one, Pryne? |
53390 | Where''d he get the thing? |
53390 | Where''d you corral so much good pidgin, Tsan? |
53390 | Where''s Pryne? |
53390 | Where''s he from? |
53390 | Where, oh, where, did you get that? |
53390 | Who were those fellows, Motor Matt? |
53390 | Who''s there? |
53390 | Who''s there? |
53390 | Why did n''t he use the glass balls and take the note away from us while we were down and out? |
53390 | Why did you leave them in Purling? |
53390 | Why do n''t you follow them? |
53390 | Why should he want to do that? |
53390 | Why were you coming here to see me? |
53390 | Ye''d rather be sent to Davy Jones''locker, I suppose? |
53390 | You are here to be of aid to the unfortunate mandarin, are you not, illustrious sirs? |
53390 | You do n''t think--and here McGlory assumed a tragic look--"that Tsan would go off into the timber and use that yellow cord, do you?" |
53390 | You picked up the trail? |
53390 | You say the man from below passed_ two_ Chinamen talking near the car? |
53390 | You''re from up the mountain, are you? |
53390 | You''re planning on that, are you? 53390 _ Thinks_ we''re crazy?" |
53390 | Am I not right, honorable friend?" |
53390 | And how can we help you if you are not open and aboveboard with us?" |
53390 | And the other hatchet boy that brought the yellow cord? |
53390 | And what''s it all about? |
53390 | Anyhow, what do you care? |
53390 | Are ye sailin''in company with that chink we passed a ways back on our course?" |
53390 | Are you going to that Purling place and ask for Pryne at the general store?" |
53390 | Are you the fellows?" |
53390 | Are you willing to talk sense? |
53390 | But did he let us get our hands on the coin? |
53390 | But-- but,"and Matt''s voice wavered,"how did we get here?" |
53390 | Button, button, who''s got the button? |
53390 | By the way, where_ is_ Goldstein?" |
53390 | Could it be possible that the mandarin, cast down by his latest accident, was on the point of carrying out the mandate of the regent? |
53390 | Do you know?" |
53390 | Do you reckon old One Eye has found out, yet, how you juggled the notes on him?" |
53390 | Do you think the_ hombre_ was this Grattan sharp?" |
53390 | Do you?" |
53390 | Grattan?" |
53390 | Have you any notion he coaxed the mandarin away on important business?" |
53390 | Here in these hills is where Rip Van Winkle went to sleep, ai n''t it? |
53390 | How could we have missed it?" |
53390 | How is this?" |
53390 | How much farther have we got to go?" |
53390 | How much farther is it yet?" |
53390 | I reckon, though, you''ll want to stay here and give him a chance to blow in?" |
53390 | If he''d known we had the note, why did n''t he stop and palaver about it?" |
53390 | Is it well, excellent one?" |
53390 | It sounds flat enough, and if the webfoot tells us we''re crazy, and gives us the laugh, what''re we going to do?" |
53390 | Kinder keep an eye on it, will you?" |
53390 | Make an offhand demand for the Eye of Buddha? |
53390 | Noble and affluent sir, will it be insult should I offer one thousand dollars and expenses if I get my wish for your most remarkable help? |
53390 | Now bear down on your soft pedal, will you?" |
53390 | Now, if all that''s true, then where, in the name of the great hocus- pocus, is the fat Chinaman?" |
53390 | Otherwise, how is it these backsets keep happening in one, two, three order? |
53390 | Pryne?" |
53390 | Say, did n''t we come all the way from Michigan to help him? |
53390 | Shall we go on to the hotel? |
53390 | Shall we now proceed down the mountain in pursuit of the sailor?" |
53390 | Suppose One- Eye do n''t think enough of his cap to come back for it?" |
53390 | Think chink number two was Kien Lung with another yellow cord, Matt?" |
53390 | Was n''t it clever the way I put on them scarecrow fixin''s in the cornfield?" |
53390 | Was that a rhinecaboo or the real thing?" |
53390 | We were n''t going more than a hundred and twenty miles an hour when we hit that tree, so how could I possibly have suffered any damage? |
53390 | Well, let me know about that, will you?" |
53390 | Well, what are you intending to do? |
53390 | What do you say to a rest?" |
53390 | What do you say, Matt? |
53390 | What excuse was there for such a deception? |
53390 | What is it to you whether them hoodlums git away or not?" |
53390 | What kind of a brain- storm are we going through,_ any_how?" |
53390 | What says the great Confucius? |
53390 | What was the good of paying any attention to that letter, in the first place?" |
53390 | What you looking at that wheel for, Matt?" |
53390 | What''ll happen? |
53390 | What''re you side- stepping for about a little thing like that? |
53390 | What''s become of Tsan Ti? |
53390 | What''s jocosity, Matt?" |
53390 | What''s that on the hat ribbon?" |
53390 | What''s the answer?" |
53390 | What''s the good of all this strain we''ve taken upon ourselves? |
53390 | What''s the good? |
53390 | What''s the use of brains, pard, if you do n''t use''em?" |
53390 | Where are the other four?" |
53390 | Where are the other two?" |
53390 | Where in the world was McGlory? |
53390 | Where next?" |
53390 | Where was Tsan Ti? |
53390 | While Matt was running down the Eye of Buddha for him, what was the Chinaman, to whom the recovery of the ruby meant so much, doing? |
53390 | Who''re you?" |
53390 | Who''s in there with you?" |
53390 | Why did he throw the glass balls at us? |
53390 | Why did n''t they come? |
53390 | Why did you vanish from the mountainside after we had been left to chase the one- eyed sailor? |
53390 | Why is n''t he here?" |
53390 | _ When_ will we ever acquire a proper amount of horse sense for a couple of our size? |
53390 | he muttered,"or is that really Tsan Ti coming this way?" |
53390 | sneered Jackson,"what do you know about cars?" |
58175 | ''Ca n''t we raise tea in America?'' 58175 ''Do you intend to serve me always, and be a good sailor?'' |
58175 | ''What do you mean by that?'' 58175 And how was it?" |
58175 | And what became of the pirates that were left on the deck of the brig? |
58175 | And what is Cathay? |
58175 | And what is the remora? |
58175 | Are n''t you mistaken, Doctor? |
58175 | Are we to understand,Frank asked,"that the second king of Siam is named George Washington?" |
58175 | But do n''t they ever crowd the passengers rather uncomfortably? |
58175 | But how about the alligator''s part of the fight? |
58175 | But how about the half- dozen captains? |
58175 | But if one foreigner attempts to cheat another,said Frank,"does the government feel called on to interfere?" |
58175 | But what should we find if we went beyond Java? |
58175 | But where does the king get all his money? |
58175 | Can you go down in the open sea in this way,said Fred,"or must you always be where the water is quiet?" |
58175 | Can you tell me what an atoll is? |
58175 | Do n''t you remember how we used to detest it? |
58175 | Do n''t you remember,Frank responded, smiling,"that your uncle Charles was said to have bought a white elephant a year or two ago?" |
58175 | Do n''t you see? |
58175 | Do n''t you think we are making this part of our story a little too heavy? 58175 Do the steamers run there regularly?" |
58175 | Do the widows of the king go on the funeral pile to be burnt? |
58175 | Do they find the variety of monkey known as the orang- outang in Sumatra? |
58175 | Do they have oysters in Siam? |
58175 | Does Marco Polo make any mention of it in his travels in Asia? |
58175 | Does every foreigner who comes here to live have to pay forty dollars? |
58175 | Have they succeeded? |
58175 | How can that be? |
58175 | How can you save a ship in that way? |
58175 | How could that be? |
58175 | How did that happen? |
58175 | How do they make them? |
58175 | How does she manage to live all that time? |
58175 | How is it, then, Doctor? |
58175 | How is that? |
58175 | How long can a man stay under water with the apparatus you have described? |
58175 | How long have the Chinese had this model for their ships? |
58175 | How many colors of it do you think you have seen? |
58175 | How much does it cost to go from New York to England, and what is the distance? |
58175 | How was that? |
58175 | How was that? |
58175 | I wonder if that is Bangkok? |
58175 | Is the custom in Siam the same that it used to be in India? |
58175 | Is the manufacture of false pearls so great as that? |
58175 | Is the sponge an animal? |
58175 | That is what the Malays''run a- muck''with, is it not? |
58175 | That is, how does he raise his taxes, and how are they collected? |
58175 | The birds? |
58175 | Then there are monkeys in Sumatra? |
58175 | There used to be a question among the boys at school,''Why do white sheep eat more hay than black ones?'' 58175 We have the ordinary railway carriage and the Pullman car, have we not?" |
58175 | Well,replied Frank,"what has that to do with the matter of wheeled vehicles?" |
58175 | What a delightful voyage it must be,said Frank;"and how much does it cost?" |
58175 | What did he do? |
58175 | What do you make out of Marco Polo''s book? |
58175 | What is that? |
58175 | What is that? |
58175 | What is that? |
58175 | What is that? |
58175 | What is the difference between the alligator and the crocodile? |
58175 | What is the greatest length you have ever known for one of these snakes? |
58175 | What is the greatest speed that steamers can make nowadays, with all these improvements? |
58175 | What is the peculiarity of the bird''s- nest that the Chinese like so much? |
58175 | What kind of a bird is it? |
58175 | What kind of snakes do they have there? |
58175 | What was that? |
58175 | What was the bird we saw at the consul''s house the day we called there? |
58175 | Where is the captain of this junk? |
58175 | Who pays for all the expense of these ceremonies? |
58175 | Why do they wait so long? |
58175 | Why do you say that? |
58175 | Why is it? |
58175 | Why should a ship like this have so many, when the_ Great Eastern_ or the_ City of Chester_ can get along with one? |
58175 | Why so? |
58175 | Why, how can that be? |
58175 | You have heard of the birds of paradise, have n''t you? 58175 You mean the one that kept up such an incessant talking?" |
58175 | You mean those people over there? |
58175 | You will possibly ask,''What is the Eurasian?'' 58175 After looking at them, Fred inquired,How large an army do they keep here, and how is it composed?" |
58175 | And what do you think we found in his shop to remind us of home? |
58175 | But can a foreigner be naturalized here, as in England and America, and then hold property?" |
58175 | Can you guess how it does so? |
58175 | Can you tell me what coral is?" |
58175 | Do you remember the loss of the steamship_ Japan_, on the coast of China, in December, 1874?" |
58175 | Frank laughed, and said,"What shall we do with it?" |
58175 | I wonder if he is as skilful as a regular professional?" |
58175 | Is it any wonder they were in a hurry to have her mails landed, and the precious letters delivered? |
58175 | Is that really so?" |
58175 | Now I want to know if it is this morning, or to- morrow morning with them?" |
58175 | Perhaps you do n''t know what gambier is? |
58175 | Suddenly a practical question occurred to Frank, and he asked the consul--"Does the river ever freeze over?" |
58175 | The boys had a moment of standing on tiptoe in their exuberant delight, and then Frank asked,"Where are we to go, Doctor, and when are we to start?" |
58175 | Then, on the principal lines of railway there are the emigrant trains, are there not?" |
58175 | WHO WAS PAUL GRAYSON? |
58175 | Was it not very unjust to the natives to do that?" |
58175 | Where is the Yankee that will make something to go ahead of it? |
58175 | Who knows? |
58175 | Who shall say that the Chinese thief is not a shrewd operator? |
58175 | Who would venture to sail in her now, and how long would it take a war steamer of 1880 to send her to the bottom? |
58175 | Why does it cost so much more here than on the Atlantic?" |
58175 | Would n''t it be funny to see a wheelbarrow in America for carrying passengers, just as we have cabs and coaches? |
58175 | Would n''t that be a novel idea? |
58175 | Would they go directly back across the Pacific Ocean, or would they proceed on a journey around the world? |
58175 | Would you like to try it?" |
58175 | You saw some little monuments, like miniature pyramids, near the temple we just visited; did you not?" |
58175 | how can that be?" |
6062 | Who were your friends? |
6062 | A funeral vase awaiting tearful showers? |
6062 | A silken cushion or a bank of flowers? |
6062 | A smirking servant smiled When she gave him her child to keep; Did she know he would strangle the child As it lay in his arms asleep? |
6062 | An Eastern odour, waste and oasis blent? |
6062 | And where, after all, is the harm done? |
6062 | Are the high deeds of the sires sung to the children no more? |
6062 | Art thou late fruit of spicy savour and scent? |
6062 | As Freedom with eyes aglow Smiled glad through her childbirth pain, How was the mother to know That her woe and travail were vain? |
6062 | But still they questioned,"Who art thou? |
6062 | But what care I if this be all pretence? |
6062 | Chained, watching her chosen nation Grinding late and early In the mills of usurpation? |
6062 | Did you ever hear an Apache yell? |
6062 | For thou art more than life, And if our fate should set Life and my love at strife, How could I then forget I love thee more than life? |
6062 | Four months alone I walked the chalk, I thought my heart would break; And all them boys a- slappin my back And axin'',"What''ll you take?" |
6062 | Has she not paid it dearly? |
6062 | Hast thou forgotten those days illumined with glory and honour, When the far isles of the sea thrilled to the tread of Castile? |
6062 | Hath He no instruments here? |
6062 | Have not her holy tears, Flowing through shameful years, Washed the stains from her tortured hands? |
6062 | How did he git thar? |
6062 | How shall His vengeance be done? |
6062 | How, when His purpose is clear? |
6062 | I''ve searched in vain, from Dan to Beer- Sheba, to make this mystery clear; But I end with HIT as I did begin,--"WHO GOT THE WHISKY- SKIN?" |
6062 | In fine, upon this April day, This deep conundrum I will bring: Tell me the two good reasons, pray, I have, to say you are like spring? |
6062 | Must He come down from His throne? |
6062 | Nay, what is it to thee?" |
6062 | On the dun hills of the North hast thou heard of no plough- boy Pizarro? |
6062 | Roams no young swine- herd Cortes hid by the Tagus''wild shore? |
6062 | Say, what wilt Thou with me?" |
6062 | Say, what''s the use of being a fool? |
6062 | She is stunned and speechless yet, In her grief and bloody sweat Shall we make her trust her blame? |
6062 | The captain seized the little waif, And said,"What dost thou here?" |
6062 | The fresh young smile, so pure and fine, Does it but mock our reading? |
6062 | The handmaid rows and the Countess speaks:"Seest thou not there where the water breaks Seven corpses swim In the moonlight dim? |
6062 | There is not so much to pardon,-- For why were your lips so red? |
6062 | Through the long days and years What will my loved one be, Parted from me? |
6062 | V. Has the red blood run cold that boiled by the Xenil and Darro? |
6062 | V. What is a first love worth, except to prepare for a second? |
6062 | Whar have you been for the last three year That you have n''t heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the Prairie Belle? |
6062 | What ailed the girl? |
6062 | What art thou now? |
6062 | What does the second love bring? |
6062 | What hast thou been? |
6062 | What man is there so bold that he should say,"Thus, and thus only, would I have the sea"? |
6062 | When every land under Heaven was flecked by the shade of thy banner,-- When every beam of the sun flashed on thy conquering steel? |
6062 | Which shall we see? |
6062 | Why read ye not the changeless truth,-- The free can conquer but to save? |
6062 | You did n''t know Ben? |
6062 | You see it; A gay old thing, is it not? |
6062 | [ You give it up?] |
6062 | do they shine, those eyes of thine, But for our own misleading? |
6062 | they said,"By His dread Name who shall one day come To judge the quick and the dead,--"Who art thou? |
6062 | why should you worry in choosing whom you shall marry? |
52106 | And what does it say to them? |
52106 | Do you not know,he exclaims,"that you are each an Eve? |
52106 | How do you do? |
52106 | If you ask a Kaffir why he does so and so, he will answer--''How can I tell? 52106 If you were to say to an Ainu,''You are old, are you not?'' |
52106 | Was''t Hamlet wrong''d Laertes? 52106 What do you call sin?" |
52106 | Why,says the Stoic,"do you bear with the delirium of a sick man, or the ravings of a madman, or the impudent blows of a child? |
52106 | Why,they would ask,"should a person not be{ 241} allowed to die, when he no longer desires to live?" |
52106 | [ 107] St. Paul asks with scorn,Doth God take care for oxen? |
52106 | [ 113] The Jain regards pleasure in itself as sinful:--What is discontent, and what is pleasure? |
52106 | [ 151] But why should the stranger have been more willing than the bridegroom to expose himself to this danger? 52106 [ 34] When St. Peter asked,"Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? |
52106 | [ 4] Tertullian asks,Can it be lawful to{ 346} handle the sword, when the Lord Himself has declared that he who uses the sword shall perish by it? |
52106 | [ 72] I often found the Beduins of Morocco extremely curious, but their curiosity consisted in the question, What? 52106 [ 89] The Moors ask,"What is your news?" |
52106 | ''Or savage, like wolves?'' |
52106 | ----''Besitzen die Naturvölker ein persönliches Ehrgefühl?'' |
52106 | 7:"Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?"] |
52106 | A fellow- countryman, a savage, a criminal, a bird, a fish-- all without distinction? |
52106 | Among the Burmese two relatives or friends who meet begin a conversation by the expressions,"Are you well? |
52106 | Among the Californian Miwok, when anybody meets a stranger he generally salutes him,"Whence do you come? |
52106 | An English sportsman, after firing at an antelope, inquired of his dark attendant,"Is it wounded?" |
52106 | And all the mourning customs, what are they if not tokens of grief? |
52106 | And does not this indicate that they have been neglectful of their duties to him? |
52106 | And for those who refuse to accept the gift of grace offered to them, could there be a juster punishment than death? |
52106 | And if it is a duty to recognise certain actions as indifferent how could it possibly at the same time be held a duty to perform them? |
52106 | And is there any reason to suppose that the unsuccessful offender is less dangerous to society than he who succeeds? |
52106 | And what is the cause of its original narrowness and of its subsequent extension? |
52106 | And why did he give the young men his_ daughters_? |
52106 | And why might not the{ 378} same law be applied to other relationships also, such as those constituted by a common descent or a common name? |
52106 | And yet is eating and drinking too much, is spending too much time in outdoor exercise, is lounging idly about, morally indifferent? |
52106 | And, if the theory referred to were correct, how could we explain the fact that the right of asylum is particularly attached to sanctuaries? |
52106 | And, on the other hand, why is there in many cases such a wide agreement? |
52106 | Are these phenomena less necessary or less powerful in their consequences, because they fall within the subjective sphere of experience? |
52106 | Are they not much more harmful to the human race than self- murder, which nature prevents from ever being practised by any large number of men? |
52106 | But an important question still calls for an answer, the question, Why is this so? |
52106 | But how shall we explain those elements in the moral emotions by which they are distinguished from other, non- moral retributive emotions? |
52106 | But how to account for this disposition? |
52106 | But then, shall we reckon each tribe as one{ 656} unit by itself, or, if not, into how many groups shall we divide them? |
52106 | But who does admit this? |
52106 | But why should it not, in conformity with other practices, be regarded as a means of purifying the air? |
52106 | But why the offender only? |
52106 | Can a man do more than his duty, or, in other words, is there anything good which is not at the same time a duty? |
52106 | Can we help feeling pain when the fire burns us? |
52106 | Can we help sympathising with our friends? |
52106 | Come, then, who would obey you if he saw his little child fall on the ground and cry? |
52106 | Could the moral consciousness approve of this? |
52106 | Delitzsch( Friedrich),_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ Leipzig, 1881. |
52106 | Delitzsch,_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. |
52106 | Did not Paley expressly define virtue as"the doing good to mankind, in obedience to the will of God, and for the sake of everlasting happiness"? |
52106 | Do they faithfully represent ideas of moral responsibility? |
52106 | Do you like it not? |
52106 | Do you like to be wretched? |
52106 | Does not experience show that those whose thoughts are constantly occupied with the prescriptions of duty are apt to become hard and intolerant? |
52106 | Does not public opinion in the midst of civilisation turn against the dishonoured rather than the dishonourer? |
52106 | Even suppose, however, that group marriage really was once common in Australia, would that prove that it was once common among mankind at large? |
52106 | First, how shall we explain their disinterestedness? |
52106 | First, why do men recognise proprietary rights at all? |
52106 | For when was the time that men were not used to act in this manner? |
52106 | Have the most draconic codes ever been able to suppress, say, homosexual love? |
52106 | Hence if you ask a Vaedda,''Do you marry your sisters?'' |
52106 | How can we get an insight into the moral ideas of mankind at large? |
52106 | How does Professor Durkheim know that totem clans once prevailed among all peoples who now prohibit the intermarriage of near relatives? |
52106 | How shall we explain all these facts? |
52106 | How then shall we explain this analogy? |
52106 | I am well,"if they have been some time separated; whereas those who are daily accustomed to meet say,"Where are you going? |
52106 | I ask: Is it reasonable to think that there is no causal connection between these three groups of facts? |
52106 | If it is the duty of animals to take vengeance upon men, is it not equally the duty of men to take vengeance upon animals? |
52106 | If urged to work, they have been heard to say:''Why should we resemble the worms of the ground? |
52106 | If war was allowed by God, could there be a more proper object for it than the salvation of souls otherwise lost? |
52106 | If you endeavour to shew them the folly of this conduct, they say,''Why should we hurt them? |
52106 | In Morocco, if a son or a daughter dies, it is customary to say to the afflicted parents,"Why are you sorry? |
52106 | In an infuriated crowd the one gets angry because the other is angry, and very often the question, Why? |
52106 | Is it due to defective knowledge, or has it a merely sentimental origin? |
52106 | Is it right to ignore the second group altogether, as does Frazer, and to look upon the coincidence of the first and the third as accidental? |
52106 | It may be an inquiry about the other person''s health or welfare, as the English"How are you?" |
52106 | It may be asked, why should{ 581} he be received at all? |
52106 | It seemed strange that the disagreement should be so radical, and the question arose, Whence this diversity of opinion? |
52106 | Lasch,''Besitzen die Naturvölker ein persönliches Ehrgefühl?'' |
52106 | Londini,[ 1555?]. |
52106 | Moreover, had not the Israelites fought great battles"for the laws and the sanctuary"? |
52106 | Mürdter- Delitzsch,_ Geschichte Babyloniens und Assyriens_, p. 38_ sq._ Delitzsch,_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ p. 86. |
52106 | Nay, why are there any moral ideas at all? |
52106 | Of course, he stands in need of protection and support, but why should those who do not know him care for that? |
52106 | Parkyns asks,"Who is more trustworthy than the desert Arab? |
52106 | Plato asks in his''Laws'':--"What ought he to suffer who murders his nearest and so- called dearest friend? |
52106 | Professor Ziegler ironically asks:--"Such outward matters as eating and drinking are surely morally indifferent? |
52106 | Selenoburgi,[ 1663?]. |
52106 | So, also, the Hebrew psalmist cries out,"Who can understand his errors? |
52106 | So, too, why should the moral law command less obedience because it forms part of our own nature? |
52106 | Stockholm,[ 1745?]. |
52106 | The best man even refuses to be called good by others:--"Why callest thou me good? |
52106 | The ordinary salutation of the Zulus is,"I see you, are you well?" |
52106 | The people, he argued, do not fear death; to what purpose, then, is it to try to frighten them with death? |
52106 | The question is, what evidence can Dr. Steinmetz adduce to support his theory? |
52106 | The single question asked is, Did the man kill the other? |
52106 | What are you at? |
52106 | What else could these mean but visits of their souls? |
52106 | What good man would hesitate to die for her if he could do her service? |
52106 | What happens? |
52106 | What have I done to incur so severe an accusation? |
52106 | What have you taken which belongs to him? |
52106 | What is here the"ought"that forms the totality of the indifferent? |
52106 | What is the source of the moral commandment,"Thou shalt not kill"? |
52106 | What more legal book than Chronicles? |
52106 | What? |
52106 | When he then asked of his Druids,"Whence this evil?" |
52106 | When the vassal objected that he could not subsist on such a soil, the archbishop answered,"Why do you complain? |
52106 | When was it not permitted? |
52106 | When was such conduct found fault with? |
52106 | When, in short, was the time when that which is lawful was not lawful? |
52106 | Who could affirm that every temperate, or charitable, or just man has acquired the virtue only as a result of inward struggle? |
52106 | Who does it, then? |
52106 | Who is that"Another"to whose greater good I ought not to prefer my own lesser good? |
52106 | Why are the blessings and curses of parents supposed to possess such an extraordinary power? |
52106 | Why are the moral opinions relating to it subject to so great variations? |
52106 | Why do the moral ideas in general differ so greatly? |
52106 | Why do they not deliver them up to justice through their earthly representatives? |
52106 | Why has sexual intercourse between unmarried people, if both parties consent, come to be regarded as wrong? |
52106 | Why is the standard commonly so different for man and woman? |
52106 | Why not? |
52106 | Why should I go shivering through all the ages and the distances of the next world? |
52106 | Why should not the indifferent be allowed to do the same? |
52106 | Why should the feeling against incest have survived in this case but not in others, if it had a purely conventional origin? |
52106 | Why should the gods or saints themselves be so anxious to protect criminals who have sought refuge in their sanctuaries? |
52106 | Why should the law refuse its protection to any sensitive being? |
52106 | Why were suicides buried at cross- roads? |
52106 | Why, then, could not the same have been the case with the aversion to incest and the prohibitory rules resulting from it? |
52106 | Why? |
52106 | Would anyone think himself to be in his perfect mind if he were to return kicks to a mule or bites to a dog? |
52106 | Would there be any sense in saying that you ought either to speak or not to speak? |
52106 | You say then,''What? |
52106 | Zoroaster asked,"What is the food that fills the Religion of Mazda?" |
52106 | [ 100] How, then, does the fact that two persons belong to the same totem influence their social relationships? |
52106 | [ 104] Is not this, in all probability, an instance of acquired inversion? |
52106 | [ 132] When their chief god"played"by thundering, the Amazulu said to him who was frightened,"Why do you start, because the lord plays? |
52106 | [ 142] And would it not, in many cases, be impossible to find impartial arbiters? |
52106 | [ 195] Indeed, had not God shown{ 280} indulgence for the offence committed by Lot when drunk? |
52106 | [ 208] How, for instance, are we to deal with the various tribes of Australia? |
52106 | [ 21] The question, however, is, Why was not his death avenged upon the actual culprit? |
52106 | [ 286] Jeremy Taylor asks,"Who will not tell a harmless lie to save the life of his friend, of his child, of himself, of a good and brave man? |
52106 | [ 30] Had not the Lord Himself commissioned them to attack, subdue, and destroy his enemies? |
52106 | [ 47] How shall we explain this connection between religious beliefs and the duties of veracity and fidelity to promises? |
52106 | [ 51] Is it not natural, then, that the savage should give like for like? |
52106 | [ 66] During my wanderings in the remote forests of Northern Finland I was constantly welcomed with the phrase,"What news?" |
52106 | [ 71] When Mungo Park asked some negroes, what became of the sun during the night? |
52106 | [ 9] Porphyry asks,"Who does not know that to this day, in the great city of Rome, at the festival of Jupiter Latiaris, they cut the throat of a man? |
52106 | [ Footnote 15: See_ infra_, on Suicide; Lasch,''Besitzen die Naturvölker ein persönliches Ehrgefühl?'' |
52106 | [ Footnote 165: Demosthenes(? |
52106 | [ Footnote 39:_ Ibid._ p. 147_ sqq._''Why is Single Life becoming more General?'' |
52106 | [ Westminster, 1484?] |
52106 | _ S.l._,[ 1834?]. |
52106 | and the Sabbath, that we may set forth wheat? |
52106 | are we not your children, do you not see our hunger? |
52106 | dost thou see, O Sky? |
52106 | he would answer{ 87}''Yes''; but if you asked the same man,''You are not old, are you?'' |
52106 | marry your own- sister- nagâ?'' |
52106 | or,"Is nothing wrong?" |
52106 | rather than in the question, Why? |
52106 | the Sinhalese interpreter is apt to say,''Do you marry your nagâ?'' |
52106 | they ask you,''to suffer either man or woman to languish any considerable{ 389} time under a heavy, motionless old age? |
52106 | till seven times?" |
52106 | will you have us to be silly creatures, like the sheep?'' |
578 | Are you telling me that one of the gifts of education is the skillful concealment of evildoing by those in positions of power? 578 Does this boy know,"said the voice of the television,"that he is cutting his own throat? |
578 | Is this not a wonderful world we live in? |
578 | The neighbor planted his rice? 578 What can you accomplish in your frenzied condition?" |
578 | What? 578 A duty to feed the citizens( cities)? 578 And how about, if not eradicating the cities, at least resolving to shrink the cities? 578 And is there in this real country any place where pollution can be produced? 578 And the reply is,So you have no need for loans or farm machinery or fertilizer, do you? |
578 | And what did they do to the remaining small- scale farmers? |
578 | And what happens if one replies in the following manner? |
578 | Are there no mountains in Japan? |
578 | Are we supposed to be thankful that, because of their activities, the Earth is more devastated minute by minute? |
578 | Are we supposed to be thankful when people go abroad for sightseeing, sex, or study, and then come back bug- eyed with amazement? |
578 | As long as one produces food only for oneself, why should it be necessary to keep watching one''s neighbors and worry about what they are doing? |
578 | But do we tolerate it when someone dumps his garbage in his neighbor''s house in order to keep his own clean? |
578 | But how about human beings? |
578 | But where on this depleted planet is the city going to find the land to nourish itself? |
578 | Can there truly be a reason why the farmers must be up in arms over this issue? |
578 | Can you view this merely as the misfortune of others? |
578 | Could there possibly be any other reason? |
578 | Could we hope that they wo n''t try to solve this problem by war? |
578 | Culture? |
578 | Did not Nature decree that we either gather or produce our own food? |
578 | Do you have the bravery to become independent of these shackles? |
578 | Do you not fear your master? |
578 | Freedom? |
578 | Has there ever been an instance in which cement was used for a purpose other than to plaster over the Land? |
578 | Has there ever been such an idiotic system? |
578 | Having thus listed some professions, I wonder if there is even one person living in the cities who can prove that he or she is an exception? |
578 | How can one destroy the life and cells of one''s food, thereby diminishing its effect? |
578 | How can one make things taste good, and stuff a lot into one''s stomach? |
578 | How can one, using utensils and heat and seasonings, make it possible to eat things which one can not ordinarily eat? |
578 | How can there be a reason for preserving such things when it means our own ruin? |
578 | How can we, during this time when the city still stands grandly before us, bring about conditions under which it will perish? |
578 | How could this possibly be stopped? |
578 | How much longer do you think you can live while sacrificing your own future? |
578 | I wonder if it was really the wish of Nature that the city come into being? |
578 | If evolution is the same as progress, then can we also say that it was progress when the dinosaurs became too big? |
578 | If the stable boy gets nice clothes, then why not a military uniform on a fox, and a fancy kimono on a badger? |
578 | If we plug up the nose, mouth, and anus of a human being, is it possible to continue living? |
578 | If you try to exchange 1,500 Sony transistor radios for one bag of rice, do you think the farmers will listen? |
578 | In order to keep themselves alive, what do wild[ 39] animals want, search for, and find value in? |
578 | In order to maintain this peace and prosperity how much evil( destruction, contamination, waste) must the city perpetrate? |
578 | Is It Possible to Produce Food without the City? |
578 | Is Stopping the Food Supply Possible? |
578 | Is it not exactly the same in the present day? |
578 | Is it possible that any government in the world could find the guts to make the rope for its own hanging? |
578 | Is it that the scale is different? |
578 | Is it to see the rare beauty of foreign scenery? |
578 | Is the reader aware that the hull portion of cooked brown rice passes through the gut and is found in great quantity in one''s excrement? |
578 | Is there any room in this kind of agriculture for contamination, destruction, and profligacy? |
578 | Is there no ocean? |
578 | Is this not the reason the co- op, whether it be loans or sales, constantly exploits the farmers? |
578 | Is this the best idea that the elite bureaucrats in the Ministry of Agriculture could come up with? |
578 | Must we continue with it even if it means self- destruction? |
578 | Must we maintain it even if it brings about a crisis? |
578 | Must we still pursue it even if it drives us to catastrophe? |
578 | One ca n''t keep food on the table by being a farmer"? |
578 | Please give what you can..."It is only natural, they say, that the believers(?) |
578 | Progress? |
578 | Scholarship? |
578 | Should I be thankful for the activities of such people who, with each passing minute, bring about the increasing devastation of the Earth? |
578 | Should We Be"Thankful"for Urban Civilization? |
578 | Should the multitudes of buildings collapse, how would they dispose of the mountains of rubble? |
578 | So what is all the excitement over a three or four months''excess? |
578 | The City''s Origins When did the city make its appearance in Japan? |
578 | The Land Is Nature Itself And now we arrive at the obvious question-- who shall possess the Land? |
578 | The Mammonistic Farmers Can not Become Revolutionaries Would it be possible, then, for the farmers to refuse to sell? |
578 | The city comes back with,"Do n''t you realize how helpful education is in the formation of human character?" |
578 | The city: Is it not the crystallization of human greed and wickedness? |
578 | The famous Meiji- era Marxist, Dr. Kawakami Hajime, lamented, saying,"If agriculture declines, how can business and industry prosper?" |
578 | The neighbor got a new combine? |
578 | The net of Heaven is coarse, but allows nothing to escape[ 4]-- is it possible that Nature will miss this or generously overlook it? |
578 | To the question,"Science is the standard for everything; if we can not believe in science, then what must we believe in?" |
578 | Was this the reason Marx chose the city laborers as the soldiers in his revolution instead of the farmers? |
578 | What Do We Need Most in Order to Guarantee Our Survival? |
578 | What are all these people whizzing off to other countries for, on the jets that boast of being the worst polluters? |
578 | What great catastrophes must the city bring down upon humanity and the Earth? |
578 | What is more, as long as one has to rip it off, why not grab the best( even dogs and cats take the best first)? |
578 | What need is there of money, or of living in fear of the self- destruction brought about by money? |
578 | What wild animal has ever tried to make the Land its private possession, and then used it for its own selfish purposes? |
578 | What? |
578 | Who are they kidding? |
578 | Who was it that promoted the eating of bread( that considered eating rice bad) and increased the imports of wheat? |
578 | Why Feed the Hand that Pollutes? |
578 | Why do n''t the cities build their nuclear reactors right in the middle of the cities? |
578 | Why do n''t they build them in one of their seaside industrial zones? |
578 | Why is it wrong to say"Stop driving others into poverty so that you can, by their sacrifices, live an extravagant life"? |
578 | Why was it that way? |
578 | Will the city perish because of petroleum''s poisons, or because of its disappearance? |
578 | Will we still have to defend it even after we are gone? |
578 | Your want to research foreign sexual customs? |
578 | [ 10] Will human beings in the end be crushed under the load of their merchandise and trash? |
578 | [ 19] Has humanity finally been marked for ruin? |
578 | [ 29] What could be more important to us than our own survival? |
578 | [ 34] Why is it cruel and seditious to say"Give up being a robber"? |
578 | [ 3] Why must they go to such lengths to stimulate the economy? |
578 | [ 5] How is this different from the arrogance of the feudal lords and landlords? |
55891 | After all,he reflected somewhat uneasily,"the story told by these children is very touching, and why may it not be true? |
55891 | An elephant, do you say? 55891 And how do you support yourselves?" |
55891 | And what can I do for you? |
55891 | And what did you promise? |
55891 | And what is your sister''s age? |
55891 | Are they traveling about alone? |
55891 | Are you in pain? 55891 Are you sure of your work, Fritsch?" |
55891 | Are your feet hurting you? |
55891 | But Nalla-- what about him? |
55891 | But do you realize what that would mean? 55891 But how, my dear brother?" |
55891 | But now tell me, you seek permission from the Mayor to stay here a while in order to sell some little articles I presume? |
55891 | But that will take our last cent, and what about our own food? |
55891 | But why did n''t your father come instead, my child? |
55891 | Can it be a beast? |
55891 | Could it not be on account of your unkind treatment of her that your sister ran away? |
55891 | Did you call me, young sir? |
55891 | Did you say Madame Pradère? |
55891 | Did you see anything, Cæsar? |
55891 | Do you hear Nalla calling? |
55891 | Do you mean to say that this is the chief of your troupe, Madame? |
55891 | Do you mean to say that you are all alone at your age? |
55891 | Do you wish to give some assistance to this young man? |
55891 | He dangerous? 55891 He is tired or sick, perhaps,"continued Lydia in a tone of sympathy,"and you can not continue your journey, eh?" |
55891 | He? |
55891 | How do you manage to provide for his keep? |
55891 | How on earth did he get here? 55891 I saw nothing-- what was it startled you?" |
55891 | Is it long since you lost your parents? |
55891 | Is n''t he having a fine time of it? 55891 Is n''t that fine? |
55891 | No reply? 55891 Oh, do n''t you remember that the kind old gendarme said that she hardly ever went away?" |
55891 | That will help us over the winter finely, and we will doubtless make more before the season ends, eh? |
55891 | To take us back with you? |
55891 | Was it you, Françoise, who spoke so sharply to the child? |
55891 | Was not your sister of a very headstrong nature? |
55891 | We know lots of kind- hearted ladies who are in the way of giving one hundred franc notes to strolling performers, do n''t we? 55891 Well, then, your mother-- Why does not she come?" |
55891 | What a huge creature? 55891 What can this mean? |
55891 | What can we do to protect ourselves? |
55891 | What do you mean, my dear constable? |
55891 | What do you mean? |
55891 | What do you mean? |
55891 | What do you want, Nalla? |
55891 | What if Madame Pradère should be away from home? |
55891 | What is the matter, dear sister? |
55891 | What shall we make it with? |
55891 | What''s the matter with the coffee? 55891 What''s the meaning of a dog like this being away out here alone at such an hour of the night?" |
55891 | When we left Parentes was not Mamezan in the west where the sun sets, Cæsar? |
55891 | Where are your parents? |
55891 | Where are your parents? |
55891 | Where did you come from? |
55891 | Where do you wish to take her, Cæsar? |
55891 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
55891 | Who is it that you call Nalla? |
55891 | Who is that? 55891 Why ca n''t we? |
55891 | Why so? |
55891 | Why, that is a small fortune, is n''t it, Nadine? |
55891 | Why, what can Cæsar be doing there? |
55891 | Why, what is the matter, Vigilant? |
55891 | Why, what''s the matter? 55891 Why-- what can be the matter with that big brute?" |
55891 | Wo n''t you help us recover them? 55891 Would you be so kind, then, as to show our kind patrons a quick- step of your own invention?" |
55891 | You have come back to life, eh? 55891 You have obtained the permission, have n''t you, Nadine?" |
55891 | You have perhaps disobeyed your mother? |
55891 | You hear nothing, eh? |
55891 | You think your horse is dead? |
55891 | Your parents are no doubt anxiously awaiting your return? |
55891 | And how are you feeling now?" |
55891 | And now, my dear children, are you content to accept my proposal?" |
55891 | And richly they deserved their good fortune, for, amid all their vicissitudes had they not kept their lives pure, and their hearts simple? |
55891 | At the first movement the man flung open the door, swearing furiously, and shouting out:"What are you doing? |
55891 | But Nadine, whose pretty features wore a sad expression, shook her head doubtfully:"Who can tell?" |
55891 | But as he will not consent to part from us, wo n''t you please permit him to remain at the prison gate until we come out again?" |
55891 | But how about the elephant and the horse? |
55891 | But how shall we do it?" |
55891 | But if you sing so badly, perhaps you are better at dancing?" |
55891 | But in which direction was he to go? |
55891 | But poor little Abel buried his head in her lap, sobbing piteously, and murmuring"Lydia-- Lydia-- where is my sister, Lydia?" |
55891 | But this horse that is lying down there, does he belong to you?" |
55891 | But what was that?" |
55891 | But when, and where? |
55891 | But where was Lydia? |
55891 | Ca n''t we do something to get him warm?" |
55891 | Content to accept her offer-- the advantages and attractions of which were so great that they could scarcely credit their understanding of it--? |
55891 | Could she be dead? |
55891 | Do you follow me?" |
55891 | Do you hear?" |
55891 | Does any one of those present wish to take my foil, and try a turn with Nalla?" |
55891 | Does she really want us to go to her?" |
55891 | For instance, can you sing like your mistress, Mademoiselle Nadine?" |
55891 | Had n''t I better open it now?" |
55891 | Have you come a long way? |
55891 | Have you them in your mind, my dear? |
55891 | Holding them in her hands she said to the gendarme:"Now, sir, what will there be to pay?" |
55891 | How dare you interfere with it?" |
55891 | How do you happen to own so costly an animal? |
55891 | How was he injured?" |
55891 | I wonder what it can contain?" |
55891 | If he had said,"You must deposit some money,"she would have understood it at once, but"you must make a deposition"--what could that be? |
55891 | In the first place, what is your name?" |
55891 | Is he a clever animal like Nalla, or a comic one like Vigilant?" |
55891 | Is he indeed dangerous?" |
55891 | Is it possible? |
55891 | Is not Nalla, then, a dog like Vigilant?" |
55891 | Is that the case?" |
55891 | It can only be to seek me out, and obtain my assistance? |
55891 | It would be dreadful if any one tried to rob us of our money, would n''t it?" |
55891 | Let us stay here as long as we can, eh?" |
55891 | Nalla will be happy to do you that slight service, wo n''t you, Nalla?" |
55891 | That their presence meant no good, the method of their approach clearly indicated, but who were they, and upon what mischief were they bent? |
55891 | The intruders had taken the law into their own hands, why should not the Tambys do likewise? |
55891 | Turning sadly to Cæsar, she said with a sigh that was more like a sob:"In which direction will you go, Cæsar?" |
55891 | We owe it to them, do n''t we, Nadine?" |
55891 | We will go and look for her, eh?" |
55891 | What are they, and where are they?" |
55891 | What cared he for their threat? |
55891 | What could it be? |
55891 | What could the constable mean? |
55891 | What could_ he_ be doing there-- nearly a hundred miles away from home? |
55891 | What do you say to that?" |
55891 | What means all this row? |
55891 | What was to become of them? |
55891 | When he had at last finished, the magistrate turned his fierce eyes upon the children, and scrutinized them sharply:"But where are their parents?" |
55891 | Where did you get that money?" |
55891 | Where is this highly intelligent elephant? |
55891 | Where now was he going with rapid step, and uplifted trunk as though ready to act in his own defense? |
55891 | Where were they going-- and how was it that Madame Pradère, who had not gone out since her husband''s death, went with them? |
55891 | Who has taken away our van, and put another in its place?" |
55891 | Why did you take my child from me? |
55891 | Why do n''t you begin?" |
55891 | Will they, Colonel Laurier?" |
55891 | Wo n''t somebody find out what it is? |
55891 | You are, then, perhaps some young prince making a tour of the country?" |
55891 | You assert that a kind- hearted lady gave you two hundred francs about a month ago?" |
55891 | You assert that some one has taken away your little sister, and robbed you of all your money?" |
55891 | You catch that? |
55891 | You just love me, do n''t you? |
55891 | You will live, wo n''t you, Nalla, to love us, and be loved by us in return?" |
55891 | You''re our good faithful breadwinner, are n''t you?" |
55891 | and pray who is Nalla?" |
55891 | cried Nadine, who had always, poor girl, to consider the financial side of things, for was she not the little mother of a family that had many needs? |
55891 | he asked, with anxious, apprehensive face and tone,"that Madame Pradère has not answered the letter you wrote to her more than a month ago?" |
55891 | how shall we get him back?" |
55891 | is it you that hides the soul of my child which was taken away from me by death?" |
55891 | reiterated Cæsar,"and how was it that none of us went to bed?" |
55891 | what shall we do? |
55891 | what will happen to him? |
55891 | where are you?" |
55891 | who knows where to get a mouse?" |
59728 | And you''ve never taken this shuttle from Cyngus? |
59728 | But how to reach them? 59728 But what happens to them eventually? |
59728 | But why...? |
59728 | Can we do anything? |
59728 | Can you recommend good lodging? |
59728 | Can you wait while I try to ask one question? |
59728 | Do you mean to tell me that in all the homes of Earth there are no treasured heirlooms of the past? 59728 Do you mind explaining that one?" |
59728 | Have you heard anything from Maria? |
59728 | Hg su''v rthsr? |
59728 | I beg your pardon? |
59728 | If you do n''t, why did you take me to that meeting last night and invite me here today? 59728 Is it difficult for them to take things out of the vaults?" |
59728 | Is that all you want? |
59728 | Is there more? |
59728 | Kdftc? |
59728 | Maria... do you think she would? |
59728 | My boy, work as such may still be important in Andromeda, but how could it possibly be so here on Earth? 59728 Now, who''s a fool?" |
59728 | Wait-- there may be a way-- even more illegal than your first suggestion, but still a way...."What is it? |
59728 | Want you? |
59728 | We? 59728 What can they do about it?" |
59728 | What did she say? |
59728 | What have we to lose? 59728 What''s liquor got to do with art?" |
59728 | Where would you try it-- here in Uniport? |
59728 | Who''s trying to improve anything? 59728 Whtstywt?" |
59728 | Why do the monopolies even bother with Digesters and the classics? 59728 Why do you trust me?" |
59728 | Would they-- could they-- do it? |
59728 | Would you care to sample a bit of Bohemia, my boy? |
59728 | You have your Orientation Manual? |
59728 | Your artists and writers,he demanded,"all your creative people-- don''t they have anything to say about it?" |
59728 | *****"Destination?" |
59728 | *****"How are you getting along with Maria?" |
59728 | And if he could help her, how would it all end? |
59728 | Are n''t they kept in some central place?" |
59728 | Besides, you''ve encountered a couple of our young men, do you consider them physically capable of prolonged amour?" |
59728 | But reason asked: Why should he draw back now? |
59728 | But the arts of sex... the refinements of love.... Ca n''t you imagine by this time what takes place in the boudoirs of Earth? |
59728 | But what if we could inspire a rebirth of art as big as a whole galaxy instead of entertaining each other with our little flings at Bohemia?" |
59728 | But why? |
59728 | Can you remember that?" |
59728 | Could there be one whole woman in a culture of fragmented lives? |
59728 | Did he want to sign up for a copy? |
59728 | Engaged? |
59728 | Has she ever been engaged? |
59728 | He asked wonderingly,"Where did he get them?" |
59728 | He beckoned to the old librarian, and laboriously communicated his question:"The originals of these classics-- where are they?" |
59728 | He pointed to a phrase with the tip of his pen, and Walther read: What price room do you desire? |
59728 | He wrote back: Can I go down there? |
59728 | How could he ever tell his mother and father? |
59728 | How will you ever improve things that way?" |
59728 | How would the pieces fit together again? |
59728 | Is there no other source?" |
59728 | Married?" |
59728 | Married?" |
59728 | No books? |
59728 | No paintings? |
59728 | No recordings?" |
59728 | Not accustomed to having his financial standing questioned, Walther faced the man himself and demanded:"How much money do you want?" |
59728 | Now, what is it you wanted to ask Miss Maria?" |
59728 | Off the Earth? |
59728 | Opposite these words was the phonetic jumble: Whprumuirer? |
59728 | Or should he try to help? |
59728 | She''ll read them to her Bohemian friends tonight, and tomorrow they may be in Buenos Aires or Istanbul-- who knows?" |
59728 | Should he stand by and watch? |
59728 | The chuckle emboldened Walther to ask one more question:"Will Maria be there?" |
59728 | There were many questions Walther wanted to ask about Maria, but he tactfully inquired, instead:"How often does this group meet?" |
59728 | Uniport or Italy? |
59728 | Was it actually possible to get so much material out of the vaults? |
59728 | Was it right to let his own personal reaction stand in the way of something that might benefit whole ages of Mankind? |
59728 | Was this all a cruel joke played by Willy Fritsh? |
59728 | What I asked, Sir, was how long since you''ve been on Earth?" |
59728 | What better way to become acquainted with Earth''s culture than to spend his first evening at the opera? |
59728 | What did it mean? |
59728 | What did they propose to do? |
59728 | When he caught his breath, he asked:"What sort of world do you come from? |
59728 | When he had firm control of his own voice, he nodded and asked:"How do they propose to do it?" |
59728 | Where does she come from? |
59728 | Where were the originals of these classics? |
59728 | Why create when your creation is only fed into the maw of the Digesters? |
59728 | Why did you send me off alone with Maria?" |
59728 | Why not let modern artists create in the new form?" |
59728 | Will he accuse you, too?" |
59728 | Will you take her back to our hotel? |
59728 | Willy asked quietly:"What do you think of our intellectual underworld?" |
59728 | Would Maria be there? |
55721 | Ah,said the captain; then he added:"Did n''t you learn the le''ward side of a vessel?" |
55721 | Ai n''t you going to stay a while? |
55721 | And das young of_fic_er? |
55721 | And is your heart there-- in that garden? |
55721 | And you were not frightened? |
55721 | Annie,said Medbury, abruptly,"where''s Bob? |
55721 | Are they less insistent? |
55721 | Are you a Blackwater man? |
55721 | Are you against me, too? |
55721 | Are you homesick? |
55721 | But if I do n''t,she persisted,"and-- anything happens, will you try to get to me? |
55721 | But the men''s part,persisted Drew--"will they not be punished?" |
55721 | Ca n''t I even look at you? 55721 Can I not help you?" |
55721 | Can you believe that? |
55721 | Cap''n,said Medbury,"had n''t you better keep your watch below? |
55721 | Could it be a hurricane coming? |
55721 | Das iss mo''nizeh dan heah? |
55721 | Did I say anything very dreadful, my dear? |
55721 | Did it? |
55721 | Did you ever hear a loon cry alongshore at night? |
55721 | Did you feel a puff, sir? |
55721 | Did you hear what she said to me when she came aboard? 55721 Did you learn how to make it?" |
55721 | Did you think of it in cherry- time, with all the streets and dooryards white with blossoms? |
55721 | Do I ever forget you? |
55721 | Do n''t you know that I must go back to the cold and the snow? |
55721 | Do n''t you remember the winter Billy''s wife got religion? |
55721 | Do n''t you want them to go, mother? |
55721 | Do n''t you_ know_? |
55721 | Do the ladies know? |
55721 | Do yo''t''ink Ah s''all be los''once mo''? |
55721 | Do you call it happiness,she cried--"rolling like this? |
55721 | Do you mean to say,she asked in a low voice,"that you might have punished that boy for coming aft on the wrong side? |
55721 | Do you remember how you used to tie your hair up in two tight little braids? |
55721 | Do you remember the time you snatched my hat and I did not catch you till you got to Martha Parsons''s gate? 55721 Do you think I should have succeeded if I had gone?" |
55721 | Do_ you_ know why they would not come? |
55721 | Does the water gain on you? |
55721 | Ever been to sea before? |
55721 | Had n''t you better go below? 55721 Have n''t I always had it with you?" |
55721 | Have n''t you ever heard the sailors''rhymes about hurricanes in the West Indies? |
55721 | Have n''t you had enough of the sea? |
55721 | He did, did he? |
55721 | Hetty,he said,"last night-- you rushed away so quickly-- is it all right?" |
55721 | Hetty,said the captain,"just run down and get my pipe off my desk, wo n''t you? |
55721 | How did that cat happen to escape? |
55721 | How did you know about it-- the row? |
55721 | How do you know? |
55721 | How do you know? |
55721 | How long do you suppose this is going to last, Tom? |
55721 | How''d you know? |
55721 | I ai n''t, eh? |
55721 | Is it always going to be like this, Hetty? |
55721 | Is n''t it pleasanter here? |
55721 | Is n''t that a catspaw? |
55721 | Is n''t the wind ever going to come again? |
55721 | Is that all you ask of your work-- to be made strong and hopeful? |
55721 | Is that right? |
55721 | Is that you, Hetty? |
55721 | Is there any one else? |
55721 | It makes one think of the words,''Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand,''does n''t it? |
55721 | It''s a shark, is n''t it? |
55721 | It''s awful, is n''t it? |
55721 | Just bear a hand there, will you? |
55721 | Like the reading? |
55721 | Like what? |
55721 | May I ask what that is? 55721 Mother,"she said,"are n''t you afraid Mr. Drew will think you speak too lightly of sacred things? |
55721 | No? |
55721 | One? |
55721 | Shall I lash the boat on deck, sir? |
55721 | Shall we brace the yards around, and try to get what canvas we can on her, sir? |
55721 | Shall we finish our book? |
55721 | Shall we get it? |
55721 | Shortly? |
55721 | Steer any easier, sir? |
55721 | Steer hard? |
55721 | That is better, is n''t it? |
55721 | That will be our last sight of land, wo n''t it? |
55721 | That? 55721 That?" |
55721 | The knot? 55721 Then may it not be for always?" |
55721 | Then you think it may come out all right, after all? |
55721 | To crown the present hour-- might that not be the hardest, and therefore the noblest, task? |
55721 | Want me, sir? |
55721 | Want to try? |
55721 | Was n''t it? |
55721 | Wass yo''t''ink off? |
55721 | We did n''t think it would be like this when we left the harbor at home, did we? |
55721 | Well, I do n''t think it''s the place for folks who do n''t feel as though they are going to enjoy every bit of it, do you? |
55721 | Well,said Medbury,"how are you going to explain her, and others like her? |
55721 | What did you do with her? |
55721 | What did you say? |
55721 | What did you say? |
55721 | What do you do next? |
55721 | What do you mean? |
55721 | What is that for? |
55721 | What is that, Tom-- there-- like blood? |
55721 | What made you think that? |
55721 | What of yours? |
55721 | What will be done with them? |
55721 | What''s that, sir? |
55721 | What''s the matter? |
55721 | What''s the matter? |
55721 | What''s wanted? |
55721 | What? |
55721 | What_ is_ that, Tom? |
55721 | When ought we to get out, Tom? |
55721 | When we do that, we need not think of results-- or fear them-- need we? |
55721 | When? |
55721 | Where are we going? |
55721 | Where are we now, father? |
55721 | Where are we now? |
55721 | Where are we? |
55721 | Where are you going? |
55721 | Where did the captain go? |
55721 | Where''d you get that? |
55721 | Where''s the joke? |
55721 | Where? |
55721 | Whose wife and daughter? 55721 Why did you speak like that-- before a stranger?" |
55721 | Why do n''t you whistle for a wind? |
55721 | Why do n''t you? 55721 Why do you make such a beautiful picture of it?" |
55721 | Why spik off doze when we go- ing_ in_-vite peop''at ouah house? 55721 With what?" |
55721 | Wo n''t you come? |
55721 | Wo n''t you go below now, Hetty? |
55721 | Would n''t you like to have a piece? |
55721 | Yo''happen tow be a mah''ied man, maybe? |
55721 | Yo''heah dat? |
55721 | Yo''lak doze po_et_ry? |
55721 | Yo''lak eet, maybe? |
55721 | Yo''lak him mooch? |
55721 | Yo''lak not doze wateh? |
55721 | Yo''pro- nouns doze_ d_ in''chillen''? |
55721 | Yo''sad faw das, maybe? |
55721 | Yo''t''ink das iss nize? |
55721 | You do n''t mean to say that you are afraid of the sea, Mrs. March,he asked,"after all your voyages?" |
55721 | You do n''t? 55721 You here?" |
55721 | You mean a storm? |
55721 | You want it so? |
55721 | You were thinking of it, too? |
55721 | You''re not afraid, Hetty, are you? |
55721 | You''re not down on the articles as a forecastle- hand, are you? |
55721 | You''re not going to scrape the mainmast, eh? |
55721 | ''Well, call him down,''I said sharply, and he went to the rigging, and, standing on the rail, yelled:''Who''s that up there?'' |
55721 | ''Who''s that aloft?'' |
55721 | After his action of the morning, could he again meet her on the old footing of friendly fellowship? |
55721 | After last night, that sounds true, does n''t it?" |
55721 | All his life he had loved her, followed her in devoted service, but to what end? |
55721 | And what of the girl? |
55721 | And you are sure that you will not mind giving up China, Hetty, and the missionary work?" |
55721 | But what is the use? |
55721 | Do you mind telling me?" |
55721 | Do you suppose I know my own daughter''s? |
55721 | Do you think I could go back home and have people know that your-- your trick had succeeded? |
55721 | Do you think me a silly person?" |
55721 | Does n''t life seem barren to you here?" |
55721 | Drew?" |
55721 | He could not go on, but how could he now draw back? |
55721 | He paused irresolutely, and then said:"Hurt you anywhere?" |
55721 | He turned to Medbury:"But you were going to say--?" |
55721 | He was silent a moment, and then he said:"Do you know how long that''s been, Hetty? |
55721 | How are you going to explain her?" |
55721 | How can I be sure that it is not, unless I try? |
55721 | How s''all Ah say no at so kind heaht? |
55721 | I did n''t_ want_ you to come; but if I''d known this, do you think I would have set foot on this vessel while you were aboard? |
55721 | I know we are in great danger-- isn''t it so?" |
55721 | I suppose you were thinking of her, were n''t you?" |
55721 | Is n''t that a proof that the desire is something to be obeyed-- a real call? |
55721 | Is n''t that what the Buddha is supposed to do? |
55721 | Iss das mo''betteh?" |
55721 | It is Miss March?" |
55721 | Just get that canvas lashed up again, will you?" |
55721 | Medbury?" |
55721 | Medbury?" |
55721 | Robert, have n''t you ever seen her?" |
55721 | See if that steward left any cold tea below, will you?" |
55721 | She looked up suddenly and said:"Ca n''t we still be friends, Tom-- just friends?" |
55721 | She paused, but he did not speak, and she went on:"We can always be friends, then, ca n''t we?" |
55721 | Tell me truly: have you ever been in greater danger?" |
55721 | That''s punishment enough, is n''t it? |
55721 | Was n''t it technically and actually mutiny?" |
55721 | What can we women in seaports do? |
55721 | What do sailors say-- rolling both scuppers under? |
55721 | What does the good Lord give us feelings for if he does n''t mean us to use them?" |
55721 | Why do n''t your father stop it,--pour oil on the water, or something,--if he''s such a good sailor? |
55721 | Why do you look at me like that?" |
55721 | Would you?" |
55721 | Yo''learn so not alretty?" |
55721 | You''d think that something queer had got into things, would n''t you?" |
55721 | [ Illustration:"''_ You_ will need the patience,''she said"]"You have n''t asked any,"she replied quickly; and then added:"What next?" |
55721 | he asked--"always tied with red ribbon?" |
55721 | he exclaimed,"have n''t you gone to sleep yet?" |
55721 | he muttered,"why do n''t it blow?" |
55721 | there was n''t nothing there but just Sam Thompson, what would you''a''been?''" |
45068 | A priest of Apollo? |
45068 | An idol? |
45068 | Do you ask me if I am a''Christian''? |
45068 | Do you doubt Homer? |
45068 | Do you know of any one who has? |
45068 | Do you really believe,asked young Holyoake to the clergyman,"that what we ask in faith we shall receive?" |
45068 | For two thousand years no one has either seen or heard Jesus? |
45068 | In my hand I hold the notice of a publication bearing the title_ Is Jesus a Myth? 45068 Is he, then, dead?" |
45068 | Is it possible,I asked,"that all this is pure fabrication, a fantasy of the brain, as unsubstantial as the air? |
45068 | Mightyhe was, but we ask again, was he mighty in a noble sense? |
45068 | The whole world celebrates annually the nativity of Jesus; how could there be a Christmas celebration if there never was a Christ? |
45068 | What became of his body? |
45068 | What is this I see before me? |
45068 | What was that? |
45068 | Will he not be here this morning? 45068 Would not that, then,"I ventured to ask, impatiently,"make Jesus as much of an idol as Apollo? |
45068 | _ Why then, did not Jesus explain that important_ proviso_ when he made the promise? 45068 ** If Jupiter can have, Justin Martyr seems to reason, half a dozen divine sons, why can not Jehovah have at least one? 45068 1908 years after what? 45068 ANSWER: How long wasthe time from the opening of Jesus''public career until the time that it closed?" |
45068 | Again, why do these biographers of Jesus give us the genealogy of Joseph if he was not the father of Jesus? |
45068 | And can we by voting for Jesus make him a God? |
45068 | And how can it be introduced among the Gentiles without a knowledge of the doctrines and works of its founder? |
45068 | And how does he do it? |
45068 | And if, as the professor says,"reason is born of reason,"how did the first reason come? |
45068 | And shall we speak of the bigotry, the fanaticism, the bitter sectarian prejudices which to this day embitter the life of the world? |
45068 | And what gave the disciples this supposed"precedent conviction?" |
45068 | And what was Adam''s sin? |
45068 | And what was the statement which, while it crippled his memory, it did not moderate his zeal? |
45068 | And when did the event take place? |
45068 | And which''four''does the clergyman accept as doubtlessly"genuine?" |
45068 | And who can number the bitter disappointments caused by such impossible promises? |
45068 | And why are there thousands upon thousands of various readings in these, numerous supposed copies? |
45068 | And why are these Gospels anonymous? |
45068 | And why can not Dr. Adler be a monist? |
45068 | And, if faith that Jesus is a god proves him a god, why will not faith in Apollo make him a god? |
45068 | Are not the Beatitudes beautiful-- no matter who said them? |
45068 | Are not these, too, the fruits of Christianity? |
45068 | Are there any witnesses who saw the resurrection? |
45068 | Are there no truths in their teachings? |
45068 | Are there no virtues in their lives? |
45068 | Are you? |
45068 | Aside from the fact that the Jesus of Paul is essentially a different Jesus from the gospel Jesus there still remains the question, Who is Paul? |
45068 | Besides, could anything be more mythical than a righteousness which can only be imputed to us,--any righteousness of our own being but"filthy rags?" |
45068 | But do_ you_ see them, too, because I see them? |
45068 | But how can any amount of evidence satisfy one''s self that Jesus was born of a virgin, for instance? |
45068 | But if a faith which ignores evidence be not a superstition, what then is superstition? |
45068 | But if he knew all these things about Jesus, is it possible that he could go through the world preaching Christ without ever once referring to them? |
45068 | But if the''Christ''which the Hebrews expected was"purely mythical,"what makes the same''Christ''in the supposed Tacitus passage historical? |
45068 | But if there is"some ultimate fount of being,"to which our"highest"nature"can be traced,"whence did our lower nature come? |
45068 | But if they believed he was God, would they try to kill him? |
45068 | But is it true that the Christmas celebration proves a historical Jesus? |
45068 | But is that any evidence for you or me? |
45068 | But is that any proof that what he saw we could see also? |
45068 | But is that any reason why the attending physician, his pulse normal and his brow cool, should believe that the room is filling up with assassins? |
45068 | But our clerical neighbor from Oak Park has one more argument:"Why is Sunday observed instead of Saturday?" |
45068 | But the question is, does a teacher suppress the facts? |
45068 | But was Calvin"mighty"in a beneficent sense? |
45068 | But was Jesus the only one, or even the first to offer himself as a sacrifice upon the altar of humanity? |
45068 | But what has the reception which publicans and sinners might give Jesus to do with how_ the churches_ would receive him? |
45068 | But what is meant by salvation? |
45068 | But what is that but another kind of argument? |
45068 | But where is the Jesus to correspond to this rhetorical language? |
45068 | But why seek truths that are not pleasant? |
45068 | But_ who_ guarantees Paul? |
45068 | Can you conceive of anything more mythical than that? |
45068 | Can you hear me? |
45068 | Clapping truth into jail; gagging the mouth of the student-- is that building up or tearing down? |
45068 | Could Paul really have left out of his ministry so essential a chapter from the life of Jesus, had he been acquainted with it? |
45068 | Could anything be more fanciful than that? |
45068 | Could he not have_ said_ just what he_ meant_, in the first place? |
45068 | Could slavery ever strike a deeper bottom than that? |
45068 | Could they have been in a conspiracy against him? |
45068 | Critics have discovered mistakes in Darwin and Haeckel, but are these mistakes of such a nature as to prove fatal to the theory of evolution? |
45068 | Did Jesus show gratitude to the past when he denounced all who had preceded him in the field of love and labor as"thieves and robbers?" |
45068 | Did ever a Roman court witness such a trial? |
45068 | Did he not mean just what he said? |
45068 | Did his power save people from the Protestant inquisition? |
45068 | Did it cost Jesus any effort to perform miracles? |
45068 | Did it imply a sacrifice on his part to utilize a small measure of his_ infinite_ power for the good of man? |
45068 | Did the priests of Baal or Moloch prove that these beings existed? |
45068 | Do we know of any good reason, when it comes to religion, why Asia should be incomparably superior to anything Europe has produced in that line? |
45068 | Do we mean to say that the jelly- fish, the creeping worm, or the bud on the tree has reason? |
45068 | Do you not think that if he had done this, it would then have been impossible to deny his resurrection? |
45068 | Does he believe that there are two eternal sources, from one of which we get our bodies, and from the other our"rational side?" |
45068 | Does he give his people everything, or"whatsoever"they ask of him? |
45068 | Does he insist on remaining ignorant of the facts? |
45068 | Does he mean that"New York and Chicago churches"and"publicans and sinners"are the same thing? |
45068 | Does it justify hasty language? |
45068 | Does it not read like a page from fiction? |
45068 | Does not the Professor know that the story of the resurrection of Jesus is not original, but a repetition of older stories of the kind? |
45068 | Does not the horse see, hear and think? |
45068 | Does our neighbor grasp our meaning? |
45068 | Does that make it real? |
45068 | Does this read like history? |
45068 | Evolution is our destiny; of what use is it, then, to take up arms against destiny? |
45068 | From what teaching or saying of Jesus does he infer his respect for the rights of posterity? |
45068 | Had not England rendered innumerable services to the colony? |
45068 | Had the blind, and the lame, and the deaf, remained altogether neglected before Jesus took compassion upon them? |
45068 | Had the dead never been raised before? |
45068 | Has Christ after two thousand years abolished war? |
45068 | Has Jesus healed the world of the maladies for which we blame the Pagan world? |
45068 | Has Jesus kept his promise? |
45068 | Has any of you known him for more than three years? |
45068 | Has he broken the yoke of superstition and priest- craft? |
45068 | Has he even succeeded in uniting into one loving fold his own disciples? |
45068 | Has he made humanity free? |
45068 | Has he redeemed man from the blight of ignorance? |
45068 | Has he saved the world from the fear of hell? |
45068 | Has not Felix Adler examined the evidence which incriminates Calvin and proves him beyond doubt as the murderer of Servetus? |
45068 | Has this gentleman never heard of Greece? |
45068 | Have not a thousand, thousand prayers been offered in Jesus''name against every evil which has ploughed the face of our earth? |
45068 | Have not the Czars loved their country and fought for her prosperity? |
45068 | Have not these great teachers helped humanity? |
45068 | Have these prayers been answered? |
45068 | Have they not beautified her cities and enacted laws for the protection of their subjects? |
45068 | Have they not brought Russia up to her present size, population and political influence in Europe? |
45068 | Have they not rendered any services to their countrymen? |
45068 | Have you ever noticed that the day on which Jesus is supposed to have died falls invariably on a Friday? |
45068 | Have you ever paused to think of the purport of this piece of Orientalism? |
45068 | Have you heard him? |
45068 | Have you seen Apollo? |
45068 | Have you touched him?" |
45068 | He says:"Can you imagine such a thing as a black sun, or the reversal of creation or the annihilation of primal light? |
45068 | Homer, whose every word was a drop of light?" |
45068 | Homer, whose inkwell was as big as the sea; whose imperishable page was Time? |
45068 | How are we to prove whether or not a certain person was God? |
45068 | How can Christian ministers hope to engage the interest of the reading public if they themselves abstain from reading? |
45068 | How can Christian people tolerate the rebel against their God, when God himself has pronounced sentence of death against him? |
45068 | How can we be sure that these copies are reliable? |
45068 | How could an imaginary Zeus, or Jupiter, draw to his temple the elite of Greece and Rome? |
45068 | How could he who said,"Come unto me all ye that are heavy laden,"say also,"Depart from me ye_ cursed_?" |
45068 | How could people with such feelings labor to improve a world they hated? |
45068 | How could the same Jesus who said,"Blessed are the peacemakers,"say also,"I came not to bring peace, but a sword?" |
45068 | How did a lamb hold its place on the cross for eight hundred years? |
45068 | How does our clerical neighbor arrive at such a conclusion? |
45068 | How does the Reverend Barton like the conclusion to which his own reasoning leads him? |
45068 | How does the true story of Hypatia compare with the fable of"a nude woman placed on a pedestal in the city of Paris?" |
45068 | How else is this unanimous silence to be accounted for? |
45068 | How explain it? |
45068 | How many of the world''s multitude of sufferers did Jesus help? |
45068 | How much reliance can we put in a reporter who is given to such exaggeration? |
45068 | How old was Jesus when crucified? |
45068 | How would he go about it? |
45068 | How, then, are we to decide which of the numerous candidates for divine honors should be given our votes? |
45068 | How, then, did Mithraism arise? |
45068 | I am not sure of this, of course, but if nails, bones and holy places could be miraculously preserved, why not also manuscripts? |
45068 | I said to him;"Homer, the inspired bard? |
45068 | I write to ascertain whether this report has stated your position correctly? |
45068 | IS CHRISTIANITY REAL? |
45068 | IS JESUS A MYTH? |
45068 | IS THE WORLD INDEBTED TO CHRISTIANITY? |
45068 | If Jesus as a God opened the eyes of the blind, would it not have been kinder if he had prevented blindness altogether? |
45068 | If Jesus can open the eyes of the blind, then, why is there blindness in the world? |
45068 | If Jesus died for us, how many thousands have died for him-- and by infinitely more cruel deaths? |
45068 | If Paul visited Athens and preached from Mars Hill, how is it that there is no mention of him or of his strange Gospel in the Athenian chronicles? |
45068 | If Peter ever went to Rome with a new doctrine, how is it that no historian has taken note of him? |
45068 | If a Russian is not permitted to choose his own religion, will he be permitted to choose his own form of government? |
45068 | If a charcoal can be transformed into a diamond, why may not nature, with the resources of infinity at her command, refine a stone into a soul? |
45068 | If a slave of the church, why may he not be also a slave of the state? |
45068 | If he can save at all, pray, why not save all? |
45068 | If he is in the habit of bending his knees, what difference does it make to how many or to whom he bends them? |
45068 | If he will allow a priest to impose his religion upon him, why may he not permit the Czar to impose despotism upon him? |
45068 | If it is wrong for him to question the tenets of his religion, is it not equally wrong for him to discuss the laws of his government? |
45068 | If it is, what shall we think of a man who thought he was a god and could raise the dead? |
45068 | If matter can feel, can see, can hear, can it not also think? |
45068 | If so, why are_ you_ trying to convert them? |
45068 | If that is what he meant, why did he say something else? |
45068 | If there was ample evidence for the historicity of Jesus, why did his biographers resort to forgery? |
45068 | If they were originally written in Hebrew, how can we tell that the Greek translation is accurate, since we can not compare it with the originals? |
45068 | If we are to have any mythology at all, he seems to argue, why object to adding to it the mythus of Jesus? |
45068 | If we followed these teachings, would not our industrial and social life sink at once to the level of the stagnating Asiatics? |
45068 | If what I will say is the truth, do you know of any good reason why I should not say it? |
45068 | If"life is born of life,"where did the first life come from? |
45068 | In Rome, the Jews were free to be Jews; why should the Jewish Christians-- and the early Christians were Jews-- have been thrown to the lions? |
45068 | In a speech which is put into the mouth of Paul"--_put into the mouth of Paul!_ Is this another instance of forgery? |
45068 | In the name of what other prophets have more people been burned at the stake than in the names of Jesus and Moses? |
45068 | In what sense is Jesus a god, while all his rivals were"mere men,"if he is as helpless to prevent the abuse of his teachings as they were? |
45068 | Indeed, how could a teacher who said,"He that believeth not shall be damned,"he described as recognizing the rights of future generations? |
45068 | Is Dr. Adler, then, a dualist? |
45068 | Is Jesus a myth? |
45068 | Is Prof. Adler trying to say God? |
45068 | Is he not absolute? |
45068 | Is it not already passing into the shade of neglect? |
45068 | Is it not better to praise than to blame, to recommend than to find fault?" |
45068 | Is it not more likely that the wonder- working Jesus was unknown to them? |
45068 | Is it not pathetic? |
45068 | Is it not unthinkable? |
45068 | Is it one of the merits of Christianity that it calls other people"heathen,"or that it kills them and lays waste their lands for an empty grave? |
45068 | Is it possible that a real man, not to say the Savior of the world, would give such unmeaning and evasive replies to straightforward questions? |
45068 | Is it possible that as the result of Jesus''advent into our world, we have only a basketful of nameless and dateless copies and documents? |
45068 | Is it possible that such a man could remain totally ignorant of a miracle worker and teacher like Jesus, living in the same city with him? |
45068 | Is it right, then, in spite of all these things that autocracy has done for Russia, to seek to overthrow it? |
45068 | Is it right, then, that the missionary should criticise these ancient faiths? |
45068 | Is not that suggestive? |
45068 | Is not the man who smites us upon the cheek, or robs us of our clothing, equally guilty? |
45068 | Is not this remarkable? |
45068 | Is that the way to crawl out of a contract? |
45068 | Is that why he said"Take no thought of the morrow,"and predicted the speedy destruction of the world? |
45068 | Is there any trace of such tolerance in any of the sayings of Jesus? |
45068 | Is there anything as infamous as that in any religion outside of ours? |
45068 | Is there anything more precious in human life than children? |
45068 | Is there nothing good to be said of Russian autocracy? |
45068 | Is this history? |
45068 | Jesus and his twelve apostles were Jews; why are all the four Gospels written in Greek? |
45068 | Jesus may have been a wonderful man, but is every wonderful man a God? |
45068 | Jesus may have claimed to have been a God, but is every one who puts forth such a claim a God? |
45068 | Jesus was supposedly a Jew, his twelve apostles all Jews-- how is it, then, that the only biographies of him extant are all in Greek? |
45068 | Moreover, are not the Ten Commandments in the negative? |
45068 | Moreover, does not the bible teach that Jesus was tempted in all things, and was a man of like passions, as ourselves? |
45068 | Moreover, what credit is there in opening the eyes of the blind or in raising the dead by miracle? |
45068 | Moreover, wherein does a"divine"religion differ from a man- made cult, if it is equally powerless to protect itself against perversion? |
45068 | Must a man rob the long past in order to provide clothing for his idol? |
45068 | Must he close his eyes upon all history before he can behold the beauty of his own cult? |
45068 | Now, all this may be true, and I hope it is; but what of it? |
45068 | Now, why have I given these conclusions to the world? |
45068 | Only four? |
45068 | Our answer to the question, Is Jesus a Myth? |
45068 | Paul gives no evidence of possessing any knowledge of the teachings of Jesus, how could he, then, be a missionary of Christianity to the heathen? |
45068 | Referring once more to the case of Russia: Why do the awakened people in that country demand the overthrow of the autocracy? |
45068 | The Christians have"fasted and prayed"also against science, progress, and modern thought, but what good has it done? |
45068 | The Reverend has another argument:"The Christian Church-- when, why and how did it begin?" |
45068 | The date of your own letter 1908 tells what? |
45068 | The doctrine of humanity to animals, our dumb neighbors, is a positive tenet in Buddhism; is it in Christianity? |
45068 | The primitive man guessed where knowledge failed him-- what else could he do? |
45068 | The question under discussion is, Is Jesus Historical? |
45068 | The question waits for a reasonable answer; Why did not Jesus challenge the whole world with the evidence of his resurrection? |
45068 | The strength of a given criticism is determined by asking: Does it in any way impair the soundness of the argument against which it is directed? |
45068 | Then why is there discontent in the world? |
45068 | There is no meaning in saying that a man''s title"existed in appearance only?" |
45068 | There was ignorance in the world before Christianity; has Jesus destroyed ignorance? |
45068 | There was poverty and misery in the world before Christianity; has Jesus removed these evils? |
45068 | There was war before Christianity; has Jesus abolished war? |
45068 | To questions,"Where is Jesus?" |
45068 | W. A. Bartlett consider us beyond hope? |
45068 | Was ever such a view entertained of Caesar, Socrates or of any other historical character? |
45068 | Was he still afraid of them, or did he not care whether they believed or not? |
45068 | Was he the only one who worked miracles? |
45068 | Was he with his apostles for one year or for three? |
45068 | Was it just, then, that we should have beaten out of the land a government that had performed for us so many friendly acts? |
45068 | Was it just, then, to pull down an institution that had done so much for France? |
45068 | Was it, then, for his"works,"if not for his"words,"that Jesus"won the right of preeminence in the world''s history"? |
45068 | Was not our soul worth saving? |
45068 | Was she not one of the most progressive, most civilizing influences in the modern world? |
45068 | Was there a weakness found in men like Buddha, Confucius, Socrates, etc., from which Jesus was free? |
45068 | We ask: How long have you known Jesus? |
45068 | We know what it means in the orthodox sense, but what does it mean from the Unitarian standpoint of Mr. Jones? |
45068 | We may call this instinct, sensation, promptings of nature, but what''s in a name? |
45068 | Well, why? |
45068 | Were any of you present when Jesus came forth from the grave? |
45068 | Were you present when Jesus was taken down from the cross? |
45068 | Were you present when he was buried? |
45068 | Were you present, Mary, when the angels rolled away the stone, and when Jesus came forth from the dead? |
45068 | What about the atrocious inquisition to which no other religion in the world had ever been able to give the swing that Christianity did? |
45068 | What about the persecution and burning of helpless women as witches? |
45068 | What about the wholesale massacres in the name of the true faith? |
45068 | What answer did the preacher give to Holyoake''s earnest question? |
45068 | What are the elements out of which the Jesus story was evolved? |
45068 | What are the remaining nine doing in the Holy Bible? |
45068 | What are the subtle influences which operate in the womb of nature, where"the embryos of races are nourished into form and individuality?" |
45068 | What did he do that was not done by his predecessors? |
45068 | What did the Oriental see in the worm, which induced him to select it out of all things as the original, so to speak, of man? |
45068 | What did this mighty and noble man do to save a stranger and a scholar from so atrocious a fate? |
45068 | What do you think of it?" |
45068 | What does it mean to be the"only begotten from the Father?" |
45068 | What else in our human world is more beautiful, more divine? |
45068 | What is Christianity, but the life and teachings of Jesus? |
45068 | What is a myth? |
45068 | What is the reason for this? |
45068 | What kind of flesh was he then? |
45068 | What makes a Roman a Roman, a Greek a Greek, and a Persian a Persian? |
45068 | What means have we of deciding which version or reading to accept? |
45068 | What objection is there to thinking that matter, refined, elevated, ripened, cultured, becomes both sentient and rational? |
45068 | What other revelation has given rise to so many sects, hostile and irreconcilable, as the Christian? |
45068 | What shall we think of such reasoning from the platform of a presumable rationalist movement? |
45068 | What, in Dr. Barton''s opinion, could have influenced the framers of the life of Jesus to suppress their identity? |
45068 | When Bruno lighted a new torch to increase the light of the world, what was his reward? |
45068 | When were they copied? |
45068 | When, therefore, you say, he was dead, buried and rose again, you are relying upon the testimony of others? |
45068 | Where is Christ? |
45068 | Wherein, then, was the"preeminence"of Jesus? |
45068 | Which Christian church, brother? |
45068 | Which of the many faiths of the world has opposed Science as stubbornly and as bitterly as Christianity? |
45068 | Which of the religions has persecuted as long and as relentlessly as Christianity? |
45068 | Which of us, if he had the divine power, would not have extended it unto every suffering child of man? |
45068 | Which of us, poor, weak, sinful though we are, would not be glad to give his life, if thereby he could save a world? |
45068 | Who copied them? |
45068 | Who curses them? |
45068 | Who is the_ Word_ that became flesh? |
45068 | Who was Mark? |
45068 | Who was Matthew? |
45068 | Who were John, Peter, Judas, and Mary? |
45068 | Who were the heathen? |
45068 | Who, if he could by miracle feed the hungry, clothe the naked and give light and sound to the blind and deaf, would be selfish enough not to do so? |
45068 | Why accept as history those about Jesus? |
45068 | Why are not all nations alike? |
45068 | Why are they not dated? |
45068 | Why can not mind be a state of matter? |
45068 | Why did he not show himself also to his enemies? |
45068 | Why did it get itself believed and take root?" |
45068 | Why did the Americans overthrow British rule in this country? |
45068 | Why did this particular story persist, despite the paucity and the insufficiency of the evidence? |
45068 | Why does the missionary labor to overthrow the worship of Buddha, Confucius and Zoroaster? |
45068 | Why is it not so? |
45068 | Why is the Oriental so prone or partial to miracle and mystery? |
45068 | Why is the oak more robust than the spruce? |
45068 | Why not follow the example of the deity, as set forth in the persecutions of the Old Testament? |
45068 | Why not, then, dwell upon these, and pass in silence over the objectionable teachings of these religions? |
45068 | Why then is there a different date every year? |
45068 | Why this discrepancy in a historical document, to say nothing about inspiration? |
45068 | Why were Quakers hanged? |
45068 | Why were women put to death as witches? |
45068 | Why, then, did Jesus hide himself after he came out of the grave? |
45068 | Why, then, does not Paul speak of them at all? |
45068 | Will he not speak to his worshippers?" |
45068 | Will the clergyman tell us which parts of the bible are_ not_ invented? |
45068 | Will you mention the names of some of the witnesses who saw Jesus come forth from the tomb? |
45068 | Would it not have been fairer not to have given his friends any occasion for false expectations? |
45068 | Would not his adjectives be equally appropriate in describing any other teacher he admires? |
45068 | Would the date on a letter prove that an angel appeared to Mary and hailed her as the future Mother of God? |
45068 | Yet where are there grander men, or finer women? |
45068 | You saw him, then, as the apostles did,_ after_ he had risen? |
45068 | You say he was tried and crucified in Jerusalem before your own eyes, can you remember the date of this great event? |
45068 | [ Illustration: 043 Isis Nursing Her Divine Child, 3000 B. C.] Of course, it is immaterial on which day Jesus was born, but why is it not known? |
45068 | _ Jesus_.--"Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me?" |
45068 | _ Pilate_--"Art thou a King?" |
45068 | _ The Priests_--"Art thou the Christ-- tell us?" |
45068 | _ The Priests_.--"Art thou the Son of God?" |
45068 | p. 14._) If it was unbelief that inspired the murder of McKinley, what inspired the assassins of Hypatia and Henry III? |
45068 | provided by The Internet Archive THE TRUTH ABOUT JESUS IS HE A MYTH? |
45068 | shall I be guilty of defrauding the vengeance of God of its victims?" |
52891 | Afraidt? |
52891 | Ai n''t you fer the Rapids? |
52891 | And it was from Ben Ali? |
52891 | And that Pard Matt trailed after him? |
52891 | And where does he want to meet Dhondaram? |
52891 | Are you Matt King,he asked,"the fellow they call Motor Matt?" |
52891 | Are you flagging me? |
52891 | Are you going to try that, all alone, in the_ Comet_? |
52891 | Are you holding on, Miss Manners? |
52891 | Be back there in time to take the aëroplane aloft at six- thirty? 52891 But, look here, do you see the station yonder?" |
52891 | By Jerry,he cried,"what am I giving you your salary for? |
52891 | Ca n''t you tell me what you''re going to do? |
52891 | Can he read that Hindoostanee lingo? 52891 Den it_ vas_ you, hey? |
52891 | Dhondaram did n''t get the money? |
52891 | Did either of you ever see a prettier bit of traveling? 52891 Did we?" |
52891 | Did you see the look Dhondaram gave him while he was handing us that long palaver? 52891 Did you set that Roman candle to goin''?" |
52891 | Didju fall off? |
52891 | Disappeared? |
52891 | Ditn''t I findt dot Margaret Manners vat vas draveling mit der show? 52891 Do you think,"asked Matt,"that we could go to that place on the Elgin road and meet Ben Ali instead of letting Dhondaram do it?" |
52891 | Does Ben Ali know about this house of yours? |
52891 | Does he think I can read Hindoostanee? |
52891 | Doing an aëroplane stunt with the show? |
52891 | From what you said at that house with the green shutters, I take it you''re not going back to the show with me? |
52891 | Haf you prought der money? |
52891 | Has Bill Wily any right to it? |
52891 | Have you any idea that Ben Ali is mixed up in the affair? |
52891 | Have you any idea who the man was that called on the English woman in Lafayette and took Miss Manners away? |
52891 | He treated you well? |
52891 | Hit the trail? |
52891 | How are you going about it? |
52891 | How could you expect me to do a thing like that without getting a nick or two? 52891 How did he know we wanted Wily?" |
52891 | How did you happen to be here? |
52891 | How dit der gandle go off mit itseluf? 52891 How do you know the opening is big enough for you to come down in? |
52891 | How you like der pooty firevorks? |
52891 | How you was, Dutch? |
52891 | How''ll Ben Ali think Dhondaram is running the_ Comet_, pard? |
52891 | Hurt? |
52891 | I do n''t have to tell what''s in the letter in order to prove it''s mine, see? 52891 I know dot, aber vill I ged it? |
52891 | Is he crazy, or what? |
52891 | Is n''t the envelope addressed? |
52891 | Is n''t there a name on the letter? |
52891 | Is that so, Carl? |
52891 | Is there no way out of this hole, sahib? |
52891 | Join the show? |
52891 | Just how sorry are you? 52891 Just where is that cot, my dear sir?" |
52891 | Load that machine into the runabout and drive this rig back to the show grounds for me, will you? |
52891 | Markley, do you know you are going at the rate of sixty miles an hour? |
52891 | Matter? |
52891 | Now what? |
52891 | So that''s it, eh? |
52891 | So you put the kibosh on our brown friend all by yourself, did you? |
52891 | Somebody''s blunder? |
52891 | Speak to me about it, will you? 52891 Suppose Ben Ali sees only one man on the machine, and thinks that the man is Dhondaram?" |
52891 | Suppose we should come in on him from both sides at once? |
52891 | That''s your game, is it? |
52891 | Then there''s no telling how long Bill Wily has carried it in his pocket? |
52891 | Then where did they go? |
52891 | Then you went in, looked around, and could n''t see anything of either of them? |
52891 | There are others, you say? |
52891 | They made tracks for a house with green blinds? 52891 Too much weather for the flyin''machine to- day, huh? |
52891 | Vas you looking for me to pay ofer dot rewart? |
52891 | Vat iss dot? |
52891 | Vat''s to pay? |
52891 | Vere iss Modor Matt? |
52891 | We allee same fliends, huh? |
52891 | Well, anyhow, what are we going to do? 52891 Well?" |
52891 | What can we do for you? |
52891 | What did he jump from the car for if he wanted to go on with us? 52891 What did you do with your part of the letter?" |
52891 | What do you think of yourself, hey? |
52891 | What does that mean? |
52891 | What does the letter say? |
52891 | What good''s a flying machine, pard, when a spell of weather puts it down and out? 52891 What had Ben Ali to say to you?" |
52891 | What have you got to do with this house? |
52891 | What have you got up your sleeve? |
52891 | What is it? |
52891 | What letter? |
52891 | What sort of a way is that to act, Bill Wily? |
52891 | What sort of writing is this? |
52891 | What the nation was he following Wily for? |
52891 | What was Dhondaram''s work? |
52891 | What was the matter? |
52891 | What was you chasin''me for, Motor Matt? |
52891 | What yuh got there? |
52891 | What''re you making a run from the show grounds for without saying a word to Matt? |
52891 | What''re you roughing things up like this for, Wily? |
52891 | What''s he givin''us? |
52891 | What''s our next jump, your highness? |
52891 | What''s the good? |
52891 | What''s the matter when you set out in an automobile and do n''t arrive where you''re going? 52891 What''s the matter?" |
52891 | What''s the price for a trip on the_ Comet_? |
52891 | What''s to pay? |
52891 | What''s up? |
52891 | What''ve I done? |
52891 | What''ve you got to say for yourself? |
52891 | Where did Ben Ali send his letter from? |
52891 | Where did he get it? |
52891 | Where did the man take you? |
52891 | Where does your air- ship line run? |
52891 | Where''d yuh git that paper? |
52891 | Where''s Matt? |
52891 | Where''s Motor Matt? |
52891 | Where''s the Hindoo? |
52891 | Where? |
52891 | Who are you, my friend? |
52891 | Who else besides McGlory? |
52891 | Who knows whether there''s an opening there or not? |
52891 | Who was he? |
52891 | Who was the man who impersonated the agent of the British ambassador? |
52891 | Who''s it for? |
52891 | Why are you treating me like this? |
52891 | Why did n''t you grab him,demanded Burton,"and turn him over to me?" |
52891 | Why did n''t you wait and give us a chance? |
52891 | Why does n''t the ambassador agree to send some one to meet Ben Ali? 52891 Why my makee jump my wanchee go Glan''Lapids?" |
52891 | Why my makee tlouble fo''fliend? |
52891 | Why should n''t I? |
52891 | Why were you running away from me? |
52891 | Why, where the nation is he? 52891 Would he run, then?" |
52891 | Yeou tew kids aire chums, huh? |
52891 | You heap mad with Ping, huh? |
52891 | You know him makee shoot Loman candle, play plenty hob with side show? 52891 You no pullee pin on China boy?" |
52891 | You saw what was goin''on? |
52891 | You say,remarked McGlory, giving the house a swift sizing,"that Wily Bill ran into the house?" |
52891 | You vant to choin in mit me, hey? |
52891 | You''ll make a couple of flights to- day, wo n''t you? |
52891 | You''re crazy? |
52891 | You''re going to make up for the part? |
52891 | You''re not afraid? |
52891 | You''re not goin''to bear down too hard on me, are you, Burton? |
52891 | Yuh goin''to give me that? |
52891 | Aber he von''t say vat iss in der ledder, so how could I know?" |
52891 | Am I correct?" |
52891 | And the girl-- who was she? |
52891 | And was there any one at home? |
52891 | And where''s Pard Matt?" |
52891 | Backsliding, eh?" |
52891 | But what are you making the flight for, if not to please the people?" |
52891 | Can you give any information, Motor Matt, that will help us find Ben Ali, or Miss Manners?" |
52891 | Chadwick''s?" |
52891 | Come back to earth now, and tell me what''s on your mind?" |
52891 | Dhondaram, I make no doubt, is highly gifted, but will Ben Ali credit him with skill enough to operate the aëroplane?" |
52891 | Did n''t I just tell you it was lost? |
52891 | Did you see me coming back from the oak opening?" |
52891 | Did you think I was Dhondaram? |
52891 | Dit you make all der drouples? |
52891 | Ditn''t I get dot Ben Ali Hindoo feller on der run? |
52891 | Ditn''t I vin fife tousant tollars?" |
52891 | Everything''s lovely, eh?" |
52891 | Had he lost his matches in taking that header from the street car? |
52891 | Hey?" |
52891 | How could I lose somet''ing vat I do n''t got?" |
52891 | How could Matt make him? |
52891 | How could he have done that and then shown up in Kalamazoo the morning we got there?" |
52891 | How''s tricks, huh?" |
52891 | I suppose Ping and Carl are at the show grounds and are looking after the aëroplane?" |
52891 | I used to live in Grand Rapids, and the home town was a good place for me to cut loose from the show, see?" |
52891 | If that''s the case, what''s he doing with the letter?" |
52891 | If there was any one in the place, would they talk with him and tell him whether they had seen Matt or the side- show man? |
52891 | In other words, I''m to tell my business, eh? |
52891 | Iss it shink wriding, Ping?" |
52891 | Motor Matt was afeared to go up, I reckon, Dutch?" |
52891 | Page 1, corrected? |
52891 | Page 18, changed"go"to"got"in"What have you got to do with this house?" |
52891 | Perhaps Wily had rushed out of a rear door, and Matt had followed him? |
52891 | Sit here and wait, or hit the trail ourselves and find out what''s doing?" |
52891 | So that''s what you passed up the afternoon flight for, eh?" |
52891 | Sorry enough to make a clean breast of everything?" |
52891 | Speak to me about this, will you? |
52891 | Subbose we findt oudt vat der ledder iss aboudt?" |
52891 | Then, glad that he was able to change the subject, he remarked:"You losee one piecee papel in tent, Clal?" |
52891 | There was only one idea just then in the Dutch boy''s mind, and that was this:"How dit dot Roman gandle go off mit itseluf? |
52891 | There, how''s that?" |
52891 | They went up the bank and into the woods, you say?" |
52891 | Twomley?" |
52891 | Was he being hypnotized in spite of himself? |
52891 | Was it possible,_ could_ it be possible, that the girl was Margaret Manners? |
52891 | Wha''ju jump onto our stage for?" |
52891 | What about the automobile?" |
52891 | What d''you take me for? |
52891 | What do you think?" |
52891 | What else could I do but make myself safe?" |
52891 | What had become of Motor Matt? |
52891 | What was that?" |
52891 | What was the blunder? |
52891 | What we do?" |
52891 | When''ll you get back to the grounds?" |
52891 | Where did you get the thing, Carl?" |
52891 | Where was the automobile? |
52891 | Where''d you come from, Ping? |
52891 | Where''s Ping? |
52891 | Where''s this house?" |
52891 | Who lived in the house? |
52891 | Who will go?" |
52891 | Who''s the Chinaman?" |
52891 | Why not send''em to jail, where they belong?" |
52891 | Why should we hit it, and what shall we hit it with?" |
52891 | Will you let me take your motorcycle?" |
52891 | Wo n''t he think it queer that Dhondaram is navigating the flying machine? |
52891 | Yet what did that strange weakness mean? |
52891 | You are sure,"the girl asked tremblingly,"that this other agent of the British ambassador is really the person he pretends to be?" |
52891 | You have saved me again, Motor Matt, but what is the use of it all if I ca n''t leave this country and go to England, or back to India? |
52891 | whooped Carl,"vas it you dot douched him off ven der gandle vas my pack pehindt und I don''d see? |
53533 | ''I wonder is he dead?'' 53533 ''Will I fire at it?'' |
53533 | ''You know your orders, do n''t you?'' 53533 About what time was the car stolen?" |
53533 | Ai n''t dat a mos''''sprisin''purceedin''? 53533 Ai n''t dat scan''lous?" |
53533 | And you are a prisoner? |
53533 | And you lost it while I was chasing you? |
53533 | Are those motor cycles the ones that belong to Martin, that were stolen from us and that we bled a hundred and fifty apiece for? |
53533 | Blue car? 53533 But how do you know Tsan Ti is on that train?" |
53533 | But what can Grattan do? 53533 Ca n''t you be a man? |
53533 | Can you drive a motor car, Matt? |
53533 | Did Grattan and Bunce capture the other car? |
53533 | Did n''t Grattan search him? |
53533 | Did n''t I tell you? 53533 Did n''t you hear what was said when the motor boys passed us?" |
53533 | Do n''t I look the part? |
53533 | Do you know positively that Grattan and Pardo are following the car? |
53533 | Do you think Tige can watch two prisoners? |
53533 | Does dat''ar thing b''long tuh yo'', boss? |
53533 | Generous and agreeable friend,spoke up Tsan Ti,"did you succeed in capturing Sam Wing?" |
53533 | Grattan and Pardo? |
53533 | Has he been up tuh somefin''dat he had n''t ort? |
53533 | Has he told you about the ruby, Tsan Ti? |
53533 | Has n''t he got the ruby? |
53533 | Have you a knife, illustrious youth? |
53533 | Hocused it? |
53533 | How are we going to get to Gardenville? |
53533 | How can you tell the difference? |
53533 | How did that happen? 53533 How did you happen to find me?" |
53533 | How far down the road am I to go, pard? |
53533 | How much of a start has the Chinaman got? |
53533 | How was it lost? |
53533 | How you savvy? |
53533 | How, in the name o''Davy Jones,he cried, his gaze returning to Matt,"do you happen to be cruisin''in these waters?" |
53533 | How? |
53533 | I''m ready,was the prompt response,"but will we go?" |
53533 | If Grattan and Pardo are really following you,said Matt,"why could n''t you go back down the road, stop the car, and pretend you had a breakdown?" |
53533 | If we take the_ Iris_----? |
53533 | If what? |
53533 | Is n''t the theft of the ruby enough to send you to jail? |
53533 | Is that the New York man''s automobile, Joe? |
53533 | Is that the idol''s eye, Matt? |
53533 | Is this what ye call treatin''a feller white? 53533 Jee- whillikins, mister,"said he,"what''s that slant- eyed heathen been up to, hey? |
53533 | Looks purty meachin'', do n''t he? |
53533 | Lost it? |
53533 | Lost, eh? |
53533 | Lost? |
53533 | Matter- of- fact youth,remarked the mandarin earnestly,"do you not realize how strange events happen swiftly in the wake of the Eye of Buddha? |
53533 | Matter? |
53533 | Maybe,suggested McGlory,"I''d better head the car t''other way? |
53533 | Not safe? |
53533 | Oh, friend of my friend,wheezed Tsan Ti, passing his gaze to McGlory,"was it you who shouted?" |
53533 | Oh, that''s what your chum did, eh? |
53533 | Remember Monte Cristo like that, pard? |
53533 | Say, pard,he added, turning to Matt,"do you know a spark- plug from the carburetor?" |
53533 | Shocked? |
53533 | Somebody want us to run an air ship or go to sea in a submarine? |
53533 | Something else on your mind? |
53533 | Square? |
53533 | Suppose you and Gridly get into the tonneau,suggested Matt,"and leave Boggs, and me, and the dog to hide in the bushes at the edge of the marsh? |
53533 | That''s possible, of course; but the chances for success, though slight, are worth waiting and working for, do n''t you think? 53533 Then may I request of you the Eye of Buddha?" |
53533 | This is your work, is it, Motor Matt? |
53533 | Want to take the breath all out of me? |
53533 | Was n''t Tsan Ti on the train? |
53533 | Was one of the thieves supposed to be a sailor with a green patch over one eye? |
53533 | Well? |
53533 | What are the facts, Martin? |
53533 | What are you doing out here in the woods? |
53533 | What are you thinking of, McGlory? |
53533 | What can I do for you, Neb? |
53533 | What chance is there of our receiving a letter from the mandarin? 53533 What cheering thoughts can I possibly have?" |
53533 | What did the other thief look like? |
53533 | What did you find, Neb? |
53533 | What did you jump onto me for like this? 53533 What difference does that make, Joe?" |
53533 | What good will that do? |
53533 | What is he roped for? |
53533 | What is it? |
53533 | What is the fault with my plan, generous sir? |
53533 | What luck, Zeke? |
53533 | What shall we do with Sam Wing? |
53533 | What sort of a trap? |
53533 | What sort of clue is taking us to Gardenville? |
53533 | What yew goin''to do, friend? |
53533 | What you yellin''for? 53533 What''re you doin''here? |
53533 | What''s that place ahead there? |
53533 | What''s that you say, Bib? 53533 What''s the matter with you, Grattan?" |
53533 | What''s the matter, Joe? |
53533 | What''s the matter? |
53533 | What''s the matter? |
53533 | What''s the number? |
53533 | What''s the use of chasing the chink? |
53533 | What''s to be done with the two Chinamen? |
53533 | What''s to pay? |
53533 | What''ve I done that ye can send me to the brig for? 53533 Where and how was the ruby lost?" |
53533 | Where did you and Grattan come from, Bunce, that you were placed so handily for entrapping McGlory and the mandarin? |
53533 | Where did you find Joe and Martin? 53533 Where did you have it?" |
53533 | Where does the clue lead? |
53533 | Where have you been since you took the ruby? |
53533 | Where is it? |
53533 | Where is the chink? |
53533 | Where was the car you and Bunce stole from the Catskill garage? |
53533 | Where were you,went on the cowboy,"when you hailed the man in the white car?" |
53533 | Where''s Tsan Ti and the ruby? |
53533 | Where''s the pocket, Bunce? |
53533 | Who can tell of that? 53533 Who was the_ hombre_, Grattan?" |
53533 | Who''s it from? |
53533 | Whut''s dat he''s er- sayin''tuh me? |
53533 | Why did n''t he send the thief over the road? |
53533 | Why did n''t you take his knife away from him? 53533 Why is n''t it safe?" |
53533 | Why not turn him loose, an''then follow him? |
53533 | Why not? |
53533 | Why not? |
53533 | Why not? |
53533 | Why not? |
53533 | Would n''t this rattle your spurs, Matt? |
53533 | Wrong in the upper story, ai n''t he? |
53533 | You are sure there were no more than two of the thieves? |
53533 | You chasin''dat''ar Chinymum, boss? |
53533 | You found that red jewel at the edge of the bridge, you say, Neb? |
53533 | You had the ruby when you were at the spring? |
53533 | You know how to manage a motor cycle? |
53533 | You think Grattan has gone to Gardenville to intercept Tsan Ti? |
53533 | You took it from the mandarin, did n''t you? |
53533 | You''re the man who was on duty when the automobile was stolen? |
53533 | You''re to get five hundred dollars for recovering the car? |
53533 | _ Can_ he? |
53533 | _ Now_ what? 53533 Ai n''t dat fine? 53533 And why were you chasing him? |
53533 | Any one around? |
53533 | Are Motor Matt and Pard McGlory mixed up in that''we''?" |
53533 | Are you going down the river with me, pard, or have I got to go alone?" |
53533 | Are you going?" |
53533 | But just answer me this: What''s the good of escaping? |
53533 | But what sort of a trap is it?" |
53533 | But which way am I to go?" |
53533 | By golly, whaffur kind ob way is dat tuh treat an ole moke lak me?" |
53533 | Ca n''t a heathen like you let a Christian sleep? |
53533 | Can you take me to this''pocket,''as you call it?" |
53533 | Did n''t you ever stop to think, Martin, that, off and on, the motor boys might have troubles of their own?" |
53533 | Did you see a blue car?" |
53533 | Do n''t you know Matt, that whenever you dream about a person with red hair, trouble''s on the pike and you''ve got up your little red flag?" |
53533 | Do you know him, Motor Matt?" |
53533 | Do you want to take the mandarin with you in the roadster, Matt?" |
53533 | Face the music, ca n''t you? |
53533 | Have you any notion which way that car ought to go?" |
53533 | Have you hid the lantern, Bunce?" |
53533 | How could he, a miserable bazaar man, fight the demons? |
53533 | How in blazes did old Tsan Ti get the thing back to us? |
53533 | How much do you think that ruby''s worth?" |
53533 | How_ could_ he have returned it when, as Matt and McGlory believed, he was at that very moment hurrying to get out of the country and escape the law? |
53533 | Huh?" |
53533 | I think it would work, pard, but who''s to hide in the tonneau? |
53533 | If you''re so plumb certain he wo n''t write, why not promise?" |
53533 | Is not my present distress sufficient, without any of your unwelcome attentions? |
53533 | Is that fat chink the one that come from Chiny to get holt of the idol''s eye?" |
53533 | Is the matter clear, esteemed friend?" |
53533 | Is we squar''now, boss?" |
53533 | Look there, will yew?" |
53533 | Martin?" |
53533 | Maybe you''ve heard of Motor Matt?" |
53533 | Nervy, but it wo n''t wash.""Where''d the car fall into your hands if you ai n''t the ones that stole it?" |
53533 | Ready for New York in the morning, Joe?" |
53533 | Say,_ did n''t_ I? |
53533 | Some remarkable now, ai n''t it?" |
53533 | Tell me, my lad, are you and Motor Matt looking for Tsan Ti?" |
53533 | The Confederate seemed to read me through, for he said:"''Well, Yank, have you got enough water?'' |
53533 | The question now was, did a similar waterway exist at the northern end? |
53533 | Think we''re far enough?" |
53533 | What I want to know is, where have you and the mandarin come from? |
53533 | What d''ye say, mate? |
53533 | What good is it going to do you?" |
53533 | What happened to you after Sam Wing stole the ruby?" |
53533 | What have you been doing since we went two different ways from the spring?" |
53533 | What if his ancestors were regarding him, looking out of the vastness of the life to come with stern disapproval? |
53533 | What is dat thing, anyhow? |
53533 | What more can you do to make me miserable?" |
53533 | What sort of a car was it that was stolen?" |
53533 | What were Sam Wing''s forefathers thinking of this act of vile treachery? |
53533 | What''s happened to them?" |
53533 | What''s hit him now?" |
53533 | What''s the fat Chinaman doin''?" |
53533 | What''s the trouble with it?" |
53533 | What''s the word?" |
53533 | Where are they now? |
53533 | Where are we bound for, gentlemen?" |
53533 | Where are you, pard?" |
53533 | Where did you pick up the mandarin, Grattan?" |
53533 | Where''s Matt?" |
53533 | Where''s your nerve, Pardo?" |
53533 | Which is the mandarin that got robbed of the ruby?" |
53533 | Who was Sam Wing that he should defy these ten thousand demons of misfortune? |
53533 | Whoever thought this could happen? |
53533 | Why did Tsan Ti get off the train at Gardenville when he was going to Buffalo? |
53533 | Why not crank up the automobile''s engine and rush down the ravine? |
53533 | Why should Grattan have returned the box to Matt? |
53533 | Will it insult you if I offer, of my goodness of heart, five hundred dollars?" |
53533 | Will you answer a civil question, my lad?" |
53533 | Will you go along?" |
53533 | You know these hills?" |
53533 | You takee money, lettee Sam Wing go?" |
53533 | You''re the boy to look out for Number One, eh? |
53533 | You, for one, of course, but who else?" |
53533 | asked Matt,"the one that was stolen from Martin''s garage last night?'' |
53533 | chuckled McGlory,"what sort of a day''s work would you call this, pard? |
53533 | he shouted at last,"is this a dream, or the real thing? |
60402 | And Wurst? |
60402 | And have you no duty to him as well? |
60402 | But,said someone,"how will you continue the human race?" |
60402 | Do n''t it beat all? |
60402 | Do n''t you? |
60402 | Do you think I do not want to remember, after that? |
60402 | He gave you a chance to pick up, eh? |
60402 | How could you find it when you had not looked for it? |
60402 | Is not a state of things in which truth, amenity, and innocence are impossible, to be rejected for these reasons alone? |
60402 | Is not an intimacy without charm or transport more indecent than ecstasy of what kind so ever? |
60402 | Just that I said some''sottises,''the same as always? |
60402 | That is home to you? |
60402 | What did he say, and when? |
60402 | What will you tell him then? |
60402 | What? |
60402 | Why should I? |
60402 | You imply my father''s composition is not real? |
60402 | * DO YOU KNOW* Tarrington, the fox- hunting town in Virginia, with an Alimony Row? |
60402 | * DO YOU KNOW* the blind Scotswoman''s tale and the search which followed? |
60402 | --_From A. E.''s Collected Poems._ The Critics''Critic GALSWORTHY AS A GREEK Do you read Arthur Guiterman''s rhymed reviews? |
60402 | A place where there is no strife, where everything is perfection and completion-- what joy is to be found there? |
60402 | And Peter said''Go back,''very quietly, making a lot of little passages and returning for me to find, do you see?" |
60402 | And was n''t it Edward Lear who wrote of_ The Jumblies_:"Their heads are green, and their hands are blue, And they went to sea in a sieve"? |
60402 | Anti- Christs? |
60402 | Are you tired now?" |
60402 | Can he not tack himself on to this all- inclusive life by denial and forgetfulness of himself? |
60402 | Can not the individual by contemplation identify himself with the world- soul? |
60402 | Dare we write his name and name his writings without calling down upon our much- pelted heads the wrath of the gods? |
60402 | Do you remember that exquisite thing( is it Euripides?) |
60402 | Does he not blaspheme what is sacred, and must we not, then, give him a wide berth? |
60402 | Even if what we call"true"be really true, can it make us happy? |
60402 | Faith? |
60402 | Feminism? |
60402 | Has the cubist literature of Gertrude Stein awakened echoes in Chicago? |
60402 | Have you thought there could be but a single Supreme? |
60402 | How could one of her simple clarity of thinking be anything but outraged by the vulgarities of an average marriage? |
60402 | How, now, should the timorous heart of man be quieted in the presence of this new doubt? |
60402 | If one living organism is perpetuated after its physical dissolution, why not another? |
60402 | If we doubt faith, why not doubt science, too? |
60402 | If we doubt the Church, why not doubt the state, too? |
60402 | If we doubt the bible, why not doubt reason, doubt knowledge, doubt morality? |
60402 | If we find our happiness in action, how shall our descendants find happiness when there are no more evils to conquer? |
60402 | If you ask him_ cui bono_?--he will reply: why any_ bono_ at all? |
60402 | Immoralists? |
60402 | Is not that which is called"good"grievous impediment in our pilgrimage? |
60402 | Is not this as it should be? |
60402 | It finishes with the captain pulling him in by the heels, crying,"Doktor, sind Sie des Teufels?" |
60402 | It is not possible to_ forget_ a little concert piece that you_ know_....""Did you go on again?" |
60402 | It remains to ask: What has Tagore done to us? |
60402 | It was a more poignant questioning to me, than Arnold''s"unquenched, deep- sunken, old- world pain-- Say, will it never heal?" |
60402 | Law, morals-- are not these perhaps a blunder of history, an old hereditary woe with which humanity is weighted down? |
60402 | Now, what shall we say of all these strivings to heal the hurt of the modern mind? |
60402 | O no, the old gods are not dead: I think that they will never die; But I, who lie upon this bed In mortal anguish-- what am I? |
60402 | Of what nature, then, must be the religion of the modern man and woman? |
60402 | Or were the stars, perhaps, the souls of men and women escaped for ever from love and longing? |
60402 | Perhaps he was not well... when is the first engagement-- Sunday?" |
60402 | Probably Homer might be said to do the same thing; we''d better take it out of the schools, had n''t we? |
60402 | This has long( a few months) been the cry of the painter, and the smart set has echoed: Why should he? |
60402 | Thou layest thy robes aside with gesture large and flowing-- Is it for love or sleep-- is it for life or death? |
60402 | To what extent, I was compelled to ask, was the effect illusory or hypnotic? |
60402 | Wells said to save the kitten and let the Mona Lisa burn; who would consider anything else? |
60402 | Were these results referable to the play alone or in part to the reader, or to both? |
60402 | What has been his answer to the promise and the challenge of the world? |
60402 | What if someone who had burned and ached were now spreading over him this leafy peace-- this blue- black shadow against the stars? |
60402 | What if true prophets are always men of_ Sturm und Drang_, men of divine discontent, fellow- conspirators with the Future? |
60402 | What is Boston society; what kind of people is it composed of; what are its characteristics; what does it amount to in this busy age? |
60402 | What is he likely to do for the future? |
60402 | What matter about anybody else? |
60402 | What possible_ good do they do_?" |
60402 | What value was there in it? |
60402 | Who has given men the power and right to decide about woman''s errand in the world? |
60402 | Who shall build bowers To keep these thine? |
60402 | Why should a man be any color except that which his will dictates? |
60402 | Why should it? |
60402 | Why, then, should not a magazine of the Future interpret Nietzsche the prophet of a new culture? |
60402 | With a world offering such rencontres, such aery strifes and adventures, who would not live a thousand years stone dumb? |
60402 | You have admitted since that it was too much for you, eh?" |
60402 | You suffered that night at the concert, eh? |
6747 | But, do you remember who was the last passenger? |
6747 | Germs? |
6747 | How? |
6747 | When the lunch gong sounded, we all went below( does n''t that sound real nautical?) |
6747 | Will anyone ever forget Mrs. Schwartz''s wonderful rendition of the"Lost Italian girl?" |
6747 | Will we ever forget the dining tables equipped with metal railings, divided into sections to hold in the dishes? |
62121 | Are you quite serious? |
62121 | But are there no European edifices in Canton? |
62121 | But how about wagons, carriages, and horses? |
62121 | By the way,said a friend at my side,"do you know that once in the history of this country the Japanese throne itself was wrestled for? |
62121 | Good morning, sir,said one of them in excellent English,"do you know Carter Harrison, of Chicago?" |
62121 | Have you not been to Haruna, beyond Ikao? |
62121 | How can your people live thus thinly clad, and with so little fire? |
62121 | Must I get into this thing, and have n''t you any blankets for these horses? |
62121 | So you are Ah Cum? |
62121 | What is it,we exclaimed,"a winged Mercury, or a Coney Island bather rushing to the beach?" |
62121 | What is this? |
62121 | What places have you visited? |
62121 | What under heaven is this? |
62121 | Why not retrace your steps and go there now? 62121 And if so, who will guarantee that we shall not be murdered? |
62121 | At last he gathered strength enough to ask:"But what security have you that I will repay you?" |
62121 | But is anything good for those who lead a sedentary life? |
62121 | But now, among so much that is disagreeable, one naturally inquires,"Are there not some redeeming features in this Chinese life?" |
62121 | But were they really coming in just that economical style of dress? |
62121 | Did we desire an entire story? |
62121 | Did we insist on having separate rooms? |
62121 | Have we a definite conception of what four hundred million human beings are? |
62121 | How could they? |
62121 | How do we know that his future may not be superior to our present?" |
62121 | I exclaimed,"can any one be too happy in this world?" |
62121 | I exclaimed,"what in the world do you mean by''precipice beef?''" |
62121 | If such then be the state of things in the capital, what must it be in the interior towns, so rarely reached by foreigners? |
62121 | Seeing some buildings on the opposite bank, we asked:"How do you cross here from shore to shore? |
62121 | Shades of our childhood!--what are these? |
62121 | Shall, then, our people die, and your lives not be required? |
62121 | Should we approach a group of Chinese merchants in Canton, and ask any one of them"How many children have you?" |
62121 | The motion lasted less than a minute; but what can not an earthquake do in forty seconds? |
62121 | The only question is:"Which side is up, and which is down?" |
62121 | What is a hundred years? |
62121 | What matters it if those who merit death are said to have committed one crime or another? |
62121 | What wonder, then, that tourists resort to Miyanóshita? |
62121 | Who could resist, in such a place, the impulse to revere that Power of which these forms of nature were imperfect symbols? |
62121 | Who shall say that there are not worse methods than this old Japanese mode of arbitration?" |
62121 | Will this old empire ever be aroused to new activity, and can fresh life- blood be infused into her shrunken veins to animate her inert frame? |
62121 | Will you take me?" |
62121 | Yes, we will take you; and, first of all, can you get us safely into one of those boats? |
62121 | Yet search the world through, and where will you find servants such as these? |
6804 | Were you not a noble? |
6804 | What need is there for discussion,exclaimed a delegate,"where all are agreed? |
6804 | ( 3800? |
6804 | (?-606 B.C. |
6804 | ? |
6804 | ASSHUR- BANI- PAL( 668- 626? |
6804 | As early as the times of Jeremiah, the permanency of physical characteristics had passed into the proverb,"Can the Ethiopian change his skin?" |
6804 | As the slave advanced, Marius shouted,"Man, do you dare to kill Caius Marius?" |
6804 | If the French people should be allowed to overturn the throne of their hereditary sovereign, who would then respect the divine rights of kings? |
6804 | Indeed, who is strong enough to rule the world? |
6804 | It is related that Caius had a dream in which the spirit of his brother seemed to address him thus:"Caius, why do you linger? |
6804 | It was begun in 214(?) |
6804 | Many thoughtful minds were hopelessly asking,"What is truth?" |
6804 | The most noted of these form what is known as the Epic of Izdubar( Nimrod? |
6804 | The state came to be known as Russia, probably from the word_ Ruotsi_( corsairs? |
6804 | and finished in 204(?) |
6261 | And shall I not also go on? |
6261 | Are all the sins to be thine? |
6261 | Blasphemer, did the spirit move thee to brawl and fight, to drink and curse, to kiss a wanton in the open road? 6261 Has repentance come to thee? |
6261 | He means to make Hamley his home? 6261 How came thee expert with thy fists?" |
6261 | How does thee know these things? |
6261 | How far, who can tell? |
6261 | How know I, Davy? 6261 How long have we?" |
6261 | IS IT ALWAYS SO- IN LIFE? |
6261 | In the Earl''s carriage indeed-- and the Earl? |
6261 | Shall I not speak when I am moved? 6261 Thee did use thy hands like any heathen sailor-- is it not the truth?" |
6261 | Thee has seen these things-- and how? |
6261 | Thee is guilty of all? |
6261 | Thee is guilty? |
6261 | To what end? |
6261 | To what good? 6261 What does thee know of him?" |
6261 | What does thee see for me afar, Faith? |
6261 | What is thy name? |
6261 | Wherein has it all profited? |
6261 | Again, in reply to the same question, the reply of the same Arab sprang to his lips--"Does the Morning want a Light to see it by?" |
6261 | Before that day on which I did these things was there complaint, or cause for it? |
6261 | But is there none among you who has not secretly used profane words and, neither in secret nor openly, has repented? |
6261 | Can you not hear me call? |
6261 | Can you not hear me call?" |
6261 | Did I think in secret that which might not be done openly? |
6261 | Doth not the spirit move thee?" |
6261 | For the rest--""For the rest, Faith?" |
6261 | From Ireland these furnishings come?" |
6261 | Had he not heard the knocking and the voice? |
6261 | I kissed the woman openly-- is there none among you who has kissed secretly, and has kept the matter hidden? |
6261 | I punished him-- why enlarge?" |
6261 | Is his own field so wide?" |
6261 | Is it thy will to suffer that which we may decide for thy correction?" |
6261 | Is that thy faith, friend?" |
6261 | Is there none among you who has, though it be but once, drunk secretly as I drank openly? |
6261 | Looking round the room, at last Faith said:"Thee has all thee needs, David? |
6261 | Shall a man be beaten like a dog? |
6261 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?'' |
6261 | The little wizened Elder Meacham said:"The flute, friend-- is it here?" |
6261 | Thee is sure?" |
6261 | Was my life evil? |
6261 | Was this sin in me?" |
6261 | What could there be in common between the sophisticated Eglington and this sweet, primitively wholesome Quaker girl? |
6261 | What hath come upon thee?" |
6261 | What the secret? |
6261 | What was the temptation? |
6261 | Will you hear me?" |
6261 | Would it bind one broken heart? |
6261 | Would it give light to one darkened home? |
6261 | Would it restore one single life in Damascus? |
6261 | Ye are all weavers, and Allah the Merciful, does He not watch beside the loom?" |
6036 | 20), � Hath not the potter power over the clay? � No wonder that the first Hand who moulded the man- mud is a_ lieu commun_ in Eastern thought. |
6036 | Another shift of scene, another pang to rack the heart; Why meet we on the bridge of Time to � change one greeting and to part? |
6036 | Are these the words for men to hear? |
6036 | But is it so? |
6036 | But we? |
6036 | But who dares say � can not �? |
6036 | But! � faded flow � er and fallen leaf no more shall deck the parent tree; And man once dropt by Tree of Life what hope of other life has he? |
6036 | Cease, Man, to mourn, to weep, to wail; enjoy thy shining hour of sun; We dance along Death � s icy brink, but is the dance less full of fun? |
6036 | Despite the Writ that stores the skull; despite the Table and the Pen;* Maugre the Fate that plays us down, her board the world, her pieces men? |
6036 | Dost not, O Maker, blush to hear, amid the storm of tears and blood, Man say Thy mercy made what is, and saw the made and said � twas good? |
6036 | Eternal Morrows make our Day; our_ Is_ is aye_ to be_ till when Night closes in; � tis all a dream, and yet we die, � and then and THEN? |
6036 | Faith a merit and a claim, when with the brain � tis born and bred? |
6036 | For future Life who dares reply? |
6036 | For what want is there of a Hell when all are pure? |
6036 | How may we know? |
6036 | I want not this, I want not that, already sick of Me and Thee; And if we � re both transform � d and changed, what then becomes of Thee and Me? |
6036 | IV What Truths hath gleaned that Sage consumed by many a moon that waxt and waned? |
6036 | IX How then shall man so order life that when his tale of years is told, Like sated guest he wend his way; how shall his even tenour hold? |
6036 | If Self- made, why fare so far to fare the worse � Sufficeth not a world of worlds, a self- made chain of universe? |
6036 | Is not myself enough for me? |
6036 | Is not the highest honour his who from the worst hath drawn the best; May not your Maker make the world from matter, an it suit His hest? |
6036 | It says, � This is well in theory; but how carry it out? |
6036 | Say which were easier probed and proved, Absolute Being or mortal man? |
6036 | The Hâjî again asks the old, old question, What is Truth? |
6036 | The shatter � d bowl shall know repair; the riven lute shall sound once more; But who shall mend the clay of man, the stolen breath to man restore? |
6036 | The soul is a new- comer on the scene; Sufficeth not the breath of Life to work the matter- born machine? |
6036 | This Soul to ree a riddle made; who wants the vain duality? |
6036 | To the question, is there anything outside of us which corresponds with our sensations? |
6036 | We meet to part; yet asks my sprite, Part we to meet? |
6036 | What Prophet- strain be his to sing? |
6036 | What endless questions vex the thought, of Whence and Whither, When and How? |
6036 | What hath his old Experience gained? |
6036 | What is the Truth? |
6036 | What is the actual state of the world of waters, where the only object of life is death, where the Law of murder is the Law of Development? |
6036 | What know � st thou, man, of Life? |
6036 | What man foresees the flow � er or fruit whom Fate compels to plant the tree? |
6036 | What mortal shall consort with Khizr, when Musâ turned in fear to flee? |
6036 | What reckt he, say, of Good or Ill who in the hill- hole made his lair, The blood- fed rav � ening Beast of prey, wilder than wildest wolf or bear? |
6036 | What see we here? |
6036 | What to thy Godhead easier than One little glimpse of Paradise to ope the eyes and ears of man? |
6036 | What? |
6036 | When he sings � Abjure the Why and seek the How, � he refers to the old Scholastic difference of the_ Demonstratio propter quid_( why is a thing? |
6036 | Where then � Th � Eternal nature- law by God engraved on human heart? � Behold his simiad sconce and own the Thing could play no higher part. |
6036 | Who can measure man � s work when he shall be as superior to our present selves as we are to the Cave- man of past time? |
6036 | Who e � er return � d to teach the Truth, the things of Heaven and Hell to limn? |
6036 | Why heap such hatred on a word, why � Prototype � to type assign, Why upon matter spirit mass? |
6036 | Why must we meet, why must we part, why must we bear this yoke of MUST, Without our leave or askt or given, by tyrant Fate on victim thrust? |
6036 | Why, then, asks the objector, does man ever strive and struggle to change, to rise; a struggle which involves the idea of improving his condition? |
6036 | all that is hath come either by Mir � acle or by Law; � Why waste on this your hate and fear, why waste on that your love and awe? |
6036 | how durst thou, Allah, thus to play With Love, Affection, Friendship, all that shows the god in mortal clay? |
6036 | is it so? |
6036 | pretend the Noumenon to mete and span? |
6036 | wants an appendix your design? |
6036 | what canst thou know? |
6036 | what monster- growth of human brain, What powers of light shall ever pierce this puzzle dense with words inane? |
6036 | what need of � I � within an � I �? |
6036 | what � vaileth man to mourn; shall tears bring forth what smiles ne � er brought; Shall brooding breed a thought of joy? |
6036 | � Faith stands unmoved �; and why? |
6036 | � Grant an Idea, Primal Cause, the Causing Cause, why crave for more? |
6036 | � How I the tiger, thou the lamb; again the Secret, prithee, show � Who slew the slain, bowman or bolt or Fate that drave the man, the bow? |
6036 | � Say, Man, deep learnèd in the Scheme that orders mysteries sublime, � How came it this was Jesus, that was Judas from the birth of Time? |
6036 | � Who now of ancient Kayomurs, of Zâl or Rustam cares to sing, � Whelmed by the tempest of the tribes that called the Camel- driver King? |
6036 | � Why meanly bargain to believe, which only means thou ne � er canst know? |
6036 | � Why strive its depth and breadth to mete, to trace its work, its aid to � implore? |
55650 | Ah, caballero,said the Spanish lady, with a pretty play of fan and eye as she spoke,"you will not return to Mexico, the beautiful city?" |
55650 | And sell me for five hundred dol--? |
55650 | And the artist? |
55650 | And the price? |
55650 | But wherefore came ye not sooner? |
55650 | But who? |
55650 | Can you describe,he asked,"the places you see in your dreams?" |
55650 | Croyez- vous ça? |
55650 | Didst thou dream that I was dead? 55650 El Vómito?" |
55650 | Fair, with dark eyes-- about twenty, perhaps, at that time-- a little rosy? |
55650 | Have you birds like that in the West? |
55650 | Have you never visited India even through the medium of art-- books, engravings, photographs? |
55650 | How do you mean, Doctor? |
55650 | How long have you been dreaming of these places? |
55650 | I want to get some stamped envelopes,I responded;--"is this the post- office?" |
55650 | Is it for sale? |
55650 | Is that all? |
55650 | Is there a drop of blood in your veins that does not grow ruddier and warmer at the thought of me? 55650 Knowest thou how I have lived? |
55650 | May I have the pleasure of presenting you with a Turkish pipe? 55650 Pardon!--qu''est ce que c''est?" |
55650 | Shall I mask this loveliness, that hath allured rajahs and maharajahs, beneath the coarse garb of a recluse? 55650 Shall I, indeed, cast away this beauty?" |
55650 | Sol am nobody? |
55650 | Then what would you do with a little bird in such a place? 55650 There is no name upon the tomb,"said the voice of the friend who stood beside me;"yet why should there be?" |
55650 | Too well? |
55650 | Una Méjicana? |
55650 | Was your father ever in India, or your mother? |
55650 | Were you ever in India? |
55650 | What in Christ''s name is that? |
55650 | What is its daily food? |
55650 | Why, did you know her? 55650 Why?" |
55650 | Y porque? |
55650 | Yes, but surely, you can not otherwise characterize the idea of the transmigration of souls? |
55650 | Yet, being thy son, how do I find thee tearless and impassive? |
55650 | You are not afraid? |
55650 | A feeble description, indeed; but how can such a kiss be described? |
55650 | All in white!--I asked myself whether I was not in some theatre of some tropical city-- why all in white? |
55650 | And Madhusudam, astonished and wroth, answered:"How dost thou dare ask me why I do not eat? |
55650 | And Noferkephtah laughed, saying:"Did I not tell thee beforehand?" |
55650 | And bewildered with the grief- born dreams of the night, he cried out,"Woman, what hast thou done?" |
55650 | And was it only the vibration of the thunder, or did the earth quake when I stood upon_ that_ grave? |
55650 | And when Satni entered, the Shadow of Ahouri rose against the light; and she asked him,"Who art thou?" |
55650 | Are not the elements of eternal matter limited? |
55650 | At last the Brahmans moved their lips, and answered,"Wherefore seekest thou Yama?" |
55650 | At once she laid the child upon the floor, arose, and descended the wooden step to meet me with the question--"Want to see papa?" |
55650 | But he, protesting, said:"Wherefore slay only me, since the Jew that was first aware of the presence of the worms, said nothing concerning it?" |
55650 | But the Disciples of the Sages still held to their first opinion, saying:"Shall a brook prattle to us of law? |
55650 | But the Wind asked,"To Whom?" |
55650 | But was not that the face of the doctor, anxious and kindly? |
55650 | Can one know these things and laugh at the theories of the East?" |
55650 | Could this be Vómito? |
55650 | Did I say our happiness was perfect? |
55650 | Did Macbeth''s witches ever perform greater magic than this?--a series of tableaux after Racinet animated by some elfish art? |
55650 | Did he see the Shadow of Buddha smile upon him before he passed away, as he saw it in the Dragon- Cavern at Purushapura?... |
55650 | Did you ever lay your hand upon a pillow covered with the living supple silk of a woman''s hair? |
55650 | Do you pity the fly that nourishes the spider? |
55650 | Does not your heart beat quicker at this moment because I am here? |
55650 | Doth not the same rain which nourisheth the rose also nourish the worthless shrubs that grow in salty marshes? |
55650 | For what are those monstrous pearls?" |
55650 | Had iron brought thee to Tuonela, had steel accompanied thee unto Manala, thy garments would drip with blood.... Who brought thee to Manala?" |
55650 | Hast thou forgotten thy mother, also, who weeps for thee now all alone, seeing that I have journeyed so long to find thee? |
55650 | Hast thou not heard it said that the willow giveth no fruit, however fertilizing the rain of heaven? |
55650 | Have I not tasted all the pleasures of this petty world-- pleasures that would have consumed to ashes a frame less mighty than my own? |
55650 | He was only as a traveler halting at a tavern; the traveler rests and passes on; shall the tavern keeper restrain him? |
55650 | How might any being, excepting a Rakshasa, eat in the house of one by whom such a demon- deed hath been committed?" |
55650 | How shall a salty waste produce nard? |
55650 | Is it meet that thy lord, Solomon, shall drink of the waters of youth and know the bliss of earthly immortality?" |
55650 | Is it not enough that those who loved the dead man know his place of rest, and come hither to whisper to him in his dreamless sleep? |
55650 | Is it not said that the child is the father of the man? |
55650 | Marina, Con que te lavas la cara Que la tienes tan dibina? |
55650 | NAY, not forever; for though we should see him no more in this life, shall we not see him again throughout the Cycles and the Æons? |
55650 | Now, as they were traveling together, one of the learned brothers observed:"Why should a brother without knowledge obtain profit by our wisdom? |
55650 | Of what use is the fairest body that lieth rotting beside the flowings of the Ganges? |
55650 | Or is it because my grief hath so changed me that I am no longer the same in thy sight?"... |
55650 | Shall I behold my youth and grace fade away in solitude as dreams of the past? |
55650 | Shall a carob- tree discourse to us regarding the Halacha? |
55650 | Shall she hate her slave? |
55650 | Shall we destroy only the adult viper, and spare her young? |
55650 | Shall we extinguish a fire, and leave charcoal embers alight? |
55650 | Shall we hearken to the voice of running water rather than to the voice of the Holy One-- blessed be He!--and of His servant Moses?" |
55650 | She was all gentleness, playfulness, loveliness-- but what do you care, Padre, to hear all these things? |
55650 | Surely thy wisdom hath failed thee, or may- hap thy magic hath some defect in it? |
55650 | The Heart of all that Mimic Life-- mimic yet warm and real-- throbs about thee, but dost thou understand its pulsations? |
55650 | The conscientious doctor has accepted his recompense; he will certify what we desire-- will he not, hija mia?" |
55650 | The old man roared from the recess of the hearth-- the long- beard cried out:"What manner of man art thou? |
55650 | The old man roared from the recess of the hearth:"So that was the origin of Iron? |
55650 | The old man roared from the recess of the hearth:"Where did Iron hide itself? |
55650 | Then the Brahman kindly questioned him, saying:"O friend, how comes it that thou dost not eat? |
55650 | Then the Wind mourned awhile among the old white tombs; and whispered to the cypress trees and to the Shadows,"Were not these offerings?" |
55650 | Then wondering more than ever, the Brahman questioned the slave of the dead man, asking him:"Thy master is dead; why dost thou not weep?" |
55650 | Therefore he questioned him, asking:"Whose son was that youth who is dead?" |
55650 | Therefore, why should I weep?" |
55650 | They would all laugh at you-- would n''t they?" |
55650 | Thou art living, by magic, in the age of Lorenzo di Medici; and is it strange that they should address thee in the Italian tongue? |
55650 | Unto what may Misfortune be likened?" |
55650 | Was it a witch- night, that the city slumbered so deep a sleep and the sereno slept at his post as I passed? |
55650 | Was it an illusion of broken moonlight and flying clouds, or did the dead rise and follow us like a bridal train? |
55650 | Were not those flowers the blossoming of her beautiful youth, made lovelier by its own sacrifice? |
55650 | What avail, therefore, tears and grief? |
55650 | What dost thou know of science?" |
55650 | What hast thou learned of science?" |
55650 | What hero? |
55650 | What man may put faith in women? |
55650 | Where did it find refuge in that great year of barrenness, in that fatal summer which devoured all creatures of nature?" |
55650 | Where?--when? |
55650 | Wherefore should I weep for that which could not be prevented?" |
55650 | Wherefore should I weep, not knowing how soon indeed my own hour may come?" |
55650 | Wherefore these offerings to those who dwell in the darkness where even dreams are dead?" |
55650 | Wherefore, then, should I have been born so beautiful? |
55650 | Whereupon the college shook to its foundation; and a Voice from heaven answered, saying:"What have ye to do with Rabbi Eliezer? |
55650 | Who brought thee to Manala? |
55650 | Who brought thee to Manala?" |
55650 | Who is the writer that adds another to the many attractions of our prosperous and worthy exchange? |
55650 | Who may the kindred be of one so lovely?" |
55650 | Who, therefore, hath brought thee alive to Manala?" |
55650 | Why should the world know the sweet secret of that child''s love? |
55650 | Why should unsympathetic eyes read the legend of that grief? |
55650 | Why, indeed? |
55650 | Why, therefore, lament that which is inevitable?" |
55650 | Why? |
55650 | Will a carob- tree teach us the law?" |
55650 | Wilt thou drink hereof, and live divinely immortal through ages everlasting, or wilt thou rather remain within the prison of humanity?... |
55650 | Wilt thou drive me from thee now?" |
55650 | Would it be out of place to inquire who this rare genius is? |
55650 | Would ye crush us? |
55650 | Y PORQUE[7]? |
55650 | Y porque? |
55650 | Yet has He not preserved you through the centuries that you might repent? |
55650 | Yet what man lives that hath not once in his time been a prey to the madness inspired by woman? |
55650 | You know he killed her? |
55650 | and despite the piety of those two, how could she have been resurrected but for the third?" |
55650 | and wilt thou indeed tell us that there be jewels thirty cubits by thirty?" |
55650 | art thou indeed called just, who will not hearken to the voice of the accused? |
55650 | cried one of the soldiers,"what kind of a taper is that? |
55650 | dost thou hesitate? |
55650 | dost thou not know me, thy father who mourned thee so long-- who hath even entered the presence of Yamaraja, the Lord of Death, to seek thee?"... |
55650 | have ye come forth only to destroy this world which I have made? |
55650 | how can a good sword be wrought from bad iron? |
55650 | how may education change the hearts of the wicked? |
55650 | how may so feeble a mind advise thy supernal intelligence? |
55650 | is there none among ye who will go to gather up my tears from the deeps of the ocean, from the region of black sand?" |
55650 | never have I owned a sensual wish, nor done evil to_ living_ creature; how, then, can the dead prevail against me? |
55650 | said the Demon;"how could she have been restored to life had not the other also preserved her bones? |
55650 | said the dying man, fixing upon the priest''s face his great black eyes, which flamed up again as with the fierce fires of his youth;"repent, father? |
55650 | that was the birth of Steel?" |
55650 | to which of these two was she wife? |
55650 | to which of these was she wife? |
55650 | what do you want here?" |
55650 | what hast thou done?" |
55650 | what manner of man is this?" |
55650 | whence comest thou? |
55650 | who guided thee to Tuonela?" |
55650 | wilt thou give half of thy life in order that thy Brahmani shall live again?" |
7348 | What is it the people like? |
4954 | Ah, Jim, is that you? |
4954 | And every night,said I,"you kneel down and commend yourself to our Heavenly Father''s protection? |
4954 | And how are you prospering? |
4954 | And how,said I,"do you find it practically works? |
4954 | And if the church do n''t,said I,"will you pay the deficit?" |
4954 | And our expenses? |
4954 | And pray,said I, for I happened to know the parson did need the money,"how much is the pastor''s salary? |
4954 | And the trustees? |
4954 | And to whom,said I,"Mr. Treasurer, is this floating debt due?" |
4954 | And we need a very peculiar man? |
4954 | And what do you know of his theology? |
4954 | And what has that to do with youth, Jennie? |
4954 | And who is the boss? |
4954 | And yet you expect your minister and his wife to call on you? |
4954 | And you agree with him? |
4954 | And you believe in it? |
4954 | And you really believe in prayer? |
4954 | And, pray, how,continued I,"was the deficit made up?" |
4954 | As much so? |
4954 | As you please? |
4954 | Believe in prayer? 4954 Bunyan?" |
4954 | Did I ever say that you do not love God? |
4954 | Did you ever consider,said I,"what a minister''s tools cost?" |
4954 | Did you spend your time on your knees? |
4954 | Do you believe that? |
4954 | Do you doubt it, Jennie? |
4954 | Do you have novels in your library? |
4954 | Do you mean the author of Pilgrim''s Progress? |
4954 | Do you suppose our pastor and his wife can get along the same way? |
4954 | Do you think so? |
4954 | Do? |
4954 | Does he ever go to church? |
4954 | Glen- Ridge? |
4954 | Harry,said his grandfather the other day,"do n''t you want to go back to the city and live?" |
4954 | Help? |
4954 | How about the painting? |
4954 | How can I reconcile this with the love of God? |
4954 | How did you finally settle your old difficulties concerning Christian truth? |
4954 | How do you prepare for the prayer- meeting? |
4954 | How is he getting on? |
4954 | How is it, my friend? |
4954 | How is that? |
4954 | How many calls does your wife make in a year? |
4954 | How? |
4954 | How? |
4954 | Is he social? |
4954 | Is it not true,said he,"that all Scripture is profitable?" |
4954 | Is that just to your wife? |
4954 | Is there then nothing more to be done? |
4954 | JENNIE,said I,"I do n''t believe in Mr. Work''s sermon this morning, do you?" |
4954 | Jennie, what do you think of my sending this advertisement to the Christian Union? |
4954 | John,said my wife,"where shall we spend the summer?" |
4954 | Mr. Gear,said I,"is it not evident that it is no use for you and me to discuss theology? |
4954 | Mr. Hardcap,said I,"what do your tools cost you?" |
4954 | Mr. Laicus,said he,"is it true that ten of you gentlemen have to contribute thirty dollars a piece this year to make up my salary?" |
4954 | My tools? |
4954 | Not even God? |
4954 | Say? |
4954 | Shall you not? |
4954 | Sorry that he wo n''t come, Jennie? |
4954 | The calls, do you mean? |
4954 | The real question seems to me, John, to be whether we mean to be church members at all? |
4954 | The sea shore? |
4954 | The whole of last quarter? |
4954 | Very well,said I,"what do you propose?" |
4954 | Was it a good thing? |
4954 | Well John,said she,"what you are going to do about it?" |
4954 | Well,said Mr. Hardcap,"and ca n''t a lady do her own work? |
4954 | Well? |
4954 | What are you going to do next summer? |
4954 | What are you going to do? |
4954 | What are you pondering so deeply, John? |
4954 | What can we do to shut up Poole''s? |
4954 | What can we do,I said at the close,"to save this man from the despair of utter skepticism?" |
4954 | What do you know of him? |
4954 | What do you mean? |
4954 | What do you pay for help? |
4954 | What do you pay your cook and chambermaid? |
4954 | What do you say Jennie? |
4954 | What do you think of the sermon? |
4954 | What does he say? 4954 What does it mean?" |
4954 | What for? |
4954 | What is all this? 4954 What is the difference?" |
4954 | What painters? |
4954 | What then? |
4954 | What was the rent? |
4954 | What would you have then? |
4954 | What''s that got to do with it? |
4954 | What''s that? |
4954 | What''s that? |
4954 | What''s the matter now? |
4954 | What? |
4954 | When shall we begin? |
4954 | When you organized that Shakspeare club last winter,said I,"did you occupy your time in discussions of the text? |
4954 | When you take a job Mr. Hardcap,said I,"do you expect to be paid according to the value of the work or according to the size of your family?" |
4954 | Where to? |
4954 | Where? |
4954 | Why did n''t you order them? |
4954 | Why is it then, Jennie,said I,"that you and I want youth in our minister? |
4954 | Why not, Harry? |
4954 | Why out of the question, gentlemen? |
4954 | Why would n''t he be the man for us? |
4954 | Why, my dear friend,said I,"how much do you suppose I pay for pew rent?" |
4954 | Why? |
4954 | Will you commence this night a life of prayer? |
4954 | Will you lend your word and influence with mine to summon them away? |
4954 | Will you meet Deacon Goodsole at my house to- morrow evening, half an hour before the prayer- meeting, to unite in special prayer for Mr. Gear? 4954 Will you turn over a new leaf in your lifebook?" |
4954 | Wo n''t you join me in organizing a Bible club for Sunday afternoons this winter for the same purpose? |
4954 | Worth my study? 4954 Would you have your pastor''s wife do her own work, Mr. Hardcap? |
4954 | Yes? |
4954 | You believe in prayer, and yet never pray,said I,"is that it?" |
4954 | You never go to church, Mr. Gear, I believe? |
4954 | You think Christ''s life and teaching worth your study then? |
4954 | You would n''t take baby from me would you, John? |
4954 | Yours? |
4954 | ''But,''said I,''how about the silk gown?'' |
4954 | ("Why did n''t you take his wedding fees?" |
4954 | --Do you consider the influence of the opposite teaching, both on the church and on the individual? |
4954 | --Does the Scripture really say that women must not teach? |
4954 | :--And what do you say as to that point he makes about Paul''s preaching as a candidate, Mr. Hardcap? |
4954 | :--Do you mean that it makes no difference, Mr. Laicus, whether a man is a member of the church or not? |
4954 | :--How do you mean Mr. Gear? |
4954 | :--I wonder you have any women teach in your Sabbath School? |
4954 | :--Is that quite fair Dr? |
4954 | :--Suppose this Mr. Whats- his- name comes, what more will you know about him than you know now? |
4954 | :--Well Deacon, how are church affairs coining on; pretty smoothly; salary paid up at last? |
4954 | :--Well then who stands next on our list? |
4954 | :--When will he come? |
4954 | Am I a Drone? |
4954 | An hour ago the thought occurred to me- where seek it better than where they are gathered who are walking in this light? |
4954 | And am I not a"blue Presbyterian?" |
4954 | And how can I believe that God is good? |
4954 | And how much of it is overdue?" |
4954 | And if he is ever going to get out of it, how is it to come about? |
4954 | And when at last poor Bobby came to me in utter despair, and lisped out,"Papa, what did God make Sunday for?" |
4954 | And you tell them that it is just as well they should not; that they are just as worthy of honor as if they were active in the Lords vineyard? |
4954 | Any fruit? |
4954 | Anything? |
4954 | Are our Church festivals so many that we need dread to add another? |
4954 | Are there any of your letters you want to read to us? |
4954 | Are you a visitor? |
4954 | Are you distributing tracts? |
4954 | Are you doing anything to seek and to save that which is lost?" |
4954 | Are you in the Mission- school? |
4954 | Are you in the Sabbath- school? |
4954 | Are you in the neighborhood prayer- meeting? |
4954 | Are you not living without God; is it not true of you that''God is not in all your thoughts?''" |
4954 | As we waited in the station he addressed himself to a surly looking baggage- master with this question,"What time will the train get to Albany?" |
4954 | Besides, what would the elders say? |
4954 | But am I able to fill it? |
4954 | But what can I do? |
4954 | But what do you say of the disquisition of Mr. Work on transubstantiation which followed it?" |
4954 | But what is the effect of a training which teaches a young man to consider all the time he gives to the store as time appropriated to the world? |
4954 | But what shall I do? |
4954 | Can I answer him with an old sermon? |
4954 | Can they keep loving watch and care over us; or we over them? |
4954 | Can we find none for agreement and mutual helpfulness? |
4954 | Did they expect all that has come? |
4954 | Did you compare manuscripts? |
4954 | Did you ever consider the difference between a real flower and a wax imitation? |
4954 | Did you investigate the canonicity of Shakspeare''s various plays? |
4954 | Did you not feel the Real Presence when Father Hyatt in the afternoon broke and blessed the bread? |
4954 | Did you not see the living Christ in his radiant face and hear the living Christ in his touching words, and his more touching silence?" |
4954 | Do I believe in the Real Presence? |
4954 | Do I carry Christ into my law office, and into the court- room, as Mrs. Bridgeman does into the parlor and the chair? |
4954 | Do I not know that there is a Real Presence? |
4954 | Do n''t you recollect? |
4954 | Do n''t you suppose our Mr. Wheaton understands what we want him in the board of trustees for? |
4954 | Do n''t you suppose"the world"understand this? |
4954 | Do you ask me what he said? |
4954 | Do you ask what is the matter? |
4954 | Do you suppose I should do either if I came to Wheathedge on your invitation to preach as a candidate? |
4954 | Do you take me for a heathen?" |
4954 | Does he hold before us the cross? |
4954 | Does he seem to love his Bible?" |
4954 | Does he tell us of our sins? |
4954 | Does he think we''re goin''to take a preacher without ever havin''heard him preach? |
4954 | Earnestness? |
4954 | For the summer? |
4954 | Hardcap?" |
4954 | Hardcap?" |
4954 | Hardcap?" |
4954 | Hardcap?" |
4954 | Hardcap?" |
4954 | Has the Christ- child no gifts for us as well as for other folk? |
4954 | Have the December heavens no brightness- the angel host no song for"blue Presbyterians?" |
4954 | Her mien was so sober that I asked her at once the question:"Jennie, what is the matter? |
4954 | His text was"Why stand ye here all the day idle?" |
4954 | How as to that Bible class, Mr. Laicus, that I spoke to you about week before last? |
4954 | How can I do anything for my Savior?" |
4954 | How does a minister have any chance for a change if he takes such a ground as that? |
4954 | How many calls do you suppose Mrs. Mapleson would have to make in a year in order to call on every family once in six months?" |
4954 | How much land was there? |
4954 | How shall Christian faith meet the current rationalism of the day? |
4954 | How shall we raise this mortgage interest? |
4954 | IS there any reason why Episcopalians, Lutherans and Roman Catholics should have a monopoly of Christmas? |
4954 | If a drunken loafer drops down upon us, does anybody ever angle for him? |
4954 | If a poor, forlorn widow, who has to work from Monday morning till Saturday night, comes to dwell under the shadow of our church, do we angle for her? |
4954 | If men are not curious why do the authorities always appoint them on the detective police force? |
4954 | Is he a drone? |
4954 | Is he then a drone? |
4954 | Is his wife so unfortunate as to accompany him? |
4954 | Is it indeed true that nature has no sympathy? |
4954 | Is it not Bacon who says the pen makes an accurate thinker? |
4954 | Is it so?" |
4954 | Is its glorious old patron Saint partial? |
4954 | Is our religion so inclined to gayety and money- making that we need curb its joyous tendencies? |
4954 | Is the one to be accused of serving the world any more because of his fees than the other because of his salary? |
4954 | Is there any chance of persuading him to come, Mr. Laicus? |
4954 | Laicus?" |
4954 | Laicus?" |
4954 | Laicus?" |
4954 | May not he who goes about healing the sick be following Christ as truly as he who preaches the Gospel to the poor? |
4954 | May we not come to the sacred manger too? |
4954 | Mr. Hardcap opened his eyes and pursed his mouth firmly together, as though he would say''Do my ears deceive me?'' |
4954 | Must Maurice Mapleson live and die in that little out of the way corner? |
4954 | Or did you leave that all to the critics, and take the Shakspeare of today, and gather what instruction you might therefrom?" |
4954 | Or have you turned them all out? |
4954 | Or would any Christian worker have said,''They shall not have a Sabbath- school till they ask it, and believe that it will be provided for them?'' |
4954 | Perhaps that will help you?" |
4954 | Pray, Mr. Treasurer, what was our income last year?" |
4954 | Shakspeare save as a nom de plume for Lord Bacon? |
4954 | Shall I leave that work to take hold of tenement- house visitation and tract distribution?" |
4954 | Shall we fall back again into the old ruts? |
4954 | The minister takes all the risk, do n''t you see? |
4954 | The question is, did he have the savin''grace of faith and repentance?" |
4954 | Was I? |
4954 | Was it not at Bunker Hill that the soldiers were directed to reserve their fire till the attacking party had exhausted theirs? |
4954 | Was it really about transubstantiation? |
4954 | Was that Christian? |
4954 | Was there any who did not miss them, and in missing them did not miss her? |
4954 | Was this mortgage interest all that the church owed? |
4954 | We ask, is it well carved and draped? |
4954 | What could I say? |
4954 | What do I mean by life? |
4954 | What do they cost you?" |
4954 | What do you hear from Mr. Mapleson? |
4954 | What do you mean by preaching as a candidate? |
4954 | What do you think? |
4954 | What does he expect? |
4954 | What good could it do to you or to me to take Sunday afternoon for a weekly tournament, with the young men from the shop for arbitrators?" |
4954 | What is a foot or an arm fifty miles away from the body? |
4954 | What is it in me that makes me always appreciate most keenly the ludicrous in seasons of the greatest solemnity and distress? |
4954 | What is the price of it, do you know?" |
4954 | What is the secret of ministerial success? |
4954 | What is there in common between us? |
4954 | What next, Deacon? |
4954 | What was to prevent any common, low- born fellow, any carpenter''s son, right from his shop, coming and sitting right alongside her Lillian? |
4954 | What would you have me do Mr. Laicus? |
4954 | What''s his reason? |
4954 | Wheaton?" |
4954 | Where are you going?" |
4954 | Where is the money to come from?" |
4954 | Where''s your faith?" |
4954 | Who authorized it, I should like to know?" |
4954 | Who beside yourself in our church is Mr. Gear''s most intimate acquaintance and warmest friend?" |
4954 | Who holds the mortgage?" |
4954 | Why, Jennie?" |
4954 | Why?" |
4954 | Will he come?" |
4954 | Will it hurt my Sunday to take that class for an hour? |
4954 | Work?" |
4954 | Would he rent the furniture? |
4954 | Would n''t he come on twelve hundred, and the parsonage?" |
4954 | Would property in Brooklyn or Jersey City do? |
4954 | Would the Board sustain us in pledging the church to$ 1,500 and the parsonage? |
4954 | Would you feel offended if I asked you to go away and call again some other time?" |
4954 | Would you have me play the hypocrite? |
4954 | are you taking subscriptions?" |
4954 | eh? |
4954 | replied Mr. Hardcap;"do n''t we all work in them? |
4954 | said I;"do we grade the ministers''salaries by the number of the minister''s children?" |
4954 | said she quietly;"pay it?" |
4954 | what shall I do?" |
63298 | And why not? |
63298 | As true religionists, is it our duty to say to these scouts,"Stop, you infidels, you interfere with our devotion?" |
63298 | But failing once, twice or a hundred times, do they cease to EXPERIMENT? |
63298 | But what is their wisdom so willingly imparted? |
63298 | Can we not rationally expect that even more will be given to the movement which is to multiply many times the usefulness of all colleges and churches? |
63298 | Even though they lose millions in attempting some audacious act, do they therefore refuse to attempt another act equally bold? |
63298 | From what follies are they so anxious to guard us? |
63298 | How shall we recover it? |
63298 | How? |
63298 | Is it not a rule in war always to fire in the direction opposite to that advised by your enemies? |
63298 | It may be asked, if the Volunteer Speakers work without pay, many of them living on heroic diet and traveling on foot, what need of money? |
63298 | Questions: Shall I ask a policeman to help me catch the despoiler, or shall I"cease agitating and go to work?" |
63298 | Shall I arm myself and, with the help of friends, take back my own, or shall I return to the farm and"practice industry, frugality and temperance?" |
63298 | What are the best methods of preparation? |
63298 | What but legislation can remove the barriers and allow them again to come together? |
63298 | What is it but legislation that keeps apart in unnatural divorce these two that God hath joined together? |
63298 | What is the result? |
63298 | What should our pious travelers do? |
63298 | Which shall it be? |
63298 | Whose history and statistics are we to believe in this campaign? |
63298 | Why continue to pray and plead for what God has already placed within our reach? |
63298 | Why is this? |
63298 | Why now crawl longer in the dust like worms beneath the feet of tyrants, when God bids us rise and stand erect? |
63298 | Why plan educational and charitable institutions in the slums when the causes that produce the slums are left untouched? |
63298 | Why? |
63298 | Why? |
63298 | [ 5] How can suitable speakers be had? |
63298 | why are my sheep deserting me?" |
29880 | ''_ And then remould it nearer to the heart''s desire?_''"Remould it nearer to the logic of common sense. |
29880 | --And pay you a formal little call----"No.... Would you really like to? |
29880 | --Over the telephone, perhaps? |
29880 | A Broadway joint? |
29880 | A White Nun? |
29880 | A bank president? |
29880 | A friend of mine? |
29880 | A joint? |
29880 | A lease? |
29880 | A young lady in mourning, seated beside your desk? 29880 Ads?" |
29880 | After all, what do you know about me? |
29880 | After the dirty work is done, peace, land enough for everybody, ease and plenty and a full glass always at one''s elbows-- eh, comrades? |
29880 | Ai n''t I telling you? |
29880 | Ai n''t I wipin''em? |
29880 | All died? |
29880 | Alone? |
29880 | Am I to come? |
29880 | Amazing? |
29880 | An anarchist meeting? |
29880 | And Vanya? |
29880 | And contract another alliance if they wish? |
29880 | And could I really arrive in time, though breathless? |
29880 | And do n''t you really think,she said for the hundredth time,"that we ought to sell this house?" |
29880 | And do you love your little comrade duchess? |
29880 | And do you realise,he said in a low, tense voice,"that since I met you every racing minute has been sweeping me headlong toward you?" |
29880 | And his star trick? |
29880 | And if they tire of each other? |
29880 | And in that event? |
29880 | And is Miss Westgard really coming to- night? |
29880 | And let the kids starve? |
29880 | And make your little pile too, eh, Angy? |
29880 | And she wo n''t do that, I suppose? |
29880 | And slay him? |
29880 | And then? |
29880 | And what are we doing?--our sort, I mean? 29880 And what does the little cord around your shoulder signify?" |
29880 | And when you empty those, who is to employ and pay you? |
29880 | And where the hell will you be then, Angelo? |
29880 | And why? |
29880 | And will your employees do to you some day what you did to your employers with a black- jack? |
29880 | And you have n''t seen her lately? |
29880 | And you have nobody but your aunt? |
29880 | And you were not hit? |
29880 | And-- Marya? |
29880 | Are there really? |
29880 | Are they any good? |
29880 | Are you alone? |
29880 | Are you and she so devoted? |
29880 | Are you attempting to be sentimental? |
29880 | Are you badly hurt? |
29880 | Are you cold? |
29880 | Are you crazy? |
29880 | Are you doing anything to- night? |
29880 | Are you doing anything, dear? |
29880 | Are you going to stay there to- night? |
29880 | Are you more friendly to mine? |
29880 | Are you serious? |
29880 | Are you sleepy, Jim? |
29880 | Are you two gentlemen in a rush? |
29880 | Are you very busy still? |
29880 | As an investment? |
29880 | Attractive? |
29880 | Breed? |
29880 | But I''m not social stuff, am I? |
29880 | But do n''t you want to turn in? |
29880 | But it is wonderful how eloquent it makes one feel, is n''t it? |
29880 | But what on earth has all that to do with it? 29880 But why?" |
29880 | But you do n''t know her well-- outside of having mentally vivisected her? |
29880 | But-- good heavens!--isn''t there any other anatomical feature to that block of marble? |
29880 | Ca n''t I see you? |
29880 | Ca n''t you gossip with Jim some other time? |
29880 | Ca n''t you lavish love on the contented and well- to- do? |
29880 | Ca n''t you practise your loving but godless creed at Shadow Hill? |
29880 | Ca n''t you really understand that I''m afraid? |
29880 | Christ? |
29880 | Comrade,she said,"we all have to do the best we can with what brain we have, do n''t we?" |
29880 | Could n''t I come to your garden- party? |
29880 | Could you? |
29880 | D''yeh see that blond nab the red flag outer that big kike''s fists? |
29880 | Darling-- darling-- you did-- you did wait-- didn''t you? |
29880 | Dead? 29880 Dear,"he said unsteadily,"do n''t you know I''m very desperately in love with you?" |
29880 | Did he ask you? |
29880 | Did n''t I tell you that there are some creatures you ca n''t educate? 29880 Did n''t they make the revolution?" |
29880 | Did n''t you expect me to? |
29880 | Did n''t you get my letter? |
29880 | Did n''t you know it? 29880 Did she decline?" |
29880 | Did the Red Cross fire you? |
29880 | Did you ever know one that did n''t? |
29880 | Did you expect to lunch with such a friendly, human girl? 29880 Did you expect to take me home?" |
29880 | Did you have any trouble? |
29880 | Did you really suppose I meant to go to Mexico with you? |
29880 | Did you say you knew me? |
29880 | Did you see Jim in the chapel? |
29880 | Did you see a White Nun run this way? |
29880 | Did you think you''d-- come over? |
29880 | Did you whip him? |
29880 | Directly? |
29880 | Do I still believe in my own personal liberty to do as I choose? 29880 Do n''t I? |
29880 | Do n''t everybody''s? |
29880 | Do n''t you hear him preaching hatred? |
29880 | Do n''t you like Palla any more? |
29880 | Do n''t you think I can keep my head? |
29880 | Do n''t you think it very natural that I should wonder who any girl is who lunches with my son three times in one week?... 29880 Do n''t you think she''ll come back? |
29880 | Do not your divorcees remarry if they wish? |
29880 | Do you adore me, too? |
29880 | Do you and Ilse really propose going to that dirty anarchist joint? |
29880 | Do you apprehend any violence? |
29880 | Do you care more than you did at first? |
29880 | Do you care to know mine? |
29880 | Do you imagine because you murdered Vanya Tchernov in Philadelphia the other day that you can frighten anybody dumb? 29880 Do you like her?" |
29880 | Do you like it? |
29880 | Do you mean Jim? |
29880 | Do you mean that? |
29880 | Do you mean you care enough to marry me, you darling? |
29880 | Do you really mean it? |
29880 | Do you really suppose Marya has made mischief between you? |
29880 | Do you really wish to? |
29880 | Do you remember me? |
29880 | Do you so construe the Law of Love and Service? 29880 Do you suppose we do n''t know Prussianism when we see it, after these last four years? |
29880 | Do you think you know me well enough to adore me? |
29880 | Do you think you''d enjoy it?--a lot of people who entertain the same shocking beliefs that I do? |
29880 | Do you want it? |
29880 | Do you want me to corroborate you? |
29880 | Do you want to start a riot? |
29880 | Do you wish me to be quite frank? |
29880 | Do you? |
29880 | Does it still appeal to you at times? |
29880 | Does it subdue you? |
29880 | Does n''t what? |
29880 | Does not our example count? 29880 Drag? |
29880 | Elmer? |
29880 | Elmer? |
29880 | English? 29880 Enough to come to earth and interfere?" |
29880 | Ever thought of the movies? |
29880 | Extreme? |
29880 | For bravery? |
29880 | For example? |
29880 | For example? |
29880 | For how long? |
29880 | For what reason have you permit Mr. Sondheim to wait in my office? |
29880 | Form a club, rent a room, and talk to people? |
29880 | From the moral side? |
29880 | Get her? |
29880 | Go on,said Puma impatiently,"what else did he say about me?" |
29880 | God curse you, who saw them? |
29880 | Good heavens, Helen----"And what is on that boy''s mind? 29880 Had n''t you better go, Jim, before you say anything more?" |
29880 | Had you rather? |
29880 | Hang it all, are n''t they breeding like vermin now? 29880 Hard hit, is he?" |
29880 | Have a seegar? |
29880 | Have n''t you been aware of it, Palla? |
29880 | Have they emissaries in Scandinavia? |
29880 | Have you a waitress? |
29880 | Have you come here to insult us with legends and fairy- tales about a god? |
29880 | Have you seen Jim recently? |
29880 | Have you seen Palla lately? |
29880 | Have you women considered that? |
29880 | Have you? |
29880 | He also is a sport? 29880 He''s likely to some day, is n''t he?" |
29880 | Heard what? |
29880 | Here? |
29880 | Here? |
29880 | How am I to know? 29880 How are things with you?" |
29880 | How are you, Ilse? |
29880 | How can class distinctions be eradicated by fanning class- hatred? 29880 How could you help it? |
29880 | How did he behave? |
29880 | How did you happen to embrace such a faith? |
29880 | How do you know it''s dirty? |
29880 | How do you mean? |
29880 | How far would that get you? |
29880 | How is Vanya? |
29880 | How is it they did n''t pinch_ you_? |
29880 | How many times? |
29880 | How much hush- cash d''yeh pay him? |
29880 | How soon? |
29880 | How the devil do I know? 29880 How''s he going to fire that bunch of women if they got a lease?" |
29880 | How, careful? |
29880 | How? |
29880 | I do not think you know,he said,"that I have entered partnership with a friend of yours?" |
29880 | I got to get something, have n''t I? 29880 I suppose not.... Is anything wrong with you, Palla? |
29880 | I suppose you have n''t heard that Jack Estridge is very ill? |
29880 | I thought you said she was a type? |
29880 | I wonder--_are_ women more level headed? 29880 I''m sorry,"she was saying to Marya,"but Questa Terrett desires to know Jim----""Is it any wonder,"said Marya,"that women should desire to know him? |
29880 | I-- yes----"Shall we have tea together? |
29880 | I? 29880 I? |
29880 | I? |
29880 | I? |
29880 | If that''s your opinion, had n''t you better steer for the open sea, John? |
29880 | If there really existed that sort of God, what would be the use of forgiving what He does? 29880 If you bellow in so loud a manner,"said Puma,"they could hear you in the studio.... How much do you ask for?" |
29880 | If_ what_ became serious? |
29880 | In God''s name what do you mean----"Mean? 29880 In this dull, black gown? |
29880 | In what way? |
29880 | Indeed I do----"Am I as easy to know as that? 29880 Invitation to do what?" |
29880 | Is another rainbow not worth the storm? |
29880 | Is anything troubling you? |
29880 | Is anything worrying you, darling? |
29880 | Is he any good? |
29880 | Is it a club? |
29880 | Is it a party you''re giving? |
29880 | Is it all right now? |
29880 | Is it all right? 29880 Is it not so, Ilse?" |
29880 | Is it so, Jim? |
29880 | Is it too late? |
29880 | Is it true,he said,"--that ghastly tragedy?" |
29880 | Is it? |
29880 | Is it_ you_, Palla? |
29880 | Is n''t it funny? |
29880 | Is n''t it strange? |
29880 | Is n''t there an understanding between you? |
29880 | Is not America the destination of your long journey? |
29880 | Is she nice? |
29880 | Is that a place where we may dine and see a spectacle too and afterward dance? |
29880 | Is that a wound chevron? |
29880 | Is that all you desired to say to me? |
29880 | Is that so unusual? |
29880 | Is that the reason? |
29880 | Is that the way to educate defectives? |
29880 | Is that the way you pick stars? |
29880 | Is that true? |
29880 | Is that unusual? |
29880 | Is that your answer, Palla? |
29880 | Is that your idea of liberty? |
29880 | Is the Shadow Hill Trust Company insolvent? |
29880 | Is there a meeting inside? |
29880 | Is there_ anything_ I could do? |
29880 | It really is beginning to be livable; is n''t it, Jim? |
29880 | It''s rotten luck, is n''t it? |
29880 | Jim''s what? |
29880 | Jim? |
29880 | Just plain man? |
29880 | Leila Vance? 29880 Live in a flat?" |
29880 | Marya has not yet arrived? |
29880 | May I prophesy? |
29880 | May I suggest a little rag to properly subdue us? |
29880 | May Mr. Tchernov play for us? |
29880 | Me? 29880 Miss Dumont, please?" |
29880 | Miss Dumont? |
29880 | Mortimer Wardner''s son? |
29880 | Mother? |
29880 | Much more? |
29880 | Murder? |
29880 | Must we discuss that again? |
29880 | New York? |
29880 | No social objections to the girl? |
29880 | No, not for a while----"Are you so busy? |
29880 | No, she ai n''t ill. H''ain''t you heard? |
29880 | No; we''ll_ look_ at them-- later.... Do you know it''s a long, long time since I have laughed with a really untroubled heart? |
29880 | No? 29880 Not enough to marry me?" |
29880 | Not inclined to bother herself with the formalities of marriage? |
29880 | Nothing,said Puma, coolly;"what''s the matter with you, Max?" |
29880 | Now then, Marthy, where does this here trunk go to? |
29880 | Now, how much more than it is worth do you expect us to offer you? |
29880 | Nuns, too? |
29880 | Of what are you thinking, Palla? |
29880 | Of what use is any government and its lesser laws and customs, unless it is itself governed by that paramount Law? 29880 Of what use is your God unless that Law of Love also governs Him?" |
29880 | Oh, Jim, do you want me now? |
29880 | Oh,said the blond goddess,"so you are English?" |
29880 | On the subject of marriage? |
29880 | On what authority except your own omniscience do you so confidently preach the non- existence of omnipotence? |
29880 | One of those women soldiers, you say? |
29880 | Over the top? |
29880 | Pictures? |
29880 | Please excuse,he said with his powerful smile,"but have you ever, perhaps, thought, Miss Dumont, of the screen as a career?" |
29880 | Please? |
29880 | Please? |
29880 | Probably he does n''t, but what''s the difference? 29880 Protestant.... Are you Catholic?" |
29880 | Rather inglorious, is n''t it? 29880 Really? |
29880 | Really? |
29880 | Really? |
29880 | Really? |
29880 | Refuge from what? |
29880 | Say, was n''t you her niece? |
29880 | Say, who d''yeh think you''re talkin''to? |
29880 | Say,demanded Skidder, astonished,"do you fellows think you got any drag with Angy Puma?" |
29880 | Say,he blurted out,"what else did you let me in for when I put my money into your business? |
29880 | Shall I come around? |
29880 | Shall I come to- night? |
29880 | Shall I tell you? |
29880 | Shall I? |
29880 | Shall we go to see some of them, Mr. Shotwell? 29880 Shall we return to the table? |
29880 | Shall we sit idle? 29880 Shall we try?" |
29880 | Shame? |
29880 | Share your delusion? |
29880 | She and Palla are intimate? |
29880 | She does seem to be an attractive girl,said his mother carelessly...."Are you going to Yama Farms for the week end?" |
29880 | She was really Aphrodite, was n''t she? |
29880 | Sir? |
29880 | Smears? |
29880 | So you do n''t like_ Tiger- eyes_? |
29880 | So you know about Vanya? |
29880 | So you think because I''ve seen a queen I ought to know how to act like a movie queen? |
29880 | So you think her impulsive? |
29880 | So you''ve been dissecting Palla Dumont, have you? |
29880 | So you-- expect to sell? |
29880 | So? 29880 So?" |
29880 | Stars? 29880 Tell me, Palla, how did the soap- box arguments go?" |
29880 | Tell me,she said,"why you are in Russia, and where you are now journeying?" |
29880 | That she turned him down? |
29880 | That sort? |
29880 | The Bolsheviki? |
29880 | The East Side? |
29880 | The priesthood? |
29880 | The socialists? |
29880 | The tendency to drift? |
29880 | The woman''s battalion? |
29880 | Their morals do.... Is Ilse that sort, too? |
29880 | Then what are you worrying about? |
29880 | Then you have n''t changed your attitude? |
29880 | Then you will not interfere? |
29880 | Then you_ do_ sometimes think of me? |
29880 | They all were murdered, were n''t they? |
29880 | They see more clearly, morally? |
29880 | Tiger- eyes Tiger- eyes, Where do they go, Far in the dark Over the snow? 29880 To shoot; not to debate?" |
29880 | To- morrow night, then? |
29880 | Toward you? 29880 Und dese vimmen?" |
29880 | Unfair? |
29880 | Vanya? |
29880 | Vanya? |
29880 | W-- what is it? |
29880 | Want a partner? |
29880 | Want more capital to put into your fillum concern? |
29880 | Was Ilse there, too? |
29880 | Was Vanya''s concert a great success? |
29880 | Was she a peasant girl? |
29880 | Was that your motive when you took the white veil? |
29880 | Was this necessary? |
29880 | We had a little difference.... Have you seen him lately? |
29880 | We''re getting on rather rapidly, are n''t we? |
29880 | Well, Mr. Puma, what do you wish me to do? 29880 Well, but----""Where_ does_ he go-- every evening?" |
29880 | Well, for heaven''s sake-- ain''t you going to New York? |
29880 | Well, is she at all common? |
29880 | Well, it amounts to that-- doesn''t it, mother? 29880 Well, she''s rather perilously attractive, is n''t she?" |
29880 | Well, then, what''s this drag they got with you?--Sondheim and the other nuts? |
29880 | Well, then? |
29880 | Well, what do you suppose, Helen? |
29880 | Well, what-- what--stammered Skidder--"what the hell drag have those guys got with you?" |
29880 | Well, who are the Reds, and what is it they want? |
29880 | Well,he said,"I ai n''t asking you to buy, am I?" |
29880 | Well,said the latter, his voice not yet under complete control,"do n''t you think you''d better keep away from such places in the future?" |
29880 | Well? |
29880 | Well? |
29880 | Were they singing anything new? |
29880 | Were_ you_ in that district? |
29880 | What about that antique sofa? |
29880 | What about the floor? |
29880 | What are the chances? |
29880 | What are you afraid of? 29880 What are you doing here?" |
29880 | What are you doing here? |
29880 | What are you doing, Miss Dumont? |
29880 | What are you going to do in New York? |
29880 | What are you-- a spy for Kerensky? |
29880 | What becomes of the children? |
29880 | What becomes of them when your courts divorce their parents? |
29880 | What choice? |
29880 | What d''yeh expect from a bunch of women? |
29880 | What did Sondheim say about me? |
29880 | What did he say? |
29880 | What did you do then? |
29880 | What did you tell them? |
29880 | What do you mean? |
29880 | What do you mean? |
29880 | What do you mean? |
29880 | What do you see at the bottom, Ilse? 29880 What do you wish?" |
29880 | What do_ you_ think about it, Jack? |
29880 | What else does she do? |
29880 | What else would n''t you do? |
29880 | What had you wished to say to me? |
29880 | What happens? 29880 What is all human progress but a free fight?" |
29880 | What is art? |
29880 | What is it? |
29880 | What is it? |
29880 | What is it? |
29880 | What is it? |
29880 | What is the matter with him? |
29880 | What is the matter, dear? |
29880 | What is there to laugh at? |
29880 | What is this party you''re giving, anyway? |
29880 | What is your name? |
29880 | What law for them, then? |
29880 | What of it? |
29880 | What on earth are you doing? |
29880 | What on earth are you talking about? |
29880 | What on earth makes you act like a gypsy, Palla? |
29880 | What other sort? |
29880 | What other? |
29880 | What reasons? |
29880 | What results? 29880 What shall you say to me?" |
29880 | What should I renounce? |
29880 | What sort is it? |
29880 | What sort of character do you suppose hers to be, anyway? 29880 What sort of woman is she?" |
29880 | What the devil did you do that for? |
29880 | What the hell''s the matter with yeh? |
29880 | What tripped you? |
29880 | What troubles you, darling? |
29880 | What was your branch? |
29880 | What would you do if people interfered with you? |
29880 | What yah got planted around here for us? 29880 What yeh mean by''No''?" |
29880 | What''s all this nonsense about the Red Flag Club? |
29880 | What''s shame to a cop? 29880 What''s that?" |
29880 | What''s the matter with you and me buying it? 29880 What''s your date for the cash?" |
29880 | What? 29880 What?" |
29880 | What? |
29880 | What? |
29880 | What? |
29880 | What_ is_ the objection to the girl, Helen? |
29880 | When do we get the rest? |
29880 | When do you march to the first trenches? |
29880 | When may I see a house? |
29880 | When-- when did you learn that? |
29880 | Where are the ladies? |
29880 | Where are we going, dear? |
29880 | Where are you going when we all say good- bye? |
29880 | Where are you, Jack? |
29880 | Where do you come from, Jack? |
29880 | Where do you expect to go? |
29880 | Where is Elmer''s place of business? |
29880 | Where is my aunt? |
29880 | Where on earth did you hear all that dope? |
29880 | Where on earth have you kept yourself these last weeks? 29880 Where the devil did you come from, Jim?" |
29880 | Where''s McCabe? |
29880 | Which profession do you place first? |
29880 | Which way, ma''am? |
29880 | Which? |
29880 | Who handed you this cinema stuff? |
29880 | Who is she, Jim? |
29880 | Who is she? |
29880 | Who is the girl on his right-- the one with the chalky map? |
29880 | Who is there who would not love him? |
29880 | Who mentioned God? |
29880 | Who said that? |
29880 | Who said that? |
29880 | Who the hell cares how he does it? |
29880 | Who was it wrestled with Loki? 29880 Who''ll put him out?" |
29880 | Who''s this new guy you got to go in with you? 29880 Who-- is-- it?" |
29880 | Whom did he marry? |
29880 | Why absurd? |
29880 | Why are you here at this hour? 29880 Why avoid one if it''s free?" |
29880 | Why ca n''t you understand that what you suggest would amount to collusion? |
29880 | Why ca n''t you? |
29880 | Why did they send you back? |
29880 | Why do n''t you ask her to something? |
29880 | Why do n''t you go to the opera to- night? 29880 Why do n''t you raise hell with me?" |
29880 | Why do you ask me? |
29880 | Why do you become so irritable and excited, Jim? 29880 Why do you go, sir?" |
29880 | Why hunt for a free fight? |
29880 | Why is it you talk foolish? |
29880 | Why not? 29880 Why not?" |
29880 | Why should free Cossacks be policemen any more when there is no law? 29880 Why should not we do the same thing?" |
29880 | Why wo n''t you come? |
29880 | Why, part of it is lunching with feminine clients, is n''t it? |
29880 | Why, to look at you-- at Ilse-- at Miss Lanois----"We do n''t look like very immoral people, do we? |
29880 | Why? 29880 Why?" |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Wifehood? 29880 Will they let you stay there?" |
29880 | Will you be alone? |
29880 | Will you be kind enough to put this house on your list? |
29880 | Will you marry me, Palla? |
29880 | Will you marry me, Palla? |
29880 | Will you marry me? |
29880 | Will you, Palla? |
29880 | Wo n''t you share it with me? |
29880 | Woman''s love for man you call the lesser love? |
29880 | Wonderful luck for a girl to sit at a desk and listen to an irritable young man? |
29880 | Would it interest you, perhaps? |
29880 | Would n''t you tell me about it, Jim? |
29880 | Would you care for a suggestion? |
29880 | Would you care to hear what the greatest American says on the subject, Palla? |
29880 | Would you care? |
29880 | Would you commit perjury? |
29880 | Would you consider it? |
29880 | Yeh? 29880 Yes, I''m perfectly well,"she replied to his inquiry;"where in the world did you go that night? |
29880 | Yes.... What is there for me to do but to accept things as they are? |
29880 | Yes; why not? |
29880 | Yes? 29880 You always conform to it?" |
29880 | You are quite well? 29880 You ask me to evict respectable people who pay me rent?" |
29880 | You believe it was due to the Reds? |
29880 | You do n''t like_ Tiger- eyes_? |
29880 | You do n''t mean business too, do you? |
29880 | You do n''t think it''s a plant? |
29880 | You do not believe that there is hidden gold there? |
29880 | You do skip a few words,he said,"do n''t you?" |
29880 | You explain how we can not lose out? 29880 You have accompany him to Broadway and you have shown him the parcel?" |
29880 | You have come to see us make our first charge? |
29880 | You knew that this morning? |
29880 | You know that dame? |
29880 | You mean I''ll have to do that? |
29880 | You mean I-- I am to renounce my-- creed? |
29880 | You mean all this spouting will end in a deluge? |
29880 | You mean go into the movies? |
29880 | You mean just to see my garden for a moment? |
29880 | You mean now, as we are? |
29880 | You mean that a child should not arbitrarily be placed by its parents at what it might later consider a disadvantage? |
29880 | You mean that there always will be an under- dog in the battle between capital and labour? |
29880 | You mean that when Bolshevism rules there are to be rich and poor just the same as at present? |
29880 | You mean to tell me, Puma fixed it so I''m stuck with all his debts? 29880 You mean you consider Palla Dumont neurotic?" |
29880 | You mean,he said, incensed,"that you refuse to be married by any law at all?" |
29880 | You never got it? |
29880 | You say he has seemed interested, Elmer? |
29880 | You say that the bank closed its doors this morning? 29880 You say,"he said to Skidder,"that Mr. Pawling will confirm what you have told me?" |
29880 | You see? 29880 You still feel that need?" |
29880 | You suppose you can buy me this property? 29880 You think her a visionary?" |
29880 | You think the war is going to last for years? |
29880 | You think you fire us? |
29880 | You think your fellow creatures can fill that void? |
29880 | You were n''t really sorry, were you? |
29880 | You wish to ruin me? |
29880 | You''re dining at home? |
29880 | You''re going to love the unwashed with a club? |
29880 | You-- you consented because he wished it? |
29880 | Young eyes In swift surprise, What terror veils you? 29880 Your fellow beings?" |
29880 | Yourself? |
29880 | _ Are_ you going back into the army, Jim? |
29880 | _ Do you understand?_"Oh, I-- I think I do. 29880 _ She_?" |
29880 | _ The other girl._"You believe her? |
29880 | _ What_ did you write? |
29880 | _ Your_ letter? 29880 1? |
29880 | A peasant broke the silence:"Is she a new saint, then?" |
29880 | Afraid of what? |
29880 | Afraid? |
29880 | After a long silence, Puma said calmly:"How much you want?" |
29880 | After a moment she said:"So you have concluded that you care for John Estridge?" |
29880 | After a silence:"It''s been a rotten voyage, has n''t it?" |
29880 | After another brief silence Shotwell ventured:"I suppose you''d find it agreeable to meet Palla Dumont again, would n''t you?" |
29880 | After another silence:"You go to the imperial family?" |
29880 | After this war-- after what women have done the world over-- I wonder whether there are any asses left who desire to restrict woman to a''sphere''?... |
29880 | Alonzo D. Pawling? |
29880 | Am I then so early? |
29880 | And can you see us in that dreadful place, as gay as a pair of school children? |
29880 | And he is dead, and what is the good of the law he made? |
29880 | And is remarkably pretty, besides?" |
29880 | And when they''re given only poison to stop the pangs-- what does civilisation expect?" |
29880 | And who are these damned women? |
29880 | And who was it answered the telephone at his house when she had called up and asked to speak to him? |
29880 | And why should he lose his self- possession on unexpectedly encountering her? |
29880 | And will you now take her to inspect this modest house which you hope may suit her, and which, she most devoutly hopes may suit her, too?" |
29880 | And you?" |
29880 | And yours?" |
29880 | And, after a little_ duetto_ of silence:"Do you suppose I shall ever come to care for you-- imprudently?" |
29880 | And, as Martha remained silent, gazing oddly down at her through her glasses:"My aunt is n''t ill, is she?" |
29880 | And, as far as that goes, how could I, if it happened?" |
29880 | And, not looking at her:"Do n''t you want to know me?" |
29880 | Are they really superior to the male of the species?" |
29880 | Are you anxious, darling?" |
29880 | Are you busy?" |
29880 | Are you coming in a taxi?" |
29880 | Are you ill? |
29880 | Are you in love with him?" |
29880 | Are you quite alone?" |
29880 | Are you walking up town?" |
29880 | Are you well, John Estridge?" |
29880 | Are you?" |
29880 | Are you?" |
29880 | At the revolving doors, Elorn said:"Shall I drop you at the office, Jim?" |
29880 | Because I am so respectful toward love? |
29880 | Been away, ai n''t you? |
29880 | Brisson looked askance at her, looked significantly at the Swedish girl, Ilse Westgard:"And what happened then?" |
29880 | But I think it is a little easier to wait alone until-- until there are two to wait-- for him----""Will you call me when you want me, Ilse?" |
29880 | But have you any idea what happens to him when the girl he loves, and who says she cares for him, refuses marriage? |
29880 | But have you no religion?" |
29880 | But if she does n''t disentangle her wires and straighten out she''ll burn out.... What''s that ahead? |
29880 | But is n''t it nice that I should come to you about it?" |
29880 | But it was a strange voice on the wire,--a man''s voice, clear, sinister, tainted with a German accent:"Iss this Miss Dumont? |
29880 | But suppose you try to interest_ me_?" |
29880 | But tell me, Palla, what are you doing these jolly days of the new year?" |
29880 | But when a man remembers a woman, and the woman forgets the man, is n''t something due him?" |
29880 | But where was Vanya?... |
29880 | But-- but now-- do you know what I think of your creed? |
29880 | But-- if it''s settled-- why do you continue to worry, Helen?" |
29880 | But-- if she tried.... Had she the power to move him again? |
29880 | But--_what_ is going to take its place? |
29880 | By God, how are you going to love and serve if girls stop having babies? |
29880 | By God, if this thing is out!--Who the hell is it wants to speak to me? |
29880 | CHAPTER XVI"Are you worried about this Dumont girl?" |
29880 | Ca n''t I sell it?" |
29880 | Can one serve the world better than by loving it enough to live one''s own life through to the last happy rags? |
29880 | Can you imagine it in a girl who began her novitiate as a Carmelite nun?" |
29880 | Can you imagine the scene?" |
29880 | Clear eyes, Who gallops here? |
29880 | Colour came into her face, too:"Do you know, Jim, I really do n''t know how much I do care for you? |
29880 | Could you bring some roller skates?" |
29880 | Could you come to- night?" |
29880 | Could you get me home?" |
29880 | Could you subscribe?" |
29880 | Did he tell you?" |
29880 | Did n''t Marya tell you?" |
29880 | Did you suppose I was in a hurry to see you?" |
29880 | Did you think it was to be a garden- of- Eden party?" |
29880 | Did you wish to go home and dress?" |
29880 | Did you, Jim? |
29880 | Do n''t let anybody tell you that the law of force is the law of life!----""Who are you?" |
29880 | Do n''t you ever do a little tradin''?" |
29880 | Do n''t you know it?" |
29880 | Do n''t you know that, dear?" |
29880 | Do n''t you know the world''s on fire? |
29880 | Do n''t you know what a hun really is? |
29880 | Do n''t you practise your faith?" |
29880 | Do n''t you realise it?" |
29880 | Do n''t you really go anywhere any more?" |
29880 | Do n''t you think her pallor is fascinating?" |
29880 | Do n''t you think it is high time somebody faced this crimson tide-- that somebody started to build a dyke against this threatened inundation?" |
29880 | Do n''t you think it''s sensible to combat Bolshevism and fight it with argument and debate on its own selected camping ground? |
29880 | Do n''t you understand that?" |
29880 | Do n''t you understand, Mr. Puma? |
29880 | Do we get the parcel?" |
29880 | Do you counsel me to subscribe to what I do not believe by acquiescing in it?" |
29880 | Do you dare include me?" |
29880 | Do you happen to know?" |
29880 | Do you hear what I say? |
29880 | Do you know her well, Jack?" |
29880 | Do you know her?" |
29880 | Do you know, Palla, what Jack once said of us? |
29880 | Do you remember?" |
29880 | Do you see where that would lead some of those pretty hot- heads?" |
29880 | Do you suppose I do n''t know you after all these years?" |
29880 | Do you suppose Labour will endure the autocracy of the Bolsheviki? |
29880 | Do you think I would do anything else-- now?" |
29880 | Do you think so, Palla?" |
29880 | Does it spoil_ me_ for you?" |
29880 | Does it?" |
29880 | Domestic partnership?--each sex to its own sphere? |
29880 | Estridge laughed:"What do you care, Jim?" |
29880 | Estridge smiled:"Because they do n''t conform to the established scheme of things?" |
29880 | Estridge spoke to Marya; as the girl turned slightly, Palla said to Shotwell:"Do you find them interesting-- my guests?" |
29880 | Estridge turned to another girl- soldier:"And if you are made a prisoner?" |
29880 | Finally she heard his voice saying:"This is Mr. James Shotwell Junior; who is it wishes to speak to me?" |
29880 | For it is quite true.... Will you come to tea alone with me some afternoon?" |
29880 | From the consequences of living up to it? |
29880 | From the creed they both professed? |
29880 | From their common belief? |
29880 | Get me?" |
29880 | Get me?" |
29880 | Get that?" |
29880 | Get that?" |
29880 | Had his mother mentioned meeting her at the Red Cross? |
29880 | Had she casually and candidly revealed a few of them to his mother in the course of the morning''s conversation over their sewing? |
29880 | Had she, then, that power? |
29880 | Had she? |
29880 | Has he?" |
29880 | Has she turned you into anything very disturbing?" |
29880 | Have n''t you seen any of them?" |
29880 | Have they separated?" |
29880 | Have you a cook?" |
29880 | Have you any idea of its condition? |
29880 | Have you arrived all alone for tea?" |
29880 | Have you ever seen a cinema studio, Miss Dumont?" |
29880 | Have you read my smears?" |
29880 | Have you, perhaps, time this morning?" |
29880 | He came over and took the instrument:"What d''ye want, Chief? |
29880 | He could n''t have lied.... She strove to recollect as she sat there staring at the newspaper.... What was it that beast had said about it?... |
29880 | He had to laugh at her pretence of fury:"No, Marya, you''re just a pretty mischief- maker, I suppose----""Then what do you mean by''queerness''? |
29880 | He inclined his head and felt the thrill of her breath:"Shall we drink one glass together-- to each other alone?" |
29880 | He laughed and lifted her hand from her lap:"You funny child,"he said,"you would n''t steal, for example-- would you?" |
29880 | He maintained his gravity:"Would you be kind enough to take a smear and let me look?" |
29880 | He put a brave face on the matter:"If you''re not really guying me,"he ventured,"would you tell me a little about your poem?" |
29880 | He said humbly:"Palla, would you let me drop in----""Drop into what? |
29880 | He said slowly:"Do you realise what you say? |
29880 | He turned to Estridge:"What about you?" |
29880 | He was still somewhat flushed but he forced a smile:"Did you find my mother agreeable, Palla?" |
29880 | He''s a rich man, ai n''t he?... |
29880 | Helen hesitated:"Mrs. Vance''s friend? |
29880 | Helen laughed:"That is a trifle extravagant, is n''t it?" |
29880 | Hey?" |
29880 | How do you know?" |
29880 | How long have you been in New York?" |
29880 | How to make service the Universal Heart''s Desire? |
29880 | How to transfigure self- love into Love? |
29880 | How''s the girl?" |
29880 | Human bones?" |
29880 | I ask you what have those crazy nuts got on you that you stand for all this rumpus?" |
29880 | I do n''t know how long it has been----""Have you quarrelled?" |
29880 | I remember I fought our butcher''s boy once-- right in the middle of the street----""Why?" |
29880 | I think we should go-- perhaps take part----""What?" |
29880 | I thought of you----""Do you mean to say you remembered me after the ship docked?" |
29880 | I thought perhaps-- if I could hear your voice-- if you''d say something kind----""Had you nothing else to tell me, Palla?" |
29880 | I wo n''t do it again.... Am I to see you soon?" |
29880 | I wonder what it feels like to become a little intoxicated?" |
29880 | I''ve had a lot of things to do----""You and she still agree, do n''t you, Jim?" |
29880 | If not-- was it merely a natural forgetfulness on his mother''s part? |
29880 | Ilse shook her head:"Who cares? |
29880 | In a battle against all dictators, why proclaim dictatorship-- even of the proletariat? |
29880 | Into poetry? |
29880 | Is Ilse all right?" |
29880 | Is he quite well? |
29880 | Is it entirely cleaned out? |
29880 | Is it the woman''s battalion?" |
29880 | Is it too rude?" |
29880 | Is n''t it most annoying?" |
29880 | Is n''t it really very strange, Jim? |
29880 | Is n''t it unfair and tyrannical?" |
29880 | Is n''t it, darling? |
29880 | Is n''t that a good idea?" |
29880 | Is n''t that a reason?... |
29880 | Is n''t the room attractive?" |
29880 | Is n''t this property mine? |
29880 | Is n''t your regiment in Germany?" |
29880 | Is not that our law?" |
29880 | Is propaganda wasted on these girl soldiers? |
29880 | Is she very learned?" |
29880 | Is somebody in love with you?" |
29880 | Is that it?" |
29880 | Is that love? |
29880 | Is that plain?" |
29880 | Is that power? |
29880 | Is that the true law? |
29880 | Is that very much?" |
29880 | Is that what you mean? |
29880 | Is that what you understand?" |
29880 | Is there any other happiness, Tavarishi? |
29880 | Is there any other peace? |
29880 | Is there anything for you to do except to pick yourselves out of the gutter and destroy what kicked you into it and what keeps you there?" |
29880 | Is there need of any other law? |
29880 | Is there no chance for depositors? |
29880 | Iss it for you to concern yourself mit our club und vat iss it ve do?" |
29880 | Iss it then for February the first, our understanding? |
29880 | It sounds rather silly, does n''t it?" |
29880 | It would be amusing for you to see yourself upon the screen as you are, Miss Dumont? |
29880 | It''s in the rules of the game, is n''t it? |
29880 | Jim answered:"Who? |
29880 | Jim gave him a singular look:"Yes.... Do you like Ilse Westgard?" |
29880 | Kastner came around beside him and said in his thin, sinister tone:"You know it vat I got on you, Angelo?" |
29880 | Kill? |
29880 | Looted? |
29880 | Love and Service? |
29880 | Marya waited for her to turn before replying:"Have n''t_ you_ seen him?" |
29880 | Marya, a little apart, turned to Shotwell:"You find our Russian folk- song amusing?" |
29880 | May I ask who she is?" |
29880 | May I come around for a little while?" |
29880 | May I come?" |
29880 | May I come?" |
29880 | May I?" |
29880 | Motherhood? |
29880 | Mrs. Shotwell, her eyes on her flying needle, said casually:"Have you never felt the desire to reconsider-- to return to your novitiate?" |
29880 | My Aunt Emeline?" |
29880 | My God, is he dead? |
29880 | My friends bore you?" |
29880 | News is a necessity to me, and I''m famishing.... What other reason could there be for a taxi? |
29880 | No?" |
29880 | Nobody went to- night except myself.... Why were you there, Jim?" |
29880 | Of course Jim goes out----""Where?" |
29880 | Once more he said:"Palla, is anything worrying you? |
29880 | One ca n''t endure a perfect void, can one?" |
29880 | One may not control one''s heart.... And if she is in love-- well, is she not free to love him?" |
29880 | Or have you and your comrades made a better one in Petrograd?" |
29880 | Or iss it, a little later, the end of all your troubles, Angelo?" |
29880 | Or was it Thor who wrestled with that toothless hag, Thokk?" |
29880 | Otherwise? |
29880 | Palla came into the room and picked up the receiver:"Yes? |
29880 | Palla lifted her face in flushed surprise:"Is there any compromising with truth?" |
29880 | Palla said in a low voice:"Are you-- afraid?" |
29880 | Palla smiled:"Not a bit-- only such cowardice saddens me.... And the days are grey enough....""Why do you say that? |
29880 | Pawling!----""Shall I inquire?" |
29880 | Pawling?" |
29880 | Philosophy might have answered:"But to what purpose? |
29880 | Pretty fine, was n''t it?" |
29880 | Puma stopped and looked at him stealthily:"What is it you would do, Elmer?" |
29880 | Puma turned a deep red:"And whose hall do you think it is?" |
29880 | Really? |
29880 | Safe from what? |
29880 | Safe? |
29880 | Safe? |
29880 | Say, Angy, what dames have you commandeered?" |
29880 | See?" |
29880 | See?" |
29880 | Shall I?" |
29880 | Shall we dance? |
29880 | Shall we go to Delmonico''s?" |
29880 | Shall we have tea?... |
29880 | Shall we lunch together?" |
29880 | Shall we?" |
29880 | Sharrow''s my boss, if you remember?" |
29880 | She is taken seriously----""Taken seriously ill? |
29880 | She put one persuasive arm around her slender, dark- eyed comrade:"To meet God unexpectedly is nothing to scare one, is it, Palla?" |
29880 | She seemed amused:"Tell me, are you too a concentrationist?" |
29880 | She slipped in the last hook, turned and enveloped him again with an insolent, slanting glance:"_ Allons!_ Do you come to the Red Flag?" |
29880 | She smiled:"Because I''ve been a cheerful companion-- even gay? |
29880 | She smiled:"You would n''t advise me to make such an investment, would you?" |
29880 | She took Palla''s hands and bent her lips to them, then lifted her tawny head:"What do words matter? |
29880 | She took the pale girl by both hands:"Do you understand?" |
29880 | Shotwell glanced up quickly:"Her name, by any chance, does n''t happen to be Palla Dumont?" |
29880 | Shotwell?" |
29880 | Shotwell?" |
29880 | Shotwell?" |
29880 | So she merely shook her head in gentle disapproval and dissent:"What is the use,"she said,"of exchanging one form of tyranny for another? |
29880 | So you''re fixing to locate in New York, eh?" |
29880 | So-- where does he go?" |
29880 | Speculated?... |
29880 | Sure it''s me, Elmer.... Hey? |
29880 | Tell me, Jack, how did you get on in Russia?" |
29880 | Tell me, please, what did you do that unhappy night?" |
29880 | Than which, it is said, there is no greater love...."Of what are you thinking?" |
29880 | That is all you are, is n''t it?" |
29880 | The Bolsheviki are impossible.... Are you walking up town?" |
29880 | The girl stared at her:"Did you_ marry_ Jack?" |
29880 | The latter said in English:"Could you help us? |
29880 | The other reddened and her eyes flashed:"What God do you mean?" |
29880 | The same well- dressed man interrupted again:"Say, who pays you to come here and hand out that Wall Street stuff?" |
29880 | Then Ilse''s arm tightened, and the old gaiety glinted in her sea- blue eyes:"Is your house in order too, Palla?" |
29880 | Then Jim broke loose:"Modernism? |
29880 | Then her mood changed abruptly:"You funny boy,"she said,"do n''t you understand that I want you to come?" |
29880 | Then into her brown eyes came the delicious glimmer:"May I whisper to you, Jim? |
29880 | Then to her:"Where is he?" |
29880 | Then we went to see such a charming play--_Tea for Three_--and then we had supper at the Biltmore and danced.... Will you dine with me to- morrow?" |
29880 | Then, again:"Who wants him?... |
29880 | Then, as his clasp tightened:"Please,"she said,"may I not have my freedom?" |
29880 | Then, turning to him, she said laughingly:"Does it really matter how two people meet when time races with us like that?" |
29880 | Then, was it good only in war? |
29880 | Then,"And you mean, ultimately, to take the black veil?" |
29880 | Think I''m going to be held up by any game like that? |
29880 | Think I''m going to stand for any shake- down from that gang? |
29880 | To Palla Dumont he said:"And do_ you_ remember?" |
29880 | Trust funds? |
29880 | Turning involuntarily toward Palla, he said:"Ca n''t you believe in Him, either?" |
29880 | Understand? |
29880 | Vas iss it you do about doze vimmen?" |
29880 | Wait for what?... |
29880 | Was her silence significant? |
29880 | Was it Hel, goddess of death? |
29880 | Was n''t she one of those damned girl- soldiers? |
29880 | Was she mad to return here on the wildest chance that Jim might have come-- might be inside, waiting? |
29880 | Well, darling, from where then do you derive your authority to cancel the credentials of the Most High?" |
29880 | Were you annoyed?" |
29880 | Were you dreadfully disappointed by the armistice?" |
29880 | What are all the annoying details of commerce? |
29880 | What are the Bolsheviki? |
29880 | What can one do?" |
29880 | What can one say? |
29880 | What did they care how many generals were killed? |
29880 | What difference does it make how we love?" |
29880 | What do we want to split fifty- fifty with them soft, fat millionaires for? |
29880 | What do you know about that, Angelo?" |
29880 | What do you mean? |
29880 | What do you think of your object lesson, darling?" |
29880 | What does he stick you up for per month?" |
29880 | What had Ilse meant by asking her to"wait"? |
29880 | What had happened? |
29880 | What had moved him so unexpectedly to deeper emotion? |
29880 | What had so shocked her then about Jim and Marya being together? |
29880 | What has happened to my aunt?" |
29880 | What has happened?" |
29880 | What hope is there left in him?--what sense, what understanding, what faith? |
29880 | What horseman hails you,_ Lada!_ What pleasure pales you? |
29880 | What if they are the same species of vermin that slew Vanya Tchernov? |
29880 | What is going to happen, Jim, unless educated people combine to educate the ignorant?" |
29880 | What is it he desires? |
29880 | What is it you know?" |
29880 | What is money when it is a question of art? |
29880 | What is money? |
29880 | What is particularly troubling you, dear? |
29880 | What is rent? |
29880 | What is the matter? |
29880 | What is the trouble?" |
29880 | What is the use of saying,''Let them perish''? |
29880 | What is the use of trying to rebuild the world that way? |
29880 | What is there for me to do?" |
29880 | What law? |
29880 | What of it? |
29880 | What of it?" |
29880 | What particular stunt does she perform?" |
29880 | What shall I do?" |
29880 | What was Ilse doing at half- past two in the morning? |
29880 | What will she be?" |
29880 | What will you? |
29880 | What wolf assails you? |
29880 | What y''want?" |
29880 | What yeh think yeh got on us?" |
29880 | What''s on your mind?" |
29880 | What''s the matter with our getting a jag of his coin?" |
29880 | What?" |
29880 | What?... |
29880 | What?... |
29880 | What_ are_ you doing?" |
29880 | When they were seated:"What religious order would be likely to accept me?" |
29880 | Where are they? |
29880 | Where are they? |
29880 | Where could she be? |
29880 | Where do we go from here?" |
29880 | Where had Jim gone when he left her? |
29880 | Where is it all going to land her? |
29880 | Where is my aunt?" |
29880 | Where is she to- day? |
29880 | Where is the law they made?" |
29880 | Where is their law?" |
29880 | Where was Ilse, now? |
29880 | Where was Ilse? |
29880 | Who Goes There? |
29880 | Who can tell? |
29880 | Who else calls you dear? |
29880 | Who is it?" |
29880 | Who knows if, also, happily, genius slumbers within? |
29880 | Who knows what such crazy people might do in anger? |
29880 | Who knows? |
29880 | Who knows? |
29880 | Who made it? |
29880 | Who the hell is that duck what inks his whiskers?" |
29880 | Who was this girl with whom he had crossed the ocean? |
29880 | Who''s the good- looking chap over by Ilse?" |
29880 | Who? |
29880 | Why destroy the autocracy of the capitalist and erect on its ruins the autocracy of the worker? |
29880 | Why did n''t I?" |
29880 | Why did she remain out so late with John Estridge? |
29880 | Why did_ you_ write? |
29880 | Why do n''t you say all this to Palla?" |
29880 | Why do n''t you seize Mr. Brisson and make him two- step?" |
29880 | Why do n''t you think I am likely to remain?" |
29880 | Why must the world stop there? |
29880 | Why not make it the nation''s creed? |
29880 | Why not? |
29880 | Why not? |
29880 | Why not? |
29880 | Why should I kill them-- merely because to- day a real man died? |
29880 | Why should I?" |
29880 | Why should everything suddenly happen to her in that way? |
29880 | Why should he not pay that commission if you are sufficiently obliging to buy from him his property?" |
29880 | Why should the hunt swerve for the devil''s herring drawn across the trail? |
29880 | Why the devil should free and untramelled womanhood hatch out young? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why? |
29880 | Why?" |
29880 | Will you dine at home with me?" |
29880 | Will you have a drink?" |
29880 | Will you kindly inform Mr. Skidder of my congratulations and best wishes for his prosperity? |
29880 | Will you tell them, Palla?" |
29880 | Without looking around at him she said:"Does this spoil me for you, Jim?" |
29880 | Would he come early? |
29880 | Would he? |
29880 | Would you care to walk over and see them before they leave for the front trenches?" |
29880 | Would you like to see them? |
29880 | Yes?" |
29880 | Yes?" |
29880 | Yes?" |
29880 | Yes?" |
29880 | Yes?" |
29880 | Yes?" |
29880 | Yes?'' |
29880 | Yess? |
29880 | You and I ca n''t do a thing like that to Vanya--""Are there no other reasons?" |
29880 | You ask me why I came? |
29880 | You ask why? |
29880 | You asked me to marry you, did n''t you?" |
29880 | You ca n''t pass one of those roses through the flame of that fire and still have your rose, can you?" |
29880 | You comprehend?" |
29880 | You do n''t treasure malice, do you? |
29880 | You do not believe it?" |
29880 | You get me?" |
29880 | You have n''t declined, I hope; have you, Jim?" |
29880 | You hear it what I say? |
29880 | You hear what I''m telling you?" |
29880 | You keep out of America, do you hear? |
29880 | You know what curiosity did to the cat?" |
29880 | You mention the option?" |
29880 | You never can tell, can you, sweetness?" |
29880 | You never heard of her, did you?" |
29880 | You say he took the bank''s funds? |
29880 | You think she please him?" |
29880 | You understand, McCabe?" |
29880 | You understand, Mr. Shotwell? |
29880 | You understand? |
29880 | You''re always out when he calls, ai n''t you?" |
29880 | You''re coming to my dance of course, are you not?" |
29880 | You''re just a plain, fighting male, are n''t you?" |
29880 | Your voice sounds so tired----""Does it? |
29880 | _ Allez!_""My God, are-- are you then demented?" |
29880 | _ Give?_ Hell! |
29880 | _ How_ rotten?" |
29880 | _ Is_ that Deity?" |
29880 | asked Estridge, smiling,"--to sell a house in town?" |
29880 | demanded Palla,"--or do you mean it''s only morally dingy?" |
29880 | demanded Sondheim, in a growling voice,"what haf we done?" |
29880 | he cried hoarsely,"who is it you shall kill at the hall?" |
29880 | he cried,"if it be not pleasure? |
29880 | how long d''yeh think we''re going to stand for being hammered by that bunch o''skirts? |
29880 | mocked Marya,"--What are morals? |
29880 | she said, still laughing,"do you think I care how we met? |
29880 | snapped Kastner,"of vat are you speaking? |
44307 | Again those words''Central Sea;''what does it mean? 44307 Ah, Hugh; why say the United States? |
44307 | And I am to go with him, you understand? |
44307 | And I have lain here since June 22d? |
44307 | And Rawolle; where is he? |
44307 | And are you the great- grandson of Hugh Craft, my dear old friend of 1887? |
44307 | And can you not have that? |
44307 | And day after to- morrow, at 12 dial, we sail for the north pole? |
44307 | And do you call that a painless death, being crushed upon the earth below into a shapeless mass? |
44307 | And do you mean to tell me that Chicago is a greater city than New York? 44307 And federal appointments, the patronage of the party, as it was formerly called-- how are they made?" |
44307 | And go wherever I wish? |
44307 | And has no effort been made to rediscover this secret? |
44307 | And have no accidents ever happened to these stations from ice- floes, collisions, or faulty construction? |
44307 | And how about the rates of postage? |
44307 | And how do you feel? 44307 And how have you accomplished this great change?" |
44307 | And how long does it take to gain this full momentum? |
44307 | And how long has this been the custom? |
44307 | And is all of this of malleable glass? |
44307 | And is not the country somewhat crowded by this great mass of people? |
44307 | And our elevation now is 10,000 feet, you say? |
44307 | And steam is n''t used any more? |
44307 | And that pole is where? |
44307 | And the government pays these men? |
44307 | And the officers-- how are they appointed? |
44307 | And the term of office? |
44307 | And their duties, what are they? |
44307 | And to- night is your last with us? 44307 And was I also asleep as long?" |
44307 | And was the principle never divulged by the inventor? |
44307 | And we are going north, to the extremity of the earth? |
44307 | And what are our chances for promotion? 44307 And what does my hubby get?" |
44307 | And what is considered good speed for the electric roads? |
44307 | And what will Hugh say when he returns and finds me gone? |
44307 | And where may that south point be? |
44307 | And who is President now? |
44307 | And why dare we not, Miss Timidity? |
44307 | And why may we not? |
44307 | And you have investigated? |
44307 | And you knew that a letter would be found in that cairn? |
44307 | And you mean to tell me that this paper is the newspaper of the whole country? 44307 And you personally knew the man who left that letter here in this desolate waste?" |
44307 | And you reproach me not that I see in you my former love? |
44307 | And you say the quantity that I asked for is nearly ready? |
44307 | And you want her, Hugh? |
44307 | And you will obey this order? |
44307 | And you will send for her to- morrow? |
44307 | And you, too, Hathaway? |
44307 | And yours the same? |
44307 | Any news at the club? |
44307 | Are the rates of passage high? |
44307 | Are there any changes in the method of electing Senators, Representatives, and chief magistrate? |
44307 | Are there any laws relating to the holding of real estate? |
44307 | Are they expensive? 44307 Are you displeased at meeting me?" |
44307 | Are you engaged? |
44307 | Are you not too cold, Junius? |
44307 | Are you sure? |
44307 | Bad, eh? |
44307 | But I had forgotten; is she engaged, or in love? |
44307 | But can we not help you? |
44307 | But can you not carry material to keep your supply of hydrogen up to the amount required? |
44307 | But could n''t she come as somebody else? 44307 But dare I?" |
44307 | But did not those who were not injured by the shocks and falling buildings have time to move their effects before the waters overtook them? 44307 But does not this convict labor compete with the labor of the masses?" |
44307 | But does this not work more harshly against those of otherwise good reputation than against the habitual criminal? |
44307 | But has it always worked well? |
44307 | But how are the artillery regiments kept full? |
44307 | But how are these men found? 44307 But if I were to show you that it was a fact, an accomplished fact, you would, of course, admit it?" |
44307 | But is it not a little confusing to you, this change from the old to the new style? |
44307 | But may not the choice of the people be defeated, where the election is in the hands of so few? |
44307 | But suppose one is dissatisfied with his trial; what then? |
44307 | But tell me, Rawolle, why do you speak of 16 dial and 13 dial? 44307 But the heading reads:''America, September 19, 2000?''" |
44307 | But were you? |
44307 | But will you not be adding too much weight for buoyancy? |
44307 | But, Junius, does Marie know this? 44307 But,"asked Cobb,"does not this oil congeal upon the rail in cold weather?" |
44307 | But,musingly inquired Cobb,"is not there a difference in operating the roads? |
44307 | By whom was this wonderful instrument invented? 44307 Can I help it? |
44307 | Can man forswear his soul? |
44307 | Can you explain why it is that the pole has never been reached by land parties? |
44307 | Chief of Ordnance? |
44307 | Colchis, how can I ever repay you for the time you have given to the manufacture of these crystals? |
44307 | Craft, did you say? |
44307 | Did she leave any word for you? |
44307 | Did you hear it, Marie? |
44307 | Did_ you_ know Jean Colchis? |
44307 | Do I remind you of some old friend, some old love? |
44307 | Do I? 44307 Do n''t you know in which direction south is?" |
44307 | Do n''t you see how anxious I am? |
44307 | Do you comprehend the advance in science that has been made in a hundred years? |
44307 | Do you have any accidents on the roads? 44307 Do you intend to make direct for the pole from Cape Farewell?" |
44307 | Do you wish to earn twenty dollars? |
44307 | Do you wish to go? |
44307 | Do you, indeed, make this request? |
44307 | Does it differ much from the Morse system? |
44307 | Does not this system give opportunities for bribery and jobbery? |
44307 | Does this law not tend to deprive the State and nation of the services of tried and capable men? |
44307 | Easy enough to say,''Take your bearings,''he returned,"but how? |
44307 | Father, dear; I wish to visit aunt Lora in San Francisco; can I go? |
44307 | Father, have I been a good, true daughter to you? |
44307 | Given us the slip, eh? |
44307 | Glass? |
44307 | God is all powerful; but by man? |
44307 | Have I slept a hundred and thirteen years? 44307 Have you any nitric acid?" |
44307 | Have you been over the ship? |
44307 | How about pardons from these prisons? |
44307 | How can it? 44307 How do you make that out, Junius?" |
44307 | How far apart are these stations? |
44307 | How have you done this, pray? |
44307 | How is that? 44307 How is that?" |
44307 | How is the course? 44307 How long has this sleep continued?" |
44307 | How long has this system been in operation? |
44307 | How long have these works been in operation? |
44307 | How many pairs of these sagacious little instruments have you in the system? |
44307 | How much have I had already? |
44307 | How much will the hydrogen which is used to inflate that bag weigh? |
44307 | How so, Mollie? |
44307 | How so? 44307 How?" |
44307 | Hugh,said Cobb, rising from his chair,"will you take the latitude from Polaris? |
44307 | I presume,said Cobb,"that there can be but few changes in the general management, supervision, etc., of the roads from those in vogue in my time?" |
44307 | I should imagine that the system is very expensive-- the salary of so many judges? |
44307 | I think I was informed by Mr. Rawolle that the government owns all of the railroads in the country? |
44307 | I was engaged the past two nights, and it was impossible for me to get here; but how progresses the work? 44307 I, Lester? |
44307 | IS IT A HOAX? 44307 Is it a private concern?" |
44307 | Is it to be so? |
44307 | Is n''t he a young man to have lived so long? |
44307 | Is the nation in debt? |
44307 | Is the plaster ready to set? |
44307 | Is this now the prevailing style? |
44307 | It is funny, is it not, to hear me talking of having been the friend and chum of this man''s great- great- grandfather? |
44307 | It must take powerful engines to exhaust the air from such a long tunnel, does it not? |
44307 | Listen,he exclaimed, as their glasses were laid upon the table;"are you ready to give me your strictest attention?" |
44307 | Master, this is the 25th of August, is it not? |
44307 | Mr. Rawolle, I am prepared for many new and, to me, quite startling statements, but this of yours is a little too strong, is it not? 44307 No doubt you would like to hear of the prison system as it exists to- day; for it is directly connected, of course, with the law?" |
44307 | No letter in which you are recognized? |
44307 | Perhaps not,smiling;"but I may have known his great- grandfather; in fact, I may possibly have been an intimate friend of his-- who knows?" |
44307 | Perhaps? |
44307 | Playing billiards in the other room-- at least he was there a minute ago; but do you want us to- night? |
44307 | Simple, is n''t it? |
44307 | So long? |
44307 | Such an immense basin must have required a considerable time to fill up? |
44307 | Surely, he taught you how to make the instruments? |
44307 | Tell me one other thing,said Cobb;"has the pneumatic railroad superseded all other kinds?" |
44307 | That would be terrible intriguing, would n''t it? |
44307 | The metropolis? |
44307 | The sympathetic system, did you say? |
44307 | Then, I take it that a Republican house would surely elect a Republican, and vice versa? |
44307 | Then, I understand that, if you could manufacture this gas in sufficient quantities on the ship, and by light apparatus, you could go anywhere? |
44307 | Then, how can you account for the power of attraction which draws you to me? |
44307 | Then, judging from your remarks, there is practically no limit to the speed which can be obtained by this method of propulsion? |
44307 | Then, life without your lover is worse than death? |
44307 | Then, that light away down near the horizon is nearly 150 miles from us? |
44307 | Then, the towns, excepting the great centers, are connected by electric railroads for inter- transportation? |
44307 | There are none but sailing vessels in the harbor; will madame have use for one of them? |
44307 | They must be very rich and powerful corporations, these which own such lines as this? |
44307 | This is, no doubt, an electric carriage? |
44307 | Truly, Mollie? |
44307 | Twice? |
44307 | Well, Mr. Lane, what is it? 44307 Well, did I say anything about going to New York?" |
44307 | Well, have n''t I tried to make him love me? 44307 Well, why do n''t you make them?" |
44307 | Were you ever in love, Mollie? |
44307 | What are considered among the gravest crimes? |
44307 | What did you pay for the telegraph system? 44307 What does it mean?" |
44307 | What have n''t you done? |
44307 | What is it now, pet? |
44307 | What is it? |
44307 | What is the next act in this drama? |
44307 | What is the rate of taxation-- national and municipal? |
44307 | What is the strength of the army required to protect the country from internal violence, and for a cadre of a full army? |
44307 | What is the volume of gas as compared with the solid base? 44307 What is this? |
44307 | What is your pay? |
44307 | What more can man desire than a name great to the world; a name honored, respected and loved? |
44307 | What next? |
44307 | What will Lester say when he does not find me in the conservatory to- night? |
44307 | What will you do? 44307 What''s the matter with you? |
44307 | What, doctor? |
44307 | What? |
44307 | When did you say these were invented? |
44307 | When do you desire to start, Miss Craft? |
44307 | Where is the electricity for these powerful engines generated? |
44307 | Where is the evidence of his skill, of his ingenuity? 44307 Where?" |
44307 | Who knocks? |
44307 | Who will not? |
44307 | Whose order? |
44307 | Why did I not think of that? |
44307 | Why did you bring so much meteorite and acid? |
44307 | Why must you seek me thus stealthily, Lester, you ask? 44307 Why, you have told me that New York has over four million inhabitants; has Chicago more than that number?" |
44307 | Will I see you here to- morrow evening? |
44307 | Will he know me? 44307 Will you get the nomination again, do you think?" |
44307 | Will you not smoke, also? |
44307 | Will you show me one of these milag cartridges? |
44307 | Will you take a look at the work of the day? |
44307 | Will you tell me what kind of arms are now used? |
44307 | Will you work all night for that amount? |
44307 | Will you? |
44307 | Would you do more if you could? |
44307 | Yes, I know; but are you going to work so soon? 44307 Yes,"said Cobb;"but would you rather play cinch to remaining here and listening to what I have to say?" |
44307 | Yes,said Hathaway;"but why have you gone to all this trouble with that compass, when you could have put in good- sized springs, as well?" |
44307 | Yes; and you? |
44307 | Yes; but why does it seem to interest you so much? 44307 Yes; have you seen this explosive? |
44307 | Yes; what was it? |
44307 | Yes? |
44307 | Yes? |
44307 | Yes? |
44307 | You are under orders to join your regiment, are you not? |
44307 | You certainly will not ask me to make an attempt which others have declared impossible? |
44307 | You have n''t changed the seasons, have you? |
44307 | You met Mr. Cobb at breakfast, did you not, Irwin? |
44307 | You want her, Lester? |
44307 | You will marry none other than me? 44307 You will pardon my doubts, will you not, Miss Craft?" |
44307 | ''Why not send that daughter to him?'' |
44307 | 2000?" |
44307 | 2000?" |
44307 | 2000?" |
44307 | A few years, and you will come and claim me, will you not, Junius?" |
44307 | A strange statement, is it not? |
44307 | Am I now alive? |
44307 | Am I tedious?" |
44307 | Amid the sobs which came from her heart, she asked:"And will I always be Marie Colchis to you, Junius? |
44307 | And Marie-- what were her thoughts and feelings? |
44307 | And his kindred, where were they? |
44307 | And how had their love ripened, these two of years so wide apart? |
44307 | And if this arctic current could be checked, or driven off, then what?" |
44307 | And she? |
44307 | And the other-- Junius Cobb? |
44307 | And then, was she not now informed of his mission? |
44307 | And why this haste, my daughter?" |
44307 | Are not some more expensive to the government than others?" |
44307 | Are there not other newspapers besides this?" |
44307 | Are we in 1800 or 1900?" |
44307 | Are we really to believe that you have in that case an animal undergoing the treatment you have spoken of?" |
44307 | Are you aware that you are now traveling at the rate of two hundred and forty miles per hour, or four miles per minute?" |
44307 | Are you tired?" |
44307 | As Hugh spoke, he gave the other a severe look, as if to say,"How do you like it?" |
44307 | Both were now prepared for anything which Cobb might advance, for it seemed to each of them that it was no longer a question of"Is it true?" |
44307 | But Cobb had no ill- feeling against the man; he had died long years ago; and what did this theft avail him at that moment? |
44307 | But do you know in which direction the meridian of ten degrees runs, for that is the meridian which passes through Behring Strait?" |
44307 | But does not this extra day interfere in many ways with the dates of bills, notes, and other legal documents?" |
44307 | But have you read this?" |
44307 | But he had taken a dislike to Junius Cobb-- and why? |
44307 | But one other thing troubled him very much, and that was why did the compass- needle mark 899 instead of 260, as it ought to do? |
44307 | But the other-- Junius-- how ran his thoughts? |
44307 | But what battle is this in which he died?" |
44307 | By what misfortune am I thus disturbed and my plans upset? |
44307 | By whose authority do you come? |
44307 | Can you do this?" |
44307 | Can you explain it?" |
44307 | Can you love me in return, for her sake?" |
44307 | Can you make anything out of it?" |
44307 | Chicago, an inland town, to compete with and excel New York, a sea- port city?" |
44307 | Cobb will excuse us for a few minutes, will you not?" |
44307 | Cobb?" |
44307 | Cobb?" |
44307 | Cobb?" |
44307 | Cobb?" |
44307 | Cobb?" |
44307 | Cobb?" |
44307 | Could anyone have dreamed of such a power as this?" |
44307 | Deliberately came the words:"Have you anything to prove your relationship to the President?" |
44307 | Did he ever think of little Marie Colchis? |
44307 | Did n''t I ask you to come here and win the love of Junius Cobb so as to free me from the pain of seeing his love for me unreturned? |
44307 | Did n''t you agree to throw yourself away for Lester''s sake and mine? |
44307 | Did the experiment come up to the ideal? |
44307 | Do they voluntarily enlist?" |
44307 | Do we know it to be worse than the present? |
44307 | Do we know what the future is? |
44307 | Do you believe in the immortality of the soul?" |
44307 | Do you comprehend the drift of my remarks?" |
44307 | Do you comprehend?" |
44307 | Do you hear it? |
44307 | Do you indeed know me?" |
44307 | Do you love Junius Cobb as fondly now as when you were a girl, on the night when he said good- bye and left you? |
44307 | Do you mean that these lights are on stationary vessels in the ocean?" |
44307 | Do you not have them now?" |
44307 | Do you not think it would be cozy and happy?" |
44307 | Do you understand it all now?" |
44307 | Does she know you are going away forever?" |
44307 | Even if collusion brought about a certain nomination, who could tell that that nominee would be elected by the two houses? |
44307 | Feeling this to be the case, he framed his next words accordingly:"Tell me what you mean? |
44307 | Had they all deserted him, that he was thus left alone? |
44307 | Handing one to Craft, he said:"Do you notice anything peculiar about that cartridge?" |
44307 | Has Lester Hathaway any connection with this undertaking?" |
44307 | Has everything been a dream? |
44307 | Hathaway; on time, I see; but where is Craft?" |
44307 | Hathaway?" |
44307 | Have I been asleep since 1887?" |
44307 | Have I been sick? |
44307 | Have I your word?" |
44307 | Have you any more business?" |
44307 | Have you completed everything that is necessary to be done? |
44307 | Have you had a good rest?" |
44307 | Have you no door, or mode of entrance?" |
44307 | He admired Mollie Craft; did he love her? |
44307 | He beamed with the thought, for might he not hear from Marie? |
44307 | He did want it; but for whom? |
44307 | He was living, but where were they? |
44307 | Hear you the word? |
44307 | Holding aloft the empty bullet, he exultingly cried:"Was I not right when I claimed a knowledge of this explosive?" |
44307 | How came you here?" |
44307 | How can you ever say such a thing?" |
44307 | How could it be possible to lose the secret of such a discovery as this?" |
44307 | How is this to be accomplished? |
44307 | How would he be received when he reached there? |
44307 | How, then, does the current pass?" |
44307 | Hugh Craft bowed, and moved behind his sister''s chair, and whispered:"Is he dangerous?" |
44307 | I gave you the weights a few minutes ago; what did I make them?" |
44307 | I have had relatives in the army for many years; I wonder if this man could have been one of my ancestors?" |
44307 | I have seen your aërial ships, large and stanch; why ca n''t you go in one of them?" |
44307 | I have some work to attend to, and I know Junius will excuse me-- will you not?" |
44307 | I hope you do n''t think a man can sleep three months without being satisfied, do you?" |
44307 | I hope you slept well, and are ready for the trip to Pittsburgh?" |
44307 | IS IT TRUE? |
44307 | If I fail, what is the consequence? |
44307 | Is it indeed that year? |
44307 | Is it to be life or death?" |
44307 | Is that perfectly understood?" |
44307 | Is the captain on board?" |
44307 | Is there a secret about it? |
44307 | Is there an inland sea?" |
44307 | Is there anything strange in the name, that you should look at me so doubtingly?" |
44307 | Is this the principle you have been speaking of? |
44307 | It is a remarkable one, is it not?" |
44307 | It is now the 20th of June, A. D. 2000; quite a long time after that set by Mr. Cobb for giving him assistance is it not? |
44307 | It is simple and sure; why, then, should I seek for anything different?" |
44307 | Look here, old fellow,"pettishly exclaimed Hathaway, rising from his chair,"what is all this about, anyway?" |
44307 | Looks funny, does n''t it?" |
44307 | Lost in the ecstasy of the moment, he was rudely awakened to a sense of the reality by the President remarking:"It is a grand sight, is it not?" |
44307 | May not the vision have been given for such an interpretation? |
44307 | Mr. Lyman, will you come along, too?" |
44307 | Not himself? |
44307 | Now, have I not? |
44307 | Now, what would be our velocity falling from this point upon reaching the surface of the earth below?" |
44307 | Of course, I know you refer to the time; but what has been the change in the calendar that you should employ such terms?" |
44307 | On this earth, a human being dies every second; does it interfere with the steady and slow movement of the machinery of life? |
44307 | Once more the eyes opened, and she spoke, but in a stronger voice:"Who are you? |
44307 | Pausing to light a cigar, he then resumed:"How do you feel-- sick or languid?" |
44307 | President?" |
44307 | Scared at a skeleton, eh? |
44307 | She wished to test the man she loved; and why? |
44307 | Tell me, what is the year? |
44307 | Thanking Secretary Fowler for his kindness, Cobb turned to the President and asked:"Is it time to take our departure?" |
44307 | Then aloud:"Is this Miles, who is signed here as Secretary of State, any relation to Brigadier- General Miles, of 1887?" |
44307 | Then starting up with fire in her eye, she cried:"Why not make the attempt ourselves?" |
44307 | Then, after a pause:"Why not open it, Mollie? |
44307 | Then, inquiringly:"Will you show me your finest aërial ship to- morrow?" |
44307 | Then, why care if we die to- day or to- morrow? |
44307 | Turning to Mr. Irwin, he asked:"But where is your steersman-- your lookout, I mean? |
44307 | Turning to his friends, he exclaimed:"Am I not a coward, thus to seek energy and strength in that bottle of liquor? |
44307 | Was he crazy? |
44307 | Was he satisfied to die and live again? |
44307 | Was he to be satisfied with things as he should find them now? |
44307 | Was he to find such changes in the world as he had anticipated? |
44307 | Was he, indeed, crazy? |
44307 | Was he, too, imposing upon the girl''s innocence? |
44307 | Was it a play- thing that he had discovered? |
44307 | Was it known where he was? |
44307 | Was it possible that he was not dreaming? |
44307 | Was the light worth the candle? |
44307 | Was there any harm? |
44307 | Was this the Montgomery street he had so often walked upon? |
44307 | We are all poor, impecunious gentlemen, are we not?" |
44307 | We are now 10,000 feet above the ocean, are we not?" |
44307 | Weak as he was, Cobb sprang toward the opening through which Rawolle was speaking, and excitedly cried:"Is it not 1887? |
44307 | Were I to stop now, what would you think of me? |
44307 | Were you ever in love?" |
44307 | What did he mean by those words? |
44307 | What do you think of my scheme?" |
44307 | What had become of it? |
44307 | What has kept you away?" |
44307 | What is the use of doing anything to- night? |
44307 | What shall I do?" |
44307 | What shall we do?" |
44307 | What should I do? |
44307 | What time will we get there?" |
44307 | What was he standing upon? |
44307 | What was that sound? |
44307 | What were the secrets it contained? |
44307 | What would be his reputation in Washington? |
44307 | What would he do with this power? |
44307 | What''s this?" |
44307 | What''s wanted?" |
44307 | When the Secretary had received them, he gave one to Cobb, saying:"This small bullet does not look much like a cartridge, does it?" |
44307 | When would he come? |
44307 | Where can I behold the work of his loved mind?" |
44307 | Where is my father?" |
44307 | Where was America? |
44307 | Which is the superior of the two? |
44307 | Who is President Craft? |
44307 | Who is this divinity that can hold your thoughts so enthralled when_ I_ am near?" |
44307 | Who knows? |
44307 | Whom would he meet? |
44307 | Why are you so sad to- night?" |
44307 | Why do you look at me in such a manner?" |
44307 | Why must I thus always beat about the bush to seek your society?" |
44307 | Why should I falter? |
44307 | Why was he thus descending into a barren, icy plain miles yet from the pole? |
44307 | Why was it not opened at the proper time? |
44307 | Why was it sent to the Treasurer of the United States, with instructions not to be opened before a hundred years had passed? |
44307 | Will he still love me?" |
44307 | Will it give you pleasure if I tell you that I swear to be true to you-- to wait until you have grown to womanhood? |
44307 | Will you always bear me the love you profess for that other?" |
44307 | Will you give me life? |
44307 | Will you go with me and aid me? |
44307 | Will you not make a confidant of me and tell me all about your loves?" |
44307 | Will you stop the drag a moment?" |
44307 | With a quick, shaking movement, Cobb raised his head, and turned toward the speaker:"What is it, Hugh? |
44307 | With wealth, position, wit, and beauty, what more can you desire? |
44307 | Without replying to the questions, Cobb simply asked:"Will you get the authority for a few simple changes in the construction of this vessel? |
44307 | Words prophetic of what? |
44307 | Would he give up his great undertaking, and live and marry this Hebe, this angel? |
44307 | Would he use it for good, or for evil? |
44307 | Would she not die, if yet alive? |
44307 | Would she quickly forget him, and receive with pleasure the advances of other suitors? |
44307 | Would the woman live through another year? |
44307 | Would there be any difficulty in proving that he was what he claimed to be-- a man who had lived in 1887? |
44307 | Would they succeed? |
44307 | You do not blame me, Mollie, do you?" |
44307 | You do not mean to tell me that these magnificent buildings are built of glass?" |
44307 | You have lived a hundred years; why may you not have known him?" |
44307 | You ought to be ready to get up by this time, I must admit; but that is not to the point: are you in condition to start for Washington to- day?" |
44307 | You will excuse us a few minutes, will you not, Mr. Cobb? |
44307 | You will pardon my rudeness to you this morning, will you not, Colonel Cobb? |
44307 | You will wait until I can claim you from your father? |
44307 | _ Was_ she yet alive? |
44307 | and did her father think that he still remembered his old friends in Duke''s Lane? |
44307 | and how long will their batteries last?" |
44307 | and is it cheaper and as efficient as vapor of water?" |
44307 | and was she not watching and praying for his safe return? |
44307 | and were they the listeners to a lunatic''s chattering discourse? |
44307 | and what would his future be? |
44307 | and where are we now?" |
44307 | can you doubt it?" |
44307 | did I not ask you to meet me here?" |
44307 | did I understand you to say meteorite?" |
44307 | did I? |
44307 | for what is life without him? |
44307 | have I lain here long? |
44307 | he asked again;"are you not joking me? |
44307 | he said, half aloud; then turning to Lieutenant Sibley, he exclaimed:"You spoke of water cylinders; where are they?" |
44307 | is it time to get up? |
44307 | murmured Cobb,"are there no true friends on earth?" |
44307 | or am I awake in the new era?" |
44307 | or are there some few things yet to be gotten ready?" |
44307 | or had he worked out this problem for some great and grand undertaking? |
44307 | or is this some terrible nightmare? |
44307 | or must I go alone?" |
44307 | or, rather, is A. D. 2000 this year?" |
44307 | see it? |
44307 | seeing Cobb so quiet;"or would you like a drink of something to warm the inner man?" |
44307 | she exclaimed; then pointing her delicate finger to a line, she cried:"Do you see that? |
44307 | that I will marry no other woman living but you?" |
44307 | that an-- an-- another is going to take you away from your little girl?" |
44307 | up and down, changeable as a weather- vane; who could expect a stable government? |
44307 | was he not to be envied? |
44307 | what is the matter?" |
44307 | what is this?" |
44307 | you did?" |
44307 | you did?" |
44307 | you spoke to me, did you not?" |
44307 | your friend, for instance, at school?" |
7320 | But if the present question is found to be-- How shall we guard against a terrible menace to our Indian Empire? |
7320 | Do those who shrink from expense think that the presence of Russia in Afghanistan will be inexpensive to us? |
7320 | They boast of their descent, their prowess in arms, their independence; and cap all by"Am I not a Puktan?" |
7320 | Will the weakness which will be the temptation and the opportunity of Russia be less costly than effectual defence? |
62514 | But how could you carry me? |
62514 | But in that last big heavy wagon what do you carry? |
62514 | Can you see a rain cloud, any of you? |
62514 | Do you mean to say that you left your heart back there in the tree? |
62514 | Do you think so? 62514 Does any man feel a wind laden with dampness blowing against him?" |
62514 | How am I to catch a Monkey? |
62514 | How can I go with you? |
62514 | How could I? 62514 How shall we kill it?" |
62514 | Is it true that the earth is all breaking up? |
62514 | Little Crab,said the Crane,"would you let me take you to the fine pond in the deep woods where I took the Fishes?" |
62514 | What are you doing? |
62514 | What is the matter with the rock? |
62514 | What shall I do? |
62514 | Where have you been, Blackie? 62514 Who saw it breaking up?" |
62514 | Who trod on my head? |
62514 | Why are you running so fast? |
62514 | Why did you carry them off? |
62514 | Why did you take me under water, Crocodile? |
62514 | Why do n''t you bathe in the lake and then lie on the bank and rest? |
62514 | And what is that around your neck?" |
62514 | Another Rabbit saw him running, and called after him,"What are you running so fast for?" |
62514 | As the demons neared the foolish merchant they turned their carriage to one side of the way, saying pleasantly,"Where are you going?" |
62514 | As they were going down out of the palace, after saying good- by to their father, the Sun Prince called to them,"Where are you going?" |
62514 | But will the king be pleased to ask the Valuer what is the value of the measure of rice?" |
62514 | Can you value that standing in your place by the king?'' |
62514 | Did you come through a stream?" |
62514 | Does it rain on the road you have come by? |
62514 | Have there been any bad men talking about here?" |
62514 | He hoped he could get it for nothing, so he said:"What is this worth? |
62514 | He said to his brother,"How is it, Big Red, that you and I are given only straw and grass to eat, while we do all the hard work on the farm? |
62514 | How can such a man hold that office? |
62514 | I woke up and thought,''What would become of me if the earth should all break up?'' |
62514 | If five hundred horses are worth a measure of rice, what is the measure of rice worth?" |
62514 | If that''s the cross look he wears when he is happy, how will he look when he is angry? |
62514 | Is that all that is left of the Fishes?" |
62514 | So he went to the young man and told him this, saying,"Will you go before or come on after me?" |
62514 | Stopping all the carts the wise merchant asked the men,"Have you ever heard any one say that there was a lake or pond in this desert? |
62514 | The Monkey laughed, and said:"Oh, it''s you, Crocodile, is it?" |
62514 | The Turtle looked down and began to say,"Well, and if my friends carry me, what business is that of yours?" |
62514 | The king, not knowing what had happened, asked:"How now, Valuer, what are five hundred horses worth?" |
62514 | The old woman called the merchant and showed him the bowl, saying,"Will you take this, sir, and give the little girl here something for it?" |
62514 | The question is,''What are the Good Fairies like?''" |
62514 | Then Big Red said,"Did you see, Little Red, what became of the Pig after all his fine feeding?" |
62514 | Then the first Rabbit said:"Do n''t you know? |
62514 | There he threw himself on his bed and cried:"Why did that strong Ox act so? |
62514 | They said:"Did you come back to lose more money?" |
62514 | Three times the Monkey called, and then he said:"Why is it, Friend Rock, that you do not answer me to- night?" |
62514 | Well, how do you like this?" |
62514 | What have you in all those carts?" |
62514 | What is in that bag?" |
62514 | What is it?" |
62514 | What then would become of me?" |
62514 | When he went to feed the Ox that night, the Ox turned to him and said:"Why did you whip me to- day? |
62514 | When the Sun Prince went into the pond the water- sprite saw him and asked him the question,"What are the Good Fairies like?" |
62514 | When the man saw Blackie standing on the bank he asked,"Who owns this Elephant? |
62514 | Which shall I bring?" |
62514 | Who is first?" |
62514 | Why are you lying here?" |
62514 | Why did he shame me before all those people?" |
62514 | Why did you call me''wretch''and''rascal''? |
62514 | Will you go with us?" |
62514 | XVIII WHY THE OWL IS NOT KING OF THE BIRDS Why is it that Crows torment the Owls as they sleep in the daytime? |
62514 | [ Illustration:"How could I go with you?" |
62514 | [ Illustration:"Why did you take me under water, Crocodile?" |
62514 | did I not grant you your life? |
62514 | she said,"Where have you been? |
5706 | A few trillions or quadrillions of years, what matters it to the Eternal? |
5706 | An agent of evolution is the influence of the environment, but who sees the environment set its stamp upon animal life? |
5706 | And in the end is not this best? |
5706 | And is not our system a member of a still larger family or tribe, and it of a still larger, all bound together by ties of consanguinity? |
5706 | And the fallen from their ranks, where are they? |
5706 | Are his forebears many, and not one pair? |
5706 | Are the planets not all of one family, sitting around the same central source of warmth and life? |
5706 | But could we stop with the tailed man-- the manlike ape, or the apelike man? |
5706 | But if such a continent once existed, would not some vestige of it still remain? |
5706 | But what matters it? |
5706 | But what matters it? |
5706 | Can any one tell how many hundreds of millions of years Nature has been making ready her garden and planting her seeds? |
5706 | Can there be any doubt that it is all of a piece so far as its invisible and intangible forces and capabilities are concerned? |
5706 | Can we believe that the earth is an alien and a stranger in the universe? |
5706 | Can we find any point in his history where we can say, Here his natural history ends, and his supernatural history begins? |
5706 | Can we form any mental picture of the actual animal forms that the manward impulse has traveled through? |
5706 | Can we narrow life to a single point, a single cell, in the past? |
5706 | Can we narrow their line of descent down to a single pair for each? |
5706 | Can we say that all the organic matter of our time is from preexisting organic matter? |
5706 | Can we see him as a fish in the old Devonian seas or lakes? |
5706 | Can we see him as a reptile in the slime of the jungle or in the waters of the Mesozoic world? |
5706 | Can we think of his ancestry under the image of a tree, and of him as one of the many branches? |
5706 | Certainly it favors seriousness, truthfulness, and simplicity of life; or, are only the serious and single- minded drawn to the study of Nature? |
5706 | Could a city grow by the process of pulling down the old buildings for material to build the new? |
5706 | Could the universe be run as a charity or a benevolent institution, or as a poor- house of the most approved pattern? |
5706 | Could we substitute the life of one period for that of another without doing obvious violence to the logic of nature? |
5706 | Did any terrestrial or celestial calamity endanger the line of descent of any of the higher creatures? |
5706 | Did he think he could have got a picture of our souls? |
5706 | Did his Creator start him with this appendage, or was it a later suffix of his own invention? |
5706 | Did our fate hang upon the success of any of these forms? |
5706 | Do I behold the transfiguration of the earth? |
5706 | Do not proper work and the exercise of will power have the same effect upon our lives? |
5706 | Do you want a million or two to account for this or that? |
5706 | Does man presuppose all the vertebrate sub- kingdom? |
5706 | Does not force as we know it in this world go its own way with the same disregard of the precious thing we call life? |
5706 | Does not the question still remain who or what made this feat possible? |
5706 | Had I really found sermons in stones, books in running brooks and good in everything? |
5706 | Had the birds taught me any valuable lessons? |
5706 | Had the flowers, the trees, the soil, the coming and the going of the seasons? |
5706 | Had the four- footed beasts? |
5706 | Had the insects? |
5706 | Had the vast succession of living beings, the long experience in organization, at last made the problem of the origin of man easier to solve? |
5706 | Has not science also enlarged the sphere of our love, and given us new grounds for wonder and admiration? |
5706 | Has the earth veil at last been torn aside, and the red heart of the globe been laid bare?" |
5706 | Has the solid ground melted into thin air? |
5706 | How could that comparatively narrow curtain of white spray up there give birth to such a full robust stream? |
5706 | How did God make man? |
5706 | How did they escape the world- wild catastrophe of earlier geologic times? |
5706 | How does she select her breeding- stock? |
5706 | How does she weed her garden? |
5706 | I can fancy the first beholder of it saying,"what is this? |
5706 | I suppose my logical faculties are convinced, but what is that in me that is baffled, and that hesitates and demurs? |
5706 | IV But I am not preaching much of a gospel, am I? |
5706 | IV One can not look upon Yosemite or walk beneath its towering walls without the question arising in his mind, How did all this happen? |
5706 | If so, what form went immediately before him? |
5706 | If the Eocene progenitor of the horse, the little four- toed eohippus, had been cut off, would not the world have been horseless to- day? |
5706 | If this were true, could there have been any continental growth at all? |
5706 | If thwartings and accidents arid delays could have cut man off, how could he have escaped? |
5706 | If we came out of those lowly and groveling forms, to what heights of being may we not be carried by the impetus that brought us thus far? |
5706 | If we hypothesize the ether to explain certain phenomena, why should we not hypothesize a vital force to account for other mysteries? |
5706 | If we were to say that life first appeared on the globe in Cambrian times, just what should we mean? |
5706 | In one hundred thousand years what changes should we probably find? |
5706 | In our experience there must be a first, but when did manhood begin; when did puberty, when did old age, begin? |
5706 | Indeed, what is there or has there been in the universe that he is not indebted to? |
5706 | Is it not like all that we know of the method of nature? |
5706 | Is sudden mutation, after all, the key to all these phenomena? |
5706 | Is there a firmament below as well as above? |
5706 | Is there any connection between that fact and the human sharks of to- day? |
5706 | Is there no fundamental reason for the gradation we behold? |
5706 | It appears or it does not appear, and who shall say yea or nay? |
5706 | Just as much geology in the East as in the West, did I say? |
5706 | Life works through chemical combinations and affinities, and yet is it not more than chemistry? |
5706 | Now you and I are here without imprisoning shells on our backs; but how or why did we escape? |
5706 | One hundred thousand, and we are-- where? |
5706 | Or did the creative impulse bank upon life as a whole and never become bankrupt, no matter what special lines or forms failed? |
5706 | Or shall we say that the elements of life had become more plastic and adaptable, or that the life fund had accumulated, so to speak? |
5706 | Several million years, or one million years,--how can we take it in? |
5706 | That it began as a single point, or as many points? |
5706 | The rains, the dews, the snows, the winds-- how could these soft, gently careering agents have demolished these rocks and dug these valleys? |
5706 | There has been a great geologic drama enacted here; who or what were the star actors? |
5706 | This impulse has left many forms behind it; but has this impulse itself ever been endangered? |
5706 | To clothe the earth with soil made from the disintegrated mountains-- can we figure that time to ourselves? |
5706 | Was he a big fish or a little fish? |
5706 | Was he safe as long as one vertebrate form remained? |
5706 | Was it a matter of luck or chance? |
5706 | Was it luck or law that favored us? |
5706 | Was the golden secret ever intrusted to the keeping of any single form? |
5706 | Was there a first English word spoken? |
5706 | Was there a first summer, a first winter, a first spring? |
5706 | Was there one and only one first bit of protoplasm? |
5706 | Was this impulse ever really checked or endangered? |
5706 | We find monkeys in different parts of the world in the same geologic horizons; did they all have a common origin? |
5706 | We have vastly more solid knowledge about the universe amid which we live than had our fathers, but are we happier, better, stronger? |
5706 | We say the order of nature is rational; but is it not because our reason is the outcome of that order? |
5706 | What animal profited by this rich vegetable life? |
5706 | What determined one branch to eventuate in man, another in the dog, the horse, the bird, or the reptile? |
5706 | What does this mean but that for an incalculable period the processes of erosion and deposition went on as tranquilly as a summer day? |
5706 | What else could the act mean? |
5706 | What had all my many years of journeyings to Nature yielded me that would supplement or reinforce the gospel he was preaching? |
5706 | What is knowledge without enjoyment, without love? |
5706 | What is the moral and intellectual value of this kind of knowledge to those girls? |
5706 | What lies back of it all? |
5706 | What mark or sign was there upon him at that time of the future that was before him? |
5706 | What matters it to the prodigal All? |
5706 | What matters it? |
5706 | What or who set the whole grand process going? |
5706 | What should they know Of a world of woe, And myriad men that weep?" |
5706 | What then? |
5706 | What was he like or what akin to? |
5706 | What were the agents that brought it about? |
5706 | What would he do there? |
5706 | What? |
5706 | When did each stage of our mental growth begin? |
5706 | When man comes to draw his sustenance from their breasts, may they not be said to have reached the mammalian stage? |
5706 | When or where did the English language begin, or the French, or the German? |
5706 | When we have taken the first step in trying to solve the problem of man''s origin, where can we stop? |
5706 | When we say that the primates first appeared in Eocene times, do we mean that one single primate appeared then? |
5706 | Whence comes this inborn momentum, this evolutionary send- off? |
5706 | Whence the impulse that sent man forward? |
5706 | Where does one end and the other begin? |
5706 | Where shall we stop on his trail? |
5706 | Whether one million or two millions of years would do it, who knows? |
5706 | Who or what planted the germ of the biological tree, and predetermined all its branches? |
5706 | Whose loss or gain is it? |
5706 | Why may not the race of man grow from a like simple beginning? |
5706 | Why may they not come again? |
5706 | Why the line of man''s descent was not cut off, who knows? |
5706 | Why was his development so tardy? |
5706 | Why was one animal form endowed with the capacity for endless growth and development, and all the others denied it? |
5706 | Will Nature in the end be avenged for the secrets he has forced from her? |
5706 | Will not these diseases increase as his life becomes more and more complex and artificial? |
5706 | Without this merciless justice, this irrefragable law, where should we have brought up long ago? |
5706 | Yes, and probably exhaust her? |
5706 | Yet did he not write that audacious line about"the worm striving to be man"? |
5706 | and, had that form been cut off, would the earth have been still without its man? |
5706 | geologic Time, what can it not do? |
5706 | its elements becoming less crude and acrid, and better suited to sustain the higher forms, as the eons passed? |
5706 | nor ferns, nor mosses, nor as gigantic trees as those of Carboniferous times? |
5706 | one organism torn down to build up another? |
5706 | that it has no near kin? |
5706 | that the beginning of the series was as great as the end? |
5706 | that there is no tie of blood, so to speak, between it and the other planets and systems? |
5706 | what has it not done? |
53466 | ''And would five dollars make you try?'' 53466 ''Cos why? |
53466 | ''Fur from here?'' 53466 ''How about a hundred and fifty?'' |
53466 | ''How high be you willing to go?'' 53466 ''How much for this''ere one?'' |
53466 | ''Oh, you think your darn smart, Jerry Stebbins, do n''t ye?'' 53466 ''S''pose you could pick out a good nice critter for me, Mr. Stebbins, and not get cheated in the price?'' |
53466 | ''Will you jest go along,''arn the five, and see that I ai n''t cheated?'' 53466 ''Would you mind going back by yourself and trying?'' |
53466 | A little late getting them out to- night, are n''t you? |
53466 | Agreement? |
53466 | Ai n''t that reedic''lous? |
53466 | Am I blaming him, inconsiderate one? |
53466 | Am I locoed, I wonder? |
53466 | An''ye''ll come armed? 53466 And then Grattan gave you a letter to some man in New York and you carried it personally?" |
53466 | And there''s nothing more between us and a high old time in Manhattan? |
53466 | And this man in New York entrapped the mandarin and is holding him a prisoner until he can hear what Grattan wants done? |
53466 | And where''ll we meet you? |
53466 | And who has it now? |
53466 | And you came back on the train to tell Grattan? |
53466 | And-- and you gave it up? |
53466 | Any trains coming or going at this hour? |
53466 | Are you all a pack of fools? 53466 Are you all right, Bunce?" |
53466 | Are you men from Catskill? |
53466 | Are you positive, Joe,went on Matt,"that the two thieves who figured in the picture were really Grattan and Bunce?" |
53466 | Are you ready? |
53466 | Are you working for Tsan Ti? 53466 But the phantom-- how do you explain it?" |
53466 | But what was the fellow''s object in seeking to disable the train? |
53466 | But what will you do with the Eye of Buddha? |
53466 | But where did you get it, and what were you doing with it? |
53466 | But why should Grattan want to publish his criminal work all over the country in moving pictures? 53466 Cautious? |
53466 | Clever? |
53466 | Come up here and bear a fist with the car, will ye? |
53466 | Did I see that moving picture, with Grattan and Bunce in it and stealing the''Eye of Buddha,''or did n''t I? |
53466 | Did ye come armed, mateys? |
53466 | Did you ever see anything more beautiful? |
53466 | Did you know, Tsan Ti,he queried,"that while you were in New York you had a Chinese spy around with you? |
53466 | Did you play a part in the pictures, Bunce? |
53466 | Did you think for a minute, Bunce, we''d jump into this without being heeled? |
53466 | Do you belong around here? |
53466 | Do you know anything about motors, Bunce? |
53466 | Do you take care of this palatial depot? |
53466 | Does it stop here? |
53466 | Got them? |
53466 | Had you any notion it was this sort of a bubble, Matt? |
53466 | Have I said one scolding word, or emitted anything but praise? 53466 Have n''t you done enough walking for one day, Joe?" |
53466 | Have you gone off the jump on account of that confounded ruby? 53466 He said that Grattan was hiding out about five miles from Catskill, did n''t he?" |
53466 | How could he have any right to the box,stormed McGlory,"when the letter asking you to turn it over to him was never written by Motor Matt? |
53466 | How far is it to Catskill? |
53466 | How in the dickens does that happen, eh? |
53466 | How much are you willing to pay for the trip? |
53466 | How''ll we flag it? |
53466 | How? |
53466 | I hope there''s nothing wrong? |
53466 | I hope, Motor Matt,went on Grattan,"that you do n''t cherish any hard feelings?" |
53466 | I reckon,he went on,"that this sidetracks us, eh? |
53466 | I wonder if Mr. Pardo has got here? |
53466 | I wonder if it would do any good to send out telegrams? |
53466 | Is it because you desire to help an unfortunate Chinaman who must use the yellow cord in case he can not return to China with the Eye of Buddha? 53466 Is that Motor Matt?" |
53466 | Is that you, Motor Matt? |
53466 | Is your friend with you? |
53466 | It has escaped you, vigilant one? |
53466 | Maybe you''re right, but how are we going to pick up the webfoot''s trail? |
53466 | Now, burn me,snorted Bunce,"d''ye take me for a dog fish? |
53466 | Now, what do you think? |
53466 | Say, Bunce,demanded McGlory suddenly,"did you take the speeder off the track and up the slope into those bushes alone?" |
53466 | Suppose we go up to our room, shake the dust out of our clothes, take a bath, and get ready to eat? |
53466 | That stopped you, did it? |
53466 | The man did n''t have any right to the box? |
53466 | Then the letter is a forgery? |
53466 | Then them pictures are out, eh? 53466 Then you have n''t heard about what happened this morning?" |
53466 | Then, why did n''t you go and tell Grattan,asked Matt,"instead of coming and telling me?" |
53466 | Then,and Matt turned toward Pardo,"this is simply a plot you have engineered to get me into the hands of Grattan?" |
53466 | They would n''t keep the gasoline supply for the speeder so far from the track, would they? |
53466 | Trapped? |
53466 | Use your brains, if you''ve got any, ca n''t you? 53466 Was n''t it neat? |
53466 | Was there anything very valuable in the box? |
53466 | Well,said Tom Barnard,"what else?" |
53466 | What I told the super had a little horse sense in it, too, did n''t it, Joe? |
53466 | What are you going to do, pard? |
53466 | What did you have in that handkerchief? |
53466 | What did you wear it for, anyhow? |
53466 | What do you reckon it is, pard? |
53466 | What do you think of that? |
53466 | What else could I do? |
53466 | What for? |
53466 | What good is a green patch as a disguise, anyway? |
53466 | What good''s an explanation? |
53466 | What have you got to tell us? |
53466 | What if he is, pard? 53466 What is it?" |
53466 | What is it? |
53466 | What man? 53466 What of that?" |
53466 | What point is that? |
53466 | What sort of a game was Bunce up to? 53466 What sort of looking man was he?" |
53466 | What took us aback, like that? |
53466 | What would happen? 53466 What would you suggest, Joe?" |
53466 | What''s become of them, Bunce? |
53466 | What''s the difference between''Buddha''s Eye''and the''Eye of Buddha,''Matt? |
53466 | What''s the odds, Matt? |
53466 | What''s to be done now, Tsan Ti? |
53466 | What''s your plan, Bunce? |
53466 | What-- what does this mean? |
53466 | What? |
53466 | When will we have to start after Grattan? |
53466 | Where does this belong? |
53466 | Where is Grattan? |
53466 | Where is Grattan? |
53466 | Where''d you get that, Joe? |
53466 | Where''s the nearest telegraph office? |
53466 | Wherever did you find that out? 53466 Which it ai n''t me, d''ye see?" |
53466 | Who could have done better? 53466 Why did n''t you go for her after Jack was dead?" |
53466 | Why do n''t ye say ye''re the governor o''the State, or somethin''like that? 53466 Why do n''t you light up?" |
53466 | Why, do n''t you know? |
53466 | Why? 53466 Why?" |
53466 | Will you consider it of an insulting nature if I offer you these? |
53466 | Will you tote it along on a trip of this kind? |
53466 | With marine motors? |
53466 | Would n''t I like to look in on him while he and Bunce are opening that box? |
53466 | Would n''t this rattle you? |
53466 | You bear no ill will, worthy one, and friend whose memory will always blossom in the gardens of my recollections? |
53466 | You ca n''t mean it, pard? |
53466 | You did n''t think you could fool Grattan so he would n''t search you, did you? |
53466 | You do n''t intend to think of business at all while you''re there, eh? |
53466 | You had to climb a hill before you took the down grade, did n''t you? |
53466 | You heard how the great ruby was recovered, and how the thieves got away? |
53466 | You mean Mulvaney''s speeder,returned Bronson,"the one that was stolen two days ago?" |
53466 | You mean about Grattan having so much to do to keep out of the clutches of the law that he wo n''t find any time to hit up your trail? |
53466 | You mean to say that Tsan Ti is a prisoner in New York-- a prisoner of a confederate of Grattan''s? |
53466 | You refer to Charley Foo, honorable one? |
53466 | You say you came here to see me? |
53466 | You stole a motor car, eh? |
53466 | You''re really going to China this time, are you, Tsan Ti? |
53466 | You''ve a pair of very good eyes, it seems to me, and what''s the good of that patch? |
53466 | A man who was carrying news of everything you did to an agent of Grattan''s?" |
53466 | Am I in a trance, or what?" |
53466 | An''supposin'', furthermore, this same beach comber is a mate o''Grattan''s, an''waitin''only for Grattan to come afore he makes Tsan Ti peg out? |
53466 | Anyhow, if he does arrive to- morrow morning, before we do, he can wait for us, ca n''t he?" |
53466 | Are you bound to do what he tells you to? |
53466 | Are you goin''to make any trouble? |
53466 | Are you sailin''this cruise wi''me to save the life o''the mandarin? |
53466 | Belay a bit, ca n''t you?" |
53466 | But how does it happen that the picture is being shown like it is? |
53466 | But how in thunder did Bunce get next to that? |
53466 | But that old two- eyed counterfeit with the green patch-- I wonder how much he''d sell out for, about now?" |
53466 | But what in the world have you got to tell me about the stolen speeder?" |
53466 | But what was that gasoline for?" |
53466 | But what''s become of the mariner? |
53466 | But what''s the good word, shipmate? |
53466 | But which of Bunce''s eyes did it cover?" |
53466 | But why did we need the speeder when we had two good motorcycles? |
53466 | But, tell me, did you capture Grattan?" |
53466 | Ca n''t I get you to help me out? |
53466 | Ca n''t you understand, Joe? |
53466 | D''ye know what he''s layin''to do? |
53466 | Did n''t I bear away for this place for nothin''else than to fall afoul o''ye? |
53466 | Did n''t he just throw the Eye o''Buddha into the river?" |
53466 | Did n''t know you had an engineer''s license?" |
53466 | Do we look like thieves?" |
53466 | Do you think he would sacrifice the ruby, even to prevent me from getting it? |
53466 | Have n''t we been tangled up with all sorts of backsets since we met Tsan Ti? |
53466 | Have n''t you got any curiosity?" |
53466 | Have you got any clear notion which eye was hit with that rope''s end?" |
53466 | He''s alone, I suppose, Bunce?" |
53466 | Here I am, an''here''s you, an''if I blow the gaff a bit that''s my business, ai n''t it? |
53466 | How about doing something to fill in the time?" |
53466 | How could he?" |
53466 | How did he know that Tsan Ti had sent you the ruby, in the first place?" |
53466 | How do you explain that?" |
53466 | How''d you ever get over this road with it, Bunce?" |
53466 | How, in the name of all his ten thousand demons of misfortune, does he happen to be in New York?" |
53466 | I escaped from the sugar camp, did I not? |
53466 | I suppose, Tsan Ti, you are after the Eye of Buddha?" |
53466 | I wonder if you could n''t buy him for me?'' |
53466 | Interview satisfactory?" |
53466 | Is it the money he pays you? |
53466 | Is that the same story as the one connected with the''Eye of Buddha?''" |
53466 | Is there any other side?" |
53466 | My name''s King, Matt King, and I''m stopping at the----""Motor Matt?" |
53466 | Page 12, added missing apostrophe to"if ye ai n''t?" |
53466 | Pardo?" |
53466 | Pardo?" |
53466 | Pardo?" |
53466 | Pardo?" |
53466 | Plotted it on a sampan off Canton, did n''t you?" |
53466 | Shall I call it an inspiration? |
53466 | Should I visit him with possible dangers, I besought of myself, in order that I might preserve the precious relic from the temple at Honam? |
53466 | Suppose we follow the trail of the motorcycles, Joe?" |
53466 | Tell me, will you? |
53466 | That''s why you wanted to make such an early start, eh?" |
53466 | The question now is, can I secure your services?" |
53466 | Wa''n''t Jim mad, then? |
53466 | Want me to run the thing?" |
53466 | Was the knife in the handkerchief when we left Catskill?" |
53466 | What box?" |
53466 | What business is it of his if we choose to show a little sense and get some one else to take charge of the ruby? |
53466 | What came over the mandarin to box it up and ship it to you? |
53466 | What do you say?" |
53466 | What has Tsan Ti done? |
53466 | What is this Tsan Ti to you that you will risk so much for him? |
53466 | What then?" |
53466 | What value did he put on it?" |
53466 | What wonder work was this? |
53466 | What would this fat mandarin of the red button do for you if your positions were reversed? |
53466 | What''re you pullin''a gun on us for, if ye ai n''t?" |
53466 | What''s in the letter, anyway? |
53466 | What''s the answer? |
53466 | What''s the name of the hotel?" |
53466 | What''s the word?" |
53466 | What''s the word?" |
53466 | What-- how-- why---- Look here, you blooming old maverick, how did you ever come to think of such a dodge?" |
53466 | When did the man call and deliver the forged letter?" |
53466 | When will it be along?" |
53466 | Where do you suppose Grattan, and that choice assortment of tinhorns he has with him on the_ Iris_, are going?" |
53466 | Where''s his letter sent from? |
53466 | Who would n''t have been fooled, when the game was worked like Grattan worked it? |
53466 | Why are you the friend of such a coward? |
53466 | Why did n''t Bunce wait for us, back there in the timber, and give us the chance to come on here and put the kibosh on the man we want?" |
53466 | Why did n''t the mandarin deposit the ruby in some bank, or safe- deposit vault? |
53466 | Why is it I have the great honor to see you here?" |
53466 | Why?" |
53466 | Will it be an insult to offer you one thousand silver dollars and expense money for consummating this task? |
53466 | Wo n''t it, now?" |
53466 | Would n''t that rattle your spurs?" |
53466 | You all know Rowley''s Bend? |
53466 | You are familiar with gasoline motors, I understand?" |
53466 | You ask, of your perplexity, why is the jewel sent to you? |
53466 | You can guide yourself by the sound of my voice, ca n''t you?" |
53466 | You do n''t want to cool your heels in the hotel, do you, while we''re waiting? |
53466 | You fellers waitin''to ketch a train for Catskill?" |
53466 | You saw him, did n''t you?" |
53466 | and did n''t us fellers plague him peskily about it arter he got home? |
53466 | bellowed Bunce,"what''s the use o''searchin''him? |
53466 | exclaimed Grattan, as though intensely surprised,"you hesitate? |
53466 | how''s the hoss trade?'' |
53466 | proceeded Joe,"or will you leave it in the hotel safe? |
53466 | what d''you say?'' |
639 | Shall I give my first born for my transgressions, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? |
639 | ''And the king, smiling, said to him:''Has she who is dead conceived?'' |
639 | ... Why has the truthful one so few adherents, while all the mighty, who are unbelievers, follow the liar in great numbers? |
639 | And I said, How can she be embraced who no longer exists? |
639 | And the king said:''What is this? |
639 | For what else are your ensigns, flags, and standards but crosses gilt and purified? |
639 | Hence, as the Mexicans had not arrived at that stage of religious progress(?) |
639 | How shall I worship thee further, living Wise One? |
639 | On appearing before the enemy they say:"Can it be, since we have made amends to the Amadhlozi, that they will say we have wronged them by anything? |
639 | On one occasion the question was asked him:"What do you say concerning the principle that injury shall be recompensed with kindness?" |
639 | That this prophet was without honor in his own country is shown by the following lamentation:"To what country shall I go? |
639 | What country gives shelter to the master, Zarathustra, and his companion? |
639 | What did he obtain through the good mind? |
639 | What help did Zarathustra receive when he proclaimed the truths? |
639 | When asked for a word which should serve as a rule of practice for all our life he replied:"Is not Reciprocity such a word? |
639 | When we say there must have been a God who created all things, the question at once arises, Who created God? |
639 | Where shall I take refuge? |
639 | dwellers of the heavenly mount From the beginning; say, who first arose? |
639 | vii., 17, 18:"Seest thou not what they do in the cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem? |
52242 | ''Ah, mon Dieu, pourquoi ne l''avez vous pas nommé? |
52242 | ''And what is drawing for? |
52242 | ''Art, poetry?''... |
52242 | ''But how can I get out of this scrape?'' |
52242 | ''But my_ perception_ of God, of him whom I seek,''asked I of myself,''where has that perception come from?'' |
52242 | ''But what is it for in summer, when not yet cut down?'' |
52242 | ''But why draw figures?'' |
52242 | ''For what do we who love truth, strive after in life? |
52242 | ''How can a man live in peace,''I asked,''so long as he has not solved the question of a future life?'' |
52242 | ''How can men do such things?'' |
52242 | ''How was it, you told us, your Aunt had her throat cut?'' |
52242 | ''If I give you five rolls, and you eat one of them, how many rolls will you have left?''... |
52242 | ''In what respect does Russia differ from other countries? |
52242 | ''Indeed? |
52242 | ''Lyóf Nikoláyevitch,''said Fédka to me( I thought he was going again to speak about the Countess),''why does one learn singing? |
52242 | ''Mais comment est- ce que je puis me tirer de cette affaire?'' |
52242 | ''No, really,''insisted Fédka;''why does a lime tree grow?'' |
52242 | ''Of an evening we often play_ vint_[ a game similar to bridge]--do you?'' |
52242 | ''So you will take each of us home? |
52242 | ''Then you consider that I educate my daughter badly?'' |
52242 | ''What are you teaching him?'' |
52242 | ''What is a stick for, and what is a lime tree for?'' |
52242 | ''What is drawing for?'' |
52242 | ''What is drawing for?'' |
52242 | ''What is it? |
52242 | ''What is the matter with you? |
52242 | ''What on?'' |
52242 | ''What shall we do if it leaps out... and comes at us?'' |
52242 | ''What will you give us?'' |
52242 | ''Where have you been?'' |
52242 | ''Why did he sing a song when he was surrounded?'' |
52242 | ''Why do n''t I do this? |
52242 | ''Why do you come here?'' |
52242 | ''Why should I ask you, where I am to go? |
52242 | ''Why should I not say what I am convinced is true?'' |
52242 | ''Why should he beat it? |
52242 | ''Wo n''t you walk a little longer?'' |
52242 | ''Yes, what is a lime tree for?'' |
52242 | ''You see those two horses grazing there,''he answered;''are they not laying up for a future life?'' |
52242 | ''[ 52][ 51]_ What is Art?_ p. 54: Constable, London, and Funk and Wagnalls Co., New York. |
52242 | ''_ When shall I come home?_''God only knows. |
52242 | *****''But perhaps I have overlooked something, or misunderstood something? |
52242 | ----How must I? |
52242 | ----what is it? |
52242 | 1862 Even then the matter was not at an end, for on 7th January[ new style?] |
52242 | Again the question: Why? |
52242 | Again''God''? |
52242 | Am I mistaken or not? |
52242 | And how go on living? |
52242 | And if he found nothing to cling to, what can I find? |
52242 | And is not the trait of Sádo''s devotion admirable? |
52242 | And lest the simple question should suggest itself: What do I know, and what can I teach? |
52242 | And what does man do? |
52242 | And what had I done during the whole thirty years of my conscious life? |
52242 | And what happened? |
52242 | And what''s the use of talking about them? |
52242 | And why do such good people as you, and, most wonderful of all, such a being as my wife, love me? |
52242 | And why should it not, once in a way, stop with a homeless soldier like Gordéy? |
52242 | And why write well?'' |
52242 | And without remarking that we knew nothing, and that to the simplest of life''s questions: What is good and what is evil? |
52242 | Art: exclusive or universal? |
52242 | At this moment Ostáshkof, armed with a small switch, came running up, shouting:''Where are you getting to? |
52242 | But I asked myself: What is that cause, that force? |
52242 | But afterwards I thought,''Well, but what should my brother do to remove the putrefying body of the child from the house? |
52242 | But how can one write now? |
52242 | But joking apart, how is your Hafiz getting on? |
52242 | But life had lost its attraction for me; so how could I attract others? |
52242 | But what desire is there that can always be satisfied in spite of external conditions? |
52242 | But what ground was there for laughter? |
52242 | But what kind of knowledge? |
52242 | But what shall we really carry away from the University?... |
52242 | But where did the truth and where did the falsehood come from? |
52242 | CHAPTER XI CONFESSION What is the meaning of life? |
52242 | Can feelings of enmity, vengeance, or lust to destroy one''s fellow beings, retain their hold on man''s soul amid this enchanting Nature? |
52242 | Can it be that people have not room to live in this beautiful world, under this measureless, starry heaven? |
52242 | Can it be wondered at, that he came more and more to identify Government with all that is most opposed to enlightenment? |
52242 | Described it, that is, as it is in reality? |
52242 | Differently expressed, the question is: Why should I live, why wish for anything, or do anything? |
52242 | Disregarding his niece''s question, he continued:''Write...''''But what are we to write, uncle?'' |
52242 | Do you hear?'' |
52242 | Do you remember Fabrice riding over the field of battle and understanding"nothing"?'' |
52242 | Do you remember, dear Aunt, how you made fun of me when I told you I was going to Petersburg''to test myself''? |
52242 | Does it wish to manifest itself? |
52242 | Does not the Crown money always stop somewhere? |
52242 | Does nothing tell him there is here no cause for great rejoicing? |
52242 | Et n''est- ce pas que le trait de dévouement de Sado est admirable? |
52242 | First one and then the other?'' |
52242 | From whom indeed do we get sensuality, effeminacy, frivolity in everything, and many other vices, if not from women? |
52242 | Have you read_ Pensées de Pascal_--_i.e._ have you read it recently with a mature head- piece? |
52242 | He really was asking, What is Art for? |
52242 | He tacitly asks: What is good and what is bad? |
52242 | He was so pleased to have won them, and asked me so often,''What do you think? |
52242 | His man, Alexis, would bring him his hunting- boots, and the Count would shout at him,''Why have you not dried them? |
52242 | How am I to think of it? |
52242 | How are they with you? |
52242 | How can man fail to see this? |
52242 | How can reason deny life, when it is the creator of life? |
52242 | How could the monks help demanding the study of the Holy Scriptures, which stood on an immovable foundation? |
52242 | How did he find it out?'' |
52242 | How does it express its wish? |
52242 | How is it that among his friends not one was found to give to that supreme moment of life the character suitable to it? |
52242 | How is it to be got? |
52242 | How is it to be when we grow weak and die? |
52242 | How is one to finish the matter decently?'' |
52242 | How, oh how, are we to see one another? |
52242 | I am fond of pawns.... Do you know the new phrase now in fashion among the French--_vieux jeu_? |
52242 | I did not understand that I with my question: How do you know what and how to teach? |
52242 | I know you will cry out; but what''s to be done? |
52242 | I often think, why, really, does one?'' |
52242 | I then understood that my answer to the question,''What is life?'' |
52242 | If Peter Afanásyevitch has no plans for September, will not he go with me to see the Kirghiz and their horses? |
52242 | If she has deserted me, who is it that has done so? |
52242 | If so, then how can we fail to be glad when death comes to us?'' |
52242 | If, for instance, some one was in the dumps about the weather, Tolstoy would say:''Is your weather behaving badly?'' |
52242 | In reality I was ever revolving round one and the same insoluble problem, which was: How to teach without knowing what? |
52242 | In reply to the question: Do people need the_ beaux arts_? |
52242 | In_ Sevastopol_, for instance, he exclaims:''Where in this tale is the evil shown that should be avoided? |
52242 | Is it not astonishing to see one''s petitions granted like this the very next day? |
52242 | Is it not my plain and sacred duty to care for the welfare of these seven hundred people for whom I must account to God? |
52242 | Is nature to take her course, are we to... and nothing else? |
52242 | Is that spring still alive? |
52242 | It can also be expressed thus: Is there any meaning in life, that the inevitable death awaiting one, does not destroy? |
52242 | It was, What will come of what I am doing to- day or shall do to- morrow-- What will come of my whole life? |
52242 | N''est- ce pas étonnant que de voir ses voeux aussi exaucés le lendemain même? |
52242 | Need I say that we would have laid down our lives for him? |
52242 | On one occasion the hero is out hunting in the woods and asks himself:''How must I live so as to be happy, and why was I formerly not happy?'' |
52242 | Only why do you want so much land? |
52242 | Or has it forgotten how to express itself? |
52242 | Or tell me where are the limits of the one or the other? |
52242 | Or when considering how the peasants might be prosperous, I suddenly said to myself,''But what business is it of mine?'' |
52242 | Or, when considering my plans for the education of my children, I would say to myself: What for? |
52242 | People have asked, How can we find the degree of freedom to be allowed in school? |
52242 | Pour faire plaisir à qui, voudrais- je devenir meilleur, avoir de bonnes qualités, avoir une bonne réputation dans le monde? |
52242 | Que resterait- il pour moi si Dieu exauçait votre prière? |
52242 | Read, Is it worth learning to? |
52242 | Really, why should it be beaten?'' |
52242 | Shall we-- you and I and Borísof-- not have to take our swords down from their rusty nails?... |
52242 | She was greatly revolted at what I told her, and rebuking me said,''Why did you not stop him?'' |
52242 | So how can they help believing in the destinies of the people and the Slavonic races... and all the rest of it?'' |
52242 | Some moments before his death he drowsed off, but awoke suddenly and whispered with horror:''What is that?'' |
52242 | Suffering? |
52242 | Teach, What must I? |
52242 | That happiness consists not in killing others, but in sacrificing oneself?'' |
52242 | That they may come to the despair that I feel, or else be stupid? |
52242 | That when you look at it well and clearly, you wake with a start and say with terror, as my brother did:''What is that?'' |
52242 | The great questions, Tolstoy says, are:( 1) What must I teach? |
52242 | The mathematician, hardly refraining from tears, kept saying:''Well, well, what of it?'' |
52242 | The old man asked in astonishment,''How could this monk, so unrestrained in many ways, deserve so great a reward?'' |
52242 | The whole village was surprised, and asked,''What has the priest told the Count, that has suddenly made him so fond of church- going?'' |
52242 | Then why go on making any effort?... |
52242 | They shook hands when they said''How do you do?'' |
52242 | They were always expressed by the questions: What''s it for? |
52242 | Thus Tolstoy for the second time found himself faced by the question: What is Art? |
52242 | To Potémkin''s suggestion that he should do so, he replied:''What makes him think I will marry his strumpet?'' |
52242 | To please whom should I then wish to become better, to have good qualities and a good reputation in the world? |
52242 | To what can one pray? |
52242 | Tolstoy received a deputation, consisting of three of the leading peasants of the village, and asked them:''Well, lads, what do you want?'' |
52242 | Tourgénef writes to Fet: And now a plain question: Have you seen Tolstoy? |
52242 | Under what circumstances, asks Tolstoy, can a pupil acquire knowledge most rapidly? |
52242 | What about his_ Youth_, which was sent for your verdict? |
52242 | What am I waiting for?'' |
52242 | What am I? |
52242 | What are my relations to that which I call''God''? |
52242 | What desire? |
52242 | What do I mean by religious reverence? |
52242 | What do you mean by''something or other''? |
52242 | What do you think of the Polish business? |
52242 | What does it lead to? |
52242 | What for? |
52242 | What if this be only a_ desire_ for love and not real love? |
52242 | What is God, imagined so clearly that one can ask him to communicate with us? |
52242 | What is that?'' |
52242 | What is the use of it? |
52242 | What means have we of lifting this corner of the veil?... |
52242 | What profit hath man of all his labour under the sun?... |
52242 | What proves it? |
52242 | What shall we be good for, and to whom shall we be necessary?" |
52242 | What wo n''t she do afterwards? |
52242 | What would be left to me if God granted your prayer? |
52242 | What''s the good of looking?'' |
52242 | What''s to be done? |
52242 | What?'' |
52242 | When describing that death, is it possible that you did not suffer from the horny indifference of good but unawakened human souls? |
52242 | When shall I see you? |
52242 | When will he turn his last somersault and stand on his feet? |
52242 | When you meet some one carried on a stretcher, and ask,''Where from?'' |
52242 | Where am I to send the money to?... |
52242 | Where are you getting to?'' |
52242 | Where did he get all this? |
52242 | Where is she-- that mother? |
52242 | Where is the good that should be imitated? |
52242 | Where was he to take money from? |
52242 | Where, in our day, can we get such faith in the indubitability of our knowledge as would give us a right to educate people compulsorily? |
52242 | Which of these benefits does the railway bring to the peasant? |
52242 | Whither? |
52242 | Who ever before so described war? |
52242 | Who has in his soul so immovable a_ standard of good and evil_ that by it he can measure the passing facts of life?'' |
52242 | Who has not wept over the story of Joseph and his meeting with his brethren? |
52242 | Who is the villain, who the hero of the story? |
52242 | Who said so? |
52242 | Who was that some one? |
52242 | Who will do the writing?''... |
52242 | Whoever was it wrote_ The Cossacks_ and_ Polikoúshka_? |
52242 | Whose fault is it, if not women''s, that we lose our innate qualities of boldness, resolution, reasonableness, justice, etc.? |
52242 | Why are they current only among authors, and not among musicians, painters, and other artists? |
52242 | Why are you so pale: are you ill?'' |
52242 | Why did you not tell us who it was? |
52242 | Why do you beat him? |
52242 | Why does Tolstoy not get rid of that nightmare? |
52242 | Why should I love them, guard them, bring them up, or watch them? |
52242 | Why should they live? |
52242 | Why strive or try, since of what was Nicholas Tolstoy nothing remains his? |
52242 | Why? |
52242 | Why? |
52242 | Will it not be a sin if, following plans of pleasure or ambition, I abandon them to the caprice of coarse Elders and stewards? |
52242 | Will your brother be glad that I have done this?'' |
52242 | With such a task, how can she be logical? |
52242 | With what must we sympathise and what must we reject? |
52242 | Wo n''t you take up that work? |
52242 | Would it not be all the same if one did not know them at all? |
52242 | Would you feel no pity for him?'' |
52242 | Yet when one has learnt these stories only in childhood, and has afterwards partly forgotten them, one thinks: What good do they do us? |
52242 | You consciously follow a definite road faithfully and undeviatingly; but are you really completely alien to the literature of indictment? |
52242 | [ 42]''Qui est donc ce singulier personnage?'' |
52242 | [ 47] Some details of this crime are given in''Why do Men Stupefy Themselves?'' |
52242 | [ 6] Do you remember, dear Aunt, the advice you once gave me-- to write novels? |
52242 | [ o.s.?] |
52242 | _ What is Art?_ 260, 342, 378, 430. |
52242 | and( 2) How must I teach it? |
52242 | he kept mentally repeating:''Then why not live for others?'' |
52242 | says:''If you have to die, lads, will you die?'' |
56332 | And are not common observation and individual experience in accord with this suggestion of science? 56332 But what are his hypotheses? |
56332 | But why does not Keely share his knowledge with others? |
56332 | By what means is force exerted, and what definitely is force? 56332 Can this subtle force reasonably be expected to be caged and fettered by mere earthly instruments? |
56332 | Euroclydon driveth us-- where? 56332 In other words, if you put so many pounds of energy into vibratory motion, how many foot- pounds do you get out of this?" |
56332 | There is one other question I should like to ask you,said our representative,"Is Mr. Keely a spiritualist? |
56332 | What is the amount of energy that you get out of that initial amount of water, say twelve drops, when decomposed into ether? |
56332 | What is there that we really know? |
56332 | When will he be ready? |
56332 | Why does he not proclaim his secret to the world? |
56332 | After years of experiments with this force, what does the public know of its nature? |
56332 | Again, to answer the often- asked question,"What has Keely done?" |
56332 | Also, how can we prove beyond dispute the facts relating to their sympathetic government? |
56332 | And by what power was it held in its quiescent state? |
56332 | And what is nature but the characteristic echo of the spirit of man? |
56332 | And what the tenets of his new philosophy?" |
56332 | And what the triumphs of old Greece and Rome With his compared? |
56332 | And when has Nature ever revealed a force save to permit man to subjugate it for the progress of our race? |
56332 | And who intrusted each with his particular burden, which he carries aloft as if it deserved exclusive admiration? |
56332 | And why is this? |
56332 | Another question asked by the same editor:"What is the main difficulty to be overcome before completing the system for commercial benefit?" |
56332 | Another question often heard is,"Why does not Keely make known his discoveries?" |
56332 | Are these beasts to be let loose upon men? |
56332 | Are they real? |
56332 | Are we to expect the appearance of a new Columbus to answer it again? |
56332 | But does psychical research lie outside the domain of physical science? |
56332 | But has science destroyed faith? |
56332 | But what as to mind? |
56332 | But, if so, do they not touch upon the confines of the spiritual world to say the least? |
56332 | Can the bubble withstand the onset of the wave, of which it is a mere drift?" |
56332 | Can the twentieth century by any possibility be more productive, more fertile, more prolific of wonders than its predecessor? |
56332 | Can we consecrate money power to humanity, as we do mind power? |
56332 | Disperse them into what? |
56332 | Do men of science hail him as a great discoverer, or hold out the hand of fellowship? |
56332 | Do we ourselves disunite and intermingle, by myriad channels, in order to rejoin and replace a molecule which awaits this aid? |
56332 | Does Congress come forward with a grant to enable him to complete his marvellous work? |
56332 | Does he claim that he has bridged the gulf between the finite and the infinite?" |
56332 | Does it not easily penetrate all bodies? |
56332 | Does its materialism clog its powers and prevent its progress? |
56332 | Does not this statement border on an admission that the atom may be divisible? |
56332 | Est- ce- là cet Esprit survivant à nous- même? |
56332 | From what unknown land does all this wealth of information come? |
56332 | Given that force can be exerted by an act of will, do we understand the mechanism by which this is done? |
56332 | God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform; and if He has chosen me as the tool to carve out certain positions, what credit have I? |
56332 | HOW MUCH LONGER WILL THE CLEVER JUGGLER BE ABLE TO DELUDE HIS VICTIMS? |
56332 | Had he been driven into making it known, who would have credited what Crookes is now able to prove? |
56332 | Have I not paid my debt, O God, What have I left to give? |
56332 | Have they mind like men? |
56332 | He answered,"Do you think so? |
56332 | He replied,"Of what use is a baby? |
56332 | Here let me ask, What does the term cohesion mean? |
56332 | How came these atoms and energies there, from which this wonderful universe of worlds has been evolved by inevitable laws? |
56332 | How shall iron and steel stand before the power which builds up and clasps the very atoms of their mass? |
56332 | How shall strength of materials avail against the power that gives, and indeed is, strength of materials? |
56332 | If atomic vibration can be made to serve the purposes of mechanics, why not etheric vibration? |
56332 | If it be not latent force that is thus liberated by its exciter, a mere spark, what is it? |
56332 | If it is not latent power that is excited into action, what is it? |
56332 | If this force is not compressed there, nor placed there by absorption, how did it get there? |
56332 | If we are the children of God, why do we not trust our Father? |
56332 | If"the time is out of joint,"is it not possible that worship of wealth is responsible for it? |
56332 | In fact, what do men comprehend? |
56332 | In reply to the question,"What do you include in the polar forces?" |
56332 | Is it not rather remarkable that, after a sleep of nearly two centuries, it is again claimed that gravity is inherent in all matter? |
56332 | Is it possible to compute what the velocity would be, on the same ratio, up to the earth''s diameter? |
56332 | Is nature a mystery? |
56332 | Is not ether infinitely more rare and more subtle than air, and exceedingly more elastic and more active? |
56332 | Is not the supernatural, then, just as legitimate a subject of consideration, for the truly scientific mind, as is the natural? |
56332 | Is not this energy latent, quiet, until brought forth by its sympathetic negative exciter? |
56332 | Is the human race worn out? |
56332 | Is the world going wrong for want of an ideal? |
56332 | Is the world growing old and effete? |
56332 | Is this generation incapable of the great achievements of the past? |
56332 | It is the key force, the one that presided over the creation of these very metals, and can it reasonably be expected to be caged and fettered by them? |
56332 | Its uses-- are they so unthinkable? |
56332 | Let us see what Keely knows on this subject? |
56332 | Mr. Browne(?) |
56332 | Nay, who can refrain from admitting with Kant that they can be nothing more?" |
56332 | Of what nature are the ideas which Macvicar was so sure would be unpopular? |
56332 | Of what value were their prejudices or their wisdom in opposition to her immutable laws? |
56332 | Only a partial answer has been given to the question,"What has Keely done for science?" |
56332 | Order is an end, not a beginning; but out of respect for the rights of bears and lions are we to open the bars of a menagerie? |
56332 | Question asked in Clerk Maxwell''s memoirs:"Under what form, right, or light, can an atom be imagined?" |
56332 | Question.--And where do these sympathetic conditions or streams of force have their origin? |
56332 | Science has made gigantic strides in our days; but have its discoveries added much to the sum of human happiness? |
56332 | Shall I say that it kills our sense of the beautiful, and takes all the romance out of nature? |
56332 | Shall physical force persist for ever-- and this love, which is the strongest force in nature, perish? |
56332 | Shall the philologist who toils on words and syllables be less honoured than the student of chemistry labouring in his laboratory? |
56332 | Shall there not be a new revelation of a great and more perfect cosmos, a universe fresh- born, a new heaven and a new earth? |
56332 | Shall we ever reach them? |
56332 | Shall we not then be really seeing something new? |
56332 | Soon the question set by modern physics will be,"Are not all things due to conditions of ether?" |
56332 | The Daily News in Philadelphia, on May 25th, 1886, contained a most sensible editorial, with the heading What has Keely Discovered? |
56332 | The fact that the Board has some delicate and important work to perform, brings us to the question, Are we properly organized to perform our part? |
56332 | The first remark that he made was,"What would Jules Verne say if he were here?" |
56332 | The genuineness of his claims as a discoverer rests upon a correct answer to the question,"Is hydrogen gas an element or a compound?" |
56332 | The question arises, How is this sympathetic power held in the interstitial corpuscular condition? |
56332 | The question arises, how and by what means are we able to measure the velocity of these capsules and the differential range of their vibratory action? |
56332 | The question arises, what are these aggregations and what do they represent, as being linked with physical impulses? |
56332 | The question has often been asked,"How much energy does Keely expend in the production of the force he is handling?" |
56332 | The question is often asked,"Is he not an ignorant man?" |
56332 | The question naturally arises, Why is this condition of ether always under a state of luminosity of an especial order? |
56332 | The struggle between capital and labour threatens to reach unheard- of proportions.... What is the meaning of the general restlessness? |
56332 | They were all fixed, but what of the innocent stockholders who had purchased this stock? |
56332 | This hypothesis explains the differences in nature as differences in motion, ending:"Can we resist the conclusion that all motion is thought? |
56332 | To the question,"What does the supply cost in dollars and cents, per horse- power developed?" |
56332 | Well did Hertz reason when he wrote,"Soon the question set by modern physics will be,''Are not all things due to conditions of ether?''" |
56332 | Were it otherwise, how could there ever be any planetary formations or the building up of visible structures? |
56332 | What Columbus can help us out of our dangers now? |
56332 | What are its causes? |
56332 | What are they in their essence, and what do they mean? |
56332 | What do they know of causes? |
56332 | What does this activity represent, by which luminosity is induced in the high etheric realm? |
56332 | What happens when an irresistible force encounters an impenetrable barrier? |
56332 | What if this combining and organizing is to become first habitual, then organic and unconscious, so that the sense of law becomes a direct perception? |
56332 | What is Electricity? |
56332 | What is Heat? |
56332 | What is etheric force? |
56332 | What is light and heat, and how are they evolved? |
56332 | What is the character of these powers which Oliphant has written so eloquently concerning? |
56332 | What is the power that holds molecules together, but electro- magnetic negative attraction? |
56332 | What is the supernatural but the higher workings of laws which we call natural, as far as we have been able to investigate them? |
56332 | What is to happen? |
56332 | What signified to him the opinion of men, when Nature confirmed his discovery? |
56332 | What, then, is the relation of the cosmic gas to the ether? |
56332 | Whence comes this energy? |
56332 | Whence comes this energy? |
56332 | Who are these bearers of it? |
56332 | Who knows anything about medicine? |
56332 | Who knows anything in the world about medicine? |
56332 | Who shall say? |
56332 | Who shall tell us the boundary in the outward of that power which says"I will,""I feel,""I see"? |
56332 | Who that has considered the philosophy of the infinitely great and of the infinitely minute can doubt the inexhaustibleness of nature? |
56332 | Who would not ask for demonstration when told that a gnat''s wing, in its ordinary flight, beats many hundred times in a second? |
56332 | Why does n''t the donkey balk and insist on biting into the cabbage? |
56332 | Why, ah why, has Science grave Scattered afar your sweet imaginings?" |
56332 | Will it be soon? |
56332 | Will it escape us also? |
56332 | Yet, since to think and know fire through and through Exceeds man, is the warmth of fire unknown? |
56332 | You ask if sound waves had anything to do with the motion of the globe? |
56332 | and why are they so intensely perceptible as emanating from the solar world? |
6368 | And do you, sir,continued the Guardsman to the swarthiest of them all,"feel the heat of the climate much? |
6368 | And how about your own house, Charlie? 6368 And now, may I ask,"questioned the irate business man,"when you mean to start this infernal train?" |
6368 | Art frightened, fair one? |
6368 | Baker, what fruit did I tell you grew in the West Indies? |
6368 | Evans, what did I tell you last time grew in Jamaica? |
6368 | May I inquire, sir,said the Guardsman, with ready tact, to the lightest- complexioned of the young men,"how long you have been out from England?" |
6368 | Please, what can I hab de pleasure of showing Madam? |
6368 | Really I,faltered Mr. Smith with a gratified smile,"really... Well... do you mean it?" |
6368 | Sugar and coffee, sir,"Next boy, what else? |
6368 | Wilt fly with me? |
6368 | Would you care, sir, to enter offeecial complaint in book kept for that purpose? |
6368 | You ask me dat, sir? 6368 ( How on earth did Shakespeare ever come to hear of Bermuda?) 6368 After this, who will dare to assert that there are no advantages in a classical education? 6368 And what of the occupants of the hospital beds themselves? 6368 Are you really swollen- headed enough to imagine that it was you who drove the French out of Russia in 1812? 6368 Canada? 6368 Could any preacher quote a more striking instance of_ sic transit gloria mundi_"? |
6368 | Did he admit it? |
6368 | Do not the national arms and motto proclaim that his country stands in the van of Liberty and Progress, and what more could any one want? |
6368 | How did these elaborate works of art come there? |
6368 | India? |
6368 | Is it necessary to specify the nationality of a firm so prompt to rise to an emergency, or to add that the names over the door were two Scottish ones? |
6368 | Is that all right?" |
6368 | It is rather a change from England, is n''t it?" |
6368 | Jules Gerard''s name was familiar to me, for was he not, like the illustrious Tartarin de Tarascon, a_ tueur de lions_? |
6368 | More low prostrations, and then,"Et c''est toi vieille croute qui imagines que tu as chasse les Francais de ce pays en 1812?" |
6368 | On being told that it was dog- wood she asked,"Why is it called dog- wood?" |
6368 | Part of it, I remember, ran,"Dost love me, Leonora?" |
6368 | South Africa? |
6368 | South America? |
6368 | Supposing that he spoke to me, how was I to address him? |
6368 | Surely I do not understand you to dissent? |
6368 | The West Indies? |
6368 | The stern officer of the law grew absolutely furious; did my father suppose that a French gendarme could be bribed into forgetting his duty? |
6368 | Waxing confidential, he observed to us,"Is n''t this earthquake awfully jolly? |
6368 | What did the writers of this imagine that Franz- Josef was called by his subjects? |
6368 | What else could be expected when all the men got drunk as a matter of course almost every night of their lives? |
6368 | What more can any one ask? |
6368 | What more could any one ask? |
6368 | Where did they find the trained craftsmen to execute the architects''designs? |
6368 | Where did they get the architects to design these buildings? |
6368 | Who, after having had that experience, can falter in their belief that the"decent bodies"are in a majority? |
6368 | Why did the settlers, struggling with the difficulties of an untamed wilderness, require such large and ornate dwellings? |
6368 | Why, in an island producing both oranges and sugar, ship them separately to Europe to be made into marmalade, instead of manufacturing it on the spot? |
6368 | Would he carry his lance upstairs and leave it outside my father''s door? |
6368 | Would he leave his prancing charger in the courtyard in the care of his esquire? |
6368 | Would he wear a thing like a saucepan on his head, with a little gate in front to peep through? |
7237 | At what time did Master wish to be called? |
7237 | Could that have been a tiger? |
7237 | Did you see? |
7237 | Yes,he said, they had; adding brightly,"Quite a war, was n''t it?" |
7237 | (_ To the audience_) You like Norma Talmadge, do n''t you?" |
7237 | A dialogue, which to the trained ear was obviously more or less an improvisation, then followed:_ Manager_:"What will you do with that dollar, Frank?" |
7237 | And do we all need it, or at any rate deserve it? |
7237 | And now(_ to the audience_) would n''t you like to see Norma''s little sister, Constance? |
7237 | And what about the science of physiognomy? |
7237 | As for those olive- skinned Parsee girls, with the long oval faces and the lustrous eyes-- how must it strike them? |
7237 | As the question"What shall I do instead?" |
7237 | But so much? |
7237 | But what is the use of eight weeks? |
7237 | Could there be anything better than the term"Nearbeer"to reveal at a blow the character of a substitute for ale? |
7237 | I found( this was in the spring of 1920) Prohibition the universal topic: could it last, and should it last? |
7237 | Katie had fair soft blue eyes-- who blackened yours? |
7237 | Need it have defeated so much patriotism? |
7237 | The Taj? |
7237 | The dollar is very powerful, I know, but should it have been as pre- eminently powerful as this? |
7237 | Why are the blacksmiths out to- day, beating those men at the spring? |
7237 | Why should he make me wince? |
7237 | You do like saving your honour, do n''t you, Norma? |
7237 | Young Joe( you''re nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark? |
7237 | _ Frank_:"Then would n''t you like to see her as she really is? |
7237 | _ Manager_:"Why do you always go to the movies when there''s a Norma Talmadge picture, Frank?" |
7237 | _ Manager_:"Why is Norma Talmadge your favourite actress, Frank?" |
52309 | Is this a fancy of mine? 52309 Where did you get these?" |
52309 | Where would you go? 52309 Why should you make way with yourself? |
52309 | ***** When he had told this story, the goblin asked:"O King, which of them was the most delicate?" |
52309 | ***** When he had told this story, the goblin said:"O King, when the king was so happy, why should the counsellor''s heart break? |
52309 | ***** When he had told this story, the goblin said:"O King, who murdered the Brahman? |
52309 | ***** When the goblin had told this story on the road in the night, he said:"O King, which was the most foolish among those who died for love? |
52309 | ***** When the goblin had told this story, he asked King Triple- victory:"O King, which of all these was the most worthy? |
52309 | ***** When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king:"O King, when they were mingled in this way, which should be her husband? |
52309 | ***** When the goblin had told this strange story, he asked the king:"O King, why did the boy laugh at the moment of death? |
52309 | A star- gazer and a chariot- maker work for other people, do they not?" |
52309 | And Calamity seemed to be looking on, thinking:"Whom shall I embrace?" |
52309 | And Cloud- banner said:"My son, I only want the kingdom for you, and if you give it up from benevolent motives, what good is it to me? |
52309 | And Hero was amazed, and timidly asked her:"Who are you, and why do you weep?" |
52309 | And King Shudraka saw all this and went back without being seen himself, and climbed to the roof, and called:"Who is there at the gate?" |
52309 | And again the king thought to test his behaviour, and climbing to the roof he called out toward the palace gate:"Who is there?" |
52309 | And as he walked along, the goblin on his shoulder said to him again:"O King, why do you take such pains for that wretched monk? |
52309 | And as soon as the counsellor was refreshed, the king said:"Counsellor, why did you leave us? |
52309 | And as to his knowledge of the speech of beasts and birds, of what practical use is it? |
52309 | And he also thought:''Why does this girl reject kings and fall in love with a thief like me? |
52309 | And he asked her:"What does it mean, dearest? |
52309 | And he ran between them and spoke again to the agitated bird:"O Garuda, what madness is this? |
52309 | And he thought:"If I am born a prince, why am I so poor? |
52309 | And he thought:"Who is this who laments so piteously, as if in deep despair? |
52309 | And he wondered:"Oh, where has my wife gone? |
52309 | And her mother and father were surprised and asked her:"Why did you come back so soon, and in this condition?" |
52309 | And how can you blame either or both of the charitable people who gave food to a guest who arrived unexpectedly? |
52309 | And if I am to be poor, why did God give me so many desires? |
52309 | And if this is a usual occurrence at sea, why do not other goddesses arise?" |
52309 | And she thought:"Who can he be in this forest? |
52309 | And the concealed thief saw it all and thought:"What has the wicked woman done? |
52309 | And the counsellor''s son said to the old woman:"Old woman, do you know anybody named Bite in this city?" |
52309 | And the goblin on his shoulder saw that he was silent and said:"O King, why are you so obstinate? |
52309 | And the goblin spoke to him again:"O King, why do you go to such pains in this cemetery at night? |
52309 | And the hermit said:"My boy, what is this wailing we hear? |
52309 | And the king fell in love with her and thought:"Who is she? |
52309 | And the king respectfully asked her:"My good girl, what happy family does your friend adorn? |
52309 | And the king said:"What can I say? |
52309 | And the king said:"Why are you so sad, my dear? |
52309 | And the king thought:"Ah, what does this mean? |
52309 | And the loud shouts of angry gamblers seemed to suggest the question:"Who is there that would not be fleeced here, were he the god of wealth himself?" |
52309 | And the prince mounted his father''s judgment throne, and when he had heard the cause of the quarrel, he asked the thrush:"How are men ungrateful? |
52309 | And the princess trusted him and said after a little hesitation:"My dear girl, why should I not trust you? |
52309 | And the spell appeared in bodily form, and said:"What shall I do?" |
52309 | And then she spoke to Sandal with words punctuated by smiles:"My dear, why do you not show hospitality to the fairy prince? |
52309 | And what child would give his body?" |
52309 | And what did you fall into?" |
52309 | And what good is a Brahman who neglects his own affairs and turns magician, despising real courage? |
52309 | And what good is there except helping others? |
52309 | And what is this hermit garb? |
52309 | And when he saw that he had come there so suddenly, he thought:"Oh, what does it mean? |
52309 | And when he saw that the culprit was dressed like a hermit, he asked him very gently:"Holy sir, where did you get this pearl necklace? |
52309 | And when the king saw him following, he spoke lovingly:"My good man, do you perhaps know the way we came?" |
52309 | And when the monk came the next day, he asked him:"Monk, why do you keep honouring me in such an expensive way? |
52309 | And where are they now? |
52309 | And where are you going?" |
52309 | And where did you come? |
52309 | And where did you stay? |
52309 | And why should feet fit to saunter in a court, press this thorny ground? |
52309 | Are men bad, or women? |
52309 | Are the crows to blame when the geese eat up the rice?" |
52309 | Are you not aware that I am a connoisseur in food? |
52309 | At that moment a serving- maid came into the room and said to the king:"Your Majesty, why have you come into the jaws of death? |
52309 | Besides, what nonsense are you talking?" |
52309 | Besides, you have surely heard what the poet says:''What fool would go into a house? |
52309 | But Cloud- chariot said to his father:"Father, how can you take your weapons and fight? |
52309 | But Fierce- lion said:"My son, what do you mean? |
52309 | But after all, who can understand the strange workings of stern necessity? |
52309 | But her father said:"What do you mean, my daughter? |
52309 | But his parents immediately said:"Son, what are you saying? |
52309 | But presently she rose, lamenting for the pair so unexpectedly dead, and thought:"What is my life good for now?" |
52309 | But the goblin said:"How could it be the king''s fault? |
52309 | But the goblin said:"Why not Hero, the like of whom as a servant is not to be found in the whole world? |
52309 | But when the eldest said this, the two younger said:"Sir, if you feel disgust, why should n''t we?" |
52309 | But while he reflected, Cloud- chariot said:"O king of birds, why do you stop? |
52309 | Can women be so dreadful as this? |
52309 | Did he weep or laugh?_ 117 14. |
52309 | Did he weep or laugh?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started. |
52309 | Did you understand the signs I made, or was it the counsellor''s son?" |
52309 | Do you not know that money is uncertain as an autumn cloud? |
52309 | Do you not know this, you who know things above and things below? |
52309 | Do you not see how gentle his appearance is?" |
52309 | Do you not see that I have the hood and the forked tongue? |
52309 | Do you not see the home of the ghosts, full of dreadful creatures, terrible in the night, wrapped in darkness as in smoke? |
52309 | Do you not see the rock of sacrifice wet with the blood of serpents, the terrible plaything of Death? |
52309 | Have you no sense about this fruitless task? |
52309 | Have you the rheumatism? |
52309 | He thought:"Is she the goddess of love, plucking the spring flowers in person? |
52309 | He went himself to see Good, and asked him soothingly:"What does this mean? |
52309 | How about generosity and that kind of thing? |
52309 | How can I comfort it? |
52309 | How can I do such a wicked thing? |
52309 | How can I find her? |
52309 | How can I partake of such a meal?" |
52309 | How can I save him from the king? |
52309 | How can I touch this loathsome thing?" |
52309 | How can a good counsellor be happy when his master devotes himself to a vice? |
52309 | How can he live then? |
52309 | How can it bear the pangs of being eaten by Garuda? |
52309 | How could I be mad enough to eat a future Buddha? |
52309 | How could a man in my position overlook such a transgression? |
52309 | How could a teacher with such powers promise falsely? |
52309 | How could a warrior''s daughter be given to a working- man, a weaver? |
52309 | How could he be so mean as to beg Garuda to destroy his own race? |
52309 | How could this woman have a goaty smell?" |
52309 | How could you bring yourself to do so harsh and loveless a thing? |
52309 | How could you do this thoughtless thing?" |
52309 | How did you come to this inaccessible under- world? |
52309 | How much less in the case of others? |
52309 | How shall I find another such master? |
52309 | How shall I live without you?" |
52309 | If I should transgress, who would be virtuous? |
52309 | If not, why do you talk nonsense? |
52309 | If the counsellor is lost, the fundamental principle is lost; how then can virtue be preserved? |
52309 | In this strange world who else is so brave as that, to give his son, his family, and his life for his king? |
52309 | Is it good manners to enter the heart of an innocent girl by force, steal her thoughts, and run away? |
52309 | Is n''t it possible to prepare for heaven in your own house?" |
52309 | Is she a goddess come to bathe in these waters? |
52309 | Is she angry with me? |
52309 | Is there no other kind of virtue except in pilgrimages? |
52309 | Is this a dream, or an illusion?" |
52309 | Is this hermit manners, to run away?" |
52309 | Just then the thief came up and said to the king''s men:"Why do you kill this man without any good reason? |
52309 | Or Gauri, separated from her husband Shiva, leading a hard life to win him again? |
52309 | Or a dream? |
52309 | Or an illusion? |
52309 | Or are you possessed by a devil? |
52309 | Or from sorrow because the king came back, and he could no longer act as king? |
52309 | Or how can Garuda, the heavenly bird, do such a crime? |
52309 | Or is she a forest goddess, come here to worship the spring- time?" |
52309 | Or is she playing hide- and- seek with me, to see how I will take it?" |
52309 | Or the favour of the goddess?" |
52309 | Or the lovely moon, taking a human form, and trying to be attractive in the daytime? |
52309 | Or to a farmer, either? |
52309 | Or why at her age does she torture a body as delicate as a flower with a hermit''s life in a lonely wood?" |
52309 | Or why is not the boy Trusty the most worthy, who showed such wonderful manhood when only a little boy? |
52309 | Or why should not his wife receive the most praise, who did not waver when she saw her son killed like a beast before her eyes? |
52309 | Otherwise, why did the fire seem cool to you? |
52309 | Shall I go into the fire, or go home? |
52309 | So Spotless went and saw how his son was acting, and said:"My son, why should you be downcast? |
52309 | So at night he climbed to the palace roof and cried:"Who is there at the gate?" |
52309 | So how can I touch it?" |
52309 | So now I say: What good is life to me without my children? |
52309 | So now why should I want to live alone? |
52309 | So the eldest brother straightway plucked up heart, and said:"What virtue is it which we should acquire?" |
52309 | So the king knew that a goblin lived in it, and said without fear:"What are you laughing about? |
52309 | So what shall I do now?" |
52309 | The brave man said:"If I had not killed the giant in the fight, who would have saved her in spite of all your pains? |
52309 | The wise man said:"If I had not discovered her by my wisdom, how could you have found her hiding- place? |
52309 | Then Cloud- chariot asked one of her friends:"My good girl, what is your friend''s sweet name? |
52309 | Then a voice cried from heaven:"O Hero, who else is devoted to his master as you are? |
52309 | Then she slowly spoke:"Who are you, sir? |
52309 | Then the chief of police went and asked him:"Holy sir, how did this pearl necklace come into your pupil''s hand?" |
52309 | Then the counsellor''s son said:"Did you not see all that she hinted with her signs? |
52309 | Then the goblin said reproachfully:"O King, why was not the general better? |
52309 | Then the king broke silence and said:"Who did the murder? |
52309 | Then the younger brothers said to him:"Sir, why is an intelligent man sad for lack of money? |
52309 | There he saw great heaps of bones, and he asked Friend- wealth:"What creatures did these heaps of bones belong to?" |
52309 | Therefore, as you are a wise man, tell us what you mean by embracing this dead body?" |
52309 | To which should the girl be given?_ 51 6. |
52309 | To which should the girl be given?_ 81 10. |
52309 | To which should the girl be given?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started. |
52309 | Was his wife his or the other man''s?_ 125 15. |
52309 | Was it from grief because he did not win the fairy himself? |
52309 | Was not Rama forced to abandon his good wife by popular clamour? |
52309 | Was the night jealous of your beauty; did she carry you away? |
52309 | What advantage would it be to you if all the serpents were slain at once?" |
52309 | What are the syllables of her name, which must be a delight to the ear? |
52309 | What could she do, poor woman? |
52309 | What do you mean by your hour for begging? |
52309 | What does the question mean? |
52309 | What family does she adorn?" |
52309 | What fool would begin a thing and then stop?" |
52309 | What good would life be to us otherwise?" |
52309 | What happiness is there in a life of constant mourning for your children? |
52309 | What high- minded man would want a kingdom after killing his relatives just for the sake of this wretched, perishable body? |
52309 | What is it to them, or they to it? |
52309 | What is the use of throwing him into a well now? |
52309 | What madness is this? |
52309 | What might she not do next?" |
52309 | What need of more words? |
52309 | What rights have you in my wife? |
52309 | What shall I do?" |
52309 | What will happen now, when he loves a fairy? |
52309 | What will holy men not do out of regard to those who seek aid? |
52309 | What would my father say if he saw me now, or any relative, or any friend? |
52309 | When Hero heard this, he was frightened and said:"Goddess, is there any remedy for this, any way in which the king might be saved?" |
52309 | When Lotus- lake saw that terrible fall, he cried:"Oh, what does it mean?" |
52309 | When so good a wife is gone, how could I think of another?" |
52309 | When the counsellor was rested, the merchant asked him:"Who are you? |
52309 | When the goblin had told this story, he asked the king:"O King, which of these two deserves more credit for plunging into the sea?" |
52309 | When the king saw this, he took it and asked the treasurer:"Where have you been keeping the fruits which the monk brought? |
52309 | Whence do you come? |
52309 | Where can I find such a sacrifice for the giant? |
52309 | Where did you go? |
52309 | Where has the great being been carried by my enemy? |
52309 | Where is that heavenly garden? |
52309 | Where is the great man? |
52309 | Where shall I go now, naked and dusty as I am? |
52309 | Where shall I see you again? |
52309 | Which are worse, men or women?_ 25 4. |
52309 | Which are worse, men or women?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree to fetch the goblin. |
52309 | Which combination of head and body is her husband?_ 57 7. |
52309 | Which is the cleverest?_ 75 9. |
52309 | Which is the more deserving?_ 63 8. |
52309 | Which is the more deserving?_ Then the king went back to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder as before, and started. |
52309 | Which is the more self- sacrificing?_ 135 16. |
52309 | Which is the more self- sacrificing?_ So the king walked along with the goblin. |
52309 | Which is the more worthy?_ 157 17. |
52309 | Which is the more worthy?_ Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder as before, and started. |
52309 | Which is the most delicate?_ 87 11. |
52309 | Which is the most delicate?_ Then the king went to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder once more, and started toward the monk. |
52309 | Which is to blame when he kills them all?_ 197 21. |
52309 | Which of the five deserves the most honour?_ 37 5. |
52309 | Which of the five deserves the most honour?_ Then King Triple- victory went back under the sissoo tree and caught the goblin, who gave a horse- laugh. |
52309 | Which of these are you? |
52309 | Which of these are you? |
52309 | Which was the more self- sacrificing, Cloud- chariot or Shell- crest? |
52309 | Which was the most foolish?_ 187 20. |
52309 | Which was the most foolish?_ Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, took the goblin on his shoulder, and set out in haste. |
52309 | Who can she be?" |
52309 | Who could expect a good result from creating a bad- tempered creature? |
52309 | Who is to blame for his death?_ 109 13. |
52309 | Who is to blame for his death?_ Then the king went back under the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started as before. |
52309 | Who killed the Brahman? |
52309 | Who will save my son?" |
52309 | Who would break a promise that had been made solemnly? |
52309 | Who would sacrifice his child for money? |
52309 | Who would save a common stone at the cost of a pearl? |
52309 | Whose fault was the resulting death of his parents- in- law?_ 5 2. |
52309 | Whose fault was the resulting death of his parents- in- law?_ There is a city called Benares where Shiva lives. |
52309 | Whose wife is she? |
52309 | Whose wife should she be? |
52309 | Whose wife should she be?_ 19 3. |
52309 | Whose wife should she be?_ Then King Triple- victory went back under the sissoo tree to fetch the goblin. |
52309 | Why did he fail to win the magic spell?_ 163 18. |
52309 | Why did he laugh at the moment of death?_ 173 19. |
52309 | Why did he laugh at the moment of death?_ Then the king went to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder as before, and started in silence. |
52309 | Why did he weep and dance?_ 203 22. |
52309 | Why did his counsellor''s heart break?_ 91 12. |
52309 | Why did his counsellor''s heart break?_ Then the king went as before to the sissoo tree, put the goblin on his shoulder, and started back. |
52309 | Why did the Creator and the serpent- king choose my only son from the broad serpent- world, and seize upon him?" |
52309 | Why did they lose their magic, when everything had been done according to precept?" |
52309 | Why did you not save me?" |
52309 | Why do we keep such a wishing- tree for the sake of transient blessings? |
52309 | Why do you not seize her?" |
52309 | Why do you say that King Shudraka was the best among them?" |
52309 | Why do you urge me to a sin which is pleasant for the moment, but causes great sorrow in the next world? |
52309 | Why do you vainly try to comfort me?" |
52309 | Why do you work so hard and grow weary for the sake of that monk? |
52309 | Why does that magic goblin keep wasting my time? |
52309 | Why does the fruit of the poison- tree of sin taste sweet?" |
52309 | Why have you come into this lonely wood? |
52309 | Why have you killed my husband and my brother at one fell swoop? |
52309 | Why insist on more? |
52309 | Why not trust a loving, innocent girl like me? |
52309 | Why not?" |
52309 | Why seek the pains of hell by suicide?'' |
52309 | Why should I deceive an honourable man, especially as your noble character has made me feel like a servant? |
52309 | Why should I not please the goddess by sacrificing myself?" |
52309 | Why should I not win her favour by sacrificing myself?" |
52309 | Why spend your time in such an evil pursuit?" |
52309 | Why then delay? |
52309 | Why then do you uselessly kill the wild beasts? |
52309 | Why torture me yet more? |
52309 | [ Illustration:"Shall I go into the fire or go home?"] |
52309 | the snake, or the hawk, or the woman who gave him the food, or her husband? |
7489 | But are not people angry at losing their heads? |
7489 | But what do you expect to find in New Guinea? |
7489 | Have you got the big serpent? |
7489 | How do you use it? |
7489 | They often ask us,the lieutenant said:"When are you going to leave Long Nawang? |
7489 | To look for rattan,was the answer, and"What is your name?" |
7489 | What do you expect to find? |
7489 | What is the matter,he said,"do n''t you know the way?" |
7489 | What necessity was there for my child to come here? |
7489 | Where are you going? |
7489 | Why all this? |
7489 | Why have people been bold enough to take the fish? |
7489 | Why should I pay Otter? |
7489 | Arriving at the house she went up the wrong ladder, and the man was angry and said:"Do n''t you know the right ladder?" |
7489 | His mother angrily said to him:"Why do n''t you exert yourself to get food?" |
7489 | In the night Deer( rusa) arrived and called out:"Is there any one here?" |
7489 | Seeing this, his wife for the second time said:"Why do you eat pátin? |
7489 | Semang said:"Who is talking there?" |
7489 | She went away and met an antoh in the shape of a woman who asked her:"Where are you going?" |
7489 | Tell me, would not a man''s life be well spent-- tell me, would it not be well sacrificed in an endeavour to explore these regions? |
7489 | The mother asked:"Why do you hurry so?" |
7489 | Then he passed through it and said to the stranger:"How did you come here? |
7489 | What is your name?" |
7489 | she answered,"what else did you hunt for?" |
5173 | Do the inanimate preach the Doctrine? |
5173 | How art thou going to encounter it? |
5173 | How can you turn Self into the phenomenal universe? |
5173 | How do you display your supernatural powers? |
5173 | How do you, sir,questioned the monk,"teach about that?" |
5173 | I have been reciting the sacred Canon, why do you not see? 5173 Is there not anything good in the worshipping of the Buddha?" |
5173 | Let go of that, I say,the Muni commanded again; but the Brahmin, having nothing to let go of, asked:"What shall I let go of, Reverend Sir? |
5173 | Obak said:''How dares this lunatic come into my presence and play with a tiger''s whiskers?'' 5173 Then who is that confronts us?" |
5173 | What doctrine do the masters of the South teach? |
5173 | What has brought you here? |
5173 | What have I to do when death takes the place of life? |
5173 | What is the best way of living for us monks? |
5173 | What is the spiritual body of Buddha who is immortal and divine? |
5173 | What is, reverend sir,asked a man of Chao Cheu( Jo- shu),"the holy temple( of Buddha)?" |
5173 | What is, sir,asked a monk to Yen Kwan( Yen- kan),"the original body of Buddha Vairocana? |
5173 | Who are you,demanded the Fifth Patriarch,"and whence have you come?" |
5173 | Who can hear them? |
5173 | Who is the master of the temple? |
5173 | Why, then, do I not hear them? |
5173 | [ FN#262] Who could cheer him up who abandons himself to self- created misery? 5173 [ FN#37]"I know, your reverence,"said the man,"that you belong to Samgha; but what are Buddha and Dharma?" |
5173 | ''Are these sages alive?'' |
5173 | ''How should you, a wheelwright, have anything to say about the book which I am reading? |
5173 | ''O monk,''demanded the man, as Boku- den was clad like a Zen monk,''what school of swordsmanship do you belong to?'' |
5173 | ''There are nettles everywhere, but are not smooth, green grasses more common still?'' |
5173 | ''What is life and death?'' |
5173 | ''What is the real nature of mind?'' |
5173 | ''What is the spirit of Bodhidharma?'' |
5173 | ''Where is my visitor, where my dear monk?'' |
5173 | ''Why not,''he might have thought within himself,''why all this is futile? |
5173 | ''Why, you might go to the master and ask him what is the essence of Buddhism?'' |
5173 | ''Why,''said the teacher,''art thou so late?'' |
5173 | A man asked Chang Sha( Cho- sha):"How can you turn the phenomenal universe into Self?" |
5173 | A man asked Poh Chang( Hyaku- jo):"How shall I learn the Law?" |
5173 | A monk, Hwui Chao( E- cha) by name, asked Pao Yen( Ho- gen):"What is Buddha?" |
5173 | Again, if there be nothing real in the universe, what is it that causes unreal objects to appear? |
5173 | Again, if there be nothing real in the universe, what is it that causes unreal objects to appear? |
5173 | Are the stars too distant? |
5173 | Are there not holy men, Holy Truths, Holy Paths stated in the scriptures? |
5173 | Are there not many who are rich without any virtues, while some are poor in spite of their virtues? |
5173 | Are there not the humane, who die young, while the inhuman enjoy long lives? |
5173 | Are there not the unjust who are fortunate, while the just are unfortunate? |
5173 | Are we doomed to be victims for the jaws of the environment? |
5173 | Are we not endowed with inner force to fight successfully against obstacles and difficulties, and to wrest trophies of glory from hardships? |
5173 | Are we to be slaves to the vicissitudes of fortune? |
5173 | But are your beliefs, we should ask, based on historical fact? |
5173 | But as soon as they withdraw into themselves and ask themselves,''Am I now happy?'' |
5173 | But is there inner life expressed, or possible to be expressed, in any other form save physical organism? |
5173 | By what authority does he declare all this meritless? |
5173 | Can a superior man be without the feeling of shame to such an extent as this?'' |
5173 | Can you assert that those traditions which deify Mohammed and Shakya are the statements of bare facts? |
5173 | Can you cause things to fall off the earth against the law of gravitation? |
5173 | Can you not recognize something undisturbed and peaceful among disturbance and trouble? |
5173 | Can you realize that death, which you have yet no immediate experience of, is the greatest of evil? |
5173 | Can you recognize something awe- inspiring in the rise and fall of nations? |
5173 | Can you say that such traditional and self- contradictory records as the four gospels are history in the strict sense of the term? |
5173 | Can you thus prove that you- in- yourself exist beyond or behind you? |
5173 | Confucius replied:''What words are these? |
5173 | Could there be any meat that is not fresh in my shop?'' |
5173 | Do n''t you see?" |
5173 | Do they denote or connote anything? |
5173 | Do you bear the trumpet call? |
5173 | Do you feel the earth tremble? |
5173 | Do you not need to mitigate the struggle for existence more sanguine than the war of weapons? |
5173 | Do you not shed tears over those hunger- bitten children who cower in the dark lanes of a great city? |
5173 | Do you not sympathize with poverty- stricken millions living side by side with millionaires saturated with wealth? |
5173 | Do you not want to do away with the so- called armoured peace among nations? |
5173 | Do you not wish to put down the stupendous oppressor-- Might- is- right? |
5173 | Does He not give new forms to His design? |
5173 | Does He not show us new materials for His building? |
5173 | Does He not surprise us with novelties, extraordinaries, and mysteries? |
5173 | Does not even a stone tell the mystery of Life? |
5173 | Does this not amount to your stealing the annual salary from your lord?" |
5173 | Does, then, Zen use no scripture? |
5173 | For what purpose is your question? |
5173 | For whose sake should he take life,[FN#350] or commit theft, or give alms, or keep precepts? |
5173 | For whose sake, then, should he be lustful or angry? |
5173 | Has it a form? |
5173 | Has not art found that she is beautiful? |
5173 | Has not each of us a light within him, whatever degrees of lustre there may be? |
5173 | Has not even grass some meaning? |
5173 | Has not philosophy announced that she is spiritual? |
5173 | Has not religion proclaimed that she is good? |
5173 | Has not science proved that she is truthful? |
5173 | Has there been any paramour who disgraced himself that lie might help his neighbours? |
5173 | Has there been any traitor who performed the ignoble conduct to promote the welfare of his own country or society at large? |
5173 | Has there been anyone who committed theft that he might further the interests of his villagers? |
5173 | Has, then, the divine nature of Universal Spirit been completely and exhaustively revealed in our Enlightened Consciousness? |
5173 | Have we not hundreds of thousands of life- long slaves to gold among us? |
5173 | Have we not myriads of lifelong slaves to vanity among us? |
5173 | Have we not thousands of life- long slaves to spirits among us? |
5173 | Have we not, nevertheless, hundreds of life- long slaves to cigars among us? |
5173 | He replied:''What profession is there which has not its principles? |
5173 | How can he be so? |
5173 | How can it, by coming quickly into the eyes and ears, distinguish the pleasing from the disgusting in external objects? |
5173 | How can such a person be the master of things? |
5173 | How can the divine law of causality be so unreasonable? |
5173 | How can the spirits of the past always live in a crowd? |
5173 | How can there be reward for the good( as it is taught in your sacred books),[FN#315] that Heaven blesses the good and shows grace to the humble? |
5173 | How can this one put the others in motion, or communicate with them, in order to co- operate in producing Karma? |
5173 | How can we suppose that we, the children of Buddha, are put at the mercy of petty troubles, or intended to be crushed by obstacles? |
5173 | How can you be saved when you are at the verge of death? |
5173 | How can you single out angels from among devils? |
5173 | How could I understand all human affairs, ancient and modern, in the world? |
5173 | How could he be reluctant to give his halo?" |
5173 | How could he, however, succeed in his task unless he has two or three lives, as some animals are believed to have? |
5173 | How could it be called a noble( path)? |
5173 | How could it be possible to make the unmoral being moral or immoral? |
5173 | How could man, the most spiritual of the Three Powers[FN#284] exist without an origin? |
5173 | How could one extirpate man''s bad nature implanted within him at his origin? |
5173 | How could such a dull fellow as I grasp its spirit?" |
5173 | How could we save the dying by persuading them that death is a bare privation of life? |
5173 | How could you establish the authority of morality? |
5173 | How could you know Him to be a Divine man different from other criminals who were crucified with Him? |
5173 | How could you say that its relation to a knower is the only and fundamental relation for the existence of the tree? |
5173 | How could you think anything purely spiritual and formless existing without blending together with other things? |
5173 | How did he come to consider that he ought to be good and ought not to be bad? |
5173 | How do kings differ from beggars in the eye of Transience? |
5173 | How do you know the causes of one are more numerous than the causes of the other? |
5173 | How does it differ from soul? |
5173 | How was it possible for man to do good before these sages''appearance on earth? |
5173 | How, then, can the heart within freely pass to the organs of sense without? |
5173 | How, then, did philosophers come to consider reality to be unknowable and hidden behind or beyond appearances? |
5173 | How, then, do you distinguish the real cause of pain from that of pleasure? |
5173 | How, then, does Alaya give rise to them through transformation? |
5173 | How, then, is life sustained there and kept up in continuous birth after birth? |
5173 | Hwui Chung( Ye- chu), a famous disciple of the Sixth Patriarch in China, to quote an example, one day asked a monk:"Where did you come from?" |
5173 | If it be said that it is the mind that produces Karma( I ask), what is the mind? |
5173 | If it be the will of Heaven to bless so limited a number of persons at all, and to curse so many, why is Heaven so partial? |
5173 | If man be double- natured, how did he come to set good over evil? |
5173 | If mind as well as external objects be unreal, who is it that knows they are so? |
5173 | If morality be merely subjective, and there be no objective standard, how can you distinguish evil from good? |
5173 | If the dream is not the same as the things dreamed, in what other form does it appear to you? |
5173 | If the external objects which are transformed are unreal, how can the Vijnyana, the transformer, be real? |
5173 | If there be no distinction between the pleasing and the disgusting, why does it accept the one or reject the other? |
5173 | If there be no individual soul either in mind or body, where does personality lie? |
5173 | If there be no life in earth, how could life come out of it? |
5173 | If there be no life similar to ours in animals, how could we sustain our life by subsisting on them? |
5173 | If there be no life, the same as the animal''s life in the vegetables, how could animals sustain their lives feeding on vegetables? |
5173 | If there be no unchanging mirror, bright and clean, bow can there be the various images, unreal and temporary, reflected in it? |
5173 | If there be no unchanging mirror, bright and clean, how can there be various images, unreal and temporary, reflected in it? |
5173 | If there be no water of unchanging fluidity, how can there be the unreal and temporary forms of waves? |
5173 | If there be no water of unchanging fluidity,[FN#373] how can there be the unreal and temporary forms of waves? |
5173 | If there be no way of escape, why do you trouble yourself about it? |
5173 | If this assertion be true, is it not a useless task to educate man with the purpose of making him better and nobler? |
5173 | If vices be congenial and true to man''s nature, but virtues be alien and untrue to him, why are virtues honoured by him? |
5173 | If vices be genuine and virtue a deception, as you think, why do you call the inventors of that deceiving art sages? |
5173 | If you contend that good is man''s primary nature and evil the secondary one, why is be so often overpowered by the secondary nature? |
5173 | If you could conquer the enemy without fighting, what then is your sword for?'' |
5173 | If, again, man''s nature is essentially bad, as Siun Tsz holds, how can he cultivate virtue? |
5173 | In short, why are so many destined to be unlucky and so few to be lucky? |
5173 | In such a world as this, what is the use of the enjoyment of pleasures, if he who has fed on them is to return to this world again and again? |
5173 | Is he himself not one of the holy men?'' |
5173 | Is it bright? |
5173 | Is it conscious? |
5173 | Is it empty? |
5173 | Is it intelligent? |
5173 | Is it non- intelligent? |
5173 | Is it not a fact that the more virtuous one grows the more sinful he feels himself? |
5173 | Is it not best for it to do so? |
5173 | Is it not just one moment from the nuptial song to the funeral- dirge? |
5173 | Is it not just one step from rosy childhood to snowy age? |
5173 | Is it not mere tautology? |
5173 | Is the doomsday coming instead? |
5173 | Is there any example of an individual object that escaped the government of that law in the whole history of the world? |
5173 | Is there any instance of an individual who escaped it in the whole history of mankind? |
5173 | Is there any merit, Reverend Sir, in our conduct?" |
5173 | Is this not contrary to fact? |
5173 | Laying aside his hammer and chisel, Phien went up the steps and said:''I venture to ask your Grace what words you are reading?'' |
5173 | Let us ask you: Are you satisfied with the present state of things? |
5173 | Li Ngao( Ri- ko) one day asked Yoh Shan( Yaku- san):"What is the way to truth?" |
5173 | Might I ask you, sir, to pacify my mind?" |
5173 | Nothing exists from the first What can be dimmed by dust and dirt?" |
5173 | Now ask yourself what is you- in- yourself? |
5173 | Now if I, being born among men, know not whence I came( into this life), how could I know whither I am going in the after- life? |
5173 | Now the question arises, If all human beings are endowed with Buddha- nature, why have they not come naturally to be Enlightened? |
5173 | Now, then, what is the use of our life, if it stand still? |
5173 | Now, then, who can point out any sinless person in the present world? |
5173 | Of what use( then) are the teachings of Lao Tsz and Chwang Tsz? |
5173 | One day she instructed a young girl to embrace and ask him:"How do you feel now?" |
5173 | Or did you do so, in the service of a perishing state, by the punishment of an axe? |
5173 | Or was it that you had completed your term of life?'' |
5173 | Or was it through your evil conduct, reflecting disgrace on your parents and on your wife and children? |
5173 | Or was it through your hard endurances of cold and hunger? |
5173 | Ordinary people know not even the phenomena actually occurring before them; how could they understand the unseen? |
5173 | Pao Chi( Ho- shi), a Buddhist tutor to the Emperor, asked the perplexed monarch:"Does your Lordship understand him?" |
5173 | Perhaps he might have thought:''Why is nothing holy? |
5173 | Providence, salvation, and divine grace-- what are they? |
5173 | Say, one and all, how do you understand the Law?" |
5173 | Shall we perish in the darkness of scepticism, shutting our eyes to the light of Tathagata? |
5173 | Shall we say, then, that the shape of the nail gave the shape of the coat, or in any way corresponds to it? |
5173 | Shall we starve ourselves refusing to accept the rich bounty which the Blessed Life offers to us? |
5173 | Shall we suffer from innumerable pains in the self- created hell where remorse, jealousy, and hatred feed the fire of anger? |
5173 | So why do they not see and hear and thus produce Karma? |
5173 | Such is the clearness of still water, and how much greater is that of the human spirit? |
5173 | Tapping it with his horse- switch, he asked it saying:''Did you, sir, in your greed of life, fail in the lessons of reason and come to this? |
5173 | The elder said:''Have you ever approached the master and asked his instruction in Buddhism?'' |
5173 | Then Tung Shan went round the chair, taking the officer with him, and making a bow again to the officer, asked:"Do you see what I mean?" |
5173 | Then an attendant of his asked"What is the matter?" |
5173 | Then the monk bowed politely to the teacher, who questioned:"How did you understand me?" |
5173 | Then, turning to another monk, inquired:"How did you understand me?" |
5173 | Thus thinking, he inquired:"What is the holy truth, or the first principle?" |
5173 | To the question,"What and who is Buddha?" |
5173 | Tung Shan( To- Zan) was on one occasion attending on his teacher Yun Yen( Un- gan), who asked:"What are your supernatural powers?" |
5173 | Was it not typical of a so- called great man of the world? |
5173 | Was not Jesus also a criminal? |
5173 | Was not Socrates a criminal? |
5173 | Was the golden age of man, then, over in the remote past? |
5173 | We have to ask, in what respects does the interrelation between mind and body resemble the relation between a coat and a nail? |
5173 | Were we born eyeless, should we not be happy, as we are in no danger of suffering from eye disease? |
5173 | Were we born headless, should we not be happy, as we have to suffer from no headache? |
5173 | What business have you, a Samurai, with a thing of that sort? |
5173 | What can I do for you?" |
5173 | What does he hold as the first principle of Buddhism?'' |
5173 | What does his Absolute, or One, or Substance mean? |
5173 | What does his Reality or Truth imply? |
5173 | What holy text can be quoted to justify his assertion? |
5173 | What is Real Self? |
5173 | What is his view in reference to the different doctrines taught by Shakya Muni? |
5173 | What is morality, then? |
5173 | What is our sin, after all? |
5173 | What is self?'' |
5173 | What is the difference between eternal life, fixed and constant, and eternal death? |
5173 | What is the difference between everlasting bliss, changeless and monotonous, and everlasting suffering? |
5173 | What is the reason of all this? |
5173 | What is the use of your endeavour in the reformation of society, which does not endure any longer than the castle in the air? |
5173 | What is the use of your exertion, they would say, in accumulating wealth, which is doomed to melt away in the twinkling of an eye? |
5173 | What is the use of your striving after power, which is more short- lived than a bubble? |
5173 | What you hold as duty may I not condemn as sin? |
5173 | What you honour may I not denounce as disgrace? |
5173 | What, then, are the spirits of the dead( which they believe in)? |
5173 | What, then, is the chief agent that produces Karma? |
5173 | What, then, is the use of your worship?" |
5173 | When that monk came down and approached him with a respectful salutation, he asked:''Where art thou from? |
5173 | Where do you go when your body is reduced to elements? |
5173 | Where does the Root of the Illusion Lie? |
5173 | Where does the Root of the Illusion Lie? |
5173 | Where does the real nature of mind exist? |
5173 | Where, then, does the Error Lie? |
5173 | Where, then, does the Error Lie? |
5173 | Where, then, does the error lie in the four possible propositions respecting man''s nature? |
5173 | Who can deny furthermore that Wang''s philosophy is Zen in the Confucian terminology? |
5173 | Who can deny that one''s physical conditions determine one''s character or personality? |
5173 | Who can draw a strict line of demarcation between mind and body? |
5173 | Who can live the same moment twice? |
5173 | Who can overlook the fact that one''s bodily conditions positively act upon one''s personal life? |
5173 | Who can say that Zen is nihilistic?" |
5173 | Who can tell whether another sanguinary affair will not break out before the Bulgarian bloodshed comes to an end? |
5173 | Who could blind your spiritual eyes, unless you yourself shut them up? |
5173 | Who could chain your will but your own will? |
5173 | Who could prevent you from enjoying moral food, unless you yourself refuse to eat? |
5173 | Who could put fetters on your mind but your mind itself? |
5173 | Who could save him who denies his own salvation? |
5173 | Who is that other person?" |
5173 | Who, then, after the destruction of body by death, would receive the retribution( in the form) of pain or of pleasure? |
5173 | Why are trees and grass which were also formed of the same Gas unconscious? |
5173 | Why did Lao Tsz, Chwang Tsz, Cheu Kung[FN#304] and Confucius do such a useless task as to found their doctrines and lay down the precepts for men? |
5173 | Why do the sun and the earth seem changeless and constant to you? |
5173 | Why do we prefer an animal life, which passes away in a few scores of years, to a vegetable life, which can exist thousands of years? |
5173 | Why do we prize changing organism more than inorganic matter, unchanging and constant? |
5173 | Why do we value the morning glory, which fades in a few hours, more than an artificial glass flower, which endures hundreds of years? |
5173 | Why do you bother yourself about such an idle question? |
5173 | Why do you not preach?" |
5173 | Why do you waste your energy in the construction of the Three Worlds? |
5173 | Why does it wait for some direct or indirect causes( to gain its knowledge), and to acquire them through study and instruction? |
5173 | Why not, then, these trees, grass, etc., the alphabets of Nature when they compose the Volume of the Universe? |
5173 | Why so many to be low and so few to be high? |
5173 | Why, then, do you trouble yourself about it? |
5173 | Why, we must ask, do you trouble yourself so much about death? |
5173 | Would you know where He is? |
5173 | Would you like to hear me, sir, tell you about death?'' |
5173 | Yoh Shan, pointing to the sky and then to the pitcher beside him, said:"You see?" |
5173 | [ FN#261]"Who ties you up?" |
5173 | [ FN#407] Ratnakuta- sutra(? |
5173 | what does it avail you to come and go all the time like this?'' |
4005 | A faithful little sister, who will not misunderstand her brother, even if he does n''t confide in her? |
4005 | Ah, they are young-- life does not seem long to them, does it, Elizabeth? |
4005 | Ah, why indeed? |
4005 | Am I late, have you come to meet me; and what have you done with your luggage? |
4005 | Am I not a lover of the picturesque, my dear boy? 4005 Am I not bringing trouble enough on Elizabeth? |
4005 | Am I really Verity-- Verity Westbrook, who used to live in that dreadful Montagu Street? |
4005 | Am I? |
4005 | An impotent genius? |
4005 | And I am to do the job for you? 4005 And I am to run down to the Crow''s Nest when I like?" |
4005 | And Miss Jacobi called here? |
4005 | And Miss Jacobi seemed in fairly good spirits? |
4005 | And Mr. Herrick is to be asked on this grand occasion? 4005 And Mr. Rossiter knows him?" |
4005 | And Saul Jacobi was a billiard- marker? |
4005 | And her sister? |
4005 | And it is something you do not wish her to hear? |
4005 | And now, my dear lady, what is wrong? |
4005 | And poor Mrs. Martin is alone in Todmorden''s Lane? |
4005 | And she made no objection? |
4005 | And so you have been staying at the Wood House? |
4005 | And the headaches are better? |
4005 | And then they quarrelled? |
4005 | And then you became friends? |
4005 | And this is all you have to tell me? |
4005 | And this was all? |
4005 | And what am I to do without you both-- a lonely bachelor? |
4005 | And what did my mother say to that, Dawson? |
4005 | And you are engaged to her? 4005 And you came to meet me?" |
4005 | And you mean Miss Jacobi to be her travelling companion? |
4005 | And you think that arrangement would suit you? |
4005 | And you think this good lady will be able to help Miss Jacobi? |
4005 | And you think, as Mr. Carlyon does, that there will be active life and work there? |
4005 | And you will come down again, and let us know the result of your interview? |
4005 | Anna, you are my dear little sister, are you not? |
4005 | Are you a born natural? |
4005 | Are you always so energetic? |
4005 | Are you going to order all these things? |
4005 | Are you going up to the Wood House now? 4005 Are you ill, or has something frightened you?" |
4005 | Are you speaking of Matt Logan? |
4005 | Are you sure my mother will approve of your programme? |
4005 | Are you sure that you had better do this? |
4005 | Are you sure you mean what you say? |
4005 | At the Pool? |
4005 | Betty, did you notice that Mr. Herrick did not want to go? |
4005 | But how about the marred and ugly faces, Die? |
4005 | But the book? |
4005 | But the child Kit? |
4005 | But unfortunately you are the exception-- is that what you mean, Mr. Herrick? 4005 But why does she call herself Miss Jacobi when she is really the Contessa Ferrari?" |
4005 | But you will think over all I have said, and let me see you again? |
4005 | But, Betty dear, surely David Carlyon is not going there again to- night? |
4005 | Can I be of any use and assistance? 4005 Can these dry bones live?" |
4005 | Can you not? |
4005 | Carlyon has a father then? |
4005 | Colonel Godfrey is well, and you are quite well,he said pointedly,"and yet something seems troubling you?" |
4005 | Confound you, Herrick, what do you mean by talking such infernal rot? |
4005 | Could you not remember one of them, Betty? |
4005 | Dear, I understand better now,returned Malcolm kindly;"but I ask myself, could I have done the same in his place? |
4005 | Dear, do you mean that you will consent? 4005 Did I say so?" |
4005 | Did he say much about the Jacobis? |
4005 | Did my mother really say that, Dawson? |
4005 | Did you fear I should refuse? |
4005 | Did you go all the way to Rotherwood? |
4005 | Did you mean that for a hit at me, Anna dear? |
4005 | Did you really think that even Dinah Templeton could have her forty years in the wilderness without her share of pain and difficulty? 4005 Did you ring, sir?" |
4005 | Did you tell Dinah? |
4005 | Did you? |
4005 | Die, dear, why do you not make some pretty speeches to Mr. Herrick when he has achieved all this? |
4005 | Do I not always do my duty? |
4005 | Do I? |
4005 | Do I? |
4005 | Do n''t you remember what Clough says? |
4005 | Do n''t you see Die is wearing her grannie face? |
4005 | Do n''t you think so, Betty? |
4005 | Do you consider men so dense? |
4005 | Do you know her too? 4005 Do you mean Mrs. Godfrey of the Manor House, near Cookham?" |
4005 | Do you mean that she would let him starve? |
4005 | Do you mean that very eccentric old lady whom Mrs. Godfrey always calls Mother Quixote, who is so rich, and always travels with a white Persian cat? 4005 Do you mean the Jacobis? |
4005 | Do you mean to tell me that Miss Jacobi and her brother quarrel? |
4005 | Do you mind telling my friend Herrick all you said to us? |
4005 | Do you really mean this? |
4005 | Do you really want me to say this to him? |
4005 | Do you suppose this violence will serve your purpose? 4005 Do you think I should refuse any wish that it is in my power to gratify?" |
4005 | Do you think he will get over it? |
4005 | Do you think he would care to bring his friends? |
4005 | Do you think that she would take care of Kit? |
4005 | Do you think that would be wise, that it might not complicate matters and increase the intimacy? |
4005 | Do you think you could possibly manage it, dear? |
4005 | Do you think you need ask me that? |
4005 | Do you understand it? |
4005 | Does Miss Jacobi lounge too? |
4005 | Does it mean that you love me well enough to be my wife? |
4005 | Does that mean you do not intend to tell me your trouble? |
4005 | Does your sister really expect me? |
4005 | Elizabeth, will you try to love me a little? |
4005 | Father, how could you guess that? |
4005 | For the present? |
4005 | Hallo, Cedric, are you going to cut me? 4005 Hallo, Davy, what cheer, my lad? |
4005 | Hallo, you people,shouted Cedric,"have you been looking for glowworms or hunting moths? |
4005 | Has anything happened? |
4005 | Has the child been ill? |
4005 | Have I been long? |
4005 | Have I done any good? |
4005 | Have I ever refused to listen to you, my son? |
4005 | Have I startled you? |
4005 | Have I tired you, or has your day disappointed you? |
4005 | Have I, dear? 4005 Have they sent you to find me?" |
4005 | Have you been ill, Malcolm? |
4005 | Have you come to spend the afternoon with me, Malcolm? |
4005 | Have you forgotten already? |
4005 | Have you found that out already? |
4005 | Have you just found that out, Betty? |
4005 | He and Cedric are sure to walk over in the morning-- the vicar and Herrick are such cronies; and why should he pass my door? |
4005 | He has no objection then to your marrying a pauper? |
4005 | He must be aware that you have only an allowance from your sisters? |
4005 | Hide you from your brother do you mean, or Cedric, or both? 4005 How can he help it? |
4005 | How can you be so absurd, Tiny? |
4005 | How can you say such dreadful things? 4005 How could I face the future if I did not believe it?" |
4005 | How could she-- how could she? |
4005 | How could you know my habits? 4005 How did you know, Die-- have you seen him?" |
4005 | How do you do, Miss Sheldon? |
4005 | How do you mean, my dear lad? |
4005 | How do you mean? |
4005 | How long have you known these people? |
4005 | How long shall you stay? |
4005 | How many mutton chops has he had since? |
4005 | How much do you owe? |
4005 | How old are you, dear? |
4005 | How would you like me to make you out a list? 4005 Hurry up,"he said severely;"how long do you suppose I am going to wait for your opinion of the Keston family?" |
4005 | I am not going out this morning-- will you come straight to 12 Gresham Gardens? 4005 I am thirty- one to- day,"she said to him gaily;"is not that a great age? |
4005 | I feel Mondayish-- do you know what I mean, Herrick? |
4005 | I hope Miss Templeton approved of my suggestion? |
4005 | I hope you agree with my mother, Anna? |
4005 | I shall be in my rooms at Lincoln''s Inn by mid- day,returned Malcolm,"will you come to me there?" |
4005 | I suppose Davos Platz would not cure me? |
4005 | I suppose Kit is Mrs. Martin''s child? |
4005 | I suppose Kit is not able to walk? |
4005 | I suppose Miss Jacobi was there too? |
4005 | I suppose Mr. Carlyon''s mother is living too? |
4005 | I suppose he will remain the night? |
4005 | I suppose there is a fire? |
4005 | I suppose there will be no other guests? |
4005 | I suppose you could not go without me, Die? |
4005 | I suppose you have already made your plans? |
4005 | I suppose you intend to bring out a volume of essays? |
4005 | I think you said the lady jilted him? |
4005 | I thought you always slept well, dear? |
4005 | I was like a queen in a big tent, was n''t I, dad? 4005 If Miss Jacobi is so unapproachable,"he said quietly,"perhaps the Countess Ferrari will not refuse to listen to me?" |
4005 | If it be not impertinent, may we inquire why you have absented yourself the whole morning? |
4005 | Is Miss Carlyon like her brother in appearance? |
4005 | Is it not good of him to come, when he is so dreadfully busy? |
4005 | Is it yours too, David? |
4005 | Is it? |
4005 | Is that such a strange thing? |
4005 | Is the spirit of the Pool properly exorcised now, Malcolm? |
4005 | Is there anything more you''ll be needing, sir? |
4005 | Is there anything that I can do to help you? |
4005 | Is there not? |
4005 | Is this Miss Elizabeth''s idea too? |
4005 | Is this what you have to tell me? 4005 It has something to do with those odious Jacobis?" |
4005 | It is about Cedric,she said abruptly--"that boy has got into trouble again?" |
4005 | It is good of you to think of it, and nothing would have given Anna greater pleasure, but--"You mean she has some other engagement this summer? |
4005 | It is one of your best pictures, Goliath,observed Malcolm,"but I suppose you do not intend to exhibit it next year?" |
4005 | It was the copy David gave you at Christmas, was it not? |
4005 | Jacobi is an Italian Jew, is he not? |
4005 | Malcolm, you will not leave me to- morrow? 4005 Malcolm,"she said presently,"did you hear what Mrs. Godfrey was telling me at dinner-- that Mr. Rossiter is coming to the Manor House?" |
4005 | May I ask if the report be true? |
4005 | May I ask one more question, old fellow? 4005 May I ask you one question first?" |
4005 | May I know the message first? |
4005 | May I speak? |
4005 | Miss Jacobi-- I suppose you mean the Contessa Ferrari? |
4005 | Miss Templeton, am I to prophecy smooth things to you, or am I to answer in the spirit of Micaiah the son of Imlah? |
4005 | Mother, are you a witch? |
4005 | Mr. Herrick, do you ever write poetry? |
4005 | Mr. Rossiter is not well off, is he? |
4005 | Mr. Templeton is an intimate friend of yours, is he not? |
4005 | Must I not? |
4005 | Must you go? |
4005 | Must you really go to Staplegrove to- night? 4005 My baby''s asleep-- should you like to see her open her eyes?" |
4005 | My dear Miss Templeton, how could I do otherwise? 4005 My dear fellow, would it not have been as well to find this out before you pledged yourself to the lady?" |
4005 | My dear lady,he returned gravely,"do you suppose that we have seen the last of Saul Jacobi?" |
4005 | Need we consider the point at present? |
4005 | No more-- not come to the Wood House? |
4005 | No one wanted my society-- a disagreeable, cross old maid-- eh, Dinah? |
4005 | No-- no,she returned, covering her face with her hands,"I never knew it; how could I-- how could I?" |
4005 | Not even to poor little Anna? |
4005 | Now tell me, please, what have you done with Leah? |
4005 | Now, will you answer my question-- what brings you up to Lincoln''s Inn in this unexpected manner? |
4005 | Now, will you come in, Mr. Herrick, and have luncheon with us? |
4005 | Now,with a housewifely air,"shall I give you some tea? |
4005 | Of course you told him? |
4005 | Oh my, Ma''am, do you hear that? 4005 Oh yes, we understand that, do n''t we, Betty?" |
4005 | Oh, Amias, do n''t you remember I was seventeen on the first of May, and Mrs. Craven gave us a syllabub in honour of the occasion? |
4005 | Oh, I see--but David tried not to look at his father''s pinched, white face--"you mean months probably?" |
4005 | Oh, Malcolm, have you been ill? |
4005 | Oh, Mr. Herrick, is that wise? 4005 Oh, Mr. Herrick, what is it?" |
4005 | Oh, Mr. Herrick, what shall we do? |
4005 | Oh, can you help me? |
4005 | Oh, do you think so? |
4005 | Oh, he has a temper, has he? |
4005 | Oh, why are such things allowed? 4005 Only this: if Cedric does not pass, what are we to do with him? |
4005 | Out with it, lad-- you are not quite happy about Ventnor? |
4005 | People often talk of continuity of life, and continuity of love, and why not continuity of work? 4005 Poor fellow, did he really say that?" |
4005 | Saul, were you looking for me? |
4005 | Shall I give you some whiskey and soda? |
4005 | Shall we go downstairs? |
4005 | Shall you go to- morrow? |
4005 | Something? 4005 Staplegrove,"she said in a surprised voice,"do you mean Staplegrove in Surrey? |
4005 | The Wallaces are a good sort of people, are they not? |
4005 | Then she is not as nice as this wonderful Dinah? |
4005 | Then you approve of it? |
4005 | Then you think he will pass? |
4005 | There are some daughters, I believe? |
4005 | There is something I want to say to you-- that for weeks I have been trying to say-- will you let me speak now? |
4005 | To Miss Jacobi? |
4005 | Very possibly-- why not? |
4005 | Was it so bad as that, Die? |
4005 | Well, Annachen,one of his pet names for her,"what is it, little woman?" |
4005 | Well, Elizabeth, what is it? |
4005 | Well, Herrick, what do you say about putting me up? 4005 Well, I am rather a poor specimen just now,"returned David with a feeble laugh;"but what ca n''t be cured must be endured-- eh, Herrick? |
4005 | Well, Mr. Herrick,said Mrs. Godfrey quietly,"I suppose I may ask your opinion now?" |
4005 | Well, and what did Mrs. Martin say? |
4005 | Well, are you going to speak? |
4005 | Well, what do you think of little Tina? |
4005 | Well,he said tentatively,"have you made up your mind about to- morrow; is it to be Kew, or Cookham and Henley?" |
4005 | Well,with a forced laugh,"did you succeed in saving me?" |
4005 | Were they there all the time? |
4005 | Were you afraid to ask me that before, my dear? |
4005 | What I want? |
4005 | What did the place matter after all,she said to herself,"as long as Malcolm was with her? |
4005 | What do I mean? |
4005 | What do you mean? 4005 What does it matter how one looks?" |
4005 | What does the Colonel think? |
4005 | What have you and Anna been talking about? |
4005 | What have you done to yourself, Betty? |
4005 | What if I am engaged to him? |
4005 | What is it, Betty? |
4005 | What is it, dearest? |
4005 | What is it, dearest? |
4005 | What is it, my dear? |
4005 | What is it, my dear? |
4005 | What is it, my dear? |
4005 | What is it-- what does it mean? |
4005 | What is the matter with you, Elizabeth? |
4005 | What is the use of turning on the waterworks like this? |
4005 | What is to be done, Mr. Herrick, to save my poor boy from this iniquitous marriage? |
4005 | What makes him so thoughtful and understanding? 4005 What on earth has brought you to Oxford?" |
4005 | What on earth has brought you up to town on the hottest day of the year? 4005 What on earth is that noise?" |
4005 | What right had I to climb up into the judgment seat and rebuke one of these little ones? |
4005 | What time do they dine, Anderson? |
4005 | What was it? |
4005 | What''s come to Herrick? |
4005 | What''s the matter, good friends? |
4005 | What''s your pleasure? |
4005 | What, do you know la belle Jacobi? |
4005 | What, has Tina shown her claws to you? 4005 What-- what do you mean?" |
4005 | When I go back to town may I send you her little book--Thoughts of a Queen"it is called?" |
4005 | When did he die? |
4005 | When do you want to come to me? |
4005 | Where''s Dick and the rest of the fellows? 4005 Where''s your pipe, Goliath? |
4005 | Who is she? |
4005 | Who is that nice lady, dad, in the white dress? 4005 Who says so-- you, or Hugh Rossiter?" |
4005 | Who? 4005 Why are these talents, these gifts of genius, this thirst for knowledge given to us, if they are not to be developed and turned to account hereafter? |
4005 | Why are you weeping, Elizabeth? 4005 Why did you ask him, Die? |
4005 | Why do n''t you box his ears, Miss Templeton? 4005 Why do you imagine that I have done anything with her?" |
4005 | Why do you stand here? |
4005 | Why do you undervalue yourself so? |
4005 | Why does he always think of the right thing? |
4005 | Why does he not get married then? |
4005 | Why does he put up with it? |
4005 | Why not, my dear lady? |
4005 | Why on earth could she not have said so? |
4005 | Why on earth did you say that, Betty? |
4005 | Why should I be vexed? 4005 Why should I let them sacrifice themselves for me?" |
4005 | Why should I not have heard it from Cedric himself-- we are close friends? |
4005 | Why should another life be spoiled? |
4005 | Why should we not all go down and see the place? 4005 Why should you spoil your life, Elizabeth? |
4005 | Why were you so silent? |
4005 | Will you allow me to settle things for you? |
4005 | Will you bring her to me, Malcolm? |
4005 | Will you forgive my speaking plainly, Malcolm? |
4005 | Will you hide me for a few days, until I know what to do? |
4005 | Will you not sit down too? |
4005 | Will you put on your walking things at once, while I make my plans? |
4005 | Will you take this umbrella for the child, my good man? |
4005 | Will you tell me all you know about these people? |
4005 | Will you tell me what you mean to do? |
4005 | Will you tell me why your brother has gone to Oxford? |
4005 | Wo n''t you tell me more, Herrick? |
4005 | Would Miss Sheldon care to see my picture, Malcolm? |
4005 | Would it not be wiser to leave Mrs. Godfrey to deal with Miss Jacobi? |
4005 | Would it? |
4005 | Yes, I must go,he returned hurriedly;"will you excuse me to your sister?" |
4005 | Yes, there is one thing I want to know-- has not Dr. Fraser married? |
4005 | You are all right now, Herrick? |
4005 | You are doing it for Elizabeth''s sake too, are you not, David? |
4005 | You are going to the vicarage? |
4005 | You are in trouble, I fear; is there anything I can do to help you? |
4005 | You are making things worse,he said;"why do n''t you take your trouble like a man?" |
4005 | You are not vexed with me, my dear? |
4005 | You have been shedding tears-- do you think I did not know that? |
4005 | You have come here to talk to me? |
4005 | You have seen this Leah-- would it be better to bribe or frighten her? |
4005 | You mean Miss Sheldon has to work too? |
4005 | You mean about your marriage? |
4005 | You mean that he told you that your husband was dead? |
4005 | You mean to go to the station? |
4005 | You really care for him? |
4005 | You say every one knows about it? |
4005 | You shall go in a moment, dear; but just tell me one thing-- did Mr. Herrick ask you to be his wife? |
4005 | You surely do not wish him to marry her? |
4005 | You think not? |
4005 | Young, do you call her? 4005 Your court has deserted you, Miss Jacobi?" |
4005 | ''Dinah,''he said--''you will let me call you Dinah now? |
4005 | Ah, just so, was not Cedric endorsing his thought at this very moment? |
4005 | Am I right, Elizabeth? |
4005 | Am I the same man? |
4005 | And now will you do me a favour"--turning to him--"when you write next to Mr. Templeton, will you give him a message from me?" |
4005 | And so you think you would like to take to farming-- eh, Cedric?" |
4005 | And then he added breathlessly,"Do you mean that you will give him up?" |
4005 | And then he continued in a perplexed tone,"How on earth did Cedric get hold of them?" |
4005 | And then-- shall I go on?" |
4005 | And this trouble-- could it be connected in any way with this mysterious Elizabeth, of whom he never spoke? |
4005 | And you call yourself a father, Caleb Martin? |
4005 | Are the fates propitious?" |
4005 | Are these things material to our covenant? |
4005 | Are those tears for yourself or me?" |
4005 | Are you sure I do n''t look rather blowsy, and like a milkmaid?" |
4005 | Are you sure he is quite happy, dear?" |
4005 | As Mr. Carlyon unlatched the gate, Cedric said in an audible aside--"It is not washing- day, is it, David? |
4005 | At least let me accompany you?" |
4005 | Betty?" |
4005 | But as Malcolm said no more, she observed presently--"I suppose you thought you could exorcise the nightmares by seeing the place again?" |
4005 | But now she was asking this sacrifice of him, and how was he to refuse her? |
4005 | But now what am I to do? |
4005 | But we were talking about Mr. Herrick, were we not?" |
4005 | But why must pleasant things come to an end?" |
4005 | By the bye, Malcolm, what have you two arranged for to- morrow?" |
4005 | By the bye, Mr. Herrick, did you know the Jacobis were staying a mile and a half from Fettercairn? |
4005 | By the bye, how long have you been in town?" |
4005 | By the bye, where is the Colonel?" |
4005 | By the bye,"turning to him with her customary quickness-- but Malcolm was just then studying the menu--"what do you think of this engagement?" |
4005 | CHAPTER II FALLEN AMONG THIEVES Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend? |
4005 | CHAPTER VII MORE ANCIENT HISTORY WITH VERITY Heart, are you great enough For a love that never tires? |
4005 | CHAPTER XXIX"SHE IS A WICKED WOMAN"Am I cold-- Ungrateful-- that for these most manifold High gifts, I render nothing back at all? |
4005 | CHAPTER XXXIX THE NEW CURATE- IN- CHARGE While I? |
4005 | CHAPTER XXXVII THE PARTING OF THE WAYS Shall I forget on this side of the grave? |
4005 | Can such prayers help? |
4005 | Can you not understand that I only cared for my money because it would be his, and now what good will it be to me? |
4005 | Carlyon?" |
4005 | Come, let me look at you, lady fair?" |
4005 | Could even a blinded Samson equal the pathos of such a picture?" |
4005 | Could you wait until the afternoon, Die?" |
4005 | Cowards run away, do they not? |
4005 | Did Elizabeth perceive the dark figure that glided in at the open window and settled itself so comfortably in the easy- chair? |
4005 | Did he really say those words, or did he whisper them inwardly? |
4005 | Did she not make an idol of her young brother? |
4005 | Did you ever see Mrs. Richardson, who lives in the red house on the road to Combe-- Sandy Hollow, I think they call it?" |
4005 | Do n''t you agree with me, Mr. Herrick, that there is too little sense of honour in these matters? |
4005 | Do n''t you hate parodies, Miss Templeton? |
4005 | Do n''t you know, darling-- don''t we both know-- that nothing really matters? |
4005 | Do n''t you remember Carmen Sylva''s charming description of youth and age? |
4005 | Do n''t you remember dear old dad''s speech? |
4005 | Do n''t you think one ought to do something to entertain one''s guests?" |
4005 | Do n''t you wonder Mr. Carlyon never thought of it?" |
4005 | Do you agree with me?" |
4005 | Do you know how long it has belonged to the Templetons?" |
4005 | Do you mean Dinah? |
4005 | Do you not think it would be a good thing if you and your sister were to take possession of them for a week or two? |
4005 | Do you remember that low gray house, with the rowan tree over the gate, just by Elizabeth''s Home of Rest, where little Kit died? |
4005 | Do you think I could bear you out of my sight?" |
4005 | Do you think we have not sufficient proof?" |
4005 | Do you think we ought to ask Theo and Mr. Carlyon to dinner, or would Mr. Herrick prefer just a family party?" |
4005 | Dryasdust?" |
4005 | Elizabeth, surely all these weeks you must have known that you were the one woman in the world for me?" |
4005 | Gyp Campion told me as a fact-- do you know Gyp? |
4005 | Had Leah Jacobi''s strange beauty ensnared him too? |
4005 | Had a name suddenly occurred to Dinah, for as she rose hastily a girlish blush came to her cheek? |
4005 | Have I not often warned you that if you go on like this you will turn him out a full- fledged tyrant? |
4005 | Have you anything particular to do?" |
4005 | Have you ever seen Keston''s''Leah and Rachel at the Well''?" |
4005 | He goes back with him to- night, does he not? |
4005 | He had kept away, banishing himself for all these months, and yet what good had it done him? |
4005 | He is a barrister, is n''t he, and literary, and all that sort of thing?" |
4005 | He is going to stay at Beechcroft-- is that not the name of the place they have taken for the season?" |
4005 | He is two- and- twenty, is he not? |
4005 | Herrick?" |
4005 | Herrick?" |
4005 | Herrick?" |
4005 | Herrick?" |
4005 | Herrick?" |
4005 | How can two walk together unless they are agreed?" |
4005 | How could any one hope to influence her, when she, poor soul, lived under a reign of terror? |
4005 | How could any woman bear to think of her boy standing at bay in that dreadful defile, to gain a few precious moments until help came? |
4005 | How could he compel this haughty and obstinate young woman to listen to him? |
4005 | How could he refuse to go when the vicar was waiting for him?" |
4005 | How did it happen, Betty? |
4005 | How many men of my age do you suppose would have yielded to you in the matter of a latch- key? |
4005 | I am right, am I not, Elizabeth?" |
4005 | I am to give you a straight tip, am I not? |
4005 | I dared not be guilty of such selfishness, for-- after all, what does a little more pain matter?" |
4005 | I have heard of thorns and briers? |
4005 | I once lost a good bit of money to him; but a burnt child dreads the fire-- eh, Colonel? |
4005 | I see you are dressed for the evening; are those poppies part of the toilette?" |
4005 | I suppose David-- we really must call him David between ourselves, Betty, to distinguish him-- I suppose he will have his father as usual in August?" |
4005 | I suppose we should have to send Miss Jacobi a card of invitation?" |
4005 | I suppose you are staying with Dr. Medcalf as usual?" |
4005 | I was rather in a fix, and was going to Victoria for one of those boy messengers; but you will do my business for me, like a good fellow? |
4005 | If I go away, you tell me my life will be prolonged-- do you mean for years?" |
4005 | If I may presume to ask the question, why will the Jacobis have to reckon with you?" |
4005 | If I take your advice and go to one of these places, may I expect to get well in time?" |
4005 | Is it by your own or Mr. Jacobi''s wish that the engagement is kept a secret?" |
4005 | Is it heresy, dear? |
4005 | Is it not lovely down here, Mr. Herrick? |
4005 | Is it only a friendship between those two, or is it something else on David Carlyon''s part? |
4005 | Is it true that you have been mad enough to engage yourself to the lady calling herself Miss Jacobi?" |
4005 | Is it your opinion,"turning to him,"that Saul Jacobi and his sister have any designs on my friend Cedric Templeton?" |
4005 | Is she the gentleman''s wife?" |
4005 | Is there any friend to whom I could take you?" |
4005 | Is this the solid earth on which I am walking?" |
4005 | It has really been very pleasant, do n''t you think so?" |
4005 | It is Telemachus and Mentor over again, is it not?" |
4005 | It is his hobby-- is it not, Dinah? |
4005 | It is not like me, is it, dear? |
4005 | Keston?" |
4005 | Keston?" |
4005 | Look here, could n''t you do a good turn for a chap and introduce me?" |
4005 | Malcolm assented to this, then he said slowly,"Has it ever struck you that there are no lines on Miss Templeton''s face? |
4005 | May I ask how you got your information?" |
4005 | May I have this bud for myself?" |
4005 | May I join your tea- party, Mr. Carlyon? |
4005 | May I take this comfortable chair?" |
4005 | May I tell you what I think?" |
4005 | Meanwhile Malcolm was saying to himself in his whimsical way,"It is my destiny-- is it not written in the book of fate? |
4005 | Miss Jacobi, how can you reconcile it to your conscience to injure that poor boy''s prospects by entering into a clandestine engagement with him?" |
4005 | Miss Jacobi, if you love this poor lad, how can you have the heart to ruin him? |
4005 | Mr. Herrick, are you fond of raspberries? |
4005 | Mr. Herrick, it is an absurd question, for Cedric is such a boy-- but is not Miss Jacobi likely to be the attraction? |
4005 | Now I wonder, if I were to give you a doll, what sort you would like?" |
4005 | Now what was there in this speech to cause such a curious revulsion in Malcolm''s mind? |
4005 | Now, why did Malcolm frown at this boyish speech, and drop the subject hastily? |
4005 | Of course you know Mrs. Richardson is dying, Malcolm, and that she is likely to be left alone in the world?" |
4005 | Oh heart, are you great enough for love? |
4005 | Oh please may I have a baby that shuts its eyes, and that I can love?" |
4005 | Oh, must you go?" |
4005 | Oh, why was the boy so like Elizabeth? |
4005 | Oh,"interrupting herself,"what am I thinking about? |
4005 | Only Elizabeth''s pleading voice was in his ears-"You will bear with him-- you will be patient with him, will you not?" |
4005 | Poor dear Cedric, how could he help loving her?--how could any man resist her?" |
4005 | Rossiter?" |
4005 | Shall I forget in peace of Paradise? |
4005 | Shall I tell you of what I was really thinking when you turned on me in that crushing manner? |
4005 | She is just the beautifullest thing I ever saw, ai n''t she, dad? |
4005 | She is so beautiful-- why is she still Miss Jacobi?" |
4005 | She is worth the rest of us put together, is she not, Davie?" |
4005 | Speak out, man; I suppose you do n''t intend to keep your engagement dark?" |
4005 | Suppose Cedric goes to Cheyne Walk?" |
4005 | Suppose''we beard the lion in his den;''in other words, look up Caleb Martin and my umbrella in Todmorden''s Lane?" |
4005 | Then in a lower voice,"It is a lovely evening-- will you do your lady''s mile?" |
4005 | Then she chanted merrily,"Oh, who will o''er the downs with me?" |
4005 | Then with a sudden change of tone--"Did you tell his sisters?" |
4005 | Things are going wrong somehow, or is it my fancy?" |
4005 | This Blanche-- shall we call her Blanche? |
4005 | This wonderful unknown Elizabeth-- had she refused him? |
4005 | Those were his words, were they not, Die?" |
4005 | Very well, Cedric dear, you will go over on your bicycle and leave the notes?" |
4005 | Was anything wrong with him? |
4005 | Was it likely that Cedric had told them that there was even such a place as Shepherd''s Hut? |
4005 | Was it mere good- humour and a wish to please, or had he any private reason of his own for desiring to break off this engagement? |
4005 | Was it not all peaceful and beautiful? |
4005 | Was it only his imagination, he wondered, that she seemed trying to keep him at a distance, as though she were afraid of him? |
4005 | Was it possible that the sisters had known all these weeks that Cedric had been thrown into daily and hourly contact with Leah Jacobi and her brother? |
4005 | Was she altogether reasonable on the subject? |
4005 | Was she conscious of his devotion? |
4005 | Was there not an element of truth under Elizabeth''s jokes? |
4005 | Was there some one else? |
4005 | Was this the reason, he wondered, why Elizabeth had looked so grave? |
4005 | We are mediaeval or in the Dark Ages, according to him, but how is one to alter one''s nature or to talk unknown languages? |
4005 | We have a debt to pay to her, have we not, Die? |
4005 | Well, Cedric,"with an amused look at his bored expression,"do you feel equal to the exertion of bicycling over to Rotherwood, or shall Johnson go?" |
4005 | Well, Dinah"--seating herself in a comfortable easy- chair beside her--"what do you think of our new friend?" |
4005 | Well, Elizabeth, you will do your best to make my boy hear reason? |
4005 | Well, Mr. Herrick, is that likely to suit Miss Sheldon?" |
4005 | Well, what of that; ca n''t I swim like a fish? |
4005 | Well,"struggling with his ill- humour,"what have you been doing with yourself since you left Staplegrove? |
4005 | What could be troubling her? |
4005 | What could it be? |
4005 | What could she mean? |
4005 | What did it matter on what subject they talked? |
4005 | What do you advise?" |
4005 | What do you mean?" |
4005 | What do you say to a mastership in a public school? |
4005 | What does it matter? |
4005 | What have you done with the girl who is to be my wife to- morrow?" |
4005 | What is the message you have for me from Miss Templeton?" |
4005 | What on earth do you mean?" |
4005 | What right have you to come between a man and his affianced wife? |
4005 | What was I saying? |
4005 | What was a small loan?" |
4005 | What was he to do with her? |
4005 | What would have become of her when she left the hospital if he had not cared for her and placed her with those kind people at the farm?" |
4005 | When I am alone, will you come down for a night? |
4005 | When did you come back to town?" |
4005 | Where could he take her? |
4005 | Who, seeking for himself alone, ever entered heaven? |
4005 | Why are you staying away in this unmannerly fashion, you naughty boy?" |
4005 | Why be visited by him at your own? |
4005 | Why could not Malcolm be always like that? |
4005 | Why did I ever speak to her? |
4005 | Why did he not tell them about Staplegrove? |
4005 | Why did not Dinah come to her assistance and say some word of grateful acknowledgment? |
4005 | Why did they ask this of him? |
4005 | Why did you not tell us you were coming?" |
4005 | Why do n''t you congratulate me, Herrick,"exclaimed the lad excitedly,"instead of badgering and cross- examining me like an Old Bailey witness? |
4005 | Why do n''t you put her in her cot and order her to go to sleep, instead of crooning absurd ditties over her? |
4005 | Why do n''t you put her up at''The Plough''and let her have a feed and a rub down?" |
4005 | Why do you call your fiancee Miss Jacobi?" |
4005 | Why do you not come down to the Manor House for a quiet Sunday?" |
4005 | Why go to his house, or know his mother and brother and sisters? |
4005 | Why had Saul Jacobi gone down to Oxford-- on what new mischief was he bent? |
4005 | Why had his womankind such sharp eyes? |
4005 | Why impotent, in the name of all that is rational?" |
4005 | Why is your heart to be empty and your arms unfilled because our precious boy is in paradise? |
4005 | Why should I come here to be treated as you have treated me to- day? |
4005 | Why should another life be spoiled? |
4005 | Why should you doom him as well as yourself to loneliness? |
4005 | Why was Anna''s life so dull, and his so full of interest? |
4005 | Will you bring Miss Sheldon into the studio, Mr. Herrick? |
4005 | Will you give it to him?" |
4005 | Will you go with me to Rotherwood to- morrow? |
4005 | Will you listen to me a moment?" |
4005 | Will you ring for Nurse Gibbon, Elizabeth?" |
4005 | Will you show Mr. Herrick his room?" |
4005 | Will you stop and play with me?'' |
4005 | Will you tell him this?" |
4005 | Will you tell me all you can about the Jacobis?" |
4005 | Would it not be a good plan,"turning to her brother,"for you to go over to the White Cottage on your bicycle and ask Mr. Carlyon to make the fourth? |
4005 | Would not Caleb Martin like to come too? |
4005 | Would you care to come with us?" |
4005 | Would you have me suppress the truth or tell you a lie? |
4005 | Would you like me to tell you what he said as well as I can remember his words?" |
4005 | You and I understand each other-- don''t we, Davie?" |
4005 | You are getting better, are you not?" |
4005 | You are going back to town this evening, are you not, because you expect that Cedric will come to Cheyne Walk?" |
4005 | You can trust your old friend Amias, can you not?" |
4005 | You heard from Douglas Fraser this morning, did you not?" |
4005 | You know how she meant it?" |
4005 | You know we saw Cedric when he was staying at Fettercairn?" |
4005 | You look rather seedy and a bit pale about the gills-- do you and the giant smoke too much?" |
4005 | You tell me that she and Mrs. Richardson return to Sandy Hollow early in June?" |
4005 | You want me you say-- does that mean you are beginning to care for me?" |
4005 | You will be careful, will you not, Die?" |
4005 | You will bear with him-- you will be patient, will you not?" |
4005 | You will believe this?" |
4005 | You will dine with us, of course?" |
4005 | You will go to- morrow, then?" |
4005 | You will let me know how things go on,"addressing Dinah,"and if there be anything I can do for you?" |
4005 | You will not think me too critical in saying all this?" |
4005 | Your head aches, does it not?" |
4005 | as he caught sight of Malcolm''s face,"do you mean that you have ever been in love?" |
4005 | could this be the Verity that Malcolm had eulogised with such enthusiasm-- this little brown girl who was regarding her so gravely and fixedly? |
4005 | cried Theo rather pettishly;"do you know, you have added up all those figures wrongly?" |
4005 | his expression seemed to say--"is he not your brother, and am I not your devoted and humble servant?" |
4005 | in a defiant voice,"or do you wish to drive me crazy? |
4005 | returned Elizabeth gently;"do n''t you know people take us at our own value? |
4005 | she asked--"Colonel Godfrey''s wife?" |
4005 | she cried more than once;"how could any woman refuse my dear Malcolm?" |
680 | Ah, who will ease my bitter pain? |
680 | Ah, who will stay these hungry tears, Or still the want of famished years, And crown with love my marriage- bed? |
680 | CORN- GRINDERS O LITTLE MOUSE, WHY DOST THOU CRY WHILE MERRY STARS LAUGH IN THE SKY? |
680 | Did I say dead? |
680 | Do you remember Pater''s phrase about Leonardo da Vinci,''curiosity and the desire of beauty''?" |
680 | Have I seen them? |
680 | How shall we reach the great, unknown Nirvana of thy Lotus- throne? |
680 | I wonder why these little things move me so deeply? |
680 | INDIAN WEAVERS Weavers, weaving at break of day, Why do you weave a garment so gay? |
680 | It is scarcely two months since I came back from the grave: is it worth while to be anything but radiantly glad? |
680 | King Feroz bent from his ebony seat:"Is thy least desire unfulfilled, O Sweet? |
680 | Love, must I dwell in the living dark? |
680 | MY DEAD DREAM Have you found me, at last, O my Dream? |
680 | Mother, O Mother, wherefore dost thou sleep? |
680 | O LITTLE BRIDE, WHY DOST THOU WEEP WITH ALL THE HAPPY WORLD ASLEEP? |
680 | O LITTLE DEER, WHY DOST THOU MOAN, HID IN THY FOREST- BOWER ALONE? |
680 | O king, thy kingdom who from thee can wrest? |
680 | Shall any foolish veil divide my longing from my bliss? |
680 | Shall any fragile curtain hide your beauty from my kiss? |
680 | Shall the blossom live when the tree is dead? |
680 | Shall the flesh survive when the soul is gone? |
680 | Shalt thou be vanquished, whose imperial feet Have shattered armies and stamped empires dead? |
680 | THE SNAKE- CHARMER Whither dost thou hide from the magic of my flute- call? |
680 | TO YOUTH O Youth, sweet comrade Youth, wouldst thou be gone? |
680 | VILLAGE- SONG Honey, child, honey, child, whither are you going? |
680 | Weavers, weaving at fall of night, Why do you weave a garment so bright? |
680 | Weavers, weaving solemn and still, What do you weave in the moonlight chill? |
680 | What hope shall we gather, what dreams shall we sow? |
680 | What peace, unravished of our ken, Annihilate from the world of men? |
680 | What though we toss at the fall of the sun where the hand of the sea- god drives? |
680 | What war is this of THEE and ME? |
680 | Whither dost thou loiter, by what murmuring hollows, Where oleanders scatter their ambrosial fire? |
680 | Who bade you arise from your darkness? |
680 | Who bade you awake from your sleep And track me beyond the cerulean foam of the deep? |
680 | Who shall prevent the subtle years, Or shield a woman''s eyes from tears? |
680 | Who shall unking thee, husband of a queen? |
680 | Why have you come hither? |
680 | Would it not be wonderful? |
680 | Would you cast your jewels all to the breezes blowing? |
680 | Would you grieve the lover who is riding forth to we d you? |
680 | Would you leave the mother who on golden grain has fed you? |
680 | Would you scare the white, nested, wild pigeons of joy from my eaves? |
680 | Would you tear from my lintels these sacred green garlands of leaves? |
680 | Would you touch and defile with dead fingers the robes of my priest? |
680 | Would you weave your dim moan with the chantings of love at my feast? |
680 | Your bridal robes are in the loom, silver and saffron glowing, Your bridal cakes are on the hearth: O whither are you going? |
680 | how can one deliberately renounce this coloured, unquiet, fiery human life of the earth?" |
680 | who will quiet my lament? |
61316 | A few more punitive expeditions like tonight''s-- an incendiary grenade was thrown at Kansannamura, did you know that, Lee? 61316 A nothing?" |
61316 | Are n''t you going to kiss her good night? |
61316 | Are you unique, Lee- san, that you must hide yourself? 61316 But how do I prove to the troopers that the monad sweeps Kansas cleaner than their Barracks floors?" |
61316 | Can you do it? |
61316 | Can you imagine what it must be like to be one of them? 61316 Could we stand against troopers?" |
61316 | Did you sure- enough volunteer for this duty? |
61316 | Dimples? |
61316 | Do the bodies of your buried fathers lie uncorrupted in their graves? |
61316 | Do you agree, sir, that I should place one squad in reserve till the rest get through the gully? |
61316 | Do you know, Lee- san, the greatest law of life? |
61316 | Do you live? |
61316 | Do you want me to go in and ask him to come out? |
61316 | Do you worship him? |
61316 | Does it not puzzle you that none of us harbors open sores, or coughs up phlegm, or dies of fever? |
61316 | Does n''t that annoy you, Lee? |
61316 | Does the rubble of your forest- floors never turn to mould, then? |
61316 | Going for a walk, sir? |
61316 | Have you tried to tap Piacentelli on his suit- receiver, Corporal? |
61316 | He gave you Scotch? |
61316 | Hear me out there, Miller? |
61316 | How badly torn must a safety- suit be, to make necessary the wearer''s going into the purification cart? |
61316 | How do we break into all those Stone Houses at once? |
61316 | If we are as much human as you,she said,"why does your Nef call us_ Hominids_? |
61316 | Is n''t this a bit extreme, sir? 61316 Just bamboo, is n''t it?" |
61316 | Lee, do you think one Stinkerville destroyed is too high a price for them to pay for having murdered two Axenite troopers? 61316 Lee, why was Piacentelli so anxious to pull this extra duty?" |
61316 | Me? 61316 Mix it up with a Stinker maiden? |
61316 | My father heard an_ hikoki_--how do you say? |
61316 | Proof? |
61316 | Shikata ga nai...._*****"Any sign of Piacentelli yet?" |
61316 | That our work''s fruit is to be enjoyed by shiploads of Stinkers? |
61316 | The colonel''s going out with us? |
61316 | Want to give me the word on this romp of yours? |
61316 | What about the Stinkers? |
61316 | What are they? |
61316 | What do you propose, sir? |
61316 | What do you think of tonight''s adventure, Lee? |
61316 | What happened, sir? |
61316 | What is that made of? |
61316 | What is your name? |
61316 | What now, Hartford? |
61316 | What sort of talk is that, Lieutenant? 61316 What will happen to them if we decide to axenize Kansas?" |
61316 | Where did you learn to speak Standard, Takeko? |
61316 | Where is she now? |
61316 | Where were you born, Lee? |
61316 | Who is it? |
61316 | Who is that? |
61316 | Who''s going outside with you? |
61316 | Why would they do such a terrible thing? |
61316 | Will this Decontamination-_kuruma_ house two thousand men? 61316 Would it be well for me to leave beside the torn and broken suit signs of a fight?" |
61316 | You all hear me? |
61316 | You do not enjoy my playing? |
61316 | You must use the official name for the Gooks, must n''t you? |
61316 | You''re a second or third- generation Axenite, then? |
61316 | _ Anata we dare desu ka?_she asked. |
61316 | _ Ano hito wa dare desu ka? |
61316 | _ Best platoon?_"THIRD PLATOON! |
61316 | _ Ne?_"I''ve been breathing contaminated air for twelve hours,Hartford said. |
61316 | _ So... ka?_white- bearded Togo exclaimed. |
61316 | _ What platoon?_Hartford called, his voice magnified by the bitcher till the whole column could hear him. |
61316 | _ Who are we?_Hartford chanted. |
61316 | _ Worst platoon?_Hartford asked. |
61316 | _ Yamamura wa koko kara toi desu ka?_Kiwa smiled, and rattled off an answer much too brisk for Hartford to catch. |
61316 | *****"How do you propose to do this jabbing?" |
61316 | *****"Want to run in the rain in your little bare skin?" |
61316 | Any questions?" |
61316 | Anything on the right flank?... |
61316 | Brandy?" |
61316 | But who will inherit those planets when we''ve finished our explorations? |
61316 | Can I, with you, stop the ugly thing that began last night in Kansannamura? |
61316 | Did bacteria impart that brisk taste? |
61316 | Do we indeed stink?" |
61316 | Do you understand, Takeko?" |
61316 | Do you wonder that they''d delight to make us as unwholesome as they are themselves?" |
61316 | Every inch of your skin a- crawl with living filth, your guts packed with foulness, your whole frame a compromise with rottenness? |
61316 | Foolish?" |
61316 | Hartford visited his Platoon Sergeant last:"Sergeant Felix, could you have our bunch standing on bug- dirt ten minutes after I blew the whistle? |
61316 | He practiced his question:"Is Yamamura far from here?" |
61316 | How can you hope to live if you will not kill?" |
61316 | How hot, he wondered, would the rounds packed into the butt of his Dardick- pistol have to get before they exploded? |
61316 | I was certain I would die when my safety- suit was torn: remember our meeting, Takeko- san? |
61316 | Is n''t that right, Lee?" |
61316 | Is that a name to give a brother?" |
61316 | Is there no law among the light- skinned people? |
61316 | Is this correct?" |
61316 | Lunch?" |
61316 | Okay, Pia?" |
61316 | Okay?" |
61316 | So desa ka?_"Hartford replied. |
61316 | Tell me, Takeko- san, do you Kansans know anything of the very, very small....""Microscopic?" |
61316 | The blabrigars, fluttering up from the roadway, chanted too:"Who are we? |
61316 | The chill of infection? |
61316 | Twenty?" |
61316 | Two hundred? |
61316 | What do you want me to do, sir?" |
61316 | What would happen to Hartford- the- deserter? |
61316 | What''s that you''re taking outside with you? |
61316 | When the old philosophers asked,''What is man?'' |
61316 | Where was he? |
61316 | Who will at the last till the fields of Kansas?" |
61316 | Who, we? |
61316 | Why did Paula Piacentelli seem to know why Pia was going outside tonight? |
61316 | Why did Paula kill herself?" |
61316 | Why did he take a microscope with him? |
61316 | Why did none of the natives lift a hand against us, though we were burning their homes? |
61316 | Why do you wish to kill us all?" |
61316 | Why is your Brotherhood so angry with us, Lee- san, who live in only a few places on a wide world? |
61316 | Why should you die?" |
61316 | Would he have done so if the Indigenous Hominids had him captive? |
61316 | Would n''t Paula love that, though? |
61316 | You are Hartford?" |
61316 | the night we get in?" |
39985 | O flies? 39985 ''A charming trio; and what part have I to play in the drama?'' 39985 ''A first- rate piece of work indeed; does the man live here?'' 39985 ''A hunt?'' 39985 ''A shame, is it? 39985 ''Am I to beg your pardon, dear?'' 39985 ''And George Keene''s memory?'' 39985 ''And George''s?'' 39985 ''And after?'' 39985 ''And for George Keene? 39985 ''And how much do you want to keep all this quiet?'' 39985 ''And poor old Dan down in the wilderness? 39985 ''And that, you say, was the face of your dream?'' 39985 ''And the girl?'' 39985 ''And then, dear? 39985 ''And what am I, potter- ji?'' 39985 ''And what good will such accursed idol- making do?'' 39985 ''And who was that who looked in on me from the door? 39985 ''And why should I not spoil you, Lewis? 39985 ''And you have known that he shot himself from the beginning?'' 39985 ''And you?'' 39985 ''And you?'' 39985 ''Angry?'' 39985 ''Are we not all tired? 39985 ''Are you afraid I wo n''t leave you any?'' 39985 ''Are you asleep, Dan? 39985 ''Art not angry with thy father, Azîz?'' 39985 ''At what hour will the Huzoor please to dine?'' 39985 ''But I shall be turning you out of house and home, sha n''t I?'' 39985 ''But if I do n''t say that sort of thing, what_ are_ we to talk about?'' 39985 ''But we might ride again, surely? 39985 ''But where are you going?'' 39985 ''But why did n''t you come at once and tell me?'' 39985 ''But why? 39985 ''But you could go into Rose''s sitting- room, of course,''protested the Colonel;''could n''t she, dear?'' 39985 ''Ca n''t I? 39985 ''Ca n''t wait any longer now, I''m afraid,''he replied, glad of the excuse;''just send one of your fellows up to my quarters with the pot, will you? 39985 ''Can I lend you anything peculiarly barbaric in the way of a knife?'' 39985 ''Did I ever mention the fright I had one morning? 39985 ''Did I not say the sand lay under all? 39985 ''Did I? 39985 ''Did he say how Mr. Keene liked it?'' 39985 ''Did n''t he, my dear?'' 39985 ''Did n''t you hear?'' 39985 ''Did you make that?'' 39985 ''Didst not give him beef- tea? 39985 ''Die of the potter''s thumb-- what potter?'' 39985 ''Do I not know? 39985 ''Do n''t see it?'' 39985 ''Do you feel out in the cold?'' 39985 ''Do you mean by force?'' 39985 ''Do you not? 39985 ''Do you really like it?'' 39985 ''Do you think I am not sorry too?'' 39985 ''Do you think I am quite blind?'' 39985 ''Does it? 39985 ''Does not all go well?'' 39985 ''Dost know aught? 39985 ''For Hodinuggur; where else?'' 39985 ''For the sake of the satin?'' 39985 ''From what? 39985 ''Fuzl Elâhi? 39985 ''George, what has that to do with the question? 39985 ''Gwen? 39985 ''Hast new to advise?'' 39985 ''Hast not played in the Mori gate, and bought sweetmeats of old Bishno, perched on my shoulder like any tame squirrel?'' 39985 ''Hath not the Potter power over the Clay?'' 39985 ''Have you been in long?'' 39985 ''Have you seen Mrs. Boynton? 39985 ''Have you settled what you are going to do?'' 39985 ''He wo n''t ask you to pay the bills, will he?'' 39985 ''How came he by the pot, I say? 39985 ''How can I tell if this be so; and if it be so, how can I tell what came? 39985 ''How could she?'' 39985 ''How dare you come here? 39985 ''How funny it is, is n''t it?'' 39985 ''How is it not fair on you, Gwen? 39985 ''How? 39985 ''Hullo, what''s that?'' 39985 ''I am not regenerate out of the old Adam, am I, potter- ji?'' 39985 ''I believe you mesmerise me,''she replied, trying to jest,''and forgetting bills does n''t help to pay them; does it, Dan?'' 39985 ''I could not marry a pauper; could I?'' 39985 ''I do n''t think I ever thought of it as a home before,''he said with an embarrassed laugh at his own words;''but wo n''t you come to breakfast? 39985 ''I suppose you would rather I did n''t kiss you?'' 39985 ''I suppose you-- I mean, she is safe, of course?'' 39985 ''I suppose your cousin is delighted?'' 39985 ''I wonder what on earth the Colonel will say?'' 39985 ''I wonder why? 39985 ''I''m Mrs. Boynton,''she went on;''you will have heard of me, I expect, from Rose?'' 39985 ''I? 39985 ''I? 39985 ''I?'' 39985 ''If I did, what then? 39985 ''If you did not, who did?'' 39985 ''Is it true? 39985 ''Is it? 39985 ''Is n''t it quaint up here?'' 39985 ''Is that a disease?'' 39985 ''Is that all?'' 39985 ''Is that better?'' 39985 ''Is that the mosque?'' 39985 ''Is that the thanks I get for warming a viper in my bosom? 39985 ''Is-- is he dead?'' 39985 ''Leaves? 39985 ''Mem sahiba see my thing? 39985 ''No mothers- in- law?'' 39985 ''No news of the pearls yet?'' 39985 ''No, no?'' 39985 ''Not kind, when I know what the best means? 39985 ''Now?'' 39985 ''Now?'' 39985 ''Oh, Gwen, my darling, if we were married you would forget to be afraid, as you did just now; did n''t you, Gwen?'' 39985 ''Only?'' 39985 ''Perhaps you can tell me whom it represents?'' 39985 ''Really, my dear Rose----''''Well, dear, why not? 39985 ''Right ahead-- there-- don''t you see?'' 39985 ''Save him from what?'' 39985 ''Shall I come, Huzoor?'' 39985 ''Shall I set them on thee and thine?'' 39985 ''Shall we not dance?'' 39985 ''She waltzes beautifully, does n''t she?'' 39985 ''Should I be responsible?'' 39985 ''So soon?'' 39985 ''So thou too hast been of the bazaar? 39985 ''So thou wouldst have killed me, thy best friend? 39985 ''So you listened to them again?'' 39985 ''So you''re the Keeper of the Key of the King''s conscience, are you? 39985 ''Start? 39985 ''Surely you make a difference-- surely there''s some excuse for me, dear? 39985 ''That is all, I think?'' 39985 ''The fire, and the fall?'' 39985 ''The potter''s thumb?'' 39985 ''The weather-- the news? 39985 ''Then there is truth in it? 39985 ''Then what did you think made him do it? 39985 ''Then you measure them, do you?'' 39985 ''Then you refuse to find out the truth? 39985 ''This-- or that?'' 39985 ''To bill and coo?'' 39985 ''Took it again then you were the thief-- is that it?'' 39985 ''Took it from you?'' 39985 ''Try what make you are, Gordon?'' 39985 ''We were very happy, were n''t we?'' 39985 ''Well, father, what is it?'' 39985 ''Well,''she said eagerly,''what news?'' 39985 ''What are you two discussing so eagerly?'' 39985 ''What care I for the girl? 39985 ''What do I care? 39985 ''What do you mean?'' 39985 ''What do you want, you fool?'' 39985 ''What else?'' 39985 ''What harm have you done?'' 39985 ''What has Keene sahib done that you can dare to threaten?'' 39985 ''What is he saying? 39985 ''What is it the song says, Gwen, about giving your hand where your heart can never be? 39985 ''What is it you want me to do?'' 39985 ''What is it, Gwen?'' 39985 ''What is it? 39985 ''What is it?'' 39985 ''What is the matter with your mother?'' 39985 ''What is the matter? 39985 ''What is the use of any one being devoted to you, Gwen, if you are going to marry Colonel Tweedie?'' 39985 ''What is to come of this foolishness?'' 39985 ''What on earth is delaying the breakfast?'' 39985 ''What put such a fancy into your head now?'' 39985 ''What right have you to do that?'' 39985 ''What then?'' 39985 ''What would people have said? 39985 ''What''s that?'' 39985 ''What? 39985 ''What_ is_ she saying?'' 39985 ''Where were you?'' 39985 ''Where? 39985 ''Wherefore not, Huzoor? 39985 ''Wherefore should I be afraid? 39985 ''Wherefore shouldest lose it? 39985 ''Wherefore? 39985 ''Which is it to be, Mirza sahib?'' 39985 ''Which scum of the bazaars?'' 39985 ''Who are you? 39985 ''Who is it?'' 39985 ''Who is that ill?'' 39985 ''Who knows?'' 39985 ''Who was that?'' 39985 ''Why are n''t you dancing?'' 39985 ''Why did n''t you tell the truth about it at first? 39985 ''Why did n''t you?'' 39985 ''Why did you send old Fuzli away?'' 39985 ''Why didst lie to me?'' 39985 ''Why didst say thou hadst sent it to her? 39985 ''Why didst send the Ayôdhya pot to her? 39985 ''Why didst thou not open the door, fool?'' 39985 ''Why do n''t you speak and shame them? 39985 ''Why does n''t it fly away?'' 39985 ''Why not say of the race, father?'' 39985 ''Why not? 39985 ''Why should I be angry with you? 39985 ''Why should I? 39985 ''Why should he come back?'' 39985 ''Why should you care? 39985 ''Why, Miss Tweedie? 39985 ''Why-- why should you go away?'' 39985 ''Why? 39985 ''Why?'' 39985 ''Why?'' 39985 ''Will you ask, or shall I?'' 39985 ''Will you take me to get a cup of coffee?'' 39985 ''Wondering what?'' 39985 ''Would he care? 39985 ''Would it soothe thee to talk of it?'' 39985 ''You are not frightened now, I hope?'' 39985 ''You are sure?'' 39985 ''You do n''t lump me in as the world, do you, Gwen?'' 39985 ''You have been betting against me, have n''t you, dear?'' 39985 ''You mean Azîzan, your daughter?'' 39985 ''You will own it was odd, wo n''t you?'' 39985 ''Your daughter is dead, potter- ji, how can I have seen her?'' 39985 ''_ Ai fool!_ Who cares for the water? 39985 ''_ Loved!_''was that what she meant? 39985 ''_ Proxime accessit_,''he went on, to Rose,''what crime in your past incarnation is responsible for your being bracketed with me in this?'' 39985 ''_ Shot himself!_ What do you mean? 39985 ''tis thou, Mohammed? 39985 A difference, is n''t there? 39985 A mere slip of a village girl; and yet was she of the village? 39985 A murmur from the hut? 39985 A slip of a girl with a fawn face tinted like a young gazelle''s? 39985 After all, it was true; what more was there to tell save the barest possibilities? 39985 After all, was it not a wife''s part to flatter and cajole? 39985 After all, what was there to say? 39985 After all, why should he not stop now, if only to see her gratitude? 39985 And Gwen? 39985 And I? 39985 And after all, what had happened? 39985 And as for the sluice? 39985 And could that be rain? 39985 And did not the master arise to health thereby? 39985 And have you ever thought, Gordon, what it must be like to look back over a lifetime, and see next to nothing that you would rather have left undone? 39985 And if I ca n''t keep the promise, am I not bound to take it back while I can? 39985 And if he did care, would she be glad or sorry for his pain?'' 39985 And if it were? 39985 And if the choice was necessary then, what was it now with her acquired habits, her knowledge of the world? 39985 And if this were so to men in the slack- water of life, what must it have been to Dan on the flood- tide of his threescore years and ten? 39985 And now would it really be her fault if any one had taken advantage of her absence? 39985 And she, I suppose, told you that I had stolen the pearls and the pot, and then taken it and a fresh bribe from poor George? 39985 And she? 39985 And she? 39985 And surely these virtues had a right to forgiveness? 39985 And then, in regard to the water itself? 39985 And then? 39985 And was he not right? 39985 And was there not cause enough here for a sudden loss of balance? 39985 And what care I? 39985 And what in either case did she intend to do? 39985 And why, if she would have him, should he not marry Mrs. Boynton? 39985 And why, in these pushing days when fat pigs like that Hindu made money, should they remain poverty- stricken? 39985 And, after all, what had she done? 39985 Are n''t the lotus lovely?'' 39985 Are n''t you coming?'' 39985 Are n''t you to be there as heir- presumptive?'' 39985 Are you coming with me to the Grahams, this afternoon, father?'' 39985 Are you going to allow his memory to be smirched?'' 39985 Are you thinking of the whisky bottle again? 39985 As for her? 39985 Azîzan, daughter of the potter''s daughter?'' 39985 Because I ca n''t even add up a column of figures without wondering what you will say now-- now when I ask you to marry me? 39985 Because he was dead? 39985 Boynton? 39985 Boynton?'' 39985 Boynton?'' 39985 Boynton?'' 39985 But for Dan? 39985 But how? 39985 But how? 39985 But now I have no answer when my father says:Where is thy little Azîzan?"'' |
39985 | But she? |
39985 | But there is something more, is there not, Gwen? |
39985 | But to what? |
39985 | But what''s that to do with it? |
39985 | But where could she have raised the money necessary to buy freedom? |
39985 | But where? |
39985 | But you? |
39985 | But, as I am awake, had n''t you better put it all down before the marmalade runs into the sardines? |
39985 | By the way, when did you get my wire?'' |
39985 | CHAPTER XVIII The last twelve hours before the advancing rains break over your particular portion of the fiery furnace!--who can describe them? |
39985 | Could a girl be expected, for ever and aye, to be on the outlook for such openings? |
39985 | Could it be a bribe? |
39985 | Could it be true? |
39985 | Could she----? |
39985 | Could the latter really be attracted by Rose? |
39985 | Cup what you call hog- wash, eh, Tweedie? |
39985 | Did I not say so?'' |
39985 | Did any one see it?'' |
39985 | Did it not come back in the end to the old ways, to the first principles? |
39985 | Did not his best man see that the idea was palpably absurd when life itself was a dream-- a dream that only came once to a fellow? |
39985 | Did not his servant tell me but now I had stinted them in wine? |
39985 | Did not the tent pitchers say he wandered as a madman among the pegs? |
39985 | Did she not deserve the best he could give her? |
39985 | Did she not want revenge? |
39985 | Did she tell you that? |
39985 | Did they not admire the room? |
39985 | Did you see me come to grief?'' |
39985 | Do I not know the trick? |
39985 | Do let me send you over some Elliman?'' |
39985 | Do n''t I see it?--who but the blind do not-- in everything? |
39985 | Do you know she never allows an ungentlemanly man to fall in love with her? |
39985 | Do you not see it is only what you are to me, not what I am to you? |
39985 | Do you remember saying that, Gordon?'' |
39985 | Do you remember, dear? |
39985 | Do you suppose I do n''t know what you are, Dan?'' |
39985 | Do you suspect him? |
39985 | Do you think_ monsieur le père_ will be very angry?'' |
39985 | Dost know him?'' |
39985 | Dost think it to be really the Flood of Destruction?'' |
39985 | Even if it did not, was it not wiser she should know the real truth about George Keene, and so be able to judge him fairly? |
39985 | Fitzgerald?'' |
39985 | Fitzgerald?'' |
39985 | For my sake you will, wo n''t you?'' |
39985 | For the sake of his friends alone, was not this desirable? |
39985 | For what loss of liberty is comparable to that entailed on the possessor of a fringe which will come out of curl, even with the damp of tears? |
39985 | For what? |
39985 | From Rajpore, seventy odd miles of sheer desert to the north, or from the south? |
39985 | Furthermore, what did the Huzoor mean to do about his breakfast? |
39985 | Fuzl Elâhi?'' |
39985 | God bless my soul, is n''t she with Rose?'' |
39985 | Good- bye, Miss Tweedie, till dinner- time, and-- you wo n''t forget about the watch, will you? |
39985 | Gordon looks pleasant, does n''t he?'' |
39985 | Gordon?'' |
39985 | Gordon?'' |
39985 | Gordon?'' |
39985 | Gwen!--are you there?'' |
39985 | Gwen, why should n''t you marry me to- morrow?'' |
39985 | Had he ever been so tired in all his life? |
39985 | Had he not begged her fifty times to ride in a more reserved and ladylike fashion? |
39985 | Had he not warned her a hundred times against sitting up to read? |
39985 | Had her passionate interest in him died down with his obedience to her orders? |
39985 | Had not one of her partners last night told her that he had left George playing poker at the Club but half an hour before? |
39985 | Had not the end of all things come to her already? |
39985 | Had not the flood come to end even his anxiety? |
39985 | Had she been dreaming? |
39985 | Had she not even defied Manohar Lâl? |
39985 | Had she not hitherto refused to listen to hints or threats? |
39985 | Had they found out her entanglement with Dan Fitzgerald? |
39985 | Had they killed him? |
39985 | Have you any idea how you got here?'' |
39985 | Have you never seen one?'' |
39985 | Have you seen it done, Fitzgerald?'' |
39985 | Have_ you_ seen her? |
39985 | He could scarcely think of her without it clasped in her thin hands; so silent-- yet all the time----? |
39985 | He had the pose; but should he ever succeed in painting the picture which rose before his mind''s eye? |
39985 | He lingered a moment as he rose, to add with a half shy, half happy smile,''Were you very much surprised, old man?'' |
39985 | He saw nothing but a blaze of light through the open gates of heaven showing him a woman, transfigured, glorified? |
39985 | He swore it was foul, Mrs. Boynton, and I thought I saw foul-- you believe that, eh, Gordon?'' |
39985 | He told himself that he would speak to the Secretary of the caretaker''s neglect; yet how would that be since he would never see him again? |
39985 | He was unhappy at losing her, and she? |
39985 | Her dress? |
39985 | Her mother? |
39985 | How came it that the English cub had seen Azîzan? |
39985 | How can I pay thee,''he whimpered,''when those low- caste white swindlers with whom I betted will not pay what I have won? |
39985 | How could I? |
39985 | How could it, when he had deliberately but savagely attacked the wisdom of his elders? |
39985 | How could they? |
39985 | How could you go to a girl like that and ask her to marry you straight off? |
39985 | How dare he send it to her, mixing her up, as it were, in such a discreditable affair? |
39985 | How on earth had she come there? |
39985 | How, in fact, could you do anything without reference to the certainty that your unworthy self would form a part of perfection''s environment? |
39985 | I say, Gordon, do you think there is any chance of her being up still?'' |
39985 | I should not like that-- would you?'' |
39985 | I thought of going to see the woman myself----''''You did n''t go, I hope?'' |
39985 | I want Dalel-- where is he?'' |
39985 | I wonder how the dickens the old man got hold of them?'' |
39985 | If you ride on at a reasonable pace I''ll catch you up again in no time---- What was it he left in her_ dandy_?'' |
39985 | Is Bronzewing keen, Miss Tweedie?'' |
39985 | Is it anything else, Gwen?--anything in which I can help; or are you only feeling afraid of the future? |
39985 | Is it not enough?'' |
39985 | Is it so?'' |
39985 | Is n''t it that which makes me content to go on as I''m doing? |
39985 | Is n''t it time you were weighing- in or something of that sort? |
39985 | Is n''t that a long enough catalogue of ills? |
39985 | Is n''t that confidence enough for you?'' |
39985 | Is n''t that so, sir?'' |
39985 | Is not that right? |
39985 | Is that fair, Miss Tweedie?'' |
39985 | Is that your cloak?'' |
39985 | Is there to be payment?'' |
39985 | It should be,"How can I give my heart where my hand can never be?" |
39985 | It wo n''t bother you, will it?'' |
39985 | It would bring money to the treasury also, and before that consideration what mere personal whim could stand? |
39985 | It would have been better, as it turns out, if you had; but who can tell? |
39985 | It''s better, I hope? |
39985 | Jolly, Tweedie, ai n''t it?'' |
39985 | Keene sent me a message, did n''t he? |
39985 | Keene?'' |
39985 | Keene?'' |
39985 | Keene?'' |
39985 | Losing it? |
39985 | Mai Zainub, is it truth? |
39985 | May I tell him?'' |
39985 | Miss Tweedie had spoken to her father about it?'' |
39985 | Must it always be so when those you loved were lost? |
39985 | Of course it was incredible; and yet----? |
39985 | Of course there were the other keys and the new lock; but what need was there for hurry now? |
39985 | Oh, George, what shall I do? |
39985 | One would need to be omnipotent to carry out all one''s kindly impulses, would n''t one, Colonel Tweedie? |
39985 | Only, what is the use of talking about it just now? |
39985 | Or should she risk the life of a go- between in her old age, return to Delhi and amuse herself? |
39985 | Or was it hosts of Midian and tents of Ishmael? |
39985 | Or, if you''re pious, to take a sort of pride in pillorying yourself for a cross word or a tarradiddle? |
39985 | Reason? |
39985 | Rose Tweedie? |
39985 | Rough? |
39985 | Shall I open boxes, Huzoor?'' |
39985 | Shall I pay you?'' |
39985 | Shall I tell him the mem sahiba is going to eat the air in her carriage? |
39985 | Shall you be here on my return? |
39985 | She blushed as she went forward a step, asking,''What is it? |
39985 | She had had no letter; but of course Mr. Jackson would have mentioned it if there had been anything wrong with Charlie? |
39985 | She had seen dozens of men ride steeplechases before without a flutter at her heart: but now----''You bet? |
39985 | She? |
39985 | Should it be Chândni? |
39985 | Should it be Khush- hâl Beg in his swinging cradle? |
39985 | Should she keep it, or should she not? |
39985 | Should she risk it? |
39985 | Should she say anything of the scene burnt in on her memory, or should she not? |
39985 | So now when my fathers say,"Where is Azîzan?" |
39985 | So that was all? |
39985 | So why should you care when they invent a definite crime for you to commit? |
39985 | So, he fancies thee? |
39985 | So, the smith being absent over some work for the palace, why should he not be waited for even though the sun was setting red behind the heat- haze? |
39985 | Surely a woman might go and see her dressmaker sometimes and leave her_ dandy_ outside? |
39985 | Surely, something ailed the terminology of religion if these were Heathen, and certain Western folk in his father''s suburban parish were Christians? |
39985 | That will be next year, wo n''t it? |
39985 | The Ayôdhya pot? |
39985 | The Huzoor was right, said the man with a grin, it was the mem''s, and was it to have three or four pounds of grain? |
39985 | The crudeness, not to say rudeness, of her own words startled her into adding hastily,''For she is a good nurse; is n''t she, Mr. Gordon? |
39985 | The girl''s heart stood still an instant in that utmost fear which will come first-- was he_ dead_? |
39985 | Then what proof could any one have that she had kept, or even found the jewels? |
39985 | Then what wouldst say? |
39985 | Then would_ he_ feel so if he had to turn away from the mem? |
39985 | Then you are a Mohammedan?'' |
39985 | Then, if one came to think of it, did she not deserve some compensation for that loss of her dresses? |
39985 | There was a pause, before he said quietly,''Why not be quite frank, Gwen, and say he is in love with you still? |
39985 | There was sufficient foundation for an_ esclandre_, of course, but how would that help them? |
39985 | Thinkest thou I am a fool when I go to dance and sing in the women''s quarter? |
39985 | To save_ her_ from even a breath of scandal he was willing to bear the blame; but how could this be without also imperilling Dan''s future? |
39985 | To the ball? |
39985 | Was he not at me, even now, to get this pot for this mem, this woman?'' |
39985 | Was he really allowing Rose Tweedie''s open mistrust to bias him? |
39985 | Was it a dream? |
39985 | Was it blue after all, or did a gold shimmer suggest a pattern beneath the glaze? |
39985 | Was it her fault if the coolies slipped away to smoke their hookahs? |
39985 | Was it her fault if the dressmaker lived in a house close to the bazaar in full view of Manohar Lâl''s shop? |
39985 | Was it her fault that the key of the sluice was behind the cushions of the_ dandy_, and that Dalel Beg knew it was there? |
39985 | Was it not better to confess frankly that with all his faults Lewis Gordon interested her more than any one else in the world? |
39985 | Was it possible that he was sitting calmly listening to such a story from her lips and asking her to go on? |
39985 | Was n''t it rough that a man could not stop breathing for half- an- hour just to oblige a friend? |
39985 | Was not that enough to make any one unhappy who cared for him as she cared? |
39985 | Was not that enough, more than enough, to upset the balance? |
39985 | Was she contented that things should end as they had begun? |
39985 | Was she not telling the Huzoor the bare truth she knew to be true, and nothing else? |
39985 | Was she not the most beautiful, the most fascinating, the most perfect woman he had ever seen? |
39985 | Was that a fern hidden in the crevice of the yellowing rocks? |
39985 | Was that all? |
39985 | Was the other thing true also? |
39985 | Was the sahib dead? |
39985 | Well, Heaven help those who say good- bye to it without a solid reason, or have a sneaking intention of not really saying good- bye to it at all? |
39985 | What business had it there? |
39985 | What business had the thought of its pain to come so close to him? |
39985 | What care I? |
39985 | What chance can she have with the Confederation''s Waler? |
39985 | What chance would the child have to begin with, and then what good would it do? |
39985 | What city? |
39985 | What could induce you to think that?'' |
39985 | What did it really mean, that invocation used by so many millions? |
39985 | What did she know or care of Lewis Gordon''s heart? |
39985 | What did you believe?'' |
39985 | What did you think then-- before you knew anything about the death or the opening of the gates?'' |
39985 | What didst say? |
39985 | What do you mean? |
39985 | What do you mean?'' |
39985 | What do you want?'' |
39985 | What does Gordon say?'' |
39985 | What does she mean?'' |
39985 | What does that matter? |
39985 | What feeling could there be between a man and a woman save the one feeling? |
39985 | What good to talk when''tis settled? |
39985 | What had he ever been but a reckless, insubordinate, unsteady, loafing brute, who ought to have been kicked out of the service years ago? |
39985 | What had he ever done for any of them? |
39985 | What had she done? |
39985 | What had she said? |
39985 | What harm have I done to thee, Azîzan? |
39985 | What if he had lost his way in that hideous tangle? |
39985 | What is Ayôdhya?'' |
39985 | What is it that you want of me?'' |
39985 | What made you do it?'' |
39985 | What mischief had the woman been up to? |
39985 | What more could any one ask from one in her position? |
39985 | What news?'' |
39985 | What right, she asked herself fiercely, had she to hesitate? |
39985 | What shall it be-- money or jewels? |
39985 | What the dickens did the fellows mean by giving him a dinner? |
39985 | What then?'' |
39985 | What use in pointing out whether anger or regret came uppermost in the conglomerate of passion? |
39985 | What use is there in saying that he felt this, that he felt that? |
39985 | What use to deny it to me? |
39985 | What was that huddled up on the next step? |
39985 | What was that rising on the stillness of the night? |
39985 | What was the mystic jewel in the lotus? |
39985 | What was the use of lying to herself? |
39985 | What was there to quarrel about? |
39985 | What wonder if it became the motive power in life? |
39985 | What wonder that he was tired-- did any one in the wide world know or care how tired? |
39985 | What would you like best?'' |
39985 | What would your father say if he knew? |
39985 | What wouldest thou do?'' |
39985 | What''s the use of strength-- what''s even the use of brains nowadays except to make money? |
39985 | When are you going to marry Miss Tweedie?'' |
39985 | When is it a light matter to leave Paradise? |
39985 | When those white devils of women turn the place into a museum until every Parsee in the bazaar threatens to summon me to court?'' |
39985 | When will it be?'' |
39985 | When would he come through it again? |
39985 | Where did you get it?'' |
39985 | Where was the hurry? |
39985 | Where? |
39985 | Where?'' |
39985 | Wherefore else are there such as I?'' |
39985 | Wherefore, is it not the will of God, plainly, that thy man should find freedom? |
39985 | Wherefore? |
39985 | Wherefore?'' |
39985 | Wherefore?'' |
39985 | Which will give back the pearls and save him?'' |
39985 | Who can tell? |
39985 | Who could do that better than she? |
39985 | Who could help it, over that picture of home training so utterly unfit for one recipient, at least? |
39985 | Who could it be? |
39985 | Who does not know the opposite extremes of these two factions? |
39985 | Who knew? |
39985 | Who knows-- who can tell? |
39985 | Who wants thee and thy evil- smelling brute?'' |
39985 | Who was to say that the pot had not been stolen, jewels and all? |
39985 | Who would n''t be content with you, Gwen? |
39985 | Who, having once endured them, can need description as an aid to memory? |
39985 | Why ca n''t you stay now?'' |
39985 | Why did n''t you send some one else?'' |
39985 | Why did n''t you show it me before? |
39985 | Why did you? |
39985 | Why didst thou not choose, Azîzan?'' |
39985 | Why had George brought it up to Simla and never showed it to any one? |
39985 | Why had Rose set fire to the camp? |
39985 | Why had he not told the Colonel? |
39985 | Why had she charged Lewis? |
39985 | Why had she never thought of such a plan before? |
39985 | Why not he as well as another? |
39985 | Why should he be killed this time? |
39985 | Why should n''t you, dear? |
39985 | Why should she live in a fool''s paradise? |
39985 | Why should she not face the facts of life as well as he? |
39985 | Why should she? |
39985 | Why should the married women have all the chances? |
39985 | Why should you go down? |
39985 | Why should you not know the truth? |
39985 | Why then should they try to find out now, when it was all irrevocable, when no harm could come out of silence? |
39985 | Why wilt not be comforted, child? |
39985 | Why, indeed? |
39985 | Why, then, had he come? |
39985 | Why, when the pot was stolen, had he said nothing about the girl? |
39985 | Why? |
39985 | Why? |
39985 | Why? |
39985 | Will not the Huzoor come?'' |
39985 | Will you forgive me, and try and put up with me, Gwen?'' |
39985 | Will you show him?'' |
39985 | Wo n''t you take a chair-- the chair, perhaps I ought to say? |
39985 | Wo n''t you take it?'' |
39985 | Wonder how he managed it?'' |
39985 | Would it be fair for her to object? |
39985 | Would it send that pain into_ his_ heart? |
39985 | Would n''t she, sir?'' |
39985 | Would n''t you, sir?'' |
39985 | Would the light never come? |
39985 | Would wickedness never tire? |
39985 | Wouldst have me Dalelâh since thou art Dalel? |
39985 | Wouldst have the son come to thee with his mark on the breast? |
39985 | Yet how could she dismiss him, even for his food, until that money was repaid? |
39985 | Yet if there be no money in the treasury? |
39985 | Yet what else could she expect when her first thought had been one of gratitude for that offer of six thousand rupees in her pocket? |
39985 | Yet why should truth be supposed in one incident when causeless wicked lying was evident in all the others? |
39985 | Yet, after all, what did it matter? |
39985 | You are content to let this suspicion lie upon-- upon me and upon your cousin?'' |
39985 | You do n''t want anything more, do you?'' |
39985 | You may mix yourself up----''''Whose picture is it, I ask?'' |
39985 | You remember the potter''s measure? |
39985 | You think it was her ghost, perhaps; but did George paint the ghost?'' |
39985 | You will be at the Graham''s tennis, I suppose? |
39985 | You would have fainted, if it had n''t been for the whisky and water-- which, by the way, I stole from Gordon''s flask----''''You did n''t tell him?'' |
39985 | _ Ai, soor ke butcha kyon nahin sunté ho?_( Ah, son of a pig, why do n''t you listen?) |
39985 | _ Ai, soor ke butcha kyon nahin sunté ho?_( Ah, son of a pig, why do n''t you listen?) |
39985 | _ Ari bhai!_ is he dead, that he hath no fear? |
39985 | _ Remember, the tent rises at the word!_ Gordon, are you ready? |
39985 | and barley- water likewise? |
39985 | and have you been asking her for the truth also? |
39985 | and what good is our complicated system of procedure save to put power into the hands of the educated few who naturally clamour for more? |
39985 | and when it came, what would it reveal? |
39985 | art jealous? |
39985 | but I wonder what he would say if he knew what I know now?'' |
39985 | called a voice from the outer room,''have you seen my daughter?'' |
39985 | closer even than his own reason, his own sense of justice? |
39985 | cries the Major;''a foul? |
39985 | did I not wait till nigh three with champagne and devil- bone, yet he came not? |
39985 | do men send bullets through their hearts as Keene sahib did for no cause? |
39985 | do n''t we, Mr. Keene? |
39985 | do n''t you wonder I did n''t snore, considering I had been in the saddle for eight hours?'' |
39985 | do you mean that_ really_, Lewis?'' |
39985 | do you think you could prevail on them to give me another chance with the satin?'' |
39985 | go to blazes with your wife''s brother-- put the thing down there on the table, I tell you, and go-- go-- do you hear?'' |
39985 | he began in the same low tones,''it is n''t true-- how can it be true?'' |
39985 | he echoed,''that means silvery, does n''t it?'' |
39985 | he said gently, looking into her gracious eyes;''or will you believe that you have so spoilt me that I can not get on without the spoiler? |
39985 | he said rather brutally; yet what else was there to say with that glaring daylight shining down remorselessly on the squalid reality of the scene? |
39985 | how can you?'' |
39985 | how hath he seen a woman of our race?'' |
39985 | how often have I told you never to let these people come?'' |
39985 | how would he thread them? |
39985 | it is a pity, but one ought not to be----''''Ought not to be what?'' |
39985 | it''s Fate-- but when will it be, my dear? |
39985 | jealous of Chândni the courtesan? |
39985 | might they not be solid blocks of marble fastened by silver cords?'' |
39985 | more dead men waiting to be roused? |
39985 | my dear boy, and are n''t you sent to fight them all? |
39985 | my dear little girl-- what is the matter?'' |
39985 | oh, Rose, how can you ask? |
39985 | or losing her? |
39985 | she cared for him as she cared for no one else in the world, and was it not detestable to blush and deny the fact instead of being straightforward? |
39985 | she cried;''but why did n''t you ask me before?'' |
39985 | tell me, Keene, a young girl? |
39985 | that is better than having one with some one else, is n''t it?'' |
39985 | that large warm drop upon her hand, so large that it ran down between her fingers? |
39985 | that wreck of a man, with his head upon his breast? |
39985 | to make life soft and sweet? |
39985 | was that all? |
39985 | we want the_ oof_ ourself, do n''t we, Tricks? |
39985 | what am I to do with it? |
39985 | what business has it to put hydraulic pressure on us all?'' |
39985 | what can I do for you?'' |
39985 | what did it mean? |
39985 | what have I done that she should be going to marry me to- morrow?'' |
39985 | what is it?'' |
39985 | what is it?'' |
39985 | what is the use of talking? |
39985 | what mem?'' |
39985 | what of the pot?'' |
39985 | what shall I do?'' |
39985 | what''s that?'' |
39985 | where is he who gave the Huzoor meats fit for his rank? |
39985 | where?'' |
39985 | whither should I go? |
39985 | who cared? |
39985 | why did I do it? |
39985 | why did I do it?'' |
39985 | why did n''t you send that wire sooner, and save poor George from his needless death?'' |
39985 | why did you do it?'' |
39985 | why had he slept? |
39985 | why?'' |
39985 | wilt not leave me in peace?'' |
39985 | with eyes of light like potter''s?'' |
39985 | would he never come out? |
39985 | would he never come? |
39985 | you do n''t mean to say it was you I saw on the other bank? |
39985 | you will prevent it, wo n''t you? |
769 | Why does the hare fly from you? |
769 | You are not myself,returned Soshi;"how do you know that I do not know that the fishes are enjoying themselves?" |
769 | But, after all, what great doctrine is there which is easy to expound? |
769 | Change is the only Eternal,--why not as welcome Death as Life? |
769 | Do we not need the tea- room more than ever? |
769 | Have you not noticed that the wild flowers are becoming scarcer every year? |
769 | His friend spake to him thus:"You are not a fish; how do you know that the fishes are enjoying themselves?" |
769 | How could we live without them? |
769 | In our self- centered century, what inspiration do we offer them? |
769 | Is it not but an instinct derived from the days of slavery? |
769 | Is it not like asking the birds to sing and mate cooped up in cages? |
769 | Our standards of morality are begotten of the past needs of society, but is society to remain always the same? |
769 | Rob the Church of her accessories and what remains behind? |
769 | Tell me, will this be kindness? |
769 | The poets of the Decadence( when was not the world in decadence? |
769 | V. Art Appreciation Have you heard the Taoist tale of the Taming of the Harp? |
769 | We say that the present age possesses no art:--who is responsible for this? |
769 | What solace do they not bring to the bedside of the sick, what a light of bliss to the darkness of weary spirits? |
769 | What were the crimes you must have committed during your past incarnation to warrant such punishment in this? |
769 | When will the West understand, or try to understand, the East? |
769 | Where better than in a flower, sweet in its unconsciousness, fragrant because of its silence, can we image the unfolding of a virgin soul? |
769 | Where is Horaisan? |
769 | Whither do they all go, these flowers, when the revelry is over? |
769 | Who can contemplate a masterpiece without being awed by the immense vista of thought presented to our consideration? |
769 | Why do men and women like to advertise themselves so much? |
769 | Why not amuse yourselves at our expense? |
769 | Why not consecrate ourselves to the queen of the Camelias, and revel in the warm stream of sympathy that flows from her altar? |
769 | Why not destroy flowers if thereby we can evolve new forms ennobling the world idea? |
769 | Why not enter into their spirit, or, like Liehtse, ride upon the hurricane itself? |
769 | Why take the plants from their homes and ask them to bloom mid strange surroundings? |
769 | Why the display of family plates, reminding us of those who have dined and are dead? |
769 | Why these pictured victims of chase and sport, the elaborate carvings of fishes and fruit? |
769 | Why were the flowers born so beautiful and yet so hapless? |
769 | Would you not have preferred to have been killed at once when you were first captured? |
769 | You may laugh at us for having"too much tea,"but may we not suspect that you of the West have"no tea"in your constitution? |
8163 | For who is better able to direct my hesitation, or to instruct my ignorance? |
8163 | What, let me ask, is a man in and of himself?" |
8163 | While on her way to make the proposal, she met him in the street, and said,"La Fontaine, will you come and live in my house?" |
7336 | ''Tis very cleverly arranged, I say, But here''s a knob marked with the letter A; What is its use? |
7336 | A crown of earthly splendour might have enwreathed his brow, But could that weigh''gainst glory with which''tis radiant now? |
7336 | And do not youth and manhood Deserve a better fate, Than to be rashly sacrificed To jealous greed and hate? |
7336 | And seeing Harry still upon the ground, Cried, is there any danger at the gate? |
7336 | And should not all religion tend, To this all- glorious god- like end? |
7336 | And think ye mortals that a God so great Could be unmindful of our mortal state? |
7336 | And who shall say how many This noble woman led, To break their bonds asunder, Who were to priestcraft we d? |
7336 | Another awful error-- what a scrape I found myself within, and how escape? |
7336 | Are hearts thus drunk with life blood, And hands thus steeped in gore, Not calculated to become More brutal than before? |
7336 | Can all the so- called glory, That man to man can pay, Outweigh the dire inheritance Of this unhallowed fray? |
7336 | Could any sect or doctrine claim A higher, nobler, holier aim? |
7336 | Danger, what do you mean? |
7336 | For would not self- denial spring From such rich soil, and blessings bring, Which would provoke each one to be His brother''s helper ceaselessly? |
7336 | Good night, I cried; why, how is this; Things are then what they seem, And these sweet picture- paintings here Have not been all a dream? |
7336 | Hallo, that''s"open, Sesame,"I said, How is it done? |
7336 | Have ye e''er heard it echoed through the woods By birds and insects, mountain, streams and floods? |
7336 | I noticed as I hung up coat and hat, A sort of cage, and said to Hal, what''s that? |
7336 | I''d rush to Harry; ah, he''d heard the crash, And to my room now rushed with hurried dash; Why, what on earth''s the matter, quickly tell? |
7336 | I''m waiting to go down, will you be long? |
7336 | In a trance of enjoyment and pride; For were they not reaping the cherished reward Which to labour is never denied? |
7336 | Is Jane the pretty housemaid? |
7336 | Is there not on this isle some society formed To reward such brave deeds as this one? |
7336 | Mark, will you go? |
7336 | Now sable night droops kindly Into the arms of morn, Who comes to herald in the day And nature''s face adorn? |
7336 | Once moved by this Herculean power, What can not mortals dare? |
7336 | Set in the royalty of love, What can with it compare? |
7336 | Shall life to us be crowned with blessings sure, As noblest woman''s life, Harmonious''mid all strife, Or blurred with bestial appetites impure? |
7336 | Shall then our path o''er life''s uncertain way Be led by a true heart, Acting pure love''s kind part, Or by fierce guidance of a beast of prey? |
7336 | Should not all education be then based On this foundation and with it enlaced? |
7336 | The bare idea of my speaking so To that old lady was an awful blow; How could I meet her at the breakfast? |
7336 | Then, say, do man''s best efforts match the song Of that harmonious, grateful, fervent throng? |
7336 | There, shouted Harry, what d''ye think of that? |
7336 | Was it the trick of demons To lure them to the shore, And lead them on to ruin, As many had been before? |
7336 | What can be, cried the angel, The meaning of such strife, And how dare man thus rashly Trifle with human life? |
7336 | What should I do? |
7336 | What should I do? |
7336 | Where now is Heliopolis? |
7336 | Who could have thought that vows exchanged before the God of heaven, And pledged so solemnly, could be so soon, so rudely riven? |
7336 | Who has not treasured some poor faded flower? |
7336 | Who says that Scotland''s thistle is not fair? |
7336 | Why vex the world with differing creeds, Which meet not universal needs, Which sore perplex and lead the mind To separate, not link mankind? |
7336 | Would''st thou exchange the latter for all earth''s gaud and glare? |
7336 | ah, where Her sun- shrine, raised in classic beauty rare? |
7336 | at any rate You''re sure there''re no more wires or such like thing, No coils or batteries, no more bells to ring? |
7336 | here it is, this is the curtain slide; I passed within, when-- how shall I describe My woeful plight? |
7336 | how Sustain the anger of that rigid brow? |
7336 | what on earth was I to do? |
45518 | A back number, you mean? |
45518 | A real Japanese? |
45518 | About what, Jack? 45518 Afraid, you darlingest girl?" |
45518 | After the wistaria, what? |
45518 | All because of wicked me, do you reckon? 45518 An evening affair, is it?" |
45518 | And Kamakura? |
45518 | And all stood the journey well, I hope? |
45518 | And are the consequences liable to be disastrous? |
45518 | And can one buy things at them? |
45518 | And did you have a happy day? |
45518 | And do we climb that long flight? |
45518 | And does Buddha live here? |
45518 | And has he? |
45518 | And has she come back home? |
45518 | And have you been here long? |
45518 | And how long shall you be gone? |
45518 | And how she never looks at him at all? |
45518 | And is n''t the color beautiful? |
45518 | And the_ samurai_ class? |
45518 | And those white wisps upon the gratings of the doors? |
45518 | And we shall have the chance of seeing a veritable Japanese house? 45518 And what have you been doing?" |
45518 | And what in the world is a go- down? |
45518 | And what is that which looks like hair, there with the little knots of paper? |
45518 | And what were the_ ronin_? 45518 And when do you go?" |
45518 | And when may we expect that it will? |
45518 | And where is Kwannon- with- the- Horse''s- Head? |
45518 | And where is he now? |
45518 | And which do you like best? |
45518 | And which was the first festival you saw? |
45518 | And would we start soon? |
45518 | And you will be sorry? |
45518 | And you will be willing to go to a strange country with me? 45518 Are n''t they darling?" |
45518 | Are n''t they perfectly wonderful? |
45518 | Are n''t those wonderful groves of trees? |
45518 | Are n''t you glad we waited? 45518 Are n''t you going to stay for lunch?" |
45518 | Are n''t you tired? |
45518 | Are we not compassed about by a cloud of witnesses? |
45518 | Are you able to distinguish anything? |
45518 | Are you all very tired? |
45518 | Are you going, Jean? |
45518 | Are you really going to take him back with you? |
45518 | But are n''t you? |
45518 | But does n''t one enjoy a thing all the more after he has been deprived of it a while? 45518 But how did it come about? |
45518 | But what is there to do but write letters? 45518 But when you get back home what then?" |
45518 | But where would you fly? |
45518 | But why did you seek us in a perfectly strange wood- carver''s shop? |
45518 | But you will go with me, wo n''t you? |
45518 | Can I open it? |
45518 | Can you imagine that really sober, every- day people live in them? 45518 Carter, too?" |
45518 | Could any one feel anything else but reverence? |
45518 | Could n''t we come and stay a little while at either Kamakura or Enoshima, Aunt Helen? 45518 Could one ever imagine this was once a busy, restless city with magnificent buildings, temples and wonders of all kinds?" |
45518 | Dear me, all that distance? |
45518 | Dear me, is it so late? |
45518 | Dear me, is it time to go? 45518 Did n''t I hear some one say that the carp is the emblem of good luck as well as of strength and courage?" |
45518 | Did n''t we plan that out on that unforgettable day at Kamakura? |
45518 | Did you ever know such immovable gravity? |
45518 | Did you ever know such luck? |
45518 | Did you ever see such a strong family resemblance as they bear to one another? 45518 Did you expect to meet him at his aunt''s?" |
45518 | Did you have a good time, and did Mr. Harding come? |
45518 | Did you have a good time? |
45518 | Did you make any dreadful mistakes? |
45518 | Did you notice that old fellow actually prostrate himself? |
45518 | Did you see Aunt Helen when you all came in? 45518 Did you stop at Honolulu?" |
45518 | Do all the Japanese adopt the Shinto creed? |
45518 | Do n''t you think it is rather hard upon a mother to have two such announcements thrust upon her in one day? |
45518 | Do n''t you think this is a particularly good piece of carving? 45518 Do n''t you wish she would have a wedding while we are here so we could see how it is done?" |
45518 | Do you always have to take off your shoes before entering a temple? |
45518 | Do you hear that, Mary Lee? |
45518 | Do you hear that? |
45518 | Do you like Mr. Harding as much as you did at first? |
45518 | Do you mind my seeing Cart''s letter? |
45518 | Do you notice how little jewelry they wear? 45518 Do you realize that this is the Pacific and not our old friend, the Atlantic?" |
45518 | Do you really mean it? |
45518 | Do you really mean that it is all settled and that you never told me? |
45518 | Do you suppose I might make her a present? 45518 Do you suppose it is an earthquake?" |
45518 | Do you suppose she would like that? |
45518 | Do you think I will ever forget it? |
45518 | Do you think he is really ill, Nan? |
45518 | Do you think she would be happy married to Neal Harding? |
45518 | Do you think this is a typhoon? |
45518 | Do you think you will marry, Ko- yeda? |
45518 | Does Cart have anything to say about it? |
45518 | Does he know you are here? |
45518 | Does he play well? |
45518 | Does n''t it seem familiar? |
45518 | Does n''t it seem queer to be going the other way around? |
45518 | Eleanor Harding, who could have expected to meet you on the other side of the world? |
45518 | Even after having had a reinforcement of food? |
45518 | For me? |
45518 | For whom then? |
45518 | For yourself, did n''t you? 45518 From his ear?" |
45518 | Good- bye and write a fellow a word of cheer once in a while, wo n''t you? |
45518 | Hallo,cried Nan,"what in the world are you doing, Jo?" |
45518 | Has Cart been telling you anything? |
45518 | Have they any religious fitness? |
45518 | Have you taken it? |
45518 | He is? 45518 How big is Oahu?" |
45518 | How can I let you go? |
45518 | How can you say such cruel things? |
45518 | How could you in two days? |
45518 | How did you find out it was not the thing to do? |
45518 | How did you get here? 45518 How did you know?" |
45518 | How did you travel? |
45518 | How does one get to it? 45518 How long had you planned to stay?" |
45518 | How long is he going to be here? |
45518 | How many were there in the duomo at Florence? |
45518 | How on earth did you get here? |
45518 | How queer, how very queer, and what is that on the next stall? |
45518 | I am crazy to know, are n''t you? |
45518 | I am wildly excited, are n''t you, Aunt Helen? 45518 I came near getting into a bad scrape, did n''t I?" |
45518 | I see, and what do you suppose will happen now? |
45518 | I suppose you will think it is foolish, and of course I do n''t in the least believe in these queer religions, for who could? 45518 In time for the cherry blossoms, the lovely flowery Japanese spring and all that?" |
45518 | Is Mr. Montell going back from here? |
45518 | Is Mrs. Sannomiya abject? |
45518 | Is her brother going back from here? |
45518 | Is it Sakusa? |
45518 | Is it far? |
45518 | Is it the island Enoshima? |
45518 | Is it this evening? |
45518 | Is n''t he enormous? |
45518 | Is n''t he the cunningest ever? |
45518 | Is n''t it a gay sight? |
45518 | Is n''t it a queer little train? |
45518 | Is n''t it a sight? |
45518 | Is n''t it all entertaining and surprising? |
45518 | Is n''t it interesting? |
45518 | Is n''t it larks? |
45518 | Is n''t it so with most of the fruit here? |
45518 | Is n''t it the very epitome of all that is horrible and frightful? |
45518 | Is n''t it the weirdest sight? |
45518 | Is n''t that just like her? 45518 Is n''t this luck? |
45518 | Is there anything about calabashes? |
45518 | Is there much to see when you get there? |
45518 | Is this our picnic ground? |
45518 | Is this what they call a_ tori- i_? |
45518 | It could n''t be Carter, could it? |
45518 | It does look as if I were making a house to house search for you, does n''t it? 45518 It is a watering place, is n''t it?" |
45518 | It is really beautiful against the rich green, is n''t it? 45518 It isn''t-- it isn''t-- his old trouble, is it?" |
45518 | Japan? 45518 Just what class do the Sannomiyas belong to?" |
45518 | Just what do you mean by that remark? |
45518 | Just where is Myanoshita? |
45518 | Matter? 45518 May I see Mrs. Roberts''letter, Aunt Helen?" |
45518 | Must we? 45518 No, I do n''t care to, do you?" |
45518 | No, no, I do n''t mean I am afraid, I mean-- oh, what do I mean? |
45518 | Now, is n''t that just like you, Jack? |
45518 | Oh, Mary Lee, did she really? |
45518 | Oh, Mary Lee, do you really? |
45518 | Oh, Mary Lee, have I been twice a selfish pig? 45518 Oh, Nan, those square- sailed things are the junks, are n''t they? |
45518 | Oh, are there street- cars? |
45518 | Oh, bless me, who can count upon what happened before the deluge? 45518 Oh, dear, must we eat?" |
45518 | Oh, do you play the violin? |
45518 | Oh, is that what the pestle is for? 45518 Oh, look,"she cried,"are n''t they cunning?" |
45518 | Oh, where do those steps lead? |
45518 | Oh, will you? |
45518 | Oh, would n''t it be fine if there should happen to be one while we are in Honolulu? |
45518 | Philistine of Philistines, is n''t she, Miss Nan? |
45518 | Rita say anything of Rob Powell? |
45518 | See, Nan, is n''t he a darling? |
45518 | Shall I ask her? |
45518 | Shall we go inside? |
45518 | Shall we go up? |
45518 | Shall we have to eat anything that is set before us? |
45518 | Shall we see the flowers first? 45518 She has? |
45518 | So then it is settled, is it, that we go on to Kyoto? |
45518 | Stands, did I hear you say? |
45518 | Suppose you had been obliged to give him up to some one else, loving him as you did, would n''t it have been harder? |
45518 | The Shinto belief is the worship of ancestors, is n''t it? |
45518 | The paper says so? 45518 The whole family?" |
45518 | Then why did n''t she tell us? |
45518 | Then why under the sun did he march off with Jack to- day without a word with Nan? |
45518 | There are mountains, Nan, beautiful purple mountains, but it is rather sombre scenery, do n''t you think? |
45518 | They have flower festivals right along through the year, do n''t they? |
45518 | To share the doldrums? |
45518 | To take it from your friend''s brother? 45518 To where?" |
45518 | Was it only a year ago? 45518 Was it worth the hard trip?" |
45518 | Was it worth while going out to see the havoc? |
45518 | Was she very serious and-- and-- oh, you know,--overcome and all that? |
45518 | We are all going, are n''t we? |
45518 | We could n''t understand what she said, so what''s the use? |
45518 | Well, did you get it over? |
45518 | Well, how was it? |
45518 | Well, what do you make of it? |
45518 | Well,began Jack,"what did the mail bring you to- day?" |
45518 | Well,said Mrs. Craig,"are n''t you two pretty nearly ready to drop? |
45518 | Well,she exclaimed,"what do you make out of that?" |
45518 | Were you very intimate with her at college? |
45518 | What about Carter? |
45518 | What about Rob Powell? |
45518 | What about mother and the twinnies? |
45518 | What about you, Mary Lee? |
45518 | What are they? |
45518 | What are they? |
45518 | What did mother say to you, Nan? |
45518 | What did you have to eat? |
45518 | What did you tell him? |
45518 | What do the maids do? |
45518 | What do you mean? |
45518 | What do you say to Japan? |
45518 | What do you say, Nan? |
45518 | What do you think Mr. Harding asked me the other day? |
45518 | What else did you see? |
45518 | What for? |
45518 | What has that to do with the robes? |
45518 | What have you seen? |
45518 | What in the world are these? |
45518 | What in the world are they jabbering about? |
45518 | What in the world would you do with him? |
45518 | What is at Susaki, or whatever the name is? |
45518 | What is he doing here? |
45518 | What is inside the temple? |
45518 | What is its particular vanity? |
45518 | What is the matter? |
45518 | What is the matter? |
45518 | What is the matter? |
45518 | What is the name of this street, for instance? |
45518 | What is the tower for? 45518 What is?" |
45518 | What kind of notions? |
45518 | What made her do it? |
45518 | What makes you do that? |
45518 | What on earth are you doing? |
45518 | What special form of enticement can you offer us? |
45518 | What special thing? |
45518 | What was the compact? |
45518 | What will be the next to come? |
45518 | What will you tell him? |
45518 | What would you have told him if he had asked? |
45518 | What''s the first thing on the carpet to- day, Aunt Helen? |
45518 | What''s the matter with Cart? |
45518 | When Carter and you are married? |
45518 | When you would n''t even look at me? |
45518 | Where are his parents? |
45518 | Where are the others and what are you doing here all alone? |
45518 | Where are your presents? |
45518 | Where could that happen but in Japan? |
45518 | Where does it end? |
45518 | Where is that dear old Nan? |
45518 | Where is your kitchen? |
45518 | Where that huge statue of Buddha is, the one that is called the Dai Butsu? 45518 Where?" |
45518 | Which are considered the nicest? |
45518 | While they were adopting a costume, could n''t some civilized person have suggested something more artistic? 45518 Who do you think has come?" |
45518 | Who is next? |
45518 | Who is the man? |
45518 | Who wants to pick up shells in the pouring rain? |
45518 | Who wrote last, you or Rob? |
45518 | Who, the coolie? |
45518 | Why did n''t the whole family come, as long as you were about it? |
45518 | Why did n''t you come, Nan? |
45518 | Why did n''t you show me his letter, Nan? |
45518 | Why did you tell him that? |
45518 | Why do n''t you all fall upon Nan? 45518 Why do those women all wear those awful Mother Hubbard looking frocks?" |
45518 | Why do you ask, Nan? |
45518 | Why is it called the Feast of the Lanterns? |
45518 | Why nonsense? 45518 Why not come along and flock with Nell? |
45518 | Why not meet right here? |
45518 | Why not? 45518 Why not? |
45518 | Why not? |
45518 | Why should you think that? |
45518 | Why would n''t you? |
45518 | Why''poor''? |
45518 | Why, my child, what in the world are you doing over in this part of the city dressed like that, when you do n''t know the language? |
45518 | Why, you old fraud, the fact was written on your face on that very day of our wild trip to Sakusa, was n''t it, Mary Lee? |
45518 | Why? |
45518 | Will it break the charm? |
45518 | Will you look? |
45518 | Will you please tell me where I can get a_ jinrikisha_? |
45518 | Will you? |
45518 | With all this powder and rouge on my face? |
45518 | Would n''t it be fun to have a real Japanese party when we get back? |
45518 | Would n''t you rather the mystery would unfold itself? |
45518 | Yes? |
45518 | You are not going to desert us, Aunt Helen? |
45518 | You do n''t happen to have any one else back there, do you? |
45518 | You do n''t think then that it is Rob Powell whom Nan likes? |
45518 | You heard me? 45518 You mean?" |
45518 | You remember her, Nan? 45518 You will like to see?" |
45518 | You will not forget, sweetheart? |
45518 | You wo n''t say anything to Eleanor, will you? |
45518 | All of us?" |
45518 | And how high is it? |
45518 | Are n''t the woods delightful after the heat of the city, and are n''t we fortunate not to have rain? |
45518 | Are n''t you glad we are all girls, mother? |
45518 | Are you glad, Nan, you old dear?" |
45518 | Are you really going to Japan?" |
45518 | Are you really in earnest, Nan, and do you think your mother and aunt would consent to let me hang on to your skirts?" |
45518 | Aunt Helen is not ill, is she?" |
45518 | But is n''t this a jolly stunt you are doing?" |
45518 | Chicken salad, is that? |
45518 | Dear me, why did n''t I come to Japan before I left college? |
45518 | Did Mr. Harding ask if you were engaged?" |
45518 | Did she say what we were to do to- morrow?" |
45518 | Did the colonel read you the inscription at the gateway? |
45518 | Did you ever hear anything so dreadful as that singing, for instance?" |
45518 | Did you ever see so many little children and so many poor little youngsters with babies on their backs? |
45518 | Did you ever think dear old Nan would be so far gone?" |
45518 | Did you know that there was once a doll so human that it ran out of a house which had caught on fire?" |
45518 | Did you stop to see the Robertses?" |
45518 | Do n''t you know we are always hearing that tale of the''Forty- seven Ronin''?" |
45518 | Do n''t you like Mrs. Craig, Aunt Helen? |
45518 | Do n''t you think he is nice, Nan?" |
45518 | Do n''t you think that in the countries where there are coins of such small denominations one can always find cheaper things than at home? |
45518 | Do n''t you think we might take a day for Enoshima, Aunt Helen, just one day before we go? |
45518 | Do you know how far it is, Nan?" |
45518 | Do you know what I thought when I first caught sight of you, Nan? |
45518 | Do you remember how Jack always used to feel aggrieved, when she was little, because she and Jean had to celebrate their birthday on the same day? |
45518 | Do you suppose I would be so sure if it were not all settled?" |
45518 | Do you suppose by any accident that she has gone off in this way because she is jealous of Jack, is miffed because Neal did n''t come back with us?" |
45518 | Do you suppose he will want to? |
45518 | Does n''t it express all the peace and the calm you ever dreamed of as existing in Nirvana? |
45518 | Does n''t it seem like the very spirit of a mountain wrapped in this pale, misty evening light? |
45518 | Does n''t she write to you, Carter?" |
45518 | Does the last kitchen queen prove as unworthy to be crowned as her predecessors were?" |
45518 | Had he not already learned to prefer Jack? |
45518 | Has any one mentioned that we were going?" |
45518 | Have you all had dinner? |
45518 | Have you noticed how Neal watches Nan when he thinks no one is looking?" |
45518 | Have you quarreled with Carter?" |
45518 | Have you seen her three temples and the Dragon Cave?" |
45518 | He attracts her and I think she would attract him if----""If what?" |
45518 | How did you leave the twinnies?" |
45518 | How do we get there?" |
45518 | How many are going? |
45518 | How many are in the family and did you see them all, and what were they like?" |
45518 | I get struck bally west by the blues myself once in a while and then----""What do you do?" |
45518 | I have much more of a sensation, have n''t you, Aunt Helen?" |
45518 | I said,''Why this unusual effusiveness, my dear?'' |
45518 | I used to think it was on the Island of Hawaii, did n''t you, Mary Lee? |
45518 | I will come for you, shall I? |
45518 | I will take good care of him, and I will let you know if anything goes wrong? |
45518 | Is everything ready, Neal? |
45518 | Is he?" |
45518 | Is it far to the temple of Kwannon and could n''t one walk?" |
45518 | Is it real food they offer them? |
45518 | Is it true?" |
45518 | Is n''t it a pretty fashion?" |
45518 | Is n''t it fortunate that our steamer chairs happened to be next Mrs. Beaumont''s? |
45518 | Is n''t it funny?" |
45518 | Is n''t it great? |
45518 | Is n''t it just like the pictures with the straw- thatched houses? |
45518 | Is n''t it just the climax of our pleasure here, Mary Lee, to have mother and the girls? |
45518 | Is n''t it queer that no matter at what time of year a boy is born his birthday is celebrated on May fifth?" |
45518 | Is n''t that a nice tale? |
45518 | Is n''t this a gay and happy crowd? |
45518 | Is the chrysanthemum the very last flower festival of the year?" |
45518 | Is there a temple beyond?" |
45518 | Is there something to tell, then?" |
45518 | Is your aunt here in Yokohama?" |
45518 | Is your violin here, and ca n''t you play for us some time?" |
45518 | It is getting a trifle exciting, is n''t it?" |
45518 | It looks very gay, does n''t it? |
45518 | It seems good to be in the hills again, does n''t it? |
45518 | Just what did he mean by that? |
45518 | Like a flock of bright butterflies, is n''t it? |
45518 | Look at our runner, too; is n''t he a sight, with his queer hat and that straw thatch of a cloak to keep off the rain? |
45518 | Look at that fat old monstrosity; is n''t she a sight?" |
45518 | Mary Lee did not pursue the subject, but turned to Jean to ask,"Does Ko- yeda do anything about the house?" |
45518 | May I go with you? |
45518 | May I put my humble initials on it?" |
45518 | Montell?" |
45518 | Montell?" |
45518 | Mr. Harding interrupted these conjectures by repeating,"You do remember, do n''t you?" |
45518 | Mr. Harding took it in his hand, looked at it with a smile and handed it back saying,"Will you mind very much being lost again?" |
45518 | Nan did not reply to this but instead asked,"Did Jack say anything about Carter?" |
45518 | Nan suddenly came to a realizing sense that the show was over"Oh, is it time to go?" |
45518 | Nan, what do you think about it?" |
45518 | Neal Harding was a fine, clean- minded, unselfish man, missing him who could tell upon what unworthy object Jack might next set her fancy? |
45518 | No? |
45518 | Now then what shall we do?" |
45518 | Now what do you think we should make our next point?" |
45518 | Oh, dear, why did I come to this dreadful place?" |
45518 | Oh, those are cherry blossoms, are n''t they? |
45518 | Or does it make no difference to a vital spark where it is liberated?" |
45518 | Paul?" |
45518 | Shall it be said that we have both deserted her on a hopeless day like this?" |
45518 | Shall we go and sail a boat?" |
45518 | Shall we go up there and join them? |
45518 | Shall you ever forget it?" |
45518 | She ran to meet them exclaiming:"Why, where have you all been? |
45518 | She wondered if Jack really did like him so very much, and was n''t it disloyal to Carter to encourage Jack to smile on any one else? |
45518 | She would see Ko- yeda? |
45518 | She, who was so amusing, so perfectly at her ease, so young and joyous? |
45518 | Tell us, Nan, oh, honorable lady of the guide- book, what is it up to us to see?" |
45518 | That Jack is fond of Carter and that Nan is not pledged to any one?" |
45518 | Then in a lower voice and more seriously he asked,"Did she send me any message, Nan?" |
45518 | There is no bad news, is there?" |
45518 | They are baskets, are n''t they? |
45518 | They had been in bed some time when from Mary Lee came the question,"Do you ever hear from Rob Powell, Nan?" |
45518 | Vulgar wealth calls for ostentation and why should they retain simplicity? |
45518 | Was n''t she far- seeing? |
45518 | We are a great nation whose success is enviable and why not imitate us in all matters?" |
45518 | Wells?" |
45518 | Were you ever present when such a thing was done?" |
45518 | Were you going to buy some carvings?" |
45518 | What about the classes below the_ samurai_, the common people,''po''white trash''as it were?" |
45518 | What about yourself, Nell, my dear? |
45518 | What are the ceremonies?" |
45518 | What are they for?" |
45518 | What are we going to do to- morrow?" |
45518 | What are we to see first, colonel?" |
45518 | What became of you? |
45518 | What can I tell him? |
45518 | What could Nan do but consent? |
45518 | What did Carter think of that? |
45518 | What did you think of it, Nan?" |
45518 | What do you mean?" |
45518 | What do you say, girls?" |
45518 | What do you say?" |
45518 | What do you say?" |
45518 | What do you think of this brother, Nan?" |
45518 | What else is there? |
45518 | What is this Sakusa that you are so keen about?" |
45518 | What is your alluring project?" |
45518 | What shall we bring you, Jo?" |
45518 | What should be the matter?" |
45518 | What would Honolulu have been without Mrs. Beaumont? |
45518 | When did you come? |
45518 | When did you write to him last, Jack?" |
45518 | Where are you stopping?" |
45518 | Where are your checks and things? |
45518 | Where in the world are those two?" |
45518 | Where is the house?" |
45518 | Where were you?" |
45518 | Where will you get the boat?" |
45518 | Where''s a good place to find those, Neal?" |
45518 | Where?" |
45518 | Who but Jack would take such means of smoothing over unpleasant facts? |
45518 | Who but Japanese would ever think of building a red lacquer bridge? |
45518 | Who could tell when she would really fall in love? |
45518 | Who has asked her?" |
45518 | Who is so alone as in a crowd? |
45518 | Who would not prefer gay, merry Jack? |
45518 | Why have n''t you written?" |
45518 | Why not shark or whale or dolphin, for example?" |
45518 | Why not stop there over night, or at Kamakura? |
45518 | Why not? |
45518 | Why should n''t she be? |
45518 | Will she give you to me, Nan?" |
45518 | Will you allow me to present him to you?" |
45518 | Will you ask how much it is?" |
45518 | Will you believe it? |
45518 | Will you come with me?" |
45518 | Will you have to wait on your mother- in- law, then?" |
45518 | Will you tell me what we are expected to see?" |
45518 | Will you write an article on the subject? |
45518 | Wo n''t it be fine?" |
45518 | Woods?" |
45518 | Would he ever return? |
45518 | Would n''t he think it hard lines?" |
45518 | Would n''t it be fine if, at the end of a year, Neal and I could go back together and that he could then have an appointment not so far off?" |
45518 | Would you rather we took a hamper along or shall we depend upon a tea- house or inn or something like that?" |
45518 | You did love me yesterday and the day before, did n''t you, Nan?" |
45518 | You do n''t really think I shall never see Cart again, do you?" |
45518 | You do n''t suppose Jack has been putting notions in Neal''s head, do you?" |
45518 | You marry some of the day?" |
45518 | You will wait for me till I can feel I have something more than myself to offer?" |
45518 | [ Illustration:"IS IT TRUE?"] |
45518 | he said,"and will you tell me if I may put my name there too? |
45518 | or will you come for me?" |
45518 | whispered Nan to her aunt,"and do n''t you wish we had sentiment enough to do such things at home? |
38807 | And Samuel said to Saul, Why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up? |
38807 | And cried with a loud voice, and said, What have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou son of the most high God? 38807 And he asked him, What is thy name? |
38807 | And he said unto her, What form is he of? 38807 And the king said unto her, Be not afraid: for what sawest thou? |
38807 | And when the woman saw Samuel she cried with a loud voice: and the woman spake to Saul, saying, Why hast thou deceived me? 38807 But is employment always to be had?" |
38807 | But,says this gentleman,"Where do we get the idea of good and bad?" |
38807 | But,says this reverend doctor,"Whence comes this conception of space?" |
38807 | Can he that is himself or any one else say there is no possible relation between one and the other? |
38807 | Did you belong to the church? |
38807 | Did you love your wife and children? |
38807 | Did you take care of your wife and children? |
38807 | Did you try and make them happy? |
38807 | Did you try and make your neighbors happy? |
38807 | Love the whole world? |
38807 | Love your country? |
38807 | Never made anybody unhappy? |
38807 | Now,said Cosmas,"if the world is round, how could the people on the other side see the Lord when he comes?" |
38807 | Pay your debts? |
38807 | Then said the woman, Whom shall I bring up unto thee? 38807 Well, who is to judge?" |
38807 | What am I going to do with you? |
38807 | What were you hung for? |
38807 | Yes? |
38807 | and the love of God--how does he know there is any love in God? |
38807 | heed not the cries and tears of earth? |
38807 | * Col. Ingersoll filled McVickor''s Theatre again yesterday afternoon, when he answered the question"What Must We Do to Be Saved?" |
38807 | --_Judges xi._ Is there in the history of the world a sadder thing than this? |
38807 | A man goes to the day of judgment, and they cross- examine him, and they say to him:"Did you believe the Bible?" |
38807 | According to this account, what was the sun, or rather the earth, stopped for? |
38807 | After all, is it not of more importance to speak the absolute truth? |
38807 | After all, of what use is it to search for a creator? |
38807 | Again he asks:"If one is not responsible for his thought, why is any one blamed for thinking as he does?" |
38807 | Again: This reverend Doctor says:"Shall we say that all the love of the unseen world"--how does he know there is any love in the unseen world? |
38807 | All the sweet humanities of life were trodden beneath the brutal foot of creed; and what did God do? |
38807 | Allow me to use the language of the reverend gentleman:"Is there no remedy to correct such irregularities?" |
38807 | Am I bound in conscience and in good sense to accept it? |
38807 | Am I not accountable for the result of the mind given me, whether I yield to the debauch, or rise to the dignity of self- control? |
38807 | And Satan replied to him and said:"Why should he not be an excellent man-- you have given him everything he wants? |
38807 | And do you think any God would be satisfied with compulsory worship? |
38807 | And has not honest poverty the right to hold dishonest wealth in contempt, and will it not do it, whether it belongs to the same church or not? |
38807 | And if a man honestly decides that death is best-- best for him and others-- and acts upon the decision, why should he be blamed? |
38807 | And if, knowing this, you changed the stone into a man, would you not be a fiend? |
38807 | And right here it may be well enough to inquire: What is blasphemy? |
38807 | And so you really wonder why any man should be indignant at the idea that God upheld and sanctioned that beastliness called polygamy? |
38807 | And what can we think of a God who would accept such a sacrifice? |
38807 | And what did God do? |
38807 | And what is the crime or practice known as watering stock? |
38807 | And what is your idea of the sacred Scriptures? |
38807 | And what will churches do then? |
38807 | And why has man ever believed that his fellow- man was responsible for his thought? |
38807 | And why is it that they say it is not orthodox Christianity? |
38807 | And why should a man be proud of brain? |
38807 | And why? |
38807 | And would you make your world so as to provide for earthquakes and cyclones? |
38807 | And, to carry this idea clearly out, why should we be proud of anything? |
38807 | Another thing: Do you believe in the eternity of punishment? |
38807 | Any evidence that he hushed the storm any more than there is that the storm comes from the cave of à � olus? |
38807 | Any more evidence than that Venus rose from the foam of the ocean? |
38807 | Are Christian families so weak intellectually that they can not bear to hear the other side? |
38807 | Are not many of the contradictions in the Bible owing to mistranslations? |
38807 | Are the pillory and the whipping- post to be used to prevent an excess of thought in the county of New Castle? |
38807 | Are the principles taught by us superior to those of Confucius? |
38807 | Are the savages the agents of the good God? |
38807 | Are they the servants of the Infinite? |
38807 | Are we satisfied? |
38807 | Are we satisfied? |
38807 | Are you an orthodox Christian? |
38807 | Are you tender and charitable to me if you enter my house, my castle, and debauch my children from the faith that they have been taught? |
38807 | Be honest, would you provide for religious persecution? |
38807 | Billions of prayers have been uttered; has one been answered? |
38807 | But how is it possible to blaspheme a day? |
38807 | But what right have we to expect anything good of a man who believes in the eternal damnation of infants? |
38807 | But what was his grandfather? |
38807 | But why should any man deem it his duty or feel it a pleasure to say harsh and cruel things of the dead? |
38807 | But, Mr. Collyer, do you really think that a book with as many passages in favor of wrong as right, is inspired? |
38807 | But, after all, why should we expect charity in a church that believes in the dogma of eternal pain? |
38807 | Can Christianity afford to speak of war? |
38807 | Can God do nothing except to pronounce the sentence of eternal pain? |
38807 | Can any man tell what he is going to think to- morrow? |
38807 | Can any one conceive of anything more infamous? |
38807 | Can any one find in the literature of this world more frightful words ascribed even to a demon? |
38807 | Can anything be more debasing to the intellect of man than a belief in the astronomy of the Bible? |
38807 | Can anything be more pitiful-- more terrible? |
38807 | Can he cease to do evil in the eternal penitentiary? |
38807 | Can he say this and say it honestly? |
38807 | Can it be said that God intended that thousands should die of famine and that he, to accomplish his purpose, withheld the rain? |
38807 | Can it be said that people have cared for the wounded and dying only because they were orthodox? |
38807 | Can it be said that the church has been the friend of geology, or of any true philosophy? |
38807 | Can it be shown that any infidel has ever raised his voice against education? |
38807 | Can liberty go further than that? |
38807 | Can such a God be worthy of the worship of man? |
38807 | Can such an institution, with any propriety, be called a seat of learning? |
38807 | Can there be any impudence beyond this? |
38807 | Can there be found in the literature of free thought one line against the enlightenment of the human race? |
38807 | Can there be such a thing as mercy in eternal punishment? |
38807 | Can we say that he intended that thousands of innocent men should die in dungeons and on scaffolds? |
38807 | Can you conceive of force floating about attached to nothing? |
38807 | Can you conceive of force without matter? |
38807 | Can you imagine such a thing as matter without force? |
38807 | Can you possibly conceive of this? |
38807 | Colonel, have you noticed the criticisms made on your lectures by the_ Cincinnati Gazette_ and the_ Catholic Telegraph_? |
38807 | Could not an Egyptian, at that time have used the same arguments that Mr. Peters uses now, to prove that the religion of Egypt was divine? |
38807 | Could you help believing that story of Jonah? |
38807 | Could you help thinking as you did on this subject? |
38807 | DOES THE BIBLE DESCRIBE A GOD OF MERCY? |
38807 | DOES THE BIBLE SANCTION POLYGAMY AND CONCUBINAGE? |
38807 | DOES THE BIBLE TEACH MAN TO ENSLAVE HIS BROTHER? |
38807 | DOES THE BIBLE TEACH THE EXISTENCE OF THAT IMPOSSIBLE CRIME CALLED WITCHCRAFT? |
38807 | DOES THE BIBLE UPHOLD AND JUSTIFY POLITICAL TYRANNY? |
38807 | Did Dr. Plumb ever read Confucius? |
38807 | Did he ever hear of Auguste Comte, the great Frenchman? |
38807 | Did he ever hear of Descartes, of Laplace, of Spinoza? |
38807 | Did he ever read Epicurus, one of the greatest of the Greeks? |
38807 | Did he ever read Lao- tsze? |
38807 | Did that fact prove that the Egyptian religion was of divine origin? |
38807 | Did the Doctor ever read Zeno? |
38807 | Did the compassionate God create the cancer so that it might feed on the quiverering flesh of this victim? |
38807 | Did we have it before the war? |
38807 | Did you notice what the_ Catholic Telegraph_ said about your lecture being ungrammatical? |
38807 | Do n''t you think there are many worthy poor in this city who need material help?" |
38807 | Do you believe all the stories in the Bible? |
38807 | Do you believe in a personal devil? |
38807 | Do you believe in the inspiration of the Bible? |
38807 | Do you believe in the stories of the Bible, about Jael, and the sun standing still, and the walls falling at the blowing of horns? |
38807 | Do you believe that God upheld polygamy? |
38807 | Do you believe that God upheld slavery and polygamy? |
38807 | Do you believe that any suicides have been caused or encouraged by your declaration three years ago that suicide sometimes was justifiable? |
38807 | Do you believe that he ordered the killing of babes and the violation of maidens? |
38807 | Do you believe that such a law will prevent the frequency of suicides? |
38807 | Do you believe that the bodies of men and women become tenements for little imps and goblins and demons? |
38807 | Do you believe that the devil used to lead men and women astray? |
38807 | Do you believe the stories about devils that you find in the Old and New Testaments? |
38807 | Do you consider that nationality plays a part in these tragedies? |
38807 | Do you ever meet Christian people who try to convert you? |
38807 | Do you find in lecturing through the country that your ideas are generally received with favor? |
38807 | Do you mean to say that all the great living scientists regard the Cosmogony of Moses as a myth? |
38807 | Do you not regard such talk as"slang"? |
38807 | Do you really believe the Old Testament was inspired? |
38807 | Do you think any book inspired? |
38807 | Do you think that God upheld polygamy? |
38807 | Do you think that is thought? |
38807 | Do you think that what you have written about suicide has caused people to take their lives? |
38807 | Do you think the Old Testament true? |
38807 | Do you think the stories in the Bible exaggerated? |
38807 | Do you, then, advise suicide? |
38807 | Does God enjoy his agony? |
38807 | Does Mr. Hamlin believe in the existence of the devil? |
38807 | Does a god desire the homage of a coward? |
38807 | Does he know that any such place exists? |
38807 | Does he know where heaven is? |
38807 | Does he not know that even to- day the church slanders and maligns the foremost men? |
38807 | Does he not know that nearly every man who took a forward step was denounced by the church as a heretic and infidel? |
38807 | Does he not know that the church has in all ages persecuted the astronomers, the geologists, the logicians? |
38807 | Does he not perceive that had the savages passed the same kind of laws that now exist in Delaware, they could have prevented any change in belief? |
38807 | Does he really long for the adoration of a hypocrite? |
38807 | Does he think that the Presbyterians of Delaware are not only the best now, but that they will forever be the best that God can make? |
38807 | Does he wish for reputation? |
38807 | Does it not say it? |
38807 | Does it satisfy the craving hearts of the nineteenth century? |
38807 | Does n''t it? |
38807 | Does not reason take hold? |
38807 | Does not will power take hold? |
38807 | Does that fact absolutely prove that Zeus was the creator of heaven and earth? |
38807 | Does that prove that Vishnu was a God? |
38807 | Does the Bible uphold polygamy? |
38807 | Does the Doctor think that Christ could not see through the disguise? |
38807 | Does the Doctor think that the material progress of the world was caused by this passage:"Take no thought for the morrow"? |
38807 | Does the gentleman contend there had to be a revelation of God for us to conceive of a place where there is nothing? |
38807 | Does the gentleman imagine that true men and pure women can not differ with him? |
38807 | Does the reverend gentleman really believe that a man can steal without fear, without remorse? |
38807 | Does the reverend gentleman still think that it was the disguise of the devil that tempted Christ? |
38807 | Does the reverend gentleman think that Mr. Newgate made or could make himself comfortable in that way? |
38807 | Does this Judge think that Delaware is incapable of any improvement in a religious point of view? |
38807 | For seven years he did every act of kindness; again he came, and the voice said:"Who is there?" |
38807 | For the invention and use of instruments of torture? |
38807 | God was satisfied when his enemy was? |
38807 | Has free thought ever endeavored to hide or distort, a fact? |
38807 | Has he ever heard of Tyndall, of Huxley? |
38807 | Has he no right to defend himself? |
38807 | Has he read anything from Buddha? |
38807 | Has he read the dialogues between Arjuna and Krishna? |
38807 | Has he the right to render himself unconscious? |
38807 | Has it not always appealed to the senses-- to demonstration? |
38807 | Has not most of modern literature been produced in spite of the Bible? |
38807 | Has orthodoxy produced anything as generously beautiful as this? |
38807 | Has the county ever been troubled that way? |
38807 | Has the hand of help ever been reached from heaven? |
38807 | Has the orthodox religion produced a prayer like this? |
38807 | Has there been no advancement? |
38807 | Has this Judge ever had symptoms of any such disease? |
38807 | Have they ever touched the heart of the Infinite? |
38807 | Have you any idea what reason he had for attacking you? |
38807 | Have you ever met him? |
38807 | Have you ever read the story of Jephthah? |
38807 | Have you noticed what an excellent man he is?" |
38807 | Have you read Chief Justice Comegys''compliments to you before the Delaware grand jury? |
38807 | Have you read a report of it, and what have you to say? |
38807 | Have you read an article in the_ Western Watchman_, entitled"Suicide of Judge Normile"? |
38807 | Have you read the article in the Morning Advertiser entitled"Workers Starving"? |
38807 | Have you seen in the papers that many who have killed themselves have had on their persons some article of yours on suicide? |
38807 | Have you seen that Henry Bergh has introduced in the New York Legislature a bill providing for whipping as a punishment for wife- beating? |
38807 | Have your opinions been in any way modified since your first announcement of them? |
38807 | He says:"Where did you come from?" |
38807 | How about Spain and Portugal? |
38807 | How are you to know whether he thought a solitary thing that he said, or not? |
38807 | How can a Christian comfort the mother of a girl who has died without believing in Christ? |
38807 | How can a man in the flowing tide and noon of life destroy himself? |
38807 | How can any woman believe that this is the will of a most merciful God? |
38807 | How can any woman look other than with contempt upon such passages? |
38807 | How can he achieve what we call glory? |
38807 | How can he have what we call reputation? |
38807 | How can the Infinite be glorified? |
38807 | How could they publicly acknowledge the divinity of Christ? |
38807 | How could they talk back? |
38807 | How could we prove such a thing if it happened now? |
38807 | How dare he call the work of such a being"poor"? |
38807 | How did he dare to pit his little brain against the word of God? |
38807 | How did he get it? |
38807 | How did you get the first one? |
38807 | How do you account for chemistry? |
38807 | How do you account for the difference between the Christian and other modern civilizations? |
38807 | How do you account for the presence of the latter? |
38807 | How do you know but atoms have love and hatred? |
38807 | How do you know that a vine bursting into flower does not feel a thrill? |
38807 | How do you know that the vegetable does not enjoy growing, and that crystallization itself is not an expression of delight? |
38807 | How does Dr. Thomas know that he is not indebted to me for this year''s crops? |
38807 | How does he know that he is vindictive and sharp and shrewd and persevering? |
38807 | How does he know? |
38807 | How does the Doctor know that the devil has an organizing, imperial intellect? |
38807 | How is it possible for men of ordinary intellect, not only to endorse such ignorant falsehoods, but to malign those who do not? |
38807 | How is it possible for us to ascertain whether he is simply the mouthpiece of some other? |
38807 | How is it possible to blaspheme a day? |
38807 | How many errors do you suppose there are? |
38807 | How shall I characterize the spirit that could prompt the writing of such a sentence? |
38807 | How will this action of Delaware, in your opinion, affect the other States? |
38807 | How would it be possible to prove that the dead were raised? |
38807 | How would you convey moral instruction from youth up, and what kind of instruction would you give? |
38807 | Human beings, his children, were tracked through swamps by bloodhounds; and what did God do? |
38807 | I ask you, is it all that is demanded by the brain and heart of the nineteenth century? |
38807 | I believe that thoughtful people require some additional testimony in order to settle the question,"Does death end all?" |
38807 | I might ask: How do you account for the civilization of Egypt? |
38807 | I once delivered a lecture entitled"What must we do to be Saved?" |
38807 | I should judge, Colonel, that you are prejudiced against the State of Delaware? |
38807 | I understand, Colonel Ingersoll, that you have been indicted in the State of Delaware for the crime of blasphemy? |
38807 | IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT? |
38807 | IS AVARICE TRIUMPHANT? |
38807 | IS SUICIDE A SIN? |
38807 | IS SUICIDE A SIN? |
38807 | IS it possible to conceive of a more jealous, revengeful, changeable, unjust, unreasonable, cruel being than the Jehovah of the Hebrews? |
38807 | If Dr. Plumb wanted to answer me, why did he not take my argument instead of my motive? |
38807 | If God determines all births and deaths, of what use is medicine and why should doctors defy with pills and powders, the decrees of God? |
38807 | If God is a being of infinite wisdom and kindness, why does he make failures? |
38807 | If I could turn a piece of wood into a human being, and I knew that he would murder a man, who is the real murderer? |
38807 | If all I have said is nothing, if it is all idle and foolish, why do they take up the time of their fellow- men replying to me? |
38807 | If devils are only personifications of evil, how is it that these personifications of evil could hold arguments with Jesus Christ? |
38807 | If he allows injustice to prevail here, why will he not allow the same thing in the world to come? |
38807 | If he can be of no use to others-- if he is of no use to himself-- if he is a burden to others-- a curse to himself-- why should he remain? |
38807 | If he does, will he Have the goodness to say who created the devil? |
38807 | If he is going to put an end to him why did he start him? |
38807 | If so, what is your opinion of it? |
38807 | If suicide is sometimes justifiable, is not killing of born idiots and infants hopelessly handicapped at birth equally so? |
38807 | If the devil has an"imperial intellect,"why does he attempt the impossible? |
38807 | If there is any being with power to prevent it, why is crime permitted? |
38807 | If this is so, why not give the money back? |
38807 | If we were at the judgment seat to- night, and the Supreme Being, in our hearing, should ask a man:"Have you been a good man?" |
38807 | If you can absolutely control your thought, can you stop thinking? |
38807 | If you return benefits for injuries what do you propose for benefits? |
38807 | If you say six periods, instead of six days, what becomes of your Sabbath? |
38807 | If you think you can, what are you going to think to- morrow? |
38807 | If you, Mr. Kraeling, had the power to make a world, would you make an exact copy of this? |
38807 | If, then, this eternal being allows the good to suffer pain here, what right have we to say that he will not allow them to suffer forever? |
38807 | In order to be a moral nation must we be controlled by king or emperor? |
38807 | In other words, why should anybody be assisted, if assistance encourages carelessness, or idleness, or negligence? |
38807 | In other words, why should the son of God attempt to get glory out of the fact that he had in his veins the blood of a barbarian king? |
38807 | In short, has he ever heard of a man who took a step in advance of his time? |
38807 | In the first place, what have I said? |
38807 | In the nature of things, how could he have evidence? |
38807 | In this connection we might ask how God can be moral or good unless he believes in some Being superior to himself? |
38807 | In this connection we might ask how God can be moral or good unless he believes in some Being superior to himself? |
38807 | In this he was mistaken; and in the darkness of death, overwhelmed, he cried out:"Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
38807 | Is God thrilled by the music of his moans-- the melody of his shrieks? |
38807 | Is a man dishonest because he is a man and maintains the rights of men? |
38807 | Is a suicide necessarily a coward? |
38807 | Is a suicide necessarily insane? |
38807 | Is he a personal enemy of yours? |
38807 | Is he acquainted with John W. Draper, one of the leading minds of the world? |
38807 | Is he perfectly sure that an infinite God would be foolish enough to make people who needed a redeemer? |
38807 | Is he willing to abdicate? |
38807 | Is he willing to admit that his rights are not equal to the rights of others? |
38807 | Is he willing to admit that we have drifted so far from orthodox religion that the way to make money is to denounce Christianity? |
38807 | Is he, for the sake of what he calls morality, willing to become a serf, a servant or a slave? |
38807 | Is human liberty a mistake? |
38807 | Is it a consolation to us now? |
38807 | Is it because he was just? |
38807 | Is it because he was merciful? |
38807 | Is it because there is being written upon every orthodox brain a certificate of intellectual inferiority? |
38807 | Is it because they feel the sceptre slowly slipping from their hands? |
38807 | Is it even a consolation when those we love die? |
38807 | Is it in fault, is it responsible, for the picture? |
38807 | Is it mercy to punish a man with eternal fire simply because there is not testimony enough to satisfy his mind? |
38807 | Is it mercy to reward a man forever in consideration of believing a certain thing, of the truth of which there is, to his mind, ample testimony? |
38807 | Is it not a fact that America is to- day the best market in the world for books, for music, and for art? |
38807 | Is it not barely possible that something may be done in another world? |
38807 | Is it not blasphemous for a Boston minister to denounce the work of the Infinite and say to God that he made a"poor"world? |
38807 | Is it not manlier to tell the fact than to endeavor to convey comfort through falsehood? |
38807 | Is it not more reasonable to be proud of wealth which you have accumulated than of brain which nature gave you? |
38807 | Is it not perfectly plain from this story that charity was in the world before Christianity was established? |
38807 | Is it not true that where the church has cared for one orphan it has created hundreds? |
38807 | Is it not unworthy of so eloquent and intelligent a man to preach before you here to- night that thought must always be free? |
38807 | Is it possible for abject obedience to go beyond this? |
38807 | Is it possible for the Christian religion to put a smile upon the face of death? |
38807 | Is it possible that God can not write a book good enough and great enough and grand enough not to excite the laughter of his children? |
38807 | Is it possible that a citizen of the great Republic attacks the liberty of his fellow- citizens? |
38807 | Is it possible that a god wishes the worship of a slave? |
38807 | Is it possible that force could exist without matter or spirit? |
38807 | Is it possible that free institutions tend to the demoralization of men? |
38807 | Is it possible that he is compelled to have his literary reputation supported by the State of Delaware? |
38807 | Is it possible that he requires the worship of one who dare not think? |
38807 | Is it possible that infinite wisdom can do no more than is done for a majority of souls in this world? |
38807 | Is it possible that matter could exist alone, if by matter you mean something without force? |
38807 | Is it possible that the religion of this nineteenth century has for its basis such childish absurdities? |
38807 | Is it possible that"high character is impracticable"in this Republic? |
38807 | Is it possible to contemplate his character without hatred? |
38807 | Is it possible to read the words said to have been spoken by this Deity, without a shudder? |
38807 | Is it proper for him to take refuge in sleep? |
38807 | Is it the duty of this man to allow them to wrap his body in a garment of flame? |
38807 | Is it the result of impotent rage? |
38807 | Is it the soul in which the blossom of charity has never shed its perfume that makes life so desirable? |
38807 | Is it the soul without pity that makes life worth living? |
38807 | Is it the will of God that he die by torture? |
38807 | Is it true that the churches, as a general thing, make strong efforts, as I have seen it stated, to prevent people from going to hear you? |
38807 | Is it true that"intellectual achievement pays no dividends"? |
38807 | Is not this written in the book of Jasher? |
38807 | Is that a fair bargain? |
38807 | Is that the charity that you speak of? |
38807 | Is that the idea we now have of love? |
38807 | Is the Bible inspired? |
38807 | Is the Bible true? |
38807 | Is the man that takes poison rather than be tortured to death by savages or"Christians"a coward? |
38807 | Is the man who leaps into the sea rather than be burned a coward? |
38807 | Is the man who takes morphine rather than be eaten to death by a cancer a coward? |
38807 | Is there a Christian in the world who would not think vastly more of the Bible if all these infamous things were eliminated from it? |
38807 | Is there a sensible man in the world who believes this wretched piece of ignorance? |
38807 | Is there an orthodox minister in this town now who will stand up and say that an honest atheist can be saved? |
38807 | Is there any evidence that he raised the dead? |
38807 | Is there any evidence that this Being trod the sea? |
38807 | Is there any limitation beyond that? |
38807 | Is there any orthodox Christian creed without the devil in it? |
38807 | Is there any proper occasion on which to crow? |
38807 | Is there anything higher than human love? |
38807 | Is there anything in Christianity that will account for such persecutions-- for the Inquisition? |
38807 | Is there anything more spiritual than that-- anything higher? |
38807 | Is there anything more spiritual? |
38807 | Is there authority in the world of art? |
38807 | Is there nothing left for God to do for a poor, ignorant, criminal human soul after it leaves this world? |
38807 | Is there room for discussion? |
38807 | Is there to be no advancement? |
38807 | Is this a festival for God? |
38807 | Is this man under obligation to keep his life because God gave it, until the savages by torture take it? |
38807 | Is this passage applicable only to me? |
38807 | Is this the experience of the author of"Brutality and Avarice Triumphant"? |
38807 | Is this the work of the good God? |
38807 | Is this true of all? |
38807 | It certainly has not been the advocate of free thought; and what is freedom worth if the mind is to be enslaved? |
38807 | It is bad enough; so bad that I do not believe it was ever created by a beneficent deity; but what little good there is in it, why not have it? |
38807 | It may be said that year after year we get to understand it better, but if it is not understood when given, why is it called a"revelation"? |
38807 | John Hall and by Mr. Warner Van Norden, Treasurer of the"Church Extension Committee"? |
38807 | Knowing that all the consequences believed in by orthodox Christians would follow from that fall? |
38807 | Kraeling on Christ and the Devil-- Would he make a World like This? |
38807 | Letting the question as to hell hereafter rest for the present, how do you account for the hell here-- namely, the existence of pain? |
38807 | Little children die upon the withered breasts of mothers; and what does God do? |
38807 | Man has in all ages endeavored to answer the great questions Whence? |
38807 | Mr. Guard, of"some little dog barking at a railway train"? |
38807 | Mr. Hamlin have the goodness to answer this? |
38807 | Mr. O''Donaghue advise people to commit crimes in order that they may enjoy this life? |
38807 | Mr. O''Donaghue mean to say that if there is no future life it is wise to steal in this? |
38807 | Mr. O''Donaghue''s God allow a thief to live without fear, without remorse, to enjoy life immensely and to reach a mellow old age? |
38807 | Mr. O''Donaghue? |
38807 | Mr. Peters asks-- and probably honestly thinks that the questions are pertinent to the issues involved--"What has infidelity done for the world? |
38807 | Mr. Peters asks:"What name is there among the world''s emancipators after which you can not write the name''Christian?''" |
38807 | Mr. Peters, in his enthusiasm, asks this question:"Who raised our great institutions of learning? |
38807 | Must inspiration claim infallibility? |
38807 | No accountability? |
38807 | No, Could you help believing the Bible? |
38807 | Now stop-- turn right into your own minds-- is that thought? |
38807 | Now, I want to know what, according to the orthodox church, is done with that man? |
38807 | Now, are the angels referred to in the New Testament simply personifications of good, and are there no such personal existences? |
38807 | Now, did Christ mean that these dumb devils did not exist? |
38807 | Now, if he knew that billions upon billions would refuse to take the remedy, and consequently would suffer eternal pain, why create them? |
38807 | Now, is it possible that a spirit existed during an eternity without any force and without any matter? |
38807 | Now, is not that a fair logical analysis of what he has said? |
38807 | Now, the question is, do I attack a man of straw? |
38807 | Now, then, what is Christianity? |
38807 | Now, to him, it makes no difference whether I am sincere or insincere; the question is, Can my argument be answered? |
38807 | Now, to- day, right now, what is the church doing? |
38807 | Now, what is spirit? |
38807 | Now, where did this personification of evil come from? |
38807 | On the whole is the world made better or worse by suicides? |
38807 | Or is their case so weak that the slightest evidence overthrows it? |
38807 | Seventh--"And what death has infidelity ever cheered?" |
38807 | Should suicide be forbidden by law? |
38807 | Since the days of Zoroaster has there been any rule for human conduct given superior to this? |
38807 | So you think God corrected some of the worst abuses of polygamy, but preserved the institution itself? |
38807 | So, when a man has committed some awful crime, why should he stay and ruin his family and friends? |
38807 | Solemnity-- Charged with Being Insincere-- Irreverence-- Old Testament Better than the New--"Why Hurt our Feelings?" |
38807 | Spirit without force, a spirit without any matter-- what would that spirit do? |
38807 | State with what words you can comfort those who have, by their own fault, or by the fault of others, found this life not worth living? |
38807 | Suppose I could take a stone and in one moment change it into a sentient, hoping, loving human being, would I have the right to torture it? |
38807 | Suppose that Voltaire and Thomas Paine, and Volney and Hume and Hobbes had cried out when dying"My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
38807 | Suppose the Supreme Being then should say:"Were you ever baptized?" |
38807 | Suppose you could prove that the maker of the multiplication table held mathematics in contempt; what of it? |
38807 | Suppose you have an authority in music? |
38807 | Take away the senses, how would you think then? |
38807 | That he was to create Adam and Eve and put them in the Garden of Eden, and did he not know that this devil would tempt this Adam and Eve? |
38807 | That in consequence of that he himself would have to be born into this world as a Judean peasant? |
38807 | That in consequence of that he would have to drown all their descendants except eight? |
38807 | That in consequence of that they would fall? |
38807 | That they were only"personifications of evil"? |
38807 | The Lord was walking up and down, and happening to meet Satan, said to him:"Are you acquainted with my servant Job? |
38807 | The Parsee sect of Persia say: A Persian saint ascended the three stairs that lead to heaven''s gate, and knocked; a voice said:"Who is there?" |
38807 | The boys asked,"What for?" |
38807 | The first question, then, is: Has a man under any circumstances the right to kill himself? |
38807 | The great question is not, who died right, but who lived right? |
38807 | The man having died, what does the church say now? |
38807 | The ministers say, I believe, Colonel, that worldliness is the greatest foe to the church, and admit that it is on the increase? |
38807 | The question is, Has the will any power over the thought? |
38807 | The question is, who is right? |
38807 | The real question is not, who is afraid to die? |
38807 | Then I ask Mr. Hamlin this question: Why did God create a successful rival? |
38807 | Then after all you do not pretend that the Scriptures are really inspired? |
38807 | Then why do you put him above mercy? |
38807 | There is rain and there is infidelity; can any one say there is no possible relation between the two? |
38807 | They remained in the dungeons built by theology, by malice, and hatred; and what did God do? |
38807 | This being the very essence of wrong, how can the suffering of innocence justify the guilty? |
38807 | This you may say is the doctrine of the Old Testament-- what is the doctrine of the New? |
38807 | Thousands of men were taken from their homes, fagots were piled around their bodies; they were consumed to ashes, and what did God do? |
38807 | Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done-- I suppose you will throw in the saddle and bridle?" |
38807 | Thy will be done,"--"I suppose you will throw in the saddle and bridle?" |
38807 | WAS THE WORLD CREATED IN SIX DAYS? |
38807 | WHAT IS THE ASTRONOMY OF THE BIBLE? |
38807 | Was either of them inconsistent or illogical? |
38807 | Was it a Catholic persecution that drove the Puritan fathers from England? |
38807 | Was it an actual existence? |
38807 | Was it not a Protestant persecution that drove the Ark and Dove to America? |
38807 | Was it not a waste of raw material to make him? |
38807 | Was it not the storm of Episcopal persecution that filled the sails of the Mayflower? |
38807 | Was it possible for the devil with a mask to fool God, his creator? |
38807 | Was this in favor of science and learning? |
38807 | We find sex in the meanest weeds-- how can you say they have no loves? |
38807 | We think we have liberty of speech, as we understand it, and yet who would undertake to say that our society could live with liberty of speech? |
38807 | Well, can matter exist without force? |
38807 | Well, what do you think of the attempted argument of the_ Gazette_ against your lecture on Moses? |
38807 | Were it not for"worldly"people how would the preachers get along? |
38807 | Were they capable of self- government then? |
38807 | What are we to think of the rule of life laid down by these men? |
38807 | What are you going to think next year? |
38807 | What can men do with it? |
38807 | What can the future have for him? |
38807 | What can we think of a father who would sacrifice his daughter to a demon God? |
38807 | What colleges, hospitals, and schools has it founded? |
38807 | What did God do? |
38807 | What do I think of what the Doctor says about the_ Telegram_ for having published my Christmas sermon? |
38807 | What do you consider the chief cause of suicide? |
38807 | What do you get out of Shakespeare? |
38807 | What do you say to the last verse in the Bible, where a curse is threatened to any man who takes from or adds to the book? |
38807 | What do you think as a freethinker of the Sunday question in Cincinnati? |
38807 | What do you think of Mr. Warner Van Norden''s sentiments as expressed to the reporter? |
38807 | What do you think of that statement? |
38807 | What do you think of the law which prohibits self- destruction? |
38807 | What do you think of the point that no one is able to judge of these things unless he is a Hebrew scholar? |
38807 | What do you think of them? |
38807 | What doctrine is there in Christianity to wipe away her tears? |
38807 | What does God do? |
38807 | What does he care, even, for the religious weeklies, or the presidents of religious colleges? |
38807 | What does the reverend gentleman mean by"_ such a foot to trample our enemies_"? |
38807 | What evidence has Dr. Thomas that the cries and tears of man have ever touched the heart of God? |
38807 | What evidence has he that Christ was God? |
38807 | What excuse has infinite wisdom for peopling the world with savages? |
38807 | What excuse then is left? |
38807 | What good will it do him to know that his course has been approved of by the Methodist Episcopal Church? |
38807 | What harm would that do justice or mercy? |
38807 | What has been my offence? |
38807 | What has it done for the elevation of public morals?" |
38807 | What have I done? |
38807 | What have I said? |
38807 | What have I to say to the Doctor''s personal abuse? |
38807 | What is Calvinism? |
38807 | What is blasphemy? |
38807 | What is it doing, I ask you honestly? |
38807 | What is morality? |
38807 | What is morality? |
38807 | What is the Christian conception? |
38807 | What is the answer to this? |
38807 | What is the best thing to do under the circumstances? |
38807 | What is the best thing to do under the circumstances? |
38807 | What is the doctrine of the New? |
38807 | What is the modern conception of the universe? |
38807 | What is thought? |
38807 | What is worldliness? |
38807 | What is your belief about virtue, morality and religion? |
38807 | What is your idea of the Bible? |
38807 | What is your idea of the chief end of man? |
38807 | What is your opinion about the Old Testament? |
38807 | What is your opinion of the Bible anyhow? |
38807 | What is your opinion of the Bible? |
38807 | What is your opinion of the Old Testament? |
38807 | What is your opinion with regard to that subject? |
38807 | What kind of law must it be that is satisfied with the agony of innocence? |
38807 | What message had he who came from heaven''s throne for the oppressed of earth? |
38807 | What one of us would not put manacles and fetters upon his thoughts, if he only could? |
38807 | What pleasure can it give God to see a man devoured by a cancer; to see the quivering flesh slowly eaten; to see the nerves throbbing with pain? |
38807 | What right had he to create men, knowing that they were to be damned? |
38807 | What right had the first Presbyterian to be a Presbyterian? |
38807 | What right had they to change? |
38807 | What right has Dr. Buckley to disagree with Cardinal Gibbons, and what right has Cardinal Gibbons to disagree with Dr. Buckley? |
38807 | What right has a God to make a failure? |
38807 | What right has he to state what is orthodox? |
38807 | What right has he to tell what is orthodox Christianity? |
38807 | What science? |
38807 | What shall we say of the"Index Expurgatorius"? |
38807 | What then shall be done? |
38807 | What was in your judgment the motive of Judge Comegys? |
38807 | What was the condition of France a century ago? |
38807 | What words of comfort have you for such fathers and for such mothers? |
38807 | What words of sympathy, what words of cheer, for those who labored and toiled without reward? |
38807 | What would any man of ordinary intelligence do in a case like this? |
38807 | What would keep it together? |
38807 | What would keep the finest possible conceivable atom together unless there was force? |
38807 | What would such a spirit turn its particular attention to? |
38807 | What would the_ Watchman_ have said if these men had been the personal enemies of the managers of that paper? |
38807 | What would this God have done if he had lacked wisdom, or power, or goodness? |
38807 | What would we think of a schoolmaster who killed the most of his pupils the first day? |
38807 | What would you think of a farmer who would prepare his land and wait to have it planted by meteoric stones? |
38807 | What would you think of a law compelling a man to admire Shakespeare, or calling it blasphemy to laugh at Hamlet? |
38807 | When God created the devil, did he not know at that time that he was to make this world? |
38807 | When I meet one I tell him,"There is no hell,"and he says:"What do you want to hurt our feelings for?" |
38807 | When a man is of no use to himself or to others, when his days and nights are filled with pain and sorrow, why should he remain to endure them longer? |
38807 | When did the man lose the right of self- defence? |
38807 | When he is of no benefit, when he is a burden to those he loves, why should he remain? |
38807 | When in the history of the world has thought ever been fettered? |
38807 | When is the suicide of the sane justifiable? |
38807 | When life is of no value to him, when he can be of no real assistance to others, why should a man continue? |
38807 | Where did he get his right to be a Presbyterian? |
38807 | Where did he get his right to decide which creed is the correct one? |
38807 | Where did the heat come from? |
38807 | Where the best would die in the darkness of dungeons? |
38807 | Where the best would make scaffolds sacred with their blood? |
38807 | Who bids the earthquake devour and the volcano to overwhelm? |
38807 | Who burned and destroyed men and women and children charged with impossible crimes? |
38807 | Who cut out the tongues of Quakers? |
38807 | Who did this? |
38807 | Who drove Roger Williams from Massachusetts? |
38807 | Who is a worshiper? |
38807 | Who made this law? |
38807 | Who makes the faith? |
38807 | Who sends plague, pestilence and famine? |
38807 | Who sold white Quaker children into slavery? |
38807 | Who was it that chained to the stake that splendid girl by the sands of the sea for not saying"God save the king"? |
38807 | Who was the villain, who was the criminal, who deserved the scaffold-- who but free speech? |
38807 | Who went to Scotland and persecuted the Presbyterians? |
38807 | Who would believe the evidence? |
38807 | Who would build the churches? |
38807 | Who would fill the contribution boxes and plates, and who( most serious of all questions) would pay the salaries? |
38807 | Whom would you punish for the murder of Desdemona-- is it Iago, or Othello? |
38807 | Why did he not point out my weakness instead of telling the consequences that would follow from my action? |
38807 | Why do you call Christ good? |
38807 | Why do you call Christ good? |
38807 | Why do you put him before justice? |
38807 | Why does Dr. Plumb call this world a"poor"world? |
38807 | Why has any life been a failure here? |
38807 | Why is it better for him to kill another man, who wishes to live? |
38807 | Why is it that Germany, said to be the most educated of civilized nations, leads the world in suicides? |
38807 | Why is not a statute necessary to uphold the reputation of Raphael or of Michael Angelo? |
38807 | Why not enjoy the sunshine of this world, and all there is of good in it? |
38807 | Why not go to heaven now-- that is, to- day? |
38807 | Why not have joy here? |
38807 | Why not? |
38807 | Why pierce the brow of death with the thorns of hatred? |
38807 | Why say"toleration"? |
38807 | Why should a man sentenced to imprisonment for life hesitate to still his heart? |
38807 | Why should a soul without pity pray? |
38807 | Why should an almost infinite force be expended simply for the purpose of destroying a handful of men? |
38807 | Why should any one ask God to be merciful to the poor if he is not merciful himself? |
38807 | Why should he add to the injury? |
38807 | Why should he be proud of disposition or of good acts? |
38807 | Why should he call an opponent coarse and blasphemous, simply because he does not happen to believe as he does? |
38807 | Why should he change dust into a sentient being, knowing that that being was to be the heir of endless agony? |
38807 | Why should he live, filling his days and nights, and the days and nights of others, with grief and pain, with agony and tears? |
38807 | Why should he wish the flattery of the average Presbyterian? |
38807 | Why should not poverty have rights? |
38807 | Why should one standing on the shore attempt to rescue him? |
38807 | Why should one thank God, who lived and died a slave? |
38807 | Why should the agony of time interfere with their happiness, when the agonies of eternity will not and can not affect their joy? |
38807 | Why should the devil, who is an enemy of God, help punish God''s enemies? |
38807 | Why should the man, sitting amid the wreck of all he had, the loved ones dead, friends lost, seek to lengthen, to preserve his life? |
38807 | Why should the poor wretch stay and suffer? |
38807 | Why should they despise the mentally weak-- the diseased in brain? |
38807 | Why stop the train, why send for the directors, why hold a consultation and finally say, we must settle with that dog or stop running these cars? |
38807 | Why this waste of force? |
38807 | Why? |
38807 | Why? |
38807 | Why? |
38807 | Why? |
38807 | Wild storms sweep over the earth and the shipwrecked go down in the billows; and what does God do? |
38807 | Will Mr. Campbell have the goodness to tell me why God made the devil? |
38807 | Will any God be satisfied with that? |
38807 | Will anyone, the most ardent admirer of Colonel Ingersoll, tell me what he has built up? |
38807 | Will he have the kindness to give just one? |
38807 | Will it cheer him to know that, even if he is to be saved, countless millions are to be lost? |
38807 | Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? |
38807 | Women lifted their hands to God and implored him to protect their children, their daughters; and what did God do? |
38807 | Would I have the right to give it pain? |
38807 | Would it give God pleasure to see him burn? |
38807 | Would not the rich there predominate and the poor be just as much out of place? |
38807 | Would this state of affairs be remedied if, instead of churches, we had societies of ethical culture? |
38807 | Would you create the seeds of disease and scatter them in the air and water? |
38807 | Would you do it? |
38807 | Would you fill the woods with wild beasts? |
38807 | Would you have it so that millions and millions of babes would be sold from the breasts of mothers? |
38807 | Would you include a man like Henry Ward Beecher in that statement? |
38807 | Would you make a few volcanoes to overwhelm your children? |
38807 | Would you make a man and woman, put them in a garden, knowing that they would be deceived, knowing that they would fall? |
38807 | Would you make a world in which innocence would not be a shield? |
38807 | Would you make a world in which the wrong would triumph? |
38807 | Would you make a world where hypocrisy and cunning and fraud should represent God, and where meanness would suck the blood of honest credulity? |
38807 | Would you make a world where the best would be loaded with chains? |
38807 | Would you make different races of men? |
38807 | Would you make them ignorant, savage, and fill their minds with all the phantoms of horror? |
38807 | Would you make them of different colors, and would you so make them that they would persecute and enslave each other? |
38807 | Would you provide for earthquakes that would swallow them? |
38807 | Would you provide for plague and pestilence? |
38807 | Would you provide for the settlement of all difficulties by war? |
38807 | Would you see to it that the rack was not forgotten, and that the fagot was not overlooked or unlighted? |
38807 | Would you so arrange matters as to produce cancers? |
38807 | Would you so arrange matters that millions and millions should toil through many generations, paid only by the lash on the back? |
38807 | Would you so make your world that life should feed on life, that the quivering flesh should be torn by tooth and beak and claw? |
38807 | Would you? |
38807 | Would you? |
38807 | Yes, we all admit that, but is the Bible inspired? |
38807 | Yes, we know all that, but is the Old Testament inspired? |
38807 | Yet seven other years of kindness, and the man again knocked; and the voice cried and said:"Who is there?" |
38807 | You have stated your objections to the churches, what would you have to take their place? |
38807 | You say that the aristocracy of intellect is quite as cruel as the aristocracy of wealth-- what do you mean by that? |
38807 | Zeno, who denounced human slavery many years before Christ was born? |
38807 | _ Answer._"Ingersoll is very fond of saying''The question is not, is the Bible inspired, but is it true?'' |
38807 | _ Answer._"What is there to be indignant about in that?" |
38807 | _ But what is there to be indignant_ about in that?" |
38807 | _ Psalms, lxviii._ Is it possible that a God takes delight in seeing dogs lap the blood of his children? |
38807 | and Whither? |
38807 | and if he does, can he be pardoned-- can he be released? |
38807 | what would the clergymen of this city then have said? |
38807 | xxxii._ Is this the language of an infinitely kind and tender parent to his weak, his wandering and suffering children? |
60222 | And he-- this Paul himself? |
60222 | And the best motive power? |
60222 | And there were many in the ship? |
60222 | And this Paul-- tell me-- what teacheth he concerning women? |
60222 | And while they were away the men would have a quiet time, eh? |
60222 | And you are helping-- you are one of them? |
60222 | By the way,said Sir Robert, casually, as they resumed their seats,"is Wardlaw with us?" |
60222 | Can we last as long? |
60222 | Do you believe in the theory of pre- existence? |
60222 | Dog of a Christian, are thy head and heart of stone? |
60222 | Eh, what d''ye mean? |
60222 | Father,cried the girl passionately, as she closed the Book,"Why did you keep it from me? |
60222 | How can a man love''em when he sees the mischief they''ve done by their ambitions and pertinacity? |
60222 | I''ll ask you one question,she exclaimed, in tones so shrill that here and there a laugh broke out:"Are we inferior to poor Tommy Atkins?" |
60222 | In whom thou dost believe? |
60222 | Is Mr. Renshaw still living-- is it_ really_ true that he is still alive? |
60222 | Is it your pleasure that this lady be heard further? |
60222 | Is not Paul the Apostle of Him who blessed the marriage feast of Cana? |
60222 | Is there danger? |
60222 | Is there no more to tell? |
60222 | Is this the first time you have felt like this? |
60222 | It is your advice? |
60222 | Must I, to- night? |
60222 | Once,she went on, hesitatingly,"the first time we went up in the_ Bladud_, you remember that night...?" |
60222 | See that, sir? 60222 See that?" |
60222 | So you''ve made the young lady''s acquaintance on the river? |
60222 | The storm had lasted long? |
60222 | Then he forbiddeth not to marry? |
60222 | Then why, O Lucius Flaccus, hast thou built here an altar to our Goddess Sul? |
60222 | We ca n''t get down? |
60222 | What about the Corps of Commissionaires? |
60222 | What about the old Household troops? |
60222 | What age would Renshaw be by this time? |
60222 | What do you mean? |
60222 | What does it mean? |
60222 | What would you do? 60222 What''s that?" |
60222 | What, I wonder, is the true philosophy of life? |
60222 | Where is he now-- is he ill, is he safe? |
60222 | Why do n''t you answer? 60222 Why not?" |
60222 | Why the devil do n''t you speak? 60222 Will the speaker favour us with the authority for her quotations?" |
60222 | Will you not cry out? |
60222 | Will you trust yourself to me? |
60222 | Would anyone like a sail? |
60222 | Yes, yes? |
60222 | You can steer? |
60222 | You mean your father? |
60222 | ***** How and why had this dastardly combined attack on England come to pass? |
60222 | And everywhere the question was asked:"Where is he? |
60222 | And if by any chance it should come to fighting at close quarters, had woman shown herself lacking in courage, or even in ferocity in such encounters? |
60222 | And now that the lifeless hand of the President had dropped the real sceptre, whose hand was to take it up? |
60222 | And what should she give in exchange for that submissive tender love of wife for husband which the Sacred Book declared to be the law of God? |
60222 | And, worse still, what might not she dare and do, as the champion and inciter of woman, if the head of the Government should die? |
60222 | But how''s the worm going to manage it?" |
60222 | But now? |
60222 | But what can we do without a leader in Parliament? |
60222 | But where was the leader of men? |
60222 | Call these creatures men? |
60222 | Come, man, what the deuce are you driving at?" |
60222 | Could these things be reconciled in the light of the revelation that had come to her? |
60222 | Did not a certain abbot of Iona go to Ireland to organise a movement against the custom of summoning women to join the standard and fight the enemy? |
60222 | Did not the crime of which she was convicted strike at the root of the religion of the people? |
60222 | Did you ever read how Balmerino faced the headsman after Culloden? |
60222 | Do you suppose we want an army of Amazons armed with lethal weapons to keep in order?" |
60222 | Does n''t that suggest an opportunity?" |
60222 | God in heaven, could it be truly that? |
60222 | Great God in heaven!--men call upon the name of God even when they profess to be agnostics-- could she be going to die? |
60222 | Had any confidential information been received from certain oriental visitors who, from time to time, had come to this country? |
60222 | Had he not sought by magical aid to soar aloft like the eagle, only to fall and be dashed to pieces on Minerva''s altar? |
60222 | He glanced at Wilton:"Ready?" |
60222 | He swore irritably, and then roared an inquiry:"Are you there? |
60222 | History has illustrated that over and over again?" |
60222 | How are we going to regulate international commerce? |
60222 | How shall he face the unfathomable whirlpool that yawns for the frail boat in which he is compelled to trust? |
60222 | I have read it, or did I dream it?" |
60222 | If he did not look out he would go there and get killed himself presently, and that would be a nice thing to happen, would n''t it? |
60222 | If one had repeated to most of these globe- trotters Gloster''s question in King Lear:"Dost thou know Dover?" |
60222 | In love with whom? |
60222 | Is it true he is still alive?" |
60222 | Is n''t nearly every man, in both services? |
60222 | It was her own voice that died away, and what was this mysterious sound-- rising from the valley with the mists that melted at the break of day? |
60222 | Linton, raising his own cap, turned towards the illustrious passenger:"Shall we start, sir?" |
60222 | Or could it be that they were running short of ammunition? |
60222 | She sighed and looked at him wistfully, then said appealingly:"You will come upstairs?" |
60222 | THE COUP D''ÉTAT? |
60222 | The voice that spake to the woman in the garden seemed to be speaking still:"What is this that thou hast done?" |
60222 | Then came another problem-- what was the right sort of motor? |
60222 | Then once more the Vice- President vehemently appealed to the audience:"Who will join the Amazons of England?" |
60222 | Then the Vice- President, in tones now piercing and tremulous, cried out:"Who will join the First Regiment of the Amazons of England?" |
60222 | There is something I can do for you in your trouble?" |
60222 | To what purpose do we expose our lives in war? |
60222 | To- morrow we''ll be just the same as ever, wo n''t we? |
60222 | Was it not an American, not an English, Admiral who had come to the rescue of the British colony? |
60222 | Was it the word"Forgive?" |
60222 | Was not blood thicker than water? |
60222 | Was the reign of woman to be inaugurated on new and bolder lines; or would man, in the nick of time, re- assert himself? |
60222 | Were not the American people our own kith and kin? |
60222 | Were they in for a lecture on geography? |
60222 | What about imports and exports? |
60222 | What could it mean? |
60222 | What did Wilton want? |
60222 | What did he say? |
60222 | What did these things betoken? |
60222 | What do you think? |
60222 | What is his good, and what is his evil? |
60222 | What is man in presence of the waterspout that towers from the ocean to the clouds? |
60222 | What is your advice?" |
60222 | What mad idea was this? |
60222 | What might not Lady Cat accomplish in the temporary absence of the President? |
60222 | What more natural than that most of the passengers should land and fill up the time by the inspection of the points of interest in the town? |
60222 | What of the Empire? |
60222 | What part of the coast is that down there?" |
60222 | What was he doing now? |
60222 | What was he trying to do? |
60222 | What was that silent log- like thing the waves were rolling yonder in the semi- darkness? |
60222 | What was there to be afraid of? |
60222 | What was this? |
60222 | What would it profit a woman to force herself out of her ordained place in the plan of creation? |
60222 | What''s the best air- ship that ever was built against a wind like this?" |
60222 | What''s this I hear about the Fort?" |
60222 | What, he vaguely wondered, was Wilton doing now? |
60222 | What, then, would be likely to limit her revenge or curb her ambition if an opportunity like the present could be made to serve her purpose? |
60222 | What? |
60222 | Where''s my book?" |
60222 | Which mine would be exploded first? |
60222 | Which shall it be?" |
60222 | Who are you?" |
60222 | Who can limit the life of the ego-- fix its beginning, or appoint its end?" |
60222 | Who could possibly credit such a tale? |
60222 | Who is it?" |
60222 | Who wants an air- ship calling for his parlour- maid at the attic window? |
60222 | Who wants thieves sailing up to his balcony? |
60222 | Who would dare to deny that women were as brave as men? |
60222 | Why did you do it?" |
60222 | Why do we defend our wives and sisters from a foreign enemy if Rome has tyrants who incite the people to violent and vindictive acts? |
60222 | Why had he not used it before? |
60222 | Why not?" |
60222 | Why not?" |
60222 | Why should you help me, unless I tell you all, everything-- everything, fully and frankly? |
60222 | Why was he sawing frantically, convulsively, at that tightened cord? |
60222 | Will you read this?" |
60222 | Would it be his turn next? |
60222 | You shall be very nice, and I shall forgive you, because, after all, I do love you, do n''t I?" |
60222 | and suppose, after all, poor Renshaw is dead?" |
60222 | exclaimed Herrick, springing to his feet,"do n''t you see one over yonder?" |
60222 | exclaimed the General,"were Thackeray and Dickens prejudiced? |
60222 | is that the_ Bladud_?" |
60222 | she asked, abruptly,"do you think it possible that in some former state of being you and I or others can have met before?" |
60222 | still the gods?" |
60222 | what was the matter? |
7274 | And yet who knows? 7274 Do you ask me the place of the Valley, Ye hearts that are harrowed by care? |
7274 | What will it matter by- and- by? 7274 *****What will it matter? |
7274 | And what are the objects on which this angel of Poesy loves to dwell? |
7274 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
7274 | Are not all short- lived things the loveliest? |
7274 | Do you ask how I live in the Valley? |
7274 | Do you ask what I found in the Valley? |
7274 | Does any falter? |
7274 | Dumb woods, have ye uttered a bird? |
7274 | Fierce spirit of the glass and scythe!--what power Can stay him in his silent course, or melt His iron heart to pity? |
7274 | In my heart? |
7274 | In the leaves? |
7274 | In the poem entitled_ What?_ it is again her spirit voice that conveys to his soul an ineffable word.] |
7274 | In whom, save Thee, our Father, shall I trust?" |
7274 | Is it necessary to quote a stanza of a poem so well known? |
7274 | Is it strange that under this training he acquired a taste for strong drink, and became opinionated and perverse? |
7274 | LYRIC OF ACTION[ 17]''Tis the part of a coward to brood O''er the past that is withered and dead: What though the heart''s roses are ashes and dust? |
7274 | Months of torture, how many such? |
7274 | No yearning memory of those scenes that were So richly calm and fair, When the last rays of sunset, shimmering down, Flashed like a royal crown? |
7274 | O say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave? |
7274 | O say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave?" |
7274 | Or, capriciously still, Like the lone Albatross, Incumbent on night( As she on the air) To keep watch with delight On the harmony there?" |
7274 | So, unto thee, Lucretius[ 24] mine,( For oh, what heart hath loved thee like to this That''s now complaining?) |
7274 | That crystal nothing who''ll peruse? |
7274 | The Lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the Palm Tree fear? |
7274 | The blood of its sons has but brightened its sheen; What though the tyrant has trampled it down, Are its folds not emblazoned with deeds of renown?" |
7274 | We part!--I speak not of the pain,-- But when shall I each lovely spot, And each loved face behold again? |
7274 | What is it? |
7274 | What logic of greeting lies Betwixt dear over- beautiful trees and the rain of the eyes? |
7274 | What though the heart''s music be fled? |
7274 | What though the heart''s music be fled? |
7274 | What though the heart''s roses are ashes and dust? |
7274 | What was the cause of this sadness? |
7274 | Who knows? |
7274 | Who knows? |
7274 | Why does your poetry sound like a sigh? |
7274 | Why murmur at the common lot? |
7274 | Will the East unveil? |
7274 | [ 15] Why walk we thus alone, when by our side, Love, like a visible God, might be our guide? |
7274 | [ 36] My gossip, the owl,--is it thou That out of the leaves of the low- hanging bough, As I pass to the beach, art stirred? |
7274 | [ 5] Do you ask me the place of the Valley, Ye hearts that are harrowed by care? |
7274 | [ Footnote 15: This desire for death occurs in several poems, as_ When?_ and_ Rest_. |
7274 | hast thou no memory at thy core Of one who comes no more? |
7274 | in the air? |
7274 | is it thy will On the breezes to toss? |
7274 | somewhere,--mystery, where? |
7274 | who knows what soul- dividing bars Earth''s faithful loves may part in other stars? |
7274 | why may not love and life be one? |
7274 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
7274 | wouldst thou not better be More violet still? |
48309 | ''Swoon,''sayest thou? |
48309 | All things? |
48309 | Also wherefore that? |
48309 | Am I so lost I can not save myself? |
48309 | And knowest perhaps,Said Julius, further sounding,"what the chance Of mischief from him thou hast late escaped?" |
48309 | And knowest thou by what arts her place she won? |
48309 | And what love to me Speak they, thy wife and queen-- not with her lord Joined in thine imprecation dire of doom? 48309 And what, then, nephew, were those thoughts of thine?" |
48309 | But art thou not in prior duty bound To that Drusilla fair of thine? |
48309 | But he, will he receive what we should bring? |
48309 | But knowest thou,the centurion pressed,"how he Plotted last night to have thee overboard To wrestle, swimming, with the swirling sea?" |
48309 | But thou, Tell me, What is it to believe on him? 48309 But wherefore this?" |
48309 | But, Simon,_ will_ it serve for no reward? |
48309 | Consider, Simon, what might not I do For thee, once seated in that place of power? |
48309 | Could then those words themselves mean something else? |
48309 | Does thy love puff thee up to challenge God Whether He be consistent with Himself? 48309 Dost thou ask, How do this? |
48309 | Greek understandest thou? |
48309 | Hard? |
48309 | How knowest thou what is in that letter? |
48309 | Knowest thou aught, of thine own eye or ear, How Paul thy kinsman was bestead last night? |
48309 | Knowest thou this man? |
48309 | Lo, Jesus, wilt thou master also me? 48309 Lord other than lord Felix hast thou then?" |
48309 | Might I propose if it be yet too late? |
48309 | O, uncle,''all things''to Onesimus, Him also, in a fearful stead like this? |
48309 | Real reason, or pretended, wilt thou have? |
48309 | Ruth,Mary said, so softly that the sound Was like a pulse of silence,"art asleep?" |
48309 | So, is a stroke of lightning pity then, Sometimes,said Nero,"with the gods in heaven? |
48309 | Some kin thou to the prisoner Paul, I think? |
48309 | Suppose the case, then; how wouldst thou proceed? |
48309 | Supposing beautiful Drusilla''s aims And mine should clash? |
48309 | Thou art not sure? 48309 Thou hast told me all? |
48309 | Thou knowest this fellow- countryman of thine? |
48309 | Thy sedative will not pain my lord too much? |
48309 | What dost thou mean? |
48309 | What meanest thou, boy? |
48309 | What meanest thou? |
48309 | What of it all? |
48309 | What say? |
48309 | What sayest thou, Jew,with challenge lowering stern, Asked the centurion of his prisoner,"In answer to the charge against thee laid?" |
48309 | What was not meant? 48309 What was the spirit with which the Spirit of God Breathed these into the soul of him elect Among the sons of men to give them voice? |
48309 | What wast thou doing at thy sentry- post, That miscreant such as this should sit him there Unchallenged? 48309 What wilt thou say?" |
48309 | What wilt thou, my lord Felix,Julius asked,"Wilt thou forgive the lad outright? |
48309 | What wilt thou, then? |
48309 | Who was that kindly courteous gentleman,Thus at fit moment Rachel asked of Paul,"That spoke so fair my brother coming up? |
48309 | Wilt ply again thy skill of go- between, And faithfully, for me? |
48309 | With that I turned Me back, I think I should have gone away, But I saw one I knew not, standing there, Who also spake,''Woman, why weepest thou?'' 48309 Ye do not ask, but some have doubting asked,''How are the dead raised up, and in what form Of body do they come?'' |
48309 | ''But captives still,''said I,''might try to escape?'' |
48309 | ''Had he indeed been tricked? |
48309 | ''Is Simon playing me false in a deep game To serve lord Felix at his wife''s expense?'' |
48309 | ''Speakest thou not to me? |
48309 | ''Thee,''said I,''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
48309 | ''Thou thinkest that?'' |
48309 | ''Thou, thou-- who art thou, Lord?'' |
48309 | ''Too foully base insinuation mine, Does Lysias mean?'' |
48309 | ''What is it in my heart that answers, Yea? |
48309 | ''What is thy name?'' |
48309 | ''Where is my pride, which was so dear to me, My pride, and my vain confidence of strength? |
48309 | ''Who art thou, Lord?'' |
48309 | -- When calmly to his captor- savior, he Addressed himself and asked,"May I to thee A few words speak?" |
48309 | A flash of light invaded Simon''s mind:''Were there not hidden here the way long sought To free himself from the abhorréd yoke Of Felix? |
48309 | A paradox, sayest thou, hard to be solved? |
48309 | A question fairly asked, which must be met: Could it concern-- Poppæa? |
48309 | A question, still of wonder, soon it came:"Tell me, what hast thou gained, in all these years Of thy most strange discipleship, my son?" |
48309 | All is for sale at Rome, but who can buy That goes barehanded thither, as do we? |
48309 | All, all, as if I were a little child? |
48309 | And I then said,''What wilt thou, Lord, that I should do?'' |
48309 | And did not Malachi foretell that He, The Angel of the covenant, should sit As a refiner and a purifier, To purge the sons of Levi of their dross? |
48309 | And have I missed to know the Christ of God?'' |
48309 | And how shall_ I_ know that thou knowest these things? |
48309 | And if your brethren only ye salute, What more than others do ye do? |
48309 | And is Gamaliel wrong? |
48309 | And now why lingerest thou? |
48309 | And those, the few who did, would they await Nirvâna as the goal of long pursuit, Not snatch it instant with rash suicide? |
48309 | And thou, Sittest thou here to judge me by the law, And, the law breaking, biddest me be smitten?" |
48309 | And what doest thou here? |
48309 | Apostate from the emperor to Christ Am I to recognize in thee? |
48309 | Art thou mad? |
48309 | As has been, is, our pact; art thou content?" |
48309 | At first Indeed, when He stood forth and said to them,''Whom seek ye?'' |
48309 | Before-- what? |
48309 | Besides, with such a sun quenched from our sky, What then were day prolonged but night to us? |
48309 | But Krishna said( For, by some sense of disadvantage stung, He took reprisals of his gentle sort):"What if I could not name them? |
48309 | But Nero rattled on licentiously:"What was I saying? |
48309 | But at last He, how shall I say it? |
48309 | But how these things knowest thou? |
48309 | But look abroad upon the world of men; What seest thou? |
48309 | But may one seek God unawares? |
48309 | But so thou darest, rascal, cast a doubt On what thy mistress sends in love to me? |
48309 | But who for these things is sufficient-- save God only? |
48309 | But will he heed? |
48309 | But would Poppæa help him in one thing? |
48309 | But Ânanda Said:''If by chance we see them at some time?'' |
48309 | But, Syrus, what thinkest thou my master did? |
48309 | By whom not meant? |
48309 | Can I hope to equal it?'' |
48309 | Can we not have him forth of his duress In dungeon into this fair light of day? |
48309 | Can we not succor him? |
48309 | Christ bids me take His perfect righteousness; I can be humble but by taking it-- Boldly? |
48309 | Communication none Between Paul and this soldier keeping him?" |
48309 | Crucify your king?'' |
48309 | Dazed, hast thou then denounced the innocent man?" |
48309 | Did Saul discern the tongue in which it spake? |
48309 | Did he hear Paul? |
48309 | Did he refuse to come? |
48309 | Did not God hate whom He so heavily cursed?" |
48309 | Didst thou heed So as to mark the manner of the speech, Or peradventure but the meaning take?" |
48309 | Do not The oppressive publicans likewise? |
48309 | Do not the oppressive publicans the same? |
48309 | Does he even seek to make a tool of me? |
48309 | Does she, Drusilla, too, collude? |
48309 | Dost thou judge nothing at all Due from thee to the dignity of trust Received from the august imperial hand? |
48309 | Dost thou not know I can release thee if I will,''he said;''Or, if I will can send thee to the cross?'' |
48309 | Drusilla reasoned; then, with threatening brow, To Syrus:"Whence these things to thee? |
48309 | Drusilla wondered;''would he dare so far? |
48309 | Each one with himself''Among them, I?'' |
48309 | Enormous claim seems this of selfishness In me? |
48309 | Equal? |
48309 | For if ye love Them that love you, what have ye for reward? |
48309 | For the first time the Indian felt give way A little, melting underneath his feet, His standing- ground of settled certitude:''Was it all quicksand? |
48309 | For what said that commandment threatening wrath Divine, in sequel of ancestral sin, To light on generations yet to be? |
48309 | For why do I believe, except that He Makes me believe, against so many signs Seen in the world abroad which swear in vain He is not good? |
48309 | For,''The Lord cometh,''saidst thou then, and,''Who Of us,''thou askedst,''who of us shall bide The day of that approach?'' |
48309 | Forsooth, Not by Gamaliel meant that he should die? |
48309 | Gamaliel-- was that reverend- looking man, That image of a stately- fair old age, Was he a low complotter of deceit? |
48309 | Had Nero overheard Through some eavesdropper what had just now passed Between him and Poppæa? |
48309 | Had she achieved her wish? |
48309 | Hate is the spirit of the psalm I said, Is it not, uncle?" |
48309 | He has been deceived; how could he be deceived? |
48309 | Here they beheaded him; Christ suffered it-- What matter to His servant how he died? |
48309 | His heart misgave him heavily; he felt:''And here perhaps is destiny for me, Perhaps, who knows? |
48309 | Hold I not well thou hadst something still to learn Of the unsounded depths his''way''seeks out?" |
48309 | How could it be, Ânanda, otherwise than thus? |
48309 | How far may I abiding true to her Involve Drusilla in a plea to him?'' |
48309 | How know we the master died After the manner that thou toldst us of? |
48309 | How knowest thou but thy scouting walk this morn Shall rescue to the world, in need so deep, Yet many a year of that apostleship? |
48309 | How mend our case? |
48309 | How shall I find wherewith to answer thee? |
48309 | How thinkest thou? |
48309 | How was he bestead? |
48309 | How, pray, did those disciples round him pierce The dark and silence of their master''s mind, To know what passed therein?" |
48309 | How, too, that thou speakest truly as thou knowest?'' |
48309 | I hope thy go- between officiousness Ended with bringing the devoted pair Together? |
48309 | I reason in this way,''Why should I presume To scruple, where those wiser far than I Are clear?'' |
48309 | I see, I see them spring upon their prey-- O master, master, must he die like this?" |
48309 | If report were brought to Rome Of such acquittal of the office thine, Would it seem well? |
48309 | In what mistaken terms of complaisance, Tell me-- mistaken, or even treacherous-- Didst thou present me to his majesty?" |
48309 | Inferior? |
48309 | Is Christ the power?'' |
48309 | Is all arranged? |
48309 | Is he thy Son? |
48309 | Is it Thou, O Holy Spirit? |
48309 | Is life then, boundless, better than blank death?'' |
48309 | Is such thy measure of the faith required In one of Cæsar''s deputies? |
48309 | Is this, even this, impossible-- through Christ? |
48309 | Knowest not Thou beardest thus the lion in his lair?" |
48309 | Knowest thou aught of him that might resolve A doubt how much he be to trust for true?" |
48309 | Meet is it thou shouldst speak in parable Thus to thy master in his hoary age? |
48309 | Merging the Indian''s idiom in his own And lading it with unwonted sense, Paul said:"That karma, erst so valued, I escaped How? |
48309 | Nothing after had to do With the late parting of the same by death?" |
48309 | Nothing there of rock?'' |
48309 | Now Ânanda inquired of Buddha this:''How, master, shall we deal with womankind?'' |
48309 | O Rabbi, master of mine uncle Saul, Beseech thee, speak, bid me, what must I do?" |
48309 | O Rachel, why was I not then disturbed With doubts and fears, and guesses of the true? |
48309 | Of me, Drusilla, make a pliant tool--_ I_ serve their turn forsooth against myself? |
48309 | On mine own head do I Paul''s house pull down?'' |
48309 | One quickly answered, and the master said:"Where is thy mistress? |
48309 | Or art unmasked to thy contentment, Jew? |
48309 | Or does she know Nothing of all? |
48309 | Or pleasest Thou rather_ I_ condignly deal with him?" |
48309 | Or suffered any liar to claim it his? |
48309 | Or what? |
48309 | Or will the terrors of the world to come Vainly appal him with the eternal fear? |
48309 | Or, if not that, had nameless turpitude Abused such dignity into a tool, Helpless, unwitting, of ignoble wile?'' |
48309 | Or, knowing, does she fear Felix, and therefore leave us helpless thus? |
48309 | Other none than Thou, Paul''s God, and mine, and mine, and mine, O yea, Who but my God could speak thus closely to me? |
48309 | Paul''s keeper, thus prepared to falter, heard Ambiguous challenge from the officer:"What sayest thou, soldier? |
48309 | Paul, with a pathos of sweet cheerfulness, In dark and bright of paradox replied:"Gained? |
48309 | Plain, and forthwith, what meanest thou, son Saul?" |
48309 | Point- blank his aim shifted to Lysias now, He said:"Why did Gamaliel stay so long? |
48309 | Procure he have his audience soon, and then-- Simon, what thinkest thou? |
48309 | Rascals, where are ye all?" |
48309 | Resist, or yield? |
48309 | Resist? |
48309 | Ruth in a whirl of thought Wondered,''Are these things all a wicked wile Of Simon''s to entrap us here? |
48309 | Said it not,''On the children?'' |
48309 | Schoolmasters and schoolmistresses and all, Is there not risk they overstep the bound? |
48309 | Shall He have died in vain? |
48309 | Shall I trust all to him? |
48309 | Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? |
48309 | Shall we not say that that love faulty is, Which less desires to please the one beloved, Than to indulge itself, have its own way? |
48309 | She perhaps has thought The emperor was a trifle slow to claim His privilege at her court? |
48309 | She said:''It must be true; how otherwise Than because God Himself who can not lie Declared it could such gospel come to men? |
48309 | Sleeping? |
48309 | Soothed perhaps to sleep With chink of gold sweet- shaken in thine ear?" |
48309 | Stay, hast thou seen him since last night''s farewell?" |
48309 | Syrus, deep scrupling,''Fair is this, or foul?'' |
48309 | Tell me, what knowest thou of Onesimus? |
48309 | That frightened Pilate, and,''Whence art thou?'' |
48309 | That inspiration of the Holy Ghost Whereby thou knowest what else thou wouldst not know-- Perhaps that helps thee be, as well as know?" |
48309 | That light which fell around him at mid- noon, Who counterfeited that? |
48309 | The acclamation of the people then Would join the emperor''s own desire to fill Octavia''s vacant room with-- whom but one? |
48309 | The gentle chiliarch rescued him from them, Not knowing, as of course how could he know? |
48309 | The merciless Poppæa pressed her point:"Was it to me, or to somebody else, I heard thee offer service of thine art? |
48309 | The truth-- Thou hast heard Paul, and learned such lies from him?" |
48309 | Then to Paul Hastens the chiliarch and, perturbed, inquires:"Tell me, art thou a Roman?" |
48309 | Then was it that the Lord asked them, not yet Enough assured or haply stunned with fear,''Whom seek ye?'' |
48309 | These are my last heart- beats, and with the last, The very last, what would I do? |
48309 | This the centurion hearing, straightway he Went to the chiliarch and abrupt exclaimed:"What is it thou art on the point to do? |
48309 | Those angels said that He would yet return So as we saw Him then ascend to heaven-- Is He now come? |
48309 | Those are the first words of a psalm Prophetic of a suffering Savior Christ; They mean,''My God, my God, wherefore hast thou Forsaken me?'' |
48309 | Those words, Saul, which thou seemedst to hear, What were they, Greek or Hebrew? |
48309 | Thou hangest-- wilt not go?--art false to me? |
48309 | Thou knowest these things? |
48309 | Thou wilt not? |
48309 | Thy mistress sends me this? |
48309 | Thy victory where, O grave? |
48309 | To Shimei, Lysias thus;"That is not death, thou thinkest, but a swoon?" |
48309 | To earth Prostrate I fell, and heard a voice that said,''Saul, Saul, why art thou persecuting me?'' |
48309 | Too late? |
48309 | Uplifted, while abashed, he dared to say:"Perhaps I trespassed in my vehemence; But, uncle, did not God inspire the psalm?" |
48309 | Was Paul such knave? |
48309 | Was he perhaps a kinsman near of Paul?" |
48309 | Was he vexed? |
48309 | Was it not promised Him That he should of the travail of His soul See and be satisfied? |
48309 | Was there not in them, this thou askest me, Expression intermixed of wicked hate, His whose the occasion was to write the psalm? |
48309 | Wast beside thyself? |
48309 | We wondered as we went,''But who will roll The great stone back for us that closes up The doorway to the tomb?'' |
48309 | What am I to judge The servant of another, I who am Servant myself with him of the same Lord? |
48309 | What but a word to mean, As if of purpose to make naught the blame, Simply the casual missing of a mark? |
48309 | What but of wrath, or as of wrath, and hate? |
48309 | What can we do at Rome? |
48309 | What comparable wonder wilt thou show That thou hast seen thy master Buddha work?" |
48309 | What could be worse misdeed Than breach attempted of a soldier''s faith To purchase murder?" |
48309 | What did it mean? |
48309 | What form of anguish ours did He not feel? |
48309 | What is impossible? |
48309 | What is sin? |
48309 | What is the night appointed? |
48309 | What mean? |
48309 | What meant it? |
48309 | What message does the fair Drusilla send?" |
48309 | What power? |
48309 | What profit were there in a history, What history indeed were possible, Of either leaves or men? |
48309 | What sayest thou, boy? |
48309 | What surety have we that it is not so? |
48309 | What wilt thou? |
48309 | What would Stephen say? |
48309 | When, by the soldier whom he sought to bribe For thy destruction, of his crime accused To me, how, thinkest thou, he would purge himself? |
48309 | Whence is the power? |
48309 | Where is Gamaliel now? |
48309 | Where is he now? |
48309 | Wherefore? |
48309 | Which wilt thou, Stephen? |
48309 | Who are we, Stephen, to be more wise than God, Who, to be holier than His Holy Son?" |
48309 | Who knows but God to love will win him yet?" |
48309 | Who knows but thou shalt save thine uncle Saul? |
48309 | Who knows? |
48309 | Who taught thee this? |
48309 | Who, who is able to deliver us Out of the clinging body of this death? |
48309 | Why had he not been first to speak of that? |
48309 | Why had lord Felix died so suddenly? |
48309 | Why never can you people tell the truth? |
48309 | Why should I then have feared, and naught to fear, Save words, mere words? |
48309 | Why should Jehovah on the children wreak The wages of the fathers''wickedness? |
48309 | Why should we? |
48309 | Why, indeed, come at all, but, having come, Why so long tarry, wearing out the day? |
48309 | Wilt thou not see Drusilla? |
48309 | With Him or against?" |
48309 | With wondering interruption Julius asked:"But how, but wherefore, was it thus? |
48309 | Would He have lied Who flashed it blinding down? |
48309 | Would it not be well That I attend him when he pleads his cause? |
48309 | Yea, doubtless, yea; but_ that_--how is that right?" |
48309 | Yea, sorrow for sin not His;''Which one of you,''He asked once, and no hearer made reply,''Which one of you convinceth Me of sin?'' |
48309 | Yet I experience an obscure distress-- Is it of mind or heart? |
48309 | _ Him!_ Are ye all blind? |
48309 | said I to him--''Yea, how with thee that lettest them go by?'' |
48309 | Ânanda Once more:''O master, if they speak to us?'' |
55575 | Because Christians were not familiar with it? 55575 Is it,"to use his own words,"worth while to heap up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly idle?" |
55575 | Joshua is apparently[ why this qualification?] 55575 Lord, dost Thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?" |
55575 | Why,he asks,"was this Jesus cult originally secret, and expressed in such guarded parabolic terms as made it unintelligible to the multitude?" |
55575 | Why? |
55575 | ( Jesus) Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ?" |
55575 | ( i.e., life in the kingdom to come)--the answer:"Why callest thou me good? |
55575 | And as, according to Drews, he was so interested in fruitfulness and foreskins, why not suppose he was a Priapic god? |
55575 | And he said unto him, What things? |
55575 | And he said unto him, Why askest thou me concerning that which is good? |
55575 | And his sisters, are they not all with us?" |
55575 | And what does it amount to? |
55575 | And what has Jerusalem to do with Dodona? |
55575 | And where did he discover that Jesus was represented as Fishes in Art and Lore? |
55575 | And why should they eke out their plot with a thousand scraps of pagan mythology? |
55575 | And, after all, were statues of Osiris so plentiful in Jerusalem, where the sight even of a Roman eagle aroused a riot? |
55575 | Are they Israelites? |
55575 | Are they all Mithraic? |
55575 | Are they ministers of Christ? |
55575 | Are they the seed of Abraham? |
55575 | As he took the Israelites dryshod over the Jordan, why have they not made a River- god of him? |
55575 | But as it is you have abandoned God and put your trust in man, so what further hope is left to you of salvation? |
55575 | But how about the prostitute; and how about the entry into Erech? |
55575 | But is it worth while to heap up the disproof of a thesis so manifestly idle?" |
55575 | But what, we still ask, is the Gospel counterpart to the honours heaped by Gilgamesch on Eabani? |
55575 | But where did the play come from? |
55575 | But, if so, what Jew, we ask, ever heard of a God called Jeshua or Joshua? |
55575 | By adding it before"thing"he creates additional nonsense; for how could any but a good action merit eternal life? |
55575 | By what channels did it reach them? |
55575 | CHAPTER II PAGAN MYSTERY PLAYS[ Is Mark''s Gospel a religious romance?] |
55575 | Could texts be treated with greater levity? |
55575 | Could they there have given themselves up to the study of pagan statuary, art, and ritual dramas? |
55575 | Did Jesus in his physical body go up like a balloon before the eyes of the faithful, and disappear behind a cloud, or did he not? |
55575 | Did all these people, we may ask, including his mother, stand in a merely spiritual relationship to Jesus? |
55575 | Did they at the time, or afterwards, set any such interpretation on the story of his rising up from the ground like an airship or an exhalation? |
55575 | Do we not here get a glimpse of an early stage of the story of Jesus before it was overlaid with miracles? |
55575 | Does Mr. Robertson claim to know the reasons of their symbolism better than they did themselves? |
55575 | Does he mean that the legend is no more than"a certain way of expressing moral ideas rooted in human thought"? |
55575 | Does he, too, mean merely to"denote religious relation without the remotest hint of blood kinship"? |
55575 | Does not this mean that a cult of Jesus already existed before this myth was added, and that the myth is absent in the earliest documents of the cult? |
55575 | Even if the story of the Twelve be legendary, need we go outside Judaism for our explanation of its origin? |
55575 | For example, what have the Zodiacal signs and the Apostles of Jesus in common except the number twelve? |
55575 | Gardner and Carpenter] Dr. Gardner, who here lies under a special spell of absurdity? |
55575 | Has the Latin wine- god a single trait in common with the Christian founder? |
55575 | Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" |
55575 | How are these lacunæ of the Gospel story to be filled in? |
55575 | How can it possibly be defended to- day on grounds of symbolism, or on any other? |
55575 | How can writers who end their record of Jesus by telling us how in the moment of death he cried,"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
55575 | How could he, inasmuch as he had stayed with them at Jerusalem? |
55575 | How could so late a myth influence or form part of a tradition three centuries older than itself? |
55575 | How could there be, seeing that the book was not penned( except on Van Manen''s hypothesis) until long after the Epistles had been written and sent? |
55575 | How did these gentlemen get it into their heads that he was a Sun- god? |
55575 | How do Mr. Robertson and his friends get round all this evidence? |
55575 | How does Mr. Robertson get rid of their evidence? |
55575 | How, indeed, could he be, seeing that Jesus is a Sun- god crucified upon the Milky Way? |
55575 | If Jesus was only a myth, how could this writer have written, probably before A.D. 70, that he was of the tribe of Judah? |
55575 | If he believes in such a miracle, why expatiate on the symbolism of all the acts of Jesus subsequent to his resurrection? |
55575 | If he obviously believed it, then how did his error arise? |
55575 | If he should seem to have made it without himself believing it, then we ask, Why did he wish to deceive his reader? |
55575 | If the legend was part of the earliest tradition, why does it figure for the first time in the late Third Gospel and in a late addition to the first? |
55575 | If the reading of Mark be not original, how came Luke to copy it from him? |
55575 | If they had so excellent a legend of Bacchus on his asses crossing a marsh, why not be content with it? |
55575 | If we deny all authenticity to Jesus''s teaching, what of Solon''s traditional lore? |
55575 | If we found ourselves in such case, would we not think we were bewitched, and take to our heels? |
55575 | In Matthew, however( xix, 16), we read as follows:"Behold, one came to him and said: Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life? |
55575 | In a word, why should such connoisseurs of paganism have disguised themselves as monotheistic and messianic Jews? |
55575 | In any case, may not Christian story have fixed the number of Apostles at twelve in view of the tribes being twelve? |
55575 | In other words, Simson, or Samson, left a corpse behind him( who does not? |
55575 | Is he not the spiritual guide of learned German orientalists like Winckler and Jensen? |
55575 | Is he, too, afraid of being regarded as a"tell- tale"( p. 48)? |
55575 | Is it credible in the face of such facts that the authors we are criticizing should turn this Joshua, too, into a solar god? |
55575 | Is it not as clear as daylight that he was the survival of a pre- Platonic Apollo myth? |
55575 | Is not Mr. Smith attributing his own feelings, as he sat in a Sunday school, to Jews and Gentiles of the first century? |
55575 | Is not his mother called Mary? |
55575 | Is not this enough? |
55575 | Is that the way the sublimist of teachers would found the new and true religion?" |
55575 | Lastly, what had Bacchus to do with Jesus? |
55575 | Let Professor W. B. Smith speak:"What was the essence, the central idea and active principle, of the cult itself?" |
55575 | Little girl:"Then how did you come to hear all about it?" |
55575 | May we welcome his insistence on its moral symbolism as a prelude to his abandonment of the literal truth of the tale? |
55575 | Might I suggest the addition of the god Thor to the collection of gospel aliases? |
55575 | Might he not have reflected that then, as now, there was no other way of entering Jerusalem unless you went on foot? |
55575 | Now what Christian writer ever made this rapprochement? |
55575 | Now what had Speusippus to tell? |
55575 | Now who had commissioned these three apostles, if not Jesus? |
55575 | Of a Jesus that is God from the first it is perhaps natural to ask-- anyhow our authors have asked it of themselves-- which God was he? |
55575 | Of what Patriarch? |
55575 | Or are we to suppose that all these things were related in the Sun- god Joshua legend? |
55575 | Or is it Pilatus who stabs Orion? |
55575 | Secondly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean the"javelin- man"for the earliest generations of Roman Christians? |
55575 | Since when, I would like to know, did we need such evidence against that legend? |
55575 | Such references could be multiplied; are they all Osirian? |
55575 | The Rock- Tomb] Why was Jesus buried in a rock- tomb? |
55575 | Thirdly, what evidence is there that Pilatus could mean a javelin- man even to a Latin? |
55575 | This apart, the Second and Third Gospels may be said to agree in reading,"Good master,"and,"Why callest thou me good?" |
55575 | This being so, is it likely that any Jewish community would keep up even the simulacrum of such rites? |
55575 | Unless he regards this later Joshua also as a divine figure, and no mere man of flesh and blood, why does he thus drag him into his argument? |
55575 | Was Jordan, too, up in heaven? |
55575 | Was ever such a god known of or worshipped in the tribe of Ephraim or in Israel at large? |
55575 | Was it entirely appropriate for these mystic devotees to encourage the use of demonological terminology, when they meant something quite else? |
55575 | Was it necessary to concoct human pedigrees for a solar myth, and to pretend that Jacob begat Joseph, and Joseph begat Jesus? |
55575 | Was the deception necessary? |
55575 | Was there ever an author so hopelessly uncritical in his methods? |
55575 | We ask of Mr. Smith, why was so much mystification necessary? |
55575 | We naturally ask, Were the twelve tribes of Israel equally representative of the Zodiac? |
55575 | Were not other sources of recent Roman history available for Tacitus? |
55575 | Were the Essenes there also? |
55575 | Were the Pharisees and Sadducees, the Scribes, or the Sicarii or zealots, secret sects? |
55575 | Were they likely to fashion a tale of a Messianic triumph out of Gentile myths? |
55575 | Were they, too, mere"earnest Messianists, zealots of obedience"? |
55575 | Were they, too, only spiritually related to him? |
55575 | Were they, too,"earnest Messianists, zealots of obedience"? |
55575 | What better proof could we have than this citation of the fact that they servilely adopted the traditions of Jesus recorded in the Gospels? |
55575 | What clues has he? |
55575 | What evidence that such a myth ever existed at all? |
55575 | What has Bacchus''s choice of one ass to ride on in common with Matthew''s literary deformation, according to which Jesus rode on two asses at once? |
55575 | What has Mr. Robertson to say about it? |
55575 | What inspired it? |
55575 | What is the meaning of these wheels within wheels, that hardly hunt together? |
55575 | What its germ? |
55575 | What on earth were the Nazarenes doing to publish a Gospel like this, and so let the cat out of the bag? |
55575 | What right has he to argue as if he had the whole of it in the hollow of his hand? |
55575 | What, again, do we know of secret societies in Jerusalem? |
55575 | What, again, have the three Maries in common with the Greek Moirai except the number three and a delusive community of sound? |
55575 | What, asks Professor Smith( Ecce Deus, p. 67), was the active principle of Christianity? |
55575 | When Josephus, again, alludes to"James the Just who was brother of Jesus,"is he, an enemy of the Christian faith, adopting Christian slang? |
55575 | Where could they see such statuary in or about Jerusalem? |
55575 | Where is the proof that such a god was ever heard of in ancient Palestine, either early or late, or that such a cult ever existed? |
55575 | Who ever heard before them of a Jewish cult of a Sun- God- Saviour Joshua? |
55575 | Who ever in that age felt the name Jesus to be grand, comforting, uplifting? |
55575 | Who had taught them about the Kingdom and sent them forth to proclaim it? |
55575 | Who were the seven? |
55575 | Why are no warnings against polytheism put into the mouth of Jesus? |
55575 | Why carry coals to Newcastle on so huge a scale? |
55575 | Why could not Dr. Jensen consult Dr. Drews"as to the real spiritual nature"of John the Baptist? |
55575 | Why could they not have asked one of the priests of Osiris, who as a rule might be found in the neighbourhood of his statues, what the emblem meant? |
55575 | Why could they not rest content with him as they found him in their ancient tradition? |
55575 | Why did Peter deny Jesus? |
55575 | Why did they do it? |
55575 | Why does he shut his eyes to them, and gibe perpetually at the critical students who attach weight to them? |
55575 | Why from the very first did the followers of Jesus entertain what Mr. Smith denounces as"an a priori concept of the Jesus"( p. 35)? |
55575 | Why give up at the eleventh hour the astral explanation for an utterly different one? |
55575 | Why has the fact of his unreality, as these writers argue it, left no trace of itself in Christian tradition and literature? |
55575 | Why is he sure that the Nazarenes, and after them the earliest Christians, were a secret society with a secret cult? |
55575 | Why is not a single precept of the Sermon on the Mount directed against idolatry? |
55575 | Why not have both in the case of Jesus, to whose real life and subsequent deification the Augusti and the Pharaohs offer a remarkable parallel? |
55575 | Why on the occasion in question did Jesus make a scourge of cords with which to drive the sheep and oxen out of the Temple? |
55575 | Why should there be? |
55575 | Why should worshippers of Serapis have been regarded as specially vicious by the Roman mob? |
55575 | Why so, when they knew that from the first he was a God and up in heaven? |
55575 | Why so? |
55575 | Why trouble to utter these documents in which Jesus"reappears as a natural man,"long after the sect as a whole were committed to the miraculous birth? |
55575 | Why was Jesus crucified? |
55575 | Why were they at such pains to transform it into the story of a Galilean Messiah crucified by the Roman Governor of Judæa? |
55575 | Why, in other words, were they convinced from the beginning that he was a man of flesh and blood, who had lived on earth among them? |
55575 | Why, then, did they call their sublime deity by the name of Jesus? |
55575 | Why, then, reject the view that Jesus chose twelve apostles because there were twelve tribes? |
55575 | Why, then, should they have had their central myth of the crucifixion in a Latin form? |
55575 | Why, therefore, go out of the way to attribute the tale to the influence of a legend of Bacchus, so multiplying empty hypotheses? |
55575 | Why? |
55575 | Would Mr. Smith on that account dispute their authenticity? |
55575 | Would any sane person doubt that there was a substratum of fact and real history underlying them all? |
55575 | Would it not be simpler, in the end, to tell people frankly that a legend is only a legend? |
55575 | [ 10] Why necessarily from Josephus? |
55575 | [ Contents of Mark] What, then, do we find in Mark''s narrative? |
55575 | [ How could a Sun- god slain annually be slain by Pontius Pilate?] |
55575 | [ If so, how could they devote themselves to pagan mystery plays?] |
55575 | [ Inadequacy of the mythic theory] But, letting that pass, we ask what evidence is there that Orion ever had the epithet Pilatus in this sense? |
55575 | [ Janus- Peter the bifrons] Who was Peter? |
55575 | [ Joseph and his ass] Who was Joseph? |
55575 | [ Mary and her homonyms] Who was Mary, the mother of Jesus? |
55575 | [ Summary of Pauline evidence] What does it amount to? |
55575 | [ The Lamb and Fish symbolism] Why is Jesus represented in art and lore by the Lamb and the Fishes? |
55575 | [ The Pilate myth] Why was Jesus crucified by Pilate? |
55575 | [ The Sermon on the Mount] Why did Jesus preach his sermon on the Mount? |
55575 | [ The cleansing of the temple] Why did the solar God Joshua- Jesus scourge the money- changers out of the temple? |
55575 | [ The date of birthday] Why was Jesus born at the winter- solstice? |
55575 | [ The last Judgment] Why was it believed that Jesus was to judge men after death? |
55575 | [ The twelve disciples] Why did Jesus surround himself with twelve disciples? |
55575 | [ The two asses] Why did Jesus ride into Jerusalem before his death on two asses? |
55575 | [ Why make him the central figure of a monotheistic cult?] |
55575 | [ Why should the robber chief Joshua have been selected as prototype of Jesus?] |
55575 | and his brethren, James and Joseph and Simon and Judas? |
55575 | ix, 1, he writes in answer to those who pooh- poohed his mission:"Am I not an apostle? |
55575 | of Matthew xxvii, 17:"Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I release unto you? |
55575 | xi, 22, in the same vein:"Are they Hebrews? |
55575 | xv, 6) that the greater part of the 500 brethren to whom Jesus appeared were still alive? |
6678 | But now you are covered with bunions And spongy and morbid and blue; You bite in the night like an adder-- O say, what has happened to you? |
6678 | Father is a corner druggist-- Why should I abstain? 6678 Oh, father,"she cried in hurt bewilderment,"what kind of place was that?" |
6678 | Well, Jack,he says,"You want some real good gin?" |
6678 | What could I say? 6678 What''s the matter?" |
6678 | ''Tickling Tottie''s Tummy?'' |
6678 | And after all who does make the best censor, or nonsenseor or whatever you choose to call it? |
6678 | And as for religion-- Well, if there''s a God why does n''t He stop this bloody war, or, anyway, where the blazes is He? |
6678 | And do n''t these statements illustrate Our Nation''s progress up to date? |
6678 | And is there no way of escape? |
6678 | And pretty soon there''s all the other laws, And how''re you goin''to keep from think''likewise About a thing like stealin'', and all that? |
6678 | And so, of course, later I did want some, And had to pay that much, and even more; But hell, what can you do? |
6678 | And the policeman just said,''Here, where you going? |
6678 | But did it give old Adam pause, This One and only law there was? |
6678 | But does the nonsenseorship rest content with its achievement? |
6678 | But is not that ideal for the nonsenseorship? |
6678 | But now is he permitted to have his own secret museum of virility? |
6678 | But that prohibition, like all the others, has its side door-- may one say its small- family entrance? |
6678 | But was there not still some remedy which would keep at least part of the edition free from that dreadful word? |
6678 | But what is the situation? |
6678 | Can naïveté go further? |
6678 | Can you believe it? |
6678 | Charles Lamb, a typically English author, wrote a poem beginning"Who first invented work?" |
6678 | Conversation will be wholly instructive, for in fifty years the last generation capable of saying,"Do you remember that night--?" |
6678 | D''you want the whole of England?'' |
6678 | De Gourmont, writing of education, asks:"Is it necessary to cultivate at such pains in the minds of the young, hatred of what is new?" |
6678 | Do n''t the smutty shows always make money? |
6678 | Do not the censors read our books? |
6678 | Does a censor ever have need of any other word but"no"? |
6678 | Does an American feel happy in his work? |
6678 | Does anybody in his senses imagine that Isadora Duncan has been changed, or could be changed, for better or worse? |
6678 | Does n''t the public invariably stampede to the most bedridden plays? |
6678 | Does the act of work give him a satisfaction which is not felt by an Englishman? |
6678 | Here it is in print; is n''t it disgraceful? |
6678 | How does it come Professor Frinck of Cornell is not in jail? |
6678 | How many times I got to tell you? |
6678 | If citizenship is a mere legal figment, by what right do States send their citizens to war? |
6678 | If water was just as good, why did not water remain in the casks? |
6678 | In a hundred years it may be that men will meet around a table and that one will say to the other,"What have you got?" |
6678 | In the darkness I called to them as they went down the gangway into their boat,"What is a wowzer?" |
6678 | Is n''t the pornographic play the most valuable of all theatrical properties?" |
6678 | Is there reasonable assurance that we shall always be able to keep the guiding principles of our national life, the nonsenseorship, a child mind? |
6678 | Leave her alone, you hear? |
6678 | My dainty, fastidious tummy-- O what have you had to endure? |
6678 | No more wars? |
6678 | One comes from the man who can be counted on to say:"They tell me that show at the Eltinge-- What''s it called? |
6678 | People pass with unmoved faces-- Why remark such commonplaces? |
6678 | So I say to myself:''If tellin''lies is all that bloody good in war, what bloody good is tellin''truth in peace?''" |
6678 | Suppose its answer had been"yes"to your righteous question? |
6678 | THE AUTHOR OF"THE MIRRORS OF WASHINGTON"Has anyone ever stopped to think what the nonsenseorship would do to our suppressed desires? |
6678 | That''s what this Prohibition done for him, And what''s it do for me, I''d like to know? |
6678 | This was denied in a great sputter, to which Miss Royden replied,"How about Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria?" |
6678 | This, then, is all very well, but what is the end to be? |
6678 | Too late to reset? |
6678 | Very well, what happens? |
6678 | Was it not thoughtful, good and kind For such a man of such a mind To show an interest so grand In his misguided native land? |
6678 | Was it not written,"The child is censor to the man?" |
6678 | Was n''t it still possible to rout out the type at that point, to chisel the word away and leave a blank? |
6678 | Well, some of us, Of course, might get just a wee mite too much Under the belt, but who did that ever hurt? |
6678 | Were they losing control of us? |
6678 | What divination is theirs which makes them so positive? |
6678 | What was it that it had this wonderful quality of always being right? |
6678 | Who are happy over Prohibition? |
6678 | Who gets a long- term lease nowadays? |
6678 | Why the Extremists? |
6678 | Why the Uplift Workers? |
6678 | Why, then, the Reformers? |
6678 | Would anyone exchange a voice like that as a ruler for the wisdom of the world''s ten wisest men? |
6678 | You hear me? |
6678 | You hear that? |
6678 | You think I''ll have my son foolin''around A little snippy rat that''s all stuck- up, And thinks my son''s not good enough for her? |
6678 | You would ask,"Shall we tamely acquiesce while the labor unions import the Russian revolution into our very midst?" |
6678 | You would frame your question thus:"Shall we stand by idly and pusillanimously while our neighbor invades our land and rapes our women?" |
6678 | You would not go to the temple and say,"Shall we reduce wages?" |
6678 | _ What''s that?_ You have known a politician. |
6678 | said to it? |
7397 | Hans Breitmann gif a barty,--vhere is dot barty now? |
7397 | Ah, who shall count a rescued nation''s debt, Or sum in words our martyrs''silent claims? |
7397 | And art thou, then, a world like ours, Flung from the orb that whirled our own A molten pebble from its zone? |
7397 | And bast thou cities, domes, and towers, And life, and love that makes it dear, And death that fills thy tribes with fear? |
7397 | And is thy bosom decked with flowers That steal their bloom from scalding showers? |
7397 | And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, Where sorrow saddens every cheek And broods in every aching heart? |
7397 | And you, our quasi Dutchman, what welcome should be yours For all the wise prescriptions that work your laughter- cures? |
7397 | Ask you what name this prisoned spirit bears While with ourselves this fleeting breath it shares? |
7397 | At Israel''s altar still we humbly bow, But where, oh where, are Israel''s prophets now? |
7397 | B."? |
7397 | But who is he whose massive frame belies The maiden shyness of his downcast eyes? |
7397 | Can Freedom breathe if ignorance reign? |
7397 | Can I believe it? |
7397 | Dead? |
7397 | Have the pale wayside weeds no fond regret For him who read the secrets they enfold? |
7397 | I think him dead? |
7397 | No angry passion shakes the state Whose weary servant seeks for rest; And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast? |
7397 | O guardian of the starry gate, What coin shall pay this debt of mine? |
7397 | Say, shall the Muse with faltering steps retreat, Or dare these names in rhythmic form repeat? |
7397 | Science has kept her midnight taper burning To greet thy coming with its vestal flame; Friendship has murmured,"When art thou returning?" |
7397 | Shall Commerce thrive where anarchs rule? |
7397 | Shall I the poet''s broad dominion claim Because you bid me wear his sacred name For these few moments? |
7397 | Shall the proud spangles of the field forget The verse that lent new glory to their gold? |
7397 | Slowly the stores of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair; Will Heaven not yield when knees are bent? |
7397 | The hues of all its glowing beds are ours, Shall you not claim its sweetest- smelling flowers? |
7397 | This wreath of verse how dare I offer you To whom the garden''s choicest gifts are due? |
7397 | Too old grew Britain for her mother''s beads,-- Must we be necklaced with her children''s creeds? |
7397 | Tower- like he stands in life''s unfaded prime; Ask you his name? |
7397 | Well may they ask, for what so brightly burns As a dry creed that nothing ever learns? |
7397 | What were the glory of these festal days Shorn of their grand illumination''s blaze? |
7397 | When thy last page of life at length is filled, What shall thine heirs to keep thy memory build? |
7397 | Where in the realm of thought, whose air is song, Does he, the Buddha of the West, belong? |
7397 | Where is the charm the weird enchantress weaves? |
7397 | Where is the sibyl with her hoarded leaves? |
7397 | Where shall she find an eye like thine to greet Spring''s earliest footprints on her opening flowers? |
7397 | Who broods in silence till, by questions pressed, Some answer struggles from his laboring breast? |
7397 | Who is our brother? |
7397 | Who shall our heroes''dread exchange forget,-- All life, youth, hope, could promise to allure For all that soul could brave or flesh endure? |
7397 | Who then is left to rend the future''s veil? |
7397 | Why not as boldly as from Homer''s lips The long array, of Argive battle- ships? |
7397 | Why that ethereal spirit''s frame describe? |
7397 | Will Faith her half- fledged brood retain If darkening counsels cloud the school? |
7397 | Will piles of stone in Auburn''s mournful shade Save from neglect the spot where thou art laid? |
38811 | 2 Does one have to be born again to appreciate the beauty and solemnity of such a performance? 38811 And is mine one?" |
38811 | Oh,said the wolf,"Are you chained? |
38811 | Provoked him to anger._Is that true? |
38811 | Would you go if you were invited? |
38811 | You have? |
38811 | _ Can the mind conceive of more horrid blasphemy?_Is not that true? |
38811 | _ Can the mind conceive of more horrid blasphemy?_Is not that true? |
38811 | _ Or the Word of God_--What is that? |
38811 | ''s dearest brother James, the Duke of York.. And what else? |
38811 | * Is it true that when a captain with fifty men went after Elijah, this prophet caused fire to come down from heaven and consume them all? |
38811 | About how many sins could an average goat carry? |
38811 | After the passage of such a law by the United States is it not indecent for us to send missionaries to China? |
38811 | Again, what is the difference between a State that has no law on the subject, and a State that has passed an unconstitutional law? |
38811 | All at once there arose a man called Martin Luther, and what did the dear old Catholics think? |
38811 | And are they the"merciful"who when some man endeavors to answer their argument, put him in the penitentiary? |
38811 | And do you know that we ought to feel under the greatest obligation to men who have fought the prevailing notions of their day? |
38811 | And has a man that right? |
38811 | And how are you going to keep from having more? |
38811 | And how would the ministers feel if somebody should invent a clergyman of wood that would to all intents and purposes answer the purpose? |
38811 | And if he could know, how could he convince others? |
38811 | And if the writers of the Bible were in reality inspired, ought not that book to be the greatest of books? |
38811 | And is it possible that a work written by an infinite Being has to be protected by a legislature? |
38811 | And is not this difference founded on the difference in credulity? |
38811 | And is such citizenship within the protecting power of Congress? |
38811 | And suppose he does not believe in any bible whatever? |
38811 | And suppose the highest tribunal of the State holds that the question is of a"social"character-- what then? |
38811 | And that this God at the same time he gave the Ten Commandments ordered the Jews to break the most of them? |
38811 | And what does that mean? |
38811 | And what else says the defendant? |
38811 | And what else? |
38811 | And what has been the result? |
38811 | And what is it that for the moment destroys the sense of right and wrong? |
38811 | And what is it to reap that field? |
38811 | And when children were sold from the breasts of mothers, why was he deaf to the mother''s cry? |
38811 | And when he heard the lash upon the naked back of the slave, why did he not also hear the prayer of the slave? |
38811 | And wherever such laws have been enforced, have the people been friends? |
38811 | And why were the Jews themselves without a Bible until the days of Ezra the scribe? |
38811 | And why? |
38811 | And why? |
38811 | Any harm in saying that? |
38811 | Are all these doubts born of a malignant and depraved heart? |
38811 | Are diseases of the brain-- are deformities of the soul, of the mind, also transmitted? |
38811 | Are his words a shield that he uses to protect himself from suspicion? |
38811 | Are majorities always right? |
38811 | Are not, then, all the immunities and privileges and rights under the protecting power of Congress? |
38811 | Are the brains of criminals exactly like the brains of honest men? |
38811 | Are the majority the pioneers of progress, or does the pioneer, as a rule, walk alone? |
38811 | Are the monk and nun superior to the father and mother? |
38811 | Are there several kinds of knowing? |
38811 | Are they holy? |
38811 | Are vices as carefully transmitted by nature as virtues? |
38811 | Are we any better friends to- day than we were in 1789? |
38811 | Are we any nearer thinking alike to- day than we were then? |
38811 | Are we certain that all people can tell the truth? |
38811 | Are we certain that it does not require genius to be good? |
38811 | Are we going back to superstition? |
38811 | Are we going to take authority for truth? |
38811 | Are we not all children of the same Mother? |
38811 | Are we not all compelled to think, whether we wish to or not? |
38811 | Are we not satisfied now that back of every act and thought and dream and fancy is an efficient cause? |
38811 | Are we to have a God who will re- enact the Mosaic code and punish hundreds of offences with death? |
38811 | Are we to have the God who issued a commandment against all art-- who was the enemy of investigation and of free speech? |
38811 | Are we to retrace our steps? |
38811 | Are you deprived of your liberty? |
38811 | Are"the law of supply and demand,"invention and science, monopoly and competition, capital and legislation always to be the enemies of those who toil? |
38811 | As a matter of fact, is there not now a cause which did not to the same extent exist then? |
38811 | As a matter of fact, miracles could only satisfy people who demanded no evidence; else how could they have believed the miracle? |
38811 | As he lived, he died-- hopeful and serene-- and now, standing in imagination by his grave, we ask: Will the night be eternal? |
38811 | Besides, if all should obey this injunction,"Sell what thou hast and give to the poor,"who would buy? |
38811 | But how is it possible to fix the wages of every man? |
38811 | But let me ask, What is it to be spiritual? |
38811 | But the real question is: Can religion restrain people from committing natural crimes? |
38811 | But what can the United States say? |
38811 | But who is to make known the will of this supreme God? |
38811 | By what standard would he judge? |
38811 | By what testimony can we substantiate the authenticity of the prophets, or of the prophecies, or of the fulfillments? |
38811 | Can God, then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two persons? |
38811 | Can any man have the egotism to say that he has found it all out? |
38811 | Can anything be done for the reformation of the criminal? |
38811 | Can anything be more absurd? |
38811 | Can anything be plainer-- anything be more forcibly stated? |
38811 | Can anything more brutally hellish be conceived? |
38811 | Can he believe without evidence? |
38811 | Can he get employment? |
38811 | Can he preserve his manhood only by making a false statement? |
38811 | Can his lips be closed by the power of the state? |
38811 | Can it be true that God was afraid to trust himself with the Jews for fear he would consume them? |
38811 | Can it imagine a beginningless being, infinitely powerful and intelligent? |
38811 | Can man become intelligent enough to be generous, to be just; or does the same law or fact control him that controls the animal and vegetable world? |
38811 | Can one who does not believe in this God, conscientiously take such oath, or make such affirmation? |
38811 | Can the Federal arm be palsied by the action or non- action of a State? |
38811 | Can the fatherless and motherless exist? |
38811 | Can the offender be proceeded against in the criminal courts? |
38811 | Can there be anything more consoling than to feel, to know, that Jehovah is not God-- that the message of the Old Testament is not from the infinite? |
38811 | Can these forces of nature be controlled for the benefit of her suffering children? |
38811 | Can this be unpleasant except in an uncivilized community-- a community in which an uncivilized church has authority? |
38811 | Can we blame the Hebrews for getting tired of their God? |
38811 | Can we conceive of nothing as a force, or as a cause? |
38811 | Can we not safely take another step, and say that the criminal is a victim, as the diseased and insane and deformed are victims? |
38811 | Can we now say that the Bible is inspired in its morality? |
38811 | Can you help thinking as you do? |
38811 | Can you imagine an infinitely good God sending a man to hell because he did not believe the bear story? |
38811 | Could a man meet such a goat now without laughing? |
38811 | Could it now, by any possibility, make a man a good father, a good husband, a good citizen? |
38811 | Could the States, in spite of the 13th Amendment, deprive free men of life or property without due process of law? |
38811 | Could they be classified by a naturalist? |
38811 | Could you pour contempt on Shakespeare by saying that his mother was a woman,--by saying that he was once a poor, crying, little, helpless child? |
38811 | Did John Calvin give evidence of his spirituality by burning Servetus? |
38811 | Did a man actually go to heaven in a chariot of fire drawn by horses of fire, or was he carried to Paradise by a whirlwind? |
38811 | Did anybody ever dream of passing a law to protect Shakespeare from being laughed at? |
38811 | Did anybody ever hear of a policeman being dismissed because a new church had been organized? |
38811 | Did anybody ever think of such a thing? |
38811 | Did anybody ever want any legislative enactment to keep people from holding Robert Burns in contempt? |
38811 | Did he know he would drown them when he made them? |
38811 | Did he know they ought to be drowned when they were made? |
38811 | Did he mix his ignorance with the divine information, his prejudices and hatreds with the love and justice of the Deity? |
38811 | Did he not, if the Bible is true, drown the people? |
38811 | Did it please him for man to kill his neighbor, for brother to murder his brother, and for the father to butcher his sou? |
38811 | Did not Congress have that power under the 13th Amendment? |
38811 | Did not Congress, under that amendment, have the power to protect the lives, liberty and property of free men? |
38811 | Did not Congress, under the 13th Amendment, have power to destroy slavery and involuntary servitude? |
38811 | Did that law apply to States, or to individuals? |
38811 | Did the nations thus restrained by religion, prosper? |
38811 | Did the one inspired set down only the thoughts of a supernatural being? |
38811 | Did the prosecution have the courage to attack his reputation? |
38811 | Did the word Protestant"carry an unpleasant significance"? |
38811 | Did they succeed? |
38811 | Did you ever know of a more despicable fraud practiced by one brother on another than Jacob practiced on Esau? |
38811 | Do I think that the marriage of the sickly and diseased ought to be prevented by law? |
38811 | Do not these passages show that these laws were made long after the Jews had left the desert, and that they were not given from Sinai? |
38811 | Do they live upon some kind of food? |
38811 | Do they occupy space? |
38811 | Do they run or float or fly? |
38811 | Do we need to protect him from ridicule by a statute? |
38811 | Do you believe that? |
38811 | Do you know that all the mechanics that ever lived-- take the best ones-- cannot make two clocks that will run exactly alike one hour, one minute? |
38811 | Do you not see what the effect will be? |
38811 | Does an officer, by acting contrary to State law, become so like a State that the word State, used in the Constitution, includes him? |
38811 | Does any intellectual man who has examined the question believe that depraved demons live in the bodies of men? |
38811 | Does any theologian hate the man he can answer? |
38811 | Does citizenship mean anything except certain"rights, privileges and immunities"? |
38811 | Does each man in some degree bear burdens imposed by ancestors? |
38811 | Does he blot out, or dim, one star in the heaven of hope? |
38811 | Does he help the poor? |
38811 | Does he like to lock somebody up in the penitentiary because he has the power of the moment? |
38811 | Does he need assistance from New Jersey? |
38811 | Does he pay his debts? |
38811 | Does he tell the truth? |
38811 | Does he want to crush his fellow citizens? |
38811 | Does he wish to convince his neighbors that the evil thought and impulse were never in his mind? |
38811 | Does he wish to use it as a despot, or as a philanthropist-- like a devil, or like a man? |
38811 | Does it involve moral responsibility? |
38811 | Does it make any difference whether you believe it or not? |
38811 | Does it, or does it not? |
38811 | Does that cast any scorn or contempt upon him? |
38811 | Does the Agnostic take any consolation from the world? |
38811 | Does the Bible describe God as having drowned the whole world with the exception of eight people? |
38811 | Does the Principal of King''s College know any more as to the truth of the Old Testament than the man who modestly calls for evidence? |
38811 | Does the Supreme Court wish to be understood, that until the 14th Amendment was adopted the States had the right to rob and kill free men? |
38811 | Does the great law demand that every worker live on the least possible amount of bread? |
38811 | First of all, is it probable? |
38811 | For what sum of money, for what amount of wealth, would the world have the science of astronomy expunged from the brain of man? |
38811 | Gentlemen, does not that show the need of more missionaries? |
38811 | HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? |
38811 | HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? |
38811 | Had they the public weal at heart, or were they simply endeavoring to be revenged upon this defendant? |
38811 | Has a man the right to examine, to investigate, the religion of his own country-- the religion of his father and mother? |
38811 | Has he got a heart that melts when he hears grief''s story? |
38811 | Has he the confidence of the Infinite? |
38811 | Has he the right to be sincere? |
38811 | Has he the right to say it, if he believes it? |
38811 | Has he the right to show that Martin Luther said he did not believe there was one solitary word of gospel in the Epistle to the Romans? |
38811 | Has he the right to show that some of these books were not written till nearly two hundred years afterward? |
38811 | Has he the right to show that the book of Revelation got into the canon by one vote, and one only? |
38811 | Has he the right to show that there were twenty- eight books called"The Books of the Hebrew''s"? |
38811 | Has he the right to show that they passed in convention upon what books they would put in and what they would not? |
38811 | Has he the right to show that? |
38811 | Has not a mistake been made? |
38811 | Has the Catholic Church thrown away the differences between it and the Protestants? |
38811 | Has the Principal of King''s College any knowledge that he keeps from the rest of the world? |
38811 | Has the father no real love for the children? |
38811 | Has virtue had as many martyrs as vice?" |
38811 | Have all citizens of the United States equal rights, without regard to race or color? |
38811 | Have all citizens the same right to travel on the highways of the country? |
38811 | Have criminals the same ambitions, the same standards of happiness or of well- being? |
38811 | Have the angels no regret, no remorse, no conscience? |
38811 | Have the laborers the same right to consult and combine? |
38811 | Have these scientific assassins discovered anything of value? |
38811 | Have they all the same right to ride upon the railways created by State authority? |
38811 | Have we not advanced far enough intellectually to deny the existence of chance? |
38811 | Have you a right to think about it at all? |
38811 | Have you any suggestions to make in regard to remodeling the libel laws? |
38811 | Have you not the right to read, to observe, to investigate-- and when you have so read and so investigated, have you not the right to reap that field? |
38811 | Have you produced a new argument? |
38811 | Having this control, why did he not see to it that he was recognized in the Constitution of the United States? |
38811 | He goes so far as to say, that:"_ He was found staring foolishly at his own little toes._"And why not? |
38811 | He is the American who is forever asking,"Why?" |
38811 | Honestly-- what do you think they would say? |
38811 | How are we to settle the unequal contest between men and machines? |
38811 | How are you going to judge him? |
38811 | How came the miracles to be believed? |
38811 | How can a man obtain any knowledge of the unseen world? |
38811 | How can a slave owe labor? |
38811 | How can a slave owe service? |
38811 | How can man make friends with God by cutting the throats of bullocks and goats? |
38811 | How can the Deist satisfactorily account for the sufferings of women and children? |
38811 | How can the fact of inspiration be established? |
38811 | How can these miracles be verified? |
38811 | How can we account for an article like that? |
38811 | How can we know that any human being was divinely inspired? |
38811 | How could a slave make a contract? |
38811 | How could even the inspired man know that he was inspired? |
38811 | How could such a being be intelligent? |
38811 | How could such a being be powerful? |
38811 | How could such a law have been constitutional? |
38811 | How could such impostors have escaped exposure? |
38811 | How could the inspired man know that the communication was received from God? |
38811 | How could the master have a legal claim against a slave? |
38811 | How could these priests get wine? |
38811 | How did the Bible get lost?5 Where was the precious Pentateuch from Moses to Josiah? |
38811 | How did these absconding slaves make cherubs of gold? |
38811 | How did they coin the shekel of the sanctuary? |
38811 | How did they come to crucify him? |
38811 | How did they happen to have it, and how did you happen to be deprived of it? |
38811 | How did they make wreathed chains and spoons, basins and tongs? |
38811 | How did they overlay boards with gold? |
38811 | How do we know that it is possible for all people to be honest? |
38811 | How do you know what such men are mentioned for? |
38811 | How does he use power? |
38811 | How else? |
38811 | How has the Catholic Church imposed upon millions of people? |
38811 | How has the church in every age, when in authority, defended itself? |
38811 | How is it a virtue to deny the miracles of Mohammed and to believe those attributed to Christ? |
38811 | How is it possible to know whether the reputed authors of the books of the Old Testament were the real ones? |
38811 | How is it that the rich control the departments of government? |
38811 | How is"the contrary to appear"? |
38811 | How long will they be controlled by friends who seek favors, and by reformers who want office? |
38811 | How was it possible for the Jews to get along without the directions as to fat and caul and kidney contained in Leviticus? |
38811 | How would Jeremy Taylor have treated an Episcopalian like Heber Newton? |
38811 | How, in the desert of Sinai, did the Jews obtain curtains of fine linen? |
38811 | I ask: How did Mohammed deceive the people of Mecca? |
38811 | I do not say whether this is true or not, but has a man the right to say it if he believes it? |
38811 | I have given you my definition of blasphemy, and now the question arises, what is worship? |
38811 | I now ask, has that subject-- that is to say, Liberty,--been submitted to the general legislative power of Congress? |
38811 | I touched him and said,"Did you ever see anything so beautiful?" |
38811 | If Congress was not clothed with such power by the 13th Amendment, what was the object of that amendment? |
38811 | If God be infinitely good and wise and powerful, is it possible he is afraid of anything? |
38811 | If God in reality should appear to a human being, how could this human being know who had appeared? |
38811 | If Hermann, the magician, and Humboldt, the philosopher, could have appeared before savages, which would have been regarded as a god? |
38811 | If a community is thoroughly civilized, why should it be an unpleasant thing for a man to express his belief in respectful language? |
38811 | If a difference exists in brain, will that in part account for the difference in character? |
38811 | If a nation is Christian, will all the citizens go to heaven? |
38811 | If a sick man should come down the street and sit upon your doorstep, what would you do with him? |
38811 | If excluded from one inn, he may be from all; if from one car, why not from all? |
38811 | If he is to be regarded as perfect, although not divine, when did he reach perfection? |
38811 | If he wished other nations to be informed, and revealed himself to but one, why did he not choose a people that mingled with others? |
38811 | If it is not, will they all be damned? |
38811 | If it is true, is it blasphemous? |
38811 | If it was of such vast importance for man to know that there is a God, why did not God make himself known? |
38811 | If one denies the existence of devils, does he, for that reason, cease to believe in Jesus Christ? |
38811 | If others claim the right, where did they get it? |
38811 | If stories like this can be circulated about a living man, what may we not expect concerning the dead who have opposed the church? |
38811 | If the Catholic Church was still in partnership with God, what excuse could have been made for the Reformation? |
38811 | If the Mosaic account does not convince a man that it is true, is he a wretch because he is candid enough to tell the truth? |
38811 | If the argument is against him, it might be unpleasant; but why should simple numbers be the foundation of unpleasantness? |
38811 | If the book and my brain are both the work of the same infinite God, whose fault is it that the book and the brain do not agree? |
38811 | If the majority have the facts,--if they have the argument,--why should they fear the mistakes of the minority? |
38811 | If the minority had never spoken, what to- day would have been the condition of this world? |
38811 | If there be one true religion, how is it possible to ascertain which of all the religions the true one is? |
38811 | If this be true, then your knowledge of the subject is also irrelevant? |
38811 | If this statute is constitutional, why has it been allowed to sleep for all these years? |
38811 | If to deny the existence of these supposed beings is to be an infidel, how can the word infidel"carry an unpleasant significance"? |
38811 | If we can not believe those whom we know, why should we believe witnesses who have been dead thousands of years, and about whom we know nothing? |
38811 | If what the defendant has said is blasphemy under this statute then the question arises, is the statute in accordance with the constitution? |
38811 | If you have the right to work with your hands and to gather the harvest for yourself and your children, have you not a right to cultivate your brain? |
38811 | If, on the other hand, the communication is absurd or wicked, will that conclusively show that the man was not inspired? |
38811 | If, then, all the people in each State, were, by virtue of the 13th Amendment, free, what right had a majority to enslave a minority? |
38811 | If, then, even the inspired man can not certainly know that he is inspired, how is it possible for him to demonstrate his inspiration to others? |
38811 | In examining a philosophy, a system, the ministers asked:"Does it agree with the sacred book?" |
38811 | In order to be really spiritual, must a man sacrifice this world for the sake of another? |
38811 | In other words, is our reason to be the final standard? |
38811 | In other words, what is the difference between no law and a void law? |
38811 | In other words, why may not the mob do quickly that which the State does slowly? |
38811 | In other words: Is the principal bound by the acts of his agent, that act not being within the scope of his authority? |
38811 | In this Manifesto was this argument:"What kind of office must that be in a government which requires neither experience nor ability to execute? |
38811 | In this sense, what is an unbeliever? |
38811 | In what obscure and shadowy recesses of the brain are passions born? |
38811 | In what way will he justify religious persecution-- the flame and sword of religious hatred? |
38811 | Is a State liable-- or is the Government liable-- for the act of any officer, that act not being authorized by law? |
38811 | Is a man to be blamed for not agreeing with his fellow- citizen? |
38811 | Is a man to be sent to the penitentiary for that? |
38811 | Is a person accountable for the constitution of his mind, for the formation of his brain? |
38811 | Is any government, or can any government, be capable of intelligently performing these countless duties? |
38811 | Is any human being responsible for the weight that evidence has upon him? |
38811 | Is any statute needed to keep Euclid from being laughed at in this neighborhood? |
38811 | Is anything, or can anything, be produced that is not necessarily produced? |
38811 | Is he convinced? |
38811 | Is he not paid a thousand times through their caresses, their sympathy, their love? |
38811 | Is hell hungry for those who deny that water gushed from a"hollow place"in a dry bone? |
38811 | Is hell the only place where souls regret the evil they have done? |
38811 | Is it a sin to ask these questions? |
38811 | Is it a sin to be counted? |
38811 | Is it a sin to deny this, and to deny the inspiration of a book that teaches it? |
38811 | Is it a small thing to lift from the shoulders of industry the burdens of superstition? |
38811 | Is it any harm to speak of it? |
38811 | Is it blasphemous to deny that God commanded his children to murder each other? |
38811 | Is it blasphemous to say that he was benevolent, merciful and just? |
38811 | Is it blasphemy to ask that question? |
38811 | Is it blasphemy to deny that a God of infinite love gave such commandments? |
38811 | Is it blasphemy to quote from the"Sacred Scriptures"? |
38811 | Is it blasphemy to say that Solomon was not a virtuous man, or that David was an adulterer? |
38811 | Is it blasphemy to say that you do not like a hypocrite, a murderer, or a thief, because his name is in the Bible? |
38811 | Is it blasphemy to tell the truth and to say exactly what David was? |
38811 | Is it evidence of a new heart to believe that one man turned over a house so large that over three thousand people were on the roof? |
38811 | Is it his duty to close his lips? |
38811 | Is it his fate to work one day, that he may get enough food to be able to work another? |
38811 | Is it likely that a being of infinite wisdom would deliberately do what he knew he must undo? |
38811 | Is it necessary to believe in eternal torment to understand the meaning of the word spiritual? |
38811 | Is it necessary to believe that? |
38811 | Is it necessary to hate those who disagree with you, and to calumniate those whose argument you can not answer, in order to be spiritual? |
38811 | Is it not a little late in the day to object to people because they sacrifice meat and other eatables to their god? |
38811 | Is it not an invasion of citizenship to invade the immunities or privileges or rights belonging to a citizen? |
38811 | Is it not possible to imagine that a great and tender soul living in Palestine nearly twenty centuries ago was misunderstood? |
38811 | Is it not true that the citizen is apt to imitate his nation? |
38811 | Is it not true that the criminal is a natural product, and that society unconsciously produces these children of vice? |
38811 | Is it not within the range of the probable that legend and rumor and ignorance and zeal have deformed his life and belittled his character? |
38811 | Is it not within the realm of the possible that his words have been inaccurately reported? |
38811 | Is it not wonderful that the creator of all worlds, infinite in power and wisdom, could not hold his own against the gods of wood and stone? |
38811 | Is it possible for all men to be generous or candid or courageous? |
38811 | Is it possible for the human mind to conceive of an infinite personality? |
38811 | Is it possible that Christians will break the peace? |
38811 | Is it possible that God commanded them to be done? |
38811 | Is it possible that a book can not be written by a God so that it will not excite the laughter of the human race? |
38811 | Is it possible that a few Chinese can bring our"holy religion"into disgust and contempt? |
38811 | Is it possible that a good and wise God, knowing that he was going to drown them, made millions of people? |
38811 | Is it possible that the average man assaults the criminal in a spirit of self- defence? |
38811 | Is it possible that these things really happened? |
38811 | Is it possible that they will violate the law? |
38811 | Is it possible that thoughts or desires or passions are the children of chance, born of nothing? |
38811 | Is it possible that we must go to the same causes for these effects? |
38811 | Is it possible that women, who have been the Caryatides of the church, who have borne its insults and its burdens, are to be its destroyers? |
38811 | Is it possible to conceive of a despotism beyond this? |
38811 | Is it possible to flatter the Infinite with a constitutional amendment? |
38811 | Is it possible to get any morality out of this history? |
38811 | Is it possible to imagine an infinite intelligence dwelling for an eternity in infinite nothing? |
38811 | Is it possible to put in ordinary English a more perfect absurdity? |
38811 | Is it probable that Christians will congregate together and make a mob, simply because a man has given an opinion against their religion? |
38811 | Is it the God of the Old Testament, who was a believer in slavery and who justified polygamy? |
38811 | Is it the God who commanded the husband to stone his wife to death because she differed with him on the subject of religion? |
38811 | Is it the duty of the General Government to protect its citizens? |
38811 | Is it the duty of the minority to keep silent? |
38811 | Is it to be expected that they will unfrock themselves? |
38811 | Is it very wicked to deny that the universe was created of nothing by an infinite being who existed from all eternity? |
38811 | Is it within the power of man to determine the influence that testimony shall have upon his mind? |
38811 | Is man involved in the"general scheme of things"? |
38811 | Is man under any obligation to his fellows? |
38811 | Is not that an absurd and foolish statute? |
38811 | Is not the difference one of belief instead of knowledge? |
38811 | Is not the tendency to harden and degrade not only those who inflict and those who witness, but the entire community as well? |
38811 | Is not this statement perfectly absurd? |
38811 | Is progress to stop? |
38811 | Is such a denial calculated to pour contempt and scorn upon the God of the orthodox? |
38811 | Is that of any importance? |
38811 | Is that the Christian religion? |
38811 | Is that the Christian religion? |
38811 | Is that the doctrine? |
38811 | Is that the law? |
38811 | Is that to be his only hope-- that and death? |
38811 | Is the god dead? |
38811 | Is the human body at present the residence of evil spirits, or have these imps of darkness perished from the world? |
38811 | Is the human race worthy to be worshiped by itself-- that is to say, should the individual worship himself? |
38811 | Is the man spiritual who endeavors by thought and deed to ennoble the human race? |
38811 | Is the result of such weighing necessary? |
38811 | Is the weight of evidence a question of choice? |
38811 | Is then, the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? |
38811 | Is there a Christian missionary who could help laughing if in any heathen country he had seen the following command of God carried out? |
38811 | Is there any blasphemy about that? |
38811 | Is there any difference between the knowledge of the Christian and of the Agnostic? |
38811 | Is there any evidence-- has there been any-- to show that the defendant was not absolutely candid in the expression of his opinions? |
38811 | Is there any obligation resting on any human being to believe this account? |
38811 | Is there any other knowledge than a scientific knowledge? |
38811 | Is there any remedy for this? |
38811 | Is there any remedy? |
38811 | Is there anything blasphemous in that? |
38811 | Is there anything in heredity? |
38811 | Is there anything in this that is blasphemous? |
38811 | Is there as much division now in the religious world as then? |
38811 | Is there enough in the Bible to save a soul with this story left out? |
38811 | Is there no joy in seeing their minds unfold, their affections develop? |
38811 | Is there no pity, no mercy? |
38811 | Is there not a connection between all events, and is not every act related to all other acts? |
38811 | Is there not work enough for them at home? |
38811 | Is there nothing in this to excite the admiration, the adoration, of a modern reformer? |
38811 | Is there one particle of evidence tending, to show that he is not a perfectly honest and sincere man? |
38811 | Is there such a thing as honestly weighing testimony? |
38811 | Is there such a thing as scientific ignorance? |
38811 | Is there to be no change? |
38811 | Is this a Nation? |
38811 | Is this a difference in knowledge, or a difference in belief-- that is to say, a difference in credulity? |
38811 | Is this blasphemy? |
38811 | Is this knowledge? |
38811 | Is this law constitutional, or is it simply an old statute that fell asleep, that was forgotten, that people simply failed to repeal? |
38811 | Is this statute in harmony with, the part of the constitution of 1844 which says:"The liberty of speech shall not be abridged"? |
38811 | Is this true? |
38811 | It may be well enough to ask: What is it to be really spiritual? |
38811 | Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what does he get? |
38811 | Let this be admitted, and what does it prove? |
38811 | Must a man be honest? |
38811 | Must the discoverer of new truths make of his mind a tomb? |
38811 | Must the inventor allow his inventions to die in the brain? |
38811 | Must we admit that Elijah was fed by ravens; that they brought him bread and flesh every morning and evening? |
38811 | Must we judge from the communication? |
38811 | Now, gentlemen, what is blasphemy? |
38811 | Now, how should we treat a new thought? |
38811 | Now, if the legislation of Congress must be"corrective,"then I ask, corrective of what? |
38811 | Now, is it not a fact that the Old Testament does uphold polygamy? |
38811 | Now, is there any blasphemy in saying that the Bible is true? |
38811 | Now, then, to come to the point, to answer the interrogatory often flung at us from the pulpit, What institutions have Infidels built? |
38811 | Now, what has a man the right to say about that? |
38811 | ONE HUNDRED years after Christ had died suppose some one had asked a Christian, What hospitals have you built? |
38811 | Of what shape are they? |
38811 | On the way the wolf happened to notice that some hair was worn off the dog''s neck, and he said,"How did the hair become worn?" |
38811 | Ought I to clap my hand over my mouth and start for another State, and the minute I got over the line say,"It is not true, It is not true"? |
38811 | Ought a man to be despised and persecuted for denying that God ordered the priests to make women drink dirt and water to test their virtue? |
38811 | Ought an honest man to be sent to the penitentiary for simply telling the truth? |
38811 | Ought not the work of a God to be vastly superior to that of a man? |
38811 | SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? |
38811 | SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? |
38811 | SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? |
38811 | SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? |
38811 | Second, Is the Bible true? |
38811 | Shall the nation take life? |
38811 | Shall we now go back to barbarism? |
38811 | She is asked:"Love you the man that wronged you?" |
38811 | Should God allow such wretches to manage his fire? |
38811 | Should it be an unpleasant thing for a man to say plainly what he believes? |
38811 | Should you express that thought? |
38811 | Suppose God is acknowledged in the Constitution, and somebody denies the existence of this God-- what are you to do with him? |
38811 | Suppose a man believes that, and practices it, does it make any difference whether he believes in the flood or not? |
38811 | Suppose a man writes a libelous article, leaves the country, and then the article is published; is there no remedy? |
38811 | Suppose a person denied equal privileges upon the railway on account of race and color, brings suit and is defeated? |
38811 | Suppose the defendant in this case were guilty of something like that? |
38811 | THOUSANDS of Christians have asked: How was it possible for Christ and his apostles to deceive the people of Jerusalem? |
38811 | The defendant also says, that:"_ God was sick when cutting his teeth._"And what of that? |
38811 | The defenders of orthodox creeds should have the courage to candidly answer at least two questions: First, Is the Bible inspired? |
38811 | The first question for you, gentlemen, to decide in this case is: Is this statute constitutional? |
38811 | The great question is, How shall this right of self- defence be exercised? |
38811 | The other day I was asked these questions:"Has there been as much heroism displayed for the right as for the wrong? |
38811 | The question arises: Is a State responsible for the action of its agent when acting contrary to law? |
38811 | The question is, Has it the right to punish?--has it the right to degrade?--or should it endeavor to reform the convict? |
38811 | The question is, Who has the right on his side? |
38811 | The question is: Can miracles be established except by miracles? |
38811 | The question is: Is Christianity declining? |
38811 | The question is: When will people see the defects in their own theology as clearly as they perceive the same defects in every other? |
38811 | The wolf said,"Do you think this man would treat me as he does you?" |
38811 | Then what has happened? |
38811 | Then what have they cursed? |
38811 | Then what would the Turks do? |
38811 | Then what would the Turks say? |
38811 | They may have settled some disputes as to the action of some organ, but have they added to the useful knowledge of the race? |
38811 | They would put the Morristown missionary in jail, and he would send home word, and then what would the people of Morristown say? |
38811 | Think of men and women without love, without desires, without passions? |
38811 | To individuals or to States? |
38811 | To what extent do antecedents and surroundings affect the moral sense? |
38811 | To whom was this clause directed? |
38811 | Under these circumstances, what avenue is opened to the ex- convict? |
38811 | Under what circumstances, then, can Congress be called upon to act by way of"corrective"legislation, as to these particular clauses? |
38811 | WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? |
38811 | WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? |
38811 | WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? |
38811 | WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? |
38811 | Was Luther a misfortune to the human race? |
38811 | Was he a good man? |
38811 | Was he simply an instrument, or did his personality color the message received and given? |
38811 | Was it at any time in the history of the world an unpleasant thing to be called a Protestant? |
38811 | Was it reasonable for God to give the Jews manna, and nothing else, year after year? |
38811 | Was it"perhaps right that it should"? |
38811 | Was not the world exactly as God made it? |
38811 | Was that amendment a mere opinion, or a prophecy, or the expression of a hope? |
38811 | Was the Episcopal religion always in the majority? |
38811 | Was there at that time moral, mental and financial growth? |
38811 | Was there ever in the history of man so detestible an administration of public affairs? |
38811 | Well what is it? |
38811 | Well, the great question about that is, is it true? |
38811 | Well, what about the souls in heaven? |
38811 | Well, what is the Christian religion? |
38811 | Were all these found in the desert of Sinai? |
38811 | Were most of them as guilty of blasphemy as is the defendant in this case? |
38811 | Were the Jews the only people who needed a revelation? |
38811 | Were the selfish hermits, who deserted their wives and children for the miserable purpose of saving their own little souls, spiritual? |
38811 | Were the unbelievers in the pagan world better or worse than their neighbors? |
38811 | Were these sins contagious? |
38811 | Were they actuated by good and noble motives? |
38811 | Were they spiritual people who insisted that Infinite Love could punish his poor, ignorant children forever? |
38811 | Were they willing to disgrace the State, in order that they might punish him? |
38811 | Were those who put their fellow- men in dungeons, or burned them at the state* on account of a difference of opinion, all spiritual people? |
38811 | What God is it proposed to put in the Constitution? |
38811 | What action can the State take? |
38811 | What are seas and stars compared with human hearts? |
38811 | What are seas and stars in the presence of a heroism that holds pain and death as naught? |
38811 | What are the restraining influences of religion? |
38811 | What are the restraining influences of religion? |
38811 | What are"the fundamental rights, privileges and immunities"which belong to a free man? |
38811 | What asylums have you founded? |
38811 | What can Congress do? |
38811 | What can the evidence of the first class be worth? |
38811 | What can we say of the persecuted and enslaved? |
38811 | What constructive work has been done by the church? |
38811 | What court, what tribunal of last resort, is to define this God, and who is to make known his will? |
38811 | What did he make them for? |
38811 | What does he get from him? |
38811 | What does it mean? |
38811 | What does it mean? |
38811 | What else did the savage suppose? |
38811 | What for? |
38811 | What harm can come from an honest interchange of thought? |
38811 | What have we destroyed? |
38811 | What have we to say of Russia-- of Siberia? |
38811 | What if God did cry? |
38811 | What is blasphemy? |
38811 | What is holy, what is sacred? |
38811 | What is it to be spiritual? |
38811 | What is lost? |
38811 | What is meant by inspiration? |
38811 | What is morality? |
38811 | What is prayer? |
38811 | What is real blasphemy? |
38811 | What is real religion? |
38811 | What is the authority of the Christian? |
38811 | What is the condition of this man? |
38811 | What is the effect of the example set by a nation? |
38811 | What is the positive side? |
38811 | What is the quarry compared with the statue? |
38811 | What is the use of telling a falsehood about it? |
38811 | What is the"question of religion"to which he referred? |
38811 | What is their religion? |
38811 | What is there in either case to correct? |
38811 | What is to be the result? |
38811 | What knowledge has the Christian of another world? |
38811 | What must we think of a man impudent enough to break in pieces tables of stone upon which God had written with his finger? |
38811 | What of it? |
38811 | What of the kings and nobles who live on the stolen labor of others? |
38811 | What of the priest and cardinal and pope who wrest, even from the hand of poverty, the single coin thrice earned? |
38811 | What reason do you suppose was given? |
38811 | What right had a majority to make any distinctions between free men? |
38811 | What right had a majority to take from a minority any privilege, or any immunity, to which they were entitled as free men? |
38811 | What right had the majority to make that unequal which the Constitution made equal? |
38811 | What right had the other State to pass a law that passengers should be kept separate, on account of race or color? |
38811 | What right has he? |
38811 | What rights are within the protecting power of Congress? |
38811 | What shall be done with the slayers of their fellow- men-- with murderers? |
38811 | What shall be done with these men and women? |
38811 | What then is left? |
38811 | What then is under the protecting power of Congress? |
38811 | What then is, or can be called, a moral guide? |
38811 | What was the office or purpose of that Constitution? |
38811 | What was the spirit of our Government at that time? |
38811 | What was there to be intelligent about? |
38811 | What were the reasons given? |
38811 | What were their opinions? |
38811 | What will conscience trouble the people in hell about? |
38811 | What would Calvin have thought of a Presbyterian like Professor Briggs? |
38811 | What would I do? |
38811 | What would I not give for a picture of Shakespeare as a babe,--a picture that was a likeness,--rocked by his mother? |
38811 | What would John Wesley have thought of a Methodist like Dr. Cadman? |
38811 | What would Lyman Beecher have thought of a man like Dr. Abbott? |
38811 | What would we now think of a God who made his will known to the South Sea Islanders for the benefit of the civilized world? |
38811 | What would we say of an admirer of Humboldt who should claim that the great German could cast out devils? |
38811 | What would we think now of a man who, in writing the life of Charles Darwin, should attribute to him supernatural powers? |
38811 | When asked to give your opinion upon any subject, can it be said that your ignorance of that subject is irrelevant? |
38811 | When some poor mother is found wandering in the street with a babe at her breast, does he quote Scripture, or hunt for his pocket- book? |
38811 | Where and what are the sources of vice and virtue? |
38811 | Where are the Wesleys and Whitfields? |
38811 | Where are the old evangelists, the revivalists who swayed the hearts of their hearers with words of flame? |
38811 | Where are they? |
38811 | Where did a church or a nation get that right? |
38811 | Where did they get the blue cloth and their purple? |
38811 | Where did they get the fine flour and the oil? |
38811 | Where did they get the numberless instruments and tools necessary to accomplish all these things? |
38811 | Where did they get the skins of badgers, and how did they dye them red? |
38811 | Where did they get the sockets of brass? |
38811 | Where is the man with intelligence enough to take into consideration the circumstances of each individual case? |
38811 | Where then, is the blasphemy in saying so? |
38811 | Where would we have been if authority had always triumphed? |
38811 | Where would we have been if such statutes had always been carried out? |
38811 | Whether a man built an ark or not-- does that make the slightest difference? |
38811 | Who are the men who are leading the race upward and shedding light in the intellectual world? |
38811 | Who at that time had the slightest conception of the immediate future? |
38811 | Who can account for the success of falsehood? |
38811 | Who can comprehend the stupidity at the bottom of this truth? |
38811 | Who could have guessed the names of the heroes to be repeated by countless lips before the echoes of that shot should have died away? |
38811 | Who had the impudence to publish it? |
38811 | Who had the impudence to say that lepers had been cleansed, and that the dead had been raised? |
38811 | Who is a worshiper? |
38811 | Who is honestly entitled to this seat? |
38811 | Who is to blame? |
38811 | Who knows the author of Kings and Chronicles? |
38811 | Who knows whether such a man as Moses existed or not? |
38811 | Who made up this story? |
38811 | Who must see to it that this declaration is carried out? |
38811 | Who obtained this indictment? |
38811 | Who then was great enough to see the end? |
38811 | Who were they? |
38811 | Why did God allow, and why does he still allow, a vast majority of his children to remain in ignorance of his will? |
38811 | Why did he compel his priests to be butchers, cutters and stabbers? |
38811 | Why did he make your brain so that you could not by any possibility be a Methodist? |
38811 | Why did he make yours so that you could not be a Catholic? |
38811 | Why did he not answer the prayers of the imprisoned, of the helpless? |
38811 | Why did he not do so? |
38811 | Why did his God sit idly on his throne and allow his enemies to wet their swords in the blood of his friends? |
38811 | Why did not the Supreme Court tell us what may be done when"the contrary appears"? |
38811 | Why has it been allowed to slumber? |
38811 | Why is it that men will suffer and risk so much for the sake of stealing? |
38811 | Why is not the Positive stage the point reached by the Agnostic? |
38811 | Why kick him? |
38811 | Why not? |
38811 | Why not? |
38811 | Why not? |
38811 | Why should God delight in the shedding of blood? |
38811 | Why should God in this desert prohibit priests from drinking wine, and from eating moist grapes? |
38811 | Why should God kill the people for what David did? |
38811 | Why should God object to a man wearing a garment made of woolen and linen? |
38811 | Why should a man allow human love to stand between his soul and the will of God-- between his soul and eternal joy? |
38811 | Why should a man risk an eternity of perfect happiness for the sake of enjoying himself a few days with his wife and children? |
38811 | Why should a man, because he has done a bad action, go and kill a sheep? |
38811 | Why should burning flesh be a sweet savor in the nostrils of God? |
38811 | Why should he allow his children to be stuffed with these foolish and impossible falsehoods? |
38811 | Why should he become an eternal outcast for the sake of having a home and fireside here? |
38811 | Why should he carry them to a land uninhabited? |
38811 | Why should he give his lambs to the care and keeping of the wolves and hyenas of superstition? |
38811 | Why should he want his altar sprinkled with blood, and the horns of his altar tipped with blood, and his priests covered with blood? |
38811 | Why should man waste prayers upon such a God? |
38811 | Why should not a man be as free to say that he does not believe as to say that he does believe? |
38811 | Why should not each human being have the right, so far as thought and its expression are concerned, of all the world? |
38811 | Why should not the laborers combine for the purpose of controlling the executive, legislative, and judicial departments? |
38811 | Why should not the true believer tear every blossom of pity, of charity, from his heart, rather than put in peril his immortal soul? |
38811 | Why should the lips of men feel the ripple of laughter if there is a bare possibility that the creed of Christendom is true? |
38811 | Why should the rich control? |
38811 | Why should the same God kill a man for eating the fat of an ox, a sheep, or a goat? |
38811 | Why should these gentlemen object to a god with big, fiery eyeballs, when their own Deity has eyes like a flame of fire? |
38811 | Why should they take the bread out of their own mouths? |
38811 | Why should we believe that God insisted upon the sacrifice of human beings? |
38811 | Why should we endeavor to beautify a world that is so soon to perish?" |
38811 | Why should we fear our fellow- men? |
38811 | Why should we object to their worshiping God as they please? |
38811 | Why should we send missionaries to China if we can not convert the heathen when they come here? |
38811 | Why should you object to these people on account of their religion? |
38811 | Why then should a free and sensible believer in Science, in the naturalness of the universe, send his child to a Catholic school? |
38811 | Why then should an intelligent man allow his child to be taught the geology and astronomy of the Bible? |
38811 | Why then should there be four inspired accounts? |
38811 | Why was nature not so made that it would give light enough? |
38811 | Why was not a written, or what is still better, a printed revelation given to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden? |
38811 | Why will they accept degradation and punishment and infamy as their portion? |
38811 | Why, then, were not the books furnished? |
38811 | Why, whoever did, since the poor man, or the poor God, was crucified? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Why? |
38811 | Will extravagance keep pace with ingenuity? |
38811 | Will honest men stop taking off their hats to successful fraud? |
38811 | Will it be a crime to deny the existence of this constitutional God? |
38811 | Will the Principal of King''s College say that having no knowledge is the reason he knows? |
38811 | Will the machine finally go into partnership with the laborer? |
38811 | Will the workers always be ignorant enough and stupid enough to give their earnings for the useless? |
38811 | Will the workers become intelligent enough and strong enough to be the owners of the machines? |
38811 | Will the wrath of God abide forever upon a man for doubting the story that Samson killed a thousand men with a new jawbone? |
38811 | Will there be a supreme tribunal composed of priests? |
38811 | Will these giants, these Titans, shorten or lengthen the hours of labor? |
38811 | Will they always build temples for ghosts and phantoms, and live in huts and dens themselves? |
38811 | Will they always prefer famine in the city to a feast in the fields? |
38811 | Will they become wise enough to know that they can not obtain their own liberty by destroying that of others? |
38811 | Will they ever feel and know that they have no right to bring children into this world that they can not support? |
38811 | Will they ever find how powerful they are? |
38811 | Will they ever recognize the fact that labor, above all things, is honorable-- that it is the foundation of virtue? |
38811 | Will they forever allow parasites with crowns, and vampires with mitres, to live upon their blood? |
38811 | Will they give leisure to the industrious, or will they make the rich richer, and the poor poorer? |
38811 | Will they have no conscience? |
38811 | Will they remain the slaves of the beggars they support? |
38811 | Will they succeed? |
38811 | Will they support millions of soldiers to kill the sons of other workingmen? |
38811 | Will they understand that beggars can not be generous, and that every healthy man must earn the right to live? |
38811 | Will they use their intelligence for themselves, or for others? |
38811 | Will they, at the command of priests, forever extinguish the spark that sheds a little light in every brain? |
38811 | With that view in his mind, he said to himself,"Why should we waste our energies in producing food for destruction? |
38811 | Would a Catholic send his children to a school to be taught that Catholicism is superstition and that Science is the only savior of mankind? |
38811 | Would a white man, under such circumstances, feel that he was in a condition of involuntary servitude? |
38811 | Would he feel that he was treated like an underling, like a menial, like a serf? |
38811 | Would he feel that he was under the protection of the laws, shielded like other men by the Constitution? |
38811 | Would not an infinitely wise and good being-- where belief is a condition to salvation-- supply the evidence? |
38811 | Would not this be the inauguration of religious persecution? |
38811 | You can hardly imagine that there was a time when the same kind of men that made this law said to another man:"You say this world is round?" |
38811 | You may ask, and what of all this? |
38811 | You may not agree with these men-- and what does that prove? |
38811 | You say:"Take a chair; are you thirsty, are you hungry, will you not break bread with me?" |
38811 | You will get your revenge on him through all eternity-- is not that enough? |
38811 | a child that made beehives of lions, incendiaries of foxes, and had a wife that wept seven days to get the answer to his riddle? |
38811 | is it within the experience of mankind? |
38811 | xix, 21, 22 Can it be that an infinite intelligence takes delight in scaring savages, and that he is happy only when somebody trembles? |
63667 | ''A big painted- port craft, eh?'' |
63667 | ''And perhaps clothes?'' |
63667 | ''And set my ship on fire, eh?'' |
63667 | ''Are all our men safe, Statten?'' |
63667 | ''Are those typhoons frequent?'' |
63667 | ''Are you ready?'' |
63667 | ''Are your men good shots?'' |
63667 | ''But what is it for?'' |
63667 | ''By the way, captain, did not the"Alert"belong to a certain Liverpool firm?'' |
63667 | ''By what authority do you issue them?'' |
63667 | ''Did you discover anything in the long- boat, Sennit?'' |
63667 | ''Did you ever see anything like them before?'' |
63667 | ''Did you think the anchor would be dropped, and all hands turn in till daylight?'' |
63667 | ''Did your father tell you about it?'' |
63667 | ''Do you know my father?'' |
63667 | ''Do you know, Readyman, that we are just two years out?'' |
63667 | ''How could they be navigated, or, if captured, what could be done with such large craft?'' |
63667 | ''How did they get to the fo''c''s''le?'' |
63667 | ''How far off?'' |
63667 | ''How is the hand line used?'' |
63667 | ''I say, Clewlin,''Wilton sang out,''this is all right, you know; but do you like the sea?'' |
63667 | ''Is it not wonderful how many strange creatures there are in the sea, Readyman?'' |
63667 | ''Is not her chief officer in charge?'' |
63667 | ''Is there anyone on board, sir?'' |
63667 | ''It''s camphor,''Jack replied;''where does it come from?'' |
63667 | ''Kind, lad?'' |
63667 | ''Like it?'' |
63667 | ''Not another invitation?'' |
63667 | ''Royal yard, there, are you going to furl that sail?'' |
63667 | ''Shoot? |
63667 | ''Suppose they are becalmed near any of the islands, and are seen by the savages? |
63667 | ''That refers to the steering, does n''t it?'' |
63667 | ''Was that the"Isabella,"sir?'' |
63667 | ''What are we doing now, Fortune?'' |
63667 | ''What can they mean? |
63667 | ''What do you think of it, captain?'' |
63667 | ''What do you think of this, Readyman?'' |
63667 | ''What does it mean?'' |
63667 | ''What has become of Sorter?'' |
63667 | ''What is the charge?'' |
63667 | ''What more could I have done?'' |
63667 | ''What water have you now?'' |
63667 | ''What you do with pigee me give yesterday?'' |
63667 | ''What''s that hair you picked up?'' |
63667 | ''What''s the matter with it?'' |
63667 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
63667 | ''When was it done?'' |
63667 | ''Where did you find the women?'' |
63667 | ''Where is the Canton River, Readyman?'' |
63667 | ''Where you shippee?'' |
63667 | ''Who has gone?'' |
63667 | ''Who made eight bells?'' |
63667 | ''Who taught you?'' |
63667 | ''Why do n''t your cook get up more steam?'' |
63667 | ''Will our men still live in the forecastle?'' |
63667 | ''You mean the entrance to San Francisco Bay?'' |
63667 | ''You men no shoot?'' |
63667 | ''You no likee boat pull up?'' |
63667 | A slip of hand or foot now would end all your voyaging, and how could I send your dad such news?'' |
63667 | Ai n''t she a beauty, Master Jack?'' |
63667 | And yet, I suppose, within a few years it will all have gone before the axe, and the enterprising advance of the settler?'' |
63667 | Are you coming?'' |
63667 | CHAPTER XV THE''ALERT''S''LAST BERTH''What is a thrummed sail, Readyman?'' |
63667 | Can you box the compass?'' |
63667 | Could any repairs be done so that she might remain afloat even for a few days?'' |
63667 | Did you ever hear how he saved my life, when no one could have believed it possible?'' |
63667 | Do you see any resemblance?'' |
63667 | Do you see anything at all resembling a human footprint?'' |
63667 | Do you see that white- painted Yankee- built steamboat moored alongside the wharf yonder? |
63667 | Had he been too hasty? |
63667 | Half an hour later a pilot came alongside, and for some seconds his ears tingled with the oft- repeated inquiry,''Has the"Flying Scud"arrived?'' |
63667 | How can anyone tell that this place is n''t swarming with niggers ready to bake us for breakfast? |
63667 | Into a cockle- shell like her? |
63667 | Is not that so, chief?'' |
63667 | Part company? |
63667 | Savvee? |
63667 | Savvee?'' |
63667 | Savvee?'' |
63667 | Savvee?'' |
63667 | Savvee?'' |
63667 | Savvee?'' |
63667 | Savvee?'' |
63667 | See here, what did that rascally Malay''s grandfather do with the"Olive Branch"and the"Crusader"? |
63667 | Suppose you had been cast ashore without shipmates, and had to discover everything for future guidance? |
63667 | Surely you have not come all across the Pacific in a cockle- shell like this?'' |
63667 | Was the skipper punishing him for having left the barque without permission when she touched at the island in Torres Strait? |
63667 | We''ve seen something of the Malay pirates----''''Which do you mean, Readyman?'' |
63667 | What about the cutting and the fitting of rigging, masting and dismasting, stowage of cargoes, and a hundred other matters? |
63667 | What harm did those little birds do you? |
63667 | What has become of them?'' |
63667 | What have they been doing, sir?'' |
63667 | What is his name?'' |
63667 | Where were the vessels from which those mute figure- heads had been removed, or what fate had overtaken their crews? |
63667 | Who made the track, Readyman?'' |
63667 | Why could n''t they give us something better?'' |
63667 | You promise, Jack?'' |
63667 | he cried,''what sort of yarn are you reading?'' |
60492 | And Jesus said, who touched me? |
60492 | And our father Adam spake unto the Lord, and said: Why is it that men must repent and be baptized in water? 60492 How can you do it? |
60492 | In what terms does the New Testament describe them? 60492 There are several gifts mentioned here, yet which of them all could be known by an observer at the imposition of hands? |
60492 | Thinkest thou that I can not now pray to my Father, and he shall presently give me more than twelve legions of angels? 60492 Unto what shall I liken these kingdoms, that ye may understand? |
60492 | What could be more original, for instance, than the Apostle''s reiteration that the Christian was a new creature, a new man, a babe? 60492 What now, let us ask specifically, distinguishes a Christian man from a non- Christian man? |
60492 | [ B] How could a power or influence of the Father intercede with the Father? 60492 [ B] How then shall this difficulty be overcome? |
60492 | [ B] Is this new birth possible to all? 60492 *** For which of those do ye stone me? 60492 *** Forasmuch then as God gave them the like gift as he did unto us, who believed on the Lord Jesus Christ; what was I, that I could withstand God? 60492 *** Now what is this other Comforter? 60492 *** Say ye of him, whom the Father hath sanctified, and sent into the world, Thou blasphemest; because I said I am the Son of God? 60492 Again:Is the Son of God the very eternal Father? |
60492 | And again:"Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? |
60492 | And if the ear shall say, Because I am not the eye, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? |
60492 | And if they were all one member, where were the body? |
60492 | And is there not a real justification in the processes of the new birth for such a parallel? |
60492 | And now, who are the world? |
60492 | And the Lord said: Whom shall I send? |
60492 | And what shall it matter? |
60492 | And what will that life be? |
60492 | And why the expression--"Somebody hath touched me; for I perceive that virtue is gone out of me?" |
60492 | Appearing now in this form, now in that? |
60492 | Are all Teachers? |
60492 | Are all apostles? |
60492 | Are all workers of miracles? |
60492 | Are there not vital processes in the spiritual as well as in the natural world? |
60492 | As yet? |
60492 | At this the Pharisees marveled, and enquired,"How can a man be born again when he is old? |
60492 | But does not the Scriptures say that they spake in tongues and prophesied? |
60492 | But how then shall the scripture be fulfilled, that thus it must be? |
60492 | But if the God Immanent may be associated with the Christ, may it not also be associated with God, the Father, as well as with God the son? |
60492 | But was the world created to make us happy? |
60492 | But-- how? |
60492 | Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
60492 | Can he enter the second time into his mother''s womb, and be born?" |
60492 | Can it be that the Holy Ghost takes on varied and really physical forms? |
60492 | Conformity to Type:_ The Spiritual life of God once established in man-- what then? |
60492 | David states it beautifully:"Whither shall I go from thy spirit, or whither shall I flee from thy presence? |
60492 | Do all interpret?'' |
60492 | Do all speak with tongues? |
60492 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
60492 | Do not I fill heaven and earth? |
60492 | Do the elders understand that way? |
60492 | Does not the Father speak of himself? |
60492 | Doth this idea startle you? |
60492 | For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?" |
60492 | For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? |
60492 | For where may sin and wickedness hide themselves? |
60492 | How can freedom co- exist, that is, the freedom of man as a free moral agent, co- exist with the Sovereign will of the All- Powerful and Immanent God? |
60492 | How could a power or influence groan with groanings unutterable? |
60492 | How long can rolling waters remain impure? |
60492 | How long shall it take? |
60492 | If the Holy Spirit were the Father, would it be reasonable to say, that he does not speak of himself? |
60492 | If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? |
60492 | If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing? |
60492 | If the whole were hearing where were the smelling? |
60492 | In writing to the Corinthian Saints who had received the Holy Ghost, Paul says:"What? |
60492 | Is his religion merely that peculiar quality of the moral life defined by Mr. Matthew Arnold as"morality touched by emotion?" |
60492 | Is it that certain faculties have been trained in him, that morality assumes special and higher manifestations, and character a nobler form? |
60492 | Is it that he has certain mental characteristics not possessed by the other? |
60492 | Is the Christian merely an ordinary man who happens from birth to have been surrounded with a peculiar set of ideas? |
60492 | Is the analogy invalid? |
60492 | Is there a way? |
60492 | Is there any fallacy in speaking of the embryology of the new life? |
60492 | It does not confine[ conform?] |
60492 | Jeremiah is equally as clear in a statement of the same truth, even if less poetical:"Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him? |
60492 | Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that thou wilt manifest thyself unto us, and not unto the world? |
60492 | Now, perhaps, as"burning bush"; now as a"dove"; now as"cloven tongues as of fire"; and now"in form of a man?" |
60492 | Now, what had happened? |
60492 | Or that this new man was"begotten of God,"God''s workmanship? |
60492 | Or this,''we are changed into the same image from glory to glory?'' |
60492 | Paul''s Choice of Gifts:_"So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? |
60492 | Solomon said of God:"The heaven, and heaven of heavens can not contain thee, how much less this house that I have builded? |
60492 | Suppose a man had the discerning of spirits, who would be the wiser for it? |
60492 | That being the general truth taught throughout nature, may it not hold in reference to Divine Personages as well? |
60492 | The Divinity of the Holy Ghost:_ There remains to be considered the question, Is the Holy Ghost God? |
60492 | The Law of Biogenesis in the Spiritual World:_"Where now in the Spiritual spheres shall we meet a companion phenomenon to this? |
60492 | The Things that Make for Edification:_"How is it then, brethren? |
60492 | The answer Peter gave was,"Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we? |
60492 | The bird being an incarnation of the bird- life, may not the Christian be a spiritual incarnation of the Christ- life? |
60492 | Then with that new birth will there come new life? |
60492 | What essentially is involved in saying that there is no Spontaneous Generation of Life? |
60492 | What in the Unseen shall be likened to this deep dividing- line, or where in human experience is another barrier which never can be crossed? |
60492 | What is it then? |
60492 | What is the object of our coming into existence, then dying and falling away, to be here no more? |
60492 | What is to come of it? |
60492 | What must a man do to commit the unpardonable sin? |
60492 | What power shall stay the heavens? |
60492 | What wonder if development be tardy in the Creature of Eternity? |
60492 | When all denied, Peter and they that were with him said,"Master, the multitude throng thee and press thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me?" |
60492 | When it dies whither has it gone? |
60492 | When the plant lives whence has the life come? |
60492 | Who could point out a Pastor, a Teacher, or an Evangelist by their appearance, yet had they the gift of the Holy Ghost? |
60492 | Who knows? |
60492 | Whoever had so great a privilege and glory? |
60492 | Why does prosperity so frequently, in this world at least, attend upon the wicked? |
60492 | Why is it, then, it may be asked, that every one is willing to admit the postulate of science, while so many doubt that of religion? |
60492 | Will you be liable to fall into temptation and be overtaken in sin? |
60492 | Would the Father intercede with himself? |
60492 | Yes; but who is it that writes these Scriptures? |
60492 | Yet ye say, What have we spoken so much against thee? |
60492 | [ B] Why is the sum of human misery so great? |
60492 | [ C] Why is the sum of human happiness so small? |
60492 | [ D] Why do the good suffer adversity? |
60492 | [ E] Why do the sins of the wicked involve the innocent-- why are the innocent made to suffer with the guilty? |
60492 | [ F] Why does truth make such tardy appearance in the world, and why of so partial rather than of universal distribution? |
60492 | [ Footnote C:"How terribly large is the proportion of evil? |
60492 | _ SPECIAL TEXT:"Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off? |
60492 | _ SPECIAL TEXT:"Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in yon? |
60492 | are all prophets? |
60492 | are all teachers? |
60492 | are all workers of miracles? |
60492 | do all interpret? |
60492 | do all interpret?'' |
60492 | do all speak with tongues? |
60492 | do all speak with tongues? |
60492 | have all the gifts of healing? |
60492 | the supreme in you? |
754 | Is it worth while,so they ask,"to work and slave for the benefit of creatures who have not yet passed beyond the stage of the earliest cave men?" |
754 | There,he would say, pointing to a bend of the river,"there, my boy, do you see those trees? |
754 | This is very well as far as it goes,said the next critic,"but how about the Puritans? |
754 | Are not the social changes of the nineteenth century of greater importance than the career of an ill- balanced woman who had better be forgotten? |
754 | But there can be no union without a strong leadership, and who was to be this leader? |
754 | But was it a time of darkness and stagnation merely? |
754 | But was there a way out? |
754 | But what could they do? |
754 | But what does the word really mean? |
754 | But what was one to do? |
754 | But what will they think of those short four thousand years during which we have kept a written record of our actions and of our thoughts? |
754 | But what? |
754 | But who cared? |
754 | But who was to be commander- in- chief? |
754 | Could they change the existing order of things and do away with a system of rivalry which so often sacrificed human happiness to profits? |
754 | Did anybody object? |
754 | Do n''t you see how these surroundings must have influenced a man in everything he did and said and thought? |
754 | From one blunder to another, until one gasps and exclaims"but why in the name of High Heaven did not the people object?" |
754 | He was vain( who would not be under the circumstances?) |
754 | How about the Church, the second great power in the world? |
754 | How could they realise the threatened danger? |
754 | Indeed, and why not? |
754 | The Serbians remembered their ancient glory as who would not? |
754 | The question then became where was this money to be found? |
754 | To JIMMIE"What is the use of a book without pictures?" |
754 | Upon this subject, the Abbe Sieyes then wrote a famous pamphlet,"To what does the Third Estate Amount?" |
754 | What did you find? |
754 | Where could he find this gold? |
754 | Where did the stars come from? |
754 | Where do we come from? |
754 | Which side should a dutiful subject and an equally dutiful Christian take? |
754 | Whither are we bound? |
754 | Who are we? |
754 | Who made the noise of the thunder which frightened him so terribly? |
754 | Who was he, himself, a strange little creature surrounded on all sides by death and sickness and yet happy and full of laughter? |
754 | Why defend something which meant nothing to them but a temporary boarding house in which they were tolerated as long as they paid their bills? |
754 | Why did I leave out such countries as Ireland and Bulgaria and Siam while I dragged in such other countries as Holland and Iceland and Switzerland? |
754 | Why is he so curious about the insides of fishes and the insides of insects? |
754 | Why not do it now? |
754 | Why not indeed? |
754 | Why should he not be contented with our Latin- Arabic translation which has satisfied our faithful people for so many hundred years? |
754 | Why should they work and exert themselves? |
754 | Why should we ever read fairy stories, when the truth of history is so much more interesting and entertaining? |
754 | Would he please come and teach them? |
754 | Would it not be a good idea to consult the representatives of the people? |
754 | You desired proof of this? |
754 | You may ask why I tell you this story in such great detail? |
8555 | Tell me, which is the virtue among all the virtues that human malice can not vilify?" |
8555 | What supports me, dost thou ask? |
7377 | In death there is no remembrance of Thee; in the grave who shall give Thee thanks? |
7377 | Who knoweth the spirit of man that goeth upward and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth? |
7377 | After having once received the human organism, why should a soul choose to go back to the lesser and more imperfect organism of an animal? |
7377 | And will you punish him because he can not become so? |
7377 | But how can we bring the soul down on the sense plane when it is ethereal and finer than anything that we can perceive with our senses? |
7377 | Can a man who possesses the slightest common sense be so unreasonable? |
7377 | Do we see in nature any other higher form evolved out of the human body? |
7377 | Do you think that the thought- forces of one life- time will end suddenly after death? |
7377 | Does heredity explain such cases? |
7377 | Does it not seem absurd to you? |
7377 | Does the theory of heredity explain it? |
7377 | Even if we admit this theory of heredity, then what do we understand? |
7377 | From whom did he inherit them? |
7377 | How can heredity explain such cases? |
7377 | How can something come out of nothing? |
7377 | How can such cases be explained by the theory of hereditary transmission? |
7377 | How can that come into existence which did not exist before? |
7377 | How can we worship Him, how call Him just and merciful? |
7377 | How is it possible for a lesser manifestation to hold a greater one? |
7377 | If the omnipotent personal God created human souls out of nothing, could He not make all souls equally good and happy? |
7377 | If we do not admit this law then the problem will arise: How can non- existence become existent? |
7377 | In Psalms we read,"Wilt Thou shew wonders to the dead? |
7377 | Is that"tendency to vary"indefinite, or is it limited by any definite law? |
7377 | Now that we have outgrown them why should we go back to them? |
7377 | Now, what are those germs like? |
7377 | Parents? |
7377 | Shall the dead arise and praise Thee?" |
7377 | Shall we not be justified if we say that the end of physical evolution is the attainment of the perfection of animal form? |
7377 | Similarly what would you think if God punishes a man because he can not become perfect within a lifetime? |
7377 | The question was asked,"How shall they produce resurrection?" |
7377 | WHICH IS SCIENTIFIC-- RESURRECTION OR REINCARNATION? |
7377 | We ask, how can a single cell reproduce the whole body of the offspring, its mind, character and all the peculiarities of an organism? |
7377 | What is love? |
7377 | What is sin? |
7377 | What is that germ like? |
7377 | What is the cause? |
7377 | What regulates them? |
7377 | When did he inherit? |
7377 | Where did he get all these powers? |
7377 | Where is that common stock and why will certain germs acquire certain tendencies and other germs retain other peculiarities? |
7377 | Wherefrom do they acquire these tendencies, these peculiarities? |
7377 | Who can tell how long it will take to reach that goal? |
7377 | Who made one honest and saintly, another an idiot, and so forth? |
7377 | Who made these dissimilarities? |
7377 | Why are they invisible to us now? |
7377 | Why does He make one to enjoy all the blessings of life and another to suffer all miseries throughout eternity? |
7377 | Why does He not create all souls equal? |
7377 | Why is it that the children of the same parents show a marked dissimilarity to their parents and to each other? |
7377 | Why is one born intelligent and another idiotic? |
7377 | Why is one born with good tendencies and another with evil ones? |
7377 | Why is one man virtuous throughout his life and another bestial? |
7377 | Why is there this difference? |
7377 | Why should a greater manifestation choose more limited forms in preference to those of others? |
7377 | Why will one soul be highly advanced spiritually while another is entirely ignorant and idiotic? |
7377 | Why? |
7377 | Why? |
7377 | Would we be able to see those pictures? |
7377 | _ Poem on Pythagoras, Dryden''s Ovid._ Here it may be asked, if we existed before our birth why do we not remember? |
5651 | ''Lora: you are happy now? |
5651 | ''The temptation of a bribe? |
5651 | A poodle dog,cried I eagerly,"with his coat unclipped,--a rough brown dog?" |
5651 | About this? 5651 Adelais, O Adelais,"he cried in his despair,"Why will you refuse me always? |
5651 | Adelais,said he, presently,"you do not love me?" |
5651 | Ah? 5651 And Antoine?" |
5651 | And does she wish it too? |
5651 | And the luck has not turned yet in Saint- Cyr''s case, I suppose? |
5651 | And the mule? |
5651 | And where does Noemi Bergeron live? |
5651 | And who is your generous benefactor? |
5651 | And will you always keep silence? |
5651 | And you and he are engaged to be married, is it not so? |
5651 | And you can tell me nothing about her now,--you know no more than that? |
5651 | And you go alone? |
5651 | And you-- have you business in Bale? |
5651 | Both of us? |
5651 | But it can not cost you much to live, Noemi? |
5651 | But may I, without danger of seeming too inquisitive, ask you one question more? |
5651 | Dead? |
5651 | Dear friend, why should you leave us? 5651 Did no one ever tell you anything about its history,"I asked,"or were you never asked any questions about it until now?" |
5651 | Do I look as if I were traveling for pleasure''s sake? |
5651 | Do n''t you know, Miss? |
5651 | Do n''t you know? |
5651 | Do you, then,I asked,"desire the whole world to abandon the use of fire in preparing food and drink?" |
5651 | Father,he asked, tremulously,"shall I not see that good Gluck again and tell the monks how he saved me, and how Fritz and Bruno brought you here?" |
5651 | Have you any idea,said I, at last,"whether there''s any story connected with that place where I slept last night? |
5651 | Have you told''Tista anything? |
5651 | Hein? |
5651 | How can that be? |
5651 | How many? |
5651 | How old do you suppose the patient to be? |
5651 | I am to tell her this--asked Herr Ritter, recovering himself with a prodigious effort"from you?" |
5651 | I sold half a metre of it about three weeks ago,said she slowly,"to Noemi Bergeron; you know her, perhaps? |
5651 | If I tell you at all, boy,said the wine- merchant,"I shall tell you the truth; can you hold your peace like a man of discretion?" |
5651 | If this be so,said I,"why did you build your house in the midst of this forest, and why are there no shutters to the windows? |
5651 | Indeed? |
5651 | Innocent-- she innocent? 5651 Is it a good road from here to--?" |
5651 | Lace- making does not pay well, then? |
5651 | My dear Frau''Lora, who thinks of such things twice? 5651 My little old gentleman dead? |
5651 | No more? |
5651 | So,said I, taking a chair beside her,"you are going to earn your living again by making lace?" |
5651 | The fruit- seller''s child? 5651 The same price, then, Herr? |
5651 | Then after yet another ten years had passed, they sent a third time, asking,''What dost thou claim to be, Gotama?'' 5651 Then, Maurice, you do n''t care to see her once more before you sail? |
5651 | They,I interpolated,--"is the wife, then, also ill?" |
5651 | This, then,asked''Lora, gently,"is why you gave up the world, that you might be alone?" |
5651 | Tista, how is your mother today? |
5651 | Was it a love story, Eugene? |
5651 | What are trumps? |
5651 | What did she say? 5651 What have I done, monsieur?" |
5651 | What person is that? |
5651 | What''s that to you? |
5651 | What,--Antoine? |
5651 | When are we to be shot? |
5651 | Where am I? |
5651 | Who are they? |
5651 | Who is that? |
5651 | Why,said they,"do you suffer your subjects to die for your daughter''s sake? |
5651 | Will ye just step in now and take somethin''? 5651 Will you tell me, madame,"said I with my most agreeable air,"whether you recollect having sold any of that tinsel ribbon lately, and to whom?" |
5651 | Willum, do n''t ye think as the gentleman might be put to sleep in the room up at the House, where George slept last time he was here to see us? 5651 Wo n''t you have one of them, Herr Ritter?" |
5651 | Yes; Signora,he answered, mildly,"I bring you this letter; may I beg you will read it now, before I go? |
5651 | You know the girl,she squeaked, eyeing me greedily,--"will you pay her rent? |
5651 | You lave no regrets, then, Herr Ritter? |
5651 | You say you slept last night in Steepside mansion? |
5651 | You turned her out? |
5651 | You will have no companions to join you? |
5651 | -------------"How can you have the answer before I have written it?" |
5651 | 7 for a moment? |
5651 | And I awoke, repeating to myself the question,"How could one woman become three?" |
5651 | And I heard them say one to another,"Brother, what hast thou in thy casket?" |
5651 | And as for the lesser considerations of our daily being, what are they? |
5651 | And the Carpenter answered,"How then shall the Temple of the Lord be builded? |
5651 | And the other asked him,"What buildest thou, brother?" |
5651 | And this open country under the eastern night,--is it not the same in which they were"abiding,"to whom that Birth was first angelically announced? |
5651 | And was the wedding- day fixed? |
5651 | And why do they write backwards? |
5651 | And, shall I tell you what else I am thinking about, Herr Ritter? |
5651 | Are not their very creeds pretexts for slaughter and persecution and fraud? |
5651 | Are we not of three Ages, and is the temple yet perfected?" |
5651 | Are you mad, or a fool, that you do not know every one can see from without into your lighted rooms?" |
5651 | Art thou not of Solomon, and he of Christ? |
5651 | Before I accept your kindness, will you permit me to tell you the nature of the journey I am making? |
5651 | Birth lights, or funeral pyre? |
5651 | But I may go and thank her myself; I may go and thank her?" |
5651 | But he who sat next the last speaker answered,"Truth also is partial; for where is he among us who shall be able to see as God sees?" |
5651 | But she made answer very sadly and slowly:--"Stephen, ought the living and the dead to we d with one another? |
5651 | But supposing Adelais loved you, and my father and-- and-- everybody else you know, wished her to be your wife, how would you feel towards her then? |
5651 | But tell me, Cameron, for you know I must needs divine something from all this; your sister loves my boy Maurice?" |
5651 | But then, if not? |
5651 | But what is that strange singing I hear beneath your cloak?" |
5651 | But what noise is that yonder?" |
5651 | But you are a strange old darling, are n''t you, Herr Ritter?" |
5651 | But, Adelais, is there nothing more than this that troubles you? |
5651 | But, pardon me, are you a stranger in this city, sir?" |
5651 | Ca n''t you come over here and play for me?" |
5651 | Can you tell me anything of your lodger, Noemi Bergeron?" |
5651 | Can you tell? |
5651 | Could I make them any wiser, purer, gentler, truer than they are? |
5651 | Could I teach them to be honest in their dealings with each other, compassionate, considerate, liberal? |
5651 | Could any one be angry with her? |
5651 | Could it have been upon the page before I turned it? |
5651 | Do n''t you see my heart is breaking for love of you? |
5651 | Do n''t you think him like a baby, monsieur?" |
5651 | Do they not support even their holiest truths, their sincerest beliefs, by organised systems of deceit and chicanery? |
5651 | Do you think me a child to be fooled by such a tale?" |
5651 | Does monsieur know me, then?" |
5651 | Does not this suffice?--is not the end great enough to justify the means?" |
5651 | For him I can not refuse the money; can I, Herr? |
5651 | For of what value to man is the Mind without the Soul? |
5651 | Gleams from the altar- lamps seven? |
5651 | Have you been there this evening?" |
5651 | Have you found it sweet, Frau''Lora? |
5651 | Have you not heard the story of my lion?" |
5651 | Have you not lost a brown poodle with a ribbon like this round his throat?" |
5651 | Have you not often spoken before of dying, and yet have lived on? |
5651 | How can I get money-- and get it quickly-- for her sake and for the child''s?'' |
5651 | How can that be?" |
5651 | How could I tell him that he interested me so much as to make me long to know the romance which, I felt convinced, attached to his expedition? |
5651 | How could a myth give me this living bird?" |
5651 | How could he tell her that Maurice had already found himself a rich handsome wife in India? |
5651 | How shall we understand this word` perfection''?" |
5651 | I repeated,"Noemi dead?" |
5651 | I suppose you will be married soon now, wo n''t you?" |
5651 | If they have not heard the prophets, nor even the divine teacher of Nazareth, shall I be able to do them any good? |
5651 | In the mangled corpses and entrails of these victims our augurs find the knowledges we seek,""And what knowledges are they?" |
5651 | Is it the breaking of day? |
5651 | Is it the glare of a fire? |
5651 | Is it your wish then that these two should marry?" |
5651 | Is n''t it good of him? |
5651 | Is this the bitter end of all, and must I lose my darling so? |
5651 | May you tell me, as we sit here together? |
5651 | O why should you die now and break my heart outright?" |
5651 | Or did he sink into the reeling swirl of the foaming waters, and die more mercifully in their steel- dark depths? |
5651 | Or shall I never leave purgatory, but burn, and burn, and burn there always uncleansed? |
5651 | Presently I ventured another question:"You go on business, perhaps-- not on pleasure?" |
5651 | Shall I ever go to paradise-- to paradise where the saints are? |
5651 | Shall I tell it to you, Lizzie? |
5651 | She must have known he was married, for why else did he not marry her? |
5651 | She paused at the door and added shyly,"You will really come tomorrow morning?" |
5651 | She put her hand into his, and fixing the clear light of her brown eyes full upon him:"Why,"she said, hurriedly,"do you ask me this? |
5651 | Shortly after the dream began, my partner addressed me, saying,"Do you play by luck or by skill?" |
5651 | Should I go to bed? |
5651 | Should I, too, be sucked in and absorbed, and perhaps C. after me, knowing nothing of my fate? |
5651 | Signs of the Times Eyes of the dawning in heaven? |
5651 | Silence? |
5651 | Slept well last night, sir?" |
5651 | Sparks from the opening of hell? |
5651 | Stephen, Stephen, do n''t you see that I am dying?" |
5651 | That is so, is it not, monsieur,--is it not?" |
5651 | That she is poor, in want, widowed, and almost dying?" |
5651 | The boy''Tista surely came with the morning, and learned at last, even though too late, who had been his unknown friend?" |
5651 | The idea flashed on me that he would certainly turn, and then-- what could happen? |
5651 | The world? |
5651 | Then they said,"Where is that country of which you speak, and who is this wonderful Princess?" |
5651 | This empty picture had, moreover, an odd metallic coloring which fascinated me; and saying to myself"Is there really any painting on it?" |
5651 | To what end do you plod there every day,--you who are wifeless and childless, and have no need of money for yourself? |
5651 | Was I doomed? |
5651 | Was he speared on those terrible shafts of rock below, or was his life dashed out in horrible crimson splashes against the cliffside? |
5651 | Was it the shock of an emotion coming unexpected and intense after all those dreary weeks of futile watchfulness? |
5651 | Was it the strong love in St. Aubyn''s cry that broke through the spell of disease and thrilled his child''s dulled nerves into life? |
5651 | Was this sarcastic? |
5651 | Well, Herr Ritter, I daresay you think my story a very long one, do n''t you? |
5651 | What can you gain by shooting an old man such as he?" |
5651 | What do you think of it now, Herr Ritter? |
5651 | What if indeed I have been dreaming; what if this, after all, should be the real world, and the other a mere fantasy?" |
5651 | What is Adelais Cameron to me, when all my world is here?" |
5651 | What is the matter?" |
5651 | What is this Inn, I wondered, all the rooms of which are haunted, and in which the Christ can not be born? |
5651 | What more could she want? |
5651 | What say you to taking me along with you? |
5651 | What wonder that Philip had been deceived into believing her false? |
5651 | What, have you lost him too, then, as well as Bambin?" |
5651 | What, then, did the father do? |
5651 | Where is he among us who could attain to such a state? |
5651 | Where then is this guide? |
5651 | Who are They?" |
5651 | Who could have anticipated or suspected this cheerful welcome, these entertaining literati, these innocent- looking frescoes? |
5651 | Who could have foreseen so deadly a horror in such a guise? |
5651 | Who shall say? |
5651 | Why did not the Gods decree my death before I brought thee into the world?" |
5651 | Why doom us to perish daily by the poisonous breath of the dragon?" |
5651 | Why must those always die who are needed most, while such as I live on from year to year? |
5651 | Why should the Soul be respected where nothing else is spared? |
5651 | Why should you have taken him out before the eyes of the cat?" |
5651 | Why will you do these things?" |
5651 | Will they let me in there?--will they suffer my soul among them? |
5651 | Will you come back with me, for I think she has something particular to say to you?" |
5651 | Will you have them?" |
5651 | Will you marry Pauline this autumn and take her with you to the south?'' |
5651 | Will you not wait for it?" |
5651 | Will you suffer the-- the fault of ten years ago to bear weight upon your sisterly kindness,--your human compassion and sympathy, now?" |
5651 | Ye look tired like, this morning; didna get much rest p''raps? |
5651 | You chose to be silent?" |
5651 | You do n''t want to say goodbye?" |
5651 | You have been to the town again?" |
5651 | You remember, Lizzie, what a wonderfully bright and beautiful sunset it was this evening? |
5651 | You will not refuse me the last request I shall make you, Phil? |
5651 | You wish to speak to me?" |
5651 | ` And the child?'' |
5651 | ` Do you believe I would have done what I did for mere coin?" |
5651 | ` What ails you, foolish old woman? |
5651 | a message?" |
5651 | and I do n''t think she would mind my asking her this, though we did part in anger; do you? |
5651 | but ought I to take it, Herr?" |
5651 | can he be-- do you think-- can he be an Angel in disguise? |
5651 | cried he, his whole manner changing in a moment from easy indifference to earnest interest:"what, you will part with this after all? |
5651 | he groaned in his unutterable despair;"is there no hope, no redemption, no retrieving of the past? |
5651 | how am I to send the answer? |
5651 | no? |
5651 | said the gentleman, looking up from his book;"what is that?" |
5651 | she cried; and her voice was half choked with contending anger and despair,"I am his wife; and what then is she? |
5651 | she said,"what have you done? |
5651 | she sent me a note? |
5651 | was her retort, as she paused in her meal and stared at me;"do you want to buy the rest of it?" |
5651 | what has happened? |
5651 | where are you?" |
5651 | you have been? |
5957 | And how many sons has Mistress Snake here? |
5957 | And on the golden throne? |
5957 | And what do the rest of you think? 5957 Are they asleep?" |
5957 | Are you brave? |
5957 | But what is the meaning of all this? |
5957 | Could I get work at the Palace? |
5957 | Do you remember that? |
5957 | Do you remember this? |
5957 | How can a lion come roaring at you, you silly thing? 5957 How can this be?" |
5957 | How do you know this? |
5957 | How long have they been asleep? |
5957 | How much do you want for your pipkin? |
5957 | How should I know? |
5957 | Hurt me? 5957 Is it so essential to the story to know the exact number of goats that passed over, that if one error be made the story can proceed no further?" |
5957 | No,says the artist(? |
5957 | Nobody knows what the dog did? |
5957 | Now, how could a fish, a live fish, get into my front yard? |
5957 | Now, what do you suppose the dog did? |
5957 | Of course I''ll say it; why should I not say it? 5957 Oh, why,"said the little boy,"does she not get on?" |
5957 | Shall I sing for the Emperor again? |
5957 | Tell me, how many have passed already? |
5957 | The Earth is falling in, is it? |
5957 | Well, what did he say? |
5957 | What can all the crowd be down by the pig- sty? |
5957 | What is that? |
5957 | What is this all about? |
5957 | What is this? |
5957 | What story is that? |
5957 | What would you do if you saw a little kitten like that? |
5957 | Where have you been? |
5957 | Where? |
5957 | Who are these sitting at the round table? |
5957 | Who are they? |
5957 | Why did you go so near the edge of the brink? |
5957 | Why did you refuse it? |
5957 | You saw it? |
5957 | A crown for his head, or a laurel wreath? |
5957 | A sword to wield, or is gold his load? |
5957 | A very earnest young student came to me once after the telling of this story and said in an awe- struck voice:"Do you cor- relate?" |
5957 | Am I to disobey a Father and Mother I love so well, and forget my duty, because they are a long way off? |
5957 | And Hafiz said:"Is there something stronger in the world than the Rock? |
5957 | And Hafiz said:"Is there something stronger than the Cloud?" |
5957 | And a great voice came from their midst:"Who rang the bell? |
5957 | And often he grew very weary of his task and he would say to himself impatiently,"Why should I not have pleasure and amusement as other folk have?" |
5957 | And one day, Menelayus went out hunting, and left Paris and Helener alone, and Paris said:"Do you not feel_ dul_ in this_ palis_? |
5957 | And the Lion said:"Little Hare,_ what_ made you say that the Earth was falling in?" |
5957 | And the man was feared, and said to his wife:"What have we done?" |
5957 | And the_ Darning- Needle_? |
5957 | And then he stopped them all short and said:"What is this you are saying?" |
5957 | And then the hermit said unto him,"Knowest thou such a river in which many be perished and lost?" |
5957 | And when he came he greeted the king and said:"What will you have me to do, Sir?" |
5957 | And, after thrice crying aloud,"To whom do these belong?" |
5957 | As for the_ Beetle_--who ever thinks of him as a mere entomological specimen? |
5957 | But could not the dramatic form and interest be introduced into our geography lessons? |
5957 | But loud laughed he in the morning red!-- For of what had the robbers robbed him? |
5957 | But what is it I have to stop?" |
5957 | But where was it to be found? |
5957 | But, would_ she_? |
5957 | Could we imagine a lower standard of a Deity than that presented here to the child? |
5957 | Dare you to run up and down on the Lord''s Day, or do you keep in to read your book, and learn what your good parents command?" |
5957 | Did I not tell thee to keep an exact account? |
5957 | Did n''t it hurt you?" |
5957 | Do n''t I give you board and wages?" |
5957 | Do you remember where you cut that stick?" |
5957 | Does it matter whether we know today or tomorrow how much a child has understood? |
5957 | Doest thou this out of hatred for me, or dost thou store up the food in same granary for selfish greed?" |
5957 | For instance, before his performance, the_ Tumbler_ cries:"What am I doing? |
5957 | Has he accomplished the quest?" |
5957 | Has he accomplished the quest?" |
5957 | Has he accomplished the quest?" |
5957 | Has he accomplished the quest?" |
5957 | Has the day come?" |
5957 | Have not our hands the power of inciting, of restraining, or beseeching, of testifying approbation? |
5957 | He sought the shopkeeper and said to him:"Have you got me the blue rose?" |
5957 | How begot, how nourished? |
5957 | How shall I reward you?" |
5957 | If there came a lion roaring at men, I think you''d fight him, would n''t you, Tom?" |
5957 | If they do n''t like_ water_,_ what_ do they like?" |
5957 | Il vous a parle, grand mere? |
5957 | Il vous a parle? |
5957 | Is he not the symbol of the self- satisfied traveler who learns nothing en route but the importance of his own personality? |
5957 | Is it not so, O King?" |
5957 | Is it not true in a higher sense that fearlessness often lessens or averts danger? |
5957 | Is not this a good law: an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth? |
5957 | Is not_ one_ of the reasons that children reject fairy tales this, that such very_ poor_ material is offered them? |
5957 | Is there something stronger in the world than a King?" |
5957 | Now, cats do n''t like water, do they? |
5957 | Now, it was really very bold on his part to say to a King''s daughter:"Will you marry me?" |
5957 | Now, of what artifices can we make use to take the place of all the extraneous help offered to actors on the stage? |
5957 | Now, what else do you think I saw?" |
5957 | Now, what is the impression we wish to leave on the mind of the child, apart from the dramatic joy and interest we have endeavored to provide? |
5957 | One day, when she had been saying over and over again,"Suppose the Earth were to fall in, what would happen to me?" |
5957 | QUESTION II:_ What is to be done if a child asks you:"Is the story true? |
5957 | QUESTION III:_ What are you to do if a child says he does not like fairy tales_? |
5957 | QUESTION IV:_ Do I recommend learning a story by heart, or telling it in one''s own words_? |
5957 | QUESTION V:_ How do I set about preparing a story_? |
5957 | QUESTION VI:_ Is it wise to talk over a story with children and to encourage them in the habit of asking questions about it_? |
5957 | QUESTION VII:_ Is it wise to call upon children to repeat the story as soon as it has been told_? |
5957 | QUESTION VIII:_ Should children be encouraged to illustrate the stories which they have heard_? |
5957 | QUESTION X:_ Which should predominate in the story-- the dramatic or the poetic element_? |
5957 | QUESTION XI:_ What is the educational value of humor in the stories told to our children_? |
5957 | Shakespeare has said: Tell me where is Fancy bred, Or in the heart, or in the head? |
5957 | She opens thus:"Yesterday, children, as I came out of my yard, what do you think I saw?" |
5957 | She ran away as fast as she could go, and presently she met an old brother Hare, who said:"Where are you running to Mistress Hare?" |
5957 | She was always saying:"Suppose the Earth were to fall in, what would happen to me?" |
5957 | So they_ sliped_ off together, and they came to the King of Egypt, and_ he_ said:"Who_ is_ the young lady"? |
5957 | The Emperor sprang out of bed and sent for the Court Physician, but what could he do? |
5957 | The King was much vexed; he drove further on till they came to a splendid castle, all of gold, and then he said:"Do you see this golden castle? |
5957 | The Otter scented the buried fish, dug up the sand till he came upon them, and he called aloud:"Does any one own these fish?" |
5957 | The Welshman was still suspicious, and said:"What does it matter where I cut it?" |
5957 | The king said to her:"Can you follow the poem so clearly?" |
5957 | The queen asked:"What is that crowd on deck there?" |
5957 | Then Christopher said to him,"Thou doubtest the devil that he hurt thee not? |
5957 | Then said he:"Sturla the Icelander, will you tell stories?" |
5957 | Then, again, why are we in such a hurry to find out what effects have been produced by our stories? |
5957 | There is just time during that instant''s pause to_ feel_, though not to_ formulate, the question:"What is standing at the door?" |
5957 | What do they like?" |
5957 | What do you think about it?" |
5957 | What for his scrip on the winding road? |
5957 | What for the journey through day and night? |
5957 | What is the meaning of this?" |
5957 | What is the result? |
5957 | What really brings about this apparent simplicity which insures the success of the story? |
5957 | What should you do, Tom?" |
5957 | What was the blue rose and where was it to be found? |
5957 | What were tears to her? |
5957 | What will you give him for weal or woe? |
5957 | What will you give to him, Fate Divine? |
5957 | What''s that?" |
5957 | What''s the use of talking?" |
5957 | When they reached it, he said:"Do you see this silver wood? |
5957 | When they said:"Is it small?" |
5957 | Who will listen to my stories?'' |
5957 | Whoever saw such goats as these? |
5957 | Why have I been told nothing about it?" |
5957 | Why not give them the dramatic interest of a larger stage? |
5957 | Why should I see an elephant in my yard? |
5957 | Would they have helped to tell her sorrow? |
5957 | You cry if you soil your copybook, do n''t you? |
5957 | [ 49] QUESTION IX:_ In what way can the dramatic method of story- telling be used in ordinary class teaching_? |
5957 | _ Polyanthus_ died?" |
5957 | a favorite one still) is to say at the end of the story:"Now, children, what do we learn from this?" |
5957 | and the Lion said:"Shall we go back and tell the other animals?" |
5957 | asked the sorcerer;"will you come in with me?" |
5957 | or pinch your hand? |
5957 | says the friend,"this is surely meant for a lion?" |
5957 | what sin have I done?" |
60575 | And may we not say that the mind of the one has knowledge, and that the mind of the other has opinion only? 60575 Are, then, senses, understanding, reason, all equally at fault? |
60575 | Dost thou see aught? |
60575 | Granted that the very existence of the world implies an Eternal Cause, what can we learn about that Cause? 60575 Granted, then, that the religious faculty is practically universal among mankind, what is the significance of this fact? |
60575 | How do you distinguish them? 60575 Is not that the true cause?" |
60575 | Was,did I say? |
60575 | What is the name of angels in the pure language? |
60575 | What is the name of men? |
60575 | What is the name of the Son of God? |
60575 | Who shall deliver me from this body of death? |
60575 | Whom do men say that I the Son of man am? |
60575 | Whom do ye say that I am? |
60575 | Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? 60575 _ What think ye of Christ? |
60575 | ''He that made the eye, shall he not see?'' |
60575 | **** Was the world[ universe], always in existence and without beginning? |
60575 | 46), asks,''Have we not one God, and one Christ? |
60575 | After being instructed of Philip, he inquired--"What doth hinder me to be baptized?" |
60575 | And by His humility, are not men taught humility, as they are taught it by no other circumstance whatsoever? |
60575 | And have not even these poor savages some vestige at least of the religious faculty? |
60575 | And it came to pass that Moses called upon God, saying: Tell me, I pray thee, why these things are so, and by what thou madest them? |
60575 | And what certainty can we have that He hath not done it? |
60575 | And what is an event? |
60575 | And what is man that God is mindful of him? |
60575 | And why do thoughts arise in your hearts? |
60575 | Are they, all alike, prone to deception, all alike, unproductive? |
60575 | But how did he do so? |
60575 | But what are they? |
60575 | But what causes? |
60575 | But where does this leave Jesus? |
60575 | But why must Force"in every instance be assumed as prior"to volition? |
60575 | Can it be? |
60575 | Can we proceed to reason from them, to build any conclusions upon the fact that such ideas are? |
60575 | Can''st thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" |
60575 | Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father in Me? |
60575 | For what is the belief in the necessity and universality of causation? |
60575 | Has he? |
60575 | He can make nothing of them; but if he could, what God, what immortality, would they establish? |
60575 | He said to them:"Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are Gods? |
60575 | He said:"Many good works have I shown you from the Father; for which of these works do ye stone me?" |
60575 | He said:''In what, then[ in whose name, then] were you baptized?'' |
60575 | How can we know that we can know absolutely nothing about a conceivable object of knowledge? |
60575 | How do children of our generation get their first idea of God? |
60575 | If so, then what advantage has the Christian over the Hindoo, whom he has called a heathen, for so many generations? |
60575 | If this is not the absolute nothing, what is Nirvana? |
60575 | In the face of these scriptures, will anyone who believes in the Bible say that it is blasphemy to speak of God as being possessed of a bodily form? |
60575 | Is He God? |
60575 | Is He an exalted man? |
60575 | Is He personal or impersonal? |
60575 | Is Jesus Christ God? |
60575 | Is Mr. Van Der Donckt prepared to accept the inevitable conclusion of his own exposition of John 10:30? |
60575 | Is he God? |
60575 | Is he man? |
60575 | Is not Nature taking the place of God? |
60575 | Is not that atheism? |
60575 | Is the Absolute to be apprehended as"Will,""finding its completion in the intuition of perfect attainment?" |
60575 | Is there any of your false gods, who is able to do the least of these things? |
60575 | Is there no such thing as degradation? |
60575 | Is there not one Spirit of Grace, who is poured out upon us, and one calling in Christ?'' |
60575 | It is a grand(?) |
60575 | It is written that God can not look upon sin with the least degree of allowance, and that is true, he can not; but how about the sinner? |
60575 | Jesus answered, referring to Psalm 82:6,"Is it not written in your law: I said ye are Gods? |
60575 | Jesus, observing that something had happened to him, turned to the apostles, and said,"Who touched Me?" |
60575 | Joshua approached him and said:"Art thou for us, or for our adversaries?" |
60575 | May not eternal things exist together as the two eternal things, matter and force, co- exist; as duration and space co- exist? |
60575 | Merely"a power outside ourselves"? |
60575 | Now Moses, in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned; but what sayest Thou?" |
60575 | On one occasion he was asked how the"spirits could be served,"to which he made answer,"If we are not able to serve men, how can we serve the spirits?" |
60575 | Or was it placed in the word of God because it is simply true? |
60575 | Or"Feeling,""which apprehends the unity of things in a single and immediate act of self- consciousness?" |
60575 | Or"Reason,""comprehending itself as the eternal process of the world and finding that all is Good?" |
60575 | Oromasdes, say they, considering that he was alone, said to himself,''It I have no one to oppose me, where, then, is all my glory?'' |
60575 | Shall He come again in that form? |
60575 | The Douay Bible gives the same passages,"Who do men say that the son of man is?" |
60575 | The first question is,"What is the name of God in the pure language?" |
60575 | Then to the apostles"But whom say ye that I am? |
60575 | Then, in further attestation of the reality of His existence, as if to put away all doubt, He said,"Have ye here any meat?" |
60575 | They replied,"Master, the multitude throng Thee and press Thee, and sayest thou, Who touched ME?" |
60575 | This is not only a weak, but a false, argument; for, first of all, how do you know the opinions of all nations? |
60575 | Was He God as He stood there among His disciples in His glorious and, to use Mr. V''s own word,"sacred,"resurrected body? |
60575 | Was and is Jesus God-- true Deity? |
60575 | Was that done to make human beings or certain truths more intelligible to God? |
60575 | What do these words imply, but that Seth was like his father in features, and also, doubtless, in intellectual and moral qualities? |
60575 | What idea does this language convey to the mind of man, except that man, when his creation was completed, stood forth the counterpart of God in form? |
60575 | What is the meaning of Antediluvian? |
60575 | What more is wanted? |
60575 | What of Postdiluvian? |
60575 | What of the blind, the lame, the halt? |
60575 | What think ye of Christ? |
60575 | What think ye of Christ? |
60575 | What was it? |
60575 | What was the reply? |
60575 | When Jesus looked around and saw none but the woman, He said to her,"Woman, where are thine accusers? |
60575 | Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? |
60575 | Whereon are the foundations thereof fastened, or who laid the cornerstone thereof?" |
60575 | Whereupon she uncovered her face and said:"Dost thou see it now?" |
60575 | Who hath laid the measures thereof if thou knowest, or who hath stretched the line upon it? |
60575 | Who said:''In John''s baptism*** Having the instrument of the Father? |
60575 | Why should man obey God? |
60575 | Why, then, should we not believe the world is a living and wise being, since it produces living and wise beings out of itself?" |
60575 | Will He become an impersonal, incorporeal, immaterial God, without body, without parts, without passions? |
60575 | Will it be? |
60575 | With His body of flesh and bones, with the marks in His hands and in His feet? |
60575 | Ye fools and blind: for whether is greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the gift? |
60575 | Ye fools and blind: for whether is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifieth the gold? |
60575 | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?" |
60575 | [ 1] What is the conclusion to be drawn from this? |
60575 | _ ARE THE SOURCES OF MAN''S KNOWLEDGE OF GOD, APART FROM REVELATION, SUFFICIENT FOR AN INTELLIGENT FAITH IN GOD?__ NOTES._ 1. |
60575 | _ God''s Treatment of Sinners:_ Let us ask, rather, how did Jesus Christ-- God-- deal with sinners? |
60575 | _ SPECIAL TEXT:"Can''st thou by searching find out God? |
60575 | _ THE CALLING OF ISRAEL AS A WITNESS OF THE TRUE GOD-- WAS ISRAEL TRUE TO HIS MISSION?_( AN ARGUMENTATIVE DISCOURSE.) |
60575 | _"What Think Ye of Christ? |
60575 | and does He hold personal relations to man, and men definite and personal relations to Him? |
60575 | and"Who do you say that I am?" |
60575 | hath no man condemned thee?" |
60575 | or created and having a beginning? |
60575 | or is he awake? |
60575 | or, Is He not only a power outside ourselves, but a power outside ourselves that makes for righteousness? |
38802 | ''Have we not eaten and drank in thy presence? 38802 And did you do all this for my glory?" |
38802 | Did you believe the Bible, the miracles-- that I was God, that I was born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish? |
38802 | Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? 38802 Did you endeavor to convert your fellow- men?" |
38802 | Did you ever hear anything so wonderful? |
38802 | Did you seek to convert your fellow- men? |
38802 | Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you? |
38802 | INSPIREDMARRIAGE Is there an orthodox clergyman in the world, who will now declare that he believes the institution of polygamy to be right? |
38802 | Love God with all thy heart? |
38802 | Love thy neighbor as thyself? |
38802 | Return good for evil? |
38802 | Then, why do you not change it? |
38802 | Well, what is it? |
38802 | Were you a Christian? |
38802 | Were you a Christian? |
38802 | What did you do? |
38802 | What do you mean by that? |
38802 | What is your name? |
38802 | Which is the one prayer which in greatness, goodness, and beauty is worth all that is between heaven and earth and between this earth and the stars? 38802 --Neither was the man created for the woman, but the woman for the man?" |
38802 | --Do you believe that he would have even suspected that the creator of the universe was talking? |
38802 | A gentleman was telling some wonderful things and the listeners, with one exception, were saying, as he proceeded with his tale,"Is it possible?" |
38802 | About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? |
38802 | After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles? |
38802 | After all, is it not possible to live honest and courageous lives without believing these fables? |
38802 | After the Canaanites were driven out, could he not have employed the hornets to drive out the wild beasts? |
38802 | Again I ask, where did he go? |
38802 | Again he heard the question:"Who is there?" |
38802 | Again he mounted the three steps, again knocked at the doors of Paradise, and again the voice asked:"Who is there?" |
38802 | Again, I ask what and who was this serpent? |
38802 | All of it? |
38802 | And for what? |
38802 | And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public? |
38802 | And here let me ask: Why should there have been more than one correct account of what really happened? |
38802 | And how are you to get to this heaven? |
38802 | And how can we be made in the image of something that has neither body, parts, nor passions? |
38802 | And how could the confusion of tongues prevent its construction? |
38802 | And how long do you suppose the church fought that? |
38802 | And if Joseph was not his father, why did they not give the genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Herod? |
38802 | And if a god has made us, knowing that we are totally depraved, why should we go to the same being to be"born again?" |
38802 | And if he is infinite how can they comprehend him? |
38802 | And let me ask, why was not the miracle substantiated by some of the multitude? |
38802 | And what am I to go by? |
38802 | And what does that prove? |
38802 | And what is the next thing? |
38802 | And what right has a man to charge an infinite being with wickedness and folly? |
38802 | And what shall we say of Greece? |
38802 | And what would be our feelings if the savage king sent for his sorcerers and had them perform the same feat? |
38802 | And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? |
38802 | And why did he, after the menagerie had passed by, pathetically exclaim,"But for Adam there was not found an helpmeet for him"? |
38802 | And why does this same God tell me how to raise my children when he had to drown his? |
38802 | And why, after he had eaten, was he thrust out? |
38802 | And why? |
38802 | And why? |
38802 | And yet we are told, in this creed, that"_ we believe in the ultimate prevalence of the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth._"What makes you? |
38802 | And yet what is this Old Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? |
38802 | And you deserted them? |
38802 | Another listener said to him"Did you hear that?" |
38802 | Another man''s oracle? |
38802 | Are all the investigators in perdition? |
38802 | Are the charitable clothed? |
38802 | Are the honest fed? |
38802 | Are the virtuous shielded? |
38802 | Are we better, purer, and more intelligent than God was four thousand years ago? |
38802 | Are we bound to believe it without knowing what the meaning is? |
38802 | Are we indebted to polygamy for our modern homes? |
38802 | Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was virtuous? |
38802 | But what shall we say of God? |
38802 | But what was the result? |
38802 | But where is the new Eden? |
38802 | By whom? |
38802 | Can God then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two persons? |
38802 | Can absurdities go farther than this? |
38802 | Can any believer in the Bible give any reasonable account of this process of creation? |
38802 | Can any one conceive of music without human love? |
38802 | Can any one imagine what objection God would have to the building of such a tower? |
38802 | Can any reason be given for not allowing man to eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge? |
38802 | Can anybody believe that, under such circumstances, the danger from wild beasts could be very great? |
38802 | Can anything be more infamous? |
38802 | Can epilepsy certify to divinity? |
38802 | Can it be necessary to believe a story like this? |
38802 | Can it be possible that he knew anything about the stars beyond the mere fact that he saw them shining above him? |
38802 | Can not God forgive me for being honest? |
38802 | Can there be Methodist mathematics, Catholic astronomy, Presbyterian geology, Baptist biology, or Episcopal botany? |
38802 | Can there be goodness in this? |
38802 | Can we assist him? |
38802 | Can we believe in this, the Nineteenth Century, that these infamous passages were inspired by God? |
38802 | Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a legal tender for labor performed? |
38802 | Can we believe that any such command was ever given by a merciful and intelligent God? |
38802 | Can we believe that such laws and ceremonies were made and instituted by a merciful and intelligent God? |
38802 | Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the sun? |
38802 | Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man to be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? |
38802 | Can we believe that the stick was changed into a real living serpent, or did it assume simply the appearance of a serpent? |
38802 | Can we believe this story? |
38802 | Can we conceive of the Almighty granting letters of marque and reprisal to hornets? |
38802 | Can we demand of all the same result? |
38802 | Can you imagine anything more absurd than an infinite intelligence in infinite nothing wasting an eternity? |
38802 | Could he not compete with Baal? |
38802 | Could he not see them from where he lived or from where he was? |
38802 | Could the missionary maintain an action of replevin, and if so, what would the cannibal do for a body? |
38802 | Could the most revengeful fiend, the most malicious vagrant in the gloom of hell, sink to a lower moral depth than this? |
38802 | Could there be any progress, even in heaven, without intellectual liberty? |
38802 | Could they, by giving the genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of the blood of David if Joseph was in no way related to Christ? |
38802 | Did God create hornets for that especial purpose, implanting an instinct to attack a Canaanite, but not a Hebrew? |
38802 | Did God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how? |
38802 | Did God object to education then, and does that account for the hostile attitude still assumed by theologians toward all scientific truth? |
38802 | Did God put it in the cloud simply to keep his agreement in his memory? |
38802 | Did God simply by his creative fiat cause a rib slowly to expand, grow and divide into nerve, ligament, cartilage and flesh? |
38802 | Did God teach it to him, or did he happen to overhear God, when he was teaching Adam and Eve? |
38802 | Did Satan remain in the body of the serpent, and in some mysterious manner share his punishment? |
38802 | Did fits pretend to be the owner of the whole earth? |
38802 | Did he at once proceed to make a woman? |
38802 | Did he come in the daytime, or in the night? |
38802 | Did he come simply to tell us that we should not revenge ourselves upon our enemies? |
38802 | Did he come to give a rule of action? |
38802 | Did he come to tell us of another world? |
38802 | Did he know anything about Saturn, his rings and his eight moons? |
38802 | Did he know of the next, that is thirty- seven billion miles distant? |
38802 | Did he know of the one hundred and four planets belonging to our solar system, all children of the sun? |
38802 | Did he know that it would require about seventy- two years for light to reach us from this star? |
38802 | Did he know that light travels one hundred and eighty- five thousand miles a second? |
38802 | Did he know that some stars are so far away in the infinite abysses that five millions of years are required for their light to reach this globe? |
38802 | Did he know that the volume of the earth is less than one- millionth of that of the sun? |
38802 | Did he not know exactly just what he was making? |
38802 | Did he not know that when he made us? |
38802 | Did he pull out the linch- pins, or did he just take them off by main force? |
38802 | Did he rest on that day? |
38802 | Did he walk or fly? |
38802 | Did it ever occur to you that he fell a victim to his own tyranny, and was destroyed by his own hand? |
38802 | Did the giraffe, hippopotamus, antelope and orang- outang journey from Africa in search of the ark? |
38802 | Did the kangaroo swim or jump from Australia to Asia? |
38802 | Did the polar bear leave his field of ice and journey toward the tropics? |
38802 | Did the rainbow originate in this way? |
38802 | Did the"fall"produce a change in the climate? |
38802 | Did this God have to resort to force to make converts? |
38802 | Did wisdom perish with the dead? |
38802 | Did you believe in eternal punishment? |
38802 | Did you believe in the rib story? |
38802 | Did you believe that? |
38802 | Did you believe the rib story? |
38802 | Did you belong to any church? |
38802 | Did you belong to any church? |
38802 | Did you ever run away with any money? |
38802 | Did you have a wife and children of your own? |
38802 | Did you meet there the friends you had lost? |
38802 | Did you pay your debts? |
38802 | Did you run away with any money? |
38802 | Did you take anything else with you? |
38802 | Do away with human love and what are we? |
38802 | Do the angels all discuss questions on the same side? |
38802 | Do the good succeed? |
38802 | Do they really wish me to make more converts? |
38802 | Do we not know that every word was suggested in some way by the experience of men? |
38802 | Do you account for the snake- worship in Mexico, Africa and India in the same way? |
38802 | Do you also believe that God told Pharaoh,"It you do not let these people go, I will fill all your houses and cover your country with flies?" |
38802 | Do you believe God makes such threats as this? |
38802 | Do you believe God would make this threat? |
38802 | Do you believe that God was the author of this infamous law? |
38802 | Do you believe that any man was ever crucified who was the master of death? |
38802 | Do you believe that he baited the dungeon of servitude with wife and child? |
38802 | Do you believe that the loving father of us all, turned the dimpled arms of babes into manacles of iron? |
38802 | Do you believe the rib story yet? |
38802 | Do you believe this? |
38802 | Do you believe this? |
38802 | Do you doubt his power, his wisdom or his justice? |
38802 | Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting along now? |
38802 | Do you mean the Adam and Eve business? |
38802 | Do you suppose they are going to die without a struggle? |
38802 | Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? |
38802 | Does God delight in causing pain? |
38802 | Does any Christian believe that if the real God were to write a book now, he would uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? |
38802 | Does any intelligent man now believe that God made man of dust, and woman of a rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? |
38802 | Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for himself? |
38802 | Does anybody believe this? |
38802 | Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? |
38802 | Does belief depend upon evidence? |
38802 | Does he need human sympathy? |
38802 | Does it tend to the elevation of the human race to speak of"God"as a butcher, tanner and tailor? |
38802 | Does such a threat sound God- like? |
38802 | Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? |
38802 | Does this sound reasonable? |
38802 | HE came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal? |
38802 | Has Jehovah improved? |
38802 | Has he done anything in the way of creation since Saturday evening of the first week? |
38802 | Has infinite mercy become more merciful? |
38802 | Has infinite wisdom intellectually advanced? |
38802 | Has the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of a sin? |
38802 | Hast thou not preached in our streets?'' |
38802 | Have you heard of them since? |
38802 | He knocked and a voice said:"Who is there?" |
38802 | He said,"Who is reading this?" |
38802 | Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and gets sick and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the resurrection? |
38802 | How can any book be a standard, when the standard itself must be measured by human reason? |
38802 | How can any man accept as a revelation from God that which is unreasonable to him? |
38802 | How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk while others were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to control? |
38802 | How can we get along without the revelation that no one understands? |
38802 | How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen hundred years ago was possessed by seven devils? |
38802 | How could God make known his will to any being destitute of reason? |
38802 | How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of evidence, substantiate one of the miracles of Christ? |
38802 | How could eight persons have distributed this food, even if the ark had been large enough to hold it? |
38802 | How could language be confounded? |
38802 | How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves and fishes? |
38802 | How deep did the water get? |
38802 | How did God convey the information to the serpents, that he wished them to go to the desert of Sinai and bite some Jews? |
38802 | How did he do it? |
38802 | How did he know where the ark was? |
38802 | How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? |
38802 | How did it happen that they needed coats of skins, when they had been perfectly comfortable in a nude condition? |
38802 | How did the animals get back to their respective countries? |
38802 | How did the serpent learn the same language? |
38802 | How did these waters happen to run up hill? |
38802 | How did they get there? |
38802 | How did they get there? |
38802 | How did they know the way to go? |
38802 | How did you like it? |
38802 | How did you treat your family? |
38802 | How do they answer all this? |
38802 | How do they know about this Infinite Being? |
38802 | How do we know that there were three million at the end of two hundred and fifteen years? |
38802 | How do you account for Russia? |
38802 | How do you account for Siberia? |
38802 | How do you account for it? |
38802 | How do you account for the existence of martyrs? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers-- arms that had been reached toward God in supplication? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmned by volcanoes, and swept from the earth by storms? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that the world has been filled with pain, and grief, and tears? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving him? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the master''s lash for ages without recompense and without reward? |
38802 | How high did he go? |
38802 | How is it possible to sanctify a space of time? |
38802 | How large a country was that? |
38802 | How long did it rain? |
38802 | How long is it since you converted a Chinaman? |
38802 | How long since you have had an intelligent convert in India? |
38802 | How long was he in the ark? |
38802 | How many are you converting a year, really, truthfully? |
38802 | How many millions of Christians are in the uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of love? |
38802 | How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy their fellow- Christians? |
38802 | How many people are being born a year? |
38802 | How many people were in the promised land already? |
38802 | How many trees can live under miles of water for a year? |
38802 | How many walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature? |
38802 | How much did it rain a day? |
38802 | How much? |
38802 | How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that? |
38802 | How was it possible for Lucretius to get along without the Bible?--how did the great and glorious of that empire? |
38802 | How was man created simply from dust? |
38802 | How was the ark kept clean? |
38802 | How was the woman created from a rib? |
38802 | How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? |
38802 | How were the animals from the tropics kept warm? |
38802 | How were the animals kept from freezing? |
38802 | How were the animals preserved after leaving the ark? |
38802 | How were the animals watered? |
38802 | How were the tender plants and herbs preserved? |
38802 | How were these flocks supported? |
38802 | How were they supported until the world was again clothed with grass? |
38802 | How were those animals taken care of that subsisted on others? |
38802 | How would the hornets know a Canaanite? |
38802 | How would you keep Sunday then? |
38802 | How? |
38802 | I again ask the old question, Of what did he make it? |
38802 | I am the one you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave"? |
38802 | I ask again, how were Adam and Eve created? |
38802 | I ask the Christian world to- day, was it right for the heathen to sell their children? |
38802 | I said,"Do you think the people who were drowned believed in special providence?" |
38802 | I would say,"Where were you when you got the notice to come back? |
38802 | IF we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural and the scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world? |
38802 | If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is another life? |
38802 | If Christ wished to convince his fellow- men by miracles, why did he not do something that could not by any means have been a counterfeit? |
38802 | If he takes a book as a standard, does he so take it because it is to him reasonable? |
38802 | If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man of importance, some one known to all? |
38802 | If he wished miraculously to increase the population, why did he not wait until the people were free? |
38802 | If he wished to do away with the idolatry of the Canaanites, why did he not appear to them? |
38802 | If he wished to keep man and this tree apart, why did he put them together? |
38802 | If it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? |
38802 | If it is a revelation, what does it reveal? |
38802 | If it is all an allegory, what truth is sought to be conveyed? |
38802 | If it was the fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not appear to his enemies? |
38802 | If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries ago, are they not necessary now? |
38802 | If the Bible is not obscene, what book is? |
38802 | If the book and my brain are both the work of the same Infinite God, whose fault is it that the book and the brain do not agree? |
38802 | If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would he have taken? |
38802 | If the devil told a man to kill his wife, would you be shocked? |
38802 | If the devil upheld polygamy, would you be surprised? |
38802 | If the devil wanted to kill men for differing with him would you be astonished? |
38802 | If the flood was simply a partial flood, why were birds taken into the ark? |
38802 | If the words are not inspired, what is? |
38802 | If there is any difference between days, ought not that to be considered best in which the most useful labor has been performed? |
38802 | If there is no devil, who was the original tempter in the garden of Eden? |
38802 | If there is no hell, from what are we saved; to what purpose is the atonement? |
38802 | If they are right, then how long was the seventh day? |
38802 | If this is so, why should the law have been given? |
38802 | If this is so, why should the serpent have been cursed? |
38802 | If this is true, why did he"come down to see the city and the tower?" |
38802 | If this was the order of God, what, under the same circumstances, would have been the command of a devil? |
38802 | If we think that God is kinder than he really is, will our poor souls be burned for that? |
38802 | If you have it, why seek it? |
38802 | If you knew the devil had written a work on human slavery, in your judgment, would he uphold slavery, or denounce it? |
38802 | In that eternity what was this God doing? |
38802 | In the New Testament we find that in giving the genealogy of Christ it says,"who was the son of Joseph?" |
38802 | In the light shed upon this question by the telescope, I again ask, where was he going? |
38802 | In what way did he overcome the intense cold? |
38802 | In what way is the human reason to be ignored? |
38802 | In what way would God put it in the mind of a hornet to attack a Canaanite? |
38802 | In what? |
38802 | Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some man whose arm had been cut off, and make another grow? |
38802 | Instead of turning them out, why did he not keep him from getting in? |
38802 | Is Christ to be praised for resisting such a temptation? |
38802 | Is a god who will burn a soul forever in another world, better than a Christian who burns the body for a few hours in this? |
38802 | Is a man to be eternally rewarded for believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against evidence? |
38802 | Is credulity the mother of virtue? |
38802 | Is falsehood a reforming power? |
38802 | Is he in trouble? |
38802 | Is he in want? |
38802 | Is he unhappy? |
38802 | Is innocence always acquitted? |
38802 | Is it conceivable that fits wanted Christ to fall down and worship them? |
38802 | Is it easy to account for famine, for pestilence and plague if there be above us all a Ruler infinitely good, powerful and wise? |
38802 | Is it necessary to believe that God is a kind of prestigiator-- a sleight- of- hand performer, a magician or sorcerer? |
38802 | Is it not a little curious that no priest of one religion has ever been able to astonish a priest of another religion by telling a miracle? |
38802 | Is it not a little curious that the priests of one religion never believe the priests of another? |
38802 | Is it not a little strange that the believers in sacred books regard all except their own as having been made by hypocrites and fools? |
38802 | Is it not a strange coincidence that there should be contradictory accounts mingled in both the Babylonian and Jewish stories? |
38802 | Is it not altogether more probable that some ignorant Hebrew would write the vulgar words? |
38802 | Is it not far better and wiser to take the good and throw the bad away? |
38802 | Is it not humiliating to know that our ancestors believed these things? |
38802 | Is it not strange that a Chinaman should find out by his own exertions more about the material universe than Moses could when assisted by its Creator? |
38802 | Is it not wonderful that while God told his people what animals were fit for food, he failed to give a list of plants that man might eat? |
38802 | Is it not, after all, barely possible that a man acting like Christ can be saved? |
38802 | Is it on account of that transaction in the Garden of Eden, that all the descendants of Adam and Eve known as Jews and Christians hate serpents? |
38802 | Is it possible for any sane and intelligent man to believe this story? |
38802 | Is it possible for this God to prevent it? |
38802 | Is it possible for us to believe that an infinite being would resort to such expedients in order to drive the Canaanites from their country? |
38802 | Is it possible not to hate and despise him? |
38802 | Is it possible that God is intolerant? |
38802 | Is it possible that God would make a successful rival? |
38802 | Is it possible that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles, and yet forgot to put it in his life of Christ? |
38802 | Is it possible that a God capable of doing the miracles recounted in the Old Testament could not, in some way, have disposed of the wild beasts? |
38802 | Is it possible that a being of infinite purity-- the author of modesty, would smirch the pages of his book with stories lewd, licentious and obscene? |
38802 | Is it possible that any one now believes that the whole world would be of one speech had the language not been confounded at Babel? |
38802 | Is it possible that fits can talk? |
38802 | Is it possible that fits carried Christ himself to the pinnacle of a temple? |
38802 | Is it possible that he could not see whether the waters had gone? |
38802 | Is it possible that of all these, the Bible only is the work of God? |
38802 | Is it possible that seventy people could increase to that extent in two hundred and fifteen years? |
38802 | Is it possible that the Infinite could not overwhelm with waves this atom called the earth? |
38802 | Is it possible that the Pentateuch could not have been written by uninspired men? |
38802 | Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was acceptable to God? |
38802 | Is it possible to conceive of a more perfectly childish way of ascertaining whether the earth was dry? |
38802 | Is it possible to imagine what was really done? |
38802 | Is it possible to love a God who would make such laws? |
38802 | Is it really necessary to believe this account in order to be happy here, or hereafter? |
38802 | Is it the church? |
38802 | Is it true that man was once perfectly pure and innocent, and that he became degenerate by disobedience? |
38802 | Is it true that when we kill a snake we also destroy an evil spirit, or is there but one devil, and did he perish at the death of the first serpent? |
38802 | Is justice always done? |
38802 | Is not such a course dishonorable to both? |
38802 | Is not such a course far more reasonable than to insist that all these things are true and must stand though every science shall fall to mental dust? |
38802 | Is orthodox Christianity on the increase? |
38802 | Is rest holier than labor? |
38802 | Is that because we are depraved? |
38802 | Is the freedom of the future to exist only in perdition? |
38802 | Is then the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? |
38802 | Is there a Christian woman, civilized, intelligent, and free, who believes in the institution of polygamy? |
38802 | Is there a land without a grave, and where good- bye is never heard?" |
38802 | Is there a solitary Christian nation that will trust any other? |
38802 | Is there a standard of a standard? |
38802 | Is there a world without death, without pain, without a tear? |
38802 | Is there an honest man who does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife for suggesting the worship of some other God? |
38802 | Is there any saving grace in hypocrisy? |
38802 | Is there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? |
38802 | Is there any sense in that? |
38802 | Is there any theologian who will contend that man was created directly from the earth? |
38802 | Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this?--"Shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? |
38802 | Is there anything in the New Testament more beautiful than the story of the Sufi? |
38802 | Is there anything in the literature of the world more nearly perfect than this thought? |
38802 | Is there anything that can be more perfectly absurd than that a space of time can be holy? |
38802 | Is there no intellectual liberty in heaven? |
38802 | Is there one who will now say that, under such circumstances, the wife ought to have been killed? |
38802 | Is there one who will publicly declare that, in his judgment, that institution ever was right? |
38802 | Is there wisdom in this? |
38802 | Is there, in all the history of war, a more infamous thing than this? |
38802 | Is there, in the civilized world, to- day, a clergyman who believes in the divinity of slavery? |
38802 | Is this belief necessary unto salvation? |
38802 | Is this established by the history of nations? |
38802 | It will be the same to- morrow, will it not? |
38802 | Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what does he get? |
38802 | Lover-- husband-- wife-- mother-- father-- child-- home!--? |
38802 | Must I be false to my understanding? |
38802 | Must a man be born a second time before this account seems reasonable? |
38802 | Must not the reason be convinced? |
38802 | Must the civilized accept the religion of savages? |
38802 | Must we believe anything that can not in any way be substantiated? |
38802 | Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of others? |
38802 | Must we regard the auction block as an altar? |
38802 | Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe that the creation of woman was a second thought? |
38802 | Now, I ask, whether it was unreasonable for the Jews to suggest that a little meat would be very gratefully received? |
38802 | Now, after concluding to make"an helpmeet"for Adam, what did the Lord God do? |
38802 | Of art, or joy? |
38802 | Of what did he make it? |
38802 | On which of the six days was he created? |
38802 | Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making depraved people? |
38802 | People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to do? |
38802 | Robert Collyer suggests,"nourish a bank of violets"? |
38802 | Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and where was the old heaven and where was the hell? |
38802 | Shall I take another man''s word-- not what he thinks, but what he says some God has said to him? |
38802 | Should we imagine that he was divinely inspired because he gave to the Jews what the Egyptians had given him? |
38802 | Suppose a man came into this city and should meet a funeral procession, and say,"Who is dead?" |
38802 | Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament except laws in favor of these crimes, would it still be insisted that it was inspired? |
38802 | Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament upholding these crimes, would the modern Christian suspect that it was not inspired on that account? |
38802 | Suppose the compasses were not constant to the pole-- no two compasses exactly alike-- would you expect all ships to reach the same harbor? |
38802 | Suppose we invent something that can go one thousand miles an hour? |
38802 | That Jehovah really endeavored to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an helpmeet for him? |
38802 | That all his bones were formed as they now are, and all the relations of nerve, ligament, brain and motion as they are to- day? |
38802 | The Christians tell me that God is the author of these vile and stupid things? |
38802 | The Euphrates still journeys to the gulf, but where are Pison, Gihon and the mighty Heddekel? |
38802 | The Recording Secretary, or whoever does the cross- examining, says to a soul: Where are you from? |
38802 | The hail experiment having accomplished nothing, do you believe that God murdered the first- born of animals and men? |
38802 | The next question is, how many beasts, fowls and creeping things did Noah take into the ark? |
38802 | The question, then arises, whether within the last six thousand years there have been such upheavals and displacements? |
38802 | The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by his church, causes war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and why? |
38802 | Then what became of the body that died? |
38802 | Then which day would you keep? |
38802 | Then why did he say anything upon these subjects? |
38802 | Then why does not God give me the evidence? |
38802 | There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in the world? |
38802 | Thereupon, Moses returned unto the Lord and said,"Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil entreated this people? |
38802 | They said to the priests:"Where is your New Jerusalem?" |
38802 | This God, waiting around Eden-- knowing all the while what would happen-- having made them on purpose so that it would happen, then does what? |
38802 | This is what happens--"What is your name?" |
38802 | Unless the Lord God was looking for an helpmeet for Adam, why did he cause the animals to pass before him? |
38802 | Until then, I will remain and suffer where I am?" |
38802 | Upon what food did he subsist before his conversation with Eve? |
38802 | WILL any one claim that the passages upholding slavery have liberated mankind? |
38802 | WILL the unknown, the mysteries of life and itiations of the mind, forever furnish food for superstition? |
38802 | Was God at that time governing the world? |
38802 | Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel? |
38802 | Was he envious of the success of the Egyptian magicians? |
38802 | Was he so ignorant of the structure of the human mind as to believe all honest doubt a crime? |
38802 | Was it not possible for him to make such a convincing display of his power as to silence forever the voice of unbelief? |
38802 | Was it right for God not only to uphold, but to command the infamous traffic in human flesh? |
38802 | Was religious liberty born of that infamous verse in which the husband is commanded to kill his wife for worshiping an unknown God? |
38802 | Was that, too, a geologic period covering thousands of ages? |
38802 | Was the Lord God compelled to take a part of the man because he had used up all the original"nothing"out of which the universe was made? |
38802 | Was the fish"spiritual?" |
38802 | Was the slave- pen a temple? |
38802 | Was there a time when the institution of polygamy was the highest expression of human virtue? |
38802 | Was there ever a time in the history of the world when it was right to treat woman simply as property? |
38802 | Was there in the garden a tree of life, the eating of which would have rendered Adam and Eve immortal? |
38802 | Was there not room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he did not want people to eat his apples? |
38802 | Was this the work of the most merciful God, the father of us all? |
38802 | We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how was this done? |
38802 | We know how it was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? |
38802 | We know that after that he lived upon dust, but what did he eat before? |
38802 | We should have said to him,"What do you propose to give us in place of that angel? |
38802 | We would have asked that man whether he knew more than all the great minds of his country, whether he was so much wiser than his fathers? |
38802 | Well, what else? |
38802 | Well, why? |
38802 | Were blood hounds apostles? |
38802 | Were the stealers and whippers of babes and women the justified children of God? |
38802 | Were these parts, so worn away, perpetually renewed, or was the nature of things so changed that they could not wear away? |
38802 | Were they better than other nations? |
38802 | What are the Christian nations doing to- day in Europe? |
38802 | What are they to do? |
38802 | What are we going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel about What are we to do without hell? |
38802 | What are we going to do with our enemies? |
38802 | What are we going to do with the people we love but do n''t like? |
38802 | What are we to do without the Bible? |
38802 | What are you doing in the missionary world? |
38802 | What argument did he make in favor of immortality? |
38802 | What became of the Jews who had a Bible? |
38802 | What became of the birds that devoured other birds? |
38802 | What became of the birds that fed on worms and insects? |
38802 | What became of the soil washed, scattered, dissolved, and covered with the_ debris_ of a world? |
38802 | What became of them? |
38802 | What becomes of those who hear and do not believe? |
38802 | What can the orthodox minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? |
38802 | What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of the unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? |
38802 | What consolation have they? |
38802 | What could heaven be without human love? |
38802 | What did God make him for? |
38802 | What did he do after he got rested? |
38802 | What did he do with his body? |
38802 | What did he do? |
38802 | What did he do? |
38802 | What did he use for the purpose? |
38802 | What did the writer mean by the word firmament? |
38802 | What did they drink? |
38802 | What did they eat while in the ark? |
38802 | What did they eat? |
38802 | What do they teach to- day? |
38802 | What does he get from him? |
38802 | What does that prove? |
38802 | What does that prove? |
38802 | What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the earth? |
38802 | What else can they do? |
38802 | What facts did he furnish? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What good is it to believe in something that you know you do not understand, and that you never can understand? |
38802 | What had he been doing? |
38802 | What had the God been doing for the eternity he had been living? |
38802 | What had the beasts, and the creeping things, and the birds done to excite the anger of God? |
38802 | What had these animals to eat while on the journey? |
38802 | What had these children done? |
38802 | What has become of the millions who have died since, without having heard of the atonement? |
38802 | What has religion to do with facts? |
38802 | What have the nations been fighting about? |
38802 | What is the man to do? |
38802 | What is the next thing I find in this creed? |
38802 | What is the next thing in this great creed? |
38802 | What is the use of sending them to hell by enlightening them? |
38802 | What kind of a country is it? |
38802 | What kind of a man were you? |
38802 | What kind of opening there for a young man? |
38802 | What kind of tree was that? |
38802 | What objection could God have had to the immortality of man? |
38802 | What part of the Bible? |
38802 | What particular ones would naturally come together if nobody understood the language of any other person? |
38802 | What right has a god to fill a world with fiends? |
38802 | What right would this God have to complain of a crucifixion suffered in accordance with his own command? |
38802 | What should I obey? |
38802 | What star of hope did he put above the darkness of this world? |
38802 | What was the Thirty Years''War in Europe for? |
38802 | What was the form of the serpent when he entered the garden, and in what way did he move from place to place? |
38802 | What was the next blow that this church received? |
38802 | What was the war in Holland for? |
38802 | What was your business? |
38802 | What would be thought of a physician now, who would give a prescription like that? |
38802 | What would become of National Thanksgiving? |
38802 | What would we be in another world, and what would we be here? |
38802 | What would you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? |
38802 | When does that mean? |
38802 | Where are these four rivers now? |
38802 | Where are they? |
38802 | Where are you from? |
38802 | Where can words be found bitter enough to describe a god who would kill wives and babes because husbands and fathers had failed to keep his law? |
38802 | Where could he have obtained his flax? |
38802 | Where did he come down from? |
38802 | Where did he get his words? |
38802 | Where did the Lord God get those skins? |
38802 | Where did the bees get honey, and the ants seeds? |
38802 | Where did the serpent come from? |
38802 | Where did the tenants of the ark get food? |
38802 | Where did the water come from? |
38802 | Where did these serpents come from? |
38802 | Where did they get it? |
38802 | Where did this serpent come from? |
38802 | Where was he going? |
38802 | Where was he going? |
38802 | Where were meadows and pastures for them? |
38802 | Where were these people going? |
38802 | Where were those people going? |
38802 | Which had the greater and the grander government? |
38802 | Which of those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? |
38802 | Which way did he go? |
38802 | Who are the men in Europe crying against war? |
38802 | Who can over estimate the progress of the world if all the money wasted in superstition could be used to enlighten, elevate and civilize mankind? |
38802 | Who is the blasphemer; the man who denies the existence of God, or he who covers the robes of the Infinite with innocent blood? |
38802 | Who made him? |
38802 | Who made the devil? |
38802 | Who protects the insane? |
38802 | Who saw this miracle? |
38802 | Who selected these? |
38802 | Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? |
38802 | Who, and what was this serpent? |
38802 | Why allow the earth to be peopled with depraved and monstrous beings, each one of whom must be re- made, re- formed, and born again? |
38802 | Why are the wife- beaters protected, and why are the wives and children left defenceless if the hand of God is over us all? |
38802 | Why call back to life people so insignificant that the public did not know of their death? |
38802 | Why did Adam and Eve disobey? |
38802 | Why did God tell Moses, while in the desert, to make curtains of fine linen? |
38802 | Why did God wait until the cool of the day before looking after his children? |
38802 | Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in the darkness of the hovel? |
38802 | Why did he fill the world with his own children, knowing that he would have to destroy them? |
38802 | Why did he go dumbly to his death and leave the world in darkness and in doubt? |
38802 | Why did he leave his children to find out the hurtful and the poisonous by experiment, knowing that experiment, in millions of cases, must be death? |
38802 | Why did he make animals that he knew he would destroy? |
38802 | Why did he not again enter the temple and end the old dispute with demonstration? |
38802 | Why did he not call upon Caiaphas, the high priest? |
38802 | Why did he not confront the Roman soldiers who had taken money to falsely swear that his body had been stolen by his friends? |
38802 | Why did he not defend his children? |
38802 | Why did he not give them the tables of the law? |
38802 | Why did he not make another triumphal entry into Jerusalem? |
38802 | Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this serpent? |
38802 | Why did he not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent? |
38802 | Why did he not tell him that a nation founded upon slavery could not stand? |
38802 | Why did he not tell us something about it? |
38802 | Why did he not turn the tear- stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another life? |
38802 | Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? |
38802 | Why did he not watch the devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve? |
38802 | Why did he only make known his will to a few wandering savages in the desert of Sinai? |
38802 | Why did he put it in the midst of the garden? |
38802 | Why did he repent having made them? |
38802 | Why did he say"And every living substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the earth"? |
38802 | Why did he tell him to make things of gold, and silver, and precious stones, when they could not have been in possession of these things? |
38802 | Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap his head off? |
38802 | Why did they give a supposed genealogy? |
38802 | Why did"the Lord come down to see the city and the tower"? |
38802 | Why do all these religions die hard? |
38802 | Why do they not send missionaries there with copies of the Old Testament? |
38802 | Why do we make so many mistakes? |
38802 | Why does Providence permit insanity? |
38802 | Why does he desire worship? |
38802 | Why does not the Congregational Church tell us? |
38802 | Why does special providence allow all the crimes? |
38802 | Why is a miracle any more necessary to account for yesterday than for to- day or for to- morrow? |
38802 | Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even to this day? |
38802 | Why is it that thou hast sent me? |
38802 | Why not purify the fountain of all human life? |
38802 | Why over_ running_ water? |
38802 | Why should Christians try to deprive God of the glory of having wrought the most stupendous of miracles? |
38802 | Why should God allow an inspired book to be interpolated? |
38802 | Why should God be so jealous of the wooden idols of the heathen? |
38802 | Why should God curse the serpent for what had really been done by the devil? |
38802 | Why should God hate to see a man happy? |
38802 | Why should God miraculously increase the number of slaves? |
38802 | Why should God object to that fruit being eaten by man? |
38802 | Why should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that his God is waiting to damn? |
38802 | Why should a Christian not destroy an infidel who is trying to assassinate his soul? |
38802 | Why should a Christian pity an unbeliever-- one who has rejected the Bible-- when he knows that God will be pitiless forever? |
38802 | Why should a God care about such things? |
38802 | Why should a believer in God hate an atheist? |
38802 | Why should a book take its place, unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the proper standard? |
38802 | Why should a mother be declared unclean? |
38802 | Why should a son who has examined a subject, throw away his reason and adopt the views of his mother? |
38802 | Why should a woman ask pardon of God for having been a mother? |
38802 | Why should an infinite God care whether mankind made ointments and perfumes like his or not? |
38802 | Why should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand years ago, control the living world? |
38802 | Why should giving birth to a daughter be regarded twice as criminal as giving birth to a son? |
38802 | Why should he destroy them? |
38802 | Why should he insist on having buttons sewed in certain rows, and fringes of a certain color? |
38802 | Why should he make experiments that he knows must fail? |
38802 | Why should he make those whom he knew would be criminals? |
38802 | Why should it excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream, talking, laughing and loving? |
38802 | Why should men be imprisoned simply for imitating God? |
38802 | Why should men in the name of religion try to harmonize the contradictions that exist between Nature and a book? |
38802 | Why should philosophers be denounced for placing more reliance upon what they know than upon what they have been told? |
38802 | Why should that be considered a crime in Exodus, which is commanded as a duty in Genesis? |
38802 | Why should that day be filled with gloom instead of joy? |
38802 | Why should the Creator of all things threaten to kill a priest who approached his altar without having washed his hands and feet? |
38802 | Why should the babes in the cradle be destroyed on account of the crime of Pharaoh? |
38802 | Why should the bird be killed in an_ earthen_ vessel? |
38802 | Why should the cattle be destroyed because man had enslaved his brother? |
38802 | Why should the innocent maiden and the loving mother worship the heartless Jewish God? |
38802 | Why should they, with pure and stainless lips, read the vile record of inspired lust? |
38802 | Why should this be a period of probation? |
38802 | Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his foxes, while others, holding the Nebular Hypothesis in utter contempt, go straight to heaven? |
38802 | Why should we imprison Mormons, and worship God? |
38802 | Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? |
38802 | Why should we look sad, and think about death, and hear about hell? |
38802 | Why should we object to the Darwinian doctrine of descent after this? |
38802 | Why should we, looking at some ancient daub of angel, saint or virgin, say its painter must have been assisted by a god? |
38802 | Why then should we not place greater confidence in Nature than in a book? |
38802 | Why was he not kept out of the garden? |
38802 | Why was he not on hand in the morning? |
38802 | Why was it that England persecuted Scotland? |
38802 | Why was the Garden of Eden planted? |
38802 | Why was the experiment made? |
38802 | Why were Adam and Eve exposed to the seductive arts of the serpent? |
38802 | Why were four gospels necessary? |
38802 | Why were not the maidens also killed? |
38802 | Why were they spared? |
38802 | Why were we not given better brains? |
38802 | Why would the confounding of the language make them separate? |
38802 | Why would they not stay together until they could understand each other? |
38802 | Why, in this instance, did they separate? |
38802 | Why, then, should a sectarian college exist? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Will I be sorry that I did not say I was a Christian when I was not? |
38802 | Will I be sorry when I come to die that I did not live a hypocrite? |
38802 | Will anybody now contend that man was a direct and independent creation, and sustains and bears no relation to the animals below him? |
38802 | Will darkness forever be the womb and mother of the supernatural? |
38802 | Will he accept the agony of innocence for the punishment of guilt? |
38802 | Will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ? |
38802 | Will men become clean in speech by believing that God is unclean? |
38802 | Will men make better husbands, fathers, neighbors, and citizens, simply by giving credence to these childish and impossible things? |
38802 | Will some Christian give us an explanation of this matter? |
38802 | Will some gentleman skilled in theology give us an explanation? |
38802 | Will some kind clergymen tell us upon what kind of food Adam subsisted during these immense periods? |
38802 | Will some minister when he answers the"Mistakes of Moses"tell us where these rivers are or were? |
38802 | Will some minister, some graduate of Andover, tell us what this means? |
38802 | Will some theologian explain this? |
38802 | Will some theologian have the kindness to answer these questions? |
38802 | Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the miraculous, tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind? |
38802 | Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease the happiness of God? |
38802 | Will the fact that I was honest put a thorn in the pillow of death? |
38802 | Will the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the honest folks in hell? |
38802 | Will there be, in the universe, an eternal_ auto da fe?_ XXIX. |
38802 | Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep are? |
38802 | Wives, submit yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord?" |
38802 | Would a partial, local flood have fulfilled these threats? |
38802 | Would it not be far better to admit that the Bible was written by barbarians in a barbarous, coarse and vulgar age? |
38802 | Would it not be far better to treat this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us? |
38802 | Would it not be safer to charge Moses with vulgarity, instead of God? |
38802 | Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had_ created_ instead of multiplied the loaves and fishes? |
38802 | Would it not have been better to change Noah and his people, so that after that a second birth would not have been necessary? |
38802 | Would it not have been much better to have made another Adam and Eve? |
38802 | Would the charm be broken if the vessel was of wood? |
38802 | Would we not regard such a performance as beneath the dignity even of a President? |
38802 | Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? |
38802 | Would you regard it as any evidence that he ever wrote it, if it upheld slavery? |
38802 | You may ask, and what of all this? |
38802 | You may say that it was a miracle; but what need was there of working a miracle? |
38802 | and if he did say anything, why did he not give the facts? |
38802 | and when he had concluded, there was a kind of chorus of"Is it possible?" |
38802 | and"Can it be?" |
38802 | and, if so, is not the reason of each man the final arbiter of that man? |
38802 | no enemies?" |
38802 | that God approved not only of human slavery, but instructed his chosen people to buy the women, children and babes of the heathen round about them? |
38802 | that the assistance of God was necessary to produce these books? |
38802 | upon Herod? |
9172 | The question might arise, To what extent do the distinctions thus made correspond to reality? |
9172 | The whole question might more profitably be approached from another point of view: To what extent are the distinctions of this classification useful? |
7871 | Are they cold that they have to keep warm? |
7871 | But which,asked some,"was the more glorious, her long tresses, floating down her back, or the shining crown above it?" |
7871 | Have I killed them? |
7871 | How can they swim with petticoats on? |
7871 | Oh, Mynheer Eerlyk, you mean? 7871 They are very proud of their linen, these men are; but, without the spider to teach them, what could they have done? |
7871 | What do you bring me? |
7871 | What is it? |
7871 | What now? |
7871 | What of the third one? |
7871 | What shall we name it? |
7871 | When men say to you, on the street, to- morrow,''How do you sail?'' 7871 Where did you get those brats? |
7871 | Where shall we go when our pool is destroyed? 7871 Who has been here? |
7871 | Why not divide this wheat among the needy, if you are greatly disappointed? 7871 Why not?" |
7871 | ( How goes it with you, already?) |
7871 | But when, instead of green grass, they saw a white landscape, they wondered, Was it winter? |
7871 | But where was it,--the farm, with the house and fields? |
7871 | But where was the giant? |
7871 | Could it be? |
7871 | Did not the ancient oak promise that the trees would be turned upside down for you? |
7871 | Did they not say you could walk on top of them?" |
7871 | Did you ever see him? |
7871 | Do n''t you hear Karel''s Klok( the curfew) sounding? |
7871 | Do n''t you know I belong to my Lord?" |
7871 | For what reason did the wise birds emigrate to the cold country a thousand miles away? |
7871 | Forgive even the Danes? |
7871 | Had he made"goed koop"that day? |
7871 | How could a saint lose his temper so? |
7871 | How did he get his name? |
7871 | How do you sail to- day?" |
7871 | How was Santa Klaas dressed? |
7871 | How will Spin Head reveal his secret?" |
7871 | Indeed, she spoke to the spider as an old friend:"Well, playmate of my babyhood, what have you to tell me?" |
7871 | Now when he first came to New Netherland in America, what did he find to take back to Holland? |
7871 | Proud of her riches, with her voice in a high key, she shouted,"I ever want? |
7871 | SANTA KLAAS AND BLACK PETE Who is Santa Klaas? |
7871 | She had even to beg her bread on the streets; for who wanted to help the woman who wasted wheat? |
7871 | That''s the way the Dutch talk-- not"how do you do,"but, in their watery country, it is this,"How do you sail?" |
7871 | Then she said to herself:"Is there anything in this ugly stick? |
7871 | Then what do you think he did?" |
7871 | Was that all? |
7871 | Were they like other fairies? |
7871 | What became of the body of the Mermaid Queen? |
7871 | What did the proverb mean? |
7871 | What had, what would, become of our baby? |
7871 | What is money?" |
7871 | What was it all for? |
7871 | What was the matter? |
7871 | What was the matter? |
7871 | Where does he live? |
7871 | Where should he hide? |
7871 | Whither had they gone? |
7871 | Who ever saw a white penny? |
7871 | Who would be a woman? |
7871 | Who would n''t be a mermaid?" |
7871 | Why should she? |
7871 | Why were the pagan followers of the king so angry with the singer? |
7871 | Would it be Wilhelm or Wilhelmina? |
7871 | forgive an enemy? |
7871 | or else,"Hoe gat het u al?" |
6411 | But wo n''t the good god be displeased and do you harm? |
6411 | Didna ye hear-- didna ye hear? |
6411 | Do you go? |
6411 | I have tried to do my duty,he said, as he breathed his last, and this is all his tomb has to say of him; but is n''t it enough? |
6411 | No; do n''t you wish you could? |
6411 | Shall I shoot with this gun? |
6411 | Then what do you think of the worms? |
6411 | What do you think of that description? |
6411 | Where? 6411 Why did n''t you send for me? |
6411 | Why do n''t you worship something good and beautiful,I said;"some god that would detest such things as firecrackers?" |
6411 | You''ve got it bad, have n''t you? |
6411 | A train of three Pullmans, all well filled-- but what is this shift made for, at the last moment, when we thought we were off? |
6411 | Am I to be disappointed? |
6411 | And should not this incontrovertible fact teach you a lesson-- just a little bit of modesty? |
6411 | Are they happy? |
6411 | Because one has been awe- stricken by Niagara''s torrent, are the other waterfalls of the world to be uninteresting? |
6411 | Burke pardoned something to the spirit of liberty, and shall we do less to the august shade of St. Andrew? |
6411 | But custom has much to do with one''s prejudices, for, after all, how is this worse than to roll in one''s carriage to our Fifth Avenue temples? |
6411 | But imagine Herbert Spencer and the average Prince giving evidence; whose word would go the farther the wide world over? |
6411 | But is the past to be repeated? |
6411 | But is this new business to be permanent? |
6411 | But look at their costume, or shall I rather say want of costume? |
6411 | But where shall we find so mighty an organ, or so grand an anthem? |
6411 | Can any knowledge be sweeter to one than this? |
6411 | Can it be only seven days since we waved adieu to bright eyes on the pier? |
6411 | Can we make it? |
6411 | Can you resist our appeal to come and help us? |
6411 | Can you wonder that our daily excursions were delightful? |
6411 | Did n''t you know my rifle would have reached him?" |
6411 | Do you know, for instance, that such a potentate as the Sultan of Terantor exists? |
6411 | Do you remember with what laughter the sun- spot theory was received? |
6411 | Having seen the Himalayas, are the more modest but not less dear Alleghanies to lose their charm and power? |
6411 | His efforts had been successful, but for what? |
6411 | How could it grow? |
6411 | How is it with thee, my friend? |
6411 | How many human beings can the land maintain to the square mile? |
6411 | I shall never forget the malicious inquiry:"Does your God_ change_, then?" |
6411 | I wonder what we are coming to?" |
6411 | Is it any wonder that the masses are constantly upon the verge of starvation? |
6411 | Is it any wonder that the vice of gambling seems inherent in the Chinese character? |
6411 | Is it not a blessing for the race that evil disintegrates? |
6411 | Look out for their forthcoming declaration of independence; and why should n''t they have their"_ Whereases_"as well as your even Christian? |
6411 | May not the poverty of the East have much to do with it? |
6411 | Need I say that it is in the Turner Gallery alone where such color can be seen? |
6411 | Now if wines, and especially champagne-- that creature of fashion-- should go, what shall we have to tax? |
6411 | One always likes to help on a match when he can, and something may come of this; who knows? |
6411 | One says instinctively,"What care these roarers for the name of king?" |
6411 | The night we spent at Saigon the French governor gave a grand ball, five hundred invitations; but out of all this number how many ladies, think you? |
6411 | The question of railroads is more serious, and what think you is the one obstacle to their introduction? |
6411 | Therefore, we need not be surprised that in good time a revelation came to this effect:"When man was divided how many did they make him? |
6411 | Well, does the priest know where there are any temple gongs that can be bought? |
6411 | Well, then, gentlemen, if all this be so, what''s the use of your petty criticism? |
6411 | What can a dealer do but meet the imperious demands of his patrons? |
6411 | What constitutes the choice food of the world? |
6411 | What could we expect from kings content to lie in such tombs but lives of disgusting dissipation? |
6411 | What do I think of India? |
6411 | What his arms? |
6411 | What his legs and feet? |
6411 | What is pig metal to this? |
6411 | What is this noise? |
6411 | What is this? |
6411 | What is this? |
6411 | What was his mouth? |
6411 | What was this general''s daughter in India? |
6411 | What was to be done? |
6411 | Where are we going to stop in the domain of invention? |
6411 | Where shall we find its equal? |
6411 | Which has not fall''n on the dry heart like rain? |
6411 | Which has not taught weak wills how much they can? |
6411 | Who can assure us that these bronzed figures which surround us by millions may not again in some mad moment catch the fever of revolt? |
6411 | Who shall paint it satisfactorily? |
6411 | Why does not some born reformer of our sex devote his life to giving his fellow man such additional happiness in life? |
6411 | Will it be fine to- morrow? |
6411 | You ploughman bard, who are so much to me, are you then forgotten? |
6411 | and did n''t Napoleon win battles which he should have lost? |
6411 | and does n''t the Taj do this so far beyond all other human structures that no one thinks of naming another in comparison? |
6411 | and what are its effects today in India? |
6411 | and whither do they finally go? |
6411 | and, ambitious ruler that he is, that he now claims tribute from the whole of New Guinea? |
6411 | overjoyed at being homeward bound? |
6411 | what is caste? |
6411 | what''s this? |
6411 | whence did it spring? |
6411 | who could sleep in such an hour? |
47769 | Am I so much disfigured? 47769 And Augustine?" |
47769 | And do you think you will go on loving Mariquilla? |
47769 | And is Mariquilla nice? |
47769 | And our protector and friend, Don José de Montoria, what of him? |
47769 | And the fathers at the Seminary? |
47769 | And the peaches? |
47769 | And this Candiola has a daughter? |
47769 | And what induces Saragossa to wish to carry her defence to the last extreme? 47769 And would not the Señor Candiola be pleased to see her married to the son of Don José de Montoria?" |
47769 | And your daughter? |
47769 | And your father? |
47769 | Are these things so valuable, Señor Candiola? |
47769 | Are we blown up too? |
47769 | Are you afraid? 47769 Are you afraid?" |
47769 | Are you alive? |
47769 | Are you coming to help carry the wounded? |
47769 | Are you devoted to this Virgin? |
47769 | Are you dying? |
47769 | Are you going to make it a matter of justices and notaries? 47769 Are you ill? |
47769 | Are you mad? 47769 Are you mad? |
47769 | Are you wounded? |
47769 | Augustine, dost thou not feel like smashing something? |
47769 | Augustine, have you told this girl that you have any idea of failing in your duty? 47769 Augustine, how can you permit me to be insulted?" |
47769 | Augustine, is it thou? |
47769 | By this place? 47769 Did n''t you see how those barbarians were trampling my father underfoot? |
47769 | Did not Mariquilla see me among all those who crowded in front of the door of her house? 47769 Did she come out of the fire unharmed?" |
47769 | Did you see her? 47769 Did you see that miserable and ridiculous old man?" |
47769 | Do you hear what I tell you, Señor Don José? |
47769 | Do you hear what they are saying here, Don José? |
47769 | Do you not hear all the drums and bells sounding the call to arms? |
47769 | Do you not hear the cracked bell? |
47769 | Do you not know it, then? |
47769 | Do you not see? 47769 Do you see this enormous heap of powder?" |
47769 | Do you see those sacks and those barrels all full of the same material? 47769 Do you see those women over there? |
47769 | Do you see? 47769 Do you tell me that you will not set him at liberty?" |
47769 | Do you want to go to sleep, you poor little thing? |
47769 | Does it not have to be defended? |
47769 | Does n''t it frighten you to look at all that? |
47769 | Eh, Father Luengo,said Montoria, calling to the friar of that name,"what is it? |
47769 | For me? 47769 Has not that wretched niggard understood that we will pay him for his flour? |
47769 | Have you been over back here, near San Diego? 47769 Have you come from San Francisco?" |
47769 | Have you not understood me, you meddlesome fellow? |
47769 | Have you seen my father? |
47769 | Have you seen my son? |
47769 | How am I to blame for what this child has inherited of the evil ways of her mother? 47769 How is it that you are here? |
47769 | How is that? |
47769 | How pale and changed thou art? 47769 I should not like to see them fall anywhere; but if at any time one could wish ill- fortune to a neighbor, it would be now, do you not think so?" |
47769 | I? 47769 Is it the eldest son who is dead, Manuel Montoria?" |
47769 | Is my daughter asleep? |
47769 | Is that your father? |
47769 | Is this true, friend Candiola, that they are telling about here? |
47769 | Is your reverence wounded? |
47769 | It is true,said Candiola, with the calmness of despair;"what harm can I do who am always busy aiding those in need? |
47769 | Manuela, are you not going? |
47769 | Manuelilla, have you got over being afraid of the bullets yet? |
47769 | Mariquilla, why are you silent? 47769 Miserable pig, is there not in your black and empty soul one spark of patriotism?" |
47769 | Oh, Señor Don José de Montoria, will you not ask them to pardon my father? 47769 Or perhaps where they are making cartridges?" |
47769 | Perhaps I am the author of its being? |
47769 | Señor Don José,said Don Roque, weeping,"will you not retire also, and let your friends fulfil this sad duty?" |
47769 | Señor de Araceli, are you not going on firing? 47769 Señor de Araceli, did they not say that all precautions had been taken to defend San Francisco? |
47769 | Señor,answered the old woman, showing herself at a window which opened upon the balcony,"who can sleep during this dreadful bombardment? |
47769 | So you are not able to tell me where my dear friend Don José lives? |
47769 | That you have been inside the French lines, holding confabs with that mob? |
47769 | The Torre Nueva? 47769 Then I will give her the amulet?" |
47769 | Then you were not here on the fourth of August? |
47769 | They have condemned him? |
47769 | To the Torre Nueva? 47769 Well, where do you live? |
47769 | What am I to understand? |
47769 | What are you thinking about? |
47769 | What are you thinking about? |
47769 | What city? |
47769 | What do you say? |
47769 | What is all this? |
47769 | What is going on here? |
47769 | What is going on, Señor Sursum Corda? |
47769 | What is it? 47769 What news do your reverences bring us?" |
47769 | What the matter is with me? 47769 What victim is that?" |
47769 | What? |
47769 | Where is Augustine? |
47769 | Where is she? |
47769 | Where shall we ever find something to eat? |
47769 | Who are you? |
47769 | Who is going to see about that? |
47769 | Who is your father? 47769 Who, the Virgin? |
47769 | Why are you doing that? 47769 Why are you silent, Augustine?" |
47769 | Why do n''t you eat more? |
47769 | Will God keep us to- day as He preserved us yesterday? |
47769 | You brought these last night? 47769 You did not know it?" |
47769 | You did not see the battle of Eras? |
47769 | You will not at all oppose their setting my father at liberty? 47769 Against this formidable line of attack what avail was our fortified circuit? 47769 Am I not good? 47769 Among so many men, is there not even one to prevent this crime? 47769 And he is a friend of my friend? |
47769 | And how about rank, friend Araceli? |
47769 | And what do you say to that little barrack- sergeant of a marshal, Señor Lannes? |
47769 | And what if when the pebble strikes the window, goodman Candiola comes out with a cudgel and gives me a good beating for flirting with his daughter?" |
47769 | And you are hungry, and you did not tell me so to my face without any round- about fuss? |
47769 | And you did not see it? |
47769 | And you took care of me? |
47769 | And you, Araceli, have you lost any legs? |
47769 | And you, good Guedita, what brought you to the Pilar at such an hour? |
47769 | And you, wife? |
47769 | Are not the storehouses of the junta of supplies over there? |
47769 | Are there no authorities in Saragossa? |
47769 | Are there no authorities now in Saragossa, señor? |
47769 | Are we going to win?" |
47769 | Are you made of paste or cheese? |
47769 | Are you not ashamed of your cowardice?" |
47769 | Are you not willing to leave me in peace?" |
47769 | Are you thinking? |
47769 | Are you wounded? |
47769 | As far as that is concerned, the boys in the street ask one another,''Who is this admirer of the Candiola?'' |
47769 | Augustine, are you not in command here? |
47769 | Augustine, are you weeping? |
47769 | But how did they come here? |
47769 | But is there not one, one single one, to pity him and me?" |
47769 | But she, what fault has she? |
47769 | But what makes you look at me so much? |
47769 | But what makes you look at me so? |
47769 | But what the devil are you looking for here, señor soldier? |
47769 | But you will be good? |
47769 | But, Señor de Araceli, if I keep on bleeding, where the devil is all this blood going? |
47769 | But, señor, is there no one who has any charity for, any compassion upon this unhappy old man who has never harmed anybody? |
47769 | CHAPTER V"Gabriel,"he said to me one morning,"dost thou not feel like smashing something?" |
47769 | CHAPTER XXIX Will Saragossa surrender? |
47769 | Can you not have two sentinels placed here for me to guard these treasures which I have been able to save only with great trouble?" |
47769 | Can you see her, Gabriel? |
47769 | Could it really be abandoned? |
47769 | Could the"Gazette"explain all this? |
47769 | Did fear prevent her from moving? |
47769 | Did n''t you see it? |
47769 | Did you ever hear of anything so shameless?" |
47769 | Did you ever see such savages? |
47769 | Did you find any better at court? |
47769 | Did you hear it? |
47769 | Did you see her when she threw the money? |
47769 | Did you see her when she went out to get her father? |
47769 | Did you see how the boys threw mud at poor Candiola? |
47769 | Did you see it? |
47769 | Do I look like a man capable of letting my friends go hungry? |
47769 | Do I not do all the good I can? |
47769 | Do I not favor my neighbors, lending them money at low interest? |
47769 | Do n''t you see that it is straight, Gabriel? |
47769 | Do n''t you see the tower? |
47769 | Do n''t you want a little diversion? |
47769 | Do n''t you want to come along?" |
47769 | Do not the moans of those poor wounded men sound in your bat''s ears? |
47769 | Do they not say all sorts of things about her mother, Pepa Rincon?" |
47769 | Do you also accuse him? |
47769 | Do you also forgive yours? |
47769 | Do you feel worse? |
47769 | Do you hope to gain favor by your bloody cruelty of those inhuman barbarians who have destroyed the city, imagining that they were defending it? |
47769 | Do you intend to stop him? |
47769 | Do you know Father Rincon? |
47769 | Do you know her?" |
47769 | Do you know me? |
47769 | Do you know what they are saying? |
47769 | Do you know who Candiola is? |
47769 | Do you know, my friend, what I have just seen? |
47769 | Do you know, perhaps, that I am living? |
47769 | Do you not remember me? |
47769 | Do you remember how wine tastes? |
47769 | Do you remember me? |
47769 | Do you see all the destruction made by the siege which we are enduring? |
47769 | Do you see her? |
47769 | Do you see how the bombs and shells shower about us, and how numbers of my companions fall never to rise? |
47769 | Do you see it? |
47769 | Do you see that gallows set up in that place for traitors? |
47769 | Do you see there near the great pile there is another tower, a little belfry? |
47769 | Do you see this bundle? |
47769 | Do you see this house? |
47769 | Do you see this order? |
47769 | Do you see this powder? |
47769 | Do you see those two posts there on the Trenque knoll with beams crossed on top from which six ropes are hanging? |
47769 | Do you see? |
47769 | Do you suppose that my house is not full of valuable things? |
47769 | Do you suppose that the people of Saragossa are going to forget the morning of the fifth? |
47769 | Do you think this will give them an advantage? |
47769 | Do you wish to help me? |
47769 | Does my face look like a monkey''s? |
47769 | Does not everybody''s hatred of you for this vile conduct weigh upon you more heavily than if all the rocks of Moncayo had fallen upon you?" |
47769 | Does not the generosity of this people surprise you? |
47769 | Don Roque, my friend, will you not go and find something to eat, let it cost what it may?" |
47769 | Eh, where are you going? |
47769 | From what part of the world do you come?" |
47769 | Good God, this junta, these authorities, this Captain- General, what are they thinking of?" |
47769 | Has he perished in the ruins?" |
47769 | Has the bell sounded for matins? |
47769 | Has your father ever spoken to you of marriage?" |
47769 | Hast thou not done enough to prove us? |
47769 | Have I not reason to hope that at last He will pity us?" |
47769 | Have n''t you a knife? |
47769 | Have they wounded thee?" |
47769 | Have you anything to eat?" |
47769 | Have you not been making it easy for those men to rob me? |
47769 | Have you not seen the works that we have built? |
47769 | Have you not shown them this house where there are a thousand objects of value which can be concealed in a pocket? |
47769 | Have you seen my daughter about here?" |
47769 | Have you seen that trench which is at the end of the Calle de los Clavos? |
47769 | Have you taken many fowls to- day?" |
47769 | He came nearer to us, and said in a voice so feeble that we could scarcely hear,--"Augustine, my son, what are you doing here?" |
47769 | He turned towards me as if frightened at hearing my footsteps, and said to me,''Stupid meddler, who told you to follow me?'' |
47769 | He was very angry at seeing us there, and exclaimed,--"What are you doing here, idiots? |
47769 | Holy Virgin del Pilar, and thou, dear little Santo Domingo of my soul, why have ye let my receipts be burned? |
47769 | Holy Virgin del Pilar, is it not true that my son is not dead?" |
47769 | How can any one expect me to leave this place? |
47769 | How can you distract in this manner a man needed on the other side? |
47769 | How can you think that I would go from here without taking them? |
47769 | How could I insult my benefactress? |
47769 | How could it be possible for God to take our son from us? |
47769 | How could it be that all this should be destroyed? |
47769 | How could you go out of the redoubt?" |
47769 | How do you find yourself, Señor de Araceli?" |
47769 | How do you know whether or not he has a daughter?" |
47769 | How do you know whether she will come or not come?" |
47769 | How do you suppose I am going to leave my house when the authorities of Saragossa have not sent a detachment of troops to guard it? |
47769 | How goes it, Señor de Araceli? |
47769 | How goes the battle?" |
47769 | How has my son Augustine borne himself?" |
47769 | How is it that until now I have never fallen in love?'' |
47769 | How is it? |
47769 | How long will this night of my soul endure, this solitude in which you have left me? |
47769 | How much would those foreign fellows yonder give for it?" |
47769 | How would they be able to take a step without meeting our men?" |
47769 | How would you like a dozen of these roasted peas? |
47769 | I am thankful that I and other friends have been able to help her a little; but what can one do when there is scarcely any bread to be had? |
47769 | I asked several people I know that I met in the Coso,''Do you know what gentleman it is who has lost his eldest son?'' |
47769 | I heard no questions, but,"Have you seen my brother?" |
47769 | If I am a good man, exact and careful, why is such distress heaped upon me? |
47769 | If there is something to come after this world, as our religion teaches us, why should we worry about a day more or less of life?" |
47769 | If you are not going to work on the ditch, why not come along to the cartridge factory? |
47769 | If you die, what would be left me? |
47769 | If you saw her, how can you ask me if I will go on loving her? |
47769 | In a moment we will carry thee into the house-- but where is our house? |
47769 | In the house of Señor Candiola, whose cellars are full of money, is there not some old rag to give to the wounded? |
47769 | Indeed, am I going to abandon my estate? |
47769 | Indeed, if Don Miguel Salamero had not been present-- don''t you know anything about that?" |
47769 | Is Saragossa still in existence?" |
47769 | Is everybody in Aragon like this?" |
47769 | Is it a right thing to burn houses merely to retard the conquest by the French?" |
47769 | Is it believed that the Coso can still be defended?" |
47769 | Is it conceivable that the defence of one plaza continued after all that surrounded it was taken? |
47769 | Is it not a horrible state of things? |
47769 | Is it not possible that the Señorita Doña Mariquilla Candiola has also gone to care for the wounded at San Pablo or the Pilar?" |
47769 | Is it not time yet to tell me that?" |
47769 | Is it not true that it will soon be finished, Augustine?" |
47769 | Is it possible to keep my temper and to have humility in the presence of this man? |
47769 | Is it true that the bombs have destroyed your house?" |
47769 | Is it true that we two young gentlemen have been promoted to be sergeants?" |
47769 | Is it you, Señor de Montoria, who have set these stories going?" |
47769 | Is n''t it true that you will free my father? |
47769 | Is n''t there a pair of crutches anywhere here?" |
47769 | Is n''t there a pair of crutches there? |
47769 | Let us see, a little gun- scratch? |
47769 | Let''s see, is it finished? |
47769 | Lord Jesus of Nazareth and thou my patron, Saint Dominguito del Val, tell me what have I done to deserve so many misfortunes in the same day? |
47769 | Manuel, my son, why dost thou not answer me? |
47769 | Mariquilla, Mariquilla, why do I still have that which they call life, and you not? |
47769 | Mariquilla, my wife, why didst thou die, without wounds, without sickness? |
47769 | Meeting one another after a combat they would ask,"Who are you?" |
47769 | Montoria, Montorilla, you have a little dough in your own house, is n''t that true? |
47769 | Must everything be dreadful and unfortunate? |
47769 | Must my second son also perish? |
47769 | My God, dost thou punish me for wasting good money on useless things which if placed at interest would have been tripled? |
47769 | My God, is there no generous hand to help me? |
47769 | Of what did this woman die?" |
47769 | Of what use, when death was expected from one moment to the next? |
47769 | Oh, my Virgin del Pilar, why dost thou not perform a miracle for me? |
47769 | Oh, you did not see the hospital? |
47769 | Pirli, who was lying on the ground, wounded in the leg, exclaimed in affright,"Manuela Sancho, where are you going?" |
47769 | See, how does this bottle of wine look to you? |
47769 | Señor de Araceli, have you died yet?" |
47769 | Señors, what are you here for? |
47769 | Shall one sacrifice all one''s life for others, and, coming into such a plight as this, find no friendly hand held out to help him? |
47769 | Shall they be supported by me, Señor de Montoria?" |
47769 | She and I, what fault have we? |
47769 | So then you are going to bury the dead?" |
47769 | Soldiers, how can you talk of your honor, when you do not know what honor is? |
47769 | Some were not willing to give? |
47769 | Suppose I do ask a trifle of three or four reales on the dollar by the month? |
47769 | Tell me, have we anything to eat here?" |
47769 | The cripple replied:--"Don José de Montoria? |
47769 | The fiends will kick his soul in hell like that, wo n''t they?" |
47769 | The unfortunate old man had not moved, and when we came up, and asked him how he found himself, he answered thus,--"What is it? |
47769 | Then are not those Mendieta, and Paul, Benedicto, and Oliva? |
47769 | Then he answered,''Do you know that my friend who served last year in Saragossa, the Swiss Captain Don Carlos Lindener, is in the French army? |
47769 | Then of what good are you? |
47769 | Then we heard the voice of the miser coming nearer, and saying,--"What are you doing up at this hour, Señora Guedita?" |
47769 | To whom could I tell it but to you, my friend? |
47769 | We murmured timid excuses, and then our protector, very red in the face, spoke as follows,--"Is it possible that you are hungry? |
47769 | What are you doing?" |
47769 | What business have you in my house? |
47769 | What charge are you going to give me for that lady?" |
47769 | What did it all mean? |
47769 | What do all these towers and stoppages signify?" |
47769 | What do you say? |
47769 | What good does it do to the dead? |
47769 | What harm can this ridiculous old wretch do?" |
47769 | What harm has he done them? |
47769 | What has happened to you?" |
47769 | What has happened? |
47769 | What has my son done with himself?" |
47769 | What have we done to deserve such a punishment? |
47769 | What have we done?" |
47769 | What if she is nice? |
47769 | What if the house should take fire, and the neighbors should come to drag out the furniture and put out the fire, and find us in our night- clothes? |
47769 | What is all that but the effect of fear? |
47769 | What is his name? |
47769 | What is it? |
47769 | What is passing? |
47769 | What is the country to me? |
47769 | What is the matter? |
47769 | What is the matter? |
47769 | What is the matter?" |
47769 | What is this that you say about my Augustine?" |
47769 | What is this which goes back and forth before my eyes? |
47769 | What matters the rest? |
47769 | What need was there that the French should bombard us and destroy the city? |
47769 | What time is it?" |
47769 | What was it? |
47769 | What will happen? |
47769 | What''s that you say? |
47769 | Where are you now? |
47769 | Where can you find half a dozen men for me? |
47769 | Where do you want to take me? |
47769 | Where is my daughter?" |
47769 | Where is the Captain- General? |
47769 | Where shall I find you, to hear you, to talk with you, and to come to you so that you may see me? |
47769 | Who could believe it of a people tried in the fire of the first siege?" |
47769 | Who could think of giving them sepulchre? |
47769 | Who does that now? |
47769 | Who knows for what we are destined in life?" |
47769 | Who knows what to- morrow will bring forth? |
47769 | Who says that I sell myself to the French? |
47769 | Who was throwing those projectiles from the tower? |
47769 | Why are we despised? |
47769 | Why deceive me? |
47769 | Why did I hide it like a crime? |
47769 | Why did I not tremble in the trenches as I tremble now? |
47769 | Why do they not free my father? |
47769 | Why do you hide it? |
47769 | Why do you talk so to my son? |
47769 | Why dost thou not move? |
47769 | Why dost thou not speak? |
47769 | Why have n''t you said so before? |
47769 | Why have you separated yourself from your mother and your sister?" |
47769 | Why is it that so many people detest my poor father? |
47769 | Why not? |
47769 | Why not? |
47769 | Why such solicitude for a stranger? |
47769 | Why wish to know more?" |
47769 | Why, instead of my first- born, why have you not taken my life a hundred times, miserable old man, good for nothing? |
47769 | Why, man, do you not see that it is straight? |
47769 | Will Manuela Sancho be there too?" |
47769 | Will she not think me one of those who abused her father?" |
47769 | Wo n''t you lend me a hand?" |
47769 | Would you believe it? |
47769 | Would you believe it? |
47769 | You are going to run there too? |
47769 | You can see that this first story is unhurt? |
47769 | You did not see it? |
47769 | You have already lost your fear?" |
47769 | You have nothing the matter? |
47769 | You have seen the Moncayo, that great rock which is near Poniente in the suburb? |
47769 | You say you will not free him? |
47769 | You see that group of women? |
47769 | You see that tower that leans this way, as if to see what is passing here, or hear what we are saying?" |
47769 | You stop there--""And then I come back again?" |
47769 | You thought that you would be able to present yourself before me with your hands stained with the blood of my father? |
47769 | can you not move the furniture? |
47769 | exclaimed the beggar,"who said I would n''t tell you? |
47769 | he cried;"men occupied in women''s business? |
47769 | moaned the mother,"what ails my son that he does not speak, nor move, nor wake? |
47769 | where art thou?" |
45053 | Can you give me,asks Father Ignatius,[ 33]"one single text in Holy Scripture to prove that miracles and visions are to cease with the apostles? |
45053 | Cui bono? |
45053 | Experience proves that''principles''instilled into anyone while in the hypnotic condition become irrevocably[?] 45053 How can we believe in a personal God?" |
45053 | In an unknown[?] 45053 Is Man by Nature Religious?" |
45053 | Is not the quality rather than the quantity of children the thing to be aimed at? |
45053 | Is, then, the record of the raising of Lazarus a fiction? |
45053 | It is easy enough to show that Christianity is false, but what have you to put in its place? 45053 Quo vadis?" |
45053 | Where is the seat of authority for what is moral? 45053 Why Live a Moral Life?" |
45053 | Why Live a Moral Life? |
45053 | Why Live a Moral Life? |
45053 | Why Live a Moral Life? |
45053 | Why should we be so impatient of error? |
45053 | ( f) CAN WE ALTER PEOPLE''S BELIEFS? |
45053 | ( g) CAN BELIEFS BE USEFUL THOUGH FALSE? |
45053 | ( g) Can Beliefs be Useful though False? |
45053 | ( h) Is a New Religion Required? |
45053 | ( i) WHY BE SO IMPATIENT OF ERROR? |
45053 | ( i) Why be so Impatient of Error? |
45053 | ARE THE KRISHNA AND BUDDHA LEGENDS BORROWED FROM CHRISTIANITY? |
45053 | Above all, why should it destroy its use? |
45053 | Again, did not the disciples and their converts celebrate the anniversaries of these great events? |
45053 | Again, do we not prefer the fellowship of the good- natured? |
45053 | Also, How is it the ancient''s belief is still foisted on the credulous modern? |
45053 | An obvious objection to miracles is the one often propounded by an inquiring child,"Why do we no longer have miracles?" |
45053 | And how was it that their graves were opened as Jesus died, while their bodies did not come out till after His Resurrection? |
45053 | And if God knew they must fall, how could Adam help falling, and how could he justly be blamed for doing what he must do? |
45053 | And who took the chief, and, in the initial stage, the only, part in this reform movement? |
45053 | And, finally, why do we teach, or allow others to teach, our children what we know to be untrue? |
45053 | And, if so, on what dates? |
45053 | Anyone wishing to form some idea of an experience of this sort should read The Bible: Is it the Word of God? |
45053 | Are cases of assault on women any the more prevalent on that account? |
45053 | Are not the teachers creating for them the very difficulties which, when they come to mature years, will make shipwreck of their faith?" |
45053 | Are there any grounds for this presumption, any grounds for presuming that God ever wishes to prevent bloodshed? |
45053 | Are they not all, everyone of them, adherents of the party desirous of reform and of religious toleration? |
45053 | Are they not the very same emotions which, in all but religious matters, are admittedly a fruitful source of self- deception? |
45053 | Are they trivial? |
45053 | Are we justified in keeping silence? |
45053 | Are we justified in making no effort to save the future generation from mental distress, or from what is far worse, a demoralising indifference? |
45053 | Are we not children of God in a strange country? |
45053 | Are we not, then, to take the author of"The Acts"literally when he informs us that Christ spent forty days on earth after His resurrection? |
45053 | Are we right, then, in permitting our children''s minds to be imbued with a"sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life"? |
45053 | Are we to conclude that this is a proof of the divine origin of Christianity? |
45053 | Are we to suppose that He pretended to be ignorant? |
45053 | Are we, then, more merciful than God? |
45053 | Are you and I any unhappier than the believer? |
45053 | Besides, after all, what is there in the broad facts of modern science which could not be explained to an intelligent savage to- day? |
45053 | But are we now any less happy than our fellows who are believers? |
45053 | But need we wait long weary years, burdened with the thousand and one curses of war and militarism,[ 382] till this supreme horror has been invented? |
45053 | But what does this special pleading amount to? |
45053 | But what will be the result of this thinking? |
45053 | But, I ask, Will not Christianity, if true in any shape or form, benefit by truth- telling? |
45053 | By Christianity? |
45053 | Can he remain a Christian? |
45053 | Can not the same and better results be attained by a process less crude, less cruel? |
45053 | Can this be God''s method of revealing Himself? |
45053 | Can we depend upon such narrators to furnish us with true history? |
45053 | Can we make the same excuse for another potentate-- for him of the"mailed fist"? |
45053 | Can we say that of our philosopher- Premier''s books, A Defence of Philosophic Doubt and The Foundations of Belief? |
45053 | Can we worship the Unknown? |
45053 | Can we, like the Athenians of old, erect altars to the Unknown God? |
45053 | Candidly, if the writer had had our astronomical knowledge, would these words ever have been written? |
45053 | Could He not have brought about development without all this terrible struggle? |
45053 | Could any Omnipotent Being be proud of it? |
45053 | Could anything be more unsatisfactory, more calculated to arouse suspicion of the"Christian Verities"--the Gospel truths? |
45053 | Could anything more conclusively demonstrate the prevailing ignorance of comparative mythology? |
45053 | Could not the Church spare a little of her military ardour( exhibited in the arm- chair and pulpit) for supporting peaceful projects of this nature? |
45053 | Did He not know that we should therefore require absolute proof before we could believe that they had been broken in a bygone and credulous age?" |
45053 | Did He, or did He not, know what we now know? |
45053 | Did not our British forefathers think, and with more reason, that"men of honour"could settle their disputes only by the duel? |
45053 | Do not these visions, too, usually take their form from the teaching with which the mind has been imbued? |
45053 | Do the above- stated facts bear out that contention? |
45053 | Do these facts bear out the Christian contention that Christianity purifies empire? |
45053 | Do they not consist of corrupt officials and cruel Cossacks? |
45053 | Do they not, however, still survive when human emotions, such as love and anger, happiness and sorrow, are attributed to the Deity? |
45053 | Do we not guard them against the inglorious possibilities-- the slavery of vice? |
45053 | Do we not see it flaring up again in the"War of the Kirks,"the Education controversy, and the arguments for the retention of the Athanasian Creed? |
45053 | Does Dr. Flint mean to say that there is an after- life for all living things? |
45053 | Does God reveal Himself, then, only or especially to the æsthetic? |
45053 | Does a surmise-- a belief if you will have it so-- of this kind afford any religious satisfaction? |
45053 | Does either science or common sense support a belief in the survival of personality? |
45053 | Does he obtain then the consolation he looks for? |
45053 | Does it matter whether we call the raising of Lazarus a"miracle"or a"sign"? |
45053 | Does it necessarily follow that a Supernatural Being hears and answers the suppliant''s prayers? |
45053 | Does it not account for the effects of prayer? |
45053 | Does it not at the present time surpass, in the number of its followers and the area of its prevalence, any other form of creed? |
45053 | Does it not furnish a damaging commentary on one of the strongest arguments for belief-- the argument from religious consolation? |
45053 | Does it not give us a thrill of pleasure when the lion is baulked of his prey-- when the pet lamb is rescued from the butcher? |
45053 | Does not scepticism lead to atheism? |
45053 | Does not this deep and sympathetic writer furnish us with a true picture of men''s hearts? |
45053 | Does she realise that her"purity"campaigns fail to strike at the root of the evil? |
45053 | Does the Church realise the extent to which men of science coat their popular writings with"ecclesiastical sugar"? |
45053 | Does the end-- the survival of the fittest-- justify the means-- over- production and murder? |
45053 | Eliminating the cases of sudden death, how seldom are these consolations of utility? |
45053 | Even if your body had health, would your mind have peace without morality?" |
45053 | Even now how many disbelieve or preserve an agnosticism regarding the chief dogmas of the Christian creed? |
45053 | Fielding so eloquently discourses in his Hearts of Men, do they not need to be carefully controlled by reason? |
45053 | For why not, then, allow the process of strengthening to continue by these means? |
45053 | Good, very good; such views appeal to us as being more humane and rational; but are they compatible with the truth of the Bible? |
45053 | Granted; but at what stage of development did this poor wretch ever get a proper chance? |
45053 | Has he not been taught that he must have faith, and that faith is a feeling of trust divinely implanted, and not needing to be fed on evidences? |
45053 | Has it a spiritual meaning? |
45053 | Has it an ethical value? |
45053 | Has it not existed during twenty- four centuries? |
45053 | Has not his religion to be diligently instilled into him from the cradle? |
45053 | Has not the picture handed down by tradition, and afterwards committed to writing, often been that of a perfect man? |
45053 | Has the Boer War made us more virile? |
45053 | Has the Church, then, been deceived in her impression that a reconciliation has taken place between Christianity and Science? |
45053 | Has the rainbow- covenant prevented millions of people perishing since then in many a mighty flood? |
45053 | Have not the disciples of great teachers in the past invariably extolled the perfections of their masters? |
45053 | Have they ever dwelt upon their imperfections? |
45053 | Have we not here a satisfactory and perfectly natural explanation of the phenomena of conversion? |
45053 | Have we not seen, however, that primitive beliefs were the natural offspring of fear and wonder? |
45053 | Have we, then, any right to disturb people''s belief, and to lacerate their feelings? |
45053 | Have we? |
45053 | Have you ever, in the days of your early youth, played the game of"gossip"? |
45053 | He asks:"How can a people who are unable to count their own fingers possibly raise their minds so far as to admit even the rudiments of religion?" |
45053 | His prayer is therefore reasonable, and( may we not suppose?) |
45053 | How are we to set about their conversion? |
45053 | How came such a cultus to die out of the Roman and Byzantine Empire after making its way so far, and holding its ground so long? |
45053 | How can any argument be based upon the phantasms of a disordered brain? |
45053 | How can he believe in and worship the Unknown? |
45053 | How can it be said that the craving for a deity is instinctive? |
45053 | How can man be tolerant in matters concerning which God is alleged to have distinctly told us that He is not tolerant? |
45053 | How can the ethical argument be maintained in face of objections which continue to become ever graver as our knowledge increases? |
45053 | How can the will be at one and the same time fettered and free? |
45053 | How can they, how can we, profess to approve of a plan that brings only unhappiness in its train? |
45053 | How can they? |
45053 | How can we expect it? |
45053 | How comes it that in our own Government two of the most responsible posts are now occupied by declared Agnostics? |
45053 | How could it be otherwise when the Reformers were nothing if not Bibliolaters? |
45053 | How could it be otherwise? |
45053 | How do the Japanese hope to solve this new problem? |
45053 | How do we know that the same fate may not await the new arguments of the Christian evolutionist? |
45053 | How do you propose to replace the aid derived from belief? |
45053 | How does God view this perplexing situation? |
45053 | How does he come here? |
45053 | How few of us have ever had our belief tested by searching questions such as a cultured heathen would put if we tried to convert him? |
45053 | How is it possible that St. Matthew and St. John could have remained silent regarding such an event if they had really witnessed it? |
45053 | How is it that the claims of Christianity require all this vindication? |
45053 | How is it that they have simply disappeared without a word of explanatory comment in the Bible? |
45053 | How many are sceptical concerning the continuance of consciousness after death? |
45053 | How many, I wonder, have ever read the masterly exposition of the case for Haeckel-- Haeckel''s Critics Answered, by Joseph McCabe? |
45053 | How much is the intelligence of the Microcephalæ, the clucking"small heads"lately on show at the Hippodrome, capable of rapid improvement? |
45053 | How often has it not occurred that these same stories have been further exaggerated in the course of their transmission to succeeding generations? |
45053 | How, then, can it be said that man is by nature religious? |
45053 | How, then, can we dream of making this up in one or a few generations by artificial training of the ape? |
45053 | How, then, do we find it requiring all this explanation-- explanation which no ordinary adult can understand? |
45053 | How, then, does he explain the virtues of the Japanese? |
45053 | I would ask my readers kindly to put to themselves the following crucial questions: To what party do the religious bigots and their partisans belong? |
45053 | If God intended the sun to be a symbol of Christ, why have we never been told this before? |
45053 | If Jews and Christians still really believe in this story, how is it that the rainbow attracts not the slightest devout attention? |
45053 | If conscience, then, be fallible, how is it a Theistic proof? |
45053 | If it be urged that such trials of faith are useful, why should it be the thoughtful of future generations who are chiefly to be so tried? |
45053 | If man is not doing his best in obeying the behests of his Maker, how can he do right? |
45053 | If the pious lady who contributes towards mission work in China only knew of this, would she be pleased? |
45053 | If the symbolical sun leads such a great and heavenly flock, what must be said of the true and only begotten Son of God? |
45053 | If this be not word- spinning, then what is? |
45053 | If this be so, how comes it that such a vast number of the pious still adhere to the old ideas? |
45053 | If we are disposed to say: Cui bono? |
45053 | If we do not so believe, why do we say we do when we repeat the Creed? |
45053 | If we fail in our duty to them and they fall, should we add to our guilt by perpetrating on them unimaginable cruelties? |
45053 | If we inquired of the average religionist, should we find that his or her ideas had been revolutionised? |
45053 | If women only knew of these sayings, would they approve of the"appeal to the first six centuries"? |
45053 | If, then, God put upon the bridge a weight equal to double the bearing strain, how could God justly blame the bridge for falling?" |
45053 | In a lecture reported in the Tablet, Father Gerard voiced the growing feeling of apprehension when he referred to the"Do We Believe?" |
45053 | In our own times, was it not working men who first set in motion a revolution that will eventually reform Russia? |
45053 | In what Christian country would it be safe to have paper windows and walls, as in Japan? |
45053 | Is he, then, oblivious to Spinoza''s objection? |
45053 | Is it a kind act to expose our children to the pain of a rude awakening by instilling hopes that are destined to be ultimately shattered? |
45053 | Is it a wise act to allow their morality to be based upon foundations that are doomed to destruction? |
45053 | Is it not because religion has too often submitted to be"a''kept''priest to bless or ban as the passion or self- interest of its employer dictated?" |
45053 | Is it not because they are beginning to appreciate the perplexities of faith, and to learn that agnostics as a body can be, and are, good men? |
45053 | Is it not because they find that many are beginning to doubt its truth? |
45053 | Is it not far more likely that, with the spread of education, they will finally reject theology? |
45053 | Is it not on a peasantry wallowing in ignorance and steeped in superstition? |
45053 | Is it not purely accidental, purely the outcome of natural agencies, of effects produced by position, distance, etc.? |
45053 | Is it not the duty of the pastor to educate his flock? |
45053 | Is it not the orthodox Church and her supporters? |
45053 | Is it not time the truth should be told? |
45053 | Is it not time, then, for all thoughtful men and women to be up and doing? |
45053 | Is it not to the reactionary party, the party that sets its face against reform? |
45053 | Is it possible for the bulk of humanity, I ask, to possess the requisite spiritual discernment? |
45053 | Is it the law of a kind Creator that no animal shall rise to excellence except by being fatal to the life of others? |
45053 | Is it too much to say that these"experiences"differ only in degree from those of the dog who howls as certain notes affect him? |
45053 | Is it? |
45053 | Is not Buddhism, then, one of the great living religions of the present day? |
45053 | Is not Christianity the civilising agent of the world, and the origin of all morality and all good works? |
45053 | Is not Gautama Buddha worthy of men''s love, if we are to credit the best authenticated records of his life? |
45053 | Is not a man''s religion determined by the geographical accident of his birth? |
45053 | Is not the whole point of the sign lost, too, if it be no longer supernatural-- if it becomes a sort of juggling feat? |
45053 | Is not this tantamount to giving up belief in the Virgin- birth? |
45053 | Is such a contention warranted by acknowledged facts? |
45053 | Is that why we have paid them the compliment of adopting their dates for the birth and death of their Saviours? |
45053 | Is the miraculous feeding of the multitudes rendered more credible if we call it a natural instead of a supernatural occurrence? |
45053 | Is the struggle for existence, with all its attendant horrors, to be perpetuated? |
45053 | Is the æsthetic mind always perfectly balanced? |
45053 | Is there anything, then, that can in any way take the place of the ethical assistance[ 329] afforded by belief in God and an after- life? |
45053 | Is there consistent evidence of design? |
45053 | Is there, haply, no middle course that we may steer? |
45053 | Is there, then, no likelihood of Jesus and His disciples being familiar with the ideas of sun- worshippers? |
45053 | Is this no reflection upon Christianity''s power for good? |
45053 | Is this one of the reasons why the believer is able to continue a believer in spite of all disproof? |
45053 | Is this what he was taught, or what his children are now being taught? |
45053 | It may be said that such optimism is absurd, but is it really so? |
45053 | It would be easier, but would that be the life which Christ came down from heaven to show us and place within our reach?" |
45053 | J. Lawson- Forster, that"the Russian Church has become the tool of murderers"? |
45053 | May not the very subtlety of their intellects aid the work of their own self- deception? |
45053 | May we not reasonably expect, therefore, that morality will advance side by side with Rationalism? |
45053 | Morality.--Have we not seen[ 367] that morality can be taught apart from belief, and, indeed, that it is better so taught? |
45053 | Mr. W. M. Salter''s essay,"Why Live a Moral Life?" |
45053 | Now the nature of the malady has been diagnosed, and now the proper remedies have been discovered, will he not set about the cure? |
45053 | Now, do we allow our children to choose for themselves when we know they will choose wrongly? |
45053 | Now, what are these omissions in St. Mark? |
45053 | On the other hand, the Bishop of London believes this miracle to have occurred"because of the very humble, unimaginative[? |
45053 | On what do the reactionaries chiefly rely for the retention of their hold upon the bulk of the people? |
45053 | P. 160, lines 3- 4.--Why do we hear so little of this great discovery from the pulpit? |
45053 | P. 367, lines 21- 2.--Did not slavery flourish side by side with the Christian Church? |
45053 | P. N. Waggett to be wrong, what then? |
45053 | PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION What does a man seek when he examines his religious creed? |
45053 | Perhaps this pious opinion may have had something to do with the slow progress of palæontology? |
45053 | Perhaps, after all, the secret lay in the well- known reply to the question,"Is life worth living?" |
45053 | Prebendary W. A. Whitworth,[ 258]"was the original gospel of power which overran the world with such astonishing success?" |
45053 | Preliminary Remarks The View of Science Why Have Miracles Ceased? |
45053 | Regarding the particular explanation under consideration, one may be permitted to ask, How is it the water has lost its medicinal qualities? |
45053 | Religious Experience Mysticism and Conversion The Psychology of Prayer The Religious(?) |
45053 | Shall we then, after all, in these days, cause so very much distress by our confessions of unbelief? |
45053 | Should it not be a divine intuition of the right both in our religious beliefs and in our conduct? |
45053 | Should the Truth be Told? |
45053 | Should the Truth be Told? |
45053 | Sir Hiram Maxim wrote lately to the Literary Guide concerning his letter in the"Do We Believe?" |
45053 | So the fair show, Veiled one vast, savage, grim conspiracy Of mutual murder, from the worm to man, Who himself kills his fellow"? |
45053 | Suppose, however, that the consensus of opinion had been otherwise, what conclusion could we draw? |
45053 | Surely we are not to take seriously and literally the words of our great philosopher- poet when he says:"Let no such man be trusted"? |
45053 | Surely we may dismiss such a preposterous theory? |
45053 | Surely we must admit the inherent cruelty of the process? |
45053 | Surely, then, they could and should have been enlightened for their mission work up to the level, say, of some of our twentieth- century theologians? |
45053 | THE RELIGIOUS(?) |
45053 | Taking him seriously, can he also explain how it is that God permits devils to perform such pranks? |
45053 | Taking it to be so, what, after all, does it amount to? |
45053 | The Mohammedan sees a heaven peopled with houris; do we on that account accept the Koran as our guide? |
45053 | The Rationalist asks: What grounds have we for assuming that the existence of religious belief points to the existence of a religious instinct? |
45053 | The Virgin Birth.--According to Chinese legends, the sages Fohi(? |
45053 | The lecture is incorporated with others in a book entitled Is Christianity True? |
45053 | The plain question, however, is-- Had He, or had He not, the attribute of Omniscience? |
45053 | The question arises,"How, then, do the majority of our spiritual guides regard the accounts of miracles in the Bible?" |
45053 | The question arises: Why has Christianity stood in the way of woman''s cause? |
45053 | The writer of the letter, a lady, says:"Is n''t Mr. X( the rector of a certain country parish) a gauche man? |
45053 | The"Do We Believe?" |
45053 | Then is the Ascension a fact or is it not? |
45053 | They are beginning to speak out-- why should not you? |
45053 | This is certainly a fact in history; but can we safely build upon it the metaphysical theories of the Christian Faith? |
45053 | This reconstructed Christian(?) |
45053 | Though it may be a long time before our efforts are rewarded, is that any reason for not making a commencement in the right direction? |
45053 | Thus in the question now before us,"Is the First Cause a beneficent intelligence?" |
45053 | Time after time a terrible suspicion must have crossed his mind-- what if he were committing a heinous crime in persecuting the Christians? |
45053 | To give an example from history, did not slavery flourish side by side with the Christian Church? |
45053 | To what extent will not bias influence the brain to use its powers perversely? |
45053 | To what other historical personage but Christ can it apply? |
45053 | To what party do the Freethinkers belong? |
45053 | To whom did they appear? |
45053 | Unbelief? |
45053 | WHY HAVE MIRACLES CEASED? |
45053 | Was He God or was He man? |
45053 | Was it not mainly because he believed that it had a power to wipe away his own heinous crimes? |
45053 | Was it, for example, impossible for God to have decreed that sentient life should feed only on non- sentient life? |
45053 | Was it? |
45053 | We know that mistakes do occur through trusting to intuition, especially in the matter of beliefs; how, then, can we assume that it is infallible? |
45053 | Were not His hearers who misunderstood Him His own selected expositors? |
45053 | What about those inherited animal instincts? |
45053 | What also became of them afterwards?" |
45053 | What are the Christian evolutionist''s replies to these terrible attacks upon our Heavenly Father?" |
45053 | What are the actual instruments employed for maintaining their power? |
45053 | What are the causes of criminality? |
45053 | What belief did this immature man have to guide him? |
45053 | What can be the motive of the Omnipotent Revealer in allowing Himself to be misunderstood? |
45053 | What do these inquiries portend? |
45053 | What do we know of His life? |
45053 | What do we mean by''descended into Hell''? |
45053 | What does Science reply? |
45053 | What does it matter whether the gods had a vegetable or a solar origin, or arose, as Max Müller thought, from"a disease of language"? |
45053 | What grounds have we for assuming that Christianity is exempt from it? |
45053 | What has taught her this duty if it be not the growing spirit of nationalism? |
45053 | What has the Rationalist to say to this state of things? |
45053 | What have the apologists to say to this? |
45053 | What if, after all, the Crucified One were the real Saviour of mankind? |
45053 | What is the Rationalistic explanation of that essence of the"religious instinct,"belief in an after life? |
45053 | What is the cause? |
45053 | What is the purpose and drift of the various forms of existence around him? |
45053 | What is the use of a revelation which can be misunderstood in this way? |
45053 | What is this but a naïve admission that the proofs of the Deity''s benevolence are sadly wanting? |
45053 | What is to be done, then? |
45053 | What other solution can it have? |
45053 | What power is it that comes from the sun to give light and heat to all created things? |
45053 | What remedy does he propose to apply? |
45053 | What steps do the Churches propose to take concerning these disclosures? |
45053 | What was the result? |
45053 | What were the"Providential"methods of conversion? |
45053 | What will happen, for instance, when the knowledge of this falsehood becomes common property? |
45053 | What"ideas of God''s action in nature"are missionaries even now putting into the heads of their converts? |
45053 | What, then, is to become of the many? |
45053 | What, then, may I ask, had become of the"gifts at Pentecost"? |
45053 | When will they receive a"straight"answer? |
45053 | Whence did these instincts themselves originate? |
45053 | Where would the Theist fix the"commencement"? |
45053 | Which is in the right? |
45053 | Which of the conflicting explanations are we to take as correct? |
45053 | Which would you or I rather be-- lovely and unhappy, or ugly and happy? |
45053 | Whither is he going? |
45053 | Who are responsible for shameless acts of persecution, and, indeed, very largely for all the bloodshed, strife, and anarchy? |
45053 | Who could call modern theology simple? |
45053 | Who designed that?" |
45053 | Who more logical, apparently, than John Henry Newman, the coadjutor of Whately in his popular work on logic? |
45053 | Who were silent when they were not active opponents? |
45053 | Why Lead a Moral Life? |
45053 | Why Lead a Moral Life? |
45053 | Why are they neglected? |
45053 | Why be in such a hurry to''change the errors of the Church of Rome for those of the Church of the Future''?" |
45053 | Why did the Emperor Constantine embrace Christianity? |
45053 | Why do we allow our friends to think that we do so believe? |
45053 | Why do we pretend we do when we sit in church and listen to the account of the Ascension, and perhaps to a sermon on it? |
45053 | Why even now is it only put forward by a certain school of apologists in costly books that few will ever set their eyes upon? |
45053 | Why is Ascension Day one of our Holy Days? |
45053 | Why is it so ordained that bad should be the raw material of good? |
45053 | Why is this? |
45053 | Why is this? |
45053 | Why oddly? |
45053 | Why should He alone be a machine that can not go wrong? |
45053 | Why should I not follow nature just so far as I can get out of my nerves a maximum of pleasure at the expense of a minimum of pain? |
45053 | Why should it be better for men to be capable of-- or, rather, may we not say prone to-- sin? |
45053 | Why should not the Buddhist claim the same authority for the dogmas of his faith? |
45053 | Why should the man without a note of music in his composition have this much less chance of eternal salvation?" |
45053 | Why should their Maker grant them"glorious possibilities"which He has denied to Himself? |
45053 | Why should they? |
45053 | Why, in the name of all that is reasonable, should spiritual experiences be the prerogative of exceptional temperaments only? |
45053 | Why, of all the most undesirable states of mind, should morbidity assist the human being to have faith in God? |
45053 | Why, oh why, have we not the real picture of our Saviour, bringing our God nearer to us, and enabling us to focus our thoughts on Him? |
45053 | Why, then, do we hear so little of this great discovery from the pulpit? |
45053 | Why, then, should you hesitate to speak out? |
45053 | Why, then, whether we are Theists or Agnostics, should we not study and apply those laws for our moral improvement? |
45053 | Why? |
45053 | Why? |
45053 | Why? |
45053 | Why? |
45053 | Why? |
45053 | Will his children, when they grow up and begin to think for themselves, remain Christians? |
45053 | Will it not thereby assume its true form, whatever that may eventually prove to be, and is not that a consummation to be desired? |
45053 | Will it suffice? |
45053 | Will not the acceptance of this doctrine have a paralysing effect upon us? |
45053 | Will this argument bear analysis? |
45053 | With more modesty and( may I add?) |
45053 | [ 121] Are we, then, to regard this working of primitive thought as the working of the Holy Spirit? |
45053 | [ 131] Can we call this Progressive Revelation? |
45053 | [ 132] Will this sort of reasoning satisfy the average man? |
45053 | [ 133] How comes it that it is discovered so many years after the fulfilment of these unconscious prophecies of the pagans? |
45053 | [ 179] Can anyone imagine his Maker arranging all this on purpose? |
45053 | [ 210] Afterwards he puts the question,"Is the universe His body or His work?" |
45053 | [ 212] It apparently is so to certain subtle and biassed intellects; but the question is, Is it so, will it ever be so, to the average mortal? |
45053 | [ 238] Are our emotions reliable guides, or are they not? |
45053 | [ 239] Do you know a hymn tune by Lord Crofton, set to the words,"Bless''d are the pure in heart"? |
45053 | [ 276] Dr. Flint devotes the seventh of his Lectures on Anti- Theistic theories to the discussion of the question,"Are there tribes of Atheists?" |
45053 | [ 281] See Anti- Theistic Theories, Lecture vii.,"Are there Tribes of Atheists?" |
45053 | [ 299] Speaking of Chinese nature- worship, Dr. Smith says:"No prayer is uttered.... What is it that at such times the people worship? |
45053 | [ 300] As to there being no such thing as an atheistic people, are we to take no account of the cultured classes? |
45053 | [ 304] Are there not many English people strangely like the Chinese in an umbrella- patronage of Christianity? |
45053 | [ 308] Can this be said of our Bible? |
45053 | [ 312] How many Toyamas and Fukuzawas are there not in modern Christendom? |
45053 | [ 314] Is not this a perfectly natural explanation of the craving for immortality? |
45053 | [ 319] One phase of this failure was well shown by"Oxoniensis,"in his letters which started and ended the"Do We Believe?" |
45053 | [ 349] Presuming that we have come to the conclusion that Christianity is not true, are we to say so, or are we to be silent? |
45053 | [ 363]( h) IS A NEW RELIGION[ 364] REQUIRED? |
45053 | [ 37] Could any two views be more diametrically opposite? |
45053 | [ 388] How is it, then, that Religionist and Rationalist arrive at such contrary conclusions? |
45053 | [ 49] See p. 31 of What is Christianity? |
45053 | [ 6] Are there not indications, moreover, everywhere in the literature of the day? |
45053 | [ Had we not every reason thus to imagine on the authority of Holy Scripture?] |
45053 | [ Why not? |
45053 | [ Yet how much hangs upon the trustworthiness of this same Jewish tradition, and how much else may not the Church have wrongfully accepted?] |
45053 | by''Sitteth on the right hand of God''?... |
45053 | who are church and chapel- goers would be reduced to-- what shall we say? |
63233 | ''Are the Manchus capable of regeneration?'' 63233 ''Do you think the baby Emperor can be raised to be a capable sovereign for the nation?'' |
63233 | ''Has Yuan Shih K''ai any reason to love the Manchus?'' 63233 ''Has she any real power?'' |
63233 | ''How are they brought up in the palace and what is the influence of this upon their views about government?'' 63233 ''If the Monarchy is retained, what reforms should be made in the social life of the Court?'' |
63233 | ''What are the first things to be done in China to institute real reform?'' 63233 ''What is the chief source of their inefficiency-- does it lie in their characters, training, or habits?'' |
63233 | ''What kind of Government do you think is better for the present? |
63233 | ''What kind of a woman is the present Empress Dowager?'' 63233 ''What part is she likely to play if the infant Emperor remains upon the throne under a Constitutional Government and Chinese Regency? |
63233 | ''What part will the Manchus of all kinds play in China under a Constitutional or Republican Government?'' 63233 ''What sort of education and surroundings should he have?'' |
63233 | ''Who is, then, the real power among the Manchu nobility?'' 63233 ''Why are the Manchu princes and high officials so inefficient?'' |
63233 | Are they? 63233 Are you quite sure that the Revolution will be permanently successful, that all China will become loyal to the Republican flag?" |
63233 | As regards business, do you think that Hankow will benefit in trade from the Revolution? |
63233 | But do n''t you think that that''s a funny sort of_ tao li_ for Chinese to kill Chinese? |
63233 | But do you think the Revolutionary party, as it is, strong enough to establish conditions which shall permanently make for peace and real progress? |
63233 | Do you think that Yuan Shih K''ai will be the first President? |
63233 | Have you any more to say? |
63233 | How often would you elect a President? 63233 Of course, you have been a Revolutionary for some years, have you not?" |
63233 | Well, will you be in favour of granting concessions to foreign syndicates for the development of mines and so on? |
63233 | What are you going to do now? |
63233 | What do you consider the main point upon which the two parties will have difficulty in seeing eye to eye about at the Peace Conference? |
63233 | Where to? |
63233 | Who are your political associates at this time? |
63233 | Who do you think you would ask to become the President-- Yuan Shih K''ai perhaps? |
63233 | Why, General Li, did the Revolution break out? 63233 After a moment I suggested:But Yuan Shih K''ai is one of your great friends, is he not?" |
63233 | Ah, who knew? |
63233 | And have you ever seen a cargo of human freight not knowing what to do to reach the shore or any place of safety? |
63233 | And imagining, think you that you could describe? |
63233 | Another Dynasty, or a Republic? |
63233 | Are we not all alike, subjects of the great Manchu Dynasty, and shall we not acquit ourselves like men in the service of the State? |
63233 | But I ask again, Can_ you_ imagine all this? |
63233 | But is there no way to avert it? |
63233 | But shall we? |
63233 | But what at? |
63233 | But what is the sum of it all? |
63233 | But what was happening elsewhere? |
63233 | But{ 286} what is the genius of any reform, and what are the elements which ensure its success? |
63233 | Ca n''t you stop this dreadful carnage? |
63233 | Can you tell me briefly the specific reason you assign for the outbreak to have taken place so suddenly?" |
63233 | Coming over to me, with sincerity shining in his eyes, he exclaimed:"Come, you''re a journalist; ca n''t you help us? |
63233 | Could a Republic solve these offhand? |
63233 | Did they think that the great bulk of the common people of China actually understood what the issues were? |
63233 | Do you not think, General Li, that Christianity will become more popular among the people as the country is opened up more?" |
63233 | Fighting was still heavy, but every moment made a difference-- and who knew but that those blind boys were being burnt alive? |
63233 | Have you ever noticed how soon a Chinese can spoil or totally destroy things in general? |
63233 | Have you ever seen a boat drifting on a rapid river? |
63233 | Have you ever watched a Chinese junk, ungainly and ugly perhaps, just going helplessly with the tide? |
63233 | How can they think that? |
63233 | I know that General Li Yuan Hung is anxious for a Republic, but do you think there are many who would rather see a Republic than anything else?" |
63233 | If further war were to come? |
63233 | If he is true, why does he not withdraw his army at once and let there be peace? |
63233 | If the present Dynasty would be overthrown, what would replace it? |
63233 | If we had agreed to your terms, had you any means of compelling the Manchu Government to fulfil its promises? |
63233 | In the battle of brains( as well as of bullets) who would prove to be the stronger man? |
63233 | Is China, the oldest, and to all outward seeming one of the most effete, of Oriental monarchies, fit for so vast a change? |
63233 | Is it not a well- known fact that every anti- Christian outbreak invariably brings misery to the stupid innocent people of the district concerned? |
63233 | Is not this a lamentable thing? |
63233 | Is there no way to save the lives and property of millions of people? |
63233 | Now how can they bear fine sons? |
63233 | Or would{ 193} a republic have a better prospect? |
63233 | Should Yuan Shih K''ai concede the point at issue and assent to a Republic, what then? |
63233 | Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, till eight o''clock in the morning-- after then, what? |
63233 | THE PEACE CONFERENCE-- A MONARCHY OR A REPUBLIC? |
63233 | The letter continued:"Are you not the most famous and most able man among the Chinese? |
63233 | The next point is, Who is to get it, and how is it to be got? |
63233 | The students rule the people-- who rules the students? |
63233 | Then--"Where do you come from? |
63233 | There will be need for foreign loans now more than ever?" |
63233 | They have decided cases unjustly, and what not? |
63233 | Was it Yuan? |
63233 | Was there to be any more fighting? |
63233 | What can they do with power? |
63233 | What do you want? |
63233 | What else are the mutations of the Yin and the Yang? |
63233 | What man could convert Szechuan, Kiangsi, Anhui, Kiangsu, Kwangtung, Kwangsi, Yunnan, Kweichow, Shansi, and Shensi to republicanism? |
63233 | What was she going to do? |
63233 | Who wants to protest against this thing? |
63233 | Why not meet and set younger civilisations an example in civics? |
63233 | Yuan was looked upon as being the great man who could make no false moves; Li was merely a trained soldier, and what could he know? |
63233 | { 183}"Do you in Wuchang still hold out so strongly for the Republican form of government as you did? |
63233 | { 185} CHAPTER XIII THE PEACE CONFERENCE-- A MONARCHY OR A REPUBLIC? |
63233 | { 62} What nationality are you?" |
63233 | { 81} CHAPTER VIII THE BURNING OF HANKOW Have you ever seen a fire-- a big fire? |
4394 | ''And there are bodies celestial and bodies terrestrial, but one is the glory of the celestial? |
4394 | ''Are you a physician?'' 4394 ''Aye, and what if it were madness?'' |
4394 | ''Well?'' 4394 ''Will you give me your name, signor?'' |
4394 | ''You are a Chaldean?'' 4394 A woman''s face then, I suppose? |
4394 | Advice and guidance from whom? |
4394 | And are you going to give the Improvisation this Mrs. Challoner asks you for? |
4394 | And do you base all your medical treatment on this principle? |
4394 | And now we have drawn up, signed, and sealed our compact of friendship,she said gaily,"will you come and see my studio? |
4394 | And now, mademoiselle, will you give me the pleasure of this waltz with you? 4394 And now, will you stop to luncheon?" |
4394 | And so,said Zara-- how soft and full of music was her voice!--"so you are one of Casimir''s patients? |
4394 | And the Death Angel? |
4394 | And the Moon? |
4394 | And this is real electric light? 4394 And was it like you?--a really good resemblance?" |
4394 | And what are those theories? |
4394 | And what did you learn? |
4394 | And what friend is that in YOUR case? |
4394 | And what of the child-- the little waxen- faced helpless babe left to die on the banks of the Loire? 4394 And what of the shadow also foretold as inseparable from your fate?" |
4394 | And when I am out of the world-- what then? |
4394 | And who IS his master? |
4394 | And why,she had said,"should anybody be sad, when_ I_ in reality am so thoroughly happy?" |
4394 | And you are not afraid? |
4394 | And you are sure you love me? |
4394 | And you forgive my seeming rudeness? |
4394 | And you have no fear? |
4394 | And you-- are not you blase to talk like that, with your genius and all the world before you? |
4394 | Are you acquainted with the book? |
4394 | Are you come to say''Good- bye,''my child? |
4394 | Are you not one of us? 4394 Are you one of those also who must see in order to believe?" |
4394 | Are you sorry for him, Zara? |
4394 | Are you sure? |
4394 | Are you, too, a musician? |
4394 | Art thou also one of us? |
4394 | Askest thou nothing? |
4394 | But did you not doubt-- were you not inclined to think they might be wrong? |
4394 | But shall I return at all? |
4394 | But tell me, do you quite understand from my explanation what Casimir will do to you? |
4394 | But what? |
4394 | But why,I demanded,"why did you give me this medicine? |
4394 | But will you give me a letter to your friend? |
4394 | But, Signor Cellini,I urged,"if it is so harmless, why did you forbid my tasting it? |
4394 | But,I exclaimed in surprise,"how about the Moon''s influence on the tides? |
4394 | But,I said, as I took the pencil and book from his hand,"why do you not make these convenient writing materials public property? |
4394 | But,I said,"if you are willing to accept the pleasant part of his prophecy, why not admit the possibility of the unpleasant occurring also?" |
4394 | Can YOU ask that? |
4394 | Can you believe in NOTHING? |
4394 | Can you command human beings so? |
4394 | Cure me? 4394 Dance?" |
4394 | Did I dwell in that body? |
4394 | Did I not tell you so? 4394 Did n''t I say he was a queer young man?" |
4394 | Did you also know she would die that night? |
4394 | Did you ever hear that line of poetry which speaks of''A woman wailing for her demon- lover''? 4394 Did you hear the organ?" |
4394 | Did you hear the thunder just now? |
4394 | Do you know Dr. Casimir and his sister? |
4394 | Do you know how old I am? |
4394 | Do you know this secret? |
4394 | Do you know what you ask? |
4394 | Do you know where Zara is? |
4394 | Do you like it? |
4394 | Do you mean to tell me,I said slowly,"that she is dead-- really dead?" |
4394 | Do you not find it difficult to make your audiences understand your aims? |
4394 | Do you remain in Paris? |
4394 | Do you remember, Amy,I said, addressing Mrs. Everard,"how you told me I looked like a sick nun at Cannes? |
4394 | Do you understand what you mean by power? |
4394 | Fearest thou me, my child? 4394 Going on a journey, Zara?" |
4394 | Had you a model for that also? |
4394 | Has he been long thus? |
4394 | Has this also to do with electricity? |
4394 | Have I been long away? |
4394 | Have I lost it? |
4394 | Have you no soothing draught for me? |
4394 | Here it may be asked: Why should God take pity? 4394 How about suicide?" |
4394 | How and where did you hear the name of Heliobas? |
4394 | How came I shut in such a prison? 4394 How can I help it?" |
4394 | How can you do it? |
4394 | How did he die? |
4394 | How do you know I am of the temperament you describe? |
4394 | How do you know? |
4394 | How is it we have never seen him before? |
4394 | How so? |
4394 | How? 4394 I am connected with you?" |
4394 | I am sure you are not too DAZED, as you call it, to see your favourite picture, are you? |
4394 | I dare say you know something of what I have seen on my journey? |
4394 | I opine that Job was pretty correct in his ideas-- don''t you, reverend sir? |
4394 | I should be sorry to fatigue you at all,he went on;"do you care for reading?" |
4394 | In England, dear, for instance,she said, with a mischievous glance at her spouse--"in England you never grumbled, did you?" |
4394 | In Paris? |
4394 | In the meanwhile I have your promise? |
4394 | Is THAT all? |
4394 | Is he ill? |
4394 | Is it a fit, do you think? |
4394 | Is it actually mid- day? |
4394 | Is it safer in Leo''s charge? |
4394 | Is it? |
4394 | Is she not well? |
4394 | Is that your theory, sir? |
4394 | Is the act of thinking them out an effort to you? |
4394 | Is there not something strange about that young man? |
4394 | Is your fair fiancee here to- night? |
4394 | It WAS thunder? 4394 It seems like magic to you, does it not?" |
4394 | It was really through Leo,he said,"that you were induced to follow out your experiments in human electricity, Casimir, was it not?" |
4394 | Know what? |
4394 | Like Angelo? |
4394 | Lost what? |
4394 | MADAM,Will you tell me what ground you have for the foundation of the religious theory contained in your book,''A Romance of Two Worlds''? |
4394 | Mad? 4394 Mademoiselle, had you not better come in?" |
4394 | May I ask you one question? |
4394 | May I never try to instruct anyone in these things? |
4394 | Must I come at the same time to- morrow? |
4394 | My lord will not surely dismiss US who desire to devote ourselves to his service? 4394 Not even to one other?" |
4394 | Oh, mademoiselle,she exclaimed,"have you not dread of that terrible man? |
4394 | Oh, my dear, do not say such things as why should God trouble Himself? 4394 Readest thou the lesson in these glowing spheres, teeming with life and learning?" |
4394 | Seest thou yonder planet circled with a ring? 4394 Shall I have any dreams?" |
4394 | Shall we not keep silence? |
4394 | So you are the young musician? |
4394 | Something fiendish or angelic, or a little of both qualities mixed up? |
4394 | Surely it is well to wish to know the reason of things? |
4394 | Tell me if there was anything in Zara''s mind and intelligence to attract you? 4394 Tell me,"I asked with a little hesitation,"what did Prince Ivan mean by saying he had seen your lover, Zara?" |
4394 | Tell me,he said in an authoritative tone,"tell me WHY you wish to see what to mortals is unseen? |
4394 | Tell me,he said, addressing me,"have I been dreaming?" |
4394 | Tell me,she said,"can you not come here and stay with me while you are under Casimir''s treatment?" |
4394 | That is very prettily said, is n''t it? |
4394 | Then our next meeting will be happy? |
4394 | Then why do n''t you disclose it for the benefit of everybody? |
4394 | Then, if it can be done,said Prince Ivan,"why do you not accomplish it for me?" |
4394 | To set me free? |
4394 | WHAT did she see? |
4394 | We shall always be good friends, Zara dearest,I said,"shall we not? |
4394 | Well, if you are, I suppose you will soon return home again; and why should your statue be destroyed in the meantime? 4394 Well, what DID he mean?" |
4394 | Well,I said,"and when are you coming back again? |
4394 | Well? |
4394 | What are we waiting for? 4394 What are you doing?" |
4394 | What are you waiting for? |
4394 | What dance, and where? |
4394 | What did she say? |
4394 | What do you know? |
4394 | What do you mean by''the reason of its coming''? |
4394 | What do you mean? |
4394 | What do you mean? |
4394 | What do you mean? |
4394 | What do you mean? |
4394 | What does it mean? |
4394 | What have you done to yourself, child? |
4394 | What have you found out? |
4394 | What is it? 4394 What is it?" |
4394 | What seekest thou? |
4394 | What shall I tell him? |
4394 | What was it, Zara, that made him fall? 4394 What''s this?" |
4394 | Where are you going? |
4394 | Where did that child get all those pearls from? |
4394 | Where do you suppose your music comes from? 4394 Where is Leo?" |
4394 | Where is this Heliobas? |
4394 | Where would you take me? |
4394 | Who comes quickly? 4394 Who''s your doctor?" |
4394 | Why did you not call me? |
4394 | Why should I build up a fortune for some needy stationer? |
4394 | Why should you imagine her to be otherwise? |
4394 | Why then, if Christianity be a Divine Truth, are not all people Christians? 4394 Why, Zara,"I said,"I thought you were so keenly sympathetic?" |
4394 | Why, what do you mean? |
4394 | Will you go? |
4394 | Will you swear to me that you actually do not know? |
4394 | World''s fame? 4394 Would you like to see the chapel on your way to the drawing- room?" |
4394 | YOUR friend,here indicating me by a slight yet tender gesture,"has also become mine; but I do not think we shall be jealous, shall we?" |
4394 | You admire Keats? |
4394 | You are a Catholic, are you not? |
4394 | You are better, Ivan? |
4394 | You are nervous? |
4394 | You are quite resolved,she said, when I had concluded,"to let Casimir exert his force upon you?" |
4394 | You believe in the soul? |
4394 | You know, of course, that I am not a doctor? |
4394 | You make statues in marble like Michael Angelo? |
4394 | You think the worth of your life increased by wealth? |
4394 | You will never forget me, will you? |
4394 | You? |
4394 | ... Would it be asking too much of you to name any books you think might help me in this new vein of thought you have given me? |
4394 | A brief farewell to those who have perused this narrative, or a lingering parting word? |
4394 | A candle when lit emits flame; blow out the light, the flame vanishes-- where? |
4394 | A man? |
4394 | A slight tremor came over me; but I said with an attempt at indifference:"You mean that I shall be dominated also by some great force or influence?" |
4394 | A strange name? |
4394 | Again, at the marriage feast in Cana of Galilee, when Christ turned the water into wine, He said to His mother,''WOMAN, what have I to do with thee?'' |
4394 | Am I not thy friend? |
4394 | And are you not happy, dearest? |
4394 | And have I not humoured him? |
4394 | And is it perfectly harmless?" |
4394 | And now what else remains? |
4394 | And now what was I? |
4394 | And now will you look at the''Life and Death''once more?" |
4394 | And now,"I added, loosening my clasp of her,"have I guessed well?" |
4394 | And then-- who knows what then?" |
4394 | And what was that dreadful thing he said to you?" |
4394 | And where was Zara? |
4394 | And why? |
4394 | And why? |
4394 | And why? |
4394 | And why? |
4394 | And would she have contented herself with a love like yours? |
4394 | And you actually would grasp ashes and drink wormwood, little friend? |
4394 | And you are already better, are you not?" |
4394 | And you, my boy,"he went on, addressing the tearful page,"think you that I would turn adrift an orphan, whom a dying mother trusted to my care? |
4394 | Are n''t you and Cellini getting to be rather particular friends-- something a little beyond the Platonic, eh?" |
4394 | Are you not strong and satisfied?" |
4394 | Are you quite ready?" |
4394 | As we approached the entrance, Heliobas turned towards me and said with a smile:"Did not the manoeuvres of my street- door astonish you?" |
4394 | Astonished at this, I paused in my hasty walk, and said with as much calmness as I could muster:"''What do you mean by that? |
4394 | Before I leave Paris?" |
4394 | Before you leave me, you will look at your own picture, will you not?" |
4394 | Belief-- belief in God-- belief in all things noble, unworldly, lofty, and beautiful, is rapidly being crushed underfoot by-- what? |
4394 | But I am sorry for the poor Prince; and I can not understand---""You can not understand why those who trespass against fixed laws should suffer?" |
4394 | But answer me this: Who made her capable of attracting atmospheric electricity? |
4394 | But are you convinced? |
4394 | But have you never been in England, Madame Casimir? |
4394 | But how shall I describe her? |
4394 | But in return for my name, you will favour me with yours?'' |
4394 | But in what I have endeavoured to prove to you, you have no doubts, have you?" |
4394 | But may I venture to hope that you have some words of comfort and assurance out of your own experience to give me? |
4394 | But perhaps,"and here she looked alarmed--"perhaps you''ve got the fever?" |
4394 | But tell me,"and her pretty face became serious with a true feminine anxiety,"whatever will you wear? |
4394 | But the mystery remained: how had I discovered the truth of the matter at all? |
4394 | But what should_ I_ care for your family diamonds? |
4394 | But why do we stand here in this bleak place, which must be peopled by the ghosts of olden heroes? |
4394 | But why point out these simple things to those who have no desire to see? |
4394 | But you have been educated in England?" |
4394 | But, after all, what of it? |
4394 | By some fancy title?" |
4394 | By- the- bye, I forgot to ask you how the picture got on?" |
4394 | Can I get it anywhere?" |
4394 | Can anything be more pitiful to think of than his deafness? |
4394 | Can you be here at noon?" |
4394 | Can you come to me tomorrow afternoon at five o''clock? |
4394 | Close, fond friends, like sisters?" |
4394 | Come with me, will you? |
4394 | Convict myself of falsehood? |
4394 | Could a God design and create so poor and cruel a jest? |
4394 | Darkness? |
4394 | Dead? |
4394 | Dead? |
4394 | Defiance? |
4394 | Did not all his power come from the knowledge of the necessity of obedience to the spiritual powers within and without? |
4394 | Did you know he was going to Rome?" |
4394 | Did you sympathize in her pursuits; did you admire her tastes; had you any ideas in common with her?" |
4394 | Do n''t you think so?" |
4394 | Do n''t you want the bodice cut lower?" |
4394 | Do n''t you?" |
4394 | Do not I know that he considers me a false pretender and CHARLATAN? |
4394 | Do you deem women all alike-- all on one common level, fit for nothing but to be the toys or drudges of men? |
4394 | Do you know Swinburne, mademoiselle?" |
4394 | Do you like it?" |
4394 | Do you think Nature is overcome by a few dishonest traders? |
4394 | Do you think she could have led a life like that of other women? |
4394 | Do you think you can like me?--perhaps LOVE me after a little while?" |
4394 | Do you understand?" |
4394 | Do you want to come with your mistress to- day, old boy? |
4394 | Does he journey on foot, or does he take the train?" |
4394 | Everything? |
4394 | For all these things, impossible of purchase by mere wealth, should I not give thanks? |
4394 | For do I not know thee better than the Angels can? |
4394 | For ever, did I say? |
4394 | For how could I turn altogether away from them, as long as but a few remembered me? |
4394 | For instance, suppose--"he hesitated:"suppose Zara were to die?" |
4394 | For is there any human sorrow so great that the blessing of mere daylight on the earth does not far exceed? |
4394 | For what had he, Heliobas, to do with even the thought of defiance? |
4394 | Had I ever been unhappy? |
4394 | Hast thou aught else to ask before the veil of mortality again enshrouds thee?" |
4394 | Have I not dwelt in thy clay, suffered thy sorrows, wept thy tears, died thy deaths? |
4394 | Have I not read his thoughts? |
4394 | Have I seen it? |
4394 | Have I the evil- eye, think you?'' |
4394 | He said quietly:"Who told you, madame, that I am engaged?" |
4394 | He then came straight up to Heliobas, and pressing his hand in a friendly manner, said briefly:"How and when did this happen?" |
4394 | Heliobas smiled, and said in a tone that was almost gay:"Shall I draw the picture for you? |
4394 | Heliobas, after watching my face intently, resumed:"You can not guess the reason of your omission? |
4394 | Her voice, so sweetly familiar, answered me:"To life? |
4394 | How can I help it? |
4394 | How can there be any criticism at all in silence? |
4394 | How can you attract what is not in your sphere? |
4394 | How could_ I_ pray? |
4394 | I BEG of you to tell me-- DO you feel sure of this beneficent all- pervading Love concerning which you write so eloquently? |
4394 | I asked; adding with a half- smile,"Are you the possessor of a specimen of the far- famed Aqua Tofana?" |
4394 | I asked;"and what will he teach me?" |
4394 | I feel and know that all these wonders must soon pass away from my sight; but wilt thou also go?" |
4394 | I felt a little abashed, and, to change the subject, I said:"Tell me, Zara, what is that stone you always wear? |
4394 | I forget your nationality-- you are not English?" |
4394 | I gladly agreed to this, and Heliobas added with cheerful cordiality:"Why not ask your friends to dine here to- morrow? |
4394 | I had followed the speaker''s words with fascinated attention, but now I said:"Dying, Heliobas? |
4394 | I have books, a piano, flowers-- what more do I want? |
4394 | I hear you have been suffering from physical depression?" |
4394 | I may rely upon you?" |
4394 | I now recalled the request of Heliobas, and spoke:"Azul, tell me what shadow rests upon the life of him to whom I am now returning?" |
4394 | I repeated in astonishment;"why''good- bye''?" |
4394 | I should like, mademoiselle,"and his voice sank very low,"to send some flowers for-- her-- you understand?" |
4394 | I suppose she is a dream of beauty?" |
4394 | I whispered hurriedly,"What are you going to do? |
4394 | If his present prophet- like utterances be true---""Why should you doubt him?" |
4394 | If so, why? |
4394 | If you can arrange to stay to dinner, my sister will be pleased to meet you; but perhaps you are otherwise engaged?" |
4394 | If you propound to these theorists the eternal question WHY?--why is the world in existence? |
4394 | In these days of haste and scramble, when there is no time for faith, is there time for sentiment? |
4394 | In what way?" |
4394 | Indeed, why should I resist? |
4394 | Instead of a martyr he is a living triumph-- are you not, old boy?" |
4394 | Is it a part of your own belief? |
4394 | Is it a talisman?" |
4394 | Is it education to teach the young that their chances of happiness depend on being richer than their neighbours? |
4394 | Is it morbid reading?" |
4394 | Is it not enough for thee to have heard the voice that maketh the Angel''s singing silent, and wouldst thou yet know more?" |
4394 | Is it not he that is reported to be a cruel mesmerist who sacrifices everybody-- yes, even his own sister, to his medical experiments? |
4394 | Is it not so?" |
4394 | Is it not so?" |
4394 | Is it sense to imagine that the immense machinery of the Universe has been set in motion for nothing? |
4394 | Is it the young moon? |
4394 | Is n''t that utter rubbish?" |
4394 | Is not fame power? |
4394 | Is not money a double power, strong to assist one''s self and those one loves? |
4394 | Is not the world''s favour a necessary means to gain these things?" |
4394 | It is but one pang the more, and why should I not endure it?" |
4394 | It is growing late-- shall we prepare for dinner?" |
4394 | It is to me pathetically absurd to see gifted persons all struggling along, and rudely elbowing each other out of the way to win-- what? |
4394 | Knowest thou not the name of HELIOBAS?" |
4394 | Look at society around you, and ask yourselves: Whither is our"PROGRESS"tending-- Forward or Backward-- Upward or Downward? |
4394 | May I do this?" |
4394 | Meeting Cellini''s glance as I finished reading these lines, I asked:"Did you know the author of this book, signor?" |
4394 | My beautiful, gay, strong Zara DEAD? |
4394 | My curiosity was much excited by these remarks, and I said eagerly:"Will you tell me in what way Leo has been useful to you? |
4394 | Now, suppose Zara were commanded by some strange evil thing, unguessed at, undreamt of in the wildest night- mare? |
4394 | O Angelic Spirits, what is there in the poor and shabby spectacle of human life to attract your mighty Intelligences? |
4394 | Of two men working in the same field, shall it not be as Christ foretold--''the one shall be taken, and the other left''? |
4394 | On the way downstairs he said:"Do you know why Zara wished that statue destroyed?" |
4394 | Once I thought,"Shall I take a pencil and write it down lest I forget it?" |
4394 | Ought I not to ask him his fee? |
4394 | Over and over again I have asked myself-- If there is a God, why should He be angry? |
4394 | Presently he continued:"Shall I tell you everything now, mademoiselle?" |
4394 | Put this standard of judgment to the verse- writers of the day, and where would they be? |
4394 | Raffaello tried you with one of them, did he not?" |
4394 | Seeing no one but me he grew bewildered, and asked:"What has happened?" |
4394 | Seekest thou to pierce the future fate of others? |
4394 | Shall I go on guessing?" |
4394 | Shall I suffer any pain?" |
4394 | Shall a mere man deny himself for the sake of his child or friend? |
4394 | Shall we deny those merciful attributes to God which we acknowledge in His creature, Man? |
4394 | Shall we go to the smoking- room for a little, and join them in the drawing- room afterwards?" |
4394 | Shall we have some tea up here?" |
4394 | Slowly my self- possession returned to me, and I said calmly:"YOU forbid me, signor? |
4394 | Still, I can not compel you to do this for me-- I only ask, WILL you?" |
4394 | Suppose a man rich enough to purchase all the treasures of the world-- what then? |
4394 | Supposing you were a second Beethoven, what could you do in that land without faith or hope? |
4394 | Surely it is as well to call Him a Spirit of pure Light as an atom? |
4394 | Surely that was a faint shriek? |
4394 | Surely the medicines ought to be paid for? |
4394 | Surely you will not hesitate? |
4394 | Surely your own reason proves this to you? |
4394 | Tell me-- why did you not visit the Moon, or the Sun, in your recent wanderings?" |
4394 | That is something, surely?" |
4394 | The German Wagner-- did he not himself say that he walked up and down in the avenues,''trying to catch the harmonies as they floated in the air''? |
4394 | The end for all of you can be but death; and are you quite positive after all that there is NO Hereafter? |
4394 | The sound of the organ? |
4394 | The stuff is lovely; where did you get it?" |
4394 | The thunder of His power, who can understand?''" |
4394 | Then I bethought myself of all my boasted bravery; was it possible that I should fail now at this critical moment? |
4394 | Then I said:"Does Zara know how long I have been absent?" |
4394 | Then looking at me scrutinizingly, he added kindly:"You have eaten nothing, my child? |
4394 | There is not a plant or herb in existence, but has almost a miracle hidden away in its tiny cup or spreading leaves-- do you doubt it?" |
4394 | There is poverty in many places, but why seek to relieve it? |
4394 | These sounds were meant for me alone, then? |
4394 | This Heliobas,--was I right after all in coming to consult him? |
4394 | Those clear childlike eyes-- that frank smile-- that gentle and dignified mien-- could they accompany evil thoughts? |
4394 | Thou HAST pardoned me? |
4394 | Thou art with me, Azul, my beloved? |
4394 | Thou wilt love me still? |
4394 | To the Universal Law of Necessity? |
4394 | To what? |
4394 | Wait one week more, and then you shall be--""What?" |
4394 | Was Christ indeed Divine-- or is it all a myth, a fable-- an imposture?" |
4394 | Was I a fettered prisoner? |
4394 | Was I indeed losing my reason? |
4394 | Was he mad? |
4394 | Was he not perhaps a mere charlatan? |
4394 | Was it not wrong to take so much responsibility upon yourself?" |
4394 | Was it possible that I must again be the victim of miserable dejection, pain, and stupor? |
4394 | Was not that picture veiled? |
4394 | Was this the terrific meaning of my sleepless nights, my troubled thoughts, my strange inquietude? |
4394 | Well, have you any idea how the melodies or the harmonies form themselves in your brain?" |
4394 | Well, when you return to earth again, do you suppose you can make people believe the story of your experiences? |
4394 | What WOULD he answer? |
4394 | What am I to say about my recovery, which I know is little short of miraculous?" |
4394 | What are we waiting for, you and I? |
4394 | What authority had I for saying that Cellini was betrothed? |
4394 | What brutal Code compels us to be born, to live, to suffer, and to die without recompense or reason? |
4394 | What can_ I_ do? |
4394 | What comfort had he now? |
4394 | What crushing weight overpowered me? |
4394 | What did I know about it? |
4394 | What did Prince Ivan mean? |
4394 | What did he mean by it, I wonder?" |
4394 | What did it represent? |
4394 | What do I look like now?" |
4394 | What do I mean, you ask, by accepting everything as it comes, and trying to find out the reason of its coming? |
4394 | What doctor shall I send?" |
4394 | What had I to do with darkness? |
4394 | What had happened to me? |
4394 | What harm have I done in helping myself to a simple glass of water in your studio? |
4394 | What have I said to grieve you?" |
4394 | What have you done?" |
4394 | What if he SHOULD fail? |
4394 | What is the matter?" |
4394 | What joy could he ever expect? |
4394 | What made you love Zara?" |
4394 | What motive have you? |
4394 | What say you?'' |
4394 | What secret do you possess to make yourselves look so bright?" |
4394 | What strange illusion had he in his mind about Zara and a demon? |
4394 | What ulterior plan?" |
4394 | What was that passage in Job, Effie, that I used to say they reminded me of?" |
4394 | What was the secret of Correggio-- of Fra Angelico-- of Raphael? |
4394 | What was there in that wine you gave me this morning?" |
4394 | What will you call it, signor? |
4394 | What would you? |
4394 | What, Ivan,"as he perceived the Prince attiring himself in his great- coat and hat,"are you also going?" |
4394 | When will the preachers learn to preach Christ simply-- Christ without human dogmas or differences? |
4394 | Where do you suppose any music comes from that is not mere imitation? |
4394 | Which way? |
4394 | Whither? |
4394 | Who portioned out this Law of Necessity? |
4394 | Who shall dare to say we have no need of prayer?" |
4394 | Who tampered with her fine brain and made her imagine herself allied to a spirit of air? |
4394 | Why all this discontent with the present-- why all this universal complaint and despair and world- weariness, if there be NO HEREAFTER? |
4394 | Why did you say there was danger for me when I was about to drink it?" |
4394 | Why do you look so distressed?" |
4394 | Why do you trouble yourself for the safety and happiness of anyone you love?" |
4394 | Why have you never exhibited it?" |
4394 | Why lessen the sparkling heaps of gold by so much as a coin? |
4394 | Why not? |
4394 | Why should I be? |
4394 | Why should a man, for instance, be subjected to an undeserved and bitter disappointment?" |
4394 | Why should she not have touched Him? |
4394 | Why should this Universe be an ever- circling Wheel of Torture? |
4394 | Why wouldst thou make of Him a being destitute of the best emotions that He Himself bestows upon thee? |
4394 | Why, therefore, waste your time in seeking a love which does not exist, which never will exist for you?" |
4394 | Why, who but a lunatic would say that the only criticism of art is silence? |
4394 | Why? |
4394 | Why? |
4394 | Will that message suffice?" |
4394 | Will these things make you enjoy life? |
4394 | Will you come to her room?" |
4394 | Will you consent to remain so long in my company?'' |
4394 | Will you excuse me?" |
4394 | Will you help me?" |
4394 | Will you leave Cannes to- morrow?" |
4394 | Will you permit me to ask if you have evolved this new and beneficent lustre from the Gospel yourself? |
4394 | Will you play to me?" |
4394 | Will you seat yourself here?" |
4394 | Will you sit to me for your portrait?" |
4394 | Will you stand up now and see how you feel?" |
4394 | Wilt thou lead me? |
4394 | Wilt thou seek for admittance there or wilt thou faint by the way and grow weary?" |
4394 | Wist ye not that I must be about My Father''s business?'' |
4394 | World''s wealth? |
4394 | Would it not be madness to assert the flame immortal? |
4394 | Yet to whom? |
4394 | You ARE restored to health; will you give me my reward?" |
4394 | You are attending?" |
4394 | You are incredulous? |
4394 | You are not afraid of me now?" |
4394 | You are not angry with me, mademoiselle? |
4394 | You are not inquisitive, are you?" |
4394 | You are satisfied of the fact that my touch can influence you?" |
4394 | You can not? |
4394 | You feel better?" |
4394 | You have some other questions to put to me, have you not?" |
4394 | You knew I was betrothed, mademoiselle?" |
4394 | You know, I suppose, that she was prepared for her death?" |
4394 | You look doubtful-- are you afraid of me, dear?" |
4394 | You love music, I understand-- you are a professional artist?" |
4394 | You must have heard things of him that are not altogether bad, surely?" |
4394 | You remember? |
4394 | You see how all the sparkling brilliancy has gone out of it? |
4394 | You see how easy? |
4394 | You think no other career would be possible to you? |
4394 | You understand now why I said you were in danger?" |
4394 | You understand the nature of an electric shock?" |
4394 | You veel dance, sans doute?" |
4394 | You will correspond with me?" |
4394 | You will have your money-- more than your share-- what else seek you? |
4394 | You''ve brought no ball fixings, have you?" |
4394 | Yours? |
4394 | a god? |
4394 | an angel? |
4394 | and might not his experiments upon me prove fruitless, and possibly fatal? |
4394 | and shall the Infinite Love refuse to sacrifice itself-- yea, even to as immense a humility as its greatness is immeasurable? |
4394 | and she rushed from the piano, with pale face and trembling lips, gasping out:"What has happened? |
4394 | and what of eclipses?" |
4394 | but how often do I see her? |
4394 | do you believe he will recover?" |
4394 | for your ambitions? |
4394 | for your surroundings? |
4394 | had I lost the use of my light aerial limbs that had borne me so swiftly through the realms of space? |
4394 | he wrote,"Music, thou Sweetest Spirit of all that serve God, what have I done that thou shouldst so often visit me? |
4394 | it said,"understandest thou not the Christ?" |
4394 | or all three united in one vast figure? |
4394 | or are you promised to another partner?" |
4394 | or do you think you have been dreaming all that you heard just now?" |
4394 | or had he drunk too much wine? |
4394 | or whether some experienced student in mystic matters has been your instructor? |
4394 | she asked almost anxiously;"never cease to think of me kindly?" |
4394 | she exclaimed, with a ringing laugh,"are n''t you a little bit eccentric, signor? |
4394 | she exclaimed;"will you go to the dance?" |
4394 | what is wrong with you?" |
4394 | what was that? |
4394 | what was that? |
4394 | what was that? |
4394 | why do we live? |
4394 | why do we think and plan? |
4394 | why is there a universe? |
4394 | why such want of air and loss of delightful ease? |
4394 | why, what can you really call your own? |
42802 | ''A rope of fear''was what he said, was n''t it? 42802 A clue?" |
42802 | A duke, I think you said? |
42802 | A false alarm, was n''t it? |
42802 | A ghost? |
42802 | A mistake? 42802 A rope?" |
42802 | Ah, yes, indeed, most impeccable of detectives,she mocked,"and now your eyes are to be opened, eh?" |
42802 | And Miss Jardine? |
42802 | And did you bring the warrant with you? |
42802 | And how will you be doing this fine weather, sir? |
42802 | And it is this man who has been murdered? |
42802 | And now then-- what next? |
42802 | And now what, old chap? |
42802 | And that''s what Scotland Yard takes the rate- payers''good money to support, eh? 42802 And the safe?" |
42802 | And where did the murder take place-- in London? |
42802 | And you, who are you? |
42802 | Another case of Prince Hal, eh? |
42802 | Another feather in the cap of foolish old Scotland Yard, is n''t it? |
42802 | Another? 42802 Anthony Winton, do you mean? |
42802 | Any attempt been made to decide the matter? 42802 Any ideas, old chap?" |
42802 | Any ideas, old chap? |
42802 | Any relation to the soldier and scientist- inventor of that new machine- gun tried out last year? |
42802 | Anything happen? |
42802 | Are not all lives equal in the sight of the law? |
42802 | At least his note to me this morning is signed C. G. Belthouse; but what----? |
42802 | Bedtime? |
42802 | Bridge parties? 42802 But how and by what was Winton killed? |
42802 | But how did she get into the safe? |
42802 | But how did the Eugenie pearl vanish with the other jewels? 42802 But how?" |
42802 | But how? |
42802 | But in what way does this young lady benefit? 42802 But maylike you''d be glad to run up to your room and wash a bit, the whiles the kittle''s boilin''? |
42802 | But not so clever, eh, my friend? 42802 But what about the police? |
42802 | But what dees it all mean? |
42802 | But what do you know about it, youngster? |
42802 | But what on earth----? |
42802 | But when a mouse gets into a trap, what does it do? |
42802 | But why did he want the light off? |
42802 | But you said she had poisoned my dear mother? |
42802 | By the way, Mr. Montelet, who told you the history of this ill- fated stone and its fearful curse of a wandering spirit that slays in the dark? |
42802 | Ca n''t you? 42802 Capitoline, eh?" |
42802 | Ceiling repaired? |
42802 | Church where the goings on takes place, ai n''t it? 42802 Cleaning, sir? |
42802 | Close to the end, were they? |
42802 | Countess Maravitz? 42802 Dead?" |
42802 | Did he expect anything to happen then? |
42802 | Did he too, die mysteriously? 42802 Did n''t I hear you say you were going to the theatre yourself? |
42802 | Did n''t he arrive at Charing Cross by the 8:40? |
42802 | Did you find it, sir? |
42802 | Did you get her name and address? |
42802 | Did you have that headache last night? |
42802 | Disappointed, old chap? |
42802 | Do n''t happen to know the market price for fullers''earth in bulk, do you? |
42802 | Do you know if Lady Montelet had anything to drink previous to her retirement to this room? |
42802 | Do you know? |
42802 | Do you mean he was murdered? |
42802 | Do you see any light, however? |
42802 | Do you think I''d have waited till now if I''d known where he was? 42802 Do you? |
42802 | Does anybody know what he meant? |
42802 | Does it mean that Laura_ stole_ the stone? |
42802 | Doo- ee, now? 42802 Eh, but she would not like to know of this little meeting, my friend? |
42802 | Ever stop anywhere on the road? |
42802 | Feel like having a pipe and a toddle up and down the garden before turning in? 42802 For not only have the notes vanished, but I''ve lost the best night- watchman I ever had, a good, trustworthy man----""Lost him?" |
42802 | Forgery, swindling, robbery? |
42802 | Going, are you, Mr. Overton, sir? |
42802 | Good heavens, Calcott, where did this come from? 42802 Got him-- who''ve got him? |
42802 | Had n''t you? |
42802 | Hammond-- why, what is wrong, man? 42802 Happened, sir-- happened?" |
42802 | Have n''t come to tell me the Capitoline Venus has disappeared, have you? |
42802 | Hay? 42802 He made no statement, I suppose, before he died, to give an idea of the assassin? |
42802 | How about that, please? 42802 How did you know?" |
42802 | How did you manage it? |
42802 | How long was she here, do you remember? |
42802 | How should I know what happened? 42802 How was it that Miss Parradine was able to make such an inopportune call? |
42802 | How''s that? 42802 How, then, was this door opened in the morning?" |
42802 | How? |
42802 | I heard a cry-- at least----"Right through the closed door of a nine- inch concrete walled vault, Wilson? |
42802 | I wonder if our friend the vicar noticed, too? 42802 I wondered where it came from; but I suppose you have had the ceiling repaired-- eh, what?" |
42802 | Ideas? 42802 Impossible, is it?" |
42802 | In case Mr. Hubert might get involved, eh? |
42802 | In love, eh? |
42802 | Indeed? 42802 Into the cellar-- hark, what''s that? |
42802 | Is it broken, Cleek? |
42802 | Is it likely that any one overheard your conversation then? 42802 Is she now?" |
42802 | Is the matter really a very important one? |
42802 | It is a most unfortunate tragedy indeed, almost a dual one, one might say, but I think you can safely trust yourself in our hands, eh, Headland? |
42802 | It is about the reputed''haunting''of the village where your country seat is located, I believe? 42802 It is not your place, mademoiselle, is it? |
42802 | It is ze brave Super- in- tend- ent and he come for his gr- great frien''Cleek-- is it not so, my frien''? |
42802 | It worked all right, eh? |
42802 | Jeannette, you will? 42802 Kenneth Digby?" |
42802 | Known him long, by the way? |
42802 | Lor lumme, sir, you ai n''t a- going out again to- night, are ye? |
42802 | Mean the box with the wire netting over the front? |
42802 | Meaning the gentleman who is your guest, sir? |
42802 | Might be aconite-- but how administered? |
42802 | Mind reading it aloud, sir? |
42802 | Mr. Winton was cleaning his jewels then, was he? 42802 No idea as to the cause of death, Mr. Brent? |
42802 | Not those silly little painted things with the fancy borders? |
42802 | Now what do you mean by that? 42802 Now what the devil can the bed of a river have to do with the matter in hand?" |
42802 | Now, what about this Marie Vaudrot? 42802 Now, what''s the next thing?" |
42802 | Oh, Mr. Belthouse,he exclaimed,"going to move the blessed statues in a furniture van?" |
42802 | Oh, so that''s why they did n''t get out and chuck the place when the mischief began, is it? 42802 Oh, that you, Mr. Cleek, is it? |
42802 | Oh, the ghost, you mean? |
42802 | Old lady''s something after the style of my mate here, ai n''t she-- a bit deaf? |
42802 | One of that sort is he? 42802 Overton? |
42802 | Patterson? |
42802 | Poison, sir, poison? |
42802 | Remembered? |
42802 | Right was I, old chap? |
42802 | Robberies? 42802 Roses and---- My hat, what the dickens are you talking about?" |
42802 | Rum sort of a case, is n''t it? |
42802 | Save her from what, Mr. Montelet? 42802 Saw? |
42802 | Say anything to the duke about it? |
42802 | See him? 42802 See the skull and crossbones?" |
42802 | She hear anything last night, then? |
42802 | She was there all right when you came away, was n''t she? |
42802 | She_ is_ all right, ai n''t she, sir? |
42802 | Simmons had been shut in there by myself, Mr. Headland, and----"Shut in, Mr. Brent? 42802 Smokeless? |
42802 | So my little trick succeeded, eh, Jules Berjet? 42802 So that, naturally, he will not be invited to share in the festivities in connection with Lady Adela''s wedding?" |
42802 | So then, of course---- To- morrow, eh? 42802 Sorry we ca n''t reciprocate the feeling, Mr. Narkom,"said Cleek with a rueful smile;"but we ca n''t, can we, Dollops? |
42802 | Surely you do n''t allow smoking in the vault, Mr. Brent? 42802 That was to be the signal, was n''t it? |
42802 | That''ll be the bell- tower over there to the left, wo n''t it, the round thing with the cement pavement all round it? |
42802 | That''s Mr. Cleek----"Do you think I do n''t know that? |
42802 | That? 42802 That? |
42802 | The beggar''s come at last, has he? 42802 The river stopped up? |
42802 | The which, sir? |
42802 | There was something of importance in it, then? |
42802 | They say you have a white- and- gold lady to be your woman over on the other side-- is it not so? |
42802 | They''ve started-- don''t you hear them? |
42802 | They, too, have left then, after all? |
42802 | This Wilson, Mr. Brent,Cleek asked, quietly,"is he a young man?" |
42802 | Valuable? |
42802 | Was anything missing from that? |
42802 | Was he tied or bound then? |
42802 | Waterloo? 42802 Well, Carstairs, taking a constitutional before dinner- time?" |
42802 | Well, my sweet- voiced little traitress, so I''ve got one more of your precious gang, have I? |
42802 | Well, then, it''s indigestion, shall we say? |
42802 | Well? |
42802 | What are you? |
42802 | What became of her? |
42802 | What did he have to eat last? |
42802 | What did you do with it then? |
42802 | What do you mean, you fool? |
42802 | What do you mean? |
42802 | What does it mean? 42802 What exactly do you mean by that, Mr. Brent? |
42802 | What had she to do with it? |
42802 | What has been stolen, something from his collection? |
42802 | What have they done, Mr. Headland, or Cleek? 42802 What have you found, Headland?" |
42802 | What key-- what door? |
42802 | What notes? |
42802 | What the deuce is the matter, you young monkey? |
42802 | What was the message, and who took it? |
42802 | What would be the sense of wasting tears over such a man, sir? |
42802 | What''s that, Inspector? |
42802 | What''s that, Mr. Narkom? 42802 What''s that, Mr. Narkom? |
42802 | What''s that, Mr. Narkom? 42802 What''s that, Mr. Narkom? |
42802 | What''s that, my friend-- how did I find you? |
42802 | What''s that? 42802 What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? 42802 What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? 42802 What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What,_ deaf_? |
42802 | What? 42802 What?" |
42802 | When did you miss this formula? |
42802 | Where have you been all day? |
42802 | Where is the laboratory and how is it built? |
42802 | Where now, sir? |
42802 | Where was your master sitting before that, do you know? |
42802 | Where were you; where had you been during the evening? |
42802 | Who has n''t? 42802 Who is George?" |
42802 | Who is at the head of affairs, by the way? |
42802 | Who is young Wilson, Mr. Brent, and why should he instead of the inspector have been left alone with the body? |
42802 | Who rings them? |
42802 | Why did I suspect Mr. Brent? 42802 Why most important?" |
42802 | Why not kill her first, Queen Margot? |
42802 | Why not, you inquisitive young monkey? |
42802 | Why not? |
42802 | Why, did you know her? |
42802 | Why, what''s wrong? 42802 Why?" |
42802 | Will there be any difficulty in your admitting me into the laboratory, by the way? |
42802 | Will you forget that you have done so, Mr. Howard, until after this Valehampton business is settled? 42802 Would you mind giving me the full details as explicitly as possible, and from the very beginning, please?" |
42802 | Yes, I----"Warrant? |
42802 | Yes, Mr.--er-- Headland, will it be? 42802 Yes, but what? |
42802 | Yes, old man? |
42802 | Yes, that''s the---- My dear Cleek, you are hardly respectful, are you? |
42802 | Yes, they are fine, are n''t they now? |
42802 | You do n''t mean to say that any fool man bought that ill- fated jewel at Christie''s last week? 42802 You have a clue to that, then?" |
42802 | You have a special message for me? |
42802 | You have an idea, then? |
42802 | You have no gas fittings here? |
42802 | You have really picked up a clue? |
42802 | You think it was carried to the bell- tower, then? |
42802 | You think so? |
42802 | You thought you were safe this time, did n''t you, and that the dead tell no tales, eh? |
42802 | You-- knew? |
42802 | You_ knew_? 42802 _ Come, God''s sake, 1st barge, Limehouse, Dock 3.--Cleek._""What does it mean, sir?" |
42802 | _ Myself?_Captain Digby''s voice registered utter amazement. |
42802 | _ Rich?_ Are you off your head, old man? 42802 _ Rich?_ Are you off your head, old man? |
42802 | ''Tisn''t that chap, I suppose?" |
42802 | A case? |
42802 | A clue? |
42802 | After that I rushed to the safe and----""Why did you do that?" |
42802 | Agreeable?" |
42802 | All ready, are you?" |
42802 | Am I dropping into the habit of giving signs, then?" |
42802 | An explanation? |
42802 | And did Lady Montelet believe in the priest''s curse or not?" |
42802 | And how is the good man coming on?" |
42802 | And if you must cry out, surely there is another name more fitting to the occasion? |
42802 | And now may I venture to ask a question touching upon more personal matters? |
42802 | And now, if you please, may I not see the body of Davis at once?" |
42802 | And the coach next to the engine if I can manage it? |
42802 | And the old man-- wot about him? |
42802 | And the one adjoining it is where the child disappeared, eh?" |
42802 | And then your agitation made me risk the guess.... What''s that, Inspector? |
42802 | And then-- what?" |
42802 | And what about her visit?" |
42802 | And what did the local police say? |
42802 | And where does Elton Carlyle come in in this pleasant little mà © nage? |
42802 | And where will the next one be? |
42802 | And where?" |
42802 | And you, too, Marie Peret?" |
42802 | And your land- steward?" |
42802 | And, pray, who is that?" |
42802 | Any more questions, please?" |
42802 | Any possibility of his secreting the jewel himself?" |
42802 | Anyhow, I know the apparatus; and one belongs to Mr. Desmond, eh? |
42802 | Anyhow, having secured the formula, she burnt it and----""Burnt it?" |
42802 | Are you positively certain Simmons said nothing as to the cause of his death? |
42802 | Are you sure, Dollops?" |
42802 | Are you the great Cleek?" |
42802 | Belthouse?" |
42802 | Blown, I suppose?" |
42802 | Brent?" |
42802 | Brent?" |
42802 | Brent?" |
42802 | Bristol?" |
42802 | But I say, Mr. Overton, what put it into Captain What''s- his- name''s head to have you telephone the duke and inquire? |
42802 | But had n''t we better be moving? |
42802 | But what has become of Borelle? |
42802 | But what has become of Borelle?" |
42802 | But why cry at all? |
42802 | But why did you seek to conceal the other entrance, mademoiselle?" |
42802 | But, before you start, who is Estelle?" |
42802 | By the sofa there-- with the quilt half over it?" |
42802 | By the way, was there any tribe of gypsies known to be in the vicinity of Valehampton at the time?" |
42802 | CHAPTER XVI CLEEK EXPLAINS"How did I manage to find the thing out?" |
42802 | Ca n''t you see the man''s ill? |
42802 | Can you remember the names?" |
42802 | Carstairs?" |
42802 | Carstairs?" |
42802 | Charles Belthouse-- Charles Galveston Belthouse?" |
42802 | Cleek?" |
42802 | Cleek?" |
42802 | Cleek?" |
42802 | Cleek?" |
42802 | Coming our way, Mr. Wilson? |
42802 | Concrete everything? |
42802 | Costivan?" |
42802 | Could n''t give any account of who he was?" |
42802 | Could n''t speak, I suppose? |
42802 | Could n''t yer telephone you was ill, sir?" |
42802 | Desmond?" |
42802 | Did Cleek the Cracksman ever break his oath?" |
42802 | Did Lady Montelet believe in the curse?" |
42802 | Did he expect a murder or robbery beforehand? |
42802 | Did he know the notes had vanished? |
42802 | Did he vanish with the notes?" |
42802 | Did n''t get his watch, I suppose?" |
42802 | Did they all go in, then, Norton?" |
42802 | Did you manage to find us any, then?" |
42802 | Did you take anybody into your confidence regarding this visit to London to- day?" |
42802 | Do I make that clear?" |
42802 | Do n''t happen to know of anybody that did, do you?" |
42802 | Do n''t you?" |
42802 | Do you not always find the answers to the cases propounded to you? |
42802 | Do you think you are likely to make any discovery?" |
42802 | Do you understand?" |
42802 | Do you want to see what I found, gentlemen? |
42802 | Do you, Marie Peret, when you''ve got such a clever cousin as Margot to pose as the statue? |
42802 | Does she live in Grays, too?" |
42802 | Does that mean that you have had a colleague or assistant before this?" |
42802 | Does that mean you are trying to tell me that Graham Digby''s son is a traitor to his country?" |
42802 | Eh, what?" |
42802 | Eh,_ mes amis_? |
42802 | Fine, are n''t they?" |
42802 | First of all, who was it that discovered the actual loss of the statue?" |
42802 | Fly, fly----""So we have caught the pair of you, eh?" |
42802 | Gawd bless yer both, and now let''s get out before this beauty wakes up, or shall I finish her, sir?" |
42802 | Ghastly sort of business, is n''t it? |
42802 | Good heavens, man, you do n''t mean that you suspect----?" |
42802 | Got the moving men, too, did you? |
42802 | Have they found any clues yet?" |
42802 | Have you your key? |
42802 | Hay_ stain_? |
42802 | He deaf, too?" |
42802 | He had evidently died----""What''s that?" |
42802 | He is here?" |
42802 | He preferred Venetian powder to jeweller''s rouge, eh?" |
42802 | He''s not dead?" |
42802 | Headland?" |
42802 | Headland?" |
42802 | Headland?" |
42802 | Headland?" |
42802 | Headland?" |
42802 | Headland?" |
42802 | How can it be possible for them to have discovered anything_ here_?" |
42802 | How could as large an object as the Capitoline Venus disappear in broad daylight? |
42802 | How could the murderer escape through closed doors and window and in the dark? |
42802 | How dare you?" |
42802 | How did I get the idea of Captain Sandringham''s connection with the affair? |
42802 | How did I guess? |
42802 | How did I guess? |
42802 | How did I know that? |
42802 | How did it happen? |
42802 | How do you pay me-- eh?" |
42802 | How do you see in it?" |
42802 | How long had the lady left before Calvert began to suspect trouble?" |
42802 | How was he killed? |
42802 | How was the murder committed, and what did this little rattler have to do with it? |
42802 | How would it be if we slipped over the wall and had a look at''em a bit closer, Mr. Overton? |
42802 | How? |
42802 | Hullo, though, who''s that coming out of it now?" |
42802 | I do n''t say it has anything to do with the present case; still, the details are so strange:----""What is this case?" |
42802 | I must get a squint into the room and write immediately-- you have no telephone, have you?" |
42802 | I presume you have not mentioned my name in the matter?" |
42802 | I say, wot price letting him stand here and talk with the vicar for a time while you show us the rest of the way? |
42802 | I shall just say you are another colleague----""Another, Captain Digby?" |
42802 | I suppose he wanted his future wife to indulge in the same tricks, eh?" |
42802 | I suppose you are going to carry me off, so where do we go, and when?" |
42802 | I suppose you know that I placed the stuff about the tower''s base when I left you at the limousine?" |
42802 | I thought you used electricity for lighting?" |
42802 | If it was n''t for the blessed lump of marble being so valuable----""Valuable?" |
42802 | If there was to be a tunnel, then, why should not that be the starting point? |
42802 | If you think you will want that address----?" |
42802 | In England is he?" |
42802 | In Paris, eh? |
42802 | In the name of Heaven, what did you cut up that fainting caper for last night?" |
42802 | Indeed, she was more angry than frightened when the other two deaths occurred----""Ah, yes, what of them? |
42802 | Instructing Carstairs how to go about putting up the banns? |
42802 | Introduce me as Lieutenant Deland in mufti, will you? |
42802 | Is he still up to high jinks?" |
42802 | Is he the tame cat of the house, or master of the revels?" |
42802 | Is it a peculiarity of Essex hay, then, to give off a deep yellowish stain?" |
42802 | Is it any wonder that my chief suspects me?" |
42802 | Is n''t that so, Mr. Brent? |
42802 | Is not that proof enough? |
42802 | Is that a fact?" |
42802 | Is that so?" |
42802 | Is that so?" |
42802 | Is that the secret? |
42802 | Is that the stone in question?" |
42802 | Is your wife a light sleeper?" |
42802 | Just what_ has_ happened? |
42802 | Justice? |
42802 | Lord, did n''t the beggar bolt?" |
42802 | Mind our going through the kitchen, missus?" |
42802 | Mr. Desmond, you saw me set that safe yourself, to open at what hour?" |
42802 | Mr. Narkom, just look into the large urn over there, will you?" |
42802 | Narkom?" |
42802 | Narkom?" |
42802 | Narkom?" |
42802 | Narkom?" |
42802 | Narkom?" |
42802 | Nervous gent, is he?" |
42802 | Nice and thoughtful of the gent, Markham-- eh, what? |
42802 | Nothin''wrong, is there?" |
42802 | Nothing from you to- night, Kenneth?" |
42802 | Notice anything else as well?" |
42802 | Once again Cleek spoke:"And you saw nothing, heard nothing?" |
42802 | Overton?" |
42802 | Pardon, Duke? |
42802 | Pardon? |
42802 | Peppermint drops or aniseed balls, eh?" |
42802 | Perhaps you have forgotten----?" |
42802 | Perhaps you would n''t mind telling me where this door leads to?" |
42802 | Perhaps_ le cher Borelle_ will bring them along later, who knows?" |
42802 | Perry?" |
42802 | Pretty little light that, but not much good to see by, eh?" |
42802 | Saintly?" |
42802 | Saviour''s?" |
42802 | Saw what?" |
42802 | See that thing in the corner? |
42802 | Septarite it is called, is it not? |
42802 | Shall I ask?" |
42802 | Shall I show you to it? |
42802 | Shall Naylor give the word?" |
42802 | Shall it be the knife, the poison, the rope? |
42802 | She is no relation, is she?" |
42802 | She spoke to Marshall, you say? |
42802 | She would scorn the poor Jeannette, eh? |
42802 | Shoals formed, did n''t they?" |
42802 | Shot himself? |
42802 | Shot?" |
42802 | Shut in, did you say? |
42802 | So if you will ask me anything else you want to know----?" |
42802 | Something come to light about last night''s horrible affair, Vicar?" |
42802 | Stabbed? |
42802 | Still thinking of that elderly Venus, eh? |
42802 | Sure he was n''t making the words fit those of the dying man? |
42802 | Tell Mr. Narkom I am ready for him, will you?" |
42802 | That is it?" |
42802 | That special midnight mail, I presume? |
42802 | That''s the Johnnie, is n''t it?" |
42802 | The Duke of Essex, eh? |
42802 | The boat goes back to- night, does n''t it?" |
42802 | The celebrated shrine, is n''t it?" |
42802 | The door screwed up, Mr. Belthouse? |
42802 | The duke got back a''ready, has he?" |
42802 | The effect of the curse?" |
42802 | The lights wrong?" |
42802 | Then he sniffed the air, and uttered a casual remark:"Fond of sweets still, are you, Mr. Wilson? |
42802 | Then how did Mr. Wilson here and the inspector enter?" |
42802 | Then noting Dollops''dejected mien, he asked,"What''s wrong, old man?" |
42802 | Then young Wilson told me that he himself had closed the safe door.... What are you smiling at, Mr. Headland? |
42802 | Then, six months later, a young orphaned French girl from a Russian convent, Celestine Merode---- Why, what''s the matter?" |
42802 | There is no one you know who might benefit by his death?" |
42802 | They might have found traces of footprints, you think?" |
42802 | This is the house, is n''t it?" |
42802 | Thought you''d have escaped with that £200,000 and left your confederates to bear the brunt of the whole thing, did you? |
42802 | Too far for us to go in the limousine, then?" |
42802 | Was n''t he to have been married to- day, by the way, according to the papers?" |
42802 | Was n''t it about''74 when the Bengal Lancers were stationed at Mandalay? |
42802 | Was n''t that the man who owned''Black Prince,''the last Derby winner? |
42802 | Was this the explanation? |
42802 | Well, my friend, were n''t you telling me something about a series of robberies in this precious new case of yours?" |
42802 | Well, what is it this time, Narkom? |
42802 | Well, you remember that time when Sir Julius Solinski passed us in his motor? |
42802 | Were n''t you, my girl? |
42802 | Were the two in league, after all? |
42802 | What do you mean?" |
42802 | What do you think of that?" |
42802 | What end can be attained, what purpose served by a proceeding of this nature? |
42802 | What exactly were his last words to you?" |
42802 | What happened after Doctor Forsyth''s visit?" |
42802 | What happened after the young lady-- did you say?--had gone?" |
42802 | What happened next?" |
42802 | What happens to me if I let you go? |
42802 | What has been stolen from where?" |
42802 | What has that hard- working, pleasure- shunning, late sportsman- banker, Brian Desmond, got to do with bridge parties?" |
42802 | What has''gone''?" |
42802 | What if the old lady-- her ladyship-- took out the stone, and when the pain at her heart caught her, let the blessed thing drop? |
42802 | What is it?" |
42802 | What is this stone, and to whom does it belong?" |
42802 | What is this? |
42802 | What made you ask?" |
42802 | What on earth makes you think that?" |
42802 | What shall we do with him,_ mes amis_? |
42802 | What time was it when young Wilson discovered the door of the bank unlatched?" |
42802 | What was the doctor''s verdict?" |
42802 | What will the charge be at the police court?" |
42802 | What''s that, Miss Parradine, the skeleton? |
42802 | What''s that, Mr. Belthouse, where is the statue? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that? |
42802 | What''s that?" |
42802 | What''s that?" |
42802 | What''s wrong? |
42802 | What''s wrong?" |
42802 | What-- what''s it like in there, anyway?" |
42802 | Whatever by?" |
42802 | When was the loss discovered, and how?" |
42802 | When was the murder discovered and who discovered it?" |
42802 | When you got downstairs with the inspector, Mr. Brent, did you happen to notice the safe or not?" |
42802 | When?" |
42802 | Where are we?" |
42802 | Where does it begin?" |
42802 | Where is it, pig of a cracksman, where, I say?" |
42802 | Where is there such an opening?" |
42802 | Where is this precious''Rose of Fire''? |
42802 | Where were you lunching?" |
42802 | Whether she went back while I was answering the''phone, I do n''t know....""Went back?" |
42802 | Who are you? |
42802 | Who could have been his confederate?" |
42802 | Who has been managing that little dodge, and-- how?" |
42802 | Who were they?" |
42802 | Who----?" |
42802 | Why did I suspect old Twells? |
42802 | Why did n''t I suspect Miss Vaudrot here? |
42802 | Why, what in the world----?" |
42802 | Why?" |
42802 | Williams?" |
42802 | Wilson, you understand you are to come with us? |
42802 | Without a struggle, and a man with whom she was deeply in love, at that?" |
42802 | Wot happened afterward?" |
42802 | Wot price Shanks''s mare for a bit, Jim? |
42802 | Wot price that church spire away over there to the left? |
42802 | Would it be too much to ask what the''general notion''is?" |
42802 | Would they live to emerge safe? |
42802 | Would you care to go in and have a look at it? |
42802 | Would you like to go in and examine it? |
42802 | Would you like to know how bells can be rung without hands or ropes, or wires, or anything of that sort, gentlemen? |
42802 | Would you like to see the Valehampton ghost laid, Captain? |
42802 | Would you mind telling me where your husband got them?" |
42802 | Yes, but the bells, Mr. Headland-- the bells?" |
42802 | You are tired, eh? |
42802 | You ask him for me, will you? |
42802 | You do n''t think that a fat old woman could have smuggled out the Capitoline Venus in her reticule, do you? |
42802 | You got the others all safe and sound, did n''t you?" |
42802 | You remember, you heard the sound of that pipe, Mr. Wilson? |
42802 | You saw me examine his nails? |
42802 | You understand me?" |
42802 | You would n''t mind letting it be understood when you go back, would you, that a couple of ordinary Yard men have been put on the case? |
42802 | You''re not insinuating that that boy murdered old Simmons, are you? |
42802 | You''re not supposing that Estelle got up and went down and drugged with chloroform a big strong man like Elton, are you? |
42802 | but we ai n''t goin''to be done out of_ this_''oliday, are we?" |
42802 | how should I know?" |
42802 | that hits the mark, does it? |
42802 | we''re slowing down, are n''t we? |
42802 | what about keys?" |
42802 | who''s this Johnnie, I wonder? |
9188 | By what name is thy bride known? 9188 What betrothal presents didst thou give? |
9188 | What said the old man, her father, when thou askedst for his pretty daughter? 9188 ( Mexico, 1583?) 9188 Are her eyes soft as the light of the moon? 9188 Didst thou understand her signs during the dance? 9188 In fine, Is there any such thing? 9188 Is she a strong woman? 9188 Is she beautiful? 9188 Mexico( 1599? 9188 When even a quite intelligent person hears aboutAboriginal American Literature,"he is very excusable for asking: What is meant by the term? |
9188 | Where is this literature? |
9188 | or 1601?). |
7431 | But who is he that prates of the culture of mankind, of better arts and life? 7431 If fifty dollars can be so easily earned,"I thought,"why not go on adding to my income in this way from time to time?" |
7431 | Shall we, then,he asks,"judge a country by the majority or by the minority? |
7431 | And how is this identification made possible? |
7431 | And upon what pretence do we ask any others? |
7431 | And what is an American novel except a novel treating of persons, places, and ideas from an American point of view? |
7431 | And what should be the manner of his death? |
7431 | And what then? |
7431 | Are these books French and English, or are they nondescript, or are they American? |
7431 | Are we to believe what they say, because they have lost their bodies? |
7431 | At last I said to him,''Will you move aside, please? |
7431 | Beat them, how? |
7431 | But does any such Democracy as he combats exist, or could it conceivably exist? |
7431 | But how about quality? |
7431 | But how( since he can no longer communicate with the world by means of his senses) is this idea to be insinuated? |
7431 | But in what does the purpose in question essentially consist? |
7431 | But is this reason reasonable? |
7431 | But what would this huge western continent be, if America-- the real America of the mind-- had no existence? |
7431 | Can we not be content to learn from Europe the graces, the refinements, the amenities of life, so long as we are able to teach her life itself? |
7431 | Does the man who"strikes"for higher wages desire it? |
7431 | Earth laughs in flowers at our boyish boastfulness, and asks"How am I theirs if they can not hold me, but I hold them?" |
7431 | For what is America? |
7431 | He ridicules our unsuspecting provincialism:"Have you seen the dozen great men of New York and Boston? |
7431 | He runs up to his mother and tells her about it; and has she ever seen fairies? |
7431 | How answer your question before you ask it, and describe to you your most secret thoughts and actions? |
7431 | How is such misapprehension on his part possible? |
7431 | How paralyze your strength with a look, heal your wound with a touch, or cause your bullet to rebound harmless from my unprotected flesh? |
7431 | How shall I call spirits from the vasty deep, and make you see and hear and feel them? |
7431 | How shall I visit the other side of the moon, jump through the ring of Saturn, and gather sunflowers in Sirius? |
7431 | How shall I walk on the air, sink through the earth, pass through stone walls, or walk, dry- shod, on the floor of the ocean? |
7431 | How to make myself visible and invisible at will? |
7431 | How to present myself in two or more places at once? |
7431 | How was it with the makers of English literature? |
7431 | How, then, does the spiritists''Positive Revelation help the matter? |
7431 | In what, then, does its fascination consist? |
7431 | Is it simply a reproduction of one of these Eastern nationalities, which we are so fond of alluding to as effete? |
7431 | Is not every man sometimes a radical in politics? |
7431 | Is such a profession as this credible? |
7431 | Is the travail of a work of art the same thing as the making of a pair of shoes? |
7431 | Moreover, by what touchstone shall we test the veracity of the self- appointed purveyors of this Positive Revelation? |
7431 | Now, what is to be understood from this passage? |
7431 | Or who, with accent bolder, dare praise the freedom- loving mountaineer? |
7431 | The American bear and bison, the cimmaron and the elk, the wolf and the''coon-- where will they be a generation hence? |
7431 | The man is magnetized-- that is to say, insulated; how can we have intercourse with him? |
7431 | The time, the age, what is that, but a few prominent persons and a few active persons who epitomize the times? |
7431 | They may never have visited these shores, or even heard of them; but what of that? |
7431 | This being conceded, what meaning would there be in designing works of art? |
7431 | To what good end? |
7431 | What are these Irish fellow- creatures doing here? |
7431 | What difference can it make what the subject of the writing is? |
7431 | What does Mr. Mallock expect? |
7431 | What had an unfortunate novelist of those days to fall back upon? |
7431 | What is an American book? |
7431 | What is the course of study, what are the ways and means whereby such persons accomplish such results? |
7431 | What is the will, and how does it produce such a result? |
7431 | What more can you want? |
7431 | What must one do, in short, in order to become a magician? |
7431 | What sort of a man, for example, must the hero be to fall into and remain in such an error regarding the character of the heroine? |
7431 | What, then, will be the character of the faith which the Positive Revelation has furnished him? |
7431 | Wherefore? |
7431 | Who can state the mission and effect of Emerson more tersely and aptly than those words do it? |
7431 | Who does desire it? |
7431 | Why should I speak of him as an American? |
7431 | Why should the novelist make believe that the wicked are punished and the good are rewarded in this world? |
7431 | Why, then, does he not so choose? |
7431 | Will the human intellect acquire a power before which all mysteries shall become transparent? |
7431 | the jackals of the negro- holder.... What boots thy zeal, O glowing friend, that would indignant rend the northland from the South? |
9592 | What works of Mr. Baxter shall I read? |
9592 | She was greatly excited, and exclaimed, as she laid down the book,"Why can not I write a novel?" |
45636 | A Chinaman? |
45636 | A motor accident, was n''t it?... 45636 A tiring day, Uncle?" |
45636 | Although Wu Ling actually won back the statue Gregory took home with him? |
45636 | An invalid, eh? |
45636 | An old family? |
45636 | And Sir James,he enquired;"has he been down this week?" |
45636 | And here? |
45636 | And if the jewels should be discovered? |
45636 | And now please tell, where Images? |
45636 | And of my suspicions? |
45636 | And risk getting blown to pieces? |
45636 | And the Images? |
45636 | And the Images? |
45636 | And the ship sails? |
45636 | And the young lady-- his niece? |
45636 | And what about the son? |
45636 | And what happened? |
45636 | And who are you? |
45636 | And who might he be? |
45636 | And why not indeed? |
45636 | And you miss nothing of value in any other part of the house, sir? |
45636 | And you say that that Image is now at Ballaston Hall? |
45636 | And you yourself have never been in this room? 45636 And you? |
45636 | Any family? |
45636 | Anything else? |
45636 | Anything of value gone? |
45636 | Are n''t you just a little inclined to be cynical to- night? |
45636 | Are they in any particular danger? |
45636 | Are you Wu Abst, the river pirate? |
45636 | Are you a native of these parts? |
45636 | Are you coming down or going up or rooted? |
45636 | Are you in earnest? |
45636 | Body or Soul? |
45636 | Both? |
45636 | But do n''t you want them? |
45636 | But how the devil do you know? |
45636 | But is this Image really of great value? |
45636 | But the Image? |
45636 | But what have they done? |
45636 | But when? |
45636 | But why do you need money? 45636 But why not?" |
45636 | But, my dear sir,he pointed out,"what possible place of concealment could there be in, say, this particular Image? |
45636 | Condition? |
45636 | Dad, was that a dream? |
45636 | Did it do her no good at all? |
45636 | Did kindness,he asked bluntly,"prompt him to take you away from your husband?" |
45636 | Did you bring home any treasures from China, Gregory? |
45636 | Did you recognise the man? |
45636 | Did you say Endacott? |
45636 | Did you see him? |
45636 | Did you see me? |
45636 | Did your informant specify the door which was made use of? |
45636 | Disturbed at all during the night, Morton? |
45636 | Do n''t you think it would be a good idea? |
45636 | Do n''t you think it would be a sin to have it all broken up? |
45636 | Do n''t you understand? 45636 Do you believe in them?" |
45636 | Do you know Sir Bertram''s son, Gregory? |
45636 | Do you know them? |
45636 | Do you mean to say that you did n''t do it, Greg? |
45636 | Do you mean to tell me that you did n''t know about it? |
45636 | Does it matter? |
45636 | Does she live quite alone? |
45636 | Doubts? 45636 Everything all right again?" |
45636 | Fond of games? |
45636 | For what purpose? |
45636 | From a poacher? |
45636 | From what part of the world, might I ask, Mr. Johnson, do you come? |
45636 | Gone to London, has he? |
45636 | Has Mr. Kershaw examined the position so far as regards the Romneys and the three Gainsboroughs? |
45636 | Has any one been talking to you? |
45636 | Has he been caught? 45636 Has the old gentleman been exercising his malevolent influence upon you?" |
45636 | Have one? |
45636 | Have the family a town house? |
45636 | Have you any shopping to do, beyond your visit to the hairdresser? |
45636 | Have you been with Aunt Angèle all this time? |
45636 | Have you brought me any information? |
45636 | Have you ever dined more strangely? |
45636 | Have you taken a fancy to my companion? |
45636 | He got away then? |
45636 | He knew to whom the property belonged before he took the house, I suppose? |
45636 | He really means to come then? |
45636 | How are they getting at you? |
45636 | How can I trade? |
45636 | How could I? |
45636 | How did he seem? |
45636 | How do you know that? |
45636 | How many servants are there sleeping in the house? |
45636 | How old are you, Claire? |
45636 | How the mischief did this Mr. Johnson get hold of a private detective at a moment''s notice? |
45636 | How''s that? |
45636 | How, useless? |
45636 | How? |
45636 | I do n''t look like a superstitious man, do I, Miss Besant? |
45636 | I gather that no clue or motive of any sort has been discovered? |
45636 | I hope that you are still content with the neighbourhood, Miss Besant? |
45636 | I wonder if he knows anything about your new possession, Gregory? |
45636 | I wonder when he''ll be back? |
45636 | I wonder whether there is anything in the world,he murmured,"which would ever induce Henry to diverge from a habit?" |
45636 | I wonder whether you would care to come? 45636 I wonder who the devil it can be at this time of the night?" |
45636 | If he were one of these paid spies,Mr. Craske enquired,"who were paying him?" |
45636 | If it is not an impertinent question, sir,he proceeded,"is it true that Johnson and Company are relinquishing the business?" |
45636 | If there is any truth in the story,Major Holmes suggested,"why do n''t you break them up?" |
45636 | If this is true,Gregory asked bluntly,"what is the use of my taking one to England and leaving the other here in this warehouse?" |
45636 | If you were told that some one had left this house at about three o''clock and gone down to the Great House, what should you have to say about it? |
45636 | In a way,he ventured,"the Image which you have locked up there, the Image which you call the Soul, rather belongs to me, do n''t you think? |
45636 | In any case, if you were only out of the room for a few minutes, who could have entered without your seeing them? |
45636 | In here? |
45636 | In what way? |
45636 | In which Image? |
45636 | Is Miss Endacott expected here? |
45636 | Is Miss Endacott in a similar predicament? |
45636 | Is he altogether Chinese? |
45636 | Is he too a recluse or an invalid? |
45636 | Is it Uncle? |
45636 | Is it my fancy,she asked,"or are you rather a strange person?" |
45636 | Is it really as bad as that? |
45636 | Is my bath ready? |
45636 | Is n''t it wonderful? |
45636 | Is she-- er-- inclined to be sociable? |
45636 | Is that a fact? |
45636 | Is that so? |
45636 | Is that why you sent it me home in such a hurry? |
45636 | Is there any other way out at all? |
45636 | Is there anything I can do for you before I go? |
45636 | Is there no other thing but money to be desired amongst you of the West,Wu Ling asked,"that even in youth you risk so much?" |
45636 | It makes the world seem a small place, does n''t it? |
45636 | It means breaking the entail, I suppose? |
45636 | It''s true then, what they are saying? |
45636 | Just why, at the present moment? |
45636 | Last night? 45636 Leaving out the other improbabilities, could its possession be considered as a possible incentive for the perpetration of such an atrocious crime?" |
45636 | Let''s sell it then? |
45636 | Lord love us, you do n''t suppose I want to stand in the way of your duty, Holmes? |
45636 | Madame? |
45636 | Major Holmes is examining the servants? |
45636 | May I ask your name, sir? |
45636 | May I be privileged,he asked,"to smoke one more of your excellent cigarettes? |
45636 | May I? 45636 Might one enquire then, whilst congratulating ourselves upon your choice, what made you select this particular part of the world for your abode?" |
45636 | Miss Besant still going on all right? |
45636 | More trouble? |
45636 | My dear fellow,he expostulated,"how the deuce can any of us help you? |
45636 | Nothing could make my reputation in the County worse than it is, could it, Borroughes? |
45636 | Nothing was taken from the room then, I suppose? |
45636 | Now what the devil is it this time, Holmes? |
45636 | Now, look here, young fellow,he went on, putting his hand on Gregory''s shoulder,"how old are you?" |
45636 | Of cheerful disposition? |
45636 | Perhaps you care buy some curios? |
45636 | Puncture? |
45636 | Ralph? |
45636 | Rawson,he asked,"do you know any one-- any man-- who could have left this house between midnight and three or say four o''clock this morning?" |
45636 | Seems queer, does n''t it, if that was all, that there should be bars on the windows and a double lock on the door? |
45636 | Shall I come with you? |
45636 | Ship not gone? |
45636 | Sir Bertram, I suppose, has been extravagant? |
45636 | Surely that''s a very unusual thing in this country? |
45636 | Surely,he ventured at last,"we have met before?" |
45636 | Tell me then-- there is n''t really any fear that all this may have to go? |
45636 | Tell me what has happened? |
45636 | Tell me what it is? |
45636 | Tell me your aunt''s name? |
45636 | Tell me, Mr. Ballaston,the girl asked,"have you looked at your Image yet, the one you have on the ship?" |
45636 | Tell me, tell me what it is? |
45636 | That''s what you like; to see me drink, is n''t it? |
45636 | The Squire? |
45636 | The story? |
45636 | Then the other Image----? |
45636 | Then why on earth did you come to Market Ballaston? |
45636 | Then why,he asked,"do you feel so strongly upon the matter? |
45636 | Then you do n''t believe in your own allegory? |
45636 | Then you really do n''t know what has been taken? |
45636 | There is nothing I can do for you? |
45636 | They have not returned, our porters? |
45636 | They spend most of their time down here then, I suppose? |
45636 | Things here are pretty bad? |
45636 | Through Mr. Endacott, I think you said? |
45636 | Was Sir Bertram very much in love with her? |
45636 | Was anything missing? 45636 Was he very depressed?" |
45636 | We ca n''t go on much longer without money, can we, Borroughes? |
45636 | We understand one another? |
45636 | Well, Doctor? |
45636 | Well, Gregory, old man, you could n''t quite bring it off then? |
45636 | Well, I''ve told you, have n''t I, the story of my rescue on the river by Wu Ling? |
45636 | Well, Major? |
45636 | Well, if you have made up your mind to go,Sir Bertram said,"why not? |
45636 | Well, my dutiful brother? |
45636 | Well,he enquired,"have you found the fortune yet?" |
45636 | Well,he said,"I''m a pretty obvious sort of person, are n''t I?" |
45636 | Well? |
45636 | Well? |
45636 | What about all the treasures of Peru and Mexico, brought into the old world? 45636 What about it?" |
45636 | What about my life? |
45636 | What about that last manuscript? |
45636 | What about the Image, which is at present in our possession? 45636 What are you going to do with it?" |
45636 | What are you going to do with that? |
45636 | What can I do about it? |
45636 | What could I do? |
45636 | What counts money? |
45636 | What do I know? |
45636 | What do the police say about it? |
45636 | What do you ask? |
45636 | What do you mean by that? |
45636 | What do you mean, too late? |
45636 | What do you suppose brought me out here on an enterprise like this? 45636 What do you suppose this Mr. Johnson has got to do with it all, Mr. Rawson, that he''s putting his oar in?" |
45636 | What do you think about it? |
45636 | What do you think of it yourself? |
45636 | What do you think of this, Cloutson? |
45636 | What does it matter? 45636 What else can it be?" |
45636 | What have you been doing all day then? |
45636 | What have you done? 45636 What is it, Nunks dear?" |
45636 | What is that horrible- looking wooden Image in Uncle Henry''s room? |
45636 | What is the charge? |
45636 | What is there to think? |
45636 | What is your business with me? |
45636 | What key is that? |
45636 | What new thunderbolt are you going to launch? |
45636 | What of this prisoner of yours? |
45636 | What should I think of him? |
45636 | What sort of a fellow is this new tenant of ours? |
45636 | What sort of a man was this predecessor of mine? |
45636 | What the mischief can it matter to you? |
45636 | What time did you tell Holmes you would leave? |
45636 | What was it? |
45636 | What words other than hard can be spoken of such? |
45636 | What''s wrong with you, young fellow? |
45636 | What''s your name? |
45636 | When does he go abroad? |
45636 | When one gets over the spell of this lotuslike existence,she asked him,"what is there to do here-- in the way of exercise, I mean?" |
45636 | When shall I be able to finish your packing, sir? |
45636 | Where are these infernal Images? |
45636 | Where did you get hold of this cock- and- bull story, Holmes? |
45636 | Where did you get it? |
45636 | Where did you get it? |
45636 | Where does one buy horses? |
45636 | Where have you been all day, child? |
45636 | Where have you been then? |
45636 | Where on earth did the police get hold of their information? |
45636 | Where the hell did that come from? |
45636 | Where was the key last night? 45636 Where?" |
45636 | Which Image you have? |
45636 | Who are they? |
45636 | Who can tell? |
45636 | Who has it? |
45636 | Who was there? |
45636 | Whom did you get to read them? |
45636 | Whom else? |
45636 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
45636 | Why do you call it that? |
45636 | Why do you look at me as though you had never seen me before? |
45636 | Why do you want to come and live in a house in an out- of- the- way village like this-- a house, too, in which another man was murdered? 45636 Why for?" |
45636 | Why go into the history of the treasure? |
45636 | Why have you come here? |
45636 | Why not have this one broken up? |
45636 | Why not? |
45636 | Why not? |
45636 | Why not? |
45636 | Why not? |
45636 | Why on earth should I? 45636 Why selfish?" |
45636 | Why should I do that? |
45636 | Why should I have any? 45636 Why, indeed?" |
45636 | Why, what difference could that make? |
45636 | Why? |
45636 | Why? |
45636 | Will he wait until Gregory returns? |
45636 | Will you gentlemen follow me? |
45636 | Will you lend me the key, Wu Ling, or will you take us back yourself? |
45636 | Will you write down the address of your bankers,he invited,"to whom I may refer? |
45636 | Without money how buy? |
45636 | Would it be as well to wait for a moment? |
45636 | Would n''t that be very wonderful? |
45636 | Would the world be any the worse? |
45636 | Wu Ling? |
45636 | You are coming to England? |
45636 | You are not fool enough to be in love with him? |
45636 | You could n''t be a little more explicit? |
45636 | You did n''t hear any unusual sound in the night like a door opening or anything of that sort? |
45636 | You did n''t lend it to any one? |
45636 | You did n''t use it yourself? |
45636 | You did not mind coming, Ralph? |
45636 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you were mixed up in the Nilkaya affair? |
45636 | You do n''t mind our invading your sanctum for a minute or two, Henry? |
45636 | You found Image bad company? |
45636 | You had no communication from Mr. Borroughes this morning, I suppose? |
45636 | You had, perhaps, a proposition? |
45636 | You have had no wireless from your uncle or from the firm since you left? |
45636 | You have heard the story of my friend, Wu Ling? |
45636 | You have heard then? |
45636 | You have no further suggestions to make, I suppose? |
45636 | You mean that, Doctor? |
45636 | You think that his word it is broken,the latter asked,"broken to us who scorned even to watch him to the ship?" |
45636 | You think you get the jewels? |
45636 | You will come on Thursday? |
45636 | You wo n''t argue the matter? |
45636 | You''re not one of the Englishmen who looted the place? |
45636 | You''re not suggesting, I hope, that there is any kindness in driving you to Norwich? |
45636 | You''ve been out along with Mr. Gregory, sir? |
45636 | Your aunt all right to- day? |
45636 | Your uncle has found what he wanted in London then? |
45636 | Yun- Tse,she murmured,"the home of the Body and the Soul?" |
45636 | A county squire, however, finds few opportunities.--Off already, Borroughes?" |
45636 | Am I not right in saying, Mr. Endacott, that you could, if you would, assist us in the matter of obtaining those jewels?" |
45636 | And I do n''t mind telling you that I hate you,"he went on,"because----""Because?" |
45636 | And as for this burglar, who else except that pettifogging enquiry agent saw any one leave the Great House? |
45636 | And did you see the Inspector turn around and look across towards the Hall?" |
45636 | Any choice as to who turns the first card up?" |
45636 | Any news about the burglary, Major?" |
45636 | Anywhere where any one could have got hold of it?" |
45636 | Are n''t you going to play, Uncle Bertram?" |
45636 | Are you shocked at me for my materialism? |
45636 | Ballaston?" |
45636 | But how? |
45636 | But what does it all mean? |
45636 | By- the- by, Claire, you did n''t come down again last night after you had gone to bed, did you, or hear anything unusual?" |
45636 | By- the- by, did n''t I hear that Gregory Ballaston was going abroad again for some years?" |
45636 | By- the- by, there was nothing much stolen, was there? |
45636 | CHAPTER III"Well,"Claire exclaimed, laughing at Gregory Ballaston across the table,"how have you enjoyed your dinner?" |
45636 | CHAPTER V"Steward,"Gregory asked him, standing up in the centre of his stateroom, his hands behind his back,"do I look drunk?" |
45636 | Ca n''t we talk in a little more friendly fashion? |
45636 | Ca n''t you look as though you remembered that we are still brother and sister?" |
45636 | Can any of you suggest anything which might throw light upon the affair?" |
45636 | Can you help me? |
45636 | Could one trust any Chinaman, even though he has saved one''s life, with a secret like this? |
45636 | Did you love De Fourgenet?" |
45636 | Do n''t you love the stillness with just the throb of the engine?" |
45636 | Do n''t you sympathise with me for being rather glad to get away from here?" |
45636 | Do they set much store by them?" |
45636 | Do you honestly believe that at the present moment it is as it stands the receptacle for a portion of the jewels of the temple?" |
45636 | Do you know that you are still very beautiful, Angèle?" |
45636 | Do you know what Wu Ling, the Chinaman who rescued me and who apparently is one of the principals in the firm, suggested?" |
45636 | Do you mind, just for a moment?" |
45636 | Do you mind-- all on you-- when he pretended to be surprised about the murder? |
45636 | Do you mind?" |
45636 | Do you realise that he must know something about you or your family?" |
45636 | Do you remember a man-- a brave fellow he was-- who used to trade up the Yun- Tse River amongst the villages? |
45636 | Do you remember the day when he lunched here and he saw the Images?" |
45636 | Do you wish me to believe that it was chance, or, perhaps, morbid curiosity, or had you another reason?" |
45636 | Fielding?" |
45636 | For what? |
45636 | For what? |
45636 | For whom do you watch?" |
45636 | Gregory?" |
45636 | Had you met him?" |
45636 | Have I made myself quite clear?" |
45636 | Have you seen anything of Gregory?" |
45636 | He risked his life, did n''t he, a dozen times over? |
45636 | Henry?" |
45636 | How can I possibly, therefore, be of any interest to you?" |
45636 | How on earth did that get to the Hall?" |
45636 | How on earth is he likely to succeed, however, when you and Scotland Yard have failed?" |
45636 | How on earth should I, Madame''s companion, know or think anything about him?" |
45636 | I ask myself in wonder why I find you pleading for them? |
45636 | I do n''t suppose you''ve read much European history, have you?" |
45636 | I ought to know, ought n''t I? |
45636 | If it is true that there are a million pounds''worth of jewels in these images, what good can they possibly do to any one hidden there for centuries? |
45636 | If the story of this treasure is true and you can help them to get the jewels, why do n''t you? |
45636 | Is it money? |
45636 | Is it my fancy, or was n''t this place-- Market Ballaston-- the scene of some sort of a tragedy some time ago? |
45636 | Is it you who have been stirring up all this trouble?" |
45636 | Is that agreed?" |
45636 | Is there any clue?" |
45636 | Is this a fairy prince, Claire, or a very handsome young man in grey tweeds?" |
45636 | Is this the truth, Wu Abst, or am I to search your ship?" |
45636 | It is true, is n''t it, that you sit in your little office every day without stirring? |
45636 | It is, of course, impossible for Madame to come and see me-- would it be possible for me to call upon her?" |
45636 | It sounds like a page from somebody''s novel, does n''t it? |
45636 | It''s the devil''s own luck to lose Ballaston, but we''ve gone the limit, eh, Gregory, to try to keep it?" |
45636 | Johnson?" |
45636 | Johnson?" |
45636 | Johnson?" |
45636 | Johnson?" |
45636 | Miniature Buddhas, are n''t they?" |
45636 | One of the villagers?" |
45636 | Phillpots kept me some time at the British Museum, or I could really have caught the earlier train.--How is the piano?" |
45636 | Phillpots?" |
45636 | Queer situation, ai n''t it?" |
45636 | Query-- how do we live? |
45636 | Rawson, am I to be allowed a glass of the sherry? |
45636 | Rawson?" |
45636 | Sentiment, but hell all the same, is n''t it? |
45636 | Shall I read to you?" |
45636 | Shall we go down?" |
45636 | Shall we go in, Major? |
45636 | Shall you like it?" |
45636 | Sir Bertram demanded in bewilderment--"the second Image of the Soul? |
45636 | Smoke cigarette?" |
45636 | So tell me, child, what could we do with more money?" |
45636 | Supposing he wanted them? |
45636 | There was a dark shrub near the wire fence-- or was it a shrub? |
45636 | There''s nothing fresh, is there, Mr. Rawson, about the murder?" |
45636 | To take another man''s life-- have you thought what it means?" |
45636 | To whom do you consider that it belongs?" |
45636 | Uncle,"she went on, as he stepped through the window,"do you realise that Mr. Ballaston knows Aunt Angèle?" |
45636 | Was I a fool or am I a fool now?" |
45636 | Was I-- er-- misbehaving more than usual?" |
45636 | Was it his fancy, he wondered, or was there a faint note of sardonic disbelief in his even tone? |
45636 | We did n''t meet fifteen months ago in China-- Wu Ling-- the firm of Johnson and Company?" |
45636 | We''ve heard of jobs, Major, done from the inside, done by the victim, have n''t we? |
45636 | Were there any papers there that mattered?" |
45636 | Were you, by- the- by, personally acquainted with my unfortunate predecessor?" |
45636 | What about poker?" |
45636 | What about that?" |
45636 | What are you doing to everybody? |
45636 | What but real affection and kindness could bring him here day after day?" |
45636 | What do you do? |
45636 | What do you think of Gregory Ballaston?" |
45636 | What do you think, Claire?" |
45636 | What do you think?" |
45636 | What does it matter about letters?" |
45636 | What games do we both know?" |
45636 | What of the other, his companion?" |
45636 | What right have you to interfere, anyway? |
45636 | What was the chief reason which made you in the first instance come over to China on that mad adventure?" |
45636 | What will you do with your Image, young man, if you reach your country safely?" |
45636 | Where did it happen? |
45636 | Where did they come from? |
45636 | Where did you say he lived?" |
45636 | Where is your uncle?" |
45636 | Which do you think might hold the jewels-- the Body or the Soul?" |
45636 | Who asks? |
45636 | Who cares? |
45636 | Who is he? |
45636 | Who lives in the long, low house across the way from my garden gate?" |
45636 | Why are they such stay at homes?" |
45636 | Why did you choose this place?" |
45636 | Why did you come? |
45636 | Why do you ask me about keys at a moment like this? |
45636 | Why may n''t I help?" |
45636 | Why not?" |
45636 | Why should I not choose to come and live a quiet life in Market Ballaston? |
45636 | Why should I waste my time? |
45636 | Why should he?" |
45636 | Why wait, Wu Ling?" |
45636 | Why?" |
45636 | Will you excuse me if I hurry you downstairs now? |
45636 | Will you marry me, Claire, as soon as we reach England, and my father and your uncle can meet and give their consent? |
45636 | Will you promise me one thing, Miss Besant?" |
45636 | Will you promise me that you will not go away without seeing me?" |
45636 | Without gold, how can buy?" |
45636 | Wo n''t you smoke?" |
45636 | Yet, after all, why should there be any secrecy? |
45636 | You came back in Wu Ling''s trading schooner, did n''t you?" |
45636 | You have n''t seen it yet, Borroughes, have you?" |
45636 | You know the legend?" |
45636 | You know the story of the last tenant here?" |
45636 | You know what happened?" |
45636 | You mind the young man Fielding, who called himself a retired schoolmaster and sat in the corner pretending to make flies?" |
45636 | You think that in the first instance they were probably stolen?" |
45636 | You were of Oxford, young man?" |
45636 | You will not think it impertinent?" |
45636 | You would n''t say that I was a popular person on board, would you, Perkins?" |
45636 | You''ve never been affected before like this, have you?" |
8896 | A pamphlet of Abbé_ Sieyés_, in answer to the question,"What is the Third Estate?" |
8896 | Already a far heavier sentence had been passed, and was hanging over a man''s head: before that fell, why should he not take a little pleasure?" |
8896 | But what matters the ingratitude of men? |
8896 | But when he saw the flashing eyes of the old general, and heard him cry,"Fellow, darest thou kill_ Caius Marius_?" |
8896 | How should the duchies be disposed of? |
8896 | Later still, apparently not earlier than the ninth century B.C., the_ Chaldoeans_( of Semitic stock?) |
8896 | THE MEANING OF HISTORY.--A thoughtful student can hardly fail to propose to himself the question,"What is the meaning of history? |
8896 | Their alphabet( invented by them?) |
8896 | Then lived a famous public officer,_ Yang Chên_, who, when asked to take a bribe, and assured that no one would know it, answered,"How so? |
8896 | There a priest named_ John Ball_ harangued them on the equality of rights, from the text,-- When Adam delved, and Eve span, Who was then a gentleman? |
8896 | This is not the place to consider the question, What was the primitive religion of man? |
8896 | Was Heaven, or Shang- ti-- or the Lord-- the visible heaven, the expanse above, clothed with the attribute of personality? |
8896 | Was the principle of heredity to come back? |
8896 | What but debasement could come from the worship of Astarte and the Phoenician El? |
8896 | What might then have been the subsequent course of European history? |
8896 | What survives of all these violent and arbitrary works? |
8896 | Who would be willing to sacrifice himself to the law of honor when he knew not whether he would ever live to be held in honor? |
8896 | Why is this long drama with all that is noble and joyous in it, and with its abysses of sin and misery, enacted at all?" |
8896 | _ Anaximander_( 611-? |
8896 | |+--C. Werner(?) |
8567 | What is the purpose of the smoke? 8567 (?) 8567 But what makes you sell land in the dark? 8567 Can then your mind be at ease when you are weeping on your way? 8567 Did we ever receive any part of the price, even the value of a pipe- stem from you? 8567 Did you ever tell us that you had sold this land? 8567 From_ ohni_, C., what? 8567 How then can your mind be at ease? 8567 Katykenh[ kadikenh], how then? 8567 Kendonsayedane(?) 8567 Nakwah,(?) 8567 Nayeghnyasakenradake,(?) 8567 Ne katykcnh nayoyaneratye ne sanikonra? 8567 Ne katykenh nayuyaneratye ne sanikonra desakaghserentonyonne? 8567 Niutercnhhatye(?) 8567 Oghnonekenh, dismayed(?) 8567 Ottinawahoten ne oyengwaetakwit? 8567 Thadenyedane(? 8567 What nation or confederacy of civilized Europe can show an exemption from domestic strife for so long a term? 8567 _ Aseñon_(? 8567 _ Deyohhagwente_( Onon.,_ Tyohagwente_),open voice"(?) |
8567 | _ Kenni-- ha_, C., small,_ kanahses_,(?) |
7966 | And who is thy God? |
7966 | Who can tell for what high cause This darling of the Gods was born? |
7966 | ''But where are there any?'' |
7966 | ''Dost thou know what he says?'' |
7966 | ''It has been the death of its mother; now she is gone, who will suckle it?''" |
7966 | ''May I turn the platter?'' |
7966 | ''On which side shall it fall?'' |
7966 | ''What are you doing there, children?'' |
7966 | ''What is the matter before the court?'' |
7966 | ''Why should it live?'' |
7966 | ''Will he come? |
7966 | (? |
7966 | 182):--"Where did you come from, baby dear? |
7966 | 31- 33,"Will father be a goat, then, mother?" |
7966 | 32):--"My first- born; where art thou? |
7966 | A classical example is the question of the Low German child:--"Kukuk van Hewen,"Wi lank sail ik lewen?'' |
7966 | A platter is brought in, and a child, rising, asks the judge,''May I go into the middle of the room?'' |
7966 | A''are guid lasses, but where do a''the ill wives come frae? |
7966 | Are you separated from the object of your love? |
7966 | As soon as the light is let in upon him, he stops dancing, looks up suddenly, and exclaims,''Well, what is it? |
7966 | But do you know what you are to do? |
7966 | But what am I? |
7966 | Daddy- nuts,_ Tilia sp._(?). |
7966 | Do you wish to know if that dear one is thinking of you? |
7966 | Have they sent any messages?''" |
7966 | How are they all up above? |
7966 | If a child asks, when it sees that its parent is going out,"Am I not going, too?" |
7966 | If you had been her mother, what would you have done or said to Jennie?" |
7966 | It is said that one morning, while with his mother in the cave in which they were hiding from Nimrod, he asked his mother,"Who is my God?" |
7966 | Look into our childish faces; See you not our willing hearts? |
7966 | Looking up to it, she said,''Why can not you come down and let my child have a bit of you?'' |
7966 | Mother of thousands,_ Tradescantia crassifolia_(?). |
7966 | POLLE, F.: Wie denkt das Volk fiber die Sprache? |
7966 | R-- Richard S-- sews T-- slippers U-- Uethet V-- Volkert W-- waeder? |
7966 | SCHELL, O.: Woher kommen die Kinder? |
7966 | SUNDERMANN, F.: Woher kommen die Kinder? |
7966 | Seem I not as tender to him As any mother? |
7966 | Shakespeare has said:--"What''s in a name? |
7966 | The good mother says not"Will you?" |
7966 | Then they talked together, and the youngest said:''Why should I wait? |
7966 | U-- Fetches V-- Volkert W-- water? |
7966 | Wer darf das Kind beim rechten Namen nennen? |
7966 | What is it that you are brawling about?'' |
7966 | What is wanted?'' |
7966 | What shall we say of that art, highest of all human accomplishments, in the exercise of which men have become almost as gods? |
7966 | When a sister or brother asks:"Where did the little_ swan- child_"--for so babies are called--"come from?" |
7966 | When the boy had been lying in his lap for a while, he again burst out:''What is it I now see? |
7966 | When the question is asked a Mecklenburger, concerning a social gathering:"Who was there?" |
7966 | Whither is my pet gone-- She who absorbed all my love-- She whom I had hoped To fill with ancestral wisdom? |
7966 | Who has not had his mother say:"Does it hurt? |
7966 | Who should not know your origin? |
7966 | ["Cuckoo of Heaven, How long am I to live?"] |
7966 | of the fiery pit, And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird Carries the water that quenches it? |
7966 | what is it I see? |
984 | Address:? |
984 | Ambition: Subjects without guns? |
984 | Ambition:(?). |
984 | Past:(?) |
984 | Publications: Poems, tragedies, and comedies(?). |
984 | Recreation: After 11.45 P. M. Epitaph: When Will There Be Another Like Her? |
9173 | What would you like to be in an imaginary new city? |
9173 | Who,asks Swift,"were the forty- one above him?" |
9173 | But is it a gain to substitute a letter for a visit, to try to give written precedence over spoken forms? |
9173 | Here the child reverences what is not understood as authority, and to the childish"Why?" |
9173 | How now should this common element of union be taught? |
9173 | How then can we ever hope to secure proper training for the will? |
9173 | Is heaven a bribe? |
9173 | Is it the warm sun? |
9173 | Miss Patterson[20] collated the answers of 2,237 children to the question"What does 1895 mean?" |
9173 | The end had ceased to charm, and how could there ever again be any interest in the means? |
9173 | Twenty- three shock expletives, e.g., are,"Would n''t that---- you?" |
9173 | We should ask, however, What is nature''s way at this stage of life? |
9173 | Where is due the weariness or satiety? |
9173 | Why did all profess and no one believe religion? |
9173 | Why is God so stern and yet so partial, and how about the Trinity? |
9173 | [ 26] Is it the sweetness of flowers? |
47141 | A real baby you have? |
47141 | Ah, who knows? |
47141 | Alfred, how did you get home the other night? 47141 All right, dear, and now what are you going to do with the pair since they are born?" |
47141 | And what in the world do you mean by saying that we shall never marry? |
47141 | Are n''t some men small potatoes? |
47141 | Are n''t those eggs delicious? |
47141 | Are you going to give us another pony- ballet tonight? 47141 Are you so silly and ignorant as to fancy that you can step out of Madame Ash''s solfeggi class straight to the footlights? |
47141 | At the Arena? |
47141 | Besides,pursued Alfred, thoroughly aroused,"is n''t it time to give literature a breathing- spell from this infernal sex- humbuggery? |
47141 | Cider? 47141 Did n''t Nietzsche assert that Christianity and alcohol have been the two great means of corruption and still are the worst foes of civilization?" |
47141 | Did n''t you say that you had to change mistresses every three months? 47141 Did you see Milt recently"? |
47141 | Different, my dear? |
47141 | Do n''t mind my entering in this rude fashion, do you? 47141 Do n''t you remember the white horse of Brunnhilde in''Siegfried''?" |
47141 | Does Alfred know the news? |
47141 | Does that young lady know the ropes? |
47141 | Has she a banker? 47141 How about the Litany of Satan"? |
47141 | How forbidden? |
47141 | How many, five or six? |
47141 | I say, Ulick,remarked Paul,"you do draw the longbow, do n''t you, about sex- worship? |
47141 | I think it was the one who plays the violoncello-- or should I say,''cello, Stone? 47141 If you love Mona, why not tell her so? |
47141 | Is n''t she a queen? |
47141 | Is she a great actress this Marthe Brandès? |
47141 | Is that all? |
47141 | Is that the rich Mr. Godard I read of in the newspapers? |
47141 | It''s you, is it? |
47141 | Jewel,she said meditatively regarding him,"Jewel, why do n''t you write a novel?" |
47141 | La pudeur? 47141 May I?" |
47141 | Oh, yes, anybody knows that, but why am I different from other girls? |
47141 | Sir critic, when you have made all the specifications, registered the shortcomings, wo n''t you please say something? 47141 So Mister Paul came across with you, did he?" |
47141 | So that was your game, was it, to go hell- splitting through the town and get rid of my darling friend? |
47141 | The night of your début? |
47141 | Ulick? 47141 Was she the cause of the duel?" |
47141 | We must have swilled a bathtub of liquid this afternoon over at Meyer''s in Hoboken, eh, Alfred? |
47141 | Well, Ulick, how goes the culture of that famous ego of yours? |
47141 | Well, why not? 47141 Well?" |
47141 | What did she wait for? |
47141 | What did you and Mary row about? |
47141 | What do they pay accompanists by the hour? |
47141 | What has your religion to do with my projected books? |
47141 | What is life? 47141 What name did you call him?" |
47141 | What night is n''t all night with you? |
47141 | What shall I do? 47141 What sort of looking young gentleman was it?" |
47141 | What time shall I call for you tomorrow? |
47141 | What you my baby Jewel drunk? 47141 What''s become of Dora that Paul used to rave over, or was it you, Jewel?" |
47141 | What''s morality got to do with art? |
47141 | What''s nice about it? |
47141 | What''s the difference? |
47141 | What''s the matter? |
47141 | What''s this? |
47141 | What''s up, little mamma? |
47141 | What''s up? |
47141 | What-- you do n''t know that Lehmann has sung the Queen in Huguenots, Filina in Mignon? 47141 Where are you off to, old top?" |
47141 | Where did you get that notion? 47141 Where do you live?" |
47141 | Where have you chaps been this hot afternoon? |
47141 | Where in the world are you off to so late, Mona? 47141 Which one"? |
47141 | Which wife? |
47141 | Who is Invern? |
47141 | Who is this Walt Whitman? 47141 Who said that?" |
47141 | Who told her? 47141 Who told you about her"? |
47141 | Who was it then? |
47141 | Who was? |
47141 | Why be cynical, even if you have heard it so often? 47141 Why do you call him Escargot? |
47141 | Why do you think I''ll never write artistic books? |
47141 | Why drag in alcohol? |
47141 | Why not? 47141 Why such an unusual name?" |
47141 | Why? 47141 Wo n''t you be the father of our twins?" |
47141 | Yes, but darling girl, the chief bother to me is what will your parents say-- or do-- to me? 47141 Yes, did n''t I tell you? |
47141 | You have n''t ordered, have you, Miss Milton? |
47141 | You here? |
47141 | You of course, how can you ask? |
47141 | You wo n''t mind, Paul, will you? 47141 You''re not well these days, are you? |
47141 | ''Do you hear what the trees are telling us?'' |
47141 | A detestable character? |
47141 | A virgin? |
47141 | A warning? |
47141 | Admitted, but what has that to do with the vitality of his characters, the validity of his portraiture? |
47141 | After I lost you this afternoon at the Everett House"--"Lost me at the Everett?" |
47141 | After a pause, she said:"Ulick, our children, our dream- children, they are born at last, and they are loved by their parents, are they not?" |
47141 | Alfred again? |
47141 | Alone? |
47141 | Am I fond of the girl? |
47141 | Am I purer in New York? |
47141 | And for heaven''s sake why did he bring in the name of Easter? |
47141 | And how are you, Stone? |
47141 | And how in the world did you break in? |
47141 | And if I do write, where shall I send the letter? |
47141 | And is n''t she grateful? |
47141 | And men? |
47141 | And the money? |
47141 | And what are you going to do in New York?" |
47141 | And what shall I say to her? |
47141 | And what will our dear old Easter, the celebrated Wagner singer, Istar, say when she hears that her young man has deserted her?" |
47141 | And why did he dream of Mona Milton, Mona of all girls, instead of Easter-- or Dora? |
47141 | And why the sudden interest in Easter Brandès? |
47141 | And, then, does n''t all this interest in a woman''s chastity sicken you? |
47141 | Are n''t you from the South, from Richmond-- Miss Brandès?" |
47141 | Are there any ugly women? |
47141 | Are they so differently constructed? |
47141 | Are you behaving honourably towards her, Ulick? |
47141 | Are you still smitten?" |
47141 | As he left the taxi at the club the man confidentially whispered:"Some girl, that?" |
47141 | At the casual reference to Easter she asked:"What sort of a girl is this Easter-- what''s her real name?" |
47141 | At the present rate-- she will be singing Wagner in a couple of years... Alfred, you think she has no temperament? |
47141 | Beauty? |
47141 | Bell, where do you get your novel ideas"? |
47141 | Beloved? |
47141 | Big heart? |
47141 | Brilliant? |
47141 | But Istar? |
47141 | But do you love your country?" |
47141 | But good- tempered, irrepressible Paul exclaimed:"I say, Invern, we do coincide in our tastes, do n''t we?" |
47141 | But how could the Church get souls were it not for this same fornication, despised and berated? |
47141 | But if I relapse, as I am sure to do? |
47141 | But jealousy over Dora? |
47141 | But those children of flesh and blood were not treated with the same sort of love the dream- children had received"--"Dream- children?" |
47141 | But what can she do? |
47141 | But what mattered that? |
47141 | But what was he going to do with the lady? |
47141 | But what''s the difference if I can hold his baby and mine to my breast? |
47141 | But who placed your voice did you say?" |
47141 | Ca n''t I mention Easter''s name without you rearing on your hind legs? |
47141 | Ca n''t you cuddle me a little bit?" |
47141 | Can you beat it? |
47141 | Conceited? |
47141 | Convictions are prisons, you know?" |
47141 | Could n''t Milt take that meal with him? |
47141 | Could she be permitted to go to Dora''s room by way of the balcony? |
47141 | Curiously he asked:"But Easter, how did you get in here?" |
47141 | Did he do it on purpose, just to annoy her? |
47141 | Did he really long for her presence, or was it pure fancy, rather, unmitigated curiosity? |
47141 | Did n''t Ulick notice how sensible were his suggestions? |
47141 | Did you ever meet him? |
47141 | Did you ever see such a bunch of cards?" |
47141 | Did you make it up?" |
47141 | Did you yarn for Milt''s benefit or is it all gospel truth?" |
47141 | Dismissing this mean suggestion, he posed the naked question:"Shall or sha n''t I write to Mona? |
47141 | Do n''t I love babies? |
47141 | Do they fit? |
47141 | Do you force me to stick to Hannah More or Self- Help? |
47141 | Do you know that?" |
47141 | Do you speak French?" |
47141 | Do you suppose that Ulick will tumble over when she returns"? |
47141 | Does he even love his grovelling earth- creatures"? |
47141 | Does he teach Wagner rôles? |
47141 | Does it still hurt?" |
47141 | Does n''t Alfred dine here any more? |
47141 | Drinking? |
47141 | Esther Brandès? |
47141 | Fiction or criticism, or both? |
47141 | Freedom for what? |
47141 | From the rising of the curtain when she hurls her angry disdainful:"Wer wagt mich zu hohnen?" |
47141 | Go home, go back to New York, you are deracinated in Paris, as my brilliant friend, Maurice Barrès puts it-- what, have n''t you read Barrès? |
47141 | Go to confession, get down on my marrow- bones and say''mea culpa''? |
47141 | Great artists? |
47141 | Had n''t we better be going?" |
47141 | Had she? |
47141 | Had the miserable spy, Alfred, given her a hint of Dora? |
47141 | Have n''t you read Charles Lamb''s description of his dream- children, the children he never fathered-- only dreamed of?" |
47141 | Have you been saving up for me during these years?" |
47141 | Have you written much in English? |
47141 | He called,"Paulchen, is that you?" |
47141 | He felt ill. Could n''t the city department get someone to cover the operetta? |
47141 | He grimly smiled:"A critic who has to listen to rotten singers is n''t working, is he? |
47141 | He seemed puzzled, as if he were about to blurt out,"Then what the devil did you come for?" |
47141 | He shook Ulick''s hand, crying:"You know Thomas à Kempis, too? |
47141 | He went over to Ulick and said:"What''s the matter with you? |
47141 | His friend was in the fumoir-- you know, the geistlicher Herr-- the maid giggled--"What reverend sir?" |
47141 | His only answer was"Qui sait?" |
47141 | How about correspondence? |
47141 | How are you, and how is your very good brother? |
47141 | How could she go away and write those dear little unworldly people? |
47141 | How d''ye do, Ulick? |
47141 | How dare you quote that vilest of pagans, Petronius Arbiter, almost in the same breath with the divine à Kempis?" |
47141 | How did he find that out? |
47141 | How did she do it? |
47141 | How do, bishop? |
47141 | How long would she remain one in his corrupting company? |
47141 | How much did Easter know? |
47141 | How much had Alfred told her? |
47141 | How to enter a dining- room full of strangers? |
47141 | How unlike other women? |
47141 | I have already a real child, did n''t I tell you?" |
47141 | I speak Italian, without an accent, my teacher said--""Without an Italian accent, he meant?" |
47141 | I was too late.... Of what use now my travail, my countless preparations? |
47141 | I wonder if she suspects?" |
47141 | I wonder if women feel the same? |
47141 | I wonder what Easter is doing now? |
47141 | I wonder what Easter-- no I mean Mona-- is doing now? |
47141 | I wonder what Milt would say if he could peep into my brain at this moment? |
47141 | I wonder what that girl is doing now? |
47141 | I wonder whether Ulick really was in earnest about our dream- children? |
47141 | I''m glad you came home to your mamma-- what''s the matter?" |
47141 | I''ve come back to you, have n''t I Madame?" |
47141 | If I could only have two dream- children"--"Who is to be the father?" |
47141 | If a man can run around, having a good time, and not be reproached with his loose- living, why, by the same token, ca n''t a woman?" |
47141 | If it''s right for the men to go philandering, why is n''t it right for the women? |
47141 | If only Dostoievsky, the greatest psychologist since Balzac, had mastered the compression of Turgenev? |
47141 | If, as the Bible says, fornication is a rank sin, why do a few words mumbled over a man and woman by a clergyman or magistrate make it less a sin? |
47141 | Illegitimate? |
47141 | Imprudent? |
47141 | In what faraway forest is buried the sinister evidence of the trees fall from grace?'' |
47141 | Invern?" |
47141 | Is Paris my real home, and am I deracinated as Maurice Barrès calls it, and only transplanted in America? |
47141 | Is it not better to fall into the hands of a murderer than into the dreams of a lustful woman? |
47141 | Is my accent so marked?" |
47141 | Is n''t he a dirty- minded person, or is he an ex- medical student?" |
47141 | Is n''t that it? |
47141 | Is n''t the old Adam stirring in you, Milt? |
47141 | Is physical love only a matter of hygiene? |
47141 | Is she a trifle smitten? |
47141 | Is she mashed on him? |
47141 | Is she on the other side of good and evil, as Nietzsche, his favorite philosopher phrased it? |
47141 | Istar? |
47141 | It is objective""And how about Carducci''s Hymn to Satan? |
47141 | It''s the same vile act is n''t it, even in marriage? |
47141 | Madame Ash smiled:"Are you green enough to expect gratitude from a singer? |
47141 | Magnetism? |
47141 | Marry her? |
47141 | May I run in on your return"? |
47141 | Melodeon or molasses"? |
47141 | Milt demurred, then said rather maliciously:"Ulick, who is this Dora that you and Paul Godard share so happily? |
47141 | Modern polyandry"? |
47141 | Modern? |
47141 | Mona incredulously smiled yet wondered; how could anyone prefer Paris to New York? |
47141 | Mr. Invern? |
47141 | My lease says no fighting is allowed on the premises, and what have you fellows been doing? |
47141 | My son Milt has spoken so often of you, and so beautifully-- why did n''t Mona tell us of her love for you? |
47141 | No doubt the prose- poem threatened by the heroine with the iron- colored eyes, or was it rust- colored hair? |
47141 | No, not yet? |
47141 | No? |
47141 | Not for thirty cents, d''ye hear? |
47141 | Now tell me, I''ll keep it secret, how do you contrive to stay clear of the petticoats? |
47141 | Oh Lord, I wonder what mischief Easter Brandès is up to at this minute? |
47141 | Oh, Lord, how long? |
47141 | Once a newspaper man always a whore? |
47141 | One day when she was hardly sixteen she said:"Papa, why do I love dolls so much?" |
47141 | Or angry? |
47141 | Or have you heard of his variegated behaviour?" |
47141 | Or was it only an itching curiosity to discover her feelings concerning a certain mysterious event? |
47141 | Otherwise, why did Ulick crumble after one real debauch? |
47141 | Paul said--""Paul?"... |
47141 | Perhaps-- if your voice-- you have an excellent stage presence-- who knows?" |
47141 | Please do please tell me what Mel stands for Mr. Milton-- or should I say, Father Milton?" |
47141 | Poisonous honey from France-- what? |
47141 | Poor Mona, what a disappointment her''s?" |
47141 | Pray, since when are you become the keeper of my conscience? |
47141 | Really, Mona, does the man matter much? |
47141 | Saints? |
47141 | Say, Ulick, what are you up to with that young woman? |
47141 | Shall I give her your love?" |
47141 | Shall we take a ride and a dinner at the Casino? |
47141 | Shamus and----? |
47141 | Shamus, Tenth Earl, or is it Marquis of Thingamajig somewhere in Ireland? |
47141 | She could see that, and then had n''t he brought her to Lilli and might n''t that meeting decide her artistic fate? |
47141 | She must make him her husband,--or?... |
47141 | Should he risk a call? |
47141 | Should he, or should he not, phone or write her? |
47141 | So, my sweet laddybuck plank down the mazuma, or must I make a noise like a dollar- mark for this stupid young chap from Paris?" |
47141 | Some one tried the door and asked:"Are you up dearie? |
47141 | Sounds like Stendhal, does n''t it? |
47141 | Summon Madame Felicé? |
47141 | Talent? |
47141 | That must be a Jewish name?" |
47141 | That''s what this sweeping dictum means: but how to achieve a personality? |
47141 | The House of Correction, or some horrible Magdalen Home? |
47141 | The boy? |
47141 | The offspring of aged men are not taken seriously, as is evidenced by the brutal query:''Who is the other fellow?'' |
47141 | The puberty of adultery? |
47141 | Then, in her broadest most cordial Southern tones, she asked:"Whatever in the world are you talking about, mister?" |
47141 | There is the park a block away and....""And Ulick?" |
47141 | Those yelling hausfraus and bier- bassos-- what do they know of the real Wagner melos? |
47141 | True, I wonder if this orchestra of cells that I call''Moi''will ever have its day? |
47141 | Truth-- error? |
47141 | Ulick suddenly changed the subject by asking:"Milt, what is your first name? |
47141 | VII"Have n''t I been rather discursive?" |
47141 | Was he engaged to Mona Milton? |
47141 | Was he in love with Easter himself? |
47141 | Was he rich? |
47141 | Was it because Paul Godard was in her dressing- room? |
47141 | Was it his fault? |
47141 | Was it romance, sloppy, slimy sentimentality, after all? |
47141 | Was it, after all, coming, the realization of her mother''s solitary ambition? |
47141 | Was n''t there a horse or a mare in the dream? |
47141 | Were they never to begin again? |
47141 | Were those two boys jealous because Mr. Godard had invited her? |
47141 | What a picturesque name for the operatic stage? |
47141 | What about her? |
47141 | What about women? |
47141 | What are you after?" |
47141 | What are you crying about?" |
47141 | What are you going to do about it? |
47141 | What are you good for anyhow?" |
47141 | What are you here for? |
47141 | What are you writing just now, Ulick?" |
47141 | What could he know in reality? |
47141 | What could he say or do in face of such barbed- wire opposition? |
47141 | What crime did our arboreal ancestors commit that we must so suffer and atone for it? |
47141 | What did Mr. Stone call you?" |
47141 | What did it matter, anyhow? |
47141 | What did she mean? |
47141 | What do you say-- Miss Mona?" |
47141 | What do you think of it? |
47141 | What else is Tristan and Isolde but a tonal orgasm? |
47141 | What else was it? |
47141 | What else? |
47141 | What good wind blew you down here"? |
47141 | What if she played for a bigger stake? |
47141 | What if she were sick? |
47141 | What if they did write charmingly? |
47141 | What in the hell are you up to?" |
47141 | What in the world makes you drag in his name?" |
47141 | What is it that interests nice girls in irregular lives? |
47141 | What is it you say, Invern? |
47141 | What is it, dearie?" |
47141 | What is it? |
47141 | What matters a ring, a bit of parchment, a ceremony? |
47141 | What music is comparable to the exquisite sighs of a woman satisfied? |
47141 | What naughty girl kept you away from me? |
47141 | What next--? |
47141 | What next? |
47141 | What of those factors? |
47141 | What shall it profit a woman if she saves her soul, but loseth love? |
47141 | What should he do now? |
47141 | What sort? |
47141 | What then? |
47141 | What time is it, I wonder? |
47141 | What to do? |
47141 | What was Ulick to her? |
47141 | What was he? |
47141 | What was she? |
47141 | What were their names, those children? |
47141 | What were those two girls doing now? |
47141 | What''s the difference between me and the poor dirty wife with a dozen brats? |
47141 | What''s the difference? |
47141 | What''s the lark, Ned?" |
47141 | What''s the method, Milt, camphor or prayer"? |
47141 | What''s the trouble?" |
47141 | What''s the use of anything? |
47141 | What''s the use of writing about life, she complained to her mother, and leave life out of the story? |
47141 | What''s this I''ve written? |
47141 | What-- you wo n''t drink anything?" |
47141 | When did you see Dodo last? |
47141 | When she communicated this original idea to Ulick he frankly asked her:"See here, Mona, do you ever expect to have a child?" |
47141 | Where could they go afterwards? |
47141 | Where did you blow in from? |
47141 | Where has that little wretch Stone gone? |
47141 | Where his calm attitude of a spectator on the sidewalk of life? |
47141 | Where his philosophy now? |
47141 | Where in the world was it to come from? |
47141 | Where was all this vain talk leading to? |
47141 | Who could tell? |
47141 | Who is Trabadello? |
47141 | Who is the Siegfried that will release this Brunnhilde from her bed of fire? |
47141 | Who knows? |
47141 | Who the woman so closely embracing him? |
47141 | Who was that young man with the blue eyes?" |
47141 | Who was this Mr. Stone? |
47141 | Why are you looking like that at me, Ulick?" |
47141 | Why did she fight a duel with Mary Garden? |
47141 | Why do n''t you marry? |
47141 | Why do n''t you?" |
47141 | Why do women admire the miserable, whitewash whinneying of tenor singers? |
47141 | Why do you ask? |
47141 | Why do you class them among the destructive elements? |
47141 | Why does man crave self- abasement? |
47141 | Why had n''t Alfred told her? |
47141 | Why had she turned cold? |
47141 | Why has n''t Mona written me? |
47141 | Why his sudden interest? |
47141 | Why not bravely go to her parents and confess that she loved Ulick? |
47141 | Why not? |
47141 | Why not? |
47141 | Why should I? |
47141 | Why should he be? |
47141 | Why should n''t he? |
47141 | Why then worry over free- will? |
47141 | Why this mania of certitude in the choice of a phrase? |
47141 | Why, at least, had n''t she dropped him a line saying she was going away? |
47141 | Why, then, should n''t Mona have heard, perhaps read, of his complicity in the horrid debauch? |
47141 | Will you be seen tomorrow afternoon, Ulick"? |
47141 | Wine? |
47141 | With all your clairvoyance, ca n''t you see that I do n''t care whether Mr. Invern has one or ten mistresses? |
47141 | With that horrid woman? |
47141 | Would he ever see her again? |
47141 | Would he try to profit by her? |
47141 | Would n''t they wait in the reception room? |
47141 | Would n''t you like to meet her, Milt?" |
47141 | Would she go? |
47141 | Would that keep his vile tongue in his mouth? |
47141 | Yes, yes, I have it, Brunnhilde''s white horse, or was it one of the white horses of''Rosmersholm''? |
47141 | Yet he does n''t live in his own apartment?" |
47141 | Yet, Jewel, why harp on marriage?" |
47141 | Yet, who shall dare say that he had lived in vain? |
47141 | You a chit who only have a a voice and a pretty face to go to Lehmann before you know how to sing? |
47141 | You have? |
47141 | You here?" |
47141 | You know where we live, yes? |
47141 | You remember? |
47141 | You-- of all men? |
47141 | but what reason can a young man or a young woman give for their first fugitive predilections? |
47141 | dear, I wonder what he is doing now? |
47141 | exclaimed Stone,"you have Invern''s place, have n''t you?" |
47141 | he ejaculated,"where did that dream come from?" |
47141 | he exclaimed,"already a Wagnerian critic?" |
47141 | how long are the emasculated ideals of ancient Asiatic fanatics to check the free exercise of a woman''s nature? |
47141 | no mistresses, not one?" |
47141 | she asked,"what are you doing here Jewel?" |
47141 | she exclaimed turning to Mona and embracing her energetically,"what will you ever know of the submerged lives about you? |
47141 | what''s the use of talking so much about the horrid thing?" |
47141 | who''s this? |
8094 | ''Is there any way we can beat them?'' |
8094 | ''Who''d tell you that now?'' |
8094 | ( omotenchi, face to face attack) PRIEST What chiefs came to you from the city? |
8094 | ( singing) Of whom shall I ask my way As I go out from Tagami province? |
8094 | And you would tell me then that Nishikigi and Hosonuno are names bound over with love? |
8094 | Are not all these presages of the spring? |
8094 | Are not the fairy- stories of Oscar Wilde, which were written for Mr. Ricketts and Mr. Shannon and for a few ladies, very popular in Arabia? |
8094 | By the dew- like gemming of tears upon my sleeve, Why will you grant no admission? |
8094 | CHORUS Shall I ever at last see into that room of hers, which no other sight has traversed? |
8094 | Do they go, or do they return? |
8094 | Has anyone been here to see you? |
8094 | How can I answer when they call me by my right name? |
8094 | I crossed the bay in a small hired boat And came to Yatsuhashi in Mikawa: Ah when shall I see the City- on- the- cloud? |
8094 | I have not yet been about the east country, but now I have set my mind to go as far as the earth goes; and why should n''t I, after all? |
8094 | I wonder now, would the sea be that way, or the little place Kefu that they say is stuck down against it? |
8094 | Is it a god who has struck down these men with such ease? |
8094 | Is it illusion, illusion? |
8094 | Is it reasonable? |
8094 | KAGEKIYO HIME AND TOMO( chanting) What should it be; the body of dew, wholly at the mercy of wind? |
8094 | KAGEKIYO Indeed? |
8094 | KAGEKIYO What exile? |
8094 | KAGEKIYO Who are you? |
8094 | KUMASAKA First Part PRIEST Where shall I rest, wandering, weary of the world? |
8094 | KUMASAKA--But Kumasaka thought-- CHORUS( taking it up) What can he do, that young chap, if I ply my secret arts freely? |
8094 | Of whom in Totomi? |
8094 | PRIEST All right, but for whom shall I pray? |
8094 | PRIEST And this world would be a sorry place for her to dwell in? |
8094 | PRIEST Are you Kumasaka Chohan? |
8094 | PRIEST Do you mean me, what is it? |
8094 | PRIEST First tell me your nature, who are you, Tennin? |
8094 | PRIEST How, is the owner of this cloak a Tennin? |
8094 | PRIEST In Kaga? |
8094 | PRIEST In northern Hakoku? |
8094 | PRIEST Not yet, for if you should get it, how do I know you''ll not be off to your palace without even beginning your dance, not even a measure? |
8094 | PRIEST Tell me the chief men, were they from many a province? |
8094 | PRIEST That''s very fine, is n''t it? |
8094 | PRIEST This is your house? |
8094 | PRIEST This? |
8094 | PRIEST( to the Tennin) What do you say? |
8094 | SHITE Tell me, could I have foreseen Or known what a heap of my writings Should lie at the end of her shaft- bench? |
8094 | SHITE Will you enter? |
8094 | Shall I act out the old ballad? |
8094 | TENNIN A Tennin without her robe, A bird without wings, How shall she climb the air? |
8094 | TENNIN I am caught, I struggle, how shall I?... |
8094 | TOMO Do you know where the exile lives? |
8094 | TOMO Shall I ask the old man by the thatch? |
8094 | TOMO Where does the exile live? |
8094 | TOMO( at further side of the stage) Is there any native about? |
8094 | TOMO( to Hime) It seems that he is not here, shall we ask further? |
8094 | The feather- mantle, for whose lack the moon goddess,( or should we call her fairy?) |
8094 | Then Kumasaka said,''Are you the devil? |
8094 | This thinking in sleep of someone who has no thought of you, is it more than a dream? |
8094 | VILLAGER Did you not pass an old man under the edge of the mountain, as you were coming that way? |
8094 | VILLAGER What do you want with me? |
8094 | VILLAGER What exile is it you want? |
8094 | VILLAGER( to Kagekiyo) Many a fine thing is gone, sir; your daughter would like to ask you.... KAGEKIYO What is it? |
8094 | Wait a little, is it not spring? |
8094 | We neither wake nor sleep, and passing our nights in a sorrow which is in the end a vision, what are these scenes of spring to us? |
8094 | What ails the lady? |
8094 | What are these for? |
8094 | What are you proposing to do with it? |
8094 | What can people be expected to know of these affairs when it is more than they can do to keep abreast of their own? |
8094 | Whom shall I ask, and how answer? |
8094 | Whose fault was it, dear? |
8094 | Will you show me my way there? |
8094 | Will you take us to Kagekiyo? |
8094 | Would you care to buy them from us? |
8094 | Would you know what men were with me? |
8094 | Would you tell her the ballad? |
8094 | will not the wind be quiet? |
52356 | But what, after all, is this appeal that we make to posterity? 52356 How is it these countries are now deserted,"said Momus to Prometheus,"though they were evidently once inhabited?" |
52356 | --Children, children, what game are you playing at? |
52356 | A life at hap- hazard, and of which you would know nothing beforehand, as you know nothing about the New Year? |
52356 | A mistress chaster than Penelope? |
52356 | Again, how many people in the present day read the writings of Francis Bacon? |
52356 | Again, will the affections, imagination, and intellect of men be, as a rule, more powerful than they are at present? |
52356 | Almanacs for the New Year? |
52356 | Am I not right? |
52356 | Am I the nurse of the human race; or the cook, that I should look after the preparation of their food? |
52356 | An empire as large as that of which Charles V. dreamt one night? |
52356 | And does not death seem natural to you? |
52356 | And for what reason? |
52356 | And how can I take enough food to prevent my dying of hunger a few years before reaching the Sun? |
52356 | And how is it you know my name? |
52356 | And how long will your singing or speaking last?'' |
52356 | And how will they protect themselves against the cold? |
52356 | And if so, why not some other intelligent animals instead of men? |
52356 | And if the thought of such separation be nothing to us, ought we not to consider their feelings? |
52356 | And meanwhile? |
52356 | And now I would ask you why you imagine we are nearer perfection than our ancestors were? |
52356 | And on my complaining to him of such ill- treatment, he replied:"Dost thou think I made this house for thee? |
52356 | And pray of what use to the Goblins are the mines of gold and silver, and the whole body of earth, except the outer skin? |
52356 | And seest thou, or hast thou ever seen, happiness within the boundaries of the world? |
52356 | And since death is our greatest good, is it remarkable that men should voluntarily seek it? |
52356 | And the book that you carry? |
52356 | And what is to be done about your book? |
52356 | And who does not know that most pleasures are due to the imagination rather than to the inherent qualities of the things that please us? |
52356 | And why also should I keep these slaves of mine alive, if it were not that from time to time they give me children to eat? |
52356 | And yet life is a fine thing, is it not? |
52356 | And your inhabitants, are they mostly happy or unhappy? |
52356 | And, apart from anything else, do we not instinctively fear, hate, and shun death, even in spite of ourselves? |
52356 | And, since I owe it to you that I am here, ought I not to rely on you to assure me, if possible, a life free from trouble and danger?" |
52356 | And, supposing it to have land and water like the other, why may it not be uninhabited? |
52356 | Are facts deniable, simply because they are not in harmony with words? |
52356 | Are these truths, which I merely express, without any pretence of preaching, of primary or secondary importance in philosophy? |
52356 | Are you much disturbed by the dogs that bay at you? |
52356 | Are you so puffed up because of the Czar''s visit,[1] that you imagine yourselves no longer subject to the laws of Nature? |
52356 | As happy as last year? |
52356 | As the year before? |
52356 | At least, you can tell me if your inhabitants are acquainted with vices, misdeeds, misfortunes, suffering, and old age; in short, evils? |
52356 | Beading the following from Cicero''s"Paradoxes"--"Do pleasures make a person better or more estimable? |
52356 | Besides, how could there be an acute sensation at the time of death? |
52356 | Besides, who can say that he has reached your standard of purity? |
52356 | But do you distinctly confess that you do not love the human race in general? |
52356 | But do you not think it is a great failing in women that they prove really to be so very different from what we imagine? |
52356 | But had he no friend or relative to whom he could entrust his children instead of killing them? |
52356 | But have you, or have you not, changed your opinions? |
52356 | But how could a shadow fulfil any promise, much less induce the Truth to descend to earth? |
52356 | But how did you perceive at length that your soul had left the body? |
52356 | But how do you know I am a Canon? |
52356 | But how is it these rogues have disappeared? |
52356 | But how is it they have not already mentioned it? |
52356 | But how shall we do it? |
52356 | But how shall we know in future the news of the world? |
52356 | But how? |
52356 | But if they did wish to die, what should deter them from fulfilling their desire? |
52356 | But if you had to live over again the life you have already lived, with all its pleasures and sufferings? |
52356 | But in what then are we superior to the men of primitive times, who were perfectly unacquainted with philosophy? |
52356 | But must this necessarily continue? |
52356 | But supposing you are right, what ought I to do, if I can not be useful to my race? |
52356 | But tell me, is greatness the same thing as extreme unhappiness? |
52356 | But tell me: do you ever remember having been able at any moment in your life to say sincerely,"I am happy"? |
52356 | But tell me: why am I here at all? |
52356 | But then, if you are not incited by injuries received, nor by hatred, nor ambition, why do you write in such a manner? |
52356 | But what does it matter? |
52356 | But what has that to do with it, if we ourselves do not conform to nature; that is, are no longer savages? |
52356 | But what is pleasure? |
52356 | But what is this other novelty that I discover? |
52356 | But what shall I say to you about men? |
52356 | But why dost thou shun me? |
52356 | But why is it that we live? |
52356 | But, Excellency, how can the little fellows manage that? |
52356 | But, apart from the fact that your heaven is scarcely an inviting place, who among the best of us can hope to merit it? |
52356 | But, reasonably, and not imaginatively, do we really think our successors will be better than ourselves? |
52356 | Children, do you not hear?... |
52356 | Did I ask to come into the world? |
52356 | Did not one of your ancient mathematicians say, that if he had standing room given him outside the world, he would undertake to move heaven and earth? |
52356 | Did you hear that? |
52356 | Did you not say you were inhabited? |
52356 | Do I keep these my children and servants for thy service? |
52356 | Do you also believe that the human race actually progresses daily? |
52356 | Do you believe all the century believes? |
52356 | Do you believe that forty or fifty years ago the philosophers were right or wrong in their statements? |
52356 | Do you clearly understand? |
52356 | Do you feel bad anywhere? |
52356 | Do you hear the delightful sound made by the heavenly bodies in motion? |
52356 | Do you imagine I should oppose the discoveries of the nineteenth century? |
52356 | Do you mean to say he killed his children and himself? |
52356 | Do you mean what you say? |
52356 | Do you not ordain that I am to be unhappy? |
52356 | Do you not recognise me? |
52356 | Do you not remember any particular year which you thought a happy one? |
52356 | Do you not remember that you are dead? |
52356 | Do you not remember we are both born of Decay? |
52356 | Do you not see that if there are no men there will be no more newspapers? |
52356 | Do you not see that the soul necessarily leaves the body when the latter becomes uninhabitable, and not because of any internal violence? |
52356 | Do you think that in these forty or fifty years the human race has changed to the opposite of what it then was? |
52356 | Do you think they will not come unless you call them? |
52356 | Do you think this New Year will be a happy one? |
52356 | Do you understand these names? |
52356 | Do you, however, think books are able to help the human race? |
52356 | Does it not follow that all your inhabitants are animals? |
52356 | Does it perchance hide from thee in the bowels of the earth, or the depths of the sea? |
52356 | Does not memory, wisdom''s ally, lose strength as we advance in age? |
52356 | Does pleasure or pain predominate? |
52356 | Does that seem incredible to you? |
52356 | Does your Excellency feel ill? |
52356 | Dost thou wish for majesty surpassing that of the Atrides? |
52356 | Even in dreams? |
52356 | Far from here? |
52356 | For do we not oftener see the former productive of results than the latter? |
52356 | For do we not see with our own eyes that the needle in these seas falls away from the Pole Star not a little towards the west? |
52356 | For have they not reached the summit of what is called human happiness? |
52356 | For to what end do we shun death, or desire life, save to promote our well- being, and for fear of the contrary? |
52356 | For what is implied in a state of life free from uncertainty and danger? |
52356 | For whose pleasure and service is this wretched life of the world maintained, by the suffering and death of all the beings which compose it? |
52356 | Had he not enlarged the world, multiplied its pleasures, and increased its diversity? |
52356 | Had you then, like Pasiphaë, a calf for your son? |
52356 | Has humanity progressed in strength and perfection, that the writers of to- day should be constrained to flatter, and compelled to reverence it? |
52356 | Have we not a strong instinctive horror of death? |
52356 | Have you felt no variation in the ennui which oppresses you, from the first day until now? |
52356 | Have you the mandate of Beelzebub? |
52356 | Honours and success, however wicked thou mayst be? |
52356 | How are you? |
52356 | How are you? |
52356 | How can I excuse myself? |
52356 | How can I go unless your Excellency comes? |
52356 | How can I sit? |
52356 | How can there be pain at a time of unconsciousness? |
52356 | How far are these conclusions refutable? |
52356 | How has it become so light? |
52356 | How have I injured you, in making you happy for three or four days?" |
52356 | How long have you been reduced to this kind of life? |
52356 | How many years have gone by since you began to sell almanacs? |
52356 | How should I know? |
52356 | How should we be occupied? |
52356 | How should we be spending our time? |
52356 | How then can it be unnatural to escape from suffering in the only way open to man, that is, by dying; since in life it can never be avoided? |
52356 | How then can order and virtue be said to be encouraged by your doctrine? |
52356 | I am the first Hour of the day, and how can the day exist, if your Excellency does not deign to go forth as usual? |
52356 | I ask you if it be permissible to be unhappy? |
52356 | I care little for the opinion of the world; nevertheless, exonerate me if you have any opportunity of doing so.... What am I? |
52356 | I mean, why do we consent to live? |
52356 | I should be very sorry for that; but what can I do? |
52356 | If a friend begged you to do this, why should you not gratify him? |
52356 | If it be peopled as numerously as our hemisphere, what proof have you that rational beings are to be found there, as in ours? |
52356 | If it be true, why may I not lament openly and freely, and say that I suffer? |
52356 | If man had the power to live for ever, I mean in this life and not after death, do you think he would be happy? |
52356 | If not, why should you expect to feel any violent sensation at its departure? |
52356 | If, however, they are different, why could not the one be separated from the other? |
52356 | Immortal? |
52356 | In answer to Horace''s question,"Why is no one content with his lot?" |
52356 | In short, Don Nicolas, what do you wish to prove by this discourse? |
52356 | In short, to sum it up in two words, do you agree with what the journals say about nature, and human destiny? |
52356 | In what, therefore, are we more advanced than our ancestors; and what means of attaining perfection do we possess, which they had not? |
52356 | Io chiedo al cielo, E al mondo: dite, dite: Chi la ridusse a tale? |
52356 | Is death itself a sensation? |
52356 | Is it not so? |
52356 | Is it that we are better acquainted with the truth? |
52356 | Is it that you have scruples of conscience lest the deed should be treasonable? |
52356 | Is it true that Mahomet one fine night cut you in two like a water melon, and that a good piece of your body fell into his cloak? |
52356 | Is it true that the Arcadians came into the world before you? |
52356 | Is it your own flesh and blood that you are eating? |
52356 | Is not man''s reason daily governed by accidents of all kinds? |
52356 | Is there any one who boasts of the pleasures he enjoys?" |
52356 | May not the same progress which exposes the wound find the salve to heal it? |
52356 | Mine, or that of the Prince, or whose? |
52356 | More joyfully perhaps? |
52356 | More probably, in greater trouble and difficulty; or worse, in a state of ennui? |
52356 | More wealth than shall be found in El Dorado, when it is discovered? |
52356 | My own? |
52356 | My sister? |
52356 | Nature? |
52356 | Not even for a single moment? |
52356 | Now tell me, did you feel any pain at the point of death? |
52356 | Now tell me: are all other actions of civilised men regulated by the standard of their primitive nature? |
52356 | Now, if man be permitted to live unnaturally, and be consequently unhappy, why may he not also die unnaturally? |
52356 | Now, if we remove the Earth from its place in the centre, and make it whirl round and round unremittingly, what will be the consequence? |
52356 | Of a domestic, or wild animal? |
52356 | Of course this was in reality mere fancy, since what could it matter to them when dead, that they lived in the minds of men? |
52356 | Of course, then, you believe that this century is superior to all the preceding ones? |
52356 | Oh, then, what are you? |
52356 | Or am I here unnaturally, contrary to your will? |
52356 | Or instead of land and water, may it not contain some other element? |
52356 | Or is it a member which has to be severed or violently wrenched away? |
52356 | Or, that once passed, they will return if you call out their names? |
52356 | Or, why not return to our primitive condition, and state of nature? |
52356 | Perhaps you think this very extinction of sensibility ought also to be an acute sensation? |
52356 | Perhaps, however, it is because some few men in the present day have learnt that the truest philosopher is he who abstains from philosophy? |
52356 | Say, how did you know you were dead?... |
52356 | Should you not like the New Year to resemble one of the past years? |
52356 | Tell me also: were you sensible of the moment when the soul entered you, and was joined, or as you say agglutinated, to your body? |
52356 | Tell me, do these slaves belong to your tribe or to another? |
52356 | Tell me: among the animals you mentioned, are there any of less vitality and sensibility than men? |
52356 | Tell me: is the spirit joined to the body by some nerve, muscle, or membrane which must be broken to enable it to escape? |
52356 | Tell me; are you really inhabited, as thousands of ancient and modern philosophers affirm-- from Orpheus to De Lalande? |
52356 | Tell me; do you amuse yourself by drawing up my sea- water, and then letting it fall again? |
52356 | That here or there it has rained or snowed, or been windy? |
52356 | That it is hot or cold? |
52356 | That the sun rises and sets? |
52356 | The last hour of the office of the breviary? |
52356 | The matter really resolves itself into this: which is the better, to suffer, or not to suffer? |
52356 | The pleasure of a dream worth more than a real pleasure? |
52356 | The word of honour of a good demon? |
52356 | Then even the fleas and gnats were made for the service of men? |
52356 | Then have you changed your opinion? |
52356 | Then is it impossible for a man to believe that he is actually happy? |
52356 | Then what dost thou want? |
52356 | Then what is death, if it be not pain? |
52356 | Then what is the meaning of this singing freak? |
52356 | Then what life would you like? |
52356 | Then what other life would you like to live? |
52356 | Then what shall you do with your book? |
52356 | Then what sort of creatures are yours? |
52356 | Then why has he done this thing? |
52356 | Then would you recommence it on this condition, if none other were offered you? |
52356 | Then? |
52356 | Thinkest thou then that the world was made for thee? |
52356 | To eat him? |
52356 | To posterity? |
52356 | To sensitive minds, what misery can exceed this? |
52356 | Well, supposing I admit the truth of what you say, how does that alter the matter? |
52356 | Were you ever conquered by any of your inhabitants? |
52356 | What are these judges doing? |
52356 | What colour are your men? |
52356 | What do I hear your Excellency say? |
52356 | What do you infer from that? |
52356 | What do you mean? |
52356 | What do you mean? |
52356 | What do you mean? |
52356 | What do you think of my reasoning? |
52356 | What do you think of the feast of Bairam? |
52356 | What do you think of those people who show you another moon in a well? |
52356 | What does all this uproar mean? |
52356 | What does it matter? |
52356 | What does it matter? |
52356 | What doest thou here, where thy race is unknown? |
52356 | What evil have I done before beginning to live, that you condemn me to this misery? |
52356 | What good are the sun, moon, air, sea, and country to the Gnomes? |
52356 | What has that to do with it? |
52356 | What have such pleasantries to do with so grave a matter? |
52356 | What have you found? |
52356 | What in the world has a thousandth part of the perfection with which your fancy endows women? |
52356 | What is ennui? |
52356 | What is it? |
52356 | What is it? |
52356 | What is it? |
52356 | What is less natural than medicine? |
52356 | What is that life we lived on earth? |
52356 | What is this to do with me? |
52356 | What is truth? |
52356 | What kind of books? |
52356 | What living being, what plant, or other thing animated by thee, what vegetable or animal participates in it? |
52356 | What man can satisfy your inexorable judges, Minos, Eacus, and Rhadamanthus, who will not overlook one single fault, however trivial? |
52356 | What men? |
52356 | What misery, my child? |
52356 | What remedy is there for ennui? |
52356 | What savoury food have you got? |
52356 | What then is this reward? |
52356 | What was it to him that he might gain a reputation on that earth which appeared so hateful and contemptible to him? |
52356 | What will be the fruit of this? |
52356 | Whence will come these praises and honours,--from heaven, from you, or from whom? |
52356 | Where does it dwell? |
52356 | Where, then, is the certainty that posterity will always esteem the kind of writing that we praise? |
52356 | Which are the more numerous among your people, virtues or vices? |
52356 | Which do you consider the more delightful, to see the dear woman, or to think of her? |
52356 | Which of the twenty should you wish the New Year to be like? |
52356 | Who are these unfortunate beings? |
52356 | Who are you? |
52356 | Who art thou? |
52356 | Who doubts the justice of men? |
52356 | Who has been teaching these dead folks music, that they thus sing like cocks, at midnight? |
52356 | Who has killed them? |
52356 | Who troubles himself about Malebranche? |
52356 | Who wants new Almanacs? |
52356 | Who would think of including a little earth in the catalogue of human benefits? |
52356 | Who, for instance, now reads Galileo''s works? |
52356 | Why can not I do it? |
52356 | Why did he do that? |
52356 | Why do you like to stay on the tops of minarets? |
52356 | Why else did I bring him into the world, and nourish him? |
52356 | Why may it not be one immense sea? |
52356 | Why not? |
52356 | Why not? |
52356 | Why not? |
52356 | Why not? |
52356 | Why should not the same reason govern our death which rules our life? |
52356 | Why should this latter, which has no influence over our life, control our death? |
52356 | Why then should suicide alone be judged unreasonably, and from the aspect of our primitive nature? |
52356 | Why? |
52356 | Why? |
52356 | Why? |
52356 | Why? |
52356 | Will you allow it to go down to posterity, conveying doctrines so contrary to the opinions you now hold? |
52356 | Would it not be evident that the happiness or unhappiness of such a person is nevertheless a matter of fortune? |
52356 | Would not the very disposition they boast of be dependent on circumstances? |
52356 | Would they then imagine that everything was made and maintained solely for them? |
52356 | Would you not like to live these twenty years, and even all your, past life from your birth, over again? |
52356 | Yes, what then? |
52356 | Yet, to enable them to attain to their present imperfect state of civilisation, how much time has had to elapse? |
52356 | You believe then in the infinite perfectibility of the human race, do you not? |
52356 | You would throw on me the responsibility of making daylight? |
52356 | [ 2] If immortality wrought such an effect on the gods, how would it be with men? |
52356 | [ 3] Are your women, or whatever I should call them, oviparous, and did one of their eggs fall down to us, once upon a time? |
52356 | [ 4] Are you perforated like a bead, as a modern philosopher believes? |
52356 | [ 5] Are you made of green cheese, as some English say? |
52356 | _? |
52356 | or even uninhabitable? |
52356 | what is this that I hear? |
52356 | what is this? |
52356 | what news? |
52356 | where are you going? |
52356 | who does not know that the world is made for the Gnomes? |
52356 | Çâkyamuni, nearly 2500 years ago, asked,"What is the cause of all the miseries and sufferings with which man is afflicted?" |
49181 | _] MACK What are you reading? 49181 A VOICE Where''s his wings? 49181 A man could n''t come into another man''s house, and be welcomed, and then take the other man''s coat, without losing his self- respect... could he? 49181 About the Parish House... shall I tell my husband you''ll speak to Mr. Gilchrist? 49181 Ai n''t I found you with her when I came home unexpected? 49181 Ai n''t I seen you down town with her? 49181 Ai n''t it... you... Grubby? 49181 Ai n''t she home? 49181 Ai n''t you fellows on? 49181 Ai n''t you seen what he just done to me? 49181 All right; in God''s name, what_ are_ we to say? 49181 Am I costing you one blanket from your warm beds, or one stick of furniture from your comfortable homes, or anything else you''ll ever miss? 49181 Am I interruptin''your readin''? 49181 Am I late? 49181 And how about Buddha and Mohammed? 49181 And if he do n''t insist? 49181 And if they did, what does that matter? 49181 And if we want to keep it in our hearts, and never think about it or look it in the face, should n''t someone pry open the door and cry:Behold"?... |
49181 | And that''s almost the same thing, is n''t it? |
49181 | And then what becomes of our influence? |
49181 | And what do you think? |
49181 | And what if she is... now? |
49181 | And you are, shall we say, twenty- nine in October? |
49181 | And you? |
49181 | And, if you_ could_, and_ did_, how in the name of God would that help the Community? |
49181 | Another says it was suggestion... believing... which is another way of saying faith, is n''t it? |
49181 | Anyway, do you think people are? |
49181 | Are n''t you? |
49181 | Are you looking for someone? |
49181 | BENFIELD All? |
49181 | BENFIELD Police duty? |
49181 | BENFIELD What the he---- GOODKIND What has that to do with it? |
49181 | BENFIELD What''s what? |
49181 | BENFIELD Why should you have? |
49181 | BENFIELD[_ Taking one_]: Thanks.... Why did n''t you go down to West Virginia? |
49181 | But do n''t you think... sometimes... you and the other women... that they cost you too much? |
49181 | But there''s a fellow named Joe Hennig.... GOODKIND Who''ll listen to reason? |
49181 | But where has that brought us? |
49181 | By doubling his wages? |
49181 | CLARE And for them you''d send me back to degradation? |
49181 | CLARE And love? |
49181 | CLARE And so-- you advise me to marry you? |
49181 | CLARE Are you... honestly... happy? |
49181 | CLARE But... he''s just_ got_ back.... Where have you been, Jerry? |
49181 | CLARE Do n''t you understand that I''m offering myself to you? |
49181 | CLARE Do n''t you want me? |
49181 | CLARE For what? |
49181 | CLARE Had dinner? |
49181 | CLARE He''ll be up in a moment... wo n''t you sit down? |
49181 | CLARE How can anybody be happy without money? |
49181 | CLARE I''m very grateful... but... JERRY But what? |
49181 | CLARE In just helping others? |
49181 | CLARE Is it true? |
49181 | CLARE Is that the truth? |
49181 | CLARE Mrs. Hennig? |
49181 | CLARE Must I go on forever paying for one mistake? |
49181 | CLARE What do you propose to give me? |
49181 | CLARE What_ is_ right? |
49181 | CLARE Why do you say that? |
49181 | CLARE Why, Jerry did n''t leave much before you, did he? |
49181 | CLARE Why? |
49181 | CLARE Why? |
49181 | CLARE Why? |
49181 | CLARE Will you, Doctor? |
49181 | CLARE You mean to Jerry? |
49181 | CLARE You mean you''re going on like this? |
49181 | CLARE You think_ that''s_ God''s will? |
49181 | CLARE You''ve got... everything... you want? |
49181 | CLARE[_ In almost speechless amazement_]: Dan; you''re not going to take that? |
49181 | CLARE[_ Looking at him squarely and significantly_]: Knowing all I_ do_ know about you? |
49181 | CLARE[_ Looking at the box_]: Another... substitute.... GOODKIND Substitute, for what? |
49181 | Can I do anything for you, sir? |
49181 | Can I do anything for you? |
49181 | Can you beat it? |
49181 | Comes down R._]: Yes? |
49181 | Could we have forgotten promises unkept, faith disappointed, aspirations unrealized? |
49181 | DANIEL About the money? |
49181 | DANIEL Am I costing you one cigar? |
49181 | DANIEL And then? |
49181 | DANIEL And you have everything_ you_ want? |
49181 | DANIEL Are you? |
49181 | DANIEL Are you? |
49181 | DANIEL But how? |
49181 | DANIEL But in this day-- in this practical world-- can any man follow the Master? |
49181 | DANIEL Caught in what act, Joe? |
49181 | DANIEL Do n''t drive me to---- GOODKIND To what? |
49181 | DANIEL Do n''t you? |
49181 | DANIEL Does n''t it mean-- telling the truth? |
49181 | DANIEL Forget? |
49181 | DANIEL From you? |
49181 | DANIEL He accused..._ you_? |
49181 | DANIEL How about the money? |
49181 | DANIEL How can anybody be happy_ with_ it? |
49181 | DANIEL How is Jerry? |
49181 | DANIEL How many rooms do you live in at the same time? |
49181 | DANIEL I only mean is n''t there something worth more than good clothes and a good time? |
49181 | DANIEL If you''ll only let me explain.... GOODKIND Explain_ what_? |
49181 | DANIEL In God''s name, who are you? |
49181 | DANIEL In what way? |
49181 | DANIEL Is it any more comfortable than this? |
49181 | DANIEL Is n''t it worth trying? |
49181 | DANIEL Left... Jerry? |
49181 | DANIEL Like it? |
49181 | DANIEL Little bird tell you that? |
49181 | DANIEL Meaning? |
49181 | DANIEL Money? |
49181 | DANIEL Mr. Henchley''s_ what_? |
49181 | DANIEL No; I just slipped up here to read a while before we put our gifts on the tree.... Where''s Grubby? |
49181 | DANIEL Not even as an advance? |
49181 | DANIEL Oh, is that all? |
49181 | DANIEL Pearl Hennig? |
49181 | DANIEL Suppose we ask the police to look for her? |
49181 | DANIEL The secret? |
49181 | DANIEL What are you doing? |
49181 | DANIEL What can I buy with it that I have n''t got? |
49181 | DANIEL What do you mean... worse? |
49181 | DANIEL What do_ you_ want, Clare? |
49181 | DANIEL What good can one man do? |
49181 | DANIEL What? |
49181 | DANIEL Who said that? |
49181 | DANIEL Who told you that? |
49181 | DANIEL Why did you have to get mixed up with Pearl Hennig? |
49181 | DANIEL Why do n''t you give it to him? |
49181 | DANIEL Why do you say that, Hennig? |
49181 | DANIEL Why not in place of the Venus who fell on her nose? |
49181 | DANIEL Why not? |
49181 | DANIEL Why not? |
49181 | DANIEL Why open wounds that are beginning to heal? |
49181 | DANIEL Why? |
49181 | DANIEL Yes; do n''t you? |
49181 | DANIEL You do n''t want_ my_ advice? |
49181 | DANIEL"And on earth, Peace, good will toward men"? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Crossing to C._]: How are you, Jerry? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Laughs_]: Is generosity a fault in a husband? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Quickly_]: What do you---- CLARE I mean anything special to do? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Sits on bench in front of table_]: Well? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Smiling_]: Are_ you_ going to advise me to carry a pistol? |
49181 | DANIEL_ How_ do you know? |
49181 | DILLY What could be sweeter? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM And that is? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Ca n''t I help? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Do you know the truth, Daniel? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM How can you make them try? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM In addition to his salary? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Is n''t that a little mandatory? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Oh, how do you do, Miss Jewett? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Shall we go into my study? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM What strike? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Wondering? |
49181 | Did he bring her in here... an''keep her... against her will? |
49181 | Did he? |
49181 | Did n''t I always say you were a nut? |
49181 | Did n''t he tell you he was a Son of God? |
49181 | Did n''t he tell you that, Jimmie? |
49181 | Did you know Gilchrist proposes to preach a Christmas sermon about the strike? |
49181 | Dilly''s looking well today, is n''t she, Mr. Goodkind? |
49181 | Do n''t you think there might have been a compromise? |
49181 | Do you know that your young trouble- hunter has given away nearly one- tenth of his capital in three months? |
49181 | Do you know what they''re planning to do now? |
49181 | Do you remember... in your church... a Mrs. Thornbury? |
49181 | Does it occur to you that may have been because_ he_ was n''t in Black River? |
49181 | Does n''t every man-- in his heart? |
49181 | Does that offend your reverence? |
49181 | For the rest-- we need n''t bother each other too much.... What do you say? |
49181 | GOODKIND And what''s the answer? |
49181 | GOODKIND Any opinion? |
49181 | GOODKIND Anyway, what do I know about coal mining? |
49181 | GOODKIND Are you making a profit? |
49181 | GOODKIND But if everybody lived your way, what would become of the world''s work? |
49181 | GOODKIND Dead? |
49181 | GOODKIND Happy? |
49181 | GOODKIND He wo n''t listen to reason? |
49181 | GOODKIND He''s coming back--[_ Servant enters R._] Yes; what is it? |
49181 | GOODKIND How do you do, Doctor? |
49181 | GOODKIND How do, Stedtman? |
49181 | GOODKIND How''re you going to do it? |
49181 | GOODKIND How? |
49181 | GOODKIND Huh? |
49181 | GOODKIND Is it? |
49181 | GOODKIND Married? |
49181 | GOODKIND May I come in? |
49181 | GOODKIND Oh, is that all? |
49181 | GOODKIND Umanski? |
49181 | GOODKIND We''re agreed that if he insists on preaching about the strike---- BENFIELD He goes? |
49181 | GOODKIND Well, there you are, and what I wanted to talk about privately is... what''s got into the boy? |
49181 | GOODKIND What can you buy with fifty---- DANIEL What have_ you_ bought? |
49181 | GOODKIND What do you want? |
49181 | GOODKIND What kind of a man? |
49181 | GOODKIND Who ever heard of a poor Jew? |
49181 | GOODKIND Who said so? |
49181 | GOODKIND Who''s in this delegation? |
49181 | GOODKIND Why? |
49181 | GOODKIND You''re hanging, and what have you got? |
49181 | GOODKIND You''re not going to turn down fifty thousand dollars a year? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Crisply_]: Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Goes to her_]: You''re not crying? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Hardly believing his own ears_]: To ask for... WHAT? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Lights his cigar_]: Well... how are things in Black River? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Looking off after his son_]: Jerry do n''t like you much, does he? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Offering cigars_]: Smoke? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Pushes back papers_]: What have you got there? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ To_ DAN]: Had a doctor look her over? |
49181 | GRUBBY What for? |
49181 | GRUBBY What''s_ your_ job? |
49181 | Gilchrist applied a little soft soap-- BENFIELD Soft soap or gold dust? |
49181 | Golden slippers? |
49181 | Got anything on your mind, Dan? |
49181 | Had n''t we better retire to my study if we''re going to discuss Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | Happier than the people who just have enough? |
49181 | Has he gone crazy? |
49181 | Have you? |
49181 | He is consoled by her very presence_] What''s happened to the choir? |
49181 | His slow mind has been thinking out the earlier declaration._] UMANSKI What about this here twelve- hour day? |
49181 | How are we going to be married if you go on giving things away? |
49181 | How do you know when I left? |
49181 | I did n''t go for pleasure... did I, Gilchrist? |
49181 | I hate the breed, but what are you going to do about it? |
49181 | I knew you was stuck on her, and I warned you to stay away... did n''t I? |
49181 | I wanted to ask had I better send for the police? |
49181 | I''m_ engaged_ to Mr. Gilchrist, and he loves me, and believes in me, and your sense of decency and fair play... JERRY Inherited from my father? |
49181 | If it could be done then, why not now, and, if it was ever worth the doing, why not now? |
49181 | Impatiently_] What is it, Barnaby? |
49181 | In early, are n''t you? |
49181 | In the blackness, he hears a step._ THE POOR MAN_ has come on through the open door L._] Who''s there?... |
49181 | Instantly, of course, she sees the figure in the chair, and conceals the package beneath her apron._ MARY MARGARET Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | Is a man dead whose ideal lives? |
49181 | Is it possible he was_ gassed_--or something? |
49181 | Is it true the boss''ll give you an overcoat? |
49181 | Is it true you''ve been giving away-- well-- large sums of money? |
49181 | Is n''t it worth the price? |
49181 | Is that the Star of Bethlehem? |
49181 | Is this Overcoat Hall? |
49181 | Is this day different from any other? |
49181 | Is this the first time of conflict between flesh and spirit? |
49181 | It is n''t too late? |
49181 | It_ is_ a lie? |
49181 | JERRY Alone? |
49181 | JERRY Did you see Gilchrist? |
49181 | JERRY Do you? |
49181 | JERRY Going to take my job? |
49181 | JERRY I''ve said:"What''s the use bluffing?" |
49181 | JERRY No? |
49181 | JERRY No? |
49181 | JERRY Wha''d''ya mean--_son_? |
49181 | JERRY What part of the mines? |
49181 | JERRY When you worked you had enough to eat, did n''t you? |
49181 | JERRY Where''s father? |
49181 | JERRY Where? |
49181 | JERRY Where? |
49181 | JERRY Who''s the girl? |
49181 | JERRY Why not? |
49181 | JERRY Why not? |
49181 | JERRY Why? |
49181 | JERRY With whom? |
49181 | JERRY Would n''t I? |
49181 | JERRY You''re_ what_? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Cynically_]: To put on before you pray? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Insolently_]: Are you ready? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Sneers_]: When? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Turning quickly_]: What''s the use of starting a hulla- ba- loo? |
49181 | JOE And you came again... did n''t you? |
49181 | JOE Did n''t I warn you? |
49181 | JOE Well, you''re workin''for him, ai n''t you? |
49181 | JOE Why do I say it? |
49181 | JOE You''ll play around_ my_ wife, will you? |
49181 | JOE[_ Cries_]: How''m I gon na be sure? |
49181 | MACK Are you working here? |
49181 | MACK Is_ anybody_ working here? |
49181 | MACK Think she''ll tell_ him_? |
49181 | MACK What girl? |
49181 | MACK What''d you do then? |
49181 | MACK What''s the catch? |
49181 | MACK What? |
49181 | MACK Where_ is_ he? |
49181 | MACK Who''s she? |
49181 | MACK[_ Laughs_]: Are you going into the baby business? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET Ai n''t you well, Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET And if He do n''t? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET Could God do that for me? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET He''s been good to you, ai n''t he? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET That''s right.... You mean, if God wants me to be well, some day He''ll make me well? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET What was the matter with her? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET What''re you going to do if you''re happy? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET Where? |
49181 | MISS LEVINSON That''s it; is n''t it? |
49181 | MR. BARNABY Why do n''t he go over to the Synagogue instead of hanging around a Christian Church? |
49181 | MR. HENCHLEY What''s the matter? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM A dance at this hour? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM Is n''t Dilly looking_ wonderful_? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM What do they do it for? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM Where does she get all her money? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM You''ll be sure to fix it? |
49181 | MRS. HENCHLEY I s''pose you ai n''t read"The Sheik"? |
49181 | MRS. HENCHLEY What''ve you been reading? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY Are those your husband''s men-- on the front steps? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY Testaments? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY[_ Holding up two dolls_]: What are we going to do with these? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY[_ Turns and is appalled at his burden_]: What have you got? |
49181 | MRS. TICE And will you put us in the car? |
49181 | MRS. TICE Ca n''t I drive you home? |
49181 | MRS. TICE Do you know what he said, Doctor? |
49181 | Money? |
49181 | Oh, do n''t you see, my dear,_ that''s_ been your_ great_ mistake? |
49181 | Only... since you''ve insisted on the truth.... Dan, when_ did_ my husband leave Black River? |
49181 | PEARL For Christ''s sake, ai n''t you done with me now? |
49181 | PEARL[_ Uncertainly_]: Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | POOR MAN Did they? |
49181 | POOR MAN What does it matter? |
49181 | POOR MAN Why do n''t you try? |
49181 | POOR MAN Why not? |
49181 | Preach your Christmas sermon, and afterward---- DANIEL Yes? |
49181 | STEDTMAN Pearl Hennig? |
49181 | Something half way? |
49181 | TONY Why you send for me? |
49181 | Takes cigars from his pocket_]: Smoke? |
49181 | The conspicuous feature of her costume is a pair of soiled gold slippers that once set off a ball gown._] MACK Do n''t he try to reform you? |
49181 | The_ SERVANT_ enters R._] SERVANT Did you ring, sir? |
49181 | There is a pause._] GOODKIND Smoke? |
49181 | There was a telegram, and he read it, and---- JOE And came here to ask Gilchrist: Where''s my wife? |
49181 | They got onto you, did they? |
49181 | This fellow, Max Stedtman, got into the union five or six years ago, and now he''s one of the delegation they''ve sent up to me.... Where''s Jerry? |
49181 | To_ MACK,_ who has been stealing surreptitious glances at the overcoat_] And you? |
49181 | UMANSKI And the twenty- four- hour shift? |
49181 | UMANSKI How I gon na learn English-- work twelve hours a day? |
49181 | UMANSKI That little box-- what you pay for him? |
49181 | UMANSKI Then what good we gain by strike? |
49181 | UMANSKI[_ Threatening with his free fist_]: Shall I? |
49181 | VOICES IN THE GANG You remember Teresa Malduca? |
49181 | Was Christ eccentric? |
49181 | Was Confucius a fool? |
49181 | Was the world never practical before? |
49181 | We all feel that Gilchrist has gone too far, and we''re agreed---- BENFIELD Does he preach tomorrow? |
49181 | We wanted to make up a couple of tables at bridge, but, with the men in here... as usual.... Where''s Jerry? |
49181 | We''re postin''bills, in seven languages, saying:"Why should workmen mistrust the company? |
49181 | We''ve had centuries of"fear, and hate, and greed"--and where have they brought us? |
49181 | Well, why would n''t it be? |
49181 | Were they failures, or were they the great successes of all Time and all Eternity? |
49181 | Were they fools, or were they wise men and women who had found the way to peace and happiness? |
49181 | Wha''d''ya expect of a man kicked out of his church for Bolshevism? |
49181 | What about happiness? |
49181 | What are the conditions? |
49181 | What are you complaining about? |
49181 | What do we get out of it now? |
49181 | What do you want? |
49181 | What have you there? |
49181 | What is success? |
49181 | What stopped it? |
49181 | What was the idea of the high sign? |
49181 | What would Mrs. Tice say if I invited them to sleep in her pew? |
49181 | What''re you giving us? |
49181 | What''s he do it for? |
49181 | What''s she doing here? |
49181 | What''s the difference between us? |
49181 | What''s this? |
49181 | When he does n''t, she returns._] Do n''t you think you''re making a terrible mistake? |
49181 | When he left, I went in to have a little talk with Joe... alone.... See? |
49181 | Where I get air-- sunshine-- milk-- eggs? |
49181 | Where I get him? |
49181 | Where are you going, Grubby? |
49181 | Where are your crutches? |
49181 | Where were you yesterday? |
49181 | Where were you? |
49181 | Where''s the Star of Bethlehem? |
49181 | Where''s your overcoat? |
49181 | Where''ve you got my wife? |
49181 | Which of us is the rich man? |
49181 | Who would n''t go to church to get a squint at Douglas Fairbanks? |
49181 | Who wrote that,"Luck is Work"? |
49181 | Whoever heard of the lights working on a Christmas Tree? |
49181 | Why ca n''t you keep your nose out of other people''s business? |
49181 | Why did you have to date my leaving Black River? |
49181 | Why did you keep your mouth shut when I lost my temper? |
49181 | Why did you turn the other cheek? |
49181 | Why not try love? |
49181 | Why not you carry a pistol? |
49181 | Why should I? |
49181 | Why would n''t I say he was crazy? |
49181 | Will you see if you can fix it? |
49181 | Wo n''t you come in? |
49181 | Wo n''t you take me, dear? |
49181 | Would n''t it be more fitting to preach from the text,"Glory to God in the Highest"? |
49181 | You do n''t forbid that, do you? |
49181 | You do n''t mean that because I''m trying to help---- GOODKIND Help... whom? |
49181 | You do n''t want to keep on-- coming down,_ do_ you? |
49181 | You expect me to believe that when you admit---- Why did you pull that hero stuff? |
49181 | You see what I mean? |
49181 | You were saying, Miss Levinson? |
49181 | You will... will you?... |
49181 | You''re a good man, Doctor, and, honestly, what would you say tomorrow if your wife told you she''d sold her rings, and given the money to the poor? |
49181 | You''ve had my son''s wife down here, have n''t you? |
49181 | [ MR. BARNABY_ re- enters L. The door closing attracts_ MRS. GILLIAM] MRS. GILLIAM Oh, Mr. Barnaby, how about the lights? |
49181 | [_ A pause._] CLARE You want me to go back? |
49181 | [_ All laugh._] PEARL Ai n''t you heard? |
49181 | [_ Bringing forth a small case_] What''s the matter with the Star of Bethlehem? |
49181 | [_ Comes down_] What''s the matter with the window? |
49181 | [_ Gets his hat._] CLARE Where''s your coat? |
49181 | [_ He assists her, but his mind is afar._] What''s the matter with you, Dan? |
49181 | [_ He exits._] UMANSKI What''s_ he_ doing down here, Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | [_ He follows the man back into the room._] Have n''t I seen you somewhere before? |
49181 | [_ He gives her the box, and exits L. A pause._] GOODKIND Everybody gone? |
49181 | [_ He has put down the bills, and brought forth an English grammar._] How about I go upstairs and study? |
49181 | [_ He laughs_] And that you''ve refused to take part of your income? |
49181 | [_ He lounges against the ladder._] What''s the use bluffing? |
49181 | [_ He remembers_]_ You''re_ not the Pole who came to my house last year with a delegation? |
49181 | [_ He rises_] Why....[_ Words fail_] What is this? |
49181 | [_ He sits._] GOODKIND How are things with you? |
49181 | [_ He wheels about and exits._] GOODKIND[_ Taking cigars from humidor_]: Smoke? |
49181 | [_ Looks around_] So you''re reduced to this, are you? |
49181 | [_ Looks up_] What''s this we''re wearing? |
49181 | [_ Shakes hands_] Have you come down to look us over? |
49181 | [_ She stands"Mama''s Treasure"atop a bookcase L._] It looks good, do n''t it? |
49181 | [_ The_ SERVANT_ exits_] What''s it all about, Stedtman? |
49181 | [_ They laugh._] CLARE When did you get in? |
49181 | [_ They sit_--JERRY_ down L._; BENFIELD_ left of the table_; GOODKIND_ back of it_; STEDTMAN_ R._] GOODKIND Well? |
49181 | [_ Throws the card on the table_] What the h---- GOODKIND What are labor conciliators? |
49181 | [_ To_ CLARE] Now do you think I was lying? |
49181 | [_ To_ DANIEL]: Did n''t you tell''em you was a Son of God? |
49181 | [_ To_ JERRY] Anything the matter with that bell? |
49181 | [_ To_ MRS. THORNBURY]_ We''re_ young and we''ve got to have life and gaiety; have n''t we, Mrs. Thornbury? |
49181 | [_ Together_] GOODKIND_ Your_ son? |
49181 | [_ Together_] MRS. HENCHLEY Is there any danger? |
49181 | [_"Everybody"returns the greeting_] Who are those people on the church steps? |
49181 | _ Making conversation_]: You live in Black River? |
49181 | honest?... |
7523 | Are you in pain? |
7523 | Brother, are you a Christian? |
7523 | But,he said to Miss Lessing in Japanese,"how does she get into it?" |
7523 | Did n''t you talk to him at all? |
7523 | Have you been inspected? |
7523 | Where are you going to wear all these lovely things? |
7523 | A good saddle horse? |
7523 | And why ca n''t you be horrid to people without being too horrid? |
7523 | Are n''t the lightness and brightness and beauty ever coming back? |
7523 | Black or white? |
7523 | But then I am so used to the heartache that I might be lonesome without it; who knows? |
7523 | By means of an interpreter, I told the mothers that we were going to try an American amusement and would they lend their honorable assistance? |
7523 | By the way, what has become of Jack? |
7523 | Can you guess how eagerly I am waiting for your answer to my April letter? |
7523 | Can you guess what it means? |
7523 | Can you guess what the temptation is? |
7523 | Can you imagine Philistine Me going out on the hill top to see the sun- rise and going without my supper to see it set? |
7523 | Can you realize that I am three whole weeks from home? |
7523 | Did I tell you that I stopped over two days in Korea? |
7523 | Did n''t I know better than anybody in the world how he felt? |
7523 | Did n''t we have a royal time that summer and were n''t we young and foolish? |
7523 | Do n''t tell him that I asked you to, but wo n''t you get him to go away? |
7523 | Do n''t you shudder at the risk you are taking? |
7523 | Do you remember the last reunion before I was married? |
7523 | Do you remember the lines:"He shall restore the years that the locust hath eaten?" |
7523 | Do you wonder that I almost danced a hole in the parlor rug? |
7523 | Do you wonder that I am happy and miserable and homesick and contented all at the same time? |
7523 | Does July 16th mean anything to you? |
7523 | Eyes? |
7523 | Hair? |
7523 | Have n''t I paid my penalty? |
7523 | Have you been getting an"aim"in life, are you going to be an operatic singer, or a temperance lecturer, or anything like that? |
7523 | Have you ever seen these dolls that have a weight in them, so that you can push them over and they stand right up again? |
7523 | Have you forgotten Jack''s famous parody on"My Country''Tis of Thee?" |
7523 | How many of you will be up at the Cape this summer? |
7523 | How many teeth have you? |
7523 | How tall? |
7523 | I do n''t believe Santa Glaus will have the heart to pass us by, do you? |
7523 | I have a good deal to learn, have n''t I? |
7523 | I have even been invited to write for the Mission papers, now is n''t that sufficient glory for any sinner? |
7523 | I told him that I could n''t, that I never had sworn, that ladies did n''t do it in America, would n''t he please do it for me? |
7523 | I wrote rapidly until I got to"When were you born?" |
7523 | I''ll stay bottled up as tight as I know how, but suppose the cork_ should_ fly? |
7523 | If they have made such progress under a superficial, shallow- pated thing like me, what_ would_ they have done under a woman with brains? |
7523 | Is Jack going? |
7523 | Is n''t it dandy that he is going to back the hospital scheme? |
7523 | Is n''t it ridiculous, Mate? |
7523 | Is n''t this enough to discourage people from ever going anywhere? |
7523 | Kind of chin? |
7523 | Now are n''t you surprised at hearing from me in Nagasaki? |
7523 | Now how is that for a soldier lady? |
7523 | Now what do you suppose the result is? |
7523 | Now who do you suppose has come to the surface again? |
7523 | Only_ why_ did you tell Jack? |
7523 | Plates were laid for twenty, and who do you suppose was on my right? |
7523 | Please will you give this or that a little adoring look? |
7523 | Shape of face? |
7523 | The price? |
7523 | The questions were about like this: Who was your father? |
7523 | There is a big yellow bee, doing the buzzing act in the sunshine on my window, and I am just wondering who is doing the most buzzing, he or I? |
7523 | They are very ambitious, and what do you suppose is their chief aim in life? |
7523 | This morning I was awakened by the strains"Shall we meet beyond the River?" |
7523 | Was anybody in your family ever hung? |
7523 | Was he just as unsociable as ever? |
7523 | Was n''t it exactly like him to back out of going South on account of his conscience? |
7523 | Was there ever anything so absurd as my lot being cast with a band of missionaries? |
7523 | What about yours? |
7523 | What are you doing out of your own country? |
7523 | What could you expect of a person who eats pie with a spoon? |
7523 | What do you suppose I''ve been longing for all day? |
7523 | What do you suppose he wanted? |
7523 | What does it matter if he is talking about"the other one"? |
7523 | What is the matter with you at home? |
7523 | Who is the Dr. Leet that was in the party? |
7523 | Why ca n''t people be nice to one without being too nice? |
7523 | Why did n''t you tell me at first it was Dr. Leet? |
7523 | Why do n''t you write to me? |
7523 | Would you believe it? |
7523 | You ask if I mind wearing that beautiful crêpe de chine which is not becoming to you? |
7523 | You know how I shrink from seeing pain, and how all my life I have tried to get away from the disagreeable? |
7523 | You remember the Irishman''s saying that we could be pretty comfortable in life if it was n''t for our pleasures? |
7523 | You remember the old darkey song,"Wisht I was in Heaben, settin''down"? |
7523 | but I was to be crushed yet further for the doctor looked over his glasses and said:"Now how did we miss that?" |
7523 | perhaps there will be starlight nights in Siberia, who knows? |
7523 | yes I did it too, in spite of all the fun I have made, and would you believe it? |
9404 | How do you mean,''all''s lost''? 9404 How many?" |
9404 | Well, why not? |
9404 | What time does it rise to- night? |
9404 | Besides, the moon was full, and had not the Great Fakir declared that this should be the moment of victory? |
9404 | Do n''t you see the 10th Hussars are here?" |
9404 | How long should Islam be insulted? |
9404 | How long should its followers lurk in the barren lands of the North? |
9404 | Is it fitting that Great Britain should play off one brutal khan against his neighbours, or balance one barbarous tribe against another? |
9404 | Is it not so, my brothers?" |
9404 | Rifles there were in plenty; but where could a gun be found? |
9404 | The mountain battery fired a few shells, but the distance was too great to do much good, or shall I say harm? |
9404 | They bore no malice, why should the Sirkar? |
9404 | What could be more attractive? |
9404 | What did they know of the distant regiments which the telegraph wires were drawing, from far down in the south of India? |
9404 | What is the actual fact? |
9404 | What is the explanation? |
9404 | What must the garrison have been by the reality? |
9404 | Where did the inhabitants of the villages go? |
9404 | Who should shoot? |
9404 | Why had the Sirkar burnt their village? |
9404 | Why should the common be precious? |
9404 | Why, replied Major Deane, had they broken the peace and attacked the camp? |
9404 | Why, they asked, had the Sirkar visited them so heavily? |
9404 | Would they give up their rifles or not? |
9404 | Yet, who would by his evidence send a brother to the gallows? |
60488 | And he said unto them, How is it that ye sought me? 60488 And when they saw him, they were amazed: and his mother said unto him, Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? |
60488 | He was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall declare his generation? 60488 Is he the God of the Jews only? |
60488 | Then answered Peter and said unto him, Behold, we have forsaken all, and followed thee; what shall we have therefore? 60488 Then came to Jesus scribes and Pharisees, which were of Jerusalem, saying, Why do thy disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? |
60488 | What is the object of this unparalleled, this mysterious incarnation? 60488 When Jesus came into the coasts of CÃ ¦ sarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I the Son of man am? |
60488 | Wherewith shall I come before the Lord( said the prophet Micah),"and bow myself before the high God? |
60488 | Who am I, that I should go unto Pharaoh, and that I should bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt? 60488 And he said unto them, What would ye that I should do for you? 60488 And he saith unto them, Whose is this image and superscription? 60488 And when Peter saw it, he answered unto the people, Ye men of Israel, why marvel ye at this? 60488 And why did God make himself man? 60488 Are we then to pronounce all divine incarnation false, every tradition of it spurious? 60488 Are we to infer that these faults have the same origin as the doctrines with which they are intermixed, and that they are both divinely inspired? 60488 Are we, therefore, to affirm that those laws are necessary, and that no deviation from them is possible in nature? 60488 But He answered and said unto them,Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition? |
60488 | But Jesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites? |
60488 | But Jesus said unto them, Ye know not what ye ask: can ye drink of the cup that I drink of? |
60488 | But he is pre- eminently the seer:"Is not the seer here?" |
60488 | But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe my words?" |
60488 | But what images so strike, so penetrate the soul? |
60488 | But why an attack of this character, so indirect and little complete? |
60488 | By a voice from without or by an internal inspiration? |
60488 | By what marks can we distinguish the Divine origin of this special revelation that became the Christian religion? |
60488 | By what ways did Jesus Christ penetrate the human soul to accomplish this great work? |
60488 | Did they act up to their teachings, and accomplish what they attempted? |
60488 | Did they cause humanity to make any great progress, and open to it horizons which it had not before known? |
60488 | Did they really change the moral and social condition of nations? |
60488 | Do these two monuments form but one single edifice? |
60488 | For what is it that unites in a church if it is not faith? |
60488 | Had He not to do so when invested with the attributes of humanity, among contemporaries, and even in his own family? |
60488 | Has God need of man''s concurrence? |
60488 | Has it a rightful claim to all this power? |
60488 | Have they, or not, a meaning and an object? |
60488 | Have we not daily the example and the spectacle before our eyes? |
60488 | Have you then completely forgotten, or have you never thoroughly comprehended, humanity and the history of humanity? |
60488 | He acts, it is said, only by general and permanent laws: how can we implore His interference in favour of our special and exceptional desires? |
60488 | He has himself his moments of sadness, of disquietude:"And Moses cried unto the Lord, saying, What shall I do unto this people? |
60488 | He is immutable, ever perfect, and ever the same: how is it conceivable that He lends Himself to the fickleness of human sentiments and wishes? |
60488 | He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am? |
60488 | How did He win the human soul to the Christian faith, in order to snatch it from evil and to save it? |
60488 | How did he, in each instance, reach such a haven of repose? |
60488 | How did those who were its witnesses and instruments think and speak of it at the moment when it was manifested? |
60488 | How does life become sad? |
60488 | How had God spoken to Abraham? |
60488 | How has he come there? |
60488 | How is his liberty compatible with the laws which govern him and the world? |
60488 | How is it that we find it so charming to give it this name, and regard it under this aspect? |
60488 | How is the great event thus characterised by M. Ewald proved? |
60488 | How lead them back to Christianity? |
60488 | How sound closely the mysteries of such a person and such a purpose? |
60488 | How was the Divine Incarnation accomplished in man? |
60488 | If good, how then has evil found admission? |
60488 | Impossible that men should not feel themselves bound to act towards each other as God has done to them; and towards what man is not charity a duty? |
60488 | In holding this language, what in effect is Dr. Chalmers doing? |
60488 | Is good or is evil the condition and the law of man and of the world? |
60488 | Is he a passive instrument of fate, or a responsible agent? |
60488 | Is it by virtue of experience that the child trusts to the words of its mother, that it has faith in all she tells it? |
60488 | Is it destined to fall with the monarchy of Solomon, or to languish and die out in the midst of the struggles and disasters of Judah and of Israel? |
60488 | Is it, then, in His own name that Jesus Christ teaches and commands? |
60488 | Is its influence legitimate, as well as efficacious? |
60488 | Is this the normal and definitive state of man and of the world? |
60488 | Jesus saith unto him, Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? |
60488 | Laws there are which govern them;--is there a legislator? |
60488 | Miracles formerly constituted the great force of the sermon, at the present day what are they but a secret source of embarrassment? |
60488 | Tell us therefore, What thinkest thou? |
60488 | That second history, is it comprised and written beforehand in the first? |
60488 | They say unto him, Why did Moses then command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her away? |
60488 | What are its source and its nature? |
60488 | What are the elements and the essential facts which constitute it, and upon which it is founded? |
60488 | What are the ties and relations which connect him with the Legislator of the world? |
60488 | What are their beginning and their end? |
60488 | What are they in comparison and in contact with Christian nations? |
60488 | What connection and harmony between the purest, the most generous, instincts of the human soul, and the dogma of God''s Redemption? |
60488 | What did Moses do to obtain a renown so great and so enduring? |
60488 | What does it affirm itself in support of its claim to the moral conquest of mankind? |
60488 | What great progress, what salutary changes, have been effected? |
60488 | What is man himself, but an incomplete and imperfect incarnation of God? |
60488 | What is the full import of this title? |
60488 | What is the full meaning of these words? |
60488 | What is the meaning of this? |
60488 | What is the origin of each, and whither does each tend? |
60488 | What is to become, in this absolute ruin of the nationality of the Jews, of their God, and their faith? |
60488 | What mean these inward disquietudes,--these alternate impulses of pride and weakness? |
60488 | What need to add more? |
60488 | What need to mention that in speaking of the finite world, I do not mean to speak of the material world alone? |
60488 | What passed in that divine soul during that human existence? |
60488 | What shall I say unto them? |
60488 | What sincerity and what firmness ever showed themselves more strikingly than those that grew out of the faith of St. Paul? |
60488 | What teach, what command, in that speech full of authority? |
60488 | What the signification of the inspiration of the sacred volumes? |
60488 | What then ensues? |
60488 | What then is this but to pretend to comprehend God? |
60488 | What was the positive extent of this primal revelation, the necessary attendant upon creation, which occurred in the first relation of God with man? |
60488 | What wonder if Christ has in these days to encounter such adversaries? |
60488 | When it has no other God than the universe, no other man than the chief of the mammalia, what is it but a mere system of Zoology? |
60488 | Whence come this commingling and this strife? |
60488 | Whence comes this Utopia of innocence and bliss in the cradle of the human race? |
60488 | Whence does the world proceed, and whence does man appear in the midst of it? |
60488 | Whence in him this harmony between the philosopher and the Christian? |
60488 | Where are these nations at the present day, more than two thousand years after the appearance of these glorious characters in their history? |
60488 | Wherefore suffering and death? |
60488 | Who does not see how this sublime fact exalts man''s dignity at the same time that it illustrates the worth of man''s nature? |
60488 | Who is there that does not discern an essential, an absolute difference between what is general and what is necessary? |
60488 | Who shall define the possible contingencies, or fathom the mysteries of this relation? |
60488 | Who shall sound the depth of the fall, and of the change which it brought into the moral condition of its author? |
60488 | Who shall weigh the consequences of this change to the state and the moral dispositions of man''s descendants? |
60488 | Why did these four essential systems-- sensualism, idealism, scepticism, and mysticism, appear from the most ancient times? |
60488 | Why has he left Chaldà ¦ a? |
60488 | Why prayer? |
60488 | Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
60488 | and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with? |
60488 | and by what right do they oppose his nature to his providence, if his nature is, to us, an impenetrable mystery? |
60488 | how does it lose its illusions? |
60488 | is he not also of the Gentiles? |
60488 | or why look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had made this man to walk? |
60488 | shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old? |
60488 | shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? |
60488 | why is it that the intimate experience of my own heart can not express itself in a forcible protest against any such opinion? |
60488 | wist ye not that I must be about my Father''s business? |
60488 | { 147} Is it possible to determine in words of greater precision the religious and moral object of the inspiration? |
60488 | { 178} Can He not, if He will, accomplish all his designs by himself, and through the fulness of his omnipotence?" |
60488 | { 206} But what, in this decline, will become of the law revealed on Sinai to Moses? |
60488 | { 212} And shall, then, the Hebrews oppose no efficacious resistance to these reverses? |
60488 | { 245} What Reformer, other than Jesus Christ, ever held to his followers such language? |
60488 | { 248} What does He say to them? |
60488 | { 258} Need I say more? |
60488 | { 278} Is it lawful to give tribute unto Cesar, or not? |
60488 | { 287} Another day,"came the disciples unto Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? |
60488 | { 36} In what does this dogma consist? |
60488 | { 3} Under the empire of these laws, man feels and calls himself free: is he so in reality? |
60488 | { 47} To what does this idea of a primal time, without strife, without sin, and without pain, correspond? |
60488 | { 49} Is this a pleasure foreign to all personal sentiment, to all secret reference to ourselves, the pleasure, that is to say, of a simple spectator? |
60488 | { 5} I borrow the following admirable observations from M. de Châteaubriand:--"Why does not the ox as I do? |
60488 | { 62} Whence comes this power? |
60488 | { 80} And are we then to regard this merely as a pious, a generous illusion, a devotedness as vain as admirable? |
60488 | { 87} Do you ignore absolutely what the people really is, and what all those nations are that cover the surface of the earth? |
60488 | { 95}''Whither, whither, O Lord, marches the earth in the heavens?''" |
60488 | { 97} Have you well weighed all this? |
60488 | { xiii} Does it comprehend properly, does it suitably carry on the warfare in which it is engaged? |
9071 | And what is this but the strongest possible corroboration of our assertion as Christians that Jesus was executed upon a cross- shaped instrument? |
9071 | And, was it a caricature of the execution of Jesus? |
9071 | But can we fairly do so? |
9071 | But did the so- called Monogram of Christ first come into being as a combination of two letters; Greek, Roman, or otherwise? |
9071 | But was the"star and crescent"the symbol of the City of Constantine? |
9071 | But-- the reader may object-- how about the Greek word which in our Bibles is translated as"crucify"or"crucified?" |
9071 | Does not that mean"fix to a cross"or"fixed to a cross?" |
9071 | For your very standards, as well as your banners, and flags of your camps, what are they but crosses gilded and adorned? |
9071 | The references in question commence with the enquiry,"Let us further ask whether the Lord took any care to foreshadow the Water and the Stauros?" |
9071 | WAS THE_ STAUROS_ OF JESUS CROSS- SHAPED? |
9071 | WAS THE_ STAUROS_ OF JESUS CROSS- SHAPED? |
9071 | Was_ that_ what Jesus meant, and all that the so- called cross effected? |
9071 | What, for instance, can be more unfair than the assumption that God, if incarnated as one of the genus Homo, must have been born a male? |
9071 | What, then, does this important witness have to say, which bears upon the points at issue? |
9071 | Whether such men as these, or Ptolemaeus, who never saw the apostles and who never even in his dreams attained to the slightest trace of an apostle? |
9071 | Whom, then, should we rather believe? |
8104 | Are not our spirits clothed round with the substance of earth? |
8104 | Are they malleable to public opinion? |
8104 | But does the party system yield us such Ministers? |
8104 | Can we contemplate the permanent existence of a servile class in Ireland? |
8104 | Can we discover how it is done and apply the law to civil life? |
8104 | Can we inspire civilians with the same passionate self- forgetfulness in the pursuit of the higher ideals of peace? |
8104 | Can we master these arcane human forces? |
8104 | Could I wish humanity different Could I wish the people made of wood and stone, or that there be no justice in destiny or time? |
8104 | Could we carve an Attica out of Ireland? |
8104 | Do we not perish without sunlight and fresh air? |
8104 | Does it not favor an evolution of manufacturing industry, so that democratic control may finally replace the autocratic control of the capitalist? |
8104 | Does not this suggest new productive urban enterprises? |
8104 | Does political action, on which so many rely, promise more? |
8104 | How are we to prevent them fighting the old battle between producer and consumer? |
8104 | How can the two main divisions of national life be brought together in a national solidarity? |
8104 | How can we make the countryside in Ireland a place which nobody would willingly emigrate from? |
8104 | How does the policy of co- working make Patrick pass away from his old self? |
8104 | How ought he to wish to see life in the towns develop? |
8104 | How would its members live? |
8104 | I agree that representative government is the ideal, but how is it to operate in the legislature and still more in administration? |
8104 | In practice is not high position the reward of service to party? |
8104 | Is it any wonder that agriculture decays in countries where the farmers are expected to buy at retail prices and sell at wholesale prices? |
8104 | Is it his interest to support the farmers in his own country or to regard the world as his farm? |
8104 | Is it not from Nature we draw life? |
8104 | Is not the earth mother of us all? |
8104 | Is not the growth of a tree from a tiny cell hidden in the earth as provocative of thought as the things men learn at the schools? |
8104 | Is not the idea of a civilization amid the green trees and fields under the smokeless sky alluring? |
8104 | Is not the return of man to a natural life on the earth a great enough idea to inspire humanity? |
8104 | Is not thought on these things more interesting than the sophistries of the newspapers? |
8104 | Is special knowledge demanded of the controller of a Board of Trade or a Board of Agriculture? |
8104 | Is the old daring gone? |
8104 | Is there any reason why we should not have conscription for civil purposes? |
8104 | It is-- how many hundred years since greatness guided us? |
8104 | Let them unite together in their charge, and what will oppose them? |
8104 | One can only say with Whitman: Pale, silent, stern, what could I say to that long- accrued retribution? |
8104 | They want a village hall, but how is it to be obtained? |
8104 | Was not the last Irish rising largely composed of those who were economically neglected and oppressed? |
8104 | We often hear the expression,"the rural community,"but where do we find rural communities? |
8104 | What are all these little shops doing? |
8104 | What chance has the individual who is aggrieved against the great carrying companies? |
8104 | What could be done? |
8104 | What could be more depressing than the miles of poverty- stricken streets around the heart of our modern cities? |
8104 | What is the cause of this? |
8104 | What kind of a being is he? |
8104 | What profound spiritual life can there be when the social order almost forces men to battle with each other for the means of existence? |
8104 | What right have we to ask for ourselves what we deny to another? |
8104 | What way has he of influencing the jobbers and dealers to act honestly by him-- they who have formed rings to keep down the prices of cattle? |
8104 | What would be their relations to one another and their community? |
8128 | And how many men,I said,"would want to be reborn as women?" |
8128 | But what did you think of the personages? |
8128 | But where does it stay? |
8128 | Can it be true?-or is it only a dream? 8128 Do you mean,"I asked,"that a man would be reborn as a woman, and a woman as a man?" |
8128 | Eyebrows? |
8128 | Have I become a god? |
8128 | Is it possible,he exclaimed,"that you never saw a silkworm- moth? |
8128 | May I put your theory some day into print? |
8128 | Reborn in some one of the heavens? |
8128 | Reborn, then, in what form? |
8128 | So it was he who told you? |
8128 | Tasogare("Who- Is- there?" |
8128 | Well, mistress,said O- Yone,"you will wait,--will you not,-- until to- morrow night?" |
8128 | Who? |
8128 | Why not give English readers the ghostly part of the story? |
8128 | Why not? |
8128 | Why repeat such unlucky words?... 8128 ''Do you know where he lives?'' 8128 ''Master,''Nanda inquired of the Buddha,''for whom has this vessel been prepared?'' 8128 ''O Master,''cried Nanda,` what wonderful festival is this?'' 8128 ( 2).... What does this mean? 8128 --that is to say,Have I died?--am I only a ghost in this desolation?" |
8128 | AUTUMN FANCIES( 1) Faded the clover now;--sere and withered the grasses: What dreams the matsumushi(1) in the desolate autumn- fields? |
8128 | And to myself I said:--Is it wonderful that the voice of the sea should make us serious? |
8128 | And what, under such circumstances, would have been the Western estimate of Leander?" |
8128 | But the little private work...? |
8128 | But what would become of this human imago in a state of perfect bliss? |
8128 | Did you ever visit them at that place? |
8128 | Do not our common forms of prayer prove our desire for like attention? |
8128 | Do not whole scales of colors invisibly exist above and below the limits of our retinal sensibility? |
8128 | I queried,--"by the Apparitional Birth?" |
8128 | Koko(?) |
8128 | Koko(?) |
8128 | Kwakko( Bishop''s- wort?) |
8128 | My friend says that he has seen two Chinese versions,--one in the Hongyo- kyo(? |
8128 | O poor singer of summer, Wherefore thus consume all thy body in song? |
8128 | O- Yone at last made answer,--"My dear young lady, why will you trouble your mind about a man who seems to be so cruel?... |
8128 | SHINTO REVERY Mad waves devour The rocks: I ask myself in the darkness,"Have I become a god?" |
8128 | Shomokko(?) |
8128 | The incense first mentioned, for example, is called by the poets''name for the gloaming,--Tasogare( lit:"Who is there?" |
8128 | The woman said:--"And if I should be disowned by my father, would you then let me come and live with you?" |
8128 | Then the Buddha asked him:''Is there any one among these maidens, Nanda, equal in beauty to the woman with whom you have been in love?'' |
8128 | This is what I wanted to say to you, dear Yukiko.... Have you been able to understand?" |
8128 | Who could fully describe even five minutes of it? |
8128 | Who told you?" |
8128 | Whose dog is it?" |
8128 | You did not suppose that ghost- story was true, did you?" |
8128 | Yusai wonderingly exclaimed:--"Yes, he is dead;--but how did you learn of it?" |
8128 | [ Laughing] Is n''t it a sin to have been born so handsome that the girls die for love of you? |
8128 | compassionately exclaimed the priest;--"why do you torment it so, children?" |
8128 | exclaimed Nanda,''how can a lovely woman be compared with an ugly ape?'' |
8128 | look?--where is the place of parting? |
8128 | or"Who is it?") |
8128 | repeated Shinzaburo, turning white,--"did you say that she is dead?" |
8128 | sobbed the other,--"have we to go back to- night again without seeing Hagiwara Sama? |
8128 | the tombs of O- Tsuyu and O- Yone?" |
8128 | where does she dwell to- day, our dear little vanished sister? |
8128 | why will you ask me to do these things?" |
8128 | will you not allow her to stay here to- night?" |
38805 | Did he call on God or Jesus Christ, asking either of them to forgive his sins, or did he curse them or either of them? |
38805 | My God, my God, why hast thou for-saken me?" |
38805 | To whatpurpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me? |
38805 | What is it? |
38805 | When ye come to appear before me, who hath re-quired this at your hand?" |
38805 | Where did he get it? 38805 ''_ Why did you not publish that? 38805 --of his brother ministers? 38805 158 Can he do anything of that nature? 38805 174 The Christian now asks of the atheist: Where is your asylum, where is your hospital, where is your university? 38805 217 Are stories like this calculated to make soldiers merciful? 38805 280 Is such a vision a prophecy? 38805 352 Why was not the mind of each man so made that every religious truth necessary to his salvation was an axiom? 38805 405 Would not a man who had been raised from the dead naturally be an object of considerable interest, especially to his friends and acquaintances? 38805 482 Did the State of New York feel indebted to a drunken beast, and confer upon Thomas Paine an estate of several hundred acres? 38805 85 Do you think that laymen have the same right as ministers to examine the Scriptures? 38805 About how long did God continue to pay particular attention to his children in this world? 38805 After some solicitation on my part he agreed to do so? 38805 After these sinners have died, and been sent to hell, will the Christians in heaven then pity them? 38805 Again I ask, in what respect? 38805 Allow me to ask again, do you believe? 38805 And if he does not believe it, and ad- mits that he does not believe it, then his honesty will not save him? 38805 And suppose that the islander should honestly reject the true religion? 38805 And suppose, further, that the man honestly believed that the efficacy of the sacrifice depended largely on the size of the toad? 38805 And the Lord saidunto him: Wherewith? |
38805 | And what is better calculated to increase the happiness of mankind than to know that the doctrine of eternal pain is infinitely and absurdly false? |
38805 | And why does one who had the power miraculously to feed thousands, allow millions to die for want of food? |
38805 | Are all parts of the inspired books equally true? |
38805 | Are any miracles performed now? |
38805 | Are people to be saved or lost on the reputation of Eusebius? |
38805 | Are we absolutely certain that he ever lived? |
38805 | Are we absolutely sure who wrote them? |
38805 | Are we certain that some of the books that were thrown out were not inspired? |
38805 | Are we indebted for his kindness to the flesh that clothed his spirit? |
38805 | Are we not commanded to love our enemies? |
38805 | Are we under obligation to render good for evil, and to"pray for those who despitefully use us"? |
38805 | Are you satisfied that Christ was abso- lutely God? |
38805 | Are you still of that opinion? |
38805 | Are you willing to accept the challenge; or have you ever read that chapter? |
38805 | As soon as I offered to deposit the gold and give bonds besides to cover costs, did you not publish a falsehood? |
38805 | Aside from the miracles, is there any evidence to show the supernatural origin or character of Jesus Christ? |
38805 | At the time God made these people, did he know that he would have to drown them all? |
38805 | At the time God told Adam and Eve not to eat, why did he not tell them of the existence of Satan? |
38805 | But how can he answer these scientists? |
38805 | But suppose they are good men,-- what then? |
38805 | But why should God be so particular about our believing the stories in his book? |
38805 | But why should I expect kindness from a Chris- tian? |
38805 | But why should Mr. Tal- mage say that? |
38805 | But why, if the flood was local, should he have taken any of the fowls of the air into his ark? |
38805 | By hating infidels and maligning Christians? |
38805 | Can I control these impressions? |
38805 | Can a man be saved now by living exactly in accordance with the Sermon on the Mount? |
38805 | Can a man control his belief? |
38805 | Can a minister be expected to treat with fairness a man whom his God intends to damn? |
38805 | Can any one believe this to be a true account of the personal appearance of Mr. Paine in 1802? |
38805 | Can he even cause a"vehement east wind"? |
38805 | Can it be that to give an honest opinion causes one to die in terror and de- spair? |
38805 | Can such a God be good? |
38805 | Can we rely upon the Catholic Church now? |
38805 | Certainly, birds could have avoided a local flood? |
38805 | Could Christ have prevented the Jews from crucifying him? |
38805 | Could Christ now furnish evidence enough to convince every human being of the truth of the Bible? |
38805 | Could any additional evidence have been furnished? |
38805 | Did Abraham show any gratitude? |
38805 | Did Christ only have pity when he was part human? |
38805 | Did Christ write anything himself, in the New Testament? |
38805 | Did God always know that a Bible was necessary to civilize a country? |
38805 | Did God ever make any other special efforts to convert the people, or to reform the world? |
38805 | Did God hear about this? |
38805 | Did God keep his promise? |
38805 | Did God succeed in civilizing the Jews after he had"removed"the Canaanites? |
38805 | Did God use the prophets simply as instruments? |
38805 | Did I understand you to say that Christ was actually God? |
38805 | Did Jehovah change the canes of the Egyptian magicians into snakes? |
38805 | Did Luke? |
38805 | Did Mark? |
38805 | Did Matthew say anything on the sub- ject of"regeneration"? |
38805 | Did Thomas Paine Recant? |
38805 | Did any of your ancestors ever receive a letter like that? |
38805 | Did any of your ancestors ever receive a letter like that? |
38805 | Did any of your ancestors ever receive a letter like that? |
38805 | Did he create his own"omnipotence"? |
38805 | Did he drown them all? |
38805 | Did he establish any church? |
38805 | Did he ever quite succeed in civilizing them? |
38805 | Did he excuse murderers then, and does he damn thinkers now? |
38805 | Did he get out of hailstones? |
38805 | Did he know exactly how they would use that freedom? |
38805 | Did he know exactly what they would do when he chose them? |
38805 | Did he know just as much before he was born as after? |
38805 | Did he know that billions would use it wrong? |
38805 | Did he know that hundreds and millions and billions would suffer eternal pain? |
38805 | Did he know when Judas went to the chief priest and made the bargain for the delivery of Christ? |
38805 | Did he know when he made them that they would all be failures? |
38805 | Did he make a woman at the same time that he made a man? |
38805 | Did he make the world out of nothing? |
38805 | Did he ordain any ministers, or did he have any re- vivals? |
38805 | Did he put his thoughts in their minds, and use their 337 hands to make a record? |
38805 | Did he refer to the gospel set forth by Mark? |
38805 | Did he tell any of his disciples to write any of his words? |
38805 | Did he then succeed in civilizing them? |
38805 | Did he turn them out of the garden because of their sin? |
38805 | Did he want Garfield assassinated? |
38805 | Did not Christ say that we ought to"bless those who curse us,"and that we should"love our enemies"? |
38805 | Did not the first disciples advocate theories that their parents denied? |
38805 | Did reading the Bible make them bad people? |
38805 | Did the Catholics decide for us which are the true gospels and which are the true epistles? |
38805 | Did they die for a lie? |
38805 | Did they get the idea of persecution from the Bible? |
38805 | Did they not, by reading the same book, come to the conclusion that it was their solemn duty to extirpate heresy and heretics? |
38805 | Did they try to circumvent God? |
38805 | Did this God establish any schools or institutions of learning? |
38805 | Did this convince Pharaoh? |
38805 | Did you not ask me to deposit the money that you might prove the"absurd story"to be an"ower true tale"and obtain the money? |
38805 | Did you not in your paper of the twenty- seventh of September in effect deny that you had offered to prove this"absurd story"? |
38805 | Did you not offer to prove that Paine died in fear and agony, frightened by the clanking chains of devils? |
38805 | Do all men get the same ideas from the Bible? |
38805 | Do all men give the same force to the same evidence? |
38805 | Do any two people in the whole world speak the same language, now? |
38805 | Do good Christians pity sinners in this world? |
38805 | Do they divide profits? |
38805 | Do we know anything of the character of Eusebius? |
38805 | Do we know that Polycarp ever met St. John? |
38805 | Do we know that they picked out the right ones? |
38805 | Do we know where the Garden of Eden was, and have we ever found any place where a"river parted and became into four heads"? |
38805 | Do we know whether any of the dis- ciples wrote anything? |
38805 | Do we know who wrote the gospels? |
38805 | Do we not know absolutely that man is greatly influenced by his surroundings? |
38805 | Do you admit that I have the right to reason about it and to investigate it? |
38805 | Do you admit that Matthew says nothing on the subject? |
38805 | Do you believe all the miracles? |
38805 | Do you believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ? |
38805 | Do you believe that he can help you? |
38805 | Do you believe the story of Jonah to be a true account of a literal fact? |
38805 | Do you consider it just in God to create a man who can not believe the Bible, and then damn him because he does not? |
38805 | Do you consider it necessary to be"regenerated"--to be"born again"--in order to be saved? |
38805 | Do you consider it our duty to love our neighbor? |
38805 | Do you consider it possible for a law to be jusdy satisfied by the punishment of an innocent person? |
38805 | Do you consider such treatment of ani- mals consistent with divine mercy? |
38805 | Do you consider that the inventor of a steel plow cast a slur upon his father who scratched the ground with a wooden one? |
38805 | Do you fear the final triumph of infi- delity? |
38805 | Do you have to employ Christ to mollify a being of infinite mercy? |
38805 | Do you mean that he performs no miracles at the present day? |
38805 | Do you mean to say that there would have been no death in the world, either of animals, insects, or persons? |
38805 | Do you not consider the treatment of the Canaanites to have been cruel and ferocious? |
38805 | Do you not think that a confusion of tongues would bring men together instead of separa- ting them? |
38805 | Do you really believe that Elijah went to heaven in a chariot of fire, drawn by horses of fire? |
38805 | Do you really believe that the infinite God killed some animals, took their skins from them, cut out and sewed up clothes for Adam and Eve? |
38805 | Do you really regard poverty as a crime? |
38805 | Do you remember the pains I took to clean you? |
38805 | Do you see anything"prophetic"in the fate of the Jewish people themselves? |
38805 | Do you still insist that the Old Testa- ment upholds polygamy? |
38805 | Do you suppose it was really brim- stone? |
38805 | Do you suppose that we will care nothing in the next world for those we loved in this? |
38805 | Do you take the ground that there never has been a human being who could predict the future? |
38805 | Do you think that Christ knew the Jews would crucify him? |
38805 | Do you think that Christ wrought 413 many of his miracles because he was good, charitable, and filled with pity? |
38805 | Do you think that God made the Jewish people wanderers, so that they might be perpetual witnesses to the truth of the Scriptures? |
38805 | Do you think that God really endeav- ored to civilize the Jews? |
38805 | Do you think that God, if there be one, when he saves or damns a man, will take into con- sideration all the circumstances of the man''s life? |
38805 | Do you think that Jonah was really in the whale''s stomach? |
38805 | Do you think that Lot''s wife was changed into salt? |
38805 | Do you think that Luke was mistaken? |
38805 | Do you think that Matthew, Mark and Luke knew anything about the necessity of"regen-"eration"? |
38805 | Do you think that Paine was a drunken beast when the following letter was received by him? |
38805 | Do you think that Samson''s strength depended on the length of his hair? |
38805 | Do you think that it is necessary for us to believe all the miracles of the Old Testament in order to be saved? |
38805 | Do you think that light emitted by rocks would be sufficient to produce trees? |
38805 | Do you think that the spirit in which Mr. Talmage reviews your lectures is in accordance with the teachings of Christianity? |
38805 | Do you think that there are any cruel- ties on God''s part recorded in the Bible? |
38805 | Do you think that when he chose Judas he knew that he would betray him? |
38805 | Do you think they did, and are doing great harm? |
38805 | Do you think this brimstone came from the clouds? |
38805 | Do you understand that God made coats of skins, and clothed Adam and Eve when he turned them out of the garden? |
38805 | Do you wish, as Mr. Talmage says, to de- stroy the Bible-- to have all the copies burned to ashes? |
38805 | Does God believe in the right of private judgment? |
38805 | Does Mr. Talmage believe in the doctrine of"tran-"substantiation"? |
38805 | Does Mr. Talmage believe that it is the duty of a man to fight for a government in which he has no rights? |
38805 | Does Mr. Talmage think that it is absolutely neces- sary to believe_ all_ the story? |
38805 | Does an argument depend for its force upon the pecuniary condition of the person making it? |
38805 | Does he always do just what ought to be done? |
38805 | Does he at all times know just what ought to be done? |
38805 | Does he not know, that a fact can not by any possi- bility be affected by opinion? |
38805 | Does he seek to enhance his glory by receiving the adulation of cringing slaves? |
38805 | Does it show that a heart is entirely without mercy, simply because a man denies the justice of eternal pain? |
38805 | Does it show that a man has been entirely given over to the devil, because he refuses to believe that God ordered a father to sacri- fice his son? |
38805 | Does not such a statement devour itself? |
38805 | Does the existence of such people conclusively prove the existence of a good Designer? |
38805 | Does the fact that Buddha taught the same tend to show that he was of divine origin? |
38805 | Does the fact that he died for that belief prove its truth? |
38805 | Does the following sound as though spoken by a God of mercy:"I will make mine arrows drunk"with blood, and my sword shall devour flesh"? |
38805 | Does the good Christian defame unanswering and unresisting dust? |
38805 | Does the real Christian malign the memory of the dead? |
38805 | Does the real Christian violate the sanctity of death? |
38805 | Does the right to read a book include the right to give your opinion as to the truth of what the book contains? |
38805 | For what reason did he place temptation in the way of his children? |
38805 | God''s bodikins, man, much better: use every man after his desert, and who should''scape whipping? |
38805 | Had all of his moral precepts been taught before he lived? |
38805 | Had he no time to give a commandment against slavery? |
38805 | Had he no"omnipotence"left? |
38805 | Had these people any option as to whether they would be made or not? |
38805 | Has any one ever seen any of these cherubim? |
38805 | Has he as much power now as he had when on earth? |
38805 | Has he correctly stated your position? |
38805 | Has he not as much power now as he had then? |
38805 | Has the honesty of his belief anything to do with his future condition? |
38805 | Have I the right to decide for myself whether or not the book is inspired? |
38805 | Have I the right to read the Bible? |
38805 | Have I the right to say that God did not write the Koran? |
38805 | Have all honest men who have exam- ined the Bible believed it to be inspired? |
38805 | Have we any testimony, except human testimony, to substantiate any miracle? |
38805 | Have you any evidence that he was in a drunken condition when he died? |
38805 | Have you any other reasons for be- lieving it to be inspired? |
38805 | Have you in your writings been actuated by the fear of such a consequence? |
38805 | Have you no confidence in any pro- phecies? |
38805 | Have you not the same witnesses in favor of their authenticity, that you have in favor of the gospels? |
38805 | Have you read the sermon of Mr. Talmage, in which he exposes your mis- representations? |
38805 | Have you the right to be guided by your reason? |
38805 | Have you the same right to follow your reason after reading the Bible? |
38805 | How am I to get out of this sinful state? |
38805 | How could a devil have done worse? |
38805 | How could it be worse, when assassins are among the best people in it? |
38805 | How could there have been any progress in this world, if children had not gone beyond their parents? |
38805 | How deep was the water? |
38805 | How did God destroy the people? |
38805 | How did it happen that Christ did not visit his mother after his resurrection? |
38805 | How did it happen that the Canaanites were never convinced that the Jews were assisted by Jehovah? |
38805 | How did the Catholic Church select the true books? |
38805 | How did the Christian religion commence? |
38805 | How did they happen to be there? |
38805 | How did vegetation grow without sun- light? |
38805 | How do I know that you believe the Bible? |
38805 | How do you account for that? |
38805 | How do you account for that? |
38805 | How do you account for the fact that God did not make himself known except to Abra- ham and his descendants? |
38805 | How do you account for the fact that the heathen were not surprised at the stopping of the sun and moon? |
38805 | How do you account for the present condition of woman in what is known as"the civilized"world,"unless the Bible has bettered her condition? |
38805 | How do you answer this? |
38805 | How do you explain the story of Elisha and the children,--where the two she- bears destroyed forty- two children on account of their impudence? |
38805 | How do you know he was converted? |
38805 | How do you know? |
38805 | How do you know? |
38805 | How do you know? |
38805 | How do you under- stand this matter, and has Mr. Talmage stated the facts? |
38805 | How does he prove that he is a Christian? |
38805 | How does he regard the great and glorious of the earth, who have not been the victims of his particular superstition? |
38805 | How does it happen that the two gene- alogies given do not agree? |
38805 | How is it that not one word is said about the death of Mary-- not one word about the death of Joseph? |
38805 | How is it that the Jews had no confi- dence in these miracles? |
38805 | How is it? |
38805 | How long did it take God to make the universe? |
38805 | How long did they remain in slavery? |
38805 | How long is a"good- while"? |
38805 | How many of the Christian witnesses against him, in his judgment, told the truth? |
38805 | How much did it rain each day? |
38805 | How should infidels be treated? |
38805 | How should we regard the wonderful stories of the Old Testament? |
38805 | How was it answered? |
38805 | How was it possible, under the old dis- pensation, to please a being of infinite kindness? |
38805 | How were the people prevented from succeeding? |
38805 | How would their being"broken up"increase the depth of the water? |
38805 | How, then, do you account for the fact that, before the forbidden fruit was eaten, an evil serpent was in the world? |
38805 | How? |
38805 | I ask again, was this cruel? |
38805 | I ask the questions asked by Jefferson:"Is he"honest; is he capable?" |
38805 | I ask you again whether these splendid utterances came from the lips of a drunken beast? |
38805 | I want to ask you a few questions about the second sermon of Mr. Talmage; have you read it, and what do you think of it? |
38805 | If Christ had not been betrayed and 399 crucified, is it true that his own mother would be in perdition to- day? |
38805 | If Christ knew that Judas would betray him, why did he choose him? |
38805 | If God gave laws from Sinai what right have we to repeal them? |
38805 | If God''s witnesses were honest, anybody could believe, and what be- comes of faith, one of the greatest virtues? |
38805 | If I do not believe the Bible, whose fault is it? |
38805 | If I have the right to read the Bible, have I the right to try to understand it? |
38805 | If Mr. Talmage had been born in Turkey, is it not probable that he would now be a whirling Dervish? |
38805 | If Paine had died a millionaire, would you have accepted his religious opinions? |
38805 | If Paine had drank nothing but cold water would you have repudiated the five cardinal points of Calvin- ism? |
38805 | If Paine recanted why should he be denied"a little earth for charity"? |
38805 | If a man honestly thinks that the Bible is not inspired, what should he say? |
38805 | If he concludes that some of them are inspired, and believes them, will he then be damned for that belief? |
38805 | If he could have saved his life and did not, was he not guilty of suicide? |
38805 | If he recanted, he died substantially in your belief, for what reason then do you denounce his death as cowardly? |
38805 | If he wanted to kill anybody, why did he not kill David? |
38805 | If he was and is the God of all worlds, why does he not now give back to the widow her son? |
38805 | If he was false in his testimony as to liberty, what is his affidavit worth as to the value of Christianity? |
38805 | If he was so terribly against that crime, why did he forget to 69 mention it? |
38805 | If it had not been, then, for the con- fusion of languages, spelling books, grammars and dictionaries would have been useless? |
38805 | If it was a local flood, why did they put birds of the air into the ark? |
38805 | If it was necessary to believe on Jesus Christ, in order to be saved, how is it that Matthew failed to say so? |
38805 | If not, is Mr. Talmage a Baptist? |
38805 | If so, what? |
38805 | If the Catholic Church at that time had thrown out the book of Revelation, would it now be our duty to believe that book to have been inspired? |
38805 | If the Catholic Church was not infal- lible, is the question still open as to what books are, and what are not, inspired? |
38805 | If the light of which you speak was sufficient, why was the sun made? |
38805 | If the man had eaten of the tree of life, would he have lived forever? |
38805 | If the political theory of Mr. Talmage is carried out, of course the question will arise in a little while, What is a Christian? |
38805 | If they wanted to show that Christ was of the blood of David, why did they not give the gene- alogy of his mother if Joseph was not his father? |
38805 | If they were honest in the vote they gave, and died without changing their opinions, are they now in hell? |
38805 | If upon reading these apocryphal books a man concludes that they are not inspired, will he be damned for that reason? |
38805 | If we are under obligation to love our enemies, is not God under obligation to love his? |
38805 | If we forgive our enemies, ought not God to forgive his? |
38805 | If we forgive those who injure us, ought not God to forgive those who have not injured him? |
38805 | If you take this away from us, what do you propose to give us in its place? |
38805 | In the Psalms, Jehovah derides the idea of sacrifices, and says:"Will I eat of the flesh of"bulls, or drink the blood of goats? |
38805 | In the first place, what is an"infidel"? |
38805 | In the morn- ing at breakfast my mother asked Willet Hicks the following questions:"Was thee with Thomas Paine during his last sickness?" |
38805 | In what language? |
38805 | In what respect? |
38805 | In what way was his death cowardly? |
38805 | In your judgment, why did God destroy the Canaanites? |
38805 | Instead of having an inspired book, why did he not make inspired folks? |
38805 | Instead of having his commandments put on tables of stone, why did he not write them on each human brain? |
38805 | Is Buddhism true? |
38805 | Is Christ any more willing to take to his heart the whole world than his Father is? |
38805 | Is God infinite in wisdom and power? |
38805 | Is God satisfied with the adoration of the frightened? |
38805 | Is God the author of all books? |
38805 | Is God''s ship to go down in storm and darkness? |
38805 | Is Mr. Talmage willing that the question, What is Christianity? |
38805 | Is Saint John the only one who speaks of the necessity of being"born again"? |
38805 | Is all this a consequence of the wrath of God? |
38805 | Is he a Catholic? |
38805 | Is he as charitable and pitiful now, as he was then? |
38805 | Is he still omnipotent, and has he as much"omnipotence"now as he ever had? |
38805 | Is he the product-- the natural product-- of Chris- 150 tianity? |
38805 | Is he willing that I should exercise my judgment in deciding whether the Bible is inspired or not? |
38805 | Is he willing to accept the testimony even of ministers? |
38805 | Is he willing to admit that the testi- mony of a Bible, reader and believer is true? |
38805 | Is it a sure sign of an impure mind, when a man insists that God never waged wars of extermination against his helpless children? |
38805 | Is it as great a sin to admit into the Bible books that are uninspired as to reject those that are inspired? |
38805 | Is it because the mind of the infidel is poisoned, that he refuses to believe that an infinite God commanded the murder of mothers, maidens and babes? |
38805 | Is it because their minds are vile, that they refuse to believe that an infinite God established or protected polygamy? |
38805 | Is it calculated to convey the slightest information? |
38805 | Is it evidence of a thoroughly scientific mind to believe that one man turned over a house so large that three thousand people were on its roof? |
38805 | Is it neces- sary for those who profess to love the whole world, to hate the few they come in actual contact with? |
38805 | Is it necessary to believe all the miracles? |
38805 | Is it necessary to understand the Bible in order to be saved? |
38805 | Is it necessary, in order to ascertain the truth of Christianity, to look over the election re- turns? |
38805 | Is it not a little strange that religion should make men so coarse and ill- mannered? |
38805 | Is it not astonishing that so little is in the New Testament concerning the mother of Christ? |
38805 | Is it not better for each one to decide honestly for himself? |
38805 | Is it not infinitely impudent in him to contrast his penny- dip with the sun of inspiration? |
38805 | Is it not possible that something can be done for a human soul in another world as well as in this? |
38805 | Is it not singular that they were never mentioned afterward? |
38805 | Is it not strange that Christ, in his Ser- mon on the Mount, did not speak of"regeneration,"or of the"scheme of salvation"? |
38805 | Is it not strange that none of the disciples of Christ 123 said anything about their parents,--that we know absolutely nothing of them? |
38805 | Is it not true that some of these books were adopted by exceedingly small majorities? |
38805 | Is it not wonderful that God failed to pro- tect these innocent wives and children? |
38805 | Is it not wonderful that all the writers 404 of the four gospels do not give an account of the ascension of Jesus Christ? |
38805 | Is it not wonderful that some of them said that he did ascend, and others that he agreed to stay with his disciples always? |
38805 | Is it not wonderful that such awful con- sequences flowed from so small an act? |
38805 | Is it not wonderful that the Egyptians were not converted by the miracles wrought in their country? |
38805 | Is it not wonderful that they were not convinced of the power of God, by the many mira- cles wrought in Egypt and in the wilderness? |
38805 | Is it possible for any intelligent man now to believe that the history of Jonah is literally true? |
38805 | Is it possible that Christ is less for- giving in heaven than he was in Jerusalem? |
38805 | Is it possible that God can be gratified with the applause of moral cowards? |
38805 | Is it possible that a being of infinite power would exercise it in that way instead of in the interest of kindness and peace? |
38805 | Is it possible that a good God would take pains to deceive his children? |
38805 | Is it possible that the God of Mr. Tal- mage could not have made man a success? |
38805 | Is it possible that the eternal welfare of a human being depends upon believing the testimony of Poly- carp and Irenæus? |
38805 | Is it possible that the other writers never heard of these things? |
38805 | Is it possible that this will was made by a pauper--by a destitute outcast-- by a man who suffered for the ordinary necessaries of life? |
38805 | Is it possible to conceive of anything more fig- leaflessly 297 absurd? |
38805 | Is it possible to see"design"in earth- quakes, in volcanoes, in pestilence, in famine, in ruthless and relentless war? |
38805 | Is it scientific to assert that seven priests blew seven rams''horns loud enough to blow down the walls of a city? |
38805 | Is it scientific to imagine that thrusting a spear through the body of a woman ever stayed a plague? |
38805 | Is it scientific to say that a river cut itself in two and allowed the lower end to run off? |
38805 | Is it scientific to say that an animal saw an angel, and conversed with a man? |
38805 | Is it scientific to say that the muscle of a man de- pended upon the length of his locks? |
38805 | Is it unscientific to deny that water gushed from a hollow place in a dry bone? |
38805 | Is it worse in a man than in an angel, to care nothing for his mother? |
38805 | Is it your candid opinion that a man who does not believe the Bible should keep his belief a secret from his fellow- men? |
38805 | Is not self- denial in a man as praise- worthy as in a God? |
38805 | Is not that passage in Mark generally admitted to be an interpolation? |
38805 | Is not this a supply of liquor for dinner and supper?" |
38805 | Is not this true? |
38805 | Is that all we know about Polycarp? |
38805 | Is that portion of the last chapter of Mark found in the Syriac version of the Bible? |
38805 | Is the Bible scientific? |
38805 | Is the God of Mr. Talmage in partnership with the devil? |
38805 | Is the New Testament now the same as it was in the days of the early fathers? |
38805 | Is the man who shoulders his musket in the defence of human freedom good enough to cast a ballot? |
38805 | Is there any evidence that they showed any particular respect even for the mother of Christ? |
38805 | Is there to be a wreck at last? |
38805 | Is there"design"in this? |
38805 | Is this true? |
38805 | Is this true? |
38805 | Is virtue the same in all worlds? |
38805 | Is"inspiration"a question to be settled by the ballot? |
38805 | It is hardly fair to compare her with the inventor of the steamship? |
38805 | Jehovah got angry again, and said to Moses:"How long will these people provoke me? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage also charges you with"making light of holy things,"and seems to be aston- ished that you should ridicule the anointing oil of Aaron? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage also claims that we are indebted to Christianity for schools, colleges, univer- sities, hospitals and asylums? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage asks you whether, in your judgment, the Bible was a good, or an evil, to your parents? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage asks:"What has been the effect upon your children? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage charges that you have taken the ground that the Bible is a cruel book, and has produced cruel people? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage charges you with being"the champion blasphemer of America"--what do you understand blasphemy to be? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage charges you with having said that the Scriptures are a collection of polluted writings? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage in reply to you? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage says that infidels have done no good? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage thinks that you laugh too much,--that you exhibit too much mirth, and that no one should smile at sacred things? |
38805 | Mr. Talmage wants you to tell where the cruelty of the Bible crops out in the lives of Chris- tians? |
38805 | Must a man believe statements that he has every reason to think are false? |
38805 | Now suppose that in this belief the man had died,--what then? |
38805 | Now, if we are to take the testimony of Irenæus, 267 why not take it? |
38805 | Now, suppose that the father is an infidel, and the mother a Christian, what must the son do? |
38805 | Of course, infidels laugh at these things; but what can you expect of men who have not been"born"again"? |
38805 | Of what use are all the sciences, if you lose your own soul? |
38805 | Of what use to the world was Bishop Mcllvaine, compared with the inventor of needles? |
38805 | Of what use were a hundred such priests compared with the inventor of matches, or even of clothes- pins? |
38805 | On what day did God make vegetation? |
38805 | Once he pitied even thieves; does he now abhor an intellectually honest man? |
38805 | Or, was it a belief in the Bible that made Mr. Talmage deny the truth of their statements? |
38805 | Paine, you have not answered my questions; will you answer them? |
38805 | Perhaps it has, but would it not be well enough to answer it once more? |
38805 | Should Christians pray for the con- version of infidels? |
38805 | Should Christians try to convert them? |
38805 | Should a God be worshiped, and a man be damned, for the same action? |
38805 | Should he have betrayed Christ, or let somebody else do it; or should he have allowed the world to perish, in- cluding his own soul? |
38805 | Should we believe the miracles, whether they are reasonable or not? |
38805 | So you think that, after all, it was not God''s intention that the Jews should become civilized? |
38805 | Some may not have seen the answer? |
38805 | Suppose Judas had understood the divine plan, what ought he to have done? |
38805 | Suppose a man is firmly convinced that Polycarp knew nothing about Saint John, and that Saint John knew nothing about Christ,--what then? |
38805 | Suppose he is convinced that Eusebius is utterly unworthy of credit,--what then? |
38805 | Suppose his father had been a Catholic, and his mother a Protestant,--what then? |
38805 | Suppose his parents had both been infidels-- what then? |
38805 | Suppose it should turn out that some of these miracles depend upon mistranslations of the original Hebrew, should we still believe them? |
38805 | Suppose that Hannah More had never lived? |
38805 | Suppose that doubts force themselves upon my mind? |
38805 | Suppose that the Christian religion had been put to vote in Jerusalem? |
38805 | Suppose that the infidel is a good man, how will you answer him then? |
38805 | Suppose that the same man should read the Koran, and come to the conclusion that it is not an inspired book; what ought he to say? |
38805 | The question is: Is the Bible a cruel book? |
38805 | The second time was at the marriage feast in Cana, when he said to her:"Woman, what have I to do"with thee?" |
38805 | The text from which he preached is:"Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?" |
38805 | The worship of the sun was an exceedingly natural religion, and why should a man or woman be destroyed for kneeling at the fireside of the world? |
38805 | Then hypocrisy will not save him? |
38805 | Then the Old Testament tells us how we lost immortality, not that we are immortal, does it? |
38805 | Then why did Luke say in the same verse of the same chapter that"Jesus increased in"favor with God"? |
38805 | Then you regard belief as the safe way? |
38805 | Then you think that there is no such thing as the crime of blasphemy, and that no such offence can be committed? |
38805 | There are in Russia about eighty millions of people--how many Christians? |
38805 | There are more Buddhists than Christians-- why does he vote against majorities? |
38805 | There are more Methodists than Presbyterians-- why does the gentleman remain a Presbyterian? |
38805 | There was a time when an abolitionist could not be elected to office in any State in this Union; what did that prove? |
38805 | There was a time when no man could have been elected to any office, who in- 300 sisted on the rotundity of the earth; what did that prove? |
38805 | There was a time when no man who denied the existence of witches, wizards, spooks and devils, could hold any position of honor; what did that prove? |
38805 | There was a time when they were not allowed to express their honest thoughts; what does that prove? |
38805 | They had wandered so long in the desert that they finally cried out:"Wherefore have ye brought us"up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? |
38805 | This being so, this miracle is the best attested of all? |
38805 | This being so, why did not God reveal himself to every human being? |
38805 | Twelfth-- If Thomas Paine recanted, why do you pursue him? |
38805 | Was Abraham pursued by the justice of God because of the crime against Hagar, or for the crime against his own wife? |
38805 | Was Christ the God of the universe at the time of his birth? |
38805 | Was God afraid that Adam and Eve might get back into the garden, and eat of the fruit of the tree of life? |
38805 | Was God always patient and kind and merciful toward his children while they were in the wilderness? |
38805 | Was God at that time, in favor of slavery? |
38805 | Was God driven to madness by the conduct of his chosen people? |
38805 | Was God, at that time, merciful? |
38805 | Was Mohammed an im- postor? |
38805 | Was anything more infamous ever recorded in the annals of barbarism? |
38805 | Was he a 479 drunken beast when he wrote the"Crisis"? |
38805 | Was he convinced before that time? |
38805 | Was he in the world before the for- bidden fruit was eaten? |
38805 | Was he the infinite God, creator and controller of the entire universe, before he was born? |
38805 | Was he turned out to prevent his eating? |
38805 | Was he willing that the"unconverted"should cover 308 the fields of victory with their corpses, that this nation might not die? |
38805 | Was he willing, at that time, that sinners should vote to keep our flag in heaven? |
38805 | Was it a belief in the Bible that colored their testimony? |
38805 | Was it beastly to die without a com- plaint, without a murmur-- to pass from life without a fear? |
38805 | Was it beastly to look with composure upon the approach of death? |
38805 | Was it beastly to submit to the inevitable with tranquillity? |
38805 | Was it because in the light of that letter Mary Roscoe, Mary Hinsdale and Grant Thorburn appeared un- worthy of belief? |
38805 | Was it because it proved beyond all cavil that Thomas Paine did not recant? |
38805 | Was it cowardly in him to hold the Thirty- Nine Articles in contempt? |
38805 | Was it cowardly not to be afraid? |
38805 | Was it cowardly not to call on your Lord? |
38805 | Was it cruel, or unjust? |
38805 | Was it kind, was it just, was it noble, was it worthy of a good God? |
38805 | Was it necessary for him to stop the sun and moon and depend entirely upon the efforts of Joshua? |
38805 | Was it necessary to have a devil in heaven? |
38805 | Was it optional with him whether he should make such people or not? |
38805 | Was not God able to write a book that would command the love and admiration of the world? |
38805 | Was such conduct Godlike? |
38805 | Was that a punishment for having had so many wives? |
38805 | Was that before the sun was made? |
38805 | Was that cruel? |
38805 | Was the Catholic Church infallible then? |
38805 | Was the snake who tempted them to eat, evil? |
38805 | Was there any particular"design"in that? |
38805 | Was there not room enough on the tables of stone for just one word on this subject? |
38805 | Was this cruel? |
38805 | Was this fearful destruction an act of mercy? |
38805 | Was this the conduct of a drunken beast? |
38805 | Were animals so treated by the com- mand of a merciful God? |
38805 | Were both these persons inspired by the same God? |
38805 | Were our first parents under the im- mediate protection of an infinite God? |
38805 | Were the Jews guilty of idolatry? |
38805 | Were the men who picked out the in- spired books inspired? |
38805 | Were the people after the flood just as bad as they were before? |
38805 | Were these eight persons totally de- praved? |
38805 | Were they 155 not false,--in his sense of the word,--to their fathers and mothers? |
38805 | Were they the same people that God had promised to take care of? |
38805 | What are the principal reasons that have satisfied you that the Bible is not an inspired book? |
38805 | What are"the fountains of the great deep"? |
38805 | What became of Abraham and his people? |
38805 | What became of all the Canaanites, the Egyptians, the Hindus, the Greeks and Romans and Chinese? |
38805 | What became of the millions and billions who lived in this hemisphere, and of whose existence Jehovah himself seemed perfectly ignorant? |
38805 | What can I be expected to give as a substitute for perdition? |
38805 | What could have been more cruel than the flood? |
38805 | What crime had Thomas Paine committed that he should have feared to die? |
38805 | What did God do then? |
38805 | What did God do with Adam and Eve after he got them done? |
38805 | What did God do with these people after Pharaoh allowed them to go? |
38805 | What did God give us reason for? |
38805 | What did God make man of? |
38805 | What did he make him for? |
38805 | What did he make it out of? |
38805 | What did he say or do of a cowardly character just before, or at about the time of his death? |
38805 | What did he say? |
38805 | What did that prove? |
38805 | What did that prove? |
38805 | What did that prove? |
38805 | What did they do? |
38805 | What do we really know about Polycarp? |
38805 | What do you consider is the strongest argument in favor of the inspiration of the Scrip- tures? |
38805 | What do you consider the strongest argument against the truth of infidelity? |
38805 | What do you mean by that? |
38805 | What do you think of his argument, or of his explanation, rather, of that miracle? |
38805 | What do you think of it? |
38805 | What do you think of the argu- ments presented by Mr. Talmage in favor of the inspiration of the Bible? |
38805 | What do you think of the declaration of Mr. Talmage that the Bible will be read in heaven throughout all the endless ages of eternity? |
38805 | What do you think of the following state- ment by Mr. Talmage:"Oh, I have to tell you that no"man ever died for a lie cheerfully and triumphantly"? |
38805 | What do you think of the story of Daniel-- you no doubt remember it? |
38805 | What do you think of what he has to say? |
38805 | What do you understand by"the"morning and evening"of a"good- while"? |
38805 | What do you wish to have done with the Bible? |
38805 | What does Mr. Talmage think of man- kind? |
38805 | What does a man want in place of a disease? |
38805 | What does he think of some of the best the earth has produced? |
38805 | What does it prove? |
38805 | What does that prove? |
38805 | What effect has the religion of Jesus Christ had upon him? |
38805 | What effect, in his judgment, did the reading of the Bible have upon his enemies? |
38805 | What else did God do in order to in- duce Pharaoh to liberate the Jews? |
38805 | What else did he make? |
38805 | What evidence, according to the Bible, can Mr. Talmage give of his belief? |
38805 | What happened then? |
38805 | What happened to Adam and Eve in the garden? |
38805 | What have you stated upon that subject? |
38805 | What have you to say to the charge that you were mistaken in the number of years that 72 the Hebrews were in Egypt? |
38805 | What is his opinion of the"unconverted"? |
38805 | What is your opinion about that? |
38805 | What is your understanding of this matter? |
38805 | What is"inspiration"? |
38805 | What kind of man was Abram? |
38805 | What makes you think it is inspired? |
38805 | What means did he take to liberate the Jews? |
38805 | What more heartless than to overwhelm a world? |
38805 | What more merciless than to cover a shoreless sea with the corpses of men, women and children? |
38805 | What must we think of your present conduct? |
38805 | What punishment did God inflict upon Adam and Eve for the sin of having eaten the for- bidden fruit? |
38805 | What right has a Christian to ask anybody to love his father, or mother, or wife, or child? |
38805 | What right has he to any opinion upon the subject? |
38805 | What right has he to question the statements of an inspired writer? |
38805 | What then? |
38805 | What was the object of making woman out of man''s side? |
38805 | What was the result? |
38805 | What was this miracle performed for? |
38805 | What was woman made of? |
38805 | What were the affirmations contained in the offer you made? |
38805 | What were the last words of Jesus Christ? |
38805 | What will be the fate of a man who does not believe it, and yet pretends to believe it? |
38805 | What would Russia be, in the opinion of Mr. Tal- mage, but for Christianity? |
38805 | What would he Jiave done had he been remorse- lessly cruel and wicked? |
38805 | What would he have done had he acted from motives of revenge? |
38805 | What would they have done had he been exacting, easily incensed, revengeful, cruel, or blood- thirsty? |
38805 | What, in your judgment, became of the dead who were raised by Christ? |
38805 | When God created each human being, did he know exactly what would be his eternal fate? |
38805 | When he thinks he is right? |
38805 | When the flood came, why did he not drown all? |
38805 | When we take into consideration that it is aided by the momentum of eighteen centuries, is it not wonderful that it is not to- day holding its own? |
38805 | When we were engaged in civil war, did Mr. Tal- mage object to any man''s enlisting in the ranks who was not a Christian? |
38805 | Where did education come from? |
38805 | Where did they get it? |
38805 | Where did"Polycarp get it? |
38805 | Where has he been through all the centuries of slavery and crime? |
38805 | Where is he now? |
38805 | Where is the flaming sword now? |
38805 | Who cares then for the pride of intellect? |
38805 | Who has the right to decide as to the real ideas that God intended to convey? |
38805 | Who made you? |
38805 | Who saw the miracle? |
38805 | Who would not complain under similar cir- cumstances? |
38805 | Whom did he select? |
38805 | Whom do you regard as infidels? |
38805 | Why could we not get along without it? |
38805 | Why did a God of infinite mercy destroy seventy thousand men? |
38805 | Why did he allow him to thwart his plans? |
38805 | Why did he allow himself to be be- trayed, if he knew the plot? |
38805 | Why did he allow the devil to tempt Adam and Eve? |
38805 | Why did he create him? |
38805 | Why did he do this? |
38805 | Why did he fail to reveal himself to the other nations-- nations that, compared with the Jews, were learned, cultivated and powerful? |
38805 | Why did he fill his land with widows and orphans, because King David had taken the cen- sus? |
38805 | Why did he leave innocence and ignorance at the mercy of subtlety and wickedness? |
38805 | Why did he not destroy that 370 snake; or how did he come to make him; what did he make him for? |
38805 | Why did he not give a Bible to the Egyptians, the Hindus, the Greeks and the Romans? |
38805 | Why did he not kill them, and start over again with a perfect pair? |
38805 | Why did he not make them so sharp, intellectually, that they could not be deceived? |
38805 | Why did he not play the role of a Savior instead of that of a 205 detective? |
38805 | Why did he not protect them? |
38805 | Why did he not put them on their guard? |
38805 | Why did he not warn them of this snake? |
38805 | Why did he not, as the leader of this people, his chosen children, feed them better? |
38805 | Why did he permit him to pollute the inno- cence of Eden? |
38805 | Why did he preserve Noah? |
38805 | Why did he produce them? |
38805 | Why did he put"the"tree of the knowledge of good and evil"in the garden? |
38805 | Why did he save for seed that which was"perfectly"and thoroughly corrupt in all its parts and facul-"ties"? |
38805 | Why did his God make a devil? |
38805 | Why did n''t you call your adversary a fool? |
38805 | Why did not Christ tell Zaccheus that he"must be born again;"that he must"believe on the Lord Jesus Christ"? |
38805 | Why did not God punish Saul instead of the people? |
38805 | Why did not these inspired men tell us how to cure some of the diseases that have decimated the world? |
38805 | Why did the bears come? |
38805 | Why did they fail to speak of it? |
38805 | Why did you not publish the entire letter of Bishop Fenwick? |
38805 | Why did you suppress it? |
38805 | Why do you call infidels"fools"? |
38805 | Why do you call upon Jesus Christ to help you? |
38805 | Why do you curse infidels? |
38805 | Why do you pray to him? |
38805 | Why do you think she was changed into salt? |
38805 | Why does a good God permit these things? |
38805 | Why does he allow him now to wrest souls by the million from the redeeming hand of Christ? |
38805 | Why does he not now cure the lame and the halt and the blind? |
38805 | Why does he per- mit him to live? |
38805 | Why does he with- hold light from the eyes of the blind? |
38805 | Why does not God furnish more evidence? |
38805 | Why save such seed? |
38805 | Why should God hate us for being what we are and necessarily must have been? |
38805 | Why should God object to having his book examined? |
38805 | Why should a God of infinite wisdom create people who would gladly murder their Creator? |
38805 | Why should a good God people a world with men capable of burning their fellow- men-- and capable of burning the greatest and 48 best? |
38805 | Why should a ship built by infinite wisdom, by an infinite shipbuilder, carry life- boats? |
38805 | Why should he set up his judgment against the Websters and Jacksons? |
38805 | Why should we have a book for a master? |
38805 | Why was it necessary to save the birds? |
38805 | Why were the miracles recorded in the New Testament performed? |
38805 | Why were they not put upon their guard against the serpent? |
38805 | Why were they thrown out? |
38805 | Why would Paine expect a correct answer about his writings from one who had read very little of them? |
38805 | Why would a God do such an infamous thing? |
38805 | Why, man, what''s the matter? |
38805 | Why, then, did he make them? |
38805 | Why? |
38805 | Why? |
38805 | Why? |
38805 | Why? |
38805 | Will Christians in heaven love their neighbors? |
38805 | Will Mr. Talmage admit that his witness told the truth in this? |
38805 | Will Mr. Talmage be kind enough to explain the stoppage of the moon? |
38805 | Will he give us the names of the painters that existed in Palestine from Mount Sinai to the destruction of the temple? |
38805 | Will he give us the names of the sculptors between those times? |
38805 | Will he have the kindness to perform a miracle?--for instance, produce a"local flood,"make a worm to smite a gourd, or"prepare a fish"? |
38805 | Will he pledge himself in advance to subscribe to such a creed? |
38805 | Will it be necessary at last to forsake his ship and depend upon life- boats? |
38805 | Will somebody be kind enough to show the"design"in this trans- action? |
38805 | Will the reading of these things make children kind to animals? |
38805 | Will you have the fairness to admit it? |
38805 | Would God allow a soul to suffer 426 eternal agony rather than furnish evidence of the truth of his Bible? |
38805 | Would he say,"I can not tell the truth, I must lie,"for the purpose of shedding a halo of glory around"the memory of my mother"? |
38805 | Would he say:"Of"course, my father and mother would a thousand"times rather have their son a hypocritical Christian"than an honest, manly unbeliever"? |
38805 | Would it not have been better to have had his flood at first, before he made anybody, and drowned the snake? |
38805 | Would it not have been far better to leave them unconscious dust? |
38805 | Would it not have been more con- vincing if Christ, after his resurrection, had shown himself to his enemies as well as to his friends? |
38805 | Would it not seem from this, that"regeneration"and a"belief in the"Lord Jesus Christ,"are no part of the gospel? |
38805 | Would not a millionth part of the force necessary to stop the moon, have pierced the enemy''s centre, and rolled up both his flanks? |
38805 | Would not the force employed in stopping the rotary motion of the earth have been sufficient to destroy the enemy? |
38805 | Would not the mission of Christ have been a failure had no one betrayed him? |
38805 | Would such a fish understand any language? |
38805 | Would then a man, by following the course of conduct prescribed by Christ in the Sermon on the Mount, lose his soul? |
38805 | Would there have been no poisonous plants, no poisonous reptiles? |
38805 | Would you regard a revelation now made to the Esquimaux as intended for us; and would it be a revelation of which we would be obliged to take notice? |
38805 | You do not seem to have any great opinion of the chemical, geological, and agricultural views expressed by Mr. Talmage? |
38805 | You have told me that if you did not be- lieve it, you would not tell me? |
38805 | You notice that Mr. Talmage finds nearly all the inventions of modern times mentioned in the Bible? |
38805 | _ Third._ If God is infinitely good, is he not fully as sympathetic as Christ? |
38805 | did he deny that story? |
38805 | not: Was Miss Nightingale a cruel woman? |
38805 | or let me qualify the question, do you wish to believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God?'' |
38805 | should be so settled? |
38805 | why hast thou forsaken me?" |
9577 | I''ve law and gospel on my side, And who shall dare refuse me? |
9577 | Who dares profane this house and day? |
9577 | Beneath the slowly waning stars And whitening day, What stern and awful presence bars That sacred way? |
9577 | Come these from Plymouth''s Pilgrim bark? |
9577 | Had woman''s heart no feeling? |
9577 | I started up,--where now were church, Slave, master, priest, and people? |
9577 | Is that young Vane? |
9577 | My brain took fire:"Is this,"I cried,"The end of prayer and preaching? |
9577 | Shall we falter before what we''ve prayed for so long, When the Wrong is so weak, and the Right is so strong? |
9577 | She raised a keen and bitter cry, To Heaven and Earth appealing; Were manhood''s generous pulses dead? |
9577 | THE PASS OF THE SIERRA A SONG FOR THE TIME WHAT OF THE DAY? |
9577 | The braggart Southron, open in his aim, And bold as wicked, crashing straight through all That bars his purpose, like a cannon- ball? |
9577 | Then sound again the bugles, Call the muster- roll anew; If months have well- nigh won the field, What may not four years do? |
9577 | Then sound again the bugles, Call the muster- roll anew; If months have well- nigh won the field, What may not four years do? |
9577 | WHAT OF THE DAY? |
9577 | What dark mass, down the mountain- sides Swift- pouring, like a stream divides? |
9577 | What faces frown upon ye, dark With shame and pain? |
9577 | What prove these, but that crime was ne''er so black As ghostly cheer and pious thanks to lack? |
9577 | Who most deserves our blame? |
9577 | Who shall henceforth doubt That the long- wished millennium draweth nigh? |
9577 | Who, dimly beckoning, speed ye on With mocking cheer? |
9577 | Why hate your neighbor? |
9577 | Why mourn the quiet ones who die Beneath affection''s tender eye, Unto their household and their kin Like ripened corn- sheaves gathered in? |
9577 | Ye sow to- day; your harvest, scorn And hate, is near; How think ye freemen, mountain- born, The tale will hear? |
8390 | But what say the holy books? 8390 But you, yourself, are you not one of the holy ones?" |
8390 | Can you express this experience in words? |
8390 | Do you believe in the salvation of all beings? |
8390 | Does anything exist? |
8390 | Does faith save such a man? |
8390 | Is not this entirely negative? |
8390 | Well, about what do you think? |
8390 | What energizing power does Buddhism provide? |
8390 | What happens when you meditate or pray? |
8390 | What hope has such a man? |
8390 | What is the driving power in all this? |
8390 | What_ work_ have you done? |
8390 | Who are you? |
8390 | But where do the fiery chariots come from? |
8390 | Do they not promise rewards for such deeds?" |
8390 | Do you believe in the existence of_ purgatory?_ What sufferings will those endure who do not live a virtuous life? |
8390 | Do you believe in the existence of_ purgatory?_ What sufferings will those endure who do not live a virtuous life? |
8390 | Do you believe in the reality of the Western Paradise? |
8390 | Has not Christianity a message of balm and peace for these sons of the East who are so sensitive to the touch of the eternal and sublime? |
8390 | He was asked,"Would you adapt some of the symbols of the Chinese religions?" |
8390 | Heaven and Purgatory_"Do heaven and purgatory exist?" |
8390 | How can one enter it? |
8390 | How can they reach the Pure Land? |
8390 | How is the middle and the small merit accumulated? |
8390 | If its premises are granted, the conclusion is inevitable:"If the fiery chariots are seal, why does not man see them? |
8390 | If they are false, how is it that man feels the pain? |
8390 | In what do you trust? |
8390 | Is not Buddhism more democratic than Christianity, because it holds out the possibility of Buddhahood to all beings? |
8390 | Is not Buddhism more inclusive, because it provides for the salvation of all beings? |
8390 | Is not Shang Ti the tribal god of the Jews? |
8390 | Is not real religion a matter of the heart?" |
8390 | Is not your Shang Ti( name for God used in China) a being lower than Buddha and just a little higher than a Bodhisattva? |
8390 | Is the reality of religion for you also an inward experience of the heart?" |
8390 | Mrs. Chang accordingly went to Yama and said,"During life we honored Buddha and so why should we become animals after death?" |
8390 | Nirvâna__"Do you know of any one who attained Nirvâna? |
8390 | People with the face of a man and the heart of a beast, should they not be punished?" |
8390 | Relation to Confucian Ideals_ Why have not these ideals exercised a larger influence in China? |
8390 | Salvation for the Common Man_"What can Buddhism do for the lowest class?" |
8390 | Salvation for the Highest Class_"And the third class?" |
8390 | Salvation of the Second Class_"How do those of the second class attain salvation?" |
8390 | Sin_"Does sin exist?" |
8390 | The Place of Faith_"Can any man enter the western paradise of Amitâbha?" |
8390 | The Threefold Classification of Men Under Buddhism_"What does Buddhism do for men?" |
8390 | Then turning to a friend of mine the speaker said:"What have you done in Buddhism?" |
8390 | There being three kinds of merit, by what method is the great merit accumulated? |
8390 | To be branded without inward faith would be an insult to your religion as well as treachery to my own, would it not? |
8390 | What are the fruits of these proportions of merit and what are they like? |
8390 | What work of meditation do you perform? |
8390 | Why worry? |
8390 | Yama said,"What use is it to honor Buddha? |
9564 | ''I love you: on that love alone, And not my worth, presuming, Will you not trust for summer fruit The tree in May- day blooming?'' 9564 ''Nor frock nor tan can hide the man; And see you not, my farmer, How weak and fond a woman waits Behind this silken armor? |
9564 | ''You go as lightly as you came, Your life is well without me; What care you that these hills will close Like prison- walls about me? 9564 And, if in peril from swamping sea Or lee shore rocks, would he call on thee?" |
9564 | Is it a chapel bell that fills The air with its low tone? |
9564 | She looked up in his face of pain So archly, yet so tender''And if I lend you mine,''she said,''Will you forgive the lender? 9564 What is it to thee, I fain would know, That waves are roaring and wild winds blow? |
9564 | Whom shall we give the strong ones? 9564 And o''er her vault of burial( who shall tell If it be chance alone or miracle?) 9564 Are His responsibilities For us alone and not for these? 9564 Before her queenly womanhood How dared our hostess utter The paltry errand of her need To buy her fresh- churned butter? 9564 But he knelt with his hand on her forehead, his lips to her ear, And he called back the soul that was passingMarguerite, do you hear?" |
9564 | Hast thou not read,''Better the eye should see than that desire Should wander?'' |
9564 | If he kept This gold, so needed, would the dreadful God Torment him like a Mohawk''s captive stuck With slow- consuming splinters? |
9564 | One healed the sick Very far off thousands of moons ago Had he not prayed him night and day to come And cure his bed- bound wife? |
9564 | Or thy own prophet''s,''Whoso doth endure And pardon, of eternal life is sure''? |
9564 | The angel brought One broad piece only; should he take all these? |
9564 | Was there a hell? |
9564 | We walk in clearer light;--but then, Is He not God?--are they not men? |
9564 | Were all his fathers''people writhing there-- Like the poor shell- fish set to boil alive-- Forever, dying never? |
9564 | What sounds are these But chants and holy hymns?" |
9564 | What to her was the song of the robin, or warm morning light, As she lay in the trance of the dying, heedless of sound or sight? |
9564 | Who would be wiser, in the blind, dumb woods? |
9564 | Why mourn above some hopeless flaw In the stone tables of the law, When scripture every day afresh Is traced on tablets of the flesh? |
9564 | Would the saints And the white angels dance and laugh to see him Burn like a pitch- pine torch? |
9564 | love you the Papist, the beggar, the charge of the town?" |
9564 | of the fiery pit, And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird Carries the water that quenches it? |
9564 | she cried in fear,"Hearest thou nothing, sister dear?" |
9564 | she cried,"hast thou forgotten quite The words of Him we spake of yesternight? |
9564 | what matters where A true man''s cross may stand, So Heaven be o''er it here as there In pleasant Norman land? |
58305 | Ah, is it you? |
58305 | All fun? |
58305 | And Numè,she turned to her,"Numè, will you kiss me?" |
58305 | And so you have been making almost daily trips to Tokyo? |
58305 | And when will that be? |
58305 | And will we see Shiku? |
58305 | And will we see the consul also, Koto? |
58305 | And you have not seen him for eight years? 58305 And you think she''ll have you?" |
58305 | Are not they very beautiful? |
58305 | Are you disappointed, dear? |
58305 | Are you trying to-- to fool me about something? |
58305 | Been fooling you? |
58305 | But Cleo? |
58305 | But Orito? |
58305 | But why are you not always happy? |
58305 | But, my son, surely you do not regret your travel? |
58305 | Ca n''t you leave it behind? |
58305 | Cleo, how_ could_ you do it? 58305 Could you, then, leave your father to a comfortless, childless life?" |
58305 | Did I offend you? |
58305 | Did he tell Numè so? |
58305 | Did the pretty Americazan ladies luf their husbands, and was that why they were always so proud and beautiful? |
58305 | Did you not say that you would dance? |
58305 | Do the pretty Americazan ladies always luf when they marry? |
58305 | Do they make much money? |
58305 | Do you dance? |
58305 | Do you know, Koto- san, that the American consul is the Mr. Sinka I tell you of? |
58305 | Do you like the big proud American girl, Miss Numè? |
58305 | Do you love him, sweetheart? |
58305 | Do you mean the case of a girl betrothed to one man and in love with another? |
58305 | Do you then wish to go against the command of your father? 58305 Do you think he will love me forever, Koto?" |
58305 | Does your father know? |
58305 | Er-- do you dance, as well as-- as serve tea? |
58305 | Er-- er-- Takashima? |
58305 | Ess? |
58305 | Feeling blue, little sis? |
58305 | Had a sunstroke, old man? |
58305 | He told you-- told you the-- the-- meetings were sacred? |
58305 | He write to-- Numè, what are you talking about? 58305 How is Numè?" |
58305 | How is your mother? |
58305 | How much is it, Shiku? |
58305 | How on earth do you know that? 58305 I thought you contemplated making your home here?" |
58305 | I thought you had been making sly trips to Tokyo? |
58305 | Is it true? |
58305 | Is the beautiful Americazan lady your betrothed? |
58305 | Koto,Numè said, vaguely,"will you leave me now? |
58305 | Life is so serious to you, is it not, Mr. Takashima? 58305 Love?" |
58305 | Luf? 58305 ME? |
58305 | Madam, are you teaching that young girl to lose faith in mankind already? |
58305 | May I ask what you intend to do? |
58305 | Me? 58305 Me? |
58305 | Must there necessarily be something wrong, Tom, because I am looking well? |
58305 | No? 58305 Not Koto whom I painted in the woods?" |
58305 | Numè, Numè, do n''t you understand-- don''t you know? |
58305 | Numè, how could you be so sly? |
58305 | Numè? |
58305 | Oa,the girl continued, smiling saucily,"Americazan girl talk too much also?" |
58305 | Oh, Numè, Numè- san,he almost groaned,"what can I do?" |
58305 | Oh, will you? 58305 Perhaps, Arthur, you will introduce me-- to----to your friend?" |
58305 | Remember Jenny Davis, Tom? |
58305 | Remember Sinclair, Takie? 58305 Seen Sinclair anywhere about?" |
58305 | Shall I go back with you, dear? |
58305 | Shall I have my answer now? |
58305 | Shall I speak to your mother? |
58305 | So he has arrived? |
58305 | So she has been telling you some more yarns? |
58305 | So you want to marry, Shiku? |
58305 | Suppose Japanese girl lig''instead some_ nize, pretty_ genleman, and she marry with some one she_ nod_ like? |
58305 | Sweetheart-- do you need to ask? |
58305 | Tell me now, instead, what is your most beautiful memory of Japan? |
58305 | Tell me, Miss Ballard, also, do you flirt only with me? |
58305 | That you do not lig''liddle Japanese girl-- do you lig''Americazan big proud girl? |
58305 | Then what made you come? |
58305 | Tom is just teasing me,she said; and added,"But how did you know Tom did not want you to know me?" |
58305 | Tom,_ what_ do you suppose they will give us to eat? 58305 Was it wrong to luf too many people?" |
58305 | Was this luf good? |
58305 | Well, Shiku, what luck? |
58305 | Well, what about Koto? |
58305 | Well? |
58305 | What are you nervous about, dear? |
58305 | What did you do that for? |
58305 | What do you mean, Koto? |
58305 | What do you mean, Numè? |
58305 | What do you mean? |
58305 | What does that woman mean? |
58305 | What does this mean? |
58305 | What have you been doing with yourself all these days, Numè? |
58305 | What is all fun, Numè? 58305 What is it, Koto- san?" |
58305 | What is it? |
58305 | What is the matter, Walter? |
58305 | What is the matter? |
58305 | What is the matter? |
58305 | What is your name, little_ geesa_ girl? |
58305 | What makes you ask that? |
58305 | What makes you say that? |
58305 | What makes you say that? |
58305 | What''s her name? |
58305 | What''s up, Cleo? |
58305 | When does the wedding take place? |
58305 | When is it to be, my dear? |
58305 | Where is Mrs. Davis now? |
58305 | Where is Numè, my father? 58305 Where will we see him?" |
58305 | Who is it? |
58305 | Who told you, my dear? |
58305 | Why do n''t you_ hate_ me? |
58305 | Why does not every one-- as I do myself? |
58305 | Why must she not tell when she lufed any one? |
58305 | Why shall I_ promise_? |
58305 | Why, Cleo, what is the matter, dear? |
58305 | Why, Cleo-- what is it? |
58305 | Why, Koto,Numè turned around in surprise,"how do you know?" |
58305 | Why, Numè-- is-- what do you mean? |
58305 | Will madam kindly not speak of this? |
58305 | Will you be glad,she asked him,"when we reach Japan?" |
58305 | Will you let me paint you, Miss Numè? |
58305 | Will you marry with me, Miss Cleo? |
58305 | Will you not enjoy it also? |
58305 | Will you not let me get you a seat somewhere where there is not such a crowd? |
58305 | Will you not tell me what to expect, then? |
58305 | Will you tell me why,said the young Japanese, very seriously,"you did not want that I should know your cousin?" |
58305 | Will you tell me why? |
58305 | Will you tell me, Miss Ballard,he said,"why Mr. Sinclair will be so overjoyed that you come to Japan?" |
58305 | Yes, go on;--well, and what happened-- you----? |
58305 | Yes----"Foraever an''aever? |
58305 | You are not well at all,he said, and then added, looking about them anxiously:"I wonder where Sinclair is?" |
58305 | You lig''me? |
58305 | You understand, Numè, do n''t you-- understand that I love you? |
58305 | You want me_ with_ you? |
58305 | You will not marry her? |
58305 | Your cousin likes you very much, does he not? |
58305 | _ Me?_ I lig''only the-- a-- Mister Sinka. |
58305 | --"How would she know it?" |
58305 | After a time she asked her:"How did_ you_ know?" |
58305 | After thinking a moment she added,"Tom, do you know, there was not a single American to meet us? |
58305 | Ah-- pretty good smelling flowers those over there, eh?" |
58305 | Alliston? |
58305 | And you were only ten years old when you last saw him? |
58305 | Anything wrong?" |
58305 | Are you conscienceless? |
58305 | Can we not have her make the return voyage soon? |
58305 | Could he desert Cleo now while she lay so sick and helpless? |
58305 | Cranston? |
58305 | Davees?" |
58305 | Did he love her? |
58305 | Did n''t you say he had lived eight years in America?" |
58305 | Did you forget that in America? |
58305 | Do n''t you think there is really more in the past to regret than anything else?" |
58305 | Do n''t you understand me, Jenny? |
58305 | Do you remember-- it was about Japanese women?" |
58305 | Do you wonder I did not_ die_--go mad when I learned the truth? |
58305 | Ever heard him speak of her?" |
58305 | God help me-- what shall I do?" |
58305 | Great big fellow at Harvard-- in for all the races-- rowing-- everything going-- in fact, all- round fine fellow?" |
58305 | Had she been an ordinary woman it might have been different, but with Numè could he cherish anything harsher against her than regret? |
58305 | Have you settled on the girl yet?" |
58305 | Have you told Takashima yet?" |
58305 | He only said,"What of Numè, my father?" |
58305 | He turned as Tom called out to him:"See a-- a whale, Takie?" |
58305 | Her words were halting, for she hesitated to ask even her closest friend such a question:"Does he-- has he paid any one_ here_ much-- a-- attention?" |
58305 | His next quiet, meaning words startled her:"Would you wish to marry with him?" |
58305 | How could Arthur Sinclair have acted so outrageously? |
58305 | How hot your little head is-- you are tired? |
58305 | How long had it been? |
58305 | I knew dear Mr. Takashima so well in America, and I am sure he would like Numè and me to be good friends, eh, Numè?" |
58305 | I-- Parental Ambitions, 5 II-- Cleo, 10 III-- Who Can Analyze a Coquette? |
58305 | Is it American?" |
58305 | Is it not so, dear?" |
58305 | Is it some flirtation you have carried too far? |
58305 | Jenny,"she put her hand feverishly on the other woman''s shoulder,"tell me about these Japanese-- can they-- do they feel as deeply as we do?" |
58305 | Koto luf vaery much Japanese boy in Tokyo----""That is good, and are they to be married?" |
58305 | Mrs. Davees, do you lig''that I am goin''to marry Orito?" |
58305 | Must I then say I have lost my son?" |
58305 | No one has said anything to you about-- about it, have they?" |
58305 | No? |
58305 | Of America-- of Japan? |
58305 | Of you-- and of myself?" |
58305 | Or will you stay with me forever? |
58305 | She ca n''t jolly you, eh, Numè?" |
58305 | She continued speaking to him:"Are you habby, too?" |
58305 | She had paused here, and Tom had prompted her with a quick query,"Why?" |
58305 | She stopped talking to herself, and opening the door called out to her mother in the next room:"Mother dear, are you dressing for dinner yet?" |
58305 | She was silent a moment, and then she said, very wistfully:"Tom, do you suppose I can ever make up-- atone for all my wickedness?" |
58305 | Shiku is going to take me home, and to- morrow will you come?" |
58305 | Sinka?" |
58305 | Sinka?" |
58305 | Something like remorse crept into his own heart; for was he entirely blameless? |
58305 | Takashima broke it after a while to say, very gently:"Will you forgive me, Miss Ballard?" |
58305 | Takie-- you there?" |
58305 | Tell me, Cleo, do you think he actually believes you care for him?" |
58305 | That you-- that you did not love me-- that you did not want me to come-- and-- and-- but I know it is not true, now-- and you will forgive me?" |
58305 | The girl''s voice was almost frantic:--"Why do n''t you speak to me, Arthur;--have you ceased to-- to love me?" |
58305 | The next morning, as she and Numè sat together, she said:"Numè- san, did you know why Orito killed himself?" |
58305 | Then Mrs. Davis said:"Cleo, does Arthur Sinclair know?" |
58305 | Then Tom broke the silence, saying carelessly, as he lit a cigar:"Mind my smoking, sis?" |
58305 | Then she said:"Numè talk too much, perhaps?" |
58305 | There was a touch of impatience in his voice:"What is the matter now, Cleo?" |
58305 | There were enough without him;--when was it? |
58305 | They were asking each other with pale lips-- the cause? |
58305 | They were with each other constantly, and, and,--are you tired?" |
58305 | WHAT CAN THAT"LUF"BE? |
58305 | WHO CAN ANALYZE A COQUETTE? |
58305 | Was he free to go, after all? |
58305 | Was it merely the selfishness and vanity of a coquette? |
58305 | Was it not that he had drank too much wine that night? |
58305 | What can you tell her? |
58305 | What could he do? |
58305 | What did he intend to do? |
58305 | What do you think he answered? |
58305 | What man could have resisted her, whether he loved her or not? |
58305 | What put such an idea into your head?" |
58305 | What will we talk of? |
58305 | What would Miss Cleo say?" |
58305 | When did he write-- what?" |
58305 | When his father joined him he said, with a sigh:"Father, how came I ever to leave my home?" |
58305 | Who can analyze a coquette? |
58305 | Who is it? |
58305 | Why did he leave her like that? |
58305 | Why did not Mr. Sinka tell her he cared for her-- did he love the beautiful American lady more than he did her? |
58305 | Why not take a run down to Matsushima, where the Ballards are? |
58305 | Why was everything so still? |
58305 | Why was there an added charm and beauty to all things in life? |
58305 | Why was there music even in the drone of the crickets in the grass? |
58305 | Why, what is the matter, sweetheart-- why so contrary to- day?" |
58305 | Will you despise_ also_ grade big mans who do same thing?" |
58305 | Will you marry with_ me?_"he asked. |
58305 | Wo n''t you and Koto come there instead of going all the way to Tokyo?" |
58305 | Yaes?" |
58305 | Yet how can she know the one without the other?" |
58305 | You did n''t know I was going with you, did you? |
58305 | You really ought to see her-- she-- why, my dear, what is the matter? |
58305 | You remember that Englishman who stayed over at the Cranstons''? |
58305 | You will let me; will you not?" |
58305 | how can I ever repay you for what you have done?" |
58305 | how? |
58305 | the cause? |
58305 | yes,"said Takashima, sadly,"because I have misjudged you so?" |
8125 | Do I contradict myself? |
8125 | Have you no vicious animals at all? |
8125 | Ought not we to rehabilitate and reinstall the Devil? |
8125 | Who was ever a pirate for millions? |
8125 | ( I had done the same some years before, perhaps as stupidly, who knows? |
8125 | A paradox? |
8125 | And if there is a difference, what is that difference? |
8125 | And the keeper in surprise answered him:"Do you suppose we would be so foolish as to permit vicious animals to breed?" |
8125 | And-- to come nearer to the point-- could her fine tension of soul have been built up on a body as dissolute and weak as a candle in the sun? |
8125 | But how about us? |
8125 | But if one looks at the matter broadly and naturally, may it not be that the vices themselves are after all nothing but disreputable virtues? |
8125 | But if the revolted moral sense rejects Jack, is it likely that even the Great Giant himself will much longer retain our faith? |
8125 | But what do they suppose"Life"to be? |
8125 | But what stage? |
8125 | But where is our great writer to- day, and how can we apply this test to him? |
8125 | But who will talk of the passing of Plato or even of the passing of Hobbes? |
8125 | Do they suppose by any chance that their books grapple with the real life of Nurseries and Young Ladies''Schools? |
8125 | For an Archbishop of Canterbury has a public function to perform( has not Sydney Smith described a"foolometer"?) |
8125 | For who knows what he talks about when he talks of even the simplest things in the world, the sky or the sunshine or the water? |
8125 | Has not Nietzsche himself been counted, in his own playful phrase, an"immoralist"? |
8125 | How can he be sure to hold the critical balance even? |
8125 | How long will it be before we understand that it is also the law of morality, the greatest art of all, the Art of Living? |
8125 | I could hear her speaking gently and kindly, though of what she said I could only catch,"Where do you live?" |
8125 | I wonder whether Mazzini, could he revisit the Italy which reveres his memory, would really find more light there than of old? |
8125 | In a few years''time where would you find one smut of soot in London? |
8125 | Is a woman gazing into her mirror beautiful? |
8125 | Is this a clue to our Intellectual Anaemia and Spiritual Starvation? |
8125 | Is this love of torture, by the way, possibly one of the fruits of Empire? |
8125 | Life says for ever:"Do I contradict myself? |
8125 | May it be because the Tradesman has inherited the earth and stocked Morality on his shelves? |
8125 | Now, how about the Normans? |
8125 | One finds such a problem as this: Suppose you like a man, and suppose you think he likes you, and suppose he never says so-- what ought you to do? |
8125 | Or that we want it to be? |
8125 | Shall we, therefore, rail against the police, or the vulgar ideals of the mob whose minions they are? |
8125 | That he stocks no line of moral goods to which the yard- measure can not be applied? |
8125 | To Christianity? |
8125 | To Humanitarianism? |
8125 | To what predominant influence are we to attribute that movement? |
8125 | Was there so great a gulf between Pascal and Daumier? |
8125 | Well, what then? |
8125 | What Christian foresaw the Renaissance? |
8125 | What Greek or Roman in his most fantastic moments prefigured our thirteenth century? |
8125 | What Rousseau or Byron could find inspiration on that lake to- day? |
8125 | What architect to- day would venture to design a triangular- towered church, and what Committee would accept it? |
8125 | What can be more beautiful than Flowers and Gods? |
8125 | What can save the Church in Spain from perishing by that sword of Intolerance which it has itself forged? |
8125 | What do the so- called great things of life count for in the end, the fashion of a man''s showing- off for the benefit of his fellows? |
8125 | What savages anywhere in the world would have laughed? |
8125 | Where else can there be such wild rose trees? |
8125 | Who are to be the creators of this new World City? |
8125 | Who ever really expected the French Revolution? |
8125 | Who foresaw-- to say nothing of older and vaster events-- the Crucifixion? |
8125 | Who knows how long these things will be left on the earth? |
8125 | Who knows what it may bring? |
8125 | Who would have thought to find in the visions of St. Anthony a clue to the disease of our modern morality? |
8125 | Why indeed should one ever be hostile? |
8125 | Why indeed should one expect a great poet to be a great critic? |
8125 | Why should flowers possess this emotional force? |
8125 | Why should we pretend any more that the world is on the road to Perfection? |
8125 | Would such a man be permitted to live among savages? |
8125 | You doubt whether that oil will calm the waves? |
8125 | _ August 21_.--Is not a certain aloofness essential to our vision of the Heaven of Art? |
8125 | _ June_ 15.--Am I indeed so unreasonable to care so much whether the sun shines? |
8125 | when the sun rises do you not see a round disc of fire, somewhat like a guinea?" |
57395 | ''Er? 57395 ''Ow_ are_ you, dear?" |
57395 | A fine.... fuliginous...._ pink_ was n''t it? |
57395 | And sending notes? |
57395 | But why do you ask? 57395 Come round at once my state of mind is awful?" |
57395 | Did she flirt with some one? |
57395 | Did they tell her? |
57395 | Did you talk German? |
57395 | Do you know the schoolboy''s definition of the equator? |
57395 | Do you never read after you retire? |
57395 | Do you still go to Ruscino''s every night Miriam? |
57395 | Even so; but suppose they_ all_ went up? |
57395 | Good Lord; you''d be a millionaire in no time; why not take it until you are a millionaire and then if you do n''t like it, chuck it? |
57395 | Great_ CÃ ¦ sar_, where did you come across that? |
57395 | Have you ever been to one? |
57395 | Him? 57395 How does she know?" |
57395 | How is Miss Henderson? |
57395 | How is the Flat? |
57395 | How so? |
57395 | How_ do_ you talk? |
57395 | I like the teapot and the lantern, do n''t you? |
57395 | I_ say_...... Did they tell you? |
57395 | Is n''t it? |
57395 | Is n''t_ what_ wonderful? |
57395 | Is she still living on a hard- boiled egg and a bottle of stout? |
57395 | It is not a prejudice; how can it be pre after I have seen her? |
57395 | It_ has_ been wonderful to- day, do n''t you_ think_? 57395 Now_ where_"he smiled rising, and surrounding her with his smile,"where did you discover Artemus_ Ward_?" |
57395 | Oh, by the way, Mrs. Bailey, has her bill been settled? |
57395 | Only sometimes? |
57395 | So you_ do n''t_ go to Ruscino''s every evening? |
57395 | Talk? 57395 That''s what you told her eh?" |
57395 | Was n''t they dear boys? 57395 Well I think you''ve a capacity-- Don''t you think she has a capacity-- von Bohlen?" |
57395 | Well really Miriam I ca n''t see that there is anything extraordinary about a man''s being a Spanish Jew if he wants to? |
57395 | Well; that''s what I''ve got to ask you my chahld; are you under a fascination about him? 57395 Well?" |
57395 | Well? |
57395 | What about all the others? |
57395 | What about phthisical subjects who need dry cold climes? |
57395 | What do you think it is? |
57395 | What''s that Mr. Joe- anzen says? |
57395 | Where will that place be? |
57395 | Which? |
57395 | Who is she? |
57395 | Who? |
57395 | Why an American? |
57395 | Why are they fond of him? |
57395 | Why did it go off beautifully? 57395 Why not have said so?" |
57395 | Why? |
57395 | With the Spaniard? 57395 With_ what_?" |
57395 | Yes but the others? 57395 You go out Miss?" |
57395 | You off Winchester? |
57395 | You really like the Orlys, do n''t you? |
57395 | You write that miss? |
57395 | You''d advocate everyone living in temperate climes to spare the beasts? |
57395 | You''ve read those? |
57395 | _ I think this is a good evening to go to church._What have you been doing all this time? |
57395 | _ Where? 57395 ''Er be fascinated by anybody? 57395 *****_ Fascinated._ How did they find the word? 57395 ...... Are you going to say anything.... why do you not think it wonderful? 57395 ...... some man.... who? 57395 ......Have you ever been to one?" |
57395 | ....._ Why_ did n''t they come to me, instead of all this talk? |
57395 | Am I, Jan?" |
57395 | And always so....""So what?" |
57395 | Are n''t we? |
57395 | Are you going to try all these things?" |
57395 | Are you going to walk to Highgate_ to- night_? |
57395 | Are you going? |
57395 | Are you rested? |
57395 | Beg pardon? |
57395 | Being what she was, why could she not be sufficient to herself? |
57395 | Better not to have given any facts at all but just to have said Eve''s coming to London; is n''t it weird? |
57395 | But after talking to them how could one listen to music? |
57395 | But how could anybody do anything with people coming and going, confusing everything by perpetually_ saying_ things? |
57395 | But how could it make you so blissful? |
57395 | But how did they find out how to do it? |
57395 | But then they would have said is she coming to London to see the Queen? |
57395 | But who could attain to it? |
57395 | But why does n''t she act open? |
57395 | But why was it? |
57395 | Ca n''t you come upstayers? |
57395 | Ca n''t you hear him? |
57395 | Can I come in? |
57395 | Can you see her difficulty Jan?" |
57395 | Chris_tine_? |
57395 | Could n''t you come round for a long time? |
57395 | Could she possibly be a boarder? |
57395 | Critique de la Pensà © e Moderne; traduit par H. Navray, Mercure de France..... How did he begin? |
57395 | D''après nature? |
57395 | D''you like London Miss Scott? |
57395 | Dangerous to what? |
57395 | De mà © moire, alors? |
57395 | Did he read novels and like them? |
57395 | Did it seem the same to her now? |
57395 | Did she want a world made up of women like this? |
57395 | Did you see the extraordinary light this afternoon?" |
57395 | Do you like it? |
57395 | Do you remember him coming out into the hall one evening when you were brushing your coat?" |
57395 | Do you_ remember_ looking at the Kaleidoscope? |
57395 | Every day of your life for ever and ever? |
57395 | Had anyone ever put it to them in so many words? |
57395 | Had he really beaten those wonderful skaters? |
57395 | Had he said that? |
57395 | Had it ever been seen by anybody who knew the kind of life it was meant to be surrounded by? |
57395 | Had they already found out that it was not their sort of house? |
57395 | He had come back for something? |
57395 | He remained himself, apparantly unaware of the change of environment, or indifferent to it...._ En dà © che_ what did that mean? |
57395 | Her graceful dresses and leisurely brown hair going further and further away...... Do you_ serve_? |
57395 | How are you my sweet? |
57395 | How can I become more loving? |
57395 | How could he be a composer; looking so.... vanishing? |
57395 | How could humanity become more loving? |
57395 | How could she find room to have the door shut? |
57395 | How could social life come to be founded on love? |
57395 | How dare they? |
57395 | How did he get to know about it all? |
57395 | How had she done it? |
57395 | How had they come? |
57395 | How is the Spaniard?" |
57395 | How long had they been there? |
57395 | How_ could_ she rejoice in the idea of a house full of Canadians? |
57395 | I think if you would like the job you are a fool to hesitate, do n''t you Jan?" |
57395 | If a man love not his brother whom he hath seen how shall he love God whom he hath not seen? |
57395 | If it did not open? |
57395 | If you are liking...[ p. 248]:... not think it wonderful........... not think it wonderful? |
57395 | If you care about music he said towards the piano, will you come one evening and let me play to you on my own piano? |
57395 | In a moment she would begin her questionings and the voice would sound again.--You cold mother darling? |
57395 | In her ears was the rush of spring rain on the garden foliage, and presently a voice saying where are we going this summer? |
57395 | Is it his imagination that has found out that mind is loose? |
57395 | Is n''t it extraordinary?" |
57395 | Is n''t it funny? |
57395 | Is n''t it wonderful?" |
57395 | Is n''t she funny? |
57395 | Is not imagination mind? |
57395 | It was going away--_Mustard_--said Florrie tapping the table with the mustard- pot.--Did you hear the waits? |
57395 | Mendizabal?" |
57395 | Modern men? |
57395 | Mrs. Bailey, at midnight, busy in the little box- room? |
57395 | My word is n''t that chap a_ cure_? |
57395 | Not attempting to hide your peculiarities and defects, but just keeping perfectly still and calm whatever happened? |
57395 | Oh yes, did n''t you know? |
57395 | Oh, ca n''t you hear? |
57395 | Parky, reiterated Mrs. Bailey uncertainly, glancing daintily from side to side and smiling away a yawn behind her small rough reddened hand-- Parky? |
57395 | Perhaps he was the foreigner who had sung last night? |
57395 | Perhaps it would be possible to tell her about this moment? |
57395 | Seen what? |
57395 | Shall I come in or shall I burst into tears and sit down on the doorstep? |
57395 | She saw something of the hostel...... Where''s Mr. Mendizzable? |
57395 | She''s been with us a month-- What became of Amelia? |
57395 | Sit on the rocking chair while I ablute; unpack my bag-- D''you mind if I do n''t Miriam darling? |
57395 | Talking to Mrs. Bailey? |
57395 | The only honest thing to say now would be-- oh well of course with a mother and sisters like_ that_; do n''t you_ see_--what they are? |
57395 | They had come back? |
57395 | They waited and, well, all at once the man, well, they heard him being violently_ ill_--Oh_ Miriam_--Yes; was n''t it awful? |
57395 | Uncle George gave it to her.--They began describing.--Didn''t you love it? |
57395 | Was he an Irishman? |
57395 | Was he daring to speak of Dr. von Heber? |
57395 | Was he vulgar? |
57395 | Was it raining? |
57395 | Was that all there was? |
57395 | Was that being_ inside_? |
57395 | Was that dignity? |
57395 | Was that it? |
57395 | Well; you must just tell me; wot you been doing? |
57395 | What I say is, why does n''t she go to the clergy, in her own parish?" |
57395 | What about Sunday? |
57395 | What are you doing sitting here playing? |
57395 | What could change them? |
57395 | What could teach them? |
57395 | What did genius Wayneflete think? |
57395 | What did it mean? |
57395 | What does it matter?" |
57395 | What for? |
57395 | What for? |
57395 | What is it all about? |
57395 | What other way was there? |
57395 | What sort of people had they been? |
57395 | What was Mrs. Bailey going to say? |
57395 | What was it that had risen in her mind as she came into the room? |
57395 | What was the everlasting secret of Eleanor? |
57395 | What was the plot for? |
57395 | What were the exact things she had told Mrs. Bailey? |
57395 | What''s the meaning of it? |
57395 | What? |
57395 | What_ are_ walls? |
57395 | What_ is_ Christianity? |
57395 | What_ is_ Genius? |
57395 | When had she seen Mrs. Bailey last? |
57395 | When will you meet me? |
57395 | When? |
57395 | Where are Christians? |
57395 | Where did she get her ideas? |
57395 | Where do you go, going out so often? |
57395 | Where had Mrs. Bailey found them? |
57395 | Where had it come from? |
57395 | Where had they come from? |
57395 | Where was he when he came out and began saying everybody was wrong? |
57395 | Where was the station? |
57395 | Where''s the hurry as you say in Canada?" |
57395 | Where? |
57395 | Which was midnight? |
57395 | Who could stop all this coming and crowding of mean little things? |
57395 | Whom were they afraid of shocking with their refinement and freedom? |
57395 | Why could one not be sure whether it was right or wrong? |
57395 | Why did Ibsen sit down in Norway and write plays? |
57395 | Why did Mag and Jan leave that boarding house? |
57395 | Why did he write it? |
57395 | Why did life produce people with lymphatico- nervous temperaments? |
57395 | Why did men write books? |
57395 | Why did not Mrs. Bailey make him go on talking? |
57395 | Why did people say Ibsen as if it were the answer to something? |
57395 | Why do people say he is improper? |
57395 | Why should Christine be pleased to be spoken to? |
57395 | Why should science go ahead so fast? |
57395 | Why should she stand advantageously there while Christine unwillingly laboured? |
57395 | Why were they so secret? |
57395 | Why?_""Why? |
57395 | Why?_""Why? |
57395 | Wilberforce? |
57395 | Will you have your milk hot or cold Miriam? |
57395 | With your feet on that firm ground what would it matter how life went on and on? |
57395 | Would you like to be here always? |
57395 | You consider that invalidates medical science?" |
57395 | You go Miss? |
57395 | _ Had_ he? |
57395 | _ Had_ they half believed it? |
57395 | _ Imagination._ What_ is_ imagination? |
57395 | _ Rod_kin? |
57395 | _ Their_ idea of truth--"Well if she is ill why does n''t she act according?" |
57395 | _ What_ did people mean about loneliness? |
57395 | _ What_ was Dr. von Heber silently thinking? |
57395 | _ What_ was it? |
57395 | _ What_ was she doing? |
57395 | _ Win_chester?" |
57395 | _ what_ for? |
57395 | _''I m?_ gasped Mrs. Bailey, transfigured. |
57395 | asked a deep hollow insinuating voice at the door, how do you do Mrs. Bailey? |
57395 | Ã � a va bien, hein? |
5772 | Ah, how can I answer you? 5772 And where go the fires of men when they despair"? |
5772 | But beyond this illusive light and these ever- changing vistas-- what lies? 5772 But what is pain if there is this love?" |
5772 | But who would leave joy for sorrow, and who being one with Brahma may return to give council? |
5772 | But why do you say it is universal? 5772 Can they not be stayed? |
5772 | Can you forget pain so easily? 5772 Can you not understand?" |
5772 | Did he say aught further? |
5772 | Did you come up to the mountains for this,I asked,"to increase your knowledge of the Eocene age? |
5772 | Did you really dream all that? |
5772 | Do you go to the theatre? |
5772 | Do you not know,said Conail sternly,"that one lies ill here who must not be disturbed?" |
5772 | Do you not see? |
5772 | Do you now understand? |
5772 | Do you read much? |
5772 | Do you really believe all that? |
5772 | Do you see our old neighbour there? |
5772 | Has Emer come? |
5772 | Have you never felt pity as universal as the light that floods the world? 5772 How came you here?" |
5772 | How then shall we go to the plains of Murthemney? 5772 I say, Harvey,"he said,"how do you spend your evenings?" |
5772 | Is it not pitiful? 5772 Is it these pitiful spectres we must wage war against? |
5772 | Is it to meet that fury of fire when he sinks back blind and oblivious? 5772 May I go with you?" |
5772 | Merodach, must we then give up love? |
5772 | Never? |
5772 | Oh, Fountain I seek, thy waters are all about me, but where shall I find a path to Thee? |
5772 | Oh, yes, why not? 5772 Primaveeta, who can understand you?" |
5772 | Shall we not go and welcome him when he returns? |
5772 | Shall we not take you to Dun Imrish, or to Dun Delca, where you may be with Emer? |
5772 | Tell me, for I would know, why do you wait so long? 5772 There is that fantastic fellow who slipped by me-- could your wisdom not keep him? |
5772 | Was Fand there? |
5772 | Was it one such guided me thither? |
5772 | What are the triumphs of earthly battles to victories like these? 5772 What do I think?" |
5772 | What have I to do with God, or He with me? |
5772 | What is it? |
5772 | What should I do? |
5772 | Where did Liban take you this time, Laeg? 5772 Whither must I go with you, strange woman?" |
5772 | Who are these? |
5772 | Who are you down there in the darkness who sigh so? 5772 Who are you?" |
5772 | Why do I come? 5772 Why do they not listen?" |
5772 | Why do you intrude upon our seclusion here? 5772 Why do your white limbs shine with moonfire light?" |
5772 | (?) |
5772 | --August 1895 Content Who are exiles? |
5772 | --July 15, 1894 The Man to the Angel I have wept a million tears; Pure and proud one, where are thine? |
5772 | --July 15, 1896 The Chiefs of the Air Their wise little heads with scorning They laid the covers between:"Do they think we stay here till morning?" |
5772 | --March 15, 1897 Priest or Hero? |
5772 | A voice came up from the depths chanting a sad knowledge--"What of all the will to do? |
5772 | After all, what else could the soul do after death but think itself out? |
5772 | After freedom can you dwell in these gloomy duns? |
5772 | Ah, very well they are; well to know and to keep, but wherefore? |
5772 | And in what future will be born the powers which are not quick in the present? |
5772 | And now, changing from particular types, how do we look upon Theosophy as a power in Ethics? |
5772 | And we, who professed to bring such wisdom, what have we to say? |
5772 | And what of the other sheep? |
5772 | And why? |
5772 | Answer me, priestess, where go the fire- spirits when winter seizes the world?" |
5772 | Are her darlings forgotten where they darkly wander and strive? |
5772 | Are not its ideas on a level with, if not higher than, what his most sublime moments of feeling can bring before him? |
5772 | Are not the lives of all her heroes proof? |
5772 | Are the rocks barren? |
5772 | Are these conditions, social and mental, which some would have us strive for really so admirable as we are assured they are? |
5772 | Are they gay or sad together On that way who go?" |
5772 | Are they worth having at all? |
5772 | Are we to acknowledge that Christianity or Agnosticism is more practical, easier for the men in the street to grasp? |
5772 | Are we to confess Theosophy is a doctrine only for the learned, the cultured, the wealthy? |
5772 | Are we to say that Theosophy is not a gospel for to- day? |
5772 | Are you all alone there? |
5772 | Art thou a magian, or in thee Has the divine eye power to see?" |
5772 | Born out of the womb of the earth long ago in the fulness of power-- what shadow had dimmed his beauty? |
5772 | But how are we to hope for this progress? |
5772 | But if it does do so, what does it substitute? |
5772 | But what gardens are these?" |
5772 | But whence came the two maidens who were walking toward him along the glistening sand? |
5772 | But who is there may set apart his destiny from the earth which bore him? |
5772 | But who of the old bards would have described nature other than as she is? |
5772 | But who thinking what he is would call back the titan to this strange and pitiful dream of life? |
5772 | Can not we get this ideal or some other ideal so essential a part of our thought that it colours all our feelings, emotions and actions? |
5772 | Can they not be stayed?" |
5772 | Can we not do something to allay the sorrow of the world? |
5772 | Can we reject him or any other as comrades while they offer? |
5772 | Closer I heard voices and a voice I loved: I listened as a song came"Tell me, youthful lover, whether Love is joy or woe? |
5772 | Could he be initiated deeper in the chambers of the temple than in those great and lonely places where God and man are alone together? |
5772 | Could the fire of the altar inspire more? |
5772 | Cuchullain was silent awhile and then said reflectively:"Do you think we could find Liban again?" |
5772 | Cuchullin, whose hair, dark( blue?) |
5772 | Deep down in our hearts have we not all longed, longed, for that divine love which rejects none? |
5772 | Do the war- songs of the Ultonians inspire thee ever like the terrible chant of fire? |
5772 | Do we not treasure most their words which remind us of our divine origin? |
5772 | Do you call those miserable myriads a humanity? |
5772 | Do you sigh at the long, long time? |
5772 | Does it seem very vast and far away? |
5772 | Does not Theosoophy afford the very best outlet for his soul force? |
5772 | Does the glory fade away before thee? |
5772 | Does this seem to slight a guarantee for sincerity, for trust reposed? |
5772 | Earth- breath, what is it you whisper? |
5772 | Father, what is it they tell me? |
5772 | Father, why do I hear the things others hear not, voices calling to unknown hunters of wide fields, or to herdsmen, shepherds of the starry flocks"? |
5772 | For their own sake? |
5772 | Full of scorn it spake,"You, born of clay, a ruler of stars? |
5772 | Had he not written of it? |
5772 | Has he not done it over and over again, as here? |
5772 | Has she also become one of the Sidhe that she journeys thus?" |
5772 | Has thou not degraded me before all the maidens of Eri by forsaking me for a woman of the Sidhe without a cause? |
5772 | Have they not come forth in every land and race when there was need? |
5772 | Have we uttered with equal confidence such hopes, or with such daring and amplitude of illustration? |
5772 | Have you brought back a message from the Sidhe?" |
5772 | His spirituality, beauty and tenderness, are these fostered in the civilizations of today? |
5772 | How can it accomplish its high mission in the world if we seem to ignore in our ranks the presence of the insincere person or fraud?" |
5772 | How is it, father, that the pouring of cool water over roots, or training up the branches can nourish Zeus? |
5772 | How shall he now escape? |
5772 | I hardly had rested, My dreams wither now: Why comest thou crested And gemmed on they brow? |
5772 | I knew the faces of the day-- Dream faces, pale, with cloudy hair, I know you not nor yet your home, The Fount of Shadowy Beauty, where? |
5772 | I murmured? |
5772 | I stood before one of this race, and I thought,"What is the meaning and end of life here?" |
5772 | I suppose you have some theory about it all-- as wonderful as your gardens?" |
5772 | I thought,"To what end is this life poured forth and withdrawn?" |
5772 | If he could only find it, what might he not dare, to what might he not attain? |
5772 | If our humanity fails us or become degraded, of what value are the rest? |
5772 | In the many cases where the suffering is unavoidable, and can not be otherwise received, what are we to do? |
5772 | Is it by any of these dear and familiar names? |
5772 | Is it by wishing for it that this state will come about? |
5772 | Is nature to be lost; beauty to be swallowed up? |
5772 | Is not that a frightful thought?" |
5772 | Is the brown earth unbeautiful? |
5772 | Is there no everyday way of getting forward? |
5772 | Is this the only way for us as a people? |
5772 | Is thy wisdom of no avail? |
5772 | It is now the Hour of the King,"Who would think this quite breather From the world had taken flight? |
5772 | No clubs, classes, music- halls-- anything of the sort, eh?" |
5772 | Of what power are spear and arrow beside the radiant sling of Lu? |
5772 | Or does it appear hopeless to you who perhaps return with trembling feet evening after evening from a little labour? |
5772 | Or will they assimilate the aged thought of the world and apply it to the needs of their own land? |
5772 | Others have explained intellectually tattvas, principles and what not, but who like him has touched the heart of a hidden nobility? |
5772 | Others may have been more eloquent and learned, but who has been so wise? |
5772 | Others may have written more beautifully, but who with such intimations of the Secret Spirit breathing within? |
5772 | Out of these as from a fountain will spring-- what? |
5772 | Perhaps he is ill. Are you not well, sir?" |
5772 | Perhaps you could tell us a real dream?" |
5772 | Pitiful toiler with the pen, feeble and weary body, what shall make of you a spirit?" |
5772 | Sad or fain no more to live? |
5772 | Shall I not say the truth I think? |
5772 | Shall we go invisibly, or in other forms? |
5772 | She cried out,"Laeg, Laeg, do you see anything?" |
5772 | Should we not waken him?" |
5772 | Show, form, appearance and seeming, what force have they? |
5772 | Some questions we ought to ask ourselves about this movement: where its foundations were laid? |
5772 | Tell me-- you dream-- have you ever seen a light from the sun falling upon you in your slumber? |
5772 | That you knew some one who knew the Masters? |
5772 | The Glory Why tremble and weep now, Whom stars once obeyed? |
5772 | The Shadow Who art thou, O Glory, In flame from the deep, Where stars chant their story, Why trouble my sleep? |
5772 | The children looked without talking Till Roray spoke again,"Are those our folk who are walking Like little shadow men? |
5772 | The flame of Beauty far in space-- When rose the fire, in Thee? |
5772 | The rill to its bed came splashing With rocks on the top of that: The children awoke with a flashing Of wonder,"What were we at?" |
5772 | The voices from the earthly ways Questioned him still:"What dost thou here, If neither prophet, king nor seer? |
5772 | Then Apollo said,"What wisdom shall we give to children that they may remember? |
5772 | To the question,"What have we to do with God?" |
5772 | Twilight of amethyst, amid The few strange stars that lit the heights, Where was the secret spirit hid, Where was Thy place, O Light of Lights? |
5772 | Was not this apartness the very thing he had just been bitterly feeling? |
5772 | Was the gloom of the great warrior because he was but the shadow of his former self, or was that pale form indeed empty? |
5772 | We write that in letters, in books, but to the face of the fallen who brings back remembrance? |
5772 | Were not these enough for him? |
5772 | Were they not giants long ago, mighty men and heroes? |
5772 | What are the princeliest of them beside the fiery halls of Tir- na- noge and the flame- built cities of the Gods? |
5772 | What are we to do to realize these ideas? |
5772 | What did you think the links were? |
5772 | What had he been in her presence that could teach her otherwise? |
5772 | What has Theosophy to offer to the Roman Catholic? |
5772 | What is love but a breath of their very being? |
5772 | What is one to do?" |
5772 | What is poetry but a mingling of some tone of theirs with the sounds that below we utter? |
5772 | What is rule over a thousand warriors to kingship over the skyey hosts? |
5772 | What is the ideal of Ireland as a nation? |
5772 | What is the love of shadowy lips That know not what they seek or press, From whom the lure for ever slips And fails their phantom tenderness? |
5772 | What love? |
5772 | What of all the heart to love? |
5772 | What of all the hope to climb? |
5772 | What of all the soul to think? |
5772 | What of the heroic best of man; how does that show? |
5772 | What place had he amid these huge energies? |
5772 | What power is kindled by they might?" |
5772 | What shall be done to quiet the heart- cry of the world: how answer the dumb appeal for help we so often divine below eyes that laugh? |
5772 | What shall draw him up?" |
5772 | What the gain of all your years That undimmed in beauty shine? |
5772 | What to the average dweller in cities are stars and skies and mountains? |
5772 | What was he amid it all? |
5772 | What was his delusion? |
5772 | What was the mysterious glamour of the Druid age? |
5772 | What was this old wisdom- religion? |
5772 | What were they, these figures? |
5772 | What were they? |
5772 | What were we to do in the long evenings? |
5772 | What, I wonder, would these antique heroes say coming back to a land which preserves indeed their memory but emulates their spirit no more? |
5772 | Where is the ancient image of divinity in man''s face: where in man''s heart the prompting of the divine? |
5772 | Who announces the ages of the moon? |
5772 | Who calls him by his secret name? |
5772 | Who can forget that memorable day when its last great chief was laid to rest? |
5772 | Who gave thee such a ruby flaming heart, And such a pure cold spirit? |
5772 | Who is it throws light into the meeting on the mountain? |
5772 | Who is there who has not felt in some way or other the rhythmic recurrence of light within? |
5772 | Who teaches the place where courses the sun?" |
5772 | Why did he not hear their voices? |
5772 | Why does he linger now? |
5772 | Why is it that the spirit of daring, imaginative enquiry is so dead here? |
5772 | Why is this? |
5772 | Why should I toil after the far- off glory? |
5772 | Why should you not leave me here for a time, Emer? |
5772 | Why, therefore, dost thou wait?" |
5772 | Will they pass by feeble and longing for bygone joys, for the sins of their proud exultant youth, while I have grown into a myriad wisdom?" |
5772 | Will you come in and rest?" |
5772 | Would you recover strength and immortal vigor? |
5772 | You-- so beautiful?" |
5772 | in Me? |
5772 | my, what''s he piping over?" |
5772 | what are the doors? |
5772 | what had he to do with these things? |
5772 | what the links are? |
5772 | where is the boy running to?" |
5772 | where is the fountain of force? |
9579 | Hast thou not, on some week of storm, Seen the sweet Sabbath breaking fair, And cloud and shadow, sunlit, form The curtains of its tent of prayer? 9579 We braved the iron tempest That thundered on our shore; But when did kindness fail to find The key to Finland''s door? |
9579 | What is it that the crowd requite Thy love with hate, thy truth with lies? 9579 What means he?" |
9579 | A cause of praise and thankfulness? |
9579 | Alone to such as fitly bear Thy civic honors bid them fall? |
9579 | And but to faith, and not to sight, The walls of Freedom''s temple rise? |
9579 | And call thy daughters forth to share The rights and duties pledged to all? |
9579 | And so, for such a place of rest, Old prisoner, dropped thy blood as rain On Concord''s field, and Bunker''s crest, And Saratoga''s plain? |
9579 | And the mothers? |
9579 | Bring back The cells of Venice and the bigot''s rack? |
9579 | Can this be Rain- in- the- Face? |
9579 | Can this be the voice of him Who fought on the Big Horn''s rim? |
9579 | Can ye not learn From the pure Teacher''s life how mildly free Is the great Gospel of Humanity? |
9579 | For such gifts to me What shall I render, O my God, to thee? |
9579 | Forget ye how the blood of Vane From earth''s green bosom cried? |
9579 | Give every child his right of school, Merge private greed in public good, And spare a treasury overfull The tax upon a poor man''s food? |
9579 | Harden the softening human heart again To cold indifference to a brother''s pain? |
9579 | Has murder stained his hands with gore? |
9579 | Have miracles ceased When robbers say mass, and Barabbas is priest? |
9579 | Hear''st thou the angels sing Above this open hell? |
9579 | Here''s another sweet son What''s this mastiff- jawed rascal in epaulets done? |
9579 | Is that thy answer, strong and free, O loyal heart of Tennessee? |
9579 | Let the State scaffold rise again; Did Freedom die when Russell died? |
9579 | Outspake the ancient Amtman, At the gate of Helsingfors"Why comes this ship a- spying In the track of England''s wars?" |
9579 | Sorrowing of soul, and chained of limb, What is your carnival to him? |
9579 | Speak, Prince and Kaiser, Priest and Czar I If this be Peace, pray what is War? |
9579 | The fathers sleep, but men remain As wise, as true, and brave as they; Why count the loss and not the gain? |
9579 | Think ye his dim and failing eye Is kindled at your pageantry? |
9579 | V. Who shall arrest this tendency? |
9579 | WHY urge the long, unequal fight, Since Truth has fallen in the street, Or lift anew the trampled light, Quenched by the heedless million''s feet? |
9579 | What has the gray- haired prisoner done? |
9579 | What strange, glad voice is that which calls From Wagner''s grave and Sumter''s walls? |
9579 | What voice is beseeching thee For the scholar''s lowliest place? |
9579 | What, then, is he, Who in that name the gallows rears, An awful altar built to Thee, With sacrifice of blood and tears? |
9579 | Wherefore turn To the dark, cruel past? |
9579 | Who calls thy glorious service hard? |
9579 | Who deems it not its own reward? |
9579 | Who doubts Antonelli? |
9579 | Why cite that law with which the bigot Jew Rebuked the Pagan''s mercy, when he knew No evil in the Just One? |
9579 | Why lingers on these dusty rocks The young bride of the sea? |
9579 | Young Romance raised his dreamy eyes, O''erhung with paly locks of gold,--"Why smite,"he asked in sad surprise,"The fair, the old?" |
9579 | do ye wish More than your Lord, and grudge His dying poor What your own pride and not His need requires? |
9579 | why lies that old man there? |
9920 | Who will tell us for certain That winter is not at the other side of the mirror, Obscuring our delights And covering our hair with frost? |
9920 | Am I then a lesser king than love? |
9920 | And if Mahomet threw his handkerchief And took you up and loved you for himself? |
9920 | But what if I make a mistake And call to the wrong man? |
9920 | But with the silver from your roses What can you buy so precious as your roses? |
9920 | Did God use a bluer paint Painting the sky for the gold sun Or making the sea about your two black stars? |
9920 | Did God use a stronger light When He fashioned and dropped the sun into the sky Or dropped your black stars into their blue sea? |
9920 | Did God use a whiter silk Weaving the veil for your fevered roses, Or spinning the moon that lies across your face? |
9920 | Do you know what the time is? |
9920 | Eyes of my eyes, how could I then defend you? |
9920 | For silver? |
9920 | I wonder if he also was glad? |
9920 | Is it because I am maimed? |
9920 | Is it because I am maimed? |
9920 | Or make no sign at all, And it is he? |
9920 | Rose- seller, why do you sell your roses? |
9920 | Suddenly The bleak resurgent mind Called wonderfully clear:"What mark have I left?" |
9920 | What by the freshness of those blue streams, Seeing my face reflected there alone? |
9920 | What is the profit of these shawls without you? |
9920 | What should I do with those tall loaded fruit- trees, Seeing I could not give the fruit to you? |
9920 | Who will guide me to the dwelling of Abla? |
9920 | Whom? |
9920 | Why are your tears so black? |
9920 | Why are your tears so green? |
9920 | Why did I not meet you before I married? |
9920 | Why did the snow fall On my dress? |
9920 | Why did you wait till spring; Were not my hands already full of red- thorned roses? |
9920 | Why do the birds let their feathers Fall among the clouds? |
9920 | Why do you lower your eyes? |
9920 | Why do you not look at me? |
9920 | Will it ever wake? |
9920 | Would you like me to go and see your father and mother? |
9920 | Yet do not my strong eyes know you, far house? |
9920 | _ From the Arabic of Ahmed Bey Chawky( contemporary)._ WHITE AND GREEN AND BLACK TEARS Why are your tears so white? |
9920 | _ From the Arabic._ THE DANCING HEART When she came she said: You know that your love is granted, Why is your heart trembling? |
9920 | _ From the Persian of Abu- Yshac( middle of the tenth century)._ I ASKED MY LOVE I asked my love:"Why do you make yourself so beautiful?" |
9920 | _ Popular Song of Kafiristan.__ KAZACKS_ YOU DO NOT WANT ME? |
9920 | _ Song of Daghestan.__ GEORGIA_ PART OF A GHAZAL Lonely rose out- splendouring legions of roses, How could the nightingales behold you and not sing? |
9920 | _ Song of the Love Nights of Laos._ KHAP- SALUNG Seeing that I adore you, Scarf of golden flowers, Why do you stay unmarried? |
9944 | Do not two sparrows sell for a half- penny? |
9944 | That''s pretty near free- thinking, is n''t it? |
9944 | What''s it going to be now? |
9944 | And can we expect the Father of us all to act in other than common- sense ways? |
9944 | And what is money after all? |
9944 | And why be anxious about clothing? |
9944 | Are they doing it independently of God? |
9944 | Are they working in a medium into which God can not enter? |
9944 | But are not my present cravings those which count for me? |
9944 | But what can they do? |
9944 | Dare I say it? |
9944 | Do not even begin to be anxious, therefore, saying,''What shall we eat?'' |
9944 | Do you happen to know it?" |
9944 | How can I help seeing so much beauty and sweetness as the manifestation of God? |
9944 | How can I talk of not seeing God when I see_ this_? |
9944 | How could He show Himself to me more smilingly? |
9944 | How could anyone delight in the Caucasian God, as the majority of Caucasians conceive of Him? |
9944 | How do you picture Him? |
9944 | I have forgotten how we chanced on the subject, but I remember that she asked me these questions:"When you think of God_ how_ do you think of Him? |
9944 | If, therefore, we mentally poison the well of Universal Good- intent at its very source what have we to depend on? |
9944 | Is it any wonder that nothing ever comes of these efforts? |
9944 | Is it argued for a single minute that"goods"are not God''s good things, and that money is not their token? |
9944 | Is not the life more precious than its food, and the body than its clothing? |
9944 | Is not this common sense? |
9944 | It is not in heaven that thou shouldest say, Who shall go up for us to heaven and bring it down unto us that we may hear it and do it? |
9944 | Neither is it beyond the sea that thou shouldest say, Who shall go over the sea for us and bring it unto us that we may hear it and do it? |
9944 | Oseraije le dire? |
9944 | What does He seem like?" |
9944 | What is there then that we can trust to? |
9944 | Which of you by being over- anxious can add a single foot to his height? |
9944 | Who am I that I should be overlooked by it, or miss being made the expression of its infinite energies?" |
9944 | Why is it, we ask, that He snatches away those who are needed, leaving those who might be spared? |
9944 | Would you mind telling me how it helped you?" |
9944 | XII What place is there then for intersectarian or ecclesiastical arrogance? |
9944 | and do they not make up precisely that character which renders me unique? |
9944 | or''What shall we drink?'' |
9944 | or''What shall we wear?'' |
53214 | ''Manifestation''? 53214 ''Seem''?" |
53214 | A boa- constrictor, or one of them bushmasters out of Australia? |
53214 | A lizard? |
53214 | A medium? 53214 A microphone, inside of a glass cage top?" |
53214 | A-- did you say''snake''? |
53214 | A-- you mean a-- kangaroo? |
53214 | Am I out of my mind? |
53214 | And did we have experiences in India? |
53214 | And how was the recording made? 53214 And is there not the word that prophets, as fire descended upon their heads, spoke''with many tongues''?" |
53214 | And now, how will we coagulate''em? |
53214 | And so the Chief thinks this fellow with the ape and the mouses and the kangaroo is a criminal and made them criminals? |
53214 | And what about the film? |
53214 | And what was it? |
53214 | And why did he leave? |
53214 | And why would he have to go down there? |
53214 | Are they genuine priests? 53214 Are we right, interpreter?" |
53214 | Are you all right? 53214 Are you batty?" |
53214 | Are you-- sure? |
53214 | Are you? |
53214 | Are_ you_ going to have fireworks too? |
53214 | But how did it get on the records? |
53214 | But what told you, Grover? |
53214 | But what_ was_ the sound- clue? |
53214 | But why did the man take the white rats? |
53214 | But why did they go to all that trouble, when a man could of swarmed down a rope, and got the rats? |
53214 | But why do you suggest taking Roger, Doctor? |
53214 | But why must you restore the Eye, at so much risk? |
53214 | But-- lookit, Roger-- you did n''t notice, maybe----"That you had marked on a paper a list of words? 53214 But-- where have you put The Eye of Om?" |
53214 | But-- with some desperate person abroad----"Do I look desperate? |
53214 | Ca n''t you raise even a whisper? |
53214 | Can I see you in private? |
53214 | Can I snap her picture? 53214 Can you go further and say why no culture was allowed to be given, although the inoculator evidently thought his serum was genuine?" |
53214 | Can you see any other explanation for the disclosed conditions? |
53214 | Circumstantial evidence? 53214 Claws on glass? |
53214 | Cost you-- how much you want to pay? |
53214 | Cupola? |
53214 | Curdle them? 53214 Dicker?" |
53214 | Did Potts put this record here? |
53214 | Did he faint? |
53214 | Did he get it himself-- where? 53214 Did he stand in front of that Beta- ray?" |
53214 | Did he-- drink anything? |
53214 | Did no other camera operated by some one having entered-- they all ran for three minutes-- did none have the shot recorded? |
53214 | Did you? |
53214 | Do n''t you see? |
53214 | Do you really think I got the right meaning out of the hisses? |
53214 | Do you-- does Grover-- think he was-- was in danger-- hurt? |
53214 | Does n''t the man who has the trained animals use an ape? |
53214 | Gone? 53214 Gone?" |
53214 | Grover Brown, calling Chief of Police-- hello-- that you? 53214 Have you secured permission to enter our land?" |
53214 | Heard of the Eye of Om, did n''t he?... 53214 His?" |
53214 | How about last night? 53214 How about telepathy? |
53214 | How are my diffusion shots coming along? |
53214 | How are you doing? |
53214 | How comes it you''re out here? 53214 How could a valve on a radiator across the room make all that noise?" |
53214 | How did you come here? |
53214 | How do you know? |
53214 | How do you propose to return the jewel? |
53214 | How is Astrovox? |
53214 | How will you trap him? |
53214 | How''d I know? |
53214 | How? |
53214 | How? |
53214 | Huh? 53214 I have thought of going to Tibet-- but how shall I get into that temple, and how give back the gem? |
53214 | I picked up what I thought was the subterfuge----"Substitute? |
53214 | I wonder if your cousin would arrange for one of his men to stay part of the night with me, to take down my data? |
53214 | If mouses is here, you say they_ is_ here? |
53214 | If you took it-- how could you help meaning to? |
53214 | Is Astrovox all right? 53214 Is anybody in the cellar? |
53214 | Is he-- alive? |
53214 | Is it all right at the lab.? |
53214 | Is this a dream? |
53214 | It is n''t here.... Look, then.... What do_ you_ know about any laboratory?... 53214 It''s all right to say a monkey climbed in through the skylight way; but how does that fit the snake- trail up the stairway?" |
53214 | Like what? |
53214 | Me? |
53214 | More? |
53214 | My-- which letter? |
53214 | No abrasions of the bolt, or edge of the trap? |
53214 | Now-- where is any gun? |
53214 | Oh, yeah? |
53214 | Oh, yeah? |
53214 | Oh-- a man with a-- a what? |
53214 | Pedal protuberances, eh, Tip? |
53214 | Potts,Doctor Ryder turned his head, half accusingly,"are you a ventriloquist?" |
53214 | Roger,as the hurrying figure came into the room with the vacant glass experiment- cage,"are you afraid to stay up here?" |
53214 | Say, can we get into that lab? |
53214 | Shall I turn on the current? |
53214 | Shoes? |
53214 | Short- wave? |
53214 | So you''re in it, are you? |
53214 | So, where does that get us? |
53214 | That film was taken from a brand new shipment, was n''t it? |
53214 | That tells me that the entry was made through the skylight, as we had thought,he decided, but added:"Or-- does it tell more?" |
53214 | That you, Rog''? |
53214 | The Tibetans? |
53214 | The one that took pictures of them mouses? |
53214 | The others-- the vocational clues----"Do you mean''vocal''? |
53214 | The record ran out before it was spoken,said Roger, and he added:"Well-- did you find the jewel safe?" |
53214 | The shoes, Grover? |
53214 | The watch- chain? 53214 The what of who?" |
53214 | Then how about this? |
53214 | Then how was the stuff ignited? 53214 Then where did the ape come from? |
53214 | Then, what about visible ones? |
53214 | Then-- whose? |
53214 | There was a fire, was n''t there? |
53214 | They are? 53214 They pretend to be able to communicate with spirits of people, but has it been verified?" |
53214 | Think I''ll sit here and let something attack me? |
53214 | Tip,he hailed,"Did you get anything on the''sound''film in the one- snap- a- minute camera?" |
53214 | Toby Smith, huh? 53214 Two attempts to reach you-- and why? |
53214 | Want me? |
53214 | Was that clever? 53214 Was there an open microphone near you?" |
53214 | Water? |
53214 | Well, how else could it have happened? 53214 Well, then, was the ape?" |
53214 | Well, what could leave a snake trail? |
53214 | Well, what''s the use of holding me for all this? |
53214 | Well, what_ did_ the sound that Roger described as claws on glass really signify that linked up Ryder and not any of us? |
53214 | What ape? |
53214 | What are you doing here? |
53214 | What brings you here at five in the morning? |
53214 | What did it tell you? |
53214 | What do we know about the unseen things? 53214 What do you expect will happen here?" |
53214 | What do you seek? |
53214 | What do you suppose is wrong? |
53214 | What do you think of this? |
53214 | What do you think, Roger? |
53214 | What do you want? |
53214 | What else-- out of Australia? |
53214 | What explains_ my_ denseness? |
53214 | What good are they? 53214 What happened? |
53214 | What happened? |
53214 | What have you got, Tip? |
53214 | What is it? |
53214 | What is it? |
53214 | What motive could_ I_ have for wanting to hurt Roger? |
53214 | What told you? |
53214 | What tricks? |
53214 | What was it? |
53214 | What was it? |
53214 | What you buttin''in our game fer, huh? |
53214 | What you got in your coat-- candy? |
53214 | What''s going on? |
53214 | What''s going to happen here? |
53214 | What''s that, now lyddite? |
53214 | What''s the matter? 53214 What''s your idea, Grover?" |
53214 | What- da- ya mean, nothing more wo n''t burn? |
53214 | Where did he go? |
53214 | Where have you been? |
53214 | Where is it? |
53214 | Where is it? |
53214 | Where were you? 53214 Who are you? |
53214 | Who says I have? |
53214 | Who says the gem was left in India? 53214 Who''s there? |
53214 | Who-- what set off the flouroscope and the X- rays? |
53214 | Whose hands did we overlook? |
53214 | Why in the world did Ryder have to go to all that trouble? |
53214 | Why should I be bothered? |
53214 | Why would n''t he let you bring it? |
53214 | Why would they want to lure me to the lab? |
53214 | Why, Toby? |
53214 | Y-- er----"_ Did he?_"I-- no-- yes, sir. |
53214 | Yes, sir,Roger agreed, not knowing how else to respond, then:"How do you come to know our language, sir?" |
53214 | You come for what? |
53214 | You mean, where someone inserted a''jimmy''to shove back the bolt? |
53214 | You think the smoke overcame them, Doctor? |
53214 | You think-- anybody is hiding? |
53214 | You understand something of science? |
53214 | You''re what? |
53214 | Your own sacred Book tells of the-- is it not the Tower of Babel? |
53214 | 3. we thought it was to conceal identity that Mr. Clark wrote; wonder if it was not a talk with him in room, if he telephoned instead? |
53214 | A big dog?" |
53214 | A clean one?" |
53214 | A fortune teller?" |
53214 | A joke? |
53214 | A shot? |
53214 | A torpedo such as he had made? |
53214 | And how could the alarm go off by human means when he had made so certain that no one could enter? |
53214 | And if a magician could wave a wand and turn a beast into a Prince, does n''t chemistry transmute base elements into wonderful, modern products? |
53214 | And while I hate to suspect him--""But he was n''t there, today, when Doctor Ryder--""How do you know?" |
53214 | And why, then, was there a strange chattering and jumping sound? |
53214 | And_ you_ exploded a torpedo to call attention to a certain place and away from some other?" |
53214 | Anyway, Roger, do you think we do n''t how loyal Potts is to you? |
53214 | At whom? |
53214 | Better sidle over and ask Grover? |
53214 | But how? |
53214 | But there''s ol-- olle-- something about a factory----""Olfactory? |
53214 | But where, he mused, had the scientific star- student gone to? |
53214 | But why did the record add something not in Tibet? |
53214 | But---- Why had Potiphar Potts gone back to that secret tunnel? |
53214 | By whom? |
53214 | Ca n''t you think, Roger?" |
53214 | Can you tell me?" |
53214 | Chapter 9 THE VOICE IN THE SILENCE"Had your sleep out?" |
53214 | Clark? |
53214 | Claws on glass? |
53214 | Clues coming from smells? |
53214 | Coma?" |
53214 | Could Grover have miscalculated, Roger wondered, in implying that the kangaroo was the impersonator? |
53214 | Could be so many electrical switch noises or relays, but why was it so close to hearing Voice of Doom? |
53214 | Could he find out what he was supposed to know? |
53214 | Could it be-- really, a kangaroo? |
53214 | Did Clark or Ellison do it to try to shoot the man at the desk? |
53214 | Did he say anything?" |
53214 | Did that ring true? |
53214 | Did the man at the desk take him?" |
53214 | Did you see me go out?" |
53214 | Do n''t you know? |
53214 | Do these tell me anything? |
53214 | Do you know him?" |
53214 | Do you know?" |
53214 | Do you know?--who is it?" |
53214 | Doctor Ryder? |
53214 | Does that make me think of Clark, a jeweler? |
53214 | Does that tell you the size of reel to wind it on?" |
53214 | Ellison? |
53214 | For what? |
53214 | Furthermore, Roger mused, why had the fluoroscope and X- ray machinery been put into operation? |
53214 | Gone?" |
53214 | Grover turned to his younger cousin,"Does it strike you as convincing?" |
53214 | Grover? |
53214 | Had Potts, fighting either fire or intruder, been rendered incapable of responding to their telephone call? |
53214 | Had his trap sprung? |
53214 | Had it been the ever- blowing gale, stirring something? |
53214 | Had some one, entering the laboratory, set off the first alarm as fire broke out? |
53214 | Had someone-- or something!--drawn the rest away, and lured_ him_ there? |
53214 | Had the power- house cut off their"juice"or had a dynamo cut out for the time? |
53214 | Had this been tragedy? |
53214 | Has Clark got some hold over Doctor Ryder that made him go after a telephone summons? |
53214 | Have you located it?" |
53214 | How about you, Roger?" |
53214 | How could the answer fail to be recorded? |
53214 | How did you discover it?" |
53214 | How do they tell me anything? |
53214 | How do you know my name, and what do you want to see me about?" |
53214 | How does it fit? |
53214 | How had he been spirited away? |
53214 | How start? |
53214 | How would it be known? |
53214 | How would it help? |
53214 | How''d I know the man wanted ice?" |
53214 | How''s this? |
53214 | How? |
53214 | How?" |
53214 | I wonder how important it really is, or if it was just plaster or a film in a can? |
53214 | If his star- reading could warn him, why did n''t he take care?" |
53214 | Important, but how? |
53214 | Is Ellison able to work a combination"by ear"? |
53214 | Is Potts safe?" |
53214 | Is he there? |
53214 | Is that my real clue?" |
53214 | Is that what you saw?" |
53214 | It was crackle of flame on like what old Astrovox said when we were unused record in my collecting old papers in upper room? |
53214 | Kangaroo hitting it with paw? |
53214 | Magic? |
53214 | Might some one else be the next? |
53214 | Monkey? |
53214 | Mr. Millman, the electrical engineer, asked immediately of Dr. Ryder:"Have you any enemies?" |
53214 | No Tibet? |
53214 | No adventure? |
53214 | No thrills? |
53214 | Now what_ am_ I supposed to know that would reveal the''who''in this?" |
53214 | Now, that leaves the talk that named Clark, after the Voice of Doom-- all three times it could have been the same record, of course-- what is left?" |
53214 | Now-- what would have been his natural, subsequent procedure?" |
53214 | Or Millman? |
53214 | Or did Millman come along too soon and scare you off?" |
53214 | Or did either one do it at the other? |
53214 | Or had Zendt, formerly up with the doctor, put anything in that glass perhaps intended for either of the pair working there? |
53214 | Or had he-- what? |
53214 | Or some fresh menace, some creeping creature, some vindictive priest, who had made that tiny sound of a scraping shoe? |
53214 | Or the night before?" |
53214 | Or thieves?" |
53214 | Or what? |
53214 | Or, as Roger felt, could he have wanted to silence a tongue able to accuse him about Astrovox? |
53214 | Or, would you rather be announced?" |
53214 | Or-- Toby? |
53214 | Or-- he thought-- was it all over? |
53214 | Or-- was another inside? |
53214 | Over- confidence? |
53214 | Query, could Ellison have done it? |
53214 | Query: how did Tibetans know all about our stock to substitute? |
53214 | Roger gasped,"How do you get that?" |
53214 | Roger? |
53214 | See the scorch? |
53214 | Seems important, because it was on record probably made in Tibet and brought here by-- Tibet lama? |
53214 | Such as what?" |
53214 | Suppose a gas in the atmosphere reacted with some exposed ingredient? |
53214 | The Eye-- gone?" |
53214 | The Voice again on a record that ought to have been blank?" |
53214 | The doctor, turning, recognized him as he approached,"How''d you locate me so soon?" |
53214 | The kangaroo-- shall we help him?" |
53214 | The recording was again audible:"How did you get in? |
53214 | Then what, besides? |
53214 | Thought transference?" |
53214 | To his surprise his pet, the tiny mouse, began to run about, to show unmistakable signs of animation-- or was it of excitement? |
53214 | Toby? |
53214 | Trickery? |
53214 | Voice of Doom heard Was it record, same as others? |
53214 | Want to bring my machine?" |
53214 | Was it so wise to wait? |
53214 | Was it too soon, Roger wondered, to screw it into the tiny receptacle? |
53214 | Was that thump the telephone taken off hook? |
53214 | Was that, thought Roger, a way that a person might behave who had put something in the water? |
53214 | Was the man crazed? |
53214 | Was the real culprit caught? |
53214 | Well, for that jewel, what would not some characters do? |
53214 | Were"appearances"cheating his common sense? |
53214 | What animal, he mused, would fit the conditions? |
53214 | What could those enlarged views hide from him? |
53214 | What danger, he wondered, might lurk in just a visit? |
53214 | What did he know? |
53214 | What do you want?" |
53214 | What else?" |
53214 | What glass did he use? |
53214 | What happened, Roger? |
53214 | What made all that compulsatory?" |
53214 | What was going on? |
53214 | What was the matter with Grover? |
53214 | What would they see? |
53214 | What''s all them little windmills for?" |
53214 | What''s the matter with everybody? |
53214 | What''s your best price?" |
53214 | What, Roger wondered, was the condition in that partitioned place adjoining their waiting room? |
53214 | Where are you?" |
53214 | Where in that office could a man be, and not have the camera register his presence? |
53214 | Where is our boy? |
53214 | Where was Cousin Grover? |
53214 | Where were the rest? |
53214 | Which of them? |
53214 | Who besides Potts could have known that the genuine gem was in its place? |
53214 | Who else? |
53214 | Who had the sense to pull fuses, to stop our devices? |
53214 | Who says you could get it from him?" |
53214 | Who, besides, could be guilty? |
53214 | Who, but the guilty man he accused, could be meant? |
53214 | Why did fire alarm go off? |
53214 | Why have they stopped ringing?" |
53214 | Why should Toby want to do that? |
53214 | Why was it important for him to be lured to the laboratory? |
53214 | Why''n''t you ride right on in if you want the Doctor?" |
53214 | Why? |
53214 | Why? |
53214 | Why? |
53214 | Will that lamp burn him?" |
53214 | Will you go and recover it, please? |
53214 | Would it, he wondered, be Clark? |
53214 | Would the people in Tibet pay you?" |
53214 | You know what taking the gem means to those Tibetans?" |
53214 | You mean-- like thought transference or the''ghosts''that spirit- mediums pretend to call on?" |
53214 | You sent Potts to-- shall I say the real word? |
53214 | Zendt, what do you say this is?--Stroke? |
53214 | Zendt? |
53214 | _ What_ law of Nature? |
53214 | as the ape made a lunge and Roger, avoiding it, had to drop to his haunches to avoid the boxing kangaroo''s leap and stroke,"Would, eh?... |
53214 | asked Millman,"the fire- cry on a record supposed to be unused? |
53214 | chuckled Mr. Hope,"What do you say, Grover?" |
53214 | in next day''s papers, get back his animal that could n''t tell what it was there for, and----""Well, what_ was_ it here for? |
53214 | possible anybody made a record of it? |
53214 | the combination being worked by expert who could tell by sound when tumblers fell right? |
53214 | try to get to that cabinet.... Like to paw the Eye of the Buddha, eh, would you?" |
8678 | Am I a beast? 8678 Are you the lady who is to teach in the royal family?" |
8678 | But how is it that you are still a slave? |
8678 | But what manner of birth, is this that she has conceived, in that it has already brought grief and death into the land? 8678 By what authority does he send me this message?" |
8678 | Can I see her? |
8678 | How could she,she asked,"leave her Mem and the_ chota baba sahib_ alone in a strange land?" |
8678 | How many years shall you be married? |
8678 | How many years your husband has been dead? |
8678 | Then where will you go in the evening? |
8678 | Then why you shall object to the gates being shut? |
8678 | To see or to hear? |
8678 | What in the world can you want with a screw- driver, Moonshee? |
8678 | What is the matter? |
8678 | Where do you go every evening? |
8678 | Where is your mother, dear? |
8678 | Who, of himself, can interpret the symbol expressed by the wings of the air- sylph forming within the case of the caterpillar? 8678 Will you teach me to draw?" |
8678 | A Tala- yea kia hai?_[ Footnote:"Great God! |
8678 | Am I an absolute monarch? |
8678 | Am I an unbelieving dog? |
8678 | And as to salary, he continued:"Why you should be poor? |
8678 | And why and whither did they disappear from among the nations of the earth? |
8678 | But the spot? |
8678 | By what hope? |
8678 | Finding I had none, he was silent for a minute or two; then demanded:"What will you do? |
8678 | Has he no pity, even for those who love him? |
8678 | Has it ever been thought that evil is dearer unto me than good? |
8678 | His Majesty spied us quickly, and advanced abruptly, petulantly screaming,"Who? |
8678 | How can I be an absolute monarchy?" |
8678 | How many grandchildren shall you now have? |
8678 | How many? |
8678 | How many? |
8678 | Is it all_ maya_,--delusion? |
8678 | It will be my turn next; and then what will become of the_ chota baba sahib?_"[ Footnote: The little master.] |
8678 | Must you have everything in this world? |
8678 | On my replying in the affirmative, he asked,"Have you friends in Bangkok?" |
8678 | On translating the line,"Whom He loveth he chasteneth,"she looked up in my face, and asked anxiously:"Does thy God do that? |
8678 | Scarcely less intelligent, and certainly more entertaining, than these were the dogs of our company,-? |
8678 | Was he dying, or acting? |
8678 | Was it a bear? |
8678 | What could I do but weep with him, and then steal quietly away and leave the king to the Father? |
8678 | What could I do, but stand still and submit to kisses, embraces, reproaches, from princesses and slaves? |
8678 | What could I say? |
8678 | What does Geographies mean? |
8678 | What manner of people were these? |
8678 | What might the omen be? |
8678 | What shall you consider me?" |
8678 | Whence came their civilization and their culture? |
8678 | Where were all the romantic fancies and proud anticipations with which I had accepted the position of governess to the royal family of Siam? |
8678 | Where will you sleep to- night?" |
8678 | Wherefore are you so difficult? |
8678 | Why should he become a Christian? |
8678 | Why they did not look in journal of Royal Asiatic Society, where several words of Sanskrit and Pali were published continually? |
8678 | Why you come so late?" |
8678 | Why you do not make_ them_ pay you? |
8678 | Why you no love play?" |
8678 | Will whole human learned world become the pupil of their corrupted Siamese teachers? |
8678 | Will you now have any objection to write to Sir John, and tell him I am his very good friend?" |
8678 | Will you take me to England with you, Mam cha?" |
8678 | lady, are_ all_ the gods angry and cruel? |
8678 | not if he gave you all these jewelled rings and boxes, and these golden things?" |
8678 | the right spot? |
8678 | what is this?"] |
8678 | who? |
8678 | who?" |
8678 | why do n''t you come home? |
8544 | Afraid of_ me_? |
8544 | But I do wish you would tell me what you really think? |
8544 | If I were Lord Arden,I said; but then it flashed vividly into my mind, suppose I really were this opulent young Lord? |
8544 | Then there really are such people? |
8544 | Afraid of a shadow, a poor make- believe like me? |
8544 | All these are familiar-- but what is that unknown voice, that thrilling note? |
8544 | And after all, why not let oneself be dazzled and enchanted? |
8544 | And how about your own life? |
8544 | And on what errands? |
8544 | And through how many rains and years shall I still hurry down wet streets-- middle- aged, and then, perhaps, very old? |
8544 | And yet, hang it all, who by rights should be the teachers and who the learners? |
8544 | Are children more absurdly terrified by a candle in a hollow turnip? |
8544 | Are not Illusions pleasant, and is this a world in which Romance hangs on every tree? |
8544 | Are there not soporific dreams and sweet deliriums more soothing than Reason? |
8544 | But have the condemnations of all the ages done anything to tarnish that bright lustre? |
8544 | But is this struggle for a healthy mind in a maggoty universe really after all worth it? |
8544 | But what awful things happen to us? |
8544 | But what powers of careful observation could one expect from a group of labourers and small farmers? |
8544 | Can he ever be sure that he wo n''t be suddenly struck down by the fever of Funeral, or of Spelling Reform, or take to his bed with a new Sex Theory? |
8544 | Did Francis know of this? |
8544 | For those peevish, over- toiled, utilitarian insects, was there no lesson to be derived from the spectacle of Me? |
8544 | Funny- shaped hat, where are the thoughts that once nested beneath you? |
8544 | I cried...._ The Starry Heaven_"But what are they really? |
8544 | Is it true to say that the human heart remains quite unchanged beneath all the changing fashions of frills and ruffles? |
8544 | Is it, indeed, merely the last great summons and revelation for which I am waiting? |
8544 | Is that, then, so full of golden visions? |
8544 | Is the emotion always precisely the same? |
8544 | Is there an ecstasy or any intoxication like it? |
8544 | It was as if some spell had drawn him; and now, with my curiosity newly wakened, I asked myself what had been that spell? |
8544 | Oh? |
8544 | Old shoes, hurrying along what dim paths of the Past did I wear out your sole- leather? |
8544 | Only to find the words-- that troubled me; were there then no words to describe this Vision-- divine-- intoxicating? |
8544 | Or with Job, should I question the Universe, and puzzle my sad brains about Life-- the meaning of Life on this apple- shaped Planet? |
8544 | To a waste- paper basket, to a sieve choked with sediment, or to a barrel full of floating froth and refuse? |
8544 | Was Bedlam at full moon ever scared by anything half so silly? |
8544 | Was he too on the hunt for Pleasure, solemnly pursuing his Bird? |
8544 | Was it worth while then going up in a lift into a world that had nothing less trite to offer? |
8544 | What do they say they are?" |
8544 | What has become of them?" |
8544 | What, as a plain matter of fact, was I doing, how did I spend my days? |
8544 | When I find myself however among persons of middle age and settled principles, see them moving regularly to their offices-- what keeps them going? |
8544 | Where, in what paradise or palace, shall I ever find Them? |
8544 | Who are They? |
8544 | Who made it my duty anyhow to administer the Universe, and keep the planets to their Copernican courses? |
8544 | Who sang"Auld Lang Syne"and howled with sentiment, and more than once gazed at the summer stars through a blur of great, romantic tears? |
8544 | Who worried about the existence of God, and danced with young ladies till long after daybreak? |
8544 | Why am I to blame for all that is wrong in the world? |
8544 | Why not be led with the others by still waters, and be made to lie down in green pastures? |
8544 | Why should all the birds of the air conspire against me? |
8544 | Would not that astute official see that I was only posing as a Real Person? |
8544 | _ Lord Arden_"If I were Lord Arden,"said the Vicar,"I should shut up that great House; it''s too big-- what can a young unmarried man...?" |
8544 | _ Old Clothes_ Shabby old waistcoat, what made the heart beat that you used to cover? |
8544 | _ Self- Analysis_"Yes, are n''t they odd, the thoughts that float through one''s mind for no reason? |
8544 | _ The Birds_ But how can one toil at the great task with this hurry and tumult of birds just outside the open window? |
8544 | _ The Spider_ What shall I compare it to, this fantastic thing I call my Mind? |
8544 | _ The Voice of the World_"And what are you doing now?" |
8544 | _"Where Do I Come In? |
8544 | on the Age with Hamlet, sternly unmasking its hypocrisies, and riddling through and through its comfortable Optimisms? |
58699 | Ai n''t they pretty? |
58699 | All alone here? |
58699 | And Jinx? 58699 And leave her here at his mercy? |
58699 | And suppose I grow up lig''civilised girl,_ then_ I may live ad America? |
58699 | And what''s your name? |
58699 | And your father? |
58699 | Bobs asked you yet? |
58699 | Brother,said the Salvation captain,"are you saved?" |
58699 | But Jerry----"I say, let go my arm, will you? |
58699 | But you do n''t want more than one husband? |
58699 | By what process of mathematics, will you tell me, did you arrive at the figure of two? |
58699 | Ca n''t I read it? 58699 Can you beat it?" |
58699 | Did he now? 58699 Did you hear her?" |
58699 | Do n''t you know better than to smile at any man on the street? |
58699 | Do you know who this letter is addressed to, dearie? |
58699 | Do you mean to tell me that that little girl is being beaten because she threw back that dirty gorilla''s coin to him? |
58699 | Dog? |
58699 | Emgaged? 58699 Engaged?" |
58699 | For heaven''s sake, Sunny, will nothing teach you civilised ways? |
58699 | Friend, eh? 58699 Gentleman, huh?" |
58699 | Gosh, what do they know about it? 58699 Hatsu, have you ever seen the Emperor?" |
58699 | Hatton,_ if_ a man_ not_ ask girl to make marry wiz him, what she can do? |
58699 | Hatton? 58699 He did, did he? |
58699 | How are your frien'', Miss Falconer? |
58699 | How are your mother? |
58699 | How old are you? |
58699 | How ole? |
58699 | I beg your pardon? |
58699 | I sawry, Jinx, but me? 58699 I?" |
58699 | Jerry, how can I tell you? 58699 Jerry, how you are do ad those worl''? |
58699 | Jerry, you like very much those plum? |
58699 | Jinx, you are sick? 58699 Job? |
58699 | Keep your hands off me, will you? |
58699 | Leap year? 58699 May I add,"continued Professor Barrowes,"that it is my devout hope, my dear, that you will always remain unchanged? |
58699 | Mormon? |
58699 | Mother, where is Sunny? 58699 Mr. Hammond, manager of some corporation or company in Japan?" |
58699 | Oh, Bobs, I are_ thad_ sorry, but me? 58699 Oh, Jinx, you are ask_ me_ to make marry wiz you?" |
58699 | Oh, for God''s sake, Professor Barrowes, why did you not come when I asked you to? 58699 Oh, my dear, did you really_ ask_ him to ask you to marry him?" |
58699 | So you decided on Jinx, did you? 58699 Sunny, ai n''t you got any better sense than speak to a man on the street?" |
58699 | Sunny, do n''t you remember me? |
58699 | Sunny, do you want me to bring that young puppy to you? |
58699 | Sunny, you do n''t want to wear a fellow''s ring unless you intend to marry him, do n''t you understand that? 58699 Sunny, you know your father now, fully, do n''t you? |
58699 | They do nod lig''Japanese girl? |
58699 | Tomb? |
58699 | Two? 58699 Uh- h- h?" |
58699 | Well, but you can promise me, ca n''t you? |
58699 | Well, make up your mind to it, you''re not going, do you understand? 58699 Well, what are they then?" |
58699 | Well, what of it? |
58699 | Were you ever a_ beggar_, Sunny? |
58699 | What are we going to do about it? 58699 What are you doing in my son''s apartment?" |
58699 | What are you doing, miss? 58699 What are you talking about?" |
58699 | What are you wearing Jinx''s ring for then? |
58699 | What can I do for you, fair one? |
58699 | What can I do for you? |
58699 | What difference does that make? |
58699 | What do you mean? |
58699 | What do you mean? |
58699 | What do you_ mean_ by doing a thing like that? |
58699 | What does he do, Sunny? |
58699 | What in the world do you mean? |
58699 | What is your name? |
58699 | What you been doing with yourself, and what''s this latest story I''m hearing about your marrying some Sonofagun? |
58699 | What you shall do, baby mine? 58699 What''s the use? |
58699 | What''s your hurry? |
58699 | Who asked him around here anyway? |
58699 | Who-- is-- he? |
58699 | Why did you never mail it? |
58699 | Why not, Hatton? |
58699 | Why, my dear, where is your ring? |
58699 | Why, yes-- don''t they have engagements in Japan? |
58699 | Why, you did n''t suppose, did you, that I was going to continue my engagement to Jerry Hammond after what he told me? |
58699 | Will you ever forget( from Bobs)"her intense admiration for Monty''s white skin? |
58699 | You have n''t promised any other lucky dog that you''ll marry him, have you? |
58699 | You live here, do you? 58699 You live here?" |
58699 | You want me marry wiz-- the Son of Heaven? 58699 You want something, my darling?" |
58699 | You what? 58699 You would n''t marry him, would you?" |
58699 | You would n''t take him if he did, would you, Sunny? |
58699 | You''re dog- tired, ai n''t you? 58699 You_ are_ English then?" |
58699 | Young Hammond? |
58699 | _ Do_ I? 58699 After a moment:Are you stone broke then? |
58699 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
58699 | Are n''t you going to say bye- bye to your best friend?" |
58699 | Are you a Frenchy? |
58699 | Are you a royal princess in disguise?" |
58699 | Are you found those Beauty thad you are loog for always?" |
58699 | Are you make grade big success? |
58699 | Beautiful day-- er-- night, is n''t it?" |
58699 | Could it possibly be someone she had known in Japan? |
58699 | D''she ever make_ you_ feel like a two- spot?" |
58699 | Daikoku( God of Fortune) he have been kind to you-- yes?" |
58699 | Did Schmidt sell you a whole cow?" |
58699 | Did you see her hair?" |
58699 | Do you get me? |
58699 | Do you see? |
58699 | Do you understand that?" |
58699 | Ever seen''em? |
58699 | First, I will ask you: What is your name?" |
58699 | For the fourth time within half an hour Jerry seized that telephone and shouted into the receiver:"What in hades do you want?" |
58699 | Got around him too, did you? |
58699 | Got him going, ai n''t you? |
58699 | Had he, then, all unwittingly, injured little Sunny? |
58699 | Hammond?" |
58699 | How I kin see all those year come?" |
58699 | How about it?" |
58699 | How are you?" |
58699 | How long have you had that letter?" |
58699 | How long you been out of work? |
58699 | How then will you answer it?" |
58699 | How''s your dog?" |
58699 | I ask you, what is a fellow to do when he''s got a sister on his back like that? |
58699 | I cannod marry those Emperor, and me? |
58699 | I do n''t know where?" |
58699 | I printed it, because it was good stuff, but who is the lucky dog? |
58699 | If I did, would you wait for me? |
58699 | If she suspects every little innocent chorus girl of the town, what is she going to say to Sunny when that kid goes up before her in tights?" |
58699 | Is he any young man we are acquainted with?" |
58699 | Is it true you are going to be married?" |
58699 | Is n''t the world small? |
58699 | It''s a game between you and Katy, is n''t it, dear? |
58699 | Japanese or white people?" |
58699 | Jerry Hammond turned to his friends,"Are we going to stand for this?" |
58699 | Jerry,_ I_ are goin''to wait till those year of Leap are come, and then, me? |
58699 | Let her off, just this time, will you?" |
58699 | Me? |
58699 | Me? |
58699 | Me? |
58699 | Me? |
58699 | Now the question is"--Jerry looked sternly at his friends--"which one of your families would be decent enough to give a temporary home to Sunny? |
58699 | Or are you devoid of shame, you bad creature?" |
58699 | Out of work? |
58699 | Pretty good, ai n''t it? |
58699 | Professor, if I study mos''hard, mebbe I grow up to be American girl-- jos same as her?" |
58699 | Relative of yours?" |
58699 | Say, Sunny, whose the duck you''re engaged to? |
58699 | She asked herself in her quaint way:"What I are now to do? |
58699 | She----""What? |
58699 | So I smile on those mans----""You_ what_?" |
58699 | So what do you say, Sunny?" |
58699 | Sunny retreated hurriedly, almost panically? |
58699 | Sunny, old scout, where are you?" |
58699 | Sunny?" |
58699 | Tell me-- you have not forgotten your father altogether, have you?" |
58699 | That is, wait a bit, will you? |
58699 | The ring means that you are promised to him, do you get me?" |
58699 | The ring''s worth that, is n''t it?" |
58699 | Then his glance turning irritably from Katy, rested upon Sunny''s slightly shocked face? |
58699 | Then to the girl at the desk:"Who was his nibs?" |
58699 | Then, with a pretended yawn, she added,"But really we must be going now? |
58699 | Two flea?" |
58699 | Wear this for me, will you? |
58699 | Were they not all in the same boat, and equally stung by the story of Sunny''s engagement? |
58699 | What I can do?" |
58699 | What I shall do?" |
58699 | What I want to know is-- how about that marriage story? |
58699 | What about Jinx?" |
58699 | What are those, Bobs?" |
58699 | What are those, Hatton?" |
58699 | What are you doing here? |
58699 | What are you givin''us? |
58699 | What are you, anyway? |
58699 | What are you, anyway? |
58699 | What can I do for you?" |
58699 | What can we do for you?" |
58699 | What could the Three- in- one God of the Reverend Mr. Sutherland do for her now? |
58699 | What did you ask for?" |
58699 | What do you say? |
58699 | What do you say?" |
58699 | What else you got?" |
58699 | What floor you on?" |
58699 | What freak of fate therefore should interpose at this juncture, and thrust Sunny electrically into the lives of her friends again? |
58699 | What have you done with Sunny?" |
58699 | What in Sam Hill is keeping that blamed Proff?" |
58699 | What in the name of common sense had she come to the States for? |
58699 | What is his name?" |
58699 | What is it? |
58699 | What is that you are taking?" |
58699 | What is that you say?" |
58699 | What is the trouble, lad?" |
58699 | What nationality was your mother? |
58699 | What was it Professor Barrowes had warned him of? |
58699 | What was it now the Reverend Simon Sutherland desired her to say? |
58699 | What was she-- a white woman or a Japanese?" |
58699 | What you are doing these day?" |
58699 | What you are eat? |
58699 | What you doin''on the streets? |
58699 | What you got there, dearie, if it ai n''t being too personal to ask? |
58699 | What''s that you got there, Sunny?" |
58699 | What''s the use?" |
58699 | What''s your other name?" |
58699 | What''s yours?" |
58699 | What''s yours?" |
58699 | Whatsh matter?" |
58699 | Where do you come from? |
58699 | Where in the name of all the pagan gods and goddesses of Japan did you get that god- forsaken mutt from? |
58699 | Where is Sunny, I say?" |
58699 | Where''d you get it?" |
58699 | Where''s your home, girl?" |
58699 | Who do you want to see? |
58699 | Who is Katy?" |
58699 | Who is he? |
58699 | Who then was the mysterious fiancé? |
58699 | Who----?" |
58699 | Would you, Sunny?" |
58699 | You ain''t----? |
58699 | You are ache on him, Mr. dear Jinx?" |
58699 | You ca n''t beat it for-- for tradgedy, now can you? |
58699 | You know those name?" |
58699 | You love me very much, papa?" |
58699 | You poor ignorunt little simp, do n''t you reckernise when a fellow is fainting with pure unadulterated joy? |
58699 | You see him?" |
58699 | You suit me down to the ground, I''ll tell the world, and you look- a- here, I''m coming back to see you, d''ye understand? |
58699 | You''ve had no lunch?" |
58699 | Your janitor gentleman and landlord asked you too?" |
58699 | _ How_ I can do those?" |
58699 | _ I''ll_ speak to Miss Ah-- what is the name?" |
58699 | ai n''t it pretty? |
58699 | ai n''t that a job? |
58699 | for it resumed complacently:"Shall we send her up to you?" |
58699 | groaned Jinx,"what in the name of thunderation are you going to do with a Japanese girl in New York City? |
8130 | ''Akira, do the Japanese always keep their vows to the gods?'' |
8130 | ''Akira,''I ask,''it can not then be lawful, according to Buddhism, for any one to wear silk?'' |
8130 | ''And how many pilgrims from other provinces visit the great shrine yearly?'' |
8130 | ''And the Kami,--the deities of Shinto?'' |
8130 | ''And your name?'' |
8130 | ''Are there Buddhists in England and America?'' |
8130 | ''Are you a Buddhist?'' |
8130 | ''But do they clap their hands to call the Gods, as Japanese clap their hands to summon their attendants?'' |
8130 | ''But there are only nine?'' |
8130 | ''But what is this, Akira?'' |
8130 | ''But why are those little stones piled about the statues?'' |
8130 | ''Even in Nirvana?'' |
8130 | ''In the period when the temple was built upon a larger scale,''I ask,''were the timbers for its construction obtained from the forests of Izumo?'' |
8130 | ''In what part of the Oho- yashiro,''I ask,''do the august deities assemble during the Kami- ari- zuki?'' |
8130 | ''Is it really worth while to climb up there in the sun?'' |
8130 | ''Is not this great temple of Kitzuki,''I inquire,''older than the temples of Ise?'' |
8130 | ''Then is there no way, Akira, by which Bimbogami may be driven away?'' |
8130 | ''Then the clapping of hands signifies that in prayer the soul awakens from such dreaming?'' |
8130 | ''Tsukuri hana!--tsukuri- hana- wa- irimasenka?'' |
8130 | ''What amusing is? |
8130 | ''What do they signify?'' |
8130 | ''What is more fugitive than a smile? |
8130 | ''What is that?'' |
8130 | ''What time do you think it is?'' |
8130 | ''Why do you make offerings if you do not believe in Buddha?'' |
8130 | ''Why is there no image of Buddha in your temple?'' |
8130 | ''Yes, will you come to my room?'' |
8130 | ''You understand what I mean by the word"soul"?'' |
8130 | 10''Tera?'' |
8130 | 19''And this,''the reader may say,--''this is all that you went forth to see: a torii, some shells, a small damask snake, some stones?'' |
8130 | 8''Tera?'' |
8130 | 9''Tera?'' |
8130 | Again he asked:"What is the cause of your crying?" |
8130 | And I ask:''How many Buddhas are there, O Akira? |
8130 | And even then--''And even then?'' |
8130 | And he asked the boy:''Why did you not put the ten?'' |
8130 | And the emotion itself-- what is it? |
8130 | And the tale of his descent into that strange nether world, and of what there befell him, is it not written in the Kojiki? |
8130 | As Akira takes his seat before me, on the other side of the hibachi, I ask him:''What was the name I saw on the tablet?'' |
8130 | But Ono- no- Kimi pleaded, saying,''How may I go back, not knowing my way through the darkness?'' |
8130 | But in what land did ever religious practice and theology agree? |
8130 | But tell me, I pray you; unto what may the Bon- ichi be likened?'' |
8130 | But what is the hare? |
8130 | But what, you may ask, has all this to do with the Horse of Bronze? |
8130 | But where are the men, and the old women? |
8130 | But why should the papers be cast into running water? |
8130 | But why that long, loud, weird rapping on the bow with a stone evidently kept on board for no other purpose? |
8130 | Finally he asks me:''Are you a Christian?'' |
8130 | Hast thou other sons who should speak?" |
8130 | How can people afford to make such things for four cents, even in this country of astounding cheapness? |
8130 | How describe a torii to those who have never looked at one even in a photograph or engraving? |
8130 | How far is it from here to the next town?--Akasaka? |
8130 | I asked a charming Japanese girl:''How can a doll live?'' |
8130 | I turn to the young student, and ask him:''Why do they clap their hands three times before they pray?'' |
8130 | IYAJI.--What are you doing there? |
8130 | Illusion? |
8130 | Is the number of the Enlightened known?'' |
8130 | KIDAHACHI.--What are you doing?--putting your hand there? |
8130 | KIDAHACHI.--What do you mean?--What are you going to do to me? |
8130 | Or more briefly:''No or yes?'' |
8130 | Perhaps you would like to see it?'' |
8130 | So how is thy heart?''" |
8130 | Symbolising what? |
8130 | Then Kobodaishi asked the boy:''Who are you?'' |
8130 | Then Take- haya- susa- no- wo- no- mikoto said to the old man:"If this be thy daughter, wilt thou offer her to me?" |
8130 | Then he asked him:"What is its form like?" |
8130 | Then he deigned to ask:"Who are ye?" |
8130 | To the question,''Why do they come from the sea?'' |
8130 | Unto what, I ask myself, may this be likened? |
8130 | What are the Ma? |
8130 | What are they? |
8130 | What is this but Renan''s thought of a deity in process of evolution, uttered by the heart of a child? |
8130 | What would be thought of our own roughs in such a country? |
8130 | Where is he? |
8130 | Which no doubt means, do I want to see any more temples? |
8130 | Whither? |
8130 | Who presumes to suppose that the gods know English? |
8130 | Why should the trees be so lovely in Japan? |
8130 | Why such a feeling? |
8130 | Why these offerings of horses of straw? |
8130 | Would you like to come with me?'' |
8130 | You do not know what an uguisu is? |
8130 | [ 1]''What night? |
8130 | [ 6]''Does the little serpent come to the temple of its own accord?'' |
8130 | [ 8]''There are many deities enshrined at Kitzuki, are there not?'' |
8130 | but what has this to do with faith or ghosts? |
8130 | de...?'' |
8130 | for''uchi desuka?'' |
8130 | gwaikojn dana!--nani ski ni kite iru daro?'' |
8130 | or that the Universe exists for us solely as the reflection of our own souls? |
8130 | or the old Chinese teaching that we must seek the Buddha only in our own hearts? |
8130 | or the soft regret which that memory may evoke? |
8130 | outrageousness doing-- what marvellous is? |
8130 | tamago wa arimasenka?'' |
8130 | what dream?'' |
8130 | what is all this? |
8130 | yet when does the memory of a vanished smile expire? |
9573 | Do I smell your gums of incense? 9573 For the death in life of Nitria, For your Chartreuse ever dumb, What better is the neighbor, Or happier the home? |
9573 | Forever round the Mercy- seat The guiding lights of Love shall burn; But what if, habit- bound, thy feet Shall lack the will to turn? 9573 Have ye not still my witness Within yourselves alway, My hand that on the keys of life For bliss or bale I lay? |
9573 | Heart of mine unsatisfied, Was it vanity or pride That a deeper joy denied? 9573 Heed I the noise of viols, Your pomp of masque and show? |
9573 | I note each gracious purpose, Each kindly word and deed; Are ye not all my children? 9573 Need I your alms? |
9573 | No prayer for light and guidance Is lost upon mine ear The child''s cry in the darkness Shall not the Father hear? 9573 Of rank and name and honors Am I vain as ye are vain? |
9573 | Shall souls redeemed by me refuse To share my sorrow in their turn? 9573 What if the earth is hiding Her old faiths, long outworn? |
9573 | What if the o''erturned altar Lays bare the ancient lie? 9573 What if the vision tarry? |
9573 | What if thine eye refuse to see, Thine ear of Heaven''s free welcome fail, And thou a willing captive be, Thyself thy own dark jail? 9573 What lack I, O my children? |
9573 | What part or lot have you,he said,"In these dull rites of drowsy- head? |
9573 | Who called ye to self- torment, To fast and penance vain? 9573 Why sitt''st thou thus?" |
9573 | Ah, who shall pray, since he who pleads Our want perchance hath greater needs? |
9573 | Art fearful? |
9573 | Art weak? |
9573 | As from the lighted hearths behind me I pass with slow, reluctant feet, What waits me in the land of strangeness? |
9573 | Bowing his head he pondered The words of the little one; Had he erred in his life- long teaching? |
9573 | But what avail inadequate words to reach The innermost of Truth? |
9573 | Can Hatred ask for love? |
9573 | Can He break His own great law of fatherhood, forsake And curse His children? |
9573 | Can Selfishness Invite to self- denial? |
9573 | Can prayer Reach the shut ear of Fate, or move Unpitying Energy to spare? |
9573 | Did ever such a moonlight take Weird photographs of shrub and tree? |
9573 | Did ever such a morning break As that my eastern windows see? |
9573 | Did his own heart, loving and human, The God of his worship shame? |
9573 | Did the shade before him come Of th''inevitable doom, Of the end of earth so near, And Eternity''s new year? |
9573 | Dream ye Eternal Goodness Has joy in mortal pain? |
9573 | Had he wrong to his Master done? |
9573 | Has faith no work, and love no prayer? |
9573 | Has saintly ease no pitying care? |
9573 | Have I not dawns and sunsets Have I not winds that blow? |
9573 | He shook his wings and crimson tail, And set his head aslant, And, in his sharp, impatient way, Asked,"What does Charlie want?" |
9573 | Hush every lip, close every book, The strife of tongues forbear; Why forward reach, or backward look, For love that clasps like air? |
9573 | Is He less Than man in kindly dealing? |
9573 | Is heaven so high That pity can not breathe its air? |
9573 | Is it a dream? |
9573 | Is my ear with chantings fed? |
9573 | Is silence worship? |
9573 | Or, sin- forgiven, my gift abuse Of peace with selfish unconcern? |
9573 | Rang ever bells so wild and fleet The music of the winter street? |
9573 | Shall not the Father heed? |
9573 | Takes Nature thought for such as we, What place her human atom fills, The weed- drift of her careless sea, The mist on her unheeding hills? |
9573 | Taste I your wine of worship, Or eat your holy bread? |
9573 | Then up rose Master Echard, And marvelled:"Can it be That here, in dream and vision, The Lord hath talked with me?" |
9573 | To what grim and dreadful idol Had he lent the holiest name? |
9573 | Was ever yet a sound by half So merry as you school- boy''s laugh? |
9573 | What can Eternal Fulness From your lip- service gain? |
9573 | What doth the cosmic Vastness care? |
9573 | What face shall smile, what voice shall greet? |
9573 | What if the dreams and legends Of the world''s childhood die? |
9573 | What is it to the changeless truth That yours shall fail in turn? |
9573 | What lip shall judge when He approves? |
9573 | What reeks she of our helpless wills? |
9573 | What space shall awe, what brightness blind me? |
9573 | What thunder- roll of music stun? |
9573 | What vast processions sweep before me Of shapes unknown beneath the sun? |
9573 | While sin remains, and souls in darkness dwell, Can heaven itself be heaven, and look unmoved on hell?" |
9573 | Who dare to scorn the child He loves? |
9573 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
9573 | Who shall essay, Blinded and weak, to point and lead the way, Or solve the mystery in familiar speech? |
9573 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
9573 | Who the secret may declare Of that brief, unuttered prayer? |
54815 | A secret concerning the new firm? |
54815 | A special train for Tokio? |
54815 | Ah, you wish to sell the information, I suppose? |
54815 | And at its base are the caves? |
54815 | And if we engage you we can become the agents of your English and German firms in this matter of the government contracts? |
54815 | And it was gone when you examined the safe after your father''s death? |
54815 | And run the risk of passing him during the night, eh? 54815 And suppose we do n''t look at it in that light?" |
54815 | And that means a little trifle of twenty thousand pounds, eh? |
54815 | And the other party? |
54815 | And thou escaped from old''Jishin''after all? 54815 And when did you reach that city after leaving my father''s service?" |
54815 | And who will ye take besides me, sir? 54815 And you propose?" |
54815 | Are you afraid? |
54815 | Are you here for the same reason? |
54815 | Are you injured, brother? |
54815 | Bandai- San? |
54815 | But did you see how he acted when he caught sight of us? |
54815 | But does he know them? |
54815 | But first tell me if ye anticipate anything serious? 54815 But how can you? |
54815 | But my friend? |
54815 | But tell us, how did you manage to escape? |
54815 | But what proof can you present? 54815 Can I do anything for you? |
54815 | Can you pay me the money now? |
54815 | Can you tell me exactly where he is, so that I can send and have him arrested? |
54815 | Could yer step back here a bit where we wo n''t be overheard, sir? 54815 Dead?" |
54815 | Did a party composed of foreigners and several coolies with a prisoner pass through here recently? |
54815 | Did they state their destination? |
54815 | Did you hear what that crippled whelp said? |
54815 | Did you notice whether the two other coolies were with them? 54815 Did you see him?" |
54815 | Did you see the others? |
54815 | Do n''t you think this is rather sudden? |
54815 | Do you agree to the conditions? |
54815 | Do you dare to insult my father in his own office? 54815 Do you intend to return to the house, or shall I lock up the bottles? |
54815 | Do you know what that means to us? |
54815 | Do you know what you mean, you puny wretch? 54815 Do you know where Willis Round is?" |
54815 | Do you know who I am? |
54815 | Do you think I am a fool? 54815 Do you think I would tamely submit to arrest and go from here with the certain knowledge that my destination would be a long term in a prison?" |
54815 | Do you think they succeeded in leaving before the shock came? |
54815 | Does it ever reach this far? |
54815 | Fools; what think you? |
54815 | For me to say? 54815 Four hours?" |
54815 | Grant-- what of him? |
54815 | Had n''t we better get out of this house before we talk? |
54815 | Hardly, but----"Grant? |
54815 | Have you a twin brother, sir? |
54815 | Have you anything to prove that you are Grant Manning? |
54815 | Have you heard anything? |
54815 | Have you seen anything of Patrick Cronin? |
54815 | How about the German firms? |
54815 | How are we going to reach the road, I wonder? |
54815 | How dare you interfere? 54815 How do you do, Master Grant? |
54815 | How does the estate stand? |
54815 | How much can we use this quarter? |
54815 | How much farther? |
54815 | How much farther? |
54815 | How under the sun did you get in here? |
54815 | I beg your pardon, sir, but could Oi have a bit of a talk wid yer? |
54815 | I suppose you are afraid of your neck? |
54815 | I suppose you are anxious to know what it is? |
54815 | I suppose you know why I am here? |
54815 | I wonder if there is any way by which they could leave? |
54815 | I wonder what he had to do with that debt? |
54815 | Indeed? |
54815 | Is he dead? |
54815 | Is he one of my countrymen, a youth like yourself, and clad in tweed? |
54815 | Is it as bad as that? |
54815 | Is it possible he has fallen so low as to frequent such a place? |
54815 | Is n''t it at the base of that volcano where those peculiar mud caves are found? |
54815 | Is the information worth twenty pounds, sir? |
54815 | It is to your interest to ruin the new firm before the awarding of the army contracts, eh? |
54815 | It''s mad ye are at me, Oi suppose? |
54815 | May I ask the nature of the contracts? |
54815 | Mr. Udono, will you please accept our bid for the contracts? |
54815 | Nagasaki? 54815 Nattie, when will you ever learn to avoid these disgraceful rows?" |
54815 | Nothing was found of the first receipt? |
54815 | Now what is it? |
54815 | Oh, did n''t we? |
54815 | Phwat is the matter, sir? 54815 Pray tell us, father, have you seen aught of a red- bearded foreigner traveling by horse?" |
54815 | Send me to the offal heap, thou braggart? |
54815 | So Black& Company have wind of the impending contracts, eh? |
54815 | So you are our old bookkeeper after all? |
54815 | So you think there will be no trouble in effecting the capture, eh? |
54815 | So you wish to enter our employ as bookkeeper? |
54815 | Suppose we start at once? |
54815 | Sure and Oi do n''t want to lose th''drink, but----"Yes, or no? |
54815 | That''s the way to the caves,muttered Nattie, then he added, aloud:"How long have they been gone?" |
54815 | Then I am forgiven for disobeying orders, eh? |
54815 | Then how much? |
54815 | Then the scoundrel escaped after all? |
54815 | Then we would have over six thousand dollars to the good if we could prove that father had really paid the English importing merchant? |
54815 | Then you have been away from Japan for some time? |
54815 | Then you have no money? |
54815 | Then you mean to pay it? |
54815 | Then you think? |
54815 | Thought you would give us the slip, eh? |
54815 | To crawl out of the scrape, eh? |
54815 | W- h- hat did you say? |
54815 | Was your father lying upon the floor when you were called? |
54815 | Weel, now,he said, slowly,"can you no explain matters to me? |
54815 | Well, did you ever see the beat of that? |
54815 | Well, do you intend to pay? |
54815 | Well, what do you wish to say? 54815 Well, what is the object of this visit, then?" |
54815 | Well, what of it? |
54815 | Well? |
54815 | What about yourself, brother? |
54815 | What are you afraid of? |
54815 | What are you driving at? |
54815 | What are you talking about? |
54815 | What did you get out of his father and those Germans, Mori? 54815 What do yez want?" |
54815 | What do you mean, dog? |
54815 | What do you mean, you scoundrel? |
54815 | What do you mean? 54815 What do you mean?" |
54815 | What do you mean? |
54815 | What do you think he could have meant? |
54815 | What do you want in here? |
54815 | What do you wish? |
54815 | What does this mean? |
54815 | What have you seen? |
54815 | What have you to do with it? |
54815 | What have you to say, Nattie Manning? |
54815 | What is it, my lad? |
54815 | What is it? |
54815 | What is it? |
54815 | What is it? |
54815 | What is that on the edge of the lake? 54815 What is the matter now?" |
54815 | What is the matter, Manning? |
54815 | What is the matter? |
54815 | What is the matter? |
54815 | What is the matter? |
54815 | What is the meaning of it all, brother? |
54815 | What is the meaning of this, sir? |
54815 | What is your plan? |
54815 | What nonsense is this? |
54815 | What of it? |
54815 | What on earth is the matter with you? |
54815 | What shall it be, back gate or a search through the blessed shanty? 54815 What shall it be, home?" |
54815 | What time does the next train leave for the capital? |
54815 | What was he doing in there, then? |
54815 | What was it, an earthquake? |
54815 | What will we do with Patrick Cronin? |
54815 | What would you do, blowhard? |
54815 | What would you do? |
54815 | What would you give if they were rendered unable to bid for them? |
54815 | What''s a dislocation, anyway? 54815 What''s that you say?" |
54815 | What''s the difference? |
54815 | What''s up now, dad? |
54815 | What, what''s that? |
54815 | When can we leave? |
54815 | When shall we close up? |
54815 | Where are the others? |
54815 | Where are you going? |
54815 | Where art thou now, Raiko? 54815 Where have you been? |
54815 | Where have you been? 54815 Where in the deuce have they gone?" |
54815 | Where is Willis Round? |
54815 | Where is he now? |
54815 | Which are caused by internal convulsions of the volcano, I suppose? |
54815 | Which shall we take? |
54815 | Which way did the scoundrels go? |
54815 | Who was in the office when your father-- er-- when the sad end came? |
54815 | Why did n''t I bring matters to a point in the office? 54815 Why do n''t yez lift that fine- tooth comb thing and go out and fight them?" |
54815 | Why do n''t you come in and rescue your brother, you coward? |
54815 | Why do n''t you storm the castle like the knights of old? |
54815 | Why do n''t you try for the contracts then? |
54815 | Why do you ask? 54815 Why?" |
54815 | Would it do any good to notify the American Consul? |
54815 | Would yer like to capture him? |
54815 | Would you delay us, man? |
54815 | Yes; but you intend to remain here until morning? |
54815 | You do n''t know the name of your antagonist? |
54815 | You do n''t say? |
54815 | You do n''t think he intended to lead us into a trap? |
54815 | You mean about that debt? |
54815 | You refer to the army contracts? |
54815 | You remember Mori Okuma? |
54815 | You think so? |
54815 | Am I right in believing that you are open for valuable contracts?" |
54815 | And through whom? |
54815 | And where is the foreigner, old Red- Beard?" |
54815 | Answer me, yes or no?" |
54815 | Any mention made of purchases?" |
54815 | Are they more brave than we?" |
54815 | As I understand it, you wish me to invest twenty thousand_ yen_ against your experience and the orders on hand?" |
54815 | As they left the craft, Yoritomo leaned over the clumsy rail, and called out, sneeringly:"How about that four hundred_ yen_ and the free pardon? |
54815 | BROTHER, IS IT YOU?" |
54815 | Brother, is it You?" |
54815 | Brother, is it you?" |
54815 | But for what class of articles?" |
54815 | But had n''t we better leave this neighborhood? |
54815 | But how is Ralph? |
54815 | But then would it not be advisable for the sake of future peace to have Round behind prison bars? |
54815 | But what do you intend to do now?" |
54815 | But what in thunder can I do? |
54815 | But where are the fugitives? |
54815 | But where, and how? |
54815 | But who would believe that miracles could happen in this century? |
54815 | By the way, what is your name?" |
54815 | By the way, what was in that letter?" |
54815 | Ca n''t you see that a horse could n''t pass here? |
54815 | Can you pay it to- day?" |
54815 | Can you telegraph from here?" |
54815 | Can you tell me anything of him? |
54815 | Did the fellow really use those words?" |
54815 | Did the old man do any betting?" |
54815 | Did you like this story? |
54815 | Dinner first, eh? |
54815 | Do n''t you think we should feel ashamed?" |
54815 | Do you agree?" |
54815 | Do you know anything about the place?" |
54815 | Do you really mean to say that you have a plan promising success?" |
54815 | Do you think I would leave you and Grant in the lurch? |
54815 | Do you think it is time to get up and circumvent those fools? |
54815 | Has Mr. Grant absented himself before?" |
54815 | Have either of you heard?" |
54815 | Have you ever heard of the firm of Manning& Company, dealers and importing merchants?" |
54815 | He added, sneeringly:"Are you awakening from your''Rip Van Winkle''sleep? |
54815 | He presently gasped:"Who is-- is here? |
54815 | How about bringing him here this afternoon? |
54815 | How did you get in?" |
54815 | How do we know that we were not seen in Yokohama? |
54815 | How does this sound? |
54815 | How is everything in London?" |
54815 | How is it you could find no trace of the payment at the bank or among your canceled checks? |
54815 | How is your shoulder?" |
54815 | How long will it take you to start a special train?" |
54815 | I mean those who were with Ralph at the castle?" |
54815 | I must-- what''s that?" |
54815 | I suppose you have come to beg for time, as usual?" |
54815 | I think-- what is up now?" |
54815 | I wonder what he thinks about the failure of his confederate, Willis Round, to injure us? |
54815 | I wonder what they expected to do after the awarding of the contracts? |
54815 | I wonder where Patrick is?" |
54815 | I wonder where Ralph is? |
54815 | I would have fought for thee if mortal enemies threatened, but what is my puny arm to that of the underground demon?" |
54815 | If Oi----""Then it is''no,''eh? |
54815 | If we had money could we continue the business with any success?" |
54815 | In the meantime how had Nattie and his party fared in their pursuit of the wily Irishman? |
54815 | Is he safe?" |
54815 | Is it Grant-- Grant Manning?" |
54815 | Is it going to sea we are in a train of cars? |
54815 | Is this the new member of the firm? |
54815 | Just then a maudlin voice came from outside:"Phwere is the lock, Oi wonder? |
54815 | Know they not that the demon of the mountain, old''Jishin''himself, lives there? |
54815 | Legitimate expenses, you understand? |
54815 | Men and provisions, eh? |
54815 | Now what are we going to do?" |
54815 | Now what can be his reason?" |
54815 | Now where is Willis Round?" |
54815 | Now where is he?" |
54815 | Okuma?" |
54815 | Patrick Cronin, did ye live to see the day when forty men would scoot from the sight of yer face?" |
54815 | Phwy do n''t yer git fat? |
54815 | Remember the cowardly thrust thou gavest my brother?" |
54815 | Remember the night at the_ matsura_? |
54815 | Round may have stolen the receipt?" |
54815 | Round?" |
54815 | Round?" |
54815 | Round?" |
54815 | Rushing bareheaded into the street, Grant grasped one of the lads by the arm, and exclaimed:"What under the sun does this mean, Nattie? |
54815 | So the Germans are hobnobbing with our esteemed enemy, eh? |
54815 | So you would try to wheedle me with lies? |
54815 | Sumo, who is a good man to send to the nearest town for police?" |
54815 | Suppose Round-- if it were he-- should take it into his head to enter one of the private apartments? |
54815 | Surely you must remember his son, Nattie Manning?" |
54815 | The first question in such a case is, who will it benefit?" |
54815 | The old company has called in native blood, eh? |
54815 | The others----""What of them?" |
54815 | The police are coming at last, eh? |
54815 | They surely could not hope to keep Grant a prisoner for many months?" |
54815 | Was it theft of valuable silks or deliberate incendiarism? |
54815 | What about him?" |
54815 | What absurdity is this?" |
54815 | What are you going to say about this affair? |
54815 | What can he hope to do against the authorities?" |
54815 | What could be the man''s object? |
54815 | What could the fellow mean? |
54815 | What could you do in a row with three or four cutthroats? |
54815 | What did the Blacks agree to pay you?" |
54815 | What do you say?" |
54815 | What do you say?" |
54815 | What do you think about it?" |
54815 | What do you think of it?" |
54815 | What do you think of it?" |
54815 | What do you think of it?" |
54815 | What do you want to come out in this wet for when you have a cozy nook in yon house? |
54815 | What had he learned? |
54815 | What have I to do with it?" |
54815 | What have you seen?" |
54815 | What if the truth should be discovered? |
54815 | What is the cause of this disgraceful row?" |
54815 | What is the matter with all of the old merchants, eh? |
54815 | What kind of a man was he?" |
54815 | What mystery do you mean?" |
54815 | What of him? |
54815 | What part?" |
54815 | What was Nattie''s object in leaving the Manning residence in face of Mori''s warning? |
54815 | What was his object in paying a visit to his enemy at such an hour of the night? |
54815 | What would I do with a vacation? |
54815 | What would you give if the contracts were placed in your way?" |
54815 | When can you see him? |
54815 | When do you want to start, sir?" |
54815 | Where had the man gone? |
54815 | Where is the animal?" |
54815 | Where is the engine that brought the train in a few moments ago?" |
54815 | Whither go you?" |
54815 | Who will take the bet?" |
54815 | Why am I dragged out here like a drunken sailor? |
54815 | Why ca n''t you come also?" |
54815 | Why do you ask these questions?" |
54815 | Why this haste?" |
54815 | Will you mention your suspicions?" |
54815 | Will you please give me a reply?" |
54815 | Willis Round, Cronin, do you intend to abide by Ralph Black''s murderous proposition?" |
54815 | Wo n''t ye make it twenty pounds, sir?" |
54815 | Wonder if I have any matches in my pocket?" |
54815 | Would it really be worth the candle to bring the ex- bookkeeper to justice? |
54815 | Would the excellency call at once? |
54815 | Would the excellency condescend to visit him at his house in a street hard by the Shinto temple? |
54815 | Would you add to our misery? |
54815 | Yes? |
54815 | You Grant Manning? |
54815 | You do not think you could ruin them single- handed?" |
54815 | You have been a prisoner in your time, eh?" |
54815 | You have doubtless heard rumors of trouble with China about Corea?" |
54815 | Your little plan did n''t work, eh? |
54815 | do you know what day this is?" |
54815 | is n''t that provoking?" |
54815 | or why did n''t I strike him down while I had the chance a moment ago? |
54815 | so it''s ye, me bold Nattie? |
54815 | there will be loads of fun, and-- what under the sun is the matter?" |
54815 | where are the backers of the other side? |
54815 | why do I ask such a question? |
54815 | wo n''t they groan in bitterness of spirit when I send over for the money?" |
8458 | And for how much? |
8458 | And the heroine? |
8458 | But,cried he as he came off the stage,"that was not a hit, was it? |
8458 | Ca n''t you send me to headquarters with a guard? |
8458 | Colonel Walton,said I,"did the whipping hurt you much?" |
8458 | Did n''t you ever put up any money on a margin? |
8458 | Did n''t you know that I have what they call second sight? |
8458 | Did you ever meet this present peer and possible usurper? |
8458 | How about fifteen thousand? |
8458 | How did you get this? |
8458 | McClure,said I with the cool and quiet resolution of despair, drawing him aside,"what in the---- do you want anyhow?" |
8458 | Twenty- five thousand? |
8458 | Well, what does Frank say? |
8458 | What do you mean? |
8458 | What does he want, Colonel Forney? |
8458 | What is the matter with it-- is it not liberal enough? |
8458 | What majority will you have? |
8458 | What? 8458 Who the hell is Franklin Pierce?" |
8458 | Why,he said,"do you buy long, or short? |
8458 | Why? |
8458 | Will you leave this open for an hour or two? |
8458 | You like this wine? |
8458 | You old reprobate,said Tyler,"what office on earth do you think you are fit to fill?" |
8458 | You think you can deliver the goods? |
8458 | And-- and-- what about the Bolsheviki? |
8458 | Are its issues irreconcilable? |
8458 | Are we traveling the same road? |
8458 | Are you lucky or unlucky?" |
8458 | As we were about taking our leave my father said:"Well, my son, you have seen General Cass; what do you think of him?" |
8458 | But how? |
8458 | But would despotism be so demurrable under a wise unselfish despot? |
8458 | Can you not pass me in without a pass?" |
8458 | Can you take me in?" |
8458 | Do they advance the world in grace? |
8458 | For was it not Emerson who exclaimed,"We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands; we will speak our own minds?" |
8458 | Gould?" |
8458 | Have you money enough to carry you through? |
8458 | He said to me,"How are you in stocks?" |
8458 | How did you leave my friend Forrest?" |
8458 | I was in luck, was I not? |
8458 | If Barnum did not know, why might not a doubt be raised? |
8458 | Is self- government a failure? |
8458 | Is the world on the way to organic revolution? |
8458 | Is there any remedy for all this? |
8458 | Must the alternative of the future lie between Socialism and Civil War, or both? |
8458 | Replying to the apprehension of a collision of force between the parties Mr. Tilden thought it exaggerated, but said:"Why surrender now? |
8458 | Shall it prove another irrepressible conflict? |
8458 | Shall there be no stability in either actualities or principles? |
8458 | Suppose that picket on the outpost reported to the provost marshal general that he had passed a relative of Mrs. Dana? |
8458 | The eternal verities-- where shall we seek them? |
8458 | The miracles of electricity the last word of science, what is left for man to do? |
8458 | The pessimist answers what easier than the demolition of a sexless world gone entirely mad? |
8458 | Then he said:"Where did you get your press power?" |
8458 | To what end? |
8458 | What business had the professional politicians with a great reform movement? |
8458 | What cared the perennial candidate so he got votes enough? |
8458 | What cared the professional agitator so his appeals to passion brought him his audience? |
8458 | What do you think would it be your duty to do?" |
8458 | What had I to say? |
8458 | What have such people to do with such things?" |
8458 | What is it that the woman suffragette expects to get? |
8458 | What is the matter with it now?" |
8458 | What is your instrument?" |
8458 | What more natural than that he should believe it real instead of the empty pageant of a vision? |
8458 | What then? |
8458 | What was Stonewall Jackson but a Puritan? |
8458 | What were Custer, Stoneman and Kearny but Cavaliers? |
8458 | When the glasses were filled Dade pompously said:"With whom have I the honor of drinking?" |
8458 | When we reached headquarters the lad said,"Do you gentlemen want me any more?" |
8458 | Whither is it leading us? |
8458 | Who shall say that, let loose in the crowded centers of population, it may not one day engulf us all? |
8458 | Why not? |
8458 | Why surrender before the battle for fear you may have to surrender after the battle?" |
8458 | Will the Democrats go into Prohibition and paternalism? |
8458 | With those cranks? |
8458 | With what I took for a sneer he said:"I suppose you are a good Union man?" |
8458 | With wireless telegraphy, the airplane and the automobile annihilating time and space, what else? |
8458 | You are teaching everybody to read, nobody to think; and do you know where you will end, sir? |
50138 | A fear generator? |
50138 | A fog in your head? |
50138 | A what? |
50138 | A woman in this wilderness? |
50138 | A_ whore house_? 50138 About this woman, colonel? |
50138 | Actually I was wondering--"Whether or not I could read your mind? 50138 Ah? |
50138 | Ah? 50138 Ah?" |
50138 | Am I wrong? |
50138 | And are there others down there who feel like heading for the hills? |
50138 | And no weapons? |
50138 | And thus destroy their bomb and the best of their scientists and engineers? |
50138 | And what about your life? |
50138 | And you can get me to Asia? |
50138 | And--"And what? |
50138 | Anything else I can tell you? |
50138 | Are n''t you even afraid to die? |
50138 | Are n''t you really afraid, Nedra? |
50138 | Are you about to faint again? |
50138 | Are you all right? |
50138 | Are you giving me orders? |
50138 | Are you hot? |
50138 | Are you out of your mind? |
50138 | Are you reading my mind? |
50138 | Are you ready? |
50138 | Are you sleepy, too? |
50138 | Are you still on that level? |
50138 | Are you sure you''re not suffering from delayed shock following the bomb explosion? 50138 Are you?" |
50138 | Are_ you_ one of the new people? |
50138 | But after the first man has been killed, does it help the situation to kill a second? 50138 But does it make a great deal of difference?" |
50138 | But does n''t that change the picture, colonel? |
50138 | But goddammit-- Are you hurt, Kurt? |
50138 | But that would n''t keep you from shooting me? |
50138 | But what is a blooper? |
50138 | But what of the men who need help? |
50138 | But what point are you making if not the one that wars are mistakes? |
50138 | But where are we going? |
50138 | But while she is developing her muscular control, what is she doing to the endocrinal system of every male in the place? |
50138 | But why did you shoot him? |
50138 | But why have n''t Cal and his buddies found it? |
50138 | But--"How do you know? 50138 Can I turn around now?" |
50138 | Clairvoyants? |
50138 | Could you do it? |
50138 | Dead? |
50138 | Did I say the wrong thing, ask the wrong question? |
50138 | Did it really happen? 50138 Did she blow?" |
50138 | Did you also suspect that the only reason this airborne landing was made on these shores was to capture you? |
50138 | Did you have a good night''s sleep? |
50138 | Did you have that in mind for me? |
50138 | Did you know? |
50138 | Did you make those people go to sleep? |
50138 | Did you run into some difficulty? |
50138 | Did you show him that? |
50138 | Do n''t you believe he is actually one of us? 50138 Do n''t you hear me?" |
50138 | Do n''t you hear that blooper in the sky overhead? |
50138 | Do n''t you realize that your failure to report what you knew is high treason? |
50138 | Do you believe in the race soul too? |
50138 | Do you feel as bad as all that, colonel? |
50138 | Do you feel you really need burping? |
50138 | Do you have a weapon that will penetrate to this depth? |
50138 | Do you honestly think that? |
50138 | Do you know him well? |
50138 | Do you know that going with me may mean death? |
50138 | Do you know what this means, Kurt? 50138 Do you mean they would get a jolt of high voltage electricity if they ventured in here?" |
50138 | Do you mean you have never heard of them? |
50138 | Do you mind if I ask you a question? |
50138 | Do you think I have no friends? |
50138 | Do you think she might be a spy for Cuso heading for his camp to report? |
50138 | Do you want to die? 50138 Do you want to die?" |
50138 | Do you want to go with me to Asia? |
50138 | Do you want to howl like a dog too? |
50138 | Does he live back there? |
50138 | Does that mean I''m all right? |
50138 | Does the generator have the same effect on all people? |
50138 | Does the government know about this? |
50138 | Eh? 50138 Eh?" |
50138 | Eh? |
50138 | Explode the rocket here in space? |
50138 | For how long? |
50138 | Get me where? |
50138 | Granting your statement, what do you propose I do? |
50138 | Has somebody been sleeping? |
50138 | Have I alibied or evaded? 50138 Have n''t they?" |
50138 | Hell, how long can this go on? |
50138 | How are things going down there? |
50138 | How are you going to discharge this responsibility? |
50138 | How can this be anything but savage? |
50138 | How come, do n''t they eat? |
50138 | How did they do it? |
50138 | How did they get past your fear generators? |
50138 | How did we get out of this gallery? |
50138 | How did we vanish? 50138 How did you do it?" |
50138 | How did you find this place? |
50138 | How did you know I would follow you? |
50138 | How do I come closer to you? |
50138 | How in the hell will you get us to Asia? |
50138 | How many are there? |
50138 | How many millions died in Washington, Pittsburgh, and Chicago? |
50138 | How much farther before we get to-- Hell, where are we going anyhow? |
50138 | How the hell did you know me? |
50138 | How was it done? |
50138 | How was it up in that satellite? |
50138 | How will we ever root that bastard out of his hole now? |
50138 | How''d you get to heaven? |
50138 | How? |
50138 | How? |
50138 | How? |
50138 | However, I guess there is nothing I can do about it, is there? |
50138 | Huh? |
50138 | Hunh? 50138 Hunh?" |
50138 | I said,_ Who are you?_Cuso shouted again. |
50138 | If she comes back alive, you mean? |
50138 | In that case, since you already know about me-- how about it? |
50138 | In that case, who would shoot him? |
50138 | Is it possible, colonel, that you do not know everything? |
50138 | Is n''t there any place where we can hide? |
50138 | Is somebody supposed to? |
50138 | Is something going to happen? |
50138 | Is the pass too hot for more troops to go through it? |
50138 | Is there anything I can get for you? |
50138 | Is this all? |
50138 | Is this the one? |
50138 | Kurt, boy, where are you? |
50138 | Land the satellite, colonel? |
50138 | Last week? 50138 Marcia? |
50138 | Maybe we will be turtles? 50138 Mm?" |
50138 | Moscow? |
50138 | Nedra, what is it? |
50138 | Nedra, will you stop fussing with me? 50138 No more than that?" |
50138 | No problem? 50138 No rifles?" |
50138 | No? |
50138 | Not a citizen? |
50138 | Not alone? |
50138 | Not even tear gas? |
50138 | Not hot, eh? |
50138 | Now what do you see? |
50138 | Or do you want to go join him? |
50138 | Positive? |
50138 | Really? |
50138 | Rebuild what with what? |
50138 | Red- Dog Jimmie Thurman? 50138 Sam, huh?" |
50138 | Say--"An eel? |
50138 | Shall I shoot him, colonel? |
50138 | Spies? |
50138 | Sure of that? |
50138 | That makes things different, does n''t it? |
50138 | That would create the very danger you are trying to avoid, would it not? |
50138 | The big one? |
50138 | The blooper got a lot of''em, eh? |
50138 | The colonel followed you, eh? |
50138 | Then how in the hell did you expect to stay alive? |
50138 | Then how? |
50138 | Then it''s a race to see which side gets its bomb built first? |
50138 | Then we ca n''t change the course? |
50138 | Then what am I? |
50138 | Then what country do you claim to belong to? |
50138 | Then what do you propose-- to sit here and do nothing? |
50138 | Then what is it like? |
50138 | Then what is she doing up here? |
50138 | Then what is your purpose? |
50138 | Then who am I? |
50138 | Then who did? |
50138 | Then who did? |
50138 | Then who-- where? |
50138 | Then why are you two here? |
50138 | Then why did n''t you warn us? |
50138 | Then why did you let me do it? |
50138 | Then why do n''t we-- just take a little nap? |
50138 | Then you also know how these men here were put to sleep? |
50138 | To Asia? |
50138 | To me? |
50138 | Walk on skulls? |
50138 | Was there a face? |
50138 | We''ll have them on their knees in-- huh? 50138 Weapons?" |
50138 | Well, what if I am? 50138 Well, when and where do you want me to start?" |
50138 | Well, where do you get it? 50138 Well, you are not a citizen of--""Why do you think I need protection?" |
50138 | Were you going to say_ blessings_, colonel? |
50138 | Were you with this woman? |
50138 | West, how many of these kids did you have here? |
50138 | What about my gun that was taken from me while I slept? |
50138 | What about them? 50138 What about_ her_ life?" |
50138 | What are you doing up here? |
50138 | What are you looking for up here? |
50138 | What are you two talking about? |
50138 | What bomb? |
50138 | What color is red? |
50138 | What color was it last week? |
50138 | What do you do, raid the low country for supplies, like Cuso''s men? |
50138 | What do you know about the so- called new people? |
50138 | What do you mean? |
50138 | What do you think has happened to me? |
50138 | What do you think we have here? |
50138 | What good is it to go home? |
50138 | What good would one gun do now? |
50138 | What happened next? 50138 What happened?" |
50138 | What happened? |
50138 | What has happened to you? |
50138 | What have you done here? |
50138 | What have your liver and lights to do with this? |
50138 | What if you are wrong? |
50138 | What is it, Kurt? |
50138 | What is it, Kurt? |
50138 | What is it, Nedra? |
50138 | What is it? |
50138 | What is more reasonable than a corpse? |
50138 | What is she doing, learning to be a strip- tease dancer? |
50138 | What is that? |
50138 | What kind of nerves do you have? 50138 What made you lose your head?" |
50138 | What makes you think that? |
50138 | What on earth makes you ask a question like that? |
50138 | What the hell are you doing here? |
50138 | What the hell are you talking about? |
50138 | What the hell difference does it make? 50138 What the hell has happened to Nedra?" |
50138 | What the hell is this, a glorified whorehouse? |
50138 | What then? |
50138 | What was it? |
50138 | What was over there that was worth the cost of a blooper? |
50138 | What was the big boom over that way this morning? |
50138 | What were you two talking about? |
50138 | What would happen to the people here, and to me, if I revealed the existence of this instrument? |
50138 | What''s a strip- tease dancer? |
50138 | What''s death, suh? |
50138 | What''s going on here? |
50138 | What''s gone? |
50138 | What''s happening? |
50138 | What''s she doing behind him? |
50138 | What''s that? |
50138 | What''s the wilderness? |
50138 | What''s wrong? 50138 What''s wrong?" |
50138 | What''s wrong? |
50138 | What? |
50138 | What? |
50138 | When so many have died already, why should I hesitate to join them? |
50138 | Where are your weapons? |
50138 | Where did they go? 50138 Where did they go?" |
50138 | Where does all this grub come from? |
50138 | Where in the hell is that man on the speaker? |
50138 | Where''s my pack? |
50138 | Which way are they going now? |
50138 | Who are the new people? |
50138 | Who are you? |
50138 | Who did all of this? |
50138 | Who do you think she was, commander? |
50138 | Who has a better right than I? |
50138 | Who invented it? |
50138 | Who is that? |
50138 | Who is this? |
50138 | Who knows whether we shall meet again? |
50138 | Who the hell are you? |
50138 | Who will go with me to Asia? |
50138 | Why all the fol- de- rol? |
50138 | Why ca n''t I? |
50138 | Why did n''t you go with''em? |
50138 | Why did n''t you take me with you when you went-- wherever it was you went? |
50138 | Why did n''t you warn us? 50138 Why did you come back?" |
50138 | Why do n''t we go farther back? |
50138 | Why do n''t you put me over your shoulder and burp me? |
50138 | Why do you make that noise? |
50138 | Why do you suppose they did that? |
50138 | Why do you want to be last? |
50138 | Why is everybody going to sleep? 50138 Why not?" |
50138 | Why not? |
50138 | Why not? |
50138 | Why should n''t I look contented? 50138 Why were you following her?" |
50138 | Why would any man follow a woman like that? |
50138 | Why? |
50138 | Why? |
50138 | Why? |
50138 | Would I stand around here and let you shoot me if I was one of them? |
50138 | Would you cry, after you had shot me? |
50138 | Would you point out these blessings? |
50138 | Yes? 50138 You did it?" |
50138 | You did this? |
50138 | You did? |
50138 | You know what it''s like beyond death? |
50138 | You know what? |
50138 | You put us all to sleep, you and that girl? 50138 You think the Asians are gon na win, then?" |
50138 | You thought what? |
50138 | You want to ask her? |
50138 | You with''em? |
50138 | You? |
50138 | Your guess? 50138 Zen, old man, what are you up to?" |
50138 | And what-- what happened to Marcia?" |
50138 | Are they shamming too?" |
50138 | Are you out of your mind again?" |
50138 | Are you still determined to volunteer for that position, or should I say_ condition_?" |
50138 | Are you sure?" |
50138 | Are you surprised at what you find here?" |
50138 | Are you?" |
50138 | As to what she is doing, maybe she got tired of all that down there too, and decided to come up here and live in the mountains?" |
50138 | Ask her what she is doing up here?" |
50138 | Besides, has he not promised me a commission as a marshal in the armed forces of his land?" |
50138 | But how did you know?" |
50138 | But if she comes back dead, or so loaded with radiation that she will die within a few days, then you will know she was just like all the rest of us?" |
50138 | But if you did n''t do this, who did?" |
50138 | But what do you wish of me?" |
50138 | But what if you are mistaken?" |
50138 | But what makes you think I would be interested in such a commission-- or in any commission-- in your armies?" |
50138 | But what power? |
50138 | But what the hell are you doing up here?" |
50138 | But why was she coming up here?" |
50138 | But-- how does this radar work? |
50138 | But-- what to say? |
50138 | Clothes? |
50138 | Could all of these people read his mind? |
50138 | Cuddling the youth''s head in his lap as one would a frightened child, he asked,"What happened, Carl?" |
50138 | Describe the little man for you? |
50138 | Did he know what had happened here? |
50138 | Did n''t she know that she had escaped from Ed only to fall into the tender mercies of Cuso''s men? |
50138 | Did you not see everything in our center here?" |
50138 | Do n''t you engage in it?" |
50138 | Do n''t you know?" |
50138 | Do n''t you think I''ve got enough sense to take cover?" |
50138 | Do n''t you understand what has happened? |
50138 | Do you know how many millions of people died directly or indirectly in that bomb explosion?" |
50138 | Do you know what it means?" |
50138 | Do you live around here?" |
50138 | Do you mean to tell me you can actually see what is going on inside the country of the enemy?" |
50138 | Do you think the Earth would remain in its orbit if this happened?" |
50138 | Error in the instrument? |
50138 | For what? |
50138 | Had a modern Noah appeared and not been recognized? |
50138 | Had she followed the youth? |
50138 | Had some subtle, odorless gas been introduced into the room? |
50138 | Had the sound been present all the time? |
50138 | Had the work here been an effort to escape that future? |
50138 | He followed me, did n''t he? |
50138 | He started to add another word,"Alone?" |
50138 | How could a dead man build anything? |
50138 | How could any human being stay in bed alone when that beautiful bronze creature was going through her swaying dance? |
50138 | How did the men in the reports you read get into the planes that were about to crash? |
50138 | How did they do it?" |
50138 | How do you know?" |
50138 | How had she known he was following her? |
50138 | Human mistake? |
50138 | I mean, do n''t you go?" |
50138 | I mean, was anyone present?" |
50138 | If she thought he had read her mind, did this mean that she was actually capable of reading his thoughts? |
50138 | If the new people found it convenient to disintegrate their sewage, rather than dispose of it by the conventional method, what else could they do? |
50138 | If they did, what would they do? |
50138 | Is it bedtime?" |
50138 | It''s true, is n''t it?" |
50138 | Looking up at him, she said,"You think I''m one of the new people, do n''t you?" |
50138 | More important, where was she leading him? |
50138 | Most important of all, why was she trying to save him when her own life was in danger? |
50138 | Or did these people slide forever into nothingness, into some dimensional interspace where there was no Earth, no moon, and no stars? |
50138 | Or does killing the second one merely make it more likely that a third one will have to be destroyed?" |
50138 | Or had it come into existence just before the fat youth vanished? |
50138 | Or had that dream been a grim prognostication of the way things were to be on the surface of the third planet out from the sun? |
50138 | Or is it the other way around?" |
50138 | Or perhaps you did not know this?" |
50138 | Or was it sorrow? |
50138 | Or would it?" |
50138 | So you are emotionally interested in her?" |
50138 | Talk about the beauties of flowers and read poetry to each other? |
50138 | Tell me honestly, colonel, would not this happen?" |
50138 | Then, as the implications back of the question caught him,"Are n''t you on the same level? |
50138 | There are other ways-- how do you say it?" |
50138 | They had their chance, but they failed to develop.__ Where, now, are the dinosaurs?__ The Law is-- Grow or Die. |
50138 | VIII"Is the center in here?" |
50138 | Was he actually witnessing one of the miracles performed by the new people? |
50138 | Was he dealing with a madman? |
50138 | Was he dying? |
50138 | Was it the appearance again of the face that had looked from the air in the center of the room? |
50138 | Was mind reading actually commonplace here? |
50138 | Was she playing games, making fun? |
50138 | Was she, then, a normal human being? |
50138 | Was this underground cavern really a modern Ark, dug into the heart of a mountain so that at least a few humans might escape the deluge by fire? |
50138 | Were the grave and the thick files the only remaining evidence that at least one human had dared to dream of a new day? |
50138 | Were the vanished people to reappear, armed with new weapons, and take the Asians prisoners? |
50138 | Were you together?" |
50138 | What are you doing up here? |
50138 | What caused it, shock?" |
50138 | What difference does it make?" |
50138 | What gas? |
50138 | What is the purpose back of this savagery, if it is not to force men to learn and to grow? |
50138 | What kind of people were they, to be able to walk through hell and be uninfluenced by it? |
50138 | What resources were his to command, what troops, what weapons? |
50138 | What was he waiting for? |
50138 | What was it? |
50138 | What was that you just said? |
50138 | What was that?" |
50138 | What would happen after darkness fell? |
50138 | What would happen when the bomb landed? |
50138 | What''s that?" |
50138 | What''s wrong with that? |
50138 | When had this happened? |
50138 | When he had finished, the senior member, an admiral, asked breathlessly,"And then what happened to her, commander?" |
50138 | When?" |
50138 | Where would he find himself if he vanished? |
50138 | Where you been?" |
50138 | Who cared? |
50138 | Who had introduced it? |
50138 | Who keeps tab on where the boys and the girls spend the night?" |
50138 | Who knew? |
50138 | Who landed Colonel Grant''s space satellite? |
50138 | Who provided the power to energize the motion? |
50138 | Who says it ca n''t be done?" |
50138 | Who slipped out while my back was turned?" |
50138 | Who steered it? |
50138 | Who--""Did you know I knew about Grant?" |
50138 | Why desert when you''ve had it?" |
50138 | Why did you come up here in the first place? |
50138 | Why did you let so many of us die so unnecessarily?" |
50138 | Why go back to what is n''t there?" |
50138 | Why had she let him do it? |
50138 | Why not give up now and be done with all tragedy, with all tears, with all trying to find the road to the future? |
50138 | Why should he be wishing this? |
50138 | Why trust this one? |
50138 | Why would the race mind permit such an outrage as this? |
50138 | Why? |
50138 | Why?" |
50138 | Would people who did n''t use toilets spend nights together? |
50138 | You will come down the trail with us, wo n''t you?" |
50138 | _ N- oten._ Where did they go? |
50138 | _ Would_ he find himself again? |
8133 | ''A yamabushi, an exorciser?'' |
8133 | ''And does a European love his wife more than his father and mother?'' |
8133 | ''And in these days, Kinjuro, do people ever see her?'' |
8133 | ''And in what manner,''I asked,''came you to learn that you have four Souls?'' |
8133 | ''And it is better to have many Souls than a few?'' |
8133 | ''And tell me, O Kinjuro, do there now exist people having more Souls than you?'' |
8133 | ''And the Souls are never separated?'' |
8133 | ''And the man having but one Soul is a being imperfect?'' |
8133 | ''And this I desire to know: Can a man separate his Souls? |
8133 | ''And what is the Yuki- Onna?'' |
8133 | ''But after death what becomes of the Souls?'' |
8133 | ''But do not some of the pilgrims die of cold, Kinjuro?'' |
8133 | ''But she can not use her hands while she is carrying a baby that way, can she?'' |
8133 | ''But why?'' |
8133 | ''Can they be seen?'' |
8133 | ''Did you ever see her, Kinjuro?'' |
8133 | ''Eggs?'' |
8133 | ''Four? |
8133 | ''How? |
8133 | ''How?'' |
8133 | ''Is it possible you never heard of the Kudan? |
8133 | ''Naked?'' |
8133 | ''Nay,''protested the painter, smiling,''what is it that I have done? |
8133 | ''Not from the parents, then, do the Souls descend?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | ''On what part of the roof?'' |
8133 | ''So that a man of to- day possessing but one Soul may have had an ancestor with nine Souls?'' |
8133 | ''Teacher, how do European women carry their babies?'' |
8133 | ''Then what has become of those other eight Souls which the ancestor possessed, but which the descendant is without?'' |
8133 | ''What does the Master honourably think concerning it?'' |
8133 | ''What is a Kudan?'' |
8133 | ''What is there at Yabumura, Kinjuro?'' |
8133 | ''Where did he come from?'' |
8133 | ''Why do they not stay upon the roof for fifty days instead of forty- nine?'' |
8133 | ''Why?'' |
8133 | ''Yet a man very imperfect might have had an ancestor perfect?'' |
8133 | ( Elder Brother probably is cold? |
8133 | ( Has the honzon[ 33] been suspended?) |
8133 | ), and another sweet voice made answer caressingly,''Omae samukaro?'' |
8133 | 20 Was it not the eccentric Fourier who wrote about the horrible faces of''the_ civilizà © s_''? |
8133 | 4 Once more to rest beside her, or keep five thousand koku? |
8133 | 9 Having asked in various classes for written answers to the question,''What is your dearest wish?'' |
8133 | And how far can a woman walk carrying a baby in her arms?'' |
8133 | And in the deepest love of another being do we not indeed love ourselves? |
8133 | And the voices continued until the hour of dawn:''Ani- San samukaro?'' |
8133 | And what is the waste entailed upon the Japanese schoolboy''s system by study? |
8133 | Are not our ancestors in very truth our Kami? |
8133 | Are we not all One in the unknowable Ultimate? |
8133 | But does it at present atrophy certain finer tendencies? |
8133 | But is not this true? |
8133 | But of any who return for that which is not evil-- where is it written? |
8133 | But tell me, I pray you, what is the use of having more than one or two Souls?'' |
8133 | But the danna- sama knows that story?'' |
8133 | But what did it mean? |
8133 | But why a lobster? |
8133 | But why charcoal( sumi)? |
8133 | Can he, for instance, have one Soul in Kyoto and one in Tokyo and one in Matsue, all at the same time?'' |
8133 | Did the Moon cry? |
8133 | Did you ever hear of such disgusting creatures?'' |
8133 | Do I buy tobacco for frogs? |
8133 | Do Japanese enamoured of Western ways propose to have their nation''s history written in similar terms? |
8133 | Do they seriously contemplate turning their country into a new field for experiments in Western civilisation? |
8133 | Do we still think of that infinitely complex Something which is each one of us, and which we call EGO, as''I''or as''They''? |
8133 | For a moment only there was silence; then a sweet, thin, plaintive voice queried, close to his ear,''Ani- San samukaro?'' |
8133 | For an instant he hesitated; then he said to himself,''What matters it? |
8133 | If a cat be left alone with a corpse, will not the corpse arise and dance? |
8133 | If he be afraid, will he not call my name, as he was wo nt to do? |
8133 | Is not every action indeed the work of the Dead who dwell within us? |
8133 | Is she always as mischievous as she seems while her voice ripples out with mocking sweetness the words of the ancient song? |
8133 | Kimi to neyaru ka, go sengoku toruka? |
8133 | Master, said I not rightly this boy has but one Soul?'' |
8133 | Nanno gosengoku kimi to neyo? |
8133 | O Heaven, why didst thou take away that dawning life from the world, and leave such a one as I-- old Shokei, feeble, decrepit, and of no more use? |
8133 | One with the everlasting future? |
8133 | One with the inconceivable past? |
8133 | One within the other-- like the little lacquered boxes of an inro?'' |
8133 | Parents watch, and friends, for these living moments to whisper caressing things, or to ask:''Is there anything thou dost wish?'' |
8133 | So I questioned Kinjuro:''Kinjuro, those goblins of which we the ningyo have seen-- do folk believe in the reality, thereof?'' |
8133 | So degozarimasu ka? |
8133 | Some declare that the hototogisu does not really repeat its own name, but asks,''Honzon kaketaka?'' |
8133 | Such is the geisha''s rôle But what is the mystery of her? |
8133 | Then the Master answered sharply:''Why did none of you tell me of this before?'' |
8133 | We can not now fight: what shall be done?" |
8133 | What are her thoughts, her emotions, her secret self? |
8133 | What are the personalities, the individualities of us but countless vibrations in the Universal Being? |
8133 | What care I for koku? |
8133 | What do you think of that?'' |
8133 | What has become of the noble and charming qualities they must have inherited from their fathers? |
8133 | What is a nuke- kubi? |
8133 | What is her veritable existence beyond the night circle of the banquet lights, far from the illusion formed around her by the mist of wine? |
8133 | What is here to shave? |
8133 | What is the psychical theory connected with so singular a belief? |
8133 | What offence have these poor people committed that they, too, should not share the benefits of Western civilisation? |
8133 | What? |
8133 | Which signifies,''Thou, the male, King of Korea, dost thou not feel shame to flee away from the Queen of the East?'' |
8133 | Why are the honourable ears of the Child of the Hare of the honourable mountain so long? |
8133 | Why bitter oranges( daidai)? |
8133 | Why fern- leaves( moromoki or urajiro)? |
8133 | Why the devil did the man smile? |
8133 | Why?'' |
8133 | Would he really?'' |
8133 | [ 1]''What is her face like?'' |
8133 | [ 4] Or might we think her capable of keeping that passionate promise she utters so deliciously? |
8133 | [ 4]''But why was the God of Mionoseki angry about the Kudan?'' |
8133 | [ 7] How far are these antique beliefs removed from the ideas of the nineteenth century? |
8133 | [ Nay, thou probably art cold?] |
8133 | must I enter slowly?" |
8133 | no ko, Naze mata O- mimi ga Nagai e yara? |
8133 | the LAST time you threw me away the night was just like this, and the moon looked just the same, did it not?'' |
8133 | washi wo shimai ni shitesashita toki mo, chodo kon ya no yona tsuki yo data- ne?'' |
42365 | A father? |
42365 | A person of the name Dodge, n''est- ce- pas? |
42365 | A piano cover? 42365 A- rr- e you the A- mer- i- kan?" |
42365 | Ah, is that it? 42365 Ah, was it then-- you-- who sent them?" |
42365 | Ah,said Hagané, speaking also in English,"I am recently from the country of Monsieur, which, I do not mistake in conjecturing, is France? |
42365 | Ai n''t he handsome for a Jap? |
42365 | Am I right in thinking this your first visit to Japan, Monsieur? |
42365 | Am I to infer, then, that to your Highness one woman would be about as desirable as another? |
42365 | Am I to understand that the thought underlying your remarkable utterance is unchanged? |
42365 | American good friend to Nip- pon-- yes? |
42365 | An excellent sentiment,he remarked gravely in English;"but now will you kindly inform me why it seems appropriate to the present moment?" |
42365 | And I would be in all respects-- your-- wife? |
42365 | And am I to infer that the efficient police, of whom his Excellency so kindly speaks, have failed to keep in touch with Monsieur''s Legation? |
42365 | And did you bethink you to inquire whether the-- person-- had already followed her to this country? |
42365 | And is it not better? |
42365 | And not even your daimyo''s word can free your childish promise? 42365 And not to a Japanese?" |
42365 | And now, Madame,he said, with bloodshot eyes on Yuki,"have you explanation for this new act of disobedience, of affront to my dignity?" |
42365 | And that Mr. Todd, now come to be minister in our very home,--did he encourage your filial impiety? |
42365 | And the good luck too, I presume, if it turns that way? 42365 And you are not afraid something is going to happen?" |
42365 | And you did n''t resent it? 42365 Angered,--with you?" |
42365 | Answer me, Yuki, who was that man? |
42365 | Are n''t girls sometimes that way too? |
42365 | Are other Japanese girls like you? 42365 Are the aggressive American women happier or more beloved?" |
42365 | Are they afraid Pierre will run away with you? |
42365 | Are you against me for that man? 42365 Are you looking for me, dear?" |
42365 | Are you praying to your sun- god, little Christian Yuki? |
42365 | Are you really Yuki''s mother? |
42365 | But if some strange thing that you, not being Japanese, can not foresee should hold me back, do you think there is other chance? |
42365 | But not really, really-- yet_ begun_? |
42365 | But tell me how did Monsieur-- obtain possession? |
42365 | But what could cause this doom to befall an innocent tree, little sister? |
42365 | But what power needed to be suppressed-- what harm could a picture do? |
42365 | But you are sure you really admire us, Madame? |
42365 | But you will be true to me no matter whether they give consent or not? |
42365 | But, Miss Gwendolen,ventured a bold swain,"how about that first waltz? |
42365 | Ca n''t you be patient just a little longer, girlie? 42365 Can all be present at eight?" |
42365 | Can it be possible that in that country unmarried youths speak in unmannerly directness to young women of such intimate affairs? 42365 Can not I see your Highness a brief instant?" |
42365 | Can these letters have told you anything worse? |
42365 | Can we really be on the same planet? |
42365 | Can you mean that she goes utterly free-- free to be happy-- back to her father''s home? |
42365 | Can you think it possible, your Excellency? |
42365 | Could any secrecy be too great for such a meeting? |
42365 | Dad, how shall I endure these spreading slanders about my friend? 42365 Detained? |
42365 | Did you not begin to feel it? 42365 Did you not wish me, your Ladyship?" |
42365 | Did you see the belching of black smoke, my Yuki, and did you hear the clashing of scourged steel? |
42365 | Did you see the way that Yuki''s father watched us all last night? |
42365 | Do Christians dare-- to die? |
42365 | Do I not know,--do I not know? |
42365 | Do they offer prizes here for doing duty? 42365 Do they wear tails?" |
42365 | Do you agree, then, for me to-- to-- try? |
42365 | Do you beg my pardon for being a princess, for making your father proud and happy, when-- when-- he was threatened by such disappointment? |
42365 | Do you call that thing a plant? |
42365 | Do you expect me to stand here patiently and see her carried away? 42365 Do you feel so too, mother?--you, who are always so tranquil and so dear?" |
42365 | Do you grieve for Pierre? 42365 Do you mean that I am to go?" |
42365 | Do you not wait for your worthless breakfast, honorable master? |
42365 | Do you realize that Gwendolen, our only child, is to graduate this June, and formally come out next season? |
42365 | Do you really care to know? |
42365 | Do you recognize me, Yuki? |
42365 | Do you refuse, then? |
42365 | Do you so greatly distrust your powers of attraction? |
42365 | Do you think I wish excuse for it? |
42365 | Do you think that the soul of a woman who shirks would be less cowardly if put into the body of a man? 42365 Does my mother accompany him?" |
42365 | Does n''t that seem a joke? 42365 Does treachery and faithlessness ever serve? |
42365 | Er-- had we not better pause to see whether Madame tends to prove after all-- recalcitrant? |
42365 | Even at your orders will she come? |
42365 | Even in this barbaric country-- have even--_you_--such power? 42365 Father, what is it about this land of ours that makes all things so honorably different,--so strangely beautiful?" |
42365 | Fine morning, is n''t it? 42365 First, what is it, Pierre?" |
42365 | For what do you ask pardon-- the expression, or the thought? |
42365 | Friends? |
42365 | Gallant lover,continued Hagané to Pierre,"when and how do you wish to claim your prize?" |
42365 | Gentlemen,he cried with a gesture,"may I entreat you to leave,--for these first moments?" |
42365 | Gwendolen, where is your father hiding? |
42365 | Gwendolen,said Yuki, in a very low voice,"do you see a long, green patch, like moss, over on that brown slope?" |
42365 | Gwendolen,said her father, drawing her close,"is this true?" |
42365 | Hagané being in ignorance? |
42365 | Hagané-- come? 42365 Has my master come?" |
42365 | Has the dempo come? |
42365 | Has the father confessor nothing but the husks of literary comparison to offer? |
42365 | Have Frenchmen adopted this-- vice-- also? |
42365 | Have an absinthe, Mouquin? |
42365 | Have not I always been your friend and Yuki''s,--even to the point of what Cyrus called''entangling alliances''? |
42365 | Have you let me lead you here deliberately to ask me such a thing? |
42365 | Have you thought for her of a possible forced marriage? |
42365 | His threat is to harm Prince Hagané, is it not? |
42365 | Honorably steamed, or augustly raw, O maiden of the lovely countenance? |
42365 | How can I be sure that the seal will be intact? |
42365 | How can one ponder on the classics, with pigeons cooing beneath his very eaves? |
42365 | How can you say such silly thing? 42365 How did you get away?" |
42365 | How is it? |
42365 | How long has it been here, mother? |
42365 | How long has this been known to you? |
42365 | How will your thoughts be this gray morning, my dear? |
42365 | How would it seem if you were in the place of Pierre Le Beau? |
42365 | How would you be? |
42365 | How, in God''s name, do you think such things? |
42365 | I beg paw- don? |
42365 | I shall not ask again, Yuki; will you tell me the name of the man who has gone? |
42365 | I thank you, Suzumé; but do you realize that the master sits alone in the zashiki, with no tea, no coal, no--? |
42365 | I understand, your Excellency, that your appointment as envoy to our small island has come the very recent time? |
42365 | I-- Monsieur? |
42365 | If Yuki did not speak of her feeling, should I, even though I knew? |
42365 | In lawful marriage? 42365 In these last weeks what can I do,--what can I suffer,--how shall I pray,--that I may make myself worthy of return?" |
42365 | Indeed? 42365 Is Monsieur Le Beau afraid?" |
42365 | Is Yuki indisposed this morning? |
42365 | Is it a deaf devil, that the o jo san speaks so loudly? |
42365 | Is it not the sound of-- wheels? |
42365 | Is it safe for_ me_? |
42365 | Is it too late? |
42365 | Is it very bad names that he is calling me, M. Le Beau? |
42365 | Is it you, Pierre, or is it indeed your newly fled spirit come to reproach me? |
42365 | Is it-- oh, can it be-- that little roughened thread in the warp and woof of blue-- is it-- Japan? |
42365 | Is one alone in a shining company of spirits, Lord? |
42365 | Is that the office? |
42365 | Is that the very wonderful paper just signed, Lord? |
42365 | Is that you speaking, Onda Yuki? |
42365 | Is that your fear-- you thing of snow and plum- blossom? 42365 Is the buckwheat- man boiling you, that so long you remain? |
42365 | Is there not some mistake? 42365 Is there not talk of war with Russia?" |
42365 | Is there to be an answer, Pierre? |
42365 | It does not augustly displease your Highness? |
42365 | Little flowers, was it you that spoke my name? |
42365 | Lord Hagané, in what way can I serve you? |
42365 | Lord,faltered the girl,"are your august utterances heavy with reproof? |
42365 | Madame, what do you think those French painters of yours would say to her-- Chavannes, De Monvel, Besnard,--who owe so much to Yuki''s art? |
42365 | May I not expect her on deck? |
42365 | May I venture to ask what special phase of our civilization has been honored with your interest? |
42365 | Me post it? 42365 Monsieur Le Beau,"said Hagané again,"you are fully determined to retain the body-- and give her name to public defamation?" |
42365 | Musicians,--musicians? |
42365 | My Lord-- your Highness,whispered Yuki, barely touching his sleeve,"has aught offended you?" |
42365 | Nan desu ka? |
42365 | No further orders, your Excellency? |
42365 | No more questions, Pussy San? 42365 No news at all, Mouquin?" |
42365 | Nonsense, Lizette,smiled the pampered one,"not eat dulces? |
42365 | Not much floral- anchor business about those two, eh, Captain? |
42365 | Now is n''t this a world with the top off? 42365 Now what shall I sing for such a crowd as this?" |
42365 | Now, my very dear Miss Todd,expostulated the"Hawk''s Eye,""do you not consider at all the misery of Monsheer Le Beau? |
42365 | Now, shall we smoke? |
42365 | O Kwannon Sama, what am I to do? |
42365 | Oh, Gwendolen, why did we leave Washington, or even our peaceful Western home? 42365 Oh, Iné, is that you? |
42365 | Oh, Yuki, it''s you, is it? 42365 Oh, how could you think it?" |
42365 | Oh, is that all? |
42365 | Oh, oh; did he say that the first was-- Pierre? |
42365 | Oh, what is it? |
42365 | Oh, what is wrong now? |
42365 | Oh, why does n''t Yuki come? 42365 Pretty?" |
42365 | Romantic? 42365 Shall I be compelled to play my own accompaniment?" |
42365 | Shall I draw the hood of the kuruma? |
42365 | Shall I speak now, Lord? |
42365 | Shall Yuki and I run for the drawing- room, mother? |
42365 | Shall we be seated? |
42365 | Shall we bid the chatterer enter, Yuki? |
42365 | Shall we interfere? |
42365 | Shall we proceed to serve the food, your Highness? |
42365 | She is already betrothed, perhaps? |
42365 | She truly is, O most worthy sir,--but why should you wish to know? |
42365 | So this has been his plan, dear? 42365 So this is Japanese art,--the real thing,--is it?" |
42365 | Speaking of Dodging it,put in Gwendolen;"where is your secretary?" |
42365 | That new American envoy,--he with the nose of a sick vulture and the fine yellow eye,--is he favorable to us? 42365 That you have been her lover,--that you have so deeply injured me,--is that not enough to gloat over?" |
42365 | The appointment? 42365 The august one-- is he within?" |
42365 | The meeting is over safely, then, and nothing happened? |
42365 | Then Pierre did not wake up? 42365 Then shall I accompany, now? |
42365 | Then what will you do? |
42365 | Then who is to bear it, small sweet wife, if I should put it down? 42365 Then why not take the responsibility of sending him there?" |
42365 | There is no rumor at all that Pierre may go home to France? |
42365 | To a Japanese? 42365 To what shall I help you, little one? |
42365 | To whom could you have promised such a thing? |
42365 | To- night? |
42365 | Was it anything definite that you had to say? |
42365 | Was one of a pink color, like buds of a kaido bloom, and eyes a deep- blue color? |
42365 | Was there a man, Lord? |
42365 | Well, Amazon? |
42365 | Well, Madame la Princesse, may I give you now my first social commission? 42365 Well, and what of you, my little Japanese daughter?" |
42365 | Well, do n''t you care whether I suffer or not? 42365 Well, shall I go or stay?" |
42365 | Well, what is it? 42365 Well, your Excellency, is this all you can remark?" |
42365 | Well,he cried,"are your wits gone? |
42365 | Well,he remarked once more,"have you nothing to say to me?" |
42365 | Well,said Todd, sharply,"am I to keep the paper or not?" |
42365 | Well? |
42365 | Well? |
42365 | Were you not at my villa this morning? |
42365 | What ails you, child? 42365 What am I to Carmen or Carmen to me?" |
42365 | What am I to say to Gwendolen? |
42365 | What are those fearful scars on your hands? 42365 What do they use them for?" |
42365 | What do you wish, August Mistress? |
42365 | What else is there for me, devil? |
42365 | What have we here, young lover? |
42365 | What if one has ceased to love God? |
42365 | What is it that you were about to warn me of Monsieur Le Beau? |
42365 | What is it you think I can do with Pierre for you, Yuki? |
42365 | What is it, Pierre? |
42365 | What is it, child? 42365 What is it? |
42365 | What is it? 42365 What news from war- centres, your Excellency?" |
42365 | What or_ who_ entangled him, Pierre? |
42365 | What sound is that? 42365 What storm can have found you so early, my little one?" |
42365 | What was it, Yuki, that you tried to tell us just before the meeting? |
42365 | What would the Japanese like best? |
42365 | What would you prefer, Yuki- ko? |
42365 | What''s that pretty thing you''re making? |
42365 | What''s the matter, dear? 42365 What, Lord, would be the penalty-- what to a wicked soul would be the price?" |
42365 | What, in the name of Beelzebub, are you doing with it? 42365 What, the forced marriage?" |
42365 | What_ does_ the young man mean? |
42365 | When have I pretended? |
42365 | When you met your daughter on the hatoba at Yokohama were there young males of the party? |
42365 | Where are you? 42365 Where is Prince Hagané? |
42365 | Where would be my atonement, my reparation? 42365 Whew,--how did you remember it all?" |
42365 | Who already have seats in the inner office? |
42365 | Who cares about the setting off? 42365 Who is that that speaks to me? |
42365 | Who is the mad young foreigner with yellow hair who now haunts the foot of this hill? |
42365 | Who is your friend, Yuki? |
42365 | Why did Pierre wake so soon? |
42365 | Why did you let me go at all? |
42365 | Why do we fret and worry about such things so far away? 42365 Why do you affront the fair morning with your sighs? |
42365 | Why should it hurt you, Yuki- ko,--I mean, your Highness, when old Suzumé is only proud? |
42365 | Why, did you not know of it? 42365 Why, er-- that such a step would be foolish, and-- er-- unworthy?" |
42365 | Why, how should I know? 42365 Why, of all days, should the meeting fall on this?" |
42365 | Why, what was that great bunch of cables that came this morning? |
42365 | Why? 42365 Why? |
42365 | Will my soul speak, Lord? |
42365 | Will that youth of whom you told us be lonely, though he stand singly against a squadron of Cossacks? 42365 Will the blessed daylight never come?" |
42365 | Will you not take an umbrella-- not even a foreign bat- umbrella-- to protect your illustrious head? |
42365 | Wo n''t you give us that lovely thing of Goo- nowd''s you sung at our last Charity concert? |
42365 | Would you speak of the young Frenchman, whose mother is a Russian? |
42365 | Yes; did n''t you know? 42365 You are certain, Yuki?" |
42365 | You are in great grief, my child? |
42365 | You are sure Gwendolen suspects nothing? |
42365 | You believed this of your wife, yet forgave-- helped-- loved her-- You look forward to having her as your wife in a coming re- birth? |
42365 | You dare to refuse me? |
42365 | You did what? 42365 You do not consider him,--over their heads?" |
42365 | You escaped, in spite of your two nurses? |
42365 | You have arrived,--two weeks, is it not? 42365 You have no son-- but what of it? |
42365 | You heard my order? |
42365 | You intend then to hold to Pierre, and throw over Prince Hagané, no matter what the consequences? |
42365 | You mean for me to go? 42365 You mean-- love--''ai''--the love of a man and a woman who wish to marry?" |
42365 | You promised? |
42365 | You really mean such a thing? |
42365 | You sent for me, your Excellency? |
42365 | You think she is safe? 42365 You think you have found something that looks just like me?" |
42365 | You told him of your-- attachment? |
42365 | You understand, Gwendolen? 42365 You will come and assist me in the preparing, wo n''t you, dear Gwendolen?" |
42365 | You will neither go nor admit a foreign guest-- nor write and receive letters? |
42365 | You will of course, in any case, give up the paper at first appearance of Hagané and Madame? |
42365 | You will retain the enclosed letter? |
42365 | You wish to hear that many times, do you not? 42365 You would defend him,--betray me already? |
42365 | You? 42365 Your Excellency,"he said to the broad silk- clad back before him,"are you sure that we did well to rebuff that little girl?" |
42365 | Your Excellency,he said,"if I might be allowed to suggest, why not let me be Miss Todd''s escort? |
42365 | Your betrothed is broken- hearted, of course, at the thought of severance from you? |
42365 | Your father is not exactly a lover of foreigners, is he? |
42365 | Yuki, Yuki, shall we ever be happy again as we were at school? 42365 Yuki, Yuki, what is it,--what do you see?" |
42365 | Yuki, as to the ear of your ancestral gods, tell me, should this paper be regained by means less terrible,--are you worthy to be my wife? |
42365 | Yuki, did you leave your friends,--would you offend them,--rather than greet the Russian ambassador? |
42365 | Yuki, for God''s sake are you mad? |
42365 | Yuki, what can you mean? |
42365 | Yuki,said the phantom, with a little chill whine in his voice,"wo n''t you even speak to me?" |
42365 | _ You_ enjoin pity, Madame Hagané? 42365 ( Is Mr. Baby hurt?) 42365 ( What is it?) 42365 Accompany? 42365 After a pause she said aloud,I wonder if it thinks itself really dead?" |
42365 | Again I ask, Do you accept my bargain?" |
42365 | Again to- morrow you will augustly pause at our broken- down step, will you not?" |
42365 | All children love daisies, n''est- ce- pas?" |
42365 | All day long, ever since his escape from the hospital( and could it be possible that his flight had taken place since dawn of this very day? |
42365 | Already Mamselle Onda has received important propositions?" |
42365 | Am I not your only little girl?" |
42365 | Am I our secretary''s keeper?" |
42365 | Am I to understand that this man-- this person-- spoke directly to you, and you listened without first receiving permission from your parents? |
42365 | Am I wrong in thinking these to be something unusual? |
42365 | An age limit? |
42365 | And is not the diamond- point on which that mighty turning rests, the Spirit of Japan?" |
42365 | And mother does n''t know? |
42365 | And the old nurse Suzumé, was she there?" |
42365 | And what are those purple things, and those? |
42365 | And what was her small single danger to the issues they represented? |
42365 | And when did the hushed rumor have it that he was seen,--what hour?" |
42365 | And you thought them pretty from the very first moment?" |
42365 | And, by the way, where is my Zulika, my soft, blue- tinted amorette? |
42365 | And-- young bloods?" |
42365 | Are n''t you afraid the old priest''s ghost will haunt you?" |
42365 | Are these the little rooms where we are to live, Yuki, now that we have run away from the old prince and are married?" |
42365 | Are we all known, one to the other?" |
42365 | Are we running away to be married?" |
42365 | Are you certain that my dress hangs right now, Madame?" |
42365 | Are you certain that this man, whom our little Yuki thinks she loves, is, indeed, a foreigner?" |
42365 | Are you faint?" |
42365 | Are you ready, my Princess?" |
42365 | Are you trying to frighten me? |
42365 | Are you yourself a demon, Tetsujo,--or a father? |
42365 | Are you-- willing, dearest father?" |
42365 | As the servant left, Iriya asked of her husband,"Shall I also withdraw?" |
42365 | At the last moment should he, Pierre, refuse to grasp the prize he had turned criminal in pursuing? |
42365 | Before she could speak, Dodge had interrupted:"As long as we are so close, would you- all mind walking one more block on foot? |
42365 | But I can assure you, my dear, there is one man at least who does not think us silly; he has been worse off than either of us, has n''t he, Gwennie?" |
42365 | But did a toad have blood at all? |
42365 | But how can I believe that? |
42365 | But how dare she, already to one pledge so faithless, climb upward, even on bleeding knees, to that splendid portico above? |
42365 | But how would Yuki die? |
42365 | But if I lie quite still you''ll kiss me many, many times again when you return, wo n''t you?" |
42365 | But what am I to do if other visitors come?" |
42365 | But what comfort would this reply bring to Gwendolen? |
42365 | But what is that to Yuki and to me?" |
42365 | But what of it? |
42365 | But who told you?" |
42365 | But why did you wait so long?" |
42365 | But why should they interfere with my rambles? |
42365 | But why-- didn''t-- Hagané stop you?" |
42365 | But would it set her beyond the black tide of her own remorse? |
42365 | Can I not belong to myself, just for the time of this war, mother? |
42365 | Can any bodily passion exonerate this ultimate crime?" |
42365 | Can it be that our gracious lady has gone for repose to the tea- rooms?" |
42365 | Can you not be called to some account?" |
42365 | Can you not trust me? |
42365 | Can you play the accompaniment?" |
42365 | Can you repeat precisely?" |
42365 | Cat?" |
42365 | Cigarettes or opium?" |
42365 | Come to think of it, why does Dodge get out of the way when you appear? |
42365 | Come,--you have n''t promised it, have you? |
42365 | Did I understand you to say all? |
42365 | Did Yuki,--could Yuki have--?" |
42365 | Did he confess that war had come?" |
42365 | Did it ever fail to return before the dawn?" |
42365 | Did n''t you know who sent them? |
42365 | Did n''t you really find that card in the box?" |
42365 | Did not Prince Hagané speak of him?" |
42365 | Did she not give you the pledge of the hairpin?" |
42365 | Did they torture you after all?" |
42365 | Did you not hear me?" |
42365 | Did you not notice the disarray of Madame''s toilette?" |
42365 | Did you see how nearly I broke down in the face of that last fat lady in tight gray sleeves? |
42365 | Do I receive your felicitations?" |
42365 | Do n''t you hear them? |
42365 | Do n''t you play, Miss Todd?" |
42365 | Do n''t you see it is as much to me as anybody else that the thing gets back, unopened, to Hagané?" |
42365 | Do n''t you see, it compromises France?" |
42365 | Do n''t you understand? |
42365 | Do others of your countrymen think thus?" |
42365 | Do the joys of Tokio prove too arduous?" |
42365 | Do you dare come out with me to the very prow of the ship?" |
42365 | Do you hear also? |
42365 | Do you intend to sit sullen and inactive here, at home?" |
42365 | Do you keep the latter luxury?" |
42365 | Do you know what that may mean to you? |
42365 | Do you not say so, too, my Yuki?" |
42365 | Do you not see, right on the edge of beach, a small red something?" |
42365 | Do you remember, Yuki?" |
42365 | Do you think he will be angry, Meta, that I went?" |
42365 | Do you understand all I have said, my Yuki?" |
42365 | Do you understand that, Onda Tetsujo?" |
42365 | Do you understand?" |
42365 | Do you want me to try to keep him away from you this afternoon, or is it part of your penitence to assist him in insulting you?" |
42365 | Do you wish still to be his? |
42365 | Do_ you_?" |
42365 | Dodge, what was it that you meant by the su- per- lative opportunity--?" |
42365 | Dodge?" |
42365 | Dodge?" |
42365 | Does he wait?" |
42365 | Does n''t she look well to- night?" |
42365 | Does that make the knife in its belly less sharp?" |
42365 | Does that put any lubricator on your troubled waves?" |
42365 | Est- çe que vous croire que le va levé apres so''bon diner au poisson pou''vini donner nous autres la sainte messe? |
42365 | For whom are you keeping it?" |
42365 | For whom then will be the cry but for old Onda? |
42365 | Give the princess to me bodily? |
42365 | Glorious, was n''t it? |
42365 | Gwendolen and I were almost distracted, were n''t we, Gwendolen? |
42365 | Gwendolen, dear, will you go on deck and see that a chair is made ready for the poor child?" |
42365 | Had Prince Hagané spoken ill of her? |
42365 | Had she done right? |
42365 | Had she offended, beyond forgiveness, her kind friends, the Todds? |
42365 | Hagané refused_ what_?" |
42365 | Hark, is that not the hour of noon now striking? |
42365 | Has anybody sat on my orchids? |
42365 | Has he been here, Yuki?" |
42365 | Has night a voice? |
42365 | Has that the air of Suzumé?" |
42365 | Has war really begun, or were those reports only to frighten us? |
42365 | Has-- has he made your father a formal offer of marriage for you, Miss Yuki?" |
42365 | Have n''t I watched and studied, with Kanrio here to coach? |
42365 | Have n''t you ever been to the American Legation at all? |
42365 | Have the rest come?" |
42365 | Have you charges of misconduct against me?" |
42365 | Have you ever known love-- do you understand jealousy-- have you heard of-- hell?" |
42365 | Have you heard from Yuki this morning?" |
42365 | Have you known before to- day of his terrible illness?" |
42365 | Have you not planned, and spied, and-- stolen for this?" |
42365 | He called me a thief; but what has he not stolen? |
42365 | He knew it meant the utmost of something, but which-- glory or dishonor? |
42365 | He looked hard, and asked,"Is this Onda Yuki- ko?" |
42365 | He moved it a confidential three inches nearer before asking,"Will she not be able to come up sometime before to- morrow? |
42365 | His voice was higher and a little careless, as he asked of Todd, directly,"Is Onda Yuki- ko to sail with your family?" |
42365 | How am I to endure the waiting? |
42365 | How could I guess the gross sentiment that is attached to the silly business by such minds as yours? |
42365 | How could I know? |
42365 | How could any man in his senses ever love any other woman after once seeing you?" |
42365 | How could he know it was Pierre? |
42365 | How could he think so quickly to go to the French Legation? |
42365 | How could his thumping heart and brain direct that tranquil flow? |
42365 | How could you fawncy such a thing? |
42365 | How did you keep ahead? |
42365 | How did you know of it? |
42365 | How had the sun such callousness that it could shine to- day after such a blackness? |
42365 | How has it come about? |
42365 | How is it that little Maru did not come to- day?" |
42365 | How often have I told you that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure?" |
42365 | How shall I let you know?" |
42365 | How then should she reconcile her fondest belief, that in a union with Pierre she might serve to bring closer French and Japanese friendship? |
42365 | How then, if Pierre were a mere common thief, could Yuki be involved? |
42365 | How was it possible for a man with the intelligence of Ronsard to harbor such ideas of Japanese character? |
42365 | How, in the Virgin''s name, would one get through a novel without a plate of dulces beside it?" |
42365 | I agree, but where?" |
42365 | I am in society,--is it not nice? |
42365 | I do like ourselves,--now do n''t you, dad?" |
42365 | I feel to be sick at the thought of such treachery to my parents; but what am I to do?" |
42365 | I hate the silk upon me, the soft rug at my feet, the smiling servants,--how can they smile? |
42365 | I stand it? |
42365 | I wish-- oh, I wish you could be happy together; but--""Can you not omit that last small word?" |
42365 | If he felt it a concession to admit Gwendolen, daughter of the new American minister, what would he say to Pierre? |
42365 | If my life can serve this land, or aid, in infinitesimal good, my Emperor, why can I not be glad and desire no more?" |
42365 | If, for a moment, the bright tint or the fleeting perfume please, is it not best to grasp the trivial pleasure? |
42365 | In bewilderment, as one reaches out in the dark, his voice cried,"Is this your sorrow, Yuki? |
42365 | In the name of Shaka, what has hurt you?" |
42365 | Iriya, noting her expression, asked brightly,"Is my dear one just a little happy to be at home?" |
42365 | Is anything safe?" |
42365 | Is he one that at all understands us?" |
42365 | Is he worth it--?" |
42365 | Is it a sleeping draught?" |
42365 | Is it my marriage you speak of?" |
42365 | Is it not enough that you have used, and then slain her, that you now traduce her name? |
42365 | Is it not enough? |
42365 | Is it not kind to be so? |
42365 | Is it not partly so in France, Monsieur? |
42365 | Is it not so? |
42365 | Is it not true?" |
42365 | Is it to beg paw- don of some one?" |
42365 | Is it to come, Lord?" |
42365 | Is it your belief that Yuki will surely betray herself, if indeed the foreign devil whom she-- she-- well, the foreign devil,--should arrive?" |
42365 | Is n''t Yuki simply a dream of spring?" |
42365 | Is n''t he a relative, Yuki?" |
42365 | Is n''t it a joke?" |
42365 | Is n''t that what you thought?" |
42365 | Is n''t this war- news exciting? |
42365 | Is not that true, Mama San?" |
42365 | Is she not lawfully married to the richest and most powerful of lords, to Prince Hagané?" |
42365 | Is the carriage ready, Gwen?" |
42365 | Is there anything further to discuss, your Excellency?" |
42365 | Is there nothing we can do,--nobody to shoot, or challenge, or anything like that?" |
42365 | Is this as you wish, Yuki- ko?" |
42365 | Is this thing I call fidelity but a shirking?" |
42365 | Is war safe? |
42365 | It is more delicate, n''est- ce pas?" |
42365 | Like the Ayrshire poet we cry,"How can ye be so fresh and fair?" |
42365 | Lord, shall you think me fit to go to such a father? |
42365 | Lovers''quarrels were well enough in their way; but why should this have come just now when Dodge could be of use? |
42365 | Making some excuse to the group about her, she went to him, saying in her direct, disconcerting way,--"What have you done to my Yuki- ko? |
42365 | May I not conduct her to her chamber?" |
42365 | May I not prepare a little meal to tempt your appetite?" |
42365 | May I speak to my friends to- day?" |
42365 | Me put it in a box?" |
42365 | Miss Gwendolen de Lancy Todd was crying,"where on earth_ is_ my other glove? |
42365 | Must I listen to this cat- mewing?" |
42365 | Ne?" |
42365 | Ne?" |
42365 | Next Thursday, is n''t it? |
42365 | Now ca n''t we go into your bedroom, or out to the garden, and finish our conversation in peace?" |
42365 | Now tell me what ma-_ma_ thought of the flowers and the card?" |
42365 | O my Christian God!--must I live, can I endure it? |
42365 | Oh, Gwendolen, do you see any way to save?" |
42365 | Oh, are n''t we a pair of rascals, dad? |
42365 | Oh, can I bear it, father? |
42365 | Oh, mother, one hour?" |
42365 | Oh, my poor darling, what will those vile men do to you?" |
42365 | Passing the cathedral, Pierre asked of a lounging, large- hipped negress:"Est- ce qu''il y à la messe à la Cathédrale demain?" |
42365 | Perhaps you Christians have not such uncomfortable passions, ne?" |
42365 | Pierre, can you not see for yourself how flimsy is his argument? |
42365 | Pity to women has always been his.--Well, when shall your answer go-- to- night, in the morning, on the first rays of the sun? |
42365 | Prevent her? |
42365 | Prince Sanétomo Hagané?" |
42365 | Rick- shaw,--Dan- na San?" |
42365 | Ronsard passed a fat hand over his mouth before asking,"With her family''s consent?" |
42365 | Sayo de gozaimasuka?" |
42365 | Shall I assist you to inclose yourself in that barbed- wire fence of love?" |
42365 | Shall I buy his mercy for you with this paper?" |
42365 | Shall I ever again look a flower in the face?" |
42365 | Shall I go on?" |
42365 | Shall I now leave with you the body, Monsieur Le Beau, or shall I retrace my steps as I came, giving honorable burial to the Princess Hagané?" |
42365 | Shall I ring for lights?" |
42365 | Shall I send her away? |
42365 | Shall I set you free?" |
42365 | Shall I stop the carriage and get out?" |
42365 | Shall I strike roots, or reverse the throttle?" |
42365 | Shall I summon the noble count to be asked?" |
42365 | Shall it not be so, my husband? |
42365 | Shall not Baron Kanrio stand as-- interpreter-- for my heavy thought?" |
42365 | Shall not Suzumé and Maru be given bliss? |
42365 | Shall we not join our young imbecile in the garden?" |
42365 | Shall we not purchase less rich food another time, and fewer candles? |
42365 | Shall you dare take it?" |
42365 | Shall you sail soon?" |
42365 | Should a foreigner be allowed to bear away the sweetness of this flower? |
42365 | Something in the girl''s face made him ask,"Ah, have you indeed a matter of importance? |
42365 | Statistics, Sociology, Political Economy?" |
42365 | Stunt after all the hypocrite Gwendolen said she was? |
42365 | Tell me honestly, as a friend, do you think that Pierre has absolutely no chance of marrying Yuki?" |
42365 | That you?" |
42365 | The Cossacks cut and slay like demons,--why not we? |
42365 | The host then asked of the party,"Shall I not order for you foreign chairs? |
42365 | The world does n''t seem a very bright place, this morning, does it? |
42365 | Then why would Hagané not take her back? |
42365 | There has no Hagané come, do n''t you see? |
42365 | Think you not, Lord, that she deserves death for such impiety?" |
42365 | This is Friday, is it not? |
42365 | To marriage with an alien?--repudiation of a country that I serve?" |
42365 | To- night, you say? |
42365 | Todd could understand this much, but what was Hagané''s hidden source of light? |
42365 | Todd?" |
42365 | Todd?" |
42365 | Was I not mad enough with love without this new gray snare of mist, these blossoms drifting along an irresistible tide? |
42365 | Was it Japanese Art, as with Frenchmen? |
42365 | Was it possible that Todd''s light words could move him? |
42365 | Was it too cheeky, having met you but a glorious once?" |
42365 | Was it your august intention that I should accompany you?" |
42365 | Was n''t that banquet last night, after the Red God appeared, a regular skeleton''s feast? |
42365 | Was she unworthy, simply through the act of saving Pierre, or was there a lower reason? |
42365 | Was this done by order of the duchess?" |
42365 | Was this the ghost of the man she had loved? |
42365 | Well, what of it? |
42365 | What are the honor and glory of France to such effete sensualists as you? |
42365 | What are those hard men saying to you now? |
42365 | What could it mean? |
42365 | What could the Frenchman say? |
42365 | What did her father mean? |
42365 | What did you see at Yuki''s house?" |
42365 | What do I care for Ronsard or for France if I, with this, can buy your life- long happiness?" |
42365 | What do I care for war, for Russia, even for France, if once I could believe you entirely my own? |
42365 | What do I hear?" |
42365 | What do you think about keeping her with me and the prince, Cy?" |
42365 | What guarantee can you offer?" |
42365 | What had happened? |
42365 | What had such as they to do with the God Hagané? |
42365 | What has happened-- an earthquake?" |
42365 | What has happened?" |
42365 | What has she done?" |
42365 | What have you been doing to my secretary?" |
42365 | What have you to say?" |
42365 | What is it now, Yuki,--lack of English,--that keeps you so dumb?" |
42365 | What is the human body but a petal drifting in the wind? |
42365 | What is the matter with''Theodora''?" |
42365 | What is the theft of a paper compared to this? |
42365 | What is this desire of yours but sentiment, false sentiment, puerile, absurd? |
42365 | What is to be her fate? |
42365 | What is your question?" |
42365 | What language was it that the thing had tried to speak, what wish to utter? |
42365 | What matter that the Buddha waited? |
42365 | What new horror is this?" |
42365 | What on earth has come to you lately? |
42365 | What on earth have you been doing to your prince?" |
42365 | What shall I do until he comes?" |
42365 | What sorrow could it be that made the young foreigner''s eyes so deep and blue? |
42365 | What spirit hides behind that mask?" |
42365 | What though her father and her jailers heard? |
42365 | What use would death be, especially if you seek it as an escape from conditions that do not please you? |
42365 | What was her name, Yuki? |
42365 | What was she, their only child, now doing for the land they loved? |
42365 | What was spoiling her home- coming? |
42365 | What was that"snip,"or his opinions, compared with Yuki''s danger? |
42365 | What was to be the end of it all, for her? |
42365 | What were foreign education, foreign friendship, foreign pledges,--love itself,--to a girl of Yamato Damashii? |
42365 | What were those great men thinking and saying behind the closed doors? |
42365 | What will be your part? |
42365 | What will they do if they think you wrong? |
42365 | What will you have me think? |
42365 | What will you?" |
42365 | What would he say now,--what would her father say,--if told of this rude and un- Japanese yielding to a personal distaste? |
42365 | What''s to hinder you from going to him? |
42365 | When does that train start?" |
42365 | When his arms are around you, do you not think of mine? |
42365 | When his thick lips press you, do you not faint for me? |
42365 | Where did Gwendolen go?" |
42365 | Where did Yuki go? |
42365 | Where is his mother''s soul? |
42365 | Where is the chit- book?" |
42365 | Where-- and how-- did you get it?" |
42365 | Where_ is_ that wretched man? |
42365 | Who could be found to fight on such an earth? |
42365 | Who dares to hint of war?" |
42365 | Who is T. Caraway Dodge? |
42365 | Who knows what may happen? |
42365 | Who should condole with her but he? |
42365 | Why am I waiting? |
42365 | Why ca n''t you drive home with me, and give mother a surprise? |
42365 | Why did anybody want to carve such things?" |
42365 | Why did you give no warning? |
42365 | Why do you smile so, and never change? |
42365 | Why had the great man said"Monsieur"? |
42365 | Why not Sunday night, better than another? |
42365 | Why not? |
42365 | Why should I not return? |
42365 | Why should people talk so?" |
42365 | Why should she wish to go? |
42365 | Why should you be true to him when you were false as hell to me? |
42365 | Why this continued talk of sacrifice? |
42365 | Why, I wonder, do they wish to expose arms more than legs? |
42365 | Will Pierre be really there? |
42365 | Will any of us ever be happy again? |
42365 | Will there be many bright spring flowers in it?" |
42365 | Will you apologize now?" |
42365 | Will you destroy her love, fool, by smothering it in her contempt? |
42365 | Will you follow me quickly and in silence along this little path?" |
42365 | Will you give parole to stay here till I come back,--you and Yuki?" |
42365 | Will you kindly clap and serve us tea, small pigeon?" |
42365 | Will you kindly convey this message?" |
42365 | Will you not plead with father for this boon?" |
42365 | Will you not return to the room with me?" |
42365 | Will you not trust me even further and be the one by whose hand it goes?" |
42365 | Will you promise to befriend me to that hour, my husband?" |
42365 | Will you write your humble and grateful acceptance in person, or shall I convey it for you?" |
42365 | Will your kind eyes moisten for such a thing? |
42365 | Without a flicker of anger or impatience Hagané, still facing the count, inquired,"Does the young man act with your authority?" |
42365 | Would Baron Kanrio, when he heard, defend the childish impulse? |
42365 | Would Mrs. Todd reprove her publicly? |
42365 | Would her hand or his deal the final blow-- give Death his first sweet sip of her? |
42365 | Would she be alone, or Hagané with her? |
42365 | Would you advise me to see him alone?" |
42365 | Would you indeed disgrace us by marrying-- a Russian?" |
42365 | Would you take this one possible chance from me?" |
42365 | You did not hear that in the music?" |
42365 | You have never heard the old volcano growl before? |
42365 | You have not gained?" |
42365 | You left husband and wife together?" |
42365 | You look different? |
42365 | You need him, foolish one,--why not admit it and have peace?" |
42365 | You very happy?" |
42365 | You will continue to be my very good friend in Japan, will you not?" |
42365 | You wish to speak with me?" |
42365 | You would trust with such responsibilities a weak, untutored girl like me?" |
42365 | Your kind mother, will she not come?" |
42365 | Your question, Yuki,--are you fitted to return? |
42365 | Yuki, Yuki, what strange thing is this rooted in your heart,--what grim hilt with twisted dragons? |
42365 | asked Gwendolen;"or in the night, did this little measuring- worm of a train reach up and pull itself to Mars?" |
42365 | asked Yuki of her mother, when Maru was at last persuaded to hold her head erect,"that, I not having yet written, you and the servants came to me?" |
42365 | cried Pierre, smiting his clammy forehead,"how is it that I live at all?" |
42365 | cried the badgered youth,"how can a man retract what he still thinks? |
42365 | cried the girl to him in great stress,"am I indeed of the coward''s heart? |
42365 | do thieves who enter other men''s homes to rob them still wave the flag of honor?" |
42365 | does mother know?" |
42365 | exclaimed Mrs. Todd, as she lifted her lorgnette to survey the long hall and the gathered company,"a regular sewing- bee, is n''t it? |
42365 | fumed Tetsujo,"shall I be able to contain myself while you condescend to bandy words with a mere girl?" |
42365 | how could it? |
42365 | how far yet to my home? |
42365 | is it you?" |
42365 | murmured Cyrus, looking about,"where are the musicians?" |
42365 | now, over there-- there-- where on top of a hill three great crosses, the middle one so great and black and high,--is it not Gethsemane?" |
42365 | or is it only I?" |
42365 | said Gwendolen;"have we become mere transparencies, or do your wits acquire a preternatural alertness in these big rooms? |
42365 | said the tan- colored fowl, superbly,"why do you hesitate? |
42365 | she cried passionately,"why could I not have been born a man? |
42365 | she cried, holding the drowsy animal high above her and smiling into its blinking eyes.--"Do American cats like rice?" |
42365 | we go_ before_ next spring? |
42365 | what are those?" |
42365 | whispered Gwendolen, as they reached the further side of the room,"are you a condemned prisoner already?" |
42365 | why was it not given to me to be a man?" |
7952 | And after Sicily? |
7952 | And after you have conquered the world? |
7952 | Are you in earnest? 7952 Break one of them and what do you see?" |
7952 | But must I then die sorrowing? 7952 I have fallen into the hands of thieves,"says Jeremy Taylor;"what then? |
7952 | That which does not make a man worse, how can it make his life worse? 7952 The true, the good, and the beautiful,"says Cousin,"are but forms of the infinite: what then do we really love in truth, beauty, and virtue? |
7952 | Then,asked Cineas,"why can you not take your ease and be merry now?" |
7952 | To sit at home,says Leigh Hunt,"with an old folio(?) |
7952 | We talk,says Helps,"of the origin of evil;... but what is evil? |
7952 | Who has traced,says Cousin,"the plan of this poem? |
7952 | Am I not free? |
7952 | Am I not without fear? |
7952 | Am I not without sorrow? |
7952 | And how do I meet with those whom you are afraid of and admire? |
7952 | And if it were, would friends be any real advantage? |
7952 | And what do I want? |
7952 | And who has guided reason and love? |
7952 | But how can we fill our lives with_ life_, energy, and interest, and yet keep care outside? |
7952 | But if I have been greatly favored, ought I not to be on that very account especially qualified to write on such a theme? |
7952 | But if death is the journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead are, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this? |
7952 | But is this so? |
7952 | But ought we not to place before ourselves a very different ideal-- a healthier, manlier, and nobler hope? |
7952 | But ought we so to regard death? |
7952 | But what came of all his victories? |
7952 | But what is glory? |
7952 | But what of the future? |
7952 | But, on the other hand, what gift is there which is without danger? |
7952 | Can I be prevented from going with cheerfulness and contentment? |
7952 | Can we then retrace our steps? |
7952 | Can you then show me in what way you have taken care of it? |
7952 | Did I ever accuse any man? |
7952 | Did I ever blame God or man? |
7952 | Did any of you ever see me with a sorrowful countenance? |
7952 | Do n''t you think that we should all consider it to be a primary duty to learn at least the names and the moves of the pieces? |
7952 | Do not I treat them like slaves? |
7952 | Do you seek a reward greater than that of doing what is good and just? |
7952 | Does it really give that love of learning which is better than learning itself? |
7952 | Does it then seem to you so small and worthless a thing to be good and happy?" |
7952 | Does not this seem natural? |
7952 | For which would you rather have? |
7952 | Has Biology ever professed to explain existence? |
7952 | Hence, we dread ghosts more than robbers, not only without reason, but against reason; for even if ghosts existed, how could they hurt us? |
7952 | How can he think or act for himself? |
7952 | How may we see in them all that is to be seen by the finest senses? |
7952 | How then do we stand now? |
7952 | How then is this great object to be secured? |
7952 | How, then, is this to be paid for? |
7952 | I asked myself, as on previous occasions, How was this colossal work performed? |
7952 | I fancied one of the angels came and asked me,''Well, M. l''Abbé how did you like the beautiful world you have just left?'' |
7952 | If the condemnation is just, it should be welcome as a warning; if it is undeserved, why should we allow it to distress us? |
7952 | In the words of the old Lambeth adage--"What is a merry man? |
7952 | Is it not extraordinary that many men will deliberately take a road which they know is, to say the least, not that of happiness? |
7952 | Is it really so; need it be so? |
7952 | Is the object to produce the same impression on the mind as that created by the scene itself? |
7952 | It is indeed sometimes objected that Landscape painting is not true to nature; but we must ask, What is truth? |
7952 | Man, what are you saying? |
7952 | Many are wearily asking themselves"Ah why Should life all labor be?" |
7952 | Moreover, have we not all, in a better sense-- have we not all thousands of acres of our own? |
7952 | Moreover, to what do Generals and Statesmen owe their fame? |
7952 | Must I then also lament? |
7952 | Must we not all admit, with Sir Henry Taylor, that"the retrospect of life swarms with lost opportunities"? |
7952 | Now that which does not make a man worse, how can it make his life worse?" |
7952 | On the other hand, we must remember how much we have gained in security? |
7952 | Sed quibus? |
7952 | That they prefer to make others miserable, rather than themselves happy? |
7952 | The Canaanitish woman lives more happily without a name than Herodias with one; and who would not rather have been the good thief than Pilate?" |
7952 | The fount of tears is sealed, Who knows how bright the inward light To those closed eyes revealed? |
7952 | There was silence; and I heard a voice saying Shall mortal man be more just than God?" |
7952 | This seems a paradox, yet it there not much truth in his explanation? |
7952 | To lose such Deans as Stanley would indeed be a great misfortune; but does it follow? |
7952 | Well then does Epictetus ask,"Is there no reward? |
7952 | Well, banishment? |
7952 | Well, then, why should we complain of what is but a preparation for future happiness? |
7952 | What are friends, books, or health, the interest of travel or the delights of home, if we have not time for their enjoyment? |
7952 | What does it matter if the pupil know a little more or a little less? |
7952 | What is he that he should resist? |
7952 | What is it to be king, sheikh, tetrarch, or emperor over a''bit of a bit''of this little earth?" |
7952 | What is there?" |
7952 | What more is there we could ask for ourselves? |
7952 | What science brings so much out of so little? |
7952 | What then is the difference? |
7952 | What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus, and Musaeus, and Hesiod, and Homer? |
7952 | What would one not give for a Science primer of the next century? |
7952 | What, says Marcus Aurelius,"What is that which is able to conduct a man? |
7952 | When did any of you see me failing in the object of my desire? |
7952 | When we speak of Palestrina or Perugino, of Nelson or Wellington, of Newton or Darwin, who remembers the towns? |
7952 | Wherefore weep?" |
7952 | Who chiselled these mighty and picturesque masses out of a mere protuberance of the earth? |
7952 | Who discovered the art of procuring fire? |
7952 | Who has given it life and charm? |
7952 | Who invented letters? |
7952 | Who saw the dance of the dead clouds when the sunlight left them last night, and the west wind blew them before it like withered leaves? |
7952 | Who saw the narrow sunbeam that came out of the south, and smote upon their summits until they melted and mouldered away in a dust of blue rain? |
7952 | Who would not rather be forgotten, than recollected as Ahab or Jezebel, Nero or Commodus, Messalina or Heliogabalus, King John or Richard III.? |
7952 | Who, when he sees me, does not think that he sees his king and master?" |
7952 | Why should we expect Religion to solve questions with reference to the origin and destiny of the Universe? |
7952 | Why, then, should this be so? |
7952 | Would you have me to bear poverty? |
7952 | Would you have me to bear poverty? |
7952 | Would you have me to possess power? |
7952 | Yes, but what world? |
7952 | Yet consider what it contains; or rather, what does it not contain? |
7952 | Yet in comparison with what possession, of all others, would not a good friend appear far more valuable?" |
7952 | Yet what is the ocean compared to the sky? |
7952 | [ 10] And yet"if, in our moments of utter idleness and insipidity, we turn to the sky as a last resource, which of its phenomena do we speak of? |
7952 | [ 7] The future of man is full of hope, and who can foresee the limits of his destiny? |
7952 | can we recover what is lost? |
7952 | or ever falling into that which I would avoid? |
7952 | where is thy sting? |
7952 | where is thy victory?" |
4928 | Ah, Tristram''far away from me, Art thou from restless anguish free? 4928 Ah, lady,"said Geraint,"what hath befallen thee?" |
4928 | Am I on earth,he exclaimed,"or am I in Paradise? |
4928 | Am I, then,said Sacripant,"of so little esteem with you that you doubt my power to defend you? |
4928 | And art thou certain that if that knight knew all this, he would come to thy rescue? |
4928 | And how can I do that? |
4928 | And is it thus they have done with a maiden such as she, and moreover my sister, bestowing her without my consent? 4928 And what dost thou here?" |
4928 | And what has Gan been plotting with Marsilius? |
4928 | And what may that be? |
4928 | And what weapon hast thou,said he,"if thy lance fail thee?" |
4928 | And who is he? |
4928 | And who was it that slew them? |
4928 | And you, wherefore come you? |
4928 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
4928 | By what means will that be? |
4928 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
4928 | Cruel wall,they said,"why do you keep two lovers apart? |
4928 | Damsel,said Sir Perceval,"who hath disinherited you? |
4928 | Did he meet with thee? |
4928 | Did you hear the horn as I heard it? |
4928 | Didst thou hear what Llywarch sung, The intrepid and brave old man? 4928 Didst thou inquire of them if they possessed any art?" |
4928 | Do you do this as one of the best knights? |
4928 | Do you hear that? |
4928 | Dost thou know him? |
4928 | Dost thou know how much I owe thee? |
4928 | Fair brother, when came ye hither? |
4928 | Fair damsel,said Sir Launcelot,"know ye in this country any adventures?" |
4928 | Fair knight,said he,"how is it with you?" |
4928 | Geraint,said Guenever,"knowest thou the name of that tall knight yonder?" |
4928 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for you worthy of your praise? |
4928 | Has he not given it before the presence of these nobles? |
4928 | Hast thou heard what Avaon sung, The son of Taliesin, of the recording verse? 4928 Hast thou heard what Garselit sung, The Irishman whom it is safe to follow? |
4928 | Hast thou heard what Llenleawg sung, The noble chief wearing the golden torques? 4928 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
4928 | Hast thou not received all thou didst ask? |
4928 | Have you any tidings? |
4928 | Have you come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold you after such perils past? |
4928 | Have you heard anything of Arion? |
4928 | Heaven prosper thee, Geraint,said she;"and why didst thou not go with thy lord to hunt?" |
4928 | How can a fool have such strength? |
4928 | How know you that? |
4928 | How now, Thor? |
4928 | How now, cousin,cried Orlando,"have you too gone over to the enemy?" |
4928 | How shall I need them,said Rinaldo,"since I have lost my horse?" |
4928 | I come, lord, from singing in England; and wherefore dost thou inquire? |
4928 | I put the case,said Palamedes,"that you were well armed, and I naked as ye be; what would you do to me now, by your true knighthood?" |
4928 | I stand in need of counsel,he answered,"and what may that counsel be?" |
4928 | I will gladly,said he;"and in which direction dost thou intend to go?" |
4928 | In the name of Heaven,said Manawyddan,"where are they of the court, and all my host beside? |
4928 | Is it known,said Arthur,"where she is?" |
4928 | Is it thus I find you restored to me? |
4928 | Is it time for us to go to meat? |
4928 | Is not that a mouse that I see in thy hand? |
4928 | Is that the horse they presume to match with Marchevallee, the best steed that ever fed in the vales of Mount Atlas? |
4928 | Is this, then,she said,"the fruit of all my labors? |
4928 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair? 4928 Know ye,"said Arthur,"who is the knight with the long spear that stands by the brook up yonder?" |
4928 | Knowest thou his name? |
4928 | Lady,he said,"wilt thou tell me aught concerning thy purpose?" |
4928 | Lady,said he,"knowest thou where our horses are?" |
4928 | Lady,said they,"what thinkest thou that this is?" |
4928 | Lord,said Kicva,"wherefore should this be borne from these boors?" |
4928 | Lord,said she,"didst thou hear the words of those men concerning thee?" |
4928 | Lord,said she,"what craft wilt thou follow? |
4928 | Most undutiful and faithless of servants,said she,"do you at last remember that you really have a mistress? |
4928 | My men,said Pwyll,"is there any among you who knows yonder lady?" |
4928 | My son,said she,"desirest thou to ride forth?" |
4928 | My soul,said Gawl,"will thy bag ever be full?" |
4928 | My soul,said Pwyll,"what is the boon thou askest?" |
4928 | Now where did he overtake thee? |
4928 | Now, fellow,said King Arthur,"canst thou bring me there where this giant haunteth?" |
4928 | Now,quoth Owain,"would it not be well to go and endeavor to discover that place?" |
4928 | Now,said Arthur,"where is the maiden for whom I heard thou didst give challenge?" |
4928 | O Bujaforte,said he,"I loved him indeed; but what does his son do here fighting against his friends?" |
4928 | O Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
4928 | O my friend,said he,"must then the body of our prince be the prey of wolves and ravens? |
4928 | O my lord,said she,"what dost thou here?" |
4928 | Say ye so? |
4928 | Seest thou yonder red tilled ground? |
4928 | Shall I not believe my own eyes and ears? |
4928 | Shall such wickedness triumph? |
4928 | Sir knight,said Arthur,"for what cause abidest thou here?" |
4928 | Sir, what penance shall I do? |
4928 | Sir,said Geraint,"what is thy counsel to me concerning this knight, on account of the insult which the maiden of Guenever received from the dwarf?" |
4928 | Sir,said Sir Bedivere,"what man is there buried that ye pray so near unto?" |
4928 | Sir,said Sir Bohort,"but how know ye that I shall sit there?" |
4928 | Sir,said Sir Galahad,"can you tell me the marvel of the shield?" |
4928 | Sir,said she,"when thinkest thou that Geraint will be here?" |
4928 | Sir,said the king,"is it your will to alight and partake of our cheer?" |
4928 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure brought you hither?" |
4928 | Suppose they will not trust themselves with me? |
4928 | Tell me, I pray you,he said,"what benefit will accrue to him who shall get the better in this contest? |
4928 | Tell me, good lad,said one of them,"sawest thou a knight pass this way either today or yesterday?" |
4928 | Tell me, tall man,said Perceval,"is that Arthur yonder?" |
4928 | Tell me,said Sir Bohort,"knowest thou of any adventure?" |
4928 | Tell me,said the knight,"didst thou see any one coming after me from the court?" |
4928 | That will I not, by Heaven,she said;"yonder man was the first to whom my faith was ever pledged; and shall I prove inconstant to him?" |
4928 | Then Bacchus( for it was indeed he), as if shaking off his drowsiness, exclaimed,''What are you doing with me? 4928 Then Perceval told him his name, and said,"Who art thou?" |
4928 | There is; wherefore dost thou call? |
4928 | They are already united by mutual vows,she said,"and in the sight of Heaven what more is necessary?" |
4928 | This is indeed a marvel,said he;"saw you aught else?" |
4928 | This will I do gladly; and who art thou? |
4928 | Traitor knight,said Queen Guenever,"what wilt thou do? |
4928 | Truly,said Pwyll,"this is to me the most pleasing quest on which thou couldst have come; and wilt thou tell me who thou art?" |
4928 | Verily,said she,"what thinkest thou to do?" |
4928 | Well,cried the hero,"what news?" |
4928 | What are we to do,said he,"now that daylight has left us?" |
4928 | What are ye? |
4928 | What discourse,said Guenever,"do I hear between you? |
4928 | What doth my knight the while? 4928 What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turned your affection from me? |
4928 | What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? 4928 What harm is there in that, lady?" |
4928 | What has become,said they,"of Caradoc, the son of Bran, and the seven men who were left with him in this island?" |
4928 | What hast thou there, lord? |
4928 | What have ye seen? |
4928 | What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? 4928 What herb has such a power?" |
4928 | What is the forest that is seen upon the sea? |
4928 | What is the lofty ridge, with the lake on each side thereof? |
4928 | What is the meaning of this? |
4928 | What is there about him,asked Arthur,"that thou never yet didst see his like?" |
4928 | What is this? |
4928 | What is thy craft? |
4928 | What is your lord''s name? |
4928 | What is your name? |
4928 | What is your name? |
4928 | What kind of a thief may it be, lord, that thou couldst put into thy glove? |
4928 | What knight is he that thou hatest so above others? |
4928 | What manner of thief is that? |
4928 | What manner of thief, lord? |
4928 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
4928 | What sawest thou there? |
4928 | What sawest thou there? |
4928 | What say ye to this adventure,said Sir Gawain,"that one spear hath felled us all four?" |
4928 | What saying was that? |
4928 | What sort of meal? |
4928 | What then wouldst thou? |
4928 | What thinkest thou that we should do concerning this? |
4928 | What treatment is there for guests and strangers that alight in that castle? |
4928 | What was that? |
4928 | What wight art thou,the lady said,"that will not speak to me? |
4928 | What wilt thou more? |
4928 | What work art thou upon? |
4928 | What wouldst thou with Arthur? |
4928 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Baldur?" |
4928 | Whence came these stories? 4928 Where are my pages and my servants? |
4928 | Where is Cuchulain? |
4928 | Where is he that seeks my daughter? 4928 Where is the Earl Ynywl,"said Geraint,"and his wife and his daughter?" |
4928 | Where,said she,"are thy companion and thy dogs?" |
4928 | Wherefore came she to me? |
4928 | Wherefore comes he? |
4928 | Wherefore not? |
4928 | Wherefore not? |
4928 | Wherefore wilt thou not? |
4928 | Wherefore,said Evnissyen,"comes not my nephew, the son of my sister, unto me? |
4928 | Which way went they hence? |
4928 | Who is the loser now? |
4928 | Who may he be? |
4928 | Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the goddess? 4928 Whose are the sheep that thou dost keep, and to whom does yonder castle belong?" |
4928 | Why dost thou ask my name? |
4928 | Why should I not prove adventures? |
4928 | Why should you wish to behold me? |
4928 | Why withdrawest thou, false traitor? |
4928 | Why, who is he? |
4928 | Why,said Sir Lionel,"will ye stay me? |
4928 | Why? |
4928 | Will nothing satisfy you but my life? |
4928 | Will she come here if she is sent to? |
4928 | Will this please thee? |
4928 | Willest thou this, lord? |
4928 | Wilt thou follow my counsel,said the youth,"and take thy meal from me?" |
4928 | Wilt thou follow the counsel of another? |
4928 | Yes, in truth,said she;"and who art thou?" |
4928 | ''What hope for us,''resumed the king,''if he brings with him a greater host than that?'' |
4928 | ''Why do you refuse me water?'' |
4928 | A prince of the house of Guienne, must he not blush at the cowardly abandonment of the faith of his fathers?" |
4928 | Aeneas, horror- struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose punishments produced the sounds he heard? |
4928 | Aeneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
4928 | After having disobeyed my mother''s commands and made you my wife, will you think me a monster and cut off my head? |
4928 | Ah, noble sir,"he added,"tell me, I beseech you, of what country and race you come?" |
4928 | Alcinous says to Ulysses:"Say from what city, from what regions tossed, And what inhabitants those regions boast? |
4928 | And Arthur said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4928 | And Gawain was much grieved to see Arthur in his state, and he questioned him, saying,"O my lord, what has befallen thee?" |
4928 | And Gwernach said to him,"O man, is it true that is reported of thee, that thou knowest how to burnish swords?" |
4928 | And Kilwich said to Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is thy daughter mine now?" |
4928 | And Sir Launcelot heard him say,"O sweet Lord, when shall this sorrow leave me, and when shall the holy vessel come by me whereby I shall be healed?" |
4928 | And after twenty- four days he opened his eyes; and when he saw folk he made great sorrow, and said,"Why have ye wakened me? |
4928 | And as they came in, every one of Pwyll''s knights struck a blow upon the bag, and asked,"What is here?" |
4928 | And can any other woman dare more than I? |
4928 | And his father inquired of him,"What has come over thee, my son, and what aileth thee?" |
4928 | And is Lorenzo''s salamander- heart Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?" |
4928 | And now, wilt thou come to guide me out of the town?" |
4928 | And shall I let you go into such danger alone? |
4928 | And share with him-- the unforgiven-- His vulture and his rock?" |
4928 | And the earl said to Enid,"Alas, lady, what hath befallen thee?" |
4928 | And the maiden bent down towards her, and said,"What aileth thee, that thou answereth no one to- day?" |
4928 | And the queen said,"Ah, dear brother, why have ye tarried so long? |
4928 | And the woman asked them,"Upon what errand come you here?" |
4928 | And then he said to the man,"Canst thou tell me the way to some chapel, where I may bury this body?" |
4928 | And they spoke unto him, and said,"O man, whose castle is that?" |
4928 | And they went up to the mound whereon the herdsman was, and they said to him,"How dost thou fare, herdsman?" |
4928 | And thinking that he knew him, he inquired of him,"Art thou Edeyrn, the son of Nudd?" |
4928 | And what cowardice makes thee sink under this last danger who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy former?" |
4928 | And what is it, pray, that brings you into these parts? |
4928 | And what work art thou upon, lord?" |
4928 | And what, lord, art thou doing?" |
4928 | And when meat was ended, Pwyll said,"Where are the hosts that went yesterday to the top of the mound?" |
4928 | And whence dost thou come, scholar?" |
4928 | And who will proceed with thee, since thou art not strong enough to traverse the land of Loegyr alone?" |
4928 | And with this they put questions one to another, Who had braver men? |
4928 | And ye also, who are ye?" |
4928 | And, by the way, pray tell me, are you not that Orlando who makes such a noise in the world? |
4928 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
4928 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
4928 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
4928 | Asked Gwyddno,"Art thou able to speak, and thou so little?" |
4928 | Bethink thee how thou art a king''s son, and a knight of the Table Round, and how thou art about to dishonor all knighthood and thyself?" |
4928 | Bradamante, addressing the host, said,"Could you furnish me a guide to conduct me to the castle of this enchanter?" |
4928 | But Alardo said,"Brother, let Bayard live a little longer; who knows what God may do for us?" |
4928 | But Psyche said,"Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? |
4928 | But a voice from the tower said to her,"Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy days in so dreadful a manner? |
4928 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4928 | But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? |
4928 | But how? |
4928 | But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to deserve such a fate? |
4928 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4928 | But shall he then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? |
4928 | But tell me, pilgrim, who is that man who stands beside you?" |
4928 | But what has become of my glove?" |
4928 | But what if I offer him to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
4928 | But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feast? |
4928 | But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster? |
4928 | But why ask the gods to do it? |
4928 | But, O fair nephew, what be these ladies that hither be come with you?" |
4928 | Byron also employs the same allusion, in his"Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte":"Or, like the thief of fire from heaven, Wilt thou withstand the shock? |
4928 | Can they be mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse of silent forms be living beings? |
4928 | Could you keep your course while the sphere was revolving under you? |
4928 | Crying out,"What are the emperor''s engagements to me?" |
4928 | Cupid, beholding her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and said,"O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? |
4928 | Death seems his only remedy; but how to die? |
4928 | Did he fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? |
4928 | Do I indeed behold a chevalier of my own country, after fifteen years passed in this desert without seeing the face of a fellow- countryman?" |
4928 | Do you ask me for a proof that you are sprung from my blood? |
4928 | Do you ask me why?" |
4928 | Do you forget the battle of Albracca, and how, in your defence, I fought single- handed against Agrican and all his knights?" |
4928 | Do you not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
4928 | Do you prefer to rob me of my ring rather than receive it as a gift? |
4928 | Does she ever come hither, so that she may be seen?" |
4928 | Dost thou bring any new tidings?" |
4928 | Dost thou not know that the shower to- day has left in my dominions neither man nor beast alive that was exposed to it?'' |
4928 | Dying now a second time, she yet can not reproach her husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her? |
4928 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied,"Would you, then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? |
4928 | For how could Achilles require the aid of celestial armor if be were invulnerable?] |
4928 | Had I imagined that this hard bark covered a being possessed of feeling, could I have exposed such a beautiful myrtle to the insults of this steed? |
4928 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
4928 | Has earth no more Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?" |
4928 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
4928 | Have I not cause for pride? |
4928 | Have they a foundation in truth or are they simply dreams of the imagination?" |
4928 | Have you learned to feel easy in the absence of Halcyone? |
4928 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
4928 | He said to his mother,"Mother, what are those yonder?" |
4928 | He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said,"If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" |
4928 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
4928 | He was loath to give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a simple heifer? |
4928 | He, starting from his sleep, cried out,"My daughters, what are you doing? |
4928 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
4928 | His father cried,"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?" |
4928 | How can we describe the conflict that agitated the heart of Tristram? |
4928 | How could he suspect that falsehood and treason veiled themselves under smiles and the ingenuous air of truth? |
4928 | How could you fly from a single arm and think to escape?" |
4928 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
4928 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
4928 | I am a poor man, have you not something to give me?" |
4928 | I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life? |
4928 | I think we shall be conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war? |
4928 | I value not life compared with honor, and if I did, do you suppose, dear friend, that I could live without you? |
4928 | If you can not defend them against me, how pray will you do so when Orlando challenges them?" |
4928 | Is it for this that I have supplied herbage for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars? |
4928 | Is it of those who are to conduct Geraint to his country?" |
4928 | Is it treachery to punish affronts like these? |
4928 | Is it well for thee to mourn after that good man, or for anything else that thou canst not have?" |
4928 | Is this the reward of my fertility, of my obedient service? |
4928 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair?" |
4928 | Just then came along some country people, who said to one another,"Look, is not that the great horse Bayard that Rinaldo rides? |
4928 | Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said,"Do you recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? |
4928 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
4928 | My lord,"he added,"will it be displeasing to thee if I ask whence thou comest also?" |
4928 | Next follow some moral triads:"Hast thou heard what Dremhidydd sung, An ancient watchman on the castle walls? |
4928 | Nisus said to his friend,"Do you perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
4928 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
4928 | Or have you rather come to see your sick husband, yet laid up of the wound given him by his loving wife? |
4928 | Out upon the wharfs they came, Knight and burgher, lord and dame, And round the prow they read her name,''The Lady of Shalott''"Who is this? |
4928 | Rinaldo replied,"Are you making sport of me? |
4928 | Rogero exclaimed as he came near,"What cruel hands, what barbarous soul, what fatal chance can have loaded thee with those chains?" |
4928 | Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to discover himself and make his wants known? |
4928 | Said Gurhyr Gwalstat,"Is there a porter?" |
4928 | Said Gurhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
4928 | Said Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
4928 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon, the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
4928 | Seeing the prince Orlando, one said to the rest,"What bird is this we have caught, without even setting a snare for him?" |
4928 | Shaking her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed,"Am I then to be eclipsed in my honors by a mortal girl? |
4928 | Shall I for the horse''s life provoke the anger of the king again?" |
4928 | Shall I trust Aeneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
4928 | Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son, while the house of Thestius is desolate? |
4928 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4928 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
4928 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out,"What''s the matter? |
4928 | So desperate was he that he took off his armor and his spurs, saying,"What need have I of these, since Bayard is lost?" |
4928 | So the porter went in, and Gwernach said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4928 | Spoke the youth:"Is there a porter?" |
4928 | Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she exclaims,"O dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?" |
4928 | Struck with the ingratitude which could thus recompense his services, he exclaimed:"Thankless beauty, is this then the reward you make me? |
4928 | Suppose I should lend you the chariot, what would you do? |
4928 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is that which in the morning gees on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
4928 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
4928 | The dwarf, approaching Huon, said, in a sweet voice, and in Huon''s own language,"Duke of Guienne, why do you shun me? |
4928 | The king said to Malagigi,"Friend, where did you get that beautiful cup?" |
4928 | The old man took the spurs, and put them into his sack, and said,"Noble sir, have you nothing else you can give me?" |
4928 | The parents consent( how could they hesitate?) |
4928 | The traitor smiled at seeing her thus suspended, and, asking her in mockery,"Are you a good leaper?" |
4928 | The voice said,''Why do you fly, Arethusa? |
4928 | Then Guenever said to Arthur,"Wilt thou permit me, lord, to go to- morrow to see and hear the hunt of the stag of which the young man spoke?" |
4928 | Then Sir Tristram cried out and said,"Thou coward knight, why wilt thou not do battle with me? |
4928 | Then a third time he said to Rinaldo,"Sir, have you nothing left to give me that I may remember you in my prayers?" |
4928 | Then at noon came a damsel unto him with his dinner, and asked him,"What cheer?" |
4928 | Then cried Sir Colgrevance,"Ah, Sir Bohort, why come ye not to bring me out of peril of death, wherein I have put me to succor you?" |
4928 | Then he asked of Geraint,"Have I thy permission to go and converse with yonder maiden, for I see that she is apart from thee?" |
4928 | Then he cried:"Ah, my lord Arthur, will ye leave me here alone among mine enemies?" |
4928 | Then he overtook a man clothed in a religious clothing, who said,"Sir Knight, what seek ye?" |
4928 | Then he said to the other,"And what is the cause of thy grief?" |
4928 | Then said Arthur,"Which of the marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4928 | Then said Perceval,"Tell me, is Sir Kay in Arthur''s court?" |
4928 | Then said the good man,"Now wottest thou who I am?" |
4928 | Then said the steward of the household,"Whither is it right, lord, to order the maiden?" |
4928 | Then the hoary- headed man said to him,"Young man, wherefore art thou thoughtful?" |
4928 | Then they took counsel, and said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4928 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
4928 | Think not to avoid it by shutting your eyes, for how then will you be able to avoid his blows, and make him feel your own? |
4928 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
4928 | This is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:"You have the letters Cadmus gave, Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
4928 | To what new miseries do you doom me? |
4928 | To which question the river- god replied as follows:"Who likes to tell of his defeats? |
4928 | To whom do these ships belong, and who is the chief amongst you?" |
4928 | Tristram believed it was certain death for him to return to Ireland; and how could he act as ambassador for his uncle in such a cause? |
4928 | Was it not clear that Providence led him on, and cleared the way for his happy success? |
4928 | Were you ever in love? |
4928 | What advantage have you derived from all your high deserts? |
4928 | What could Jupiter do? |
4928 | What evil have I done to thee that thou shouldst act towards me and my possessions as thou hast this day? |
4928 | What has become of them?" |
4928 | What have I done that you should treat me so? |
4928 | What have the cranes to do with him?" |
4928 | What is the good of a gentleman''s poring all day over a book? |
4928 | What is this fighting about? |
4928 | What shall he do? |
4928 | What shall he do?--go home to seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? |
4928 | What should he do? |
4928 | When Enid saw this, she cried out, saying,"O chieftain, whoever thou art, what renown wilt thou gain by slaying a dead man?" |
4928 | When wilt thou that I should present to thee the chieftain who has come with me hither?" |
4928 | Where are my attendants? |
4928 | Where are you going to carry me?'' |
4928 | Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? |
4928 | Where is that love of me that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? |
4928 | While they hesitate, Laocoon, the priest of Neptune exclaims,"What madness, citizens, is this? |
4928 | Who brought me here? |
4928 | Who could have believed that you would become the slave of a base enchantress? |
4928 | Who had fairer or swifter horses or greyhounds? |
4928 | Who had more skilful or wiser bards than Maelgan? |
4928 | Who lived when thou wast such? |
4928 | Why do you hang round my neck and still entreat me? |
4928 | Why hast thou murdered this Duchess? |
4928 | Why have you thought evil of me? |
4928 | Why hidest thou thyself within holes and walls like a coward? |
4928 | Why should Latona be honored with worship, and none be paid to me? |
4928 | Why should any one hereafter tremble at the thought of offending Juno, when such rewards are the consequence of my displeasure? |
4928 | Why should he alone escape? |
4928 | Why tarry the horses of Rinaldo and Ricciardetto? |
4928 | Why will you not take a lesson from the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one? |
4928 | Why, therefore, should either of us perish? |
4928 | Will any one deny this? |
4928 | Will you insure me this, as ye be a true knight?" |
4928 | Will you kill your father?" |
4928 | Will you now turn back, now you are so far advanced upon your journey? |
4928 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
4928 | Wilt thou shame thyself? |
4928 | Would you rather have me away?" |
4928 | Yet can ye relieve my grief? |
4928 | Yet what could be done against foes without number? |
4928 | Yet where is your triumph? |
4928 | You surround him, and who receives tribute then?" |
4928 | a chiding voice was heard of one approaching me and saying:''O knight, what has brought thee hither? |
4928 | and what is here? |
4928 | asked the king,"and will he come to the land?" |
4928 | could not verse immortal save That breast imbued with such immortal fire? |
4928 | couldst thou so one moment be, From her who so much loveth thee?" |
4928 | darest thou maintain in arms the lie thou hast uttered?" |
4928 | did he say?" |
4928 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
4928 | exclaimed Bradamante,"what can be the cause of this sudden alarm?" |
4928 | exclaimed Rinaldo,"do you make me your sport?" |
4928 | exclaimed he,"how could I, dear Medoro, so forget myself as to consult my own safety without heeding yours?" |
4928 | hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts?" |
4928 | haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die?" |
4928 | have you any wish ungratified? |
4928 | he exclaimed,"do you dare to insult me at my own table? |
4928 | he exclaimed,"was there ever such a resemblance? |
4928 | he said;"have you any doubt of my love? |
4928 | how can you foresee his fate when you could not foresee your own? |
4928 | inquired Malagigi;"and what is to come of it?" |
4928 | master, how can I do that? |
4928 | my dear nephew,"exclaimed the Holy Father,"what harder penance could I impose than the Emperor has already done? |
4928 | said Aeneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
4928 | said Arthur,"what hast thou done, Merlin? |
4928 | said Arthur;"and whence do you come?" |
4928 | said Geraint,"how is it that thou hast lost them now?" |
4928 | said Geraint;"and whence dost thou come?" |
4928 | said Rhiannon,"wherefore didst thou give that answer?" |
4928 | said Sir Launcelot,"why have ye betrayed me?" |
4928 | said Sir Tristram,"what have I done? |
4928 | said Sir Tristram;"art thou not Sir Palamedes?" |
4928 | said he,"is it Geraint?" |
4928 | said he;"have you any news?" |
4928 | said the Abbot of Cluny;"slaughter a Saracen prince without first offering him baptism?" |
4928 | said the pilgrim;"is Bayard there?" |
4928 | said they;"what is the mountain that is seen by the side of the ships?" |
4928 | she cried;"whither do you fly? |
4928 | the cause? |
4928 | through a marble wilderness? |
4928 | to what deed am I borne along? |
4928 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise; What was thy pity''s recompense? |
4928 | was then the rumor true that you had perished? |
4928 | was this the end to which old quarrels were made up?" |
4928 | what availed it you to possess so many virtues and such fame? |
4928 | what will he profit thee?" |
4928 | who hath proven him King Uther''s son? |
4928 | why hast thou slain my husband?" |
4928 | why should I fear his rage? |
56036 | ''Member young Frank Coales-- old Henry Coales''son? 56036 A message from-- Almer to me?" |
56036 | A message? |
56036 | A room, sir? |
56036 | Afraid that Captain Cavendish might be as vile a deceiver as Woodhouse? 56036 Afraid that, after all, it was n''t true?" |
56036 | After these months of hand to mouth and begging for a nasty pint of ale in a common pub-- leave good wine when it''s right under my nose? 56036 Ah, from Egypt, Captain? |
56036 | Ah, so? |
56036 | Ah, yes, a rather good likeness, eh, Major? |
56036 | All these questions-- aren''t they rather absurd? 56036 And I suppose I locked the door to Lady Crandall''s room and my door?" |
56036 | And if I refuse----"Why should you? |
56036 | And now that we are properly introduced,Jaimihr began, with a sardonic smile,"may I venture a criticism? |
56036 | And the general''s door was locked? |
56036 | And these? |
56036 | And what you know about the Brussels shop you want to sell to the-- Wilhelmstrasse? |
56036 | And you came here to save Gibraltar-- and the fleet from German spies? |
56036 | And you have a temperature on arising? 56036 And you kept your promise?" |
56036 | Any trouble? |
56036 | Anybody who''d carry two watches around----"Two watches? |
56036 | Are n''t you just a bit-- ah-- nervous to be over in this part of the world-- alone? |
56036 | Are you really, General Crandall? |
56036 | At the corner of the warehouse near the docks, where it is dark-- he was going early to the_ Princess Mary_, and----"Yes, a tap on the head-- so? |
56036 | Beg pardon, but can I be of any help? |
56036 | Blackmail? 56036 But Woodhouse; you have arranged a way to have him drop out of sight before the_ Princess Mary_ sails? |
56036 | But was there no other reason except just humanity to prompt you? |
56036 | But what do you think, General? 56036 But what is your plan, Doctor? |
56036 | But why should I worry about coming over alone? |
56036 | But, Louisa--again the whine--"how do I know you''re what you say? |
56036 | By George, General, why not try him on Lady Evelyn? 56036 By gad, working with Woodhouse all the time, eh? |
56036 | Capper-- never heard the name in Alexandria, eh? |
56036 | Captain Woodhouse will report for signal duty on the Rock to- morrow, I suppose? |
56036 | Did you ask me to listen? 56036 Do n''t you think everybody is suffering from a bad dream when they say there''s to be fighting?" |
56036 | Do you happen to recall this chap Woodhouse whom I sent to you to report for duty in the signal tower to- day? 56036 Do you make a practise of consulting a-- friend with a revolver at your hip?" |
56036 | Everything is all right? |
56036 | Everything quiet on the upper Nile? 56036 Fritz, the barber, lives here, does he not?" |
56036 | From Paris by motor, eh? 56036 Have n''t forgotten him, General? |
56036 | Have you any money? |
56036 | Have you anything to report? |
56036 | Have you determined the sum you want or are you in the open market? |
56036 | Have you seen Captain Woodhouse, General? |
56036 | Have you thought of catching a boat at Gibraltar? |
56036 | He did, eh? 56036 He showed you his number-- his ticket, then?" |
56036 | Henry Sherman, do you think Kitty ought to see this sort of thing? 56036 How can you joke when we''re in such a fix? |
56036 | How could I, when this is the first time Captain Woodhouse has been out of Egypt for years? |
56036 | How did you come into the room-- when you found me here? |
56036 | How did you know I was to report for signal duty here? |
56036 | How do you know I met him before? |
56036 | How will the madness end, Captain Woodhouse? 56036 I beg your pardon, but are n''t you mistaken?" |
56036 | I discharge a duty-- for you? |
56036 | I''ve been away from the drink so long that----"Where do you want to go? |
56036 | If somehow this Capper should get through to Alexandria, would n''t that make it somewhat embarrassing for me? |
56036 | In yesterday on the_ Princess Mary_, I presume, Captain? |
56036 | Indeed? |
56036 | Involved you? |
56036 | Is it likely I should fail you this time, General Sahib, when so many times I have succeeded? |
56036 | Is it that they have ceased to teach discretion-- at the Wilhelmstrasse? |
56036 | Is n''t it too bad this soldier person is n''t married, so he could appreciate these beauties? |
56036 | Is n''t that a bit sudden? 56036 Is that not correct?" |
56036 | Is this a fortress or a hotel? |
56036 | Is this-- ah, customary? |
56036 | It is----"Say, proprietor; you do n''t charge for advice, do you? |
56036 | Little bit discriminating that way, eh? 56036 Lose me?" |
56036 | May I go further-- and ask you to-- promise? |
56036 | Mistaken? |
56036 | Nervous, jerky way of talking-- fingers to his mouth, as if to feel his words as they come out-- brandy or wine breath? 56036 No card? |
56036 | Now what are they all doing out there? |
56036 | Oh, sha n''t I? 56036 Oh, you wo n''t, wo n''t you? |
56036 | One moment-- before he leaves the room let me tell you he lies? 56036 Our man, Doctor?" |
56036 | Pardon me, Doctor Koch; did you get this fellow''s name? |
56036 | Plans of what? |
56036 | Ready, Captain? |
56036 | Remember, father, that gentleman I mistook for Albert Downs, back home, that night we saw that-- er-- wicked performance? |
56036 | Report for signal duty? |
56036 | Roses, eh? 56036 Seemed all right to you-- this Woodhouse?" |
56036 | Selling you out? |
56036 | Shall you be long on the Rock? |
56036 | She seemed rather glad to see you again; I----"Really? |
56036 | Shops, did you say? |
56036 | Signal service; that means the army? |
56036 | So, a friend-- a friend in Berlin told you to consult me, eh? 56036 So? |
56036 | So? 56036 So?" |
56036 | Tell me, Miss Gerson, when will you be through with your work in Paris, and on your way back to America? |
56036 | That you, Bishop? 56036 That young man, General Crandall, the one Sergeant Crosby was to escort out of the lines to Algeciras----""Well, what of him? |
56036 | The utmost discretion-- you understand? |
56036 | Then I take it you''ve put a trailer on the girl? |
56036 | Then I will hear from you as to the time and route of departure for Alexandria? |
56036 | Then why--Jane''s voice quavered almost to a shriek--"why had I failed to lock the double doors-- the doors through which you came?" |
56036 | Then you engineered the stealing of my number-- from the hollow under the handle of my cane-- some time between Paris and Alexandria? |
56036 | Then you wo n''t tell me what I want to know? |
56036 | Then you''ve never bought a Worth? |
56036 | This afternoon? 56036 This man Jaimihr-- he is thoroughly dependable?" |
56036 | Threat, General? |
56036 | Trouble? |
56036 | Until when? |
56036 | War? |
56036 | Was he an undersized man, very thin, sparse hair, and a face showing dissipation? |
56036 | Was the sun, then, too hot to bermit you to come to my house during regular office hours? 56036 We?" |
56036 | Well, Jaimihr,Crandall briskly addressed the servant,"have you completed the errand I sent you on?" |
56036 | Well, Willy, it would be too bad if you had to go back to Kewanee after your many years in Paris, France; now, would n''t it? |
56036 | Were you, General? 56036 What about it?" |
56036 | What are you doing at that safe, Jaimihr Khan? |
56036 | What are you going to do with this young lady, sir? |
56036 | What can I do? |
56036 | What can you say? 56036 What do I mean? |
56036 | What do you mean by''we''? |
56036 | What do you mean? |
56036 | What do you propose to do-- with those plans? |
56036 | What do you think, General? 56036 What explanation do you want?" |
56036 | What happened? |
56036 | What is all this? |
56036 | What is it you want to know, General Crandall? |
56036 | What should I do? |
56036 | What the devil are you doing? |
56036 | What the devil is this? |
56036 | What was Woodhouse doing at the Splendide? |
56036 | What''s this got to do with----"Did you lock the general''s door? |
56036 | What''s this-- what''s this? |
56036 | What-- what have you done? |
56036 | When did you meet Woodhouse before-- and where? |
56036 | When this war is over, if I am alive,he was saying rapturously,"may I come to America for you? |
56036 | Where are you going? |
56036 | Where are you going? |
56036 | Who am I? |
56036 | Who are you-- and what are you doing in Gib? |
56036 | Who told you that? |
56036 | Who-- who the devil are you, sir? |
56036 | Why me? |
56036 | Why not joke, mother? 56036 Why not?" |
56036 | Why, George, dear, how could she? 56036 Why,"he hissed,"why did you give me a number with the Wilhelmstrasse and send me to Alexandria if I was to be caught and shot at Malta? |
56036 | Will you be my teacher? 56036 With a number-- the number expected?" |
56036 | Woodhouse, eh? 56036 Would I be likely to forget?" |
56036 | Would n''t I, though? 56036 Yes, but how to get to Room D?" |
56036 | You are, of course, off duty? |
56036 | You do not answer in German; why not? 56036 You expected to find a friend, then?" |
56036 | You go direct to the_ Princess Mary_? |
56036 | You have n''t got a cable through regarding her? |
56036 | You know that Doeuillet evening gown-- the one in blue? 56036 You mean Bishop? |
56036 | You mean Craigen''s wife? |
56036 | You really are very anxious to sail, Miss Gerson? |
56036 | You say you are sleepless at night? |
56036 | You see, mother? 56036 You want to go to Paris, eh?" |
56036 | You will go to your room now? |
56036 | You will not be followed? |
56036 | You''re going to slip me some bank- notes to- night-- right now, are n''t you, Louisa, old pal? |
56036 | You''re not with the Brussels secret- service people any longer, then? |
56036 | You-- don''t think this is a shade too young for me, Miss Gerson? |
56036 | Your journey here from your station on the Nile-- it was without incident? |
56036 | Your name? |
56036 | _ Wagon- lit?_She caught a familiar word. |
56036 | ''Wedded, But Not a Missis''; would n''t that be a perfectly gorgeous title for a Laura Jean novel? |
56036 | ... General Crandall speaking.... Bishop, you were here on the Rock seven years ago? |
56036 | Almer seemed satisfied, but raised another point:"But the girl who has just left here; am I to have no explanation of her?" |
56036 | And Bishop? |
56036 | And Major Bishop-- where is he? |
56036 | And now where was she? |
56036 | And what do we find? |
56036 | And what happens? |
56036 | And where?" |
56036 | And, of course, if I should fall down----""Fall down?" |
56036 | And-- well--"And this Hildebrand, he sends you over here alone just to buy pretties for New York''s wonderful women?" |
56036 | And_ il dit''deux troncs''_; now you ca n''t go behind that, can you? |
56036 | Besides-- who was it went with Bishop down the Rock after the dinner to- night? |
56036 | Bishop pushed the inquisition another step:"Did you happen to be present, Captain, at the farewell dinner we gave little Billy Barnes? |
56036 | Bishop? |
56036 | But have you considered what you would do-- how you would get back to America in case of-- war?" |
56036 | But we come out all right, did n''t we?" |
56036 | But why----""Has Miss Gerson seen him since?" |
56036 | But you, Miss Gerson-- you''ve been to Egypt, you say?" |
56036 | But you----""You wish me to give this to Captain Woodhouse?" |
56036 | But, George, dear, is n''t that-- aren''t you-- ah-- rushing this young man to have him up to Government House so soon after his arrival?" |
56036 | But, honestly, is n''t this a bit low for a staid middle- aged person like myself? |
56036 | But-- um-- aren''t you a bit-- mild; this asking of a suspected spy to tea?" |
56036 | CHAPTER IX ROOM D Woodhouse hurried to Jane Gerson''s side and began to speak swiftly and earnestly:"You are from the States?" |
56036 | Ca n''t you guess who he was?" |
56036 | Ca n''t you see you''re wrong?" |
56036 | Ca n''t you understand when I speak your language?" |
56036 | Capper leaned far over the desk, and began in an eager whisper:"General, remember Cook-- that chap in Rangoon-- the polo player?" |
56036 | Captain, do you happen to remember the major? |
56036 | Come, now; in your capacity as temporary executrix will you invest one of the captain''s cigarettes in a demand of real charity?" |
56036 | Could it be that behind his serious eyes, now frankly telling her what she dared not let herself read in them, lay duplicity and a spy''s cunning? |
56036 | Could n''t do more than that-- what? |
56036 | Could there now be any doubt of what she felt to be the truth? |
56036 | Could this little American ever know, or believe, that some sorts of service were honorable? |
56036 | Did Louisa go further and list him in the Wilhelmstrasse out of the goodness of her heart, or for old memory''s sake? |
56036 | Did n''t he think Rameses and all those other old Pharaohs had the right idea in advertising-- putting up stone billboards to last all time? |
56036 | Do n''t recognize the second- cabin passengers aboard the_ Princess Mary_, eh?" |
56036 | Do n''t you agree, Helen?" |
56036 | Do n''t you have a great deal of trouble with spies in your army in war time? |
56036 | Do n''t you know a Worth gown when you see it? |
56036 | Do you sail in the morning-- or not?" |
56036 | Do you wonder I try to forget our native tongue?" |
56036 | Does Cavendish have to prove himself all over again, little girl?" |
56036 | Eh?" |
56036 | Fancy little girl, eh? |
56036 | Find him in the barber shop, eh?" |
56036 | Flirting with poor old George-- pinning a rose on my revered husband when my back''s turned? |
56036 | For his information regarding the Anglo- Belgian understanding? |
56036 | Friend Billy Capper, of Brussels, has a touch of the spy fever himself, and distrusts an old pal?" |
56036 | General Crandall exploded irritably:"What the devil do you mean? |
56036 | General Crandall folded his arms on his desk and went direct to his subject:"Major, you were here on the Rock seven years ago, you say?" |
56036 | Germans not tinkering with the Mullah yet to start insurrection or anything like that?" |
56036 | Good lord, girl; ca n''t you see how he''s using you?" |
56036 | Had it been fair of him when he so glibly practised a deception on her? |
56036 | Had n''t he been ready to deliver the goods? |
56036 | Have n''t I been Josepha, the cigar girl, to every Tommy in the garrison for nearly a year? |
56036 | Have n''t I had that told me a thousand times these last few days?" |
56036 | Have you recognized it, Captain?" |
56036 | He knows something?" |
56036 | He persisted:"This war means nothing to you-- one side or the other?" |
56036 | His mind willed murder-- willed it with all the strength of hate; but still the springs of his body were cramped-- by what? |
56036 | How could he turn it to the desire of his heart? |
56036 | How is it there?" |
56036 | How long before you made up your mind you had a grievance?" |
56036 | How many widows will curse when they hear his name? |
56036 | I am not presuming?" |
56036 | I say, do you think Miss Gerson and this Captain Woodhouse had met somewhere before last night?" |
56036 | If I may suggest, is n''t it about time that you explain this-- this melodrama?" |
56036 | If she knew what his present business was, would she understand; would she approve? |
56036 | In Paris, caught in its hysteria of patriotism and darkling fear of what the morrow would bring forth? |
56036 | Is all well with you? |
56036 | Is anything wrong?" |
56036 | Is there anything more to be said except that we must keep a close watch on him?" |
56036 | Jane Gerson was bidding him good night when he interrupted, somewhat gruffly:"Well, young woman, have you made up your mind? |
56036 | May I ask what you want this time-- besides money, of course?" |
56036 | Natives think no more of it than they would of a water fly''s bite; but the white man is----""A virus of some kind?" |
56036 | Never heard the name-- in Alexandria; what?" |
56036 | Nineteen- seven, eh? |
56036 | Now is n''t that a perfect dear of an afternoon gown? |
56036 | Now, Bishop, what do you remember about nineteen- seven-- something we can lead up to in conversation, you know?" |
56036 | One pull of the switches in Room D-- and where will England''s great fleet be then?" |
56036 | Or had she started for England, and become wedged in the jam of terrified thousands battling for place on the Channel steamers? |
56036 | Paul Poiret-- Worth-- Paquin; you''ve heard of those wonderful people, of course?" |
56036 | Perhaps----""You fear the English agents? |
56036 | Pretty good memory for names and faces, eh? |
56036 | Remember her, do n''t you?" |
56036 | Remember that, General?" |
56036 | Remember what that hotel man said last night about careless remarks about military things on the Rock? |
56036 | Safe as safe could be had been that little square of paper Louisa had given him with his expense money, from the day he left Berlin until-- when? |
56036 | Said he:"But Woodhouse-- this British captain who''s being transferred from the Nile country to the Rock; has he ever served there before? |
56036 | See that hotel keeper lose his temper and tongue- lash that poor girl? |
56036 | See that lovely basque effect? |
56036 | Sherman?" |
56036 | Silence between them for a minute, broken by the captain:"Our friends at Gib-- who are they, and how will I know them?" |
56036 | Since when have men who come from the Wilhelmstrasse allowed themselves to make love in drawing- rooms?" |
56036 | Sir George, affecting a gruff geniality, launched a question:"Rock look familiar to you, Captain?" |
56036 | So Captain Woodhouse had begun to play the game-- going to report to the governor, eh? |
56036 | So old Koch was taking precautions, eh? |
56036 | So you finally did discover that you were elected to be the goat? |
56036 | Sort of thrills a chap, eh?" |
56036 | Surely you would not desire that a friend-- a veree dear friend----""Who do you mean?" |
56036 | That''s fair?" |
56036 | Then aloud:"On the_ Princess Mary_, you say?" |
56036 | Then to Jane----"Where are you taking all these wonderful gowns?" |
56036 | Then, to Almer:"I say, can you split a crown?" |
56036 | There will be no confusion-- no slip- up?" |
56036 | They will ask questions-- perhaps arrest----""Me? |
56036 | This old Rock is one of them; eh, Bishop?" |
56036 | Understand?" |
56036 | Was it possible Jane Gerson ever had a thought for Captain Woodhouse? |
56036 | Was she any better off dressed than thrashing in the bed? |
56036 | Well, Capper, for one, could hardly blame him; who would n''t, under the circumstances? |
56036 | What are you driving at, man?" |
56036 | What could he mean by that if not that somehow the little ferret had learned of his visit to the home of Doctor Koch? |
56036 | What d''you think of that for a quick change? |
56036 | What did she think of him? |
56036 | What is she?" |
56036 | What need to become excited?" |
56036 | What of that?" |
56036 | What station?" |
56036 | What to do next? |
56036 | What was Egypt like; who owned the Pyramids, and why did n''t the owners plant a park around them and charge admittance? |
56036 | What will be the boundary lines of Europe''s nations in-- say, 1932?" |
56036 | What would Albert Downs be doing in Berlin?" |
56036 | What year is it, then, you die?" |
56036 | What''s that?" |
56036 | What, may I ask, do you have to do for-- ah-- Pop Hildebrand?" |
56036 | What?" |
56036 | When his companion had disappeared, he stepped to the door and cautiously asked:"Who knocks?" |
56036 | When is the first boat out for Gibraltar?" |
56036 | Where is that other trunk?" |
56036 | Where_ did_ you learn your French, anyway? |
56036 | Who did that?" |
56036 | Who is she? |
56036 | Who knows? |
56036 | Who will dare stop me?" |
56036 | Why did Brussels let you go?" |
56036 | Why did his eyes constantly stray to that white hand lifted to allow the fingers to play with the filigree of wood on the mirror support? |
56036 | Why did you get that message through to me to meet you here in the Café Riche to- night if you did not trust me? |
56036 | Why not?" |
56036 | Will the lady be with us long?" |
56036 | Will you-- wait?" |
56036 | Without turning his eyes from the two he guarded, Jaimihr asked:"Who is it?" |
56036 | Would she lock her lips and see a man walk blindfolded to his death? |
56036 | Would she speak-- and betray General Crandall, her kindly host? |
56036 | Yes-- yes, who is this? |
56036 | You are a gallant man, my General; is it not so? |
56036 | You have that? |
56036 | You were aboard the_ Princess Mary_, then?" |
56036 | You will pardon?" |
56036 | You wo n''t refuse to drink with me to my good luck that''s coming?" |
56036 | Your number, then?" |
56036 | [ Illustration:"Have n''t I been Josepha for nearly a year?"] |
56036 | [ Illustration:"Who are you?" |
56036 | _ Ou est l''autre?_"The grinning customs guard lifted his shoulders to his ears and spread out his palms. |
56036 | she commanded; then in complaint to Jane:"Now where do you suppose that husband of mine went? |
8920 | ''Tis good,the Sage rejoined,"Most noble Prince, If these thou know''st, needs it that I should teach The mensuration of the lineal?" |
8920 | And none can say,` I sleep Happy and whole tonight, and so shall wake''? |
8920 | And the end of many aches, Which come unseen, and will come when they come, Is this, a broken body and sad mind, And so old age? |
8920 | But by what road Wendeth my Lord? |
8920 | But,spake he to the herdsmen,"wherefore, friends, Drive ye the flocks adown under high noon, Since''t is at evening that men fold their sheep?" |
8920 | Come such ills unobserved? |
8920 | Die? |
8920 | In this,he said,"That happy earth they brought me forth to see? |
8920 | Is there a gift for me? |
8920 | Most honored,spake again the charioteer,"Bethink thee of their woe whose bliss thou art-- How shalt thou help them, first undoing them?" |
8920 | Then all men live in fear? |
8920 | What power superior draws us from our flight? |
8920 | What would my Lord? |
8920 | Wherefore thus Bowest thou, Brother? |
8920 | ''How could love Leave what it loved?'' |
8920 | Am I not she thou lovedst?" |
8920 | And light and kind these men that are not kings, And sweet my sisters here, who toil and tend; What have I done for these to make them thus? |
8920 | And she would ask,"What ails my Lord?" |
8920 | Are men born sometimes thus? |
8920 | Ask of the sick, the mourners, ask of him Who tottereth on his staff, lone and forlorn,"Liketh thee life?" |
8920 | But Buddh said,"What is it thou dost bring me?" |
8920 | But didst thou find The seed?" |
8920 | But most the women gathering in the doors Asked:"Who is this that brings the sacrifice, So graceful and peace- giving as he goes? |
8920 | But spake the Prince, still comforting the man,"And are there others, are there many thus? |
8920 | Can he be Sakra or the Devaraj?" |
8920 | Can life and love suffice?" |
8920 | Finds he no food that so his bones jut forth? |
8920 | For which of all the great and lesser gods Have power or pity? |
8920 | For who hath grieved when soft arms shut him safe, And all life melted to a happy sigh, And all the world was given in one warm kiss? |
8920 | How should I not be happy, blest so much, And bearing him this boy whose tiny hand Shall lead his soul to Swerga, if it need? |
8920 | Know''st thou, my brother, if it be not thus, After their many pains, with saints in bliss? |
8920 | Or might it be to me as now with him?" |
8920 | So, in full council of his Ministers,"Who is the wisest man, great sirs,"he asked,"To teach my Prince that which a Prince should know?" |
8920 | Then Sorrow ends, for Life and Death have ceased; How should lamps flicker when their oil is spent? |
8920 | Then he--"What is with thee, O my life?" |
8920 | Then spake the Prince"But shall this come to others, or to all, Or is it rare that one should be as he?" |
8920 | Then spake the Prince,"Is this the end which comes To all who live?" |
8920 | Then the King amazed Inquired"What treasure?" |
8920 | There must be many we should love-- how else? |
8920 | What good gift have my brothers but it came From search and strife and loving sacrifice? |
8920 | What grief Springs of itself and springs not of Desire? |
8920 | What have they wrought to help their worshippers? |
8920 | What heaven hast thou found like that we knew By bright Rohini in the Pleasure- house, Where all these weary years I weep for thee? |
8920 | What is his caste? |
8920 | What knows this noble boy of beauty yet, Eyes that make heaven forgot, and lips of balm? |
8920 | What lets?--Brothers? |
8920 | What meaneth he Moaning''tomorrow or next day I die?'' |
8920 | What pleasure hast thou of thy changeless bliss? |
8920 | What woe hath happened to this piteous one?" |
8920 | When was fond Love so pitiless to love Save that this scorned to limit love by life?) |
8920 | Where tether they that swift steed of the tale? |
8920 | Who hath seen them-- who? |
8920 | Why have I never seen and never sought? |
8920 | Why is it, Channa, that he pants and moans, And gasps to speak and sighs so pitiful?" |
8920 | Why, if I love them, should those children know? |
8920 | Will you send?" |
8920 | Wilt thou go forth into the friendless waste That hast this Paradise of pleasures here?" |
8920 | Wilt thou ride hence and let the rich world slip Out of thy grasp, to hold a beggar''s bowl? |
8920 | Yet dost thou truly find it sweet enough Only to live? |
8920 | Yet who shall shut out Fate? |
8920 | as ye lie asleep so must ye lie A- dead; and when the rose dies where are gone Its scent and splendour? |
8920 | do your Gods endure For ever, brothers?" |
8920 | dost see? |
8920 | he said,"And dear to leave; yet if I leave ye not What else will come to all of us save eld Without assuage and death without avail? |
8920 | heir of this spacious power, and heir Of Kings who did but clap their palms to have What earth could give or eager service bring? |
8920 | if I feed her, who shall lose but I, And how can love lose doing of its kind Even to the uttermost?" |
8920 | is there so wide a world? |
8920 | she lowly asked,"And hath my gift found favour?" |
8920 | the charioteer replied-- Slow- rising from his place beside the gate"To ride at night when all the ways are dark?" |
8920 | what harm Hath fallen? |
8920 | what is this you ask? |
8920 | what may such visions mean Except I die, or-- worse than any death-- Thou shouldst forsake me or be taken?" |
8920 | what thing is this who seems a man, Yet surely only seems, being so bowed, So miserable, so horrible, so sad? |
8920 | when looked a Rishi thus?" |
8920 | when the lamp is drained Whither is fled the flame? |
8920 | whence hath he eyes so sweet? |
8920 | wherefore canst thou not arise? |
8920 | who? |
8920 | why is this?" |
889 | Were you brought up in Europe and educated? |
889 | : What had Miss Carl been saying? |
889 | A little boy like you come to fight me? |
889 | After Miss Carl had left the Court, Her Majesty asked me one day:"Did she ever ask you much about the Boxer movement of 1900?" |
889 | After she had passed the camera she turned and asked my brother:"Did you take a picture?" |
889 | After that we return to the Sea Palace, and what can we do with this artist? |
889 | And even if this can be satisfactorily arranged, what about the Winter Palace in the Forbidden City? |
889 | And how do you know that these are my favorites and have placed them near me? |
889 | Another thing-- did you notice that Mrs. Conger handed a parcel to Miss Carl out in the courtyard when she came in?" |
889 | Are these good presents? |
889 | Are you all tired?" |
889 | Are you hungry? |
889 | Are you not dizzy turning round and round? |
889 | Are you standing on your head or feet?" |
889 | Before we had time to explain to her, she said:"I see, dresses with tails behind must be more dignified than short ones, am I right?" |
889 | Ca n''t they see that the veranda is wet?" |
889 | Can you guess what it is?" |
889 | Coming again?" |
889 | Continuing, she said:"By the way, how long will it take before this portrait is finished?" |
889 | Could you get Chinese food when you were abroad, and were you homesick? |
889 | Did any of the foreign ladies ever tell you that I am a fierce- looking old woman?" |
889 | Did n''t I tell you she was watching you when you pulled my sleeve? |
889 | Did you enjoy yourself while you were there, and do you wish to go back again? |
889 | Did you really study to acquire all those languages or was it drinking the water that gave them to you?" |
889 | Did you sleep at all?" |
889 | Do n''t you think that our own customs are much nicer?" |
889 | Do they consider me a man of character and do they think me clever? |
889 | Do you have to jump up and down with men? |
889 | Do you know how the Boxer rising began? |
889 | Do you remember what Her Majesty said to you? |
889 | Do you think they are beautiful?" |
889 | Do you think they, the foreigners, really like me? |
889 | Do you think you know enough Chinese to read this map?" |
889 | Does she speak Chinese?" |
889 | Evans?" |
889 | Has she found out yet that you are there simply to keep an eye upon her?" |
889 | He looked surprised and asked:"Can you take pictures, too? |
889 | Her Majesty exclaimed:"Why is it your head is upside down? |
889 | Her Majesty said to me:"Why ca n''t you win once?" |
889 | Her Majesty said:"I would like to see how you jump, can you show me a little?" |
889 | Her Majesty said:"Why must you change your clothes? |
889 | Her Majesty then enquired:"Do you think that this Artist lady will paint my picture to look black also? |
889 | Her Majesty turned to me and said:"Have you ever witnessed such an operation?" |
889 | Her Majesty walked along a little way, then laughed and said to me:"Do n''t I look more comfortable now? |
889 | How dare she suggest that you would say anything against Miss Carl? |
889 | How dare they give orders without receiving instructions from me first? |
889 | How did you learn? |
889 | How is Yu Keng?" |
889 | How is it?" |
889 | How would you like to look after her? |
889 | I can see that it is myself all right, but why is it that my face and hands are dark?" |
889 | I order you to bring all your things to this place, but what is your father going to do? |
889 | I told her that perhaps Mrs. Conger thought I wanted to advise her to refuse this request, but Her Majesty said:"What does that matter? |
889 | I was very much surprised to see Court ladies doing this kind of work and I said to myself, if I come here will I have to do this sort of thing? |
889 | I wonder who made that story up? |
889 | Is it bad luck?" |
889 | Is it true that the foreigners do n''t respect their parents at all- that they could beat their parents and drive them out of the house?" |
889 | Is that true?" |
889 | Is this dress only worn on certain occasions, or is it worn any time, even when gentlemen are present?" |
889 | Matters became worse day by day and Yung Lu was the only one against the Boxers, but what could one man accomplish against so many? |
889 | Now, where can we put her? |
889 | One day Her Majesty asked me:"What kind of medicine does a foreign doctor usually give in case of a fever? |
889 | Plancon say yesterday? |
889 | She again asked me what was my objection to getting married; was I afraid of having a mother- in- law, or what was it? |
889 | She again examined the portrait and said:"Why is it that one side of your face is painted white and the other black? |
889 | She asked me:"How do you like this kind of life?" |
889 | She asked:"Do you not think this food has more flavor than that prepared by the cooks?" |
889 | She came out and said:"I want to see you people eat; why is it that you are standing at the end of the table, the best dishes are not there? |
889 | She could not understand this at all, and exclaimed:"Why has this gone black? |
889 | She looked surprised and said:"Why did n''t you tell me that before? |
889 | She said that I had guessed right, and asked:"Do you know anything about this audience? |
889 | She said to me:"I know you can wear my shoes, for I tried yours on the first day you came, do n''t you remember? |
889 | She said:"How is it that these foreign ladies have such large feet? |
889 | She said:"If her brother has been in the Customs service for so long, how is it that she does n''t speak Chinese also?" |
889 | She said:"Oh, must you jump with music?" |
889 | She said:"What kind of a place is this wonderful Paris I have heard so much about? |
889 | She sat up on the bed, smiled, and said:"Are you glad to come back? |
889 | She smiled and asked:"Have you had a good rest? |
889 | Tell me, have you yet changed your opinion with regard to foreign customs? |
889 | Tell me, is not this so?" |
889 | That night one Court lady came over to me while I was sitting on the veranda and said:"I wonder if you will look nice in Manchu dress?" |
889 | Then I heard Her Majesty say to the Emperor,"Is that correct?" |
889 | Then she asked us:"Is it very tiring to hold half of your dress in your hand when you are walking? |
889 | Then she said:"Has anyone told you to put them away as soon as I am finished with them? |
889 | They asked:"Do you think you would like to live in this place, and how long do you intend to stay?" |
889 | This Li was indeed a bad and cruel man, and said:"Why not beat him to death?" |
889 | Was she really pleased? |
889 | What does the Emperor know? |
889 | What is dancing? |
889 | What is the general opinion amongst the foreigners regarding myself? |
889 | What is the matter with you?" |
889 | What is the use of changing everything? |
889 | When Her Majesty saw me, she asked me:"Where have you been?" |
889 | When will he be able to come to the Court? |
889 | When will it take place?" |
889 | While we were talking Her Majesty said that she felt chilly and asked:"Are you cold? |
889 | Who can the rest of the people be? |
889 | Who told you to come and wake me?" |
889 | Who told you?" |
889 | Why are your arms and neck all bare? |
889 | Why could n''t they leave China to deal with her own subjects and mind their own business a little more? |
889 | Why did n''t you show them to me before?" |
889 | Would n''t it be foolish to have a school at the Palace; besides, where am I going to get so many girls to study? |
889 | and on my brother answering that he had, Her Majesty said:"Why did n''t you tell me? |
889 | it is you, is it? |
6687 | And are not these poor people right? 6687 And what if I were to push one of these fakirs?" |
6687 | And where is your witch? 6687 And... and have you no regard for mediums?" |
6687 | Are you comfortable, uncle? 6687 Are you sure you remember drawing this view?" |
6687 | But do you really mean that you have no faith what- ever in the spirits of the dead? |
6687 | But how did you get rid of the''striped one''? |
6687 | But what are their ceremonies? 6687 But what does that prove? |
6687 | But why do you intend taking us to the place of a man whom you consider as a thief and a robber? |
6687 | But why should it be so? 6687 But why should you be upset, my dear fellow? |
6687 | But you do not deny, do you, that you have studied this science and possess this gift? |
6687 | Did you know, then, beforehand that we would discover the cells, or what? |
6687 | Do n''t you admire this merry gathering, for instance? 6687 Do n''t you believe in animal magnetism?" |
6687 | Do you mean that island there? 6687 Do you mean to say you do not recognize the lake?" |
6687 | Do you think, then, that the Chinese ever understood anything about music? |
6687 | Has anyone fired a shot? |
6687 | Have you seen the lighthouse? |
6687 | How can you Europeans kill and even devour them? |
6687 | How dare you appear before us? 6687 How did you do it, Gulab- Sing? |
6687 | How is it that the Brahmans manage to keep up such an evident cheat? |
6687 | Indeed? 6687 Is it possible that a single, miserable rupee can have been the cause of all this?" |
6687 | Is it possible the Swami had not to pay for this new achievement of his? |
6687 | Is it possible you never came across these fossils in European museums? 6687 Is not this an exact interpretation of the Darwinian school?" |
6687 | Nevertheless; suppose it bit you? |
6687 | Now what is this view, sir? |
6687 | Ought I not? 6687 Shall I give you some good advice?" |
6687 | She? |
6687 | The gland is in its place right enough,said he,"but how are we to know that it really does contain poison?" |
6687 | The village? 6687 The whole mystery?" |
6687 | This a woman''s voice? 6687 Upon my word,"said he,"do you really take me for the great Parabrahm? |
6687 | Well, well,remarked he,"what shall we do if tigers really assault us?" |
6687 | What am I to think? 6687 What can this be?" |
6687 | What did the Swami say to that? |
6687 | What do you mean? 6687 What do you say to all this? |
6687 | What ground have you for saying so, I wonder? |
6687 | What harm could be done by it? 6687 What is become of you, Mr. President? |
6687 | What is the matter now? |
6687 | What is the matter with him? |
6687 | What is this new Orpheus, to whose voice these monkeys answer? |
6687 | What is to be done now? |
6687 | What on earth are you talking about? |
6687 | What on earth brought you here? |
6687 | What shall we do indeed? |
6687 | What should I do, sir? |
6687 | What should I do? 6687 What would you do,"I asked,"if this snake were about to bite you? |
6687 | Who and what is this mysterious Hindu? |
6687 | Who can strive against the Age of Darkness? |
6687 | Who can tell,whispered the colonel in my ear,"whether these reports are mere gossip, or the truth?" |
6687 | Why call forth the hour which has not yet struck? |
6687 | Why should I fall? |
6687 | Why should you be so frightened? |
6687 | Why? 6687 A City Of The Dead What would be your choice if you had to choose between being blind and being deaf? 6687 After all, maybe it is his brother, or even his son? |
6687 | All those pagodas and caves have been built by the Kings of Kanada,(?) |
6687 | And are you not afraid of falling down?" |
6687 | And did not your Kabalists of the middle ages designate these Pitris under the expression Planetary Spirits? |
6687 | And do you not look up to him as to your Guru?" |
6687 | And now? |
6687 | And this very moment they all heard the voice of Gulab- Sing coming from the upper cell:"Tum- hare iha aneka kya kam tha?" |
6687 | And was he satisfied?" |
6687 | And what do they know? |
6687 | And what do you think?.... |
6687 | And what is this transformation, pray, if not the transmigration of the ancient and modern Hindus, and the metempsychosis of the Greeks?" |
6687 | And which are the imitators-- the builders of the Egyptian pyramids, or the unknown architects of the under ground caves of India? |
6687 | And who will profit by all this if not the family priest? |
6687 | And why is it that the Orientalists will not give it more serious attention? |
6687 | And,"he added, addressing me,"was it not your wish to be present at a real Hindu meal? |
6687 | As soon as I recognized the owner of this beard, I could not abstain from expressing my feelings by a joyful exclamation:"Where do you come from?" |
6687 | But do you mean to say that this strange people worshipped Captain Pole also?" |
6687 | But even these intimate friends do they know much beyond what is generally known? |
6687 | But how can this be maintained in view of the above- mentioned perfectly authentic inscriptions? |
6687 | But how do you account for it? |
6687 | But what of that? |
6687 | But what of that? |
6687 | But what was this? |
6687 | But what, I pray you, is the poor narrator to do, when new, undreamed- of charms are daily discovered in the lady- love in question? |
6687 | But when? |
6687 | But where was Gulab- Sing? |
6687 | Did not these bushes grow on sacred ground? |
6687 | Do n''t you see that this wild music is a natural acoustic phenomenon? |
6687 | Do you mean glamour?..." |
6687 | Do you mean we are to watch her performance in complete darkness?" |
6687 | Do you realize what that means? |
6687 | Does it belong to the Hindus, or to the Buddhists? |
6687 | Fables(?) |
6687 | Fergusson writes,"What is this monument of antiquity? |
6687 | Has it been built upon plans drawn since the death of Sakya Sing, or does it belong to a more ancient religion?" |
6687 | Have you ever seen anything to equal this magnificent panorama?" |
6687 | Have you no story to tell us about the Swami? |
6687 | He found also a portrait of his own late father amongst the lot.....""Well? |
6687 | How best to employ our time? |
6687 | How many centuries were spent by weak man in digging out in your stone bosom this town of temples and carving your gigantic idols? |
6687 | How many generations of Hindus, how many races, have knelt in the dust before the Trimurti, your threefold deity, O Elephanta? |
6687 | How on earth did I not think of that before?... |
6687 | I could not help asking myself,"Ou la science va- t''elle se fourrer?" |
6687 | If such a misfortune befell me, it would simply kill her....."But why should he not free himself from every bond to Brahmanism and caste? |
6687 | Is he simply sleeping, or is he in that strange state, that temporary annihilation of bodily life?... |
6687 | Is it a mere coincidence, or is it one of the rules of the religious architecture of the remote past? |
6687 | Is it delirium? |
6687 | Is it not so?" |
6687 | Is it possible the intelligent English and Americans are so mad as this?" |
6687 | Is it possible then that thy name is also vanitas vanitatum, like the other things of this world? |
6687 | Is it possible you do not dread a sleepless night spent in fighting jackals, if not something worse? |
6687 | Is it possible you would not kill it, if you had time?" |
6687 | Is it possible, then, that all these coincidences are only accidental? |
6687 | Is it possible, then, that, as amongst men one hand washes the other, so in the animal kingdom one species conceals the crimes of another? |
6687 | Is it then so difficult to procure a store of these stones?" |
6687 | Is not it strange that Apis, the sacred ox of the Egyptians, is honored by the followers of Zoroaster, as well as by the Hindus? |
6687 | Is not their sap impregnated with the incense of offerings, and the exhalations of holy anchorites, who once lived and breathed here?" |
6687 | Is there no way out of it?" |
6687 | Is this a hallucination, or a wonderful inexplicable reality? |
6687 | Is this death? |
6687 | It enabled him to choose the right thing to gratify the personal tastes of each demon, do n''t you see? |
6687 | Narayan has been telling you all kinds of things about me behind my back.... Now, is it not so?" |
6687 | Now, do you think we could disobey his orders? |
6687 | Poor Mr. Y----, was not he upset?" |
6687 | Ride on a cow, and a five- legged one at that? |
6687 | Seriously speaking, what is there to prevent humanity from acknowledging two active forces within itself; one purely animal, the other purely divine? |
6687 | Then why should not we suppose the same possibilities in the soul of the man as well as in his body? |
6687 | These questions harassed him for a long time afterwards, until they became something like the puzzle: Which was created first, the egg or the bird? |
6687 | They did it on purpose....""Who they? |
6687 | To whom does it not happen to meet with women, to see cows, and admire a garden? |
6687 | Was it not a tiger?" |
6687 | Was it our visitor of the night before? |
6687 | Were you asleep, or what?" |
6687 | What are these mysterious virtues of your music, that can be understood only by yourselves? |
6687 | What could we say against all this? |
6687 | What is it that gives to the sailor the sight of an eagle, that endows the acrobat with the skill of a monkey, and the wrestler with muscles of iron? |
6687 | What is this spiritualism they talk so much of in the West? |
6687 | What is this then? |
6687 | What should you do in my place?" |
6687 | What was the matter with them all? |
6687 | What witchcraft is this?" |
6687 | Where are you?" |
6687 | Where did you learn this science?" |
6687 | Where did you read this?" |
6687 | Where is the lake, if you please? |
6687 | Where were we to go? |
6687 | Which were we to choose? |
6687 | Who can say? |
6687 | Who can tell? |
6687 | Who cared to know about him, except his own family and his very intimate friends? |
6687 | Who else is capable of such a wonderful achievement?" |
6687 | Who is there among the foreigners who is able to do this? |
6687 | Who spoke in those deep manly tones? |
6687 | Who were the Goths, the Swedes, the Vandals, the Huns and the Franks, if not separate swarms of the same beehive? |
6687 | Why does she think that our perfected scientific theories are superstitions, and we ourselves a fallen inferior race?" |
6687 | Why not ask all his family to form a colony and join the civilization of the Europeans? |
6687 | Why not join, once for all, the ever- growing community of men who are guilty of the same offence? |
6687 | Why should I dwell on them when you must see for yourself that my reasoning gives you the clue, which will solve many similar problems? |
6687 | Why should not the English buy it as readily?" |
6687 | Why then do the bunis not claim it, rather than let thousands of people die helpless?" |
6687 | Why, then, should we not pay some attention to the explanations of the Brahmans? |
6687 | Will a time ever come for these secrets of the centuries to be revealed? |
6687 | Would you believe it? |
6687 | You did not believe, of course, and laughed at Narayan?" |
6687 | You know, I am not superstitious.... Am I?..." |
6687 | You mean that your music has something to do with the Vedas?" |
6687 | am I to believe that these confounded Hindus really possess the mystery of this trick? |
6687 | and do you really think we must go?" |
6687 | and have the gates of death been opened unto them?" |
6687 | and"Are you willing to be her husband, O son of Zoroaster?" |
6687 | how dare you to stand on this holy ground in boots made of a cow''s sacred skin? |
972 | An aim? 972 And how many impenetrable battleships strike terror to the hearts of all Christian swine?" |
972 | And pray what may be the value of that? |
972 | Did I not sentence you to stand in the market- place and have your head struck off by the public executioner at three o''clock? 972 Do you mean that?" |
972 | Do you mean to say that''s what you did this time? |
972 | Eat arsenic? 972 First thoughts are best?" |
972 | Indifferent? |
972 | Now, why is yer wife called a helpmate, Pat? |
972 | Old books? 972 Pork?" |
972 | Remember the fable of tortoise and hare-- The one at the goal while the other is-- where? |
972 | Then why do you not become an atheist? |
972 | To what regiment of executioners does the black- boweled caitiff belong? |
972 | Were the enemy''s tactics offensive? |
972 | What do you want? |
972 | What is your religion my son? |
972 | What shall we do now? |
972 | What''s that you say? |
972 | Why have you halted? |
972 | Why, Owen,said one,"what brings you here on such a night as this? |
972 | ''Tis the answer to What? |
972 | A simpler plan for saving man( But, first, is he worth saving?) |
972 | And Whence? |
972 | And is it not now 3:10?" |
972 | And why does not the apparition of a suit of clothes sometimes walk abroad without a ghost in it? |
972 | Are n''t you afraid to be out?" |
972 | Are not their houses as likely as mine to burn before they have paid you as much as you must pay them? |
972 | But why, O why, has ne''er an eye Seen her of winsome manner And youthful grace and pretty face Flaunting the White Cross banner? |
972 | CUI BONO? |
972 | Content? |
972 | Desirous to avoid the pains of Hell, You will repent and join the Church, Parnell? |
972 | Do you think that fair criticism?" |
972 | Do your policemen also have to approve the local ordinances that they enforce? |
972 | Does the sandhill crane, the shankank, Shiver grayly in the north wind, Wishing he had died when little, As the sparrow, the chipchip, does? |
972 | Dom Pedro, you desire to go Back to Brazil to end your days in quiet? |
972 | HOUSE OWNER: And virtually, then, do n''t I help to pay their losses? |
972 | HOUSE OWNER: How, then, can_ I_ afford_ that_? |
972 | Have you no aim in life?" |
972 | He is said in the Scripture to''make a god of his belly''--why, then, should he not be pious, having ever his Deity with him to freshen his faith? |
972 | His belly? |
972 | How can you be so rash?" |
972 | I a Christian? |
972 | If I could not afford that, how could you if it were insured? |
972 | Is public worship, then, a sin, That for devotions paid to Bacchus The lictors dare to run us in, And resolutely thump and whack us? |
972 | Is that_ all_ father dear? |
972 | Its nature? |
972 | Now where''s the need of speech and screed To better our behaving? |
972 | Now, where the dickens is the sense In calling that a year Which does no more than just commence Before the end is near? |
972 | O, tell me, ye gods, for the use of my rhyme: For respecting the dead what''s the limit of time? |
972 | O, what''s the loud uproar assailing Mine ears without cease? |
972 | Pray reflect: How, if one- tenth we must resign, Can we exist on t''other nine?" |
972 | Revenge, at the best, is the act of a Siou, But for trifles-- Pray what did bad Mendicant do? |
972 | So how can any one know? |
972 | Supposing the products of the loom to have this ability, what object would they have in exercising it? |
972 | The case stands this way: you expect to take more money from your clients than you pay to them, do you not? |
972 | The monarch asked them in reply:"Has it occurred to you to try The advantage of economy?" |
972 | The question,"Is life worth living?" |
972 | What is that? |
972 | What should they do? |
972 | What though of all man''s works your tomb alone Should stand till Time himself be overthrown? |
972 | What''s Satan done that him you should eschew? |
972 | What''s the matter with pie? |
972 | What''s this that''s found upon the ground? |
972 | What, for example, has been more valorously derided than the doctrine of Infant Respectability? |
972 | Whence comes it? |
972 | Where did you get them?" |
972 | Who cares What face he carries or what form he wears? |
972 | Who is that, father? |
972 | Who so well as he can know the might and majesty that he shrines? |
972 | Who''d think this gorgeous creature''s only virtue Is that in battle he will never hurt you? |
972 | Whose is the sanction of their state and pow''r? |
972 | Why did n''t he work? |
972 | Why did they put him there, father? |
972 | Why, what assurance have you''twould be so? |
972 | Will you not be more likely to squander them? |
972 | Would it advantage you to dwell therein Forever as a stain upon a stone? |
972 | You ask me how this miracle is done? |
972 | You know That empires are ungrateful; are you certain Republics are less handy to get hurt in? |
972 | [ Latin] What good would that do_ me_? |
972 | and How? |
972 | and Why? |
972 | cried one,"are you not amazed At what our friend has told?" |
972 | interrupted Rochebriant;"eating dinner in a drawing- room?" |
972 | roared the sovereign--"why didst thou but lightly tap the neck that it should have been thy pleasure to sever?" |
972 | said one of his disciples,"you weep at the death of an enemy?" |
972 | said the Prior,"would you master stay our benefactor''s soul in Purgatory?" |
972 | shrieked the patient--"pork? |
972 | what is that?" |
972 | you his appointed adversary, charged from the dawn of eternity with hatred of his soul-- you ask for the right to make his laws?" |
8459 | ''Garçon,''says he,''if I ask you a question will you tell me the truth?'' 8459 ''What are these fireworks for?'' |
8459 | ''What do you want of me?'' 8459 ''_ Oui, monsieur; certainement._''"Well, how much was the largest tip you ever received?" |
8459 | As they were coming away the great Mr. Lamar said to the poor landlady,''Madam, have you lived long in Washington?'' 8459 But,"says Bill,"did you see him?" |
8459 | Did you ever hear The Frenchman tell that story about Sophonisba? |
8459 | Did you see that? |
8459 | Do you think that the committee have found you out? |
8459 | How so? |
8459 | How you expect an old sport like me to bet upon a certainty? |
8459 | I understand,I said in an address to the assembled delegates,"that you are all for Grover Cleveland?" |
8459 | If,I ended my sketch,"out of the mouths of babes and sucklings, why not out of the brain of this crazed old woman of the South?" |
8459 | In what way do you consider it unfair, your Majesty? |
8459 | Is it a free fight? |
8459 | Is that all? |
8459 | Lamar,he exclaimed,"do n''t you think you have heard the greatest speech to- night that was never delivered?" |
8459 | My God,without a pause he continued,"is n''t that great?" |
8459 | That is good, is n''t it? 8459 The first thing I want to ask,"said he,"is whether that old woman was a real person or a figment of your imagination?" |
8459 | To whom are you referring? |
8459 | What do you take me for-- confidence man? |
8459 | What do you think of that? |
8459 | What do you think of this vintage? |
8459 | What was it? |
8459 | What would you do,he once said,"if you owned the Herald?" |
8459 | What would you suggest? |
8459 | What-- at the d''Orient? |
8459 | Where do I come in? |
8459 | Why,I answered,"I would stay in New York and edit it;"and then I proceeded,"but you mean to ask me what I think you ought to do with it?" |
8459 | ''Ace high,''says the Jedge;''what you got?'' |
8459 | ''Do you remember,''the statesman, soldier and orator continued,''a young and handsome Mississippian, a member of Congress, by the name of Lamar?'' |
8459 | ''What you got?'' |
8459 | ''Will you,''he abruptly interjected,''accept the chairmanship of the board of visitors to the academy this coming June?'' |
8459 | A little group of such men formed itself about Schurz-- then only forty- three years old-- to what end? |
8459 | And how?" |
8459 | And then life tenure after the manner of the Caesars and Cromwells of history, and especially the Latin- Americans-- Bolivar, Rosas and Diaz? |
8459 | Are they willfully dense? |
8459 | Are we on the way to another terrestrial collapse, and so on ad infinitum to the end of time? |
8459 | But before her time what had he been, what had he done? |
8459 | But what was he to do? |
8459 | But which among us keeps or has ever kept the middle of the road? |
8459 | But which page of the court calendar made you a plural? |
8459 | Could mortal ask for more? |
8459 | Could there be a stronger argument in favor of a world to come than may be found in the brevity and incertitude of the world that is? |
8459 | Could you not substitute some other expression?" |
8459 | Did Washington, when he was angry, swear like a trooper? |
8459 | Do the people grow degenerate? |
8459 | Does this make me a Baptist, I wonder? |
8459 | He came down from the Castle on the hill to the marketplace in the town and says he:"What do you galoots want, anyhow?" |
8459 | He stood quite at the head of our literature, giving the lie to the scornful query,"Who reads an American book?" |
8459 | He was, for all his self- sufficiency and pride, short- sighted; and yet, until they arrived, how could he foresee the developments of artillery? |
8459 | How could such a mà © nage last? |
8459 | How much does old Sam Johnson owe of the fine figure he cuts to Boswell, and, minus Boswell, how much would be left of him? |
8459 | I wonder if that can be justly said of the President? |
8459 | I wonder shall we ever get any real truth out of what is called history? |
8459 | I wonder where they got it? |
8459 | In what was he a black sheep, for that he had been one seemed certain? |
8459 | Mr. Barksdale said:"Would not the words''We have received with the deepest sensibility Mr. Tilden''s letter of withdrawal,''answer your purpose?" |
8459 | Neither shall I make apology for this long quotation by myself from myself, for am I not inditing an autobiography, so called? |
8459 | On one occasion I said to her:"Ellen, why do you pursue this man in this cruel way? |
8459 | Once after a concert he suddenly exclaimed:"Do n''t you think Wagner was a---- fraud?" |
8459 | Once out of the White House-- what else and what----? |
8459 | Only names? |
8459 | Pryor?" |
8459 | Senator Gwin of California, the eighth of February, 1858?'' |
8459 | Ten minutes later,"Is it still a free fight?" |
8459 | Ten thousand heads were chopped off during the Terror in France to make room for whom? |
8459 | The challenge underlying prohibition is twofold: Does prohibition prohibit, and, if it does, may it not generate evils peculiarly its own? |
8459 | Then he asked:"What do you want for Winchester?" |
8459 | Then it appeared that the designated thesis read:"Which political party offers for the workingman the best solution of the tariff problem?" |
8459 | To what end? |
8459 | Was it for this that he had fought with tongue and pen and sword? |
8459 | Was it for this that oceans of patriotism, of treasure and of blood had been poured out? |
8459 | We owe a great debt to Washington, because if a third why not a fourth term? |
8459 | We sat together at table and suddenly he turned and said:"How are you getting on with your bill?" |
8459 | What are you hanging round Washington for anyhow? |
8459 | What boots it? |
8459 | What did the President know or care about foreign appointments? |
8459 | What do they know or care about the origins of wealth; about Venice; about Cadiz; about what is said of Wall Street? |
8459 | What do you want?" |
8459 | What else and what next? |
8459 | What had he done to be ashamed about or wish to conceal? |
8459 | What is CÃ ¦ sar to us, or we to CÃ ¦ sar? |
8459 | What is to be done about it? |
8459 | What of that?" |
8459 | What possible good can it do you?" |
8459 | What was it I was saying about statues-- that they all look alike to me? |
8459 | What was the matter with Nero? |
8459 | What was there for Webster, what was there for Clay to quibble about? |
8459 | When I had finished he said:"What are you doing about Winchester?" |
8459 | When will the world learn to discriminate? |
8459 | When, having failed to provoke a fight, he had taken himself off, an onlooker said:"Bill, I thought you were going to do him up?" |
8459 | Where must an old- line Democrat go to find himself? |
8459 | Where this side of heaven shall we look for the court of last resort? |
8459 | Where will it end? |
8459 | Who among us has the single right to claim for himself, and the likes of him, the divine title of a workingman? |
8459 | Who shall tell us the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, about Hamilton; about Burr; about CÃ ¦ sar, Caligula and Cleopatra? |
8459 | Who that heard them shall ever forget them? |
8459 | Who this side of the grave shall be sure of anything? |
8459 | Whom do you mean by"we"?'' |
8459 | Why did n''t you hold back your statement a bit? |
8459 | Why might I not put a head and tail to this-- a foreword and a few words in conclusion-- and make it meet the purpose and serve the occasion? |
8459 | Why not?" |
8459 | Why should not you and I call him Master and kneel together in love and pity at his feet?" |
8459 | Wo n''t you manage it for me?" |
8459 | Yet have we the record of any moment when it was not so? |
8459 | Yet how could I accept it with the work ahead of me? |
8459 | Yet, to come again, d''ye mind? |
6282 | Ah, is it not always so? |
6282 | Am I a fool? 6282 And Tripple?" |
6282 | And room also? |
6282 | And the vote let you be a town- councillor? |
6282 | And then-- after that? 6282 And what did you say?" |
6282 | And what is it you want to buy from me? |
6282 | And what was she worth? |
6282 | And you late ones? |
6282 | Any telegrams for me? |
6282 | Are you a musician by trade? |
6282 | Blown up with what? |
6282 | Can the Monseigneur cast a spell over them all? |
6282 | Could you do without the Sarasate? |
6282 | Did they say what hour? |
6282 | Do you want to save his life? |
6282 | Eh, well, what is he after? |
6282 | Had you the same love of conscience and truth at Radley? |
6282 | Has this man come here against your will? |
6282 | Have I succeeded? |
6282 | Have they been opened? |
6282 | Have you got a minute to spare, kind sir? |
6282 | Have you got it again out here-- your own? |
6282 | He is dead? |
6282 | Heads I win, tails it''s yours? |
6282 | Here in Lebanon? |
6282 | His nose-- how? |
6282 | How are you feeling, old man? |
6282 | How do I know what was in my mind? 6282 How do you know we are rich?" |
6282 | How is he? |
6282 | How much? |
6282 | How? |
6282 | How? |
6282 | I got drunk-- oh, yes, of course, blind drunk, did n''t I? 6282 I know there was catastrophe, the tumblings of avalanches, but the voice that cried- the soul of a lover, was it?" |
6282 | If he was your son? |
6282 | In Lebanon? |
6282 | In a horse- trade? |
6282 | In what way? |
6282 | Is it quiet in both towns? |
6282 | Is it that those who beat you have to get up early? |
6282 | Is there harm in that? 6282 Is there no work here for her?" |
6282 | Is-- is he dead? |
6282 | It does n''t look like war, does it? |
6282 | It does n''t matter about the head bandages, but the eyes-- can''t I slough the wraps to- morrow? 6282 It is good enough for you-- almost, eh?" |
6282 | It went? |
6282 | It''s announced? |
6282 | Long enough to hear you play it, Mr.--what is your name, may I ask? |
6282 | May I speak with you? |
6282 | My corner lot against double the shares? |
6282 | No, I ca n''t pay you anything, that''s clear,he said;"but to get your own-- I''ve got some influence out here-- what can I do? |
6282 | Oh, that''s one of your questions, is it? |
6282 | Rockwell,Ingolby suddenly asked,"is there any chance of my discarding this and getting out to- morrow?" |
6282 | She did not tell you she was made my wife those years ago? 6282 Suppose Ingolby is n''t there?" |
6282 | Taught him his A- B- C- was his dear, kind teacher, eh? |
6282 | That''s the thing that did it, but where''s the man behind the thing? |
6282 | That''s what''s the matter with me, then? |
6282 | That''s your view, is it, Barbazon? |
6282 | The Monseigneur Lourde? 6282 The gun- shots-- what?" |
6282 | The sword of the Spirit--"Oh, you want the sword, do you? 6282 Then you got a vote on it?" |
6282 | There''ll be what? |
6282 | To play the Sarasate alone to you? |
6282 | Was ever a tent too full, when the lost traveller stumbled into camp in the old days? |
6282 | Was it good or bad? |
6282 | Was it your first town lot? |
6282 | Well, we need n''t lose any time, but will you have a drink and a smoke first? |
6282 | Well, what do you think of him? |
6282 | Well? |
6282 | What am I? |
6282 | What brought you to the West? |
6282 | What danger did you come to warn M. Marchand about? |
6282 | What did the single cry-- the motif-- express? |
6282 | What did you mean when you said that Ingolby''s eyes would not feed upon me? |
6282 | What do you want? |
6282 | What do you wish? |
6282 | What else? |
6282 | What for? |
6282 | What good would it do if they got ten years-- or one year, if the bridge was blown up? 6282 What happened to the watch?" |
6282 | What has happened? |
6282 | What have I done? |
6282 | What have you seen? |
6282 | What is it? 6282 What is the rest I know so well?" |
6282 | What time is it, Jim? |
6282 | What was the danger? |
6282 | What was the mare worth? |
6282 | What''d buy Felix Marchand? |
6282 | What''s he after? 6282 What''s he going to say?" |
6282 | What''s his price? |
6282 | What''s the lot worth now? |
6282 | What''s your opinion, boss? |
6282 | What''ve you got to say about it, son? |
6282 | What''ve you got to say about it? 6282 When did you learn it?" |
6282 | When do you go over to Manitou again to cut old Hector Marchand''s hair? 6282 When was it they said the strike would begin?" |
6282 | Where did you think of going from here? |
6282 | Where have you come from? |
6282 | Where is he? |
6282 | Where would they get it? |
6282 | Who are they? |
6282 | Who are you to tell me I must go? |
6282 | Who commits my crimes for me? |
6282 | Who said it? 6282 Who struck him down?" |
6282 | Who will kill him? |
6282 | Who''s for Lebanon? |
6282 | Who''s for giving Lebanon hell, and ducking Ingolby in the river? |
6282 | Who''s he? |
6282 | Who''s the Master of the Lodge? |
6282 | Why ca n''t he see himself through? |
6282 | Why did n''t I know that? |
6282 | Why do n''t you go, as I tell you, Jim? |
6282 | Why? 6282 Will a wife betray her husband?" |
6282 | Will my eyes have to be kept bandaged long? 6282 Will you toss for it?" |
6282 | Yes, but what was the matter with her? |
6282 | Yes, there was a big house in Montreal? |
6282 | Yeth-''ir? |
6282 | You are going to him? |
6282 | You believe in God Almighty? |
6282 | You did not know? |
6282 | You have it here-- at your house here? |
6282 | You have shown what power you have-- isn''t that enough? |
6282 | You know the Romany lingo? |
6282 | You mean you''re going to deny it in the papers? |
6282 | You said you had come here to get your own-- is your home here? |
6282 | You see I treated you fairly, and that you''ve been a fool? |
6282 | You speak French much? |
6282 | You understand about God? |
6282 | You want me to know what it''s for? |
6282 | You wanted to pay me respect, eh? |
6282 | You will go back to Dennis? |
6282 | You would n''t? |
6282 | You''re sure it''s according to Hoyle? |
6282 | You? 6282 ''But why have the Orange funeral while things are as they are?'' 6282 After that, what? |
6282 | And the something else-- what? |
6282 | Are you satisfied?" |
6282 | Are you sure you got it right?" |
6282 | Berry, however, said to the still absorbed musician:"Where did you learn to play?" |
6282 | But had Jethro told all? |
6282 | But if you go to Manitou to- night, how can you have that fiddler?" |
6282 | But no-- what was there strange in the man being a Romany and playing the fiddle? |
6282 | CHAPTER XV THE WOMAN FROM WIND RIVER"What is it?" |
6282 | Ca n''t you see, my friends, what I''m driving at? |
6282 | Did he refer to money, or-- was it Fleda Druse? |
6282 | Did not the world know that he had saved her life? |
6282 | Did you ever get close to him and try to figure what he was driving at? |
6282 | Did you ever give that Ingolby a chance to tell you what his plans were? |
6282 | Did you think I''d put it in a museum? |
6282 | Do you not see? |
6282 | Do you think such tomfoolery has any effect in this civilized country? |
6282 | Do you think you could make a deal with Felix Marchand? |
6282 | Does he preach as well as that?" |
6282 | Eh?" |
6282 | Had it anything to do with Gabriel Druse and his daughter? |
6282 | Had she not her own trouble to face? |
6282 | Had these disguises to do with Fleda-- with his Romany lass? |
6282 | Have you got one?" |
6282 | He had noticed the old man straighten himself with a spring and stand as though petrified when Ingolby said:"Why do n''t you turn on the light?" |
6282 | He might speak once, he might speak twice, he might speak thrice, but would it ever be the same as the look that needed no words? |
6282 | How much did you pay for her?" |
6282 | How was it that men did not use their chances? |
6282 | How was it that more throats were not cut in that way? |
6282 | How would you like to try it?" |
6282 | I belong-- bagosh, what do you want to ask? |
6282 | I did n''t, did I? |
6282 | In the pause Ingolby said to Jethro Fawe,"Play something, wo n''t you? |
6282 | Ingolby said to him,"Jim, what the devil is this-- finger- bowls in my private car? |
6282 | Is it Gipsy music?" |
6282 | Is n''t he good for all day, this one?" |
6282 | Is n''t it a beauty, Jethro Fawe?" |
6282 | Is that what M''sieu''Marchand told you? |
6282 | Is the pain in the head less?" |
6282 | It flashed into her mind-- what would Max Ingolby think of such a thing? |
6282 | May we use your back parlour?" |
6282 | Or was he a tool of Felix Marchand? |
6282 | Shall I have to give up work for any length of time?" |
6282 | Shall I see the Master of the Orange Lodge or the Chief Constable for you?" |
6282 | She did not tell you she was the daughter of the Romany King? |
6282 | She was beautiful and-- well, who could tell? |
6282 | So this was the way the swaggering, masterful Gorgio lived? |
6282 | Soon?" |
6282 | Suppose they took it into their heads to wreck the place?" |
6282 | That being so, should my own man turn his head away from me day or night? |
6282 | That''s what he said, is it?" |
6282 | There was no child to keep you, and the man that tempted you said he adored you?" |
6282 | There was silence for a moment in which they moved slowly forward, and then she said:"You were at Barbazon''s last night?" |
6282 | There''s a bell on the table, is n''t there?" |
6282 | There''s a snake in the bed of Manitou-- what are you going to do with it?" |
6282 | They make us learn English, and--""If you do n''t like the flag and the country, why do n''t you leave it?" |
6282 | This girl would never be his in the way that the others had been, but-- who could tell?--perhaps he would think enough of her to marry her? |
6282 | To blow up the bridge-- for what? |
6282 | Want the clothes, too?" |
6282 | Was he to wear them? |
6282 | Was it some temperamental thing in him? |
6282 | Was it the embodied second self of Jethro Fawe, doing the evil that Jethro Fawe, the visible corporeal man, wished to do? |
6282 | Was it through his fiddling that he was going to find a way to deal with this Gorgio, who had come between him and his own? |
6282 | Was not humanity alone sufficient warrant for staying by his side? |
6282 | Was that not what he wanted-- that you should leave him?" |
6282 | Was the man a Romany, and, if so, what was he doing here? |
6282 | We''d like to hear him play-- wouldn''t we, Berry?" |
6282 | Well, is n''t it worth while making the bargain? |
6282 | Were these disguises for the Master Gorgio? |
6282 | What could she do to prevent his ruin? |
6282 | What did the fellow mean? |
6282 | What do you want at the end of it all? |
6282 | What do you want to say to me?" |
6282 | What does he say?" |
6282 | What is it?" |
6282 | What was it? |
6282 | What were they for? |
6282 | What woman could have designs upon a blind man? |
6282 | Where is the Romany''s home? |
6282 | Who can tell? |
6282 | Who was there at one with him in all his deep designs, in all he had done and meant to do? |
6282 | Who was there that loved him? |
6282 | Who would have hinted at shame, if she had taken him to her father''s tan or gone to his tan and tended him as a man might tend a man? |
6282 | Who''s going to stand it? |
6282 | Who''s the cause? |
6282 | Why Arabic-- why''kowadji''?" |
6282 | Why should the world babble? |
6282 | Why was it that now she could never think of the lost and abandoned Romany life without thinking also of Jethro Fawe? |
6282 | Will you come?" |
6282 | Will you see to it, Rockwell?" |
6282 | Would he need it, robbed of sight and with his life- work murdered? |
6282 | Yet had she not the right of common humanity? |
6282 | Yet what had she to do with it, after all? |
6282 | Yet would he wish it? |
6282 | You gabble of conscience and truth, but is n''t it a new passion with you-- conscience and truth?" |
6282 | You have money and brains; why not use them to become a leader of those who will win at last, no matter what the game may be?" |
6282 | You have the gift of getting hold of the worst men here, and you have done it; but wo n''t you now master them again in the other way? |
6282 | You think there''s something else that''ll be good for me? |
6282 | You understand, Jim?" |
6282 | You understand? |
6282 | You want the sword, eh?" |
6282 | You''ll keep me posted as to anything important?" |
6282 | You''ll not forget the wig-- you''ll bring it round yourself?" |
6282 | Your home and country''s a good way from here, eh?" |
54247 | About''Us,''the spiritual club, in which the dead and the living are members on the same footing? 54247 Ages?" |
54247 | Am I late, mother? |
54247 | And are they really going to live in the house in Portland Place? |
54247 | And did n''t you? |
54247 | And do they appear to you? 54247 And he found you together, and you killed him?" |
54247 | And is not that a pose? 54247 And now the time has come?" |
54247 | And of that colossal income-- which you have enjoyed for five years-- you have nothing left? 54247 And then I shall be with him again, where they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but where they are as the angels of God in heaven?" |
54247 | And then? |
54247 | And was she saying the outrageous things? |
54247 | And yet you ask her to your house? |
54247 | And you believe in him? |
54247 | And you had tea with Vera Provana? |
54247 | And you will never take the liberty I give you for a letter of license? |
54247 | Are n''t you coming back? |
54247 | Are n''t you coming, Vera? 54247 Are n''t you glad to be home?" |
54247 | Are their voices heard-- do they speak to you? |
54247 | Are you a heavy sleeper? |
54247 | Are you giving me a letter of license? |
54247 | At what time had she fallen asleep after her return from Fulham Park? |
54247 | Because she does not love you? 54247 But are there not some mild pleasures left in the years that bring the philosophic mind?" |
54247 | But considering that she was carrying on with Rutherford years before Provana''s death? |
54247 | But he might have had a secret enemy without your knowledge? |
54247 | But is there really, really no hope of saving her? |
54247 | But why take so much trouble? |
54247 | But you did n''t mind? 54247 But you have Susie Amphlett?" |
54247 | But you were not in love with him? |
54247 | By the by, Lady O. told me you have had the Princess Hermione? |
54247 | Can you forgive me for calling at such an unorthodox time? 54247 Can you promise as much as this, Vera? |
54247 | Can you suppose the loss of money would change my feeling for him? 54247 Claude, are you mad?" |
54247 | Claude, do you ever keep a promise? |
54247 | Dangerous? |
54247 | De gustibus? 54247 Dear child,"exclaimed Lady Okehampton,"can you ask?" |
54247 | Did I hear somebody talking of me? |
54247 | Did I? |
54247 | Did he leave his card? |
54247 | Did none of the other men hear anything? |
54247 | Did not Desdemona dote upon Othello? |
54247 | Did you hear nothing between six and half- past eight o''clock? |
54247 | Do brothers tell old love stories? 54247 Do n''t I tell you they are like Paul and Virginia?" |
54247 | Do they take that lad with them to play propriety? |
54247 | Do you believe they think of us, sometimes, those who have gone beyond? |
54247 | Do you know what they say of him? |
54247 | Do you mean too handsome, too attractive? |
54247 | Do you remember our walks in the woods, and the afternoon we lost our way and could not get home for the nursery tea? |
54247 | Do you suppose I am never tired of things? 54247 Do you think any man cares how his coat is cut, or who made his boots, when he may be dead at the bottom of a ditch before the end of the run?" |
54247 | Do you think her so remarkably pretty? |
54247 | Do you think that Tennyson is dead? 54247 Do you want a mission?" |
54247 | Do_ you_ feel the want of children? |
54247 | Does anything last in this decadent age? 54247 Does she not look like a poet''s daughter?" |
54247 | Does that mean when one is eighty? 54247 Does the doctor prescribe them?" |
54247 | Gratis? |
54247 | Grisly thoughts? |
54247 | Had not Mrs. Provana been awakened by the sounds of voices and footsteps on the landing? |
54247 | Has he made up his mind? |
54247 | Has it dawned upon you at last? |
54247 | Has she complained of him? |
54247 | Have n''t I told you, my dear friend? 54247 Have you discovered that we have been living apart; that we have been man and wife only in name?" |
54247 | Have you ever thought of those who have to come after you? 54247 Have you nice people on your first floor, Madame Canincio?" |
54247 | Have you not? 54247 Have you sampled all the people? |
54247 | How can I blame you when his mother was the active agent? 54247 How can I help you?" |
54247 | How can you be essential? 54247 How can you be so heartless, and how can you use that odious expression''up- to- date''?" |
54247 | How can you imagine anything so impossible? |
54247 | How could I ever forget that she was going to die? |
54247 | How could I refuse? 54247 How did I know? |
54247 | How did he call himself? |
54247 | How do you mean? |
54247 | How is Provana? |
54247 | How old is the girl? |
54247 | How old was he? 54247 How should he object? |
54247 | How was it that he came home so unexpectedly? |
54247 | I am always hearing of Mr. Symeon and his spook magazine; but what does he do? 54247 I am glad you are glad,"he said,"but can that mean that you have missed me? |
54247 | I love to be with you; but I may slip away for the Cambridgeshire? |
54247 | I suppose you have heard nothing of Signor Provana since he left? |
54247 | I think it is one of your favourites, ma''am? |
54247 | I wonder which of us two is the more unhappy? |
54247 | In this house? |
54247 | Is Mrs. Bellenden here? |
54247 | Is death so great an evil? 54247 Is modern London so like Babylon?" |
54247 | Is n''t it always the elderly Colonel''s second wife? |
54247 | Is n''t it strange that in so small a party there should be such a prodigious amount of dullness? |
54247 | Is n''t she simply wonderful? |
54247 | Is n''t she too killing? |
54247 | Is n''t this delicious? |
54247 | Is she resting after her journey? |
54247 | Is there no hope-- no hope? |
54247 | Is your love quite dead? |
54247 | It must have been sudden? |
54247 | Like it? |
54247 | Mais où donc est Madame? |
54247 | Mais, madame, pourquoi ne pas sonner? 54247 May I sit by your side for a few minutes? |
54247 | May I walk with you as far as your lodgings? |
54247 | My God, what do you mean? 54247 My cousin Claude? |
54247 | Not after six years as the wife of a financial Croesus? |
54247 | Not ill, I hope? |
54247 | Not meant? 54247 Of course,"echoed Susan;"why should n''t he be there? |
54247 | Oh, it is all over? 54247 Oh, my dearest, why did you not stand firm? |
54247 | Our future? |
54247 | Pardon? |
54247 | Perhaps you never were really in love with your second husband? |
54247 | Provana''s heirs? 54247 Really?" |
54247 | Rutherford was there, of course? |
54247 | Serious? |
54247 | Shut, but not locked? |
54247 | So soon? |
54247 | That''s what they always say about women; but is it true in her case? 54247 The not- out daughter?" |
54247 | The room in which the shot was fired has a door communicating with your bedroom? |
54247 | Then why are you unhappy? |
54247 | Then you will help me? |
54247 | They are bored? |
54247 | Tired of it? 54247 Tired of you? |
54247 | To what end? 54247 To what should I come back? |
54247 | Tyrol, Engadine, Courmayeur? 54247 Vera,"Mrs. Rutherford cried passionately,"have you no compassion for me? |
54247 | Was Signor Provana there? |
54247 | Was he called after Don Quixote''s Sancho? |
54247 | Was it likely that he would tell me, if he did not tell his mother? |
54247 | Was it you who inspired this extraordinary resolve? |
54247 | Was our walk through the streets too much for you? 54247 Was that door shut?" |
54247 | Was that so easy? |
54247 | Was there an inquest? |
54247 | Was there ever anyone so feather- headed, so feckless? 54247 Was your maid in attendance upon you when you went to bed?" |
54247 | Well, did n''t she bring her dog? |
54247 | Well, what do you want of me now? |
54247 | What can I do for him but remember him and regret him? |
54247 | What can you mean by thoughts going backward? |
54247 | What could happen? 54247 What could have been the motive for such a murder?" |
54247 | What do you mean? |
54247 | What do you want me to do for you? |
54247 | What does he do? |
54247 | What does it matter? |
54247 | What else could he say? 54247 What grief can she have?" |
54247 | What had become of the devoted husband you used to tell us about? |
54247 | What has Mrs. Bellenden done to risk her future status? |
54247 | What has made you so pale? |
54247 | What have I done? |
54247 | What have I to confess? 54247 What have you been doing with yourself this afternoon, dearest?" |
54247 | What is that? |
54247 | What is the good of trying, when one must always fall short of Turner? |
54247 | What is the matter? |
54247 | What is the use of making a fuss? 54247 What kind of things?" |
54247 | What would you do if the great house of Provana were to go down like a scuttled ship? 54247 What''s the matter, Susie? |
54247 | What''s the matter? |
54247 | What''s the use of marrying a rich woman if you do n''t get some of the stuff? |
54247 | What''s your hurry? |
54247 | What, are you as bad a sleeper as ever? |
54247 | What, you''ve caught my fear? |
54247 | What? 54247 When was Madame Provana informed of her husband''s death?" |
54247 | Where was Rutherford? |
54247 | Where was the disgrace, more than in all such cases? 54247 Where was the disgrace?" |
54247 | Which next world? 54247 Which woman?" |
54247 | Which? 54247 Who can remember half the things people say of a genius who lays himself out to be talked about?" |
54247 | Who told you that I ca n''t sleep? |
54247 | Why did n''t you keep him? 54247 Why did not you tell me of your past life? |
54247 | Why do I wonder? 54247 Why do we do these things and call them pleasures?" |
54247 | Why have you done this? |
54247 | Why not go to him at once and make your confession? 54247 Why not? |
54247 | Why should n''t they waltz? 54247 Why should we forbid you? |
54247 | Why should you make a martyr of yourself? |
54247 | Why? 54247 Why?" |
54247 | Will you make me happy, Vera? 54247 Will you walk a little way with me-- until five o''clock?" |
54247 | With heart and mind? |
54247 | Would I mind? |
54247 | Would it not be better to rest for a few days in this quiet place? |
54247 | Would the happy spirit descend From the realms of light or song, Should I fear to greet my friend Or to say''Forgive the wrong''? 54247 Would these bonds be easily convertible into cash?" |
54247 | Would they let me see her? |
54247 | Would you like it? |
54247 | Would you mind if we were not able to stop them on this side of the sea? |
54247 | Would you prefer them if they were poisoners, like the Borgia? |
54247 | Yet you never ask a friend to help you out of a fix? |
54247 | You admired the actor? |
54247 | You ask me no questions, Father? |
54247 | You have heard my moralities-- I wo n''t call them sermons? |
54247 | You have known...? |
54247 | You knew? |
54247 | You know Rome? |
54247 | You want to fall in love with me again? 54247 You were with her that night when Provana came home unexpectedly?" |
54247 | You''d like them kept to look at, eh? |
54247 | Your faces-- You mean those portraits? |
54247 | Your society? |
54247 | _ I?_ No, indeed. 54247 _ Ninon, que fait tu de la vie?_"Memory brought back every tone of the fresh young voice. |
54247 | _ Now_ will you believe that Claude Rutherford was a devoted husband, and that he broke his heart when his wife died? |
54247 | ''Dear Lady Sue, would you call no trumps if?'' |
54247 | --and would you do this and t''other? |
54247 | A wicked woman, a foolish young man-- very young, was n''t he?" |
54247 | After only three years? |
54247 | All their talk began with"Do you remember?" |
54247 | Am I to walk about like a dead man for ten or twenty or thirty years? |
54247 | And now what was to be her doom? |
54247 | And then, after a little more doctor''s talk, soothing, and rather meaningless, she asked abruptly:"What time of year is it?" |
54247 | Answer, love, can you trust me?" |
54247 | Are n''t you pleased to be home, Vera, in these cosy drawing- rooms?" |
54247 | Are we to let her die?" |
54247 | Are you capable of renouncing that hope by burying yourself in a cloister? |
54247 | Are you equal to the sacrifice? |
54247 | Bizet? |
54247 | But it''s the modern way, is n''t it? |
54247 | But oh, what shall I do without him? |
54247 | But why conjure up the memory of things that were sad? |
54247 | But why?" |
54247 | But your accumulations? |
54247 | By what authority? |
54247 | CHAPTER VII"Well, now your whim has been gratified, I should like to know what you think of Francis Symeon?" |
54247 | Can anything be more romantic, when one considers the woman she is and the man he is, and that they absolutely dote upon each other?" |
54247 | Can you forget that when your wife dies her fortune dies with her?" |
54247 | Could he have told her more absolutely that his love was dead, and that no charm of sweetness in her could make it live again? |
54247 | Could it be strange that she loved the girl who had begun by loving her, and who was her first girl friend? |
54247 | Could love that had begun in ecstasy close in this grey calm? |
54247 | Could she be happy if he left her for ever? |
54247 | Could she give up all the world for him, as he would for her? |
54247 | Did she love him? |
54247 | Did the witness know of any incident in her husband''s life-- in England or in Italy-- which might suggest a motive for the crime? |
54247 | Do you mind? |
54247 | Do you not despise me, Vera?" |
54247 | Do you remember all we talked about when you were last in this room-- a long time ago?" |
54247 | Do you remember the night we walked home together from Portland Place? |
54247 | Do you see them as they were on earth?" |
54247 | Do you suppose they do n''t ask to be considered? |
54247 | Do you understand?" |
54247 | Does he float up to the ceiling, as Home did? |
54247 | Does he look through death to the Spirit- world beyond? |
54247 | Does he realise the After- life as Christ realised it when He talked with His disciples?" |
54247 | Does she never see gardens and meadows? |
54247 | Duplicity-- an old man''s heart broken-- Isn''t that enough? |
54247 | Ever so far away? |
54247 | Father, have you forgotten those two lost souls Dante saw, driven through the malignant air; they who had stained the earth with blood? |
54247 | Had Giulia lived, would everything have been different? |
54247 | Had Mr. Provana a quarrel with anybody, either in his social or business relations? |
54247 | Had he gone for ever? |
54247 | Had she anything in this world to be glad or sorry about, except her son? |
54247 | Had she enjoyed her walk? |
54247 | Had she, too, come to winter there? |
54247 | Had they come, like her, for a refuge from the tragedy of life? |
54247 | Has anything happened while I have been away, anything to make you unhappy?" |
54247 | Have I not loved you?" |
54247 | Have n''t you enough frocks? |
54247 | Have you made your will?" |
54247 | Have you neither eyes nor understanding that you do n''t try to help me?" |
54247 | Have you no thought of my grief?" |
54247 | He could take such a step without consulting you, without confiding in you-- his closest friend?" |
54247 | He who was neither soldier nor senator, who had no rag of reputation to bequeath: what should he want with an heir? |
54247 | Her twelfth year? |
54247 | Here they could say to each other,"Do you remember?" |
54247 | How can a woman like Fanny, eaten up with spiritualism, look after a daughter? |
54247 | How can you say such a thing?" |
54247 | How could I know that Death was the only security from sin?" |
54247 | How could she ever have feared him? |
54247 | How could you be such a fool?" |
54247 | How much of her millions had Mrs. Provana settled upon Rutherford? |
54247 | How should you know the measureless love in the heart of a man of my life- history? |
54247 | I hardly like to speak of such things; but has she not been just a little talked about lately? |
54247 | I sometimes wonder how I could bear it?" |
54247 | I suppose you and the little girl are soon going into the country?" |
54247 | If Lord Avebury could devote his days to watching bees and wasps, do you wonder that I am interested in watching my fellow- creatures? |
54247 | If you are to be in Rome in November, why not spend the interval in Italy, at Varese, for instance, a charming spot, with every advantage?" |
54247 | If you do n''t care for society, what are the things that make your idea of happiness?" |
54247 | If you think poor little Vera is in danger, why do n''t you contrive to see a little more of her? |
54247 | Is blood to be no thicker than water? |
54247 | Is death to take her from me and leave me in this black world alone? |
54247 | Is he ill?" |
54247 | Is it because I am a failure that you have cut me?" |
54247 | Is it near him? |
54247 | Is it thought- reading, slate- writing, materialisation? |
54247 | Is it--"her voice became tremulous,"is it anything about Claude? |
54247 | Is not that dreadful?" |
54247 | Is that nothing?" |
54247 | Is that the reason for not coming?" |
54247 | Is that the reason?" |
54247 | Is that to be the end? |
54247 | Is the bond of our childish affection to go for nothing? |
54247 | Is there anything wrong?" |
54247 | Is this how you help me?" |
54247 | It is a comfort to know that,_ n''est- ce pas, mein Schatz?_""Yes, of course it is a comfort. |
54247 | May I call you by your pretty Christian name?" |
54247 | Mrs. Rutherford had called her cruel, but was not the cruelty far greater that submitted her to that heart- rending ordeal? |
54247 | My story would not bear telling-- and why should you want to know?" |
54247 | Oh, God, was it her old woman''s preaching that had brought him to this living death? |
54247 | Oh, who will care take of my father when he is old; who will love him as I have done? |
54247 | Or Browning, who has gone to the very core of religion, whose magnificent mind grasped the highest and deepest in Divine love and Divine power? |
54247 | Perhaps you are a member?" |
54247 | Pleasure? |
54247 | Rome? |
54247 | Shall we go away? |
54247 | She had shown herself heartless as a daughter, and how could she expect softness in her mother? |
54247 | Stale, barren stories of loves that are dead?" |
54247 | Symeon''s?" |
54247 | That crouching form with contracted shoulders, and wasted hands stretched above the feeble fire- glow-- could that be Claude Rutherford? |
54247 | That is enough, Claude, is it not? |
54247 | The club that elects, or selects, Confucius or Browning one day, and Lady Fanny Ransom-- mad Lady Fanny as they call her-- the next?" |
54247 | The orthodox Christian talks of the life beyond; and we must give him credit for sometimes thinking of it-- but does he realise it? |
54247 | The truth? |
54247 | Then you have not forgotten?" |
54247 | They quite took you up, did n''t they? |
54247 | To whom can I submit myself?" |
54247 | To- day she must see no one but her nurse-- not even me; but if she should be a shade better to- morrow, will you come to her? |
54247 | Vera, why have you come between me and my God?" |
54247 | Vera, will you be my wife?" |
54247 | Wagner? |
54247 | Was he always good? |
54247 | Was he always kindly treated?" |
54247 | Was it indeed the end? |
54247 | Was not that enough for happiness? |
54247 | Was not that sublime vision something more than a dream in a stuffy Methodist chapel? |
54247 | Was there any other love left her now quite as real as this? |
54247 | Was there ever a servant who confessed to being anything else? |
54247 | Was there one among them all whose love she could believe in as she could in her Irish terrier? |
54247 | What are you two talking about,_ entre chien et loup_? |
54247 | What can I do for you? |
54247 | What can I do? |
54247 | What can she have in common with such a man?" |
54247 | What could be Mrs. Rutherford''s trouble? |
54247 | What could be more diverse than those? |
54247 | What could it mean but a sneer at my poverty?" |
54247 | What danger could there be in such a friendship? |
54247 | What does the house matter?" |
54247 | What else? |
54247 | What had tragedy to do with Claude Rutherford? |
54247 | What has become of our past, Vera? |
54247 | What have you been doing since six o''clock? |
54247 | What ignorant sin have I committed that it should be''Darwaza band''when I call in Portland Place? |
54247 | What is her misery measured against mine?" |
54247 | What more could any woman want of wealth, than to be able to draw upon the purse of a triple millionaire? |
54247 | What more could be wanted?" |
54247 | What more was left but to be happy in her own way? |
54247 | What must it be to a girl to be loved so fondly by that great strong man? |
54247 | What wife, who cared for her husband, could help being angry if she saw him near such a creature? |
54247 | What''s the matter?" |
54247 | When did you make your last confession, Claude?" |
54247 | When had the fatal change begun? |
54247 | Where are they found, as a rule, when they do get nicked? |
54247 | Where can I go? |
54247 | Where could they get such rooms, such air and space? |
54247 | Who could say precisely what made the separation? |
54247 | Who has told you that she is in failing health? |
54247 | Whoever said she was to be cremated?" |
54247 | Why do n''t you never come down to the drawing- room of an evening?" |
54247 | Why had she come there? |
54247 | Why should I have been afraid of truth in those days? |
54247 | Why should I make a will? |
54247 | Why should he shut himself in a monastery to find forgiveness for trivial sins, and neglect of religious forms? |
54247 | Why should not people want to see the old church at Allersley? |
54247 | Why? |
54247 | Will you come?" |
54247 | Will you let mine be the hand to lead you along the passive way of light and love, the way that leads to pardon and peace?" |
54247 | Will you trust your life to me? |
54247 | With all her heart and soul? |
54247 | Would Mario have loved and married her, and would they three have lived in a trinity of love? |
54247 | Would n''t you like a country holiday, Veronica? |
54247 | Would there be no looking back, no repentance?" |
54247 | You all know the sequel, so why recapitulate? |
54247 | You did n''t mean that for me?" |
54247 | You remember what Macbeth said to his physician?" |
54247 | You will let her come, wo n''t you,_ cara_ Grannie?" |
54247 | You will let us be friends, wo n''t you,_ cara_ Grannie?" |
54247 | Your surplus income?" |
54247 | _ A riverdervi, Madre mia._""Where are you going?" |
54247 | _ Non è vero, Padre?_"He looked at her with his fond parental smile. |
54247 | _ That_ is the noblest kind of nobility--_non è vero_, Grannie?" |
54247 | _ Welt Schmerz._ Is n''t that enough?" |
54247 | and was it not a delicious evening? |
54247 | she gasped, amidst her sobs;"you know I need pardon?" |
54247 | to new worlds-- to places where the stupendous phenomena of Nature, and the things that men have made, will take us out of ourselves? |
8882 | According to Buddhism, therefore, he has obtained no merit? |
8882 | And at last, knowing not what else to do, I took away by stealth[ the spirit?] 8882 And by those knowing the Law, what will be thought of the results, the karma of his act?" |
8882 | And is it not like tearing the hands of Kobodaishi, thus to tear a letter written with characters? 8882 And what shall it be?" |
8882 | At all events,he cried in a cheery tone,"they''ll be appreciated in the British Museum-- eh?" |
8882 | But was it the duty of the priest,I asked,"to disfigure his face?" |
8882 | But what is the teaching? |
8882 | Did any person tell you these were devils trampling on the cross? |
8882 | Do n''t you see what they are? 8882 Do you mean that in some former life also he may have tried to escape from sin by destroying his own body?" |
8882 | For old bronze? |
8882 | How did you ever manage to get those big figures upstairs? |
8882 | Josses? |
8882 | Know you not that a woman is less pure than a man? 8882 Suppose that he sought death only to escape from sinning?" |
8882 | Well, come, and look at my collection, wo n''t you? 8882 Well?" |
8882 | What else are they doing? |
8882 | What of his future lives? |
8882 | What would you call that? |
8882 | When do you intend to offer the collection to the British Museum? |
8882 | Who is that man? |
8882 | Why do you think they will make a sensation? |
8882 | Why, the story of Buddha is like the story of Christ, is n''t it? |
8882 | Will you not please permit me to stay, if only for a little time? 8882 Woman or wood- fairy?" |
8882 | Would you really have broken it up? |
8882 | ( 1)"Is that really the head of your father?" |
8882 | ( 3) Nono- San, or O- Tsuki- san Ikutsu? |
8882 | A tale: then of what is it best that we should tell? |
8882 | Again we may vainly ask, What becomes of the forces which constituted the vitality of a dead plant? |
8882 | Also Nobuyoshi said to his wicked wife:"What do you mean by remaining here? |
8882 | And being so young, how came you to commit such a dreadful crime as incendiarism?" |
8882 | And the bamboo- screen having been rolled up before her, Terute- Hime asked:"What is the cause of all this laughing? |
8882 | And the painter questioned her, sayings"Shall I paint you the picture of a very old plum- tree, or of an ancient pine?" |
8882 | Are you really in earnest? |
8882 | Are you truly in your right senses? |
8882 | Buddhist faith, however, answers the questions"Whence?" |
8882 | But are they so antagonistic? |
8882 | But if inquiry is pushed a stage further, and the question is asked, What, then, do we know about matter and motion? |
8882 | But what is the meaning of a perfect imagination? |
8882 | But what was her age? |
8882 | But which of the man servants or maid servants would you wish to go with you?" |
8882 | But whose the witchcraft? |
8882 | Can all this mean more than the ordered conservation of forms after the departure of faith? |
8882 | Could it, as his aged teacher averred, have some occult relation to a higher religion? |
8882 | Could she not call back her boy for one brief minute only? |
8882 | Did the Buddhist landscape- gardener wish to tell us that all pomp and power and beauty lead only to such silence at last? |
8882 | Does it go on existing viewlessly, like the forces that shape spectres of frondage in the frost upon a window- pane? |
8882 | Does the evil stop even there? |
8882 | Going to the middle one, she greeted the smith, and asked him:"Sir smith, can you make some fine small work in iron?" |
8882 | Hastening on, she met five or six persona going to Kumano; and she asked them:"Have you not met on your way a blind youth, about sixteen years old?" |
8882 | Her husband answered,"Yes, surely; but what is it that you wish to do for seven days?" |
8882 | How can the beliefs of Shinto coexist with the knowledge of modern science? |
8882 | How can the men who win distinction as scientific specialists still respect the household shrine or do reverence before the Shinto parish- temple? |
8882 | How do you like the baby?" |
8882 | How long do you require to go?" |
8882 | How should he want for milk?" |
8882 | Is all well with you, honored parents?" |
8882 | Is it any power in the living idol? |
8882 | Is it not a self? |
8882 | Is it not all a lie?" |
8882 | Is it not certain that with the further progress of education, Shinto, even as ceremonialism, must cease to exist? |
8882 | It would trouble the little soul; but would he not gladly bear a moment''s pain for her dear sake? |
8882 | Little comrades would ask him mockingly,"Do you still need milk?" |
8882 | Might they not signify also the inevitable penalty of long- forgotten sins? |
8882 | Must not the same truth hold of that shock which supreme art gives? |
8882 | Nevertheless, though the fact be unique in human history, what does it really mean? |
8882 | Not twelve? |
8882 | Question: Is an artist justified in creating nakedness for its own sake, unless he can divest that nakedness of every trace of the real and personal? |
8882 | See that Jizo in the corner,--the big black fellow? |
8882 | Servants disputing, ask each other,"By reason of what ingwa must I now dwell with such a one as you?" |
8882 | She was accepted into the Order, and became a holy nun.... Well, which was the wiser, that woman, or the priest you wanted to praise?" |
8882 | Shuntoku asked:"Why do you laugh? |
8882 | Suppose he sought death that he might not, unwittingly, cause others to commit sin?" |
8882 | THE BALLAD OF SHUNTOKU- MARU_ Ara!--Joyfully young Daikoko and Ebisu enter dancing_ Shall we tell a tale, or shall we utter felicitations? |
8882 | That one there looks just like a Virgin Mary, does n''t it?" |
8882 | The dreams of Buddhism can scarcely be surpassed, because they touch the infinite; but who can presume to say they never will be realized? |
8882 | Then Otohime, a daughter of that family, hearing the voices, came out, and asked the maid:"Why did you laugh?" |
8882 | Then she thanked him, and asked:--"Now will you say again for me the little word which I prayed you to tell your honored father?" |
8882 | Then tremblingly she questioned:--"Why must I sorrow for my child? |
8882 | Then what is it? |
8882 | Therefore may I beseech you to bestow some suitable name upon me?" |
8882 | Uma ni yaru? |
8882 | Ushi ni yaru? |
8882 | VI What of the future of Japan? |
8882 | What care we now if the posts should fall, if the wires be broken?" |
8882 | What else could you do with it?... |
8882 | What is it that suffers by karma; what is it that lies within the illusion,--that makes progress,--that attains Nirvana? |
8882 | What is it?" |
8882 | What is the divine magic of the woman thus perceived? |
8882 | What is the justice of the gods?" |
8882 | What is the shock? |
8882 | What is the story of a common Japanese dwelling? |
8882 | What remains in Nirvana? |
8882 | What though the shattered body fall? |
8882 | What, of bad men and of bad acts in this theory of Shinto? |
8882 | When the plant turns to clay, what becomes of the vibration which was its life? |
8882 | Where are the outward material signs of that immense new force she has been showing both in productivity and in war? |
8882 | Wherefore, then, do you, born a woman, thus presume to tear a letter? |
8882 | Why does he not go to the Palace of the Dragon- King of the Sea, like Urashima?" |
8882 | Why does it call once more? |
8882 | Why has that bugle ceased to call? |
8882 | Why not? |
8882 | Why should not Japan become the France of the Further East?" |
8882 | Why should not prayers now also be made? |
8882 | Why sounds the stirring signal now More faintly than before? |
8882 | Will you give it to the cow? |
8882 | Will you give it to the horse? |
8882 | Will you take me now?'' |
8882 | With what sword shall we fight? |
8882 | XI IN THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS"Do you know anything about josses?" |
8882 | and"Whither?" |
8882 | are you really Otohime? |
8882 | is she present?" |
8882 | not fourteen? |
8882 | not thirteen? |
9865 | ''And now what hast thou to do in the way of Egypt, to drink the waters of Sihor? 9865 ''Thou shalt have no other God--''"Jeremy, with a glint in his eye, asked,"Was n''t your last consignment of West India molasses marked Medford?" |
9865 | ''Yet I had planted thee a noble vine, wholly a right seed: how then art thou turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me? 9865 About Nettie Vollar?" |
9865 | And for Manilla? |
9865 | Ca n''t I get nearer, mother? |
9865 | Ca n''t I go and see the little lamps on their heads? |
9865 | Captain Jeremy is sick? |
9865 | Could n''t you wait till he''s dead, William? |
9865 | Dead? |
9865 | Did he get pale or did n''t he? 9865 Did he like the girl?" |
9865 | Did mother say you might put that on? |
9865 | Did you hear that they want me to go away? |
9865 | Did you notice,the former volunteered,"mother is letting Camilla have lots of starch in her petticoats, so that they stand right out like crinoline? |
9865 | Do n''t you think we''d better be going? |
9865 | Do you expect me to go to their house, like you did? |
9865 | Do you mean that Gerrit''s loose? |
9865 | Do you mean that what we call nonsense is really the most important? |
9865 | Do you think he means it,Janet asked hopefully,"and he''ll never have any geography again?" |
9865 | Do you want me to go? |
9865 | Does n''t she want to go? |
9865 | God bless me,he said, turning upon her his steady blue gaze;"what have we got here, all dressed up to go ashore?" |
9865 | Has father failed, do you think? 9865 He did Sidsall, though, as we all remember; did n''t he, love?" |
9865 | Head pump rigged and deck swabbed down? |
9865 | How are you now? |
9865 | How can it matter what you will or will not allow when everyone''ll think the other? 9865 How do you know?" |
9865 | How do you suppose he got hold of a Manchu? |
9865 | How have you been? |
9865 | How is she? |
9865 | How soon do we go? |
9865 | How''s Barzil Dunsack? |
9865 | How''s Nettie? |
9865 | How? |
9865 | I did n''t fetch boundaries back in the_ Two Capes_, did I? |
9865 | I do n''t suppose they ever have a good chantey with the stuff they play? |
9865 | If it''s hard for us what must it be for Taou Yuen? |
9865 | Is he dead? |
9865 | Just so, and--he looked up at the ceiling,"the port for Boston?" |
9865 | Laurel Ammidon, wherever are your pantalets? |
9865 | Laurel,he demanded,"what is an outport?" |
9865 | Laurel? |
9865 | Look here, Rhoda,he demanded,"did Gerrit ever say anything to you about her?" |
9865 | My dear child,he replied,"ca n''t you guess how absolutely refreshing you are? |
9865 | Nettie, do you-- do you think he wanted to marry you? |
9865 | Nettie? |
9865 | Please-- I have a box full; you will let me give you some? |
9865 | Remember Oahu like it was when we first made it,he queried,"and the Kanaka girls swimming out to the ship with hybiscus flowers in their hair? |
9865 | Scuttle butt filled? |
9865 | Shall I help you up to bed? |
9865 | Shanghai? |
9865 | The British Government is putting a stop to that,he added hastily,"and to suttees--""What are they?" |
9865 | Then it''s no better than before? |
9865 | There was something special you wanted to say? |
9865 | Was it anything to you? |
9865 | Well, is n''t there a salute in you? |
9865 | What am I to do? |
9865 | What did you say her name was? |
9865 | What do you mean-- not very nice? |
9865 | What has it ever been to me but an unfair judgment? 9865 What in the name of all the heavens would I do with Taou Yuen?" |
9865 | What is bad and what is good? |
9865 | What is she like? 9865 What''s the sense in frightening the child, father?" |
9865 | What? |
9865 | What? |
9865 | What? |
9865 | Whatever was it--? |
9865 | Who knows? 9865 Whom are you with, Nettie?" |
9865 | Will we be going on Central Street? |
9865 | Woman,he demanded,"can you cure what God has smitten?" |
9865 | Yes? |
9865 | You understood,she said,"that I only bothered you because your father... because I was so put on?" |
9865 | You want to marry me, do n''t you? |
9865 | And did he or not rush from the room like a man in a fever? |
9865 | But what can that do for us now? |
9865 | Did he hold her hand? |
9865 | Did you notice that fore- royal mast and yard? |
9865 | Do Chinese women kiss? |
9865 | Do they seem happy? |
9865 | Do you suppose, William, that he took the_ Nautilus_ about the Horn and--?" |
9865 | Father liked the Chinese though; so many of our shipmasters have, and not always the merchants.... What was I saying? |
9865 | Gerrit asked,"He did n''t stop to get a whiff of it then?" |
9865 | Gerrit suggested,"Since it''s so hot why do n''t you have the carriage round?" |
9865 | Have they given up hope of the_ Nautilus_?" |
9865 | He asked:"Have you forgotten that we are friends?" |
9865 | How did you manage a go- between, and did you send the hour of your birth to the Calculator of Destinies? |
9865 | How much, I''d like to ask, have you been expecting all your life and getting nothing? |
9865 | How was Dunsack, who was now clearly demented, implicated? |
9865 | How will he ever get along with her or be happy?" |
9865 | How will she get along while you are away on your long voyages? |
9865 | I intend to have a good time until I get married--""But what if you love in vain?" |
9865 | If you are so pure how can you explain your gold and bracelets and pins, all the marks of your worldly rank? |
9865 | Is n''t a religion a religion? |
9865 | It was Sunday; and with the customary preparation for church under way William said:"I suppose you will go down to the ship?" |
9865 | Might he have some Chinese disease, do you think?" |
9865 | Mrs. Ammidon,"she hesitated, then continued more rapidly, her gaze lowered,"have you had any word about Captain Ammidon yet? |
9865 | Petersburg?" |
9865 | Shall I tell him that-- that you are here?" |
9865 | She paused, studied him for a moment, and then asked,"Was your call on Captain Dunsack pleasant?" |
9865 | Sometimes I-- I wonder that I do n''t actually go sinful, I''ve had opportunities, and being good has n''t offered me much, has it?" |
9865 | Tell me, is-- is that possible with an American?" |
9865 | The servant explained impotently,"I told him I would see--""Yes?" |
9865 | The thing is-- how long will it last, how soon will he get tired of her and send her back to Canton?" |
9865 | To be unfaithful in anything is to fail, is n''t it? |
9865 | Was his admiration for Taou Yuen sufficient provision for his part of their future together? |
9865 | What has upset you now?" |
9865 | What racking thing had Nettie Vollar seen? |
9865 | What were they all about? |
9865 | Whose concern was it if he did, very occasionally, smoke a"pistol"? |
9865 | Why do you suppose he brought such a woman home?" |
9865 | Will you go up with her? |
9865 | William, would you know that my hair is turning gray, do I look a lot older than I did five years ago?" |
9865 | Yes, and the anchorage at Tahiti with the swells pounding on the coral reef and Papeete under the mountain? |
9865 | You must have been horribly worried--""What do you mean?" |
9865 | You''ll ask me, Sidsall?" |
9865 | he asked, adding, with a descriptive gesture:"the town and people?" |
9865 | or what hast thou to do in the way of Assyria, to drink the waters of the river? |
7297 | ''"May I, freeing myself from all pain, enter on free possession of endless delight?" |
7297 | ''For who could breathe, who could breathe forth, if that bliss existed not in the ether? |
7297 | ''How can creative energy be attributed to Brahman, devoid of qualities, pure,& c.?'' |
7297 | ''That is the immortal, the fearless, this is Brahman''( VIII, 7, 3?). |
7297 | ''What was the wood, what the tree from which they have shaped heaven and earth? |
7297 | ''What will happen to us if we transgress his commandments?'' |
7297 | ''Why so?'' |
7297 | ''how can you speak of Jânasruti, being what he is, as if he were Raikva, who knows Brahman and is endowed with the most eminent qualities? |
7297 | ''what is the substrate of the erroneous imagination of a world?'' |
7297 | --''And what does this imply?'' |
7297 | --''Why so?'' |
7297 | --Is then the apûrva a pleasure? |
7297 | --Is then, we ask, this primary motion of the atoms caused by an adrishta residing in them, or by an adrishta residing in the souls? |
7297 | Among the questions belonging to the first category, the question''whence proceed animate and inanimate things?'' |
7297 | And how can one subject cognise what has been apprehended through the senses of another? |
7297 | And in reply to the question''What is that Self?'' |
7297 | And moreover another text also--''Who could breathe if that bliss existed not in the ether?'' |
7297 | And who were those Rishis? |
7297 | Brahman was born as the first of all beings; who may rival that Brahman?'' |
7297 | But how can it be maintained at all that Scripture does not set forth a certain view because thereby it would enter into conflict with Smriti? |
7297 | But how can the subtle body persist, when the works which originate it have passed away? |
7297 | But how then is the plural form''the Rishis are the prânas''to be accounted for? |
7297 | But what about the distinction of souls implied therein? |
7297 | But what then is the entity referred to in the text''tato yad uttarataram''? |
7297 | But, do you then, we ask in reply, admit that any change is real? |
7297 | But, if the Self is mere light, where is the being by which light is to be apprehended as agreeable to its own nature? |
7297 | Bâlâki at first offers to teach Brahman(''Shall I tell you Brahman?'') |
7297 | Compare''For who could breathe, who could breathe forth, if that ether were not bliss?'' |
7297 | Do they also lead the soul along their stages? |
7297 | Do you hold that everything is being or non- being, or anything else? |
7297 | Do you mean to say that the difference lies in one aspect of the thing and the non- difference in the other? |
7297 | Does consciousness become a reflection of the ahamkâra, or does the ahamkâra become a reflection of consciousness? |
7297 | Does it mean that they can not be counted? |
7297 | Does it not mean that the judgment''This is a jar''implies the negation of pieces of cloth and other things? |
7297 | Does that nearness mean merely the existence of Prakriti or some change in Prakriti? |
7297 | Does the Lord produce his effects, with his body or apart from his body? |
7297 | Does the aggregate of Goodness, Passion, and Darkness constitute the Pradhâna? |
7297 | Does the mere gold,& c., by itself originate the svastika- ornament? |
7297 | Does this nature then exist previously( to the cessation of indistinctness), or not? |
7297 | For as there is equal authority for both sides, why should the contrary view not be held? |
7297 | For if there were nothing but essential unity of being, what reason would there be for the employment of several words? |
7297 | For in the early part of that Upanishad, we have after the introductory question,''Is Brahman the cause?'' |
7297 | For the question is,''Do you know why in the fifth libation water is called man?'' |
7297 | For there the view of the absolute non- being of the effect is objected to,''But how could it be thus?'' |
7297 | For, he argues, on the introductory question,''He who here among men should meditate until death on the syllable Om, what would he obtain by it?'' |
7297 | For, in answer to the question''Do you know why that world never becomes full?'' |
7297 | For, we ask, has the former knowledge the same object as the latter, or a different one? |
7297 | Have we, perhaps, to understand by it the invariable concomitance of existence and shining forth? |
7297 | Have you then, we ask, ever observed this so as to be able to assert an absolute rule? |
7297 | He then concludes,''Whereby should he know the Knower? |
7297 | He then proceeds,''He by whom he knows all this, by what means should he know Him?'' |
7297 | He thought, shall I send forth worlds? |
7297 | Here they say, what was that? |
7297 | How is this possible? |
7297 | How then should consciousness and( the conscious subject) be one? |
7297 | How, further, do you conceive this consciousness of ajnâna on Brahman''s part? |
7297 | How, we ask in return, is this becoming a reflection of intelligence imagined to take place? |
7297 | II, 4);''By whom he knows all this, whereby should he know him?'' |
7297 | III, 1, 8);''But by a pure mind''(? |
7297 | III, 18, 2).--But how can something that in itself is beyond all measure, for the purpose of meditation, be spoken of as measured? |
7297 | IV, 3, 7);''By what should one know the knower?'' |
7297 | IV, 4, 19);''But when for him the Self alone has become all, by what means, and whom, should he see?'' |
7297 | If Vaisvânara is the highest Self, how can the text say that the altar is its chest, the grass on the altar its hairs, and so on? |
7297 | If the former, what is that reality? |
7297 | In the first place we ask,''What is the substrate of this Nescience which gives rise to the great error of plurality of existence?'' |
7297 | Is breath, which we thus know to be a modification of air, to be considered as a kind of elementary substance, like fire, earth, and so on? |
7297 | Is it due to Brahman itself, or to something else? |
7297 | Is it merely the knowledge of the sense of sentences which originates from the sentences? |
7297 | Is that distinction essential to the nature of the soul, or is it the figment of Nescience? |
7297 | Is the activity of the individual soul independent( free), or does it depend on the highest Self? |
7297 | Is this main vital breath nothing else but air, the second of the elements? |
7297 | Jânasruti, is likewise a Kshattriya, not a Sûdra.--But how do we know that Abhipratârin is a Kaitraratha and a Kshattriya? |
7297 | Nor can it do so if not being; for if consciousness itself is not, how can it furnish a proof for its own non- existence? |
7297 | Now in our text Brahman is introduced at the outset''Shall I tell you Brahman?'' |
7297 | Now there arises the question, What are the characteristics of that Self? |
7297 | Or is it a certain motion of the air? |
7297 | Proof of what, we ask in reply, and to whom? |
7297 | Similarly we read in the Vâjasaneyaka, in reply to the question''Who is that Self?'' |
7297 | Similarly, Scripture says,''what was that wood, what was that tree from which they built heaven and earth?'' |
7297 | Similarly, in the Mahâbhârata, to the question''Whence was created this whole world with its movable and immovable beings?'' |
7297 | Smriti also says,''Dost thou know both Prakriti and the soul to be without beginning?'' |
7297 | Take the judgment''This is such and such''; how can we realise here the non- difference of''being this''and''being such and such''? |
7297 | The following question now arises-- Is the individual soul absolutely different from Brahman? |
7297 | The word''iti,''_ thus_, here intimates that the answer is meant to dispose of the question,''Do you know_ how_?'' |
7297 | This scripture confirms when saying''By what should he know the knower?'' |
7297 | To this praise of Jânasruti the other flamingo replied,''How can you speak of him, being what he is, as if he were Raikva"sayuktvân"?'' |
7297 | Uddâlaka asks,''Dost thou know that Ruler within who within rules this world and the other world and all beings? |
7297 | VI, 2, 3);''He thought, shall I send forth worlds?'' |
7297 | VI, 8, 7);''Am I thou, O holy deity? |
7297 | VIII, 12, 4);''Who is that Self? |
7297 | We read in the Chândogya( I, 10; ii),''Prastotri, that deity which belongs to the Prastâva,''& c.; and further on,''which then is that deity? |
7297 | We read in the Chândogya( I, 9),''What is the origin of this world?'' |
7297 | We read in the Kathavallî( I, 3, 25),''Who then knows where he is to whom the Brahmans and Kshattriyas are but food, and death itself a condiment?'' |
7297 | What could, moreover, be the nature of that''manifestation''of the Self consisting of Intelligence, which would be effected through the ahamkâra? |
7297 | What need is there, in fact, of lengthy proofs? |
7297 | What, it must be asked, do you understand by this dependence on an intelligent principle? |
7297 | What, to come to the next point, do you understand by the inexplicability( anirvakaniyatâ) of Nescience? |
7297 | Whence did he thus come back?'' |
7297 | Where was he? |
7297 | Why so? |
7297 | Why so?'' |
7297 | With regard to the first- mentioned doctrine, we ask''if there is only one substance; to what can the doctrine of universal identity refer?'' |
7297 | You will perhaps reply''Proof to the Self''; and if we go on asking''But what is that Self''? |
7297 | and art thou me, O holy deity? |
7297 | and how is one subject to take to itself what another subject has cognised? |
7297 | and what is the cognising Self? |
7297 | and when do they become the abodes of the activities of appropriation, avoidance and so on( on the part of agents)? |
7297 | and when do they become the''objects of states of consciousness''? |
7297 | and which Self proceeds to appropriate which objects, and at what time? |
7297 | and which cognising Self cognises which objects, and at what time? |
7297 | and with what objects does it enter into contact through the sense- organs? |
7297 | by what means, and whom, should he know?'' |
7297 | consciousness) whose nature is pure Being? |
7297 | desire, aversion, and so on, originate? |
7297 | difference and non- difference)? |
7297 | for what purpose should we sacrifice?'' |
7297 | if its non- existence is not, how can it give rise to the idea of its non- existence? |
7297 | in the passage,''Now that serene being, which after having risen from this body,''& c.( VIII, 3, 4)? |
7297 | or how can it be said that of a thing absent at one time and place there is absence at other times and places also? |
7297 | or is it Brahman in so far as determined by a limiting adjunct( upâdhi)? |
7297 | or is it knowledge in the form of meditation( upâsana) which has the knowledge just referred to as its antecedent? |
7297 | or is it nothing else than Brahman itself in so far as under the influence of error? |
7297 | or is it something else? |
7297 | or is it the gold coins( used for making ornaments) which originate? |
7297 | or is it the gold, as forming the substrate of the coins[ FOOTNOTE 434:1]? |
7297 | or is it the soul which corresponds to the reflected image? |
7297 | or is the Pradhâna the effect of those three? |
7297 | self- illumination? |
7297 | texts such as''The Rishis descended from Kavasha said: For what purpose should we study the Veda? |
7297 | the being which constitutes the topic of the section) where he is?'' |
7297 | the consciousness of its own true nature, implicate the released Self in Nescience, or, in the Samsâra? |
7297 | the highest Brahman or Vishnu, in the section beginning''The Self smaller than small,''and ending''Who then knows where he is?'' |
7297 | the non- produced one; or, if it is non- produced, how can it be originated by Brahman? |
7297 | the whole Universe, will be known? |
7297 | where is the knowing subject conscious of bliss?) |
63181 | Afraid of what? |
63181 | Ah, thad half- Jap, he was very high- up man ad Japan, perhaps? |
63181 | Ah, whad? |
63181 | Ain''you shamed? |
63181 | Anata? |
63181 | And how are things with you? 63181 And she has not returned? |
63181 | And so you did it, after all? |
63181 | And still has you under her spell? |
63181 | And that is--? |
63181 | And what can they find there to distress you? |
63181 | And what do you want with me? |
63181 | And wife? |
63181 | And you,Taro turned on him,"have you come out all right?" |
63181 | And your father and mother? |
63181 | Are you the girl who sang? |
63181 | Better than you do me? |
63181 | Burton, dear old friend, what is it? |
63181 | Burton,he said, as the sick man stirred,"you have something to say to me?" |
63181 | But do n''t any of them work? 63181 But where does he think you are all the time?" |
63181 | But where is she? |
63181 | But why do you want to marry me? |
63181 | But would n''t you rather stay at the tea- house than get married? |
63181 | But you know where she lives? |
63181 | Ca n''t you talk here? |
63181 | Did I say so? |
63181 | Did what? |
63181 | Did you hear it? 63181 Do you do everything for money?" |
63181 | Do you know what they''d call you in my country? |
63181 | Do you-- um-- like him? |
63181 | Does a promise mean nothing to you-- a promise-- an oath itself? 63181 Forgetting what?" |
63181 | Frien''? 63181 Has your mother given you any information of her whereabouts?" |
63181 | Have you any stars to trot out? |
63181 | He has rather large quarters for one fellow, do n''t you think? |
63181 | He? |
63181 | How I goin''to live? |
63181 | How can they do that? 63181 How could you remember me?" |
63181 | How did_ she_ know me? |
63181 | How do you mean? |
63181 | How much come ad Japan? |
63181 | How much do you want now, Yuki? |
63181 | How much? 63181 How old are you, anyhow?" |
63181 | How you lige me smiling forever? |
63181 | How you like me danze?--liddle bit summer danze? |
63181 | I thought you said you were visiting your people? |
63181 | Inside what? |
63181 | Is n''t she lovely? |
63181 | Is that all? |
63181 | My people? 63181 Never?" |
63181 | Never? |
63181 | Nod for a leetle while whicheven? |
63181 | Now, whad you wan''know for, sinze you don''like me whicheven? |
63181 | Now, would n''t that make one of this country''s squatty little gods groan? |
63181 | Sa- ay, how much it taking go ad America? |
63181 | Say, Ido, just step into the next room a minute, will you? |
63181 | Separate us? |
63181 | So you remember, Yuki, what you asked me when you were here before? |
63181 | Tell me, is it-- do you-- want-- need some more money, Yuki? 63181 That all?" |
63181 | That means''Snowflake,''does n''t it? 63181 The house?--the people''s name?" |
63181 | The meaning of this? |
63181 | Then why does your family object to receiving me into its bosom, eh? |
63181 | To whom were you writing, fairy- sage? |
63181 | To whom? 63181 We could be capital friends, even if we did n''t care to marry, could n''t we?" |
63181 | Well? |
63181 | Well? |
63181 | Well? |
63181 | Whad you goin''do? 63181 What are you doing? |
63181 | What do you know of the Christian marriage service? |
63181 | What do you mean? |
63181 | What for? |
63181 | What is it now? |
63181 | What is it you want with me? |
63181 | What is it, Yuki, dear? |
63181 | What is it? |
63181 | What is troubling you, Yuki? 63181 What is?" |
63181 | What is? |
63181 | What part of Japan does your family live in? |
63181 | What tea- house? |
63181 | What was your intention? 63181 What''s the matter with me? |
63181 | What''s the matter, Yuki? 63181 What''s your name?" |
63181 | Where did you carry her to? 63181 Where did you get them, dear?" |
63181 | Where did you go? |
63181 | Where do they live? |
63181 | Where does she live? |
63181 | Where have you put her? |
63181 | Where is my sister, Yuki? |
63181 | Where is she? 63181 Where is she?" |
63181 | Where were you, Yuki? |
63181 | Where were you? |
63181 | Where? |
63181 | Where? |
63181 | Which one, my lord? |
63181 | Why did you come, then? |
63181 | Why do you persist in that? 63181 Why does n''t your brother come to see you?" |
63181 | Why not? |
63181 | Why should he disown you? |
63181 | Why should he do that? |
63181 | Why, pray? |
63181 | Why? 63181 Why?" |
63181 | Why? |
63181 | Why? |
63181 | Wife? 63181 Would you like to be rich?" |
63181 | Would you like to-- would you rather marry me than one of those other fellows? |
63181 | Yes, yes-- where is she? |
63181 | Yes? |
63181 | You also los''liddle bird? |
63181 | You angery ad me, excellency? |
63181 | You are Japanese? |
63181 | You are not ill already, you poor little thing? |
63181 | You are not so dreadfully sick, are you? |
63181 | You glad see me bag, excellency? |
63181 | You god nod anudder wife? |
63181 | You have come to see me again? 63181 You like me sing ad you?" |
63181 | You loog lige--"Where did you go? |
63181 | You nod yit seen Japanese woman that please you for wife? 63181 You very_ cross_ ad me, my lord?" |
63181 | You very_ mad_ ad me, augustness? |
63181 | You wan''me be American girl? |
63181 | You wan''me go''way? |
63181 | You''re not married yet, are you? |
63181 | Yuki? |
63181 | _ All_ of them too young? |
63181 | After a time she demanded of him, with a shrewd inflection in her voice:"You goin''to lige me, excellency?" |
63181 | Ah, how was her honorable son, her august offspring? |
63181 | Ah, you have a brother, have you? |
63181 | Am I not good enough?" |
63181 | And now, when there was scarcely a doubt left in his mind of her love for him, why had he failed to win her confidence? |
63181 | And the ball? |
63181 | And then Jack''s voice, hoarse with a fear he could not understand, broke in:"Burton, what is the matter?" |
63181 | And then? |
63181 | And where is he?" |
63181 | Are n''t any of them married? |
63181 | Business good? |
63181 | But why had she come to him asking him to marry her? |
63181 | By- the- way, Ido, what''s become of the girl you brought around to my place? |
63181 | Ca n''t you see-- understand how I-- I am suffering?" |
63181 | Come on with me, will you?" |
63181 | Could n''t you bring her to call on me to- morrow morning?" |
63181 | Did Madam Pine- leaf believe he had time to get there before she would leave? |
63181 | Did she want to meet him? |
63181 | Did you intend to leave me? |
63181 | Do you understand?" |
63181 | Git you nudder wife?" |
63181 | Got the dumps again, eh?" |
63181 | Had he enjoyed himself largely with them, and how could he live away hereafter from such mirth and gayety? |
63181 | Had his lordship come into like happiness? |
63181 | Have I silenced you like this and this? |
63181 | He hesitated, and she asked, quickly,"You_ wan_''me do so?" |
63181 | How did she know that on such occasions the ladies, Japanese included, dressed in European gowns? |
63181 | How far away was that? |
63181 | How much of the country had he seen? |
63181 | How was he to know where she had gone or what might happen to her? |
63181 | I think we''ll be fine friends, do n''t you?" |
63181 | It could not have happened without your knowledge?" |
63181 | It was a gentle word, spoken as a question, as though she would ask him,"Condescend to speak your honorable desire with me?" |
63181 | Madam Omatsu, was she resting? |
63181 | Making many matches?" |
63181 | Married yet?" |
63181 | Marry her? |
63181 | Me-- how ole_ I_ am? |
63181 | Me? |
63181 | Me? |
63181 | No? |
63181 | Now, ai n''t I good to speak out just what''s on my mind, eh?" |
63181 | Of what did they warn her? |
63181 | Oh, had I not willing hands and an eager heart to work, to slave for them? |
63181 | Osaka? |
63181 | Rest for her? |
63181 | She stood silent, her head down, so that the manager prompted her impatiently:"Well?" |
63181 | Should he humbly wait for his excellency to condescend to return to the city? |
63181 | So he was to be married, was he? |
63181 | Still approaching her, as she backed from him, he questioned her boyishly:"And you? |
63181 | Tha''s bedder save, eh?" |
63181 | The people''s name? |
63181 | Then she said:"You pay more money ad liddle girl lige me whad nod been marry before?" |
63181 | Then, after a meditative moment:"Sa-- ay, it taking more money than thad three- four hundled dollar whicheven?" |
63181 | Those same honorable monsters, Japanese princes, whad, before all the gods, they goin''to thing of me?" |
63181 | Was there not behind it all some mysterious possibility of such a spirit? |
63181 | Was there not in her house a girl, very beautiful and very young, who sang and danced? |
63181 | Well now, Yuki, may n''t I visit you at your home, before you are married?" |
63181 | Were there many ladies more beautiful than she at the ball? |
63181 | Were you, parrot- like, merely echoing my words when you swore to stay by me until--"his voice broke--"death?" |
63181 | Whad I goin''do then? |
63181 | What I do?" |
63181 | What about that? |
63181 | What do you know of this, my mother? |
63181 | What do you mean? |
63181 | What do you mean?" |
63181 | What do you mean?" |
63181 | What gods would not be? |
63181 | What had he been thinking about? |
63181 | What has become of my little mocking- bird? |
63181 | What has come over you? |
63181 | What is it, Yuki?" |
63181 | What they goin''do git bag thad power an''reeches ag''in? |
63181 | What was her object? |
63181 | What was that tale of the spirit which haunted and was felt but never seen? |
63181 | What was the exact address? |
63181 | What were the memories that crowded back on him, suffocating him? |
63181 | What would his parents think? |
63181 | What''s a summer dance, anyhow?" |
63181 | What''s the matter with them all?" |
63181 | Where can I find her?" |
63181 | Where do you live?" |
63181 | Where? |
63181 | While he lay tossing thus? |
63181 | Whither had she gone? |
63181 | Whither had the soul of the Eurasian drifted? |
63181 | Who are your people? |
63181 | Who has thad money? |
63181 | Who they are? |
63181 | Who was his wife, after all? |
63181 | Who was she, and where did she live? |
63181 | Who were her people, and why had none of them come near her during all these months? |
63181 | Why does n''t he?" |
63181 | Why had he come back to little, insignificant her? |
63181 | Why had he failed to visit his people as promised? |
63181 | Why should the whole burden have fallen on her, my little, frail sister? |
63181 | Why the deuce had n''t he learned her name? |
63181 | Why were his letters so few and far between? |
63181 | Why were they so loud? |
63181 | Why?" |
63181 | Will you like me?" |
63181 | Wo n''t you tell me where you live?" |
63181 | Would she accompany him? |
63181 | Would they never cease? |
63181 | Would they pray wait till morning? |
63181 | You are not, are you?" |
63181 | You like see her?" |
63181 | You missing me very much?" |
63181 | You very, very, very, very_ affended_, Mister Bigelow?" |
63181 | You''member? |
63181 | You''re awfully young, are n''t you? |
63181 | she queried, softly--"jus''lige unto my same liddle nightingale?" |
63181 | you that girl?" |
60795 | A knife, Miss Lee? 60795 A note?" |
60795 | Ai n''t you a deputy sheriff? |
60795 | Ai n''t you jest said that the chink and this Doc Murray were out together? 60795 Aiblins, now, d''ye know what this Deadoak scoundrel will do? |
60795 | Aiblins, now,said Sandy, while Murray examined the paper,"that looks like a chink laundry- man''s mark, eh? |
60795 | And how are you doing without it? |
60795 | And if we go broke on it, no hard feelings? |
60795 | And no reason given? |
60795 | And use the common funds for that purpose? 60795 And ye wo n''t talk mines to nobody else first?" |
60795 | And ye''ll try to pinch one o''Swifty Bill''s mob, will ye? 60795 Are there mines around Two Palms? |
60795 | Arrest? |
60795 | Broken? |
60795 | But how about yourself? 60795 But this-- this ai n''t on the square, is it?" |
60795 | Ca n''t you run on the rim? |
60795 | Can I see ye a moment in private? |
60795 | Can you get along? |
60795 | Cheerful? |
60795 | Come on and help me throw some things together-- put one of those extra gas cans in the back of my car, will you? 60795 Did you give him more opium?" |
60795 | Do you know why I stood in the top rank of surgeons? 60795 Do you like this desert country as much as you expected?" |
60795 | Do you think your father means to come out to Morongo Valley? |
60795 | Doctor Murray has been hurt-- why, what''s the matter? |
60795 | Doctor Murray,she said, a trace of color in her cheeks,"will you take me up to Morongo Valley in your car-- right away?" |
60795 | Does anybody here know anything about medicine? 60795 Each one of us helps the other to get on his feet, eh?" |
60795 | Eat it? 60795 Fall for it?" |
60795 | Five thousand? |
60795 | Had n''t I better see him----? |
60795 | Have a dish, partner? |
60795 | Have ye found somethin''? |
60795 | He ai n''t dead, miss? |
60795 | He ai n''t even usin''a alleyas, huh? 60795 He has not recovered yet?" |
60795 | He has, I believe, engaged a room in advance of my coming? |
60795 | He was an actor, was n''t he? |
60795 | Him? |
60795 | Homestead and minerals? |
60795 | How about you, Willyum? 60795 How can I get off some letters and telegrams?" |
60795 | How come? |
60795 | How d''you know none of these guys ai n''t done it already? |
60795 | How long ago? |
60795 | How long do you want to stay? |
60795 | How the devil do I know? |
60795 | How''s my patient? |
60795 | How? |
60795 | I hope,said Murray,"that you hurt him worse than he hurt you?" |
60795 | I thought that perhaps he wanted to get you away from Doctor Scudder, to prevent trouble; but why should I go too? 60795 I thought,"he said quietly,"that you had decided to throw overboard all the shady tricks of yesterday, Sandy?" |
60795 | I was vagged down to N''Orleans, just like I printed it, and seen him in court bein''tried for supplyin''dust an''hop to----"Was he convicted? |
60795 | I-- why, Miss Lee, what do you mean? 60795 In other words, will you be willing to let me gamble for the good o''the firm?" |
60795 | Is Doc back? 60795 Is that fellow Mackintavers still here?" |
60795 | Know him, do you? |
60795 | Know him? |
60795 | Know it? |
60795 | Know me, do you? |
60795 | Leavin''all that out, how did the paper strike you-- honest, now? |
60795 | Lie put, will you? |
60795 | Mac''s playin''on the level with us, ai n''t he? 60795 Matter with it?" |
60795 | May I inquire if Mr. Lee is stopping here? |
60795 | May I inquire whether you think me a fit person to be associated in such a work? |
60795 | Near here? |
60795 | Need any money? |
60795 | No more fisticuffs, eh? |
60795 | Not in condition just now, are you? 60795 On what charge?" |
60795 | Piute do n''t know, an''if he do n''t, who does? |
60795 | Piute owns it now, then? |
60795 | Prisoner? 60795 Ride, boys?" |
60795 | Savvy? 60795 Say, is them real bakin''powder biscuits ye got? |
60795 | Seen me before, have ye? |
60795 | Shady? 60795 So that was why you had me run you out here, huh? |
60795 | Speakin''o''that chink, now,he said, sitting up suddenly,"you say he''s headin''for Morongo Valley to- day? |
60795 | Step into the back office, will you? |
60795 | Taking photographs, eh? |
60795 | That story about Doctor Scudder-- where on earth did you get the nerve to print that, you big boob? |
60795 | The chink? 60795 The matter?" |
60795 | The sun got me, eh? |
60795 | Then you really found something? |
60795 | Then you take me up? |
60795 | Then, Sandy we own everything in sight? |
60795 | There is nothing else? |
60795 | Tom Lee? 60795 Want me?" |
60795 | Want to find it or buy it? |
60795 | Was n''t the paper worthless that I gave it for? |
60795 | We''re partners, are n''t we? |
60795 | Well, Sandy, suppose you elucidate? 60795 Well?" |
60795 | Wh- what''s the matter? |
60795 | What about your mortgage? |
60795 | What d''ye mean by all this----? |
60795 | What d''ye mean, huh? |
60795 | What d''ye mean? |
60795 | What happened to Scudder? 60795 What in hallelujah would he do with it when he got it?" |
60795 | What stroke of luck turned you loose, Sandy? |
60795 | What then? |
60795 | What we goin''to do with''em when we get''em? 60795 What''s bitin''you?" |
60795 | What''s he want? 60795 What''s in the mine?" |
60795 | What''s it mean, Doc? |
60795 | What''s that stuff? |
60795 | What''s that you guys say about this here printin''office? 60795 What''s the matter with it?" |
60795 | What''s the matter, Miss Lee? |
60795 | What''s the matter? |
60795 | What''s the rush? |
60795 | What''s there? |
60795 | What''s this about the chink and the girl? |
60795 | What''s this-- a holdup? |
60795 | What''s this? |
60795 | What''s your proposition? |
60795 | What? |
60795 | What? |
60795 | What? |
60795 | When do you want to go? |
60795 | Where is he? |
60795 | Where to? |
60795 | Where''s Father? |
60795 | Where''s Two Palms? |
60795 | Where''s he gone? |
60795 | Where''s the doc? |
60795 | Where''s the nearest State Land office? |
60795 | Where? |
60795 | Who ever heard of a chink ownin''a autobile? 60795 Who owns the mining rights?" |
60795 | Who the devil are you? |
60795 | Who''s this guy Mackintavers? 60795 Who-- who owns it?" |
60795 | Why did n''t you stick it out yourself? |
60795 | Why did n''t you stick it out? 60795 Why in time do they go out workin''with that picture machine? |
60795 | Why-- d''ye mean the homestead or the mine, now? |
60795 | Will I? 60795 Will I?" |
60795 | Will you have a drink? 60795 Willyum, can you take care of Sandy?" |
60795 | Wo n''t ye wait till mornin'', anyhow? |
60795 | Wot kind o''guys d''you take us for, Mac? |
60795 | Would we take advantage of ye that way? 60795 Ye did n''t allow them samples come from here, did ye?" |
60795 | Ye do n''t think there''s nothin''wrong, do ye? |
60795 | Ye''ll leave this matter to me? |
60795 | Yes? |
60795 | You ai n''t goin''to pay the note? |
60795 | You are not glad he has come? |
60795 | You do n''t like Scudder, eh? |
60795 | You do n''t mean he''s-- arrested? |
60795 | You do n''t mean that you''ll take back the property? 60795 You got the papers to prove it, of course?" |
60795 | You know him, then? |
60795 | You''re a real physician? |
60795 | You''re the mining gent, ai n''t you? |
60795 | You''ve been wondering about me, I suppose? 60795 You''ve not been long in this country?" |
60795 | You-- what? |
60795 | You-- you boys now, how d''ye know I wo n''t beat it with your pile? 60795 ; wHen i was vagGed and hE was iN tHe dOck two for pedLing dope& Happy dust two the nlgge*rs& jUdje give him hEll,? 60795 Ai n''t goin''there, I hope? |
60795 | Ai n''t he? |
60795 | Ai n''t that fair?" |
60795 | Ai n''t that gratitood? |
60795 | Ai n''t that wonderful, now?" |
60795 | Aiblins, now, ye have a price?" |
60795 | Aiblins, now, ye''ve heard of me?" |
60795 | And now, may I suggest that we lift him into the car at once? |
60795 | And what''s shady about this, will ye tell me?" |
60795 | And where is it?" |
60795 | And why not?" |
60795 | Any luck?" |
60795 | As concerns your offer of a position-- may I reserve judgment upon that for a time?" |
60795 | At the price we paid?" |
60795 | Autobile an''all-- say, is that a real autobile? |
60795 | But say, Doc, how are you?" |
60795 | But what business had the man with Doctor Scudder? |
60795 | But what''s this Mac is tellin''me about gettin''in bad?" |
60795 | By the way, I''m interested in this fellow who fixed you up-- did you say his name was Murray? |
60795 | Can he? |
60795 | Can ye run a flivver, Bill?" |
60795 | Comest thou?" |
60795 | D''ye mind, Murray, what our host said about Deadoak? |
60795 | Did he homestead the valley an''lease the mineral rights?" |
60795 | Did n''t you ask him?" |
60795 | Did you arrange for a contractor as I ordered?" |
60795 | Did you have a wagon- spoke in your hand?" |
60795 | Ding my dogs, ai n''t you got no patience? |
60795 | Do n''t go to p''inting that there gun too reckless----""Scudder, was it?" |
60795 | Do you think he''s all right?" |
60795 | He do n''t go by the front name o''Sandy, I suppose?" |
60795 | How we goin''to get them pears to market?" |
60795 | How''s that, now? |
60795 | I bought a worthless mortgage with a worthless note-- ain''t that even?" |
60795 | I got ta beat it with these guys, see? |
60795 | I guess you''ll sell at_ that_ figger, huh?" |
60795 | I''m askin''ye-- ain''t it? |
60795 | Ice cream or business?" |
60795 | If I see a chance to-- to-- to----""To crack a safe?" |
60795 | If he don''t-- then do n''t say nothin''about me, savvy? |
60795 | If it do n''t intrude none, what ye lookin''for?" |
60795 | If there''s no valid reason for keeping the place, why not make a good profit while we can? |
60795 | If you''re seriously set on opening up a print- shop, we''ll agree----""As partners?" |
60795 | Is it agreeable to you guys?" |
60795 | Is it possible, worthy sir, that you do not own this fine motor car?" |
60795 | Is it true-- what you said about Doctor Murray?" |
60795 | Is it your proposition that we throw all we have into a common fund?" |
60795 | Kinda nifty, ai n''t it?" |
60795 | Let Sandy do it; do n''t he know all about them things? |
60795 | Let''s go together, eh?" |
60795 | May I inquire as to your name?" |
60795 | Miss Lee, would you have any objection to leaving me and Doctor Scudder in private for a few moments?" |
60795 | Morphia victim, were n''t you? |
60795 | Now, Hassayamp was Piute Tomkins''father- in- law by marriage, savvy? |
60795 | Pilgrims, I''m right pained to hear tell o''this, but----""Huh?" |
60795 | Quite a drop for Douglas Murray, to be a bindle stiff, eh?" |
60795 | Quite a drop for me, eh? |
60795 | Right?" |
60795 | Savvy that?" |
60795 | Savvy?" |
60795 | Say, I reckon ye ai n''t heard the news about him?" |
60795 | Say, tell the doc I''m squarin''things up, will you? |
60795 | Shall I let a big yellow man drive all the romance out of things? |
60795 | Should I do it to- night or wait? |
60795 | Since then, I done the time an''got out again, see? |
60795 | So he adopted me----""Adopted you? |
60795 | So he tried to frame the doc, here, did he?" |
60795 | So this Tom Lee is a rich man, is he? |
60795 | So-- ye see?" |
60795 | Suit ye?" |
60795 | Suppose we go over and get the shop cleaned up a bit for him?" |
60795 | Sure he did n''t mention it?" |
60795 | Take some grub and a pair o''blankets, and watch what them pilgrims does, savvy? |
60795 | Tell him, will you?" |
60795 | That him yonder?" |
60795 | The pictures are safe?" |
60795 | There''s machines and stuff in here-- don''t nobody want it?" |
60795 | To tell ye the truth, now, d''ye know what''s broke me? |
60795 | Tryin''to make a pinch, huh? |
60795 | Want to go along?" |
60795 | Was his leg broken?" |
60795 | We''ll go on to California, huh?" |
60795 | We''ll see who this stranger is, huh?" |
60795 | We''re usin''your flivver, ai n''t we? |
60795 | What d''you guys say to this-- leave the girl an''the doc go, and take me with you? |
60795 | What did he look like?" |
60795 | What did he put those stakes in for?" |
60795 | What did the girl think of Tom Lee''s proposals? |
60795 | What had Scudder said out there? |
60795 | What is her origin, then? |
60795 | What made you plant the dope there? |
60795 | What matter to him? |
60795 | What prisoner?" |
60795 | What right ye got to treat me----""We''re friends and partners, are n''t we?" |
60795 | What was happening beyond that horizon, over the rim of the world? |
60795 | What''s in this dope frame- up, anyhow?" |
60795 | What''s the chink doin''over to Two Palms?" |
60795 | What''s the fun about?" |
60795 | What''s the idea?" |
60795 | What''s this, Murray-- sunstroke? |
60795 | Where are you going from here, Mackintavers? |
60795 | Where did Doc go to?" |
60795 | Where is the answer to this riddle?" |
60795 | Who ever heard of a chink goin''off into the sandy wastes like any other prospector? |
60795 | Who ever heard of a chink havin''a purty daughter? |
60795 | Why am I in this place, Doctor? |
60795 | Why did n''t we bring some lunch?" |
60795 | Why did you turn him down?" |
60795 | Why not? |
60795 | Why should that fellow come here and make us an offer? |
60795 | Why?" |
60795 | Why?" |
60795 | Will ye? |
60795 | Willyum''s remarks on Doctor Scudder were frankly illuminating about Willyum himself: I wunst seen tHis gink iN neworLeens.? |
60795 | Would n''t it be great to camp out there?" |
60795 | Would such a thing be allowed?" |
60795 | Ye do n''t mind, o''course?" |
60795 | Ye said no?" |
60795 | You do n''t want to, eh? |
60795 | You goin''to come out o''that place?" |
60795 | You know what I told you about the sanitarium? |
60795 | You register for us, Sandy? |
60795 | You remember that guy come out three years ago an''boarded over to Stiff Enger''s place by Skull Mountain? |
60795 | You there?" |
60795 | You thought you''d dispose of Murray and have Claire in your power, did n''t you?" |
60795 | You will remain here for a time?" |
60795 | You''ll have to foreclose the mortgage----""Is it recorded?" |
60795 | You''re goin'', understand?" |
60795 | the minin''rights or----?" |
621 | ( 118) Our great American revivalist Finney writes:I said to myself:''What is this? |
621 | ( 202) Well, what were its good fruits for Margaret Mary''s life? 621 Heavens, how can I speak of it? |
621 | How are we to conceive,Principal Caird writes,"of the reality in which all intelligence rests?" |
621 | How does it work when we thus anticipate God by going our own way? 621 I then closed my eyes for a few minutes, and seemed to be refreshed with sleep; and when I awoke, the first inquiry was, Where is my God? |
621 | Is there, then,our author continues,"no solution of the contradiction between the ideal and the actual? |
621 | It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do?--deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
621 | She burst out weeping, and said,''O Richard, what made you fight?'' 621 The spiritual life,"he writes,"justifies itself to those who live it; but what can we say to those who do not understand? |
621 | What for? |
621 | What is the answer which Jesus sends to John the Baptist? |
621 | What shall I think of it? |
621 | Wherefore? |
621 | ''And where shall I do that, Lord?'' |
621 | ''But,''said I,''is that possible?'' |
621 | ''Some one ought to do it, but why should I?'' |
621 | ''Some one ought to do it, so why not I?'' |
621 | ''What is it that is finished?'' |
621 | ''Why,''I asked of myself,''does the author use these terms? |
621 | ( 328) Ought it to be assumed that in all men the mixture of religion with other elements should be identical? |
621 | ( 333) How indeed could it be otherwise? |
621 | ); H. L. HASTINGS: The Guiding Hand, or Providential Direction, illustrated by Authentic Instances, Boston, 1898(?). |
621 | --"How did I come to be? |
621 | ------------------------------------- What shall we now say of the attributes called moral? |
621 | ------------------------------------- What, now, must we ourselves think of this question? |
621 | --or shall we do so with enthusiastic assent? |
621 | ..."Why does man go out to look for a God?... |
621 | ; Brainerd''s, 212; Alline''s, 217; Oxford graduate''s, 221; Ratisbonne''s, 223; instantaneous, 227; is it a natural phenomenon? |
621 | ?_ A. |
621 | After this distinct revelation had stood for some little time before my mind, the question seemed to be put,''Will you accept it now, to- day?'' |
621 | After this, with difficulty I got to sleep; and when I awoke in the morning my first thoughts were: What has become of my happiness? |
621 | Again, are men the factors of some dream, the dream- like unsubstantiality of which they comprehend at such eventful moments? |
621 | And how should I have cried, since I was swooning with happiness within? |
621 | And if it be so, how can any possible judge or critic help being biased in favor of the religion by which his own needs are best met? |
621 | And in what form should we conceive of that"union"with it of which religious geniuses are so convinced? |
621 | And it being said to her in the going out,_ Where is thy faith? |
621 | And second, What is its importance, meaning, or significance, now that it is once here? |
621 | And second, ought we to consider the testimony true? |
621 | And what could it matter, if all propositions were practically indifferent, which of them we should agree to call true or which false? |
621 | And what had they exactly in their several individual minds, when they delivered their utterances? |
621 | And what then? |
621 | And why may not religion be a conception equally complex? |
621 | Are the men of this world right, or are the saints in possession of the deeper range of truth? |
621 | Are there not hereabouts some points of application for a renovated and revised ascetic discipline? |
621 | Are you any more prepared for heaven, or fitter to appear before the impartial bar of God, than when you first began to seek? |
621 | Are you any nearer to conversion now than when you first began? |
621 | At once I replied,''Will you take the desire away?'' |
621 | But I can not keep myself from being either crazy or an idiot; and, as things are, from whom should I ask pity? |
621 | But do you wish, Lord, that I should inclose in poor and barren words sentiments which the heart alone can understand?" |
621 | But how came I, then, to this perception of it? |
621 | But in all seriousness, can such bald animal talk as that be treated as a rational answer? |
621 | But make a mother of her, and what have you? |
621 | But now, I ask you, how can such an existential account of facts of mental history decide in one way or another upon their spiritual significance? |
621 | But the idea of him, I said, how did I ever come by the idea? |
621 | But verily, how stands it with her arguments? |
621 | But what matters it in the end whether we call such a state of mind religious or not? |
621 | But why in the name of common sense need we assume that only one such system of ideas can be true? |
621 | Can modern idealism give faith a better warrant, or must she still rely on her poor self for witness? |
621 | Can philosophy stamp a warrant of veracity upon the religious man''s sense of the divine? |
621 | Can things whose end is always dust and disappointment be the real goods which our souls require? |
621 | Can you believe it? |
621 | Did I stop to ask a single question? |
621 | Did he not love me? |
621 | Do mystical states establish the truth of those theological affections in which the saintly life has its root? |
621 | Do they deduce a new spiritual judgment from their new doctrine of existential conditions? |
621 | Do they frankly forbid us to admire the productions of genius from now onwards? |
621 | Do we accept it only in part and grudgingly, or heartily and altogether? |
621 | Do you not blush with shame at wishing that a knife should be your master? |
621 | Does God really exist? |
621 | Does it act, as well as exist? |
621 | Does it furnish any_ warrant for the truth_ of the twice- bornness and supernaturality and pantheism which it favors? |
621 | Does this temperamental origin diminish the significance of the sudden conversion when it has occurred? |
621 | Everything in me awoke and received a meaning.... Why do I look farther? |
621 | Finney, what ails you?'' |
621 | First of all, then, I ask, What does the expression"mystical states of consciousness"mean? |
621 | First, is there, under all the discrepancies of the creeds, a common nucleus to which they bear their testimony unanimously? |
621 | First, what is the nature of it? |
621 | For what seriousness can possibly remain in debating philosophic propositions that will never make an appreciable difference to us in action? |
621 | Had I not found my God and my Father? |
621 | Had he not called me? |
621 | Has he made religion universal by coercive reasoning, transformed it from a private faith into a public certainty? |
621 | Has he rescued its affirmations from obscurity and mystery? |
621 | Has science made too wide a claim? |
621 | Have I not said the state is utterly beyond words?" |
621 | He came and, placing his hand upon my shoulder, said:''Do you not want to give your heart to God?'' |
621 | He then said,''Are you in pain?'' |
621 | How can I learn aught when naught I know? |
621 | How can the devotee show his loyalty better than by sensitiveness in this regard? |
621 | How do we part off mystical states from other states? |
621 | How does he exist? |
621 | How is success to be absolutely measured when there are so many environments and so many ways of looking at the adaptation? |
621 | How should you know their true nature, since one knows only what one can comprehend? |
621 | How, then, should we_ act_ on these facts? |
621 | How_ can_ you measure their worth without considering whether the God really exists who is supposed to inspire them? |
621 | I ask you, what is human life? |
621 | I asked them what place that was? |
621 | I feel the pressure of his hand, I feel something else which fills me with a serene joy; shall I dare to speak it out? |
621 | I halted but a moment, and then, with a breaking heart, I said,''Dear Jesus, can you help me?'' |
621 | I now turn to my second question: What is the objective"truth"of their content? |
621 | I say God, but why? |
621 | If I, being a wretch and damned sinner, could be redeemed by any other price, what needed the Son of God to be given? |
621 | If it did not, wherein would its superiority consist? |
621 | If one with Omnipotence, how can weariness enter the consciousness, how illness assail that indomitable spark? |
621 | If so, in what shape does it exist? |
621 | If the inner dispositions are right, we ask, what need of all this torment, this violation of the outer nature? |
621 | If the natural world is so double- faced and unhomelike, what world, what thing is real? |
621 | If we are sick souls, we require a religion of deliverance; but why think so much of deliverance, if we are healthy- minded? |
621 | If we can not explain physical light, how can we explain the light which is the truth itself? |
621 | If we were to ask the question:"What is human life''s chief concern?" |
621 | If, then, the entire work is finished, all the debt paid, what remains for me to do?'' |
621 | In other words, is the existence of so many religious types and sects and creeds regrettable? |
621 | In our own attitude, not yet abandoned, of impartial onlookers, what are we to say of this quarrel? |
621 | In the healthiest and most prosperous existence, how many links of illness, danger, and disaster are always interposed? |
621 | In the mean time while thus exercised, a thought arose in my mind, what can it mean? |
621 | In what facts does it result? |
621 | Into what definite description can these words be translated, and for what definite facts do they stand? |
621 | Is an instantaneous conversion a miracle in which God is present as he is present in no change of heart less strikingly abrupt? |
621 | Is it necessary, some of you have asked, as one example after another came before us, to be quite so fantastically good as that? |
621 | Is it not surprising that health exists at all? |
621 | Is it possible that I, in that moment, felt what some of the saints have said they always felt, the undemonstrable but irrefragable certainty of God? |
621 | Is not it a maimed happiness-- care and weariness, weariness and care, with the baseless expectation, the strange cozenage of a brighter to- morrow? |
621 | Is not its blessedness a fragile fiction? |
621 | Is not your joy in it a very vulgar glee, not much unlike the snicker of any rogue at his success? |
621 | Is such a"more"merely our own notion, or does it really exist? |
621 | Is the saint''s type or the strong- man''s type the more ideal? |
621 | Is there in life any purpose which the inevitable death which awaits me does not undo and destroy? |
621 | May not voluntarily accepted poverty be"the strenuous life,"without the need of crushing weaker peoples? |
621 | Of what I shall do to- morrow? |
621 | Oh, happy child, what should I do? |
621 | Or how does it assist me to plan my behavior, to know that his happiness is anyhow absolutely complete? |
621 | Or is dogmatic or scholastic theology less doubted in point of fact for claiming, as it does, to be in point of right undoubtable? |
621 | Ought all men to have the same religion? |
621 | Ought it, indeed, to be assumed that the lives of all men should show identical religious elements? |
621 | Ought they to approve the same fruits and follow the same leadings? |
621 | Ought we not, whether we dig or plough or eat, to sing this hymn to God? |
621 | Pray, what specific act can I perform in order to adapt myself the better to God''s simplicity? |
621 | Religion, whatever it is, is a man''s total reaction upon life, so why not say that any total reaction upon life is a religion? |
621 | Severed like cobwebs, broken like bubbles in the sun--"Wo sind die Sorge nun und Noth Die mich noch gestern wollt''erschlaffen? |
621 | She asked always earnestly,''When shall I be perfectly thine, O my God?'' |
621 | Should we not love it; should we not feel buoyed up by the Eternal Arms?" |
621 | So what good will it do you to think all your lives,''Oh, I have done evil, I have made many mistakes''? |
621 | The mere possibility of producing milk from grass, cheese from milk, and wool from skins; who formed and planned it? |
621 | The poet says, Dear City of Cecrops; and wilt thou not say, Dear City of Zeus? |
621 | The question, What are the religious propensities? |
621 | The questions"Why?" |
621 | The subject of Saintliness left us face to face with the question, Is the sense of divine presence a sense of anything objectively true? |
621 | The whole feud revolves essentially upon two pivots: Shall the seen world or the unseen world be our chief sphere of adaptation? |
621 | Then I flung myself on the ground, and at last awoke covered with blood, calling to the two surgeons( who were frightened),''Why did you not kill me? |
621 | Then there crept in upon me so gently, so lovingly, so unmistakably, a way of escape, and what was it after all? |
621 | Then what was to me an audible voice said:''Are you willing to give up everything to the Lord?'' |
621 | There was a sincerity about this man that carried conviction with it, and I found myself saying,''I wonder if God can save_ me_?'' |
621 | These questions"Why?" |
621 | They drew the cord tight with all their strength and asked me,''Does it hurt you?'' |
621 | Thy cowl, thy shaven crown, thy chastity, thy obedience, thy poverty, thy works, thy merits? |
621 | To the believer in moralism and works, with his anxious query,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
621 | To what psychological order do they belong? |
621 | Under just what biographic conditions did the sacred writers bring forth their various contributions to the holy volume? |
621 | Under what form will this fear crush me? |
621 | Was there not a Church into which I might enter?... |
621 | We are It already; how to know It?" |
621 | Well, how is it with these fruits? |
621 | Well, what did I do? |
621 | What are we to think of all this? |
621 | What can be more base and unworthy than the pining, puling, mumping mood, no matter by what outward ills it may have been engendered? |
621 | What could I do? |
621 | What have I done to deserve this excess of severity? |
621 | What is he? |
621 | What is it, indeed, that keeps existence exfoliating? |
621 | What is its cash- value in terms of particular experience? |
621 | What is more injurious to others? |
621 | What is the particular truth in question_ known as_? |
621 | What less helpful as a way out of the difficulty? |
621 | What may the practical fruits for life have been, of such movingly happy conversions as those we heard of? |
621 | What more have we to say now than God said from the whirlwind over two thousand five hundred years ago? |
621 | What must I do to please thee? |
621 | What single- handed man was ever on the whole as successful as Luther? |
621 | What then must the person do? |
621 | What will be the outcome of all my life? |
621 | What will be the outcome of what I do to- day? |
621 | What would happen if the final stage of the trance were reached? |
621 | When I came to him he burst into tears and said:''Richard, will you forgive me for striking you?'' |
621 | When I waked in the morning, the first thought would be, Oh, my wretched soul, what shall I do, where shall I go? |
621 | When S. had finished his prayer and was turning to sleep, the brother said,''Do you still keep up that thing?'' |
621 | When could it be evil when thou wert near? |
621 | When such a conquering optimist as Goethe can express himself in this wise, how must it be with less successful men? |
621 | When we think certain states of mind superior to others, is it ever because of what we know concerning their organic antecedents? |
621 | Whence am I? |
621 | Wherefore did I come? |
621 | Why are twice two four? |
621 | Why can I not write down the inconceivable influences, consolations, and peace which I felt interiorly? |
621 | Why do n''t you manage it somehow?" |
621 | Why does he not say"the atoning work"?'' |
621 | Why not simply leave pathological questions out? |
621 | Why regret a philosophy of evil, a mind- curer would ask us, if I can put you in possession of a life of good? |
621 | Why should I do anything? |
621 | Why should I live? |
621 | Why then not call these reactions our religion, no matter what specific character they may have? |
621 | Why would you not let me die?'' |
621 | Will you be the slave of a knife or the slave of Jesus Christ? |
621 | Would martyrs have sung in the flames for a mere inference, however inevitable it might be? |
621 | Yet he finds himself forced to write:--"What right have we to believe Nature under any obligation to do her work by means of complete minds only? |
621 | Yet how believe as the common people believe, steeped as they are in grossest superstition? |
621 | You have been seeking, praying, reforming, laboring, reading, hearing, and meditating, and what have you done by it towards your salvation? |
621 | _ Have you had any experiences which appeared providential?_ A. |
621 | _ Je m''en fiche_ is the vulgar French equivalent for our English ejaculation"Who cares?" |
621 | _ Things are wrong with them_; and"What shall I do to be clear, right, sound, whole, well?" |
621 | _ What does Religion mean to you?_ A. |
621 | _ What is your notion of sin?_ A. |
621 | _ What is your temperament?_ A. |
621 | _ What things work most strongly on your emotions?_ A. Lively songs and music; Pinafore instead of an Oratorio. |
621 | a common person says to himself about a vexed question; but in a"cranky"mind"What must I do about it?" |
621 | and in what proportion may it need to be restrained by other elements, to give the proper balance? |
621 | and must our means of adaptation in this seen world be aggressiveness or non- resistance? |
621 | and say outright that no neuropath can ever be a revealer of new truth? |
621 | and the question, What is their philosophic significance? |
621 | and"What next?" |
621 | how did it come about? |
621 | in a penny?_ she threw it away, begging pardon of God for her fault, and saying,''No, Lord, my faith is not in a penny, but in thee alone.'' |
621 | until this came:''Why do you not accept it_ now_?'' |
621 | what is its constitution, origin, and history? |
621 | what shall I do now?'' |
621 | what shall I do?'' |
621 | what shall all these do? |
621 | what shall the law of Moses avail? |
4996 | A hostage for what? |
4996 | A lady? 4996 Again then, may I ask, why wait?" |
4996 | All a flam, is it? |
4996 | And do you expect the police to leave the whole neighborhood severely alone for another hour? |
4996 | And what then? 4996 And you can tell a Japanese from a Chinaman at sight?" |
4996 | And you spoke to him? |
4996 | And, pray, what can the Legation do? |
4996 | And-- may I smoke? 4996 Any letters?" |
4996 | Any luck? |
4996 | Any news of the gray car? |
4996 | Any noos? |
4996 | Anything else? |
4996 | Are n''t you pretty sure he was the man? |
4996 | Are we justified in taking the law into our own hands? |
4996 | Are you joking? |
4996 | Are you quite safe here? 4996 Are you sure?" |
4996 | Are you waiting here for some official of the Embassy? |
4996 | As a gift or a loan? |
4996 | As the weather was bad, you probably hurried in when your cab stopped? |
4996 | Before I efface myself, may I be allowed to congratulate Mrs. Forbes on her escape? |
4996 | Beg pardon, sir, but you are Mr. Theydon, are n''t you? |
4996 | But do you know? |
4996 | But how? 4996 But how?" |
4996 | But is n''t that somewhat singular in itself? 4996 But what does it matter now? |
4996 | But what has he done? 4996 But what''s this story of another shooting up in Fortescue Square? |
4996 | But why adopt such a clandestine method? |
4996 | But why? |
4996 | But why? |
4996 | But, dear, ca n''t you trust me? 4996 But, my dear Evelyn,"she said,"did n''t you yourself send for your mother?" |
4996 | Ca n''t you speak plainly, Mr. Forbes? 4996 Can I do anything? |
4996 | Can I drive you anywhere? 4996 Can that thing be operated only from the ground?" |
4996 | Can you do it now? |
4996 | Can you take a hand in the game? 4996 Can you tell me where I can find Mr. Forbes at once?" |
4996 | Could n''t we contrive matters so that if the pistol were fired it need not necessarily inflict a fatal wound? |
4996 | Dad, dear,she complained,"why did n''t you give me your confidence? |
4996 | Dad,she said, with a charming smile in which there was just a hint of a pout,"are n''t you coming home with me?" |
4996 | Did I give way like that? |
4996 | Did Wong Li Fu recognize you? |
4996 | Did n''t I drag the Chinese aspect of the crime out of him with pincers? |
4996 | Did n''t you explain matters? |
4996 | Did the police officers supply any theory of motive for the crime? 4996 Did you fly?" |
4996 | Did you happen to see that car waiting near the house I came from? |
4996 | Did you notice the number of the house? |
4996 | Did you now? |
4996 | Did you see or meet any one in particular while your car approached these mansions, or when you ascended the stairs? |
4996 | Did you tell the police? |
4996 | Do I look it? |
4996 | Do I really resemble a Romney? 4996 Do n''t you smoke?" |
4996 | Do n''t you think you ought to call in a doctor? |
4996 | Do you expect him to arrive soon? 4996 Do you know where he is?" |
4996 | Do you mean detectives from Scotland Yard? |
4996 | Do you mean it is one of the cars which these men use? |
4996 | Do you mean that I am to parley with these ruffians? |
4996 | Do you mean that she is dead? |
4996 | Do you-- know the lady? 4996 First, is Mrs. Forbes there, too?" |
4996 | Had he a scar down the left side of his face? |
4996 | Has Mr. Furneaux used the telephone, or did any one ring up? |
4996 | Has Theydon gone to Fortescue Square? |
4996 | Has everybody suddenly gone mad? |
4996 | Has something unforeseen happened? 4996 Have the police yet obtained any real clew as to the whereabouts of the gang''s headquarters? |
4996 | Have the-- er-- enemy made off in a car? |
4996 | Have you had any news of Mr. Forbes, sir? |
4996 | Have you informed Scotland Yard? |
4996 | Have you invited Miss Beale to reside with you while she is in London, Sis? |
4996 | Have you left the doors open? |
4996 | Have you no friends in London? |
4996 | Have you traveled from Oxford this morning? |
4996 | He knew what hotel you were making for? |
4996 | He knows that my visits to the Chinese Embassy are few and far between and generally have to do with-- but what is it now? 4996 He will turn up-- an American, is n''t he? |
4996 | Heaven help me, why do you ask that? |
4996 | How can I be sure? 4996 How can I?" |
4996 | How did you know? |
4996 | How do you know that? |
4996 | How do you know,he gasped,"that I received an ivory skull this morning? |
4996 | How long will it be before London wakes up to the knowledge of what is going on in its midst? |
4996 | How on earth do you know I looked out? |
4996 | How was I to deduce the true nature of these hell hounds''mission from a casual glance vouchsafed of one who may or may not be their leader? |
4996 | I have not the excuse of the Canaletto,he said, compelling a pleasant smile,"but may I plead an even more distracting vision? |
4996 | I regard you as a clever man, Mr. Furneaux, so may I remind you that this is neither the time nor the place for a display of gross humor? |
4996 | I think we see now at least one method whereby the man who killed Mrs. Lester could have entered the flat without her knowledge? |
4996 | I wonder whether Wong Li Fu is aware I have been liberated? |
4996 | I? |
4996 | If I agree, what time do you propose going there? |
4996 | If the message has not come direct from Mrs. Forbes may it not be rather exaggerated in tone? 4996 If you did n''t send, who did?" |
4996 | If you died, what would become of the two millions? |
4996 | In Heaven''s name, how do you know anything of any letter? |
4996 | In a side- car? |
4996 | In a word,he said, at last,"you are Mrs. Lester''s next- of- kin and probably her heiress?" |
4996 | Is George absent? |
4996 | Is Miss Forbes a nice girl to talk to? 4996 Is Mr. Forbes in?" |
4996 | Is any one justified in tryin''to get in here an''cut our throats while we''re asleep, sir? |
4996 | Is it a personal matter? |
4996 | Is it addressed to you personally? |
4996 | Is n''t he at his office, sir? |
4996 | Is n''t that in the far north of Scotland? |
4996 | Is n''t that some sort of incense used by Chinese in their temples? |
4996 | Is that all you know about it? |
4996 | Is that the man who came with you from London? |
4996 | Is that the meaning of the little ivory skull which my father received at breakfast this morning? |
4996 | Is that why you covered up your tracks, even in this hotel, before you came to my room? |
4996 | Is that you, Tomlinson? |
4996 | Is that your telephone number? |
4996 | Is there a detective or constable on duty there now? |
4996 | Is there anything in the newspapers? 4996 Is there anything really impossible? |
4996 | Is your name Wong Li Fu? |
4996 | It''s rather odd, is it not, that nothing has been heard from him or his gang if I was to be held a prisoner in order to extort terms? |
4996 | Japanese, you say? 4996 Japanese, you say?" |
4996 | May I answer, Miss Forbes? |
4996 | May I not make the acquaintance of these people? 4996 May I share the joke?" |
4996 | May I take it that the car has not been dogging me by your instructions? |
4996 | Meanwhile, are you and Miss Forbes going to the hotel? |
4996 | Meanwhile, wo n''t you be seated? 4996 Mine?" |
4996 | More bullets? |
4996 | Mr. Forbes? 4996 Mrs. Forbes is quite well, I hope?" |
4996 | Mrs. Lester had lived in China, then? |
4996 | Need we remain here? 4996 No one hurt, and no one arrested?" |
4996 | No one was injured, you say? |
4996 | Now will you be good and tell me why Dad should receive a little ivory skull by this morning''s post? |
4996 | Now, Theydon,he said, coming back to the sitting room,"what about that key?" |
4996 | O, you''ve got one, then? |
4996 | Oh, dash it all, what business is it of mine, anyhow? |
4996 | Oh, mother,laughed Evelyn nervously,"you are not anticipating more horrors, are you?" |
4996 | On suspicion of what crime? |
4996 | Perhaps he has forgotten the name? |
4996 | Please, may I look at the Canaletto which indirectly waylaid me? |
4996 | Quite certain about that? |
4996 | Say, can you boys eat a line? 4996 Seemed?" |
4996 | Sensational? |
4996 | Shall I wait up for you? |
4996 | Singular thing, is n''t it? |
4996 | Smell it? |
4996 | So you''re still on the map? |
4996 | So, while Mrs. Lester was being killed, the key of her flat was actually in your possession? |
4996 | Surely not? |
4996 | That you, Theydon? |
4996 | That you, Tomlinson? |
4996 | That''s hardly a fair question, is it? |
4996 | The what? |
4996 | Then it would seem that she resolved to come to me at Iffley as the result of something he told her? |
4996 | Then you just invented the comparison as an excuse for colliding with the chair? |
4996 | Then, if your surprise was so successful, what caused the fire? |
4996 | There was only one man, then? |
4996 | Was I not your guest? 4996 Was that all?" |
4996 | Was the car empty? 4996 Was the detective a man named Furneaux?" |
4996 | Well, a cup of tea, then? 4996 Well, what is it now?" |
4996 | Well? |
4996 | Well? |
4996 | Were the ladies very much frightened? |
4996 | Were there seventeen in the gang, all told? |
4996 | Were you a sergeant at the time of the Surrey Bank robbery? |
4996 | Were you at Daly''s Theater last night? |
4996 | Were you delayed? 4996 What Chinese business, Bates?" |
4996 | What can have become of that American? |
4996 | What car? 4996 What did I tell you?" |
4996 | What did the chief inspector mean when he said you refused to help him at first? |
4996 | What do you mean? |
4996 | What do you mean? |
4996 | What do you mean? |
4996 | What do you owe for? |
4996 | What do you say? |
4996 | What else can we do? 4996 What fiendish trick have you played on those wretches penned up inside there? |
4996 | What have I to fear? |
4996 | What in the world have the newspapers to say about me? |
4996 | What in the world should each of us have thought if we had both been bound and gagged in that car? |
4996 | What is it now? |
4996 | What is it? 4996 What is the meaning of this? |
4996 | What known facts? |
4996 | What sort of accident? |
4996 | What time does your train leave? |
4996 | What time shall I call you, sir? |
4996 | What was Mr. Lester''s business, or profession? |
4996 | What will you do? 4996 What''s your name?" |
4996 | What''s your telephone number? |
4996 | What? 4996 Where are you staying?" |
4996 | Where do you get your coffee? |
4996 | Where is it? 4996 Where was the body found?" |
4996 | Which place are you going? |
4996 | Which way was he heading? |
4996 | Who is it, please? |
4996 | Who is it? |
4996 | Who is speaking? |
4996 | Who the devil are you, at any rate? |
4996 | Who''s the toff who just left your lot? |
4996 | Whose brainy idea was that-- yours or Bates''s? |
4996 | Whose car is this? |
4996 | Why a''gentleman''? |
4996 | Why are we, your friends, to be arrested? |
4996 | Why are you mixed up in this dreadful business? 4996 Why did n''t I jump in after Forbes? |
4996 | Why did you hide your knowledge of Mrs. Lester''s visitor from your man Bates? |
4996 | Why did you tell me that Mr. Theydon was a serious scientific person? |
4996 | Why do you ask that? |
4996 | Why do you say that? |
4996 | Why do you think that? |
4996 | Why have you visited these two houses, and not 412? 4996 Why not go to him? |
4996 | Why not? 4996 Why on earth did n''t you mention such an important fact to the detectives?" |
4996 | Why should any Chinaman single out poor Mrs. Lester as a victim? 4996 Why should this crime, in particular, have worried my father? |
4996 | Why wo n''t you be candid? 4996 Why, what''s up?" |
4996 | Why? 4996 Why?" |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Will others go there-- friends of yours, I mean? |
4996 | Will you ask Mr. Forbes if I am to turn up in time for afternoon tea? 4996 Will you be good enough, then, to set her to work? |
4996 | Wo n''t you have a cigar? |
4996 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
4996 | Wo n''t you take us with you? |
4996 | Would you care to have a word with Miss Evelyn, sir? |
4996 | Would you mind if I just rang him up on the telephone? 4996 Would you recognize him if you saw him again?" |
4996 | Yes, what of her? |
4996 | Yet you treated your discovery as serious enough to warrant a prompt visit to the woman with whom association was dangerous? |
4996 | You believe that the airship might develop along the unemotional lines of the parcel post? |
4996 | You do n''t know, then, that a murder was committed in the Innesmore Mansions last night or early this morning? |
4996 | You do not wish to fail, no? 4996 You had been to a theater?" |
4996 | You have nothing more to tell us? |
4996 | You have seen the-- the detectives in the meantime? |
4996 | You just contrived to pick him up, and used him as an excuse for coming to Eastbourne? 4996 You mean they are anxious to find out what we are doing?" |
4996 | You remember Dr. Johnson''s dictum:''Claret is the liquor for boys; port for men; but he who aspires to be a hero must drink brandy''? 4996 You see what I''m driving at, then?" |
4996 | You soon got rid of your friend, then? |
4996 | You think that some one had the impudence to follow us, watch us in Waterloo, and take up Theydon''s trail when we had revealed it? |
4996 | You told him, I suppose, that Scotland Yard was worrying you, and he wants to know the result? |
4996 | You''re ready to listen, eh? 4996 You''ve seen Wong Li Fu, and would know him again?" |
4996 | You, Mollie? |
4996 | You? |
4996 | Your informant was not mistaken about the Chinese Embassy, I suppose? |
4996 | 11 Fortescue Square, have thought of his master if told that Mrs. Lester''s last known visitor was James Creighton Forbes? |
4996 | 17 Innesmore Mansions is dead-- has been murdered?" |
4996 | 17 on the night of the murder? |
4996 | 17?" |
4996 | 17?" |
4996 | 412?" |
4996 | After a slight pause, an agitated voice said:"Is that you, Evelyn?" |
4996 | Ah, that touches you, does it? |
4996 | And the railway tickets-- first- class, of course?" |
4996 | And then his blood ran cold, because Forbes was saying:"Are you leaving us because of anything Evelyn has said or done?" |
4996 | And what do we gain by waiting here any longer? |
4996 | And what of the ivory skull? |
4996 | And what would be the outcome? |
4996 | And why did he try to force me into the car?" |
4996 | And why should I strive to help it, anyhow? |
4996 | And why should any car pursue you? |
4996 | And why should he adopt the first of these alternatives? |
4996 | And you wore an overcoat, which you removed on entering your hall?" |
4996 | And, if you make an exception of Theydon, why are you doing it?" |
4996 | And, wretched doubt, was she already the promised bride of another man? |
4996 | Any orders for the morning?" |
4996 | Anyhow, we held the thug dead easy, but did n''t press him any, as I had no call to butt in, had I?" |
4996 | Anyhow, what was the man to do? |
4996 | Anything fresh in that telephone talk?" |
4996 | Anything new or interesting during my absence?" |
4996 | Are these Chinamen likely to show fight?" |
4996 | Are you a Frenchman, may I ask?" |
4996 | Are you aware that the newspapers will get on our track now? |
4996 | Are you worried about things? |
4996 | Are your affairs in the hands of any firm of solicitors?" |
4996 | Both? |
4996 | But am I not right?" |
4996 | But before you go wo n''t you enlighten me somewhat? |
4996 | But do n''t you see the diabolical cleverness of the scheme? |
4996 | But he schooled himself to say, with a semblance of calm interest:"What exactly do you mean, Miss Forbes?" |
4996 | But what is it?" |
4996 | But why this din of war, this smoke of arsenals, this marching and drilling of the world''s youth? |
4996 | But why, in the name of humanity, should every such development of man''s almost immeasurable resources be dedicated to warlike purposes? |
4996 | But will they own up if they do? |
4996 | But, are you sure of what you are saying? |
4996 | But, for Heaven''s sake, what is this you tell me about my wife?" |
4996 | By the way, is that the latest thing in hats? |
4996 | By the way, was any one looking after Mrs. Lester''s interests? |
4996 | By the way, what is your name?" |
4996 | By the way, where is the motor cyclist-- what is his name?" |
4996 | Callous and calculating demon, is n''t he?" |
4996 | Can I do anything?" |
4996 | Can I give him a message?" |
4996 | Can I give you a lift?" |
4996 | Can you ascertain for certain?" |
4996 | Can you be home by eleven?" |
4996 | Can you give us the exact hour when you returned home?" |
4996 | Can you? |
4996 | Come now, Mr. Theydon, I think you''ve caught on to my scheme-- will you help?" |
4996 | Could George assist if he were here?" |
4996 | Could that pretty girl''s father, by any chance, be coming to visit him? |
4996 | Croydon?" |
4996 | Did Furneaux get hold of Forbes?" |
4996 | Did it call for some one at the Embassy?" |
4996 | Did my daughter tell you?" |
4996 | Did n''t I make that clear? |
4996 | Did n''t Mrs. Lester''s servant admit the visitor last night?" |
4996 | Did n''t that horrid man knock you down?" |
4996 | Did n''t the letter you received this morning tell you something of the sort?" |
4996 | Did n''t you hear the hum of the engine as it went by?" |
4996 | Did the crime possess a political significance? |
4996 | Did you know who that man was? |
4996 | Did you notice that?" |
4996 | Did you see him?" |
4996 | Did you see the driver and occupants? |
4996 | Did you speak to Macdonald?" |
4996 | Did you take a cab?" |
4996 | Did you? |
4996 | Do n''t you see the instant result of a war- limiting ordinance of the kind I advocate? |
4996 | Do you believe they want China to wake up and organize before they''re ready to take hold? |
4996 | Do you imagine that he killed Mrs. Lester? |
4996 | Do you mean that they are stupefied?" |
4996 | Do you mean that you were followed on leaving my house?" |
4996 | Do you now vouch for it that the man was completely unknown to you?" |
4996 | Do you recognize my voice?" |
4996 | Do you regard him as the sort of man who would rush off in a panic to consult the Home Secretary without very grave and weighty reasons?" |
4996 | Do you understand?" |
4996 | Does n''t a pretty girl live there?" |
4996 | Does n''t that opinion conflict with the known facts?" |
4996 | Doris, is it, or Phyllis? |
4996 | Eh, what''s that? |
4996 | For whose benefit? |
4996 | Forbes?" |
4996 | Forbes?" |
4996 | Good Lord, man, what do you mean?" |
4996 | Got all that?" |
4996 | Got that?" |
4996 | Great heavens, are not these enough, without having our ears deafened by powder and drumming? |
4996 | Had he, or had he not? |
4996 | Handyside?" |
4996 | Handyside?" |
4996 | Have you been to my house? |
4996 | Have you ever met her?" |
4996 | Have you ever really seen Romney''s portrait of Lady Hamilton as Joan of Arc?" |
4996 | Have you met Miss Beale?" |
4996 | Have you seen his daughter?" |
4996 | Have you seen the evening papers? |
4996 | His tone seemed to annoy Furneaux, who broke in:"Do n''t you write novels?" |
4996 | How about a square meal? |
4996 | How about a wrap for you, Miss Forbes? |
4996 | How can I have any guarantee that you and this other gentleman may not be his next victims? |
4996 | How did such an extraordinary topic crop up?" |
4996 | How did you come to know that my father was acquainted with Mrs. Lester? |
4996 | How did you know it was a man? |
4996 | How had they got there? |
4996 | How many days''journey are you from the center of the city?" |
4996 | How much did you promise the taxi- man?" |
4996 | How much money did you provide for the revolutionaries?" |
4996 | How much would you have paid, Jim?" |
4996 | How often has impulse led me to the goal when by every known rule of evidence I was completely beaten? |
4996 | How reconcile an immediate call on Scotland Yard with the guarantee of secrecy demanded by Forbes? |
4996 | How was she killed?" |
4996 | How would this be? |
4996 | I have your positive assurance, too, that you are not exposing your own life in any way?" |
4996 | I said half- a- crown, did n''t I? |
4996 | I suppose I shall be wanted at the inquest?" |
4996 | I suppose you know what that means? |
4996 | I tried hard to baffle the detectives--""Again I ask''Why?''" |
4996 | I wonder what the deuce Furneaux saw or heard?" |
4996 | I would help you if I could--""Why?" |
4996 | I''ll bet you sixpence nothing was said at the inquest concerning Chinamen?" |
4996 | I''ll find the number in the directory, of course?... |
4996 | I--""What do you imply by that remark?" |
4996 | If Evelyn Forbes-- or, let me see, is it Phyllis or Doris? |
4996 | If Furneaux had expressed himself differently-- if, for instance, he had said:"Had you ever before seen the man?" |
4996 | If it held some member of the Embassy staff, why had no more been heard of it? |
4996 | If not, why not now? |
4996 | If some one said that of you to your husband, what would he do?" |
4996 | If there were no Evelyn, or if Evelyn were harelipped and squinted, you would n''t hesitate a second-- now, would you?" |
4996 | If you wish to examine Mrs. Lester''s flat why not seek the permission of Scotland Yard?" |
4996 | In his distress he was prepared to hear Winter or that little satyr, Furneaux, say mockingly:"Why are you trying to screen James Creighton Forbes? |
4996 | In the first place, is Mrs. Lester''s flat in charge of the police?" |
4996 | Is it like that? |
4996 | Is it likely that such an insignificant object as a chair, and a small one at that, would succeed in catching my eye?" |
4996 | Is it true that my niece was absolutely alone in her flat on Monday night?" |
4996 | Is it true?" |
4996 | Is n''t it more than certain that he has plenty of determined helpers? |
4996 | Is that all?" |
4996 | Is that the lady''s name? |
4996 | Is there any place in London where they know what a planked steak is?" |
4996 | Is there room for two?" |
4996 | It is quite agreed,"he went on, addressing the Chinaman again,"that I have full liberty of action in so far as preliminary arrangements are concerned? |
4996 | It touched you, too, did it?" |
4996 | Lester?" |
4996 | Lester?" |
4996 | Lester?" |
4996 | May I ask your name? |
4996 | May I come with you?" |
4996 | May I see it?" |
4996 | May we come in your carriage? |
4996 | Miss Beale?" |
4996 | Mrs. Forbes would have risen, but was restrained by the girl''s emphatic cry:"Mother, why wo n''t you behave like an obedient invalid?" |
4996 | My sister?" |
4996 | Now that we have reached more intimate terms, can you help by describing this stranger?" |
4996 | Now, about last night? |
4996 | Now, how in the name of goodness could I possibly entertain any notion of marrying the only daughter of a man in Forbes''s position?" |
4996 | Now, how''s this for a proposition? |
4996 | Now, what''s the next item on the program?" |
4996 | Number Seventeen BY Louis Tracy 1915 CHAPTER I THE OUTCOME OF ARTISTIC CURIOSITY"Taxi, sir? |
4996 | Of what avail will it be if this fellow, Wong Li Fu, is laid by the heels? |
4996 | One more word-- have you heard anything of Furneaux?" |
4996 | Or shall I try and reach him at Fortescue Square?" |
4996 | Otherwise--"You wish you had the murderer here now?" |
4996 | Paxton?" |
4996 | Shall I get you something, sir?" |
4996 | Shall I return, and strengthen your guard?" |
4996 | Shall I wire an apology to the man I''m dining with?" |
4996 | Shall we have some tea? |
4996 | She kem here about an hour ago--""Who? |
4996 | Should he, or should he not, tell the girl''s father of the rather indiscreet admissions she had made during their brief talk that morning? |
4996 | Should one leave her alone or endeavor to soothe her? |
4996 | Should she be given water or a stimulant? |
4996 | Suppose we concoct an advertisement for the Times?" |
4996 | Surely she had dealings with a bank or an agency?" |
4996 | Surround the house with policemen, break in the doors, and fight? |
4996 | That poor lady''s flat is next door to yours, is it not?" |
4996 | That sort of behavior does n''t help at all-- does it?... |
4996 | The gentleman you were dining with?" |
4996 | The ways of the Oriental were not his ways, but a bargain was a bargain, so what more could be said? |
4996 | There is n''t a Dr. Sinnett in Eastbourne at this date, but how was I to know that? |
4996 | Theydon-- do you believe in that detective? |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | Theydon?" |
4996 | This Miss Forbes-- by the way, what is her Christian name?" |
4996 | Want a bet?" |
4996 | Was he not bringing himself practically within the law? |
4996 | Was he only assuming the fact, or have there been developments at Croydon?" |
4996 | Was his hopeless admiration for Evelyn Forbes so patent that a sharp- eyed stranger could discern it after a brief hour in their company? |
4996 | Was it placed over her heart?" |
4996 | Was the Far East bound up in some mysterious way with Mrs. Lester''s death? |
4996 | Was this poor woman killed for the sake of her few trinkets?" |
4996 | Were they active allies of Scotland Yard or did they hold what is known in the law courts as a watching brief? |
4996 | What can we do? |
4996 | What did really happen? |
4996 | What did you make of that?" |
4996 | What do you say if we give a look along the front? |
4996 | What else could I do? |
4996 | What good purpose do you serve by holding forth these vague terrors? |
4996 | What had become of him? |
4996 | What is he to you? |
4996 | What is of greater importance than the food we eat and the liquors we drink? |
4996 | What is your favorite liqueur-- or shall we tell Tomlinson to send along that decanter of port? |
4996 | What matter his fame or social rank? |
4996 | What of her?" |
4996 | What of the other fellow who was caught near Innesmore Mansions?" |
4996 | What type of car was it? |
4996 | What''s its number?" |
4996 | When did you become acquainted with this Mr. Forbes? |
4996 | When have you, ever before, admitted an outsider to your councils? |
4996 | When?" |
4996 | Where are you speaking from? |
4996 | Where is it? |
4996 | Where''s this place, Eastbourne? |
4996 | Whether once or twice, why did you do it?" |
4996 | Which one?" |
4996 | Who more likely than he, I argued, to be a leading spirit among the Young Manchus? |
4996 | Who was killed?" |
4996 | Who would have expected this downpour after such a fine day?" |
4996 | Who''s Handyside-- a mere acquaintance?" |
4996 | Why are you constantly meeting detectives? |
4996 | Why did you rush off to Eastbourne yesterday? |
4996 | Why did you seem, at one time, to be taking sides with my father against a public inquiry by the police?" |
4996 | Why do you mention Japanese?" |
4996 | Why do you remain here, man? |
4996 | Why not dine with us tonight?" |
4996 | Why should Evelyn Forbes want speech with him at that early hour? |
4996 | Why should he dream of fanning into a fiercer fury the flame of his love? |
4996 | Why should you be so perturbed when I mention the Chinese Embassy?" |
4996 | Why the deuce, then, ca n''t you mouth your incantations? |
4996 | Why? |
4996 | Why?" |
4996 | Will you come, quick?" |
4996 | Will you come?" |
4996 | Will you go as quickly as possible to the chief police station at Croydon? |
4996 | Will you hand in these three messages at the telegraph office? |
4996 | Winter?" |
4996 | Wo n''t you let me into the secret? |
4996 | Wo n''t you let me order an egg?" |
4996 | Would he have gagged me and taken me away to some lonely place, where I would be kept a prisoner, or even killed?" |
4996 | Would n''t it be a reasonable thing if we drove a couple of screws into that door tonight?" |
4996 | Would you mind telling me what happened at one o''clock, when my colleague, Mr. Furneaux, jumped on to your car and went in pursuit of some one?" |
4996 | Yesterday it was an old woman, today a dictator, tomorrow the mob; who can foretell what shape the lava erupted from a volcano will take? |
4996 | Yet why did he fail to turn up at the station? |
4996 | Yet, what did it avail? |
4996 | You all appreciate the fact, of course, that I knew nothing whatever of any quarrel between my husband and a faction in China?" |
4996 | You follow me?" |
4996 | You heard about those ivory skulls yesterday?" |
4996 | You heard the conversation on the telephone?" |
4996 | You remember that Ann Rogers, Mrs. Lester''s maid, was called away by a telegram saying that her father was ill?" |
4996 | You see that, do n''t you?" |
4996 | You think I am adopting some of the methods of the French_ juge d''instruction_, eh?" |
4996 | You understand? |
4996 | You vaunt the prowess of your department-- why are you not scouring every haunt of Chinamen in the East End? |
4996 | You want to be sure that Wong Li Fu''s evil deeds shall be stopped? |
4996 | You''re pleased, are n''t you? |
4996 | You''ve seen no Chinamen, I supposed?" |
4996 | he said;"that is, unless Miss Forbes has any objection?" |
4996 | or"Have you now any reason for believing that you know his name?" |
49772 | ''Evolution,''she said blankly,"''what is evolution?''" |
49772 | ''Ought to go alone?--ought to go alone?'' 49772 ''Roger Michael''--''Roger Michael''--Sylvie, would n''t you rather use your own name if you wrote?" |
49772 | A nice, clean- looking man,said Elizabeth who was inveterate at finding good;"not very original, but then who is?" |
49772 | Ah, Hagar!--Goodies from Gilead Balm? 49772 Ai n''t you been to college for going on three years?" |
49772 | All the same,said Hagar,"go to bed before two o''clock, wo n''t you?" |
49772 | Am I not? 49772 Am I tiring you?" |
49772 | Am I? 49772 And Elizabeth?" |
49772 | And each change is greater by geometrical progression than was the one before? |
49772 | And that respect? |
49772 | And the two over there with the stout man? |
49772 | And then-- how many years?--Nine, is n''t it?--that night at that Socialist meeting, when you spoke--"What were you doing there? 49772 And what may be your name?" |
49772 | And without a child? |
49772 | And you call this home? |
49772 | And you rest the conqueror? |
49772 | And you told him? |
49772 | And you''re aware that I shall work on through life for the fairer social order? 49772 And you?" |
49772 | And you? |
49772 | Another? |
49772 | Are n''t we going to have some more poetry? 49772 Are n''t you lucky, too? |
49772 | Are n''t you the selfish person not to be willing to go to Bogotá? |
49772 | Are n''t you tired, Molly? 49772 Are they always going to call you that?" |
49772 | Are we? 49772 Are you afraid of death?" |
49772 | Are you better? |
49772 | Are you cold? |
49772 | Are you going again this summer? |
49772 | Are you going in, Miss? 49772 Are you hungry?" |
49772 | Are you interested? |
49772 | Are you interested? |
49772 | Are you so wild to go to Bogotá? |
49772 | Are you speaking,asked Hagar Ashendyne,"of the Suffrage Movement?" |
49772 | Are you very tired? |
49772 | Are you? |
49772 | Aunt Serena, what do you suppose he did? |
49772 | Aunt Serena, what is''evolution''? |
49772 | Be yez the new man? 49772 But are n''t American women the freest in the world?" |
49772 | But if there really is n''t any one? |
49772 | Ca n''t I go to Cooper Union to- night? |
49772 | Ca n''t you come with me, Hagar? |
49772 | Can you read aloud? |
49772 | China Awake? |
49772 | Christopher? |
49772 | Consciously together? |
49772 | Could n''t we have,said Fay,"a month in some old, green, still, English country place?" |
49772 | Could n''t you-- won''t you? |
49772 | Dangerous? |
49772 | Did I startle you? |
49772 | Did he ask for his wife? |
49772 | Did n''t you think,murmured the latter,"that that was a very curious speech? |
49772 | Did you have a good time? |
49772 | Did you have a pleasant walk? |
49772 | Did you-- ever have-- the asthmy? 49772 Dilsey, has n''t Miss Hagar come in yet?... |
49772 | Do I mind seeing you here, in Brittany? 49772 Do n''t you ever wish for just a clear Nothing? |
49772 | Do n''t you like people to like you? |
49772 | Do n''t you want some burrs? |
49772 | Do n''t you, too,she asked,"feel at home with the dear old imperfection?" |
49772 | Do you believe that-- when it is over-- we shall be together still? |
49772 | Do you mean that they ought n''t to-- to do anything to you? 49772 Do you mean that you wo n''t like it?" |
49772 | Do you mean,asked Mrs. LeGrand,"that, against your counsel and advice, Hagar is really going headstrongly on to do this silly thing?" |
49772 | Do you object to my swearing? |
49772 | Do you remember Ishmael in the Bible?--his hand against every man and every man''s hand against him? 49772 Do you remember once I told you I was going to make a great fortune, and you made light of it? |
49772 | Do you see them staying women? |
49772 | Do you suppose,said Molly,"that, in Merry England, the milkmaids and shepherdesses danced about a maypole at thirty- two? |
49772 | Do you think she would hate me if I turned up in that place in Brittany? |
49772 | Do you think that only mind in man rebels? 49772 Do you think that... perhaps... he might like to go home-- to go home to Gilead Balm?" |
49772 | Do you think there can be no home without a man? |
49772 | Do you think they can change? |
49772 | Do you want me to get up and say good- night? |
49772 | Do you, now? |
49772 | Do you? 49772 Does he really think, mother, that it''s serious?" |
49772 | Does that happen often? 49772 Dr. Bude-- oh, Dr. Bude-- is my mother going to die?" |
49772 | Even so, you could come to see me, could n''t you? 49772 Four years in-- in jail?" |
49772 | Four years? |
49772 | Free politically? |
49772 | Got a chill? |
49772 | Grandfather,said Hagar,"do you remember Alexandria and the mosques and the Place Mahomet Ali?" |
49772 | Hagar!--What is that? 49772 Hagar, do you love me?" |
49772 | Hagar,said Elizabeth,"if I give you two or three books upon the position of woman in the past and to- day, will you read them?" |
49772 | Has Isham brought the mail? |
49772 | Has Isham gone for the mail? |
49772 | Have n''t I anything of my father at all? |
49772 | Have n''t you any other name than Hagar? |
49772 | Have n''t you got any pretty patchwork nor nothin''? |
49772 | Have we got it in the library at Gilead Balm? |
49772 | Have you been to Gilead Balm? |
49772 | Have you got gipsy blood in you? |
49772 | Have you got one? |
49772 | Have you got to go? 49772 Have you had any since you set up in this remarkable way for yourself?" |
49772 | Have you heard from Lily? |
49772 | Have you heard from Rose Darragh? |
49772 | Have you heard them say how many days it will be before I am on my feet again? |
49772 | Have you ladies seen Hagar Ashendyne? 49772 Have you seen the evening paper?" |
49772 | Her husband hurt and ca n''t get to him to nurse him? |
49772 | Hi, Gipsy,he said, when Hagar came and stood by him;"what''s the matter with breakfast this morning?" |
49772 | Home to-- to Gilead Balm? |
49772 | How can you know that your judgment is good? |
49772 | How is mother? |
49772 | How is my mother? |
49772 | How long are you going to be in Nassau? |
49772 | How long since that summer at the New Springs? 49772 How many days have you now?" |
49772 | How numerous do you think are those women? |
49772 | How''s yo''ma this mahnin''? |
49772 | How, you mean, can I help it? 49772 I did n''t suppose you could do that.--What_ do_ you earn?" |
49772 | I hope I may be.--What are you knitting, grandmother? |
49772 | I think that I''m going to have an apartment in New York this winter, and if I do, wo n''t you make me a pincushion? 49772 I wonder now,"she said,"if you''re goin''to grow up a rebel? |
49772 | I wonder what you''d say if I said that charity-- charity in your sense-- is one of woman''s worst weaknesses? 49772 I''m old- fashioned enough to believe that a man can_ make_ a woman love him--""Are you? |
49772 | If you''d rather not, Gipsy--? 49772 If you''ve said enough for to- day, grandmother, shall I get the mail?" |
49772 | Indeed? |
49772 | Is it like''Tom Jones''? |
49772 | Is it proper for ladies? |
49772 | Is it your answer? |
49772 | Is it your vacation? 49772 Is it? |
49772 | Is it?... 49772 Is n''t it? |
49772 | Is n''t there another piece about the Campagna? 49772 Is she really going to work if he can get her a place?" |
49772 | Is that your last word? |
49772 | Is there anything else, sir? |
49772 | Is your name Hagar Ashendyne? |
49772 | It''s a pleasant old place, is n''t it? |
49772 | It''s big enough for two, is n''t it? |
49772 | Just what and how much did you tell him? |
49772 | Law, no, chile-- What put dat notion in yo''po''little haid? 49772 Let me see-- what is there to tell? |
49772 | Let us go somewhere where we can talk,said Hagar;"the gardens over there-- have you time?" |
49772 | Live? 49772 M. Morel and Mr. Pollock and you, Miss Carlisle and Miss Bedford, will, I hope, take supper with our guest and me? |
49772 | Maria going to die? 49772 Maria was perfectly spendthrift, and of course you take after her.--What kind of work do you mean you have been doing?" |
49772 | Maria? 49772 May I go play awhile on the ridge?" |
49772 | May I see Jim or his wife? |
49772 | May I sit and talk a little while? 49772 May n''t I see it, too?" |
49772 | Miss Ashendyne, wo n''t you? |
49772 | Miss Goldwell, wo n''t you come, too, to see''Romeo and Juliet''? |
49772 | Miss Smythe, wo n''t you come, too? |
49772 | Money and women are you talking about? 49772 Mr. Chairman, may I say one word to our comrades, and to any others who may be here? |
49772 | Mrs. Green, why are all the shutters closed? |
49772 | Mrs. LeGrand, ca n''t I go into grandmother''s room and hear what Dr. Bude says about my mother? |
49772 | My dear Miss Eden, how did all this begin? 49772 No one knows, Hagar, what''s going to happen in this old world, do they? |
49772 | November or April, what is ze difference? 49772 Of whom are you speaking, Hagar?" |
49772 | Oh, I think so,said Rachel absently,"but would it really amuse you, Hagar?" |
49772 | Oh, Lily, how is your head? 49772 Oh, Mr. Laydon, a briar has caught my skirt-- Will you--? |
49772 | Oh,cried Hagar,"do n''t they make you feel timid, cautious, and conservative?" |
49772 | Oh,she called,"will you stop-- will you wait?" |
49772 | Ought you to have run away? 49772 Out where?" |
49772 | Pleasant fellows, are n''t they? |
49772 | Ralph, do you wish still to be friends, or do you wish me to put you one side of the Equator and myself on the other? 49772 Ralph, why do n''t you study?" |
49772 | Rose went to Brooklyn to- night? |
49772 | Rose? |
49772 | Serena,appealed Mrs. LeGrand,"_ do_ you think Hagar ought to be allowed to contaminate her mind by a book like that?" |
49772 | She does n''t mean that she''s friends with those brazen women who want to be men? 49772 She was sorry to see you, too, was n''t she? |
49772 | Since I came? |
49772 | Some wave will swamp us? |
49772 | Suppose you do not begin the arrangement until next year? 49772 That I am just the same?--That I love you still?" |
49772 | That is very nice of you to look her up, but do you think you ought to go alone? |
49772 | The Princess of Wales keeps her beauty, does she not? |
49772 | The copepods? 49772 The other half?" |
49772 | Then,said Rachel,"we will get along very well.... What do you want to do anyhow?" |
49772 | There is a natural history museum here, is n''t there? |
49772 | There''s a woman over there who has a wonderful face-- brooding and wise.... A teacher is n''t she? 49772 They are going to live on there?" |
49772 | They are so excited over the prospect of your speaking to them after supper,said Mrs. LeGrand, her hand upon the coffee urn.--"Cream and sugar?" |
49772 | They''d tell you, would n''t they, if my mother was going to die? |
49772 | Thomasine Dale? 49772 Tired? |
49772 | To Hagar? |
49772 | To live at Gilead Balm with Bob and Serena? |
49772 | Was it named''Evolution''? |
49772 | Was n''t the Canal good enough? 49772 Was this-- was this New York?" |
49772 | Was you looking for the Greens? |
49772 | Water tastes good,he said,"does n''t it?" |
49772 | Well, Gipsy, we always wanted to travel, did n''t we? 49772 Well, Reverend, if we''re only two words apart-- Are you going to stay here? |
49772 | Well, and what do you girls want to see first? |
49772 | Well? |
49772 | Well? |
49772 | What are you doing here? |
49772 | What day of the month? |
49772 | What did you do that for? 49772 What did you do?" |
49772 | What did you do? |
49772 | What did you like best? |
49772 | What do you like to do and to talk about? |
49772 | What do you mean, grandfather? 49772 What do you mean?--That you want to become a rich man?" |
49772 | What do you say, Gipsy, to risking a South American Revolution? 49772 What do you want to do that for?" |
49772 | What dress are you going to wear? |
49772 | What else is there, mother? 49772 What have they got the dogs out for?" |
49772 | What have you done now, Hagar? 49772 What is going on?" |
49772 | What is it that you do want? |
49772 | What is it? 49772 What is it? |
49772 | What is my sort? 49772 What is the matter? |
49772 | What is the trouble with Hagar? 49772 What is your name?" |
49772 | What kind of people are they? 49772 What should I do with it when it was done, and if I liked it-- which you know, Greer, is not dead certain? |
49772 | What time is it? |
49772 | What we gwine do? 49772 What were they?" |
49772 | What will they say at Gilead Balm-- oh, what will they say at Gilead Balm? |
49772 | What would it be? |
49772 | What would you like to do with it, Gipsy? |
49772 | What you doin''dat for? |
49772 | What you shakin''for? |
49772 | What''s grieving you, little girl? |
49772 | What''s happened? 49772 What''s here?" |
49772 | What''s the matter? |
49772 | What''s the matter? |
49772 | What,he said,"is_ your_ vision of the country that is coming?" |
49772 | What,she said,"does a man or woman do in a dusty day''s march of every great transit? |
49772 | When may I see grandfather? |
49772 | When,asked Hagar,"are you going to build another bridge?" |
49772 | When,asked Old Miss,"are you going to marry-- and whom?" |
49772 | Where are they gone? |
49772 | Where are you going, dear? |
49772 | Where did you send it? 49772 Where did you two find each other?" |
49772 | Where is Thomson? |
49772 | Where will we go to- morrow afternoon? |
49772 | While you were with Medway? |
49772 | Who is it speaking? |
49772 | Who is it? |
49772 | Who on earth can that be? |
49772 | Who should? |
49772 | Who''s afraid of a little bit of storm anyhow? |
49772 | Why are n''t you at the University with Blackstone under your arm? |
49772 | Why could n''t you,said Mrs. LeGrand,"do both? |
49772 | Why do you call it that, Colonel? 49772 Why is it that women do n''t have any money?" |
49772 | Why not eternally the man of the past? 49772 Why not? |
49772 | Why should n''t you all go? 49772 Why should they set traps?" |
49772 | Why, are n''t there books enough here? |
49772 | Why, my dear father, what are you doing here?... 49772 Why?" |
49772 | Why? |
49772 | Will you be-- Are you much hurt? |
49772 | Without a man? |
49772 | Wo n''t you take them-- dear Hagar? |
49772 | Would you listen, Ralph? |
49772 | Wrong things? |
49772 | Yes, Gipsy? 49772 Yes, and where else do you think I went? |
49772 | Yes, but--"Can you sing? |
49772 | Yes, father? |
49772 | Yes, it is very pretty.... You did n''t see Sylvie Maine-- Sylvie Carter-- when you were in New York? |
49772 | Yes, mother? |
49772 | Yes-- much better.... Where shall we go to- morrow? |
49772 | Yes? 49772 You are going down the river, are n''t you?" |
49772 | You are going to England, too? |
49772 | You are sleeping better? |
49772 | You do n''t have friends and correspondents who are working for_ that_? |
49772 | You do n''t mind if I sit on the edge of the porch and dangle my feet, do you? 49772 You enjoyed it?" |
49772 | You liked it, did n''t you? |
49772 | You mentioned the University? 49772 You remember Bessie, do n''t you? |
49772 | You should have married Ralph.... All these years have you had any other offers? |
49772 | You''re aware that you''re marrying a working- woman, who intends to continue to work? |
49772 | You''ve heard of the cat that always falls on its feet? 49772 You, Hagar? |
49772 | _ Do_ you want to go, John? 49772 _ Hagar Ashendyne_--You ca n''t be-- do you mean that you are-- Hagar Ashendyne, the writer?" |
49772 | A silence while the trees and the flowering blackberry bushes went by; then,"Aunt Serena--""Yes?" |
49772 | After all, why should it fatigue more than standing in cathedrals, walking through art galleries? |
49772 | Ah, I understand Medway, from hair to heel!--What comes of it all? |
49772 | An afghan? |
49772 | And I thought,''Why not I as well as another?'' |
49772 | And Molly and Christopher would come to see her? |
49772 | And now will you tell me about yourself?" |
49772 | And now, my dear, will you tell Mrs. Lane that I want to see her?" |
49772 | And still you could travel-- sometimes with me, sometimes without me-- travel often if you pleased and far and wide.... Would it be so distasteful?" |
49772 | And that, generally speaking, the Woman Movement has me for keeps?" |
49772 | And the people who work under your direction, and atom by atom give you power?" |
49772 | And then why not feel that you had, so to speak, the rest in trust, and give liberally, so much a year, to all kinds of worthy enterprises? |
49772 | And your people up the river-- why not_ not_ tell them until summer- time? |
49772 | Are you a fisherman, too?" |
49772 | Are you coming to supper?" |
49772 | Are you feeling badly?" |
49772 | Are you fond of the theatre?" |
49772 | Are you going to the World''s Fair?" |
49772 | Are you wilful?" |
49772 | As they passed Mrs. Maine''s door she asked sleepily from within,"Did you enjoy the play?" |
49772 | But I can take the morning train if you''d rather?" |
49772 | But after that, oh, steadily after that, it lessened--""''Lessened''!--You mean that you are not in love with me as you were?" |
49772 | But could n''t they work in the country? |
49772 | But having done it, our own judgment has to determine at last, has n''t it? |
49772 | But how to convey that fact to the old Bourbon up the river? |
49772 | But she is too sensible a woman to think that I meant anything seriously--""Did you?" |
49772 | But what could you expect? |
49772 | But what have they to do with''freer''and''freest''? |
49772 | But you yourself--""But I myself?" |
49772 | Ca n''t I-- wouldn''t you-- can''t I-- give her just a little?" |
49772 | Ca n''t you come with me and have a cup of tea? |
49772 | Can you swim?" |
49772 | Captain Bob, with his hound Luna at his heels, greeted the returning members of the family:"Well, Serena, did you have a pleasant visit? |
49772 | Comment vous nommez- vous?" |
49772 | Damn it, where''d we be but for women anyhow? |
49772 | Did Mrs. LeGrand say so?" |
49772 | Did she like it? |
49772 | Did she live with Marietta Green and Jim?" |
49772 | Did you drop out of the sky? |
49772 | Did you gather, Gipsy, that Thomson had told him that he would remain crippled?" |
49772 | Did you have a tiresome journey?--Is your trunk coming? |
49772 | Discouragements? |
49772 | Do n''t you know that little girls ought to mind?" |
49772 | Do n''t you know, Gipsy, that something like that is the career for a man like me? |
49772 | Do n''t you like it?" |
49772 | Do n''t you want a hansom?" |
49772 | Do n''t you want me to do your hair?" |
49772 | Do n''t you want me to take you one day to see the shrine where he keeps his idol and watch him providing acceptable sacrifice? |
49772 | Do n''t you want to go along?" |
49772 | Do n''t you?" |
49772 | Do the women fish, too?" |
49772 | Do you chance to know Elizabeth Eden?" |
49772 | Do you grudge me this half- year in between?" |
49772 | Do you know any of them?" |
49772 | Do you like this place?" |
49772 | Do you mind, very much?" |
49772 | Do you notice how they always put Wife first? |
49772 | Do you remember the day we climbed there?" |
49772 | Do you remember the great pine above the spring?" |
49772 | Do you remember the rain barrel?" |
49772 | Do you remember?" |
49772 | Do you think I owe my father so great a love and obedience?" |
49772 | Do you want to_ take_ me, regardless-- just as you''d take those millions? |
49772 | Does he undertake to support them, stay by his bargain, however poor a one? |
49772 | Everything all right?" |
49772 | For instance,"said Hagar,"is it wrong to write on both sides of the paper?" |
49772 | Glass of water? |
49772 | God was everywhere; then, was God right here, too? |
49772 | Got any rags?" |
49772 | Green?" |
49772 | Had he not gone over them to himself afterwards, in his homely, cheerfully commonplace room in the brown cottage outside the Eglantine grounds? |
49772 | Hagar looked at her large- eyed,"Is my mother going to die, Aunt Phoebe?" |
49772 | Hagar, how old are you?" |
49772 | Has the University burned down? |
49772 | Have I offended you in any way, Hagar?" |
49772 | Have n''t you liked this winter?" |
49772 | Have you been expelled?" |
49772 | Have you broken your doll, poor dear?" |
49772 | Have you got a holiday?" |
49772 | Have you got that menthol pencil still?" |
49772 | Have you heard from Thomasine?" |
49772 | Have you?" |
49772 | He is a great traveller-- we do not see as much of him as we should like to see, do we, Hagar?" |
49772 | He is pretty badly knocked to pieces.--What have you got there? |
49772 | He went an hour ago.--You''re hoping, I suppose, for a letter from that dreadful man?" |
49772 | How can any thinking woman not think of that? |
49772 | How do you feel about it?" |
49772 | How long are you going to stay at Hawk Nest?" |
49772 | How old were you the last time we met?" |
49772 | How the devil did you get into that galley?" |
49772 | Hurt? |
49772 | I am here this winter with my father.... And you?" |
49772 | I came up here to meet you because I wanted to find out-- to know-- to be certain, at once--""To find out-- to know-- to be certain of what?" |
49772 | I do n''t believe you have ever really considered-- And I intend one day to make you see--""See what? |
49772 | I do n''t remember.--A kind of crash.... What happened?" |
49772 | I do n''t suppose,"said Dr. Bude,"that it would be possible for her to travel?" |
49772 | I only want to know plain things-- A, B, C''s of how to manage--""About a manuscript, you mean?" |
49772 | I should be bored to extinction.--What is your alternative?" |
49772 | I went to school with her--""The writer?" |
49772 | I wonder if you do n''t remember her, that summer long ago at the New Springs?" |
49772 | I would n''t stay long.--And what have you been doing this winter?" |
49772 | I''ll put you on the Elevated in plenty of time.--What people were you looking for?" |
49772 | If I saw any end to it... but I do not--""And you wish to cut the painter? |
49772 | If it was n''t going to last, what was going to make things better? |
49772 | If only there was a little more compliance, more feminine sweetness, more-- if I may say so-- unselfishness--""Where,"asked the Bishop,"is Medway?" |
49772 | If so, why? |
49772 | If they could n''t pay the rent, how could they pay for six to go down to Virginia-- and the children''s clothes, and the food and everything?... |
49772 | If you look pretty, how can people help liking you? |
49772 | If you tell me the way I can find it--""You are not a Catholic?" |
49772 | In what are they especially interested?" |
49772 | Is father ill? |
49772 | Is he coming home?" |
49772 | Is he hanged or struck by lightning? |
49772 | Is n''t he going to suffer? |
49772 | Is n''t it better just to keep our own concerns to ourselves for a while? |
49772 | Is n''t it divine?" |
49772 | Is n''t that the thinking rôle for every properly brought- up girl? |
49772 | Is n''t that thunder?" |
49772 | Is that Hagar? |
49772 | Is the word''rebellion''so strange to you? |
49772 | Is there any one else who could speak?" |
49772 | Is there anything else you can think of at the moment?" |
49772 | It sang,''Yes, rather handsome, but do n''t you find her dreadfully unfeminine?''" |
49772 | It took us so by surprise.... We had best, I think, just quietly say nothing to anybody for a while.... Do n''t you think so?" |
49772 | Let me see-- where can we meet? |
49772 | Luna here, now,--Luna''s got a roving disposition-- haven''t you, old girl?" |
49772 | May I come in?" |
49772 | May I have my letter, grandfather?" |
49772 | Medway made an impatient movement,"We have had this before--""Yes, but not so determinedly.... Why not agree that the battle is over? |
49772 | Miss Bedford, will you please wait here with me just a minute? |
49772 | Morel?" |
49772 | Mr. Laydon, Mrs. LeGrand says will you come into the parlour? |
49772 | Mrs. Lane, wo n''t you go?" |
49772 | No one with girls in their charge can be too careful!--What is the Gilead Balm news?" |
49772 | No pain, no feeling, no people, no light, no sound, no anything?" |
49772 | No; they were n''t going to do anything to him, they were just going to take him back.--He had n''t hurt her, had he? |
49772 | Nor if I take off my hat and roll up my sleeves so that I can feel the air on my arms?" |
49772 | Now are you-- now are you?" |
49772 | Now, did I dream it or did Thomson tell me that he''d brought my daughter with him?" |
49772 | Now, sir--"he turned on Laydon--"what have you got to say for yourself?" |
49772 | Of what shall I talk to them? |
49772 | Say, ai n''t they gettin''too big for their places?" |
49772 | See my enormous advantage in marrying you? |
49772 | Shall I sing you to sleep?" |
49772 | She ai n''t notionate-- are you, Luna? |
49772 | She had the address, and upon showing it to Rachel the latter had pronounced it"poor but respectable,"adding,"Are you sure you ought to go alone?" |
49772 | She says she''s going to work with them? |
49772 | She went on now with one of the children''s rhymes:--"Baa, baa, Black Sheep, Have you any wool?" |
49772 | Simply turn round and say to him''Mr.--''What''s his name?--Layton?" |
49772 | So you see,"said Mrs. LeGrand, smoothly argumentative,"what''s the use of stirring up the bottoms of things? |
49772 | Tea? |
49772 | The open road-- and a clear fire at night-- and to see all things--""Hagar-- Why did they call you Hagar?" |
49772 | The true survivor-- wouldn''t you like to see him-- see her-- see_ us_, Molly?" |
49772 | The very latest thing, I suppose, in fancy- work-- or perhaps you do pastels?" |
49772 | Then the man said,"This is the nobler use, do n''t you think?" |
49772 | Then was she wicked? |
49772 | Then will you take your grandmother''s big knitting- needles back to her for me? |
49772 | Then, as to Mrs. LeGrand.... Of course, I suppose, as I am a teacher here, and you are a pupil... but there, too, had we not best delay a little? |
49772 | Tom will have told you that I sometimes use my tongue, and that''s the ancient woman, still, is n''t it? |
49772 | Two women behind Lily Fay whispered together excitedly,"Hagar Ashendyne?" |
49772 | Uncle Bob--""Well, chicken?" |
49772 | Want to come along?" |
49772 | Was Amy really to blame in"Locksley Hall"? |
49772 | Was Hagar delighted? |
49772 | Was it a constant; was it going to last? |
49772 | Was it right to run away?" |
49772 | Was it to me you were speaking?" |
49772 | Was she five or six years old the last time she had seen him? |
49772 | Was she missing Laydon? |
49772 | Was there no one who could send them money? |
49772 | Was there something direfully wrong with her nature, or was it possible for people simply to be mistaken in such a matter? |
49772 | We''re all human together, are n''t we? |
49772 | Well, Colonel?" |
49772 | Well, what happens? |
49772 | Well, what''s the use of a woman quarrelling with the world as it''s made? |
49772 | Well? |
49772 | Were n''t you at the lock up the river? |
49772 | What am I to say--""To people? |
49772 | What are you doing, Hagar, with an improper book?" |
49772 | What could make me tired a day like this? |
49772 | What did Mr. Laydon think Browning really meant in"Childe Roland,"and was Porphyria''s lover really mad? |
49772 | What did it matter, all those things? |
49772 | What did she think of Juliet?--What did she think of Romeo?--Was it not well- staged? |
49772 | What do you know about''Tom Jones''?" |
49772 | What do you make of them?" |
49772 | What do you think they''re talking about over there? |
49772 | What do you want to put your feet on the table and smoke cigars for?" |
49772 | What else?" |
49772 | What is it you want now?" |
49772 | What is it, Colonel?" |
49772 | What is it?" |
49772 | What is that fragrance-- those strange lilies? |
49772 | What is the matter? |
49772 | What kind of a fellow is he, Hagar?--Like me?" |
49772 | What on earth are you doing in Omega Street?" |
49772 | What was Poverty? |
49772 | What were they?" |
49772 | What''s it about?" |
49772 | What''s it all about?" |
49772 | What''s that? |
49772 | What''s the matter, Hagar?" |
49772 | When are you going to hear?" |
49772 | When, after another minute or two, they were gone from the room,"Were you waiting for them to go? |
49772 | Where are you staying?" |
49772 | Where on earth did you come from? |
49772 | Where the cleanness and fairness-- where the order and beauty? |
49772 | Where there is no love and honour, what is the use? |
49772 | Where was the noble, great city? |
49772 | Where were the domes and colonnades? |
49772 | Where were the happy people? |
49772 | Where? |
49772 | Who could help being optimistic on such an afternoon? |
49772 | Who ever supposed there were n''t Jacobins in every historic struggle for liberty? |
49772 | Who will it be, Miss Gage?" |
49772 | Who''s been writing to you? |
49772 | Why ca n''t we just walk about until bedtime?" |
49772 | Why could n''t you give a handsome donation-- give a really large amount to this charity? |
49772 | Why do you change and grow from age to age?" |
49772 | Why do you not change your mind and go?" |
49772 | Why does n''t that moment carry on over? |
49772 | Why had n''t Thomasine-- why had n''t Jim let them know? |
49772 | Why not''The eternal masculine''? |
49772 | Why not''There is n''t any other''? |
49772 | Why should he trouble? |
49772 | Why should n''t he help now that he can do so? |
49772 | Why should n''t you come? |
49772 | Why should the world pry into it?" |
49772 | Why talk about it? |
49772 | Why was Poverty? |
49772 | Why will you, Denny?" |
49772 | Why, who keeps anything from Thomson? |
49772 | Why?" |
49772 | Will you come to my flat?" |
49772 | Will you come to- morrow at four?" |
49772 | Will you have one?" |
49772 | Will you let it all rest for a little longer? |
49772 | Wo n''t you come to dinner with me-- both of you? |
49772 | Wo n''t you come to the platform?" |
49772 | Would he not take it with her father and herself? |
49772 | Yesterday was lonesome and to- morrow''s going to be lonesome--""Have n''t you got a good book? |
49772 | You go pick your raspberries, and maybe to- morrow you can see her--""Ca n''t I see her to- night?" |
49772 | You goin''to play on the ridge? |
49772 | You''re real helpful.--What was I saying? |
49772 | cried Laydon, maddened, too,"are you going to say that?" |
49772 | do you think I shall weep for that?... |
49772 | exclaimed Mrs. LeGrand;"wo n''t you come here and talk to this little girl?" |
49772 | he said with cheerfulness,"It''s a pretty comfortable boat, eh? |
47002 | ''But why?'' 47002 ''But,''I exclaimed,''all those blind men whom you quartered in the stable?'' |
47002 | ''In the stable?'' 47002 ''What is this enchanting palace?'' |
47002 | ''Yes,''said I;''but why use our liberty to muffle ourselves in that ugly garb?'' 47002 ''You think my daughter would take a scamp like you fora husband?" |
47002 | Against your life? |
47002 | Aki has betrayed us; does my son know that? |
47002 | Am I mad, that I stand here, stunned by horror, instead of bringing you help, or having your wound dressed? 47002 Am I not always so?" |
47002 | Am I really so resplendent? |
47002 | And I? |
47002 | And he is really married? |
47002 | And if I command you to stay? |
47002 | And if you do not stanch the wound? |
47002 | And our comrades? |
47002 | And the other boats? |
47002 | And what are those three things? |
47002 | And what is that word? |
47002 | And what princess do you name to take the place of the one who is to leave me? |
47002 | And when that mass of water fell upon you, what did you think? |
47002 | And who are the princes that compose it? |
47002 | Are Signenari and his twenty thousand men still on the Island of Awadsi? |
47002 | Are there many of them? |
47002 | Are there soldiers there? |
47002 | Are they the Mongols? |
47002 | Are we very far from land still? |
47002 | Are you crazy? 47002 Are you crazy?" |
47002 | Are you crazy? |
47002 | Are you going out, mistress? |
47002 | Are you ill? |
47002 | Are you in earnest, mistress? 47002 Are you in pain?" |
47002 | Are you mad? 47002 Are you mad?" |
47002 | Are you seriously wounded, Prince? |
47002 | Are you very sure that the woman you saw was the one you are looking for? |
47002 | Because you are tired of my society? |
47002 | But do you really think that we shall let you thus despoil our child before our eyes? |
47002 | But how can I leave the castle,--how pass through the frenzied hordes which surround it,--without being massacred? |
47002 | But how did you escape from the murderers? |
47002 | But how did you get here? |
47002 | But if death deceive us,said the Prince;"if life ends in annihilation; if all is over with the last sigh?" |
47002 | But our wives and children; what will become of them? |
47002 | But speak, Raiden, do you wish to continue the fight? |
47002 | But tell me how you discovered this plot,continued the Shogun,"and who are its authors?" |
47002 | But tell me,cried Raiden,"why you pushed the plank so hard, in spite of all my warnings?" |
47002 | But then it''s her own fault: why did she die like that? |
47002 | But what ails your arm? |
47002 | But what does it matter? 47002 But where are you taking me, gracious master?" |
47002 | But who could listen to that young scamp without blushing and losing her temper? |
47002 | But why did they drown their rays in tears? 47002 By what means shall we swell the list?" |
47002 | Can nothing that we say move you? |
47002 | Can she be dead? |
47002 | Can she be saved? |
47002 | Can you disguise yourself so that none shall know you? |
47002 | Can you doubt it, Iwakura? |
47002 | Can you doubt it, master? 47002 Can you speak in such terms of our mortal enemy, Tika?" |
47002 | Certainly,said Fide- Yori;"why do you look so sad?" |
47002 | Could I live to see the end of the war which I am undertaking, supposing that it should last six moons? |
47002 | Could I not first send the Kisaki a secret petition of the utmost importance? |
47002 | Did I not swear to avenge our fine boats, which lie in ashes on the beach? |
47002 | Did he cancel it? |
47002 | Did not some man tear me from my palace, and carry me brutally away? |
47002 | Did she not tell you that she cared for nothing now? 47002 Did you not see that I looked at you alone?" |
47002 | Did you see which way the boat went? |
47002 | Do I hear aright? 47002 Do n''t you know?" |
47002 | Do n''t you recognize the spray of lemon- blossoms which you gave me when I saw you? |
47002 | Do n''t you remember, Prince, how he bit me when I wanted to fight you? 47002 Do n''t you think I was speedily consoled?" |
47002 | Do you bring news of my son? |
47002 | Do you know him, friend? 47002 Do you know the password?" |
47002 | Do you know to what class she belongs? |
47002 | Do you know which way the royal hunt went? |
47002 | Do you know whom you''re talking to? |
47002 | Do you not see how I suffer? 47002 Do you recognize this?" |
47002 | Do you recognize this? |
47002 | Do you suffer, my sweet love? |
47002 | Do you think I do not suffer too? 47002 Do you think now that I was right not to leave the fortress?" |
47002 | Do you think that I would rest inactive, useless, here? 47002 Do you think we can carry out our plan?" |
47002 | Do you think, because you do not choose to give up what you have taken, that we will not wrest it from you? 47002 Do you want a cup of tea or saki?" |
47002 | Does he bring tidings from Osaka? |
47002 | Even to me? 47002 Every one is anxious to detach me from you, my friend: what can be their motive?" |
47002 | For what cause? |
47002 | For what purpose? |
47002 | Has grief affected her reason? |
47002 | Has she lost her mind? |
47002 | Has the boy come back? |
47002 | Have you any further commands? |
47002 | Have you any wish which I can gratify, fair Princess? |
47002 | Have you come to make a sale? |
47002 | Have you full trust in my friendship for you? |
47002 | Have you no directions to give me, master? |
47002 | Have you preserved that fan? |
47002 | Have you your weapons? |
47002 | He loves her madly, I suppose? |
47002 | Her name is Omiti; you know nothing more? |
47002 | Hieyas is there in person? |
47002 | How can you ask me, friend? 47002 How can you think of such a thing?" |
47002 | How could Nagato be at Osaka and at Kioto at one and the same time? |
47002 | How could any one help loving her? |
47002 | How did you manage it? 47002 How does it run?" |
47002 | How fleeting, in life, is the time When we have only joys, hopes, and no regrets? 47002 How many soldiers are there on the island?" |
47002 | How many soldiers have we at the present time? |
47002 | How many soldiers landed on the island? |
47002 | How shall I ever dare to tell my son that his wife is a prisoner? |
47002 | I am ready to go,said Fatkoura, glad to be sacrificed for the safety of the rest;"may I take a maid with me?" |
47002 | I despise him too much to heed whether he loves or hates me? |
47002 | I know it; shall I sue for your pardon? 47002 I made you a confession the other day which I should have withheld,"said the Prince;"did you repeat it to your mistress?" |
47002 | I pitied and respected his age,thought he;"does such a man merit pity?" |
47002 | I suppose you have discovered a conspiracy? |
47002 | I think I see boats hovering about her; do you think our friends can have been taken by surprise?. |
47002 | If Hieyas really feels a particle of respect for me,replied Yoke- Moura,"why does he feign to think me capable of selling myself? |
47002 | If he thought otherwise, would he endure from him insults serious enough to condemn him to hara- kiri? 47002 If she were lost to you,"said the Prince, turning to Omiti,"could you consent to live? |
47002 | Illustrious scholar,said Hieyas, looking fixedly at him,"am I very ill?" |
47002 | In danger of death? |
47002 | In which direction did they go? |
47002 | In which direction shall we go, master? |
47002 | In which direction? |
47002 | Is Fatkoura in danger? |
47002 | Is any one jesting with me? 47002 Is he a general?" |
47002 | Is he dead, that dear old man? |
47002 | Is he there? 47002 Is he wounded?" |
47002 | Is it also in my honor, faithless subject, that you appear before me armed? 47002 Is it because I have not behaved well, that you want to drive me from you?" |
47002 | Is it because you think me angry with you that you are so much alarmed? |
47002 | Is it for the enemy''s eyes that you adorn yourself thus? |
47002 | Is it my mother? |
47002 | Is it not my delight to serve you? |
47002 | Is it possible? |
47002 | Is it possible? |
47002 | Is it really he who occupies the litter? |
47002 | Is it really in your power to save us? |
47002 | Is it so dreadful, then, to dwell in one castle rather than in another? |
47002 | Is it the blood buzzing in my ears? |
47002 | Is it thus you thank me for saving your life? |
47002 | Is it you, Iwakura? |
47002 | Is she as sad as ever? |
47002 | Is she really Iwakura''s wife? |
47002 | Is that all? |
47002 | Is that your daughter? |
47002 | Is there a password to enter the camp? |
47002 | Is there a traitor in the camp? 47002 Is there no fountain whose water has the power to make men light- hearted and careless?" |
47002 | Is there no one here? |
47002 | Is there no way to save them? |
47002 | Is there not a port- hole up there over our heads? |
47002 | Is your daughter''s name Omiti? |
47002 | It is high,thought the young girl;"will my rope be long enough?" |
47002 | Iwakura,he said, looking him in the eye,"what do you think of this war?" |
47002 | Iwakura,said he,"what do you advise me to do?" |
47002 | Master, why did you make me get up so early? |
47002 | Must I find her only to lose her, after waiting so long? |
47002 | Must I repeat his words? 47002 Must I smile upon that ugly creature?" |
47002 | News from Osaka? |
47002 | No,said Nagato;"what may that be?" |
47002 | Omiti,he cried,"is this a dream? |
47002 | On whom do you wish to be revenged, friend? |
47002 | Open the door at this time of night? |
47002 | Shall I ever reach my journey''s end? |
47002 | Shall I fly? 47002 Shall I grind some ink for you? |
47002 | Shall I order sweetmeats to be brought? 47002 Shall I strike the koto- strings, and sing a song to cheer you?" |
47002 | Shall I summon your suite? |
47002 | Shall we start at once? |
47002 | Shall you return to the city? |
47002 | She hates me, I suppose? |
47002 | She is beautiful, is she not? |
47002 | She was very fond of this Nagato, then? |
47002 | Speak quickly, come I What have you learned? |
47002 | That is exactly the idea that I wished to convey,said Iza- Farou, bursting into laughter;"was I not bound to reply to your impudent wolf?" |
47002 | That is shameful,said Nagato;"has n''t one a right to escape by death from a grief too heavy to be endured?" |
47002 | That is your final answer? 47002 That''s not all I did,"said Loo, still looking back;"see the pink light yonder? |
47002 | The air is fresher here, is it not, young woman? |
47002 | The woman whom you love: of whom was he talking? |
47002 | Then the Queen is not in the fortress? |
47002 | Then you are deaf to our prayers? |
47002 | Then you are not friends of Hieyas, as you said? |
47002 | Then you think that she lives in Osaka? |
47002 | There are plenty of them here,said Raiden;"but how are we to get hold of them?" |
47002 | There is no rest by night or day, is there? 47002 This peace will not last long,"said he;"and If the war is renewed, what will become of us with our dismantled castle?" |
47002 | Towards the shores of Lake Biva, at the foot of the mountains,replied the lackey;"but, my lord, do you wish to join the illustrious hunters?" |
47002 | Was it indeed with your blood that you traced your traitorous name here side by side with my loyal one? 47002 Well, Tika?" |
47002 | Well, what is that to us? |
47002 | Well, where will you get the troops of which you speak? |
47002 | Were the assassins numerous? |
47002 | What a beauty he is? |
47002 | What ails her? |
47002 | What are you about there? |
47002 | What can be burning on that shore? |
47002 | What can have happened to him? 47002 What can it be?" |
47002 | What can they be waiting for? |
47002 | What can your girl do, I say? |
47002 | What did he mean to do with me? |
47002 | What did he tell you? |
47002 | What do I care, whether they live or die? |
47002 | What do I hear? |
47002 | What do we know of the will of Heaven? 47002 What do you know about it, imp?" |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you mean? |
47002 | What do you want? |
47002 | What does all this mean? |
47002 | What does all this mean? |
47002 | What does he mean? |
47002 | What does that mean? |
47002 | What does this mean? |
47002 | What does this mean? |
47002 | What does this mean? |
47002 | What evil do we commit? 47002 What had you to tell me?" |
47002 | What has happened to you? 47002 What has happened?" |
47002 | What has happened? |
47002 | What has happened? |
47002 | What has happened? |
47002 | What have I done? |
47002 | What have I ever done to inspire such hatred? 47002 What have you been about?" |
47002 | What have you done? 47002 What have you in your hand?" |
47002 | What head? |
47002 | What if I lose patience at last, Nagato,said the Shogun;"what if I exile you to your own province for a year?" |
47002 | What is going on here? |
47002 | What is going on? |
47002 | What is it, father? |
47002 | What is it, my beloved prince? |
47002 | What is it? 47002 What is it? |
47002 | What is it? |
47002 | What is that? |
47002 | What is that? |
47002 | What is the matter, Prince? |
47002 | What is the matter? |
47002 | What is the meaning of this haughty bearing? |
47002 | What man is that who dares clasp her in his arms? |
47002 | What matters it to me? |
47002 | What matters one man''s despair? 47002 What orders did he send us through you?" |
47002 | What sacrilege, what unprecedented crime, do we behold? |
47002 | What say you, sire? |
47002 | What say you? |
47002 | What shall I do? 47002 What shall I do?" |
47002 | What shall we do? |
47002 | What sudden madness has seized upon them? 47002 What will become of her if you die?" |
47002 | What''s going on here? 47002 What''s that?" |
47002 | What''s the matter? |
47002 | What''s the use of shrieking? |
47002 | What? |
47002 | What? |
47002 | What? |
47002 | What? |
47002 | Whence come you? |
47002 | Where are they going? 47002 Where are we?" |
47002 | Where do you come from? |
47002 | Where have you been, my poor Sado? |
47002 | Where is Hieyas''camp? |
47002 | Where is Loo? |
47002 | Where is he at this moment? |
47002 | Where is the Mikado now? |
47002 | Where shall we land? |
47002 | Where will you get so much money? |
47002 | Which is the shortest way to reach the banks of the Yedogawa? |
47002 | Which of the two spoke first?'' |
47002 | Which way shall we go? |
47002 | Which? |
47002 | Who are you? |
47002 | Who are you? |
47002 | Who are you? |
47002 | Who gives orders in my house? |
47002 | Who is it? 47002 Who is this man who speaks so boldly?" |
47002 | Who knows what may happen yet? |
47002 | Who will feed them in our absence? |
47002 | Who would have thought that I came here to play the part of servant? |
47002 | Whom can this letter be from? |
47002 | Whom do you love, then? |
47002 | Whom does he seek? |
47002 | Whom has he sent? |
47002 | Why are you hacking my furniture to pieces? |
47002 | Why can I not be always here? |
47002 | Why did n''t you say so in the beginning? |
47002 | Why did you ask me as a special favor to make you chief of that embassy? |
47002 | Why did you try to run away? |
47002 | Why do you run away so quickly? 47002 Why do you say alas? |
47002 | Why do you say so cruel a thing? 47002 Why does n''t your mistress take a little walk? |
47002 | Why does not Aroufza move? |
47002 | Why have you betrayed yourself, my daughter? |
47002 | Why not let me go? |
47002 | Why should I hide the truth? |
47002 | Why should they? |
47002 | Why should? |
47002 | Why this oath? |
47002 | Why will you not fly with me? 47002 Why will you not hear me? |
47002 | Why? |
47002 | Will you be quiet? |
47002 | Will you come with me to one of my illustrious friends, the noble Iza- Farou No- Kami? 47002 Will you dismount?" |
47002 | Will you do me the honor to acquaint me with your glorious name? |
47002 | Will you drink? |
47002 | Will you have me for a husband? |
47002 | With what? |
47002 | Would Hieyas dare commit such a crime? 47002 Would n''t you think the brat spent his life in enjoyment like a lord? |
47002 | Would you be brave, Loo? |
47002 | Would you know that wretch?--would you learn the name of the guilty man? |
47002 | Would you love me then? |
47002 | Would you witness a renewal of the hideous and bloody scenes whose terror still lingers in our minds? |
47002 | Yes; and who would be left to love me? |
47002 | You are firmly resolved to resist me still? |
47002 | You are not afraid, Loo? |
47002 | You are not peasants,said the Prince;"why have you two swords hidden in your belt?" |
47002 | You are wounded, eh? 47002 You come from Hieyas? |
47002 | You deigned to protect my life, divine Queen,said the Prince;"could I longer delay coming to testify my humble gratitude?" |
47002 | You did not fear the just reproaches I might lavish upon you? |
47002 | You die for me after a life of suffering,--you, so fair, so young, and so formed for happiness? 47002 You disobeyed me, Iwakura,"said the dying girl in a voice which grew ever weaker;"why did you call in help?" |
47002 | You feel that you are forgiven, do n''t you? |
47002 | You have money, then? |
47002 | You have other wounds, have you not? |
47002 | You intend to escort me then? |
47002 | You know it? |
47002 | You leave the city which owes its triumph to you so soon, and without taking time for rest? |
47002 | You love fighting, you are brave, you are strong; will you be my comrades still, and fight under my command, against the enemies of Fide- Yori? |
47002 | You love me, then? |
47002 | You love me?--you, the Shogun? |
47002 | You refuse? |
47002 | You see that small house with two roofs, outlined clear against the sky? 47002 You think me mad?" |
47002 | You think we can not remain at sea? |
47002 | You thought of me, while I groaned at your absence; and you did not come? |
47002 | You want a story? |
47002 | You want to get rid of that young woman? |
47002 | You will not confess your love? 47002 Your heart is at peace with mine,"said Fide- Yori;"why do you talk of war?" |
47002 | ''And what are these disorders?'' |
47002 | ''Are the authors of these misdeeds known?'' |
47002 | ''Who is he?'' |
47002 | Am I to transport my whole army in that vulgar boat?" |
47002 | Am I very ill? |
47002 | And how much do you want for her?" |
47002 | And must I not now struggle to repair the wrong done you by one of my family without my knowledge?" |
47002 | And the Shogun, what was he about? |
47002 | Are not all the nobles of the Court admitted to your presence? |
47002 | Are they cowards?" |
47002 | Are they friends or foes?" |
47002 | Are you blind and deaf? |
47002 | Are you hardened in crime? |
47002 | Are you still devoted to me?" |
47002 | Are you sure of what you state?" |
47002 | Are you there?" |
47002 | At this time of day? |
47002 | Besides, how could she refuse? |
47002 | Besides, if I have been deceived, what matters it? |
47002 | But at least tell me whence comes this great devotion, and why is my life so precious to you?" |
47002 | But can I assure the Queen that you will never again commit the fault which angered her so deeply?" |
47002 | But do you think that I could cease to love you? |
47002 | But how could they contend in a trial of speed with oars against those great sails swelling in the morning breeze? |
47002 | But how? |
47002 | But she thought: Why am I not on the other bank? |
47002 | But tell me now, how did you happen to fall in love with me?" |
47002 | But there was another messenger; what tidings does he bring?" |
47002 | But what could he do? |
47002 | But what do I care? |
47002 | But what do you want? |
47002 | But what were the conditions of my pardon?" |
47002 | But why did you not tell me what was going on?" |
47002 | But why should he wait? |
47002 | But why should you suffer from your love?" |
47002 | But why should you waste your sublime thoughts upon so trifling an incident?" |
47002 | But why this madness, and why this mystery? |
47002 | Can I have given you any cause to grieve?" |
47002 | Can I now be content with what has hitherto filled up my life? |
47002 | Can the flower refuse to bud and bloom,--the star refuse to shine? |
47002 | Can the night rebel when day triumphs over it, as you have triumphed over my soul?" |
47002 | Can you not bring nearer the celestial hour of our reunion?" |
47002 | Could you not stifle them, and at least spare me the sight of your immodest conduct?'' |
47002 | Did I not bid you beware of betraying your master? |
47002 | Did he not come but lately, at the risk of his life,--for the wrath of the Kisaki might well prove fatal,--merely to behold you for one instant?" |
47002 | Did there not fall a rain of hairy locks in the suburbs of Osaka only a few days after that mountain rose up out of the water? |
47002 | Did you not hear me say that gayety reigns here? |
47002 | Do lips like yours address such words to me?" |
47002 | Do n''t you see that she has fascinated me, and that I am miserable?" |
47002 | Do you fear nothing, that you do not shake before the breath of my wrath?" |
47002 | Do you forget that fact? |
47002 | Do you lack money?" |
47002 | Do you not see the joy that sparkles in my eyes, now that I approach the end of my sufferings? |
47002 | Do you recollect, when you followed me in the merry pranks which I invented? |
47002 | Do you remember what a scornful, angry air I assumed? |
47002 | Do you suppose that I did not know your mad plan to deliver your lover, or provide him with the means to escape my vengeance?" |
47002 | Do you suppose that your every word and movement are not faithfully reported to me? |
47002 | Do you think that I would look on and see others slaying and being slain, and not join the fray? |
47002 | Does it not seem to fly the pursuit of some powerful enemy? |
47002 | Everybody? |
47002 | For the last time, will you love me?" |
47002 | For what?" |
47002 | Had not his grace of person and of face, the charm which emanated from him, had their share in attracting the favorable notice of the Queen? |
47002 | Had the true master waked at last from his long torpor? |
47002 | Had you no thought of me?" |
47002 | Has he ever paid any heed to the affairs of the nation? |
47002 | Has she then forgotten that she owes the light of day to it? |
47002 | Have we not suffered enough? |
47002 | Have you anything to conceal?" |
47002 | Have you ceased to understand the threats of Heaven? |
47002 | Have you forgotten our agreement?" |
47002 | Have you not noticed the signs of anger given by my celestial progenitors? |
47002 | Have you thought of that?" |
47002 | Hieyas directed a lantern to be brought, saying:"Is it really true? |
47002 | How can you think of such a thing?" |
47002 | How could she make him open the door at this hour? |
47002 | How did he hope to defend the sacred city against forces which were undoubtedly large? |
47002 | How much does a fisherman earn in a day?" |
47002 | How, in the space of a single moon, could he make himself so formidable?" |
47002 | I am master still, am I not? |
47002 | I ca n''t stand it any longer; I''ve laughed too hard?" |
47002 | I do not yet know the name of this noble; but perhaps the Prince of Nagato, who was at Kioto last night, heard something of this adventure?" |
47002 | I need two hundred horses; where am I to get them?" |
47002 | I share your fears, Iwakura, and sad forebodings overwhelm me; but can I persuade the Mikado that our presentiments are not vain? |
47002 | If he were here, he would rush to his death; and who would avenge us then?" |
47002 | In what fashion will you amuse us to- night?" |
47002 | Is anything known of the fight?" |
47002 | Is it because you are a widow that you take so little care of your skin, and let it be destroyed by the sun?" |
47002 | Is it in my power to make you happy?" |
47002 | Is it indeed possible? |
47002 | Is it not frightful, and can you not pity me?" |
47002 | Is it thus you love me? |
47002 | Is it you? |
47002 | Is n''t she the very one you are looking for? |
47002 | Is not his life worth mine? |
47002 | Is not that a mark of the displeasure with which mankind has inspired the Gods? |
47002 | Is not that terrible? |
47002 | Is this the way you treat a god? |
47002 | Is your route fixed?" |
47002 | It is not merely from a spirit of obedience that you yield, is it?" |
47002 | It is to be to- night, do you understand? |
47002 | Let us start to- morrow, eh? |
47002 | My soul surrenders itself to you, against my will; could I hide it from you? |
47002 | Oh, can not you, to whom I have confided the dread secret of my life, understand how painful my existence is? |
47002 | Saved, rather,"she added;"what should I do in this world?" |
47002 | Shall I have strength to conceal my agitation and my criminal love? |
47002 | Shall I kill myself at your feet? |
47002 | Should I alone be exiled because I am blind to everything but your beauty? |
47002 | Should n''t you think the sun was rising?" |
47002 | Such a favor is, I know, enough to cause your emotion: but are you not used to all honors?" |
47002 | Tell me what does she like?" |
47002 | Tell me: how long have you loved me?" |
47002 | The kingdom is at peace, but I am not?" |
47002 | The sentinels had already noted the arrivals, and shouted,"Who goes there?" |
47002 | Then he turned to the messengers, saying:"Did Attiska give you a verbal message besides this letter?" |
47002 | They shouted this song in chorus:--"Is there aught on earth more precious than saki? |
47002 | They were about to resume their journey, when Raiden suddenly exclaimed:"But where is Loo?" |
47002 | Was it a trap? |
47002 | Was it possible? |
47002 | Was not that a sign of misfortune? |
47002 | Were they not brothers? |
47002 | What are you about? |
47002 | What are you thinking of? |
47002 | What are your wishes?" |
47002 | What can I do for you? |
47002 | What care I for power? |
47002 | What could be the meaning of this singular tryst at the doors of the temple of the Sun- Goddess in the province of Ise? |
47002 | What did I do to you, cruel one, that you should desert me as you did?" |
47002 | What do we care for what the gossips say? |
47002 | What do you think of my team?" |
47002 | What does General Yoke- Moura say?" |
47002 | What does all this mean? |
47002 | What does that mean?" |
47002 | What does the bird who soars aloft, intoxicated with light, care for the hiss of the reptiles writhing in the swampy mire?" |
47002 | What excuse could she give to the suspicious and probably surly keeper? |
47002 | What had become of him? |
47002 | What had become of the sacred majesty, the divine prestige, of the descendant of the Gods amidst this fatal adventure? |
47002 | What had happened to him? |
47002 | What had happened? |
47002 | What have you been doing now, incorrigible and imprudent fellow?" |
47002 | What have you yet to do? |
47002 | What is life? |
47002 | What is there in this world that is permanent? |
47002 | What is to become of us?" |
47002 | What is your name?" |
47002 | What mattered the name by which the power was known, so long as the power rested in my hands? |
47002 | What matters the war? |
47002 | What must I do to dry your tears?" |
47002 | What shall we do?" |
47002 | What was he about to hear? |
47002 | What will become of me during these long days of agony and alarm?" |
47002 | What will become of us without you?" |
47002 | What young girl would stay at home to- day?" |
47002 | Where is she now?" |
47002 | Where should she get a rope without arousing suspicion? |
47002 | Which is the most delicious moment of spring? |
47002 | Which shall I take,"he continued,--"the son, or the father? |
47002 | Who could this enemy be, who struck in the dark? |
47002 | Who is Omiti? |
47002 | Who is the unhappy man whom my life oppresses, and who would fain hurry me from the world?" |
47002 | Who is this woman stretched motionless on the ground?" |
47002 | Who was the accursed coachman who urged that infernal team across the bridge? |
47002 | Who would have thought it from her charming face and form? |
47002 | Why are you sad?" |
47002 | Why are you so pale?" |
47002 | Why can I not carry you far from here,--escape this struggle and this slaughter? |
47002 | Why delay so long?" |
47002 | Why did such unspeakable agony oppress his soul? |
47002 | Why did you delay so long? |
47002 | Why did you lag behind so long? |
47002 | Why do you ask?" |
47002 | Why do you look so frightened?" |
47002 | Why does she linger thus? |
47002 | Why not let this light breeze cool her heated brow?" |
47002 | Why should rout precede the battle? |
47002 | Why should they be reduced to the last extremity? |
47002 | Why should we torture ourselves thus? |
47002 | Why was the Queen at Naikou, instead of at her palace? |
47002 | Why, after opening heaven to my gaze for a brief instant, do you hurl me suddenly down to the torments of hell? |
47002 | Will this last long?" |
47002 | Will you permit me to say so to our much- loved lord?" |
47002 | With a rope? |
47002 | Would not that be unjust?" |
47002 | Would you refuse to live with me-- to be my wife?" |
47002 | You do not doubt my words, I hope? |
47002 | You have fully made up your mind to keep us?" |
47002 | You have saved my life twice, and you think I would forsake you I would scorn you? |
47002 | You hear? |
47002 | You kept those flowers?" |
47002 | You leave her there in the snow instead of going to her aid? |
47002 | You shall be queen; do you hear me? |
47002 | You understand me fully, my son? |
47002 | asked Nagato;"have you told the truth?" |
47002 | can you not hasten? |
47002 | cried Fide- Yori, his eyes filling with tears,"was it to save me yet again that you came? |
47002 | cried Fide- Yori,"will you not go with us?" |
47002 | cried Nagato, raising himself on one elbow;"what does he look like?" |
47002 | cried Nagato;"and you were never able to trace her?" |
47002 | cried Nagato;"have I been tricked? |
47002 | cried a feminine voice from the interior of a pavilion,"are you out at such an hour? |
47002 | cried the Kisaki,"have I so nearly lost?" |
47002 | cried the Prince, springing toward her,"am I the victim of a dream? |
47002 | cried the Shogun,"is it thus you love me? |
47002 | cried the maid,"Fatkoura no longer loves music? |
47002 | dare I confess to you,"cried Nagato,"that to me physical suffering is a comfort? |
47002 | did he intend to grasp the power once more, and govern his kingdom for himself? |
47002 | do you not know that I love you, and need I repeat it? |
47002 | eagerly exclaimed the Prince,"what did she say when she learned of my love for her?" |
47002 | exclaimed Fide- Yori,"have the Prince of Figo and the Prince of Tosa deserted me?" |
47002 | exclaimed Hieyas;"he was not allowed to kill himself?" |
47002 | exclaimed Nagato;"where did you find her?" |
47002 | gently asked the Shogun;"is it a talisman?" |
47002 | have you nothing to say?" |
47002 | he cried;"to let them live? |
47002 | he exclaimed;"perhaps the guardian spirit of this grove?" |
47002 | he shouted, in a rage,"do n''t you see that she still breathes, that she has only fainted? |
47002 | he was old, was he?" |
47002 | how can we struggle against love? |
47002 | is it really true? |
47002 | is that indeed possible?" |
47002 | is that so? |
47002 | must the land, then, be bathed in the blood of its own children? |
47002 | said Fide- Yori,"will you never cease to play with your life?" |
47002 | said Iza- Farou,"would you disobey her command?" |
47002 | said Nagato;"but what difference does that make to you, so long as I agree to carry the message in your place?" |
47002 | said Nagato;"did you succeed?" |
47002 | said Tika in amaze,"has he not revealed his deep passion by a thousand acts of folly? |
47002 | said Tika, clasping her hands;"do you think I would deceive you, and that it would not be the best way to make my mistress happy? |
47002 | said Tika;"has he not told you that he loved you?" |
47002 | said he,''is not this the hour when we may drop the weary pomp of our rank, and become free and happy men?'' |
47002 | said she;"shall we not return to the palace?" |
47002 | said the Kisaki meditatively,"is the man who has the confidence of my divine spouse so fierce and treacherous? |
47002 | said the Kisaki, disguising her profound emotion with a smile,"is this the way that you obey my wishes? |
47002 | said the Mikado;"and whom?" |
47002 | said the Prince of Nagato,"will you allow me to speak in your presence?" |
47002 | said the Shogun,"when I myself come hither to share your captivity, are you so impatient to be free?" |
47002 | said the old woman;"shall we have time to dress our master?" |
47002 | she cried,"why did you undertake a journey when you are still so weak and ill?" |
47002 | she said, in a faint voice;"have you come back to me at last? |
47002 | so you contrived to get hold of that?" |
47002 | then I am not dead?" |
47002 | thought he;"whence comes all this stir I what mean these messengers bearing orders of which I know nothing?" |
47002 | what have you done?" |
47002 | what shall I do?" |
47002 | what will it matter?" |
47002 | why are you so merciless, so cruel? |
47002 | why was I placed upon your path?" |
47002 | wondered Yoke- Moura;"why do they pause in their forward movement?" |
47002 | would you like to hear the sound of the flute or biva? |
47002 | you do not tremble? |
47002 | you will not be angry?" |
47002 | you''re going to be married, and in that dress?'' |
5775 | Is such a life eligible? |
5775 | It is luxury which upholds states? |
5775 | What is meant by''rationally''? |
5775 | [ Footnote: Tolstoy, What Shall We Do Then? 5775 ''Happy,''my brother? 5775 ( 1) How can we know what is the will of God except by considering what makes for human welfare? 5775 ( 2) And what criterion should we have to judge what is virtuous? 5775 ( 6) Finally, we may ask of every proposed line of conduct, what will be its worth to us in memory? 5775 ( or What to Do?)] 5775 ( or, What To Do?) 5775 1Is divorce morally justifiable? 5775 ? |
5775 | ALTEBNATIVE THEORIES... Is morality"categorical,"beyond need of justification? |
5775 | ARE votes for women worth the similar evils which British suffragettes are drifting into? |
5775 | And how shall we decide what is the best way? |
5775 | And how shall we define virtue? |
5775 | And how shall we define virtue? |
5775 | And if a man feels no such"categorical imperative,"how can you prove to him it is there? |
5775 | And may not he be justly deemed a fool who says that these pairs of pleasures are respectively alike?" |
5775 | And that, therefore, morality itself would be the danger of dangers?" |
5775 | And the problem, Which solutionis better? |
5775 | And what else can welfare ultimately be but happiness? |
5775 | And why? |
5775 | And will those irritating acts actually forward their cause, or tend to bring about a revulsion of feeling? |
5775 | Are altruistic impulses always right? |
5775 | Are altruistic impulses always right? |
5775 | Are competitive athletics desirable? |
5775 | Are competitive athletics desirable? |
5775 | Are n''t you?" |
5775 | Are pleasures and pains incommensurable? |
5775 | Are pleasures and pains incommensurable? |
5775 | Are some pleasures worthier than others? |
5775 | Are some pleasures worthier than others? |
5775 | Are the rich justified in living in luxury? |
5775 | Are the rich justified in living in luxury? |
5775 | Are their fears well founded? |
5775 | Are there not other things to be considered besides happiness? |
5775 | BUT YOU HAVE NONE TO SHOW... And have you not a similar way of speaking about pain? |
5775 | Because he is stronger, and can reward or punish? |
5775 | But how do we know that it is good unless we have some deeper criterion to judge it by? |
5775 | But how should we WISH others to act in the given situation? |
5775 | But if that enthusiasm be challenged, how shall we justify it? |
5775 | But if the deliverances of different men''s consciences conflict, how shall we know which to trust? |
5775 | But is it necessary to destroy this splendidly efficient concentration of industry in order to avoid its evils? |
5775 | But is it, any more than that, the ULTIMATE JUSTIFICATION of morality? |
5775 | But is that connection a mere accident? |
5775 | But is this so? |
5775 | But perhaps some of thy active powers will be hindered? |
5775 | But something external will stand in the way? |
5775 | But the question"Why not?" |
5775 | But what makes it the best way? |
5775 | But what will be his comparative worth as a human being? |
5775 | But why? |
5775 | By what means was social morality produced? |
5775 | By what means was social morality produced? |
5775 | C. J. Hawkins, Will the Home Survive? |
5775 | CAN WE BASE MORALITY UPON CONSCIENCE... What is the meaning of"moral intuitionism"? |
5775 | CHAPTER II THE ORIGIN OF SOCIAL MORALITY How early was social morality developed? |
5775 | CHAPTER III OUTWARD DEVELOPMENT-- MORALS What is the difference between morals and non- moral customs? |
5775 | CHAPTER IV INWARD DEVELOPMENT-- CONSCIENCE What are the stages in the history of moral guidance? |
5775 | CHAPTER IX THE JUDGMENT OF CHARACTER Wherein consists goodness of character? |
5775 | CHAPTER V. THE INDIVIDUALIZING OF CONSCIENCE... Why did not the individualizing of conscience occur earlier? |
5775 | CHAPTER VI CAN WE BASE MORALITY UPON CONSCIENCE? |
5775 | CHAPTER VIII THE MEANING OF DUTY Why are there conflicts between duty and inclination? |
5775 | CHASTITY AND MARRIAGE... What are the reasons for chastity before and fidelity after marriage? |
5775 | COMMERCIALIZED VICE? |
5775 | CULTURE AND ART... What is the value of culture and art? |
5775 | Can we attain to greater health and efficiency? |
5775 | Can we attain to greater health and efficiency? |
5775 | Can we lay down any useful rules in the matter, indicating what types of cases require untruthfulness? |
5775 | Can we maintain a steady under glow of happiness? |
5775 | Can we maintain a steady under glow of happiness? |
5775 | Can we say, with Kant, that the only good is the Good Will? |
5775 | Can we say, with Kant, that the only good is the Good Will? |
5775 | Commercialized vice? |
5775 | Crime? |
5775 | Crime? |
5775 | Did he live up to his conscience? |
5775 | Did the crimes of the Jesuits make the Church triumphant? |
5775 | Do men always act for pleasure or to avoid pain? |
5775 | Do moral acts always bring happiness somewhere? |
5775 | Do moral acts always bring happiness somewhere? |
5775 | Do the deliverances of different people''s consciences agree? |
5775 | Do the deliverances of different people''s consciences agree? |
5775 | Do we say, because conscience makes for our best welfare? |
5775 | Does the end justify the means? |
5775 | Does the end justify the means? |
5775 | Does the proposition that it is my pecuniary interest to choose the most valuable, therefore, become doubtful? |
5775 | EQUALITY AND PRIVILEGE... What flagrant forms of inequality exist in our society? |
5775 | Even if we grant the superior authority of the Hebrew- Christian Bible, can we rely on its teachings implicitly? |
5775 | Even, however, if conscience led us all in the same direction, would that prove its authority? |
5775 | Every choice involves rejection; infinite possibilities diverge before us; which among the myriad impulses that call upon us shall we follow? |
5775 | Expediency asks,"How shall I do this?" |
5775 | FELLOWSHIP, LOYALTY, AND LUXURY... what social relationships impose claims upon us? |
5775 | First, did he do the best he knew? |
5775 | Free trade and protection? |
5775 | Free trade and protection? |
5775 | From the same lips came the final answer to the question,"Who is my neighbour?" |
5775 | Government regulation of prices, profits, and wages? |
5775 | Government regulation of prices, profits, and wages? |
5775 | HEALTH AND EFFICIENCY... What is the moral importance of health? |
5775 | How can we decide between them? |
5775 | How can we have enjoyment without being wrecked by it; how can we make life rich and yet keep it pure? |
5775 | How can we judge impartially between our standards and those of the Fiji Islanders? |
5775 | How can we justify that judgment? |
5775 | How can we reconcile egoism and altruism? |
5775 | How can we reconcile egoism and altruism? |
5775 | How did these germinal forms of courage, prudence, industriousness, etc, first come into existence? |
5775 | How do we actually decide in such cases? |
5775 | How do we know that God is not an arbitrary tyrant? |
5775 | How do we know that good will is good, unless we can see WHY it is good? |
5775 | How do we know that it is a revelation of God except by our experience of the beneficence of its teachings? |
5775 | How early in the evolutionary process did personal morality of some sort emerge? |
5775 | How far has the moralizing process been blind and how far conscious? |
5775 | How far has the moralizing process been blind and how far conscious? |
5775 | How has morality been fostered by the tribe? |
5775 | How has morality been fostered by the tribe? |
5775 | How many"greatest American newspapers"are there? |
5775 | How much of the public moneys should be put into this and how much into that undertaking? |
5775 | How shall we feel assured that we are following a real duty, pursuing an actual good, and not being led astray by a mere prejudice or convention? |
5775 | How should patriotism be directed and qualified? |
5775 | How should patriotism be directed and qualified? |
5775 | How, for example, shall we ascertain from the Bible the will of God with respect to the trust problem, or currency reform, or penal legislation? |
5775 | How, then, can we decide between conflicting ideals and estimate their relative value? |
5775 | IF virtue is simply conduct that makes most truly for happiness, why are not all but fools virtuous? |
5775 | INTRINSICALLY they may be equally desirable, or the latter may even be keener pleasures? |
5775 | INWARD DEVELOPMENT- CONSCIENCE... What are the stages in the history of moral guidance? |
5775 | If Benedict Arnold was a sincere convert to the British cause, did he do right in trying to deliver West Point into their hands? |
5775 | If any particular command of the inner voice may be morally wrong, how can we trust it at all? |
5775 | If conscience everywhere agreed in its dictates, could we base morality upon it? |
5775 | If conscience everywhere agreed in its dictates, could we base morality upon it? |
5775 | If morality does not exist for human welfare, what is it good for? |
5775 | If we mean by the question,"Wherein is happiness to be found, by doing what can we attain it?" |
5775 | In every case, then, the question must arise: Is the end to be attained worth the cost? |
5775 | In the case of the intuition- theory it is easy to discern the reasons that have kept it alive? |
5775 | In what directions are our standards of truthfulness low? |
5775 | In what directions are our standards of truthfulness low? |
5775 | In what ways should the State seek to better human environment? |
5775 | In what ways should the State seek to better human environment? |
5775 | In which of these ways shall we"realize"ourselves? |
5775 | Instead of these endless attempts to cure the natural results of the system, is there not need of a radical reconstruction? |
5775 | Is continued idleness ever justifiable? |
5775 | Is continued idleness ever justifiable? |
5775 | Is divorce morally justifiable? |
5775 | Is it an adequate justification to say that morality is what makes for self- development or self- realization? |
5775 | Is it expedient to allow this accumulated wealth to bring an income to its possessors? |
5775 | Is it not likely that the usefulness of virtue has something to do with its origin and existence? |
5775 | Is it not the height of irrationality to bow down before an unexplained and mysterious impulse and allow it to sway our conduct without knowing why? |
5775 | Is it wrong to gamble, bet, or speculate? |
5775 | Is it wrong to gamble, bet, or speculate? |
5775 | Is it wrong to smoke? |
5775 | Is it wrong to smoke? |
5775 | Is moral progress certain? |
5775 | Is moral progress certain? |
5775 | Is morality merely subjective and relative? |
5775 | Is morality merely subjective and relative? |
5775 | Is morality"categorical,"beyond need of justification? |
5775 | Is not reason, as it has been recently called,"the ultimate conscience"? |
5775 | Is not, perhaps, the whole system morally wrong? |
5775 | Is self- development or self- realization the ultimate end? |
5775 | Is self- development, or self- realization, the ultimate end? |
5775 | Is the heroic inspiration we name Virtue but some Passion, some bubble of the blood, bubbling in the direction others PROFIT by? |
5775 | Is the source of duty the will of God? |
5775 | Is the source of duty the will of God? |
5775 | Is the will of God the SOURCE of morality? |
5775 | Is there any way of reconciling these opposing interests except by an unhappy and regrettable sacrifice? |
5775 | Is there anything better than morality? |
5775 | Is there anything better than morality? |
5775 | Is there no other way of securing votes for women than by the hysterical and criminal pranks our British sisters have been playing? |
5775 | Is this act not only a good one, is it the best one for that moment of our lives? |
5775 | Is this irrational, or can it be shown to be teleologically justifiable? |
5775 | It asks,"What shall I do to be saved?" |
5775 | It is but one specific type of impulse among many; why should it be given the reins, the control over all? |
5775 | It is reassuring to divide the world into the sheep and the goats? |
5775 | LIBERTY AND LAW... What are the essential aspects of the ideal of liberty? |
5775 | Let us ask in every case, Does this expenditure bring use, health, joy commensurate with the labor it represents? |
5775 | May he by use of the argumentum ad populum, by his eloquence and skill, win a case which he does not believe in at heart? |
5775 | May he so manipulate the facts in his plea as to convince a jury of what he is himself not convinced? |
5775 | May it not even be better drastically to choke our natures, better to get a new nature than to realize the old? |
5775 | May not a man have good will and yet do much mischief? |
5775 | May we attempt to stifle the utterance of( c) such other untruths as are inexcusable in the light of our common knowledge? |
5775 | Moral philosophy asks the deeper and more significant question, What SHALL we do? |
5775 | Morality is made for man, for his use and guidance; what could possibly have greater sanctity or authority for him? |
5775 | Moreover, there are those who feel no call to follow conscience; how could we prove to them that they ought? |
5775 | Must I not choose as well as I can, and if I choose wrongly, must I give up my ground of choice? |
5775 | Must it not show its credentials before it can legitimately command our allegiance? |
5775 | Must this conflict be eternal? |
5775 | Must we deny that duty is the servant of happiness? |
5775 | Must we deny that duty is the servant of happiness? |
5775 | OBJECTIONS AND MISUNDERSTANDINGS... Do men always act for pleasure or to avoid pain? |
5775 | OUTWARD DEVELOPMENT- MORALS... What is the difference between morals and non- moral customs? |
5775 | Observation can teach us, slowly, what conduct makes for happiness; but what conduct makes for"self- development"? |
5775 | On what grounds shall we decide? |
5775 | One may well say,"Who are we of the upper classes to throw the first stone?" |
5775 | Or are we right in execrating him for his attempted breach of trust? |
5775 | Or how do we know that the whole thing is not superstition? |
5775 | Or if we mean,"What is the psychology of happiness?" |
5775 | Or who in anger, grief, or fear is actuated to the movements which he makes by the pleasures which they yield? |
5775 | Ought the trusts to be broken up or regulated? |
5775 | Ought the trusts to be broken up, or regulated? |
5775 | Ought we to do this? |
5775 | Ought we to slacken our process of lawmaking lest we make the yoke too hard to bear? |
5775 | Out of what has conscience developed? |
5775 | Out of what has conscience developed? |
5775 | PATRIOTISM AND WORLD- PEACE... What is the meaning and value of patriotism? |
5775 | POLITICAL PURITY AND EFFICIENCY... What are the forces making for corruption in politics? |
5775 | PROBLEMS OF CONDUCT INTRODUCTORY What is the field of ethics? |
5775 | PROFIT SHARING, COOPERATION, AND CONSUMERS''LEAGUES? |
5775 | Perhaps more comfortably, less dangerously, but also in humbler style- more meanly? |
5775 | Poverty and inadequate living conditions? |
5775 | Poverty and inadequate living conditions? |
5775 | Problems would arise on all hands: On what basis should the wage- rate in this industry and in that be determined? |
5775 | Profit- sharing, cooperation, consumers''leagues? |
5775 | SICKNESS AND PREVENTABLE DEATH? |
5775 | SOCIALISM? |
5775 | Secondly, did he do what was really best? |
5775 | Shall a man who is needed by his family risk his life to save a ne''er- do- well? |
5775 | Should art be censored in the interests of morality? |
5775 | Should art be censored in the interests of morality? |
5775 | Should existing laws always be obeyed? |
5775 | Should existing laws always be obeyed? |
5775 | Should we live"according to nature,"and adjust ourselves to the evolutionary process? |
5775 | Should we live"according to nature,"and adjust ourselves to the evolutionary process? |
5775 | Should we not praise only the man who fights his inclinations, does right when he does not want to, and without foresight of ultimate gain? |
5775 | Sickness and preventable death? |
5775 | So that just morality were to blame, if a HIGHEST MIGHTINESS AND SPLENDOR of type of man- possible in itself were never attained? |
5775 | Socialism? |
5775 | THE ALCOHOL PROBLEM... What are the causes of the use of alcoholic drinks? |
5775 | THE BASIS OF RIGHT AND WRONG... What is the nature of that intrinsic goodness upon which ultimately all valuations rest? |
5775 | THE JUDGMENT OF CHARACTER... Wherein consists goodness of character? |
5775 | THE MEANING OF DUTY... Why are there conflicts between duty and inclination? |
5775 | THE MECHANISM OF SELF- CONTROL... What are our potentialities of greater self- control? |
5775 | THE ORIGIN OF PERSONAL MORALITY... How early in the evolutionary process did personal morality of some sort emerge? |
5775 | THE ORIGIN OF SOCIAL MORALITY... How early was social morality developed? |
5775 | THE SOLUTION OF PERSONAL PROBLEMS... What are the inadequacies of instinct and impulse that necessitate morality? |
5775 | THE SOLUTION OF SOCIAL PROBLEMS... Why should we be altruistic? |
5775 | TO COMPETITORS? |
5775 | TO EMPLOYEES? |
5775 | TO INVENTORS? |
5775 | TRADE UNIONS AND STRIKES? |
5775 | TRUTHFULNESS AND ITS PROBLEMS... What are the reasons for the obligation of truthfulness? |
5775 | The actual question is, Is the happiness of a fool, or of an oyster( if happiness it has) as worthy, as objectively desirable, as that of a wise man? |
5775 | The air is full of proposals, invectives, causes, movements; how shall we know which to espouse and which to reject, or where best to lend a hand? |
5775 | The answer to the Epicurean''s heedlessness is expressed in such lines as"What is this world''s delight? |
5775 | The control of immigration? |
5775 | The control of immigration? |
5775 | The general point of view may be found, more temperately stated, in F. H. Bradley''s Ethical Studies, the chapter entitled"Why Should I be Moral?" |
5775 | The question, however, persistently recurs, Why should the INDIVIDUAL be altruistic? |
5775 | The single tax? |
5775 | The single tax? |
5775 | The woman''s movement? |
5775 | The woman- movement? |
5775 | To all this organizing activity we might say, Cui bono, for what good? |
5775 | To competitors? |
5775 | To employees? |
5775 | To investors? |
5775 | To the public? |
5775 | To the public? |
5775 | To what aims shall we give our allegiance? |
5775 | Tolstoy, What Shall We Do Then? |
5775 | Tolstoy, What is Art? |
5775 | Virtue asks,"Shall I do this or that?" |
5775 | WAS the advancement of the Church worth the cost in human suffering, estrangement, and bitterness that the Jesuits exacted? |
5775 | WHY should we organize our interests; why not deny them like the ascetics? |
5775 | Was his conscience properly developed and directed? |
5775 | Was this department head fair in discharging this man and promoting that man? |
5775 | We OUGHT, we OUGHT- but what? |
5775 | We have in mind the concrete virtues which have been developed; but what common function have these habits of conduct, so produced, had in human life? |
5775 | We have"harnessed heredity"to produce better types of wheat and roses and cattle and horses and dogs; why not produce better types of men? |
5775 | Were not the French army officers sane in preferring to make Dreyfus their scapegoat rather than bring dishonor and shame upon their army? |
5775 | What are our potentialities of greater self- control? |
5775 | What are the causes of the use of alcoholic drinks? |
5775 | What are the dangers of conventional morality? |
5775 | What are the dangers of conventional morality? |
5775 | What are the essential aspects of the ideal of liberty? |
5775 | What are the ethics of the following schemes: I. Trade- unions and strikes? |
5775 | What are the evil results of political corruption? |
5775 | What are the evil results of political corruption? |
5775 | What are the evils in undue self- indulgence? |
5775 | What are the evils in undue self- indulgence? |
5775 | What are the evils in undue self- repression? |
5775 | What are the evils in undue self- repression? |
5775 | What are the evils of war? |
5775 | What are the evils of war? |
5775 | What are the evils that result from alcoholic liquors? |
5775 | What are the evils that result from alcoholic liquors? |
5775 | What are the factors in an ideal marriage? |
5775 | What are the factors in an ideal marriage? |
5775 | What are the forces making for corruption in politics? |
5775 | What are the gravest moral dangers of our times? |
5775 | What are the gravest moral dangers of our times? |
5775 | What are the inadequacies of instinct and impulse that necessitate morality? |
5775 | What are the reasons for chastity before and fidelity after marriage? |
5775 | What are the reasons for the obligation of truthfulness? |
5775 | What can be done by eugenics? |
5775 | What can we do to hasten world- peace? |
5775 | What can we do to hasten world- peace? |
5775 | What dangers are there in culture and art for life? |
5775 | What dangers are there in culture and art for life? |
5775 | What definition of morality emerges from this? |
5775 | What definition of morality emerges from this? |
5775 | What does HE get out of it? |
5775 | What evils may go with conscientiousness? |
5775 | What evils may go with conscientiousness? |
5775 | What exceptions are allowable to the duty of truthfulness? |
5775 | What exceptions are allowable to the duty of truthfulness? |
5775 | What factors are to be considered in estimating the worth of personal moral ideals? |
5775 | What factors are to be considered in estimating the worth of personal moral ideals? |
5775 | What flagrant forms of inequality exist in our society? |
5775 | What forces made against custom- morality? |
5775 | What forces made against custom- morality? |
5775 | What general duties do we owe our fellows? |
5775 | What general duties do we owe our fellows? |
5775 | What general remedies for industrial wrongs are feasible? |
5775 | What general remedies for industrial wrongs are feasible? |
5775 | What harm can be done thereby, and why cause her useless embarrassment? |
5775 | What has been the net result of the process? |
5775 | What have been the benefits of war? |
5775 | What have been the benefits of war? |
5775 | What if the reverse were true? |
5775 | What is being done to abolish this ghastliest of evils? |
5775 | What is conscience now? |
5775 | What is conscience now? |
5775 | What is extrinsic goodness? |
5775 | What is extrinsic goodness? |
5775 | What is most important in cultural education? |
5775 | What is most important in cultural education? |
5775 | What is responsibility? |
5775 | What is responsibility? |
5775 | What is the exact meaning of selfishness and unselfishness? |
5775 | What is the exact meaning of selfishness and unselfishness? |
5775 | What is the field of ethics? |
5775 | What is the justification of justice and chivalry? |
5775 | What is the justification of justice and chivalry? |
5775 | What is the justification of praise and blame? |
5775 | What is the justification of praise and blame? |
5775 | What is the meaning and value of patriotism? |
5775 | What is the meaning of"moral intuitionism"? |
5775 | What is the moral importance of health? |
5775 | What is the nature of that intrinsic goodness upon which ultimately all valuations rest? |
5775 | What is the plausibility of moral intuitionism? |
5775 | What is the plausibility of moral intuitionism? |
5775 | What is the political duty of the citizen? |
5775 | What is the political duty of the citizen? |
5775 | What is the value of conscience? |
5775 | What is the value of conscience? |
5775 | What is the value of culture and art? |
5775 | What is this ideal of liberty, and how should it affect our efforts at industrial regeneration? |
5775 | What legislative checks to corruption are possible? |
5775 | What legislative checks to corruption are possible? |
5775 | What mental and moral obstacles hinder altruistic action? |
5775 | What mental and moral obstacles hinder altruistic action? |
5775 | What methods of equalizing opportunity are possible? |
5775 | What methods of equalizing opportunity are possible? |
5775 | What might we have been doing with our time and strength or money? |
5775 | What now is the price that must be paid for its use? |
5775 | What safeguards against unchastity are necessary? |
5775 | What safeguards against unchastity are necessary? |
5775 | What self- respecting man can eat"caviar on principle"when another has not even bread? |
5775 | What shall we choose and from what refrain? |
5775 | What shall we fight for and what against? |
5775 | What shall we say to this plea? |
5775 | What shall we say to this? |
5775 | What should be done in the way of public education? |
5775 | What should be done in the way of public education? |
5775 | What should be our attitude toward the use of alcoholic liquors by others? |
5775 | What should be our attitude toward the use of alcoholic liquors by others? |
5775 | What should be the attitude of the individual toward alcoholic liquors? |
5775 | What should be the attitude of the individual toward alcoholic liquors? |
5775 | What social relationships impose claims upon us? |
5775 | What sort of conduct, then, is good? |
5775 | What sort of conduct, then, is good? |
5775 | What warrant have we for saying that our code is a better one than theirs? |
5775 | What were the main causes that produced personal morality? |
5775 | What were the main causes that produced personal morality? |
5775 | What, in general, has been the direction of moral progress? |
5775 | What, in general, has been the direction of moral progress? |
5775 | What, then, is the rationale of these emotion- reactions? |
5775 | Which shall a man obey? |
5775 | Who are the happiest people in the world? |
5775 | Who blushes to escape the discomfort of not blushing? |
5775 | Who smiles for the pleasure of smiling, or frowns for the pleasure of the frown? |
5775 | Why did not the individualizing of conscience occur earlier? |
5775 | Why is any one better than another? |
5775 | Why not train men to supplant a blind sense of duty by a conscious insight, a rational valuation of ends and means? |
5775 | Why should we be altruistic? |
5775 | Why should we bow down to a command shot at us out of the air, a command irrelevant to our actual interests? |
5775 | Why should we imitate such ruthless ways? |
5775 | Why should we study ethics? |
5775 | Why should we study ethics? |
5775 | Why, however, do we rate the pleasures of temperance and wisdom above those of intemperance and folly? |
5775 | Will the spirit of lawlessness spread? |
5775 | Would not the ACT OF MEASURING be the saving principle?"] |
5775 | Year by year we are extending our network of laws over human conduct; more and more pertinent becomes the them? |
5775 | [ Footnote: For an arraignment of the money thrown away on modern decadent art, see Tolstoy''s What is Art? |
5775 | [ Footnote: See his What Shall We Do Then? |
5775 | [ Footnote: Tolstoy also hit the nail on the head in his little essay, Why do Men Stupefy Themselves?] |
5775 | also Tolstoy, in What to Do? |
5775 | and Who is my neighbor? |
5775 | and the further question, Are there times when the law may be rightly disobeyed? |
5775 | hat can be done by eugenics? |
5775 | how many have been repealed because they were mischievous? |
5775 | rather than"What shall I do to serve?" |
5775 | says Bradley,"the one question which no one can answer is, what is happiness?" |
5775 | though it has never been at all widespread among thinking men? |
6172 | But,you may say,"the poor, the failures, the wretched-- what of them?" |
6172 | Who among you, if his child asks bread, will give him a stone? |
6172 | ( How could the perfect fall?) |
6172 | ( How could the"perfect"fall?) |
6172 | 7) as saying:"For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto His Glory, why yet am I also judged as a sinner?" |
6172 | Accepting Evolution, how can we believe in a Fall? |
6172 | After all, may not even John Burns be human; may not Mr. Chamberlain himself have a heart that can feel for another? |
6172 | And I take the opportunity to here recommend very strongly_ Shall We Understand the Bible?_ by the Rev. |
6172 | And Moses said unto them, Have ye saved all the women alive? |
6172 | And Pharaoh called Abram, and said, What is this that thou hast done unto me? |
6172 | And do you believe that"our Father in Heaven, our All- powerful God, who is Love,"would first create man fallible, and then punish him for falling? |
6172 | And he said, Who made thee a prince and a judge over us? |
6172 | And how does it stand to- day? |
6172 | And if God is our"maker,"who but He is responsible for our make- up? |
6172 | And if God knew they_ must_ fall, how could Adam help falling, and how_ could_ he justly be blamed for doing what he_ must_ do? |
6172 | And if He alone is responsible, how can Man have sinned against God? |
6172 | And if He did so create and so punish man, could you call that just or merciful? |
6172 | And if an earthly father would act thus wisely and thus kindly,"how much more your Father which is in Heaven?" |
6172 | And if there never was a Fall, why should there be any Atonement? |
6172 | And now, will you ponder these words of Arthur Lillie, M.A., the author of_ Buddha and Buddhism_? |
6172 | And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith? |
6172 | And what has it accomplished? |
6172 | And what of Noah, who got drunk, and then cursed the whole of his sons''descendants for ever, because Ham had seen him in his shame? |
6172 | And yet, what would a Christian congregation say of an"Infidel"who committed half the crimes and outrages of any one of those Bible heroes? |
6172 | Are London and Paris, New York and St. Petersburg, Berlin, Vienna, Brussels, and Rome centres of holiness and of sweetness and light? |
6172 | Are Mark and John dead, also? |
6172 | Are the masses of people who accept it peaceful, virtuous, chaste, spiritually minded, prosperous, happy? |
6172 | Are their international politics guided by the Sermon on the Mount? |
6172 | Are their national laws based on its ethics? |
6172 | Are their noblest and most Christlike men and women most revered and honoured? |
6172 | Are there no good, nor happy, nor worthy men and women to- day outside the pale of the Christian churches? |
6172 | Are these the signs of a triumphant and indispensable religion? |
6172 | Are they witnessed and attested? |
6172 | Are we Rationalists so wicked, so miserable, so useless in the world, so terrified of the shadow of death? |
6172 | Are we, on the evidence of such a people, to believe that miracles happened two thousand years ago? |
6172 | Are you not aware, friend Christian, that what was Infidelity is now orthodoxy? |
6172 | Because a moral man would not say:"If I give up my religion, what will you pay me?" |
6172 | But do I despair? |
6172 | But if the spread of a faith proves its miracles to be true, what can be said about the spread of the Buddhist and Mohammedan religions? |
6172 | But if they knew not what they did, why should God be asked to_ forgive_ them? |
6172 | But is not this like sending flowers and jewels to the king? |
6172 | But is there any reason to regard the Gospel stories of the death, Resurrection, and Ascension on of Christ as historical? |
6172 | But suppose any pagan or Mohammedan general were to behave to a Christian city as Moses behaved to the people of Midian, what should we say of him? |
6172 | But was it so? |
6172 | But what are we to think of his offering his daughters to the mob, and of his subsequent conduct? |
6172 | But what kind of Creator must He be who has created such a universe as this? |
6172 | But without a Devil how can we maintain a belief in a God of love and kindness? |
6172 | CONTENTS PREFACE FOREWORDS THE SIN OF UNBELIEF ONE REASON WHAT I CAN AND CANNOT BELIEVE THE OLD TESTAMENT-- Is the Bible the Word of God? |
6172 | COUNSEL: I shall show that the act of resurrection was witnessed by one Mary Magdalene, by a Roman soldier-- JUDGE: What is the soldier''s name? |
6172 | COUNSELS OF DESPAIR"If you take from us our religion,"say the Christians,"what have you to offer but counsels of despair?" |
6172 | Can the man be justly blamed for the acts of the cherub? |
6172 | Can there be a more horrible object in existence than an eloquent man not speaking the truth? |
6172 | Can you believe it? |
6172 | Can you bring evidence to prove that he was ever alive? |
6172 | Can you find in all the world to- day two men as wise, as good, as gentle, as happy? |
6172 | Can you suppose that such a creator would, after thousands of years of effort, have failed even now to make His repeated revelations comprehensible? |
6172 | Christianity Before Christ Other Evidences THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION-- What is Christianity? |
6172 | Consider these unhappy ones, what do you offer them? |
6172 | Could He not have created him at once a wise and good creature? |
6172 | DETERMINISM CAN MAN SIN AGAINST GOD? |
6172 | DETERMINISM-- Can Man Sin against God? |
6172 | Despair of what? |
6172 | Despair? |
6172 | Did Adam choose that Eve should have a stronger will than he, or that the Serpent should have a stronger will than Eve? |
6172 | Did Buddha, and King Asoka, and Socrates, and Aristides lead happy, and pure, and useful lives? |
6172 | Did Christianity abolish them? |
6172 | Did Matthew see Christ ascend into Heaven? |
6172 | Did Matthew see Christ crucified? |
6172 | Did Matthew see Christ in the flesh and alive after His Resurrection? |
6172 | Did Matthew see Christ quit the tomb? |
6172 | Did Matthew see Christ''s dead body? |
6172 | Did the Protestant martyrs prove Protestantism true? |
6172 | Did the citizens receive them into their midst without fear, or horror, or doubt? |
6172 | Did these dead saints go back to their tombs? |
6172 | Did they correct the proofs? |
6172 | Do they live worse or die worse, or bear trouble worse, than those who accept the Christian faith? |
6172 | Do we not know that religion was so born and nursed? |
6172 | Do you believe that the God who imagined and created such a universe could be petty, base, cruel, revengeful, and capable of error? |
6172 | Do you believe that? |
6172 | Do you deny that? |
6172 | Do you know what the Christians call Tom Paine? |
6172 | Do you think He is the kind of Creator to make blunders and commit crimes? |
6172 | Does a strong man value the praise of the weak? |
6172 | Does a wise man prize the praise of fools? |
6172 | Does any man of wisdom and power care for the applause of his inferiors? |
6172 | Does it prove that the Buddhist faith is the only true faith? |
6172 | Does not history teach us that it is true? |
6172 | Does not that sound reasonable? |
6172 | Does not the long finger of the animal show the infinite badness of God to the insect? |
6172 | Does that prove that Christianity was not true? |
6172 | Does the Bible reveal any new moral truths? |
6172 | Does the Bible revelation contain no errors of fact? |
6172 | Does this prove that King Asoka or his teacher, Buddha, was divine? |
6172 | Does_ that_ prove that Christ was divine? |
6172 | Even when man was ignorant and savage, could not an all- powerful God have devised some means of revealing Himself so as to be understood? |
6172 | First of all, then, what is the fact which this evidence is supposed to prove? |
6172 | For if I had power to train a son of mine to righteousness, and I trained him to wickedness, should I not sin against my son? |
6172 | From Glasgow to Johannesburg, from Bombay to San Francisco is God or Mammon king? |
6172 | HAVE THE DOCUMENTS BEEN TAMPERED WITH? |
6172 | Had this stupendous miracle no effect upon the Jewish priests who had crucified Christ as an impostor? |
6172 | Has God''s revelation, as given in the Bible, reached all men? |
6172 | Have you_ any_ witnesses? |
6172 | How are Christians treating Jews to- day in Holy Russia? |
6172 | How are we to know that these men ever lived? |
6172 | How are we to know that they were correctly reported, if they ever spoke or wrote? |
6172 | How can they think that? |
6172 | How can we account for King Asoka, how can we account for Buddha? |
6172 | How can we rely upon such evidence after nineteen hundred years, and upon a statement of facts so important and so marvellous? |
6172 | How comes it, then, that the treatment of the poor by the rich is better amongst Jews than amongst Christians? |
6172 | How did it fare with the poor all over Europe in the centuries when Christianity was at the zenith of its power? |
6172 | How do they bear themselves in"the solemn realities of life"? |
6172 | How have Christians treated Jews for fifteen centuries? |
6172 | How is it that the gulf betwixt rich and poor in such Christian capitals as New York, London, and Paris is so wide and deep? |
6172 | How long is it since Jews were granted full rights of citizenship in Christian England? |
6172 | How many Christians have reached it yet? |
6172 | How many centuries did it take the Christians to rise to that level of wisdom and charity? |
6172 | How many cruel and sanguinary wars has that presumptuous belief inspired? |
6172 | How many persecutions, outrages, martyrdoms, and massacres have been perpetrated by fanatics who have been"jealous for the Lord?" |
6172 | How many stars are there? |
6172 | How would he fare at the hands of the Press, and the Public-- and the Church? |
6172 | How, then, can God blame the horse? |
6172 | How, then, could God blame Man for anything Man did? |
6172 | How, then, could God blame Man for the Fall? |
6172 | I shall begin by quoting from_ Shall We Understand the Bible?_ by the Rev. |
6172 | IS CHRISTIANITY THE ONLY HOPE? |
6172 | If Christ died to save Man from sin, how is it that nineteen centuries after His death the world is full of sin? |
6172 | If God blesses, who curses? |
6172 | If God helps, who harms? |
6172 | If God is a tender, loving, All- knowing, and All- powerful Heavenly Father, why did He build a world on cruel lines? |
6172 | If God is all wise, and knows all that happens, will He not know what is for man''s good better than man can tell Him? |
6172 | If God is just, will He not do justice without being entreated of men? |
6172 | If God put a beggar on horseback, would the horse be blamable for galloping to Monte Carlo? |
6172 | If God put a"will"on Adam''s back, and the will followed the beckoning finger of Eve, whose fault was that? |
6172 | If God really wished to reveal Himself to man, why did He reveal Himself only to one or two obscure tribes, and leave the rest of mankind in darkness? |
6172 | If God saves, who damns? |
6172 | If He is a just God, will He give us less than justice unless we pray to Him; or will He give us more than justice because we importune Him? |
6172 | If I am bad, does it make my offence the less that another man is so much better? |
6172 | If You wished me to act otherwise, why did You not make me differently? |
6172 | If he is all- powerful, why did He make man so imperfect? |
6172 | If the success of the Christian religion proves that Christ was God, what does the success of the Buddhist religion prove? |
6172 | If we do not blame a man for one kind of defect, why blame him for another? |
6172 | If we pity a man with a stiff wrist, why not the man with a stiff pride? |
6172 | If we pity a man with a twist in his spine, why should we not pity the man with a twist in his brain? |
6172 | If we pity a man with a weak heart, why not the man with the weak will? |
6172 | If you do not deny it, then on what grounds do you claim that Christ is_ the_ Saviour of all mankind, and that"only in Christ we are made whole"? |
6172 | If, then, God put upon the bridge a weight equal to double the bearing strain, how could God justly blame the bridge for falling? |
6172 | In the many massacres, and famines, and pestilences has God answered prayer? |
6172 | Is Christianity the rule of life in America and Europe? |
6172 | Is God all- powerful or is he not? |
6172 | Is God so weak that He needs foolish men''s defence? |
6172 | Is God''s revelation of the relations between man and God true? |
6172 | Is He not rather the savage idol of a savage tribe? |
6172 | Is He so feeble that He can not judge nor avenge? |
6172 | Is He the Father of Christ? |
6172 | Is he not blameworthy?" |
6172 | Is he the God who inspired Buddha, and Shakespeare, and Herschel, and Beethoven, and Darwin, and Plato, and Bach? |
6172 | Is it consonant with common sense? |
6172 | Is it just or moral to forgive one man his sin because another is sinless? |
6172 | Is it just, or is it moral, to make the good suffer for the bad? |
6172 | Is it my fault that You fore- ordained me to be and to do thus?" |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it not so? |
6172 | Is it the kind of theory a reasonable man can accept? |
6172 | Is it wise, then, to sell even a fraction of your liberty of thought or deed for a paper promise which the Bank of Futurity may fail to honour? |
6172 | Is not that a material difference? |
6172 | Is not that free will? |
6172 | Is that a reasonable theory? |
6172 | Is that so lofty and so noble? |
6172 | Is that the idea? |
6172 | Is the Bible revelation so clear and explicit that no difference of opinion as to its meaning is possible? |
6172 | Is the Christian religion loved and respected by those outside its pale? |
6172 | Is the ethical code of the Bible complete, and final, and perfect? |
6172 | Is there any earthly father who would allow his children to suffer as God allows Man to suffer? |
6172 | Is there any man or woman alive who has seen Christ? |
6172 | Is there any man or woman alive who has seen God? |
6172 | Is this position supported by the facts? |
6172 | Is this unspeakable monster, Jahweh, the Father of Christ? |
6172 | It is stated by Paul of Tarsus that he and others worked miracles-- THE JUDGE: Do you intend to call Paul of Tarsus? |
6172 | JUDGE: Are these letters affidavits? |
6172 | JUDGE: Are they in the handwriting of this Paul of Tarsus? |
6172 | JUDGE: Are they signed? |
6172 | JUDGE: But you do n''t mean to, say-- how long has this shadowy witness, Paul of Tarsus, been dead? |
6172 | JUDGE: Deposition? |
6172 | JUDGE: Did he make a proper sworn deposition? |
6172 | JUDGE: Do n''t know? |
6172 | JUDGE: These statements of theirs, to which you allude: are they in their own handwriting? |
6172 | JUDGE: Thousand years dead? |
6172 | JUDGE: Were the copies seen and revised by the authors? |
6172 | JUDGE: Who was Paul of Tarsus? |
6172 | JUDGE: Who were they? |
6172 | JUDGE: You intend to call some of these Gentiles? |
6172 | Let us first think what would be the orthodox method of dealing with these two cases? |
6172 | Matthew and John are"supposed"to have been disciples of Christ; but were they? |
6172 | Matthew states very plainly that-- JUDGE: Of course, you intend to call Matthew? |
6172 | My Christian friend, so jealous for the Lord, did you ever regard your hatred of"Heretics"and"Infidels"in the light of history? |
6172 | Note next this, from Kant: What are the aims which are at the same time duties? |
6172 | Now, consider, is the God of whom we have been reading a God of love? |
6172 | Now, how did the finger begin to elongate? |
6172 | Now, how does the creation of this long finger show the"infinite goodness of God"? |
6172 | Now, in the opinion of these Christian teachers, is the Bible perfect or imperfect? |
6172 | Now, supposing these facts to be as I have stated them above, to what conclusion do they point? |
6172 | Religion has been attacked before, they cry, and where now are its assailants? |
6172 | Shall we kill these, or revile them, or desert them, for the sake of the lurid ghost in the cloud, or the fetish in his box? |
6172 | Should one be angry with a myth? |
6172 | THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION WHAT IS CHRISTIANITY? |
6172 | THE OLD TESTAMENT IS THE BIBLE THE WORD OF GOD? |
6172 | The distance from our Sun to the nearest fixed(?) |
6172 | The infinite goodness of God to whom? |
6172 | Then how are we to account for King Asoka? |
6172 | Then what about the insect? |
6172 | Then"how much more your Father which is in Heaven?" |
6172 | Then, if God made Adam weak, and Eve seductive, and the Serpent subtle, was that Adam''s fault or God''s? |
6172 | This being the case, I ask, as a mere layman, what right has the Bible to usurp the title of"the word of God"? |
6172 | This good man prays: for what? |
6172 | This the Creator of the Milky Way? |
6172 | Thomas asks:"How do you know?" |
6172 | To bear the ills and the wrongs of this life more patiently, in the hope of a future reward? |
6172 | To him the vital question would be, not"What will you give me to desert my colours?" |
6172 | To the animal whose special finger enables him to catch the insect? |
6172 | To what extent does the Bible revelation fulfil the above natural expectations? |
6172 | To what stage of knowledge and science had those who created or accepted the myth attained? |
6172 | Was Buddha God? |
6172 | Was Mahomet God? |
6172 | Was it before he ceased to be a monkey, or after? |
6172 | Was it in the Stone Age, or the Bronze Age, or in the Age of Iron? |
6172 | Was it when he was a tree man, or later? |
6172 | Was there neither love, nor honour, nor wisdom, nor valour, nor peace in the world until Paul turned Christian? |
6172 | Were such a man to arise amongst us and voice the awful truth, what would his reception be? |
6172 | Were there no virtuous, nor happy, nor noble men and women during all the millions of years before the Crucifixion? |
6172 | What are a few paltry, lumps of crystallised carbon compared to a galaxy of a million million suns? |
6172 | What can it give you more than Socrates or Buddha possessed? |
6172 | What chance, then, has a drunkard''s baby, born in a thieves''den, and dragged up amid the ignorant squalor of the slums? |
6172 | What conclusion can we come to, then, as to the story in the first Gospel? |
6172 | What does that mean? |
6172 | What does that prove? |
6172 | What does the success of the Mohammedan religion prove? |
6172 | What does_ that_ prove? |
6172 | What evidence is forthcoming that Christ did not recover from a swoon, and that His friends did not take Him away in the night? |
6172 | What evidence is forthcoming that the Bible is true? |
6172 | What happens? |
6172 | What has this faith helped him to do? |
6172 | What have we to do with such dreamy, self- centred, emotional holiness, here and now in London? |
6172 | What is Paul''s evidence worth? |
6172 | What is a"spiritual truth"? |
6172 | What is it to you whether another is guilty or guiltless? |
6172 | What is science? |
6172 | What is that assertion or implication? |
6172 | What is the Universe like, as far as our limited knowledge goes? |
6172 | What is the nature of the evidence produced in support of this tremendous miracle? |
6172 | What is the nature of the evidence? |
6172 | What is there so superior or so meritorious in the attitude of a religious man towards God? |
6172 | What is will? |
6172 | What of the infinite goodness of God in teaching the cholera microbe to feed on man? |
6172 | What of the infinite goodness of God in teaching the grub of the ichneumon- fly to eat up the cabbage caterpillar alive? |
6172 | What was the attitude of the general mind towards the miraculous? |
6172 | What was the"time spirit"in the day when this legend arose? |
6172 | What would Christ think of Park Lane, and the slums, and the hooligans? |
6172 | What would He think of the House of Peers, and the Bench of Bishops, and the Yellow Press? |
6172 | What would He think of the Stock Exchange, and the music hall, and the racecourse? |
6172 | What would a man think if his children knelt and begged for his love or for their daily bread? |
6172 | What would be the orthodox method? |
6172 | What would he think of our national ideals? |
6172 | What would one naturally expect in a revelation by God to man? |
6172 | What would you give us in exchange?" |
6172 | What_ are_ we to think if the facts be thus? |
6172 | What_ is_ Christianity? |
6172 | When did a poet conceive an idea so vast and so astounding as the theory of evolution? |
6172 | Where does he come in? |
6172 | Where does natural selection come in? |
6172 | Which day? |
6172 | Which is worse, to be a Demagogue or an Infidel? |
6172 | Which religion was the borrower from the other-- Buddhism or Christianity? |
6172 | Who does not see that such facts as these compel us to remodel our whole idea of the past? |
6172 | Who has communicated with God? |
6172 | Who has entered that"region"? |
6172 | Who has seen God? |
6172 | Who is responsible for the quality or powers of a thing that is made? |
6172 | Who made Adam? |
6172 | Who made Eve? |
6172 | Who made the Serpent? |
6172 | Who were these authors? |
6172 | Who, then, are the witnesses? |
6172 | Why did Adam fall? |
6172 | Why did Christianity with its spiritual and temporal power, permit such things to be? |
6172 | Why did a good and loving God allow evil to enter the world? |
6172 | Why does He not give the world peace, and health, and happiness, and virtue? |
6172 | Why does He permit evil and pain to continue? |
6172 | Why is religious intolerance so much more fierce and bitter than political intolerance? |
6172 | Why saidst thou, She is my sister? |
6172 | Why should I? |
6172 | Why should we cling to this perishable body? |
6172 | Why, then, did He permit evil to enter? |
6172 | Why? |
6172 | Why? |
6172 | Why? |
6172 | Why? |
6172 | Will you, then, compare the Heavenly Father with a father among men? |
6172 | Would a Liberal accept it from a Tory? |
6172 | Would a Roman Catholic admit it from a Jew? |
6172 | Would the Christian hearken to such a defence from a Socialist, or from a Mohammedan? |
6172 | Would the Christians listen to such a plea in any other case? |
6172 | You ridiculous creatures, what do you mean by it?" |
6172 | _ Shall We Understand the Bible?_ Williams. |
6172 | _ This_ the Father of Christ? |
6172 | _ This_ the God of Heaven? |
6172 | _ What is Religion?_ Tolstoy. |
6172 | _ When_ did Man fall? |
6172 | but"What is the_ truth_?" |
6172 | intendest thou to kill me as thou killedst the Egyptian? |
6172 | they will exclaim,"take away the belief in the Bible, and the service of God? |
6172 | what is this? |
6172 | why didst thou not tell me that she was thy wife? |
9574 | ''Where is God, that we should fear Him?'' 9574 Ah, the cloud is dark, and day by day I am moving thither I must pass beneath it on my way-- God pity me!--whither?" |
9574 | And what am I, o''er such a land The banner of the Cross to bear? 9574 Did not the gifts of sun and air To good and ill alike declare The all- compassionate Father''s care? |
9574 | Do I smell your gums of incense? 9574 Fearless brow to Him uplifting, Canst thou for His thunders call, Knowing that to guilt''s attraction Evermore they fall? |
9574 | For the death in life of Nitria, For your Chartreuse ever dumb, What better is the neighbor, Or happier the home? 9574 Forever round the Mercy- seat The guiding lights of Love shall burn; But what if, habit- bound, thy feet Shall lack the will to turn? |
9574 | From youth to age unresting stray These kindly mockers in our way; Yet lead they not, the baffling elves, To something better than themselves? 9574 Have ye not still my witness Within yourselves alway, My hand that on the keys of life For bliss or bale I lay? |
9574 | Heart of mine unsatisfied, Was it vanity or pride That a deeper joy denied? 9574 Heed I the noise of viols, Your pomp of masque and show? |
9574 | I note each gracious purpose, Each kindly word and deed; Are ye not all my children? 9574 Is it choice whereby the Parsee Kneels before his mother''s fire? |
9574 | Know''st thou not all germs of evil In thy heart await their time? 9574 Need I your alms? |
9574 | No prayer for light and guidance Is lost upon mine ear The child''s cry in the darkness Shall not the Father hear? 9574 Of rank and name and honors Am I vain as ye are vain? |
9574 | Shall souls redeemed by me refuse To share my sorrow in their turn? 9574 Thou, the patient Heaven upbraiding,"Spake a solemn Voice within;"Weary of our Lord''s forbearance, Art thou free from sin? |
9574 | Through mortal lapse and dulness What lacks the Eternal Fulness, If still our weakness can Love Him in loving man? 9574 What if the earth is hiding Her old faiths, long outworn? |
9574 | What if the o''erturned altar Lays bare the ancient lie? 9574 What if the vision tarry? |
9574 | What if thine eye refuse to see, Thine ear of Heaven''s free welcome fail, And thou a willing captive be, Thyself thy own dark jail? 9574 What lack I, O my children? |
9574 | What matter though we seek with pain The garden of the gods in vain, If lured thereby we climb to greet Some wayside blossom Eden- sweet? 9574 What part or lot have you,"he said,"In these dull rites of drowsy- head? |
9574 | Where are the harvest fields all white, For Truth to thrust her sickle in? 9574 Who called ye to self- torment, To fast and penance vain? |
9574 | Who there shall hope and health dispense, And lift the ladder up from thence Whose rounds are prayers of penitence? |
9574 | Why sitt''st thou thus? |
9574 | A banished name from Fashion''s sphere, A lay unheard of Beauty''s ear, Forbid, disowned,--what do they here? |
9574 | Ah, who shall pray, since he who pleads Our want perchance hath greater needs? |
9574 | Allied to all, yet not the less Prisoned in separate consciousness, Alone o''erburdened with a sense Of life, and cause, and consequence? |
9574 | And am I he whose keen surprise Flashed out from such unclouded eyes? |
9574 | And my heart murmured,"Is it meet That blindfold Nature thus should treat With equal hand the tares and wheat?" |
9574 | And shall the sinful heart, alone, Behold unmoved the fearful hour, When Nature trembled on her throne, And Death resigned his iron power? |
9574 | And shall these thoughts of joy and love Come back again no more to me? |
9574 | And what is He? |
9574 | And what were life and death if sin Knew not the dread rebuke within, The pang of merciful discipline? |
9574 | And where art thou going, soul of mine? |
9574 | And whither this troubled life of thine Evermore doth tend? |
9574 | And wilt thou prize my poor gift less For simple air and rustic dress, And sign of haste and carelessness? |
9574 | And yet, dear heart''remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old? |
9574 | And, through the shade Of funeral cypress planted thick behind, Hears no reproachful whisper on the wind From his loved dead? |
9574 | Are these the rocks whose mosses knew The trail of thy light gown, Where boy and girl sat down? |
9574 | Are we wiser, better grown, That we may not, in our day, Make his prayer our own? |
9574 | Art fearful now? |
9574 | Art fearful? |
9574 | Art weak? |
9574 | As from the lighted hearths behind me I pass with slow, reluctant feet, What waits me in the land of strangeness? |
9574 | Bend there around His awful throne The seraph''s glance, the angel''s knee? |
9574 | Bowing his head he pondered The words of the little one; Had he erred in his life- long teaching? |
9574 | But what avail inadequate words to reach The innermost of Truth? |
9574 | But wherefore this dream of the earthly abode Of Humanity clothed in the brightness of God? |
9574 | Can Hatred ask for love? |
9574 | Can He break His own great law of fatherhood, forsake And curse His children? |
9574 | Can Selfishness Invite to self- denial? |
9574 | Can prayer Reach the shut ear of Fate, or move Unpitying Energy to spare? |
9574 | Canst see the end? |
9574 | Did ever such a moonlight take Weird photographs of shrub and tree? |
9574 | Did ever such a morning break As that my eastern windows see? |
9574 | Did his own heart, loving and human, The God of his worship shame? |
9574 | Did the shade before him come Of th''inevitable doom, Of the end of earth so near, And Eternity''s new year? |
9574 | Do bird and blossom feel, like me, Life''s many- folded mystery,-- The wonder which it is to be? |
9574 | Dream ye Eternal Goodness Has joy in mortal pain? |
9574 | For the sighing of the poor Wilt Thou not, at length, arise? |
9574 | Had he wrong to his Master done? |
9574 | Has faith no work, and love no prayer? |
9574 | Has saintly ease no pitying care? |
9574 | Hast thou wrought His task, and kept the line He bade thee go? |
9574 | Have I not dawns and sunsets Have I not winds that blow? |
9574 | He shook his wings and crimson tail, And set his head aslant, And, in his sharp, impatient way, Asked,"What does Charlie want?" |
9574 | He who might Plato''s banquet grace, Have I not seen before me sit, And watched his puritanic face, With more than Eastern wisdom lit? |
9574 | Hide it from idle praises, Save it from evil phrases Why, when dear lips that spake it Are dumb, should strangers wake it? |
9574 | How feels the stone the pang of birth, Which brings its sparkling prism forth? |
9574 | How speaks the primal thought of man From the grim carvings of Copan? |
9574 | Hush every lip, close every book, The strife of tongues forbear; Why forward reach, or backward look, For love that clasps like air? |
9574 | I passed the haunts of shame and sin, And a voice whispered,"Who therein Shall these lost souls to Heaven''s peace win? |
9574 | I turn from Nature unto men, I ask the stylus and the pen; What sang the bards of old? |
9574 | If any words of mine, Through right of life divine, Remain, what matters it Whose hand the message writ? |
9574 | In Thy long years, life''s broken circle whole, And change to praise the cry of a lost soul?" |
9574 | In his black tent did the Tartar Choose his wandering sire? |
9574 | Is He less Than man in kindly dealing? |
9574 | Is heaven so high That pity can not breathe its air? |
9574 | Is it a dream? |
9574 | Is it so hard with God and me To stand alone? |
9574 | Is it the palm, the cocoa- palm, On the Indian Sea, by the isles of balm? |
9574 | Is my ear with chantings fed? |
9574 | Is silence worship? |
9574 | Is there no holy wing for me, That, soaring, I may search the space Of highest heaven for Thee? |
9574 | Is this the wind, the soft sea wind That stirred thy locks of brown? |
9574 | Lord, forgive these words of mine What have I that is not Thine? |
9574 | Mine or another''s day, So the right word be said And life the sweeter made? |
9574 | O''er the sons of wrong and strife, Were their strong temptations planted In thy path of life? |
9574 | Of all I see, in earth and sky,-- Star, flower, beast, bird,--what part have I? |
9574 | Oh, looking from some heavenly hill, Or from the shade of saintly palms, Or silver reach of river calms, Do those large eyes behold me still? |
9574 | Oh, whither shall I go to find The secret of Thy resting- place? |
9574 | Oh, who the speed of bird and wind And sunbeam''s glance will lend to me, That, soaring upward, I may find My resting- place and home in Thee? |
9574 | Oh, why and whither? |
9574 | Or are thy inmost depths His own, O wild and mighty sea? |
9574 | Or clouded sunset''s crimson bars? |
9574 | Or glimpse through aeons old? |
9574 | Or is it a ship in the breezeless calm? |
9574 | Or sense or spirit? |
9574 | Or stand I severed and distinct, From Nature''s"chain of life"unlinked? |
9574 | Or, sin- forgiven, my gift abuse Of peace with selfish unconcern? |
9574 | Our wasted shrines,--who weeps for them? |
9574 | Rang ever bells so wild and fleet The music of the winter street? |
9574 | Safe in thy immortality, What change can reach the wealth I hold? |
9574 | Secure on God''s all- tender heart Alike rest great and small; Why fear to lose our little part, When He is pledged for all? |
9574 | Shall not the Father heed? |
9574 | Somewhere it laughed and sang; somewhere Whirled in mad dance its misty hair; But who had raised its veil, or seen The rainbow skirts of that Undine? |
9574 | THE REWARD Who, looking backward from his manhood''s prime, Sees not the spectre of his misspent time? |
9574 | Takes Nature thought for such as we, What place her human atom fills, The weed- drift of her careless sea, The mist on her unheeding hills? |
9574 | Taste I your wine of worship, Or eat your holy bread? |
9574 | That Tyrian maids with flower and song Danced through the hill grove''s spaces, And hoary- bearded Druids found In woods their holy places? |
9574 | The forest- tree the throb which gives The life- blood to its new- born leaves? |
9574 | The hieroglyphics of the stars? |
9574 | The meaning of the moaning sea? |
9574 | The rolls of buried Egypt, hid In painted tomb and pyramid? |
9574 | The squirrel lifts his little legs Because he has no hands, and begs; He''s asking for my nuts, I know May I not feed them on the snow?" |
9574 | Then of what is to be, and of what is done, Why queriest thou? |
9574 | Then something whispered,"Dost thou pray For what thou hast? |
9574 | Then up rose Master Echard, And marvelled:"Can it be That here, in dream and vision, The Lord hath talked with me?" |
9574 | There the dews of quiet fall, Singing birds and soft winds stray: Shall the tender Heart of all Be less kind than they? |
9574 | Think ye that Raphael''s angel throng Has vanished from his side? |
9574 | Think ye the notes of holy song On Milton''s tuneful ear have died? |
9574 | Thy deeds are well: Were they wrought for Truth''s sake or for thine? |
9574 | To be, indeed, whate''er the soul In dreams hath thirsted for so long,-- A portion of heaven''s glorious whole Of loveliness and song? |
9574 | To breathe with them the light divine From God''s own holy altar flowing? |
9574 | To what grim and dreadful idol Had he lent the holiest name? |
9574 | Was ever yet a sound by half So merry as you school- boy''s laugh? |
9574 | Was it a dim- remembered dream? |
9574 | Was it mirth or ease, Or heaping up dust from year to year? |
9574 | Was it the half- unconscious moan Of one apart and mateless, The weariness of unshared power, The loneliness of greatness? |
9574 | Was it the lifting of that eye, The waving of that pictured hand? |
9574 | Was not my spirit born to shine Where yonder stars and suns are glowing? |
9574 | Well pleased,( for when did farmer boy Count such a summons less than joy?) |
9574 | What Presence from the heavenly heights To those of earth stoops down? |
9574 | What are its jars, so smooth and fine, But hollowed nuts, filled with oil and wine, And the cabbage that ripens under the Line? |
9574 | What calls back the past, like the rich Pumpkin pie? |
9574 | What can Eternal Fulness From your lip- service gain? |
9574 | What chance can mar the pearl and gold Thy love hath left in trust with me? |
9574 | What daunts thee now? |
9574 | What does the good ship bear so well? |
9574 | What doth that holy Guide require? |
9574 | What doth the cosmic Vastness care? |
9574 | What eyes look through, what white wings fan These purple veils of air? |
9574 | What face shall smile, what voice shall greet? |
9574 | What had she in those dreary hours, Within her ice- rimmed bay, In common with the wild- wood flowers, The first sweet smiles of May? |
9574 | What hast thou done, O soul of mine, That thou tremblest so? |
9574 | What hast thou wrought for Right and Truth, For God and Man, From the golden hours of bright- eyed youth To life''s mid span? |
9574 | What heed I of the dusty land And noisy town? |
9574 | What if the dreams and legends Of the world''s childhood die? |
9574 | What is it that the black crow says? |
9574 | What is it to the changeless truth That yours shall fail in turn? |
9574 | What lip shall judge when He approves? |
9574 | What marvel that, in simpler days Of the world''s early childhood, Men crowned with garlands, gifts, and praise Such monarchs of the wild- wood? |
9574 | What marvel then that Fame should turn Her notes of praise to those of scorn; Her gifts reclaimed, her smiles withdrawn? |
9574 | What matter how the night behaved? |
9574 | What matter how the north- wind raved? |
9574 | What matter, I or they? |
9574 | What matters it? |
9574 | What may the wind''s low burden be? |
9574 | What mean Idumea''s arrowy lines, Or dusk Elora''s monstrous signs? |
9574 | What meant The prophets of the Orient? |
9574 | What oracle Is in the pine- tree''s organ swell? |
9574 | What reeks she of our helpless wills? |
9574 | What sings the brook? |
9574 | What space shall awe, what brightness blind me? |
9574 | What thunder- roll of music stun? |
9574 | What unseen altar crowns the hills That reach up stair on stair? |
9574 | What vast processions sweep before me Of shapes unknown beneath the sun? |
9574 | What, my soul, was thy errand here? |
9574 | When I and all who know And love me vanish so, What harm to them or me Will the lost memory be? |
9574 | Whence came I? |
9574 | Where flock the souls, like doves in flight, From the dark hiding- place of sin? |
9574 | Where is evil, and whence comes it, since God the Good hath created all things? |
9574 | Where rests the secret? |
9574 | Where the keys Of the old death- bolted mysteries? |
9574 | While sin remains, and souls in darkness dwell, Can heaven itself be heaven, and look unmoved on hell?" |
9574 | Whither do I go? |
9574 | Who bears no trace of passion''s evil force? |
9574 | Who dare to scorn the child He loves? |
9574 | Who does not cast On the thronged pages of his memory''s book, At times, a sad and half- reluctant look, Regretful of the past? |
9574 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
9574 | Who lives unhaunted by his loved ones dead? |
9574 | Who mourneth for Jerusalem? |
9574 | Who owned the prophet of the Lord? |
9574 | Who shall essay, Blinded and weak, to point and lead the way, Or solve the mystery in familiar speech? |
9574 | Who shall say What touch the chord of memory thrills? |
9574 | Who shuns thy sting, O terrible Remorse? |
9574 | Who smokes his nargileh, cool and calm? |
9574 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
9574 | Who the secret may declare Of that brief, unuttered prayer? |
9574 | Who trembled at my warning word? |
9574 | Who turneth from his gains away? |
9574 | Who, leaving feast and purpling cup, Takes Zion''s lamentation up? |
9574 | Who, with vain longing, seeketh not to borrow From stranger eyes the home lights which have fled? |
9574 | Whose knee with mine is bowed to pray? |
9574 | Why climb the far- off hills with pain, A nearer view of heaven to gain? |
9574 | Why fear the night? |
9574 | Why idly seek from outward things The answer inward silence brings? |
9574 | Why made He anything at all of evil, and not rather by His Almightiness cause it not to be? |
9574 | Why should the showman claim The poor ghost of my name? |
9574 | Why should the unborn critic whet For me his scalping- knife? |
9574 | Why should the"crowner''s quest"Sit on my worst or best? |
9574 | Why stretch beyond our proper sphere And age, for that which lies so near? |
9574 | Yet when did Age transfer to Youth The hard- gained lessons of its day? |
9574 | art sad of cheer? |
9574 | how long Shall thy trodden poor complain? |
9574 | what shakes thee so? |
9574 | where are they who sailed with me The beautiful island- studded sea? |
9574 | where art Thou? |
9574 | wherefore strain Beyond thy sphere? |
9574 | whose of all those kindly eyes Now smile upon another''s? |
9574 | why shrink from Death; That phantom wan? |
45623 | ''A what?" |
45623 | ''An estimate of the profits?" |
45623 | ''Are you a lunatic?" |
45623 | ''Are you an idiot? |
45623 | ''But how can they estimate the profits?" |
45623 | ''But what profits? |
45623 | ''But what will''Olotutu''be?" |
45623 | ''But who_ is_ going to manufacture''Olotutu''then?" |
45623 | ''Do you mean to say----?" |
45623 | ''Have what?" |
45623 | ''How? |
45623 | ''Oh, I see you will get the syndicate to do it?" |
45623 | ''Then you refuse half the profits?" |
45623 | ''What for?" |
45623 | ''And what would_ you_ do under this beautiful scheme?'' 45623 ''But look at the position you will be in?'' |
45623 | ''Can you wonder, then, that I was born with a congenital craving for springing mysteries upon the public? 45623 ''Does it give his address?'' |
45623 | ''Hang- ho: Out, Fu- sia, does your mother know you are? 45623 ''How dare you say that?'' |
45623 | ''How do you mean?'' 45623 ''How?'' |
45623 | ''Is n''t it wonderful the news should be in London before me?'' 45623 ''Is there need to prolong the story? |
45623 | ''Is this true?'' 45623 ''Oh, you would like me to, would you?'' |
45623 | ''That you may flee the country?'' 45623 ''Were you waiting for me?'' |
45623 | ''What for? 45623 ''What is it? |
45623 | ''What is the matter?'' 45623 ''What is this?'' |
45623 | ''What would be the good of that? 45623 ''What''s that?'' |
45623 | ''Where?'' 45623 ''Who is"dearest"?'' |
45623 | ''You will submit to being taken by the police?'' 45623 A memorial brass then?" |
45623 | A patent medicine, a tobacco, a soap, a mine, a comic paper, a beverage, a tooth- powder, a hair- restorer? |
45623 | A what? |
45623 | About my discovery in the algebra of love? |
45623 | Ah, have you heard of that? 45623 Ah, then you''re not a novelist yourself?" |
45623 | Ah, then, there is some regularity about the time of day at least? |
45623 | Algebra of love? |
45623 | An unhappy ending? |
45623 | And do you agree with him? |
45623 | And he has always this nervous air? |
45623 | And how do you know this is false sentiment? |
45623 | And if neither succeed? |
45623 | And must I talk to them? |
45623 | And must this be the end? |
45623 | And so she wishes to be an object lesson in female celibacy, does she? |
45623 | And so you did not dare marry the composer? |
45623 | And still you do not intend to marry? |
45623 | And then you will marry me? |
45623 | And vat vould you haf done in--_was sagt man_--in my shoes? |
45623 | And what became of Richard? |
45623 | And what did he do when he learnt it? |
45623 | And what have you heard of it? |
45623 | And what was in the note? |
45623 | And what will be the subscription? |
45623 | And what would you like me to be? |
45623 | And when is your lordship''s next book coming out? |
45623 | And where is the Old Maids''Club? |
45623 | And who elects her? |
45623 | And who put you into that position, I should like to know? |
45623 | And why not? |
45623 | And why not? |
45623 | And why? |
45623 | And you have decided to enroll in our ranks? |
45623 | And you have not been able to discover anything about him, though he has given it you in twelve? |
45623 | And you really love me? |
45623 | And you will give up your bad habits? |
45623 | Another love- song to Chloe? |
45623 | Any relation to the Mendozas of Highbury? |
45623 | Are there any Old Maids here? |
45623 | Are you a widow? |
45623 | Are you an English Sephardi or a native Sephardi? |
45623 | Are you sure_ you_ do? |
45623 | Are you, then, a painter or a musician? |
45623 | As a visitor? 45623 Ay, but what shall it be?" |
45623 | Because you are not what I should like you to be? |
45623 | But could you never learn to love me? |
45623 | But do you propose to accept Wee Winnie? |
45623 | But do you want to join us? |
45623 | But how can you be a member of the Junior Widows''? |
45623 | But how have you remembered him from year to year? |
45623 | But how shall I know the result? |
45623 | But how----? |
45623 | But how? |
45623 | But if you join us, had n''t you better go back to your maiden name? |
45623 | But is n''t the outside in need of renovation? |
45623 | But is n''t there any improvement that you would like? |
45623 | But is n''t there-- I mean there is-- such a thing obtainable as a dumb wife? |
45623 | But is there no hope for me? |
45623 | But is there no way of getting a wife with a gift of categorical conversation? |
45623 | But of course you_ have_ had your romance? |
45623 | But suppose we both succeed? |
45623 | But surely he wants the world to enjoy his work? |
45623 | But surely_ you_ have nothing to complain of in the way of loveliness? |
45623 | But what does that matter? 45623 But what is it you object to in me?" |
45623 | But what right have we to take away their lives? 45623 But what, I wonder, has caused this tide of applications?" |
45623 | But where are you going? 45623 But why should he exist at all?" |
45623 | But why take the words in their natural meaning? |
45623 | But would you have had me defy the probabilities? |
45623 | But would you, if you could? |
45623 | But you have n''t yet told me how it is done? |
45623 | But you love me a little, too? |
45623 | But you never lived in Tartary? |
45623 | But you will never believe that again, when I tell you mine? |
45623 | But you will not carry out your threat? 45623 But you would not love me more, if I were a great writer?" |
45623 | But, sir, how can we inaugurate a Club which has never had any members? |
45623 | By the way, you did not come across Mr. Fladpick in Tartary? |
45623 | By what right, sir,said Mr. Wilkins, who had been struggling with an attack of speechlessness,"do you persecute me like this? |
45623 | Can you doubt it? |
45623 | Can you give me a copy of the song? |
45623 | D- do you m- m- ean,asked Lord Arthur,"''how happy could I be with either, were t''other dear charmer away?''" |
45623 | Dead? |
45623 | Dearest? |
45623 | Diana? |
45623 | Did I hear aright? |
45623 | Did n''t they withdraw their custom from you instanter? |
45623 | Did n''t we lift you up into it on the point of our pens? |
45623 | Did you catch any Tartars? |
45623 | Did you ever really love that actress? |
45623 | Did you like the play? |
45623 | Did you see her? 45623 Do n''t you remember Wilkins, the_ Moon_-man that I was up in a balloon with? |
45623 | Do n''t you see I''m busy? |
45623 | Do you call that charity? |
45623 | Do you dare to say that you saw my poor father, who was righteousness itself, breaking his fast in a restaurant on the Day of Atonement? 45623 Do you mean here-- this afternoon?" |
45623 | Do you mean to say,he said at last,"that because you love a man, he ca n''t love you?" |
45623 | Do you not feel the perfect pathos of those two lines, the infiniteness of incisive significance? 45623 Do you not see it is impossible? |
45623 | Do you see anything strange in my appearance? |
45623 | Do you see anything, Princess? |
45623 | Do you see anything, Princess? |
45623 | Do you suppose the syndicate will have any capital? 45623 Do you think so? |
45623 | Do you too hold that false theory that womanliness consists in childishness? |
45623 | Does he always come on the same date? |
45623 | Does he always slink out if anybody sits down opposite to him? |
45623 | Does n''t it want anything done to it? |
45623 | Eh? 45623 Figure you to yourself that I speak at the foot of the letter? |
45623 | Flirt? |
45623 | Frank, is this true? |
45623 | Good gracious, father, have n''t you gone? |
45623 | Has he been dead long? |
45623 | Have I the pleasure of speaking to Miss Dulcimer? |
45623 | Have I the pleasure of speaking to Miss Dulcimer? |
45623 | Have they given good reasons for their refusal to marry their lovers? |
45623 | Have you it with you? |
45623 | Have you never been to a circus? 45623 Have you no faith and trust in me?" |
45623 | Have you nothing better than this to say to me, after I have shown you my inmost soul? |
45623 | Have you read Mr. Gladstone''s latest? |
45623 | Have you seen it, Lord Silverdale? |
45623 | How about a reredos? |
45623 | How are you, everybody? 45623 How can anybody write as well as yourself? |
45623 | How can you talk so irreligiously? 45623 How could I? |
45623 | How did you know that? |
45623 | How do you climb? |
45623 | How do you expect me to amuse myself in the library? |
45623 | How do you expect me to bother about details? 45623 How do you know?" |
45623 | How do you mean? |
45623 | How long ago was it? |
45623 | How many will you be? |
45623 | How should I know it? |
45623 | How so? |
45623 | How so? |
45623 | How so? |
45623 | How then? |
45623 | How? 45623 How_ do_ you get it?" |
45623 | I-- I am-- I-- that is to say, Fladpick-- oh how can I explain what I mean? |
45623 | I-- I----? |
45623 | If I told you, you would try to become it? |
45623 | If you have n''t read it, why should you abuse it? |
45623 | If you know, why should I tell you? |
45623 | In a restaurant? |
45623 | In bad taste, is it? |
45623 | Indeed? 45623 Indeed? |
45623 | Indeed? |
45623 | Is he as careful to conceal his body as his soul? |
45623 | Is he gone already? |
45623 | Is it not obvious? |
45623 | Is it not? |
45623 | Is it to join the Old Maids''Club that you have called? |
45623 | Is it true that your lordship has been converted to Catholicism? |
45623 | Is it worth while saying such commonplace things? |
45623 | Is it yours? |
45623 | Is n''t it rather_ vice versâ_? 45623 Is not that a place in nature to be vain of? |
45623 | Is she also beautiful? |
45623 | Is she really beautiful, et cetera? |
45623 | Is she? 45623 Is that a joke? |
45623 | Is there any way of finding out? |
45623 | Is there no way over the difficulty? |
45623 | Is there none on the church? |
45623 | Is this the time-- when I am busy feeling the pulse of the Bazaar? |
45623 | Is this the way all match- games are played? |
45623 | Is this woman going to be a success? |
45623 | It''s a lot of sentimental rot, is n''t it? 45623 Knocked you, old man, this time, eh?" |
45623 | Libel the dead? 45623 Lillie, what''s this I see in the_ Moon_ about Clorinda Bell joining your Club?" |
45623 | Mad-- when you love me? |
45623 | Madly in love with you? |
45623 | May I ask if that is to be the uniform of the Old Maids''Club? |
45623 | May I come in? |
45623 | May I send you in a hundred- weight of chocolate creams? |
45623 | Miscalculated them? |
45623 | Miss Sybil Hotspur? |
45623 | Miss Winifred Woodpecker? |
45623 | My dear Fanny, what in Heaven''s name is it? |
45623 | My father did n''t tell you? |
45623 | N- n- no, y- y- y- y----"What is it, Captain Athelstan? |
45623 | No, why John P. Smith? 45623 No,"he said;"has Mr. Gladstone ever a latest?" |
45623 | No-- what did you-- I mean you did think what? |
45623 | No? 45623 Not of any kind?" |
45623 | Oh, Frank, this is no cruel jest? |
45623 | Oh, by the way, have you seen anything of that-- that-- the man in the Ironed Mask, I think they call him? |
45623 | Oh, is there a leader? |
45623 | Oh, then you are of the school of Addiper? |
45623 | Oh, where did you spring from? |
45623 | Oh,_ warum_ was n''t the Club founded before I married? |
45623 | Once a year? |
45623 | Original composer? |
45623 | P- p- p- rincess what? |
45623 | Pretty well, thank you; how''s yourself? |
45623 | Rather taking an unfair rise out of your partner, is n''t it? |
45623 | Shall I have time? 45623 Shall I show him in?" |
45623 | Shall you be present at the trials? |
45623 | So_ this_ is your mother? |
45623 | Tell me what? |
45623 | That is all a heap of galimatias,replied the Parisienne with the flaming hair"If I kiss a man, I, surely he may call me Alice without demanding it? |
45623 | The English Shakespeare? 45623 The English Shakespeare?" |
45623 | The Princess''s compliments,he was told to say,"and how is it to- day?" |
45623 | The Sunday School Fund-- how is that? |
45623 | The rules will not allow it, will they, Miss Dulcimer? 45623 The song or the singing?" |
45623 | Then I did not hear aright before? |
45623 | Then how does your lordship account for the rumor? |
45623 | Then to- day is the first time he has behaved so strangely? |
45623 | Then what''s to be done? |
45623 | Then why do you neglect him? |
45623 | Then why do you say it? |
45623 | Then why does he object to me, when he does n''t object to anybody else? |
45623 | Then why give her two by contradicting it? |
45623 | Then why object to servants? |
45623 | Then you_ will_ marry him? |
45623 | Thinking of the little fishes-- or of the gods? |
45623 | This is not one of the cliques of the shrieking sisterhood? |
45623 | This is not one of your teasing jokes? |
45623 | This year? |
45623 | Too sweet for you? |
45623 | Was Ellaline the girl who has just gone? |
45623 | Well, Lillie,he said,"when are you going to give the_ soirée_ to celebrate the foundation of the Club? |
45623 | Well, but,put in Harry Robinson,"if none of us is to be the English Shakespeare, why should we give over the appointment to an outsider? |
45623 | Well, have you seen this Fanny Radowski? |
45623 | Well, what in the name of angels or devils is your objection then? |
45623 | Well, what is it you do n''t like? 45623 Well,"I said, unimpressed and uncomprehending,"and what of it?" |
45623 | Well? 45623 Well?" |
45623 | Were you ever really simple enough to suspect me of having a mother? |
45623 | What about that actress you are painting now? |
45623 | What are you telling me there? |
45623 | What book is that you are reading? |
45623 | What can I do for you? |
45623 | What do I think? |
45623 | What do you say, Lord Silverdale? |
45623 | What do you suggest then? |
45623 | What do you think of my stepmother? |
45623 | What do you want? |
45623 | What do_ you_ think? 45623 What does it matter now, dearest?" |
45623 | What does it matter? |
45623 | What have I to do with science? 45623 What have you been doing to yourself, Princess?" |
45623 | What is fame, reputation, weighed against love? 45623 What is it, dearest?" |
45623 | What is its name? |
45623 | What is that? |
45623 | What is that? |
45623 | What is the matter with the bells? |
45623 | What is the matter? |
45623 | What is the matter? |
45623 | What is the use of my trying the candidates if you''re going to admit the plucked? |
45623 | What is this woman''s name? |
45623 | What is your lordship''s opinion of the best fifty books for the working man''s library? |
45623 | What name? |
45623 | What of it? |
45623 | What question? |
45623 | What reply would you make to that, Miss Nimrod? |
45623 | What runs in the family? |
45623 | What''s my being married got to do with it? |
45623 | What''s that-- the belief of old maids that they''ll get married? |
45623 | What''s that? 45623 What''s that? |
45623 | What''s the matter? |
45623 | What''s the matter? |
45623 | What''s the piece like? |
45623 | What''s the time- limit? |
45623 | What''s this? |
45623 | What-- smoking? |
45623 | What_ are_ you talking about? 45623 When are you going to lend me your face?" |
45623 | When do you propose to be proposed to by him? |
45623 | When you have n''t read it? |
45623 | Where are we to get the capital from? |
45623 | Where is the Shakespearean quality? |
45623 | Where''s the harm? |
45623 | Where? |
45623 | Who is he? |
45623 | Why can you not explain what you mean? |
45623 | Why do I want to join you? |
45623 | Why do you call me Rainbow? |
45623 | Why have sunstroke in India? |
45623 | Why not a competition? |
45623 | Why not? 45623 Why not? |
45623 | Why not? 45623 Why not?" |
45623 | Why not? |
45623 | Why not? |
45623 | Why should I embrace a profession to which I feel no call? 45623 Why should you be afraid?" |
45623 | Why so? 45623 Why, are you a member of that? |
45623 | Why, are you allowed to have men? |
45623 | Why, did the hieroglyphists use to brag? |
45623 | Why, do you believe in a future state? |
45623 | Why, has he done anything strange before to- day? |
45623 | Why, have you any difficulty about getting enough? 45623 Why, is this the candidate you were telling me about?" |
45623 | Why, what is this, father? |
45623 | Why? 45623 Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Why? |
45623 | Wilkins? 45623 Will all your Old Maids be young?" |
45623 | Will it be poetry or prose? |
45623 | Will you back your incredulity with a pair of gloves? |
45623 | With whom? |
45623 | Wo n''t you come and talk it over, whatever it is, another time? |
45623 | Would n''t you like a colored window to somebody? |
45623 | Would you have love a Burlesque? 45623 Yes or no?" |
45623 | Yes, but what am_ I_ to call you, dearest? |
45623 | Yes, but why does n''t he speak? |
45623 | Yes, have you read it? |
45623 | Yes, miss; who shall I say, miss? |
45623 | Yes, wo n''t it be awful fun? |
45623 | Yes, wo n''t it be fun to run her to earth? |
45623 | Yes-- do you think the Old Maids''is the only one in London? 45623 You are Fladpick?" |
45623 | You are not yourself married? |
45623 | You do n''t? |
45623 | You envy them? |
45623 | You got my letter, I suppose? |
45623 | You got my verses this morning, Rainbow mine? |
45623 | You know not his name even? |
45623 | You know one romance per head is our charge for admission? |
45623 | You mean the great dramatic critic''s? 45623 You suspect her, then, of being herself responsible for the statement that she was going to join the Club?" |
45623 | You thought what? |
45623 | You threaten? |
45623 | You want us to commit suicide together? |
45623 | You what? |
45623 | You will have a little refreshment before you go? |
45623 | You? |
45623 | _ He!_ What? |
45623 | _ Mine?_}"Dead heat,"I murmured, and fell back in a dead faint. |
45623 | _ Which?_"_ Leave you to guess_,answered the electric current. |
45623 | _ Wife?_} the two travellers exclaimed together. |
45623 | _ You_ are not a literary man? |
45623 | ''Ah, but where should I find a man of like mind, a man to whom leisure for the cultivation of his soul was the one great necessity of life?'' |
45623 | ''Am I really the only woman you ever loved?'' |
45623 | ''But how am I to take it?'' |
45623 | ''Can not you see that, as my future wife, you will also suffer?'' |
45623 | ''Goodness gracious, Silverplume,''I said,''is this the way you poets go on?''" |
45623 | ''How can you say that? |
45623 | ''How should you? |
45623 | ''W-- w-- here did you get that from?'' |
45623 | ''What can you do?'' |
45623 | ''What for?'' |
45623 | ''What is this?'' |
45623 | ''Why not rather keep a mistress? |
45623 | ''Why?'' |
45623 | ''Why_ must_ you keep a servant?'' |
45623 | ''Wo n''t you say"yes"and make me the happiest man alive? |
45623 | *****"Have you seen Patrick Boyle''s poem in the_ Playgoers''Review_?" |
45623 | A Cassandra at sea- trip and_ soirée_, Or Proserpina visiting earth? |
45623 | A good mortgage, perhaps?" |
45623 | After so decisive an avowal from the essence of candor, what remained to be said? |
45623 | Ah, what Harpy pursued her as quarry To strangle so mirth? |
45623 | Ah, why I call you"Rainbow,"sweet? |
45623 | Aloud she said:"Under the circumstances may I venture to ask you to see my mother at the house? |
45623 | Am I to risk ruining three- fourths of my life, in defiance of the unerring dogmas of the Doctrine of Chances? |
45623 | And am I to give up all this, merely because I love you?" |
45623 | And are you sure it is admiration?" |
45623 | And art thou-- here''s my last, if not my stiffest-- As good a bouncer as the hieroglyphist? |
45623 | And do n''t you see that, as I love him, the odds are that he does n''t love me?" |
45623 | And how about grub?" |
45623 | And now may I see your mother? |
45623 | And several people had known it all along, for what but fraternal interest had taken him so often to the_ Lymarket_? |
45623 | And so I sadly turn away: How_ can_ I love a clod of clay, Doomed to grow earthlier day by day? |
45623 | And so, Miss Woodpecker, you have thought about joining our institution for elevating female celibacy into a fine art?" |
45623 | And their owner, was she A Swinburnian Lady Dolores, Or a sprite from some shadowy sea? |
45623 | And was I to depart like the rest, doomed to cudgel my brains till they ached like caned schoolboys? |
45623 | And yet what are you but another Helmer? |
45623 | And yet what can be more evident than that the art of criticism was never in such a critical condition? |
45623 | And yet, was this to be the end of all that sweet idyllic interlude, a jarring note and then silence for evermore? |
45623 | And yet-- what was the meaning of that significant invitation:"_ We are waiting only for you?_""I thought you were a stranger,"he replied. |
45623 | And you still wish to cry off?" |
45623 | Anyhow I resolved to know what_ I_ had been summoned for? |
45623 | Are n''t there plenty of candidates without them? |
45623 | Are old maids a sacred subject?" |
45623 | Are the members of the Savage Club savages, of the Garrick Garricks, of the Supper Club suppers?" |
45623 | Are there any more candidates to- day?" |
45623 | Are they on view?" |
45623 | Are you going to poke and pry into the concerns of the very journalist? |
45623 | Are you sure it is love you feel, not admiration?" |
45623 | But about this appointment?" |
45623 | But are you sure you are willing to renounce all mankind because you find one man unsatisfactory?" |
45623 | But did anyone grumble? |
45623 | But do you really think you would be happy if you lost her?" |
45623 | But may I ask, Miss Nimrod, why you did not enrich the book with more sketches? |
45623 | But then according to the story she does n''t know he''s a Catholic?" |
45623 | But then would n''t it be the truth?" |
45623 | But was it too late? |
45623 | But were we created merely to gratify man''s vanity?" |
45623 | But what are these weighed against the cramping of her individuality? |
45623 | But what had I come to do in that galley? |
45623 | But what of Paul Horace?''" |
45623 | But what then?" |
45623 | But whom can we discover?" |
45623 | But why are you so concerned about my church?" |
45623 | But why not have told_ me_ that you were Fladpick?" |
45623 | CRITICUS IN STABULIS(?). |
45623 | Can you still disbelieve that I suffer from an hereditary tendency to advertise in the agony column? |
45623 | Come now, would you give up your genius, your reputation, just to marry me?" |
45623 | Could n''t you call again to- morrow?" |
45623 | Could n''t you lean against something else?" |
45623 | Damn it all, sir, is there to be nothing private? |
45623 | Dead? |
45623 | Did I, though you had just called me a modern Buddhist with the soul of an ancient Greek and the radiant fragrance of a Cingalese tea- planter? |
45623 | Did Robinson, though the edition was sold out the day after? |
45623 | Did n''t I tell you I had the story from her own mouth, though I have put it into Mendoza''s?" |
45623 | Did she not love John Beveridge? |
45623 | Did the stern Priesthood strive thy cult to smother, Or wast thou worshipped, like thy purring brother? |
45623 | Do many people give charity except to advertise themselves? |
45623 | Do n''t you know that a combination of maid and mother is the newest thing in actresses''wardrobes? |
45623 | Do n''t you see that there is a fortune in''Olotutu''?" |
45623 | Do n''t you think it would be unfair to him to take my vows without giving him a chance?" |
45623 | Do n''t you understand that Miss Bell was good enough to engage me as mother and travelling companion when you left me to starve? |
45623 | Do n''t you understand that your charm to me is your being just yourself-- your simple, honest, manly self? |
45623 | Do n''t you understand? |
45623 | Do we ever complain when you call us cataclysmic, creative, esemplastic, or even epicene? |
45623 | Do you expect him?" |
45623 | Do you know me so little as to consider me capable of flippancy? |
45623 | Do you know of any? |
45623 | Do you know that you could be prosecuted?'' |
45623 | Do you like it?" |
45623 | Do you mean to say there''s any bad taste about that?" |
45623 | Do you think I could peep at him from the wing?" |
45623 | Do you think I would hoax you thus-- to dash you to earth again?" |
45623 | Do you think there is still a danger of her marrying to get someone to advertise her?" |
45623 | Does n''t he ride or dance well?" |
45623 | Does she hope to achieve recognition by it, I wonder?" |
45623 | Does she long to be of service in the world?" |
45623 | Doth he frisk in glee In Aahlu, or lives he, transmigrated, The lower life Osiris did decree, Of fowl, or fly, or fish, or fox, or flea? |
45623 | Equally aghast and excited, Lillie wired back,"_ How?_"and prepaid the reply. |
45623 | Every now and again she asked,"Do you see anything, Princess?" |
45623 | For what but to forget the wiles and treacheries of women of the town had he buried himself here? |
45623 | Good looks? |
45623 | Great heavens, can it be?" |
45623 | Had I not still to discover for what end we were leagued together? |
45623 | Have you anything worthy of you in your pocket to- day?" |
45623 | Have you had a desirable proposal of marriage?" |
45623 | Have you heard anything to her disadvantage?" |
45623 | He comes not always on the same date of the month, but he comes, perhaps, on the same day of the week, eh?" |
45623 | He says:''Miss Leroux-- Alice; may I call you Alice?''" |
45623 | Her father? |
45623 | Ho, some brandy-- is it handy? |
45623 | How can I, the President of the Old Maid''s Club, be the first recreant?" |
45623 | How can we face Wee Winnie?" |
45623 | How can you say so? |
45623 | How could I now explain that it was her father who was the renegade, not I? |
45623 | How did even these know that what they saw_ was_ the Emperor? |
45623 | How does it run? |
45623 | How few persons actually saw the Emperor? |
45623 | How is it Boyle managed to crack up our plays without being driven to any of this new- fangled nonsense?" |
45623 | How is the old gentleman? |
45623 | How many girls do you suppose Silverdale has met in his varied career?" |
45623 | How stands the account with the new young womanhood? |
45623 | How was he to explain to this fair young thing that she loved nobody and could never hope to marry him? |
45623 | How?" |
45623 | How?" |
45623 | However, if Miss Woodpecker feels these fine ethical shades, wo n''t she be ineligible?" |
45623 | I asked Guy if he would have a chop with me at the club this evening, and what do you think? |
45623 | I become your sister by rejecting you, do I not?" |
45623 | I beg your pardon?" |
45623 | I forgot the sardines must be caught first, before they are tinned, must n''t they?" |
45623 | I had sundry valuables about my person, but then they included a loaded revolver, so why refuse the adventure? |
45623 | I presume you know all about Miss Dulcimer''s scheme?" |
45623 | I say, how will you get them to wear stuff gowns?" |
45623 | I went to him and I said:"How is the church?" |
45623 | I wonder,"he added irrelevantly,"why the number nine always goes with cats-- nine lives, nine tails, nine muses?" |
45623 | I wondered whether perhaps he could be teething-- or should I say, tusking? |
45623 | If this is so before marriage, what will it be after, when her opportunities of buttonholing me will be necessarily more frequent?" |
45623 | Is he too modest, too timid?" |
45623 | Is n''t he here?" |
45623 | Is n''t it awful? |
45623 | Is n''t it better to take the bull by the horns?" |
45623 | Is n''t one of the rules that candidates shall not believe in Women''s Rights? |
45623 | Is n''t that a lovely face?" |
45623 | Is that easier?" |
45623 | Is that the logic? |
45623 | Is that the_ Saturday Slasher_ you have there?'' |
45623 | Is there any entrance fee?" |
45623 | Is there anything in that passage in the least calculated to bring a blush to the cheek of the young person?" |
45623 | It makes me miserable, but what can I do? |
45623 | It was lucky he was not in a bank; for he had only a moderate income, and who knows to what he might have been driven? |
45623 | It would require a genius to really prove such a connection, and as he would, on his own theory, be a lunatic, what becomes of his theory?" |
45623 | It''s by that new woman who came out last year and calls herself Andrew Dibdin, is n''t it?" |
45623 | Know you not the idioms of your own barbarian tongue? |
45623 | Leave me, I pray you; or, must I ring the bell?" |
45623 | Let me see, was it Campbell or Belfort who shot himself? |
45623 | May I ask what are the peculiar experiences you speak of?" |
45623 | May I ask what it is?'' |
45623 | May I trust it is now re- established, and that"Olotutu"has washed away the apparent stain on my character? |
45623 | May I wait to see Clorinda?" |
45623 | Meantime as it is getting very late, and as I have finished my lemonade, I will bid you good afternoon-- have you used''Olotutu?''" |
45623 | Might I have another egg?'' |
45623 | Mine is the Lady Travellers''--do you know it, Miss Dulcimer?" |
45623 | Moreover, was he not responsible for Fladpick''s being, and thus for all the evil done by his Frankenstein? |
45623 | Must they not be true of herself? |
45623 | Need we feel a less genuine passion Because we{ shall} live in May- fair? |
45623 | Oh, when are they going to make that tunnel?" |
45623 | On page 112, a quotation mark was removed after"then silence any more?". |
45623 | On page 23, a double quotation mark was added after"What do men think?" |
45623 | On third thoughts I went on in my best English,"May I in return be favored with the pleasure of knowing your name?" |
45623 | Once we begin to break the law where are we to stop? |
45623 | Or shall we say the 11- 15 from Paddington, Popsy?'' |
45623 | Or was it some deeper impulse? |
45623 | Or why not get a music- master or a professor of painting?" |
45623 | Or would you like some lemonade?" |
45623 | Or, fallen deeper, is he politician, Stumping the land, his country''s quack physician? |
45623 | Original, is n''t it, to have your hero hungry in the first chapter? |
45623 | Ought I to entertain that?" |
45623 | Out of a sack containing three thousand coins, what are the odds that a man will draw the one marked coin?" |
45623 | Presently she murmured:"But think what you are asking me to do? |
45623 | Say, when thy popularity shall fade? |
45623 | Shall I tell it you?" |
45623 | Shall I write you a recommendation?" |
45623 | Shall we say 11.15 from Paddington since the sea will not give up its dead? |
45623 | She rolled up the MS."But,"said Lillie excitedly, breaking in for the first time,"what is the way you want them to come?" |
45623 | Should I tell him my real name? |
45623 | Smythe?" |
45623 | So I shall not need to try Miss Radowski?" |
45623 | So why should I suffer for the sins of my predecessors? |
45623 | Still can it ever be a serious success? |
45623 | Suppose I had never been born?" |
45623 | The first words of love comes from his mouth-- and what think you that he say? |
45623 | The retiring candidate does not state_ what_ Providence has granted, does she?" |
45623 | The twenty- fourth of October, did you say?" |
45623 | Then there is no chance at all for me on your paper?'' |
45623 | Then you will come to- morrow and tell me your final decision?" |
45623 | To pepper them with pellets of platitude?" |
45623 | To which, Lillie,"Why do you say such obvious things? |
45623 | True, it was a heavy burden to sustain, but what will a man not dare or suffer for the woman he loves? |
45623 | Truly, was there ever an age which had so much light and so little sweetness? |
45623 | Under such circumstances is not marriage a contract entered into under false pretences? |
45623 | Unless he is in need of money, why should he concern himself with the outside universe? |
45623 | Vain, vain the hope from Fate to flee, What special Providence for me? |
45623 | Vill you, in return, take_ mein frau_ into de Old Maids''Club?" |
45623 | Was I not saved by one? |
45623 | Was he to let the woman he loved fret herself to death for a shadow? |
45623 | Was it not imprudent for him to alienate the leading critic by marrying her? |
45623 | Was it that Ellaline was all these things incarnate? |
45623 | Was it that I resembled someone this man knew? |
45623 | Was n''t it invented in the States? |
45623 | Was she the unwilling accomplice of their discreditable designs? |
45623 | Was this to be the end of all my beautiful visions? |
45623 | Watchman, what of the night? |
45623 | Well, what will you wager?" |
45623 | Were it not better to possess my soul in peace and to cultivate it nobly and wisely and become a shining light of the higher spinsterhood?" |
45623 | Were n''t you in the accident?'' |
45623 | Were they human at all, these dusk glories Of eyes? |
45623 | What are you saying?" |
45623 | What are you talking about?" |
45623 | What certainty was there my singer was a hunchback? |
45623 | What do you conclude?" |
45623 | What else have you written?" |
45623 | What had they been doing to bring suffering to this fair girl, before whom all bowed in mock homage? |
45623 | What had they been plotting? |
45623 | What hands, now tinct with substances balsamic, Have set thee leaping like the sportive kids, What time the passers- by did close their lids? |
45623 | What in the name of all the saints could he possibly want with me? |
45623 | What is a social lion? |
45623 | What is a successful reception? |
45623 | What is it for which people barter health, happiness, even honor? |
45623 | What is it to be on the World''s lips, if the lips we love are to be taken away?" |
45623 | What is social ambition? |
45623 | What is the glory of doing compared with the glory of being? |
45623 | What is this terrible mystery? |
45623 | What makes you ask?" |
45623 | What next, sir? |
45623 | What other attraction have I? |
45623 | What part had I been playing in these uncanny transactions? |
45623 | What pleasure is there in such a conquest? |
45623 | What was the use of marrying a milksop like that? |
45623 | What? |
45623 | What_ do_ men think?" |
45623 | When are you going to let me have_ your_ face to paint?" |
45623 | When he comes home and finds Little Dolly is an old maid, wo n''t he be sorry, poor Philip? |
45623 | When is the wedding to be?" |
45623 | When you come to analyze it, what more does the greatest author do? |
45623 | Where do you hope to find this man?" |
45623 | Where from?" |
45623 | Where is the Shakespearean quality of this, which is, you say, the whole of Act Thirteen? |
45623 | Where is the youth by whom thou wast created And tipped profusely? |
45623 | Where would be the fun of a union without mutual recriminations and sweet reconciliations? |
45623 | Where?" |
45623 | Which are they?" |
45623 | Which of the jaws would touch me first? |
45623 | Who are these people?" |
45623 | Who but herself knew that she was not?" |
45623 | Why are you so pale and agitated? |
45623 | Why can you no longer think of me?" |
45623 | Why does your lordship ask?" |
45623 | Why indeed? |
45623 | Why should I allow myself to be viewed in the refracting medium of alien ink? |
45623 | Why should I expect immunity from the general fate? |
45623 | Why should I marry to gratify a man''s vanity, his cravings after cheap quixotism?" |
45623 | Why should he not become"the English Shakespeare?" |
45623 | Why should he show the cloven hoof just to- day? |
45623 | Why should weddings have a monopoly of presents? |
45623 | Why simply if she acquired an enamelled complexion, it might be the salvation of her, do n''t you see? |
45623 | Why, a question lies at the very threshold of marriage--''Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?'' |
45623 | Will you be mine?" |
45623 | Will you promise to read the book if I lend it you?" |
45623 | Will you tell me, Miss Jack, what marriage has to offer to a woman like me?" |
45623 | Will you, or will you not, become Honorary Trier of the Old Maids''Club?" |
45623 | With young and beautiful girls?" |
45623 | Wo n''t you come to tea to- morrow?" |
45623 | Wo n''t you have a chocolate cream before you commence?" |
45623 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
45623 | Would you be so good as to epitomize your scheme in twenty words? |
45623 | Would you sacrifice these things to your love for me?" |
45623 | Wretched woman, what have you done?'' |
45623 | Yes, why not? |
45623 | You agree with me?" |
45623 | You are there-- and there you_ are_, do n''t you know? |
45623 | You remember that book you liked so much--_The Cherub That Sits Up Aloft_?" |
45623 | You smile in your superior way, A Rainbow has no feet, you say? |
45623 | You will believe that, dearest?" |
45623 | You would n''t like her to be indifferent to what you were doing, saying, feeling?" |
45623 | You''re selling''Olotutu''to me, are n''t you? |
45623 | You, a plunderer of the dead, a harpy, a ghoul, ask what for?'' |
45623 | [ Illustration:"_ Is that the uniform of the Old Maids''Club?_"]"Is it to me you are referring as an unconventional female?" |
45623 | [ Illustration:"_ Is that the uniform of the Old Maids''Club?_"]"Is it to me you are referring as an unconventional female?" |
45623 | [ Illustration:"_ Knocked you, old man, this time, eh?_"]"Yes, all to pieces!" |
45623 | [ Illustration:_ Driven to Drink._]"And have you then finally decided to abandon Platonics?" |
45623 | [ Illustration:_ He was willing to become a Mormon._]"And what was your reply?" |
45623 | [ Illustration:_ I encircle him with my arms and speak with my lips._]"I love you?" |
45623 | [ Illustration:_ I pulled the paper from the dead hand._]"Died?" |
45623 | [ Illustration:_ The Old Maid arrives._]"Then he said in low tones:''Maggie, can I never become anything to you but a stranger?'' |
45623 | [ Illustration:_ The office boy edits the paper._]"Why? |
45623 | _ De mortuis nil nisi bonum._ Why reveal his breach of etiquette to the world? |
45623 | _ No!_ Will it be believed that( such is the heart of woman) I felt a sensation of relief on finding the issue still postponed? |
45623 | _ You_ reading_ Threepenny Bits_?" |
45623 | cried Lord Silverdale,"do you mean to say this is why you were so cold to me all those long weary months?" |
45623 | here it is--"The pocket- book contained letters addressed to Josiah Twaddon, Esquire, and----"''"''Twaddon, did you say?'' |
45623 | shrieked the_ Moon_-man, as the balloon began to free itself on its upward flight,"How far off is it?" |
45623 | to your baseness? |
45623 | what do you suppose they''re chartered for? |
45623 | who told you she was going to join?" |
45623 | why not? |
45623 | why should he not sacrifice himself to save this delicate creature from a premature tomb? |
45623 | you will nevermore eat fish?" |
749 | ''And who is worthy to obtain this?'' 749 And what is the plan?" |
749 | And who,quoth he,"shall fill thy place, O my father? |
749 | And who,said he,"is blameable for all my misfortunes but myself, who have dealt with thee so kindly, and cared for thee as no father before? |
749 | And,said he,"what will be his end?" |
749 | But idolaters-- to whom shall I compare them, and to what likeness shall I liken their silliness? 749 But tell me, dearly beloved, how thou camest hither? |
749 | But,said he,"is this the appointed doom of all mankind? |
749 | But,said he,"why labour ye in vain? |
749 | Do we not, then, well to laugh you to scorn, or rather to weep over you, as men blind and without understanding? 749 Furthermore, how do the wise and eloquent among the Greeks fail to perceive that law- givers themselves are judged by their own laws? |
749 | Him therefore, who endured such sufferings for our sakes, and again bestowed such blessings upon us, him dost thou reject and scoff at his Cross? 749 How shall I describe to thee the evils of this life? |
749 | Lady, and what is thy request? |
749 | Said the king,''And what is the way that beareth thither?'' 749 The king, endowed with understanding worthy of the purple, said unto him,''What hath hindered thee until now from doing me to wit of these things? |
749 | Through thine,said they,"we learned to know God, and were redeemed from error, and found rest from every ill. What remaineth us after thou art gone? |
749 | What man,said they,"can discern the future, and accurately ascertain it? |
749 | What sayest thou? |
749 | What,answered the boy,"but the Devils that deceive men? |
749 | What,said the monk,"seest thou in our case that should by its attractions cause us to cling to life, and be afraid of death at thy hands? |
749 | Would God,said Ioasaph,"that he too were instructed in these mysteries?" |
749 | ''For how could anything have endured, if it had not been his will? |
749 | ''For''saith he,''why, on behalf of the living, should they seek unto the dead?'' |
749 | Again said Ioasaph,"Why, O king, hast thou been kindled to wrath? |
749 | Again said the king,"And of what neglect hast thou been guilty? |
749 | Again the youth asked,"If then this is wo nt to happen not to all, but only to some, can they be known on whom this terrible calamity shall fall? |
749 | And Ioasaph told him his vision, and said,"Wherefore hast thou laid a net for my feet, and bowed down my soul? |
749 | And after his holy resurrection Christ made good this three- fold denial with the three- fold question,''Peter, lovest thou me? |
749 | And did they not present thee to the king in answer to his prayer, thus redeeming him from the bondage of childlessness?" |
749 | And hath thy father learned to know God, or is he still carried away with his former foolishness, still under the bondage of devilish deceits?" |
749 | And he said unto them,''Know ye to whom these are like? |
749 | And how can I describe to thee the glory that shall receive them at that day? |
749 | And how can a body be careless in the expectation of an unknown death, whose approach( ye say) is as uncertain as it is inexorable?" |
749 | And how cometh it that thou hast heard the words of God incarnate? |
749 | And how have ye come to learn that which ye have not seen, that ye have so steadfastly and undoubtingly believed it? |
749 | And how is that god that can not move called God? |
749 | And how was earth, that did not exist, produced? |
749 | And if the elements are not gods, how are the images, created to their honour, gods? |
749 | And is this alone sufficient for salvation, to believe and be baptized, or must one add other services thereto?" |
749 | And never having understood them, how shall he despise them?'' |
749 | And shall we men, appointed to die, return to nothing, or is there some other life after our departure hence? |
749 | And the prophet saith,''When shall I come and appear before the presence of God?'' |
749 | And what canst thou tell of them but unreason and shamefulness, and vain craft that with glosing words concealeth the mire of their unsavoury worship? |
749 | And what foundation hath it? |
749 | And what is my recompense for thee? |
749 | And what is the dread that encompasseth thee?" |
749 | And what is the uncertain day of death? |
749 | And what of fire? |
749 | And what this kingdom which thou callest the kingdom of Heaven? |
749 | And what will they do in the day of visitation, and to whom will they flee for help? |
749 | And when he asketh thee,''What meaneth this apparel?'' |
749 | And where will they leave their glory, that they fall not into arrest? |
749 | And which commandments above all shouldest thou observe? |
749 | And which of the goodly things of this world can give such gladness as that which the great God giveth to those that love him? |
749 | And who is he that shall make mention of me after death, when time delivereth all things to forgetfulness? |
749 | And whom like unto thee shall I find to be shepherd and guide of my soul''s salvation? |
749 | And why is it that the common herd are pinched with poverty, while thou addest ever to thy store by seizing for thyself the goods of others? |
749 | And why will ye die, O house of Israel?'' |
749 | And wouldst thou have an example of that which I say? |
749 | And, if ye fear not death, how came ye to be fleeing? |
749 | And, thyself wholly riveted to carnal delights and deadly passions, dost thou proclaim the idols of shame and dishonour gods? |
749 | And, when Ioasaph enquired,"Whose are these exceeding bright crowns of glory, which I see?" |
749 | Art thou grieved that I have gained such bliss? |
749 | Barlaam and Ioasaph by St. John Damascene(?) |
749 | But how tell of all that the son spake with his father, and of all the wisdom of his speech? |
749 | But if the elements are corruptible and subject to necessity, how are they gods? |
749 | But shew me where thou dwellest?" |
749 | But tell me truly what is thy manner of life and that of thy companions in the desert, and from whence cometh your raiment and of what sort may it be? |
749 | But the spirit of vain glory and pleasing of men-- what place had it among them? |
749 | But what hast thou thyself to say of thy wise men and orators, whose wisdom God hath made foolish, the advocates of the devil? |
749 | But what is the proof thereof? |
749 | But what is the proof whereby thou seekest to know the steadfastness of my purpose?" |
749 | But what is this profit which thou saidest that I should receive of thee?" |
749 | But what must I do after baptism? |
749 | But what proof seekest thou, O fool, that thy prophets are liars and ours true, better than the truths I have told thee? |
749 | But who buyeth God? |
749 | But, if it be impossible to express in language that glory, that light, and those mysterious blessings, what marvel? |
749 | But, when it is of the future that ye preach tidings of such vast import, how have ye made your conviction on these matters sure?" |
749 | Child, wherefore hast thou done this? |
749 | Contrariwise, how deadly and cursed a thing it is to provoke a father and despise his commands? |
749 | Didst thou, O king, ever see madness greater than this? |
749 | Do not your Scriptures teach that all the righteous men of old, patriarchs and prophets, were wedded? |
749 | Dost thou mark the delusion and lasciviousness that they allege against their gods? |
749 | Dost thou not know how lovely a thing it is to obey one''s father, and please him in all ways? |
749 | Dost thou not owe thy life to the gods? |
749 | Doth it not take iron, which is black and cold in itself, and work it into white heat and harden it? |
749 | Doth it receive any of the properties of the iron? |
749 | Else, where were the justice of God, if there were no Resurrection? |
749 | For he can shew his great strength at all times, and who may withstand the power of his arm? |
749 | For how could death have remained unknown to any human creature? |
749 | For how knowest thou whether thou shalt save thy sire, and in wondrous fashion be styled the spiritual father of thy father? |
749 | For if their gods did so, how should they not themselves do the like? |
749 | For what is there profitable, abiding or stable therein? |
749 | For what terror of this life can be so terrible as the Gehenna of eternal fire, that burneth and yet hath no light, that punisheth and never ceaseth? |
749 | For when a certain rich young man asked the Lord,''What shall I do to inherit eternal life?'' |
749 | For when these skill not to work their own salvation, how can they take care of mankind? |
749 | For, as your gods have done, why should not also the men that follow them do? |
749 | Hath he therefore any stain of reproach? |
749 | He said,''Who then are these men that live a life better than ours?'' |
749 | Hereupon the king, wishing to entrap the monks, as I ween, shrewdly said,"How now? |
749 | Him were it not better to worship than thy gods of many evil passions, of shameful names and shameful lives? |
749 | How can such an one, that is an huntress and a ranger with hounds, be a goddess? |
749 | How can this be? |
749 | How did thy matters speed after my departure? |
749 | How much wiser is the unreasonable beast than thou the reasonable man? |
749 | How must I show my hatred for things present and lay hold on things eternal? |
749 | How shalt thou converse with God? |
749 | How speakest thou of forty and five? |
749 | How then can an adulterer, one that defileth himself by unnatural lust, a slayer of his father be a god? |
749 | How then can the covetous, the warrior, the bondman and adulterer be a god? |
749 | How then could I contain such a pearl?"'' |
749 | How then could a drunkard and slayer of his own children, burnt to death by fire, be a god? |
749 | How then deem they their creators those which have been formed and fashioned by themselves? |
749 | How then did earth become man? |
749 | How then shall he take thought for mankind, he the adulterer, the hunter who died a violent death? |
749 | How then should one prefer the preaching of these few obscure countrymen to the ordinance of the many that are mighty and brilliantly wise? |
749 | If then Dionysus was slain and unable to help himself, nay, further was a madman, a drunkard, and vagabond, how could he be a god? |
749 | If thou hast learned to love thy neighbour as thyself, with what right art thou eager to shift the burden off thy back and lay it upon mine? |
749 | If thou wast seeking Barlaam, thou shouldest certainly have said,''Where is he that hath turned from error and saved the king''s son?'' |
749 | If, therefore, there is joy in heaven over the conversion of a sinner, shall not great recompense be due to the causer of that conversion? |
749 | In abhorrence of the sight, he cried to his esquires,"Who are these, and what is this distressing spectacle?" |
749 | In how many talents wilt thou undertake to assist me now? |
749 | Ioasaph asked,"What is free will and what is choice?" |
749 | Ioasaph said unto him,"And what is this good hope whereto thou sayest it is impossible without baptism to attain? |
749 | Ioasaph said unto him,"Hath my father then, learned naught of these things?" |
749 | Ioasaph said unto the elder,"Are there now others, too, who preach the same doctrines as thou? |
749 | Ioasaph said,"But whence cometh this garment that thou wearest?" |
749 | Is it not written that the mighty Peter, whom ye call Prince of the Apostles, was a married man? |
749 | Is it possible then that one who was prisoner and mutilated should be a god? |
749 | Is not Paul said to have circumcised Timothy on account of a greater dispensation? |
749 | Is not a little seed thrown into the womb that receiveth it? |
749 | Now if Asklepius, though a god, when struck by a thunder- bolt, could not help himself, how can he help others? |
749 | Now if Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead? |
749 | Now what sayest thou thereto, and what is thine advice? |
749 | O death where is thy sting? |
749 | O grave, where is thy victory?'' |
749 | Or art thou to- day the only one that teacheth this hatred of the present world?" |
749 | Or doth it happen only to some?" |
749 | Or how can he help others who could not help himself? |
749 | Or is there life beyond, and another world?" |
749 | Or rather, the idol hath no right to be called even dead, for how can that have died which never lived? |
749 | Said Ioasaph,"If, then, this kind of philosophy be so ancient and so salutary, how cometh it that so few folk now- a- days follow it?" |
749 | Said Theudas,"And be ye so weak and puny that ye can not get the better of one young stripling?" |
749 | Said ye not but this instant, that ye were withdrawing even as I commanded you? |
749 | Seest thou not that the god that standeth can not sit, and the god that sitteth can not stand? |
749 | Seest thou not yonder sun, into how many a barren and filthy place he darteth his rays? |
749 | She, seeking to make the way straight and smooth for him, cried,"Why dost thou, who are so wise, talk thus? |
749 | So now, tell me without fear, how wast thou so greatly taken with this error, to prefer the bird in the bush to the bird already in the hand?" |
749 | Tell me whether is better? |
749 | Than which state what can be more blessed and higher? |
749 | The boy said,"What is the reason of mine imprisonment here? |
749 | The chief counsellor seized the happy moment and said,''But to thee, O king, how seemeth their life?'' |
749 | The governor said,"Thou knowest him then?" |
749 | The king said,"And who are these enemies whom thou biddest me turn out of court?" |
749 | The king spake unto him,"Why hast thou forced thyself to appear? |
749 | The monk answered,"And wherefore then spakest thou in this ambiguous manner, asking about him that had deceived the king''s son? |
749 | The young man heard her hymn of praise and said,''Damsel, what is thine employment? |
749 | The young prince asked,"Are these the fortune of all men?" |
749 | Then calling to his son, he said,"Child, what is this report that soundeth in mine ears, and weareth away my soul with despondency? |
749 | Then said he unto them,"Why bear ye about these dead men''s bones? |
749 | Then said the king in the hearing of all present,"Art thou the devil''s workman, Barlaam?" |
749 | Thou fool and blind, why doth not the force of truth bring thee to thy senses? |
749 | To this said Ioasaph,"But how, after baptism, shall a man keep himself clear from all sin? |
749 | To what extent then canst thou share my labour? |
749 | Trow ye that this present life, and luxury, and these shreds of glory, and petty lordship and false prosperity are any great thing?'' |
749 | Upon how many a stinking corpse doth he cast his eye? |
749 | What God hath ordered, who, of men, can scatter? |
749 | What consolation may I find in my loss of thee? |
749 | What evils shall not befall us?" |
749 | What excuse shall I make, for neglecting his orders, and giving this fellow access unto thee?" |
749 | What folly? |
749 | What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? |
749 | What harm then befell him thereby that thou thinkest to make mock of him? |
749 | What harm therefore came to God, the Word, that thou blasphemest without a blush? |
749 | What is the hope that I may count upon at thy hands, O my dearest friend?'' |
749 | What is the manner of thy proof that the Crucified is God, and these be none?" |
749 | What is the proof that your teachers be right and the others wrong?" |
749 | What man in his senses could admit it? |
749 | What reward therefore shall I give thee for all these benefits? |
749 | What thanks hath the servant if he suffer like as his Master? |
749 | What thanks shall I offer God for thee? |
749 | What then must I say about the elements? |
749 | What thinkest thou, my son? |
749 | What worthy memorial have they bequeathed to the world? |
749 | What, is it not written in one of your books,''Marriage is honourable, and the bed undefiled''? |
749 | What, then, sayest thou, dearest son, hereto? |
749 | When dead, shall I dissolve into nothingness? |
749 | When have they given even the smallest answer to their bedesmen? |
749 | When have they walked, or received any impression of sense? |
749 | When the iron is smitten and beaten with hammers is the fire any the worse, or doth it in any way suffer harm? |
749 | When was there ever heard utterance or language from their lips? |
749 | Whence then cometh such a marvellous fashioning of a living creature? |
749 | Wherefore saith he this, except he count the kind acts we do unto the needy as done unto himself? |
749 | Wherefore speakest thou of it as of defilement and shameful intercourse? |
749 | Wherefore, wretch, attempt the impossible? |
749 | Which shall I first lament, or which first deplore? |
749 | Who could endure to defile his lips by the repeating of their filthy communications? |
749 | Who could recount in order their abominable doings? |
749 | Who offereth God for sale? |
749 | Who, then, hath persuaded thee to call this defilement? |
749 | Why art thou wholly given up to the passions and desires of the flesh, and why is there no looking upward? |
749 | Why love ye vanity and seek after leasing? |
749 | Why love ye vanity, and seek after leasing?'' |
749 | Why sittest thou at the feet of things that can not move and help thee? |
749 | Why therefore flatterest thou things that can not feel? |
749 | Why, what father was ever seen to be sorrowful in the prosperity of his son? |
749 | Wilt thou not break away from serving thy many gods, falsely so called, and serve the one, true and living God? |
749 | Wilt thou not haste past the things which haste pass thee, and attach thyself to that which endureth? |
749 | Wilt thou not understand this, my father? |
749 | Wily hast thou barred me within walls and doors, never going forth and seen of none?" |
749 | With such truths set before us, what must we do to escape the punishments in store for sinners, and to gain the joy of the righteous?" |
749 | With what words of blessings may I bless thee? |
749 | Would not such an one be called an enemy rather than a father? |
749 | Zardan answered,"Why hath it pleased thee, O prince, to prove me that am thy servant? |
749 | and again,''What God hath joined together, let not man put asunder''? |
749 | and wherefore, poor and needy as thou art, givest thou thanks as though for great blessings, singing praise to the Giver?'' |
749 | and,''It is better to marry than to burn''? |
749 | or been preserved, if not called by him?'' |
749 | or is it undefined and unforeseeable?" |
749 | the true spiritual and eternal death? |
749 | who could describe the beauty and brightness of that city? |
749 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death?'' |
56999 | A gentleman? |
56999 | A padded chair? 56999 Afraid of being compromised?" |
56999 | And Jean Paul? |
56999 | And did no one take any steps to stop them? |
56999 | And if it had been we could n''t very well follow them all over, and warn people off, could we? |
56999 | And so prevent me from filing my claim? |
56999 | And who is he? 56999 And with girls?" |
56999 | And you wo n''t make me apologize to her? |
56999 | Any man who did get let in for such a game,he said with a great air of innocence,"hardly deserves any sympathy, does he, Sir Bryson?" |
56999 | Are n''t they lovely? 56999 Are n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
56999 | Are n''t you glad to see us? |
56999 | Are the actresses all as pretty as they say? |
56999 | Are there any men among you? 56999 Are you afraid?" |
56999 | Are you goin''to shoot me? |
56999 | Are you going to square me? |
56999 | Are you prepared to consider an offer to guide our party? |
56999 | Are you satisfied? |
56999 | Are you sure? 56999 Are you willing?" |
56999 | Are you, or have you ever been, associated with them? |
56999 | Ascota, where is he? |
56999 | Before or after the accident of the boat? |
56999 | Bring her here? 56999 But do you know what you''re doing?" |
56999 | But how are we going to support life on the way? |
56999 | But how can we? |
56999 | But how? |
56999 | But if he did,faltered Mary,"why would he take-- take the body away?" |
56999 | But what will he think of me? |
56999 | But what''ll we do without them? |
56999 | But where are you going? |
56999 | But you do love me? |
56999 | But-- but, leave us here without horses? |
56999 | By whom? |
56999 | Ca n''t I go with you? |
56999 | Can we cross the river if we wish to? |
56999 | Can we start this morning? |
56999 | Cash or stock? |
56999 | Climbed up the back of the summit at night? |
56999 | Could I have a word with you urgent and private? |
56999 | Could n''t we camp here by ourselves? |
56999 | Danger? 56999 Davy Cranston?" |
56999 | Did Ascota speak? |
56999 | Did he tell you his story? |
56999 | Did you break it? |
56999 | Did you ever hear of Dexter''s Creek? |
56999 | Did you ever hear the name Malcolm Piers? |
56999 | Did you let him keep a knife, too? |
56999 | Did you like it there? |
56999 | Did you meet the other party? |
56999 | Did you see Mr. Garrod push the boat off? |
56999 | Did you tell him what they were? |
56999 | Did your father let you come? |
56999 | Do n''t I? |
56999 | Do n''t they have anything about hunting, or having sport? |
56999 | Do n''t you believe me? |
56999 | Do n''t you care for me any more? |
56999 | Do n''t you see that if there is any-- well, love- making between us, it makes me out a villain to them? |
56999 | Do n''t you see what it means? 56999 Do n''t you suppose there is something we could do, Kate?" |
56999 | Do n''t you understand? 56999 Do you care?" |
56999 | Do you ever think of taking a trip outside? |
56999 | Do you know anybody in Toronto? |
56999 | Do you know it at all? |
56999 | Do you know this man? |
56999 | Do you know two men called Beckford and Rowe? |
56999 | Do you like it? |
56999 | Do you remember what happened this morning? |
56999 | Do you remember what we were talking about? |
56999 | Do you think I know nothing? |
56999 | Do you think I''ll ever be as strong as that? |
56999 | Do you think I''m staying because I want to? |
56999 | Do you think we had better take it? |
56999 | Down? |
56999 | Driven off? |
56999 | Eavesdropping? |
56999 | Eh? |
56999 | Exciting? |
56999 | For the last time I ask you, where is Garrod? |
56999 | For what? |
56999 | Frank, did n''t you tell me you took the money? |
56999 | Frank, do n''t you know me? |
56999 | Friends shake hands, do n''t they? |
56999 | Garrod, ca n''t you hear me? |
56999 | Garrod, can-- can you remember what happened this morning? |
56999 | Garrod----"What about him? |
56999 | Hair is just hair, is n''t it? |
56999 | Hard? |
56999 | Has anybody dry matches? |
56999 | Has he said anything? |
56999 | Have n''t you anything to say? |
56999 | Have ye anything to say? |
56999 | Have you anything to say for yourself now? |
56999 | Have you been there ever since you left the fort? |
56999 | Have you ever been outside? |
56999 | Have you gone back on it already? |
56999 | He said he would be here to show you how to fool me? 56999 He''s an awfully good sort, is n''t he?" |
56999 | How are business matters going? |
56999 | How can I get up any enthusiasm when you make me do it? |
56999 | How can we prevent him from coming with us? |
56999 | How dare you bring her here, and install her under my eyes? |
56999 | How did you get adrift? |
56999 | How did you know? |
56999 | How different? |
56999 | How do you go back upstream? |
56999 | How do you know all this? |
56999 | How do you know? |
56999 | How far have we made to- day? |
56999 | How far is it to the top of the canyon? |
56999 | How long? |
56999 | How will we ever get back? |
56999 | How will we get back across the river? |
56999 | How will you get over there? |
56999 | How, bad? |
56999 | I asked you if you saw him do it? |
56999 | I say,Ferrie suddenly called out,"how far is that peak over there, the pointed one?'' |
56999 | I say,he said in his jerky way,"as long as you want to keep your real name quiet, we had better not let on that we are old friends, eh?" |
56999 | I suppose you know Prince George well? |
56999 | If it''s hypnotism, who''s doing it? |
56999 | If you ca n''t hear a civil request, I''ve a fist to back it up, understand? 56999 If you did drive the white men away,"Jack went on,"how would you kill the moose for food without their powder? |
56999 | In Montreal? |
56999 | In the first place, about your name,she chattered;"what am I to call you? |
56999 | Is he-- sane? |
56999 | Is it nothing but making love? |
56999 | Is it possible? |
56999 | Is it-- is it Malcolm Piers? |
56999 | Is that what you calculate to do? |
56999 | Is there a good place to camp? |
56999 | Is there a good trail? |
56999 | Is there a woman or a child that he sets great store by? |
56999 | Is this your justice, your disinterestedness? |
56999 | It is Macgreegor, is n''t it? |
56999 | It''s a funny situation, is n''t it? |
56999 | It''s a rotten, mixed- up mess, is n''t it? |
56999 | It''s all right now, is n''t it? |
56999 | It''s all right with us now, is n''t it? |
56999 | Jack Chanty? |
56999 | Jack, what''s the matter? |
56999 | Jean Paul, will you oblige me by stepping outside for a moment? |
56999 | Jumped? |
56999 | Killed him? |
56999 | Know what? |
56999 | Left him to starve? |
56999 | Logical, eh? 56999 Lost the note- book, eh?" |
56999 | Mary? 56999 Maybe you tell me''ow?" |
56999 | Me? |
56999 | Medicine? |
56999 | Miss Cranston''s? |
56999 | More humiliating scenes? |
56999 | Mus''I tell w''en I go to see a girl? |
56999 | My name,she said,"and Davy''s?" |
56999 | No place for me? |
56999 | No reason? |
56999 | Not hurt? |
56999 | Of what use was the confession of a man in such a state? |
56999 | Promised what? |
56999 | Rather different from a game in the library at Government House, eh? |
56999 | Set you adrift? |
56999 | Shall we dance? |
56999 | Shall we put our hates together? |
56999 | Since when has the chief of the Sapis learned to lie? |
56999 | So this is the young man who was of so much assistance to us this morning? |
56999 | Something has happened here? |
56999 | Sucker claims? |
56999 | Suppose you could face me down,Jack continued,"what then? |
56999 | That shakes your impudence, eh? 56999 The conjuror and medicine man, eh? |
56999 | The horses, too? |
56999 | The law? |
56999 | The other claim? |
56999 | The people? |
56999 | The question is, what are we to do with him? |
56999 | The slope on this side,asked the geologist,"I suppose there is a stream that drains it? |
56999 | The whole truth? 56999 Then what happened?" |
56999 | Then what? |
56999 | Then you mean to come? |
56999 | There''s somet''ing you do n''t want me to see, huh? |
56999 | To you? |
56999 | W''at you goin''to do? |
56999 | Was he killed? |
56999 | Was there any one behind you? |
56999 | Wat you do? |
56999 | Wat''s the matter? 56999 Wat''s the matter?" |
56999 | We would be so glad to teach you, would n''t we, Kate? 56999 Well, well,"stammered Sir Bryson,"what are we to do?" |
56999 | Well, what are you going to do now? |
56999 | Well, what is it? |
56999 | Well, what''s to prevent your telling now? |
56999 | Well-- Jack? |
56999 | Well? |
56999 | Were you in time? |
56999 | What about Garrod? |
56999 | What about him? |
56999 | What about you? |
56999 | What about? |
56999 | What about? |
56999 | What are we doing on this side? |
56999 | What are we going to do? |
56999 | What are you doing here? |
56999 | What are you doing up here, Malcolm? |
56999 | What are you doing up here? 56999 What are you looking for?" |
56999 | What are you waiting for? |
56999 | What can I do? |
56999 | What can happen? |
56999 | What could have led him to do that? |
56999 | What could have startled your horse? |
56999 | What damn nonsense is this? |
56999 | What did Reason tell you about Fair Hebe? |
56999 | What did you call him? |
56999 | What did you frighten me like that for? |
56999 | What did you learn? |
56999 | What did you promise? |
56999 | What do you expect? |
56999 | What do you know about this? |
56999 | What do you make of this desertion? |
56999 | What do you mean? |
56999 | What do you mean? |
56999 | What do you mean? |
56999 | What do you read? |
56999 | What do you suppose he''s doing to- night? |
56999 | What do you think I am, a doll? 56999 What do you want here?" |
56999 | What do you want? |
56999 | What does this mean? 56999 What else was there for us to do?" |
56999 | What good am I to you? 56999 What good is this life you''re leading to you? |
56999 | What gun do you use? |
56999 | What have the horses got to do with it? |
56999 | What have they been up to? |
56999 | What is it? |
56999 | What is there I can do? |
56999 | What kind of a reputation do these men bear? |
56999 | What luck did he have? |
56999 | What must we do when we find the posts? |
56999 | What nonsense is this? |
56999 | What was his name? |
56999 | What was? |
56999 | What we do now? |
56999 | What will_ she_ say? |
56999 | What with? |
56999 | What would I be doing all that time? 56999 What would we do without you? |
56999 | What you do with my boy? |
56999 | What''s a crest? |
56999 | What''s a mermaid? |
56999 | What''s become of him now? |
56999 | What''s biting you? 56999 What''s come over you?" |
56999 | What''s it called? |
56999 | What''s the alternative then? |
56999 | What''s the difference? |
56999 | What''s the governor''s game up here? |
56999 | What''s the matter with him? |
56999 | What''s the matter with you? 56999 What''s the matter?" |
56999 | What''s the matter? |
56999 | What''s the use to make believe? |
56999 | What''s to be done? |
56999 | Whatever Jack does is all right, is n''t it? |
56999 | Where are we heading for? |
56999 | Where have they staked out claims? |
56999 | Where have you come from? |
56999 | Where is Etzeeah? |
56999 | Where is Garrod? |
56999 | Where is Swan Lake? |
56999 | Where is he? |
56999 | Where is the Sapi camp? |
56999 | Where is this fellow now? |
56999 | Where''s Garrod? |
56999 | Where''s Jean Paul? |
56999 | Where''s the proof? |
56999 | Where? |
56999 | Where? |
56999 | Which way are you travelling? |
56999 | Who are they? |
56999 | Who are you? |
56999 | Who can tell? |
56999 | Who cares for safety? |
56999 | Who did then? |
56999 | Who is the head man now? |
56999 | Who knows? |
56999 | Who says I''m going back on you? |
56999 | Who told you? |
56999 | Who was the woman who kept pulling at your sleeve? |
56999 | Who will ride with me to catch the murderer? |
56999 | Who will tell Sir Bryson? |
56999 | Who would believe what he said at such a time? |
56999 | Who you got? |
56999 | Who''s running the governor''s camp? |
56999 | Whom have you the next dance with? |
56999 | Why ca n''t we be? |
56999 | Why did you never answer my letter? |
56999 | Why don''you shoot me now? |
56999 | Why is n''t Ascota here now to help you? |
56999 | Why not? |
56999 | Why not? |
56999 | Why not? |
56999 | Why not? |
56999 | Why not? |
56999 | Why should I hide it now? |
56999 | Why should n''t you tell the truth? |
56999 | Why, how did you know? |
56999 | Why? |
56999 | Why? |
56999 | Will you write out a confession? |
56999 | With me? |
56999 | Without telling me? |
56999 | Would n''t it be as well to let the matter go over? |
56999 | Would you dress up as a drummer- boy and follow your lover to the wars, like Polly did? |
56999 | Would you have me the same to everybody? |
56999 | Would you like to go? |
56999 | Would-- would you be friends with me again? |
56999 | Yes,said Jack,"but why stop at Prince George? |
56999 | You are all right? |
56999 | You are quite yourself again? |
56999 | You do wish to be friends? |
56999 | You feed me? |
56999 | You got your pipe? |
56999 | You have had no trouble with the Indian, since? |
56999 | You know the canyon well? |
56999 | You t''ink you one brave man, huh, to climb up the rock las''night? |
56999 | You take my horse? |
56999 | You think the coal they''re after has a yellow shine? |
56999 | You will? |
56999 | You wo n''t go away without waking me? |
56999 | You''d desert me? 56999 You''d follow on foot?" |
56999 | You''re all right? |
56999 | You''re not still hitting the old pace? |
56999 | You''re pulling out? |
56999 | You''re serious about going back with them, then? |
56999 | ... What time is it, old fel''? |
56999 | ...''Member the rink in the winter? |
56999 | Abandoning the direct line, she asked:"What do you do up here regularly?" |
56999 | Above all the others Sir Bryson''s voice was heard trembling with alarm and anger:"Would you desert us here?" |
56999 | After the usual pause Garrod replied like an automaton without moving his eyes:"Yes, Sir Bryson?" |
56999 | Am I your brother? |
56999 | And Mary? |
56999 | And are we not ready in the North, too? |
56999 | And if they did, how could we convict them?" |
56999 | And the old Park Slide? |
56999 | And then suddenly:"Are you free for the next month or so?" |
56999 | Anne''s, with the sun shining on the river? |
56999 | Are you ashamed of my colour? |
56999 | Are you good for it?" |
56999 | Before any move was made the company was electrified by a new voice:"May I speak if you please, Sir Bryson?" |
56999 | Before he could speak she asked quickly:"What''s the matter?" |
56999 | Besides----""Well?" |
56999 | Biting my thumbs?" |
56999 | Ca n''t you see that things are different up here? |
56999 | Can anybody take down what I want to say?" |
56999 | Could n''t they have run off by themselves?" |
56999 | Could you take us to it?" |
56999 | Do n''t you see how you''re hurting me? |
56999 | Do you mind?" |
56999 | Do you remember that?" |
56999 | Do you suppose he will expect to sit down with us?" |
56999 | Do you think I would entrust myself and my party to a nameless nobody from nowhere?" |
56999 | Do you think you can fight all the white men with your eighteen lodges? |
56999 | Do you think you can go through with that?" |
56999 | Do you think you''re in any state to face me down? |
56999 | Do you want to make a permanent camp here, or to push farther on?" |
56999 | Extending a trembling forefinger, he asked hoarsely:"Ascota, is he there?" |
56999 | His choler promptly rose, and, drawing Vassall aside, he said:"Look here, why do you let that beggar impose on you like this? |
56999 | How can you be so hard? |
56999 | How could he? |
56999 | How could one fire at a being who held himself so high? |
56999 | How could you go without saying a word to me? |
56999 | How could you two ever hope to pull together? |
56999 | How did you get here?" |
56999 | How did you know that?" |
56999 | I have an eye on one or two things----""Gold?" |
56999 | I will talk to you later Mr.--er?" |
56999 | I''ve disgraced myself forever with them, and if you go back on me too, what will I do?" |
56999 | I''ve made a rotten mess of it, have n''t I? |
56999 | If he can send sickness through the air, why does n''t he strike_ me_ down, who bound him, and blinded, and gagged him?" |
56999 | Is he dead?" |
56999 | Is it a man or a devil?" |
56999 | Is it any wonder he was filled with a sense of well- being so keen it was almost a pain? |
56999 | Is it my fault that my blood is mixed? |
56999 | Is it true?" |
56999 | Is n''t he handsome?" |
56999 | Is n''t that enough?" |
56999 | Is n''t the rest of the creek enough for you? |
56999 | Is that the best you can invent?" |
56999 | Is that true?" |
56999 | It was many a day since he had hobnobbed with his own kind, and what is the use of gold if there is no chance to squander it? |
56999 | Jean Paul--""He''s safe?" |
56999 | Jull?" |
56999 | Mary''s warning occurred to Jack, but what was he to do? |
56999 | May I? |
56999 | No reason? |
56999 | Pretty near closing- time? |
56999 | Remember the night I said good- bye to you in the Bonaventure station, and blubbered like a kid? |
56999 | Save me?" |
56999 | Shall I get you some of those?" |
56999 | So that was why his uncle had cut him off? |
56999 | The other girl-- she''s nothing to you, is she? |
56999 | There''s another pair of kids winning the tandem paddles now, eh? |
56999 | Thus Jack was presently startled to hear a clear high voice behind him say:"Are you going to travel on the river with that little thing?" |
56999 | Thus it ran, the paper blistered with tears, and the headlong words tumbling over each other: MY OWN JACK: You_ are_ mine, are n''t you? |
56999 | Was he?" |
56999 | Was there anything else?" |
56999 | What are they called?" |
56999 | What are you doing?" |
56999 | What could he say? |
56999 | What could he say? |
56999 | What did you come for then?" |
56999 | What did you give her a mining- claim for? |
56999 | What did you mean by offering to engage her as your maid? |
56999 | What do I know of white men, and white men''s horses?" |
56999 | What do you mean?" |
56999 | What do you want? |
56999 | What does an idle lad like you know of the worth of women? |
56999 | What else can I do? |
56999 | What else can I say? |
56999 | What else could he do? |
56999 | What good does it do?" |
56999 | What has the law to do with it?" |
56999 | What have you got to complain of? |
56999 | What if he is tied? |
56999 | What is he?" |
56999 | What is your name?" |
56999 | What matter who does it, or how it''s done? |
56999 | What was a man to make of this? |
56999 | What was he to do with him then? |
56999 | What was he to do with the helpless, contrite little thing but comfort her? |
56999 | What will Sir Bryson say?" |
56999 | What would I do?" |
56999 | What''s become of her, Frank?" |
56999 | What''s the matter with you?" |
56999 | What''s the matter?" |
56999 | When he had a chance apart with her he asked:"What''s the game?" |
56999 | When the man at last became quiet he said, not unkindly:"Are you ready now?" |
56999 | When your few shells are spent, where will you get more bullets to shoot the white men?" |
56999 | Where are we? |
56999 | Where is Davy?" |
56999 | Where is she?" |
56999 | Where would you get flour and tea and tobacco, and matches to light your fires? |
56999 | Where''s Garrod?" |
56999 | Who would buy your furs? |
56999 | Who would not be afraid? |
56999 | Why ca n''t we be friends like we were before? |
56999 | Why do you ask?" |
56999 | Why not have him in here now, and look him over? |
56999 | Why two? |
56999 | Why wo n''t he do?" |
56999 | Why? |
56999 | You and I and Mary, we''ll make a great team, eh? |
56999 | You ca n''t mean it? |
56999 | You do love me, do n''t you?" |
56999 | You feel bad?" |
56999 | You took the money, and spent it, and let them fasten the theft on me?" |
56999 | You used to know him, did n''t you?" |
56999 | You will not say anything to her to make me sorry I brought her, will you?" |
56999 | [ Illustration:"F. G.,"he said grimly,"Francis Garrod"]"How do I know?" |
56999 | he cried suddenly,"do you remember those two claim- salters-- Beckford and Rowe their names were-- who went out after the ice last May?" |
56999 | said Jack;"it''s a childish outfit, is n''t it? |
56999 | what are you doing out there? |
56999 | what is he? |
7885 | ''Why will you be silent? 7885 An''are you sorry for our agreement?" |
7885 | An''what are you doing with that box and dice I see in your hand? |
7885 | An''where would I get em''but in the heads of your own sheep? 7885 And do you blame, master?" |
7885 | And do you say no more nor that? |
7885 | And how did you know there were six, you poor innocent? |
7885 | And how did you like the sport? |
7885 | And what do you say to me,says''Saint Kavin,"for making her the like?" |
7885 | And where will I look for''em? |
7885 | And who else should I mean? 7885 And who wo n''t you have, may I be so bold as to ask?" |
7885 | And will you direct me to where she dwells? 7885 Are you doing any soothsaying?" |
7885 | Are you making game of me, man; what else have I to stake? |
7885 | Are you strong? |
7885 | Are you wishful to hang me a third time? |
7885 | Art thou shaved, man? |
7885 | Blur- an- agers, how came ye to know about my goose? |
7885 | But will you gi''e me all the ground the goose flew over? |
7885 | But you''ll keep your word true? |
7885 | Dear me,said Tom,"but is n''t it surprising to hear the stonechatters singing so late in the season?" |
7885 | Devil a one of me knows,said Tom;"but of malt, I suppose, what else?" |
7885 | Did you ever see Fin? |
7885 | Do n''t you see her there away from you? |
7885 | Do you see that black thing at the end of the field? |
7885 | Have n''t you chariot and horses and hounds? |
7885 | Have you any more to stake? |
7885 | He''ll do well enough,said one;"but who''s to mind him whilst we''re away, who''ll turn the fire, who''ll see that he does n''t burn?" |
7885 | Heardst thou ever the like? |
7885 | How could I go? |
7885 | How could I kill you,asked the king''s son,"after what you have done for me?" |
7885 | How could I? |
7885 | How did you forget? |
7885 | How do you know that? |
7885 | How much for your hides, my men? |
7885 | I am King O''Toole,says he,"prince and plennypennytinchery of these parts,"says he;"but how came ye to know that?" |
7885 | I know that you are a great rascal; and where did you get the eyes? |
7885 | I suppose,said the Lepracaun, very civilly,"you have no further occasion for me?" |
7885 | I''ll give you whatever you ask,says the king;"is n''t that fair?" |
7885 | I''m much obleeged to you: where is the baste and yourself going? |
7885 | I''m sure I beg your pardon,said my grandfather"but might I ask you a question?" |
7885 | If thy father had that rod,says the giant,"what would he do with it?" |
7885 | Indeed it is, honest man,replied Oonagh;"God save you kindly-- won''t you be sitting?" |
7885 | Is it a story you want? |
7885 | Is it a tinker you are? |
7885 | Is it fearing I wo n''t pay you, you are? |
7885 | Is it fighting you''ve been? 7885 Is it me myself, you mean?" |
7885 | Is it you, Donald? |
7885 | Is it you,said she,"that were there?" |
7885 | Is that the way you''re leaving me? |
7885 | Is there any other young woman in the house? |
7885 | Is this the way you are mending the path, Jack? |
7885 | Is thy daughter mine now? |
7885 | It''s daybreak that''s the matter: do n''t you see light yonder? |
7885 | Jack, you anointed scoundrel, what do you mean? |
7885 | Jack, you vagabone, do you see what the cows are at? |
7885 | Jewels, do you say? 7885 May your hand turn into a pig''s foot with you when you think of tying the rope; why should you speak of hanging me?" |
7885 | Never welcome you in,cried the captain of the guard,"did n''t we hang you this minute, and what brings you here?" |
7885 | Now, O Conall,said the king,"were you ever in a harder place than to be seeing your lot of sons hanged tomorrow? |
7885 | Now,said he to the story- teller,"what kind of animal would you rather be, a deer, a fox, or a hare? |
7885 | Now,said the lank grey beggarman;"has any one a mind to run after the dog and on the course?" |
7885 | Now,said the raven,"see you that house yonder? |
7885 | Now,says he,"she''ll be without talk any more; now, Guleesh, what good will she be to you when she''ll be dumb? |
7885 | O musha, mother,says Jack,"why do you ax me that question? |
7885 | Oonagh,said he,"can you do nothing for me? |
7885 | So the sea- maiden put up his head(_ Who do you mean? 7885 So,"says Tom to the king,"will you let me have the other half of the princess if I bring you the flail?" |
7885 | Thank you, ma''am,says he, sitting down;"you''re Mrs. M''Coul, I suppose?" |
7885 | The host,they cried;"what do you want with the host? |
7885 | There is gloom on your face, girl,said the youth;"what do you here?" |
7885 | This is the third time, and who knows what luck you may have? 7885 To be sure, you lazy sluggard, I do?" |
7885 | To whom art thou talking, my son? |
7885 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
7885 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
7885 | Well, honest man,says the king,"and how is it you make your money so aisy?" |
7885 | Well, may be you''d be civil enough to tell_ us_ what you''ve got in the pitcher there? |
7885 | Well, well,cried them all, when he came within hearing,"any chance of our property?" |
7885 | Well, what about_ them_? |
7885 | What are you doing there, you rascal? |
7885 | What are you doing, you contrary thief? |
7885 | What canst thou do? |
7885 | What colour do you want the mare to be? |
7885 | What could I do with the twelve iron ones for myself or my master? 7885 What gift,"said his wife,"would you give me that I could make you laugh?" |
7885 | What is the good of that? 7885 What is the reason of your journey?" |
7885 | What like are these men when seen, if we were to see them? |
7885 | What men are these you refer to? |
7885 | What news have you to- day? |
7885 | What news the day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news today? |
7885 | What piercing, shrill cry is that-- the most melodious my ear ever heard, and the shrillest that ever struck my heart of all the cries I ever heard? |
7885 | What purse is that you are talking about? |
7885 | What reason had you to strike the man who won my daughter? |
7885 | What reward would you give me for sending plenty of fish to you? |
7885 | What robe will you wear? |
7885 | What scoundrel struck that blow? |
7885 | What suitor is that? |
7885 | What work can ye do? |
7885 | What would bring them there? |
7885 | What''ll you take for that hide? |
7885 | What''s the matter, friends? |
7885 | What''s the matter? 7885 What''s the matter?" |
7885 | What''s the reward for putting it back in the bundle as it was before? |
7885 | What''s the reward you would ask? |
7885 | When he felt the birds calling in the morning, and knew that the day was, he said--''Art thou sleeping? 7885 When will he be here?" |
7885 | Whence come you, and what is your craft? |
7885 | Whence comest thou, maiden? |
7885 | Where did I get it, is it? 7885 Where is the water, wife?" |
7885 | Where will I look for them? |
7885 | Where? 7885 Who are you, my good man?" |
7885 | Who deluded you? 7885 Who else took the head off the beast but you?" |
7885 | Who else? |
7885 | Who has dared to interfere with my fighting pet? |
7885 | Who is there? |
7885 | Who is this beauty and where is she to be seen, when she was not seen before till you saw her, if you did see her? |
7885 | Who knows,they replied,"who committed the crime?" |
7885 | Who should take the heads off the knot but the man that put the heads on? |
7885 | Who then? |
7885 | Who then? |
7885 | Who then? |
7885 | Why do n''t you come to breakfast, my dear? |
7885 | Why should n''t I be satisfied? |
7885 | Will you give a body a taste of your beer? |
7885 | Will you give me the first son you have? |
7885 | Will you not put out,said Silver- tree,"your little finger through the key- hole, so that your own mother may give a kiss to it?" |
7885 | Will you play again? |
7885 | Will you play again? |
7885 | Will you take a gold piece? |
7885 | Will you take me? |
7885 | Would you tell a body,says the cock that was perched on the ass''s head,"who was it that opened the door for the robbers the other night?" |
7885 | You home- spun shoe carle, do you think I am fit to be your thrall? |
7885 | You wo n''t go back o''your word? |
7885 | You would not cheat the poor man, would you? |
7885 | You, you poor creature, what good would you do? |
7885 | ''Hast thou boiled that youngster for me?'' |
7885 | ''Play up with you, why should you be silent? |
7885 | ''Strike up with you,''said the head bard,''why should we be still? |
7885 | A LEGEND OF KNOCKMANY What Irish man, woman, or child has not heard of our renowned Hibernian Hercules, the great and glorious Fin M''Coul? |
7885 | A while after this he called again:"Are your asleep?" |
7885 | After some more talk the king says,"What are you?" |
7885 | After they had gone and were out of sight, the henwife came to the kitchen and said:"Well, my dear, are you for church to- day?" |
7885 | After they had gone, the henwife came in and asked:"Will you go to church to- day?" |
7885 | Ah, now, could n''t you take me with you?" |
7885 | Ah, will any of you pull a bed of dry grass for me? |
7885 | And again the mighty voice thundered:"Do you see this great chest of mine?" |
7885 | And if she asks you, Were you at the battle of the birds? |
7885 | And now tell me what dress will you have?" |
7885 | And she said to me,''What brought you here?'' |
7885 | And the giant asked him,"Where is thy father when he has that brave rod?" |
7885 | And the voice said:"Do you see this great head of mine?" |
7885 | And what do you think I made it of?" |
7885 | And when its neck was shown, the thundering voice came again and said:"Do you see this great neck of mine?" |
7885 | Are you in need of soothsaying?" |
7885 | Are you satisfied, Guleesh, and will you do what we''re telling you?" |
7885 | Are you sorry for hiring me, master?" |
7885 | Are you sorry for it?" |
7885 | Are you sorry for our agreement?" |
7885 | At last they stood still, and a man of them said to Guleesh:"Guleesh, do you know where you are now?" |
7885 | But about the time when he should drive the cattle homewards, who should he see coming but a great giant with his sword in his hand? |
7885 | But does that hare come here still?" |
7885 | But have you seen her, and are Deirdre''s hue and complexion as before?" |
7885 | Connachar came out in haste and cried with wrath:"Who is there on the floor of fight, slaughtering my men?" |
7885 | Deirdre heard the voice and said to her foster- mother:"O foster- mother, what cry is that?" |
7885 | Did I not hear you speaking to the king''s son in the palace to- night? |
7885 | Did n''t you see the gold with your own two eyes?" |
7885 | Did you never hear tell of the Danes?" |
7885 | Do you blame me for what I have done?" |
7885 | Do you blame me, sir?" |
7885 | Do you think for all the money in Ireland, I''d run the risk of seeing my lady tramp home on foot?" |
7885 | Fin, who was dressed for the occasion as much like a boy as possible, got up, and bringing Cucullin out,"Are you strong?" |
7885 | For the comic relief of this volume I have therefore had to turn mainly to the Irish peasant of the Pale; and what richer source could I draw from? |
7885 | Guleesh, is n''t that a nice turn you did us, and we so kind to you? |
7885 | Guleesh, my boy, are you here with us again? |
7885 | Guleesh, you clown, you thief, that no good may happen you, why did you play that trick on us?" |
7885 | Has n''t it kept me and mine for years?" |
7885 | He called to speak to the master in the haggard, and said he,"What are servants asked to do in this country after aten their supper?" |
7885 | He gave a cross look to the visitors, and says he to Jack,"What do you want here, my fine fellow? |
7885 | He shouted,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
7885 | He sputtered it out, and cried,"Man o''the house, is n''t it a great shame for you to have any one in the room that would do such a nasty thing?" |
7885 | Her husband forgot, and touched her rather roughly on the shoulder, saying,"Is this a time for laughter?" |
7885 | Her husband tapped her on the shoulder, and asked her,"Why do you weep?" |
7885 | How are you getting on with your woman? |
7885 | I thought to myself that I was near my foe and far from my friends, and I called to the woman,''What are you doing here?'' |
7885 | I went in, and I said to her,''What was the matter that you were putting the knife on the neck of the child?'' |
7885 | In comes the giant, and he said:"Hast thou cleaned the byre, king''s son?" |
7885 | Is he at home?" |
7885 | It was a good trick you played on us last year?" |
7885 | Just then we could be hearing the footsteps of the giant,''What shall I do? |
7885 | Keep your toe in your pump, will you? |
7885 | May I be so bold as to ask where yez are all going?" |
7885 | May I make bold to ask how is your goose, King O''Toole?" |
7885 | Maybe I wo n''t remember your kindness if ever I find you in hardship; and where in the world are you all going?" |
7885 | Maybe you''re sorry for your bargain?" |
7885 | My wings, are they not withered stumps? |
7885 | Now, when they told Arthur how they had sped, Arthur said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek first?" |
7885 | On a day of days, while he was fishing, there rose a sea- maiden at the side of his boat, and she asked him,"Are you getting much fish?" |
7885 | Or has that devil made you really dumb, when he struck his nasty hand on your jaw?" |
7885 | Out came the tanner:"How much for your hides, my good men?" |
7885 | Said Gwrhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
7885 | Said Silver- tree,"Troutie, bonny little fellow, am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
7885 | Said Yspathaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
7885 | Said a man of them to him:"Are you coming with us to- night, Guleesh?" |
7885 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon?" |
7885 | Seeing her so vexed and so changed in the face, the old woman asked:"What''s the trouble that''s on you now?" |
7885 | She asked the boy"Did you tell the master what I told you to tell him?" |
7885 | She cried:"Naois, son of Uisnech, will you leave me?" |
7885 | She rose up before him, and said:"Did n''t I tell you not to leave a bone of my body without stepping on it? |
7885 | So Conn of the hundred fights said to him,"Is it to thy mind what the woman says, my son?" |
7885 | Suddenly she paused, and said aloud:"Where are the women? |
7885 | Thackeray?) |
7885 | That vagabond, bad luck to him--""You mean Donald O''Neary?" |
7885 | The eldest sister came home alone, and the husband asked,"Where is your sister?" |
7885 | The giant asked him--"If thy father had that rod what would he do with it?" |
7885 | The giant awoke and called,"Are you asleep?" |
7885 | The son asked his father one day,"Is any one troubling you?" |
7885 | The very letters that have spread through all Europe except Russia, are to be traced to the script of these Irish monks: why not certain folk- tales? |
7885 | The woman said:"Whose else should they be?" |
7885 | The wren threshed( what did he thresh with? |
7885 | Then he said,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
7885 | There was once a farmer who was seeking a servant, and the wren met him and said:"What are you seeking?" |
7885 | Well, the long and the short of it was that Donald let the hide go, and, that very evening, who but he should walk up to Hudden''s door? |
7885 | What dress would you like?" |
7885 | What has happened to you, Gelban? |
7885 | What kind of soothsaying do you want?" |
7885 | What''s the matter?" |
7885 | What''s the matter?" |
7885 | When he said me then,''Is the ring fitting thee?'' |
7885 | When she perceived that he was asleep, she set her mouth quietly to the hole that was in the lid, and she said to me''was I alive?'' |
7885 | When the giant came home, he said:"Hast thou thatched the byre, king''s son?" |
7885 | When the sisters came home, the henwife asked:"Have you any news from the church?" |
7885 | When the two sisters came home the henwife asked:"Have you any news to- day from the church?" |
7885 | Where are you going?" |
7885 | Where have you been so long?" |
7885 | Where''s all your invention? |
7885 | Which of the keys should I keep?" |
7885 | Who is she, or how did you get her?" |
7885 | Why say so when you were at home every Sunday?" |
7885 | Why should n''t I have them all to myself?" |
7885 | Why what has a poor old man like you to play for?" |
7885 | Will you begin, if you please, and put in the thatch again, just as if you were doing it for your mother''s cabin?" |
7885 | Will you lend me your best pair of scales?" |
7885 | Would n''t it be a fine thing for a farmer to be marrying a princess, all dressed in gold and jewels?" |
7885 | Would you have me meddle with the bastes of any neighbour, who might put me in the Stone Jug for it?" |
7885 | Would you not sooner stay with me than with them?" |
7885 | You would n''t wish to keep the luck all to yourself?" |
7885 | an''who is it, avick? |
7885 | and what would you be taking their feet off for?" |
7885 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
7885 | he shouted;"how is this? |
7885 | here I am, and what do you want with me?" |
7885 | or mayhap you met the police, ill luck to them?" |
7885 | said Fin again;"are you able to squeeze water out of that white stone?" |
7885 | said Tom, bursting out laughing;"sure you do n''t think me to be such a fool as to believe that?" |
7885 | said he, suddenly, as he looked again at the young girl,"in the name of God, who have you here? |
7885 | said he;"is this where the great Fin M''Coul lives?" |
7885 | said the giant;"but were n''t you impudent to come to my land and trouble me in this way? |
7885 | says Ould Nick;"is that the way? |
7885 | then,"says the king,"who are you?" |
7885 | to take a woman with him that never said as much to him as,''How do you do?'' |
7885 | what for?" |
7885 | what made your sons go to spring on my sons till my big son was killed by your children? |
7885 | what shall I do?'' |
7885 | where did you get it?" |
7885 | where?" |
7885 | who was calling him, and not a soul in sight? |
6107 | A priest of Apollo? |
6107 | An idol? |
6107 | Do you ask me if I am a''Christian''? |
6107 | Do you doubt Homer? |
6107 | Do you know of any one who has? |
6107 | Do you really believe,asked young Holyoake to the clergyman,"that what we ask in faith we shall receive?" |
6107 | For two thousand years no one has either seen or heard Jesus? |
6107 | In my hand I hold the notice of a publication bearing the title_ Is Jesus a Myth? 6107 Is he, then, dead?" |
6107 | Is it possible,I asked,"that all this is pure fabrication, a fantasy of the brain, as unsubstantial as the air? |
6107 | Mightyhe was, but we ask again, was he mighty in a noble sense? |
6107 | The whole world celebrates annually the nativity of Jesus; how could there be a Christmas celebration if there never was a Christ? |
6107 | What became of his body? |
6107 | What is this I see before me? |
6107 | What was that? |
6107 | Will he not be here this morning? 6107 Would not that, then,"I ventured to ask, impatiently,"make Jesus as much of an idol as Apollo? |
6107 | _ Why then, did not Jesus explain that important_ proviso_ when he made the promise? 6107 --Thomas Huxley._ CONTENTS PART I A PARABLE IN CONFIDENCE IS JESUS A MYTH? 6107 1908 years after what? 6107 ANSWER: How long wasthe time from the opening of Jesus''public career until the time that it closed?" |
6107 | Again, why do these biographers of Jesus give us the genealogy of Joseph if he was not the father of Jesus? |
6107 | And can we by voting for Jesus make him a God? |
6107 | And how can it be introduced among the Gentiles without a knowledge of the doctrines and works of its founder? |
6107 | And how does he do it? |
6107 | And if, as the professor says,"reason is born of reason,"how did the first reason come? |
6107 | And shall we speak of the bigotry, the fanaticism, the bitter sectarian prejudices which to this day embitter the life of the world? |
6107 | And what gave the disciples this supposed"precedent conviction?" |
6107 | And what was Adam''s sin? |
6107 | And what was the statement which, while it crippled his memory, it did not moderate his zeal? |
6107 | And when did the event take place? |
6107 | And which''four''does the clergyman accept as doubtlessly"genuine?" |
6107 | And who can number the bitter disappointments caused by such impossible promises? |
6107 | And why are there thousands upon thousands of various readings in these, numerous supposed copies? |
6107 | And why are these Gospels anonymous? |
6107 | And why can not Dr. Adler be a monist? |
6107 | And, if faith that Jesus is a god proves him a god, why will not faith in Apollo make him a god? |
6107 | Are not the Beatitudes beautiful-- no matter who said them? |
6107 | Are not these, too, the fruits of Christianity? |
6107 | Are there any witnesses who saw the resurrection? |
6107 | Are there no truths in their teachings? |
6107 | Are there no virtues in their lives? |
6107 | Are you? |
6107 | Aside from the fact that the Jesus of Paul is essentially a different Jesus from the gospel Jesus there still remains the question, Who is Paul? |
6107 | Besides, could anything be more mythical than a righteousness which can only be imputed to us,--any righteousness of our own being but"filthy rags?" |
6107 | But do_ you_ see them, too, because I see them? |
6107 | But how can any amount of evidence satisfy one''s self that Jesus was born of a virgin, for instance? |
6107 | But if a faith which ignores evidence be not a superstition, what then is superstition? |
6107 | But if he knew all these things about Jesus, is it possible that he could go through the world preaching Christ without ever once referring to them? |
6107 | But if the''Christ''which the Hebrews expected was"purely mythical,"what makes the same''Christ''in the supposed Tacitus passage historical? |
6107 | But if there is"some ultimate fount of being,"to which our"highest"nature"can be traced,"whence did our lower nature come? |
6107 | But if they believed he was God, would they try to kill him? |
6107 | But is it true that the Christmas celebration proves a historical Jesus? |
6107 | But is that any evidence for you or me? |
6107 | But is that any proof that what he saw we could see also? |
6107 | But is that any reason why the attending physician, his pulse normal and his brow cool, should believe that the room is filling up with assassins? |
6107 | But our clerical neighbor from Oak Park has one more argument:"Why is Sunday observed instead of Saturday?" |
6107 | But the question is, does a teacher suppress the facts? |
6107 | But was Calvin"mighty"in a beneficent sense? |
6107 | But was Jesus the only one, or even the first to offer himself as a sacrifice upon the altar of humanity? |
6107 | But what has the reception which publicans and sinners might give Jesus to do with how_ the churches_ would receive him? |
6107 | But what is meant by salvation? |
6107 | But what is that but another kind of argument? |
6107 | But where is the Jesus to correspond to this rhetorical language? |
6107 | But why seek truths that are not pleasant? |
6107 | But_ who_ guarantees Paul? |
6107 | Can you conceive of anything more mythical than that? |
6107 | Can you hear me? |
6107 | Clapping truth into jail; gagging the mouth of the student-- is that building up or tearing down? |
6107 | Could Paul really have left out of his ministry so essential a chapter from the life of Jesus, had he been acquainted with it? |
6107 | Could anything be more fanciful than that? |
6107 | Could he not have_ said_ just what he_ meant_, in the first place? |
6107 | Could slavery ever strike a deeper bottom than that? |
6107 | Could they have been in a conspiracy against him? |
6107 | Critics have discovered mistakes in Darwin and Haeckel, but are these mistakes of such a nature as to prove fatal to the theory of evolution? |
6107 | Did Jesus show gratitude to the past when he denounced all who had preceded him in the field of love and labor as"thieves and robbers?" |
6107 | Did ever a Roman court witness such a trial? |
6107 | Did he not mean just what he said? |
6107 | Did his power save people from the Protestant inquisition? |
6107 | Did it cost Jesus any effort to perform miracles? |
6107 | Did it imply a sacrifice on his part to utilize a small measure of his_ infinite_ power for the good of man? |
6107 | Did the priests of Baal or Moloch prove that these beings existed? |
6107 | Do we know of any good reason, when it comes to religion, why Asia should be incomparably superior to anything Europe has produced in that line? |
6107 | Do we mean to say that the jelly- fish, the creeping worm, or the bud on the tree has reason? |
6107 | Do you not think that if he had done this, it would then have been impossible to deny his resurrection? |
6107 | Does he believe that there are two eternal sources, from one of which we get our bodies, and from the other our"rational side?" |
6107 | Does he give his people everything, or"whatsoever"they ask of him? |
6107 | Does he insist on remaining ignorant of the facts? |
6107 | Does he mean that"New York and Chicago churches"and"publicans and sinners"are the same thing? |
6107 | Does it justify hasty language? |
6107 | Does it not read like a page from fiction? |
6107 | Does not the Professor know that the story of the resurrection of Jesus is not original, but a repetition of older stories of the kind? |
6107 | Does not the horse see, hear and think? |
6107 | Does our neighbor grasp our meaning? |
6107 | Does that make it real? |
6107 | Does this read like history? |
6107 | Evolution is our destiny; of what use is it, then, to take up arms against destiny? |
6107 | From what teaching or saying of Jesus does he infer his respect for the rights of posterity? |
6107 | Had not England rendered innumerable services to the colony? |
6107 | Had the blind, and the lame, and the deaf, remained altogether neglected before Jesus took compassion upon them? |
6107 | Had the dead never been raised before? |
6107 | Has Christ after two thousand years abolished war? |
6107 | Has Jesus healed the world of the maladies for which we blame the Pagan world? |
6107 | Has Jesus kept his promise? |
6107 | Has any of you known him for more than three years? |
6107 | Has he broken the yoke of superstition and priest- craft? |
6107 | Has he even succeeded in uniting into one loving fold his own disciples? |
6107 | Has he made humanity free? |
6107 | Has he redeemed man from the blight of ignorance? |
6107 | Has he saved the world from the fear of hell? |
6107 | Has not Felix Adler examined the evidence which incriminates Calvin and proves him beyond doubt as the murderer of Servetus? |
6107 | Has this gentleman never heard of Greece? |
6107 | Have not a thousand, thousand prayers been offered in Jesus''name against every evil which has ploughed the face of our earth? |
6107 | Have not the Czars loved their country and fought for her prosperity? |
6107 | Have not these great teachers helped humanity? |
6107 | Have these prayers been answered? |
6107 | Have they not beautified her cities and enacted laws for the protection of their subjects? |
6107 | Have they not brought Russia up to her present size, population and political influence in Europe? |
6107 | Have they not rendered any services to their countrymen? |
6107 | Have you ever noticed that the day on which Jesus is supposed to have died falls invariably on a Friday? |
6107 | Have you ever paused to think of the purport of this piece of Orientalism? |
6107 | Have you heard him? |
6107 | Have you seen Apollo? |
6107 | Have you touched him?" |
6107 | He says:"Can you imagine such a thing as a black sun, or the reversal of creation or the annihilation of primal light? |
6107 | Homer, whose every word was a drop of light?" |
6107 | Homer, whose inkwell was as big as the sea; whose imperishable page was Time? |
6107 | How are we to prove whether or not a certain person was God? |
6107 | How can Christian ministers hope to engage the interest of the reading public if they themselves abstain from reading? |
6107 | How can Christian people tolerate the rebel against their God, when God himself has pronounced sentence of death against him? |
6107 | How can we be sure that these copies are reliable? |
6107 | How could an imaginary Zeus, or Jupiter, draw to his temple the elite of Greece and Rome? |
6107 | How could he who said,"Come unto me all ye that are heavy laden,"say also,"Depart from me ye_ cursed_?" |
6107 | How could people with such feelings labor to improve a world they hated? |
6107 | How could the same Jesus who said,"Blessed are the peacemakers,"say also,"I came not to bring peace, but a sword?" |
6107 | How did a lamb hold its place on the cross for eight hundred years? |
6107 | How does our clerical neighbor arrive at such a conclusion? |
6107 | How does the Reverend Barton like the conclusion to which his own reasoning leads him? |
6107 | How does the true story of Hypatia compare with the fable of"a nude woman placed on a pedestal in the city of Paris?" |
6107 | How else is this unanimous silence to be accounted for? |
6107 | How explain it? |
6107 | How many of the world''s multitude of sufferers did Jesus help? |
6107 | How much reliance can we put in a reporter who is given to such exaggeration? |
6107 | How old was Jesus when crucified? |
6107 | How would he go about it? |
6107 | How, then, are we to decide which of the numerous candidates for divine honors should be given our votes? |
6107 | How, then, did Mithraism arise? |
6107 | I am not sure of this, of course, but if nails, bones and holy places could be miraculously preserved, why not also manuscripts? |
6107 | I said to him;"Homer, the inspired bard? |
6107 | I write to ascertain whether this report has stated your position correctly? |
6107 | IS CHRISTIANITY REAL? |
6107 | IS JESUS A MYTH? |
6107 | IS THE WORLD INDEBTED TO CHRISTIANITY? |
6107 | If Jesus as a God opened the eyes of the blind, would it not have been kinder if he had prevented blindness altogether? |
6107 | If Jesus can open the eyes of the blind, then, why is there blindness in the world? |
6107 | If Jesus died for us, how many thousands have died for him-- and by infinitely more cruel deaths? |
6107 | If Jupiter can have, Justin Martyr seems to reason, half a dozen divine sons, why can not Jehovah have at least one? |
6107 | If Paul visited Athens and preached from Mars Hill, how is it that there is no mention of him or of his strange Gospel in the Athenian chronicles? |
6107 | If Peter ever went to Rome with a new doctrine, how is it that no historian has taken note of him? |
6107 | If a Russian is not permitted to choose his own religion, will he be permitted to choose his own form of government? |
6107 | If a charcoal can be transformed into a diamond, why may not nature, with the resources of infinity at her command, refine a stone into a soul? |
6107 | If a slave of the church, why may he not be also a slave of the state? |
6107 | If he can save at all, pray, why not save all? |
6107 | If he is in the habit of bending his knees, what difference does it make to how many or to whom he bends them? |
6107 | If he will allow a priest to impose his religion upon him, why may he not permit the Czar to impose despotism upon him? |
6107 | If it is wrong for him to question the tenets of his religion, is it not equally wrong for him to discuss the laws of his government? |
6107 | If it is, what shall we think of a man who thought he was a god and could raise the dead? |
6107 | If matter can feel, can see, can hear, can it not also think? |
6107 | If so, why are_ you_ trying to convert them? |
6107 | If that is what he meant, why did he say something else? |
6107 | If there was ample evidence for the historicity of Jesus, why did his biographers resort to forgery? |
6107 | If they were originally written in Hebrew, how can we tell that the Greek translation is accurate, since we can not compare it with the originals? |
6107 | If we are to have any mythology at all, he seems to argue, why object to adding to it the mythus of Jesus? |
6107 | If we followed these teachings, would not our industrial and social life sink at once to the level of the stagnating Asiatics? |
6107 | If what I will say is the truth, do you know of any good reason why I should not say it? |
6107 | If"life is born of life,"where did the first life come from? |
6107 | In Rome, the Jews were free to be Jews; why should the Jewish Christians-- and the early Christians were Jews-- have been thrown to the lions? |
6107 | In a speech which is put into the mouth of Paul"--_put into the mouth of Paul!_ Is this another instance of forgery? |
6107 | In the name of what other prophets have more people been burned at the stake than in the names of Jesus and Moses? |
6107 | In what sense is Jesus a god, while all his rivals were"mere men,"if he is as helpless to prevent the abuse of his teachings as they were? |
6107 | Indeed, how could a teacher who said,"He that believeth not shall be damned,"he described as recognizing the rights of future generations? |
6107 | Is Dr. Adler, then, a dualist? |
6107 | Is Jesus a myth? |
6107 | Is Prof. Adler trying to say God? |
6107 | Is he not absolute? |
6107 | Is it not already passing into the shade of neglect? |
6107 | Is it not better to praise than to blame, to recommend than to find fault?" |
6107 | Is it not more likely that the wonder- working Jesus was unknown to them? |
6107 | Is it not pathetic? |
6107 | Is it not unthinkable? |
6107 | Is it one of the merits of Christianity that it calls other people"heathen,"or that it kills them and lays waste their lands for an empty grave? |
6107 | Is it possible that a real man, not to say the Savior of the world, would give such unmeaning and evasive replies to straightforward questions? |
6107 | Is it possible that as the result of Jesus''advent into our world, we have only a basketful of nameless and dateless copies and documents? |
6107 | Is it possible that such a man could remain totally ignorant of a miracle worker and teacher like Jesus, living in the same city with him? |
6107 | Is it right, then, in spite of all these things that autocracy has done for Russia, to seek to overthrow it? |
6107 | Is it right, then, that the missionary should criticise these ancient faiths? |
6107 | Is not that suggestive? |
6107 | Is not the man who smites us upon the cheek, or robs us of our clothing, equally guilty? |
6107 | Is not this remarkable? |
6107 | Is that the way to crawl out of a contract? |
6107 | Is that why he said"Take no thought of the morrow,"and predicted the speedy destruction of the world? |
6107 | Is there any trace of such tolerance in any of the sayings of Jesus? |
6107 | Is there anything as infamous as that in any religion outside of ours? |
6107 | Is there anything more precious in human life than children? |
6107 | Is there nothing good to be said of Russian autocracy? |
6107 | Is this history? |
6107 | Jesus and his twelve apostles were Jews; why are all the four Gospels written in Greek? |
6107 | Jesus may have been a wonderful man, but is every wonderful man a God? |
6107 | Jesus may have claimed to have been a God, but is every one who puts forth such a claim a God? |
6107 | Jesus was supposedly a Jew, his twelve apostles all Jews-- how is it, then, that the only biographies of him extant are all in Greek? |
6107 | Moreover, are not the Ten Commandments in the negative? |
6107 | Moreover, does not the bible teach that Jesus was tempted in all things, and was a man of like passions, as ourselves? |
6107 | Moreover, what credit is there in opening the eyes of the blind or in raising the dead by miracle? |
6107 | Moreover, wherein does a"divine"religion differ from a man- made cult, if it is equally powerless to protect itself against perversion? |
6107 | Must a man rob the long past in order to provide clothing for his idol? |
6107 | Must he close his eyes upon all history before he can behold the beauty of his own cult? |
6107 | Now, all this may be true, and I hope it is; but what of it? |
6107 | Now, why have I given these conclusions to the world? |
6107 | Only four? |
6107 | Our answer to the question, Is Jesus a Myth? |
6107 | P. 14._) If it was unbelief that inspired the murder of McKinley, what inspired the assassins of Hypatia and Henry III? |
6107 | PART II IS THE WORLD INDEBTED TO CHRISTIANITY? |
6107 | Paul gives no evidence of possessing any knowledge of the teachings of Jesus, how could he, then, be a missionary of Christianity to the heathen? |
6107 | Referring once more to the case of Russia: Why do the awakened people in that country demand the overthrow of the autocracy? |
6107 | THE TRUTH ABOUT JESUS IS HE A MYTH? |
6107 | The Christians have"fasted and prayed"also against science, progress, and modern thought, but what good has it done? |
6107 | The Reverend has another argument:"The Christian Church-- when, why and how did it begin?" |
6107 | The date of your own letter 1908 tells what? |
6107 | The doctrine of humanity to animals, our dumb neighbors, is a positive tenet in Buddhism; is it in Christianity? |
6107 | The primitive man guessed where knowledge failed him-- what else could he do? |
6107 | The question under discussion is, Is Jesus Historical? |
6107 | The question waits for a reasonable answer; Why did not Jesus challenge the whole world with the evidence of his resurrection? |
6107 | The strength of a given criticism is determined by asking: Does it in any way impair the soundness of the argument against which it is directed? |
6107 | Then why is there discontent in the world? |
6107 | There is no meaning in saying that a man''s title"existed in appearance only?" |
6107 | There was ignorance in the world before Christianity; has Jesus destroyed ignorance? |
6107 | There was poverty and misery in the world before Christianity; has Jesus removed these evils? |
6107 | There was war before Christianity; has Jesus abolished war? |
6107 | To questions,"Where is Jesus?" |
6107 | W. A. Bartlett consider us beyond hope? |
6107 | Was ever such a view entertained of Caesar, Socrates or of any other historical character? |
6107 | Was he still afraid of them, or did he not care whether they believed or not? |
6107 | Was he the only one who worked miracles? |
6107 | Was he with his apostles for one year or for three? |
6107 | Was it just, then, that we should have beaten out of the land a government that had performed for us so many friendly acts? |
6107 | Was it just, then, to pull down an institution that had done so much for France? |
6107 | Was it, then, for his"works,"if not for his"words,"that Jesus"won the right of preeminence in the world''s history"? |
6107 | Was not our soul worth saving? |
6107 | Was she not one of the most progressive, most civilizing influences in the modern world? |
6107 | Was there a weakness found in men like Buddha, Confucius, Socrates, etc., from which Jesus was free? |
6107 | We ask: How long have you known Jesus? |
6107 | We know what it means in the orthodox sense, but what does it mean from the Unitarian standpoint of Mr. Jones? |
6107 | We may call this instinct, sensation, promptings of nature, but what''s in a name? |
6107 | Well, why? |
6107 | Were any of you present when Jesus came forth from the grave? |
6107 | Were you present when Jesus was taken down from the cross? |
6107 | Were you present when he was buried? |
6107 | Were you present, Mary, when the angels rolled away the stone, and when Jesus came forth from the dead? |
6107 | What about the atrocious inquisition to which no other religion in the world had ever been able to give the swing that Christianity did? |
6107 | What about the persecution and burning of helpless women as witches? |
6107 | What about the wholesale massacres in the name of the true faith? |
6107 | What answer did the preacher give to Holyoake''s earnest question? |
6107 | What are the elements out of which the Jesus story was evolved? |
6107 | What are the remaining nine doing in the Holy Bible? |
6107 | What are the subtle influences which operate in the womb of nature, where"the embryos of races are nourished into form and individuality?" |
6107 | What did he do that was not done by his predecessors? |
6107 | What did the Oriental see in the worm, which induced him to select it out of all things as the original, so to speak, of man? |
6107 | What did this mighty and noble man do to save a stranger and a scholar from so atrocious a fate? |
6107 | What do you think of it?" |
6107 | What does it mean to be the"only begotten from the Father?" |
6107 | What else in our human world is more beautiful, more divine? |
6107 | What is Christianity, but the life and teachings of Jesus? |
6107 | What is a myth? |
6107 | What is the reason for this? |
6107 | What kind of flesh was he then? |
6107 | What makes a Roman a Roman, a Greek a Greek, and a Persian a Persian? |
6107 | What means have we of deciding which version or reading to accept? |
6107 | What objection is there to thinking that matter, refined, elevated, ripened, cultured, becomes both sentient and rational? |
6107 | What other revelation has given rise to so many sects, hostile and irreconcilable, as the Christian? |
6107 | What shall we think of such reasoning from the platform of a presumable rationalist movement? |
6107 | What, in Dr. Barton''s opinion, could have influenced the framers of the life of Jesus to suppress their identity? |
6107 | When Bruno lighted a new torch to increase the light of the world, what was his reward? |
6107 | When were they copied? |
6107 | When, therefore, you say, he was dead, buried and rose again, you are relying upon the testimony of others? |
6107 | Where is Christ? |
6107 | Wherein, then, was the"preeminence"of Jesus? |
6107 | Which Christian church, brother? |
6107 | Which of the many faiths of the world has opposed Science as stubbornly and as bitterly as Christianity? |
6107 | Which of the religions has persecuted as long and as relentlessly as Christianity? |
6107 | Which of us, if he had the divine power, would not have extended it unto every suffering child of man? |
6107 | Which of us, poor, weak, sinful though we are, would not be glad to give his life, if thereby he could save a world? |
6107 | Who copied them? |
6107 | Who curses them? |
6107 | Who is the_ Word_ that became flesh? |
6107 | Who was Mark? |
6107 | Who was Matthew? |
6107 | Who were John, Peter, Judas, and Mary? |
6107 | Who were the heathen? |
6107 | Who, if he could by miracle feed the hungry, clothe the naked and give light and sound to the blind and deaf, would be selfish enough not to do so? |
6107 | Why accept as history those about Jesus? |
6107 | Why are not all nations alike? |
6107 | Why are they not dated? |
6107 | Why can not mind be a state of matter? |
6107 | Why did he not show himself also to his enemies? |
6107 | Why did it get itself believed and take root?" |
6107 | Why did the Americans overthrow British rule in this country? |
6107 | Why did this particular story persist, despite the paucity and the insufficiency of the evidence? |
6107 | Why does the missionary labor to overthrow the worship of Buddha, Confucius and Zoroaster? |
6107 | Why is it not so? |
6107 | Why is the Oriental so prone or partial to miracle and mystery? |
6107 | Why is the oak more robust than the spruce? |
6107 | Why not follow the example of the deity, as set forth in the persecutions of the Old Testament? |
6107 | Why not, then, dwell upon these, and pass in silence over the objectionable teachings of these religions? |
6107 | Why then is there a different date every year? |
6107 | Why this discrepancy in a historical document, to say nothing about inspiration? |
6107 | Why were Quakers hanged? |
6107 | Why were women put to death as witches? |
6107 | Why, then, did Jesus hide himself after he came out of the grave? |
6107 | Why, then, does not Paul speak of them at all? |
6107 | Will he not speak to his worshippers?" |
6107 | Will the clergyman tell us which parts of the bible are_ not_ invented? |
6107 | Will you mention the names of some of the witnesses who saw Jesus come forth from the tomb? |
6107 | Would it not have been fairer not to have given his friends any occasion for false expectations? |
6107 | Would not his adjectives be equally appropriate in describing any other teacher he admires? |
6107 | Would the date on a letter prove that an angel appeared to Mary and hailed her as the future Mother of God? |
6107 | Yet where are there grander men, or finer women? |
6107 | You saw him, then, as the apostles did,_ after_ he had risen? |
6107 | You say he was tried and crucified in Jerusalem before your own eyes, can you remember the date of this great event? |
6107 | [ Illustration: Isis Nursing Her Divine Child, 3000 B. C.] Of course, it is immaterial on which day Jesus was born, but why is it not known? |
6107 | _ Jesus_.--"Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me?" |
6107 | _ Pilate_--"Art thou a King?" |
6107 | _ The Priests_--"Art thou the Christ-- tell us?" |
6107 | _ The Priests_.--"Art thou the Son of God?" |
6107 | shall I be guilty of defrauding the vengeance of God of its victims?" |
8388 | ( Is it night? |
8388 | ( said the boy''s soul,) Is it indeed toward your mate you sing? |
8388 | 2. Who is he that would become my follower? |
8388 | A man is a summons and challenge;( It is vain to skulk-- Do you hear that mocking and laughter? |
8388 | A young man came to me bearing a message from his brother; How should the young man know the whether and when of his brother? |
8388 | Accouchez!_ Will you rot your own fruit in yourself there? |
8388 | All architecture is what you do to it when you look upon it; Did you think it was in the white or grey stone? |
8388 | All hold spiritual joys, and afterwards loosen them: How can the real body ever die, and be buried? |
8388 | All waits for the right voices; Where is the practised and perfect organ? |
8388 | And I have dreamed that the satisfaction is not so much changed, and that there is no life without satisfaction; What is the earth? |
8388 | And how shall I deck my song for the large sweet soul that has gone? |
8388 | And what does it say to me all the while? |
8388 | And what shall my perfume be for the grave of him I love? |
8388 | And what shall the pictures be that I hang on the walls, To adorn the burial- house of him I love? |
8388 | And who but I should be the poet of comrades? |
8388 | And who but I should be the poet of comrades? |
8388 | Are all nations communing? |
8388 | Are its disposals without ignominious distinctions? |
8388 | Are there some of us to droop and die? |
8388 | Are they not continually putting distempered corpses in you? |
8388 | Are those billions of men really gone? |
8388 | Are those really Congressmen? |
8388 | Are those the great Judges? |
8388 | Are those women of the old experience of the earth gone? |
8388 | Are we here alone?) |
8388 | Are you retreating? |
8388 | Are you so earnest-- so given up to literature, science, art, amours? |
8388 | But there is one thing that belongs here-- shall I tell you what it is, gentlemen of Boston? |
8388 | Ca n''t you stand it? |
8388 | Can each see signs of the best by a look in the looking- glass? |
8388 | Come, my tan- faced children, Follow well in order, get your weapons ready; Have you your pistols? |
8388 | Could I wish humanity different? |
8388 | Could I wish the people made of wood and stone? |
8388 | Dark Mother, always gliding near, with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
8388 | Daughter of the lands, did you wait for your poet? |
8388 | Did they achieve nothing for good, for themselves? |
8388 | Did we think victory great? |
8388 | Did you guess any of them lived only its moment? |
8388 | Did you suppose there could be only one Supreme? |
8388 | Did you wait for one with a flowing mouth and indicative hand? |
8388 | Do the corpulent sleepers sleep? |
8388 | Do the feasters gluttonous feast? |
8388 | Do their lives, cities, arts, rest only with us? |
8388 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied, over there beyond the seas? |
8388 | Do you enjoy yourself in the city? |
8388 | Do you hear the ironical echoes?) |
8388 | Do you know that Old Age may come after you, with equal grace, force, fascination? |
8388 | Do you mistake your crutches for firelocks, and level them? |
8388 | Do you suspect death? |
8388 | Do you think the great city endures? |
8388 | Does all sit there with you, with the mystic, unseen soul? |
8388 | Does he feel and make me feel? |
8388 | Does it improve manners? |
8388 | Does it live through them? |
8388 | Does it solve readily with the sweet milk of the breasts of the mother of many children? |
8388 | Does it still hold on untired? |
8388 | Does the ague convulse your limbs? |
8388 | Does the young man think often of him? |
8388 | Does this acknowledge liberty with audible and absolute acknowledgment, and set slavery at nought, for life and death? |
8388 | Does this answer? |
8388 | Father, what is that in the sky beckoning to me with long finger? |
8388 | Great is the Earth, and the way it became what it is: Do you imagine it has stopped at this? |
8388 | Great is the English brood-- what brood has so vast a destiny as the English? |
8388 | Great is the English speech-- what speech is so great as the English? |
8388 | Has any one fancied he could sit at last under some due authority, and rest satisfied with explanations, and realise and be content and full? |
8388 | Has it too the old, ever- fresh forbearance and impartiality? |
8388 | Has the night descended? |
8388 | Have I forgotten any part? |
8388 | Have I not told how the universe has nothing better than the best womanhood? |
8388 | Have the elder races halted? |
8388 | Have the marches of tens and hundreds and thousands of years made willing detours to the right hand and the left hand for his sake? |
8388 | Have you dreaded these earth- beetles? |
8388 | Have you feared the future would be nothing to you? |
8388 | Have you guessed you yourself would not continue? |
8388 | Have you pleasure from looking at the sky? |
8388 | Have you reckoned the landscape took substance and form that it might be painted in a picture? |
8388 | Have you reckoned them for a trade, or farm- work? |
8388 | He says indifferently and alike,"_ How are you, friend_?" |
8388 | How can I but, as here, chanting, invite you for yourself to collect bouquets of the incomparable feuillage of these States? |
8388 | How can you be alive, you growths of spring? |
8388 | How can you furnish health, you blood of herbs, roots, orchards, grain? |
8388 | I utter and utter: I speak not; yet, if you hear me not, of what avail am I to you? |
8388 | If I were to suspect death, I should die now: Do you think I could walk pleasantly and well- suited toward annihilation? |
8388 | If they had not reference to you in especial, what were they then? |
8388 | In the name of these States, shall I scorn the antique? |
8388 | Is he American? |
8388 | Is he beloved long and long after he is buried? |
8388 | Is he new? |
8388 | Is he rousing? |
8388 | Is it for the ever- growing communes of brothers and lovers, large, well united, proud beyond the old models, generous beyond all models? |
8388 | Is it for the nursing of the young of the republic? |
8388 | Is it not, on the contrary, true, if not absolutely, yet with a most genuine and substantial approximation? |
8388 | Is it something grown fresh out of the fields, or drawn from the sea, for use to me, to- day, here? |
8388 | Is it through you? |
8388 | Is it uniform with my country? |
8388 | Is it wonderful that I should be immortal? |
8388 | Is it you that thought the President greater than you? |
8388 | Is it you then that thought yourself less? |
8388 | Is not every continent worked over and over with sour dead? |
8388 | Is reform needed? |
8388 | Is that it from your liquid rims and wet sands? |
8388 | Is that the President? |
8388 | Is the beginningless past nothing? |
8388 | Is the house shut? |
8388 | Is the master away? |
8388 | Is there a single final farewell? |
8388 | Is this hour with the living too dead for you? |
8388 | Is to- day nothing? |
8388 | Let the questions rather be-- Is he powerful? |
8388 | Men and women crowding fast in the streets-- if they are not flashes and specks, what are they? |
8388 | Must I leave thee there in the door- yard, blooming, returning with spring? |
8388 | Must I leave thee, lilac with heart- shaped leaves? |
8388 | Must not Nature be persuaded many times? |
8388 | Must we barely arrive at this beginning of me?... |
8388 | No sleepers must sleep in those beds; No bargainers''bargains by day-- no brokers or speculators-- Would they continue? |
8388 | O how can the ground not sicken? |
8388 | O how shall I warble myself for the dead one there I loved? |
8388 | O what is it in me that makes me tremble so at voices? |
8388 | O what is my destination? |
8388 | O what shall I hang on the chamber walls? |
8388 | Old age, alarmed, uncertain-- A young woman''s voice, appealing to me for comfort; A young man''s voice,"_ Shall I not escape_?" |
8388 | Old institutions-- these arts, libraries, legends, collections, and the practice handed along in manufactures-- will we rate them so high? |
8388 | Or a teeming manufacturing state? |
8388 | Or by an agreement on a paper? |
8388 | Or hotels of granite and iron? |
8388 | Or men and women that they might be written of, and songs sung? |
8388 | Or that the growth of seeds is for agricultural tables, or agriculture itself? |
8388 | Or that there be no justice in destiny or time? |
8388 | Or the attraction of gravity, and the great laws and harmonious combinations, and the fluids of the air, as subjects for the savans? |
8388 | Or the brown land and the blue sea for maps and charts? |
8388 | Or the rich better off than you? |
8388 | Or the splendour of the night that envelops me? |
8388 | Or the stars to be put in constellations and named fancy names? |
8388 | Or to achieve yourself a position? |
8388 | Or with your mother and sisters? |
8388 | Over the traffic of cities-- over the rumble of wheels in the streets: Are beds prepared, for sleepers at night in the houses? |
8388 | Pale, silent, stern, what could I say to that long- accrued retribution? |
8388 | Smell you the buckwheat, where the bees were lately buzzing? |
8388 | The battle- ship, perfect- modelled, majestic, that I saw pass the offing to- day under full sail? |
8388 | The splendours of the past day? |
8388 | Then my realities; What else is so real as mine? |
8388 | Then to the second I step-- And who are you, my child and darling? |
8388 | These ostensible realities, politics, points? |
8388 | Think of manhood, and you to be a man; Do you count manhood, and the sweet of manhood, nothing? |
8388 | Think of womanhood, and you to be a woman; The creation is womanhood; Have I not said that womanhood involves all? |
8388 | This is unfinished business with me-- How is it with you? |
8388 | Those drunkards and gluttons of so many generations; Where have you drawn off all the foul liquid and meat? |
8388 | To bear-- to better; lacking these, of what avail am I? |
8388 | To think there will still be farms, profits, crops-- yet for you, of what avail? |
8388 | Was somebody asking to see the Soul? |
8388 | Was that your best? |
8388 | Was the road of late so toilsome? |
8388 | Was the wind piping the pipe of death under the black clouds? |
8388 | We understand, then, do we not? |
8388 | Were I as the head teacher, charitable proprietor, wise statesman, what would it amount to? |
8388 | Were I to you as the boss employing and paying you, would that satisfy you? |
8388 | Were all educations, practical and ornamental, well displayed out of me, what would it amount to? |
8388 | Were the centuries steadily footing it that way, all the while unknown, for you, for reasons? |
8388 | Were the children straying westward so long? |
8388 | Were the idea untrue, it would still be a glorious dream, which a man of genius might be content to live in and die for: but is it untrue? |
8388 | Were the precedent dim ages debouching westward from Paradise so long? |
8388 | Were those your vast and solid? |
8388 | Were you looking to be held together by the lawyers? |
8388 | Were you thinking that those were the words-- those delicious sounds out of your friends''mouths? |
8388 | Were you thinking that those were the words-- those upright lines? |
8388 | What I promised without mentioning it have you not accepted? |
8388 | What are the mountains called that rise so high in the mists? |
8388 | What are you doing, young man? |
8388 | What are your theology, tuition, society, traditions, statute- books, now? |
8388 | What can it do now? |
8388 | What climes? |
8388 | What do you hear, Walt Whitman? |
8388 | What do you need, Camerado? |
8388 | What do you see, Walt Whitman? |
8388 | What do you seek, so pensive and silent? |
8388 | What do you think endures? |
8388 | What is all this chattering of bare gums? |
8388 | What is it, then, between us? |
8388 | What is marvellous? |
8388 | What is that dusky spot in your brown yellow? |
8388 | What is that little black thing I see there in the white? |
8388 | What is the count of the scores or hundreds of years between us? |
8388 | What is there more, that I lag and pause, and crouch extended with unshut mouth? |
8388 | What is your money- making now? |
8388 | What is your respectability now? |
8388 | What myriads of dwellings are they, filled with dwellers? |
8388 | What rivers are these? |
8388 | What shall I give? |
8388 | What shapeless lump is that, bent, crouched there on the sand? |
8388 | What stays with you latest and deepest? |
8388 | What the push of reading could not start, is started by me personally, is it not? |
8388 | What the study could not teach-- what the preaching could not accomplish, is accomplished, is it not? |
8388 | What troubles you, Yankee phantoms? |
8388 | What waves and soils exuding? |
8388 | What widens within you, Walt Whitman? |
8388 | What, to passions I witness around me to- day, was the sea risen? |
8388 | What, to pavements and homesteads here-- what were those storms of the mountains and sea? |
8388 | Where are your cavils about the Soul now? |
8388 | Where are your jibes of being now? |
8388 | Where have you disposed of their carcasses? |
8388 | Where is the developed Soul? |
8388 | Who are the girls? |
8388 | Who are the infants? |
8388 | Who are the three old men going slowly with their arms about each others''necks? |
8388 | Who are they you salute, and that one after another salute you? |
8388 | Who are they, as bats and night- dogs, askant in the Capitol? |
8388 | Who are you, my dear comrade? |
8388 | Who are you, sweet boy, with cheeks yet blooming? |
8388 | Who knows but I am as good as looking at you now, for all you can not see me? |
8388 | Who knows but I am enjoying this? |
8388 | Who knows the curious mystery of the eyesight? |
8388 | Who was to know what should come home to me? |
8388 | Who would sign himself a candidate for my affections? |
8388 | Whom have you slaughtered lately, European headsman? |
8388 | Whose is that blood upon you, so wet and sticky? |
8388 | Why myself and all drowsing? |
8388 | Why, what have you thought of yourself? |
8388 | Will it help breed one good- shaped man, and a woman to be his perfect and independent mate? |
8388 | Will the same style, and the direction of genius to similar points, be satisfactory now? |
8388 | Will the whole come back then? |
8388 | Will you seek afar off? |
8388 | Will you squat and stifle there? |
8388 | With passions of demons, slaughter, premature death? |
8388 | Would the lawyer rise in the court to state his case before the judge? |
8388 | Would the talkers be talking? |
8388 | Your ambition or business, whatever it may be? |
8388 | [ 1] Why reclining, interrogating? |
8388 | _ AUXILIARIES._ WHAT place is besieged, and vainly tries to raise the siege? |
8388 | _ PARTING FRIENDS._ What think you I take my pen in hand to record? |
8388 | _ SINGING IN SPRING._ These I, singing in spring, collect for lovers: For who but I should understand lovers, and all their sorrow and joy? |
8388 | _ WHEREFORE?_ O me! |
8388 | _ WONDERS._ 1. Who learns my lesson complete? |
8388 | and do the middle- aged and the old think of him? |
8388 | and the young woman think often of him? |
8388 | and which are my miracles? |
8388 | are the acts suitable to them closed? |
8388 | did we stop discouraged, nodding on our way? |
8388 | do I not see my love fluttering out there among the breakers? |
8388 | do you not see how it would serve to have eyes, blood, complexion, clean and sweet? |
8388 | do you think it is love? |
8388 | has the hour come? |
8388 | have they locked and bolted doors? |
8388 | have you pleasure from poems? |
8388 | have you your sharp- edged axes? |
8388 | how can I but offer you divine leaves, that you also be eligible as I am? |
8388 | is it too only halting a while, Till night and sleep pass over?) |
8388 | is there going to be but one heart to the globe? |
8388 | is there nothing greater or more? |
8388 | must all then amount to but this? |
8388 | of curious panics, Of hard- fought engagements, or sieges tremendous, what deepest remains?" |
8388 | or a prepared constitution? |
8388 | or any_ chefs- d''oeuvre_ of engineering, forts, armaments? |
8388 | or by arms? |
8388 | or engaged in business? |
8388 | or for the profits of a store? |
8388 | or in womanly housework? |
8388 | or is it mostly to me? |
8388 | or is it without reference to universal needs? |
8388 | or old needs of pleasure overlaid by modern science and forms? |
8388 | or planning a nomination and election? |
8388 | or sprung of the needs of the less developed society of special ranks? |
8388 | or the beautiful maternal cares? |
8388 | or the best- built steamships? |
8388 | or the educated wiser than you? |
8388 | or the lines of the arches and cornices? |
8388 | or to fill a gentleman''s leisure, or a lady''s leisure? |
8388 | or with your wife and family? |
8388 | so sad, recurring-- What good amid these, O me, O life? |
8388 | so wide the tramping? |
8388 | some playing, some slumbering? |
8388 | the increase abandoned? |
8388 | those curves, angles, dots? |
8388 | what are Body and Soul without satisfaction? |
8388 | what are you? |
8388 | what forests and fruits are these? |
8388 | what is impossible or baseless or vague? |
8388 | what is unlikely? |
8388 | what persons and lands are here? |
8388 | what were God? |
8388 | who are the married women? |
8388 | who makes much of a miracle? |
8388 | would not people laugh at me? |
8388 | would the singer attempt to sing? |
45760 | ''Tis fair, ah!--- but keepest thou Not me depriven Of some one-- somewhere-- who needeth most me? 45760 Freedom is better than love?" |
45760 | Glad it is ended,are you? |
45760 | Immortal? |
45760 | No young in the nest, no mate, no duty? |
45760 | The mother of him at the window looks out thro''the lattice to listen-- Why roll not the wheels of his chariot? 45760 _ But, all unasked, we''re hither hurried Whence? |
45760 | _ Then, strange, is''t not? 45760 ''Tis of the Saracens? 45760 ''Tis you? 45760 ''Twas not his trumpet? 45760 ( DAVID_ shrinks._) You desperately breathe and pale at last? 45760 ( JUDITH_ glides in._)(_ To her._) Why are you here? 45760 ( VITTIA_ advances inquiringly._) What is beyond this shame upon Yolanda? 45760 ( VITTIA_ enters unnoted._) Of whom?--Of whom, and what? 45760 ( VITTIA_ laughs and goes._) But you, mother, are come at last to say Your promises, broken two days, are kept? 45760 (_ A pause._) Does she not see lightnings now in Amaury, Plunging for truth? 45760 (_ A pause._)_ Amaury._ How? 45760 (_ All have gone._) Shall I not play to him? 45760 (_ Bends to it._)_ Abiathar._ And-- why? 45760 (_ Conceals her face in her hair._)_ David._ Who crieth here? 45760 (_ Dips dagger in._)_ Doeg._ You''ll stab him? 45760 (_ Entering with people of the palace._) Aye, is there none Galled of the sting, Will at the soul of Goliath run? 45760 (_ Flings down the sword in anguish._)_ Abiathar._ You will not come? 45760 (_ Follows_ SMARDA''S_ eye._) Of lord Amaury? 45760 (_ He searches her eyes._) Or than-- I may believe?--a miracle Of dew, were you a traveller upon The illimitable desert''s thirst? 45760 (_ He stares at her ardour._) Did no one say?... 45760 (_ He throws off the cloak._)_ Doeg._ Lured? 45760 (_ He turns away laughing._)_ Saul._ Why do you laugh? 45760 (_ His dagger out_) the murderer Of priestly sanctity and of my father? 45760 (_ Is held by_ MICHAL_ entering._) Woman, who are you, who? 45760 (_ Lifting her face, with surprise._) But how now? 45760 (_ Looks from one to the other._)_ Yolanda._ He comes here, mother? 45760 (_ Murmurs of astonishment._)_ Saul._ What mean you? 45760 (_ Overcome_) Pure as the rills of Paradise, endured? 45760 (_ Overjoyed._) Do you hear? 45760 (_ Puts them aside, takes sword, and goes to_ SAUL''S_ cave._)_ Abishai._ What will he do?... 45760 (_ Rage takes him._) In lying rags? 45760 (_ Reels._)_ Jonathan._ David, unhurt? 45760 (_ Saul''s hand drops._) Is this thy love, the love of Saul the king, Who once was kindlier than kindest are? 45760 (_ Sees_ SMARDA_ snarl._) Is it not so? 45760 (_ She goes to the porch._)_ Leah._ What shall we do? 45760 (_ She rends the parchment._)_ Mauria._ What are you doing? 45760 (_ She stands unaccountably moved._) Now are you Baal- bit? 45760 (_ Shrinking._) David? 45760 (_ Stepping out._) My lady? 45760 (_ Steps forth._) Futile and death? 45760 (_ Takes the papers._) Not these alone have brought you thus; then what? 45760 (_ The commotion sounds again._) For there is murmur misty of distress, What is it? 45760 (_ The wind passes._ ADAH_ enters from a chamber, rubbing her eyes._) Thou art awake? 45760 (_ The women leave._) Camarin-- you saw? 45760 (_ They face, opposed._) What have you told him? 45760 (_ They pose._ ISHUI_ entering sees them._ JUDITH_ sighs._)_ Ishui._ Now, timbrel- gaud, why gape you here? 45760 (_ They stop in mock awe before him._) What does he think of? 45760 (_ To a soldier re- entering from one cave._) Where is he? 45760 (_ Turns, and stares amazed._) A fool I am...._ Renier._ Where is my wife? 45760 (_ Watching, then springing to meet them as they reel in._) Abishai, what is it that you bring? 45760 ... Shall we ever forget Even Above this glory? 45760 3 But where now art thou? 45760 A bugle? 45760 A dog out of Canaan!--thought he I was woman alone? 45760 A help for it or healing? 45760 A jackal? 45760 A king who murders priests..._ Michal._ Priests? 45760 A leper? 45760 A prophetess to- day Hath told me that he is a----(_ Realises._)_ Saul._ Now you cease? 45760 A singer music- maudled and no more?... 45760 A spy of Saul and hypocrite have crept Hither to learn...? 45760 A wail of wind._)_ Adriel._ Ishui, true? 45760 A woman who betrays? 45760 ADRIEL_ enters, and_ DOEG,_ who pauses in quick alarm, as_ DAVID_ goes between him and the gate._)_ Doeg._ What place is this? 45760 ASHORE What are the heaths and hills to me? 45760 Abiathar?... 45760 After how many lives returning Shall I hither come? 45760 Ah me, do women weep when men have died? 45760 Ah, then, if one arise? 45760 Ah, you remember; you will hear me? 45760 Alien? 45760 All press around him gaily._)_ Mauria._ Well what, Olympio, from Famagouste? 45760 Am I king? 45760 Am I not David, faithful, and thy friend? 45760 Am I not king, the king? 45760 Amaury?--It is? 45760 And brave me to my breast? 45760 And do you still forbid that I bear gold And bribe away this Philistine array Folded about us, fettering with flame? 45760 And from his finger strive to draw The ring that bound him to her spell?-- But on her closed his hand-- she saw... Oh, who can tell? 45760 And he comes here? 45760 And is not David''s Thought but of Michal, not of smiting him And, with a host, of leaping to the kingdom? 45760 And now will kill me, too? 45760 And offer me irrevocable aid To win Amaury? 45760 And they who love may stray, it seems, beyond All justice of our judging.-- Is evil mad enchantment come upon The portals of this castle? 45760 And this is the blind witch, Miriam? 45760 And this your heart is? 45760 And to this wanton''s perfidy to bind Him witless to her-- with a charm perhaps-- Or, past releasing, with a philtre? 45760 And truth? 45760 And we might be As those that wedded love? 45760 And what the requital that entices her? 45760 And what will the last sight be of life As lone we fare and fast? 45760 And where did the lark ever learn his speech? 45760 And will He pluck us ecstasies out of his harp, Winning until we''re wanton for him, mad, And sigh and laugh and weep to the moon? 45760 And yet you do not seem----_ Alessa._ My lady--? 45760 And you have? 45760 And, all unasked, we''re Whither hurried hence? 45760 Answer; I am not milky Jonathan, Answer; and for the rest-- You hear? 45760 Are Samuel-- the priests, not slain? 45760 Are there No stones to stone you? 45760 Are you flesh of me? 45760 As the forest-- What does the forest love, Amaury? 45760 But can the soul not break the crumbling Crust In which he is encaged? 45760 But first I''d know if yet Lord Renier----(_ Sees their disquiet-- starts._) Why are you pale? 45760 But he has heard no word from me?--not how My father, Saul, frantic of my repentance, Had unto Phalti, a new lord, betrothed me? 45760 But how; was any here? 45760 But of the king-- the king----? 45760 But one said,Why weepest thou Here in God''s heaven-- Is it not fairer than soul can see?" |
45760 | But staggering and wounded? |
45760 | But under the terror of his might have I Not seen his heart beat justice and beat love? |
45760 | But what is this? |
45760 | But why do you stand stone? |
45760 | But you have finished? |
45760 | But you will heed? |
45760 | But, lady, it is a lie? |
45760 | But... what has befallen? |
45760 | Can he not smile too on his handiwork? |
45760 | Can you forgive him? |
45760 | Can you not hear? |
45760 | Come to you with the king? |
45760 | Come you a friend? |
45760 | Cruelty like to this you could not do? |
45760 | Dead, she is dead? |
45760 | Dear mother----? |
45760 | Deem I can not overleap this destiny? |
45760 | Dethrone my mother? |
45760 | Did I curse God and rave When they came shrinkingly to tell me''twas A witless child? |
45760 | Did she not say? |
45760 | Do you come with vexing too? |
45760 | Do you hear me? |
45760 | Do you not understand? |
45760 | Do you understand this wedding? |
45760 | Does she not love-- Camarin? |
45760 | Does the truth So limpid overflow in palaces? |
45760 | Edomite? |
45760 | Ever then Vexation? |
45760 | Ever this worshipping of utterance? |
45760 | FAUN- CALL Oh, who is he will follow me With a singing, Down sunny roads where windy odes Of the woods are ringing? |
45760 | For but a woman''s wantonness of word And idle air, my life? |
45760 | For, was it little? |
45760 | Goliath''s dead----_ David._ But not all villainy? |
45760 | Grief and the face we love in mist-- Then night and awe too vast? |
45760 | Had I a mother out of Israel? |
45760 | Has all of life No glow for me? |
45760 | Have I thrown doom not daring to your feet, Ruler of Israel, that you rise wild, Livid above me as an avalanche? |
45760 | Have slain? |
45760 | Have you Not much desired discovery of whom Samuel hath anointed? |
45760 | Have you not heard? |
45760 | He With Samuel the prophet fast enshrouds Some secret, and has Samuel not told The kingdom from my father shall be rent And fall unto one another? |
45760 | He came after your words... yes... could not see Here in the dimness... but has only heard Sir Camarin? |
45760 | He is not come? |
45760 | He leaps up the cliff._) Abishai? |
45760 | He pauses, his hand to his brow, enspelled of the playing; then slowly goes up the daïs._)_ Ahinoam._ My lord, shall David sing-- to ease us? |
45760 | He turns to her._) Mother? |
45760 | He? |
45760 | Hear me..._ Saul._ Can not? |
45760 | Heeling away from him? |
45760 | His speed upon the road? |
45760 | How shall your baby now be fed, Ukibo fed, with rice and bread-- What if I hush his prattle?" |
45760 | How then I fled to win unto these wilds? |
45760 | I am snared? |
45760 | I can not cry in the jungle''s deep-- Is it not time for Nirvana''s sleep? |
45760 | I can not look upon Him So strangely burn His eyes-- Hath not some grieving drawn Him From Paradise? |
45760 | I cannot-- am not-- whither shall I, whither...? |
45760 | I do not dream? |
45760 | I who am wounded with her every wound?... |
45760 | I wonder why he has heard my call, My giftless call-- and what shall befall?... |
45760 | I----_ David._ Michal? |
45760 | I... do you not see? |
45760 | If I believe it will not miracle Alone bring joy again unto my pain? |
45760 | If one arise? |
45760 | In the garden? |
45760 | In what? |
45760 | Is He not here? |
45760 | Is Michal to be slain? |
45760 | Is heaven a mocking shield that ever keeps God from our prayers? |
45760 | Is it balm? |
45760 | Is it not so? |
45760 | Is it so? |
45760 | Is more than the rapture of earth can teach In its creed? |
45760 | Ishui, in a rage? |
45760 | It is not clear? |
45760 | It is not false? |
45760 | Lady Yolanda? |
45760 | Lady--? |
45760 | Let me but think.--He came----_ Berengere._ You see? |
45760 | Listening through dim trees Some thrilled muezzin of the forest cry From his leafy minaret? |
45760 | Love is above-- Or Hate, what matter? |
45760 | Mean? |
45760 | Merab now Plotteth against her-- she and Doeg? |
45760 | Merab,''tis you? |
45760 | Michal!--for me you have done this, for me? |
45760 | Must we not cross the Sky Unto Eternity upon his wings-- Or, failing, fall into the Gulf and die?" |
45760 | My lord?... |
45760 | My rage was undammable.... Could a stilletto''s one prick be prettier? |
45760 | My wife? |
45760 | Never an enemy to venom it? |
45760 | No word? |
45760 | No... not for that Her hope was? |
45760 | None for the king, the king? |
45760 | None of the Saracens? |
45760 | Now wilt thou tell The plan and passion of the people''gainst us? |
45760 | Now, Again-- you''ve hither fled your mistress Merab, In fear of her? |
45760 | Now, is he not? |
45760 | Now, what have you? |
45760 | O, is he come? |
45760 | OUTCAST I did not fear, But crept close up to Christ and said,"Is He not here?" |
45760 | Of the squadron huddling yesterday for haven At Keryneia? |
45760 | Or could my gaze more tenderly entwine Each pallid beech or silvery sycamore, Outreaching arms in patience to divine If winter''s o''er? |
45760 | Or than--(_ He draws his own dagger, pricks his wrist, and hands it her._) Than this? |
45760 | Palely she took it-- did it give Ease there against her breast? |
45760 | Pled him to silence which alone can save us? |
45760 | Poor leper in these wilds, who art thou? |
45760 | Rather the convent and the crucifix, Matin and Vesper in a round remote, And senseless beads, for such.--But what more now Is she demanding? |
45760 | Reed as I am, could he not breathe and break? |
45760 | Shall I not learn if she lives? |
45760 | Shall he not return with the booty of battle, and glisten In songs of his triumph-- ye women, why do ye not say?" |
45760 | Shame has till now Withheld her, but... what ails you? |
45760 | Shattering love for ever at my feet? |
45760 | She Whom now he holds pure as a spirit sped From immortality, or the fair fields Of the sun, to be his bride? |
45760 | She knows what I would bid and does she hurl Her soul in any disavowal? |
45760 | She sees_ DAVID_ rise and wander into cave, right._)_ Michal._ This is the place, then, this? |
45760 | She walks slowly, but becoming conscious starts, sees_ VITTIA,_ and turns to withdraw._)_ Vittia._ Your pardon--_ Yolanda._ I can serve you? |
45760 | She''s not asleep as you averred to me, Was not asleep, but comes?... |
45760 | Slay, my lord? |
45760 | Slow sullen speech come to my soldier lips, Rough with command, and impotent of softness? |
45760 | So? |
45760 | Some fall to their knees._)_ Vittia._ What? |
45760 | Some love- fear for ever shades All with sere shadows-- Had I no child_ there_--whom I forget?" |
45760 | Speak they not vision, song, frenzy to dare, That still in me yearn?... |
45760 | Speak, what is it? |
45760 | Spend all upon the Wine the while I know A possible To- morrow may bring thirst For Drink but Credit then shall cause to flow?" |
45760 | Still, still you shrink? |
45760 | Sunk? |
45760 | TEARLESS Do women weep when men have died? |
45760 | Tell you that You are her murderer? |
45760 | Terrible fury stealing from the heart And crouching cold within the eye, O Saul? |
45760 | That day, can it fade?... |
45760 | That he would slay me though I fought For Israel!--But, Michal!--_ Miriam._ Aie----_ David._ What brews? |
45760 | The Bird of Time has but a little way To flutter-- and the Bird is on the Wing._""The Bird of Time?" |
45760 | The Master of the Well has much to spare: Will He say,''Taste''--then shall we no more be?" |
45760 | The Nightingale that on the branches sang-- Ah, whence, and whither flown again, who knows?_""So does it seem-- no other joys like these! |
45760 | The Spring and its nuptial fear? |
45760 | The evil that has risen in this house? |
45760 | The gods, shall they be disquieted By dread of a mortal''s lot? |
45760 | The king Again is kind and soft his spirit moves? |
45760 | The kingdom is not in decay, and falls? |
45760 | The lotus leans her head on the stream-- Shall I not lean to thy breast and dream, Dream ere the night- cool dies? |
45760 | The priest with bloody ephod, too, and wild? |
45760 | The reason of this mood in her? |
45760 | The reason? |
45760 | Then of my veins whatever drop you will But, no...(_ Pauses._) You do not mock me? |
45760 | Then see you now how"lovable"he is? |
45760 | Then what? |
45760 | There is escape? |
45760 | They drain it fiercely._) What is it now so fevered from you stares, And breathing, too, abhorrence? |
45760 | They have forgotten life, Forgotten sunless death; Desire is gone-- is it not gone for ever? |
45760 | They heard us, Maga? |
45760 | They say that you----_ David._ They say? |
45760 | They start up fearful._)_ Miriam._ Who seeks blind Miriam of Endor''s roof, Under the night and unextinguished storm? |
45760 | They''ve told him? |
45760 | This is the beast then of the labyrinth? |
45760 | This sounding giant flings again his foam? |
45760 | This timbrel- player, Judith? |
45760 | Thy servant, is he? |
45760 | To hope or to Despair he will-- which is more wise or just?" |
45760 | To- morrow, if Goliath still exult, There''s peril of desolation, bloody ruin? |
45760 | Too pitiless have pressed You to this coat of steel? |
45760 | Treachery? |
45760 | Under a sham of tribute poison? |
45760 | Under the eyes does a marvel not burn? |
45760 | Under the livid day and lonelier night? |
45760 | Wait? |
45760 | Watching with love''s eye The eve- star wander? |
45760 | We d me with destiny against my father? |
45760 | Well? |
45760 | What Kingdom is to a woman as her love? |
45760 | What are they all? |
45760 | What do they purpose? |
45760 | What do you--? |
45760 | What does she say? |
45760 | What fear-- if it is fear-- has so unfixed her? |
45760 | What have I done? |
45760 | What have you? |
45760 | What is it tells me mystically That strange one was I?... |
45760 | What is it? |
45760 | What is this ravage in you? |
45760 | What is this? |
45760 | What is''t? |
45760 | What mean you? |
45760 | What of thy lady and Lord Renier? |
45760 | What reason can be? |
45760 | What say you? |
45760 | What signal for to- night? |
45760 | What sound was that?... |
45760 | What thing is this? |
45760 | What tidings? |
45760 | What? |
45760 | What?... |
45760 | When I knew its source? |
45760 | When was a laugh or any leaping here? |
45760 | Where is Yolanda?--Well? |
45760 | Where is she? |
45760 | Where was so wonderful a deed as this, So fair a springing of salvation up? |
45760 | Who cries unclean? |
45760 | Who is he? |
45760 | Who recks for the rest? |
45760 | Who shall the gods be then, the millions, Meek, entreat or praise? |
45760 | Who will go now and bring us word of Saul? |
45760 | Who''d kill the Paphian, too? |
45760 | Who''ve been anathema and have been bane Unto the foes of Israel, and filled The earth with death of them? |
45760 | Who, who, now? |
45760 | Whom lead you? |
45760 | Whose that anguish? |
45760 | Why are you here?... |
45760 | Why do you bar that gate? |
45760 | Why do you gaze, rigid? |
45760 | Why does she lie so cold? |
45760 | Why have You dallied and delayed? |
45760 | Why should we but to follow a mere shepherd Famish-- over a hundred desert hills? |
45760 | Why then should I o''ermuch for earth- sight care? |
45760 | Will it be so of all our thoughts When we set sail on Death? |
45760 | Wring it and up To his false gods fling?... |
45760 | Yet Summer comes, and Autumn''s honoured ease; And wintry Age, is''t ever whisperless Of that Last Spring, whose Verdure may not cease?" |
45760 | Yet it is mine, is mine? |
45760 | Yet lie to sleep, and lo, The soul seems quenched in Darkness-- is it so? |
45760 | Yolanda; what is this? |
45760 | Yolanda? |
45760 | Yolanda? |
45760 | You are here? |
45760 | You are not prophesy''s anointed one? |
45760 | You falter? |
45760 | You have been_ there_? |
45760 | You know Not it is David offers against Goliath? |
45760 | You know obedience? |
45760 | You linger? |
45760 | You sup the confidence of Samuel? |
45760 | You''ve spoken? |
45760 | You? |
45760 | Your desire? |
45760 | Your mistress, Merab, girl, whom does she love? |
45760 | Your reason? |
45760 | _ Abiathar._ Has Saul Hunted you to this desert''s verge? |
45760 | _ Abiathar._ Has he pursued you, all his hate unleashed? |
45760 | _ Abiathar._ He''s mad? |
45760 | _ Abiathar._ Only fetter? |
45760 | _ Abiathar._ Saul''s? |
45760 | _ Abiathar._ Well, what? |
45760 | _ Abishai._ Pierct? |
45760 | _ Abishai._ What stare you on? |
45760 | _ Abner._ My lord----_ Saul._ Not come? |
45760 | _ Abner._ Then-- safe to leave him? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ Betray? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ But has he not dealt honourably? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ David? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ David? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ For me? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ How of the king to- night? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ How? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ I was laughed at? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ Is David with him? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ Of the king? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ Saul----_ David._ Saul----? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ The king? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ What sting from that? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ What was the offence? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ Who, girl? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ Why do you urge it? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ You are certain? |
45760 | _ Adriel._ You were concealed? |
45760 | _ Ahinoam._ And David still enthralls you? |
45760 | _ Ahinoam._ My daughter? |
45760 | _ Ahinoam._ My lord? |
45760 | _ Ahinoam._ Saul? |
45760 | _ Ahinoam._ Which you crave? |
45760 | _ Alessa._ And he would not? |
45760 | _ Alessa._ Boy, Halil, who? |
45760 | _ Alessa._ I? |
45760 | _ Alessa._ Though you boasted love to me? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ And did not wonder? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ And not you? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ Because you love her? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ But''tis not? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ I? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ My father? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ My words, Or silence, then? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ She? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ The spur? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ What? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ Yolanda? |
45760 | _ Amaury._ You? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ His step? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ I can not...._ Yolanda._ But can leave me so laden here within This gulf''s dishonour? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ It is ill news? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ My lord? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ Then,_ her_ design? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ What brings you here-- to spy upon me? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ You love me? |
45760 | _ Berengere._ You? |
45760 | _ Camarin._ Amaury was not then delayed? |
45760 | _ Camarin._ Renier? |
45760 | _ Camarin._ Then how? |
45760 | _ Camarin._ What do you purpose? |
45760 | _ Camarin._ What? |
45760 | _ Civa._ Maga will you prattle? |
45760 | _ David._ A spy? |
45760 | _ David._ Abiathar, is lost? |
45760 | _ David._ Abiathar--? |
45760 | _ David._ And I of vanity should prick it in? |
45760 | _ David._ And Phalti? |
45760 | _ David._ And heard her speak? |
45760 | _ David._ And it was you...? |
45760 | _ David._ And often since Have we not swayed and swept thro''happy hours, Far from the birth unto the bourne of bliss? |
45760 | _ David._ And provoke Murder in him, insatiable though I fled upon the wilderness and famine? |
45760 | _ David._ And you have seen Michal, you have beheld her? |
45760 | _ David._ And you would go? |
45760 | _ David._ Ask? |
45760 | _ David._ But he-- your father? |
45760 | _ David._ But show a tiger gleam? |
45760 | _ David._ Child, why do you quail? |
45760 | _ David._ Do you know More of her? |
45760 | _ David._ For what, and suddenly? |
45760 | _ David._ Girl? |
45760 | _ David._ Have I done wrong that I should fear the king? |
45760 | _ David._ Here? |
45760 | _ David._ Hither coming? |
45760 | _ David._ How, then Wandering came you here? |
45760 | _ David._ Is the word honey? |
45760 | _ David._ Merab''s self? |
45760 | _ David._ Merab? |
45760 | _ David._ Michal? |
45760 | _ David._ My lord, delayed? |
45760 | _ David._ My lord? |
45760 | _ David._ Not dead? |
45760 | _ David._ Now, what fever? |
45760 | _ David._ Now? |
45760 | _ David._ O king, my lord----_ Saul._ Had Saul Ever so rich a rapture from his son? |
45760 | _ David._ Or perfume out of India jewel poured? |
45760 | _ David._ Or-- you yourself?... |
45760 | _ David._ Samuel...? |
45760 | _ David._ Saul? |
45760 | _ David._ She withholds her father''s wrath? |
45760 | _ David._ Slain thy father? |
45760 | _ David._ So bitter are you, blind? |
45760 | _ David._ That is all?... |
45760 | _ David._ Then who Art thou to know and speak of her, of Michal? |
45760 | _ David._ Then----? |
45760 | _ David._ This-- this can be? |
45760 | _ David._ Thus all is vain; A seething on the lips, I''ll say no more.... Care but to reign and not for Israel''s calm? |
45760 | _ David._ To me is this? |
45760 | _ David._ To warn? |
45760 | _ David._ To whom, my lord, and what? |
45760 | _ David._ To you no more? |
45760 | _ David._ Use? |
45760 | _ David._ Were...? |
45760 | _ David._ What is its wail? |
45760 | _ David._ Where have you Michal? |
45760 | _ David._ Who are you? |
45760 | _ David._ Who? |
45760 | _ David._ Woman, the king''s? |
45760 | _ David._ Woman, who are you? |
45760 | _ David._ Woman...? |
45760 | _ David._ Woman? |
45760 | _ David._ You mean... that Saul----? |
45760 | _ David._ You, you-- The awful dead? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ David? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ Do you hear? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ See you, my lord? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ The poison? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ Unclean? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ Unto your Soft sympathy-- and passion? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ What will you do? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ Why me? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ Why, my lord? |
45760 | _ Doeg._ Will he brook denial? |
45760 | _ First Fol._ And should I thirst, not he? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ And chain them, lady? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ Have you not been gone? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ Lady Yolanda--_ Yolanda._ Well? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ No word of him? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ To know of lord Amaury? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ What do you know? |
45760 | _ Hassan._ What do you say? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ A king? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ And you see? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ And you''ve the king''s consent; but she denies? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ David? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Disdaining Doeg and his plea to dust, His waiting and the winning o''er of Edom, You are enamoured of this David too? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Do you not see it crawl, this serpent scheme? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Lovable? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Not? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Now are you kindled-- are you quivering, Or must this shepherd put upon us more? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Should I not be? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ This, then: you''ve hither come with gifts and gold, Dream- bringing amethyst and weft of Ind, To we d my sister, Merab? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ What do you say? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Who likes Laughter against him? |
45760 | _ Ishui._ Whose cry? |
45760 | _ Ishui.__ You?__ Jonathan._ No, David! |
45760 | _ Jonathan._ Ah, she knows? |
45760 | _ Jonathan._ And disdains Believing? |
45760 | _ Jonathan._ Father? |
45760 | _ Judith._ It is no longer fair? |
45760 | _ Judith._ Or till a youth we d Zilla for her beauty? |
45760 | _ Judith._ So cold? |
45760 | _ Judith._ Who, who can tell? |
45760 | _ Lad._ Why Must he not know you? |
45760 | _ Leah._ Why hates he David, Zilla? |
45760 | _ Maga._ The rest are flown? |
45760 | _ Maga._ Where is she? |
45760 | _ Mauria._ So, so, my Cupid? |
45760 | _ Mauria._ To her? |
45760 | _ Mauria._ Who? |
45760 | _ Merab._ And Michal, where? |
45760 | _ Merab._ As any fool? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Goaded, chagrined? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Is it strange That even I now ask it? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Nor have not, ah? |
45760 | _ Merab._ That Michal shall be slain? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Then? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Well, well; then--? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Well? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Well? |
45760 | _ Merab._ What is your mien? |
45760 | _ Merab._ Why did my father pledge her to him? |
45760 | _ Merab._ You refuse me, then? |
45760 | _ Merab._ You scorn-- you scorn me? |
45760 | _ Merab._ You will not? |
45760 | _ Michal._ All, all? |
45760 | _ Michal._ And loving? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Betrayed? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Coiling of plot? |
45760 | _ Michal._ David? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Here So long in want and sickness he hath hid? |
45760 | _ Michal._ My father? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Poison? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Then you will learn.... Who''s that? |
45760 | _ Michal._ What anger''s this? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Wronged him? |
45760 | _ Michal._ Yet If deep she should repent?--if deep she should? |
45760 | _ Michal._ You are the anointed? |
45760 | _ Michel._ And shall I, shall I? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ And-- you hear?---- Many within the army urge for David, Would cry him king, if Saul were slain? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ At Engeddi Michal By Saul was apprehended? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ To danger? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ To thieves? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ What is this? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ Who crieth at my gate? |
45760 | _ Miriam._ Whom seek you? |
45760 | _ Moro._ Hints? |
45760 | _ Moro._ I-- am a priest-- and shame----_ Renier._ You have suspicion? |
45760 | _ Moro._ Sir, sir?--of what? |
45760 | _ Moro._''Tis of your wife?--Yolanda? |
45760 | _ Olympio._ Who has told you? |
45760 | _ Pietro._ Slave? |
45760 | _ Renier._ And wherefore did? |
45760 | _ Renier._ As now a fool is doing? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Delayed? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Girl, what rends you? |
45760 | _ Renier._ I say-- only delayed? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Not of it? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Not the means Still to deceive Amaury? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Of rule?... |
45760 | _ Renier._ Of what women, then? |
45760 | _ Renier._ So that you may Allure him yet to we d you? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Stand off!--As dogs forget The lash in hunger of the wonted bone? |
45760 | _ Renier._ This can be? |
45760 | _ Renier._ What, what? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Where is my wife? |
45760 | _ Renier._ Why do you clutch me? |
45760 | _ Renier._ With Camarin of Paphos? |
45760 | _ Renier._ With him, with him, I say?... |
45760 | _ Renier._ Yes, yes? |
45760 | _ Samuel._ Doeg, chief servant of the king? |
45760 | _ Samuel._ You, Abner, will not? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Are forty days not dead? |
45760 | _ Saul._ But think you, David, I shall lose the kingdom? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Child, well, what then? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Do you not fear? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Girl? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Have heard!--Why do you pale? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Is it not praise enough, has he not reached The skies on it? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Pain in your eyes? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Pains beyond...? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Perhaps; then, well? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Say you? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Swear? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Then-- you have heard...? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Tighten the torture more.... Now will you? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Use? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Well? |
45760 | _ Saul._ Well? |
45760 | _ Saul._ What mean you? |
45760 | _ Saul._ What mean you? |
45760 | _ Saul._ You swear? |
45760 | _ Saul.__ You?__ David._ Sudden you hound about me ravenous? |
45760 | _ Saul.__ You?__ David._ Sudden you hound about me ravenous? |
45760 | _ Second Fol._ Or betray him? |
45760 | _ Smarda._ And how? |
45760 | _ Smarda._ As you came? |
45760 | _ Smarda._ Lady? |
45760 | _ Smarda._ To you, lady? |
45760 | _ Smarda.__ She!__ Vittia._ Who? |
45760 | _ Third Fol._ And fawning too? |
45760 | _ Third Fol._ Have not Abishai, Abiathar, And others gone? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Again unshameful? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ And this baron Of Paphos-- Camarin-- is but her_ friend_, And deeply yours-- as oft you feign to shield her? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ And to his bed is true? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ And wholly? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ And-- then go pray? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Blindly, and peril all? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ By the freedom due us, What matters it? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Hah? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Hindered? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ I, a dear guest? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Ignorantly? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Knowing A Paphian ere this has fondled two? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ More, my lord? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ My lord----? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ None? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Nor me? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Now you refuse? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Or-- hope to be? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Still, before Evening is done, you will become his wife? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Tell?... |
45760 | _ Vittia._ That, ere a dawn, Guileless Yolanda, you shall we d with him Your paramour of Paphos----_ Yolanda._ Camarin? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ The whole? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ To be repelled? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ To say you''ve chosen? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Were it folly to make sure? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ What? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Will? |
45760 | _ Vittia._ Yolanda, does she know? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Amaury, no; release me and say why You come: The Saracens----? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Amaury----_ Amaury._ What have I done? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ And is in danger-- jeopardy? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ And, you mean----? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ But he-- you mean-- is here? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Lord Amaury-- He has not yet returned? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Mother?... |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Nor heard? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Not? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Of guile? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ On-- him? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Save her? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Saw you not? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Then, mother----(_ Goes to bier._)_ Amaury._ That name again? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Though he is weak, there is within him--_ Amaury._ That Which women trust? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ To... what? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Too--? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Well? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Who? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Will--? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ With murder? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ Yielding-- still, And past all season of recovery? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ You hear, mother? |
45760 | _ Yolanda._ You? |
45760 | _ Zilla._ Shall we-- with David whom he hates? |
45760 | a leper? |
45760 | a trap? |
45760 | a way from it? |
45760 | again? |
45760 | ah, bob, bob- white, Still calling-- calling still? |
45760 | all-- all-- is beauty?" |
45760 | and climb the votive Ever mossy ways? |
45760 | and could I more of thee ask?... |
45760 | and now He sinks who climbed for the crown To the Summit''s brow? |
45760 | and warm within your veins Live sympathy and all love unto your father, Yet you have shielded me? |
45760 | and you--? |
45760 | and you? |
45760 | art Thou not stronger than gods of the heathen? |
45760 | art Thou not stronger than gods of the heathen? |
45760 | art thou sunken? |
45760 | as a leper could I...? |
45760 | breathless? |
45760 | but now, the uttermost? |
45760 | chosen and sealed? |
45760 | comes? |
45760 | darken? |
45760 | do you not see, not feel? |
45760 | do you? |
45760 | does he so indeed? |
45760 | dog, fox, devil? |
45760 | even in all? |
45760 | he is wounded? |
45760 | he? |
45760 | how Michal Is given to the embraces of another? |
45760 | how this prophetess Miriam hath foretold----_ David._ Some wonder? |
45760 | how? |
45760 | if---- Come here: David? |
45760 | in all honour? |
45760 | in this place? |
45760 | is it thou? |
45760 | is there no gentleness In thee to move her and dissolve away This jeopardy congealing over us? |
45760 | is this your song? |
45760 | is-- here? |
45760 | know you of him? |
45760 | know you? |
45760 | lady Berengere? |
45760 | lovable? |
45760 | my father? |
45760 | new terror? |
45760 | not know? |
45760 | now at the gates? |
45760 | o''er Israel? |
45760 | servant? |
45760 | slain? |
45760 | spitingly? |
45760 | sprung of the Philistines? |
45760 | still"beauty"? |
45760 | still? |
45760 | subtle? |
45760 | tears? |
45760 | that mouse? |
45760 | the dread What does it mean? |
45760 | the spur? |
45760 | the triumph? |
45760 | then as a wild shadow burst Her moan on the pale air,"What have I dreamed? |
45760 | then what? |
45760 | this reverence as to An angel? |
45760 | to meet Goliath? |
45760 | to whom? |
45760 | to you Whom not a slave can serve unhonoured? |
45760 | torn? |
45760 | treachery, then? |
45760 | until The last void of the everlasting sky--(_ Looking up, falters, breaks off, and is strangely moved._)_ Abiathar._ Now what alarm? |
45760 | vowing him first To win his father''s lenience?... |
45760 | what are you saying? |
45760 | what is it she says? |
45760 | what is this? |
45760 | which? |
45760 | who know nought? |
45760 | who, who is it? |
45760 | who? |
45760 | whose? |
45760 | why are you here? |
45760 | why does he stay? |
45760 | why hast Thou brought me from the quietness and rest? |
45760 | with dust? |
45760 | won Lord Renier to wisdom? |
45760 | would You have lady Yolanda hear? |
45760 | you Not hindering? |
45760 | you have we d him? |
45760 | you hear me? |
45760 | you ride to- night Into their peril? |
45760 | you think it? |
45760 | you will not? |
45760 | you? |
48882 | ''Did you know those English at Lahore?'' 48882 ''What is it?'' |
48882 | ''You could guide us through?'' 48882 ''You have come for it?'' |
48882 | Ah, but you have not spoken of this? |
48882 | All the servants are on the beach, then? |
48882 | Am I not? |
48882 | An ancestress of hers, no doubt? |
48882 | And destroyed it, of course? |
48882 | And her hat? |
48882 | And here you are going to remain all night? |
48882 | And how should I know anything? 48882 And if you die in the meantime? |
48882 | And now can you explain it? |
48882 | And show my hand, you mean? 48882 And so that inhuman wretch is Marion''s mother?" |
48882 | And that is all you are going to tell me, Geoffrey? |
48882 | And there she is now? |
48882 | And to- night''s doings are to remain a secret? |
48882 | And what is that? |
48882 | And when I come back do I bring a joyful confession with me? |
48882 | And who is this gentleman? |
48882 | And why are you regarding me so intently? 48882 And why has Marion gone away?" |
48882 | And yet I rather gather that she does not hold first place in your affections? |
48882 | And you do n''t know who she is? |
48882 | And you expect me to believe this, Geoffrey? |
48882 | And you interfered to save the life of others? |
48882 | And you will not have a doctor? |
48882 | And you wo n''t be long? |
48882 | Are there any mysteries? |
48882 | Are they different to ours? |
48882 | Are we never going to do anything? |
48882 | Are you coming with us? |
48882 | Are you feeling better? |
48882 | Are you going to speak or shall I tell the story? 48882 Are you not my friend? |
48882 | Are you really leaving us? |
48882 | Are you sure of that? |
48882 | Are you thinking of the same thing that we are? |
48882 | As far as I am concerned, you mean? 48882 As you do?" |
48882 | But I suppose she came to see you? |
48882 | But can I cultivate her after to- night? |
48882 | But can they? |
48882 | But do you think you were wise to show this to me? |
48882 | But my mother and Geoffrey and----"Ah, you love Geoffrey? 48882 But surely this does not apply to my family?" |
48882 | But the light in the corridor? |
48882 | But was it an accident? |
48882 | But what can I want it for? 48882 But what do they want there?" |
48882 | But who was he, Tchigorsky? |
48882 | But why bring him here? |
48882 | But why does she come? |
48882 | But why not stop it? 48882 But why-- why does this fascinating Asiatic come all those miles to destroy one by one a race that she can scarcely have heard of? |
48882 | But will this mystery and misery never end? |
48882 | But you have not always been blind? |
48882 | But you say that Marion was with Vera? |
48882 | But your curious expression----"What is curious about my expression? |
48882 | By the cruel foe, Marion? 48882 Can you let me out here, or shall I go by the same means that I entered?" |
48882 | Can you manage to keep her afloat? |
48882 | Can you not? |
48882 | Can you see anything? |
48882 | Could it have been the flowers? |
48882 | Could we prove that the foe had had a direct hand in the tragedies of the past? 48882 Dare you open it?" |
48882 | Dare you use it? |
48882 | Darling,he whispered,"you know that I love you?" |
48882 | Dear, do n''t you know that I am devoted heart and soul to your interests? 48882 Did I?" |
48882 | Did Tchigorsky tell you? |
48882 | Did n''t I always say as how he''d get through? 48882 Did she write to you?" |
48882 | Did you call out? |
48882 | Did you ever know me tell you a lie? 48882 Did you know that diary existed?" |
48882 | Did you really love your mother? |
48882 | Did you see her? |
48882 | Do it? 48882 Do n''t you like that woman?" |
48882 | Do n''t you see she is in the dark? 48882 Do you know anything of this?" |
48882 | Do you know you seem to be a long way off to me this afternoon? |
48882 | Do you mean that they perished with that stranger last night? |
48882 | Do you recognize the voice? |
48882 | Do you want anything more? |
48882 | Do you want to say anything to me? |
48882 | Do you want to see me? |
48882 | Does it hurt much? |
48882 | Does n''t it seem wonderful, Geoffrey? |
48882 | Does she account for her presence here? |
48882 | Does the slave reproach the master who keeps his carcass from the kennel? |
48882 | Dr. Tchigorsky is still about? |
48882 | Drowned, with a placid smile on his face, after the fashion of the novel? |
48882 | Foiled her? |
48882 | For Mrs. May''s benefit? |
48882 | For revenge on you two? |
48882 | Geoff, have you any suspicions? |
48882 | Geoff, was it you who snatched the cloth from the table? |
48882 | Geoffrey, Geoffrey, where are you? |
48882 | Geoffrey,Vera said after a long pause,"are we too happy?" |
48882 | Give you what, uncle? |
48882 | Had n''t we better search them? |
48882 | Have I not already explained to you, darling? |
48882 | Have we not trouble and misery enough in our house without making more? |
48882 | Have you been out to the west of Gull Point to- day? |
48882 | Have you discovered it all? |
48882 | Have you learned what the latest villainy is? |
48882 | Have you seen her? |
48882 | He was a very old friend of yours? |
48882 | Hence the changed face and the glasses? |
48882 | Horrible,he said,"but why this mystery?" |
48882 | How can you look me in the face after the way in which you have treated me? |
48882 | How could you prevent them? |
48882 | How did it happen? |
48882 | How did you get here? 48882 How did you get here?" |
48882 | How did you get here? |
48882 | How did you guess that? |
48882 | How did you manage it, uncle? |
48882 | How did you manage it? |
48882 | How is the visitor? |
48882 | How long can one endure this and live? 48882 How long has she been like this?" |
48882 | How long have I been asleep? |
48882 | How long will it last? |
48882 | How long, how long? 48882 How should I? |
48882 | How''s this for a disguise, Master Geoffrey? |
48882 | I am so sorry for you? |
48882 | I am to accompany you, then? |
48882 | I am your prisoner, then? |
48882 | I believe I have the pleasure of speaking to Mr. Ralph Ravenspur? |
48882 | I hope you are comfortable? |
48882 | I need not ask what opinion you have formed of me? |
48882 | I suppose I have to thank Mrs. May for this? |
48882 | I suppose they are a nuisance occasionally? |
48882 | I suppose you can do no more to- night? |
48882 | I suppose you planned everything out? |
48882 | In the name of Heaven, why? |
48882 | In the name of Heaven, why? |
48882 | In the ordinary bar- frame hives of course? |
48882 | In what way? |
48882 | In which direction? |
48882 | Is anything going to happen? |
48882 | Is it a fact? |
48882 | Is it a painless death? |
48882 | Is it as Jessop says? |
48882 | Is it dangerous? |
48882 | Is it possible to be too happy? |
48882 | Is it you, Elphick? |
48882 | Is my cousin Nicholas Tchigorsky? 48882 Is not my pulse steady? |
48882 | Is that because you think my secret is a shameful one? |
48882 | Is that you, Tchigorsky? |
48882 | Is the coast clear? |
48882 | Is the difference very marked? |
48882 | Is there another mystery? |
48882 | Is there any danger? |
48882 | Is there any need to go on? 48882 Is there anything I can do for you?" |
48882 | Is there anything in the morning papers that is likely to interest me, Abell? |
48882 | Is there danger? |
48882 | It is all right? |
48882 | It was not possible for him to be picked up? |
48882 | Lies just outside the window, does n''t he? |
48882 | Marion has come back again? |
48882 | Marion? |
48882 | Marion? |
48882 | May I assist you? |
48882 | May I venture to suggest that the knowledge is not displeasing to you? |
48882 | No more visions lately? |
48882 | Now what am I to do? |
48882 | Now, I put it to you as a lady of brains and courage, if you had been in my position, would you have shown that to your family? |
48882 | Now, ca n''t you come up some evening and dine with me? 48882 Of course you ascertained her name?" |
48882 | Of what use is a blind man? |
48882 | Oh, so you know that also? |
48882 | Oh, will you never wake up? |
48882 | Oh, yes, uncle; are you a wizard or what? 48882 On the floor, my dear uncle?" |
48882 | Read your fortune in the stars? 48882 See whom?" |
48882 | Shall I go and see what it is? |
48882 | So that we are rid of our foes at last? |
48882 | So this is the Alton where you are going to- night? |
48882 | So you have been successful? |
48882 | So you have been taken into her confidence? |
48882 | Solved? |
48882 | Something has happened? |
48882 | Something to do with it? |
48882 | Straight to Jessop''s farm? |
48882 | Tchigorsky has disappeared? |
48882 | Tchigorsky not dead? |
48882 | Tchigorsky? |
48882 | Tell me what it means, Geoff? |
48882 | Tell me what the language says? |
48882 | That you propose to do? |
48882 | The marks on my face? 48882 The princess is convinced of that?" |
48882 | Then he has not been here to- day? |
48882 | Then my friend Tchigorsky is alive? |
48882 | Then the princess goes not back to Lassa? |
48882 | Then they are usually dangerous? |
48882 | Then who was it that was buried? |
48882 | Then why did he come here? |
48882 | Then why do you take every means of thwarting me? |
48882 | Then why not drop upon them? |
48882 | Then why should you worry? |
48882 | Then you are not going to take any notice of the warning? |
48882 | Then you have no theory to offer? |
48882 | Then you have not guessed? |
48882 | Then, in that case, sir, why do n''t you? |
48882 | There is nobody about? |
48882 | There is nobody within earshot of us? |
48882 | There was one traveler who found the key, you remember? |
48882 | They are great friends? |
48882 | They guess I am a victim to the vendetta? |
48882 | They managed to elude you? |
48882 | Uncle Ralph, do you know what it is? |
48882 | Uncle, how did you guess that? |
48882 | Uncle,she stammered,"what are you doing here?" |
48882 | Very,Geoffrey said dryly;"but where is Marion?" |
48882 | Was it imported for the purpose? |
48882 | Was she young and good looking? |
48882 | Was that not so, Vera? |
48882 | Wass and Watkins, will you come with me? |
48882 | Well, I suppose I must go, too? |
48882 | Well, was the adventure this evening creepy enough for you? |
48882 | Well, what am I to do with it? |
48882 | Well,Tchigorsky asked,"have you solved the problem?" |
48882 | Well,he said,"have you anything wonderful to relate?" |
48882 | Well? |
48882 | Well? |
48882 | Were you ever in Tibet? |
48882 | What am I to understand by that, sir? |
48882 | What are you doing? |
48882 | What are you going to do with me? |
48882 | What are you going to do? |
48882 | What are you going to do? |
48882 | What are you looking for? |
48882 | What are you thinking about? |
48882 | What became of the fellow? |
48882 | What better proof could the slave of my illustrious mistress have? |
48882 | What can an unfortunate like that have to live for? |
48882 | What can it matter whether there is an inquest held on them or not? 48882 What could we gain by that? |
48882 | What did it mean? |
48882 | What did you think of the episode? |
48882 | What difference does it make? |
48882 | What do you make that out to be? |
48882 | What do you mean by that? |
48882 | What do you mean by that? |
48882 | What do you propose to do? |
48882 | What do you say, Uncle Ralph? |
48882 | What do you with your gentle nature know of love? 48882 What does all this mystery mean?" |
48882 | What does it all mean? |
48882 | What does it matter? |
48882 | What does it mean, Marion? |
48882 | What does it mean, uncle? |
48882 | What good would that do? |
48882 | What have I done? |
48882 | What is all this about? |
48882 | What is her hold over Marion? |
48882 | What is it, what is it? |
48882 | What is it? |
48882 | What is it? |
48882 | What is it? |
48882 | What is that choking smell? |
48882 | What is that noise? |
48882 | What is the confusion in the house? |
48882 | What is the matter with the girl? |
48882 | What is the matter? |
48882 | What is the matter? |
48882 | What is the matter? |
48882 | What is the matter? |
48882 | What is the next move? |
48882 | What is your name? |
48882 | What matter? |
48882 | What shall you do about it? |
48882 | What should be the matter? |
48882 | What should they want? 48882 What should we do without you?" |
48882 | What was she doing? |
48882 | What will be her fate? |
48882 | What would Vera say? |
48882 | What''s the matter, little girl? |
48882 | What, go away and leave me all alone, dearest? |
48882 | What, indeed? |
48882 | When does he come here? |
48882 | Where am I? |
48882 | Where are they going? |
48882 | Where are you going to sleep? |
48882 | Where are you going to take me? |
48882 | Where are you going? |
48882 | Where are you? |
48882 | Where did I leave off? 48882 Where did I leave off?" |
48882 | Where did she go? |
48882 | Where have you been? |
48882 | Where they are attached to a queer- looking instrument? |
48882 | Who are you and whence do you come? |
48882 | Who are you, and whence do you come? |
48882 | Who are you? |
48882 | Who are you? |
48882 | Who are you? |
48882 | Who can she be? |
48882 | Who could fail to? |
48882 | Who did it? |
48882 | Who gave you this, and what is your message? |
48882 | Who is she? |
48882 | Who is the new marvel? |
48882 | Who is the woman? 48882 Who is there?" |
48882 | Who knows but that she had discovered some plot against us and had come to warn us? 48882 Who laid this labyrinth?" |
48882 | Who opened the window? |
48882 | Who was it who tampered with the boat? |
48882 | Who was the victim, uncle? |
48882 | Who will help me upstairs? 48882 Why do n''t you denounce me now?" |
48882 | Why do you drag me here? |
48882 | Why do you intrude upon me like this? 48882 Why not produce your proofs and hand the miscreants over to the police?" |
48882 | Why not? 48882 Why not? |
48882 | Why not? |
48882 | Why should they have fascinated us in that strange way? 48882 Why should we sit here like this?" |
48882 | Why should you all live and prosper while he was dead? |
48882 | Why should you do this thing? |
48882 | Why your fault? 48882 Why?" |
48882 | Why? |
48882 | Why? |
48882 | Why? |
48882 | Will it ever be lifted, sir? |
48882 | Will it sound strange to you to hear that I long and yearn for you always; that I still love those whom I would have destroyed? 48882 Will she die?" |
48882 | Will somebody ring the bell? |
48882 | Will you tell him so? 48882 Wo n''t you tell me now?" |
48882 | Wo n''t you tell me what has happened? |
48882 | Woman? |
48882 | Would she recognize us? 48882 Would the Ravenspurs outrage the sacred name of hospitality like that? |
48882 | Yes, but what had the dream and the powder to do with it, little girl? |
48882 | You are better? |
48882 | You are getting near the truth? |
48882 | You are going to London alone? |
48882 | You are in Dr. Tchigorsky''s confidence? |
48882 | You are interested in the Ravenspur case? |
48882 | You are not afraid of the family terror? |
48882 | You are sure you can not get up? |
48882 | You are under the impression that I am not English? |
48882 | You dare ask me that question? |
48882 | You did not tell those servants their fortunes in your present garb? |
48882 | You do not care for white flowers? |
48882 | You find it strange? |
48882 | You found her charming? |
48882 | You got it, eh? |
48882 | You had a good look at it, then? |
48882 | You have found the culprit? |
48882 | You have no hope, no expectation of the truth coming to light? |
48882 | You have not given up all hope? |
48882 | You have not guessed who the Princess is, then? |
48882 | You have proofs of what you say? |
48882 | You heard all this? |
48882 | You heard her, then? |
48882 | You knew the day you got here? |
48882 | You say it is impossible for that woman to get away? |
48882 | You say this is the place? |
48882 | You wanted to see my father? |
48882 | You wo n''t betray yourself? |
48882 | You, Marion? 48882 ''Did you ever know a Russian traveler, Voski by name? 48882 ''Do you know her, too?'' 48882 ''Dogs, do you want to live?'' 48882 ''What are the five points of the temple there?'' 48882 ''What of him?'' 48882 Ah, what did I tell you? 48882 Am I always to carry the family troubles on my shoulders? |
48882 | Am I never to have a minute to myself? |
48882 | Am I not an object of pity? |
48882 | Am I to believe that you are not going to be true to your oath?" |
48882 | Am I to regard myself as a prisoner, then?" |
48882 | And Marion?" |
48882 | And how could he broach the matter of Tchigorsky without betraying Marion? |
48882 | And how many times has Vera seen me kiss you? |
48882 | And if I did lose you, darling, what would become of me?" |
48882 | And now will you promise me that you will say nothing of this to a soul?" |
48882 | And the others?" |
48882 | And was not Marion equally mysterious? |
48882 | And was she not here----here a guest among those who for some reason she hated from her soul? |
48882 | And was this the wildest comedy or the direst tragedy that was working out before his eyes? |
48882 | And what are you doing with that feminine- looking box?" |
48882 | And what could the bees have to do with it? |
48882 | And what did that light mean? |
48882 | And where has the fellow gone?" |
48882 | And where was Marion? |
48882 | And why did everybody leave her so severely alone? |
48882 | And why do they commit follies with their eyes wide open? |
48882 | And why had Marion not returned? |
48882 | And why should these people persecute him; why should they come here? |
48882 | And why waste the breath that would be so precious to him later? |
48882 | And yet where could he get the poison? |
48882 | Any color?" |
48882 | Are you going home?" |
48882 | Are you going?" |
48882 | Are you ready?" |
48882 | Are you right? |
48882 | Are you still suffering from a headache?" |
48882 | Are you, Tchigorsky?" |
48882 | But had Marion a sister?" |
48882 | But how are we going to get rid of those things?" |
48882 | But what are you doing?" |
48882 | But what brings them here? |
48882 | But what has Mrs. May to do with it?" |
48882 | But what room did she go into?" |
48882 | But where are you going?" |
48882 | But who would believe my accusation?" |
48882 | But why do you speak like this to- day?" |
48882 | But why do you want to have that woman under the roof?" |
48882 | But why go on like this? |
48882 | But why not meet him in daylight in a proper and natural manner?" |
48882 | But would n''t it be well to make sure?" |
48882 | By the way, have you concocted a plausible story to account for your escape?" |
48882 | By the way, what is it I hear about your finding a body down on the sands?" |
48882 | CHAPTER LI"WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?" |
48882 | CHAPTER LVII HAND AND FOOT What did it mean? |
48882 | CHAPTER XV RALPH RAVENSPUR''S CONCEIT"I should like to know why you wanted the ivory picture?" |
48882 | CHAPTER XVII WHENCE DID THEY COME? |
48882 | Ca n''t you tell me a little more? |
48882 | Can the leopard change his spots? |
48882 | Can you be any the worse because you are bound by some tie to that woman yonder? |
48882 | Can you stand there calmly and see----""See you making an ass of yourself, eh? |
48882 | Could I have the heart to do so after all you have done for my family? |
48882 | Could I see one of those charming girls, Miss Vera or Marion? |
48882 | Could she recognize me?" |
48882 | Could the mind of man imagine a more diabolical torture? |
48882 | Could we demonstrate to the satisfaction of a jury that Mrs. May and her confederates were responsible for those poisoned flowers or the bees? |
48882 | Dear Geoff, will it be long before all this anxiety is disposed of?" |
48882 | Did I not possess the occult knowledge of the East with a thorough knowledge of what you are pleased to call Western civilization? |
48882 | Did I not tell you that the attempt had been made and had failed? |
48882 | Did Ralph know everything, or was he as ignorant as the rest? |
48882 | Did not Princess Zaza pick you both out at Lassa?" |
48882 | Did the people of the castle suspect her? |
48882 | Did this man know the terrible position he had placed her in? |
48882 | Did you ever see Tibet bees?" |
48882 | Did you hear anything they were saying?" |
48882 | Did you manage to get a clue to what it was?" |
48882 | Did you notice anything as you came along?" |
48882 | Did you notice the eyes of the Princess?" |
48882 | Do n''t we all love you the same? |
48882 | Do n''t you remember my telling you how the princess spoke of him? |
48882 | Do n''t you remember?" |
48882 | Do n''t you see that they have missed me?" |
48882 | Do n''t you think it was a queer thing?" |
48882 | Do n''t you think that Jessop''s lodger must be a very extravagant kind of woman?" |
48882 | Do n''t you understand that she suspects she has been trapped? |
48882 | Do you know anything of this, I say?" |
48882 | Do you know who the guilty creature is, whose hand is actually striking the blow?" |
48882 | Do you mean to say you know what it is?" |
48882 | Do you propose to make the capture to- night?" |
48882 | Do you really mean that?" |
48882 | Do you recognize anything beyond the legitimate perfume?" |
48882 | Do you see anything else here?" |
48882 | Do you suppose that I could ever forget the love and affection that have been poured upon me? |
48882 | Do you understand what I mean?" |
48882 | Do you want anything?" |
48882 | Does he court defeat at the outset of our enterprise?" |
48882 | Does it not seem funny to realize that before long we shall be laughing and chatting and moving with the world once more, Geoff? |
48882 | Does it not sound strange? |
48882 | Does my face tell you nothing?" |
48882 | Geoffrey, are you indifferent to myself and my future that you speak like this?" |
48882 | Geoffrey, you are fond of novel reading?" |
48882 | Geoffrey, you will see that all proper arrangements are made for the funeral?" |
48882 | Get inspiration from the heavenly bodies to combat the power of darkness?" |
48882 | Grandfather, you would not turn him away?" |
48882 | Had he left it in the dining- room or the library? |
48882 | Had he not arranged it so that a score of savants in Europe should learn the truth within a month of his decease? |
48882 | Had he not said that everything hinged upon her reticence and silence? |
48882 | Had he not seen her return after the boat had been beached and mourn over the wreck like some creature suffering from deep remorse? |
48882 | Had he not seen the girl hastening away from his boat? |
48882 | Had her subordinates heard her cry? |
48882 | Had not she a secret in common with Ralph? |
48882 | Had she really seen this thing or had she dreamed it? |
48882 | Had she said too much or did he suspect? |
48882 | Had the affair miscarried and the miscreants got away in some other direction? |
48882 | Had they fled, or had they been taken? |
48882 | Had you not a daughter?" |
48882 | Has Mrs. May a companion hidden somewhere, a companion who might be Marion''s sister?" |
48882 | Has Vera been arguing with the bees again?" |
48882 | Has anything happened here?" |
48882 | Has the stuff any particular smell?" |
48882 | Have I been mistaken in you, Vera?" |
48882 | Have you a heart at all, or are you a beautiful fiend?" |
48882 | Have you any doubt?" |
48882 | Have you discovered that, Tchigorsky?" |
48882 | Have you done that?" |
48882 | Have you no feeling?" |
48882 | He was poisoned, you think?" |
48882 | How did he die? |
48882 | How did he escape?" |
48882 | How did it all happen? |
48882 | How did you manage to deal him that blow on the head, uncle?" |
48882 | How did you manage to get away, Geoffrey?" |
48882 | How do you think my sketch is progressing? |
48882 | How long are you going to detain me here?" |
48882 | How long have you known her?" |
48882 | How much did she know? |
48882 | How much had she guessed? |
48882 | How much more of this is it possible to bear and still retain the powers of reason? |
48882 | How?" |
48882 | I do n''t know whether you know the man-- his name is Tchigorsky?" |
48882 | I suppose you recognized the risks that you ran?'' |
48882 | I will kill them off-- they shall die----""As my mistress slew her husband when his life was of no more value to her?" |
48882 | If they had fled, had they removed the instruments with them? |
48882 | Is Marion connected with her?" |
48882 | Is it not strange that I have the seeds of the same complaint?" |
48882 | Is it possible that he suspected anything? |
48882 | Is there a fire laid here?" |
48882 | Is there anything else?" |
48882 | Is-- is it dangerous?" |
48882 | Jessop?" |
48882 | Marion, where are your tender feelings?" |
48882 | May?" |
48882 | May?" |
48882 | May?" |
48882 | May?" |
48882 | Mr. Ravenspur, surely you have guessed who was the English officer Princess Zara married?" |
48882 | Need I say more?" |
48882 | Now do you understand what it all means?" |
48882 | Now, do you begin to understand the malignity of the plot? |
48882 | Or was he the poor creature he represented himself to be? |
48882 | Ralph, can you induce your father and the whole family to go away for a time-- say till after dark?" |
48882 | Ralph, do you know anything?" |
48882 | Ralph, everybody has retired?" |
48882 | Ralph, what is it? |
48882 | Ravenspur, are you ready?" |
48882 | See, is there blood on this knife?" |
48882 | Shall I see your father?" |
48882 | Shall I tell you how?" |
48882 | Shall we enlighten Master Geoffrey a little as to the kind of woman she is?" |
48882 | Shall we go to bed?" |
48882 | Shall we see if we can get as far as Sprawl Point and back before luncheon?" |
48882 | She was trapped, eh?" |
48882 | She wrote to you, of course?" |
48882 | So Tchigorsky is in danger, eh? |
48882 | Surely her grief must be beyond the common? |
48882 | Surely, you do not need to be told why you are detained?" |
48882 | Tchigorsky?" |
48882 | Tell me, do you ever see this Mrs. May by any chance?" |
48882 | They had something with them?" |
48882 | To strike him down foully had been too dangerous, for had he not told her that he was prepared for that kind of death? |
48882 | Was he dangerous enough to be removed? |
48882 | Was he telling the truth, or was he spying on her? |
48882 | Was it possible that some such horrible thoughts had crossed Marion''s mind? |
48882 | Was n''t it plucky of her?" |
48882 | Was she entirely in the dark as to her mother''s machinations, or had she come resolved to protect the relatives as much as possible? |
48882 | Was she still in the vaults or had she managed to slip away to her bedroom? |
48882 | We are alone?" |
48882 | Well, are you going to convey us to a place of safety, or shall we shoot you like the others?''" |
48882 | What am I saying?" |
48882 | What are they going to do now?" |
48882 | What are you going to do about it?" |
48882 | What are you to me?" |
48882 | What are you? |
48882 | What can Marion''s queer ancestors and all that kind of thing have to do with our family terror?" |
48882 | What could have become of him? |
48882 | What could it mean? |
48882 | What could the mysterious foe hope to gain by this merciless slaughter? |
48882 | What did it mean, what strange mystery was here? |
48882 | What did it mean? |
48882 | What did the other girl wear?" |
48882 | What did this girl know about him, and why did she stand wailing over his boat? |
48882 | What did those men mean by drowning themselves in the vaults? |
48882 | What do we know of them? |
48882 | What do you make of it, uncle?" |
48882 | What do you mean?'' |
48882 | What do you see outside?" |
48882 | What does it matter what I do?" |
48882 | What flowers?" |
48882 | What had become of the coat and glass mask she was wearing at the time things went wrong in Geoffrey Ravenspur''s room? |
48882 | What happened?" |
48882 | What has become of her?" |
48882 | What have I to fear now from those wise men of the East? |
48882 | What have you two been quarreling about?" |
48882 | What next? |
48882 | What should we do without her?" |
48882 | What should we do without you? |
48882 | What should we do without your cheerfulness and good advice? |
48882 | What time is it?" |
48882 | What to do next? |
48882 | What use is the Ravenspur property to us when we are doomed to die?" |
48882 | What was going on? |
48882 | What was going to happen next? |
48882 | What was it?" |
48882 | What was it?" |
48882 | What was the use of calling so long as nobody could hear him? |
48882 | What would the estimable Jessop say if he could see into his parlor?" |
48882 | When we get Voski''s body, what shall we do with it?" |
48882 | Whence come these cruel misfortunes? |
48882 | Where are the bees?" |
48882 | Where are those scripts?'' |
48882 | Where are you going, dear?" |
48882 | Where are your proofs?" |
48882 | Where had he heard a laugh like that before? |
48882 | Who can help the wayward driftings of a woman''s heart? |
48882 | Who could connect the poor blind man with the deed? |
48882 | Who did it?" |
48882 | Who is it?" |
48882 | Who shall comprehend the waywardness of a woman''s heart? |
48882 | Who was this man who knew so much and could probe her secret soul? |
48882 | Who, then, is the prime mover in this business?" |
48882 | Why are clever people often so foolish? |
48882 | Why do we never hear of that sort of poison nowadays?" |
48882 | Why do you feel for things in that way?" |
48882 | Why does she do it, Tchigorsky?" |
48882 | Why draw the veil aside when even a few hours''peace stood between them and the terror which sooner or later must sap the reason of every one there? |
48882 | Why had his uncle and the mysterious Tchigorsky taken him so far into their confidence and then failed him at the critical moment? |
48882 | Why had she not thought of this before? |
48882 | Why not end her life now? |
48882 | Why not kill off her husband''s family one by one so that finally the estates should come to her? |
48882 | Why not let them enter and then take them all red- handed?" |
48882 | Why should I go on leading my present life? |
48882 | Why should I shield you? |
48882 | Why should this blow fall after the lapse of all these years? |
48882 | Why should you say that?" |
48882 | Why was there all this commotion in the house? |
48882 | Why, then, should Marion be disturbed? |
48882 | Why, then, should her good name be dragged in the mire? |
48882 | Why? |
48882 | Why?" |
48882 | Why?" |
48882 | Why?" |
48882 | Will you please take the letter without letting anybody know what you are doing, and put it at the foot of the big elder in the tangle? |
48882 | Will you, dear?" |
48882 | Wo n''t you do this thing? |
48882 | Wo n''t you say that it is a sudden whim of yours? |
48882 | Wonderfully artistic, is n''t it?" |
48882 | Would it never stop? |
48882 | Would the time to act never come? |
48882 | Would you have your enemies to guess that you have seen my master? |
48882 | Would you like to see the letter? |
48882 | Would you say that the condemned murderer was rash for attempting to pick the pocket of the gaoler, even for attempting to murder him? |
48882 | Would you take pity upon my loneliness and come to tea?" |
48882 | You are better, sir?" |
48882 | You are not afraid of danger?" |
48882 | You are not afraid?" |
48882 | You are still interested in occult matters?" |
48882 | You follow me?" |
48882 | You have not far to go, of course?" |
48882 | You have sent him somewhere, uncle?" |
48882 | You hear?" |
48882 | You know nothing of the boy?" |
48882 | You know why I am here?" |
48882 | You would n''t think she was a woman whose heart is in a weak state, eh?" |
48882 | You would not reproach me, Ben Heer?" |
48882 | Your friend here?" |
48882 | can you hear anything?" |
48882 | is there no mercy for us?" |
46986 | And, behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? 46986 Art thou loose from a wife? |
46986 | Behold, we have forsaken all, and followed thee; what shall we have therefore? |
46986 | But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? 46986 For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory, why yet am I also judged as a sinner?" |
46986 | Friend, wherefore art thou come? |
46986 | Have ye never read what David did?... 46986 Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?" |
46986 | How would such a theory affect the received chronology concerning Christ? 46986 Is Christ divided? |
46986 | Is poverty of spirit a blessing? 46986 Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss?" |
46986 | Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind? |
46986 | Pilate then went out unto them[ the Jews], and said, What accusation bring ye against this man? 46986 Suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth? |
46986 | Then Judas which betrayed him, answered and said, Master, is it I? 46986 Then one of them, which was a lawyer, asked him a question, tempting him, saying, Master which is the great commandment in the law? |
46986 | Who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good? |
46986 | Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the gods? |
46986 | Why callest thou me good? 46986 Why do ye eat and drink with publicans and sinners?" |
46986 | Why eateth your master with publicans and sinners? |
46986 | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
46986 | ''My son,''she is represented as having said,''why have you done this? |
46986 | 1 When was Jesus born? |
46986 | 10 How many generations were there from Abraham to Jesus? |
46986 | 101 In what country were they when Peter was called? |
46986 | 102 Who did Jesus declare Peter to be? |
46986 | 104 When were James and John called? |
46986 | 105 Where was Jesus when he called Peter, James and John? |
46986 | 106 Was Andrew called when Peter was called? |
46986 | 107 Who was called from the receipt of custom? |
46986 | 108 Who was the mother of James the Less and Joses? |
46986 | 109 Who was their father? |
46986 | 11 Does Luke''s genealogy agree with the Old Testament? |
46986 | 110 Were Matthew and James the Less brothers? |
46986 | 111 To what city did John belong, and where was it located? |
46986 | 112 Who was the tenth apostle? |
46986 | 113 How many of the apostles bore the name of Judas? |
46986 | 116 Who was Jesus''favorite apostle? |
46986 | 117 Is the Apostle James mentioned in John? |
46986 | 118 What other disciples besides the Twelve did Jesus send out? |
46986 | 119 What charge did Jesus make to his disciples? |
46986 | 12 How many generations were there from Abraham to David? |
46986 | 120 Did Jesus have a habitation of his own? |
46986 | 121 His residence in Capernaum was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 122 Were Zebulon and Nephthali situated"beyond Jordan,"as stated? |
46986 | 123 Were Peter, Andrew, James and John with Jesus when he taught in the synagogue at Capernaum? |
46986 | 124 Did Jesus perform many miracles in Galilee at the beginning of his ministry? |
46986 | 125 Did he perform any miracles before he called his disciples? |
46986 | 126 When was the miraculous draught of fishes made? |
46986 | 127 What accident was caused by the enormous draught of fishes? |
46986 | 128 How long did the Jews say it took to build the temple? |
46986 | 13 How many generations were there from David to the Captivity? |
46986 | 130 Did he deliver his sermon sitting or standing? |
46986 | 134 When and where was the Lord''s Prayer delivered? |
46986 | 135 Was the Sermon on the Mount delivered before Matthew( Levi in Mark and Luke) was called from the receipt of custom? |
46986 | 136 When did Jesus cleanse the leper? |
46986 | 137 When did he cure Peter''s mother- in- law? |
46986 | 138 Was this before or after Peter was called to the ministry? |
46986 | 139 Were James and John with Jesus when he performed this cure? |
46986 | 140 When was the centurion''s servant healed? |
46986 | 141 Who came for Jesus? |
46986 | 142 Where was he when he performed this miracle? |
46986 | 143 When did he still the tempest? |
46986 | 144 When did he cast out the devils that entered into the herd of swine? |
46986 | 145 How many were possessed with devils? |
46986 | 146 When asked his name what did the demoniac answer? |
46986 | 147 How many swine were there? |
46986 | 148 Where did this occur? |
46986 | 149 Do the Evangelists all agree in regard to the expulsion of demons by Jesus? |
46986 | 15 How many generations were there from the Captivity to Christ? |
46986 | 150 What great miracle did Jesus perform at Nain? |
46986 | 151 In their accounts of his curing the paralytic what parenthetical clause is to be found in each of the Synoptics? |
46986 | 152 What effect had the teachings of Jesus upon the people? |
46986 | 153 What did he say to the people in regard to letting their light shine? |
46986 | 154 What did he say concerning the way that leads to life? |
46986 | 156 Where was John baptizing when Jesus and his disciples came into Judea? |
46986 | 157 What city of Samaria did Jesus visit? |
46986 | 158 What did his disciples say to him when about to leave Bethany? |
46986 | 159 Where was he when he dined with publicans and sinners? |
46986 | 160 What did the Pharisees say to his disciples, because they, with Jesus, dined with publicans and sinners? |
46986 | 161 Who inquired of Jesus the reason for his disciples not fasting? |
46986 | 162 What did he say when reproved for plucking the ears of corn on the Sabbath? |
46986 | 163 What did he claim regarding Moses? |
46986 | 165 Who of Christ''s disciples witnessed the raising of Jairus''daughter? |
46986 | 166 What did Jesus say when sending out his Twelve Apostles? |
46986 | 167 What command did he give them respecting the provision of staves? |
46986 | 168 When the Samaritans refused to receive him what was said? |
46986 | 169 What did Jesus say to the multitude concerning John the Baptist? |
46986 | 17 According to the accepted chronology, what was the average age of each generation from David to Jesus? |
46986 | 170 Whose rejection of him provoked the declaration,"A prophet is not without honor, save in his own country"? |
46986 | 171 When he came into his own country and taught in the synagogue what did the people say? |
46986 | 172 When Herod heard of his wonderful works, what did he say? |
46986 | 173 When and for what reason was John beheaded? |
46986 | 174 Who was Herodias? |
46986 | 175 What is said of the numbers baptized by Jesus and his disciples as compared with those baptized by John? |
46986 | 176 Who furnished the loaves and fishes with which the multitude in the desert was fed? |
46986 | 177 How many were fed? |
46986 | 178 Where did this miracle occur? |
46986 | 179 After feeding the five thousand what did Jesus do? |
46986 | 18 What was the average age from David to the Captivity? |
46986 | 180 For what purpose did he go to the mountain? |
46986 | 181 Were his disciples with him? |
46986 | 182 To what port did he command his disciples to sail? |
46986 | 184 What remarkable feat was attempted on the trip? |
46986 | 185 What did the Jews say to Jesus respecting his Messianic mission? |
46986 | 186 What notable incident occurred at Jerusalem? |
46986 | 187 In the miracle of restoring the sight of the man born blind, what did he tell the man to do? |
46986 | 188 What is the meaning of the word"Siloam"? |
46986 | 189 Who provoked the displeasure of the Pharisees by eating with unwashed hands? |
46986 | 19 What was the average age from the Captivity to Jesus? |
46986 | 190 Of what nationality was the woman who desired Jesus to cast the devil out of her daughter? |
46986 | 191 What did his disciples say when he expressed his intention of feeding the four thousand? |
46986 | 192 After feeding the four thousand where did he come? |
46986 | 193 Where does Mark say he came? |
46986 | 194 What did he say to the Pharisees who asked for a sign? |
46986 | 195 On the way to Caesarea Philippi what remarkable discovery was made by Peter? |
46986 | 197 When did the Transfiguration take place? |
46986 | 198 Was the countenance of Jesus changed? |
46986 | 199 When did Peter propose building the three tabernacles to Jesus, Moses and Elias? |
46986 | 1:"Good Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?" |
46986 | 20 What was the average length of each generation from Abraham to David? |
46986 | 200 What did the voice from the clouds declare? |
46986 | 200, 201), says:"People wonder why so much of the old mythology, the daily talk, of the Aryans was solar: what else could it have been? |
46986 | 201 Who witnessed the Transfiguration? |
46986 | 203 What occurred immediately after the Transfiguration? |
46986 | 204 What ailed the man''s son whom Jesus cured after the Transfiguration? |
46986 | 205 When the authorities at Capernaum demanded tribute of Jesus what did he command Peter to do? |
46986 | 206 What was the nature of the tribute demanded? |
46986 | 207 After leaving Galilee where did Jesus go? |
46986 | 208 In going to Jerusalem to attend his last Passover, what route did he take? |
46986 | 209 What city did he pass through on his way to Jerusalem? |
46986 | 21 What was the average length of each generation from Adam to Abraham? |
46986 | 210 What miracle did he perform on the way? |
46986 | 211 Was it one or two blind men that sat by the wayside beseeching him to heal them? |
46986 | 212 What inquiry did the disciples make regarding the cause of the man''s blindness? |
46986 | 213 When did this occur? |
46986 | 214 What did Jesus say regarding divorce? |
46986 | 216 In his conversation with the rich man what commandments did he prescribe? |
46986 | 217 What great miracle did he perform at Bethany? |
46986 | 218 Who was it requested that James and John might sit, one on the right and the other on the left hand of Jesus in his kingdom? |
46986 | 219 Who occupies a seat at the left hand of Jesus? |
46986 | 22 How many generations were there from Adam to Abraham? |
46986 | 220 What did Jesus affirm in regard to the mustard seed? |
46986 | 221 With faith as large as a grain of mustard seed, what did he say his disciples could do? |
46986 | 222 In the parable of the Great Feast what was the character of the feast? |
46986 | 223 Whom did the giver of the feast send to invite the guests? |
46986 | 224 What befell the servants, or servant? |
46986 | 225 What did the giver of the feast declare respecting those who refused to attend? |
46986 | 227 In the parable of the Wicked Husbandmen did the owner of the vineyard send one servant, or more than one, each time to collect the rent? |
46986 | 228 What happened to the servants? |
46986 | 229 In the parable of the Talents how did the master apportion his money? |
46986 | 23 How many generations were there between Rachab, the mother of Booz, and David? |
46986 | 230 What was their gain? |
46986 | 231 What did the unprofitable servant do with the money entrusted to him? |
46986 | 232 What are the concluding words of Jesus in this parable? |
46986 | 233 In the lawyer''s interview with Jesus, who was it, the lawyer, or Jesus, that stated the two great commandments? |
46986 | 235 Did his controversy concerning David and Christ take place with the Pharisees, as stated by Matthew? |
46986 | 236 Where was Jesus on the day preceding his triumphal entry into Jerusalem? |
46986 | 237 Preparatory to his triumphal entry what command did he give his disciples? |
46986 | 238 Did he ride both animals? |
46986 | 239 The riding of two asses by Jesus was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 240 When did Jesus purge the temple? |
46986 | 241 When did he curse the fig tree? |
46986 | 242 When was the tree discovered by his disciples to be withered? |
46986 | 244 What did Jesus accuse the Jews of doing? |
46986 | 246 Who anointed Jesus? |
46986 | 247 Where did she put the ointment? |
46986 | 248 Where did this occur? |
46986 | 249 At whose house did it occur? |
46986 | 250 Who was Simon? |
46986 | 251 At what time during his ministry did this anointing occur? |
46986 | 252 Did it occur before or after his triumphal entry? |
46986 | 253 How many days before the Passover did it occur? |
46986 | 254 Who objected to this apparent waste of the ointment? |
46986 | 256 When did the Last Supper take place? |
46986 | 258 What ceremony was instituted at the Last Supper? |
46986 | 26 Who was Sala? |
46986 | 260 At the Last Supper did Jesus pass the cup once, or twice? |
46986 | 261 Where was Jesus when he uttered his last prayer? |
46986 | 262 What is said of his agony at Gethsemane? |
46986 | 263 How many times did Jesus visit Jerusalem during his ministry? |
46986 | 264 To what country was his ministry chiefly confined? |
46986 | 265 How long did his ministry last? |
46986 | 266 What is said regarding the extent of his works? |
46986 | 267 Can the alleged teachings of Jesus be accepted as authentic? |
46986 | 268 When did Jesus first foretell his passion? |
46986 | 269 When did he announce his betrayal? |
46986 | 27 Who begat Ozias? |
46986 | 270 Did Jesus say who should betray him? |
46986 | 271 How did he disclose his betrayer? |
46986 | 272 When did Satan enter into Judas? |
46986 | 273 How did Judas betray Jesus? |
46986 | 274 What did Jesus say to Judas when he betrayed him? |
46986 | 275 What was Judas, and what office did he hold? |
46986 | 276 What did Judas receive for betraying his master? |
46986 | 277 What did he do with the money? |
46986 | 278 The purchase of the potter''s field was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 279 What became of Judas? |
46986 | 28 Who was Josiah''s successor? |
46986 | 280 To whom did Peter deliver his speech describing the fate of Judas? |
46986 | 281 What did Peter say in regard to the name of the field? |
46986 | 282 Were there more than one of Jesus''disciples concerned in his betrayal? |
46986 | 283 When the Jewish council met to plan the arrest of Jesus, to what conclusion did they come? |
46986 | 284 Who arrested him? |
46986 | 285 Who does John say was sent to arrest him? |
46986 | 286 What is said regarding the multitude sent out to apprehend him? |
46986 | 287 How did they go out to capture him? |
46986 | 288 When the band sent to capture him first came up to him what did they do? |
46986 | 289 What did Peter do when Jesus was arrested? |
46986 | 29 Who was the father of Jechonias? |
46986 | 290 When was Jesus bound? |
46986 | 291 What did they do with Jesus when he was taken? |
46986 | 292 Did he have an examination before his trial? |
46986 | 293 Before whom did his preliminary examination take place? |
46986 | 296 What is said regarding the tenure of Caiaphas''office? |
46986 | 297 What had Caiaphas prophesied concerning Jesus? |
46986 | 298 Did Jesus have a trial before the Sanhedrim? |
46986 | 299 Where was his trial held? |
46986 | 3 In what month and on what day of the month was he born? |
46986 | 30 When did Josias beget Jechonias? |
46986 | 300 What was the charge preferred against him? |
46986 | 301 What is said regarding witnesses? |
46986 | 302 What did the so- called false witnesses that appeared against him testify that he had said? |
46986 | 303 What had Jesus said? |
46986 | 304 Was he questioned by the Sanhedrim? |
46986 | 305 To the priest''s question,"Art thou the Christ?" |
46986 | 306 When did his trial before the Sanhedrim take place? |
46986 | 307 Could this trial have been held in the night as stated by Matthew and Mark? |
46986 | 308 During what religious festivities was his trial held? |
46986 | 309 On what day of the week was it held? |
46986 | 31 Did Jechonias have a son? |
46986 | 310 How long did this trial last? |
46986 | 311 Did he have a defender or counselor in the Sanhedrim? |
46986 | 312 Had Jesus been tried, convicted and executed by the Jews would he have been crucified? |
46986 | 313 What does Peter say in regard to the mode of punishment employed in his execution? |
46986 | 314 How was he treated by the Sanhedrim? |
46986 | 316 Did Peter deny him three times before the cock crew? |
46986 | 317 Where were they when Jesus foretold Peter''s denial? |
46986 | 318 What did Peter do when he entered the palace? |
46986 | 319 When was he first accused of being the friend of Jesus? |
46986 | 320 When was he accused the second time? |
46986 | 321 By whom was he accused the second time? |
46986 | 322 Who accused him the third time? |
46986 | 323 Was Jesus present when Peter denied him? |
46986 | 324 Where was Jesus next sent for trial? |
46986 | 325 What was the result of Pilate''s sending Jesus to Herod? |
46986 | 326 Did Jesus''s trial before Pilate take place in the presence of his accusers? |
46986 | 327 Did Pilate go out of the judgment hall to consult with those who were prosecuting Jesus? |
46986 | 328 What was the result of his trial before Pilate? |
46986 | 329 When Pilate could not prevail upon the Jews to allow him to release Jesus, what did he do? |
46986 | 33 Who was the father of Zorobabel? |
46986 | 330 What indignities were heaped upon Jesus during his trial before Pilate? |
46986 | 331 When was he scourged? |
46986 | 332 What custom is said to have been observed at the Passover? |
46986 | 334 By whom was Jesus clad in mockery? |
46986 | 335 What was the color of the robe they put on him? |
46986 | 336 When did this occur? |
46986 | 338 Who smote Jesus after his trial? |
46986 | 339 To whom did Pilate deliver him to be crucified? |
46986 | 34 Who was the son of Zorobabel? |
46986 | 340 Who was compelled to carry the cross? |
46986 | 341 Where was Simon when they compelled him to carry the cross? |
46986 | 345 Where was he crucified? |
46986 | 346 What was the inscription on the cross? |
46986 | 347 Did the name of Jesus appear on the cross? |
46986 | 348 Did the word"Nazareth"appear in the inscription? |
46986 | 349 What did they offer him to drink before crucifying him? |
46986 | 35 Who was the father of Joseph? |
46986 | 350 How was he fastened on the cross? |
46986 | 351 At what hour of the day was he crucified? |
46986 | 352 How did the soldiers divide the garments? |
46986 | 353 Who were crucified with Jesus? |
46986 | 354 His crucifixion between two thieves fulfilled what prophecy? |
46986 | 355 How long did Jesus survive after being placed upon the cross? |
46986 | 356 What were his last words? |
46986 | 357 In what language were his last words uttered? |
46986 | 358 Matthew interprets the Hebrew words quoted by him to mean,"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
46986 | 359 What are the words given by Matthew and Mark? |
46986 | 360 What expression did his words,"Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani,"provoke? |
46986 | 361 Who was it bade them see whether Elias would come to his rescue? |
46986 | 362 Did the thieves between whom he was crucified both revile him? |
46986 | 363 What request did the penitent thief make of Jesus? |
46986 | 364 What did Jesus say to the thief? |
46986 | 365 What were the centurion''s words? |
46986 | 366 After Jesus expired what did one of the soldiers do? |
46986 | 367 What is said to have issued from the wound? |
46986 | 368 Was Christ''s suffering foretold by the prophets? |
46986 | 369 What marvelous events occurred at the time of the crucifixion? |
46986 | 370 How long did the darkness last? |
46986 | 371 Was the veil of the temple rent, as our Gospel of Matthew declares? |
46986 | 373 From what source was Matthew''s story regarding these marvelous events derived? |
46986 | 374 What request did the Jews make of Pilate concerning Jesus and the malefactors? |
46986 | 375 When the soldiers broke the legs of the thieves, why did they spare those of Jesus? |
46986 | 376 What demand was made by the Jews on the evening of the crucifixion? |
46986 | 377 What additional reason was there for having the bodies taken down? |
46986 | 378 What did Pilate do when Joseph solicited the body of Jesus? |
46986 | 379 Were the disciples present at the crucifixion? |
46986 | 380 What women followed Jesus and witnessed his execution? |
46986 | 381 Where were Mary Magdalene and her companions during the crucifixion? |
46986 | 382 Was Mary, the mother of Jesus, present? |
46986 | 383 Who stood by the cross with the mother of Jesus? |
46986 | 384 To whom was entrusted the care of Jesus''mother? |
46986 | 385 In whose sepulcher was the body of Jesus placed? |
46986 | 386 Was his body embalmed when it was laid in the sepulcher? |
46986 | 387 What is said in regard to wrapping the body of Jesus by Joseph? |
46986 | 388 What was the amount of the material used in embalming Jesus? |
46986 | 389 When did the women procure materials for embalming Jesus? |
46986 | 39 Did Jesus believe himself to be descended from David? |
46986 | 390 When did they go to embalm the body? |
46986 | 391 When was the sepulcher closed? |
46986 | 392 In what year was Jesus crucified? |
46986 | 393 On what day of the month was he crucified? |
46986 | 394 On what day of the week was he crucified? |
46986 | 395 On what day of the feast did the crucifixion occur? |
46986 | 396 What led to the arrest and crucifixion of Jesus? |
46986 | 397 What did Christ say during his ministry concerning the cross? |
46986 | 399 How old was Jesus at the time of his death? |
46986 | 4 What determined the selection of this date? |
46986 | 40 The miraculous conception was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 400 How long did Jesus say he would remain in the grave? |
46986 | 401 What occurred on the morning of the resurrection? |
46986 | 402 Who were the first to visit the tomb on the morning of the resurrection? |
46986 | 403 Who was Salome? |
46986 | 404 At what time in the morning did the women visit the tomb? |
46986 | 405 When does Matthew say they came? |
46986 | 406 Was the tomb open, or closed, when they came? |
46986 | 407 Whom did they meet at the tomb? |
46986 | 408 Were these men or angels in the sepulchre or outside of it? |
46986 | 409 Were they sitting or standing? |
46986 | 41 What name was to be given the child mentioned in Isaiah''s prophecy? |
46986 | 410 What were the first words they spoke to the women? |
46986 | 411 Did Mary Magdalene observe the divine messengers when she first came to the tomb? |
46986 | 412 Who became frightened at the messengers? |
46986 | 413 What did the women do when they became frightened? |
46986 | 414 Did the women see Jesus? |
46986 | 415 Did the women tell the disciples what they had seen? |
46986 | 416 How many disciples visited the tomb? |
46986 | 417 Who looked into the sepulchre and beheld the linen clothes? |
46986 | 418 Did Peter enter into the sepulchre? |
46986 | 42 To whom did the angel announcing the miraculous conception appear? |
46986 | 421 To whom did Jesus first appear? |
46986 | 422 Where was Mary Magdalene when Jesus first appeared to her? |
46986 | 423 Did Mary know Jesus when he first appeared to her? |
46986 | 424 Was she permitted to touch him? |
46986 | 425 Where did he appear to his disciples? |
46986 | 426 How far from Jerusalem was Emmaus, where Jesus made his first appearance? |
46986 | 427 How many disciples were present when he first appeared to them? |
46986 | 428 What effect had his presence when he first appeared to them? |
46986 | 429 How many of the disciples doubted the reality of his appearance? |
46986 | 43 For what purpose was the Annunciation made? |
46986 | 430 Were they all finally convinced of his resurrection? |
46986 | 431 When he appeared to them did they know that he must rise from the dead? |
46986 | 433 Did Paul''s companions see Jesus? |
46986 | 435 Was Jesus seen by woman after his resurrection? |
46986 | 436 From where did Jesus rise? |
46986 | 437 Was he readily recognized by his friends? |
46986 | 438 Did his appearances indicate a corporeal, or merely a spiritual existence? |
46986 | 439 If Jesus appeared in a material body, was he naked, or clothed? |
46986 | 44 Did the Annunciation take place before or after Mary''s conception? |
46986 | 440 What is said of the saints who arose on the day of the crucifixion? |
46986 | 441 When did the resurrection take place? |
46986 | 443 On what day did the Sanhedrim visit Pilate for the purpose of obtaining a guard? |
46986 | 444 When was the guard placed at the tomb? |
46986 | 445 What is said in regard to the opening of the tomb? |
46986 | 446 What did the guards do when they left the tomb? |
46986 | 447 What did the chief priests do? |
46986 | 448 What is said of the resurrection by Peter? |
46986 | 449 What did Paul teach regarding the resurrection of Christ? |
46986 | 45 Who was declared to be the father of Jesus? |
46986 | 450 What did Paul teach regarding the resurrection of the dead in general? |
46986 | 451 When did the disciples receive the Holy Ghost? |
46986 | 452 On what day of the week did it occur? |
46986 | 453 Did Thomas receive the Holy Ghost? |
46986 | 454 Who had Jesus said would send the Holy Ghost to his disciples? |
46986 | 455 What effect had the Holy Ghost upon them? |
46986 | 456 Who heard them speak in new tongues? |
46986 | 457 To the charge of drunkenness what reply did Peter make? |
46986 | 458 What inquiry did Paul make of John''s disciples? |
46986 | 459 When did Jesus''disciples begin to baptize? |
46986 | 46 What prediction did the angel Gabriel make to Mary concerning Jesus? |
46986 | 460 What form of baptism is Jesus said to have prescribed for the use of his apostles? |
46986 | 461 What was his final command to the apostles? |
46986 | 462 How long did Jesus remain on earth? |
46986 | 463 Where did the ascension take place? |
46986 | 465 What occurred at the ascension? |
46986 | 466 For what purpose did Jesus ascend to heaven? |
46986 | 467 Did Jesus ascend bodily into heaven? |
46986 | 468 Do all the Evangelists record the ascension? |
46986 | 469 Had any man ever ascended to heaven before Jesus? |
46986 | 47 When Mary visited Elizabeth what did she do? |
46986 | 470 Who was Jesus Christ? |
46986 | 471 Is God a visible Being? |
46986 | 472 How many Gods are there? |
46986 | 473 Is the doctrine of the Trinity taught in the New Testament? |
46986 | 474 Was Christ the only begotten Son of God? |
46986 | 475 By what agency and when was the Christ begotten? |
46986 | 476 Of what gender is the Holy Ghost? |
46986 | 479 Who did Mary say was the father of Jesus? |
46986 | 48 What decree is said to have been issued by Caesar Augustus immediately preceding the birth of Christ? |
46986 | 480 What did Jesus''neighbors say regarding his paternity? |
46986 | 481 Who did Peter declare him to be? |
46986 | 482 What testimony is ascribed to Paul? |
46986 | 487 Did Christ have a preexistence? |
46986 | 488 Was he infinite in wisdom? |
46986 | 489 Was he infinite in goodness? |
46986 | 490 Was he infinite in mercy? |
46986 | 496 When was Christ''s second coming and the end of terrestrial things to take place? |
46986 | 497 Did the Apostles believe that the second coming of Christ and the end of the world were at hand? |
46986 | 498 To what extent was the gospel to be preached before his second coming? |
46986 | 499 Did Jesus claim to be the Christ or Messiah from the first? |
46986 | 5 What precludes the acceptance of this date? |
46986 | 50 Of what province was Joseph a resident? |
46986 | 500 Who where the first to recognize his divinity? |
46986 | 501 What is said of Jesus in Hebrews? |
46986 | 502 What did he say respecting his identity with God? |
46986 | 503 How did he attempt to establish his claims? |
46986 | 504 What did he say regarding the truthfulness of his testimony concerning himself? |
46986 | 505 Did Jesus''neighbors believe in his divinity? |
46986 | 506 What opinion did his friends entertain of him? |
46986 | 507 Did even his brothers believe in him? |
46986 | 509 What is said of the Apocryphal Gospels which appeared in the early ages of the church? |
46986 | 51 Why was Joseph with his wife obliged to leave Galilee and go to Bethlehem of Judea to be enrolled? |
46986 | 511 For whom did he say his blood was shed? |
46986 | 512 Was his blood really shed? |
46986 | 515 If the God was crucified does he suffer endless pain? |
46986 | 516 If God died, but subsequently rose from the dead, was there not an interregnum when the universe was without a ruler? |
46986 | 517 Are all mankind to be saved by Christ? |
46986 | 518 What does Paul affirm concerning the Atonement? |
46986 | 52 Was Jesus born in a house or in a stable? |
46986 | 520 In permitting the crucifixion of Jesus, who committed the greater sin, Pilate or God? |
46986 | 521 What was the character of his death? |
46986 | 522 What did Jesus teach respecting the resurrection of the dead and the doctrine of immortality? |
46986 | 524 Did Christ descend into hell? |
46986 | 525 What is taught regarding justification by faith and justification by works? |
46986 | 526 What does Christ teach regarding salvation? |
46986 | 527 Did Christ abrogate the Mosaic law? |
46986 | 528 What is taught regarding the forgiveness of sin? |
46986 | 529 What is taught regarding future rewards and punishments? |
46986 | 53 Why did Joseph and his wife take shelter in a stable? |
46986 | 530 Did he teach the doctrine of endless punishment? |
46986 | 531 Is it possible to fall from grace? |
46986 | 532 Is baptism essential to salvation? |
46986 | 533 What constitutes Christian baptism, immersion or sprinkling? |
46986 | 534 Did Christ command his disciples to repeat and perpetuate the observance of the Eucharist? |
46986 | 535 What did he teach in regard to the efficacy of prayer? |
46986 | 536 Where are we commanded to pray? |
46986 | 537 Did Christ assume for himself the power of answering petitions? |
46986 | 538 Does God know our wants? |
46986 | 539 What portion of their goods did he require the rich to give the poor to obtain salvation? |
46986 | 54 What celestial phenomenon attended Christ''s birth? |
46986 | 540 What did he teach respecting the publicity of good works? |
46986 | 541 What original rules of table observance did he teach his disciples? |
46986 | 542 What religious formula is to be found in the New Testament? |
46986 | 543 What is taught respecting the use of oaths? |
46986 | 544 What opposing rules of proselytism did Christ promulgate? |
46986 | 545 What is to befall him that hath nothing? |
46986 | 546 What did he say would be the fate of those who took up the sword? |
46986 | 547 What did he say regarding the fear of death? |
46986 | 548 What is to be the earthly reward of those that follow Christ? |
46986 | 549 What promise did Christ make to Paul at the commencement of his ministry? |
46986 | 55 Who visited him after his birth? |
46986 | 550 How are Christ''s true followers to be distinguished from those of the devil? |
46986 | 552 What were the early Christians? |
46986 | 553 What did he teach respecting poverty and wealth? |
46986 | 554 In the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus, what befell the representatives of vagrancy and respectability? |
46986 | 555 Why was Dives''request that his brothers be informed of their impending fate refused? |
46986 | 556 While at the temple with his disciples what act did he commend? |
46986 | 557 Did he practice the virtue of temperance? |
46986 | 558 What was his first miracle? |
46986 | 559 Did he oppose slavery? |
46986 | 56 From where did the wise men come? |
46986 | 560 What did the apostles teach? |
46986 | 561 Did he favor marriage? |
46986 | 562 What did he encourage women to do? |
46986 | 563 What did he say respecting children? |
46986 | 565 Did he not promote domestic strife? |
46986 | 566 What did he require of his disciples? |
46986 | 567 Did he not indulge in vituperation and abuse? |
46986 | 569 Do the Pharisees deserve the sweeping condemnation heaped upon them by Christ and his followers? |
46986 | 57 What announcement did the angel make to the shepherds? |
46986 | 570 What is said in regard to his purging the temple? |
46986 | 572 Did he not teach the doctrine of demoniacal possession and exorcism? |
46986 | 573 What became of the swine into which Jesus ordered the devils to go? |
46986 | 574 What did Jesus say to the strange Samaritan woman whom he met at the well? |
46986 | 575 Was he not an egotist and given to vulgar boasting? |
46986 | 576 Did he not practice dissimulation? |
46986 | 577 After performing one of his miraculous cures, what charge did he make to those who witnessed it? |
46986 | 578 On the approach of the Passover what did he say to his brethren? |
46986 | 579 Why did he teach in parables? |
46986 | 58 What effect had the announcement of Christ''s birth upon Herod and the people of Jerusalem? |
46986 | 580 What immoral lesson is inculcated in the parable of the Steward? |
46986 | 581 In the parable of the Laborers what unjust doctrine is taught? |
46986 | 582 What did he teach regarding submission to theft and robbery? |
46986 | 583 Why was the woman taken in adultery released without punishment? |
46986 | 584 Whom did he pronounce blessed? |
46986 | 585 Did he teach resistance to wrong? |
46986 | 588 What maxim does Paul attribute to Jesus? |
46986 | 59 What did his parents do with him? |
46986 | 590 What was the character of Christ''s male ancestors? |
46986 | 591 What female ancestors are named in his genealogy? |
46986 | 592 Who was his favorite female attendant? |
46986 | 593 Who were his apostles? |
46986 | 594 What power is Christ said to have bestowed on Peter? |
46986 | 595 When Peter discovered that Jesus was the Christ what did he do? |
46986 | 597 What did Peter say to Jesus in regard to compensation for his services? |
46986 | 598 What is said of John in the Gospel of John? |
46986 | 599 What is said regarding the conduct of his Apostles on the evening preceding the crucifixion? |
46986 | 6 Where was Jesus born? |
46986 | 60 When unable to discover Jesus what did Herod do? |
46986 | 600 When the Jews came to arrest Jesus what did the disciples do? |
46986 | 601 What became of the Twelve Apostles? |
46986 | 602 What are Paul''s teachings regarding woman and marriage? |
46986 | 603 Did Paul encourage learning? |
46986 | 604 What admissions are made by Paul regarding his want of candor and honesty? |
46986 | 605 What is said of the persecutions of Paul? |
46986 | 606 What was Christ''s final command to his disciples? |
46986 | 608 What did Christ say respecting the intellectual character of his converts? |
46986 | 609 Whom did Christ declare to be among the first to enter the Kingdom of Heaven? |
46986 | 61 What was the real cause of Herod''s massacre? |
46986 | 610 What promise did he make to his followers? |
46986 | 62 In the massacre of the innocents what prophecy was fulfilled? |
46986 | 63 When Herod died what did the Lord command Joseph to do? |
46986 | 64 The sojourn of Joseph and Mary with Jesus in Egypt was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 66 Had Joseph and Mary lived in Nazareth previous to the birth of Jesus? |
46986 | 67 How did the parents of Jesus receive the predictions of Simeon concerning him? |
46986 | 68 Does the name"Joseph"belong in the text quoted above? |
46986 | 69 What does Luke say regarding the infancy of John and Jesus? |
46986 | 7 His reputed birth at Bethlehem was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 70 What custom did Jesus''s parents observe? |
46986 | 71 On one of these occasions where did they find him? |
46986 | 72 What was the medium of communication through which the will of Heaven was revealed to the participants in this drama? |
46986 | 73 When, and at what age, did Jesus begin his ministry? |
46986 | 75 The advent of John was in fulfillment of what prophecy? |
46986 | 76 What was predicted concerning John? |
46986 | 77 When the conception of John was announced what punishment was inflicted upon Zacharias for his doubt? |
46986 | 78 Where was John baptizing when he announced his mission to the Jews? |
46986 | 79 How old was Jesus when John began his ministry? |
46986 | 80 Were Jesus and John related? |
46986 | 81 When Jesus desired John to baptize him, what did the latter do? |
46986 | 82 What did John say regarding Jesus? |
46986 | 83 What other testimony did he bear concerning Jesus? |
46986 | 85 John heard this voice from heaven; did he believe it? |
46986 | 86 Do all the Evangelists record Jesus''baptism by John? |
46986 | 87 With what did John say Jesus would baptize? |
46986 | 88 How many were baptized by John? |
46986 | 89 Who held the office of high priest at the time Jesus began his ministry? |
46986 | 9 How many generations were there from David to Jesus? |
46986 | 90 Who was tetrarch of Abilene at this time? |
46986 | 91 Where was Jesus three days after he began his ministry? |
46986 | 92 Was he led, or driven by the spirit into the wilderness? |
46986 | 93 When did the temptation take place? |
46986 | 95 What did the devil next do? |
46986 | 96 What did the devil propose? |
46986 | 97 Where did the devil take him first, to the temple, or to the mountain? |
46986 | 98 Had John been cast into prison when Jesus began his ministry? |
46986 | After what? |
46986 | Alluding, as is alleged, to the coming destruction of Jerusalem, what did he declare they would say? |
46986 | Among the politer classes, when strangers meet, the question is asked:''To what sublime religion do you belong?'' |
46986 | An enrollment of Roman citizens for the purpose of taxation was made in Syria 7 A. D. 49 Of what king was Joseph a subject when Jesus was born? |
46986 | And are we to approve in a God conduct that we regard as detestable in a man? |
46986 | And he asked them, How many loaves have ye? |
46986 | And he called him, and said unto him, How is it that I hear this of thee? |
46986 | And how could he have taught, unless he had reached the age of a master? |
46986 | And if all of it was fulfilled, will not this account for the empty sepulchre? |
46986 | And what of Joses, and Juda, and Simon, and her daughters who remained at home? |
46986 | Apostles"? |
46986 | Are not Christians, then, in condemning these men, ungrateful to their greatest benefactors? |
46986 | Are not these writings"full of pious frauds and fabulous wonders"? |
46986 | Art thou Elias? |
46986 | Besides, as it was at the full of the moon, what need had they of lanterns and torches? |
46986 | But conceding, for the sake of argument, that he was crucified; does this make his resurrection probable, or even possible? |
46986 | But did his so- called prophecy have reference to this event? |
46986 | But have Protestant countries a purer record? |
46986 | But if Joseph was not the father of Jesus, what is the use of giving his pedigree? |
46986 | But if"I and my Father are one,"how does that fulfill the law? |
46986 | But some said, Shall Christ come out of Galilee? |
46986 | But the other answering rebuked him, saying, Dost not thou fear God, seeing thou art in the same condemnation?" |
46986 | But what do we understand by the term myth? |
46986 | But who can describe the grace and the soft languor of these daughters of Syria, their large black eyes, the warm bistre tints of their skin? |
46986 | But why did Jesus, if omniscient, as claimed, select a thief for this office? |
46986 | But why was this duty imposed upon John when the Apostle James( the Less) was a brother of Jesus and a son of Mary? |
46986 | By reminding them that it was the express will of their Master? |
46986 | Can one, who soothed us in the lesser troubles of our lives, look on while we are suffering the greatest agony of all and fail to comfort? |
46986 | Can the belief of such men, in such an age, establish the reality of a phenomenon which is contradicted by universal experience? |
46986 | Concerning this brutal act of Jesus, Helen Gardener says:"Do you think that was kind? |
46986 | Could they have done otherwise? |
46986 | Did Jesus go to Hell with the thief because the thief was unfit to go to Heaven with him? |
46986 | Did Jesus miraculously create it? |
46986 | Did Jesus recant on the cross? |
46986 | Did he advocate industry and frugality? |
46986 | Did he appear to her naked, or was he clothed? |
46986 | Did he desire them to disregard his commands? |
46986 | Did he do this himself? |
46986 | Did he do this? |
46986 | Did he raise himself from the dead? |
46986 | Did he renounce the Kingdom of God when God deserted him? |
46986 | Did he respect it himself? |
46986 | Did representatives of all these nations really assemble to hear the disciples, or was this merely an imaginary gathering of the writer? |
46986 | Do not these writings display"the greatest superstition and ignorance"? |
46986 | Do such predictions exist? |
46986 | Do the remaining books of the New Testament confirm it? |
46986 | Do the writers of the New Testament claim to be inspired? |
46986 | Do they prove that Christ was divine-- that he was a supernatural being, as claimed? |
46986 | Do you think it was godlike? |
46986 | Do you think that a man who could offer such an indignity to a sorrowing mother has a perfect character, is an ideal God?" |
46986 | Do you think that, even if he were to cure the child then, he would have done a noble thing? |
46986 | Does an analysis of his alleged history disclose the deification of a man, or merely the personification of an idea? |
46986 | Does any one believe that he did?" |
46986 | For how could he have had disciples if he did not teach? |
46986 | For what purpose did Christ descend into hell and preach to its inhabitants? |
46986 | For what purpose was his blood shed? |
46986 | For what purpose was the voice sent? |
46986 | Grant it; but is it necessary for him in order to exhibit his divine character to assume the manners of a brute? |
46986 | Had they turned their mother out of doors? |
46986 | Hath not the scriptures said, That Christ cometh out of the seed of David, and out of the town of Bethlehem, where David was?" |
46986 | Have not these writings been"imposed upon the world by fraudulent men, as the writings of the holy(?) |
46986 | He said unto him, What is written in the law? |
46986 | He saith unto them, But whom say ye that I am? |
46986 | He says:"Why then, it has been asked, does Josephus make no mention of so infamous an atrocity? |
46986 | How could the council, many of whose members were Sadducees, receive this as credible? |
46986 | How did they treat it? |
46986 | How does he meet the accusation and justify his conduct? |
46986 | How he went into the house of God in the days of Abiathar, the high priest, and did eat the shew bread?" |
46986 | How long before the close of Herod''s reign was he born? |
46986 | How long did he remain in the grave? |
46986 | How long must an innocent people suffer for an alleged crime that was never committed? |
46986 | How long must our mythology, with all its attendant evils, rule and curse the world? |
46986 | How long ought we to continue in prayer? |
46986 | How, then, could he have written that Jesus was the Christ? |
46986 | I should call on that Infinite Love that has served us so well? |
46986 | If Christ was the first to rise from the dead what becomes of the miracles of Lazarus, of the widow of Nain''s son, and of the daughter of Jairus? |
46986 | If Christ, then, did not rise from the dead by his own volition, was his resurrection any proof of his divinity? |
46986 | If God really wished to convince all the people why did he not show him to all the people? |
46986 | If Jesus was the Christ, and Christ was God, as claimed, who owned"these things,"he or the devil? |
46986 | If Joseph was not the father of Jesus how does proving that he was descended from David prove that Jesus was descended from David? |
46986 | If a part of this prophecy was fulfilled, may not all of it have been fulfilled? |
46986 | If man can not punish crime because not free from sin himself, is it just in God, the author of all sin, to punish man for his sins? |
46986 | If only the man died can this be true? |
46986 | If so, how did it come into existence? |
46986 | If so, what relation did she bear to him? |
46986 | If so, where did he procure his clothes? |
46986 | If the Holy Ghost was the mother of Jesus did he have two mothers? |
46986 | If the New Testament is not inspired and infallible, what follows? |
46986 | If the disciples believed that Mary was deluded, is it unreasonable to believe that they were deluded also? |
46986 | If the divine part was sacrificed does God cease to exist? |
46986 | If, on the other hand, he would deliberately falsify in a matter of this importance, what is his testimony worth as to the origin of the four gospels? |
46986 | In order for him to believe this what was necessary? |
46986 | In the verse immediately following this prediction, his disciples say:"Tell us, when shall these things be? |
46986 | Is Christ a historical or a philosophical myth? |
46986 | Is God a mischievous urchin taunting his hungry dog with a morsel of bread, and shouting,"Beg, Tray, beg!"? |
46986 | Is John the Baptist a historical character? |
46986 | Is it evidence of a perfect character to accompany a service with an insult? |
46986 | Is it not plain that each of them professes to trace the lineal descent of one and the same man, Joseph?" |
46986 | Is it not reasonable to suppose that the alleged information conveyed in his speech was as familiar to the disciples whom he addressed as to himself? |
46986 | Is it not strange that his enemies should be cognizant of this when his disciples"knew not the scripture, that he must rise again from the dead?" |
46986 | Is it probable that a man in the agonies of a terrible death would devote his expiring breath to a recital of Hebrew poetry? |
46986 | Is the above less true of the books we are reviewing? |
46986 | Is this confirmed by the Evangelists? |
46986 | Is this correct? |
46986 | Is this probable? |
46986 | Is this the only miraculous conception claimed in the Bible? |
46986 | Is this true? |
46986 | Is this true? |
46986 | Is this true? |
46986 | James:"But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith without works is dead?" |
46986 | Jesus answered him, Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me?" |
46986 | John:"And they asked him[ John], what then? |
46986 | John:"They said, Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph?" |
46986 | John:"Woman, why weepest thou?" |
46986 | Judged by this standard what is the comparative strength of these sovereigns''subjects? |
46986 | Luke: When he remained behind in Jerusalem, and they found him in the temple,"his mother said unto him, Son, why hast thou thus dealt with us? |
46986 | Luke:"They said, Is not this Joseph''s son?" |
46986 | Luke:"Why seek ye the living among the dead?" |
46986 | Mark:"And his disciples answered him, From whence can a man satisfy these men with bread here in the wilderness? |
46986 | Mark:"Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani, which is, being interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
46986 | Mark:"Is not this the carpenter?" |
46986 | Matthew and Mark say:"Is not his mother called Mary? |
46986 | Matthew: By an implied affirmative answer to Judas''question,"Is it I?" |
46986 | Matthew: They said,"Is not this the carpenter''s[ Joseph''s] son?" |
46986 | Matthew:"Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani, that is to say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
46986 | Matthew:"He[ Jesus] asked his disciples, saying, Whom do men say that I the Son of Man am? |
46986 | Matthew:"His disciples asked him, saying, Why then say the scribes that Elias must first come? |
46986 | Matthew:"Is not this the carpenter''s son?" |
46986 | Matthew:"Then came to him the disciples of John, saying, Why do we and the Pharisees fast oft, but thy disciples fast not?" |
46986 | Most Christians condemn Communism; but was the Communism of nineteen hundred years ago better than the Communism of today? |
46986 | Of what benefit was the voice when those who heard it were unable to distinguish it from thunder? |
46986 | On what part of the temple did he set him? |
46986 | Paul:"But some man will say, How are the dead raised up? |
46986 | Pilate saith unto them, Shall I crucify your King? |
46986 | Pursuant to this command toward what place did they steer? |
46986 | Regarding this the"Bible for Learners"says:"Was such a foolish report really circulated among the Jews? |
46986 | Savage says:"They knew nothing about any sacraments; they had not been instituted"( What is Christianity?). |
46986 | So he called every one of his lord''s debtors unto him, and said unto the first, How much owest thou unto my lord? |
46986 | The words Mark attempts to give are"Elohi, Elohi, metul mah shabaktani?" |
46986 | The words mean,"My God, my God, why hast thou sacrificed me?" |
46986 | Then said he unto another, And how much owest thou? |
46986 | Then said the Jews unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham?" |
46986 | Then that story about Elijah is a fiction, is it? |
46986 | Then the steward said within himself, What shall I do? |
46986 | Then what is the use of prayer? |
46986 | Through whom was this sacrifice secured? |
46986 | To ten(?) |
46986 | To whom is this rite to be administered, to both adults and infants, or to adults alone? |
46986 | To whom were its words addressed? |
46986 | Under these circumstances is it reasonable to suppose that the chief priests would send out a torchlight procession to apprehend him? |
46986 | Was Christ omnipotent? |
46986 | Was Christ omnipresent? |
46986 | Was Christ omniscient? |
46986 | Was Christ self- existent? |
46986 | Was Mary descended from David? |
46986 | Was Paul crucified for you?" |
46986 | Was he a worthless ingrate, unable and unwilling to care for her? |
46986 | Was he its author? |
46986 | Was he unable to conduct his ministry without the aid of one? |
46986 | Was it a lost coin? |
46986 | Was it the human, or the divine part of him that suffered death? |
46986 | Was she really dead? |
46986 | Was such insolence of manners on the part of Jesus calculated to promote the interest of the cause he professed to hold so dear at heart? |
46986 | Was the penitent thief baptized? |
46986 | Were he and his disciples the only ones who performed miracles? |
46986 | Were the disciples armed? |
46986 | Were they greater than God? |
46986 | What becomes of Matthew''s saints who rose from the dead on the day of the crucifixion, two days before Christ rose? |
46986 | What did Jesus do in turn? |
46986 | What did he say according to Matthew? |
46986 | What did he teach? |
46986 | What did his companions do when they saw the light which attended the appearance? |
46986 | What did they say in reply? |
46986 | What do the Evangelists themselves declare? |
46986 | What had Jesus predicted concerning his denial? |
46986 | What is such belief worth? |
46986 | What meaning did he attach to the word Cephas? |
46986 | What name was to be given Mary''s son? |
46986 | What request was made by James and John? |
46986 | What use have such men of witnesses? |
46986 | What was required of man to secure salvation? |
46986 | What was the burden he was required to carry? |
46986 | What was the nature of his resurrection? |
46986 | What was the need of this when the place had already been"prepared... from the foundation of the world"( Matthew xxv, 34)? |
46986 | When did they come out of their graves? |
46986 | When even the dying words of this Christ are borrowed, is it not evident that the whole story of his life is fabulous? |
46986 | When every step thus far taken by the council had been illegal, why should it have been so particular in regard to the witnesses? |
46986 | When restored does he show his gratitude by praising the drug and damning the doctor? |
46986 | When was this? |
46986 | Where did he overtake them? |
46986 | Where did this bring them? |
46986 | Where now is Isis the mother, with the child Horus in her lap? |
46986 | Where was he when he uttered this lamentation? |
46986 | Which one? |
46986 | Who did Paul declare him to be? |
46986 | Who does Luke declare him to be? |
46986 | Who does the author of Acts state was high priest? |
46986 | Who ruled Judea, Pilate or the Sanhedrim? |
46986 | Who was Barrabas? |
46986 | Who was John the Baptist? |
46986 | Who was the other? |
46986 | Who will be his successor?" |
46986 | Who witnessed it? |
46986 | Why blame the Jews or the Romans or any other mortals? |
46986 | Why blame the instruments? |
46986 | Why did the tree contain no fruit? |
46986 | Why persecute the descendants? |
46986 | Why should they marvel at the predictions of Simeon when long before they had been apprised of the same thing by the angel Gabriel? |
46986 | Why was this done? |
46986 | Why? |
46986 | Why? |
46986 | Would such insolent behavior have a tendency to gain for him the world''s esteem or aid the cause he represents? |
46986 | Would you like him as a family physician? |
46986 | and his brethren, James and Joses, and Simon, and Judas? |
46986 | and his sisters, are they not all with us?" |
46986 | and is not such an omission rather indicative of a late Hellenistic author, who scarcely had heard the name of the brother so early martyred?" |
46986 | and what shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
46986 | and with what body do they come? |
46986 | and with what body do they come? |
46986 | how readest thou? |
46986 | what answer did he give? |
8193 | But man dieth and lieth outstretched; He giveth up the ghost, where is he then? 8193 But wisdom-- whence shall it come? |
8193 | Far off is that which is, and deep, deep, who can fathom it? 8193 How should man be in the right against God? |
8193 | Shall they not teach thee? |
8193 | Wherefore,he asks,"do the wicked live, become old, yea wax mighty in strength?" |
8193 | Who has ascended into heaven and come down again? 8193 [ 123] What then is life? |
8193 | [ 194] The same doctrine is laid down by the last accredited of the Buddha''s disciples, Sariputto:What, brethren, is the source of suffering?" |
8193 | ***** Such an one would I question about God: What is his name?" |
8193 | 21. Who knoweth whether the breath of man riseth upwards or whether the breath of the beast sinketh downwards to the earth? |
8193 | 3. during his life, what shall befall after his death? |
8193 | :"Is not the soul of every living thing in his hand, And the breath of all mankind?" |
8193 | :"Why do the times of judgment depend upon the Almighty, And yet they who know him do not see his days? |
8193 | Am I a sea or a sea- monster,[205] That thou settest a watch over me? |
8193 | And are not his days like to those of an hireling? |
8193 | And does he judge the man of blood? |
8193 | And harrow up your friend? |
8193 | And hast thou drawn wisdom unto thyself? |
8193 | And he said, What shall I cry? |
8193 | And his dread seize hold of you? |
8193 | And how can man be deemed just before God, And how can he be clean who is born of a woman? |
8193 | And how often doth"ruin"overwhelm them? |
8193 | And how should not my spirit be impatient? |
8193 | And how will ye comfort me in vain, Since of your answers nought but falsehood remains? |
8193 | And is not rescue driven wholly away from me? |
8193 | And its path for the lightning of thunder? |
8193 | And knitted me with bones and sinews? |
8193 | And of darkness, where is the abode? |
8193 | And of the latter he says:"But wisdom-- whence shall it come? |
8193 | And shall the prattler[212] be deemed in the right? |
8193 | And shall the rock be removed from its place? |
8193 | And that thou shouldst set thine heart upon him? |
8193 | And that thou shouldst set thine heart upon him? |
8193 | And the east wind scattered upon the earth? |
8193 | And the uprightness of thy ways thy hope? |
8193 | And upon whom doth his light not arise? |
8193 | And utter lies on his behalf? |
8193 | And what is the name of his sons, if thou knowest it? |
8193 | And what mine end that I should be patient? |
8193 | And what the name of his sons, if thou knowest it?''" |
8193 | And when he visiteth, what could I answer him? |
8193 | And when thou jeerest, shall none make thee ashamed? |
8193 | And where is the place of understanding? |
8193 | And where is the place of understanding? |
8193 | And where is the place of understanding? |
8193 | And who gendered the hoar- frost of heaven? |
8193 | And who knoweth whether he be a wise man or a fool? |
8193 | And whose spirit went out from thee? |
8193 | And why the breasts, that I might suck? |
8193 | And wilt thou pursue the dry stubble? |
8193 | Are not thine iniquities numberless? |
8193 | Are thy days as the days of mortals? |
8193 | As He does not, why speak of the moral order of His world or of the moral attributes of Himself? |
8193 | As then our acts shape our rewards, of what avail are gods or Fate? |
8193 | Be not righteous overmuch, neither make thyself overwise; why wouldst thou ruin thyself? |
8193 | Because he knoweth not what shall be; for who can tell him how it will come to pass? |
8193 | Become old, yea, wax mighty in strength? |
8193 | Behold, he taketh away, and who can hinder him? |
8193 | Bethink, I pray thee, who ever perished guiltless? |
8193 | But does such a genuine teacher exist? |
8193 | But may we not hope for some better and higher state in the future life beyond the tomb where vice will be punished and virtue rewarded? |
8193 | But shall not a drowning man stretch out his hand? |
8193 | But this proves nothing; the all- important question being, could we, under the circumstances, have willed otherwise than we did? |
8193 | But what doth your arguing reprove? |
8193 | But what, I have been frequently asked, will be the effect of all this upon theology? |
8193 | CCCII Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom, And spread her pinions towards the south? |
8193 | CCCIII Will the caviller still contend with the Almighty? |
8193 | CCCVII JOB: Behold I am vile, what shall I answer thee? |
8193 | CCI Is the wicked taught understanding by God? |
8193 | CCIV ELIPHAZ: Can a man be profitable unto God? |
8193 | CCLII Yea, what booted me the strength of their hands? |
8193 | CCLIX Did I not weep for him that was in trouble? |
8193 | CCLXVI Had I despised the right of my man- servant Or of my maidservant, when they contended with me, What could I do, when God rose up? |
8193 | CCLXXIX When I laid the earth''s foundation where wast thou? |
8193 | CCLXXVIII JAHVEH: Who is this that darkeneth my counsel, With words devoid of knowledge? |
8193 | CCLXXX Where are its sockets sunk down, Or who laid the corner- stone thereof? |
8193 | CCLXXXI Who shut in the sea with doors, When it brake forth as issuing from the womb? |
8193 | CCLXXXIII Was it at thy prompting that I commanded the morning, And caused the dawn to know its place? |
8193 | CCLXXXIX By what way is the mist parted? |
8193 | CCLXXXV Hast thou entered into the springs of the sea? |
8193 | CCLXXXVI Hast thou surveyed the breadth of the earth? |
8193 | CCLXXXVII Which way leadeth to the dwelling of light? |
8193 | CCV Will he reprove thee for thy fear of him? |
8193 | CCXC Out of whose womb issued the ice? |
8193 | CCXCI Canst thou bind the knots of the Pleiads, Or loose the fetters of Orion? |
8193 | CCXCIV Who provideth his food for the raven, When his young ones cry unto God? |
8193 | CCXCV Canst thou mark when the hinds do calve? |
8193 | CCXCVII Will the wild ox be willing to serve thee, Or abide by thy grip? |
8193 | CCXCVIII Dost thou bestow might upon the horse? |
8193 | CCXIX But he is bent upon one thing and who can turn him away? |
8193 | CCXVI Will he plead against me with his almighty power? |
8193 | CCXXI Why do the times of judgment depend upon the Almighty, And yet they who know him do not see his days? |
8193 | CCXXVI But the thunder of his power, Who understands its working? |
8193 | CCXXVIII JOB: How hast thou helped him that is without power? |
8193 | CCXXXIV But wisdom-- whence shall it come? |
8193 | CCXXXIX Will God hear his cry, When trouble overtaketh him? |
8193 | CI Is not the soul of every living thing in his hand, And the breath of all mankind? |
8193 | CIII Behold he breaketh down and it can not be builded anew: He shutteth up a man, and who can open to him? |
8193 | CLIV Hold still my pledge in thy keeping, Who then will be my voucher? |
8193 | CLIX And my hope-- where is it now? |
8193 | CLX BILDAD: When wilt thou make an end of words? |
8193 | CLXI Shall the earth be deserted for thy sake? |
8193 | CLXVIII JOB: How long will ye harrow my soul, And crush me with words? |
8193 | CXCII As for me, is my complaint to men? |
8193 | CXCVIII How oft is"the lamp of evil- doers put out"? |
8193 | CXI Will ye discourse wickedly for God? |
8193 | CXII Were it well for you should he search you out? |
8193 | CXIII Shall not his majesty, then, make you afraid? |
8193 | CXIX Wilt thou scare a leaf driven to and fro? |
8193 | CXVIII How many are mine iniquities? |
8193 | CXXVI But man dieth, and lieth outstretched; He giveth up the ghost, where is he then? |
8193 | CXXX ELIPHAZ: Should a wise man utter empty knowledge, And fill his belly with the east wind? |
8193 | CXXXII Art thou the first man born? |
8193 | CXXXIII What knowest thou that we know not? |
8193 | Can not my palate discern misfortunes? |
8193 | Can the Nile- reed shoot up without water? |
8193 | Can ye dupe him as ye dupe men? |
8193 | Canst thou number the months when they bring forth? |
8193 | Canst thou send lightnings that they may speed, And say unto thee: Here we are? |
8193 | Deemed silenced in thy sight? |
8193 | Deeper than hell; what canst thou know? |
8193 | Did I not weep for him that was in trouble?" |
8193 | Did not he that made me in the womb, make him? |
8193 | Did not he that made me in the womb, make him? |
8193 | Do not allow thyself too much liberty, and be not a fool: why wouldst thou die before thy time? |
8193 | Dost thou clothe his neck with a waving mane? |
8193 | Dost thou make him to bound like a locust, In the pride of his terrible snort? |
8193 | Doth God pervert judgment? |
8193 | Doth not the ear try words As the mouth tasteth its meat? |
8193 | Doth the solace of God not suffice unto thee, And a word to thee whispered softly? |
8193 | Far off is that which is,[288] and deep, deep; who can fathom it? |
8193 | For what can be the hope of the iniquitous, When God cutteth his soul away? |
8193 | For what hath man of all his striving and of the worry of his heart wherewith he labours under the sun? |
8193 | For what hath the wise more than the fool? |
8193 | For what manner of man will he be who shall come after me? |
8193 | For who can eat and who can enjoy except through him? |
8193 | For who can show him what shall become of him after his death? |
8193 | For who can tell a man what shall come to pass after him under the sun? |
8193 | For who knoweth what is helpful to man in life during the brief vain days of his existence which he spendeth as a shadow? |
8193 | For whom do I wear myself out and bereave my soul of pleasure? |
8193 | God alone is endowed with wisdom; but is He likewise good? |
8193 | Granting that a certain wholesale kind of equity was administered, why must the individual suffer for no fault of his own? |
8193 | Hast thou not clothed me with skin and flesh? |
8193 | Hath not man warfare upon earth? |
8193 | Have the gates of death been opened unto thee, Or hast thou seen the doors of darkness? |
8193 | How much less shall I answer him, And choose out my words to argue with him? |
8193 | How oft are they as stubble before the wind, And as chaff that the storm carries away? |
8193 | How then can ye reason as if the moral order were based upon retribution, and from my sufferings infer my sins? |
8193 | How upholdest thou the arm that hath no strength? |
8193 | I heard a gentle voice:--"Shall a mortal be more just than God? |
8193 | II Who has ascended into heaven and come down again? |
8193 | If God will not punish them, is He just? |
8193 | If He can not, is He almighty? |
8193 | If strength be aught, lo, he is strong, And if judgment, who shall arraign him? |
8193 | If this be so, who are they that have surprised the secret and found the clue to the enigma? |
8193 | Involuntarily, then, the question forces itself upon us, Is He all- good? |
8193 | Is he not heedless of the counsel of the wicked? |
8193 | Is it a boon to the Almighty that thou art righteous? |
8193 | Is my strength the strength of stones? |
8193 | Is not pity the duty of the friend, Who, else, turneth away from the fear of God? |
8193 | Is not rather thy wickedness great? |
8193 | Is not their tent- pole torn up? |
8193 | Is there any number to his armies? |
8193 | Is there taste in the white of raw eggs? |
8193 | Jahveh virtually asks, as Buddha had asked before:"Shall any gazer see with mortal eyes, Or any searcher know with mortal mind? |
8193 | LIII What is man that thou shouldst magnify him? |
8193 | LIX Can the papyrus grow without marsh? |
8193 | LV Why dost thou not rather pardon my misdeed, And take away mine iniquity? |
8193 | LVI BILDAD: How long wilt thou utter these things, And shall the words of thy mouth be like a storm wind? |
8193 | LXV JOB: I know it is so of a truth; For how should man be in the right against God? |
8193 | LXXXI Is it meet that thou shouldst oppress, Shouldst thrust aside the work of thine hands? |
8193 | LXXXIV Didst thou not pour me out as milk, And curdle me like cheese? |
8193 | LXXXVIII Wherefore, then, didst thou bring me out of the womb? |
8193 | Lest I be sated and deny thee, And say, Who is the Lord? |
8193 | Likewise, if two lie down together, they become warm; but how can one grow warm alone? |
8193 | Ma- yámriç''khá, ki táhnä? |
8193 | Mighty is the word of the monarch; Who dares ask him:"What dost thou? |
8193 | My bliss-- who shall behold it? |
8193 | Nor leave me in peace while there is breath in my throat? |
8193 | Of what avail is it to man? |
8193 | Or at least how are we to reconcile His having done so with His attribute of goodness? |
8193 | Or deliver me from the enemy''s hand? |
8193 | Or doth the Almighty corrupt justice? |
8193 | Or give a bribe for me of your substance? |
8193 | Or hast thou walked in search of the abysses? |
8193 | Or is it gain to him that thou makest thy way perfect? |
8193 | Or is my flesh of brass? |
8193 | Or loweth the ox over his fodder? |
8193 | Or redeem me from the hand of the mighty? |
8193 | Or wast thou made before the hills? |
8193 | Or where were the righteous cut off? |
8193 | Or with speeches that profit him nothing? |
8193 | Say not: Why were old times better than these? |
8193 | Seest thou as man seeth? |
8193 | Shall a man be more pure than his maker? |
8193 | Shall he not cry out in his destruction? |
8193 | Shall idle words have an end? |
8193 | Should he reason with bootless prattle? |
8193 | Should men hold their peace at thy babbling? |
8193 | Such an one would I question about God: What is his name? |
8193 | Such an one would I question about God:''What is his name? |
8193 | Take our fellow- men, their ways and works, for instance, and what do we behold? |
8193 | That it might seize hold of the ends of the earth, That the wicked might be shaken out? |
8193 | That thou shouldst take it to its bounds, And that thou shouldst know the paths to its house? |
8193 | That thou shouldst visit him every morning, And try him every moment? |
8193 | That thou shouldst visit him every morning, And try him every moment? |
8193 | The tuneful Psalmist had sung in ecstatic wonder at the mercy of God:"What is man, that thou art mindful of him? |
8193 | Then I said in mine heart: As it happeneth to the fool, so shall it happen also unto me; and why then have I been so very wise? |
8193 | To whom hast thou uttered words? |
8193 | Unto mirth: What cometh of it? |
8193 | V Why died I not straight from the womb? |
8193 | Was not my soul grieved for the needy? |
8193 | Wast thou heard in the council of God? |
8193 | What is there in material man that he should be immortal? |
8193 | What pricks thee that thou answerest? |
8193 | What profit hath man of all his toil wherewith he wearies himself under the sun? |
8193 | What profit hath the toiler from that whereat he labours? |
8193 | What understandest thou which is not in us? |
8193 | What, the poor who knoweth how to walk before the living? |
8193 | What, then, is the secret of"happiness"? |
8193 | When goods increase, they also are multiplied that devour them, and what profit hath the owner thereof save the gazing thereon with his eyes? |
8193 | Wherefore are we counted as beasts? |
8193 | Wherefore do the wicked live? |
8193 | Wherefore hidest thou thy face, And holdest me for thine enemy? |
8193 | Who can bind the waters in a garment? |
8193 | Who can bind the waters in a garment? |
8193 | Who can gather the wind in his fists? |
8193 | Who can gather the wind in his fists? |
8193 | Who can grasp all the ends of the earth? |
8193 | Who can grasp all the ends of the earth? |
8193 | Who can straighten what he hath made crooked? |
8193 | Who hath divided its course for the rain- storm? |
8193 | Who hath laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest, Or who hath stretched the line upon it? |
8193 | Who is he that will plead with me? |
8193 | Who revealed to them that retribution is the basis of the moral order? |
8193 | Who will say unto him:"What dost thou?" |
8193 | Why cause God to be wroth at thy voice and destroy the work of thy hands? |
8193 | Why did God make man under such conditions? |
8193 | Why did the knees meet me? |
8193 | Why do ye persecute me like God, And are not satiated with my flesh? |
8193 | Why hast thou set me up as a butt, So that I am become a target for thee? |
8193 | Why, having come out of the belly, did I not expire? |
8193 | Will he always call upon God? |
8193 | Will he delight himself in the Almighty? |
8193 | Will he enter with thee into judgment for that? |
8193 | Will he not surely rebuke you, If ye secretly[218] accept his person? |
8193 | Will not your adages become as ashes, Your arguments even as bulwarks of clay? |
8193 | Will ye contend for God with deception? |
8193 | Will ye even assail me, the blameless one? |
8193 | Wilt thou condemn me that thou mayst be in the right? |
8193 | Wilt thou even disannul my judgment? |
8193 | Wilt thou trust him because his strength is great, Or wilt thou leave thy labour to him? |
8193 | Would one eat things insipid without salt? |
8193 | XC ZOPHAR: Shall the multitude of words be left unanswered? |
8193 | XCII It[213] is high as heaven; what canst thou do? |
8193 | XIII Was not the fear of God thy confidence? |
8193 | XLI Did I say: Bestow aught upon me? |
8193 | XLIII Do ye imagine to rebuke words? |
8193 | XLV Is there iniquity in my tongue? |
8193 | XLVII Lying down I exclaim: When shall I arise? |
8193 | XX Call now, if so be any will answer thee; And to which of the angels wilt thou turn? |
8193 | XXXIV Doth the wild ass bray when he hath grass? |
8193 | XXXVII What is my strength that I should hope? |
8193 | XXXVIII Am I not utterly bereft of help? |
8193 | Yea, though one lived a thousand years twice told, yet had not tasted happiness, must not all wander into one place? |
8193 | Yet hold they not happiness in their own hands? |
8193 | [ 19] But if this be so, one may ask, why do we feel sorrow, shame, repentance for acts which we were not free to perform or abstain from performing? |
8193 | [ 206] LIV Why wilt thou not look away from me? |
8193 | [ 217] Will ye accept his person by dint of trickery? |
8193 | [ 239] If there be a God who rules the world, punishes evil, and rewards good, how comes it that we descry no signs of such just retribution? |
8193 | [ 241] And if it be not so now, who will make me a liar, And render my speech meaningless? |
8193 | [ 242] Why then do ye utter such empty things? |
8193 | [ 247] And did he not fashion us in one belly? |
8193 | and the son of man that thou visitest him? |
8193 | i. to:"Hast not thou made an hedge about him, and about his house, and about all that he hath on every side?" |
8193 | in spite of the fact that ye know it is untrue? |
8193 | is rendered in our version as follows:"If a man die shall he live again?" |
8193 | shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil? |
8193 | to which the emphatic answer is"None;"and How had we best occupy the vain days of our wretched existence? |
8193 | with a strophe from Job: Shamáti khéllä rábbot: Menáchme''amal koól''khem, Hakeç ledíberé rooch? |
38808 | But you believe in eternal damnation, do you not? |
38808 | Did you deliver it? |
38808 | Do you believe in eternal punishment, as set forth in the confession of faith? |
38808 | Has anyone seen a map of the land of Nod? |
38808 | Have you preached on that subject lately? |
38808 | Is the keen logic and broad humanity of Ingersoll converting the brain and heart of Christendom? |
38808 | Well, what was the matter--did you drink, or cheat your employer, or were you idle? |
38808 | What was the trouble? |
38808 | Where are the four rivers that ran murmuring through the groves of Paradise? |
38808 | Where do you come from? |
38808 | Who was Cain''s wife? |
38808 | Who was the snake? 38808 A gentleman passing, stopped for a moment and said to the little girl:What relation is the little boy to you?" |
38808 | About how many have taken part in the recent nominations? |
38808 | About what age were you when you began this investigation which led to your present convictions? |
38808 | Above the grave what can the honest minister say? |
38808 | According to your views, what disposition is made of man after death? |
38808 | After all, has he not pursued the same method with me that he blames me for pursuing in regard to the Bible? |
38808 | Although you are not in favor of taking the Philippines by force, how do you regard the administration in its conduct of the war? |
38808 | And are they not, in spite of their professions to the contrary, enemies to republican liberty? |
38808 | And if she is granted one, is virtue in danger, and shall we lose the high ideal of home life? |
38808 | And in what way has not Spiritualism done good? |
38808 | And is it desirable that this relation should be rendered sacred by a church? |
38808 | And is there a woman so heartless and so immoral that she would force another to bear what she would shudderingly avoid? |
38808 | And the same old question is upon us now: What shall be done with the victims of drink? |
38808 | And what did you think of it? |
38808 | And what do you think of the modern development of metaphysics-- as expressed outside of the emotional and semi- ecclesiastical schools? |
38808 | And what shall I say of Sidney Carton? |
38808 | And why should we take so much pains to free the body, and then enslave the mind? |
38808 | And, after all, is not a noble man, is not a pure woman, the finest revelation we have of God-- if there be one? |
38808 | Are all mediums impostors? |
38808 | Are not parallel railroads an evil? |
38808 | Are not persons allowed to testify in the United States whether they believe in future rewards and punishments or not? |
38808 | Are not religion and morals inseparable? |
38808 | Are not the Catholics the least progressive? |
38808 | Are our workingmen to wear wooden shoes? |
38808 | Are the doctrines of Agnosticism gaining ground, and what, in your opinion, will be the future of the church? |
38808 | Are the fathers and brothers blameless who allow young girls to make coats, cloaks and vests in an atmosphere poisoned by the ignorant and low- bred? |
38808 | Are the millions of Spiritualists deluded? |
38808 | Are there not some human natures so morally weak or diseased that they can not keep from sin without the aid of some sort of religion? |
38808 | Are they in any sense correct? |
38808 | Are they rectifying the error now? |
38808 | Are they sincere-- have they any real basis for their psychological theories? |
38808 | Are we not entering upon the era of our greatest prosperity? |
38808 | Are we really in need of the children born of such parents? |
38808 | Are women becoming freed from the bonds of sectarianism? |
38808 | Are you aware that it has been attempted to show that some money loaned or given him by yourself was really what he purchased the pistol with? |
38808 | Are you getting nearer to or farther away from God, Christianity and the Bible? |
38808 | Are you going to make a formal reply to their sermons? |
38808 | Are you going to take any part in the campaign? |
38808 | Are you in favor of expansion? |
38808 | Are you in favor of the A. P. A.? |
38808 | Are you in favor of the annexation of Canada? |
38808 | Are you in sympathy with the workingmen and their objects? |
38808 | Are you seeking to quit public lecturing on religious questions? |
38808 | Are you still a Republican in political belief? |
38808 | Are you to go on the lecture platform again? |
38808 | Are you willing to give your opinion of the Pope? |
38808 | As Truth can brook no compromises, has it not the same limitations that surround social and domestic hospitality? |
38808 | As a lawyer, will you express an opinion as to the moral and legal responsibility of a victim of alcoholism? |
38808 | Ball and Burchard? |
38808 | Besides, if this woman of whom he speaks was a lady, how did she happen to stay where obscene language was being used? |
38808 | But do n''t you think, Colonel, that the materialistic philosophy, even in the light of your own interpretation, is essentially pessimistic? |
38808 | But do you not think the Greenback movement will help the Democracy to success in 1880? |
38808 | But has the Republican party all the good and the Democratic all the bad? |
38808 | But if it clings to soft money? |
38808 | But if they will not disband? |
38808 | But suppose that the Chinese came to look upon wheat in the same light that other people look upon wheat and its product, bread? |
38808 | But suppose they give the same receptions in the South? |
38808 | But the question arises, What is Christianity? |
38808 | But unless it can be shown that Atheism interferes with the sight, the hearing, or the memory, why should justice shut the door to truth? |
38808 | But what about the Prohibitionists? |
38808 | But what about there being"belief"in Matthew? |
38808 | But what can we say of a marriage where the parties hate each other? |
38808 | But what is the simple assertion of Thomas Carlyle worth? |
38808 | But what would you do if they should make an attempt to arrest you? |
38808 | But who will win? |
38808 | But would n''t it be better for the people if the railroads were managed by the Government as is the Post- Office? |
38808 | But, Colonel, is there no danger of greatly interfering with a woman''s duties as wife and mother? |
38808 | Can any one, by studying geology, find the locality of the great white throne? |
38808 | Can anyone imagine that such a course would add to the joy of Paradise, or even tend to keep one harp in tune? |
38808 | Can anything be more infamous than to endeavor to make a woman, under such circumstances, remain with such a man? |
38808 | Can it be said that a State is"free"that is absolutely governed by the Nation? |
38808 | Can she never sit by her own hearth, with the arms of her children about her neck, and by her side a husband who loves and protects her? |
38808 | Can the good of society require the woman to remain? |
38808 | Can the virtue of others be preserved only by the destruction of her happiness, and by what might be called her perpetual imprisonment? |
38808 | Can these phenomena be considered aside from any connection with, or form of, superstition? |
38808 | Can they do this as long as the Government collects ninety million dollars per annum from that one source? |
38808 | Can you find in the graveyard of nations this epitaph:"Died of a Surplus"? |
38808 | Can you guess as to what the platform in going to contain? |
38808 | Can you offer any explanation of the extraordinary phenomena such as Henry J. Newton has had produced at his own house under his own supervision? |
38808 | Can, or ought, the Liberals and Spiritualists to unite? |
38808 | Christianity certainly fosters charity? |
38808 | Colonel Ingersoll, are you a Socialist? |
38808 | Colonel, are your views of religion based upon the Bible? |
38808 | Colonel, crossing the Atlantic back to America, what do you think of the Greenback movement? |
38808 | Colonel, did you ever kill any game? |
38808 | Colonel, have you read the revised Testament? |
38808 | Colonel, to start with, what do you think of the solid South? |
38808 | Colonel, what do you think about Mr. Cleveland''s Hawaiian policy? |
38808 | Colonel, what do you think of the course the Mayor has pursued toward you in attempting to stop your lecture? |
38808 | Colonel, what is your opinion of Secularism? |
38808 | Did God know how Herod would use his freedom? |
38808 | Did God know what Herod would do? |
38808 | Did God write it? |
38808 | Did he ever mention the quarto in any letter, essay, or in any way? |
38808 | Did he have a copy? |
38808 | Did he know that he would become the villain in the drama of Christ? |
38808 | Did he know that he would cause the children to be slaughtered in his vain efforts to kill the infant Christ? |
38808 | Did he mention the copy in his will? |
38808 | Did the hand that was stretched out to him on the stage of the Academy reach across the chasm which separates orthodoxy from infidelity? |
38808 | Did they write exactly what the Holy Spirit wanted them to write? |
38808 | Did you anticipate a verdict? |
38808 | Did you discuss the matter with him? |
38808 | Did you make this remark as a Christian, or as a lady? |
38808 | Did you read Mr. Courtney''s answer? |
38808 | Did you say these words to illustrate in some faint degree the refining influence upon women of the religion you preach? |
38808 | Do I understand you to imply that there will be a neutral policy, as it were, towards the South? |
38808 | Do liberal books, such as the works of Paine and Infidel scientists sell well? |
38808 | Do many people write to you upon this subject; and what spirit do they manifest? |
38808 | Do n''t you think that some good has been accomplished, some valuable information obtained, by vivisection? |
38808 | Do n''t you think that the pass system is an injustice--that is, that ordinary travelers are taxed for the man who rides on a pass? |
38808 | Do n''t you think the belief of the Agnostic is more satisfactory to the believer than that of the Atheist? |
38808 | Do newspapers to- day exercise as much influence as they did twenty- five years ago? |
38808 | Do not its facts and conclusions prove, if not immortality, at least the continuity of life beyond the grave? |
38808 | Do not the evidences of design in the universe prove a Creator? |
38808 | Do these things really happen? |
38808 | Do they believe that by forcing people to remain together who despise each other they are adding to the purity of the marriage relation? |
38808 | Do they deserve any credit for the course they have taken? |
38808 | Do they forget that people have a choice? |
38808 | Do they not know that all marriage is an outward act, testifying to that which has happened in the heart? |
38808 | Do they not understand something of the human heart, and that true love has always been as pure as the morning star? |
38808 | Do they not, as a rule, give something to deaden pain? |
38808 | Do they sustain any relation except that of hunter and hunted-- that is, of tyrant and victim? |
38808 | Do they, so far as you know, justify his charge? |
38808 | Do you agree with George''s principles? |
38808 | Do you agree with Mr. Carnegie that a college education is of little or no practical value to a man? |
38808 | Do you agree with the Pope in attacking the present governments of Europe and the memories of Mazzini and Saffi? |
38808 | Do you agree with the Pope that:"Sound rules of life must be founded on religion"? |
38808 | Do you apprehend any trouble from the Southern leaders in this closing session of Congress, in attempts to force pernicious legislation? |
38808 | Do you believe Madame Blavatsky does or has done the wonderful things related of her? |
38808 | Do you believe in a God; and, if so, what kind of a God? |
38808 | Do you believe in free text- books in the public schools? |
38808 | Do you believe in socialism? |
38808 | Do you believe in spirit entities, whether manifestible or not? |
38808 | Do you believe in the existence of a Supreme Being? |
38808 | Do you believe in the resurrection of the body? |
38808 | Do you believe that any sane man ever had a vision? |
38808 | Do you believe that the Democratic success was due to the possession of reverse principles? |
38808 | Do you believe that the divorced should be allowed to marry again? |
38808 | Do you believe that the race is growing moral or immoral? |
38808 | Do you believe that the spirit lives as an individual after the body is dead? |
38808 | Do you believe that the world, and all that is in it came by chance? |
38808 | Do you believe that there is such a thing as a miracle, or that there has ever been? |
38808 | Do you believe the people can be made to do without a stimulant? |
38808 | Do you believe the spirits of the dead come back to earth? |
38808 | Do you believe there will ever be a millennium, and if so how will it come about? |
38808 | Do you believe, or disbelieve, in the immortality of the soul? |
38808 | Do you care to say who your choice is for Republican nominee for President in 1888? |
38808 | Do you consider any religion adequate? |
38808 | Do you consider inebriety a disease, or the result of diseased conditions? |
38808 | Do you consider marriage a contract or a sacrament? |
38808 | Do you consider that churches are injurious to the community? |
38808 | Do you consider that society in general has been made better by religious influences? |
38808 | Do you consider the new ballot- law adapted to the needs of our system of elections? |
38808 | Do you consider the religion of Bhagavat Purana of the East as good as the Christian? |
38808 | Do you deny the immortality of the soul? |
38808 | Do you enjoy Shakespeare more in the library than Shakespeare interpreted by actors now on the boards? |
38808 | Do you enjoy lecturing? |
38808 | Do you foresee any danger of centralization in the full enfranchisement of the citizens of Washington? |
38808 | Do you imagine she would condemn Burns or Shelley for that reason? |
38808 | Do you intend making any reply to what she says? |
38808 | Do you know her personally? |
38808 | Do you know that you have been greatly criticized for what you have said on this subject? |
38808 | Do you know the reason she applied the epithet? |
38808 | Do you know this from experience? |
38808 | Do you not believe that such a man as Robert Dale Owen was sincere? |
38808 | Do you not think Arthur has grown and is a greater man than when he was elected? |
38808 | Do you not think that capital is entitled to protection? |
38808 | Do you not think that the Bible has consolation for those who have lost their friends? |
38808 | Do you not think that these men had a fair trial? |
38808 | Do you not think there are some dangerous tendencies in Liberalism? |
38808 | Do you really think that the church is losing ground? |
38808 | Do you really think, Colonel, that the country has just passed through a crisis? |
38808 | Do you regard him as more popular now than ever before? |
38808 | Do you regard it as a religion? |
38808 | Do you regard the Briggs trial as any evidence of the growth of Liberalism in the church itself? |
38808 | Do you say this because your reason is convinced that it is? |
38808 | Do you still believe that suicide is justifiable? |
38808 | Do you sympathize with the Socialists, or do you think that the success of George would promote socialism? |
38808 | Do you take much interest in politics, Colonel Ingersoll? |
38808 | Do you think Cleveland will put any Southern men in his Cabinet? |
38808 | Do you think mankind is drifting away from the supernatural? |
38808 | Do you think resumption will work out all right? |
38808 | Do you think so? |
38808 | Do you think that Cleveland''s course as to appointments has strengthened him with the people? |
38808 | Do you think that Liberals should undertake a reform in the marriage and divorce laws and relations? |
38808 | Do you think that Mr. George would make a good mayor? |
38808 | Do you think that Senator Logan will be able to deliver this State to the Grant movement according to the understood plan? |
38808 | Do you think that bigotry would persecute now for religious opinion''s sake, if it were not for the law and the press? |
38808 | Do you think that eloquence is potent in a convention to set aside the practical work of politics and politicians? |
38808 | Do you think that evolution and revealed religion are compatible-- that is to say, can a man be an evolutionist and a Christian? |
38808 | Do you think that is so, Mr. Ingersoll? |
38808 | Do you think that men are naturally criminals and naturally virtuous? |
38808 | Do you think that the American people are seeking after truth, or do they want to be amused? |
38808 | Do you think that the Knights of Labor will cut any material figure in this election? |
38808 | Do you think that the era of good feeling between the North and the South has set in with the appointment of ex- rebels to the Cabinet? |
38808 | Do you think that the friends of Gresham would support Blaine if he should be nominated? |
38808 | Do you think that the marriage institution is held in less respect by Infidels than by Christians? |
38808 | Do you think that the moral atmosphere will improve with the political atmosphere? |
38808 | Do you think that the nominations have been well received throughout the United States? |
38808 | Do you think that the old parties are about to die? |
38808 | Do you think that the orthodox church gets its ideas of the Sabbath from the teachings of Christ? |
38808 | Do you think that the political features of the incoming administration will differ from the present? |
38808 | Do you think that the vivisectionists do their work without anesthetics? |
38808 | Do you think that there is any danger of war? |
38808 | Do you think the Christian religion has made the world better? |
38808 | Do you think the President should have stated his policy in Boston the other day? |
38808 | Do you think the Republican party should take a decided stand on the temperance issue? |
38808 | Do you think the South will ever equal or surpass the West in point of prosperity? |
38808 | Do you think the election has brought about any particular change in the issues that will be involved in the campaign of 1880? |
38808 | Do you think the investigations of the Republicans of the Danville and Copiah massacres will benefit them? |
38808 | Do you think the law in the next decade will permit the affirmative oath? |
38808 | Do you think the laws governing divorce ought to be changed? |
38808 | Do you think the people lead the newspapers, or do the newspapers lead them? |
38808 | Do you think the use of the word sheol will make any difference to the preachers? |
38808 | Do you think there will be a second coming? |
38808 | Do you think we are going to have war with Spain? |
38808 | Do you think young men need a college education to get along? |
38808 | Do you uphold the Anarchists? |
38808 | Do you wish to say anything as to the reasoning of Justice Harlan on the rights of colored people on railways, in inns and theatres? |
38808 | Do you, in any way, see any reason or foundation for the severe and bitter criticisms made against the Stalwart leaders in connection with this crime? |
38808 | Does Christianity advance or retard civilization? |
38808 | Does exposure do any good? |
38808 | Does he compare any other Infidels with Christians? |
38808 | Does it point with pride to the Mexican fiasco, or does it rely entirely upon the great fishery triumph? |
38808 | Does not a Creator need a Creator as much as the thing we think has been created? |
38808 | Does not a designer need a design as much as a design needs a designer? |
38808 | Does not the Government feed the mob spirit-- the lynch spirit? |
38808 | Does not the mob follow the example set by the Government? |
38808 | Does the protective tariff cheapen the prices of commodities to the laboring man? |
38808 | Does the question of the inspiration of Scriptures affect the beauty and benefits of Christianity here and hereafter? |
38808 | Dr. Abbott, will tend to soften the sentiment of the orthodox churches against the stage? |
38808 | Dr. Banks stand against a circus? |
38808 | Dr. Fulton? |
38808 | Dr. Jewett before the Methodist ministers''meeting? |
38808 | Dr. Parkhurst, of New York, justifiable, and do you think that it had a tendency to help morality? |
38808 | During the recent presidential campaign did any clergymen denounce you for your teachings, that you are aware of? |
38808 | Father Lambert''s"Notes on Ingersoll,"and if so, what have you to say of them or in reply to them? |
38808 | From your knowledge of the religious tendency in the United States, how long will orthodox religion be popular? |
38808 | Had she then good cause for divorce? |
38808 | Had they been in that country, with their present ideas, what would they have said? |
38808 | Has Spiritualism, through its mediums, ever told the world anything useful, or added to the store of the world''s knowledge, or relieved its burdens? |
38808 | Has any church succeeded as well as the Catholic? |
38808 | Has any orthodox minister in the year 1898 given just one paragraph to literature? |
38808 | Has not Spiritualism added to the world''s stock of hope? |
38808 | Has not the Democracy injured itself irretrievably by permitting the free trade element to rule it? |
38808 | Has not the Republican party trouble enough with the spirituous to let the spiritual alone? |
38808 | Has not the married woman the right of self- defence? |
38808 | Has society any interest in forcing women to live with men they hate? |
38808 | Has the Christian religion changed in theory of late years, Colonel Ingersoll? |
38808 | Has the woman whose rights have been outraged no right to build another home? |
38808 | Has there ever been found a line from any play or sonnet in his handwriting? |
38808 | Have n''t you just the faintest glimmer of a hope that in some future state you will meet and be reunited to those who are dear to you in this? |
38808 | Have you any decided opinions on that subject? |
38808 | Have you any objection to being interviewed as to your ideas of Grant, and his position before the people? |
38808 | Have you any objection to stating your real opinion in regard to the matter? |
38808 | Have you any objections to giving your present views of the question? |
38808 | Have you been invited to lecture in Europe? |
38808 | Have you ever been interfered with before in delivering Sunday lectures? |
38808 | Have you ever been misrepresented in interviews? |
38808 | Have you ever had any similar experiences before? |
38808 | Have you found any other work, sacred or profane, which you regard as more reliable? |
38808 | Have you given them reason to believe so? |
38808 | Have you had any experience with spirit photography, spirit physicians, or spirit lawyers? |
38808 | Have you investigated Spiritualism, and what has been your experience? |
38808 | Have you noticed a great change in public sentiment in the last three or four years? |
38808 | Have you read Miss Cleveland''s book? |
38808 | Have you read Nordau''s"Degeneracy"? |
38808 | Have you read the replies of the clergy to your recent lecture in this city on"What Must we do to be Saved?" |
38808 | Have you seen him? |
38808 | Have you seen or known of any Theosophical or esoteric marvels? |
38808 | Have you seen the attacks made upon you by certain ministers of New York, published in the_ Herald_ last Sunday? |
38808 | Have you seen the published report that Dorsey claims to have paid you one hundred thousand dollars for your services in the Star Route Cases? |
38808 | Have you seen the recent clerical strictures upon your doctrines? |
38808 | He did not say: Why have you called me from another world? |
38808 | He left a library, was there a copy of the plays in it? |
38808 | He would ask himself the question:"Is it possible that this is a divine institution? |
38808 | How about Illinois? |
38808 | How about lying, Colonel? |
38808 | How about that"personal and confidential letter"? |
38808 | How are they to be prevented? |
38808 | How are we to do away with crime? |
38808 | How are we to do away with pauperism? |
38808 | How are we to do away with want and misery in every civilized country? |
38808 | How are you getting along with Delaware? |
38808 | How are you on the arbitration treaty? |
38808 | How can any one come to the conclusion that the Catholic Church has been a source of truth, a source of intellectual light? |
38808 | How can anyone believe that the church of John Calvin has been a source of truth? |
38808 | How can the coffin or the grave be purchased? |
38808 | How could the church live a minute unless somebody attended to the affairs of this world? |
38808 | How could there be a disaster with a vast surplus in the treasury? |
38808 | How did Guiteau impress you and what have you remembered, Colonel, of his efforts to reply to your lectures? |
38808 | How did he walk? |
38808 | How did taxation become necessary? |
38808 | How did the card of Dr. Thomas strike you? |
38808 | How do I account for the defeat of Mr. Blaine? |
38808 | How do the clergy generally treat you? |
38808 | How do we do away with larceny? |
38808 | How do you account for Mr. Blaine''s action in allowing his name to go before the convention at Minneapolis in 1892? |
38808 | How do you account for the defeat of Mr. Blaine? |
38808 | How do you account for the results of the recent elections? |
38808 | How do you account for these attacks? |
38808 | How do you answer the argument, or the fact, that the church is constantly increasing, and that there are now four hundred millions of Christians? |
38808 | How do you enjoy staying in Chicago? |
38808 | How do you explain the figure:"His soul, like Mazeppa, was lashed naked to the wild horse of every fear and love and hate"? |
38808 | How do you like the administration of President Hayes? |
38808 | How do you regard the action of Bismarck in returning the Lasker resolutions? |
38808 | How do you regard the opposition of the local clergy and of the Bourbon Democracy to enfranchising the citizens of the District? |
38808 | How do you regard the present political situation? |
38808 | How do you regard the religious question in politics? |
38808 | How do you regard the situation in Ohio? |
38808 | How do you stand on the money question? |
38808 | How do you stand with the clergymen, and what is their opinion of you and of your views? |
38808 | How do you think he will treat the South? |
38808 | How does the literature of to- day compare with that of the first half of the century, in your opinion? |
38808 | How does the next campaign look? |
38808 | How does the religious state of California compare with the rest of the Union? |
38808 | How does this happen in a Government where church and state are not united? |
38808 | How good does a father have to be, in order to put his son under obligation to defend his blunders? |
38808 | How has the Democratic party"averted disaster"? |
38808 | How have the recently expressed opinions of our local clergy impressed you? |
38808 | How have you acquired the art of growing old gracefully? |
38808 | How is it possible for the virtues to grow in the damp and darkened basements? |
38808 | How is this? |
38808 | How many clergymen would it take to command, at regular prices, the audiences that attend the presentation of Wagner''s operas? |
38808 | How many in England? |
38808 | How much importance do you attach to the present prohibition movement? |
38808 | How should the dispute be settled? |
38808 | How soon do you think we would have the millennium if every person attended strictly to his own business? |
38808 | How then can she hope to conquer this country? |
38808 | How were you pleased with the Paine meeting here, and its results? |
38808 | How will the Democratic victory affect the colored people in the South? |
38808 | How would an honest Christian minister console the widow and the fatherless children? |
38808 | How would he dare to tell what he claims to be truth in the presence of the living? |
38808 | I agree with the Presbyterian General Assembly, if the creed is true, why should anyone try to amuse himself? |
38808 | I believe it was Confucius who said:"How should I know anything about another world when I know so little of this?" |
38808 | I said to him:"Is that honest?" |
38808 | I see that Mr. Beecher is coming round to your views on theology? |
38808 | I see that some one has been charging that Judge Gresham is an Infidel? |
38808 | I see that some people are objecting to your taking any part in politics, on account of your religious opinion? |
38808 | I see that you are frequently charged with disrespect toward your parents-- with lack of reverence for the opinions of your father? |
38808 | I see that you say that one of the great issues in the coming campaign will be civil rights; what do you mean by that? |
38808 | I should be glad if you would tell me what you think the differences are between English and American oratory? |
38808 | I understand that there was some trouble in connection with your lecture in Victoria, B. C. What are the facts? |
38808 | I was told that you came to St. Louis on your wedding trip some thirty years ago and went to Shaw''s Garden? |
38808 | I would like to ask him if the Old Testament is in favor of religious toleration? |
38808 | I would like to ask if there is a Christian in the world who would not be overjoyed to find that every one of these passages was an interpolation? |
38808 | I would like to ask you why, in your opinion as a student of history, has the Protestant Church always been so bitterly opposed to the theatre? |
38808 | I would like to have a positive expression of your views as to a future state? |
38808 | I would like to know if that is so? |
38808 | I would like to know something of the history of your religious views? |
38808 | I would rather be deceived than killed, would n''t you? |
38808 | If Blaine had been nominated at Cincinnati in 1876 would he have made a stronger candidate than Hayes did? |
38808 | If English actors are so much better than American, how is it that an American star is supported by the English? |
38808 | If God allows injustice to triumph here, why not there? |
38808 | If I asked for proofs for your theory, what would you furnish? |
38808 | If Mr. Mills has given a true statement with regard to the measure proposed by him, what relation does that measure bear to the President''s message? |
38808 | If Robert Elsmere''s views were commonly adopted what would be the effect? |
38808 | If a community violates that law, why should not the individual? |
38808 | If a man is rich why should he have any pension? |
38808 | If at that time there was nothing in existence but himself, how could he have exerted any force? |
38808 | If free trade will not reduce wages what will? |
38808 | If he allows rascality to succeed in this world, why not in the next? |
38808 | If he allows the innocent to suffer here, why not there? |
38808 | If he can stand it, I can; and why should there be any malice on the subject? |
38808 | If it is called upon for counsel and advice, how can it give advice without knowing the facts and circumstances? |
38808 | If its creed is not true, if its doctrines are mistakes, if its dogmas are monstrous delusions, how can it be said to have been a source of truth? |
38808 | If not, in what particulars does it require amendment? |
38808 | If she has the right to leave, has she the right to get a new house? |
38808 | If she owes no duty to her husband; if it is impossible for her to feel toward him any thrill of affection, what is there of marriage left? |
38808 | If so do you intend to accept the"call"? |
38808 | If so, what do you think of it? |
38808 | If the Democratic party makes anti- imperialism the prominent plank in its platform, what effect will it have on the party''s chance for success? |
38808 | If the Jews did not believe in immortality, how do you account for the allusions made to witches and wizards and things of that nature? |
38808 | If the President feels that he is bound to carry out the civil- service law, ought not the Senate to feel in the same way? |
38808 | If the colored people have to depend upon the State for protection, and the Federal Government can not interfere, why say any more about it? |
38808 | If the dead were not a Christian, what then? |
38808 | If the man is sick, if one of the children dies, how can doctors and medicines be paid for? |
38808 | If the man was in the army a day or a month, and was uninjured, and can make his own living, or has enough, why should he have a pension? |
38808 | If the ordinance exempts scientific, literary and historical lectures, as it is said it does, will not that exempt you? |
38808 | If the woman is not in fault, does society insist that her life should be wrecked? |
38808 | If there is anything whatever in this argument, is it not that the traffic pays a bribe of ninety million dollars a year for its life? |
38808 | If there is no beatitude, or heaven, how do you account for the continual struggle in every natural heart for its own betterment? |
38808 | If there is only punishment in this world, will not some escape punishment? |
38808 | If they are higher here than in foreign countries, the question arises, why are they higher? |
38808 | If they have done good, could they not have done just as much if they had used anesthetics? |
38808 | If they have the right to compel the President to choose from four, why not from three, or two? |
38808 | If this man has a wife and a couple of children how can the family live? |
38808 | If we should agree to- morrow to put God in the Constitution, the question would then be: Which God? |
38808 | If you should write your last sentence on religious topics what would be your closing? |
38808 | If you take away the idea of eternal punishment, how do you propose to restrain men; in what way will you influence conduct for good? |
38808 | If you were to compare individual English and American orators-- recent or living orators in particular-- what would you say? |
38808 | If you were to witness phenomena that seemed inexplicable by natural laws, would you be inclined to favor Spiritualism? |
38808 | If, again, you say the church is a source of authority, why do you say so? |
38808 | In other words, is not this simply a circle of human ignorance? |
38808 | In other words, who has been idle? |
38808 | In the next presidential contest what will be the main issue? |
38808 | In this connection there has been so much said about the art of acting-- what is your idea as to that art? |
38808 | In view of all this, where do you think the presidential candidate will come from? |
38808 | In what estimation do you hold Charles Watts and Samuel Putnam, and what do you think of their labors in the cause of Freethought? |
38808 | In what geologic period was the great white throne formed? |
38808 | In what light do you regard the Chinaman? |
38808 | In what light do you regard the Philippines as an addition to the territory of the United States? |
38808 | In what section of the country do you find the most liberality? |
38808 | In your experience as a lawyer what was the most unique case in which you were ever engaged? |
38808 | In your opinion, what relation do Liberalism and Prohibition bear to each other? |
38808 | Is Agnosticism gaining ground in the United States? |
38808 | Is Chicago as liberal, intellectually, as New York? |
38808 | Is Christianity really gaining a strong hold on the masses? |
38808 | Is England expected to give us another Shakespeare? |
38808 | Is Judge Hoadly to be attacked because he exercises the liberty that he gives to others? |
38808 | Is Spiritualism a religion or a truth? |
38808 | Is a State free that can make no treaty with any other State or country-- that is not permitted to coin money or to declare war? |
38808 | Is he to rely for meat, on poaching, and then is he to be transported to some far colony for the crime of catching a rabbit? |
38808 | Is his influence upon the world good or otherwise? |
38808 | Is it a fact that there are thousands of clergymen in the country whom you would fear to meet in fair debate? |
38808 | Is it because we lack men of genius or because our life is too material that no truly great American plays have been written? |
38808 | Is it consistent to say that a design can not exist without a designer, but that a designer can? |
38808 | Is it desirable to have families raised under such circumstances? |
38808 | Is it ever right to lie? |
38808 | Is it necessary to lose your freedom in order to retain your character, in order to be womanly or manly? |
38808 | Is it not a Republican administration that is at present investigating the alleged evils of trusts? |
38808 | Is it not a fact that you possess the confidence and friendship of some of the most respected leaders of that party? |
38808 | Is it not strange that, with one exception, the most notable operas written since Wagner are by Italian composers instead of German? |
38808 | Is it not the duty of society to protect her from her husband? |
38808 | Is it not the duty of the Senate to see to it that the President does not, with its advice and consent, violate the civil service law? |
38808 | Is it not the fact that punishments have grown less and less severe for many years past? |
38808 | Is it possible for impudence to go further? |
38808 | Is it possible that God has so made the world that the threat of eternal punishment is necessary for the preservation of society? |
38808 | Is it possible that God''s last witness died with Cicero? |
38808 | Is it possible that an infinitely wise and good God would insist on this poor, helpless woman remaining with the wild beast, her husband? |
38808 | Is it possible that he is a kind of vulture that sees only the carrion of another? |
38808 | Is it possible that his companions would object to his being paid for honest work in the penitentiary? |
38808 | Is it possible that human nature stands on such slippery ground? |
38808 | Is it possible that logic stands paralyzed in the presence of paternal absurdity? |
38808 | Is it possible that the superior support the inferior? |
38808 | Is it possible that, after preachers have had the field for eighteen hundred years, the way to make money is to attack the clergy? |
38808 | Is it to the interest of a husband and wife to live together after love has perished and when they hate each other? |
38808 | Is it true that you were once threatened with a criminal prosecution for libel on religion? |
38808 | Is it true, as rumored, that you intend to leave Washington and reside in New York? |
38808 | Is it true? |
38808 | Is it your experience that public men usually ride on passes? |
38808 | Is not Christianity and the belief in God a check upon mankind in general and thus a good thing in itself? |
38808 | Is not a pleasant illusion preferable to a dreary truth-- a future life being in question? |
38808 | Is not the ballot an assurance to the laboring man that he can get fair treatment from his employer? |
38808 | Is not the"lake of fire and brimstone"an obsolete issue? |
38808 | Is not this definition-- a definition given in hatred-- a perfect definition of every monarchy and of nearly every government in the world? |
38808 | Is she entitled to a divorce now? |
38808 | Is such a man seeking the good of his fellow- men? |
38808 | Is that true which succeeds to- day, or next year, or in the next century? |
38808 | Is the Age of Chivalry dead? |
38808 | Is the Republican party dead? |
38808 | Is the consent of the Senate a mere matter of form? |
38808 | Is the noun"United States"singular or plural, as you use English? |
38808 | Is the religious movement of which you are the chief exponent spreading? |
38808 | Is the spirit of patriotism declining in America? |
38808 | Is the woman still bound? |
38808 | Is there a more wonderful character in all the realm of fiction? |
38808 | Is there a probability that Mr. Sherman will be retained in the Cabinet? |
38808 | Is there a woman in the world who would not shrink from this herself? |
38808 | Is there any better Mrs. Malaprop than Mrs. Drew, and better Sir Anthony than John Gilbert? |
38808 | Is there any better or more ennobling belief than Christianity; if so, what is it? |
38808 | Is there any morality in this-- any virtue? |
38808 | Is there any possibility of your coming to England, and, I need hardly add, of your coming to speak? |
38808 | Is there any remedy? |
38808 | Is there any split in the solid South? |
38808 | Is there any such thing as mind- reading or thought- transference? |
38808 | Is there any such thing as telepathy? |
38808 | Is there anything else bearing upon the question at issue or that would make good reading, that I have forgotten, that you would like to say? |
38808 | Is there anything in the charge that the Republican party seeks to change our form of government by gradual centralization? |
38808 | Is there anything new about religion since you were last here? |
38808 | Is there no future for her? |
38808 | Is there no mutuality? |
38808 | Is there no other applicable to this case? |
38808 | Is there no truth in the statement, then? |
38808 | Is this all that man can do with the assistance of God? |
38808 | Is this because priests instinctively know priests? |
38808 | Is this because you regard Washington as the pleasantest and most advantageous city for a residence? |
38808 | Is this intended as a slander against me or the ministers? |
38808 | Is this the best?" |
38808 | Is this trifling experiment of any importance? |
38808 | Is this true? |
38808 | Is what we call civilization a sham? |
38808 | Is your objection based on any religious grounds, or on any prejudice against the ceremony because of its religious origin; or what is your objection? |
38808 | Is your theory, Colonel, the result of investigation of the subject? |
38808 | It is claimed that an amendment to the law, such as is desired, will interfere with the growth of art? |
38808 | It is possible that our civilization to- day rests upon the price of alcohol, and that, should the price be reduced, we would all go down together? |
38808 | It is reported that you are the son of a Presbyterian minister? |
38808 | It is said that in the past four or five years you have changed or modified your views upon the subject of religion; is this so? |
38808 | It is said, Colonel Ingersoll, that you are for Henry George? |
38808 | It seems to me that reason should come first, because if you say the Bible is a source of authority, why do you say it? |
38808 | Judging by your criticism of mankind, Colonel, in your recent lecture, you have not found his condition very satisfactory? |
38808 | Judging from what has been told you of his utterances and actions, what kind of a man would you take him to be? |
38808 | MUST RELIGION GO? |
38808 | Might not the rich do much? |
38808 | Mr. Banks, and what do you think of what he said? |
38808 | Mr. Crafts stated that you were in the habit of swearing in company and before your family? |
38808 | Mr. Ingersoll, do you think that Mr. Blaine wanted the nomination in 1884, when he got it? |
38808 | Mr. Ingersoll, what do you think defeated Blaine for the nomination in 1876? |
38808 | Mr. Lansing? |
38808 | Mr. Sherman expresses the opinion that if he had had the"moral strength"of the Ohio delegation in his support he would have been nominated? |
38808 | Must he be reduced to the diet of the old country? |
38808 | Must he sell his birthright for the sake of being a doorkeeper? |
38808 | Must he stand upon an exact par with the laborers of Belgium and England and Germany, not only, but with the slaves and serfs of other countries? |
38808 | Must she be an outcast forever? |
38808 | Must they be preserved to please God? |
38808 | Must this woman, full of kindness, affection and health, be chained until death releases her? |
38808 | Must we depend on police or statesmen? |
38808 | Must we wait for mobs to inaugurate reform? |
38808 | Not even in the case of a Democratic victory? |
38808 | Now that a lull has come in politics, I thought I would come and see what is going on in the religious world? |
38808 | Now, as to the other part of the question,"Is not a belief in God a check upon mankind in general?" |
38808 | Now, if a State refuses to do anything upon the subject, what is the citizen to do? |
38808 | Now, if the man turns out to be a wild beast, if he destroys the happiness of the wife, why should she remain his victim? |
38808 | Now, is it possible that he gets additional rights by immigration? |
38808 | Now, is there not some better organization of society that will help in this trouble? |
38808 | Now, let me ask, what consolation could a Christian minister have given to his family? |
38808 | Now, the question arises, what is humane about this society? |
38808 | Now, what is morality? |
38808 | Of course men may conspire to quit work, but how is it to be proved? |
38808 | Of his last ride, holding the poor girl by the hand? |
38808 | Of his last walk? |
38808 | Of what possible use is it to know how long a dog or horse can live without food? |
38808 | Of what use can it be to take a dog, tie him down and cut out one of his kidneys to see if he can live with the other? |
38808 | Of what use is it to be false to ourselves? |
38808 | Of what use is it to give a man two or three dollars a month? |
38808 | Perhaps you will tell me your methods as a speaker, for I''m sure it would be interesting to know them? |
38808 | R. Heber Newton? |
38808 | Samuel Jones? |
38808 | Samuel did not pretend that he had been living, or that he was alive, but asked:"Why hast thou disquieted me?" |
38808 | Shall you attend the Albany Freethought Convention? |
38808 | Shall you sue the Opera House management for breach of contract? |
38808 | Should Liberals vote on Liberal issues? |
38808 | Should a woman be compelled to remain the wife of a man who hates and abuses her, and whom she loathes? |
38808 | Should a woman be punished for having married? |
38808 | Should not the museums and art galleries be thrown open to the workingmen free on Sunday? |
38808 | Should the drama teach lessons and discuss social problems, or should it give simply intellectual pleasure and furnish amusement? |
38808 | Should we not have other bills to colonize the Germans, the Swedes, the Irish, and then, may be, another bill to drive the Chinese into the sea? |
38808 | Should we wait and crush by brute force or should we prevent? |
38808 | Since you expounded your justification of suicide, Colonel, I believe you have had some cases of suicide laid at your door? |
38808 | So the first question is, What is a miracle? |
38808 | Somebody asked Confucius about another world, and his reply was:"How should I know anything about another world when I know so little of this?" |
38808 | Still, I suppose we can count on you as a Republican? |
38808 | Suppose God should answer the prayers and convert me, how would he bring the conversion about? |
38808 | Suppose a man has a bad father; is he bound by the bad father''s opinion, when he is satisfied that the opinion is wrong? |
38808 | Suppose the dog can live a week or a month or a year, what then? |
38808 | Suppose the father changes his opinion; what then? |
38808 | Suppose the father thinks one way, and the mother the other; what are the children to do? |
38808 | Suppose they arrest you what will you do? |
38808 | Suppose we had free trade to- day, what would become of the manufacturing interests to- morrow? |
38808 | Suppose, as a matter of fact, the Devil did get hold of it; what part of the Bible would Mr. Beecher pick out as having been written by the Devil? |
38808 | Supposing this to have been accomplished, what effect is it likely to have on the future of creeds? |
38808 | Surely, there is no need for the Legislature of Pennsylvania to protect an infinite God, and why should the Bible be protected by law? |
38808 | Swing? |
38808 | That is a perfectly reasonable question, is it not, Colonel Ingersoll? |
38808 | That is no explanation, and, after admitting that we do not know and that we can not explain, why should we proceed to explain? |
38808 | The Republicans are making all the mistakes they can, and the only question now is, Can the Democrats make more? |
38808 | The Senate is almost tied; do you think that any Republicans are likely to vote in the interest of the President''s policy at this session? |
38808 | The great objection to your teaching urged by your enemies is that you constantly tear down, and never build up? |
38808 | The great questions are: Will man ever be sufficiently civilized to be honest? |
38808 | The idea expressed is: I was asleep, why did you disturb that repose which should be eternal? |
38808 | The issue is fairly made-- shall American labor be protected, or must the American laborer take his chances with the labor market of the world? |
38808 | The minister asks:"What right have you to hope? |
38808 | The ministers are always talking about worldly people, and yet, were it not for worldly people, who would pay the salary? |
38808 | The other part is how cheaply can we manufacture it? |
38808 | The people shouted:"If all is illusion, what made you run away?" |
38808 | The question arises, What is Christianity? |
38808 | The question is, is it correct? |
38808 | The question ought not to be,"Has this been sworn to?" |
38808 | The real question is, what do they stand for? |
38808 | Then I assume that you and Mr. Beecher have made up? |
38808 | Then you do not deny that you received such an enormous fee? |
38808 | Then you only consider the Greenback movement a temporary thing? |
38808 | Then you would not undertake to say what becomes of man after death? |
38808 | Then your present convictions began to form themselves while you were listening to the teachings of religion as taught by your father? |
38808 | Then, if there is no objection to a third term, what about a fourth? |
38808 | They intended to do what they did, and why should the South not be recognized? |
38808 | Thousands of mistakes are made-- are these mistakes sacred? |
38808 | Tilden? |
38808 | To what extent does it harden the community for the Government to take life? |
38808 | To what stratum does it belong? |
38808 | Under a Federal Constitution guaranteeing civil and religious liberty, are the so- called"Blue Laws"constitutional? |
38808 | Upon this question what does our party say? |
38808 | Was Lincoln an orthodox Christian? |
38808 | Was it extemporaneous? |
38808 | Was it the result of his hatred of the Jews? |
38808 | Was not Mr. Jarvis right in standing by the law? |
38808 | Was the tragedy of the Garden of Eden a success? |
38808 | Was there any ground to expect aid or any different action on Arthur''s part? |
38808 | Well, Colonel, is the world growing better or worse? |
38808 | Well, Colonel, what are you up to? |
38808 | Well, what do you think of the religious revival system generally? |
38808 | Well, what does inspiration mean? |
38808 | Were the abolitionists all believers in the inspiration of the Bible? |
38808 | Were the founders of the party-- the men who gave it heart and brain-- conspicuous for piety? |
38808 | Were you an admirer of Lord Beaconsfield? |
38808 | What God are we to have in the Constitution? |
38808 | What about Bayard and Hancock as candidates? |
38808 | What about Beecher''s sermons on"Evolution"? |
38808 | What about Henry George''s books? |
38808 | What about Indiana? |
38808 | What about Zola''s trial and conviction? |
38808 | What about the other ministers? |
38808 | What advice would you give to a young man who was ambitious to become a successful public speaker or orator? |
38808 | What are Mr. Blaine''s chances for the presidency? |
38808 | What are such lives worth? |
38808 | What are the chances for the Republican party in 1888? |
38808 | What are the consolations of the Church of England? |
38808 | What are the most glaring mistakes of Cleveland''s administration? |
38808 | What are the reasons for and against the adoption of the policy they propose? |
38808 | What are you going to do to be saved? |
38808 | What are your conclusions as to the future of the Democratic party? |
38808 | What are your feelings in reference to idealism on the stage? |
38808 | What are your opinions on the woman''s suffrage question? |
38808 | What are your present views on theology? |
38808 | What are your views as to a third term? |
38808 | What are your views, generally expressed, on the tariff? |
38808 | What assurance has the American laborer that he will not be ultimately swamped by foreign immigration? |
38808 | What attributes should an actor have to be really great? |
38808 | What business is it of theirs who believes or disbelieves in the religion of the day? |
38808 | What causes operated for the Republican success in Iowa? |
38808 | What comfort can the orthodox clergyman give to the widow of an honest unbeliever? |
38808 | What could be more idiotic, absurd, childish, than the duel between Boulanger and Floquet? |
38808 | What could by any possibility be done? |
38808 | What did God mean when he said, If a man strike his servant so he dies, he should not be punished, because his servant was his money? |
38808 | What did you do on your European trip, Colonel? |
38808 | What did you think of the American display? |
38808 | What did you think of the late Joseph Medill? |
38808 | What did you think of them, Colonel? |
38808 | What do recent exhibitions in this city, of scenes from the life of Christ, indicate with regard to the tendencies of modern art? |
38808 | What do they care about the coachman''s soul? |
38808 | What do they care for the souls of cooks? |
38808 | What do they say of natural modesty? |
38808 | What do you base your views upon? |
38808 | What do you believe about the immortality of the soul? |
38808 | What do you believe to be his position in regard to the presidency? |
38808 | What do you mean by this? |
38808 | What do you regard as the greatest of all themes in poetry and song? |
38808 | What do you regard as the result of your lectures? |
38808 | What do you say to that? |
38808 | What do you say? |
38808 | What do you think Cleveland''s chances are in New York? |
38808 | What do you think about prize- fighting anyway? |
38808 | What do you think about the recent election, and what will be its effect upon political matters and the issues and candidates of 1880? |
38808 | What do you think as to the presidential race? |
38808 | What do you think defeated Mr. Blaine at the polls in 1884? |
38808 | What do you think generally of the revival of the bloody shirt? |
38808 | What do you think of Atkinson''s speech? |
38808 | What do you think of Beecher? |
38808 | What do you think of Bellamy? |
38808 | What do you think of Bishop Doane''s advocacy of free rum as a solution of the liquor problem? |
38808 | What do you think of Cleveland''s message? |
38808 | What do you think of England''s Poet Laureate, Alfred Austin? |
38808 | What do you think of General Washington? |
38808 | What do you think of Governor Roosevelt''s decision in the case of Mrs. Place? |
38808 | What do you think of Hall Caine''s recent efforts to bring about a closer union between the stage and pulpit? |
38808 | What do you think of Henry George for mayor? |
38808 | What do you think of Justice Harlan''s dissenting opinion in the Civil Rights case? |
38808 | What do you think of Madame Blavatsky and her school of Theosophists? |
38808 | What do you think of McKinley''s inaugural? |
38808 | What do you think of Mr. Cleveland''s Cabinet? |
38808 | What do you think of Mr. Conkling''s course? |
38808 | What do you think of Mr. Mills''Fourth of July speech on his bill? |
38808 | What do you think of Niagara Falls? |
38808 | What do you think of Pope? |
38808 | What do you think of Senator Sherman''s book-- especially the part about Garfield? |
38808 | What do you think of Wendell Phillips as an orator? |
38808 | What do you think of civil service reform? |
38808 | What do you think of him as an author? |
38808 | What do you think of international marriages, as between titled foreigners and American heiresses? |
38808 | What do you think of newspaper interviewing? |
38808 | What do you think of political parties, Colonel? |
38808 | What do you think of prohibition, and what do you think of its success in this State? |
38808 | What do you think of the Buckner Bill for the colonization of the negroes in Mexico? |
38808 | What do you think of the Chilian insult to the United States flag? |
38808 | What do you think of the Congress of Religions, to be held in Chicago during the World''s Fair? |
38808 | What do you think of the Democratic nominations? |
38808 | What do you think of the Democratic platform? |
38808 | What do you think of the French drama as compared with the English, morally and artistically considered? |
38808 | What do you think of the Mormon question? |
38808 | What do you think of the Pre- Millennial Conference that was held in New York City recently? |
38808 | What do you think of the Theosophists? |
38808 | What do you think of the action of Congress on Fitz John Porter? |
38808 | What do you think of the action of the Presbyterian General Assembly at Detroit, and what effect do you think it will have on religious growth? |
38808 | What do you think of the administration of President Cleveland? |
38808 | What do you think of the efficacy or the propriety of punishing criminals by solitary confinement? |
38808 | What do you think of the income tax as a step toward the accomplishment of what you desire? |
38808 | What do you think of the influence of the press on religion? |
38808 | What do you think of the influence of women in politics? |
38808 | What do you think of the investigation of the Department of Justice now going on? |
38808 | What do you think of the law of 1860? |
38808 | What do you think of the new legislation in the State changing the death penalty to death by electricity? |
38808 | What do you think of the new woman? |
38808 | What do you think of the policy of nominating Blaine in 1888, as has been proposed? |
38808 | What do you think of the political outlook? |
38808 | What do you think of the prohibitory movement on general principles? |
38808 | What do you think of the prospects of Liberalism in this country? |
38808 | What do you think of the recent opinion of the Supreme Court touching the rights of the colored man? |
38808 | What do you think of the result in Ohio? |
38808 | What do you think of the revision of the Westminster creed? |
38808 | What do you think of the sacredness of the Sabbath? |
38808 | What do you think of the service pension movement? |
38808 | What do you think of the signs of the times so far as the campaign has progressed? |
38808 | What do you think of the tendency of newspapers is at present? |
38808 | What do you think of the treatment of the actor by society in his social relations? |
38808 | What do you think of the trial of the Chicago Anarchists and their chances for a new trial? |
38808 | What do you think of the use he has made of the Dred Scott decision? |
38808 | What do you think of this? |
38808 | What do you think of"Spiritualism,"as it is popularly termed? |
38808 | What do you think was the main cause of the Republican sweep? |
38808 | What do you think will be the particular issue of the coming campaign? |
38808 | What do you think, Colonel, of the Cuban question? |
38808 | What does our party say? |
38808 | What does the Republican party propose? |
38808 | What does the word"extended"mean? |
38808 | What does this mean? |
38808 | What effect has the protective tariff on the condition of labor in this country? |
38808 | What effect has the woman''s suffrage movement had on the breadwinners of the country? |
38808 | What effect has unlimited immigration on the wages of women? |
38808 | What effect, if any, would the complete franchise to our citizens have upon real estate and business in Washington? |
38808 | What essentially American idea does he stand for? |
38808 | What figure will Butler cut in the campaign? |
38808 | What gave rise to the report that you had been converted--did you go to church somewhere? |
38808 | What good can it do God to keep people married who hate each other? |
38808 | What good can it do the community to keep such people together? |
38808 | What good can it, by any possibility, do? |
38808 | What had the Knights of Labor to do with a question of religion? |
38808 | What has been the attitude of President Arthur? |
38808 | What has it to do with the Democratic platform? |
38808 | What has the administration done-- what has it accomplished in the field of diplomacy? |
38808 | What has the press generally said with regard to the action of Judge Comegys? |
38808 | What have you to say about his having died with sealed lips? |
38808 | What have you to say about tariff reform? |
38808 | What have you to say about the attack of Dr. Buckley on you, and your lecture? |
38808 | What have you to say about the claim that Mr. Cleveland does not propose free trade? |
38808 | What have you to say concerning the operations of the Society for Psychical Research? |
38808 | What have you to say in regard to the decision of Judge Billings in New Orleans, that strikes which interfere with interstate commerce, are illegal? |
38808 | What have you to say in reply to the letter in to- day''s_ Times_ signed R. H. S.? |
38808 | What have you to say on the Mormon question? |
38808 | What have you to say to that? |
38808 | What have you to say to that? |
38808 | What have you to say to the assertion of Dr. Deems that there were never so many Christians as now? |
38808 | What have you to say with reference to the respective attitudes of the President and Senate? |
38808 | What have you to say? |
38808 | What is Mr. Conkling''s place in the political history of the United States? |
38808 | What is a contract? |
38808 | What is causing the development of this country? |
38808 | What is education worth? |
38808 | What is going to take the place of the pulpit? |
38808 | What is his forte? |
38808 | What is most needed in our public men? |
38808 | What is the best philosophy of summer recreation? |
38808 | What is the explanation of the stories of mental impressions received at long distances? |
38808 | What is the history of the speech delivered here in 1876? |
38808 | What is the reason for so much intemperance? |
38808 | What is the use of wasting money for food? |
38808 | What is true temperance, Colonel Ingersoll? |
38808 | What is worse than death? |
38808 | What is your conception of true intellectual hospitality? |
38808 | What is your estimate of Susan B. Anthony? |
38808 | What is your explanation of the Republican disaster last Tuesday? |
38808 | What is your explanation of the miracles referred to in the Old and New Testaments? |
38808 | What is your idea as to the difference between honest belief, as held by honest religious thinkers, and heterodoxy? |
38808 | What is your idea in regard to it? |
38808 | What is your idea of Christian Science? |
38808 | What is your idea with regard to divorce? |
38808 | What is your opinion as to the action of the President on the Venezuelan matter? |
38808 | What is your opinion as to the effect of praying for the recovery of the President, and have you any confidence that prayers are answered? |
38808 | What is your opinion concerning women as conductors of these revivals? |
38808 | What is your opinion of American writers? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Brewster''s administration? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Colonel Ingersoll? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Count Leo Tolstoy? |
38808 | What is your opinion of General Grant as he stands before the people to- day? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Ignatius Donnelly as a literary man irrespective of his Baconian theory? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Matthew Arnold? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Mr. Beecher? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Mr. Gladstone as a controversialist? |
38808 | What is your opinion of Spiritualism and Spiritualists? |
38808 | What is your opinion of charity organizations? |
38808 | What is your opinion of foreign missions? |
38808 | What is your opinion of making ex- Presidents Senators for life? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the Christian religion and the Christian Church? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the Gerry Whipping Post bill? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the effect of the multiplicity of women''s clubs as regards the intellectual, moral and domestic status of their members? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the incoming administration, and how will it affect the country? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the peculiar institution of American journalism known as interviewing? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the position taken by the United States in the Venezuelan dispute? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the relative merits of the pulpit and the stage, preachers and actors? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the religious tendency of the people of this country? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the result of the election? |
38808 | What is your opinion of the work undertaken by the_ World_ in behalf of the city slave girl? |
38808 | What is your opinion of"Christian charity"and the"fatherhood of God"as an economic polity for abolishing poverty and misery? |
38808 | What is your opinion regarding the Republican nomination for President? |
38808 | What is your opinion? |
38808 | What is your opinion? |
38808 | What is your remedy, Colonel, for the labor troubles of the day? |
38808 | What is your reply to such assertions? |
38808 | What kind of a President will Garfield make? |
38808 | What kind of a person will do the whipping? |
38808 | What language did he speak?" |
38808 | What led you to begin lecturing on your present subject, and what was your first lecture? |
38808 | What matters it that we differ? |
38808 | What moral quality is there in theological pretence? |
38808 | What must be the life of a man who can earn only one dollar or two dollars a day? |
38808 | What must other nations think when they read the two letters and mentally exclaim,"Look upon this and then upon that?" |
38808 | What must the real character of the scientific wretch be who would try an experiment like this? |
38808 | What must they eat? |
38808 | What must they wear? |
38808 | What must"the great and good"Dole think of our great and good President? |
38808 | What on earth has geology to do with the throne of God? |
38808 | What ought to be done, or what is to be the end? |
38808 | What part of the contract remains in force? |
38808 | What part should you take if not that of the weak? |
38808 | What phases will the Southern question assume in the next four years? |
38808 | What place does the theatre hold among the arts? |
38808 | What policy do they advocate? |
38808 | What possible good did it do the world for Christ to go without food for forty days? |
38808 | What punishment is there for physical crime? |
38808 | What punishment, then, is inflicted upon man for his crimes and wrongs committed in this life? |
38808 | What remains to be done now, and who is going to do it? |
38808 | What section of the United States, East, West, North, or South, is the most advanced in liberal religious ideas? |
38808 | What shall we say of a Bible that we dare not read to a Mormon as an argument against legalized lust, or as an argument against illegal lust? |
38808 | What shall we say of the moral force of Christianity, when it utterly fails in the presence of Mormonism? |
38808 | What should be done with the surplus revenue? |
38808 | What should be the attitude of the church toward the stage? |
38808 | What steps could be taken in any State of this Union? |
38808 | What suggestion would you make for the improvement of the newspapers of this country? |
38808 | What was settled? |
38808 | What was the real difficulty between you and Moses, Colonel, a man who has been dead for thousands of years? |
38808 | What was the real state of mind of the author of"Footfalls on the Boundaries of Another World"? |
38808 | What will be the effect of the enthusiastic receptions that are being given to General Grant? |
38808 | What will be the effect on labor of a departure in American policy in the direction of free trade? |
38808 | What will be the fate of the Mills Bill in the Senate? |
38808 | What will be the main issues in the next presidential campaign? |
38808 | What will be the political effect of the Greenback movement? |
38808 | What would be the effect on farms in that neighborhood? |
38808 | What would be the effect on railroads, on freights, on business-- what upon the towns through which they passed? |
38808 | What would be your advice to an intelligent young man just starting out in life? |
38808 | What would have been his fate a few years ago? |
38808 | What would have happened to him in Spain, in Portugal, in Italy-- in any other country that was Catholic-- only a few years ago? |
38808 | What would the city that had been built up by the factories be worth? |
38808 | What would the clergy of Washington think should the miracle of Cana be repeated in their day? |
38808 | What would they have done had the vaults been empty? |
38808 | What would you define public opinion to be? |
38808 | What would you think of me if I should retort, using your language, changing only the sex of the last word? |
38808 | What, in your estimation, is the value of the drama as a factor in our social life at the present time? |
38808 | What, in your judgment, is necessary to be done to insure Republican success this fall? |
38808 | What, in your judgment, is the source of the greatest trouble among men? |
38808 | What, in your judgment, is to be the outcome of the present agitation in religious circles? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, are the best possible means to spread this gospel or religion of Secularism? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, is the condition of labor in this country as compared with that abroad? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, is the condition of the Democratic party at present? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, is the significance of the vote on the Mills Bill recently passed in the House? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, were the causes for Blaine''s defeat? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, were the causes which led to the Democratic defeat? |
38808 | What, in your opinion, will be Browning''s position in the literature of the future? |
38808 | What, on the whole, is your judgment of the book? |
38808 | What, then, are their relations? |
38808 | When I watch them on the avenue I, too, fall to quoting Scripture, and say,"Can these dry bones live?" |
38808 | When Saul visited the Witch of Endor, and she, by some magic spell, called up Samuel, the prophet said:"Why hast thou disquieted me, to call me up?" |
38808 | When we come to civil service, about how many Federal officials were at the St. Louis convention? |
38808 | Where are the four hundred millions found? |
38808 | Where are the most Liberals, and in what section of the country is the best work for Liberalism being done? |
38808 | Where do we get the right to say that the negroes must emigrate? |
38808 | Where do you meet with the bitterest opposition? |
38808 | Where do you think it is necessary the Republican candidate should come from to insure success? |
38808 | Where does Mr. Buckner propose to colonize the white people, and what right has he to propose the colonization of six millions of people? |
38808 | Where is an actress on the English stage the superior of Julia Marlowe in genius, in originality, in naturalness? |
38808 | Where is the great white throne? |
38808 | Where rests the responsibility for the Armenian atrocities? |
38808 | Which did more for his country, George Washington or Abraham Lincoln? |
38808 | Which do you regard as the better, Catholicism or Protestantism? |
38808 | Which in your opinion is the greatest English novel? |
38808 | Which is the more dangerous to American institutions--the National Reform Association( God- in- the- Constitution party) or the Roman Catholic Church? |
38808 | Which would you say are the better orators, speaking generally, the American people or the English people? |
38808 | Who brought about"a critical period of our financial affairs"? |
38808 | Who created the vast debt that American labor must pay? |
38808 | Who do you think ought to be nominated at Chicago? |
38808 | Who do you think will be nominated at Chicago? |
38808 | Who made Herod? |
38808 | Who made this taxation of thousands of millions necessary? |
38808 | Who succeeded there? |
38808 | Who wants it inflicted? |
38808 | Who will be the Republican nominee for President? |
38808 | Who, in your judgment, would be the strongest man the Republicans could put up? |
38808 | Who, in your opinion, is the greatest leader of the"opposition"yclept the Christian religion? |
38808 | Who, in your opinion, is the greatest novelist who has written in the English language? |
38808 | Who, then, is really responsible for the acts of Herod? |
38808 | Whose God? |
38808 | Why are you so utterly opposed to vivisection? |
38808 | Why did he want to pick out my bad things? |
38808 | Why did not Brewster speak? |
38808 | Why did you not take part in the campaign? |
38808 | Why do people read a book like"Robert Elsmere,"and why do they take any interest in it? |
38808 | Why do the theological seminaries find it difficult to get students? |
38808 | Why do you make such a distinction between the rights of man and the rights of women? |
38808 | Why do you not meet these men, and why do you not answer these attacks? |
38808 | Why do you not respond to the occasional clergyman who replies to your lectures? |
38808 | Why give us corn, and Egypt cholera? |
38808 | Why inflict pain? |
38808 | Why is it the Presbyterians are so opposed to music in the world, and yet expect to have so much in heaven? |
38808 | Why not have the courage to say that if there be a God, all I know about him I know by knowing myself and my friends-- by knowing others? |
38808 | Why not name the one, and have done with it? |
38808 | Why not say that the universe has existed from eternity, as well as to say that a Creator has existed from eternity? |
38808 | Why not take the middle ground? |
38808 | Why not work with the great and enlightened majority? |
38808 | Why rush to the extreme for the purpose not only of making yourself useless but hurtful? |
38808 | Why should Christians refuse to persecute in this world, when their God is going to in the next? |
38808 | Why should God treat us any better than he does the rest of his children? |
38808 | Why should I say that he has the assistance of spirits? |
38808 | Why should Sunday be observed otherwise than as a day of recreation? |
38808 | Why should a barbarian boy cast reproach upon his parents? |
38808 | Why should a man say that he loves God better than he does his wife or his children or his brother or his sister or his warm, true friend? |
38808 | Why should a member of Parliament or of Congress swear to maintain the Constitution? |
38808 | Why should an infinite God allow some of his children to enslave others? |
38808 | Why should any one, when convinced that Christianity is a superstition, have or feel a sense of loss? |
38808 | Why should ex- Presidents be taken care of? |
38808 | Why should he allow a child of his to burn another child of his, under the impression that such a sacrifice was pleasing to him? |
38808 | Why should he annihilate his mistakes? |
38808 | Why should he make mistakes that need annihilation? |
38808 | Why should he send pestilence and famine to China, and health and plenty to us? |
38808 | Why should such a State be called free? |
38808 | Why should the Democratic party lay claim to any anti- trust glory? |
38808 | Why should the Republican party be so particular about religious belief? |
38808 | Why should the reputations of the dead, and the feelings of those who live, be placed at the mercy of the ministers? |
38808 | Why should they be compelled to license that which they are not permitted to enjoy? |
38808 | Why should they care for what the animals suffer? |
38808 | Why should we expect an infinite Being to do better in another world than he has done and is doing in this? |
38808 | Why should we follow such an example? |
38808 | Why should we not protect, by the same means, the actor? |
38808 | Why should we postpone our joy to another world? |
38808 | Why should we worship in God what we detest in man? |
38808 | Why should you love the memory of one whom God hates?" |
38808 | Why so? |
38808 | Why was the word sheol introduced in place of hell, and how do you like the substitute? |
38808 | Why was this? |
38808 | Why were the bonds sold? |
38808 | Why were the greenbacks issued? |
38808 | Why, I ask, should God give life to men whom he knows are unworthy of life? |
38808 | Why, then, resort to the duel? |
38808 | Will Dr. Banks in his fifty- two sermons of next year show that his God is not responsible for the crimes of Herod? |
38808 | Will Liberalism ever organize in America? |
38808 | Will Mr. Cleveland, in your opinion, carry out the civil service reform he professes to favor? |
38808 | Will a time ever come when political campaigns will be conducted independently of religious prejudice? |
38808 | Will he listen to or grant any demands made of him by the alleged Independent Republicans of New York, either in his appointments or policies? |
38808 | Will it necessitate the nomination of an Ohio Republican next year? |
38808 | Will the Democratic party have a strong issue in its anti- trust cry? |
38808 | Will the Supreme Court take cognizance of this case and prevent the execution of the judgment? |
38808 | Will the church and the stage ever work together for the betterment of the world, and what is the province of each? |
38808 | Will the instructions given to delegates be final? |
38808 | Will the negro continue to be the balance of power, and if so, will it inure to his benefit? |
38808 | Will the religion of humanity be the religion of the future? |
38808 | Will the time ever come when it can truthfully be said that right is might? |
38808 | Will there be other trials? |
38808 | Will these two considerations cut any figure in the presidential campaign of 1884? |
38808 | Will this add to their happiness? |
38808 | Will this reverse seriously affect Republican chances next year? |
38808 | Will you give your reasons? |
38808 | Will you lecture the coming winter? |
38808 | Will you state your reasons for your belief? |
38808 | Will you take any notice of Mr. Magrath''s challenge? |
38808 | With a solid South do you not think the Democratic nominee will stand a good chance? |
38808 | With all your experiences, the trials, the responsibilities, the disappointments, the heartburnings, Colonel, is life worth living? |
38808 | With the introduction of the Democracy into power, what radical changes will take place in the Government, and what will be the result? |
38808 | Wo n''t you give us, then, Colonel, your analysis of this act, and the motives leading to it? |
38808 | Would he want a divorce? |
38808 | Would it not be better to teach that he who does wrong must suffer the consequences, whether God forgives him or not? |
38808 | Would people be any more moral solely because of a disbelief in orthodox teaching and in the Bible as an inspired book, in your opinion? |
38808 | Would the Catholicism of General Sherman''s family affect his chances for the presidency? |
38808 | Would the Democracy of New York unite on Seymour? |
38808 | Would you again refuse to take the stump for Mr. Blaine if he should be renominated, and if so, why? |
38808 | Would you consent to live in any but a Christian community? |
38808 | Would you have Government clerks and officials appointed to office here given the franchise in the District? |
38808 | Would you have us discard it altogether? |
38808 | Would you mind telling me how it was you came to be a public speaker, a lecturer, an orator? |
38808 | Yet the sacred volume, no matter who wrote it, is a mine of wealth to the student and the philosopher, is it not? |
38808 | You consider Greenbackers inflationists, do you not? |
38808 | You do not deny that a religious belief is a comfort? |
38808 | You do not seem to think that Arthur has a chance? |
38808 | You have studied the Bible attentively, have you not? |
38808 | You knew John Russell Young, Colonel? |
38808 | You seem to agree with all that Justice Harlan has said, and to have the greatest admiration for his opinion? |
38808 | You think, then, that there is no great principle involved? |
38808 | Your objective point is to destroy the doctrine of hell, is it? |
38808 | Your views of the country''s future and prospects must naturally be rose colored? |
38808 | and if so what do you think of them? |
38808 | and should this, if given, include the women clerks? |
38808 | as expressed in_ The Herald_ of last week? |
38808 | but,"Is this true?" |
38808 | of the people to even call themselves Presbyterians, about how long will it take, at this rate, to convert mankind? |
56945 | ''He''s not married, then?'' 56945 ''Who was that officer?'' |
56945 | A room, sir? |
56945 | A sermon? 56945 A threat?" |
56945 | A woman? 56945 Afraid of you? |
56945 | Ah, George, what''s the news? |
56945 | Ah, and yet? |
56945 | Alone? 56945 Am I a mollycoddle?" |
56945 | Am I your prisoner? |
56945 | Anchor afoul my unlighted sign? |
56945 | And how is the jealous husband to- night? |
56945 | And how might you be armed? |
56945 | And how will you prove it? |
56945 | And if I refuse? |
56945 | And if he loses it, it will break him? |
56945 | And the dream- woman? |
56945 | And what is that? |
56945 | And where else could I take a sea voyage? 56945 And will you do me a favor?" |
56945 | And you let him go? |
56945 | Another hotel before we sail? |
56945 | Any way of getting a cup of coffee? |
56945 | Anything wrong in these diggings? |
56945 | Are you a poet? |
56945 | Are you guying me? 56945 Are you mad or am I?... |
56945 | Are you trying to get my goat? |
56945 | At this hour? |
56945 | Beautiful, with blonde hair? |
56945 | Berta free?... 56945 Berta, do you ever stop to think?" |
56945 | Berta, what nonsense is this? 56945 Berta?" |
56945 | Bird? |
56945 | Bob? |
56945 | Bob?... 56945 But how would you know?" |
56945 | But if he goes on this way? |
56945 | But why coop me up? |
56945 | But why do you bar the windows and doors so carefully at night? 56945 Ca n''t you recognize Jack Barrymore when you see him? |
56945 | Could n''t it be possible to stay without explaining? |
56945 | Dey sure fools yo''sometimes, do n''t dey? 56945 Did I see the red and blue lights of a drug- store down the street as we came along?" |
56945 | Did n''t I tell you there was something off- color? |
56945 | Did n''t ask any questions about the man? |
56945 | Did you like the play? |
56945 | Did you rap about one o''clock? |
56945 | Do you believe in love at first sight? |
56945 | Do you know her? |
56945 | Do you know that blond man''s name? |
56945 | Do you want the truth? 56945 Does he talk?" |
56945 | Escaped? |
56945 | Find anything? |
56945 | For how long? |
56945 | For what? |
56945 | Forgive? 56945 George, is there a lady next door?" |
56945 | Get a good look? |
56945 | Going to let''em put it over without a kick? |
56945 | Going to take his things with him? |
56945 | Gone? |
56945 | Had you a hand in Bob Hallowell''s death? |
56945 | Has the Secret Service man asked my name? |
56945 | Have we sunk the German fleet? |
56945 | He has n''t sent or received any telegrams? |
56945 | His books? 56945 Honestly? |
56945 | How am I to know that no one will enter this room while I''m down- stairs? |
56945 | How are you going to carry them? |
56945 | How big a town is this? |
56945 | How did you learn anything was wrong? 56945 How do you feel?" |
56945 | How do you figure that out? |
56945 | How does he spend his time? |
56945 | How long will we be stalled? |
56945 | Huh? 56945 I see.... What''s that?" |
56945 | I suppose it''s still snowing outside? |
56945 | I wonder if I can make you understand what your kindness has done for me? 56945 I... what? |
56945 | I? 56945 In a white pith helmet?" |
56945 | In what way? |
56945 | Is it so hard to forgive? |
56945 | Is the lady still in room two twenty?... 56945 Is there any reason why we ca n''t remain here? |
56945 | It is not over yet? |
56945 | It sounds so silly, does n''t it? 56945 John, why should she tramp like that?" |
56945 | Karl, do n''t you see? 56945 Letter- perfect?" |
56945 | Like him? 56945 Madame is not offended?" |
56945 | Madame, that handsome young man with the little green bird...."Well? |
56945 | Malachi, old boy? |
56945 | Mat, you lubber, where''s my tobacco? 56945 Mat, you lubber, where''s my tobacco?" |
56945 | Mat, you lubber, where''s my tobacco? |
56945 | Mat, you lubber, where''s my tobacco?... 56945 Mathison?" |
56945 | May I go to the bathroom? |
56945 | Music? 56945 Need any help?" |
56945 | No objection to my taking my things along? |
56945 | No regret, no pity? |
56945 | No? 56945 Not Jack?" |
56945 | Now then,said Mathison, still able to hold his rage in check,"be so good as to explain what the devil all this means?" |
56945 | Observe those photographs? 56945 Oh, madame, who would not be patient with you? |
56945 | Oh, she is, huh? 56945 Over what?" |
56945 | Passengers in number two? |
56945 | Richard Whittington? |
56945 | Roland? 56945 Rubin? |
56945 | Sable coat? |
56945 | Sam Rubin, what have you got under your arm? |
56945 | Sarah, am I beautiful? |
56945 | Sarah, dear, am I tiring you out? |
56945 | Sarah,said the mother to the Breton maid,"have you taken good care of my Hilda?" |
56945 | Save me? 56945 She gave it to you for_ me_?" |
56945 | She? 56945 She?" |
56945 | She? |
56945 | Still in town, then? |
56945 | Suppose you sit here on this divan? 56945 Supposing you were found here? |
56945 | Talk? |
56945 | Taxi, sir? |
56945 | That I should find you? 56945 That my feet are wet or that the woman you know as The Yellow Typhoon is my twin sister? |
56945 | The Lord Mayor of London, huh? |
56945 | The man has been asking you questions about me? |
56945 | The steward...? |
56945 | The woman next door? |
56945 | Then I am still beautiful to you? |
56945 | Then I may come to tea day after to- morrow? |
56945 | Then I was n''t useless, after all? |
56945 | Then you are a good American? |
56945 | Then you have come back to marry before you go across? |
56945 | Then you remember that yarn called''Love o''Women''? 56945 Then you saw her?" |
56945 | Then you were n''t in the theater to- night? |
56945 | Then you wo n''t forgive? |
56945 | They are not? 56945 This Mr. Rubin? |
56945 | This the Watkins?... 56945 To injure me? |
56945 | To me? |
56945 | Two? 56945 Wanted?" |
56945 | War stuff? |
56945 | Was it...? |
56945 | Well, I had de bed made up, case yo''did come back.... Lan''sakes, what''s happened t''dem satchels? |
56945 | Well, and why not? 56945 Well, what do you know about that?" |
56945 | Well? |
56945 | Well? |
56945 | What are the other passengers going to do? |
56945 | What are you laughing at? |
56945 | What are you telling me? |
56945 | What arm? |
56945 | What do you call him? |
56945 | What does that mean? |
56945 | What has become of Miss Farrington''s car? |
56945 | What has happened? |
56945 | What have you got in the line of theaters? |
56945 | What is it you really want? |
56945 | What is it? 56945 What is it?" |
56945 | What is it? |
56945 | What is it? |
56945 | What is that? |
56945 | What made him decide to risk leaving the car? |
56945 | What makes you think that? |
56945 | What matters the hour? 56945 What now?" |
56945 | What now? |
56945 | What shall I call you? 56945 What the dickens is her hurry?" |
56945 | What time will we make New York, if this keeps up? |
56945 | What was it you wanted? |
56945 | What''s a successful week amount to? |
56945 | What''s de mattah wid dat hotel? |
56945 | What''s happened? |
56945 | What''s hit this room, then-- an earthquake? |
56945 | What''s that under your arm? |
56945 | What''s the difficulty? |
56945 | What''s the matter with them? |
56945 | What''s the matter? |
56945 | What''s the matter? |
56945 | What''s the name of it? |
56945 | What''s the trouble? |
56945 | What''s the trouble? |
56945 | What''s the trouble? |
56945 | What''s wanted? |
56945 | What''s wanted? |
56945 | What? 56945 What? |
56945 | What? |
56945 | What? |
56945 | What? |
56945 | What? |
56945 | What? |
56945 | When will you have the extra stuff ready? |
56945 | Where have I heard her voice? |
56945 | Where in the world did you find all those violets-- loose, the way I love them? |
56945 | Where''s Berta Nordstrom, the woman known as The Yellow Typhoon? |
56945 | Where''s the girl for me? |
56945 | Where''s the keys? |
56945 | Where''s the other man? 56945 Which husband? |
56945 | Who is it and what is wanted? |
56945 | Who was it we buried? |
56945 | Who''s this woman, Manon Roland? |
56945 | Why not become a friend instead of an enemy? 56945 Will madame continue wearing this make- up?" |
56945 | Will there be trouble in getting her a passport? |
56945 | Will you be aboard all night? |
56945 | Would it do any good to arrest them? |
56945 | Would you like him? |
56945 | You are John Mathison? |
56945 | You are an officer in the United States navy? |
56945 | You are fond of something, then? |
56945 | You are going to try to love me? |
56945 | You are leaving? |
56945 | You are not afraid to shake hands? |
56945 | You did n''t like it? |
56945 | You did n''t? |
56945 | You do n''t know this Roland woman? |
56945 | You found me by that? 56945 You know Kipling?" |
56945 | You mean, go back with me to the hotel? |
56945 | You saw what he did? |
56945 | You will not forget me? |
56945 | You wo n''t mind if I smoke and jog about a bit? 56945 You wo n''t mind if I stay here a few minutes?" |
56945 | You''ll be taking Malachi along with you? |
56945 | You''re not much on the gab- fest, are you? |
56945 | You''ve a son over in France? |
56945 | You?... 56945 Your keys? |
56945 | _ All_ the passengers returned? |
56945 | _ Hilda?_CHAPTER XV Mathison stepped aside, not only physically, but figuratively. |
56945 | ''Where does he live?'' |
56945 | 9? |
56945 | A chance shot in the dark that the bird might remember and repeat it? |
56945 | A cue? |
56945 | A passport, or was she up to some deadly mischief? |
56945 | After all, what did her affairs amount to in this great game? |
56945 | Ah, God, why did n''t you tell me? |
56945 | Ah, madame, what is happening to us?" |
56945 | Am I right?" |
56945 | Among the natives?" |
56945 | Analyze it? |
56945 | And how the devil is a man to know? |
56945 | And what kind of a game was she about to spring? |
56945 | And what was Berta? |
56945 | And where the devil was Bob? |
56945 | And yet, on board the_ Nippon Maru_, had n''t he told her there was no one? |
56945 | And you are traveling in mufti?" |
56945 | And you supposed I would not recognize you, never having seen you? |
56945 | Any idea what was in this box?" |
56945 | Any man with her?" |
56945 | Are you ever going to talk again? |
56945 | Berta free and Hilda alone? |
56945 | Berta in New York? |
56945 | Bo, was it love- letters-- divorce stuff? |
56945 | Bo, what did you have?" |
56945 | But how did you learn that this man is a Secret Service agent?" |
56945 | But how would she use this furtive freedom? |
56945 | But if we secure a passport, what is your bond?" |
56945 | But she managed to say, calmly,"In a play?" |
56945 | But what did The Yellow Typhoon want of John Mathison? |
56945 | But what was the idea? |
56945 | But would he ever speak? |
56945 | But, he had argued, supposing he struck and the print was not found? |
56945 | Chota Malachi!_""What does he say?" |
56945 | Crazy? |
56945 | Crook stuff?" |
56945 | Curious old world, is n''t it? |
56945 | Danger? |
56945 | Did Hallowell have a photograph of you?" |
56945 | Did I ever cringe, whine? |
56945 | Did he expect to get his farmer on long- distance at this hour? |
56945 | Did n''t you hear him order me out of Manila?" |
56945 | Did n''t you tell me I''d find Her?... |
56945 | Did you lamp the roll he dragged out? |
56945 | Do you believe it will be pleasant for me? |
56945 | Do you realize that you have been dead eight years?" |
56945 | Do you think me such a fool as to come unarmed?" |
56945 | Entered a house in Fiftieth Street? |
56945 | Ever heard of a woman called The Yellow Typhoon?" |
56945 | Ever see a spider weave his web-- and then wait for the fly to walk in? |
56945 | Fifth Avenue, Broadway, the theaters, the brilliant restaurants, the shops-- why did the thought of New York set a little chill in her heart? |
56945 | Flesh and blood-- or was there something in the psychology of double- birth? |
56945 | Flesh and blood? |
56945 | For if he had not been drawn to her through some mysterious forces, why had he sought her? |
56945 | Gave up the key a moment ago?... |
56945 | Glad to see me?" |
56945 | Going out?" |
56945 | Gone? |
56945 | Good- lookers?" |
56945 | Got anything to say?" |
56945 | Had he not hinted at the supper- table that there was? |
56945 | Had he understood that one of his masters had been trying to tell him something? |
56945 | Had she been mothering him? |
56945 | Had she declared to the blond man that she had not found it? |
56945 | Had the porter betrayed her? |
56945 | Had the woman really tried to do him a service? |
56945 | Had there been a cable from that man Morgan, after his solemn promise? |
56945 | Had they discovered what she had done and had she flown to him for protection? |
56945 | Had they speculated upon his running out into the corridor? |
56945 | Hallowell, Graham, Morris?" |
56945 | Hate you? |
56945 | Have n''t I promised you all the dresses you can pack in two trunks? |
56945 | Have you ever seen a clean, upstanding flower suddenly beaten down by a squall of rain? |
56945 | He followed this clue, and at length came upon the message:"You understand your powers? |
56945 | He has n''t ordered anything to drink, has he?" |
56945 | He is? |
56945 | He swung along with a jaunty stride, whistling the latest tune that had"come out,""Oh, boy, where do we go from here?" |
56945 | Hilda, will you know how to keep him?" |
56945 | Honest, now, are you meetin''Miss Farrington?" |
56945 | How big a town is this?" |
56945 | How could these turn up if he had n''t telegraphed? |
56945 | How do you like it?" |
56945 | How had they gotten the fumes into the compartment? |
56945 | How long do you expect to be with us, sir?" |
56945 | How many against him? |
56945 | How many of us poor devils have you rooked with your infernal beauty? |
56945 | How many times had she almost reached out to rumple his hair? |
56945 | How the deuce would he be able to kiss her when the time came, with his lips puffed and bleeding? |
56945 | How valuable was the print?" |
56945 | How was he to know that the gown she wore had been donned expressly for him? |
56945 | How would these react upon Malachi''s memory? |
56945 | How?" |
56945 | I suppose you are going back to enlist?" |
56945 | I wonder if Cunningham would come up and share the place with me?" |
56945 | I wonder if that extension''phone will reach over here?" |
56945 | I wonder if there is a sadder place than a stage when the actors have left it to the tender mercies of scene- shifters, carpenters, and electricians? |
56945 | I wonder what would have happened?" |
56945 | I wonder, am I a mollycoddle?" |
56945 | I''ll break her contract for her and you may sue from Maine to Oregon.... What''s that?... |
56945 | If I should happen to fire a pistol, you promise not to scream?" |
56945 | If a blow was struck, did I not always strike back? |
56945 | If a submarine should pop up, you''ll promise to come for me?" |
56945 | If madame is not interested?" |
56945 | If the Secret Service was baffled, what was going on in the minds of the men following him? |
56945 | If the woman''s tempestuous actions had awakened the bird''s recollection, what might a reconstruction of the crime do? |
56945 | In God''s name why had he not let them search? |
56945 | In their minds, who would be the logical messenger? |
56945 | Is Norma Farrington playing in town?... |
56945 | Is it a bargain?" |
56945 | Is she still there?... |
56945 | Is there a comic opera or a good burlesque?" |
56945 | Is there anything in prenatal influence? |
56945 | Is this coat yours?" |
56945 | Is yo''an officer in de_ navy_?" |
56945 | It is you, Sam? |
56945 | Love anything? |
56945 | Love my mother? |
56945 | Made all your plans?" |
56945 | Malachi, are you cold?" |
56945 | Malachi?" |
56945 | Man by the name of Richard Whittington registered?... |
56945 | May I come and see you in New York?" |
56945 | May I give him to you?" |
56945 | May I give him to you?" |
56945 | May I write a note?" |
56945 | Mere bewilderment? |
56945 | Murdered?" |
56945 | Must women always suffer to see these things about? |
56945 | Norma Farrington, The Yellow Typhoon? |
56945 | Now suppose you bring it over?" |
56945 | Now then, anything missing?" |
56945 | On our return we are going to spend the honeymoon at my home in the North Woods.... Contract? |
56945 | One like those I saw in Agra, flying about in the ruined fort?" |
56945 | Or had she been attracted from another angle? |
56945 | Or had she noticed that his right hand was still in the pocket of his coat? |
56945 | Or is it the devil himself who fits you out, covers your black heart with alluring flesh? |
56945 | Or was it Hallowell!--a touch of remorse? |
56945 | Or was this the beginning of a series of night attacks to break him down physically and mentally?... |
56945 | Porter, what was this woman like?" |
56945 | Regret? |
56945 | Remember those sables I smuggled in last spring? |
56945 | Remember? |
56945 | Remorse? |
56945 | Rubin? |
56945 | Say"--wrathfully--"why did you give me that bunk about being Ellison?" |
56945 | Say, I ai n''t nachelly inquis''tive, but what''s in dat cage?" |
56945 | Seeing her, would he not always be seeing Berta, who in his eyes was a criminal of a dangerous type? |
56945 | Seek to injure Hilda, himself? |
56945 | Selfish? |
56945 | Shall I send for a cup of coffee? |
56945 | Shall I take you to her room?" |
56945 | Shame? |
56945 | She came from the stalled train.... She said she would not return? |
56945 | She is n''t? |
56945 | She_ is_?... |
56945 | Should I know real happiness or should I choose a bed like my father''s? |
56945 | Should I take her a clean heart or a muddy one? |
56945 | Should he do this, or should he do that, or should he ask advice? |
56945 | So she had noticed? |
56945 | Somehow I_ know_ I''m coming back.... Where''s this man Rubin live?" |
56945 | Sound? |
56945 | Spirits? |
56945 | Suppose we let Berta''s fate rest on the knees of the gods?" |
56945 | Supposing Hallowell had called out to Malachi the name of the man? |
56945 | Supposing he really started out upon such an adventure in earnest, not in imagination? |
56945 | Supposing his love for the Jezebel was still a living thing and needed only the sight of the woman to revive it? |
56945 | Supposing that was it? |
56945 | Take you home? |
56945 | That blond beast''s evil influence removed, who knows?" |
56945 | The Yellow Typhoon? |
56945 | The craving for exercise? |
56945 | The fool woman is always writing them and then bawling to heaven to get them back.... For the love o''Mike, what''s this? |
56945 | The girl he saw in every port: what about her? |
56945 | The gray wig and the goggles...."What did you say?" |
56945 | The hour was fast approaching when he would have to let her go, perhaps forever...."Glorious up here, is n''t it?" |
56945 | The kite in the dove- cote? |
56945 | The pearl is gone from the oyster, the juice from the orange; so why tarry, pretty blackmailer? |
56945 | The photograph of the actress? |
56945 | The want of sleep? |
56945 | The woman still inside? |
56945 | Then he''s th''inventor?'' |
56945 | Then it is war?" |
56945 | Then you are beginning to doubt that superior efficiency of yours?... |
56945 | There was a woman? |
56945 | This man?... |
56945 | To kill him, now that he could identify the woman? |
56945 | To- day where are they? |
56945 | Understand? |
56945 | Want anything done about it? |
56945 | War? |
56945 | Was it inspired by some vague regret for Hallowell? |
56945 | Was n''t this his master? |
56945 | Was the wig on straight? |
56945 | Was there another woman? |
56945 | Was there anything concerning John Mathison that she did not know? |
56945 | Was there really an invisible connecting link? |
56945 | We''re all riddles, are n''t we?" |
56945 | Well, why not? |
56945 | Well?" |
56945 | Were they following him? |
56945 | Were_ they_ alive or dead? |
56945 | What ailed the bird? |
56945 | What are they, pro- Germans from that dear Chicago?" |
56945 | What are you-- German, Dane, Finn? |
56945 | What do they offer me? |
56945 | What do you mean?... |
56945 | What do_ you_ think?" |
56945 | What had happened to the world? |
56945 | What had happened? |
56945 | What had happened? |
56945 | What had he learned within these four short hours? |
56945 | What had her heart been calling out through it all, since the miracle of the violets? |
56945 | What had started this rather sinister idea in his mind, or rather reawakened it? |
56945 | What happens? |
56945 | What has happened to the souls of men, that from generation to generation the male child''s toys must be these? |
56945 | What idiocy had inveigled him to carry it to his room? |
56945 | What if they had no key- print? |
56945 | What in the world was the meaning of such irrelevant questions? |
56945 | What is it I want, Sarah? |
56945 | What is life but an accident? |
56945 | What is she like?" |
56945 | What is the kite but cousin to the eagle? |
56945 | What kind of a man was he, that he could sit opposite her without deluging her with questions? |
56945 | What manner of fool have you written me down? |
56945 | What mattered it if they could not apply the principle, so long as they understood that this menace existed, of what it comprised? |
56945 | What the deuce is that to me?... |
56945 | What theater?... |
56945 | What to do? |
56945 | What was happening to the world? |
56945 | What was her game? |
56945 | What was her love for you? |
56945 | What was it that stirred in the back of his head at the sight of this bit of dramatized photography? |
56945 | What was it, a diamond toothpick?" |
56945 | What was it? |
56945 | What was it? |
56945 | What was the matter with her that she did not blaze with pleasure at the thought of New York? |
56945 | What was the meaning of this self- imposed isolation? |
56945 | What was the meaning of this singular tameness? |
56945 | What would be his wonder? |
56945 | What would be surer to call forth a fighting- man than the sound of shots in the night? |
56945 | What would he do without some one to watch over him? |
56945 | What''s God''s idea, anyhow? |
56945 | What''s behind that day in San Francisco when you decided to cast your lot with mine? |
56945 | What''s de matter wid dat hotel? |
56945 | What''s he done, I wonduh? |
56945 | What''s he look like?" |
56945 | What''s the good of clothes if you ca n''t wear them? |
56945 | What''s the news?" |
56945 | What''s the report from Fiftieth Street?... |
56945 | What''s the report on the woman in the sables?... |
56945 | What''s the trouble?" |
56945 | What''s this box? |
56945 | What_ could_ he want of Rubin? |
56945 | What_ was_ God''s idea? |
56945 | What_ was_ he talking about? |
56945 | When she paused to analyze the situation, however, the question arose: Why should he care? |
56945 | Where are we going to eat?" |
56945 | Where did she go?" |
56945 | Where did you get it?" |
56945 | Where had he heard that? |
56945 | Where is it?" |
56945 | Where shall we go? |
56945 | Where was Bob? |
56945 | Where was Mathison? |
56945 | Where was she, what was she doing? |
56945 | Where would two sentimental fools like you two come for their honeymoon? |
56945 | Where''d juh come from?" |
56945 | Where''s your servant?" |
56945 | Where? |
56945 | Whither had she gone, this ghost? |
56945 | Who in the world will recognize you? |
56945 | Who knows what may happen?" |
56945 | Who knows? |
56945 | Who was it we buried?" |
56945 | Who would care, these tremendous times? |
56945 | Who would look out for Berta but Berta? |
56945 | Who, then, was in the grave in Greenwood? |
56945 | Why bother? |
56945 | Why did n''t he attempt to distract the man with the automatic-- arguments, protests, threats? |
56945 | Why did n''t he offer the bird to her?... |
56945 | Why did n''t he speak, demand questions, satisfy her curiosity? |
56945 | Why did n''t she take out a revolver, cover him in the conventional style, and open the door for her friends in the hall? |
56945 | Why did n''t you set up a holler?" |
56945 | Why did she want to? |
56945 | Why did you hook up? |
56945 | Why had n''t he left the envelope in the safe? |
56945 | Why had n''t he taken advantage of it? |
56945 | Why had n''t she? |
56945 | Why had she shed tears over the poor, unrecognizable thing in Berta''s clothes she and the mother had buried eight years ago? |
56945 | Why not melt a little? |
56945 | Why not? |
56945 | Why not? |
56945 | Why not? |
56945 | Why not? |
56945 | Why not?_ pulsed his father''s blood. |
56945 | Why should a young man of thirty keep fresh in his memory an old woman ostensibly sixty? |
56945 | Why? |
56945 | Why? |
56945 | Why? |
56945 | Why? |
56945 | Will you help me?" |
56945 | Will you kindly ascertain for me if rooms three eighteen and three twenty- two are occupied by passengers from the stalled flier from Chicago?... |
56945 | Will you marry me?" |
56945 | Will you testify before the authorities that you found the blue- print in his kit- bag? |
56945 | Wo n''t you please tell me exactly what happened?" |
56945 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
56945 | Wo n''t you take me back and forgive?" |
56945 | Would n''t you prefer me to the hotel physician?" |
56945 | Would she ever be able to call him that again? |
56945 | Yet, if so, why had she not_ felt_ that Berta was alive? |
56945 | You admit you are''Black''Ellison?" |
56945 | You are disappointed? |
56945 | You are sure you want him?" |
56945 | You are trying to solve the riddle? |
56945 | You devil, what game are you up to?" |
56945 | You do n''t suppose I came here with any other idea?" |
56945 | You have a good safe?" |
56945 | You have traveled far?" |
56945 | You saw her, then?" |
56945 | You wo n''t look at me? |
56945 | _ Chota Malachi!_... You lubber, where''s my tobacco?... |
56945 | _ Why not? |
56945 | what?" |
56945 | why did you run away?" |
9866 | And if he ca n''t work? |
9866 | And if he wo n''t work? |
9866 | So far, so good,thought I; but I asked further what the Hotel Association would do if a guest_ could_ not pay? |
9866 | Yes, but what are my people and I to live upon in the mean time, until our factory begins to work? |
9866 | ''And are you not afraid,''I interposed,''that this absence of care will eventually put an end to that upon which you rely-- that is, to progress? |
9866 | ''And do not foreign crises sometimes disturb the calm course of your Freeland production? |
9866 | ''And is not this last- mentioned fact a disadvantage to the Freeland saver?'' |
9866 | ''And what has been your experience of these illiterate immigrants?'' |
9866 | ''Are there no horses here?'' |
9866 | ''But how would you defend yourselves against the artillery of European armies?'' |
9866 | ''But how,''asked my father--''how do you arrive at a knowledge of the mental condition of your ignorant fellow- countrymen? |
9866 | ''But, in heaven''s name, what becomes of the productive power among us which thus remains unemployed?'' |
9866 | ''But,''I asked,''what will prompt men to struggle in the cause of progress when want has lost its sting?'' |
9866 | ''But,''I interposed,''suppose a child is or becomes incapable of work?'' |
9866 | ''If it is really so, why have you not said so before; for you must have seen what good use can be made of elephants here?'' |
9866 | ''Is this your country,''was the rejoinder,''that you demand tribute? |
9866 | ''May I, in this connection, ask how you deal with the right of inheritance in general, and of inheritance of real property in particular? |
9866 | ''Or do you really believe that perfectly uneducated persons possess the power of disciplining themselves? |
9866 | ''Perhaps you will ask what right we have in this way to burden future generations to the profit of their ancestors? |
9866 | ''The last would be scarcely possible among us,''answered Mr. Ney, smiling;''for who would be willing to act as groom in Freeland? |
9866 | ''Then you do not admit that ornaments have any real adorning power? |
9866 | ''Then you think,''I said,''that equality of actual income has nothing to do with equality_ of rights_? |
9866 | ''Then,''said my father,''your boasted equality of rights exists only for educated persons?'' |
9866 | ''What can you do to protect the wretched remnant of our proud allied fleet?'' |
9866 | ''What do you find remarkable in that, my worthy guests? |
9866 | ''What have you done?'' |
9866 | ''What was to be done? |
9866 | ''Whence do you get all this reflected splendour of sunny joyousness?'' |
9866 | ''Why not?'' |
9866 | ''Why,''I asked,''do these ladies forsake the parental houses, which must be highly respectable ones?'' |
9866 | ''Why,''asked my father,''is there comparatively less use of the service in your house than elsewhere?'' |
9866 | ''You mean harshness, love of domination, wrangling? |
9866 | And can he use any such information when communicated to him, except to the injury of others? |
9866 | And in the war with the Kavirondo and Nangi were not the Masai in the wrong? |
9866 | And in what consists the change in the struggle for existence, in such a case as that indicated above? |
9866 | And what if it is not so? |
9866 | And what is the utility of human labour? |
9866 | And what is this? |
9866 | And what was it but want that drove them to both of these courses? |
9866 | And when the inevitable limit is reached, what then? |
9866 | And who will undertake to say that such a turn of affairs is altogether impossible? |
9866 | Are economic justice and freedom the ultimate outcome of human evolution; and what will probably be the condition of mankind under such a_ régime_? |
9866 | Are not your markets flooded, through foreign over- production, with goods for which there is no corresponding demand?'' |
9866 | Are you not yet able to measure the height of absurdity to which your doctrine leads?'' |
9866 | Because there was not yet enough human material for the organisation of all the branches of industry? |
9866 | But I perceive that your associations are by no means lacking in push and enterprise: how is this? |
9866 | But I think we are getting away from the main point, which is: is such a turn of affairs possible? |
9866 | But are the advantages of the individual undertaker over the joint- stock company really so great? |
9866 | But are we shut up to these modern kinds of luxury? |
9866 | But because this is the fact at present,_ must_ it necessarily be so? |
9866 | But can we conceive the condition possible in which our race should cover the surface of the earth like a plague of locusts? |
9866 | But have the masters really only this_ one_ way of disposing of the surplus-- can they really make no other use of it? |
9866 | But have we a right to infer that it will permanently assert itself? |
9866 | But how are armies, equal to the reorganised Abyssinian forces, to be maintained on those inhospitable coasts? |
9866 | But how could any political discretion on the part of the ruling classes have prevented this? |
9866 | But how is it with those who are orphaned in infancy? |
9866 | But how will it be when what you are striving after has happened, when the whole human race shall have been converted to your principles? |
9866 | But is that which Christ understands by justice really identical with what we mean by it? |
9866 | But perhaps a difficulty is found in the possibility that this small capitalist might no longer be capable of work? |
9866 | But self- interest? |
9866 | But there are outside of Freeland hundreds of thousands, nay millions, who are free from oppressive care: why do they not feel real cheerfulness? |
9866 | But was my fate so certain and inevitable? |
9866 | But what are such figures in comparison with the gigantic amounts of our savings and capital? |
9866 | But what good would it do us to spend money upon useless things? |
9866 | But what right have they to this so- called property? |
9866 | But where are its results? |
9866 | But who made them, and for what purpose were they originally made? |
9866 | But why not? |
9866 | But why should I spend time in surmises about questions which the immediate future must bring to a decision? |
9866 | But you will ask whether, in this placing of the savings of the community at the disposal of those who need capital, there does not lie an injustice? |
9866 | But, I hear it asked, does political economy possess such a problem-- one whose solution it has merely attempted but not arrived at? |
9866 | Can those others make any use of the knowledge they would thus acquire, except to do him injury? |
9866 | Can we really depend upon nature spontaneously to guarantee us this? |
9866 | Could we do so, even if we were willing? |
9866 | Did not_ unreasonable_ party agitations create difficulties in Freeland? |
9866 | Did they think that we should continue to be friends with thieves and robbers? |
9866 | Did they-- the Duruma-- imagine that we needed their help, or the help of anyone, to slay the Masai if we wished to slay them? |
9866 | Do men commit murder from religious motives_ merely_? |
9866 | Do the men of Freeland think that they are able to defend their creation from these dangers? |
9866 | Do they need none over them to organise, discipline, guide, and overlook the process of production? |
9866 | Do you believe that want can completely disappear from off the face of the earth without taking progress with it?'' |
9866 | Do you see that little apparatus yonder in the corridor? |
9866 | Does it really never happen that some of you drink a little more than enough to quench your thirst?'' |
9866 | Does man prevent them? |
9866 | Does not the most superficial glance show you that nowhere on the earth are there nearly so many elephants as would find nourishment in abundance? |
9866 | Does not the same apply to private property? |
9866 | Does not this thrift prove that anxiety for the morrow is not after all quite unknown here?'' |
9866 | Does the human labour- force which carries on their undertakings belong to them? |
9866 | Does the meeting approve of this choice?'' |
9866 | Does this constitute a just claim to exceptional treatment? |
9866 | Everywhere I see heavy carpets-- who keeps these clean? |
9866 | For is everything which is necessary to the progress of civilisation consequently also possible? |
9866 | Granted; but what right has the borrower, who at any rate derives advantage from the service rendered, to retain all the advantage himself? |
9866 | Had he not told them that the swords which we had given to their_ leitunus_ would snap asunder like glass if drawn in an unrighteous cause? |
9866 | Has anyone a remark to make upon our proposal? |
9866 | Have they cultivated the ground to which they lay claim? |
9866 | Have you a special board for this purpose; and do no unpleasantnesses spring from such an inquisition?'' |
9866 | Have your institutions such a strong ameliorating power over hardened criminals?'' |
9866 | He asked himself why did the Irish peasant and the Egyptian fellah suffer hunger? |
9866 | How are we to understand that this is not forbidden in Freeland?'' |
9866 | How could our thin line withstand the onset of fifteen times as many veteran warriors? |
9866 | How could we, without communistic coercion, transfer capital from the hands of the saver into those of the capital- needing producer? |
9866 | How do you reconcile these things?'' |
9866 | How were we to get this 130,000 £, or the greater part of it, into our pockets? |
9866 | I could go on with the thread of the narrative, and depict the work of human emancipation as it appears to my mental eye, but of what use would it be? |
9866 | If he acts in good faith he is not obnoxious to punishment-- but entitled to compensation? |
9866 | If they anticipated overthrow, why did they not withdraw in time? |
9866 | In a word, what if mankind could not permanently, and as a whole, participate in that progress the necessary condition of which is economic justice? |
9866 | In a word, who does the coarser work in this comfortably furnished house, which one can see at a glance is kept most carefully in order?'' |
9866 | In the name of heaven, do not your workers need such a man? |
9866 | Is it not evident that the previous speaker would, under their_ régime_, set self- interest upon the throne as the inciter to work? |
9866 | Is it so?'' |
9866 | Is no provision made for such? |
9866 | Is not, then, an appeal to this noblest of all minds calculated to discourage rather than to encourage us in the pursuit of our aims? |
9866 | Is the capital which they use the fruit of_ their_ labour? |
9866 | Is the new law to have a retrospective force? |
9866 | Is the story of the Golden Age something more than a pious fable; and are we upon the point of conjuring up another Golden Age? |
9866 | Is there no inconsistency here?'' |
9866 | Is there, nevertheless, no ground to fear that they will exhibit serious defects in comparison with undertakings conducted by individual employers? |
9866 | It can not possibly accord with the sentiments of Freeland parents who live in luxury to hand over their children to public orphanages?'' |
9866 | Merely the associations and workers who actually make use of the new waterways for transport? |
9866 | Mrs. Ney, however, asked what further preliminaries were necessary? |
9866 | Now, in spite of all this, how is it possible to satisfy everyone''s claim not merely to land, but to produce- bearing land? |
9866 | On the other hand, what reason has the producer in the world outside to communicate his experiences to others? |
9866 | Or are you in Freeland of opinion that it is unjust to give to the saver a share of the fruits of his saving?'' |
9866 | Or did its results once exist though we know nothing of them? |
9866 | Or do such servants receive exceptionally low wages here?'' |
9866 | Or have we yet to learn of some provisions made to defend you from such guests? |
9866 | Or will the arguer fall back upon the assertion that self- interest refers merely to the acquisition of material goods? |
9866 | Shall I be privileged to live until these men are found? |
9866 | Should we, in possession of the stronger form of civilisation, yield to the weaker and more backward one? |
9866 | Take the property from its owners? |
9866 | The correct answer to the question,''Why are we not richer in proportion to the increase in our productive capacity?'' |
9866 | The directors have no means of_ compelling_ obedience? |
9866 | The masses of the people, the serfs, where were these ever asked? |
9866 | The possessor may have produced it by his own labour and saved it: is he not in that case entitled to compensation? |
9866 | The question now is, what part of the earth shall we choose for such a purpose? |
9866 | The word''robbery''does not please the previous speaker? |
9866 | The workers were''free,''nothing compelled them to produce for other men''s advantage? |
9866 | Then are those who have been exploiters to retain undiminished the fruit of their''economic robbery''? |
9866 | This leaves unexplained the principal question, whence comes this difference in wealth? |
9866 | Was it at all conceivable that Ellen-- this Ellen-- such as I had known her for months, would love such a wretched fellow? |
9866 | We were also compelled to moot the question, what would happen if Freelanders wore to settle in any district belonging to a Western nation? |
9866 | What I now wish to know is, what were your reasons for forbidding the payment of interest? |
9866 | What advantage do we offer to the former for their compulsory thrift? |
9866 | What does our amiable hostess think upon this point?'' |
9866 | What does the production of labour cost? |
9866 | What does this mean when applied to the labour market? |
9866 | What foe prevents lions and tigers, sperm- whales, and sharks from multiplying until they reach the limit of their food supply? |
9866 | What has been the result? |
9866 | What has brought us to the country of social liberty? |
9866 | What if economic justice, though an extraordinary vehicle of civilisation, were for some reason unfortunately impracticable? |
9866 | What is the reason of this?'' |
9866 | What more could the most affectionate care of parents do for them? |
9866 | What of the criminals, against whose immigration you are not protected? |
9866 | What prompts your producers to run risks-- small though they may be-- when the profit to be gained thereby must so quickly be shared by everybody?'' |
9866 | What properly belongs to_ me_? |
9866 | What sense would there be in attempting to assimilate our several needs? |
9866 | What was to be done under such circumstances? |
9866 | What would happen then? |
9866 | What would have become of economic justice if any one of these possibilities had occurred? |
9866 | What would her friends in Paris have said to that? |
9866 | Where then, I repeat, lies the immense difference between the utilisation of our powers of production and of yours?'' |
9866 | Whether it is not Communism? |
9866 | Who can say? |
9866 | Who gains by the lowering of freights? |
9866 | Who would have hindered it from handing its milliards over to us? |
9866 | Who would not be glad to discover that a dreadful figure which filled him with terror and alarm was nothing but a scarecrow? |
9866 | Why did it delay so long, and why does it now make its assistance conditional on our accepting its economic institutions? |
9866 | Why does not this happen? |
9866 | Why is the existing exploiting society not able to call forth all this capacity? |
9866 | Why should not such a course answer in modern times? |
9866 | Why was this? |
9866 | Why? |
9866 | Will it not be humane, and therefore also prudent, to make some compensation to those who will be deprived of their possessions? |
9866 | Will not the new order work better if this small sacrifice is made, and embittered foes are thereby converted into grateful friends? |
9866 | Will this continue permanently: in particular, will the whole human race feel and act thus? |
9866 | Will you do this, and will you honourably keep your word?'' |
9866 | With what right, then, does exploitation dare to plume itself upon making use of_ self_-interest as a motive to labour? |
9866 | Would we pay tribute? |
9866 | Would you not think anyone a dotard who would try to convince you of the contrary? |
9866 | You are astonished? |
9866 | You deny that pearls or diamonds add materially to the charms of a beautiful person?'' |
9866 | You hold it to be impossible to become rich by lending gratuitously or by absolutely giving away a part of one''s property? |
9866 | You look at each other and at me with an inquiring astonishment? |
9866 | You think I hold that to be unnatural because it is immoral? |
9866 | [ A Voice: Then why was Christ crucified?] |
9866 | cried I, with dissembled anger;"but if more should come in than are needed?" |
50561 | A doctor? 50561 About what?" |
50561 | About what? |
50561 | After the things these lips of mine have said, and what these arms have done to you? |
50561 | Again? 50561 All right?" |
50561 | Am I the product of his puerile, vacillating nature? 50561 Am I?" |
50561 | An echo of the Black Mass and witchcraft, but--"What did they do,asked the girl,"to people they thought were possessed?" |
50561 | And can you bring this other personality into dominance? 50561 And could you?" |
50561 | And did you cure him? |
50561 | And do I? |
50561 | And do you hate me? |
50561 | And how did they-- exorcise? |
50561 | And how do you know what memories I might choose to carry along? 50561 And how long has he suffered from these-- intrusions?" |
50561 | And how''s yourself? |
50561 | And in many different ways? |
50561 | And is he in love with you? |
50561 | And meanwhile? |
50561 | And of what-- or whom? |
50561 | And so? |
50561 | And the bruises? 50561 And then what?" |
50561 | And this? 50561 And what am I supposed to do?" |
50561 | And what do writers live by? |
50561 | And what kind of quart was that you ordered? 50561 And what''s stopping you?" |
50561 | And what''s the trouble tonight? |
50561 | Are n''t you going to answer me seriously? |
50561 | Are n''t you going to kiss me? 50561 Are n''t you pleased? |
50561 | Are n''t you usually happy? |
50561 | Are you going out, Patricia? 50561 Are you going to fight me further?" |
50561 | Are you in love with this Nicholas Devine? |
50561 | Are you intimating that you still love him? |
50561 | Are you mine now? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you mine? |
50561 | Are you not yet broken, convinced of the uselessness of this struggle? |
50561 | Are you ready now for the consummation? 50561 Are you ready?" |
50561 | Are you really, Pat? 50561 Are you sure it is n''t some kind of madness? |
50561 | Bargain? 50561 Besides what?" |
50561 | Bring your boy friend around, will you? |
50561 | But I mean-- hadn''t you any idea of what had happened? 50561 But Nick-- why?" |
50561 | But a chance? |
50561 | But did you think that? |
50561 | But have you any idea? |
50561 | But he will live? |
50561 | But is n''t there a drug that can separate good qualities from evil, like the story? |
50561 | But no other after- effects? |
50561 | But suppose he can''t-- what then? |
50561 | But they''ve been more severe of late? |
50561 | But what do you think it is? |
50561 | But what in Heaven''s name did you do? |
50561 | But what is this, Nick? 50561 But what''ll we do?" |
50561 | But what''ll you do? |
50561 | But what, Pat? 50561 But why? |
50561 | But why? |
50561 | But will he--? |
50561 | But, Honey, what difference does it make? 50561 But-- It was a drug that caused that change in the story, was n''t it?" |
50561 | But-- Oh, Nick, what is it? 50561 By the way, who''s this Nicholas you''re so enthusiastic about?" |
50561 | By what right? |
50561 | Can I diagnose it by absent treatment? 50561 Can he-- prevent you?" |
50561 | Can you hear me? |
50561 | Can you hear me? |
50561 | Can you leave him? |
50561 | Can you see what--_he_ sees? |
50561 | Come to, have you? 50561 Composed? |
50561 | Could it,he asked,"have imposed its will actively on yours? |
50561 | Could the second personality have qualities that the first one lacked? |
50561 | Could you fight him? |
50561 | Dancing? |
50561 | Devil and all? |
50561 | Devine, did you say? |
50561 | Did he get it? |
50561 | Did n''t you ever see one? |
50561 | Did this Nick of yours have one of his masterful moments? |
50561 | Did you ever hear of anything like it? 50561 Did you ever read''Tristram Shandy''?" |
50561 | Did you learn anything from that? |
50561 | Did you notice how he harped on the undeserved punishment theme? 50561 Did you really feel that?" |
50561 | Did you think you detected incipient dementia in your ideal? |
50561 | Did you-- remove it? |
50561 | Do I dare? |
50561 | Do I hear the translation? |
50561 | Do fixed ideas do things like that to people? |
50561 | Do n''t I? 50561 Do n''t you believe it?" |
50561 | Do n''t you really want to discuss it? |
50561 | Do n''t you think that''s best for everybody concerned? 50561 Do n''t you, Pat?" |
50561 | Do you expect me to treat the thing blindly-- in the dark? 50561 Do you hate me?" |
50561 | Do you hate me? |
50561 | Do you hear me? 50561 Do you know now what that devil-- what the attack was?" |
50561 | Do you know what it is? |
50561 | Do you know what it meant by saying it was a question of synapses? |
50561 | Do you know what you''ve done? 50561 Do you mean one of those cars was following us? |
50561 | Do you mean to say you''d care? |
50561 | Do you mean,she asked, struck by a sudden thought,"that discussion of ours about pure horror? |
50561 | Do you psychiatrists actually_ know_ anything about love? |
50561 | Do you really know anything about it? |
50561 | Do you really think so? |
50561 | Do you remember a story you told me a long time ago? 50561 Do you remember that?" |
50561 | Do you see,he sneered,"how weakening an influence is this love of yours? |
50561 | Do you suppose there''s a chance to beat the thing? |
50561 | Do you think I come trailing a maniac without some protection? 50561 Do you think so?" |
50561 | Do you think you can help? |
50561 | Do you think,she said unsteadily,"that I''d consent to that even to save Nick from disgrace and punishment? |
50561 | Do you want to see the face of evil? |
50561 | Do you work? |
50561 | Do you yield willingly? |
50561 | Does n''t he prove that by his very existence? |
50561 | Does that mean,asked Pat anxiously,"that Nick''s character will be changed now?" |
50561 | Dr. Carl, is that possible? |
50561 | Dr. Carl, is there any sort of craziness that could take an ordinarily shy person and make a passionate devil of him? 50561 Dr. Carl,"she said,"are you sure-- quite sure-- you''re right about him? |
50561 | Dr. Stuart Devine? |
50561 | Eh? 50561 Ever happen before, that you know of?" |
50561 | Ever have anything published? |
50561 | Evil and good-- what''s difference? 50561 Experiment?" |
50561 | Fine evening we''re spoiling, is n''t it? |
50561 | Finicky devil, is n''t he? 50561 First, then-- Is that Satyro- stuff you mentioned intermittent or continuous?" |
50561 | Frankly, could he help being? |
50561 | Have I ever turned you away? |
50561 | Have I your promise? |
50561 | Have we decided anything? 50561 Have you any idea what it is?" |
50561 | Have you any theory at all? |
50561 | He has n''t? 50561 He''s cured?" |
50561 | Honey, what''ll we do? |
50561 | How can anyone except me fight it? |
50561 | How could I look forlorn, Honey, when something like this has happened to me? 50561 How do you know what he''s worth? |
50561 | How do you manage to sleep? |
50561 | How does he like me? 50561 How does he live? |
50561 | How long,she queried listlessly,"before-- before you''ll know?" |
50561 | How many men have told you you were beautiful, Pat? |
50561 | How''d you meet this mental paragon? |
50561 | How, Nick? |
50561 | How? |
50561 | Huh? |
50561 | Hungry? |
50561 | I know, but what else can it be? |
50561 | I mean how do you live? |
50561 | I mean what sort of operation will it need? 50561 I mean, does the mania lie dormant for weeks or months, and then flare up?" |
50561 | I mean, in plain Americanese, did he make a pass at you? |
50561 | I''m sorry, Dr. Carl-- but what_ can_ we do? |
50561 | If there''s a chance, the very slightest shadow of the specter of a chance, we''ll take it, wo n''t we? 50561 In Hell?" |
50561 | In what way does he differ from his normal self? |
50561 | Indeed? 50561 Indeed?" |
50561 | Intellectual, eh? 50561 Is it over?" |
50561 | Is it really so short a time? 50561 Is n''t that enough?" |
50561 | Is n''t there? |
50561 | Is that all? |
50561 | Is that enough? |
50561 | Is that what you wish to do-- experiment on me? |
50561 | Is that worse than being possessed by a devil, Magda? |
50561 | Is the pain in any particular region? 50561 Is there a chance left to us?" |
50561 | Is there a hope, Nick? |
50561 | Is there any hope at all? |
50561 | It rises a little earlier each night-- or is it later? 50561 It still means nothing to you, does n''t it, Doctor?" |
50561 | It''s true, is n''t it? |
50561 | It-- makes things rather hopeless, does n''t it? |
50561 | Letter? 50561 Like a fit?" |
50561 | Listen, Bud-- this place is respectable, see? 50561 Localized?" |
50561 | Magda,she asked in a faint voice,"could he change any time he wanted to?" |
50561 | Magda,she asked,"did you ever see a devil?" |
50561 | May I come in a while? |
50561 | Mine-- for the delights of evil? |
50561 | Muenster? |
50561 | Must I render you helpless again? |
50561 | Must I? |
50561 | My face? 50561 Nice enough, except for that little spot on your chin, and will you never learn to keep your hair away from that side of your forehead? |
50561 | Nicholas, have you gone and composed a poem to me? |
50561 | Nicholas,said the girl, tossing the paper napkin out of the car window,"is that an indirect and very evasive proposal of marriage?" |
50561 | Nicholas,she said pleadingly,"wo n''t you take me home? |
50561 | Nicholas,she said wearily, clinging desperately to a remnant of logic,"what do you want of me? |
50561 | Nick, was it--? |
50561 | Nick,she murmured,"will you kiss me?" |
50561 | Nick,she said in a small voice,"how do you know the-- the other wo n''t come back here? |
50561 | Nick,she said,"did you ever try medical help? |
50561 | Nick,she said,"what did you mean-- then-- when you said there was danger and you came to save me?" |
50561 | Nick,she said,"why were you so-- well, so reluctant about admitting this? |
50561 | No,he muttered, all the relief gone out of his tones,"no, it does n''t help, does it? |
50561 | Not your sweetheart? |
50561 | Now? |
50561 | Odd? 50561 Oh Nick,"she continued, in a voice gone suddenly dreamy,"this_ is_ marvelous, is n''t it? |
50561 | Oh, do you think so? |
50561 | Oh, it is? 50561 On you?" |
50561 | Or on us? |
50561 | Or should I say, Good morning, Judge? |
50561 | Pat dear,he said earnestly,"do n''t you see I''d give my eyes to help you? |
50561 | Pat, do you believe me? |
50561 | Pat, do you think I could assault your daintiness, or maltreat the beauty I worship? 50561 Pat,"he said seriously,"do n''t you believe me? |
50561 | Pat,said the Doctor with an air of patience,"you want me to treat this affliction, do n''t you? |
50561 | Pat-- How am I going to convince you that I''m sincere? 50561 Pat?" |
50561 | Queer, is it? |
50561 | Queer, is n''t it? |
50561 | Really, Pat? 50561 Remember that story of his--''The Black Cat''?" |
50561 | Save what? |
50561 | Shall I drag you? |
50561 | Shall I turn him in? |
50561 | Since when? |
50561 | Sir? |
50561 | Slip in without anyone seeing you, will you, Honey? 50561 So he told a story, eh?" |
50561 | So he''s spotted Mueller, eh? 50561 So? |
50561 | Suppose,said the other with a strange, cold, twisted smile,"it were_ he_ that''s doomed to extinction-- what then?" |
50561 | Tell me, is n''t there? |
50561 | That all you''ve got against him? |
50561 | That means is his family acceptable, does n''t it? 50561 That''s all, but where''s that streak of mastery you mentioned? |
50561 | That''s certainly a mild word to use, is n''t it? |
50561 | That''s the love of son for mother, or daughter for father, is n''t it? 50561 The Picador?" |
50561 | Then how can you-- act like this to me? |
50561 | Then what is it? 50561 Then what is?" |
50561 | Then what''s the reason for all this curiosity about perversions and aphasias? 50561 Then what''s the use of my asking questions?" |
50561 | Then where is he now? |
50561 | Then why are you here, you young imp? |
50561 | Then why did you? |
50561 | Then why not send her a bill tall enough to cure her altogether? |
50561 | Then you have an idea yourself what the trouble is? 50561 Then you''ve been here?" |
50561 | Then your definition does n''t explain a thing, does it? |
50561 | Then-- it''s good- bye? |
50561 | Then_ you_ mean it? 50561 There''s somebody at the door, is n''t there? |
50561 | Things like the pig and what happened to Nick? |
50561 | This devil of yours said that? |
50561 | This the stuff? |
50561 | To take off-- my dress? |
50561 | Told you not to, eh? 50561 Tomorrow?" |
50561 | Was it a question of synapses? |
50561 | Was it as bad as all that? |
50561 | Was it-- did he by any chance say synapses? 50561 Was n''t it enough?" |
50561 | Was n''t it? 50561 Well, if you''re so contemptuous of the thing, why do n''t you cure it? |
50561 | Well, then? |
50561 | Well, what_ did_ he do? |
50561 | Well,he said,"What touched off the fuse this time?" |
50561 | Well? 50561 Well?" |
50561 | Well? |
50561 | Well? |
50561 | Well? |
50561 | Well? |
50561 | Well? |
50561 | Were there any signs of Satyromania? |
50561 | What about the other? 50561 What am I to do about it-- scream for help? |
50561 | What are these dual personalities you read about in the papers? |
50561 | What are they? |
50561 | What authors-- writers? |
50561 | What can we say? |
50561 | What can we tell them? |
50561 | What chance have we? |
50561 | What did he say, then? 50561 What difference can it make?" |
50561 | What difference does it make-- our actions? |
50561 | What difference does it make? 50561 What difference does that make? |
50561 | What do you expect? |
50561 | What do you mean, Pat? |
50561 | What do you need? |
50561 | What do you want? |
50561 | What do you want? |
50561 | What do you want? |
50561 | What does that mean, Nick? |
50561 | What else can we do, Nick? |
50561 | What happened to him? |
50561 | What happened tonight to change your attitude so suddenly? 50561 What happened, Pat?" |
50561 | What is it, Nick? |
50561 | What is it, Pat? 50561 What is it, then?" |
50561 | What is it? |
50561 | What is, then? |
50561 | What is? |
50561 | What it is? |
50561 | What made me find such a fierce pleasure in its kisses-- in its blows and scratches, and the pain it inflicted on me? 50561 What of it?" |
50561 | What prose writers? |
50561 | What queer things did he say? |
50561 | What sort of material? |
50561 | What things, Honey? |
50561 | What time,he asked irrelevantly in a queer voice,"did the Doctor say the moon rose? |
50561 | What was I to think? |
50561 | What was it? |
50561 | What was n''t? |
50561 | What was that devil? 50561 What was the story?" |
50561 | What will you do? |
50561 | What you so quiet about, Miss Pat? |
50561 | What''d he do? |
50561 | What''s he like? |
50561 | What''s that-- trephine? |
50561 | What''s that? 50561 What''s that?" |
50561 | What''s that? |
50561 | What''s the connection, Pat? |
50561 | What''s the difference? |
50561 | What''s the matter, Honey? |
50561 | What''s the matter? |
50561 | What''s the remark? |
50561 | What''s the verdict? |
50561 | What''s wrong with being a doctor? |
50561 | What-- are you-- are you going to do? |
50561 | What-- what are you? |
50561 | What? |
50561 | What? |
50561 | What? |
50561 | What_ I''ve_ done? 50561 Whatever inspires you, I suppose?" |
50561 | When''ll you go? |
50561 | Where are we going? |
50561 | Where are we? |
50561 | Where do devils live? |
50561 | Where is he now? |
50561 | Where''ll we go? |
50561 | Where''ll we go? |
50561 | Where''s Pat? |
50561 | Where''s Pat? |
50561 | Where''s here? |
50561 | Where? |
50561 | Which one''s most suitable? 50561 Who cares as long as we go together?" |
50561 | Who''s spying on you? |
50561 | Whom do I like? |
50561 | Why are you spying on my friends? |
50561 | Why did I yield to it so? |
50561 | Why did n''t you tell me Mueller brought you home last night? 50561 Why do n''t you go on, Nick? |
50561 | Why do n''t you start talking? 50561 Why do you have to torment me? |
50561 | Why do you say I''m not out as often in February? |
50561 | Why is Dr. Carl having him watched? |
50561 | Why not? 50561 Why not?" |
50561 | Why not? |
50561 | Why not? |
50561 | Why should I? |
50561 | Why should n''t he say they were beautiful? |
50561 | Why so pensive, Honey? |
50561 | Why''s that? |
50561 | Why, Pat? |
50561 | Why,he countered,"do gangsters''girls and apache women enjoy the cruelties perpetrated on them by their men? |
50561 | Why? 50561 Why? |
50561 | Why? |
50561 | Will you come if you can, or if that''s not possible, break that self- given promise of yours, and communicate with me? 50561 Will you go away now?" |
50561 | Will you yield? |
50561 | Would you mind telling me why you waited until now to interfere? 50561 Would you mind telling me, Honey? |
50561 | Yeah? |
50561 | Yes? 50561 You came to take me back, did n''t you? |
50561 | You did, did n''t you? |
50561 | You did? 50561 You do n''t think the cause could be in any way connected with, let us say, the emotional disturbances attending your acquaintance with Pat here?" |
50561 | You do n''t want to tonight, Pat, do you? |
50561 | You doctors can explain anything, ca n''t you? |
50561 | You get your letter? |
50561 | You hate me, do n''t you? |
50561 | You hoped it was n''t true? |
50561 | You mean-- he''ll live? |
50561 | You still feel that way, after the experience you went through? |
50561 | You wanted him back, Honey, did n''t you? |
50561 | You were nervous? 50561 You''ll want to wait, wo n''t you?" |
50561 | You''re going to take me home, are n''t you? |
50561 | You''re not, are you? |
50561 | You''re the psychiatrist and brain specialist, are n''t you, Sir? |
50561 | You''ve a mirror, have n''t you? 50561 You''ve been on the telephone all morning, and what did Carl want of you last night?" |
50561 | You''ve no idea of the cause for this increase in the malignancy of the attacks? |
50561 | You''ve read it? |
50561 | You? |
50561 | _ I_ did it, Pat? 50561 _ Is_ there such a drug? |
50561 | --and would you mind very much telling me what that''Oh''of yours implies?" |
50561 | 19 Man or Monster? |
50561 | 3 Psychiatrics of Genius"How do you charge-- by the hour?" |
50561 | A little, anyway?" |
50561 | Address it to his last residence; you know that, do n''t you? |
50561 | Am I an illusion?" |
50561 | Am I drunk?" |
50561 | An attack? |
50561 | And Nick, Honey-- didn''t I tell you I could forgive you anything? |
50561 | And again-- was that a flash of red? |
50561 | And anyway, how do you know I''ve a godling on my mantel? |
50561 | And how?" |
50561 | And if he were, would she be able to prevent herself from yielding? |
50561 | And other fellows than I have taken you around, have n''t they?" |
50561 | And still, she reflected forlornly, what difference did it make? |
50561 | And then?" |
50561 | And was his warning justified?" |
50561 | And where do we dance?" |
50561 | And your cut lips?" |
50561 | Any trouble?" |
50561 | Apologies? |
50561 | Are n''t you happy at the prospect?" |
50561 | Are n''t you thrilled to the very core of your being?" |
50561 | Are there any after effects from these spells?" |
50561 | Are we-- going through with it?" |
50561 | Are you capable of inspecting my mental baggage?" |
50561 | Are you mad?" |
50561 | Are you really so miserable over this Nick problem of yours?" |
50561 | Are you so spiritual and ethereal, or is my attraction for you just sort of intellectual? |
50561 | Are you truly here?" |
50561 | Are you-- all right?" |
50561 | As he made no reply, she continued,"Or are those poems you spout about my physical charms just-- poetic license?" |
50561 | As she was still silent, he repeated,"Are you?" |
50561 | Beyond all doubt, the logical course for us, is n''t it? |
50561 | But seriously, Pat, what is it? |
50561 | By his writing?" |
50561 | Ca n''t we fight it somehow?" |
50561 | Ca n''t you see it, Dr. Carl? |
50561 | Can I?" |
50561 | Can you believe that I love you tenderly, worshipfully-- reverently? |
50561 | Can you change controls, so to speak, at will?" |
50561 | Can you comprehend that?" |
50561 | Can you?" |
50561 | Carl?" |
50561 | Carl?" |
50561 | Carl?" |
50561 | Carl?" |
50561 | Carl?" |
50561 | Carl?" |
50561 | Could I blame you for-- that_ other_?" |
50561 | Could n''t there be a chance that you''re mistaken-- that it''s something your psychiatry has overlooked or never heard of?" |
50561 | Could you ever be in doubt as to which phase you were encountering?" |
50561 | Devils are only fallen angels, are n''t they?" |
50561 | Did he say?" |
50561 | Did n''t I say anywhere would do, so we went together?" |
50561 | Did n''t anything occur to you? |
50561 | Did n''t anything seem queer about-- about that ghastly evening?" |
50561 | Did n''t you say he''d be over this evening?" |
50561 | Did n''t you think anything of it except that I had suddenly gone mad? |
50561 | Did n''t you?" |
50561 | Did you ever go to a doctor about it?" |
50561 | Did you ever hear of a madman who stood aside and rationally watched the working of his own insanity? |
50561 | Do I go?" |
50561 | Do his utterances seem to follow a logical thought sequence?" |
50561 | Do n''t you believe that?" |
50561 | Do n''t you credit me with any modesty?" |
50561 | Do n''t you hate me?" |
50561 | Do n''t you know I love you, Nick? |
50561 | Do n''t you love me?" |
50561 | Do n''t you think I should know?" |
50561 | Do n''t you think he might possibly have lied to you, Pat? |
50561 | Do n''t you think so?" |
50561 | Do n''t you understand me? |
50561 | Do n''t you understand that I''m trying to protect you? |
50561 | Do we take it?" |
50561 | Do you feel it? |
50561 | Do you hear me? |
50561 | Do you know that, young man?" |
50561 | Do you know what I am?" |
50561 | Do you know what he is?" |
50561 | Do you really believe that indictment of the normal viewpoint?" |
50561 | Do you remember?" |
50561 | Do you see what I mean?" |
50561 | Do you see?" |
50561 | Do you see?" |
50561 | Do you suspect your friend of being addicted to some mysterious drug? |
50561 | Do you think I can guess at the cause without observing the effect?" |
50561 | Do you think I could consider the destruction of your beauty, Dear? |
50561 | Do you think I hired Mueller out of morbid curiosity, or professional interest in the case? |
50561 | Do you think I''d consent to that?" |
50561 | Do you think I''m fool enough for that?" |
50561 | Do you think it wise?" |
50561 | Do you think so?" |
50561 | Do you think you can believe me?" |
50561 | Do you think_ I_ could have done it?" |
50561 | Do you understand me, dear? |
50561 | Do you understand?" |
50561 | Do you understand?" |
50561 | Do you understand?" |
50561 | Do you want to forgive me?" |
50561 | Do you?" |
50561 | Does it help matters, my sensing that? |
50561 | Does it?" |
50561 | Does that excuse you?" |
50561 | Does that explain him? |
50561 | Does that mean merely that he writes? |
50561 | Does that one stand by while you''re in the saddle?" |
50561 | Dr. Carl does n''t even believe in a soul; how could he know anything about it, then?" |
50561 | Dr. Carl, what happened to me last night? |
50561 | Dr. Carl, what''s a synopsis?" |
50561 | Dr. Carl,"she changed to a pleading tone,"ca n''t you think of something?" |
50561 | Especially a vicious one like you?" |
50561 | Even his name, Nick-- that''s a colloquialism for the devil, is n''t it?" |
50561 | Even suppose that she found him the sweet personality that she had loved, might that also be a trick? |
50561 | Forehead, temples, eyes, or so forth?" |
50561 | Had that been Nick, really her Nick, or--? |
50561 | Has n''t it?" |
50561 | Have you already forgotten the early steps of our experiment in evil?" |
50561 | Have you any idea what you''ve done?" |
50561 | Have you by some mischance broken your promise to me?" |
50561 | Have you forgotten how nearly I won you to the worship of that principle? |
50561 | Have you forgotten the ecstasy of that pain?" |
50561 | Have you forgotten?" |
50561 | Have you, perchance, discovered a new way, Nick?" |
50561 | He paused,"How old are you, Pat?" |
50561 | He was punished for another''s mischief?" |
50561 | Horker?" |
50561 | Horker?" |
50561 | How can you promise for-- it?" |
50561 | How come?" |
50561 | How did I get home last night, Dr. Carl? |
50561 | How did I get to bed?" |
50561 | How did he look?" |
50561 | How do you feel, child?" |
50561 | How would you like to hear my analysis of you?" |
50561 | How''d you find me?" |
50561 | How? |
50561 | How?" |
50561 | I mean, could it have made you actually do what it asked there at the end, just before I recovered enough sense to let out that bellow?" |
50561 | I saw it happen once before, that other night when-- Well, what difference does it make, anyway? |
50561 | I suppose this is different-- a grand passion?" |
50561 | I was n''t more than eight years old, was I?" |
50561 | If you brain- doctors know it all, why do you switch theories every year?" |
50561 | Is he nice?" |
50561 | Is n''t it?" |
50561 | Is n''t that the proper course for lovers in this situation?" |
50561 | Is n''t that what both of you want?" |
50561 | Is that reason enough?" |
50561 | Is that right?" |
50561 | Is that the famous Nick?" |
50561 | Is that the latest hypothesis?" |
50561 | Is that usually dominant?" |
50561 | Is that what makes you look so forlorn?" |
50561 | Is the difference recognizable instantly? |
50561 | Is there anything I''d refuse to promise you, Pat? |
50561 | Is there anything more you might want to tell?" |
50561 | Is twenty- two getting old?" |
50561 | It must have been that, but Dear, can you forgive? |
50561 | It was n''t so much her physical condition, either; it was-- She clenched her jaws firmly; was the memory of Nicholas Devine to haunt her forever? |
50561 | It''s far too dangerous, and-- can I ever be certain? |
50561 | It''s foolish, superstitious, but Nick, what else can it be?" |
50561 | Just between friends, it''s all applesauce, is n''t it?" |
50561 | Know a good place?" |
50561 | MAN OR MONSTER? |
50561 | Might n''t he be trusting to his ability to win her over, to the charm she had confessed to him that he held for her? |
50561 | Must I drag you?" |
50561 | Must n''t we find out who?" |
50561 | Not at all-- understand? |
50561 | Not synopsis-- synapses?" |
50561 | Now do you see what I mean?" |
50561 | Now, do n''t you suppose he''ll leave a forwarding address? |
50561 | Now, when our friend has one of these-- uh-- attacks, is he rational? |
50561 | Now-- when he turned, when the light struck his eyes at an angle, was that a glint of crimson? |
50561 | Oblivion, annihilation-- they''re preferable, are n''t they?" |
50561 | One can never do a bob right; why do n''t you let it grow out like the other girls?" |
50561 | One that could change a person''s character?" |
50561 | Or are you one of these visions that have been plaguing me for hours?" |
50561 | Or that I''d grown to hate you?" |
50561 | Or vice- versa? |
50561 | Or was it simply the natural thing to do to tell one''s troubles to a doctor? |
50561 | Or was there? |
50561 | Or were both of these fragmentary entities, portions of some greater personality as yet unapparent to her? |
50561 | Or will they suffer more watching me? |
50561 | Or-- are you afraid?" |
50561 | Or_ was_ it the liquor? |
50561 | Pat snapped,"What makes you think you can bully me? |
50561 | Pat, does it mean you-- care for me? |
50561 | Pleas? |
50561 | Please, please-- what is this? |
50561 | Probing or what?" |
50561 | Promise me you''ll let him try, wo n''t you?" |
50561 | Promises? |
50561 | References to what? |
50561 | Remember that, wo n''t you?" |
50561 | Revelation"Is it over now?" |
50561 | Right?" |
50561 | Romantic, is n''t it?" |
50561 | See?" |
50561 | Shall I?" |
50561 | Shall we go?" |
50561 | She paused, then continued,"How do you like the Doctor?" |
50561 | So it''s come to the point where you''re investigating his antecedents, eh? |
50561 | So now what?" |
50561 | So what does he do?" |
50561 | Some very subtle compliment?" |
50561 | Suppose she went to that meeting and found-- the other? |
50561 | That''s a subterfuge we have n''t needed, is n''t it?" |
50561 | That''s considerably more to the point, is n''t it?" |
50561 | That''s evil enough, is n''t it?" |
50561 | That''s it, is n''t it?" |
50561 | The both of you, see?" |
50561 | Think it''d help?" |
50561 | Think you were going out?" |
50561 | This was Nick beside her, gentle, intelligent, kind; had he ever been otherwise? |
50561 | To excuse himself for the responsibility of Saturday night, for instance?" |
50561 | To look upon the face of evil?" |
50561 | Understand? |
50561 | Understand?" |
50561 | Want me?" |
50561 | Was any one, she asked herself-- was any one, anywhere, ever in a more hopeless predicament? |
50561 | Was cruelty merely the lack of kindness, or, cynical thought, was kindness but the lack of cruelty? |
50561 | Was cruelty, then, a part of kindness? |
50561 | Was he really?" |
50561 | Was medicine falling into the state of Chinese science-- a vast collection of good rules for which the reasons were either unknown or long forgotten? |
50561 | Was n''t it but a short time since they had both contemplated it? |
50561 | Was she willing to face another evening of indignities and terrors like those still fresh in her memory? |
50561 | Was that it? |
50561 | Was that the cause of Nick''s curious reluctance where she was concerned? |
50561 | Was the face that had glared at her the visage of a maniac? |
50561 | Was the gentle, lovable, but indubitably weaker character the split, and the demon of last evening his normal self? |
50561 | Was this irrational tale of a fiendish intruder merely evidence that the Doctor was right in his opinion? |
50561 | Was this story the figment of an unsettled mind? |
50561 | We have n''t whispered any news of an engagement to you, have we, Doc?" |
50561 | We will, wo n''t we, Nick?" |
50561 | We''ll check up on the Doctor''s astronomy, or is it chronology?" |
50561 | We''ll tell her you had an automobile accident; explain away those bruises.--And now, how did you get them?" |
50561 | Well, that''s part of a parent''s privilege, is n''t it?" |
50561 | Were its actions insane?" |
50561 | Were they elements in a picture conjured out of her own imagination? |
50561 | What are you trying to do-- teach me capital L-- life? |
50561 | What could she do? |
50561 | What did you think?" |
50561 | What do you mean by changed?" |
50561 | What do you mean?" |
50561 | What ever can we do? |
50561 | What good did your psychoanalysis do? |
50561 | What had occurred to alter that determination? |
50561 | What happened then?" |
50561 | What happened to your face?" |
50561 | What happened?" |
50561 | What happens to his own personality when this other phase is dominant? |
50561 | What happens to your individuality, your own consciousness, while you''re suffering an attack?" |
50561 | What have I to risk? |
50561 | What have you to offer?" |
50561 | What if we go a year or a million years before the rest? |
50561 | What is it?" |
50561 | What is this-- this outsider? |
50561 | What letter? |
50561 | What next?" |
50561 | What of that?" |
50561 | What on earth makes you think that, and why should it, anyway?" |
50561 | What was it worth-- this array of medical facts-- if it failed to cure? |
50561 | What you said that night last week?" |
50561 | What''s happened to your genius now?" |
50561 | What''s happened? |
50561 | What''s the difference, anyway?" |
50561 | What''s the rest of his cognomen?" |
50561 | What''s there to be afraid of?" |
50561 | What''s there to be afraid of?" |
50561 | What''s this prodigy''s specialty?" |
50561 | What''s to keep him from it?" |
50561 | What''s wrong with it?" |
50561 | What_ could_ Nick write that had the power to change things? |
50561 | Where are you going, child?" |
50561 | Where''s this chap of yours?" |
50561 | Where''ve you been?" |
50561 | Which do you think?" |
50561 | Which one"--an hysterical laughing sob shook her--"will wear the longest?" |
50561 | Which one''s most becoming? |
50561 | Which qualities were positive in the antagonistic phases of Nicholas Devine''s individuality, and which negative? |
50561 | Who are his people?" |
50561 | Who''d write me a special?" |
50561 | Who''s''he''?" |
50561 | Whom do you like?" |
50561 | Why do you ask that?" |
50561 | Why do you want me?" |
50561 | Why not, Nick? |
50561 | Why should I offer to give you up if this were-- what you said? |
50561 | Why should n''t_ he_ say it? |
50561 | Why should you want to improve on his treatment of the theme?" |
50561 | Why the''again''?" |
50561 | Why''d you cut the light like that?" |
50561 | Why, she wondered, had the thought of Nick''s death disturbed her so? |
50561 | Why?" |
50561 | Why?" |
50561 | Will it make any difference in the end?" |
50561 | Will you answer them?" |
50561 | Will you believe me when I write that I love you? |
50561 | Will you tell me what you-- will you tell me why we''re here?" |
50561 | Will you?" |
50561 | Will you?" |
50561 | With an eye to marriage, or what?" |
50561 | Would it add a poignancy to the torture if I made you strip this body of yours with your own hands? |
50561 | Would n''t I be pleading for another chance, making promises, finding excuses?" |
50561 | You did n''t see it last night, did you?" |
50561 | You do n''t want me dancing with a crowd of memories, do you?" |
50561 | You felt it too; it was n''t just a mental lapse on my part, was it?" |
50561 | You heard me, did n''t you?" |
50561 | You know I feel that way about you, do n''t you?" |
50561 | You really do?" |
50561 | You want to pull something like this, you go upstairs, see? |
50561 | You''ll promise that, wo n''t you?" |
50561 | You''re just safely you, are n''t you? |
50561 | You''re traveling light tonight, are n''t you?" |
50561 | is it you-- truly you? |
9580 | ALL ready? |
9580 | And heard and saw ye only wrong And pain,I cried,"O wing- worn flocks?" |
9580 | Are all the dead dogs over? |
9580 | Genius of America!--Spirit of our free institutions!--where art thou? 9580 Hast thou not, on some week of storm, Seen the sweet Sabbath breaking fair, And cloud and shadow, sunlit, form The curtains of its tent of prayer? |
9580 | I''ve law and gospel on my side, And who shall dare refuse me? |
9580 | O wild- birds, flying from the South, What saw and heard ye, gazing down? |
9580 | We braved the iron tempest That thundered on our shore; But when did kindness fail to find The key to Finland''s door? 9580 What is it that the crowd requite Thy love with hate, thy truth with lies? |
9580 | What means he? |
9580 | What price was Ellsworth''s, young and brave? 9580 Who dares profane this house and day?" |
9580 | Why wait we longer, mocked, betrayed, By open foes, or those afraid To speed thy coming through my aid? 9580 Why watch to see who win or fall? |
9580 | ''Do they say anything else?'' |
9580 | ''Oh, do n''t you know?'' |
9580 | ''What do you mean?'' |
9580 | ** What words can drown that bitter cry? |
9580 | --I knew the voice of Peace,--"Is there no respite? |
9580 | A cause of praise and thankfulness? |
9580 | A mighty host, on either hand, Stood waiting for the dawn of day To crush like reeds our feeble band; The morn has come, and where are they? |
9580 | Against the burden of that voice what tyrant power shall stand? |
9580 | Alone to such as fitly bear Thy civic honors bid them fall? |
9580 | And asks our haughty neighbor more? |
9580 | And but to faith, and not to sight, The walls of Freedom''s temple rise? |
9580 | And call thy daughters forth to share The rights and duties pledged to all? |
9580 | And dost thou shake to hear, Actieon- like, the bay of thine own hounds, Spurning the leash, and leaping o''er their bounds? |
9580 | And he said:"Who hears can never Fear for or doubt you; What shall I tell the children Up North about you?" |
9580 | And is it Christian England cheers The bruiser, not the bruised? |
9580 | And must she run, despite the tears And prayers of eighteen hundred years, Amuck in Slavery''s crusade? |
9580 | And must we yield to Freedom''s God, As offering meet, the negro''s blood? |
9580 | And see our Freedom''s light grow dim, Which should have filled the world with flame? |
9580 | And shall the Russian serf go free By Baikal''s lake and Neva''s wave? |
9580 | And shall the slanderer''s demon breath Avail with one like me, To dim the sunshine of my faith And earnest trust in thee? |
9580 | And shall the slave, beneath our eye, Clank o''er our fields his hateful chain? |
9580 | And shall the wintry- bosomed Dane Relax the iron hand of pride, And bid his bondmen cast the chain From fettered soul and limb aside? |
9580 | And shall we crouch above these graves, With craven soul and fettered lip? |
9580 | And shall we know and share with him The danger and the growing shame? |
9580 | And so, for such a place of rest, Old prisoner, dropped thy blood as rain On Concord''s field, and Bunker''s crest, And Saratoga''s plain? |
9580 | And the mothers? |
9580 | And toss his fettered arms on high, And groan for Freedom''s gift, in vain? |
9580 | And union find in freedom? |
9580 | And watched the trials which have made Thy human spirit strong? |
9580 | And what are ye who strive with God Against the ark of His salvation, Moved by the breath of prayer abroad, With blessings for a dying nation? |
9580 | And why with reckless hand I plant A nettle on the graves ye honor? |
9580 | And will ye ask me, why this taunt Of memories sacred from the scorner? |
9580 | And, in Oppression''s hateful service, libel Both man and God? |
9580 | And, writhing, feel, where''er we turn, A world''s reproach around us burn? |
9580 | Are these the graves they slumber in? |
9580 | Are they men whose eyes of madness from that sad procession flash? |
9580 | Are we the sons by whom are borne The mantles which the dead have worn? |
9580 | Art thou become as one of us?" |
9580 | Art thou become like unto us?" |
9580 | Be firm, be true: What one brave State hath done, can ye not also do? |
9580 | Beats her Pilgrim pulse no longer? |
9580 | Beneath the slowly waning stars And whitening day, What stern and awful presence bars That sacred way? |
9580 | Bring back The cells of Venice and the bigot''s rack? |
9580 | But who are they, who, cowering, wait Within the shattered fortress gate? |
9580 | Can a Christless church withstand, In the van of Freedom''s onset, the coming of that band? |
9580 | Can this be Rain- in- the- Face? |
9580 | Can this be the voice of him Who fought on the Big Horn''s rim? |
9580 | Can ye not learn From the pure Teacher''s life how mildly free Is the great Gospel of Humanity? |
9580 | Come these from Plymouth''s Pilgrim bark? |
9580 | Corpse after corpse came up, Death had been busy there; Where every blow is mercy, Why should the spoiler spare? |
9580 | Did the brutal cravens aim To make God''s truth thy falsehood, His holiest work thy shame? |
9580 | Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
9580 | End in this the prayers and tears, The toil, the strife, the watchings of our younger, better years? |
9580 | FROM Yorktown''s ruins, ranked and still, Two lines stretch far o''er vale and hill Who curbs his steed at head of one? |
9580 | Feel ye no earthquake underneath? |
9580 | For such gifts to me What shall I render, O my God, to thee? |
9580 | For this did shifty Atherton Make gag rules for the Great House? |
9580 | For who that leans on His right arm Was ever yet forsaken? |
9580 | Forget ye how the blood of Vane From earth''s green bosom cried? |
9580 | Forgets she how the Bay State, in answer to the call Of her old House of Burgesses, spoke out from Faneuil Hall? |
9580 | Give every child his right of school, Merge private greed in public good, And spare a treasury overfull The tax upon a poor man''s food? |
9580 | Give thanks, and rob thy own afflicted poor? |
9580 | God and truth and right a dream? |
9580 | HAVE ye heard of our hunting, o''er mountain and glen, Through cane- brake and forest,--the hunting of men? |
9580 | Had woman''s heart no feeling? |
9580 | Harden the softening human heart again To cold indifference to a brother''s pain? |
9580 | Has he not, with the light of heaven Broadly around him, made the same? |
9580 | Has murder stained his hands with gore? |
9580 | Has she none to break the silence? |
9580 | Has she none to do and dare? |
9580 | Hast Thou not said that whatsoe''er is done Unto Thy weakest and Thy humblest one Is even done to Thee? |
9580 | Hath she forgot the day When o''er her conquered valleys swept the Briton''s steel array? |
9580 | Have I not known thee well, and read Thy mighty purpose long? |
9580 | Have miracles ceased When robbers say mass, and Barabbas is priest? |
9580 | Have they wronged us? |
9580 | Hear ye no warnings in the air? |
9580 | Hear''st thou the angels sing Above this open hell? |
9580 | Here''s another sweet son What''s this mastiff- jawed rascal in epaulets done? |
9580 | How side by side, with sons of hers, the Massachusetts men Encountered Tarleton''s charge of fire, and stout Cornwallis, then? |
9580 | How weigh the gift that Lyon gave, Or count the cost of Winthrop''s grave? |
9580 | I inquired,''Is that all?'' |
9580 | I inquired,''What else?'' |
9580 | I started up,--where now were church, Slave, master, priest, and people? |
9580 | In madness shall we barter, For treacherous peace, the freedom Nature gave us, God and our charter? |
9580 | Is not Thy hand stretched forth Visibly in the heavens, to awe and smite? |
9580 | Is not your sail the banner Which God hath blest anew, The mantle that De Matha wore, The red, the white, the blue? |
9580 | Is that a woman On whose wrist the shackles clash? |
9580 | Is that shriek she utters human, Underneath the stinging lash? |
9580 | Is that thy answer, strong and free, O loyal heart of Tennessee? |
9580 | Is that young Vane? |
9580 | Is the dollar only real? |
9580 | Is the tyrant''s brand upon thee? |
9580 | Is this our mission? |
9580 | Is this the land our fathers loved, The freedom which they toiled to win? |
9580 | Is this the soil whereon they moved? |
9580 | Is this thy voice whose treble notes of fear Wail in the wind? |
9580 | Is''t not enough that this is borne? |
9580 | Know we not our dead are looking Downward with a sad surprise, All our strife of words rebuking With their mild and loving eyes? |
9580 | Let the State scaffold rise again; Did Freedom die when Russell died? |
9580 | Let us then Render back nor threats nor prayers; Have they chained our free- born men? |
9580 | Must fetters which his slaves have worn Clank round the Yankee farmer''s door? |
9580 | Must he be told his freedom stands On Slavery''s dark foundations strong; On breaking hearts and fettered hands, On robbery, and crime, and wrong? |
9580 | Must he be told, beside his plough, What he must speak, and when, and how? |
9580 | My brain took fire:"Is this,"I cried,"The end of prayer and preaching? |
9580 | Not as we hoped; but what are we? |
9580 | OLOR ISCANUS queries:"Why should we Vex at the land''s ridiculous miserie?" |
9580 | Of human skulls that shrine was made, Round which the priests of Mexico Before their loathsome idol prayed; Is Freedom''s altar fashioned so? |
9580 | Oh, say, shall Prussia''s banner be A refuge for the stricken slave? |
9580 | Oh, who could dream that saw thee then, And watched thy rising from afar, That vapors from oppression''s fen Would cloud the upward tending star? |
9580 | Or shall the Evil triumph, and robber Wrong prevail? |
9580 | Outspake the ancient Amtman, At the gate of Helsingfors"Why comes this ship a- spying In the track of England''s wars?" |
9580 | Plied we for this our axe of doom, No stubborn traitor sparing, Who scoffed at our opinion loom, And took to homespun wearing? |
9580 | Said:''No; they say,"Where are we going? |
9580 | Shall Belgium feel, and gallant France, By Vendome''s pile and Schoenbrun''s wall, And Poland, gasping on her lance, The impulse of our cheering call? |
9580 | Shall Honor bleed?--shall Truth succumb? |
9580 | Shall Justice, Truth, and Freedom turn the poised and trembling scale? |
9580 | Shall Mercy''s tears no longer flow? |
9580 | Shall Pity''s bosom cease to swell? |
9580 | Shall a Republic be less free than a Monarchy? |
9580 | Shall every flap of England''s flag Proclaim that all around are free, From farthest Ind to each blue crag That beetles o''er the Western Sea? |
9580 | Shall freemen lock the indignant thought? |
9580 | Shall not the living God of all the earth, And heaven above, do right? |
9580 | Shall our New England stand erect no longer, But stoop in chains upon her downward way, Thicker to gather on her limbs and stronger Day after day? |
9580 | Shall our own brethren drag the chain Which not even Russia''s menials wear? |
9580 | Shall our own glorious land retain That curse which Europe scorns to bear? |
9580 | Shall outraged Nature cease to feel? |
9580 | Shall pen, and press, and soul be dumb? |
9580 | Shall the United States-- the free United States, which could not bear the bonds of a king-- cradle the bondage which a king is abolishing? |
9580 | Shall the broad land o''er which our flag in starry splendor waves, Forego through us its freedom, and bear the tread of slaves? |
9580 | Shall tongues be mute, when deeds are wrought Which well might shame extremest hell? |
9580 | Shall watch and ward be round him set, Of Northern nerve and bayonet? |
9580 | Shall we alone Be left to add our gain to gain, When over Armageddon''s plain The trump is blown? |
9580 | Shall we cloud their blessed skies? |
9580 | Shall we falter before what we''ve prayed for so long, When the Wrong is so weak, and the Right is so strong? |
9580 | Shall we grieve the holy angels? |
9580 | Shall we, in the vigor and buoyancy of our manhood, be less energetic in righteousness than a kingdom in its age?" |
9580 | She raised a keen and bitter cry, To Heaven and Earth appealing; Were manhood''s generous pulses dead? |
9580 | Side by side, amidst the slave- gang, toil the lover and the maid; Wherefore looks he o''er the waters, leaning forward on his spade? |
9580 | Sits she dumb in her despair? |
9580 | Sons of old freemen, do we but inherit Their names alone? |
9580 | Sorrowing of soul, and chained of limb, What is your carnival to him? |
9580 | Speak and tell us where we are going, Where are we going, Rubee? |
9580 | Speak, Prince and Kaiser, Priest and Czar I If this be Peace, pray what is War? |
9580 | Still as the Old World rolls in light, shall ours in shadow turn, A beamless Chaos, cursed of God, through outer darkness borne? |
9580 | Still the dance goes gayly onward What is it to Wealth and Pride That without the stars are looking On a scene which earth should hide? |
9580 | THE PASS OF THE SIERRA A SONG FOR THE TIME WHAT OF THE DAY? |
9580 | Talk of thy glorious liberty, and then Bolt hard the captive''s door? |
9580 | Tell us not of banks and tariffs, cease your paltry pedler cries; Shall the good State sink her honor that your gambling stocks may rise? |
9580 | That all his fathers taught is vain,-- That Freedom''s emblem is the chain? |
9580 | That your gains may sum up higher, Must we kiss the feet of Moloch, pass our children through the fire? |
9580 | The braggart Southron, open in his aim, And bold as wicked, crashing straight through all That bars his purpose, like a cannon- ball? |
9580 | The fathers sleep, but men remain As wise, as true, and brave as they; Why count the loss and not the gain? |
9580 | The flesh may fail, the heart may faint, But who are we to make complaint, Or dare to plead, in times like these, The weakness of our love of ease? |
9580 | The hope of all who suffer, The dread of all who wrong, She drifts in darkness and in storm, How long, O Lord I how long? |
9580 | The parson has turned; for, on charge of his own, Who goeth a warfare, or hunting, alone? |
9580 | Then sound again the bugles, Call the muster- roll anew; If months have well- nigh won the field, What may not four years do? |
9580 | Then sound again the bugles, Call the muster- roll anew; If months have well- nigh won the field, What may not four years do? |
9580 | They break the links of Union: shall we light The fires of hell to weld anew the chain On that red anvil where each blow is pain? |
9580 | They cater to tyrants? |
9580 | They rivet the chain, Which their fathers smote off, on the negro again? |
9580 | Think ye his dim and failing eye Is kindled at your pageantry? |
9580 | Thou, our morrow''s pathway knowing Through the strange world round us growing, Hear us, tell us where are we going, Where are we going, Rubee? |
9580 | To feed with our fresh life- blood the Old World''s cast- off crime, Dropped, like some monstrous early birth, from the tired lap of Time? |
9580 | To run anew the evil race the old lost nations ran, And die like them of unbelief of God, and wrong of man? |
9580 | To whom shall men thyself compare, Since common models fail''em, Save classic goose of ancient Rome, Or sacred ass of Balaam? |
9580 | Torture the pages of the hallowed Bible, To sanction crime, and robbery, and blood? |
9580 | V. Who shall arrest this tendency? |
9580 | WHAT OF THE DAY? |
9580 | WHAT though around thee blazes No fiery rallying sign? |
9580 | WHERE are we going? |
9580 | WHY urge the long, unequal fight, Since Truth has fallen in the street, Or lift anew the trampled light, Quenched by the heedless million''s feet? |
9580 | Was it for such a sad reverse Our mobs became peacemakers, And kept their tar and wooden horse For Englishmen and Quakers? |
9580 | Was it thus with those, your predecessors, Who sealed with racks, and fire, and ropes Their loving- kindness to transgressors? |
9580 | Weighed against your lying ledgers must our manhood kick the beam? |
9580 | What asks the Old Dominion? |
9580 | What avail Your terrors of forewarning? |
9580 | What boots it that we pelted out The anti- slavery women,( 9) And bravely strewed their hall about With tattered lace and trimming? |
9580 | What breaks the oath Of the men o''the South? |
9580 | What could have been more congenially adapted to their then woful condition? |
9580 | What dark mass, down the mountain- sides Swift- pouring, like a stream divides? |
9580 | What faces frown upon ye, dark With shame and pain? |
9580 | What fear we? |
9580 | What gives the wheat- field blades of steel? |
9580 | What has the gray- haired prisoner done? |
9580 | What marvel, if at times they spurn The ancient yoke of your dominion? |
9580 | What marvel, if the people learn To claim the right of free opinion? |
9580 | What mean the gladness of the plain, This joy of eve and morn, The mirth that shakes the beard of grain And yellow locks of corn? |
9580 | What means the Old Dominion? |
9580 | What oaths confirm your broken faith? |
9580 | What points the rebel cannon? |
9580 | What prove these, but that crime was ne''er so black As ghostly cheer and pious thanks to lack? |
9580 | What righteous cause can suffer harm If He its part has taken? |
9580 | What sets the roaring rabble''s heel On the old star- spangled pennon? |
9580 | What she has done can we not do? |
9580 | What strange, glad voice is that which calls From Wagner''s grave and Sumter''s walls? |
9580 | What tears wash out the stain of death? |
9580 | What though the cast- out spirit tear The nation in his going? |
9580 | What though unthrilled, unmoving, The statesman stand apart, And comes no warm approving From Mammon''s crowded mart? |
9580 | What voice is beseeching thee For the scholar''s lowliest place? |
9580 | What, but the stubble and the hay To perish, even as flax consuming, With all that bars His glorious way, Before the brightness of His coming? |
9580 | What, then, is he, Who in that name the gallows rears, An awful altar built to Thee, With sacrifice of blood and tears? |
9580 | Whate''er the loss, Whate''er the cross, Shall they complain Of present pain Who trust in God''s hereafter? |
9580 | When shall the hopeless quarrel cease? |
9580 | When was ever His right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun? |
9580 | Where are we going, Rubee? |
9580 | Where are we going? |
9580 | Where burns its star? |
9580 | Where flows its stripe? |
9580 | Where for words of hope they listened, the long wail of despair? |
9580 | Where the far nations looked for light, a black- ness in the air? |
9580 | Where then was he whose fiery zeal Had taught the trampled heart to feel, Until despair itself grew strong, And vengeance fed its torch from wrong? |
9580 | Where''s now the flag of that old war? |
9580 | Where''s the hand to light up bonfires from her mountains to the sea? |
9580 | Where''s the voice to speak her free? |
9580 | Wherefore turn To the dark, cruel past? |
9580 | Who Stands guiltless forth? |
9580 | Who bends his keen, approving glance, Where down the gorgeous line of France Shine knightly star and plume of snow? |
9580 | Who bids for God''s own image? |
9580 | Who calls thy glorious service hard? |
9580 | Who comes in his pride to that low cottage- door, The haughty and rich to the humble and poor? |
9580 | Who deems it not its own reward? |
9580 | Who doubts Antonelli? |
9580 | Who is it now despairs? |
9580 | Who most deserves our blame? |
9580 | Who murmurs that in these dark days His lot is cast? |
9580 | Who now shall rally Freedom''s scattering host? |
9580 | Who shall henceforth doubt That the long- wished millennium draweth nigh? |
9580 | Who stay the march of slavery? |
9580 | Who then shall take him in the law, Who punish crime so flagrant? |
9580 | Who wear the mantle of the leader lost? |
9580 | Who will say that the above words are not a very appropriate song? |
9580 | Who, dimly beckoning, speed ye on With mocking cheer? |
9580 | Whose hand shall serve, whose pen shall draw, A writ against that"vagrant"? |
9580 | Why ask for ease where all is pain? |
9580 | Why cite that law with which the bigot Jew Rebuked the Pagan''s mercy, when he knew No evil in the Just One? |
9580 | Why hate your neighbor? |
9580 | Why lingers on these dusty rocks The young bride of the sea? |
9580 | Why mourn the quiet ones who die Beneath affection''s tender eye, Unto their household and their kin Like ripened corn- sheaves gathered in? |
9580 | Why take we up the accursed thing again? |
9580 | Will the call to the rescue of Freedom be vain? |
9580 | Will their hearts fail within them? |
9580 | Will ye Join hands with the oppressor? |
9580 | Wiped we for this our feet upon Petitions in our State House? |
9580 | Woe, now, to the hunted who turns him at bay Will our hunters be turned from their purpose and prey? |
9580 | Would ye barter man for cotton? |
9580 | Ye sow to- day; your harvest, scorn And hate, is near; How think ye freemen, mountain- born, The tale will hear? |
9580 | Yea, on his thousand war- fields striven, And gloried in his ghastly shame? |
9580 | Yoke in with marked and branded slaves, And tremble at the driver''s whip? |
9580 | Young Romance raised his dreamy eyes, O''erhung with paly locks of gold,--"Why smite,"he asked in sad surprise,"The fair, the old?" |
9580 | a day for us to sow The soil of new- gained empire with slavery''s seeds of woe? |
9580 | and art thou fallen thus? |
9580 | and shall we calmly rest, The Christian''s scorn, the heathen''s mirth, Content to live the lingering jest And by- word of a mocking Earth? |
9580 | are ye not Likewise the chosen of the Lord, To do His will and speak His word? |
9580 | can such things be? |
9580 | do ye wish More than your Lord, and grudge His dying poor What your own pride and not His need requires? |
9580 | for his grace, Which that poor victim of the market- place Hath in her suffering won? |
9580 | for the pride of man is low, The counsels of the wise are naught, The fountains of repentance flow; What hath our God in mercy wrought? |
9580 | for the pride of man is low, The counsels of the wise are naught, The fountains of repentance flow; What hath our God in mercy wrought? |
9580 | for who will ride then, For pleasure or gain, to the hunting of men? |
9580 | he continued,''they asked God to give them their Atka?'' |
9580 | how long Shall priestly robbers at Thine altar stand, Lifting in prayer to Thee, the bloody hand And haughty brow of wrong? |
9580 | how long Shall such a priesthood barter truth away, And in Thy name, for robbery and wrong At Thy own altars pray? |
9580 | is that church, which lends Strength to the spoiler, thine? |
9580 | no release? |
9580 | not for thee Our tears are shed, our sighs are given; Why mourn to know thou art a free Partaker of the joys of heaven? |
9580 | preach, and kidnap men? |
9580 | shall their agony of prayer Come thrilling to our hearts in vain? |
9580 | shall we guard our neighbor still, While woman shrieks beneath his rod, And while he tramples down at will The image of a common God? |
9580 | shall we henceforth humbly ask as favors Rights all our own? |
9580 | shall we send, with lavish breath, Our sympathies across the wave, Where Manhood, on the field of death, Strikes for his freedom or a grave? |
9580 | their nerves tremble, when All roughly they ride to the hunting of men? |
9580 | unto Thee May not our humble prayer be given? |
9580 | what cries Rang upward unto thee? |
9580 | where are we going, Where are we going, Rubee? |
9580 | where are we going? |
9580 | where''s the manly spirit Of the true- hearted and the unshackled gone? |
9580 | why lies that old man there? |
9580 | why will ye delay, When their pride and their glory are melting away? |
9580 | why will ye slumber where The sleeper only wakes in death? |
9580 | will ye falter With all they left ye perilled and at stake? |
7452 | ''Are you a fatalist, Father? 7452 ''Are you going to become a religious fanatic?'' |
7452 | ''Can that be the sunrise?'' 7452 ''Do you know Lahiri?'' |
7452 | ''Has he legs, or tree- trunks?'' 7452 ''How is Rama now?'' |
7452 | ''How long will it take you to reach my place?'' 7452 ''Lahiri, are you still feasting on your dream desires for a golden palace?'' |
7452 | ''Lahiri, do you call me for a trifle?'' 7452 ''Lahiri, do you remember that seat?'' |
7452 | ''My guru, what can I say?'' 7452 ''Oh, did n''t you recognize him?'' |
7452 | ''Ramu, how long have you been blind?'' 7452 ''Sir, why should n''t I be?'' |
7452 | ''What can I do? 7452 ''What do you think of the KUMBHA MELA?'' |
7452 | ''What is the difference if I wear a visible or invisible wave on the ocean of my Spirit?'' 7452 ''What reason shall I give, so early in my service?'' |
7452 | ''Who is he?'' 7452 ''Why do you smile?'' |
7452 | ''Why hurry to Benares?'' 7452 ''Why this special costume?'' |
7452 | ''Would you all like to see a picture?'' 7452 ''Would you rather have seen him burned to ashes before your eyes, according to the decree of his past karma?'' |
7452 | Ah, wherein did I die? 7452 All- pervading, eh?" |
7452 | America? |
7452 | Are n''t you clever to think that, unannounced, you could pounce on me? 7452 Are we living in this material age, or are we dreaming? |
7452 | Are you Bhagabati''s son? |
7452 | Are you Kedar Nath Babu? |
7452 | Are you Swami Pranabananda? |
7452 | Are you able to have a little room where you can close the door and be alone? |
7452 | Are you giving these descriptions from scriptural lore, or from inward experience? |
7452 | Are you never tempted to eat? |
7452 | Are you running away from home in anger? |
7452 | As I paid no attention, he suddenly spoke in a stentorian voice that issued oddly from his frail body:''Do you not recognize me?'' |
7452 | Beloved Master,I asked,"will you please describe more in detail the difference between rebirth on the earth and in the astral and causal spheres?" |
7452 | Beloved guru, shall I take the medicines prescribed by the doctors? |
7452 | Bhagabati,he said,"what are you doing about yourself? |
7452 | But is it YOU, Master, the same Lion of God? 7452 But what original commentary can you supply, from the uniqueness of your particular life? |
7452 | But, sir,I said in dismay,"what do I know about public speaking? |
7452 | Can I help it if your mental mirror oscillates with such restlessness that you can not register our guru''s instructions? |
7452 | Can the astonishing fertility of his genius ever be exhausted? |
7452 | Can this odorless blossom be permeated with jasmine? |
7452 | Can you also arrange that He hurry? 7452 Can you teach others how to live without food?" |
7452 | Certainly you could not have lived on that, for twelve whole years? |
7452 | Could I add a single word this morning to the assurance you received last night at ten o''clock from the Beautiful Mother Herself? |
7452 | Dare you bring your blasphemies into this sacred ashram? |
7452 | Dear friends, will you not honor my home for a visit? |
7452 | Dear uncle,I said,"could you possibly spare me your servant, Lal Dhari?" |
7452 | Dick, what is your impression of India? |
7452 | Dick,I asked between bites of ambrosia, warm with the tropical sun,"are all the cameras in the car?" |
7452 | Dick,I inquired anxiously,"were you the one who fell?" |
7452 | Did you ever hear of the extraordinary circumstances under which your father became a disciple of Lahiri Mahasaya? |
7452 | Did you remember to lock the back door of the hermitage? |
7452 | Divine Mother,I prayed,"wilt Thou not spiritually change my sister''s husband?" |
7452 | Do n''t you eat anything? |
7452 | Do n''t you have any extra clothes for winter? |
7452 | Do you carry any books? |
7452 | Do you know the BHAGAVAD GITA? |
7452 | Do you not agree that the family man, engaged in useful work to maintain his wife and children, thus plays a rewarding role in God''s eyes? |
7452 | Do you think your relatives will laugh at you? |
7452 | Do you think, revered swami, that I could ever fight tigers? |
7452 | Do you want the whole divine CHANNA( milk curd) for yourself alone? |
7452 | Do you want this woman also to remember painfully your refusal of ten rupees which she needs urgently? |
7452 | Does she yet live? |
7452 | Does your friend, Romesh Chandra Dutt, still live in your boardinghouse? |
7452 | Father knows all about it; why repeat it? |
7452 | Gurudeva, are all astral persons beautiful? |
7452 | Guruji, how can I take the barefooted students over the fiery sands? |
7452 | Guruji, should one offer himself a sacrifice rather than kill a wild beast? |
7452 | Guruji, what''specific purpose''do you mean? |
7452 | Guruji,I interrupted,"if Afzal could easily secure such things as gold dishes, why did he covet the property of others?" |
7452 | Harnessing God to make odors? |
7452 | Has not this youngster been staging a holdup? |
7452 | Have you heard that your Master is gone? |
7452 | Have you understood? |
7452 | How best may a man make himself beloved? |
7452 | How can sense slaves enjoy the world? 7452 How can such as he be the world''s master, when he has not yet seated himself on a throne of inner universal dominion? |
7452 | How can that be? 7452 How can you go?" |
7452 | How does he remain in the air, defying the law of gravitation? |
7452 | How large is the wafer? |
7452 | How long did it take to master your art? |
7452 | How may a man become a god? |
7452 | How plump do you want to be- as fat as our aunt who has n''t seen her feet in years? |
7452 | I want to know, sir- when shall I find God? |
7452 | I wonder if they would grow in Wardha? 7452 If I die, will you find me when I am reborn, and bring me again to the spiritual path?" |
7452 | If one busies himself with an outer display of scriptural wealth, what time is left for silent inward diving after the priceless pearls? |
7452 | If the vicious nature of the tigers be not changed through the power of our spiritual trance, shall they treat us with the kindness of house cats? |
7452 | Is it all over? |
7452 | Is n''t it a bit late now to be worrying over your life? 7452 Is n''t it true, little sir, that the Beloved''s name sounds sweet from all lips, ignorant or wise?" |
7452 | Is this your love for the Lord? 7452 Let me see; you have been ailing for twenty- four days, have n''t you?" |
7452 | Long- haired monk,he said laughingly,"why this sudden interest in scholastic matters? |
7452 | Lord,I prayed,"am I dead or alive?" |
7452 | Lord,I prayed,"why dost Thou permit such suffering?" |
7452 | Lord,I sighed complainingly,"why didst Thou lead me here if she has disappeared?" |
7452 | Lord,he prayed,"wilt Thou come into my broken temple?" |
7452 | Master mine, beloved of my heart, why did you leave me? |
7452 | Master mine, do astral beings eat anything? |
7452 | Master,he said scornfully,"why do n''t you take me to the festival, even as you did yesterday for the other children?" |
7452 | May we hear, sir, how you changed from a tamer of wild tigers to a tamer of wild passions? |
7452 | Mother,I asked,"why do n''t you teach others the method of living without food?" |
7452 | Mother,I said slowly,"what is the use of your having been singled out to live without eating?" |
7452 | Mukunda, has the Lord ever failed you, at an examination or elsewhere? |
7452 | Mukunda, how can you admire worthless humbugs? |
7452 | Mukunda, would n''t you like to stay awhile longer with me? |
7452 | Must you test me? |
7452 | Nothing like this in America, Swamiji, eh? |
7452 | Now do you understand? |
7452 | Perhaps you are just trying to protect the guru from insistent visitors? |
7452 | Please tell me, sir, if it is absolutely true that she eats nothing? |
7452 | Please tell me, sir, if you and your wife have been expecting a child for about six months? |
7452 | Please, dear one,he said,"wo n''t you relax your hold a little?" |
7452 | Respected Sir, have you no sympathy for the bewildered masses? |
7452 | Should I, Master? 7452 Sir, have you not been singleheartedly seeking God for a long time?" |
7452 | Sir, how can I sleep in the presence of lightning, blazing whether my eyes are shut or open? |
7452 | Sir, how come you here? |
7452 | Sir, how do you happen to come here? |
7452 | Sir, is it necessary to prove God? 7452 Sir, why did you judge me so mercilessly before my astounded father? |
7452 | Sir, why do n''t you grant me a SAMADHI? |
7452 | Sir,I inquired,"is this an astrological analysis? |
7452 | Sir,he said,"shall I be a monk? |
7452 | Sir,he said,"what will be my fate?" |
7452 | Sir,he said,"why did your guru use castor oil?" |
7452 | Sir,he said,"why do you, a swami and a renunciate, show such respect to a householder?" |
7452 | Swamiji, I think I could impress my subconsciousness with the thought that tigers are pussycats, but could I make tigers believe it? |
7452 | Swamiji, were n''t you hungry? |
7452 | Swamiji,I inquired, looking straight into his eyes,"please tell me the truth: Are n''t you feeling the advance of age? |
7452 | Tell me truly, Paramhansaji, has it been worth it? |
7452 | Tell me, Mother, from your own lips- do you live without food? |
7452 | Tell me, are you ready for the second technique of KRIYA? |
7452 | Tell me; where do you think God is? |
7452 | Tell the master,she had said,"that I did not know there was any Male in the universe save God; are we all not females before Him?" |
7452 | Then what about us poor mortals? |
7452 | Then why, young sir, did you fail to bow before the Infinite in the stone symbol at the Tarakeswar temple yesterday? 7452 Then, dear Master, why do you want me to wear an astrological bangle?" |
7452 | Think you that your devotion did not touch the Infinite Mercy? 7452 Think you,"Jesus was saying,"to silence men of peace? |
7452 | This excursion, I suppose, is a scheme to reform me? |
7452 | To America? |
7452 | Well, do n''t you see, my dear boy, that God is Eternity Itself? 7452 What ails you? |
7452 | What are your plans, my wandering brother? |
7452 | What can I do with such a master, who penetrates my random musings? |
7452 | What do you mean, sir? |
7452 | What else do you do? |
7452 | What for? |
7452 | What is behind the darkness of closed eyes? |
7452 | What is the excitement? |
7452 | What is the matter, sir? |
7452 | What is this wondrous glow? |
7452 | What is your friend''s name? |
7452 | What is your name? |
7452 | What is your question? |
7452 | What kind of pension, sir, do you receive from the Heavenly Father? 7452 What of it? |
7452 | What perfume do you want? |
7452 | What then? |
7452 | What? 7452 Where are you going?" |
7452 | Where has that divine sage gone? |
7452 | Where is the third boy? |
7452 | Where is your orange robe? 7452 Which be the more numerous, the living or the dead?" |
7452 | Which breeds the larger animals, the sea or the land? |
7452 | Which existed first, the day or the night? |
7452 | Which is greater,one may ask,"a swami or a yogi?" |
7452 | Which is stronger, life or death? |
7452 | Which is the cleverest of beasts? |
7452 | Who are you? |
7452 | Who will finance you? |
7452 | Why are you so quiet? |
7452 | Why are you stupefied at all this? 7452 Why be elated by material profit?" |
7452 | Why bring a dead man to the ashram? |
7452 | Why counsel him that he must also make himself cross- eyed? 7452 Why did God punish not only the guilty pair, but also the innocent unborn generations?" |
7452 | Why did n''t you finish the job? |
7452 | Why did you let me go to the KUMBHA MELA? 7452 Why do n''t you go to bed? |
7452 | Why do n''t you go to sleep? |
7452 | Why do you come here to bother me? 7452 Why do you use medicine on a healthy arm?" |
7452 | Why not? |
7452 | Why not? |
7452 | Why shed them until you are sure he is dead? |
7452 | Why so mysterious, so evasive? 7452 Why ten rupees? |
7452 | Why, then,inquired a critic,"do you not die?" |
7452 | Will you give me the same unconditional love? |
7452 | Will you not tell us, please, how it is possible to subdue with bare fists the most ferocious of jungle beasts, the royal Bengals? |
7452 | Would you like to see some bioscopes? |
7452 | Yes? |
7452 | Yogananda, are you leaving now for Calcutta? 7452 Yogananda, must I bring out into the cold realms of speech the warm sentiments best guarded by the wordless heart?" |
7452 | You are surely not banishing me? |
7452 | You dream so? |
7452 | You go often into the silence, but have you developed ANUBHAVA? |
7452 | Young lads, do you have friends in Brindaban? |
7452 | ''Did you just meet Babaji at the threshold of my room?'' |
7452 | ''Do you recognize that woman?'' |
7452 | ''He is a great soul, is n''t he? |
7452 | ''How can a man inquire into human phenomena,''he said,''when he is ignorant of divine ones?''" |
7452 | ''Indeed, Whose work is all this, and Who is the Doer of all actions? |
7452 | ''My son, why do you doubt?'' |
7452 | ''Param- guruji,''I said imploringly,''will you and your chelas not honor my near- by home with your presence?'' |
7452 | ''Shall I rob the rosebush of its pride in beauty? |
7452 | ''Sir, what are you doing here?'' |
7452 | ''Surely the whole night has not passed?'' |
7452 | ''Where has one ever heard of such deathless love?'' |
7452 | ''Who am I? |
7452 | ''Will you come with me?'' |
7452 | ''Will you not write a short book on the underlying basic unity between the Christian and Hindu scriptures? |
7452 | A soft rumbling vibration formed itself into words:"What has life or death to do with Light? |
7452 | Again, in his hour of extremity on the cross, Jesus cried out the divine name:"ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI? |
7452 | Am I losing my mind? |
7452 | And how on earth are you going to take me back to Ananta''s?" |
7452 | Any FORM is useless, of course, without the spirit, but why should you not start busy hives full of the spiritual nectar?" |
7452 | Are these newly decorated walls really ancient with memories?" |
7452 | Are we not to have our first glimpse of the sacred wonders of Brindaban? |
7452 | Are you content to be a hollow victrola, mechanically repeating the words of other men?" |
7452 | Are you crazy?" |
7452 | Are you not Bhagabati''s son who has been waiting here to meet me?" |
7452 | Are you swelling with dropsy?'' |
7452 | Are you wearing a body like the one I buried beneath the cruel Puri sands?" |
7452 | As our horses were led to be watered, Auddy inquired,"Sir, do you mind if I ride awhile with the driver? |
7452 | As the body is weakening, are your perceptions of God suffering any diminution?" |
7452 | Awed and frightened, I heard a voice resounding from every part of the room:"''It is all nothing, do n''t you see? |
7452 | Be frank, please; have you not been fighting only spineless, opium- fed animals?'' |
7452 | Because a study is difficult, is that a reason for not understanding it? |
7452 | But how then shall the scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be? |
7452 | But is that not what every person has latent in him? |
7452 | But the world will always ask: May one not kill a cobra to protect a child, or one''s self?" |
7452 | CHAPTER: 16 OUTWITTING THE STARS"Mukunda, why do n''t you get an astrological armlet?" |
7452 | CHAPTER: 27 FOUNDING A YOGA SCHOOL AT RANCHI"Why are you averse to organizational work?" |
7452 | CHAPTER: 3 THE SAINT WITH TWO BODIES"Father, if I promise to return home without coercion, may I take a sight- seeing trip to Benares?" |
7452 | CHAPTER: 36 BABAJI''S INTEREST IN THE WEST"Master, did you ever meet Babaji?" |
7452 | CHAPTER: 46 THE WOMAN YOGI WHO NEVER EATS"Sir, whither are we bound this morning?" |
7452 | Ca n''t you see that we are only two?" |
7452 | Ca n''t you stand the little test of a treacherous companion?" |
7452 | Ca n''t you understand that only through the swami could I have known you were waiting at this place for me?" |
7452 | Can he do anything about it? |
7452 | Can he seem other than impotent, wooden, ignominious?" |
7452 | Can we be surfeited with bliss, delightfully varied throughout eternity?" |
7452 | Can you materialize flowers?" |
7452 | Can your camera reflect the omnipresent Invisible?" |
7452 | Could they aid if the Lord withdraws your life- breath? |
7452 | Did n''t you make a similar request last summer, and the year before that? |
7452 | Did the Beloved Mother say anything about me?" |
7452 | Did you meet him in a vision, or did you actually see him, touch his hand, and hear the sound of his feet?" |
7452 | Do n''t you see your son racing to the Infinite?" |
7452 | Do not lament; am I not with you forever?''" |
7452 | Do saints never speak plainly?" |
7452 | Do you advocate taking life?" |
7452 | Do you attend his evening meetings?" |
7452 | Do you confine God to a speculative world?" |
7452 | Does He drop money in your lap?" |
7452 | Does it matter that we know not the patronymic of an earth- released master? |
7452 | Feeling my sympathy, Dr. Bose pointed unobtrusively to Nalini, and whispered in my ear,"Say, what''s this?" |
7452 | He added gently,''Lahiri, surely this cave seems familiar to you?'' |
7452 | He would rather hint:"Do n''t you think it may happen?" |
7452 | How can I assimilate any higher teachings? |
7452 | How can I enact a farce by appearing for those difficult finals?" |
7452 | How can such contradictions exist?" |
7452 | How can we see the sights of this city, without a single pice between us? |
7452 | How could a nothing like me produce riches for you?'' |
7452 | How could my good actions bring ill upon me? |
7452 | How could you, a Hindu, accept a drink from my hands?'' |
7452 | How did Christ resurrect his crucified body? |
7452 | How did Lahiri Mahasaya and Sri Yukteswar perform their miracles? |
7452 | How did the three saints walk on the water? |
7452 | How then have I denied myself anything? |
7452 | How was I to tune in with him, among so many vibrating lights of other souls? |
7452 | How was this universe born? |
7452 | I added hopefully,"Sir, will you not make me a monk of the Swami Order?" |
7452 | I felt the materialistic, twentieth- century world slipping from me; was I back in the ancient days when Jesus appeared before Peter on the sea? |
7452 | I left you only for a little while; am I not with you again?" |
7452 | I understood his laconic question:"Have you been happy in America? |
7452 | If a disciple, I reflected, could materialize an extra fleshly form at will, what miracles indeed could be barred to his master? |
7452 | If joy were ceaseless here in this world, would man ever seek another? |
7452 | If we may make new discoveries and inventions in the phenomenal world, must we declare our bankruptcy in the spiritual domain? |
7452 | If"escapism"be a need of man, cramped in his narrow personality, can any escape compare with the majesty of omnipresence? |
7452 | In what ways have these timeless truths renovated your nature? |
7452 | Is it a fact?'' |
7452 | Is it by any skill of yours that food digests in your stomach? |
7452 | Is it impossible to multiply the exceptions so as to make them the rule? |
7452 | Is man not missing his real destiny if he fails to explore them?" |
7452 | Is my life only for God?" |
7452 | Is n''t He performing miracles in everything, everywhere?" |
7452 | Is n''t there some contradiction?" |
7452 | Is that a sacrifice? |
7452 | Is the whole world going to change for you? |
7452 | Is there anything I can do to make your journey more comfortable?" |
7452 | Is there possibly any connection between my award of the Nobel Prize, and your suddenly acute powers of appreciation? |
7452 | Is"patience"not indeed a synonym of India, confounding Time and the historians alike? |
7452 | Jesus similarly taught:"Who is my mother? |
7452 | May I have six train passes to Kashmir and enough money to cover our travel expenses?" |
7452 | May I look through the stack myself?" |
7452 | Must he, then, depart for higher duties at Thy behest?" |
7452 | Must man always be brute first and man after, if at all?" |
7452 | My guru only laughed:"Why not throw the dog a bone?" |
7452 | My own, do you now understand?'' |
7452 | Nothing else offering, what else could be swallowed except pride over yesterday''s achievement of a fast? |
7452 | Now, what are your plans?" |
7452 | O death, where is thy sting? |
7452 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
7452 | Of what use is the oil now?'' |
7452 | Scoffed at by Ananta, had Its bounty not far exceeded necessity? |
7452 | Shall I be able to fulfill it?'' |
7452 | Shall I cruelly affront its dignity by my rude divestment?'' |
7452 | Shall I go?" |
7452 | Shall any peace indeed come out of it? |
7452 | She added hopefully,"You are now robust in appearance; can you help me? |
7452 | Should he have no light in his eyes, when he faithfully served our master, in whom the Divine was fully blazing? |
7452 | Should superstition be allowed to discolor the powerful waters or my activities?'' |
7452 | Suppose I suggest that your vaunted philosophy be put to a test in this tangible world?" |
7452 | The creature finally turns to his Creator, if for no other reason than to ask in anguish:''Why, Lord, why?'' |
7452 | Was dream ever more concrete? |
7452 | Was it Bhaduri Mahasaya, of Upper Circular Road?" |
7452 | Was that just?" |
7452 | Was the unknown oil endued with a cosmical heat? |
7452 | What about the disillusionments, the heartaches, the center leaders who could not lead, the students who could not be taught?" |
7452 | What about your responsibilities for your wife and children? |
7452 | What have you there?'' |
7452 | What holy text have you absorbed and made your own? |
7452 | What is its material cause?'' |
7452 | What is the matter? |
7452 | What is the trouble?" |
7452 | What more liberating thought than''God is''-nay,''God''?" |
7452 | What mortal lover can bestow that infinite promise? |
7452 | What power in those few words, that my being should know release from its stormy exile? |
7452 | What''s the hurry? |
7452 | Where is my food? |
7452 | Where is there pure loving love? |
7452 | Where is there truly loving Thee? |
7452 | Who can solve the mystery of attraction? |
7452 | Who can tell? |
7452 | Who is its maker? |
7452 | Who knows? |
7452 | Who knows? |
7452 | Who was this simple saint, whose least request to the Universal Spirit met with sweet acquiescence? |
7452 | Who will look after me, if you take my servant on one of your pleasure jaunts?" |
7452 | Why cry in the eleventh hour? |
7452 | Why did n''t you explain yesterday that you expected me to give Rama tangible aid in the form of some medicine?'' |
7452 | Why exclude relatives from your love of humanity?" |
7452 | Why should I desire that which pleases the body only?" |
7452 | Why should you leave your body?'' |
7452 | Will you accept my insignificant self as your disciple?'' |
7452 | Will you demand that men not celebrate in honor of the peace in heaven, but should only gather together in multitudes to shout for war on earth? |
7452 | Will you forgive me, and receive me as a disciple?'' |
7452 | Will you guide us to him?'' |
7452 | Will you pardon me for having considered you as my husband? |
7452 | Will you therefore give me the privilege of hearing a few incidents in your sacred life?" |
7452 | Will you?" |
7452 | Withdrawn for a time into the spacious spirit of nature, is that not Luther whispering in her winds, walking her dawns? |
7452 | Would importunate books pursue me down the years? |
7452 | Would you like some perfume?" |
7452 | Would you like to go?" |
7452 | Yet a torturing surmise sometimes haunts me: may not untapped soul possibilities exist? |
7452 | You have been sick?" |
7452 | Your body is frail yet; who can say how it will be tomorrow?'' |
7452 | [ Illustration: BHADURI MAHASAYA,"The Levitating Saint""Sir,"I inquired,"why do you not write a book on yoga for the benefit of the world?" |
7452 | and who are my brethren?" |
7452 | and"They Have Heard Thy Name"; Tagore''s"Who is in my Temple? |
7452 | examination?" |
7452 | examinations start?" |
7452 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see? |
7452 | he that teacheth man knowledge, shall he not know? |
7452 | know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? |
7452 | she said,''how can you live without eating, when you can not live without overeating?'' |
7452 | that is to say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
7452 | till seven times? |
7452 | where was the saint when the youth wanted to leave? |
7452 | { FN15- 6}"He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
7452 | { FN31- 5} What need for man''s brief resources? |
7452 | { FN33- 1} Spacious with omnipresence, could Christ indeed be followed except in the overarching Spirit? |
7452 | { FN42- 6}"Do you really want to go?" |
7452 | { FN44- 10} I added,"Eggs are a high- protein food; are they forbidden to SATYAGRAHIS?" |
7452 | { FN44- 18}"Then came Peter to him and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? |
7452 | { FN8- 4} Can anything small or circumscribed ever satisfy the mind of India? |
4508 | A chapter on Volcanic Phenomena? 4508 A first marriage? |
4508 | A skunk? 4508 A tonic?" |
4508 | About what? |
4508 | All wrong? |
4508 | Alone? |
4508 | Am I right, then, or am I wrong? |
4508 | An Artist? 4508 And are they of no avail?" |
4508 | And has it no influence on the character? |
4508 | And how do you like the procession? 4508 And how,"he continued, addressing Denis,"are your Italian studies progressing?" |
4508 | And that of the Bible? |
4508 | And those others? |
4508 | And what have you been doing, Phipps, these last nineteen years? |
4508 | And what, may I ask, would you do? |
4508 | And when did it go? |
4508 | And where,he added, laughing--"where does one dine?" |
4508 | And who is the judge of what constitutes the dividing line between use and abuse? |
4508 | And why? |
4508 | And your mother, now-- could she perhaps tell us when she gave it to you? |
4508 | Another one? |
4508 | Apple sauce? |
4508 | Are the peculiar hobbies of their votaries distasteful to you? |
4508 | Are those sailors not coming with us? |
4508 | Are you not a little hard on the Puritans? |
4508 | Are you? 4508 Are you? |
4508 | As bad as all that, are they? |
4508 | Ashes? 4508 Bampopo? |
4508 | But why is he a don? |
4508 | Call yourself a gentleman? 4508 Call yourself a gentleman?" |
4508 | Can it be the south wind? |
4508 | Carried? |
4508 | Coming to Keith''s to- night? |
4508 | DEMI- VIERGE concessions to common sense; what did he mean by that? |
4508 | Dead, is she? 4508 Denis? |
4508 | Did he? |
4508 | Do n''t they smell? |
4508 | Do n''t you care about our English vegetables? |
4508 | Do people really throw themselves over here? |
4508 | Do you believe the influence of Nepenthe can make Northern people irresponsible for their actions? 4508 Do you know England well?" |
4508 | Do you mean to say,asked the millionaire,"that it is impossible to be progressive and civilized at the same time?" |
4508 | Does he say that? 4508 Does it not strike you, Count, that there is a curious, an evasive kind of resemblance between this Faun and the Demeter?" |
4508 | Fireworks in broad daylight? |
4508 | Goth and Latin? |
4508 | Had n''t I better get some clothes on? |
4508 | Half a million francs-- what''s that, Duchess, as the price of a smile from yourself? 4508 Hanged if you know? |
4508 | Has n''t it been hot to- day? |
4508 | Have you any fault to find with my precipice? |
4508 | Have you any particular reason--? |
4508 | Have you discovered yourself, Keith? |
4508 | Have you ever seen a gentleman, except on a tailor''s fashion- plate? |
4508 | Have you not noticed that whenever anything, however fantastic, is imposed upon men by physical forces, they straightway make a god of it? 4508 He said that?" |
4508 | He said:''What is all wisdom save a collection of platitudes? 4508 Headache? |
4508 | Heard the news? 4508 Heard the news? |
4508 | How can I explain it to you? 4508 How long did you say you were staying here?" |
4508 | How on earth are they able to support such a weight? 4508 How shall a plant survive, save by withering now and then? |
4508 | How shall that come out of a man,continued Mr. Heard,"which was never in him? |
4508 | How so? |
4508 | How so? |
4508 | I wonder how you manage to keep the sirocco out? |
4508 | If I had been the botanist? 4508 In Paradise, is she? |
4508 | In that case,said the millionaire,"if you drink a little too much occasionally-- only occasionally, I mean!--you would not call that intemperance?" |
4508 | Indeed? 4508 Indeed?" |
4508 | Interesting? 4508 Interesting?" |
4508 | Is it always like this? |
4508 | Is it true that you kept them locked up in different parts of London? |
4508 | Is n''t her villa at the back? |
4508 | Is n''t she here? 4508 Is that so?" |
4508 | Is that the person,enquired the Count,"who is reported to drink to excess? |
4508 | Is that your quarrel with what you call the upstairs god system? |
4508 | Is this music? 4508 Kindly? |
4508 | Know Eames? 4508 Koppen? |
4508 | Lively? |
4508 | Me? 4508 Minerals?" |
4508 | Muhlen? 4508 My opinion? |
4508 | Never change? 4508 Nice bathe?" |
4508 | Nine o''clock? 4508 No success?" |
4508 | No? 4508 Nor yet in a theatre?" |
4508 | Not THAT kind? 4508 Not that kind? |
4508 | Of Denis? 4508 Oh, Mr. Keith,"said the Duchess in her sweetest accents,"do you know of what this entertainment makes me think?" |
4508 | Oh, it''s rather a pretty name, do n''t you think? |
4508 | Overwhelming? 4508 Pray, why should the dear lady not choose to be run over? |
4508 | Really...? |
4508 | Really? 4508 Really? |
4508 | Really? 4508 Really? |
4508 | Really? |
4508 | Retlow, you say? 4508 See that high cliff, gentlemens? |
4508 | Shall I guess? |
4508 | Shall we take a turn or two outside? |
4508 | Sleepy? 4508 So you do n''t know the difference between augite and hornblende?" |
4508 | So your mother would like to see you in Parliament? |
4508 | Street? 4508 Such as?" |
4508 | Suppose you go alone? 4508 Surely there are heights and depths in the matter of conduct?" |
4508 | That is as it should be, is it not? 4508 That thing? |
4508 | That was a suggestive encounter, was it not, between the Deputy and our local judge? |
4508 | The adventure? |
4508 | The animal? 4508 The little pastel? |
4508 | The old teacher? 4508 The personal element signifying favouritism and venality?" |
4508 | The withering influences of Homer: surely that is a bad sign? |
4508 | Then what on earth--? |
4508 | Then why not do what I have proposed several times already? |
4508 | There resides, for example, in Hellenic sculpture a certain ingredient-- what shall we call it? 4508 There was an English boy who threw himself over this cliff for a bet-- you have heard the story? |
4508 | They did n''t even tell you about Miss Wilberforce? 4508 Think? |
4508 | This poetic omission on the part of Perrelli to mention the sirocco? |
4508 | We have touched on that subject once or twice already, have we not? 4508 Well?" |
4508 | Well? |
4508 | Well? |
4508 | What are you doing afterwards? |
4508 | What are you going to do about it? |
4508 | What are you thinking? |
4508 | What burglary? |
4508 | What did he say? |
4508 | What did you say about the book I lent you the other day? 4508 What do you call romance?" |
4508 | What do you call sensible? |
4508 | What do you make of it? |
4508 | What do you mean by that? |
4508 | What does he say? |
4508 | What does it matter? |
4508 | What does your Perrelli say on the subject? |
4508 | What else could the poor fellow do? 4508 What is that?" |
4508 | What is the meaning of this, girl? |
4508 | What is their point of view? |
4508 | What is your objection to them? |
4508 | What little affair? |
4508 | What little affair? |
4508 | What think you, Heard, of this old injunction? 4508 What was that about the English lord?" |
4508 | What would you have done? |
4508 | What? |
4508 | What? |
4508 | When? |
4508 | Where are they? |
4508 | Where would I be, if my grandfather had seen no harm in it? 4508 Where would we have been without them in America?" |
4508 | Who? |
4508 | Why can not they drink wine or-- or ginger beer? |
4508 | Why has it been left out? |
4508 | Why not devote yourself to it? 4508 Why not? |
4508 | Why not? 4508 Why not?" |
4508 | Why should I approve or disapprove? 4508 Why should you find it complex, when I find it simple? |
4508 | Why unhappy? |
4508 | Will you do me the pleasure of coming to my house, and allow me to offer you a cup of tea? 4508 Will you? |
4508 | Would you not do the same for me? 4508 Would you not include some of our American dishes in your bill of fare?" |
4508 | You are content, as you observed before, to establish a fact? |
4508 | You are rather young, surely, for a bishop? |
4508 | You are unaware of a struggle between your own mind and that of the artist? 4508 You do n''t feel the need of any kind of superior being to control human affairs?" |
4508 | You have found them out, have you? |
4508 | You have heard of Sir Herbert Street? 4508 You have n''t heard anything? |
4508 | You like Zola? |
4508 | You like to be precise? |
4508 | You think he ought to have cut it? |
4508 | You think it possible that Denis--? |
4508 | You think so? 4508 You were speaking of woman- cooks?" |
4508 | You would approve? |
4508 | You would? |
4508 | You''re not feeling very well, sir? |
4508 | Your cousin? 4508 ''A sin?'' 4508 ''But are n''t you a little hard on the youngsters?'' 4508 ''How much to pull up?'' 4508 ''How much?'' 4508 ''How much?'' 4508 ''See knife?'' 4508 ''Well,''said he,''granting this-- how came they to be unearthed up in the hills, on your property, twenty- five miles away?'' 4508 ''What d''ye call these things?'' 4508 ''Who was the man?'' 4508 A bad sign? 4508 A cowardly attitude? 4508 A kind of Asiatic Socrates, do n''t you think? |
4508 | A mere fool-- what''s the use of him on earth? |
4508 | A singular illusion, is it not?" |
4508 | A veritable island of rocks and vineyards and houses-- this pallid apparition? |
4508 | Ah, that peninsula, that isthmus, or whatever you called the thing-- what on earth had attracted her to the place? |
4508 | All culinary tasks should be performed with reverential love, do n''t you think so? |
4508 | All mothers ought to be tiger mothers....""Do n''t you notice, Count, that there is an unwonted sparkle in the air this evening? |
4508 | All these together? |
4508 | Aloud he remarked:"What have I always said? |
4508 | Am I becoming more of a Christian, or less?" |
4508 | An enigma? |
4508 | And Count Caloveglia-- was he mistaken too? |
4508 | And Florence?" |
4508 | And Saint Dodekanus himself-- what would he think, if this ancient act of homage were withheld? |
4508 | And after that perhaps you will let me know what is wrong with baby?" |
4508 | And better food, I hope? |
4508 | And do n''t you think,"he went on, reverting to his theme,"that we might revive a few of those forgotten recipes of the past? |
4508 | And does it always hang about like this?" |
4508 | And gold, and jewels-- of what avail were these against the spectre? |
4508 | And had he not voyaged in many parts of the world, in China Seas and round the Cape? |
4508 | And how would England compare with the tingling realism of Nepenthe? |
4508 | And how you complained of the roses? |
4508 | And if she drinks a little--""Drinks a little?" |
4508 | And if so, how was he going to live? |
4508 | And is n''t he dirty? |
4508 | And now, how d''ye eat them?'' |
4508 | And talking Latin, no doubt?" |
4508 | And the Count?" |
4508 | And then? |
4508 | And what are the wild waves saying?" |
4508 | And what did she mean by that sudden conundrum:"Do you know anything, Tommy, about our laws of illegitimacy?" |
4508 | And what does it explain? |
4508 | And what does it matter to anybody?" |
4508 | And what does it mean? |
4508 | And what have people''s clothes to do with their religion? |
4508 | And what if the truth ultimately leaked out? |
4508 | And what more? |
4508 | And what more? |
4508 | And what then? |
4508 | And when would she be back? |
4508 | And when would that kind gentleman with the machine arrive? |
4508 | And which of the two, Count, would you say was the more beneficial to humanity?" |
4508 | And who are you, to dictate how we shall order our day? |
4508 | And why are you looking so glum? |
4508 | And why so much water for so few fishes? |
4508 | And yet they sometimes make one laugh in spite of one''s self, do n''t they? |
4508 | And yet, he argued, if the man does seclude them in this fashion-- supposing they really exist-- who can blame him? |
4508 | And yet, what is a surer guide than the heart? |
4508 | And, by Jove, they do rub this one in, do n''t they? |
4508 | Anti- eclipse? |
4508 | Any other advice?" |
4508 | Anybody can say they had gold coins given them by dead mothers, do n''t you see? |
4508 | Anyhow, what did legal aspects matter? |
4508 | Anything else?" |
4508 | Apropos, what has become of Marten?" |
4508 | Are n''t they queer people? |
4508 | Are n''t you a little too old for that sort of thing? |
4508 | Are n''t you feeling well?" |
4508 | Are n''t you glad you need n''t escort me to England?" |
4508 | Are they not? |
4508 | Are you always going to be a convolvulus, Denis?" |
4508 | Are you going?" |
4508 | As Magistrate of Nepenthe, who cared what political or religious views he professed or in what manner he administered the law? |
4508 | As to Denis, I saw him last-- when was it? |
4508 | As to the populace-- who is going to risk his life in the midst of this calamity? |
4508 | At last he remarked:"We are not doing much mineralogy, are we? |
4508 | Because of its churchly flavour? |
4508 | Because you are n''t, are you?" |
4508 | Been down to the sea, have you? |
4508 | Business? |
4508 | But a subtle change had spread over the figure, or was it, he wondered, merely a change in the state of his own mind, due to what the Count had said? |
4508 | But are n''t we a little too near the edge of the cliff? |
4508 | But he only believed half of it...."You were saying, Count?" |
4508 | But how about all those Russians?" |
4508 | But how was the place to be purified? |
4508 | But how will they educate that boy, in India? |
4508 | But if the insect keeps good time-- why not?" |
4508 | But if--""You mean, do n''t you, if the ashes continue to fall, notwithstanding our expiatory demonstration? |
4508 | But let me ask you this: have you ever heard of a teetotaler conspicuous for kindliness of heart, or intellectually distinguished in any walk of life? |
4508 | But now, how do you account for the likeness?" |
4508 | But perhaps you are not interested in psychology?" |
4508 | But surely, Eames, we two need not stand on ceremony? |
4508 | But surely, my dear fellow, you can put it off a little longer? |
4508 | But this island is really too small; there are so many glass windows and babies about-- don''t you think so, gentlemen?" |
4508 | But to what purpose? |
4508 | But we need n''t quarrel about it, need we? |
4508 | But what did it matter, after all? |
4508 | But what does it avail to unburden oneself? |
4508 | But what else can he do in lands adapted only for wolves and bears? |
4508 | But what is the matter with you?" |
4508 | But what was going to happen when all this mud, baked by the sun into the hardness of brick, covered the island? |
4508 | But what was she like, after all these years? |
4508 | But what would it cost you-- just a friendly handshake?" |
4508 | But what''s the use of farming without capital? |
4508 | But where are you going to draw the line? |
4508 | But where was the rest of the stanza? |
4508 | But who can believe it? |
4508 | But why an artist? |
4508 | But why-- why must the fishes live in water? |
4508 | By the way, Count-- you remember our conversation? |
4508 | By the way, Eames, what do you think of this discovery of mine? |
4508 | By the way, have you seen Denis lately? |
4508 | By the way, have you seen anything of Denis lately?" |
4508 | By the way, when next you call, would you please say something particularly nice DE MA PART? |
4508 | CAPITO? |
4508 | CHAPTER VIII"Sanidin?" |
4508 | Ca n''t a fellow be a Messiah without sporting a pink shirt or fancy dressing- gown or blue pyjamas or something? |
4508 | Ca n''t read or write? |
4508 | Ca n''t you be reasonable, for once in your life? |
4508 | Ca n''t you oblige me, for once in the way?" |
4508 | Ca n''t you really manage it? |
4508 | Ca n''t you suggest something better? |
4508 | Can it upset their nerves to such an extent?" |
4508 | Can you picture Virgil collaborating with Apicius?" |
4508 | Certain problems are always cropping up, are n''t they?" |
4508 | Could he absorb all this? |
4508 | Could n''t he swear--?" |
4508 | Could n''t we take your chair along with us, somehow? |
4508 | Could this be an island? |
4508 | Could you oblige me with a fairy- tale?" |
4508 | Denis repeated:"Sanidin?" |
4508 | Denis, meekly resigned, enquired:"Was he?" |
4508 | Denis?" |
4508 | Did his church really make such concessions? |
4508 | Did it betray a lapse from his old- established principles, a waning of his respect for traditional morality? |
4508 | Did the Court appreciate the import of those words? |
4508 | Did the Court realize what it meant? |
4508 | Did you do much educational work in Africa? |
4508 | Do I make myself clear? |
4508 | Do listen to what those inebriated lunatics are saying on the balcony....""What did you do to that skunk, Charlie?" |
4508 | Do n''t you agree, Bishop? |
4508 | Do n''t you ever look at women? |
4508 | Do n''t you feel its effect upon yourself? |
4508 | Do n''t you notice a kind of demonic influence in the air?" |
4508 | Do n''t you realize that we are still in the stage of that ENFANT TERRIBLE of Christianity, Paul of Tarsus, and his gift of tongues? |
4508 | Do n''t you really believe that money sweetens all things, as Pepys says?" |
4508 | Do n''t you remember? |
4508 | Do n''t you think so, Denis?" |
4508 | Do n''t you think that richer people had domiciles in both places? |
4508 | Do n''t you think that the man who made this Faun was entitled to dine well?" |
4508 | Do you deny this?" |
4508 | Do you imagine a person like this could possibly remain insensible to the beguiling influence of these surroundings?" |
4508 | Do you know why? |
4508 | Do you see much of the Count?" |
4508 | Does it not all depend upon where we take up our stand? |
4508 | Does it strike you as a reasonable proposition? |
4508 | Does not the whole world know his history? |
4508 | Does that surprise you too? |
4508 | Don Francesco broke in:"Tell me, Keith, how about your wives? |
4508 | Down there; do you see, Mr. Heard? |
4508 | Eh, Phipps?" |
4508 | Ever been to Trinidad, Mr. Richards? |
4508 | Ever seen the Lake of Pitch in Trinidad? |
4508 | Every year he complained in like fashion: Ah, what would the Madonna say, if she saw it? |
4508 | For is it not a fact that distempers like leprosy and PLICA POLONICA are now almost unknown on Nepenthe? |
4508 | For what is the truth of the matter? |
4508 | For where should we be without them?" |
4508 | From which quarter would the quickening breeze arrive? |
4508 | Gone where to? |
4508 | Got a soul, eh? |
4508 | Had he done anything to justify self- reproach? |
4508 | Had he not acted with the best intentions, under the written advice of an expert? |
4508 | Had he not engaged Don Giustino? |
4508 | Had she heard of his arrival on the island? |
4508 | Had something upset her? |
4508 | Had they decided to cancel it? |
4508 | Happiness-- an honourable, justifiable happiness-- how was it to be attained? |
4508 | Has any man ever attained to inner harmony by pondering the experiences of others? |
4508 | Has any one ever done so? |
4508 | Have n''t you ever noticed that? |
4508 | Have you discovered, by the way, whether the business of Miss Wilberforce has been settled?" |
4508 | Have you ever heard of Thomas Keith, a soldier in a Highland regiment, who became governor of the Holy City of Medina? |
4508 | Have you ever heard of that Sparker affair?" |
4508 | Have you ever thought about the impossibility of realizing colour description in landscape? |
4508 | Have you ever tried to annotate a classic, Mr. Heard? |
4508 | Have you never felt inclined to cry?" |
4508 | Have you never heard of Beelzebub?" |
4508 | Have you no room in your heart for an original? |
4508 | Have you noticed what a disruptive and irreverential brood they are? |
4508 | He always say,''All Italians liars, and liars where go? |
4508 | He asked:"Are you referring to that blackguard, that pestilential hog, who calls himself a judge?" |
4508 | He asked:"Has he no relations?" |
4508 | He paused, but the Count merely asked:"No further back than that?" |
4508 | He said-- do you know what he said?" |
4508 | He tells it rather well, does n''t he? |
4508 | He turned to go, and had already made a few paces when the voice croaked after him:"Does your mother know you''re out?" |
4508 | He was in charge of that particular one; they were dong all they could, but what did it amount to? |
4508 | He, too, might end in annotating some masterpiece-- who knows? |
4508 | Heard?" |
4508 | Heard?" |
4508 | Home influence, as Grace Aguilar conceived it-- where has it gone? |
4508 | Hot, is n''t it? |
4508 | How about His Reverence the PARROCO? |
4508 | How about Solomon''s proverbs?" |
4508 | How about the other passengers? |
4508 | How came it about? |
4508 | How could a volcanic eruption be stopped? |
4508 | How could the fellow be turned to account? |
4508 | How day you? |
4508 | How do they live? |
4508 | How do you explain it?" |
4508 | How do you like this place? |
4508 | How do you manage it?" |
4508 | How do you think the local authorities would envisage such an arbitrary step? |
4508 | How does it make you feel?" |
4508 | How else could the fishes live save in the water? |
4508 | How far were they applicable, those old Hebrew precepts, to modern conditions? |
4508 | How is she?" |
4508 | How is the place getting on? |
4508 | How large, by the way, is your diocese?" |
4508 | How much higher are we going?" |
4508 | How much longer would Peter escape his malice? |
4508 | How old did you say you were?" |
4508 | How shall he generate a harmonious atmosphere if he be disharmonious himself? |
4508 | How shall there be candour if the poet lacks worldly experience? |
4508 | How should Moses have come to inscribe some particular form of wrong- doing into his Code, if it had not proved harmful to the community at large?" |
4508 | How that old Jew took our English measure, eh? |
4508 | How the blazes is a man--""I say, Charlie, what did the fellow on the ranch want to do with that skunk? |
4508 | How understand, how interpret, a dastardly deed like this? |
4508 | How were poor Apostles to find the necessary sixty or seventy francs for such a venture? |
4508 | How would it all end? |
4508 | How would you like to spend a week or two in gaol? |
4508 | However, we wo n''t labour that point; we have discussed it before, have n''t we? |
4508 | I ask myself: what has this fellow got to say to me? |
4508 | I declare he''s worse than the cinematographic villain-- you remember, Denis?" |
4508 | I do n''t fancy cold luncheons, do you? |
4508 | I hope you were gentle with my friends the Bulaga?" |
4508 | I liked it, did n''t you?" |
4508 | I may count on you, Bishop? |
4508 | I suppose even you have your moments of dejection?" |
4508 | I suppose they could n''t be unwell, could they? |
4508 | I suppose this pumice is very light?" |
4508 | I suppose you wo n''t deny that?" |
4508 | I suppose your people are rather alarmed?" |
4508 | I was much interested in that little lake-- you know? |
4508 | I wonder how much those men are paid for carrying that statue? |
4508 | I wonder what I would do in her place? |
4508 | I wonder what he wants here?" |
4508 | I wonder what you can see in the man?" |
4508 | I wonder whether I could induce him to try my Longwood? |
4508 | I wonder, by the way, why the old scholars''language was ever discarded?" |
4508 | If I were to come home a little joyful now and then, do you know what these people would say? |
4508 | If he had not seen with his own eyes--"Has it gone, your headache?" |
4508 | If you have nothing better to do, come and lunch to- morrow, can you? |
4508 | If you like our American dishes, why not get this man of yours to learn a few from the Duchess? |
4508 | If you were to ask him,''What are those wonderful rocks over there, shaped like some Titanic organ and glowing with a kind of violet flame?'' |
4508 | If you were wrong, Mr. van Koppen, where would our poets and novelists be?" |
4508 | If your decent folks are so squeamish, what are they doing in the streets at that unearthly hour? |
4508 | If, as he says, the thing was never found out, how can he have learnt all about it?" |
4508 | In African days, or earlier? |
4508 | In other words, what must be done? |
4508 | In the stage of these Russians here, with their decayed Messiah? |
4508 | Instead of pursuing the subject of the expedition he asked, quite abruptly:"Tell me, Denis, are you happy here?" |
4508 | Is it not altogether obsolete? |
4508 | Is it not creditable for a man to support his wife and family in the best conditions possible?" |
4508 | Is it true that you sold them at various Oriental ports?" |
4508 | Is it true that you used to be known as the Lightning Lover? |
4508 | Is it true that you used to say, in your London days, that no season was complete without a ruined home?" |
4508 | Is its beauty really so antagonistic to that of your civilization?" |
4508 | Is that your conception of sin? |
4508 | Is that your way of mortifying the flesh? |
4508 | Is there anything better, for instance, than a genuine Turkish pilaf? |
4508 | Is there no other wind hereabouts? |
4508 | Is this your first visit to Nepenthe?" |
4508 | It gives a distinctive tone to this quiet courtyard, do n''t you think? |
4508 | It is visible from here-- that rounded portal, do you see? |
4508 | It makes one see things in their true perspective, does n''t it?" |
4508 | It might end-- who knows where? |
4508 | It''s a good place for throwing oneself down, is n''t it?" |
4508 | It''s getting warm, is n''t it? |
4508 | It''s rather a pretty word, do n''t you think? |
4508 | Jacopo Bellini: why not? |
4508 | Just for once in your life? |
4508 | Keith? |
4508 | Keith?" |
4508 | Koppen? |
4508 | Let the Court call to mind the names of those who had deviated from the narrow path of duty; did they not all belong to this unhappy class? |
4508 | Liars where go? |
4508 | Look at that peak yonder-- is it not almost transparent, like some crystal of amethyst? |
4508 | Looks as if it had been done with a knife, does n''t it? |
4508 | Looks as if it might drift in our direction, does n''t it, if the wind were strong enough to move it? |
4508 | Marten repeated:"Sanidin?" |
4508 | May I get you a lemon? |
4508 | May I offer you my arm, Duchess? |
4508 | Meadows?" |
4508 | Meadows?" |
4508 | Meadows?" |
4508 | Must we always remain stationary like vegetables? |
4508 | NON CAPIRE? |
4508 | NON CAPIRE? |
4508 | NON PIACERE? |
4508 | NON VOLERE? |
4508 | No interest in Arabian history? |
4508 | Nothing at all?" |
4508 | Now I wonder if she knows English?" |
4508 | Now I wonder whether there will be enough food for both of us in the basket?" |
4508 | Now I wonder why you should hit upon sanidin? |
4508 | Now I wonder why?" |
4508 | Now I wonder, Mr. van Koppen-- I wonder what your millennium would be like?" |
4508 | Now what had this boy done? |
4508 | Now who, I wonder, is the friend of man, the modern Prometheus; you who incarcerate her, or this alien lawyer who sets her free? |
4508 | O Lord, ca n''t you understand?" |
4508 | Obvious sources of pleasure, are n''t they, Keith?" |
4508 | Of what act of proposal could the man have been guilty to merit, even in her eyes, a fate such as this? |
4508 | Often had he puzzled on the subject.... Why? |
4508 | One dirty blackmailer more or less: what on earth did it matter to anybody? |
4508 | One owes something to one''s self, N''EST- CE PAS? |
4508 | One owes something to one''s self: N''EST- CE- PAS? |
4508 | One owes something to oneself, N''EST CE PAS? |
4508 | One owes something to oneself, N''EST- CE PAS? |
4508 | One soon realizes the vanity of all those talks about the consolations of philosophy and the comforts of religion, does n''t one? |
4508 | Or a glass of liqueur?... |
4508 | Or anybody? |
4508 | Or do you think it''s a laughing matter?" |
4508 | Or how about the sirocco? |
4508 | Or perhaps a glass of cognac?" |
4508 | Or perhaps he did n''t want the skunk to get hold of its tail: see?" |
4508 | Or perhaps you would prefer some wine and a biscuit? |
4508 | Or what''s the matter with the Dog''s Home?" |
4508 | Or why not try the midnight expedition first? |
4508 | Or you, Mr. White? |
4508 | Our contribution to human happiness, and that of America-- are they not irreconcilable? |
4508 | Our lives are perfectly insignificant, are n''t they? |
4508 | Our reverence for inspired idiots: has it never struck you? |
4508 | Papacy and Camorra-- interconvertible terms-- who could plumb their depths? |
4508 | Perhaps he had talked more dully than usual.... Or could it be the south wind? |
4508 | Perhaps you are afraid of them? |
4508 | Perhaps you know her?" |
4508 | Perhaps you would like to look at my precipice and tell me if there is anything wrong with that too? |
4508 | Perhaps you would like to sit down? |
4508 | Pheidias was a talented fellow- citizen-- a hewer in stone by profession: what could he know of the relations of Pheidias to posterity? |
4508 | Professor, what are you laughing at now?" |
4508 | Really? |
4508 | Rest without; but where was that old rest within, that sense of plain tasks plainly to be performed, of tangible duty? |
4508 | Retlow... where had he heard that name before? |
4508 | Romance.... What was left of life without romance? |
4508 | Samuel?" |
4508 | Seen the ghost?" |
4508 | Shall Andrea find you a carriage?" |
4508 | Shall I give you my recipe for happiness? |
4508 | Shall I tell you about one of our most interesting cases? |
4508 | She said:''So that''s it, is it? |
4508 | She watched their naked antics at first with disapproval-- what could you expect, she would say, from Russians? |
4508 | Should he exclude the miserable joke altogether from his amended and enlarged edition of Perrelli? |
4508 | Should he reproduce it there fore IN EXTENSO? |
4508 | Shows how careful one must be in judging of other people, does n''t it? |
4508 | Something about tickling, was n''t it?" |
4508 | Something cleansing, clarifying?" |
4508 | Sometimes I feel almost ashamed--""Ashamed? |
4508 | Somewhat terrestrial and palpitating, is it not, after the cloistered twilight of a University?" |
4508 | Suppose we sit down somewhere?" |
4508 | Surely a woman can change her mind? |
4508 | Surely all knowledge is valueless save as a guide to conduct? |
4508 | Surely it is his duty to show himself now and then to his parishioners-- constituents, I mean? |
4508 | Surely she can please herself? |
4508 | Surely the number of words is not disproportionate to the subject? |
4508 | Surely you are not going to make a tragedy of it? |
4508 | Surely you''ve got an uncle or something? |
4508 | Swim to Philadelphia? |
4508 | Talking of gipsies, do you know whether our friend van Koppen has arrived?" |
4508 | Tell me, Count, does the sirocco always blow?" |
4508 | Tell me, Madame Steynlin, what is music?" |
4508 | Tell me, Mr. van Koppen, how do you propose to amalgamate or reconcile such ferociously antagonistic strivings? |
4508 | Tell me, if music says nothing to you, why not leave it alone?" |
4508 | Tell me, sir, how shall the mind be elevated if the body be exhausted with material preoccupations? |
4508 | Tell me, why should I disapprove of things?" |
4508 | That cloud, that change of tone-- what did they portend? |
4508 | That contact of hand and chin-- what did it imply? |
4508 | That is rather a depreciation, is n''t it? |
4508 | That meant leaden, did n''t it? |
4508 | That note of exaltation in his voice.... And what did he mean by saying that something funny would happen? |
4508 | That white villa by the sea, at the end of the promontory? |
4508 | That''s so, is n''t it, Antonio?" |
4508 | That''s so, is n''t it, Charlie?" |
4508 | The Cave of Mercury.... How had Mercury, the arch- thief, come to be presiding genius here? |
4508 | The Church? |
4508 | The State provides old folks with refuges and pensions: how about the former obligations of children? |
4508 | The act of pardoning: what did it imply? |
4508 | The bishop asked:"You think the Bible has done the same for us?" |
4508 | The bishop suddenly asked:"If somebody you knew had committed a crime, what would you say? |
4508 | The effect of changed environment-- new friends, new food, new habits? |
4508 | The laws that regulate human intercourse; what could be more interesting? |
4508 | The means-- the money? |
4508 | The priest insisted:"Is it true that you gave the plumpest of them to the Sultan of Colambang in exchange for the recipe of some wonderful sauce? |
4508 | The privileges of humanity: you understand, Eames?" |
4508 | The ruffian, the son of an impure mother-- up to his tricks, was he? |
4508 | The solemn doctrines he had preached in those days: were they really a panacea for all the ills of the flesh? |
4508 | The south wind acting on his still weakened health? |
4508 | The south wind is a good slice of Nepenthe, is it not?... |
4508 | The unaccustomed leisure which gave him, for the first time, a chance of thinking about non- professional matters? |
4508 | The volcano? |
4508 | Then little one, he say: I good diver, eh, what, friend? |
4508 | Then why not allow him to help? |
4508 | Then you ask yourself: How is it possible? |
4508 | This Faun, you say, was found on the mainland yonder?" |
4508 | This Mr. Richards-- was he, perhaps, the burglar? |
4508 | This blue sea, and those orange tints on the mountains, I mean to say-- how are they going to be held fast by the optic apparatus? |
4508 | This downright sympathy with sinners, what did it portend? |
4508 | This lust of handling-- what is its ordinary name? |
4508 | This thing thrusts itself upon us; it makes no concessions, does it? |
4508 | Thousands of decent upright folks swept away at a blow.... Who cared? |
4508 | To feel righteous, or to feel sinful, is quite an innocent form of self- indulgence--""Innocent self- indulgence? |
4508 | To those how have hitherto preached indecorous maxims of conduct they will say:''What is all this ferocious nonsense about strenuousness? |
4508 | Too much, you think? |
4508 | Turkey rhubarb--""I am afraid, Mr. Keith, that we have come at an inopportune moment?" |
4508 | Twelve years ago, was n''t it, that little affair of yours? |
4508 | Understand? |
4508 | Verse- making is a little out of date, is it not? |
4508 | Was Giordano Bruno, or Edgar Poe, born out of time? |
4508 | Was he becoming a sinner himself? |
4508 | Was he contemplating--? |
4508 | Was he not even then on his return journey from Zanzibar? |
4508 | Was he up to some mystification? |
4508 | Was it not written for quite other conditions? |
4508 | Was it possible? |
4508 | Was n''t he at South Kensington? |
4508 | Was n''t it, Denis?" |
4508 | Was n''t she coming down to- night?" |
4508 | Was she speaking the truth? |
4508 | Was that Christianity, civilization? |
4508 | Was the action quasi- paternal, or pseudo- paternal? |
4508 | Was the lady indoors? |
4508 | Was this the kind of boy to kill himself? |
4508 | Was this the lady who had charmed him the other day? |
4508 | We are all liable to that, are we not? |
4508 | We are always groping about in the dark, are we not? |
4508 | We''ve had the pleasure have n''t we? |
4508 | Well, how? |
4508 | Well, what are you thinking?" |
4508 | Well; one really does n''t quite know what to make of a fellow like that, does one?" |
4508 | Well? |
4508 | Well?" |
4508 | Were his values really vitiated? |
4508 | Were it otherwise, there would be no more reasonableness on earth, would there?" |
4508 | Were they not all her brothers and sisters-- these laughing, round- cheeked primitives? |
4508 | Were they still availing as guides to conduct? |
4508 | What a bother.... Why, Mr. Heard, what''s the matter with you? |
4508 | What are other joys-- those of the illiterate and incurious? |
4508 | What business had he to transact up there? |
4508 | What can a person of that kind have in common with a mother of any kind?" |
4508 | What can it be?... |
4508 | What can this mean? |
4508 | What cared Madame Steynlin about hats? |
4508 | What cared he for primroses? |
4508 | What could her motives have been? |
4508 | What could it be? |
4508 | What could that signify? |
4508 | What could they be? |
4508 | What could this mean? |
4508 | What could you expect from a fool? |
4508 | What demon had tempted her to buy it? |
4508 | What did he want with a skunk? |
4508 | What did it signify? |
4508 | What do they expect me to do with these things? |
4508 | What do you make of him?" |
4508 | What do you mean?" |
4508 | What do you say, Heard?" |
4508 | What do you say,"he went on,"to climbing a little up that gorge, into the shade? |
4508 | What do you say?" |
4508 | What do you think of chastity, Marten?" |
4508 | What do you think of my theory?" |
4508 | What do you think of them?" |
4508 | What do you think of women-- generally speaking, I mean?" |
4508 | What do you think? |
4508 | What do you think?" |
4508 | What do you think?" |
4508 | What does it all amount to? |
4508 | What does she look like?" |
4508 | What else is money made for? |
4508 | What else was there to do? |
4508 | What fountain?" |
4508 | What had Muhlen done? |
4508 | What had Muhlen said? |
4508 | What had happened? |
4508 | What had happened? |
4508 | What has he done? |
4508 | What has money to do with it?" |
4508 | What have you done with them? |
4508 | What if his human values were really wrong? |
4508 | What is a child of his age doing at a University? |
4508 | What is going to replace the home, Mr. Keith? |
4508 | What is it?" |
4508 | What is the consequence? |
4508 | What is the name of your patron?" |
4508 | What is the outstanding feature of modern life? |
4508 | What is the unforgivable sin in poetry? |
4508 | What is the use of civilization if it makes a man unhappy and unhealthy? |
4508 | What is to be done?" |
4508 | What is your secret? |
4508 | What is yours? |
4508 | What is yours?" |
4508 | What makes you think it?" |
4508 | What more can you expect from an author? |
4508 | What more? |
4508 | What of it?" |
4508 | What on earth did she mean by that conundrum about illegitimacy, I wonder?" |
4508 | What on earth does it matter who Henry the Twelfth''s wife was? |
4508 | What on earth ever for did he do that? |
4508 | What one brother has to tell another-- why write it down? |
4508 | What other happiness deserves the name? |
4508 | What pecuniary advantage could Marten expect to gain from his minerals?" |
4508 | What position was he to take up? |
4508 | What shall we do with you?" |
4508 | What should he do? |
4508 | What was a modern philanthropist? |
4508 | What was all the talk about? |
4508 | What was he doing there, at this hour? |
4508 | What was it Count Caloveglia had said? |
4508 | What was it still good for? |
4508 | What was it, this excessive love of erring humanity, and whither trending? |
4508 | What was it? |
4508 | What was its burden? |
4508 | What was the good, he asked, of employing a specialist? |
4508 | What was the result of keeping these people alive? |
4508 | What was the secret of their greatness? |
4508 | What was the use of a Committee for trying to keep her in order and getting her locked up in a sanatorium? |
4508 | What was the use of thinking about it? |
4508 | What was to be done? |
4508 | What was to be done? |
4508 | What were his motives for this strange act? |
4508 | What were these revenues expended upon? |
4508 | What were they doing there, at this impossible hour of the day? |
4508 | What were they talking about? |
4508 | What were this young man''s relations with the girl? |
4508 | What were we saying?" |
4508 | What were you going to say about the American millionaire?" |
4508 | What would happen? |
4508 | What would that gentleman do without her? |
4508 | What would to- morrow bring? |
4508 | What would you call the reverse of an eclipse, Denis? |
4508 | What''s that, to a man of your influence up there? |
4508 | What''s that?" |
4508 | What''s the meaning of this? |
4508 | What''s the name of her villa, Denis?" |
4508 | What, has nobody been to Trinidad? |
4508 | What, sanidin again?" |
4508 | What, sir, would you call the phenomenon of to- day? |
4508 | When shall it be?" |
4508 | When will the peace of God descend upon our island?" |
4508 | When would all this material be published? |
4508 | When would they take him out again? |
4508 | When, when would that kindly gentleman with the instrument arrive? |
4508 | Whence came it, he wondered? |
4508 | Whence came it? |
4508 | Whence now this novel and unpleasant sensation in the upper gastric region? |
4508 | Where are we going?" |
4508 | Where could it have been? |
4508 | Where could she be? |
4508 | Where did you become acquainted with it?" |
4508 | Where had he found the money? |
4508 | Where had he heard it before? |
4508 | Where is a truer poet than Homer? |
4508 | Where is the connection between piety and dirt? |
4508 | Where the Hell, then, was money to come from? |
4508 | Where was money to come from-- those miserable fifteen pounds, for example? |
4508 | Where was she now, his cousin? |
4508 | Where? |
4508 | Where? |
4508 | Where? |
4508 | Whether she could n''t give her last shirt to a beggar, as well as anybody else? |
4508 | Which was it? |
4508 | While Denis, slightly embarrassed, was uttering some appropriate words, the bishop suddenly asked:"Where is Mrs. Meadows? |
4508 | Whither had it gone? |
4508 | Whither would it bring him? |
4508 | Who can say? |
4508 | Who can tell what proposals were made in this particular case-- what degrading proposals, backed by the insidious offer of foreign gold? |
4508 | Who cared about rules? |
4508 | Who could tell? |
4508 | Who ever heard of a Jew telling the difference between a primrose and any other kind of rose? |
4508 | Who had spoken of England and conjured up the memories of his own home in the Midlands? |
4508 | Who is this man? |
4508 | Who killed it? |
4508 | Who knows when the next mineralogist will turn up? |
4508 | Who knows? |
4508 | Who was it? |
4508 | Who were they? |
4508 | Who would have dreamt of finding a house of this kind in such a situation? |
4508 | Who would lend him fifteen pounds? |
4508 | Who''s going to pick that up? |
4508 | Who? |
4508 | Why all these strange letterings-- so unnecessary, so dangerous to the life of an orthodox Christian? |
4508 | Why are sinecures extinct? |
4508 | Why are you intent on these conundrums?" |
4508 | Why be thirsty, why be sober, when you can get as drunk as a lord for the asking? |
4508 | Why can not fishes live on land? |
4508 | Why could n''t you speak up sooner? |
4508 | Why could not van Koppen see the beauty of such dreamings? |
4508 | Why cry about it?''" |
4508 | Why did God create water, when land would have been so much more useful? |
4508 | Why do n''t you drive up one day and have a look at his Locri Faun? |
4508 | Why do n''t you write a book about these things, Denis?" |
4508 | Why do politicians exist?" |
4508 | Why does everybody anticipate my ideas? |
4508 | Why does everybody leave so soon?" |
4508 | Why grumble at the inscrutable ways of Providence? |
4508 | Why has Signor Malipizzo set the lady free? |
4508 | Why have n''t you come to tea lately? |
4508 | Why interfere? |
4508 | Why is a poppy show more convincing than the COMEDIE FRANCAISE? |
4508 | Why is everybody so much alike? |
4508 | Why not amalgamate our respective civilizations?" |
4508 | Why not be cheerful about it? |
4508 | Why not go a step further? |
4508 | Why not here?" |
4508 | Why not organize a procession at once, a penitential procession? |
4508 | Why not salt a vineyard? |
4508 | Why not shout? |
4508 | Why not? |
4508 | Why not? |
4508 | Why on earth should a globe- trotting bishop be bothered about the mineralogy of Nepenthe? |
4508 | Why overhead? |
4508 | Why should Denis? |
4508 | Why should I impose this strain upon myself? |
4508 | Why should I plague myself with what is tedious? |
4508 | Why should I pretend to be interested in what a child can grasp? |
4508 | Why should She now think differently? |
4508 | Why should not a fountain dry up if it wants to? |
4508 | Why should she look as if she had seen a ghost? |
4508 | Why should you want to read about them? |
4508 | Why was everybody so violent, so extreme in their views? |
4508 | Why, then the scheme might fall through and-- he added to himself-- how was he going to get his share of the plunder? |
4508 | Why? |
4508 | Why? |
4508 | Why? |
4508 | Why? |
4508 | Why? |
4508 | Why?" |
4508 | Why?" |
4508 | Why?" |
4508 | Why?" |
4508 | Will you admire something more adapted to modern needs than those intemperate Hebrew doctrines; something with more delicately adjusted mechanism? |
4508 | Will you be there?" |
4508 | Will you come and see me, as you promised? |
4508 | Will you help me to grasp the pleasure which you seem to derive from it? |
4508 | Will you modify your conception of what is fair in conduct? |
4508 | Will you tell me what you think? |
4508 | Will you try to find out what it''s all about? |
4508 | Will you? |
4508 | With the thermometer at seventy- eight in this room?" |
4508 | Wo n''t you go?" |
4508 | Worrying about some pastoral epistle?" |
4508 | Would he be able to do anything? |
4508 | Would he ever again be satisfied with himself? |
4508 | Would he ever get things in order once more, and recapture his self- possession? |
4508 | Would he go into the house and do some reading or write a few letters? |
4508 | Would n''t you get more fun out of life if you were? |
4508 | Would n''t you get more fun out of life if you were?" |
4508 | Would she recognize him? |
4508 | Would such an existence ever fall to his own lot? |
4508 | Would these people never get civilized? |
4508 | Would you mind telling me whether PECUNIA really comes from PECUS? |
4508 | Would you not call it a procession of Titans, children of the Gods, storing up mountain- blocks for some earth- convulsing battle? |
4508 | Yes? |
4508 | You are coming to my picnic after the festival of Saint Eulalia? |
4508 | You are going to do me the honour, are you not, of sharing my simple luncheon? |
4508 | You are learning Russian, Madame Steynlin?" |
4508 | You are rather young for a Monsignor, are you not? |
4508 | You ca n''t think how it annoys me nowadays to see all these young people-- all these young people-- need I go into particulars?'' |
4508 | You catch my meaning?" |
4508 | You do n''t like advice, do you? |
4508 | You do n''t mind my saying so, do you?" |
4508 | You do n''t mind, do you?" |
4508 | You have doubtless heard about the FICUS RUMINALIS, at hose feet the cradle of Romulus and Remus was stranded? |
4508 | You have lately been to Florence, I hear? |
4508 | You have observed, have you not, that there is no running water on this island? |
4508 | You know our proverb? |
4508 | You know that American millionaire, van Koppen, and the scandal attached to his peculiar habits? |
4508 | You know the Cave of Mercury? |
4508 | You know what actually did happen, do n''t you? |
4508 | You know what he says? |
4508 | You like fairy tales?" |
4508 | You liked them too? |
4508 | You might collect them for me, will you? |
4508 | You might tell him I have n''t forgotten, will you? |
4508 | You pay for my peg and I''ll tell you all about it....""Heard the news? |
4508 | You remember how I warned you about that little affair of yours? |
4508 | You remember how inquisitive you were? |
4508 | You remember what an ass you made of yourself?" |
4508 | You saw it too? |
4508 | You think I was consoled by his words? |
4508 | You will perhaps be able to have a cup of tea with me to- day?" |
4508 | You''ll all come, wo n''t you? |
4508 | You''ll do that, wo n''t you? |
4508 | You''ll show the bishop all over it, wo n''t you, Denis?" |
4508 | You''ll stay to luncheon?" |
4508 | Your English majority, in particular, is quite unaware of its debt to us: why should it turn eyes in our direction? |
56447 | After four months? 56447 And just put them on?" |
56447 | And what is our life worth without late hours? 56447 And you got all this for two pounds?" |
56447 | And you still go down at eleven? |
56447 | And your youngest sister has a little girl? |
56447 | Are Mr. Hancock''s clamps ready? |
56447 | Are birds happy? |
56447 | Are they all right? |
56447 | Are they showing up? |
56447 | Are they? |
56447 | Are you a millionaire my dear? 56447 Are you busy?" |
56447 | Are you familiar with Plato? |
56447 | Are you familiar with Professor Tyndall? |
56447 | Are you for the top? |
56447 | Are you ill? |
56447 | At your Association, d''you mean? 56447 Besides, what''s the good?" |
56447 | Better, boysie? |
56447 | Busy? |
56447 | Busy? |
56447 | But are n''t clothes awful, anyhow? 56447 But the people at the Nursing Association?" |
56447 | But why should they assume that you would do the same? |
56447 | But why thirty? 56447 But--_how_ can you get about?" |
56447 | Ca n''t you make her see one of the others? |
56447 | Ca n''t you send it back? |
56447 | Ca n''t you? |
56447 | Can I have my charts? |
56447 | Can I take off my things? |
56447 | Can he see me? |
56447 | Can y''remember? 56447 Com- pen-_sa_-tions?" |
56447 | Come and try it now, d''ye mind? |
56447 | Could you come and see me? |
56447 | D''you feel bad? 56447 D''you mean to say she''s improper?" |
56447 | D''you remember the extraordinary moment when you felt the machine going along; even with the man holding the handle- bars? |
56447 | D''you think it right to try to introduce single pieces of Japanese art into English surroundings? |
56447 | Did anybody see anything of Mrs. Binks at the station? |
56447 | Did they Mag; so they did me; did you dream? |
56447 | Did you have a pleasant week- end? |
56447 | Did you see this month''s Studio? |
56447 | Did you sell them? |
56447 | Did you_ hate_ being there? |
56447 | Do n''t you know, my dear girl? |
56447 | Do n''t you think so? 56447 Do n''t you think so?" |
56447 | Do n''t you think soh? |
56447 | Do n''t you want to marry-- ever; ever? |
56447 | Do they put dressing on it? 56447 Do we smoke in here?" |
56447 | Do you believe in blunted sensibilities? |
56447 | Do you indeed? |
56447 | Do you know Thomas''s-- the chemist-- in Baker Street? |
56447 | Do you know Thomas''s? |
56447 | Do you like children? |
56447 | Do you like haddock, dear? |
56447 | Do you like your life? |
56447 | Do you mean to say there is someone_ dying_ there? |
56447 | Do you mean to say they do n''t put them into a separate room to_ die_? |
56447 | Do you mean you are going away? |
56447 | Do you really like them? |
56447 | Do you think I should like salad? |
56447 | Do you think it would be_ wrong_ to write mediocre stuff? |
56447 | Do_ phwatt_ me dear? |
56447 | Does one always know? |
56447 | Does that matter? |
56447 | East is East and West is West and never the twain can meet? |
56447 | Eh? |
56447 | Feeling the effects? |
56447 | Friday is it? 56447 Gerald, do you think it''s all right on the whole?" |
56447 | Get any help? |
56447 | Good advice my boy-- if we all took good advice... eh Miss Hens''n? 56447 Got a match, G?" |
56447 | Got anything on on Friday Miss Henderson? |
56447 | Had n''t you a bell? |
56447 | Hancock busy Miss Hens''? |
56447 | Hancock busy? |
56447 | Hancock busy? |
56447 | Hancock too busy? |
56447 | Has Mr. Leyton a patient Emma? |
56447 | Has my telegram gone? 56447 Has n''t she told you?" |
56447 | Have you been out alone yet? |
56447 | Have you looked at the book? |
56447 | Have you observed with what a remarkable brilliance the tender green shines out against the soot- black branches? |
56447 | Have you read any of his? |
56447 | Have you read that novel? |
56447 | Have you seen the Ducaynes lately? |
56447 | Have you written anything? |
56447 | Have you_ left_ your association? |
56447 | He''s better than he used to be, is n''t he? |
56447 | Her_ husband_? |
56447 | How can I answer till I''m told the_ date_? |
56447 | How can I take a case dear when I have n''t got my uniforms? |
56447 | How can you stand it? |
56447 | How d''you like this get up? |
56447 | How did you find out? |
56447 | How did you get on? |
56447 | How do you mean de- er? |
56447 | How do you mean dear? |
56447 | How long are you going to stay here? |
56447 | How old is she? |
56447 | How''s it coming in? 56447 How''s that eh?" |
56447 | Hullo, you porking? 56447 I do n''t believe you would; but if you had?" |
56447 | I drempt that I dwelt in Marble Halls; you awake von Bohlen? |
56447 | I might ask her-- won''t they let you leave things here? |
56447 | I said Herr_ Epstein_; what can I do? 56447 I say, has this man got a chart? |
56447 | I say, what''s the name of the American chap Hancock was talking about at lunch yesterday? |
56447 | I think we''d better leave her here, do n''t you von Bohlen? |
56447 | I think-- in that matter-- one must not allow one''s mind to be led away? |
56447 | I wish I could wear things like that round my neck, do n''t you von Bohlen? |
56447 | I, my dear? 56447 If you_ had_ a brother would he like salad?" |
56447 | In life or in books? |
56447 | In one evening,trumpeted Jan."I say are you going to leave?" |
56447 | Is Mr. Buck here? |
56447 | Is he very young? |
56447 | Is it Miss Henderson? |
56447 | Is it a pretty book? |
56447 | Is it all right, James? |
56447 | Is n''t it a glorious Spring evening? |
56447 | Is n''t she_ extraordinary_? |
56447 | Is she German? |
56447 | Is she scientific? |
56447 | Is that a compliment to us? |
56447 | Is that a forest? |
56447 | Is that a nice one-- what''s it about? |
56447 | Is that so, Jan? |
56447 | Is that the Henderson? |
56447 | Is that your invariable experience of humanity?'' |
56447 | Is the young man in a position to take her abroad? |
56447 | Is there anyone else in the waiting room? |
56447 | Is there anything to go back? |
56447 | It is awful-- because we are all blunting our sensibilities all the time-- are we not? |
56447 | It''s enough to_ make_ anyone ill."_ What_ is? |
56447 | Jan,_ what_ have you ordered? |
56447 | Just so, have you written? |
56447 | Kike? |
56447 | Like Cabinet ministers? |
56447 | Like dining at restaurants? |
56447 | Like''i m? |
56447 | Miriam, are you a pantheist? |
56447 | Miss Campbell? |
56447 | More or less----"Did you boil the remains? |
56447 | Morning, Pater got a gas case? |
56447 | Mr. Hancock busy? 56447 Mr. Hancock busy?" |
56447 | Mr. Hancock never gets rushed or flurried does he? 56447 Must ye go? |
56447 | No, I will; but how shall I know what to keep? 56447 Oh Miss Hens''n"she pursued absently,"if Mudie''s send d''you mind lookin''and choosin''us something nice?" |
56447 | Oh why did n''t you? |
56447 | Oh yes? |
56447 | Oh yes? |
56447 | Oh, Emma, will you ask the workshop for Mr. Hancock''s rubber and clamps? |
56447 | Oh, is this the annual? |
56447 | Oh-- she''s married...."She''s married is she? |
56447 | Ought she to marry? |
56447 | Ph-- Ph-- Major Moke''s case ready? |
56447 | Phoohe puffed,"I''ve been taking phenacetin all day; you do n''t get heads do you?" |
56447 | Read it? |
56447 | Right my love, right, right, always right-- Hancock busy? |
56447 | Ro, you_ are_ silly, who''s Buck, Ley? |
56447 | Shall we tell her? |
56447 | Still here? |
56447 | Stop and have a bit of dinner with us can ye? |
56447 | Tea darling? |
56447 | Tea? 56447 Tell me my dear girl"he said smiting her knee with gentle affection,"is there someone who would like to marry her?" |
56447 | That''s London-- isn''t it? 56447 Then why not do it now?" |
56447 | Then you can both really ride? |
56447 | There''s a patient of Mr. Hancock''s in pain, can you see them if I can persuade them? |
56447 | There-- what do you think of that? |
56447 | They''re too absolutely pig- headed and silly...."_ Is n''t_ she intolerant? |
56447 | Too many whiskies? |
56447 | Trustworthy? 56447 Two"said Mr. Leyton, noisily spooning up jelly,"any more of that stuff mater, how about Hancock?" |
56447 | Us? |
56447 | We going to wait for Mr. Hancock, Mater? |
56447 | We have the honour of begging Mr. Leyton''s company on the occasion of our visit, dinner included, to----"What''s the date? |
56447 | We went out-- last night-- after dark-- and rode-- round Russell Square-- twice-- in our knickers----"_ No._ Did you really? 56447 Well dear who should I mention if not you?" |
56447 | Well in general? |
56447 | Well of course she_ might_----"Is there a sweetheart on the horizon? |
56447 | Well that''ll be better for you wo n''t it? |
56447 | Well-- er-- you embarrass me, child, how shall we put it to her, Jan? |
56447 | Well-- what is he_ here_? 56447 Well-- why not? |
56447 | Well? |
56447 | Well? |
56447 | What are you going to do? 56447 What can I do?" |
56447 | What can he do? |
56447 | What did Ro want? |
56447 | What did he do? |
56447 | What did he say? |
56447 | What did she tell you? |
56447 | What did you do at lunch time dear? |
56447 | What did you have for supper? |
56447 | What did you say? |
56447 | What do you think of the saddle? |
56447 | What does she do with her holidays? 56447 What happened?" |
56447 | What happened? |
56447 | What have I done now? |
56447 | What is it you want? |
56447 | What is she? |
56447 | What is that book? |
56447 | What is the matter with her? |
56447 | What is the matter? |
56447 | What reason? |
56447 | What things little one? |
56447 | What things? |
56447 | What time are you coming dear? |
56447 | What was Susan like at school? |
56447 | What was the employment Mr. Dolland was speaking of? |
56447 | What would you do in our place? |
56447 | What would you have done? |
56447 | What you doing s''aafnoon? |
56447 | What you having? |
56447 | What you having? |
56447 | What''s it totting up to this month? 56447 What''s the show?" |
56447 | When are you going to get up? |
56447 | Where did you get them? |
56447 | Where on earth did you find the money child? |
56447 | Where shall I put it? |
56447 | Where should I go? 56447 Who''s your half past one patient Ley?" |
56447 | Why Chalk? |
56447 | Why are you late Frederika Elizabeth von Bohlen? |
56447 | Why begin it at all, Jan? |
56447 | Why did n''t you go? |
56447 | Why do n''t you ask them to raise your salary? |
56447 | Why do n''t you two write? |
56447 | Why do you say their wives were all like cats? |
56447 | Why does n''t she have him in her room? 56447 Why have n''t you gone away for the week- end, child?" |
56447 | Why not asthore? |
56447 | Why not write an article about a lamp- post? |
56447 | Why on earth not? 56447 Why on earth?" |
56447 | Why on earth? |
56447 | Why pay up? 56447 Why should I? |
56447 | Why? |
56447 | Will somebody send them up when they''re done? |
56447 | Will you teach her shorthand if I teach her typing? |
56447 | Would you be afraid to go round there now? |
56447 | Would you call that treachery to the other person? |
56447 | Wrong numbersaid Miriam,"will you please ring off?" |
56447 | Yes-- isn''t she nice? 56447 Yes?" |
56447 | You busy? 56447 You had tea?" |
56447 | You have had a good deal of worry-- how is your father? |
56447 | You have n''t been able to hear of a case? |
56447 | You know how to cook? |
56447 | You look very happy tonight child; what have you been doing? |
56447 | You never get heads do ye? |
56447 | You remember there''s Lady Cazalet? |
56447 | You think it''s only outward? |
56447 | You''ll be able to come Ley wo n''t you? |
56447 | Ze got someone with him now? |
56447 | _ Have n''t I?_ There''s a sing- song at Headquarters Friday. |
56447 | _ Have_ you Mag? |
56447 | _ Have_ you? 56447 _ I?_""Well dear, I thought you would n''t mind calling and finding out for me how the land lies." |
56447 | _ Jan_, why do n''t_ you_? |
56447 | _ Nelly!_ D''they know he''s down? 56447 _ Oh_, did you go?..." |
56447 | _ Really?_ Are you sure? |
56447 | _ Really?_ Are you sure? |
56447 | _ What?_"I''ve sent for Dr. 56447 _ What?_"said Mr. Orly softly, emerging from his serviette,"a traitor in the camp?" |
56447 | _ What?_said Mr. Orly softly, emerging from his serviette,"a traitor in the camp?" |
56447 | _ Write?_"Write what? |
56447 | _ Write?_"Write what? |
56447 | ***** Which was the stronger? |
56447 | --you little simpleton--"Who? |
56447 | ... Was Mr. Canfield thwarted? |
56447 | ... glaring muddy hot pink? |
56447 | 14"Tea up?" |
56447 | 2"Books posted? |
56447 | 2"Why did n''t you ask him to supper La Fée?" |
56447 | 3"Is this Reading?" |
56447 | 3"That your machine in the yard, Mirry?" |
56447 | 4"Has she applied to the Association to which she belongs?" |
56447 | 6"Was she your favourite schoolfellow?" |
56447 | 7"What is your book dear?" |
56447 | 8 What is it in me that stands back? |
56447 | 9"You do n''t think of riding up over the downs at this time of night?" |
56447 | Albert...? |
56447 | Amadou, gold and tin... Japanese paper? |
56447 | And all the other people?" |
56447 | Any idea?" |
56447 | Are n''t they shockin''?" |
56447 | Are n''t you glad you are alive to- day, when all these things are happening?" |
56447 | Are n''t you going to have any pudding?" |
56447 | Are n''t you two going to have any pudding?" |
56447 | Are there two Gods?... |
56447 | As before; was not that enough, and more than enough? |
56447 | Bassanio-- was it not just as wrong to get into debt and raise money from the Jews as to let money out on usury? |
56447 | Because she had blurted out"Oh what a perfectly lovely picture"when he showed her the painting of his cousin? |
56447 | Before she said"teeth?" |
56447 | Buck?" |
56447 | Buck?" |
56447 | But German was the same? |
56447 | But I think we must get some powder and a puff.... Do you think you could get some...?" |
56447 | But how could he speak so of her? |
56447 | But was it a workshop or a surgery expense that had gone wrong? |
56447 | But was not indiscriminate deliberate conscious goodness to everybody an insult to humanity? |
56447 | But what was it for? |
56447 | But what was she going to do with it? |
56447 | But what_ was_ it? |
56447 | But where could all these wives go? |
56447 | But why are the English so awful about music? |
56447 | But why do not men acknowledge this? |
56447 | CHAPTER II 1"Been to church?" |
56447 | CHAPTER XXIV 1"There; how d''ye like that, eh? |
56447 | CHAPTER XXX 1"Regular field- day, eh Miss Hens''n? |
56447 | CHAPTER XXXIII 1"What a_ huge_ room?" |
56447 | Can I alter it?" |
56447 | Can no one be trusted? |
56447 | Can you imagine a woman?" |
56447 | Can you manage it?" |
56447 | Cigarettes and talk.... What would Mr. Hancock think? |
56447 | Come on Saturday_ any_ time or Sunday morning if you ca n''t manage the week- end?" |
56447 | Could n''t the man see the look of the square and the moonlight? |
56447 | Could she not see, could not both of them see that the quiet sheen of the green- painted window- frame cast off their complacent speech? |
56447 | D''they know Hancock''s down Nelly?" |
56447 | D''they know you''re down?" |
56447 | D''you think I could tell Miss Hens''n that one Nelly?--you''re not easily shocked, are you?" |
56447 | D''you understand him?" |
56447 | Did a man_ ever_ speak in a natural voice-- neither blustering, nor displaying his cleverness, nor being simply a lustful slave? |
56447 | Did he really feel that suddenly sitting there in the consulting- room? |
56447 | Did he too feel oppressed with the gas and the pale madder store cupboards? |
56447 | Did she really like it? |
56447 | Did the authors know when they did it? |
56447 | Did they know how hard she was working? |
56447 | Did they not hear it tinkle emptily back from the twined leaves and tendrils, the flowers and butterflies painted on the window in front of them? |
56447 | Did they really like reading"The Evolution of the Idea of God"or were they only pretending? |
56447 | Did you look in the wallet?" |
56447 | Do n''t forget to send off Major Moke''s case sharp will ye?" |
56447 | Do you know this book?" |
56447 | Do you realise how lucky you are in being a stock size?" |
56447 | Do you realise you''re in Brussels? |
56447 | Do you realise? |
56447 | Do you?" |
56447 | Do your friends know how things are?" |
56447 | Does n''t she look pretty?" |
56447 | Does n''t she rest then?" |
56447 | Ever seen anything like it?" |
56447 | Everything''s happened just right has n''t it?" |
56447 | Going to sing Ley or to song, eh? |
56447 | Got any oil?" |
56447 | Had it been a dull day when she first called? |
56447 | Had it been asked twice? |
56447 | Had she cut them, standing with her back to the room, or they her? |
56447 | Had she wanted other things in the years of her strange occupation? |
56447 | Had the hall clock struck three? |
56447 | Hancock?" |
56447 | Has n''t she told you? |
56447 | Has she?" |
56447 | Has the Pater got anybody?" |
56447 | Have I not already enough on my fair young shoulders?" |
56447 | Have some paté Miss Hens''--No? |
56447 | Have they raised your salary?" |
56447 | Have you?" |
56447 | He came forward across the soft grey green carpet to take the clamps and murmured gently"Have you got my carbolic?" |
56447 | He''s longing to meet you?" |
56447 | How are you getting on? |
56447 | How are you? |
56447 | How can a country be ruled? |
56447 | How can it?" |
56447 | How could anyone think it was a place, like other places? |
56447 | How could he of all men in the world be taken out of himself by an effective trick? |
56447 | How could they go on living and laughing and talking? |
56447 | How did Eve manage to read Music and Morals and Olive Schreiner here? |
56447 | How did he come to know all about it and to put it into words? |
56447 | How did he come to know such a person? |
56447 | How did he dare to use it to her? |
56447 | How did people find out how to do these things? |
56447 | How did she feel? |
56447 | How do they know it? |
56447 | How do you know? |
56447 | How do you like your life here?" |
56447 | How do you suppose I can get up, have breakfast and be down here before eleven?" |
56447 | How had he known that she cared for things? |
56447 | How is the decayed gentlewoman?" |
56447 | How long would it take me in evenings?" |
56447 | How many did you have this morning?" |
56447 | How much did the tea cost here? |
56447 | How much would a hotel cost? |
56447 | How superficial...."Where did you meet her?" |
56447 | I ca n''t think why they do it myself-- sheer well to call a spade a spade sheer bestiality those French writers-- don''t ye think so, eh?" |
56447 | I say I''ve got a new song-- like to try it presently or are ye too busy?" |
56447 | I say are we going to read''The Evolution Idea of God''to- night?" |
56447 | I say has this man got a chart?" |
56447 | I say if I have Buck in will you finish up these things?" |
56447 | I say, d''you mind just lookin''--at the books?" |
56447 | I say, vi got any gold and tin?" |
56447 | I say-- v''you greased all Hancock''s and the Pater''s instruments?" |
56447 | I suppose I ought to learn typing and shorthand; but where could I find the money for the training?" |
56447 | I think it''s a reflection on her taste, do n''t you Jan?" |
56447 | If she believed it she must loathe her married state and her children... how_ could_ she let life continue through her? |
56447 | If they did_ not_, what were they doing? |
56447 | In what way?" |
56447 | Is God a chess- player? |
56447 | Is Miss Dear going to Bournemouth?" |
56447 | Is it so awful?" |
56447 | Is it your landlady?" |
56447 | Is n''t he trustworthy?" |
56447 | Is n''t it porking?" |
56447 | Is n''t it tahsome?" |
56447 | Is that Tomlinson? |
56447 | Is there a list?" |
56447 | It was wrong; but were not they too wrong? |
56447 | It''s the wickedest thing of its kind I''ve ever heard of; some great fat healthy woman... why do n''t the_ doctors_ stop it?" |
56447 | Just look at this-- how''s that for twisted? |
56447 | Like caviare?" |
56447 | Lilla? |
56447 | Lloyd''s? |
56447 | Miriam went in briskly...."Well? |
56447 | Miss Szigmondy had mentioned hansoms... supposing she should have to pay her share? |
56447 | Moore? |
56447 | Mr. Hancock seemed to think it was a sort of disgraceful joke... what was it? |
56447 | Must monarchies decay? |
56447 | Oh death, where is thy sting? |
56447 | Oh grave, where is thy victory? |
56447 | Or would you prefer that I should do so?" |
56447 | Orly?" |
56447 | Perhaps it was only in seeing Shakespeare acted that one could appreciate him? |
56447 | Perhaps that is what they all_ do_? |
56447 | Portia? |
56447 | Pouring out a cup he held the teapot suspended,"another cup?" |
56447 | Que faire?" |
56447 | Ready dearest?" |
56447 | Referee? |
56447 | Schoolboys got their first ideas...._ How_ could Newnham and Girton women endure it? |
56447 | See?" |
56447 | See?" |
56447 | Shall we just try this over?" |
56447 | She looked fearfully ill. Was she ill? |
56447 | She was not sure that she did... not in the way that he did.... How did he know that she had noticed any of his things? |
56447 | She was saying something else.... How to mention it? |
56447 | Spring? |
56447 | Surely she must feel the opposition in the room? |
56447 | That is one of the things I have always wanted to stop and remember.... What was it all about? |
56447 | That was why you did n''t send your box on to me? |
56447 | The Future of the Race? |
56447 | The Greeks were cultured; but they are barbarians... why? |
56447 | The Hyamson girls-- they had been foreigners, like the Siggs and the de Bevers, but different... what was the difference in a Jew? |
56447 | The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world? |
56447 | The high huskily hooting voice... what was the overwhelming impression? |
56447 | The little man talking about the wonders of the linotype in the smoking room.... How did I get into the smoking room? |
56447 | The poetry of Shakespeare...? |
56447 | The thought of Wales full of Welsh people like her, makes one mad with sorrow.... Did she think I could get to know her by hearing all her complaints? |
56447 | Then everything in life depends upon women? |
56447 | Then why did the Restoration come? |
56447 | Then why not stop_ now_? |
56447 | There''s no time now...."Do you like living alone in London?" |
56447 | They marched along at a great rate, very upright and swift-- like grenadiers-- why grenadiers? |
56447 | They were like a sort of secret society... all agreed about something... about what? |
56447 | They_ did_ just miss it...."Why, my child? |
56447 | This is the same as Literature and Dogma.... Only in Literature and Dogma there is that thing that is perfectly true-- that thing-- what is it? |
56447 | Totting up, eh?" |
56447 | Was Mr. Orly in"the den"or in his surgery? |
56447 | Was it a rescue, or a sacrifice to the embarrassing occasion? |
56447 | Was it any good?" |
56447 | Was it because it suggested that one cared more for the gay circumstances than for the thing seen? |
56447 | Was it nearly tea- time? |
56447 | Was that a method-- just a social method? |
56447 | Was the idea of divine right a mistake? |
56447 | Was there no way out? |
56447 | Was there something wrong in it? |
56447 | Were people who lived together always like this, always brisk and joking and keeping it up? |
56447 | Were they good and right? |
56447 | What could be more ladylike, more-- simple, more altogether suitable?" |
56447 | What could she do? |
56447 | What did everybody mean about them? |
56447 | What did he mean by saying that the art of conversation was doomed? |
56447 | What did she want? |
56447 | What did we send it in for?" |
56447 | What did you have for supper, child?" |
56447 | What did you want to consult me about?" |
56447 | What do English people want? |
56447 | What do people_ think_ when they say these things? |
56447 | What for? |
56447 | What future would it bring? |
56447 | What had become of her autumn of hard work that was to lift her out of her personal affairs and lead somewhere? |
56447 | What had become of the card and letter that came with the case? |
56447 | What had it been for her? |
56447 | What is it? |
56447 | What is the meaning of it? |
56447 | What is''raining''? |
56447 | What made it different to ordinary candlesticks? |
56447 | What ought one to be if one can neither be quite a Roundhead nor quite a Cavalier? |
56447 | What ought she to have done? |
56447 | What race? |
56447 | What then? |
56447 | What was a Tudor mantelpiece? |
56447 | What was everybody_ doing_? |
56447 | What was it I said the other day? |
56447 | What was it all for? |
56447 | What was it that came from the stage? |
56447 | What was it they had seen? |
56447 | What was she doing here, among all these worldly musicians? |
56447 | What was she doing now? |
56447 | What was she doing, bearing herself so easily in the inner circle of English science? |
56447 | What was she trying to do? |
56447 | What was that I was just thinking? |
56447 | What was that idea in Literature and Dogma? |
56447 | What was the secret of the everlasting same awfulness of even the nicest of refined sheltered middle- class Englishwoman? |
56447 | What were they doing when one forgot them? |
56447 | What world? |
56447 | What would Miss Dear do or say? |
56447 | What_ was_ Shakespeare? |
56447 | What_ was_ this effective thing? |
56447 | What_ will_ you? |
56447 | When he said the conservatoire was so near that there would be plenty of time was not that as good as saying she might be a little late? |
56447 | Where are you?" |
56447 | Where had he sat doing all those pages of beautiful spidery book- keeping? |
56447 | Where was Leyton?" |
56447 | Where was she? |
56447 | Where would a woman, a wife- woman, be in a life like this? |
56447 | Which is most cruel, to take life or to torture the living? |
56447 | Who are you speaking of? |
56447 | Who chooses the music? |
56447 | Who is Jacob Boehme? |
56447 | Who started it? |
56447 | Who was Mr. Wilson? |
56447 | Who would not rather live with Charles than with Cromwell? |
56447 | Whose fault was it that she was tired? |
56447 | Why are they not musicians? |
56447 | Why ca n''t it explain? |
56447 | Why children? |
56447 | Why did Miss Szigmondy go to these things? |
56447 | Why did he keep making such impossible suggestions? |
56447 | Why did n''t he admit it at once? |
56447 | Why did one''s head get into such a hot fearful state before tea? |
56447 | Why did she imagine that one was also forlorn? |
56447 | Why did she want to stay? |
56447 | Why did that make one so sad? |
56447 | Why did they not come up? |
56447 | Why did you not come? |
56447 | Why do lovely things and people go on happening? |
56447 | Why do n''t you Mag?" |
56447 | Why do you stand it?" |
56447 | Why had he never spoken of her uncle''s cottage so near his own? |
56447 | Why had he not said they were staying with him? |
56447 | Why had they gone? |
56447 | Why is it that no one seems to know what north London is? |
56447 | Why not go to the Lyons at Portland Road station and have a meal and get calm and think out a plan? |
56447 | Why not thirty- one?" |
56447 | Why not? |
56447 | Why not? |
56447 | Why say anything about it? |
56447 | Why that amazed stupefaction? |
56447 | Why was nature there? |
56447 | Why was one allowed to be so utterly happy? |
56447 | Why was she feeling so miserable? |
56447 | Why was she forlorn? |
56447 | Why was there always a feeling of guilt about a salary? |
56447 | Why? |
56447 | Why? |
56447 | Why?... |
56447 | Will you call on them-- to- day? |
56447 | Would either of them soon mention tea? |
56447 | Would her room be a bright suburban bedroom? |
56447 | Would n''t she, Jan?" |
56447 | Yes, that was wonderful but what was the joke? |
56447 | You despise paté?" |
56447 | You do n''t care who hears the long tales as long as you do n''t...."Have you seen her doctor?" |
56447 | _ Grove_?" |
56447 | _ Is n''t_ it a lovely day? |
56447 | _ Is n''t_ it? |
56447 | _ What?_ It was like... a gesture. |
56447 | _ What_ was it Mr. Wilson was so sure about?... |
56447 | _ What_ was she like when she was alone and dropped that bright_ manner_...."Have you made any New Year resolutions? |
56447 | _ What_ world? |
56447 | _ Why?_""Well they asked me to. |
56447 | _ Why_ do I meet such nice people? |
56447 | _ Why_ do they do it?" |
56447 | she responded emphatically.... Why ca n''t I be quiet and hear what he has to say? |
56614 | After the Gamarala has gone at night in that manner, and tapped at the door, she will ask,''Who is it?'' 56614 Afterwards I asked at elder brother''s hand regarding it,''Elder brother, to whom are we to give this?'' |
56614 | All these persons being now without memory or understanding, what saying of sooth is there? |
56614 | And thy mother? |
56614 | Are the Crocodiles cheated quite, Thus the Ketala yam to bite? |
56614 | Are we good enough for you? |
56614 | Are we good enough for you? |
56614 | Are we good enough for you? |
56614 | At a time when I was not here did ye give a resting- place to any one else? |
56614 | Canst thou grow and give me a Margosa tree without bitterness? |
56614 | Does the Mouseling eat the cooked rice? 56614 Dost thou carry me by the legs to some place to give a livelihood to thee?" |
56614 | Dost thou not know the help I gave thee? 56614 For whom?" |
56614 | Hast thou not an axe? |
56614 | Having seen the earth why didst thou not come? |
56614 | Having seen the sky why didst thou not come? |
56614 | How is it that mother is dead? |
56614 | If not, how shall I carry thee? |
56614 | In what country, Bola, Jackal, do the fish who are in the water sport on the land? |
56614 | Leave this discourse,said the devil;"with what canst thou sow our field this following year?" |
56614 | Mother, whose is that house? |
56614 | My Lord Devil,replied the husbandman,"how have I cheated you who have chosen first? |
56614 | Upasakaralas, where are you going? |
56614 | Was the egg given? |
56614 | What am I to do? 56614 What are the facts about the bulls to me? |
56614 | What are you lying down for? |
56614 | What are you plucking mangoes for? |
56614 | What are you taking those elephants for? |
56614 | What art thou going to seek and eat in this forest? |
56614 | What do you eat? |
56614 | What do you eat? |
56614 | What do you eat? |
56614 | What hast thou come to- day for? |
56614 | What have you come again for? |
56614 | What is in thy hands? |
56614 | What is it, Gamarala? 56614 What is it?" |
56614 | What is it? |
56614 | What is it? |
56614 | What is that about? |
56614 | What is the assistance? |
56614 | What is the use of sitting and staying? 56614 What is the use of sitting and staying? |
56614 | What is the use of sitting and staying? 56614 What is the use of sitting and staying? |
56614 | What is the use of sitting and staying? 56614 What is the use of sitting and staying? |
56614 | What is the use of sitting and staying? 56614 What is the use of sitting and staying? |
56614 | What is the use of sitting and staying? 56614 What is this, Sapu- flowers''Minister, you are doing?" |
56614 | What is[ the use of] sitting and staying? 56614 What name am I to say?" |
56614 | What son- in- law? |
56614 | What things dost thou want for it? |
56614 | What, Tokkan the Devil- dancer, are you crying for? |
56614 | Whence? |
56614 | Where are you going? |
56614 | Where are you going? |
56614 | Where are you taking them? |
56614 | Where are you taking those turtle- doves? |
56614 | Where shall I make the trap? |
56614 | Where, Bolan, are the cakes? |
56614 | Where, Upasakarala, are you going? |
56614 | Where? 56614 While he was outside how could I, sitting in the cave, kill him?" |
56614 | Why are you sleeping yet? |
56614 | Why hast thou come to- day? |
56614 | Why wilt thou eat me? |
56614 | Why, Bola? |
56614 | ''Prince,''she replied,''what need hast thou of attendants? |
56614 | ''Woman, hast thou seen my attendants?'' |
56614 | A King having come that way while they were there, asked,"Are you Yakas or human beings?" |
56614 | A rain- storm caused it to contract(?) |
56614 | A younger brother of mine is there; how can I go without him? |
56614 | After he asked,"What do you do with the bill- hook?" |
56614 | After he came home, the woman, seeing it, asked,"Where did you eat Kaekiri?" |
56614 | After he had been looking the Lion says,"Having been like a what- is- it stone, did n''t you preach to me in overbearing words?" |
56614 | After he had informed him, the King asked,"What are the three matters?" |
56614 | After he had said,"Why should I be of assistance to thee?" |
56614 | After it became night, the elder brother and the younger brother having come home, the younger brother asked,"Girl, where is thy mother?" |
56614 | After laughing, it asked,"Are you taking me in this manner to cook?" |
56614 | After she had asked,"Who was it? |
56614 | After she had come she said, sniffing twice,"Where does this smell of fresh human flesh come from?" |
56614 | After she has asked from inside the house,''Who is it?'' |
56614 | After that the King asked at the hand of the Prince,"How did you kill the Yaka?" |
56614 | After that, one day this Prince asked,"Mother, what is the reason why your eyes have become blind, and my eyes are well?" |
56614 | After that, the King asked,"Where wilt thou grow it?" |
56614 | After that, the King caught a bird, and clenching it in his fist, asked the sooth- sayer,"What is there in this fist?" |
56614 | After that, the Prince and Princess ate the food, and having talked much, the Princess asked,"For what purpose have you come?" |
56614 | After that, the Princess asked at the hand of the Prince,"Where is your death?" |
56614 | After that, the Yaka asked,"What do you eat?" |
56614 | After that, the Yaka brought the lost sheep, and having given it to the Prince, asked,"What more do you want?" |
56614 | After that, the man having gone near those women and boys, asked,"What is it? |
56614 | After that, what does the Princess do? |
56614 | After the Cat had said,"It is not a fault to eat a dead one, is it?" |
56614 | After the Lion, having become angry, said,"Wilt thou come to swim that side and this side with me? |
56614 | After the adopted Prince finished dragging the hop counters, and came to the palace, the King asked,"Did you give the letter to the potter?" |
56614 | After the boy had come in, the mother asked at the hand of the boy,"What is your name?" |
56614 | After the elder sister went to the rice field, the younger brother asked at the hand of the elder sister,"Why has no one come from our house?" |
56614 | After the friendly Turtle asked,"What is it, friend?" |
56614 | After the judge asked,"Dost thou know about this lawsuit?" |
56614 | After the man comes home, the woman asks,"Is the jungle cut yet?" |
56614 | After they had come, the King having given quarters to the ministers, and having given them food and drink, asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | Afterwards that younger sister''s girl asked,"Loku- Amma,[ 34] where is our mother?" |
56614 | Afterwards the Gamarala asked the Deer,"What, Deer, is thy elder sister''s illness?" |
56614 | Afterwards the Jackal Panditaya asked,"What are you on that flat rock for?" |
56614 | Afterwards the King asked the people,"Who is able to bring this flower?" |
56614 | Afterwards the Prince, taking his sword, came near the Rakshasi, and asked,"Did n''t three men come here?" |
56614 | Afterwards the great village Boar asked the other Boars,"Who else is there to eat your flesh?" |
56614 | Afterwards the woman said,"Now then, are we not cutting the child''s hair to- morrow? |
56614 | Afterwards, taking those things, as they were getting very far away the man said,"What have you forgotten? |
56614 | Afterwards, the man having plucked Kaekiri, and filled and tied up the bag, said to the woman,"Shall I take the girl, or shall I take the bag?" |
56614 | Afterwards, when the Rakshasa came home,"What is this, Bolan?" |
56614 | Afterwards, when the elder sister''s two men came, having seen that she was lying down,"What are you lying down for to- day also?" |
56614 | Afterwards, when those two men came home, having seen that the woman was lying down,"What are you lying down for?" |
56614 | Again he asked,"Why didst thou not come on the first day?" |
56614 | Again the King having called the Monkey asked,"Whose is that city?" |
56614 | Am I without clothes to that extent?" |
56614 | And what canst thou do to me, who having roared and caused the bottom of the ears to burst, and killed every animal, eats it?" |
56614 | Are there dried coconuts and meneri[ 52] here?" |
56614 | Are these dead without any uncanny sound?" |
56614 | Are you not going to hunt to- day?" |
56614 | Are you saying it falsely? |
56614 | Are you the millet trader, Bola?" |
56614 | Art thou a person afraid to have the sovereignty bestowed on thee? |
56614 | Art thou unable to go hunting[ alone] this day only?" |
56614 | As he was saying"Friend,"the Crocodile rose to the surface, and asked,"Friend, did you get it settled to- day?" |
56614 | As he was thinking about it that poor man asked,"What is it, Gamarala, that you are thinking about in that way?" |
56614 | As the King was sorrowful the Jackal says,"Are you mad, Sir, that you doubt my powers? |
56614 | As the Parrots getting soaked and soaked were driving off the Crow in this way, an old Parrot, sitting down, says,"What is it doing? |
56614 | As the boy was carrying them he asked at the hand of the Lord,"What is there in the bundles?" |
56614 | At each place a Turtle rose on hearing this, and said,"What is it, friend?" |
56614 | At the time when they were in the shed the persons of the party said,"Vedarala, what are you staying looking about for? |
56614 | Because I stopped in the chena you cooked and ate three sweet- potatoes, did you?" |
56614 | Because of it, on what day will it be good to come and summon[ our wives]?" |
56614 | Because of that, how if you should surround him even in the pottery kiln?" |
56614 | Before passing them he made an obeisance, and( as usual in such cases) said,"Awasara,""Permission"--that is,"Have I permission( to pass)?" |
56614 | Bola, art thou saying Bana? |
56614 | Bola, did I fail? |
56614 | But the washerman- uncle, saying,"Will you eat my fowls again afterwards? |
56614 | But will a Boar come near me? |
56614 | Can you remain, without going? |
56614 | Can you value it?" |
56614 | Canst thou fight with the giant and win?" |
56614 | Could it be finished? |
56614 | Could n''t you kill him?" |
56614 | Did I tell you falsely?" |
56614 | Did a thunderbolt strike thee, that thou camest bounding away?" |
56614 | Did he attempt the crime of eating thee?" |
56614 | Did n''t a turtle- dove fall here?" |
56614 | Did n''t the God Saman also run behind him?" |
56614 | Did you go and give a light also to that one?" |
56614 | Did you hear something break in the lower part of the garden? |
56614 | Didst thou cook and also give him to eat?" |
56614 | Didst thou not see that I am[ here]?" |
56614 | Do kings eat and drink in that manner?" |
56614 | Do you say so? |
56614 | Do you think it right?" |
56614 | Does he know sooth and the like?" |
56614 | Does he know to say sooth and the like?" |
56614 | Does n''t the front half belong to the Gamarahami? |
56614 | During the time while he was there in that way, the other friend having come, asked,"Where is the tree?" |
56614 | During the time while it was in this state, Great Vishnu thought,"In what manner, having lowered the water, should the earth be established?" |
56614 | Friend, if you would become of assistance to me in that way ca n''t I put you on the other bank?" |
56614 | Friend, what is the use of a leaf without a point now? |
56614 | Has our father been to Puttalam and come back? |
56614 | Has our father been to Puttalam and come back?" |
56614 | Has our father been to Puttalam and come back?" |
56614 | Has some ailment befallen Your Majesty? |
56614 | Have I come to eat rice out of the Hettiya''s bowl?" |
56614 | Have all come? |
56614 | Have you come on in front[ of the others who went]?" |
56614 | Having arrived and given the milk to the woman, after she had drunk it he asked,"Now then, mother, is your illness cured?" |
56614 | Having arrived there, when he said"Friend,"the Crocodile rose to the surface and asked the Jackal,"Friend, did you ask for a mate for me?" |
56614 | Having arrived, he asked the Queen,"Why did you not prepare the royal food for me?" |
56614 | Having ascended the tree, as he was going[ along it] the Kinnara says,"What is this, Bola? |
56614 | Having called the elder son she asked,"Where, son, is the cooked rice and vegetable curry for me?" |
56614 | Having called the young younger brother she asked,"Where, son, is cooked rice and vegetable curry for me?" |
56614 | Having come and seen that the Prince''s horse was there, she asked her daughter,"Whose is this horse?" |
56614 | Having come to life, the three Princesses asked at the hand of the King, the father of the Princes,"Was it thus in the dream that appeared to you?" |
56614 | Having come, they are asked,''What have you come for?'' |
56614 | Having drawn near they asked,"How is it that she has gone away for such a long time since she went from here that day? |
56614 | Having drunk water the Jackal asked the Turtles,"When will it be good to come?" |
56614 | Having drunk water, he asks the other Jackal,"What, friend, are you thinking of and clenching your nails about?" |
56614 | Having gone there, during the time while he was residing in a village, the village men asked,"What sooth can you tell?" |
56614 | Having gone there, he asked at the hand of the God Saman,"What is the way to establish this earth?" |
56614 | Having gone there, he made inquiry throughout the country--"Are there horses to sell in this country?" |
56614 | Having gone to him, the Jackal said,"What is it, Sir? |
56614 | Having gone to the God Saman he said,"What is the use of being the owner of this world when it is in this state? |
56614 | Having made ready to descend into the water, he asked Great Vishnu,"What thing am I to bring up from the bottom of the water?" |
56614 | Having once escaped death and gone away, would he again be caught for killing if he had had brains? |
56614 | Having sat down,"Where are the cakes?" |
56614 | Having seen it the Jackal says,"Is n''t this a troublesome comrade they are taking?" |
56614 | Having seen it, the Jackal made obeisance to the Lion, and asked,"What, O Lord, are you lying down for? |
56614 | Having seen it, the Lion asked the Jackal,"Where are my brains?" |
56614 | Having seen me going, younger brother asked,''Where, elder brother, are you going?'' |
56614 | Having seen that the boy was on a branch, the Leopard asked,"Art thou descending to the ground, boy? |
56614 | Having seen the bill- hook,"What is that?" |
56614 | Having seen[ this] the Jackal says,"Have n''t you tom- toms, drums, kettle- drums?" |
56614 | Having sent him there she asked,"Who tapped at the door?" |
56614 | He asked at the hand of the men,"What is it? |
56614 | He asked the Deer,"Where, Deer, are ye going?" |
56614 | He asked them,"How do you like that trick?" |
56614 | He asked,"Where are you taking a present?" |
56614 | He asked,"Where?" |
56614 | He came home and asked Wimali,"Have you been out?" |
56614 | He next asked,"How many stars are there?" |
56614 | He says,"Which gentleman?" |
56614 | He then inquired,"Where is the centre of the earth?" |
56614 | He told the Lion that"the creature never possessed ears or a heart, otherwise how could he have returned when he had once escaped?" |
56614 | Here is prey for you; are you delaying to eat? |
56614 | His mother asked,"What did you go for?" |
56614 | How can I govern a kingdom when I can not either read or write?" |
56614 | How canst thou seek out the one that cheated thee?" |
56614 | How does an oil- mill which expresses the kinds of oils give birth to horses?" |
56614 | How many Turtles are there yet in the pond? |
56614 | How shall I escape?" |
56614 | How was that? |
56614 | How wilt thou go with us to another village?" |
56614 | I also indeed scolded her a great deal, saying,''What is it to thee whether my works are good or not good now?'' |
56614 | I have been to the other world and back,"[ 21] and laying them on the veranda, said,"What are you crying for, mother?" |
56614 | If he had done so wouldst thou be thus? |
56614 | If he had given it to us would n''t the Gamarala have been well able to eat cakes? |
56614 | If not, Bola, whose is that cloth?" |
56614 | If not, am I telling lies? |
56614 | If so, what is it? |
56614 | If you should say,"Who was sleeping there?" |
56614 | In Wide- Awake Stories, p. 59--Tales of the Punjab, p. 52--a Jinni''s life was in a bee, which was in a golden cage inside the crop(?) |
56614 | In the evening the Jackal came to the river, and when he was saying"Friend,"the Crocodile rose to the surface, and asked,"Friend, where is the mate?" |
56614 | Is it true or not, Cultivator, that as he told me to seek a person to give the sovereignty to, I have been going about seeking thee? |
56614 | Is it true that a Jackal King like me is going to ask for a wedding for thee, for a Crocodile who is in the water like thee? |
56614 | Is n''t it the Gamarahami who must attend to the grazing?" |
56614 | Is that right?" |
56614 | It is good for the gentleman, is it not?" |
56614 | It is requisite to make our division now?" |
56614 | Meeting there the husbandman, he said to him,"And now, villein, how hast thou been since my departure? |
56614 | Must not persons who took a thing give it back? |
56614 | Must not this youth who is not vicious nor low go away? |
56614 | My Latti went to the other world; did you meet her there?" |
56614 | Now then, after the three men had come together there, the man who brought her back to life asked,"To whom do you belong?" |
56614 | Now, what will you give on account of it?" |
56614 | O Lord, when coming on account of this day of the trial, was it necessary for me to ask for a cloth from that gentleman? |
56614 | On account of that remark the Monkey became angry, and saying,"What is my business to thee?" |
56614 | On account of that saying the judge having become angry,"Being here what art thou sleeping for?" |
56614 | On hearing this the King said,"Can you go with me?" |
56614 | On the next day, also, the King having come that way asked,"Are you a Yaka or a human being?" |
56614 | Saying,"Why are you asking for them at my hands? |
56614 | Seeing it, he asked,"What are you laughing at?" |
56614 | Seeing the man in the tree, he asked,"Who is that in the tree?" |
56614 | Shall I not go hereafter?" |
56614 | She inquired,"What will you give me to eat and drink, what to wear and what to spend?" |
56614 | Should ye and we, both parties, take wives[ from each other] would n''t it be good?" |
56614 | So he came home, and asked Wimali,"Have you been out?" |
56614 | So the Gama- puta thinks,"The bill- hook having got fever, is it on that account it did not eat the cooked rice and did not cut the jungle?" |
56614 | So the Jackal asked,"Who is going here?" |
56614 | So the man said,"What is the matter I require? |
56614 | Son, what have you come here for? |
56614 | Son, when did any one get milk from me, and cure a sick person with it? |
56614 | Son, who will give in marriage to us?" |
56614 | Tamarind Tikka said"Ha,"and having gone to the place where the dead buffalo was lying, said,"Uncle, shall I make that get up?" |
56614 | That giant said,"How can I give you tobacco there?" |
56614 | That girl having seen the Prince coming and not knowing him, asked,"Elder brother, elder brother, where are you going?" |
56614 | That man asked,"What is that?" |
56614 | That man saw it, and asked,"Where are you going there?" |
56614 | That man, sitting down in the travellers''shed, said,"Friend, where are you going?" |
56614 | The Black Storks ask the Dog, the Cat, the Crow, the Parrot, the Rat, and the Cock,''Where is the Princess?'' |
56614 | The Boar says,"What did I come away for? |
56614 | The Demon Hound asked at the hand of this youth,"What, son, have you come for?" |
56614 | The Gama- Mahage( his wife) asked,"What are you laughing at?" |
56614 | The Gamarala asked these men,"What have you come here for?" |
56614 | The Gamarala said,"What can she eat for it?" |
56614 | The God Great Vishnu asked,"In what way, then, can you make the earth?" |
56614 | The Hettirala asked,"What is it, then, that is necessary for offering to that deity?" |
56614 | The Hettirala asked,"What is that cage?" |
56614 | The Hettiya having heard it said to his wife,"What is that, Bola, I hear there?" |
56614 | The Hunchback said,"What is the journey on which I am going to thee, Bola, O Heretic?" |
56614 | The Hunchback said,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The Hunchback said,"Would it be bad if you went with me?" |
56614 | The Jackal asked,"How, Friend, did you become clean?" |
56614 | The Jackal asked,"What wilt thou obtain for the dancing?" |
56614 | The Jackal asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The Jackal asked,"Where is he washing?" |
56614 | The Jackal asks,"What is it about?" |
56614 | The Jackal having gone on the path on which the Boar went, and having seen the Boar says,"What is the matter with thee? |
56614 | The Jackal said,"What art thou going this way for, without permission?" |
56614 | The Jackal said,"Would it be bad if you went with me?" |
56614 | The Jackal said-- Kimbulundae raewatundae Ketala ale dae gandae? |
56614 | The Jungle- cock asked the Cat,"Where, O Cat- Lord, are you going?" |
56614 | The King also in that very manner having given him quarters, and food and drink, asked,"Where art thou going?" |
56614 | The King asked at the hand of the Hettiya,"Is he doing slave work for you?" |
56614 | The King asked at the hand of the Prince,"Did you stop the light?" |
56614 | The King asked him,"Are you able to teach my white horse to speak?" |
56614 | The King asked him,"How deep is the sea?" |
56614 | The King asked the Deer,"What is thy elder sister''s illness?" |
56614 | The King asked,"Dost thou know the centre of the country, and the number of the stars, and the work which the God of the world of the Devas does?" |
56614 | The King asked,"Having measured them did you finish?" |
56614 | The King asked,"How have your eyes become displaced?" |
56614 | The King asked,"If so, how will you say it?" |
56614 | The King asked,"What can she eat for it?" |
56614 | The King asked,"What do you require for him?" |
56614 | The King asked,"What is that?" |
56614 | The King asked,"Whence this slave youth?" |
56614 | The King asked,"Who is it?" |
56614 | The King asked,"Why? |
56614 | The King becoming angry asked,"How do you know?" |
56614 | The King having heard it, asked,"What, Bola, is that one saying?" |
56614 | The King of that city in that very manner having prepared quarters, and made ready and given him food and drink, asked,"Where art thou going?" |
56614 | The King on the other side of the river having heard that, while he was on the back of the elephant, said,"What is it, girl, that you are saying?" |
56614 | The King said,"Would it be a bad thing if you remained at this palace?" |
56614 | The King will agree to this, and in the meantime who knows what may happen?" |
56614 | The Lord asked at the hand of the boy,"What is thy name?" |
56614 | The Ministers asked the Yaksani who was bounding behind him,"What is that for?" |
56614 | The Ministers went and asked the potter,"Is the Prince here?" |
56614 | The Pond Heron came and asked the Crab,"What, friend, are you here alone for?" |
56614 | The Pond Heron having gone there, asked the small fishes,"What, friends, are you there for?" |
56614 | The Prince arose, and said to the girl,"What are you weeping for?" |
56614 | The Prince asked her,"Mother, where does the light fall first?" |
56614 | The Prince asked the old woman,"Mother, can no one go to the place where the Glass Princess is staying?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Are there Kaekuna[ 96] seeds here?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Father- King, what appeared in the dream?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Father- King, what appeared in the dream?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"For how much will you give it?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"How does that Yaka seize the men?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"How much pay would there be for me for the day?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"How will the Yaka come?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Mother, at what time does the Princess eat rice at night?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Mother, how does one win by that game?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"What appeared in the dream, Father- King?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"What art thou saying?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"What work would there be for me?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Where are you taking that Monkey?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Where are you taking these pigs?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Where is it?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Who are you?" |
56614 | The Prince asked,"Why, mother, is that?" |
56614 | The Prince having eaten, after he had come again to the pool the Prince''s mother asked,"Where did you go?" |
56614 | The Prince having looked for the tongues in the mouths of the Yakas, asked,"What is this, that there are not tongues for these Yakas?" |
56614 | The Prince said,"When there is thirst, how can one not give water? |
56614 | The Prince went and asked,"What is that for?" |
56614 | The Princess asked him,"What else is there in your hands?" |
56614 | The Princess having heard that saying, stopped the horse and asked,"What are you saying?" |
56614 | The Princess having said,"Where is it? |
56614 | The Princess said,"Having said''I will not,''how will it be? |
56614 | The Princess said,"Why are you telling me lies? |
56614 | The Princess, clasping her hands with grief, asked,"Where was it?" |
56614 | The Princesses asked,"Is it a Yaka or a human being who asks?" |
56614 | The Princesses asked,"What is the sooth?" |
56614 | The Princesses said to this Prince,"What have you come for? |
56614 | The Queen asked at the hand of the Prince,"Where is the girl?" |
56614 | The Queen asked,"What sort of goods have you brought?" |
56614 | The Rakshasa came home, and asked Wimali again,"Have you been out?" |
56614 | The Rakshasa''s daughter said,"Is it a Yaka or a human being who asks?" |
56614 | The Rat asked the Cat,"Where, O Cat- Lord, are you going?" |
56614 | The Rat asked,"Shall I come too?" |
56614 | The Rat[ seeing the rosary] asked the Cat,"Upasakarala,[ 131] where are you going?" |
56614 | The Squirrel asked the Cat,"Where, O Cat- Lord, are you going?" |
56614 | The Squirrel asked,"Shall I come too?" |
56614 | The Turtle shrugged its shoulders, and replied,"Can you travel better than I?" |
56614 | The Vaedda replied,"Why should n''t it be good? |
56614 | The Vedarala asked,"What is the illness?" |
56614 | The Vedarala said,"Now then, what have we to do with your losing a yoke of cattle? |
56614 | The Village Headman asked,"Where, Mr. Hunchback, did you go?" |
56614 | The Washerman said,"What are you telling me? |
56614 | The Yaksani asked the Prince,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The bird asked,"What do you eat?" |
56614 | The bird asked,"What do you eat?" |
56614 | The blind man asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The blind man said,"Would it be bad if you went with me?" |
56614 | The boys having gone to the chena and come back, after they had asked,"Is there nothing to eat?" |
56614 | The first one was,"How deep is the sea?" |
56614 | The giant having gone, asked the Rakshasi,"Did n''t a man come here?" |
56614 | The giant went, and asked the Rakshasi,"Did n''t two men come here?" |
56614 | The girl asked,"What are you angry for?" |
56614 | The girl said,"Is it here with me? |
56614 | The girl sitting in the swing says,"Is it here with me? |
56614 | The house persons having heard these words, said,"What is this, that you are saying''Vedarala''? |
56614 | The large village Boar asks the other large Boars,"This Rakshasa having come, what will you do as he comes?" |
56614 | The little ones of the Demon Hound replied,"You eat fresh human flesh, and you bring fresh human flesh; what is this that you are saying?" |
56614 | The man asked him,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The man asked the Deer,"Where, Deer, are ye going?" |
56614 | The man asked,"Bola, can any one in the other world come to this world? |
56614 | The man asked,"What can she eat for it?" |
56614 | The man asked,"What for?" |
56614 | The man asked,"What, Deer, is thy elder sister''s illness?" |
56614 | The man asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The man having given him sitting accommodation asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The man said again,"What are the facts about the bulls to me? |
56614 | The man said,"Can you tell me the place where Senasura is[ and what I must say to him]?" |
56614 | The man said,"If he plundered the house day before yesterday, why didst thou not tell me yesterday?" |
56614 | The man says,"A couple of bushes are cut; is the bag woven?" |
56614 | The man who was ploughing asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | The man[ thinking he had come to another village] said,"What are you saying''Father''to me for? |
56614 | The men asked,"What was in the dream?" |
56614 | The men having said,"What has happened to this man?" |
56614 | The merchant said,"Do n''t you feel ashamed at saying I owe you some money?" |
56614 | The merchant told him,"Do n''t you feel ashamed to say that to me when you know what size my house is?" |
56614 | The millet trader said,"What have I got to give? |
56614 | The other man asked,"What will you give me to catch that paramour for you?" |
56614 | The people of the party said to the Vedarala,"Vedarala, why are you staying looking about? |
56614 | The rats asked the Prince:"O Lord, what assistance does Your Majesty want us to give?" |
56614 | The servant having become grieved says,"What am I to do now? |
56614 | The servant says to the Jackal,"Jackal- artificer,[ 87] is the trouble that happened to me right to thee, according to what was said?" |
56614 | The six uncles having come, said,"Whence, Tamarind Tikka, this money?" |
56614 | The two women asked,"What do you eat?" |
56614 | The widow woman asked,"Son, did you meet with the Yaka?" |
56614 | The woman replied,"Bolan, why should n''t I laugh? |
56614 | The woman said,"Have I got any here? |
56614 | The woman said,"Have I got one here? |
56614 | The woman said,"Why, son? |
56614 | The woman says,"Why, Bolan, do n''t you understand in this way? |
56614 | The younger brother asked,"Elder brother, what shall we do with this turtle- dove?" |
56614 | The younger brother said,"Where? |
56614 | The youth asked,"If so, what shall I do?" |
56614 | The youth who looked after the Royal Preceptor''s goats came at that time, and asked,"For what reason are you lying down, Sir?" |
56614 | Then I say,''Is it here with me? |
56614 | Then a man said,"Are our men all right? |
56614 | Then having gone and taken a rice pestle, and come back with it, he said,"Is the fly still biting the head?" |
56614 | Then seeing a youth running along the road, he called him, and asked,"Boy, where art thou going?" |
56614 | Then the Hettiya asked,"Where is the dried fish?" |
56614 | Then the Hettiya said,"If it is wrong for thee to eat from my bowl, how is it thou art eating from my slave''s bowl?" |
56614 | Then the Hettiya, saying,"I told thee,''Do not give a resting- place to any one''; is it not so? |
56614 | Then the Jackal said,"Now then, how are you getting on, living in that[ solitary] way? |
56614 | Then the Jackal says,"Did a thunderbolt strike you, Sir? |
56614 | Then the King asked Sigiris Siñño,"Canst thou fight with this one?" |
56614 | Then the King asked at the hand of the Hettiya,"Is what he has said regarding the gem- stones, and the taking him as a slave, true?" |
56614 | Then the King asked the Monkey,"What, Monkey, is[ the reason of] that?" |
56614 | Then the King asked the Monkey,"Whose is that city that is visible?" |
56614 | Then the King asked,"Can you cut it, and show me it?" |
56614 | Then the King asked,"Did she not return again, after she had dropped down into the ant- hill?" |
56614 | Then the King asked,"What is it, Monkey, that you have fallen down there for?" |
56614 | Then the King asked,"What is this, Monkey, that having taken the measure thou hast been such a time[ in returning it]?" |
56614 | Then the King asks,"Can he catch and give the thief who broke into the box at the foot of my bed?" |
56614 | Then the King came and asked,"What is it, Monkey? |
56614 | Then the King having caused the next Prince to be fetched, asked him,"Son, can you explain this dream?" |
56614 | Then the King having caused the youngest Prince to be brought asked him,"Son, can you explain this dream?" |
56614 | Then the King having returned, asked the younger brother,"Where, Bola, is thy elder sister?" |
56614 | Then the King said,"Do you want the kingdom, or do you want the Princess?" |
56614 | Then the King said,"If so, can you go with me?" |
56614 | Then the King said,"Wilt thou give thy elder sister to me[ in marriage]?" |
56614 | Then the King whose Princesses they were, asked,"Is there not a Prince for the youngest Princess?" |
56614 | Then the King, catching a great many fire- flies and putting them in a coconut shell, asked the Vedarala,"What is there in this?" |
56614 | Then the Lion asks,"Art thou coming to swim?" |
56614 | Then the Mouse- deer came out, saying,"There is fresh Leopard''s flesh, there is dried Leopard''s flesh; what else shall I give you? |
56614 | Then the Pond Heron said,"Friend, shall I take you also to the river, and put you down in it?" |
56614 | Then the Prince asked,"How does he come to eat men?" |
56614 | Then the Prince asked,"Mother, why do they say that the Princess is the Glass Princess?" |
56614 | Then the Prince cut off the woman''s head with his sword, and having gone to the King, asked,"Where is my Princess? |
56614 | Then the Prince said to the Yaka,"Where is the path to go to the Kule- baka garden?" |
56614 | Then the Princesses asked,"What have you come here for?" |
56614 | Then the Queen said,"What is the use of beheading him? |
56614 | Then the Royal Preceptor said,"What is there in these for me to tell you? |
56614 | Then the Turtle says,"Why are you afraid of that, friend? |
56614 | Then the Vedarala, thinking it unseasonable, said,"Who is talking to me without allowing me to sleep?" |
56614 | Then the Washerman said,"Will you do the chena work until I catch the jungle- cock and come back?" |
56614 | Then the Weaver- bird said,"Why does a person endowed with hands and feet, and strength, like thee, get soaked in this rain? |
56614 | Then the Yaka asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | Then the cattle asked,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | Then the elder brother said,"Why should we give it to our father the King? |
56614 | Then the elder sister said,"Younger sister, didst thou never bathe? |
56614 | Then the girl said,"At the time when I asked at the hand of Loku- Amma,''Where is our mother?'' |
56614 | Then the house people say,"What are you saying''Vedarala''for? |
56614 | Then the man of the house asks the woman,"Who is that running away?" |
56614 | Then the man of the house having opened his eyes, asked,"What is speaking in the corn loft?" |
56614 | Then the man said,"Is n''t that just what I''m saying? |
56614 | Then the man said,"What is it, friend? |
56614 | Then the man said,"Where is now, Bola, the horse that was here?" |
56614 | Then the men of the village asked,"You have nothing; what will you take?" |
56614 | Then the mother asked at the hand of the elder sister,"Where, daughter, is cooked rice and vegetable curry for me?" |
56614 | Then the son asks,''Mother, by which stile did the Princess go?'' |
56614 | Then the woman said,"Now then, are we not cutting the child''s hair to- morrow? |
56614 | Then the youth said,"Are you so much troubled about that? |
56614 | Then they told her to come out in order to dress her in the robes[ sent by the bridegroom(?)]. |
56614 | Then this Prince asked,"Is there or is there not a tongue to every living being whatever?" |
56614 | Then this man asked,"What are you saying?" |
56614 | Then what does he do? |
56614 | Then, as a flower- mother was coming to the river for water, she saw the Prince, and said,"What is this, son, that you are in the sun? |
56614 | Then, as a washerwoman- aunt was washing clothes, she saw the boy going along, and asked him,"Can you live at our house?" |
56614 | Then, having seen this Prince, the King''s Prince asked,"Where, elder brother, are you going?" |
56614 | Thereafter the Vedarala asked,"What will you give me for seeking and giving you the yoke of cattle?" |
56614 | Thereupon the God Great Vishnu asked,"Then who is able to do it?" |
56614 | Thereupon the Jackal said to the Lion,"O Lord, is that which should be done a difficult thing? |
56614 | Thereupon the Jackal said,"O Lord, if this one had any brains would it have come twice near Your Majesty? |
56614 | Thereupon the Prince said,"Will not even the Rakshasi whom I set free that day without killing her, render assistance in this?" |
56614 | Thereupon the Vedarala says,"Where is it? |
56614 | Thereupon,"What shall I say?" |
56614 | They also said,"Whence the rice, coconut, and the like, for it?" |
56614 | They asked the two women,"Where are you going?" |
56614 | They came to him and said,"What is this, Loku- Appu? |
56614 | They said,"What is the meaning? |
56614 | This Crocodile, why does n''t he wag his tail? |
56614 | This Gamarala''s son asked,"Where are you taking the bull?" |
56614 | This might also be interpreted,"On account of the absence of Sihibuddi what saying of sooth is there?" |
56614 | This python is going to eat the Jackal, is n''t it?" |
56614 | Vaedi- elder- brother, why is the turtle- dove such a good one?" |
56614 | Was I not indeed a royal Prince before; why must I stop now in a calf house?" |
56614 | Was there no better place to give?" |
56614 | We three persons having eaten here, on our going how about food for our mother? |
56614 | What are you eating?" |
56614 | What art thou going on a rapid journey in this manner for? |
56614 | What can I do now that I have promised to help you?" |
56614 | What favour besides will you give me?" |
56614 | What hast thou given it at the calf house for? |
56614 | What have the Princesses done?" |
56614 | What have you come here for? |
56614 | What have you come to this city for? |
56614 | What is it to thee whether my works are good or not good now?" |
56614 | What is it? |
56614 | What is it? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is the use of betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What is[ the use of] betel leaf and areka nut at the corner of the bed? |
56614 | What of that? |
56614 | What of that? |
56614 | What shall I do?" |
56614 | What shall we do?" |
56614 | What was it? |
56614 | What was it? |
56614 | What will you give?" |
56614 | What will you give?'' |
56614 | What, then, shall we do to that one?" |
56614 | What[ harm] will it do if it be here this little time in our company?" |
56614 | When a neighbour asked the men what it was about, who was dead? |
56614 | When coming afterwards, the Yaka met another Yaka, who asked,"Where are you taking those things?" |
56614 | When didst thou eat us?" |
56614 | When he arrived there the King saw him, and asked,"Who are you?" |
56614 | When he plundered the house day before yesterday, why didst thou not tell me yesterday?" |
56614 | When he said,"There is no brain,"the Jackal said,"Sir, do n''t you know so much? |
56614 | When he said,"When I ran and sprang at some Boars now I could n''t catch one,"the Jackal said,"If it come near this cave ca n''t you seize it, Sir?" |
56614 | When he saw it he asked,"What is this doing?" |
56614 | When he was asked how hay could quench flames, he replied,"How could a tree eat up a horse?" |
56614 | When my friend from a foreign town came dost thou give him a resting- place in this way? |
56614 | When she had given it and he had eaten, the Prince asked that old woman,"Mother, what are the new things that are happening at this city?" |
56614 | When the Gamarala asked,"Where are[ some] for me?" |
56614 | When the Jackal tried to eat it he heard the Turtle laughing inside the shell, and said,"Friend, what are you laughing at?" |
56614 | When the Lion asked,"Why not, Bola?" |
56614 | When the Prince came after getting the sword made, he asked at the hand of the widow woman,"Where is the Princess?" |
56614 | When the Prince came there the man asked him,"Where, younger brother, are you going?" |
56614 | When the Prince had gone into the room[ he thought],"Will the fire- flies that I freed by giving a hundred masuran render an assistance?" |
56614 | When the Storks asked,''By which stile did he take her?'' |
56614 | When the eldest Prince had been brought he asked him,"Son, can you explain this dream which I have had?" |
56614 | When the merchant came, the Chief of the Police asked him,"Why do n''t you pay this gentleman the money you owe him?" |
56614 | When they asked at the hand of a tom- tom beater,"What is the sound of tom- toms for?" |
56614 | When they asked the Parrot,''What has happened?'' |
56614 | When this was proved, and the Crocodile taken back, the Hare said to the child,"Does n''t thy father eat Crocodile?" |
56614 | When will such a Boar come near me again?" |
56614 | When will the reaping be?" |
56614 | Where art thou going?" |
56614 | Where did you get all this cloth?" |
56614 | Where did you go for such a long time? |
56614 | Where have you come from? |
56614 | Where is father- in- law?" |
56614 | Where is he?" |
56614 | Where is it? |
56614 | Where is she now?" |
56614 | Where is she now?" |
56614 | Where shall we all go now?'' |
56614 | While he was calling out to him, the woman having opened her eyes said,"What is it, Bolan?" |
56614 | While he was eating it, the Princess, taking the sword, arose, and having come towards him, asked,"Who are you?" |
56614 | While he was eating them I said,''Now then, are we not cutting the child''s hair to- morrow? |
56614 | While he was there the Crab asked,"What, friend, have you delayed here for?" |
56614 | While lying down to sleep at night the sweet odour of the Prince having reached the Rakshasi, she said to her daughter,"What is this, Bola? |
56614 | While she was there, her husband, having gone somewhere or other, came back, and asked,"What are you crying for?" |
56614 | While they were under the net in that way, the Parrot Chief says to the other Parrots,"How has another tree grown up under this tree that we live in?" |
56614 | Who is dead?" |
56614 | Who is dead?" |
56614 | Who is your witness?" |
56614 | Who took it?" |
56614 | Who will give money for cattle hides?" |
56614 | Who would give in marriage to Tamarind Tikka?" |
56614 | Whose is it, Bola, if that cloth is not mine?" |
56614 | Why are ye coming to eat me? |
56614 | Why are you keeping them back?" |
56614 | Why did n''t you hold the Boar?" |
56614 | Why didst thou give it?" |
56614 | Why do n''t you invite me[ to be your wife]?" |
56614 | Why do you[ arrange to] drag me, having put a creeper on my neck? |
56614 | Why have you fallen down there?" |
56614 | Why is there so much need of it by me? |
56614 | Why? |
56614 | Why?" |
56614 | Will even those rats that I took up that day out of the river and placed on the bank, become of assistance to me in this matter?" |
56614 | Will our great- grandfather come to his senses again?" |
56614 | Will people who have to be under foot- bridges become in want of clothes?" |
56614 | Will people with cattle hides to sell become in want of money?" |
56614 | Will the Maharaja be pleased to look behind me?" |
56614 | Will the elephants that I set free by giving a hundred masuran render an assistance?" |
56614 | Will the pigs that I set free by giving a hundred masuran render an assistance?" |
56614 | Will the turtle- doves that I freed by giving a hundred masuran render an assistance?" |
56614 | Will you be kind enough to come to- morrow morning to the Government offices to see me?" |
56614 | Will you eat them?" |
56614 | Will you give me every day in the evening a hundred masuran?" |
56614 | You also having gone, and having been unable[ to do anything], have you come back?" |
56614 | You are constantly eating fresh bodies; how can there not be an odour of them?" |
56614 | [ 132]"Upasakarala, where are you going?" |
56614 | [ 141]"Art thou reciting the Buddhist Scriptures?" |
56614 | [ 142] Ehema nan ehemada,"If so( would it be) so?" |
56614 | [ 147] Grewia tiliaefolia(?). |
56614 | [ 31] Literally,"Are we bad?" |
56614 | [ 33] Is n''t she playing[ illicit] games at home?" |
56614 | [ 33] Literally,"Is there any coming for her?" |
56614 | [ 62] Equivalent to saying,"What things do you know?" |
56614 | [ 65] Sihi buddi naetuwata mona saestara kiyamanada? |
56614 | [ 78] Mat ekka giyama nakeyi? |
56614 | [ 78] The bird asked,"What do you eat?" |
56614 | [ 82]"Who is it?" |
56614 | [ Afterwards] those men asked at the hand of the boy,"What did the python seize thee for?" |
56614 | a wife)?" |
56614 | and asking,"Which way did he go?" |
56614 | he said,"What is it? |
56614 | is the gruel?" |
56614 | the second,"How many stars are there?" |
56614 | the third,"Which is the centre of the earth?" |
56614 | where are the other plantains and palm- sugar that were in these?" |
15338 | ''And he puts in the capital?'' 15338 ''And what''s there to be reticent about, ma''am?'' |
15338 | ''And why,''said the uncle, with an amused smile,''why, Tommy, do you desire me to make a noise like a frog?'' |
15338 | ''And you know your Bible?'' |
15338 | ''Any of you men want to go to work?'' 15338 ''Are you guilty or not?'' |
15338 | ''Besides,''my son? 15338 ''Could you perhaps tell me something that is in it?''" |
15338 | ''Do n''t want to risk it, eh?'' 15338 ''Do n''t you want to be on the winning side?'' |
15338 | ''Do you put in much capital?'' 15338 ''Ere, you,"he said to a man on top,"do n''t you want Westminster Abbey?" |
15338 | ''Got to? 15338 ''How do you know ours will be the winning side?'' |
15338 | ''I wonder,''she said, with an embarrassed laugh,''if these ultra- short skirts will ever go out?'' 15338 ''Is that so, uncle?'' |
15338 | ''Power of initiative, my lord?'' 15338 ''So you attend Sunday- school regularly?'' |
15338 | ''Uncle, give me that colt, will you?'' 15338 ''Well, my lad,''said the sergeant,''you know the Germans have been trying for more than a year and a half to win and have failed, do n''t you?" |
15338 | ''What do you want of the rag- bag?'' 15338 ''What kind of a place is it?'' |
15338 | ''Why not?'' 15338 ''With what hand did you do it?'' |
15338 | ''Wot''s this here feller charged with?'' 15338 A bookseller? |
15338 | A fowl? 15338 A hunting license?" |
15338 | A_ red_ one-- can''t you find it_ now_? |
15338 | Age? |
15338 | Ah, how many loads do you take in a day? |
15338 | Ah, the Americans,said a Frenchman standing by,"Where have they not been?" |
15338 | Ah,replied the good man with a grateful expression on his face,"and you have come back to repay me?" |
15338 | Ai n''t de license all right? 15338 Ai n''t got no sense? |
15338 | Ai n''t they fer sale? |
15338 | Ai n''t what nice? |
15338 | Ai n''t you''fraid when it thunders? |
15338 | Am I as sick as all that? |
15338 | Anwas she spanked, too, when she was bad?" |
15338 | An''why should I get out of the way? |
15338 | An''ye think he was mair clever than Rabbie Burns? |
15338 | And I suppose you are both pretty highly valued, George, eh? |
15338 | And about how long do you keep it up? |
15338 | And are the divorce laws so very liberal in your section? |
15338 | And can you tell us what George Washington was remarkable for? |
15338 | And did her mother spank her? |
15338 | And did n''t I do it? |
15338 | And did they tell you their age? |
15338 | And did you actually go to Rome? |
15338 | And did you catch my hired man in motion? |
15338 | And did you post it? |
15338 | And do you not know that you can accomplish more with animals by speaking to them? |
15338 | And do you set the alarm? |
15338 | And how are you today? |
15338 | And how does it work? |
15338 | And how is that? |
15338 | And how is your husband keeping? |
15338 | And how long have you been in domestic service? |
15338 | And is your husband at work? |
15338 | And now does n''t he threaten to split your head with an ax? |
15338 | And now, sir,turning to the other,"What have you to say?" |
15338 | And should I go to heaven? |
15338 | And the Egyptians? |
15338 | And this expression,''The banquet- table groaned''--do you think that is proper? |
15338 | And what did my little son learn about this morning? |
15338 | And what do they boil locomotives for? |
15338 | And what is a farmer? |
15338 | And what is a man who does both? |
15338 | And what under heaven do you expect from that? |
15338 | And what''s that? |
15338 | And when can you come? |
15338 | And where are the Jews? |
15338 | And where did you hide it? |
15338 | And who are you? |
15338 | And why should that make you so sad? |
15338 | And would the bear have to go too? |
15338 | And you did n''t answer it? |
15338 | And you had a position as watchman once, did n''t you? |
15338 | And you know your way to announce? |
15338 | And you lost the cat all right? |
15338 | And you worked a while as a caretaker, did n''t you? |
15338 | And you would n''t begin a journey on Friday? |
15338 | And you? |
15338 | And young? |
15338 | And your pals sitting at the next table-- would they also not shoot the Germans if they tried to invade this country? |
15338 | And, the plural of child? |
15338 | And,continued the woman anxiously,"do you make any inquiries as to the origin of the fire?" |
15338 | Any damage done your way? |
15338 | Any news, Brown? |
15338 | Anything going on here tonight? |
15338 | Are caterpillars good to eat? |
15338 | Are green bananas full of starch? |
15338 | Are n''t you afraid America will become isolated? |
15338 | Are n''t you ever going home? |
15338 | Are oysters good to eat in March? |
15338 | Are there no short cuts, father? |
15338 | Are they wild oats,queried the youth,"that you''ve got to sneak up on''em in the dark?" |
15338 | Are ye sure it was lost, Sandy? |
15338 | Are you a lawyer? |
15338 | Are you aware,he remarked to the milkman,"that we require this milk for the hitherto recognized purposes?" |
15338 | Are you going away? |
15338 | Are you hurt? |
15338 | Are you interested in a loose- leaf encyclopedia? |
15338 | Are you mamma''s mother? |
15338 | Are you of the opinion, James,asked a slim- looking man of his companion,"that Dr. Smith''s medicine does any good?" |
15338 | Are you one of the heroes? |
15338 | Are you sure of that? |
15338 | Are you sure you can prove my client is crazy? |
15338 | Are you sure your auditors understood all of your arguments? |
15338 | Are you taking me by the hour or by the day? |
15338 | Are you willing to swear that you know more than half of them? |
15338 | Arrah, Biddy,said one,"did ye hear him last Sunday when he preached on''Hell''?" |
15338 | Aw, why ca n''t I just powder it like you do yours? |
15338 | Be you our preacher? |
15338 | Been hunting today? |
15338 | Beg pardon, but where is the sea? |
15338 | Big job, was n''t it? |
15338 | Bobby, do you know you''ve deliberately broken the eighth commandment by stealing James''s candy? |
15338 | Boy, have you got a handkerchief? |
15338 | Boys,she said,"do n''t you know that it is Sunday and you must n''t play ball in the front- yard? |
15338 | But I thought I saw one in your kitchen? |
15338 | But are you sure? 15338 But do n''t you hear the alarm in the morning, Rufus?" |
15338 | But it is broken? |
15338 | But surely you have heard of Puddin''head Wilson? |
15338 | But what do I want with money? |
15338 | But what in the world made you think that? |
15338 | But where is the saucer? |
15338 | But who will take me out,she sighed,"And who will glove my hands, And who will kiss my ruby lips When you are in foreign lands?" |
15338 | But why should I work? |
15338 | But why the hurry? |
15338 | But why would you not shoot the Germans? |
15338 | But you got it? |
15338 | But your fiancà © has such a small salary, how are you going to live? |
15338 | But, Maria,demanded Uncle Josh,"how can you blame them two Rhode Island Reds for what happened twenty- five years ago?" |
15338 | But, Mollie,she demanded,"do n''t you trust him?" |
15338 | But, Sandy, man,objected the host,"ye''re not going yet, with the evenin''just started?" |
15338 | But, doctor, do n''t you think I''m a bit crazy? |
15338 | But, father, what am I to do without a riding habit? |
15338 | But, laird--"Will ye listen to me, Donald? 15338 But,"interrupted the famous director,"can you_ act_?" |
15338 | By indulging in foolish pleasures, I suppose? |
15338 | By the way, did you mail the letters I gave you yesterday? |
15338 | Ca n''t see anything, hey? |
15338 | Ca n''t you cash your check in the mornin''? |
15338 | Ca n''t you do without them? |
15338 | Ca n''t you make it any sooner? |
15338 | Ca n''t you pull a tooth without a rehearsal? |
15338 | Can you lend me a postage- stamp? |
15338 | Can you make anything out of the news from Europe? |
15338 | Can you remember the title? |
15338 | Can you sign your name? |
15338 | Can you support a family? |
15338 | Can you tell me what a smile is? |
15338 | Can your little baby brother talk yet? |
15338 | Certainly,said the real- estate dealer calmly,"and you have n''t, have you?" |
15338 | Civics? 15338 Come, find my book-- why make a row?" |
15338 | Corn bread? 15338 Could you not have settled your differences by a peaceful discussion of the matter, calling in the assistance of unprejudiced opinion, if need be?" |
15338 | Dark breakfast? 15338 Dat thing? |
15338 | Did Brummell wear a satin vest? |
15338 | Did any patient order a postage stamp? |
15338 | Did he leave any address? |
15338 | Did he tell you to go prowling round all night? |
15338 | Did n''t anybody criticise you for filming an automobile in ancient Babylon? |
15338 | Did n''t that fetch him? |
15338 | Did nature make you, papa? |
15338 | Did they feed you well? |
15338 | Did what? |
15338 | Did you ever hear about that home brew blowing up? |
15338 | Did you ever hear the story of the deacon''s daughter? 15338 Did you go to the fight last night?" |
15338 | Did you hear about the defacement of Mr. Skinner''s tombstone? |
15338 | Did you hear me come downstairs this time, mamma? |
15338 | Did you imagine that was within the right of a tenant? |
15338 | Did you laugh him to scorn?'' |
15338 | Did you not strike it repeatedly with a club? |
15338 | Did you read it? |
15338 | Did you scream? |
15338 | Did you see the girls next door,she asked--"The Hill twins?" |
15338 | Did you try the simple plan of counting sheep for your insomnia? |
15338 | Died at second? |
15338 | Dinah, did you wash the fish before you baked it? |
15338 | Do Englishmen understand American slang? |
15338 | Do I get all this for my dollar? |
15338 | Do der minister lif in dis house? |
15338 | Do n''t you enjoy your meals? |
15338 | Do n''t you ever feel sick going up and down in this elevator all day? |
15338 | Do n''t you ever say anything when you have nothing to say? |
15338 | Do n''t you find it hard these times to meet expenses? |
15338 | Do n''t you know I''m a''painless dentist''? |
15338 | Do n''t you know that you should always hand me notes and cards on a salver? |
15338 | Do n''t you know, dear,said the mother,"that it is very wicked to behave so? |
15338 | Do n''t you object to all this talk about the high cost of everything? |
15338 | Do n''t you remember that Macbeth said to him,''Thou canst not say,I did it"''?" |
15338 | Do n''t you see my signature there on the register? |
15338 | Do n''t you think it''s great? |
15338 | Do n''t you think our friend Crossum might loom up as a dark horse? |
15338 | Do n''t you wind it up? |
15338 | Do you act toward your wife as you did before you married her? |
15338 | Do you believe honesty is the best policy? |
15338 | Do you consider yourself financially able to do so? |
15338 | Do you drive it yourself? |
15338 | Do you find public office an easy berth? |
15338 | Do you find that prohibition has deprest Crimson Gulch? |
15338 | Do you imagine I could be so hard- hearted as to deprive you poor fellows of your employment? |
15338 | Do you keep any servants? |
15338 | Do you know what it is to go before an audience? |
15338 | Do you know who''s talking in there now? |
15338 | Do you know,asked the guide,"that it took millions and millions of years for this great abyss to be carved out?" |
15338 | Do you know,remarked the girl,"you remind me strongly of Banquo''s Ghost?" |
15338 | Do you like codfish? |
15338 | Do you like it? |
15338 | Do you like that? |
15338 | Do you mean that little weedy, undersized creature? |
15338 | Do you mean to say you do n''t know? |
15338 | Do you mean to tell me that is a finished painting? |
15338 | Do you mean to tell this court,he demanded,"that you can determine the make of a car by studying its track? |
15338 | Do you really mean to call me a liar? |
15338 | Do you say''two- spot,''or''the deuce''? |
15338 | Do you think that I am going to let any foreigner lick me? |
15338 | Do you think the motor will entirely supersede the horse? |
15338 | Do you understand what you are to swear to? |
15338 | Do you want a narrow man''s comb? |
15338 | Do you want a steak for a dollar or a dollar and a half? |
15338 | Do you want a ticket one way or one that will take you there and back? |
15338 | Do you want to sell a mule? |
15338 | Do you wish me to vote for the same candidate that you do? |
15338 | Do you wish to wear a surplice? |
15338 | Do you wonder why? |
15338 | Doan yo''''membeh whut de good book sez''bout turnin''de odder cheek? |
15338 | Doctor''s orders? |
15338 | Doctor,she gasped,"you''re a good fellow, are n''t you? |
15338 | Doctor,she inquired of a country physician,"can you tell me how it is that some folks be born dumb?" |
15338 | Does nobody know? |
15338 | Does what you see here today please you? |
15338 | Does your family have any trouble with servants? |
15338 | Does your husband ever lie to you? |
15338 | Does your wife neglect her home in making speeches? |
15338 | Done? 15338 Eh, what do you say?" |
15338 | Eh, what? |
15338 | Eh? |
15338 | Enjoy my meals? |
15338 | Er-- aw-- what was the denomination of the bill you loaned me? |
15338 | Er-- what were you-- er-- talking about? |
15338 | Exactly how far is it between the two towns? |
15338 | Excuse me, madam, would you mind walking the other way and not passing the horse? |
15338 | Father, is the zebra a black animal with white stripes or a white animal with black stripes? |
15338 | Father, what is a convalescent? |
15338 | Father,asked Prince Edward, placing his finger on the Colonel''s picture,"Mr. Roosevelt is a very clever man, is n''t he?" |
15338 | Father,said he, thoughtfully,"what part of speech is woman?" |
15338 | Father,she said at the close of his lecture,"when you see a cow, ai n''t you''fraid?" |
15338 | Fine attitude, eh? |
15338 | From your husband? 15338 Give up my nice, pleasant office and stay home?" |
15338 | Going fishing? |
15338 | Had any experience acting without audiences? |
15338 | Haf you Der Hohenzollernspiel? |
15338 | Happy? 15338 Hard? |
15338 | Has Bobbie been eating between meals? |
15338 | Has Jobkins any money? |
15338 | Has Owens ever paid back that$ 10 you loaned him a year ago? |
15338 | Has it? |
15338 | Has n''t he choked you into insensibility? |
15338 | Has n''t he dragged you the length of the room by your hair? |
15338 | Has the line been busy? |
15338 | Has this bill been endorsed by the Prohibition party? |
15338 | Has your publicity man written the usual biographical notices and arranged for a series of dinners in my honor? |
15338 | Have they found it out yet? |
15338 | Have you a book called''Shapes of Fear''? |
15338 | Have you a life of Sairy Gamp? |
15338 | Have you a visiting card? |
15338 | Have you any alarm- clocks? |
15338 | Have you any cooks on hand? |
15338 | Have you any flesh- colored stockings in stock? |
15338 | Have you any references? |
15338 | Have you been touching the barometer, Jane? |
15338 | Have you consulted your doctor, Rufus? |
15338 | Have you ever had any experience in handling high- class ware? |
15338 | Have you ever had appendicitis? |
15338 | Have you ever taken a tail- spin in an airplane? |
15338 | Have you fed the pigs, Biddy? |
15338 | Have you found one? |
15338 | Have you heard my last joke? |
15338 | Have you looked by your pockets? |
15338 | Have you lost half a crown? |
15338 | Have you never noticed the lady on the dollar? |
15338 | Have you poured water on her head? |
15338 | Have you seen the announcement of my death in the paper? |
15338 | Have you the rimes of Edward Lear? |
15338 | Have you? |
15338 | Have your great minds selected a title for my forthcoming work? |
15338 | Have your salesmen,he asked,"prepared for their semi- annual trip among the down- trodden booksellers?" |
15338 | Having any success with your garden? |
15338 | Hear the boss has had a fever? 15338 Here, boy,"said the man to the boy who was helping him drive a bunch of cattle,"hold this bull a minute, will you?" |
15338 | Hollerin''for who? |
15338 | Hoo dae ye mak''that oot? |
15338 | Hoo is''t, Geordie,asked a customer,"ye''ve altered the smaal clock and not the gran''faither''s clock?" |
15338 | How are you getting on at your new place? |
15338 | How can you tell when a woman is only shopping? |
15338 | How come, I''se out? |
15338 | How come, niggah? |
15338 | How could I? |
15338 | How could you do that when you had no letters? |
15338 | How could you say those are fine biscuits? |
15338 | How d''you make that out an epigram? |
15338 | How did Cranbury ever manage to get so deeply in debt as he is? |
15338 | How did that private ever get in here? |
15338 | How did you earn your dollar? |
15338 | How do the Joneses seem to like their little two- room kitchenette apartment? |
15338 | How do you get down? |
15338 | How do you know that Blinks has had a raise in salary? |
15338 | How do you know that I have been swimmin''? |
15338 | How do you know? |
15338 | How do you know? |
15338 | How do you know? |
15338 | How do you like my pound cake, dearie? |
15338 | How do you manage to remember all these things, Rose? |
15338 | How do you manage to sell so many fireless cookers? |
15338 | How do you mean a letter from your wife? 15338 How do you pronounce''pneumonia''?" |
15338 | How do you sell your music? |
15338 | How do you spell Schenectady? |
15338 | How do you spell''anemic,''please? |
15338 | How does it work? |
15338 | How does she get along with her family? |
15338 | How does your boy Josh like his job in the city? |
15338 | How far have you studied, Johnny? |
15338 | How fine? |
15338 | How is he? |
15338 | How is it, Jimmy, that you alone out of my entire staff seem to have a pocketknife with you? |
15338 | How is it? |
15338 | How is that? |
15338 | How is the missus? |
15338 | How is this, William? |
15338 | How is your little brother, Johnny? |
15338 | How long do you want them? |
15338 | How many fish yer got, mister? |
15338 | How many head o''live stock you got on the place? |
15338 | How many miles behind? |
15338 | How many revolutions does the earth make in a day? 15338 How much did Daniel Lambert weigh?" |
15338 | How much do I owe you? |
15338 | How much do you want? |
15338 | How much for vun? |
15338 | How much is it? |
15338 | How much is the deficit that you expect my subscription to meet? |
15338 | How much life insurance do you think a man ought to carry? |
15338 | How much shall we make out of it? |
15338 | How much vas dose collars? |
15338 | How much will it be? |
15338 | How much? |
15338 | How muchee Melican monee? |
15338 | How mush do I owe you? |
15338 | How now am I to do it? |
15338 | How now? |
15338 | How old, I pray, was Sister Ann? |
15338 | How so? |
15338 | How so? |
15338 | How was it, then, Pat, that I saw you pass the factory on your bicycle during the morning? |
15338 | How was that? |
15338 | How was the trip over? |
15338 | How will you have your roast beef? |
15338 | How''d that city hired man of yours pan out? |
15338 | How''s business? |
15338 | How''s business? |
15338 | How''s that? |
15338 | How''s this, waiter? 15338 How?" |
15338 | How? |
15338 | How_ do_ you use this catalog? |
15338 | Huh? |
15338 | I ask if you can write your name? |
15338 | I beg pardon? |
15338 | I guess you do n''t remember me? |
15338 | I hear you are going to marry Archie Blueblood? |
15338 | I say, Hodge, why do you always put''dictated''on your letters? 15338 I sent the first stanza to the editor of the Correspondence Column with the inquiry,''Can anyone give me the rest of this poem?'' |
15338 | I suppose you ai n''t the chap that pulled the cord? |
15338 | I suppose you do not know where Boston is? |
15338 | I suppose you get home once in a while? |
15338 | I sure have,admitted the Celt,"and did n''t you see me running home to get the money to pay for it?" |
15338 | I understand,said the clerk,"You mean one of our porous plasters?" |
15338 | I vas standing on the street corner the other day and a cop came along and said to me,''Holy Moses, are you here again?'' |
15338 | I wonder how that idea originated? |
15338 | I''m thinking of getting married, pa. What''s it like? |
15338 | I--"Did n''t I tell you to get a report on any and every man asking for credit? |
15338 | I? 15338 If a man brings his car to me to be repaired, and it costs me sixty cents, and I charge him sixteen dollars, what per cent profit would I be making?" |
15338 | If the lamb had been good and sensible,said the little boy, gravely,"we should have had him to eat, would n''t we?" |
15338 | Ikey,said the teacher,"can you give me a definition for''a bargain''?" |
15338 | In January? |
15338 | In Washington, Lieutenant de Tessan was approached by a pretty American girl, who said:''And did you kill a German soldier?'' |
15338 | In a bad way? |
15338 | In recognition of his heroic service, I suppose? |
15338 | Indeed,said the lady, quick as a flash,"and pray what are you doing there?" |
15338 | Is Judge David Poggenburg stopping here? |
15338 | Is Mr. Smith in the audience? |
15338 | Is dem you- all''s chickens? |
15338 | Is dis whar de redemtion bo''d is at? |
15338 | Is he after me or my vote? |
15338 | Is he in the habit of beating you? 15338 Is hero- ing a criminal career?" |
15338 | Is it an accident? 15338 Is it the motion going down?" |
15338 | Is it the stopping that does it? |
15338 | Is it true? |
15338 | Is my son getting well grounded in the classics? |
15338 | Is n''t my society good enough for them? |
15338 | Is n''t she? 15338 Is that all? |
15338 | Is that all? |
15338 | Is that the Dickel Liquor Company? |
15338 | Is that where we got our green cook? |
15338 | Is the barrel full, my lad? |
15338 | Is the show this evening fit for church women to see? |
15338 | Is the world safe for democracy now, papa? |
15338 | Is there any one there? |
15338 | Is there anything you do n''t understand? |
15338 | Is this the hosiery department? |
15338 | Is this your essay? 15338 Is this your little boy, Aunt Liza?" |
15338 | Is your husband a good provider, Dinah? |
15338 | Is your husband in? |
15338 | Is your wife cheerful about it? |
15338 | Is your wife''s mother enjoying her trip to the mountains? |
15338 | It vos bretty big vactory? |
15338 | John, are you happy there? |
15338 | John,she remarked,"do you know that next Sunday will be the twenty- fifth anniversary of our wedding?" |
15338 | Judge, Your Honor,cried the prisoner at the bar,"have I got to be tried by a lady jury?" |
15338 | La, Miss Daviess,he replied,"don''you- all know colored folks well''nough to know dat dey don''need no''casion foh a p''rade?" |
15338 | Large on the top, sir, and small at the bottom? |
15338 | Law, ma''am, what''s de use ob washin''er fish what''s lived all his life in de water? |
15338 | Liberal? 15338 Little boy- eh? |
15338 | Little girl, why are n''t you provided with an umbrella? |
15338 | Live stock? |
15338 | Ma, do cows and bees go to heaven? |
15338 | Ma, is Mr. Jones an awfully old man? |
15338 | Ma, what does the''home- stretch''mean? |
15338 | Madam,said the professor,"can we get corn bread here? |
15338 | Maggie, dear,he said,"had n''t you better take some fiction with you to while away the time?" |
15338 | Mamma, if a bear should swallow me, I should die, should n''t I? |
15338 | Mamma, what does it mean when you''re wined and dined? |
15338 | Mamma,she asked,"what''s to keep them from crawling up his other arm?" |
15338 | Mamma,she sobbed,"did Gran''ma spank you when you was little?" |
15338 | Married? |
15338 | Marry him? |
15338 | Mary,he said to the Irish waitress at the hotel where he was stopping,"you''ve been in this country how long?" |
15338 | May I ask whar yo''live, sah? |
15338 | May I take this book home please, or is n''t it a_ running_ book? 15338 Morris,"he said,"your oldest daughter was married about five years ago, was n''t she? |
15338 | Mother,asked Tommy,"do fairy tales always begin with''Once upon a time''?" |
15338 | Mother,he asked,"will Charlie Chaplin go to heaven?" |
15338 | Mother,said he, finally,"what does D-- d stand for?" |
15338 | Mourning? |
15338 | Mr. Brown, are you married? |
15338 | Mr. Brown,he began,"what is a popinjay?" |
15338 | Mr. Toppan, what is law? |
15338 | Mrs. Johnson, you know Mrs. Wilson, do you not? |
15338 | My boy, how came you by those? |
15338 | My boy,said the minister, when they were closeted together,"who is that elderly gentleman you attend church with?" |
15338 | My man,he said,"What is the matter?" |
15338 | Need more exercise? |
15338 | Never boast? 15338 No way for me to git in it, then?" |
15338 | No, there is nothing I want today,said the customer,"But will you just examine my line of goods?" |
15338 | No, what was it? |
15338 | No,said Blathers,"I ca n''t do that; but suppose you give me five hundred dollars and keep the car, eh? |
15338 | No,said his father;"what makes you ask a question like that while we are eating?" |
15338 | Not bad, is it? |
15338 | Nothin'', eh? |
15338 | Now can any of you give me the name of a town in France? |
15338 | Now then, Tommy,he exclaimed,"what are you doing?" |
15338 | Now will this train reach its destination on time? |
15338 | Now, Britzmann, what do you make in the factory? |
15338 | Now, Britzmann,said the lawyer for the plaintiff,"what do you do?" |
15338 | Now, Harold,said the teacher,"if there were eleven sheep in a field and six jumped the fence how many would there be left?" |
15338 | Now, Mick,asked the plater,"what size is the plate?" |
15338 | Now, Tommy,she pursued,"if your father were busy all day and said he would have to go back to the office at night, what would he be doing?" |
15338 | Now, tell me,she said, at the close of the lesson,"who will get the biggest crown?" |
15338 | Now,continued the teacher when Jimmy had finished writing,"can you find a better form for that sentence?" |
15338 | Of course he''d say that; but what did you do? |
15338 | Of course you have your little theory about the cause of the high cost of living? |
15338 | Of what were you accused? |
15338 | Oh, is n''t he? 15338 Oh, it is, is it?" |
15338 | Oh, say, who was here to see you last night? |
15338 | Oh, she broke it? |
15338 | Oh, we all must have-- but have we? |
15338 | Oh, were you? |
15338 | Oh, what''s the matter, ma''am? |
15338 | Oh,said she, turning a wrathful tearful face to her mother,"Why do n''t you obey your mother?" |
15338 | Oh-- who won? |
15338 | Or are you just going in? |
15338 | Ou est, m''sie, la grand Larousse? |
15338 | P. S.--Do you furnish clothes for your vampires? 15338 PRACTICAL"BUSINESS MAN( sneeringly)--"You''re a holier- than- thou guy, eh?" |
15338 | Pa, a man''s wife is his better half, is n''t she? |
15338 | Pa, what are ancestors? |
15338 | Pa, what is a retainer? |
15338 | Pa, what''s an actor? |
15338 | Pa, what''s phonetic spelling? |
15338 | Pa,inquired a seven- year- old seeker after the truth,"is it true that school- teachers get paid?" |
15338 | Papa, you there? |
15338 | Papa,said Evelyn, solemnly,"ai n''t you''fraid of nothing in the world but mama?" |
15338 | Pardon me,said he to Jones,"but what would you say if I sat on your hat?" |
15338 | Parson, you are n''t by any chance a Baptist, are you? |
15338 | Pat, what''s that piece of blank paper you have in your hand? |
15338 | Paw, what is an advertisement? |
15338 | Paw, what''s the longest period of time? |
15338 | Pay yo for what, boss? |
15338 | Phwat''s this fince for? |
15338 | Please send me,he shouted,"a bicycle, a tool chest, a--""What are you praying so loud for?" |
15338 | Please, Jedge,interrupted Mrs. Rastus from the rear of the court room,"will yo''Honah jes''kinder split dat sentence? |
15338 | Please, ma''am,Edgar piped out,"do you want us to draw a hen or a rooster?" |
15338 | Please, which is right? 15338 Pop, what do we mean by a good listener?" |
15338 | Pop, what is a promoter? |
15338 | Postman? |
15338 | Pretty? 15338 Rastus, how is it you have given up going to church?" |
15338 | Ready to give him an argument, eh? |
15338 | Rufus, are n''t you feeling well? |
15338 | Sah? |
15338 | Samantha, what''s thet chune the orchestry''s a- playin''now? |
15338 | Say, Sam, why do you- all carry that parrot around with you on the wagon? |
15338 | Say, dad, what keeps us from falling off the earth when we are upside down? |
15338 | Say, mama, was baby sent down from heaven? |
15338 | Say, mister, where''s the telephone? |
15338 | See here, what''s wrong with you anyway? |
15338 | See those people? |
15338 | Shall I call you''doctor''or''professor''? |
15338 | Shall I show him in?. |
15338 | Shall it be said we are clothed in male armor? |
15338 | Shall you need it a long time? |
15338 | She called Sammy up to the desk and said,''Sammy, do n''t you know that was very anti- social?'' |
15338 | Shot anything? |
15338 | Shure, he does; vy not? |
15338 | Sick, eh? |
15338 | Sir,screeched the wild- haired man,"are you opposed to free speech?" |
15338 | Six? |
15338 | Smith, what do you intend to do when you are released from the service? |
15338 | So that is O''Ryan, is it? |
15338 | So you got your poem printed? |
15338 | So you kicked your landlord downstairs? |
15338 | So you want to marry Alice, do you? |
15338 | So you want to marry my daughter, eh? |
15338 | So you''re a moonshiner? |
15338 | So? |
15338 | Some un sick at yo''house, Mis''Carter? |
15338 | Speculating? |
15338 | Still looking for an honest man? |
15338 | Stranger in the town, sir? |
15338 | Suppose success do n''t come at first, What are you goin''to do? 15338 Suppose you jack it up and run a new car under it?" |
15338 | Suppose,said the dealer,"you accidentally broke a very valuable porcelain vase, what would you do?" |
15338 | Suspicious actions? |
15338 | Sworn off? |
15338 | T- t- t- tough or t- t- tender? |
15338 | Tell me,then said the child,"how many children have you got?" |
15338 | Ten minutes? |
15338 | Thank you, missy,replied the colored woman, smiling broadly,"but which gen''man''s lap was you sittin''on?" |
15338 | Thankful? 15338 That so?" |
15338 | That so? |
15338 | That so? |
15338 | That? 15338 The Argonne?" |
15338 | The conductor, who was departing, looked back and snarled:''What''ll you do? |
15338 | The flu? |
15338 | The interrogation''Where did you get it?'' 15338 The motion going up?" |
15338 | The right of way is ours, is n''t it? |
15338 | The ruin, my lord? |
15338 | Them was nice folk you waited on, Mamie, ai n''t they? |
15338 | Then if a man marries twice there is n''t anything left of him, is there? |
15338 | Then the small favor I am about to ask you will no doubt be granted? |
15338 | Then what do you sell them for? |
15338 | Then what do you want me to write about? |
15338 | Then what is it? |
15338 | Then where is the general passenger agent? |
15338 | Then why did n''t you ask him to go home? |
15338 | Then why did you not bring some of them with you? |
15338 | Then why have n''t you paid up? |
15338 | Then why were n''t you drowned? |
15338 | Then you lost? |
15338 | Then you understand it thoroughly? |
15338 | Then, why do n''t you stop butting in? |
15338 | Then,he retorted promptly,"may I not claim my reward as an astronomer?" |
15338 | Then,said Beryl, looking at him and then at her reflection in the mirror,"do n''t you think nature is turning out better work than she used to?" |
15338 | Then,said the salesman meekly,"will you let me use a part of your counter to look at them myself, as I have not had the opportunity for some time?" |
15338 | There was a dead silence for a few moments, when one of the loafers spoke up and queried,''What doing, and what do yer pay?'' 15338 These''ere, guv''nor?" |
15338 | Thet so, Hiram? 15338 Think so?" |
15338 | This car cost me thirty- five hundred dollars, Blathers, but I''ll let you have it for two thousand, eh? 15338 To those high food prices?" |
15338 | To what do you attribute your long life, Uncle Mose? |
15338 | To which party do you refer? |
15338 | Tommy,said the Sunday- school teacher, who had been giving a lesson on the baptismal covenant,"can you tell me the two things necessary to baptism?" |
15338 | Twenty or thirty bushels? |
15338 | Twenty or thirty dozens? |
15338 | Two dozen? |
15338 | Vell, vy do n''t you look in dot? |
15338 | Very good,said the polite clerk,"and how long did you wish to take it for?" |
15338 | WILLIE,asked a New York teacher of one of her pupils,"how many make a million?" |
15338 | Wa- al, say,inquired the farmer in surprise,"what time air I goin''ter git ter see the town?" |
15338 | Wal, you''re goin''to be, ai n''t ye? |
15338 | Want any''elp, chum? |
15338 | Was he, indeed? 15338 Was it you wot did dat trick? |
15338 | Was papa the first man who ever proposed to you, mama? |
15338 | Was that God? |
15338 | Watcha doin''wi''thet thar thermometer, boy? |
15338 | Water? |
15338 | Well, George,asked the man of law, when the waiter was shown in,"what can I do for you? |
15338 | Well, George,said the president of the company to old George,"how goes it?" |
15338 | Well, Jimmy,said the patient, when the boy came to report,"what did they say?" |
15338 | Well, John,asked the boss,"which did you find the stickiest?" |
15338 | Well, John,asked the teacher,"what is it?" |
15338 | Well, John,she said finally,"tell me_ why_ you want your Ford car buried with you?" |
15338 | Well, Maria,said Jiggles after the Town Election,"for whom did you vote this morning?" |
15338 | Well, Rena? |
15338 | Well, Sam, what crime did you commit to be put in those overalls and set under guard? |
15338 | Well, about how hard? |
15338 | Well, auntie, have you got your photographs yet? |
15338 | Well, boys, how do you like it? |
15338 | Well, did he run fast? |
15338 | Well, do you think she''d like you to have two pieces here? |
15338 | Well, have you seen any without a little boy? |
15338 | Well, how did folks stay on before the law was passed? |
15338 | Well, how do you pronounce it? |
15338 | Well, my little man, did you want to see me? |
15338 | Well, now,said Ian Hay,"is n''t that provoking? |
15338 | Well, since you do n''t pay rent, why not get something better? |
15338 | Well, then, why do n''t they trade back? |
15338 | Well, well,replied the man, rubbing his hands,"if it had n''t been for an apple where would the clothing business be today?" |
15338 | Well, what about the hundred bones? |
15338 | Well, what did she say? |
15338 | Well, what do you want? |
15338 | Well, what does he do now? |
15338 | Well, what have you done, anyway? |
15338 | Well, what is a middleman, Pop? |
15338 | Well, what is your sentence, Tommy? |
15338 | Well, where you been? |
15338 | Well, where''s the general superintendent? |
15338 | Well, who started this blamed thing anyhow? |
15338 | Well, why not? |
15338 | Well, why should a dozen or so be trying for it? 15338 Well, will you buy a carload?" |
15338 | Well,commented the Fool,"if this is true, why do n''t we learn to expect it?" |
15338 | Well,he asked,"how do you get on with the ladies?" |
15338 | Well,mused six- year- old Harry, as he was being buttoned into a clean white suit,"this has been an exciting week, has n''t it, mother? |
15338 | Well,queried the landlady in a peevish tone,"have you anything to say against the coffee?" |
15338 | Well,replied the clothing- dealer,"I guaranteed it to wear like iron, did n''t I?" |
15338 | Well,responded Senator Sorghum with deliberation,"what is a majority? |
15338 | Well,said the manager after a moment''s thought,"suppose we call it$ 5,000 a week?" |
15338 | Well,said the storekeeper,"why do n''t you exchange your little sister for a boy?" |
15338 | Well,said the"Tommy"who was escorting him,"what about me? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Went on a furlong? 15338 Were you happy when you started for France?" |
15338 | Were you very sick with the''flu,''Rastus? |
15338 | Were you-- er-- the proprietor? |
15338 | Wha''s you will- power? |
15338 | Whaddy ya want-- pink, yellow, or black? |
15338 | Whar yo''all ben scrappin''in dis yar war, boss? |
15338 | What about it? |
15338 | What about? |
15338 | What are all those flowers, straw hats and palm- leaf fans scattered about for? |
15338 | What are the boys doing now? |
15338 | What are the directions? |
15338 | What are the luxuries of life? |
15338 | What are their names, Lindy? |
15338 | What are those posts sticking out all the way up? |
15338 | What are you cutting out of the paper? |
15338 | What are you doin''of, James? |
15338 | What are you doing there, Robert? |
15338 | What are you doing, my little men? |
15338 | What are you going to call it? |
15338 | What are you going to do next? |
15338 | What are you going to do with it? |
15338 | What are you going to make of your son Charley? |
15338 | What are you hunting, bub? |
15338 | What are you looking for now, then? |
15338 | What are you making such a noise for? |
15338 | What are you raising? |
15338 | What are you saying? |
15338 | What are you? |
15338 | What are your reasons for wanting a divorce, madam? |
15338 | What brought you here, my man? |
15338 | What can he do? |
15338 | What coal is it? 15338 What code is that?" |
15338 | What color is your body? |
15338 | What d''ye mean by live stock? 15338 What d''yo''-all want?" |
15338 | What dictionary is the best? |
15338 | What did he say? |
15338 | What did he talk about? |
15338 | What did he tell you, Mose? |
15338 | What did she say? |
15338 | What did you learn at the school? |
15338 | What did you realize on it? |
15338 | What do you call this stuff? |
15338 | What do you do that for? |
15338 | What do you have reference to? |
15338 | What do you mean by making a silly blunder like that? |
15338 | What do you mean by treblin''your price on me? 15338 What do you mean,"said Bill,"by bringing me in cold cakes?" |
15338 | What do you mean? |
15338 | What do you mean? |
15338 | What do you pay for them? |
15338 | What do you sell them for? |
15338 | What do you think he did? |
15338 | What do you think is the matter with you this morning? |
15338 | What do you think is the most difficult thing for a beginner to learn about golf? |
15338 | What do you think of my library? |
15338 | What do you think of the animals? |
15338 | What do you think of the candidates? |
15338 | What do you think of this disarmament idea? |
15338 | What do you wish? |
15338 | What do you wish? |
15338 | What does autosuggestion mean? |
15338 | What does he want to talk for when all he has to do is yell a while to get everything in the house that''s worth having? |
15338 | What does he want? |
15338 | What for, my boy? |
15338 | What for? |
15338 | What for? |
15338 | What good,asked the angry would- be passenger,"are the figures set down in these railway time- tables?" |
15338 | What has happened now? |
15338 | What has mamma''s darling been doing this morning? |
15338 | What has that got to do with being a detective? |
15338 | What has that got to do with it? 15338 What has that got to do with it?" |
15338 | What if we loses this blinkin''war after all, Bill? |
15338 | What in the world are you doing with them? |
15338 | What in the world are you talking about, my dear? |
15338 | What is a Gorgonzola cheese? |
15338 | What is a complete sentence? |
15338 | What is a gardener? |
15338 | What is considered a good score on these links? |
15338 | What is equity? |
15338 | What is it, Bridget? |
15338 | What is it, Edgar? |
15338 | What is it? |
15338 | What is it? |
15338 | What is new? |
15338 | What is poetry of motion? |
15338 | What is that? |
15338 | What is that? |
15338 | What is the fare to Kokomo? |
15338 | What is the littlest one named? |
15338 | What is the matter, little girl,he kindly asked;"are you hurt?" |
15338 | What is the plural of man, Willie? |
15338 | What is the square of 96? |
15338 | What is this leathery stuff? |
15338 | What is this wonderful machine? |
15338 | What is worrying you now? |
15338 | What is your last name then? |
15338 | What is your last name? |
15338 | What is your name? |
15338 | What is your name? |
15338 | What is your opinion of relativity? |
15338 | What kind of a boy does youse want? |
15338 | What kind of a factory? |
15338 | What kind of a license? |
15338 | What kind of a plant is the Virginia creeper? |
15338 | What kind of a time is he having on his motor- trip? |
15338 | What kind of coal do you wish, mum? |
15338 | What makes you think so, Samanthy? |
15338 | What makes you think that? |
15338 | What might you be trying to do? |
15338 | What name are you calling? |
15338 | What names do you wish? |
15338 | What occupation have you here in Baltimore? |
15338 | What of it? |
15338 | What of that? |
15338 | What position is that, my dear? |
15338 | What prompts you to make such a ridiculous request? |
15338 | What puzzles you? |
15338 | What reward? |
15338 | What seems silly? |
15338 | What seems to be the matter, Jones? |
15338 | What shall we say of the former Senator? |
15338 | What should one do if cats have fits? |
15338 | What sort of a chap is Bill to camp out with? |
15338 | What streets have you? |
15338 | What wages do they give you here? |
15338 | What was her name? |
15338 | What was it? |
15338 | What was the epitaph? |
15338 | What will it cost? |
15338 | What woman first invented mitts? |
15338 | What would be a good way to raise revenue and still benefit the people? |
15338 | What would my husband say? |
15338 | What would you say,began the voluble prophet,"if I were to tell you that in a very short space of time all the rivers will dry up?" |
15338 | What you- all doin''? |
15338 | What''s Blinks going to do with his new noiseless typewriter? |
15338 | What''s a''hoosit,''Katje? |
15338 | What''s an optimist? |
15338 | What''s become of your chauffeur? |
15338 | What''s civics? |
15338 | What''s coming off out in front there? |
15338 | What''s it about? |
15338 | What''s that piece of cord tied around your finger for? |
15338 | What''s that? |
15338 | What''s the difference between valor and discretion? |
15338 | What''s the difference,she asked the solemn man at the end of the table,"between a turkey dinner and a mess of stewed prunes?" |
15338 | What''s the difference? |
15338 | What''s the idea? |
15338 | What''s the matter, do n''t you like nuts? |
15338 | What''s the matter, old man? 15338 What''s the matter?" |
15338 | What''s the matter? |
15338 | What''s the matter? |
15338 | What''s the occasion for the parade, Tom? |
15338 | What''s the score, Jim? |
15338 | What''s the trouble? |
15338 | What''s yer bill o''fare? |
15338 | What''s your time? |
15338 | What''s yours? |
15338 | What,she asked,"do you think is the most wonderful thing man ever made?" |
15338 | What? |
15338 | What? |
15338 | Whatever put such an idea into your mind? |
15338 | When does this occur? |
15338 | When will we have peace, papa? |
15338 | When you see a bumblebee, ai n''t you''fraid? |
15338 | When you sold me this house, did n''t you say that in three months I would n''t part with it for$ 10,000? |
15338 | When''s the bloomin''war goin''to end? |
15338 | Where are you going? |
15338 | Where are you speaking from? |
15338 | Where are you working now? |
15338 | Where did you get that, Scotty? |
15338 | Where do you live in the city-- close in? |
15338 | Where do you work? |
15338 | Where is Tough Jim? |
15338 | Where is he? 15338 Where is that book I used to see?" |
15338 | Where is that clock I gave you? |
15338 | Where is the general freight agent? |
15338 | Where is the general manager? |
15338 | Where is the head of the legal department? |
15338 | Where is the prisoner? |
15338 | Where is your lawyer this time? |
15338 | Where shall I put this apple peel? |
15338 | Where''s Asia? |
15338 | Where''s that hotel that used to advertise,''All the Comforts of Home for One Dollar''? |
15338 | Where''s the boy? |
15338 | Which do you prefer? |
15338 | Which side is it best to lie on, Doc? |
15338 | Who are you? |
15338 | Who are you? |
15338 | Who can furnish a clear definition of a politician? |
15338 | Who done it? 15338 Who ferried souls across the Styx?" |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who is your family doctor? |
15338 | Who led the army in that recent expedition? |
15338 | Who said that? |
15338 | Who said''To labor is to pray?'' |
15338 | Who told you that? |
15338 | Who was it, Willie? |
15338 | Who was that? |
15338 | Who was the patron saint of Ireland? |
15338 | Who were they from? |
15338 | Who won the war? |
15338 | Who''s running the blame railroad, anyway? |
15338 | Who,asked the officiating clergyman, formally but impressively,"gives this bride away?" |
15338 | Whose? |
15338 | Why are school- teachers like Ford cars? |
15338 | Why are you dressed like that? |
15338 | Why are you driving that second nail? |
15338 | Why are you fighting so? |
15338 | Why are you so pensive? |
15338 | Why did n''t you get out of the way? |
15338 | Why did n''t you stop when I signaled you? |
15338 | Why did you kick John? |
15338 | Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson, if I may be permitted to ask? |
15338 | Why did you make off with the pocketbook you saw this lady drop in the street? |
15338 | Why did you think that? |
15338 | Why did your wife leave you? |
15338 | Why do n''t you advertise a thousand reward and no questions asked? |
15338 | Why do n''t you get out and hustle? 15338 Why do n''t you get rid of that mule?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you move into more comfortable quarters, old man? |
15338 | Why do n''t you pay your bills? |
15338 | Why do you always look in the glass? |
15338 | Why do you bring a check with the cocktails? |
15338 | Why do you do that? |
15338 | Why do you feed every tramp who comes along? 15338 Why do you have an apple as your trade- mark?" |
15338 | Why do you look so sorrowful, Dennis? |
15338 | Why father, that''s just what you put in, was n''t it? |
15338 | Why have I never married? |
15338 | Why have words roots, pa? |
15338 | Why is dat, boss? |
15338 | Why is it you never get to the office on time in the morning? |
15338 | Why is it, Bob,asked George of a very stout friend,"that you fat fellows are always good natured?" |
15338 | Why is it, Sam, that one never hears of a darky committing suicide? |
15338 | Why is it, Sam,he said, addressing the waiter,"that poor men usually give larger tips than rich men?" |
15338 | Why is that? |
15338 | Why not? 15338 Why not?" |
15338 | Why not? |
15338 | Why not? |
15338 | Why not? |
15338 | Why on earth does n''t somebody write a book on how to get a seat after you do get in? |
15338 | Why should n''t you? |
15338 | Why so? |
15338 | Why worry? |
15338 | Why''s that? |
15338 | Why, Auntie,exclaimed the officer,"why do n''t you want me to take it down?" |
15338 | Why, Doc? 15338 Why, Henry,"asked the statesman,"why are you eating out here alone?" |
15338 | Why, Johnny,exclaimed the shocked teacher,"do you mean to say that you do n''t want to go to heaven?" |
15338 | Why, William,replied his teacher,"what would it take to make you happy?" |
15338 | Why, dad,said he, in an injured tone,"do n''t you know that everything is marked down after the holidays?" |
15338 | Why, er- er- er,stammered Mr. Newlywed,"I do n''t think you pounded it enough, did you?" |
15338 | Why, grandma? |
15338 | Why, how could that be? |
15338 | Why, look here,said the merchant who was in need of a boy,"are n''t you the same boy who was in here a week ago?" |
15338 | Why, my little girl? |
15338 | Why, so it is, father,--whose wife shall I take? |
15338 | Why, what class? |
15338 | Why, what''s this? |
15338 | Why, who invited you here? |
15338 | Why, you''re perfectly capable of doing your own wishing, are n''t you? |
15338 | Why,asked the good man, with an anxious look,"is she dead?" |
15338 | Why,said the witness, with a beaming smile,"are these men interested in the case, too?" |
15338 | Why? 15338 Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Will I be likely to see him again? |
15338 | Will that be all? |
15338 | Will the nations always fight to have peace, papa? |
15338 | Will we make it up before we reach New York? |
15338 | Will ye, now? |
15338 | Will you be back? |
15338 | Will you be my wife? |
15338 | Will you be my wife? |
15338 | Will you have me for your wife? |
15338 | Will you mend it? |
15338 | Will you,fiercely demanded the general,"show the white feather in a season when feathers are not worn?" |
15338 | William,asked the teacher of a rosy- faced lad,"can you tell me who George Washington was?" |
15338 | Willie,said the teacher sternly,"what did I whip you for yesterday?" |
15338 | Witnesses? |
15338 | Women,she cried,"will you give way to mannish fears?" |
15338 | Wot''s up? |
15338 | Wotcher wages? |
15338 | Would you like me to ask your mother first? |
15338 | Would you like some views of the hotel to send to your friends? |
15338 | Would you shoot on the Germans if they invaded Switzerland? |
15338 | Would your Majesty deign to tell me the value of the cross? |
15338 | Ye think a fine lot of Shakespeare? |
15338 | Yes, Sue? 15338 Yes, mother,"said the boy obediently;"and shall I take that vase you won at Mrs. Jones''whist party, and give it back to her?" |
15338 | Yes,replied the friend;"the kind we feed to our horses?" |
15338 | Yes,replied the sympathetic friend,"but what has that to do with the wobegone expression on your face?" |
15338 | Yes,said the Judge;"and what will happen if you do not tell the truth?" |
15338 | Yes; but where were you born? |
15338 | Yes; but why do you ask? |
15338 | Yes? |
15338 | Yes? |
15338 | Yess? 15338 You are an actor?" |
15338 | You are one of those''read''men, ai n''t you Henry? |
15338 | You are sure he ran? |
15338 | You been to school, ai n''t you? |
15338 | You did n''t do it on your employer''s time, did you? |
15338 | You do n''t find nothing wrong with me, doctor? |
15338 | You do n''t make anything at that? |
15338 | You do n''t say? |
15338 | You had a job as janitor once, did n''t you? |
15338 | You mean you sell me a ticket to get to a certain place by a certain time and then you give me no assurance I''ll be there at that time? |
15338 | You mind if I leave baby here? |
15338 | You must have heard the bell, boys; why did you not come? |
15338 | You say Henry ran? |
15338 | You say this doctor has a large practice? |
15338 | You say you have good references? |
15338 | You shall have it,said Buddha, and turning to the Protestant,"What do you wish?" |
15338 | You there? |
15338 | You vant to know vot I make in der vactory? |
15338 | You would like to know what meal it was? |
15338 | You wrote this report of last night''s banquet, did you? |
15338 | You''re not going to sell him, are you, daddy? |
15338 | Your Honor,he asked,"will you charge the jury?" |
15338 | Your Honor,he said,"I beg your pardon; but do you follow me?" |
15338 | _ Going Up_SMITH--"Do you realize that we are beholding the completion of a great cycle in history?" |
15338 | ''18( otherwise)--"Think about it? |
15338 | ''Arrison?" |
15338 | ''For the third and last time, as a gentlemaun,''I sez,''will ye gie me thot watch?'' |
15338 | ''How would you define power of initiative?" |
15338 | ''Now, Sam, what have you to say?'' |
15338 | ''Ow do I know? |
15338 | ''Well, boss,''he finally said,''ai n''t dat the very thing we''re about to try?''" |
15338 | ''What do you think of that?'' |
15338 | ''Wo n''t you please give me this colt, then, and pray for one for yourself?''" |
15338 | ''Wull ye gie me it?'' |
15338 | --_E.H._"Do you think there''s a chance of prohibition''s being repealed, after all?" |
15338 | 1921--"Did you see that movie called''Oliver Twist''?" |
15338 | A colored woman one day visited the court- house in a Tennessee town and said to the judge:"Is you- all the reperbate judge?" |
15338 | A comrade communicated the sad news to another gallant Scot, who asked, anxiously:"Where''s his head? |
15338 | A fire to call the engines out? |
15338 | A homebrew Bacchus''raisin dance? |
15338 | A little boy''s mother in the congregation whispered to her son,"Is n''t it wonderful? |
15338 | A salesman stopping in one of the towns asked the old darky bus driver about it:"Say, uncle, why have they got the depot way down here?" |
15338 | A second car approached and stopped, whereon the tourist reached for his pocketbook and asked in an embarrassed manner,"How much?" |
15338 | A skidding auto turned about? |
15338 | A stranger, having admired the animal, asked the farmer:"What will you take for your cow?" |
15338 | A street car left the track perhaps? |
15338 | A suburban housewife relates overhearing this conversation between her Cape girl and the one next door:"How are you, Katje?" |
15338 | A.--"Does your husband consider you a necessity or a luxury?" |
15338 | ACCIDENTS Hearing a crash of glassware one morning, Mrs. Blank called to her maid in the adjoining room,"Norah, what on earth are you doing?" |
15338 | ACTORS AND ACTRESSES FIRST ACTRESS( behind the scenes)--"Did you hear the way the public wept during my death scene?" |
15338 | AD WRITER--"When do you want me to prepare that copy for the sale of antiques you have been planning?" |
15338 | AFFABLE WAITER--"How did you find that steak, sir?" |
15338 | AGATHA-"Is your former cook happy since she inherited a fortune?" |
15338 | AGE HE--"How old are you?" |
15338 | AGRICULTURE"Crop failures?" |
15338 | ALIBI TEACHER--"What is an alibi?" |
15338 | ALICE--"Did that make you want to marry her?" |
15338 | ALICE--"You''d take me out with you, if you had, would n''t you?" |
15338 | ALIMONY_ Or Go to Jail_"Is there any way a man can avoid paying alimony?" |
15338 | ALPHABET MOTHER( who is teaching her child the alphabet)--"Now, dearie, what comes after''g''?" |
15338 | ANTICIPATION"Mr. Blinks,"said she,"do you think that anticipation is greater than realization?" |
15338 | APPLICANT-"Do you happen to have a daughter, sir?" |
15338 | ASKER--"Could you lend me a V?" |
15338 | ASKER--"Have you a friend that would lend me a V?" |
15338 | ASSISTANT--"Are there any others you wish for?" |
15338 | ASSISTANT--"What are you going to do?" |
15338 | AUNT--"You''ll be late for the party, wo n''t you, dear?" |
15338 | AUTOMOBILE TOURISTS"Why do you turn out for every road hog that comes along?" |
15338 | AUTOMOBILES AND AUTOMOBILING"Has this car got a speedometer?" |
15338 | AVIATION TOMMY( to Aviator)--"What is the most deadly poison known?" |
15338 | AVIATOR--"And that is--?" |
15338 | Abner, ai n''t that nice?" |
15338 | Accordingly, the teacher started off with the question:"Now in this present terrible war, who is our principal ally?" |
15338 | After another block there was the same performance:"''Scuse me, boss, but whar d''you say you wanter go?" |
15338 | After he had climbed in, the cabby leaned over and asked,"What street do you want?" |
15338 | After tea Mrs. Timson asked:"Did you remember about the water, Thurza?" |
15338 | After the first hole the Englishman asked:"How many did you take?" |
15338 | After the kiss the little girl drew back sharply, sniffed and said:"''Why, mamma, you''ve been using father''s perfume, have n''t you?''" |
15338 | After the man had driven on the mother asked:"Why did n''t you take the nuts when he told you to?" |
15338 | After walking some distance the boy noticed his father was very silent evidently pondering over something, so he said,"Father, how much did you get?" |
15338 | Ai n''t they got any health laws in that town?" |
15338 | Alarm- clock:----? |
15338 | Alcott?" |
15338 | Along comes a flivver and the driver uncranks himself, gets out and stretches, and asks:"How far is it to Kansas City?" |
15338 | Already? |
15338 | Among other questions, the specialist asked,"Do you ever hear voices without being able to tell who is speaking, or where the sound comes from?" |
15338 | An English clergyman turned to a Scotchman and asked him:"What would you be were you not a Scot?" |
15338 | An Irishman who was rather too fond of strong drink was asked by the parish priest:"My son, how do you expect to get into Heaven?" |
15338 | And addressing again the soldier, he asked:"Is this generally the view held in the Swiss Army in regard to a possible German invasion? |
15338 | And came another wire in mid- afternoon:"How much snow there now?" |
15338 | And did n''t I tell you then that I wanted an older boy?" |
15338 | And discretion?" |
15338 | And how much does he put away every Saturday night, my dear?" |
15338 | And if we save or lose an hour or two what''s the odds? |
15338 | And what is his business?" |
15338 | And when do you expect to strike it, my good man?" |
15338 | And where would you like your spirit to sit? |
15338 | And who can pay a gardener? |
15338 | And you, sir?" |
15338 | Andrew ran up to his mother in great excitement and said:"Mamma, is that one a collector?" |
15338 | Answering the question,"When is a woman old?" |
15338 | Are all the Swiss soldiers so Germanophil?" |
15338 | Are n''t you quick at anything?" |
15338 | Are n''t you willing to trust your doctor, Rufus?" |
15338 | Are there various kinds?" |
15338 | Are things going badly?" |
15338 | Are you a teetotaler?" |
15338 | Are you able to sit up?" |
15338 | Are you sure he said in January?" |
15338 | Are you the president or the vice- president of the society?" |
15338 | Are you trying to climb where the chosen are, Where the feet of men are few? |
15338 | As a friend, and man to man, who do you think stands the best chance of getting the property when I am gone?" |
15338 | As soon as I took yere note ye''d draw the twenty poonds, would ye no?" |
15338 | At last he voiced his trouble:"But were they all Disciples? |
15338 | At the close of her discourse, she put this question to the class:"What high office in a nation could such a wonderful man fill?" |
15338 | At the wedding reception the young man remarked:"Was n''t it annoying the way that baby cried during the whole ceremony?" |
15338 | BAGGAGE TOMMY( just off train, with considerable luggage)--"Cabby, how much is it for me to Latchford?" |
15338 | BAILIE--"An''what will ye be daein on Saturday?" |
15338 | BALDNESS BALD HEADED GUEST--"Well, sonny, what is it that amuses you?" |
15338 | BAPTISM"You do n''t know me, do you, Bobby?" |
15338 | BEAUTY, PERSONAL"Is she very pretty?" |
15338 | BELLEVILLE--"Is Glenshaw getting ready for the fishing season?" |
15338 | BESSIE--"Then why did n''t he say walk?" |
15338 | BILLS COLLECTOR--"Did you look at that little bill I left yesterday, sir?" |
15338 | BLONDINE--"Isn''t Bennie Beanbrough the thick one?" |
15338 | BLUCK--"Why do vessels leaving New York make the greatest speed the first three miles?" |
15338 | BLUFFING VISITOR( at private hospital)--"Can I see Lieutenant Barker, please?" |
15338 | BOXCAR HARRY--"Beg pardon, ma''am, but do you happen to have some pie or cake that you could spare an unfortunate wanderer?" |
15338 | BREATHLESS VISITOR--"Doctor, can you help me? |
15338 | BRIGHT CHILD--"And when are they going to burn Mr. Lloyd George, daddy?" |
15338 | BROOKLYN"Where can I find a map of Brooklyn, old man?" |
15338 | BROWN( angrily)--"Why do n''t you see my wife about it and not come to me?" |
15338 | BULL--"How do I know? |
15338 | Be this the place?" |
15338 | Born? |
15338 | Brown?" |
15338 | Brown?" |
15338 | Business? |
15338 | But how am de wireless telegraph?" |
15338 | But how can I give it to him when he''s dead?" |
15338 | But how did you know where I''m from?" |
15338 | But if I had one I''d want to cash it when I wanted to, would n''t I? |
15338 | But is he required to chase it, too?" |
15338 | But suppose we are bad, then what will become of us?" |
15338 | But tell me, do you libr''yites Believe in fairies too? |
15338 | But what can you expect? |
15338 | But where are the guests''rooms?" |
15338 | But why does n''t she?" |
15338 | By the way, where is he going?" |
15338 | CALLER--"Is your mother at home, Elsie?" |
15338 | CANDIDATES TED--"So you think I''m wasting my time making love to that rich girl?" |
15338 | CANDOR"How is your wife this morning, Uncle Henry?" |
15338 | CANVASSER--"May I have a few minutes of your time?" |
15338 | CAPITAL AND LABOR WILLIE--"Paw, what is the difference between capital and labor?" |
15338 | CAPTAIN( speaking to raw recruit trying to drill)--"What was your occupation before entering the army?" |
15338 | CARD INDEX MINING- STOCK PROMOTER--"Where can I hide? |
15338 | CHEMIST--"Are they both for the same person, or shall I wrap them up separately?" |
15338 | CHICKEN STEALING An old negro was charged with chicken- stealing, and the judge said:"Where''s your lawyer, uncle?" |
15338 | CHILD LABOR SOUTHERNER--"Why are you Northerners always harping on the children employed in Southern factories?" |
15338 | CHILDREN JOHNNY--"What makes the new baby at your house cry so much, Tommy?" |
15338 | CHRISTMAS GIFTS"Is n''t this too absurd?" |
15338 | CHURCH ATTENDANCE"What''s the idea of free pews?" |
15338 | CHURCH SCOTT--"What is your notion of an ideal church?" |
15338 | CLASSIFIED AD MANAGER--"Do you want this placed under Business Opportunities or Matrimony?" |
15338 | CLEANLINESS"Ma, do I have to wash my face?" |
15338 | CLERK--"Why, sir?" |
15338 | CLIENT--"And how much will the real thing cost, with lots of publicity and everything?" |
15338 | COHEN, THE DEBTOR--"Cash, you say? |
15338 | COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES SOPH.--"How does it happen you came to Harvard? |
15338 | COMEDIAN--"My memory is n''t very accurate, but is n''t there a book called''Alice Threw the Looking- glass''?" |
15338 | COMMANDER--"What''s his character apart from this leave- breaking?" |
15338 | COMMITTEE BOBBIE--"What is a committee, pa?" |
15338 | CONDUCTOR--"Do you mind if I put your bag out of the way, sir? |
15338 | CONGRESS"How is the law made?" |
15338 | CONSCIENCE Wilson and Wilton were discussing the moralities when the first put this question:"Well, what is conscience, anyhow?" |
15338 | CONSOLATION FIRST WALL STREET BROKER--"Anything to do today?" |
15338 | CONVIVIAL GENT--"Wha''she call- calling me; Billy or William?" |
15338 | CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS_ The Stamp of Learning_"Pa, what''s a postgraduate?" |
15338 | COURTESY"How do you like your new music- master?" |
15338 | COW--"Can you beat it? |
15338 | CRABSHAW--"Why do you wish to leave school and go to work when you''re so young?" |
15338 | CREDIT FIRST CREDIT MAN--"How about Jones of Pigville Center?" |
15338 | CUBIST TEACHER--"Can anyone give an impressionistic definition of New York?" |
15338 | CURES_ A Testimonial_ DOCTOR--"Did that cure for deafness really help your brother?" |
15338 | CURRENT EVENTS MRS. BARR--"Henry, what are current events?" |
15338 | Ca n''t the leading man act as if he were in love with the star?" |
15338 | Ca n''t you see one is black and the other brown?" |
15338 | Can I book your order?" |
15338 | Can I have his house?" |
15338 | Can any one give me another example?" |
15338 | Can you arrange it for him?" |
15338 | Can you fix it?" |
15338 | Can you promise that?" |
15338 | Clean saving of a thousand, eh? |
15338 | Corn bread, did yo''say?" |
15338 | Crawley- Smith?" |
15338 | DAD--"Postscript? |
15338 | DAYLIGHT SAVING"Is your husband in favor of daylight saving?" |
15338 | DEAF- AND- DUMB BEGGAR--"Do you think it looks like rain, Bill?" |
15338 | DEMAGOG"Father,"said the small boy,"what is a demagog?" |
15338 | DENTIST( inserting rubber gag, towel, and sponge)--"How''s your family?" |
15338 | DEPARTING GUEST--"Enjoyed ourselves? |
15338 | DETECTIVES HOKUS--"How does Sleuthpup rank as a detective?" |
15338 | DIAGNOSIS FRIEND--"What is the first thing you do when a man presents himself to you for consultation?" |
15338 | DIBBS--"How do you make that out?" |
15338 | DICKEY--"Yes; why?" |
15338 | DIPLOMACY"Father,"said the small boy,"what is an overt act?" |
15338 | DISCRETION WILLIE--"Pa, what is discretion?" |
15338 | DOCTORS"What is your greatest wish, Doctor, now that you have successfully passed for your degree?" |
15338 | DOMESTIC FINANCE LITTLE TOMMY--"What does''close quarters''mean, Ma?" |
15338 | DOMESTIC RELATIONS HUSBAND( newly married)--"Don''t you think, love, if I were to smoke, it would spoil the curtains?" |
15338 | DORA-"How did you vote?" |
15338 | DREAMS"Mother, was n''t that a funny dream I had last night?" |
15338 | DRUGGIST--"Something else, miss?" |
15338 | Dentist, speaking to patient about to have a tooth extracted--"Have you heard the latest song hit?" |
15338 | Detroit a reliable car?" |
15338 | Dickson?" |
15338 | Did he enjoy it?" |
15338 | Did n''t I promise you a nickel a week to keep him awake?" |
15338 | Did n''t you feel shaky?" |
15338 | Did n''t you hear me say we were out against four to one?" |
15338 | Did n''t you stop and spell your names, as I told you?" |
15338 | Did you ever try gin and ginger ale?" |
15338 | Did you ever try to sell any?" |
15338 | Did you have any luck?" |
15338 | Did you put anything like that in this prescription?" |
15338 | Did you say sun was or was not shining?" |
15338 | Dis razor hurt you, sah?" |
15338 | Do n''t forget to tell her I called, will you?" |
15338 | Do n''t it trouble you?" |
15338 | Do n''t the Bible say plain and flat:''What God hath j''ined togither, let not man put asunder''?" |
15338 | Do n''t they teach you the common abbreviations in school?" |
15338 | Do n''t you know his name?" |
15338 | Do n''t you know that drink is mankind''s worst enemy?" |
15338 | Do n''t you like the beautiful country?" |
15338 | Do n''t you see dar''s nowhere else to put you?" |
15338 | Do they?" |
15338 | Do you believe in them?" |
15338 | Do you ever tell lies?" |
15338 | Do you expect company?" |
15338 | Do you hear dot?" |
15338 | Do you keep them all clean?" |
15338 | Do you know that when Woodrow Wilson was your age he was head of the school?" |
15338 | Do you know why a sane man will whimper and cry And weep o''er a ribbon or glove? |
15338 | Do you know? |
15338 | Do you long for"a job that is worth one''s while?" |
15338 | Do you mean to say your parents did not come from Ireland?" |
15338 | Do you think I''m a cold- storage plant?" |
15338 | Do you think she is reliable?" |
15338 | Do you think that you can manage it?" |
15338 | Do you want a colt so very badly?'' |
15338 | Do you want the earth with a little red fence around it for a cent?" |
15338 | Do you want to win? |
15338 | Does a sweetheart, or a wife, Love you, little star of"Life?" |
15338 | Does he dig in a ditch, or blaze a trail, Where the dreams of men may run? |
15338 | Does that young man never go to church, then?" |
15338 | Drink? |
15338 | During the conversation that took place, the politician asked,"And I may count upon your support, may I not?" |
15338 | ED--"Have you forgotten you owe me five dollars?" |
15338 | EDITH--"Dick, dear, your office is in State street, is n''t it?" |
15338 | EDITH--"How does Fred make love?" |
15338 | EDITORS"An editor is a man who puts things in the paper, is n''t he?" |
15338 | EMPLOYER( coming upon colored porter looking through the dictionary)--"What are you doing, Sam; looking up some more big words for another speech?" |
15338 | EMPLOYER--"Too strict, is she?" |
15338 | ENTHUSIAST--"Don''t the spectators tire you with the questions they ask?" |
15338 | ENTHUSIASTIC AVIATOR( after long explanation of principle and workings of his biplane)--"Now, you understand it, do n''t you?" |
15338 | EXCITABLE PARTY( at telephone)--"Hello? |
15338 | EXE--"Why not plead that you have a previous engagement?" |
15338 | EXPERIENCE"Did you ever realize anything on that investment?" |
15338 | EXTRAVAGANCE"What made you a multi- millionaire?" |
15338 | Early in the morning one winter''s day, came a wire from a friend in Chicago:"How''s the weather today out there?" |
15338 | Easy, is n''t it? |
15338 | FAILURES BROWN--"Back to town again? |
15338 | FAIR CUSTOMER( to salesman displaying modern bathing suit)--"And you''re sure this bathing suit wo n''t shrink?" |
15338 | FANNING--"What''s become of that rubber stamp,''Dictated, but not read,''that you used to use on your letters?" |
15338 | FASHION"Is n''t your wife dogmatic?" |
15338 | FATHER--"Who is he this time?" |
15338 | FINANCE"Dad,"said little Reginald,"what is a bucket- shop?" |
15338 | FIRST ARTIST--"The umbrella you lent me? |
15338 | FIRST COMMUTER--"Do you have to take such an early train as this?" |
15338 | FIRST LABORING MAN--"Wot''s a minimum wage, Albert?" |
15338 | FIRST LADY--"Did you vote with all those vile people?" |
15338 | FIRST LITTLE GIRL--"What''s your last name, Annie?" |
15338 | FIRST MERCHANT( as reported in the New York"Trade Record")--"How''s business?" |
15338 | FIRST OFFICER--"Did you get that fellow''s number?" |
15338 | FIRST SOUTHERNER--"Were you in New York long enough to feel at home?" |
15338 | FIRST TRAVELER( cheerily)--"Fine day, is n''t it?" |
15338 | FIRST WAR- CORRESPONDENT--"Did your dispatch get past the censor?" |
15338 | FISH The teacher asked,"Who can tell me what an oyster is?" |
15338 | FISHING UNLUCKY FISHERMAN--"Boy, will you sell that big string of fish you are carrying?" |
15338 | FOOD CONSERVATION"Well, Ezri, how''d jer make out with yer boarders this year?" |
15338 | FOOD DINER--"See here, where are those oysters I ordered on the half shell?" |
15338 | FOOLS"Did you really call this gentleman an old fool last night?" |
15338 | FORDS"So you bought one of those automobiles they tell so many funny stories about?" |
15338 | FOREIGNERS TEACHER--"Who was the first man?" |
15338 | FORESIGHT"Are you going to pay any attention to these epithets that are being hurled at you?" |
15338 | FORTUNE- TELLER--"You wish to know about your future husband?" |
15338 | FRANK--"When you proposed to her I suppose she said:''This is so sudden?''" |
15338 | FREE VERSE YOUNG THING--"I wonder why they call it free verse?" |
15338 | FRENCH LANGUAGE"Does your son who is abroad with the troops understand French?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"After you got through, how did you find out what it was?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"But, I say, that was written about autumn, was n''t it?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"To what do you attribute your rapid rise in your profession?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"What do you learn from that?" |
15338 | FROSH--"Yes, and say, would n''t that make a peach of a book?" |
15338 | Father Duffy is credited by the New York World with this after- dinner story:"An old sexton asked me,''Father, were n''t the Apostles Jews?'' |
15338 | Favorite living master? |
15338 | Finally one day he called and said:"How iss my wife?" |
15338 | Finally, she turned to a young man who was showing her through, and asked:"What is that big thing over there?" |
15338 | Five hundred dollars for that antique? |
15338 | Fixing the man with his eye, the admiral asked:"Did you get that medal for eating, my man?" |
15338 | Fogarty?" |
15338 | GARAGES"What do they sell in that last garage besides gasoline, father?" |
15338 | GARDENING"I suppose you are going to raise potatoes in your garden?" |
15338 | GAS DISSATISFIED HOUSEHOLDER--"Do you mean to say that this meter measures the amount of gas we burn?" |
15338 | GENIUS WILLIE--"Paw, what is the difference between genius and talent?" |
15338 | GILLIS--"Who are they?" |
15338 | GIRL( to druggist)--"Could you fix me a dose of castor oil so as the oil wo n''t taste?" |
15338 | GIRL--"Well, your chair is n''t nailed to the floor, is it?" |
15338 | GOSSIP"They say--""Who say?" |
15338 | GRAMERCY--"Why do n''t you have your old car repainted?" |
15338 | GREENE--"And did he?" |
15338 | GRIGGS( obliged to face him)--"Just what were you saying?" |
15338 | GUEST--"Who is the next speaker?" |
15338 | George Washington Jones, colored, was trying to enlist in Uncle Sam''s army, and the following conversation ensued with the recruiting officer:"Name?" |
15338 | Get her a new dress?" |
15338 | Give it up? |
15338 | Going up to Moses, he demanded harshly,"Moses, do you know the Ten Commandments?" |
15338 | Golden star and star of blue-- With one soul God gave to you-- Do you know how proud we are Of the golden service star? |
15338 | Grievous the pain; but, in the day When all the cost is counted o''er, Would it be best that ye should say:"We lost no loved ones in the war?" |
15338 | HAPPY--"How''s that?" |
15338 | HE( cautiously)--"Would you say''Yes''if I asked you to marry me?" |
15338 | HE--"Hadn''t you better practise while your father is supplying the raw materials?" |
15338 | HE--"Not quite a lady, is she?" |
15338 | HENLEY--"How are you getting on with your writing for the magazines?" |
15338 | HERBERT--"Why do you say that?" |
15338 | HEREDITY"What is heredity?" |
15338 | HEWITT--"Don''t you think I stand a good chance of making a fortune out of that mine?" |
15338 | HIX--"For a vacation, I suppose?" |
15338 | HOME BREW TIPS--"Why not try a home- brew receipt?" |
15338 | HOSTESS( at party)--"Does your mother allow you to have two pieces of pie when you are at home, Willie?" |
15338 | HOWELL--"What sort of a fellow is he?" |
15338 | HURRY--"Has he crashed?" |
15338 | HUSBAND--"Why do n''t you give it to the laundress?" |
15338 | HUSBAND--"Will it be ready then?" |
15338 | Hair? |
15338 | Has not your mother said something to you about this habit of his?" |
15338 | Has the strike been settled?" |
15338 | Have you any witnesses to stand for you?" |
15338 | Have you ever been fired? |
15338 | Have you got the engineer''s plans for the new bridge?" |
15338 | Have you read it?" |
15338 | Having tasted it, he exclaimed:"Which did you put in first, the whisky or the water?" |
15338 | He asked, pointing to the lettering:"That''s my name, I suppose?" |
15338 | He came back home, and his brother meeting him at the depot said:"Vell, Abie, did you find out vat ditto is?" |
15338 | He knew if he had the million you''d be easy,"FOUNTAIN PENS"Why do they call''em fountain pens? |
15338 | He must read the day''s record through, Then would n''t one sigh, And would n''t he try A great deal less talking to do? |
15338 | He said,''Littul man, how do you feel?'' |
15338 | He turned excitedly to his steward:"Look here, where''s the ruin, man?" |
15338 | He went out and met a friend, and the friend said:"Well, how is your wife?" |
15338 | Healthy? |
15338 | Hearst?" |
15338 | His brother said:"I buy ditto?" |
15338 | His mother, noticing a troubled look on his face as he looked about, said:"What''s the matter, dear? |
15338 | His question, innocent enough in appearance, dear knows, was this:"''Would you mind making a noise like a frog, uncle?''" |
15338 | His strong- minded fiancà © e looked sternly at him for a moment and replied,"Good enough for me? |
15338 | How can you say that no one knows it?" |
15338 | How did he do it?" |
15338 | How did it happen?" |
15338 | How did this policeman get here?" |
15338 | How did you know it was a Ford?" |
15338 | How do I know, for example, that you''re honest?" |
15338 | How do you account for it?" |
15338 | How do you know that it is any good?" |
15338 | How do you like my hat?" |
15338 | How do you like your editor? |
15338 | How does it feel? |
15338 | How does that old saying go:''Of two evils always choose--?" |
15338 | How far are they from here?" |
15338 | How far is it to Lexington?" |
15338 | How high did you say? |
15338 | How in the world did you happen to call him that?" |
15338 | How long must I wait for the half- portion of duck I ordered?" |
15338 | How many hods of mortar have yuh carried up that ladder today?" |
15338 | How many shares do you want?" |
15338 | How many?" |
15338 | How much did it bring you in? |
15338 | How much water at this rate have you hauled in all?" |
15338 | How much will such a course cost, and how long will it take?" |
15338 | How shall I classify it?" |
15338 | How shall I get rid of my present husband?" |
15338 | How so?''" |
15338 | How was that?" |
15338 | How was that?" |
15338 | How''s his temperature today?" |
15338 | I asked him why?" |
15338 | I did not know your mother was ill."LITTLE GIRL--"No, it is my aunt who is ill."NEIGHBOR--"What is the matter with your aunt?" |
15338 | I have n''t seen him for weeks?" |
15338 | I sez,''Who d''yer blinkin''well think you''re a- talkin''to? |
15338 | I suppose you know the man who''s running against me?" |
15338 | I''m sorry-- was it a secret?" |
15338 | INDUSTRY Andrew Carnegie was once asked which he considered to be the most important factor in industry-- labor, capital, or brains? |
15338 | INQUIRER( at South Station)--"Where does this train go?" |
15338 | INSOMNIA BARK--"So you have been cured of your insomnia? |
15338 | INSTALMENT PLAN"I wonder will Smithers always allude to his wife so lovingly as''my own''?" |
15338 | INTERVIEWER--"What is your wife''s favorite dish?" |
15338 | INTRODUCTION What can be more fitting than that a compiled book should have a compiled introduction? |
15338 | If a man dies, does lie live again? |
15338 | If any over- critical reader fails to find them humorous, may not the fault possibly be due to his own imperfect sense of humor? |
15338 | If we never had to utter,"Wo n''t you pass the bread and butter, Likewise push along that platter Full of meat?" |
15338 | In fact, as she was leaving his cell she said:"May I ask you why you are in this distressing place?" |
15338 | In his rapture he exclaimed,"But do you think, my love, I am good enough for you?" |
15338 | In the course of his examination these questions were put to an old negro who was appearing as a witness:"What is your name?" |
15338 | In trouble?" |
15338 | Instead of sitting at a desk''Mid undone labours, grimly lurking-- Oh, say, what is there picturesque In working? |
15338 | Is dere much money in dat?" |
15338 | Is he running on the Progressive ticket?" |
15338 | Is it immoral?" |
15338 | Is it love?" |
15338 | Is journalism with you a life- work or merely a means to a higher literary end? |
15338 | Is n''t that Smithson who just went by in his automobile? |
15338 | Is n''t that so, Sam?" |
15338 | Is n''t that something?" |
15338 | Is that it?" |
15338 | Is that my dog?" |
15338 | Is there any one here who knows how to pray?" |
15338 | Is this a party wire?" |
15338 | Is this hotel American or European?" |
15338 | Is this lady your wife?" |
15338 | Is this you, mother, dear?" |
15338 | Is you?" |
15338 | Is your heart for success athrob? |
15338 | It is n''t so hard, is it?" |
15338 | It is only that each has forgotten Something he used to remember: Black bat goes searching... searching.... White owl says over and over Who? |
15338 | It''s a fine line ye''re keeping, is n''t it?" |
15338 | JACK--"Did you tell her that what you said was in strict confidence?" |
15338 | JANITOR--"Down to zero, is it? |
15338 | JEEMS--"Yes; but do n''t you teach us to love our enemies?" |
15338 | JEWETT--"How is that?" |
15338 | JEWS Pat, answering questions in applying for a job as keeper of the pound, came to the query,"What are rabies and what would you do for them?" |
15338 | JOHNNY--"Ten hours a day? |
15338 | JONES--"How much were you beaten by?" |
15338 | JONES--"How so?" |
15338 | JONES--"Took a drop? |
15338 | JONES--"Well, if a haitch, a hay, two hars, a hi, a he s, a ho and a hen do n''t spell''Arrison, then what does it spell?" |
15338 | JOURNALISM"I represent The Daily Scoop, At what time did his lordship die?" |
15338 | JUDGE--"You let the burglar go to arrest an automobilist?" |
15338 | JUNKMAN( smiling)--"Any empty bottles?" |
15338 | JUNKMAN--"Any rags, paper, old iron to sell?" |
15338 | Johnson?" |
15338 | Jones?" |
15338 | Jones?" |
15338 | Junkins?" |
15338 | Just what does Scribbler write?" |
15338 | Know''st thou not all germs of evil In thy heart await their time? |
15338 | LABOR AND CAPITAL"What''s the difference between capital and labor?" |
15338 | LADY( to small boy who is fishing)--"I wonder what your father would say if he caught you fishing on Sunday?" |
15338 | LADY--"You say your father was injured in an explosion? |
15338 | LANDLADY--"Just when are you going to pay your arrears of room rent?" |
15338 | LAUNDRY"Did the laundry man find those cuffs he lost last week?" |
15338 | LAWYERS LAWYER--"Are you aware, sir, that what you contemplate is illegal?" |
15338 | LAZY MIKE--"You know the fellow that goes alongside the train and taps the axles to see if everything''s all right? |
15338 | LEA--"I wonder if Professor Kidder meant anything by it?" |
15338 | LEAGUE OF NATIONS"Why do you object to the League of Nations?" |
15338 | LEGISLATION"Have you made any resolutions or turned over a new leaf or anything like that?" |
15338 | LEGISLATORS"Do you think we are happier for the conveniences of telegraph and telephone?" |
15338 | LEISURE THE CHILD--"Mother, what is''leisure''?" |
15338 | LIBRARIAN--"Oral, of course?" |
15338 | LITTLE WILLIE--"What is a lawyer, pa?" |
15338 | LOST AND FOUND OLD GENTLEMAN( in street car)--"Has anyone here dropped a roll of bills, with a rubber elastic around them?" |
15338 | Little Marie was sitting on her grandfather''s knee one day, and after looking at him intently for a time she said:"Grandpa, were you in the ark?" |
15338 | Little kiddies over there-- Solemn eyes and tangled hair-- Ten years old? |
15338 | Look here, mister, how do you know my husband is n''t at the club when I have n''t told you my name?'' |
15338 | Lovers are plenty, but fortunes are few Why lose wages that carry me Better by far than a husband could do? |
15338 | Lucky we do n''t live in those times, what?" |
15338 | M.D.--"Would you have the price if I said you needed an operation?" |
15338 | MA--"Really?" |
15338 | MACPHERSON( at the box office)--"Will ye kindly return me the amount I paid for amusement tax?" |
15338 | MAG.--"Wot is''platonic affection,''Liz? |
15338 | MAGISTRATE( to policeman)--"Officer, what is this man charged with?" |
15338 | MAGISTRATE( to prisoner)--"What is your name?" |
15338 | MAGISTRATE--"Where do you live?" |
15338 | MAJORITY"You do n''t mean to tell me you ever doubt the wisdom of the majority?" |
15338 | MAMMA--"How do you feel this morning, Robert? |
15338 | MAN FROM MISSOURI--"Have you never been seasick?" |
15338 | MANAGER--"Can''t you find some way to make yourself busy around here?" |
15338 | MANDY--"Rastus, you all knows dat yo''remind me of dem dere flyin''machines?" |
15338 | MARJORIE--"Will I get everything I pray for, mama?" |
15338 | MARKSMANSHIP"Why do you compare my marksmanship with lightning?" |
15338 | MARRIAGE"Hubby, if I were to die would you marry again?" |
15338 | MASCOTS"Does a rabbit''s foot really bring good luck?" |
15338 | MAUDE--"And now?" |
15338 | MAUDE--"What makes you think his intentions are serious?" |
15338 | MAYOR OF TOWN--"Why so, Mooney? |
15338 | MEDICINE DOCTOR--"What? |
15338 | MIKE--"How is that, Pat?" |
15338 | MIKE--"Would ye trust such a party as thot?" |
15338 | MISTRESS( to butler)--"Why is it, John, every time I come home I find you sleeping?" |
15338 | MOTHER( after visitor had gone)--"Bobby, what on earth made you stick out your tongue at our pastor? |
15338 | MOTHER--"Joan, darling, run and call Fido, will you?" |
15338 | MOTHERS Answers to the question"what is Mother?" |
15338 | MOVIE OPERATOR--"What shall I do with this film? |
15338 | MR. EXE--"Did you tell the cook that the beefsteak was burned?" |
15338 | MR. GOODTHING--"How does your sister like the engagement ring I gave her, Bobby?" |
15338 | MR. ISOLATE( wearily).--"Purgatory? |
15338 | MR. MEEK--"Doctor would you mind telling her yourself?" |
15338 | MR. NEWLYWED--"Did you sew the button on my coat, darling?" |
15338 | MR. NEWRICHE--"What makes you think so?" |
15338 | MRS. BROWN--"And what did you say to him?" |
15338 | MRS. CASEY--"An''phwat are yez doin''wid thot incoom- tax paper, Casey?" |
15338 | MRS. GLABBERDEEN--"Of course you, too, must often change cooks?" |
15338 | MRS. HOMESPUN--"What''ll we contribute to the minister''s donation- party?" |
15338 | MRS. KNAGG--"Did the doctor ask to see your tongue?" |
15338 | MRS. LESSNER--"Do you think it''s true that poor Lydia has n''t smiled since her marriage?" |
15338 | MRS. SMYTHE DE WILLOUGHBY--"Was the grocer''s boy impudent again this morning, Clara, when you telephoned the order?" |
15338 | MRS. SUBBUBS( to tramp)--"Out of work, are you? |
15338 | MULES"Is you gwine ter let dat mewel do as he pleases?" |
15338 | MUSICAL STUDENT--"That piece you just played is by Mozart, is n''t it?" |
15338 | Married or single? |
15338 | Masefield?" |
15338 | May I ask if you''re a relative?" |
15338 | May I borrow yours, sir, to keep me dry while I run to the station?" |
15338 | Mayor, do you see any objection to my being put in poor Tom Smith''s place?'' |
15338 | Miss SNOWFLAKE--"What did Jim Jackson git married for?" |
15338 | Moses scratched his chin for a moment, and then, in an equally harsh voice, said:"Parson, yo''do n''t think yo''kin beat me do yo''? |
15338 | Mother asked"Why?" |
15338 | Must our play day Be a gray day Locked behind a prison wall? |
15338 | Must our proud day Be a shroud day With rehearsals once a week? |
15338 | Must the Sun day Be the one day When the sun is banned to all? |
15338 | Must the feast day Be the least day, Robbed of all the things we''d seek? |
15338 | Must the rest day Be a pest day? |
15338 | Must we backward turn to find The kind of day To while away The stalwart modern mind? |
15338 | Must we bore ourselves to death By boding ill From sitting still To curb each merry breath? |
15338 | My dear, do n''t you know? |
15338 | NAMES, PERSONAL"Why do you call the baby Bill?" |
15338 | NATIONALITY"But are you an American citizen?" |
15338 | NED--"But you got a check did n''t you?" |
15338 | NEIGHBOR''S MAID--"And what did they talk about?" |
15338 | NEIGHBOR--"Got much money in your bank, Bobby?" |
15338 | NEIGHBOR--"How is your mother this morning?" |
15338 | NEW MAN ON THE ROAD--"What is the best time for me to see the head of this firm I''m working for, boy?" |
15338 | NEW MISTRESS--"How about the afternoon off?" |
15338 | NEWSPAPER PROPRIETOR--"Well, what''s your idea?" |
15338 | NODD--"Are you sure your wife knows I''m going home to dinner with you?" |
15338 | NULLERFORD--"Do you know anybody who favors government control of the railroads?" |
15338 | NURSES FREDDIE--"Are you the trained nurse mama said was coming?" |
15338 | New car?" |
15338 | Not bad, is it?" |
15338 | Now I understand the three years all right; but what the ten days were for I''d like to know?" |
15338 | Now play one of your own, wo n''t you?" |
15338 | Now that the good times are over, how about a little honest business?" |
15338 | Now what does that word mean to you, children?" |
15338 | Now, I ask you, would you like a husband you had to keep in an aquarium?" |
15338 | Now, can you say all that?" |
15338 | Now, do you understand?" |
15338 | Now, how about it? |
15338 | Now, how do you spell''mouse''?" |
15338 | Now, what does that prove?" |
15338 | O''HOULIHAN--"Pwhut''s a pessimist, Mike?" |
15338 | OCCUPATIONS PAPA--"But has n''t your fiancà © got a job?" |
15338 | OCEAN TRAVEL"Terribly rough, is n''t it?" |
15338 | OFFICE BOY--"Gee whiz: Am I expected to do the work and find it, too?" |
15338 | OFFICE BOYS Boss--"Can''t you find something to do?" |
15338 | OFFICER( to private)--"What are you doing down in that shell- hole? |
15338 | OFFICER( to recruit)--"Goodness gracious, man, where are all your shots going? |
15338 | OFFICER--"Is that soup ready, Jones?" |
15338 | OKE--"Would you be satisfied if you had all the money you wanted?" |
15338 | OLD LADY( to motorman on her first drive on an electric car)--"Would it be dangerous, conductor, if I was to put my foot on the rail?" |
15338 | OPPORTUNITY"But did n''t Opportunity ever knock at your door?" |
15338 | OUIJA BOARD"Do you think Mrs. Spinnix cheated at the ouija board?" |
15338 | On coming to himself, he asked faintly,"What was it?" |
15338 | On profits tightens all the reins, Who has to suffer all the pains? |
15338 | On the man replying"No, sir,"the admiral rapped out:"Then why the deuce do you wear it on your stomach?" |
15338 | One day I proposed marriage to her, and what do you think she did? |
15338 | One day he said to his mother:"Mama, how did uncle grow so big and tall?" |
15338 | One day she said:"Mother, do you know that it is better to be a Christian Scientist than anything else?" |
15338 | One morning Jorkins looked over his fence and said to his neighbor, Harkins:"What are you burying in that hole?" |
15338 | One morning it was absent, as usual, and I said,''Maggie, where is the stepladder?'' |
15338 | One morning she said to her husband:"Did you have any mail this morning, dear?" |
15338 | One of them asked,"Why is the pancake like the sun?" |
15338 | One of them thought she would have some fun, and called to a little girl standing near,"Are there any shows in town?" |
15338 | Or a mother, proud but sad, Who gave all, her only lad? |
15338 | Or have they gone in search of the Fourteen Points? |
15338 | Out in Kansas, for instance, a native observed a stranger looking around and ventured to say,"Good morning, sir, House hunting?" |
15338 | PARSON BLACK( sternly)--"Did you come by dat watehmelyun honestly, Bruddeh Bingy?" |
15338 | PARSON WHITE--"Brudder Lamkins, how did yer son come outen de trial?" |
15338 | PASSENGER( after first night on board ship)--"I say, where have all my clothes vanished to?" |
15338 | PASSENGER--"Are you blind, man? |
15338 | PATIENT--"And will my nerve be as good as yours then?" |
15338 | PEACE"Why were all the nations fighting, papa?" |
15338 | PENFIELD--"What do you know about Bestseller''s new book?" |
15338 | PENMANSHIP Mr. Brown had just registered and was about to turn away when the clerk asked:"Beg pardon, but what is your name?" |
15338 | PERKINS--"By what?" |
15338 | PERSUASION"Mother,"said a twelve- year- old of Baltimore,"did you tell father I wanted a new bicycle?" |
15338 | PESSIMISM TED--"What''s the difference between a pessimist and a cynic?" |
15338 | PHIL--"Was he glad to see you?" |
15338 | PITTSBURG PITTSBURG MAN( telephoning to Long Island from New York)--"Ten cents? |
15338 | POLICE"Why does n''t the policeman pay his fare?" |
15338 | POLICEMAN--"Lost yer mammy,''ave yer? |
15338 | POLITICIANS"And why is he here?" |
15338 | POLITICS GREEN--"What is the hardest work you ever did?" |
15338 | POSTAL SERVICE WILLIS--"What did you think of that fellow''s carrying the message to Garcia?" |
15338 | PREPAREDNESS GRUBBS--"Are you planning to make any good resolutions?" |
15338 | PRICES"Have any trouble in getting your money back?" |
15338 | PRISON VISITOR--"What terrible crime has this man committed?" |
15338 | PRISONER--"How can that be, your honor, when I was arrested for getting rid of it?" |
15338 | PROF.--"What happened to Babylon?" |
15338 | PROF.--"What happened to Tyre?" |
15338 | PROFESSOR AT AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL--"What kinds of farming are there?" |
15338 | PROFESSOR--"So, sir, you said that I was a learned jackass, did you?" |
15338 | PRONUNCIATION"Was n''t it_ fearful_ about the Reims cathedral?" |
15338 | PROSECUTING ATTORNEY( investigating election fund)--"Dave, what happened to you before you reached the polls?" |
15338 | PROSECUTOR--"Did you take that money, too, Dave?" |
15338 | PROSECUTOR--"Did you take the money?" |
15338 | PROSECUTOR--"Then, Dave, how did you vote?" |
15338 | PSYCHOLOGY"Father,"said the small boy,"what is psychology?" |
15338 | PUNCTUATION"Ca n''t you stretch a point?" |
15338 | PUNS"Have you a little fairy in your home?" |
15338 | PURGATORY MARMADUKE ISOLATE( of Lonelyville).--"Pa, what is Purgatory?" |
15338 | Paper, mister?" |
15338 | Parents alive yet? |
15338 | Presently, seeing the visitors glancing around the room, he said:"Well, what do you think of our stuff, anyway?" |
15338 | Previous experience? |
15338 | Put them up to look as if they''d been caught today, will you?" |
15338 | Puzzled, he demanded:''Then how the deuce did the Jews let go of a good thing like the Catholic Church and let the Eytalians grab it?''" |
15338 | Q. Nativity? |
15338 | QUESTIONS"You understand your duties thoroughly, do n''t you?" |
15338 | RAILROADS"Where''s the president of this railroad?" |
15338 | RASTUS-"How''ll it be if Ah pays seben- fifty, Jedge? |
15338 | RASTUS--"How much, boss?" |
15338 | RASTUS--"No, Mandy, how''s dat?" |
15338 | RAYMOND--"What the deuce do you mean by telling Joan that I am a fool?" |
15338 | RECRUITING POLICEMAN( rounding up draft suspects)--"Have you got a card?" |
15338 | REGRETS_ Who Am I?_ I am frequently most potent in the morning, but I am willing to abide with you at any time. |
15338 | RELATIVES"Have you any relatives living in the country?" |
15338 | REPARTEE"Pa, what is repartee?" |
15338 | ROADS"How are the roads in this section?" |
15338 | RUPERT--"What did you do with the cuffs I left on the table last night?" |
15338 | Roe?" |
15338 | Roosevelt then said:"Then if your father had been a horsethief and your grandfather had been a horsethief you would be a horsethief?" |
15338 | SACRIFICES"George, where are your school- books?" |
15338 | SALARIES"And about the salary?" |
15338 | SALES MANAGER--"Had much experience?" |
15338 | SALESMEN AND SALESMANSHIP"Hey, what did you go and sell them apples fer?" |
15338 | SAM--"Something easy?" |
15338 | SAM--"Who was the first Kaiser?" |
15338 | SAVING SON--"Dad, what is a savings account?" |
15338 | SCEPTIC--"If you have such an infallible remedy for baldness, why do n''t you use it?" |
15338 | SCHOLARSHIP"What''s the matter? |
15338 | SCHOOL- TEACHER( to little boy)--"If a farmer raises 3,700 bushels of wheat and sells it for$ 2.50 per bushel, what will he get?" |
15338 | SECOND HE--"Why do you say that?" |
15338 | SECOND LOAFER--"Wat''ave they struck for?" |
15338 | SECOND NAVVY--"Why? |
15338 | SECOND( more hopefully)--"Why do n''t you tell the truth and get a good night''s rest?" |
15338 | SECRETS"Can you keep a secret, Peggy?" |
15338 | SENATORS"What is your position on this great question?" |
15338 | SETTLEMENT WORKER( visiting tenements)--"And your father is working now and getting two pounds a week? |
15338 | SHE( fluttering visibly)-"Oh, did you?" |
15338 | SHE( still more cautiously)--"Would you ask me to marry you if I said I would say''Yes''if you asked me to marry you?" |
15338 | SHE( thoughtfully)--"Did you ever think much about reincarnation, dear?" |
15338 | SHE--"How will I know until I get it?" |
15338 | SHE--"I wonder why men lie so?" |
15338 | SHE--"Tore it up? |
15338 | SHE--"What makes you imagine I should ever want another like you?" |
15338 | SHE--"What''s the man running for?" |
15338 | SHE--"Why do n''t you talk of higher things once in a while?" |
15338 | SILAS( in a whisper)--"Did you git a peep at the underworld at all while you wuz in New York, Ezry?" |
15338 | SLAPSTICK DIRECTOR--"Can''t you suggest a novel from which we could adapt a comedy?" |
15338 | SMALL SCOUT--"Dad, what are the silent watches of the night?" |
15338 | SMITHSON--"Do you know that Noah was the greatest financier that ever lived?" |
15338 | SMOKING"Have a cigar?" |
15338 | SOCIALISTS"What''s the difference between a socialist and a plutocrat?" |
15338 | SOCIETY"Dad, what''s a social scale?" |
15338 | SPELLING If an S and an I, and an O and a U, With an X at the end spell"su,"And an E and a Y and an E spell I, Pray what is a speller to do? |
15338 | SPINSTERS"Helen,"said the teacher,"can you tell me what a''myth''is?" |
15338 | STENOGRAPHERS"How many stenographers have you?" |
15338 | STEWARD--"Where did you put them last night?" |
15338 | STRANGER--"Upon what plan are your city institutions conducted?" |
15338 | STRATEGY WILLIE WILLIS--"Pa, what''s strategy?" |
15338 | STUDENT( writing home)--"How do you spell''financially''?" |
15338 | SUBURBS"Pa, what is a suburb, anyhow?" |
15338 | SUBWAYS"There''s no danger in riding in these subways, is there?" |
15338 | SUNDAY SCHOOLS"Ef yo''had your choice, Liza, which would yo''rather do-- live, or die an''go to heaven?" |
15338 | SURPRISE"Do you think Gladys was surprised when I proposed to her?" |
15338 | SYNONYMS TEACHER--"Hawkins, what is a synonym?" |
15338 | Said A to B:"I do n''t believe you even remember the Lord''s Prayer, do you?" |
15338 | Salary expected? |
15338 | Same kind as you sent me last?" |
15338 | See? |
15338 | Senator Hoar used to tell with glee of a Southerner just home from New England who said to his friend,"You know those little white round beans?" |
15338 | Shall I accept him?" |
15338 | Shall I chase them away?" |
15338 | Shall I make some apple sauce out''n hit, mum?" |
15338 | She explained her dilemma and the colored woman listened in silence, then she said:"Where do yo''live, missus?" |
15338 | She looked at him and said,"Are you shaving?" |
15338 | Should I wake him?" |
15338 | Since then in every sort of place I''ve met with Mark and heard him joke, Yet how can I describe his face? |
15338 | Skinner?" |
15338 | So she makes that up too, does she?" |
15338 | Suddenly he called to the new clerk:"Did you give George Callahan credit?" |
15338 | Suddenly he turned to the priest:"See here, old chap,"he demanded,"is this thing perfectly safe?" |
15338 | Surprised, she asked:"Did you really do that?" |
15338 | TARDINESS MR. PECK--"Would you mind compelling me to move on, officer? |
15338 | TEACHER--"And what was Nelson''s farewell address?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"Do you know the population of New York?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"In what part of the Bible is it taught that a man should have only one wife?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"Thomas, will you tell me what a conjunction is, and compose a sentence containing one?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"What lesson do we learn from it?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"You remember the story of Daniel in the lion''s den, Robbie?" |
15338 | TEACHERS FATHER( meaningly)--"Who is the laziest member of your class, Tommy?" |
15338 | TELEGRAPH"Why did you strike the telegraph operator?" |
15338 | THE COURT--"Considering that you are the wife of the prisoner, do you think you are qualified to act as a juror in this case?" |
15338 | THE FATHER--"But have you enough money to marry my daughter?" |
15338 | THE LADY-"So you''re really one of the strikers?" |
15338 | THE PUBLISHER--"How are you going to introduce accurate local color in your new story of life in Thibet? |
15338 | THE TOMBSTONE MAN( after several abortive suggestions)--"How would simply,''Gone Home''do?" |
15338 | THE VISITOR--"Does your new baby brother cry much, Ethel?" |
15338 | TILDA--"How come I say mo''''lasses when I ai n''t had none yet?" |
15338 | TODAY--"What do we care for prices? |
15338 | TOMMIE--"What makes you think that?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"Father, what''s the future of the verb''invest''?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"How much does it take to kill a person?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"How much for my luggage?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"Why do the ducks dive?" |
15338 | TOMORROW--"What do we care for prices? |
15338 | TOURIST( in village notion- store)--"Whaddya got in the shape of automobile- tires?" |
15338 | TRADE UNIONS TEACHER--"If a man gets four dollars for working eight hours a day, what would he get if he worked ten hours a day?" |
15338 | TRAMP--"That so, mum? |
15338 | TRIGGS--"What are they?" |
15338 | Taking in the size of the boy and then glancing back at the book she remarked,"This is rather technical, is n''t it?" |
15338 | That so earnestly ye lean From the spirit to the clay? |
15338 | The Function of Humor In an article entitled"Why Do We Laugh?" |
15338 | The Irishman looked at him suspiciously for a moment, then said:"What the devil do I want a ticket there an''back for when I''m here already?" |
15338 | The Tax? |
15338 | The boarder watched him a little while and then said:"What on earth are you howling for? |
15338 | The canny Scot replied with a merry twinkle in his eye,"Which is the most important leg of a three- legged stool?" |
15338 | The couple agreed, and at the proper moment the clergyman said:"Will those who wish to be united in the holy bond of matrimony please come forward?" |
15338 | The deft designer, what of her? |
15338 | The editor of The Reporter humbly submits to the editor of The Digest this bit of pathos:"What shape, madam, was the pocketbook you lost?" |
15338 | The farmer scratched his head for a moment, and then said:"Look a- here, be you the tax assessor or has she been killed by the railroad?" |
15338 | The following is reported as an incident to his vigil:"Who goes there?" |
15338 | The host''s son was at the table, and one of the New York clergymen said to him:"My lad, what did you think of your father''s sermon?" |
15338 | The minister noticed that the pigs were very strange in their manner, so he said:"My good lady, why are the pigs so excited?" |
15338 | The minister, surprised and confused, turned to the keeper and said:"Shall I stop speaking?" |
15338 | The mother, quite anxious, exclaimed,"Where can Aunt Mary be?" |
15338 | The teacher had asked,"Why did David say he would rather be a door- keeper in the house of the Lord?" |
15338 | The workman was busily employed by the roadside, and the wayfarer paused to inquire,"What are you digging for?" |
15338 | The young man reflected a moment, and then asked,"How many are there of you, sir?" |
15338 | The young woman urged the child to come to her, saying again:"Wo n''t you give me a kiss?" |
15338 | Then comes a Buick and the chauffeur says:"How far is it to Kansas City?" |
15338 | Then he anxiously turned to his mother and exclaimed:"Ma, which one are you going to keep?" |
15338 | Then he remarked bitingly:"How will you have your tea, Miss Brown?" |
15338 | Then he said"Then perhaps you knew Tom Sawyer?" |
15338 | Then the clergyman turned to a gentleman from Ireland and asked him:"And what would you be were you not an Irishman?" |
15338 | Then what did you have your eyes closed for?" |
15338 | Then why do n''t you light it again?" |
15338 | Then why is it people brag about them?" |
15338 | Then, the following colloquy occurred:"Did n''t you get my letter?" |
15338 | Then:"Mother, why do n''t you boil daddy?" |
15338 | There ca n''t but one be elected, can there?" |
15338 | They ask,"What does that represent?" |
15338 | They charged the bug with bigamy; Now what could the poor thing do? |
15338 | They like to have it quiet up there, do n''t they?" |
15338 | They thought she was going blind, and so a surgeon operated on her and found--""Yes?" |
15338 | Throw down your pole, chuck out your bait And say your fishin''s through? |
15338 | Throw up the sponge and kick yourself And growl, and fret, and stew? |
15338 | To the woman who was bending over the washtub he said:"Madam, I am the census- taker; how many children have you?" |
15338 | Troubled with sleeplessness? |
15338 | Turning to the daughter of the house, he asked sternly:"Do you yourself, Miss Fuller, think the girls who dance these dances are right?" |
15338 | Turning to the mother, he inquired,"What is the name of the child?" |
15338 | Two bootblacks nabbed for shooting craps? |
15338 | Two nurse- maids were wheeling their infant charges in the park when one asked the other:"Are you going to the dance tomorrow afternoon?" |
15338 | UNFORTUNATE PEDESTRIAN( who has been knocked down and dazed)--"Where am I? |
15338 | Understan'', Rastus?" |
15338 | VEGETARIANS"Ever bothered with tramps out your way?" |
15338 | VISITOR--"What about?" |
15338 | VISITOR--"What''s that new building on the hill yonder?" |
15338 | VISITOR--"Why does your servant go about the house with her hat on?" |
15338 | Voice? |
15338 | WAITER( confidently)--"Would you mind just letting me''ave another look at the bill, sir?" |
15338 | WAITER--"And will you take the macaroni au gratin, sir?" |
15338 | WAITER--"What strike, sir?" |
15338 | WARD HEELER--"Are women trying to reform politics?" |
15338 | WATKINS--"Just what is democracy, anyway?" |
15338 | WEARY RHODES--"What ja gona do?" |
15338 | WHAT HE SAID TO HIS PARTNER--"Well, how''s the garden coming along? |
15338 | WIFE( trying to think of The Hague)--"Let''s see, what is the name of the place where so much was done toward promoting peace in the world?" |
15338 | WILLIE( doing his homework)--"What is the distance to the nearest star, Auntie?" |
15338 | WILLIE--"Paw, why is the way of the transgressor hard?" |
15338 | WILLIS--"Did the war do anything for you?" |
15338 | WILLIS--"Going to the party?" |
15338 | WILLIS--"What makes you think it is easier for a rich man to land in Society than for an immigrant to land in America?" |
15338 | WISDOM"Father, have you cut all four of your wisdom teeth?" |
15338 | WIVES"Are you the captain of your soul?" |
15338 | WORRY"Did n''t you use to belong to a Do n''t Worry Club years ago?" |
15338 | Walk?'' |
15338 | Was he a steady chap Ryan?" |
15338 | Was n''t there something said about a movement to have it reduced?" |
15338 | Was there a dull thud? |
15338 | We''ve been at Gallipoli, Mesopotamia, the plains of Bethlehem, and--""The plains of Bethlehem?" |
15338 | Were n''t there_ any_ Methodists?" |
15338 | Were they lost?" |
15338 | What are they for, I should like to know?" |
15338 | What are those things you are driving? |
15338 | What are ye daein the morrow nicht?" |
15338 | What are you going into?'' |
15338 | What are you locked up here for?" |
15338 | What are your qualifications?" |
15338 | What can I do for you?" |
15338 | What causes winter underwear? |
15338 | What d''ye want a watch fer? |
15338 | What did he say, pet?" |
15338 | What did she die of?" |
15338 | What do I know about surplices? |
15338 | What do you call her Postscript for?" |
15338 | What do you expect us to do? |
15338 | What do you mean, child?" |
15338 | What do you suppose I came to consult you for?" |
15338 | What do you think I am, a college graduate?" |
15338 | What do you think it was?" |
15338 | What do you think of him?" |
15338 | What do you think of mine?" |
15338 | What do you think the servants are for?" |
15338 | What do you want to do with this extra one?" |
15338 | What do you want?" |
15338 | What does Ghoughphteightteau spell? |
15338 | What does this mean? |
15338 | What drove our honest pen to rhyme? |
15338 | What else do you want to know?" |
15338 | What happened?" |
15338 | What happened?" |
15338 | What have I to be thankful for? |
15338 | What have the various expeditions to the North Pole accomplished?" |
15338 | What have you done it for?" |
15338 | What have you to say in your defense?" |
15338 | What in the world gives you that idea?" |
15338 | What in thunder is a poor editor to do anyhow? |
15338 | What is he doing?" |
15338 | What is he suffering from?" |
15338 | What is it men in ev''ry clime, Will talk about till end of time? |
15338 | What is it moulds the life of man? |
15338 | What is it, anyhow?'' |
15338 | What is it? |
15338 | What is it?" |
15338 | What is it?" |
15338 | What is the title of it?" |
15338 | What is your income from art? |
15338 | What is your motto, my son?" |
15338 | What is your name, age, and salary? |
15338 | What is your proposition?" |
15338 | What is yours?" |
15338 | What makes some black and others tan? |
15338 | What makes the Cost of Living high? |
15338 | What makes the Libyan Desert dry? |
15338 | What makes the Zulu live in trees, And Congo natives dress in leaves, While others go in fur and freeze? |
15338 | What makes the summer warm and fair? |
15338 | What makes us rush and build a fire, And shiver near the glowing pyre-- And then on other days perspire? |
15338 | What makes you ask?" |
15338 | What makes you think so?" |
15338 | What marvel from the fabled isles That drew the eye from Paris styles? |
15338 | What number immediately comes into your mind?" |
15338 | What number was it you wanted?" |
15338 | What on earth could I do with him? |
15338 | What poems have been written by just looking through a window; and as for literature in general, who does not remember the window in Thrums? |
15338 | What seed did you use?" |
15338 | What swayed the living mass? |
15338 | What then?" |
15338 | What was the best interview you ever wrote? |
15338 | What was the nature of the trouble you consulted him about?" |
15338 | What would a policy for$ 20,000 cost?" |
15338 | What would you think of a soldier without a gun?" |
15338 | What would you want to go for, anyhow? |
15338 | What''s happened to your box for the blind?" |
15338 | What''s he done got de matter of''m?" |
15338 | What''s he want of such a speed demon?" |
15338 | What''s that mean?" |
15338 | What''s the difference between the city and the country?" |
15338 | What''s the matter? |
15338 | What''s the secret?" |
15338 | What''s up? |
15338 | What''s your notion of a hospitable house?" |
15338 | What? |
15338 | What? |
15338 | What?" |
15338 | When I made a mistake yesterday he said:''Pray, mademoiselle, why do you take so much pains to improve upon Beethoven?''" |
15338 | When I want a shirt mended I take it to my wife and flourish it around a little and say,''Where''s that rag- bag?'' |
15338 | When Paderewski was on his last visit to America he was in a Boston suburb, when he was approached by a bootblack who called:"Shine?" |
15338 | When did he get a car?" |
15338 | When he had sufficiently gained his breath he spoke:"Which one?" |
15338 | When his brother arrived he showed him the bills and said:"Vat do it mean you shall buy ditto for a closing( clothing) business?" |
15338 | When labor gets dissatisfied, And would conditions override, Who gets submerged beneath the tide? |
15338 | When lovely woman wants a favor, And finds, too late, that man wo n''t bend, What earthly circumstance can save her From disappointment in the end? |
15338 | When managers and actors fight And theaters are closed at night, Who sees amusement out of sight? |
15338 | When street- cars cease to run, and balk At all conciliation talk, Who has to pay the freight and walk? |
15338 | When strikes put up the price of food, And each side holds firm attitude, Who always has to make loss good? |
15338 | When, after much labor, the document was completed, the client asked:"Have you fixed this thing, as I wished it, tight and strong?" |
15338 | When, where, and why did you paint it? |
15338 | Where am I?" |
15338 | Where are the clothes of yesteryear-- And of the year before? |
15338 | Where are the clothes of yesteryear? |
15338 | Where are you-- out driving or at a four- o''clock tea?" |
15338 | Where does he live? |
15338 | Where have you been since you took my order?" |
15338 | Where is it?" |
15338 | Where would you go to dig a can of worms?" |
15338 | Where''d you get that idea?" |
15338 | Where''ll I begin?" |
15338 | Where''s the lady?" |
15338 | Where? |
15338 | Where? |
15338 | Which of your paintings do you consider your best work? |
15338 | Whit wad ye say to Union Street?" |
15338 | Who in disputes which rise each day, Is not permitted any say, But always loses either way? |
15338 | Who is she?" |
15338 | Who is this, I say?" |
15338 | Who is this? |
15338 | Who is your favorite dead master? |
15338 | Who knows? |
15338 | Who outspoke you?" |
15338 | Who will forget his smoking bout With Mount Vesuvius-- our cheers-- When Mount Vesuvius went out And did n''t smoke again for years? |
15338 | Who would venture to predict a woman''s ballot twenty- four hours before election?" |
15338 | Who''s chickens did you''spose dey was?" |
15338 | Whose?" |
15338 | Whut''s dis yere haid for?" |
15338 | Why a cook will put sugar for salt in a pie? |
15338 | Why an ostrich will travel for miles? |
15338 | Why are jokes preceded by the so- called title, which is virtually the conclusion, or what Twain termed the"nub"? |
15338 | Why ca n''t I cease a slave to be, And taste existence beatific On some fair island hid in the Pacific? |
15338 | Why did n''t yer keep hold of her skirt?" |
15338 | Why did n''t you stop?" |
15338 | Why did she leave you?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you get a more interesting preacher?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you have him arrested?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you keep your account in a bank that has plenty of money?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you leave him?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you try my plan?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you want a lawyer?" |
15338 | Why do you ask that question?" |
15338 | Why do you want job? |
15338 | Why have n''t you sent us anything? |
15338 | Why is n''t every one happy?" |
15338 | Why learn to economize in politics? |
15338 | Why should one with great pains and poor prospects of success attempt to do what has already been well done? |
15338 | Why should the teachers get paid when us kids do all the work?" |
15338 | Why should they strangely disappear-- All the old clothes of yesteryear? |
15338 | Why the tigers and lions creep out of their lair? |
15338 | Why, how''s that? |
15338 | Why?" |
15338 | Why?" |
15338 | Why?" |
15338 | Will it ever make a change for the better? |
15338 | Will you lend me one?" |
15338 | Will you take yer heggs fried, same as this''ere gentleman?" |
15338 | William thought this over seriously for a few minutes, then said:"Mama, what kind of a boy was papa?" |
15338 | With but three minutes to catch his train, the traveling salesman inquired of the street- car conductor,"Ca n''t you go faster than this?" |
15338 | With the sobs rising in her throat, she held up her plate as high as she could and said:"Does anybody want a clean plate?" |
15338 | Without windows there would be no ghost stories, for how could the rain beat on the pane, or the wind come in short gusts through the cracks? |
15338 | Wo n''t you have a glass of soda while waiting?" |
15338 | Wo n''t you see if you ca n''t fix it so I can use them privately? |
15338 | Wonder who it belongs to?" |
15338 | Would n''t some bread and butter do?" |
15338 | Would n''t you like to add a little to the amount?" |
15338 | Would the butcher, baker, grocer Get our hard- earned dollars? |
15338 | Would you mind telling me about how much the wedding cost you?" |
15338 | X.--"Bothered with time- wasting callers, are you? |
15338 | Y.--"But suppose it''s some one you want to see?" |
15338 | Y.--"What is your plan?" |
15338 | YOUNG HOPEFUL--"Father, what is a traitor in politics?" |
15338 | YOUNG HOPEFUL--"Well, then, what is a man who leaves his party and comes over to yours?" |
15338 | YOUNG LADY--"What makes it stay up?" |
15338 | YOUNG SON--"What is luck, father?" |
15338 | YOUNG WOMAN( to be neighbor at dinner)--"Guess whom I met today, doctor?" |
15338 | You know everything- what''s a cosmopolitan?" |
15338 | You know something about punctuation, do n''t you?" |
15338 | You make me stop and wonder Why I find you there to- night, Is it some worry or some fright That leaves you colorless, and oh, so white? |
15338 | You may analyze this and say, what is there in it? |
15338 | You remember things now?" |
15338 | You want to know''oo told me that, mum?" |
15338 | You- all do n''t s''pose Uncle Sam is gwine to put a$ 10,000 man in the first- line trenches, do you?" |
15338 | Young M.D.--"Well, Dad, I''m hanging out my shingle; ca n''t you give me some rules for success?" |
15338 | _ Consolation_"How did your novel come out?" |
15338 | _ Cupid_ Why was Cupid a boy, And why a boy was he? |
15338 | _ Do You Believe In Fairies?_ The world is full of people Who are under the impression That libr''ry work in general Is the easiest profession. |
15338 | _ Fishin''_"Supposin"fish do n''t bite at first, What are you goin''to do? |
15338 | _ Hard to Find_ LIBRARIAN--"What kind of book do you want-- fictional, historical, philosophical--?" |
15338 | _ I And Me_ I wonder just what kind of guy Am I? |
15338 | _ Its Friendly Way_"How are we to meet the high cost of living?" |
15338 | _ Sunday the Thirteenth_ Must the new morn Be a Blue morn? |
15338 | _ Superfluous_"What''s that you''re goin''to give Bill?" |
15338 | _ Twenty- One Plus_ FIRST SUFFRAGIST--"How old do you think Mabel is?" |
15338 | _ Unseen, Unheard_ TEACHER--"What does a well- bred child do when a visitor calls to see her mother?" |
15338 | _ Up- to- date_ KIND STRANGER--"How old is your baby brother, little girl?" |
15338 | _ Who Can Tell?_ Dear Sirs,--About the engine. |
15338 | _ Why_ Do you know why the rabbits are caught in the snare Or the tabby cat''s shot on the tiles? |
15338 | _"How? |
15338 | and the Bolsheviki?" |
15338 | are you not a member of the African Church?" |
15338 | exclaimed his mother;"do n''t you know it''s wicked to play marbles for''keeps''? |
15338 | exclaimed she,"what in the world has happened to you?" |
15338 | exclaimed the physician,"are you old Tom''s son?" |
15338 | he demanded,"that you stand so much lower in your studies for the month of January than for December?" |
15338 | he was asked;"what is the Spanish flu like, Sam?" |
15338 | how long has this been going on?" |
15338 | how shall I define Thy shapeless, baseless, placeless emptiness? |
15338 | no supper ready? |
15338 | queried his Honor"What was he doing that seemed suspicious?" |
15338 | replied the recruit;"if he''d do that to Lord Roberts, what would he do to plain Mike Flanagan?" |
15338 | said Sam;"do n''t you all know what de flu is? |
15338 | said a hearer, in sympathetic tones;"and what were you in for?" |
15338 | said the sergeant,"why did n''t you answer right when the sentry challenged you?" |
15338 | she persisted,"does it make any difference which of these cars I take to Greenwood Cemetery?" |
15338 | shouted the irate farmer,"Well, why does the sign say,''Fine for Hitching''?''" |
15338 | so much and go round with a straw in your mouth?" |
15338 | so you want a job, eh? |
15338 | the lady exclaimed,''You''re mighty sure about it, are n''t you? |
15338 | to''lend''or''loan''?" |
15338 | what is the matter with you?" |
15338 | why should I marry me? |
15338 | wo n''t you- all tell Marse Bob please not to go out no moh till I kin git his clo''es round to him?" |
15338 | you broke the Sabbath?" |
58270 | ''Well,''he says to me, ses he,''do you know,''he ses,''who lives over there?'' 58270 A very nice little job, is it not, Russell?" |
58270 | About what length of time? |
58270 | Ah, cockney, would n''t you like to know? |
58270 | Ai n''t it like a banquet in a play? |
58270 | Ai n''t there_ no_ chance for him, sir? |
58270 | All armed? |
58270 | All the boys here, ship''s corporal? |
58270 | Am I dreaming? |
58270 | And I am to be your scapegoat, Captain Puffeigh? |
58270 | And what may I call you? |
58270 | Are you an enemy? |
58270 | Are you aware, Mr. Shever, who the mob were who insulted myself and my officers coming aboard? |
58270 | Are you mad or drunk? 58270 Ask the hermit if he has seen a man?" |
58270 | Bless me-- you do n''t say so? |
58270 | Bless us, is that all? |
58270 | But did n''t you feel afraid? |
58270 | But is it pisonous to wear for a few hours every day? |
58270 | But what do you want to walk with her for? |
58270 | But why not obtain these results without humiliating me? 58270 But why not torture him a little now?" |
58270 | But, sir, what shall I do? |
58270 | By- the- by, have you heard from her since you have been here? |
58270 | Ca n''t marry her? 58270 Ca n''t you do it a little cheaper? |
58270 | Ca n''t you run away with me? |
58270 | Can he be indifferent to me? 58270 Can you in any way account for this conduct; was the man drunk?" |
58270 | Can you make a seventeenth mess? |
58270 | Captain''s compliments to Mr. Thompson, and will he dine with him this evening at six o''clock? |
58270 | Charley, how are you gettin''on? |
58270 | Chops? |
58270 | Come,said the officer in charge of the boat,"what do they want? |
58270 | Did ever I laugh at a real sorrer in all my born days? 58270 Did he?" |
58270 | Did the old woman get under weigh sudden? |
58270 | Did you ever see sich a fee- nomer- nile? |
58270 | Did you ever? |
58270 | Did you like the last raghot, sir? |
58270 | Did you not abuse him in return, my man? |
58270 | Did you write this ere letter to me? |
58270 | Did you write this poetry to me, Mrs. Mary Ann? |
58270 | Did you, miss? 58270 Did you?" |
58270 | Do n''t I? 58270 Do n''t you believe it, mum?" |
58270 | Do n''t you think it would be better to let him live in the pinnace, miss? |
58270 | Do n''t you think it''s flogging has brought this on, sir? |
58270 | Do they? 58270 Do they?" |
58270 | Do you call that sensible behaviour? |
58270 | Do you hear? 58270 Do you keep a canary?" |
58270 | Do you know Clare, mam? 58270 Do you know him?" |
58270 | Do you mean to say that the compradors have not paid you for the bullocks you have sent off to us? |
58270 | Do you mean to say you did not swear, as he asserts? |
58270 | Do you remember I promised you four dozen when you sailed with me in the Porpoise, eh? 58270 Do you think jist them words will go-- Dear Polly? |
58270 | Do you think that a small affair like a flogging justified him in killing his superior? |
58270 | Do you, beauty? 58270 Do you? |
58270 | Do you? 58270 Does Mrs. Shever live here?" |
58270 | Does any o''you remember Limpin Lew? |
58270 | Does dey have no rights to do dat? |
58270 | Does dey have no rights to do noting vot dey never does? |
58270 | For why does you ask? |
58270 | Four, sir;and added,"Please, sir, I''m ill, may I turn in? |
58270 | Gracious Yeh, why are you so disquieted? |
58270 | Gracious, Mary Ann, ca n''t I speak of a gentleman of my acquaintance without you being jealous of me, and flying at me like that? |
58270 | Had n''t you better write him and say you''re well? |
58270 | Has he left any family, Thompson? |
58270 | Has his character been good, or bad? |
58270 | Have you any family? 58270 Have you not sailed with me somewhere, my man?" |
58270 | Have you? 58270 He deserted from the Stinger, did he not?" |
58270 | Here, Mary-- Eliza-- what''s your name? 58270 How are you a goin''to get rid of all your fan- pinners, chummy?" |
58270 | How are you goin''to spend your whack, Joseph? |
58270 | How are you, my good friend? |
58270 | How can we fail, your excellency? |
58270 | How did you contrive to seize that big fellow with only one hand? |
58270 | How did you get through? 58270 How do n''t dey know much dere, scherry?" |
58270 | How do you know she''s dead? 58270 How much does he say pilot? |
58270 | How much will it cost? |
58270 | How will you go about it? 58270 I did?" |
58270 | I do n''t know, Chinee, Mi, ai n''t you a good un to talk English? 58270 I have been below all the morning, and did not know what was going on, sir?" |
58270 | I hear, Hill; but who set up this main rigging? |
58270 | I mean, do n''t you think I''m in my senses? |
58270 | I say, Bill Farley, wo n''t your old woman be in Portsmouth to meet you? |
58270 | I say, Jemmy, how do you feel now? |
58270 | I say, Mr. B., ca n''t you chuck in one of them long words of yours? 58270 I say, do n''t Puffeigh look like old Stiff the beadle this morning?" |
58270 | I should like to know how the likes of_ you_ became ack- vainted with sich an elegant field- male? |
58270 | I wonder how it is you have n''t got married before this? |
58270 | I wonder what the deuce it means? 58270 If she weighs one hundred and ninety pounds when she is nineteen years old, what will she turn when she''s thirty- eight?" |
58270 | If you please, sir, may poor Clare remain there for a day or two? 58270 Is it such a dreadful secret, that the monkey ca n''t go on deck?" |
58270 | Is n''t that a picture for a tax- payer? |
58270 | Is she all right there? |
58270 | Is she at home? |
58270 | Is she in her boat? |
58270 | Is that all, sergeant? |
58270 | Is that all, sergeant? |
58270 | Is that all? |
58270 | Is that all? |
58270 | Is that the Cape style of getting satisfaction, friend Tomson? |
58270 | Is that your polly, darling? |
58270 | It was very unfortunate my not being able to obtain that French steward, was it not? |
58270 | It''s a purser''s name, ai n''t it pretty? |
58270 | Jerry, dear, that sergeant is my own brother Alfred; however did you come for to fight him? |
58270 | Jerry, old friend, in a little time I shall see her, and then wo n''t I be happy? |
58270 | Ken I have a word with you in private, capt''n? |
58270 | Knowing his character, you were obliged to send a strong force to bring him on board, were you not? |
58270 | May I play with them? |
58270 | Me, mam? 58270 Me, miss? |
58270 | Me, miss? |
58270 | Me, old George? 58270 Me, sir? |
58270 | Me? 58270 Monsieur Thompe- sonne, how you do you do to- day?" |
58270 | Monsieur Thompe- sonne, will you please be so kind as to tell me vare my malle-- my tronke is? |
58270 | My dear fellow, what do you mean? |
58270 | No nervousness about you, eh? |
58270 | No,exclaimed the cherub, shaking her head, as if to say,"Now, do n''t you want to know all about me?" |
58270 | No; he''s got a wig on, ca n''t ye see? 58270 No?" |
58270 | Not a sea- song? |
58270 | Not my cousin? |
58270 | Now, vot ish de use of us going to de expensh ov dish poat? |
58270 | Of course_ you_ know how to do your duty, Shever? |
58270 | Oh, I lof you, Ger- r- r- r- ai, and vot do I vant more? |
58270 | Oh, Monsieur Thompe- sonne, how could you trifle vith me like zat you have did? 58270 Oh, Yung- Yung- Sho do you think Buddha knows how badly they treat us poor girls?" |
58270 | Oh, are you sicke, poor theeng? 58270 Oh, should n''t I like to?" |
58270 | Oh, that''s Sandwich, is it? 58270 Oh,"mused Jerry,"that''s it, is it, Miss Polly- wo- frunkzay? |
58270 | Overcome what, sir? |
58270 | Plack mans, Caffres, dere too, Scherry? |
58270 | Please, miss, as it''s my call, may I be so bold as to ask_ you_ to sing? |
58270 | Please, sir,pleaded one of the men,"may I go on shore?" |
58270 | Satisfaction? |
58270 | Shall I ask him in? |
58270 | So that''s-- all there is left-- of my-- darling, is it? |
58270 | So you have caught him, eh? |
58270 | So you think I am too indulgent to the brutes, do you, Crushe? |
58270 | So you''re a Kingsdown man, are you? |
58270 | So you''re married, and have got a family, and a good husband, have you, Mary Ann? |
58270 | Steward, to what messes do these men belong? |
58270 | That beant you, Tom, be it? |
58270 | The prisoner showed a determined resistance, I understand? 58270 Then what are ye a loadin''yer musket for?" |
58270 | Then why do n''t you answer me, you vermin? |
58270 | Then you deny having used improper language? |
58270 | Then you mean to marry Mr. Thompson,''Melia? |
58270 | There were women in the house? |
58270 | There, there, my dear Russell, why not say we''ve got to do it, and will do it well? |
58270 | Tom, old chap, however did you come here? |
58270 | Vich Chawles is it? |
58270 | Vot ish de use of all dish foolishness? |
58270 | Vy, Shack, ma poy, how are you? |
58270 | Was she pleased to get my letter? |
58270 | Well, Alaya,said her master,"do you see the captain sahib?" |
58270 | Well, I suppose he deserved it? |
58270 | Well, I''m werry glad to think it''s a boy, but would n''t you have liked a gal better, Tom? |
58270 | Well, am I all square? 58270 Well, it was n''t bad; but why do you ask?" |
58270 | Well, what sort of satisfaction do you require, and what do you want it for? |
58270 | Wh-- why-- what_ does_ this mean? 58270 What are these men''s names?" |
58270 | What can it be? |
58270 | What did I say? 58270 What did he say to you, master?" |
58270 | What did you say, you yahoo? |
58270 | What did you tell him? |
58270 | What did you tell them, sir? |
58270 | What do they say, Hoo- kee? |
58270 | What do you consider is the matter with this man Clare? |
58270 | What do you know of the theft? |
58270 | What do you think of him? |
58270 | What do you think, Cravan? 58270 What do you want with her? |
58270 | What do you want, my man? 58270 What do you want, my men?" |
58270 | What do you want? |
58270 | What do_ you_ want leave for? |
58270 | What does he say? |
58270 | What does the fellow say? |
58270 | What for? 58270 What for?" |
58270 | What for? |
58270 | What is her mother like? |
58270 | What is it, bo''? |
58270 | What is it? |
58270 | What is life? |
58270 | What is she? |
58270 | What is that little beast''s name? |
58270 | What is this place called? |
58270 | What led you to suppose so? |
58270 | What ship do you belong to? |
58270 | What song would you like, Mr. Thompson? 58270 What then occurred?" |
58270 | What way? |
58270 | What will you name me, then? |
58270 | What you want, mine- ear? 58270 What!--wa-- what was it?" |
58270 | What''s alten narren, my man? |
58270 | What''s that, Puffeigh? |
58270 | What''s that? |
58270 | What''s the matter, Tom? |
58270 | What''s your name? |
58270 | What? 58270 What? |
58270 | Whatsh the mattersh, Jerry? |
58270 | When A- tae gets well, what shall she do? |
58270 | When did you see Polly-- my wife-- last? |
58270 | Where are ye? |
58270 | Where do you come from, Yung- Yung- Sho, that you speak thus? 58270 Where does your mother reside?" |
58270 | Where is my love? 58270 Where is she then?" |
58270 | Where is the child? |
58270 | Where was he found secreted by the non- commissioned officer? |
58270 | Where''s the cook? |
58270 | Where''s the dish? 58270 Where''s the pilot? |
58270 | Where, sir? 58270 Who are you a calling boy Arnold?" |
58270 | Who asks you to be kidded, as you calls it? |
58270 | Who is those men? |
58270 | Who received it? |
58270 | Who sent it? |
58270 | Who stole our bullocks? |
58270 | Who stole our ducks? |
58270 | Who the deuce are you? |
58270 | Who would hurt_ you_? |
58270 | Who''ll volunteer to cut away that spare anchor when the junks are again under the bows? |
58270 | Who''s agoing to trifle? 58270 Who''s that ere a flyin''my number?" |
58270 | Who''s that ere soger? |
58270 | Who''s that taking my name in vain? |
58270 | Why did you not answer my hail, sir? 58270 Why do you apply your hand to the most prominent member of your countenance?" |
58270 | Why not? 58270 Why not?" |
58270 | Why should I go aboard that hooker where all have forgotten me, to be flogged like a dog, when I can always earn a living here? 58270 Why were you not back last night?" |
58270 | Why, do n''t you know me now you''re promoted? |
58270 | Why, do n''t you know? |
58270 | Why, for ourselves, my keovy; do n''t we want a drink? |
58270 | Why, how could he be jealous if she did n''t know you? |
58270 | Why, there''s Mary Ann? |
58270 | Why, when did she die? |
58270 | Why, you stupid boy? 58270 Why-- how-- did-- you-- come-- here?" |
58270 | Why? |
58270 | Will it, miss? 58270 Will she never bring to?" |
58270 | Will the sahib deign to put on these? |
58270 | Will you kill him? |
58270 | Will you, you willin? |
58270 | Wo n''t you keep it in your house, and let it live with you, and I''ll come and see it? |
58270 | Wot''s the row? |
58270 | Would any of your men like a glass of grog? |
58270 | Would you like a little cold water sprinkled over your face? |
58270 | Yes, boatswain, do your duty,mimicked the impudent little victim;"do your duty, it''s a_ pleasure_ to you, ai n''t it?" |
58270 | Yes, mam, I called to see her this morning, and, would you believe it? 58270 Yes, two large fat chops; surely you did not eat them for your dinner?" |
58270 | You Captain Buffy? 58270 You Chinee,"whispered the sentry to the amused Jerry,"you ken come aboard, d''ye hear?" |
58270 | You ai n''t married, are you? |
58270 | You can take that and welcome, Mr. Thompson, but do n''t you think it will look rather odd? |
58270 | You did not see two chops left yesterday? |
58270 | You do n''t get such a curry as that on board, do you, Puffeigh? |
58270 | You get back into your sampan, will ye? |
58270 | You had other reasons for sending an armed party to secure the prisoner? 58270 You had to find fault with him soon after he was drafted to the ship? |
58270 | You received orders to arrest the prisoner, and take a strongly- armed party with you? |
58270 | You was borned? |
58270 | You wo n''t, sir? |
58270 | You''d be grey before then,''Melia dear, would n''t you? |
58270 | You-- Wall-- bug? |
58270 | You-- you-- who are you? |
58270 | Your Jem, mam? 58270 _ Are_ you, Joseph?" |
58270 | _ De_-ceive_ you_ capt''n? 58270 _ What_ is your name?" |
58270 | ''What do you want?'' |
58270 | ''Who?'' |
58270 | ''Why, you never mean to say Jerry Thompson, do you?'' |
58270 | ( O great Buddha) what shall I do?" |
58270 | ( President)"And this without any provocation on your part?" |
58270 | ( President)"How many men had you?" |
58270 | ( Puffeigh)"Do you know any reason for the prisoner''s attack upon you?" |
58270 | Adèle walked into the cabin, gazed almost fiercely in his face, and exclaimed,"Vy should I hold my tongue? |
58270 | After much persuasion she finally left his presence, but not until she had extorted from him the word"yes,"in reply to her inquiry,"Do you lofe me?" |
58270 | Ai n''t all a captain does right? |
58270 | Another world? |
58270 | Are you damaged?" |
58270 | Are you wanted? |
58270 | At last he whispered to her,"Do you love me, Alayer?" |
58270 | Before parting with the old folks, Jerry-- without implying any reproach-- asked them plainly why they did not write Tom about his wife''s death? |
58270 | Besides, whoever heerd of a captain in the Rile Navy wearin''a red wig?" |
58270 | But what cared the operator as long as the captain failed to notice it? |
58270 | But what do you mean by your candy, and your theatre orders? |
58270 | But what is that? |
58270 | But what is your regular name?" |
58270 | But what makes you look so pale?" |
58270 | But what makes you so white and haggard, Tom?" |
58270 | But where are you going to keep it?" |
58270 | But where were the men? |
58270 | But why do those Yuen- chae( police runners) point this way? |
58270 | Ca n''t I say my prayers in a man- o''-war?" |
58270 | Ca n''t ye see? |
58270 | Ca n''t you send me a sun picture? |
58270 | Clare who was very little interested in his friend''s recital, inquired rather vaguely,"Have you ever learned German?" |
58270 | Did ever you see me make fun of trouble in others, Tom?" |
58270 | Did he go ashore to av his edd dyed?" |
58270 | Did he want to say good- bye to his kind host? |
58270 | Did she thank me ever? |
58270 | Did you hear a noise?" |
58270 | Do n''t all of the fellers like the captain and first lieutenant? |
58270 | Do n''t you know it?" |
58270 | Do n''t you know one song?" |
58270 | Do n''t you know?" |
58270 | Do n''t you remember he has suffered from them about this time every year?" |
58270 | Do n''t you remember, when Captain Interest said you would n''t be posted until you got back to England, you said,''Oh, wo n''t I?'' |
58270 | Do n''t you think so, Crushe?" |
58270 | Do n''t you think so?" |
58270 | Do n''t you think they will alter it?" |
58270 | Do you hear me-- curse you?" |
58270 | Do you hear? |
58270 | Do you know that?" |
58270 | Do you know who I am?" |
58270 | Do you like me? |
58270 | Do you think, my illustrious friends, that Chung- sung, our learned mayor, will believe such shallow lies? |
58270 | Do-- you-- call that a trifle, eh?" |
58270 | Gone? |
58270 | Have those wretches taken him? |
58270 | Have you a hand organ, or do that work by machinery?" |
58270 | Have you no friends?" |
58270 | Have you positive information?" |
58270 | Have you posted all the proclamations?" |
58270 | Having read the foregoing, Thompson glanced at his friends, who were laughing most immoderately, and observed,"What does it mean?" |
58270 | He picked out the sailors at a glance, and spoke to them, asking the usual question, were they satisfied with their ship? |
58270 | He will ask,''Where is the blood upon your garments? |
58270 | Hearing this, Clare staggered to a chair, and after passing his hand across his brow, exclaimed,"My-- Polly-- dead?" |
58270 | Here Mr. Mo was interrupted by a dirty- looking boatman, who demanded,"How much will you give me if I tell you where your craft is?" |
58270 | How can that be?" |
58270 | How can you bear to leave her?" |
58270 | How could any one with a heart do such a cruel deed?" |
58270 | How could he get in there? |
58270 | How could she help losing her husband?" |
58270 | How dare you desert? |
58270 | How do you like it?" |
58270 | How many messes are there?" |
58270 | How shall I call you, then?" |
58270 | I sbeaks blain, does n''t I?" |
58270 | I suppose you do n''t want me to break the law, do you, and be had up for bigamy?" |
58270 | I''ll do it, but what security have I that you will not deceive me?" |
58270 | I''m on the list, ai n''t I, sir?" |
58270 | If we take him in, the people will say,''Where is the tiger?'' |
58270 | Immediately after the governor''s chair, came the Stinger''s band, playing"Oh, dear, what can the matter be?" |
58270 | Is it one of your French ragouts, Mister B.?" |
58270 | Is there anything I can do for you besides?" |
58270 | Is this the husband of Mary Clare?" |
58270 | It''s hard, ai n''t it? |
58270 | Jem what?" |
58270 | Jenkins?" |
58270 | Jenkins?" |
58270 | Jerry surveyed the latter for a few moments, then asked if that was what he lived on? |
58270 | Jerry touched his forelock, and said,"Any orders, sir?" |
58270 | Master Jordun was in despair, and wanted to know"if he were going to be kidded hout ov a situvation in that ere manner?" |
58270 | Me marry? |
58270 | Mother, what makes you look so? |
58270 | Mr. Thompson fond of me? |
58270 | My face burns with happiness, But you will never repeat it? |
58270 | Now, sir, will you be so kind as to speak to the first lieutenant, so as to prewent this in future? |
58270 | Of what nation are you?" |
58270 | Oh, do n''t he shiver? |
58270 | Oldcrackle woke with a start, and sat bolt upright in his chair, calling out,"What''s that?" |
58270 | One evening Tom was sitting by the fore- hatchway in conversation with Thompson, when he suddenly asked him"if he believed in ghosts?" |
58270 | POISON; So he thinks these foreign barbarians may take me, does he? |
58270 | Perhaps you''ve heard of me?" |
58270 | Puffeigh looked at the food, and then asked Hoo- kee if it were all right? |
58270 | Puffeigh received him upon his quarter- deck, and politely inquired what he wanted? |
58270 | Rigging all right?" |
58270 | Ses I,''Wot''s that for?'' |
58270 | Shever?" |
58270 | Sir, Captain Puffeigh, will you have me tried by court- martial or not? |
58270 | Sir, will you do me that act of justice?" |
58270 | Take_ my_ city? |
58270 | That''s the original and only genuine ham, mustard, and bread- and- butter Sandwich, is it? |
58270 | The boatswain was about availing himself of one of these, when his wife exclaimed,"Mr. Shever, where''s your manners? |
58270 | The boy did as requested, then locked the store and returned the key to Puffeigh, who quietly inquired,"how many dozen did they take?" |
58270 | The sly Taontai has arranged this matter very cleverly; do you not think so, Russell?" |
58270 | The suddenness of the attack for a moment bewildered the sergeant, who said, by way of reply,"Wot''s the matter with_ you_, Jack?" |
58270 | The wounded officer heard this announcement without a shudder, and presently inquired,"Who was it that shot me?" |
58270 | Then what would become of you, my lord Sho?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Thompson?" |
58270 | Upon which he says,''But why not in a man- of- war, marm?'' |
58270 | Vill you allow me to attend to you? |
58270 | Vy should I do so for zo meece?" |
58270 | Was he not one of those genii who, assuming the appearance of gods, use their fatal beauty to destroy all whom they fall in with? |
58270 | Was it a dream? |
58270 | Was it a soda and brandy he required? |
58270 | Was she not going to meet her true love, her own Yung- Yung- Sho? |
58270 | Waving her off with a dignified and injured air, he exclaimed,"Mary Ann, tell me-- who is that soger? |
58270 | We know he was a foul- mouthed little monkey, but what made him so? |
58270 | Well, let us get out and have a glass of ale, shall we, Tom?" |
58270 | Well, would you believe it? |
58270 | What are all the poor people at home but slaves? |
58270 | What could he be? |
58270 | What day of the month is this, sir?" |
58270 | What did you have for your dinner yesterday?" |
58270 | What do you mean by firing into us in that fashion?" |
58270 | What does she say?" |
58270 | What does the fool mean? |
58270 | What else did he ask you?" |
58270 | What has the usual serenity of your most excellent excellency''s mind been disturbed about?" |
58270 | What have we to live for? |
58270 | What have you stopped for?" |
58270 | What is that staining the boatswain''s fingers? |
58270 | What makes you ask me such a question?" |
58270 | What ship is that?" |
58270 | What ship''s that?" |
58270 | What was Mary Ann about all the time? |
58270 | What will our rulers say if they do not witness his death struggles?" |
58270 | What would people say if they knew he had invited such strange guests? |
58270 | What''s all the jabber about?" |
58270 | What''s your name, missy?" |
58270 | When are you coming home? |
58270 | When he was comfortably arranged he turned to his coxswain and asked him"if he could keep a secret?" |
58270 | When his anger had evaporated the steward demanded what the sailor required, and added,"Why did n''t you tell me when you come in?" |
58270 | When the door was closed upon him, he heard the sentry say, with a chuckle,"Did n''t seem to thank ye for it much, sir?" |
58270 | When the last bale was packed, the elderly bonze turned to Mr. Thompson, and asked him how much he would give him for the ladders? |
58270 | Where is my brave, handsome husband? |
58270 | Where''s Clare?" |
58270 | Where''s Hoo- kee?" |
58270 | Where''s the cook?" |
58270 | Who dared do that?" |
58270 | Who knows your constitution as I do? |
58270 | Who put that rubbish into your head?" |
58270 | Who sez a pint ov grog for this? |
58270 | Who will prescribe for you when I am gone? |
58270 | Who would n''t wait for such a man as that? |
58270 | Why did you deny having stolen them?" |
58270 | Why, do you think we are little fools to indulge in torturing this devil? |
58270 | Why, gracious goodness, ai n''t she a- writ to you a dozen times, a- tellin''you about the babby, little Tom? |
58270 | Why, she can speak French; ca n''t you, pretty?" |
58270 | Why, that ai n''t a name, is it?" |
58270 | Why, they knows more than any one else; and if any one offends them, ai n''t it proper for''em to take it out of their backs? |
58270 | Why, what is that?" |
58270 | Why?" |
58270 | Will ye have some?" |
58270 | Will you be my friend?" |
58270 | Will you leave this place and go with me?" |
58270 | Will you please give me your card?" |
58270 | Wo n''t you come in?" |
58270 | Ye- as?" |
58270 | You imagined you could give me the slip, did you? |
58270 | You remember how two soldiers hunted the man who frightened this poor child so? |
58270 | You will always speak gently to me, will you not? |
58270 | You will let us know when your happy event takes place, will you not, and send us a description of the bride?" |
58270 | You wo n''t take my offer? |
58270 | You, of all others, who is braver than any of us, you ai n''t afraid now, are you?" |
58270 | Your father? |
58270 | and ai n''t I sent her a crape shawl by that feller Bowler? |
58270 | and ai n''t we soon a- goin home to see her, hey, old chap?" |
58270 | and you''re the official who has charge of my valuable person? |
58270 | ask blue jackets? |
58270 | ca n''t you recognize an acting warrant- officer in disguise?" |
58270 | contemptuously observed the old man who had first spoken;"you, was borned? |
58270 | cried her mother,"where are you? |
58270 | cried the astonished acting- warrant;"and that little cheerup, is_ he_ or_ she_ your''n?" |
58270 | dead, d- e- d?" |
58270 | demanded Puffeigh on one occasion;"did she look delighted?" |
58270 | demanded a stumpy individual;"is it I or Conkey Smith?" |
58270 | did you hear that poor fellow cry out?" |
58270 | do I look like a trifler?" |
58270 | do n''t you see who it is?" |
58270 | he bawled,"up to your old tricks, mammy, hiding again? |
58270 | he observed to the boatswain,"are we free, then?" |
58270 | how- de- do, may- dam- moselle?" |
58270 | is that you, my lord?" |
58270 | me allow sich language to come from my lips? |
58270 | not know my name?" |
58270 | observed the acting warrant- officer, as the lieutenant vanished up the hatchway,"so that''s your little game, is it? |
58270 | said the valet,"has it been a snowin''?" |
58270 | screamed the almost frantic sailor;"not my cousin? |
58270 | that''s you, Mr. Clare, is it?" |
58270 | the kid of my old chum Bill? |
58270 | vare deed you get zat monquai?" |
58270 | vill you trink some schnapps?" |
58270 | what do you want to know for?'' |
58270 | what makes you think that?" |
58270 | what shall I do with these mad folks?" |
58270 | what the deuce is all this outrage for, sir? |
58270 | what would people think if they heered I had wrote to a gentleman who were not my intended?" |
58270 | what''s your name?" |
58270 | where does you expect to go to?" |
58270 | where the dead bodies or even heads of those western devils you have slain?'' |
58270 | where your wounds? |
58270 | who sez a pint?" |
58270 | who''d have thought I''d have found such a good friend in a man- o''-war?" |
58270 | who''s_ your_ father?" |
58270 | why did you not speak before?" |
58270 | why not, in the name of goodness?" |
58270 | why, dew I look like it?" |
58270 | will you? |
58270 | you brute, you thought to murder me, did you?" |
58270 | you do n''t mean to say you''d think of doing such a thing?" |
58270 | you withered old anatomy, you miserable compound of cunning and conceit, you-- you go to--""Yes, your excellency; but what is the trouble about? |
9498 | ''"Hello, is somebody in here?" |
9498 | ''"Strew on us roses, roses,"''quoted Byrne, adding after a while, in wistful mockery:''"And never a sprig of yew"--eh?'' |
9498 | ''Am I not uneasy?'' |
9498 | ''And I for breakfast-- but shall I do?'' |
9498 | ''And I, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | ''And I?'' |
9498 | ''And Siegmund, how is he, I wonder?'' |
9498 | ''And are you ready for your supper?'' |
9498 | ''And bring the bread and butter, too, will you?'' |
9498 | ''And did ye see the ships of war?'' |
9498 | ''And if you were ill-- you would let me come to you?'' |
9498 | ''And shall I not be brave?'' |
9498 | ''And then where?'' |
9498 | ''And what sort of a time have you had?'' |
9498 | ''And what time shall you expect dinner?'' |
9498 | ''And when was this, then-- that he--?'' |
9498 | ''And when we come out of the mist- curtain, what will it be? |
9498 | ''And why did he ask me so peculiarly whether he should wire them at home?'' |
9498 | ''And will you be sad?'' |
9498 | ''And you are glad?'' |
9498 | ''And you?'' |
9498 | ''And you?'' |
9498 | ''Are n''t they fine bits?'' |
9498 | ''Are n''t you going to bed?'' |
9498 | ''Are n''t you going to get your chocolate?'' |
9498 | ''Are n''t_ you_ having any?'' |
9498 | ''Are there?'' |
9498 | ''Are you sure it is not bad for you-- your head, Siegmund? |
9498 | ''Are you sure this is the right way?'' |
9498 | ''Are you sure?'' |
9498 | ''At Waterloo?'' |
9498 | ''At least,''he said, in mortification of himself--''at least, someone must recognize a strain of God in me-- and who does? |
9498 | ''Because I scan a list of puddings?'' |
9498 | ''Because we were n''t in till about eleven?'' |
9498 | ''But ca n''t you_ do_ something?'' |
9498 | ''But did we not come this way?'' |
9498 | ''But is n''t it a beautiful evening? |
9498 | ''But shall we come down here in the morning, and find some?'' |
9498 | ''But then, what then? |
9498 | ''But what did you go for?'' |
9498 | ''But what has he_ been_ doing?'' |
9498 | ''But what will he do, Mam?'' |
9498 | ''But who did you go with?'' |
9498 | ''But why should you?'' |
9498 | ''But why?'' |
9498 | ''But why?'' |
9498 | ''But will you be able to fake the old life up, happier, when you go back?'' |
9498 | ''But you agree?'' |
9498 | ''But you have promised Louisa, have you not?'' |
9498 | ''Ca n''t you forget it, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | ''Ca n''t you forget it? |
9498 | ''Ca n''t you smell it-- like hot tobacco and sandal- wood?'' |
9498 | ''Ca n''t you smell_ Fumum et opes strepitumque Romae_?'' |
9498 | ''Catching what?'' |
9498 | ''Could n''t you take me?'' |
9498 | ''Did he?'' |
9498 | ''Did it disturb you? |
9498 | ''Did n''t you have a good time?'' |
9498 | ''Did you go to the house?'' |
9498 | ''Did you?'' |
9498 | ''Do n''t I know what you are? |
9498 | ''Do n''t they seem a long way off?'' |
9498 | ''Do n''t you like it?'' |
9498 | ''Do n''t you think it''s wrong to get like it?'' |
9498 | ''Do n''t you think we had better be mounting the cliffs?'' |
9498 | ''Do they?'' |
9498 | ''Do you think the man_ wanted_ to drown the boat?'' |
9498 | ''Do you want any supper?'' |
9498 | ''Does she-- your other friend-- does she know?'' |
9498 | ''Does the Czar sail this way?'' |
9498 | ''Does the sea really char it?'' |
9498 | ''Fasolt? |
9498 | ''For fear of alarming the old lady?'' |
9498 | ''Forgive you?'' |
9498 | ''H''m? |
9498 | ''Had we better go back?'' |
9498 | ''Has she come?'' |
9498 | ''Have n''t all women?'' |
9498 | ''Have n''t you done it?'' |
9498 | ''Have you ever noticed, Mr Holiday,''asked Vera, as if very friendly,''how awfully tantalizing these flowers are? |
9498 | ''Have you found an acquaintance even here?'' |
9498 | ''Have you heard anything against us? |
9498 | ''Have you never seen them?'' |
9498 | ''Have you noticed the waves? |
9498 | ''Have you read this tale of a French convent school in here, Mother?'' |
9498 | ''Have you washed your ears?'' |
9498 | ''How could I leave you?'' |
9498 | ''How could I? |
9498 | ''How could we help?'' |
9498 | ''How did you find things at home?'' |
9498 | ''How did you get to know?'' |
9498 | ''How did you sleep?'' |
9498 | ''How do you do?'' |
9498 | ''How long have you been in?'' |
9498 | ''How long will it be?'' |
9498 | ''How?'' |
9498 | ''I believe you''ve got a tooth out, have n''t you?'' |
9498 | ''I did well to ask you to come?'' |
9498 | ''I did well, did n''t I, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | ''I live here-- at least for the present-- name, Hampson--''''Why, were n''t you one of the first violins at the Savoy fifteen years back?'' |
9498 | ''I suppose the newspaper will tell us?'' |
9498 | ''I will, since I may not do more,''replied Siegmund, smiling, continuing:''And how is Sister Louisa?'' |
9498 | ''I?'' |
9498 | ''In the first place, what does it mean?'' |
9498 | ''In what way?'' |
9498 | ''In what way?'' |
9498 | ''In where?'' |
9498 | ''Is he taken bad or something? |
9498 | ''Is it a dream now, dear?'' |
9498 | ''Is it a-- a natural sleep?'' |
9498 | ''Is it so late?'' |
9498 | ''Is it the least of the front rooms he''s in?'' |
9498 | ''Is it?'' |
9498 | ''Is it?'' |
9498 | ''Is my promise so_ very_ important?'' |
9498 | ''Is n''t it beautiful this morning?'' |
9498 | ''Is n''t it nice?'' |
9498 | ''Is n''t the sea wonderful this morning?'' |
9498 | ''Is that why I have failed? |
9498 | ''Is the table ready to be cleared yet?'' |
9498 | ''Is there no more time for me?'' |
9498 | ''It seems another eternity before the three- forty- five train, does n''t it?'' |
9498 | ''It''s after half past ten-- aren''t you going to get up?'' |
9498 | ''It_ is_ blood?'' |
9498 | ''Later,''she murmured--''later than what?'' |
9498 | ''Like a housewife of forty going placidly round with the duster-- yes?'' |
9498 | ''Mam,''Siegmund heard her say as she went down the hall,''has dad come?'' |
9498 | ''Need we go-- need we leave this place of friends?'' |
9498 | ''Nevertheless,''said Mr. Allport,''it''s true-- isn''t it?'' |
9498 | ''No? |
9498 | ''Of what, dear?'' |
9498 | ''Oh, is n''t there? |
9498 | ''On credit?'' |
9498 | ''Perhaps you would like one of these?'' |
9498 | ''Shall I leave you the candle?'' |
9498 | ''Shall I let her out?'' |
9498 | ''Shall I read to you?'' |
9498 | ''Shall I?'' |
9498 | ''Shall it be Hampton Court or Richmond on Sunday?'' |
9498 | ''Shall it not be so-- no yew?'' |
9498 | ''Shall we go out a moment, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | ''Shall we go out, or are you too tired? |
9498 | ''Shall we go?'' |
9498 | ''Shall we not go under the rocks?'' |
9498 | ''Shall we sit by firelight?'' |
9498 | ''Shall we walk over, then?'' |
9498 | ''So many calories per week-- isn''t that how we manage it?'' |
9498 | ''So you have lain there amusing yourself at my expense all the time?'' |
9498 | ''Stare beyond it, you mean?'' |
9498 | ''Surely he didn''t--?'' |
9498 | ''The men- of- war? |
9498 | ''The noise, you mean? |
9498 | ''The young donkey, why does n''t he get out?'' |
9498 | ''Then? |
9498 | ''They look rather incongruous, do n''t you think? |
9498 | ''To Brighton?'' |
9498 | ''To Worthing?'' |
9498 | ''Twuly?'' |
9498 | ''Well, and what then?'' |
9498 | ''Well, then''--and again there was the touch of a sneer--''if I ca n''t help myself, why trouble, my friend?'' |
9498 | ''Well,''said Siegmund,''are there any postcards?'' |
9498 | ''Were n''t they pretty?'' |
9498 | ''What am I doing? |
9498 | ''What am I going to do?'' |
9498 | ''What anniversary is it, then?'' |
9498 | ''What are you shouting for?'' |
9498 | ''What are you thinking of?'' |
9498 | ''What day is it, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | ''What did he say?'' |
9498 | ''What do I want?'' |
9498 | ''What do you mean by"leak"?'' |
9498 | ''What do you mean? |
9498 | ''What do you say, Mother?'' |
9498 | ''What do you say?'' |
9498 | ''What do you think you_ can_ do?'' |
9498 | ''What does it matter, Helena?'' |
9498 | ''What does it matter? |
9498 | ''What does it matter? |
9498 | ''What have you got?'' |
9498 | ''What is he doing, Mam?'' |
9498 | ''What is he thinking of?'' |
9498 | ''What is it, Helena?'' |
9498 | ''What is it, dear?'' |
9498 | ''What is it? |
9498 | ''What is it?'' |
9498 | ''What is it?'' |
9498 | ''What is it?'' |
9498 | ''What is it?'' |
9498 | ''What is myself?'' |
9498 | ''What is she thinking?'' |
9498 | ''What is the music of it?'' |
9498 | ''What is the note in_ Tristan_?'' |
9498 | ''What is the pitch?'' |
9498 | ''What made her bring me the letters?'' |
9498 | ''What music do you think holds the best interpretation of sunset?'' |
9498 | ''What of yourself?'' |
9498 | ''What primroses?'' |
9498 | ''What then? |
9498 | ''What time have I for reading, much less for anything else?'' |
9498 | ''What time is it?'' |
9498 | ''What will she do?'' |
9498 | ''What will she do?'' |
9498 | ''What would it just be like now?'' |
9498 | ''What, are you alone?'' |
9498 | ''What, do you like it? |
9498 | ''What, has she been saying something about last night?'' |
9498 | ''What, is that the stack?'' |
9498 | ''What_ was_ the matter with you?'' |
9498 | ''When does your engagement at the Comedy Theatre commence?'' |
9498 | ''When is a hundred not a hundred?'' |
9498 | ''Where have you been to?'' |
9498 | ''Where is Helena?'' |
9498 | ''Where is Louisa?'' |
9498 | ''Where is he, Mum?'' |
9498 | ''Where is the coffee?'' |
9498 | ''Where it is horizontal? |
9498 | ''Where''s my stockings?'' |
9498 | ''Wherefore?'' |
9498 | ''Who called them"fairies''telephones"?'' |
9498 | ''Why am I doing this?'' |
9498 | ''Why did n''t you give them me to warm?'' |
9498 | ''Why did n''t you send me the time of the train, so that I could come and meet you?'' |
9498 | ''Why do n''t you go down and ask?'' |
9498 | ''Why do you ask me? |
9498 | ''Why do you?'' |
9498 | ''Why hell, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | ''Why me?'' |
9498 | ''Why not?'' |
9498 | ''Why should I be turned out of the game?'' |
9498 | ''Why should I want to label them?'' |
9498 | ''Why should we?'' |
9498 | ''Why should you cry?'' |
9498 | ''Why should you want putting in a pinafore?'' |
9498 | ''Why, how is that?'' |
9498 | ''Why, mum?'' |
9498 | ''Why,''she cried,''was n''t it all right?'' |
9498 | ''Why? |
9498 | ''Why?'' |
9498 | ''Why?'' |
9498 | ''Why?'' |
9498 | ''Why?'' |
9498 | ''Will it be fine all day?'' |
9498 | ''Will she be all right if you leave her?'' |
9498 | ''Will you carry the basket or the violin, Mater?'' |
9498 | ''Will you come and see if there''s anything wrong with my husband?'' |
9498 | ''Will you have anything to eat?'' |
9498 | ''Will you have cocoa or lemonade?'' |
9498 | ''Will you make coffee, Louisa?'' |
9498 | ''Will you want anything else?'' |
9498 | ''Wo n''t you go to rest, Nellie?'' |
9498 | ''Wo n''t you go to rest, Nellie?'' |
9498 | ''Wo n''t you let me go by the South- Western, and you by the Brighton?'' |
9498 | ''Would it?'' |
9498 | ''Would the woman cry, or hug and kiss the boy when she got on board?'' |
9498 | ''Would you care to?'' |
9498 | ''Would you like this? |
9498 | ''Would you like to come to the window?'' |
9498 | ''Would you rather have me more like the rest, or more unlike, Siegmund? |
9498 | ''Would you really like to travel beyond the end?'' |
9498 | ''Ye did run well-- what hath hindered you?'' |
9498 | ''Yes, I ought to have done, ought n''t I?'' |
9498 | ''Yes, but the settled pitch-- is it about E?'' |
9498 | ''Yes, he did belittle great things, did n''t he?'' |
9498 | ''You are not afraid?'' |
9498 | ''You are not alone on your holiday?'' |
9498 | ''You are not an Anarchist, I hope?'' |
9498 | ''You are not gone, then?'' |
9498 | ''You are sure you''re not too tired?'' |
9498 | ''You ca n''t do without me?'' |
9498 | ''You have bathed?'' |
9498 | ''You have made so many enemies?'' |
9498 | ''You have n''t seen it this morning?'' |
9498 | ''You have n''t sent them any word?'' |
9498 | ''You mean I lose my attraction for you, or my hold over you, and then you--?'' |
9498 | ''You wo n''t be tired when you go back?'' |
9498 | ''You would like supper now, dear?'' |
9498 | ''You''ll be coming in to dinner today?'' |
9498 | ''You''re a bit downright are you not?'' |
9498 | ''You-- what of you?'' |
9498 | After a few moments of watching the bank, she said:''Do you know, I have never gathered one? |
9498 | Ai n''t he a rotten funker?'' |
9498 | Am I a servant to eat out of your hand?'' |
9498 | Am I right?'' |
9498 | Am I unconscious? |
9498 | And at the same moment Beatrice answered, also crossly:''What do you want?'' |
9498 | And then what? |
9498 | Apart from the gold light, and the hum and the colour of day, what was I? |
9498 | Are they down here?'' |
9498 | Are you sure?'' |
9498 | As Helena reluctantly entered the mother drew herself up, and immediately relaxed, seeming to peck forwards as she said:''Well?'' |
9498 | As if in answer or in protest to her thoughts, Siegmund said:''Do you want anything better than this, dear? |
9498 | At last he had something to say to Helena:''Do you remember,''he asked,''the roses of Sharon all along here?'' |
9498 | Beatrice called from the bottom of the stairs:''Do you want any hot water?'' |
9498 | Besides, I_ have_ burned bright; I have laid up a fine cell of honey somewhere-- I wonder where? |
9498 | But are n''t they beautiful?'' |
9498 | But in the eyes of the world--''''If you feel so in yourself, is not that enough?'' |
9498 | But what then?'' |
9498 | But what will she do?'' |
9498 | But why should he have failed with Helena? |
9498 | But, after all-- what is there to do but to hop out of life as quickly as possible? |
9498 | Ca n''t you forget it, dear?'' |
9498 | Can you?'' |
9498 | Do I disturb them?'' |
9498 | Do I make any noise? |
9498 | Do n''t they devour the sunshine?'' |
9498 | Do n''t you ever put anything on to heal it?'' |
9498 | Do you think so?'' |
9498 | Do you want a nice plum?'' |
9498 | Does n''t it seem to you to be travelling with us? |
9498 | For what is a life but a flame that bursts off the surface of darkness, and tapers into the darkness again? |
9498 | Had the world a heart? |
9498 | Has n''t it been hot?'' |
9498 | Have I done anything? |
9498 | Have I said anything? |
9498 | Have you ever been through the larch- wood?'' |
9498 | He held her safely, saying nothing until she was calmer, when, with his lips on her cheek, he murmured:''I should be able, should n''t I, Helena?'' |
9498 | He hunted through the country and the sky, asking of everything,''Am I right? |
9498 | He was walking down the path when the door was snatched open behind him, and Vera ran out crying:''Are you going out? |
9498 | Hearing the front door open, Mrs Curtiss called from upstairs:''Is that you, dear?'' |
9498 | Helena let him go, shook herself free, turned sharply aside, and said:''Shall we go down to the water?'' |
9498 | Helena, did you see that?'' |
9498 | Helena, who was thinking actively, leaned forward to him to say:''Shall I not go down to Cornwall?'' |
9498 | Her little voice could be heard cautiously asking:''Mam, is dad cross-- is he? |
9498 | How can one be outcast in one''s own night, and the moon always naked to us, and the sky half her time in rags? |
9498 | How could he leave her alone while he watched the sky? |
9498 | How could he play with the idea of death, and the five great days in front? |
9498 | How could he set himself again into joint with these? |
9498 | How could it be that he and Helena were two children of London wandering to find their lodging in Freshwater? |
9498 | How much farther do you''think you can go? |
9498 | How should I?'' |
9498 | How would it be? |
9498 | I always think Scripture false in French, do not you?'' |
9498 | I think this is about perfect, do n''t you?'' |
9498 | I wonder how much you think I shall stand? |
9498 | I''d rather see her shoulders and breast than all heaven and earth put together could show.... Why does n''t she like me?'' |
9498 | If Life could swerve from its orbit for pity, what terror of vacillation; and who would wish to bear the responsibility of the deflection? |
9498 | If it''s too much-- what_ is_ too much?'' |
9498 | Is he there?'' |
9498 | Is it any good my going if I leave her behind? |
9498 | Is n''t it fine to be up here, with the sky for nearest neighbour?'' |
9498 | Is something wrong?'' |
9498 | It is I who am to blame, is it? |
9498 | It is I, is it, who am wrong? |
9498 | It is so, is n''t it? |
9498 | It was inevitable; then would begin-- what? |
9498 | It would go on, after his death, just in the same way, for a while, and then? |
9498 | It''s a pity to try and stare out of a beautiful blue day like this, do n''t you think?'' |
9498 | Look here-- who''d care? |
9498 | Louisa suddenly stopped crying and sat up:''Oh, I know I''m a pig, dear, am I not?'' |
9498 | Nevertheless, when she drew near he said brightly:''Have you noticed how the thousands of dry twigs between the trunks make a brown mist, a brume?'' |
9498 | Oh, you are coming to Waterloo?'' |
9498 | Pulling himself together, he bent his head from the sea, and said:''Why, what time is it?'' |
9498 | Shall I put her down?'' |
9498 | Shall we come here next year, and stay for a whole month?'' |
9498 | Shall we go down to the water?'' |
9498 | She lifted her voice and shouted:''Mam? |
9498 | She pressed her face in his breast, and said in a muffled, unrecognizable voice:''You wo n''t leave me, will you, Siegmund?'' |
9498 | She restrained herself, and immediately called:''You are coming? |
9498 | She waited a while, clinging to him, then, finding some difficulty in speech, she asked:''Was I very cruel, dear?'' |
9498 | She was young and naïve, and should he be angry with her for that? |
9498 | Siegmund was gazing oversea in a half- stupid way, when he heard a voice beside him say:''Where have they come from; do you know, sir?'' |
9498 | Siegmund was gone; why had he not taken her with him? |
9498 | Siegmund was repeating deliriously in his mind:''Oh-- go-- go-- go-- when will she go?'' |
9498 | Sitting in the dark, Mother?'' |
9498 | Smiling quickly, gently--''''Never?'' |
9498 | Suddenly controlling herself, she said loudly at Siegmund''s door, her voice coldly hostile:''Are n''t you going to get up?'' |
9498 | Supposing they could not get by? |
9498 | Surely he could help? |
9498 | Swiftly he took her in his arms, and asked in a troubled voice:''What is it, dear? |
9498 | The fields were very flowery, the morning was very bright, but what were these to her? |
9498 | The little one waited for her father, calling shrilly:''Tiss ca n''t fall now, can she, dadda? |
9498 | The question was, How should he reset himself into joint? |
9498 | Then,''Is there really nothing I could turn to?'' |
9498 | Vera waited awhile, then repeated plaintively:''Are n''t you going to bed, Father?'' |
9498 | Very well, then, that being so, what remained possible? |
9498 | Was Siegmund asleep? |
9498 | Was somebody coming? |
9498 | Was that really Siegmund, that stooping, thick- shouldered, indifferent man? |
9498 | Was that the Siegmund who had seemed to radiate joy into his surroundings, the Siegmund whose coming had always changed the whole weather of her soul? |
9498 | Was that the Siegmund whose touch was keen with bliss for her, whose face was a panorama of passing God? |
9498 | Was there also deep in the world a great God thudding out waves of life, like a great heart, unconscious? |
9498 | Was this the real Siegmund, and her own only a projection of her soul? |
9498 | We are all glad when intense moments are done with; but why did she fling round in that manner, stopping the keen note short; what would she do? |
9498 | Well, have you made the plans for today?'' |
9498 | What I mean to say-- for long?'' |
9498 | What I mean to say-- what''s the good, after all? |
9498 | What about you, Helena?'' |
9498 | What are you going to do?'' |
9498 | What can I do? |
9498 | What could he hold to in this great, hoarse breathing night? |
9498 | What did he do?'' |
9498 | What do I matter?'' |
9498 | What do we want?'' |
9498 | What do you expect, after a day like this?'' |
9498 | What do you think I am, to put up with it? |
9498 | What do you think I am? |
9498 | What do you think_ I_ do? |
9498 | What does it matter? |
9498 | What has happened at home? |
9498 | What has happened? |
9498 | What is the good? |
9498 | What is the matter? |
9498 | What is the matter?'' |
9498 | What makes me myself, among all these?'' |
9498 | What shall I be when I come out of this? |
9498 | What should I think of myself?'' |
9498 | What times does the train go?'' |
9498 | What was all this? |
9498 | What was behind the gate? |
9498 | What was he to do? |
9498 | What will become of her? |
9498 | What will become of us-- what will happen?'' |
9498 | What will you have?'' |
9498 | What would she do when she was thirty- eight, and as old as himself? |
9498 | What''s the point?'' |
9498 | What''s the trouble now?'' |
9498 | What''s the use,''replied Mr Allport, turning to look at his landlady,''of going out? |
9498 | When Vera had gone, she asked, in the peculiar tone that made Siegmund shiver:''Why do you consider the music of_ Pellà © as_ cold?'' |
9498 | When can I set my feet on when this is gone?'' |
9498 | When would the tip be placed upon the table of the sea? |
9498 | Where are you going?'' |
9498 | Where is the north, even?'' |
9498 | Where was Siegmund? |
9498 | Which is it?'' |
9498 | Whose are they? |
9498 | Why did I come back? |
9498 | Why did n''t you call me sooner?'' |
9498 | Why had she not smothered it and pretended? |
9498 | Why had she, a woman, betrayed herself so flagrantly? |
9498 | Why should I be parcelled up into mornings and evenings and nights? |
9498 | Why should I discuss reasons for and against? |
9498 | Why should they give themselves away any more than you do? |
9498 | Why that"once could"?'' |
9498 | Why was he cruel to her because she had not his own bitter wisdom of experience? |
9498 | Why?'' |
9498 | Wo n''t you tell me what is the matter?'' |
9498 | Would she speak? |
9498 | Would she touch him with her small hands? |
9498 | Would the child speak to him? |
9498 | You are full and beautiful enough in the flesh-- why will she help to destroy you, when she loved you to such extremity?'' |
9498 | You have had your fling, have n''t you? |
9498 | You talk about shirking the engagement, but who is going to be responsible for your children, do you think?'' |
9498 | You will not be long, dear?'' |
9498 | You will put the lamp out, dear?'' |
9498 | You will see us forth on our perils?'' |
9498 | cried Siegmund,''What will she do when I am gone? |
9498 | exclaimed Hampson; then:''Do you remember Flaubert''s saint, who laid naked against a leper? |
9498 | she cried,''How could we miss it?'' |
9498 | she exclaimed,''may I come into the fold? |
9498 | thought Siegmund-- he was tired--''if one bee dies in a swarm, what is it, so long as the hive is all right? |
57399 | Can you bring back this Queen? |
57399 | Can you two stay to look after cattle? |
57399 | Did this Treasurer give thee a necklace? |
57399 | How did you[ dare to] eat them, you dog? |
57399 | How didst thou cure it? |
57399 | How will you, Gourd, pluck flowers? |
57399 | If so, is the truth the contrary, is the truth the contrary? |
57399 | If so, what shall I give thee? |
57399 | If thou drewest it out, where is now the gold ring I gave thee? |
57399 | The Princess asked me,''What do you know of the sciences?'' 57399 What are these for, son? |
57399 | What are we to do? 57399 What art thou here for? |
57399 | What is lost from my house? |
57399 | What is missing from our house? |
57399 | What is the science that is[ known] in this city? |
57399 | What is the science that is[ known] in this city? |
57399 | What is the science you learnt? |
57399 | Where are you going? |
57399 | Where, little younger brother, is younger sister? |
57399 | Who art thou? |
57399 | Why do n''t you speak? |
57399 | Why, mother, is n''t that the Rakshasas- eating Prakshasa? |
57399 | Without going alone what shall I do? |
57399 | A Leopard having come near the Damba tree[ said],"[ How] if you should throw down a Damba branch with your golden little hand?" |
57399 | A man having come there said,"What, Prince, art thou sleeping there for? |
57399 | After he arose, when he asked,"What is the matter for which thou camest here?" |
57399 | After he brought them, having eaten and drunk in the evening, and spread and given the mat for the Prince to sleep on, what does this Princess do? |
57399 | After he gave it,"What do you want still?" |
57399 | After he has brought them, his two parents ask,"Whence, son, are these?" |
57399 | After he said it, he asked,"Did you warm water for me to bathe?" |
57399 | After he stayed there many days, this Princess asks this nobleman''s son,"What do you know of the sciences?" |
57399 | After she came, he asked,"What is the reason of your assisting me in this way?" |
57399 | After she took the Prince into the light, she asks the Prince,"What do you eat?" |
57399 | After that she asked at the hand of the girl,"Daughter, did n''t you cut up that one?" |
57399 | After that the King and the seven Princes having come to the city, the King asked,"Who can say sooth?" |
57399 | After that the King asked,"Was the dog''s broken leg so thoroughly broken that it could not place the foot on the ground?" |
57399 | After that the Rakshasa said,"I will give food and clothing; can you come to our house?" |
57399 | After that, Hitihami having come home with the Ministers, asked at the hand of his mother,"Mother, have n''t you cooked yet?" |
57399 | After that, he asked,"Loku- Appuhami, whence( kohendae) are you bringing that drove of pack- bulls and the goods?" |
57399 | After that, he said,"Can anyone( kata) plant a garden?" |
57399 | After that, she asked at the hand of the girl,"Daughter, why did n''t you cut up that one?" |
57399 | After that, the Adikarama and the gardener spoke together,"What shall we do about this?" |
57399 | After that, the King said,"What are the things thou wantest for it?" |
57399 | After that, the Prince asks,"Whose house is that, mother?" |
57399 | After that, the Princess having come near the Prince, asked,"What is He? |
57399 | After that, the Princess having come near the stile, while she was weeping and weeping the Rakshasa came there and asked,"What art thou weeping for?" |
57399 | After that, the Vaedda having said,"What is this man dead for?" |
57399 | After that, the Yakas having come, ask,"Who came here?" |
57399 | After that, the man cut up the bird with the bill- hook, and says,"Mango Bird, was that day good,[ or] is to- day good?" |
57399 | After that, the three keys being in the hands of the three persons, having said,"Who opened[ the boxes]?" |
57399 | After that, the youth says,"Mudalali, are you trying to cheat me? |
57399 | After that, their troubles being allayed, when they asked from this one,"What is this you said?" |
57399 | After that, this man said,"Friends, taking my twelve horses, will you give me those two elephants?" |
57399 | After the articles became sufficient for the two persons, one day the Yaka said to the two,"The articles are sufficient for you, are they not?" |
57399 | After they have asked it, this[ 137] Gamarala asks those people who come,"Do you know the New Speech?" |
57399 | Afterwards he asked at the hand of the Princess,"Mother, where is my father?" |
57399 | Afterwards he asked the son- in- law thus,"Where is even my yoke of cattle?" |
57399 | Afterwards she asked at the hand of the female slave,"Where, Bola, is the necklace?" |
57399 | Afterwards that courtesan woman asked at the hand of the Treasurer,"O Treasurer, when did you give me a necklace? |
57399 | Afterwards that man having come near the Prince, asked,"Prince, where art thou going?" |
57399 | Afterwards that sister- in- law having gone and eaten the cooked rice, and said,"Sister- in- law, give me water,"these women said,"Is it in our hand? |
57399 | Afterwards the King asked,"Where is the boy?" |
57399 | Afterwards the King having caused the Gandargaya to be brought, asked,"Did this courtesan woman give thee a necklace?" |
57399 | Afterwards the King having caused the Minister to be brought,[ told him who she was, and asked],"Why did you tell lies?" |
57399 | Afterwards the King having caused the Treasurer to be brought, asked,"Did this man give thee a necklace?" |
57399 | Afterwards the Ministers spread the news:"Is there a giant able to wrestle with the Mallawa giant?" |
57399 | Afterwards the Naekatrala said,"What has happened to you that you are forgetting in that way?" |
57399 | Afterwards the Owls said,"Friend, can you show us the country in which the Crows are?" |
57399 | Afterwards the eldest elder brother having gone,"What, younger sister, happened to you?" |
57399 | Afterwards the son- in- law said,"Father- in- law, is n''t there scarcity of food now everywhere in the country? |
57399 | Afterwards they said,"What are we keeping this dead man for? |
57399 | Afterwards, after the Prince ate, she said,"Where are you going?" |
57399 | Afterwards, having caused the Prince to descend from the scaffold, the King[ said],"Who is this of yours?" |
57399 | Afterwards, having seen the old woman the Minister asks,"Is there a Princess[ here] like this picture?" |
57399 | Again, when coming a little further, she asks,"Elder brother, is our village still far away?" |
57399 | All the crows went away; must n''t we also go? |
57399 | And the robber having gone there, while he was asking,"[ Am I] to bring the black ones[ or] to bring the red ones?" |
57399 | And the widow having gone near the royal daughters, asked,"There is an only Kabaragoya of mine; is anyone willing to be married to it?" |
57399 | Are you going in that way for that little matter?" |
57399 | As soon as he came the Devatawa asked,"What else do you want?" |
57399 | As soon as the King looked at the painting he asked,"What[ relative] of yours[ 280] is this Princess?" |
57399 | At that time he asked the Vaeddas,"To whom must this woman belong?" |
57399 | At that time that fish having come, seizing the Prince''s leg asked,"Where is the charge you undertook for me that day?" |
57399 | At that time the Gamarala, having become much troubled, asked the Lord,"What shall I do for this?" |
57399 | At that time the Gandargaya thought to himself,"What is this thing that this woman said? |
57399 | At that time the Queen asked the King,"Is that little bird which is there the male or the female?" |
57399 | At that time the Sun asks thus,"O Turtle, why didst thou place thy head at this chariot wheel?" |
57399 | At that time the other six persons scolded him:"How wilt thou eat and dress?" |
57399 | At that time,"Son, look at the manner of our house; besides that, to a Kabaragoya who will give a Kabaragoyi( female Kabaragoya)?" |
57399 | At the hand of the men I asked,''What are you many men joined together there for?'' |
57399 | At the time when he asked,"What is the science that is[ known] in this city?" |
57399 | At the time when he is bringing them, his wife said,"Whence are these?" |
57399 | At the time when she asked,"Where are you going?" |
57399 | At the time when they asked the nobleman,"Where is the daughter?" |
57399 | Because of it, can you marry your daughter to my son?" |
57399 | Because she did not speak, the eldest elder brother said,"Who can cut[ and kill] this younger sister?" |
57399 | Before bringing her there was an anger- wager, was there not?" |
57399 | Calling him near he says,"Why hast thou brought Jak? |
57399 | Can she have gone for firewood? |
57399 | Can she have gone for water?" |
57399 | Can you[ bring them]?'' |
57399 | Canst thou catch him?" |
57399 | Canst thou go to the Naga world?'' |
57399 | Canst thou[ go there and after] looking[ at their condition] come back?'' |
57399 | Darata giyado? |
57399 | Daughter, how does the water dry up in this well? |
57399 | Daughter, where is it? |
57399 | Did n''t you meet him on the way?" |
57399 | Did you come seeking me?" |
57399 | Didst thou do them?" |
57399 | Didst thou give my elder sister amply to eat and drink?" |
57399 | Didst thou stay with thy paramours until so much time has gone?" |
57399 | Do n''t throw away their rinds( potu); having given money also[ for them] what are you throwing them away for?" |
57399 | Do n''t you know about it? |
57399 | Do n''t you know about it? |
57399 | Do you say you do n''t know? |
57399 | During the whole night thou canst go to steal fowls; why canst thou not go to bring a bundle of firewood?" |
57399 | Each day the husband asked her,"Was there ever a man as clever as I am?" |
57399 | Endless times, having heard the talk, the Rakshasa asked at the hand of the woman,''What is that I hear?'' |
57399 | Every day you are eating fresh human flesh indeed; how should there not be a corpse smell?" |
57399 | For it, what else do you want, etc.?" |
57399 | Friend, will you let me row and look at the Wooden Peacock machine?" |
57399 | From the man this woman asked,"Is the affliction of my two parents light, or what?" |
57399 | Gave he them, washerwoman? |
57399 | Got she them, washerwoman? |
57399 | Harida kirilli? |
57399 | Has thy city become waste, or what? |
57399 | Have n''t you dresses? |
57399 | Having arrived and said,"O Lord, where is Your Majesty going in the midst of this forest?" |
57399 | Having awakened, he asked the Prince thus,"Regarding what matter did you awake me?" |
57399 | Having awoke thus, she asked at the hand of those seven,"Sister- in- law, is there cooked rice?" |
57399 | Having been listening he says at the hand of the Gama- mahange,"What, Bolan, is this thing that our girl is saying? |
57399 | Having been there a few days, she asked at the hand of the Princess,"Has your husband confidence in you?" |
57399 | Having called the eldest Prince of the same three Princes he asks from the same Prince,"Son, what is the work thou canst do?" |
57399 | Having come and seen these matters, she asked this woman,"Sister- in- law, how did you obtain these things?" |
57399 | Having come there the eldest brother asked,"Where is our younger sister?" |
57399 | Having come there, he showed and showed that handkerchief at the shops, while asking,"Are there handkerchiefs of this kind?" |
57399 | Having come there, sitting down on the bed he said to the woman,"Have n''t you cooked yet? |
57399 | Having come very near they asked the King and Queen,"What are you weeping there for?" |
57399 | Having come, he asked that Yaksani,"Mother, where are the cakes?" |
57399 | Having come, he asked,"Did you do all these services?" |
57399 | Having come, he said to the Prince,"Can you pluck and give me the Blue- lotus flower which is in the Great Sea?" |
57399 | Having come,"What is it, boy, thou art lamenting for?" |
57399 | Having driven it, when he went to the city the King asked the Prince,"Have you brought the gems?" |
57399 | Having gone and returned, he says to these three Princesses,"The King says thus to me,''How is it? |
57399 | Having gone there, after having surrounded Ibbawa city, and set guards( raekala), he sent a letter to the Turtle King:"What is it? |
57399 | Having gone, he said to the girl,"I caused thee to be in widowhood, did n''t I? |
57399 | Having gone, the Ministers asked,"Is it you they call Hitihami of Andara- waewa?" |
57399 | Having heard it, the girl said,"Father, why are you frightened at that? |
57399 | Having met with him, he asked these two,"Where are you two going?" |
57399 | Having met with them, they asked at the hand of the youth,"Where did you go?" |
57399 | Having said,"It is good,"the King asked,"What is there at my house?" |
57399 | Having said,"It is good,"when they went near the house the Rakshasa''s wife asked,"Who are you? |
57399 | Having said,"Now, on one occasion( gamanaka), as I am bad you spat in my face; have I now become good?" |
57399 | Having said,"Well then, what[ else] shall I do?" |
57399 | Having said,"Why did a Beggar like thee come, and come in contact with me?" |
57399 | Having said[ to himself],"What is[ the reason of] it, Bola? |
57399 | Having seen him she asked at the King''s hand,"Lord, where is Your Majesty going?" |
57399 | Having seen it, she went and said to the girl,"Why did''st thou send away the cotton in the wind? |
57399 | Having set fire to it, when the smoke was going that Rakshasi having walked[ there] asked,"Regarding what circumstance is[ this done]?" |
57399 | Having stopped the talk, they said,"Who is that lad who said the verse? |
57399 | Having stopped them, the Queen went away and dressed in woman''s clothes, and having returned, asked,"Can you recognise me?" |
57399 | Having struck it he asked the Mango Bird,"Mango Bird, was that day good[ or] is to- day good?" |
57399 | Having struck the bird[ on the ground] in the field, the man asked,"Mango Bird, was that day good,[ or] is to- day good?" |
57399 | Having taken and given thee a tom- tom, am I to take and give thee a mask too?" |
57399 | Having thus seized him, placing him on its back the fish asked at the hand of the Prince,"What will you give me to put you ashore?" |
57399 | Having tied him, taking the whip and having said,"Will you give the gem? |
57399 | Having waited a little time, she asked,"Can you bring and give[ me] three handfuls of sand from a place they are not trampling on?" |
57399 | Having waited until the time when he was going, what does this girl do? |
57399 | He asked the next Prince,"What is the science you learnt?" |
57399 | He asked the younger youth,"What is thy name?" |
57399 | He asked the youngest Prince,"What is the science you learnt?" |
57399 | He asked,"What is the science that is[ known] in this city?" |
57399 | He asks that party, also, in that very manner,"Do you know the New Speech?" |
57399 | He plucked a sesame flower, and taking it in his hand asked the girl,"Girl, in this sesame flower where is the oil?" |
57399 | He said thus to the Tom- tom Beater, it is said,"Where art thou going?" |
57399 | Hearing that, the old woman asked,"Whence is there money for you?" |
57399 | His three friendly giants asked,"What is this that happened?" |
57399 | Hitihami having gone there, asked,"What are you come together there for?" |
57399 | Hitihami said,"Are you willing for me also to cut the paddy plants for a breath( husmak)?" |
57399 | How about a little paddy for it?" |
57399 | How are you to express oil from sand?" |
57399 | How are you to milk milk from oxen and curdle it? |
57399 | How can these be[ possible]? |
57399 | How can you, Sir, a King, and we, eat[ together]?" |
57399 | How did he charm it? |
57399 | How did they bring them? |
57399 | How does it fill?" |
57399 | How shall I do them?" |
57399 | How shall I go with this Kabaragoya, without shame?" |
57399 | I am[ here]; is that insufficient for you?" |
57399 | I have not even heard of them since I was born, so how shall I cook them?" |
57399 | If I did not eat a little flesh from my younger sister to- day, what am I living for?" |
57399 | If I have n''t the Princess what are these Gods for? |
57399 | If not, wilt thou fight?" |
57399 | If there is not my piece of gold what should I stay for?" |
57399 | If without moving the head the eyes be momentarily directed towards the door, the question is asked,"Shall we go out?" |
57399 | If you said,"Husband, husband,"would it be bad?''" |
57399 | In the forest?" |
57399 | Is it not as though one saw a reflection below the water, what one says in a dream?" |
57399 | Is it not so?" |
57399 | Is it true, washerwoman? |
57399 | Is n''t it because of the Gamarala''s dog? |
57399 | Is n''t thy Turtle going hunting?" |
57399 | Is this cowdung or what? |
57399 | It is in the cooking pot, is n''t it?" |
57399 | Mother, where is it? |
57399 | Mother- in- law, he is a salt leaf- cutter whom you have married, is n''t he?" |
57399 | Night and day continually having eaten and eaten human flesh and having come, why do you ask me what is the smell of human flesh?" |
57399 | Now then, how shall I eat[ her]? |
57399 | Now then, out of these four persons, to whom does she belong? |
57399 | Now then, the letter which the people of seven cities were unable to explain, how can I explain? |
57399 | Now then, where is your learning that you have taught me?" |
57399 | Now, then, how shall I do those things? |
57399 | Now, to what place are you to go?" |
57399 | On account of it, art thou able to drive off and send away the army?" |
57399 | On account of it, of what assistance will you be to me?" |
57399 | On account of it, of what assistance will you be to me?" |
57399 | On account of it, the Parrot having gone there said to the King,"How was the way the woman won that law- suit? |
57399 | On account of it, this King having said,"To this Mara[ 201] army what shall I do?" |
57399 | One day when the woman went to bring water she met with the woman''s elder brother; he asked,"What is it, younger sister, that you are so thin for?" |
57399 | One day, at the time when the man comes, the little one says,"Father, having cooked maekittan fry, and having cooked raw- rice, let us eat her, eh?" |
57399 | Otherwise, when did I give Your Honour a necklace?" |
57399 | Otherwise, when did I give thee a necklace?" |
57399 | Otherwise, when did I give thee a necklace?" |
57399 | Regarding that indeed, why will you go to another place and become wearied?" |
57399 | Saw you him, washerwoman? |
57399 | Saw you him, washerwoman? |
57399 | Saying,"O ass of the strumpet''s son, why were you hidden last night?" |
57399 | Seizing it, the Princess came to the ground; and making clear the two eyes of the blind man, she went with the blind man[? |
57399 | Should you say,"Did they say who that was?" |
57399 | Should you say,"How was the meaning?" |
57399 | Sir?" |
57399 | Six out of the seven royal daughters having said,"Are we also female Kabaragoyas to go with Kabaragoyas?" |
57399 | So the Rakshasa asked,"What art thou crying for?" |
57399 | So the girl asked,"What is it, father, you are crying for?" |
57399 | So the girl asked,"What, father, are you crying for to- day also?" |
57399 | So the youngster said,"Mother, when you are not here how will it be for us? |
57399 | Son, whence is there money for us? |
57399 | Son, where did you go all this time?" |
57399 | That Yaksani had previously[ 249] said at the hand of the Prince that when the King asks,"Have you brought the gems?" |
57399 | That woman having come and said,"Where is it? |
57399 | The Barbet asked,"What is the other assistance?" |
57399 | The Bear asked the Queen,"What are you going for?" |
57399 | The Bear having said,"Where is there a cleverer Bear than I? |
57399 | The Darter says,"Why are you going?" |
57399 | The Devatawa asked the Devatawi,"Thou not having come[ 92] at the time when thou camest on other days, why hast thou delayed so much to- day?" |
57399 | The Devatawa asked,"What dost thou want?" |
57399 | The Eastern Liar[ asked] the female child,"Where is thy father? |
57399 | The Gamarala said,"What is the reason why you( ombaheta) have such a mind to die?" |
57399 | The Gamarala says,"Where, Bolat,[ 221] have I the money[ for it]?" |
57399 | The Hettiya asked,"Appuhami, have you met with anything even to- day?" |
57399 | The Hettiya that day also asked,"What is it, Appuhami, that you have obtained to- day?" |
57399 | The King asked the royal Queen,"By what means came you here?" |
57399 | The King asked,"Do you know the path to go on?" |
57399 | The King asked,"For what shall I give pay to thee?" |
57399 | The King asked,"From what country camest thou?" |
57399 | The King asked,"How did you shoot to- day the Crow that you were unable to shoot for so many days?" |
57399 | The King asked,"What is the stratagem?" |
57399 | The King asked,"Where is the necklace now?" |
57399 | The King asks,"Why did you not come?" |
57399 | The King having come rubbing( whetting) a sword, asked the eldest Prince,"What is the science you learnt?" |
57399 | The King having come to the palace and entered it, said,"Why did you not speak for so much time?" |
57399 | The King said,"How, girl, are men[ affected like women]?" |
57399 | The King said,"If so, who are the thieves who took this necklace?" |
57399 | The King said,"We said it for fun, did n''t we? |
57399 | The King said,"What, daughter, are you saying that for? |
57399 | The King told Hitihami to come near, and said,"Can you wrestle with the Mallawa one?" |
57399 | The King who had married the Arab Queen says,"If I had not shot it, how would your dogs chase it?" |
57399 | The King, the Arab Queen''s father, says,"If there had not been my dogs, how would you catch the deer?" |
57399 | The Leopard another time said,"Holding fast, fast,[ how] if you should slowly slowly descend?" |
57399 | The Leopard having eaten[ the fruit on] it, said again,"[ How] if you should throw down a Damba branch with your golden little hand?" |
57399 | The Minister having come, asked,"O Lord, what is the matter?" |
57399 | The Minister says,"Who is the man whom you, Sir, saw to- day in the morning? |
57399 | The Nagaya asks,"How, mother, was the manner in which you came to this country?" |
57399 | The Padda says,"Why, younger sister? |
57399 | The Prince said,"How is the way to take the stone?" |
57399 | The Prince says,"How shall I go in that way? |
57399 | The Prince, having mounted on the horse, asked his mother,"Mother, on which hand is the river in which you picked up the stone?" |
57399 | The Princess asked at the hand of the Prince( giant),"Where is your life?" |
57399 | The Princess asked,"What, mother, are you weeping and weeping for?" |
57399 | The Princess asks at the hand of the King,"Why are these people[ here] in this manner?" |
57399 | The Princess, having seen the Prince, asked,"Father, in this country how are the laws now regarding journeys?" |
57399 | The Queen, walking with the Prince, said,"Which is the house?" |
57399 | The Rakshasa having become afraid, and having jumped up, when he was saying,"What, Bola, is this one? |
57399 | The Rakshasa having heard the talk, said,"What, Bola, is that I hear?" |
57399 | The Rakshasa, having heard that talk also, again asked at the hand of the woman,"What, Bola, is that I hear?" |
57399 | The Rakshasi having become afraid, asked her daughter,"What is this?" |
57399 | The Rakshasi, weeping and weeping, having said,"What was this need for you to abandon me?" |
57399 | The Seven- mouthed Prince asks,"Who has cooked these?" |
57399 | The Sinhalese query and rhyme are:-- Ã � tamba kirilliye, edada honda adada honda? |
57399 | The Sinhalese text is,"Umbawaen occarawat beruwa mama nan okage kaewtu kanawa nae?" |
57399 | The Sun, the Divine King, asked,"What is the reason why you brought this kitten?" |
57399 | The Vaedda King having seen this Princess and Prince, asked,"Who are you? |
57399 | The Vaedda having gone near asked,"What are you staying looking upward for?" |
57399 | The Vedarala having heard it, when he asked,"What manner of illness is that malady?" |
57399 | The Yaka said,"Should anyone ask,''What is this?'' |
57399 | The Yaksani asked the Prince,"Where are you going, Sir?" |
57399 | The areka- nut trader( Gampolaya) asked,"What, friend, is your pingo load?" |
57399 | The crow said,"Being without a light, what art thou lamenting for?" |
57399 | The father- in- law asked,"What is[ the meaning of] that, son- in- law?" |
57399 | The father- in- law said,"Where, son- in- law, are we going still?" |
57399 | The giant asked,"Where are you three persons going?" |
57399 | The girl, having gone to the city, and gone to the palace in which is the King, said,"What will He give me to cure His foot?" |
57399 | The great Naga King, Mahakela by name, having seen this Turtle, asked,"Whence camest thou? |
57399 | The guards thought,"To- day the King went here; what came he again for?" |
57399 | The man asked,"With this cudgel what shall I do?" |
57399 | The man having come, when he was calling,"Arise, daughter,"she said,"What is it, father?" |
57399 | The man, taking the plate, asked,"With this plate what shall I do?" |
57399 | The men of this city say,"If we had not killed it, how would you kill the deer?" |
57399 | The men said to that Prince,"Who gives rice cakes for quartz stones, Bola?" |
57399 | The nobleman asks his son,"What have you come for?" |
57399 | The royal party said,"What is this that is fallen from the sky?" |
57399 | The shopkeepers, taking the handkerchief, having seen the marvel of it, asked,"For this handkerchief how much?" |
57399 | The son- in- law, cutting a stick, came and struck the buffalo, and drove it away, saying,"What did you come to sleep in my chena for?" |
57399 | The son- in- law, taking the cake bag, asked,"Father- in- law, what sort is this?" |
57399 | The three Princesses asked,"What, mother, are you weeping for?" |
57399 | The three persons asked the eldest Prince,"What is there at our house?" |
57399 | The two Nagayas having gone to Bamba City, after they went near the King, the King asked,"From what country came ye?" |
57399 | The washerman asked,"Why are you working for wages?" |
57399 | The washermen asked,"Where are ye going?" |
57399 | The widow woman asks,"Of what village are you?" |
57399 | The woman says,"Well, what is it to me, if it be good to you?" |
57399 | The woman, taking the three pills in her hand, and having looked at them, said,"Are these ani that you have brought?" |
57399 | The young rats asked,"What is it, mother, that you are weeping for?" |
57399 | The young younger sister''s seven elder brothers and younger brothers went[ on a trading journey?] |
57399 | The youth said,"How is the price for these plates?" |
57399 | The youth said,"What does the Lord know about it? |
57399 | The[ old] man perceiving the stench, at the time when he said to his wife,"What is this stench? |
57399 | Then King Bamba says,"Is it true that a King like me gives[ in] marriage to frog- eating beasts like you?" |
57399 | Then Nahakota says,"Why do you say,''Elder brother, elder brother?'' |
57399 | Then Nahakota says,"Why do you say,''Elder brother, elder brother?'' |
57399 | Then at the hand of that King who had become the thief, this Prince says,"You brought for yourself the Queen of such and such a city, did you not? |
57399 | Then at the hand of the Rakshasa asked the Rakshasa''s mother,"Who, son, is that?" |
57399 | Then at the time when he went to the friend''s house, having amply given him food and drink, the friend asked,"What have you come for?" |
57399 | Then both the elder brothers asked,"Where did he bring her?" |
57399 | Then elder brother said,''Why do you say,"Elder brother, elder brother?" |
57399 | Then firstly that Treasurer asked at the hand of that poor man,"When didst thou give me a necklace? |
57399 | Then having said,"It is good,"the King asked,"To catch the Peacock what are the things you want?" |
57399 | Then one man who was present said,"Why are you saying thus? |
57399 | Then that girl''s mother, bringing the cooked rice and coming to the field, asked the son- in- law,"Where, son- in- law, is your father- in- law now?" |
57399 | Then that man says at the hand of the woman,"What, Bolan, does this one say?" |
57399 | Then the Bull asked,"What did you bring this kitten for?" |
57399 | Then the Carpenter''s son said,"Why do you desire others''wives? |
57399 | Then the Cat asked,"What did you bring this kitten for?" |
57399 | Then the Gamarala asked the big youth,"What name?" |
57399 | Then the Gamarala asks these youths,"What can ye do for a living?" |
57399 | Then the Gamarala says,"Daughter, why should n''t I cry? |
57399 | Then the Gamarala, as it was burning his back, cried,"What, son- in- law, did you do here?" |
57399 | Then the Gandargaya asked the woman,"What, woman, is this thing that thou saidst? |
57399 | Then the Ground Ant- hill asked,"What have you brought this kitten for?" |
57399 | Then the Hettiya asked,"What is the name of the cudgel?" |
57399 | Then the King asked at the hand of the Gamarala''s daughter,"Where, girl, art thou going?" |
57399 | Then the King asked the Gamarala,"Who expounded this?" |
57399 | Then the King asked the Ministers,"How did ye ascertain that they are not thieves?" |
57399 | Then the King asked,"Bola, whence[ came] this stone to thee?" |
57399 | Then the King asked,"If so, owing to whom did you win in this battle?" |
57399 | Then the King asked,"What dost thou want done?" |
57399 | Then the King asked,"Where is it now?" |
57399 | Then the King asked,"Where is it now?" |
57399 | Then the King asks,"Did a Yaka, or a Yaksani, or a Deity, or a Devatawa( Godling) say that four- line verse? |
57399 | Then the King said,"How didst thou go to my palace?" |
57399 | Then the King said,"What is necessary for you?" |
57399 | Then the King said,"Where? |
57399 | Then the King said,"Who can take the eggs by stealth[ without disturbing the crow]?" |
57399 | Then the King said,"Who can,[ after] stealing them, come with those seven Princesses?" |
57399 | Then the King says,"Are you willing to take the sovereignty of the city?" |
57399 | Then the King says,"Why are you such a time?" |
57399 | Then the King thinks,"How[ am I] to take these very three beautiful Princesses?" |
57399 | Then the King will ask,''On what account should I give pay to thee?'' |
57399 | Then the Leopard asked,"What did you bring this kitten for?" |
57399 | Then the Leopard said,"Holding fast, fast,[ how] if you should slowly slowly descend?" |
57399 | Then the Minister would say a word thus[ doubtingly] to the Turtle,"Turtle, when would you bring it indeed?" |
57399 | Then the Ministers say,"What fighting dost thou know? |
57399 | Then the Naekatrala said,"Why do you become unable[ to remember] because of the dog?" |
57399 | Then the Naekatrala says,"Why do you forget; did n''t I say Thursday?" |
57399 | Then the Naga King asked,"What is the business for which he sent thee?" |
57399 | Then the Nagayas said,"What is[ the meaning of] that speech that Your Honour is saying? |
57399 | Then the Prince said,"If so, am I to tell you?" |
57399 | Then the Prince said,"You will give punishment to the Queen, you said, did you not? |
57399 | Then the Princes asked,"Where is the Leopard?" |
57399 | Then the Princess asked,"For what matter has He Himself come here?" |
57399 | Then the Princess said,"Son, how can I take the appearance I want? |
57399 | Then the Princess, speaking in ridicule of the Vaedda''s want of good looks, replied,"If so, why should I wear this costume? |
57399 | Then the Princesses said,"What are you crying for on that account? |
57399 | Then the Queen said, did she not? |
57399 | Then the Queen, at the time when they were going ashore, said thus,"Why do you speak in that manner in the company of that crowd? |
57399 | Then the Rain- cloud asked,"What is the reason why you brought this kitten?" |
57399 | Then the Rakshasa having come, asked at the hand of the woman,"What, Bola, is this smell of a human body that came, a human body that came?" |
57399 | Then the Rakshasa, having been frightened, said,"Who art thou, Clever One, to eat me?" |
57399 | Then the Vaedda asked,"What happened to you?" |
57399 | Then the Vedarala asks the Princess,"What is the malady which has come to you?" |
57399 | Then the Washerman having come, asked,"What is it?" |
57399 | Then the Wind- cloud asked,"What did you bring this kitten for?" |
57399 | Then the Yaka asked at the hand of those two,"Where did you go? |
57399 | Then the Yaksani asked the Prince,"Who art thou?" |
57399 | Then the Yaksani said,"Son, for us to cook cakes, whence[ can we get] the things for them?" |
57399 | Then the boatman says,"Thou having now wept, what[ good] will it do? |
57399 | Then the father- in- law asked,"Where, son- in- law, is the chena?" |
57399 | Then the father- in- law having come up, asked,"What, son- in- law, is that?" |
57399 | Then the four young rats said,"What are you weeping for at that?" |
57399 | Then the girl asked at the hand of the King,"Before your mother was married where were you?" |
57399 | Then the girl asked,"Why, father, are you without sense?" |
57399 | Then the girl said,"On your head you got my dirty cloth, did n''t you? |
57399 | Then the girl said,"Where is it, for me to look at, that letter?" |
57399 | Then the girl''s father says,"What, daughter, are you frying?" |
57399 | Then the man asked,"From these twelve dogs taking six, will you give me for cooking in order to eat, a small cooking pot and a large cooking pot?" |
57399 | Then the man having said,"What are these, Bola?" |
57399 | Then the man says,"Well, then, what shall I do? |
57399 | Then the man who being without that ass sought for it, saw the Leopard[ in the semi- darkness], and having said,"Is it the ass?" |
57399 | Then the man who came afterwards asked,"What is it?" |
57399 | Then the man who came first asked the man who came afterwards,"Where art thou going?" |
57399 | Then the men having said,"Of what country are you?" |
57399 | Then the men said to me,''Where did you go?'' |
57399 | Then the men who watch the hill- rice chena having been there, said,"What is this, Bola, that you are taking the corpse through the hill- rice chena?" |
57399 | Then the mother- in- law asked,"What is[ the meaning of] that, son- in- law?" |
57399 | Then the nobleman says,"Unless I caused the sooth to be looked at,[ 27] how would you three otherwise take her? |
57399 | Then the party who stayed on the bank asked,"What, Loku- Appuhami, is that?" |
57399 | Then the servants asked at the hand of the Princess,"In what shall we give the cooked rice?" |
57399 | Then the sister- in- law[ said],"Son, what do I know? |
57399 | Then the son- in- law, hearing her, asked at the man''s hand,"What, father- in- law, is that girl crying for?" |
57399 | Then the son- in- law, taking the bag of cooked rice, asked,"Father- in- law, what sort is this?" |
57399 | Then the soothsayer says,"If I had not looked at the sooth, and told[ you about her death], how would you two take her? |
57399 | Then the three Princesses asked,"What is it, mother, you are weeping for?" |
57399 | Then the turtles ask,"If so, O Four- faced King, what do you eat?" |
57399 | Then the washerman asked at the hand of the Prince,"Whence come you eating and eating certain cakes?" |
57399 | Then the woman said,"Where have you cattle to plough?" |
57399 | Then the women said,"Is there cooked rice in our hand? |
57399 | Then the younger elder brother says,"Why, younger sister? |
57399 | Then the younger sister says,"Why, elder brother, are you saying thus? |
57399 | Then this Prince asked the Devata- daughter,"Who art thou?" |
57399 | Then this man asked,"Friends, taking my two elephants, will you give me those twelve dogs?" |
57399 | Then this son- in- law says,"What are you crying for? |
57399 | Then this son- in- law says,"What is it, Naekatrala? |
57399 | Then this younger woman, having said,"At first having said ye do not want him, how does the Prince who has come become yours now? |
57399 | Then what does the Tom- tom Beater do? |
57399 | Then, because he had been afraid[ of her] formerly, when the boy said it, the Yaka, saying,"Where, Bola?" |
57399 | There is very much wind; owing to it will the coconut leaves stay without waving about?" |
57399 | Thereafter the upasakarala having gone to the pansala, asked at the hand of the pupils,"What is the reason the Lord has not yet arisen?" |
57399 | Thereafter, after he became big, they asked at the hand of the Gamarala''s daughters,"Who is willing to marry this child?" |
57399 | Thereafter, the King of this city employed the notification tom- tom,"Who can construct the Wooden Peacock machine? |
57399 | Thereafter, the giant who at first did cultivation work having gone, taking his sword also, asked,"Did n''t my three men come here?" |
57399 | Thereupon he says,"When do you bathe( that is, pour water over yourself) by your own hand? |
57399 | Thereupon the Gamarala asked at the hand of the son- in- law,"Son- in- law, who cut the fence of the garden?" |
57399 | Thereupon the Gamarala asks,"Is there[ only] so much plantain, son- in- law?" |
57399 | Thereupon the King asked at the hand of the girl,"Girl, the flower that has blossomed, where did it come from in the plant?" |
57399 | Thereupon the King asked at the hand of the man,"Didst thou take a gold[ and pearl] necklace in this manner?" |
57399 | Thereupon the King having said,"Are you going for that? |
57399 | Thereupon the King having seen her, becoming much pleased, asked,"Whence didst thou obtain this stone?" |
57399 | Thereupon the King said,"For the fault that it frightened my Princesses, what is the suitable punishment to inflict on this one?" |
57399 | Thereupon the King says,"Widow- Mahage, wilt thou tell the Prince to come to my palace?" |
57399 | Thereupon the King, having heard the sweet speech of this young Prince, becoming pleased, said,"Where, Bola, is the stone? |
57399 | Thereupon the Minister asked at the hand of the shopkeepers,"Who gave this handkerchief?" |
57399 | Thereupon the Prince said to the Gem Princess,"In this manner the King asked me:''Can you go to the God- world and come back?'' |
57399 | Thereupon the Prince says,"How do you know?" |
57399 | Thereupon the Python says,"Have n''t you bracelets and rings to put on as ornaments? |
57399 | Thereupon the Queen asks the King,"What did you laugh at? |
57399 | Thereupon the Rakshasa having arisen, asked,"Who art thou?" |
57399 | Thereupon the courtesan woman thought to herself,"What will this be about, that such a Treasurer said he gave me a necklace? |
57399 | Thereupon the giants asked,"Whence came the woman?" |
57399 | Thereupon the house persons asked,"Is there a daughter?" |
57399 | Thereupon the male Monkey says,"If five hundred are able to eat these, why canst thou not eat them?" |
57399 | Thereupon the man asked,"Where?" |
57399 | Thereupon the woman having warmed water, and made him bathe, and given him to eat, and given him betel to eat, asked the man,"What have you brought?" |
57399 | Thereupon the woman quickly having arisen and come, asked,"Where, son, where were you for so many days?" |
57399 | Thereupon these three having said[ to each other],"Can you swim?" |
57399 | Thereupon these two persons said,"Well then, what shall we do about that? |
57399 | Thereupon this King says,"Canst thou come here with the three persons( his parents and other brother)?" |
57399 | Thereupon this man having said,"What is it?" |
57399 | Thereupon, at that instant[ 172] a disturbance( internal) having come to her, while this woman was saying,"Is it true, washerwoman? |
57399 | Thereupon, at the time when the Gamarala was asking,"What is this chaff?" |
57399 | Thereupon, at the time when the King, holding the Queen''s hair- knot, was beating her, saying and saying,"Will you ask me again?" |
57399 | Thereupon, the Devatawa who stayed in that tree came and asked at the hand of the man,"Bola, what art thou crying for?" |
57399 | Thereupon, the Goat Queen asks,"What, mother,( maeniyan wahansa), are you crying for?" |
57399 | Thereupon, the giant asked the giant of the ash- heap,"Where are you going?" |
57399 | Thereupon,[ having called the eldest son again], what sooth did the nobleman ask? |
57399 | These two having become afraid, having said,"What shall we do about this?" |
57399 | These two having gone near asked,"What are you staying looking upward for?" |
57399 | They asked at the hand of his mother,"Where is now Hitihami?" |
57399 | They asked that Crow,"What is it, friend, that has happened to you?" |
57399 | They asked the next Prince,"What is the science you learnt?" |
57399 | They asked the next Prince,"What is the science you learnt?" |
57399 | They asked the young Prince,"What is the science you learnt?" |
57399 | They having said,"We can not take it,"he asked,"For me to take and give you it, what mark am I to make on you?" |
57399 | Thinking it in his mind[ only], he asked,"How are now the happiness and health of the Princess whom you at first summoned[ in marriage]?" |
57399 | Thinking it, she asked,"What is that meritorious act?" |
57399 | Thinking,"Can not I cause those silk robes to be woven?" |
57399 | Thinking,"The Prince having been put into the tunnel, and stones trampled down[ over it], when will he come again? |
57399 | Thinking,"Why am I in this fear?" |
57399 | This Prince who is washing clothes asked at the hand of those Ministers,"Where are you going?" |
57399 | This Princess having heard it, asked,"What does it say?" |
57399 | This night where are we to go? |
57399 | This nobleman, after that having summoned the eldest son, asked,"What is the science that thou knowest?" |
57399 | Thou atest my mouth? |
57399 | To go where, came you?" |
57399 | Was it right, O Hen? |
57399 | Was that good?" |
57399 | Waturata giyado? |
57399 | We poor men, can we go to fight with a King? |
57399 | Well then, having given food and drink to the Turtle,"Did you bring a Suriya- kanta flower?" |
57399 | Well then, must n''t I take the letter to- morrow? |
57399 | What am I to do?" |
57399 | What are the best journeys to go on?" |
57399 | What came you here for?" |
57399 | What do you say about it?" |
57399 | What do you weep at that for? |
57399 | What does the Princess do? |
57399 | What else will you tell me to give?" |
57399 | What else?" |
57399 | What has happened here? |
57399 | What have you come here for? |
57399 | What is that Gamarala''s daughter crying for?" |
57399 | What is that Gamarala''s daughter crying for?" |
57399 | What is this sovereignty for?" |
57399 | What is this thing thou saidst?" |
57399 | What is this you did?" |
57399 | What is this you said?" |
57399 | What matter have you come about?" |
57399 | What of that? |
57399 | What shall I do? |
57399 | What shall I do? |
57399 | What shall I do? |
57399 | What the best journey to go on?" |
57399 | What was that stratagem, indeed? |
57399 | What was the manner in which thou camest here?" |
57399 | What was the wager, indeed? |
57399 | What was[ the real reason of] it? |
57399 | When didst thou give me a necklace?" |
57399 | When going, having seen that man who is tied to the post, this Moorman asks,"Why, Loku- Appuhami, are you caught and tied to that tree?" |
57399 | When he asked also at the hand of the son- in- law,"What is[ the meaning of] that?" |
57399 | When he asked"What is the stratagem?" |
57399 | When he asked,"Ca n''t you remain and eat the small fishes I give?" |
57399 | When he asked,"What are you doing here?" |
57399 | When he asked,"What mark of it have you, Sir?" |
57399 | When he asked,"What was it?" |
57399 | When he brought them, what does that Princess do? |
57399 | When he is descending into the hole to go, what does this Prince do? |
57399 | When he said,"What do ye want to take?" |
57399 | When he was there, a big Leopard which was near having heard this speech that he is making, thinks,"The Leopard indeed is I; what is the Botiya?" |
57399 | When he went, that Devatawa also asked,"What else do you want?" |
57399 | When his wife in various ways was asking,"Why did you laugh?" |
57399 | When it is cut at the root it will fall together with thee also, will it not, into the river? |
57399 | When it struck her the woman says,"What are you throwing stones for?" |
57399 | When she asked,"What is the smell of human flesh?" |
57399 | When she asked,"Whose are these goods?" |
57399 | When the Gamarala was taking the rice- dust porridge the Tom- tom Beater asked,"What, Gamarahami, are those?" |
57399 | When the garland- making mother( mal- kara amma) went to pluck flowers,"May I also pluck flowers?" |
57399 | When the man was staying[ there] thinking,"How is the expedient for this?" |
57399 | When they asked,"What is there for us to eat?" |
57399 | When they asked,"What is this you are doing?" |
57399 | When they went, the Gamarala asked this youth who looks after the cattle,"Who are these two youths?" |
57399 | When they were bathing a crow cawed; then the King said,"Who can explain the language of that crow?" |
57399 | When they were[ there] not much time, the washermen, thinking,"What are we giving to eat to these two for?" |
57399 | When this party are going near that house they ask at the hand of that eldest daughter,"Where[ is he], Bola? |
57399 | When[ she was] coming, those men who came to take the debts asked,"What did you to your mother?" |
57399 | When[ the ash- heap giant] told that[ other] giant to look for the two giants, he went, and asked,"Did n''t our men come here?" |
57399 | Where are ye fellows going?" |
57399 | Where are you going? |
57399 | Where are you two going?" |
57399 | Where have I money to that extent, to take and give you those things?" |
57399 | Where is the money to take and give these things in this way?" |
57399 | Where is this one?" |
57399 | Where, son- in- law, is the rice bag?" |
57399 | While all the robbers were going away from there, they met with yet a man, and when he was asking,"Where are you going?" |
57399 | While coming with that girl, having met with villages on the road that girl says,"Elder brother, is our village still far away?" |
57399 | While he is[ there] the Rakshasi, having come back, says,"Wherever went my daughter? |
57399 | While seeking him in that manner that woman came to the rice field, and asked,"Son- in- law, has n''t he come yet, your father- in- law?" |
57399 | While the men who were sleeping, having said,"What is this?" |
57399 | Who art thou?" |
57399 | Who asked it? |
57399 | Who gave you permission to go through the middle of this forest of mine? |
57399 | Who is the person who said that four- line verse? |
57399 | Who is the stronger?" |
57399 | Why are you there?" |
57399 | Why came I for water?" |
57399 | Why didst thou come away, leaving thy younger sister quite alone? |
57399 | Why have you come?" |
57399 | Why have you thrown an elephant into the water?" |
57399 | Why is it?" |
57399 | Why not, son? |
57399 | Why, while you are at the top, are you cutting at the root? |
57399 | Why? |
57399 | Why?" |
57399 | Why?" |
57399 | Why?" |
57399 | Will you give the gem?" |
57399 | Will you give us a resting- place in your kingdom?" |
57399 | Will you give your daughter to him?" |
57399 | Wilt thou give thy city to us? |
57399 | Wilt thou hearken to what I am saying?" |
57399 | Would it be bad if you said,''Husband, husband''( Wahe)?" |
57399 | Would it be bad if you said,''Husband, husband?''" |
57399 | Yet[ another] Prince asked,"I will bring and give him; will you marry me?" |
57399 | [ 104] A Yaka, or a Deity?" |
57399 | [ 165] The meaning is,"If you did not notice and punish him for so long, was it likely that I should?" |
57399 | [ 165] Why did n''t you split that one''s head?" |
57399 | [ 222] Bolat, where have I money to that extent?" |
57399 | [ 232] Mage duwa kohe giyado? |
57399 | [ 233] When the Rakshasi came[ after] bathing, at the time when she is coming she says,"Daughter, even to- day has tasty food been prepared? |
57399 | [ 245] Owing to it where are you to go?" |
57399 | [ 280] Umbe kawuda, your who? |
57399 | [ 293] Having gone inviting him into the house, and given him to eat, after he finished she asked,"What is there in this bag, son?" |
57399 | [ 324b]? |
57399 | [ 351] A form of comparison, meaning,"Which was the better, that day or to- day?" |
57399 | [ 70] What is[ the reason why] they do not bring them? |
57399 | [ 74] Should you say,"What was that for?" |
57399 | [ For us] to let him go, will you give the four hundred masuran?" |
57399 | [ She added]"What does it matter if my first husband is not good- looking? |
57399 | [ They said],"If this cobra having bitten her she had died, where would there be a bride for you?" |
57399 | [ When] he escaped from you even so much[ time], am I indeed going to eat that one''s liver? |
57399 | after I was unable to kill this one by this also, what shall I do?" |
57399 | and again having wept and wept, rolling on the ground, the boatman says to him,"Thou having now lamented, what[ good] will it do? |
57399 | are they? |
57399 | didst thou say?" |
57399 | he asked,"For[ weaving] the silk robes what sort of other things are necessary?" |
57399 | just as before, the owners having come and said,"What are you cutting sugar- cane for?" |
57399 | that you are making happen to- day? |
57399 | the daughter says,"Why, mother? |
57399 | the owners, having said,"Who is this who is taking the fowls?" |
57399 | what shall I say?" |
57399 | where are you going on this path? |
58889 | A Yaka or a human being( manuswayekda)? |
58889 | Are you well now? |
58889 | Because of what circumstances are you praising this hat? |
58889 | Dost thou require something for it? |
58889 | Friends, where do you drink water? 58889 How many is the number of the cakes?" |
58889 | If you thus committed the robbery are ye guilty or not guilty persons? |
58889 | In this way when night has come, where are you going? |
58889 | Is it good for me also to come? |
58889 | Is it good for me to come? |
58889 | Of what country are you, Sir? 58889 Parrot, am I to take thee?" |
58889 | Then will you give me still a masurama? |
58889 | What are you crying for? |
58889 | What has a dying man to do with eating and drinking? |
58889 | What is it? |
58889 | What is it? |
58889 | What is proper to be done concerning it? |
58889 | What is the juice? |
58889 | What is this meat in your hand? |
58889 | What is, Ada, Destiny? |
58889 | What things are on your head? |
58889 | What things are on your head? |
58889 | What, mother, are you weeping for? |
58889 | Where is the food that was in this? |
58889 | Where is the lion? |
58889 | Who, Bola, told thee? |
58889 | Why didst thou send them to the chena jungle? |
58889 | Why is it? |
58889 | Why must you go? |
58889 | Why, friend, have n''t you eaten the Kaeppitiya[ 280] cakes that are on the trees near this, where you wash? |
58889 | Will you say yet a word[ of advice] to me? |
58889 | Would it be good for me to come, too? |
58889 | Would it be good for me to come, too? |
58889 | ''Am I a slave to drag about oranges?'' |
58889 | ( that is,"Have you a wife?"). |
58889 | A Jackal having gone near the Wild Cat,[ 43] says,"Preceptor,[ tell me] how to eat a little milk- rice from the Gamarala''s house?" |
58889 | A hyæna when asked replied,"What would it matter?" |
58889 | After creating it, when he seized that man he says,"Is there a child of thine?" |
58889 | After having descended( baehaela hitan), having come near those men he says,"Where went ye?" |
58889 | After he drank,"Why is there no one in this palace?" |
58889 | After he gave them this woman asks the Brahmana,"Whence did you bring these?" |
58889 | After he presented[ 95] that jewelled ring to the King, the King asked,"Whence[ came] this jewelled ring to thee?" |
58889 | After he seized him, the man says,"What didst thou seize me for?" |
58889 | After he took it he asks,"Now then, art thou afraid of me now?" |
58889 | After he went the Princess asked the Vaedda,"What animals''skins are these?" |
58889 | After it removed the rind, when she said,"What is that[ you are doing]?" |
58889 | After seizing him he says,"Who sent thee?" |
58889 | After that the King having come, when he asked,"What is it?" |
58889 | After that the King said,"Can you find the Princess who owns this hair?" |
58889 | After that, Batmasura asked,"Can you go with me?" |
58889 | After that, he says to the parrot,"What art thou here for?" |
58889 | After that, not eating the rice, and thinking,"By whom will this work be done?" |
58889 | After that, that man says,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | After that, the King also having freed him from death, asked the Destiny Prince,"Of which village are you; of which country?" |
58889 | After that, the Prince descended from the tree to the ground, and asked the three men[ when they had bathed],"Who are you?" |
58889 | After that, the Rakshasa having come into the city, when he went near the King the King asked,"What hast thou come for?" |
58889 | After that, the men having said"Ha,"[ added],"How shall we come now? |
58889 | After that, the woman asks, it is said,"Of what country are you? |
58889 | After that, these two men lament,"What is it that has happened to us? |
58889 | After that, when the King asked them,"How do you get a living?" |
58889 | After the man went to the city the King said,"Canst thou guard my elephants?" |
58889 | After the two Princes became big, calling them near the King the King asked both,"Is Destiny the greatest thing or not?" |
58889 | Afterwards the Carpenter''s son asked at the hand of the Princess,"Can you( puluhanida) go with me to our country?" |
58889 | Afterwards the God Îswara went near another deity and asked,"What is this? |
58889 | Afterwards the King asks at the hand of Dippitiya,"What is the name of thy mother?" |
58889 | Afterwards the King of the city said,"Who can seize that Yaka?" |
58889 | Afterwards the King said,"Can a Queen eat this Jak section and bear a child?" |
58889 | Afterwards the Prince having restored the Princess to consciousness, asked,"What happened?" |
58889 | Afterwards the lad said,"What is the difficulty for you?" |
58889 | Afterwards the man having gone asked the Gamarala( his wife''s father),"How[ are we to do], then? |
58889 | Afterwards the woman asked,"Without eating the milk- cake, what do you say that for?" |
58889 | Afterwards, the Carpenter having said,"If the Hettirala''s son goes in the horse carriage, am I not a Carpenter? |
58889 | Again the Prince asked,"On which road go you to your house?" |
58889 | Am I not becoming afraid[ when you talk in that way]?" |
58889 | Are they coming for some fight, or what?" |
58889 | Are we so? |
58889 | Art thou clever enough to arrange a contrivance for it?" |
58889 | As he was running he met with yet a man who is going on the road; he asks at the hand of this foolish man,"What, friend, are you running for?" |
58889 | As the man came up, the first rogue said,"O Brahmana, why dost thou carry that dog on thy shoulder?" |
58889 | At that time Sokka asks,"Dost thou think that I have obtained thee( ti) without doing anything( nikan)? |
58889 | At that time his father asked,"Did you learn the subtlety( mayama) of women?" |
58889 | At that time the Barber woman asked,"What are you staying[ in this way] for, not eating cooked rice, without life in your body?" |
58889 | At that time the Hettirala having seen the haunch of flesh, asked,"What is that, Sokka?" |
58889 | At that time the King asked Appusiñño,"Whence comes this money?" |
58889 | At that time the King having seen Appusiñño, asked,"What have you come for?" |
58889 | At that time the Monkey called Appusiñño asked Babasiñño the Beggar,"Am I to arrange and give you an opportunity[ for a marriage]?" |
58889 | At that time the men living in the neighbourhood having come, asked the woman,"Who is thy husband?" |
58889 | At that time the royal Princess, thinking he was the second teacher, said,"What are you sleeping for? |
58889 | At that time this royal Queen asked,"What have ye come for?" |
58889 | At that time, King Attapala asks Great- Fisher,"Is this one thy brother, or thy friend?" |
58889 | At that time, the Queen asked,"Is the tank built and finished?" |
58889 | At the time when the Gama- Mahage also asked"In what manner is that[ to be done]?" |
58889 | At the time when these two asked the two persons of the house,"Is there nobody of your elders?" |
58889 | At the time when they asked,"What is this?" |
58889 | At the time when they went, having seen the Princess who was in the palace they asked the Princess,"Why? |
58889 | Because of it, are you willing or not?" |
58889 | Because of it, are you willing that I should marry you?" |
58889 | Because of it, having gone together with my war army can you defeat the enemies?" |
58889 | Because of it, the Great King asked,"Came you with the thought of perhaps a war, or what?" |
58889 | Because of it,[ the King] gave notice by beat of tom- toms,"Can any one seize them?" |
58889 | Because of what thing? |
58889 | Because of what[ reason] was that? |
58889 | Before they went they said,"When any matter of sickness has happened to a person out of us three, how shall we get to know?" |
58889 | Beginning from that day, the woman, having said,"Do you tell tales in that way?" |
58889 | Bola, boy, is thy filth( kunu) a religious merit? |
58889 | Brahmana, will you say a word[ of advice] to me?" |
58889 | Bringing goods afresh will be good, will it not?" |
58889 | By asking for a marriage from persons without lineage, will they give it?" |
58889 | Can you go?" |
58889 | Concerning it the Prince asked,"Father- in- law, are these cut fence- sticks, or uncut fence- sticks?" |
58889 | Dead men having arisen from the dead, will there be a country also to which they come? |
58889 | Did he die?" |
58889 | Did n''t you see a place where there is water?" |
58889 | Did you seize the Yaka?" |
58889 | Did you teach that one all soothsaying?" |
58889 | Didst thou seize the Yaka?" |
58889 | Do you investigate only suits for rich persons? |
58889 | Do you look after cattle in this way?" |
58889 | Do you not institute suits for poor persons? |
58889 | During that night having given the dana and having finished,"Whence are you?" |
58889 | Enemy, what is this?" |
58889 | Except that they give[ adulterers, or perhaps only offenders against caste prohibitions in such cases as this?] |
58889 | For eating for the road, what shall we eat?" |
58889 | For houses, on the days when it rains is there not much advantage in[ having] coconut husks?" |
58889 | For how much money will you give this horse?" |
58889 | For what things will you give this?" |
58889 | For what[ reason] are you without cause( nikan) in this great trouble?" |
58889 | Friend, will you give us that hat?" |
58889 | From our friendship what will be the profit? |
58889 | Hast thou come to rebuke me?" |
58889 | Have I blundered? |
58889 | Have I tied them badly? |
58889 | Having broken open this letter and shown it to the man, he asked,"What things are in this letter?" |
58889 | Having brought a plantain tree they set it up[? |
58889 | Having caused Diktaladi''s daughter to be brought, he asks,"What is thy mother''s name?" |
58889 | Having come he asked,"This mother, a person from where is she? |
58889 | Having come there the Hettirala asks, he asks from the house people,"Has n''t the fool himself who went to the rice field come?" |
58889 | Having come there, he asked that Prince who says"Destiny,""Who are you, Ada?" |
58889 | Having come there,"What is this smell of dead bodies?" |
58889 | Having come thus, and met with the very Prince who trades in the scarves, and conversed well, he asked,"Who knits the scarves?" |
58889 | Having come, when he looked he saw that the Deer had been caught in the noose, and asked,"Friend, what is[ the reason of] it?" |
58889 | Having come,"Where are ye two going?" |
58889 | Having finished and talked, when they said,"We are going,"[ 185][ the people of the eating- house] ask,"Where is the money?" |
58889 | Having finished coming,[ 167] he says,"Where is my golden mat?" |
58889 | Having given information of it to the King''s younger brother also, the younger brother asked,"What is that for?" |
58889 | Having gone there, the God Îswara asked at the hand of that deity,"What, now then, shall I do for this?" |
58889 | Having gone, at that Prince''s hand,"What[ are you doing here]?" |
58889 | Having gone, these six persons together said,"Where is the sword?" |
58889 | Having heard that lamenting, that Rakshasa came and said,"What are ye lamenting for?" |
58889 | Having said it, Appusiñño said,"O Lord King, Your Majesty, will you, Sir, be angry at my speaking?" |
58889 | Having said that, he asked at the hand of the woman,"What are you here for?" |
58889 | Having said thus, the man who looks after the cattle asked the man who pours the water,"How, friend, is your work?" |
58889 | Having said,"If these killed them, where are the tongues of these animals?" |
58889 | Having said,"When will the scarf trader come again to the shop?" |
58889 | Having said,"Who is it?" |
58889 | Having satisfied her mind he asks,"Dost thou know the time when the Yaka comes?" |
58889 | Having seen him, when he asked,"What is it?" |
58889 | Having seen it, he says,"What is it? |
58889 | Having seen that this God Iswara is running, the brother- in- law of the God Iswara asked at the hand of the God Iswara,"Where are you running?" |
58889 | Having seen that this very boy is going, the Queen, calling the boy, asked,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | Having seen the Parrot the Mouse- deer says,"Friend, where is your friend?" |
58889 | Having seen the shark the Queen asked,"For how much are you selling this shark?" |
58889 | Having seen them, he spoke to the Prince and awoke him, and asked,"How did you kill this tusk elephant?" |
58889 | Having seen these four the Jackal said,"What, friends, are you[ doing] there?" |
58889 | Having seen these two here,"What, friends, are you[ doing] there?" |
58889 | Having shown her, Sakra asked,"Can you stay here?" |
58889 | Having spoken to the man, when they asked him,"Will you give us the goat?" |
58889 | Having struck on the head of the Hetti- elder- brother and sworn, how can I come?" |
58889 | Having thus gone, when he was[ at the palace] the King asked,"What is it? |
58889 | Having told the old woman to come, the King asked,"What do you want in order to go to seek the Princess?" |
58889 | He asked the Princess,"Are you a human daughter, or a Yaksa- daughter?" |
58889 | He got him ashore, and after taking him asked,"What is your name?" |
58889 | He having stopped the horse- keeper, asks,"To which district are you taking this horse?" |
58889 | How about it?" |
58889 | How about the maintenance of those two?" |
58889 | How is that? |
58889 | How is the mode of selling the goods?" |
58889 | How shall I come with four or five persons?" |
58889 | How shall they carry the earth?" |
58889 | How will you take it and go?" |
58889 | If I did n''t eat it is there any harm?" |
58889 | If I remained[ with them] wo n''t the two persons get a subsistence, I having even done cultivation and trading?") |
58889 | If not, how does this woman know to- day the story which my Prince told yesterday for me to hear?" |
58889 | If you said,"What is[ the reason of] that?" |
58889 | In this drought where is there water for anyone to drink?" |
58889 | In this forest wilderness what are we to do?" |
58889 | Is he a person of good lineage?'' |
58889 | Is it easy or difficult?" |
58889 | Is it true?" |
58889 | Is there your wife?" |
58889 | It is mine, is n''t it?" |
58889 | Just as he is taking the two bundles in his hand, the Prince asks,"What are these?" |
58889 | Meanwhile, not allowing them to approach their own country, the King asked,"Of what country are these ships? |
58889 | Now then, how shall I obtain a living?" |
58889 | Now then, to- morrow, during the day, having said,''Whose is the corpse?'' |
58889 | Now then, where shall I go?" |
58889 | O meritorious Bug, because of what camest thou to this place? |
58889 | Of what village?" |
58889 | On account of it the woman said,"Why have you not died yet? |
58889 | On that account am I to take an elephant and give it to you; or if not am I to give the money it is worth?" |
58889 | On the following day the flower- mother says to the Princess,"Where is the Prince''s life?" |
58889 | One day our father the King asked me and my younger brother,''Is Destiny the greatest thing or not?'' |
58889 | One day, when I was asking that Prince and this Prince,''Is Destiny the greatest thing or not?'' |
58889 | Other women asked,"What is[ the reason of] so much sportiveness of the Turtle''s wife which there is to- day?" |
58889 | Owing to it, the boy, speaking to the rich man, says,"Will you sell this ship?" |
58889 | Sakra said,"Why? |
58889 | Sakra, creating an old appearance, having come asked at the boy''s hand,"What are you weeping for?" |
58889 | Seizing the man he says,"What is in your box?" |
58889 | Shall I summon her to come?" |
58889 | Shall I summon her to come[ as my wife]?" |
58889 | She asked at the hand of the Princess,"How, daughter( pute), do you eat?" |
58889 | Should you ask,''What is the medical treatment?'' |
58889 | Should you ask,''What is[ the reason of] that?'' |
58889 | Should you say,"In what manner was that?" |
58889 | Shouldst thou say,''Why is that?'' |
58889 | So the Princess asked the Prince,"Where is your life?" |
58889 | So the man asked,"What are you crying for?" |
58889 | So the robber asked the Princess,"Now then, how to kill your elder brother?" |
58889 | Son, who will give[ marriage] feasts to us? |
58889 | That Kota said,"Who said she will give power to me?" |
58889 | That Rakshasa youngster says,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | That day the woman having spoken to the Barber, asked,"What did you laugh for when I was coming? |
58889 | That lad asked,"What are you again lying down for?" |
58889 | That woman''s mother also having come at this time, very noisily asked,"Did my daughter receive the bag of masuran?" |
58889 | The Brahmana[ whom he had met], turning to go along a different path, asked at the hand of this one,"Are there still masuran in your hand?" |
58889 | The Crow said,"Our friend went for food; why has he not come?" |
58889 | The Crow said,"What, friends, are you[ doing] there?" |
58889 | The Gamarala asked,"Now then, is it well, the pregnancy longing?" |
58889 | The Gamarala asked,"Now then, is it well, the pregnancy longing?" |
58889 | The Gamarala asked,"What can you eat?" |
58889 | The Gamarala asked,"What is it, Bolan? |
58889 | The Gamarala asked,"What is it, Bolan? |
58889 | The Gamarala asked,"What is it, Bolan? |
58889 | The Gamarala said,"Now then even, is the pregnancy longing well?" |
58889 | The Gamarala said,"What can you eat for the pregnancy longing?" |
58889 | The Hettirala asked,"What is this?" |
58889 | The Hettirala gave the money; and taking the Prince and having arrived at his house the Hettirala having spoken to the Prince, asks,"What can you do?" |
58889 | The Hettirala having become very angry said,"He having done me much injury until this time, now he smeared this on my body, did n''t he?" |
58889 | The Hettirala''s wife asks,"Even to- day did that fool do even that work?" |
58889 | The Hettirala, having cast off those clothes and put on clothes in the manner of a Princess, came and asked,"Am I the Princess?" |
58889 | The Hettirala, having gone a little far, asked,"Where[ is the whip], Bola? |
58889 | The Jackal having seen the ascetic and spoken to him, says,"Meritorious ascetic, having been in which district are you, Sir, coming? |
58889 | The Jackal says,"Friend, where do you drink water? |
58889 | The King asked at the hand of that woman,"How didst thou recognise this Crow, so as to catch it?" |
58889 | The King asked,"Because of what circumstance did he kill them in that way?" |
58889 | The King asked,"By the account which thou knowest, are the females in excess or the males in excess?" |
58889 | The King asked,"Treasurer, is there rain in your quarter?" |
58889 | The King asked,"What are the things you require for it?" |
58889 | The King asked,"What is that for?" |
58889 | The King asked,"Where is that ring?" |
58889 | The King asked,"Who must beat it for the sound of this to spread?" |
58889 | The King asks the Brahmana,"How did this occur?" |
58889 | The King having come again to this boy''s house, said at the hand of the boy''s mother and father,"How is the manner in which you get a living now?" |
58889 | The King having come asked,"What is it?" |
58889 | The King having given much wealth to the man, at the time when you went into the midst of the forest did n''t you meet with the leopard?" |
58889 | The King having said to this one,"What can you do?" |
58889 | The King said,"Can you go with me to my city?" |
58889 | The King said,"For seizing the Yaka what do you want?" |
58889 | The King said,"What do you want?" |
58889 | The King, having seen this bunch of keys, asked,"Whence, Appusiñño, keys to this extent?" |
58889 | The King[ asked],"What does he require[ 296] for it?" |
58889 | The Moorman says,"O Rakshasa, where are you going?" |
58889 | The Moorman says,"What didst thou seize me for?" |
58889 | The Moorman says,"What didst thou seize me for?" |
58889 | The Prince asked,"Does a Yaka or a human being ask? |
58889 | The Prince asked,"For how much?" |
58889 | The Prince asked,"For how much?" |
58889 | The Prince asked,"Will you sell that Parrot?" |
58889 | The Prince asks,"What is this?" |
58889 | The Prince having come asked,"What is it, younger sister?" |
58889 | The Princess asked at the hand of the Princes,"Whence are you?" |
58889 | The Princess asked the Brahmana''s wife,"Who told you this?" |
58889 | The Princess asked the robber,"When he has gone to the pool what will happen?" |
58889 | The Princess having seen it asked,"What are you collecting those coconut husks and coconut shells for?" |
58889 | The Queen asked,"Son, what is the merchandise you have brought to- day?" |
58889 | The Queen having said,"Well, what can I do?" |
58889 | The Queen said,"Am I a slave to drag about anybody''s orange?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa having arisen, at the hand of the girl, having scolded her, asked,"What is this?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa lads[ said],"Having come after eating men''s flesh, what do you say''smell of dead bodies''for?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa says to that Rakshasa''s youth,"Where went this thief?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa says,"Didst thou come alone?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa says,"If so, wilt thou bring and give them?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa says,"O Rakshasi, what happened to thy Rakshasa?" |
58889 | The Rakshasa youth is grieved, and says,"You are not my mother, not my father; what man are you?" |
58889 | The Rat King having come, and said,"One with cooking pot''s mouth( appalla- kata), are you asleep?" |
58889 | The Sannyasi asked,"What is it? |
58889 | The Treasurer asked at the hand of the Treasurer''s wife,"What shall I do for this?" |
58889 | The Turtle also asked,"Friend, where do you drink water? |
58889 | The Turtle said,"Friend, what are you[ doing] there?" |
58889 | The Vaeddas asked the Princess,"If so, how is it[ to be]?" |
58889 | The Yaka''s wife asked,"Where is your life?" |
58889 | The Yakadura having gone quite alone to the rock house, when he asked the woman who was unclothed,"Art thou a human daughter[ 204] or a Yaksani?" |
58889 | The ascetic having been much pleased, asks the Jackal,"Regarding it, what must be done by me for thee?" |
58889 | The bird having become angry and said,"If ye did not eat them, who ate them?" |
58889 | The boy asked,"Father, how far( koccara taen) can you swim in this tank?" |
58889 | The boy asked,"For how much will you sell it?" |
58889 | The boy having gone home, at the time when he was there, when his mother asked,"Why, Bola, where are thy books and slates?" |
58889 | The boy''s parents asked the boy,"Did you learn all the sciences?" |
58889 | The elder brother asked,"What?" |
58889 | The girl asked at the Prince''s hand,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | The girl''s father asked at the hand of the Prince,"Son- in- law, is this rice field a cultivated rice field, or an unworked rice field?" |
58889 | The lad asked,"What are you again lying down for( budi)?" |
58889 | The man asked at the hand of his wife,"Where are the two youths?" |
58889 | The man asked,"What can you eat?" |
58889 | The man having said,"I can,"said,"What will you give me?" |
58889 | The man having seen Sokka asked,"Friend, what are you doing?" |
58889 | The man said,"What will you give me?" |
58889 | The man said,"What, friend, is my work? |
58889 | The man says,"What didst thou seize me for?" |
58889 | The man who is uttering spells, after saying,"Ha, are you getting caught?" |
58889 | The man who owned the goats asked,"Who can bring the golden pillow?" |
58889 | The other six Princesses ask the Princess of the flower- mother''s son,"Is your husband going for the hunting- sport to- day?" |
58889 | The owner of the goats asked,"Who can bring it?" |
58889 | The royal Queen having been near, asked,"What did you laugh at?" |
58889 | The second teacher having gone, asked this one,"Who are you, Ada?" |
58889 | The thief says,"If so, how shall I go from this jungle?" |
58889 | The thief says,"What is that for?" |
58889 | The thief thought,"Who spoke here?" |
58889 | The three persons having joined together, talk together:"Friend, what can you do?" |
58889 | The tiger says,"Am I to eat thee, or wilt thou give me thy two children?" |
58889 | The widow woman asked,"Where, son, are you going in this way when it has become night?" |
58889 | The woman asked,"What are you saying? |
58889 | The woman having gone running and said,"Elder brother, where are you going?" |
58889 | The woman said,"How shall I go carrying two in the arms, and again with child? |
58889 | The woman said,"Where did you go?" |
58889 | The woman who was in the house asked,"What is your name?" |
58889 | Then Ayiwanda''s uncle said,"Who will give girls to thee?" |
58889 | Then Babasiñño said,"What is this you are saying, Appusiñño? |
58889 | Then a crow which was quarrelling said to another crow,"Wilt thou be[ quiet], without quarrelling with me? |
58889 | Then at the time when the Hettirala asked,"Sokka, what is this?" |
58889 | Then at the time when the Hettirala was asking Sokka,"What shall I do for this?" |
58889 | Then having cut down the man with the sword that was in the Prince''s hand, he asked the Princess,"Whence this man?" |
58889 | Then he asked the beggar,"How didst thou cure this sickness?" |
58889 | Then that Yaka says,"Is that also an impossible thing[ for me]?" |
58889 | Then the Beggar says,"Should I hold the wager that you, Sir, hold, that is as much[ as matters] to you, is n''t it? |
58889 | Then the Carpenter asked,"What dost thou not go to school for?" |
58889 | Then the Destiny King asked,"Where then is the other Prince? |
58889 | Then the Destiny Prince asked,"Of what city are you?" |
58889 | Then the Elephant calves[ asked],"What have you come for?" |
58889 | Then the Gamarala, having scolded and scolded her, began to lament, and said,"Why, O archer, can I kill the lion?" |
58889 | Then the God Îswara asked at the hand of the Princess,"What is the food so late to- day for?" |
58889 | Then the God Îswara said,"When I have split my body shall I not be destroyed?" |
58889 | Then the Hare having said,"What? |
58889 | Then the Hettiya''s daughter having come with sandal- wood scent and distilled Attar water, asked,"Who are you?" |
58889 | Then the Jackal said,"Are the animals able to build tanks? |
58889 | Then the King asked the Crow,"Why didst thou drop excreta in my mouth?" |
58889 | Then the King asked,"Can you seize the Yaka of the Akaragane jungle?" |
58889 | Then the King asked,"How dost thou know?" |
58889 | Then the King asked,"What account art thou looking at?" |
58889 | Then the King asked,"What is it? |
58889 | Then the King having spoken, asked,"Canst thou catch and give the thief?" |
58889 | Then the King said to the Treasurer,"Treasurer, now the time for eating rice has come, has n''t it?" |
58889 | Then the King said,"What will you eat me for? |
58889 | Then the King spoke,"Wast thou unable to learn letters? |
58889 | Then the King thinking,"Who is it, Bola, who is a rich man to that degree?" |
58889 | Then the King will ask,''What dost thou want?'' |
58889 | Then the Lord asked,"When I have seized the Yaka what will you give me?" |
58889 | Then the Minister''s daughter having come, asked,"Who are you?" |
58889 | Then the Minister''s daughter said,"What is it you call Destiny? |
58889 | Then the Parrot asked the Hare,[ 2]"Where, friend, is the Mouse- deer?" |
58889 | Then the Parrot asked,"Well then, what are you telling me to do?" |
58889 | Then the Prince asked the Princess,"Will you come to go with me?" |
58889 | Then the Prince asked,"Are you coming immediately?" |
58889 | Then the Prince asked,"For how much will you sell the Cobra?" |
58889 | Then the Prince asked,"When you have gone to the ship how many men can you cut down?" |
58889 | Then the Prince having come, asked at the hand of the Princess,"Whence the golden ash- pumpkin upon the bed?" |
58889 | Then the Prince said,"Are there not other boxes?" |
58889 | Then the Prince says,"Why, what is it you are asking? |
58889 | Then the Princess asked,"If I and the ornaments belong to Your Honour,[ 305] for what purpose will you kill me?" |
58889 | Then the Princess asks the Vaedda,"Where do you live?" |
58889 | Then the Queen asked the boy,''Where are you going?'' |
58889 | Then the Queen asked,"Son, on this journey what have you brought?" |
58889 | Then the Queen asked,"Son, what is the merchandise you have brought?" |
58889 | Then the Rakshasa says,"Am I to eat this one?" |
58889 | Then the Rakshasa says,"Art thou a greater person than I, Bola?" |
58889 | Then the Rakshasa says,"Where have I, Bola, an elder brother?" |
58889 | Then the Turtle''s wife asked,"What is the packet of cooked rice for you for?" |
58889 | Then the Vedarala asked,"How did you come into a room the doors of which were closed?" |
58889 | Then the Yaka says,"Are thou a greater one than I?" |
58889 | Then the bride''s mother asked,"Where is the Vedarala?" |
58889 | Then the fishermen asked,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | Then the girl''s father having gone and said,"What is this, Bola, that thou hast not yet taken that cloth?" |
58889 | Then the grandmother asked,"What, Sokka, shall we do for it?" |
58889 | Then the men asked at the hand of the man who came with the tusk elephant,"You[ come] whence?" |
58889 | Then the men who were cheating him began to say,"Why, O fool, when you have come driving the goat, are you trying to make it a bull? |
58889 | Then the palm- sugar maker and the washerman[ 53] having gone and said,"What are you doing? |
58889 | Then the parrot says,"Friend, what did you come to this jungle for?" |
58889 | Then the second teacher asked,"Who are you, Ada?" |
58889 | Then the two persons having gone near that blind person, asked,"Who are you?" |
58889 | Then the whole of the Kings, having hit upon a little about it, inquired,"What is it?" |
58889 | Then the widow- mother asked,"Where are you, son, going?" |
58889 | Then the woman asked at the hand of Batmasura,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | Then the woman having gone to the place where the King is, the King asked,"What have you come for?" |
58889 | Then the woman said,"If so, how can I go? |
58889 | Then the woman said,"Is that a very wonderful work? |
58889 | Then these men asked,"In the Divine World are the coconuts very large?" |
58889 | Then these three persons, whence are they to give the money? |
58889 | Then they asked,''Did you learn the subtlety of women?'' |
58889 | Then when the royal servants asked Kota,"Why have you come to the royal house without permission?" |
58889 | Then, also, the royal Queen asked,"What did you laugh at?" |
58889 | Then, having called Sokka, he asked,"Where are the cattle?" |
58889 | Then,"Who can bring it?" |
58889 | Thereafter having gone near their palace, he cried out for the King to hear,"Will you give the youngest of the seven, Princess Sunumalli?" |
58889 | Thereupon Bahu- Bhutaya, because the woman was good-[looking], thinks,"What medical treatment shall I give for this?" |
58889 | Thereupon asking the man for the Princess, what does this Prince do? |
58889 | Thereupon that Prince says,"How are there women for me? |
58889 | Thereupon the Destiny King asked,"When you were staying at that city how many children had you?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Hettirala having spoken to the Prince asks,"Can you plough rice fields?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Hettirala''s daughter having become much afraid, asked,"What is the medicine?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Jackals ask,"Where, Gamarala, are you going?" |
58889 | Thereupon the King asked Appusiñño,"What has split your head?" |
58889 | Thereupon the King asks Sokka,"If you are a dexterous man to that degree, will you come to fight with the first dexterous fighter of my war army?" |
58889 | Thereupon the King asks,"Are there not Tom- tom Beaters in this city?" |
58889 | Thereupon the King having come to the rice field and called the man, when he asked,"What are you cutting the unripe paddy for?" |
58889 | Thereupon the King said,"Are you quite satisfied[ for me] to give a district from the kingdom, and goods[ amounting] to a tusk elephant''s load?" |
58889 | Thereupon the King said,"What do you require?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Leveret says,"What is it to you? |
58889 | Thereupon the Parrot said,"What, friend?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince asked,"Are there dried areka- nuts?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince asks,"Do you give the shop goods on credit( nayata) and the like? |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince having said,"At what country have we arrived?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince says,"How are there women for me? |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince says,"The thing which the Hetti- elder- brother has thrown away when coming, why should I bring? |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince says,"What is the Hetti- elder- brother saying? |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince says,"What, Hetti- elder- brother, are you saying? |
58889 | Thereupon the Prince, having opened his eyes and said,"Who are ye?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Princess also being willing regarding it, asked the robber,"How shall we kill elder brother?" |
58889 | Thereupon the Sun asked,"Of what lineage are ye, Fish- Owls?" |
58889 | Thereupon the carpenter says,"Why, friend, do n''t you know? |
58889 | Thereupon the man asked,"What have you come here again for?" |
58889 | Thereupon the man who owned the elephant having come to the house, asked the woman,"Where is thy husband?" |
58889 | Thereupon the man, looking in the direction of the plate, says,"What are ye saying? |
58889 | Thereupon the men of that country said to the woman,"Your children are male children, are they not? |
58889 | Thereupon the teacher said,"No, you are a poor woman, are you not? |
58889 | Thereupon the three persons becoming afraid, and thinking,"Is selling firewood of the jungle of the Gods and getting a living by it, wrong?" |
58889 | Thereupon the washerman asked Matalana,"What is that you are eating?" |
58889 | Thereupon the woman asked,"Were you inclined to come with me?" |
58889 | Thereupon the woman says,"Why, Bola, do n''t you know that after their life, when they have burnt men they receive goods?" |
58889 | Thereupon this Prince asked,"Because of what circumstance art thou weeping?" |
58889 | Thereupon to the Hettirala the Prince says,"Hetti- elder- brother, what is this you say? |
58889 | Thereupon, after Matalana came to the royal house, when he asked,"In about how many days can you seize and give Matalana?" |
58889 | Thereupon, having called Sokka, and having said,"Where is the revenue obtained from this? |
58889 | Thereupon, while this Hettiya was talking with the two persons he asked,"Where are you two going in the jungle in this forest wilderness?" |
58889 | They sent word,''Who gives in marriage to a young youngster? |
58889 | This Jackal said,"Does n''t the corn disappear in this chena? |
58889 | This Prince asked these two,"Can you swim to that ship?" |
58889 | This Prince asked,"Will you sell that?" |
58889 | This destitute Brahmana asked the tom- tom beater,"What is that tom- tom beating for?" |
58889 | This giantess[ 205] has not[ come] yet; what is that for?" |
58889 | This is Sunday;[ 6] how shall I bite hides to- day?" |
58889 | This man asked,"What came you for?" |
58889 | This man said,"What will you eat me for? |
58889 | This one thought,"Yet[ another] Brahmana having taken one masurama from me said,''To one''s own wife do n''t tell a secret,''did n''t he?" |
58889 | To the boy said the soothsayer,"Your father is lost, is it not so?" |
58889 | To whom shall I tell this suit? |
58889 | To- day how shall I get free?" |
58889 | Was it good to go home empty- handed? |
58889 | Was it the Deer that I got, or the packet of cooked rice I got?" |
58889 | Wast thou unable to learn the art of swords, the art of bows, etc.?" |
58889 | Well then, the shopkeeper Hettiya asked,"Who art thou?" |
58889 | Well then, these city people having said,"Who is this who cried out?" |
58889 | Well then, what does that Sokka do? |
58889 | Well then, while the party are staying there, one day, to look,"Does the Lord Mudaliyar Babasiñño regard me?" |
58889 | What are the goods for, that we have? |
58889 | What are you plucking vegetables for[ but to eat in curry]?" |
58889 | What art thou saying? |
58889 | What came she here for?" |
58889 | What did he bring? |
58889 | What did mother and father[ 75] bury me for? |
58889 | What did our mother and father bury me for? |
58889 | What did our mother and father bury me for? |
58889 | What did the other do? |
58889 | What did they bury me for? |
58889 | What do you say about it?" |
58889 | What dost thou say about[ thy reward for] it?" |
58889 | What have you come to this place for? |
58889 | What have you to say?" |
58889 | What illness have you?" |
58889 | What is it you are saying? |
58889 | What is this thing you are saying now?" |
58889 | What is this you are asking? |
58889 | What is this you are doing?" |
58889 | What is thy name?" |
58889 | What is your name?" |
58889 | What was it? |
58889 | What was it? |
58889 | What was that for? |
58889 | What''s that?" |
58889 | When I stopped for this business you went away, did n''t you?" |
58889 | When he asked again,"How is that?" |
58889 | When he asked,"Because there is darkness how shall we find our mother''s bed?" |
58889 | When he asked,"Can you[ do] letter accounts?" |
58889 | When he asked,"How is that?" |
58889 | When he asked,"What is this?" |
58889 | When he asked,"Why so?" |
58889 | When he came near the tree he asked,"What is that?" |
58889 | When he is going on the path, the men whom he meets ask,"Where are you going?" |
58889 | When he is sending the fire- ball the Prince asked the deity,"What is the reason for sending this fire- ball?" |
58889 | When he said thus, those three enemies say,"What are you saying? |
58889 | When her husband further asked,"By what method shall we kill mother?" |
58889 | When his parents afterwards asked the boy,"Did you learn the subtlety of women?" |
58889 | When she said,"What is that[ you are doing]?" |
58889 | When the Hettirala was asking at the hand of Sokka,"What shall I do for it?" |
58889 | When the Jackal spoke thus the ascetic asks,"On account of what matter dost thou speak to me in that manner?" |
58889 | When the Prince asked on account of it,"Will the party come now?" |
58889 | When the Prince said,"What shall I go and escort you for? |
58889 | When the Prince, having said,"What is this?" |
58889 | When the Princess asked,"What is that for?" |
58889 | When the Queen asked,"Where is the other man?" |
58889 | When the female Palm- cat said,"What is that[ you are doing]?" |
58889 | When the men came he asked,"Where are you going? |
58889 | When the son was buried he said,"What[ did they bury] me for? |
58889 | When the thief''s son asked his mother,"What is the motive for going for robbery, tying on the bells?" |
58889 | When the two Princes went to their uncle''s house,"What, Princes, have you come for?" |
58889 | When they asked,"What are you weeping for?" |
58889 | When they came near the parrot, the Rakshasa says to the parrot,"Friend, didst thou send this one to my forest?" |
58889 | When they had been going a considerable distance, this Brahmana asked,"Will you still say a word[ of advice] to me?" |
58889 | When they said,"Having given the money, go away,"where have these three got money to give? |
58889 | When they said[ this], these three persons, except that they ate in order to look at the power of the hat, whence are they to give the money? |
58889 | When this thief''s wife asked,"Why are you doing that?" |
58889 | When ye asked for marriage in that way will they give it?" |
58889 | Whence are these goods?" |
58889 | Whence has our mother silver and golden goods? |
58889 | Whence has our mother silver and golden things? |
58889 | Whence is it for thee, for a man called up for hire?" |
58889 | Whence is this tavalama for thee? |
58889 | Where are you going?" |
58889 | Where did you meet with a hat of a kind which is not[ elsewhere]? |
58889 | Where is your village? |
58889 | While eating them, having summoned still[ other] Jackals, and said,"I did such a clever deed; what did ye?" |
58889 | While he is coming, this panting Lizard asked,"Friend, where are you going?" |
58889 | While he is there[ after] thus putting the three- cornered hat on his head, those three persons ask,"What is it, friend? |
58889 | While he was there, thinking,"Æyi, Bola, at one blow with my hand they were deprived of life to this extent; is n''t it so?" |
58889 | While passing over a town the turtle continually asked"What''s this? |
58889 | While time was passing, he spoke to the Minister one day, and said,"Can not I obtain profit by cultivating kahawanas( coins)?" |
58889 | While you were burning me did I also cry out? |
58889 | Who and whose?" |
58889 | Who can do these things?" |
58889 | Who is the owner?" |
58889 | Why are you saying so? |
58889 | Why was that? |
58889 | Why was that? |
58889 | Why? |
58889 | Why? |
58889 | Why?" |
58889 | Why?" |
58889 | Will you give me a little fire?" |
58889 | Will you, Sirs, be seated there?" |
58889 | Yet still the King asked, through the excess of his fear, saying and saying,"Whose ships? |
58889 | You ca n''t find the gap[ by which he came]; shall I find and show( lit., give) you it?" |
58889 | Your livelihood being of a different sort, how is it?" |
58889 | [ 126] If thou cut[ some] and went, would it be bad?" |
58889 | [ 153] The King said,"For seizing the Yaka what do you want?" |
58889 | [ 157] Then the Rakshasa says,"Why didst thou tell me lies?" |
58889 | [ 158] After he seized them that man says,"O Rakshasa, what didst thou hold me for?" |
58889 | [ 160] To taniyenda awe? |
58889 | [ 193] At the time when they asked,"What is that?" |
58889 | [ 21] The Polanga asked,"Where, friend, do you drink water?" |
58889 | [ 238] Akuru ganan, that is,"Can you keep accounts?" |
58889 | [ 274] Because of it, why are you staying without eating? |
58889 | [ 291] The younger brother having come, asked,"What?" |
58889 | [ 303] The meaning is,"Can you take my war army and defeat the enemies?" |
58889 | [ 31]"Secondly, how many is the number of the cakes?" |
58889 | [ 321] Widi lokuda madi lokuda, lit., Is Destiny great or insufficiently great? |
58889 | [ 42] One day, this Prince asked another man,"Did you see my Princess?" |
58889 | [ 50] Bola, because there is no hunting- meat have you come to rebuke me? |
58889 | [ 65] Then the Yaka[ who guarded the treasure] having come, asked from the Sannyasi,"Where is the demon offering( billa)?" |
58889 | [? |
58889 | [? |
58889 | dost thou not go to school?" |
58889 | i, p. 77, of these Sinhalese tales, a man asks,"Can anyone in the other world come to this world?" |
58889 | she said thus:"Why, son? |
61963 | About my letter, did you receive it? 61963 Absurd? |
61963 | An accident? |
61963 | And if I should ask you to stay here with me? |
61963 | And tonight he is busy, so that--The moist varnished lips whispered good- naturedly:"Half an hour is plenty for us, is it not, O-? |
61963 | And what if he had been a living one? 61963 And why should you think that foolishness is not fine? |
61963 | And why then do you think there is a_ last_ revolution? 61963 And you would not be afraid to follow me anywhere? |
61963 | And you, the Mephi? |
61963 | And you? |
61963 | Are you free? |
61963 | Are you going to remain here? |
61963 | But more specifically, what is it? 61963 But tell me please, why suddenly... suddenly a soul? |
61963 | But what is the use, what is the use of it all? 61963 But why such talk? |
61963 | But you understand, I-330, do n''t you, you understand what it means if he, or one of them is here? |
61963 | Closed? |
61963 | Do n''t you think it is time to go? |
61963 | Do you know already? |
61963 | Do you remember that woman, I-330? 61963 Good?" |
61963 | Have you heard about the new operation which has been invented? 61963 How do I know who? |
61963 | How...? 61963 I made you wait, I think? |
61963 | I-330, are you there? |
61963 | I? 61963 Indecency?" |
61963 | Is he not... is he not?... |
61963 | Is it, is it her check? |
61963 | Is she here? |
61963 | Is she_ that same one_? |
61963 | It was absolutely clear that this contrast, this impassable abyss, between the things of today and of years ago--"But why impassable? |
61963 | Listen, if nothing particular happens tomorrow, I shall take you there; do you understand? |
61963 | Listen, please, in the name of the Well- Doer, could you tell me where she went? 61963 Listen, you are crazy, it seems.... And anyway you... what are you happy about? |
61963 | Listen,I shouted straight into his ear( because of the roar),"Is she here? |
61963 | May I take the aero? |
61963 | Mephi? 61963 My dear O-, if only you, if....""What if? |
61963 | My dear, you are a mathematician, are you not? 61963 No, really?... |
61963 | No? 61963 Oh, dear, is it true that you are wounded? |
61963 | Oh, this? 61963 Out for a walk?" |
61963 | She? 61963 So you did not go to the Bureau of Guardians after all?" |
61963 | Tell me, will you ever forget me? 61963 That legend referred to us of today, did it not? |
61963 | Then why did you torture me? 61963 They are coming here,--"panted the air- pump,"with guards.... And with them that what''s- his- name, the hunchback....""S-?" |
61963 | They,"We...? |
61963 | Thou lovest fog, dost thou? |
61963 | Thou lovest fog? |
61963 | To burn them? |
61963 | WHY? 61963 We? |
61963 | Well then? 61963 Well, better today?" |
61963 | Well, do you feel better now? |
61963 | Well, my fallen angel... you perished just now, do you know that? 61963 Well, shall we have her up in a week?" |
61963 | Well, what do you think of that? 61963 Well, what else do you want? |
61963 | Well, what is going to happen? |
61963 | Well? |
61963 | Well? |
61963 | What better? |
61963 | What does it matter? 61963 What else?" |
61963 | What good do you find in that? 61963 What is the matter with you?" |
61963 | What is the matter, a soul? 61963 What is the matter?" |
61963 | What is the matter? |
61963 | What? 61963 What? |
61963 | What? 61963 What? |
61963 | What? 61963 What? |
61963 | What? 61963 What?" |
61963 | Where do you want to go? |
61963 | Who are they? 61963 Who is detaining you? |
61963 | Who is it, do you know him? |
61963 | Who is it? 61963 Who? |
61963 | Why are there so many today? |
61963 | Why do I sit here enduring this smile with such resignation and what is this all about? 61963 Why... why''good- bye''?" |
61963 | Why? 61963 Why? |
61963 | Why? |
61963 | Would you not consent to have me perform an extirpation on you? 61963 Yes... but... You see, I was not alone; I was in the company of I-330, and then....""I-330? |
61963 | Yes? 61963 You are laughing at him, but do n''t you think the''European''of that age deserves more to be laughed at? |
61963 | You are so strange today... are you ill? |
61963 | You have been ill, have you not? 61963 You too are writing for the_ Integral_? |
61963 | You want to know all? |
61963 | You? 61963 You? |
61963 | _ They?_ Are those_ they_? |
61963 | _ They?_ Are those_ they_? |
61963 | ''If only''what? |
61963 | ''If only''what?" |
61963 | ''Why?'' |
61963 | ( Did you ever hear your own laughter?) |
61963 | ( I had no right to do that, but who cared about rights then?) |
61963 | ( Sharp smile- bite)"I am very curious to know; will you or will you not go to the Guardians?" |
61963 | ( Was there that wrinkle before?) |
61963 | ( Why in a moment? |
61963 | ( is it not clear?) |
61963 | ), in temperature, only thermic contrasts make for life? |
61963 | ),"Tell me, R-, did you ever have the opportunity to try nicotine or alcohol?" |
61963 | *****_ The Same Evening_ Are you familiar with the following sensation? |
61963 | ... And what if without waiting for anything I should... just head down.... Would it not be the only right thing to do? |
61963 | ... Why did she suddenly ask about the_ Integral_? |
61963 | ... to the spies? |
61963 | A dream? |
61963 | A dream? |
61963 | A soul?--that strange ancient word that was forgotten long ago...."Is it... v- very dangerous?" |
61963 | A thin invisible thread stretched between her and R-( what thread?). |
61963 | A voice,--a long needle slowly penetrating my heart:"Oh, you are at home? |
61963 | About the Operation? |
61963 | Absurd? |
61963 | Again I was surprised to see her grown- together mouth open, and to hear her say:"And your lady, did she remain alone?" |
61963 | Again the old lament about a child or perhaps something new regarding, regarding... the other one? |
61963 | Agreed?" |
61963 | Already the hard blue smoke of the clouds appeared below.... What if...? |
61963 | Am I not right?" |
61963 | And I went to the Botanical Garden and brought you a branch of lily- of- the- valley....""Why,''and I''? |
61963 | And all this, all this impeccable, most geometric beauty, shall I, I myself, with my hands...? |
61963 | And do n''t you think that spermatozoa are the most terrible of all microbes? |
61963 | And for some reason these grooves made me think: that double- curved being, half- hunched, with wing- like ears,--he embraced her? |
61963 | And his hands.... Did you ever notice how sometimes in a photograph the hands, if they were too near the camera, come out enormous? |
61963 | And it is none of your business... what do you care?" |
61963 | And now you are late for your work anyway?" |
61963 | And the Christian, most clement God himself, who burnt on a slow fire all the infidels, is he not an executioner? |
61963 | And then, swallowing my own words I shouted,"Are you at home? |
61963 | And what if...? |
61963 | And whence all these strange sensations? |
61963 | And who am I? |
61963 | And why all these strange sensations, this irritating, repellent female, this strange game?" |
61963 | And why did you make me come here?" |
61963 | And you remain standing here and listening to me? |
61963 | Are you a mathematician?" |
61963 | Are you crazy?" |
61963 | Are you deaf? |
61963 | As a matter of fact, what did happen? |
61963 | As before?... |
61963 | At last she was nearby, here, and what did it matter where"here"was? |
61963 | Besides, how could she know that I did not go to the Bureau of the Guardians? |
61963 | Beyond the Wall or...? |
61963 | But I ask: has it ever happened that you_ actually believed_ it? |
61963 | But I could not tell her everything, could I, if for no other reason than that it would make her an accomplice of my crimes? |
61963 | But I know a woman....""I-330?" |
61963 | But do n''t you remember that once, just in passing, just for a second you saw me there? |
61963 | But does it not prove that we are at the summit?" |
61963 | But have you not become as precise as a pendulum, you who are brought up on the system of Taylor? |
61963 | But is blooming-- not a sickness? |
61963 | But is it not clear that supreme bliss and envy are only the numerator and the denominator respectively, of the same fraction, happiness? |
61963 | But is it not clear to you that there the spies were henbane; here they are lilies- of- the- valley? |
61963 | But is it possible that you--?" |
61963 | But is your philosophy less circular? |
61963 | But now-- what? |
61963 | But what could I say to her? |
61963 | But what else can I do since it all happened exactly as I relate it? |
61963 | But what of it? |
61963 | But what was it? |
61963 | But where?" |
61963 | But who are"they"? |
61963 | But why do I write about all this? |
61963 | But why first? |
61963 | But why is it that within me"I do n''t want to"and"I want to"stand side by side? |
61963 | But why should I be surprised? |
61963 | But would it help? |
61963 | But you can not say about an odor, about the conception of an odor, that it_ is_ good or bad, can you? |
61963 | But you know that every honest Number as a matter of course must immediately go to the office of the Guardians and--""And as a matter not of course?" |
61963 | But, why then?... |
61963 | Can I find a formula to express that whirlwind which sweeps out of my soul everything, everything save her? |
61963 | Could you show me a fire that would not hurt? |
61963 | Day after tomorrow?" |
61963 | Desires are tortures, are they not? |
61963 | Did I not populate these pages which only recently were white quadrangular deserts, with you? |
61963 | Did all this really happen? |
61963 | Did she notice it or not? |
61963 | Did you ever hear cranes restlessly toss about and sigh at night, during the hours designed for rest? |
61963 | Did you ever think it was possible? |
61963 | Did you ever try to take off its shell and look into its inner meaning? |
61963 | Do I know? |
61963 | Do I put it right?" |
61963 | Do n''t you realize that they want to liberate you from these gnawing, worm- like, torturing question marks? |
61963 | Do n''t you see it matters little? |
61963 | Do you mean that you do n''t want happiness?" |
61963 | Do you realize how wonderful it is? |
61963 | Do you realize that all that was certain has come to an end? |
61963 | Do you realize what a joy it is? |
61963 | Do you realize what you are saying? |
61963 | Do you see? |
61963 | Do you understand? |
61963 | Do you understand? |
61963 | Do you understand?" |
61963 | Do you understand?" |
61963 | Do you_ understand_?" |
61963 | Does it not all resemble the ancient disease of dream- seeing? |
61963 | Does it not follow that the most sedentary form of life( ours) is at the same time, the most perfect one? |
61963 | Does it not seem to you that the part which those above must play is the more difficult, the most important part? |
61963 | Dreaming?" |
61963 | Eh?" |
61963 | Even if it be so, if nobody sees that I am covered with black, ineffaceable stains, I know it, do I not? |
61963 | Executioner? |
61963 | Flowers-- The Dissolution of a Crystal-- If Only(?) |
61963 | For I_ do not want_ salvation.... RECORD THIRTY- TWO I Do Not Believe Tractors A Little Human Splinter Do you believe that_ you will die_? |
61963 | For a second appeared( or perhaps it was only an hallucination?) |
61963 | For is there such an iceberg as could ever break the most lucid, solid crystal of our life? |
61963 | For the first time in life to find myself outside the limits of our city and see-- who knows what is beyond the Green Wall?" |
61963 | Good? |
61963 | Half closing his eyes, he bored his little drills into me and asked:"Taking a walk?" |
61963 | Happier than_ I_ he may be, but I am an exception, am I not? |
61963 | Has not all this tormented you? |
61963 | Have you read? |
61963 | Heavy steps from afar, nearer and louder like cast- iron, and...."D-503? |
61963 | Heh? |
61963 | Heh?" |
61963 | Her name, you know whom I am talking of,--did you report her name? |
61963 | How about it?... |
61963 | How can there be, how can there be any tomorrow? |
61963 | How could I argue? |
61963 | How could it be otherwise, since"all"and"I"are one"we"? |
61963 | How could it ever enter the heads of those within the Wall that we are here? |
61963 | How could she be wrong at that moment? |
61963 | How could she smile? |
61963 | How could they write whole libraries about some Kant and take notice only slightly of Taylor, of this prophet who saw ten centuries ahead? |
61963 | How did they manage to think of such things? |
61963 | How much fuel for the motors shall we load on? |
61963 | How to calculate it, since she comes from beyond, from the wild ancient land of dreams? |
61963 | How to learn it? |
61963 | I always forget to ask; will it soon be completed?" |
61963 | I am almost sure that at first he was even lonesome without his tail, but now, can you imagine yourself with a tail? |
61963 | I am in your hands; you can now at any moment....""What,''at any moment?''" |
61963 | I am sure that the primitive man would look at a coat and think,"What is this for? |
61963 | I ask: what was it that man from his diaper age dreamed of, tormented himself for, prayed for? |
61963 | I call you and call.... What is the matter with you?" |
61963 | I called softly:"I-330, are you here?" |
61963 | I came to tell you that perhaps we are now... our last days.... You know, do n''t you, that all Auditoriums are to be closed after tonight?" |
61963 | I can not understand, which_ last_?" |
61963 | I can not.... Do you understand? |
61963 | I did not ask where we were going; what did it matter? |
61963 | I distinctly heard his thoughts:"Friend though he is, yet...."And he answered:"What shall I say? |
61963 | I do not understand what I want; do I want them to have or not to have enough time? |
61963 | I do not want... do you see? |
61963 | I have a soul... incurable... and I must walk....""An incurable soul? |
61963 | I heard distinctly every blow of the hammer, and... what if she too heard it? |
61963 | I looked at his tightly closed little"valise"and thought,"What is he handling in his little valise now?" |
61963 | I mean the surgical removal of fancy?" |
61963 | I must see that she..."I crawled through the hatchway to the deck and stood there; where was I to go now? |
61963 | I must.... Do you hear me? |
61963 | I passed by and saw that in all Auditoriums preparations are going on: tables; medics all in white....""But what does it all mean?" |
61963 | I suddenly felt I had come here in vain( why in vain and how could I not have come here, where I was assigned?). |
61963 | I thought, I--""Who?" |
61963 | I thought: how was it that the ancients did not notice the utter absurdity of their prose and poetry? |
61963 | I want her; what do I care what_ she_ wants? |
61963 | I.... Is it possible that_ my_ brain, this precise, clean, glittering mechanism, like a chronometer without a speck of dust on it, is...? |
61963 | If boots are not a sickness, why should the"soul"be one? |
61963 | If cured I should have nothing to live with-- do you understand me? |
61963 | If it were not for them, how could that magnificent tragedy ever have been staged? |
61963 | If some one should tell you your shadow sees you, sees you all the time, would you understand? |
61963 | If that world is only my own, why should I tell about it in these records? |
61963 | If this be so, what does it matter if I relate one absurdity more, or one less? |
61963 | If this be so, will not this derivative be a poem in itself, despite my limitations? |
61963 | If what?" |
61963 | In a tired voice:"Why did you bring me here? |
61963 | Is it not clear then, that consciousness of oneself is a sickness? |
61963 | Is it not clear to you that what you are contriving is a revolution?" |
61963 | Is it not clear? |
61963 | Is it not droll? |
61963 | Is it not painful when the buds are bursting? |
61963 | Is it not true that the same faultless reason is within you? |
61963 | Is it not true? |
61963 | Is it not, is it not stupendous?" |
61963 | Is it possible that I ever felt, or imagined I felt all this? |
61963 | Is it possible that he knows already about her, about me, about everything? |
61963 | Is it possible that my lot is?... |
61963 | Is it possible that she means to say, that she?..." |
61963 | Is it possible that the strong, salutary, centuries- old walls of the United State have fallen? |
61963 | Is it possible that there is in me...? |
61963 | Is it possible that we are again without a roof over our heads, back in the wild state of freedom like our remote ancestors? |
61963 | Is it possible that we have lost our Well- Doer? |
61963 | Is it possible that you do not yet hear that great symphony of snoring? |
61963 | Is it possible that you forget what is ahead of you? |
61963 | Is it possible?... |
61963 | Is it really true that despite everything we are saved? |
61963 | Is it true, or not? |
61963 | Is it with your permission?" |
61963 | Is that not so?" |
61963 | Is there any happiness more wise and cloudless in this wonderful world? |
61963 | Is there no way out? |
61963 | It is possible that I, D-503, really wrote these-- pages? |
61963 | It is very strange; is it really impossible to find any cure for this dream- sickness, or to make it rational, perhaps even useful? |
61963 | It seemed incredible that she should be able to talk and yet she did:"Well, dear, come again to see my little house?" |
61963 | It seemed to me that I saw enveloped in the tender tissue of that smile a word, a letter, a name, the only name.... Or was it only my imagination? |
61963 | It seems funny? |
61963 | It was a brass knob, a cold, brass knob and I heard, cold like brass, her voice:"Just a minute, may I?" |
61963 | It was he, the devil, who lead people to transgression, to taste pernicious freedom, he the cunning serpent? |
61963 | It was yesterday, do you remember?" |
61963 | It will soon be twelve o''clock and nobody knows what.... And when night.... Where shall you and I be tonight? |
61963 | Just a minute please, may I? |
61963 | Light, figures, sparks, were trembling in the black, wet mirror.... No, all this was I, myself,--within me.... What did he call me for? |
61963 | Like the ancient ones, heh?" |
61963 | More than that, a philosopher- mathematician? |
61963 | Moreover, is it not true that the more genuinely national a man''s art, and the more sincerely national his personality, the more is he universal? |
61963 | My first thought was to rush to her and cry,"Why with him? |
61963 | Nice little idea, is it not? |
61963 | No path? |
61963 | No trail? |
61963 | No? |
61963 | No? |
61963 | Number I-330?" |
61963 | Oh, why did I not have a doctor''s certificate for today? |
61963 | One ought always to ask like children,''what further''?" |
61963 | Only a few... but why is it that I too, I...? |
61963 | Or S-? |
61963 | Or can you imagine yourself walking in the street naked, without clothes? |
61963 | Or is it only inertia? |
61963 | Or perhaps there is no black and white in life, but everything depends upon the first logical premise? |
61963 | Or was it again the"soul"at work? |
61963 | Poisoning with what? |
61963 | RECORD TWENTY- THREE Flowers The Dissolution of a Crystal If only(?) |
61963 | Rays.... Do you picture it? |
61963 | Remember a blue hill, a crowd, a cross? |
61963 | She breathed the words through sparkling white clenched teeth,"Tomorrow, nobody knows what... do you understand? |
61963 | She took my face, my whole self, between her palms, lifted my head:"And how about''It is the duty of every honest Number''? |
61963 | Since the number of numbers is infinite, how can there be a last one?" |
61963 | Somehow I can not imagine--""You see... how shall I put it? |
61963 | Suddenly I felt every hair on my head living, separated, moving:"What if they should read, even one page of these most recently written?" |
61963 | Suddenly from above:"And do n''t you think that at the apex are, precisely,_ stones_ unified into an organized society?" |
61963 | Suddenly the telephone:"D-503?" |
61963 | Suddenly, what was it? |
61963 | That is, everything would undoubtedly be clear to one of us but who knows to whom my_ Integral_ will some day bring these records? |
61963 | That one with ray- like fingers or that thick- lipped, sprinkling R-? |
61963 | That... of... of long ago?... |
61963 | The grown- together lips opened slowly:"Who is''she''?" |
61963 | The only thing left is to calculate the numerical coefficient and then.... Do you realize what it means? |
61963 | The red flame of torches dancing in the wind.... Why was such secrecy necessary? |
61963 | The square- root of minus one became silent and motionless...."Well, how is your_ Integral_? |
61963 | The_ Integral_ in our hands will be a tool that will help to put an end to everything at once without pain.... Their aeros?... |
61963 | The_ other_ I, my former self... but now....""How do I know? |
61963 | Then I, the real I, suddenly saw in the mirror a broken, quivering line of brow; I, the real I, heard suddenly a wild disgusting cry:"What? |
61963 | Then the thought came: why beautiful? |
61963 | Then the world,_ our world_, does still exist? |
61963 | There was a dim droning somewhere.... Was it a machine or voices? |
61963 | There where your finite universe ends, what is there? |
61963 | There? |
61963 | They are waiting for me below.... Do you want these minutes which are our last...?" |
61963 | They say many things; must we believe them all? |
61963 | They were asking:"What? |
61963 | This dear O-, how shall I say it? |
61963 | This seemed to have stopped for a second, hanging in air, and I waited, waited... until suddenly:"How old are you?" |
61963 | Through the noise of the wind and wings and cawing, he cried to me:"Do you realize? |
61963 | Through the wall?" |
61963 | To build a state on some non- discountable contingencies, to build blindly,--what could be more nonsensical? |
61963 | To disentangle everything at once? |
61963 | To fly without knowing where... no matter where? |
61963 | To kill U- and then go to her and say:"Now do you believe?" |
61963 | To the commander''s bridge; time to go... where? |
61963 | To whom?... |
61963 | Tomorrow I shall go and attend to the formalities...."What was she talking about? |
61963 | True, they were hissed by the dark crowd but for that the author of the tragedy, God, should have remunerated them the more liberally, should he not? |
61963 | Try to remember, have you not noticed yourself, some one with something similar, very similar, identical?" |
61963 | Understand me? |
61963 | Want some?" |
61963 | Was he my Guardian- Angel? |
61963 | Was not the whole day from early morning, full of improbable adventures? |
61963 | Was the number of those burned by the Christians less than the number of burned Christians? |
61963 | We are all so much alike--"Are you sure?" |
61963 | We may have known nothing about them until now only because today is the"once in a thousand years"? |
61963 | We shall go together.... Where? |
61963 | Well, true I did not go; I did n''t, but was it my fault that I felt indisposed? |
61963 | Well, why do n''t we grow feathers or wings, but only shoulder blades, bases for wings? |
61963 | Well?" |
61963 | What a slavish spirit, do n''t you think so?" |
61963 | What are you standing here for?" |
61963 | What are you writing about? |
61963 | What could one expect of them, since even in our day one hears from time to time, coming from the bottom, the primitive depths, the echo of the apes? |
61963 | What did he mean? |
61963 | What did she mean by that? |
61963 | What did you write today, for instance?" |
61963 | What do they say? |
61963 | What do you need such a lot for? |
61963 | What do you think of it? |
61963 | What does it matter if we are separated from the other, black side of the zero rock only by the thickness of a blade? |
61963 | What does it matter to you if I want to struggle, hopelessly struggle? |
61963 | What does it matter to you that I do not want others to desire for me? |
61963 | What does it matter? |
61963 | What does that''also''mean? |
61963 | What does that''also''mean? |
61963 | What else are we doing now? |
61963 | What for? |
61963 | What further? |
61963 | What further?" |
61963 | What had she there, behind her lowered curtains? |
61963 | What happened? |
61963 | What has happened?" |
61963 | What has that to do with it?" |
61963 | What if I were made of glass and he could have seen what was going on within me at that moment? |
61963 | What if...? |
61963 | What is it, I-, dear?" |
61963 | What is the matter? |
61963 | What is the use since all are happy already?" |
61963 | What is your concern, if I remain here alone? |
61963 | What joy?... |
61963 | What might I have become if I had moved? |
61963 | What objection indeed can one find to this most crystalline syllogism? |
61963 | What sense would the innumerable sacrifices of the Two Hundred Years''War have for us if a reason were left in our life for jealousy? |
61963 | What under these conditions is the lot of a creative individuality? |
61963 | What was he alluding to? |
61963 | What was the matter with me? |
61963 | What will become of me tomorrow? |
61963 | What would she do in a second? |
61963 | What would she say? |
61963 | What"It"? |
61963 | What-- on the Day of Unanimity?" |
61963 | What? |
61963 | What? |
61963 | What?" |
61963 | What?..." |
61963 | When I had reached the door, a thought flashed:"And if she is there... not alone?" |
61963 | Where and who are you? |
61963 | Where did those corridors lead? |
61963 | Where have you been?... |
61963 | Where is I-330? |
61963 | Where is she? |
61963 | Where is she?" |
61963 | Wherever I should lead you?" |
61963 | Which I am I? |
61963 | While doing this:"What for? |
61963 | Who am I? |
61963 | Who are those"we"? |
61963 | Who does not lose his breath when he runs through the pages of the Guide? |
61963 | Who during that walk?... |
61963 | Who has need of these things now? |
61963 | Who is he? |
61963 | Who is ignorant of the simple fact that pains are negative items which reduce that sum total we call happiness? |
61963 | Who is it? |
61963 | Who knows you? |
61963 | Who, having read them, will not bow piously before the unselfish service of that Number of all Numbers? |
61963 | Whom? |
61963 | Why am I here? |
61963 | Why are you silent? |
61963 | Why did he bring me here rather than to the Operation Department? |
61963 | Why did she bring me here? |
61963 | Why did she phone me today? |
61963 | Why did you not want...?" |
61963 | Why did you send me the pink check and make me--?" |
61963 | Why do you say that?" |
61963 | Why has he been following me all these days like a shadow? |
61963 | Why is a dance beautiful? |
61963 | Why is it absurd?" |
61963 | Why is it that I have heard his steps splashing behind me as though in a ditch all these days? |
61963 | Why not suppose the existence of flowers that bloom only once a thousand years? |
61963 | Why not use a little bit of logic? |
61963 | Why should I recount all these absurd"dreams"about closets, endless corridors? |
61963 | Why so late?" |
61963 | Why then am I unable to go now?... |
61963 | Why then do n''t I hear it?" |
61963 | Why then?... |
61963 | Why this''and''? |
61963 | Why was the doctor there,--or perhaps all that never happened?" |
61963 | Why were they not isolated and exterminated? |
61963 | Why would you not come? |
61963 | Why? |
61963 | Why?" |
61963 | Why?..." |
61963 | Will you always remember me?" |
61963 | Will you soon hop off to enlighten the inhabitants of the planets? |
61963 | With a sip of that green poison or with her? |
61963 | With as much self- control as possible I asked,"If you still feel that way, why did you have me assigned to you? |
61963 | With pleasure I pricked her:"Answer? |
61963 | With their simple, not at all terrible- looking electrocutors( where did they get them?) |
61963 | With what eyes would I have looked at the glass monster had everything remained as it was yesterday? |
61963 | Without any reason whatever I exclaimed( oh, why did n''t I restrain myself at that moment? |
61963 | Without me would they whom I shall guide over the narrow paths of my lines, could they ever see you? |
61963 | Without them in our schools, how could we love so sincerely and dearly our four rules of arithmetic? |
61963 | Work is too much for you? |
61963 | Would it not be absurd?" |
61963 | Would it not seem preposterous for these happily multiplied twos suddenly to begin thinking of some foolish kind of freedom? |
61963 | Would not your head whirl as mine does? |
61963 | Would there not run over your back and arms those strange, sweet, icy needles? |
61963 | Would you not feel that you were a giant, an Atlas?--that if only you stood up and straightened out you would reach the ceiling with your head? |
61963 | Yes? |
61963 | Yes? |
61963 | Yes? |
61963 | Yet how could I express it in words? |
61963 | Yet how could they have State logic, since they lived in a condition of freedom like beasts, like apes, like herds? |
61963 | Yet if his novel had been translated for primitive races, how could he have avoided explaining what a coat meant? |
61963 | Yet they should have understood, should they not, that such a life was actually wholesale murder, although slow murder, day after day? |
61963 | You are not afraid? |
61963 | You are reading now? |
61963 | You are with us, are you not? |
61963 | You are with us?" |
61963 | You ca n''t, can you? |
61963 | You deny it? |
61963 | You desire to go under the Machine of the Well- Doer?" |
61963 | You lied to me?" |
61963 | You remember, there on the rock, the figure of the youth? |
61963 | You remember?" |
61963 | You say a soul? |
61963 | You see? |
61963 | You see? |
61963 | You see?" |
61963 | You tell something to children, come to the very end, yet they will invariably ask you,''what further?'' |
61963 | You too?" |
61963 | You understand? |
61963 | You understand? |
61963 | You want her to?" |
61963 | You? |
61963 | and''what for?''" |
61963 | left sexual life absolutely without control? |
61963 | of a mistake? |
61963 | one of my''what?" |
61963 | she shouted to R-,"Do n''t you see that he--? |
61963 | well?... |
9395 | An ordeal? |
9395 | And how can you get them to stop? |
9395 | And what about Colorland? |
9395 | And what about all the funny characters she says live there? |
9395 | And what about the strange stories? |
9395 | And what is the purpose of your journey? |
9395 | And what may that mission be, if I may be so bold as to ask? |
9395 | And your purpose, my dear? |
9395 | Are n''t they just the most adorable creatures? |
9395 | Are you all right? 9395 Are you aware of the light?" |
9395 | Are you coming to kill me, too? 9395 Are you feeling poorly?" |
9395 | Are you saying that rocks are alive? |
9395 | Are you saying we live two lives simultaneously-- one on earth during the day, and one on the ANIM level at night? |
9395 | Are you saying you think our neighborhood is run down, and you do n''t think any decent person would want to live here? 9395 Are you the leader?" |
9395 | Auntie Em, could I stay home today? |
9395 | But how can you love someone who hates you? |
9395 | But how do you do that? |
9395 | But is n''t it human nature to see things as we want to see them? |
9395 | But order a river? 9395 But we believe Dorothy, do n''t we?" |
9395 | But what can I do? |
9395 | But what on earth do you want a pin cushion for? |
9395 | But why have you returned so soon? |
9395 | But why not? |
9395 | But why not? |
9395 | But you are so nice, why would anyone want to be hurtful? |
9395 | But, as Scarecrow said, it is confusing to read all those different ideas about things? |
9395 | But,said the Scarecrow,"what about the really bad ones? |
9395 | Ca n''t anyone stop all this? |
9395 | Can people really do that? |
9395 | Can they hurt me? |
9395 | Can we do it now? |
9395 | Can you describe it to us? |
9395 | Can you imagine how much worse conditions would be in the world had these masters not lived? |
9395 | Can you tell me the shapes of some other thoughts and what their effects are? |
9395 | Chemicals for their mind? |
9395 | Could n''t you also cover meditation? |
9395 | Dangerous? |
9395 | Depends on what? |
9395 | Did anyone bring a map with them? |
9395 | Did you see that? |
9395 | Do n''t mortals understand that? |
9395 | Do n''t you know that mind is all there is? 9395 Do n''t you see the name of the land next to Colorland?" |
9395 | Do they like plants, too? |
9395 | Do they prefer to be miserable? |
9395 | Do you know what kind of country you headed into? |
9395 | Do you know what you''re saying, Dorothy? |
9395 | Do you know who the Great Wizard is? |
9395 | Do you know,said the Fuzzy Yellow Wogglebug,"that thoughts have shapes?" |
9395 | Do you realize, my friends, the power that is contained in that love that is being offered you? 9395 Do you really think it''ll take that long?" |
9395 | Do you remember studying my life at school in your history lessons? |
9395 | Do you remember when you first arrived in Oz and your house fell on the Wicked Witch of the East and killed her dead? 9395 Do you remember when you first drafted the Constitution of the United States?" |
9395 | Do you see that red haze, Dorothy? |
9395 | Do you still hate us? |
9395 | Do you think I can become attractive? |
9395 | Do you think so? |
9395 | Do you think they would accept what was said, and change their ways? |
9395 | Does n''t it all boil down to what we said earlier? 9395 Dorothy, do you hear me?" |
9395 | Elfland? |
9395 | Excuse me, but did you see something? |
9395 | Excuse me,said Dorothy,"but did I hear you correctly? |
9395 | For example: if the bad person were to say to himself, prior to performing an act of violence,/What am I doing? 9395 Have n''t you been absorbing all that we have been told? |
9395 | Have n''t you heard the song? |
9395 | Have you come for R and R? |
9395 | Have you seen the Octapong before? |
9395 | Help you? |
9395 | Hmmm, is that so? |
9395 | How about this for the last verse? |
9395 | How are things decided, then? |
9395 | How are we going to get back, Dorothy? |
9395 | How can I meet him, then? |
9395 | How can this understanding be accomplished among your people? 9395 How can we achieve that?" |
9395 | How could He love someone so evil? |
9395 | How could they help but see that their lives have great meaning-- that they do n''t just live and die and that''s the end of it? |
9395 | How did she ever think up such a name? |
9395 | How did you do that? |
9395 | How do we define this man? 9395 How do we do that?" |
9395 | How do we know if he can hear us, or even that he exists if no one has seen him? |
9395 | How do you feel, Dorothy? |
9395 | How does it make you feel if you''re not angry or resentful? |
9395 | How long do you think our journey will take? |
9395 | How long will it be before we get to Octapongland? |
9395 | How many great teachers have come and gone? 9395 How often in these times is a problem attacked in this manner? |
9395 | Hungry? |
9395 | I do? |
9395 | I said, what''s the use of a well without a bucket? |
9395 | I said,repeated the Lion,"If the thoughts have forms, what kind of shape must her thoughts be in?" |
9395 | I said,replied Dorothy, beginning to sing:"If thoughts are things that go bump in the night, what kind of thoughts do you think are right? |
9395 | I suppose we must go through Tickleland? |
9395 | I thought this was...? |
9395 | I was wondering which political party is the best for our country, Republican or Democrat? |
9395 | I''m locked out of my own castle? |
9395 | I''m still mystified as to how you create a river to order? |
9395 | I''ve got a good one,said the Tin Woodman:"If the thoughts of witches are jagged and sharp, what kind of thoughts do they think after dark?" |
9395 | I- I thought you were...."Dead? |
9395 | If he is alive, then where is he? |
9395 | If people of earth were to be told the things that have been rejected from us by the powers that be upon your planet, I wonder, would they believe? 9395 If thoughts have forms, what kind of shape must her thoughts be in?" |
9395 | If you, a very powerful witch, can not make her give up her evil ways, what hope have I? |
9395 | In other words, most of our worries never materialize, so why fret constantly over something that in all probability will never occur? |
9395 | Is Dorothy going to help us again? |
9395 | Is anything the matter, Dorothy? |
9395 | Is it dangerous? |
9395 | Is n''t Oz a happy place now? |
9395 | Is n''t that just something? |
9395 | Is n''t that the point of the whole thing? |
9395 | Is that so? |
9395 | Is that true, Dorothy dear? |
9395 | Is that what you mean when you say my goldfish is not really dead? |
9395 | Is there any way we can help you? |
9395 | It appears that way, does n''t it? 9395 It is beautiful, is n''t it?" |
9395 | Know ye not that ye are the Temple of Creation? 9395 Let me try,"said the Scarecrow:"If thoughts are things that can zip and zoom, what kind of thoughts do you think in your room?" |
9395 | May I come to Elfland when I die? |
9395 | More power? |
9395 | Not to change the subject,said the Tin Woodman,"but where do we go from here?" |
9395 | Now everyone,she shouted, waving her arms:"Ohhh... What kind of thoughts do they think after dark?" |
9395 | Now let''s see.... What else were we going to discuss? 9395 Now what?" |
9395 | Now, what is this they called Man who was given dominion over all things by his Creator? 9395 Now, why is man on earth? |
9395 | Now, would you all like to know something of our spaceships? |
9395 | Octapongland? |
9395 | Oh no, what if I ca n''t distinguish between the real and the unreal? |
9395 | Oh, before you go,said Dorothy,"can you tell us about Thoughtformland and Americanindianland?" |
9395 | Oh, it will be so marvelous, wo n''t it? |
9395 | Only... only..."Only what? |
9395 | Or fish? 9395 Or what about your tin- can friend?" |
9395 | Precious to whom, might I ask? |
9395 | R and R? |
9395 | Really now? |
9395 | Really? 9395 Really?" |
9395 | Remember what President Washington told you? 9395 Shall we go in?" |
9395 | So they have to steal other people''s shoes? |
9395 | So, my little one,she sneered,"you decided to help me, eh? |
9395 | Sorry for them? |
9395 | Speaking of which, have you been noticing our surroundings? 9395 T- t- talk to her?" |
9395 | Taking people''s property without their consent? |
9395 | Tell them''do n''t stop''? |
9395 | That key is Love, is n''t it? |
9395 | That the atoms of its body are still in motion and will become a part of some other living thing? |
9395 | The reason they do it is quite simple: they do it for food, and the reason--"For food? |
9395 | Then, is it true? |
9395 | Therapy? |
9395 | They do? |
9395 | Thick and thin what? |
9395 | Thought you could get away, eh? 9395 Tickleland?" |
9395 | Warning you that you''re welcome? |
9395 | Was the happiest? |
9395 | We all had quite a discussion on the subject of knowledge and truth and books? |
9395 | We''ll be extremely careful, wo n''t we everyone? |
9395 | Well what do you call it? |
9395 | Well what? |
9395 | Well, how do we go through? |
9395 | Well, how''s the bag of straw and the tin can? |
9395 | Well, is n''t it precious to you? |
9395 | Well, is n''t it? |
9395 | Well, is n''t that something? |
9395 | Well, my pretty, what say you now, eh? |
9395 | Well, what are you people doing here in the first place? 9395 Well, what shall we do now?" |
9395 | Well, what? 9395 Well, where do you wish to be taken?" |
9395 | Well,continued the Girrephalump,"where do you wish to go? |
9395 | Well,said the Lion,"you''ve heard the expression''so and so makes me see red''?" |
9395 | Well,said the Tin Woodman at length,"how would you like a nice cup of tea?" |
9395 | Were you sleeping? |
9395 | What about a dead animal? |
9395 | What about countries,said the Scarecrow,"whose governments do n''t believe in a supreme intelligence, life after death, or rebirth? |
9395 | What about her? |
9395 | What about me? |
9395 | What about my name? 9395 What are they doing?" |
9395 | What are we going to do? |
9395 | What did he say would be on Dorothy''s head? |
9395 | What did you say would be in the pudding? |
9395 | What did you say? |
9395 | What did you say? |
9395 | What do you make of it? |
9395 | What do you mean, wherever she is? |
9395 | What does UFO mean? |
9395 | What does that mean? |
9395 | What does that thought look like? |
9395 | What happened, Dorothy? |
9395 | What happens if you ask them to tickle you more? |
9395 | What if I fall overboard? |
9395 | What if someone is not content with one of these little houses you have,asked Dorothy,"but wants to build a great big house on top of the hill?" |
9395 | What if they''re really hungry? |
9395 | What if you brought us all home? |
9395 | What is happening to me? 9395 What is it this time?" |
9395 | What is it? |
9395 | What is that supposed to mean? |
9395 | What is the matter with you, child? 9395 What is your intent, sir?" |
9395 | What is? |
9395 | What other work do you do? |
9395 | What shall we do now? |
9395 | What song? |
9395 | What was the general consensus? |
9395 | What would we have done without you? |
9395 | What''s a W.T.? |
9395 | What''s going on? |
9395 | What''s that like? |
9395 | What''s the Golden Rule? |
9395 | What''s the matter? |
9395 | What''s the matter? |
9395 | What''s the matter? |
9395 | What''s the use of a well without a bucket? |
9395 | What, my friends, do you think is the greatest power in the universe? |
9395 | What? |
9395 | What? |
9395 | What? |
9395 | When will that be? |
9395 | Where do you live? |
9395 | Who are you? |
9395 | Who are you? |
9395 | Who are you? |
9395 | Who assigns the Indian guides? |
9395 | Who wrote that? 9395 Who- who does she th- think she is?" |
9395 | Who? |
9395 | Why are n''t we all shouting and dancing for joy? |
9395 | Why are you? |
9395 | Why ca n''t the schools teach the children differently? |
9395 | Why could I not see that at the time? |
9395 | Why do n''t we stay here overnight,she said,"and get an early start in the morning?" |
9395 | Why do n''t you look at each other''s heads with it? |
9395 | Why do people have to go around stealing other people''s things? 9395 Why do people make these chemicals and sell them?" |
9395 | Why do they hate having to do as they''re told so much? |
9395 | Why do they prolong the agony? 9395 Why do you suppose nature is gradually becoming more violent around your planet? |
9395 | Why does God even allow bad people to be born in the first place? |
9395 | Why not? |
9395 | Why on earth do they do that? |
9395 | Why should she be scared of us? |
9395 | Why the Yellow Belt? |
9395 | Why would you be sorry for them? |
9395 | Why would you want to save me? |
9395 | Why, what do you mean? 9395 Will it really fly?" |
9395 | Will they fly? |
9395 | Will they stop tickling you if you ask them to? |
9395 | Will you do it, Dorothy? 9395 Wo n''t that be a surprise for her?" |
9395 | Worry themselves to death? |
9395 | Would n''t we, everyone? |
9395 | Would you care for milk and sugar? |
9395 | Would you care to have tea with me? 9395 Would you care to walk in the garden?" |
9395 | Would you get that? |
9395 | Would you help around the house without being asked? 9395 Would you help me with this, Em?" |
9395 | Would you like a drink of water, Dorothy? |
9395 | Would you like to see your little goldfish? |
9395 | Would you like to take over, George? 9395 Yellow Belt?" |
9395 | You do have a government, then? |
9395 | You have? |
9395 | You have? |
9395 | You mean about Oz? |
9395 | You mean it''s not real? |
9395 | You mean the Great Wizard that Glinda spoke of? |
9395 | You mean the place you''ve been telling us about? |
9395 | You mean there is no lady lion to keep you company? |
9395 | You mean you can see them? |
9395 | You never what? |
9395 | You see? |
9395 | You were going to tell us about Americanindianland? |
9395 | You''re the reason for what? |
9395 | Your little goldfish did recognized you, did n''t he? |
9395 | ''/ So, beloved friends, how should you define man? |
9395 | * Chapter Fifteen: Elfland*"Well, what next?" |
9395 | * Chapter Twenty- five: A Mystical Encounter*"Where does this mysterious stranger live?" |
9395 | A strange thought suddenly occurred to her: What if Oz was the real world, and Kansas but a shadowy dream world? |
9395 | Again everyone joined in: Ohhh... What kind of thoughts will you think tonight? |
9395 | Am I not correct?" |
9395 | And Colorland?" |
9395 | And do your homework without putting up a fuss?" |
9395 | And how angry the Wicked Witch of the West was?" |
9395 | And how did each cell of the body, as it reproduced, know that it was to be a liver cell, heart cell, et cetera? |
9395 | And what is the greatest law of all, my friends? |
9395 | Are we, Boys?" |
9395 | Be ye perfect... How shall we become perfect? |
9395 | Because they wish to cling to suffering? |
9395 | Besides, you got us out of the situation, did n''t you?" |
9395 | But how many people of today pay any attention to this kind of advice? |
9395 | But how was I to know the water would melt her down to a puddle? |
9395 | But what else is there to say? |
9395 | But would you like to look around?" |
9395 | By the way, may I ask you a question?" |
9395 | Can you see, my friends, why this is? |
9395 | Can you visualize how different your world would be? |
9395 | Can you visualize the results? |
9395 | Could it be for selfish reasons? |
9395 | Could it be that certain interests see their power crumbling through the introduction of certain improvements upon planet earth? |
9395 | Could this be, my friends? |
9395 | Did n''t anyone tell you that?" |
9395 | Did n''t you hear me calling?" |
9395 | Did you say Sir Bear? |
9395 | Do n''t you agree?" |
9395 | Do n''t you like it?" |
9395 | Do n''t you remember what I told you?" |
9395 | Do n''t your people want to be happy?" |
9395 | Do you feel guilty about killing her sisters?" |
9395 | Do you feel the power as you breathe in? |
9395 | Do you have a slight understanding of what would happen to your planet if suddenly all would start emanating positive thoughts? |
9395 | Do you realize the power that it will place in your hands once you are established in it? |
9395 | Do you think the raft will stay big? |
9395 | Do you understand?" |
9395 | Does n''t He know the state of their soul before they''re born?" |
9395 | Does n''t that feel good? |
9395 | Does that sound bizarre?" |
9395 | Does this sound inconceivable to you, my friends, or can you conceive of this? |
9395 | Does this surprise you? |
9395 | Dorothy began again:"If thoughts are things that can give you a fright, What kind of thoughts will you bring to sight? |
9395 | Dorothy said,"Why do n''t we leave these two alone for a while to get acquainted? |
9395 | Dorothy thought:"What if Aunt Em could see all this?" |
9395 | Dorothy, if your masses and your leaders could realize this, I wonder what their reaction would be? |
9395 | Everyone joined in to repeat the last line:"What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?" |
9395 | Everyone ready? |
9395 | Everyone sang the last line really loud:"What kind of thoughts will you think tooo- night?" |
9395 | Have n''t you ever lost something, then found it in a place you''ve already looked?" |
9395 | How can we be sure of electing only those who have the best interests of our beloved country at heart?" |
9395 | How can we establish love and understanding among us if these things are not mastered? |
9395 | How can you establish this among your people? |
9395 | How could I be? |
9395 | How do you define this thing called man? |
9395 | How do you do this? |
9395 | How do you feel?" |
9395 | How do you think we could make a big raft for you giants? |
9395 | How long ago was their land discovered?" |
9395 | How many earth people would be willing to leave their comfortable homes and work in your slums, to go there and live in the filth that exists? |
9395 | How would it be if everyone in Oz looked the same? |
9395 | How would they like it if someone stole from them?" |
9395 | How/could/ they disbelieve her story? |
9395 | I wonder how many varieties there are?" |
9395 | I''d call that arguing, would n''t you?" |
9395 | Is it? |
9395 | Is it? |
9395 | Is n''t it a beautiful day?" |
9395 | Is that what I heard you say? |
9395 | Is that what you''re saying? |
9395 | It sounds a little bit like Oz, does n''t it? |
9395 | It was pretty funny, huh? |
9395 | It''s good to think, do n''t you agree?" |
9395 | It''s/''do this,/''and/''do that/,''and/''why are n''t you doing so and so/?'' |
9395 | Just like that?" |
9395 | May I?" |
9395 | Must we go through Octapongland?" |
9395 | Now, what would Aunt Em think if she could see me? |
9395 | Oh dear, what if it gets little again? |
9395 | Or get up in the morning in time for school, and go to bed at a reasonable hour? |
9395 | Oz her real home and Kansas just a place she was somehow visiting in her dreams...? |
9395 | Peculiar, is n''t it? |
9395 | Remarkable, is n''t it?" |
9395 | Remember that was told to us? |
9395 | Shall we go higher? |
9395 | She glared at Dorothy and screamed,"You thought you''d liquidated me, did n''t you, my pretty? |
9395 | She looked incredulously at Dorothy, and, shaking her head in disbelief, said,"You are trying to save me?" |
9395 | She made one final swoop at Dorothy-- screaming in her ear,"Well, my little pretty, what say you now? |
9395 | Sir Bear?" |
9395 | So why prolong the agony? |
9395 | The Lion said,"Let me make one up: If thoughts have wings and can fly away, what kind of thoughts are you thinking today?" |
9395 | The Scarecrow interceded,"We discussed this recently, did n''t we, Dorothy?" |
9395 | The Wicked Witch of the West screamed at her:"So, you thought you''d get away from me, eh? |
9395 | The leader of the Girrephalumps walked right up to Dorothy and said,"You knocked, madam?" |
9395 | The question I now pose to you is: How can we solicit help from the people themselves?" |
9395 | Then, turning to the Pinhead child, he asked,"How much will it cost?" |
9395 | They all sang at the top of their voices:"What kind of thoughts do you think in your room?" |
9395 | This sounds like a big order, does it not? |
9395 | Well, would you like to begin?" |
9395 | Well,"the Witch said, looking around at all her friends,"are we all ready?" |
9395 | What about them? |
9395 | What has happened?" |
9395 | What is the nature of this living energy that appears to have an intelligence all its own? |
9395 | What kind of a life is this? |
9395 | What kind of thoughts do you think to yourself? |
9395 | What kind of thoughts do you think to yourself? |
9395 | What kind of thoughts do you think to yourself? |
9395 | What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?" |
9395 | What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?" |
9395 | What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?" |
9395 | What on earth has food got to do with it?" |
9395 | What solution could we arrive at that would be most beneficial to all concerned? |
9395 | What would be the results if love and harmony existed around this table, and around all your conference tables? |
9395 | Where are you?" |
9395 | Who do you think you are?" |
9395 | Who is to be the supreme authority on the matter?" |
9395 | Who''s going to do it? |
9395 | Who, no matter what they go through, continue to be as evil as ever? |
9395 | Why clutter up the proceedings with a lot of unnecessary rhetoric? |
9395 | Why do n''t we transport your Aunt Em and Uncle Henry to Oz? |
9395 | Why is this, my friends? |
9395 | Why the refusal to accept? |
9395 | Why the stubbornness? |
9395 | Why, oh why, make it difficult? |
9395 | Why? |
9395 | Will you tell your story?" |
9395 | Would you behave in school, and concentrate on learning all you could? |
9395 | Would you like to answer first, George?" |
9395 | Would you like to continue, George?" |
9395 | Would you like to hear the famous Wogglebug song? |
9395 | Would you move over please? |
9395 | Yet how few, even to a small degree, attempt to follow the teachings? |
9395 | You mean you can order a river on demand? |
9395 | You say you will mention how kind I''ve been?" |
9395 | You were sitting on your friend the rock, having a conversation with him?" |
9395 | You will accompany us on our journey, wo n''t you?" |
9395 | Your great Avatar often spoke of the I AM, but how has it been interpreted by your people? |
9395 | Your scraggly stuffed friend?" |
9395 | but rather''What is best for all concerned?'' |
9395 | questioned Dorothy,"You mean rest and recreation?" |
9395 | said Dorothy, as they all chimed in:"What kind of thoughts are you thinking today?" |
8299 | ''And who are you to seek for him? 8299 ''But, Brother Middle- Finger,''protested the Forefinger,''what if Heaven gives us no food?'' |
8299 | ''What are you doing in this part of the country, then? 8299 -"Why did you not tell me? |
8299 | And is that all? |
8299 | And what to a woman is her son? 8299 And where are you going?" |
8299 | And your remedy will do her no harm? |
8299 | Are n''t you my sister? |
8299 | Are you Don Juan? |
8299 | Are you a man, or a devil? |
8299 | Are you trying to joke us? |
8299 | But as long as I have visitors(? 8299 But what is it, and where is it?" |
8299 | But,continued the boy, raising his voice,"is it possible for her to bring into the world another brother? |
8299 | Can you not lend it to me until this afternoon? |
8299 | Can you prove what you have stated? |
8299 | Can you swim? |
8299 | Come out of the bag, and behold my rude abode? |
8299 | Did I not tell you not to stand or walk on my ground around this palace? 8299 Did he not give you grains of wheat to be planted in a hill, and the morning following you were to give him newly baked bread made from the wheat?" |
8299 | Did he not mix together two jars of mongo and sand, then order you to assort them so that the mongo was in one jar and the sand in the other? |
8299 | Did it harm you? |
8299 | Did the table prove good? |
8299 | Did you not tell me to select whatever I might desire, including gold and silver, and take it with me? 8299 Do n''t you know me?" |
8299 | Do n''t you know that I went to the neighboring town to sell my cowhide? |
8299 | Do n''t you know that no human being is able to see her? |
8299 | Do n''t you know? 8299 Do n''t you see the red part on my back? |
8299 | Do n''t you see? 8299 Do n''t you think that it would be a wise thing for us to get that banana- stalk and plant it?" |
8299 | Do you call me weak? 8299 Do you hear me, Juan?" |
8299 | Do you want to go with me? |
8299 | Father, father, why did you leave me alone in the forest? |
8299 | Foolish mother, do you want me to die? |
8299 | Friends,said Juan,"is a storm blowing?" |
8299 | Grandpa, what are you doing there? |
8299 | Have I any sister? |
8299 | Have you come to return the box? |
8299 | Have you decided whom you are going to take for a wife? |
8299 | How are you and your family? |
8299 | How big are you? |
8299 | How can you make her love me? |
8299 | How did you come into the world? |
8299 | How do you do, Friend Carabao? |
8299 | How does it happen that you own this river? |
8299 | How many seeds has the green melon? |
8299 | How many were you at first? |
8299 | How much does the bottle cost? |
8299 | How much does the coat cost? |
8299 | How much does your book cost? |
8299 | How much will you sell this for? |
8299 | How much? |
8299 | How now, Alejo? 8299 How so? |
8299 | If I should obey my mother''s request,he said to himself,"what would the princess say? |
8299 | If you were in the place of the woman,asked the playful grandfather with a smile on his face,"whom would you select?" |
8299 | If you, Antonio, were in her place, whom would you select? |
8299 | Is the notice on your door true? |
8299 | Maria, what will become of us here? |
8299 | Married? 8299 Master Juan, do you want to marry the king''s daughter? |
8299 | May I have a candle? 8299 Means of living?" |
8299 | Of what value is it? |
8299 | Of what value is it? |
8299 | Of what value is it? |
8299 | Old woman, what are you doing here? |
8299 | Pray,he said,"are you the owner of that thing?" |
8299 | Pray,said the old man, talking with difficulty in his pain and weakness,"what have you in your sack, my son?" |
8299 | Should you like to buy this book, my grandsons? |
8299 | Should you like to have a contest with me? 8299 Sir,"said Clotilde sneeringly,"why, then, did you tell his Majesty and other persons that you have discovered my secrets? |
8299 | Supla Supling, why are you here? |
8299 | The woman would be right in selecting her brother--"Because"--"Because, what to a woman is a husband? |
8299 | To bet? 8299 Well, after it is beaten, is it ready for use?" |
8299 | Well, after it is spun,persisted the saucy maiden,"is it ready for use?" |
8299 | Well, what do you want to take with you? |
8299 | Well, why did you give it up? |
8299 | Well,said Don Toribio,"we have a bigger one than that; do you want to borrow it?" |
8299 | Well,said Juan,"will your Majesty''s eyes please see whether I am standing on your ground or not? |
8299 | Well,said the chief to Andres,"what reward do you want me to give you?" |
8299 | Well,said the king,"answer this third question, and you shall be married to my daughter: Can you drink all the fresh water in the world?" |
8299 | What am I thinking about now? |
8299 | What are you all doing here? 8299 What are you doing here, my friend?" |
8299 | What are you doing, friend? |
8299 | What are you fighting about? |
8299 | What are you looking for? |
8299 | What are you? |
8299 | What are your Majesty''s commands for me? |
8299 | What business have you to come here? 8299 What can I do if fortune turns against me? |
8299 | What can I do if fortune turns against me? |
8299 | What can we do with him? |
8299 | What care I? |
8299 | What chance have you of winning the prize? |
8299 | What did you tell the man that you were going to do with it? |
8299 | What do I care for a good voice, so long as I have a strong body? 8299 What do you say, Curan Curing? |
8299 | What do you think of me? |
8299 | What do you want me to do? |
8299 | What do you want this snake for? |
8299 | What help do you desire? |
8299 | What impudent knave,she said,"ventures to let fall his kite in my garden?" |
8299 | What is it that you want? 8299 What is it, mother?" |
8299 | What is that lying over there? |
8299 | What is that? |
8299 | What is the matter? 8299 What is the matter?" |
8299 | What is the matter? |
8299 | What is the virtue of that book, grandmother? |
8299 | What is your name? |
8299 | What right have you to claim her? |
8299 | What shall I do to destroy this brave man? 8299 What shall we do after we have spent all our money?" |
8299 | What''s that you say? |
8299 | What''s the matter with you, Juan? |
8299 | What''s the matter, Juan? |
8299 | What''s the matter? |
8299 | When will you go get that fire- wood, Juan? |
8299 | Where are those two men? |
8299 | Where are we now? |
8299 | Where are you going? 8299 Where did I get the money?" |
8299 | Where did you get it? |
8299 | Where did you get the money? |
8299 | Where have you been, Carguen Cargon? 8299 Where is he?" |
8299 | Where is my necklace? |
8299 | Where is the army? |
8299 | Where is the ring? |
8299 | Where is the ring? |
8299 | Where? |
8299 | Who are you? |
8299 | Who are you? |
8299 | Who broke your heart, and who disgraced you? |
8299 | Who calls? |
8299 | Who gave him this divine gift? |
8299 | Who is her husband? 8299 Who is that stranger with you,--a murderer, or a robber?" |
8299 | Who is this benefactor? 8299 Who is your friend?" |
8299 | Who is your master? |
8299 | Who under heaven can make a rope out of loam? |
8299 | Whose belt is this? |
8299 | Whose cattle are these? |
8299 | Why are you crying? |
8299 | Why are you going away? 8299 Why are you there? |
8299 | Why are you there? |
8299 | Why did you come so late? |
8299 | Why do n''t you go ahead and steal something? |
8299 | Why do you always carry your house with you? |
8299 | Why do you ask me that? |
8299 | Why do you hold up one of your legs as if it were in pain? |
8299 | Why do you want her house? |
8299 | Why do you weep, Florentina? |
8299 | Why impossible? |
8299 | Why should we buy ashes when we do n''t know what to do with those that come from our own stoves? |
8299 | Why should you say so? |
8299 | Why so sad? |
8299 | Why, Juan,said the pugu,"did you put up your mosquito- net? |
8299 | Why, cock,said the pugu,"did you crow, so that the horse was startled and broke my eggs?" |
8299 | Why, horse,said the pugu( a small bird),"did you touch my eggs, so that now they are broken?" |
8299 | Why, then, do you claim that you have been in my room, and that I gave you a lock of my hair? |
8299 | Why, turtle,said the pugu,"did you carry your house with you, so that the cock crowed, and the horse was startled and broke my eggs?" |
8299 | Why,said Antonio to his grandfather one day,"does our thumb stand separate from the other fingers?" |
8299 | Why? 8299 Why? |
8299 | Will you exchange your sack of meat for my sack of money? |
8299 | Will you fetch me the box which contains the life and strength of the giant? |
8299 | Will you give me some food? |
8299 | Will you join us, Curan Curing? |
8299 | Will you please come out of the princess''s abdomen? |
8299 | Yes, Friend Carabao? |
8299 | You are only guessing, are n''t you? |
8299 | ( 10) How far is it from East to West? |
8299 | ( 11) How heavy is the moon? |
8299 | ( 12) How deep is water? |
8299 | ( 2) How many days have passed since Adam lived? |
8299 | ( 3) Where is the centre of the earth? |
8299 | ( 4) How far is it from earth to heaven? |
8299 | ( 5) What is the breadth of heaven? |
8299 | ( 6) What is the exact value of the king and his golden crown? |
8299 | ( 7) How long a time would it take to ride around the whole world? |
8299 | ( 8) What is the king thinking of this very moment? |
8299 | ( 9) How far is fortune removed from misfortune? |
8299 | --"Do you say that you have never seen me before?" |
8299 | --"How can you prove that?" |
8299 | --"What for?" |
8299 | 13, 16, and 21: Which are earlier,--the more elaborate literary forms, or the simpler popular forms? |
8299 | 152,"The Shepherd Boy,"the hero is asked three questions impossible to answer,--How many drops of water are there in the sea? |
8299 | 22 and 2:-- Who Invented Woman? |
8299 | A Malayan story given by Skeat( Fables and Folk- Tales from an Eastern Forest, 9- 12),"Who Killed the Otter''s Babies?" |
8299 | A man who was passing by said,"Pedro, what are you looking for?" |
8299 | After a few minutes the monkey stopped, and said,"Ca n''t you travel a little faster?" |
8299 | After a while she calls to Juan, and says,"Did you cover the pot[ tinungtungan mo na ang paliok]?" |
8299 | After doffing his bonnet and bowing to the king, Juan said,"Will you give me the hand of your daughter?" |
8299 | After he was given permission to try, he said to the duende,"Who are you?" |
8299 | After recovering himself, he dropped another gold- piece into the hand of the chaperon, and said,"Will you get one of those locks for me?" |
8299 | After the battle was over, the knight said to the king,"Do you know where my brother Pugut- Negru lives?" |
8299 | After thinking for a moment, he asked,"Where is the ring?" |
8299 | Alberto then said to the other boy,"Why do n''t you give the boy his boot? |
8299 | Am I dreaming? |
8299 | An eagle which had a nest at the very top of the tree saw him crying, and said to him,"Why do you weep, Carlos?" |
8299 | And what happened to the old woman, who preferred the gold of an impostor to the kindness of a virtuous woman? |
8299 | And when he looked back, whom did he see? |
8299 | Are you hurt?" |
8299 | Are you not a nobleman? |
8299 | Are you still here? |
8299 | As he sat there, he began to call loudly,"Turtle, where are you?" |
8299 | As he was considering this oversight, a strange man passed by, whom he asked,"Will you be so kind as to act as my child''s godfather?" |
8299 | As he was in the street calling out,"Who wants to buy a hide?" |
8299 | At last he asked,"Where do you get money? |
8299 | At last he shouted,"Ay, here?" |
8299 | At last some of those who had been defeated said to the king,"Of what is the drum made?" |
8299 | Bugtongpalasan faced him, but what could a man do to a big giant? |
8299 | Bursting with anger, the king said,"Are you the one who was bold enough to post this paper?" |
8299 | But what could she do? |
8299 | But what is"native,"and what is"derived"? |
8299 | But where With all my pains another brother find?" |
8299 | But will it be in my case? |
8299 | By and by he heard a sweet voice saying,"What has brought you to this place?" |
8299 | Can you do it, or not? |
8299 | Can you do it?" |
8299 | Did I not tell you not to make any noise?" |
8299 | Did n''t I tell you that you must never tread the soil of this town again? |
8299 | Did n''t you know that I was baptized by the priest, and that my name is Juan?" |
8299 | Did you lose your head?" |
8299 | Diego was astonished to see his brother, and said,"How did you manage to get out of the box, and where did you get those rings?" |
8299 | Do n''t you hear it?" |
8299 | Do n''t you know that I am the king of the snakes? |
8299 | Do n''t you know that I will never sacrifice anything for your sake? |
8299 | Do n''t you know that it is the smallest pepper that is the hottest?" |
8299 | Do n''t you know that this hat is the only means I have of earning a living?" |
8299 | Do n''t you know that we are very poor?" |
8299 | Do n''t you remember the leg of the ant and the feathers of the eagle which were given to you, and the promise of the ant and eagle?" |
8299 | Do n''t you see that I can not pound my rice well?'' |
8299 | Do n''t you think we should get along better without them?" |
8299 | Do you also feel the heat of this April morning?" |
8299 | Do you call my scheme bad policy,--to save your lives and mine?'' |
8299 | Do you mean to mock me?" |
8299 | Do you need it?" |
8299 | Do you steal it?" |
8299 | Do you understand?" |
8299 | Does not your grace think that this is cheap?" |
8299 | Don Diego, noticing the gloomy appearance of his brother, said,"What is the matter with you? |
8299 | Don Juan, have you given up so soon? |
8299 | Felipe whispered to Ambrosio,"Do you see the cow tied to the back of that carreton? |
8299 | Finally he cried out,"What is the use of groaning? |
8299 | For bibliography of the question"How much is the king worth?" |
8299 | For what man can give birth to a child, and what bull can give milk? |
8299 | Has your master finished measuring his money?" |
8299 | Have n''t you sense enough even to know how foolish you are to oppose my plan? |
8299 | Have you come to spy?'' |
8299 | Have you ever heard of an animal not carrying his heart with him?" |
8299 | Have you not killed a cow with a mark J on the right hip?" |
8299 | He called to the crow, and said to him,"Mr. Crow, do you know that I am the one who took your meat? |
8299 | He came before God, who spoke to him thus:"What made you so long? |
8299 | He covered the corpse of his father, and then went crying out through the streets of the city,"Who wants to buy a slave?" |
8299 | He embraced his daughter, and then turned to Juan, saying,"Stranger, ca n''t you favor us now with your name?" |
8299 | He said to her,"Why are you so sad and unhappy, my darling? |
8299 | He said to them,"Why do you fight for such an old rusty key? |
8299 | He said,"Have you seen a wounded deer?" |
8299 | He said,"What is the reason for carrying away a sleeping man?" |
8299 | He said,"Why did n''t you tell me that before? |
8299 | He touched her abdomen, and said,"Who are you?" |
8299 | He went to the palace, and said,"King, is it true that your son- in- law is a good guesser?" |
8299 | He, seeing her afar off in the dress of a man, thought to himself,"Who may this merchant be that looks so like my beloved wife?" |
8299 | Here are some of those found in the European versions:( 1) How much water is there in the sea? |
8299 | Here he found the old man, who said to him,"Where are you going, Alejo?" |
8299 | His look of dejection did not escape the notice of his master, who said,"What is the matter, my boy? |
8299 | His parents and his older brothers expostulated with him not to go, for what could a man unskilled in the fine arts do? |
8299 | How could I steal your ear- ring?" |
8299 | How could you ever get anything useful? |
8299 | How do you do?" |
8299 | How goes the quest?" |
8299 | How is it that you have not reached Marsella yet? |
8299 | How long was she sick?" |
8299 | How many seconds has eternity? |
8299 | How many stars are in the heavens? |
8299 | Imagining that the fly wanted to buy meat, this sapient vender said to it,"Do you want to buy meat?" |
8299 | In Parker''s main story the false proofs are five,--ass( voice), two winnowing- trays( ears), two bundles of creepers( testicles? |
8299 | In his fright, he sprang to his feet to run away; but the snake looked up at him sympathetically, and then began to speak:"Why do you fear me? |
8299 | Is he the Crafty Ulysses? |
8299 | Is it not possible to bear another one after she marries again?" |
8299 | Is it not right to protect one''s house from fire?" |
8299 | Is it possible? |
8299 | Is the rice cooked?" |
8299 | Is there anything I can do to comfort you?" |
8299 | Juan says,"Do n''t you know that there are many worms and loose branches in a tree? |
8299 | Maria stopped the procession, and addressed the governor thus:"My lord, do you see this ear- ring?" |
8299 | Marta set out, as she was told; and when she arrived at the sister''s house, the woman said to her,"Marta, why are you crying?" |
8299 | May I borrow it? |
8299 | Mayabong held up a green melon, and said,"How many seeds does this melon contain?" |
8299 | Mayabong then held up another melon, and said,"How many does this one contain?" |
8299 | Narrated by Tomas V. Vargas( of Iloilo?). |
8299 | Next morning, when the Grand Sultan awoke, he was enraged to find himself outwitted; but what could he do? |
8299 | Noet Noen said to him,"What are you here for? |
8299 | Not receiving a prompt reply, the king turned to Cabal, one of his lords, and said in a whisper,"Do you know who this Juan is who measures his money?" |
8299 | Now that the day has come when your son can be of some service to me, will you deny your promise?" |
8299 | Now what would become of him? |
8299 | Now, his wife was a kind- hearted woman; so, after thinking a few minutes, she said,"Husband, what can we do? |
8299 | Now, the girl knew nothing about making cloth and weaving it: so she said to the goddess,"When the cotton is cleaned, is it ready for use?" |
8299 | Pretty soon Juan himself saw the mischievous man, and said,"Soplin Soplon,[ 41] son of the great Blast- Blower, what are you doing?" |
8299 | Q.--Which man is the right husband? |
8299 | Q.--Who cured the king''s son? |
8299 | Q.-Who made the man? |
8299 | Remember, there is nothing difficult if you call on God.--What do you say, comrades? |
8299 | Salaksak asked him,"Are you going to the ruler''s house?" |
8299 | Say, cook, why are you in such a hurry? |
8299 | Seeing that they are not pursued, the captain calls Juan, and says to him,"Juan, why did you fool us? |
8299 | Seeing the soldiers entering their house, Zaragoza asked,"What is your pleasure?" |
8299 | She stared about, and exclaimed in surprise,"Oh, where am I? |
8299 | So Mayaman called out to the wood- cutter, and said,"Do you want to be rich, my good man?" |
8299 | So he said to the tendera,[ 53]"How much must I pay for that fat fish?" |
8299 | So one day when Carancal was away playing, the wife said to her husband,"What shall we do with Carancal? |
8299 | So the hawk said to the coling,"Do you wish to fly up into the sky with me to see which of us can fly the faster and the higher?" |
8299 | So, as soon as the sun shone, he called the Bataktak, and said to them,"Why did you laugh last night? |
8299 | Speaking of the demons and spirits of northern India, W. Crooke writes( 1: 138) that"some of the Bhût[= pugut? |
8299 | TALE 21 IS HE THE CRAFTY ULYSSES? |
8299 | TALE 31 WHO IS THE NEAREST RELATIVE? |
8299 | The Golden Lock 248 31. Who is the Nearest Relative? |
8299 | The boy then said,"Is that all?" |
8299 | The country was far away, but what else could she do? |
8299 | The crow called to her, and said,"Kasaykasay, where did you get that dead rat that you have?" |
8299 | The daughter replied,"Mother, why have you brought this ugly man here? |
8299 | The giant was afraid to enter the house, but he called in a voice of thunder,"Who''s there?" |
8299 | The horse said to him,"Why are you so sad, Juan?" |
8299 | The king asked,"Where is she, Carlos?" |
8299 | The king at once said to him,"What did you do last night?" |
8299 | The king began the trial by saying,"Do n''t you know that there is a law prohibiting men and animals from making a noise?" |
8299 | The king said to him,"How do you know that I have a daughter? |
8299 | The king said to him,"Who are you, and what do you come here for?" |
8299 | The king said to him,"Will you have your head cut off, too?" |
8299 | The king said,''I am pleased with you, and I will give you one of the three; which do you choose?'' |
8299 | The king spoke to the maiden, and asked,"What plants are you growing here?" |
8299 | The king then said to the firefly,"Why do you carry fire with you always?" |
8299 | The monkey says,"Why did n''t you tell me before? |
8299 | The monkey threatened to kill the turtle; but she said to him,"Friend monkey, do you want to wear the king''s belt?" |
8299 | The next question was this:"How much am I worth?" |
8299 | The old man appeared to him, and said,"Why are you dejected, my son?" |
8299 | The old woman smiled when she saw Maria, and said,"Do you not recognize me, pretty Maria? |
8299 | The old woman wakes up at the noise of the crash, and says,"What is that, Juan? |
8299 | The queen answered, reminding him thus:"My husband, my beloved, what did you tell me some time ago when you were driving me away? |
8299 | The question is, Who has invented the woman, and to whom does she belong by right? |
8299 | The question which the vetála now asks the king is,"Which of these four was guilty in respect of the lion who slew them all?" |
8299 | The story ends as a riddle: Who married the maiden? |
8299 | Then he asked,"Who owns this kingdom?" |
8299 | Then he said to the hawk,"When do you want to have the race?" |
8299 | Then he said,"How comes it, Friend Rock, that you wo n''t answer me to- day?" |
8299 | Then he went through the town, crying,"Who wants to buy ashes?" |
8299 | Then she began to ask the dog these questions:--"Did you not serve a certain king for his daughter?" |
8299 | Then, dropping a piece of gold on her palm, he said,"Will you tell me the secrets of your mistress?" |
8299 | There he began to ask the fool such questions as these:"Does your grace wish to have this? |
8299 | They rushed downstairs, and, half frightened, said to him,"What are you trying to do?" |
8299 | Thinking that this was its opportunity to improve its condition, it said,"Camanchile, why is your life dreary?" |
8299 | This time she was given a coach drawn by five(?) |
8299 | Transformation flight( needle, thorns; piece of soap, mountain; withe[? |
8299 | Turning to Don Juan, he said,"Do you really wish to bet? |
8299 | What are you doing here, wretched creature?" |
8299 | What could the poor turtle do? |
8299 | What do you say to exchanging loads? |
8299 | What do you wish me to give you in payment for it?" |
8299 | What is the matter? |
8299 | What is the matter?" |
8299 | What is the matter?" |
8299 | What is there in me that you do not like? |
8299 | What is your name?'' |
8299 | What shall I do? |
8299 | What will my husband think of me if he learns that this wretched, ugly, miserable- looking dog is my mother?" |
8299 | What''s the matter?" |
8299 | When Aninipot appeared, the king, with eyes flashing with anger, said to the culprit,"Why were you carrying fire last night?" |
8299 | When Culing saw Pogô, he said in a taunting tone,"Where are you going, lazy one? |
8299 | When Diego came in and saw his brother, he said,"Juan, why are you crying?" |
8299 | When Masama heard this, he said to Mabait,"Why do n''t you cure the princess? |
8299 | When Mayaman saw the wood- cutter, he said,"Are you rich now, my good man?" |
8299 | When Pedro saw the coins sticking in the cracks of his measure, he said,"What did you do with the salop?" |
8299 | When Sunga and Suac came back, Sunga said to Sacu,"Is the food ready? |
8299 | When he heard these words, the boy said,"Is that so?" |
8299 | When he reached home, his brother said to him,"Where did you get all those riches?" |
8299 | When he went home and opened the fish to clean it, what do you suppose he found inside? |
8299 | When his father saw him and said to him,"What are you doing, son?" |
8299 | When his mother saw him, she said to him,"Did you find what you were looking for?" |
8299 | When she came out of the water, Juan approached her, and said,"Princess, do n''t you know that this river is mine? |
8299 | When the doctor heard Pedro''s story, he pitied the man, and said to him,"What was the matter with your wife? |
8299 | When the king discovered that they all had horns, he summoned the cook at once, and asked,"What kind of food did you give us?" |
8299 | When the marriage ceremony was over, the king called the monkey, and asked,"Where is the couple going to live?" |
8299 | When the melons are over( gone? |
8299 | When the monarch saw it, he was greatly astonished, and said to himself,"How does he accomplish all the tasks I have given him? |
8299 | When the monkey handed the ganta back to Don Toribio, the man said,"Why do you return it? |
8299 | When the monkey reached home carrying the large measure, Andres said to him,"Where did you get that box?" |
8299 | When the old man saw his son stretched out on the floor, he said,"Juan have we fire- wood now?" |
8299 | When the princess saw the horse, she became very angry, and said,"Who is the one who is so bold as to let his horse enter my garden?" |
8299 | When the two princes came up, they said to him,"May we have some of your lion''s milk?" |
8299 | When they came to the palace, the king said,"Why have you come here?" |
8299 | When they had taken their seats, the king spoke thus:"What shall we give the victor? |
8299 | When they saw the poor man, Mayaman said to his friend,"Now, which one of us can make that wood- cutter rich?" |
8299 | Where am I? |
8299 | Where are you going? |
8299 | Where are you going?" |
8299 | Where did you come from?" |
8299 | Where did you get that mountain?" |
8299 | Where do you think this ship came from, if not from the land of enchanters?" |
8299 | Where is it?" |
8299 | Where is my cow?" |
8299 | Where is that boast of yours, that I am already beaten? |
8299 | Where is your wife, Don Juan?" |
8299 | While he was crying over his bad luck, a very old woman came near him, and said,"Why are you weeping, my boy?" |
8299 | While she was washing, a crab approached her, and said,"Why are you crying, Maria? |
8299 | Whither are you bound?" |
8299 | Who are you? |
8299 | Who wishes to buy fresh horse- meat?" |
8299 | Who would answer them? |
8299 | Why am I thus insulted and my honor destroyed before my guests?" |
8299 | Why are you here now? |
8299 | Why art thou so unkind to me? |
8299 | Why can you not taste this salt, which is just under the plate? |
8299 | Why did they do that?" |
8299 | Why did you not return sooner from the earth?" |
8299 | Why did you shatter that jar of yours, received from my hands?" |
8299 | Why do n''t you laugh at yourself? |
8299 | Why do n''t you take me with you?" |
8299 | Why do you look so sad? |
8299 | Why do you look so sad?" |
8299 | Will the princess be my wife?" |
8299 | Will you have nothing except a poor worthless fish?" |
8299 | Wo n''t you bring down lightning to slay him?" |
8299 | Would not his head be dangling from the ropes of the scaffold, to be hailed by the multitude as the remains of a blockhead, a dunce, and a fool? |
8299 | Yes, rich; but what are riches if I am going to be wretched? |
8299 | You really do not know, do you? |
8299 | Zelima said to him,"Sir, ca n''t you give us a little something to appease our hunger? |
8299 | ], like the Kâfari[= cafre? |
8299 | answered the carabao angrily,"ca n''t you see that my stomach is almost bursting?" |
8299 | any bull''s milk( to- day?)." |
8299 | are you here again?" |
8299 | asked the hermit,"why didst thou frighten the deer?" |
8299 | exclaimed Clotilde,"what''s the matter with you?" |
8299 | exclaimed Don Pedro,"what happened to you? |
8299 | exclaimed his friend,"where did you get that funny hat?" |
8299 | exclaimed the doctor,"why did you not call me, then? |
8299 | is that so?" |
8299 | said Andres,"what money are you going to count? |
8299 | said Bruja,"and are you just going to Rome now? |
8299 | said Juan,"what are you doing?" |
8299 | said Juan,"what are you doing?" |
8299 | said the Ring- Finger in reply,''I am hungry also; but where shall we get food?'' |
8299 | said the owner of the store,"but where is my payment for the refreshments you have just eaten?" |
8299 | shouted Juan,"what are you doing?" |
8299 | shouted Juan,"what are you doing?" |
8299 | what are you doing there?" |
8299 | what have you come here for? |
8299 | where are you?" |
8299 | where are you?" |
7166 | A sister? |
7166 | About the fever fit of poesy? |
7166 | And Amulya Babu? |
7166 | And his fine? |
7166 | And may we venture to ask, further, what your share of the privation has been? |
7166 | And who may''she''be? |
7166 | And why, pray? 7166 And, brother,"she went on,"did I not warn you, it was not well to keep so much money in your room? |
7166 | Any trace of the dacoits? |
7166 | Are there not more precious things in life? |
7166 | Are these jewels so very precious? 7166 Are they not our kings? |
7166 | Are we to understand, Maharaja,said my visitors,"that the prosperity of the country does not interest you?" |
7166 | Are you come to advise flight? |
7166 | Are you counting your spoils inside? |
7166 | At any rate,interposed Sandip Babu,"why should we not follow suit? |
7166 | Bimala,said I,"why should I seek to keep you fast in this closed cage of mine? |
7166 | Bless my soul, Chota Rani,she exclaimed,"what has come upon you? |
7166 | But are you going out on any particular business? |
7166 | But are you not aware, sir, of what is behind all this? |
7166 | But have you had your dinner yet? |
7166 | But how am Ito get it? |
7166 | But how can that be? 7166 But how can you get through all this alone?" |
7166 | But how does all this apply to our work for the country? |
7166 | But how much? |
7166 | But what if afterwards I am held responsible? |
7166 | But what of Panchu? |
7166 | But why all this excitement? |
7166 | But why, then, did you try to return the money? |
7166 | But, Inspector,I said,"why are you badgering a respectable young gentleman like Amulya Babu?" |
7166 | Can man ever give as woman can? |
7166 | Can one ever finish a subject with words? |
7166 | Can you not get it out of the treasury? |
7166 | Could you not get his boat sunk? |
7166 | Did you not promise me you would have a sleep? |
7166 | Do n''t you know that the dear old man has got a wife and children and that he is..."Where are we to find men who have no wives and children? |
7166 | Do we not see before our very eyes how things, of which we never even dreamt of sowing the seed, are sprouting up on every side? 7166 Do you know, Sister Rani,"said Amulya,"I have had a quarrel with Sandip Babu over that six thousand rupees he took from you? |
7166 | Do you not know that I come to worship? 7166 Do you not see what pleasure it gives him? |
7166 | Do you really suppose I spend sleepless nights for fear of being robbed by you? |
7166 | Do you think I am not going with you? |
7166 | Does it not rather show,interposed a Master of Arts,"that trading in slavery is inherent in man-- a fundamental fact of his nature?" |
7166 | Does she not know that there are losses which no security can make good, either in this world or in the next? |
7166 | For fear of the Mussulmans, or is there any other fear you have to threaten me with? |
7166 | For what fault? |
7166 | Forcibly? |
7166 | Go? 7166 Gone where?" |
7166 | Has not Amulya gone, then? |
7166 | Has not the pressure of society cramped them into pettiness and crookedness? 7166 Have you been there all these days?" |
7166 | Have you brought Kasim here? |
7166 | Have you taken that jewel- box from my trunk? |
7166 | Have you then really no such thing as fear? |
7166 | Have you yet wasted so much as a glance on what was happening to them? 7166 He said he had orders...""Whose orders?" |
7166 | His burnt bale of cloth? |
7166 | How am I to get it? |
7166 | How am I to know? |
7166 | How can the__ zamindar__ realize that if he becomes my tenant? |
7166 | How could you let him go? |
7166 | How is it, sir, you have not yet retired? |
7166 | How will you do it? |
7166 | If I could read the book, why not Bimala too? 7166 Indeed? |
7166 | Is anything wanting, then, in the love we have here at home? |
7166 | Is not his money yours as well? |
7166 | Is not such coercion of the individual will seen in other countries too? |
7166 | Is not the market yours? |
7166 | Is that all? |
7166 | Is the Maharaja a thief, or a robber,the Bara Rani flared up,"that he should be set upon so by the police? |
7166 | Is the thing which happens the only truth? |
7166 | Is there a greater force than greed? 7166 Is there any country, sir,"pursued the history student,"where submission to Government is not due to fear?" |
7166 | Is there any example of this in history? |
7166 | Is there no one else for whom I could be making them? |
7166 | Kasim? 7166 Money? |
7166 | Must it be tomorrow? |
7166 | My wife--Does that amount to an argument, much less the truth? |
7166 | Not had your dinner yet? 7166 Oh dear,"she exclaimed,"has it come to this that you must make cakes for your own birthday?" |
7166 | Oh, our artless little Chota Rani!--straight as a schoolmaster''s rod, eh? 7166 On whom?" |
7166 | Queen,he asked,"can you give me another?" |
7166 | So Amulya and I are separate in your eyes? 7166 So exit Sandip for the second time, I suppose?" |
7166 | So the money is wanted for the use of your patriots? |
7166 | So you think Amulya will not tell me? |
7166 | So you trust Amulya more than you trust me? 7166 So you want to make trouble to prevent trouble?" |
7166 | Tell me truly, Amulya, swear by me, where did you get this money? |
7166 | That may hardly be possible, but why? |
7166 | The Bara Rani? |
7166 | The special- talk business not yet over? |
7166 | To Calcutta? |
7166 | Well, even if the drawback is only on my side, why should n''t you help to remove it? |
7166 | Well, what do you say? |
7166 | What I want to say is this: Why not try to build up something? 7166 What can you do there?" |
7166 | What do I care for my jewels? |
7166 | What do we want with so much, Sandip Babu? |
7166 | What do you mean,I exclaimed,"by being a witness on this or that side? |
7166 | What do you mean? |
7166 | What do you specially like, Amulya? |
7166 | What do you think, doctor? |
7166 | What do you want with it, sister? |
7166 | What do you want with that seat? |
7166 | What does this mean? |
7166 | What happened to the cloth? |
7166 | What harm if you did have a wholesome fear of me? 7166 What harm?" |
7166 | What harm? |
7166 | What has happened to your key? |
7166 | What has your book to do with__ Swadeshi__? |
7166 | What if they get in there? 7166 What is all this for?" |
7166 | What is fifty thousand? |
7166 | What is it then that you do want? |
7166 | What is it you wanted to tell me, Sandip Babu? |
7166 | What is that? |
7166 | What is the matter? |
7166 | What is the matter? |
7166 | What is the use of being angry with me? |
7166 | What is the use of so much? |
7166 | What is there so entertaining about it? |
7166 | What is this about both of you going off to Calcutta tomorrow? 7166 What is this matter,"I asked,"you are wanting to tell me about?" |
7166 | What is to be done? |
7166 | What mad idea is this of yours? |
7166 | What made you do all this, Amulya? |
7166 | What makes you realize that all of a sudden? |
7166 | What makes you suppose that artists need no teachers? |
7166 | What of that? 7166 What other truths can there be?" |
7166 | What terrible thing have you done, Amulya? |
7166 | What''s the news, Jata? |
7166 | What, then, is your plan? |
7166 | What, then, would be the right thing to do? |
7166 | Whatever are you doing, brother dear? |
7166 | Whatever shall we do? |
7166 | When do you want it then? |
7166 | Where from? |
7166 | Where have you kept it, then? |
7166 | Where is the money to come from? |
7166 | Where is the noose with which you can catch me? |
7166 | Where on earth do you see all that? |
7166 | Where was it found? |
7166 | Where was the time for him to marry again? |
7166 | Where, then, is this wonderful soul? |
7166 | Whither away, Chota Rani? |
7166 | Who am I, that I should dare do such a thing? 7166 Who denies it?" |
7166 | Who did you say had sent for me? |
7166 | Who else was there? |
7166 | Who gave you the order? |
7166 | Who is it, then? |
7166 | Who is there? |
7166 | Who wants fruit? |
7166 | Why allow such trifles to upset you? |
7166 | Why be so clumsy as to leave any loophole for responsibility? 7166 Why burn them?" |
7166 | Why did you not send me word when Brother Nikhil came in? |
7166 | Why has your Thako been calling poor Khema names? |
7166 | Why is it possible,I asked,"to use the Mussulmans thus, as tools against us? |
7166 | Why need you hear it? 7166 Why not say plainly that you will not risk your money?" |
7166 | Why not take it out and send it to the treasury while you have it in mind? |
7166 | Why not? |
7166 | Why should they loot our house? |
7166 | Why, Sister Rani? |
7166 | Why, did you want him for anything? |
7166 | Why, then, are you troubling to destroy the illusion? |
7166 | Why, what harm can come to you? |
7166 | Why, what is the matter? |
7166 | Will you not tell him not to go? |
7166 | Will you then be the only one, Maharaja, to put obstacles in the way of what the country would achieve? |
7166 | Wo n''t you bear witness to the burning of this man''s cloth? |
7166 | Would you thwart me in my resolve? |
7166 | You here? |
7166 | You think you will gain the mastery over me? |
7166 | You want to know, do you? |
7166 | You want to teach me a lesson by trusting me? 7166 You, Amulya?" |
7166 | Your jewel- box? |
7166 | A matinà © e, eh?" |
7166 | A sorry exchange, I suppose you would call it?" |
7166 | After a long pause she said:"But how am Ito get his money?" |
7166 | After that? |
7166 | All of a sudden Sandip Babu turned to me with the question:"What do__ you__ say to this?" |
7166 | Am I a drifting log to be caught up at any and every obstacle? |
7166 | Am I a man, that you should hoodwink me?" |
7166 | Am I made of words? |
7166 | Am I merely a book with a covering of flesh and blood? |
7166 | Am I taking them? |
7166 | Amulya turned to go, but before he was out of sight I called him back and asked:"Have you a mother, Amulya?" |
7166 | And Bee? |
7166 | And Bimala? |
7166 | And I, a woman-- of his mother''s sex-- how could I hand him poison, just because he asked for it? |
7166 | And how can I have the power to refuse to take the money? |
7166 | And then also, what is this getting? |
7166 | And then? |
7166 | And what of the day when we should have to come back here? |
7166 | Another day my master came to me and said:"Why do n''t you two go up to Darjeeling for a change? |
7166 | Anyhow, why trouble to blush for me, since I am shameless?" |
7166 | Anyway, why lose time in trying your magic weapons?" |
7166 | Are men like women? |
7166 | Are you not mine?" |
7166 | As I was coming away, he exclaimed:"May I trouble you for a trifle?" |
7166 | As for Khema, where are the hussy''s manners to go and disturb you when you are engaged? |
7166 | As my husband entered the room, Sandip exclaimed:"I say, Nikhil, do n''t you keep Browning among your books here? |
7166 | As we entered the room Sandip asked:"What was that box Amulya carried away?" |
7166 | Ashamed? |
7166 | At first I felt scruples; for is it not the habit of man''s mind to be in purposeless conflict with itself? |
7166 | Bee frowned a little as she murmured:"What makes you wish that?" |
7166 | Bee was silent for a while and then gravely said:"Is it not a part of human nature to try and rise superior to itself?" |
7166 | Bimala was still flushed, her eyes clouded, her accents thick, as she replied:"You poor? |
7166 | Bimala''s Story XIV Who could have thought that so much would happen in this one life? |
7166 | But after this how was Ito go on living all by myself? |
7166 | But can even Nature''s nursing heal the open wound, into which our accumulated differences have broken out? |
7166 | But can freedom-- empty freedom-- be given and taken so easily as all that? |
7166 | But can one carry on a quarrel with a storm? |
7166 | But do you not see one thing: how these political bags of theirs are bursting with lies and treacheries, breaking their backs under their weight?" |
7166 | But for what? |
7166 | But he cried,''What infatuation is this of yours? |
7166 | But how am Ito bear this terrible mercy of my God? |
7166 | But how can I offer those which have been stolen away from me?" |
7166 | But how can you elude my watchfulness? |
7166 | But how on earth am I to mention money after the high flight we have just taken? |
7166 | But how to get that fifty thousand rupees out of the clutches of those iron bars? |
7166 | But is strength mere display of muscularity? |
7166 | But suppose they do not?" |
7166 | But tell us, pray, finally, are you determined not to oust foreign articles from your market?" |
7166 | But theft is never worship-- how then can I offer this gold? |
7166 | But then what is this force? |
7166 | But there was none to gainsay her-- for was not this the custom of the house? |
7166 | But was he not wounded?" |
7166 | But was not also this very thing I had done a robbing of the whole world-- not only of money, but of trust, of righteousness? |
7166 | But what has since been its actual story? |
7166 | But what is the use of it all? |
7166 | But what was it that happened? |
7166 | But where am I, and what am I about, letting day after day of golden opportunity slip by? |
7166 | But where was the unity in this heap of barren ashes? |
7166 | But where were cheap Indian woollens to be had? |
7166 | But why all these arguments? |
7166 | But why are we arguing about these things? |
7166 | But why be frightened even of that? |
7166 | But why did not my husband compel me to go with him to Calcutta? |
7166 | But why return? |
7166 | But why should he have left the rest of the money lying about?" |
7166 | But why should the Inspector alone be regaled with cakes? |
7166 | But why this bonfire business?" |
7166 | But, I ask you, where do you find this''answering''in history?" |
7166 | By what power? |
7166 | Ca n''t you humour them? |
7166 | Ca n''t you recognize that there is such a thing as feeling?" |
7166 | Can I ever forget it? |
7166 | Can I not be born over again? |
7166 | Can force prevail against Truth? |
7166 | Can it be that all this multitude is quieted with only a lie? |
7166 | Can not you get over the barrier of her name after such a long acquaintance? |
7166 | Can not you realize that she loves you?" |
7166 | Can one imprison a whole personality within that name? |
7166 | Can there be any real happiness for a woman in merely feeling that she has power over a man? |
7166 | Can you not do it, dear?" |
7166 | Could I have given her too rude a shock, leaving her assailed with doubts and wanting to learn her lesson afresh from the schoolmaster? |
7166 | Could I not be allowed to suffer alone without inviting all this multitude to share my punishment? |
7166 | Could I not go back to the beginning? |
7166 | Could it be that his outstretched hands had really been directed towards my feet? |
7166 | Could it be that my husband had missed the key of the safe, and the Bara Rani had assembled all the servants to help him to hunt for it? |
7166 | Could they have been discussing my deed in their meeting place? |
7166 | Did I not learn that from Sandip himself, and was I not able in the light of this knowledge to despise all else in my world? |
7166 | Did he wish to make up now for neglecting me so long? |
7166 | Do I not know how well he loves me? |
7166 | Do I not know that thus you can not but pine and droop?" |
7166 | Do I not see that none shall stand in the way of your desires? |
7166 | Do I really desire emancipation? |
7166 | Do they want to tell me now that all this was false? |
7166 | Do you get them up by heart, beforehand?" |
7166 | Do you know that the boy is the shadow of my shadow, the echo of my echo-- that he is nothing if I am not at his side?" |
7166 | Do you know that your weakness is weakening your neighbouring__ zamindars__ also?" |
7166 | Do you know, sister, he has not spent a pice out of those sovereigns he took from you? |
7166 | Do you know, we always insist on Sandip Babu travelling First Class? |
7166 | Do you mean you are never coming back home?" |
7166 | Do you not know that in the immense cauldrons, where vast political developments are simmering, untruths are the main ingredients?" |
7166 | Do you not think so?" |
7166 | Do you remember old Dakshina? |
7166 | Do you remember that contest of ours over the translation of those lines from Browning? |
7166 | Do you remember this comb? |
7166 | Do you say I shall be uttering lies? |
7166 | Do you take me for one of your retinue?" |
7166 | Does anybody know anybody else in this world?" |
7166 | Each has been suited to his taste, so why complain? |
7166 | Five thousand is it? |
7166 | For you see, do you not, that I can not stand by and see his motherless little ones sent out into the streets?'' |
7166 | For, who is the bridegroom? |
7166 | From Sandip''s dry throat there came a muffled cry:"Whither would you flee, Queen?" |
7166 | God can create new things, but has even He the power to create afresh that which has been destroyed? |
7166 | Had I called him? |
7166 | Had I ever wanted this-- had I ever been waiting or hoping for any such thing? |
7166 | Had I not risen, all in one moment, from my nothingness to a height above everything? |
7166 | Had I then misunderstood him? |
7166 | Had any vestige of a veil of decency been left for me? |
7166 | Had he then come like a streak of light from the setting sun, only to be gone for ever? |
7166 | Had not so tremendous a man as Sandip fallen helplessly at my feet, like a wave of the mighty sea breaking on the shore? |
7166 | Had the Creator created me afresh, I wondered? |
7166 | Have I not often twitted Nikhil that they who walk in the paths of restraint have never known what sacrifice is? |
7166 | Have I not seen how my presence pours fresh life into him time after time? |
7166 | Have I not told you that, in you, I visualize the__ Shakti__ of our country? |
7166 | Have you also a book?" |
7166 | Have you been getting enough sleep?" |
7166 | Have you not heard of the Pachur case?" |
7166 | Have you not read history? |
7166 | Have you sent off that money you gave me to the Calcutta bank?" |
7166 | He feels the danger threatening his home, and yet why does he not turn me out? |
7166 | His eldest boy and girl nestled up to him, crying:"Where have you been all this time, father?" |
7166 | How can I tell how much he has deprived me of? |
7166 | How could I fail to see the hand of Providence in this? |
7166 | How could she again admit defeat? |
7166 | How could we help thinking that it was all supernatural? |
7166 | How dare they be so insolent? |
7166 | How else could she be happy? |
7166 | How little can you deprive me of, my love, after all? |
7166 | How long should they keep you cool with the wet towel of moral precepts?" |
7166 | How many years, how many ages, aeons, must pass before I can find my way back to that day of nine years ago? |
7166 | How much money?" |
7166 | How on earth did I manage to let my good fortune escape me, and spoil my life so? |
7166 | How then could I burst on him with this stupendous news? |
7166 | How then did you bring yourself to offer them to the Goddess? |
7166 | How was he to be saved? |
7166 | However did he manage to get through his meal so soon?" |
7166 | However, I must shut my eyes to that for the present, for is he not shouting__ Bande Mataram__ as lustily as I am? |
7166 | I am doomed to death myself, must I desecrate my country with my impious touch? |
7166 | I asked them:"Who is there among you that can cut off a leg of that goat, alive, with this knife, and bring it to me?" |
7166 | I could not keep from joining in:"You think this excitement is only a fire of drunkenness, but does not drunkenness, up to a point, give strength?" |
7166 | I felt somewhat foolish as I asked him:"And where have you been all this while, sir?" |
7166 | I must confess there was something in me which... what shall I say? |
7166 | I must not allow the pressure of too much greed to flatten out the reed, for then, as I fear, music will give place to the questions"Why?" |
7166 | I say, Robber Queen,"she called out to me,"are you taking stock of your loot?" |
7166 | I should not try to fetter my life''s companion with my ideas, but play the joyous pipes of my love and say:"Do you love me? |
7166 | I strained his feet to my bosom-- oh, why could not their impress remain there for ever? |
7166 | I threw myself down and sobbed:"What is the end of all this, what is the end?" |
7166 | I took up the spirit of his remark as I dropped my voice to reply:"Why even then should we not meet?" |
7166 | I was silent for a while and then asked again:"Could he not possibly stay a day longer?" |
7166 | I went up to him and placing my hand on his head asked him:"What is your trouble, Amulya?" |
7166 | I would get angry and say:"If you feel generous, make gifts by all means, but why allow yourself to be robbed?" |
7166 | If Bimal should say she is not mine, what care I where my Society wife may be? |
7166 | If I pity her and save her from her sorrows, what then was the purpose of my being born a man? |
7166 | If she says:"No, I am myself"--am I to reply:"How can that be? |
7166 | If the Dark which sounded the flute should lead to destruction, why trouble about the hereafter? |
7166 | If they go to law, we must retaliate by burning down their granaries!--What startles you, Amulya? |
7166 | If we must lose our all, let us lose it: what is it worth after all? |
7166 | If we took them as true, even for a moment, where would be our appetite, our sleep? |
7166 | If, like a toy paper- boat, she be swept along into the muddy waters of the gutter-- would I not also...? |
7166 | In the midst of the immense, age- long concourse of humanity, what is Bimal to you? |
7166 | In the springtime of your kingdom, my Queen, My meeting with you had its own songs, But has not also my leave- taking any gift to offer you? |
7166 | Is friendship by itself a crime? |
7166 | Is it not because we have fashioned them into such with our own intolerance? |
7166 | Is it quite settled about your going tomorrow?" |
7166 | Is it right that ours should be the only market in all Bengal which allows foreign goods?" |
7166 | Is it the fate of the estate that is worrying you? |
7166 | Is it then your command that this money be replaced?" |
7166 | Is not all that each one has yours? |
7166 | Is not that best, Queen?" |
7166 | Is the heart''s worship to be shut out like a stray cur?" |
7166 | Is this power of yours to be kept veiled in a zenana? |
7166 | It is like setting a fish free in the sky-- for how can I move or live outside the atmosphere of loving care which has always sustained me? |
7166 | It is not too late? |
7166 | It was Buddha who conquered the world, not Alexander-- this is untrue when stated in dry prose-- oh when shall we be able to sing it? |
7166 | It was one of the__ Swadeshi__ combs you brought for me...""But what is all this for, Sister Rani? |
7166 | Jealous of whom, pray?" |
7166 | Must strength have no scruples in treading the weak underfoot? |
7166 | Must this continue to the end of my days? |
7166 | My master came to me that day and said:"Is it necessary to detain Sandip here any longer?" |
7166 | My portrait now reposes next to Nikhil''s, for are not the two of us old friends? |
7166 | Now it looks as if it were time for him to quit... O you little demon, do your glances never fall, by chance, on his agonized face?" |
7166 | Now that I know it concerns only me, what after all can be its value? |
7166 | O God, why need my expiation have such pomp and circumstance? |
7166 | Of what value are that orchid and that niche in my bedroom? |
7166 | Oh why has God made man such a mixed creature? |
7166 | Oh, why am I not dead? |
7166 | Oh, why does this outer world insult the heart so? |
7166 | On what perilous adventure had I sent this only son of his mother? |
7166 | Once she comes panting to say:"Oh, brother, have you heard? |
7166 | One day, he happened to awake, and smiled as he asked me:"What is that, Bimala? |
7166 | Only five thousand rupees? |
7166 | Or would he simply take me to be an ordinary, domestic woman? |
7166 | Panchu was not excessively pleased-- was there then no such thing as charity on earth? |
7166 | Sandip again affected surprise as he said:"Must there always be some matter? |
7166 | Sandip''s Story IV When I read these pages of the story of my life I seriously question myself: Is this Sandip? |
7166 | Shall I ever recover, as from a delirium, and forget it all; or am I to be dragged to depths from which there can be no escape in this life? |
7166 | Shall I tell the whole truth? |
7166 | She sat by my bed after I was stretched on it, and smiled at Bimal as she said:"Give me one of your pans, Chotie darling-- what? |
7166 | She would scold me, saying:"Why are you all plaguing him so? |
7166 | Should I then get back my seat at the head? |
7166 | So then these jewels are mine?" |
7166 | Supposing I buy it up and then keep him on as my tenant?" |
7166 | Tell me what about yourself?" |
7166 | That was only natural, for had I not stepped into my good fortune by a mere chance, and without deserving it? |
7166 | The Bara Rani came and asked me:"What is the meaning, brother, of all these books being packed up and sent off in box- loads?" |
7166 | The method? |
7166 | The money has been held up because the country wants it-- who could have the power to take it away from her to the bank? |
7166 | The morning light, like the love of the blue sky, is lavished upon the earth... Why can not I sing? |
7166 | Then as I looked about me, where was it-- the tree of plenty? |
7166 | Then whom shall I blame? |
7166 | There is at present no room in her mind for the question"why?" |
7166 | There must be great excitement in the Police Office-- whose are the jewels?--where did he get them? |
7166 | They were sarcastic:"Why, Maharaja, will the loss be too much for you?" |
7166 | This morning I am...""Waiting for Amulya?" |
7166 | To whom could he be going to return that money? |
7166 | To whom was I to explain that the Rani herself had been weaving all this network of trouble, and had got caught in it, too? |
7166 | Truth? |
7166 | Under what bush? |
7166 | Was I making any difference between yours and mine? |
7166 | Was I not awaiting my fate? |
7166 | Was I not removed from the plane in which right and wrong, and the feelings of others, have to be considered? |
7166 | Was I the god of her worship that I should have any qualms? |
7166 | Was it because of the husband''s pride of possession over his wife? |
7166 | Was it only to show his supernatural sleight of hand? |
7166 | Was not I good for something more than only five thousand rupees? |
7166 | Was not this our House, which she had kept under her sheltering care through all her trials and troubles? |
7166 | Was the credit due to me that my husband did not touch liquor, nor squander his manhood in the markets of woman''s flesh? |
7166 | Was this, then, my truer self? |
7166 | Were not men naturally inclined to plunge downwards? |
7166 | What about the gang of armed men?..." |
7166 | What about the urgent immediate? |
7166 | What am I to them but a meadow flower in the path of a torrent in flood? |
7166 | What are my caskets full of jewellery for? |
7166 | What can they do to you?" |
7166 | What charm did I know to soothe the wild and wandering mind of men? |
7166 | What could have possessed me, I angrily wondered, to appear before him in such an absurd way? |
7166 | What do I care what people may think of me? |
7166 | What does it matter? |
7166 | What else had she with which to express her loving worship? |
7166 | What favour could she be wanting to beg, seated like this at my door? |
7166 | What good will this extinction of me be to Sandip? |
7166 | What harm if I confess that I have something lacking in me? |
7166 | What has been my sin that I should be scourged so, bound hand and foot?" |
7166 | What has happened? |
7166 | What have I to do with the mirror, or even the image? |
7166 | What if I am unworthy? |
7166 | What if business is a bit neglected? |
7166 | What if he was fearless? |
7166 | What if the wound does eventually heal?--can the devastation it has wrought ever be made good? |
7166 | What if your money is lost, does not that hurt me? |
7166 | What if, on pulling out the inside drawer, I should find the rolls of gold there, just as before? |
7166 | What incense of worship, what music of passion, what flowers of my spring and of my autumn, have I not offered up at its shrine? |
7166 | What is a wife? |
7166 | What is it? |
7166 | What is that answer to be? |
7166 | What is the use of straining to keep up my pride? |
7166 | What is there left of you that I do not know to the very bottom? |
7166 | What must the messenger have thought? |
7166 | What need had Ito volunteer an explanation? |
7166 | What other province of India has succeeded in giving such wonderful visual expression to the ideal of its quest? |
7166 | What pleasure can that be to me?" |
7166 | What power have they to belittle me, to put me to shame? |
7166 | What responsibility have they of their own?" |
7166 | What rigour of penance is there which can serve to bring me once more, as a bride adorned for her husband, to my place upon that same bridal seat? |
7166 | What should I do in the dust of Calcutta, away from it? |
7166 | What stood in the way? |
7166 | What was the use of arguing? |
7166 | What was this? |
7166 | What was to be done next? |
7166 | What will you do with him now? |
7166 | What__ are__ you doing?" |
7166 | Whatever did you spend all that money on?" |
7166 | When I came out my sister- in- law railed at me:"How many times are you going to dress today?" |
7166 | When do we start?" |
7166 | When she saw me passing in the distance she cried:"Have you heard the news, Chota Rani?" |
7166 | When was the ceremony to be held and where? |
7166 | When will come the time, I wondered, for the purification of the Brahmins themselves who can accept such offerings? |
7166 | When will you be going there?" |
7166 | Whence came foaming into me this surging flood of glory? |
7166 | Where is its solidity? |
7166 | Where was that former self of mine? |
7166 | Where was the place? |
7166 | Where will it all end, I asked myself? |
7166 | Where?" |
7166 | Who am I, what am I, in its presence? |
7166 | Who can hide your fire under your home- roof? |
7166 | Who could bear my company day and night without a break? |
7166 | Who could have believed that they would attack our treasury, either?" |
7166 | Who could it be? |
7166 | Who else could have come into this room? |
7166 | Who is there that can stay your progress? |
7166 | Who says that the gods do not show themselves to mortal men? |
7166 | Who says"Truth shall Triumph"? |
7166 | Who was I to stop her? |
7166 | Who will eat them? |
7166 | Who? |
7166 | Whose is the money? |
7166 | Why am I allowing my life to become entangled with Bimala''s? |
7166 | Why are they all so angry with you? |
7166 | Why can not the stricken one be kept far away from the rest of the world? |
7166 | Why did I fail to think of this? |
7166 | Why do not men change wholly when they change? |
7166 | Why does not my voice find a word, some audible cry, which would be like a sacred spell to my country for its fire initiation? |
7166 | Why have you been packing up all these things?" |
7166 | Why need I bother about their plight? |
7166 | Why not stand out aloof in the highway of the universe, and feel yourself to be part of the all? |
7166 | Why put everybody out?" |
7166 | Why should not its glory flash from my forehead with visible brilliance? |
7166 | Why should there be only one? |
7166 | Why should they put up with such tyranny, and why should we let them?" |
7166 | Why should we suppose that they will do so just because we have become frantic?" |
7166 | Why this sudden reverence?" |
7166 | Why"muddy"? |
7166 | Why, then, trouble to preach patriotism?" |
7166 | Why? |
7166 | Why? |
7166 | Why?" |
7166 | Why?" |
7166 | Will all the wounds of my home life then be still as fresh as ever? |
7166 | Will you give him the coup de grâce, or keep him in your cage? |
7166 | Will you not bear witness to the truth?" |
7166 | Will you not take a seat?" |
7166 | With this he looked up at Bimala and asked:"Do you not think so too?" |
7166 | With which he... but why, oh why, do I go back to all that? |
7166 | Would I not rather lay down my life to help it?" |
7166 | Would Sandip Babu find the__ Shakti__ of the Motherland manifest in me? |
7166 | Would my shoulders, I wondered, be broad enough to stand its shock, or would it not leave me overthrown, with my face in the dust? |
7166 | Would not a curse come upon me if I deserted it and went off to town? |
7166 | Would you now take it back?" |
7166 | Wounds must be bandaged-- can we not bandage our wound with our love, so that the day may come when its scar will no longer be visible? |
7166 | XIII What is this? |
7166 | XVI"The money, Queen?" |
7166 | You are burning in every vein with life- fire-- do I not know it? |
7166 | You are rich; why not buy it up and burn it?" |
7166 | You do n''t? |
7166 | You have three shelves in your sitting- room full of..."Sandip Babu broke in:"Do you know what they are? |
7166 | You want it tomorrow? |
7166 | Your wife? |
7166 | [ 25]"Well, Junior Rani, are you turned into a wooden doll? |
7166 | [ 30] Could this be my Bimal of old, my proud, sensitive Bimal? |
7166 | [ 6] One day I said to him:"What do I want with the outside world?" |
7166 | __"Whatever do you mean, Amulya?" |
7166 | had I not said"Why not?" |
7166 | into what fresh entanglement was the poor boy rushing? |
7166 | student smiled a crooked smile, as he asked:"May we enquire what you are actually doing to help?" |
7166 | to Sandip just in the same way? |
44302 | Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering? |
44302 | Better beware,it says.... And I can strike, too[_ He raps the top of a table with one of his crutches_] Do you hear? |
44302 | Doth God pervert judgment, or doth the Almighty pervert justice? |
44302 | Hush- a- bye, baby,I suppose you mean?... |
44302 | Then said they unto him: What shall we do unto thee, that the sea may be calm unto us? |
44302 | What roars more loudly than a crane? 44302 --Is it settled? 44302 A debt like that can not be paid in money, and still less in treaties.--Why do you want any treaties? 44302 A man from Småland who is full of sensible ideas.--Do you still need to have your forehead bandaged? 44302 About Shechem, you mean? 44302 After St. Nicolaus, who comes with rods for children on the sixth of December? 44302 Against Kersti Margaret Hansdaughter!--What is the charge? 44302 Against whom? 44302 Am I not? 44302 Am I to bow down to a vagabond? 44302 And I shall leave it alone now.--Do you know Prince Eric, Agda? 44302 And Johan? 44302 And Jorghen comes next, I suppose? 44302 And Prince Eric belongs to the Reformed Church, you say? 44302 And as my dreams took on flesh and blood, so to speak, my old suspicions turned into certainty, and now I really believe that he is alive? 44302 And at home? 44302 And besides, what does it matter? 44302 And besides-- what is good? 44302 And do you know what she was? 44302 And furthermore? 44302 And he wo n''t come back, you think? 44302 And how about the Dalecarlians? 44302 And how about the articles of confession? 44302 And inside the cradle? 44302 And is not my suffering caused by seeing other people behave abnormally or-- pathologically? 44302 And it was not worth having? 44302 And not in a pleasant way, I suppose? 44302 And now you wish to go to Wittenberg to learn the true faith from Doctor Martin Luther? 44302 And now you''ll leave me, of course? 44302 And now your fears are gone? 44302 And she cut the wedding poles, too, and spread the spruce? 44302 And that is what you are waiting for? 44302 And the church silver? 44302 And the costliest.... Is life really worth so much trouble? 44302 And the crown? 44302 And the lake? 44302 And the sun never gets here? 44302 And they are still fighting? 44302 And what are we to wait for? 44302 And what are you to say, if the King asks you why? 44302 And what are you? 44302 And what do you ask of me now? 44302 And what do you mean to do with your future? 44302 And what do you want her to do? 44302 And what do you want? 44302 And what does he wish to do in this house here? 44302 And what have_ you_ forgotten? 44302 And what is he doing with the tithes of the poor? 44302 And who has done this to me? 44302 And who is the dark lady talking to the janitress? 44302 And who was subsequently tried for high treason on suspicion of having known about a plot against the King''s life? 44302 And why are you so disturbed by those stories? 44302 And why did you run away from the wedding? 44302 And why do you look at me like a stranger? 44302 And why? 44302 And will you please ask Reginald to come here now? 44302 And you are not ashamed of saying so to his own wife? 44302 And you do n''t despise me? 44302 And you do n''t hate her? 44302 And you think it necessary to return that advice to me now? 44302 And your evidence? 44302 And?... 44302 Anything else? 44302 Anything else? 44302 Anything else? 44302 Anything more? 44302 Are all the rest of them as drunk as you are? 44302 Are the priests bad, or is the pure word of God not preached here? 44302 Are the rapids far from here? 44302 Are the soldiers asleep? 44302 Are those words plain enough? 44302 Are we not going to part as friends-- we who have had so many pleasant days together during the gloomy winter and the slow spring? 44302 Are we regarded as prisoners, then? 44302 Are we that far already? 44302 Are you a Calvinist? 44302 Are you a medical student? 44302 Are you a sportsman? 44302 Are you afraid of death, Prince? 44302 Are you alone? 44302 Are you busy? 44302 Are you certain that he is going to Wittenberg to study? 44302 Are you coming with me to the mass in the chapel, Johan? 44302 Are you crying? 44302 Are you dreaming again, you dreamer? 44302 Are you fond of children, Kersti? 44302 Are you glad, Kersti? 44302 Are you going away? 44302 Are you good at mathematics? 44302 Are you mocking me? 44302 Are you my friend? 44302 Are you not a Lutheran? 44302 Are you not afraid of them? 44302 Are you not almost done? 44302 Are you not ashamed of yourself? 44302 Are you on their side? 44302 Are you pledged? 44302 Are you quite sure that the King will visit you, Mons Nilsson? 44302 Are you really such a beast? 44302 Are you sick? 44302 Are you still afraid of me? 44302 Are you sure that you are writing? 44302 Are you talking of Agda? 44302 Are you telling my fortune, you witch? 44302 Are you there, Jacob? 44302 Are you there, Jacob? 44302 Are you there, Jacob? 44302 Are you trustworthy? 44302 Are you waiting for Communion? 44302 As a keepsake only, or as a plight of his troth? 44302 As it is, I can not climb stairways or ring door- bells, and for that reason I ask you: will you help me a little? 44302 As near as that?--And what errand is supposed to bring him here? 44302 As to stripping you naked-- do you know who you are in reality? 44302 Ask one another''s state of health, which we know just as well? 44302 At night I see him in my dreams together with that other woman.... Have you ever known torments like that, Mr. Brunner? 44302 Because this is a place for trading, you mean-- as if the parties to such a transaction were degraded by it? 44302 Believe, you say? 44302 Brita with the evil eye? 44302 But I have no right to forgive so quickly.--You came here to accuse your father? 44302 But are you so sure that he likes you? 44302 But are you sure, dear, that what we mean to do is not sinful? 44302 But do it like a servant of the Lord, and not like a conceited schoolmaster.... Have I gone too far? 44302 But do you know what is the most tragical feature of my ridiculousness? 44302 But how is this going to end, Kersti? 44302 But if he acts badly, why should n''t I say so? 44302 But if he were taken sick while with her? 44302 But suppose you ca n''t? 44302 But then, I made it myself.--Well, Agda, or Magda, or what it is, where''s your pawnbroker to- day? 44302 But we can sweep, ca n''t we? 44302 But when_ is_ it? 44302 But where am I? 44302 But where? 44302 But who was the dead man? 44302 But why do you continue to associate? 44302 But will you please tell me why you hate me? 44302 But you are wealthy, and you have two servants? 44302 But you remember Master John.... John, the old friend of my youth, who assisted me in that first bout with Christian? 44302 But, Jacob, what do you want here? 44302 Ca n''t I bid him good night? 44302 Ca n''t I help you with something, Mr. Axel? 44302 Ca n''t we talk of something else? 44302 Ca n''t you blind it? 44302 Ca n''t you hear their heavy tread on the planking of the bridge? 44302 Ca n''t you look people in the face? 44302 Ca n''t you talk plainly? 44302 Ca n''t you tell? 44302 Can I be of any help? 44302 Can I have it, if it should come off? 44302 Can I have the cup? 44302 Can I trust him? 44302 Can Reginald come in and say good- bye? 44302 Can he be made useful? 44302 Can it not be prevented? 44302 Can that be Herman Israel who is sitting there? 44302 Can that be the Mummy? 44302 Can you explain why you care to be the wife of a ridiculous man? 44302 Can you hear it? 44302 Can you hear the rapids? 44302 Can you match us with eight pairs? 44302 Can you meet what is hopeless with anything but despair? 44302 Can you see anything beautiful about her? 44302 Can you see now that good exists? 44302 Can you tell me what has come over Eric these last days? 44302 Can you tell what made our families hate each other so fiercely? 44302 Can your Highness solve it? 44302 Commanded? 44302 Could it be the bear? 44302 Crime and guilt and secrets bind us together, do n''t you know? 44302 Dacke?--Dacke?--It sounds like the cawing of a jackdaw.--Who is he? 44302 Dare you sting, you gnat? 44302 Dead? 44302 Did I scare you? 44302 Did he come? 44302 Did n''t you hear, either? 44302 Did n''t you notice her voice? 44302 Did n''t you see the Milkmaid to whom I was talking? 44302 Did n''t you see? 44302 Did n''t you see? 44302 Did she? 44302 Did we know at all what we were doing at that time? 44302 Did you ever see such a lot of ants, Kersti? 44302 Did you hear the hunt, Mats? 44302 Did you hear what he answered? 44302 Did you know me before? 44302 Did you notice how I trapped them? 44302 Did you put it there? 44302 Did you really? 44302 Did you see that they had something to eat and drink? 44302 Did you see the Young Lady drop her bracelet out of the window? 44302 Did you see? 44302 Did you sleep well? 44302 Did your father tell you that? 44302 Do I disturb you? 44302 Do I smell of liquor? 44302 Do n''t you believe in them? 44302 Do n''t you feel at home here? 44302 Do n''t you get enough to eat? 44302 Do n''t you know that Queen Philippa was a daughter of King Henry IV? 44302 Do n''t you know that belief comes as a grace of God? 44302 Do n''t you know that the midwife can baptise in case of need? 44302 Do n''t you know that we may have to flee this very day, if the news should prove as bad as yesterday? 44302 Do n''t you know that? 44302 Do n''t you know the Mewler? 44302 Do n''t you know the hornet that buzzes before it stings? 44302 Do n''t you know? 44302 Do n''t_ you_ see?... 44302 Do they ever buy any flowers there? 44302 Do they mean to give me a crown of birch, like the one I gave to Peder the Chancellor and Master Knut? 44302 Do you bear in mind that you are to be king some time? 44302 Do you believe in love? 44302 Do you care for frankness? 44302 Do you dare to lay hands on the Heir Apparent? 44302 Do you dare to takes sides against me, you rascal? 44302 Do you hate him? 44302 Do you hear the cry of the blackcock? 44302 Do you hear the even- song bell? 44302 Do you hear the ice tuning up? 44302 Do you hear? 44302 Do you imagine that I think children are born through the ear? 44302 Do you know Agda the Chaste, who has told us that she would sell her favours, but never give them away? 44302 Do you know Agda? 44302 Do you know John Andersson? 44302 Do you know Karin, the flower girl? 44302 Do you know him? 44302 Do you know him? 44302 Do you know how a woman''s love is to be won? 44302 Do you know how many times I have been in love? 44302 Do you know how to do it? 44302 Do you know that I lost my doll-- the one you gave me?... 44302 Do you know that he has crossed the Kolmord Forests and stands with one foot in West Gothia and the other in East Gothia?--Who is back of him? 44302 Do you know that it was your father who brought my mother to him from Lauenburg? 44302 Do you know that the Queen''s mother-- that is, I-- has been insulted by the mob? 44302 Do you know that those Hanseatic people are in the habit of butchering little boys and selling them to the Turk? 44302 Do you know that? 44302 Do you know that? 44302 Do you know the legend of that flower? 44302 Do you know the people who live here? 44302 Do you know this man, Bengtsson? 44302 Do you know what I am thinking of you now? 44302 Do you know what can be done by the King, and by no other authority? 44302 Do you know what she was? 44302 Do you know what they are talking of? 44302 Do you know what you are doing? 44302 Do you know where the Principal is? 44302 Do you know who I am-- that I am a free miner and a friend of the King? 44302 Do you know who will be here? 44302 Do you know with whom you are talking? 44302 Do you know young Jacob, the son of Herman Israel? 44302 Do you mean the road of the fish in the water? 44302 Do you mean to order my household? 44302 Do you mean to prove false? 44302 Do you object? 44302 Do you realise now that I have a right to be angry with your needless and unsolicited questions? 44302 Do you really believe in God? 44302 Do you really think so, Herman? 44302 Do you remember last summer, when there was not a soul on that island but we two? 44302 Do you see my cosset cow Over there at your place? |
44302 | Do you see my smoke going northward? |
44302 | Do you see? |
44302 | Do you see? |
44302 | Do you side with the children against their parents? |
44302 | Do you speculate in houses? |
44302 | Do you still remember it? |
44302 | Do you think I am doing anything wrong? |
44302 | Do you think I can get out of this? |
44302 | Do you think I have such ugly arms? |
44302 | Do you think I wear the bandage as an ornament, or as a souvenir of the city mob? |
44302 | Do you think a woman could possibly-- hm!--love me? |
44302 | Do you think he will be welcome then? |
44302 | Do you think he would tear my pet cow? |
44302 | Do you think me so vile? |
44302 | Do you think one''s destiny is predetermined? |
44302 | Do you think so? |
44302 | Do you think that deed was displeasing to the Lord? |
44302 | Do you think there is any cause for fear? |
44302 | Do you think they''ll eat me? |
44302 | Do you think we are happier now? |
44302 | Do you think you could sleep nights-- having shown that kind of-- sternness? |
44302 | Do you understand? |
44302 | Do you want me to sell my soul? |
44302 | Do you want to play games? |
44302 | Do you wish to look on? |
44302 | Does he speak Swedish? |
44302 | Does it lead to court or church? |
44302 | Does it mean thaw? |
44302 | Does it scare you to find life so serious, dear? |
44302 | Does the fair maiden care to see the midwife now? |
44302 | Eng- el- brecht? |
44302 | Exactly, and about Dinah, for whom his heart was longing.... Do you know who Dinah was? |
44302 | Far in the forest!--What''s that in your hair? |
44302 | Far? |
44302 | Fareth he well, Fareth he well Far in the forest?" |
44302 | For how long? |
44302 | For the measurement of my thorny path, you mean? |
44302 | Give me your hand You wo n''t? |
44302 | Good God, what is that I see? |
44302 | Good times will mean better taxes, I suppose? |
44302 | Good!--Tell me something What do you think of Herman Israel-- as a man, and more particularly in his relationship to me? |
44302 | Hardly!--What did your mother have to say? |
44302 | Has Mats been nasty to you? |
44302 | Has he no faults? |
44302 | Has she been here? |
44302 | Has the Danish war come to an end, sir? |
44302 | Has the King sent word of his visit, as you have put everything in order to receive him? |
44302 | Has the examination begun already? |
44302 | Has the family been playing the high- and- mighty? |
44302 | Have I asked?... |
44302 | Have I ever denied it? |
44302 | Have n''t I told him to keep it closed? |
44302 | Have n''t the girls come out of the bath yet? |
44302 | Have n''t we waited long enough? |
44302 | Have n''t you asked him even? |
44302 | Have the children any natural rights to anything? |
44302 | Have we now got to the poking point again? |
44302 | Have we to bother about the kitchen, too? |
44302 | Have we to listen to that noise? |
44302 | Have you always been equally wise? |
44302 | Have you any more protégés of the same kind? |
44302 | Have you been buried? |
44302 | Have you been invited for to- night? |
44302 | Have you been milking May- dew or Starbright? |
44302 | Have you been paid? |
44302 | Have you been spying? |
44302 | Have you begun to use a pedometer? |
44302 | Have you brought the Book? |
44302 | Have you ever heard that name before? |
44302 | Have you ever tried? |
44302 | Have you heard of a rising among them on account of the executions? |
44302 | Have you heard of the restlessness in the southern provinces? |
44302 | Have you heard some bird sing, or have you been dreaming? |
44302 | Have you heard that, too? |
44302 | Have you heard the Emperor''s name mentioned in this connection? |
44302 | Have you heard the name of Dacke? |
44302 | Have you looked them over? |
44302 | Have you lost her? |
44302 | Have you many bells of that kind? |
44302 | Have you no shame? |
44302 | Have you not noticed how all our plans are foiled? |
44302 | Have you not recognised that already? |
44302 | Have you noticed anything of that kind? |
44302 | Have you noticed this house? |
44302 | Have you often heard my name mentioned at home? |
44302 | Have you really that much sense left?--Do you think the King likes any reminder of a deed that has brought him so little honour? |
44302 | Have you seen anything of Mats? |
44302 | Have you seen the shallot bloom? |
44302 | Have you tried it on? |
44302 | He was a kindly man, then? |
44302 | He''s a sly old guy, is n''t he? |
44302 | Here? |
44302 | How about the young people? |
44302 | How am I to get there? |
44302 | How can I tell what to think? |
44302 | How can I? |
44302 | How can you make those things go together? |
44302 | How could I tell? |
44302 | How could it? |
44302 | How could we possibly know anything of that other life, when we know so little of this one? |
44302 | How could you? |
44302 | How dare you? |
44302 | How did you discover it? |
44302 | How did you get in?--Does it concern my daughter? |
44302 | How did you learn to do it? |
44302 | How do we begin? |
44302 | How do you know? |
44302 | How do you know? |
44302 | How do you mean? |
44302 | How do you mean? |
44302 | How does she look? |
44302 | How far, do you think?--Oh, Mrs. Olga, why ca n''t you be nice to him, when he is so kind to you? |
44302 | How is my mother- in- law? |
44302 | How the devil is that to be done? |
44302 | How was it during the last famine, when the King sent grain to be distributed here: did it go to those who needed it? |
44302 | How-- is the little one doing? |
44302 | I am glad to hear it, and I am sure it will please his Highness still more.--Are the people attending church diligently, Master Stig? |
44302 | I am perishing, too!--Why are you begging, anyhow? |
44302 | I am, and guess why? |
44302 | I believe you and I thank you!--You say that Anders Persson and Mons Nilsson have been plotting with the rebels right here in my own city? |
44302 | I do n''t want to ask your name, for I know who you are, although I have never seen you or heard of you before.--What do you ask of me? |
44302 | I have been dying for days.... Are you satisfied now? |
44302 | I have read your report on the conditions at Copperberg, and I am pleased with you.--Have Anders Persson and Mons Nilsson been arrested? |
44302 | I mean the Colonel.... your husband? |
44302 | I saw a Mummy who was not a mummy, and a maiden-- how about the maidenhood, by the by?... |
44302 | I see now.... Are not the snow crystals six- pointed, too, like the hyacinth- lily? |
44302 | I shall forget that I am a merchant, and--[_Pause_] I hope that I may never regret it--[_Pause_] and-- and.... Do you know John Andersson? |
44302 | I suppose the King has sent him? |
44302 | I suppose you have never cried, Jorghen? |
44302 | I wonder if he believes in his own preachings? |
44302 | I wonder if it''s going to rain? |
44302 | I wonder if the cup is full yet? |
44302 | I wonder who sent them? |
44302 | I? |
44302 | Ice? |
44302 | If it comes off, would you mind my getting quite close to it?... |
44302 | If you know, why do n''t you tell? |
44302 | If you never see anything good, how can you believe in it? |
44302 | If your decision is irrevocable.... wo n''t you let me help you, as no one else is doing so? |
44302 | Illegally, you say? |
44302 | In there, you say? |
44302 | In this house.... Do you know what that Japanese screen by the couch is used for? |
44302 | In what way? |
44302 | Indeed? |
44302 | Innocent? |
44302 | Is Prince Johan a Catholic? |
44302 | Is all this a fairy- tale? |
44302 | Is everything that I have built to be torn down? |
44302 | Is he a miser? |
44302 | Is he alive? |
44302 | Is he coming here, too? |
44302 | Is he free to follow his conscience, or is he not? |
44302 | Is he going far away? |
44302 | Is he in his right mind? |
44302 | Is he still asleep? |
44302 | Is he your friend? |
44302 | Is it Anna? |
44302 | Is it a musicale, or what is it? |
44302 | Is it a question of Eric? |
44302 | Is it about Mats? |
44302 | Is it all right? |
44302 | Is it already in the papers? |
44302 | Is it not-- a little milkmaid that he fears? |
44302 | Is it really I who am diseased? |
44302 | Is it safe to leave the children alone? |
44302 | Is it settled? |
44302 | Is it the quartz or the pyrites that make the worst smoke? |
44302 | Is it to be a bargain? |
44302 | Is it true? |
44302 | Is life heavy? |
44302 | Is my King in a gracious mood to- day? |
44302 | Is n''t that rather impolite to me, Miss Rose? |
44302 | Is n''t that what we want? |
44302 | Is not my behaviour quite normal? |
44302 | Is she alive? |
44302 | Is that Currrrr? |
44302 | Is that a common thing or does it happen only once in a while? |
44302 | Is that a play on words? |
44302 | Is that a riddle? |
44302 | Is that any special sound? |
44302 | Is that clear? |
44302 | Is that enough? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that so? |
44302 | Is that the road? |
44302 | Is that the way to answer an old friend who will be a kinsman by this hour to- morrow? |
44302 | Is that the wheel? |
44302 | Is that true? |
44302 | Is that true? |
44302 | Is that what Mats has been teaching you? |
44302 | Is that what Mrs. Olga has to do? |
44302 | Is that you, father? |
44302 | Is that you, grandfather? |
44302 | Is the Young Lady sick? |
44302 | Is there a parrot in the room? |
44302 | Is there anything else? |
44302 | Is there anything you want? |
44302 | Is there law and justice in this country? |
44302 | Is there not a lady in the house, too? |
44302 | Is there nothing good in you at all? |
44302 | Is this Krummedikke''s lake? |
44302 | Is this man to be trusted? |
44302 | Is this sulphur smoke always hanging over the place? |
44302 | Is this the flower of your soul? |
44302 | Is this the road to the church? |
44302 | Is_ he_--the Colonel? |
44302 | It does n''t help.--Do you see that writing- table? |
44302 | It is for your sake the crown is to be cleaned-- for your own sake, do n''t you know?... |
44302 | It looks almost as if you did n''t want us to be friends? |
44302 | It''s Sunday, and the ringing during the day has made them tired What shall we call the little one? |
44302 | It''s here, you say? |
44302 | It''s to be at four o''clock in the church, is n''t it? |
44302 | KERSTI[_ Rising_] Is it true? |
44302 | KING,[_ to_ ISRAEL] It''s your Jacob, is it not? |
44302 | Let the Lord look into our minds and hearts, and if they hold no evil-- what matters the rest? |
44302 | Like a mummy.... Would you care to look at her? |
44302 | Lodging here? |
44302 | Look at her!--Did you ever see such a masterpiece? |
44302 | Look!--Do you know what that means? |
44302 | May I ask you in return whether King Christian still is free? |
44302 | May I ask your name? |
44302 | May I say a word? |
44302 | May I speak? |
44302 | May the clock strike? |
44302 | Might it not be wise for you, as personal friends of the King, to meet him and bid the stem master welcome? |
44302 | Money cares again? |
44302 | Most reasons are no good at all.--Is it a question of Anders Persson and Mons Nilsson? |
44302 | Mr. Hummel? |
44302 | Must I go to the opera in the middle of the day? |
44302 | Must I hear more of that sort of thing? |
44302 | Must I obey blindly? |
44302 | Must I then tell you myself that I have spent the night dressing wounds and nursing the injured? |
44302 | My blood was poisoned at my birth, and I doubt the existence of an antidote.... Why do you leave me? |
44302 | My devoted servant, who has been with me a lifetime, and who has the medal for long and faithful service.... Why should I discharge him? |
44302 | My future? |
44302 | My own wife, my beloved Margaret.... She turns away from me when I want to kiss her pure brow, and can you imagine? |
44302 | Never with a bashful fellow like you!--Tell me, does that make you despise me again? |
44302 | No, it wo n''t be necessary.--Who are you, anyhow, and with what right are you stripping me naked in this fashion? |
44302 | No, no!--Is the little one asleep? |
44302 | No, really? |
44302 | No, that''s just what they should not do, because when the King asks whom they are mourning-- well, what are you to answer, Barbro? |
44302 | No, who would be hunting at this time of day? |
44302 | No- o.... People are like that!--Will you please move the chair a little, so that I get into the sunlight? |
44302 | No.--And the Colonel-- who is he? |
44302 | No? |
44302 | Not always? |
44302 | Not at home, you say? |
44302 | Of Småland, you say? |
44302 | Of course, I know what you mean? |
44302 | Of what? |
44302 | Oh, Jacob, my friend, why do you cease to call your old schoolmate by name? |
44302 | Oh, Kersti dear, why are you so sorry? |
44302 | Oh, Kersti, why are you lying here? |
44302 | Oh, Mrs. Olga[_ She catches sight of the travelling- bag_] Who is going away? |
44302 | Oh, his name is Nils? |
44302 | Oh, is that what it is? |
44302 | Oh, there is something to tell, then? |
44302 | Oh, what will become of us? |
44302 | Oh, you are that kind? |
44302 | Oh, you do n''t? |
44302 | Oh, you do n''t? |
44302 | Oh, you saw me kissing your mother''s hand, did you? |
44302 | Oh.... Do you think any one has-- that your mother may have heard him? |
44302 | Old Dalecarlia is a pretty good country, is it not? |
44302 | Olga.--Where is he going? |
44302 | On account of what happened last night? |
44302 | On my behalf, or on your own? |
44302 | Or a glass of wine? |
44302 | Or perhaps you wish to keep my husband company while I get the dress ready? |
44302 | Or sing? |
44302 | Or what? |
44302 | Out of the mouth of babes may come the truth.... Shall Kersti have Mats? |
44302 | Paid? |
44302 | Perhaps Agda is too modest-- and does not dare to believe in the sincerity of my feelings? |
44302 | Perhaps he is the fellow who buys up the bells? |
44302 | Perhaps the crown wo n''t fit her even? |
44302 | Perhaps you think that I am-- that I am jealous? |
44302 | Perhaps you will let me find a little treasure for you? |
44302 | Perhaps you, who are so clever, can also tell a poor, strayed old woman where she is? |
44302 | Please keep quiet a while, children.... Do you know if the sergeant has been asked? |
44302 | Please tell me one thing: what made you act as you did by the fountain a while ago? |
44302 | Pooh!--Is there anything else I can do for you? |
44302 | Poor fellow!--Tell me, secretary, is the Prince quite right? |
44302 | Poor little girl-- is she crying? |
44302 | Ready? |
44302 | Really, Herman? |
44302 | Really? |
44302 | Really?... |
44302 | Shall I ask Anna? |
44302 | Shall he have her? |
44302 | Shall we have new furniture? |
44302 | Shall we make conversation? |
44302 | Shall we order the tea now? |
44302 | Sixteen, you say? |
44302 | So Mats gets the mill? |
44302 | So he_ does_ know? |
44302 | So those little trips of yours were attempts to run away? |
44302 | So we are.--And where''s the King? |
44302 | So you do n''t trust me? |
44302 | So you know that, too? |
44302 | So you said that? |
44302 | So you think I can rely on him? |
44302 | So you want to run away? |
44302 | So you''re going to look after him, are you? |
44302 | So_ that''s_ what was coming? |
44302 | Still fighting, and still slaying.... You remember, do n''t you, Kersti, the soldier''s daughter? |
44302 | Still more? |
44302 | Tell me, secretary, are you really as hard as people say? |
44302 | Tell me, secretary, did the Prince mean what he said about the Hanseatic people and what they are doing in that house? |
44302 | Tell me: what is life? |
44302 | That depends.... You are very friendly with my wife, are you not? |
44302 | That means the little one!--Who did it? |
44302 | That of Mr. Hummel? |
44302 | That was mere boasting, I suppose? |
44302 | That''s a good one, is n''t it? |
44302 | That''s a promise, but will you keep it? |
44302 | That''s all I wanted to know.... And you do n''t want me to go with you? |
44302 | That''s four o''clock, is it not? |
44302 | That''s plain.... Is this the place where we are to live? |
44302 | That''s settled-- but what more? |
44302 | That''s the King!--Shall we ask the antking if he will grant pardon? |
44302 | That''s the jail, then? |
44302 | That''s where his daughter lives? |
44302 | That''s why I wish to leave before I am kicked out.--Do you know what day it is to- day? |
44302 | The Bible, you say? |
44302 | The Colonel''s daughter? |
44302 | The Emperor? |
44302 | The Mewler, you say? |
44302 | The Sheriff, you say? |
44302 | The dead man? |
44302 | The liberator of the country has descended during the darkness of night to set my little bird free.--Will you take flight with me? |
44302 | The little one, you say? |
44302 | The man in the invalid''s chair?... |
44302 | The midwife, you say? |
44302 | The mill- folk''s, I suppose? |
44302 | The one and only.--Are you fond of the hyacinth? |
44302 | The people are muttering? |
44302 | The problem of Strindberg''s play might be said to be this: granted such a mission, how much has a man the right to pay for its proper fulfilment? |
44302 | Then he is alive?... |
44302 | Then he will marry, I guess? |
44302 | Then the ice will begin to break from the shore? |
44302 | There is something nice about children, is n''t there? |
44302 | There must be a curse on all creation and on life itself.... Why did you not want to become my bride? |
44302 | Therefore....[_ Heavy steps are heard outside_] Do you hear those steps? |
44302 | Think of my sane and shrewd and sensible father-- doesn''t he act like a madman? |
44302 | This is the way my father puts it:"What is the use of talking, when you ca n''t fool each other anyhow?" |
44302 | Those that show the hymns you are to sing, do n''t you know? |
44302 | Times are good, then? |
44302 | To eat or drink-- you can have it now, you know.... Did they give you any tobacco while you were in the Castle? |
44302 | To feel raised above all human considerations; to kill whatever stands in the way? |
44302 | To save mine!--Oh, what is to become of me? |
44302 | To what? |
44302 | Try to know and you will perish!--However, do you want to go or stay? |
44302 | Unjustly, you say? |
44302 | Us? |
44302 | Very well!--Have you anything to ask me about? |
44302 | Vesterlund? |
44302 | Wait a little.--All of us, you say? |
44302 | Was he sick? |
44302 | Was it not Saint Augustine who said that he who has been coined into a groat can never become a ducat? |
44302 | Was it three quarters we got off the place last year? |
44302 | Was it your father? |
44302 | Was she very lovely? |
44302 | Was that what you said? |
44302 | Was there anything else? |
44302 | We can do nothing with her, and we have got her for the sake of our sins.... Do n''t you see that we are pining and wasting away? |
44302 | We did n''t know better.--Can you see that she was young and pretty once? |
44302 | We hold wedding like beggars, and rascals, and roving folk.... What is it you can not eat or drink, but that tastes good for all that? |
44302 | We old ones, you mean? |
44302 | We- ell? |
44302 | Wealthy, I suppose? |
44302 | Well, Nils, how is the mining nowadays? |
44302 | Well, Rose!--What''s the matter, child? |
44302 | Well, is Christian still free? |
44302 | Well, there lies my heart-- the only one I ever had What have you to do with my entrails, for that matter? |
44302 | Well, what do I care? |
44302 | Well, what is there to do about it? |
44302 | Well, what of it? |
44302 | What am I to call him? |
44302 | What am I to do? |
44302 | What am I to do? |
44302 | What am I to do? |
44302 | What am I to do? |
44302 | What are they doing in there? |
44302 | What are you after? |
44302 | What are you aiming at? |
44302 | What are you doing, woman? |
44302 | What are you looking for in this house? |
44302 | What are you looking for? |
44302 | What are you thinking of, Nils? |
44302 | What are you two doing? |
44302 | What blood is to be shed here to- day? |
44302 | What can I do for you? |
44302 | What can I say, and what--_may_ I say? |
44302 | What can be in store for us? |
44302 | What can he be expecting? |
44302 | What child? |
44302 | What could I do with it? |
44302 | What could there be to know? |
44302 | What crown? |
44302 | What did I say? |
44302 | What did I tell you? |
44302 | What did he want? |
44302 | What do I mean? |
44302 | What do they do in that house? |
44302 | What do you bring? |
44302 | What do you fear might happen? |
44302 | What do you hear down there in the valley, child? |
44302 | What do you mean yourself? |
44302 | What do you mean? |
44302 | What do you mean? |
44302 | What do you mean? |
44302 | What do you mean? |
44302 | What do you mean? |
44302 | What do you say, Anders Persson? |
44302 | What do you see down there in the valley? |
44302 | What do you take? |
44302 | What do you think my end will be? |
44302 | What do you want me to say? |
44302 | What do you want of him? |
44302 | What do you want of me? |
44302 | What do you want? |
44302 | What do you want? |
44302 | What do you want? |
44302 | What do you want? |
44302 | What do you wish? |
44302 | What does he want there? |
44302 | What does it matter? |
44302 | What does it mean? |
44302 | What does she want? |
44302 | What does that concern us? |
44302 | What does that help? |
44302 | What does that mean if not a bride that wears a crown? |
44302 | What does that mean? |
44302 | What does the Scripture, say? |
44302 | What draws all the blood to your heart? |
44302 | What happened yesterday? |
44302 | What happens to a human being only once in a lifetime.--Are you much wiser now? |
44302 | What has happened, anyhow? |
44302 | What has he to do with the Colonel? |
44302 | What has she in her hand? |
44302 | What have I got to do with that one? |
44302 | What have I said that could please you like that? |
44302 | What have you there? |
44302 | What have you to be afraid of? |
44302 | What have you to do with the family anyhow? |
44302 | What have you to do with the others? |
44302 | What in the world am I going to do, you little silly? |
44302 | What in the world does this mean? |
44302 | What is he after? |
44302 | What is he doing around the corner now? |
44302 | What is it? |
44302 | What is it? |
44302 | What is it? |
44302 | What is it? |
44302 | What is it? |
44302 | What is it? |
44302 | What is strange about that? |
44302 | What is that? |
44302 | What is the errand that has made the King cross Långhed Forest and Brunbeck Ford without permission and safe- conduct? |
44302 | What is the hurry? |
44302 | What is the matter? |
44302 | What is the matter? |
44302 | What is the meaning of all this? |
44302 | What is the meaning of it? |
44302 | What is the sentence? |
44302 | What is the use of being proud? |
44302 | What is the use of talking of it? |
44302 | What is this? |
44302 | What is weighing on it? |
44302 | What is weighing on you, my son? |
44302 | What is whiter by far than a swan? |
44302 | What is your name? |
44302 | What is your name? |
44302 | What kind of a bell in the Siljan valley was that you spoke of? |
44302 | What kind of a monster is she? |
44302 | What kind of a piece is she? |
44302 | What makes you utter what I have thought so many times?--Do you know that I was also born to be in the way? |
44302 | What more remains? |
44302 | What more? |
44302 | What numbers? |
44302 | What other things? |
44302 | What should he be called? |
44302 | What song was that? |
44302 | What sort of a man has he turned out? |
44302 | What student? |
44302 | What talk is that, child? |
44302 | What was his name again? |
44302 | What was it you called that thing-- piety? |
44302 | What will you take to get out of here? |
44302 | What would it help to have three? |
44302 | What would you do with it? |
44302 | What would you, in my place, do with Anders Persson and Mons Nilsson? |
44302 | What year was that? |
44302 | What''s amiss? |
44302 | What''s his name? |
44302 | What''s on your mind, dear? |
44302 | What''s the matter, my dear Rose? |
44302 | What''s the matter? |
44302 | What''s the name? |
44302 | What''s the use? |
44302 | What? |
44302 | What? |
44302 | What? |
44302 | What_ do_ you see? |
44302 | When I do what''s ill, he has the right to speak ill of me-- has he not? |
44302 | When is the wedding to be? |
44302 | When will he be back? |
44302 | Where are you going, father? |
44302 | Where can I find anything that keeps its promise? |
44302 | Where can I go? |
44302 | Where can you get any? |
44302 | Where did you find it? |
44302 | Where did you get it? |
44302 | Where do we find honour and faith? |
44302 | Where do you get your confidence from? |
44302 | Where do you get your fixed ideas from? |
44302 | Where does the thought of violence come from, if not from your own bad conscience? |
44302 | Where have you been all this time, daughter? |
44302 | Where is Jacob? |
44302 | Where is Johan? |
44302 | Where is Kersti? |
44302 | Where is Kersti? |
44302 | Where is Kersti? |
44302 | Where is Kersti? |
44302 | Where is Kersti? |
44302 | Where is beauty to be found? |
44302 | Where is the Midwife? |
44302 | Where is the church? |
44302 | Where is the guest of honour at this virginal wedding? |
44302 | Where is the road to the church? |
44302 | Where is the winter road? |
44302 | Where? |
44302 | Where? |
44302 | Where? |
44302 | Where? |
44302 | Whew-- is the wind in that corner? |
44302 | Which previously belonged to the Captain, I suppose? |
44302 | White as snow, and white as linen.... Why are you so white? |
44302 | White metallic substance.--Do you think those rustics are cheating us? |
44302 | Who are they, then? |
44302 | Who are you? |
44302 | Who are you? |
44302 | Who are you? |
44302 | Who are you? |
44302 | Who brings the charge? |
44302 | Who brings the charge? |
44302 | Who can free the prisoner from his bonds and set the tongue of the fish talking? |
44302 | Who can that be? |
44302 | Who commands here? |
44302 | Who dares to disturb me? |
44302 | Who did that? |
44302 | Who do you think can be my rival? |
44302 | Who is John Andersson? |
44302 | Who is after my life? |
44302 | Who is doing me the honour? |
44302 | Who is he? |
44302 | Who is lying in the white box? |
44302 | Who is that? |
44302 | Who is the Mocker? |
44302 | Who is this mysterious man who never appears? |
44302 | Who is, then, to blame? |
44302 | Who killed him? |
44302 | Who knows? |
44302 | Who read my riddle? |
44302 | Who says I am? |
44302 | Who should be called a tyrant? |
44302 | Who was he? |
44302 | Who was that? |
44302 | Who was that? |
44302 | Who was that? |
44302 | Who will haste to the house, and milk the cows, and see that baby lacks nothing? |
44302 | Who''s got it? |
44302 | Who''s your master? |
44302 | Who, I ask? |
44302 | Who? |
44302 | Who?--Have you not a word to say? |
44302 | Whom are you bringing with you? |
44302 | Whom do you think? |
44302 | Whom does that statue represent? |
44302 | Whom were you talking to a while ago? |
44302 | Whose chimney? |
44302 | Whose cock do you mean, and whose dog? |
44302 | Whose was it? |
44302 | Why are they called Mewlings? |
44302 | Why crown- thief? |
44302 | Why did you call me, mother? |
44302 | Why did you not give me yours? |
44302 | Why do n''t you always speak like that? |
44302 | Why do n''t you believe me? |
44302 | Why do n''t you discharge her? |
44302 | Why do n''t you have a fire? |
44302 | Why do n''t you leave it to her entirely? |
44302 | Why do n''t you? |
44302 | Why do you ask? |
44302 | Why do you call it a spook supper? |
44302 | Why do you call me stepmother? |
44302 | Why do you hate me? |
44302 | Why do you stare at me? |
44302 | Why do you talk like that? |
44302 | Why do you tell me all these dreadful stories? |
44302 | Why do you think so? |
44302 | Why do you think the Councillor''s word will be of any help? |
44302 | Why do you think we have come, anyhow? |
44302 | Why do you visit a vulgar place like that, Prince? |
44302 | Why do your parents sit there so silently, without saying a single word? |
44302 | Why dressed up in your best, daughter? |
44302 | Why has Bengtsson got a medal? |
44302 | Why have you picked me to be your instrument? |
44302 | Why not? |
44302 | Why not? |
44302 | Why not? |
44302 | Why should I do so? |
44302 | Why should it be so hard for us to understand each other? |
44302 | Why should it be? |
44302 | Why should you be unhappy, then? |
44302 | Why should you go? |
44302 | Why the deuce must you always come poking after me when somebody else has made a fool of himself? |
44302 | Why were you talking to yourself? |
44302 | Why"O"? |
44302 | Why? |
44302 | Why? |
44302 | Why? |
44302 | Why? |
44302 | Will there be a wedding? |
44302 | Will there be peace after this? |
44302 | Will there ever be peace? |
44302 | Will those girls never come back? |
44302 | Will you do me a favour? |
44302 | Will you lay hand on your own mother, you trull? |
44302 | Will you let me dispose of her? |
44302 | Will you pardon me a momentary impertinence, Mr. Brunner? |
44302 | Will you please ask Reginald to come here? |
44302 | Will you swear? |
44302 | With the help of Luebeck_ only_? |
44302 | With what? |
44302 | With whom? |
44302 | Without wishing to show you any disrespect, father-- how can a man of your age believe that secrets exist? |
44302 | Wo n''t Inghel Hansson come back first? |
44302 | Wo n''t those people in there try to get away? |
44302 | Wo n''t you let me brush your hat? |
44302 | Wo n''t you sit down and drink a goblet, Duke? |
44302 | Wonder if he''s crazy? |
44302 | Would it be impertinent-- to ask-- your estimable name? |
44302 | Would you care to accept a position? |
44302 | Would you like a glass of beer, doctor? |
44302 | Would you like to call her? |
44302 | Would you like to guess riddles? |
44302 | Yes, has she not? |
44302 | Yes, if something should happen.... Well, where''s the midwife to be found? |
44302 | Yes, is it not? |
44302 | Yes, what do you think of it? |
44302 | Yes, what is life? |
44302 | Yes, why not? |
44302 | Yes, why not? |
44302 | Yes, you are to be pitied, and so am I, but what can be done? |
44302 | You are crying? |
44302 | You are the midwife-- Mrs. Larsson-- are you not? |
44302 | You are the only other one.... Could you possibly be a relative of the late Mr. Arkenholtz, the merchant? |
44302 | You are worried, father? |
44302 | You are? |
44302 | You ask what that big red house is? |
44302 | You can not be Olavus Petri? |
44302 | You can see it on the flies; they''re kind of drowsy.... Will there be a lot of berries this year? |
44302 | You do n''t think that I am telling the truth? |
44302 | You have heard that, too? |
44302 | You may be sure I have!--But what makes you think that he is still alive? |
44302 | You mean Mons Nilsson of Aspeboda and Anders Persson of Rankhyttan, who are still hanging about the town, hoping to get an audience with the King? |
44302 | You mean that I have transgressed-- that I have gone too far? |
44302 | You mean the crown? |
44302 | You saw that, too, did you? |
44302 | You say that you know? |
44302 | You see it, then? |
44302 | You think I have been drinking, do you? |
44302 | You think it right, then?... |
44302 | You understand, do n''t you?--Stinderborg Castle, in the island of Als? |
44302 | You want to_ fight_ Dacke? |
44302 | You were paid, were you not? |
44302 | You wish to marry her to the Student? |
44302 | You wo n''t believe me? |
44302 | You''ll let me do that, wo n''t you? |
44302 | You? |
44302 | Your mother?--And how about the baby? |
44302 | Your name is Hummel? |
44302 | [ 5] Is that to be my reward, too? |
44302 | [ 6][_ Pause_] Write now.... No, I''ll go home and do the writing myself.... Have you heard that Luther is dead? |
44302 | [ BRITA_ does not answer_] Is it Kersti you mean? |
44302 | [ BRITA_ makes no answer_] And Kersti? |
44302 | [ KERSTI_ does not reply_] Have you lost it? |
44302 | [ To_ the_ KING] Are you the Councillor? |
44302 | [_ Agitated_] Then he is dead? |
44302 | [_ Appearing_] Is that you, Marcus? |
44302 | [_ Arrogantly_] Good- bye, then, Baruch!--Have you read the Book of Baruch? |
44302 | [_ As he is seized by the guard_] Must I be spanked because_ he_ wo n''t go to bed? |
44302 | [_ As if blinded by his appearance_] Who are you, child-- you who come when the evil one departs? |
44302 | [_ As she rises and is about to go out with_ REGINALD] Will there be peace on earth now? |
44302 | [_ As they start to go out to the right_] But wo n''t the King frighten us? |
44302 | [_ Astounded_] You can figure it out, you say? |
44302 | [_ Beyond himself_] In the name of Christ, will this never come to an end? |
44302 | [_ Covering her face with the apron and weeping_] Must I live in a place like this, beneath the water, at the bottom of the sea? |
44302 | [_ Crying, as they become aware of the playing of the_ NECK] Who is cutting in? |
44302 | [_ Disturbed_] Will my opinion have any influence on their fate, or have you already made up your mind? |
44302 | [_ Dragging his words_] Look here.... Tell me, please.... Who_ is_ your master? |
44302 | [_ Drily_] What has happened? |
44302 | [_ Emerging from the wardrobe_] Are you going away again, Mr. Brunner? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the left_] How dare you fish on Easter Sunday? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the left_] Was it Anna that was here? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the rear, stops in front of_ KERSTI_ and looks at her in surprise_] Who is that? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the rear_] Has it been found? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the rear_] Have you found the crown? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the rear_] Have you found the crown? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the right, followed by the smaller children_] Is father here? |
44302 | [_ Entering from the right, with raised staffs]_ Will you bide now, mill- folk? |
44302 | [_ Enters from the left_] Did you call me, Prince? |
44302 | [_ Enters from the right_] Are you alone? |
44302 | [_ Enters, haughty and reserved_] Wo n''t you be seated, please? |
44302 | [_ Enters; he is somewhat older than_ JACOB] Why did you leave me, Jacob? |
44302 | [_ Enters; he is the son of_ HERMAN ISRAEL;_ a richly dressed young man, carrying a racket in his hand; his forehead is bandaged_] Is my father here? |
44302 | [_ Faltering_] Do n''t you know me?... |
44302 | [_ Glancing at the paper_] Oh, is that me? |
44302 | [_ Going to meet him_] Did you see anybody? |
44302 | [_ Haughtily, giving him two fingers to shake_, JACOB_ pretending not to notice it_] Farewell!--What became of those two little pawnbrokers? |
44302 | [_ He broods a while_] If we only dared.... What was that you said? |
44302 | [_ He puts his hand to his ear as if to hear better_] Would your Majesty be willing to pardon her-- that is, in regard to the worst part?... |
44302 | [_ He seats himself on the chair of state, and_ ISRAEL_ sits down across the table_] So you have just come from Dalecarlia? |
44302 | [_ He turns away from_ KERSTI_ and catches sight of the open trap- door_] What''s that? |
44302 | [_ Hesitatingly_] Would you do me a favour? |
44302 | [_ Horrified_] A milkmaid? |
44302 | [_ In a low voice to_ BRITA] What is he thinking of? |
44302 | [_ Indicating_ ISRAEL_ to_ OLAVUS] Is that chap from Luebeck a royal person, too? |
44302 | [_ Is heard singing outside_]"Kersti dear, is baby asleep?" |
44302 | [_ Leaping to her feet_] Is he coming, you say? |
44302 | [_ Leaping to their feet_] What''s that? |
44302 | [_ Listening_] They have drums, too.--Oh, everything comes home!--Do you think I can get out of this, Olof? |
44302 | [_ Long silence_] Do you hear that clock ticking like the deathwatch hidden in a wall? |
44302 | [_ Looking about_] Do you think we have been recognised? |
44302 | [_ Looking at the statue_] It''s horrible to think that.... How old is she now? |
44302 | [_ Looking attentively at him_] If you''ll pardon me-- Master Olavus was your name, I think? |
44302 | [_ Looking hard at her_] What do you mean? |
44302 | [_ Looking hard at him_] Do you put your trust in the enemy? |
44302 | [_ Looking hard at him_] Is that the truth, or do you merely talk like that out of politeness? |
44302 | [_ Motions_ MARCUS_ out of the room; then to_ Jacob] Do you know him, too? |
44302 | [_ Moving back a couple of steps without turning about_] Have we got that far now? |
44302 | [_ Opening a trap- door in the floor_] What''s down here? |
44302 | [_ Painfully impressed_] What''s that? |
44302 | [_ Pause; then to_ ANDERS PERSSON] And how about the crops? |
44302 | [_ Pause; then, pointing to the blood- stained coats_] Must those things stay here? |
44302 | [_ Pause]_ What is the worst thing you can think of? |
44302 | [_ Pause_] Is Mrs. Larsson the only one_ you_ have asked? |
44302 | [_ Pause_] Not one of you? |
44302 | [_ Pause_] Well? |
44302 | [_ Pause_] What kind of a man is Nils of Söderby? |
44302 | [_ Playing with the flowers_] Do you really remember that much? |
44302 | [_ Pointing at the hammer_] For the sake of old friendship and good faith, ca n''t we put that away? |
44302 | [_ Pointing to the cradle_] What have you there? |
44302 | [_ Pointing to the statue_] Life is a pleasant thing, is it not?... |
44302 | [_ Pursuing_ KERSTI_ with her stare_] A merry wedding eve, is n''t it? |
44302 | [_ Pushing the chair as directed_] Have you no attendant? |
44302 | [_ Repeat without looking at the water- wheel or knowing from whence the strange music is heard_] Who is cutting in? |
44302 | [_ Revolted_] You have visited places of that kind? |
44302 | [_ Rises, but sits down again immediately_] Barbro?--Have you ever seen the King? |
44302 | [_ Rising and approaching them angrily_] Do you know Dacke? |
44302 | [_ Rising_] Well, well, am I to be the first? |
44302 | [_ Scared_] Are they hunting again? |
44302 | [_ She goes toward the right_] There is a wreath floating on the water-- where''s the crown? |
44302 | [_ She rises to her feet_] This has been the longest Sunday in all my life!--What kind of a smell is that? |
44302 | [_ Showing her crown_] Do you see what I...? |
44302 | [_ Shrinking back_] Shall we meet a Thursday night at the crossroads? |
44302 | [_ Slowly and with frequent pauses_] Behold the Sheriff!--You are only scared by him!--Do you think everybody feels like that? |
44302 | [_ Somebody raps three times at the door from the outside_] Who''s that? |
44302 | [_ Speaking drily, with a vain attempt to show emotion_] Yes, here we are now!--Was it bad in the Castle? |
44302 | [_ Speaking in a normal voice_] Is that you, Jacob? |
44302 | [_ Speaking slowly and with frequent pauses._] Talk of the weather, which we know all about? |
44302 | [_ Standing by the armchair at the end of the table_] Is the King to sit here? |
44302 | [_ Staring at her_] Who-- is-- that? |
44302 | [_ Staring at his visitor_] You wrote this letter, sir? |
44302 | [_ Startled_] The Sheriff? |
44302 | [_ Startled_] What do you mean by-- engaged? |
44302 | [_ Startled_] What was that? |
44302 | [_ Surprised_] Who carried out the Reformation? |
44302 | [_ Suspiciously_] Why do you ask? |
44302 | [_ Taking hold of the garter which is still about the neck of_ KERSTI] What kind of necklace is this? |
44302 | [_ Talking baby talk_] Why does he open the door? |
44302 | [_ Tenderly, as if talking to a baby_] And now perhaps you want me to ask Mr. Axel to like you? |
44302 | [_ The reading of a litany in Latin is faintly heard from the outside_] What is that? |
44302 | [_ The_ BARONESS_ is pulling at her handkerchief, apparently unable to decide what to say or do_] Do you feel better now? |
44302 | [_ To her daughter_] Wo n''t you let Mats have it? |
44302 | [_ To himself_] With whom is he talking? |
44302 | [_ To his relatives_] Have you no word to say to Kersti? |
44302 | [_ To the soldiers_] Is that allowed? |
44302 | [_ To_ ANDERS] Was there not enough of it? |
44302 | [_ To_ BRITA,_ in a low voice_] Do you hear it sing? |
44302 | [_ To_ BRITA] What are you doing? |
44302 | [_ To_ ERIC] How fare you, Eric? |
44302 | [_ To_ ERIC] What news do you bring? |
44302 | [_ To_ Eric] Have you heard anything of your friend Jacob? |
44302 | [_ To_ GRANDFATHER] Have you thought it out? |
44302 | [_ To_ HERMAN ISRAEL] These two trustworthy men....[_ To_ MONS_ and_ ANDERS] You are trustworthy, are you not? |
44302 | [_ To_ JOHAN] Who can have sent them? |
44302 | [_ To_ JORGHEN] Can you make anything out of that boy? |
44302 | [_ To_ JORGHEN] Did you ever hear anything like it? |
44302 | [_ To_ Johan] What''s the matter with Eric? |
44302 | [_ To_ KERSTI] Did you kill the child? |
44302 | [_ To_ KERSTI] Shall I tell him? |
44302 | [_ To_ KERSTI] Why so pale? |
44302 | [_ To_ LIT- KAREN] Where did you get the doll? |
44302 | [_ To_ LIT- MATS] And you, Lit- Mats? |
44302 | [_ To_ LIT- MATS] Where did you get your doll? |
44302 | [_ To_ MONS] Do you know what is meant by"enough,"Mons Nilsson? |
44302 | [_ To_ MONS] Is there to be a funeral? |
44302 | [_ To_ OLAVUS] Have you any proof that the prisoners have been plotting with John Andersson? |
44302 | [_ To_ OLAVUS] How long are we to wait here? |
44302 | [_ To_ OLAVUS] Why has Inghel Hansson not come back? |
44302 | [_ To_ OLAVUS] Will you let us go into the next room and talk the matter over? |
44302 | [_ To_ REGINALD] My poor Alexander, what will you pull to pieces now? |
44302 | [_ To_ STIG] As we now know what is meant by"enough,"I ask you, Master Stig Larsson, if anybody perished from hunger during the last famine? |
44302 | [_ Very excited_] Yes, but for how long? |
44302 | [_ Walking back and forth_] Are you thinking of the Dalecarlians? |
44302 | [_ When they have smoked a while in silence_] What was that you said about the hunt just now? |
44302 | [_ With a gesture toward his pocket_] Do you wish to see for yourself? |
44302 | [_ With a threat in her glance_] Do you call that freedom? |
44302 | [_ With raised fists_] What deed? |
44302 | [_ in a lower voice_] A child? |
44302 | _ My_ hand? |
44302 | _ Pulchre, bene, rede!_--Who, Reginald, do you think has caused this dissension under which you young people are suffering now? |
44302 | _ Those in the rear room shout back_:"What''s up?" |
44302 | _ Who is_? |
44302 | _ Your_ daughter, you say?--But apropos of that, why is she always sitting in that room? |
44302 | that?... |
28345 | A man what? |
28345 | A person is n''t a female-- when? 28345 A recurrence, Gerry?" |
28345 | About his''n? 28345 Against whom, kitten?" |
28345 | All right? 28345 And blame me as little as possible?" |
28345 | And did n''t you say they had gone to find out if they were blown away? |
28345 | And if he is not? |
28345 | And not know what became of him, or anything? 28345 And now,"says Mrs. Nightingale,"how is he to be got back again? |
28345 | And run away and leave him alone? 28345 And suppose we did find out who she was?" |
28345 | And take milk and no sugar? 28345 And then you knew it?" |
28345 | And then you said?... |
28345 | And then? |
28345 | And what sort of person is she? |
28345 | And where did you go? |
28345 | And where do you think, mother, Mrs. Erskine Peel gets all those good- looking young men from that come to her parties? 28345 And why not? |
28345 | And you would finance him? 28345 Another cup?" |
28345 | Are Mr. and Mrs. Paganini gone to sea? |
28345 | Are those parties going, in eighty- nine, do you make out? |
28345 | Are women tiring when they have passed a good deal of time in India? |
28345 | Are ye sure ye know, young master? 28345 Are you going to sit there till the tide goes down?" |
28345 | Are you sure he meant you? 28345 Are you sure it is n''t Colonel Lund''s mistake? |
28345 | Are you sure of that? |
28345 | Are you talking about me, doctor? |
28345 | Are you, darling? |
28345 | Are you_ sure_? 28345 At Riverfordhook?" |
28345 | Because each time I see you, I want to ask if nothing has come back-- no trace of memory? |
28345 | Because she would be such a_ very_ great humbug, do n''t you see, chick? |
28345 | Before the split? 28345 Besides, if my precious father behaved so badly to mamma, how could it be_ her_ fault? |
28345 | Bring what about? |
28345 | But about yourself, Fenwick? |
28345 | But are you, or not? 28345 But did n''t you say-- only just now-- there was nothing--_nothing_--to unsettle your present life? |
28345 | But have we advertised enough? |
28345 | But how came you to know? |
28345 | But how did it get from the marmalade to Tishy''s haberdasher? |
28345 | But how does_ he_ know? 28345 But how many?" |
28345 | But suppose it all true, dearest, and that I''m going to come to life again, what does it matter? 28345 But there_ was_ a half- idea? |
28345 | But they make sloe- gin of them? |
28345 | But was it that Kensington Gardens business that did the job? |
28345 | But was n''t that what old Mr. Turveydrop said, or very nearly? 28345 But was that what did the job?... |
28345 | But we want to be at two o''clock this afternoon, if you''ll come...."Both of us? |
28345 | But were they?... |
28345 | But what was the speculation? 28345 But what_ was_ it? |
28345 | But why did n''t you tell me? |
28345 | But why should that make me think of lawn- tennis? 28345 But why? |
28345 | But why? |
28345 | But you have a father? |
28345 | But, Sally dearest-- I may say Sally dearest, may n''t I?... |
28345 | But, dearest, what made you see that it was us? |
28345 | But, in the meanwhile, how can you prove your identity with Harrisson and claim all your property without her knowing?... 28345 But----""But what?" |
28345 | Ca n''t they? |
28345 | Ca n''t you see, dear, that there is some misunderstanding? |
28345 | Ca n''t you sell it? |
28345 | Ca n''t? |
28345 | Can you come away? |
28345 | Can you tell me, sir--Sally is addressing a promising spectre, an old gentleman of sweet aspect--"have I passed the Hurkaru Club?" |
28345 | Can you tell when it came on? |
28345 | Could n''t they be got at, to see if they would n''t recollect something? |
28345 | Could n''t we have a window open to let a little air in? |
28345 | Dear madam,she recites,"you may perhaps recall-- or will perhaps recall-- which is right, mother?" |
28345 | Did Lætitia call Mr. Bradshaw a shop- boy, chick? |
28345 | Did Sally tell you about the galvanic battery on the pier? |
28345 | Did he mean a lady? |
28345 | Did he? 28345 Did it get quite well?" |
28345 | Did n''t I do that beautifully? |
28345 | Did n''t I do that nicely?... 28345 Did n''t I?" |
28345 | Did n''t the Reverend Decimus Ireson grab all the belongings? |
28345 | Did she tell you? |
28345 | Did that do the job or did it not? 28345 Did the Dragon tell him about the meeting in the park?" |
28345 | Did you ever see a ghost, old man? |
28345 | Did you expect it so early as this? |
28345 | Did you have a very touching parting, Mr. Fenwick? 28345 Did you hear that delicious little noise he made? |
28345 | Did you hear us, darling? |
28345 | Did you see them both in the water? |
28345 | Diedrich? 28345 Do n''t you see, Dr. Conrad dear, the cases are quite different? |
28345 | Do please excuse me-- I mean, excuse the liberty I take-- but I should so much like to-- to...."To buy it for sixpence? 28345 Do pray excuse me for asking, but do you find it does good? |
28345 | Do they stop at Bond Street? |
28345 | Do you always sleep there? |
28345 | Do you hear, papa? 28345 Do you know what I always call you behind your back? |
28345 | Do you know, Mrs. Nightingale,Fenwick said,"it''s always a night of this sort that brings back one''s youth? |
28345 | Do you know, kitten darling, I ca n''t help thinking perhaps we do that poor woman an injustice...."--Can''t you? |
28345 | Do you know, mamma, I really_ did_ think-- what do you think I thought? |
28345 | Do you mean that the vision-- or scene-- in your mind stops dead, and you do n''t see her get out of the carriage? |
28345 | Do you mind telling me? |
28345 | Do you really want to know what I was thinking of, Sallykin? |
28345 | Do you remember his name? |
28345 | Do you remember how we saw our profiles in a glass, and you said,''I''m sure those are somebody else''? 28345 Do you remember that about the tennis- court? |
28345 | Do you remember, darling, how we climbed up there, coming, and had hold to the top? |
28345 | Do you think they''ll know at home where you are? |
28345 | Do you want to stop at Bond Street? |
28345 | Do you wish your daughter to marry a haberdasher? |
28345 | Does William sound reproachful? |
28345 | Does it make any difference? |
28345 | Does n''t Mrs. Vereker like her? |
28345 | Does n''t he play_ beautifully_, mother? |
28345 | Does n''t it make one''s flesh creep to have a mother like that? 28345 Does n''t the Goody goozle at you about him, though? |
28345 | Does she put back the pins when she''s done scrubbing? |
28345 | Does that mean it''s sixty- seven pounds ten? |
28345 | Every day? |
28345 | Fenwick!--don''t you see how it is? 28345 Found out about him?" |
28345 | Found what? |
28345 | Gaffer Fenwick? 28345 Gerry darling, have you never been to bed?" |
28345 | Gerry, what_ was_ it? |
28345 | Goin''on in German? 28345 Gone to sea, Gerry? |
28345 | Got it? 28345 Had he fainted?" |
28345 | Had n''t the Reverend Decimus a swarm of brats? |
28345 | Had n''t we better go on to the fugue? 28345 Has anything come back to you, so far, that will unsettle your present life?" |
28345 | Has he ever resuscitated a drowned person? |
28345 | Has he gone home to his club? |
28345 | Has he had any brandy? |
28345 | Has she never told you that before? |
28345 | Hate what? 28345 Have I asked you to do so?" |
28345 | Have I not expressly said that she has done nothing whatever? 28345 Have I said this to you, Mr. Wilson, or have I not?" |
28345 | Have n''t I? |
28345 | Have n''t I? |
28345 | Have n''t you slept? |
28345 | Have some eau- de- Cologne? |
28345 | Have you any relations living in England? |
28345 | Have you got it? |
28345 | Have you got it? |
28345 | Have you never seen his portrait? |
28345 | He divorced you? |
28345 | He dresses up like his aunt, does n''t he? |
28345 | He wishes you not to do so? |
28345 | He''s been taken? 28345 He_ has_ told you more?" |
28345 | Headache, mammy dear? |
28345 | Honour bright? |
28345 | How am I to put all that? |
28345 | How came we to find each other again, I mean? |
28345 | How can that be? |
28345 | How can you be such a_ goose_, Jeremiah? |
28345 | How comes he to be such a magnificent violinist? 28345 How could I, with a fat, pink party drying himself next door? |
28345 | How do you know that? |
28345 | How do you know they are all nonsense, Gerry darling? |
28345 | How do you know you wo n''t? |
28345 | How do you know, dear? |
28345 | How do you mean? |
28345 | How do you_ know_? 28345 How does he come to know so much about it? |
28345 | How long can you be away? 28345 How long did you talk about that?" |
28345 | How many did he give you, Gerry? 28345 How much did Sally tell you?" |
28345 | How much is it? |
28345 | How much was it, Sarah? |
28345 | How old was I? |
28345 | How on earth can_ I_ tell, Tishy dear? 28345 How shall Sally be told of this? |
28345 | How shall we return his civility? |
28345 | How should I know? 28345 How should you go about it? |
28345 | How the best time of the morning, chick? |
28345 | How_ can_ you tell that,said he,"unless you know who she ought to have been?" |
28345 | I do n''t see why he should n''t.... Why should he disbelieve more than...? 28345 I mean this-- if he is n''t a gentleman, how comes it that he is n''t ashamed of being a haberdasher? |
28345 | I said, suppose it turned out that modern science was tommy- rot, would n''t he feel like a fool when all was said and done? 28345 I see, you little ducky, of course her head had come off, and she could n''t cry till it was put on, was that it? |
28345 | I shall ask it you in the end, so why not now? |
28345 | I should say_ now_,she says, after thinking it over,"that-- only I never noticed it at the time, you know----""That what?" |
28345 | I suppose you know what that young man is, dear? |
28345 | I suppose you''ll admit there_ are_ such things as social distinctions? |
28345 | I suppose,we suggested,"that the young woman threatened to be a formidable rival, as there was a row?" |
28345 | I was always what? |
28345 | I wonder when Paganini''s young woman''s row with her mother''s going to come off-- to- day or to- morrow? |
28345 | I wonder whether they heard him at Altdorf? |
28345 | I wonder whether you''re thinking of the same thing as I am? |
28345 | I wonder why they call that stuff''honesty,''Miss Sally? |
28345 | I wonder,half said, half thought he to himself,"I wonder who or what he really is?... |
28345 | If we could trust to it? 28345 If you do n''t know, dear, how should I?" |
28345 | In connexion with his intention about me? |
28345 | Is Sally there?... 28345 Is anything the matter?" |
28345 | Is he ill? |
28345 | Is he worse? |
28345 | Is it another...? |
28345 | Is it so_ very_ improbable that you were familiar with the name Gerry too? 28345 Is n''t it awful, the noise? |
28345 | Is n''t that Old Jack choking? 28345 Is n''t that St. John''s Church?" |
28345 | Is n''t that him? |
28345 | Is n''t that the omnibus? |
28345 | Is n''t that them coming, Tish? |
28345 | Is n''t which St. John''s Church? |
28345 | Is she going to turn the cab round and bring him to the house, after all? |
28345 | Is that Rosey? 28345 Is that all?" |
28345 | Is that his daughter that swims?... 28345 Is their mother still living?" |
28345 | Is there a chance? |
28345 | Is this the Strad? 28345 It was old Major Roper told mamma-- with blue pockets under his eyes and red all over, creeks and wheezes when he speaks-- do you know him?" |
28345 | It''s rather awful, is n''t it? |
28345 | Jeremiah wants to know whether you do n''t think Tishy''s male parent would be jolly glad if she and Julius took the bit in their teeth and bolted? |
28345 | Like the mock- turtle in Alice? |
28345 | Looks up at times to see if he''s going on? |
28345 | Major Lund? |
28345 | Make all the difference? 28345 Mamma, dear, how_ should_ I know his name? |
28345 | May I talk to him about it?--speak openly to him? |
28345 | Miss who? |
28345 | Mother darling, if Mr. Fenwick was to make you an offer, how should you like it? |
28345 | Mother? 28345 Mr. Shoosmith does n''t seem a very promising sort? |
28345 | My dear Conrad,_ is it likely_ I should talk such nonsense? 28345 My dear child,_ is_ this the place to talk about things in? |
28345 | My dearest, you never got my telegram? |
28345 | My medical adviser? 28345 My mummar says-- my mummar says-- my mummar says....""Yes-- little pet-- what does she say?" |
28345 | No, darling child, what should be wrong? 28345 No-- what letter?" |
28345 | No-- what_ was_ she thinking of? |
28345 | Not really Harrisson? 28345 Not rushin''at her, you know, and sayin'',''Who the dooce was it married you, ma''am?'' |
28345 | Not?--not_ at all_? |
28345 | Now, Gerry, was it that made you so glum on Monday when you came back? 28345 Now, Major dear, why not admit it when you know it''s true? |
28345 | Now, Tishy dear, is that an insinuation, or is n''t it? 28345 Now, are you ready, Miss Prince? |
28345 | Now, is n''t that like mamma? |
28345 | Now? 28345 Oh yes-- but it was my fault all the same-- for-- for----""Yes-- I beg your pardon? |
28345 | Oh yes; do n''t you know? 28345 Oh, Major dear, did you hear us? |
28345 | Oh, Sally-- dearest love-- how can it? |
28345 | Oh, here you are, chick!--how long have you been in? 28345 Oh, is that you? |
28345 | Oh, you counted him in? |
28345 | Oh-- papa? 28345 Ought I to tell her? |
28345 | Ought there to be... anything to think about? |
28345 | Party from this hotel? |
28345 | Perhaps you''re a Catholic all the while, without knowing it? |
28345 | Perhaps your name is n''t Fenwick, but Harrington or Carrington? |
28345 | Peter Burtenshaw? |
28345 | Poorer than usual, Sarah? |
28345 | Pyramus and Thisbe? |
28345 | Remember the Baron? 28345 Sally dear, when will you learn to be more refined in your ways of speech? |
28345 | Saw Tishy what, kitten? |
28345 | Say anything? 28345 Say what, papa?" |
28345 | Sha n''t I carry of''em outside, missis? |
28345 | Shall I go now, Gerry, to see? |
28345 | Shall we tell Sally? |
28345 | Shall you write and say you''re coming? |
28345 | She''d got some one else in view then? |
28345 | Should you have minded if he had? |
28345 | Since you left Mr. Pilkington-- your friend at the hotel-- didn''t you say the name Pilkington? |
28345 | So why not now? |
28345 | Stop his whatting? |
28345 | Suppose every one let their fires out, would n''t the fog go? 28345 Supposin''I do, why should n''t I?" |
28345 | Taken scrupulous, are we, all of a sudden? |
28345 | That was my grandfather? |
28345 | That was what you and little fiddle- stick''s- end were talking about till three in the morning, then? |
28345 | The Haliburtons? 28345 The cat did n''t get the robin, Sally?" |
28345 | The man outside? 28345 The poor darling money? |
28345 | The poor thing is my hypothetical wife? |
28345 | The tiger- shootin''? 28345 Then that must have been_ you_ last night, Bradshaw?" |
28345 | There was a divorce, then? |
28345 | They''re not bringing him here? |
28345 | They?... 28345 Thinks what?" |
28345 | This ring? 28345 Tired, dearest?" |
28345 | Tired, mammy darling? |
28345 | Tishy and her Bradshaw? 28345 Tishy dear, do you mean to go on like that, when I''m a hundred and you are a hundred and five?" |
28345 | To your husband? |
28345 | Troublesome, madame? |
28345 | Very like? |
28345 | Very well, then; why not wear it? |
28345 | Was ever a poor girl so sat upon? 28345 Was he in it?" |
28345 | Was it before he and mother fell out? |
28345 | Was it before or after I said that about your hair? |
28345 | Was it out in the garden at K. Villa? 28345 Was it some man that was after Tishy?" |
28345 | Was it very funny, chick? |
28345 | Was it? |
28345 | Was n''t he angry? 28345 Was n''t it, as things go, rather a malicious way of putting it-- on their part?" |
28345 | Was n''t that what this row was about, then? |
28345 | Was that before I was born? |
28345 | Was that quite all? |
28345 | Was there anything else? |
28345 | We''ll forget the old story, wo n''t we, and only think of_ now_? 28345 Wear_ what_?" |
28345 | Well, I mean what steps could be taken if it were...? |
28345 | Well, Jeremiah, and what have_ you_ got to say for yourself? |
28345 | Well, but-- hang it!--_when?_"Do not use profane language, Conrad, in your mother''s presence. 28345 Well, dear mammy, what was it, really now?" |
28345 | Well, dear, I suppose you know what half the divorce- cases are about? |
28345 | Well, doctor? |
28345 | Well, have we found it? |
28345 | Well, mother dear, what was it you really did say about the Fenwick engagement? |
28345 | Well, now-- why did n''t I? |
28345 | Well, then, how about who''s married whom? |
28345 | Well, what shall we put her down as? 28345 What I want to know is, what put it into your head_ now_, more than any other time?" |
28345 | What about it? 28345 What about, indeed? |
28345 | What about? |
28345 | What about? |
28345 | What am I? |
28345 | What are we going to do to- day? |
28345 | What are you? |
28345 | What baby? |
28345 | What business have you to smile at me, Jeremiah? |
28345 | What can I say? |
28345 | What did Dr. Vereker say, Sally dear? |
28345 | What did Jane say was a good job? 28345 What did he make of Hamlet?" |
28345 | What did he say? |
28345 | What did she say, child? |
28345 | What did the mother do? 28345 What did the party mean that let me in, mother darling? |
28345 | What did you come for, mammy? |
28345 | What did you say? |
28345 | What do you call him? 28345 What do you really think about ghosts?" |
28345 | What do you suppose the Professor will say? |
28345 | What do you think he''ll say now? |
28345 | What do you think your father will say? |
28345 | What do you think, mother? |
28345 | What do you understand? |
28345 | What do you want to speak to me about? |
28345 | What do you want? |
28345 | What do you wish me to do? 28345 What do_ you_ think, kitten?" |
28345 | What does Vereker say? |
28345 | What does she want you to say, papa? |
28345 | What does the Professor think about him? |
28345 | What does your mother say? |
28345 | What else can we call it? 28345 What fault have you to find with him?" |
28345 | What for, papa? |
28345 | What have you recollected? |
28345 | What idea? |
28345 | What is it ye say, master? 28345 What is it, Gerry darling? |
28345 | What is it, Major dear?... 28345 What is it, dear?" |
28345 | What is it, kitten? |
28345 | What is it? |
28345 | What is it? |
28345 | What is the longest time... the longest time...? |
28345 | What is your father talking about over there? 28345 What is''almost knowing''? |
28345 | What made you leave off so suddenly? |
28345 | What makes mother look so serious sometimes, kitten? 28345 What o''clock is it?" |
28345 | What on earth did he mean? |
28345 | What promise? |
28345 | What shall you do when you go back? 28345 What shall you say to her?" |
28345 | What sort of thing? 28345 What was it made me say that to you about something I would tell you? |
28345 | What was it you wished I would n''t, Miss Sally? |
28345 | What was it, then, if it was n''t drink? |
28345 | What was it? 28345 What was it?" |
28345 | What was the name you had in America? |
28345 | What was what, dear? |
28345 | What were you and Jeremiah talking about the day before yesterday, when you went that long walk? |
28345 | What were you and Mr. Fenwick talking about so seriously in the back drawing- room? |
28345 | What were you and the doctor talking about in the boat all that long time yesterday? |
28345 | What were you saying about French? |
28345 | What''s become of my step- parent? 28345 What''s he got that great big ring on his thumb for?" |
28345 | What''s it all about? |
28345 | What''s my maternal parent thinking about, as grave as a judge? 28345 What''s not fair?" |
28345 | What''s that, darling? 28345 What''s that, mother? |
28345 | What''s the kitten after, out in the cold? 28345 What''s the lawyer''s name?" |
28345 | What''s the man thinking of? 28345 What''s the news, doctor? |
28345 | What''s the other? |
28345 | What''s the question? 28345 What''s what?" |
28345 | What''s''hullo,''Sarah? |
28345 | What, Gerry darling? |
28345 | What, darling? |
28345 | What, dear? |
28345 | What, dear? |
28345 | What, dearest? |
28345 | What, kitten? 28345 What, kitten?" |
28345 | What, kitten? |
28345 | What, my child? |
28345 | What? 28345 What?... |
28345 | What_ is_ the present position of the row? 28345 What_ is_ the usual thing?" |
28345 | What_ will_ the child do next? |
28345 | When have I done so? 28345 When was that?" |
28345 | When was the divorce? |
28345 | When''s it to come off, Sarah-- the Crusade? |
28345 | When? |
28345 | Where Tishy goes? |
28345 | Where are you going afterwards? |
28345 | Where are you going to sleep? |
28345 | Where on earth did you find that? |
28345 | Where was I? 28345 Where was it?" |
28345 | Where was the Major going that he could n''t come? |
28345 | Where? |
28345 | Where_ is_ the doctor, Tish? 28345 Which sort?" |
28345 | Which was the one that shot the tiger two hundred yards off, just behind the ear? |
28345 | Which was the one you do n''t want me to know about? 28345 Which way do you mean? |
28345 | Which? 28345 Who did you have, Sally dear?" |
28345 | Who did you say was going? |
28345 | Who said anything about fruit- farming? |
28345 | Who talked it over? |
28345 | Who were the Clemenceaux at Ontario? |
28345 | Who''d gone? |
28345 | Who''s been heroically rescued? |
28345 | Who''s that talking? |
28345 | Who''s the other cup? |
28345 | Who''s the other party? |
28345 | Who''s your friend? |
28345 | Who_ told_ him? 28345 Whom do you mean by_ she_, Sally?" |
28345 | Whose handwriting is it? |
28345 | Whose name can it be if it is not yours? |
28345 | Why Australia? |
28345 | Why ca n''t she be satisfied with English?... 28345 Why did Major Roper come back? |
28345 | Why did n''t you sing out? |
28345 | Why did n''t you? |
28345 | Why did you come? |
28345 | Why do n''t they chuck each other and have done with it? |
28345 | Why do they call it the_ messe des paresseux_? |
28345 | Why do you call the old lady a dianthus, chick? 28345 Why hesitate?" |
28345 | Why not look on the boxes, you stupid kitten? 28345 Why not look round the corner and see if it is n''t him?" |
28345 | Why not, chick? |
28345 | Why not, darling? 28345 Why not, in Heaven''s name? |
28345 | Why not? 28345 Why not?" |
28345 | Why not? |
28345 | Why should I, dear? 28345 Why should n''t I count him in, if I like?" |
28345 | Why should n''t she? 28345 Why should n''t they?" |
28345 | Why should there be any such thing? |
28345 | Why tell me any more? 28345 Why tell me now? |
28345 | Why was I illogical? 28345 Why, Professor dear, do n''t you know Mrs. Nightingale''s my mother? |
28345 | Why, Sally and her doctor are staring out at the offing...."Well? |
28345 | Why-- he said so little----"But he gave you some impression? |
28345 | Why? 28345 Why? |
28345 | Why? 28345 Why?" |
28345 | Why_ now_? 28345 Will he, dear? |
28345 | Will you not tell me now? 28345 Wo n''t you come and sit in here, to be away from the music?" |
28345 | Would Professor Sales Wilson be very much shocked if his daughter and Paganini made a runaway match of it? |
28345 | Would it not be a little premature for me to say anything to him? |
28345 | Would n''t it be a good way to consider what it is that is really the matter, and make out the statement accordingly? |
28345 | Would n''t it depend entirely on what she was like, when all''s said and done? 28345 Would n''t it what?" |
28345 | Would n''t they make an awfully handsome couple? |
28345 | Would she? 28345 Yes, and suppose all the while I am hating them for dragging me away from you----""From me and Sally?" |
28345 | Yes, but who for? 28345 Yes, darling, what is it?" |
28345 | Yes, love, what? |
28345 | Yes-- Miss Gwendolen Arkwright-- what does she say? |
28345 | Yes----? |
28345 | Yes; you want the letters out? 28345 You agree with Prosy?" |
28345 | You caught him? |
28345 | You did n''t see the other arm at the station, doctor? |
28345 | You do n''t believe a man could forget his wife? |
28345 | You do n''t know them, kitten? |
28345 | You do n''t take to Conrad, somehow? |
28345 | You have divorced him? |
28345 | You know if there was or was n''t a divorce? |
28345 | You know my friend Lætitia Wilson''s mother, Major Roper? |
28345 | You mean, Miss Sally, do I think people talk spitefully of Mrs. Nightingale-- I suppose I must say Mrs. Fenwick now-- behind her back? 28345 You mean, why is n''t Sally like him?" |
28345 | You never learned to swim, then, Gerry----? |
28345 | You really did see my father, though, Major? |
28345 | You remembered the name Algernon clearly? |
28345 | You see, Professor Wilson, if I say yes, it will mean that I have been p- paying my addresses, as the phrase is...."And taking receipts? |
28345 | You think I had better not ask him questions? |
28345 | You think a nervous element comes in?... |
28345 | You think it was just a row? |
28345 | You''re sure they always were quarrelling? |
28345 | You''ve no idea who it is? |
28345 | You_ will_ remember not to say anything, wo n''t you, Sally dear? 28345 _ Am_ I that man? |
28345 | _ Has_ nothing? |
28345 | _ Must n''t_ try it again? |
28345 | _ Not a bit!_ Why should_ anybody_ mind Mr. Fenwick kissing them? 28345 _ The_ one?" |
28345 | _ Tishy!_"What, dear? |
28345 | _ What_ was Tishy''s man''s name-- the other applicant? 28345 _ Why_ do you think I sha n''t get on with her?" |
28345 | ''Beautifully?'' |
28345 | ''But should you turn us out of the house?'' |
28345 | ''But_ should_ you, papa?'' |
28345 | ''Do n''t you know?'' |
28345 | ''Heroic Rescue at St. Sennans''... just under''Startling Elopement at Clapham Rise''.... Got it?" |
28345 | ''Settle what?'' |
28345 | ''Stop a bit,''said I;''what was your father''s name?'' |
28345 | ''What has she been saying to you?'' |
28345 | ''Who was that young beggar now?--inspector-- surveyor-- something of the sort-- up at Umballa in seventy- nine? |
28345 | ''Why make any concealments? |
28345 | ''_ You_ do n''t rec''lect goin''easy over the bridge for to see the shipping? |
28345 | *****"I say, Rosey, when was it you read to me about Mary and the fat boy in''Pickwick''?" |
28345 | *****"Well, then, it''s good- bye, I suppose?" |
28345 | *****"What have you and your medical adviser been talking about all the while, there in mid- ocean?" |
28345 | --with an implication of what of that? |
28345 | A WEEK, AND OF A PLEASANT WALK BACK FROM THE RAILWAY STATION"You never mean to say you''ve been in the water?" |
28345 | A gleam of a solution was supplied to the doctor''s mind when he set himself to answer the question,"How should I have gone about suspecting it?" |
28345 | A guarantee of the latter would have been most to her liking, but how could she hope for that now? |
28345 | A vague impression got in the air that Sally''s father had not been altogether satisfactory-- well, was n''t it true? |
28345 | After all, had he not had( and completely forgotten) recurrences like that of the Baron and the fly- wheel? |
28345 | After all, why should n''t she speak a plain thought to an old friend, as poor Prosy was now? |
28345 | Am I saying that it is? |
28345 | Am I saying that they are?" |
28345 | An altogether new_ she_, or the fires of the volcano, let loose beyond recall? |
28345 | And Fenwick reinforced her with,"Yes, who''s the Crusade to be against, Sarah?" |
28345 | And I do think-- just now-- I should have let you continue believing in the real young lady... only when you said that....""Said what?" |
28345 | And I expect that girl said it when she was herself, whoever she was, and the name Rosalind turned her into you? |
28345 | And Mrs. Lobjoit put on record with an amiable smile that that is what she kept saying to Miss Nightingale,"Why not look?" |
28345 | And Sally subsides, but first makes a stipulation:"You_ will_ sleep in your hair, mother darling, wo n''t you? |
28345 | And Tishy had only been able to begin an apology she was not to be allowed to finish with,"And suppose he has...?" |
28345 | And a moment''s doubt,"But-- has it?" |
28345 | And did Beatrice say she would n''t waltz with him?" |
28345 | And does n''t make matters much better, for her action seems unaccountable to the absent- minded one, who says,"Why?" |
28345 | And from the human creature on her shoulders,"Miss Ninedale says''_ No!_''""Not so bad, you were saying, as...?" |
28345 | And had she not called her venerable sub- dean a withered old sow- thistle? |
28345 | And has it turned out exactly as I expected, or has it not?" |
28345 | And have I lost a moment? |
28345 | And he had changed away so easily to-- who was it? |
28345 | And he had replied:"Do n''t they deserve it?" |
28345 | And how about Julius? |
28345 | And how about his book- keeping? |
28345 | And how came he to know about the_ messe des paresseux_? |
28345 | And how could she know that he had not changed his name? |
28345 | And if he, why not others? |
28345 | And if she did, how live without him?... |
28345 | And if so, why strive to bring back things better forgotten? |
28345 | And leave cards turned up at the corner? |
28345 | And my mother and sister----""Have a claim on you-- is that it?" |
28345 | And my wife I can not....""Why not?" |
28345 | And now-- what? |
28345 | And pull her gloves on to go? |
28345 | And she is a glorious sight as she comes in quite close to the pier- head, and goes into stays--(is that right?) |
28345 | And she--(for it was she, not he:--did you guess wrong?) |
28345 | And stepfather to step- what? |
28345 | And the Major''s"What?" |
28345 | And the dresses were all white-- thin-- tropical....""Then the Mrs. Fenwick that comes out of the train is n''t dressed as she dresses here?" |
28345 | And the other replying:"Do n''t you know''em-- rheumatic rings?" |
28345 | And then her mother says, interrupting the conversation:"What''s that?" |
28345 | And then in reply to her daughter''s,"What''s up, mammy dear?" |
28345 | And then she told how she said to Shoosmith frequent, where was the use of his getting impatient, and exclaimin''the worst expressions? |
28345 | And then when I come back, in ever so many years, I shall find you....""Gone to kingdom come?" |
28345 | And then you''ll be happy, Rosey, eh?" |
28345 | And then?" |
28345 | And was he not then able to reply collectedly and with ease,"She is_ my_ daughter now,"and to feel the power of his choice that it should be so? |
28345 | And we kept you awake? |
28345 | And what can you make of it? |
28345 | And what do you think happened? |
28345 | And what do you think my mind hooked it on to, of all things in the world?" |
28345 | And what should I have done next? |
28345 | And when I taxed him with needless secrecy and mistrust of an old friend, what does the young humbug say? |
28345 | And why live after it? |
28345 | And yet, might it not have been better that he should have died, the innocent child she knew him, than live to follow his father''s footsteps? |
28345 | And you do like?" |
28345 | And you saw how I could ride at Sir Mountmassingham''s last month?" |
28345 | Another cup? |
28345 | Another what? |
28345 | Anything wrong, dear love?" |
28345 | Anything wrong?" |
28345 | Are n''t you?" |
28345 | Are not the motives of purity unimpeachable? |
28345 | Are they all...?" |
28345 | Are they not at it all day long, all of them? |
28345 | Are those the facts-- so far?" |
28345 | Are ye sure, boy?" |
28345 | Are you his Rosey?" |
28345 | Are you ready, Sarah? |
28345 | As for him, did he, we wonder, really exert himself to remember the cab''s number? |
28345 | As for mamma, of course it would n''t be reasonable to expect her to....""To expect her to what?" |
28345 | At which the old General laughs, and says is n''t_ he_? |
28345 | BUT WAS IT EURYDICE OR THE LITTLE BATTERY? |
28345 | BUT WAS IT EURYDICE OR THE LITTLE BATTERY? |
28345 | BUT WHAT BECAME OF HIS HORRIBLE BABY? |
28345 | BUT WHAT BECAME OF HIS HORRIBLE BABY? |
28345 | Because that''s it, I suppose?" |
28345 | Because what?" |
28345 | Because, do you know?..." |
28345 | Because-- how could I have done without you, kitten?" |
28345 | Besides, had he not admitted, in the night, that he"got worried and fidgeted by chaotic ideas"? |
28345 | Besides, would it have been honourable? |
28345 | Besides-- so ran the doctor''s thought-- with her looking like_ that_, what can I do? |
28345 | Both laugh in a way at the name he has made for her; then he adds:"Only....""Only what?" |
28345 | Bradshaw?" |
28345 | Bradshaw?" |
28345 | But I am forgiffen?" |
28345 | But I can quite understand that the young man''s mother, in speaking of it..._ you_ understand?..." |
28345 | But I did n''t tell you all papa said, did I?" |
28345 | But at the name, as it came to his mind, came also the shock of another mystery-- who and what was Sally? |
28345 | But ca n''t you think of bits of history you know quite well, without ever recalling where you got them from?" |
28345 | But did n''t mamma look_ lovely_?... |
28345 | But did you know me at once, darling?" |
28345 | But do tell me, Sally darling, does Mrs. Wilson dislike this young man on his own account, or is it only the shop?" |
28345 | But had she really taken her own measure? |
28345 | But had the others seen''Charley''s Aunt''before?" |
28345 | But had the speaker seen her daughter go by-- the young lady that swam? |
28345 | But has anything made you afraid?" |
28345 | But he detected it, and went on:"Unless, you mean, I remembered the hypothetical wife?..." |
28345 | But he did n''t want Sarah to be obliged to answer, so he went on:"Why are all these young ladies''incomes exactly in round thousands?" |
28345 | But he only says this to show his confidence, do n''t you see? |
28345 | But his brothers, his sisters, how_ could_ he forget_ them_? |
28345 | But how about calling him a shop- boy?" |
28345 | But how be sure he should not wake them? |
28345 | But how could he find it if he did n''t know what it was? |
28345 | But how did you know?" |
28345 | But how if Rosey wrote to him then-- think of it!--under his old name? |
28345 | But if my son misrepresents me, what can I expect from others?" |
28345 | But is his mind easier? |
28345 | But is no compromise possible?" |
28345 | But it_ is_ funny when it''s one''s mother, is n''t it?" |
28345 | But just as St. Sennan ceases, and leaves the air clear for listening, Rosalind exclaims,"Is n''t that it?" |
28345 | But look here, Fenwick-- isn''t what I say true? |
28345 | But she had barely got her head back on her pillow when"Was that you, mother?" |
28345 | But something makes the daughter repeat, as she comes into her mother''s room dry- towelling herself,"You''re sure you do n''t mind, mammy?" |
28345 | But speaking to you-- don''t you see?..." |
28345 | But suppose we have a chance of flying to others we can measure the length and breadth of, and staving off thereby an uncalculable unknown? |
28345 | But that"why should it make me think of lawn- tennis?" |
28345 | But the sudden uprush of the covey of partridges from the stubble, and their bee- line for a haven in the next field-- surely danger lay that way? |
28345 | But the thing that weighted her mind-- oppressed or puzzled her, as might be-- what was it? |
28345 | But then see now, had he not forgotten it already to all outward seeming? |
28345 | But then!--what would the effect be on his present life, in his relation to Rosalind and( almost as important) to Sally? |
28345 | But then, how was she to tell him his name was Palliser? |
28345 | But there''s a thing....""What thing, dear? |
28345 | But was n''t it funny?" |
28345 | But we wonder, is the image our mind forms of Sally''s answer to the third question correct or incorrect? |
28345 | But what did they_ say_, the two of them? |
28345 | But what do you think the boy''s name is?... |
28345 | But what does Dr. Vereker say?" |
28345 | But what is it you wish I would n''t?" |
28345 | But what makes you suppose Tishy Wilson objects to her?" |
28345 | But what on earth were the socks? |
28345 | But what was it made_ you_ think so?" |
28345 | But what was it now? |
28345 | But what was that_ you_ said?" |
28345 | But what was this row really about, that''s the point? |
28345 | But what will become of the money?" |
28345 | But what''s it going to be? |
28345 | But what, in Heaven''s name, was the use of bruising her brains against the conundrums of the great unanswered metaphysical sphinx? |
28345 | But what_ did_ he say?" |
28345 | But why say more than that it is an enormous hotel at the seaside? |
28345 | But why this sudden stirring of his memory, just now of all times? |
28345 | But would that child have been Sally? |
28345 | But you would n''t marry me....""How on earth can you tell, in such a short time? |
28345 | But, I say, Tishy, do you mean to say that Major Roper meant to say that he was out shooting with my father and did n''t know what his name was?" |
28345 | But, then, how about Sally? |
28345 | But, then, was not Sally a baby of three once? |
28345 | But, then, who could?" |
28345 | But, turning to him with her hand on the door, and asking"Shall I go?" |
28345 | But_ what_ does my musical son- in- law think was the little galvanic battery?" |
28345 | By the way, did no one ever ask why should any man, being of sound mind, write the current date on his shirt- sleeve? |
28345 | C.?" |
28345 | CHAPTER XLVII WAS IT THE LITTLE GALVANIC BATTERY? |
28345 | Can I do anything for you?" |
28345 | Can any one tell him what it is has happened? |
28345 | Can not most of us recall things unquestioned in our youth that we have marvelled at our passive acceptance of since? |
28345 | Can they be shoed at all? |
28345 | Can you really ask me,''When?'' |
28345 | Chemical oatmeal, mother, for invalids and persons of delicate digestion? |
28345 | Chronic arthritis-- spinal curvature-- tuberculosis of the cervical vertebræ?" |
28345 | Coffee, Gerry?" |
28345 | Come, Tishy, did you, or did n''t you?" |
28345 | Conrad?" |
28345 | Conrad?" |
28345 | Cook remarked she knew how it would be-- there was the doctor picking up like-- and had n''t she told Craddock so? |
28345 | Could any clearer proof be given that it was mere brain- froth? |
28345 | Could anything that you can imagine? |
28345 | Could he have got the story right? |
28345 | Could he not, when he was actually ready to trust him with-- Sally? |
28345 | Could her position be borne at all? |
28345 | Could it be a change for the better? |
28345 | Could n''t anything be fished out in the granny connexion? |
28345 | Could she?" |
28345 | Could that be pity she saw in them-- pity for_ her_? |
28345 | Could you call in again-- well, a little before our closing time?" |
28345 | Did he ever do so?" |
28345 | Did he really forget as much as he said he did? |
28345 | Did he say by any chance Harrisson, not Alison? |
28345 | Did he understand that? |
28345 | Did it go any further, or die out completely?" |
28345 | Did n''t he say he was coming?" |
28345 | Did n''t that show what nonsense old Major Roper''s story was? |
28345 | Did n''t ye, ye young sculping? |
28345 | Did not Sally wish the handmaiden a merry Christmas? |
28345 | Did she marry him?" |
28345 | Did she tell you what it was?" |
28345 | Did that good woman in all she said to- night-- all the time she was jawing-- did she once lose sight of her meritorious attitude?" |
28345 | Did the reality with which she spoke impress Sally more than the mere words, which were no more than"common form"of conversation? |
28345 | Did you ask him?" |
28345 | Did you ever have a quarter of an hour of absolutely unalloyed happiness? |
28345 | Did you hear what he said about his daughter? |
28345 | Did you know an Algernon?" |
28345 | Did you, so watching, feel-- not the tedium-- but the maddening speed of the hours, the cruelty of the striking clocks? |
28345 | Do n''t analyse it now; take it all for granted-- you understand?" |
28345 | Do n''t look so thunderstruck, old chap-- Shall I be that man again or not?" |
28345 | Do n''t you know? |
28345 | Do n''t you rec''lect that?'' |
28345 | Do n''t you remember? |
28345 | Do n''t you?... |
28345 | Do they do anything but waver? |
28345 | Do you know who it is?" |
28345 | Do you mean Major Roper?" |
28345 | Do you mean it?" |
28345 | Do you mind?" |
28345 | Do you recollect?" |
28345 | Do you remember Mr. Fenwick''s bottle of eau- de- Cologne?" |
28345 | Do you remember? |
28345 | Do you shake your head, and deny it? |
28345 | Do you think I could ask, mother?" |
28345 | Do you think I do n''t know? |
28345 | Do you understand me?" |
28345 | Do you understand?" |
28345 | Do you-- you who read-- find this so very difficult to understand? |
28345 | Does he know, I wonder, that the other was Algernon?" |
28345 | Does he look pale?--thinks Rosalind-- or is it only the vanished glow? |
28345 | Does his wife sell doll''s clothes?" |
28345 | Does not anything in the image of the railway- station give a clue to its whereabouts?" |
28345 | Does she really look serious though? |
28345 | Each time to ask anew, what could it all mean? |
28345 | Eh, missy?" |
28345 | Eight weeks after the latter( or the former?) |
28345 | Equally true of all faces of forty, do we understand you to say? |
28345 | Even mamma( she''s fond of music-- it''s her only good quality-- and where should I get mine from if she was n''t?) |
28345 | Even with the understanding of a man, would he have been any nearer seeing into the mystery of a girl''s heart? |
28345 | Every evening, perhaps-- who knows? |
28345 | Except he told it, who should know that he was Harrisson? |
28345 | Fenwick burst into a great laugh, and exclaimed,"What on earth are we all torturing ourselves for? |
28345 | Fenwick ran this through in a breath; and the doctor, a little hazy in school- memories of the classics, said,"What''s that?" |
28345 | Fenwick says, adding after consideration:"I think we had sooner keep our daughter, eh, Rosey?" |
28345 | Fenwick took it all as a matter of course, mere chaff.... Did he? |
28345 | Fenwick, of course, could not ask the question:"Did I pawn this watch?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | Fenwick?" |
28345 | For did not Sally come to us out of the cloud, and could we do without her?" |
28345 | For did not the wraith of his present wife quietly take its place before the altar where by rights he should have been able to recall her predecessor? |
28345 | For instance?" |
28345 | Forty pounds a year?" |
28345 | Gaffer Fenwick? |
28345 | Go straight there?" |
28345 | Got it?" |
28345 | Got whom out? |
28345 | HOW ABOUT THE POOR OLD FURNITURE? |
28345 | HOW ABOUT THE POOR OLD FURNITURE? |
28345 | Had a life been lost? |
28345 | Had anything unusual happened lately? |
28345 | Had he been a fool after all? |
28345 | Had he ever spoken of one in her presence? |
28345 | Had he taken the number of the cab? |
28345 | Had n''t they as good as talked it all over already? |
28345 | Had she ever been right? |
28345 | Had she not changed hers? |
28345 | Had the breed wearied of it? |
28345 | Had the threat_ ever_ been carried out? |
28345 | Harrisson?" |
28345 | Has anything happened? |
28345 | Has he remembered a lot more, and not told?" |
28345 | Has it come?" |
28345 | Have I not, on the contrary, from the very beginning told you I should take the first opportunity of disbelieving so absurd and mischievous a story? |
28345 | Have I said that any one has done so? |
28345 | Have I used the expression''private marriage''?" |
28345 | Have n''t we, Gaffer Fenwick?" |
28345 | Have some more port? |
28345 | Have they quarrelled? |
28345 | Have we not felt inflated when a relation of ours has had a letter to a newspaper inserted, in real print, with his own name as bold as brass? |
28345 | Have ye the brandy, Tom?" |
28345 | Have you a safety- pin?" |
28345 | Have you forgotten Diedrich Kreutzkammer?" |
28345 | Have you quarrelled with your mother?" |
28345 | Have_ you_ noticed anything?" |
28345 | He approached the subject abruptly:"Well, it''s Lætitia, I understand, that we''re making up to, eh?" |
28345 | He does, however, ask absently, what sort of way did he speak of her in the train? |
28345 | He ended with,"What have you to say to that, Jake Tracy?" |
28345 | He felt very unsafe, and could only repeat them half interrogatively,"As if Mrs. Nightingale was a real widow?" |
28345 | He had only to remain inanimate, and what could a( presumably) widow lady with one small daughter do against him? |
28345 | He is all but head over ears in love with Sally-- so why pretend? |
28345 | He meant like a waistband-- separate-- don''t you see?" |
28345 | He remained silent again for a little space, holding her hand, and then said suddenly:"It_ has_ happened, has it not? |
28345 | He said,"What did you do that for, Sarah? |
28345 | He was n''t able to speak for ever so long after that, and this time he is trying to say something...."What is it, dear?" |
28345 | He was really a very nice fellow, haberdasher or no, was n''t he, mother? |
28345 | He''s a tailor, is n''t he?" |
28345 | He''s always so kind, you know, and he knew the station people, so....""Where is he now?" |
28345 | His discretion was not on the alert on this occasion, for he incautiously asked,"When?" |
28345 | His"_ What_ is it?" |
28345 | How about his parents? |
28345 | How about his schooldays? |
28345 | How about inheritance? |
28345 | How came Sally in that train?" |
28345 | How came he not to have forgotten his languages he was so fluent with? |
28345 | How came no one of them all to put two and two together? |
28345 | How came_ you_ to know all the vulgar nigger- songs?... |
28345 | How can we limit the possible to the conditional- præter- pluperfect tense? |
28345 | How can you do otherwise than blame me?" |
28345 | How can you help it?" |
28345 | How could I have borne it-- gone on at all-- with you married to any one else?" |
28345 | How could he remember the_ messe des paresseux_, and keep his mind a blank about how he came to know of it? |
28345 | How could he sleep when now and then it jerked him so? |
28345 | How could he tell? |
28345 | How could it be better? |
28345 | How could it be else, when each one of them might have heralded a hope and did not; when each bequeathed its little legacy of despair? |
28345 | How could it be otherwise when he still was unable to force it back beyond a certain limit? |
28345 | How could mamma have been Mrs. Graythorpe if her husband''s name had been Palliser? |
28345 | How could she guard against a repetition, in some form or other, of the disastrous errors of that unhappy time? |
28345 | How could she have told him of it? |
28345 | How could such an imperfect memory- record be said to prove anything without confirmation from without? |
28345 | How could they even know that this oblivion was altogether genuine? |
28345 | How dare you speak to my wife like that?" |
28345 | How did I recognise him? |
28345 | How did_ she_ know? |
28345 | How do I know? |
28345 | How do we know she was not in love with him already? |
28345 | How do you know?" |
28345 | How does he come in?" |
28345 | How ever shall I make it up to him? |
28345 | How far did you go?" |
28345 | How far had he penetrated into his own past? |
28345 | How far this was true, who can say? |
28345 | How has he been taken?" |
28345 | How he wished he could ask:"Was one of them her father?" |
28345 | How if he were to blunder into ascribing to her something more culpable than her actual share in the past? |
28345 | How is he?" |
28345 | How long was he insensible?" |
28345 | How long was it, Major, before they parted? |
28345 | How much will you have? |
28345 | How should I be the gainer if it made Rosey unhappy?" |
28345 | How should she set about it? |
28345 | How would_ you_ like to do it yourself?" |
28345 | How''s Mrs. Vereker this morning?" |
28345 | How''s the Major?" |
28345 | How, indeed? |
28345 | How_ can_ you know that, and not know....""How I came by it? |
28345 | However, there''s tea coming; perhaps you''ll go so far as a cup of tea? |
28345 | Hullo!--what''s this? |
28345 | I do n''t know whether I ought to say I am afraid or I hope it is so....""But are you sure it is so?" |
28345 | I do not wish to lay myself open to ridicule for my old- fashioned opinions.... What_ is_ it? |
28345 | I had told him all, do n''t you see? |
28345 | I hope he has promised not to do so any more?" |
28345 | I hope you blew him well up?" |
28345 | I know my place.... We- ell, you know what a dianthus''s figure is like? |
28345 | I mean ought I to say''I_ am_ that man''? |
28345 | I mean, has Lætitia done wisely to quarrel with her family?" |
28345 | I meant excluded from participation in himself... you see?" |
28345 | I said to him,''Who''s the poor pretty little mother, General?'' |
28345 | I said,''What is it, papa?'' |
28345 | I say, mother dearest....""What, kitten?" |
28345 | I say, mother, is n''t it deliciously smooth?" |
28345 | I say, mother----""What, dear?" |
28345 | I say, mother....""What, chick?" |
28345 | I should never have found you and Sally....""Were you poor, Gerry darling?" |
28345 | I suppose he''s told you about the epileptiform disorders?" |
28345 | I suppose your mother''s about that?" |
28345 | I think I meant-- is there a station at Bond Street?" |
28345 | I told you about that letter?" |
28345 | I wonder how and when I became such a dab at it?" |
28345 | I wonder if anything''s the matter?" |
28345 | I wonder were you so before the accident? |
28345 | I wonder where they''ve got to?" |
28345 | I would rather remain quite in the dark-- unless, indeed----""Unless what?" |
28345 | I''m sure I heard Dr. Vereker''s voice----""How could you? |
28345 | IS NOT LOVE BETTER THAN MONEY? |
28345 | IS NOT LOVE BETTER THAN MONEY? |
28345 | If I were to write out_ no_ to you in India-- a great big final NO-- then what do you think you would do?" |
28345 | If Saratoga, why not Krakatoa? |
28345 | If he can say good- bye and rush away just as Sally does the same, why then they will meet outside, do n''t you see? |
28345 | If he did, what was to prevent his following it up? |
28345 | If he had received such a letter from her then, might it not all have been different? |
28345 | If her knowledge were shared with another, how could examination and analysis be avoided? |
28345 | If she were to lose Sally or Gerry, would she ever be able to talk like this, even if she lived to be ninety- nine? |
28345 | If so, might not that account for a rather forbidding or opposive attitude on the Yard''s part? |
28345 | If so, what should she-- what could she do? |
28345 | If the girl, who supposes herself to be the daughter of her mother''s husband, tries to run you into a corner-- you understand?" |
28345 | If the stories are really true, were they not possessed by evil spirits? |
28345 | If the twenty years of oblivion concealed irregularity, immorality-- well, was she not to blame for it? |
28345 | If you heard the name now, would you recollect it?" |
28345 | In the daytime?" |
28345 | In the face of that, what was the worth of anything he should recollect now, that he should not discard it as a mere phantasm, for her sake? |
28345 | Introdooce you? |
28345 | Is Oughtred his only name?" |
28345 | Is anything wrong, doctor?" |
28345 | Is it all true, or am I dreaming?" |
28345 | Is it late?" |
28345 | Is it not a little unfeeling to ask me what it is all about when you know?" |
28345 | Is it possible that some of her reckless escapades have_ froissé_''d her mother? |
28345 | Is it wonderful that I abstain from speaking, as I so often do? |
28345 | Is n''t he a water- ouzel?" |
28345 | Is n''t it funny?" |
28345 | Is n''t that Major Roper coming now?" |
28345 | Is n''t that him, in the smoking- room?" |
28345 | Is n''t that queer? |
28345 | Is n''t that the sort of question?" |
28345 | Is n''t that them coming to meet us?" |
28345 | Is she not herself a mother, and bound to take part with her kind, however obese? |
28345 | Is that a Mossoo cigar? |
28345 | Is that all you''ve got left?" |
28345 | Is that it?" |
28345 | Is that it?" |
28345 | Is that the idea? |
28345 | Is the date fixed?" |
28345 | Is there anything further you would really like me to know?" |
28345 | It does not really matter who were the speakers, nor what the share of each was in the following aggregate:"How did you manage to get it arranged?" |
28345 | It is on the Major''s lips to say,"Before the proceedings?" |
28345 | It may even be that the partial and distorted images of events such as he has been speaking of to me....""I must n''t ask you what they were?... |
28345 | It might easily have been so at first, but who could say how much of his past had come back to him during the last six months? |
28345 | It presents her to us as answering rather petulantly:"Why_ should n''t_ Dr. Conrad marry Miss Peplow, if he likes, and_ she_ likes? |
28345 | It was Palliser... that was right, was n''t it?" |
28345 | It was he brought the gentleman ashore....""Where is the gentleman?" |
28345 | It was so often her pack that there must have been an unfair allotment of knaves in it when dealt-- you know what that means in beggar- my- neighbour? |
28345 | It was yesterday morning, was n''t it?" |
28345 | It''s all his mother, you know... what is?... |
28345 | It''s awful because she is n''t_ fiancée_, or awful because she might be at any minute?" |
28345 | It''s not from Cattley''s?" |
28345 | It_ was_ Palliser, was n''t it?" |
28345 | Julius and I were walking up the avenue-- you know....""The one that goes up and across, and comes straight like this?" |
28345 | Just after you left us, when we were throwing stones in the sea, last night....""Throwing stones in the sea?..." |
28345 | Just like ice.... What, mother?" |
28345 | Lætitia says time will show, and Sally says,"Show what?" |
28345 | Macmorrough?'' |
28345 | May she not have written one? |
28345 | Meanwhile, what was there for it but patience? |
28345 | Might it not be better, after all, to dash at the position and capture it while her forces were well under control? |
28345 | Might it not even raise the question,"What does a cloud of twenty years ago matter at all?" |
28345 | Might not one branch of that tree be a terrible branch-- one whose leaves and fruit were poisoned and whose stem was clothed with thorns? |
28345 | Might she not lose him again, as she lost him then? |
28345 | Might she not lose him again? |
28345 | Monday, wo n''t it be? |
28345 | My mummar says-- see-- sall-- div me a penny....""To galvanise dolly? |
28345 | My pocky- anky?... |
28345 | Need she rouse or disturb the watcher by his side? |
28345 | Nightingale?" |
28345 | No documents?" |
28345 | No, but seriously--_why_ did you think I should n''t get on well with your mother?" |
28345 | Nobody ever called him anything but"the Major,"and he would as soon have asked"Major what?" |
28345 | Nor yet the little narrer court right- hand side of the road, with an iron post under an arch and parties hollerin''murder at the far end? |
28345 | Nor yet the way you held him in hand and played him? |
28345 | Nor yet what you sampled him out at the finish? |
28345 | Nor you, Mr. Bilkington? |
28345 | Nor you, Mrs. Prown? |
28345 | Not for the worlt? |
28345 | Not our pussy, was it?" |
28345 | Not there? |
28345 | Not your father?" |
28345 | Nothing like it since Orpheus and Eurydice-- only this time it was Proserpine, not Pluto, that had to be put to sleep.... What''s the matter, darling? |
28345 | Nothing wrong, is there?" |
28345 | Now try and tell me-- have you remembered_ all_?" |
28345 | Now what_ is_ that baby talking about down there?" |
28345 | Now you''ll say that was me, I suppose?" |
28345 | Now, how about Puckeridge, Limited?" |
28345 | Now, what do you think you can take-- to eat or drink?" |
28345 | Now, what_ was_ his confounded name? |
28345 | Of course, his relations would... do n''t you see?..." |
28345 | Of course, she never came upstairs to see what rooms were empty; why should she? |
28345 | Oh no!--why should I? |
28345 | Oh yes, there was!--a friend of Diedrich''s....""Has it come back, I mean, since you left the house? |
28345 | Oh, Major, Major, why_ did n''t_ you make yourself some toddy? |
28345 | Oh, how could I? |
28345 | Oh, you must, you_ must_ remember about the name Nightingale?" |
28345 | On this occasion Lætitia''s literal transmission of"_ Are_ you going to help the tongue or not, papa?" |
28345 | Only I''ll be hanged if I see why Tishy Wilson is to be hauled over the coals?" |
28345 | Only Rosey was so confident...._ Could_ a woman of her age feel so sure and be misled?" |
28345 | Only she wants to run with the hare and explain to the hounds when they come up.... What happened next? |
28345 | Only there''s something I wanted to say about... about....""About Sally?" |
28345 | Only you never told me about him; now, did you?" |
28345 | Only you wo n''t speak to her at all, will you?" |
28345 | Only, could it remain so? |
28345 | Or false hope, should I say?" |
28345 | Or have they since come to be possessed by better ones than their normal stock- in- trade? |
28345 | Or how to Sally? |
28345 | Or is it only the sunset? |
28345 | Or is it"Pilgrim''s Progress,"and no Bible at all? |
28345 | Or merely his generally handsome face and courteous manner? |
28345 | Or was it more? |
28345 | Or was it the tone of his voice-- a musical one enough? |
28345 | Or was it...?" |
28345 | Or, at least, do it up, and not that hateful nightcap?" |
28345 | Or, if it did n''t, where was that safety- pin that was on her dressing- table yesterday? |
28345 | Ought not Rosalind to tell the news that has just reached her? |
28345 | Overboard in mid- ocean, and none to help, and not a spar, would you soonest drown, end on, or have to fight for it, like it or no?" |
28345 | People_ do_ sign for firms, do n''t they?" |
28345 | Perhaps about the time Miss Wilson came in( just as he was showing how carefully he had listened to Joachim) and said could_ he_ play those? |
28345 | Poor dolly coming out?" |
28345 | Presently Fenwick said:"Now, who''s coming for a walk with me?" |
28345 | Presently his son shouted again, and he answered,"Not there, is she? |
28345 | Presently the old man, who had closed his eyes as though dozing, opened them and said:"Have you put them on the fire?" |
28345 | Remember,_ I_ know nothing; I''m only tellin''what was said at the time.... Now, whatever was her name? |
28345 | Reverend Samuel who?" |
28345 | Rosalind asks further:"Was he dead?" |
28345 | Rosalind found herself asking of each new thing as it arose:"Will this bring anything fresh to his mind, or will it pass?" |
28345 | Rosalind had her own share of feminine curiosity, do n''t you see? |
28345 | Sally evaded giving testimony by raising other questions:"What did your father say?" |
28345 | Sally gets the viola in place for a start, and asks is her friend ready? |
28345 | Sally goes on, half_ sotto voce_:"You can recollect your own name, I suppose?" |
28345 | Sally is nineteen-- you remember her birthday?" |
28345 | Sally takes the card and looks at it, and her mother says,"Well, Sally?" |
28345 | Sally then said, might she look at it? |
28345 | Sally was feeling greatly relieved, and showed it in the way she added:"Now, does n''t that just show what a parcel of nonsense the whole story is?" |
28345 | Sally''s was:"But are you the Julius Bradshaws, or are you not? |
28345 | Sally, feeling that the interest of either in the church was really perfunctory, said vaguely-- did they? |
28345 | Sennans?" |
28345 | Sha n''t be sorry... when it''s over.... Rosey girl, I want you to do something for me.... Is my watch there, with the keys?" |
28345 | Sha n''t we catch it?" |
28345 | Shall I get_ her_ to tell_ me_?" |
28345 | Shall we, Jeremiah? |
28345 | She asked again of the woman nearest her,"Do you know who it is?" |
28345 | She asked her mother flatly what could she want to marry again for at her time of life? |
28345 | She asked him why he said that, imitating it; on which he answered,"Why should n''t he?" |
28345 | She could forgive, under guarantees of the sinner''s repentance; for had not her Lord enjoined forgiveness where the bail tendered was sufficient? |
28345 | She could not quite understand the scared look of a girl to whom she said,"Is it a bad accident? |
28345 | She had no time to see a way out of the difficulty before Sally, puzzled, looked at her with:"Better than when? |
28345 | She is now Mrs...?" |
28345 | She might be worth thinking of...."Why do n''t you have him yourself, Sarah?" |
28345 | She said directly, why not come and bring his violin on Wednesday evening at nine? |
28345 | She said to herself:"Foolish fellow, why ca n''t he speak?" |
28345 | She thought he was dropping off, but he roused himself again to say:"What became of poor Palliser-- your husband?" |
28345 | She was half- minded to say to him,"Do you mean that you love me, Fenwick?" |
28345 | She was too full of great events at Ladbroke Grove Road-- the sort of events that are announced with a preliminary, What_ do_ you think, N or M? |
28345 | She went back on little incidents of that early time, asking herself, was it then, or then, I first saw that she was Sally? |
28345 | She''s there all right, I suppose?" |
28345 | Should n''t you say so, though, seriously?" |
28345 | Should you walk into Tattersall''s without a character, and ask for a place?" |
28345 | So long as her hand was in his, so long as her lips were near his own, what did it matter what he recollected? |
28345 | So we wo n''t say anything to mamma, will us, little woman?" |
28345 | Some one had schemed the whole business, clearly, and who else could it be but that woman? |
28345 | Somebody must, or there''d be no one to hook it to.... Have they stopped, I wonder, or are they going to begin again?" |
28345 | Somebody told her-- I wo n''t say who it was-- you do n''t mind?" |
28345 | Speaking to me, what? |
28345 | Stepdaughter or stepson?" |
28345 | Still, it might have happened... but where was the use of begging and borrowing troubles? |
28345 | Stop a bit-- was it Indermaur? |
28345 | Suppose she was to hear to- morrow that Dr. Vereker was engaged to Sylvia Peplow, would she be glad or sorry? |
28345 | Suppose you had a large family, and the nervous affection came back?" |
28345 | Sure you did n''t?" |
28345 | Surely you must remember that? |
28345 | Taking an interest or calling it honesty? |
28345 | That''s the right way to take it, is n''t it?" |
28345 | The General looked at the window and asked a bystander what he thought, sir? |
28345 | The Major would have said at once:"Why not tell him all this Baron told you, and see if it would n''t bring all his life back to him?" |
28345 | The Octopus could recollect all about it no doubt, but how venture to apply to her? |
28345 | The doctor asked, Was n''t a sovereign a large order? |
28345 | The doctor did not recover his speech before Fenwick spoke again:"Why should I claim all my property? |
28345 | The doctor resisted a temptation to ask,"From the very beginning of_ what_?" |
28345 | The fusty party? |
28345 | The loss of the husband whom every day taught her to love more dearly, or the task of explaining the cause of her loss to Sally? |
28345 | The man asked why? |
28345 | The only thing that puzzled Sally was, where on earth did he get the money to buy it? |
28345 | The question had been:--Was it invariable that all men quarrelled if one saved the other from drowning? |
28345 | The question now is, What are we going to do next?" |
28345 | The question now is-- will you, or will you not,_ do_ something?" |
28345 | The sun- ray touched it, last of anything in the room, and died...."What''s that, dear love? |
28345 | The tremor strengthened in her hand and was heard in his voice plainly as he answered with an effort:"What became of the baby?" |
28345 | The young man was really, at the moment, conscious of very little beyond the girl''s fascination, and his reply,"Instead of what?" |
28345 | Then Rosalind said,"Shall I go out and see, now?" |
28345 | Then he asked a natural question-- what_ was_ the little galvanic battery? |
28345 | Then he roused himself, to say, with but little hint in his voice of any sense of the oddity of his question:"Which is my dream?--this or the other?" |
28345 | Then she recollected_ his_ friend''s voice striking in with:"What''s that? |
28345 | Then, calming down:"But you are quite certain_ now_, my dear Lætitia?" |
28345 | There was one thing I wanted to say though just now, and we got off the line-- what was it now? |
28345 | There!--what did I tell you? |
28345 | There_ was_ a baby?" |
28345 | They look at each other, and the woman the cottage seems to belong to says interrogatively,"The young doctor- gentleman?" |
28345 | They were morrows of inextinguishable, indescribable delight for their victims or victim-- for how shall we classify Sally? |
28345 | This Colonel Lund is( have we mentioned this before?) |
28345 | This incredible boy, who deliberately called himself a waif( that was his meaning), was it possible that he had passed through a board- school? |
28345 | This time she does not want it to deadlock the conversation, which is what it usually serves for, so she adds:"You really knew him?" |
28345 | This time, in the church, it may be Sally noticed her mother''s abstraction( or was it, perhaps, devotional tension?) |
28345 | Till then....""Till then what?" |
28345 | Told him what?" |
28345 | Vereker?" |
28345 | Vereker?" |
28345 | Vereker?" |
28345 | Vereker?" |
28345 | Vereker?" |
28345 | Very ill with bronchitis? |
28345 | Very likely they would have understood each other better if they had been a little older and wiser....""Like us?" |
28345 | WAS IT THE LITTLE GALVANIC BATTERY? |
28345 | WHAT''S THE FUSS? |
28345 | WHAT''S THE FUSS? |
28345 | WHICH IS WHICH, NOW OR TWENTY ODD YEARS AGO? |
28345 | WHICH IS WHICH, NOW OR TWENTY ODD YEARS AGO? |
28345 | WHO AMONG US COURTS CATECHISM ABOUT HIMSELF? |
28345 | WHO AMONG US COURTS CATECHISM ABOUT HIMSELF? |
28345 | WHY BOTHER ABOUT HORACE? |
28345 | WHY BOTHER ABOUT HORACE? |
28345 | WHY NOT ABOUT PICKWICK JUST AS MUCH? |
28345 | WHY NOT ABOUT PICKWICK JUST AS MUCH? |
28345 | WOULD ANY OTHER CHILD HAVE BEEN SALLY? |
28345 | WOULD ANY OTHER CHILD HAVE BEEN SALLY? |
28345 | Was I right not to urge delay?... |
28345 | Was I to?" |
28345 | Was St. Sennan glad or sorry, we wonder, when the last two sorts subscribed and restored him? |
28345 | Was any of it true? |
28345 | Was ever a better boy than Gerry, as she knew him, to the day they parted? |
28345 | Was he going to worry himself to recall that which could do him no harm to know? |
28345 | Was he likely to sit by and hear me insulted? |
28345 | Was he speaking the truth? |
28345 | Was it Rayner, or was it Verschoyle? |
28345 | Was it a fight? |
28345 | Was it decent? |
28345 | Was it due to the old attachment of this man and woman-- an attachment, mind you, that was sound and strong till it died a violent death? |
28345 | Was it love, or what? |
28345 | Was it not enough to force a gasp from self- control itself? |
28345 | Was it not of her that Rosey had said, only a few hours since,"_ His_ baby was Sally--_my_ Sallykin"? |
28345 | Was it not possible that if he heard it often enough his past might revive slowly? |
28345 | Was it not the first word I said to Sally Nightingale before you came in, and without a soul in the room to hear? |
28345 | Was it pure accident? |
28345 | Was it the sea bathing?--the sea air? |
28345 | Was it worth recording? |
28345 | Was it, Fenwick wondered, the gipsies they had seen to- day that had made her think of this? |
28345 | Was it?" |
28345 | Was mine a good plan? |
28345 | Was n''t I a handful?" |
28345 | Was n''t I on the morning- watch myself, and beside him four hours of the night before, and turned in at eight bells? |
28345 | Was n''t it aggravating?" |
28345 | Was n''t it foggy?" |
28345 | Was n''t it funny? |
28345 | Was n''t it, Rosey darling?" |
28345 | Was n''t that it?" |
28345 | Was n''t that it?" |
28345 | Was n''t that them coming back? |
28345 | Was n''t that true? |
28345 | Was n''t there a moon? |
28345 | Was n''t what?" |
28345 | Was not this part of his delirium? |
28345 | Was she never to play it with him again? |
28345 | Was she not relying on the house not catching fire instead of negotiating insurance policies or providing fire extinguishers? |
28345 | Was she right in keeping it back now? |
28345 | Was that Sally''s unconscious reason for liking him? |
28345 | Was that white king afloat upon the water still? |
28345 | Was that, she thought, only what so many men say every day to so many women, and mean so little by? |
28345 | Was the last one right?" |
28345 | Was there not still time? |
28345 | Was there not the Octopus? |
28345 | Was there not yet time? |
28345 | Was there nothing he could take that would make him sleep? |
28345 | We confess freely that we should not have known, but what are we? |
28345 | Well, now, what''s the exact state of things between you and Lætitia?" |
28345 | Well, then, what next?" |
28345 | Were there not plenty of Nightingales in the world? |
28345 | What I say is this--(Are you sure Perkins has mixed this medicine the same as the last? |
28345 | What about the everlasting young beggar? |
28345 | What about them?" |
28345 | What about?" |
28345 | What and whence was Sally? |
28345 | What and whence was this little malaprop? |
28345 | What are the things-- I mean, the things he recovers the imperfect versions of? |
28345 | What are you wigging away at her for, mother dear?" |
28345 | What became of him?" |
28345 | What care I for my money oh?" |
28345 | What concern was it of theirs what Mr. Fenwick did? |
28345 | What could he do but wonder and idolize, even while he almost flinched before his idol; and wait to know what it was she wished he would n''t? |
28345 | What could she expect? |
28345 | What could there be horrible about_ him_?..." |
28345 | What did Mrs. Wilson say to that?" |
28345 | What did he come back to say, dear?" |
28345 | What did he say?" |
28345 | What did his words mean:"I must go back; it is best for you to keep away"? |
28345 | What did it all mean? |
28345 | What did it matter? |
28345 | What did it really matter how long they dawdled? |
28345 | What did she say?" |
28345 | What did that line matter? |
28345 | What did you think I said?" |
28345 | What did you think it meant?" |
28345 | What do ye make it out the gentleman says, Peter?" |
28345 | What do you make of that?" |
28345 | What do you suppose he did that Sunday afternoon when Julius Bradshaw came and had tea and brought the Strad-- the first time, I mean?... |
28345 | What do_ you_ think Gaffer Bristles thinks, that''s the point?" |
28345 | What do_ you_ think, Sally?" |
28345 | What does he come out for in weather like this? |
28345 | What does he mean? |
28345 | What does the latter know now more than she does herself? |
28345 | What does the young man expect? |
28345 | What girl would not have done so, under her circumstances? |
28345 | What good end could be gained by fidgeting him? |
28345 | What good would it do you to find out who Mr. Fenwick was? |
28345 | What had she to gain by the revival of a forgotten past-- a past her own share of which she had for twenty years striven to forget? |
28345 | What had she to lose by a complete removal of the darkness that had shrouded her husband''s early life with her-- or rather, what had she not to gain? |
28345 | What has passed between him and Dr. Conrad? |
28345 | What interest can Major Roper have in inventing the story, I should like to know?" |
28345 | What is all this prosy speculation about? |
28345 | What is he?" |
28345 | What is it that he says in a gasping whisper? |
28345 | What is it you want to know?" |
28345 | What is it, Sallykin? |
28345 | What is it, dear love? |
28345 | What is it?" |
28345 | What is it?... |
28345 | What is wrong with Mr. Fenwick? |
28345 | What more can we want?" |
28345 | What next?" |
28345 | What o''clock was it, please, ma''am?" |
28345 | What on earth_ are_ they doing?" |
28345 | What should she say to Sally? |
28345 | What should you do?" |
28345 | What the devil do you mean? |
28345 | What time does she come?" |
28345 | What was it about?" |
28345 | What was it now she really most feared? |
28345 | What was it she overheard her mother say to him, just as he was leaving the house, about something she had promised to tell him some time? |
28345 | What was it then?" |
28345 | What was it you said? |
28345 | What was she that had outlived him to bear all this? |
28345 | What was that old Scotchman-- he seemed to have come back-- what was he saying outside there? |
28345 | What was the Self he had to offer, and what else had he? |
28345 | What was the world coming to? |
28345 | What was there in earth or heaven he would not, if Sally wished it? |
28345 | What was there in this to discompose and upset her, to make her breath catch and her nerves thrill? |
28345 | What were these ideas? |
28345 | What would account for what? |
28345 | What would he do now, really, if she were to tell him she preferred his great friend Arthur Fenwick to him? |
28345 | What would he have done with the poor old furniture? |
28345 | What would his face be like-- how would his voice sound-- when she saw him next? |
28345 | What would she do if Gerry should, without some warning, identify her? |
28345 | What would the pawnbroker lend him on that-- his watch? |
28345 | What would you do yourself if you were me? |
28345 | What would your patients say if they heard you go on like that?" |
28345 | What''s o''clock?" |
28345 | What''s the damage to be?" |
28345 | What''s the matter with_ me_?" |
28345 | What''s the meaning of that? |
28345 | What''s the use of being prigs about it?" |
28345 | What''s this?" |
28345 | What?" |
28345 | What?... |
28345 | What_ could_ I do? |
28345 | What_ did_ he actually recollect? |
28345 | What_ had_ become-- what would become of Gerry? |
28345 | What_ is_ my stepfather sitting smiling at there in that contented way? |
28345 | What_ is_ that little maid talking about there?" |
28345 | What_ is_ there in the above to warrant what came next from Sally? |
28345 | What_ was_ I saying? |
28345 | What_ was_ Mrs. Julius Bradshaw''s story? |
28345 | Whatever now_ was_ his name? |
28345 | When and where will she know?" |
28345 | When did I read to you about Mary and the fat boy? |
28345 | When did I say anybody spoke untruth?" |
28345 | When she has done justice to this point, she laughs and adds:"What did_ you_ say, Tishy?" |
28345 | When they were friends again, I asked, Where had he seen me? |
28345 | When was it I read to this man Mary and the fat boy in''Pickwick''?" |
28345 | When''s he coming next? |
28345 | When?" |
28345 | Where are they now?" |
28345 | Where did she go?" |
28345 | Where else could she have been? |
28345 | Where is that tamned kellner? |
28345 | Where ought he to have been, he asked himself? |
28345 | Where would be the merit of discretion else? |
28345 | Where would they be if the whole past were suddenly sprung on him? |
28345 | Where would those hands be on that clock- face when all attempt at resuscitation had to stop? |
28345 | Where''s the pin?" |
28345 | Where?" |
28345 | Which did you mean?" |
28345 | Which meant what was Vereker going to do next? |
28345 | Which should it be? |
28345 | Which would be the worse? |
28345 | Who can tell?" |
28345 | Who could I mean but the girl you told me about that you think would n''t agree with your mother?" |
28345 | Who could gainsay it? |
28345 | Who could say that he would ever visit St. Sennans again? |
28345 | Who could say that they, or some equivalents, might not reach him out of the past to- day or to- morrow-- any time? |
28345 | Who else could it have been?" |
28345 | Who ever heard of a lady with a soiled record refusing a good offer of marriage? |
28345 | Who is Diedrich?" |
28345 | Who shall tread the inner temple of a girl''s mind? |
28345 | Who told him?" |
28345 | Who told you, and what did_ he_ say? |
28345 | Who was going overboard afore the end of next week? |
28345 | Who was going to suspect that a man who could command wealth in six figures by disclosing his identity, would keep it a secret? |
28345 | Who woke her up? |
28345 | Who''s going to turn over the leaf, I should like to know? |
28345 | Who''s yours from?" |
28345 | Who? |
28345 | Who_ could_ say anything? |
28345 | Why ca n''t you leave them alone?" |
28345 | Why come home? |
28345 | Why could n''t he leave that tiger alone? |
28345 | Why could n''t he?" |
28345 | Why could n''t her father find his way into her confidence in the natural current of events? |
28345 | Why could she not have let them alone, as her husband had said to her? |
28345 | Why did n''t you come closer?" |
28345 | Why did n''t you go?" |
28345 | Why did the swimming young lady from Lobjoit''s want to be rid of her wrap- up at that rate as she turned so sharp round to run down the ladder? |
28345 | Why do you think I shall?" |
28345 | Why do you want to know?" |
28345 | Why does he not answer the pell? |
28345 | Why does n''t he bring him back here, at once?" |
28345 | Why evade the point? |
28345 | Why must Sally''s friend, of all others, be the object of its owner''s unwelcome admiration? |
28345 | Why must n''t I have Julius Bradshaw to play with if I like because he''s at Cattley''s?" |
28345 | Why not ask the lady herself? |
28345 | Why not forget that as readily as anything else? |
28345 | Why not treat me open?'' |
28345 | Why not, indeed? |
28345 | Why not? |
28345 | Why not? |
28345 | Why not? |
28345 | Why not? |
28345 | Why not? |
28345 | Why not?" |
28345 | Why on earth could n''t you leave him to the railway people?" |
28345 | Why on earth did n''t we think of that before?" |
28345 | Why on earth need she name the place she knew Gerry did go to? |
28345 | Why should I not? |
28345 | Why should I refuse my consent to your marrying Fenwick? |
28345 | Why should it not?" |
28345 | Why should n''t he? |
28345 | Why should n''t it be?" |
28345 | Why should n''t it be?" |
28345 | Why should n''t she? |
28345 | Why should she be summoned before the bar of the house? |
28345 | Why should she not get something from him, however little? |
28345 | Why should there be? |
28345 | Why should you demand credentials of a passer- by because he is so obliging as to offer to lend you a Chinese vocabulary or Whitaker? |
28345 | Why should_ she_ want to know? |
28345 | Why should_ they_ know anything about it?" |
28345 | Why were those girls running, and why did that young man on the beach below shout to some one who followed him,"It''s over at the pier"? |
28345 | Why, did n''t they waltz all the waltzes at the party last week?... |
28345 | Why, do you think it bad for him to remember?" |
28345 | Why, he''s older than I am.... What? |
28345 | Why?" |
28345 | Why?" |
28345 | Why?" |
28345 | Why_ is_ everything late on Monday? |
28345 | Why_ should_ Lætitia''s having left her lips slightly ajar, instead of closing them, have"meant Dr. Vereker"? |
28345 | Why_ should_ he recollect one drop in the ocean of needy applicants? |
28345 | Will Gwendolen grow like her mother? |
28345 | Will it be a step on or a step back? |
28345 | Will you haff another cigar, Mr. Prown? |
28345 | Will you oblige me by telling me what it is you understand we are talking about?" |
28345 | Wilson snorted audibly--"Well, has this young haberdasher made any sort of definite declaration to Lætitia?" |
28345 | Wo n''t we, Sally?" |
28345 | Would Gerry believe him? |
28345 | Would he not be better up, now that it was light? |
28345 | Would it be safe to try to get the half- crown into his pocket? |
28345 | Would mademoiselle give him the address written down? |
28345 | Would n''t it be better to have it over and done with?" |
28345 | Would n''t it?" |
28345 | Would not the discomfort of meals eaten with a companion who could swallow nothing justify a divorce_ a mensa_? |
28345 | Would you hand me down that fire- screen off the chimney- piece? |
28345 | Would you kindly allow me to see your arm again?" |
28345 | Yes!--she would ask Dr. Conrad about_ that_: Why had n''t she thought of that before-- that galvanic battery? |
28345 | Yes, dear; what is it?" |
28345 | Yes, suppose he does? |
28345 | You ask,''What is it, then?'' |
28345 | You do n''t mean to say you believed_ that_ nonsense? |
28345 | You do n''t mean you would go and try on at two guineas a week?" |
28345 | You do n''t mind....""Mind telling you? |
28345 | You doubt it? |
28345 | You know Bailey, the young man that drives me round in London?" |
28345 | You know him? |
28345 | You know that square fellow? |
28345 | You know the Great Hotel, or Pension, near the Seelisberg, that looks down on Lucerne Lake, straight over to where Tell shot the arrow? |
28345 | You know this experience yourself at parties? |
28345 | You know what I mean?" |
28345 | You know what a nice letter he wrote Aunt Frances?" |
28345 | You know, I suppose, that men who tattoo each other''s arms ca n''t quarrel if they try?" |
28345 | You ready, Mrs. Paganini? |
28345 | You remember him? |
28345 | You saw to- day that I really liked the smoke?" |
28345 | You see how it was? |
28345 | You see something to laugh at, Conrad? |
28345 | You see?" |
28345 | You think it was really a recollection of B.C.?" |
28345 | You were going to say-- for----?" |
28345 | You will not? |
28345 | You would n''t want your own father to aim at a tiger and hit a man?" |
28345 | You''ll excuse_ me_?'' |
28345 | You''ll understand that, I''m sure?" |
28345 | You''ve made him talk about the young lady he''s in love with...?" |
28345 | You_ must_ remember that?" |
28345 | You_ will_ tell me now, wo n''t you, Major dear?" |
28345 | _ Is_ anybody going to marry anybody? |
28345 | _ Is_ he going to help that tongue or not? |
28345 | _ Might_ she come up there, beside you? |
28345 | _ Now_, are you ready?... |
28345 | _ Our_ Major? |
28345 | _ What''s_ the child saying? |
28345 | _ Who''s_ going to be married?" |
28345 | _ Who_ could be...? |
28345 | _ Why?_..."It was Rosalind that spoke. |
28345 | _ Why_ should I mind? |
28345 | _ Why_ was it so horrible? |
28345 | _ Your_ name, madame?" |
28345 | a chance if he chose to catch at it? |
28345 | a cry from any creature claiming to be human? |
28345 | about some date that we believe no human power will ever obliterate? |
28345 | and suggest the answer,"Nothing? |
28345 | and then he recalled how he afterwards heard the kitten singing to herself the old ballad:"What care I for my goose- feather bed? |
28345 | answers Sally, just on the edge of a burst of tears;"what_ was_ I to do? |
28345 | by his proper name, Gerry? |
28345 | can it be true? |
28345 | how long have I slept?" |
28345 | how should she instruct her to plead for her? |
28345 | is_ that_ what being a trustee means?" |
28345 | just to quench the tremor she knew would come with her voice if she tried now to say,"What was the name? |
28345 | light out already? |
28345 | says Sally,"did n''t I tell you? |
28345 | she asks--"or very unlike? |
28345 | she says, lengthening out the word,"why not? |
28345 | she was always met with"What good will it do? |
28345 | there!--does the association or impression repeat itself?" |
28345 | think?..." |
28345 | was it considerate to Mammon? |
28345 | was it proper? |
28345 | what is it, child?... |
28345 | what''s the latest intelligence?" |
28345 | what''s to come next?" |
28345 | who''s dyin''or goin''to die? |
28345 | why could n''t you tell me at first? |
6848 | ''The men?'' 6848 ''The spirits?'' |
6848 | ''What else was there?'' 6848 ''Where is the herd?'' |
6848 | ''While I am honoring their messenger''--thus my Lord continued--''why not honor the stars? 6848 ''Who is there?'' |
6848 | A chance? |
6848 | A monastery? |
6848 | A son of India thou, and not know them at sight? |
6848 | Abuser of the salt,said the stranger calmly,"hast thou not heard of the paschal charity, and of the fine to the poor? |
6848 | Ah, you know him? |
6848 | All his fellow- men, Sheik? |
6848 | Am I not a believer? 6848 And Constantine?" |
6848 | And descend to the Chapel? |
6848 | And he who walks with him singing? |
6848 | And if I wish to communicate with them or they with me? |
6848 | And is it not eight and twenty years since he began reigning wisely and well? |
6848 | And my servants? |
6848 | And on the side of the island over against the Asiatic coast, under a hill named Kamares, is there not a convent built centuries ago by an Empress? |
6848 | And the Gospels? |
6848 | And the Governor? |
6848 | And the Prince-- Who is he? |
6848 | And the Prophet hath lent him his name? |
6848 | And then? |
6848 | And these now coming? |
6848 | And they? |
6848 | And thou art that Manuel who made the good fight at Plati? |
6848 | And thou hast heard the Arafat sermon? |
6848 | And thou knowest when those in front abandon a man struck with the disease? |
6848 | And thy father and mother? |
6848 | And what then? |
6848 | And who are they? |
6848 | And whose the hills that look Upon the plain? |
6848 | And whose the plain? |
6848 | And you make the pursuit an occupation? |
6848 | And you will go? |
6848 | And you, my Lords? |
6848 | Are not flesh and blood of the same significance in all of us? 6848 Are they singing?" |
6848 | Are we indeed so poor? |
6848 | Are we to be held guests or prisoners? |
6848 | Art thou a Christian? |
6848 | Art thou a Moslem? |
6848 | Art thou-- even thou, O Princess-- of those who believe a Moslem must reject Christ because the Prophet of Islam succeeded him with later teachings? |
6848 | At Therapia? |
6848 | At what hour will he come? |
6848 | Brethren of the Islands? |
6848 | But he had other property doubtless? |
6848 | But how may a man know the superior powers? |
6848 | But if Mars be not in the Ascendant? |
6848 | But if you should not be here? |
6848 | But is not this city of our fathers by site and many advantages as much the capital of the world as ever? 6848 But what else?" |
6848 | But what? |
6848 | By thy young master''s bidding? |
6848 | By which am I to call you? |
6848 | Can I have two fathers? |
6848 | Canst thou name some of them? |
6848 | Canst thou not give us a lecture upon the story with which thy Arabian brother hath favored us? |
6848 | Could you find it at night? |
6848 | Did Mahommed that? |
6848 | Did you see the Emperor? |
6848 | Didst thou hear? |
6848 | Didst thou observe the young person yonder? |
6848 | Do you know of such a bay? |
6848 | Dost hear? |
6848 | Dost thou account the crown the Saint at last won nothing? |
6848 | Dost thou impugn our devotion to God? |
6848 | Excellent Princess, from whom could I have them save the good Father himself? |
6848 | Forgive another request--Sergius spoke hastily--"Have I thy permission, to look at what she hath written?" |
6848 | From whom have you all these things? |
6848 | Hath he not a son? |
6848 | Have I not told you I keep a spy on the old Prince''s house? 6848 Have you breakfasted?" |
6848 | Have you considered the risks of your project? |
6848 | Have you seen the Princess lately-- she who lives at Therapia? |
6848 | He with the torch? |
6848 | His dress? |
6848 | How call ye the afternoon prayer, O Shaykh? |
6848 | How came this doctrine to thee? |
6848 | How can I satisfy your laudable question, my son, and be brief? |
6848 | How canst thou speak so positively? |
6848 | How did he receive it? |
6848 | How do you know? |
6848 | How does the man appear? |
6848 | How great will his Highness''suite be? |
6848 | How is it with thee now, my daughter? 6848 How knowest thou?" |
6848 | How long am I to wait before the glory you promise me ripens ready for gathering? 6848 How long,"said the Prince--"in the Prophet''s name, how long will this endure?" |
6848 | How old are you? |
6848 | How, Prince? |
6848 | I can not answer, my Lord"Can not? |
6848 | I did not mean to ask what you are, but who? |
6848 | I was saying, O son of Jahdai, that thou mightest have set down the other points of information equally necessary to our intercourse-- Whence I come? 6848 I?" |
6848 | In God''s name,he said,"who are these?" |
6848 | In person? 6848 In what tongue does he recite?" |
6848 | Is he at home? |
6848 | Is he here? 6848 Is he the Patriarch?" |
6848 | Is it a letter? |
6848 | Is it something different? |
6848 | Is it thou, Shaykh? |
6848 | Is it usual? |
6848 | Is not every astrologer an adept? |
6848 | Is she old? |
6848 | Is the substitute in writing, Father? |
6848 | Is there a reason for it? |
6848 | Is what I have heard true, that at thy going into the Monastery thou hadst a family? |
6848 | Its name? |
6848 | Joqard and I pick up many odd things, and meet a world of people-- don''t we, fellow? |
6848 | Know thee, Lord Mahommed? |
6848 | Knowest thou our Scriptures? |
6848 | Knowest thou the youth yonder? |
6848 | Knowest thou--she at length said--"knowest thou of one Hatim, renowned as a warrior and poet of the Arabs?" |
6848 | Mean you God? |
6848 | More? |
6848 | My Lord Duke,the Emperor''s brother replied, somewhat stung,"dost thou believe it in woman to refuse such an honor?" |
6848 | My Lord,she said, earnestly,"is it not better to be denied choice than to be denied after choosing?" |
6848 | My lord Admiral, what sayest thou of the tale? |
6848 | My servant has found much favor with you, O Prince? |
6848 | Nay, my Lord,said the insidious counsellor, with a smile,"how do kings manage to be everywhere at the same time?" |
6848 | New? 6848 Note the same set aside for the Prince of India.-Dost hear, Prince?" |
6848 | Now who art thou? |
6848 | Now who art thou? |
6848 | Now,the Princess said, when the presentation was finished,"will my most noble sovereign suffer me to conduct him to the reception room?" |
6848 | Of discovery? 6848 Of poetry and story- telling, I suppose?" |
6848 | Of the Moors, O Sheik? |
6848 | Of the Moors? 6848 Of what, my Lord?" |
6848 | On thy spear I see no blood; And where, O Sheik, the carcass of the slain? 6848 Permit me,"he said, then asked,"Is there not an island hereabouts called Prinkipo?" |
6848 | Proclamation? |
6848 | Risks? 6848 Say you so, Emir? |
6848 | See you this? |
6848 | Sergius? |
6848 | Shall I proceed? |
6848 | Shall I so report? |
6848 | Speakest thou from experience? |
6848 | Sworn to? |
6848 | Tell me, O Emir, which wouldst thou rather face, a hill- man or the Yellow Air? |
6848 | The Bielo- Osero? 6848 The Patriarch and Scholarius quarrelling? |
6848 | The Prince of India has the honor of speech with the Governor of the Castle? |
6848 | The herds I see-- who calls them his? |
6848 | The scene before him is charming, but is he charmed with it as he appears? |
6848 | The sword obeys my hand, the hand my will, And given will and hand and sword, I pray Thee tell me, why should any man be poor? |
6848 | Then thou didst ask,''Who made worship so formal?'' 6848 Then why the fire?" |
6848 | Then, Prince? |
6848 | There is some magic in the plate, then? |
6848 | There were other books upon the Prince''s table? |
6848 | They are the same, but what of it? |
6848 | Thou art then his messenger? |
6848 | Thou likest not the singing? |
6848 | Thy imperial master is old, and much worn by wars and cares of government, is he not? |
6848 | To what accommodations have the Princess Irene and her attendant been taken? 6848 To whom is the pleasant life in a lofty garden, its clusters always near at hand-- to whom, if not to the just judges of their fellow- men?" |
6848 | To whom? |
6848 | Trust thee? 6848 Uel? |
6848 | Upon what? |
6848 | Was it knightly to betray me? 6848 We may make it,"the rower answered, somewhat sullenly,"but"--"What?" |
6848 | Well? |
6848 | What Principle? |
6848 | What ails thee, Prince? |
6848 | What are they doing? |
6848 | What are you? |
6848 | What canst thou, a stranger in a strange land, if once the Academy of which thou wert this morning informed, becomes thy enemy? 6848 What didst thou when it was called?" |
6848 | What disposition was made of it? |
6848 | What does it prove? |
6848 | What hast thou heard? |
6848 | What is her name? |
6848 | What is it? |
6848 | What is the selfish dream? |
6848 | What is thy name? |
6848 | What king could refuse a sword once Solomon''s? 6848 What more?" |
6848 | What said he next? |
6848 | What say you, my friends? |
6848 | What test? |
6848 | What then is his faith? |
6848 | What wouldst thou? |
6848 | What wouldst thou? |
6848 | What, think you they will hold me prisoner? |
6848 | What,he asked,"sayst thou the woman is akin to the Emperor Constantine?" |
6848 | What-- he is here? |
6848 | When will men learn that faith is a natural impulse, and pure religion but faith refined of doubt? |
6848 | When, O Prince-- now? |
6848 | Whence thy wisdom then? |
6848 | Where are the horsemen of whom you spoke? 6848 Where are we?" |
6848 | Where hast thou been? |
6848 | Where hast thou been? |
6848 | Where is her palace? |
6848 | Where is one for the service? 6848 Where is our worthy Professor of Rhetoric?" |
6848 | Where is she now? |
6848 | Where is she now? |
6848 | Where is the Emperor now? |
6848 | Where is the procession going? |
6848 | Whither? 6848 Whither?" |
6848 | Who am I to say thou art? |
6848 | Who can foresee the turns of life? 6848 Who is he?" |
6848 | Who is here? |
6848 | Who is she? |
6848 | Who is this? |
6848 | Who shall refuse obedience to the law? |
6848 | Why do they chant? |
6848 | Why do you say so? |
6848 | Why dost thou take this place, O Prince? |
6848 | Why have you kept us waiting so long? |
6848 | Why is she called good? |
6848 | Why not? 6848 Why not?" |
6848 | Why so? |
6848 | Will the Princess appoint a time? |
6848 | Wilt thou accept this agency? |
6848 | Without love? |
6848 | Yes, Irene-- and was not Father Hilarion for many years Abbot of the convent? 6848 You are going to Therapia?" |
6848 | You are not a Greek? |
6848 | You asked no question concerning him? |
6848 | You believe her the daughter of the Prince of India? |
6848 | You have heard, O Princess, of the sacred fig- tree of the Hindus? |
6848 | You hear, O Prince? 6848 You know her?" |
6848 | You were at the_ Pannychides?_she asked. |
6848 | You wish to go? |
6848 | You would not take her from me? |
6848 | ''Carest thou more for the dirty brutes than for the crown of honor I bought with them?''" |
6848 | ''Did not the poor man ask a gift of me?'' |
6848 | ''Shall any man fare better than John the Forerunner?'' |
6848 | ''The elder man with the white beard and black eyes, said you? |
6848 | ''Who art thou?'' |
6848 | ''Why did you sign the Decree?'' |
6848 | ''Why not call her after the convent?'' |
6848 | A few steps on the way, the Governor stopped:"Was there not a companion-- a younger man-- a Dervish?" |
6848 | A third time he asked,"You will be my Lael?" |
6848 | Accepting the remark as a question, the other answered:"Did I not spend the night with him at El Zaribah? |
6848 | Admitting she had been chosen to fulfil the saying quoted, was the call for the once only? |
6848 | Again he asked,"Will you be my Lael?" |
6848 | Again the boat slipped down the current; when it was brought back, he asked:"When did the ship yonder come up?" |
6848 | Ah, who can interpret for Providence? |
6848 | Am I understood?" |
6848 | And ask not doubtingly,''Whence the money for all this?'' |
6848 | And comes that way one religious, of him but a question, Believest thou in God? |
6848 | And from whom? |
6848 | And how I was even then on my way thither?" |
6848 | And how callest thou thyself? |
6848 | And if it get abroad, that Mahommed, son of the great Amurath, came also to the Castle, who may foretell the suspicions to hatch in the city? |
6848 | And now the Bishop dipped his fingers in the holy water--''By what name is this daughter to be known?'' |
6848 | And of all times, then? |
6848 | And the garrison, where are they?" |
6848 | And the table ware-- this plate and yon bowl-- were they really gold or some cunning deception? |
6848 | And were they dressed as these are?'' |
6848 | And what impelled him to go? |
6848 | And what is it he is leading?" |
6848 | And who is he I am to challenge? |
6848 | And why is this city so fortunate as to have attracted thy wandering feet? |
6848 | And why making study of the world? |
6848 | And why should the Governor resort to disguise? |
6848 | And why the embarrassment when people paused to observe him? |
6848 | And why? |
6848 | And wilt thou deliver it truly?" |
6848 | And wilt thou not also say it is better than wine? |
6848 | And wisdom will answer,''What are thy desires? |
6848 | Answer as thou lovest the right?" |
6848 | Are they vile as these?" |
6848 | As a student of holy canons, what sayest thou?" |
6848 | As well curse the Holy Ghost at once, for why should he who of preference seeketh a bed with the damned he disappointed? |
6848 | Ay, who was he? |
6848 | Bearest thou a message from him to me?" |
6848 | Between them there is only a feud of Islamites; how much greater is their feud with Christians? |
6848 | Bloom the roses as of old in thy gardens? |
6848 | But I recall my question-- How many are there waiting for me?" |
6848 | But he was youthful, while this one-- could it be he was old? |
6848 | But how did he save the castaways?" |
6848 | But how manage the rejection? |
6848 | But is it practicable?" |
6848 | But there is then a special object in the Vigils?" |
6848 | But to return"--Mirza paused, and looked into the Prince''s eyes earnestly--"Is your accusation just? |
6848 | But what if then you are absent?" |
6848 | But what of his spirit-- his courage-- his endurance in the Faith? |
6848 | But why the green flag? |
6848 | But,"said the bear- keeper, changing his tone,"seeing one civil answer deserves another, when was Prince Mahommed here?" |
6848 | By ships at anchor, and through lesser craft of every variety they sped, followed by exclamations frequently outspoken:"Who is she? |
6848 | By the same philosophy, where can one talk treason more securely than on this wall? |
6848 | CHAPTER VI WHAT DO THE STARS SAY? |
6848 | Can as much be said of any other subject?" |
6848 | Can it be I am but cherishing a dream?" |
6848 | Can you name an instance in which the kidnapper of a woman has been punished?--I mean in our time?" |
6848 | Canst thou kill A thought divine? |
6848 | Canst thou remember all this? |
6848 | Canst thou tell what this"--pointing to the plate--"is for? |
6848 | Could I expect better of the innkeepers there? |
6848 | Could a wicked son have been born to that excellent man? |
6848 | Could anything better signify the despair of the community? |
6848 | Could this be he? |
6848 | Dead? |
6848 | Did I speak, who listened except to revile me? |
6848 | Did Mirza tell also of my forbidding him to say anything of the predictions I then intrusted him?" |
6848 | Did his intelligence suggest how unusual it was for an Indian to be neither a Mohammedan, nor a Brahman, nor even a Buddhist in religion? |
6848 | Did not ravens feed Elijah? |
6848 | Did not some one tell thee of what I have on hand, and how I am working to finish it in time to take the water with thee this afternoon? |
6848 | Did the singers know the significancy of the text to him? |
6848 | Did you not see him? |
6848 | Didst hear?" |
6848 | Didst thou ever hear how Othman wooed and won his Malkatoon?" |
6848 | Do I not know beauty is altogether in the eye of the beholder, and that all persons do not see alike? |
6848 | Do the rivulets in thy alabaster courts still run singing to the mosaic angels on the walls?" |
6848 | Do you know the bay?" |
6848 | Does he read it?" |
6848 | Does it seem to you a vanity of wickedness?" |
6848 | Does not the rose bloom here all the year? |
6848 | Dost thou follow me, my son?" |
6848 | Dost thou remember the confounding elements given in the thesis?" |
6848 | Dost thou remember the earliest sentence I heard thee read? |
6848 | Dost thou still adhere to the Primitive Church? |
6848 | Doubtless the dead within were lying as they had been left-- but when, and by whom? |
6848 | Drawing the veil aside, she addressed the officer:"Art thou the Governor of the Castle?" |
6848 | Every man seemed to be asking, what next? |
6848 | For of what moment is it, my Lord asks, whether God bear this name or that? |
6848 | For relief, he spoke:"What dost thou, my friend?" |
6848 | For what art thou fitted? |
6848 | For where else, he asks, has the spreading earth diviner features than on the Bosphorus? |
6848 | For whom was this? |
6848 | Give up the chase? |
6848 | Had His Majesty really exposed his intent to the Princess? |
6848 | Had I not just come from loving thee? |
6848 | Had he declared himself to her? |
6848 | Had he not incited them to many of their savageries? |
6848 | Had he so loved the gems in his life as to dream he could illumine his tomb with them? |
6848 | Had he the sanction? |
6848 | Had not men been always ruled by what they imagined heavenly signs? |
6848 | Had not our fathers tried Philosophy? |
6848 | Had not the latter applauded and voted to hear him again? |
6848 | Had she accepted? |
6848 | Had she seen the Prince? |
6848 | Had the Emperor noticed the declaration of what he was not? |
6848 | Has he come?" |
6848 | Has he not studied the Zehra of Abderrahman? |
6848 | Has my Lord ever seen his nativity?" |
6848 | Hast thou not more of him? |
6848 | Have I in aught erred, my lord?" |
6848 | Have I not heard from my Lord himself how, when put to choice, he ignored my prohibition respecting the stars?" |
6848 | Have you brought us the victory?'' |
6848 | Have you heard of the Academy of Epicurus?" |
6848 | Having repulsed the Muscovite invasion, what excuse for his blasphemy would there be left the next to challenge its terrors? |
6848 | He did not kill him, did he?" |
6848 | He saw Law in it all-- or was it imposition, force, choice smothered by custom, fashion masquerading in the guise of Faith? |
6848 | He should address his best mind to the question,''I am now in a road; if I keep it, where will I arrive?'' |
6848 | He wanted a full outfit for the Hajj; could the contractor furnish him twenty camels of burden, and four swift dromedaries? |
6848 | He will run to the palace; there he will fall at the Emperor''s feet, tell his tale of woe, and"--"And if thou art denounced?" |
6848 | Here the Jew paused, and bowed--"Now doth my Lord doubt if I know him best?" |
6848 | How came you by it?" |
6848 | How can I carry such speech to him, whose soul is consuming with hunger and thirst for thy favor?" |
6848 | How can I without offending tell of the excitement into which seeing you plunged him? |
6848 | How could Father Hilarion have intrusted business of importance to an envoy so negligent? |
6848 | How could it be else? |
6848 | How could spaces be gained for foundations, for courts and gardens? |
6848 | How did he get there? |
6848 | How did he look? |
6848 | How immeasurably greater the feud between Christian and Jew? |
6848 | How know I but, within his powers, and as he lawfully might, he has contracted me by treaty to acceptance of the Georgian? |
6848 | How many have been waiting for my coming?" |
6848 | How much farther should she go? |
6848 | How stands the time?" |
6848 | How was he to be controlled? |
6848 | I may pardon you; can you assure me of their pardon?" |
6848 | I saw Walter, the beggar of Burgundy, a fugitive in Constantinople; but his followers, those who went out with him-- where were they? |
6848 | I spoke of certain ones forsworn, did I not?" |
6848 | I thought first of Jerusalem; but who without abasement can inhabit with infidels? |
6848 | I wonder if the happiness found in the affection of women is more lasting?" |
6848 | If I called the recusants forsworn and perjured, thinkest thou the pure in Heaven charged my soul with a sin? |
6848 | If I speak with heat, dost thou blame me? |
6848 | If he knew this, would he send me his blessing? |
6848 | If it requires long campaigns, shall I summon the armies now?" |
6848 | If my little mother''s lightest suggestions are laws with me, what are her invitations?" |
6848 | If one were to insult this second Lael of his love, what could he do? |
6848 | If so, O Princess, what praise is too great for him who, a young man placed upon a throne by his father, comes down from it at his father''s call?" |
6848 | If the abduction were indeed arranged for the afternoon, to what might he not be led by an open attempt to defeat it? |
6848 | If there was criminality in her faith, what was to be said of his own? |
6848 | If these poor souls can forget their condition and be happy, why not we? |
6848 | If they are glorious then, what are they when reconstructed for festal nights in shining lamps? |
6848 | If thou wilt not pardon me, how can I hope honor from my fellow men? |
6848 | In speaking but now, did he not call thee Irene?" |
6848 | In the morning I will ask first, Where is my Lael? |
6848 | In the old pagan style, what did Fate mean by thus bringing them together? |
6848 | In what age did he live?" |
6848 | Is it not so?" |
6848 | Is it not still the capital of our holy religion? |
6848 | Is it not worthy the vigils of a student? |
6848 | Is it possible a gown and priestly hat can entirely suppress his human nature? |
6848 | Is it that? |
6848 | Is it this tribe? |
6848 | Is n''t it so?" |
6848 | Is not Faith everything?" |
6848 | Is not that best for me?" |
6848 | Is the time of the running of the city now, to- morrow, next week-- when? |
6848 | Is this the day of the attempt? |
6848 | Is thy opinion of him as a politician so uncomplimentary? |
6848 | Knew you ever a scholar, O Princess, whose soul had utterly escaped the softening influence of thought and study? |
6848 | Knowest thou not more?" |
6848 | Lord, Lord, how long am I to go on thus cheating myself? |
6848 | Mahommed knit his brows, and asked imperiously,"Who art thou? |
6848 | Making no doubt now that he had really been to the gate, they asked themselves, What could have been his object? |
6848 | Must he not know them first?" |
6848 | Need I say how natural it was for me to love him? |
6848 | Not knowing their name, he could not ask of them from the decree- makers?" |
6848 | Now am I understood? |
6848 | Of all fates what more nearly justifies reproach of Allah than to have one''s name and glory at the mercy of a rival or an enemy? |
6848 | Of the Admiral, he then asked,"We were to set out in return about noon, were we not?" |
6848 | Of these we have first, Shall the bread in the Eucharist be leavened or unleavened? |
6848 | Of what account are Creeds except to set fools by the ears? |
6848 | Of what am I to speak?" |
6848 | Or a Chrysostom? |
6848 | Or a muffled roll from the sea? |
6848 | Or an Augustine? |
6848 | Or be worshipped with or without form? |
6848 | Or if still you think me exaggerating, is not the offence one to be lightly forgiven where the offender is telling of his birthplace? |
6848 | Or is thy audacity a blasphemous trial of the endurance of forgiveness?".... |
6848 | Or on foot or knee? |
6848 | Or thou? |
6848 | Or whether the devout be called together by voice or bell? |
6848 | Our neighbors, the Turks-- what hast thou of them, Sheik?" |
6848 | Reenter Demedes...."Abduct her!--How?--When? |
6848 | Said he nothing of the other caution I gave him, how absolute verity could only be had by a recast of the horoscope at the city itself? |
6848 | See thou these things?" |
6848 | Seeing his Shaykh, the Prince called him:"Who is the warrior yonder?--He in the golden armor?" |
6848 | Sergius, silently resolving to betake himself thither early next morning, replied with enthusiasm:"Have you seen the garden behind her palace?" |
6848 | Shall I break off now?" |
6848 | Shall I go empty handed to the most sacred of cities?" |
6848 | She detained him at the door to ask:"Only tell me, my Lord, did His Majesty send you with this notice?" |
6848 | She had seen it, but where and when? |
6848 | So much was of easy understanding; but where was the other terminus? |
6848 | Still later, was he not summoned to serve the Emperor in the capacity of Warden of the Purple Ink?" |
6848 | Suppose the Emperor won to his scheme; was its success assured? |
6848 | Taking position before the black- gowned personage, his feet wide apart, the mariner said:"You sent for me?" |
6848 | Tell me what thou hast?" |
6848 | Tell me why, knowing the work was to be done, you did not send for me to help you? |
6848 | Tell me, lies the field far or near? |
6848 | That even in the Hippodrome nothing is as it used to be except the colors? |
6848 | That is, does the Holy Ghost proceed from the Son, or from the Father and the Son? |
6848 | That you may be personally glorified, my Lord? |
6848 | The Church? |
6848 | The Prince did not answer immediately, and when he did, it was to ask, suggestively:"You say he is young?" |
6848 | The Prince drew a leaf of ivory, worn and yellow, from a pocket under his pelisse, and passed it to Mahommed, saying,"Will my lord look?" |
6848 | The Prince dropped his eyes, for he was asking himself, was such sweetness of sleep appointed for him? |
6848 | The Princess Irene, her property and dependents, were subjects of protection by the Moslem; that much was clear; but did she know the fact? |
6848 | The breakfast was set for an invited guest; what held him back, if not the power that led the stranger to her gate? |
6848 | The city, assembled on the quay, demanded of them:''What have you done with us? |
6848 | The hill was steep, and the way somewhat circuitous; did the Prince need assistance? |
6848 | The latter''s countenance flushed with pleasure; giving one triumphal glance at his friend, much as to say, There-- did I not tell you so? |
6848 | The legend supposes him there in presence directly of God; if so, what merit would there be in regalia? |
6848 | The monk arose to his great height, and replied, fervently:"Knowest thou when death hath the sweetness of sleep? |
6848 | The object of the Vigils is to bring the Emperor to abandon his policy and defer to Scholarius?" |
6848 | The old man turned as he spoke, and called out anxiously:"Irene-- Irene, where art thou, child?" |
6848 | The passenger reflected a moment, then asked,"Resorting to the oars, when can we reach the city?" |
6848 | The plate, man-- what of this plate? |
6848 | The spirit of prayer is a delicate minister; where can we find purer nourishment for it than in the silence which at noon is deep as at midnight? |
6848 | The stars being communicable yet, what wouldst thou have asked them next?" |
6848 | The young man had intended calling on the Patriarch first; who brought him to her? |
6848 | Then she glanced over the bay, and said very softly:"It is well; for''if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others?''" |
6848 | Then the gentle Emperor fell to pitying her, and asked, forgetful of himself, and thinking of things to lighten her lot,"Wilt thou never marry?" |
6848 | Then thou asked me,''Did Christ and His Disciples worship in a house like this? |
6848 | Then what?" |
6848 | Then, in a low voice, she asked:"Does he doubt I am a Christian?" |
6848 | Then, on account of his fame for learning and piety, did not the Patriarch exalt him to attendance on his own person as Doctor of the Gospels? |
6848 | Think you he was happy because he owned the world? |
6848 | This morning the Prophet"--"Thou meanest Scholarius?" |
6848 | Those were the words, Princess; and who shall say they do not comprehend all there is of religion?" |
6848 | Thou heardst what he did at Medina?" |
6848 | Thus full- handed, thinkest thou in a suit the Prince of India against the venerable Hegumen of all the St. James'', His Majesty will hesitate? |
6848 | Thy capital must be in India, but where, pray? |
6848 | To his entreaties, the strangers listened hard- heartedly; at last he said to them:"Am not I-- Hatim-- good as he? |
6848 | To such as I, what is sitting near the throne? |
6848 | To that end is it thou keepest her always under eye? |
6848 | To this one and to that he would run with the question:"Where is she from?" |
6848 | To what end?" |
6848 | To what end?" |
6848 | To what school should we attach ourselves? |
6848 | To whom have you told the secret? |
6848 | Turning then to the acting Chamberlain, he added:"Good Dean, have we not a little time in which to hear our guest further?" |
6848 | Unlike? |
6848 | WHAT DO THE STARS SAY? |
6848 | Was Christ the Messiah? |
6848 | Was God a sufficient substitute? |
6848 | Was God lost in Christ as he was here in Mahomet? |
6848 | Was I not witness of his trial of faith at the Holy Kaaba? |
6848 | Was ever one merciful like Hatim? |
6848 | Was he licking his chops in anticipation of a feast or merely laughing? |
6848 | Was he not right?" |
6848 | Was he young or old? |
6848 | Was it a rising wind? |
6848 | Was it strange he changed his mind? |
6848 | Was it wonderful he gave and kept giving to story- tellers, careless often if what he thus disposed of was another''s? |
6848 | Was the corps well composed now as then? |
6848 | Was there enough of him to make battle? |
6848 | We knew the diggers of the pit; but for whom was it? |
6848 | Were he to assume punishment of the insolence, from whom could he hope justice or sympathy-- he, a stranger living a mysterious life? |
6848 | What are the opportunities of the time?'' |
6848 | What business could he have with her? |
6848 | What could be expected other than that the venals would repudiate everything? |
6848 | What could the Emperor do, if it were obstinate and defiant? |
6848 | What does evil see in her to set it hungering after her? |
6848 | What have I to fear? |
6848 | What if the task did take ages? |
6848 | What if the victim was then being hurried away? |
6848 | What if this were one of them? |
6848 | What is easy life, except walking in danger of habits enervating to the hope of salvation? |
6848 | What is power when not an instrument of mercy, justice and charity? |
6848 | What is thy Academy but defiance of the Eternal Majesty? |
6848 | What is waiting but the wise man''s hour of preparation?" |
6848 | What is your name?" |
6848 | What matter? |
6848 | What more is there to be said? |
6848 | What more is wanting to set the Prophet scolding? |
6848 | What more of definition of thy glory wilt thou require? |
6848 | What more? |
6848 | What of our Faith? |
6848 | What part of the world could produce a creature so utterly barbarous? |
6848 | What right hast thou to happiness?'' |
6848 | What sayest thou now?" |
6848 | What sayest thou, O my most orthodox Confessor?" |
6848 | What sayest thou, my son? |
6848 | What sayest thou?" |
6848 | What shall I do?" |
6848 | What shall be done with such a nature? |
6848 | What subdivisions lie under those two things? |
6848 | What then was left but flight? |
6848 | What was to be done? |
6848 | What will you do?'' |
6848 | What would Christians say of his idea? |
6848 | What wouldst thou?" |
6848 | What, in illustration, if the Emperor proved a friend? |
6848 | When I took the ring, I thought, Now would the young Mahommed have so lightly pardoned the provocation?" |
6848 | When I went away they were debating, Was Mahomet a Prophet? |
6848 | When had society a better well being than in the halcyon ages of Plato and Pythagoras? |
6848 | When may it be relied upon? |
6848 | When the monk went up to the city, was her ministry to end? |
6848 | Where among them is an Athanasius? |
6848 | Where are there seas so bridled and reduced? |
6848 | Where are they going? |
6848 | Where bends a softer sky above a friendlier channel by Nature moulded for nobler uses? |
6848 | Where had he seen it? |
6848 | Where had his courage gone? |
6848 | Where had the Prince his instructors?" |
6848 | Where is it? |
6848 | Where is it?" |
6848 | Where was Cipango? |
6848 | Where was the other? |
6848 | Where-- when-- how could the Church present itself to any man more an actuality in the flesh? |
6848 | Wherefore, wilt thou tell me of thyself?" |
6848 | Wherein is she a heretic?" |
6848 | Which-- not what--_which_ is the true Christian Faith? |
6848 | Who can save thee but God? |
6848 | Who can she be?" |
6848 | Who feeds them? |
6848 | Who is he making way through the throng yonder? |
6848 | Who is she for whom thou art putting thyself in the way of temptation? |
6848 | Who knows? |
6848 | Who knows?" |
6848 | Who now will defend me against God?" |
6848 | Who of them can be said to have been touched with the fire that fell upon the faithful of the original twelve? |
6848 | Who shall ever come to really know it? |
6848 | Who shall say? |
6848 | Who should know it better than I? |
6848 | Who was he? |
6848 | Who was he? |
6848 | Who was responsible for the resurrection? |
6848 | Who was the first permanent occupant of the Palace of Blacherne? |
6848 | Who, it was argued, would voluntarily forego making his own gods? |
6848 | Whom could I ask?" |
6848 | Whose is the nativity? |
6848 | Whose the nativity, I say?" |
6848 | Why can I not get you to understand, father, that there is a new Byzantium? |
6848 | Why not return to the plan devised, practised, and exemplified by the Saviour Himself? |
6848 | Why not seek a consort among them? |
6848 | Why not suffer her to go with you? |
6848 | Why not? |
6848 | Why should I struggle to serve them?" |
6848 | Why was one in speech so like a ghost selected his companion? |
6848 | Will Your Majesty pardon my boldness, if I suggest that a reply to those inquiries would be better at the audience set for me next? |
6848 | Will my Lord tell me I am understood?" |
6848 | Will they accept it? |
6848 | Will they never be done? |
6848 | Will you be my Lael?" |
6848 | With such self- collection as he could command, he asked:"What have you in substitution of God and Christ?" |
6848 | With youth and health superadded to a glorious physical structure, may we not always conclude a man rich in spirit and lusty impulses? |
6848 | Would I tell her a story? |
6848 | Would his sword or sceptre make his supplication more impressive?" |
6848 | Would it please you, O Princess, to hear of them? |
6848 | Would not that be a half- performance? |
6848 | Would she land in Asia or recross to Europe? |
6848 | Would the Princess be pleased to hear him?" |
6848 | Would we had enough of it left to get back our own!--Sheik,"he added,"what else hast thou in the same strain? |
6848 | Yonder the East, here the West-- must they be strangers and enemies forever? |
6848 | You remember?" |
6848 | You will accept my thanks, will you not?" |
6848 | he at length asked--"where before coming here?" |
6848 | sighed the old man, turning his face hopelessly to the wall,"Whither are we drifting?" |
6848 | was the medalet lost? |
6848 | whither are we drifting? |
4520 | ''” “ What by that? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | --and I said,''Chi? |
4520 | A fair man? |
4520 | A maudlin crying to be loved, which makes your knees all go rickety. ” “ Think that''s it? ” said Jim. |
4520 | A red light? ” “ Oh, that''s only the pit- bank on fire, ” said Robert, who had followed her. |
4520 | A rug for your knees? |
4520 | Ah, my dear fellow, what is life but a search for a friend? |
4520 | All right? |
4520 | Almost angered him? |
4520 | Am I not right? ” “ Quite. |
4520 | And I may be no other to her-- ” “ Then why not let it be so, and be satisfied? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | And I thought to myself: have I lost my cloak? |
4520 | And Tanny is all right, you say? |
4520 | And did she? |
4520 | And if I can fall in love-- But it''s becoming so damned hard-- ” “ What, to fall in love? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | And if I do n''t choose to let you see me crying, that does n''t prove I''ve never had a bad half hour, does it? |
4520 | And is n''t it a great deal of honour for one man? |
4520 | And it does make a difference, does n''t it, Tanny dear? ” “ A great difference, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | And it does n''t matter, not to anybody but myself. ” “ What becomes of anybody, anyhow? |
4520 | And it is n''t natural, quite, to break it.--Do you know what I mean? ” She paused a moment. |
4520 | And she likes him too, does n''t she? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | And so-- you see-- everything goes-- ” “ But you will begin again? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | And supposing I am as you say-- are you any different? ” “ No, I''m not very different. |
4520 | And that if I enter into an undertaking, it will be successful. ” “ And your life has been always successful? ” “ Yes-- almost always. |
4520 | And then shot him dead. ” “ Was he dead? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | And then what? |
4520 | And was it not his privilege? |
4520 | And what did you think of it? ” “ Very fine. ” “ I think it is. |
4520 | And what have they learnt?--Why did so many of them have presentiments, as he called it? |
4520 | And what''s the bonum publicum but a mob power? |
4520 | And when will you be moving in? ” said Francis. |
4520 | And why? |
4520 | And will you practise with me, so that I can accompany you? ” said Manfredi eagerly. |
4520 | And wo n''t you let me take the accompaniment? |
4520 | And you are in the Nardini just across there, are you? |
4520 | And you can tell me if it is foolish to you.--Shall I tell you? |
4520 | And you have a family in England? |
4520 | Any relation of Robert? ” “ Oh, yes! |
4520 | Anybody? ” “ Rather! ” came the deep voice of Clariss. |
4520 | Are n''t you better off without him? ” “ I am. |
4520 | Are n''t you yourself seeking? ” “ Oh, that''s another matter, ” put in Argyle. |
4520 | Are n''t you? |
4520 | Are you all of you? ” “ Absolutely wild, ” said Lilly laconically. |
4520 | Are you all right? ” she said. |
4520 | Are you as keen on innocence as Manfredi is? ” “ Innocence? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you as keen on innocence as Manfredi is? ” “ Innocence? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you going to play without music? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you quite all right here? |
4520 | Are you quite comfortable? |
4520 | Are you sure you have everything? |
4520 | At what time? |
4520 | At what time? ” “ Any time, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Bach? |
4520 | Because the Germans are the only people who could make a war like this-- and I do n''t think they''ll ever do it again, do you? |
4520 | Been going to the dogs, eh? ” “ Or the bitches, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Beethoven inspires that in me, too. ” “ He makes you feel that all will be well with you at last? ” “ Yes, he does. |
4520 | Better-- better-- ” “ Good-- you say? |
4520 | Bring it, will you? |
4520 | But I keep myself from realising, do n''t you know? |
4520 | But I often wonder what will become of me. ” “ In what way? ” She was almost affronted. |
4520 | But I was n''t really. ” “ Then you expected him? ” “ No. |
4520 | But I''d rather meet her abroad than here-- and get on a different footing. ” “ Why? ” “ Oh, I do n''t know. |
4520 | But ah, what is it, you know? |
4520 | But as one must frown at something, why not at the bowler hat? |
4520 | But did you go up, now, to the belvedere? ” “ To the top-- where the vines are? |
4520 | But did you go up, now, to the belvedere? ” “ To the top-- where the vines are? |
4520 | But do n''t you give private recitals, too? ” “ No, I never have. ” “ Oh! ” cried Francis, catching his breath. |
4520 | But do you think I might? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | But here you are in bed like a woman who''s had a baby.--You''re all right, are you? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | But in the heart--? |
4520 | But it drives us, and eats away the life-- and yet we love each other, and we must not separate-- Do you know what I mean? |
4520 | But my God-- what do you think of it? ” “ Seems pretty mean, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | But my LIFE seems alone, for some reason-- ” “ Have n''t you got relations? ” he said. |
4520 | But then what does a white mouse like that need? |
4520 | But there''s nothing doing for me in France.--When do you go back into the country, both of you? ” “ Friday, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | But they hardly count over here. ” “ Why do n''t you get married? ” he said. |
4520 | But was he HURT--? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | But what could be better? |
4520 | But what did you FEEL about it, privately? ” “ I did n''t feel much. |
4520 | But what do you call the common good? ” replied the little doctor, with childish pertinence. |
4520 | But what if you have n''t got much education, to speak of? ” “ You can always get it, ” she said patronizing. |
4520 | But what is that for a life? ” cried the Marchese, with a hollow mockery. |
4520 | But what is the something? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | But what was it you played? ” Aaron told him. |
4520 | But what was the good? |
4520 | But where ELSE? |
4520 | But where is it, when it comes to? |
4520 | But whether to go and live with him? |
4520 | But why console him? |
4520 | But why, why? |
4520 | But why? |
4520 | But will you try? ” “ Yes, I''ll try. ” “ Manfredi is just bringing the cocktails. |
4520 | But you and Tanny; why, there''s the world, and there''s Lilly: that''s how I put it, my boy. ” “ All right, Argyle.--Hoflichkeiten. ” “ What? |
4520 | Ca n''t stand that fellow, can you? |
4520 | Ca n''t you pull yourself together? ” But Aaron only became more gloomily withheld, retracting from life. |
4520 | Ca n''t you rouse him up? ” “ I think it depresses him partly that his bowels wo n''t work. |
4520 | Can I have it with soda? |
4520 | Can the heart ever beat quite alone? |
4520 | Can you find it satisfactory? ” “ Is it even true? ” said the Major. |
4520 | Can you find it satisfactory? ” “ Is it even true? ” said the Major. |
4520 | Can you help me out, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | Chi sono chi vengono? |
4520 | Chi?'' |
4520 | Chianti? |
4520 | Coffee will no doubt be served. ” “ Will you take my arm, Sir? ” said the well- nourished Arthur. |
4520 | Come at half- past six, as today, will you? |
4520 | Could any race be anything but despicable, with such an antecedent? |
4520 | Could he have expected so much, in one life- time? |
4520 | Damn them all, why do n''t I leave them alone? |
4520 | Did he know many people? |
4520 | Did he need consolation? |
4520 | Did he scorn fortunes and fortune- making? |
4520 | Did he want to be Anthony to Cleopatra? |
4520 | Did n''t we hear that Lilly was in Germany? ” “ Yes, in Munich, being psychoanalysed, I believe it was. ” Aaron looked rather blank. |
4520 | Did you ever see anything like it? ” “ No. |
4520 | Do I speak the truth? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Do n''t break it, will you? ” Marjory was shaking the bell against her ear. |
4520 | Do n''t you agree, Aaron? |
4520 | Do n''t you find it rather hot? ” “ Is there another bottle of beer there? ” said Jim, without moving, too settled even to stir an eye- lid. |
4520 | Do n''t you find it rather hot? ” “ Is there another bottle of beer there? ” said Jim, without moving, too settled even to stir an eye- lid. |
4520 | Do n''t you hate them? ” “ I do n''t like them. |
4520 | Do n''t you know? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you remember? |
4520 | Do n''t you think it all works out rather stupid and unsatisfying? ” “ Ah, but a civil war would be different. |
4520 | Do n''t you think so? ” “ Oh, quite, ” said Angus, whose observations had got no further than the black cloth of the back of Aaron''s jacket. |
4520 | Do n''t you think that is very probable? ” “ I have no idea, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you think we might hear him again? |
4520 | Do n''t you try to earn all you can? ” “ Ay, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you? |
4520 | Do they want him? ” A faint smile came on her husband''s face. |
4520 | Do you believe it--? ” “ Yes, ” said Levison unwillingly. |
4520 | Do you feel the same? ” “ No, not that way, worse luck. |
4520 | Do you hear me? ” “ Miss Smitham''s coming in. |
4520 | Do you know what I mean? ” “ I do n''t know, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do you know what Josephine Ford confessed to me? |
4520 | Do you know, I think that''s the very best drink in the tropics: sweet white wine, with soda? |
4520 | Do you like being in the country? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do you mean us in this box, or the crew outside there? ” he jerked his head towards the auditorium. |
4520 | Do you mind that I call you Aaron? ” “ Not at all. |
4520 | Do you take this as my gospel? ” “ I take it you are speaking seriously. ” Here Lilly broke into that peculiar, gay, whimsical smile. |
4520 | Do you think a cuckoo in Africa and a cuckoo in Essex is one AND the same bird? |
4520 | Do you think it would hurt Robert? ” She screwed up her eyes, looking at Tanny. |
4520 | Do you think you''d prefer orange in yours? ” “ Ill have mine as you have yours. ” “ I do n''t take orange in mine. |
4520 | Do you understand me at all in what I say? |
4520 | Do you want a God you can strive to and attain, through love, and live happy ever after, countless millions of eternities, immortality and all that? |
4520 | Do you want to know anybody here, or do n''t you? |
4520 | Do you? ” replied Julia. |
4520 | Do-- and try me. ” “ And you will tell me what you feel? ” “ Yes. ” Aaron went out to his overcoat. |
4520 | Does it? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron briefly. |
4520 | Eh? |
4520 | Eh? |
4520 | Eh? ” asked Jim. |
4520 | Else perhaps, where should I be? |
4520 | English moneys, eh? |
4520 | Enlighten us. ” “ Nowhere, I suppose. ” “ But is that satisfactory? |
4520 | Enough light will come in from here. ” “ Sure? ” said Manfredi. |
4520 | Every time. ” “ Then what''s to be done? ” “ Nothing, as far as I can see. |
4520 | Except that-- ” “ You do n''t care about anything? |
4520 | Fancy yourself snug in bed, do n''t you? |
4520 | Get up now, we''re going indoors. ” “ What do you reckon stars are? ” he persisted. |
4520 | Goodbye! ” “ You''ll come to Rackham? ” said Jim, leaning out of the train. |
4520 | Had he not gained it? |
4520 | Half past eight? ” “ Thank you very much. ” “ Then at half past eight the man will bring it in. |
4520 | Has a wild creature ever absolute trust? |
4520 | Has your experience been different, or the same? ” “ What was yours? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | Has your experience been different, or the same? ” “ What was yours? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | Have another cushion? |
4520 | Have n''t I loved you for twelve years, and worked and slaved for you and tried to keep you right? |
4520 | Have n''t I loved you? |
4520 | Have n''t I, Juley? ” “ Yes, ” said Julia, vaguely and wispily. |
4520 | Have you drunk your tea? |
4520 | Have you found it like that? |
4520 | Have you got a divine urge, or need? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Have you got a divine urge, or need? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Have you some engagement in Venice? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | He made out that the woman was asking him for his name--“Meester--? |
4520 | He wanted to say “ Friday then? ” “ Yes, I''d rather you went Thursday, ” repeated Lilly. |
4520 | He was breaking loose from one connection after another; and what for? |
4520 | Her own soul will wish to yield itself. ” “ Woman yield--? ” Aaron re- echoed. |
4520 | How can he be so alone? ” said the Marchese. |
4520 | How had he got his job? |
4520 | How is it to be? ” “ I do n''t vitally care either about money or my work or-- ” Lilly faltered. |
4520 | How is the cocktail, Nan? ” “ Yes, ” she said. |
4520 | How old are you? ” “ Thirty- three. ” “ You might almost be any age.--I do n''t know why I do n''t get married. |
4520 | How old? ” “ Oldest eight-- youngest nine months-- ” “ So small! ” sang Julia, with real tenderness now-- Aaron dropped his head. |
4520 | How should they? |
4520 | I am not to be badgered any more. ” “ Am I badgering you? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I believe you''ve got the flu. ” “ Think I have? ” said Aaron frightened. |
4520 | I could kill him for it. ” “ Were you ever happy together? ” “ We were all right at first. |
4520 | I do n''t know. ” “ Too emotional? |
4520 | I enjoyed Beecham''s operas so much. ” “ Which do you like best? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I feel I''ve come out of myself. ” “ Yes, it is a wonderful sight-- a wonderful sight-- But you have not been INTO the town? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | I feel that I myself have a special kind of fate, that will always look after me. ” “ And you can trust to it? ” “ Yes, I can. |
4520 | I felt myself go-- as if the bile broke inside me, and I was sick. ” “ Josephine seduced you? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | I have not been able to get over it all day. ” “ What was it? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I hope you do n''t object to our catechism? ” “ No. |
4520 | I know she is not happy, I know I am not-- ” “ Why should you be? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I know you do n''t believe it. ” “ What do I believe then? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I left her as I shall leave the earth when I die-- because it has to be. ” “ Do you know what I think it is, Mr. Sisson? ” put in Lady Franks. |
4520 | I like her so much. ” “ And him? ” “ Mr. |
4520 | I like the WE, do n''t you? |
4520 | I loathe the slimy creepy personal intimacy.--''Don''t you think, Mr. Bricknell, that it''s lovely to be able to talk quite simply to somebody? |
4520 | I mean does it interest you? ” “ What-- the flute? ” “ No-- music altogether-- ” “ Music altogether--! |
4520 | I mean does it interest you? ” “ What-- the flute? ” “ No-- music altogether-- ” “ Music altogether--! |
4520 | I mean, does something drive you from inside? ” “ I ca n''t just rest, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I never expected the mountains. ” “ You never expected the mountains? |
4520 | I only want to be left alone. ” “ Not to have anything to do with anybody? ” she queried ironically. |
4520 | I say, wo n''t you play for us one of these Saturdays? |
4520 | I should have been all right if I had n''t given in to her-- ” “ To whom? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I thought I''d better come and see, so that we can fetch you at lunch time.--You''ve got a seat? |
4520 | I told you there were two urges-- two great life- urges, did n''t I? |
4520 | I want to get a new tune out of myself. ” “ Had enough of this? ” “ Yes. ” A flush of anger came on Aaron''s face. |
4520 | I want to walk past most of it. ” “ Can you tell us where to? |
4520 | I went away. ” “ What from? ” “ From it all. ” “ From the woman in particular? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | I went away. ” “ What from? ” “ From it all. ” “ From the woman in particular? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | I will read it out to you later. ” “ Are n''t you satisfied? |
4520 | I''d be ashamed if I were you. ” “ Would you? ” said Jim. |
4520 | I''m a shady bird, in all senses of the word, in all senses of the word.--Now are you comfortable? |
4520 | I''m dying. ” “ What of? |
4520 | I''m not sure. ” “ You do n''t look forward to the Saturday mornings? ” he asked. |
4520 | I''m thankful we have none. ” “ Why? ” “ I ca n''t quite say. |
4520 | I''ve got TWO aunts called Tabitha: if not more. ” “ They are n''t of any vital importance to you, are they? ” said Levison. |
4520 | I, too, shall have to learn to play it. ” “ And run the risk of spoiling the shape of your mouth-- like Alcibiades. ” “ Is there a risk? |
4520 | I--? ” she exclaimed. |
4520 | IS he? ” sang Julia. |
4520 | If you do n''t breathe in, you suffocate. ” “ What about breathing out? ” said Robert. |
4520 | In God''s name, why? |
4520 | In the morning he must move: where? |
4520 | Incredibly old, like little boys who know too much-- aren''t they? |
4520 | Is he in love with her? |
4520 | Is it a God you''re after? |
4520 | Is it that you want to love, or to be obeyed? ” “ A bit of both. ” “ All right-- a bit of both. |
4520 | Is it the love urge? ” “ I do n''t know, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Is my life given me for nothing but to get children, and work to bring them up? |
4520 | Is n''t it awfully unkind to them? ” She rose in her eagerness. |
4520 | Is n''t it his duty to do what he can for himself? |
4520 | Is n''t it so, Sybil? ” “ Yes, I think so, ” said Sybil. |
4520 | Is n''t it strange? |
4520 | Is n''t it wonderful? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | Is n''t the result the same? ” “ It matters. |
4520 | Is that all right?--Yes, come just before twelve.--When?--Tomorrow? |
4520 | Is that the nature of love? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Is that your intention? ” “ That I could n''t say, ” said the Marchesa, smoking, smoking. |
4520 | Is there any harm in it? |
4520 | Is there anything I could get you? |
4520 | Is this your little dodge? ” Again Aaron looked at Lilly with that odd double look of mockery and unwillingness to give himself away. |
4520 | It came naturally, though.--But why did you come, Aaron? |
4520 | It is such fine music. ” “ I find_ Ivan_ artificial. ” “ Do you? |
4520 | It makes me feel so sick. ” “ What-- do you want discords?--dissonances? ” “ No-- they are nearly as bad. |
4520 | It''ll just go on and on-- Does n''t it make you feel you''d go mad? ” He looked at her and shook his head. |
4520 | It''s all much too new and complicated for me.--But perhaps you know Italy? ” “ No, I do n''t, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | It''s no good her foisting her rights on to me. ” “ Is n''t that pure selfishness? ” “ It may be. |
4520 | It''s what does n''t go down. ” “ And how much is that? ” she asked, eying him. |
4520 | Lack of life? ” “ That''s about it, my young cock. |
4520 | League of Nations? ” “ Damn all leagues. |
4520 | Let them die of the bee- disease. ” “ Not only that, ” persisted Levison, “ but what is your alternative? |
4520 | Like to see the ball kept rolling. ” “ What have you been doing lately? ” “ Been staying a few days with my wife. ” “ No, really! |
4520 | Lilly has gone away? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Lungs are all right so far. ” “ How long shall I have to be in bed? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Major, where are you wandering off to? |
4520 | Manfredi lives for it, almost. ” “ For that and nothing else? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | Marriage is a self- conscious egoistic state, it seems to me. ” “ You''ve got no children? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | May we ask what you bought? ” This he did not like. |
4520 | May we ask you another question, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | May we hear you some time? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron, non- committal. |
4520 | May we look at it? ” Josephine now turned the handle of the French windows, and stepped out. |
4520 | Meester--? ” she kept saying, with a note of interrogation. |
4520 | Miserable tea, but nobody has sent me any from England-- ” “ And you will go on till you die, Argyle? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Mr. Lilly? ” he asked. |
4520 | Much best make rather a favour of it, than sort of ask them to hire you.--Don''t you agree? |
4520 | Music risky? |
4520 | My mother left me a bit over a thousand when she died. ” “ You do n''t mind what I say, do you? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | My wife''s gone to Norway. ” “ For good? ” “ No, ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | No-- well, then-- would you like a bath now, or--? ” It was evident the Franks had dispensed much hospitality: much of it charitable. |
4520 | Not by ANY means. ” “ Are you not seeking any more, Lilly? ” asked the Marchese. |
4520 | Not good moneys? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron, rather indignantly. |
4520 | Not he, otherwise whence this homage for the old man with much money? |
4520 | Not later than Thursday. ” “ You''re looking forward to going? ” The question was half bitter. |
4520 | Nothing beyond this hell-- only death or love-- languishing-- ” “ What could they have seen, anyhow? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Now we try to speak of that which we have in our centre of our hearts. ” “ And what have we there? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Now, in life, there are only two great dynamic urges-- do you believe me--? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Now, in life, there are only two great dynamic urges-- do you believe me--? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Of me and your children? |
4520 | Of soul? |
4520 | Oh, God''s love, are n''t we fools! ” “ No-- why? ” cried Josephine, amused but resentful. |
4520 | Oh, ROBBIE, is n''t it all right, is n''t it just all right? ” She tailed off into her hurried, wild, repeated laugh. |
4520 | Oh, have n''t I? |
4520 | Oh, yes-- quite at home. ” “ Do you like it as well as anywhere? ” he asked. |
4520 | Oh-- er-- how''s your wife? |
4520 | On what grounds? |
4520 | Once outside the door, the husband asked: “ How shall we go home, dear? |
4520 | One can never be SURE of Providence. ” “ What can you be sure of, then? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | One franc? ” asked the driver. |
4520 | Only when it came he would n''t be there. ” “ Would you? ” “ Yes, indeed I would. |
4520 | Only while it stands I do want central heating and a good cook. ” “ May I come to dinner? ” said Jim. |
4520 | Or do you give the centre of your spirit to your work? |
4520 | Or perhaps you''d like to go home? |
4520 | Or was her fear only a delightful game of cat and mouse? |
4520 | Or was the fear genuine, and the delight the greater: a sort of sacrilege? |
4520 | Or white wine? |
4520 | Other things as well. ” “ But you do n''t like it much any more? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | Paradisal enough for you, is it? ” “ The devil looking over Lincoln, ” said Lilly laughing, glancing up into Argyle''s face. |
4520 | Paris for the most part. ” “ Never America? ” “ No, never America. |
4520 | Plop!--Can the heart beat quite alone, alone in all the atmosphere, all the space of the universe? |
4520 | Plop!--Quite alone in all the space? ” A slow smile came over the Italian''s face. |
4520 | Poor old Algy.--Did I lay it on him tonight, or did I miss him? ” “ I think you got him, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Pray, why not? |
4520 | Rivets, and we ca n''t get them out. ” “ And where should we be if we could? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Self, self, self-- that''s all it is with them-- and ignorance. ” “ You''d rather have self without ignorance? ” he said, smiling finely. |
4520 | Shall YOU be any different in yourself, in another place? |
4520 | Shall we leave it at that, now? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Shall we? ” She rose from the table. |
4520 | Shall you? ” “ Candles! ” he repeated, putting the piccolo to his mouth and blowing a few piercing, preparatory notes. |
4520 | She the woman, the mother of his children, how should she ever even think to yield? |
4520 | She''s made up her mind she loves me, and she''s not going to let me off. ” “ Did you never love her? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | Sir William Franks? |
4520 | Six- pence a box. ” “ Got any holders? ” “ Holders? |
4520 | Six- pence a box. ” “ Got any holders? ” “ Holders? |
4520 | So what''s the good of talking about advantages? |
4520 | So you found our city impressive? ” “ Very! |
4520 | So you hope to earn your keep here? |
4520 | Tanny and I have been very much alone in various countries: but that''s two, not one. ” “ You miss her then? ” “ Yes, of course. |
4520 | Thank goodness my experience of a man has been different. ” “ We ca n''t all be alike, can we? |
4520 | That is a great pleasure. ” “ So I think.--Does your wife like it, too? ” “ Very much, indeed! |
4520 | That is n''t saying he''s a fool, neither. ” “ And what better is them that''s got education? ” put in another man. |
4520 | That''s a day to live for, what? ” “ Ha! |
4520 | That''s what I should have been if I had had my way. ” “ What instrument? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | The Germans were false, we were false, everybody was false. ” “ And not you? ” asked Aaron shrewishly. |
4520 | The deaf Jewish Rosen was smiling down his nose and saying: “ What was that last? |
4520 | The piano? ” “ Yes-- the pianoforte. |
4520 | The spirit may move him in quite an opposite direction to the market-- then where is Lilly? |
4520 | Then he said smiling: “ So I''d better sit tight on my soul, till it hatches, had I? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | Then he said to Aaron: “ Were you coming to see me, Sisson? |
4520 | They are very exclusive still, the Venetian_ noblesse_? ” said Miss Wade. |
4520 | They ought to have allowed us six times the quantity-- there''s plenty of sugar, why did n''t they? |
4520 | They were Guelfs, why not remain it? |
4520 | They''ll do a lot of cavilling. ” “ But wo n''t they ACT? ” cried Josephine. |
4520 | Tomorrow morning? |
4520 | Too much feeling for you? ” “ Yes, perhaps. |
4520 | Towards Rome? ” “ I came to meet Lilly, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Tram or carriage--? ” It was evident he was economical. |
4520 | Wahrhaftiger Kerl bin ich.--When am I going to see Tanny? |
4520 | Was he going to agree? |
4520 | Was it because he was one of her own race, and she, as it were, crept right home to him? |
4520 | Was it illusion, or was it genuine? |
4520 | Was n''t it extraordinary? |
4520 | Was not hers the divine will and the divine right? |
4520 | Was there? |
4520 | We are dilettanti, I suppose. ” “ No-- what is your instrument? |
4520 | We looked at most, I believe. ” “ And what do you remember best? ” “ I remember Botticelli''s Venus on the Shell. ” “ Yes! |
4520 | We''ll be like this again? ” she whispered. |
4520 | We''re all as right as ninepence-- what? |
4520 | We''re all right, are n''t we? ” he said loudly, turning to the stranger with a grin that showed his pointed teeth. |
4520 | We''re the only sober couple in the bunch-- what? ” cried Jim. |
4520 | We''ve got to accept the power motive, accept it in deep responsibility, do you understand me? |
4520 | Well now, and what next? |
4520 | Well now, it''ll be all right if I come up for a minute? |
4520 | Well, how are you? |
4520 | Well, then, what next? |
4520 | Well, well, might do worse.--Is it all right? ” Lilly eyed the suit. |
4520 | Well-- shall we join the ladies? |
4520 | What a nice name! ” “ No better than yours, is it? ” “ Mine! |
4520 | What about him? |
4520 | What are you thinking? ” “ Nothing. |
4520 | What did he clutch the castle- keys so tight for? |
4520 | What did they see when they looked at him? |
4520 | What did you say the address was? |
4520 | What did you say? ” said Francis, leaning forward. |
4520 | What difference did it make, anyhow? |
4520 | What do you care whether you see anybody again or not? |
4520 | What do you make of this this- or- nothing business? |
4520 | What do you say to whiskey and soda, Colonel? ” “ Why, delighted, Sir William, ” said the Colonel, bouncing up. |
4520 | What do you say, Major? ” “ She has all the airs of one, Sir William, ” said the Major, with the wistful grimness of his age and culture. |
4520 | What do you think of him? ” “ He seems sharp, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What do you want to poke yourself and prod yourself into love, for? ” “ Because I''m DEAD without it. |
4520 | What do you want with more than one master? |
4520 | What do you want? ” “ Why, I keep saying I want to get married and feel sure of something. |
4520 | What does any man? |
4520 | What does he scheme for?--What does he contrive for? |
4520 | What else do you give? |
4520 | What else is there to it? ” Aaron sounded testy. |
4520 | What exactly brought you? ” “ Accident, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What have n''t they to fight for? ” cried Josephine fiercely. |
4520 | What have you come for? ” “ To look at YOU, ” he said sarcastically. |
4520 | What if I do? |
4520 | What is TO CHEAP? ” “ Cheep! |
4520 | What is it a woman who allows me, and who has no answer? |
4520 | What is it? ” “ To make more money for the firm-- and so make his own chance of a rise better. ” The landlady was baffled for some moments. |
4520 | What is there to care about? ” said the Colonel. |
4520 | What liqueurs have you got? ” demanded Angus abruptly. |
4520 | What makes a child be born out of its mother to the pain and trouble of both of them? |
4520 | What pictures did you look at? ” “ I was with Dekker. |
4520 | What should he do? |
4520 | What should you say, Jimmy? ” she turned to one of the men. |
4520 | What sort of urge is your urge? |
4520 | What time is it, Manfredi? ” “ Half past six. |
4520 | What was it in her face that puzzled him? |
4520 | What was it? |
4520 | What was she going to ask of him? |
4520 | What was there in the female will so diabolical, he asked himself, that it could press like a flat sheet of iron against a man all the time? |
4520 | What was there instead? |
4520 | What were the shots? ” Aaron asked him. |
4520 | What will this beauty be? ” With finicky fingers she removed the newspaper. |
4520 | What would the world be like if everybody lived that way? ” “ Other people can please themselves, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What''s a soul, to them--? ” “ What is it to you, is perhaps the more pertinent question, ” said Algy, flapping his eyelids like some crazy owl. |
4520 | What''s his education for? |
4520 | What''s the good of running after life, when we''ve got it in us, if nobody prevents us and obstructs us? ” Aaron felt very queer. |
4520 | What''s the objection? ” asked Struthers. |
4520 | What''s this?--What''s this? |
4520 | What''s your drink? ” “ Mine-- whiskey, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? ” “ Yes, I think he''s rather nice, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | What_ did_ she mean? |
4520 | Whe''to? |
4520 | When are you coming to dine with me? ” “ After you''ve dined with us-- say the day after tomorrow. ” “ Right you are. |
4520 | When shall we make it? ” he asked. |
4520 | When they had gone, he asked: “ Where is Manfredi? ” “ He will come in soon. |
4520 | When will they learn wisdom? ” “ But what do you call wisdom? ” asked Sherardy, the Hindu. |
4520 | When will they learn wisdom? ” “ But what do you call wisdom? ” asked Sherardy, the Hindu. |
4520 | Where are you going? ” “ Malta. ” “ Malta! |
4520 | Where d''you want to go? ” he heard the hearty tones of the policeman. |
4520 | Where did he live? |
4520 | Where should we be without it? ” Lilly started, went stiff and hostile. |
4520 | Where would their money be otherwise? |
4520 | Where you go? |
4520 | Where''s that--? ” “ Oh, it''s on the map. ” There was a little lull. |
4520 | Where? ” cried Julia. |
4520 | Who have you got sitting up with her? |
4520 | Who was she, what was she? |
4520 | Who? ” they cried. |
4520 | Why break every tie? |
4520 | Why ca n''t they submit to a bit of healthy individual authority? |
4520 | Why ca n''t you gather yourself there? ” “ At the tail? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Why ca n''t you gather yourself there? ” “ At the tail? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Why do n''t you be more like the Japanese you talk about? |
4520 | Why do you ask? ” “ I was n''t thinking. ” “ But what do you mean? |
4520 | Why do you ask? ” “ I was n''t thinking. ” “ But what do you mean? |
4520 | Why do you want so badly to be loved? ” “ Because I like it, damn you, ” barked Jim. |
4520 | Why give yourself away, anyhow? |
4520 | Why go forward into more nothingness, away from all that he knew, all he was accustomed to and all he belonged to? |
4520 | Why has n''t this man been taken to the Clearing Station?'' |
4520 | Why have you come back to me? |
4520 | Why is it, do you think, that English people abroad go so very QUEER-- so ultra- English-- INCREDIBLE!--and at the same time so perfectly impossible? |
4520 | Why is it? ” “ Shall I say what I think? |
4520 | Why is it? ” “ Shall I say what I think? |
4520 | Why not come with us to Florence? ” said Francis. |
4520 | Why not flower again? |
4520 | Why not remain an infant? ” “ Be damned and blasted to women and all their importances, ” cried Aaron. |
4520 | Why not try and love somebody? ” Jim eyed her narrowly. |
4520 | Why not? |
4520 | Why not? |
4520 | Why not? ” “ If it''s going to, it will, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Why should I know? ” “ But we must know: especially when other people will be hurt, ” said she. |
4520 | Why should I? |
4520 | Why should I? |
4520 | Why should it? |
4520 | Why should n''t he want to move? |
4520 | Why should you hesitate? ” “ All right, then, ” said Aaron, not without some feeling of constraint. |
4520 | Why were their haunches so prominent? |
4520 | Why when we were in London-- when we were at lunch one morning it suddenly struck me, have n''t I left my fur cloak somewhere? |
4520 | Why, is he in Venice? |
4520 | Why, ten francs a day, you know, pension-- if you stay-- How long will you stay? ” “ At least a month, I expect. ” “ A month! |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? ” They stepped down in the darkness from their perch. |
4520 | Why? ” “ Looking at them even. |
4520 | Why? ” “ You seem to. ” “ Do I? |
4520 | Why? ” “ You seem to. ” “ Do I? |
4520 | Will he never heed? |
4520 | Will he never understand? ” he thought. |
4520 | Will that suit you? |
4520 | Will you come tomorrow? ” Aaron said he would on Monday. |
4520 | Will you do it for us now, and let us see what it is like?'' |
4520 | Will you play? ” “ I should love to, ” replied the husband. |
4520 | Will you sit? ” “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Will you sit? ” “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Will you smoke? |
4520 | Will you? ” “ I thought you hated accompaniments. ” “ Oh, no-- not just unison. |
4520 | Wine? |
4520 | Wo n''t they be awfully bothered? |
4520 | Wo n''t they fight for that? ” Aaron sat smiling, slowly shaking his head. |
4520 | Wo n''t you give us hope that it might be so? ” “ I''ve no idea, either, ” said she. |
4520 | Wo n''t you smoke? ” The strange, naked, remote- seeming voice! |
4520 | Wonderful person, to be able to do it. ” “ Where has he gone? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Would you have us make money? |
4520 | Would you like to play for us some time, do you think? ” “ Do you want me to? |
4520 | Would you like to play for us some time, do you think? ” “ Do you want me to? |
4520 | Would you? ” Aaron lay still, and did not answer. |
4520 | Yes, ten francs a day. ” “ For everything? ” “ Everything. |
4520 | Yes, that. ” “ And you could n''t go back? ” Aaron shook his head. |
4520 | Yes, you can. ” “ What terms? ” “ Terms! |
4520 | Yes-- well!-- Well-- now, why are you going away? ” “ For a change, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Yes-- what did he believe in, besides money? |
4520 | Yes? |
4520 | Yes? ” Aaron promised-- and then he found himself in the street. |
4520 | Yes? ” said the doctor. |
4520 | Yet I find_ Kovantchina_, which is all mass music practically, gives me more satisfaction than any other opera. ” “ Do you really? |
4520 | Yet what could be more conspicuous than this elegant pair, picking their way through the cabbage- leaves? |
4520 | You are? |
4520 | You ca n''t really be alone. ” “ No matter how many mistakes you''ve made-- you ca n''t really be alone--? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | You come straight from England? ” Sir William held out his hand courteously and benevolently, smiling an old man''s smile of hospitality. |
4520 | You do n''t want me to say things, do you? ” he said. |
4520 | You know that you have got an urge, do n''t you? ” “ Yes-- ” rather unwillingly Aaron admitted it. |
4520 | You talk, and you make a man believe you''ve got something he has n''t got? |
4520 | You thought her a pretty woman, yes? ” “ No-- not particularly pretty. |
4520 | You wo n''t believe you''re right in the way of traffic, will you now, in Covent Garden Market? |
4520 | You wo n''t go down? |
4520 | You yourself have no definite goal? ” “ No. ” “ Ah! |
4520 | You''d find it rather domestic. ” “ Where do you live? ” “ Rather far out now-- Amersham. ” “ Amersham? |
4520 | You''d find it rather domestic. ” “ Where do you live? ” “ Rather far out now-- Amersham. ” “ Amersham? |
4520 | You''d like a wash? ” But Jim had already opened his bag, taken off his coat, and put on an old one. |
4520 | You''ll be the same there as you are here. ” “ How am I here? ” “ Why, you''re all the time grinding yourself against something inside you. |
4520 | You''ll come in, wo n''t you? ” Aaron nodded rather stupidly and testily. |
4520 | You''re a comic. ” “ Am I though? ” said Jim. |
4520 | You''re a married man, are n''t you? ” The sardonic look of the stranger rested on the subaltern. |
4520 | You''re awfully lucky, you know, to be able to pour yourself down your flute. ” “ You think I go down easy? ” he laughed. |
4520 | You''re quite sure now? |
4520 | You''ve got a love- urge that urges you to God; have you? |
4520 | You''ve got a permanent job? ” asked Josephine. |
4520 | _ Egoisme a deux_-- ” “ What''s that mean? ” “_ Egoisme a deux_? |
4520 | _ Egoisme a deux_-- ” “ What''s that mean? ” “_ Egoisme a deux_? |
4520 | _ Siamo nel paradiso_, remember. ” “ But why should we drink your whiskey? |
4520 | “ A little Bovril? ” The same faint shake. |
4520 | “ A man ca n''t live, ” said the Italian, “ without an object. ” “ Well-- and that object? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ A whiskey and soda, Lilly? |
4520 | “ Act? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Ah, my dear fellow, are you still so young and callow that you cherish the illusion of fair play? ” said Argyle. |
4520 | “ All right, I think. ” “ But you''ve been back to them? ” cried Josephine in dismay. |
4520 | “ Always seeking a friend-- and always a new one? ” “ If I lose the friend I''ve got. |
4520 | “ Am I? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Am I? ” she smiled. |
4520 | “ And I''ll come to you.--Shall I come in fifteen minutes? ” She looked at him with strange, slow dark eyes. |
4520 | “ And can you find two men to stick together, without feeling criminal, and without cringing, and without betraying one another? |
4520 | “ And do you send her money? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ And me? ” “ You''ll have to live without a rod, meanwhile. ” To which pleasant remark Aaron made no reply. |
4520 | “ And never finding? ” said Lilly, laughing. |
4520 | “ And so the war hardly affected you? |
4520 | “ And so, Mr. Sisson, you have no definite purpose in coming to Italy? ” “ No, none, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ And stay how long? ” “ Oh-- as long as it lasts, ” said Robert again. |
4520 | “ And then what? ” “ Nay, ” interrupted Aaron. |
4520 | “ And what are they going to do about Job Arthur Freer? |
4520 | “ And what are you going to do in Florence? ” asked Argyle. |
4520 | “ And what good will Malta do you? ” he asked, envious. |
4520 | “ And what''s your way out? ” Aaron asked him. |
4520 | “ And where are you bound, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | “ And where? ” Again she was silent for some moments, as if struggling with herself. |
4520 | “ And who SHOULD have the money, indeed, if not your wives? |
4520 | “ And who knows what you''ve been doing all these months? ” she wept. |
4520 | “ And whom shall I submit to? ” he said. |
4520 | “ And will you sing? ” he answered. |
4520 | “ And yours, Lilly? ” asked the Marchese anxiously. |
4520 | “ Anyhow, ” he said at length, “ you''ll come, wo n''t you? |
4520 | “ Anything you wanted? ” repeated Robert, military, rather peremptory. |
4520 | “ Are n''t we perfectly satisfied and in bliss with the wonderful women who honour us as wives? ” “ Ah, yes, yes! ” said the Marchese. |
4520 | “ Are we to let t''other side run off wi''th''bone, then, while we sit on our stunts an''yowl for it? ” asked Brewitt. |
4520 | “ Are you a miner? ” Robert asked,_ de haute en bas_. |
4520 | “ Are you a socialist? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ Are you going out, Father? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Are you here by yourself? ” asked the sick man. |
4520 | “ Are you? ” persisted the child, balancing on one foot. |
4520 | “ Ay, an''what''s the purpose of his life? ” insisted Aaron Sisson. |
4520 | “ Ay, what? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Being yourself-- what does it mean? ” “ To me, everything. ” “ And to most folks, nothing. |
4520 | “ Beldover? ” inquired Robert. |
4520 | “ Besides, Aaron, ” said Lilly, drinking his last sip of wine, “ what do you care whether you see me again or not? |
4520 | “ But DO you want to be with Scott, out and out, or DON''T you? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But I do n''t know why you talk about him. ” “ Is he inexperienced, Josephine dear? |
4520 | “ But I''m not personal at all, am I, Mr. Bricknell? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ But ca n''t there be a balancing of wills? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But do you think I might--? ” said Francis moodily. |
4520 | “ But do you think it''s true what he says? |
4520 | “ But does it matter? ” said Lilly slowly, “ in which of you the desire initiates? |
4520 | “ But does it matter? ” said Lilly slowly, “ in which of you the desire initiates? |
4520 | “ But for how long will you settle down--? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ But have you anything to take you to Venice? |
4520 | “ But how can I live in Italy? ” he said. |
4520 | “ But is n''t it? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ But people always turn up. ” “ And then next year, what will you do? ” “ Who knows? |
4520 | “ But people always turn up. ” “ And then next year, what will you do? ” “ Who knows? |
4520 | “ But that''s not really how you take it? ” she said. |
4520 | “ But was n''t it an extraordinary affair? ” “ Very, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ But we can be friends, ca n''t we? ” he said. |
4520 | “ But what can have brought you to such a disastrous decision? ” “ I ca n''t say, ” she replied, with a little laugh. |
4520 | “ But what difference does it make, ” said Aaron Sisson, “ whether they govern themselves or not? |
4520 | “ But what do you really think will happen to the world? ” Lilly asked Jim, amid much talk. |
4520 | “ But what''s the good of going to Malta? |
4520 | “ But where is YOUR SEAT? ” cried Francis, peering into the packed and jammed compartments of the third class. |
4520 | “ But why ca n''t man accept it as the natural order of things? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But why not? |
4520 | “ But why should it? |
4520 | “ But why? |
4520 | “ But why? |
4520 | “ But why? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | “ But wo n''t you come and have coffee with us at our table? ” said Francis. |
4520 | “ But you do n''t want to get away from EVERYTHING, do you? |
4520 | “ But you must earn money, must n''t you? ” said she. |
4520 | “ But you''ll let us do that again, wo n''t you? ” said she. |
4520 | “ But you''re going home to them, are n''t you? ” said Josephine, in whose eyes the tears had already risen. |
4520 | “ But, Josephine, ” said Robert, “ do n''t you think we''ve had enough of that sort of thing in the war? |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you break it? ” “ Yes, if you hit it with a hammer, ” he said. |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you rouse his spirit? |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you settle down to something?--to a job, for instance? ” “ I''ve not found the job I could settle down to, yet, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Can I come up and have a chat? ” “ I''ve got that man who''s had flu. |
4520 | “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Christmas- tree candles, and toffee. ” “ For the little children? |
4520 | “ Cigarette, Julia? ” said Robert to his wife. |
4520 | “ DO you agree, Mr. Sisson? ” said the Marchesa. |
4520 | “ Did YOU leave the parlour door open? ” she asked of Millicent, suspiciously. |
4520 | “ Did you ever intend to marry Jim Bricknell? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Did you ever keep count? ” Tanny persisted. |
4520 | “ Did you indeed? |
4520 | “ Did you see the row yesterday? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ Did you want anything? ” Robert enquired once more. |
4520 | “ Did you want anything? ” asked Robert, from behind the light. |
4520 | “ Do n''t I? |
4520 | “ Do n''t you agree? ” He turned wolfishly to Clariss. |
4520 | “ Do they?--Don''t you think it''s nice of them? ” she said, gently removing her hand from his. |
4520 | “ Do you believe in them less than I do, Aaron? ” he asked slowly. |
4520 | “ Do you feel ill, Sisson? ” he said sharply. |
4520 | “ Do you feel quite well? ” Josephine asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you find it a tight squeeze, then? ” she said, turning to Aaron once more. |
4520 | “ Do you find it so? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you find this room very cold? ” she asked of Aaron. |
4520 | “ Do you hate the normal British as much as I do? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you know how vilely you''ve treated me? ” she said, staring across the space at him. |
4520 | “ Do you love playing? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you mean that, Aaron? ” he said, looking into Aaron''s face with a hard, inflexible look. |
4520 | “ Do you mean to say you do n''t MEAN what you''ve been saying? ” said Levison, now really looking angry. |
4520 | “ Do you recognise anyone in the orchestra? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Do you see anybody we know, Josephine? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Do you see signs of the old maid coming out in me? |
4520 | “ Do you seek nothing? ” “ We married men who have n''t left our wives, are we supposed to seek anything? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you seek nothing? ” “ We married men who have n''t left our wives, are we supposed to seek anything? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think so, my dear? ” said the old man, with his eternal smile: the curious smile of old people when they are dead. |
4520 | “ Do you think so? ” he answered. |
4520 | “ Do you think you''re wise now, ” he said, “ to sit in that sun? ” “ In November? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think you''re wise now, ” he said, “ to sit in that sun? ” “ In November? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think, Lilly, that we''re the world? ” said Robert ironically. |
4520 | “ Do you want to be believed? ” “ No, I do n''t care a straw. |
4520 | “ Do you, Aaron? ” “ I do n''t WANT to, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Do you? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ Does a man care? ” “ He might. ” “ Then he''s no man. ” “ Thanks again, old fellow. ” “ Welcome, ” said Lilly, grimacing. |
4520 | “ Does he seek another woman? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Does it? ” asked Lilly of the Marchese. |
4520 | “ Does n''t SHE love you? ” said Aaron to Jim amused, indicating Josephine. |
4520 | “ Does n''t it go more here? ” “ No no, no no, not at all. |
4520 | “ Eh--? ” and Jim stooped, grinning at the smaller man. |
4520 | “ Eh? |
4520 | “ Eh? |
4520 | “ Eh? ” Aaron looked up. |
4520 | “ Eh? ” “ Are you going out? ” She twisted nervously. |
4520 | “ Eh? ” “ Are you going out? ” She twisted nervously. |
4520 | “ Enough of what? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Er-- what bed do you propose to put him in? ” asked Robert rather officer- like. |
4520 | “ Father, shall you set the Christmas Tree? ” they cried. |
4520 | “ Give him time. ” “ Is he also afraid-- like Alcibiades? ” “ Are you, Aaron? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Give him time. ” “ Is he also afraid-- like Alcibiades? ” “ Are you, Aaron? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Glad to see you-- well, everything all right? |
4520 | “ Go up there? ” said Aaron, pointing. |
4520 | “ Have a drink, Josephine? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ Have another? ” said Jim, who was attending fixedly, with curious absorption, to the stranger. |
4520 | “ Have n''t I? |
4520 | “ Have n''t you got the music? ” She rose, not answering, and found him a little book. |
4520 | “ Have one? ” Aaron shook his head, and Jim did not press him. |
4520 | “ Have you got any Christmas- tree candles? ” he asked as he entered the shop. |
4520 | “ Have you noticed it? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Have you really broken your engagement with Jim? ” shrilled Tanny in a high voice, as the train roared. |
4520 | “ Have you? ” He lifted his head and looked at her. |
4520 | “ He wants Julia to go down and stay. ” “ Is she going? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Help him up to my room, will you? ” he said to the constable. |
4520 | “ How are you, darling? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ How are your wife and children? ” she asked spitefully. |
4520 | “ How do I look, eh? |
4520 | “ How do you come here? ” “ I play the flute, ” he answered, as he shook hands. |
4520 | “ How do you do? |
4520 | “ How do you like Lilly? |
4520 | “ How do you like being in London? ” “ I like London, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ How is everybody? ” asked Tanny. |
4520 | “ How is the night? ” she said, as if to change the whole feeling in the room. |
4520 | “ How long ha''you been married? |
4520 | “ How lovely for you!--And when will you go to Norway, Tanny? ” “ In about a month, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ How many children have you? ” sang Julia from her distance. |
4520 | “ How many do you want? ” he said. |
4520 | “ How many do you want? ” “ A dozen. ” “ Ca n''t let you have a dozen. |
4520 | “ How much? ” said Aaron to the driver. |
4520 | “ How old are you? ” “ I''m twenty- five. |
4520 | “ How shall you escape it? ” said Levison. |
4520 | “ How strange!--Why is it burning now? ” “ It always burns, unfortunately-- it is most consistent at it. |
4520 | “ How''s that? ” “ Why, because, in a way the people of India have an easier time even than the people of England. |
4520 | “ How, act? ” “ Why, defy the government, and take things in their own hands, ” said Josephine. |
4520 | “ How--? ” she said, with a sudden grunting, unhappy laugh. |
4520 | “ How? ” “ You can live by your writing-- but I''ve got to have a job. ” “ Is that all? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ How? ” “ You can live by your writing-- but I''ve got to have a job. ” “ Is that all? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ I could n''t make it out, could you? ” “ Oh, ” cried Francis. |
4520 | “ I do n''t even want to believe in them. ” “ But in yourself? ” Lilly was almost wistful-- and Aaron uneasy. |
4520 | “ I do n''t know why I cry. ” “ You can cry for nothing, ca n''t you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ I hope personification is right.--Ought to be_ allegory_ or something else? ” This from Clariss to Robert. |
4520 | “ I say, do you hear the bells? ” said Robert, poking his head into the room. |
4520 | “ I say, ” said Robert suddenly, from the rear--“anybody have a drink? |
4520 | “ I suddenly saw that if there was a man in England who could save me, it was you. ” “ Save you from what? ” asked Lilly, rather abashed. |
4520 | “ I suppose so. ” “ And why? ” she cried. |
4520 | “ I think I''ll retire. ” “ Will you? ” said Julia, also rising. |
4520 | “ I think they''re anything but angels. ” “ Do you though? |
4520 | “ I went to the Uffizi. ” “ To the Uffizi? |
4520 | “ I wish I were in the country, do n''t you? |
4520 | “ I wonder what he''s doing here. ” “ Do n''t you think we might ASK him? ” said Francis, in a vehement whisper. |
4520 | “ I wonder what will become of him-- ” “--Of the one who climbed for the flag, you mean? |
4520 | “ I''m not so late, am I? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ I''ve been awfully bored. ” “ Have you? ” grinned Jim. |
4520 | “ I''ve got it now in my overcoat pocket, ” he said, “ if you like. ” “ Have you? |
4520 | “ I''ve nothing to lose. ” “ And were you surprised, Lilly, to find your friend here? ” asked Del Torre. |
4520 | “ If childhood is more important than manhood, then why live to be a man at all? |
4520 | “ If it is a good government, doctor, how can it be so bad for the people? ” said the landlady. |
4520 | “ Is Mr. Lilly here? |
4520 | “ Is it pretty much the same out there in India? ” he asked of the doctor, suddenly. |
4520 | “ Is it that man Aaron Sisson? ” asked Robert. |
4520 | “ Is it true for you? ” “ Nearly, ” said Aaron, looking into the quiet, half- amused, yet frightening eyes of the other man. |
4520 | “ Is it very heavy? ” asked Millicent. |
4520 | “ Is music your line as well, then? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ Is n''t it nasty? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Is n''t there a lift in this establishment? ” he said, as he groped his way up the stone stairs. |
4520 | “ Is n''t there something we could do to while the time away? ” Everybody suddenly laughed-- it sounded so remote and absurd. |
4520 | “ Is that your flute? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ It IS he? ” said Josephine quietly, meeting Jim''s eye. |
4520 | “ It IS the chap-- What? ” he exclaimed excitedly, looking round at his friends. |
4520 | “ It was, was n''t it? ” she said, turning a wondering, glowing face to him. |
4520 | “ It''ll do tomorrow morning, wo n''t it? ” he asked rather mocking. |
4520 | “ It''s what chickens say when they''re poking their little noses into new adventures-- naughty ones. ” “ Are chickens naughty? |
4520 | “ Jolly-- eh? ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ Keb? |
4520 | “ Leave a message for you, Sir? ” Lilly wrote his address on a card, then changed his mind. |
4520 | “ Let''s, everybody-- let''s. ” “ Shall we really? ” asked Robert. |
4520 | “ Like me to tuck the sheets round you, should n''t you? |
4520 | “ Look, Father, do n''t you love it! ” “ Love it? ” he re- echoed, ironical over the word love. |
4520 | “ Look, Mother, is n''t it a beauty? ” “ Mind the ring does n''t come out, ” said her mother. |
4520 | “ Make haste and get better, and we''ll go. ” “ Where? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ May I stay till Monday morning? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ May he not be Guest? ” he asked, fatherly. |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Me? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Me? ” said Sisson. |
4520 | “ Mind if I stay till Saturday? ” There was a pause. |
4520 | “ Must it be bloody, Josephine? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ My dear fellow, the only hope of salvation for the world lies in the re- institution of slavery. ” “ What kind of slavery? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ My hat and coat? ” he said to Lilly. |
4520 | “ No, I like to have it in my bedroom. ” “ You do n''t eat bread in the night? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ No, I want none of that. ” “ Then--? ” But now she sat gazing on him with wide, heavy, incomprehensible eyes. |
4520 | “ No-- I do n''t mind it. ” “ Do you feel at home in Florence? ” Aaron asked her. |
4520 | “ No-- where''s the loaf? ” And he cut himself about half of it. |
4520 | “ Not asleep? |
4520 | “ Not good, eh? |
4520 | “ Not that you loved any other woman? ” “ God save me from it. ” “ You just left off loving? ” “ Not even that. |
4520 | “ Not that you loved any other woman? ” “ God save me from it. ” “ You just left off loving? ” “ Not even that. |
4520 | “ Now Marchesa-- might we hope for a song? ” “ No-- I do n''t sing any more, ” came the slow, contralto reply. |
4520 | “ Now then--_siamo nel paradiso_, eh? |
4520 | “ Now? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Now? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Of what? |
4520 | “ Oh, what would you? |
4520 | “ Or what, then? ” “ Or anything. |
4520 | “ Please do take another-- but perhaps you do n''t like mushrooms? ” Aaron quite liked mushrooms, and helped himself to the_ entree_. |
4520 | “ Robert is so happy with all the good things-- aren''t you dear? ” she sang, breaking into a hurried laugh. |
4520 | “ Shall I go away? ” he said at length. |
4520 | “ Shall I? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Shall we be lovers? ” came his voice once more, with the faintest touch of irony. |
4520 | “ Shall we be lovers? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Shall we go into the sala and have real music? |
4520 | “ Shall we illuminate one of the fir- trees by the lawn? ” “ Yes! |
4520 | “ Shall we listen to it for a minute? ” She led him across the grass past the shrubs to the big tree in the centre. |
4520 | “ She does n''t love me. ” “ Is that true? ” asked Robert hastily, of Josephine. |
4520 | “ Sir William Franks? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ So you feel you have no country of your own? ” “ I have Italy. |
4520 | “ Stay all night? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Tell me, ” said Francis, “ will you have your coffee black, or with milk? ” He was determined to restore a tone of sobriety. |
4520 | “ Thank goodness the Italians are better than they used to be. ” “ Are they better than they used to be? ” “ Oh, much. |
4520 | “ That goes much lower down-- about here. ” “ Are you sure? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ That man''s sitting in it. ” “ Which? ” cried Francis, indignant. |
4520 | “ That''s how it looks on the face of it, is n''t it? ” he said. |
4520 | “ That''s the chap. ” “ Who? |
4520 | “ The nearest? ” said the policeman. |
4520 | “ Then it''s no engagement? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ Then upon what grounds did you abandon your family? |
4520 | “ Then what''s the use of going somewhere else? |
4520 | “ Then who would be the masters?--the professional classes, doctors and lawyers and so on? ” “ What? |
4520 | “ Then who would be the masters?--the professional classes, doctors and lawyers and so on? ” “ What? |
4520 | “ Then will you come and have dinner with us--? ” Francis fixed up the time and the place-- a small restaurant at the other end of the town. |
4520 | “ Then wo n''t you come on-- let me see-- on Wednesday? |
4520 | “ There now, is n''t it handsome? |
4520 | “ They''re old-- older than the Old Man of the Seas, sometimes, are n''t they? |
4520 | “ Think they have? ” he laughed. |
4520 | “ Three. ” “ Girls or boys? ” “ Girls. ” “ All girls? |
4520 | “ Three. ” “ Girls or boys? ” “ Girls. ” “ All girls? |
4520 | “ To see her people? |
4520 | “ To whom? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ We are sure to run across one another. ” “ When are you going? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ We might begin to be ourselves, anyhow. ” “ And what does that mean? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ We''re so happy in a land of plenty, AREN''T WE DEAR? ” “ Do you mean I''m greedy, Julia? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ We''re so happy in a land of plenty, AREN''T WE DEAR? ” “ Do you mean I''m greedy, Julia? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ We''ve got one! ” “ Afore I have my dinner? ” he answered amiably. |
4520 | “ Well now, what do you base your opinion on? ” Mr. French gave various bases for his opinion. |
4520 | “ Well then, what is it? |
4520 | “ Well, and how have you spent your morning? ” asked the host. |
4520 | “ Well, and what have you been doing with yourself? ” said he. |
4520 | “ Well, then, Angus-- suppose we do that, then?--When shall we start? ” Angus was the nervous insister. |
4520 | “ Well, then, ” said Francis, “ you will be in to lunch here, wo n''t you? |
4520 | “ Well, then? |
4520 | “ Well, who AM I to think of? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Well, ” he said, “ you''ve got men and nations, and you''ve got the machines of war-- so how are you going to get out of it? |
4520 | “ Well, ” said Argyle, “ what have you been doing with yourself, eh? |
4520 | “ Well, ” said the little Hindu doctor, “ and how are things going now, with the men? ” “ The same as ever, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Well-- shall I say? |
4520 | “ Were you on your way home? ” asked Robert, huffy. |
4520 | “ What SHOULD I drink? ” said Aaron, whose acquaintance with wines was not very large. |
4520 | “ What about it, then? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ What about the bridegroom, Algy, my boy? |
4520 | “ What about the wife and kiddies? |
4520 | “ What about the wife? ” said Robert-- the young lieutenant. |
4520 | “ What am I going to do this winter, do you think? ” Aaron asked. |
4520 | “ What am I to put it in? ” he queried. |
4520 | “ What are you bothering about? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What are you doing today? ” Aaron was not doing anything in particular. |
4520 | “ What are you going to do about your move on? ” “ Me! ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ What becomes of me? |
4520 | “ What ca n''t you? ” “ Choose. |
4520 | “ What did you do yesterday? ” “ Yesterday? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What did you do yesterday? ” “ Yesterday? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What do I call the common good? ” repeated the landlady. |
4520 | “ What do I call wisdom? ” repeated the landlady. |
4520 | “ What do YOU care for? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ What do YOU think, Josephine? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ What do the words mean? ” he asked her. |
4520 | “ What do you make of the miners? ” said Jim, suddenly taking a new line. |
4520 | “ What do you make of''em, eh? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What do you reckon stars are? ” asked the sepulchral voice of Jim. |
4520 | “ What do you want to do? ” “ Nay, that''s what I want to know. ” “ Do you want anything? |
4520 | “ What do you want to do? ” “ Nay, that''s what I want to know. ” “ Do you want anything? |
4520 | “ What do you want to know for? ” He made no other answer, and turned again to the music. |
4520 | “ What do you want to see in me? ” he asked, with a smile, looking steadily back again. |
4520 | “ What does he do? ” “ Writes-- stories and plays. ” “ And makes it pay? ” “ Hardly at all.--They want us to go. |
4520 | “ What does he do? ” “ Writes-- stories and plays. ” “ And makes it pay? ” “ Hardly at all.--They want us to go. |
4520 | “ What else could I tell them? |
4520 | “ What gives you such a belly- ache for love, Jim? ” said Lilly, “ or for being loved? |
4520 | “ What gives you such a belly- ache for love, Jim? ” said Lilly, “ or for being loved? |
4520 | “ What have I been able to say to the children-- what have I been able to tell them? ” “ What HAVE you told them? ” he asked coldly. |
4520 | “ What have I been able to say to the children-- what have I been able to tell them? ” “ What HAVE you told them? ” he asked coldly. |
4520 | “ What have they to fight for? ” “ Why, everything! |
4520 | “ What have you come for? ” she cried again, with a voice full of hate. |
4520 | “ What have you come here for? ” His soul went black as he looked at her. |
4520 | “ What have you had enough of? |
4520 | “ What have you to do this morning? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ What is cheap, please? |
4520 | “ What is it on the clock? ” The taxi was paid, the two men went upstairs. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” cried Julia. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” he said, to a rather sniffy messenger boy. |
4520 | “ What is that light burning? |
4520 | “ What is the difference then between you and me, Lilly? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What is there to say? ” ejaculated Lilly rapidly, with a spoonful of breath which he managed to compress and control into speech. |
4520 | “ What is there to talk about? ” “ Usually there''s so much, ” she said sarcastically. |
4520 | “ What makes you think so? ” “ Circumstances, ” replied Aaron sourly. |
4520 | “ What sort? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What the hell do you take that beastly personal tone for? ” cried Lilly at Tanny, as the three sat under a leafless great beech- tree. |
4520 | “ What time is Manfredi coming back? ” said he. |
4520 | “ What train? ” said Arthur. |
4520 | “ What was it? |
4520 | “ What was it? ” It was the socialists. |
4520 | “ What was the interesting topic? ” he said cuttingly. |
4520 | “ What were they on about today, then? ” she said. |
4520 | “ What will Robert do? ” “ Have a shot at Josephine, apparently. ” “ Really? |
4520 | “ What will Robert do? ” “ Have a shot at Josephine, apparently. ” “ Really? |
4520 | “ What would you like to drink? |
4520 | “ What you give-- he? |
4520 | “ What''re you laughing at? ” repeated Aaron. |
4520 | “ What''s amiss? ” said Aaron Sisson, breaking this spell. |
4520 | “ What''s her name? ” “ Mrs. |
4520 | “ What''s that?--What would be romantic? ” said Jim as he lurched up and caught hold of Cyril Scott''s arm. |
4520 | “ What''s the good of that? ” he said irritably. |
4520 | “ What''s the matter with the fellow? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What''s tomorrow? ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ What, do n''t you think they''re wonderful? ” “ No. |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? ” said Aaron, looking up. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ When are you going? ” he asked irritably, looking up at Lilly, whose face hovered in that green shadow above, and worried him. |
4520 | “ When did I make that start, then? ” “ At some unmentionably young age. |
4520 | “ When did you come to Florence? ” There was a little explanation. |
4520 | “ Where are you going to have it? ” he called. |
4520 | “ Where from? ” “ Watch Ireland, and watch Japan-- they''re the two poles of the world, ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ Where is Scott to- night? ” asked Struthers. |
4520 | “ Where is n''t it? |
4520 | “ Where is there a doctor? ” he added, on reflection. |
4520 | “ Where shall I come to you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Where shall I say? ” Lilly produced the map, and they decided on time and station at which Lois coming out of London, should meet Jim. |
4520 | “ Where to? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Where were YOU all the time during the war? ” “ I was doing my job, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Where''s the beer? ” he asked, in deep tones, smiling full into Josephine''s face, as if she were going to produce it by some sleight of hand. |
4520 | “ Where''s the wine list? |
4520 | “ Where? |
4520 | “ Which room? ” said the policeman, dubious. |
4520 | “ Who knows all the vile things you''ve been doing? |
4520 | “ Who threw the bomb? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Who''s your husband? |
4520 | “ Who--? |
4520 | “ Who? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ Who? ” “ Those two who were here this evening. ” “ Miss Wade and Mr. |
4520 | “ Why I left her? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why are n''t you satisfied? ” “ I''m not satisfied. |
4520 | “ Why are you crying? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why are you such a baby? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Why do you have those people? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Why must you interfere? ” “ Because I intend to, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Why not carry it out-- eh? |
4520 | “ Why not? |
4520 | “ Why not? ” Both were watching blankly the roaring night of mid- London, the phantasmagoric old Bloomsbury Square. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” replied Robert, answering for her. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ I do n''t want to. ” “ Why not? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ I do n''t want to. ” “ Why not? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ It''s just my nature. ” “ Are you a seeker? |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ It''s just my nature. ” “ Are you a seeker? |
4520 | “ Why should I? ” And she looked away into the restless hive of the theatre. |
4520 | “ Why should n''t I? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ Why should n''t you be, anyhow? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why, have you left valuables in your overcoat? ” “ My flute, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Why, how do you mean, what sort? |
4520 | “ Why, what more could a man want from life? |
4520 | “ Why? ” she exclaimed. |
4520 | “ Why? ” “ I know it. |
4520 | “ Will he heed, will he heed? ” thought the anxious second self. |
4520 | “ Will he never hear? |
4520 | “ Will you be alone all winter? ” “ Just myself and Tanny, ” he answered. |
4520 | “ Will you be leaving in the morning, Mr. Sisson? ” asked Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ Will you come to dinner tomorrow evening? ” said his hostess to him as he was leaving. |
4520 | “ Will you get the flute? ” she said as they entered. |
4520 | “ Will you have supper? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Will you really come? |
4520 | “ Will you stay to dinner? ” said the Marchesa. |
4520 | “ Will you tell me why you left your wife and children?--Didn''t you love them? ” Aaron looked at the odd, round, dark muzzle of the girl. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t it break? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t they be expecting you? ” said Robert, trying to keep his temper and his tone of authority. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you come and have a cocktail? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you go home to them? ” she said, hysterical. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you kiss me? ” came her voice out of the darkness. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you let me try some accompaniment? ” said the soldier. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you stay? ” she said, in a small, muted voice. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you take off your coat? ” she said, looking at him with strange, large dark eyes. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you? ” “ Yes, ” he said quietly. |
4520 | “ Would n''t you? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Would you like a little tea? ” “ Ay-- and a bit of toast. ” “ You''re not supposed to have solid food. |
4520 | “ Would you like me to play it? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Would you like tea or anything? ” Lilly asked. |
4520 | “ Would you like to be wrapped in swaddling bands and laid at the breast? ” asked Lilly, disagreeably. |
4520 | “ Would you like to see the room where we have music? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Would you rather take a bus? ” she said in a high voice, because of the wind. |
4520 | “ Would you rather? ” she said, keeping her face averted. |
4520 | “ Yes, I prefer it. ” “ You like living all alone? ” “ I do n''t know about that. |
4520 | “ Yes, and THEN WHAT? ” cried the landlady. |
4520 | “ Yes, why not? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ Yes-- shall you buy us some, Father? |
4520 | “ Yes.--May I have another whiskey, please? ” She rose at once, powerfully energetic. |
4520 | “ Yes? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Yet you can give no reasons? ” “ Not any reasons that would be any good. |
4520 | “ You agree? ” “ Yes, on the whole. ” “ So do I-- on the whole. |
4520 | “ You are new in Florence? ” he said, as he presented the match. |
4520 | “ You are sure it wo n''t be too much for you-- too far? ” said the little officer, taking his wife''s arm solicitously. |
4520 | “ You believe in love, do n''t you? ” said Jim, sitting down near Aaron, and grinning at him. |
4520 | “ You brought the flute? ” she said, in that toneless, melancholy, unstriving voice of hers. |
4520 | “ You ca n''t REMEMBER us, can you? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ You can take a sudden jump, ca n''t you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You did n''t expect me, then? ” “ Yes, oh, yes. |
4520 | “ You do everything for yourself, then? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ You do know, do n''t you? ” she insisted, still with the wistful appeal, and the veiled threat. |
4520 | “ You do n''t mind if I play it, do you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You do n''t mind? ” “ No-- why-- It''s just as you see it.--Jim Bricknell''s a rare comic, to my eye. ” “ Oh, him!--no, not actually. |
4520 | “ You do n''t want emotions? |
4520 | “ You have n''t eaten? |
4520 | “ You have n''t heard from your husband? ” he added. |
4520 | “ You know what I mean-- ” “ You like your own company? |
4520 | “ You know you''ve been wrong to me, do n''t you? ” she said, half wistfully, half menacing. |
4520 | “ You mean the bird of your voice? |
4520 | “ You seriously think so? ” said Miss Wade. |
4520 | “ You want to stay? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You wanted the book of_ chansons_? ” she said. |
4520 | “ You will stay to dinner tonight, wo n''t you? ” she said. |
4520 | “ You wo n''t forget our candles, will you, Father? ” asked Millicent, with assurance now. |
4520 | “ You would n''t like me to wire to your wife? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ You''ll come and have dinner with me-- or lunch-- will you? |
4520 | “ You''ll eat a mince- pie in the kitchen with us, for luck? ” she said to him, detaining him till last. |
4520 | “ You''ll go to bed, wo n''t you? ” said Lilly to Aaron, when the door was shut. |
4520 | “ You''ll take another glass yourself, Sir? ” “ Yes, I will, I will. |
4520 | “ You''re going in the morning? ” said Arthur. |
4520 | “ You''re not offended, are you? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ You''ve got a husband, have you? ” “ Rather! |
4520 | “ You''ve known some life, have n''t you? ” he asked. |
38806 | ( vii) But who denies that the Apostles claimed a Divine mission? 38806 Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you"? |
38806 | How can divorce reform be best secured? |
38806 | It is as high as Heaven; what canst thou do? 38806 Love God with all thy heart"? |
38806 | Love thy neighbor as thyself? |
38806 | Return good for evil? |
38806 | _*** Now, what reason is there to suppose that parties divorced and remated will be happier in the new connection than in the old? 38806 32):And what shall I say more? |
38806 | 79): Or tu chi sei, che vuoi sedere a scranna Per giudicar da lungi mille miglia Colla veduta corta d''una spanna? |
38806 | A man says that he has received a revelation from God, and he wishes to convince another man that he has received a revelation-- how does he proceed? |
38806 | According to your reasoning, would there not have been left greater room for the career of human thought, had no revelation been made? |
38806 | Admit that in the person supposed, the machinery of life goes on-- what is he more than an inanimate machine? |
38806 | After a time the money failed in the land of Egypt, and the Egyptians came unto Joseph and said,"Give us bread; why should we die in thy presence? |
38806 | After all, was not Bacchus as good as Jehovah? |
38806 | After his resurrection, why did not some one of his disciples ask him where he had been? |
38806 | After making this admission, of what use is the old idea of the forgiveness of sins? |
38806 | After repudiating religion with scorn, you ask,"Is there not room for a better, for a higher philosophy?" |
38806 | Again I ask, How can I help believing what I see every day of my life? |
38806 | Again I ask, Is it desirable to have families raised under such circumstances? |
38806 | Again I ask, why were the Jewish people as wicked, cruel, and ignorant with a revelation from God, as other nations were without? |
38806 | Again, I ask, why should there be more than one inspired gospel? |
38806 | Am I bound by the opinions of Bacon in matters of religion, and not in matters of science? |
38806 | And I ask again, why should there have been more than one inspired gospel? |
38806 | And do you know that this hideous offer caused millions to desert their wives and children? |
38806 | And how did he ascertain that any of the apostles and prophets were entrusted with supernatural power? |
38806 | And how, my dear Cardinal, do you account for the fact that God upheld concubinage? |
38806 | And if his existence is immortal, are not the consequences immortal also? |
38806 | And if the claim was made, how is it known that it was not denied? |
38806 | And if the watch was made to keep time, was not the eye made to see and the ear to hear? |
38806 | And if you disagree with Milton on this point, do you thereby pretend to say that you could have written a better poem than Paradise Lost? |
38806 | And in order to find out what is this will of God, are we to ask the church, or are we to read what are called"the sacred writings"for ourselves? |
38806 | And is it historically absurd to say that our ancestors of a few hundred years ago were as credulous as the disciples of Buddha? |
38806 | And is this the end of your argument,"That you are not able to explain the inequalities of adjustment between human beings"? |
38806 | And is this the foundation of morality? |
38806 | And suppose that he also knew that only by betraying Christ could he save either himself or others; what ought Judas to have done? |
38806 | And suppose the mother should then sobbingly ask:"What has become of my son? |
38806 | And what is this but endless retribution? |
38806 | And what right has he to have anything to say on the subject, unless he has agreed to do something by reason of this vow? |
38806 | And what shall we say of the desire to condemn? |
38806 | And when has it ever appeared except in a handful of vestal virgins, or in Oriental recluses, with what reality history shows? |
38806 | And why did he drown a world to whom he had not even given that light? |
38806 | And why do you hold the will responsible, when you insist that it is swayed by the passions and affections? |
38806 | And why should such persons be punished? |
38806 | And why should the whole human race become tainted by the offence of those who had no moral sense? |
38806 | And why should we call anything a"divine scheme"that has been a failure from the"fall of man"until the present moment? |
38806 | And will those thoughts be wholly free from sadness? |
38806 | And you say:"How can you hurt my feelings?" |
38806 | Are Catholic nations better than Protestant? |
38806 | Are Catholics better than Protestants? |
38806 | Are miracles impossible? |
38806 | Are not such methods of proceeding more suited to placards at an election, than to disquisitions on these most solemn subjects? |
38806 | Are only those opinions honest that are formed without any interference of passion, affection, habit or fancy? |
38806 | Are the angels in their highest estate nothing but happy paupers? |
38806 | Are the inspiration of the Bible, the divinity of Christ, the atonement, and the Trinity, principles? |
38806 | Are the statements of the inspired witnesses alike on this important point? |
38806 | Are there any waters of oblivion that can cleanse his miserable soul? |
38806 | Are there no retributions in history? |
38806 | Are these the words of infinite mercy? |
38806 | Are they all to be saved? |
38806 | Are they nearer honest, nearer just, more charitable? |
38806 | Are they to remain forever without character? |
38806 | Are we in need of children born of such parents? |
38806 | Are we justified in saying that the Catholic Church is of divine origin because the Pagans failed to destroy it by persecution? |
38806 | Are we not responsible to"receive the truth in the love of it?" |
38806 | Are we only required to give our assent to certain principles in order to be saved? |
38806 | Are we to be bound forever by the ancient barbarians? |
38806 | Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was virtuous? |
38806 | Are we under the same obligation to share his vices as his views? |
38806 | Are you driven to the necessity of proving the existence of one tyrant by the words of another? |
38806 | Are you looking down upon him from the altitude of your own inferiority? |
38806 | Are you satisfied that Napoleon expressed his real opinion when he justified himself for the assassination of the Duc d''Enghien? |
38806 | Are you urging an objection to the dogma of immortality, when you say that a race of unparalled intellectual capacity had no confidence in it? |
38806 | Are you willing to admit that the Ten Commandments are not for all time? |
38806 | Are you willing to rely upon an argument that justifies the treachery of that wretch? |
38806 | Are you willing to say that all success is divine? |
38806 | As a matter of fact, who cares what the Old Testament says upon this subject? |
38806 | As to Lord Bacon, let me ask, are you willing to accept his ideas? |
38806 | Behind every wish and thought, every dream and fancy, every fear and hope, are there not countless causes? |
38806 | Besides, what right have you to say that I"look upon annihilation as the common lot of all"? |
38806 | But are Christians guilty of this baseness because they accept the blessings of an institution which their great benefactor died to establish? |
38806 | But coming at the close of the controversy, have they not some of the ineffectual features of a death- bed repentance? |
38806 | But do you think to escape mystery by denying the Divine existence? |
38806 | But even if we know that there is a God, what can we know of His character? |
38806 | But how and in what way, does a Christian marriage involve a vow before God? |
38806 | But how are you going to get rid of these? |
38806 | But how do we know that the disciples of Christ wrote a word of the gospels? |
38806 | But how does the matter stand historically? |
38806 | But how is it possible for a man who believes in slavery to have the slightest conception of benevolence, justice or charity? |
38806 | But if we are immortal-- if there be another world-- why was it not clearly set forth in the Old Testament? |
38806 | But if you tell him:"I saw a dead man raised to- day,"he will ask,"From what madhouse have you escaped?" |
38806 | But is there not another side to this? |
38806 | But of praise on what account? |
38806 | But suppose the father to be infinite-- why should the child sacrifice anything for him? |
38806 | But what has all this to do with the fact that he who watches the scales in which evidence is weighed knows the actual result? |
38806 | But what has all this to do with the point at issue? |
38806 | But what is regeneration but a change of character shown in a change of life? |
38806 | But what is to become of the boys and girls who"behave themselves,"who attend to their studies, and comply with the rules? |
38806 | But what of the victims? |
38806 | But what support does your hollow creed supply? |
38806 | But where is the legislation? |
38806 | But where shall we find another Pascal? |
38806 | But who were the vicars of Christ? |
38806 | But why did God allow simultaneous polygamy in Palestine? |
38806 | But why should I, an unlearned and unauthorized layman, be placed in such a predicament? |
38806 | But why should we appeal to names? |
38806 | But why such a limitation? |
38806 | But why? |
38806 | But would that be a more orderly community, more refined or more truly happy? |
38806 | But, after all, is the success of the Catholic Church a marvel? |
38806 | But, after all, would even passing good come from this greater freedom? |
38806 | By what means did that Great Power hold in bondage the then known world? |
38806 | Can God, through the Bible, make precisely the same revelation to two persons? |
38806 | Can Jehovah be excused because of his youth? |
38806 | Can a being endowed with such transcendent gifts doubt the goodness of his Creator? |
38806 | Can a good man mock at the children of deformity? |
38806 | Can a good man, believing a good doctrine, persecute for opinion''s sake? |
38806 | Can a law be satisfied by the execution of the wrong person? |
38806 | Can a man be indifferent between two such sides of the problem? |
38806 | Can a moral being be absolutely indifferent between two such issues? |
38806 | Can a murderer find justification in the agonies of his victim? |
38806 | Can he rid himself of it by fleeing beyond"that bourne from whence no traveler returns"? |
38806 | Can her conduct affect in any way the happiness of an infinite being? |
38806 | Can it be indifferent and all the same to us whether God has made Himself and His will known to us or not? |
38806 | Can it be possible that any punishment can endure forever? |
38806 | Can it be pretended that the witnesses could not have been mistaken about the relation the Holy Ghost is alleged to have sustained to Jesus Christ? |
38806 | Can it be said that success is supernatural? |
38806 | Can it be said that this contributes to the moral purity of the human race? |
38806 | Can it truthfully be said that the Catholic Church is now universal? |
38806 | Can she be bribed with money, or a home, or position, or by public opinion, and still remain a virtuous woman? |
38806 | Can she never sit by her own hearth, with the arms of her children about her neck, and with a husband who loves and protects her? |
38806 | Can the imagination conceive a worse fate than your religion predicts for a majority of the race? |
38806 | Can the scales in which reason weighs evidence be turned by the will? |
38806 | Can the virtue of others be preserved only by this destruction of happiness, by this perpetual imprisonment? |
38806 | Can there be a law that demands that the guilty be rewarded? |
38806 | Can there be a sadder fact than this: Innocence is not a certain shield? |
38806 | Can this add to the joy of Paradise, or tend to keep one harp in tune? |
38806 | Can this be avoided by saying that a false god is better than none? |
38806 | Can this be called reasoning? |
38806 | Can this increase the happiness of the one or of the three? |
38806 | Can we believe that an infinitely wise and good Being would choose immoral, dishonest, ignorant, malicious, heartless, fiendish, and inhuman vicars? |
38806 | Can we believe, upon the testimony of those about whose character we know nothing, that Lazarus was raised from the dead? |
38806 | Can we control our thought? |
38806 | Can we in this way account for the doubts entertained by the intellectual leaders of mankind? |
38806 | Can we stop thinking? |
38806 | Can we tell what we are going to think tomorrow? |
38806 | Can we, for this reason, say that it is a supernatural religion? |
38806 | Can you afford to occupy this position? |
38806 | Can you answer these questions? |
38806 | Can you by any possibility answer this question? |
38806 | Can you conceive of an"Almighty Friend"deforming his children because he loves them? |
38806 | Can you conceive of his changing his orders by reason of the message? |
38806 | Can you deny that Christ addressed the chosen people when he said:"Jerusalem, which killest the prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee"? |
38806 | Can you imagine a superstition so gross that it can not be defended by that argument? |
38806 | Can you read the names mentioned in the decrees of the Infinite? |
38806 | Can you say that he has given his opinion? |
38806 | Can you say that this is only destruction? |
38806 | Can you think of any excuse for an earthly father, who, having wealth, learning and leisure, leaves his own children in ignorance and darkness? |
38806 | Cosmas or Humboldt, St. Irenà ¦ us or Darwin? |
38806 | Could a God with any sense of humor give such directions, or watch without huge laughter the performance of such a ceremony? |
38806 | Could a noble man demand, or joyfully receive, the humiliation of his fellows? |
38806 | Could a savage account for the telegraph, or the telephone, by natural causes? |
38806 | Could anything be more suspicious if credible, or less credible even if He were there to say so? |
38806 | Could not Caiaphas, the high priest, have said substantially this to Christ? |
38806 | Could not a follower of Buddha make the same illogical remark to a missionary from Andover with the glad tidings? |
38806 | Could the condition of this victim be rendered worse by the death of God? |
38806 | Could there be progress in heaven without intellectual liberty? |
38806 | Did English judges and juries approach with an unbiassed mind the trials for the Popish plot? |
38806 | Did God hear the prayers of the slaves? |
38806 | Did God invent tumors for the brain? |
38806 | Did God treat the Canaanites better than Pharaoh did the Jews? |
38806 | Did Greece produce a man who could by any possibility have been the author of"Troilus and Cressida"? |
38806 | Did Jehovah believe in the innocence of thought and the liberty of expression? |
38806 | Did Jehovah teach and practice generosity? |
38806 | Did Jehovah uphold this savage view? |
38806 | Did Napoleon judge according to the evidence when he acquitted himself in the matter of the Due d''Enghien? |
38806 | Did ever savagery, with strange and uncouth marks, with awkward forms of beast and bird, pollute the dripping walls of caves with such commands? |
38806 | Did he allow the flames to devour the flesh of those whose hearts were his? |
38806 | Did he allow the innocent to languish in dungeons because he was their friend? |
38806 | Did he allow the noble to perish upon the scaffold, the great and the self- denying to be burned at the stake, because he had the power to save? |
38806 | Did he at that time"denounce Christ for not agreeing with him"? |
38806 | Did he at the time know what kind of man he was joining to me? |
38806 | Did he attain character through struggle and suffering? |
38806 | Did he come to give a rule of action? |
38806 | Did he come to teach us of another world? |
38806 | Did he consider that a"metaphysical question"? |
38806 | Did he cultivate those seeds? |
38806 | Did he do the one- hundredth part of the good for mankind that was done by Voltaire-- was he as great a metaphysician as Spinoza? |
38806 | Did he do these things because he loved mankind, or did he do these miracles simply to establish the fact that he was the very Christ? |
38806 | Did he establish the institution of slavery? |
38806 | Did he hear the prayers of imprisoned philosophers and patriots? |
38806 | Did he hear the prayers of martyrs, or did he allow fiends, calling themselves his followers, to pile the fagots round the forms of glorious men? |
38806 | Did he knowingly plant in the blood or brain the seeds of insanity? |
38806 | Did he pander to the barbarian view of the worthlessness of life? |
38806 | Did he say:"Whoso giveth a cup of cold water to the excommunicated shall wear forever a garment of fire"? |
38806 | Did he then know that he was a wretch, an ingrate, a kind of wild beast? |
38806 | Did he then know that this husband would desert me-- leave me with two babes in my arms, without raiment and without food? |
38806 | Did he"violate the laws of social morality and decency"? |
38806 | Did not Elijah know that the name of Baal"was encircled in the heart of every believer with the profoundest reverence and love"? |
38806 | Did not God know at the time the vow was made that it ought not to have been made? |
38806 | Did not Jehovah teach that the act that we describe as murder was a duty? |
38806 | Did that infallible Council, under the guidance of the Holy Ghost, destroy idolatry? |
38806 | Did the Catholics have it, and was it taken by Luther? |
38806 | Did the Jews believe that Christ was clothed with miraculous power? |
38806 | Did the pupils believe the teachers? |
38806 | Did the writers of the four gospels have"''the sensible and true avouch of their own eyes''and ears"in that behalf? |
38806 | Did they believe without evidence? |
38806 | Did they have any evidence? |
38806 | Did they not follow one who offered a reward to those who would desert fathers and mothers? |
38806 | Did they not heap contempt upon the religion of their fathers and mothers? |
38806 | Did they not join with him who denounced their people as a"generation of vipers"? |
38806 | Did they order their soldiers to kill men, women, and children, and to save alive nothing that had breath? |
38806 | Did this detestable doctrine"create the purity and peace of domestic life"? |
38806 | Did this tend to the elevation of woman? |
38806 | Did this"Almighty Friend"allow millions of his children to be enslaved to the end that the"splendor of virtue might have a dark background"? |
38806 | Did you intend to say Dante, or Bishop Butler? |
38806 | Did your God create these victims, knowing that they would be victims? |
38806 | Did"Mammon"or Moloch do anything more infamous than to establish slavery? |
38806 | Do I lack"reverential calm"? |
38806 | Do I rebel because my"constitution is warped, impaired and dislocated"? |
38806 | Do astronomers, geologists and scientists put the hand to the ear fearing that an accent may be lost? |
38806 | Do not Christians weep above their dead? |
38806 | Do not these facts prove that your God is cruel to all alike? |
38806 | Do not these wants and these objects have something to do with the will, and does not the intellect have something to do with the means? |
38806 | Do the Catholic nations move in the van of progress? |
38806 | Do the believers in indissoluble marriage treat their wives better than others? |
38806 | Do they believe that Christ from heaven''s throne mocked when colored mothers, reft of babes, knelt by empty cradles and besought his aid? |
38806 | Do those who have raised Italy from the dead, and placed her again among the great nations, pay attention? |
38806 | Do we forget that there are two species of polygamy-- simultaneous and successive? |
38806 | Do we not know that for hundreds of years the Mohammedans erected more hospitals and asylums than the Christians? |
38806 | Do we not know that when the Roman empire fell, darkness settled on the world? |
38806 | Do we speak of wise credulity-- of intelligent credulity? |
38806 | Do you agree with Bacon? |
38806 | Do you attack only those with whom you wish to live in peace, and do you ask questions, coupled with a request that they remain unanswered? |
38806 | Do you believe in the principle of divorce under any circumstances? |
38806 | Do you believe in the principle of divorce under any circumstances? |
38806 | Do you believe that any founder of any religion could have written"Lear"or"Hamlet"? |
38806 | Do you believe that he saw and knew all these things, and that he, the"Almighty Friend,"looked coldly down and stretched no hand to save? |
38806 | Do you believe that the English judges in the matter of the Popish Plot gave judgment in accordance with their opinions? |
38806 | Do you believe that the"Almighty Friend"then governed the world? |
38806 | Do you chain a wild beast because he is morally responsible? |
38806 | Do you consider that God was one of the contracting parties in my marriage? |
38806 | Do you consider that the proper way to attack the God of another? |
38806 | Do you consider that the"survival of the fittest"? |
38806 | Do you find anything in what I have written tending to show that I believe in annihilation? |
38806 | Do you find in this flame the bud of hope, or the flower of promise? |
38806 | Do you find it in any published words of mine? |
38806 | Do you find this doctrine of hope in the Presbyterian creed? |
38806 | Do you insist that nothing except the right can live for two thousand years? |
38806 | Do you kill the poisonous serpent because he knew better than to bite? |
38806 | Do you know that in this sentence you demonstrate the existence of a dawn in your mind? |
38806 | Do you know that nearly every intelligent minister is now ashamed to preach about it, or to read about it, or to talk about it? |
38806 | Do you know that only a few years ago"the glad tidings of great joy"consisted mostly in a description of hell? |
38806 | Do you know that the standard has changed? |
38806 | Do you not believe that any honest man of average intelligence, having absolute control of the rain, could do vastly better than is being done? |
38806 | Do you not know that the worst thing that can be said of Nero, Caligula, and Commodus is that they resembled the Jehovah of the Jews? |
38806 | Do you not see that if men have done good and bad, the future can have neither a perfect heaven nor a perfect hell? |
38806 | Do you not see that self- preservation lies at the foundation of worship? |
38806 | Do you not see that this argument devours itself? |
38806 | Do you not see that this sentence is a cord with which I easily tie your hands? |
38806 | Do you not see that you have bidden farewell to the Presbyterian Church? |
38806 | Do you not see that you have furnished the cord for me to tie your hands behind you? |
38806 | Do you not see that your argument proves too much, and that it is equally applicable to all the religions of the world? |
38806 | Do you not see that your doctrine gives intellectual freedom only to foundlings? |
38806 | Do you not see that your excuses are simply the suggestions of other crimes? |
38806 | Do you not see that your future state is infinitely worse than this? |
38806 | Do you not see that your position can not be defended, and that you have provided no way for retreat? |
38806 | Do you not see that, according to your philosophy, only the damned can grow great-- only the lost can become sublime? |
38806 | Do you not think that the criminal deserves the pity of the virtuous? |
38806 | Do you prove it by the words he put in the mouths of his characters? |
38806 | Do you prove the truth of these fine words, this honey of Trebizond, by the victims of religious persecution? |
38806 | Do you really believe that this world is governed by an infinitely wise and good God? |
38806 | Do you really desire that I should add weight to my words? |
38806 | Do you really think that God joined us together? |
38806 | Do you really think that he"Bade the slave- ship speed from coast to coast, Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost"? |
38806 | Do you really think that it is the same Christianity that has been living all these years? |
38806 | Do you really wish me to succeed? |
38806 | Do you regard ignorance as the foundation of virtue? |
38806 | Do you say this is"a great mystery,"meaning that it is something that we do not know anything about? |
38806 | Do you see any design in the volcano that sends its rivers of lava over the fields and the homes of men? |
38806 | Do you see any design in this? |
38806 | Do you see no difference between the religion of Calvin and Jonathan Edwards and the Christianity of to- day? |
38806 | Do you see the same design in cancers that you do in wheat and corn? |
38806 | Do you think that men enough could join this church to prove the truth of its creed? |
38806 | Do you think the Bible calculated to restrain him? |
38806 | Do you think this would enable him to withstand temptation? |
38806 | Does France listen? |
38806 | Does God, like an ignorant doctor, bury his mistakes? |
38806 | Does Great Britain care for this voice-- this moan, this groan-- of the Middle Ages? |
38806 | Does Italy hear? |
38806 | Does Mr. Black pretend that such statements would be admitted as evidence in any court? |
38806 | Does Mr. Ingersoll know what he is talking about? |
38806 | Does Mr. Ingersoll want to disgrace his own intellect by pretending that he can not see this simple analogy? |
38806 | Does a belief in immortality keep back their tears? |
38806 | Does a kind father mock his deformed child? |
38806 | Does a lack of knowledge as to the fate of the human soul imply a belief in annihilation? |
38806 | Does any Christian believe that if God were to write a book now, he would uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? |
38806 | Does any decent man wish the assistance of a constable, a sheriff, a judge, or a church, to keep his wife in his house? |
38806 | Does he agree with St. Augustine in his estimate of women-- placing them on a par with beasts? |
38806 | Does he appeal to the man''s reason? |
38806 | Does he believe in some being superior to himself? |
38806 | Does he call attention to this because most theologians are hateful and ungentlemanly? |
38806 | Does he defend the weak, succor the oppressed, or trample on the fallen? |
38806 | Does he laugh at misfortune, at poverty, at honesty in rags, at industry without food, at the agonies of his fellow- men? |
38806 | Does he laugh when he sees the convict clothed in the garments of shame-- at the criminal on the scaffold? |
38806 | Does he long for the fires of the_ auto da fà ©_.? |
38806 | Does he not know that hundreds of judges, some of them as great as the late lamented Gibson, believed in the existence of an impossible crime? |
38806 | Does he not know that in Egypt, before Moses lived, the insane were treated with kindness and wooed back to natural thought by music''s golden voice? |
38806 | Does he not know that these admissions were made in the presence and expectation of death? |
38806 | Does he not know that they admitted that they had spoken face to face with Satan, and had sold their souls for gold and power? |
38806 | Does he not positively know? |
38806 | Does he preserve order in Russia? |
38806 | Does he regret that dungeons of the Inquisition are no longer crowded with the best and bravest? |
38806 | Does he rub his hands with glee over the embers of an enemy''s home? |
38806 | Does history show that there is a moral governor of the world? |
38806 | Does infinite justice annihilate the work of infinite wisdom? |
38806 | Does it not equally imply a belief in immortality? |
38806 | Does it not seem to you infinitely absurd to call orthodox Christianity"a consolation"? |
38806 | Does it relieve mankind from fear to believe that there is some God who will help them in extremity? |
38806 | Does it seem possible that infinite goodness would create a world in which life feeds on life, in which everything devours and is devoured? |
38806 | Does it seem possible to you that an"Infinite Father"sees all this and sits as silent as a god of stone? |
38806 | Does it tend to convince even yourself? |
38806 | Does not Mr. Black know that thousands of people charged with witchcraft actually confessed in open court their guilt? |
38806 | Does not Mr. Black know that, thousands of years before Christ was born, there were hospitals and asylums for orphans in China? |
38806 | Does not a gradual improvement in the thing created show a corresponding improvement in the creator? |
38806 | Does not an infinite God know the circumstances under which every vow is made? |
38806 | Does not the commandment"Love thy neighbor as thyself,"apply to nations precisely the same as to individuals? |
38806 | Does not the idea of sacrifice run through human life, and ennoble human character? |
38806 | Does not the intrinsic and eternal distinction of good and evil make itself felt in spite of the will? |
38806 | Does not the willingness show that he is utterly unworthy of the sacrifice? |
38806 | Does not the world know that all the crimes or offences punishable by death in England could be divided in the same way? |
38806 | Does not this question admit that the teachings of Christ will not serve for all nations, all ages and all states of civilization? |
38806 | Does the Archdeacon agree with St. Augustine? |
38806 | Does the Archdeacon deny that credulity is ignorant? |
38806 | Does the Archdeacon insist that there is an obligation resting on any human mind to believe without evidence? |
38806 | Does the Bible shed no light? |
38806 | Does the Cardinal regret that kings and emperors are not now engaged in the extermination of Protestants? |
38806 | Does the Dean think that the satisfaction of St. Paul justified the wretches who beat and stoned him? |
38806 | Does the absolute prohibition of divorce where it exists contribute to the moral purity of society? |
38806 | Does the absolute prohibition of divorce where it exists contribute to the moral purity of society?_ We must define our terms. |
38806 | Does the absolute prohibition of divorce, where it exists, contribute to the moral purity of society? |
38806 | Does the brain think without our consent? |
38806 | Does the fact that millions of the faithful visit Mecca establish the truth of the Koran? |
38806 | Doubtless we are many of us in error; but how can Mr. Ingersoll enlighten us? |
38806 | During all that time, can it be said that the Catholic Church was universal? |
38806 | Educate, or exterminate? |
38806 | Evidence about what? |
38806 | First, Do I believe in the existence of God? |
38806 | For if man lives after death, and keeps his personal identity, do not the"consequences"of his past life follow him into the future? |
38806 | Had Christianity then produced the equals of the great Greeks and Romans? |
38806 | Had the father the right to sell or kill his child? |
38806 | Has Jehovah improved? |
38806 | Has Mr. Ingersoll fallen into the egregious blunder of confounding these things? |
38806 | Has he the right to express that opinion? |
38806 | Has infinite mercy- become more merciful? |
38806 | Has infinite wisdom intellectually- advanced? |
38806 | Has it been"fruitful in the good things"of justice, charity and forgiveness? |
38806 | Has man become more merciful than his maker? |
38806 | Has man outgrown the Inquisition, and will God forever be the warden of a penitentiary? |
38806 | Has not almost every valuable book since the invention of printing been denounced by the believers in the"divine scheme"? |
38806 | Has religion had control of the world so long that an honest man seems monstrous? |
38806 | Has she no right of choice? |
38806 | Has she no right to build another home? |
38806 | Has she no right to guard the jewels of her soul? |
38806 | Has the Cardinal forgotten the Council of Nice, held in the year of grace 787, that declared the worship of images to be lawful? |
38806 | Has the Catholic Church produced a greater man than Humboldt? |
38806 | Has the Christian world outgrown its God? |
38806 | Has the Protestant produced a greater than Darwin? |
38806 | Has the church been merciful? |
38806 | Has the creed of Buddhism changed in three thousand years? |
38806 | Has the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of a sin? |
38806 | Has the writer of the Reply really weighed the force, and measured the sweep of his own words? |
38806 | Has there been found upon the records of the savage world anything more perfectly fiendish than this commandment of Jehovah? |
38806 | Have I not suffered enough? |
38806 | Have not the subjects of redemption been for the most part the enemies of civilization? |
38806 | Have they believed without evidence? |
38806 | Have you abandoned Jehovah? |
38806 | Have you answered that? |
38806 | Have you appealed from him to the standard of reason? |
38806 | Have you convinced even yourself of this? |
38806 | Have you convinced even yourself of this?" |
38806 | Have you discovered any theory that will account for both of these facts? |
38806 | Have you done that young man any good in taking from him what he held sacred before? |
38806 | Have you literary bread to eat that I know not of? |
38806 | Have you never seen a drunkard reformed? |
38806 | Have you not left him morally weakened? |
38806 | Have you noticed any change in the last generation? |
38806 | He came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal? |
38806 | Hear now, O house of Israel, is not my way equal, are not your ways unequal?" |
38806 | Here they gather, old and young, rich and poor; and as they join in the same act of worship, feel that God is the maker of them all? |
38806 | How are we to find a common measure, again, for different kinds of greatness; how weigh, for example, Dante against Julius Caesar? |
38806 | How are you going to stop this downward tendency? |
38806 | How can a God accept the suffering of the innocent in lieu of the punishment of the guilty? |
38806 | How can a person"incapable of perceiving right and wrong"have an idea of duty? |
38806 | How can any loving man or woman"encircle the name of Jehovah"--author of these words--"with profoundest reverence and love"? |
38806 | How can sin be transferred from men to animals, and how can the shedding of the blood of animals atone for the sins of men? |
38806 | How can the criminal be washed clean and pure in the blood of another? |
38806 | How can you sustain the conduct of missionaries? |
38806 | How can you, how can any man with brain or heart, believe this infinite lie? |
38806 | How did Christ make marriage a sacrament? |
38806 | How did Jehovah command his people to treat their neighbors? |
38806 | How did Jehovah treat the animals in Egypt? |
38806 | How did it happen that Christ wrote nothing? |
38806 | How did it happen that a man who had done so many miracles was so obscure, so unknown, that one of his disciples had to be bribed to point him out? |
38806 | How did it happen that he established no asylums for the insane? |
38806 | How did religions other than Christianity and Judaism arise? |
38806 | How did the angels become good? |
38806 | How did we come here? |
38806 | How did you ascertain this fact? |
38806 | How do we know that the writers of the gospels"were men of unimpeachable character"? |
38806 | How do we really know what the great men of whom you speak believed, or believe? |
38806 | How do you account for Confucius, whose name is known wherever the sky bends? |
38806 | How do you account for him, who has had more followers than any other? |
38806 | How do you account for the fact that the flag of this impostor floats to- day above the sepulchre of Christ? |
38806 | How do you account for the fact that your God permitted some of his children to become insane? |
38806 | How do you account for the justice of God? |
38806 | How do you account for these differences? |
38806 | How do you account for this difference? |
38806 | How do you account for this miracle? |
38806 | How do you account for this? |
38806 | How do you explain this? |
38806 | How do you know"that they have been set down to work out their destiny"? |
38806 | How does a man use power? |
38806 | How does he know that God made the universe? |
38806 | How does he know that any revelation was made? |
38806 | How does he know what God would be likely to do? |
38806 | How does that throw any light upon my case? |
38806 | How does the pope speak? |
38806 | How far in the future must he travel to forget that look? |
38806 | How is it known that it was claimed, during the life of Christ, that he had wrought a miracle? |
38806 | How is it possible for angels, living in"a child''s picture,"to"suffer and be strong"? |
38806 | How is it that a despotism is established? |
38806 | How is it that he conquered and overran more than half of the Christian world? |
38806 | How is it that he forgot to say anything on the subject when he gave the Ten Commandments to Moses? |
38806 | How is it that he forgot to say anything on the subject when he gave the Ten Commandments to Moses? |
38806 | How is it that on a thousand fields the banner of the cross went down in blood, while that of the crescent floated in triumph? |
38806 | How is it that the few enslave the many? |
38806 | How is it that the nobility live on the labor of peasants? |
38806 | How is it that there is nothing in the Old Testament on this subject? |
38806 | How is its existence to be accounted for? |
38806 | How is this known? |
38806 | How long must the night be to sleep away the memory of such a hideous life? |
38806 | How long will it be before he will venture in? |
38806 | How long will what you call Christianity endure, if it changes as rapidly during the next century as it has during the last? |
38806 | How many have there been? |
38806 | How many hospitals for the sick were established by the church during a thousand years? |
38806 | How shall this be determined? |
38806 | How then can it be said that Christianity has been in changeless opposition to nature as man has marred it? |
38806 | How then can we account for the wars of extermination? |
38806 | How then should it be thought a thing without reason that a Deliverer of the race should give His life for the life of the world? |
38806 | How under such circumstances could they have the sense of guilt, or of obligation? |
38806 | How was it possible for any one of the four Evangelists to know that Christ was the Son of God, or that he was God? |
38806 | How was the Roman empire formed? |
38806 | How would he account for these wonders? |
38806 | I admit that St. Augustine had great influence with the people of his day-- but what people? |
38806 | I ask you, Was there a resurrection? |
38806 | I asked of Dr. Field, and I ask again, this question: Why should an infinitely wise and powerful God destroy the good and preserve the vile? |
38806 | I asked: Why should God treat all alike in this world, and in another make an infinite difference? |
38806 | I will answer by a question: was not this foretold? |
38806 | I would help you gladly, but I do not wish to defeat the plans of your Almighty Friend"? |
38806 | I wrote the article that appeared in the August number, and by me it was entitled"Is All of the Bible Inspired?" |
38806 | II., v. 7),"out of the dust of the ground?" |
38806 | IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING? |
38806 | IS CORPORAL PUNISHMENT DEGRADING? |
38806 | IS DIVORCE WRONG? |
38806 | IS DIVORCE WRONG? |
38806 | If Christ performed the miracles recorded in the New Testament, why would the Jews put to death a man able to raise their dead? |
38806 | If I accept, will the act lessen the felicity or ecstasy of heaven? |
38806 | If Nature is infinite, how can there be a power outside of Nature? |
38806 | If Paul did not commend Jephthah for keeping this vow, what was the act that excited his admiration? |
38806 | If a wife dies and the husband marries another woman, is not that successive polygamy? |
38806 | If a wife dies, and the husband marries another wife, is not that successive polygamy? |
38806 | If all who never heard are to be saved, is it not dangerous to hear?--Is it not cruel to preach? |
38806 | If an infinite God creates a man on purpose to damn him, or creates him knowing that he will be damned, is not the crime the same? |
38806 | If an infinite being is one of the parties to the contract, is it not the duty of this being to see to it that the contract is carried out? |
38806 | If belief depends upon the will, can all men have correct opinions who will to have them? |
38806 | If he comes to the conclusion at which you have arrived,--that Jehovah is God,--has he the right to express that opinion? |
38806 | If he concludes, as I have done, that Jehovah is a myth, must he refrain from giving his honest thought? |
38806 | If he feels toward me as a father should, why did he give no warning? |
38806 | If he knew he was negligent, what must his opinion of the result have been? |
38806 | If he wakes, will not the recollection cling to him still? |
38806 | If he was actuated by love, is he not as powerful now as he was then? |
38806 | If it all depends on the will, what is evidence? |
38806 | If it is not a crime, why should any penalty be attached? |
38806 | If it is our duty to forgive our enemies, ought not God to forgive his? |
38806 | If it is so difficult, why do you call it a revelation? |
38806 | If it is the duty of the injured to forgive, why should the uninjured insist upon having revenge? |
38806 | If kindness and affection on the part of parents demoralize children, will not kindness and affection on the part of children demoralize the parents? |
38806 | If man can exist without the"spiritual intuition,"do you insist that the"spiritual intuition"can exist without the man? |
38806 | If my heart were only good-- if I loved my neighbor as myself-- would I then see infinite mercy in these hideous words? |
38806 | If not, do you pretend that your mind is greater? |
38806 | If not, why do you quote his name? |
38806 | If nothing, why should he interfere? |
38806 | If one is bound by the religion of his father and mother, and his father happens to be a Presbyterian and his mother a Catholic, what is he to do? |
38806 | If she asked you for a little assistance, would you refuse it on the ground that by being helped she might lose character? |
38806 | If she does not, what is there left of marriage? |
38806 | If slavery was a crime in Egypt, was it a virtue in Palestine? |
38806 | If so, what is the consideration for this obligation? |
38806 | If that doctrine be true, is not your God an infinite criminal? |
38806 | If that doctrine be true, what else is there worthy of engaging the attention of the human mind? |
38806 | If the Archdeacon replies that the revelation itself will bear the evidence within itself, what then, I ask, does he mean by the word"evidence"? |
38806 | If the argument is good in the mouth of a Catholic, is it not good in the mouth of a Moslem? |
38806 | If the book and my brain are both the work of the same infinite God, whose fault is it that the book and brain do not agree? |
38806 | If the commander of one army should send word to the general of the other that his men were firing too high, do you think the general would be misled? |
38806 | If the estimate of human life was low, what was the sacrifice worth? |
38806 | If the light was necessary for one, was it not necessary for all? |
38806 | If the marvelous propagation of the Catholic Church proves its divine origin, what shall we say of the marvelous propagation of Mohammedanism? |
38806 | If the poor mother still wept, still refused to be comforted, would you thrust this dagger in her heart? |
38806 | If the religion of Christ was for that age, is it for this? |
38806 | If the success of a church proves its divinity, and after that another church arises and defeats the first, what does that prove? |
38806 | If the words are not inspired, what is? |
38806 | If there are three parties-- the man, the woman, and God-- each one should be bound to do something, and what is God bound to do? |
38806 | If there was no general atonement until the crucifixion of Christ, what became of the countless millions who died before that time? |
38806 | If there were three parties to my marriage, my husband, myself, and God, should each be bound by the contract to do something? |
38806 | If they kill the babes in our cradles, must we brain theirs? |
38806 | If they ravish, murder, and mutilate our wives, must we treat theirs in the same manner? |
38806 | If this be true, upon what principle can a woman continue to sustain the relation of wife after love is dead? |
38806 | If this doctrine be true, how can God be just or virtuous? |
38806 | If this failed to still the beatings of her aching heart, would you repeat these words which you say came from the loving soul of Christ? |
38806 | If this is true, would you call Abraham"a self- exile for conscience sake"? |
38806 | If to the man who reads it, has he the right to give to others the revelation that God has given to him? |
38806 | If wonder suggests a designer, can it go on increasing until it denies that which it suggested? |
38806 | If you do not, do you claim to be a greater man? |
38806 | If you had the power to give sight to the blind, to cleanse the leper, and would not exercise it, what would be thought of you? |
38806 | If you think of three as one, can you think of one as none, or of none as one? |
38806 | If"God would be likely to reveal his will to the rational creatures who were required to obey it,"why did he reveal it only to the Jews? |
38806 | If"believers are not obliged to approve of the conduct of Jephthah"are they free to condemn the conduct of Jehovah? |
38806 | If, as the Cardinal says, the religion of Christ is in absolute harmony with nature, how can it be supernatural? |
38806 | If, then, he agrees with my statement, why endeavor to controvert it? |
38806 | If, then, she is not bound to remain his wife for the husband''s sake, is she bound to remain his wife because the marriage was a sacrament? |
38806 | In a contest between Christianity and Paganism, in the first century, would you have considered the question settled by names? |
38806 | In a contest between Protestantism and Catholicism are you willing to abide by the tests of names? |
38806 | In my reply to Dr. Field I had asked: Why should God demand a sacrifice from man? |
38806 | In order to see the beauty, the depth and tenderness of such a consecration, is it essential to be in a state of"reverential calm"? |
38806 | In other words, are these questions to be settled by theological and ecclesiastical authority, or by the common sense of mankind? |
38806 | In other words, do they not demonstrate the absolute impartiality of divine negligence? |
38806 | In other words, do you not bring your own religion exactly within your own definition of superstition? |
38806 | In other words, have I the right to answer your letter? |
38806 | In that case would you be guided by"spiritual intuition,"or by your reason? |
38806 | In the eyes of intelligent men of Greece and Rome, were all deeds, whether good or evil, morally alike? |
38806 | In the light of this sentence, where do you find a place for forgiveness-- for your atonement? |
38806 | In the presence of these commandments, what becomes of the fine saying,"Love thy neighbor as thyself"? |
38806 | In this connection, what does the word"credulity"mean? |
38806 | Independently of conditions, can it exist? |
38806 | Is Christian polygamy less odious in the eyes of God than Mormon polygamy? |
38806 | Is God a party to the contract? |
38806 | Is Jehovah to keep the cells of perdition in repair forever, and are his children to be the eternal prisoners? |
38806 | Is Spain the first nation of the world? |
38806 | Is a belief in Beelzebub a belief in demonology? |
38806 | Is a man to be eternally rewarded for believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against evidence? |
38806 | Is a"spiritual intuition"an entity? |
38806 | Is an act infamous in man one of the virtues of the Deity? |
38806 | Is belief the result of that which to us is evidence, or is it a product of the will? |
38806 | Is character of no importance in heaven? |
38806 | Is credulity to be winged and crowned, while honest doubt is chained and damned? |
38806 | Is death more merciful than God? |
38806 | Is every man great in proportion to his genius? |
38806 | Is fear the arch that supports the moral nature of man? |
38806 | Is genius the sole constitutive element of greatness, or with what other elements, and in what relations to them, is it combined? |
38806 | Is happiness a gift or a consequence? |
38806 | Is he accountable for Siberia? |
38806 | Is he gentle or cruel? |
38806 | Is he infallible in faith and fallible in fact? |
38806 | Is he not to suffer for this poor creature''s ruin? |
38806 | Is he to hold the man to his contract, when the woman has violated hers? |
38806 | Is he to remain a victim forever? |
38806 | Is he willing to go a step further and say that there is an obligation resting upon the minds of men to believe contrary to evidence? |
38806 | Is heaven only a well- conducted poorhouse? |
38806 | Is her modesty the property of another? |
38806 | Is intellectual stagnation a demonstration of divine origin? |
38806 | Is it Mr. Black''s idea that this happened by chance? |
38806 | Is it Mr. Ingersoll''s idea that this happened by chance, like the creation of the world? |
38806 | Is it a belief in an infinite God? |
38806 | Is it a crime to be governed by that which to you is evidence, and is it infamous to express your honest thought? |
38806 | Is it a crime to investigate, to think, to reason, to observe? |
38806 | Is it a great stretch of language to say that it is his"punishment,"and nonetheless punishment because self- inflicted? |
38806 | Is it a rare thing for the pious to be candid? |
38806 | Is it a revelation to the man who reads it, or to the man who does not read it? |
38806 | Is it a scene for congratulation when the bishops of thirty nations kneel before a man? |
38806 | Is it according to common sense that an infinitely good God would order some of his children to kill others? |
38806 | Is it an effort to avoid that which can not be met? |
38806 | Is it based upon experience? |
38806 | Is it because of"total depravity"that I denounce the brutality of Jehovah? |
38806 | Is it because you were brought up in that Church, of which your father, whom you regard with filial respect and affection, was an honored minister? |
38806 | Is it conceivable that a good man with power to control the winds would not prevent cyclones? |
38806 | Is it desirable that this relation should last through life, and that it should be rendered sacred by the ceremony of a church? |
38806 | Is it for the good of society that virtue should be thus crucified between church and state? |
38806 | Is it his business to hold the woman to the contract, when the man has violated his? |
38806 | Is it historically absurd that millions of people have believed in systems of religion without evidence? |
38806 | Is it historically absurd to say that Mohammedanism is based upon mistake? |
38806 | Is it historically absurd to say that they believed without evidence? |
38806 | Is it in this way that"my misty creations are made to roll away and vanish into air one after another?" |
38806 | Is it necessary that heaven should borrow its light from the glare of hell? |
38806 | Is it necessary that my heart should break? |
38806 | Is it necessary to believe in the existence of an infinite intelligence before you can have any standard of right and wrong? |
38806 | Is it necessary to lose your liberty in order to retain your moral character-- in order to be pure and womanly? |
38806 | Is it not a consolation to have an Almighty Friend? |
38806 | Is it not better to drink wine than to shed blood? |
38806 | Is it not better to have no God than such a God? |
38806 | Is it not far better to worship a God of stone than a God who threatens to punish in eternal flames the most of his children? |
38806 | Is it not humiliating to know that man is willing to kneel at the feet of man? |
38806 | Is it not necessarily produced? |
38806 | Is it not possible that intelligence may at last raise the human race to that sublime and philosophic height? |
38806 | Is it not possible that out of this perception may come not only love and pity for others, but absolute justification for the individual? |
38806 | Is it not possible that out of this perception may come not only love and pity for others, but absolute justification for the individual? |
38806 | Is it not possible that we may find that everything has been necessarily produced? |
38806 | Is it not somewhat difficult to discover"the signature of beauty with which God has stamped"this animal? |
38806 | Is it not strange that Christ did not tell of another world distinctly, clearly, without parable, and without the mist of metaphor? |
38806 | Is it not strange that some one in the Old Testament did not stand by an open grave of father or mother and say:"We shall meet again"? |
38806 | Is it not strange that the ones he had cured were not his disciples? |
38806 | Is it not true that I say now, and that I have always said, that I do not know? |
38806 | Is it not true that no matter how good men are they must die, and will they not die of diseases? |
38806 | Is it not wonderful that Luke and Matthew do not agree on a single name of Christ''s ancestors for thirty- seven generations? |
38806 | Is it not wonderful that no historian ever mentioned any of these prodigies? |
38806 | Is it not wonderful that no one at the trial of Christ said one word about the miracles he had wrought? |
38806 | Is it not, after all, barely possible that a man acting like Christ can be saved? |
38806 | Is it of supernatural, or miraculous, origin, and is it possible that this"spiritual intuition"is independent of the man? |
38806 | Is it possible for a human being to increase or diminish the well- being of the Infinite? |
38806 | Is it possible for a"policeman"to"silence a rude disturber"in this way? |
38806 | Is it possible for the human mind to conceive of an infinite personality? |
38806 | Is it possible for the ingenuity of man to extract from the doctrine of hell one drop, one ray, of"consolation"? |
38806 | Is it possible for you to find in the literature of this world more awful passages than these? |
38806 | Is it possible that God established a government in which benevolence was unknown? |
38806 | Is it possible that God is intolerant? |
38806 | Is it possible that God will hate his enemies when he tells us that we must love ours? |
38806 | Is it possible that Napoleon-- one of the most infamous of men-- had a nature so finely strung that he was sensitive to the divine influences? |
38806 | Is it possible that St. John thought that God would kill two eminent Christians for the purpose of getting even with one heretic? |
38806 | Is it possible that a being can not be just or virtuous unless he believes in some being infinitely superior to himself? |
38806 | Is it possible that a being of infinite wisdom made hospitality a crime? |
38806 | Is it possible that a designer exists from all eternity without design? |
38806 | Is it possible that a nation in which falsehood and evil had reached their highest development was, after all, so wise, so just and so equitable? |
38806 | Is it possible that an infinitely wise and compassionate God insists that a helpless woman shall remain the wife of a cruel wretch? |
38806 | Is it possible that any good mail exists who is willing to gain the affection of his children in that way? |
38806 | Is it possible that he knows nothing of the religion of Buddha-- a religion based upon equality, charity and forgiveness? |
38806 | Is it possible that in fighting, for instance, the Indians of America, if they scalp our soldiers we should scalp theirs? |
38806 | Is it possible that only those who believe in the God who persecuted for opinion''s sake have any standard of right and wrong? |
38806 | Is it possible that the leader of the English Liberals is nearer civilized than Jehovah? |
38806 | Is it possible that the present Vicar of Christ is not certain as to the number of his predecessors? |
38806 | Is it possible that the sinfulness of man created the countless enemies of human life that lurk in air and water and food? |
38806 | Is it possible that the vast fabric of papal power has this, and only this, for its foundation? |
38806 | Is it possible that these words fell from the lips of the Most Merciful? |
38806 | Is it possible that this patriotic trinity is more powerful than the other? |
38806 | Is it possible that you wrote the letter to prevent a controversy? |
38806 | Is it possible to conceive of a more contemptible human being than a man who would appeal to force in such a case? |
38806 | Is it possible to conceive of anything more immoral than for a husband to insist on living with a wife who has no love for him? |
38806 | Is it possible to form character in heaven? |
38806 | Is it possible to know who will be saved? |
38806 | Is it possible to tell who is to be eternally lost? |
38806 | Is it possible to think of one as three, or of three as one? |
38806 | Is it possible to vindicate a just law by inflicting punishment on the innocent? |
38806 | Is it possible to write greater contradictions than these? |
38806 | Is it reasonable to believe that a good God would assist his chosen people to exterminate or enslave his other children? |
38806 | Is it such evidence as satisfies the intelligence, convinces the reason, and is it in conformity with the known facts of the mind? |
38806 | Is it that God is the Father of the human race; is that all? |
38806 | Is it that man should treat his neighbor as himself? |
38806 | Is it the belief in the immortality of the soul? |
38806 | Is it the result of observation, reason and experience, or is it the child of credulity? |
38806 | Is it the same Christian religion now living that lived during the Middle Ages? |
38806 | Is it the same Christian religion that founded the Inquisition and invented the thumbscrew? |
38806 | Is it therefore false that a connection does exist between matter and spirit? |
38806 | Is it to the interest of society that those who despise each other should live together? |
38806 | Is it true that a monk is purer than a good and noble father?--that a nun is holier than a loving mother? |
38806 | Is it true that benevolence came with Christ, and that his coming heralded the birth of pity in the human heart? |
38806 | Is it true that man deserves only punishment? |
38806 | Is it true that most of man''s diseases are due to his own sin and folly and wilfulness? |
38806 | Is it true that the Catholic Church overthrew idolatry? |
38806 | Is it true that the wickedness of man has created the microbe? |
38806 | Is it true that these deformities, these warped, impaired, and dislocated constitutions indispose men to belief? |
38806 | Is it universal now? |
38806 | Is it"against the tendencies of human nature"for a mother to throw her child into the Ganges to please a supposed God? |
38806 | Is man more just than he? |
38806 | Is not such credulity ignorant? |
38806 | Is not that a desirable thing? |
38806 | Is not that man civilized whose reason sits the crowned monarch of his brain-- whose passions are his servants? |
38806 | Is not the church weakest at its centre? |
38806 | Is not the history of real civilization the slow and gradual emancipation of the intellect, of the judgment, from the mastery of passion? |
38806 | Is not the play of"Antony and Cleopatra"as Egyptian as the Nile? |
38806 | Is not the sacrifice of a child to a phantom as horrible in Palestine as in India? |
38806 | Is not the will a product? |
38806 | Is not this a cruel treatment of the belief of a fellow- creature? |
38806 | Is not this a fountain that brings forth sweet and bitter waters? |
38806 | Is not this a perpetual crime? |
38806 | Is not this a_ non sequitur?_ The question is: Were they a loving people? |
38806 | Is not this a_ non sequitur?_ The question is: Were they a loving people? |
38806 | Is not this"the survival of the fittest?" |
38806 | Is not, then, the_ hiatus_, which the Reply has discovered in the teaching of our Lord, an imaginary_ hiatus_? |
38806 | Is passion necessarily produced? |
38806 | Is she bound by the contract he has broken? |
38806 | Is she to become a social pariah, and is this for the benefit of society?--or is it for the sake of the wretch who destroyed her life? |
38806 | Is she under any obligation to him? |
38806 | Is she under any obligation to him? |
38806 | Is that a doctrine believed only by people who lack intellectual capacity? |
38806 | Is that so very absurd? |
38806 | Is the Bible a revelation from God to man? |
38806 | Is the Christian in the presence of this question as dumb as the agnostic? |
38806 | Is the Thug of India more ferocious than Torquemada, the Thug of Spain? |
38806 | Is the chance of his resistance as good as it was before? |
38806 | Is the freedom of the future to exist only in perdition? |
38806 | Is the man she hates the lord of her desire? |
38806 | Is the open mouth of ignorant wonder the only entrance to Paradise? |
38806 | Is the religious world to- day willing to test the efficacy of prayer? |
38806 | Is the solution of this problem beyond your power? |
38806 | Is the unnatural the supernatural? |
38806 | Is the wife to lose her personality? |
38806 | Is there a believer who does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife to death for suggesting the worship of the sun or moon? |
38806 | Is there a depth below this? |
38806 | Is there a different standard for a history written in Hebrew, several thousand years ago, and one written in English in the nineteenth century? |
38806 | Is there a higher standard of virtue in countries where divorce is prohibited than in those where it is granted? |
38806 | Is there an adequate cause for every effect? |
38806 | Is there any change? |
38806 | Is there any contradiction beyond this? |
38806 | Is there any denunciation, sarcasm or invective in this? |
38806 | Is there any escape except by plunging into the gulf of annihilation? |
38806 | Is there any ground for this imputation of narrowness? |
38806 | Is there any morality in this? |
38806 | Is there any obligation on the part of the wife to remain with the brutal husband for the sake of God? |
38806 | Is there any opportunity of being dishonest in the formation of an opinion? |
38806 | Is there any way of accounting for the fact that God upheld concubinage? |
38806 | Is there any way out of this difficulty, except by confessing that Christianity is what it purports to be-- a divine revelation? |
38806 | Is there anything deeper and stronger than a mother''s love? |
38806 | Is there anything purer, holier than a mother holding her dimpled babe against her billowed breast? |
38806 | Is there anything that savors of tyranny in this? |
38806 | Is there no attraction in light, no repulsion in darkness? |
38806 | Is there no future for her? |
38806 | Is there no hope for him?" |
38806 | Is there no hope for this victim? |
38806 | Is there no possibility of delusion about a circumstance of that kind? |
38806 | Is there not room for a better, for a higher philosophy? |
38806 | Is there not some flavor of the sun and glow- worm here? |
38806 | Is there some other consideration that can take the place of genuine affection? |
38806 | Is there the slightest connection between my statement and your objection? |
38806 | Is there virtue in retaining the name of wife, or husband, without the real and true relation? |
38806 | Is this a candid statement? |
38806 | Is this a crime for which a man should everlastingly perish? |
38806 | Is this an answer, or is it simply taking refuge behind a name? |
38806 | Is this an argument? |
38806 | Is this considered an answer? |
38806 | Is this in accordance with the doctrine of Jehovah? |
38806 | Is this pathetic sacrifice on the one hand, this sacrilege on the other, pleasing in the sight of heaven? |
38806 | Is this star, that sheds light on every grave, found in your Bible? |
38806 | Is this the best that can be done by one of the disciples of the infallible God who butchered babes in Judea? |
38806 | Is this the conclusion of the most enlightened Christianity? |
38806 | Is this the echo of"Father, forgive them; they know not what they do"? |
38806 | Is this the grave philosophical conclusion of a careful observer, or is it a crude, hasty, and careless overstatement? |
38806 | Is this the last and most beautiful blossom of the Sermon on the Mount? |
38806 | Is this true? |
38806 | Is"your mole- hill higher than his Dhawalagiri"? |
38806 | Is, then, the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? |
38806 | It may be that the Thugs were taught that murder is innocent; but did the teachers believe what they taught? |
38806 | It may have the right to destroy the life of one dangerous to the community; but what has freedom to do with this? |
38806 | It may here be objected that no man can so far suspend the inclination of the will when the question is, has God indeed spoken to man or no? |
38806 | It would be wrong to call this intentional misrepresentation; but can it be called less than somewhat reckless negligence? |
38806 | Jesus saith unto him, If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? |
38806 | Let a man suppose himself a helpless woman beaten by a brutal husband-- would he advocate divorces then? |
38806 | Let another read him, who knows nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what does he get? |
38806 | Let me ask another question: Are Catholics or Protestants better than Freethinkers? |
38806 | Let me ask the Archdeacon a question: Do you agree with St. Augustine? |
38806 | Let me ask, by what man? |
38806 | Let me ask: Why can not a blind man criticise colors? |
38806 | Let us examine these three excuses: Was Jehovah justified in putting a low estimate on human life? |
38806 | Let us put this question in a milder form: Suppose the second church lives and flourishes in spite of the first, what does that prove? |
38806 | Matthew says that he cried:"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" |
38806 | May I ask, how you know that Shakespeare was a believer? |
38806 | May I be allowed to ask this simple question: Who has? |
38806 | May I be permitted to ask how he knows that space is an entity? |
38806 | May it not be said truly that she gives her life for the life of her children? |
38806 | May we not find that every soul has, like Mazeppa, been lashed to the wild horse of passion, or like Prometheus to the rocks of fate? |
38806 | May we not find that every soul has, like Mazeppa, been lashed to the wild horse of passion, or like Prometheus to the rocks of fate?" |
38806 | Mr. Cardinal, am I under any obligation to God? |
38806 | Must all the redeemed feel that they are in heaven simply because there was a miscarriage of justice? |
38806 | Must all vows made to God be kept? |
38806 | Must not the man who forms the opinion know what it is? |
38806 | Must she be an outcast forever-- deceived and betrayed for her whole life? |
38806 | Must she live with him for his sake? |
38806 | Must this woman, full of kindness, affection, health, be tied and chained to this living corpse? |
38806 | Must we believe that Joshua stopped the sun, because Faraday was"the most eminent man of science of his day"? |
38806 | Must we believe this because"Sir Gabriel Stokes is the living president of the Royal Society, and a Churchman"besides? |
38806 | Nay, are the suggested improvements of that teaching really gross deteriorations? |
38806 | No remedy for this mistake of your God? |
38806 | Nothing about the sick he had healed, nor the dead he had raised? |
38806 | Now, if God is as inconceivable as space, why should we pray to God? |
38806 | Now, if a belief in God is necessary to the salvation of the soul, why should God create a soul without this capacity? |
38806 | Now, if it should turn out that Darwin was mistaken, what then? |
38806 | Now, when the children get strong and the parents are old and weak, ought not the children to beat them, so that they too may become kind and loving? |
38806 | Of what blood were they? |
38806 | Of what consequence is anything in this world compared with eternal joy? |
38806 | Of what use were the other three? |
38806 | On what ground, then, and for what reason, is the system of Darwin fatal to Scriptures and to creeds? |
38806 | Or is there some other world of suffering and sorrow? |
38806 | Or, will you read this? |
38806 | Ought an honest man to be restrained from denouncing that faith because those who entertain it say that their feelings are hurt? |
38806 | Ought divorced people to be allowed to marry under any circumstances? |
38806 | Ought divorced people to be allowed to marry under any circumstances?_ This depends upon whether marriage is a crime. |
38806 | Ought divorced people to be allowed to marry, under any circumstances? |
38806 | Ought not the augurs to agree among themselves? |
38806 | Ought not the memory of a good action to live as long as the memory of a bad one? |
38806 | Ought not the revelation to be revealed? |
38806 | Ought the world to be peopled by the children of hatred or disgust, the children of lust and loathing, or by the welcome babes of mutual love? |
38806 | Perhaps you never saw your grandparents; but have you any more doubt of their existence than of that of your father and mother whom you did see? |
38806 | ROME OR REASON? |
38806 | Save, or destroy? |
38806 | Shall we ask Servetus? |
38806 | Shall we believe that Jonah spent three days and nights in the inside of a whale because"Professor Clark Maxwell''s death was mourned by all"? |
38806 | Shall we hear the sighs and sobs of Siberia? |
38806 | Shall we hear the story of Bruno? |
38806 | Shall we speak of the originality of the design, of the skill displayed in the execution? |
38806 | Should he read the life of David, and of Solomon? |
38806 | Should the peasant be punished for the king''s crime? |
38806 | Should the sun beg from the glowworm, and should the momentary spark excite the envy of the source of light? |
38806 | Should the sun beg of the glow- worm, and should the momentary spark excite the envy of the source of light? |
38806 | Should the sun beg of the glow- worm, and should the momentary spark excite the envy of the source of light?" |
38806 | Suppose that he refuses to protect; that he abuses, assaults, and tramples upon the woman he we d. What is her redress? |
38806 | Suppose the Bible had taught that selfishness, larceny and murder were virtues; would you deny its inspiration? |
38806 | Suppose the vow was made in ignorance, in excitement-- must it be absolutely fulfilled? |
38806 | Surely, I was not represented at that time, and is it right that I should be punished for what was done by others in the very beginning of the world? |
38806 | THE Archdeacon says that it is, and yet in the same article he quotes the following from Job:"Canst thou by searching find out God?" |
38806 | Take passions from human beings and what is left? |
38806 | That he would command soldiers to rip open with the sword of war the bodies of women-- wreaking vengeance on babes unborn? |
38806 | The Cardinal answers the question,"Can divorce from the bonds of marriage ever be allowed?" |
38806 | The Dean asks this question:"Which custom, kindness or severity, does experience show to be the less dangerous?" |
38806 | The Gentiles were left without forgiveness What has become of the millions who have died since, without having heard of the atonement? |
38806 | The billions of slaves who were paid with blows?--the countless mothers whose babes were sold? |
38806 | The great question still remains: What is right? |
38806 | The last words, according to John, were:"Peter, seeing Him, saith to Jesus: Lord, and what shall this man do? |
38806 | The question arises: Has every one who reads the Old Testament the right to express his thought as to the character of Jehovah? |
38806 | The question now is, have I the right to express mine? |
38806 | The question then arises, Should this marriage, under any circumstances, be dissolved? |
38806 | The question then is, not have we the right to think,--that being a necessity,--but have we the right to express our honest thoughts? |
38806 | The real question is this: If we can not account for Christ without a miracle, how can we account for Shakespeare? |
38806 | The real question then must be: What is best for man? |
38806 | The water drowns, the cold freezes, the flood destroys, the fire burns, the bolt of heaven falls-- when and where has the prayer of man been answered? |
38806 | The"Inspired"Writers-- Why did not God furnish Every Nation with a Bible? |
38806 | Then Peter said unto her,''How is it that ye have agreed together to tempt the spirit of the Lord? |
38806 | Then why should he insist upon the sacrifice of my life? |
38806 | There is also another question: Is credulity a virtue? |
38806 | There is another test: How does a man treat the animals in his power-- his faithful horse-- his patient ox-- his loving dog? |
38806 | They answer the chimes of the bell, and what do they hear in this village church? |
38806 | They say to every man who advances something new: Are you greater than the dead? |
38806 | Thousands of religions have perished, innumerable gods have died, and why should the religion of our time be exempt from the common fate? |
38806 | To answer an argument, is it only necessary to say that it"raises a metaphysical question"? |
38806 | To make innocence suffer is the greatest sin; how then is it possible to make the suffering of the innocent a justification for the criminal? |
38806 | To prevent this would you recommend him to read the lives of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, and the other holy polygamists of the Old Testament? |
38806 | To the question then,"Can divorce from the bond of marriage ever be allowed?" |
38806 | To this I will make but one answer: Does it convince yourself? |
38806 | To this"inflection"has it come at last? |
38806 | To what extent has man marred it? |
38806 | True, he said,"Come unto me and I will give you rest;"but what did he say to those who failed to come? |
38806 | Truly it may be asked, is not this a fountain which sends forth at once sweet waters and bitter? |
38806 | Was Gautama inspired? |
38806 | Was Isaac Newton so much greater than Humboldt-- than Charles Darwin, who has revolutionized the thought of the civilized world? |
38806 | Was Jehovah led away by the example of the Gods of Moriah? |
38806 | Was Mohammed inspired? |
38806 | Was Pius IX., or any other vicar of Christ, superior to Abraham Lincoln? |
38806 | Was Saul of Tarsus a Thug when he persecuted Christians"even unto strange cities"? |
38806 | Was Socrates after all greater than Epicurus-- had he a subtler mind-- was he any nobler in his life? |
38806 | Was he a believer in religious liberty? |
38806 | Was he base enough and infamous enough to heap contempt upon the religion of his father and mother? |
38806 | Was he in earnest when he said"that whoso sheddeth man''s blood, by man shall his blood be shed"? |
38806 | Was he not"lashed to the wild horse of passion,"carried away by a power beyond his control? |
38806 | Was he restrained by love? |
38806 | Was he the founder of the Inquisition? |
38806 | Was it any better in Palestine then than it is in Utah now? |
38806 | Was it because Jephthah slew on the banks of the Jordan"forty and two thousand"of the sons of Ephraim? |
38806 | Was it because the divinely inspired men did not know? |
38806 | Was it for this reason that he caused them to exterminate each other? |
38806 | Was it his ingenuity that so designed the human race that millions of people should be born deaf and dumb, that millions should be idiotic? |
38806 | Was it immutable when its unity, internal and external, was broken? |
38806 | Was it in any way born of the senses, or of the effect of nature upon the brain-- that is to say, of things seen, or heard, or touched? |
38806 | Was it my duty to remain silent? |
38806 | Was it my duty to speak or act contrary to this conclusion? |
38806 | Was it necessary to offer this rudeness to the religious denomination in which you were born? |
38806 | Was it not cruel for an inspired man to attack a sacred belief? |
38806 | Was it not cruel to drown a world just for the want of a supernatural religion-- a religion that man, by no possibility, could furnish? |
38806 | Was it not infinitely cruel to leave the world in darkness and in doubt, when one word could have filled all time with hope and light? |
38806 | Was it precisely the same after its unity was broken that it was before? |
38806 | Was it precisely the same after its unity was divinely restored that it was while broken? |
38806 | Was it right for Jehovah to kill the children of the people because of Pharaoh''s sin? |
38806 | Was it under these pontiffs that the"church penetrated the moral darkness like a new sun,"and covered the globe with institutions of mercy? |
38806 | Was it universal while it was without unity? |
38806 | Was not Emerson, so far as purity of life is concerned, the equal of any true believer? |
38806 | Was not Voltaire justified in saying that the English were the only people who murdered by law?" |
38806 | Was not the Church to be a field of wheat and tares growing together till the harvest at the end of the world? |
38806 | Was not the civil law far better than the Mosaic-- more philosophical, nearer just? |
38806 | Was that a violation of the"laws of social morality and decency"? |
38806 | Was the son the property of the father? |
38806 | Was there among all the countless millions of almighty Rome an intellect that could have written the tragedy of"Julius CÃ ¦ sar"? |
38806 | Was there any lack of"reverential calm"in my question? |
38806 | Was there any such thought in my Reply? |
38806 | Was there anything in the worship of Venus worse than giving captured maidens to satisfy the victor''s lust? |
38806 | Was there as much dread of God among the Pagans as there has been among Christians? |
38806 | Was there ever a barbarian nation more savage than the Spain of the sixteenth century? |
38806 | Was there no design in having an infinite designer? |
38806 | Was there"husbandry in heaven"? |
38806 | Was this a miracle? |
38806 | Was this an honest error? |
38806 | Was your God once an abolitionist? |
38806 | We make mistakes and failures because we are finite; but can you conceive of any excuse for an infinite being who creates failures? |
38806 | Were not his teachings practiced by Moses and Joshua and Jephthah and Samuel and David? |
38806 | Were not the laws of the Romans much better? |
38806 | Were the Pagans who embraced Christianity heartless sons and daughters? |
38806 | Were the early Christians lacking in respect for their fathers and mothers? |
38806 | Were the greatest men of all antiquity without this standard? |
38806 | Were the opinions formed by the English Parliament on the Treaty of Limerick formed without the intervention of the will? |
38806 | Were they all"concocted by a combination of knaves"? |
38806 | Were they honest? |
38806 | What advance has been made in what you are pleased to call the doctrine of the brotherhood of man, through the instrumentality of the church? |
38806 | What are the retributions of history? |
38806 | What became of Lazarus? |
38806 | What becomes of the sacredness of the home, if the law compels those who abhor each other to sit at the same hearth? |
38806 | What becomes of those who have heard but have not believed? |
38806 | What can increase the happiness of this world more than to do away with every form of slavery, and with all war? |
38806 | What can increase the misery of mankind more than to increase wars and put chains upon more human limbs? |
38806 | What consideration does he receive? |
38806 | What consideration does the infinite being give? |
38806 | What could I say? |
38806 | What could be more incredible? |
38806 | What did Christianity in the early centuries do for the home? |
38806 | What did God bind himself to do? |
38806 | What do I mean by this question? |
38806 | What do these causes find to disintegrate? |
38806 | What do you mean by"spiritual intuition"? |
38806 | What do you think of Abraham, of Jephthah? |
38806 | What do you think of Abraham, of Jephthah? |
38806 | What do you think of Abraham? |
38806 | What does he get? |
38806 | What does he say? |
38806 | What does the Archdeacon mean by"spirit"? |
38806 | What does the word"evidence"mean? |
38806 | What does this demonstrate? |
38806 | What does this prove? |
38806 | What effect has that promise had upon family life? |
38806 | What else does the minister say to the poor people who have answered the chimes of your bell? |
38806 | What evidence have they on which to found this belief? |
38806 | What followed? |
38806 | What have corrupt and cruel judgments pronounced by corrupt and cruel judges to do with their real opinions? |
38806 | What have nunneries and monasteries, and what has the glorification of celibacy done for the family? |
38806 | What have you to say of the apostles? |
38806 | What hope was there that such a teacher should convert imperial Rome? |
38806 | What impression has Catholicism made upon the many millions of China, of Japan, of India, of Africa? |
38806 | What is a man who has only been born once, to do? |
38806 | What is a vicar of Christ? |
38806 | What is common sense? |
38806 | What is conscience? |
38806 | What is evil? |
38806 | What is good? |
38806 | What is he? |
38806 | What is idolatry? |
38806 | What is justice? |
38806 | What is moral purity? |
38806 | What is passion? |
38806 | What is right and what is wrong? |
38806 | What is right? |
38806 | What is that to thee? |
38806 | What is the difference between one who can and will not cure, and one who causes disease? |
38806 | What is the effect of divorce on the integrity of the family? |
38806 | What is the effect of divorce on the integrity of the family? |
38806 | What is the foundation of his choice? |
38806 | What is the ordinary man to do? |
38806 | What is the testimony of St. John worth in the light of the following? |
38806 | What is the treasure in the keeping of the church? |
38806 | What is this Catholic faith that must be held? |
38806 | What is wrong? |
38806 | What is your opinion of Jehovah himself? |
38806 | What is your opinion of Jehovah himself?" |
38806 | What is your opinion of Jehovah himself?" |
38806 | What man must we take as the standard? |
38806 | What must you say? |
38806 | What must you say? |
38806 | What opportunity is given to them to"suffer and be strong"? |
38806 | What part of this contract or sacrament remains in living force? |
38806 | What power was there in this isolated Man? |
38806 | What proportion is there between the cause and the effect? |
38806 | What race, what nation, has been redeemed through the instrumentality of this"divine scheme"? |
38806 | What reason have you for believing that your God will do better in another world than he has done and is doing in this? |
38806 | What right have you to occupy the position of the deists, and to put forth arguments that even Christians have answered? |
38806 | What shall we say of a God who established slavery, and then had the effrontery to say,"Thou shalt not steal"? |
38806 | What shall we say of a God who has one of his children stoned to death for picking up sticks on Sunday, and allows another to enslave his fellow- man? |
38806 | What shall we say of the followers of Buddha, who far outnumber the followers of Christ? |
38806 | What should I have done? |
38806 | What then is the basis of this religion which you despise? |
38806 | What unseen virtues went out of Him to change the world? |
38806 | What was it in the days of Galileo, Copernicus and Kepler? |
38806 | What was it when the Western World was found? |
38806 | What was the world when science came? |
38806 | What was the"Almighty Friend"worth to her? |
38806 | What were the retributions of history? |
38806 | What will there be left of the supernatural? |
38806 | What will you say to that mother? |
38806 | What witnesses shall we call? |
38806 | What would I think of myself, had I the power by a word to send the blood through all her withered limbs freighted again with life, should I refuse? |
38806 | What would the opinion of a man without passions, affections, or fancies be worth? |
38806 | What would we think of a law that allowed the innocent to take the place of the guilty? |
38806 | What would we think of a man who would allow another to die for a crime that he himself had committed? |
38806 | What would you call such a proceeding now? |
38806 | What would you say of a mechanic who was forced to destroy his own productions on the ground that they were"incurably bad"? |
38806 | What would you say of a school teacher who should kill one- third of the children on the morning of the first day? |
38806 | What would you think of a man who was willing that his wife should become the mistress of the king, provided the king would make him presents? |
38806 | What would you think of a mother who would deride and taunt her misshapen babe? |
38806 | What, I pray you, is the"heavenly treasure"in the keeping of your church? |
38806 | What- was it when printing was invented? |
38806 | When anything refuses to grow, are we certain that the seed was planted by God? |
38806 | When did it cease so to be? |
38806 | When did this"spiritual intuition"become the property of man-- before, or after, birth? |
38806 | When has any God listened to the prayer of any man? |
38806 | When that book is opened, and we read its awful pages, shall we not all think"what might have been?" |
38806 | When they were uttered, did"righteousness and peace kiss each other"? |
38806 | When you think of one as three, how do you get the other two? |
38806 | When you think of three as one, what do you do with the other two? |
38806 | When, and where, and how did I lose mine? |
38806 | Whence came the elevation of womanhood? |
38806 | Where did you get your right to express your honest thoughts? |
38806 | Where do they get"elevation of character"? |
38806 | Where is a way to escape from the effect of a cause that is eternal? |
38806 | Where is he now?" |
38806 | Where will he find in the Old Testament the rights of wife, and mother, and daughter defined? |
38806 | Whereupon Peter said:"''Tell me whether ye sold the land for so much?'' |
38806 | Which of the fragments was universal-- which was immutable? |
38806 | Which of the warring sects in America has this treasure; or have we, in this country, only the"rust and cankers"? |
38806 | Who are the greatest and wisest and most virtuous of mankind? |
38806 | Who can be a disciple of Jesus Christ who does not believe the words? |
38806 | Who can describe exhaustively the origin of civil society? |
38806 | Who can describe exhaustively the origin of civil society? |
38806 | Who can describe that which unites men? |
38806 | Who has entered into the formation of speech, which is the symbol of their union? |
38806 | Who has entered into the formation of speech, which is the symbol of their union? |
38806 | Who has taught the equality of men before the law, and extinguished the impious thought that man can hold property in man? |
38806 | Who is the superior man? |
38806 | Who knows how little has been resisted by those who stand, how much has been resisted by those who fall? |
38806 | Who knows that the universe was created? |
38806 | Who knows the strength of the temptation to another? |
38806 | Who knows whether the victor or the victim made the braver and the more gallant fight? |
38806 | Who listens? |
38806 | Who told him that the devilish spirit of persecution was authorized, or encouraged, or not forbidden, by the Gospel? |
38806 | Who will ascribe this to natural causes? |
38806 | Why cautiously? |
38806 | Why did Jehovah fail to establish hospitals and schools? |
38806 | Why did Mr. Black fail to answer what I said in relation to the doctrine of inspiration? |
38806 | Why did he accept the vow? |
38806 | Why did he allow a contract to be made giving only to death the annulling power? |
38806 | Why did he allow the savages to depend on sunrise and sunset and clouds? |
38806 | Why did he fail to enlighten the worshipers of"Mammon"and Moloch, of Belial and Baal, of Bacchus and Venus? |
38806 | Why did he fail to speak? |
38806 | Why did he go dumbly to his death, leaving the world to misery and to doubt? |
38806 | Why did he hide this imperfect light under a bushel? |
38806 | Why did he leave them without a bible, without prophets and priests? |
38806 | Why did he leave this great truth to a few half- crazed prophets, or to a cruel, heartless, and ignorant church? |
38806 | Why did he not cry, You shall not persecute in my name; you shall not burn and torment those who differ from you in creed? |
38806 | Why did he not emerge from the darkness? |
38806 | Why did he not explain the doctrine of the Trinity? |
38806 | Why did he not furnish every nation with a Bible? |
38806 | Why did he not give the Scriptures to the Hindu, the Greek, and Roman? |
38806 | Why did he not leave them unconscious dust? |
38806 | Why did he not plainly say, I am the Son of God? |
38806 | Why did he not say something positive, definite, and satisfactory about another world? |
38806 | Why did he not tell his disciples, and through them the world, that man should not persecute, for opinion''s sake, his fellow- man? |
38806 | Why did he not tell the manner of baptism that was pleasing to him? |
38806 | Why did he not tell them what world he had visited? |
38806 | Why did he not turn the tear- stained hope of heaven to the glad knowledge of another life? |
38806 | Why did he use the word"some"? |
38806 | Why did not Jehovah, the"Father of all,"give them the Ten Commandments? |
38806 | Why did not the Catholic God commence''with the sinless and sexless? |
38806 | Why did the real God secrete himself and allow his poor, ignorant, savage children to imagine that he was a beast, a serpent? |
38806 | Why did this God allow mothers to sacrifice their babes? |
38806 | Why did you end the series with Shakespeare? |
38806 | Why do they feel it incumbent upon them to explain that which they admit God would have explained had the human mind been capable of understanding it? |
38806 | Why do you defend that which you can not understand? |
38806 | Why do you hold the intellect criminally responsible for opinions, when you admit that it is controlled by the will? |
38806 | Why does he not open the eyes of the blind now? |
38806 | Why does he not with a touch make the leper clean? |
38806 | Why does your reason volunteer as a soldier under the flag of the incomprehensible? |
38806 | Why fill the world with the children of indifference and hatred? |
38806 | Why hast thou forsaken me?" |
38806 | Why is all this? |
38806 | Why is idolatry the worst of sins? |
38806 | Why is it that he who made all the constellations did not put in his heaven the star of hope? |
38806 | Why is it that it lives on and on, while nations and kingdoms perish? |
38806 | Why is it that the Catholic Church"lives on and on, while nations and kingdoms perish"? |
38806 | Why is it that we love color-- that we are pleased with harmonies, or with a succession of sounds rising and falling at measured intervals? |
38806 | Why is the living God, whom Christians believe to be the Lord of liberty and Father of lights, denounced as the keeper of a loathsome dungeon? |
38806 | Why not leave it as an infinite God made it? |
38806 | Why not stop preaching and let the entire world become heathen, so that after this, no soul may be lost? |
38806 | Why should God permit the triumph of injustice? |
38806 | Why should God, a being of infinite tenderness, leave the question of immortality in doubt? |
38806 | Why should He allow the honest, the loving, the noble, to perish at the stake?" |
38806 | Why should He treat all alike here, and in another world make an infinite difference? |
38806 | Why should Jehovah allow his worshipers, his adorers, to be destroyed by his enemies? |
38806 | Why should a God demand a sacrifice from man? |
38806 | Why should a God of infinite wisdom create men and women whom he knew would be"incurably bad"? |
38806 | Why should a being who destroys nations with pestilence and famine expect that his children will be loving and forgiving? |
38806 | Why should a husband and wife be compelled to live with each other after love is dead? |
38806 | Why should a man be willing to let the innocent suffer for him? |
38806 | Why should a man who faithfully kept his contract of marriage, and who was deserted by an unfaithful wife, be punished for the benefit of society? |
38806 | Why should a pure woman worship a God who upheld polygamy? |
38806 | Why should an Archdeacon be cruel, or even ill- bred? |
38806 | Why should an Infinite Being demand worship? |
38806 | Why should an infinitely wise God desire this development and consolidation? |
38806 | Why should an infinitely wise and powerful God destroy the good and preserve the vile? |
38806 | Why should any civilized man worship him? |
38806 | Why should any man depend on the goodness of a God who created countless millions, knowing that they would suffer eternal grief? |
38806 | Why should he allow the honest, the loving, the noble, to perish at the stake? |
38806 | Why should he be convicted and punished for what he could not help? |
38806 | Why should he be doomed to live without a home? |
38806 | Why should he create souls that he knew would be lost? |
38806 | Why should he fortify a heathen in his crimes? |
38806 | Why should he have created uncounted billions destined to suffer forever? |
38806 | Why should he kneel to the unchangeable? |
38806 | Why should he see millions in savagery destroying the lives of each other, eating the flesh of each other, and keep his existence a secret from man? |
38806 | Why should he treat all alike here, and in another world make an infinite difference? |
38806 | Why should he waste a seventh of his whole life in hearing the same thoughts repeated again and again? |
38806 | Why should her life be destroyed because of his? |
38806 | Why should his name"be encircled with love and tenderness in any human heart"? |
38806 | Why should infinite goodness leave the existence of God in doubt? |
38806 | Why should man worship the inflexible? |
38806 | Why should not every human being be in"abject terror"who believes your doctrine? |
38806 | Why should one God wish to be worshiped as three? |
38806 | Why should one who admits that he himself is totally depraved call any other man, by way of reproach, a monster? |
38806 | Why should she be chained to a criminal and an outcast? |
38806 | Why should she be punished for the dishonesty or brutality of another? |
38806 | Why should the Infinite ask anything from the finite? |
38806 | Why should the Reply assume that it is on account of the sacrifice of his child? |
38806 | Why should the fatal gift of brain be given to any human being, if such gift renders him liable to eternal hell? |
38806 | Why should the infinite ask anything from the finite? |
38806 | Why should the infinite ask anything from the finite? |
38806 | Why should the infinite demand a sacrifice from man? |
38806 | Why should the loving be tortured? |
38806 | Why should the noblest be destroyed? |
38806 | Why should the wife still be bound in indissoluble chains to a husband who is cruel, infamous, and false? |
38806 | Why should the world be filled with misery, with ignorance, and with want? |
38806 | Why should there be more than one correct account of anything? |
38806 | Why should they attempt to kill the Master of Death? |
38806 | Why should three Gods wished to be worshiped as one? |
38806 | Why should we desire the destruction of human passions? |
38806 | Why should we pray to one God and think of three, or pray to three Gods and think of one? |
38806 | Why should your God allow His worshipers, His adorers, to be destroyed by His enemies? |
38806 | Why should your God allow his worshipers, his adorers, to be destroyed by his enemies? |
38806 | Why then do not theologians stop explaining? |
38806 | Why then should evidence be weighed? |
38806 | Why then should the father make demands of love, obedience, and sacrifice, from his young child? |
38806 | Why was it not revealed by Jehovah? |
38806 | Why were four gospels necessary? |
38806 | Why were men and women created? |
38806 | Why were the worshipers of false deities as brave, as kind, and generous as those who knew the only true and living God? |
38806 | Why would your God people a world, knowing that it would be destitute of benevolence for four thousand years? |
38806 | Why"claiming"? |
38806 | Why, then, do you accept them? |
38806 | Why, then, does he throw polygamy into the face of the religion which abhors it? |
38806 | Why, you ask, do men suffer so? |
38806 | Why? |
38806 | Why? |
38806 | Why? |
38806 | Why? |
38806 | Why? |
38806 | Why? |
38806 | Will God hold a poor girl to the bitter dregs of a mistaken bargain? |
38806 | Will Mr. Black be kind enough to state at what time"the church covered the globe with institutions of mercy"? |
38806 | Will Mr. Black have the kindness to state a few of his objections to the devil? |
38806 | Will he be more merciful? |
38806 | Will he be wiser? |
38806 | Will he deride the misshapen? |
38806 | Will he have more power? |
38806 | Will he not desire the higher and better side to be true? |
38806 | Will he not take into consideration the imperfections, the ignorance, the temptations and the passions of his children? |
38806 | Will he tell him the circumstances under which he received the revelation? |
38806 | Will he tell him why he is convinced that it was from God? |
38806 | Will it add to the grief of God? |
38806 | Will it in any way affect his well- being? |
38806 | Will it increase the happiness of the infinite for me to remain homeless and husbandless? |
38806 | Will it make any difference to God whether it is kept or not? |
38806 | Will not all the redeemed assassins remember the faces of the dead? |
38806 | Will not all the redeemed rascals remember their rascality? |
38806 | Will the Archdeacon be kind enough to tell how the spirit can be approached passing by the reason, the understanding, the judgment and the intellect? |
38806 | Will the Christians of America admit this? |
38806 | Will the angels in heaven, the redeemed of earth, lose their memory? |
38806 | Will the lost be the only ones who will know that the right thing has been done, and will they alone appreciate the"ethical elements of religion"? |
38806 | Will the pulpits of the United States adopt the arguments of this"policeman"? |
38806 | Will the reverend gentleman tell us, and without circumlocution, whether the acceptance of Christianity is necessary to the salvation of anybody? |
38806 | Will they repeat the words that you have quoted:"Mercy and judgment are met together; righteousness and peace have kissed each other"? |
38806 | Will this ever come to pass? |
38806 | Will you be kind enough to tell me your opinion of the apostles in the light of this story? |
38806 | Will you have the kindness to explain what it is to act contrary to evidence, or contrary to common sense? |
38806 | Will you read a portion of the Presbyterian Confession of Faith? |
38806 | Will you read this? |
38806 | Will you tell me why God failed to give his Bible to the whole world? |
38806 | With great propriety it may be asked: In the keeping of which church is this"heavenly treasure"? |
38806 | Within their jurisdiction are life, liberty and property safer than anywhere else? |
38806 | Without desiring to hurt the feeling? |
38806 | Would Elizabeth have had no leaning towards finding Mary Stuart implicated in a conspiracy? |
38806 | Would a good father allow some of his children to kill others of his children to please him? |
38806 | Would a loving God, with fierce hail from heaven, bruise and kill the innocent cattle for the crimes of their owners? |
38806 | Would an infinitely loving God hold his ignorant children in derision? |
38806 | Would he lead them with gentle hands toward the light, or lie in wait for them like a wild beast? |
38806 | Would he pity, or mock? |
38806 | Would he torment, torture and destroy them for the sins of men? |
38806 | Would it be possible for him to have an idea? |
38806 | Would it not be far better to fill the young man''s mind with facts so that he may know exactly the physical consequences of such acts? |
38806 | Would it not be much easier to prove that science is of divine origin? |
38806 | Would it not have been better if man, before the poor woman was blinded, had put asunder whom God had joined together? |
38806 | Would it not have been far better had he said:"I come not to bring a sword, but peace"? |
38806 | Would not that be a second violation instead of a vindication? |
38806 | Would not this have saved countless cruelties and countless lives? |
38806 | Would not your argument, Mr. Black, have been just as good in the mouth of a Brahmin then, as it is in yours now? |
38806 | Would they have dared to crucify a man who had the power to clothe the dead with life? |
38806 | Would you not rather trust a wise and honest man with the lightning? |
38806 | Would you rob her of that Unseen Friend-- the only Friend she had on earth or in heaven? |
38806 | Would you say that he was an infinitely wise mechanic? |
38806 | Would you still read from your Confession of Faith, or from your Catechism-- this? |
38806 | Would you tell her that to think of a world without poverty, without tears, without pain, is"a child''s picture"? |
38806 | Would you then put this serpent in her breast? |
38806 | Yet so it has come to pass; and how? |
38806 | You ask me whether I would"rob this poor woman of such a friend?" |
38806 | You ask me, What is Christianity? |
38806 | You ask:"Why then should the father make demands of love, obedience, and sacrifice from his young child?" |
38806 | You further say, that your simple object was to answer the question"What is Christianity?" |
38806 | You have asked me what is to become of one who seduces and betrays, of the criminal with the blood of his victim upon his hands? |
38806 | You may ask, And what of all this? |
38806 | You seem to ask me whether divorce from the bond of marriage can ever be allowed? |
38806 | and can two such issues be equally attractive to a moral agent? |
38806 | and if he desire, will he not incline to the side that he desires to find true? |
38806 | and, if so, why did it not appear in the first four thousand years? |
38806 | any virtue in this? |
38806 | deeper than Hell; what canst thou know?" |
38806 | impress the intelligence of the Great Republic? |
38806 | is the revealed law of purity, generosity, perfection, divine, or only the poetry of imagination? |
38806 | of Jephthah? |
38806 | or will those words be spoken by the redeemed as they joyously contemplate the writhings of the lost? |
38806 | or, if she leaves him to preserve her life, must she remain his wife for his sake? |
38806 | seize it, and is it now in the keeping of the Church of England? |
38806 | that he sees no choice between the murder of helpless age, of weeping women and of sleeping babes, and the defence of liberty and nationality? |
38806 | that such a doctrine should exorcise the fullness of human pride and lust? |
38806 | this the arch that supports the dome of civilization? |
38806 | this the corner- stone of society? |
38806 | whether this is the tone in which controversy ought to be carried on? |
7940 | A Bible- class? |
7940 | A traitor to whom-- to what? |
7940 | A trust? 7940 About what? |
7940 | Alone? |
7940 | Am I_ de trop,_ or do I count among the''best friends''? |
7940 | And Behar Singh died in the jungle? |
7940 | And I--? |
7940 | And Stafford--? |
7940 | And Travers--? |
7940 | And even if you were right, why should I in this particular case''shirk the responsibility,''as you put it? 7940 And have n''t we done so? |
7940 | And he made a scene, my poor Beaty? |
7940 | And my money? |
7940 | And so you are afraid of him? |
7940 | And so you are going to let your life remain empty, little woman? |
7940 | And so you have lived all your life in this lovely garden? |
7940 | And that duty, Rajah--? |
7940 | And the mine? |
7940 | And the proof of all this? |
7940 | And the women? |
7940 | And then? |
7940 | And this man-- this gentleman-- can be of all nations? |
7940 | And what are we going to do? |
7940 | And you managed to keep it a secret in Marut? |
7940 | And you wish to help me? |
7940 | And you, Miss Cary? |
7940 | And, please, would you mind making one or two without butter? |
7940 | Are all Englishwomen so brave and beautiful? |
7940 | Are the natives, then, so contemptible? |
7940 | Are you afraid, my wife? |
7940 | Are you angry? |
7940 | Are you blind to the danger? 7940 Are you not afraid?" |
7940 | Are you not aware that any moment may be our last? |
7940 | Are you starting a conscience, Miss Beatrice? |
7940 | Are you sure of that? |
7940 | Are you-- crying? |
7940 | Are you-- what are you going to do? |
7940 | Are your nerves strong enough, Mrs. Berry? 7940 Art thou not weary, my son?" |
7940 | As my wife? |
7940 | As you did on that day when you told me that you owed me all that you were and ever would be? |
7940 | At your coming? 7940 Awake, are you? |
7940 | Aware of that? |
7940 | Awful wine, was n''t it? |
7940 | Beatrice, how do you know? |
7940 | Beaty, what''s the matter? |
7940 | Because-- oh, do n''t you see? |
7940 | Because--? |
7940 | But he will keep his promise, wo n''t he? 7940 But how? |
7940 | But the mine is to be successful? |
7940 | But what, man? 7940 But which my husband knows?" |
7940 | But will it ever? |
7940 | But you are not going to buy them? |
7940 | But you have not got it back? |
7940 | But you will not punish any one? |
7940 | Ca n''t you answer me properly? 7940 Ca n''t you see that? |
7940 | Can I be the bearer of any messages? |
7940 | Can you make out what Mr. Travers is saying? |
7940 | Come, Stafford, what have you to say? |
7940 | Dear me, what are you so annoyed about? |
7940 | Delay? |
7940 | Did all the women this afternoon fulfil your ideal? |
7940 | Did you expect demigods? |
7940 | Did you understand that I had only deceived myself? 7940 Did you? |
7940 | Do n''t you know that I am_ dead?_Footsteps came hurrying down the corridor. |
7940 | Do n''t you understand? 7940 Do they talk?" |
7940 | Do they? 7940 Do you calculate wealth by polo ponies, then?" |
7940 | Do you consider a change in that respect essential? |
7940 | Do you hate us so? |
7940 | Do you imagine yourself so all- sufficient? |
7940 | Do you know of any one who could have a grudge against you? |
7940 | Do you know that, Christine? |
7940 | Do you mean that-- that it is not honest? |
7940 | Do you mean the Rajah? 7940 Do you mean, perhaps, that-- that we are not all that?" |
7940 | Do you really think that one small human life can make so much difference? |
7940 | Do you really want the whole Station to be taken into our confidence? |
7940 | Do you recognize that face? |
7940 | Do you remember that first evening? 7940 Do you remember that second evening?" |
7940 | Do you think I can begin to love you just because we are both about to die? |
7940 | Do you think I could close my ears when you speak of atonement? |
7940 | Do you think I extort promises that I do n''t want kept? 7940 Do you think a clever woman would own up to an unpleasant past to the man she wanted to marry? |
7940 | Do you think so, Colonel? |
7940 | Do you think so? 7940 Do you think that I have forgotten those months when George was fighting around Marut? |
7940 | Do you think we are going to be? |
7940 | Do you think, because one or two of us are a bit''nervy'', that we are really afraid? 7940 Do you trust me absolutely, Christine?" |
7940 | Do you wonder how I know? |
7940 | Does he think we are going to be got rid of as easily as that? |
7940 | Does it comfort you to hold my hand? 7940 Does that mean that you do n''t care?" |
7940 | Duty? |
7940 | Empty? |
7940 | Enough? |
7940 | Excuse me-- is that part of the reform? 7940 For Marut?" |
7940 | For ever? |
7940 | For him? |
7940 | For me? |
7940 | For the Rajah? 7940 For whom is that?" |
7940 | Forgotten? 7940 From what? |
7940 | Had you not better wait for him, then? |
7940 | Has n''t the mine brought in enough? |
7940 | Has this revelation come to you by force of contrast? |
7940 | Hate you? |
7940 | Have I been a long time coming? |
7940 | Have n''t I been brought up to do my best? |
7940 | Have n''t we cheated all through? |
7940 | Have n''t you been out with the Rajah? |
7940 | Have you also a debt? |
7940 | Have you any personal objection, Colonel? |
7940 | Have you been calculating how many rupees they will bring in? |
7940 | Have you come to plead again? 7940 Have you considered the consequences?" |
7940 | Have you ever heard of a mine that was n''t to be successful? 7940 Have you got a few minutes to spare?" |
7940 | Have you really failed him? |
7940 | Have you thought what that means? 7940 Have you time to spare?" |
7940 | Help me? |
7940 | Heroes? |
7940 | Heroes? |
7940 | Hesitate? |
7940 | How can we? |
7940 | How did it happen? |
7940 | How did it happen? |
7940 | How do I know? 7940 How do you know I have a God?" |
7940 | How long is that, little woman? 7940 How meanest thou? |
7940 | How much farther is it at the rate we are going? |
7940 | How much money would be required? |
7940 | How should you be''aware of that?'' 7940 How was I to know that you were so easily alarmed?" |
7940 | How was I to know you were seriously contemplating the Rajah''s conversion? 7940 How?" |
7940 | How?--what do you mean? |
7940 | Hullo, you both here? |
7940 | I ca n''t give the dead life-- I ca n''t give back a man''s faith, can I? |
7940 | I dare say she told you that it is very immoral for me to ride out with Captain Stafford? |
7940 | I fear I am presumptuous,she began again;"but are you not the Rajah? |
7940 | I hope the time of waiting has not been too long? |
7940 | I suppose it is possible to see people in different and less agreeable lights? |
7940 | I suppose you, O, wise young judge--? |
7940 | I think Rajah Sahib and Miss Cary have already met? |
7940 | I thought they were rich? |
7940 | I understood that your late husband had a government appointment somewhere in the South? |
7940 | I want to know if you are angry? |
7940 | I wonder why in two days? |
7940 | I''m awfully sorry,he stuttered;"you and Webb-- would you mind waiting till to- morrow? |
7940 | I-- crying? |
7940 | I-- hate you? 7940 I? |
7940 | If all the men are remaining, I suppose my husband remains, too? |
7940 | If it has not been what you thought it was, has it any the less opened the gates of Heaven and earth, as you said? 7940 If the light troubles you, shall I shut the door?" |
7940 | If you live, do you know what may lie before you? |
7940 | Ill? |
7940 | In thy dreams hast thou never seen thine own form rise at the call of thy waiting people? |
7940 | In what way? |
7940 | In what way? |
7940 | Indeed? 7940 Indeed?" |
7940 | Is Stafford-- so-- so desirable? |
7940 | Is he not handsome? |
7940 | Is it ever helpless, though? |
7940 | Is it necessary that you should understand? |
7940 | Is it not a sight to bring peace to the soul of the poet and the dreamer? 7940 Is it not enough that you have taken my life once?" |
7940 | Is it thou? 7940 Is it you, Miss Caruthers? |
7940 | Is n''t it strange? |
7940 | Is n''t that rather a hard punishment for him, Lois? |
7940 | Is not Travers his name? 7940 Is that generosity on your part, or-- are you shirking your share of the responsibility?" |
7940 | Is that possible? 7940 Is that well so, missy?" |
7940 | Is that why you look so tired and ill? |
7940 | Is the Colonel there? 7940 Is their homage so precious to you?" |
7940 | Is there anything you do not know or have not read, Rajah? |
7940 | It is a perfect picture, is it not? 7940 It is rather curious, under the circumstances, is n''t it?" |
7940 | It is superiority, then, which prevents every one except professors from taking any interest in the natives? |
7940 | John, is n''t that rather a lame equivocation? |
7940 | Knowest thou his name? |
7940 | Knowing what you know, you think we have no cause to fear him? |
7940 | Look here, Stafford,he said roughly,"what is it you want? |
7940 | May I ask why, Colonel? |
7940 | May I claim your assistance? |
7940 | May I speak with you for a few minutes, John? |
7940 | May I, Miss Caruthers? |
7940 | Might I ask why you take all this trouble? |
7940 | Miss Cary? |
7940 | Mother, what do you want to do? 7940 Mr. Travers, will you think me very conceited if I say that I know what you have come to tell me?" |
7940 | My dear Miss Cary, do you know what the world-- particularly the woman world-- would call you? |
7940 | My dear child,he protested,"what earthly interest can it have for you to know the pros and cons of the business? |
7940 | My dear lady, have you ever known me to do such a thing? |
7940 | My good fellow-- surely you have not forgotten? |
7940 | My husband--? |
7940 | No one? |
7940 | None? 7940 Not help missy with dress?" |
7940 | Not yourself, by any chance? |
7940 | Nothing else? |
7940 | Now, Mrs. Berry, what about you? |
7940 | Now, what do you mean? |
7940 | Now, who has a dog- cart in Marut? 7940 Of what should I be afraid? |
7940 | Of what use is the secret to you? |
7940 | Of what virtues are you speaking? |
7940 | Of whom, then? |
7940 | Oh, Archie, was it worth while-- just for a little bit of gain? 7940 Oh, Beatrice, Beatrice, where are you?" |
7940 | Oh--? |
7940 | On conditions, no doubt? |
7940 | Or against-- your family? |
7940 | Or is it not already something? 7940 Our next meeting? |
7940 | Rajah Sahib,stammered the young fellow, in helpless confusion,"if I had known you were there--""You would not have revealed your trouble to me?" |
7940 | Rajah, do n''t you think the ladies could be allowed their liberty? 7940 Really?" |
7940 | Retreat-- for me? |
7940 | Rich, I suppose? |
7940 | Sahib-- is it good to wait? 7940 Shall I light the lamp?" |
7940 | Shall we walk about a little? |
7940 | Since when is that, Travers? |
7940 | Sleepest thou, Nehal Singh? |
7940 | So all that splendid work was done for the sake of our cathedral? |
7940 | So my wife has broken the news to you? |
7940 | Stafford, you mean? |
7940 | Steven, do you trust me? |
7940 | Steven-- have you forgotten? 7940 Suppose I gossip?" |
7940 | Surely you are heavily involved-- and not only you, but the Rajah and the people in Marut? |
7940 | Surely you have something more serious on your mind than that? 7940 That Cary girl? |
7940 | That afternoon? |
7940 | That is quite a long time, is n''t it? |
7940 | That was the sum, I think? 7940 That would be a coincidence, would n''t it?" |
7940 | The Carys are ruined too? |
7940 | The Rajah Sahib remembers my coming? |
7940 | The cathedral? 7940 The next question is, on whose shoulders shall the task of beguilement fall?" |
7940 | The second part of your programme concerns the patron, then? |
7940 | The settlement and Lois''own money-- what''s become of it all? 7940 Then it is not true what you said?" |
7940 | Then it_ is_ money that is the trouble? |
7940 | Then you mean that-- it is entirely over between us? |
7940 | There is something so mystic, so enthralling about it, do n''t you think? 7940 They would have harmed me?" |
7940 | Thinkest thou never of thyself? |
7940 | To do what? |
7940 | Was she like you? |
7940 | Was that so? |
7940 | Well, what do you say, Miss Cary? |
7940 | Well, what is it? |
7940 | Well, what news, Captain Nicholson? |
7940 | Well, wo n''t you introduce me, then, so that I can express my displeasure direct to the culprit? |
7940 | Well,he said,"what is it?" |
7940 | Well? |
7940 | Well? |
7940 | Were they killed at once? |
7940 | Were you on duty last night? |
7940 | What about your serpent''s tongue, Travers? |
7940 | What about? |
7940 | What are exceptions in a whole race? |
7940 | What are you going to do? |
7940 | What are you worrying yourself about now? |
7940 | What are your purposes? |
7940 | What can have happened? |
7940 | What did he say? |
7940 | What did you say to him? |
7940 | What do you mean, Lois? 7940 What do you mean-- what have you done?" |
7940 | What do you mean? 7940 What do you say to a Bible- class on horseback?" |
7940 | What do you want me to say? |
7940 | What game is in your hands, Beaty? |
7940 | What harm do I do? 7940 What has Miss Cary to do with the matter?" |
7940 | What has happened? |
7940 | What has happened? |
7940 | What has happened? |
7940 | What have I done to deserve your kindness, Rajah Sahib? |
7940 | What have you been doing with your pocket money, eh? 7940 What is a pity?" |
7940 | What is it about? |
7940 | What is it to read? 7940 What is it? |
7940 | What is it? |
7940 | What is rather funny? |
7940 | What is the fairy godmother going to do for us? 7940 What is the matter?" |
7940 | What is there to understand that I have n''t understood, pray? |
7940 | What knowest thou of these things? |
7940 | What made you think of that, Rajah? |
7940 | What makes so much difference? |
7940 | What may they be? |
7940 | What meanest thou? |
7940 | What on earth do you mean? |
7940 | What should have made you think that? 7940 What would you do in my place?" |
7940 | What''s that you are talking about? |
7940 | When do you propose to make the start, Colonel? |
7940 | Whence comes she? |
7940 | Whence this anxiety, then? |
7940 | Where are we to start? 7940 Where hast thou come from? |
7940 | Where is Beatrice? 7940 Where is Beatrice?" |
7940 | Where''s my money? 7940 Who are you? |
7940 | Who are you? |
7940 | Who are you? |
7940 | Who are you? |
7940 | Who are your people? |
7940 | Who art thou? |
7940 | Who can help me? 7940 Who is it?" |
7940 | Who is she? |
7940 | Who is that talking about poverty and worry? |
7940 | Who is this Nicholson? |
7940 | Who knows what unseen world surrounds us? |
7940 | Who was she? |
7940 | Who was this woman? |
7940 | Who would be likely to undertake the mission with any hope of success? |
7940 | Who? 7940 Why all past?" |
7940 | Why are you here? |
7940 | Why are you so certain? |
7940 | Why did he tell Stafford? |
7940 | Why did you call Beatrice Cary a silly girl? |
7940 | Why did you not answer? |
7940 | Why do n''t you help? 7940 Why do you ask? |
7940 | Why do you keep me from him? 7940 Why do you not shoot me, then?" |
7940 | Why do you think I am angry? |
7940 | Why hast thou come before the time? |
7940 | Why have you come? |
7940 | Why have you given me a name which is not mine-- which_ she_ gave me with her last breath? 7940 Why have you not fled?" |
7940 | Why is n''t the punkah- man at work? |
7940 | Why not tomorrow? 7940 Why not? |
7940 | Why should I hate you? |
7940 | Why should I not tell you what is true? |
7940 | Why should I not? 7940 Why should n''t we, Beatrice?" |
7940 | Why should people talk? |
7940 | Why should you mind? 7940 Why so serious, dear? |
7940 | Why, when did you see him? |
7940 | Why? |
7940 | Why? |
7940 | Why? |
7940 | Will it take long? |
7940 | Will you come with me now? |
7940 | Will you forgive me if I ask you not to tell me? 7940 Will you have a cup of tea? |
7940 | Will you never lose it? |
7940 | Will you shake hands, John? |
7940 | Will you tell Travers that I shall be around at the office to- morrow morning? 7940 Wo n''t you come and help me?" |
7940 | Wo n''t you let me tell you what it is? |
7940 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
7940 | Wo n''t you? |
7940 | Would it make you very happy? |
7940 | Would you mind telling me what you mean by a Philistine? |
7940 | Yes, it was a marvel, was n''t it? |
7940 | Yes, what''s the damage? |
7940 | Yes,he said,"it is homely, is n''t it? |
7940 | You are English? |
7940 | You are going back to Marut? |
7940 | You are her mother--? |
7940 | You are no doubt preparing to start for Madras? |
7940 | You are not exactly a very trusting wife, are you, Lois? 7940 You do n''t mean that-- that it was-- dishonest?" |
7940 | You do n''t mind about Captain Stafford, then? |
7940 | You do n''t think he is ill? |
7940 | You do n''t want Mr. Travers to think that Lois was picked up in the street, do you? |
7940 | You do not wish your people to become Christians? |
7940 | You find it well? |
7940 | You have been a long time in India? |
7940 | You have heard nothing? |
7940 | You have heard what has happened? |
7940 | You have never seen anything of the world? |
7940 | You have not forgotten, then? |
7940 | You mean Captain Stafford? |
7940 | You mean I_ do_ need you? 7940 You mean he would have done better to keep to his old seclusion?" |
7940 | You mean to say that he stamped an armed crowd out of the earth in half an hour? |
7940 | You mean, then, that it is all over? |
7940 | You mean-- I stand in his way? |
7940 | You mean-- for us? 7940 You mean-- it has gone smash?" |
7940 | You never knew her? |
7940 | You promise? |
7940 | You really think that? |
7940 | You really wish us to start for Madras to- night? |
7940 | You saw us playing, then-- and heard what we said? |
7940 | You talk as though--"--As though he were being given away with a pound of tea? 7940 You think it was foolish and unreasonable to wish no one to know? |
7940 | You think not? 7940 You think the changes are for the good?" |
7940 | You think there is no hope? |
7940 | You told him--? |
7940 | You were afraid that she would see through your pretense to your unchanged affection for her? |
7940 | You would be glad to atone for all the mischief we have done? |
7940 | You would never have anything to do with them? |
7940 | You, too? |
7940 | You? 7940 Your chief business is to get the best out of life, and quixotic people who worry about the means are rather a nuisance, do n''t you think?" |
7940 | Your father? |
7940 | Your security? |
7940 | _ Does_ call me, you mean? 7940 ( What girl in Marut objected to being kissed?) 7940 A traitor to whom-- to what? 7940 A traitor? 7940 About eighteen months, eh? 7940 After that I forget what craze came about, but we always had a new one on the list, had n''t we? |
7940 | And again, I have read:''What profiteth it a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?'' |
7940 | And if beneath his heartfelt rejoicing there lurked the shadow of bitterness, who shall blame him? |
7940 | And now we are to run away like sheep? |
7940 | And now? |
7940 | And there are more like him? |
7940 | And what on earth does it matter? |
7940 | And yet-- is it not something, does it not mitigate my fault a little, that I deceived myself far, far more than I ever deceived you?" |
7940 | Anything happened to her?" |
7940 | Are there not such as could be my companion, my comrade? |
7940 | Are they all great- hearted and brave?" |
7940 | Are you coming, Phipps and Geoffries?" |
7940 | Are you going to leave the task which surely God has left for you to accomplish?" |
7940 | Are you in earnest?" |
7940 | Are you listening?" |
7940 | Are you made of stone?" |
7940 | Are you prepared to be lionized, by the way? |
7940 | Are you still my friend?" |
7940 | Are you then, so poor?" |
7940 | Been buying too many sweeties?" |
7940 | Besides, my dear mother, diplomatist as you are, do n''t you see that it would n''t have the least effect? |
7940 | But for the warrior? |
7940 | But how?" |
7940 | But was it any longer in her power to determine when it would be time enough? |
7940 | But what does that avail me if I do nothing for the suffering and sorrow with which the world is filled? |
7940 | But you ladies--""Well, what about us''ladies''?" |
7940 | But you will not listen, you are determined to go on, and I"--she caught her breath sharply--"surely you can understand? |
7940 | But"--she faced him with a sudden inspired appeal--"must you wait until you are dead to speak to her? |
7940 | By the bye, Nicholson, that''s your destination, is n''t it? |
7940 | By the way, are you really sure of your success?" |
7940 | By the way, what were her people?" |
7940 | Ca n''t you understand? |
7940 | Can he draw his sword against flowers and trees?" |
7940 | Can we start?" |
7940 | Can you be ready to start in three days?" |
7940 | Can you hear what I say? |
7940 | Can you trust yourself to his tender care?" |
7940 | Captain Stafford, do you know?" |
7940 | Captain Stafford, why did you ask me to be your wife?" |
7940 | Carmichael?" |
7940 | Carmichael?" |
7940 | Cary?" |
7940 | Cary?" |
7940 | Could I do less?" |
7940 | Did I not tell you he was the very husband for you? |
7940 | Did they not all, behind their seeming tolerance and Christian principles, hide an equal depreciation? |
7940 | Did you not know that?" |
7940 | Did you tell him?" |
7940 | Do n''t you feel it? |
7940 | Do n''t you know that I am dead?" |
7940 | Do n''t you remember what you told me then-- how you loved and admired us? |
7940 | Do n''t you think it will come in time? |
7940 | Do you agree, Colonel?" |
7940 | Do you despise me? |
7940 | Do you expect a miracle? |
7940 | Do you know if that little girl, Lois Caruthers, is with him, or has she gone back to England?" |
7940 | Do you mean from debt?" |
7940 | Do you mean me?" |
7940 | Do you mind, or would you rather dance? |
7940 | Do you remember of what use our cathedral was to be in the world? |
7940 | Do you remember that evening when you found me in the temple? |
7940 | Do you remember that ride we had together after Mr. Travers''dance? |
7940 | Do you remember?" |
7940 | Do you think opposition and struggle could darken my life? |
7940 | Do you think the most kindly thinking person in this Station would believe for an instant that_ I_ would ever convert anyone? |
7940 | Do you understand?" |
7940 | Do you want to be killed like sheep?" |
7940 | Do your best, wo n''t you?" |
7940 | Does it really mean so much? |
7940 | For him? |
7940 | For what? |
7940 | Had n''t you better see about the tea?" |
7940 | Had they not all played with fire? |
7940 | Has anything gone wrong?" |
7940 | Has not the Master said,''A man shall not live by bread alone''? |
7940 | Has not the time come when we need each other-- when no one else is left?" |
7940 | Has that gone, too?" |
7940 | Has your husband told you?" |
7940 | Hast thou a dagger in thy hand?" |
7940 | Have n''t you forgotten?" |
7940 | Have n''t you thought of that? |
7940 | Have they deserted you?" |
7940 | Have you come to torture me again? |
7940 | Have you ever seen me cry?" |
7940 | Have you got a pain anywhere?--Have you a headache? |
7940 | Have you no sense of responsibility? |
7940 | Have you understood what I mean?" |
7940 | Have you walked?" |
7940 | He was genuinely fond of her, and is there any law forbidding a man to lay firm hold upon his wife''s money? |
7940 | He wo n''t let us fall into those cruel hands? |
7940 | Him I slew-- and his pale wife I--""Who was this man?" |
7940 | How are we ever going to make people believe in us, now we have no money?" |
7940 | How are you?" |
7940 | How can I thank you for all you have given me?" |
7940 | How could I tell that you meant more than that? |
7940 | How dared he keep silence?" |
7940 | How did you come by this?" |
7940 | How does that work out, Webb?" |
7940 | How long is it since we have spoken of these things? |
7940 | How many men revealed to their syces their darkest moods, their lowest passions? |
7940 | How many men think that any sort of conduct is good enough to show a native? |
7940 | How many times have I read there the thought:''Of what use is it all? |
7940 | How much do you want to invest? |
7940 | How much had the Rajah heard of the previous conversation, how much had he understood? |
7940 | How shall I believe in a God whose disciples mock His commandments?" |
7940 | How was I to know all that when I prophesied we should not meet again?" |
7940 | How, rather, is it possible that it should be otherwise? |
7940 | I expect he will be around soon-- and if he fails, will I do instead?" |
7940 | I fooled you-- for-- for--""For what?" |
7940 | I have n''t said what I ought n''t, have I?" |
7940 | I hope you have understood?" |
7940 | I hope you laughed in his face?" |
7940 | I know whom you mean and I ask you-- does Stafford look a happy man? |
7940 | I shall never be able to help you as you have helped me-- and yet-- will you promise me something?" |
7940 | I suppose you know nothing?" |
7940 | I trust, then, Rajah Sahib that you will condescend to be the guest of the English Station?" |
7940 | I was quite right, was n''t I?" |
7940 | I wonder how he would reconcile them with all I have been telling him about love, and pity, and tolerance? |
7940 | I wonder what she expects to get out of him?" |
7940 | I wonder why?" |
7940 | I-- I hope I have done no wrong?" |
7940 | If I could win you back--""What then?" |
7940 | If I give you a hint, will you keep counsel?" |
7940 | If the time should ever come when you are in trouble, if you should ever be in need of a true and devoted friend, will you turn to me? |
7940 | If you are anxious to meet her, how would it be if I ran over to the Colonel''s bungalow and persuaded her to come? |
7940 | If you will allow me to unfold them to you before the dancing begins--?" |
7940 | In what way have you suffered? |
7940 | Is it bad because it was only friendship-- because it could n''t be more than that? |
7940 | Is it not something that you have led me to the feet of the Great Teacher? |
7940 | Is it not true? |
7940 | Is it that horrid Rajah? |
7940 | Is it too late for me to make my reparation?" |
7940 | Is my private life so public then?" |
7940 | Is n''t it a just punishment? |
7940 | Is not that the advice your Great Teacher gave to the young man seeking to do his duty?" |
7940 | Is our cathedral forgotten? |
7940 | Is she married?" |
7940 | Is that a bargain?" |
7940 | Is that it?" |
7940 | Is there any hope for me?" |
7940 | Is there anything wrong?" |
7940 | Is there no hope?" |
7940 | Is there some one else?" |
7940 | It was_ I_ who told you what I had done and who I was--""Why did you tell me?" |
7940 | It would be rather silly to begin with that sort of thing at my time of life, would n''t it? |
7940 | Lois and Stafford?" |
7940 | Long ago in the old temple? |
7940 | Mrs. Travers, do you know who it was who came between you and John Stafford?" |
7940 | Must I wait the best years of my life? |
7940 | Nicholson, are you listening? |
7940 | No doubt you know why your supposed father, Behar Singh, rose against us?" |
7940 | Now you are going to lift us out of the mire-- Lois, what was that?" |
7940 | Now, I wonder whom you caught it from? |
7940 | Now, are you keeping your promise?" |
7940 | O Lor'', give me something to drink, will you?" |
7940 | Of course, it''s only an idea of his, but men are such faddy creatures, do n''t you think?" |
7940 | Only Captain Nicholson wants to know-- will you stay or go? |
7940 | Or are they all servile slaves?" |
7940 | Or are you shirking?" |
7940 | Or did you think there were no limits?" |
7940 | Or was it something more?--the call of a great, wonderful instinct?" |
7940 | Other rajahs interest themselves in social matters-- why not this one? |
7940 | Perhaps I can help you--?" |
7940 | Produce a club- house, a patron, or a cucumber?" |
7940 | Rather a queer thing, eh?" |
7940 | Rich, good position, good family, worthy character, a trifle slow, not to say stupid-- what more do you want?" |
7940 | Shall I save you?--is that what you have come to tell me?" |
7940 | Shall we explore?" |
7940 | Shall we stop?" |
7940 | Sometimes we used to talk very seriously about life, do you remember? |
7940 | Surely you can see for yourself that Captain Stafford is to all intents and purposes engaged to Lois?" |
7940 | Tell me, does it really make so much difference?" |
7940 | That is how we feel, do we not, Beatrice?" |
7940 | That''s Miss Cary, is n''t it? |
7940 | The Rajah--""The Rajah--?" |
7940 | The face of a woman? |
7940 | The rest is rather insipid, do n''t you think?" |
7940 | Then she asked gently:"Now that you have seen, will you not leave your hermitage? |
7940 | There are no haloes or mysteries between us, are there?" |
7940 | There''s nothing vital thereabouts, is there, Berry?" |
7940 | There, are you tucked in all right? |
7940 | There, when I have pulled the curtains and put the lamp just at your elbow, you could almost imagine yourself back in England, could n''t you? |
7940 | Thinkest thou that I have brought thee up in solitude without cause? |
7940 | Thinkest thou that I have hidden thee like a miser his treasure, in the dark, unseen places, for a whim? |
7940 | To whom? |
7940 | Travers?" |
7940 | Was it caste, religion? |
7940 | Was it only that? |
7940 | Was it only your books, was it your teachers-- Behar Singh-- who made you feel as you did? |
7940 | Was it the beauty of her surroundings, or was it the man beside her, which sent the curious, almost painful emotion through her angry heart? |
7940 | Was it to these that his hero- worship was dedicated? |
7940 | Was it with the same intent, guided by the same strange foreboding? |
7940 | Was it worth while? |
7940 | Was it, perhaps, as he had said, that her honesty and genuine heart- goodness had drawn him to her? |
7940 | Was not that once enough? |
7940 | Was she even as bad as some? |
7940 | Was there any truth in the assertions that he had made to her, more than he knew? |
7940 | We are all English, and who knows how little or how much we are all to blame for this disaster? |
7940 | We have always stuck together, have n''t we?" |
7940 | We have been quite good friends, have n''t we? |
7940 | Well, what''s the damage?" |
7940 | What are a few hundreds against thousands? |
7940 | What are you laughing at?" |
7940 | What are you marrying me for?" |
7940 | What are you so cross about?" |
7940 | What did Behar Singh see of our honor? |
7940 | What did she know of him? |
7940 | What do they suppose goes on between us?" |
7940 | What do we want with the fellow? |
7940 | What do you mean by saying she is yours?" |
7940 | What do you say, George, dear?" |
7940 | What do you say, Stafford? |
7940 | What do you want me to do?" |
7940 | What does it matter if it is a little sooner than we hoped? |
7940 | What does it matter if you do? |
7940 | What else is friendship but the sanest, most lasting, and noblest part of love? |
7940 | What had she endured? |
7940 | What had she said? |
7940 | What has Nehal Singh seen of our superiority? |
7940 | What has been the consequence? |
7940 | What has caused the delay?" |
7940 | What has happened? |
7940 | What has happened?" |
7940 | What is it, dear? |
7940 | What is it, man?" |
7940 | What is thy will?" |
7940 | What is your birth or parentage to me? |
7940 | What is your share of the losses?" |
7940 | What made you think of such a thing?" |
7940 | What makes you ask?" |
7940 | What shame, what misery could be worse than the years spent at your side?" |
7940 | What surer basis was ever the union between a man and woman built upon? |
7940 | What was it in her poor dead face which stirred in him a memory which had no date nor place in his life? |
7940 | What will you do-- Steven Caruthers?" |
7940 | What would you have me do?" |
7940 | What''s she waiting for, in the name of conscience?" |
7940 | What''s the good of getting me to talk business? |
7940 | What''s the matter? |
7940 | What, after all, had she done to deserve the chief condemnation? |
7940 | When I first joined I had the chemical craze on, do you remember? |
7940 | When did you send the letter?" |
7940 | When is Travers going to take you for a change?" |
7940 | When you came among us, what led you? |
7940 | Where is he? |
7940 | Where''s my money? |
7940 | Wherein lay the link, wherein the barrier? |
7940 | Who are you that dare to assume authority over millions-- you who can not rule yourselves, you who idle away your lives in folly and self- seeking? |
7940 | Who can blame us if we get slack and ready to do anything for a change? |
7940 | Who can have more right to her than I have?" |
7940 | Who does n''t? |
7940 | Who else? |
7940 | Who had made her suffer till only a shadow of that beauty remained? |
7940 | Who has sinned against her? |
7940 | Who has sinned against me?" |
7940 | Who has taught you?" |
7940 | Who wants to be bothered with the memory of his empty purse on such a lovely day?" |
7940 | Who was he that a woman should join her lot to his? |
7940 | Who was she? |
7940 | Whom do you seek? |
7940 | Whom will you obey? |
7940 | Why are you afraid of him?" |
7940 | Why did she call him by a name which rang in his ears with a vague familiarity? |
7940 | Why did you ask me to become your wife?" |
7940 | Why did you not come?" |
7940 | Why do n''t you make yourself the benefactress of your country? |
7940 | Why do n''t you shoot her enemy?" |
7940 | Why do you look at me like that? |
7940 | Why do you look like that? |
7940 | Why does n''t Mr. Travers come? |
7940 | Why not? |
7940 | Why should I, Beatrice?" |
7940 | Why should I? |
7940 | Why should death soften me?" |
7940 | Why should you believe it was done unwittingly? |
7940 | Why, what''s the matter? |
7940 | Why?" |
7940 | Will any day suit you?" |
7940 | Will he not grow to think that there is nothing more beautiful than a mud- hut, nothing more to be desired than his daily bread? |
7940 | Will it lift them from their misery; will it make them prosperous and happy?" |
7940 | Will it never be bridged over?" |
7940 | Will it prove the strength of my love for you if I tell you that it has given me the power to look straight into your heart? |
7940 | Will that not be more difficult? |
7940 | Will you be so kind?" |
7940 | Will you help me?" |
7940 | Will you let me try to pay my debt of gratitude to you?" |
7940 | Will you let me?" |
7940 | Will you listen to me?" |
7940 | Will you not allow me to tell every one?" |
7940 | Will you please come?" |
7940 | Will you think me very low- spirited if I tell you that a man still holds a place in my life-- a man who cares nothing for me? |
7940 | Will you?" |
7940 | Wilt thou bear it?" |
7940 | Wilt thou bear my message?" |
7940 | With what purpose? |
7940 | Wo n''t you answer me?" |
7940 | Wo n''t you let me add the whole of my love to time''s cure for healing the old wound?" |
7940 | Wo n''t you run and meet him?" |
7940 | Wo n''t you take back your freedom while there is yet time?" |
7940 | Wo n''t you trust me?" |
7940 | Would it not be better to go to her now with your message? |
7940 | Would you call me an ungrateful, discontented person, Uncle?" |
7940 | Would you like to watch from the verandah? |
7940 | Would you mind telling the Colonel what I have done?" |
7940 | You are all right?" |
7940 | You baited us with this clubhouse-- you pretended you wanted to do us such a lot of good, did n''t you? |
7940 | You have friends who will help you in your distress, but who will help my people? |
7940 | You say it would overshadow my whole life, darken my career? |
7940 | You talk of gratitude-- do you really think anyone is grateful to me for-- this?" |
7940 | You will wake me if anything happens, wo n''t you?" |
7940 | he began,"are you angry--?" |
7940 | he whispered,"How did you come by this?" |
7940 | you do n''t love that man?" |
6304 | A Hell? |
6304 | Am I a genius? |
6304 | And carry thy rudeness abroad? |
6304 | And the qualifications? |
6304 | And thou wilt stay there whatever I say or do? |
6304 | And what did he do, to deserve the statue? |
6304 | And what if I have? |
6304 | And you have preached this with success? |
6304 | Any danger? |
6304 | Are you engaged for the cheese? |
6304 | Are you open for the extra joint? |
6304 | But hast thou published anything? |
6304 | But how can there be a guide to such a frightful labyrinth? |
6304 | But what did he do to deserve the statue? |
6304 | But what do you understand by illegitimate birth? |
6304 | But what has free choice to do with the unborn? |
6304 | But what of the old Greek maxim''Know thyself''? |
6304 | But what of the uncommon people? |
6304 | But who shall say,I asked sceptically,"that the new self- appointed generation will be happier than the old? |
6304 | But, Mr. Fore,I protested,"will all the unborn attach such importance to the pathological pedigree as you do? |
6304 | Can you spare me the joint? |
6304 | Can you tell us the piece to follow? |
6304 | Civilised? |
6304 | Do I? |
6304 | Do n''t you know I write for the unborn? |
6304 | Do n''t you see that the czarship will die out? |
6304 | Do n''t you think Flaubert took himself too seriously? |
6304 | Do you know what makes you be born? |
6304 | Do you know who wrote''Macbeth''? |
6304 | Do you mean Madame Blavatsky was right? |
6304 | Do you wonder Edinburgh is renowned for its medical schools? |
6304 | Does he not poison the air every day with the smoke of his coal fires? |
6304 | Earl, do you wear one of these? |
6304 | F- O- R- C- E."Is it God''s force? |
6304 | Father,he said,"have you no pity upon me-- you who once loved a woman yourself?" |
6304 | Father,pleaded the physician again,"will you not move to the foot of the bed?" |
6304 | Have you any Christians on your staff? |
6304 | Have you no wish to see it? |
6304 | How art thou responsible? |
6304 | How could I publish? |
6304 | How could they survive? |
6304 | How do they get to see them? |
6304 | How long have you been an author? |
6304 | How so? |
6304 | If the psychology of the novelist, who is the student of other people''s psychology, is to be studied, where are you to stop? 6304 If thou hadst refused to sell poison except in specially shaped bottles----""What canst thou expect of a man who allows anybody to carry firearms?" |
6304 | Indeed? |
6304 | Is He not omnipotent, then? |
6304 | Is it any wonder the rising generation is cynical, and the young maiden of fifteen has ceased to be bashful? |
6304 | Is it likely any of us would consent to be born hunchbacks? |
6304 | Is it your way that the murdered man lies? |
6304 | Is there a heaven? |
6304 | Is there any one else whom Posterity listens to? |
6304 | Legal judgment of his peers,says Magna Charta; but when an exceptional man blunders into the dock, is he ever accorded a panel of his equals? |
6304 | May I have my dessert, Minnie? |
6304 | On love? |
6304 | Or who fills his newspaper with divorce cases? |
6304 | Prithee, was ever one of us capable of not lecturing on ethics or not preaching a sermon? 6304 So soon?" |
6304 | The poets call it love-- we doctors give it another name,says a kindly old character in one of Echegaray''s comedies:"How is it cured? |
6304 | Then how am I responsible? |
6304 | Then how could I be aware of thee? |
6304 | We can scarcely afford raisins,he interrupted:"could n''t you manage without raisins?" |
6304 | Well, what would you have advised? |
6304 | Well? |
6304 | What cares_ he_? |
6304 | What certainty is there this post- natal love would spring up? 6304 What do I want to do early to- morrow morning?" |
6304 | What do you mean by''thick''? |
6304 | What do you mean? |
6304 | What has it to do? 6304 What has that to do with the unborn?" |
6304 | What is being interviewed like? |
6304 | What is my sin? 6304 What is the true religion?" |
6304 | What would you have me do, O daughters of Eve? |
6304 | What''s pretty thick? |
6304 | Where didst thou get that hat? |
6304 | Where is''The Bauble Shop''now? |
6304 | Wherefore, then, my friend,quoth I,"do you not keep them?" |
6304 | Why didst thou not come to me? |
6304 | Why, what difference can the choice of parents make after all? |
6304 | Will you give me one sweet? |
6304 | Will you put me down for a fish? |
6304 | Will you tell us? |
6304 | Wo n''t you have a drink? |
6304 | Yes; should not a child love its father and mother? 6304 Your photograph,_ señorita?_"Look! |
6304 | ''Half- past nine? |
6304 | ''T was a farce-- when was an amateur performance other? |
6304 | ( 4) And is it not an advantage that it resembleth to the Stigian smoak of the pit? |
6304 | ( Query: this being a quotation from myself, was I bound to put the inverted commas?) |
6304 | ( a) What would you think? |
6304 | ( b) What would you say? |
6304 | ( c) How would you vote? |
6304 | ("Heaven drinks, and earth drinks: why should n''t we drink?") |
6304 | A new series of formulae would be added to the language:"May I have the pleasure of seeing your menu?" |
6304 | A universal penny post? |
6304 | Act? |
6304 | After all, have not those irrepressible German savants discovered that Christ was born in the year 6 B.C.? |
6304 | Ah, shall we ever again be as happy as we were three hundred years ago? |
6304 | All this has been said before? |
6304 | And at last I asked angrily of the rocks and caves:"Will no one tell me where Peace may be found? |
6304 | And even if philosophers were kings and kings philosophers,_ would_ the kingdom of Plato be at hand? |
6304 | And even when the course of true love runs smooth, do the lovers marry whom they were in love with? |
6304 | And if Tom or Charles is a poet to boot, what can we not forgive him? |
6304 | And is not every pretty woman a"martyr"--a revelation of an inner soul of beauty and goodness in this chaotic universe? |
6304 | And is there a public opinion in Ante- land that regulates private action?" |
6304 | And shall Trelawney dine? |
6304 | And so? |
6304 | And the way thou neglectest Coleridge''s grave----""Coleridge''s grave?" |
6304 | And those clothes; didst thou investigate where they were made? |
6304 | And through the gloom a flash- light leaped and waned, flickered and died and gleamed again with electric brilliance--"the Winnaker(?) |
6304 | And to what but literature can one look for a permanent conservator of the eternal lesson of an ephemeral exhibition? |
6304 | And what about Somnambulism? |
6304 | And what does it all amount to? |
6304 | And what more natural than that one should celebrate one''s benefit by getting drunk? |
6304 | And what right have we to interfere with our fellow- creatures at all? |
6304 | And who does not admire her grand pyrotechnic display-- twice daily-- at sunrise and at sunset, or her celebrated local effect, the Aurora Borealis? |
6304 | And who in the past have done anything for our prose dramatic literature? |
6304 | And who shall determine what a nation is? |
6304 | And yet what figure is more certain to please, in the whole gallery of puppets? |
6304 | And yet, would she profit by the change? |
6304 | And, in truth, is it not so? |
6304 | And, indeed, did not humanity long regard the heavens as a firework show for its amusement, a set piece entirely for its delectation? |
6304 | Are animals automata? |
6304 | Are both these men''s incomes to be treated alike? |
6304 | Are cigarettes poisonous? |
6304 | Are examinations any real test? |
6304 | Are not our ideas made for us in the kitchen of our Sub- Consciousness? |
6304 | Are our police reliable? |
6304 | Are the English the Lost Ten Tribes? |
6304 | Are the diplomatic corps less maculate than in the days of Grenville Murray? |
6304 | Are the planets inhabited? |
6304 | Are the planets inhabited? |
6304 | Are the poor happier or unhappier than the rich? |
6304 | Are the tablets of Tel- el- Amarna trustworthy? |
6304 | Are there fresh- water jelly- fishes? |
6304 | Are there ghosts? |
6304 | Are there not a hundred sayings in Ecclesiastes and Menander, in Horace and Molière, as apt to- day as though fresh from the typewriter? |
6304 | Are they bowed down with the consciousness of their backslidings? |
6304 | Are they lazy? |
6304 | Are they under military régime? |
6304 | As for America-- what goes on across that week of ocean who dares conjecture? |
6304 | As the interpreter of the conventions, he is of a cast- iron rigidity, for is he not a child of Mrs. Grundy-- his mother''s own boy? |
6304 | As thus:-- And shall Trelawney dine? |
6304 | Beer being the national religion, why should n''t it find adequate expression in Art? |
6304 | Besides, dry- as- dust work-- collation and classification-- may be distributed among the members of a society; but how require of them fresh vision? |
6304 | Best brand of whiskey? |
6304 | Blondes or brunettes? |
6304 | But as you can not walk through any of those backways, what is the use of bothering to look for them? |
6304 | But do they ever agree-- unless they consult? |
6304 | But does one person in a hundred know the true proportions of things, or possess the eye to gauge the anatomy of a figure? |
6304 | But how about the raps? |
6304 | But how if"I and a few others"organised themselves after the fashion of the Parnellites? |
6304 | But if an ugly woman does not dress well, who should? |
6304 | But is it? |
6304 | But prejudiced? |
6304 | But was it wrong of him to do it? |
6304 | But what does it matter what one did three hundred years ago? |
6304 | But what of the author- priest? |
6304 | But whence come the sinews of war? |
6304 | But who would ever do anything if he saw his true place in the cosmos? |
6304 | But why do I say"he,"when it is generally"she"? |
6304 | But why? |
6304 | But, after all, is it fair to juxtaposit Agatha''s letters? |
6304 | But, after all, what is love? |
6304 | But, with Mr. Crummles''s Infant Phenomenon in everybody''s mind, can we expect the adjective to shake off the old associations of its parent noun? |
6304 | But_ que voulez- vous?_ The inhabitants of many nations have adopted Christianity, the nations themselves never. |
6304 | C.?" |
6304 | Can not the intellect of man devise a means of guaranteeing the deserving poor against starvation? |
6304 | Can novels be really dramatised? |
6304 | Can the nation digest them, to vary the metaphor-- assimilate them to its own substance? |
6304 | Can you imagine a true- born Briton following the flag of Swinburne, or throwing up a barricade with George Meredith? |
6304 | Cheap telegrams and telephones? |
6304 | Deer or Highlanders? |
6304 | Did I say an epitome of the Haymarket plays? |
6304 | Did I say the canny Trollope? |
6304 | Did Milton steal from Vondel? |
6304 | Did Mrs. Carlyle deserve it? |
6304 | Did Paley steal his celebrated watch? |
6304 | Did Shakespeare hold horses? |
6304 | Did Shakespeare write"Coriolanus"? |
6304 | Did Wellington say"Up, Guards, and at''em"? |
6304 | Did my Lady Clara Vere de Vere consider whether Hood''s seamstress was at work on her court gown? |
6304 | Did not Sir Barnes Newcome lecture on the Family? |
6304 | Did your Majestie hope to effect so little by Reason that your Majestie must needs fall back on Reuenue? |
6304 | Do I exist? |
6304 | Do actors feel their parts? |
6304 | Do dreams come true? |
6304 | Do green wall- papers contain arsenic? |
6304 | Do gutta- percha shoes? |
6304 | Do ladies aspire to ride bicycles? |
6304 | Do monkeys talk? |
6304 | Do plants dream? |
6304 | Do the commercial conditions apply to him? |
6304 | Do these emotions cost us nothing? |
6304 | Do they hear the note of the cuckoo, The cry of gulls on the wing, The laughter of winds and waters, The feet of the dancing Spring? |
6304 | Do they hold family councils in the chapel, I thought, and lament the growing scepticism of their grandchildren? |
6304 | Do they imagine their subjects spend their whole lives in packed black masses, waving hats? |
6304 | Do they sigh to see themselves so changed from the photographs in the family album that confronts their hollow orbits? |
6304 | Do they take themselves as seriously in death as they did in life? |
6304 | Do they think there are none left to love them, They have lain for so long there together? |
6304 | Do they wear an air of edification or humiliation? |
6304 | Do water- colours fade? |
6304 | Do we get one good novel a year? |
6304 | Do we not therefore need another Charity? |
6304 | Do we permit the cancan on the English stage? |
6304 | Do you assure me, on your word of honor as an unborn publisher, that the filial franchise has been invariably exercised wisely and well?" |
6304 | Do you deduce from this that I advise you not to learn to swim? |
6304 | Do you fail to understand Sub- Consciousness? |
6304 | Do you know how Primrose Hill looks at night? |
6304 | Do you know that, the appearance of nature is constantly varying with every change of light and every passing cloud? |
6304 | Do you know who wrote''Othello''?" |
6304 | Do you not hear in the distance the squeak of_ Puncinello_? |
6304 | Do you really know what the colour of that landscape is, or what complex hues mantle the surface of yonder all- mirroring pool? |
6304 | Do you wonder, therefore, if, with such a posse of personalities to pick from, I am never alike two days running? |
6304 | Does a man plead that he has to support his wife and children? |
6304 | Does anybody else exist? |
6304 | Does he represent Art, or does he represent the Public? |
6304 | Does it matter much what is the game? |
6304 | Does not nature amuse herself with fireworks, especially on tropical summer nights? |
6304 | Does our American reply that it is impossible now to take back the franchise? |
6304 | Does tea hurt? |
6304 | Does this saying seem cryptic? |
6304 | Does this seem an ideal demand? |
6304 | Dost thou call thyself civilised?" |
6304 | Even so in America, are not the Jewish caricatures in_ Puck_ often done by a brother of M. de Blowitz? |
6304 | Extremes of size? |
6304 | Far from making money at the start, how many authors have got a hearing without having had to pay for it out of their own pockets? |
6304 | First of all, what moves the table? |
6304 | For does not everybody complain that a General Election upsets everything? |
6304 | For what was Ranelagh, what Vauxhall? |
6304 | GLASGOW"And what do you think of Glasgow?" |
6304 | Geology: is the story of the rocks short, or long, or true? |
6304 | Going to Ventnor? |
6304 | Has Jones got better manners or champagne? |
6304 | Has any one been taking seriously Nordau''s cry for the extinction of the Degenerates? |
6304 | Has he been bankrupt? |
6304 | Has he figured in the Divorce Court? |
6304 | Have less daughters been sold at Vanity Fair, or more invitations been sent to poor relatives? |
6304 | Have they anything to do with commercial crises? |
6304 | Have they reason? |
6304 | Have we a right to extend our empire? |
6304 | Have we not, on the contrary, cast on our own imperfections the complaisance of an eye educated in the superior imperfections of our neighbours? |
6304 | Have you heard the legend of the Marriage of the Angel of Death with a mortal woman? |
6304 | Have you never noticed the innocent joy which the pop and froth of cheap champagne gives to suburban souls? |
6304 | Have you read the plan for''A Jewish State,''by Dr. Herzl, of Vienna? |
6304 | Have you seen beautiful Kelvingrove, through which flows the classic Kelvin? |
6304 | Having got your round table, what are you to eat upon it? |
6304 | He has outraged the community: shall the community reward him with free meals? |
6304 | He has shown you his soul,--why should he show you his hand? |
6304 | Heredity: are acquired qualities inherited? |
6304 | How about church- and- muffin- bells? |
6304 | How about the Queen''s staghounds? |
6304 | How about the''great white sea''that stretches round the Pole?" |
6304 | How are you to talk about the last new play without seeming personal? |
6304 | How can people be happy chained together like galley- slaves? |
6304 | How could it? |
6304 | How is it possible for you to say all those nice things about yourself which you know to be your due, and which a third person might even exaggerate? |
6304 | How knowest thou thou art not spreading to the world the germs of scarlet fever and typhoid picked up in the sweaters''dens?" |
6304 | How long will our coal hold out? |
6304 | How many elements are there? |
6304 | How much execution has been done? |
6304 | How much for each? |
6304 | How much? |
6304 | How often am I to tell you ai n''t ai n''t a word?" |
6304 | How soon will England and the States be at war? |
6304 | I exclaimed to the partner of my bosom( a tame white rat that likes to perch there),"_ Have we any trees?_"My partner gave a little plaintive squeak. |
6304 | I think the binder ought to say,''Is the book worth binding?'' |
6304 | If so, what are their laws? |
6304 | If you do this for strangers, what is there left for your friends?" |
6304 | Impressionism? |
6304 | In a big steamer accident, what chance is there for those who can swim? |
6304 | In how many lives does Love really play a dominant part? |
6304 | In sooth, is not the world divided into those who take the great cosmic drama seriously, and those who treat it as farce? |
6304 | Is Anglo- Indian society immoral? |
6304 | Is England declining? |
6304 | Is Euclid played out? |
6304 | Is Free Trade fair? |
6304 | Is Grimm''s Law universal? |
6304 | Is Morris''s printing really good? |
6304 | Is Mrs. Ponsonby de Tomkins more distant to duchesses? |
6304 | Is Platonic love possible? |
6304 | Is Stevenson''s Scotch accurate? |
6304 | Is a Free Press? |
6304 | Is a perfect translation impossible? |
6304 | Is any one wiser or kinder or honester for all the literary pother? |
6304 | Is celibacy possible? |
6304 | Is chloroforming dangerous? |
6304 | Is consumption curable? |
6304 | Is cycling injurious to the cyclist? |
6304 | Is drink? |
6304 | Is fox- hunting cruel? |
6304 | Is freemasonry a fraud? |
6304 | Is fruit or market- gardening or cattle- farming more profitable? |
6304 | Is he not serving his country as much as the soldier, and without pay-- or even discount? |
6304 | Is he, perhaps, going blind? |
6304 | Is humour declining? |
6304 | Is it allowable to say,"It''s me"? |
6304 | Is it cruel to cage birds and animals? |
6304 | Is it not a true simile of the favour of the fickle crowd? |
6304 | Is it not obvious that at a dinner you should have the same privilege as at a dance-- the privilege of choosing your partner for each course? |
6304 | Is it not shameful? |
6304 | Is it that Dickens is responsible for the season, and that Marley''s ghost has set the fashion among the younger spooks? |
6304 | Is it that the cool snow is grateful after the fervours of their torrid zone, where even the pyrometer would fail to record the temperature? |
6304 | Is it the wise men or the foolish? |
6304 | Is life worth living? |
6304 | Is literature a trade? |
6304 | Is logic or mathematics the primal science? |
6304 | Is luxury a boon? |
6304 | Is marriage? |
6304 | Is our art- pottery bad? |
6304 | Is our lifeboat service efficient? |
6304 | Is our navy fit? |
6304 | Is paraffin good for baldness? |
6304 | Is physiognomy true? |
6304 | Is prize- fighting beneficial? |
6304 | Is red the best colour for a soldier''s uniform or for a target? |
6304 | Is society purer or nobler? |
6304 | Is spiritualism a fraud? |
6304 | Is suicide immoral? |
6304 | Is the Bank of England safe? |
6304 | Is the Continental man better educated than the Briton? |
6304 | Is the English concert pitch too high? |
6304 | Is the French school of acting superior to ours? |
6304 | Is the German Emperor a genius, or a fool? |
6304 | Is the Revised Version of the Bible superior to the Old? |
6304 | Is the Salon dead in England? |
6304 | Is the Steinitz gambit sound? |
6304 | Is the Stock Exchange immoral? |
6304 | Is the coinage ugly? |
6304 | Is the confessional of value? |
6304 | Is the high hat? |
6304 | Is the race progressing? |
6304 | Is the soul immortal? |
6304 | Is theosophy? |
6304 | Is there a Ghetto in England? |
6304 | Is there a certain rugged virility in the letter, which made it somehow expressive of the nature of the original owners? |
6304 | Is there a fourth dimension of space? |
6304 | Is there a modern British drama? |
6304 | Is there a sea- serpent? |
6304 | Is there a skull in Holbein''s"Ambassadors"? |
6304 | Is there an English hexameter? |
6304 | Is there any artificial product that has escaped a medal at some Exhibition or the other? |
6304 | Is there any author who has not suffered in his beginnings from the greed of publishers? |
6304 | Is there any earthly transaction that offers such advantages? |
6304 | Is there any relation between it and its owner''s votes in the House? |
6304 | Is there any sugar in the blood? |
6304 | Is there no way of infusing colour into this depressing greyness, a martial_ timbre_ into this anaemic note? |
6304 | Is there one question in the world that can really be settled? |
6304 | Is there spontaneous creation? |
6304 | Is tobacco a mistake? |
6304 | Is trial by jury played out? |
6304 | Is vegetarianism higher? |
6304 | Is waltzing immoral? |
6304 | Is, then, science strictly accurate? |
6304 | It must be true, as Ruskin contends, that not one man in fifteen thousand has ever observed anything, else how account for this wide- spread fallacy? |
6304 | It would run:(_ a_)Hero;(_ b_)Heroine;(_ c_)How they first loved;(_ d_)What the hero''s wife or the heroine''s husband did;(_ e_)Who died? |
6304 | May I offer your Majestie a Cigarre? |
6304 | May it not be that the voice of public duty, when it calls upon you to be a citizen and a parishioner, calls with too piping a voice? |
6304 | May we say"Give an ovation"? |
6304 | Moreover, ought not hanging to be abolished in cases of murder and reserved for more noxious crimes, such as those of fraudulent directors? |
6304 | Most enviable of mankind is the appreciative person, without a scrap of originality? |
6304 | Nay, was not Hall Caine recently asked by a lady admirer in poor health, about to visit the Isle of Man, to find lodgings for her? |
6304 | Nay, which are the mighty names in our literature? |
6304 | Now, what are the elements with which our Sub- Consciousness works?--what does this ocean contain? |
6304 | Now, why should not a philosopher make a pun? |
6304 | Of Dodo? |
6304 | On second thoughts, why not eschew the season altogether? |
6304 | On what grounds, then, if one is leaning the other way, may a text be set aside that seems to settle the matter positively? |
6304 | One good symphony or opera? |
6304 | Or classics be annotated? |
6304 | Or is it that it has never yet dawned upon humanity that jam may be taken without pills? |
6304 | Or is it that the ghosts walk for me alone, by reason that Christmas always brings me haunting thoughts of them? |
6304 | Or is there room in some other world for thy baffled aspirations? |
6304 | Or wear bloomers? |
6304 | Ought Building and Friendly Societies to be supervised? |
6304 | Ought any one to carry firearms? |
6304 | Ought one to pamper this interest in mere externals? |
6304 | Ought we to fill up income- tax papers accurately? |
6304 | Ought we to give cabmen more than their fare? |
6304 | Our noble selves-- are they not already exposed to the indignity of dreams? |
6304 | Outside the tomb the poem of light and air, and inside the tomb-- what? |
6304 | Primitive Love found its poet in Longus the Greek, with his"Daphnis and Chloe"; but who has given us Modern Love? |
6304 | Romeo? |
6304 | S.!--does it not make you think of"mighty poets in their misery dead"? |
6304 | Shall Welsh perish? |
6304 | Shall members of Parliament be paid? |
6304 | Shall the Jews have Palestine? |
6304 | Shall the costers stand in Farringdon Street? |
6304 | Shall we adopt phonetic spelling? |
6304 | Shall we disestablish the church? |
6304 | Shall we ever fly? |
6304 | Shall we ever reach the Pole? |
6304 | Shall we fall in with the agnosticism of John Davidson, and admit that no man has ever understood a woman, a man, or himself, and_ vice versa_? |
6304 | Shall we seek light in the modern lady- novelist, with her demand for phases of passion suited to every stage of existence? |
6304 | Should Board School children be taught religion? |
6304 | Should German type be abolished? |
6304 | Should a novel have a purpose? |
6304 | Should armorial bearings be taxed? |
6304 | Should bachelors be taxed? |
6304 | Should classical texts be Bowdlerised for school- boys? |
6304 | Should cousins marry? |
6304 | Should critics practise without a license? |
6304 | Should curates be paid more and archbishops less? |
6304 | Should directors of insolvent companies be prosecuted? |
6304 | Should dogs be muzzled? |
6304 | Should dramatic critics write plays? |
6304 | Should duelling be revived? |
6304 | Should dynamite be used in war? |
6304 | Should gambling be legal? |
6304 | Should gentlemen pay ladies''cab- fares? |
6304 | Should girls be brought up like boys, or boys like girls, or both like one another? |
6304 | Should girls have more liberty? |
6304 | Should immoral men be allowed to retain office? |
6304 | Should ladies ride astride? |
6304 | Should ladies smoke? |
6304 | Should lawyers wear their own hair? |
6304 | Should literary men be offered peerages? |
6304 | Should newspapers publish racing tips? |
6304 | Should not each railway station bear its name in big letters? |
6304 | Should not the true critic be an interpreter? |
6304 | Should pauper aliens be admitted? |
6304 | Should postmen knock? |
6304 | Should potatoes be boiled in their skins? |
6304 | Should quack- doctors be prosecuted? |
6304 | Should the Royal Academy be abolished? |
6304 | Should there be an Academy of Literature? |
6304 | Should there be pianos in board schools? |
6304 | Should they propose? |
6304 | Should we abolish the Lords? |
6304 | Should we abolish the censorship of plays? |
6304 | Should we federate it? |
6304 | Should we not get letters on Sunday? |
6304 | Should we not patronise English watering- places? |
6304 | Should we permit sky- signs? |
6304 | Should we send missions to the heathen? |
6304 | Should we spoil the Court if we spared the Black Rod? |
6304 | Since the philanthropy of percentage is so obvious, why should we not recognise the percentage of philanthropy? |
6304 | Still, is n''t it about time you got divorced and settled down? |
6304 | Style or matter? |
6304 | Suppose that at a dance you were told off to one perpetual partner, who would ever don pumps? |
6304 | The Psychical Society has the matter in hand-- or should one say, the spirit? |
6304 | The agent may indeed squeeze out larger sums than publishers like to disgorge, but how can he obtain more than the market- value? |
6304 | The author? |
6304 | The best moustache- forcer, bicycle, typewriter, and system of shorthand or of teaching the blind? |
6304 | The origin of language, Where do the Aryans come from? |
6304 | The point is, can he represent them more forcibly than the rival candidates? |
6304 | The tailor, when a man came to be measured, would say,"Yes, but are you worth measuring?" |
6304 | The whole theory of Punishment would also have to be gone into: should it be restrictive, or revengeful, or reformative? |
6304 | Then why expect to get a picture worth hanging? |
6304 | Then, why not go there at first? |
6304 | Thirteen at table, and all other superstitions-- are they foolish? |
6304 | This consideration would solve every_ Uitlander_ question: is the national spirit strong enough to suck in the foreigners? |
6304 | Two men killed in a whole battle? |
6304 | Volunteer or conscript? |
6304 | Was Blake? |
6304 | Was Boswell a fool? |
6304 | Was De Lesseps to blame? |
6304 | Was Hamlet mad? |
6304 | Was Jezebel a wretch, or a Hellenist? |
6304 | Was Madame Blavatsky? |
6304 | Was Mrs. Maybrick guilty? |
6304 | Was Orme poisoned? |
6304 | Was Poe a drunkard, or Griswold a liar? |
6304 | Was Pope a poet? |
6304 | Was Sam Weller possible? |
6304 | Was Whitman? |
6304 | Was ever more devout Catholic than Benvenuto Cellini, who murdered his enemies and counted his beads equal gusto? |
6304 | Was it from its inscribed beams that Shelley borrowed his famous lyric"Love''s Philosophy"? |
6304 | Was it not Napoleon who said that men are meant either to lead or to obey, and those who can do neither should be killed off? |
6304 | Was it then, or in the nineteenth century, that we rode the camel together, I on the hindmost peak? |
6304 | Was it, perhaps, that your Majestie was wishful to promote English Agriculture or was getting up a cornere in Cabbaiges? |
6304 | Was n''t it Adam Smith who said that conscience was only the reflection in ourselves of our neighbours''opinions? |
6304 | Was the Silent System so bad? |
6304 | Was the_ Victoria_ Fund rightly distributed? |
6304 | Was there ever a soul that did not think some one action beneath its dignity? |
6304 | Was, then, Wordsworth right, and is our birth''but a sleep and a forgetting''?" |
6304 | We pay for stage representations: why deny our obolus to the histrionics of the beggar? |
6304 | We pay poor rates and support hospitals and orphan asylums; but is there any thinking man who can banquet with the assurance that nobody is starving? |
6304 | Were our ancestors taller than we? |
6304 | Were they bearable in private life, these monsters of virtue? |
6304 | What about musical or literary creation? |
6304 | What am I saying? |
6304 | What are the facts? |
6304 | What are the odds against the man being a scamp? |
6304 | What are the spots on the sun? |
6304 | What are they to do? |
6304 | What business have editors to expose you to such inner conflict? |
6304 | What care I for Gladstone''s glories? |
6304 | What cares she for her dignity? |
6304 | What could have attracted her if it was not love? |
6304 | What does it matter if I am not myself, but somebody else in his fifth plane or her nineteenth incarnation? |
6304 | What does it matter what primeval man ate? |
6304 | What guarantee is there that the choice of parents will be made with taste and discretion?" |
6304 | What if he does get five hundred a year, is he not worth it, provided always the institution fulfils a useful function and is not a sham? |
6304 | What if one were to collect the leaders of any newspaper on any given subject, before or after any event? |
6304 | What if the immigration of destitute little aliens into our planet ceased altogether?" |
6304 | What indignity has been spared him? |
6304 | What is Herbert doing? |
6304 | What is a good electoral address? |
6304 | What is a working- man? |
6304 | What is all this nonsense about an Italian hothouse? |
6304 | What is an English fairy- tale? |
6304 | What is an etching? |
6304 | What is influenza? |
6304 | What is the best breed of horses? |
6304 | What is the best ninth move in the Evans gambit? |
6304 | What is the meaning of Dryden''s line,"He was and is the Captain of the Test"? |
6304 | What is the origin of Egyptian civilisation? |
6304 | What is the right thing in dados, hall- lamps, dressing- gowns, etc.? |
6304 | What is the underlying reason? |
6304 | What is the use of South Kensington? |
6304 | What is the use of war if it does not even serve to reduce our surplus population? |
6304 | What is then left to console us for the eternal flux? |
6304 | What is this mania for movement? |
6304 | What is this new disease that has come upon us? |
6304 | What is to be done? |
6304 | What matters another insult? |
6304 | What meaning do you attach to them, if any? |
6304 | What persons should be buried in Westminster Abbey? |
6304 | What power will make them train up their parents in the way they should go?" |
6304 | What profits it to woo the thankless Muse, or to appeal to the autograph- huntress? |
6304 | What right had they to force one into the jury- box? |
6304 | What seduction hath Yule Tide for these phantastic fellows, that it lures them from their warm fireplaces? |
6304 | What shall literature do for these? |
6304 | What shall we do with our daughters? |
6304 | What should we do without our fools? |
6304 | What should you lead at whist? |
6304 | What spot in the world has inspired a nobler sonnet than Wordsworth''s on Westminster Bridge? |
6304 | What subtle sympathy connects_ fama_ with_ fames_? |
6304 | What the publishers are really afraid of is not a Society, but a man, and that man a middle- man? |
6304 | What town has a fairer situation? |
6304 | What was the good of repining when it was too late? |
6304 | What will be the end of it all?" |
6304 | What''s that book?" |
6304 | What''s that you say? |
6304 | What''s the use of all this wrangling, Grammar and emotions mangling? |
6304 | What, pray, in the realm of human life_ is_ a fact? |
6304 | What, then, determines the oscillation this way or that? |
6304 | When he came around asking for champagne and chicken, the working- man said,''What are you offering us in exchange?'' |
6304 | Where are the lost Tales of Miletus? |
6304 | Where is the point of a progression through stages, if there is no continuous consciousness? |
6304 | Where is this leprosy of advertisement to stop? |
6304 | Where would be the play without the villain of the piece? |
6304 | Wherefore do the critics rage? |
6304 | Which are the rarest coins and stamps? |
6304 | Which is the best soap? |
6304 | Which is the real old Curiosity Shop? |
6304 | Which is the true Poe, the hard drinker or the hard worker? |
6304 | Which is uglier-- the crude spiritualism of the Salvationist or the crude materialism of the scientist? |
6304 | Which of us has his desire, or, having it, is satisfied?" |
6304 | Which of us is happy in this world? |
6304 | Which of us would dare do this, or, doing, would dare cast a backward glance on the financial past? |
6304 | Who are our leading actors and actor- managers? |
6304 | Who are our professors of fiction to- day? |
6304 | Who are our prophets and thinkers? |
6304 | Who are the Americans? |
6304 | Who are the English? |
6304 | Who are the dramatists of to- day? |
6304 | Who are the poets of the Victorian era? |
6304 | Who are they that make up the majority of a country? |
6304 | Who built the Pyramids? |
6304 | Who can determine what are the working expenses of so complex an industrial enterprise? |
6304 | Who can possibly read ninety- nine of the worst hundred books published every week? |
6304 | Who cares what a parcel of jabbering strangers think about his actions? |
6304 | Who ever shuddered with bitter alliterative kisses before Swinburne, and who has failed to do so since? |
6304 | Who executed Charles I.? |
6304 | Who is the most marvellous man? |
6304 | Who is the rightful Queen of England? |
6304 | Who is the stock publisher of the eighteenth century? |
6304 | Who is to have this money? |
6304 | Who made our proverbs and ballads? |
6304 | Who really wrote the"Marseillaise"? |
6304 | Who seemed more surely to have been writing Christmas stories for Posterity? |
6304 | Who shall blame the melodramatist? |
6304 | Who shall tell of the daylong agony of the dumb beast as he plodded pertinaciously through the heat, ministering to the pleasures of his masters? |
6304 | Who speaks of losing at cards? |
6304 | Who stole Gainsborough''s picture? |
6304 | Who was the Man in the Iron Mask? |
6304 | Who was the original of Becky Sharp? |
6304 | Who were the first publishers of Shakespeare? |
6304 | Who were the giants of the last generation? |
6304 | Who will write the prosody of prose? |
6304 | Who would deprive the hosts of working- men of their generous enthusiasms, even though these be to the profit of the professional politician? |
6304 | Who would exchange our happy incongruity for the mechanical regularity of the mushroom cities of the States? |
6304 | Who would not fight when summoned by a tongue of flame? |
6304 | Whom are you to believe, the author or the artist? |
6304 | Why are novels published at thirty- one and six and the magazines at a shilling? |
6304 | Why be a nonentity, a mere M.P., when by a little patience you may hold the centre of the stage, if only for a week? |
6304 | Why be a slave to the season? |
6304 | Why be plagiarists, when we can make universes of our own? |
6304 | Why board and lodge him gratis for weeks? |
6304 | Why ca n''t one make three thousand a year by breeding rabbits? |
6304 | Why ca n''t we square the circle? |
6304 | Why can not we throw aside our insular stiffness, our British hauteur, and be natural? |
6304 | Why do not millionaires hear of the woes of authors and send them anonymous bank- notes? |
6304 | Why do not"national testimonials"happen in the author''s lifetime in the shape of purses of gold? |
6304 | Why do publishers tend to"n"in their names''? |
6304 | Why does not the Folklore Society investigate the origin of our modern myths? |
6304 | Why is music published at four shillings when you can buy it for one and four, or at most one and eight? |
6304 | Why not call it ninety- five at the start and be done with it? |
6304 | Why not catch it in the act-- employ vivisection, so to speak, instead of dissecting dead remains? |
6304 | Why not euthanasia? |
6304 | Why not have an unlimited paper currency? |
6304 | Why not have them nice and innocent-- the kind of oath a girl can use to her mother? |
6304 | Why not seize on the instinct as it is seen at play in our midst, moulding movements and fashioning faiths? |
6304 | Why not the binder or the bookseller? |
6304 | Why not the deserving poor? |
6304 | Why not the printer? |
6304 | Why not? |
6304 | Why not? |
6304 | Why not? |
6304 | Why should London wait? |
6304 | Why should a man''s life be divided into little artificial sections, like the labelled heads in the phrenologist''s window? |
6304 | Why should good music be translated into bad literature? |
6304 | Why should he be any more honest than a lawyer or a journalist? |
6304 | Why should he toil thanklessly? |
6304 | Why should it take its tone from London? |
6304 | Why should n''t artists even paint public- house signs? |
6304 | Why should n''t we face facts? |
6304 | Why should n''t we talk openly? |
6304 | Why should not authors have the_ kudos_ of paying off the National Debt? |
6304 | Why should one not hear the birds sing in the Strand as well as in the Inns of Court? |
6304 | Why should the money not be used to found a Lying- in Hospital, or an Asylum for Decayed Authors, or a Museum to keep Honest Publishers in? |
6304 | Why should they be less well treated than bootmakers or tailors, butchers or bakers or candlestick makers? |
6304 | Why should they not get as much as possible for their labours? |
6304 | Why should they not, like every other kind of working- man, found a Labour Union? |
6304 | Why should this picturesqueness be wasted, or only be reproduced artificially in comic operas? |
6304 | Why should we not walk under the boughs of Oxford Street? |
6304 | Why was Ovid banished from Rome? |
6304 | Why waste a citizen and a tax- payer? |
6304 | Why? |
6304 | Why? |
6304 | Will America have an aristocracy? |
6304 | Will Brighton A''s fall? |
6304 | Will Hogarth keep wine- bibbers from the bottle, or can you make men sober by acts of"L''Assommoir"? |
6304 | Will it rain to- morrow? |
6304 | Will not some Burns-- more poetical than John-- raise the banner of revolt? |
6304 | Will not the publisher in his turn grind down the unknown man to the lowest possible penny? |
6304 | Will she be on her guard against shrinking to the prejudices and flirtations of a coterie, dying to all finer and higher issues? |
6304 | Will she escape exchanging the placidity of Fra Angelico''s piping cherubim for the petulance and ring- shadowed eyes of the seasoned matron? |
6304 | Will she worship virtue more and viceroys less? |
6304 | Will the French republic endure? |
6304 | Will the coloured races conquer? |
6304 | Will the ether theory live? |
6304 | Will the family be abolished? |
6304 | Will the unborn choose the time of birth as well as their parents?" |
6304 | Will war ever die? |
6304 | Will your Majestie kindlie recommend a Brande? |
6304 | Will"Madame Bovary"stay a sister''s fall, or"Sapho"repel an eligible young man? |
6304 | Will"The Dunciad"keep one dunce from scribbling, or"Le Tartufe"elevate a single ecclesiastic? |
6304 | Would Morphy have been a first- class chess- player to- day? |
6304 | Would any sane Antelander put himself under the yoke of animal instincts or tendencies to drink? |
6304 | Would not they also split up into two factions? |
6304 | Would you play the piano? |
6304 | XI CRITICS AND PEOPLE What is the critic''s duty at the play? |
6304 | XVI GHOST- STORIES Why do ghosts walk at Christmas? |
6304 | Yet what is this but another form of Buskin''s"Pathetic fallacy"? |
6304 | You perceive the parallel? |
6304 | You simply go on making so much a year-- for do not the papers say so? |
6304 | [ Sidenote: An Attack of Alliteration] Have you noticed the Renaissance of alliteration in the new journalism? |
6304 | _ Apropos_, which is the best history of it? |
6304 | _ But why the publisher?_( Above all, why the American publisher?) |
6304 | _ But why the publisher?_( Above all, why the American publisher?) |
6304 | _ Did_ you ever see a sparrow?" |
6304 | and have better refreshments? |
6304 | and what is the best system of symbolic logic? |
6304 | and who should be the next R.A.? |
6304 | and why do they delay to announce her approaching marriage in merry melodic chorus? |
6304 | are Havanas? |
6304 | are hieroglyphic readers? |
6304 | as Mr. John Davidson writes in his"Random Itinerary":"did you ever see a sparrow? |
6304 | broke in the publisher;"or to enter families with hereditary gout? |
6304 | didst thou engage an accountant to examine his books?" |
6304 | didst thou inquire how much thy tailor paid his hands? |
6304 | do you_ read_ the books you review?" |
6304 | for depreciation in our machinery? |
6304 | for did we not read: Den Hemel drinckt, en d''Aerde drinckt: Waerom souden wij niët drinckt? |
6304 | my Friend, and clear your looks: Why all this toil and trouble? |
6304 | or German waiters? |
6304 | or Peruvians rise? |
6304 | or Stanley''s reputation? |
6304 | or Was the French Revolution a Folly? |
6304 | or a Channel Tunnel? |
6304 | or a State theatre? |
6304 | or a decimal system and coinage? |
6304 | or a one- pound note? |
6304 | or a tradesman''s holiday use of his cart? |
6304 | or aërial flights without nets? |
6304 | or book- edges cut? |
6304 | or champagne? |
6304 | or cheiromancy? |
6304 | or colour- print in England? |
6304 | or combine? |
6304 | or comment? |
6304 | or cork soles? |
6304 | or divorce cases? |
6304 | or do they live without reason? |
6304 | or editions artificially limited? |
6304 | or eucalyptus for influenza? |
6304 | or fees? |
6304 | or found a dramatic academy? |
6304 | or graphology? |
6304 | or healthier? |
6304 | or in peace? |
6304 | or is Paley right? |
6304 | or of the horny projection under the left wing of the sub- parasite of the third leg of a black- beetle? |
6304 | or organ- grinders? |
6304 | or our criminals? |
6304 | or our paupers? |
6304 | or our sons? |
6304 | or ourselves? |
6304 | or pauper couples separated? |
6304 | or people live to a hundred? |
6304 | or phrenology? |
6304 | or pigeon- shooting? |
6304 | or preserve the Commons? |
6304 | or refuse them? |
6304 | or solve equations to the_ n_th degree? |
6304 | or spontaneous combustion? |
6304 | or steer balloons? |
6304 | or the City if we spared the Lord Mayor? |
6304 | or the House be adjourned on Derby Day? |
6304 | or the public? |
6304 | or theology? |
6304 | or to keep it? |
6304 | or tolerate a reredos in St. Paul''s? |
6304 | or tooth- powder? |
6304 | or underpaid? |
6304 | or wear crinolines? |
6304 | ordains an eternal divorce between shops and trees? |
6304 | said I again,"what did he do to deserve this statue?" |
6304 | should dynamiters? |
6304 | that''s the man that wrote''Taming of the Shrew,''is n''t it?" |
6304 | the author asked; and the"spirit"responded readily"''The Pro----''""Do you mean''The Professor''s Love Story''?" |
6304 | the injudicious reader will cry,"is not snow white? |
6304 | the man who tells you that the heroine is ethereal, or the man who plainly demonstrates that she is podgy? |
6304 | what has all this to do with the Industrial Exhibition? |
6304 | what have they done with their tights? |
6304 | what my iniquity?" |
6304 | whether of tallness or shortness? |
6304 | which of us would dare sit on the panel? |
6304 | will the wine be ever as red, the potato salad as appetising, or the cheese( did they really enjoy Gorgonzola and Camembert in the sixteenth century?) |
6304 | would the wise men agree? |
6849 | A Christian? |
6849 | A Council truly-- was that all? |
6849 | A wife, my Lord? |
6849 | Ah, my Saladin, thou wert never in love, I take it? 6849 All of them-- all? |
6849 | Am I a brute? 6849 Am I in presence of the Prince of India?" |
6849 | Am I not to discover myself to her? 6849 Am I not to see her face? |
6849 | Am I to understand you gave him the form? |
6849 | And Mahomet, the Father of Islam-- what is he? |
6849 | And Nilo? |
6849 | And Scholarius? |
6849 | And Sergius? |
6849 | And art thou permitted to be confidential with me? |
6849 | And carried off his son? |
6849 | And from whose hands thinkest thou he dreams of deriving the honor? |
6849 | And her porters? |
6849 | And here-- what are these, and what the name on them? |
6849 | And the State-- how dealt he with the State? |
6849 | And the peddler? |
6849 | And then? |
6849 | And these, Count-- these poor women not of my house, and the children-- can you not save them also? |
6849 | And to- day? |
6849 | And wine? |
6849 | And you found it? |
6849 | Are the boxes secure? 6849 Are these beings indeed in thy likeness?" |
6849 | Are they in the gurglet now? |
6849 | Are they inhabited? |
6849 | Are they mounted? |
6849 | Are you a Christian? |
6849 | Are you a Moslem? |
6849 | Are you engaged? |
6849 | Are you fishermen? |
6849 | Art thou a believer? |
6849 | Art thou an oarsman? |
6849 | Art thou not He? |
6849 | At last? |
6849 | At this hour? 6849 Blows the wind to the city or from it?" |
6849 | Brings he a following? |
6849 | But if I put him to sleep, O Prince? |
6849 | But if they have somewhat to impart to him? |
6849 | But thou-- O my friend, if thou shouldst fall? |
6849 | But you know something of him? |
6849 | By what means? 6849 By whom?" |
6849 | By whose authority is this arrest renewed? |
6849 | Ca n''t we get in under the grand stand? |
6849 | Can I do nothing for you? |
6849 | Children of the Prophet? |
6849 | Come then, and I will put thee in the way to some red wine; for art thou not a traveller? |
6849 | Constantine? 6849 Did I not hear thee say the same in thy holy Sancta Sophia, in such wise that these deserved to cast themselves at thy feet? |
6849 | Did I understand you to say the entertainment took place in Lael''s presence? |
6849 | Did he swear it? |
6849 | Did he tell them what to do? |
6849 | Did so greatly? |
6849 | Did you not advise him to come to me? |
6849 | Did you not order the rebuilding? |
6849 | Did you place the jewels in new bags? 6849 Did you stop at the White Castle?" |
6849 | Didst thou see any of the balls? |
6849 | Do n''t I? 6849 Do you know Uel the merchant?" |
6849 | Do you know how large it is? |
6849 | Do you know where his house is? |
6849 | Do you speak for yourself or the Prince? |
6849 | Does he reside here? |
6849 | Does he want fish? |
6849 | Does it open into the arena? |
6849 | Does it surprise you so much? 6849 Does not the Princess Irene dwell here?" |
6849 | Dost thou threaten me? |
6849 | Enemy-- my Lord''s enemy? 6849 Everything?" |
6849 | Fish? |
6849 | For my flight, Count Corti? |
6849 | For ransom? |
6849 | For the Greek? |
6849 | For what? 6849 Friends-- countrymen!--Is there no Christian to kill me?" |
6849 | Full five? |
6849 | Going?--and without telling me where I am? 6849 Good friend,"she began, in a low, beseeching tone,"is the heretic who is to suffer here yet?" |
6849 | Greeks? |
6849 | Had he a family? |
6849 | Had he other children? |
6849 | Has my Lord finished his census yet? 6849 Hast thou eaten nothing? |
6849 | Have they another lion? |
6849 | Have you been on either of them recently? |
6849 | Have you been to it? |
6849 | Have you other suggestion? |
6849 | He is a Russian, you say? |
6849 | How came they there? |
6849 | How came you by him? |
6849 | How can he help you? |
6849 | How did he manage them? |
6849 | How did you know him? |
6849 | How do you call this kind? |
6849 | How does he communicate with them? |
6849 | How is he called? |
6849 | How is she coming? |
6849 | How long is it since the poor lady was so bereft? |
6849 | How many of you are there? |
6849 | How much do you want? |
6849 | How old is he? |
6849 | How old is the cistern? |
6849 | How was it named? |
6849 | How, Prince? |
6849 | How, my Lord? |
6849 | How, my Lord? |
6849 | How? 6849 I can not go and leave her; neither can I take her with me, for what would then become of father Uel? |
6849 | I fear, I fear--"What, my Lord?" |
6849 | If one have wisdom, O son of Abed- din, whence is it except from Allah? 6849 If this old Christian empire should be lost through folly of mine, who will there be to forgive me if not Thou?" |
6849 | In advance? |
6849 | In thy total of doctrine, what is Jesus Christ? |
6849 | In what tongue did he speak? |
6849 | Indeed? 6849 Is he not a Greek?" |
6849 | Is he so old then? |
6849 | Is he the monster they call him? |
6849 | Is he to be Captain of the guard? |
6849 | Is it broken? |
6849 | Is it in use now? |
6849 | Is it so bad? 6849 Is it so near the break of day?" |
6849 | Is it thou? |
6849 | Is it time? |
6849 | Is it what a woman may hear? |
6849 | Is my Lord less able than the Crusaders? 6849 Is that the hamari''s boat next the leader?" |
6849 | Is the Countess living? |
6849 | Is the Duke mad? |
6849 | Is the gate locked? |
6849 | Is the lion turned in already? |
6849 | Is the man mad? |
6849 | Is the piece trained on the gate? |
6849 | Is there no Christian to kill me? |
6849 | Is there not something else in the urgency? |
6849 | Is this boy Mahommed greater than his father? |
6849 | Is this the last one? |
6849 | Is your going so certain? |
6849 | It is night, and what bringest thou? |
6849 | Joqard, Joqard? 6849 Knowest thou not that I have devoted this house to Allah? |
6849 | Knowest thou the road he will take? |
6849 | Mad? 6849 Mahommed, saidst thou, John Grant?" |
6849 | May the castle be found? |
6849 | Must I talk to you from this distance? 6849 Must men be restrained because the thing they wish to do was never heard of before? |
6849 | My attendants are gone to the chapel, but I will hear you-- or will you lend us your presence at the service, and have the audience afterwards? |
6849 | My friend, is there anything in your knowledge which might serve such a rumor? |
6849 | My medicines-- are they ready for packing? |
6849 | Nay, Count Corti, is it not for me to ask what thou dost here? |
6849 | No, Captain, the wound can not be serious; and besides, how canst thou get to thy ships? |
6849 | No, where is it? |
6849 | Now, by the trials and sufferings of the Most Christian Mother, are we beasts insensible to destruction? 6849 Oh, I was wondering if the story is public?" |
6849 | Old or young? |
6849 | One? |
6849 | Or is it I who am in your doubt? |
6849 | Prey or combat? |
6849 | Prince Mahommed-- son of the terrible Amurath? |
6849 | Sancta Sophia, my Lord? |
6849 | Say you so? |
6849 | Seest thou not, O fool, that when we take the city we will recover thy horse? 6849 Sergius, did the Hegumen tell you whence this calumny had origin?" |
6849 | Shall I proceed, O Princess? |
6849 | Shall I return the paper? |
6849 | Shall we go by the streets we came? |
6849 | She went out in her chair, did you say? |
6849 | Sir Count, where is my kinswoman? |
6849 | Stand here before me.... Thou lovest me, I believe? |
6849 | Sultan Mahommed? 6849 Tell me"--he fixed his eyes darkly on the visitor--"tell me first why thou art here?" |
6849 | Tell me, O Princess, if you have received any disrespect since you entered this palace? 6849 That is his landing there?" |
6849 | That way points the punishment? 6849 The Prince of India who is the friend of the Sultan Mahommed?" |
6849 | The cistern is public, I believe; may I see it? |
6849 | Then the hamari was not gasconading? |
6849 | Then why not with Nilo? |
6849 | They slew the Count Corti? |
6849 | This castle was sacked and burned by pirates, was it not? |
6849 | This is a day of thanks to God for a great mercy; who dares profane it by tumult? |
6849 | Thou Islamite-- thou son of Mahomet, though born of a Christian, whom servest thou? 6849 Thou didst it, Count?" |
6849 | Though why should I be astonished? 6849 To the cells?" |
6849 | Turn the seven twins into a cathedral, will they? 6849 Was anybody hurt?" |
6849 | Was there not more of his message? |
6849 | Well, my Lord,said the ambassador, touched by the brevity of the communication,"did not the great lady deign an explanation?" |
6849 | Well, what things? |
6849 | Were there more? |
6849 | Were there no other animals, no horses or oxen? |
6849 | What am I there? 6849 What became of them?" |
6849 | What can he want? 6849 What could he do with the net, little Princess?" |
6849 | What did he say? |
6849 | What did he there? |
6849 | What did he wear? |
6849 | What do I understand, O Prince, by the term''total of doctrine''? |
6849 | What does this mean? 6849 What flag was the ship flying?" |
6849 | What following had he? |
6849 | What for? |
6849 | What further can they do? |
6849 | What has happened, Count Corti? 6849 What has happened?" |
6849 | What if he does? |
6849 | What if my coming were the answer of one of them to the other''s prayer? |
6849 | What is it now? |
6849 | What is it, then? |
6849 | What is it? 6849 What is it?" |
6849 | What is it? |
6849 | What is it? |
6849 | What is it? |
6849 | What is that hanging from thy belt? |
6849 | What is the device on yon pennon? |
6849 | What is the hour? |
6849 | What is the matter? |
6849 | What is the message you bring me? |
6849 | What is the verse? |
6849 | What is this, Ali? |
6849 | What is this, my Lord, but an Incarnation? 6849 What is thy pleasure?" |
6849 | What is to be done with him? |
6849 | What meal, pray, will fashion allow them to me dished? |
6849 | What next, my son? |
6849 | What next? |
6849 | What now, Ali? |
6849 | What now? |
6849 | What of him, pray? |
6849 | What of them? 6849 What ought I to do?" |
6849 | What part? |
6849 | What thing of devilish craft is here? |
6849 | What time is it? |
6849 | What was the name of the boy? |
6849 | What would I do with it? 6849 What would you have me do?" |
6849 | What, grumble, do they? |
6849 | What, is it not light enough? |
6849 | What, retire now? 6849 What, then, is it?" |
6849 | When did he arrive? |
6849 | When? |
6849 | Where am I? |
6849 | Where are they now? |
6849 | Where are they? 6849 Where are they?" |
6849 | Where are you going? |
6849 | Where did they strike? |
6849 | Where from? |
6849 | Where is he? |
6849 | Where is he? |
6849 | Where is the Church? |
6849 | Where is the Greek? |
6849 | Where is the hamari now-- where? 6849 Where is the negro now?" |
6849 | Where may I wait on you? |
6849 | Where, Captain? |
6849 | Where? |
6849 | Where? |
6849 | Which gate? |
6849 | Which way now? |
6849 | Who are you? |
6849 | Who are you? |
6849 | Who art thou? |
6849 | Who art thou? |
6849 | Who art thou? |
6849 | Who art thou? |
6849 | Who but a young fool would think of such a thing? 6849 Who calls me?" |
6849 | Who carried it? |
6849 | Who is John Grant? |
6849 | Who is gone? 6849 Who is he?" |
6849 | Who is he? |
6849 | Who is with her? |
6849 | Why alas? |
6849 | Why did n''t they give him to the lion? |
6849 | Why do you ask? |
6849 | Why do you burn your huts? |
6849 | Why do you run? 6849 Why dost thou not kill me?" |
6849 | Why not? |
6849 | Why not? |
6849 | Why should I retire? |
6849 | Why so? |
6849 | Why the need of grace? 6849 Why?" |
6849 | Will I not hear from you? |
6849 | Will my Lord please retire? |
6849 | Will my Lord walk with me a little aside? 6849 Will she pay us our price?" |
6849 | Will the stars show me a road to possession of the harbor? 6849 Wilt thou tell her one Aboo- Obeidah is at the door with a blessing and a story for her?" |
6849 | With but a company of nine? |
6849 | With what object? |
6849 | Yes, and what is strange, he is the very man who got the Prince of India''s negro--"The giant?" |
6849 | Yes, dear, to everybody but me,he answered, lightly, and asked in turn:"How do you like the palace?" |
6849 | You approve my keeping it where it is, then? 6849 You are Sergius, the monk?" |
6849 | You have in your service an African--"Nilo?" |
6849 | You know me? 6849 You know my method of speech with him?" |
6849 | You mean there is another Light of the World? 6849 You saw him closely?" |
6849 | You want the boat alone? |
6849 | You would die for the Princess? |
6849 | Your Majesty, he was a husband and father seeking his family; with all humility, what else is there for him to do? |
6849 | Your servant? |
6849 | ''Have done with your vanities,''the Christian thunders:''Who has told the truth like Jesus?'' |
6849 | ''He has been here, then? |
6849 | ''How?'' |
6849 | ''Master,''the lawyer asked,''which is the great commandment in the law?'' |
6849 | ''No,''the Islamite answers:''Who but Mahomet?'' |
6849 | ''She might become my wife''--on condition.... What condition?" |
6849 | ''What Prince Mahommed?'' |
6849 | ''What is it for?'' |
6849 | ''Where are your horses?'' |
6849 | ''Where your Mohammedan crew?'' |
6849 | ''Where your galley?'' |
6849 | ''Where?'' |
6849 | --"Only to- night my Lord spoke of him as a marvel."--"Mirza?"... |
6849 | --the wily tutor responded:"My Lord has already named him."--"I?" |
6849 | ... And who are they that say''God hath partners-- a Son and his Mother''? |
6849 | ... Oh, my Phranza, what thinkest thou the false monk is carrying under his hood?" |
6849 | ... You will take me to him, will you not? |
6849 | A fan?--And in his chamber? |
6849 | A little later he took to answering the appeal-- I hear, but where art thou? |
6849 | A man or a God? |
6849 | Again, in what passage has our Lord required belief in the personage of the Holy Ghost as an article of faith essential to salvation? |
6849 | Ah, Your Majesty is asking, will the parallel never end? |
6849 | Ah, my dear friend in need, what canst thou see of gain for him from Mahommed?" |
6849 | Already the guilty begin to pray-- but to whom? |
6849 | Am I left out? |
6849 | Am I shaken by visions of ruin to my country? |
6849 | Am I sick? |
6849 | Am I to lose her, and never know my enemy? |
6849 | And again:"Tell us, O son of Mousa, when we are in the town what will you look for?" |
6849 | And are not the Articles which they have imposed to be passed by us as stratagems dangerous to our souls? |
6849 | And as note was taken of him, the question was continually on the lip, What possesses the man? |
6849 | And as to himself, how could he more certainly provoke a forfeiture of her love?... |
6849 | And besides, did I not foresee your passion? |
6849 | And everywhere the two questions-- Has she been found? |
6849 | And from the Parsee;''No-- Who but Zarathustra?'' |
6849 | And if a man die, is it not also written:''Repute not those slain in God''s cause to be dead; nay, alive with God, they are provided for''? |
6849 | And if you have the disposition to defend me"--"You doubt me, O Princess?" |
6849 | And the dead? |
6849 | And the hamari? |
6849 | And the spirit swelled within him as he asked, Who are my brethren? |
6849 | And the sword-- is it with the books?" |
6849 | And then? |
6849 | And thou-- what wilt thou put thy hand to first?" |
6849 | And was it not too late? |
6849 | And what is he? |
6849 | And what more natural than that he should see that mother descending to the chapel in her widow''s weeds to pray for him? |
6849 | And what now? |
6849 | And what was her true relationship to the Prince? |
6849 | And what was that upon his breast? |
6849 | And when? |
6849 | And you thought I could not endure hearing you tell it? |
6849 | Are Christians so unwilling to trust God?" |
6849 | Are his arsenals full? |
6849 | Are his gifts so many and rich? |
6849 | Are there not men to take this charge upon them?" |
6849 | Are there two such in Byzantium?" |
6849 | Are they indeed sayings of Jesus Christ?" |
6849 | Are you listening, child?" |
6849 | Are you willing?" |
6849 | Art thou hearing, Prince?" |
6849 | Art thou listening? |
6849 | As a circumstance, its tendency is to confirm the theory that men are creatures of education and association.... Was his mother living? |
6849 | At length she asked:"Have you heard from Father Hilarion?" |
6849 | At length she asked:"Then, O Count, thou wert his playmate in childhood?" |
6849 | At length she asked:"Wouldst thou like to know if I am indeed a heretic?" |
6849 | At this she raised her veil entirely, and in turn asked:"Which father do you mean?" |
6849 | Be reasonable, I say, O Princess, and hear how I will conquer you.... Are not the better years of life ours? |
6849 | Briefly, O Princess, to which is obligation first owing? |
6849 | But Lael then inquired:"Where have you been to- day?" |
6849 | But how is it you are but four?" |
6849 | But how was he, standing on a platform at the eastern edge of the reservoir, mighty in so many senses, to determine its shape, width, length? |
6849 | But how? |
6849 | But if you are the monk''s friend, why do you want to see him die?" |
6849 | But might it not be too late? |
6849 | But say you are right-- that they of whom you speak are the Church-- what can I do?" |
6849 | But what did the young man think of my proposal to the Emperor?" |
6849 | But what was the Prince''s utmost achievement in comparison with this interior? |
6849 | But where was he? |
6849 | But where? |
6849 | But who was the young woman at the door calmly directing some men bringing out the body of one apparently dead? |
6849 | But who were they responsible for grace to the Academy? |
6849 | But, Prince of India, what shadows are disturbing thee? |
6849 | By Allah and Mahomet arid Christ-- all in one-- if by the compound the oath will derive an extra virtue-- what is there to consume so much time? |
6849 | By the indifferent manner too many of those ready to die defending its divine origin observe it? |
6849 | By this time the chill of the first fear was over with Lael, and she asked:"Can we go on?" |
6849 | By what management was he to make the surrender without exposing the understanding between the conqueror and himself? |
6849 | Can I ever again be confident of my judgment? |
6849 | Can a man prophesy except he have in him the light of the Spirit?" |
6849 | Can it be the Emperor is making ready to die? |
6849 | Can it be, O Mirza, can it be, you tell me these things imagining them new to me? |
6849 | Can you?" |
6849 | Christian or Moslem, are you willing to refer our rivalry for the young woman to God?" |
6849 | Coming near, the Prince raised his eyes-- stopped-- smiled-- and said:"Count Corti-- or Mirza the Emir-- which have I the honor of meeting?" |
6849 | Could he endure her salutation? |
6849 | Could the Emperor have published what took place between them? |
6849 | Cruel? |
6849 | Dare you as much?" |
6849 | Did I not bring you to this? |
6849 | Did I not, the night of our parting, foretell what would happen?" |
6849 | Did I stop there? |
6849 | Did Mahommed decide affirmatively? |
6849 | Did ever woman lay her head on my breast perforce?" |
6849 | Did he set a becoming example to his Clergy? |
6849 | Did not every man love her at sight? |
6849 | Did she remember him? |
6849 | Did you see him?'' |
6849 | Directly the Count was reseated, Mahommed continued:"And you, too, love the Princess Irene? |
6849 | Directly, having risen to a sitting posture, Lael found her tongue:"You are not my father Uel, or my father the Prince of India?" |
6849 | Do I hold to this or that? |
6849 | Do any of you deny the Real Presence in the bread and wine of communion?" |
6849 | Do you comprehend me?" |
6849 | Do you hear me?" |
6849 | Do you know you are talking the incredible to me? |
6849 | Do you remember?" |
6849 | Do you think I too would not like to be rich?--I who live doggedly on three noumias, helped now and then by scanty palm- salves from travellers?" |
6849 | Does not Mahommed draw his supplies by sea?" |
6849 | For what other outcome could there be to the ceaseless contention of fears and hopes now hers? |
6849 | From the Ceylonesian:''Who is worthy praise but Buddha?'' |
6849 | Guilt seeks exclusion, does it not? |
6849 | Had Heaven at last given them an understanding of the peril of the city? |
6849 | Had he at last made an impression upon her? |
6849 | Had he not been willing to meet old Tamerlane with that same sword? |
6849 | Had he not enjoyed the delight of holding him out over the wall to be dropped to death? |
6849 | Had one stopped him to ask, Where are you going? |
6849 | Had she wept for him? |
6849 | Had the Gypsies at last a partisan? |
6849 | Had they been served with a mess of brag, or was the fellow really capable? |
6849 | Had they not spared and converted the Khagan of the Avars? |
6849 | Had this last accusation reference to the Emperor''s dream of making her his wife? |
6849 | Has any one impugned your motive in going to the Cynegion? |
6849 | Has he come? |
6849 | Has he found an artificer to his mind?" |
6849 | Has he his ships, and sailors, and soldiers? |
6849 | Has he money according to the estimate?" |
6849 | Has not the sweet water that comes down from the hills seeking the sea through our meadow furnished drink for our fathers hundreds of years? |
6849 | Has she been found?" |
6849 | Hast thou eaten and drunk?" |
6849 | Hast thou found it? |
6849 | Hast thou yet to learn that perfidy is not a trait of any class? |
6849 | Have they another lion?" |
6849 | Have they no eyes? |
6849 | Have you laid the Sacred Books in the boxes?" |
6849 | Have you not heard the aforetime saying,''Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation''? |
6849 | He answered gravely:"Do you remember a bear tender, one of the amusements at the fisherman''s fete?" |
6849 | He attacked the Church then?" |
6849 | He believes the defence is lost-- the captains believe so-- and thou?" |
6849 | He had scarcely resumed his position before she asked, still in the quiet searching manner:"What is the highest religious crime? |
6849 | He is a foreigner-- this is not his home-- he has no kindred here-- what can be his motive? |
6849 | He is comparing the incidents of the two Incarnations of the Spirit or Holy Ghost; he is asking himself:''Can there have been several Sons of God?'' |
6849 | He keeps ambassadors with the Sultan-- what for, if not to be advised?" |
6849 | He was studying some big books, but quit them, and picked me up, and asked me who I was? |
6849 | Her face was the hue of a scarlet poppy, and I feared to go further than ask concerning the plate:''What does it mean?'' |
6849 | Here again the Lawgiver is God; but the Son-- who is he? |
6849 | Here, he thought, was a subject worth studying, and speedily two mysteries presented themselves to him: Who was the Prince of India? |
6849 | Him the first Constantine sent to prison for life, did he not?" |
6849 | His business was to deceive and betray-- whom? |
6849 | His look and tone were exceedingly grave, and she studied his face, and questioned him in turn:"You are very serious-- why?" |
6849 | Honor and duty call me to the gate; the Emperor may be calling me; but how can I go, leaving you in the midst of such peril and horrors?" |
6849 | How better recommend myself to His Majesty of Blacherne? |
6849 | How came the words in his mouth now? |
6849 | How can such thing be?" |
6849 | How could he look at the kindly face of the master he was betraying? |
6849 | How could it have been accomplished so completely? |
6849 | How could they have passed the gates unseen? |
6849 | How did he look? |
6849 | How do you know the man you met at set of sun yesterday was the man you saluted and had salute from this morning? |
6849 | How do you prepare them for the table?" |
6849 | How long, I say?" |
6849 | How many plans of relief he formed who can say? |
6849 | How may a soul contain itself knowing God has chosen it for such mighty things? |
6849 | How much?" |
6849 | How old was I? |
6849 | How then could he, Sergius, a foreigner, young, and without influence, combat a fraternity powerful in the city and most powerful up at Blacherne? |
6849 | How think you I have named my galley?" |
6849 | How was he single- handed to save her unharmed in the scramble of the hour? |
6849 | How was he to get them safely to the Church, and defend them there? |
6849 | How wilt thou take it?" |
6849 | Hypocrite-- traitor-- which is thy master, Mahomet or Christ?" |
6849 | I am a friend of his"--her voice trembled--"may I see him?" |
6849 | I believe she had a spirit to prefer death to dishonor-- but dead or dishonored, wilt thou merge thy interest in her into mine?" |
6849 | I believe you said you are a stranger?" |
6849 | I came in haste to-- to see what his guns have done-- or-- why should I not say it? |
6849 | If Demedes were exposed through his endeavor, what of the father? |
6849 | If a messenger with intelligence for some one in the procession, why not wait for him outside? |
6849 | If great calamity were to threaten Christianity in the East, would he lend it material help?... |
6849 | If he had a design against Lael, what was there to prevent him from attempting it? |
6849 | If living, how old would she be? |
6849 | If my hand is cunning with weapons, should not the Greeks be taught it? |
6849 | If my life were but a day-- One morn, one night, With a golden noon for play, And I, of right, Could say what I would do With it-- what would I do? |
6849 | If the Emperor intrusted the guardianship of the gate to one foreigner, why not to another? |
6849 | If the powers of hell are not to prevail against the Church, what may men do against the sword of God?" |
6849 | If these were empty compliments, if the relations between the potentates were slippery, if war were hatching, what was the Emperor about? |
6849 | If they betray one side, will they be true to the other? |
6849 | If they made betrayal horrible in thought, what would the fact be?... |
6849 | If they were killed, we should find their bodies; if they are alive and innocent, why are they not here? |
6849 | If this were less true, comes then the argument: How can you dispose of the properties in hand, and quiet the gossips in the_ Gabour''s_ palace? |
6849 | If thou wert the denounced, O Sergius, how wouldst thou wish to be done by?" |
6849 | If, in the conflict certain of precipitation, the latter sided with his son-- and what could be more natural?--would not the Brotherhood follow him? |
6849 | In fact, he was asking, Who am I? |
6849 | In other words, why not have the duty committed to himself and his people? |
6849 | In these respects how is it with the friend who vouched for you to the head of the Church? |
6849 | In this mighty business who is worthier to be the first help of my hands than the Messenger of the Stars?" |
6849 | In what should it be written, if at all, except in my blood-- so close is it to me?... |
6849 | In what spirit would he receive the news? |
6849 | Is Syama there?" |
6849 | Is he gone? |
6849 | Is he indeed the Sultan of Sultans he promised to be? |
6849 | Is he never coming?" |
6849 | Is he not a dog of an unbeliever? |
6849 | Is he well? |
6849 | Is he well?" |
6849 | Is it agreed?" |
6849 | Is it agreed?" |
6849 | Is it not enough to betray my kinsman? |
6849 | Is it not so?" |
6849 | Is it not so?" |
6849 | Is it not written:''A soul can not die except by permission of God, according to a writing of God, definite as to time''? |
6849 | Is it therefore less grace- giving?" |
6849 | Is not this a good time to renew thyself?" |
6849 | Is she never to know me?" |
6849 | Is she not to know me?" |
6849 | Is the Prince of India coming?" |
6849 | Is there a Greek of trust, and so truly a lover of his race, to help me make the promise a deed done? |
6849 | Is there a nearer way than this?" |
6849 | Is there a tribunal to sentence him? |
6849 | Is there no principle to which we can refer the matter-- no Christian principle? |
6849 | Islands, of course, but their names?" |
6849 | Judas, what dost thou in this city? |
6849 | Let it pass, let it pass-- I understand thee.... But what further hast thou from the meeting?" |
6849 | Let me ask first, did the Hegumen mention the name of one such associate?" |
6849 | Looking at the calculation, the Prince appeared to reply from it:"At four o''clock, March twenty- sixth"--"And the year?" |
6849 | Looking sharply at Kalil, the master asked:"You say you superintended the running of the lines in person?" |
6849 | Mahommed asked mockingly:"Is it Mirza I am treating with, or Count Corti? |
6849 | Mahommed meantime kept close watch upon him, and now he asked:"What ails thee?" |
6849 | More grievous yet, could he deceive her? |
6849 | More serious, if the harbor is left to the Greeks, how can he prevent the Genoese in Galata from succoring them? |
6849 | My Lord derives information from those treacherous people in the day; does he know of the intercourse between the towns by boats in the night? |
6849 | My Lord will have a time winning the Princess over to the Right Understanding; but in the fields of Love who ever repented him of his labor? |
6849 | No? |
6849 | Now at the mid of the night in which I whistle up my dogs of war to loose them on the_ Gabour_--How, Mirza-- what ails you? |
6849 | Now is it possible we have here at last an exception? |
6849 | Now that the gate St. Romain is in ruins and the ditch filled?" |
6849 | Now what think you of this as a parallel incident of his sojourn in the wilderness?" |
6849 | Now will you swear?" |
6849 | Now, my Lord, and very reverend sirs, do not the words quoted come to us clean of mystery? |
6849 | Now, of the classes in Byzantium, which is it by whom hate of Jews is the article of religion most faithfully practised? |
6849 | O Princess, are you giving me heed? |
6849 | Of Lysander, he asked:"Is the Princess Irene here or in the city?" |
6849 | Of the classes in Byzantium to- day, who are the kings? |
6849 | Of what use are eyes in a hollow rayless as this? |
6849 | Of what was I speaking? |
6849 | Of what was she thinking?--Of him? |
6849 | Of whom might I expect such service but a lover? |
6849 | Offended? |
6849 | On the street he heard everywhere of the rewards, and everywhere the question, Has she been found? |
6849 | Or a King of Lions? |
6849 | Or a prison agape for him? |
6849 | Or by whom? |
6849 | Or did he assert both claimants to be of the same Church, and it the only true one, then why the refusal to partake of the Sacraments? |
6849 | Or didst thou see her? |
6849 | Or do you not love them so much?... |
6849 | Or do you not love your religion so much?".... |
6849 | Or hast thou been invited?" |
6849 | Or idiots exempt from the penalties of sin and impiety? |
6849 | Or if he told her, would it not be one more grief to the many she was already breaking under-- one, the most unendurable? |
6849 | Or rather, to men in authority, like the Hegumen of your Brotherhood, what is the highest of all crimes?" |
6849 | Or that the painted Mother above the altar, though it spoke through a miraculous halo, could save her when found? |
6849 | Or torture in readiness? |
6849 | Or was she then in Sancta Sophia? |
6849 | Or why I was brought here? |
6849 | Perceiving the Emperor was again repenting the dismissal of Urban, the Captain held his peace until asked:"What shall we now do?" |
6849 | Perceiving the man''s reliance in his weapon, Mahommed returned:"How many times didst thou pray yesterday?" |
6849 | Poor without fault, were they to suffer, and curse God with the curse of the sick, the cold, the naked, the hungry? |
6849 | Profane a Mosque, wilt thou?" |
6849 | Room there may be to say the alternatives were a judgment upon him, but who will deny him pity? |
6849 | Say such anticipation followed you, Sergius-- what would you do with the plate?" |
6849 | Say you come out winners, what will you do with the prize? |
6849 | See you not I am your comrade, Mirza the Emir? |
6849 | See you not the Spirit, sometimes called the Comforter, in you? |
6849 | Send me no more despatches advisory of the Emperor"--"And the Princess Irene, my Lord?" |
6849 | Shall I call them the Church?" |
6849 | Shall I not build a mosque with five minarets because other builders stopped with three? |
6849 | Shall a Christian beat us, and wear the virtue of our daughter as it were a leman''s favor? |
6849 | She stayed her agitation, and asked:"What are your orders?" |
6849 | She was parted from me; and with whose eyes could I see her so well as with yours, O my falcon? |
6849 | She whom he was under compact to deliver to Mahommed? |
6849 | She would ask-- if but to thank God for mercies-- to what joyful accident his return was owing? |
6849 | Should he build in the city or amidst the grove of Judas trees on the crest of Candilli? |
6849 | Should he fly her recognition or betray his confiding master? |
6849 | Should he go on?... |
6849 | Should he tell the Princess? |
6849 | So it occurred to Demedes, the main object being to conceal the going to the cistern keeper''s, why not use the sedan to deceive the pursuers? |
6849 | So why not ask and answer further: What would befall the Hegumen, did you tell the accused all you had from him? |
6849 | Somebody dead or dying?" |
6849 | Still not a word from her-- only a sullenness in which he fancied there was a threat.... A threat? |
6849 | Stooping in his saddle, he asked:"What sayest thou? |
6849 | Strange was it that of the two hosts he alone understood the other''s inspiration? |
6849 | Such the introduction or first chapter, what of the catastrophe? |
6849 | Suddenly Mahommed replaced the sword, and standing before him, asked abruptly:"Tell me, have the stars fixed the day when I may assault the Gabours?" |
6849 | Tell me how I may know myself a believer?" |
6849 | Thank you.... What remains for explanation? |
6849 | That I would summon black Hassan with his bowstring? |
6849 | That is the right way, is it not?" |
6849 | That thou didst not hit the gate? |
6849 | The Hegumens of the Brotherhoods"--"All of them, O Phranza?" |
6849 | The Master felt a chill of fear-- something had happened-- something terrible-- but to whom? |
6849 | The Prince stopped reading to ask:"Will not my Lord see in these words a Mary also''blessed above other women''?" |
6849 | The father superior or the patron in danger?" |
6849 | The flower he could recover, but the fragrance and purity of bloom-- what of them? |
6849 | The jar and the blank blackness about renewed her fears, and she called out:"What is the matter? |
6849 | The last play of his-- attending the fete of the Princess Irene as a bear tender-- who but Demedes would have thought of such a role? |
6849 | The plate on the gate is a safeguard"--"Then Mahommed has visited you?" |
6849 | The question now is, whom will you fight-- me or the_ Gabour?_""O my Lord"--"Be quiet, I say. |
6849 | The speaker-- that is, the Prince himself-- submitted the question: Shall I remain here, or go to Mahommed? |
6849 | Then Constantine quietly asked:"Where is Duke Notaras?" |
6849 | Then Justiniani asked:"Why didst thou spare thy last antagonist?" |
6849 | Then Phranza raised his head, and asked, bitterly:"If five galleys won the harbor, every Moslem sail opposing, why could not twelve or more do better? |
6849 | Then fixing his eye on his confederate, he asked:"What stars told thee these things, O Prince?" |
6849 | Then he spoke to the Princess:"Noble lady, have I your consent to make a proclamation?" |
6849 | Then what if the monk talks? |
6849 | Then, say the Scriptures, they, not knowing him, would ask, Who may this be that speaks? |
6849 | There were caverns in the mountains and islands off in the mid- seas: why not fly to them? |
6849 | There were the walls shutting it in, like a pit, and on top of them, on the ascending seats back to the last one-- was it a cloud she beheld? |
6849 | This first-- Have not all men hands and eyes? |
6849 | Though one be rich, or great, or superior in his calling, wherein is the profit of it if he have lost his love? |
6849 | Thus, for instance, to Nilo"--"The black giant who defended you against the Greek?" |
6849 | Thus, which of you can find a text of our Lord treating of his procession from the substance of God? |
6849 | Thy courage-- what makest thou of it but wickedness? |
6849 | To an Arab Sheik, loudest in importunity, he said:"What has happened since yesterday to dissatisfy thee with life?" |
6849 | To what is the world coming?" |
6849 | To which is the obligation first owing?" |
6849 | To whom could he now address himself with a hope of recognition? |
6849 | To- morrow, or perhaps next day, he will open with them, and then"--"What then?" |
6849 | Turning the King face to him he asked:"Where is the keeper?" |
6849 | Two days, and not a crumb of bread in thy pretty throat?--not a drop of wine? |
6849 | Under this guard-- look-- are not the brilliants set in the form of letters?" |
6849 | Unhappily steps in confession are like links in a chain, one leads to another.... Could he, a Christian born, tell her he was an apostate? |
6849 | Verily, my Lord, was not the Spirit the same Spirit, and did it not in both incarnations take care of its own?" |
6849 | Was ever such a monster as he would then become in her eyes?... |
6849 | Was he a learned man? |
6849 | Was he afraid? |
6849 | Was he liberal and tolerant? |
6849 | Was he to bid them both a long farewell? |
6849 | Was he too late? |
6849 | Was his mother living? |
6849 | Was it Demedes? |
6849 | Was it a signal? |
6849 | Was it not said by a wise man,''Sweet water in the jar is not more precious than peace in the family''?" |
6849 | Was it not worth while to assure himself of the possibility of its conversion to the use suspected? |
6849 | Was it of the earth? |
6849 | Was not the mission to your content?" |
6849 | Was the Hegumen so exacting? |
6849 | Was the old destiny still pursuing him? |
6849 | Was there ever prisoner not in want of liberty? |
6849 | Was there not danger of being mistaken for a strutting bird of show? |
6849 | Was this prophetic? |
6849 | Were the brethren recanting their unpatriotic resolutions? |
6849 | Were they coming or going? |
6849 | What am I there?" |
6849 | What answer have you? |
6849 | What are we to think, what do, my Lord, when gold and pity alike lose their influence? |
6849 | What cared he for them? |
6849 | What ceremony is then needed to perfect his title?" |
6849 | What could he do but stand and gaze at the Christ in the act of judging the world? |
6849 | What could she do? |
6849 | What did another one matter? |
6849 | What did he propose to the Brothers?" |
6849 | What did it all mean? |
6849 | What did it mean? |
6849 | What form would the manifestation take? |
6849 | What great thing have you to offer her? |
6849 | What have they done to thee?" |
6849 | What if the Most Merciful should offer me an opportunity to do the unhappy Princess something helpful? |
6849 | What is he doing?" |
6849 | What is his name?" |
6849 | What is it you know against me? |
6849 | What is it you say? |
6849 | What is the matter?" |
6849 | What is the use of strength and skill in arms if I can not turn them to account in her behalf as my Lord would have me?... |
6849 | What is thy love if not the servant for hire of his love? |
6849 | What kept him from the promenade? |
6849 | What kind of man was he? |
6849 | What might they not do with her in the meantime? |
6849 | What new wonder was this? |
6849 | What of them?" |
6849 | What religion shall survive that test? |
6849 | What shall the poor man do? |
6849 | What shall they be? |
6849 | What should the King do now? |
6849 | What sort of being was she? |
6849 | What sound is that?" |
6849 | What things? |
6849 | What was it coursing through his veins? |
6849 | What was my name? |
6849 | What was that he saw? |
6849 | What was the mission of Jesus Christ our Lord to the world? |
6849 | What was the mission of our Lord Jesus Christ? |
6849 | What was to be done with Lael? |
6849 | What welcome can we suppose he will receive here?" |
6849 | What were the instructions given? |
6849 | What will become of us?" |
6849 | What word wilt thou give me?" |
6849 | What would the Russian do? |
6849 | What, will not one arise? |
6849 | When I come, will you receive me?" |
6849 | When at length the sobbing ceased, he arose and said, shamefacedly:"O dear little friend, you forgive me, do you not?" |
6849 | When before did a Prince, contemplating an achievement which was to ring the world, give trust with such absoluteness of faith? |
6849 | When the son of Jahdai entered, the Prince looked at him a moment, and asked:"Hast thou word of her?" |
6849 | When thou hast delivered me to Mahommed, what is he to give thee? |
6849 | When we who have grown old cast about for a hidden foe, where do we habitually look? |
6849 | When will he come? |
6849 | Where are the humanities? |
6849 | Where are the people? |
6849 | Where are we? |
6849 | Where are you?" |
6849 | Where could he have been? |
6849 | Where else are they who have power to arrest a whole people in earnest movement? |
6849 | Where is Sergius?" |
6849 | Where is he now?" |
6849 | Where is he? |
6849 | Where is he? |
6849 | Where was Sergius? |
6849 | Where, except among those whom we have offended? |
6849 | Where, she persisted in asking herself, is Sergius? |
6849 | Whether the contention was of one or many things, who may say? |
6849 | Who are to serve all these stores? |
6849 | Who are you?" |
6849 | Who but the monks? |
6849 | Who can resist them? |
6849 | Who could strike like him? |
6849 | Who could tell? |
6849 | Who dared go in and confront him? |
6849 | Who dares the chance?" |
6849 | Who else could have made himself the hero of the occasion, with none to divide honors with him except Joqard? |
6849 | Who else would report to me so truly her words? |
6849 | Who ever heard of such thing before?" |
6849 | Who has more at stake than he? |
6849 | Who is OM? |
6849 | Who is he?" |
6849 | Who is he?" |
6849 | Who lost?" |
6849 | Who next? |
6849 | Who of you can conceive him shrunk to so small a measure?" |
6849 | Who prompted them? |
6849 | Who resist when he bids strike? |
6849 | Who shall say no when he says yes? |
6849 | Who was his father? |
6849 | Who was she? |
6849 | Who were concerned in it? |
6849 | Who will deny it had to do with the marshalling of worlds, and the peopling them-- with creation? |
6849 | Who would deliver her to him? |
6849 | Whom else have I offended? |
6849 | Whom have I offended? |
6849 | Whose was it? |
6849 | Why a division amongst them at all? |
6849 | Why are you here?" |
6849 | Why art thou not asleep?" |
6849 | Why is he there, Count?" |
6849 | Why may I not go with Syama?" |
6849 | Why must I walk?" |
6849 | Why not go? |
6849 | Why not, he asked himself, make use of the opportunity to bring the chiefs of the religious factions once more together? |
6849 | Why not? |
6849 | Why not? |
6849 | Why should I spare your life?" |
6849 | Why should I struggle or make haste, or be impatient? |
6849 | Why should not her religion be his? |
6849 | Why subject her to more misery? |
6849 | Why that change of countenance? |
6849 | Why the smile? |
6849 | Why was he sent of God, and born into the world? |
6849 | Why, except to allow every man a choice according to his ideas of the proper and best in form and companionship? |
6849 | Why? |
6849 | Will it ever be that a woman can pass a mirror without being arrested by it? |
6849 | Will it not be so many days of rest?--so many nights of unbroken sleep?" |
6849 | Will she see me?" |
6849 | Will they break the chain which defends its entrance? |
6849 | Will they sink or burn the enemy''s fleet?" |
6849 | Will they? |
6849 | Will you allow him to go with me?" |
6849 | Wilt thou do as I say?" |
6849 | Wilt thou go?" |
6849 | Wine?--Elixir?--Some new principle which, hidden away amongst the stores of nature, had suddenly evolved for him? |
6849 | With such odds against thee, what preparations were at thy command?" |
6849 | With this statement-- submitted with acknowledged uncertainty-- can you trust me?" |
6849 | Would His Holiness interest himself so far? |
6849 | Would I be his Lael? |
6849 | Would he come? |
6849 | Would he stop at the cistern- keeper''s? |
6849 | Would he suffer? |
6849 | Would my Lord so much?" |
6849 | Would you like to hear the name?" |
6849 | You are certain you comprehend?" |
6849 | You can let me stand at the gate yonder?" |
6849 | You recollect him?" |
6849 | You say you love her more than I? |
6849 | You understand?" |
6849 | _ Amin!_... What if the way be perilous, as I grant it is? |
6849 | and who is the Prince of India? |
6849 | bore at Nicopolis, and thy sword of Solomon.... God is great, and the Jinn and the Stars on my side, what have we to fear?" |
6849 | cried the Prince, fervently,"who was this Mara that he should not share in the rejoicing of all nature else? |
6849 | he cried,"what dost thou here? |
6849 | if he forgave them glorying in their offences, will he be less merciful to us repentant?" |
6849 | if you still fear me, what is there to prevent my compelling the favors I beg?" |
6849 | the fisherman returned; adding immediately:"Whom serve you?" |
6849 | with her kiss on his brow, could he stand silent? |
8389 | Did he ever light a fagot? 8389 Do you know, boys, that you all ought to go to hell?" |
8389 | Do you think it is divinely inspired? |
8389 | Give me a dollar? |
8389 | Have you loved your wife and children? |
8389 | Have you taken good care of them and made them happy? |
8389 | Have you tried to do right by your neighbors? |
8389 | Paid all your debts? |
8389 | Well, What is it? |
8389 | Well, why do n''t you change it? |
8389 | What did our forefathers use it for? |
8389 | What did you do with that dollar I gave you last week? |
8389 | What did you do with that fifty cents I gave you last Christmas? |
8389 | What for? |
8389 | What for? |
8389 | What has been my offense? 8389 What kind of muscles?" |
8389 | What,they say,"leave us without any guide- boards?" |
8389 | You do n''t? 8389 A tyrant father will have liars for children; do you know that? 8389 About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? 8389 According to that book God met the devil and said:Where have you been?" |
8389 | Admitting that the bible is the book of God, is that His only good job? |
8389 | Admitting that the bible is the book of God, is that His only good job? |
8389 | Afraid of what? |
8389 | After a while the pauper without rheumatism died, and then the pauper with the rheumatism began to think in her own mind, who will bring me food? |
8389 | All of it; all of it; and yet what is this old testament that was written by an infinitely good God? |
8389 | And I ask you if I have not the same right to think that any other human has? |
8389 | And can any God damn such a soul? |
8389 | And do you know there has not been a patentable improvement made on that devil for 4,000 years? |
8389 | And do you know, it is a splendid thing for me to think that the woman you really love will never grow old to you? |
8389 | And he said to her:"These belong to your father; do you think that he will allow one of his children to starve? |
8389 | And how can we be made in the image of something that has neither body and parts nor passions? |
8389 | And how long do you suppose the church fought that? |
8389 | And if He is infinite, how can they comprehend Him? |
8389 | And if I have no right to think, who has? |
8389 | And if Joseph was not his father, why not give the genealogy of Pontius Pilate or Herod? |
8389 | And if a god has made us, knowing that we would be totally depraved, why should we go to the same being for repairs? |
8389 | And if a man honestly decides that death is best-- best for him and others-- and acts upon the decision, why should he be blamed? |
8389 | And if that story is true, ought we not after all to thank the devil? |
8389 | And then cap the climax by asking:"Were you ever baptized?" |
8389 | And we took all his cities, and utterly destroyed the men, and the women and the little ones, of every city, we left none to remain?" |
8389 | And what am I to go by? |
8389 | And what does a trial for heresy mean? |
8389 | And what for? |
8389 | And what is spirit? |
8389 | And what is the next thing? |
8389 | And what kind of a God is it that will allow such men and women to be burned at the stake? |
8389 | And what shall we say of Greece? |
8389 | And what was the golden age born of? |
8389 | And what was the result? |
8389 | And what? |
8389 | And when we get to the new testament, what do we find there? |
8389 | And why did God demand the sacrifice of a sheep? |
8389 | And why? |
8389 | And why? |
8389 | And why? |
8389 | Another man''s oracle? |
8389 | Are the Christian nations patterns of charity and forbearance? |
8389 | Are the people who go to church the only good people? |
8389 | Are the savages the agents of the good God? |
8389 | Are there not a great many bad people who go to church? |
8389 | Are they the servants of the infinite? |
8389 | As a final test:"Boys, would you be willing to go to hell if it was God''s will?" |
8389 | Billions of prayers have been uttered; has one been answered? |
8389 | But we are advancing, and we are beginning to hold all kinds of slavery in utter contempt; do you know that? |
8389 | But what shall I say more? |
8389 | But what shall we do, O God, with the maidens? |
8389 | But what was the result? |
8389 | Can God, then, through the bible, make the same revelation to two men? |
8389 | Can I increase his happiness or decrease his misery? |
8389 | Can a spirit exist without matter or without force? |
8389 | Can any one conceive of music without human love? |
8389 | Can any person read the first chapters of Genesis and believe them unless his logic was assassinated in the cradle? |
8389 | Can anybody? |
8389 | Can anyone believe this to be a true account of the personal appearance of Mr. Paine in 1802? |
8389 | Can anything be more infamous? |
8389 | Can not a soul be infinitely generous? |
8389 | Can that tongue be palsied by a presbytery that praises a self- denying and heroic life? |
8389 | Can the believing father in heaven be happy with his unbelieving children in hell? |
8389 | Can the loving wife in heaven be happy with her unbelieving husband in hell? |
8389 | Can there be such a fiend? |
8389 | Can there ever be any progress in this world to amount to anything until we have liberty? |
8389 | Can we help him, can we add to his glory or happiness? |
8389 | Can we hope, with the story of Daniel in the lion''s den, to rival the stupendous miracles of India? |
8389 | Can you contribute a few dollars to the fund?" |
8389 | Can you imagine matter without force? |
8389 | Can you? |
8389 | Christian hate has not allowed the Jews to earn a[ living?] |
8389 | Col. Ingersoll-- What did the gentleman say? |
8389 | Could a solitary being hear that question without laughing? |
8389 | Could he have done a more noble act than to recognize him who had served him faithfully as a man? |
8389 | Did Caesar take the city of Jericho"and utterly destroy all that was in the city, both man and woman, young and old?" |
8389 | Did He not know exactly just what He was making? |
8389 | Did Julius Caesar send the following report to the Roman Senate? |
8389 | Did Thomas Paine die in destitution and want? |
8389 | Did all the ministers of Scotland add as much to the such of human knowledge as David Hume? |
8389 | Did all the priests of France do as great a work for the civilization of the world as Voltaire or Diderot? |
8389 | Did all the priests of Rome increase the mental wealth of man as much as Bruno? |
8389 | Did he ever do that?" |
8389 | Did he ever tear human flesh? |
8389 | Did he leave in this world more goodness, more humanity, than when he was born? |
8389 | Did he leave in this world more liberty? |
8389 | Did he leave this world better than he found it? |
8389 | Did he see Him after He had sat down? |
8389 | Did n''t He know that when He made us? |
8389 | Did n''t they damn into eternal flames the man who discovered the movement of the earth in its orbit? |
8389 | Did n''t they damn into eternal flames the man who discovered the world was round? |
8389 | Did n''t they even try to put down life insurance by saying it was sinful to bet on the time God has given you to live? |
8389 | Did n''t they persecute the astronomers? |
8389 | Did the Congress of the United States thank him for his services because he had lived a drunken and beastly life? |
8389 | Did the State of New York feel indebted to a drunken beast, and confer upon Thomas Paine an estate of several hundred acres? |
8389 | Did the compassionate God create the cancer so that it might feed on the quivering flesh of this victim? |
8389 | Did they wish to save his life? |
8389 | Did you ever hear of any man coming into a town broke and inquire where the deacon of a Presbyterian church lived? |
8389 | Do church members pay their debts any better than any others? |
8389 | Do n''t you see that these infamous doctrines petrify the human heart? |
8389 | Do not the Presbyterians rather trample on the things that are holy to the Roman Catholics, and do they respect their feelings? |
8389 | Do they benefit mankind? |
8389 | Do they treat their families any better? |
8389 | Do we find them among all Christians? |
8389 | Do without the bible? |
8389 | Do you believe God will look for this water- mark on the soul? |
8389 | Do you believe an infinite God gave a recipe for hair- oil? |
8389 | Do you believe any such nonsense from a god? |
8389 | Do you believe that God ever told a widow if her brother- in- law refused to marry her to spit in his face? |
8389 | Do you believe that God-- if there is one-- will ever damn me for thinking Him better than He is? |
8389 | Do you believe that any man was ever crucified who was the master of death? |
8389 | Do you believe there is any duty that man owes to God that will prevent a man marrying the woman he loves? |
8389 | Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting along now? |
8389 | Do you know another thing? |
8389 | Do you know some ministers who denounce me would have been in the Inquisition themselves two hundred years ago? |
8389 | Do you know that it is insufferable egotism in you to suppose that a woman is going to love you always looking as bad as you can? |
8389 | Do you know that the church today occupies about the same ground that unbelievers did one hundred years ago? |
8389 | Do you know that the most orthodox people in this town today, three hundred years ago would have been burned for heresy? |
8389 | Do you know that there is only a little zig- zag strip around the world within which have been produced all men of genius? |
8389 | Do you know we are improving all the time? |
8389 | Do you know where once burned and blazed the bivouac fires of the army of progress, the altars of the church glow today? |
8389 | Do you not know that every religion in the world has declared every other religion a fraud? |
8389 | Do you really regard poverty as a crime? |
8389 | Do you see such a wonderful difference between a member of a church and the man who does not believe in it? |
8389 | Do you suppose they are going to die without a struggle? |
8389 | Do you tell me that the less brain a man has the better chance he has for heaven? |
8389 | Do you then believe that the bible is a different book to every human being that receives it? |
8389 | Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? |
8389 | Do you think that the people of Chicago would kill him? |
8389 | Do you understand? |
8389 | Does an argument depend for its force upon the pecuniary condition of the person making it? |
8389 | Does an infinite being need to be protected by a State Legislature? |
8389 | Does any human being now believe that God made man of dust and a woman of a rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the middle of it? |
8389 | Does anybody believe in that now that has got the slightest sense?--one who knows enough to chew gum without a string?" |
8389 | Does anybody believe it now? |
8389 | Does anybody believe that, that has ever thought? |
8389 | Does anybody now believe in the snake story? |
8389 | Does belief depend at all upon the evidence? |
8389 | Does he need my strength or my life? |
8389 | Does it still glory in the damnation of infants, and does it still persist in emptying the cradle in order that perdition may be filled? |
8389 | Does it still retain within its stony heart all the malice of its founder? |
8389 | Does it teach a man to resist oppression? |
8389 | Does it treat woman as she ought to be treated, or is it barbarian? |
8389 | Does not such a statement devour itself? |
8389 | Does the bible give woman her rights? |
8389 | Does the bible teach the existence of devils? |
8389 | Else how can you account for all this snake and hyena and jackal in man? |
8389 | Ever put the thumb- screw on anybody? |
8389 | Everbright, how do you do? |
8389 | First, what is the origin of the crime known as blasphemy? |
8389 | For more than a thousand years the church had, to a great extent, the control of the civilized world, and what has been the result? |
8389 | For the mean things you have done when you are in hell? |
8389 | For what reason, then, do you denounce his death as cowardly? |
8389 | Free labor will give us wealth, and has given us wealth, and why? |
8389 | God will say to the Presbyterians,"What shall We do to this man? |
8389 | Had I not better say so? |
8389 | Had I not better say so? |
8389 | Had he ever burned anybody? |
8389 | Had he ever put anybody in the inquisition? |
8389 | Has he no right to defend himself? |
8389 | Has he the right to render himself unconscious? |
8389 | Has not the church opposed every science from the first ray of light until now? |
8389 | He says,"Who is reading this?" |
8389 | He took away his property, but Job did n''t sin; and when God met the devil, he said:"Well, what did I tell you, smarty?" |
8389 | He was wrecked in the sea and drifted to an unknown island, and as he climbed up the shore he saw a man, and said to him,"Have you a government here?" |
8389 | Here are these millions today who say:"We are to be saved by belief, by faith; but what are we to believe?" |
8389 | Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds, and gets sick and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the resurrection? |
8389 | Honesty, hospitality, mercy in the hour of victory, generosity-- do we not find these virtues among some savages? |
8389 | Honor bright, can you conceive of force without matter? |
8389 | Honor bright, is n''t that the better story? |
8389 | Honor bright, what, in your judgment, would have been the effect upon the agricultural world? |
8389 | Honor bright, what, in your judgment, would have been the effect upon the circumnavigation of the globe? |
8389 | Honor bright, what, in your judgment, would have been the effect upon the circumnavigation of the globe? |
8389 | How are you to know that it is God''s word? |
8389 | How can fits that attack a man take up a residence in swine? |
8389 | How can we get along without the revelation that no one understands? |
8389 | How dare we drown the thunders of Sinai by calling the ayes and naes in a petty legislature? |
8389 | How did He get it out? |
8389 | How did Noah get the animals in the ark? |
8389 | How did the bears get there? |
8389 | How did the devil, who had always lived in heaven among the best society, ever happen to become bad? |
8389 | How did the great and glorious of that empire? |
8389 | How did these gentlemen of old know it was God who was talking to them? |
8389 | How did you like it?" |
8389 | How do they answer all this? |
8389 | How do they know about this infinite being? |
8389 | How do we know that the prophecies were not fulfilled before they were written? |
8389 | How do you account for Russia? |
8389 | How do you account for Siberia? |
8389 | How do you account for it? |
8389 | How do you account for the existence of martyrs? |
8389 | How do you account for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers-- arms that had been reached toward God in supplication? |
8389 | How do you account for the fact that innocence is not a perfect shield? |
8389 | How do you account for the fact that justice does n''t always triumph? |
8389 | How do you account for the fact that the world has been filled with pain, and grief, and tears? |
8389 | How do you account for the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving Him? |
8389 | How do you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the master''s lash for ages without recompense and without reward? |
8389 | How do you know it''s the word of God? |
8389 | How does God laugh? |
8389 | How does he know He was on the right hand? |
8389 | How is it with nations? |
8389 | How is that? |
8389 | How long is it since you converted a Chinaman? |
8389 | How long since you have had a convert in India? |
8389 | How long will they grovel in the dust before the ignorant legends of the barbaric past? |
8389 | How long will they grovel in the dust before the ignorant legends of the barbaric past? |
8389 | How long, O how long will man listen to the threats of God, and shut his ears to the splendid promises of Nature? |
8389 | How long, O how long will mankind worship a book? |
8389 | How long, O how long will they pursue phantoms in a darkness deeper than death? |
8389 | How long, O how long, will mankind worship a book? |
8389 | How long, O how long, will they pursue phantoms in a darkness deeper than death? |
8389 | How many are you converting a year; really, truthfully? |
8389 | How many millions of Christians are in the uniform of everlasting forgiveness, loving their enemies? |
8389 | How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy their fellow- Christians? |
8389 | How many people are being born a year? |
8389 | How was it possible for Lucretius to get along without the bible? |
8389 | How would you keep Sunday then? |
8389 | How''d you like to farm it, and depend on volcanic glare to raise a crop? |
8389 | How? |
8389 | How? |
8389 | I admit that orthodoxy could not exist without them, but why did God make them? |
8389 | I again ask the old question: of what did He make it? |
8389 | I ask again whether these splendid utterances came from the lips of a drunken beast? |
8389 | I ask you what effect would that have had upon music? |
8389 | I ask you, honor bright, if that course had been pursued, would the human ears ever have been enriched with the divine symphonies of Beethoven? |
8389 | I ask, again, whether these splendid utterances came from the lips of a drunken beast? |
8389 | I ask:"Does God wish the lip- worship of a slave? |
8389 | I do not say there is no God, but I do ask, what is God doing? |
8389 | I do not say there is not, but I want to know, and I want to know if a man is to be damned for asking the question? |
8389 | I hate dictation-- I want something like liberty; and what do I mean by that? |
8389 | I have been honest about it; do n''t believe it?" |
8389 | I have read this book and what shall I say of it? |
8389 | I have read this book, and what shall I say of it? |
8389 | I said,"Do you think the fellows that were drowned believed in special providence?" |
8389 | I say,"What are they?" |
8389 | I says,"I do n''t know whether you do or not; maybe you are following the advice you gave me; how shall I know whether you believe it or not?" |
8389 | I want you to know that the church carried the black flag, and I ask you what must have been the civilizing influence of such a religion? |
8389 | I would say,"Where were you when you got the notice to come back? |
8389 | If Christ was God, did He not know on His cross what crimes would be done in His name? |
8389 | If Christ was God, why did He not tell His disciples, and through them, the world,"Man shall not persecute his fellow- man?" |
8389 | If Christ was in fact God, why did n''t He plainly say there was another life? |
8389 | If God wo n''t love such men and women, then under what circumstances will he love? |
8389 | If He had not loved us what would He have done? |
8389 | If He wishes to hold a gentleman responsible, why does n''t He address him in his native tongue? |
8389 | If I did not believe in Him how could I call Him anything? |
8389 | If I have lost my right, Mr. Smith, where did you find yours? |
8389 | If Paine had died a millionaire, would Christians have accepted his religious opinions? |
8389 | If Paine had drank nothing but cold water, would Christians have repudiated the five cardinal points of Calvinism? |
8389 | If Paine recanted, why should he denied"a little earth for charity?" |
8389 | If Sunday alone is the Lord''s day, whose day is Monday, Tuesday, Friday, etc.? |
8389 | If Thomas Paine recanted, why do you pursue him? |
8389 | If a man surrounded by angels could become bad, why can not a man surrounded by devils become good? |
8389 | If earthquake there must be, why did it not occur in some uninhabited desert on some wide waste of sea? |
8389 | If it was the fact, if the dead got out of the grave, why did He not show himself to his enemies? |
8389 | If reason can determine what is merciful, what is just, the duties of man to man, what more do we want either in time or eternity? |
8389 | If that''s the case, then why does n''t He convert us all? |
8389 | If the Lord created it, what did He make it of? |
8389 | If the bible is inspired, does the author of it need the support of the law to command respect? |
8389 | If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would he have taken? |
8389 | If the devil told a man to kill his wife, would you be astonished? |
8389 | If the devil upheld polygamy would you be surprised? |
8389 | If the devil wanted to kill somebody for differing with him would you be surprised? |
8389 | If the doctrine of the Calvinists is true, what right had any one to ask an unbeliever to fight for his country in the civil war? |
8389 | If the infinite God, if there is one, who made us, wished us to think alike, why did he give a spoonful of brains to one man, and a bushel to another? |
8389 | If the world was created, what was it make of? |
8389 | If there is an infinite God and I have not reason enough to comprehend His universe, whose fault is it? |
8389 | If there is any God that made us, what right had He to make idiots? |
8389 | If there is nothing of the snake, or hyena, or jackal in man, why would he cut his brother''s throat for a difference of belief? |
8389 | If we can convert the heathen, why not convert those nearest home? |
8389 | If you have got it, why seek for it? |
8389 | If you knew the devil had written a little work on human slavery, in your judgment would he uphold slavery or denounce it? |
8389 | If you make your wife a perpetual beggar, what kind of children do you expect to raise with a beggar for their mother? |
8389 | If you see a man in prison with the chains eating into his flesh simply for loving God, you''ve got to ask why does not a just God interfere? |
8389 | If your child tells a lie-- what of it? |
8389 | If"God"determines all births and deaths, of what use is medicine, and why should doctors defy, with pills and powders, the decrees of"God"? |
8389 | In Brooklyn and New York you have the bible, yet do you find that the restraint is a great success? |
8389 | In mercy? |
8389 | In mercy? |
8389 | In what respect would he have differed from God on the subject of slavery, polygamy, wars of extermination, and religious persecution? |
8389 | In what? |
8389 | Ingersoll''s Lecture on Myth and Miracles Ladies and Gentlemen: What, after all, is the object of life? |
8389 | Ingersoll''s Lecture on the Review of His Reviewers Ladies and Gentlemen:"What have I said?" |
8389 | Ingersoll''s Letter, Is Suicide a Sin? |
8389 | Instead of turning them out, why did n''t He keep him from getting in? |
8389 | Is a man to be rewarded eternally for believing without evidence or against evidence? |
8389 | Is a man with a head like a pin under any obligation to thank God? |
8389 | Is a minister to be silenced because he speaks fairly of a noble and candid adversary? |
8389 | Is infinite goodness and mercy to become livid with wrath because a finite being expresses an opinion? |
8389 | Is intellectual development the highway of progress or must we depend on the pit of credulity? |
8389 | Is it a raw material? |
8389 | Is it a sin to speak a charitable word over the grave of John Stuart Mill? |
8389 | Is it a small thing to reave the heavens of an insatiate monster and write upon the eternal dome, glittering with stars, the grand word liberty? |
8389 | Is it blasphemous to describe this God as malicious? |
8389 | Is it blasphemy to believe what we read in the 109th Psalm? |
8389 | Is it blasphemy to describe God as needing assistance from the Legislature? |
8389 | Is it blasphemy to say that He is the author of the pestilence; that He ordered some of His children to consume others with fire and sword? |
8389 | Is it heretical to pay a just and graceful tribute to departed worth? |
8389 | Is it not a little late in the day to object to people because they sacrifice meat and other eatables to their god? |
8389 | Is it nothing to civilize mankind? |
8389 | Is it nothing to fill the world with light, with discovery, with science? |
8389 | Is it nothing to free the mind? |
8389 | Is it nothing to make men wipe the dust from their swollen knees, the tears from their blanched and furrowed cheeks? |
8389 | Is it possible for absurdity to go beyond that? |
8389 | Is it possible for this God to prevent it? |
8389 | Is it possible that He would damn me for being honest, and give me wings if I would play the hypocrite? |
8389 | Is it possible that a God delights in threatening and terrifying men? |
8389 | Is it possible that a few Chinese can bring"our holy religion"into disgust and contempt? |
8389 | Is it possible that an infinite Deity is unwilling that man should investigate the phenomena by which he is surrounded? |
8389 | Is it possible that somebody else can be good for me, and that this doctrine of the atonement is the only anchor for the human soul? |
8389 | Is it possible that the bible is the only restraint, and yet the nations among whom these men lived have been as moral as we? |
8389 | Is it possible that they know each other? |
8389 | Is it possible that this will was made by a pauper, by a destitute outcast, by a man who suffered for the ordinary necessities of life? |
8389 | Is it possible that we have been given reason simply that we may through faith ignore its deductions and avoid its conclusions? |
8389 | Is it possible?) |
8389 | Is it proper for him to take refuge in sleep? |
8389 | Is it really essential to conjugate the Greek verbs before you can make up your mind as to the probability of dead people getting out of their graves? |
8389 | Is it still starving the soul and famishing the heart? |
8389 | Is it still trembling and shivering, crouching and crawling, before its ignorant confession of faith? |
8389 | Is it still warming its fleshless hands at the flames that consumed Servetus? |
8389 | Is it the church? |
8389 | Is it the duty of this man to allow them to wrap his body in a garment of flame? |
8389 | Is it the will of God that he die by torture? |
8389 | Is it well with thee today? |
8389 | Is n''t it perfectly wonderful that the priest of one religion never believes the miracles told by the priest of another? |
8389 | Is n''t it possible for a man who acts like Christ to be saved, whatever be his belief? |
8389 | Is orthodox Christianity on the increase? |
8389 | Is that because we are depraved? |
8389 | Is that right? |
8389 | Is the black man, born in slavery, under any obligation to thank God for his badge of servitude? |
8389 | Is the man that believes any better than the man who does not believe? |
8389 | Is the man that takes poison rather than be tortured to death by savages or"Christians"a coward? |
8389 | Is the man who leaps into the sea rather than be burned a coward? |
8389 | Is the man who takes morphine rather than be eaten to death by a cancer a coward? |
8389 | Is the new testament inspired? |
8389 | Is there a God who says that if man does so and so He will damn him? |
8389 | Is there a city on the globe which lacks more in certain directions than some in Christendom, or even the United States? |
8389 | Is there a solitary Christian nation that will trust any other? |
8389 | Is there a tomb holding the ashes of a saint from which emerges one ray of light? |
8389 | Is there an intelligent man or woman now in the world who believes in the Garden of Eden story? |
8389 | Is there any God in heaven that hates a patriot? |
8389 | Is there any God that would damn a man for helping to free three millions of people? |
8389 | Is there any duty we owe to God? |
8389 | Is there any sense in that? |
8389 | Is there anything in our bible as lofty and loving as the prayer of the Buddhist? |
8389 | Is there goodness, is there mercy in this? |
8389 | Is there room for discussion? |
8389 | Is there some duty that I owe to the clouds that will prevent me from marrying some good, sweet woman? |
8389 | Is there the grave of a priest in France on which a lover of liberty would now drop a flower or a tear? |
8389 | Is this a festival for"God"? |
8389 | Is this man under obligation to keep his life because God gave it until the savages by torture take it? |
8389 | Is this the work of the good God? |
8389 | It is blasphemy to say that our God sent the famine and dried the mother''s breast from her infant''s withered lips? |
8389 | It may be well enough here to ask the question:"What is greatness?" |
8389 | It will be the same tomorrow, wo n''t it? |
8389 | Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama, who knows nothing of the impersonation of passion; what does he get from him? |
8389 | Let me ask you-- do you believe if that had been done that the human ears ever would have been enriched with the divine symphonies of Beethoven? |
8389 | Long time since I have seen you; how''s your family? |
8389 | Men began to inquire, By what right does a crowned robber make me work for him? |
8389 | Must I be false to my understanding? |
8389 | Must one be versed in Latin before he is entitled to express his opinion as to the genuiness of a pretended revelation from God? |
8389 | Must the true Presbyterian violate the sanctity of the tomb, dig open the grave, and ask his God to curse the silent dust? |
8389 | Must we rely on belief or credulity, or upon manly virtues, courageous investigation, thought, and intellectual development? |
8389 | No prospective fathers or mothers in law; no prying and gossiping neighbors, nobody to say,"Young man, how do you expect to support her?" |
8389 | Now if men have been slaves what shall we say of women? |
8389 | Now just suppose that some voice whispered in your ear, how would you know it was God''s? |
8389 | Now what does this prove? |
8389 | Now which? |
8389 | Now, admitting that I live in Turkey, and have a chance to get an office, what should I say? |
8389 | Now, do you for one moment believe that these words were written by the most merciful God? |
8389 | Now, does this bible teach political freedom; or does it teach political tyranny? |
8389 | Now, honor bright, should I just make a clean breast of it and say"Upon my honor, I do n''t believe it?" |
8389 | Now, honor bright, what ought I to do? |
8389 | Now, if men have been slaves, what about women? |
8389 | Now, if women have been slaves, what do you say about children? |
8389 | Now, is it not a fact that we are happier today than at any period in our history? |
8389 | Now, sir, can you tell me what I am to do? |
8389 | Now, tell me truly, which is the grander story? |
8389 | Now, what does the bible teach? |
8389 | Now, what is the next thing that I wish to call your attention to? |
8389 | Now, what is this religion? |
8389 | Now, what makes the river run? |
8389 | Now, what of the Sabbath-- the Lord''s day? |
8389 | Now, you have read the bible romance of the fall of Adam? |
8389 | Of what did He make it? |
8389 | Or will you be so good then that you wo n''t care how you used to be? |
8389 | Others said, by what right does a robed priest rob me? |
8389 | Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making depraved people? |
8389 | Ought the sailor to throw away his compass and depend entirely upon the fog? |
8389 | Quite well? |
8389 | Rather lukewarm, eh? |
8389 | Said I,"What do you mean by that?" |
8389 | Said the Northerner to the Southerner,"Did you ever see such a night as this; did you ever in your life see such a moon?" |
8389 | Say to him,"A man was raised from the dead this morning,"and he will say,"What are you giving us?" |
8389 | Says I,"Do you believe the bible?" |
8389 | Says I:"What do you mean by rudimentary muscles?" |
8389 | Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and where was the heaven, and where was the hell? |
8389 | Shall I take another man''s word and not what he thinks, but what God said to him? |
8389 | Should we, therefore, exempt it from taxation for any good it has done? |
8389 | Sin, how did it come into the world? |
8389 | Since the telescope has been pointed at the stars, where was He going? |
8389 | So, when a man has committed some awful crime, why should he stay and ruin his family and friends? |
8389 | Such a religion is demoralizing; and how are you to get there? |
8389 | Suppose a man came into Chicago and he should meet a funeral procession, and he should say,"Who is dead?" |
8389 | Suppose it is 105; have I committed any crime? |
8389 | Suppose we ever invent any thing that can go 1,000 miles an hour? |
8389 | Tell the truth? |
8389 | That depends upon this: Can a man believe as he wants to? |
8389 | The first question, then, is: Has a man under any circumstances the right to kill himself? |
8389 | The minister said,"Boys, do you know what becomes of the wicked?" |
8389 | The next question is: Did Thomas Paine recant? |
8389 | The next thing is: Did Thomas Paine live the life of a drunken beast, and did he die a drunken, cowardly, and beastly death? |
8389 | The optimist was compelled to ask,"What was my God doing? |
8389 | The question arises, Can any relation exist between finite man and infinite being? |
8389 | The question, then, is: Shall we rely upon superstition or upon growth? |
8389 | The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by His church, causes war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and why? |
8389 | Then do n''t you think, said he, He could have put in another day''s work to great advantage right here? |
8389 | Then is it right for you to say"That fellow will steal-- that fellow is a dangerous man-- he is a robber?" |
8389 | Then when He brought His flood why did He rescue eight people if their descendants were to be so totally depraved and wicked? |
8389 | Then which day will you keep? |
8389 | Then why did they have to take any birds in the ark? |
8389 | Then why does not the God give me the evidence? |
8389 | They said:"You do n''t? |
8389 | They say they brought the arts and sciences out of the dark ages; why, they made the dark ages and what did they preserve? |
8389 | They say to one, do you know more than all the theologians dead? |
8389 | They say:"A muscle that has gone into bankruptcy--""Was it a large muscle?" |
8389 | This God waiting around there, knowing all the while what would happen, made them on purpose so it would happen; and then what does he do? |
8389 | This trinity doctrine was announced several hundred years after Christ was born: Do you believe such a doctrine will make a man good or honest? |
8389 | To contradict a priest? |
8389 | To save his life? |
8389 | To see the nerves throbbing with pain? |
8389 | To see the quivering flesh slowly eaten? |
8389 | To whom will these atoms belong on the morning of the resurrection? |
8389 | Tyrannical do I call them? |
8389 | Was God a tory? |
8389 | Was God governing the world when the prisoners were confined in the Bastille? |
8389 | Was he a drunken beast when he wrote the"Crisis?" |
8389 | Was he elected a member of the French convention because he was a drunken beast? |
8389 | Was he too nervous to hear her speak? |
8389 | Was it the act of a drunken beast to put his own life in jeopardy by voting against the death of the King? |
8389 | Was n''t there room outside of the garden to put His tree, if He did n''t want people to eat His apple? |
8389 | Was that fits, too? |
8389 | Was there always something ailing him? |
8389 | Was this the conduct of a drunken beast? |
8389 | We care nothing for the rich, except what will they do with their money? |
8389 | Well, brother, can you do something for us financially, today? |
8389 | Well, ca n''t man help himself? |
8389 | Well, what changes these religions? |
8389 | Well, what of it? |
8389 | Well, what was the next? |
8389 | Well, why? |
8389 | Were they to be cursed by God and man because the former had reaped the harvest of his own sowing? |
8389 | What are the Christian nations doing today in Europe? |
8389 | What are the natural virtues of man? |
8389 | What are they to do? |
8389 | What are they? |
8389 | What are we going to do if we have no bible to quarrel about? |
8389 | What are we going to do with our enemies? |
8389 | What are we going to do with the people we love but do n''t like? |
8389 | What are we to do without hell? |
8389 | What are we to do without the bible? |
8389 | What are you doing in the missionary World? |
8389 | What became of them? |
8389 | What bishop pitied the victim of the rack? |
8389 | What can I do for him? |
8389 | What can I do? |
8389 | What can the future have for him? |
8389 | What can the orthodox ministers say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? |
8389 | What can we do? |
8389 | What can we say of a God who gives this false light of nature which, if its lessons are followed, results in hell? |
8389 | What cardinal, what bishop, what priest raised his voice for the rights of men? |
8389 | What consolation has religion for the widow of the unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man who lies dead? |
8389 | What consolation have they? |
8389 | What could be done with this horror? |
8389 | What crime had Thomas Paine committed that he should have feared to die? |
8389 | What did Adam do? |
8389 | What did He do? |
8389 | What did He make him for? |
8389 | What did He make it of? |
8389 | What did He think about? |
8389 | What did He use for the purpose? |
8389 | What did he mock? |
8389 | What do I get out of him? |
8389 | What do these horrid persecutions prove, except the barbarity of Christians? |
8389 | What do they teach today? |
8389 | What do you suppose Mr. Talmage would say that meant? |
8389 | What ecclesiastic, what nobleman, took the side of the oppressed-- of the peasant? |
8389 | What effect had this religion upon the nations of the earth? |
8389 | What else can they do? |
8389 | What else? |
8389 | What for? |
8389 | What for? |
8389 | What for? |
8389 | What for? |
8389 | What good is it to believe something that you do n''t understand-- that you never can understand? |
8389 | What had He been doing? |
8389 | What had the God been doing for the eternity He had been living? |
8389 | What harm would it do to have an opera here tonight? |
8389 | What have the nations been fighting about? |
8389 | What is blasphemy? |
8389 | What is he to do? |
8389 | What is inspiration? |
8389 | What is it worth compared with the love of a splendid woman? |
8389 | What is it? |
8389 | What is morality? |
8389 | What is omnipotence? |
8389 | What is that God worth that allows such things in the world He governs? |
8389 | What is the best thing to do under the circumstances? |
8389 | What is the child to do? |
8389 | What is the doctrine now? |
8389 | What is the highest possible aim? |
8389 | What is the man to do? |
8389 | What is the next blow that that this church received? |
8389 | What is the next thing I find in this creed? |
8389 | What is the next thing here? |
8389 | What is the next thing in this great creed? |
8389 | What is the next? |
8389 | What is the use of more than one correct account of anything? |
8389 | What kind of a God is it that will allow men and women to be put in dungeons and chains simply because they loved Him and prayed to Him? |
8389 | What kind of a law is it that would demand punishment of the innocent? |
8389 | What kind of children do you expect to have with a beggar and a coward for their mother? |
8389 | What kind of country is it? |
8389 | What kind of opening there for a young man? |
8389 | What makes the tree grow? |
8389 | What makes you? |
8389 | What man who ever thinks, can believe that blood can appease God? |
8389 | What more could he wished? |
8389 | What more did he do? |
8389 | What nations? |
8389 | What next? |
8389 | What part of the bible? |
8389 | What pleasure can it give"God"to see a man devoured by a cancer? |
8389 | What priest pleaded for the liberty of the citizen? |
8389 | What proof have we that it is God''s word? |
8389 | What right has he to assassinate the joy of life? |
8389 | What right has he to murder the sunshine of the day? |
8389 | What should I do? |
8389 | What should I obey? |
8389 | What was he afraid of? |
8389 | What was the Thirty Years''War in Europe for? |
8389 | What was the war in Holland for? |
8389 | What were all these preachers doing at that time? |
8389 | What will you have remorse for? |
8389 | What would any man of ordinary intelligence do in a case like this? |
8389 | What would he be afraid of? |
8389 | What would heaven be without love? |
8389 | What would keep it together unless there was force? |
8389 | What would that spirit do? |
8389 | What would the Christian world say of me if I should have a few children torn to pieces if they should make that remark in my face? |
8389 | What would the church people think if the theatrical people should attempt to suppress the churches? |
8389 | What would the devil have done under the same circumstances? |
8389 | What would the devil have done under the same circumstances? |
8389 | What would the devil have done under the same circumstances? |
8389 | What would the world be if infidels had never been? |
8389 | What would they have done if their hearts had not been softened by the glad tidings of great joy, peace on earth and good will to men? |
8389 | What would we be in another world, and what would we be here without it? |
8389 | What would we have been if the people in any age of the world had done just as the doctors told them? |
8389 | What would we have done if, at any age of the world, we had followed implicitly the direction of the church? |
8389 | What would we say of that man? |
8389 | What would you make it of? |
8389 | What would you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? |
8389 | What would you then think of the doctrine of vicarious sacrifice?" |
8389 | What would you think of a school- master who would kill half his pupils the first day? |
8389 | What wrong would there be to see one of those grand plays on Sunday? |
8389 | When I get through with it, suppose I think in my heart and in my brain,"I do n''t believe a word of it;"and you ask me,"What do you think of it?" |
8389 | When I was a little boy, children went to bed when they were not sleepy, and always got up when they were? |
8389 | When did the man lose the right of self- defense? |
8389 | When does that mean? |
8389 | When he is of no benefit, when he is a burden to those he loves, why should he remain? |
8389 | When life is of no value to him, when he can be of no real assistance to others, why should a man continue? |
8389 | When lightning leaped from the lurid cloud, he thought,"What have I been doing?" |
8389 | When the Hebrews threw down sticks before Pharaoh, and they became snakes, did he believe? |
8389 | When you see innocent men chained to the stake and the flames licking their flesh, it is natural to ask, why does God permit this? |
8389 | Where are they? |
8389 | Where did he get it? |
8389 | Where did it come from? |
8389 | Where did that doctrine of eternal punishment for the children of men come from? |
8389 | Where did the big fish go? |
8389 | Where did the serpent come from? |
8389 | Where do we get our ministers? |
8389 | Where was He going? |
8389 | Where was He going? |
8389 | Where was that doctrine of hell born? |
8389 | Where was the God that permitted slavery for two hundred years in these United States? |
8389 | Which does the world pay respect to? |
8389 | Which had the greater and the grander government? |
8389 | Which of those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? |
8389 | Which passages, O Christian, would you pick out now as having probably been written by the devil? |
8389 | Which way did He go? |
8389 | Who are the men in Europe crying out against war? |
8389 | Who are the real blasphemers? |
8389 | Who are the witnesses to the truth of the narratives of the Jews''bible? |
8389 | Who bids the earthquake devour and the volcano to overwhelm? |
8389 | Who by? |
8389 | Who can establish the existence of an infinite being? |
8389 | Who can estimate the misery that has been caused by this most infamous doctrine of eternal punishment? |
8389 | Who denounced the frightful criminal code the torture of suspected persons? |
8389 | Who made the devil? |
8389 | Who on earth at this day would pretend to settle any scientific question by a text from the Bible? |
8389 | Who on earth at this day would pretend to settle any scientific question by a text from the bible? |
8389 | Who saw this miracle? |
8389 | Who sends plague, pestilence and famine? |
8389 | Who will be His successor? |
8389 | Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? |
8389 | Whose fault is it that an infinite God does not advertise? |
8389 | Why are we asked to believe those ancient gentlemen? |
8389 | Why did God pay so much attention to blasphemers, and so little to slaveholders and robbers? |
8389 | Why did God people the earth with so many idiots? |
8389 | Why did He ever allow a nation to be Without a bible? |
8389 | Why did He go dumbly to his death, and leave the world in darkness and in doubt? |
8389 | Why did He leave His words to accident, to ignorance, to malice, and to chance? |
8389 | Why did He not again enter the temple and dispute with the doctors? |
8389 | Why did He not again visit Pontius Pilate? |
8389 | Why did He not call upon Caiaphas, the high priest? |
8389 | Why did He not make another triumphal entry into Jerusalem? |
8389 | Why did He not turn the tear- stained hope of immortality to the glad knowledge of another life? |
8389 | Why did He save eight of the same kind of people to take a fresh start? |
8389 | Why did he go dumbly to His death, leaving the world to misery and to doubt? |
8389 | Why did n''t He explain the doctrine of the Trinity? |
8389 | Why did n''t He give a few leaves to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden? |
8389 | Why did n''t He have His flood first and drown the devil, before He made man and woman? |
8389 | Why did n''t He have His flood first, and then drown the devil? |
8389 | Why did n''t He kill Adam and Eve and make another pair who did n''t like apples? |
8389 | Why did n''t He make a fresh lot, kill His snake, and give His children a fair show? |
8389 | Why did n''t He post His disciples? |
8389 | Why did n''t He say something positive, definite, satisfactory, about another world? |
8389 | Why did n''t He say the old testament is true? |
8389 | Why did n''t He say,"I am God?" |
8389 | Why did n''t He settle all disputes about the trinity and about baptism? |
8389 | Why did n''t He stop right there? |
8389 | Why did n''t He tell Adam and Eve about this fellow? |
8389 | Why did n''t He tell us something about it? |
8389 | Why did n''t He tell what manner of baptism was pleasing to Him? |
8389 | Why did n''t He turn the tear- stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another life? |
8389 | Why did n''t He write His testament himself? |
8389 | Why did n''t He write to me in English? |
8389 | Why did n''t He? |
8389 | Why did n''t he watch the devil instead of watching Adam and Eve? |
8389 | Why did they disobey? |
8389 | Why do n''t they send missionaries there with copies of the old testament? |
8389 | Why do they not come up and admit what they know the book means? |
8389 | Why do we make so many mistakes? |
8389 | Why do you shock these people? |
8389 | Why does He not govern Russia as well as He does Massachusetts? |
8389 | Why does Talmage try to explain a miracle? |
8389 | Why does he not get him a plaster of paris virgin and some beads and holy water? |
8389 | Why does he not then rule one as well as another? |
8389 | Why does n''t the Congregational Church tell us? |
8389 | Why does the protestant shut his eyes when he prays? |
8389 | Why have I a brain? |
8389 | Why is Sunday the Lord''s day? |
8389 | Why is it God''s word? |
8389 | Why is it better for him to kill another man, who wishes to live? |
8389 | Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even unto this day? |
8389 | Why is it that we have advanced in the arts? |
8389 | Why is it that we have all degrees of humanity, from the idiot to the genius, if it was intended that all should think alike? |
8389 | Why is not the theological world honest? |
8389 | Why is this? |
8389 | Why not be honest with these children? |
8389 | Why not convert those we can get at? |
8389 | Why not convert those who have the immense advantage of the example of the average pioneer? |
8389 | Why not? |
8389 | Why not? |
8389 | Why not? |
8389 | Why pursue that which you have? |
8389 | Why should God be so particular about my believing his book? |
8389 | Why should He make those whom He knew would be criminals? |
8389 | Why should a Christian be better than his God? |
8389 | Why should a man be afraid to think, and why should he fear to express his thoughts? |
8389 | Why should a man sentenced to imprisonment for life hesitate to still his heart? |
8389 | Why should he add to the injury? |
8389 | Why should he live, filling his days and nights, and the days and nights of others, with grief and pain, with agony and tears? |
8389 | Why should n''t men be decent enough in the management of the politics of the country for women to mingle with them? |
8389 | Why should she show mercy to a kind and noble heretic whom her God will burn in eternal fire? |
8389 | Why should the church pity a man whom her God hates? |
8389 | Why should the man, sitting amid the wreck of all he had, the loved ones dead, friends lost, seek to lengthen, to preserve his life? |
8389 | Why should the poor wretch stay and suffer? |
8389 | Why should the worshipers of God hate the lovers of men? |
8389 | Why should there have been four original multiplication tables? |
8389 | Why should these gentlemen object to a god with big fiery eyeballs, when their own Deity has eyes like a flame of fire? |
8389 | Why should they despise the mentally weak-- the diseased in brain? |
8389 | Why should this be a period of probation? |
8389 | Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his foxes, while others, holding the nebular hypothesis in utter contempt, go straight to heaven? |
8389 | Why should we convert the heathen of China and kill our own? |
8389 | Why should we help religion? |
8389 | Why should we object to their worshiping God as they please? |
8389 | Why should we send bibles to the East and muskets to the West? |
8389 | Why should we send missionaries across the seas, and soldiers over the plains? |
8389 | Why should we send missionaries to China if we can not convert the heathen when they come here? |
8389 | Why should we think Thomas Paine was afraid to die? |
8389 | Why should we throw away the law given to Moses by God Himself, and have the audacity to make some of our own? |
8389 | Why should you object to these people on account of their religion? |
8389 | Why so many sects? |
8389 | Why so much persecution? |
8389 | Why trouble ourselves about matters of which, however important they may be we do know nothing and can know nothing?" |
8389 | Why was it that England persecuted Scotland? |
8389 | Why were there four gospels? |
8389 | Why were we not given better brains? |
8389 | Why would Paine expect a correct answer about his writings from one who read very little of them? |
8389 | Why would he build dungeons and burn the flesh of his brother man with red hot irons? |
8389 | Why write His word in such a way that hundreds of thousands make their living explaining it? |
8389 | Why, what had he to be afraid of? |
8389 | Why; he said, did not God give a sure cure for leprosy, unless He wanted to have His chosen people to have that frightful disease?) |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Why? |
8389 | Will I be sorry I did not say I was a Christian when I was not? |
8389 | Will I be sorry when I come to die that I did not live a hypocrite? |
8389 | Will he not be damned as quick for denying geology as for denying the scheme of salvation? |
8389 | Will he not be damned as quick for denying geology as for denying the scheme of salvation? |
8389 | Will it make him more just? |
8389 | Will not a man be damned as quick for denying the equator as denying the bible? |
8389 | Will not a man be damned as quick for denying the equator as denying the bible? |
8389 | Will the fact that I was honest put a thorn in the pillow of death? |
8389 | Will you have any remorse for the mean things you have done when you are in heaven? |
8389 | Will you have the fairness to admit it? |
8389 | Would God give a bird wings and make it a crime to fly? |
8389 | Would any but a God of mercy and kindness people a world, and then drown them all? |
8389 | Would he give me brains and make it a crime to think? |
8389 | Would it give"God"pleasure to see him burn? |
8389 | Would you regard it as any evidence that he ever wrote it if he upheld slavery? |
8389 | You ask me about any thing; I examine it honestly, and when I get through, what should I tell you-- what I think or what you think? |
8389 | You do away with human love, and what are we without it? |
8389 | You go at your little child, five or six years old, with a stick in your hand-- what is he to do? |
8389 | You know what happened to Adam and his wife for her transgressions? |
8389 | You may say to me,"How far is it across this room?" |
8389 | a sneak? |
8389 | and who made that? |
8389 | and why should the American people malign the memory of that great man? |
8389 | colonel, what''s new?" |
8389 | no enemies?" |
8389 | of the man that dares not reason? |
8389 | or Voltaire, who peacefully and quietly bade his servant farewell? |
8389 | to have a mind of your own? |
8389 | why hast thou forsaken me?" |
9603 | ''The old cottage of a man of the Ch''in dynasty''is meant to imply a retreat from revolution, and how will it suit this place? 9603 Am I not right? |
9603 | Am I only free to play with you? |
9603 | And are all the rest of the young ladies quite well? |
9603 | Are forsooth the devices''the river Ch''i and the Chu Garden''not those of old authors? |
9603 | Are you again making fun of me? |
9603 | Are you going again to play the fool with me? 9603 Are you in real earnest?" |
9603 | Are you my keeper? |
9603 | Are you now going or not? |
9603 | Are you speaking in earnest,she inquired,"or are you only jesting?" |
9603 | As for some nearer place,Ming Yen observed;"to whose house can we go? |
9603 | As soon as it was daylight,she proceeded,"we started with all speed on our way here, and had we even so much as time to have any breakfast?" |
9603 | Better keep them and give them to your daughter Pao Ch''ai to wear,observed madame Wang,"and have done with it; why think of all the others?" |
9603 | But I would also ask you, Doctor, to be good enough to tell me whether this illness will, in the long run, endanger her life or not? |
9603 | But since you belong to this room, how is it I do n''t know you? |
9603 | But why do n''t you attend to any of those duties that would bring you to my notice? |
9603 | Cousin, tell me is it nice or not? |
9603 | Did I ever mention that I was going? |
9603 | Did my lady call? |
9603 | Did n''t I forget? 9603 Disentangle what?" |
9603 | Do I know what to do? |
9603 | Do I know? |
9603 | Do n''t pull me up for talking too much,she said;"but who of us country people is n''t honest and open- hearted? |
9603 | Do n''t you even recognise him? 9603 Do these words allude to me?" |
9603 | Do you also know what anguish means? |
9603 | Do you ask me? |
9603 | Do you mean to say,Hsi Jen insinuated with a sardonic smile,"that your cousin Pao- yü has leisure to stay at home?" |
9603 | Do you think you are equal to the task? |
9603 | Do you want to die? |
9603 | Does n''t your mind yet see for itself? |
9603 | Does your worthy father at home mind your having any friends? |
9603 | Does''green wax,''Pao- yü inquired,"come out from anywhere?" |
9603 | Exclusive of the Four Books,Pao- yü remarked smilingly,"the majority of works are plagiarised; and is it only I, perchance, who plagiarise? |
9603 | From what part of the standard books does that come? |
9603 | Gentlemen,he inquired,"what shall we write about this?" |
9603 | Gentlemen,observed Chia Cheng,"what name do you propose for this place?" |
9603 | Gently,smiled Hsi Jen,"for were you to let them hear, what figure would we cut?" |
9603 | Go after your business, and have done,She Yüeh interposed laughingly;"what''s the use of your coming and asking questions of people?" |
9603 | Had there been a way,observed Kou Erh, smiling sarcastically,"would I have waited up to this moment? |
9603 | Had we all gone to play,She Yüeh added,"to whom would the charge of this apartment have been handed over? |
9603 | Has after all permission for the visit been granted? |
9603 | Has this medicine any name or other of its own? |
9603 | Have these flowers,she inquired eagerly,"been sent to me alone, or have all the other girls got some too?" |
9603 | Have you also given them,she felt constrained to ask,"the purse that I gave you? |
9603 | Have you been well of late, mother? |
9603 | Have you had it,inquired lady Feng,"outside here, or over on the other side?" |
9603 | Have you heard what he said? |
9603 | Have you read any books, cousin? |
9603 | Have you received,further asked Mrs. Chou,"the monthly allowance for incense offering due on the fifteenth or not?" |
9603 | Have you seen any one else besides me? |
9603 | He''s most reasonable in his arguments,all the visitors protested,"and why should he be called to task?" |
9603 | He''s separated,they all ventured as they laughed,"by a distance of twenty or thirty li, and how can he be brought along? |
9603 | Here you are with your nonsense again,Pao Ch''ai rejoined laughingly;"is a pill a thing to be taken recklessly?" |
9603 | How all unsuitable? |
9603 | How are you? 9603 How can I not know all about this Chiao Ta?" |
9603 | How can it be that you people who have the same surname do not belong to one clan? |
9603 | How can it possibly be,Chia Cheng exclaimed,"that her ladyship knows anything about such kind of language? |
9603 | How could I possibly know? |
9603 | How could I put what happened in black and white on paper? |
9603 | How do you find her? |
9603 | How do you, who do n''t see our son''s wife very often, happen to find her? |
9603 | How ever can the liana and the ficus have such unusual scent? |
9603 | How ever could a mere child like her,speedily remonstrated madame Wang,"carry out all these matters? |
9603 | How far are you in your teens this year? |
9603 | How have I got a glib tongue? |
9603 | How is it she''s not even been over for these few days? |
9603 | How is it that from our house, no one comes to get any orders or to obtain anything? |
9603 | How is it you have n''t yet asked her to come in? |
9603 | How is it you utter not a word? |
9603 | How is it, miss,she inquired smiling,"that you have not turned in as yet?" |
9603 | How is it,asked Pao- yü,"that I did n''t see him? |
9603 | How is it,he purposely exclaimed,"that when you should speak, you contrariwise do n''t? |
9603 | How is it,interposed Tai- yü, as she once again called out to him and stopped him,"that you do n''t go and bid farewell to your cousin Pao Ch''ai?" |
9603 | How is my young lady? |
9603 | How many sisters have you got? |
9603 | How old is that servant girl? |
9603 | How would you have one make any reply? |
9603 | I daily have ample leisure,Chia Jui ventured with a simper,"and would n''t it be well if I came every day to dispel your dulness, sister- in- law?" |
9603 | I do n''t agree to that,Tai- yü rejoined;"are you people, pray, all of one mind to do nothing but make fun of me?" |
9603 | I do n''t mind your speaking,Chin Jung observed laughing;"but would you perchance not have me cough? |
9603 | I feel quite sore from fatigue,ventured lady Feng,"and how can I stand your rubbing against me? |
9603 | I heard that she had been kidnapped, ever since she was five years old; but has she only been sold recently? |
9603 | I was simply at random humming a few verses composed by former writers, and what reason is there to laud me to such an excessive degree? 9603 I was wondering whose relative he was,"he remarked;"is he really sister- in- law Huang''s nephew? |
9603 | I wonder,interposed Ch''iu Wen with alacrity,"who it is that will bring the workmen to- morrow, and supervise the works?" |
9603 | I''d like to ask you just a word, my young friend,she observed;"there''s a Mrs. Chou here; is she at home?" |
9603 | I''ll amend,Pao- yü observed,"and if I say anything of the kind again you can wring my mouth; but what else is there?" |
9603 | I''ll drink it,replied dame Chao,"but you, my lady, must also have a cup: what''s there to fear? |
9603 | I''ll give you a style,suggested Pao- yü smilingly;"wo n''t the double style''P''in P''in,''''knitting brows,''do very well?" |
9603 | I''ve often heard,continued lady Feng,"my eldest uncle say that things were in such a state, and how could n''t I believe? |
9603 | I''ve only just recovered from a fit of crying,dowager lady Chia observed, as she smiled,"and have you again come to start me? |
9603 | If I be wanton, it''s my own look- out;P''ing Erh answered, from outside the window, with a grin,"and who told you to arouse your affections? |
9603 | If all we do is to go on nagging in this way,Pao- yü remarked smiling,"will I any more be afraid to die? |
9603 | If it be really the case that all my cousins have come over,Pao- yü ventured with a smirk,"how is it that I do n''t see them?" |
9603 | If such be the case,madame Wang readily suggested,"why should n''t we bring her here?" |
9603 | If that wo n''t do,the party smiled,"well then what about the four characters implying''An old cottage of a man of the Ch''in dynasty?''" |
9603 | If they do n''t allude to you,she continued,"to whom do they?" |
9603 | If this,she said,"is really not nice, where are you going? |
9603 | If you encourage such ideas,remonstrated lady Feng,"how can this illness ever get all right? |
9603 | If you''re bent upon chatting,she urgently inquired, upon seeing P''ing Erh outside the window,"why do n''t you go into the room? |
9603 | In that case,observed Pao- yü,"what scent is it?" |
9603 | In this covered bowl,she continued to inquire,"is cream, and why not give it to me to eat?" |
9603 | In this felicitous first moon what are you blubbering for? |
9603 | In whose family? |
9603 | Is it indeed cousin Pao- yü? |
9603 | Is it likely that I have, like others, Buddhistic disciples,Tai- yü asked laughing ironically,"or worthies to give me novel kinds of scents? |
9603 | Is it likely that others can safely come and that you and I ca n''t? 9603 Is it really about this that you''ve come?" |
9603 | Is it really she? |
9603 | Is it really so? 9603 Is it snowing?" |
9603 | Is n''t Hsüeh P''an at home? |
9603 | Is n''t it strange? 9603 Is n''t it to the cousin born with jade in his mouth, that you are alluding to, aunt?" |
9603 | Is n''t this a scented stick to show the watch? |
9603 | Is sister( Pao Ch''ai) all right again? |
9603 | Is that it? |
9603 | Is there anything in excess? |
9603 | Is there anything short or not? |
9603 | Is there to be any entertainment or not? |
9603 | Is this a cracker? |
9603 | Is your mistress,observed lady Feng,"so like a quick- footed demon?" |
9603 | It is easy enough for us to see each other,( she said,)"and why should we indulge in any excess of grief? |
9603 | It is n''t likely you would wish to come over here to me? |
9603 | It was n''t convenient for them,remarked lady Feng,"to be over here; but who knows what they have again gone to do behind our backs?" |
9603 | It was only yesterday,he hastily added,"that I saw him, and he was still bright and cheery; and how is it that he''s anything but well now?" |
9603 | It''s enough,she rejoined,"that there''s nothing short; and how could there really turn out to be anything over and above?" |
9603 | Just see,remarked lady Feng,"how hard pressed I am; which place can do without me? |
9603 | Letting you off,rejoined Chia Se,"is no difficult thing; but how much, I wonder, are you likely to give? |
9603 | May I venture to trouble my Fairy,he said,"to take me along for a turn into the interior of each of these Boards? |
9603 | May it not be,he thought,"that she is not coming again; and that I may have once more to freeze for another whole night?" |
9603 | May she not,remarked madame Hsing, taking up the thread of the conversation,"be ailing for some happy event?" |
9603 | Miss Lin has gone long ago,observed all of them, as they burst out laughing,"and do you offer her tea?" |
9603 | My dear child,Pu Shih- jen exclaimed,"had I anything that I could call my own, your uncle as I am, would n''t I feel bound to do something for you? |
9603 | My dear cousin,Pao- yü continued smirkingly,"how is it that you combed it for me in former times?" |
9603 | My dear cousin,Pao- yü said to her smilingly,"tell me without any prevarication which of the three characters is the best written?" |
9603 | My dear cousin,pleaded Pao- yü entreatingly,"how is it you''ve seen mine?" |
9603 | My dear sister,he said,"how is it you are n''t again yourself? |
9603 | My dear sister- in- law,she replied,"as I gazed upon her, were my heart and eyes, pray, full of admiration or not? |
9603 | My dear sister- in- law,she said as she smiled,"sleep in peace; I''m on my way back to- day, and wo n''t even you accompany me just one stage? |
9603 | My senior aunt, you said you had something to tell me, Pao- yü observed; what''s it, I wonder? |
9603 | My worthy Sir,he observed with a forced smile;"how is it you are leaning against the door and looking out? |
9603 | My young ancestor,replied Li Kuei,"who presumes to look forward to an invitation? |
9603 | Of these how many kinds have by this time been got ready? 9603 Of whose family is she the mistress?" |
9603 | On the 21st,lady Feng explained,"is cousin Hsüeh''s birthday, and what do you, after all, purpose doing?" |
9603 | Pao- yü, may I ask you something? 9603 Relatives,"she continued,"of one family, as we are, what need is there to say anything of tender years?" |
9603 | She''s in that room, is n''t she? |
9603 | Since you remain in here, there''s less need for me to go,resumed She Yüeh,"for we two can chat and play and laugh; and wo n''t that be nice?" |
9603 | Sir Priest,the stone replied with assurance,"why are you so excessively dull? |
9603 | Sister Chou, what took you over on the other side? |
9603 | Study is a most excellent thing, and without it a whole lifetime is a mere waste, and what good comes in the long run? 9603 That goes without saying,"added Chia Lien,"otherwise, for what purpose could we be in such a stir just now?" |
9603 | That jade of yours is besides a rare object, and how could every one have one? |
9603 | The day after to- morrow,she felt obliged to add,"is again our senior''s, Mr. Chia Ching''s birthday, and how are we to celebrate it after all?" |
9603 | The fears you express are well founded,she urgently remarked,"but what plan is there adequate to preserve it from future injury?" |
9603 | The only thing is that crowds of people are ever passing from there, and how will it be possible for me to evade detection? |
9603 | The other day,she observed,"some things were taken out, and have you brought them all in or not?" |
9603 | The senior ladies occupy the seats of honour,remonstrated lady Feng,"and how can I presume to choose?" |
9603 | The two words''flower- laden bank,''she said,"are really felicitous, so what use was there for''persicary beach?''" |
9603 | There are even many,she explained,"that are strangers to you; and is it only myself? |
9603 | There you are again with your nonsense,exclaimed lady Chia, sneeringly;"how could you have seen her before?" |
9603 | There''s not a single person in the room,P''ing Erh rejoined,"and what shall I stay and do with him?" |
9603 | These are indeed the only four characters,rejoined Chia Cheng,"that could be suitably used; but what''s to be said as far as the scroll goes?" |
9603 | They''re all well done,she rejoined, with a smirk,"How is it you''ve written them so well? |
9603 | This Taoist,he thought,"would seem to speak sensibly, and why should I not look at it and try its effect?" |
9603 | This child too is somewhat simple,observed Chia Chen;"for what need has she to be taking off her clothes, and changing them for others? |
9603 | This is, however, anonymous; whose work is it? |
9603 | This lad,lady Feng observed smiling,"is when dressed up( as a girl), a living likeness of a certain person; did you notice it just now?" |
9603 | This offence can, anyhow, be condoned; but, what is more, why did you also wink at Yün Erh? 9603 This perfume,"she said,"is not to be found in the world, and how could you discern what it is? |
9603 | To what can you be alluding? |
9603 | To- day,she also asked of goody Liu,"were you simply passing by? |
9603 | Under the bed,continued Pao- yü,"is heaped up all that money, and is n''t it enough yet for you to lose from?" |
9603 | Under the heavens many are the hills and rivers,Pao- yü rejoined,"and how could you know them all? |
9603 | Venerable Sir,they pleaded,"why need you be so down upon him? |
9603 | Wait a while,he therefore said smilingly;"let me unravel this excellent- finality song of yours; do you mind?" |
9603 | Was it necessary that you should have done so much as made the comparison,Tai- yü urged,"and was there any need of even any laughter from you? |
9603 | We''ll go to- morrow,Hsiang- yün rejoined;"for what''s the use of remaining here any longer-- to look at people''s mouths and faces?" |
9603 | Well, in that case,Pao- yü rejoined with a smirking face,"where does this scent come from?" |
9603 | Were I,Hsi Jen smiled sardonically,"to lose my temper over such concerns, would I be able to stand one moment longer in this room? |
9603 | What Hsiang Ling ever came? |
9603 | What about regret? |
9603 | What about the whole company, and they and I? |
9603 | What an idea? |
9603 | What are these cold fragrance pills,remarked Pao- yü smiling,"that they have such a fine smell? |
9603 | What are you in such a hurry for? |
9603 | What are you running over here for at this time? |
9603 | What are you sighing for? |
9603 | What are you staring vacantly for? |
9603 | What books are my cousins reading? |
9603 | What can there possibly be to tell you? |
9603 | What can this thing be? |
9603 | What can we two do? 9603 What characters may I ask,"it consequently inquired,"will you inscribe? |
9603 | What did she have to say for herself during this visit to- day? |
9603 | What did you dream of? |
9603 | What did your father at home tell you to say? |
9603 | What do I care about how many? |
9603 | What do you feel like after all when this complaint manifests itself? |
9603 | What do you, gentlemen, think of this argument? |
9603 | What felicitous occurrence will take place? |
9603 | What flowers? |
9603 | What foul man has taken hold of them? |
9603 | What have I been up to again,he asked,"that you''re once more at me with your advice? |
9603 | What have you come back again for? |
9603 | What have you found out? |
9603 | What have you people invited me to come here for? |
9603 | What intimate friend is this again? |
9603 | What is an office- philactery? |
9603 | What is it? |
9603 | What is the matter? |
9603 | What is the meaning,therefore inquired Pao- yü,"of the Principal Record of the Twelve Maidens of Chin Ling?" |
9603 | What is the name of this tea? |
9603 | What is their price? |
9603 | What is there in your idea to be done? |
9603 | What is this place? |
9603 | What is your worthy name, cousin? |
9603 | What kind of magical mirror is it? |
9603 | What matters are these? |
9603 | What need is there to go to such trouble? |
9603 | What perfume have you used, my cousin,he forthwith asked,"to fumigate your dresses with? |
9603 | What time did you come over? |
9603 | What was cousin Pao Ch''ai doing at home? |
9603 | What wish is it you have? |
9603 | What would you then suggest? |
9603 | What''s it? |
9603 | What''s that you''re saying? |
9603 | What''s the book? |
9603 | What''s the device to be for this spot? |
9603 | What''s the good,protested Pao- yü,"of talking in this happy first moon of dying and of living?" |
9603 | What''s the hurry? |
9603 | What''s the matter with you? |
9603 | What''s the matter? |
9603 | What''s the name of this water- gate? |
9603 | What''s the use,they said,"of asking him? |
9603 | What''s there impossible about this? |
9603 | What''s there that I could n''t be equal to? |
9603 | What''s this that you''re driving at? |
9603 | What''s your name? |
9603 | When did you get here? |
9603 | When was I ever in the room? |
9603 | When you get into a passion, it''s easy enough for you to beat and abuse people; but what makes you fling away that stem of life? |
9603 | Where are the three characters I wrote? |
9603 | Where can I go? |
9603 | Where did you see them? |
9603 | Where do you come from? |
9603 | Where do you find the propriety,a nurse thereupon interposed,"of an uncle going to sleep in the room of a nephew''s wife?" |
9603 | Where does this water again issue from? |
9603 | Where have all the gentlemen gone to? |
9603 | Where is that bald- pated and crotchety superior of yours gone? |
9603 | Where shall I go over to? |
9603 | Which four characters? |
9603 | Which is the gentleman,he inquired of Chia Chen,"who was born with a piece of jade in his mouth? |
9603 | Which of them are you? |
9603 | Whither do you purpose taking the object you have brought away? |
9603 | Who are in attendance upon Pao- yü? |
9603 | Who does n''t know him? |
9603 | Who gave you this name? |
9603 | Who has been telling old stories? |
9603 | Who has ever asked you about it? |
9603 | Who has, pray,he hastily inquired smilingly, after arriving at the end of his reflections,"indulged in Buddhistic mysteries? |
9603 | Who is it? |
9603 | Who is it? |
9603 | Who is it? |
9603 | Who is n''t aware of these facts? |
9603 | Who of us has n''t seen a tiao? |
9603 | Who presses your head down,Chia Cheng urged,"and uses force that you must come out with all these remarks?" |
9603 | Who tells you to become a robber? |
9603 | Who told you to bring it? |
9603 | Who ventures to make fun of you? |
9603 | Who''s gone mad again? |
9603 | Who''s now in charge of the issue of the monthly allowances to the various temples? |
9603 | Who''s this called Hsi Jen? |
9603 | Whom have you told off to escort him? |
9603 | Whose nail,she went on to inquire,"has scratched this open?" |
9603 | Why did n''t you tell me they had come before? |
9603 | Why did you not speak about this sooner? |
9603 | Why did you, a short while back,Yü- ts''un inquired,"not allow me to issue the warrants?" |
9603 | Why do they want to redeem you? |
9603 | Why have you come back? |
9603 | Why is it,the Chia consort inquired,"that there is no tablet in this Hall?" |
9603 | Why is this Mr. Jui so bent upon coming?'' 9603 Why need you be so modest?" |
9603 | Why notice a creature like her? |
9603 | Why say I did n''t wear it? |
9603 | Why should I allude to it? |
9603 | Why should I cry? |
9603 | Why should I urge him on? |
9603 | Why should n''t she release me? |
9603 | Why should this beast compass his own death? 9603 Why should we wait for them?" |
9603 | Why that? |
9603 | Why then ask after her? 9603 Why, who wants to play with you?" |
9603 | Will you also screen him? |
9603 | With the terms of friendship,he added,"which have existed for so many generations( between our families), is there any need for such apologies?" |
9603 | Would not the four characters:''a phoenix comes with dignified air,''be better? |
9603 | Would we eat anything with all that riff- raff? |
9603 | You are not well? |
9603 | You do n''t mean to tell me,observed Mrs. Yu,"that you do n''t know this Chiao Ta? |
9603 | You may well have heard the two words''hao liao,''answered the Taoist with a smile,"but can you be said to have fathomed their meaning? |
9603 | You people,he said,"remain waiting upon him the whole day long at school, but what books has he after all read? |
9603 | You should really be called Hui Ch''i,( latent fragrance), that would be proper; and why such stuff as Hui Hsiang,( orchid fragrance)? |
9603 | You''re again up to your larks,she observed,"but what''s the aim of your visit? |
9603 | Your name is,he said,"no trumped- up story; for you, verily, resemble a precious gem; but where''s the valuable trinket you had in your mouth?" |
9603 | Your style? |
9603 | Your words are quite devoid of sense,Tai- yü added;"whether you go or not what''s that to me? |
9603 | ''A natural landscape,''says, an ancient author in four words; and why? |
9603 | ''How could you be more ingenious than they?'' |
9603 | ''How many kinds of rice are there?'' |
9603 | A matron, who was attached as a personal attendant( to Mrs. Ch''in,) and who happened to be standing by interposed:"How could it be otherwise?" |
9603 | Addressing at the same time the matrons, she went on to ask,"Have Miss Lin''s luggage and effects been brought in? |
9603 | After Chia Cheng had retired out of the hall, the Chia consort made it a point to ask:"How is it that I do not see Pao- yü?" |
9603 | After a time, the lady relatives dispersed, and madame Wang seized the opportunity to inquire of lady Feng,"What do you purpose doing to- day?" |
9603 | After the mutual salutations, Hsi Jen went on to ask of Pao- yü:"Where did you have your repast? |
9603 | All the members of my family are elsewhere, and there''s only myself in this place, so that how could I end my days here?" |
9603 | Am I right in assuming this or not?" |
9603 | Among the party of attendants was an old man, who interposed,"Do n''t baffle her object,"he expostulated;"why make a fool of her?" |
9603 | An ingenious wife can not make boiled rice without raw rice; and what would you have me do? |
9603 | And as she spoke,"Is our carriage ready?" |
9603 | And did she come to know about it would she again ever forgive me?" |
9603 | And hastily taking once more Tai- yü''s hand in her own:"How old are you, cousin?" |
9603 | And is this now enough for wines, and enough for the theatricals?" |
9603 | And that how is it possible for us to continue our studies in here?" |
9603 | And with such a temperament and deportment as hers, which of our relatives and which of our elders do n''t love her?'' |
9603 | Are the generals and ministers who have been from ages of old still in the flesh, forsooth? |
9603 | Are you also perchance well aware of the place of retreat of this homicide?" |
9603 | As Yü- ts''un bowed and expressed his appreciation in most profuse language,--"Pray,"he asked,"where does your honoured brother- in- law reside? |
9603 | As the proverb has it: The Emperor himself has three families of poverty- stricken relatives; and how much more such as you and I?" |
9603 | Besides, does his conduct consist, for the most part, of anything that would make one get any face? |
9603 | Besides, have I forsooth had a single acre of land or a couple of houses, the value of which I''ve run through as soon as it came into my hands? |
9603 | Besides, were we to have our house got ready in a scramble, wo n''t it make people think it strange? |
9603 | But I have sure enough found you out, so what''s the need of still prevaricating? |
9603 | But I wonder whether you will entertain favourably my modest invitation?" |
9603 | But am I here to afford you people amusement that you will compare me to an actress, and make the whole lot have a laugh at me?" |
9603 | But did she ever imagine that I would freeze to death?" |
9603 | But do n''t we forsooth, even so much as come up to you? |
9603 | But do you and yours, perchance, know of any good practitioner?" |
9603 | But do you think that young gentleman, Mr. Hsüeh, would yield his claim to her person? |
9603 | But espying She Yüeh enter the room, he said with alacrity:"What''s up with your sister?" |
9603 | But fancy allowing servants in this household to go on in this way; why, what will be the end of it?" |
9603 | But how is it that the Chia family have likewise fallen into this common practice?" |
9603 | But if you, sir, go on in this way, will you not, instead of doing him any good, aggravate his illness?" |
9603 | But may it please your worship to consider carefully this plan and see what you think of it?" |
9603 | But raise your eyes and look about you; who is n''t your venerable ladyship''s son and daughter? |
9603 | But reader, do you want to know the sequel? |
9603 | But suddenly, she saw Pao- ch''ai come in and inquire:"Where''s cousin Pao- yü gone?" |
9603 | But tell me, are there any that will do among the mottoes suggested just now by all the gentlemen?" |
9603 | But these words of mine are also incorrect, eh? |
9603 | But this remark was scarcely ended when they heard his wife say:"Are you again in the clouds? |
9603 | But was it likely that Pao- yü would be willing to go back? |
9603 | But what you''ve lost are simply a few cash, and do you behave in this manner? |
9603 | But what''s to be done now?" |
9603 | But when did I hear you, pray, give me a word of advice of any kind?" |
9603 | But when he saw that Lin Tai- yü was at the moment in the room, Pao- yü speedily inquired of her:"Which place do you think best to live in?" |
9603 | But where do you come from at this time?" |
9603 | But who do you presume is this lady Secunda? |
9603 | But who would have anticipated that he could ever in his quiet seclusion have become a prey to a spirit of restlessness? |
9603 | But who would have foreseen the issue? |
9603 | But why discuss third parties? |
9603 | But why should I not go in and inquire for myself?" |
9603 | But would Pao- yü agree to not introducing them into the garden? |
9603 | But would Pao- yü, upon hearing these words, submit to this decree? |
9603 | Ch''in Chung answered laughing;"do you fear that if you told her to pour you one, that she would n''t; and what need is there that I should tell her?" |
9603 | Chia Yün upon hearing this propitious language, hastily drew near one step, and designedly asked:"Does really uncle often refer to me?" |
9603 | Chih Neng compressed her lips and sneeringly rejoined,"Are you going to have a fight even over a cup of tea? |
9603 | Chih Neng got in a dreadful state, and stamping her feet, cried,"What are you up to?" |
9603 | Chou Jui''s wife then asked Hsiang Ling,"At what age did you enter this family? |
9603 | Chou?" |
9603 | Chou?" |
9603 | Consider, how many drops of tears can there be in the eyes? |
9603 | Contentment and pleasure are to be found in whose family courts? |
9603 | Do n''t you yet get out of this?" |
9603 | Do you forsooth mean to imply that my wish is to become your tool? |
9603 | Do you maintain that their union will not be remarkable? |
9603 | Do you perhaps know him?" |
9603 | Facing the breeze, her shadow she doth watch, Who''s meet this moonlight night with her to match? |
9603 | For have I, do you imagine, gone to the trouble of having a performance and laying a feast for their special benefit? |
9603 | For what purpose have I for all these days racked my heart with woes? |
9603 | From old till now of parents soft many, But filial sons and grandsons who have seen? |
9603 | From old till now the statesmen where are they? |
9603 | Had it in past days been treated with such medicine as could strengthen the heart, and improve the respiration, would it have reached this stage? |
9603 | Had we not others to depend upon for your studies, would we have in our house the means sufficient to engage a teacher? |
9603 | Had you told me just one word at an early hour, what could n''t have been brought about? |
9603 | Has Mr. Pao- yü perhaps given you offence?" |
9603 | Has not your lady, may I ask, heretofore at the period of the catamenia, suffered, if indeed not from anaemia, then necessarily from plethora? |
9603 | Have you even forgotten the place where you started in life? |
9603 | Have you got any jade or not?" |
9603 | Having arrived in a short while,"How many sorts of things are there in all?" |
9603 | Having forthwith given directions to bring fire and burn it, a voice was heard in the air to say,"Who told you to look into the face of it? |
9603 | Having passed these remarks, she inquired of Mrs. Chou,"Have you let madame know, yes or no?" |
9603 | Her gracefulness? |
9603 | Her modesty? |
9603 | His mother, née Hu, hearing him mutter;"Why meddle again,"she explained,"in things that do n''t concern you? |
9603 | How can I know what goes on between you two?" |
9603 | How can this not make my heart sore- stricken?" |
9603 | How could I ever presume to pick out hers?" |
9603 | How could you know the beauties of this play? |
9603 | How could you remember such as ourselves?" |
9603 | How did it happen that our aunt died at such an early period?" |
9603 | How ever could she come up to you?" |
9603 | How is it that you at once do what she bids you, with even greater alacrity than you would an imperial edict?" |
9603 | How is it then that you do n''t find your way as far as there; for she may possibly remember old times, and some good may, no one can say, come of it? |
9603 | How is it, cousin, that you did n''t understand what I meant to imply?" |
9603 | How is that you have no sense of shame?'' |
9603 | How is your wife getting on? |
9603 | How many servants has she brought along with her? |
9603 | How much did you lose?" |
9603 | Hsi Jen did not make any reply to his first question, and it was only when he had repeated it that Hsi Jen remarked:"Do you ask me? |
9603 | Hsi Jen immediately picked up the hair- pin, as she remarked:"What''s up with you at this early hour of the morning? |
9603 | Hsi Jen replied;"and do you still expect me to tell you?" |
9603 | Huang?" |
9603 | I have besides no revenue collectors as relatives, or friends in official positions; and what way could we devise? |
9603 | I myself am looked upon as having the gift of the gab, but why is it that I ca n''t talk in such a wise as to put down this monkey? |
9603 | I simply went over to her place for a run, and that quite casually, and will you insinuate all these things?" |
9603 | I think he''s in the library; but why not go and see for yourself, uncle Pao?" |
9603 | I''ll take P''ing Erh over and exchange her for her; what do you say to that? |
9603 | I''ll tell you what, however; if you have anything to say, why not utter it in intelligible language? |
9603 | I''ve often had the honour of being your guest, and what will it matter if I wait a little?" |
9603 | If the union will you say, be strange, how is it then that their love affair will be but empty words? |
9603 | In days of plenty there''s a lack of dearth and of distress, And what need then is there to plough and weave with such briskness? |
9603 | In plenteous streams the candles''tears do drop, but for whom do they weep? |
9603 | In the same way, this calamity of birth and the visitation of death, who is able to escape? |
9603 | Is it because you''re more respectable than they that you do n''t choose to listen to my words?" |
9603 | Is it forsooth likely that there''s honey in my hand?" |
9603 | Is it forsooth nice to think that people have n''t so much as a hand- stove, and that one has fussily to be sent over from home? |
9603 | Is it indeed she? |
9603 | Is it likely that gentlemen will cheat you? |
9603 | Is it likely that you bear me a grudge for being about to go to school, because when I leave you, you''ll all feel dull?" |
9603 | Is it likely that you expect some one to request you to confer upon us the favour of your instruction?" |
9603 | Is it likely you would have me go and play the robber?" |
9603 | Is it likely you would n''t have us speak to each other?" |
9603 | Is it perchance about him that you are inquiring?" |
9603 | Is it perchance that you expect us young ladies to go and intercede for you? |
9603 | Is it perhaps, who knows, that aunt is a stranger in this establishment, and that we have in fact no right to come over here to see her?" |
9603 | Is n''t it?" |
9603 | Is n''t this absurd, eh?" |
9603 | Is there perchance any news astir in the streets, or in the public places?" |
9603 | It''s really written in beautiful style; and were you to once begin reading it, why even for your very rice you would n''t have a thought?" |
9603 | Jui?" |
9603 | Jung?" |
9603 | Lady Feng having again called Mrs. Chou, asked her:"When you first informed madame about them, what did she say?" |
9603 | Like a dragon in motion wriggling in a stream; Her refinement? |
9603 | Like a fir- tree growing in a barren plain; Her comeliness? |
9603 | Like a white plum in spring with snow nestling in its broken skin; Her purity? |
9603 | Lin Tai- yü just happened to be standing by, and having set the question to Pao- yü"Where do you come from?" |
9603 | May I be allowed, I wonder, to do so?" |
9603 | May I not be allowed to judge for myself?" |
9603 | Mrs. Chou looked at her for some time before she at length smiled and replied,"Old goody Liu, are you well? |
9603 | Mrs. Chou promptly asked the nurse in a low tone of voice:"Is the young lady asleep at this early hour? |
9603 | Mrs. Chou was bent upon making some further remark, when madame Wang was suddenly heard to enquire,"Who is in here?" |
9603 | Now besides from the heavens has dropped such a mighty piece of good luck; and in what place will there be no need of servants? |
9603 | Now does your worship know who this girl is who was sold?" |
9603 | Now had he broken that jade, as he hurled it on the ground, would n''t it have been my fault? |
9603 | Now tell me, are not these words ridiculous? |
9603 | Now were he to come to- day, and I to come to- morrow, would n''t there be, by a division of this kind, always some one with you every day? |
9603 | Now what do you say to this? |
9603 | Now wo n''t this be a considerable saving of trouble?" |
9603 | Now, Sir Priest, what are your views on the subject?" |
9603 | Now, how can you ever compare yourself with her? |
9603 | Now, reader, do you want to know the sequel? |
9603 | Now, sister- in- law, tell me, is my heart sore or not? |
9603 | Now, tell me, was not this a novel and strange occurrence? |
9603 | Nurse Li however still kept on asking about Pao- yü,"How much rice he now ate at one meal? |
9603 | Old goody Liu was already by this time prostrated on the ground, and after making several obeisances,"How are you, my lady?" |
9603 | P''ing Erh forthwith entered the room on this side, and upon perceiving Chou Jui''s wife:"What have you come here again for, my old lady?" |
9603 | Pao- yü and the rest lost no time in rising and offering her a seat, whereupon Pao Ch''ai added with a smile,"How can you say such things?" |
9603 | Pao- yü at this question, could not for a time unfold its meaning:"What''warm''scent?" |
9603 | Pao- yü eagerly exclaimed smiling,"if I said that she should come to our house, does it necessarily imply that she should be a servant? |
9603 | Pao- yü observed advisingly;"and had n''t you made sport of her, would she have presumed to have said anything about you?" |
9603 | Pao- yü then kept his hands off, and as he laughed,"Tell me,"he asked,"will you again come out with all those words or not?" |
9603 | Perceiving him in this plight,"What is the matter?" |
9603 | Reader, can you suggest whence the story begins? |
9603 | Reader, do you wish to know what follows? |
9603 | Secundus?" |
9603 | She perused these lines twice, and, turning round, she asked Ying Erh laughingly:"Why do n''t you go and pour the tea? |
9603 | Shih- yin upon hearing these words, hastily came up to the priest,"What were you so glibly holding forth?" |
9603 | So long as you do n''t pry into my doings it will be enough; and will I go so far as to bear you a grudge?" |
9603 | Tai- yü urged,"are n''t those pillows outside? |
9603 | Taking also his hand in his, he inquired of Pao- yü what was his age? |
9603 | Tell me, my lady,( what''s come to) Wang Erh''s wife? |
9603 | The clothes may be no matter how fine, but what is their worth, after all? |
9603 | The conversation ran on what had occurred after the separation, and Yü- ts''un inquired,"Is there any news of any kind in the capital?" |
9603 | The nurse called out to them and stopped them,"Have you two gentlemen,"she said,"come out from seeing master?" |
9603 | The only thing is that if she goes on, day after day, doing nothing else than clamour in this manner, how can she let people get along? |
9603 | The poet says appositely:-- Pages full of silly litter, Tears a handful sour and bitter; All a fool the author hold, But their zest who can unfold? |
9603 | The pond who ever sinuous could hold? |
9603 | The whole body of doctors who at present go in and out of our household, are they worth having? |
9603 | Their encounter was likewise not accidental; for had it been, how was it that this Feng Yüan took a fancy to Ying Lien? |
9603 | There are now in the garden some young actors engaged in making their preparations?" |
9603 | There is n''t, I hope, any objection to my seeing him?" |
9603 | These were the sentiments affixed below: When riches will have flown will honours then avail? |
9603 | They have this very day got the paper, and gone to paste it; and would they, for whatever they need, have still waited until they had been sent for? |
9603 | This Chin Jung,"he went on to inquire as he turned towards Lei Kuei,"is the relative or friend of what branch of the family?" |
9603 | This Hsüeh family, just a while back spoken of, how could your worship presume to provoke? |
9603 | This is a private room; so that if you sat down, what would it matter?" |
9603 | This is the inevitable destiny of dissolution and continuance which prevails in the mortal world, and what need is there to indulge in useless grief? |
9603 | This was your idea was n''t it? |
9603 | To what, my dear Sir, do I owe the pleasure of your visit?" |
9603 | Upon asking"What''s the matter?" |
9603 | Was it only to give our minds to eating fruit?" |
9603 | Were it not for Chiao Ta, and him alone, where would your office, honours, riches and dignity be? |
9603 | Were you allowed to go on in this mysterious manner, what strange doings would you be up to? |
9603 | Were your master Mr. Chen to hear of it, would you die or live?" |
9603 | What are the duties of the one you want, I wonder?" |
9603 | What are, however, the events recorded in this work? |
9603 | What do you say; will this suit you or not?" |
9603 | What else is there besides?" |
9603 | What errand have n''t you delivered as yet, ma; and what is it you''re holding?" |
9603 | What help is there, but Heaven''s will to brook? |
9603 | What is her chastity like? |
9603 | What is most valuable is a precious thing; and what is most firm is jade, but what value do you possess and what firmness is innate in you?" |
9603 | What is this hazy notion about relatives distant or close? |
9603 | What medicines are you taking? |
9603 | What name will it be fit to give it?" |
9603 | What place is there that you ca n''t go to and play; and who told you to run over there and bring upon yourself all this shame?" |
9603 | What was the germ of love? |
9603 | What was this idea which you had resolved in your mind? |
9603 | What would one then do?" |
9603 | What''s it?" |
9603 | What''s the need of staying here and beating this gourd of ennui?" |
9603 | What''s there so pressing that has prevented you from returning home? |
9603 | When Chia Cheng heard these words, he exclaimed:"You''re talking still more stuff and nonsense?" |
9603 | When Hsi Jen perceived the tone, so unlike that of other days, with which these words were pronounced:"What''s this that you''re saying?" |
9603 | When Pao- yü heard this news,"Who''ll go,"he speedily ascertained of the waiting- maids,"and inquire after her? |
9603 | When tea was over,"Judging,"he inquired,"Doctor, from the present action of the pulses, is there any remedy or not?" |
9603 | When the seniors of the family still lived, they all looked upon him with exceptional regard; but who at present ventures to interfere with him? |
9603 | When will you give us a few sheets to stick on the wall?" |
9603 | Whence cometh all this mixed confusion on a day so still? |
9603 | Whence will,"he therefore went on to ask,"the money required for this purpose come from?" |
9603 | Where was she born? |
9603 | Whether you listen or not is of no consequence; and is it worth while that you should behave as you do?" |
9603 | Which of those foster brothers whom you have now discarded, is n''t clearly better than others? |
9603 | While lady Feng advanced leisurely, she inquired,"How many plays have been recited?" |
9603 | Who are the dramatis personae? |
9603 | Who else has come along with him?" |
9603 | Who is it then that your Worship purposes having arrested?" |
9603 | Who''s your sister? |
9603 | Why ask about price? |
9603 | Why do n''t you yet salute your cousin?" |
9603 | Why how then is it that he has come to meet her again in this existence? |
9603 | Why my brother was with me here last month; did n''t you see him? |
9603 | Why not pack him off to some distant farm, and have done with him?" |
9603 | Why should not you and I avail ourselves of this opportunity to likewise go down into the world? |
9603 | Why then should you not go?" |
9603 | Why, if you keep him in your house, wo n''t he be a source of mischief? |
9603 | Why, in whose household is there anything substantial? |
9603 | Will not thy heart be charmed on thy visit by the sight? |
9603 | Will this do?" |
9603 | Would n''t the four characters be better denoting''an isthmus with smart weed, and a stream with flowers''?" |
9603 | You have to bear suspense only for two or three days, and what need is there to be sorrowful and dejected?'' |
9603 | You yourselves have mistaken what is false for what is true, and why burn this glass of mine?" |
9603 | You''ll find sitting here,"she continued,"very dull, and why not go out and have a stroll?" |
9603 | You''ve come from far off with a pure heart and honest purpose, and how can I ever not show you the way how to see this living Buddha? |
9603 | and also inquired,"In what year of your teens are you? |
9603 | and at what time he went to sleep?" |
9603 | and did n''t they inquire of you where you were going?" |
9603 | and do n''t you yet carefully and circumspectly put it on? |
9603 | and do n''t you yet put down the money?" |
9603 | and do you not remember what occurred, in years gone by, in the Hu Lu Temple?" |
9603 | and do you want to fool me now?" |
9603 | and forthwith entering the grotto, Chia Cheng went on to ask of Chia Chen,"Are there any boats or not?" |
9603 | and had she given me any offence, what concern would that too have been of yours?" |
9603 | and have you still an eye as envious and a heart so covetous? |
9603 | and how could they continue to drop from autumn to winter and from spring to flow till summer time? |
9603 | and how many more are short?" |
9603 | and how then could I speak as I should?" |
9603 | and if successful in effecting the salvation of a few of them, will it not be a work meritorious and virtuous?" |
9603 | and in what place will they descend?" |
9603 | and is it likely, pray, that in the future there will only be cousin Pao- yü to carry you, our old lady, on his head, up the Wu T''ai Shan? |
9603 | and is n''t it better than he should return home? |
9603 | and is n''t this raising yourself up li by li? |
9603 | and now do you wait until he has summoned a man of glorious fortune and prosperous standing to at last desist?" |
9603 | and of what place are you a native?" |
9603 | and were he to have heard that my lady had private means, would he not have been still more reckless in spending? |
9603 | and were she even to wear out a suit of new clothes a- day, what would that too amount to? |
9603 | and were you to have shown them some favour and consideration, who would have ventured to have said''do n''t?'' |
9603 | and what do you make other people think of you?" |
9603 | and what do you mean, instead, by running out, and speaking with the window between?" |
9603 | and what is his official capacity? |
9603 | and what place will I be taken to? |
9603 | and what time did you come back?" |
9603 | and whence does she come? |
9603 | and where are your father and mother at present?" |
9603 | and who has n''t been dismounted from her horse by Hsi Jen? |
9603 | and whom would you like me to go and ask; who''s it that does n''t back you? |
9603 | and why did you wait until things came to such a pass, and did n''t even exercise any check?" |
9603 | and why then will you get angry with me?" |
9603 | and wo n''t you yet from this time change this habit of yours? |
9603 | and you again were afraid lest she should have hurt my feelings, but, had I had a row with her, what would that have been to you? |
9603 | and you just take that looking- glass and see for yourself, whether you be fit to serve tea and to hand water or not?" |
9603 | are you quite well again, sister?" |
9603 | asked Chou Jui''s wife;"but after all, what rooted kind of complaint are you subject to, miss? |
9603 | asked Pao- yü smiling;"what about sister Hsi Jen?" |
9603 | attend to them you may; but must you carry about you a placard( to make it public)? |
9603 | but from this time forth, I''ll become mute, and not say one word to you; and what if I do?" |
9603 | but to what really does it owe its rise?" |
9603 | but who are those who are, in every respect, up to the mark? |
9603 | communed goody Liu in her heart,"What can be its use?" |
9603 | do get down and let both you and I sit together in this carriage; and wo n''t that be nice?" |
9603 | eagerly observed Pao- yü with a grin, when he caught these words,"are there really eight characters too on your necklet, cousin? |
9603 | eh?" |
9603 | exclaimed Mrs. Chao,"who bade you( presume so high) as to get up into that lofty tray? |
9603 | exclaimed Yü- ts''un,"did this affair take place in that family? |
9603 | exclaimed lady Feng, as she forced a smile,"is it you who have been remiss? |
9603 | for by so doing wo n''t you yourself be aggravating your ailment?" |
9603 | for what family has such a lot of money as to indulge in this useless extravagance?" |
9603 | gently a bit; is it likely you''ve never seen any one put one on before? |
9603 | have I given away to any one what was yours?" |
9603 | have you still got this failing? |
9603 | have you,"she asked,"put on again your new clothes for? |
9603 | he asked,"are you able to undertake these commissions? |
9603 | he exclaimed,"at Yang Chou, where your official residence is, has occurred a remarkable affair; have you heard about it?" |
9603 | he exclaimed,"why should you frighten me so? |
9603 | how is she, after all, to- day?" |
9603 | inquired Hsi Jen, smiling, as she tried to stifle her blushes,"and whence comes all this perspiration?" |
9603 | is it really she?" |
9603 | nurse Li added;"do you imagine that I''m not aware of the dismissal, the other day, of Hsi Hsüeh, on account of a cup of tea? |
9603 | or did you come with any express object?" |
9603 | she asked of him;"and what did he send us over here to do? |
9603 | she exclaimed;"How is it that during the few days I''ve not seen you, you have grown so thin?" |
9603 | she inquired;"Have you been to school? |
9603 | she interposed,"and what good would come by hurting her feelings? |
9603 | she rejoined;"do I know? |
9603 | she remarked,"and do you pay any notice to me? |
9603 | sister- in- law,"exclaimed Chia Jui,"do n''t you recognise even me?" |
9603 | specially to come here? |
9603 | speedily shouted Li Kuei,"does this son of a dog happen to know of the existence of all these gnawing maggots?" |
9603 | the old lady will I fear be anxious on your account; and is it pray that you have n''t as yet had enough walking?" |
9603 | the old rat ascertained,''and how many species of fruits?'' |
9603 | to which question Pao- yü replied:"Do you call this early? |
9603 | was n''t it perhaps that if she played with me, she would be demeaning herself, and making herself cheap? |
9603 | what I said about her years back has come out quite correct; but from all you say, shall I to- day be able to see her?" |
9603 | what do you mean by it? |
9603 | what relics and curiosities there were at Yang Chou? |
9603 | what sights and antiquities she saw on the journey? |
9603 | what sort of thing am I? |
9603 | what were the local customs and the habits of the people?" |
9603 | what''s it?" |
9603 | what''s that to do with you?" |
9603 | what''s the use of coming out with all you''ve said? |
9603 | when will you turn a new leaf?" |
9603 | where were you off to now?" |
9603 | who and what kind of person have I become to do such a thing? |
9603 | why come again and ask me?" |
9603 | why then did you the other day, when you were in the old lady''s rooms, and there was not a soul present, hold her in your arms? |
9603 | why was I ever born in this household of a marquis and in the mansion of a duke? |
9603 | will depart, and dwell though you will in that mass of gauze, who is there who will know how to spoil you with any fond attention? |
40588 | Dost thou think then that such a miserable fellow dares fight with our father? |
40588 | I was very much vexed, and exclaimed''How can the king be said to have married me lawfully?'' 40588 Now king, give judgment to decide their dispute; whose wife ought the maiden to be? |
40588 | Now tell me: which of those two shewed most courage in plunging into the water? |
40588 | Prudence indeed is power, so what has a man, devoid of prudence, to do with power? 40588 So what am I to do with these figures, which are all a mere burden, now that I am deprived of him?" |
40588 | Then I said to Suratamanjarí,''Lady, by whom were you married, and how did this person get possession of you?'' 40588 Therefore, though our youth be very charming, why should we cling to this perishable body? |
40588 | Thou art an observer of the good custom; how hast thou come into this state? |
40588 | Thus discernment and reflection are the main things in governing a kingdom; what is of more importance? |
40588 | Thus heroic souls endure separation for so long a time, and how can you find it difficult to endure it for only one night? |
40588 | What reckless crime of this kind will not a wicked wife commit? |
40588 | When I heard that, I said,''What, what? 40588 When he saw her alight and come towards him, he said to her,"Who are you, and why have you come?" |
40588 | When that witch Sarabhánaná had said this, we said to her--''Tell us, who is to be the future emperor of the Vidyádharas? 40588 Would not that speech of the miser''s make even a stone laugh? |
40588 | ''How comes it that you have gone so far from the garden without letting me know? |
40588 | ''In this very market- place there is a pitcher full of valuable jewels buried in front of the god: why do you not take it up also?'' |
40588 | Accordingly she must of necessity endure the misery which the curse of the Siddha maiden has entailed; who can alter that? |
40588 | After all, how can that promise of my teacher''s be false, as it is so precisely in accordance with all that has taken place? |
40588 | After riding some time, the horse said--"I think I hear a noise; look round, can you see anything?" |
40588 | After saying this to the abashed physician, the king said to the cooks--"Is there any of the flesh of that goat left?" |
40588 | After some time the horse again said,"Look back, can you see anything now?" |
40588 | After the monkey had thus reflected, he said to the porpoise;"If this is the case, why did you not inform me of this before, my friend? |
40588 | After they had said this, they asked her young son, who was there,"Who killed your father?" |
40588 | All of them thereupon said to him,--"What does this mean?" |
40588 | Am I a weakling? |
40588 | Am I like you? |
40588 | Anangaprabhá too, seeing that he was handsome, came within the range of the god of the flowery bow, and said to herself--"Who is this? |
40588 | And Chakra asked him,--"Who are you, by what crime did you incur this, and how do you manage to continue alive?" |
40588 | And Earth said"What other man is so devoted to his lord? |
40588 | And I said to her,"Fair one, you are fitted to dwell in a palace, how comes it that you are here in the forest?" |
40588 | And I set myself to practise gaming and the use of arms; what boy does not become self- willed if he is not kept in order by some superior? |
40588 | And I, wanting to know what it was, said to him in private,''Gunasarman, why do you seem to be altered to- day?'' |
40588 | And Indra immediately had his body covered with repulsive marks; for to whom is not immorality a cause of humiliation? |
40588 | And Indra said to Chandraketu the king of the Vidyádharas,"Why has Muktáphalaketu not yet come?" |
40588 | And Prahasta advanced towards Súryaprabha and said--"King, are you awake or not?" |
40588 | And Pránadhara answered him, bowing before him--"I am that very brother of his, but how does Your Highness know about us?" |
40588 | And Siva said to her,"What can there be in the world, my beloved, present, past, or future that thou dost not know?" |
40588 | And Srídarsana said,"Can there possibly be a village here? |
40588 | And Vásavadattá frequently exclaimed with tears,"What profit is there in my life that causes only sorrow to my husband?" |
40588 | And Víravara, who was followed by the king, said with astonishment,"Who are you, and why do you thus weep?" |
40588 | And a general rumour, though false, injures even great men in this world; was not Ráma compelled by a slanderous report to abandon his wife Sítá? |
40588 | And a moment afterwards Yama said to Chitragupta,"Has this robber any amount of merit to his credit or not?" |
40588 | And a wise man must visit them, while he is young; for otherwise how can he be sure of reaching them, as this body can not be relied on?" |
40588 | And after he and his father had welcomed the man, who bowed before him, he immediately asked him,"Who are you and why have you come?" |
40588 | And after he had paid tribute, that haughty king was exceedingly afflicted, thinking to himself,"Why have I made submission to my enemy?" |
40588 | And after the meal,[ 226] being refreshed, I said to him,"Who are you, sir, and why have you thus saved the life of me who am resolved on death? |
40588 | And already five months are past; who knows what will become of her? |
40588 | And as for those Asuras who were slain by the gods, they were reckless, but did the gods slay Bali and others who were not infatuated?" |
40588 | And as for wealth, I have plenty, what do I want with more? |
40588 | And as soon as Dharmavyádha saw the hermit, he said,"Have you been sent here, Bráhman, by that faithful wife?" |
40588 | And as to the power of understanding the language of beasts and birds, which he possesses, what is the practical use of it? |
40588 | And at last he reached the shore of the western sea, and there he reflected,"How shall I cross over this sea?" |
40588 | And at night he asked that old woman, who did not recognize him,"Mother, do you know any tidings about the family of Dhanadeva?" |
40588 | And considering my poverty is so great, why did the Creator make my ambition so vast? |
40588 | And did I not say at the time,''I will not dwell in his house?''" |
40588 | And did he not, on that same occasion, grow bigger, and step into heaven? |
40588 | And did not Yayáti come to old age for love of Sarmishtá? |
40588 | And do homage, O Janamejaya; why have you given your daughter to an undeserver? |
40588 | And do not feel any commiseration with regard to me, so as to say to yourself--''Why should I be the cause of this man''s death?'' |
40588 | And do not say to yourself,''How can I eat an enemy''s food?'' |
40588 | And do you not know that he will prosper in fight by the force of science? |
40588 | And does good fortune attend on the other chief Rájpúts in his army, and on the elephants, horses, chariots and footmen?" |
40588 | And eager to hit upon an artifice, he immediately asked that woman,"Noble lady, what is the name of the king here, and what children has he? |
40588 | And he asked her,--"Auspicious lady, who are you, and why are you perturbed?" |
40588 | And he asked his wife and children, addressing them severally by name,"How have you returned to life after having been reduced to ashes? |
40588 | And he called out from above--"Who waits at the palace- gate?" |
40588 | And he certainly protects her, because she is ever intent on worshipping him; for virtue prevails; has it not been seen in the present instance? |
40588 | And he cried out from above--"Who is on guard at the palace- gate?" |
40588 | And he cried out from the roof,"Who is in attendance at the palace- gate?" |
40588 | And he exclaimed,"Holy Skanda, how could you give to ill- starred me a boon joined with a curse, like nectar mixed with poison? |
40588 | And he exclaimed,"If I do not see a living woman like this figure, of what profit to me is my kingdom or my life?" |
40588 | And he gave him his own daughter on the spot; what do generous men withhold when pleased with their benefactors? |
40588 | And he is my only husband, so why am I unchaste? |
40588 | And he said to her,"Fair one, who are you? |
40588 | And he said to her,"My beloved, what does all this mean? |
40588 | And he said to her,"Tell me, who are you?" |
40588 | And he said to himself,"If I have been born in a royal race, why am I so poor? |
40588 | And he said to the bard;"Who is this silent and motionless, engaged in meditation? |
40588 | And he said to the guards there,"Who made this offering?" |
40588 | And he said to the kings and to his ministers,"Tell me; shall I go to Ujjayiní to be married, or not?" |
40588 | And he spent the night in such thoughts as these,"Shall I ever get across the sea, and win that blushing bride?" |
40588 | And he thereupon gave her this answer;"Supported by affection for thee, I came here enduring many risks to my life, what else can I say, fair one?" |
40588 | And he, opening his eyes, said to him,"My friend, I am awake, for how could I sleep to- day being alone? |
40588 | And how am I to recover him? |
40588 | And how can one obtain from a son the same fruit in the next world, as one obtains from the marriage of a daughter? |
40588 | And how can you, though devoted to me, urge me to commit a crime, which will bring momentary pleasure,[ 366] but cause great misery in the next world? |
40588 | And how comes it that you did not know, you foolish creatures, that I should not be likely to put to death two sons obtained by severe austerities? |
40588 | And how could Bali have given the three worlds to Vishnu, and himself have gone to prison? |
40588 | And how could Prabala have given his own body to the gods? |
40588 | And how could you, without a chariot, have fought with a Rákshasa, who possessed a chariot? |
40588 | And how did he pass through the state of humanity inflicted on him by a curse, and regain Padmávatí? |
40588 | And how did you start from this place?" |
40588 | And how did you two come to enter this unpeopled wood? |
40588 | And how long, being brave men, can we remain without fighting a battle? |
40588 | And how shall I obtain such a lord again? |
40588 | And how will he manage to exist here alone separated from us? |
40588 | And how will his companions exist? |
40588 | And how will you be able to go alone on foot through the forests, and who will attend on you to remove your weariness? |
40588 | And if I do not requite this benefit, what is the use of my sovereignty, and of my protracting my life, which would only be like that of an animal?" |
40588 | And if his sister came and tricked me into marrying her by assuming my wife''s form, what fault have I committed in this? |
40588 | And if the destroyer of Tripura[ 637] favours us and is active on our side, what other miserable creature in the three worlds has any power? |
40588 | And if this prince dies, what good will my life do to me? |
40588 | And if you desert your lawful wife, I shall not allow your crime to go unpunished, for who in my position could tolerate such an outrage on morality? |
40588 | And immediately after putting him out, she went to her father, and her father asked her:"Did that Bráhman speak the truth?" |
40588 | And immediately he asked that girl in secret, bowing before her humbly,--"Adorable one, who art thou, that art thus become incarnate in my family?" |
40588 | And in a moment the princess said to the ascetic,''Then, noble lady, why should not your sister''s daughter be my guest also? |
40588 | And in his astonishment he said to the lion, the bird, and the snake;"Tell me, how come you to have articulate voice, and what is your history?" |
40588 | And in his astonishment, he asked him;"Who are you, sir, that you are so cheerful?" |
40588 | And in the evening his father said to him,"My son, treat her as a wife, for who abstains from the society of his own wife?" |
40588 | And independence is not fit for a maiden who ought to be in dependence on relations? |
40588 | And it came to pass that Vyádi and Indradatta asked their preceptor Varsha what fee they should give him? |
40588 | And it grieves me not for myself, for whose body is continuing? |
40588 | And it is guarded by a king named Devamáya, who is exceedingly haughty; so how can you advance further without conquering him?" |
40588 | And it seemed as if he was carried off to the abode of the gods by the nymphs of heaven, saying--"What have you to do with this contemptible woman? |
40588 | And king Mahásena rose up, and was pleased when he saw his enemy dead, and said repeatedly to Gunasarman--"What am I to say? |
40588 | And like a kind man, the elephant said to him lovingly, over and over again, with articulate voice,"Do you feel at all better?" |
40588 | And moreover will he forget us when he enters another body, like a man gone to the other world? |
40588 | And my brother, who was jealous, said in his wrath to that Siddha;''Why dost thou, although a Siddha, cast a longing look at another''s wife?'' |
40588 | And on the next day, as he was sitting in the hall of audience, he said to his courtiers,"Has any one among you seen the city called the Golden City? |
40588 | And once on a time the physician of his own motion said to the king,"Why do you make me of no account and act independently? |
40588 | And one day his wife asked him,--"Where do you always eat and drink before you come home?" |
40588 | And one of them came up to him, and pretending to be in a great state of excitement, said;"Bráhman, how come you to have this dog on your shoulder? |
40588 | And prompted by love, she said to that Savara,"Where is that friend of yours? |
40588 | And reflect, my good man; who is born free from sorrow in this world? |
40588 | And say to him politely from me,''Why did you not openly ask me for my daughter? |
40588 | And seeing the bed empty, she said,"How is this, that the king of Vatsa wakes up before me, and departs, leaving me asleep?" |
40588 | And she addressed to him this question,"Great Bráhman, who is this girl you have with you, and why are you come?" |
40588 | And she answered,"Would you like to eat your mangoes cold or hot?" |
40588 | And she bowed before her, and said to her,"Queen, queen Svayamprabhá sends you this message,''Have you forgotten your own promise? |
40588 | And she made him sit down on a sofa, and said to him,"Who is this man that you have brought here to- day?" |
40588 | And she said to him with a voice, the accents of which were choked with tears,"Cruel one, why did you depart and forsake my innocent self?" |
40588 | And she said to him--"Who are you, and why have you come to this inaccessible land?" |
40588 | And she said with a spiteful intonation to Mahalliká--"How are you, my friend, how comes it that you have come here at night?" |
40588 | And she said"Prince Jímútaváhana, lord renowned over the whole world, how is it, that, though thou art compassionate, thou hast not delivered me?" |
40588 | And she said,"Tell me the truth; are you the king Nala disguised as a cook? |
40588 | And she, seeing that he was of noble appearance, said to him bashfully--"Tell me, who are you? |
40588 | And she, when she heard this, answered:--"How could I desire marriage until you have accepted a bridegroom, for you are dearer to me than life?" |
40588 | And so the Rákshasa arrived as before, and asked his daughter, who was disguised as a man--"Did you see a man and a woman on the road?" |
40588 | And soon she rose up, and lamented those two that had been so unexpectedly slain, and said to herself,"Of what use is this life of mine to me now?" |
40588 | And tell me another thing, where are my sword and my beloved gone?" |
40588 | And tell us how such a disease can be cured in him?" |
40588 | And that Bráhman came in the morning, and, seeing the boy in the convent, said to those fools,"Who brought this fellow here?" |
40588 | And that blockhead asked,"What makes this food so savoury?" |
40588 | And that intoxicated woman asked him when he approached her,"Who are you, and how have you come to this inaccessible place?" |
40588 | And that priest immediately took it, saying,"I undertook to do this long ago, why should you trouble yourself about it?" |
40588 | And that sky- goer, coming near, said to the king,"King Kanakavarsha, how have you come to this region?" |
40588 | And the Rákshasa, quite taken aback by his courage, said to him,"What have you got to do there? |
40588 | And the Savara, when he saw her, being overpowered with wonder, reflected--"Who can this be? |
40588 | And the Vidyádharí, invisible as she was, said to him from the pillar--"Noble sir, what harm have I done you? |
40588 | And the compassionate man landed him on the bank, and said;"Who did this to you, my brother?" |
40588 | And the courtiers asked the porter,"Why did you, when you had got hold of a bracelet marked with the king''s name, conceal it?" |
40588 | And the emperor, seeing that his wives had arrived in his presence, said to Dhanavatí,"Where are my ministers?" |
40588 | And the great sage said to her with an affectionate voice,"Who are you, and how did you get into this wood, and why do you weep?" |
40588 | And the hall, full of the noise of the altercations of gamblers, seemed to utter this cry,"Who is there whose wealth I could not take away? |
40588 | And the hermit, after entertaining him with fruits and other delicacies, asked him,"Whence have you come, and whither are you going? |
40588 | And the hermit, who was his guest, said,"Why do you interrupt our conversation to do this?" |
40588 | And the king had her summoned, with the maimed man on her back, and, when she came near, he recognized her and said;"Are you that devoted wife?" |
40588 | And the king said to her,"Why do you suddenly appear despondent, tell me, my darling?" |
40588 | And the king seeing him in such a depressed state said to him--"Why have you become so thin? |
40588 | And the king, who had now fallen within the range of the arrows of love, said to himself;"Who can this be? |
40588 | And the mendicant answered clearly--"I do not wish to say what is unpleasant, but how can I help telling you when I am asked? |
40588 | And the mendicant monks, hearing it, came together in astonishment, and said to him,"Why do you without cause sound the gong at the wrong time?" |
40588 | And the merchant said to him,"Where is that son of mine?" |
40588 | And the mind of women can not be relied upon, it is not touched even by such a service as rescue from death; so what other benefit can move them?" |
40588 | And the next day he had them brought into his judgement- hall, and asked them--"Who are you and why did you deliberate together so long?" |
40588 | And the other hermits there debated among themselves;"Surely this Sítá is guilty, otherwise how could her husband have deserted her? |
40588 | And the people said to Sumanas,"Who are you, and what is the meaning of this?" |
40588 | And the serpent said with a human voice to the lady:"Why do you lament, my good woman?" |
40588 | And the virtuous Karataka, seeing it, said to Damanaka--"Why have you brought calamity on our master to gain your own ends? |
40588 | And then I sat down, and my friend, perceiving the feelings of both, put this question to him through his companion,"Who are you, noble sir, tell me?" |
40588 | And then he said to her,"Who art thou, and what is thy sorrow? |
40588 | And then he said to her,"Why do you weep, my daughter?" |
40588 | And then her mother Makaradanshtrá said to her,--"Why do you behave in this way, my daughter?" |
40588 | And then how would your son Naraváhanadatta live? |
40588 | And then the hero thought;"How can I manage during the night to convey this princess from this place to the harem?" |
40588 | And then the king honoured Gomukha, and asked him joyfully,"How did you obtain this princess? |
40588 | And then the lady of heavenly appearance said to him,"Courageous hero, for what price will you sell the flesh?" |
40588 | And then the princess asked the daughter of Maya,"Friend, how is it that he is called the king of Vatsa? |
40588 | And they said,"Alas, friend, what is this that you have undertaken? |
40588 | And they with one accord gave the following answer,"That king is a villain; so how can a visit to his palace turn out well? |
40588 | And was not Muktáphalaketu, emperor of the Vidyádharas, reunited to Padmávatí, after he had been separated from her? |
40588 | And was not his son Sattvavara braver, who, though a mere child, displayed such preëminent courage? |
40588 | And was not his wife braver, who, though a mother, endured to witness with her own eyes the offering up of her son as a victim? |
40588 | And were not thenceforth perfect cows born upon earth? |
40588 | And what does it matter that you gave him protection, or that he came as a suppliant, if he plots against your life? |
40588 | And what have you done? |
40588 | And what is that country favoured by fortune to which you are going?" |
40588 | And what is the meaning of what you say? |
40588 | And what thing is there in it?" |
40588 | And what what will you say to your father, when you have spent all your property, or where will you go? |
40588 | And what wise man desires to attain prosperity by the slaughter of others? |
40588 | And when Brahmá applauded him, Indra said to him,"Revered one, why are you pleased with one who is getting the worst of it?" |
40588 | And when Dhanadeva arrived there, he said to himself;"Why should I rashly introduce this unchaste woman into my house? |
40588 | And when Mandavisarpiní saw him, she said,"Why have you invaded my home? |
40588 | And when he came down, she said to him and her slave:"Are you in love with one another?" |
40588 | And when he entered it, the guards saw him, and cried out;"Who are you?" |
40588 | And when he had gone, the town- bred gentleman said to his wife,--"My dear, I hope you did not give him anything before he went?" |
40588 | And when he had set out in silence, the Vetála spake to him from his shoulder;"King, what is the meaning of this persistency of yours? |
40588 | And when he heard the cuckoos singing concealed by the leafy creepers, he said,"Is the sweet- voiced fair one here addressing me?" |
40588 | And when he looks up and asks--"Who is here?" |
40588 | And when he saw it, he restrained his wrath, and in his self- control reflected,"What is the use of slaying this animal who has betrayed his friend? |
40588 | And when he was there, the frogs asked him, keeping at a safe distance;"Tell us, worthy sir, why do you no longer eat frogs as of old?" |
40588 | And when his father said to him,"Son, why do you blame me?" |
40588 | And when my daughter, who is her friend, put this question to her''My dear, why do you not desire marriage, the only fruit of a daughter''s birth?'' |
40588 | And when night came on, he asked his servants--"Have we enough wine left for the latter part of the night or not?" |
40588 | And when night came, I said laughing to the bride in the bridal chamber,"Do you remember those warm and those cool mangoes?" |
40588 | And when she grew up, Agnisarman''s parents said to him,"Son, why do you not now go and fetch your wife?" |
40588 | And when she looked at him with a sidelong look tender with passion, he asked her--"Who are you, auspicious one, and why have you come here?" |
40588 | And when some one asked--"What is that?" |
40588 | And when the Rákshasa had disappeared, Sakatála again asked me--"How did the Rákshasa become your friend?" |
40588 | And when the Vetála wanted to kill him, he dissuaded him, and said,"Of what use will it be to us to kill this miserable heretic? |
40588 | And when the king asked,"How comes smoke to be rising here?" |
40588 | And when the king said to him;"How did you obtain these wives, and who is that Rákshasa?" |
40588 | And when the king suddenly beheld her advancing towards him, he was astonished and reflected--"Who can this be of incredible beauty? |
40588 | And when the lion heard the roar of that bull, never heard before, resounding through the air, he thought,"What animal makes this sound? |
40588 | And when the minister cried out,"Who requires anything, and what does he require?" |
40588 | And whence was he named Udayana? |
40588 | And while he said--"What, have you consumed it all?" |
40588 | And while we were reading the Veda there, her father the Bráhman Yajnasvámin came up to us, and said,"Where do you come from?" |
40588 | And who here can interfere with the movements of gods? |
40588 | And who is this, O lotus- faced one, who is sleeping here?" |
40588 | And who would ever have thought of seeing such a thing as this living golden deer studded with jewels, which they possess? |
40588 | And who, O king, is of more firm valour or more generous than you? |
40588 | And why are you so eager for the undertaking, beholding his prosperity? |
40588 | And why do you make the moon of your countenance like the moon when flecked with spots, by staining it with tears?" |
40588 | And why do you shew this despondency when your marriage is at hand? |
40588 | And why does she torture in this wilderness, with the discipline appropriate to ascetics, her body, which is soft as a flower?" |
40588 | And why have you come to me? |
40588 | And why should not one be sacrificed to supply food to many? |
40588 | And why should you have any shame about the matter? |
40588 | And why, though your body is marked with the signs of royalty, have you undertaken the vow of an ascetic? |
40588 | And will you not captivate the heart of the man, whose heart was captivated by Suprabhá? |
40588 | And you, being men of auspicious appearance, will no doubt attain prosperity; so tell me, what is your grief? |
40588 | And Ádityasena thought to himself;"His condition is past cure, so what is the use of torturing him? |
40588 | Are the crows in fault when the swans eat the rice?" |
40588 | Are there no mango- creepers, as well as poisonous creepers? |
40588 | Are you a jackal in courage, and not a lion as your name denotes?" |
40588 | Are you distracted with wind? |
40588 | Are you in good health?" |
40588 | As I am the daughter of a king, how can I become his wife? |
40588 | As for my desiring empire, is there any one that does not desire all sorts of things?" |
40588 | As he has a thousand faces and a thousand mouths, why could he not say with one mouth to Garuda,''Eat me first?'' |
40588 | As soon as he had said this, his parents answered him;"What is this that you say, son? |
40588 | As the ordinance of the god standeth sure, why should you despair of reunion with your wife? |
40588 | As things may happen, as things may fall Who knows but that I may be Lady of Bunny Hall?'' |
40588 | At that moment I called to mind what Brahmá had said, and I thought,"Why should I not call to the king for aid? |
40588 | At that moment a female slave came and said to the king,"Great Sir, how came you to enter this mouth of death? |
40588 | Besides, did not he himself take away the sovereignty of the gods from Hiranyáksha, though it descended to him as the elder? |
40588 | Besides, what harm can he do us unaided?" |
40588 | Bhadrá then said to Vidúshaka;"How did you come to this land?" |
40588 | But Gopálaka said to him,"What, my child, do you not suppose that I have all the happiness I desire by thus seeing you? |
40588 | But I recovered, and said to myself,"What is the use of bewilderment now? |
40588 | But I will tell you a strange fact; listen, for what can I hide from you? |
40588 | But Jímútaváhana answered Garuda,"In truth I am a Nága; what is the meaning of this question of yours? |
40588 | But Padmávatí thus answered him, Say to my father from me here--"What need of grief? |
40588 | But Siva answered him,"How can I possibly have retained your wealth till now? |
40588 | But could not the figures be cut in stone, as the Bharhut sculptures are? |
40588 | But he hesitated, seeing that it was empty, and then the Yakshas again said to him, smiling--"Subhadatta, do you not understand? |
40588 | But he himself again entered the women''s apartments of the palace; who, that is attracted by love and covetousness, thinks of death? |
40588 | But he was not able to remove the hump; so he paid down the hundred panas; for who in this world would be able to make straight a hunchbacked man? |
40588 | But his friends and relations said to him,"She is not dead, so why do you kill yourself? |
40588 | But his ministers roused him by saying to him,''In this transient world what is there that hath permanence? |
40588 | But his ministers said to him,"Did Visvámitra, though despondent, abandon life when Menaká had departed after giving birth to Sakuntalá?" |
40588 | But his wife Kánchanaprabhá lived in her own city with her daughter; what virtuous wife would disobey her husband''s commands? |
40588 | But how are you to search for your lover as he is not to be recognised by any token? |
40588 | But how can I associate with a mortal lady, being a Vidyádhara?" |
40588 | But how can it be otherwise? |
40588 | But how can this be? |
40588 | But how can those obtain their wishes, who are deceived by rogues? |
40588 | But how comes it, that I am so lucky as to find her here?" |
40588 | But if Indra makes himself a partizan[ 646] of Srutasarman, and violently opposes us, how are we to be blamed for it? |
40588 | But if she is Rati, where is Káma? |
40588 | But it never occurred to him to say to himself--"Who is mortally wounded? |
40588 | But the blockhead answered,"How could I drink so much water as this?" |
40588 | But the person challenged, being a man not easily abashed, made an appropriate reply,"Why are you perplexed by want of reflection? |
40588 | But they, when they saw him fall down terrified, said to him kindly,"Who are you, and how have you managed to fall into this deep well? |
40588 | But to whom is reliance upon treacherous people not a source of calamity? |
40588 | But was not the fact that he married his son by means of a substitute, in itself sufficient proof that he was a fool and a scoundrel?" |
40588 | But what am I saying? |
40588 | But what generous man desires to possess a realm, if he must do so by slaying his relations for the sake of this wicked perishable body? |
40588 | But what will not men of honour do to prevent their fame from being sullied? |
40588 | But when she began to say to the king--"Where, O king, did you go only a moment ago, so as to return with your minister?" |
40588 | But when the queen was bent on committing suicide, he consented, for how can men who are attracted by the objects of passion remain in the good path? |
40588 | But where has Rati, his companion, gone?" |
40588 | But why do I ask, Anangadeva, since I know all about him? |
40588 | But why do you wish to abandon the body? |
40588 | But why in spite of your better knowledge do you still fall in love with hetæræ? |
40588 | But you must by no means enter Pátála, for what advantage will you gain by destroying the snakes at one blow?'' |
40588 | But, as Siva has decidedly girded up his loins to shew us favour, what is his power, or what will his reliance upon Vishnu do?" |
40588 | But, even supposing he really is my beloved, how can I approach him, now that he is not in his own body, but in another body? |
40588 | But, tell me, who are you that you take upon you to instruct me, you son of Ityaka?" |
40588 | By the bye, have you not heard what happened to the Bráhman Agnisarman here?" |
40588 | Can Siva''s promise be falsified?" |
40588 | Can Syandana mean horses, like magni currus Achilli? |
40588 | Can all these men be under the influence of an optical delusion?" |
40588 | Can he be the very same? |
40588 | Can he possibly be that very man? |
40588 | Can it be Sávitrí come to bathe in the lake? |
40588 | Can it be the god of Love new- created from his ashes without Rati? |
40588 | Can not you, without going on pilgrimages, perform in your house noble religious duties, such as charity and so on, which will procure you heaven?" |
40588 | Can one fetter a whirlwind with one''s arms? |
40588 | Can she be a goddess, for her beauty is more than human?" |
40588 | Can she be my beloved herself? |
40588 | Can she be the form of the moon? |
40588 | Can we avoid the effect of acts done in a previous state of existence? |
40588 | Consequently, king, we are afraid to dwell anywhere; for whose mind is at ease after performing deeds of reckless temerity? |
40588 | Consider how far off you are from the sea and from that city, and whether the journey is worth taking for the sake of that maiden? |
40588 | Consider it yourself? |
40588 | Could I bear even to mention the name of another woman? |
40588 | Could any one by any artifice be introduced into this palace?" |
40588 | Cursed Fate, why did you rescue me from the sea? |
40588 | Darling, when this moon of your face is withdrawn, your father will fall into the darkness of grief, and how will he live to old age? |
40588 | Did I order you not to eat?" |
40588 | Did his heart break through grief at not having won the nymph himself? |
40588 | Did not Arundhatí live in friendship with the daughter of king Prithu? |
40588 | Did not Menaká leave Sakuntalá in the hermitage of Kanva? |
40588 | Did not Nahusha and others of old time obtain the dignity of Indra? |
40588 | Did not king Trivikramasena obtain of old time the sovereignty of the Vidyádharas by the favour of a Vetála? |
40588 | Did you carry on your back your innocent husband, whom you threw into the river? |
40588 | Did you not find those ministers, after they had been separated from you by the curse of the Nága? |
40588 | Distant is the time, and the place, and various is the course of Fate; so who knows what will happen to any one here in the meantime? |
40588 | Do you not know that such is the nature of the sinful vice of gambling? |
40588 | Do you not know that the dice are the sidelong loving looks of the goddess of Ill Luck? |
40588 | Do you not see that the death of all of us together is imminent? |
40588 | Do you not understand my position, fair one? |
40588 | Do you seek to be delivered from the world by binding yourself with the conceit of controversy? |
40588 | Do you suppose that Siva, who declared that you should be man and wife, can say what is false? |
40588 | Do your kind, for who, that is not foolish, would act[ 359] contrary to the purpose he had undertaken?" |
40588 | Does any animal keep his heart outside his body? |
40588 | Does he presume to give me orders and ask for my daughter as a tribute? |
40588 | Does not the moon delay to shine, when the circle of the sun is eclipsed? |
40588 | Does the fruit of the poison- tree of unrighteousness ever ripen sweet?" |
40588 | Does time past ever return, O king?" |
40588 | Especially are the twilight, the dawn, and Fortune shortlived, disappearing as soon as revealed; where and when have they been seen to abide? |
40588 | Even while she was saying this, Muktáphalaketu said to her friend,"What did this young lady say?" |
40588 | Even women, who see you,[ 699] are so much in love with your beauty that they desire to become men; so what man would not be a suitor for your hand? |
40588 | For Ganesa inflicted on them this curse,''Let them become that on which their minds are fixed?'' |
40588 | For a brave man by himself without any support obtains prosperity; have you never heard à propos of this the tale of the brave man?" |
40588 | For by his favour I have attained the grace of patience; to whom could I have shown patience, O goddess, if he had not acted thus towards me? |
40588 | For he will have a battle with Srutasarman, and who can say what will befall either party in it? |
40588 | For how can an evil deed audaciously done, the end of which is not considered through the mind being blinded with excessive hate, help bringing ruin? |
40588 | For how can servants refuse the request of an importunate lord? |
40588 | For it is suitable to you who possess all powers, but what, I pray, could a feeble creature, like me, do with it?" |
40588 | For nothing is unattainable by those who possess endurance; who, my son, will not fail, if he allows his endurance to break down? |
40588 | For of what calamities is not the blinding of the mind with excessive greed the cause? |
40588 | For of what use is my life, unless I can return having seen that city, and obtain the princess as the prize of the achievement?" |
40588 | For see, old age whispers at the root of my ear--''Since this body is perishable, why do you still remain in your house?''" |
40588 | For she, being a forest maiden, has no attendants of her own, and what will not all alien servants do for gain, being easily corrupted? |
40588 | For the stupid sleep resolutely, how can the understanding sleep? |
40588 | For to whom is a treacherous injury done to another likely to be beneficial? |
40588 | For what can make heavenly nymphs desire to hang themselves? |
40588 | For what can not the grace of the Supreme Lord accomplish? |
40588 | For what is not obtained by that? |
40588 | For what is the use of life or courage, unless employed to succour the unfortunate?'' |
40588 | For what object of desire is there that a resolute man can not obtain, as long as he continues alive? |
40588 | For what pleasure can a wise man take in a wicked place, the inhabitants of which are wanting in discrimination? |
40588 | For what reliance can be placed on fickle fortunes and fickle women? |
40588 | For whence can I obtain for this Rákshasa a victim, such as he has described? |
40588 | For which of them does it exist, and which of them exists for it? |
40588 | For who can deprive the fire of its tendency to burn? |
40588 | For who can escape from the shadow of his own head, or the course of destiny? |
40588 | For who gives anything to anybody? |
40588 | For who is able to alter the actions of a man in his previous births? |
40588 | For who is able to work such unrighteousness in my realm?" |
40588 | For who is not deceived by the hypocritically affectionate speeches of a mother? |
40588 | For who sees through the deceitfulness of the speeches of women uttered with affected simplicity? |
40588 | For who would confine his attention to filling his belly?" |
40588 | For whom does not love beguile? |
40588 | Gunádhya for his part, when he heard it, was immediately overcome with sorrow; who indeed is not inly grieved when scorned by a competent authority? |
40588 | Happen what will, I must give them my splendid elephant, for how can I let a suppliant go away without obtaining his desire, while I live?" |
40588 | Has not Providence ordained for you the usual lot of the gambler? |
40588 | Has she gone off with it? |
40588 | Have I in my delusion eaten an incarnation of a Bodhisattva? |
40588 | Have you forgotten the occasion on which I made you king?" |
40588 | Have you forgotten? |
40588 | Have you have not heard what happened to Pándu?" |
40588 | Have you managed to pick up here another set of five maidens?" |
40588 | Have you never heard the story of the donkey?" |
40588 | Have you not heard on this point the saying of the hermit Vyása? |
40588 | Have you not heard the legend of old days with regard to Rukminí? |
40588 | Have you not heard the story of king Chiradátri, and his servant named Prasanga?" |
40588 | Have you not heard the story of the adorable Bodhisattva in his former birth as a boar? |
40588 | Have you not heard the story of the ape that drew out the wedge?" |
40588 | Have you not heard, my friend, the story of the ass?" |
40588 | Having come to this conclusion, the wily monarch went up to the thief; and the thief said to him with some trepidation,"Who are you, Sir?" |
40588 | He asked her;"Who are you, and what lord do you lament?" |
40588 | He asked the woman:"Who are you, mother, and why are you standing weeping here?" |
40588 | He bowed, and then the king of Vatsa, after welcoming him, immediately asked him with curiosity:"Who are you, and what is your errand here?" |
40588 | He flung himself on a bed and said to himself"Can this be my charmer''s face, or a moon that has purged away the spot that defiles its beauty?" |
40588 | He has come here also, travelling in an air- going chariot; how can he, a mere man, have such power?" |
40588 | He replied"when I told you to use sáma, I meant coaxing and wheedling; what is the propriety of introducing the Veda in a matter of this kind? |
40588 | He replied,"I am one who gets his living by carrying burdens, and how am I to know the letters of the king''s name? |
40588 | He said to her,"Who are you, and where are you going?" |
40588 | He said to him,"Whereabouts here is Khandavataka? |
40588 | He said to himself in astonishment,"Who may this lovely one be?" |
40588 | He said to himself,"What can this mean? |
40588 | He said to me,"Who are you, and how did you reach this uninhabited land?" |
40588 | He said to me,''Friend, say, why do you allow yourself to be thus afflicted, though you are wise? |
40588 | He said,"If I make it right, what will you give me?" |
40588 | He said,"King, tell me, which of those three, who were blinded by passion, was the most infatuated? |
40588 | He said,"What is that?" |
40588 | He said--"O Tongue, what is this that you have done, through desire of enjoyment? |
40588 | He says what is not true: where did we kill his buffalo or eat it?" |
40588 | He thought to himself,"Who can this be?" |
40588 | He thought to himself--"How can I shew to the queen my face marred with grey hairs like a snow- smitten lotus? |
40588 | He thought to himself--"Who are these, and why do they deliberate so long? |
40588 | He thought"Where is that Anangaprabhá? |
40588 | He thought,"Can this be Samudradatta, and how can he have escaped after falling into the sea? |
40588 | He thought,"This is a heavenly bull, so why should I not go to heaven with it?" |
40588 | He thought,"What kind of animal is this, that makes such a sound?" |
40588 | He thought--"What can the barber do?" |
40588 | He was dissatisfied, saying to himself,"How shall I be helped to conquer my enemies by a single village that will rather disgrace me? |
40588 | He, according to his previous promise, when thought of, readily came to the minister, and bowed before him and said--"Why am I called to mind?" |
40588 | He, astonished, said to her--"Why do you speak thus?" |
40588 | He, for his part, thought in his mind, deeming he had come upon Good Fortune in bodily form--"Who is the fortunate man destined to be her bridegroom?" |
40588 | Her mother- in- law asked;"How did Saktimatí deliver her husband? |
40588 | Here I am bound by magic, and on the floor, but my adversary here is on a seat, and free; what fair controversy can there be between us?" |
40588 | His curse has been just now cancelled by virtue of your penance; so why do you now distrust the power of your own austerities? |
40588 | His father thereupon said to him,"What does her plainness matter? |
40588 | His father, annoyed at his persistence, cursed him and his wives, saying;''What need is there of your going to a wood of ascetics? |
40588 | How are we to get her back, and how is she to be married?" |
40588 | How came it that, though at first she was averse to a husband, she now showed such an insatiable appetite for husbands? |
40588 | How can I act thus? |
40588 | How can I give myself to them, when I am a Kshatriya woman? |
40588 | How can I live without you?" |
40588 | How can a crow and a female swan ever unite? |
40588 | How can a servant exist without subsistence?" |
40588 | How can a wise person conceal sorrow from friends? |
40588 | How can a woman of Kshatriya caste be given to a Súdra weaver? |
40588 | How can he have spoken anything unbecoming in speaking according to facts? |
40588 | How can he, who confides in a wicked person or a black cobra, enjoy prosperity?" |
40588 | How can prosperity befall those who walk in the path trodden by the ignoble? |
40588 | How can proud men have happiness in a previous or in a present state of existence? |
40588 | How can the mind help being amazed at pictures without walls? |
40588 | How can the ungrateful prosper? |
40588 | How can women be expected to restrain their speech? |
40588 | How can you look with a passionless eye on me who love you so much?" |
40588 | How comes it that her husband is now dead, though he has had no illness? |
40588 | How comes it that in your parrot condition you know the sástras? |
40588 | How comes it that to- night our husband has gone to sleep without any of his wives?" |
40588 | How comes it that you are at the same time a religious student, eager for liberation, and a man afflicted with the madness of disputatiousness? |
40588 | How comes it that you are now in love with an infamous brigand chief?" |
40588 | How comes it that, though you are an elephant, and are subject to the fury of elephants, you speak in this gentle way?" |
40588 | How comes it, that you are a young man, whereas these children of yours are old?" |
40588 | How could he in his state of bereavement have ever thought of undertaking such a thing, if he had not hoped in that way to recover the queen? |
40588 | How could you, son of Vinatá, do this thoughtless deed?" |
40588 | How did you reach alone this inaccessible place?" |
40588 | How have you come to forget that great principle? |
40588 | How is it that I saw you lying dead on a sofa in the golden city, and yet see you here alive?" |
40588 | How shall I exist abandoned by thee?" |
40588 | How will Mrigánkadatta, who would suffer even in a palace, exist in this desert of burning sand? |
40588 | How will your body, that could not endure to be anointed with the powder of yellow sandal- wood, endure the heat of the sun in the middle of the day? |
40588 | How will your body, that would suffer even from the touch of the sun''s rays, be able to endure the agony of being devoured by Garuda? |
40588 | However in a moment he said to himself,"This is no time for me to despond; why should I not recover firmness and strive to put an end to her curse?" |
40588 | However, what afflicted one feels quite patient about an object much desired, even though it is soon to be attained? |
40588 | I have been born in this race of fishermen for a very small offence owing to the might of cows, but what can atone for this man''s sin?" |
40588 | I have killed this kápálika by the order of king Vikramáditya; pray what have you to do with him?" |
40588 | I know this by my magic power; why are you so blinded with wrath that you can not see it? |
40588 | I must give it away to my friends, and are not you my friends? |
40588 | I said to myself,"Shall I ever again behold her face, which is the Creator''s storehouse of all the nectar of beauty? |
40588 | I said,"How are we to look for her, when we do not even know in what direction she has gone?" |
40588 | I see: this is why you are dressed so grandly, do not go to her, what have you to do with her? |
40588 | I then sat down near the king and asked him this question--"Why, O king, art thou without cause thus despondent?" |
40588 | I too am Samyataka the comrade of your beloved: why do you not say something kind to me, as I was cursed for you?" |
40588 | I too cut off my head: what is the meaning of my being now alive? |
40588 | I was overpowered with excess of joy, and I said to myself,"Can this be mere chance, or is it a dream, or sober waking reality?" |
40588 | I, ill- fated wretch, am wonderfully deceived by some strange power; or rather, who on this earth knows what is the nature of destiny?" |
40588 | If Fate has carried him off, what is the use of remaining here now? |
40588 | If I betake myself to Siva or Vishnu, what value will they attach to me, when they have gods, hermits, and others to worship them? |
40588 | If I desert the path of right, who will remain loyal to his duty? |
40588 | If I do not obtain her as a wife, what other fruit of my asceticism can I obtain?" |
40588 | If it succeeds, well and good; if it does not succeed, wherein am I the worse?" |
40588 | If she is a mortal woman, why does she ride upon a lion? |
40588 | If so, how is it that she gleams in the day? |
40588 | If the glory of generosity, which I have long been acquiring in the worlds, were to wither, what would be the use to me of prosperity, or life?" |
40588 | If the sword did this work on me, how are they in fault? |
40588 | If this takes place, what difference will there be between gods and men? |
40588 | If your agitation is due to pain, then perform good deeds; how can you be so foolish as to desire to incur the pains of hell by suicide?'' |
40588 | Immediately those attendants of Madirávatí said to the visitor,"Why do you seem so disturbed in mind, noble lady?" |
40588 | In a tank outside that city I saw a woman washing clothes, and I put this question to her,"Where do travellers stay here?" |
40588 | In his perplexity he asked,"What does this mean?" |
40588 | In illustration of this, listen to this story of Sundarasena, and hear how he endured hardship for the sake of Mandáravatí?'' |
40588 | In the meanwhile Nischayadatta came to the ape, and his friend, welcoming him, asked him--"Why do I seem to see you in low spirits to- day? |
40588 | In the meanwhile the blind man recovered a little, and the elephant said to him,"Tell me; who are you, and how did you come here, being blind?" |
40588 | In the meanwhile the thief, who was hidden there, saw all, and said to himself,"What is this that this wicked woman has done? |
40588 | In these words Siva promised me a meal, that is attended with uncertainty, and can not be obtained for a long time, so what must I do, my children?" |
40588 | In time he grew old, and desisting from his occupation, he reflected;"What resources have I in the other world? |
40588 | In what race was he born? |
40588 | Into which hand am I to put the cake?" |
40588 | Is he a Siddha or a Vidyádhara? |
40588 | Is he the incarnation of the favour of Siva towards me, he being pleased with my song?" |
40588 | Is it a dream or a delusion?" |
40588 | Is it a dream, magic, or delusion? |
40588 | Is it an illusion or a wandering of the mind? |
40588 | Is it right for me to plot treachery against the monkey, who is my friend? |
40588 | Is she sleeping a sleep from which there is no awaking, or is it a complete delusion on my part? |
40588 | Is she the goddess Rati? |
40588 | Is the last watch of the night a proper time for paying the first visit to a lady?" |
40588 | Is there anything in these three worlds difficult for you to obtain? |
40588 | Is this a delusion, or the manifest favour of the goddess?" |
40588 | Is this deluding Vetála doing this now in order to waste my time? |
40588 | Is water ever really found in desert- mirages? |
40588 | It does not deny the state of affairs; besides how is it possible to conceal this trembling of the limbs and this bursting boddice?" |
40588 | It is useless thinking of devices to produce fear; what are we ministers, to do with the king?" |
40588 | Jímútaváhana said to him:"Who are you? |
40588 | Kalávatí came to his side, thinking--"Now that I have been seen, how can I escape, shall I display shame or jealousy?" |
40588 | Kesata was terrified at first, but after some time he saw that he had nothing uncanny about him, so he said to him,"Who are you, Sir?" |
40588 | Know that my death will immediately follow if you refuse my prayer; in that case where will be your righteousness?'' |
40588 | Let him give commands to mortals, but who is he compared with Vidyádharas? |
40588 | Look; I am perishing before I reach you; why do you not deliver me?" |
40588 | Lovely as she is, if she does not become my wife, what is the profit of my life?" |
40588 | Maya said--"Let us do so, what harm is there in this?" |
40588 | Moreover you are not mighty, and you are not surrounded by mighty friends, so how can you possibly be capable of vanquishing that rival? |
40588 | Moreover, have you not heard the stanza composed by Múladeva? |
40588 | Moreover, how can a Kshatriya woman be given to a Vaisya? |
40588 | Moreover, how have you forgotten what the goddess was pleased to tell you, when she told the story of the curse of Anangaprabhá? |
40588 | Moreover, the king of the Kirátas is awaiting your coming from a distance in accordance with your agreement; how have you come to forget this? |
40588 | Moreover, what could he do to you, when you arrived at his court, since you would take your army with you? |
40588 | Moreover, where is your witness to prove the fact of the mother having promised her to you? |
40588 | My servants told him my cause of woe, and he said,"Why have you, like an unenterprising man, allowed your spirits to sink? |
40588 | Now why do you put up with it? |
40588 | Of what avail is a candle in the face of the sun?" |
40588 | Of what use is this body that brings only pain?" |
40588 | Of what use is this kingdom to me, unless it is employed to benefit my fellow- creatures? |
40588 | Of what virtuous father do you adorn the family? |
40588 | On hearing that, the hen said--"Do not talk so; what comparison is there between you and the sea? |
40588 | On the other hand how else can I cure my wife, whom I love more than my life?" |
40588 | On the other hand, if she is divine, how can she be seen by such as me? |
40588 | One day a serving maid of the name of Mochaniká came to him and said,--Illustrious Sir, unwittingly you have come hither to your death? |
40588 | One day Ádityasarman asked her this question by the mouth of that mendicant:"Who knows the proper spell for attracting Sulochaná?" |
40588 | Only half one watch of the day has passed: how can it be your time for begging now?" |
40588 | Or a second moon roaming through the heaven without a spot on its surface? |
40588 | Or are you planet- struck? |
40588 | Or can it be Gaurí, who has slipped away from the arms of Siva, and again betaken herself to asceticism? |
40588 | Or can it be the beauty of the moon that has taken upon herself a vow, as the moon has set, now that it is day? |
40588 | Or has she hidden herself to find out my real feelings, and is making fun of me?" |
40588 | Or how could Ayodeha have given his own body to Visvakarman? |
40588 | Or is it the presiding goddess of the wood, come to worship the spring?" |
40588 | Or is she a nymph of heaven? |
40588 | Or is she happiness incarnate in bodily form? |
40588 | Or is she the beauty of the moon, having taken shape,[ 489] or the command of Cupid living and walking? |
40588 | Or of punishing this wicked woman? |
40588 | Or rather on whom does not excessive compliance entail misfortune? |
40588 | Or rather who can resist the awful goddess of Destiny, that ever places her foot upon the heads of all men?" |
40588 | Or rather who knows the creation of Destiny that is full of so many marvels? |
40588 | Or rather, what fault is that miserable Vidyádhara guilty of? |
40588 | Or shall I not enter it? |
40588 | Or was it because he longed for the sovereign power, and thus was disappointed at the king''s return? |
40588 | Or were they both carried off by some being?" |
40588 | Or what is this delusion of attributing reality to the creation of your own desire, that has taken possession of your passionate heart? |
40588 | Or who has power to enter my harem?" |
40588 | Or why do you put out of sight this unalterable nature of things? |
40588 | Otherwise, how, being mortals, could they have come to this region of the gods?" |
40588 | Otherwise, what is the use of incurring needlessly the guilt of killing a Bráhman?" |
40588 | Otherwise, what is the use of this beauty?" |
40588 | Our throne has been victorious over its enemies; is there one more powerful in the whole world? |
40588 | Poverty makes men steal, and who ever gave up what he had found? |
40588 | Powers are strictly limited: can water quench the flame of lightning?" |
40588 | Prajnádhya again said to her--"Why do you enter in this sudden way when a man is sleeping at his ease? |
40588 | Sasin said,"You fool, what have you to do with her? |
40588 | She agreed, and went to Kalyánavarman and told him that falsehood, and he answered:"Lady, I am a merchant''s son, what can I do against the king?" |
40588 | She alarmed, said--"Why are we stopped, and why are you outside?" |
40588 | She answered him,"How can a pauper, like you, afford this?" |
40588 | She exclaimed,"Where have I arrived? |
40588 | She exclaimed,"this is strange; how did you guess the meaning of that sign of mine?" |
40588 | She faltered out,"Where are you going? |
40588 | She for her part thought--"Why is my husband angry without my being guilty; I wonder whether Bálavinashtaka has been at any tricks?" |
40588 | She has left my protection and gone elsewhere, how could I endure that?" |
40588 | She laughed, and said,"What do you want with her?" |
40588 | She reflected--"It is not fitting that I should go to my father''s house after acting thus; what should I say there, and how would people believe me? |
40588 | She replied,"Who, noble sir, will give alms to me who am a woman?" |
40588 | She said to her husband,"Though I take affectionate care of him, he is nevertheless the strange object you see; what am I to do with him?" |
40588 | She said to herself,"Is it possible that he has been reduced to this stage of love''s malady by separation from her?" |
40588 | She said--"Can this be the moon, that has swooped down from heaven in pursuit of the goddess of Fortune fallen into a cluster of lotuses of the lake? |
40588 | She too endured patiently to be placed on the shoulder of a very loathsome Rákshasa; what will not women do when mastered by affection? |
40588 | She with affected grief said to him,"If some one were to slay thee, what would become of me?" |
40588 | She, for her part, entertained him, and made him take a seat, and feeling love for him, said,"Who are you, noble sir?" |
40588 | She, for her part, when she beheld that king with all the auspicious bodily marks, said to herself,"Who can this exceedingly distinguished man be?" |
40588 | She, with heart captivated by the beauty of his eyes said to him,"How came such a handsome man as you to undertake such a severe vow as this? |
40588 | Since she does not love her husband, how is it possible that she can love you? |
40588 | Siva having thus finished his speech, Mádhava said,"Do not say this, you are honourable, but what fault have I committed in the matter? |
40588 | Siva, for his part, after some days said to the chaplain:"How long am I to feast in your house in this style? |
40588 | So I went up to him and said,"For what price will you give me this bedstead?" |
40588 | So Vidúshaka then became equal to a chieftain, for how can a benefit conferred on great persons fail of bearing fruit? |
40588 | So am I not fortunate, since I have such a husband as you, whom princesses fall in love with, that are themselves sought by other kings?" |
40588 | So away with delusions?" |
40588 | So being compassed about with enemies, where shall I go, what shall I do? |
40588 | So far from it, we shall live happily in mutual friendship; but what intercourse can I hold with those others who will be my enemies? |
40588 | So first shew me Prasenajit, and then take me there, where the king of Vatsa is; what do I care for my father, or my mother?" |
40588 | So he asked a physician named Srutavardhana--"Is there any medicine able to bring about the birth of a son?" |
40588 | So he asked the women, after they had filled their pitchers with water, in a courteous manner;"For whom are you taking this water?" |
40588 | So he said to him in joke,"Cowherd, is any young woman in love with you, that you sing thus in your rapture, counting the world as stubble?" |
40588 | So he went up to him and said,"Who are you, and what are you doing in this solitary place?" |
40588 | So he went up to him, with his followers, and said to him;"Reverend sir, why do you live alone in this forest in which there is no hermitage?" |
40588 | So how am I to be continually procuring fresh razors? |
40588 | So how can I eat you now? |
40588 | So how can I marry that Kalingasená?" |
40588 | So how can I now make her a recompense, in order that my vow may in course of time be fully accomplished?" |
40588 | So how can I revenge myself on him for this ill turn, and how can I reach him who has become a Vidyádhara? |
40588 | So how can continual refreshment and eating nourish me?" |
40588 | So how can we do otherwise than spare his life? |
40588 | So if she will not consent to become my wife, what is the profit of my life? |
40588 | So if you touch me by force, I will abandon life, for what woman of good family will injure her husband? |
40588 | So is not he a man to whom food ought to be given?" |
40588 | So it will be better now to find out whether the strict ascetic on the banks of Siprá named Siva pleases him or not?" |
40588 | So let her do what she is doing?" |
40588 | So of what comfort is this husband to me? |
40588 | So of what use is sovereignty to us? |
40588 | So reflecting, he began to reproach that religious student,"Tell me, religious student, what is the meaning of this inconsistent conduct on your part? |
40588 | So rise up quickly my friend, let us go; you also will find your wife, if you search for her; who knows the way of Destiny? |
40588 | So shall I enter the fire? |
40588 | So she said,"Who is this skull- bearer? |
40588 | So tell me, king, to which of the two does that wife belong? |
40588 | So tell me, king; why are you so persistent about her, though you know all this? |
40588 | So tell me, what lands have you wandered through, and what novel sights have you seen?" |
40588 | So tell us, wise man, what mean you by embracing that corpse?" |
40588 | So that king perished, though of firm soul, being deprived of Unmádiní; but what will become of the lord of Vatsa without Vásavadattá? |
40588 | So those Bráhmans perished by making the fatal mistake of creating a lion: for who can give joy to his own soul by raising up a noisome beast? |
40588 | So true is it, that intellect always obtains the supremacy, triumphing over valour, indeed in such cases what could courage accomplish? |
40588 | So we, O king, ran after him, and cut off his foot; what man of our humble degree is able to disobey the command of a ruler?" |
40588 | So what are we to do in this difficulty?" |
40588 | So what are you doing here so long? |
40588 | So what confidence, your Royal Highness, can be placed in women? |
40588 | So what course must I adopt in this emergency?" |
40588 | So what have we to do with this matter which has been settled by the lord Siva? |
40588 | So what have you to fear? |
40588 | So what is the meaning of this love of yours for the bull, O king? |
40588 | So what is the use of a sure revelation by a goddess in a dream, when Fate is adverse? |
40588 | So what is the use of delay? |
40588 | So what is the use of flesh? |
40588 | So what is the use of my life? |
40588 | So what is the use of my marrying Kalingasená? |
40588 | So what is the use of our penetrating the mind of the king of beasts?" |
40588 | So what pleasure can wise men take in these perishable objects? |
40588 | So where, my prince, have you all remained so long? |
40588 | So who is it that you embrace, or who has been bitten by the serpent? |
40588 | So why are you so distracted about an event, which was destined to take place? |
40588 | So why did you make this attempt yesterday though you were forbidden to do so by me? |
40588 | So why do you despond in the midst of this joy?" |
40588 | So why do you fear without reason, though you know this well enough?" |
40588 | So why do you offer me false comfort?" |
40588 | So why do you say that king Súdraka was more heroic than these?" |
40588 | So why do you think more highly of Vírabáhu than of the other?" |
40588 | So why do you torment yourself about a matter of this kind, which is quite becoming, and can be easily arranged by an ambassador?" |
40588 | So why does this base owl, who can not see in the day, deserve a throne? |
40588 | So why should I desert such a husband and fall in love with a common fellow? |
40588 | So why should I not devise some stratagem for obtaining him?'' |
40588 | So why should I not gratify Durgá by sacrificing myself?" |
40588 | So why should I stand here and behold their faces?" |
40588 | So why should not I do the same by expending my asceticism upon it?" |
40588 | So why should there be any delay? |
40588 | So why should you grieve? |
40588 | So why, my friend, do you weary yourself in vain? |
40588 | So with what object, father, do we keep for ourselves such an unfailing wishing- tree, as all these phenomenal conditions are but momentary? |
40588 | So, how can he be unsuccessful in fight? |
40588 | So, how long am I to retain this wretched life? |
40588 | So, if I do not show devotion to my parents, what fruit shall I reap from my body?" |
40588 | So, if I have to- day recovered my own wife, and carried her off, what harm have I done?'' |
40588 | So, king, why do creatures like you fear a mere sound? |
40588 | So, my good sir, what desire have you for me to accomplish for you?" |
40588 | So, what is all this outcry that thou art making against Maya, what offence has he committed herein? |
40588 | So, why should I not abandon my hopeless life, before I hear of some misfortune happening to my father or to my lover in battle? |
40588 | Some one said to him:"Why do you not drink water, though you are thirsty?" |
40588 | Srídarsana approached him, and made himself known to him, and then girding up his loins, he said,"Tell me, what shall I do for you?" |
40588 | Sundarasena answered the king of the Bhillas,"What does it matter who I am, or whence I come? |
40588 | Supposing a second is not born to you, what will you do?" |
40588 | Surely he must be some god that has penetrated into this well- guarded room?" |
40588 | Tell me the name of the man whose life and property I am to take by way of punishment?" |
40588 | Tell me, do you approve of this step or not?" |
40588 | Tell me, for why should you distrust loving modest attendants? |
40588 | Tell me, friend, what pleasure can wretched bereaved ones, like myself, to whom everything in the world is turned upside down, find in life?" |
40588 | Tell us why thou wanderest here alone without that fragrant artillery of thine, and where is that Rati thy constant companion?" |
40588 | That Vetála came, as soon as the king called him to mind, and bowing before him said,"Why did you call me to mind, great king? |
40588 | That father too embraced him and asked him in the presence of all,--"Do you remember both your lives, my son?" |
40588 | That king of beasts said in astonishment,"What is this creature?" |
40588 | That moment he summoned me and said,"What does this mean?" |
40588 | The Bráhman said,"What am I to do there"? |
40588 | The Vetála asks,"Which of these four deaths was the most extraordinary?" |
40588 | The Vetála then said,"Why, what did the king do? |
40588 | The Yakshí said,"How can I ever, king, recompense you for your benefits? |
40588 | The adorable god was asked by Durgá--"Whence, my lord, comes thy delight in skulls and burning- places?" |
40588 | The assessors said to Ityaka,"While the father is alive, what authority has the mother? |
40588 | The brave man said,"If I had not slain the Rákshasa in fight, who would have brought this maiden back here in spite of all your exertions? |
40588 | The bull said to him,"Friend, why are you in this state? |
40588 | The fact is they have been devoured in that tree by a demon, and without them what is Sasánkavatí to me, or what is my life worth to me? |
40588 | The fact is, I suppose, that stupidity is engrained in a man who muddles his head with the Vedas?" |
40588 | The first said,"This Bráhman gave me a cow with a sacrificial fee: why will he not receive it from my hand, when I offer to give it back to him?" |
40588 | The fool said"Who will teach me?" |
40588 | The giant awoke and called"Are you asleep?" |
40588 | The jackal answered him;"The creature never possessed ears or a heart,--otherwise how could he have returned when he had once escaped?" |
40588 | The jackal answered,"What can be healthy with a servant? |
40588 | The jackal said,"Why do you endure all this toil? |
40588 | The king asked her the reason, and she said with apparent reluctance--"My husband, why do you endure patiently the disgrace of your house? |
40588 | The king asked,"Whence comes this sound of a drum?" |
40588 | The king inclining before him, said to him,"Who art thou, and why hast thou descended from heaven?" |
40588 | The king said to Sanvarasiddhi,"Have you really seen that city?" |
40588 | The king said to him,"Wicked Bráhman, do you try to kill a woman, and for her sake set on fire your neighbours''houses? |
40588 | The king said,"Who art thou, and why dost thou weep?" |
40588 | The king thought--"Why has she put herself in this position?" |
40588 | The king welcomed the Bráhman who blessed him in return, and then Vibhíshana said,"Bráhman, how did you manage to reach this country?" |
40588 | The king woke up in a state of alarm, crying out,"What is the meaning of this?" |
40588 | The merchant''s wife then and there said to him,"Who are you?" |
40588 | The minister said,"This is strange, my son; what can you do with this head of mine? |
40588 | The object of my vow is, that that king may be announced by the heralds as waiting at the door; do you assist me in that?" |
40588 | The officers of the court said,"This is impossible, how could a kite carry off a boy?" |
40588 | The one said,''My friend, why is Kalávatí distressed to- day?'' |
40588 | The queen Madanamanchuká playfully said to him on his return,"Where have you been, my husband? |
40588 | The queen said to him--"She was proclaimed by the gods as the destined wife of Naraváhanadatta, our future emperor, why is she not given to him?" |
40588 | The queen said,"How comes it that our son, though born in a royal family, has fallen in love with a girl of the lowest[ 620] caste?" |
40588 | The second is a Vaisya, and what is the use of his knowing the language of cattle, and so on? |
40588 | The sons said,"Why did the fish laugh?" |
40588 | The teacher said,"What sort of creature is a cat? |
40588 | The thief answered her,"What do I care for those gems, fair one? |
40588 | The thief said;"I will carry off the oxen first, for if you lay hold of the Bráhman first, and he wakes up, how can I get the yoke of oxen?" |
40588 | The two Bráhman youths said with astonishment to one another,--"What does this mean?" |
40588 | The very horse, for which I abandoned my native land, is dead; so how can we travel on foot through this forest at night?" |
40588 | The warder said:"When a man''s head is cut off, does he live even if you give him a hundred heads?" |
40588 | The young merchants asked--"How have you obtained untold wealth by the assistance of a pupil?" |
40588 | Then Asokadatta said,"Who would go there at night? |
40588 | Then Bhímabhata said to her,"Fair one, why do you allow your heart to exhibit shame, though its feelings have been already revealed? |
40588 | Then Brahmá answered him,--"How can I help being pleased with one, who fights for so long with this Prabhása? |
40588 | Then Brahmá said,"Am I not also anxious to bring about the same end? |
40588 | Then Chirajívin said to the king of the owls,"What is the use to me of life, now that I am in this state? |
40588 | Then Chirajívin said,"What truce? |
40588 | Then Chitragupta, who was disguised as a Bráhman, said,"Why do you neglect Siva, and Vishnu, and the other gods, and devote yourself to Chitragupta?" |
40588 | Then Devasmitá seeing her, of her own accord sent a maid, and had her brought in, thinking to herself,"What can this person be come for?" |
40588 | Then Gautama said to Ahalyá;"Who is here?" |
40588 | Then Gomukha, who read his master''s soul, began to ask her attendants--"Who is she, and whose daughter is she?" |
40588 | Then Gunasarman said--"King, who told you such a falsehood, who painted this aerial picture?" |
40588 | Then Harasvámin standing below called all the Bráhmans who were above, one by one, by name, and said to them,"What delusion is this, Bráhmans? |
40588 | Then I and all my relations came in, hearing the cries, and when we saw her, we said,"Tell us, what is the matter?" |
40588 | Then I fearlessly drew my dagger with a frown, and said to her,"Have you seen such a man as this?" |
40588 | Then I said again to him,"My fine fellow, what will you do with them?" |
40588 | Then I said to him,"Who are you, and how do you know that?" |
40588 | Then I said,"Fair one, what is your cause of alarm? |
40588 | Then I said,"I will take it off your hands; what price do you want for it?" |
40588 | Then Jímútaváhana said to an attendant of hers,"What is your friend''s auspicious name, and what family does she adorn?" |
40588 | Then Karataka said--"What business is this of ours? |
40588 | Then Kálarátri said;"If you know what is right, then grant me my life, for what righteousness is greater than the saving of life?" |
40588 | Then Mahásena said to Sundarasena,"My son, why do you so improperly conceal this attachment of yours? |
40588 | Then Mahásena, coming in, and seeing her in that condition, said--"What is this, my beloved? |
40588 | Then Mrigánkadatta said to the Bráhman Srutadhi,"Why do you remain silent, Bráhman, like one taking no interest in the proceedings? |
40588 | Then Mrigánkadatta''s friend Srutadhi, observing that the Bhilla had come with his warder, said to him,"Why should you play dice? |
40588 | Then Mrigánkadatta, after his minister had been somewhat restored, said to him;"Tell me, my friend, what adventures have you had?" |
40588 | Then Nischayadatta said to her with eyes gushing with tears--"Wicked female, how could you thus deceive me who reposed confidence in you? |
40588 | Then Padmávatí, in her agitation, said to that friend,"Why do you weary yourself in vain? |
40588 | Then Prachandasakti said to that elephant,"Now great- souled one, tell me your history; who are you? |
40588 | Then Rambhá said to him sarcastically--"I suppose, mortal, you know this heavenly dance, do you not?" |
40588 | Then Rudrasarman said to that second wife,"How comes it that you have neglected this child of mine that has lost its mother?" |
40588 | Then Saktideva said to her,"Then why all this perturbation? |
40588 | Then Sangataka said, King why do you grieve without cause? |
40588 | Then Siddhikarí, feigning ignorance, said to the Domba,"How is the noose slipped round the neck? |
40588 | Then Siva said to him,"Why have you gone through so much toil and hardship? |
40588 | Then Siva said,"How can I take a wife, for I will not marry a woman from any low family?" |
40588 | Then Srídarsana woke up in his own palace, and seeing himself decked with the ornaments of a lady, he thought,"What does this mean? |
40588 | Then Srídarsana, knowing that his rival was possessed by a Vetála, said to him,"What proof is there that you are his friend? |
40588 | Then Vidyunmálá disappeared, and Ádityasarman asked that Yakshiní, whom the hermit had obtained,"Is there any Yakshiní superior to Vidyunmálá?" |
40588 | Then Vindhyaketu, having consoled them both, said to that merchant,"How came you to carry off the wife of one who confided in you?" |
40588 | Then Víravara said,--"Then, goddess, tell it me at once, in order that I may quickly put it in operation: otherwise what is the use of my life?" |
40588 | Then a certain makara dwelling in that lake, seeing him carrying off fish, said:--"Whither are you taking the fish?" |
40588 | Then a feast was made, and the king recovered his normal condition, and said in private to his minister,--"Did you observe the devotion of Kumudiká?" |
40588 | Then all the by- standers were bewildered thinking--"What can this mean?" |
40588 | Then he asked the hermit in his joy the following question,"Tell me, reverend sir, how was she my wife before?" |
40588 | Then he cried aloud,"Who asked the king for water?" |
40588 | Then he said to his general Harisikha:"What may be the cause of this sudden great noise of drums outside?" |
40588 | Then he said to the king,"Did you hear what the crow said? |
40588 | Then his friend said,"How will that hermit''s pupil, who has been made your vehicle by a curse, submit to me?" |
40588 | Then his minister Gomukha, after all had sat down, asked her,"Who are you, auspicious one, and for what reason have you come here?" |
40588 | Then his relations came there, and after they had seen his body, they said,"If he was killed by thieves, why did they not carry off anything?" |
40588 | Then his son said;"Why surely we may see a fire burning near us on this side, and it is very large, so why should I not go there and warm my body? |
40588 | Then his teacher said to him,"My son, I am afraid you have made some mistake in this incantation, otherwise how can the fire have become cool to you? |
40588 | Then his wife Asrutá asked him again and again lovingly,"Tell me, my husband, why do you remain so long fixed in thought?" |
40588 | Then how can I make him my son- in- law and my submissive ally? |
40588 | Then how shall I make it current? |
40588 | Then in astonishment I asked Prapanchabuddhi--"Why do you court me with such splendid jewels?" |
40588 | Then in his astonishment he asked them"Why?" |
40588 | Then king Brahmadatta said to those celestial swans,"How did Muktáphalaketu kill that Vidyuddhvaja? |
40588 | Then my father gave me a kick, and said,''Why do you go to sleep?'' |
40588 | Then one of those young Bráhmans said to him respectfully,"King, how can we tell our secret in the presence of a man of your worth? |
40588 | Then queen Gunavará delighted, said to him,"My son, what has not that Rúpasikhá done for you? |
40588 | Then she answered him--"If it is to be so, why should we not go there immediately in this chariot of yours that flies through the air? |
40588 | Then she said decidedly,"How can I return to that spiritless avaricious man, who sold me to another man without the excuse of distress?" |
40588 | Then she said to Somaprabhá--"Old age has chosen him for her own, what other female will choose him?" |
40588 | Then she, seeing that his mind was troubled, asked him anxiously,"My husband, why are you seized to- day with a sudden fit of despondency?" |
40588 | Then that chaplain went on to say to him,"Do not say that, great Bráhman, do you not know the due order of the periods in the life of a Bráhman? |
40588 | Then that good man said to me,"Why, though wise, are you bewildered? |
40588 | Then that second person said to Srídarsana,"I will not let the dead man go; I am his friend; what have you to do with him?" |
40588 | Then the Vetála said,"Was not Víravara greater, for his equal is not found on this earth? |
40588 | Then the Vidyádharas said to him,"Tell us, king; who is to occupy half your throne, and to be anointed as queen consort?" |
40588 | Then the Yaksha her husband said to her;"What have you seen?" |
40588 | Then the blockhead exclaimed;"I have been cheated; why did I not eat this cake, which has allayed the pangs of hunger, first of all? |
40588 | Then the boy said to me,"Did not Vishnu, as soon as he was born, stride across the earth, in the form of a dwarf, and make it tremble? |
40588 | Then the cunning Múladeva, who was near the king, said,"King, are there no good women, though some are bad? |
40588 | Then the eager king said to her with an affectionate manner,"Worthy lady, what auspicious family is adorned by this friend of yours? |
40588 | Then the eldest said,"What, do you not know how fastidious I am? |
40588 | Then the hermit Nárada came and said to the king,"Prince, what means this striving after things out of your reach, though you know policy? |
40588 | Then the heroic king answered in a carelessly negligent tone,"This garden is sufficient entertainment for me: what other entertainment do I require?" |
40588 | Then the hunter asked him"Are you Srídatta?" |
40588 | Then the king at last comforted his daughter, and said to her,"Why did you abandon, my daughter, the happiness of a palace, and act thus? |
40588 | Then the king being astonished said,"Then how have you managed to come so far on foot?" |
40588 | Then the king full of curiosity assembled all the citizens, and said to that lady disguised as a merchant,"What is your petition?" |
40588 | Then the king knew that it was possessed by a Vetála, and said without flinching,"Why do you laugh? |
40588 | Then the king of the owls said to another minister, named Vakranása,"What ought we to do? |
40588 | Then the king said to his daughter Anangarati,"My daughter, which of these four heroes do you prefer?" |
40588 | Then the king said to them,"Who are you, and why are you in the forest?" |
40588 | Then the king told her who he was, and why he had come; then he said to her,"Tell me, who are you, fair one? |
40588 | Then the king, in great despondency, said to Asokakarí, who was wounded,"What is the meaning of this? |
40588 | Then the lion said,"What is the use of eating such a small creature as you?" |
40588 | Then the maiden said,"King, do not speak thus, I am not of a deceitful disposition, and who would think of cheating one so worthy of respect? |
40588 | Then the merchant''s son said,"Do not take the necklace, my friend, it is an illusion, else why do not these soldiers see it?" |
40588 | Then the minister Sumantra said to the king to comfort him,"Why do you appear as if you do not understand the matter? |
40588 | Then the musician came and asked the rich man for the panas, but he said;"What did you give me, that I should make you a return? |
40588 | Then the other said,"I did not receive it first, and I did not ask for it, then why does he wish to make me receive it by force?" |
40588 | Then the others who were there laughed, and said to him,"Why should he speak? |
40588 | Then the prince said to Dridhabuddhi,"Who can this be? |
40588 | Then the queen said to him,"Of what nature was that tale?" |
40588 | Then the thief said,"How can I, who am a thief, let you go?" |
40588 | Then they answered me;"Why do you ask such a question? |
40588 | Then they put this question to Ityaka,"Now do you tell us why you carried her off?" |
40588 | Then they said;"Why fret yourself? |
40588 | Then why do you speak thus?" |
40588 | Then, being reduced to poverty, he said to his wife;"My dear, how can I, who am reduced from riches to poverty, live among my relations? |
40588 | Then, in confidential conversation, Manorathaprabhá put the following question to Makarandiká;"Fair one, why do you not wish to be married?" |
40588 | There an old gambler said to the others,"This fellow is all but dead; so what is the good of throwing him into a well now? |
40588 | There he remained performing his duties with anxious mind, which seemed ever to ask him, why he left his wife there in a state of intoxication? |
40588 | There he saw a great many heaps of bones, and he said to Mitrávasu,"What creatures are these whose bones are piled up here?" |
40588 | There is war between the crows and the owls from time immemorial; who will go to them? |
40588 | There, in the midst of great rejoicing Dírghadarsin remained despondent; how can good ministers be happy, when their lord''s vices are incurable? |
40588 | Therefore take him with you: what harm can there be in it, he is your brother?" |
40588 | Thereupon Vámadatta told him his whole story from the beginning, and his guest said to him,"What is the use of this persistent revenge? |
40588 | Thereupon a Rákshasa came with a wand in his hand, and said to him,"Mortal, why have you sat down here on the king''s throne?" |
40588 | Thereupon his friend went on to say to him,"Then let this guest come with you; is he not our friend also? |
40588 | They said to him,"Who are you, friend, and who is this lady, and where are you going?" |
40588 | They said to one another;"Why should we not ask this holy cat here to declare what is just?" |
40588 | They were announced by the warder and introduced, and then king Mahávaráha asked them in the presence of Anangarati;"What are your names? |
40588 | Thinking thus, he was about to enter the fire to purify himself from guilt, when Jímútaváhana said to him:"King of birds, why do you despond? |
40588 | This is that very Jímútaváhana, who sacrifices his life for others, the renown of whose glory pervades all these three worlds? |
40588 | Thus reflecting, the king sent for that excellent bard, and said to him,"How is it, my good friend, that you are never seen in the palace?" |
40588 | Thus she said, and he was astonished, exclaiming,"What can this mean?" |
40588 | To come to the kite; what offence did he commit in bringing his natural food which he had happened to find, and eating it, when he was hungry? |
40588 | To what man of great merit in a former life is she to be given in marriage? |
40588 | To what use can you put it? |
40588 | To whom am I betrothed? |
40588 | To whom can I give anything, and what?'' |
40588 | To whom is not association with the good a cause of exaltation? |
40588 | To whom is not the attractive object called woman the cause of misfortune? |
40588 | To whom is not the scorning of wise words bitter in its after- taste? |
40588 | To whom shall I give it?" |
40588 | Tárávaloka said to himself,"What do Bráhmans mean by asking for a mighty elephant? |
40588 | Unless you are one of these, how could you talk in this wild way? |
40588 | Vidúshaka let him go and said,"Who are you, and what are you about here?" |
40588 | Was not I swooped down on by him and married by force, after he had seen a carved likeness of me and been overcome by love? |
40588 | Was not even Siva disturbed long ago when he beheld Tilottamá, whom the Creator made by taking an atom from all the noblest beings? |
40588 | Was not the Chandála Trisanku carried to heaven by Visvámitra? |
40588 | Was she not carried off by Vishnu after she had been given to the king of Chedi? |
40588 | Wast thou not seen to be charming as a boy, and when growing up, the terror of thy foes? |
40588 | We bowed before her and asked her,''Where have you been, honoured lady, and what have you seen there strange?'' |
40588 | We said to him,''Who is this lady, and where are you taking her?'' |
40588 | We wandered about there for a time, saying to ourselves,"What is this strange thing? |
40588 | Were not Rámabhadra, king Nala, and your own grandfather,[ 648] after enduring separation, reunited to their beloved wives? |
40588 | What anger does the wise man shew for the sake of this perishing body? |
40588 | What annoyance can you, a man of pure character, derive from the contempt of a fool? |
40588 | What are the ear- nectar- distilling syllables of her name? |
40588 | What are you about to do, and why does your mother weep for you?" |
40588 | What are you waiting for? |
40588 | What are you waiting for?" |
40588 | What business has a hetæra like you with affection? |
40588 | What can Fate do against a firm unshaken man, any more than the wind against a mountain? |
40588 | What can I do in this matter, friend Kalingasená?" |
40588 | What can I gain by taking up an enmity with others on account of Anangaprabhá? |
40588 | What can I say in his presence? |
40588 | What can a man do against them? |
40588 | What can be the villain''s object in making such a proposal?" |
40588 | What can he not do whose prudence does not fail in calamity? |
40588 | What can not the will of Siva effect? |
40588 | What can this be?" |
40588 | What can we say against the porter who does not know his letters? |
40588 | What chance is there of a lion''s not being victorious in a fight with a bull? |
40588 | What child would sacrifice its body?" |
40588 | What choice have I in the matter? |
40588 | What could you have done after the event had taken place? |
40588 | What course shall I adopt? |
40588 | What delusion is this that possesses you? |
40588 | What did he do?" |
40588 | What disgrace is there in carrying on a conversation with a great merchant?" |
40588 | What do I care for my young son? |
40588 | What do we care about one day''s pay?" |
40588 | What do you desire to get by withering yourself in vain? |
40588 | What does all this mean? |
40588 | What does he take away from me? |
40588 | What does this girl''s family matter to you? |
40588 | What else indeed are we to do, for we have no other resource?" |
40588 | What else shall I tell thee?" |
40588 | What fault have we committed?" |
40588 | What for my daughter? |
40588 | What for myself? |
40588 | What friendship can you have with a camel, and why do you not eat him? |
40588 | What had a man holding the office of prime minister to do with sea- voyages? |
40588 | What harm can it do to me that you should be married among these? |
40588 | What harm can this do? |
40588 | What have I to do with it?" |
40588 | What have I to do with this mean- spirited coward?" |
40588 | What indeed is there which women of good family, who are attached to their husbands, will not endure? |
40588 | What is a realm without counsel? |
40588 | What is a tank without water? |
40588 | What is an unprotected woman, fallen into calamity in a foreign land, to do? |
40588 | What is ever likely to go wrong with a man who reflects? |
40588 | What is speech without truth?" |
40588 | What is the meaning of this despondency when your marriage is about to come off?'' |
40588 | What is the object of this basket? |
40588 | What is the profit of that mischievous hunting, in which slayer, victim, and horse[ 385] are all equally beside themselves? |
40588 | What is the sky without the sun? |
40588 | What is the use of giving to the rich or the comfortable? |
40588 | What is the use of grief?" |
40588 | What is the use of rank and power to a blockhead? |
40588 | What is the use of roaming about in foreign countries?" |
40588 | What is the use of surrendering life, for the sake of which we acquire all other things?" |
40588 | What is the use, father, of the sovereignty of those kings, who hold it merely for the sake of oppressing the poor? |
40588 | What is there that the wise can not understand? |
40588 | What is your name and how did you learn so much?" |
40588 | What king or prince is there on the earth that does not honour me? |
40588 | What man is as devoted to his sovereign as thou, who, by the sacrifice of thy noble only son, hast bestowed on this king Súdraka life and a kingdom?" |
40588 | What means this devotion on your part to the pleasures of love, when it is time to fight? |
40588 | What more can I say? |
40588 | What more shall I say? |
40588 | What need have I of any other boon?" |
40588 | What need have we of more witnesses? |
40588 | What other boon do I require?" |
40588 | What petitioner is not despised? |
40588 | What return can I make to him, who secretly redeemed my life this night by the sacrifice of his son and wife?" |
40588 | What self- willed one would desire a mighty lord as his ruler and restrainer? |
40588 | What shall I do? |
40588 | What then does that daughter matter to me? |
40588 | What visiting of holy waters, other than the doing of your duty, is incumbent upon you? |
40588 | What will not good men do for the sake of those that implore their aid? |
40588 | What will not poor people, who are struggling for a livelihood,[ 508] do out of desire for gain? |
40588 | What will not the effective favour of the gods accomplish? |
40588 | What wise man looks for love in hetæræ or for oil in sand? |
40588 | What wise man, I pray you, drowns himself in these hollow and fleeting enjoyments? |
40588 | What would my father, my relations, or my friends say of me, if they saw me? |
40588 | What, madman, do you wish to be shrivelled like a moth in the fire of his wrath?" |
40588 | When Chandasinha heard this speech of his son''s, he said to him,"What is this that you say? |
40588 | When Damanaka said this, Pingalaka answered,"What can that miserable herb- eating bull do against me? |
40588 | When Damayantí heard this, she was terrified, thinking to herself--"Why does my husband tell me the way, as if he meant to abandon me?" |
40588 | When Devasena''s mother heard that, she summoned Kírtisená, and elevating her eyes, said to him then and there,--"What have I done? |
40588 | When Dírghadarsin heard that, he said,"Why should I remain here? |
40588 | When Govindasvámin heard him say this, he was distressed at his suffering, and said to him;"Whence can I procure fire now my son?" |
40588 | When Gunasarman heard this, he answered him--"It is as you say; how could ill fortune befall a shape with such auspicious marks?" |
40588 | When Gunasarman said this, the queen continued,"Why do you possess in vain this beauty and skill in accomplishments? |
40588 | When Gunádhya had said this, Kánabhúti asked,"Why, my lord, was the king called Sátaváhana?" |
40588 | When Harisikha said this, Gomukha said again--"Why should we tell any out- of- the- way story? |
40588 | When I had said this to him, my father asked me reproachfully--''Why do you run such risks? |
40588 | When I have conversed with you gods, how can I afterwards bear to converse with gamblers? |
40588 | When I heard that, I answered that noble Bráhman,"What use can I make of Vetálas, now that I am separated from Mrigánkadatta?" |
40588 | When I said this they all exclaimed in wrath,--''Who is he that sends us this haughty command? |
40588 | When I said this to the king, he became anxious and reflected--"Can she really be a witch? |
40588 | When Indumatí said this, the queen answered her,"How can I take this from your mistress now that she is in trouble?" |
40588 | When Jímútaváhana saw that, he said to his father,"Father, what other has might, when thou hast taken up arms? |
40588 | When Jívadatta heard that, he was astonished, and reflected in his own mind--"Can Anangaprabhá have come here, or is this woman a witch?" |
40588 | When Kalingasená refused, he went as he came; but why should he not have now come secretly and carried her off by his magic power? |
40588 | When Kalávatí heard that, she said,"How is it fitting for me to do this? |
40588 | When Kalávatí said this, Mahalliká answered--"When I spoke to you kindly, why do you answer in such an unkind and spiteful way, shameless girl? |
40588 | When Mahalliká heard this from their mouth, she said,''Has he been seen by you, and is your heart attached to him?'' |
40588 | When Marubhúti heard this speech of the queen''s, he said;"Queen, how can mortals ever attain this good fortune? |
40588 | When Maya heard this, he said--"We are not forcing on war, but if Indra violently makes war on us, tell me, how can we remain passive? |
40588 | When Mukharaka heard this, he said to the maiden, without the least trepidation,"Who are you? |
40588 | When Muktáphalaketu heard this, he said to her with eager excitement,"Who is she? |
40588 | When Mánasavega took away queen Madanamanchuká by his magic power, who amused you impatient of separation, and how did he do it?" |
40588 | When Pingalaka said this, Damanaka said:"King, being thirsty, you went to drink water; so why did you return without drinking, like one despondent?" |
40588 | When Rúpavatí heard that, she came up quickly and said,"Eat me, for, if my husband is eaten, what will become of me?" |
40588 | When Siva had thus spoken, Párvatí asked,"How can I have been thy wife in a former birth?" |
40588 | When Srutadhi said this to the prince, he answered him;"How can this be? |
40588 | When Srídarsana heard this, he said,"How can I leave this place without that sorcerer? |
40588 | When Sukhadhana heard this, he said--"Then let us fight in single combat, what need is there of retainers? |
40588 | When Sundarasena and Vindhyaketu heard this, they said to themselves"Can these be that merchant and Mandáravatí?" |
40588 | When Sundarasena heard that, he thought to himself,"Can this really be that beloved of mine?" |
40588 | When Súrasena''s wife said this to him, he replied,"How can I help going, when the king summons me? |
40588 | When Súryaprabha heard this, he said to her with a downcast expression--"My beloved, you are very magnanimous, but how can I do this?" |
40588 | When Tapantaka said this, Harisikha said in his turn,"Have you not heard what happened in this way to Devadása?" |
40588 | When Tapodatta saw that, he broke his silence, and asked him out of curiosity--"Bráhman, why do you do this unceasingly?" |
40588 | When Yajnasvámin, in Bhímapura, heard this, he said to Kesata,"Why do you utter this despondent speech? |
40588 | When Yama heard this, he said to Sinhavikrama;"Tell me, which will you take first, your happiness or your misery?" |
40588 | When Yamasikha heard that, he said to him,"Then tell me, what kind of power has that king?" |
40588 | When even gods have to endure so much suffering by associating with the wives of others, what must be the result of it to inferior beings? |
40588 | When he gave her this order, she began to weep, and the friend came in, and said to her,"What is the matter?" |
40588 | When he had been thus admonished, he offered water to his parents, and put another question to that science,"Where is my uncle Gopálaka now? |
40588 | When he had given his friends this lesson, they abandoned discontent, the source of crime; to whom is not association with the good improving? |
40588 | When he had thus ascertained her wishes, he made her his wife: when two are of one mind, what more does secret love require? |
40588 | When he heard that, Bhogavarman was filled with wonder, and said to him,"What does all this mean? |
40588 | When he heard that, Sarvavarman suddenly exclaimed in a fit of jealousy--"How can a man accustomed to enjoyment endure hardship for so long? |
40588 | When he heard that, he said in answer to the water- snake,--"My friend, who are you?" |
40588 | When he heard that, he was amazed and began to murmur--"How can I have slain a Bráhman, my sovereign?" |
40588 | When he heard that, the hermit asked him out of curiosity--''What have you discovered?'' |
40588 | When he heard that, the king eagerly asked his minister;"When there are other cardinal points, why do kings first march towards the East?" |
40588 | When he heard this, Putraka said--"What is the use of fighting? |
40588 | When he heard this, he told his story, and asked her in turn,"Tell me, who are you and what is your business in this wood?" |
40588 | When he said that, Gomukha was delighted and said to him--"King, you are favoured by the gods; what is difficult to you? |
40588 | When he said this, Agnidatta answered him, smiling,"If even you show so much infatuation, what are we to expect from others? |
40588 | When he said this, Damayantí asked him--"If it is so, how did you become deformed?" |
40588 | When he said this, Gomukha replied to him smiling,"Do princes reprove with their own mouths an ill- behaved servant? |
40588 | When he said this, Raktáksha laughed and said to him;"By the favour of our master you will be well enough off: what need is there of fire? |
40588 | When he said this, all the ministers laughed at him, and Naraváhanadatta said to the minister Marubhúti:"What are you thinking about, you fool? |
40588 | When he said this, she answered, as fate would have it,"Why do you boast? |
40588 | When he said this, she, being afraid, said,"What does that matter to you? |
40588 | When he saw Chandrasvámin, he said to him,"Who are you?" |
40588 | When he saw us, he advanced towards us, and said kindly to me,"Who are you, my good sir; and who is this lady; and why have you come here?" |
40588 | When he told the younger brothers this, they laughed, and said to him,"If you see our duty so clearly, why do you not see that your own is the same?" |
40588 | When her father heard this he said,"My daughter, what is this that you say? |
40588 | When his friends heard that, they said,"How did you come into the world?" |
40588 | When his mother said this to him, the prince answered her;"Who will respect me if I go there without attendants?" |
40588 | When king Vikramasakti heard this, he thought,"Certainly this is true, if he were any other, how could he enter this carefully guarded tent? |
40588 | When king Vikramasakti saw this, he suspected some glamour of malignant demons, and he said to me apprehensively"What is the meaning of this?" |
40588 | When one of his sons died, he killed another, saying, How could this child go such a long journey alone? |
40588 | When she arrived there, Makarandiká welcomed her, and seeing Somaprabha, asked,"Who is this?" |
40588 | When she heard that, she said to him,"Whence can I procure another golden lotus? |
40588 | When she heard this, she said:"If this is your intention, why do you ask me? |
40588 | When she said this in her pain, her friend answered her,"What would not I do for your sake? |
40588 | When she said this, Mrigánkavatí went on slowly to say,"Friend, I love you as my life, so why should I not say what I think it is time to reveal? |
40588 | When she said this, her confidante answered,"Why do you say this? |
40588 | When she said this, her ladies- in- waiting said to her,"If you know this to be the case, princess, why do you not speak to him? |
40588 | When she saw him, she reflected for a moment,"Who can this being of celestial appearance be? |
40588 | When she spoke with this settled purpose, Víravara said to her;"Do so, what can I say against it? |
40588 | When she thus lamented, the young man her son said to her,"I am afflicted enough, as it is, mother; why do you afflict me more? |
40588 | When that hermit with his wives said that, Indra was abashed with shame and fear, and Aditi said--"What is that Srutasarman like? |
40588 | When the Bráhman heard that, he laughed, and went on to say to me,"Do you not know that you can obtain from a Vetála all that you desire? |
40588 | When the Bráhman heard this, he said--"If the limit of my life is attained, why do you not take me? |
40588 | When the Bráhman''s sons who were in the tree, saw this, they said to one another,"Who can this be? |
40588 | When the Rákshasí said this to her children, they asked her,"If the disease is discovered and removed, will that king live, mother? |
40588 | When the Vetála heard this, he said to him reproachfully,"Tell me, king, how can you make out that the general was not his superior? |
40588 | When the Vidyádhara maiden had said this, Somaprabha said to her,"Then, why do you remain alone, where is that female attendant of yours?" |
40588 | When the ambassador heard this from Kalingasena, he said to him,"How can you, being a servant, dare to set yourself up against your master? |
40588 | When the bard had carefully scanned the city delineated there, he was astonished, and said,"I wonder who can have drawn this city? |
40588 | When the brother- in- law heard this, he said to him, in order to dissuade him,"How can so many of us approach the goddess empty- handed?" |
40588 | When the chief said--"Who are you?" |
40588 | When the daughter of Prahláda heard that, she answered her friend pensively,''What marriage for me? |
40588 | When the earth heard this, she said,--"Who is as brave as you, and as devoted to his master? |
40588 | When the eldest brother said this, his younger brothers said to him,"Sir, why are you, though wise, afflicted with pain merely because you are poor? |
40588 | When the eldest brother said this, the two younger ones answered him,"If you hesitate about taking it, why should not we?" |
40588 | When the goat heard this, he was astonished, and remained silent, saying to himself,"How can this mere mortal know so much about me?" |
40588 | When the gods heard that, they said--"All of us have sons here that have been slain, or are being slain, so how can we help fighting? |
40588 | When the gods said this to Vishnu, he answered them,"Why, do I not know that my regulations are broken by that Asura? |
40588 | When the hermit heard that, he said to Dharmavyádha in his astonishment,--"How come you to have such knowledge, being a seller of flesh?" |
40588 | When the hermit said this to Chandrasvámin, he answered,"Reverend sir, I am a Bráhman; how can I eat a part of your alms?" |
40588 | When the holy one asked the gods how they prospered, they humbly said to him,"What prosperity can be ours, O god, as long as Vidyuddhvaja is alive? |
40588 | When the jackal said this, the bull again said to him--"Why do you seem so despondent to- day, my friend, tell me?" |
40588 | When the king heard it, he recovered his memory, and said to him,"How do you know me, who am tossed with the wind of separation?" |
40588 | When the king heard that, he said,"Villain, if it is not true, how did you know that the poison was in the dish of rice?" |
40588 | When the king heard that, he said:"Have you that portrait with you?" |
40588 | When the king heard that, he thought to himself,"What harm can it do? |
40588 | When the king heard this, he said--"How could a lady of birth and rank do such a deed? |
40588 | When the king of Kalinga heard this, he was very angry, and he said,"Who is this king Vikramáditya? |
40588 | When the king of Vatsa said this, Yaugandharáyana answered,"My lord, how could Kalingasená consent to this impropriety? |
40588 | When the king of the Bhillas saw him, he half recognised him, and being terrified, said to him,"Tell me, who are you, and whence do you come?" |
40588 | When the king said this, Mandaradeva answered him,"Of what profit is my life to me, now that I have been saved in war by a woman? |
40588 | When the king said this, his courtiers exclaimed--"Paint the king: what is the use of painting others, ugly in comparison with him?" |
40588 | When the king said this, his minister answered him;"Why, king, do you suppose that courage and not policy ensures success? |
40588 | When the king saw this, he was bewildered, and said to his own Bráhmans;"What does this mean? |
40588 | When the lion had despatched the jackal with these words, he went to the donkey and said;"Why did you run away, sir? |
40588 | When the lion heard that, he lashed his tail, and his eyes became red with anger, and he said:"Who is that second lion? |
40588 | When the lion said this, Damanaka answered him;"Being valiant, O king, why do you wish to leave the wood for so slight a reason? |
40588 | When the minister Yaugandharáyana heard this, he said to her--"Be composed, for how could this happen, queen, while I am alive? |
40588 | When the minister heard this, he said--"King, why did that mendicant court you? |
40588 | When the minister said this to him, the Bráhman- Rákshasa answered,"Why should I not by some artifice cause her to fall or slay her?" |
40588 | When the old woman heard that, she cast her sorrowful eyes all round the horizon, and cried aloud,"I am undone; who will deliver my son?" |
40588 | When the parrot had recited this sloka, it began to reflect, and said again,"What do you wish to know? |
40588 | When the prince heard this from the mouth of the female ascetic, he said,"Mother, how are we to get a sight of her beauty, which is so surpassing?" |
40588 | When the prince saw that, he said to the minister''s son,"What is the meaning of this marvel?" |
40588 | When the princess heard him singing such songs, as he danced, she said to me,''What does this fellow mean? |
40588 | When the princess heard this, she sighed, and slowly told the following tale;"Why should I distrust you of all people? |
40588 | When the princess''s attendant said this to her, she answered her,"My friend, though I know all this, what am I to do? |
40588 | When the queen Vásavadattá heard that, she said to the king--"Great king, why do you suddenly say this now? |
40588 | When the sons heard that, they were not able to persuade the king of the truth, for when a ruler is bent on violence, who can convince him? |
40588 | When the sun has risen, do the other luminaries give light? |
40588 | When the villain said this, those servants answered him,"What is there to fear in this? |
40588 | When the wicked woman said this to him, he entered the cave; what room is there for discernment in the heart of one blinded with love? |
40588 | When they had sat down, I put this question to the Yakshí,"Goddess, who are these maidens, and what is the meaning of this golden deer?" |
40588 | When they heard it, they said,"Who can tell how this matter is in the mind of Destiny? |
40588 | When they heard that, they said to her--''We saw him from the top of the palace, and what woman is there that a sight of him would not captivate?'' |
40588 | When they heard that, they said:"We have seen you, the choicest jewel in that town; what more do we require? |
40588 | When they heard this speech of their sister''s, Vatsa and Gulma said,"What confidence can we repose in all this?" |
40588 | When they replied,"No, master,"the merchant went to bed, exclaiming,"How are we to drink water in the latter part of the night?" |
40588 | When they said this to Vasubhúti, he said,"What course is this which you suggest? |
40588 | When they said this, the daughter of the king of the Asuras answered them,''Why is it not proper? |
40588 | When they were about to fly away, one crow said,"I am so hungry; where shall I get something to eat?" |
40588 | Where are my little sons?" |
40588 | Where can I find[ 260] such dear friends as you?" |
40588 | Where can one be found? |
40588 | Where can that master of mine be gone? |
40588 | Where did you see my beloved Madanamanchuká? |
40588 | Where has she gone? |
40588 | Where have you been all this time?" |
40588 | Where is Vinítamati? |
40588 | Where is it now to them? |
40588 | Where is that sword? |
40588 | Where shall I go, ill- starred as I am? |
40588 | Where shall I look for him? |
40588 | Where too are those attendants of mine? |
40588 | Where, I ask, are those our predecessors who kept it so strenuously, exclaiming,''It is mine, it is mine?'' |
40588 | Whereupon Sinhabala said to us--''This is untrue, for have not the gods and Indra girded up their loins to support the cause of Srutasarman?'' |
40588 | While Garuda was thus musing, Jímútaváhana said to him;"King of birds, why do you desist? |
40588 | While the guards were exclaiming in their distraction,"Who are these, and whither are they gone?" |
40588 | Who are they, and where have they gone?" |
40588 | Who are you, and why have you come here? |
40588 | Who are you?" |
40588 | Who are you?" |
40588 | Who but Dámodara, who is a portion of Hari, would do this? |
40588 | Who can arrest the lightning? |
40588 | Who can discern the mysterious way of Destiny?" |
40588 | Who can guard a disloyal woman? |
40588 | Who can overpower you and how? |
40588 | Who can overstep the lot prescribed by destiny?" |
40588 | Who can rely on any one before seeing the end? |
40588 | Who can restrain a furious river and a passionate woman? |
40588 | Who can see through a woman, with loving face secretly planning crime? |
40588 | Who could conquer you in the van of battle? |
40588 | Who ever died from being struck with flowers? |
40588 | Who ever returned from the house of Yama? |
40588 | Who has offended you? |
40588 | Who is able to endure the sight of the misery of youthful offspring? |
40588 | Who is he, and who are we?" |
40588 | Who is he? |
40588 | Who is he? |
40588 | Who is it that you have painted here?'' |
40588 | Who is not grieved when he has involved himself in a dangerous quarrel by a mere speech? |
40588 | Who is not subject to time?" |
40588 | Who is permanently dear to a king? |
40588 | Who is this woman? |
40588 | Who knows what will take place hereafter, for the body perishes in a moment? |
40588 | Who prospers by immorality? |
40588 | Who scratched you on the breast? |
40588 | Who told you?'' |
40588 | Who wants anything? |
40588 | Who will be ambassador? |
40588 | Who will discover that I know nothing about it, for who has ever seen it? |
40588 | Who will ever be victorious in this world by disregarding the difference between himself and his foe? |
40588 | Who would cause his son''s death for the sake of wealth? |
40588 | Who would ever expect to see a sandbank suddenly start up in the middle of the ocean, or such maidens upon it? |
40588 | Who would not joy at pain ending in happiness? |
40588 | Who, that was the favoured lover of the beautiful wife of Sasin, could care for other women?" |
40588 | Whom can I ask in the uninhabited wood? |
40588 | Whom shall I betake myself to for protection there? |
40588 | Whom will it not bring down? |
40588 | Whom will not a sudden access of prosperity intoxicate? |
40588 | Whose daughter is she? |
40588 | Whose mind was not delighted at the union of that couple, which resembled the marriage of the spring- creeper and the spring- festival? |
40588 | Why are you afraid? |
40588 | Why are you so wicked?" |
40588 | Why did I waste those others, why did I not store them up?" |
40588 | Why did he not first offer himself to Garuda? |
40588 | Why did not the Creator make men exempt from old age and death?" |
40588 | Why did you make a secret of it? |
40588 | Why did you not provide wine for Bhogavarman to drink in the latter half of the night? |
40588 | Why did you not wait for me?" |
40588 | Why do kings care so much about those sons that hanker after their kingdom, and eat up their fathers like crabs? |
40588 | Why do we not quickly march towards Ujjayiní with the whole of this force?" |
40588 | Why do you afflict us?" |
40588 | Why do you disregard your own welfare, though you have conquered the earth and Pátála? |
40588 | Why do you neglect your health, though you are a wise man? |
40588 | Why do you not inflict on her to your heart''s content the punishment due for thieving?" |
40588 | Why do you not investigate the truth with equal intensity of contemplation, in order that you may not again become the victim of such sorrows?" |
40588 | Why do you not take from me those jewels for some fixed sum of money? |
40588 | Why do you not take her to yourself, as she is at your command?" |
40588 | Why do you not take me to him?" |
40588 | Why does he wish to slay you?" |
40588 | Why has this suddenly happened to me? |
40588 | Why hast thou disappointed and slain me? |
40588 | Why should I be so eager to have her for a wife?" |
40588 | Why should I fix my heart too fondly on him? |
40588 | Why should I not do a stroke of business which would bring me great prosperity?" |
40588 | Why should I then be angry with another, when my own deeds merit anger? |
40588 | Why should he not have chosen to kill you by craft? |
40588 | Why should she not be the lady herself? |
40588 | Why then should I speak? |
40588 | Why too should I saddle my soul with a load of guilt?" |
40588 | Why trouble her further on false grounds? |
40588 | Why was I captivated by her? |
40588 | Why, fair one, is it your duty not to allow your heart to attach itself to him? |
40588 | Why, through ignorance, have you fallen like moths into burning fire?" |
40588 | Will not a person possessed by a demon eat his own flesh with his teeth?" |
40588 | Will not that same great plant of policy, watered with the streams of expedient, and nourished with due time and place, truly bring forth fruit?" |
40588 | Would not I have sacrificed myself, if the object could have been attained by the sacrifice of any victim but our son? |
40588 | Yasovarman said to the merchant out of curiosity--"Great merchant, why do you eat so little?" |
40588 | You are a distinguished hero, you are a disputant of the Kshatriya caste; why do you remain silent? |
40588 | You can attain all the results you desire by my possession of the science; why do you shew this persistence? |
40588 | You have already conquered the Himálayas, the home of the Vidyádharas, so what need have you of Meru the home of the gods? |
40588 | You know how all living creatures in the world fear death: so why do you slay without cause these poor deer? |
40588 | You ought to punish him, why do you offer to give me to him? |
40588 | You take good care of your own children; why do you perpetually torment me?" |
40588 | You that used to love me so well, what has made you cruel to me? |
40588 | Your mother has only recently gone to heaven, and now that I have lost so good a wife, how can I desire another?" |
40588 | Your person is inviolable, so what can we do?" |
40588 | Your wife is at present in love with another, so how can she shew you affection? |
40588 | [ 144] When the prince heard that, he propitiated the female ascetic and said to her;"Who is this Mrigánkalekhá? |
40588 | [ 146] What does the cold moon profit a shivering man, or what is the use of a cloud when winter has arrived? |
40588 | [ 155] She said,"who art thou, illustrious sir, and for what reason hast thou entered our home on this occasion?" |
40588 | [ 179] Cathay? |
40588 | [ 209] When Vinítamati''s father said this to him, he answered,--"My father, how can men like me contend with weak women? |
40588 | [ 232] So why do you refuse to take food? |
40588 | [ 232] Then he, full of curiosity, thought for a moment,"Can this be sleep or delusion? |
40588 | [ 253]"When Chakradhara made this proposal to the Bráhmans, Vidúshaka, who was standing near, said to them;"Do this, what is there to be afraid of?" |
40588 | [ 273] Böhtlingk and Roth give upasankhya as überzählig(?). |
40588 | [ 311] For were not the sages long ago angry with Siva in the devadáru- wood, being afraid that their wives would go astray? |
40588 | [ 31] I prefer the reading kas of the Sanskrit College MS., and would render,"Whom can the king make his equal? |
40588 | [ 323] But who knows the way of the mighty god Fate, in that you suddenly fixed your mind on pilgrimage to holy waters and other sacred places? |
40588 | [ 341] He said to himself,"Can this be Rati come in person to gather the flowers accumulated by spring, in order to make arrows for the god of love? |
40588 | [ 347] What but ridicule can ever be the portion of the over- greedy? |
40588 | [ 372] She next asked him,"By what road did you go there, and what is it like?" |
40588 | [ 391] And what greater merit can there be than the benefiting of all creatures? |
40588 | [ 439] And did not Visvámitra leave his asceticism when he beheld Menaká? |
40588 | [ 453] And the other is like it; say, what is there attractive in these?" |
40588 | [ 498] When the king heard that, he sent for the merchant, and said to him--"Tell me, who fetched you the nágabalá?" |
40588 | [ 507] And putting the betel into my mouth, I said to that dear companion of hers,"What can I say more than this, my good girl? |
40588 | [ 556] So why do you run after Bandhudattá, who is a friend of witches? |
40588 | [ 562] But such is this world, full of marvels, full of frauds; who can fathom it, or the sea, at any time?" |
40588 | [ 614] Then the Daitya said to her,"Why, who can slay me who am of adamantine frame? |
40588 | [ 635] And when Siva the god of gods is worshipped, what god is not worshipped? |
40588 | [ 63] They said to their mother,"Why was he not killed to- day?" |
40588 | [ 662] And how could one like me captivate the soul of a man who, when roaming in the air, beheld Kámachúdámani?" |
40588 | [ 713] The three India Office MSS., read purasatair,"hundreds of cities?" |
40588 | [ 749] When we saw this, we were astonished and we said to one another,"What can this wonder mean? |
40588 | [ 753] He said--"What is the use of this profitless body that is dead even while alive? |
40588 | [ 825] When this was said to the boy, he was put to shame; so he went and said to his mother,"Mother, who and where is my father? |
40588 | [ 82] The good Bráhman lady said,"Who will give me alms in this vessel, for I am a woman?" |
40588 | [ 83] He had made money without capital, so his achievements are compared to pictures suspended in the air? |
40588 | am I dead? |
40588 | am I mortally wounded by my enemies?" |
40588 | and asked him courteously;"Are you the elder brother of Rájyadhara, skilled in various very great mechanical contrivances?" |
40588 | brothers, what are we to do? |
40588 | did he go there, and was my brother not able to devour him? |
40588 | did you not keep any for Gunavará? |
40588 | did you not see, what she told you by her signs? |
40588 | do maidens obtain husbands by worshipping Ganesa?" |
40588 | do you dare to sleep, when you are at war with king Vikramáditya?" |
40588 | do you suppose, prince, that this great city could ever be stormed by us, who are so few in number? |
40588 | do you wish to smite a jasmine flower with a thunder- bolt, in that you desire to employ a weapon against this tender form?" |
40588 | has this handsome man no one to anoint his back? |
40588 | has this maiden, after rejecting kings who asked for her hand, fallen in love with me? |
40588 | has this merchant, though my friend, robbed me of my wife? |
40588 | have these miserable wretches left this unfortunate woman alone? |
40588 | have we entered the house of a profligate woman? |
40588 | how baffled?" |
40588 | how can this evildoer eat the flesh of cows, those animals that are the object of veneration to the three worlds?" |
40588 | how comes it that a wild elephant conducts itself like a man? |
40588 | how have you suddenly come to make this mistake?" |
40588 | how is this that you have neglected to arrive at my dinner hour, or what worse penalty than death can I inflict on you, scoundrel?" |
40588 | how shall I be able to pass a year, long as a thousand years, without the queen Madanasundarí, whom I value more than my life?" |
40588 | how shall I live in the body of a sow, and after that in the mire?" |
40588 | how shall I obtain the lotus- like heart of a monkey? |
40588 | is he the god of love, without his flowery bow? |
40588 | is there not a banyan- tree and a tank on the east side of the village? |
40588 | is this my brother Asokadatta come here?" |
40588 | is this my uncle Vigatabhaya, who long ago went to a foreign country, and do I now by good luck find him established in the position of a minister?" |
40588 | my beloved Padmávatí, do you not see that when I was a Vidyádhara, I incurred a curse in Meghavana for your sake? |
40588 | my beloved with face like the moon''s orb, fair as the moonlight; did this night grudge your existence, hating your charms that rival hers[ 332]? |
40588 | my female swan?''" |
40588 | shall he slay the king''s daughter while I am alive? |
40588 | she is in love with another man, she must certainly go; why should I make her break her word? |
40588 | son, the only scion of our family, where shall I behold you again? |
40588 | tell me why you have become thus?" |
40588 | the ways are seen to be lighted up by the moonlight, as if whitened with plaster, so why should I not go there and roam about? |
40588 | though it has cost me hundreds of hardships to reach this city, I can not even enter it; what chance then have I of obtaining my beloved?" |
40588 | what can I give to the king?" |
40588 | what can that miserable Yakshiní do to us? |
40588 | what does this mean?" |
40588 | what friendship can there be between the eater and his prey?" |
40588 | what is the meaning of this? |
40588 | what is the meaning of this? |
40588 | what is the meaning of this? |
40588 | what is this great display of marvellous delusion? |
40588 | what is this strange event? |
40588 | what is this wonder? |
40588 | what is this?" |
40588 | what is your descent, and what do you know?" |
40588 | what means this? |
40588 | what means this?" |
40588 | what wretch is able to injure me?" |
40588 | when Kali reduced Nala to such a state, say, what will be the lot of other mortals, who are like worms compared with him? |
40588 | where will you go, thus carrying off the wife of another? |
40588 | who can this girl be? |
40588 | who except thee is a man of valour? |
40588 | who has rubbed salt into my wounds?" |
40588 | who is it?" |
40588 | whom will not excessive desire of gain delude, since I rashly made such a promise before the queen? |
40588 | why did I foolishly abandon you in the wilderness and make you the prey of lions and tigers? |
40588 | why do you abandon your rank as a Vidyádhara, and follow this inhabitant of earth named Súryaprabha?" |
40588 | why do you not listen to the blessing of such a one as I am? |
40588 | why do you trouble yourselves about the speech of this babbler? |
40588 | why have you taken to- day one karsha more of ghee than the small amount allowed to you, and eaten meat- curry, and drunk a pala of milk?" |
40588 | will the king punish you, if you drink it all up?" |
40588 | you are a fool: what man does anything for any one, or gives anything to any one? |
40588 | you avert disgrace from others, why do you not avert it from yourself? |
7469 | A more important place than Offendene, I suppose? |
7469 | A spiritual destiny embraced willingly-- in youth? |
7469 | About Mr. Grandcourt''s intentions? |
7469 | About whether you will accept him, then? |
7469 | Ah, my friend Criterion, how is he? |
7469 | Ah, who knows? 7469 Ah?" |
7469 | Am I altogether as you like? |
7469 | Am I not to know anything now, Gwendolen? 7469 Am I wrong to come in?" |
7469 | And after that? |
7469 | And do you care about the turf?--or is that among the things you have left off? |
7469 | And hate people? 7469 And her mother?--where is she?" |
7469 | And how do you like Mr. Grandcourt, the happy lover? |
7469 | And not again here, before I leave town? |
7469 | And not take me with you? |
7469 | And people think no worse of him? |
7469 | And perhaps you will admit-- though I do n''t wish to press that point-- that you are bound in duty to consider my judgment and wishes? |
7469 | And pray, Amy, why do you insist on the number nine being so wonderful? |
7469 | And to ask her about her relations with Deronda? |
7469 | And what did you think of the future bride on a nearer survey? |
7469 | And what has become of Gwendolen? |
7469 | And what hindered her? |
7469 | And what is that, pray? |
7469 | And where do you go after the marriage? |
7469 | And why should you not? |
7469 | And will you give me a kiss this evening? |
7469 | And will you let me see you in it, Adelaide? |
7469 | And will you tell Mirah before I say anything to the children? |
7469 | And you do n''t admire young men in general? |
7469 | And you like better to see the men with their hats on? |
7469 | And you were fool enough to follow? |
7469 | And you wish them to understand that you do n''t care? |
7469 | And you would be ashamed they should see your father in this plight? 7469 And, in the other case, I suppose everything would have been reversed-- illegitimacy would have had the extinguisher?" |
7469 | Any one to take care of you? |
7469 | Any prospect of an heir being born? |
7469 | Anything about Italy-- anything about the Austrians giving up Venice? |
7469 | Apropos,she said, taking up her work again,"is there any one besides Captain and Mrs. Torrington at Diplow?--or do you leave them_ tete- à- tete_? |
7469 | Are her lessons to be very cheap or very expensive? 7469 Are there any other couples you would like to invite?" |
7469 | Are there many of these old rooms left in the Abbey? |
7469 | Are you angry with me, Gwendolen? 7469 Are you as critical of words as of music?" |
7469 | Are you converted to- day? |
7469 | Are you fond of riding? |
7469 | Are you going to take Gwendolen? |
7469 | Are you inclined to run after her? |
7469 | Are you not a musician? |
7469 | Are you persuading Mrs. Grandcourt to play to us, Dan? |
7469 | Are you there, mamma? |
7469 | Are you under a vow, Miss Harleth? |
7469 | But he has seen you often and heard you sing a great deal, has he not? |
7469 | But if feelings rose-- there are some feelings-- hatred and anger-- how can I be good when they keep rising? 7469 But if it were true, Mirah?" |
7469 | But if they injure you and could have helped it? |
7469 | But if you do n''t feel able to decide? |
7469 | But it was not always found out, was it? |
7469 | But just come with me one instant, Gascoigne, will you? 7469 But need you set off in this way, Gwendolen?" |
7469 | But ought I now to tell Ezra that I have seen my father? |
7469 | But sha''n''t I come home and be with you in the holidays? |
7469 | But the dress-- the dress,said Amy;"is it settled?" |
7469 | But we shall all go to England? |
7469 | But what would you try to do? |
7469 | But where are we to go? |
7469 | But who is he? |
7469 | But why are we to invite them to the Abbey? |
7469 | But why do you mean to do it? |
7469 | But will you take trouble for me in another way, and fetch me a glass of that fresh water? |
7469 | But with a maintenance? |
7469 | But you do n''t feel bound to continue with them now there is a closer tie to draw you? |
7469 | But you love your other children, and they love you? |
7469 | But you will come back? |
7469 | But you will see me again? |
7469 | But;she added, having devoured her mortification,"I suppose you do n''t object to Miss Lapidoth''s singing at our party on the fourth? |
7469 | But_ was_ it beautiful for Buddha to let the tiger eat him? |
7469 | Can I be of any use, sir? |
7469 | Can I find the house in Genoa where you used to live with my grandfather? |
7469 | Can I understand the ideas, or am I too ignorant? |
7469 | Can nobody be happy after they are quite young? 7469 Can you manage to feel only what pleases you?" |
7469 | Can you say this? |
7469 | Croyez- vous m''avoir humiliée pour m''avoir appris que la terre tourne autour du soleil? 7469 Daniel is not fond of Mr. Grandcourt, I think, is he?" |
7469 | Did Prince Camaralzaman find him? |
7469 | Did she tell you that I went to her? |
7469 | Did she? |
7469 | Did you not know that Mr. Grandcourt left me a letter on your wedding- day? 7469 Did you say Mirah?" |
7469 | Diplow? 7469 Do I look as well as Rachel, mamma?" |
7469 | Do n''t you approve of a wife burning incense before her husband? |
7469 | Do n''t you find this pleasant? |
7469 | Do nothing better? |
7469 | Do you despise me for it? |
7469 | Do you feel equal to the walk? |
7469 | Do you feel in that way? |
7469 | Do you feel too ill? |
7469 | Do you hear that? |
7469 | Do you intend to go out again? 7469 Do you know what they are, sir?" |
7469 | Do you know_ why_ she wants to see me, uncle? |
7469 | Do you like a cork- screw? |
7469 | Do you like danger? |
7469 | Do you mean now, immediately,said Deronda;"or as to the course of my future life?" |
7469 | Do you mean to say,said Grandcourt, just audibly, turning to face her,"that you will not do as I tell you?" |
7469 | Do you mind that? |
7469 | Do you object to my hunting? |
7469 | Do you take off your hat to horses? |
7469 | Do you think I am too old? |
7469 | Do you think so? |
7469 | Do you think we can manage it? |
7469 | Does Lady Mallinger know? |
7469 | Does he belong to your family? |
7469 | Dreadful, do you call it? 7469 Excuse me, Mirah, but_ does_ it seem quite right to you that the women should sit behind rails in a gallery apart?" |
7469 | Ezra, how is it? |
7469 | Get them away, will you? 7469 Had you luck?" |
7469 | Had you no teaching about what was your duty? |
7469 | Has Mrs. Grandcourt been in here? |
7469 | Has it two blades and a hook-- and a white handle like that? |
7469 | Have I not besought you that I might now at least be a son to you? 7469 Have I shown myself so very dense to everything you have said?" |
7469 | Have n''t children reason to be angry with their parents? 7469 Have you anything else to say to me?" |
7469 | Have you anything more to say to me? |
7469 | Have you fallen in love? |
7469 | Have you given him a doubtful answer? |
7469 | Have you heard anything of him which has affected you disagreeably? |
7469 | Have you made yourself sure that she would like to figure in that character? 7469 Have you never since heard of your sister?" |
7469 | Have you no fears? 7469 Have you written entirely in Hebrew, then?" |
7469 | Have_ you_ got a knife? |
7469 | He is perhaps very high in the world? |
7469 | He said, I must get more interest in others, and more knowledge, and that I must care about the best things-- but how am I to begin? |
7469 | He''s come to life again, do you see? |
7469 | He_ has_ spoken so that you could not misunderstand him? |
7469 | Her heart has never been in the least touched, that you know of? |
7469 | Hermione as the statue in Winter''s Tale? 7469 His mother?" |
7469 | How am I to alter myself? |
7469 | How can I help it? |
7469 | How can I help it? |
7469 | How can any one know that I exaggerate, when I am speaking of my own feeling? 7469 How can you ask me that?" |
7469 | How can you help what I am? 7469 How can you laugh at broken bones, child?" |
7469 | How could I know what I was wishing? 7469 How could I, Gwendolen?" |
7469 | How could I? |
7469 | How dare you open things which were meant to be shut up, you perverse little creature? |
7469 | How did you come to that conclusion? |
7469 | How do you know that? 7469 How do you know that?" |
7469 | How do you like Criterion''s paces? |
7469 | How does the scoring stand, I wonder? |
7469 | How far are we from Green Arbor now? |
7469 | How far are you come? |
7469 | How long are we to be yachting? |
7469 | How was it that you were taken from your mother? |
7469 | How''s that? 7469 How_ shall_ you endure it, mamma?" |
7469 | However, she ought to be something extraordinary, for there must be an entanglement between your horoscope and hers-- eh? 7469 I have some biscuits-- should you like them?" |
7469 | I know it-- I know it; what is my life else? |
7469 | I should make a tolerable St. Cecilia with some white roses on my head,said Gwendolen,--"only how about my nose, mamma? |
7469 | I suppose it was she who led you on, eh? |
7469 | I suppose you have often seen him? |
7469 | I suppose you mean to go abroad, then? |
7469 | I will do what you tell me,said Gwendolen, hurriedly;"but what else shall I do?" |
7469 | I will write to you always, when I can, and you will answer? |
7469 | I wonder what he thinks of me, really? 7469 I wonder what sort of behavior a delightful young man would have? |
7469 | I wonder what sort of trouble hers were? |
7469 | I wonder whether Grandcourt gave her any notion what were the provisions of his will? |
7469 | I wonder whether he knows about it; and whether he is angry with his father? |
7469 | I''m very sorry; but what can I do? 7469 If it were true that baseness and cruelty made an escape from pain, what difference would that make to people who ca n''t be quite base or cruel? |
7469 | If that will not do, how are we to get another before Wednesday? 7469 In lodgings?" |
7469 | In what way are you not a good Jewess? |
7469 | In what, mamma? |
7469 | Is he a great friend of yours? |
7469 | Is he a man she would be happy with? |
7469 | Is he disagreeable to you personally? |
7469 | Is he not disagreeable? |
7469 | Is it a charitable affair? |
7469 | Is it absolutely necessary that Mrs. Grandcourt should marry again? |
7469 | Is it because you are offended with Mr. Grandcourt''s odd behavior in walking off to- day? |
7469 | Is it not possible that I could be near you often and comfort you? |
7469 | Is it that I stay indoors when you stay? |
7469 | Is it the accusations you are afraid of? 7469 Is not that a dangerous plaything?" |
7469 | Is not that the way with friendship, too? |
7469 | Is novelty always agreeable? |
7469 | Is she as perfect in every thing else as in her music? |
7469 | Is she beautiful? |
7469 | Is that last word you have to say to me, Gwendolen? 7469 Is the gentlemen anonymous? |
7469 | Is the society pleasant in this neighborhood? |
7469 | Is there any fresh trouble on your mind, my dear? |
7469 | Is there any kinship between this family and yours? |
7469 | Is there? |
7469 | Is this one of your undergraduates? |
7469 | It is difficult to make Miss Harleth understand her power? |
7469 | It is not hard for you to come into this neighborhood later in the evening? 7469 It is nothing to grieve you, sir?" |
7469 | It was you, singing? |
7469 | It will not be much of a wrench to her affections, I fancy, this loss of the husband? |
7469 | It''s all very fine,said Mr. Arrowpoint, when Catherine was gone;"but what the deuce are we to do with the property?" |
7469 | Just see to everything, will you? 7469 Just tell me the truth, will you?" |
7469 | Let Hutchins go with it at once, will you? |
7469 | Make yourself just like your grandfather-- be what he wished you-- turn yourself into a Jew like him? |
7469 | Married, sir? |
7469 | May I ask if you are tired of dancing, Miss Harleth? |
7469 | May I ask where you have been at this extraordinary hour? |
7469 | May I call at Offendene to- morrow? |
7469 | May I hope that you will let me take his place? |
7469 | May I know the reason? |
7469 | May I leave that unfixed? 7469 May we sit down with you a little, papa?" |
7469 | Might I be called Cohen? |
7469 | Mirah,_ Liebchen_,he said, in the old caressing way,"should n''t you like me to make myself a little more respectable before my son sees me? |
7469 | Mirah? |
7469 | Miss Harleth? |
7469 | Mr. Arrowpoint,_ will_ you sit by and hear this without speaking? |
7469 | My child, my child, what is it? |
7469 | My dear child, why should you think of that? |
7469 | My father was a Jew, and you are a Jewess? |
7469 | My hat? |
7469 | My sweet child, what else could have been thought of? 7469 Nannie, Nannie, what on earth is the matter with you?" |
7469 | Narrow? 7469 No, but I thought-- Does papa know you are going?" |
7469 | No; how should I? 7469 No?" |
7469 | Not ambitious? |
7469 | Not long before her marriage, then? |
7469 | Not one who must have a path of her own? |
7469 | Not one? |
7469 | Nothing bad? |
7469 | Nothing else? 7469 Now my cousins are at Diplow,"said Grandcourt,"will you go there?--to- morrow? |
7469 | Now, Gwendolen, dear, you_ will not_? |
7469 | Now, Mirah, what do you mean? |
7469 | Now, what sort of issue might be fairly expected from all this self- denial? 7469 Now, why are you glad of that?" |
7469 | Now, will you be good enough to say what it is you have to complain of? |
7469 | Object? 7469 Of what use would it be to her that I should not marry him? |
7469 | Oh, have n''t I, though? |
7469 | Oh, if you please, mamma? |
7469 | Oh, was it great to you? 7469 Ought I to take anything he has left me? |
7469 | Perhaps there is some deeper interest? 7469 Pray, who is that standing near the card- room door?" |
7469 | Quarrel with her? |
7469 | Relations with money, sir? |
7469 | Satisfied, mamma? 7469 Shall I accompany myself?" |
7469 | Shall I be acceptable? |
7469 | Shall I have mamma to stay with me, then? |
7469 | Shall I lead you back? |
7469 | Shall I ring? |
7469 | Shall I tell him he may come? |
7469 | Shall I write for you, dear-- if it teases you? |
7469 | Shall we get into a cab and drive to-- wherever you wish to go? 7469 Shall we go now and hear what the scoring says? |
7469 | Shall you come again? |
7469 | Shall you make Berenice look fifty? 7469 Shall you mind turning over that folio?" |
7469 | Shall you? |
7469 | She is not like that? |
7469 | She must be a very happy person, do n''t you think? |
7469 | She told you so-- did she? |
7469 | She told you, did she? |
7469 | She was not staying at the rectory? |
7469 | Should n''t you like to make a study of Klesmer''s head, Hans? |
7469 | Should you mind about me going away, Gwendolen? |
7469 | Should you punish me by leaving the children in beggary? |
7469 | Shut the door, will you? 7469 Sir Hugo Mallinger?" |
7469 | Something has happened, dear? |
7469 | Stay a minute,_ Liebchen_,said Lapidoth, speaking in a lowered tone;"what sort of man has Ezra turned out?" |
7469 | Suppose we had lost you? |
7469 | That is a becoming glass, Gwendolen; or is it the black and gold color that sets you off? |
7469 | That your knowing me has caused you? 7469 That?" |
7469 | The pleasure is on our side too; but the wonder would have been, if you had come to this house without hearing of Mr. Deronda-- wouldn''t it, Mirah? |
7469 | The_ ensemble du serpent_? |
7469 | Then I can profit by Mr. Clintock''s misfortune? |
7469 | Then I_ am_ a Jew? |
7469 | Then it is not my real name? |
7469 | Then who was his father? |
7469 | Then you will go to Diplow to- morrow? |
7469 | There are swarms of those people, are n''t there? |
7469 | There was another situation, I think, mamma spoke of? |
7469 | They are in this house, I suppose? |
7469 | Think so? 7469 Too splendid, do n''t you think?" |
7469 | Treat you? 7469 Turn out that brute, will you?" |
7469 | Unless nationality is a feeling, what force can it have as an idea? |
7469 | Was Paley an old bachelor? |
7469 | Was it part of the play? |
7469 | Was my grandfather a learned man? |
7469 | Was the door locked? 7469 Well, but what is the use of my being charming, if it is to end in my being dull and not minding anything? |
7469 | Well, child, he did not see you, I hope? |
7469 | Were there ever such unfeeling children? |
7469 | Were those my grandfather''s words? |
7469 | What am I to tell you, mamma? |
7469 | What are the right hands? 7469 What are you going to do?" |
7469 | What can I say to your uncle, Gwendolen? 7469 What can you be thinking of, Gwen?" |
7469 | What decision have you come to? |
7469 | What did I win, Lush? |
7469 | What do I know? |
7469 | What do women always say in answer to that? |
7469 | What do you call follies? |
7469 | What do you mean? |
7469 | What do you mean? |
7469 | What do you mean? |
7469 | What do you say to being a great singer? 7469 What do you say, Dan? |
7469 | What do you say, Sirrah? |
7469 | What do you think of them? |
7469 | What does it signify whether a perfect woman is a Jewess or not? |
7469 | What does-- what makes a sharp knife, father? |
7469 | What else have you got in your pockets? |
7469 | What else should we do? |
7469 | What has been the matter? 7469 What has my meeting them in Paris to do with it? |
7469 | What is a man to do, though? |
7469 | What is it you are afraid of? |
7469 | What is it, my boy? 7469 What is it?" |
7469 | What is that hideous thing you have got on your wrist? |
7469 | What is that letter?--worse news still? |
7469 | What is that, mamma? |
7469 | What is that? |
7469 | What is that? |
7469 | What is the hymn? |
7469 | What is the matter? |
7469 | What is the matter? |
7469 | What is the use of it all? |
7469 | What is the use of talking to mad people? |
7469 | What is the use of telling? |
7469 | What is your feeling about a search for this mother? |
7469 | What is your wedding- day? |
7469 | What makes you so cold? |
7469 | What of her, eh? |
7469 | What on earth is the wonderful news? |
7469 | What orders shall I give? |
7469 | What right had he to marry this girl? |
7469 | What shall you do then? |
7469 | What shall you do to me when I ridicule Rex? |
7469 | What should you do if you were like me-- feeling that you were wrong and miserable, and dreading everything to come? |
7469 | What should you have felt if that Ezra had been your brother? |
7469 | What should you like to do? |
7469 | What sort of a place do you prefer? |
7469 | What was it? |
7469 | What were you afraid of? 7469 What wonder? |
7469 | What? |
7469 | What? |
7469 | What? |
7469 | When did you come down, Hans? |
7469 | When will you come back? |
7469 | When you are as old as I am, it will not seem so simple a question--''Why did you do this?'' 7469 When you resolved on that, you meant that I should never know my origin?" |
7469 | When? |
7469 | Where are the others? |
7469 | Where are you going, Rex? |
7469 | Where have you been with him? |
7469 | Where is he, Addy? |
7469 | Where is she gone-- do you know? |
7469 | Where is the man? 7469 Which side of the family does he get them from?" |
7469 | Who and what is she? |
7469 | Who else is inclined to make the tour of the house and premises? |
7469 | Who is Joseph Kalonymos? |
7469 | Who is that near the door? |
7469 | Who is that with Gascoigne? |
7469 | Who will be hurt but myself, then? |
7469 | Who? |
7469 | Whom do you mean by ugly people? |
7469 | Why are you dull? |
7469 | Why did n''t she fall in love with me? |
7469 | Why did she leave the stage, then? |
7469 | Why did you ask the Gogoffs? 7469 Why did you not bring me up in that way, mamma?" |
7469 | Why did you run away from me, child? |
7469 | Why do you ask such a question? |
7469 | Why do you like a hook better than a cork- screw? |
7469 | Why do you want to make them unpleasant for_ me_? |
7469 | Why have you resolved now on disclosing to me what you took care to have me brought up in ignorance of? 7469 Why in the world do you say that all on a sudden?" |
7469 | Why is it to be expected of any heiress that she should carry the property gained in trade into the hands of a certain class? 7469 Why not? |
7469 | Why not? |
7469 | Why not? |
7469 | Why not? |
7469 | Why should I dance if I do n''t like it, aunt? 7469 Why should I make the sacrifice?" |
7469 | Why should I not marry the man who loves me, if I love him? |
7469 | Why should I? |
7469 | Why should I? |
7469 | Why should you suppose she is going to do what is not right? |
7469 | Why superfluous? |
7469 | Why to- morrow? 7469 Why will you not tell me where you are going after the marriage? |
7469 | Why, dear? |
7469 | Why, how came you to put that pocket handkerchief in here? |
7469 | Why, what has shaken thee? |
7469 | Why, what kind of a man do you imagine him to be, Gwendolen? |
7469 | Why? 7469 Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why?--ah, why? |
7469 | Will it bother you to be asked how soon we can be married? |
7469 | Will she be content to wait? |
7469 | Will you allow me to come again and inquire-- perhaps at five to- morrow? |
7469 | Will you confide in me so far as to tell me your reasons? |
7469 | Will you do me the honor-- the next-- or another quadrille? |
7469 | Will you not join in the music? |
7469 | Will you ride Criterion to- morrow? |
7469 | Will you sing this again, or shall I sing it to you? |
7469 | Will you sit down near me? |
7469 | Will you take the portrait? |
7469 | Would it be disagreeable to you to sing now? |
7469 | Yes, dear; can I do anything for you? |
7469 | Yes; is it not? |
7469 | Yet his knowledge was not narrow? |
7469 | You accept my devotion? |
7469 | You accept what will make such things a matter of course? |
7469 | You admit now we could n''t have done anything better? |
7469 | You agree to change, then? |
7469 | You agree with me that I had better go? |
7469 | You and the four girls all in that closet of a room, with the green and yellow paper pressing on your eyes? 7469 You are English? |
7469 | You are a man of learning-- you are interested in Jewish history? |
7469 | You are afraid of grieving him? |
7469 | You are going to use his horse? |
7469 | You are going? |
7469 | You are not fond of him yourself? |
7469 | You are not here for the sake of the play, then? |
7469 | You are not named after your father, then? |
7469 | You are not well, dear? |
7469 | You assent to my arrangement, then? |
7469 | You can conceive no motive? |
7469 | You consent to become my wife? |
7469 | You do n''t feel quite ready for a journey to Southampton? |
7469 | You do n''t mean you would never be married? |
7469 | You do n''t object to hunting, then? |
7469 | You do n''t repent the choice of the law as a profession, Rex? |
7469 | You do n''t share that idea? |
7469 | You do want your earrings? |
7469 | You expect him to persevere? |
7469 | You have a brother? |
7469 | You have lost all sense of duty, then? 7469 You have made her an offer already, then?" |
7469 | You have not found it? |
7469 | You have written to Rome about that? |
7469 | You knew it? |
7469 | You knew nothing of my being at Chelsea? |
7469 | You like a_ nez retroussé_, then, and long narrow eyes? |
7469 | You like my singing? 7469 You live under the same roof with the Cohens, I think?" |
7469 | You mean to defy us, then? |
7469 | You mean, to give Alice lessons? |
7469 | You must surely have lived in England? |
7469 | You seem to have done well for yourself, Mirah? 7469 You think he will help her?" |
7469 | You want to know if I am English? |
7469 | You will always live at the Abbey-- or else at Diplow? |
7469 | You will like to see the stables, Henleigh? |
7469 | You will perhaps bring my cousin back to England? |
7469 | You will tell me if there is anything I forget? |
7469 | You wish me to be complaisant to him? |
7469 | You wo n''t run after the pretty gambler, then? |
7469 | You would not mind Isabel sitting with you? 7469 You would not mind singing before any one who wished to hear you?" |
7469 | Your parent''s desire makes no duty for you, then? |
7469 | _ Are_ you always getting the worst? |
7469 | _ Are_ you? |
7469 | _ She_ told you that? |
7469 | _ You_ are fond of danger, then? |
7469 | ''You do n''t see the witticism, sir?'' |
7469 | ( Was there ever a young lady or gentleman not ready to give up an unspecified indulgence for the sake of the favorite one specified?) |
7469 | ( Who has not seen men with faces of this corrective power till they frustrated it by speech or action?) |
7469 | ( You observe my new vein of allegory?) |
7469 | --"Why are you so cruel to us all?" |
7469 | A fine_ menu_-- Is it to- day what Roman epicures Insisted that a gentleman must eat To earn the dignity of dining well? |
7469 | A fish honestly invited to come and be eaten has a clear course in declining, but how if it finds itself swimming against a net? |
7469 | After a little pause Grandcourt said,"Is Miss Harleth at Offendene?" |
7469 | After a little silence she said, with agitated hurry,"If he were here again, what should I do? |
7469 | After a moment''s pause he said to Deronda,"Do you know those people-- the Langens?" |
7469 | After a slight pause, he said,"Perhaps you know Hebrew?" |
7469 | After all, what was this man to her? |
7469 | After pausing a little, she added, abruptly,"And now tell me what you shall do?" |
7469 | Am I always to be in the dark?" |
7469 | Am I to understand that you mean to accept him?" |
7469 | Am I worse than I was when you found me and wanted to make me better? |
7469 | An honorable life? |
7469 | And Grandcourt himself? |
7469 | And Gwendolen? |
7469 | And Mr. Grandcourt behaves perfectly, now, does he not?" |
7469 | And after all, what will you get by it? |
7469 | And after that he said, without haste, as if conscious that he might be wrong,"Do you forget what I told you when we first saw each other? |
7469 | And apart from the network, would she have dared at once to say anything decisive? |
7469 | And do you quite understand? |
7469 | And how could she go on through the day in this state? |
7469 | And may I see you again this evening-- to- morrow-- when you have had some rest? |
7469 | And may not Jacob come and visit me?" |
7469 | And now I am come, I suppose you want to get back to England as soon as you can?" |
7469 | And now-- will you forsake me?" |
7469 | And so you actually believe that I should get my five pictures hung on the line in a conspicuous position, and carefully studied by the public? |
7469 | And the questions I would put are three: Is all change in the direction of progress? |
7469 | And then her mouth-- there never was a prettier mouth, the lips curled backward so finely, eh, Mackworth?" |
7469 | And what can I do but ask you?" |
7469 | And what reproach is there against me,"she added bitterly,"since I have made you glad to be a Jew? |
7469 | And what sort of dispute could a woman of any pride and dignity begin on a yacht? |
7469 | And what was it whether I died or lived? |
7469 | And what would he say if he knew everything? |
7469 | And where would you go to? |
7469 | And without me?" |
7469 | And you will not go away?" |
7469 | And-- can you believe it? |
7469 | Anything different? |
7469 | Are the Arrowpoints at Quetcham still, and is Herr Klesmer there? |
7469 | Are they rich? |
7469 | Are you as kind to me as I am to you?" |
7469 | Are you fond of horses?" |
7469 | Are you generally engaged in bookselling?" |
7469 | Are you getting discontented with yourself, Gwen?" |
7469 | Are you not able to forgive me? |
7469 | Are you not glad?" |
7469 | Are you quite reckless about me?" |
7469 | Are you quite sure of your own discretion? |
7469 | Are you ready?" |
7469 | As he closed the door, the bitter tears rose, and the gnawing words provoked an answer:"Why did you put your fangs into me and not into him?" |
7469 | As it was, she felt compelled to silence, and after a pause, Grandcourt said,"Am I to understand that some one else is preferred?" |
7469 | At last he said, looking at Daniel with examination,"So you do n''t want to be an Englishman to the backbone after all?" |
7469 | At length Grandcourt, seeing Lush turn toward him, looked at him again and said, contemptuously,"What follows?" |
7469 | At length something occurred to her that made her turn her face to Deronda and say in a trembling voice,"Is that all you can tell me?" |
7469 | At ten?" |
7469 | Attempts at description are stupid: who can all at once describe a human being? |
7469 | Because you think him too learned?" |
7469 | Besides, what could we do in this house without servants, and without money to warm it? |
7469 | Besides, where are you to stop along that road-- making loopholes where you do n''t want to peep, and so on? |
7469 | But Gwendolen felt some strength in saying,"How can I help what other people have done? |
7469 | But I fancy you are the man who knew most about what Mrs. Grandcourt felt or did not feel-- eh, Dan?" |
7469 | But I set myself to obey and suffer: what else could I do? |
7469 | But Mirah went on, absorbed in her memories,"Is it not wonderful how I remember the voices better than anything else? |
7469 | But Mirah''s anger was not appeased: how could it be? |
7469 | But are we always obliged to explain why the facts are not what some persons thought beforehand? |
7469 | But do n''t you want some more money?" |
7469 | But do you know I am bold enough to wish to correct_ you_, and require you to understand a joke?" |
7469 | But he must have made himself a pretty large drain of money, eh?" |
7469 | But he said, after a just perceptible pause:"Ezra? |
7469 | But his tone was what I could not bear; and how could I tell him what I wanted? |
7469 | But how can a man avoid himself as a subject in conversation? |
7469 | But how could she arrest his wooing by beginning to make a formal speech--"I perceive your intention-- it is most flattering, etc."? |
7469 | But how much more than that is true of our race? |
7469 | But how should you bear it?" |
7469 | But how to use it? |
7469 | But how was he to understand or conceive her present repulsion for Henleigh Grandcourt? |
7469 | But if his love lies deeper than any reasons to be found? |
7469 | But if so, I ask, why have n''t they done it?" |
7469 | But now the door was opened, and while none entered, a well- known voice said:"Daniel Deronda-- may he come in?" |
7469 | But now, how is the widow?" |
7469 | But now,"he added, with a certain drop in his voice to a lower, more familiar nasal,"what do you want for it?" |
7469 | But now-- did she know exactly what was the state of the case with regard to Mrs. Glasher and her children? |
7469 | But shall you mind throwing it over your shoulders while we are on the water? |
7469 | But she spoke again, hurriedly, looking at him,"You will not say that I ought to tell the world? |
7469 | But that positive statement was immediately followed by an inward query--"Could she have known anything of it?" |
7469 | But the thought in her mind was"Can he too be starting away from a decision?" |
7469 | But then, why had he never heard Sir Hugo speak of his brother Deronda, as he spoke of his brother Grandcourt? |
7469 | But was not Mirah to be there? |
7469 | But was she going to fulfill her deliberate intention? |
7469 | But were not men of ardent zeal and far- reaching hope everywhere exceptional? |
7469 | But what can I do?" |
7469 | But what can still that hunger of the heart which sickens the eye for beauty, and makes sweet- scented ease an oppression? |
7469 | But what difference could this pain of hers make to any one else? |
7469 | But what do I know of her? |
7469 | But what does it matter? |
7469 | But what else was he? |
7469 | But what has that to do with it? |
7469 | But what is it to be rational-- what is it to feel the light of the divine reason growing stronger within and without? |
7469 | But what is the good of trying to know more, unless life were worth more?" |
7469 | But what is the use of my taking the vows and settling everything as it should be, if that marplot Hans comes and upsets it all?" |
7469 | But what notion, what vain reliance could it be that had lain darkly within her and was now burning itself into sight as disappointment and jealousy? |
7469 | But what was that German quotation you were so ready with, Mirah-- you learned puss?" |
7469 | But what was to be done with Mirah? |
7469 | But where can we meet?" |
7469 | But where is her Jewish impudence? |
7469 | But where is our new neighbor? |
7469 | But where''s your gambling beauty, Deronda? |
7469 | But which among the chief of the Gentile nations has not an ignorant multitude? |
7469 | But who knows the pathways? |
7469 | But who shall say,''The fountain of their life is dried up, they shall forever cease to be a nation?'' |
7469 | But who, loving a creature like Gwendolen, would not be inclined to regard every peculiarity in her as a mark of preeminence? |
7469 | But why did she not recognize him with more friendliness? |
7469 | But why did she run out of his way at first? |
7469 | But why have you now sent for me to tell me that I am a Jew?" |
7469 | But without further reflection he said,"Do n''t you know how much it is worth?" |
7469 | But would another woman who married Grandcourt be in fact the decisive obstacle to her wishes, or be doing her and her boy any real injury? |
7469 | But you are rich?" |
7469 | Ca n''t I be of use in going to Gadsmere?" |
7469 | Ca n''t we go to law and recover our fortune? |
7469 | Ca n''t you understand that?" |
7469 | Ca n''t you write now-- before we set out this morning?" |
7469 | Can I carry any word to my father from you?" |
7469 | Can Jeffries go on horseback with a note?" |
7469 | Can a fresh- made garment of citizenship weave itself straightway into the flesh and change the slow deposit of eighteen centuries? |
7469 | Can her mind be really made up against him?" |
7469 | Can this be part of the religious ceremony? |
7469 | Can we wonder at the practical submission which hid her constructive rebellion? |
7469 | Confess you hate them when they stand in your way-- when their gain is your loss? |
7469 | Could he know of Mrs. Glasher? |
7469 | Could he let Gwendolen go alone? |
7469 | Could she ask Grandcourt to tell her himself? |
7469 | Could the proud- spirited woman have behaved more like a child? |
7469 | Decisively, but yet with some return of kindness, she said,"About making love? |
7469 | Deronda could not escape( who can?) |
7469 | Deronda divined the hinted grief, and left it in silence, rising as he saw Mirah rise, and saying to her,"Are you going? |
7469 | Deronda, looking at the grandmother, who had only an inward silent laugh, said,"Are these the only grandchildren you have?" |
7469 | Deronda?" |
7469 | Deronda?" |
7469 | Deronda?" |
7469 | Deronda?" |
7469 | Deronda?--have you never seen Mr. Deronda? |
7469 | Did it go to your heart?" |
7469 | Did she want him to throw himself at her feet and declare that he was dying for her? |
7469 | Did you not observe how well Miss Arrowpoint shot?" |
7469 | Did you not say so?" |
7469 | Difficulties? |
7469 | Do I love that? |
7469 | Do I understand you?" |
7469 | Do n''t you think so?" |
7469 | Do they form a body of men hitherto free from false conclusions and illusory speculations? |
7469 | Do you know Hebrew? |
7469 | Do you know about my husband''s will?" |
7469 | Do you know him?" |
7469 | Do you mean that old Adonis in the George the Fourth wig?" |
7469 | Do you mind my waking you?" |
7469 | Do you object to him so much?" |
7469 | Do you remember that I said I was not of your race?" |
7469 | Do you suppose that is inattention or insolence, now?" |
7469 | Do you think a woman who cried, and prayed, and struggled to be saved from herself, could be a murderess?" |
7469 | Do you understand me?" |
7469 | Do you want to see it?" |
7469 | Do you want to send before to- morrow?" |
7469 | Do_ you_ like uncertainty?" |
7469 | Does anybody know them?" |
7469 | Does n''t he look ill?" |
7469 | Does one who has been all but lost in a pit of darkness complain of the sweet air and the daylight? |
7469 | Does she quite know what you are doing?" |
7469 | Does that flatter your imagination?" |
7469 | Dost thou understand, Mirah?" |
7469 | Else how can any one find an intense interest in life? |
7469 | Even now was it not possible? |
7469 | Every one is going to the other end now-- shall we join them? |
7469 | For what could not a woman do when she was married, if she knew how to assert herself? |
7469 | For whatever marriage had been for herself, how could she the less desire it for her daughter? |
7469 | For where might my father be going? |
7469 | For which of them, mother or girls, had not had a generous part in it-- giving their best in feeling and in act to her who needed? |
7469 | For who has two friends like him?" |
7469 | Fraser?" |
7469 | Gascoigne?" |
7469 | Grandcourt noticed a change in her face, and releasing his hand from under his knees, he laid it on hers, and said,"You object to my going away?" |
7469 | Grandcourt put up his telescope and said,"There''s a plantation of sugar- canes at the foot of that rock; should you like to look?" |
7469 | Grandcourt said,"Do you know how long it is since I first saw you in this dress?" |
7469 | Grandcourt, when they had half turned round, paused and said languidly,"Do you like this kind of thing?" |
7469 | Grandcourt?" |
7469 | Grandcourt?" |
7469 | Grandcourt?" |
7469 | Grandcourt?" |
7469 | Gwendolen did not speak immediately, and her uncle said with more emphasis,"Have you any doubt of that yourself, my dear?" |
7469 | Gwendolen gave way, and letting her head rest against her mother, cried out sobbingly,"Oh, mamma, what can become of my life? |
7469 | Had Anna been to see Gwendolen after she had known about the yacht? |
7469 | Had Grandcourt the least conception of what was going on in the breast of his wife? |
7469 | Has he made advances which you have discouraged?" |
7469 | Has he run away with it all?" |
7469 | Have I not borne it well? |
7469 | Have I not breathed my soul into you? |
7469 | Have you any more reason for being anxious now than you had a month ago?" |
7469 | Have you been left altogether ignorant of your people''s life, young man?" |
7469 | Have you been satisfied with the interview?" |
7469 | Have you ever tried your little chestnut at a ditch? |
7469 | Have you got any more knives at home?" |
7469 | Have you heard anything that has put you out of spirits lately?" |
7469 | Have you heard her-- of course you have-- heard her speak of her people and her religion?" |
7469 | Have you heard what sort of a young man he is, Henry?" |
7469 | Have you not strength of mind enough to see that you had better act on my assurance for a time, and test it? |
7469 | Have you seen her lately?" |
7469 | Have you the cursing spirit of the Jew in you? |
7469 | Have you thought of that plan--""Just leave me alone, will you?" |
7469 | Have you time to tell me more of my grandfather? |
7469 | He conceived that she did not love him; but was that necessary? |
7469 | He did come, however, and at a moment when he could propose to conduct Mrs. Davilow to her carriage,"Shall we meet again in the ball- room?" |
7469 | He did not mean to use it needlessly; but there are some persons so gifted in relation to us that their"How do you do?" |
7469 | He drew his chair quite close in front of her, and said, in a low tone,"Just be quiet and listen, will you?" |
7469 | He had hunted the tiger-- had he ever been in love or made love? |
7469 | He obeyed, saying,"You are quite relieved now, I trust?" |
7469 | He said,''What will you do? |
7469 | He said:''What is it you want done?'' |
7469 | He told you how he found me?" |
7469 | He tried to recall her to particulars by asking,"Where was my grandfather''s home?" |
7469 | He was to be a lawyer, and what reason was there why he should not rise as high as Eldon did? |
7469 | He went to her side and said,"Are you relenting about the music and looking for something to play or sing?" |
7469 | Henleigh the boy jumped up and said,"Mamma, is it the miller with my donkey?" |
7469 | Her presence will be the greatest comfort to you-- it will give you a motive to save her from unnecessary pain?" |
7469 | How came you to know anything of it?" |
7469 | How can I stem that tide?" |
7469 | How can an ugly Christian, who is always dropping her work, convert a beautiful Jewess, who has not a fault?" |
7469 | How can he help being in love with her? |
7469 | How can they help their parents marrying or not marrying?" |
7469 | How can you be sure in so short a time? |
7469 | How could Deronda help this? |
7469 | How could I know that you would have the spirit of my father in you? |
7469 | How could I live? |
7469 | How could Mordecai have borne that those friends of his adversity should have been shut out from rejoicing in common with him? |
7469 | How could he be like his mother and not like his father? |
7469 | How could he be slow to understand feelings which now seemed nearer than ever to his own? |
7469 | How could he grasp the long- growing process of this young creature''s wretchedness?--how arrest and change it with a sentence? |
7469 | How could little thick boots make any noise on an Axminster carpet? |
7469 | How could she be defiant? |
7469 | How could she believe in sorrow? |
7469 | How could she run away to her own family-- carry distress among them, and render herself an object of scandal in the society she had left behind her? |
7469 | How could she take her mamma and the four sisters to London? |
7469 | How could she? |
7469 | How could the rose help it when several bees in succession took its sweet odor as a sign of personal attachment? |
7469 | How could we travel? |
7469 | How could you be so thoughtless as to leave me in uncertainty about your address? |
7469 | How could you choose my birthright for me?" |
7469 | How could you tell me things?" |
7469 | How did you know-- how did you find him?" |
7469 | How do I know that I can see you again? |
7469 | How do you know it would be lucky if he loved Mrs. Grandcourt? |
7469 | How do you know she''s gone?" |
7469 | How far was he justified in determining another life by his own notions? |
7469 | How much from her desire to show regret about his accident? |
7469 | How much of this was due to her presentiment from what he had said yesterday that he was going to talk of love? |
7469 | How satisfy? |
7469 | How that_ fat_ Deronda can bear looking at her----""Why do you call him a_ fat_? |
7469 | How to scale the wall? |
7469 | How was it that Gwendolen did not laugh? |
7469 | How was it that nothing more was heard of Miss Harleth? |
7469 | How was she to begin? |
7469 | How was this to be accounted for? |
7469 | How will you justify keeping one sort of memory and throwing away the other? |
7469 | How, then, could Grandcourt divine what was going on in Gwendolen''s breast? |
7469 | However you may decide you will not tell Mr. Grandcourt, or any one else, that you have seen me?" |
7469 | I am to cut and run?" |
7469 | I can not make myself love the people I have never loved-- is it not enough that I lost the life I did love?" |
7469 | I could be here by five-- will that do?" |
7469 | I could silence them: may not a man silence his awe or his love, and take to finding reasons, which others demand? |
7469 | I have never broken my word to you-- how many have you broken to me? |
7469 | I suddenly felt that I was very weak and weary, and yet where could I go? |
7469 | I suppose you have been there and know all about them?" |
7469 | I think that is a different doctrine from yours?" |
7469 | I want to go to Mrs. Meyrick''s: may I go with you?" |
7469 | I wanted to know whether you thought his face and form required that his words should be among the meanings of noble music?" |
7469 | I was forced to fly from my father; but if he came back in age and weakness and want, and needed me, should I say,''This is not my father''? |
7469 | I was not aware that there was a painting behind that panel; were you?" |
7469 | I was there yesterday-- perhaps they mentioned it to you?" |
7469 | I wonder what he thinks of my marriage? |
7469 | I wonder why he fixed on me as the musical one? |
7469 | If I put my hand on his knee and say,''What is the matter, father?'' |
7469 | If I tell everything-- if I deliver up everything-- what else can be demanded of me? |
7469 | If Klesmer happened not to be at Quetcham, what could she do next? |
7469 | If he made any unpleasant discovery, was he bound to a disclosure that might cast a new net of trouble around her? |
7469 | If she cried toward him, what then? |
7469 | If somebody will introduce a brisk trade in watches among the''Jerusalem wares,''I''ll go-- eh, Mordecai, what do you say?" |
7469 | If there were nothing after all? |
7469 | In a subdued voice, she said,"Suppose I had gambled again, and lost the necklace again, what should you have thought of me?" |
7469 | In fact, it seemed to Deronda that she was only half conscious of her surroundings: was she hungry, or was there some other cause of bewilderment? |
7469 | In that attitude of preparation, he said,"Do you command me to go?" |
7469 | In that mood she once said,"Shall I tell you what is the difference between you and me, Ezra? |
7469 | Is Klesmer a severe man?" |
7469 | Is Miss Harleth there, or is she not?" |
7469 | Is eight hundred a year enough for you, mamma?" |
7469 | Is he a Great Unknown?" |
7469 | Is he an Englishman?" |
7469 | Is it Cambridge you have been to?" |
7469 | Is it any wonder that she saw her own necessity reflected in his feeling? |
7469 | Is it because I am a woman?" |
7469 | Is it because the singing lessons are so few, and are likely to fall off when the season comes to an end? |
7469 | Is it not begun? |
7469 | Is it not like mocking your parents?--like rejoicing in your parents''shame?" |
7469 | Is it not so?" |
7469 | Is it not truth I speak, Pash?" |
7469 | Is n''t that better than painting a piece of staring immodesty and calling it by a worshipful name?" |
7469 | Is she fond of her artist''s life-- is her singing worth anything?" |
7469 | Is that a good match for him?" |
7469 | Is that it?" |
7469 | Is that surprising? |
7469 | Is that the best I can do?" |
7469 | Is that what marriage always comes to?" |
7469 | Is that what you believe?" |
7469 | Is there a grand carriage, Amy?" |
7469 | Is there any man who stands between us?" |
7469 | Is there any pain like seeing what ought to be the best things in life turned into the worst? |
7469 | Is there any single occupation of mind that you care about with passionate delight or even independent interest?" |
7469 | Is there anything more that you would like to ask me?" |
7469 | Is this world and all the life upon it only like a farce or a vaudeville, where you find no great meanings? |
7469 | It is a common sentence that Knowledge is power; but who hath duly considered or set forth the power of Ignorance? |
7469 | It seemed to come naturally enough that he should say,"And you have no daughter?" |
7469 | It would be impossible to say"yes"in a tone that would be taken seriously; equally impossible to say"no;"but what else could she say? |
7469 | Kalonymos now put out his hand and said cordially,"So you are no longer angry at being something more than an Englishman?" |
7469 | Klesmer doubtless had magnificent ideas about helping artists; but how could he know the feelings of ladies in such matters? |
7469 | L''armi, qua l''armi: io solo Combatteró, procomberó sol io"--[ Footnote: Do none of thy children defend thee? |
7469 | Let me tell Hans and the girls the evening before, and they will be away the next morning?" |
7469 | Love- making and marriage-- how could they now be the imagery in which poor Gwendolen''s deepest attachment could spontaneously clothe itself? |
7469 | Mab felt herself unanswerable here, inclining to the opinion of Socrates:"What motive has a man to live, if not for the pleasure of discourse?" |
7469 | Mad project broken? |
7469 | May I ask for you at the Cohens''any evening after your hour at the book- shop? |
7469 | May I ask have you read it?" |
7469 | Me and my wife''ll feel honored, and so will mother; wo n''t you, mother?" |
7469 | Meanwhile, what would he tell her that she ought to do? |
7469 | Might it not be just as well, nay better, that Grandcourt should marry? |
7469 | Might there not come a disclosure which would hold the missing determination of his course? |
7469 | Mighty Love had laid his hand upon her; but what had he demanded of her? |
7469 | Mirah one day said to him--"I am continually going to speak to Mr. Deronda as if he were a Jew?" |
7469 | Mirah, quick as thought, went to the spot where Deronda was seeking, and said,"Did you lay it down?" |
7469 | Mirah, what are you looking sad for?" |
7469 | Mordecai paused, and then began in a changed tone, reverting to previous suggestions from Deronda''s disclosure:"What moved your parents----?" |
7469 | Moreover he liked being near her-- how could it be otherwise? |
7469 | Mr. Arrowpoint, will you tell your daughter what is her duty?" |
7469 | Mrs. Davilow paused a little, and then said,"Do you know who is to have the estates and the rest of the money?" |
7469 | Mrs. Davilow put this question rather anxiously, and receiving no answer, asked another:"You do n''t consider that you have discouraged him?" |
7469 | Mrs. Grandcourt, the Vandyke duchess, is your cousin?" |
7469 | No real vexation?" |
7469 | Now the father is there-- did you know that the father is there?" |
7469 | Now, did he suppose that she had not suspected him of being the person who redeemed her necklace? |
7469 | Now, what can I do for_ you_, sir?" |
7469 | Of what use was the rebellion within her? |
7469 | On whose shoulder would we lay it, that we might be free?" |
7469 | One day I asked him,''Is there a man capable of doing something for love of me, and expecting nothing in return?'' |
7469 | Or did she expect him to write his proposals? |
7469 | Or shall I be trespassing in staying longer?" |
7469 | Or shall I write an answer for you-- which you will dictate?" |
7469 | Or, if you send it to me, will you promise not to catechise me upon it and ask me which part I like best? |
7469 | Presently Hans said, again speaking low, and without turning,"Excuse the question, but does Mrs. Grandcourt know of all this?" |
7469 | Presently he heard her cry imploringly,"You will not say that any one else should know?" |
7469 | Probably the evil; else why was the effect that of unrest rather than of undisturbed charm? |
7469 | See, mamma?" |
7469 | Shall I bring it about? |
7469 | Shall I go away, and come again whenever you wish it?" |
7469 | Shall he say,''That way events are wending, I will not resist?'' |
7469 | Shall man, whose soul is set in the royalty of discernment and resolve, deny his rank and say, I am an onlooker, ask no choice or purpose of me? |
7469 | Shall we go now at once?" |
7469 | Shall we go up there?" |
7469 | Shall we say,"Let the ages try the spirits, and see what they are worth?" |
7469 | Shall you be glad to think that I am punished because I was not a Jewish mother to you?" |
7469 | Shall you comprehend your mother, or only blame her?" |
7469 | Shall you forgive me for not saying so before?" |
7469 | Shall you like to stand before your husband with these diamonds on you, and these words of mine in his thoughts and yours? |
7469 | Shall you like to stand before your husband with these diamonds on you, and these words of mine in his thoughts and yours? |
7469 | She could have no joy but to afflict herself; and where else would she go? |
7469 | She felt prepared to hear everything, and began in a tone of deliberate intention,"What have you thought of doing, exactly, mamma?" |
7469 | She gave herself no fuller reason than a painful sense of unfitness-- in what? |
7469 | She had come down- stairs equipped in this way; and when Mrs. Meyrick said, in a tone of question,"You like to go in that dress, dear?" |
7469 | She let her hands fall on her lap, and said with a pretty air of perversity,"Why is to- morrow the only day?" |
7469 | She raised her eyes again and said with something of her former clearness and defiance,"No"--wishing him to understand,"What then? |
7469 | She turned to her uncle again and said, apparently in acceptance of his ideas,"When is Mrs. Mompert likely to send for me?" |
7469 | She was merely coquetting, then? |
7469 | She was seeing the whole event-- her own acts included-- through an exaggerating medium of excitement and horror? |
7469 | She went to Ezra''s ear and whispered"Was my father here?" |
7469 | Short of Apollo himself, what great musical_ maestro_ could make a good figure at an archery meeting? |
7469 | Should you have known me,"she added, turning toward him,"if you had met me now?--should you have known me for the one you saw at Leubronn?" |
7469 | Should you like to be adored by the world and take the house by storm, like Mario and Tamberlik?" |
7469 | Sir Hugo, by way of changing the subject, said to her,"Is not this a beautiful room? |
7469 | So he said nothing about it to you?" |
7469 | Some attraction-- some engagement-- which it would have been only fair to make me aware of? |
7469 | Some may do wrong to another without remorse; but suppose one does feel remorse? |
7469 | Still she hesitated, and said more timidly than ever,"Do you belong to the theatre?" |
7469 | Such things had been known of male gamblers; why should not a woman have a like supremacy? |
7469 | Tell me-- it will not be a pain to you that I have dared to speak of my trouble to you? |
7469 | That doubt is in your mind? |
7469 | That evening Mrs. Davilow said,"Was it really so, or only a joke of yours, about Mr. Deronda''s spoiling your play, Gwen?" |
7469 | That''s a stupid place to go to, is n''t it?" |
7469 | The good- humor of the glance remained and shone out in a motherly way at Deronda, as she said, in a mild guttural tone,"How can I serve you, sir?" |
7469 | The market for spoons has never expanded enough for any one to say,"Why not?" |
7469 | The next morning at breakfast he said,"How are your bruises, Rex?" |
7469 | The silent question--"But is it not cowardly to make that a reason for turning away?" |
7469 | The soft warm rain of blossoms which had fallen just where she was-- did it really come because she was there? |
7469 | The story is chipped off, so to speak, and passes with a ragged edge into nothing--_le néant_; can anything be more sublime, especially in French? |
7469 | The stranger looked up again at Deronda, who said,"You will have no more fears with these friends? |
7469 | Their eyes meeting in that way seemed to allow any length of pause: but wait as long as she would, how could she contradict herself? |
7469 | Then Grandcourt said,"What men are invited here with their wives?" |
7469 | Then I said,''How shall I save the life within me from being stifled with this stifled breath?''" |
7469 | Then a great horror comes over me: what do I know of life or death? |
7469 | Then after a moment, looking up at the ivory again, she said,"Do_ you_ never find fault with the world or with others?" |
7469 | Then he said tenderly,"And so you wo n''t mind about leaving your old Nunc?" |
7469 | Then he said,"Are you as uncertain about yourself as you make others about you?" |
7469 | Then snatching the panel out of the hand of the culprit, she closed it hastily, saying,"There is a lock-- where is the key? |
7469 | Then,"Will you sit near me again a little while?" |
7469 | There is no objection, I suppose, to their knowing that you and I meet in private?" |
7469 | There is nothing that you feel need change your position in any way? |
7469 | There was a melancholy smile on her lips as she said that, but she added more entreatingly,"It will not be a pain to you?" |
7469 | They both said,"How do you do?" |
7469 | They turned their blank gray sides to her: what was there on the other side? |
7469 | Things can not be altered, and who cares? |
7469 | This last memory was just now very busy in her; for had not Klesmer then been struck with admiration of her pose and expression? |
7469 | This splendid specimen was probably gentle, suitable as a boudoir pet: what may not a lizard be, if you know nothing to the contrary? |
7469 | This was a chance to be risked: might she not be going in to buy something which had struck her fancy? |
7469 | This was not what Daniel expected, and was so far a relief, which gave him spirit to answer,"Am I to go to school?" |
7469 | To make a little difference for the better was what he was not contented to live without; but how to make it? |
7469 | To the last the evil temptation has been resisted?" |
7469 | Vandernoodt?" |
7469 | Was ever any young witch like this? |
7469 | Was he going to be a jealous husband? |
7469 | Was it a fit of madness? |
7469 | Was it alone the closeness of this fulfilment which made her heart flutter? |
7469 | Was it because I have a bulging forehead, ma, and peep from under it like a newt from under a stone?" |
7469 | Was it credible that she had refused Mr. Grandcourt? |
7469 | Was it in Mr. Fraser''s? |
7469 | Was it some event that had occurred during his absence, or only the growing fear of some event? |
7469 | Was it something, perhaps alterable, in the new position which had been made for her? |
7469 | Was not all her hurrying life of the last three months a show, in which her consciousness was a wondering spectator? |
7469 | Was she beautiful or not beautiful? |
7469 | Was she forsaken by him-- now-- already? |
7469 | Was she in a state of delirium into which there entered a sense of concealment and necessity for self- repression? |
7469 | Was that agitating experience nullified this morning? |
7469 | Was the bell on the verge of tolling, the sentence about to be executed? |
7469 | Was the good or the evil genius dominant in those beams? |
7469 | Was there any new change since then? |
7469 | Was there ever a more hypothetic appeal? |
7469 | Was there ever so unexpected an assertion of superiority-- at least before the late Teutonic conquest? |
7469 | Was there ever such a way before of accepting the bliss- giving"Yes"? |
7469 | Was there really something different about him, or was the difference only in her feeling? |
7469 | We all lived at Diplow for two years while the alterations were going on: Do you like Diplow?" |
7469 | We are going to the_ Hand and Banner_, I suppose, and shall be in private there?" |
7469 | We have nothing to carry but our clothes, you know?" |
7469 | We say,"What do you think?" |
7469 | Were the peculiarities of this man really associated with any sort of mental alienation, according to Cohen''s hint? |
7469 | What amiable baronet can escape the effect of a strong desire for a particular possession? |
7469 | What are doubts to me? |
7469 | What are you disposed to give for it?" |
7469 | What are you looking forward to, if you ca n''t behave properly as my wife? |
7469 | What better could the most loving mother have done? |
7469 | What can_ I_ do but cry for help? |
7469 | What could Deronda say? |
7469 | What could I do but say you were dead? |
7469 | What could I do? |
7469 | What could Rex say? |
7469 | What could he have done?" |
7469 | What could she say to justify her flight? |
7469 | What could you do for me but weary your own patience? |
7469 | What did Gwendolen look forward to? |
7469 | What did he really know about his origin? |
7469 | What did she wish? |
7469 | What did this vaunting brother need? |
7469 | What did you say was the name of that gentleman near the door?" |
7469 | What difference will it make to you that I have told you about your birth?" |
7469 | What do I care about his being a_ fat_? |
7469 | What do you say to Briseis being led away? |
7469 | What do you think of that? |
7469 | What do you think?" |
7469 | What do_ you_ know about the world? |
7469 | What does it all mean?" |
7469 | What does it matter whether_ he_ believes it or not?" |
7469 | What duty is made of a single difficult resolve? |
7469 | What else had she to tell him? |
7469 | What else is there for me? |
7469 | What father devoted himself to his daughter more than I did to you? |
7469 | What friend have you besides me?" |
7469 | What good have I been? |
7469 | What had she detained him for? |
7469 | What had she to complain of? |
7469 | What had they to form a polity with but memories of Europe, corrected by the vision of a better? |
7469 | What have you to be gloomy about_ now_?" |
7469 | What his need? |
7469 | What in the midst of that mighty drama are girls and their blind visions? |
7469 | What is growth, completion, development? |
7469 | What is he?" |
7469 | What is the good of calling the people''s wickedness Providence? |
7469 | What is your opinion?" |
7469 | What is your vocation?" |
7469 | What may become of him? |
7469 | What name doth Joy most borrow When life is fair? |
7469 | What name doth best fit Sorrow In young despair? |
7469 | What notions has he to make him so grave about things? |
7469 | What ought I to do?" |
7469 | What position could have been more difficult for a man full of tenderness, yet with clear foresight? |
7469 | What reasons for her belief could she give? |
7469 | What release, but death? |
7469 | What should I do else? |
7469 | What should I have done without you last night? |
7469 | What should I work at most?" |
7469 | What should we all do without the calendar, when we want to put off a disagreeable duty? |
7469 | What should you do-- what should you feel if you were in my place?" |
7469 | What sort of club is it?" |
7469 | What sort of earth or heaven would hold any spiritual wealth in it for souls pauperized by inaction? |
7469 | What sort of life had he before him-- he being nothing of any consequence? |
7469 | What spirit was there among the boughs? |
7469 | What strength have I? |
7469 | What subjects will not our talk embrace in leisurely day- journeying from Genoa to London? |
7469 | What then? |
7469 | What then? |
7469 | What then? |
7469 | What though such a reverse as hers had often happened to other girls? |
7469 | What was he going to be? |
7469 | What was she going to say beside? |
7469 | What was she going to say? |
7469 | What was she to do? |
7469 | What was she to say that would not be a condemnation of herself? |
7469 | What was the good of living in the midst of hardships, ugliness, and humiliation? |
7469 | What was the use of going to bed? |
7469 | What was there to be told her about property? |
7469 | What wonder that Deronda saw no other course than to go straight from the London railway station to the lodgings in that small square in Brompton? |
7469 | What wonder that multitudes of our people are ignorant, narrow, superstitious? |
7469 | What wonder?" |
7469 | What would be left her then? |
7469 | What would be the use if she refused to see Lush? |
7469 | What would it be for Daniel Deronda to entertain such thoughts? |
7469 | What, after all, had really happened? |
7469 | What_ does_ he say?" |
7469 | What_ is_ it that has happened?" |
7469 | When at last he had said,"Where is Gwendolen?" |
7469 | When he took his place at lunch, Grandcourt had said,"Deronda, Miss Harleth tells me you were not introduced to her at Leubronn?" |
7469 | When was she to have any happiness, if it did not come while she was young? |
7469 | Where can he be? |
7469 | Where did the child get her goodness from? |
7469 | Where was the good of choice coming again? |
7469 | Who are these Langens? |
7469 | Who can deny that bows and arrows are among the prettiest weapons in the world for feminine forms to play with? |
7469 | Who can not imagine the bitterness of a first suspicion that something in this object of complete love was_ not_ quite right? |
7469 | Who else is there?" |
7469 | Who else was it you owed everything to, if not to me? |
7469 | Who ever thought of his marrying?" |
7469 | Who has a chance against me?" |
7469 | Who is absolutely neutral? |
7469 | Who knows that about anybody?" |
7469 | Who knows?" |
7469 | Who knows?" |
7469 | Who says that the history and literature of our race are dead? |
7469 | Who shall say it? |
7469 | Who shall say where the pathways lie? |
7469 | Who supposes that it is an impossible contradiction to be superstitious and rationalizing at the same time? |
7469 | Who that has a confidant escapes believing too little in his penetration, and too much in his discretion? |
7469 | Who wants to be broiling at Genoa?" |
7469 | Who, under such circumstances, pities the husband? |
7469 | Why could she not be completely satisfied with what satisfied his larger judgment? |
7469 | Why could she not rebel and defy him? |
7469 | Why did n''t you remind me of them? |
7469 | Why did she care so much about the opinion of this man who was"nothing of any consequence"? |
7469 | Why did you come so very early? |
7469 | Why do you treat me in this way all at once?" |
7469 | Why is he come to Diplow?" |
7469 | Why not? |
7469 | Why should I not bring all four if I liked?" |
7469 | Why should he not obey such an impulse, as he would have done toward any other lady in the room? |
7469 | Why should n''t I do as I like, and not mind? |
7469 | Why should she feel it bitter to her that Grandcourt showed concern for the beings on whose account she herself was undergoing remorse? |
7469 | Why should she not let him come? |
7469 | Why should she not take little Henleigh into the Park? |
7469 | Why then are there tragedies and grand operas, where men do difficult things and choose to suffer? |
7469 | Why was she to deny herself the freedom of doing this-- which she would like to do? |
7469 | Why was the wish to look again felt as coercion and not as a longing in which the whole being consents? |
7469 | Why will you say he is lucky-- why will you use words of that sort about life and death-- when what is life to one is death to another? |
7469 | Why-- since you seem angry that I should be glad?" |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Why? |
7469 | Will any harm come to me because I broke his trust in the daylight after he was gone into darkness? |
7469 | Will any one be surprised at Deronda''s concluding that she wished him to join her? |
7469 | Will any say''It can not be''? |
7469 | Will he think you have any right to complain when he has made you miserable? |
7469 | Will he think you have any right to complain when he has made you miserable? |
7469 | Will it always be so?" |
7469 | Will you allow it, baroness?" |
7469 | Will you allow me to introduce Mr. Mallinger Grandcourt?" |
7469 | Will you come and sing at a private concert at my house on Wednesday?" |
7469 | Will you give him this letter to set him against me and ruin us more-- me and my children? |
7469 | Will you give him this letter to set him against me and ruin us more-- me and my children? |
7469 | Will you go?" |
7469 | Will you let me make you known to them, so that they may have the pleasure of showing hospitality to my friend''s grandson? |
7469 | Will you let me take you to them?" |
7469 | Will you not put on the ring?" |
7469 | Will you tell it me, or let him know that I want to see him?" |
7469 | With a happy curl of the lips, she said,"Will you not see mamma? |
7469 | With a sudden light in her eyes and a tremor in her voice, she said,"Who are the people that say evil of him? |
7469 | With ten louis at her disposal and a return of her former luck, which seemed probable, what could she do better than go on playing for a few days? |
7469 | Woman was tempted by a serpent; why not man?" |
7469 | Would he, without that, despise her for marrying Grandcourt? |
7469 | Would it ever be mentioned to him? |
7469 | Would she divine the rest? |
7469 | Would the alternative-- that I should not disappoint him-- be less painful to me?" |
7469 | Would the time come when his uncle would tell him everything? |
7469 | Would you rather be at Ryelands?" |
7469 | Yet how could she utter this? |
7469 | Yet what had been the history which had brought her to this desolation? |
7469 | Yet-- was it triumph she felt most or terror? |
7469 | You are interested in him?" |
7469 | You do not suspect me of wrong desires about those things?" |
7469 | You have forgotten that you are our only child-- that it lies with you to place a great property in the right hands?" |
7469 | You have no objection, I hope?" |
7469 | You have not been deeply pained by anything you have learned, I hope? |
7469 | You know what happened-- did he not tell you? |
7469 | You mark the phrase? |
7469 | You may as well ask me to wear out the stones with kneeling; eh, Grandcourt?" |
7469 | You mentioned Mirah, then?" |
7469 | You must let me make you happy now at last-- else what shall I do?" |
7469 | You remember her calling me?" |
7469 | You remember the low white house nearly hidden by the trees, as we turn up the lane to the church?" |
7469 | You saw Miss Harleth?" |
7469 | You will call yourself a Jew and profess the faith of your fathers?" |
7469 | You will go, Dan, wo n''t you?" |
7469 | You will not change-- you will not want to punish me now?" |
7469 | You will not forsake me?" |
7469 | You will rest to- night?" |
7469 | You wo n''t mind sitting down in our family place and waiting a bit for me, if I''m not in when you come, sir? |
7469 | You would wish her to do so-- to come and see them, would you not?" |
7469 | You''re perhaps from the West End-- a longish drive?" |
7469 | Your singing will satisfy her:''Vor den Wissenden sich stellen;''you know the rest?" |
7469 | _ 1st Gent._ What woman should be? |
7469 | _ Fronsberg._ For him? |
7469 | after your experience, will you let a whim interfere with your comfortable settlement in life?" |
7469 | and his attachment to her brother, was it not begun late to be soon ended? |
7469 | and the baron?". |
7469 | and to- morrow Sunday?" |
7469 | and what was the secret of form or expression which gave the dynamic quality to her glance? |
7469 | and where was your feeling in return? |
7469 | are you a little touched with the sublime lash?" |
7469 | are you?" |
7469 | be like Miss Graves at Madame Meunier''s? |
7469 | cried Lydia, with a faint smile;--was he aware of the minor fact that he made her feel ill this morning? |
7469 | cried Mrs. Arrowpoint;"who in their senses ever thought it would do? |
7469 | durance, assault on watch, Bill for Epernay, not a crust to eat? |
7469 | fine mechanic wings That would not fly? |
7469 | going to Ryelands again?" |
7469 | he is not hurt, I hope?" |
7469 | how?" |
7469 | if it were not possible for her to earn money at once? |
7469 | if not, how shall we discern which change is progress and which not? |
7469 | it is nothing serious, then?" |
7469 | must submit at present, whatever might be in the background for her? |
7469 | my series-- my immortal Berenice series? |
7469 | not of the other establishment he keeps up?" |
7469 | or was it some dim forecast, the insistent penetration of suppressed experience, mixing the expectation of a triumph with the dread of a crisis? |
7469 | retorted Hans,"do you want her to wear weeds for_ you_ all her life-- burn herself in perpetual suttee while you are alive and merry?" |
7469 | said Mirah, looking doubtfully at Mrs. Meyrick, who in her turn looked up at her son, and said,"What do you think, Hans?" |
7469 | said Mrs. Meyrick;"can it be Lady Mallinger? |
7469 | said Mrs. Meyrick;"come and sit down reasonably and let us talk?" |
7469 | what can be your reason for saying so?" |
7469 | what else would you have me, but what I am sure to be? |
7469 | what relation has proved itself more potent in the world than faith even when mistaken-- than expectation even when perpetually disappointed? |
7469 | who can believe that he would call out the tender affections in daily companionship? |
7469 | who is that girl with the awfully well- set head and jolly figure?" |
7469 | why do n''t you make an opportunity of saying these things in public? |
7469 | why do you bring a more horrible noise than my singing?" |
7469 | you will not say that I ought to be disgraced? |
7469 | you would n''t be afraid, eh?" |
7469 | young woman; what is it you''re wanting with Colman Street, eh?'' |